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                    <text>The SpccTRUM

»n m

Vol.

23. No. 15

State University of New York at Buffalo

University intros

Monday, 20 September 1972

tion

Self-study findings revealed
by Peter Bergum

Spectrum Staff Writer

system membership carries with it
a loss of autonomy which at least
appears to generate
inefficiencies.” The self-study
suggests that the consequences of

Perhaps the most important
measure of a university’s
administrative competency is the systematic uniformity endangers
ability to examine its own the individual goals and objectives
operations. This analysis was of the various units of the
recently made available in a University. Another stated
self-study “manual” of this -weakness is that “the pro.jsts of
the several faculties have
University.
Published primarily for the authority in terms of personnel
upcoming accreditation visit of and budget but . . . have no
the Middle States Association of responsibility for academic
Colleges and Secondary Schools programs.”
(October 29—November 10), the
Important to the functioning
report is a major accomplishment of the University at the
in collegiate introspection for this undergraduate level is the Division
University. Not only does it make of Undergraduate Studies (DUS).
evident the triumphs that have The DUS assists departments as
marked the State University of well as individuals irr instituting
Buffalo, but also presents its short new programs in such fields as
Latin American, Asian, Black and
comings.
The report points out that the environmental studies. The report
State University of Buffalo is the also states that the University
largest unit of the State University should examine exactly what
(SUNY) system on several counts grades indicate and what is to be
including enrollment, number and considered “the most valuable and
variety of degree programs, size of effective set of undergraduate
faculty and staff, library holdings programs.”
and unit budget.
The University’s undergraduate Muddled meaning
The self-study points out that:
daytime enrollment has doubled
“Within the undergraduate area, a
to over 12,OCX) since it was
absorbed into the SUNY system major difficulty is the absence of
in 1962. its operating budget has any clear, accepted University
more than quadrupled since 1962, concept of what a baccalaureate
from $15.2 million (1961-62) to degree should mean beyond the
$64.8 million (1971-72). In accumulation of the requisite
addition, the amount of number of semester credit hours
sponsored research increased from and appropriate grade point
$4.9 million (1961-62) to $16.4 average.”
million (1971-72).
A major difficulty noted in the
report
implies
report
contrast,
the
is that of budgetary and
In
that SUNY membership has facilitative restrictions (apparently
. this
the most inhibitive contributor in
presented its problems;
“

..

the developing and implementing
of new programs). It is also felt
that there is frequent competition
for resources
between
undergraduate and graduate
programs within single budgetary
units.
The most informative of the
details contained in the self-study
report comes from the data tables.
Included is the fact that grade
distributions indicate an increase
of 10% in ‘A’ grades from 1965 to
1972, and more significantly a
decrease in ‘C’ grades from 28% in
1965 to 10% in 1972..

More “A’s”
The grade distribution by
faculties in the undergraduate
level (for the spring 1972) shows
that the highest percentage of ‘A’
grades were given out by the
Faculty of Educational Studies
(44.3%) and the lowest by the
Faculty of Natural Sciences and
Mathematics (10.3%).
Comparatively the faculty
salary pattern at this University
ranks on a national scale.
Although salaries are determined
individually, there is a maximum
salary scale for various ranks of
faculty holding academic year
appointments (as of July 1972):
Professor ($31,000), Associate
Professor ($23,000), Assistant
Professor or Lecturer ($18,000),
Instructor ($13,000). For
1971-72 the average salary and
fringe benefits for the following
were;
Professor ($27,027),
Associate Professor ($19,506) and
Assistant Professor ($15,237).
Concerning the faculty, the
self-study contends: ‘To the

Late registrants may decide
Presidential election outcome
Responding to an apparent lag in the county’s
voter registration efforts this year, the Erie County
Board of Elections has teamed up with the two
major political parties in an attempt to bring local
voters to the polls.
Sam Ditera, a representative of the Board of
Elections, pointed out last week that in the past
month only 600 people have registered to vote in
Erie County, while there are about 150,000 eligible
voters who have not done so.

At McGovern.,, headquarters, Brian Jakes
indicated that a larger turnout of young registered
voters would help the McGovern campaign. He said
that the 34% lead thqt President Nixon had shown in
the most recent Poll was based on a very small
number of people, and that it was not indicative of
recent voting trends across the country.

Telephone campaign
Literature is being prepared by McGovern
campaigners urging registration, and" stations have
been set up on various local campuses. In addition, a
massive telephone campaign has been organized to
inform voters of registration procedures and to urge
their involvement in the November election.
The Committee tp Re-elect the President is also
conducting what a spokesman called “a very
extensive and exhaustive effort” to encourage the
registration of new voters.
At a rally last Saturday, which initiated the local
part oft a Republican national door-to-door effort to
register voters. Secretary of Commerce Peter G.

Peterson stressed the importance of registering new
voters. He claimed that these voters would further
strengthen the President’s lead in the polls. He called
for an all-out effort, pointing out that “we have only
11 days left to register these voters for the fall
election.”

Regan responds
When asked whether the registration of voters
would be an advantage fo the President’s campaign,
Erie County Executive Edward Regan responded.
“You can almost assume that the younger people for
McGovern are already registered. As for those young
people who work in the gas stations and the plants,
they have not registered. Yet these are the people
who would vote for Mr. Nixon if they were
registered and voted in the election.
“This is why there is a decided advantage in
registering everybody, as far as the President js
concerned, especially the young -voters ... This is
also why the Republicans have made a genuine effort
to register people this year ... not one where there
is plenty said and nothing done.”
A person can register from now until September
23 any weekday from 9 a.m. till 5 p.m. and
Saturdays from 9 a.m. till noon at the Erie County
Board of Elections at 134 West Eagle. In addition,
there will be voter registration at the respective
polling districts on the following days; October S
and 6, 12 p.m.-7 p.m. and October 7 and 10, 10
a.m.-8 p.m.

extent that the instruction,
research and creative activity,
service and development of the
faculty rests with th$ faculty, so
does the futdie of the
University.”
The appraisal of teaching
efforts has been somewhat
irregular, remarks the report,
concluding that there has been no
University-wide effort to create or
support innovations and
experimentation in teaching.
*

Faculty apathy
The study comments that: “A
major problem relating to
academic programs is the extent
to which the faculty is not
involved in student advisement,
particularly in the DUS,
continuing education and for the
summer sessions.”
A related problem is the extent
of faculty non-involvement in the
summer orientation programs for
entering undergraduate students.
The participation of the members
in the Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics is a pleasant
exception to the general pattern.”
Regarding the admission of
freshman for the Fall of 1972, the
selection was reported done by
the following process: th&amp; fifst

45% admitted were selected on
the basis of high school percentile
rank, the next 50% were selected'
on the combination of high school
grade average and the New York
Regeants

Scholarship

Examination or its equivalent, and
the last 5% were selected on the
basis of their numerical rank in
their high school class. The high
school average of this year’s
freshman class was 91.0 and their
RSE (scholarship exam) score was
215..

96% New Yorkers
Geographic origin of the 1971
undergraduate (day) students
indicates that 28.3% were from

the Buffalo area, 28.6% from the
metropolitan New York area, 96%
from Newl York state, 1.8% from
out of state and 2.2% from
foreign countries. In the minority
enrollment report only 8.6% of
the undergraduate day division
(1971) were Afro-American. The
undergraduate (day—1971)
enrollment ratio of men to
women was six to five and for
graduates, three to two.
Though the University
Libraries are a definite asset,
claims the study, they are plagued
with inefficiencies and
inadequacies. The library does
maintain one of the ten largest
microfilm collections of
documents and rare texts in the
country. However, noticable
vacancies exist in the library
holdings, especially in correlation
with the programs in history,
modern languages, law, music and
mathematics.

Inadequate facilities
The report summarizes: ‘The
size and quality of the library
facilities are grossly inadequate to
the tasks which the libraries are
assigned. The entire situation is
complicated by the fact that the
general library planned for the
Amherst campus has been delayed
a year and will not be available
before 1976.”
The self-study report indicates
that of the $16.4 million in
expenditures for sponsored
research and training programs
(for 1971-72), 66% of it ($10.8
million) went to the Faculty of
Health Sciences while to the
Faculty of Arts and Letters only
$257,293 was granted.
Specifically, Drama received a
microscopic sum of $210 and
English merely $4,019 (down
from $34,000 in 1969-70), while

the School of Medicine received
$4.8 million.

�SASUgainsinfluence

Slowly

Editor’s note: The following is the first in a two-part series
on SASU, the Student Association of the State University.
Today, the article will discuss SASU’s history and it's
increasing influence on the legislative operations of the
Slate University of New York.

by Ron Sandberg
Campus Editor

Unaware

of the

(

i

vririlf* KcmH

intricacies

involved

in

decision-making at the State University level, many
students incorrectly heap blame or praise upon their
respective schools for what actually is handed down by
Albany. Conversely, there are many whose comprehension
of the decision-making process is keen, but who choose
not to involve themselves because of the political games
that have to.be played.
In this University, however, there are a handful of
students who feel they can break through this seemingly
impenetrable wall of politics. Two such students, Mark
Borenstein and Alan Schwartz, have become actively

involved in the Student Association of the State University
(SASU) and while faced with many obstacles, continue to
make sure the student’s voice is heard in the legislative
functionings of this University
.

Interaction
SASD, tersely defined as “a coalition of student
governments in the State University of New York,” came
about two years ago when* some students from various
state schools were dissatisfied with the lack of student
input in the selection of the Chancellor. At that time it
was decided that schools in the State University system
should operate collectively rather than as separate entities.
SASU, under the direction of Chairman Mark
Borenstein, has since tried to establish itself as a credible
student organization to the state legislature and to the
Central Administration of the State University, specifically
the Chancellor’s office. It is in this area that SASU has
been most successful, and according to Programming
Director Alan Schwartz, the recent opening of the Albany
office “marks the permanence of SASU’s efforts.”
SASU’s constituency
Referred to as an “implement or policy,” SASU
functions as either depending on the desires of its
members, which consist of state-operated four-year
colleges. As Mr. Schwartz pointed out, SASU actually has
four types of members; university centers, four-year
colleges, agricultural and technical colleges and associate
memberships which are offered to community and private
colleges in the state on a non-voting basis.
Mr. Schwartz explained that each student
government of the State University who chooses to join
SASU is accorded votes based on its population. Associate
members do not partake in SASU’s political operations
which are its most important facet, but rather benefit from
its services.

SASU, as any new organization, initially suffered
from lack of coordination and small membership.
Admitting that for a good part of a year, SASU “fumbled
around,” Mr. Schwartz said that it h&amp;s only been within
the- last eight or ten months that SASU’s been gathering
momentum. By moving into more “constructive areas,” he
said SASU’s membership and credibility with Albany
legislators have grown considerably.

Semantics

Although technically not a “lobbying force,” SASU

source.” However, as Mr. Schwartz
maintained, SASU uses its information “to persuade
people” in the legislative so its purpose, therefore, ii highly

is an “information

interpretive.

This past summer gave SASU the opportunity to
demonstrate its growing strength. Citing one example, Mr.
Schwartz said that SASU played a large part in reversing an
Albany mandated decision to collect a hefty number of
fees this semester, including those for late registration and
payment, lost keys as well as one for drop and add. Mr.
Schwartz maintained that this decision from Vice
Chancellor for Finance and Management Harry Spinier
came after SASU’s ineffectual tuition hike protest, despite
a “polite” promise from Central Administration that no
fees would be initiated. Viewing the fees as ridiculous and
faulting Central Administration for going back on its word,
SASU passed a resolution to oppose fees and requested
that the Chancellor set up a University-wide committee to
discuss “the disposition of all fees.”

Illegal fees
Mr. Schwartz said that fees first became a problem
when a few SUNY units implemented them on their own.
According to him, fees introduced without proper
legislative approval are illegal, but nevertheless continue to
be collected. Although instrumental in reversing the most
recent fee decision, SASU has not been successful in
getting the original fees, such as those for labs and
graduation, rescinded.
Explaining SASU’s present status in Albany, Mr.
Schwartz said that Ernest Boyer, Chancellor of the State
University of New York, “has refused u&gt; recognize SASU
as the legitimate, so-called bargaining agent for State
University students.” Mr. Schwartz feels the reason he has
not acknowledged SASU’s credibility is due to SASU’s
proven effectiveness in matters which formerly went
unopposed.

Meeting called
Due to the many conflicts that now beseige SASU
Central Administration, Mr. Schwartz said the
Chancellor has called a meeting with all student
government presidents for the second week in October to
resolve the question of governance and decide the role
SASU should play in such areas. Mr. Schwartz feels that
because SASU has garnered much support from student
governments, the Chancellor “will be forced to recognize
and

—Osterralcher

Alan Schwartz
SASU as the official agent of the State University
students.”
Included on SASU’s summer agenda was a Higher
Education Seminar sponsored in conjunction with the
Higher Education Department. According to Mr. Schwartz,
the seminar’s prime goal was to better familiarize SASU
and student governments with higher education matters in
the hope of making them more sophisticated in this field.
Seminars set up
As an outgrowth of this program, there emerged two
other seminars, one dealing with Students’ Rights, and the
other with Union Board. Referring to the Union Board
Seminar, Mr. Schwartz said that SASU drew up a union
board “contract rider.” The rider would safeguard union
boards and student governments against “rip-offs” from
agencies capitalizing on students’ financial ignorance. The
Students’ Rights Seminar dealt with" r Student Bill of
Rights which SASU members hope will become an integral
part of every student government’s constitution.
One of SASU’s mnjor conpernslies with its budget
Funded by the student gdVemaiente *tif the State
University, SASU is granted approximately fifty cents per
full-time equivalent student. This, when calculated
amounts

to

$50,000.

While realizing the fiscal hardships that currently
plague student governments, Mr, Schwartz nevertheless
feels SASU must continue to be financially supported.
According to him, SASU has proven itself responsive to
student needs.

Friday: SASU's services

Hear, O Israel
For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone
875-4265
&gt;5SS&lt;

50*

if

ERRORITE” ioSSSTo...

�oycott end sought
Editor’s note: The following letter, dated September 13, was sent
to President Ketter by Cary Cohn, president of the Inter Residence
.
Council.
■
■

■

,

V

Dear Dr. Ketter,

The Inter-Residence Council, acting for the welfare of the
dormitory community, is continuing the “Boycott” of food service
board contracts. The consistent use (1964-72) of profits from the
contract area to defray costs in other areas of food service can no
longer be tolerated. Nor can a rigid, full year contract be tolerated
resident students should have the option of renewing or not
renewing the food service contract after one semester. Therefore, 1
have sent a letter to resident students asking that the “Boycott” be
-

continued. I have enclosed a copy of that letter.
As stated in my letter of July 18, 1972, the sole aim of the
“Boycott” is to bring about an equitable situation for dormitory
students.
The Inter Residence Council hereby requests that you, as
chairman of the Faculty Student Association, call the Board of
Directors into session to discuss the following requests:
1. That the Board direct Mr. Raymond Becker to allow
resident students to drop their food service contract after one
semester, Without penalty on a strict pro-rated basis, upon request
of the resident student.
2. That the Board direct Mr. Becker to keep a separate
accounting of board contract figures and to use all profits that
occur as a result of money collected from the contract residents to
improve the service and/or increase the quality and quantity of
food in the dormitory cafeterias.
3. That the Board make available to the President of the Inter
Residence Council, or his, designee, a complete accounting of food
service operations in the residence halls, including a list of
employees whose salaries are derived either completely or partly
from money collected from contract residents.
A quick solution to this problem would obviously be to the
advantage of all parties concerned. If the Board responds to our
reasonable requests, the Inter Residence Council will inform
resident students that their rights have been insured and the
“Boycott” is ended.
Thank you for your time.
Peace,

Gary Cohn, President
Inter Residence Council

Food Service

Semester contracts coming?
In an attempt to settle the Inter Residence
Council boycott of Food Service, IRC President
Gary Cohn has requested University President
Robert Ketter to convene the Faculty Student
Association Board of Directors for discussion of the
conflict.
The main controversy has centered around Food
Service’s refusal to allow students to sign board
contracts for only one semester. The boycott was
initiated over the summer when IRC President Cohn
sent out letters to resident students requesting that
they send back their board contracts unsigned.
Writing the word “boycott” on the unsigned
contract would signify a protest against the
scheduled increase in board contract prices, the
insufficient variety and quality of menus and the
new rigidity of Food Service against one semester
contracts.

Contracts terminated
Last year 40% of the dorm students on board
terminated their contracts after the first semester,
citing their disgust with the little concern paid to the
preparation and selection of food.
In his summer letter to the students, Cohn
attacked the use of board contract funds for the

maintenance of other Food Service enterprises,
notably the Norton Hall cafeteria and \thc
Rathskeller. In addition, Mr. Cohn requested that
Food Service director Raymond Becker “keep a
separate account Of board contract figures and use
all profits that occur as a result of money collected
from the contract residents to improve the service
and/or to increase the quality and quantity of the
food in the dormitory cafeterias.
‘More bearable’ .
Mr. Cohn also claimed that if all board contract
monies were returned to improve the quality of the
food, “board contract meals would at least be more
bearable.”
In a later letter to the resident student body,
Mr. Cohn listed the many improvements that had
been made in Food Service, but asked that the
boycott be continued until Food Service returned to
the “one semester contract.”
When contacted for further comments on the
situation, Mr. Cohn reported that he was hopeful
that “the situation would be resolved at the next
Faculty-Student Senate meeting.” Meanwhile Dr.
Ketter’s office refused to give any additional
comments.

Hillel introduces several new
programs to serve students
Hillel, an off campus Jewish
40 Capen
Boulevard, is introducing some
new programs for the students
and faculty
of the State
University of Buffalo.
One of these programs will be a
professional counseling service.
Rabbi Morris A. Cohen PhD, a
psychologist with the Buffalo
Board of Education, will be
available to students and faculty
Wednesday evenings at Hillel
House starting October 4 from
8-10 p m
Because Rabbi Cohen is both a
professional psychological

organization

at

ordained rabbi,
he combines Jewish tradition with
his scientific background, thus
making his counseling service a
counselor and

an

unique experience.
Anyone who has a problem is
welcome to come to the
counseling service, whether it be a
religious, emotional, school,
family or any other problem a
■

student or faculty member may
have. This is a free service and no
appointment is necessary.
The second program started by
Hillel this year will be a Yiddish
conversation group which will be
called “Yiddish Without a
Bellyache.” This group will be led
by Oscar Stromberg, co-chairman
of the Yiddish Forum and a staff
member of the Jewish Family
Service of Buffalo and Erie
County.

The goal of this program is to
bring together the students who
have a background in Yiddish and
anyone who would like to learn
the language.
Another aim of the program is
make Yiddish fun without
using textbooks. Conversation
records, recordings and the singing
to

of songs will be used to learn the
language. This group will meet on
Sunday, October 8 and every
Sunday thereafter at 3 p.m. in the

Hillel House.

up on the first floor of Norton
Hall. It is designed to provide
information on Judaism to the
University community. There will
be pamphlets available on a
variety of subjects. Some of these
deal with Jewish Holidays,
prayers, the beliefs of Judaism,
Jewish attitude toward divorce,
family planning, evolution and
science. Also, some inexpensive

paperbacks published by the Hillel
Foundation specifically for Jewish

students will be available.

Advanced Hebrew
A third program to be started
by Hillel this year is Chug Ivri, a
Speaking Circle. This
Hebrew
welcomes
Jewish and
group
non-Jewish \vho have spent a year
or more in Israel and acquired a
degree of Hebrew speaking
proficiency. Chug Ivri is the group
for students who are interested in
retaining their knowledge of the
Hebrew language on an advanced

level.’

group will meet on
October 8 at 3 p.m. in the Hillel
House and will be led by four
Israeli students who will take
This

turns speaking with the members
in Hebrew. The four students
leading this group are Shimon and

Michal Schieber, Yitzchak Botya
Goren and Michael Raab Raab.
The fourth addition to the
programs at Hillel this year will be
a Judaism Information Center set

Questions and answers
The Jewish Information Center
will be a service for students
interested in the religious and
cultural aspects of Judaism. Rabbi

Justin Hoffman, director of Hillel,
will be there in person, as well as a
well informed staff, to answer any
questions in these areas.
Another program planned is
designed for students interested in

Hebrew but who have no Hebrew

background. This group will meet
Tuesdays at noon in Room 262
Norton Hall beginning October 3.
A Talmud group for advanced
students having a thorough
background in Hebrew is also
forming. This group will meet on
Tuesday, October 3 in the Hillel
House. If you are interested in
any of these programs more
information may be obtained at
Hillel House.

ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!

THE FOLLOWING DEADLINES MUST BE OBSERVED:
*

r

I

AH fee waiver applications must be in the S.A.

Treasurer’s office 205 Norton, NO LATER
THAN October 1st, '72.
AH applications for Undergraduate Research
Grants must be filed no later than Sept. 30th,
,

'72.

Monday, 20 September 1972. The Spectrum Page three
■ c i ■&gt; j &gt; . C 5 . (I i v i i i j) 1 1 i,,
.

'

:

&gt;

;

■

■

�.

Law school deadlines

•

j,

v

-^HHMgg|Wjk

..*■

•■■

'•

,.

The deadline for students planning to take the

Law School Aptitude Teat on Saturday. October 21
k September 29. The Educational Testing Service
must receive all applications by that lime. In
addition, students applying to law school for the
rln«i entering September 1973 are reminded to
register with the Law School Data Assembly as soon
as possible. Students desiring further information
should obtain a Law School Admission Bulletin from
either the University Placement and Career Guidance
Office in Hayes Annex C or 4230 Ridge Lee, Room
C-l.

.

.’/WVAW.v. ■

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Security was tightened
UNITED NATIONS
as
the General Assembly
at
UN
headquarters
Sunday
prepared to convene its twenty-seventh session and
discuss
in the wake of the Olympic tragedy
measures to combat acts of terrorism throughout the
,
world.
Secretary General Kurt Waldheim promised he
would take all measures necessary to assure the
safety of the diplomats within the building and that
he , expected the United States to take similar steps
for their protection outside.
Alluding to the killings at the Munich Olympic
Games as well as recent airplane hijackings,
Waldheim formally asked the 132-member body to
discuss what measures can be taken to prevent
further acts of terrorism and violence throughout the
world.
-

-

-

Corrections officials
STORMVUJJE, N.Y.
Saturday blamed a rivalry between two black groups
for a yard brawl between 150 inmates at Green
Haven State Prison which had to be quelled by tear
gas.
Seven inmates were reported injured as the
inmates fought with broom handles, parts of benches
and weight-lifting equipment in the after supper
brawl Friday. As of Saturday, only one remained
hospitalized.
—

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Passport I.D. Photos

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VIENTIANE, LAOS

Commission oft Prison Reform
member of
called for “immediate action” Sunday to compel
State Correctional Services Commissioner Russell G.
Oswald to implement prison reform. Speaking on a
television interview program, Mr. Dunne said that
the state has “failed in its responsibility to inspect
and set standards for our corrections facilities.”

Mr. Dunne, chairman of the Senate Committee
on Crime and Correction, said that since the riot at
Attica a year ago, the state has “been reluctant to
move with substantial changes’’ and charged that
improvements since the bloody riot have not gone
“to the root oT our problems in the system.” He
suggested that legislative reform would be needed ' •
bring about meaningful results.
An effort will be made in
WASHINGTON
Congress this week to break a two-month stalemate
in the minimum wage bill designed to; increase the
paychecks of some six million low-income workers.
-

Although both houses have passed minimum
wage bills. House conservatives have so far blocked
the appointment of conferees to work out a
compromise bill with their Senate counterparts.
The House Democratic leadership now feels that
it has the strength to outvote the conservatives, send
the bills to conference and pave the way for a $2 per
hour minimum wage.

An American delegation
WASHINGTON
Senator Edward M. Kennedy,
traveling to North Vietnam for the release of three
administration of “covering up the
the
accusing
U.S. prisoners of war arrived in Hanoi last Saturday
amid speculation that American air operations have truth about American military practices in Southeast
Asia” said Monday he hopes to hold hearings shortly
been suspended along their route to permit safe
on alleged bombings of North Vietnamese dikes and
passage.
other
civilian targets.
According to the Vietnam News Agency, the
The massachusetts Democrat said in a Senate
delegation arrived shortly after noon and was met at
the airport by a group headed by Tran Trong Quat, speech that since last May, administration officials
secretary of the Vietnam Committee for Solidarity have ignored letters from his sub-committee on
with the American People.
•refugees requesting “befptj.aad^ei”
of areas where dikes, schools'and'hospitafs have been
a reportedly hit.
-

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IMMEDIATE COVERAGE
Regard*ns pf aga or record

837-2278

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—

Night Phone 839-0566

Page four The Spectrum: Wednesday, 20 September 1972
.

�lF9Tirr-/’“

Crime connoisseur

Suspense drama challenges
audiences'
Sleuth'ability
Sleuth a British suspense play is being brought
,

to Loew’s Buffalo Theater by the Buffalo Festival
for one performance at 8:30 p.m. on Sept. 26.

Sleuth was written by Anthony Shaffer, author
of Hitchcock’s recent film Frenzy. This is enough to
indicate that Sleuth’s style is bone-chilling, cerebral
and startlingly intricate.
The play continues to be shown in London and
New York to capacity audiences. Any mystery buff
worth the name should attend the play and try to
unravel the ingenious knots that playwright Shaffer
provides.
The action of Sleuth takes place in the
sumptuous English manor house of a highly
successful writer of detective stories, a crime
connoisseur who decides to turn his art into his life.
Andrew Wyke (portrayed by George Rose) built his
house, ditto his life, to resemble his books. His
stone-walled, high-ceilinged living room with

TAU KAPPA EPSILON
presents a

MAXIMUS SUPER
PARTY

mullioned windows, carved balusters on a stairway
curving up to an overhanging gallery, is deliberately
the perfect setting for one of those mystery tales
that Wyke sophisticatedly scoffs at, and that he
himself effortlessly writes.
Into this lair for a perfect crime pqler’s in the
fireplace, pistol in the drawer comes a young man
named Milo Tindle (played by David Haviland) who
has just moved into a cottage in the neighborhood.
Their get-acquainted drinks and conversation are
urbanely civilized at first. And then it appears that
Wyke is an obsessive games-player.
Chess and other such competitive exercises are
too conventional for him. He is soon playing a cat
and mouse, life and death game with his increasingly
mysterious visitor. Rots, personnas, counter-plots
and counter-counter-plots abound.
Tickets for this unique thriller are available at
the Norton Hall box office.
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Part-time secretary needed,
with shorthand. 20hrs./wk.
Apply in person at Sub-Board I
office, 214 Norton Hall.

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Past Executive Secretary of the National Vietnam
Veterans against the War. Mr. Hubbard has visited
Tokyo and Hanoi as well as the World Conference
for the Peace and Independence of The Indo Chinese
People.
,

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EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD.
wis am isw as— awvw, a v SCm
WIN I

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tVSMWOS. MEKINOt

DAYS.

233 NORTON

Branches in Major Cillss In U.S.ANutmmt* «rp.sU»«s
TW feisnef
■»■«*
&lt;

&lt;*»

Monday 20 September 1972 The Spectrum Page five
,

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�m
m/m

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Parking proposals

|

Annually, this University undertakes the time-honored
and time-worn chore of changing all the locks in all the
faculty parking lots. Ostensibly, this activity is viewed as a
mere deterrent to unauthorized parking. Yet, this
enforcement of the exclusiveness of some parking areas is
another reminder of the totally unfair and inadequate
parking situation on this campus.
Specifically, students are excluded from preferred lots;
they must suffer for the special priveleges awarded to
faculty. Two summers ago, an experiment in open parking
was tried. Although it was never allowed a serious test, the
aborted because faculty disliked
experiment was aborted
suffering the liabilities students have traditionally faced.
To justify the return to segregated parking, concern was
expressed about faculty unable to find parking spaces and
thus unable to meet their classes. Little thought was given to
the fate of students who also require parking spaces and who
also find it necessary to attend classes.
~

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It has long been obvious that a serious reevaluation and
rethinking of the parking situation is in order. In addition to
the policy of segregated lots, other problems exist. For one,
there are simply not enough parking spots to accommodate
all the members of the University community.
The chance of building more lots is slim for there
presently exists a state cut-back on capital building, and this
University looks to Amherst as one solution to Its backward
parking conditions. However, the promise of Amherst and its
a promise. Students
ample parking area remains just that
here on the Main Street campus are dissatisfied; students now
have to contend with inadequate facilities; and nothing is
being done to help ameliorate the situation.
Until more parking spots are made available or unless the
University constructs a high-rise parking facility, some
controls must be instituted over who parks on this campus. It
has been suggested, for example, that the number of dorm
residents having cars be restricted. Although drastc, such a
measure would help solve the scarcity of spots by assigning
parking priveleges by need.

mT3T3

1 £iD

from Washington

worked for the Columbia Gas System Service
Cdrporation in New York for 24 years, short 5
months, when he learned his department was being
transferred to Columbus, Ohio. To be “vested” (i.e.,
eligible) for pension he must have served 10 years
(which he had) and be 45 years old(he was 41). No
pension. He stayed in New York, got another job
and hopes he is building to another pension with the
new company. He doesn’t know.
Conditions disclosed by the Williams committee
make you wonder. A staff analysis covers 87 sets of
sample pension plans. In one group (nearly 10
million workers, and $16 billion in pension assets)
only four percent of all workers who have left since
1950 got any pension; in another group with
somewhat more lenient qualifications, only 16
percent. The forfeiture rate is shocking unless the
whole thing is considered as make-believe.
A typical letter to Sen. Williams: “Father
worked well over 25 years and he suffered a heart
attack right before retirement. They would not let
him continue working and he lost his pension
rights.”
It would be easy, it seems, to remedy this
Companies don’t mean to be cruel. Partly it is due to
the suddenness of the pension vogue. But the
statistics and evidence are appalling. “It is a rare
thing to find a major American institution private
pension plans built upon human disappointment,”
says Sen. Javits.
Here is a large oil company with pension plan
assets of over $450 million. But with the normal
mobility of average workers, and the rigid
non-transferable pension requirements, the forfeiture
rate is extraordinary; fewer than 8500 beneficiaries
since 1950.
The United Mine Workers ran their own pension
fund of $100 million and put half of it in a
Washington bank which they own and control. They
let the bank have the funds without interest. The
interest might have aided widows and orphans;
instead it benefitted the bank and the unions’
officers. Some companies invest in -their own
securities; many him funds over to the trust
department of a given hank.
.
i
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■
Millions of participants trying to practice thrift
and prudence are chasing a will of the wisp. ‘There
will be a pension check for you from the Company
every month of your life/’ promised Horn &amp; Hardart
of Philadelphia just before it'was gobbled up by a
conglomerate and the plan ceased. A Newark

THE NEW REPUBLIC
of New Jersey, Inc.

1972, Harrison-Blaine

Ever see a truck driver cry? I did the other day.
He was testifying at a Senate sub-committee on a
matter that affects 30 million American workers
(though few know it). He worked for a New York
firm 30 years and was under their pension plan for
27, and he had his retirement all planned out. He
figured he would get $140 a month from pension
and a tidy Social Security check at 65 and he and his
old woman could make out. Not lavishly, you know,
but okay. Then the blow fell.
He told Senators Williams (D., NT) and Javits
(R., N.Y.), that the company suddenly announced it
was moving over to New Jersey and he could move,
or commute if he cared to (two hours each way), or
he could take severance pay. He tried it three
months. He was at the bottom of seniority now, he
found. Take it or leave it, said the company. So he
took severance. No pension. He paused. He was
lucky though, he added. At age 47 he got another
But the lapsed peffsion rights aren’t transferable;
job.
to
introduce more
Additionally, it is necessary
he
must
start all over again.
imaginative parking arrangements. There should, for
Thirty
million Americans think they are covered
example, be more facilities for motorcycle parking, possibly
by
private
pension
plans whose assets now amount
some type of sheltered area. Such a move would relieve the
billion
$130
to
over
and are leaping by $10 billion a
parking lots of wasted spots.
year. Yet only a relative handful under present
Moreover, it has long been apparent that there is not
conditions will ever get a penny from the amount. It
adequate enforcement in the parking lots. Cars are allowed to
is the largest aggregate of virtually unregulated
block aisles, other cars, entrances and exits. Congestion in
money in the nation. Government hasn’t caught up
the lots could be helped by stricter policing
security with it. President
Kennedy started an inquiry ten
officers should concern themselves more with how a car is years ago but
Congress hasn’t acted.
parked than with who parks it.
Take the case of Mrs. Iris Kwek of Detroit
To help resolve the parking mess, it is essential that a that’s her real name
employee of Anaconda
committee of students, faculty and staff be appointed to Company. Her husband works; they don’t have
investigate all facets of the parking question. They may think children .\They aren’t
poor;Jhey are average middle
that open parking is the answer or they may suggest Tower class Americans. She worked happily
30 years.
Hall be leveled to provide more parking spots. Whatever the Everything was harmonious. Then one day the
final answer will be, it is obvious that some solution is company announced it was closing part of its Detroit
needed. This is one issue .we can't neglect any longer.
operations and sqpc workers would be let go. She
was one. The non-contributory pension, she
testified, was a tremendous incentive to loyalty; the
company called it her “second pay check.” But now
Vol. 23, No. 15
September
20
1072
Monday,
at 48 she wasn’t eligible. If she had been 60 she
could have got it 'for life. One day she was dreaming
Editor-in-Chief Jo-Ann Armao
of a $100-a-week pension; the next day
nothing.
Managing Editor
Jeff Graenwald
Aat. Managing Editor Lynne Traeger
“A tremendous injustice is being carried out on
Boainaw Manager
Jack Harlan
the traditional American middle-class working
Advertising Managar
Jeff Reiman
family,” fumed Sen. Javits.
Lippmann
Production Supervisor Mika
T
Yes, said Mr. Kwek; Anaconda had a large office
flonni Forman
graphic Ana
Tom Tolas
BackW
Toronto.
in
They couldn’t have treated her like that
. Janis Cromer
Layout
Maryhope Runyon
in Canada, she said; Canada has regulations covering
.Ron Sandberg
.Cathy Bastin
asst.
pensions, not the US.
./..vacant Lit. Drama . . Michael Silvarblatt
V#
Music
City
.Billy Altman
Dave Saleh
Word of the Senate Labor subcommittee
Composition
Karin Sheldon
Off-Campus .
vacant
Hearings spread and letters poured in, and still do;
;&lt;?apH'- ■ ■
. Mickey Osterreicher
Marty Gatti
Photo
Claire Kriagsman
Kim Santos
.agonizing letters. Out ,of a sample of S00, all but
Fmq**
Barry Rubin
.‘K-»5|i*wie Kurtz Sports
&lt;four"tdkl stories of humiliation and anguish One out
of four Americans over 65 live! jn po*#fcy. Here a
The Spectrum is served by College Pratt; Service, Intercollegiate Press
Bureau, United Pram International, The Los Angeles Timas Syndicate, The
wife writes that after 29 years her husband retired
Men! Republic Feature Syndicate, Publishers Hall Syndicate and The
and got his pension for 1V4 years, when he died. “He
Regrttar and Tribune Syndicate.
wanted that security as much for me as him,” she
Republication of matter herein in any form without the express consent of
writes. But who cares? She’s just a widow, on relief.
the Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.
Or again, a man says he is 64 and laid off after
15 years, one year short of eligibility. No pension.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief
Here is Bernard Russ, who testified that he
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brewery, P. Bailantine &amp; Sons, promised benefits
“for the rest of their lives”
and went broke. A
fr°m -the Anaconda Company shows a nice
elderly couple
taly Fnmce f
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more

enjoyable,

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Page six The Spectrum i. Wednesday, 20 September 1972
.

Gemge
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’egislation for
supervision,
Jie average An.

jo.

lifetime. Where 'does Mr. Nixon stand? He favors
reform one day; denounces the “welfare state” the
next. You would think the
million affected
Americans would have strong feelings on this issue.

�t*fkt

»

T&lt;ee

tjfiUk

WHT numirA'

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-"'0

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Journalistic ethics?

*

|

:^r

The following letter was sent to Stuart
Berger, supervising editor of ethos. The questions
posed in the letter were originally asked on the last
Thursday broadcast of WBFO’s Interface. They now
appear as follows in The Spectrum.
Editor’s

***

note:

Editor’s note: The following is the first of a regular column written by
the Buffalo Labor Committee, which will appear every Wednesday in
The Spectrum. Today ‘s column is the first of a two-part series dealing
with the 1P72 election.

Mr. Berger
I read with great interest your editorial of Sept.
14’s ethos in which you stated: “Miss Armao’s
acceptance of a proxy iq the government board that
must be viewed as
publishes all student
an exercise in questionable journalistic ethics.”
In light of this editorial, I would like to pose the
following questions:
1. Was it a practice of good journalistic ethics
when you offered me, as a proxy-holding member of
Sub Board I last year, the position of business
manager of ethos if I would vote to override the
Norton House Council decision to move the ethos
'office to its present smaller offices?
2. Was it a practice of good journalistic ethics to
have a member of Sub Board I lobby for your
organization last spring and have him even go as far
as to threaten to pull the Graduate Student
Association out of Sub Board if your budget request
wasn’t passed?
3. Is this person currently your business

by The Buffalo Labor Committee
With election day less than two months off, Democratic candidate
George McGovern is appearing more and more like another teedle-dee
alternative to Richard Nixon’s Tweedle-dum. The cause of McGovern’s
drift toward the center of the Democratic Party is the following:
George McGovern is stuck on the horns of a dillemma. He is
immobilized by the inability to solve the following political problem;
how to convince big capitalist backers and party regulars that he is no
radical at all, and at the same time, to revive his popular base of
support by stepping up the radical rhetoric which won his
primary-campaign victory.
The vacillations and wild flip-flops on policy, the slip-ups and
simple-minded errors committed by his staff and the state of cold war
existing between the engineers of his primary campaign and Larry
O’Brien (his tie to the regular Democratic machine), all reflect his
fundamental confusion in the direction of the whole campaign effort.
As things now stand, i.e., barring a major economic crisis before
the elections, there is no solution to this dilemma. The current success
of Phase II wage-gouging, and the lack of political inertia on the part of
the working class and allied popular layers in the face of this attack
have convinced most capitalists that there is no need for a McGovern
“safety-valve populist” in this election. To these capitalists, talk of tax
reform and attacks on Wall Street power brokers seem unnecessary and
potentially dangerous disruptions. In addition, the lull in visible
working class ferment is convincing McGovern himself that he must
rely on deals with and the good graces of the bourgeoisie for his
election.
Richard Nixon, however, has no other option but to cry out a
defense of his record. The essence of the Nixon strategy is to create the
image of reliability, “old rules” familiarity, invincibility and seriousness
in a low-profile campaign using the well-tested weapons of prominent
surrogates to speak for him and the power of his incumbent position.
Underlying this strategy is a slightly touched-up version o( the worn
Kevin Phillips thesis in “The Emerging Republican Majority” which
sees the emergence of a conservative “silent majority” in the U.S.
(including large sections of the working class), concerned about such
things as crime, busing, government spending, abortion, national
security, aid to parochial schools, hippies, etc. which can be mobilized
behind the Republican Party creating a winning “right-center”
coalition.
With the traditional Democratic Party falling apart, Nixon is
moving to bring elements he sees as up for grabs into his “silent
majority” coalition. Connally is sent out with the “Democrats for
Nixon” ploy to corral the big money that is shifting allegiance. And
Nixon’s temporary crumb to the Teamster’s Fitzsimmons over the
binding arbitration in transportation bill, the open wooing of Jewish
and Catholic voters, reports of approaches to Wallace and Rockefeller’s
effort to line up labor unions in New York are all part of the same plan.
Nixon, by getting endorsements from a few prominent names from
some of these groups, hopes to build his image as a candidate that
“people like us” can support, while reassuring the capitalists that he
still has a little cooptive power left. With running-mate Agnew
continuing to cover his right-flank, Nixon confirms his right-center
coalition “game plan” and prepares for a mud-slinging campaign.

—

manager?
David Keiser

Editor's note: The Spectrum contacted Mr. Berger
informing him that any response he might have to
the above letter would be included in today’s issue
of The Spectrum. He chose not to respond.

CD
CD

‘Editorial indiscretion
To the Editor

’

ST
CD

As managing editor of ethos and as a member of
the WBFO Interface panel of Thursday night. Sept.
14, the allegations of Mr. Keiser have been brought
to my attention. The publication of these

accusations are another example of the editorial
indiscretion which has so pervaded The Spectrum
management in the last two weeks.
Mr. Reiser’s allegations were publically refuted
at the WBFO broadcast called, “Interface,” on Sept.
14 and as such it is ridiculous to expect a response
frbm Mr. Berger, supervising editor of ethos at this
time.
to publish these accusations at a time
when their refutation is a matter of public record
can only be interpreted as a deliberate and obvious
attempt at the personal defamation of Mr. Berger’s
character.
Ttys letter has been written in response to the
violation of journalistic ethics by The Spectrum and
the contemptible tactic of character assassination to
which The Spectrum has resorted in order to execute
their personal and political vendettas. This letter has
been written independently of the editorial policy of
ethos and the personal opinion of its supervising
editor.

Next Week: Can McGovern Walk a

Tightrope?

David Sack
note: The Spectrum employs its editorial
pages not as weapons against indivuals, but rather as
the opportunity for persons to raise issues pertinent

Editor’s

to the concerns

body.

of this

University and to the student
,

v

tease
MWWOMWfl*

Parking solution offered
situation on this campus is
a commuting student I am forced to
i campus every day. Although the trip
minutes I usually have to spend dbout
;es looking for a parking spot. This can
imissed by the usual superficjal nnnark
coo little space and too man/'cars so
mg

i

.need the car to get to d«S8ci Suffer. I believe there
should be a small number of parking permits yet
aside for dorm residents lo be issued only in cases of
proven need (i.C, student teaching, part-time jobs,
etc.). These cars should then be restricted to an area
towards the Bailey end of the Main-Bailey lot.
Perhaps the best solution, however, would be to
have chartered buses hired by the University come
and pick students up at various, centrally-located
s throughout the dty. These bines could be
by the commuters who wouliL be able to
case bus-passes to their routes at a pro-rated
Further funds could also come from a parking
parking cars on campus. $,

■sd

us and

"r szri z

thereby the time spent in useless
dering through the Main-Bailey lot. Other
Its would also accrue, including the release of
•us Security from meaningless ticketing jobs,;
the facilitation of snow removal due to fewer cars in
into two.groups?
tore, there should be restrictions in the parking lots and the addition of ten more
tents allowed to have cars. It is unfair minutesTo my night’s sleep, v-Tv,
cting in the parking lots all week long,
"plk
only to Mihnd on the weekends while students who
Name withheld on request
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ISHBm '•'IktlaMS wo agree on something

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Monday, 20 September
1$72'. The Spectrum Page seven
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�w

le this eolu
by Ellen Greenfield
For most of us, water is something that pours
from the tap as soon as we turn it on, and pours, and
until it reaches the perfect
pours, and pours
temperature for whatever we had in mind to do with
it. Or else it fills the dishwasher, washing machine or
toilet bowl (if I may be so bold) and rinses away the
dirt we left behind. Hardly ever do we give water the
credit for the processing of all or our food, and most
of the paper, steel, plastic, and energy forms we
consume daily. What we expect from water is that it
be clean and plentiful, but what do we do to it in
exchange???
Water is one resource that is used but not
consumed. Everything which takes in water
eventually gives it off, so the water that was around
when Washington crossed the Delaware or when
Michaelangelo painted the Sistine Chapel is
essentially the same water that’s sloshing about
today. That is not to say that it is in anywhere near
the same condition, though.
About 30 inches of rain per year falls bn the
,'U.S.
or about 1.2 trillion gallons of free water
after evaporation and transporation losses. Divided
by 200 million people, that leaves 6000 gallons per
person per day. You’d think that would be enough,
but it isn’t. A day’s supply of vegetables uses
200-300 gallons. The standard American meat ration
of 10 oz. takes 1500 gallons. You draw about 100
gallons a day for residential use, of which you drink
half a gallon. This water must be pure. Once you use
it, you hardly return it in that condition.
Industry demands huge amounts of water for
cooling purposes (thermal plants now claim one
tenth of the average U.S. runoff for this purpose).
Although this adds no pollutants as such, the
additional heat destroys some of the indiginous
aquatic life and reduces the amount of oxygen in the
water. Industrial and municipal sewage is disposed of
in rivers and lakes as a matter of course and
combines with pesticide residues, acid mine drainage,
oil spillage, fertilizer runoff, natural leeching of salts
from soil, etc. to contaminate a great portion of each
of our 600 gals.
In its natural state, water contains
microorganisms with the capacity to break down
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certain wastes and so maintain a certain purity.
These “biodegradable” wastes are not always as
innocent as detergent companies would have us
believe, though.
They demand a certain amount of oxygen to be
broken down and those that demand a high amount,
phosphates being a prime example, deplete the
existing oxygen in a given area of water and from
that point on, accumulate to choke the water with
nutrients which cause algal blooms and other things
unhealthy for living things (us and the fish, for
). Since much of our surface waters
example
have already been destroyed by gross pollution,
many communities have drilled wells to tap the
groundwater.
Home water use, while admittedly not as
extensively wasteful as municipal or industrial use,
is connected to the other ecological decisions in your
life, so why not try a few neat conservation
measures.
1. Place a brick or two in your toilet bowl to cut
down on the amount of water used in flushing.
(No, I’m not joking.)
2. Keep your garbage disposal turned OFF
3. Use washing soda or good ol’ soap instead of
your Diz or Duz or whatever. And steer clear
of that Drano garbage
coarse salt and hot
water work about as well and you won’t burn
yotir skin off, either.
4. Keep cold tap water in the refrigerator instead
of running the tap for ten minutes and then
complaining.
5. Only use a washing machine at full capacity.
(This goes for dishwashers, too, since if you
have one, nothing anyone says will keep you
from using it.)
The list can go on forever. Be creative about
being a water miser ... make it a fad.
To cut down on certain industries’ effects on
your water 111 have to get into a good rap on
effective industrial hassling
but meanwhile:
Reduce your consumption of electricity to
reduce the amount of water used in the cooling
process in electrical production, and, as I’ve said
before, don’t use colored disposal paper products.
Both the dye and paper pollute.
Anyway . . remember Lake Erie
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ednesday, 20 September 1972

‘

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&gt;od
Un/ bar hcu* no norm
DONT GET

“Ripped -Off”
with high prices

CHECK LIQUORS
450 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.
(Near Allenhurst

&amp;

Princeton)

—

•ivX^v/V.v.v

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No cheap deals
amply a pleasant place

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Xv

The Spectrum
Page
eight.
h.'
i 'WdF"
7i&gt;-'

film festival
TURDAYmTUESDAY

1.79 5 th
3.99 ’AGal.
.
.
2.89 5th
| Liebfraumilch 1970 1.49 5th
1.49 5th
Beaujolais 1970

i

Yago Sangria
Alianca Rose
• Mateus Rose

.

.

|

.

r.

CHILLED WINES
uni

i

-

,'

Boones Farm Wines 1.00 5th' i
1.49 5th |
.
.
. 2.99\
Gallons Table Wines
Almaden Mt. Wines 1.59 5th'\
Lambrusco
1.59 5tht |

]i MayWine
['

J,

.

.

.

NO EXTRA CHARGE

COUPON

ESTRELLA SPANISH WINES
Red White •Rose

*

•

(Limit 3 per student

Expires

-

9/23/72

•

STUDENT DISCOUNT ON SOLID CASES OF WINES
—FREE!!!Recipe books for drinks.
P.S. Allenhurst bus

goes past

us!

�ore*yonT5Sy tteirs,*

OVERtIME'

ours.

by Bany Rubin

New York

Sunday’s football opener between the Jets and
the Bills proved to be little more than a contest
played true to form. As usual, many Buffalo fans
were heard to be murmuring in between beers, “wait
till next year.” The Buffalonians had come to see
“Joe Namath get creamed,” but rather watched Joe
Willie and John Riggins lather the Buffalo defense
and capitalize upon Bill errors.
However, there were other stories involved in
the game besides who won or lost. These went from
whether or not the Bills will win two or three games
this year up to whether or not O.J. Simpson should
be traded. After all, Simpson’s offensive line only
opened up about two or three holes for him during
the entire game.
For this columnist, two New York numbers at
the game, not Namath (12) or Riggins (44), but
rather numbers 83 and 85 brought back memories.
For the uninitiated, number 83 was worn by George
Sauer Jr., while Steve Thompson wore number 85.
What the two have in common is the fact that both
quit lucrative careers in the world of pro football for

more serene life elsewhere.
On the political spectrum, the two players
would fit at opposite ends, Sauer being considered
the more radical, but both were leaving the game for
similar reasons: the pursuit of individual goals.

a

not stressing Dave Meggyesy’s now
phrase, “dehumanizing,” Sauer indicated

While
that

he

football because there were more

left

important things for individuals to do, while
Thompson wanted to go back to the wilds of his

NEED

HOUSING?

TIRED OF CRASHING WITH FRIENDS?
U Diversity Housing Office has a
number of vacancies in the residence halls
that are available to any undergraduate,
graduate, professional, or M.F.C. student
lon ij first-come-, first-serve basis
The

To apply, contact:
UNIVERSITY HOUSING
BASEMENT
GOODYEAR HALL
CAMPUS
831-3322
-

native come a carpenter.
What brings this story to mind is the fact that
both numbers 83 and 85 were worn Sunday for the
first time in a regular season game since Sauer and
Thompson left the Jets. Replacing Sauer, also a wide
receiver, was high-priced rookie Jerome (Gee)
Barkum from Jackson State College, while another
rookie, “Ed Galigher of UCLA was wearing
Thompson’s old number 85. The change in uniform
numbers probably brings to an end any hope that

Sun., Sept, 24, 7 P.M.

Kleinhans Music Hall
All

SeafS

Reserved

Sat.,.Oct, 7, 8

P.M.

uniform.
Sauer (whose father was instrumental in getting
him into football) is now struggling as a free lance
writer, at a time when he could still be starring as a
receiver of Namath’s crisp passes. Anyone who ever
saw Sauer perform knows that Sauer quit the game
while he was one of the best. Still, Sauer has few
qualms about leaving the game, and in recent
interviews, claimed that he was happier now than
ever before.
Thompson, who was really more in the
developing stages when he left New York, is a deeply
religious man, and is closer to his family now than he
ever was during the course of a hectic football
season.
Doubtless there are some who’ll say that both
Sauer and Thompson were fools for leaving a
livelihood that gave them face. However, it’s more
likely that neither could have achieved their
individual goals while still playing football. Without
a doubt, most professional and collegiate teams
consider the needs of the individual athlete
subservient to the needs of the collective team to
win and be successful in the eyes of their coaches.
The lack of individualism in sports can best be
understood when analyzing a football coach in the
mold of Vince Lombardi, who drive his players to
the limit, or a top football college coach who
dominates the game, making it little more than a
chess match between coaches. Just last week, the
president of Boston University (BU) asked that
football coaches in the Yankee Conference (in which
BU participates) be required to sit in the stands
during the games, with only pre-game and half-time
'

contact with the players.

In effect, this would return the game to the
players and give coaches the job of coaching and
prepping the players, not running the entire game.
Under such a system, players like Sauer and
Thompson,

who

left

the

game

CHEECH

&amp;

“THE PERSUASIONS”
WKBW AND BUFFALO FESTIVAL present
IN CONCERT

ELTON JOHN

reserved

Davey Johnstone, Dee Murray, Nigel Olsson

No seat s on floor
Limited number of cdvonce tickets
S4 50 Wh-n these are gone, oil
tickets will be SS.50

WITH

AND

"FAMILY"

Sun., Oct, 8, 8 P.M.

WKBW AND BUFFALO FESTIVAL present

Kleinhans Music Hall

GORDON LIGHTFOOT

seats reserved
Florr $5 50-$4 50
Balcony $4.30-$4 00

All

Mam

than

CHONG

BUFFALO
MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM
No seats

rather

compromise their individual goals, would probably
have continued to play rather than leave, with no
possibility of return.

BUFFALO FESTIVAL presents:

also

$4.30

coach Weeb Ewbank had of ever

persuading the two former Jets to get back into

Sports Editor

popular

MTJ

Tick,,, C n a l, now of Buffalo fe,livol Tkk,l Office, Staller-Milton lobby (moil order, accepted with (tamped
eelf-addrexed envelope), U B Norton Hall; Stale College Ticket Office; Fall, Ticket,, Haeberle Ploio, NiFalls. St. Catharines, Ont., Sam the Record Man.
,

agara

THE WESTERN STATES
LSAT STUDY &amp; PREPARATION SEMINAR
(Law School Admission Test)
A seminar designed to equip the serious LSAT candidate with an understanding of the
LSAT and the skills and techniques necessary to realize his maximum score.
A thorough study of:
TEST ANALYSIS; Question types, skills tested, task analysis, etc.
TEST TAKING TECHNIQUES: Role of Guessing, Common
Mistakes, Sequential and Hierarchical Answering, Response
Biases, Question Analysis, Time Scheduling, etc.
TEST TAKING PRACTICE; An LSAT type test administered
under exam conditions, computer grading, instruction review, etc.
Seminar instructors are.R. J. Shavelson, Ph.D. School of Education, Stanford University,
W. J. Meredith, Ph.D. Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley.
PLACES AND TIMES New York: Oct. 14-15, Dec. 9-10, Feb. 3-4. Loa Angeles: Nov. 18-19,
Jan. 20-21. San Francisco: Dec. 2-3, Jan. 27-28.
Organized and administered by I. W. New, J.D. The University of California, Hastings College of Law; M. J. Klelson, J.D. Tha University of Minnesota Law School; and K. E. Hobbs,
L.L.B. The Harvard Law School.
•

•

•

:

University
Bookstore on Campus

TUITION: $85.00. Applicants should send tuition with seminar selected to Tha Registrar, THE WESTERN
STATES LSAT STUDY AND PREPARATION SEMINAR, Suite 600, 465 California St., San Francisco. Ca. 94104.
Admission Certificate and auditorium Information confirmed by mail. Enrollment limited by seats available.

Monday, 20 September 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
.

.

�Consistency name ofthe game
The golfing Bulls’ winning streak, at 23 as of
this writing, will be in serious jeopardy this
afternoon as Buffalo takes on the Canisius Griffins
on the Bulls’ home Audubon Golf Course. (Results
of Monday’s triangular match with St. Bonaventure
and Gannon were not available at (ness time.)
Last year, Canisius was the only team that gave
Buffalo any trouble during the regular season. Now
the Griffins are expected to be as good if not better
than the Bulls. In today’s match, Buffalo will have
the advantage of knowing their course better and of
having Coach Bill Dando select the scoring system
which he feels is best suited for Buffalo’s style of
play. This advantage will be reversed when the
Griffins host Buffalo on Oct. 2.

their opponents, shooting 73 and 80 respectively.
However, Dick Zdawski (third) and Steve Miller
(fifth) were both shut out. Zelawski shot a
respectable 81, but was buried by Dell Rittenhouse’s
75, tops for Geneseo. Miller just blew up on one hole
and came in with an 85.

Tennis is individualistic,
exercising, and popular

little mote pride and sense of
accomplishment when he masters
the sport. He even calls tennis an
educational game, since it makes a
There’s no doubt about it
Easy victory
the sport of tennis is growing in person think for himself, '‘beyond
Friday’s match with St. John Fisher was not leaps and bounds in popularity. the next shot or two, to three or
nearly as close, as the Bulls rolled to 15V4-854 Courts all over Buffalo
indeed, even four shots ahead.”
was
the
medalist
with
a
one-over
all
par
over America are usually filled
victory. Fink
Still another reason for the
72. The Buffalo pacesetter took 2H points as did to capacity, and the demand is new popularity of tennis, Coach
seventh man Mike Hegeman. High scorers were Batt, now for newer, more lavish indoor Sanford feels, is the emphasis
who with the points shot a 79, and Miller, who came courts, to make tennis a truly placed today on being in shape, or
in with 78 and took the maximum four points by year-round sport.
at least not being a mountain of
not only beating his opponent, but also copping the
Why this sudden upsurge in the blubber. Tennis is a very athletic
Close opener
best ball competition in his foursome.
popularity of tennis? Coach game, and because it stops and
Last Tuesday’s season opener with Geneseo was
However, while Miller improved, Scholl did not, William Sanford of Buffalo’s goes in short bursts, can be even
too close for comfort, with the Bulls barely edging rising from an 80 to an 84. This inconsistency in the varsity tennis team feels that more tiring on the body than
Geneseo 10-8. Buffalo’s first man. Chuck Prorok fifth and sixth spots could be a telling point today “tennis is not more popular; it’s some
other, more physical sports.
needed only 34 strokes on the back nine and came in and for the remainder of the season as well. Both just that more people know about
He points out that the tennis Bulls
as the medalist with a 71. Prorok received two points Miller and Scholl will have to gain consistency if the it.” Coach Sanford says that the ran at least two to five miles every
as did fourth man Jim Batt, who shot a 77. Marty Bulls expect to challenge Canisius for local youth of America is exposed more match.
Fink (second) and John Scholl (sixth) also swept supremacy.
and more to tennis through media
sources, as evidenced by the Handicapped can play
Buffalo Evenings News
Finally, a person can play
sponsorship of annual tennis
even if he or she suffers
tennis
schools. With the pro tennis tour
type of handicap, such
from
some
purses and
'

by Jim Gentile

Spectrum Staff Writer

-

-

,

attracting greater
as diabetes. Sanford recalled that
catching bigger and better
two years back, the Bulls had a
headlines, a whole generation of
player named Steve Wechsler, who
Americans has been growing up
had to stop every time ’he got
freaked-out over tennis.
tired in a match and drink orange
h,s s ystem But
u
[ uice to
Emphasis on individual sport
*
a
e&lt;
811
wonP* V
Coach Sanford also thinks that
Whatever the reason, tennis is
the emphasis today is more
towards individual sports rather growing, and one of the best
than team sports. Getting ten or examples, according to Coach
15 people together for a football Sanford, was the Bulls’ match
or hockey game, the coach says, is with Geneseo on Sept. 12. During
a lot harder than just a boy and the course of the match, the
girl getting out onto a court and qpach estimates that over 400
hitting a ball around. Sanford also students stopped by to watch and
thinks that an individual feels a admire.
"&gt;

,

HOURS:
fL/ MONDAY
-r;
&amp;

IKk/’

10:00 to 5:30

THURSDAY ’til 8:00

Slti fully
Membership meeting

TONIGHT
WEDNESDAY

at 6:00p.m.
Fillmore Room
Page ten The Spectrum Wednesday, 20 September 1972
.

.

fuxjiJDsqc;

ar

ie v im

W|y

"Due

�y

js&amp;SUbA
CLASSIFIED AOS may be placed In
355 Norton Hall, Monday thru Friday,
9 a.m.—*:30 p.m. Tha student rate Is
$1.25 for 15 words or less and $.05 for
every additional word.
HELP WANTED ads cannot
discriminate on any basis (l.e.,
"preferably" is discriminatory).

FOUND ADS will be run free of charge
of 2

for a maximum
words.

days

and 15

•

r-.

e

CLASSIFIED

Campus Staff.

We’ll make you feel
needed. See Ron or Jan.

—

—

WANTED

personable.

desirable.

SOFA

GRADUATE of UB Is looking tor
Needs to earn $60

SMALL refrigerator, stereo component
system, winter coat, small size. Please
call Susan 831-3395. Keep trying.

employment.

minimum. Can type, has teaching
certification In English. Call Cindy
Allison 837-9609.

MOTHER’S helper for 2-year-old and
days and soma evenings.
4-vear-old
Must provide own transportation.
—

*l/hr.

633-8321.

to

replace

one In furnished
cheap
call

Helen, 831-4113.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
BAILEY-KENSINGTON:

'

Furnished,

four-bedroom. $250/mo. plus utilities.
New stove and refrigerator. 832-1376.
3-BEDROOM

WAITRESS wanted for part-time

help

So’ haye a Sandwich, 181
days.
Elmwood. Call In person, 11 a.m.—3
p.m.
'VI-.;
f
FULL ROOM and board and salary to
student in exchange for babysitting.
W.Ferry/Delaware. Details
Residence
negotiable. 885-9133 after 6 p.m

flat on Minnesota
Completely furnished, $225
834-2464 after 5 p.m. Available Oct. 1

VOLKSWAGON Van 1965
good
condition, $400 or trade for station
wagon plus cash. 886-8937.

stoves and
REFRIGERATORS,
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. D&amp;G
Appliances, 844
Sycamore. TX4-3183.

LOST:

20% TO 50% OFF
all ma)or brands
fully
of stereo equipment
guaranteed. We care —'we're U.B.
Students. Call Carl, 675-3172.

FOUND: Gold cross pencil In Capan
lot. Call Spectrum Office at 831-4113.

ANTIQUES,
furniture, appliances,
trumpet, clarinet, luggage, household
furnishings from many homes. Sat. &amp;
132 Fleetwood Terrace,
Sun.,
Wllllamsvllle. Before Sat. 634-0455

—

SNOWTIRES 6.00x12. Excellent
condition, $35/pair or $20 each.
882-1765.

1966 OLDSMOBILE 35,000 miles,
beautiful condition, 2 snows, new
brakes, shocks, battery. Call George,
892-2317.

+

FURNISHED 7-8 bedroom apartment,
excellent location, available
Immediately. Suitable for 4-8 students.
82S0 monthly. 896-8180.

1971 VW Super Bug, 2nd car. Like
new. Must sell. Buying camper. Best
otter. 876-8602.
1962 Klova, 6-cyllnder,
transportation, £50. 876-8757.

CHEVY
good

II

—

v

get up off your best
HEY YOU
Intentions and Join The Spectrum's
—

ITree’I

| Tasting j
ITEMS

|

■

BLACKSMITH

I

j

■

SHOP

|

1375 DELAWARE AVE.
886-9281

|

THREE-BEDROOM flat on Engelwood
Ave. Available for Immediate
occupancy. Call Mrs. Schrelber at
875-3612 or 741-3962.

I

a

RIDE NEEDED to NYC weekend of
Sept. 28, 29, 30. Wilt share driving and
expenses. Call Ronnl 837-2771.

—

—

1959 TR-3, wire wheels, stored IV*

GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC
Jeweler Optician
41 KENM0RE AVENUE

§]

I

TERM PAPERS?

|

!
I

■

®

285-7935

I

|

It's the excitement you've
■ been looking for. Our caI noes ore safe, easy to
I handle and unsinkable.
Low rental price includes
I paddles and life jackets,
a Put some fun into your life
I —rent a canoe today!
*

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Ummwm

—

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Home of the well educated dHnkers!

Anacone'sfsn ’t for everyoneIts for you the 20* draft fan.

JLJr UUards
&amp;

—

1967 VOLKS

very good condition,

—

SABRES have Perreault and Martin.
See them; buy my grey blue-line
seasons ticket. Call 649-6582 after 7

Jukebox

3178 Bailey Ave.
Buffalo Tel. 836-8905

I

STEVE L., I lost your phone number
Please call me. Nancy, 873-6290.

ring,
LOST In Baird practice room
translucent purpose, cone-shaped stone
In three-point gold setting. Great
sentimental value. Reward. Call Kathy
832-6948.
—

DEAR SEYMOUR: Don't over let
unknowns make you doubt yourself.
The only person you have to answer to
Is yourself.

ROOMMATES WANTED

U.B. STUDENT
Also reputable
Insurance broker. Can take care of all
ydur Insurance needs. Call 674-3716.
Jim.
—

TRINITY DAY Cara Is now accepting
enrollment for children 2—6. We are
open 5 days a week from 7 a.m.—6
p.m.
Our program deals with
expressing dally living skills through
art, music, drama and body movement,
field trips and recreation. Call
8S3-35B3 or visit 371 Delaware Ave.
GUY

wants to

Spectrum,

meet

Box No. 2.

a girl. Write

MALE ROOMMATE, $80 Includes
utilities, Mlllarsport-Sharldan area.
Own room. Furnished. Call Bill
833-8781, 833-6788.
MALES (3) to share furnished apt. $75
each Includes own room and utilities.
883-6220 or 856-4200, ext. 246 Harry.
ROOMMATE
needed,
Delaware-Kenmore. . Jesse 8. Terry.
873-6174.

FEMALE senior or graduate student
upper house, own room near campus,
$75 � . Call 838-2263.
—

ROOMMATE needed, own room, fully
furnished, $50 per month, plus
utilities. Call 892-2317.
grad
wanted
or
to share beautiful
apartment two blocks from campus
with same. Call Dlnos 831-3233.

ROOMMATE
Instructor

BEAUTIFUL books from small and
large presses. EVERYMAN'S BOOK
STORE. 3102 Main St.
you $, but we can
WE CAN’T
promise
you a better sex life. Just
come up and take a look at our campus
editors.

anytime.'

FEMALE professional wanted to share
cozy apartment In U.B. area with same.
834-9869.

p.m.

REFRIGERATOR
one-year-old
half-size
excellent for
formica top
dorm use, $75. 875-8836

CRAFTS sold fbr'you at "The Whole
Earth General Store and Crafts,” 1458
Hortel Ave. Open 11 a.m.—9 p.m. t six

COLLIE puppies
AKC
sable/wht.
Great dogs, furry, intelligent, playful,
peaceloving, $50. Call Laurie. Howie,
837-6092.

PART-TIME Job wanted for age 17
male. Must pay debts by Xmas. Call
JB. 886-6473.

—

16 camera with
exposure control and
zoom lens. One-year-old
with case, filters, special

CANNON

—

close-up lens, rechargeable battery and
$700.
carrying case,
Call
metal

835-3698 after 5.

1968 COUGAR P.S., 3-speed, $1350.
sharp, 198 Minnesota Ave. Mike

Real

MOTOROLA.

T.V

—WHAT TO DO

21" console.

WITH A

DREARY DORM?
THERE'S NO NEED Of FEEIINO SAD
YOU CAN TURN IT INTO A

LIVELY RADII
•
•

Beaded Curtains
Tnmal—Celarfal

C

Jd

SRREAOS a DRAPERIES
1 (
A Great Select ten ml
i
Reciting—Maltl-ShapaS
PAPER LANTERNS
EXPENSIVI 1TT
NOT AT All
NOT AT #TT
•

you want

to door canvassers needed
Improvements. Call 836-6345

door
Home
-

Yomr

YOUR WORRIES are over
call The
Guidance Center for your
lowest available rate on auto and cycle
Insurance.
837-2278. After 5 p.m.
839-0566.
—

ARTS—

•

TYPING: Prof esslonaly
don*
business or personal. Term papers,
$.40/pg. 877-5234 after 5 p.m.; M—F,
Anytime S4S. Sherldan-Elmwood.

APARTMENTS WANTED
professor desires to rent
near campus. Call
Constantin* 831-3233.

“Bible
Truth~~i
SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES

NEED MONEY to pay tuition, buy
books, augment your social life? Sell
advertising
for The Spectrum. 15%
commission on sales. No experience
necessary, but car useful. See Jeff
Reiman In Room 355 Norton or call
831-3610.
DEAR B.C.

—

I’m

sorry your

“Faith cometh by hearing
hearing by the word of God.”

ITEMS

1

1

SPEEDED READ1N
AND STUDY

f
A

stickers
$1.00 Each—10 for $5.00

Div. of Undergraduate
Studies again offers Mrs.
Nichols non-credit course.

Bumper

Bumper Stickers
Box

BuhAairtcarl
Cari

4411

Silver Spring Md.
20904

Transit &lt;0.8. IS)
2-33S5 rnmmmm*

.

Weekly sessions. Nominal
fee $25.00 payable at
registration in 106
Dicfendorf before SEPT.
25.

I

Write:

and

“Blessed is he that readelh. Rom. 10
-Rev. 1:3
“Blessed are they that hear the word
of God and keep it.”
-Luke 11:28

tush Isn’t

(COLLECTORS
(McGovern-Eagleton

—

2 Miles East
HMHMM NL

REFRIGERATOR
$19.95,
$19.95
up.
1282

dressers,

SINGLE

DAILY IS to •
San. 1 to S
ISIS 8en«r* HI. (Ht. IS) Elma. N T.
•(

USED

Clinton St. 823-1800.

apartment

COOKBOOKS, crafts, ecology and the
VW book are here, toe. EVERYMAN'S
BOOK STORE, 3102 Main St.

.

Mutrr
A fajitn

SPANISH translations, tutoring. Call
Bob 883-6133 eves.

—

Insurance

TSUJIMOTO
OIFTH—FOODS

ORIENTAL

Dm

.

-

bed s,

EARN AS much as

•

.

PROFESSIONAL Typing 'Service
theses, dissertations, manuscripts,
Greek. Pickup arranged. 937-6050.

days a week.

Scoplc

automatic

built-in
comes

MISCELLANEOUS

—

FOR SALE or trade. Colonial couch.
Good condition.
Too big for
Allenhurst. Contact
Al or Frank at
486-B Allenhurst.

—

—

OWN
BEDROOM, completely
furnished, 4 blocks from campus on
Minnesota, male. $75. Call 837-2785

promise

AFS Returnees Meeting, Room 234
Norton, Thurs., Sept. 21, 7:30 or call
Kathryn 837-4876. All welcome.

—

1

ANACQNE’S
INN
B-'

recorder with tapes
RCA
turntable

amplifier with AM-FM radio,
and speakers. Call 838-3279.

—

wmmmwmZ

■

SONY tape

—

I

I ALGONQUIN CANOE j

I

I

Niagara Falls, New York
9 am to 9 pm 7 days a week

0flPL I

stops

female dog on
campus near Olafandorf. Call Andre,
837-8184.

CHANCE for College D’s
LAST
INTRODUCTION TO LAW, Thursday.
p.m.,
MacDonald Hall basement,
7
variable credit.

—

me from writing a
NVS law
I? your term papers this year. You ®
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I
"

FOUND; SmalU black

PERSONAL

1965 LEMANS, good condition,
automatic. Must sell, $295 or best
offer, by Friday. 773-4240.

1964 VW Van
new engine, good
brakes, clutch, tires, etc. Best offer.
Call 883-6404.

|

—

52 WEEKS later and they finish wire
to wire. Well awrlght.

—

I

after 6 p.m.

—

GARAGE SALE^
furniture, queen
bed, winter clothes, toys, high chair
and much more. 246 Roycroft Blvd,

—

WHO ELSE NEEDS

One pair of gold wlra-rim
glasses In woman's lav on 9/15 at 4236
Ridge Lea. Reward. Call 839-3014

—

—

(at University Plaza)

833-7760. Reasonable.

—

836-7937.

very
FURNITURE
Oven, tables
but cheap.
882-5566 or
used,
885-6910 evenings.

REWARD for return of Motorola
walkie-talkie radio lost Tower Hall.
Sept. 13. Contact University Housing,
831-3322. No questions asked.
$25

—

new clutch, valve job, etc., $800. Call

FOR SALE

BUFFALO, N Y. 14226

y

—

RIDE BOARD
HANDICAPPED lady woqld like ride
to and from work, Monday thru
Friday, 7:30—4:30. Call 854-3494,
ext. 60.

|

t

—

Snyder.

m

i

TAPE RECORDER Sony TC-540, four
speakers
(two
Internal and two
external)
amplifier Included
sound
tapes,
on sound
two years old
$150. Call Fran 634-1755.

1

200

RENT: House, four bedrooms,
two bathrooms, excellent condition,
private "gay living." 856-5140, 9—5.
After 6 p.m., 632-6675.

FOR

FOUND

SINGLE mattress and bed frame. Call

———

—

&amp;

SONY TC-125 cassette tape deck,
Excellent condition, $80 firm. Call
Jack 831-2397

TWO GIRL’S winter Jackets tor sale.
size 9 or 10. Excellent condition. Call
683-0211.

—

—

house—good condition

,

'

Experience

876-8576.

typist-clerical positions are
TWO
available In the Student Legal Clinic
for any students who have qualified for
the work study program through the
Financial Aid office. Call 831-5275.

LOST

Medlum-sIM whlta and tan
fluffy dog. No
tags. Answers fo
"Sasha.” Reward. 882-1726.

LOST;

B&amp;W, Indoor antennae. Good picture.
$35. Call 833-7000, ext. 852 (days);(
837-9515 (evenings).

—

advertising
SALESMEN or women
part-time, must be neat appearing and

fat MI7tmin «y

—

years. Mechanically perfect. Must sell
cheap. 835-3035 after 5 p.m.

ATTENTION part-time Jobs available
for serious-minded Individuals of all
ages. Good money, flexible working
hours. If Interested, contact lhab at
831-3285 after 2 p.m

flylift.

up ti&gt;

pillow and your mobility. Clementine.

T

A

I

f

THE STUDENT ASSOCIATION SPEAKERS BUREAU
presents

MARTY FEINRIDER
who will report on recent situation in Vietnam and
his experience in Paris with the Vietnamese

Delegation.

?

TODAY

2:30
CONFERENCE

‘THEATR E*

Monday, 20 September 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven
.

.

,

�■

if,-.

:-.a

‘

T) q

What’s Happening?
Exhibit: Sam Francis: Paintings, 1947-1972, Albright Knox
Gallery

Exhibit: Susan Knopka, Mon.-Fri., 11-5 p.m., Gallery,
Room 219 Norton Hall, thru Sept. 22.

Sports Information
Today: Varsity golf, Canisius at the Amherst Audobon
golf course, 2 p.m.
Friday: Varsity soccer scrimmage, Hilbert College, 4
p.m. at Rotary Field; Varsity golf at the Utica College fall

Wednesday, September 20

Film: Oklahoma Kid and Key Largo, 7 and 9 p.m. Capen
140
Concert: Faculty Recital, Stephen Manes, piano, works by
Bartok, Weber, Carter and Liszt, 8:30 p.m., Baird
Recital Hall

invitational.
Saturday; Varsity cross country at the University of
Rochester with Niagara, Syracuse, Buffalo and Rochester,
11 a.m.; Varsity baseball doubleheader at Brockport State,
1 p.m.; Varsity golf at Utica College fall invitational.
Undergraduates interested in trying out for the men’s
bowling team should report to Norton Hall bowling alleys at
10 a.m. on Saturday. After SaturdayVsIx game qualifier, a
second such tryout will take place Saturday, September 30
at 10 a.m. in Norton Union.
Roller' hockey action continues Sunday morning at
10:30 a.m. in the parking lot adjacent to Rotary Field.

Thursday, September 21

Film: The Ghost That Never Returns, 7 and 9 p.m.
Diefendorf 147
Broadcast: Rebroadcast of ").R. Weitz, a Portrait in
Energy,” an hour-long collection of studio and live cuts
from the Beef &amp; Ale, 12 noon on WBFO (88.7 mgh).

-

ftWSSSSSS3&amp;9SSSSSI9S&amp;&amp;1&amp;&amp;&amp;**’

�

ii=

:!

M

innk

hhhmhh

Announcements

before Sept.

The Chess

Club will hold a meeting today from
2:30-6:30 p.m. in Rooms 246 and 248 Norton Hall. Future
meetings will be on Wednesdays following the 20th. All are
welcome.

The Congress of Religious Organizations will hold a
meeting today at 7;30 p.m. in Room 345 Norton Hall.

IEEE will meet tomorrow at 12 p.m. in Room
Parker. All EE's welcome.

139

Newman Club Bowling League play begins this.week
tomorrow night at 8:30 p.m. in Norton Bowling Alley. If
you wish to join, be present and prepared to bowl. Cost
-

$

German Club will have a
p.m. in Crosby 244.

toffee

hour tomorrow at 5

Norton Hall.

RCC 320 will hold a class meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m
at Trailer 6. All interested students please attend.

—

The Occupational Therapy Club will meet today at 12
p.m. in Room 334 Norton Hall, 'there will be a discussion
of affiliation centers and a guest lecturer.
Sunshine House will have a general meeting today at 8
106 Winspear Ave. All members must attend.

p.m. at

WBFO will hold an orientation meeting for new people
interested in working at the station at 7 p.m. in Room 327
Norton Hall.

The UB Outing Club will have a general meeting today
at 7:30 p.m. in Room 234 Norton Hall. All those interested
in trailblazing this weekend should come.
The Dance Club will meet today from 7-8:30 p.m. in
the dance studio in Clark Gym. Short technique workshop
will follow.
Applications for grants for graduate study abroad and
assistantship for overseas teaching during the 1973-74
academic year will be considered this fall by the Institute of
-international Education. U.S. citizens who have received a
BA or equivalent from an American or Canadian university

All Club presidents must see Diane Zwolinski in Room
205 or call 831 -5507 on or before September 22.

Students for a Democratic Society will have a meeting
today at 4 p.m. in Room 332 Norton. Everyone interested
is welcome.

International College 396
Legal History of the North
American Indian will meet Monday and Wednesday at 11
a.m. in Parker 148.

Anyone having access to a smashed up car and willing
to let it be used for a good cause-survey of service stations
call Joe Bilger at 893-1092 or leave a message with
WNYPIRG, Box 70 or in Room 361 Norton Hall.

UB Ippon judp Club has started the Fall beginner's
class in judo. All those interested should report to the
wrestling room in C|ark Gym on Monday and Thursday at
6:30 p.m.

1.50 per week.

Walls Memorial Headstart, one of CAC’s Day Care
Centers, desperately needs volunteers. Anyone willing to
spend a few hours a week with 3 and 4 year olds, leave a
message in the Walls mailbox or the CAC office, Room 220

Services for the Mentally Retarded which works with
mentally retarded adults is in need of volunteers. SMREC is
located at 2960 Main Street near Hertel. Contact Patricia
Sapienza, 693-2074 or leave ypur name at fhe CAC office,
Room 220 Norton Hall.

mm

1971, and who are proficient in an appropriate
foreign language, are eligible to apply. Information available
in 107 Townsend Hall. Applications must be submitted no
later than Oct. 1.

—

People interested in manning desks for SA referendum,
Sept. 26 &amp; 27, see Vivian, Norton 205. Will pay $1 per

UB Riding Club will meet today at 4 p.m. in Room
234 Norton. Dues will be collected and a riding schedule
will be discussed.
Hillel will have a coffee house tomorrow evening from
8 to 11 p.m. in the Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd. Students
should bring their musical instruments or poems and come
down.

hour.

Student NYSTA will hold an open house discussion
tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. in Norton 337. All students
interested in teaching are welcome. Donuts and coffee will
be served.

The Allentowp Community Center, a tutorial and
recreational project of CAC is in desperate need of
volunteers. Anyone interested, please attend a general
meeting, tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room 266 Norton Hall or
contact the CAC office.
SUNYAB Sailing Club will hold an organizational
meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in 344 Norton. No knowledge
of sailing is needed and anyone interested in sailing is
invited to attend

Schussmeisters Ski Club will hold its annual
membership meeting tonight in the Fillmore Room, 6-12
p.m. Will be showing ski movies, giving out ski information,
refreshments, meet the officers and ski club staff.
Psychomat is a listening and speaking experience in an
open-ended, free-flowing, and inviting setting. Open, and

honest communication is its goal
and that depends
you
on your willingness to be and share with others.
Psychomat meets regularly
part of a group this
Wednesdays from, 7 to 10 p.m. in Room 232 Norton and
Thursdays from 3 to 6 p.m. in Cafeteria 118.
—

-

semester.

on
Be
on
on

French Club will have a meeting today at 2:30 p.m. in
Room 330 Norton.

Students who were closed out of the Introduction to
course may now re-register either under USB 273
or under CB 273. In the meantime they should come to the
next meeting of the class on Thursday at 2 p.m. in 404
Hayes Hall. The course has been re-opened for an additional
twenty students.

Judaism

CAC is presently trying to create a summer day camp
for underprivileged Buffalo youths. We seriously need
education and social welfare majors and graduate students,
social workers and teachers to make this program work.
Anyone interested please call Steven Moss at 837-1617.
Today and tomorrow, September 20 and 21, in Room
264 Norton there will be tryouts for an Artaud Workshop.
Tryout times will be from 7 to 11 p.m. on September 20
and 6 to 9 p.m. on September 21. The workshop will be
under the supervision of Joseph Fernbacher and all are
welcome, especially those with a working knowledge of
French. The workshop will last the entire semester,
culminating in some sort of public performance. There will
also be tryouts next Wednesday and Thursday. Checkk The
Spectrum for times and places.
v
Anyone interested in taking part in the Sensitivity

Weekend, September 29—October 1, please contact Carol
Porter, project coordinator, at 831-1822 immediately.

MFCSA^wlll, hold its executive committee meeting
tonight at 10 p.m. in Room 20S Norton Hall. All interested
MFC students are welcome to attend.

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                    <text>The Spectrum

Student Assemblyplans
academic representation
“Striving for an ideal of this magnitude will make us
stronger in dealing with the administration,” said Student
Association public information director Shelley Taylor in a
statement concerning the proposed new Assembly
reorganization plans. The plans have been incorporated in a
proposed constitutional amendment prepared by SA
Executive Vice-President Tyrone Saunders.
Commenting on last year’s
procedure of selecting members to
the Student Assembly Ms. Taylor
said that “The Executive
Committee made it very difficult
for people to get into thf
Assembly.” By insisting on forty
signatures and a complicated
election procedure, she
maintained the Assembly became
dominated by clubs and other
interest groups.
Assailing “interest group
democracy,” Ms. Taylor
commented that the former
Assembly and SA carried very
little weight with the University
Administration. She explained
that the proposed reforms would
attempt to insure that every
student is represented.
Finding fault with the role of
student government, Academic
Affairs Coordinator Janine Janas
said that it is usually viewed solely
as “an instrument for dispersing
funds.” She continued that
student government has been
negligent in attending to the
affairs students are most
concerned about. She referred
specifically to academic
grievances, tenure decisions,
curriculum changes and hiring
practices. She feels that the
“interest-group system” ignores
the one cohesive factor keeping
students together; namely
academics. The alternative to this,
she said, is the proposed
“academic grouping system.”
She explained: ‘The academic
grouping system is far more
specialized than the interest-group
system. The members of the
grouping arc more easily
recognized; student government
could personalize its contact with
student representatives.” She
added that the change over to an
Academic Assembly “could do
more to change the students’ role
in the University than any other
type of student government.”
How’s that again?
The revision focuses on the
proposal that students be
represented by academic
departments. All departments
with 40 or more students would
be apportioned representatives
according to their sire as follows:
first 40 members, one
representative; next 110 members,
a second representative; one
additional rep for the next 120,
130, 140, and 150 department

members

respectively.

representatives each. Ms. Taylor
said that ideally, any student
interested in serving in the
Student Assembly will go to the
department, get 20 signatures of
regularly enrolled daytime
undergraduates and be put on the
ballot.
The only problem, she said, is
that SA has no way of checking to
see that the students who sign *11
belong to the candidate’s
department “We just have to go
on trust.”
Numbers game
Once the students are
candidates, members of the
department can get a ballot and
“distribute the total number of
votes allotted to him in any way
he deems fit.” For example, a
member of the English
department, which is apportioned
seven delegates, can case all seven
votes for one representative, one
vote each for seven delegates, four
votes for one and one each for
three others, or any other
combination involving whole
numbers.
National

Student

Vot. 23, No. 14

Slat* Uni varsity of New York at Buffalo

Assured I

New grievance procedures
by Mike Feety
Spectrum

Staff Writer

The Student Association (SA) will act
Wednesday on a proposal to establish formal
procedures for handling academic grievances
between undergraduate students and faculty.'This
proposal would provide a unified process by which
all departments would deal with undergraduate
student complaints.
“Every department would have the same
procedures,” explained SA Academic Affairs
Co-ordinator, Janine Janas, who aided in drawing up
the Grievance Procedures for Undergraduates. This is
necessary, she explained, because many departments

Affairs

Co-ordinator, Ed Wolf-explained

SA is now collecting signatures
hold a referendum on
September 26 and 27. The
constitution says that they must
get 10% of the undergraduate
population to agree to a
referendum before it can be held.
This, in Ms. Taylor’s words,
“safeguards us from holding
frivolous referendums.” She
pointed out that signing the
petition meant only that a
referendum was desired, not that
the measure would be placed
under consideration.
to

Spectrum that though few cases have been tried by
the new process, “it’s been functioning.”
While it was initially felt that the procedures
were a “long way” from being flawless, he pointed
out, “it looks like well come a long way in a short
time.” The graduates’ plan seemed so workable, in
fact, that the undergraduate proposal is almost
identical to it and the Millard Fillmore College’s SA
is said to be working on similar procedures.
According to the undergraduate plan, three
separate levels exist in the grievance resolution
process: primary, faculty and undergraduate studies.
The primary level attempts to resolve the problem
within the department and more fundamentally
between the two disputants. The faculty and
undergraduate levels, however judge the problem to
be totally external to the department involved.

Appeal
A student may appeal a decision made on the
primary level to the chairman of the appropriate
Faculty Divisional Committee, if one exists or to the
undergraduate dean. If the chairman finds grounds
for the appeal, he will convene a grievance
committee to review the case.
The committee will be composed of two faculty
members and two students chosen by the Divisional
Chairmen rrom a panel consisting of faculty and
student representative from each department. The
committee will issue its finding; and reasons for
recommendations to the parties concerned within
ten days of its last meeting.
v
The student may appeal this decision even
further by filing his appeal with the, dean of
undergraduate studies who will, if he sees fit,
convene a grievance committee.
It is set up and operates in much the same
manner as the Faculty Divisional Committee, except
that its members are chosen from all the separate
Divisional Panels. On neither the faculty or
undergraduate studies level do members of the
department involved take part in the decision.
If a student does not wish to represent himself
before the committeefs), he may have an advisor. Dr.
Stein has volunteered his services as have both Ed
Kelly and Bob Portnoy, two third year law students,
because a student representing himself may face, said
Mr. Kelly, “a .substantial amount of intimidation.”’
Ms. Janas can see “no reason why” the proposal
should not be passed by the SA. If passed, she
continued, she will seek a mandate from the SA
Executive Committee to carry the proposal further
for approval by the administration, upon which the
procedures will become enacted.
While Ms. Janas has some doubt about the plan
being passed by the administration, she feels “we do
have a precedent set. Most pf the faculty will be
amenable to this because it will take a great burden
off their shoulders.”
Dr. Stein also noted that by getting grievances,
the procedure “can help the department and the
University” improve themselves. Moreover, he
concluded, students finally have the Student Affairs
office as the “one office to contact” for help in
resolving academic problems, “to protect the
students’ rights.”
-

the reason for this “weighted
ballot.” He said that the idea
behind it was to insure minority
representation. It would prevent
“a 51% majority from running
roughshod over a 49% minority.”
Minority viewpoints within
departments will be represented if
members of those minorities cast
their seven votes all behind the
candidate representing their
interests.”
For departments of less than
40 people, and students who are
not members of a department, 15
representatives-at-large will be up
for election under the same
procedures. In this case, a student
will have 15 votes to divide any
way he or she desires.

Monday, 18 September 1972

Ron Stein
have no grievance process at all and those that do act
solely within departmental ruling tending to favor
their own faculty members.
The new procedures, she noted. insure
impartiality by giving the students a voice in the
decision and an eventual means, if desired, to carry
the complaint outside the department.
Model
The procedures are modeled after those of the
Graduate School which were drawn up and enacted
last spring. The Graduate Student Association drew
up the procedures in conjunction with the Graduate
School Faculty and Ronald Stein, associate director
of the Office of Student Affairs. Dr. Stein told The

,

Accordingly, one representative
Petitions will be made available
will be granted for every in Room 205 Norton Hall today
additional 150 members in the and SA officers will have to rely
event the department grows on their own resources to get
larger.
signatures. Additionally, anyone
Currently, English and interested in volunteering to help
Psychology are the largest with the elections should visit the
departments and have seven SA offices.

Registration on campus
An on campus voter registration drive will get underway in Norton Hall
the
Ridge Lea Cafeteria today, Wednesday and Friday from 11—2, and
and
in Diefendorf Hall Wednesday and Thursday from 6-9 p.m. Because of
Board of Election deadlines, anyone not registered should do so
immediately.

�

I

&amp;

�New food machines
sell kosher product s

nn

University shows progress

It will be re-evaluated at the end
of that period to see if it was
profitable for both Rabbi Gurary
and PSA.

As a result of the efforts of
Rabbi Noson Gurmry of Chabad
House, interested students can
obtain Glatt Kosher food from
vending machines in the basement
of Norton Hall, next to the
Rathskeller and in Goodyear Hall.
The Kosher offerings, brought
from New York City, cost $.35
each and include hamburgers, hot
dogs and salami sandwiches. In
addition, a microwave oven has
been installed for the customer’s
convenience.
After learning that many
campuses throughout the country
have Kosher vending machines
and kitchens, Rabbi Gurary felt
that the Jewish students at the
State University at Buffalo would
buy Kosher food if it was
available to them at a reasonable
price. Through an arrangement
with food service, the vending
machines were obtained and a
group of volunteers constantly
replenishes the supplies.
The arrangement with the
Faculty-Student Association’s
(FSA) vending division was made
for a trial period of three months.

DmiSmi

Sales good

Although the exact figures are

not available, the Kosher food has

been selling fairly well in Norton
during the week, and especially
well on weekends in both Norton
and Goodyear Halls. Stewart
Sandwiches, which also has an
arrangement with the vending
division, appears unconcerned at
this time about the possible
competition with Chabad House.
Sam Davison, manager of the
vending division, is 'cooperating
with Rabbi Gurary for this trial

movement.” In the past five yean. Dr. Ketter
noted," minority enrollment went from 2% to 9.1%.
The decade,, in Dr. Ketter’s words, was “a
decade, too; both the best and wont of
Dickensian
University.
expectations, grdwth, and new status
The'review, entitled “A Decade of Progress,” times. The
an
atmosphere of euphoria, and problems
genemted
deals basically with what Dr. Ketter termed the
or
unseen.
were
ignored
of
institution,
an
“evolution
from
University’s
institutions,”
he continued, “became
“Large
modest resources to the preeminent University
larger, and in the process became bureaucratized and
higher
of
largest
system
nation’s
state
center in the
technologized to a point where many students felt
education.”
themselves threatened by anonymity.”
introductory,
the
of
the
exception
With
Dr. Ketter praised students who called what he
overview, which attempts to piece together the basic
termed
“dramatic attention to these shortcomings in
University
between
occurred
within
the
changes that
education”
but condemned, in his words, “a
higher
1962 and 1972, the review is basically a document
small radical minority” that used the issues of the
Vietnam War, racism, and repression, coupled with
the use of violent tactics as a means of politicizing
the nation’s institution’s of higher education.”

State University of Buffalo President Robert L.
Ketter turned historian last week as he released his
Ten-Year Review and 1971-72 Annual Report to the
•

period.
According

to Rabbi Gurary,
the success of Kosher food on
campus may allow more Kosher
delights to be made available:
corn beef, turkey and pastrami
sandwiches (Kosher deli style),
and pastries. Plans are also being
made for a Kosher kitchen in the
near future, which could then be
used for the Passover Seder.

Dormitory council

Judiciary set for term
The five justices of the Inter
Residence Judiciary (IRJ) met
with personnel from several facets
of the University community last
Thursday evening to discuss
obligations of IRJ members.
Representatives from Housing,
Campus Security, the Legal Aid
Society, the Hearing Commission
on Campus Disorders and' the
Student Judiciary were present.
The five justices, Charles
Epstein, Carl Gclmeyer, Jim
Joyce, Ed Caven and Jayne
Hendricks were chosen by the
Inter Residence Council Executive
Committee at the beginning of
this semester. The meeting was
the second in a series of three
intended to answer any questions
the justices might have concerning
their forensic responsibilities.
The IRC Constitution states
that the duty of the justices is
“the enforcement and explication
of the standards set forth by the
governing groups of the residence
halls in a manner which reinforces
the objectives and potentials of
residence hall living.

dormitory life. This includes any
infractions of the renewed
cooking policy which is promised
to be enforced this year. The
court is patterned after a civil
court and students have the
option of a defense counsel
provided to the student court by
the Legal Aid Society.
The relationship between

Dorm life jurisdiction
Unlike the Student Judiciary
which hears cases dealing with
students in the University
community, the 1RJ has
jurisdiction over all facets of

years,

I

I
I

I
I
I

j

!

L.

SPECIAL
NOTICE

|
|

Enrollment Deadline
Student Medical

j

Housing, Campus Security and the

IRJ was

was

enforcement of laws applicable on
campus. Mr. Glennon admonished
that in order for IRJ to be
effective, its members will have to
maintain the responsibilities they
have accepted with their position.
This year the Inter Residence
Judiciary will strive to make the
Judiciary a more viable force in
the residence halls, vowed Charles
Epstein. Unlike the past few
penalties for any
violations of housing rules will be
posed, in the hopes that the IRJ
will gain the respect of the
student community which it so
severe

desperately

facts and figures showing the statistical growth of
the University in various fields.

oi

University transformed

In the overview, Dr. Ketter remarked that the

evolution, “in only ten years, has
transformed the University. Yet the transformation
seems primarily to have been one of scope rather
than purpose. Teaching, research, and service have
remained the basic concerns of this institution, and
it has been within the limits of these purposes that
the University has made such startling progress.”
He noted that total student enrollment “has
increased by 75%; and at the graduate and
professional levels, the number of students has risen
by 141%.” According to Dr. Ketter, research
expenditures have almost tripled since the
University’s first year of involvement with the State
University’s

University system.

He described the decade as one in which “higher
education had "never enjoyed a greater prestige
among so many; and never before had so many had
the opportunity to participate in the adventure of
learning.”

Minority representation increased
He saw the University as making a “major
effort” in responding to the demands of
educationally and economically deprived people,
mainly blacks, who were stirred “by a forceful civil

needs.

The Spectrum it published three
timet e week, every Monday.

Wednesday end Friday; during the
regular academic year by Sub-Board
1, Inc. Offices are located at 365
Norton Hall, State University Of New
York at Buffalo. 3435 Main St..

Buffalo.

New

York,

14214.

Telephone: Area Code 716; Editorial

831-4113; Business. 831-3610.

OCT. 1-72

Represented

for. advertising by
National Educational Advertising
Service, Inc., 360 Lexington Ave.,
New York, N.Y. 10017.

|

Final Date
Enrollment Accepted

Subscription rates are $4.60 per
semester or $8.00 for two semesters.

Call
Niagara National I no.

Second dess Postage paidat Buffalo,
Ne v York.

853-0931
•

and it

support, the decisions made by
the IRJ. Patrick Glennon, chief of
Security, pointed out that
security has no direct relationship
to the functioning of IRJ since its
main responsibility
is the

Insurance

——

discussed

emphasized that the two groups
are committed to, and will

•

emulation: 16,000

I

SOME OF MY BEST FRIENDS ARE BORIS BUT
1 WOULDN'T WANT MY SISTER MARRYING ONE.

Page two

.

The Spectrum

.

48 $f*$**ber

rights

1972

Avoided disruption
The University “avoided serious disruption until
the years 1968 and 1970,” Dr. Ketter noted, “for ti
had imaginatively addressed many of the educational
issues raised by students.” However, the University
“was unable to avoid attempts to politicize it during
the late sixties and into the spring semester of 1970
“These attempts and disruptions were resisted,
yet they created immense internal and external
problems for the University,” he said
Topping the list, in Dr. Keller's estimation, was
University-community relations. A Presidential Task
Force was created to deal with that problem. Four
other task forces were also instituted and dealt with
the problems of Governance, Organization, Goals
and Sense of a University Community.
In Dr. Ketter’s estimation, “order has indeed
returned” to the University, “and there is no doubt
collegiality and authority are functioning concepts
within the University.”
He said, however, that although order and
authority have been restored, much still has to be
done. According to his review, the University is
currently facing a paradox: “In a time of financial
stringency, where an oppressive climate of
retrenchment is all too likely to pervade the campus,
can make the next
if it chooses
this University
decade a period of the most profound educational
change and improvement which has occurred in the
-

—

entire history of this institution.”

Efficiency sought
He saw the building and occupancy of the new
Amherst campus as one method of bringing about
this change. “Simultaneously,” Dr. Ketter said, “we
can imaginatively devise new and more effective
methods of utilizing our already substantial
education resources both physical and human; and
we can use this same quality of imagination to
explore additional sources of non-state support^
“Moreover,” he continued, “the University can
display the discipline necessary to establish and
adhere to
educational priorities. And most
important, the University qgn demonstrate the will
to choose progress, which denotes changes and
improvement, rather than its alternative, which is
—

stagnation.”

This crisis of choice is the real crisis which faces

higher education. At the University at Buffalo,” Dr
Ketter declared, “the choice has already been made:
we have chosen progress.”

�4

Departmental error
creates controversy

Reaching out to help another
by Clem Coined
Contributing Editor

Controversies involving courses are, for the most part,
commonplace in a university of this size. One of the more
recent complaints has been filed by a student from the
Department of Occupational Therapy (OT), who claims she
was arbitrarily dismissed from a course for which she was
already registered.

She explained that the instructor of Occupational
Therapy 311, Ruth Smiley, told the class that it was too
large and that because of space limitations, some members
would have to leave. This Ms. Smiley replied that, the
particular student, who student should have voiced her
wishes to remain anonymous, complaints directly to the
department rather than to other
and seven others were sources, such as The Spectrum.
informed at the next class
Occupational Therapy, a
session that they were the five-year program inundated with
ones who could not remain. financial and space restriction
Confronted by a decision that
left little choice, Ms. Smiley said
she had to drop the eight women
from the course because the

problems, has 215 students and
eight instructors. Aware of the

situation these severe limitations
Ms. Smiley said, there
department had
erroneously exists an OT Curriculum
Committee to hear gripes and help
overextended the quota
The students' records were students find solutions for them.
scrutinized very carefully, Ms. She continued that students are
Smiley maintained, and the only represented at these committee
ones asked to. leave were those meetings, which are always open
who can take the course in the to suggestions.
spring. She explained that the
department made every effort to ‘High-pitched anger'
select only those students for
With this mechanism available,
whom the course was not critical another OT student, Rebecca
this semester.
Robbins said she would like to
organize a meeting centering on
Roundabout
these immediate problems. What
The course in question permits there is now, she maintained, is
“high-pitched anger’’ directed
a student, upon its completion, to
affiliate (work for three months in towards members of the
a hospital) and is an extremely department. What should exist,
important facet of the OT however, is communication
curriculum. The student feedback and a directed effort at
mentioned above said she had improving the tight schedules,
organized her schedule around conflicting time periods and
this course and will now have to course loads that plague OT
students.
alter her plans.
Ms. Smiley, discussing the
Since most of the grievances
matter further, said that the are related to OT’s tight budget
student never approached her nor restrictions, Ms. Robbins is calling
did she address any members of upon all OT students to assemble
the department. The student said today and vent their complaints
she had feared any type of to her so she can present them
confrontation and therefore before the Curriculum Committee
preferred to remain silent. To this. on Wednesday.
create,

It started out as the annual Psychomat story.
The Spectrum does one every year, a throw-away
feature filler tossed in somewhere near the beginning
of the fall semester. There’s usually a very nice
picture of some people sitting in a circle and some
very nice words about increasing one’s awareness of
other human beings. It was that time again, so the
photographer was assigned, the reporter sent.
A news reporter is the perennial outsider, the
eternal intruder. The Psychomat session was in full
swing and there was no way to make the reporter’s
entrance unobtrusive. Seeing him sitting outside the
circle of tall cafeteria chairs with a notebook at his
knee, a member of the group asked what he was

doing.

In from the cold

Try to explain to people who are airing opt all
sorts of intimate, personal problems with relative
strangers that you’re going to sit there with a
notebook, look on, and take down anything that
sounds interesting. So they invite the outsider in.
After apologies for disrupting the proceedings, the

group continues.
It’s an odd spectacle, a handful of souls in a
fortress of chairs, sitting in the air-conditioned cold
of Norton Hall Cafeteria trying to make the ideas of
human awareness, caring, and reaching out to others
into more than jargon. They’re here to fight their
own loneliness or frustration and to help others with
the same problems.
They’re the same faceless people you see
constantly in Norton Hall, or the library, or sitting
next to you in a bar or a class. But propriety breaks
down here and you tell each other things that you
dare not tell your closest friends and lovers. It’s hard
to describe. It’s essentially a non-verbal process; to
an outsider it’s often dull, at worst silly. But this
isn’t a salon from the French Enlightenment and
sincerity comes before syntax, warmth before wit.
Body language
Then, too, words are not the only means of
communication. Devotees of body language would
love it here. Watch how the legs cross and the arms

fold. The reporter, who should have known better
(he’d been to these before), foolishly wore sandals
and wondered if anyone noticed his old habit of
crossing his toes. It’s not from nervousness, but he
knows that no one will believe it.
One has to fight the reporter’s instinct to ask
these people who they are and what their problems
are. Though you’re anxious to get some background

to make a better story you know how gauche that
would be. You must approach it as a participant and
deal with the emotions as they are presented. You

can’t

theorize or look

behind,

you take the

immediately perceived and work from there.
The writer’s instinct is satisfied, though. You
contemplate catastrophe with mixed emotions.
You’re sorry it happened, but it makes a better
story. We have a really bad case on our hands, folks.

Now we have some drama, a focus; conflict,
right out of high school
resolution, and climax
—

English.

“You’re destroying me.”
She came in late, and got involved slowly. A tall,
dark, good-looking girl. But the attraction was not so
much conventional beauty as a certain way that she
moved, looked, and spoke. It showed through as
strength and vitality even though she was physically
and, we would learn later, emotionally exhausted.
Married, divorced, alienated from her family,
run through disastrous affairs, all at the age of 28.
She had difficulty staying in the present. The last
affair had done it. She had never cared so much for
anyone, never felt so intensely about anyone.
It was an emotional investment she couldn’t
bear to lose. Her fear of rejection had been so strong
that his suggestion to slow down, not to push things,
had been more than she could bear. She pushed, she
attacked, she hung on with a fury that she never
believed could be aroused in her. Frightened,
threatened, he told her, “You’re destroying me.”
But he destroyed her instead.

A little help
Long after most of the others had gone, she sat
there. Those who stayed with her drew out as many
of the details as they could. Long past the scheduled
closing time she told her story. She spent hours
telling a slight acquaintance and a total stranger
things most people would blusli to write in their
diaries. But the feeling was unmistakable. People she
might never see again listened, encouraged, advised,
and sympathized.
Cafeteria employees came out to mop the
floors. They looked at three people in a circle of ten
chairs, shrugged their shoulders and left. An
official-looking fellow locked the door so that the
three could shut it when they left and he could go
home. Finally three souls who had come to a cold
cafeteria on a Thursday afternoon for three different
sets of reasons got up. They re-entered the nameless
stream of humanity that runs through Norton Hall
and set off in three different directions, or so it
seemed. But perhaps a small part of each had gone
the way of the other, too
'

Human sexuality
The Community Action Corps Birth Control Clinic will reopen shortly, offering a
wide range of health and information services to the University community. In addition
to supplying various forms of contraception, the Clinic’s plans include an information
center, VD tests and weekly classes oti contraception and human sexuality. The Clinic
will hold a meeting tomorrow evening at 7:30 in Room 240 Norton Hall for those
interested in positions on the Board of Directors and for those wanting to volunteer their
services.

THE BEEF ft AL

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(One

block from O.B.)

VISIT US ON
MONDAY!

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Sept 18th

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The Spectrum Page three
.

�BUILD’s proposal

Record Co-

Prices not indicative ofquality

As the Record Co-op enters its second year of
operation, it faces a problem of staffing. The Co-op,
located in Room 5 Norton Hall, is run by an entirely
volunteer student staff.
Gordon Kadatz, one of the Co-op managers,
commented on the numerous musical services
provided by the organization. “We buy our records
virtually at cost. For record collectors and people
who buy albums on a regular basis, the Co-op offers
substantial savings.” In addition, the Co-op can order
records of all kinds.
Kadatz stressed that the Co-op deals in
claslsical as well as folk and rock music. “Many
catalogs are available. With the help of staff, almost
any record can be located.
‘The greatest feature of the Co-op, however, is
the low prices,” contended Mr. Kadatz. “Our prices
ate the cheapest around. We have no competition
because there are no businesses with comparable
prices. In fact,” he continued, “It is the Record
'Co-op that forces Cavages’ and Record Runner’s
prices down.”

rejected by Board

Record browsing

COLLECTORS
ITEMS
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$1.00 Eaeh-10 for $5.00

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Page four

.

The Spectrum

.

”

ROWNIES

MOM.

.

...

INCREASE YOUR CHANCES OF
stock up at BROWNIES
SURVIVING THIS WINTER! Full line of down jackets &amp; parkas.
Use Yeur Master Charge, Empire &amp; Bank American

PARKING ON

Buffalo

.

doing volunteer work is that promotional copies of
Working staff
new releases are available on loan to all staff
Despite the many attributes of the Co-op, its members.
future will depend on whether or not an increased
As yet, the' Rettord Co-op has no regular
working staff can be obtained, explained Mr. Kadatz. operating hours, due to the lack of personnel. Mr.
An organization meeting is scheduled for today at 5 Kadatz commented: ‘The availability of the .Co-op
p.m. in the Co-op. “Anyone interested in joining the will be determined by the amount of people who
staff, those who have ideas about records, or are up man it. The more people who show up for this
on the latest music and trends, are; asked to attend meeting with a real interest in participating, the
this meeting,” he urged. One of the advantage of greater the service the Co-op offers will be.”

:w

Board of academic staff would then be
recently
rejected a made by the Woodlawn Policy
has
Education
turn
over the Board to the Buffalo School
to
proposed plan
Junior System.
Woodlawn
operation of
In order to deal with discipline
to
a
local
High School
problems
at the school Mr.
Community action group.
the
Williams
Thursday
last
said
that Woodlawn
In a meeting
would
changes
administer
have
to
Board voted to
become “a
in the school’s present leadership, community effort with parental
but voted 5-1 against a plan to involvement
Meetings are
allow BUILD of Buffalo to take planned with parents as well as
with the businessmen of the black
over its administration.
the
BUILD members, citing
community to gain their support
the
Board’s inability to handle
in discipline areas such as curbing
school’s discipline problems as unnecessary absenteeism
their major concern, had hoped to
Security patrol
take part in the supervision of the
“We are also advocating a
school as part of an attempt. to
these
BUILD security patrol,” Mr.
deal with some of
difficulties.
Williams continued, “to be
James Williams, an educational
composed of fathers of children
researcher on the BUILD
attending Woodlawn. to further
Education Committee, and
improve discipline at Woodlawn.
recently appointed principal at
This would help bring the school
WoodUwn, explained BUILD’s to the point where it could j&gt;e an
reasons for desiring such an active
asset to the community instead of
a problem.”
part in policy administration at
the school in a recent interview.
Finally the plan suggested an
According to Mr. Williams the orientation for each class
idea for BUILD’s plan came with as a teacher orientation"io insure
the development of numerous
working toward what Mr. Williams
situations, beginning with an
called common objectives and “an
attempt to place the first atmosphere of respect; not only
graduating class of BUILD
teachers respecting students and
Academy in a Buffalo High students respecting teachers but
School.
most important an atmosphere
where students respect each
Personal concern
other.”
In addition Mr. Williams
Despite the defeat of the
stated; “The transfer of
proposal by the Board, Mr
Woodlawn’s principal along with Williams’ appointment as principal
the personal concern of parents at Woodlawn and the fact that
and BUILD members for the many of the proposals might still
welfare of their children’s be implicated may indicate that
education, forced the organization BUlLD’s influence in the school’s
to make its proposal.”
administration should not be
The proposal included plans to disregarded. In addition it is
appoint a principal at the school evident that conditions in the
upon the recommendation of the Buffalo School system have come
Superintendent of Schools and an into the eye of the public and the
“elected Woodlawn Policy Board may soon be forced into
Board.” All recommendations for the position where it must finally
additional replacements to the act on the matter.
The

.

.

.

HOPE IT WAS

!

*****

Monday,

18 September 1972

&gt;.v.v

1971 U.B. GRADUATE

SSS

M

�Legal Dope
by the Legal Aid Clinic
What is Small Claims Court?
Small Claims Court is one of several courts
administered by the City of Buffalo. Like all such
courts, it is subject to the laws of the State of New
York and of the City of Buffalo.
Where is it?
Small Claims Court is located in the City Court
building, 42 Delaware Ave.
What does it do?
Small Claims Court is a relatively informal
forum for the settlement of difficulties. The only
relief the court will grant is the return of a monetary
loss suffered by an individual (a corporation cannot
be a plaintiff in Small Claims Court). Small Claims
Court will not consider a claim for losses due to pain
and suffering and a claim may not exceed $500.
How does it work?
If you feel you have been wronged by an
individual, partnership or corporation, and as a result
of that wrong, have suffered a specific monetary
loss, you may have a Small Claims Court case. Here’s
how Small Claims Court works:
1. Filing: If you want to initiate a Small Claims
Court action, you must file a claim with the clerk of
the Small Claims Court. The clerk’s office is located
on the fifth floor of the City Court building. All
claims must be filed in person between 9 a.m. and
noon, Monday through Friday.
When you file your claim, you must state the
nature and amount of, the claim and the name and
exact address of the defendant (the person you are
suing). The defendant must be a resident or have a
place of business within Erie County.
If your claim is because of an automobile
accident, you must have the name and address of the
registered owner of the other vehicle. If you are
suing a business, you must know if it is incorporated.
If it is incorporated, you must sue in the name of the
corporation. If the business is not incorporated, you
will need the name of the owner or manager.
The fee for filing a claim is $3.18. When you file
your claim, a hearing date is set. Cases are generally
heard within four to six weeks. Court meets on
Wednesdays only at either 2 p.m. or 7 p.m.,
whichever the plaintiff wants.
2. Service of the summons: When a claim is
filed, the clerk sends a summons by registered mail
to the defendant. The summons notifies the
defendant that there is a claim against him and that a
judgement will be entered against him if he fails to
appear in court.

•ripsiolc****
*

t

*

|

Once the judge hears both sides and has asked
whatever questions he thinks are necessary, he will
either render a decision or “reserve judgement.” If
judgement is reserved, the parties will be notified of
the outcome by mail. Barring a major error of law by
the judge, his decisions are final.

With the presidential campaign
still in its infant stage, area
Democrats have initiated the first
step of a drive which they feel will
win Erie County for, George
McGovern. Organizational
meetings and voter registration
drives have highlighted the efforts
in the area thus far.

the use of certified mail to insure
absentee ballot registration in the
precincts concerned, is being
utilized at this time to minimize
the occurence of discrepancies in
absentee voter registration.
Mr. Osinski said this method
will insure that the number of
students registering in absentia
here at the University of Buffalo,
will correspond with the number
registered to vote in their home
districts. In the past, numbers and
names have not balanced, but Mr.
Osinski claimed that there would
be no legal reason for such
inequities this year. “If such an
imbalance occurs, we will not
hesitate to go to court to secure
justice.”
Local McGovern workers were
ajso enthused by an organizational
meeting last Wednesday night at
Norton Hall which drew over 200
new volunteers. These newcomers
will canvass house-to-house to
promote voter registration in the
local Western New York area.
In addition, some of these
volunteers are being sent
downtown to election
headquarters to attend a
registrar’s course. They will then
be legally qualified to register
voters on campus and in the
University area. A lack of official
registrars on campus, which has
been a problem in the past, will
thus hopefully be eliminated.

Timothy Regan, a McGovern
spokesman, said that the
cooperation between area
Democrats and McGovern-Shriver
campaign workers has been very
encouraging since the. June
primary. According to Mr. Regan,
the initial election drive has
centered on local voter
registration as campaign workers
are attempting to get people to
register in their districts. The Erie
County registration drive is slated
for Oct. 5,6, 7 and 10.
the State University of
Buffalo, Jeff Osinski, Student
Association treasurer and a
McGovern worker, reported that a
sophisticated and thorough
method of securing absentee
ballot registration for students has
been devised.
At

Besides securing the names of
the absentee student voters who
are registering ,at this time a
legally notarized Account of those
names and the number of
absentee voters is also part of the
effort. This account, aloqg with

.

If the parties agree to submit to arbitration,
they will leave the courtroom with an attorney who
has been appointed .by the court to serve as an
arbitrator. The procedures are essentially the same,
both sides present their case and the judge, this time
the arbitrator, decides the case. There is no right to
appeal the decision of an arbitrator and no
stenographic record is kept.
The court generally prefers that the parties
choose arbitration because it helps to relieve the
heavy case load placed upon the judge. You should
not, however, feel compelled to choose arbitration if
you don’t want it. You have a right to be heard by
the judge and should demand it if you want

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s^sjcsjcsjesjesieslesjcslex.

RING
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|SEPT.19&amp; 20
*

If the defendant* cannot be reached by mail, the
clerk will send the summons to the plaintiff and
inform him that he must attempt personal service.
The defendant must be served before the case can be
heard.
3. Counter claims or Set Off: The defendant,
after being served, may institute a counter claim if
he wishes. Upon the filing of a counter claim, the
clerk must notify the plaintiff of this fact, and of the
amount of the counter claim.
If the counter claim is for more than $100, the
case must be transferred to the Civil branch of the
court. If the counter claim is for less than $100, the
judge shall hear the whole case together.
4. Court appearance: All Small Claims Court
cases are heard and decided by a judge or arbitrator.
If a party desires a jury trial, the case must be
transferred to the Civil Division.
At the beginning of each court session, the clerk
calls the docket. This is essentially a., matter of
checking the attendance. Once the docket is called,
those cases in which both parties are present, will be
heard.
When a case is called, the judge will ask the
parties if they desire the case to be heard by the
judge or by an arbitrator. If the parties choose the
judge, the case will then be heard by him. Both sides
then get to present their case. They may introduce
any evidence they wish and may examine and
cross-examine witnesses. There is also a right of
rebuttal. Althogh clarity and brevity in presenting a
case is appreciated by the judge, you should present
as strong a case as you can, because the right of
appeal is severely limited. It is important to
introduce all the pertinent evidence you can.

McGovern campaign has
faith in registration drive

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Monday, 18 September 1972 The Spectrum Page five
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Grounds for grievances
"If a professor really wants to get a student, he can be
gotten." This belief in the vulnerability of students has been
charged by student officials, attested to by past history and
tacitly agreed to by many faculty members. Such a condition
stems from the University's lack of formalized arid structured
;
grievance procedures.
Recognizing that such a vacuum exists, the Graduate
Student Association last semester established a set of
grievance procedures encompassing all aspects of graduate
school affairs. Their noteworthy efforts have proven valuable
graduate students know that formal procedures exist; they
are not afraid to utilize them; and the mechanisms have, thus
far, worked fairly efficiently.
In light of this, it is encouraging that the Undergraduate
Student Association has moved to enact a similar set of
procedures. The proposal presently before SA would
establish formal steps for handling academic grievances
between undergraduate students and faculty. If enacted, the
procedures would provide a unified process by which ail
departments would deal with undergraduate student
complaints.
The institution of such processes is long overdue.
Everyday undergraduates have complaints, whether real or
imagined, against faculty members. So far the only recourses
open to them are private griping or an anonymous letter to
The Spectrum. As an example, a student in the OT
Department has a complaint with that department. Fearing a
confrontation, fearing repercussions this student literally had
no available course of action. As a result, her complaint
could not be aired nor resolved. Formalized and accepted
grievance procedures would prevent the occurrence of such
an incident.
We thus strongly urge the SA to accept these procedures
and work for their establishment. Such a feat will not be an
easy one for there is much opposition to the procedures.
Some segments of the faculty view any moves in establishing
a grievance apparatus as direct threats towards their academic
autonomy. Additionally, others feel that there is no real need
for formalized procedures
that grievances are best settled
an
informal
environment.
in
*

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This case will represent Student Association's first
opportunity to deal with the Administration. It is thus a test
of their efficacy. However, the stakes are high, for if they fail
it will be the student body who suffers the most and'the
longest.

The Spectrum

Monday, 18 September 1972

Vol. 23, No. 14

Editor-in-Chief
Managing Editor

—

Jo-Ann Armao
Jeff Graenwald

-

Aset. Managing Editor
Business Manager

-

Lynne Traeger

Jack Harlan
Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
Production Supervisor Mike Lippmann
—

/

—

-

. .
.

.

Backpage
Campus

.

*,L
j

.Ron Sandberg

.

vacant
Dave Saleh
Karin Skeldon
. . . . Marty Gatti
Claire Kriegsman

.

City
Competition
Copy

Ronni Forman
. Janis Cromer

.

.

.

Graphic Arts
Layout

....

aaat

Lit ft Drama
Muaic
Off-Campus

Photo

...

.

.Howie Kurtz

Tom Toles
Maryhope Runyon
Cathy Bastin
Michael Silverblatt
.Billy Altman
.vacant
Mickey Osterreicher
Kim Santos
Barry Rubin

Thu Spectrum it served by College Prats Service, Intercollegiate Press
Bureau, United Press International, Tha Los Angeles Timas Syndicate, The
New Republic Feature Syndicate, Publishers Hall Syndicate and The
Register and Tribune Syndicate.

,

Rapublicetion of matter herein in

any form without the express consent of

the EdItor-in-Chief is forbidden.

Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page six The Spectrum Monday, 18 September 1972
.

.

6VB

F/MR

60 TO HP5 H00S5

cTZMI

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Dial.

Publlahera-Hall Syndicate

Gaydi
To the Editor
Following the release of the Aug. 23, 1972 issue
of ethos, having as its main theme “homosexuality,”
widespread disapproval was voiced by members of
Buffalo’s gay community. Stuart M. Berger,
supervising editor of ethos, was telephoned by
members of the Mattachine Society and Buffalo Gay
Activists (B.G.A.) and upon agreeing that the issue
was poorly researched, he was asked to halt
distribution of remaining copies. This request was
denied.
Complaints j)ften voiced among gays regarding
the August 23 issue were:
•
Its u n co mprehensive coverage of a
multi-faceted, Dfe-style, and of the legal (i.e. civil
rights) issues entailed in any serious discussion of
gay-life.
The irrelevance of the “What’s Your Gender?”
article

The failure to so much as mention any of
Buffalo’s five homophile organizations.
On Sept. 12, members of B.G.A. met with Mr
Berger to request space in future issues of ethos, so
that the omissions of the August 23 issue might be
compensated for. Mr. Berger agreed to a second
meeting with Mike Leuthe of B.G.A. to iron out
specifics of future gay-oriented articles. On another
promising note Mr. Berger said at the Sept. 12
meeting that he has offered Burton Weiss, a
University professor in American Studies, and a
member of the B.G.A., a staff position as
contributing editor on a regular basis to publish
articles covering issues and events of interest to the
gay community.
We are heartened by Mr. Berger’s response to
our requests that space in future issues of ethos be
given us in order to correct and complete the bleak
'

and sketchy picture painted in their

Aug.

23 issue.

The unrelatedness of the cover-graphics to the
Lynn Hadley

—

contents.

The failure to interview or secure articles by gay

Mike Leuthe
Gary M. Owen

women.

To the
Aft
Associat
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Student Association must both dispell such fears and
argue the necessity of the procedures.. Here, it would be
useful for SA to seek the counsel of GSA members who
successfully overcame these same obstacles.

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FA/R'5

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censored
To the Editor.

This letter is to protest and draw to the
attention of the University community the recent
dismissal of Anthony Favata from Dr. Lionel Abel’s
English 407 Contemporary Drama course, on Tues.,
Sept. 12. The incident erupted as follows:
Mr. Favata chose to offer criticism of the class
in session; he found it to be boring. The remark was
directly preceded by an opinion from this writer to
the effect that the class proved uncomfortable and
confusing to the assembled students, by being
approached in a totally chaotic manner, “cyclically,
or surrealistically, or something !” Dr. Abel
graciously accepted my criticism, and found no harm
in my giving an opinion.
Mr. Favata was not so fortunate.
/Professor Abel obviously took his opinion
concerning the class’s boredom as a personal attack,
and demanded Mr. Favata’s dismissal from class on
the grounds that his particular criticism was insincere
and unfounded. Furthermore, in rationale which
only Dr. Abel seems to comprehend, he further
explained his judgment of Mr. Favata on the basis of
being fully familiar with the student’s past behavior
and attitude, which he admitted as being revealed to
him in a matter of two brief class periods. My
particular acquaintance with Or. Abel is of the same

arbitrary elimination of students was indeed a
perogative granted instructors at this university. So
technically, Dr. Abel was merely exercising his legal
right of authority.
it’s just that educationally and ethically, it

stinks.
I happen to respect Dr. Abel both for his
literary reputation and academic qualifications. Yet
he has already admitted in his class that he had failed
to screen students for his course initially; in fact, he
was intent on dreaming up ways tp find expendable
students. However, this initial error remains his
responsibility, is his oversight, and must not be taken
out at fancy upon students. For Mr. Favata’s remark
was neither a slur nor an insult directed toward Dr.
Abel, any more than it was to 4ny other member of
the class that was assembled, all of whom, Dr. Abel
was quick to point out, share equal blame or credit
in establishing the rhythm and interest of a
particular course.
I strongly feel that Dr. Abel acted in an
underhanded, autocratic fashion in his dismissal of
Mr. Favata; I suggest that Dr. Abel leam from his
pupil’s sense of tolerance. I also fear that as a
consequence of the professor’s actions, irreparable
demage has been done to the spirit of his class; for
the inhibitionand outright fear felt inevitably by the
remaining students, castrates any fresh, spontaneous
length.
or unorthodox response they may wish to deliver in
Upon conferring with Dr. Newman, former head a future class.
of the English Dept., immediately following the
incident, I learned, not to my surprise, that such
Robert R. Peters

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by Howie Kurtz
It seems, in mid-September, that everything that
could be said about the Presidential election has
already been said. In 1968, the bulk of September
talk centered on the aftermath of Chicago and not
the scotch type-thin differences between the
candidacies of the “new” Nixon and the “new”
Humphrey. One recalls the image -of an almost
comical Humphrey, desperately trying to dissociate
himself from the image of Johnson politics, i.e.,
Vietnam, trying relentlessly during the final weeks of
the campaign to get Nixon to agree to televised
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debate.

Four years later, however, the emergence of
George McGovern, a controversial and decidedly not

m

•

•

•

_

To the Editor.
After almost two years, the Graduate Student
Association has won a battle to get a free academic
insurance policy for grad students. With the help of a

ilish
the
»e to

&gt;s be
ileak

lley
the

few unselfish faculty the Graduate School Executive
Committee, most Faculty Divisional Committees,
the Faculty Senate and the Graduate Faculty have
all accepted the new Grievance Procedures for
Graduate Students. It is now University policy.
The procedures allow a student to appeal an
action within his department to an uninvolved
review panel outside the department, avoiding the
conflict of interest of a group passing on the
legitimacy of its own acts. The procedures were in
operation this summer and, in one case, aided a
student in regaining a departmentally withdrawn
,

stipend.

There is a student representative with full rights
on these review panels to insure student rights and
an open proceeding. However, each departmentmurr
select a representative for these panels or there can
be no student panel member.
There are only ten percent of your departments
which are now represented; (none at all in Education
or Engineering; only one in Natural Sciences and
sd a
So

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These representatives are unlikely to serve on
more than one review panel, if that, since
assignments are rotated, but each appeal vitally
affects the life and career of one of your friends or
colleagues or maybe yourself. As with any insurance
policy, you have to pay the dues to get the
protection. Read the Grievance Procedures in the
GSA manual or the Grad School handbook so that
you will know how to file an appeal and what the
responsibilities of a student representative are. Then
recruit one of your fellow students or volunteer
yourself for this undemanding but crucial role. Have
your departmental student organization notify John
205 Norton Hall, or write
Greenwood, GSA
yourself if you have no organization and the
students have no objections.
Participatory democracy is a fair and efficient
system, but only as long as there is participation.
Protect your friends and you protect yourself. Get a
rep for the Grievance Panel now to avoid the shaft

traditional candidate, as the Democratic nominee,
has kept the national focus on what is bang billed as
“the clearest political choice of the century.” There
is no “lesser of two evils” rhetoric from the
apathetic this year; you either like McGovern or you
don’t, but he clearly represents an alternative to the
last four years.
If a foreign observer, however, were to try to
discern the issues of prime importance to American
voters in the 20th century’s clearest political choice,
he would be led astray by the news media. Scandals
and investigations which are highly relevant to
journalists may carry little weight with most voters,
ju$t as the latest technical breakthrough in cell
biology'is acclaimed by doctors reading professional
journals but ignored by the general public until it
results in a new treatment available to them.
By the same reasoning, despite all the headlines
and news specials focusing on the Watergate bugging
of the Democratic headquarters, campaign
expenditure irregularities, the ITT affair, the
Eagleton controversy, and the wheat deal charges, it
all becomes stale as yesterday’s news on Nov. 7.
When the defense worker in California pulls the
lever, he wants to know if he’s going to have a job in
1973. When the Jewish voter in New York City goes
to the polls, the U.S. committment to Israeli security
is certainly on his mind. But the political trumpeters
of the “Jewish vote” arc wrong: there are no ethnic
voting blocs anymore.Sclf-interest cones first. Thus
working class Jews may be influenced by higher
property taxes while Jews in the professions may
primarily fear that imposition of arbitrary race
quotas will curtail their disproportionate presence in
high-paying professional jobs.

The farmer in Idaho does not base his ballot on
campaign spending irregularities; he’s concerned with
an improving economy that will mean higher profits

for him after he sells his cropa. The main issues are
sometimes obscured by the news media; indeed it is
quite surprising that McGovern has failed to turn the
country’s focus to these issues since his chances of
unseating an incumbent President lies with the
nation’s dissatisfaction with the way things are.
In every Presidential election, the Republicans
try to spotlight foreign policy while the Democrats
strive to keep domestic problems in the news.
Richard Nixon is savoring the crest of popularity
stemming from his Moscow and Peking visits.
While I applaud these efforts in concept, the
fact remains that the twin detentes with the
Communist giants have produced few concrete
results. The SALT talks have bogged down, trade
gains have been modest, and tension has not been
reduced in the critical areas of the world. In

Vietnam, the President’s secret plan to end the war
remains a secret. Although he has made points with
those who are draft bait by reducing American
involvement, the killing goes on, the dike bombing
goes on, the most devastating destruction in the
history of the world is perpetrated from planes
bearing American insignias.
But despite everything, the threat to America is
truly from within. The Administration’s record on
domestic problems is atrocious. Its handling of the
economy has been terrible. Nixon presided over a
floundering ecofiomy for three years before
belatedly instituting wage-price controls to ease the
inflation and help alleviate the recession. Six million
have been added to the welfare rolls since 1968,
while almost, six percent of the labor force in
unemployed. While Nixon caters to giant
corporations, millions of Americans are looking for
work but are being forced onto welfare because
there are simply no jobs.
The list doesn’t stop there. Our cities are in
disarray. Public education, which should be our
nation’s highest priority, is experiencing its worst
crisis. The public school systems in Boston and
Detroit are wondering if they have enough money to
stay open all year. Yet Nixon recently vetoed
another school appropriations bill. Social services in
this country lag far behind those in many countries
in Western Europe.
George McGovern has put forth several concrete
proposals for change. He wants to close tax
loopholes for the rich and tax capital gains at the
same rate as other income. He wants to reorder the
Federal budget so that education, social security,
environmental improvement, health insurance,
transportation and urban renewal become the
priorities, not ABM’s and MIRV’s. Yet the
Administration has called McGovern everything from
a traitor to a Communist dupe because he proposes
to cut military spending to the point where our
nuclear capacity is to obliterate China and Russia
only 20 times over instead of SO.
Perhaps the epitome of Nixon’s indifference to
domestic affairs, unless they are politically expedient
to pay attention to, lie with the various Presidential
committees he has appointed to study major
problems. A Presidential committee represents a
team of bipartisan experts carefully examining a
controversial issue, investing a year or more and
hundreds of thousands of dollars to reach viable
conclusions and suggestions for change.
in past months, Mr. Nixon has singlehandedly
rejected the committee findings of the Committee
and Marijuana and Drug Abuse (whose results he had
said would remain above politics and that he would
abide by them); the Committee on Campus Unrest,
and the Committee on Population Control.
In short, Mr. Nixon appoints committees to
study domestic problems and then does what he
damn pleases anyway. Hi IS primary objective for the
last four years has been getting himself reflected.
One- can agree or not agree with George McGovern’s
policies, but he has at least put forth specific
proposals for change. Ail we hear from Nixon is
ambiguous rhetoric that avoids the issues. The polls,
reflecting the political realiti&amp; of trying to defeat an
incumbent President, say it is very doubtful
McGovern will be elected. They do not say what will
happen if he loses. Four more years of committees
whose findings are ignored. Four more years of
internal deterioration. Four more years of the
dike-bomber.

-

tomorrow.

ible
for

John Greenwood
Student Affairs Vice President
Graduate Student Association

the
:ous
er in

•ten

Monday, 18 September 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

�J}

Cmfs lacks facilities

No Mg concerts are coming
by Terri Fleischner
Spectrum

Staff Writer

There’s a music festival today, but it’s not at the
University of Buffalo. Perhaps it’s at Cornell, or
Syracuse where there are halls capable of holding
five to ten thousand people, and fine artists come to
perform. The present Music Committee budget of
$40,000 exceeds last year’s allotment by $26,000.

Yet, with all this money and with all the enthusiasm,
music performances still remain infrequent. The
continuing dilemma has focused on the real culprit
specifically the University’s lack
at last: facilities
of any sufficiently sized buildings.
Music presentations are operated on a
percentage basis: the guaranteed price for the
performer against the percentage of gross income
from the concert. If one concert amasses a large
enough profit, the Music Committee is able to host
other concerts'merely from that profit. However, as
Jeff Nesin, thfc coordinator of UUAB’s Music
Committee, explained: “Most concerts simply do
not break even, and in fact, they lose money.”
-

Leon Russell
The crown prince of rock in Buffalo?! That's right. Leon Russell
and the funkiest piano this side of Liber ace will be at Memorial Aud
this Thursday, Sept. 21 at 8 p.m. Incredible as it may seem, advance
tickets are still available at the Norton Ticket Office, $4.50. When
these are gone, it'll be $5.50.
In case you've been living under a boulder for the last few years,
Leon is the man wh6 made Joe Cocker's Mad Dogs. He also made his
presence strongly felt at the Bangladesh concert, and was one of
Delaney and Bonnie's original "Friends."
So, roll away the stone, Leon's almost here!

Neil Young: one example
Mr. Nesin feels that the University must build a
structure large enough to hold at least five to ten
thousand people. No “name” performer wants to
perform for a limited number of students in a
crowded hall if a bigger auditorium is available
elsewhere. An example, he said, was Neil Young,
who was almost scheduled to appear at the
University of Buffalo this year; however, a “small”
problem arose when the Music Committee revealed
the fact that the campus had no suitable hall to host
him. The only sufficiently sized area at the
University is Rotary Field. However, according to
Mr.' Nesin, outdoor concerts run too high a money
risk. Therefore, the University desperately needs a
more adequately sized building if on-campus
concerts are to be feasible.
The only alternative for handling large concerts
is to move them off campus by renting halls. The
Music Committee, however, has confronted
numerous obstacles, including finding available time
slots for concerts. For example, Memorial
Auditcnum has rigid basketball and hockey
'hr
&lt;:hedul&lt;
f
'

F»9e eight. The Spectrum

Monday, 18 September 1972

offer the performers more money and sponsor them

by themselves is another problem.
The distinguished Kleinhans Music Hall also
presents a problem since it possesses a closed Board

of Directors. Thus, th? Music Committee’s requests
to rent that facility are often rejected. Even the
Century Theater has been researched, but
unfortunately, the theater only holds 900 more
people than Clark Gym.
However, the future seems more promising than
the present, according to Steven Short, a staff
member of the Facilities Planning office for the new
Amherst Campus. Provisions for a field house
holding at least 10,000 people are already underway.
The actual architecture will begin in the summer of
1973, while the completion of the massive
auditorium is not expected until the fall of 1977.
The field house’s excellent location, which will be at
the comer of one of the main roads leading to the
campus, will also contain a large parking lot to
alleviate any possible transportation problems.
Big hjme concerts may arrive at Buffalo or
Amherst by the fall of 1977. Until then, catch a
concert at Syracuse or just sit back and soak up what

�0

Soccer season

Bulb optfor varsity success
by Dave Hnath
Spectrum Staff Writer

The world’s most popular sport has now joined
the roster of varsity athletics at Buffalo. That sport
is, of course, soccer, now one of the fastest growing
activities in the United States. After one season of
dub soccer last year, the Bulls will field a varsity
team for competition against other major college
teams.

Under the tutelage of coach Bert Jacobsen, the
Bulls produced a record of five wins and one loss last
year. Coach Jacobsen has all of last year’s top scorers
and his goalie returning, plus some fine transfers,
forming the nucleus of an exciting and potentially
successful team. Coach Jacobsen has experience with
championship soccer teams, playing on Michigan
State’s NCAA national titlists in 1967. When asked
to assess this year’s team, he said “We’ve got a better
team than last year, but on the other hand we play
better competition. We’ve got the potential, if we
put it together as a team, to go a long way. We
should not take a back seat to anybody.”
Goalie returns
Perhaps the most important player on any
team is the goalie, and the Bulls are
apparently well set for this season. Tahm Sadeghi of
Iran, last year’s starting goalie, allowed only three
goals while producing two shutouts in four of last
year’s games. A hand injury has sidelined Sadeghi,
but he should be* back for the beginning of the

soccer

season.

The big scorers this season should also be
students. Kola Oseni, last year’s leading

foreign

scorer with six goals, and Alex Torimiro, who Coach
Jacobsen calls a “potential All-American,” will lead
the attack. Adding some firepower on offense will be
returnees Don Earl and Nabil Youssef, and transfers
Dimitros Mihijlitos from Monroe Community and
Tom Schratz from Erie Community, who scored a
hat trick to beat the Bulls for their sole loss last
season.
Heading up the defense will be returning starters
Bob Hayes and Jim Leinert, both graduates of
Kenniore East High School. Also back to help out
will be freshman Jerry Galkiewicz, a pleasant
surprise, and Heron Allen, a fine transfer from
Monroe CC, hampered by a history of, bad knees.

Guarded optimism
In their first varsity season, the Bulls should
make a respectable showing, but one must regard
this team with guarded optimism. Fine individual
talent is shown, lending the potential for a winning
season. However, to be considered a serious
challenge to the stronger opposition on their
schedule, the Bulls will have to learn to play together
ar. a team, and show the spirit and teamwork
necessary to be a winner. Look for excitement and
success to initiate Buffalo soccer as the Bulls open
their season next Wednesday against Buffalo State at
Rotary Field.
The schedule: Sept. 27, Buffalo St.; Oct. 4,
Canisius; Oct. 7, at Niagara; Oct. 12, at St.
Bonaventure; Oct. 17, St. John Fisher; Oct. 23, at
Potsdam St.; Oct. 28, at Geneseo; Oct. 31, Gannon,
Nov. 3 and 4, Big Four Tournament at Albany; Nov.
I I, at Syracuse.

THE WESTERN STATES
LSAT STUDY &amp; PREPARATION SEMINAR
(Law School Admission Test)
A seminar designed to equip the serious LSAT candidate with an understanding of the
LSAT and the skills and techniques necessary to realize his maximum score.
A thorough study of;
TEST ANALYSIS; Question types, skills tested, task analysis, etc.
%
TEST TAKING TECHNIQUES: Role of Guessing, Common
Mistakes, Sequential and Hierarchical Answering, Response
Biases, Question Analysis, Time Scheduling, etc.
TEST TAKING PRACTICE: An LSAT type test administered
under exam conditions, computer grading, instruction review, etc.
Seminar instructors are R. J. Shavelson, Ph.D. School of Education, Stanford University,
W. J. Meredith, Ph.D. Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley.
PLACES AND TIMES: New York: Oct. 14-15, Dec. 9-10, Feb, 3-4. Los Angeles: Nov. 18-19,
Jan. 20-21. San Francisco: Dec. 2-3, Jan. 27-28.
Organized and administered by I. W. New, J.D. The University of California, Hastings College of Law; M. J. Nelson, J.D. The University of Minnesota Law School: and K. E. Hobbs,
L.L.B. The Harvard Law School.

Iffiamurals hope to"
serve more students

Interest in intramural and events for co-ed interest. Starting
recreational activities has with a co-ed volleyball mixer
increased, during recent years on tomorrow night and successive
the State University of Buffalo Tuesdays, the intramural
campus. Accordingly, both the department hopes to form a co-ed
Student Association and the Clark volleyball league. Also planned for
Gym intramural and recreation later this semester is a co-ed
department have increased the badminton league.
scope of their activities in this
A new sport added to the
area.
intramural schedule will be co-ed
Bill Monkarsh, Buffalo’s flag football, a popular sport
director of intramurals for the imported from Southern
past three years, feels that this California. Teams will consist of
years’ programs should reach its three men and three women, with
widest student audience ever.
action slated for Friday
Mr. Monkarsh commented: afternoons at 4 p.m.
“Our aim is to try and reach as
Several problems have faced
many as possible in some form of the intramural program at
participation in a structured Buffalo, mainly in the area of
program of intramurals or a facilities and locker space. In a
do-your-own-thing recreation move towards rectifying these
program.” Following from this problems, the program will once
basic philosophy, the intramural again utilize outside sites for
staff is ready to go all out in activity. For basketball activity
preparation for its touch football every Tuesday night, games will
tourney which is slated to begin commence at Sweet Home High
tomorrow. Last year, a record School with free bus service
number of teams participated, provided for interested players.
including independent and Also, an intramural basketball
campus teams. Mr. Monkarsh league will be formed shortly.
announced that there are still
openings for teams, but all entries Outside facilities utilized
will close by tomorrow.
A further use of outside
facilities will begin in
More women’s activities
mid-November when the Holiday
With greater interest in Ice twin rinks facility opens. With
women’s participation in the field free bus service
slated, a full
of recreation and intramurals, Mr. program of intramural ice hockey
Monkarsh has formulated several supervised by members of the
varsity Bulls will take place. Also,
recreational ice skating will be
held at the Holiday facility.

LA NOVA PIZZERIA
2473 Delaware Ave.

•

cornet of Tacoma
PIZZA
SUBMARINES
-ALL KINDSCHICKEN WINGS
FISH &amp; CHIPS
'

•

■

We Deliver
876-5522

TUITION:

$85.00. Applicants should send tuition with seminar selected to The Registrar, THE WESTERN
STATES LSAT STUDY AND PREPARATION SEMINAR, Suite 600, 465 California St., San Francisco, Ca. 94104.
Admission Certificate and auditorium information confirmed by mail. Enrollment limited by seats available.

Besides relieving pressure from
crowded Clark Gym, these
facilities serve to give the student
body a varied program. Later in
the semester, the intramural
program will also hold bicycle
races, and tourneys in soccer and
tennis. Additionally, the third
annual Turkey Trot will be held,
with interested runners competing
for several turkeys. All in all, the
intramural program shows further
evidence that it may be able to
provide the type of events
demanded by the campus

population.

I

DEMOCRATIC jYOUTH COALITION

1

TONY LoRUSSO
Candidate 38th Congressional District

INVITE YOU TO
LISTEN,# DANCE TO
*

MOM’S APP1.E PIE
(They really cook!!!)

NORTON UNION-MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, AND FRIDAY 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
RIDGE LEA-MONDAY,WEDNESDAY. AND FRIDAY 11 a.m. 2 p.m.
DIEFENDORF—WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY 6 p.m. 9 p.m.
ABSENTEE BALLOTS WILL BE DISTRIBUTED.

Tuesday: Sept. 19

8-12 p.m.-

FILLMORE ROOM

NORTON

BEER

-

-

I

,

&amp;

SOFT DRINKS A VAILABLE

I

$1.00 DONATION

Monday, 18 September 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
.

.

-

�XX

Tennis team begins
season with victory
"

•

SoBdbasdmM scorer |

Ex-Bull a Mg hit in minors

number six-ranked players, as
they showed “much more than I
had anticipated.” However,
Sanford laments the fact that he
has no “big gun” to overpower
the opposition’s number one
singles man and therefore
out-psyche the rest of the
opposing team.
Also, Coach Sanford has had to
put together three entirely new
doubles teams this year, with the
chance that the first combinations
would not click, and matches
would be lost before the right
combinations could be found.
6-0,6-0.
However, the new combinations
makes
naturally,
this,
showed well against Geneseo,
All
tennis coach William Sanford very winning two out of three matches,
happy about his team’s prospects including the two straight-love
Buffalo’s tennis team humbled
Geneseo 7-2, last Tuesday, in
their season’s away opener. Team
captain Paul Parelli gained the
deciding fifth point as his
opponent double-faulted on
Parelli’s set point.
The deciding match was a
lengthy one, with the two
opponents having to resort to a
tie-breaker to decide the winner
of the final set. The third doubles
team added to the rout by
whitewashing Gcneseo’s third
doubles team in straight-love sets,

for the coming year. Although
Sanford has lost his top two
players, Steve Sesody and Dennis
Dunning, to graduation, and the
schedule will be “undeniably”
tougher, Coach Sanford says that
the team is basically strong.
Possessing good depth, the Bulls
need only fall game competition
to show their true colors.
Coach Sanford admits that he
was “greatly pleased” with the
high caliber performance
exhibited by his number three
-

ff|§gffi £3

sets.

The tennis Bulls’ next match is
September 20 at home against
Buffalo State. After the Bengals,
comes one of the challenges for
which Coach Sanford admits he
needs an all-out team effort the
State University of New York
Center Tournament at Albany on
September 23. Tough matches
coming up after that include
Cortland, whose true strength is
unknown, dark horse Fredonia,
and Brockport.
—

*vv

by Dave Geringer

mm

Spectrum Staff Writer

Attempting to become the next Buffalo
alumnus to advance in organized baseball, ex-Bull
shortstop Rick Albert started off with a bang this
post summer. Playing for the Atlanta Braves’ rookie,
minor league affiliate at Wytheville, Va.; Albert hit asolid .330 with eigftt home runs in the two month
circuit.
Wytheville, a town of almost 6,000 people, is
not the worst place to play baseball says Albert. “It
was a nice, small town. ‘The townspeople were very
friendly, and supported us quite well. Out of about
6,000 people, six or seven hundred used to come to
the games. The kids knew who we were, and the
people treated everyone very well.”
Drawbacks
However, small towns also have their drawbacks.
The entertainment that one finds in a city wasn’t
there. “If you wanted entertainment, you had to
provide it yourself,” commented Albert. “However,
baseball took up so much time that we didn’t have
time for entertainment. They didn’t have many
rules, such as curfew, but they could tell whether or
not someone was goofing off. The attitude down
there is that if you want to advance, you will take
care of yourself.”
The ex-Bull star found hitting at Wytheville to
be tougher, also. ‘The big difference between that
league and playing college baseball is that you face
good pitching every day in the minor leagues. As a
rule, the pitchers are yanked quickly if they cannot
do the job because the manager knows he has ten
others who are just as good. Because of this, it is
impossible to know what each pitcher throws, so it is
more difficult to hit.”
draftees
Despite batting at a ,402 clip in his final season
7 for the Bulls, Albert was not selected in the
thought that he was
professional draft. Rick

Rick Albert
are selected out of high school, when they are 18,”
“The fact that I was 21 years old didn’t
hi
help matters when it came to the draft.”
After waiting for about a week after the draft,
Albert was notified that a scout from the Braves’
organization was coming over to attempt to sign
him. “1 had the pen in my hand before he opened
the door,” grinned Albert. “I just wanted a shot at
the bigs.” If his past performance is any indication.

"stated-

MO SEATS RESERVED -l» CHAIM OH FU«R. LIMITED NUMBER Of ADVANCE
TICKETS H5Cl WHEN THESE meW ALL TICKETS WILL BE � 5.50
(mail
Tick.', on solo now ot Buffalo foolival Ticket OHlco. Hotloc Hilton lobby
with clomped, oolf-oddroocod onvolopo); U.B. Norton Hall; ttoto
College Ticket Office; Folio TIckH. Haoborlo Flaio, Wiagoro folio.
ofdon occoptod

FREE!)

TONIGHT!

49c

HOT-LINER

The G.S.A.

|

base of

Hear the Californian Congressman who opposed the
Nixon Administration on its Vietnam policy.

{POINT
for

$

1.95

Find out his ecology views, consumer policies, foreign
policy ideals and personal opinions concerning Richard
Nixon.

!

iNY ANGLE
SIDE DOWM
IM OR
COLORFUL
iRREL
.

y

3'

S.A. SPEAKER'S BUREAU PRESENTS

REPRESENTATIVE PAUL McCLUSKEY

8MATE.
ic

-

f.

FILLMORE ROOM

8:00 p.m.

|

X,r

~

school special at

Your'UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE on Campus

•

•

•

•

s#v«••••••••••#•••••••••••••••••••#••#

#

�T1 Lm
T PIED

-

-

deliveries, woodworking, maintenance,
•*c. Apply In pmon. waterbrothers 51
Allan St.

WANTED
gat up off your bait
HEY YOU
Intentions and Join Tha Spectrum’s
make you real
Campus Staff. Wa’II
needed. Saa Ron or Jan.
—

STUDENT to assist professor's family
with housework and babysitting
and Thursday afternoons,
Delaware—Ferry area. 883-1892.
Tuesday

SMALL refrigerator, stereo component
system, winter coat, small size. Please
call Susan 831-3395. Keep trying.

MOTHER’S helper for 2-yr.-old and
4-yr.-old
Pays and some evenings.
Must provide own transportation.

633-4321.

RESPONSIBLE

MODELS wanted tor drawing classes.

874-6176.

10:30—12:30, 83.2S/hr.

owner wanted for
beautiful seven-week-old kitten. Call

BABYSITTER sought tor charming
three-year-old. T &amp; Th, 2:45—4:45,
$.75/

hr. Call 834-7984.

WORKING mother needs someone to

help run home and care for children
ages 1 and 6. May bring own child If
you wish. Living quarters available for
a couple or single girl. One block from
UB. $60/wk. Call 832-5826.

ATTENTION part-time Jobs available
for serious-minded Individuals of all

ages. Good money, flexible working
hours. If Interested, contact lhab at
831-3285 after 2 p.m.

CHINESE Mandarlan speaking student
willing to spend a little time each week
to talk with a student with three years
study. Call Rich, 896-5365.

SALESMEN

or

women

SOFA
house
Helen

—

—

'

to

831-411£.

an hour. Transportation
provided.
Make your own hours.
DON’T PASS THIS UP. Call 631-5327,
631-5326.
$3

THE

|

SPECIALISTS
INDEPENDENT
FOREIGN CAR

FURNISHED 7-8 bedroom apartment,
excellent location, available
Immediately. Suitable for 4-8 students.
*250 monthly. 896-8180.
FOR RENT: House, four bedrooms,
two bathrooms, excellent condition,
private “gay living." 856-5X40, 9—5.
After 6 p.m., 632-6675.
THREE-BEDROOM flat on Englewood
Ave. Available for Immediate
occupancy
call Mrs. Schrelber at
875-3612 or 741-3962.

SERVICE Inc.

TWO-BEDROOM apartment, nicely
furnished, Kenmoro—Starln, faculty or
graduate. Students preferred. 874-6275
after 5100.

RIDE BOARD
RIDE needed to Boston 9/20 or 9/21.
Will share expenses. Call evenings
874-0645.

Kensington
Harlem

—

FREE
Tasting
200

I

1

Wine

|

839 1850

1st weak October. Nancla 839-3053.

HANDICAPPED lady would Ilka ride

to and from work, Monday thru
Friday, 7:30—4:30. Call 854-3494,
axt. 50.
RIDE NEEDED to NYC waakend of
Sept. 28, 29, 30. Will share driving and
expenses. Call Ronnl 837-2771.
BLIND MFC student living In No.
Tonawanda needs ride to school for
Mon. 6 Wed. evenings classes. Call
694-3200 daytime
after 5:00 p.m.,
692-3595. Ask for Dan.

FOR SALE
AUDITORY system of
Concord
receiver, Garrard changer &amp; Scott
speakers
of exquisite sounds. Call
anytime. 631-5937.
SONY tape recorder with tapes
RCA
amplifier wlth’AM-FM radio, turntable
speakers.
and
Call 838-3279.

1968 COUGAR PS., 3-spaad, $1390.
RON sharp. 198 Mlnnasota Ava. Mika,
T.V.
Motorola. SI" console, SAW,
Indoor antannaa. Good picture, 835.
Call 833-7000, axt. 852 (days)i
837-9515 (evenings).
—

1967 Volks
New clutch,
836-7937.

very good condition.
valve Job, etc. $800. Call
—

p.m

SABRES have Perreault and Martin.
See them; buy my grey blue-line
seasons ticket. Call 649-6582 after 7
p.m.

1964

PLYMOUTH

Belvedere.

running condition. Good snows,

Good,

8300

or bast offer. Call Bob. 833-5359.
-

p.m.

BLACKSMITH ■
SHOP
1375 DELAWARE AVE.

886-9281

classic guitars; banjos. Fine
and hand-made Instruments.
Gurlan, Gibson, Guild, Gallagher,
Martin, etc. All Harmony guitars, 25%
off until Sept. 20. The String Shoppe
524 Ontario, Buffalo. Hours 7
p.m.—9 p.m. dally. Saturday, 12—5
p.m. 874-0120.
factory

REFRIGERATORS,
stoves and
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. D8.G
Appliances,
844
Sycamore. TX4-3183.

See you
DEAR STINKY
I’ll change because I wuv

1964 VW Van —' new engine, good
brakes, clutch, tires, etc. Best offer.
Call 883-6404.

wanted:
BOWLER
has reasonable
average, must be socially motivated
and enjoy beer. Call Steve 835-2761.

FOR SALE or trade. Colonial couch.
Good condition. Too big
for
Allenhurst. Contact Al or Frank at
486-B Allenhurst.

WE CANT promise you $, but we can
promise
you
a better sex life. Just
come up and take a look at our campus

ELECTRIC stove, $30; refrigerator,
$15; dresser, $20; arm chair, $5. Bricks
and boards free. 883-2589.

ALEXANDER, the slime, guards over
Jeff's petrified doughnut. Watch It!

ml

—

PERSONAL
—

In a month
Jerky

you.

editors.

AFS returnees meeting Room 234.
Norton, Thurs. 21 September, 7j30 or
call Kathryn 837-4876. All welcome.
CRAFTS sold for
at "The Whole
Earth General Store and Crafts,” 1458
Hertel Ave. Open 11 a.m. —9 p.m., six
days a week.

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
IMMEDIATE FS-1-ANY SIZE

PART-TIME lob wanted tor age ,17
mala. Must pay debts by Xmas. Call
JB. 886-6473.

No nonsense /

UPSTATE CYCLE INS.
Call 694-3100
"Ask your broker about us"

One

Reward,

Cross

mease

pan

bring

office and ask for Kim.

on 9—14.
to Spectrum

found outside Norton 9/14.

Identify and claim at Spectrum office.

355 Norton. 831-4113.

FOUND: Small black female dog on
campus near Oiefendorf. Call Andre,
837-8184.
LOST: Man's gold wedding band In
Oiefendorf Annex. Date engraved
inside 11/28/70. Generous reward. Call
881-0259.
LOST In Baird practice room
ring,
translucent purpose, cone-shaped stone
In three-point gold setting. Great
sentimental value. Reward. Call Kathy
832-6948.
—

FOUND: One (mall brown puppy near
Tower dorm. Contact Jill or Maureen.
498-B Allenhurst.

ROOMMATES WANTED
SHARE turn. apt. 2 girls, no pets, $66
each. 832-5607.

you

EARN as much as yoO want
door canvassers needed
Improvements. Call 836-6345,
YOUR

MATURE female to share furnished
house with male grad. Students own
room. Call 834-4962.
BEAUTIFUL
tremendous room
waiting for two girls In large friendly
house close to campus. 835-7579,

WANTED
1 M or F roommate.
Own room In clean attractive apt. S3
Minnesota. Call 831-2286.
—•-

OWN
BEDROOM,
completely
furnished, 4 blocks from campus on
Minnesota, male, $75. Call 837-2785
anytime.

:ANNON Scoplc
16 camera wltl
utomatlc exposure control am
luilt’in zoom lens. 1-year-old. Come

—

LOST ft FOUND
FOUND: Gold cross pencil In Capen
lot. Call Spectrum office at 831-4113.

—

—

1970, 350cc, 3300

No poo/

|

FOLK,

COLLIE puppies
AKC
sable/wht.
Great dogs, furry, intelligent, playful,
peaceloving, $50. Call Laurie, Howie,
837-6092.

KAWASAKI
835-5301.

ITEMS

1969 VW bus. Part-camper equip.
48,000 miles. 2 snows. Excellent cond.
Call 833-5589. Ask for Lee. Best offer.

—

—

831-3810.

BOOK

1968 MG Midget. Excellent running
condition, low mileage. Many extras.
Must 'sell Immediately, $495 or best
offer. 837-5831.

all major brands
20% TO 50% OFF
of stereo
equipment
fully
guaranteed.
We
care
we’re U.B.
students. Call Carl, 675-3172.

—

social'ilfaf

LOST:

CONVERTIBLE
*68 VW. Beautiful
condition. 8850. Call 675-0670 after 6

one-year-old
REFRIGERATOR
half size
formica top. Excellent for
dorm use, $75. 875-8836.
—

NEED MONEY to pay tuition, buy
SNI
books, augment ypur
advertising for Tha Spactrum. 19%
commission on solas. No ax parlance
nacassary, but car useful. Saa Jeff
Ralman In Room 399 Norton or call

833-7760. Reasonable.

—

1966 MUSTANG. $450. After 6
Call 894-4674. Ask for Raghu.

Imur.nc OuManca Cantar for your
lowaat avallabla rata on auto anO cycle
Insurant*. 837-2276. Attar 9 pjn..
839-0966.

SINGLE mattress and bed frame. Call

—

—

|
|

driving and
•xpanMt. Destination Danvar. Leaving

—

1I I
|

RIDER WANTED to share

—

APARTMENT FOR RENT

I

S

F.,
Phone Mr.

*

casa, I70Q. Call 835-369*

—

EARN

one In furnished
good condition, cheap. Call

§

M. w,

Allen 839-3600, ext. 276.

replace

WANTED: General helper (1). Steady
part-time work (25 hours). Inventory,

,

Hill

College.

—

advertising-part-time, must be neat and
Experience
personable.
desirable.

876-8576.

Rosary

,

&lt;ft&gt;f 5

—

81/hr.

J!L£JL

carrying

1

cu

with cm*. flltarf, special cIom-up IWit.
***b
A!* 1*!!

r

worries are over

—

door to

—

Home
&gt;

'

4

Call The

FEMALE professional wanted to share
cozy apartment In U.B. area with same.
,
834-9869.
_

needed,
ROOMMATES
females
or males, near Boulevard Mall.
Mostly
Own room.
furnished.
691-7753.

2

couple

1 or 2 people (male or female) for
house at 29 East Oakwood, own
bedrooms. 832-9760. Leave message
for Vlnny.
-

MISCELLANEOUS
LOOKING for

two

or three women

pre-school children to form a
cooperative play group. Call Anna at
876-7416,

Wltti

LATKO PRINTING and Copy Centers.
While you waft, offset printing. 10%
off for U.B.'students. 3171 Main St.
(near Wlnspaar), Just a few blocks from
U.B. Call 835-0101.

SchuAAmeisterA Shi CU,

USED REFRIGERATOR $19.95,
1282
beds, dressers, $19.95 up.
Clinton St. 823-1800.
TYPING: Professionally done
business or personal, term papers,
».40/pg. 877-5234 after 5 p.m.j M-F
Anytime SAS. Sherldan-Elmwood.
-

r emhership meeting

APARTMENTS WANTED
FEMALE
warm

Movies

DON'T ROT THIS WINTER IN BUFFALO!
Join SCHUSSMBISTERS SKI CLUB AND

BE PART OF THE ALPINE CULTURE

people.

ART STUDENT needs room. If you
know about any, call Dave Channon at
834-2188. Thanks.

Monday 6:00 p.m.
Fillmore Room

Information
Refreshments

GRAD
student,
wants share with
Anne 823-4307.

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SFWtrum Page eleven
.

�Schussmeisters Ski Club wHI bold a membership
meeting in the Fillmore Room at 6 p.m. on Wednesday,
Sept. 20. There wW be refreshments and films and everyone
,

is welcome.

'

■

UUAB Sound/Technical Committee needs people
interested in working lights and sound for UUAB. Come to
261 Norton for further information.

Any club wishing to advertise their activities may do so
by contacting Shelley Taylor in 205 Norton Hall. Any club
will receive space in the SA newsletter on its club page. Call
891-S507 to leave message or contact Ms. Taylor.
Psychomat meets regularly on Wednesdays from 7 to
10 p.m. in 232 Norton Hall and on Thursdays from 3 to 6
p.m. in Cafeteria 118. Psychomat is a listening and speaking
experience in an open-ended, free-flowing and inviting
and
setting. Open and honest communication Is its goal
that depends on you
on your willingness to be and share
with others. Be part of a group this semester.
-

-

Undergraduate Research Council (URC) is sponsoring a
research program for the academic year of 1972-73.
Students who are interested in applying should pick up their
applications and other pertinent materials at the SA office.
Applicant is urged to have an appointment with the director
of the URC before submitting his application form.
Deadline for submitting applications is Sept. 30.

U6 Karate Club classes are held Monday and Friday
7—9 p.m. in the Women’s gym. New members are always
welcome. All are encouraged to attend.

CAC will hold a meeting for Amherst Counseling
tonight at 7:30 p.m. In Room 262 Norton.

There will be a meeting of the student chapter of
American Institute of Industrial Engineers tomorrow night
at I p.m. in Parker 150. Mr. )ohn Zeizs will speak on
Produce and Materials Handling.

Student Film Club wilt have an organizational meeting
tomorrow night at 7 p.m. in Room 264 Norton. All old and
new members interested in making films are urged to

Anyone Interested in forming a Science Fiction Club
please contact Orlando Soto at 6155 Goodyear or call
831-2373 evenings.

attend.
UB Record Co-op will hold an organizational meeting
today at S p.m. in Room 5 Norton.
New College of Modem Education Course NC 401,
Section 1, Radical History of UB, will meet at 3 p.m. today
in Trailer 9.

An interdisciplinary credit-free course in
Environmental Education and Environmental Awareness is
being offered this fall to all elementary and high school
teachers and education students in the Buffalo area. This
course is sponsored by the School of Architecture and
Environmental Design in conjunction with the American
Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture.
EnrollmenMs open for the fall term. If interested, contact
Margaret Goglia or Dan Shimberg, 831-5 481 days or
837-1617 evenings. There will be no tuition charge for this
course

New College of Modern Education course NC 401,
Section 2, Childhood and Society, will meet Wednesday
Sept. 20 at 7 p.m. in Trailer 9.
New College of Modem Education course NC
Section 3, will meet Tuesday at 12 noon in Trailer 9.

301

New College of Modern Education course NC
Section 1, will meet today at 12 noon in Trailer 9.

301

Kundalim Yoga beginning classes in exercise and
meditation are being held Mondays and Wednesdays at 4
p.m. in 344 Norton and also daily at 7 p.m. at the Guru
Ram Das Ashram, 196 Linwood Ave. Call 881-0505 for
information.

Recorder players interested in
ensemble playing, please contact
Non-music majors welcome.

informal weekly
Judy, 838-4827.

The Coalition of Social Work Undergraduates will hold
8:15 p.m. in Foster 210.

its first meeting tomorrow night at

Services for the Mentally Retarded which works with
mentally retarded adults is in need of volunteers. SMREC is
located at 2960 Main St. near Flertel. Please contact Patricia
Sapienza, 838-4444 or leave name and phone number with
the CAC office, 220 Norton.
WBFO will hold an orientation meeting for new people
interested in working at the radio station on Wednesday,
Sept. 20 at 7 p.m. and Wednesday, Sept. 27 at 2 p.m. in 327
—

Norton.

Public Broadcasting (COE 339) will hold its first
meeting tomorrow night at 6:30 p.m. in the third floor
lounge in Norton. If you can't make this meeting, call |im
Campbell at 831-5393.
Volunteers are needed at the E.|. Meyer Memorial
Flospital in pediatrics, psychiatrics, alcoholism unit,
occupational therapy, physical therapy, medical and surgical
units, etc. For more information, contact Debbie Starr,
Marilyn Dunckel, 832-2573 or the CAC office,
Room 220 Norton (831-3609).

COE/Critical Communication and Media Center's
TV journalism Theory and Reality, taught by

course in

-

Susan Robinson King, will meet for the first time Tuesday
night at 6 p.m. in 68S Harriman. Interested students are
welcome to come, even if you have not registered for the
course.

The Debate Club will hold a meeting tomorrow at 8
p.m. in Room 337 Norton. All members are urged to attend
and anybody interested is welcome.
..

Panic Theater will hold auditions for the production of
Pajama Game today and tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the
basement lounge of Tower Hall. If you can’t attend but
wish to audition or wish to help out in the production,
please contact |udy, 894-7027 or Joanne, 834-2443.
There are positions available for a director of Student
Services and for an executive secretary of the Student
Association of the State University. Contact Mark
Borenstein at 831-3735, if interested.
Dance Club is sponsoring a children's dance workshop
for all those interested in working with children in dance
today at 7 p.m. in the dance studio in Clark Gym.
New Alternative High School of New College of
Modern Education needs students, faculty or others to
teach beginning tennis, ballet, judo, piano and guitar. We
don’t have.money to pay for instruction, but we do have
the enthusiasm to learn. Come share your talents with us
and help us too. Call New College of Modern Education,
Trailer 9, 831-5388.
Students seeking extra help in Calculus 141 special
tutoring sessions will be held Monday and Wednesday 3-5
p.m.

In Parker 32.

Yom Kippur Services will be held at Chabad House
.
today starting at 9:30 a.m.

Student Theater Guild is

holding auditions for Last
Chance Saloon on Tuesday in 262 Norton and on
Wednesday In 334 ( Norton, 4—It p.m. both days. Need,
actors, technicians, production people and musicians.

There will be a vitally Important meeting for everyone
who has been involved or wishes to be involved in the UB
Birth Control clink. There are positions available for both
trained and non-trained people. The meeting wilt be at 7:30
p.m., Tuesday Sept. 19 in Room 240 Norton.

COE/Critical Communication and

Media

Center’s

course in Mass Media and Contemporary Culture taught by
Dave Karpoff will have its initial meeting at 3 p.m. on
Tuesday in Foster 14. interested students are welcome to
come even if you have not registered for the course.
Male volunteers are needed for the CAC self-help
project. The handicapped women in the project need
assistance to get in and out of the CAC van. For more
information, contact Nancy Schuler or Bev jacklin,
832-7626 or the CAC office, Room 220 Norton, 831-3609.

College E 301/2 A &amp; B will meet in the third floor
lounge in Norton tomorrow morning at 9 a.m. All students
in the class must attend. If they cannot, leave a message at
the Colleges office.

Backpage

A special course is being given at American Studies for
those students who would like to develop a photo series.
The course, I99E, is for students who have basic knowledge
of photography. The instructor is Milton Rogovin. Please
contact the instructor before registering for the course.
All

persons

Allentown-Lakeview

who

have

volunteered

for

Community Health Center, there will
be an organizational meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the
CAC office, Room 220 Norton. If there are any problems,
please contact Ralph D'Amico at 834-8150.

Democratic Youth Coalition is sponsoring a dance with
music by Mom’s Apple Pie in support of Congressional
District No. 38 Democratic UB Candidate, Tony LaRusso,
in the Fillmore Room tomorrow night, 8-12 p.m. Donation
is $ 1. Beer and soft drinks will be available.

John

Whitney,*musician turned avant garde filmmaker,
is one of the first people to experiment in computer
generated films. Mr. Whitney will attend the screening and
discussion of hb films on Tuesday, Sept. 19 at 8 p.m. in

Diefendorf 147.
There will be a meeting of new and old members of the
Buffa/onlan Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Buffolonian
office, Room 3S6, Norton Hall.

Sports Information
Today: Varsity golf, St. Bonaventure and Gannon at
the Amherst Audobon Golf Course,

2 p.m.

Wednesday: Varsity golf, Canisius at the Arpherst
Audobon Golf Course, 2 p.m.
Friday: Varsity soccer scrimmage, Hilbert College, 4
p.m. at Rotary Field; Varsity golf at the Utica College Fall
-

Invitational.
Saturday: Varsity cross country at the University of
Rochester with Niagara, Syracuse, Buffalo and Rochester,
II a.m.; Varsity baseball doubleheader at Brockport State,
1 p.m.; Varsity golf at the Utica College Fall Invitational.
There will be a meeting Tuesday afternoon for all
freshman basketball candidates. Players should report at 3
p.m. to Room 322, Clark Gym.

Undergraduates interested in trying out for the men's
club intercollegiate bowling team should report to Norton
Union’s alleys at 10 a.m. Saturday. After Saturday's
six-game qualifier, the next qualifier comes Sat., Sept. 30 at
10 a.m.

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                    <text>The SpECTRUM
Friday. 15 September 1972

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 23, No. 13

Student Association has

deficit from overbudgeting

In his financial. statement delivered to
the Student Association Executive
Committee on Wednesday, Treasurer Jeff
Osinski declared that due to overbudgeting
errors, the SA has incurred a cash deficit of
$8736. Mr. Osinski assured the committee
that once the Bursar’s Office issues its first
check, the SA will have a better idea of
how to plan its fiscal policy. Meanwhile, to
avoid the possibility of working ivith a
negative total, the SA is calling upon Sub
Board I, Incorporated to supply the
necessary funds.
Grappling with the problem, Mr. Osinski
explained that the deficit was the result of
miscalculations on the part of both the
previous and incumbent SA. According to
him, the SA unknowingly overextended its
budget last year by $80,000, a figure
supplemented by the SA’s $30,000
overestimate this year. Mr. Osinski said the
errors came because the SA has budgeted
above its projected income for the past two
fiscal years.

Financial recklessness

Lester Goldstein, Business Manager of
Sub Board, said the question is one of

“disbursements over receipts.” He
explained, for example, that if the SA had
$100,000 to spend and $30,000 in reserve,'
and indeed spent the entire $130,000, then
it
would be overspending for that

particular period. This is esentially what
has happened, he said.

He continued that the SA has been in
the habit of building up a substantial
reserve fund. Assured of this security, the
SA did not hesitate to overbudget on the
assumption that cluq and organizational
monies would fluctuate during the
academic year. In addition; Mr. Goldstein
maintained that budget lines will soon be
computerized to facilitate computation.
Cutbacks planned
Presently proposed by Mr. Osinsjy is a
plan to “underbudget” this year. Whereas
the budget would have stood at $830,000,

Mr. Osinski said it will now be diminished
to $750,000. This, he feels, will provide
“quite a cushion” and prevent the chances
of “facing another deficit.” To date, the
SA has funded the Public Affairs
Symposium, the Buffalo Renaissance
Festival and the Legal Aid Clinic.
Although many selected interest groups
may not find his plan acceptable, Mr.
Osinski emphasized the necessity to cut
down on club budgets in order to maintain
the present status of larger organizations',
such as Community Action Corps (CAC)
and the newly funded Legal Aid Clinic.
Additionally, he stressed that
Symposiums such as the one scheduled for
October 10-17 and cultural events like the

Campus Security report
stalled by administration
In December, 1971, the alleged however, has, remained in the
blackjack beating of a dorm hands of Dr. Ketter who has made
student by two Campus Security no comments or recomguards prompted a full-scale mendations concerning the
administrative investigation of document, as of yet.
President Ketter originally
Security’s role in the University.
Now, nine months later, the announced that the report, along
Report on Campus Security has with his recommendations, would
yet to be released to the be published in “late summer or
University community.
early fall.” However, Thomas
y According to one member of
Crane, Assistant to the President,
the investigative committee, the would only say that the president
report was completed and will release the report “sometime
presented to President Robert in the fall.”
Ketter in early May, four months
after its inception. The report, Committee make-up
The investigating committee
was headed by MacAllister Hull,
dean of the Graduate School, and
included 19 men and four women
from faculty, student, staff,
alumni and community groups.
He indicated that some of the
very points the committee was
convened to investigate have
already become state law through
a bill signed by Governor
Rockefeller in June.
The law gives Campus Security
the power, while on campus, to
execute and deliver warrants and
issue appearance tickets.
Additionally, security officers are
now required to complete four
weeks of training and receive
Municipal Police Training Council
certification within six months.
Other issues -pending
committee investigation include
the lack of communication
between Campus Security and
other memqers of the University
community, the possible revision
of the duties of guards and the
possible arming of Security

Robert Ketter

officers.

JeffOsinski
forthcoming Buffalo Renaissance Festival
must continue despite the large budgets
they require.

Financial disaster
As Mr. Osinski pointed out, one major
setback the SA experienced was the loss of
$10,000 during the Black Cultural

Weekend last March. The weekend, which
promised to be a success, was, in a word,
“flop,” he continued. Mr, Goldstein

-MokKo

confirmed this evaluation by indicating
that although accomplished black artists
were present, the Weekend was plagued
with security problems and rip-offs.
According to Mr. Osinski, this deficit was
“the straw that broke the camel’s back.”
The meeting, boasting “perfect
attendance for the first
time,” also
included discussion on Public Information
Director Shelley Taylor’s newsletters which
will inform students monthly of SA
developments.

Interpersonal workshops

Sensitivity weekend planned
by Howie Kurtz
Feature Editor

feelings about each other and the group,” Ms. Porter
stated.

“Once you become aware of the effect your

Feedback
What will participants leam, and how applicable
will that knowledge be to so-called real life? There is
expect the consequences.”
This is one of the themes of an upcoming no set answer to this query, explained Ms. Porter,
weekend experience, a Workshop in Interpersonal since the experience remains a highly individual one.
Relations, as defined by Carol Porter, the project’s “People’s own behavior should become more clear to
coordinator. The sensitivity weekend, first initiated them, as they discover how they act in group
last February by Ms. Porter and other psychology situations.” A prime source of learning, Ms. Porter
graduate students, will take place September added, will be the feedback a member receives from
29—October I.
other people about himself.
Fifty students participated in the workshop last
The workshop experience is a practical one, she
the
current
weekend
for
70.
planning
continued,
is
since it involves learning to deal with
year;
be
divided
of
ten
groups
people
into
Participants will
people individually and in groups. “You learn a lot
with which they will spend the weekend interacting about how you operate in a small group.” The
and learning about interpersonal processes. ‘The trainers try to separate friends and roommates when
idea of the groups is to examine their own behavior dividing the participants into small groups since
familiarity tends to block spontaneous behavior.
as it happens,” explained Ms. Porter. Each group will
With relative strangers, explained Ms. Porter,
be supervised by two trainers who are “skilled in
and
“you
interpersonal dynamics.”
might do or say things that you wouldn’t
group processes
ordinarily do or say.” She feels that experimenting
with one’s behavior and taking risks adds to the
Mutual perceptions
nature
and
educational
value of the workshop, since “risks can
The groups are self-analytical in
its
which
lead
to
learning.”
members will be able to explore the manner in
they interact with others, how others perceive them,
how they perceive others, and how those perceptions
are communicated. The design of the weekend will
be more flexible this year than last year. As Ms.
Porter commented. “It's the members’ group. If the
participants are into something, it’s their option to'
keep it going in that direction.” She feels a loose
On the inside:
structure is best fitted to a workshop which is trying
Kunstler
page two
to facilitate honest, spontaneous interactions
page
Memorial
three
between all different types of individuals.
Commission
four
McKay
page
Group discussions will assume many shapes and
forms, focusing on such topics as the norms of the
group, power and leadership within the group, what
roles the people are playing, the respective influence
of those who talk often on those who don’t talk
much and vice versa. ‘The members will talk about
how they perceive each other; they will express

behavior has on other people, you can learn to

Attica

�official bulletin

Editor’s note: The following poUcy will take effect Sept. 18.

It is the present rule of Norton House Council that there
dull be no mote than two posters and two standards, or any
combination thereof, for any one event, posted in Norton Hall.
The posters shall he approved at the information desk before
posting.
More than four slingers and/or posters in this building, per
event, will constitute one violation. Four such violations will
automatically mean revocation of all poster posting privileges
for a period of one month from the date of the last violation.
Posting of any one unapproved poster shall constitute one
violation. Posting on a subsequent day of the same unapproved
poster shall constitute an additional violation. Four such
violations within a semester priod shall constitute grounds for
revocation of poster posting privileges for one month from the
date of the last violation and such other sanctions that shall
seem appropriate.
Notices will be sent out to the groups violating this policy.
This policy pertains to every club, organization, department and
special interest group on campus.

William Kanstler

A promise to Attica inmates

Commenting on the McKay Commission report
released Tuesday, Mr. Kunstler said that although he
ahd not studied the report very closely, he was
“pleasantly surprised” by the report even though he
Attorney Wiliam Kunstler vowed Wednesday
of
a
failed to agree with tyro of its major points.
that he will go to jail before testifying in front
“I don’t agree with the report’s saying that it is
concerning
uprising.
the
Attica
Grand Jury
hostages to change society, I can
In an interview prior to a speaking engagement never right to take
situations
where it is right. 1 also don’t
visualize
Kunstler
Mid:
Buffalo,
of
Mr.
at the State University
refusal to say that the governor and
with
its
Jury]
agree
Grand
testify
[in
to
front
of
the
willing
am
“I
all they want about the governor, about the state the state troopers and the correctional officers
this is a crime and should
troopers, and what I saw correction officers do, but I murdered in *D’ yard
be punished as a crime.”
“On the other hand,” Mr. Kunstler continued,
“for an establishment commission the report goes
pretty far and since the McKay Commission is now
embroiled with the Grand Jury, they are allied with

by Dave Saleh
City Editor

...

iis.”

commenting on the Grand Jury
Mr. Kunstler attacked it as “a rubber
stamp” for state actions. Claiming that it is all white
jury comprised of residents of the prison town where
many of the prison employees live, he stated that the
trial may turn into a "deadly circus” which may
mean life imprisonment for many of those who
rebelled.

Further

controversy,

McGovern campaign
problemslhop
has
Democratic Presidential
aspirant George S. McGovern will
carry New York if he can win over
the state’s sizeable Jewish vote,
according to his coordinator at
the State University of Buffalo,
Debbie Denz.
In an interview conducted
Wednesday, Ms. Denz stated that
the apparent coolness of many
.Jews to McGovern was evoked by
deceptions brought about by the
Republican Party and a basic
misunderstanding about his stance
towards Israel.
She referred to his vote several
years ago against a military
assistance bill that would have
provided jets to Israel as his chief
problem in this area. Ms. Denz
said that he voted against the bill
because of an amendment
attached to it that would have
given military aid to Laos.
Defeated in the Senate, the bill
was re-introduced minus the rider
and McGovern then joined the
Senate majority in passing the bill.
«•

publicity.
“The biggest problem’’
plaguing the campaign so far “is
apathy,” she said. “People are
staying home thinking that
(McGovern) is just as bad as
Nixon.” Ms. Denz said that some
of these people first thought that
Sen. McGovern “was too radical;
now, he isn’t radical enough.”
Women leaders
Commenting on the increasing
role of women in the campaign,
she remarked that previously,
“females were doing menial work
like licking stamps and envelopes,
typing and being sent to rallies
merely as “screaming sign
holders.” Now, the campaign is
“trying to get women in
leadership positions” formerly
held only by males.

MICHELIN
TIRE AND

The Spectrum it published thrat
timet a weak, every Monday,
Wednesday and Friday; during the
raguiar acadamic yaar by Sub-Board
1, Inc. Offiem ara /ocatad at 3S5
Norton Hall. Stmta Univanity of Naur
York at Buffalo. 3435 Main St.,
Buffalo. Now York. '14214.
Telephone: Araa Coda 719; Editorial
831-4113; Budnatt. 831-3610.

INDEPENDENT
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SERVICE Inc.

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KENSINGTON
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Second Clam Foatagapaid at Buffalo.
Mao York.
Circulation: 16,000

Page two.. The Spectrum, Fi
open mu'■ift&gt;&lt;. i k.
f
.

'

-r-r

After taking the microphone in the Fillmore
Room at Norton Hall, Mr. Kunstler referred to the
events of a year ago where reports had been spread
by officials to the effect that nine of the 11 hostages
killed during the uprising had been killed by the
inmates. He then referred to the falseness of that
report and called the events of Sept. 13, 1971,

Main and Genesee Streets and

When asked if McGovern will
make an appearance at the State
University of Buffalo campus, Ms.„
Denz said that she didn’t know at
this time. She said that the
Big drive planned
Democratic
nominee had
Concerning the organization of
an
here last
appearance
scheduled
the campaign at the State
week,
but
cancelled
the last
at
University of Buffalo, Ms. Denz
She
is
hopeful,
though,
minute.
said that “ij’s really going well.”
that
he
make
a
here
will
stop
She reported that more than 200
before
Election
Day.
people attended an organizational
meeting Tuesday night in Norton
Hall. The meeting centered on
THE
canvassing both the city and
suburban areas, voter registration
SPECIALISTS
drives in the dormitories, office
work at the new headquarters at

Rapratantad

‘All unnecessary’

»•

isswaffs?. ®i

unnecessary.

Mr. Kunstler
of it was unnecessary
claimed. “All of the death, the blood, the
all of it was unnecessary.
uncertainty and the pain
The storming of ‘D’ Yard was an act of utter
vengeance . . . without meaning, without an
intelligence behind it, without substance, except for
those 39 people who died that day for them, it had
all too much meaning and all too much substance.”
Mr. Kunstler went on to reiterate his stand
against the Grand Jury calling it the governor’s tool
It is my duty to respect the rights of the inmates as to “clear his conscience” and to help him return to
their attorney; this includes my duty to respect the the public “unblemished.” He then said that if any
confidence they have placed in me as their charges were to be pressed against the inmates, they
attorney.”
should be pressed by the-governor and those state
Mr. Kunstler also said an appeal of a subpeona officials who took part in the events of Sept. 9-13
for him to appear before the Grand Jury is pending, “In addition,” Mr. Kunstler continued, “these
but that “whether I can legally maintain my duty to officials should also hold themselves directly
be silent about my clients or not, I am never going to responsible for their own actions during the same
testify about them and deny them this right.” When period.”
further questioned about the possibility of a jail
Finally, Mr. Kunstler called American prisons
term for his refusal to testify, Mr. Kunstler said that, “concentration camps for everyone that the system
if necessary, he would go to jail rather than testify despised, hates, fears or reviles,” and called for
about the actions of the inmates during last year’s sweeping reforms in the whole penal system across
the nation.
uprising.

“All

’’

—

Attica attorney

-S U NS HIN E

HOUSE

GENERAL MEETING

WEDNESDAY-SEPTEMBER 20
8:00 p.m.
AH members are urged to attend.
106 Winspear Ave.

831-4046

�Freestyle radio comes
aloud again with

Attica remembered

Everyone at one time or
another has wanted to be a disc
jockey and sit behind a
microphone, playing your kind of
music and doing your kind of
show. If this has indeed been one
of your long time desires, check
into WIRR.
WIRR, for those who don’t
already know, is the Inter
Residence radio station.
Broadcasting to all the dorms on
campus, it has a transmitter
located in the basement of Tower
Hall. It also has two studios, a
master control studio and a
smaller broadcasting studio, both
of which are located in Clement
Hall.

A plea for “across the board” unity and
organization as well as a call for remembrance was
voiced at the Attica Memorial Service on Wednesday
evening.

by

last

Organized
year
co-chairmen David Simon and
Fred Jacobowitz, W1RR is known
for its freewheeling style and lack
of censorship. Its staff consists of
students interested in all aspects
of radio work. The first general
meeting was held last Sunday in
the North lounge of Clement Hall.
At that time, it was decided that
the structure of the radio station
needed reorganization, with a
ten-man executive board to be in
charge.
The board, which includes
Messrs. Simon and Jacobowitz,
also includes Larry Lippent,
program director; Rich Berg,
music director; John Starr, chief
engineer; Diane Roszczyk, news;
Ken Davis, advertising; Gayle
Watnick, publicity; Russ Sanders,
business manager and Sandy
Kimmel, secretary.
Unknown surprises
Future plans include

music

4

Disc jockey
•

m

marathons,

prize give-aways,
dances and other unknown
surprises. Programs will feature
news and weather, classical, rock
and folk music, talk shows,
interviews. Also planned are
on-the-scene reporting. from
around campus and the city, and
live concerts to be held in the
W1RR studios.
So, if you are bored in October
(and you probably will be), tune
in to W1RR, 640 on your AM dial.
However, if you want to do more
than just listen and are interested
in directing, producing,
advertising, radio electronics,
hosting a show, or playing music,
or you are just a bit curious, drop
into the WlRR office, located in
Gement Hall, or write Box L468,
Gement. If interested, the next
meeting will be Sunday, Sept. F7
at 3 p.m. in Gement’s North
lounge.

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Meatless Russian Salad$1.45; Jerry
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Stuffed Cold Maine Lobster$6.45
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Mixed Seafood Salad$3.95; Chicken
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Sock-Eye Salmon Salad$3.45; Fruit
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Two$5.50; Down East Sardine Salad
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sian Gold Salad with Red Caviar
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-

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SHOP
1375 DELAWARE AVE.
886-9281
THE NATURAL FOODS
STEAK HOUSE

***■

Survival found through unity
“You think you really did great by coming out
here this afternoon, right? How many of you are
going to go home and not even write to your
congressman?” challenged Ms. Mildred Prim of
Buffalo Rights Action Group (BRAG).
The Humboldt Park rally was sponsored by the
newly formed Buffalo Coalition against Repression.
According to one spokesman, the group, consisting
of veterans, workers, and student organizations,
joined together two months ago to “fight control,
control from a power elite.”
Urging the crowd to put an end to personal
apathy, Ms. Prim said, “We can’t go around being
sheep. You must get the information, get the facts
and get registered.” She stressed (he significance of
each individual’s right to vote. “Don’t let some fool
tell you that your vote doesn’t count. Your vote is a
vote for survival.”

Ros n«r

Lack of censorship

f

Both sides represented
Turning to a theme of black and white
solidarity, Larry Falkner of the Attica Defense
Committee praised the new coalition “I’m sure
many of the white people in this crowd had never
been in Humboldt Park before tonight. This
demonstrates how in this new organization both east
and west sides of the city are represented.”
Buffalo Assemblyman Arthur Eve directed the
audience’s attention to the tragic events of last
September 13. He recalled that a leader of the Attica
rebellion had told the men to let Eve and the other
mediators leave as the sun went down so that the
police wouldn’t shoot them by mistake. Mr. Eve
contrasted the respect for life shown by prisoners
and that shown by troopers, prison and government
officials. He repeated the plea of another rebellion
leader who asked, “that the world know that the
animals were not inside in D yard, but outside
running the government and the system.” Mr, Eve
reiterated the theme of solidarity, “survival was the
question, and unity is the answer.”
Ex-inmate elaborates
Jde Little, an ex-inmate from Attica, told the
crowd that he had gone from a maximum security
prison to the same minimum security prison to
which all the poor and powerless are confined. He
interpreted the events at Attica as an attempt to
keep the people both in and out of prison from
fighting for their legal rights.
The key speaker of the evening was Attorney
William Knottier (See opposite. paeeT Reiteration

the main events of the Attica disaster, he repeatedly
emphasized “the preposterous and monstrous lies”
espoused by the prison and governmental officials
during the incident.
Mr. Kuntsler, referring to prisons as “torture
chambers,” demanded immediate penal system
reforms. “The government can’t continue to use
prisons as training grounds for people in the ghetto
to teach what will happen to them if they ever
become aggressive,” he declared.
However, prisoners, if not the prisons, are
changing, noted Mr. Kuntsler. He announced,
“Prisoners understand now what political
organization is, where the power lies
in numbers
and now they are not merely being confined, but are
preparing to act.”
-

—Osterraleher

It was a year later and many of the scenes were the
same as Sept. 13, 1971, when 43 guards and
prisoners were killed by gunshots at the Attica State
Correctional Facility. The imposing walls were still
there, the guards were still there, and the rain and
reporters had returned to the scene, a grim reminder
of the event. State Sen. Arthur 6. Eve spoke to
newsmen, and introduced other speakers at the
memorial service. To the left of Eve is a wooden
statue, a memorial to the prisoners killed. However,
unlike the stone memorial erected to the slain
guards, this one was not there when Wednesday
ended.

Librarian search underway
Candidates are presently being sought for the position of Director of Libraries to
replace Dr. Myles Slatin who resigned on Sept. 1. A Selection Committee, appointed by
Dr. Ketter last June, requests all those with suggestions or recommendations of possible
candidates to contact the Chairman, Dr. George S. Bobinski, at the School of Information
and Library Studies, Hayes Annex C, or at die Lockwood Library.

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APPLICATIONS FOR THE POSITION OF
ASSISTANT TREASURER WILL BE AVAILABLE
IN ROOM 205 NORTON ON WEDNESDAY, SEPT.
13th.
TWO POSITIONS WILL BE AVAILBLE TO
INTERESTED STUDENTS.

3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE

saunas#*
SOME QF MY BEST FRIENDS ARE GORTS BUT I WOULDN'T WANT MY SISTER MARRYING ONE.
Friday, 15 September 1972 The Spectrum Page thtee
.

.

�ress evident

McKay findings blast

Reading not an archaic skill

failure tovisit prison
The New York State Special

McKay

Commission on Attica

attacked Gov. Nelson Rockefeller
for failing to inspect conditions at
die correctional facility prior to
ordering an assault on riqting
inmates.
In a&lt; report released last
Tuesday, the Commission claimed
that “no one can be sure whether
the governor’s presence would
have succeeded in producing a
settlement... but... conditions
(at the prison) made it
appropriate for the governor to go
to Attica.”
The Commission report went
on to attack the governor for
“committing the state’s armed
forces to the prison without first
appearing on the scene and
satisfying himself that there was
no other alternative. It is
possible” the statement continued
“that even without a grant of
amnesty, the governor’s presence
at Attica would have overcome
inmate mistrust of the state’s
commitment to reform and
induced acceptance of the 28

points.”
Stabilizing effect
In addition, the report claimed
that even if a settlement had not
been reached, the presence of the
governor at the prison would have
at least been a stabilizing force'on
the state troopers and corrections
dfficers who took part in the
assault on the prison.
The report also lashed out at
the governor’s failure to accept a
last minute proposal offered to
him late Sunday night by his
aides. The proposal was that [the
governor] offer to go to Attica to
negotiate further on the 28 points
if the inmates would first release
the hostages and then return to
their cells.”
The assault on the prison itself
was condemned by the report as
“faulty” since there was no way it
could have saved the hostages “if
the inmates had been intent on
killing them.” The report also
blamed poor planning and the
lack of a unified command
responsible for “coordinating the
assault and the various state
agencies involved” for the poor
medical attention and rehousing
services that the inmates received
after the assault.
Condemns taking of hostages
The state’s failure to supply
police with “non-lethal assault
weapons” along with the types of
guns and ammunition that were

children with special
problems.

by Clem Coined

used in the assault made the
occurrence of death and injury at

Contributing Editor

the prison “inevitable” according
to the report.
The Commissions’s most severe
criticism of the inmates came in
the form of a statement which
“condemns the taking of hostages
as a means of bringing about
changes in society, even where
peaceful efforts of reform have

Most people take their ability
to. read for granted. Learning to
read is nearly as great an
intellectual feat as learning to
speak. Linguists have often
marvelled at the child’s ability to
learn a language without formal
training. Educators often are
equally astounded at the child’s
learning to read in spite of formal

failed.”

If, as the educational pundits
are so quick to tell us, the average
high school senior cannot read
very well, the difficulties of those
at the bottom of this
undistinguished heap are almost

The Commission headed by
New York attorney Arthur Uman
also released a film of the assault
Wednesday, showing what the
Commission called
“indiscriminate shooting” by the
assault force. The film, which was
telecast across the state, showed
the police firing out of automatic
weapons, shotguns and revolvers;
inmates and hostages lying dead in
the area of the prison known as
Times Square', and inmates, naked
with their hands on top of their
heads, being herded by authorities
retaking the prison.

“Congratulations”
In response to the report, Gov.
Rockefeller failed to comment on
the Commission’s statements
concerning his role in the
negotiations, but he did
congratulate the Commission on
its work, calling it “essential to
carrying out our programs for
improving our system of criminal
justice.”
In an interview at the State
University of New York at
Buffalo, Atty. William Kuntsler
told a reporter from The
Spectrum that he was “pleasantly
surprised” by the report and the
fact that it “went as far as an
establishment commission report
could,” but attacked it for failing
to take a stronger stand in its
criticism of the
and
other officials.

training.

beyond

imagination.

Despite

Marshall McLuhan and those who
tell us that we’re entering a new
age of verbal communication,
anyone who hopes to get along in
modern society must be able to
read.
The Reading Center of the
State University of Buffalo stands
as a finger in the sieve of
illiteracy. Director Michael Kibby
runs the Center, which helps

reading

Time lag eliminated
The Center, which is located in
Foster Annex, has been helping
hundreds of children for nearly a
decade. Begun in 1963, the Center
also serves as part of graduate
courses in the Department of
Remedial
Elementary and
Education. Here the eager young
their
graduate students put
classroom lessons to work in the
real world.
The Reading Center had been
plagued with a long waiting list
when Mr. Kibby took over in
1971. The time lag between the
original diagnosis of reading
problems and. the start of
treatment was often as long as
two-and-one-half years, making
the original diagnosis almost
useless.

Killing the proverbial two birds
with one stone, Mr. Kibby
eliminated the waiting list and
gave the graduate students
training in “what they’re going to
have to work with in the'real
world” by assigning each student

two or three youngsters instead of

one. Asked if this affected the
quality of instruction, Mr. Kibby
replied: “They still get the same
attention
each grad student
has more responsibility, that’s
all.”
Since Mr. Kibby took over, the
Center has concentrated more on
.

.

.

diagnosing reading problems.
Children take a battery of tests
which are analyzed to uncover
their specific problems; then they
become part of a program
designed to fill their needs. The
Center uses a variety of methods
depending on the individual child
being treated.
Since the Center can’t handle
everybody, teachers often test
children and make up suggested
programs which they send to the
child’s school. They did this last
year for the Urban League to help
children from poor families.
Mr. Kibby’s long-range goals
are two-fold. He wants to spend
more time on research to find
better methods of diagnosis and
treatment of reading problems. He
also hopes to institute some of the
Center’s special programs into the
Buffalo Public School System

Interpersonal experience...
■W"

"d

.

Ms. Porter thinks most people have a
stereotyped conception of sensitivity groups as “a
place of positive feelings, lack of conflict, and a lot
of touchy-feely, where everyone loves each other.”
This conception does not accurately describe the
upcoming weekend, nor is'il necessarily realistic,
since it is doubtful that any ten people chosen at
random will “love” each other without qualification.
“I see sensitivity,” Ms. Porter said, “as an
awareness of your own behavior and its effects and
the ability to deal with it. it is also an awareness of
other people’s behavior and its effects.”
Furthermore, the sensitivity “T-groups” are meant
to deal with conflicts and confront issues, rather
than avoid them.
Ms. Porter and other Psychology graduate
students first became interested in group processes
over a year ago when Barbara Bunker, a National
Training Lab (NTL) associate, joined the Psychology
Department. Ms. Porter and others subsequently
studied group development and sensitivity training
groups under the NTL.

*

—contlned from page 1

All the trainees have had some graduate training
the
area. Another sensitivity weekend is being
in
planned for the spring, which is hoped to be a
residential weekend at perhaps Allegheny State Park
The current weekend will take place in Norton Hall
Any undergraduate who wishes participate in
the Workshop in Interpersonal Relations must attend
a brief interview. The interview is to fully explain to
interested persons the nature of the project, and
because they are looking for people without a lot of
group experience. It must also be stressed that the
Workshop is not a therapeutic experience but a
learning one.
To set up an interview appointment, interested
persons should call Carol Porter at 831-1822 by
Monday at 5 p.m. Interviews will be held on Monday
and Tuesday in Norton Hall. If Ms. Porter is
unavailable, call Wynne Oglesby, Myles Edwards or
Howard Pearlson at 831-1343. The total cost of the
weekend is $ 17.50. If possible, this amount should
be paid at the interview; a minimum deposit of S5 is
required to reserve a place in the Workshop.

No files

In the wake of the
Commission’s findings, the author
of the report vowed Wednesday
never to turn over his files on the
Attica prison riot to the special
Grand Jury investigating the
uprising.

The state’s Deputy Attorney
General, Robert Fischer has
subpeoned the records despite an
alleged agreement with
Commission officials to keep the
records secret. Mr. Liman has
called on the state to withdraw
the petition, claiming that he will
“burn the records and go to jail”
before turning them over to Mr.
Fischer.

Only seven more pages
to

the classifieds

CANDLES

-

POSTERS

MOBILES

IS THE FUTURE PREGNANT WITH THE PAST?
OR IS THE PAST PREGNANT WITH THE FUTURE?
Take History Courses and find out for yourself!
For courses, teachers, programs, and
opportunities, ask for booklet, "Studying History”,
at-231 or 233 Diefendorf.

Page fopr. The Spectrum Friday, 15 September 1972
.

/

HOURS;

MONDAY

-1;

SATURDAY*
10:00 to 5:30
THURSDAY ’til 8:00

�by Jeffrey Wechsler
cThe Spectrum Art Critic
An important retrospective of the paintings of
Sam Francis, one of America’s most inventive
abstractionists, opened to the public on Tuesday at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. The massive show of
149 works, ranging in date from 1947 to 1972,
sprawls throughout the upper floor of the gallery,
filling all but three rooms on that level. There is also
a fine supplementary show of graphics in the
Members’ Gallery.
Francis’ work has been linked, at one time or
another, to nearly every one of the recent abstract
styles: post-painterly abstraction, action painting,
color painting, etc. But it has never been pinned
down. This fortunate quality of “un-label-ability”
stems from Francis’ proficiency in manipulating his
basic images, the puff-like color spot and the spatter,
through continuously inventive transformations of
color, density and spatial arrangement over the
surface of the canvas.
Given its broad time perspective, this exhibition

is an outstanding opportunity to observe the richness
that a single abstract idiom may develop when it is
allowed to feed and flourish on each of its former
stages, while always proposing, and acting upon,
possibilities for future compositional problems.
Open space
It is a striving toward an overpowering openness,
via a structure seemingly composed equally of the
space contiguous to the painting and the work itself,
that is asserted as the dominant direction in Francis’
progress. In the early works, the essential idea of
floating color shapes is proclaimed in the
breakthrough paintings Rim No. I (194849) and
For Fred ( 1949).
Like early Rothkos, they have an evanescent
feeling about them. But whereas Rothkos’s forms
remained misty and grew to dominate the canvas,
those of Francis stayed small and gathered in bright
swarms which apparently migrate to small open
areas, or huddle around spot-herds of another hue. It
is in these paintings that Francis’ technique becomes
evident and important. He used oil paint, thinning it
until it was, for all practical purposes, watercolor.
The liquid application caused a network of runnels
which cascade down the canvas. Colored drips now
revealed their potential as elements capable of
holding down an area as effectively as a spot, and
Francis acted accordingly.

Figure-field reversals
Open space, which until now merely peeked in
at the edges, or was suggested by color variations,
won usage as the keystone of the works. As if ripped
apart from both sides, the paintings present a vast
empty space, a central vacuum powerful enough
cause the nervous, fragile color structures at the
borders to spurt and spatter trails of color into the

T''

visible evidence of the implied impact.
Color
radiant, high-keyed color is crucial to
Francis’ work and it undertakes as important a job in
his studied compositions as do the shapes
themselves. Always lively, relying on bright primaries
along with summery greens and oranges, ai)d also
purples ranging from dense mauves to delicate
lavenders, the artist’s colors inherently run the risk
of being a decorative outpouring of prettiness.
Francis, however, scatters his saturated packets
of color about and draws them into figurations
either massive or ephemeral that become color
presences, unified with the canvas and the space
around it in a way similar to, but curiously
distinguishable from, the school 1 of pure color
—

painting.

“Blue-ball series
The years 1960 63 were a transitional period
for Francis, producing the so-called “Blue-Ball”
void.
Streaked with various values of white and series, in which the color-shapes assemble at the
activated by the sprinklings of pigment, these open boundaries of the picture or hover in center-tending
areas take on all the weight and presence of a groups. The paint is washed and spread to create
painted shape. Indeed, as the voids become larger, objects with compelling suggestions of
the figure-field reversal nears completion and the semi-transparent membranes or cat’s-eye marbles.
M white appears to forcibly push back the tenuous From this period comes/, a truly stunning
constructions of color-spots, leaving the spatters as composition. Why Then Open, in which the spatial
tension between implied object and translucent veil,
deep color and playful spatter, and an indefinite
combine for a masterpiece of pictorial
space
For gems from the
structure.
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone
The most recent two phases of Francis’ work see
PLAYED 5 NIGHTS
the
artist
achieve the presaged total release of space,
875-4265
A WEEK BY
the first phase employing the simple laying down of
a bright piping of color stain at the periphery of
white expanses of up to 200 square feet. Now using
vibrant acrylic colors, the space of the paintings is as
one with its environment, stretching out where the
artist has chosen to abstain from even this minimal
edging.
&amp;
The style is remnriscent in its effect to the
“Unfurled” series of Morris Louis. It is only in those
works where the stain is a complete border that the
formula
fails. The color then draws attention to the
at
white as a contained block, restricted and inactive,
and all feeling of space and scale in the painting,
even if 15 feet long, is negated.
•»

m

Hear, O Israel

JAMES

HIS OUTLAWS

mm
am

INN.
621 Sycamore
854-9844
-

FAPER^MATE
•

•

•

Writes more than
a mile
Three ink colors

Medium or fipe
point

OHl*

\9S
at YOUR

UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
on Campus

I*

Sr-

Is*

GOVERNOR’S
-

by

35*

BLUES!
JESSE

ONE OF THE

—Inulaco

—

NO COMPARISON
IN
WESTERN
NEW YORK!
GUSTAV is still at
.155 Norton Hall, for
those ofyou who
failed to take advantage
of his tremendous
copy rates ($.08 for
each copy less for
multiples). SO. DON ’T
BE FOOLED BY
THOSE WHO ADVERTISE
GREAT$.10 RATES.
There is only one GUS.
—

Raucous exuberance

In his latest works, Francis moves with an
exuberant hand (or as it seems, a roller), back over
the entire canvas, using center edges and
middleground as he deems fit. On large fields,
Francis concocts fresh abstract forms which for all
the world look like gargantuan tablecloths bearing
the aftermath of wild horseplay with enormous jars
of fruit jellies. As exemplified by Untitled, 1972,
sweet, nearly raucous colors bleed, drip, ptiddle and
wash along tracks which lighten and open to
maintain an ambiguous and complex relationship
with the white ground. These paintings combine, it
seems, a lifetime of experimenting, synthesizing and
sheer joy in the process of painting.
The fascinating point about the work of Sam
Francis now is simply: what will he do next?
Considering his past achievements, one has the rather
rare luxury of confidence in the future. Francis has
always managed to elaborate new spatial and
coloristic variations into his work. He has given us
one of the most coherenVand masterful explorations
of an abstract vocabulary in modern art.

&lt;?

s

#

35*
|

Friday, 15 September 1972 The Spectrum Page five
.

.

�EU e

•

I

Blatant scapegoating

Release the report!

To the Editor
This letter is not a reply to any one but rather a
clarification of what Happened in Munich. 1 have
expressed my rejection of violence at all levels and
from all sides in previous letters to The Spectrum.
The condemnation/)! one group is not the solution
to the Palestinian problem. The solution lies in the
hearts of the Palestinian people who were wronged,
oppressed and collectively punished by the Zionist
establishment in occupied Palestine.
Force, killing and murdering were some of the
methods applied by the Zionist terrorists to evict the
Palestinians from their homes. For the last 25 years,
the Palestinians were pushed into desperate and
unbearable conditions in concentration and refugee
camps; thus reminding the world of a similar Jewish
agony in Europe.
It is these conditions which trigger violence and
constitute the core of the whole trouble in the
Middle East. How would one convince a Palestinian
refugee that an alien settler, American or Russian
Jew, has more right to live in Palestine than such a
Palestinian who can tell you about his house that is
being occupied by a Jewish immigrant? Many may
have read about the story of the villages of Ikrit and
Berem which stirred a storm of guilt among many

"The arrest of a dormitory student by Campus Security
on Nov. 1 has resulted in an examination of that evening's
events... two security officers have been accused of using
unreasonable or excessive force...
The Spectrum Nov. 16, 1971
has
accused
Campus Security of
"The Undercurrent staff
conducting an unauthorized search of their office in the early
morning hours of Jan. 27...

The Spectrum Feb. 6, 1972

"An escalating misunderstanding resulted in both a
dormitory resident and a Campus Security officer being sent
to the emergency ward of Edgar J. Meyer Memorial
Hospital...
The Spectrum July 21.1972
Within the past year, there have been just too many
incidents in which members of the Campus Security force
have been charged with some type of indiscretion. In each
case, there are always counter charges of blame, resulting in
Hayes Hall calling for an investigation of the affair.
In an attempt to once and for all fix responsibility and
hopefully to prevent such occurrences, President Robert
Ketter in December of 1971 appointed a Committee on
Campus Security. Basically, the recommendations to the
Hello. Welcome. Greetings. All that effusive
Committee called for a full and searching examination of the jazz. (All you people who have spent Fridays here
before can skim for a while, unless you are interested
policies, procedures and practices of Campus Security.
in seeing me trying to justify my existence for the
As of last May, this Committee completed its work.
umpteenth time.) Anyone
President Ketter .first said that their recommendations would
running into this corner for
|L
the first time is certainly due
110
be released in late summer. He then promised that the report
explanation. You could
an
would be published in early fall. Now, a presidential assistant
turn to your neighbor in class,
JvftlHI
will only report that the Committee's findings will be
or the Rathskeller, or
whatever, and say “What is
released "sometime in the fall."
•9
this shit?” But I’d rather get
While the report sits on President Ketter's desk, this
my two cents in first.
University suffers from serious security problems. First,
It has on occasions
by Stone
occured to me to consider my
arguments can be made that, despite a law passed last June
by the State Legislature, this University possesses neither a presence here in The Spectrum as being an increase
in tone, a raising of moral standards, and a general
professional nor efficient security unit (as witnessed by the uplifting of the university community.
Played right,
July incident). Moreover, there exists no cooperation or this point of view is worth at least twenty minutes of
understanding between Campus Security and its university hysterical laughter at any semi or completely official
*

The Spectrum party. As a result, it has been dropped
from my public repertoire, but it lingers on
somewhere in my id.
Having just misspelled repertoire, and faltered
over misspelled, I should like to announce that any

constituency.

In light of this, President Ketter's reluctance to release
the report is especially disturbing. Is his hesitation in
releasing the report an indication of his disagreement with it?
and does he hope that the nine-month delay will lessen the
report's impact?
To prevent any further speculation. President Ketter
owes this University an explanation. Additionally, it is
imperative that he release the Campus Security report at
once.
Soon after the Goodyear incident occurred in July, we
said:
it is extremely important that the President release
the committee's report. Its disclosure and possible
implementation can only lead to the beginning of what Dr.
Ketter termed "a truly effective program."
We will say it again
Release the report!

grammatical errors, or spelling errors, are completely

and solely the responsibility of the rewrite staff. This
announcement is as trustworthy as any public

-

...

•

—

The Spectrum
Vol. 23, No. 13
Editor-in-Chief

—

-

—

-

-

‘

-

Ronni Forman
Janis Cromer

Graphic Art*
Layout
asst

Tom Tolas

Mary hope Runyon
Cathy Bastin
. Ron Sandberg
vacant
Lit. &amp; Drama . Michael SHverblatt
Dave Saleh Music
Billy Altman
. Karin Skeldon
Off-Campus
.vacant
, . . Marty Gatti
Mickey Osterreicher
Photo
.
Claire Kriegsman*Kim Santos
. . .Howie Kurtz
Sports
Barry Rubin
..

.

City
Composition
Copy

. .

.

Backpage
Campus

.

Feature

The Spectrum is served by College Press Service, Intercollegiate Press
Bureau, United Press International, The Los Angeles Times Syndicate, The
New Republic Feature Syndicate, Publishers Hall Syndicate and The
Register and Tribune Syndicate.
'

Republication of matter herein in any form without the express consent of
the Editor’-in-Chief is forbidden.

Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-In-Chief.^

ige

six The Spectrum Friday, 15 September 1972
.

.

,

...

Friday, 15 September 1972
Jo-Ann Armao

Managing Editor
Jeff Greenwald
Asst. Managing Editor
Lynne Traeger
Businas Manager
Jack Herlan
Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
Production Supervisor Mike Lippmann

statement by the president of these United States.
Whoops. That may in fact count as a digression,
and I have been warned about those. But then it is
hard to write, but easy to babble with a few ounces
of alcohol in you. (So
it’s old fashioned, but they
can’t bust you for it . . . and admittedly you have to
watch the amount or the next morning is murder,
but it serves, it serves.)
And as in much madness, there is a purpose.
Politics. Managed to convince myself that there
would be no problem in not writing this thing this
year. Which of course, for whatever weird reasons,
was a he. But said he began to break down when I
was forced to contemplate spending an entire
presidential campaign on the sidelines. What, no
soapbox? I have no great sense that George is
anything other than better than what we have now.
But what we have now is
. there are things one is
not supposed to print in a decent family newspaper.
My fellow Americans, let me make one thing
perfectly clear . . . (fie really did say those two things
back to back, honest, 1 heard him)... it is my
considered opinion that the president of this fair

land is a creep. Unfortunately he in fact may be the
choice of the people. When a used car dealer is the
choice of a whole nation, one is tempted to
contemplate the whole nation as being composed of
used car dealers, but, hopefully that is not
completely so. Hopefully.
With reference to this grim vision, 1 have
recently been accused of being a cynic, or cynical.
The appropriate definitions seem to be: cynic
A
person who believes all men are motivated by
selfishness; and cynical Scornful of the motives or
vitues of others; bitterly mocking, sneering.
(Courtesy of the old American Heritage.) Such
contentions seem to me to be totally inaccurate.
And the lying wretches who made such remarks are
obviously totally inept human beings motivated only
by the foulest of reasons. I am perfectly willing to
recognize virtue when I find it (how often one does,
in fact, find it seems to be another question
-

-

entirely).

1 doThappen to think that the US of A has taken

Israelis and Jews. I do not need to mention many
other villages, such as Yallu, Imuas and Beit Nuba
that have been levelled to the ground by the Israeli
forces (who brought a model of Western civilization
to Palestine).

.

.

The cries for what happened to the Jews should
not swallow the cries for the Palestinian tragedy.
How many Jews who have experienced the
agony of the past have learned from these lessons?
Not too many, but something promising is coming,
and 'fortunately faster in Israel than among American
&gt;
Jews.
Arie Elian, the former secretary general of the
Mapan Party, the ruling party in Israel, has written a
new book, Desert Land, about the tragedy of the
Palestinians. Dr. Israel Shahak, chairman of the
Israeli League for Human Rights, exposed the
Zionist crimes against the Palestinian?. We need more
Jews and Israelis who have the courage to speak out
for the repatriation of the Palestinian refugees. Let
us do something instead of condemning this and
that. We need action, not talk, because the American
people are getting sick of double standards and
_

\

v

hypocrisy.

A. Abu-Ayyash

some funny turns of late, and that until we learn to
care a little more about each other, and treat each
other somewhat more fragileiy, that the trip is
largely a bummer and you are better off grabbing the
good people who float by and holding on for dear
life. (That there are some good ones seems to me to
be an anti-cynic point. Just because they are so
damn scarce . .)
An illustrative story . . . and a hoary old one at
that. Remember Sunday school? Went to it, I did.
And to a variety of denominations at that. And
believed what they told me. Being a basically gullible
soul, I swallowed that golden rule bit, hook etc.
Which was all right, the system still looks as if it
should work really well, at least theoretically.
However, over a series of confrontations with what is
'laughingly referred to as reality, it became rapidly
apparent that someone had been taken in. Namely
me. I have been basically pissed ever since it became
apparent that I had been had.
So I walk around working very hard at being a
grump, and growling, at people mostly, dogs take it
as a challenge. Which works most of the time, and
when it does not I am really good at running.
Because I am really, really scared of getting close to
people. And I need a lot, so that when people
can’t/won’t give it to me there is a tendency to get
really screwed up. Much of which tends to find its
way into this comer.
What you will essentially find here, shouh) you
choose to come back for whatever weird
are
the frustrations and ramblings of someone who\sees
the world as a not totally friendly place, but still/sees
most people as basically decent . just currently
pretty fucked up. It tends, as you may have/ noted l,to
be a trifle disorganized and terribly
There are those who rather it were just referred to as
terrible, but what the hell, not everyone can have
.

.

.

taste.

Frustrations, which currently need to be vented,
for example, I lost miserably to a mimeograph
machine this afternoon. I mean no contest. Fiddled
with all the knobs and changed settings for forty-five
minutes. Nothing. Big fat zero. In finished copies
that is. Had more unfinished copies than I really
want to talk about. Ones that weren’t inked on one
side . . guess how long it took who it figure oul
which side of the repro machine was controlled by
the button when it was on ink-right
he he he.
Then there is this typewriter that 1 am clattering
away ion. The ribbon system is controlled by three
rubber bands. One on each ribbon spool and one
across the front holding the other two in place. And
you don’t know what a down it is to be happily
smashed and suddenly have the rubber bands start to
.

...

rebel.
Am willing to admit to being paranoid at times

Many times. But it does seem as those these rubber
bands lie in wait. They never'bother me when 1 have
to pay bills. Only when 1 am even more disconnected
than usual, do they decide to spring off the machine
and foul up the works in a semi-conscious
malevolence. (Two other things you will find here
aperiodically are evidences of a love of words
safer
than people, baby
and a certain healthy fantasy
life. It all depends on which psychosis is minding the
—

—

store.)

Buried under it all is the strange premise that
living and that what makes it primarily
worth living are other people, in all their infinite
good and bad guises. Listen to me and you could get
in a lot of trouble. Happy Survival.

life is worth

�Fbrce cannot
justify fbrce

Critique

Editor’s note: The following letter was adressed
the editor of The Buffalo Evening News.

to

Dear Sir.

You speak of Ramsey Clark’s “gross
impropriety” in mentioning U.S. war crimes while in
North Vietnam (Editorial, “Clark Should Know
Better,” Buffalo Evening News August 15 ).
But would you care to deny the reality of
America’s war crime? Between April 16 and JUne 16
the U.S. Air Force killed 21,000 civilians, injured
another 55,000 and made refugees of 1.2 million
Would you deny the accuracy of these figures?
Would you dare argue that this massacre is justifiable
homicide?
I challenge you, or any citizen of this city, to
debate with me, orally or in writing, publically or in
private, the question of U.S. war crimes in Vietnam.
Respectfully
Ed Powell

Justify yourself,
America
To the Editor

I, am writing this letter to inform students

of

some hidden atrocities, and to let the new dean of
the School of Social Policy and Community Services
know that all of his inexcusable behavior will
eventually be made known to the community to
which he is supposedly responsible.
It should be obvious to most students, or at
least to those who were in Buffalo during the
summer, that Dean Merle of the School of Social
Policy and Community Services has been
scapegoating. Honest, sincere, valuable and
concerned people are being pushed out of their roles,
and therefore punished, for the actions of
undergraduate Social Work stuefents because these
actions are threatening to the dean’s dictatorial
demeanor.
His first scapegoat was the Undergraduate
Program itself (something about the need for a
re-evaluation of the UiTtlergraduate Program and the
danger of the graduate school losing accreditation).
If you ask me, the logical focus for, re-evaluation
would be the graduate program, but the attempt was
made to turn people’s attention away from the real
problem and toward a scapegoat. The action taken
was the sudden and unforesightfui cut in the number
of students to be admitted to the Undergraduate

Program.

This cut jeopardized the futures of many
students, so these students organized to oppose
(using the peaceful means of the establishment) this
rash decision. The alternate proposal, originally
suggested to the dean by Constance Frederickeson in
her role as Director of the Undergraduate Program,
was finally accepted and signed by Dean Merle, but
he is too childish to admit that he “blew it” in the
first place. So, as most children and dictators and
threatened people do, he scapegoated again. This
time he tried to silence the opposition by ousting
Constance Frederickson.
the dean decided that Constance should be
relieved of her administrative duties as Director of
the Undergraduate Program. Is Constance to be held
responsible for, and to be indirectly accused of
controlling the wills of students? Is this the reward
that student-oriented administrators and staff of the
School of Social Policy should look forward to? I
have yet to see otherwise since Sherman Merle
became dean and self-appointed despot.
I find it horrendous that this man is permitted
to continue to commit one act of administrative
violence after another. I and others will at least try
to keep students informed of all Dean Merle’s
blunders. I am sure there are more to come.
Dear Dean Merle; When are you going to realize
that you are quickly losing face and developing a
highly disagreeable reputation among students and
staff of the university community. 1 think that an
attempt at apologies, and not reprisals, is exactly
what is called for considering your actions so far.

Editor's note: This is the first of a regular series of
columns on the state of the University, sponsored
and writteh by members of the Faculty-Staff Caucus
of SUNY Buffalo. It will be a regular feature of The
Spectrum appearing every second Friday. Any one
wishing to respond to or comment on any issues
raised in the column should contact' The Spectrum
editor-in-chief at 831-4113. This week’s column was
written by Mark Schechner, professor of English.
by The Faculty-Staff Caucus

The Faculty-Staff Caucus, for those who may
know, was organized during the campus
disturbances in the spring of 1970 for the purpose of
providing a coherent focus for diffuse "liberal”
energies in University affairs. (Whether “liberal,
conservative, radical,” et al have any utility in
describing University politics still remains to be seen.
In the past two years of relative quiescence, the
Caucus, like many a crisis organization, has become a
victim of its own origins. Its atrophy has followed
the curve of both campus and national politics in
general, from crisis activism into the ennui of false
consensus. Through a regular column on the state of
the University, we hope to re-establish ourselves as
an active force in campus affairs, and to rewaken
both the sense of urgency that originally brought us
together and the spirit of criticism that is native to a
university and distinguishes it from all other
not

institutions in a society.
Such a column is all the more important now,
because at a time when our energies need to be
marshalled against crucial dilemmas (we have
dilemmas), the marshalling points appear to be

form and a prospectus for something else, the “idea”
of a better university. Our explicit concerns will
encompass both the critical and intellectual life of
SUNY as well as politics in the broadest sense of that
word
the study of power: where it resides in the
University, how it operates, for whom it operates
and to what ends.
It appears to some of us at present that
SUNY/B’s academic future is as much in doubt as its
future. It has convincingly
architectural
demonstrated, for example, that it does not have a
secure hold upon its best faculty. The loss of Kolko,
Friedenberg, Badian and C.L. Barber, for example, is
a serious one. Universities are built around that kind
of faculty. Nor have we been conspicuously
successful in attracting appropriate replacements for
them. Especially in the social sciences, which ought
to be the intellectual heart of any mgjor modern
university. SUNY/B has shown itself recently to be
something less than a lightning rod for distinguished
—

scholars.
Of course, SUNY’s recent unattractiveness to
blue-chip faculty is not in itself the problem, but it is

symptomatic of the problem: the indeterminate
nature of University leadership and the University’s
ambivalence about what it is and where it is going.
The problem of leadership in turn makes
considerable sense as a problem of power.

Who,

we might

ask, is in charge here? How far

back along the chain of administration do we look
for the motivational (or motivationless) structure of

SUNY/B? Do we look to the President and no

farther?

The UB Council? Statewide or local
commercial interests? The Legislature? The
Governor? The Trustees? The answers to a number
of questions await upon that one
not least the
status and meaning of the Ketter administration and
the meaning of its policies (insofar as it has policies)
and its negative stance toward its faculty and the
educational enterprise of the University. It makes
some difference whether the keys to- power arc
turned from New York City, or Albany or Buffalo,
and whether the State University Board of Trustees
or the UB Council here in Buffalo is our cynosure
for the future.

closed or inactive. The reduction of the Faculty
Senate from a town hall to a representative body has
made it an inappropriate place for open,
community-wide discussion. Outside the Senate, the
relative inactivity of most of the natural
communities of interest among faculty, staff and
students has contributed to a muting of the political
environment.
Into this vacuum of real engagement has flowed
the dissociated complaints and ineffectual
resignations of unhappy faculty, Staff and
administrators who have found themselves in
No special paranoia or conspiracy theory of
opposition to existing situations and policies, but history is necessary to see the connections between
lacking a context for that opposition. Nothing is money, power and policy. It w 9s William Baumer,
more symptomatic of this dissociation than the after all, who, as chairman of the Faculty Senate,
remarkably dead response of the faculty last fall to warned the faculty that “He who compensates the
the resignations of the dean of the Medical School,
musician also has the privilege of determining the
the chairman of the Sociology Department and the melody.” What he meant by that was neither secret
provosts of Educational Studies and Social Sciences nor suqtle.
and Administration, In an atomized environment, it
The University, in the face of reduced support
seems, real events, even disasters, are difficult to
from the state, has begun a campaign of soliciting
apprehend.
Initially, this column will run every second week funds from local commercial interests that have not
in the Friday The Spectrum , and will become a been heretofore famous for their philanthropy. But
support of the local Chamber of Commerce does
weekly column when sufficient material becomes the
available. The current co-editors, Prof. Mark not come cheap. Erie County business demands a
Shechner and Prof. Michael Frisch, invite all passive, locally-oriented university that is sensitive to
its influence, respectful of its prejudices and
members of the Faculty-Staff Caucus to use the responsive
to its hostilities.
column and to contact them about contributions.
What we hope to do during the year is to construct
What this has already cost us is considerable;
an opposition “profile” of the University which will what it is likely to cost in the future is more than
be at once a critique of the institution in its present considerable.
-

to the Editor should not exceed 300
words, and all must be signed with the name,
telephone number and address of the writer
included. A pen name or initial's will be used
if desired, and all letters will be kept in strict
confidence. However, no unsigned letters will
be considered for publication. All letters
should he addressed to The $pectrum

Letters

Editor-in-Chief. Room 355 Norton Hall.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or
delete material submitted for publication, but
this will only be done for reasons of style,
grammar or length. The intent of letters will

not be changed.

Name Withheld for Fear of Reprisal

The Spectrum mistakenly headlined an
article concerning Eric Isralow’s Pop Music
course, “Popular Music Discontinued.”
Though lacking funds, Mr. Isralow’s course is
still being taught. Anyone wishing to take the
course (SOS/308) may still register for it. The
course meets Wednesdays from 2 to 5 p.m. in
Room 147, Diefendorf Hall.
•

.

AND FOR YOU GOOD VOTIR

OFY OF M

LABOR DAY 'WORK CTHIC' SPIICHI'

Friday, 15 September 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

�Action line
Editor’s

note:

Roundup

CLEVELAND

is a

-

Senator

of news stories George McGovern, buoyed by
drawn from the wires of United some of the largest audiences of
Press International. Its purpose is his presidential campaign and
to keep students aware of events increasing labor support, renewed

compendium

outside the school.

NEW YORK

-

Chicago Seven

defendant David Dellinger won

court permission' to leave the
country Wednesday only hours
before he was to lead a delegation
to Hanoi to pick up three U.S.
prisoners of war whose release he
negotiated.

Until the Seventh Circuit Court
of Appeals ruling in Chicago the
success of the mission to Hanoi
had been in doubt because the
North Vietnamese had indicated
that they would release the
prisoners to Dellinger and fellow
anti-war activist Cora Weiss.
Mr. Dellinger
negotiated with

and Ms. Weiss
of the
North Vietnamese delegation to
the Paris Peace talks for the
release of three pilots downed and
captured by
the North
Vietnamese, They will be
accompanied only by the families
of the prisoners. Mr. Dellinger has
stated that they will not be turned
over to Government officials as
has been the case in the past.
tnemqers

his attacks on the Nixon
Administration Wednesday,
convinced he could win the
November 7 election.

Campaigning with Senator
Edward Kennedy, Sen. McGovern
reiterated his promise to pull all
American troops out of Southeast
Asia within 90 days of his
inauguration. He also addressed
himself to the internal problems
of America proclaiming: .“No
problem is more urgent or painful
than that of the 5'A million
Americans who tonight are
unemployed.” He went on to
pledge “a decent job for every
American who is able to work.”.
Crowds were generally large
during McGovern’s swing through
Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and
Pittsburgh, and numbered about
15,000 in Pittsburgh where the
crowds threatened to engulf him.
The campaign got another big
Tuesday
boost
as
the

165,000-member United
Electrical Workers Union
endorsed the McGovern-Shriver
ticket. The 400 delegates to the

union’s thirty-seventh convention

passed a resolution endorsing the

16 FLAVORS
ICE

Democratic ticket and blasted
President Nixon’s “record” in the
White House. In one of the most
stinging attacks on Nixon by any
labor union, the resolution
attacked the President on a wide
range of topics including
wage-price controls, the Vietnam
War and the Supreme Court
appointments.

/

The resolution said that
Nixon’s wage-price controls
“hand-cuffed the American
working people during collective
bargaining and gave the keys to
those hand-cuffs to a commission
dominated by their employers.
“He has sought to trick the
American people into believing
end the war,” the resolution
continued. “Meanwhile he hag
sent over 100,000 others to
destroy a small, underdeveloped
land from the air and sea, shaming
our country before the world and
to

adding

to

the

drain

on

the

nation’s wealth.
“The President has gone a long
way towards his goal to remake
the Supreme Court into the
protector of the wealthy, of the
corporations and of the enemies
of civil rights and civil liberties,”
concluded the resolution.

Call 694-3100
"Ask your broker about us"

YOUR CAR DONT DRIVE VERY FAR
TO CERTAINLY ICE CREAM
P ON A BIKE OR TAKE A SHORT HIKE
TO CERTAINLY ICE CREAM
A TALL FLOAT OR NICE BANANA BOAT
AT CERTAINLY ICE CREAM
ERRY-PEACH WITH A HOT APPLE TOPPIN
ES IT WORTH WHILE YOUR STOPPING AT

Bible Truth

GODS ETERNAL WORD
“Forever O Lbtd Thy word is settled
in heaven.”
-Psalm 119:89

The grass withereth, the flower
fadeth, but the word of our God
shall stand forever.
-Isaiah40;8
LET'S OPEN OUR BIBLES
.

TAINIY ICE CREA
from Goodyear next to Deli Place
•88 Main St. open every day 'til Midnight!
toss

Q: I am planning to graduate in February. Are there any special
procedures which I must follow?
A; Yes. You must file a degree requirement card with the Office of
Admissions and Records no later than October 15. It is recommended
that students file early so they can check any courses or requirements

by bringing ground troops
home he was fulfilling his pledge

—

25$

Q; What do I do if I am closed out of a course?
A: See the instructor of the course. If space is available, you may
add courses until October 20. Otherwise, choose another related
course. Your divisional dean must approve all adds after October 20.

that

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
IMMEDIATE FS-1-ANY SIZE
No poo/
No nonsense /
UPSTATE CYCLE INS.

CREAM CONES

Have a problem? Need help? Do you find it impossible to untangle
the University bureaucracy? In cooperation with the Office of Student
Affairs and Services, The Spectrum sponsors Action Line, a weekly
reader service column.. Through Action Line, individual students can
get answers to puzzling questions, find out where nd why University
decisions are made and get action where change is needed.
Just dial 83T-5000 or visit the Action Line booth in the Center
Lounge in Norton Hall for individual attention. The Office of Student
Affairs and Services will investigate all questions and complaints, and
will answer them individually. The name of the individual originating
the inquiry is kept confidential under all circumstances. The more
common questions will be answered in this column each week.

they have missed.

able

’

Q: I am attending Millard Fillmore College and would like
to use the pool in Clark Gym. Is there a special fee for this?

to be

A: Yes. Millard Fillmore College, part-time, graduate and
professional school students must pay a $5.00 fee per semester for use
of the gym facilities. The fee should be paid to Mrs. Plaster in Room
301 Clark Gym. Full-time undergraduate students do not pay a special
fee because it is covered by their student activity fee.

Q: Is it necessary to pick up your student registration card after
you drop or add a course?
A: Yes. Students must pick up their new course registration cards
within ten days of submitting a course request form. You are not
officially registered unless you pick up your most current registration
card.
'

Q; Where can I get a part-time job?
A: Mr. Wesley Carter, Assistant to the Director of the University
Placement and Career Guidance Office, states “Unfortunately
employment opportunities on the Niagara Frontier have been
considerably below par for the past three years. Our present rate of
unemployment is 8.9% and unemployment among individuals in
part-time positions has reached epidemic proportions. We estimate that
part-time rate of unemployment is somewhere in the area of three
times that of the full-time rate. That means, in essence, that one of
every five or six students will possibly find work. Over the past five
months we have had 1616 students looking at 185 jobs. Students are
encouraged to come into the Placement Office for an interview and to
return at least once a week to check possible job leads. Because the
employment market is So tight, you might also check the classified
section of the newspaper, suburban and speciality newspapers,
businesses and organizations where you would like employment,
particularly those businesses which expect seasonal upsurges in work
such as roofing companies and stores; outlying neighborhoods and
businesses with high staff turnover rates such as restaurants. In
addition, students may also file applications with the New York State
Employment Office for possible part-time openings.”

Q: Is it necessary to buy Health Insurance

-

to

be

seen by

the Health

Service?

A: This is a very important point. Each student enrolled at the
University is entitled to utilize the full services of the Health Service
whether or not he purchases Health Insurance. Health Insurance is
strictly voluntary. It pays for services provided by off-campus facilities
with none of the benefits being returned to the University or the

Health Service.

The Company of Man Inc
School of Modern and Classical Dance

PAPER 8 MATE
.S ALL OTHER
ALL PENS
1ED,

Galierv
of

Auditions for scholarships

Han.

Sunday, Sept. 17, 12-2 p.m

Welcomed yoivto

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Buffalo. We Jo oar

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University
Bookstore on Campus
1

Page eight. The Spectrum Friday, 15 September 1972
.

Classes for children, adults and professionals

om! Jewelry Tronv

arouhol fKeWorlJ
15&lt;18 Kertcl Av*.
Hon.—

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•

IF YOU LIKE PEOPLE, YOU'LL LOVE GORT

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�of OcJci
Pro football
by Dan Caputi, Jr.
Pro football is upon us once more, and the Wizard returns to the
you with his uncanny predilection.
Anyway, he’s back and sees Dallas reigning, as World Champions after
defeating Oakland in the Super Bowl.
Dallas 34, Philadelphia 10: Even with Morton at the helm, Cowboy
machine is the class of pro football.
Baltimore 21, St. Louis 17: Colts were slow getting out of the gate,

scene of the crime to astound

but Cards are still not playing with a full deck.
San Francisco 27, San Diego 14: Svare set new records as wheeler
dealer, but changing faces in pass defense can’t mend holes overnight.
Detroit 31, N.Y. Giants 20: Lion’s explosive offense should be
enough against revamped Giants, who surprised in pre-season play.
Minnesota 19, Washington 14: First Monday night game of the
season should be a defensive war throughout.
Green Bay 24, Cleveland 10: Packers, fresh from shutout of Chiefs,
will find the Browns somewhat easier to push around.
Denver 20, Houston 16: Battle of two “have-nots” finds former
cbllegiate coaching rivals Ralston and Peterson squaring off.
Miami 27, Kansas City 24: Rematch of “longest game” could
really go either way, considering these two teams are evenly matched.
Los Angeles 30, New Orleans 20: Rams come out of pre-season
lethargy with Gabriel leading assault on questionable Saint defense.
Pittsburgh 24, Oakland 21: I know the Raiders have looked super,
but Steelers have the tools to beat anyone.
Buffalo 23, N. Y. Jets 21: Bills have made tremendous strides under
Saban; Jets are still unknown quantity.
New England 27, Cincinnati 17: Pats feel that they can be
contenders in the AFC East, and Plunkett is the reason.
Atlanta 27, Chicago 14: Bears already harmless offense is further
depleted by the retirement of Sayers and the loss of Joe Moore.
College football
by Dave Geringer

This week will be a typical early-season week for college football,
with most of the top teams starting off against weak opponents.
Arizona State 38, Houston 24: Frank Kush’s Sun Devils go all the
way in the WAC.
Tenessee 20, Penn State 14: Vols defense will not crack.
USC 37, Oregon State 10: Mike Rae shows the way.
UCLA 28, Pittsburgh 7: Bruins may give USC a run for their
money.
Arizona 34, Oregon

14: Wildcats chase Sun Devils to no avail..
24, N.C. State 12: Orangemen grind it out over wolfpack
Miami 10, Florida State 9: Miami defense shackles Gary Huff.
Georgia 37, Baylor 6: A conservative estimate.
Georgia Tech ~27, South Carolina 10: The rambling wreck rambles
Syracuse

to victory.

Air Force 34. Wyoming 20: Rich Haynie passes the Cowboys silly.
Colorado 48, Cincinnati 6: Buffaloes on the road to the top.
L.S.U 38, Pacific 0: Tigers to cop S.E.C; Pacific hardly a
challenge.

Nebraska 34, Texas A and M 7. Cornhuskers get back to a winning
track
Ohio Stale 38, Iowa i. Buckeyes roll over perennial doormats

Proposal studied

New hockey league possible
ECAC Division I champion and runner-up, against
the first and second place teams from the ten-team
Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA).
The present WCHA cast includes Michigan, Michigan
State, Michigan Tech, Denver, Colorado College,
North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Minnesota-Duluth and new addition Notre Dame.
Dick Young commented: “Although our league
would hopefully be able to generate the same kind
of hockey excitement as the WCHA, we do not
aspire to be a copy of the WCHA.” Young also
added: “We are not looking to be a conference built
on scholarships and great income potential. Except
for St. Louis, all our potential members have arenas
with only average seating capacity.”

by Barry Rubin
Sports Editor
Should schedule difficulties continue for the
Buffalo varsity ice hockey Bulls, there is a possibility
of joining a new league forming in the midwest.
Already dubbed “Mid-West College Hockey,” the
new league could form as early as next year with the
merging of five hockey independents and the present
five-team Central Collegiate Hockey league.
Buffalo’s biggest problem in scheduling hockey
games has been its poor geographical position in
relation to the majority of the schools in the Eastern
College Athletic Conference (ECAC). Although the
Bulls finished second in last year’s ECAC Division II
playoffs, few ECAC schools will agree to travel to
Buffalo for play. Only three Division II competitors,
Hamilton, Oswego State and Ithaca are located in
New York State. Harry Fritz, Buffalo’s director of
athletics, commented: “We have had a difficult time
talking contract with most of the New England
teams of quality. It is true that we are somewhat
removed from the mainstream of the Eastern teams,
but we can’t book games on the road cither .”

Fresh purpose
Young asserts that the purpose of the new
league is to add a breath of fresh air to collegiate
hockey, which has been built to its present status
around the WCHA and the ECAC. Young added:
“We feel we have something to offer college hockey
which stands on the brink of becoming a rival to
football and basketball as major-interest sportsjn the
next 20 years.”

Scheduling problems
Dr. Fritz continued: “Even a switch to Division
I of the ECAC wouldn’t solve our situation because
the majority of those institutions are also in New
England.” A quick look at this coming season’s
varsity schedule shows that the Bulls will play 13
ECAC teams and eight midwestern schools.
Leading the quest for the formation of the new
ten-team conference are Bowling Green State
University athletic director Dick Young and hockey
coach Jack Vivian. The ten schools that have agreed
to discuss the league in January at the NCAA
convention in Chicago include Central Collegiate
teams. Bowling Green, Ohio University, Ohio State,
St. Louis and Lake Superior State. Independents
expressing interest in the league are Buffalo, Air
Force, Western Michigan, Bemidji State and
lllinois-Chicago Circle.
The main hope of the new league would be to
secure an automatic berth in the annual NCAA
hockey championships. As presently constituted, the
NCAA championships are a strictly closed affair
featuring East vs. West competition between the

With the start of the 1972-73 season, barely
months away, the Bulls signed a contract Wednesday
to play their ten home games in the Cheektowaga
Holiday Ice twin rinks facility. Included in the
schedule are four games with Ohio University and an
appearance in the local Nichols School Christmas
(Dec. 29-30) tourney. In the first round of the
Nichols tourney, the Bulls meet Division 1 Princeton,
while Vermont and St. Lawrence meet in the other
first round action.
The schedule: Nov. 11, Kent State; Nov. 17 at
Ohio University Nov. 18 at Ohio University; Dec. 1
at Kent State; Dec. 8 at Ohio State; Dec. 9 at Ohio
State; Dec. 13 at Ithaca; Dec. 29, Princeton; Dec. 30,
at Nichols finals; Jan. 6, Colgate; Jan. 14 at New
England; Jan. 15 at St. Anselm’s; Jan. 20 at Oswego
State; Jan. 27, Hamilton; Feb. 2, Ohio University;
Feb. 3, Ohio University; Feb. 10, AIC; Feb. 16,
Ithaca; Feb. 17, Ithaca; Feb. 24, Oswego State; Feb.
25, Oswego State; March 3, ECAC Division 11
championships.
;

UUAB MUSIC COMMITTEE
presents

THE BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
—Melvin Strauss, Conductor
An Outdoor Lawn Concert
Rotary Practice Field Friday, Sept. 15, ’72
7:15 p.m.
-

PROGRAM

Prelude to “Richard III"
Funeral March from “Hamlet’

Walton

The “Romeo and Juliet”Overture

~

Fantasy

Tchaikovsky

y

Suite from “Midsummers Night's Dream
Mendelssohn

Excerpts from the plays will be read by Tom Mardirosian
Tickets: $ 1.00 General Admission
Freshmen and Transfer Students -FREE!
Tickets at Norton
Box Office.
-

******

And Don’t Forget, Kids

An evening of New Orleans Gumbo and L.A. Sleaze
DR JOHN, THE NIGHT TRIPPER
and Special Guests
The Phlorescent Leech and Eddie
Featuring Ex-Mothers: Mark Volman
Howard Kaylan
Don Preston
Aynsley Dunbar

CLARK GYM Sept. 29, ’72
shows:
8:00 pan. and 11:00 p m
2
Students $2.50
Faculty,Staff.Alumni; $2.75
All Others: $3.00
-

■ BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBBBBB

Friday, 15 September 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
.

.

�Fall baseball mil reveal
top performers for team
Two seasons ago. Bull baseball
candidates were evaluated
according to their performances
indoors, beginning last season,
however, baseball coach Bill
Monkarsh was able to select his
squad on the basis of performance
in fall baseball games, a much
fairer means of assessing talent.
that
of the
*1 would

AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED ADS may be placed in
355 Norton Halt, Monday thru Friday,
9 a.m.—4:30 p-fn. The student rate Is
SI.25 for 15 words »r less and $.05 tor
every additional word.

evaluation purposes.”

Question marks

CLASSIFIED

fx

&gt;

As a team, the Bulls have
several question marks that will
have to be answered before their
strength as a team can be
evaluated. The Bull pitching staff,
which was the team’s greatest
strength a year ago, will have to
be rebuilt mainly through an
infusion of new talent. “1 have to
find a whole new pitching staff,”
assessed Monkarsh.” Monkarsh
feels that in Gary Rodgers and
Mike Klym, he has a solid nucleus.
However, it will be Rodgers and
Klym and sink or swim with the
younger pitchers that Monkarsh
has added to the squad. “The
whole season will revolve around
how well our young hurlers
mature,” he reasoned, “and I
hope to get a good look at them
during game conditions during the
fall.”
The Bulls will have to hit well
as a team to offset the loss of two
of the top 20 hitters in the
country, Rick Albert and Orv
Cott, through graduation. In
addition, outfielder Duke
McGuire, a Cornell transfer with a
fine reputation as a hitter, signed
with the Detroit Tigers.
“It is difficult to replace hitters
like those whom we have lost,”
Monkarsh stated. “We must have
clutch hitting by the team as a
whole in order to win
consistently.” Outfielder Joe
Piscotty, catchers Gary Cox and
Jim Scime and infielder Jim
Lalayanis are several key players
who must carry their share of the
hitting load. If Scime and Cox
both hit well, one will
undoubtedly be shifted elsewhere
Buffalo will attempt to shift into
high gear for tomorrow
afternoon’s opener, a
doubleheader at Monroe

Swinger
_

,

main reasons that we instituted
fajl baseball was to make it easier
to evaluate our personnel,” said
Monkarsh. “It is also much fairer
to the candidate if we can see
what he can do outdoors. In
addition, it gives our new players
a chance to learn my system.”
In starting their second season
of fall baseball, the Bulls have
followed a trend which has swept
the northeast in recent years. “I
feel that there is a definite trend
towards the institution of fall
baseball,” agreed Monkarsh.
“Because of the fact that most of
the northeast has good weather in
the fall, most university Division
teams of any stature are now
playing fall baseball. This is done
primarily for teaching and Community College.

ads cannot
HELP WANTED
discriminate on any basis (i.e.,
"preferably" Is discriminatory).
FOUND ADS will be run free of charge
for a maximum of 2 days and 15
words.

tour-bedroom
FURNISHED,
near University for rent.
apartment
Call 937-7971,

WANTED

HOUSE available for "group living;"
excellent condition, well located,
private.
Call 856-5140 between 9
a,m.—5 p.m. and 632-6677 after 6 p.m.

BABYSITTER

sought
for charming
*■ Th, 7:45—4:45,
834-7984.

three-year-old. T
$.75/hr. Call

SOFA
house
Helen

To replace one in furnished
cheap. Call
good condition
831-4113.
—

—

WANTED; General helper (1). Steady
part-time work (25 hours). Inventory,
deliveries, woodworking, maintenance,

etc.

Apply
51 Allan St.

In person. Waterbrothers,

call Susan 831-3395.

good pay. Must
MATH tutor needed
have knowledge of modern math sets
and logic. Call 897-0239 after 4:30
p.m.

MOTHER’S helper for 2-yr.old and
4-yr. old
days and some evenings.
Must provide own transportation.
$ 1/hr. 633-8321.
—

BABYSITTER. 9 to 5, Mon. to Frl.,
Light
children aged
IVs and 3.
housekeeping, good salary. 876-1631.
Babysitter
for
WANTED:
16-month-old child In professor's
home: part-time mornings, long-term
basis. No other chores. Hertel—Starln
area. 838-2050.

.

.

leaving
RIDE NEEDED to Michigan
Sept. 15 or 16. Call
Erl. or Sat.
837-6724.
—

RIDE NEEDED to NYC weekend of

Sept. 28, 29, 30. Will share driving and

expenses. Call Ronnl 837-2771.

RIDE offered to U.B. or Buffalo State.
Orchard Park via Union Road or
alternate. Call Steve 652-5989.
share
RIDERS wanted to Arizona
expenses. Call Bill, 892-1235. Leave
9-18.
—

BLIND MFC student living In No.
Tonawanda needs ride to school for
Mon. &amp; Wed. evening classes
call
694-3200 daytime
after 5:00 p.m.
692-3595. Ask tor Dan.
—

—

FOR SALE
KAWASAKI
835-5301.

1970, 350 cc, 3300 miles

POOL

TABLE,

T.V.,

chair,

T.V. —• Motorola, 21" console, B&amp;W,
indoor antennae. Good picture. $35.
Call
833-7000, ext. 852 (days);
837-9515 (evenings).
CONTEMPORARY blue, couch plus 2
matching chairs. Most reasonable offer.

694-1074.

SINGLE mattress and
833-7760. Reasonable.

bed

frame. Call

PONTIAC Lemans convertible, 1968,
glass
rear window, 3-speed Hurst,
689-8177 after 6.
TR6 1969, tuned exhaust, wire wheels,
28,000 miles, many extras. 689-8177
after 6.
FORD

Econolfne

van.

Good tires, $300 or best offer.
Call 826-1828.
shape.

typewriter:
PORTABLE
Smith-Corona, $30 or best offer. Call
854-2214 between 5.-6, M—F.

REDUCED
transferred

for quick
sale by
student: ’63 Cadillac
Hearse, $500. 773-3392.

1964 PLYMOUTH Belvedere. Good
running condition. Good snows. $300,
or best offer. Call Bob. 833-5359.
CONVERTIBLE
’68 VW. Beautiful
condition. $850. Call 675-0670 after 6
—

p.m.

10-speed
WOMEN'S
Iverson racer.
Many
new.
Almost
extras. Price
negotiable. Contact Clement Hall, Box
L343.

1969

MG

Miget convertible. Color
inspected.
Just
Excellent
condition. Phone 675-7132 after 5
yellow.

lawn

PAIR SNOW tires. Willing to pay $10
each for excellent condition 14”.
884-2779. Keep trying.

engine, clutch, tires and helmet. Best
offer. Call Larry &gt;77-8269.

an hour. Transportation
Make your own hours.
DON’T PASS THIS UP. Call 631-5327,
631-5326.
EARN

$3

provided.

STUDENT to assist professor’s family
with
housework and babysitting,
Tuesday
and Thursday afternoons.
Delaware—Ferry area. 883-1892.
BABYSITTER
wanted Tuesdays
8:30 —4:30. Amherst area. 632-1367.
part-time
two
ONE full-time and
workers tor Lighthouse Restaurant.
896-9791.
Call

Present this ad or I.D. Card for admission to store.
Audio Dept,
2500 Walden Ave.
Cheektowaga, N.Y. 14225
684-5500

Page ten The Spectrum Friday, 15 September 1972

1968 COUGAR P.S. 3-speed $1350.
Real sharp. 198 Minnesota Ave. Mike.

Mechanically sound. Body Is In perfect

mowers, household Items.
117 Allenhurst.

Come on out and rap with us.

jjT

Call 835-3698

BLACK Nlkkormat with case, hood,
�liter, F1A. Best condition. $220 or
without lense, $110. 832-8256. Leave
name, number.

1 963

RIDE BOARD

$700.

p.m.

MODELS wanted for drawing classes.
Hill College. M, W, F.,
10:30—12:30, $3.25/hr. Phone Mr.
Allen 839-3600, ext. 276.

WE WILL "BEAT" ANY PRICE IN TOWN

mrnm w\

meflTInformatlon.

Rosary

JBL; LDL; BOZAK; "ETC."

h

—

—

DUAL; THORENS; GARRARD;
SHERWOOD; SONY; HARMON KARDON;

f

Keep trying.

UUAB sound &amp; technical committee
needs members. Those Interested lr(
learning to operate sound equipment,
contact Tony, 261 Norton.

“EVER HEARD OF"
SANSUI; MARANTZ; KENWOOD; PIONEER;
TEAC; RECTILINEAR; A.R;
KLH; FISHER; ROYAL; SCOTT;

mjp

ENGLEWOOD Ave.
near U.B.
suitable for 4 students or faculty
family, three-bedroom lower flat, air
conditioned, refrigerator, dishwasher,
self-cleaning oven. Will rent furnished
or unfurnished. *300/month. No
utilities Included. 1 or 2-year lease.
Security deposit In advance. Call Mrs.
Schrelber at 875-3612 or 741-3962 tor

case,

carrying

after 5.

—

EVER HEARD OF US?

■■

—

appoint

SMALL refrigerator, stereo component
system, winter coat, small size. Please

GEX/AUDIO

ka

—

—

—

be&lt;XXXXXXXXXX^XX&gt;&lt;XXX&gt;g^X^

-

APARTMENT FOR RENT
TWO-BEDROOM apartment, nicely
furnished
Kenmore—Starln, faculty
or graduate students preferred.
874-6275 after 5:00.

,

—Sh»w«l«on

WANTED: Witnesses for the arrest of
Robert StelnhOrn last March In
Norton. Needed for trial. Call anyone
at 882-7181 or contact SOS.

-

TRIUMPH

Bonneville

Saturday,

1968,

new

PEASANT garb from Mexico, Pakistan,
India, Poland at The People, a folk arts
boutique, 144 Allen St. 882-6283.
BROILER-OVEN with 6-month
warranty. Good size for 2 people. Price
negotiable. Call Linda 838-1183.
CANNON Scoplc
16 camera with
automatic exposure control and
bullt-ln zoom lens. 1 year old. Comes
with case. Filters, special close-up lens
rechangeable.
Battery
and metal

FANTASTIC
Unlvox guitar amp, 2
Jenson 12”, $75; tuneable bongos,
$17.50; good
UM stereo, $30.
874-5978.
—

1968 MG midget. Excellent running
condition. Low mileage. Many extras.
Must sell immediately, $495 or best
offer. 837-5831.
1969 VW bus. Part-camper equip
48,000 miles. 2 snows. Excellent cond
Call 833-5509. Ask for Lee. Best offer
1972 CB750 Honda, 2300 miles.
Reasonable.
Call
881-1 150 or
883-9062 after 5 p.m.
—continued on

page

11

�—continued from paga 10—

1968 VW

Bug,

UPRIGHT piano, good condition. Can
arranga transportation, 8100. Call Bob
aftar six p.m. 881-1092.

Jewelry from
silk*,
836-4148 after 7 p.m.

classic guitars; banjos. Flna
and hand-mada Instruments.
Gurlan, Gibson. Guild, Gallagher,
Martin, etc. All Harmony guitars, 2S%
off until Sept. 20. The String Shoppe
524 Ontario, Buffalo. Hours 7
p m.—9 p-m., dally. Saturday 12—5
p.m. 874-0120.
FOLK,

India.

aborted color*
72" x 108", only 84
and prints. Also hand-blocked, printed,
batlked, Raiastanl Kallamkarl spreads
at “The People." a folk arts boutique,
144 Allen, 882-6283.

Call

—

—;

REFRIGERATORS,
stoves and
washer*. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. 0(&gt;Q Appliances,
844
Sycamore. TX4-3183.

factory

PERSONAL

—

WANT

FOUND

on* small brown puppy
Towar dorm. contact Jill or
Maureen, 498-B AllanHorst.

CLASSIFIES

8500. 837-9609,

20% TO 50% OFF
all major brands
fully
of stereo equipment
guaranteed. We care
we’re U.B.
students. Call Carl, 675-3172.
—

-

—

—

TO look at the molt
b r \llful looklr &lt;lre«"

INDIA bedspreads

I

—

special sale price,

I.

FOUND

only

has red toenails, but
—

PAULO

—

who?

A

f

wanted for age 17
PART-TIME
male. Must pay debts by Xmas. Call

—

On*

Rasamqlat Fox

—

835-4034.

light brown dog.
full grown. Call Jeff

ROOMMATES WANTED
large house
GRADUATE student
own room, bordering campus. $50
833-6115.
—

—

+

—

NEED MONEY to pay tuition, buy
books, augment your social life? Sell
advertising for The Spectrum. 15%
commission on sales. No experience
necessary, but car useful. See Jeff
Reiman In Room 355, Norton or call
831-3610.
LOST

&amp;

FOUND

TWO PEOPLE naaded to share a room
In thraa-badroom furnished apartment,
Kensington—Bailey area. Call Mika or
Shallay

835-2657.

famala graduate student
WANTED
or Instructor to share apartment with
same. Call after 4 p.m. 837-1135.
—

ROOMMATES

2

females

needed,

couple or males. Near Boulevard Mall.
Own room. Mostly
furnished.

691-7753.

ONE FEMALE for large house
own
bedroom. $65. Call John, 873-6384.
—

ring,
LOST IN Baird practice room
translucent purplse cone-shaped stone
gold
setting.
Great
In three-point
sentimental value. Reward. Call Kathy,
832-6948.
—

job

waterbrothers
alien
street,buffalo, n.y.14202

51

—

door to
Homi

YOUR worrlat ara ovar
call Tha
Inturance Guldanca Canter for your
lowest available rate on auto and cycle
insurance. 837-2278. After 5 p.m.
839-0566.

of

DEAR JEFF: This is not a dirty ad,
just an affectionate one to let you
know how much I love your tush and
smush. May I have another 30 minutes
sometime?

I

—

AMERICAN STUDIES: Beware
short females with red halrl

with me and your muscles will strain
no more. Vour loving Clementine.

Box 4411
Silver Spring Md.
20904

It Scott.

-

DEAR B.C. Vour tush and I can no

f

at much at you want
canvattart
naadad

EARN
door

Improvemantt. Call 836-6345.

longer meet like this. Please fly away

Bumper Stickers

name
plaasa.

ZONE Studlot Inc., N.E. naadt high
callbar musician* for itudlo work. Call
for audition
894-2400 or 894-2401.

PALO
PAHLO
Chris Clark?

Write

MARGE DEWEY, my
883-4451. Kmp trying,

——

—

McGovern-Eagleton
Bumper stickers
$1.00 Each—10 for $5.00

pair gold wlra-rlm glasses from
LOST
woman's bathroom basamant of
Norton 9/11/72. Call 884^1626.1 can't
afford th* $40 to raplace them.
—

JB. 886-6473

NEED a course. Try College E’s media
programs. For further Information, call
831-3810.

SHE NOT
killer dogs!

COLLECTORS
ITEMS

f

,

—

near

1 OR 2 people (male or female) for
house at 29 East Oakwood. Own
bedrooms. 832-9760. Leave message
for Vlnny.
own room,
MALE undergrad,
furnished apartment. $57/month plus
utilities. Dave 835-4034.
TWO MALES needed to share large,
convenient, furnished apartment. Own
Visit 9
$59.00
Kermlt (Bailey) after 6:00.

room, walkable, etc.
SERIOUS

+.

female

student

—

non-cigarette smoker, own room, split
rent ($75), utilities. Marcia, 837-0112,

831-20?0.

MISCELLANEOUS
IF YOU have a car, make money.
Teach someone how to drive. Cost
negotiable. Call 836-8929 between 1

� WATERBEDS*
of unrivaled quality
DOUBLE SEAMED,
20 GAUGE VINYL
MATTRESS IN
KING, QUEEN,
DOUBLE, AND
TWIN SIZES

and 5.

USED refrigerator, $19.95. Beds,
dressers, $19.95 up. 1282 Clinton St.
823-1800.
BART'S Bike Repairs has cheaper
parts, service, accessories and a few
rebuilt bicycles. 92 Wallace,^835-6739.

24 95

Professionally
TYPING:
done
business or personal. Term papers,
$.40/pg, 877-5234 after 5 p.m.; M—F.
Anytime S &amp; S. Sheridan—Elmwood.
—

APARTMENTS WANTED
FEMALE grad student, four-year old
son, wants share with warm people.

COMPLETE WATERBED
SYSTEMS WITH

FROM

Anne 823-4307.

ART STUDENT needs room. It you
know about any, call Dave Channon at
834-2188. Thanks.

FRAME, MATTRESS

LINER.

HEATER
ACCESSORY
AND
KIT.

I
!
WATERBEO

UL RECOGNIZED
CHEMELEX HEATER
WITH ADJUSTABLE

THERMOSTAT

FRAMES

WATERSAG

ROSEWOOD

40 00

HEATED WA TERSE D SYSTEM

TEAK

I

BLOCK

|
UPHOLSTERED PLATFORM

CONVENTIONAL BEDDING

It A

«

P

'*““'*

HEA TED WA TER SYSTEM

P ,n,
°

Total equal support for entire body and pressure points
reduced to Mow free circulation.
r

•

PILLOWS* PILLOWS-PILLOWS

NEW:

Patchwork Velvets
Quitted Satins
Printed Velvets
Belgian Bolsters
Denims &amp; Cottons

‘

VELVET CRUSH
FURLON
ZEBRA
LEOPARD
TIGER
PLUSH

150°

SPREADS RUGS •TAPESTRIES
•

FROM:

Fur
Hakmi »-«dy
Tie-Dyes

Spain
Morocco
Java Coast
Poland

Pakistan

IMiMim
*

smiths

«
*

|

BLACKSMITH
SHOP

J
j

1375 DELAWARE AVE.

I

® Bonn cornar litMd nutliM with an Maadar

(2)

1

'f ttad vinyl tally linar

(D

Fiaa

(4)

Hutm| unit

(5)

Thtfmoital

(S)

R«wng p«d«l«l

PLEASURE FARE
The AMOEBA CHAIR
The PASSION PUFF
CUBE TWO
THE MOD ROCK
end OTHERS YET UNNAMED
All with append
wetheUe covets;
Pure
Foem Construction;
r
Wide choice off Mines;

India

AS

ALWAYS: Mo roC can
African

FROM

ITEMS

886-9281

FRAMES

1_Aa)
JL± ■ No Support

|

j Wine |
j Tasting j
200

WALNUT
BUTCHER

FREE

1274 EGGERT ROAD
Y. 14226
Prescription Opticians
837-2507
832-0914

AMHERST, N

gml

•

TWO YEAR
WORKMANSHIP GUARANTY.

WIRE FRAMES

Friday, 15 September 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven
.

.

�a

&gt;

Available At The Ticket Office
Popular Concerts
Sept. 21: Leon Russell (M)
Sept, 24: Cheech &amp; Chong, The Persuasions (K)
Sept. 29: Dr. John, The Night Tripper, Phlorescent

North Buffalo Community Food Co-op will sponsor a
games night tonight at 7:30 p.m. at 3225 Main St.
Conflict Simulations Club will hold an organizational
meeting Sunday at 12 p.m. in Room 234 Norton Hall.

Leech

Septra

,(Sci. 10: “Godspe//"™&amp;
/
'
.‘Classical Cohcme

There will be a bike trip to Niagara Falls tomorrow.
Call Alan at 837-1617 and leave name and phone number.

The Undergraduate Anthro• poiogy
today at 3 p.m. in Room 234 Norti

C luh

«

i i

0

•

fSj?

Sept. 25: NeWjtofk Chambef Soloists (B)
27: Organ Trflogy/Concert I,

Sm

8ur&gt;omaster, organ (B)
wm
a Oct. 4; Wolfram Reuthe,c$lo; Karin Reuthe,

me*.

Deadline
fe

m

At,

I

%

teaching an English

.$

27.: TWe

Frederick
piano

Cleveland Quartet

%

%

6: the Lenox Quartet
'Dec. 8: The Guarneri Quartet

S

meet

Wffalo Chamber Music Society (K)
Series tickets on sale. For more information contact
ticket office. Individual tickets on sale for the first

The College E Course taught
meet today at 4 p.m. in Room 21 424

Heather Anderson is

%

S||P hen Manes.fljn (B)
&lt;i
igf
/rngtot. 20; Buffalo Symphone|te (K)

225

Undergraduate Research Council i* sponsoring a
research program for the academic: year of 1g72-73.
Interested students can pick up application* if the SA
for applications is
office, Room 205 Norton Hall.
September 30.
M

Eddie (C)

Theatre (L)

UB Karate Club will have a demonstration today at
7:30 p.m. on the main Boor of Clark Gym. Registration and
workshop will follow.

The Reservations Office has moved to Roprp
Norton Hall. The new number is 831-2511,
can be made between 8:30 a.m.— 5 p.m. weekdays.

&amp;

cotirse

concert.
Sept. 24; The, Cleveland Quartet
%
MO.

thfe^^

*For special student dktoupt see ad this Issue.

What’s Happening?
Exhibit; Sam Francis: Paintings,

1947-1972, Albright Knox

Gallery

Exhibit: Susan Knopka, Mon.-Fri., 11-5 p.m., Gallery,
Room 219 Norton Hall, thru Sept. 22.
Friday, September 15

Dee continuous showings, Conference Theater
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, 7:15 p.m. Rotary
FieM, ijtfmhslem one dollar.
t offeehouse: Johnny Shine* and* tarry Johnson, 9 p.m.
4
tifeterta Norf’bn Hafl. V '
FoIkdaSling: 8~11 p.m. Room 30 Dieffehdorf Annex

4&amp;finCert:

,

FiiSjplToor

*

Saturday, September 16
Film;

Lawman, Continuous showings conference Theater

Norton Hall.
Coffeehouse: 9 p.m.

hjprton Cafeteria

Sunday, September T7
Film; Lawman continuous showings Conference Theater
Recital: A Program of Early 'W/ffaque Music 3 p.m. Biard
,

,

Recital Hall

Mm.

Problems in Student Activities will meet onTues. and
Thurs. from 10—11:30 p.m. in room 205 Norton Hall. This
course provides an opportunity for students to examine the
development and process of student activities. For
information call Connie at 4630 or SteVeal 5594.

Sports Information
Today: Varsity golf, Su

Audobon Golf Course, I

WIRR will hold a meeting is Sunday, Sep», 17 at 3
p.m. in Clement Hall Nort(jytounge. There are openings for
disc jockeys, engineers, advertising salesmen, news

p.m. in Room 147 Diefendorf Hall.

Fisher at the Amherst

SaturdayfVarsity soccer scrimn\Ki». at Fredonia State,
fall varsity baseball dOubMleader at Monroe
!

2
,

Eric Isralow’s course (SOS 30$) is being taught this
may st81
semester. Anyone wishing to take the
register for it. The course meets Wednesdays from 2 to 5

John

pjn.

p.rrt.;

Community College, 1

Jf

$

p.rrt.

*

„

Monday: Varsity golf, St. flonaventure and Gannon at
tfie Amherst Audobon Golf Course, 2 p.m.

Wednesday: Varsity golf, Canisius at

the

Amherst

Audobon Golf Course, 2 p.m.
Intramural roller hockey action returns Saturday
morning at 10:30 a.m. in the parking lot adjacent to Rotary
Field.

There will be a mandatory meeting for intramural
football team captains today at 4 p.m. in room 113, Clark
Gym.

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>The

Vol. 23, No.12

State University of New York at Buffalo

Wednesday, 13 September 1972

\

ft

mm

mm

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—

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if: mute-

Attica Poem I
The shrill is disarmed in the echoes of the
long metallic hallways
The footsteps are once again casual
But innocence never existed here and
God never performed here
Inside these bars that house man’s most
hideous demise

The guards pass and will pass the laybys
The once outraged voices have been

silenced
Men pushed to thetot disparity

Perform bloody death rituals that only a
machine gun will answer

I am sure, we are sure
That prisoners were prisoners before the
prisons
That streets of yearning death hold far
more casualties
That the already wounded are but
wounded a bit more inside those walls
Institutions of death do not discriminate
All who must be killed, must be killed
The animals with blinding white skin
Can reflect by now no moral apology

All those men that died, they must have
known so well
Oh, revenge is blind, blood is cold
When or where did those eyes focus upon
the warmth of life
Do only the denied die so well

«

/xuS'

I can say no more
That there is something fit in honor
That the last man vomits honor in his last
pool of blood
Of what politic does death belong
In the final or the hereforth
My voice will not sanction slogans to
watch men die by
There are but lost words in last words
Breathless does rhetoric live in the souls
of God’s dead prisoners
,,

The voice

of conscience.

The Spectrum, Wednesday, 29 September 1971

�)

Social Science College

Theater research

Popular music discontinued
t

Students from all disciplines are invited to an
open meeting of College B’s Performance Research
Unit of the American Contemporary Theater
Thursday, Sept. 14 at 6 p.m., at 169S Elmwood
Avenue, North Entrance. The meeting’s purpose is to
enlist participation in Performer and Performance
Research, courses CB 113 and 213, as well as
offering the opportunity to participate in the
American Contemporary Theater on a volunteer,
non-credit basis. All who are interested in working to
realize original performance events on a long-term,
professional basis are urged to attend.

notify him at the time of the
evaluation.
According to him, the
Campus Editor
College failed to follow his
The Social Sciences College, instructions.
Representatives of Social
after a two-week review during
to
Sciences College, who preferred
the summer, has decided not
fund Eric Isralow’s Pop Music not to be quoted, by name,
course. According to the College, pointed out, however, that Mr.
Pop Music, while interesting, did Isralow’s absence in no way
not conform with its standard of affected their decision. Taking
bringing people together “to into account what they term the
study radical social theory.” course’s “marred history,” the
Additionally, they felt the course spokesmen maintained that Mr.
lacked a “solid and critical Isralow was aware prior to his
analysis” of music as well as departure that his course
generated “negative feelings”
content.
A letter sent by Eric among members of Social
Zinnerstrom of the Social Sciences College. Replying, Mr.
Sciences College to Mr. Isralow, Isralow said he knew his course
stated that the “crucial factor” presented problems, but assumed
insofar as funding was concerned, it would be funded.
He explained that the course
was Pop Music’s absence of a
“Marxist perspective.” Lacking proposal for Pop Music has been
these requirements, Pop Music the same “verbatim” since its
was not considered a “core entry into the College. Confused
course” and therefore received about the decision, Mr. Isralow
second priority, the College said. said he did not understand why
Moreover, they maintained that the College chose this semester to
this year’s low operating budget criticize the course.
prevented many “non-core
Poor attendance
courses” from being funded.
Referring to the course’s past
Responding, Mr. Isralow said
that when Pop Music was first history, the College’s spokesmen
criticized last May, he offered to claimed Mr. Isralow was rarely
incorporate Marxist literature into present at meetings last year. The
the course. He said he requested College, which functions as a
such literature during the summer, collective, has set forth in its
but received nothing except Mr. Governance Plan that every
Zinnerstrom’s letter.
member must “attend all meetings
and participate fully in the affairs
of the College.” Continuing, the
Angry rebuttal
The Social Sciences College Governance Plan requires that “if
faulted Mr. Isralow for not attendance is impossible,” a
responding to the letter and for member must notify anyone on
not appealing the decision. the administrative committee. The
Additionally, they maintain that College said Mr. Isralow was lax in
prior to a meeting last Friday, Mr. following these rules.
Admitting his negligence, Mr.
Isralow said he wanted nothing
more to do with the College and Isralow cited “personal reasons”
would look elsewhere for funding. for his poor attendance record. He
Angered with the College’s said, though, that once the
decision, Mr. Isralow said he feels meetings were rescheduled from
such action was taken because he evening to afternoon, his
was not present at the hearings. attendance was regular. Mr.
He explained that he had gone to Isralow further maintained that
New York City for the summer the meetings made him feel
and requested the College to “isolated.”
by Ron Sandberg

Chabad House to

sponsor exchange

Rabbi Nosen Gurary, Director
of Affairs at Chabad House,
would like to see a few changes
take place for Jewish students
attending the State University of
Buffalo.
First on the list of priorities,
according to the Rabbi, is the
awakening of Jewish identity on
campus. Maintaining that Jewish
culture has stagnated, he
suggested that there be more of a
“Chassidic Spirit” on campus. He
feels that too many individuals
have “watered down” the
meaning of Judaism and as a
result need to have their
consciousness raised.
“Get together”

Among

Rabbi

Gurary’s

suggestions is to have students

familiarize themselves with
—Osterrelcher
Chassidim by meeting members of
Chabad House. “It would be nice
if students could get together and with this lifestyle would be to
exchange ideas,” he said.
spend at least 24 hours in
Continuing, Rabbi Gurary said Chassidic surroundings. For this
he is in the midst of planning an reason, he suggested starting a
exchange program which would “retreat house” where students
bring Chassidic students together would be able to go and imbibe
from different regions. His ideas Chassidic culture.
Seeing this program as
also include a trip to the Chassidic
headquarters in New York City. challenging, Rabbi Gurary said
one of his primary goals is to
show that the Chassidic people do
Cultural emphasis
not
categorize others. He
Chassidim, a sect of Judaism contended that “the soul is all
that originated in Poland in the that is important. It doesn’t
18th century, seems strange and matter how you worship God, as
even “mystic” to the youth on long as you believe in him.”
this campus, the Rabbi explained.
Anyone interested in meeting
to
the
Chassidic
with
Rabbi Gurary can reach him
Referring
people
as “warm and friendly,” he said at Chabad House, 3292 Main
the best experience for those Street. He hopes support for these
wishing to acquaint themselves programs will be strong.

Rabbi Gurary

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
IMMEDIATE FS-1-ANY SIZE
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UPSTATE CYCLE INS.
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.

The College reproached this
reasoning as. purely “subjective”
and said that Mr. Isralow failed to
take an active part in the meetings
he did not attend. The College
concluded that by not
participating, Mr. Isralow had
tacitly excluded himself as a
member of the collective.

Showdown
Mr. Isralow, on the other hand,
assailed the collective, calling it,
among other things, an
“hypocrisy,” He said there is a
great deal of “internal dissent”
within the College and while it
may outwardly appear to be a
collective, it inwardly is not.
One recent concern was Mr.
Isralow’s recent proposal to open
the Pop Music course to 500
students and charge each a
voluntary “lab fee” of five dollars
for supplies. He feels that because
his course has no booklist,
students will be willing to pay this
fee. All supplies bought with this
money will be donated to the
record library and WBFO, he said.
The Social Sciences College
disagreed with Mr. Isralow’s plans,
explaining that no student should
be asked to pay a fee.
Furthermore, they feel Mr
Isralow’s decision to admit 500
students into the course disregards
the College’s policy of conducting
small classes. The College
emphasized that while Pop Music
is under its auspices, the course
should be taught according to
these standards.
At this point, Mr. Isralow
believes he has been “unjustly
treated.” The Social Sciences
College, however, feels it has been
fair in its evaluation. One incident
presently unexplained, though,
involves a student who, when
trying to sign up for Pop Music in
Norton Hall, was told by one
College member not to take the
course. The Social Sciences
College maintained that the story
is purely speculative at this time.

have incense and incei
burners.
Wind Chimes: brass, glass,

i

We

bamboo, capiz shells

—

The Spectrum is published three
a weak, every Monday,
Wednesday and Friday; during the
regular academic year by Sub-Board
1, Inc. Offices are located at 35S

timet

Norton Hall, State University of New
York at Buffalo. 3435 Main St..
Buffalo, New York.
14214.
Telephone: Area Code 716; Editorial
831-4113; Business. 831-3610.

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Page two The Spectrum Wednesday, 13 September 1972
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Subscription rates are $4.50 per
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A GORT1!!

�News anal sis
y

ofAttica still
hidden in official “studies’
e truth

by Dave Saleh
City Editor

On Sept. 13, 1971, the country
witnessed the bloodiest and most shocking
prison riot in its history. On September 9
inmates at the Attica State Correctional
Facility took control of the prison’s “D”
block, seizing 38 hostages. After four days
of intense negotiation between inmates and
prison officials. State Police stormed the
cellblock in a desperate attempt to put
down the rebellion.
The result was 39 people killed and
scores wounded. In additiort, four other
persons died prior to the assault. Initial
reports stated that of the 11 dead prison
employees, many were killed by the
inmates. It was soon determined though,
that all 39 victims of the assault died from
police bullets, and exactly what happened
at t' i prison was still a mystery.
vJn Sept. 13, 1972, much of the shock
has worn off. Many Americans have
probably forgotten about Attica, but there
are still a number of questions to be
answered concerning the uprising and
subsequent efforts to correct the
conditions which led to the rebellion.
Rockefeller white wash
Since the uprising, three commissions
have been set up to investigate conditions
at the prison and a Grand Jury has been
appointed

to

hand

down

possible

indictments against all those involved in
both the uprising and the assault.
The fact that all the appointments and
decisions concerning investigations into the
uprising were made by
Governor
Rockefeller, (the same man who ordered
the assault on the prison) have brought
severe accusations that he is trying to
“whitewash” the whole affair.
Of the three commissions appointed
after the rebellion, the Jones Commission,
the
McKay Commission and an
investigative committee led by Robert
Fischer, the state's “Super Cop,” none has
released a full report. In addition, the
Grand Jury probe has yet to hand down
any indictments against either the state or
the inmates.

attempt originate in the fact that all of the
Governor’s appointments seemed to have
vested interests in the affair. Mr. Fischer is

an outstanding member of the State Police
Force and it seems unlikely that he would
make any effort as the state’s prosecutor to
implicate any state official.
In addition, all other investigators are
directly responsible to the Governor, and
here, too, any decision critical of his
actions in handling
the uprising are
unlikely.
Although the Jones Commission was to
survey prison conditions across the state it
was not directly responsible for an
investigation of the Attica tragedy. The
McKay Commission has been accused of
“holding” information and refusing to
of its findings.
release the full

of

a

“whitewash

Attica aftermath

Sources indicate that tKe commission has
been able to fully reconstruct the events of
September 13, but for some reason have
refused, until recently to release a clear
picture of their findings.
Mr. Fischer, in his role of state
prosecutor has also been criticized for his
alleged tactics. In an attempt to obtain
information, he has been accused of
making deals with the prisoners.
A spokesman for the Attica Defense
Committee (ADC) claimed that prisoners
have been offered pardons, early paroles
and transfers to minimum security prisons
in return for testimony against those
inmates who became involved in the

from Buffalo and Rochester and do not
live in the town where most of the guards
live. The other guards have also allegedly
ostracized these guards, making Ufe for
them “miserable” as one ADC spokesman
puts it.
Besides this lone attempt to appease the
prisoners’ demands, conditions at the
prison continue to be poor. Medical
services are still inequitable as many
prisoners are allegedly given improper
treatment for severe ailments by doctors at
the prison.

uprising.

No improvement
Mr. Fisher’s

failure

to

Beatings increase

investigate

charges against state officials has also been
attacked by the ADC, but demands for his

In addition, beatings have continued at
a higher rate inside Jhe prison since the
uprising as witnessed by the seven
complaints filed this year alone againSt-

removal as the state’s prosecutor have been
ignored by the Governor.

prison guards. These beatings have
occurred despite a court order banning
such
“reactions”
by the guards.
Rehabilitation efforts have also existed-“itf
paper form only” as inmates continue to
receive “slave wages” for their work and no
efficient training plans have been enacted.
Legally, the plight of the leaders of the
rebellion looks bad. A Grand Jury has been
appointed in Wyoming County, where the
prison is located, and where most of the
prison employees and the families live.
Defense lawyers were not allowed to

Meanwhile conditions at the prison have
to improve since last year despite
promises to enforce most of the prisoners’
list of 28 demands. In fact, since the
uprising only one of the major demands

failed

has been partially initiated.

Earlier this year ten black guards were

hired in an effort to place minority group
members on the Security force.' These
guards represent
security

Vested interests
The first signs

—UP1

only 2,5% of the total

force while 85% of the inmates

are

either black or Spanish-speaking. In
addition, these ten guards are brought in

It has been one year since the rebellion at
Attica. The dead have been buried and the
debris has been cleared but the question
remains unanawarad as to whether any of
the conditions which triggered the uprising
have been sufficiently dealt with.
question prospective jurors, many of whom
have been in some way connected with
those prison employees who reside near the
prison.

William Kuntsler has recently been
called to testify in the probe, despite the
fact that he had become the legal counsel
for a number of the inmates. His refusal to
testify may mean a jail term.
If these circumstances continue to cloud
the investigation of what really happened
at Attica, there is only one path for the
state to take. The state’s inability to
objectively investigate the events of last
September 9-13 should be recognized and
a more objective body should take over.
Or is the State of New York more
concerned in a “whitewash” of the events
wliich led up to the bloody assault on the
prison rather than any attempt to obtain
justice for those who died? The people of
Navy -York should demand the latter.
In an ironic testimonial to the remaining
conditions which led to last year’s trouqle,
a 31-year-old inmate was found dead in his
cell Monday, the tragic victim of a suicide
attempt. This event draws a sad but clear
picture of the desperate plight of the
Attica inmates and points out that
something must be done at least to prevent
further loss of life at the prison.

International College
Director- Robert Mattern

X-4941

Fall Course Listings, 1972
Course
Number

Instructor

Credits

Course
Introductory Arabic
Practical Spoken Quechua
Quechua Conversation

Revolution in France &amp; Buffalo
Transnational Development Problems
Communitas
Afro &amp; Afro-American Literature
Extra-Parliamentary Political-Struggle
Modern Mid-East Political Structures
Ancient Mexico &amp; Modern America
W.Africa from Independence to Date
Economy of the Third World
Urbanization and Intrasitional Society
Comparative Studies in Social Work
The Nature of Internationalism
Legal History of N. American Indian
Overseas Study: Its Values &amp; Dimensons
Independent Study

Greenman
Soto
Soto
Futterman
Mattern &amp; Michaels
Berman

Moss
Syed
ElSalafy

Cazares
Oseni
ElSalafy

4
4

Mattern
Bloom
Bennett
Berman
Michielli

1-12

Michaels

4

4

information wilt be available at a table in Norton Center Lounge,
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, Sept. 13
15 from 10:00 a.m. until 3:00
-

Wednesday, 13 September 1972 The Spectrum Page three
.

.

�Student referendum for

Piefendorf ventu

—

student library opened

assemblyreorganization New
Slowly, haltingly, student
government is crawling out of the

sandbox. From the apathetic
anarchy of Polity to the
dysfunctional self-interest of last
year’s Student Assembly, the
legislative branch of the Student
Association (SA) has been a bare
quorum of groups voting on each
other’s budgets.
In last year’s SA elections,
Debbie Benson and most of her
ticket campaigned and won on a
platform of reorganization for the
Student Assembly. After a
summer’s work, mostly under the
direction of First Vice President
Ty Saunders, the new plans are
just about ready.
Although they won’t officially
be presented until this afternoon,
SA Public Information Director
Shelley Taylor delineated the
broad outlines of the proposed
constitutional amendments.
Student Power
According to Ms. Taylor, the
Executive Committee is “trying to
get the total undergraduate
population represented.” The
major instrument of change will
be a new representation scheme.
I f the proposed reforms are
accepted, each academic
department will be assigned
representatives in proportion to
its size. Other provisions are
planned for various interest
groups and for students, mostly
freshmen and sophomores, who
have not declared a major.
The new plan, Ms. Taylor said.

represents “a switch in SA from
by Janies Cromer
self-interest to academic interest.”
Campus Editor
She hoped that this would provide
a foothold from which students
In hopes of overcoming some of the inadequacies
could get “more decision-making
of Lockwood Library, an alternative, the
in
power in all departments
Undergraduate Library has found its beginnings in
such matters as tenure decisions.”
Diefendorf Annex. One half of the annex has been
Ms. Taylor also emphasized the fitted with tables and study carrels for use during
great need for students willing to regular Lockwood operating hours.
serve on various committees that
Janine Janas, Academic Affairs coordinator of
make important, decisions Student Association, has plans for the library which
affecting them. “All of us [SA are more encompassing than its present study hall
officers] are on three or four of function. Book acquisitions are being processed and a
been formed to find a
them,” she said. Ms. Taylor asks search committee has
for the library.
librarian
professional
that anyone interested in serving
...

come to the Student Association

office.
Extra services
Assembly reform isn’t the only
project keeping the SA officers
busy. Under Tom DeMartino, the
Legal Aid Clinic has been
revamped and its services
extended. Besides providing baiC
the clinic will give legal advice
and, in some cases, initiate court
action. The number for their
24-hour emergency service,
831-5275, is on all ID cards.
There will also be a newsletter,
tentatively planned for bi-weekly
publication, to keep the students
aware of what their government is
doing.
All of these proposals will be
put in a referendum scheduled for
Sept. 25 and 26. The referendum
turnout might foreshadow the
prospects for making student
government
worthwhile by
showing how many, or how few,
students really give a damn.

APPLICATIONS FOR THE POSITION OF
ASSISTANT TREASURER WILL BE AVAILABLE
IN ROOM 205 NORTON ON WEDNESDAY, SEPT.
13th.
TWO POSITIONS WILL BE AVAILBLE TO
INTERESTED STUDENTS.

POWERPOINT
$2.44 Value for $1.95
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Page four The Spectrum Wednesday, 13 September 1,972
.

.

Amherst: a cruel joke
Ms. Janas cited the construction of the Amherst
campus as one reason for the lack of action directed
toward improving the libraries. She said, ‘The faculty,
students and administration of this University have
been saying in effect, ‘Wait until we get to Amherst,
everything will be all right.’ But the Amherst campus
has become a cruel joke to this generation
we are denied a quality education
undergraduates
because no one wants to plan for us here on Main St.”
Space is a large obstacle facing the Undergraduate
Library. However, both Ms. Janas and Madeline Stern,
head of the Search Committee for the Undergraduate
librarian and presently a Lockwood assistant librarian,
agreed that prospects look good for utilizing all of
Diefendorf Annex as the proposed library. “As far as I
can see,” commented Ms. Stern, “the administration
has been quite supportive of this plan as well as of the
whole library concept.”
Search nears completion
Ms. Stern indicated that the librarian search was
near completion. ‘The Search Committee has
identified five possible candidates for the job and

:hase of

PAPERSMATE.

Seating for 2%
“Only 2% of the student body is capable of being
seated at Lockwood,” related Ms. Janas. “And the
additional study rooms in Diefendorf Annex won’t
even alleviate that problem greatly.” Commenting on
Lockwood’s inadequate staff, Ms. Janas said, “There
are about 25 positions open and these are middle
management positions which cannot be merely
overlooked.” She also stressed the need for a
professional librarian to assume administrative
responsibilities.
In addition, Ms. Janas said, ‘That we must use
Harriman to a great extent is a good indication of
Lockwood’s inadequacies. As it is now, the reserve
library functions as a repository for professors who
have limited copies of materials and must place them
on reserve out of fear that someone will steal them.”

-

FREEfl
49c
HOT-LINER

The idea of establishing an Undergraduate
Library originated from faculty studies of the
conditions of Lockwood Library. This work done by
the Faculty Senate Committee on Information and
Libraries and William Allen of the History Department
pointed out lack of space, lack of personnel and lack
ofbooks as the major proqlems to confront.

within the next ten days, by conducting a series of
interviews, we hope to arrive at a decision.” Input
from the Lockwood staff, die Faculty Senate
Committee on Information and Libraries, the Division
of Undergraduate Studies and undergraduate students
goes into the final selection process.
Funding for the library remains the greatest
problem. Ms. Stem said that some of the current
Lockwood acquisition fund is being used to start a
collection of books for the new library. However,
according to Ms. Janas, this $25,000 will not buy very
many books and much more money is needed. ‘The
Undergraduate Library should totally cost about two
million dollars. Libraries today are a burden on
administrations. It costs more to shelve a ten-dollar
book thanit does to buy it.”

Federal funds
Other possible areas from which to receive
financial help are being explored. Ms. Stern noted
state aid, women’s groups and other organizations on

and off campus as likely sources. Ms. Janas is
investigating the possibility of federally funding the
library. ‘Twenty million dollars was appropriated to
New York State last year and it wasn’t used. So it’s
evident that the money’s around,” she said.
Another highly disputed channel for revenue is
the Student Association. Ms. Janas had suggested that
the Student Association allocated $32,000 for the
purchase of books for the library. In her proposal, she
wrote, “$32,000 will not buy a large amount of books,
but it is a large enough amount of money so that we
can challenge the faculty, alumni, and perhaps even
the community, to match us or better us.”
Ms. Janas argued that this action would
demonstrate Student Association’s interest in
academic areas. Recently, Ms. Janas has reduced the
$32,000 figure because “it is unrealistic due to the
Student Association’s tight budget this year, yet the
commitment to academic aspects of this University
are still present.”
Opposition aired
Stu Berger, who has strongly debated this
proposal in Student Association executive meetings
and on a WBFO interview, believes that it is the state’s
responsibility to provide for an adequate library
“Granted, there is a basic need for a functioning
library at this University
a need which is of the
if
but
the
highest priority
library is not funded by
the state, there is no limit to what the state can ask
student governments to finance,” argued Mr Berger
“Student fees,” he continued, “are not meant to
be used to pay for courses or other matters supposedly
covered by tuition costs.” Mr. Berger also debated that
Student Association money would not be matched by
money from the faculty, alumni and outside groups as
Ms. Janas had proposed. ‘These organizations have no
interest in contributing to such a library,” he stated
Mr. Berger suggested putting pressure on Albany
and the administration to appropriate the necessary
funds. He concluded, “If the precedent is set that
student organizations must pay for all the
inadequacies of the state system, there will be no
money left for the students.”
—

—

INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE 381

Or. Curtis Bennett
The Nature of Internationalism Man and God: The Differing Origin and
Nature of the Gods of the Western World

Irreversible history, the once-for-all establishment of our symbols of
1.
time, speech, and divine power, our calendar, our writing, our theology
The strategic ’1st Century': the divine emperor, the Christian epiphany,
the Julian calendar
the continuing room of history. Plutarch’s account
of the Lupercalia, the New Testament Triumphal Entry,
Vergil's 4th

THE
SPECIALISTS

-

Eclogue.
2.
The Greek substratum of that writing, calendar, and divine form at
the center of community. The gods of Homer within the Graeco Roman
world. Readings in the Iliad and the Homeric Hymns.
3. The Greeks as heirs of earlier Near Eastern myth, not its creators. The
mysteries of Eleusis and the Great Goddess The Mesopotamian and
Egyptian background. The god and goddess of the forms of life.
4.
Hellenic selfconsciousness in regard to the man-made forms of god
Herodotus and the lonians.
5. The Hebrew contrast, the god of identity-in-community, god as
independent of the hyman imagination. Readings in the Old Testament.
6. The Crhistian Revolution: Pre-Judaic Near Eastern Myth, Hellenized,
read as Hebrew religious history. Readings from the Pauline Epistles
and
the Gospels.
Ionian
7. The
Revolution and its Athenian descendants, the
trasfor(nation of the divine figures
as the forms of experience without
personality: Xenophanes, Heracleitus, and Plato.
8. The paradoxical relation of the ancient heritage and its ancient
critique (or subversion) to the present theological predicament.

The lectures and reading will not attempt a chronological
historical
survey of th,s vast subject. Instead, the lecturer's own
analyses of selected
texts will try to set forth a quite new view of the origin
nature and
evolvement of the variant Western tradition of diety in action

MICHELIN
TIRE AND

INDEPENDENT
FOREIGN CAR
SERVICE Inc.

839-1850
KENSINGTON
and HARLEM

�Three are wounded Trinity College
in bizarre episode Innovation in academic areas

HARTFORD, Conn. (IP) —Trinity College has
An altercation took place and
added
a program of intensive studies to its curriculum
once
called
Dr. Bailey
again
will allow groups of students and faculty to
It
has
been
which
Campus Security.
alleged that he put the phone on work together exclusively for one semester.
critically wounding a former hold and produced a revolver
The Intensive Study Program (ISP) will allow a
counselor and his wife about I p.m. threatening to shoot the couple if faculty member to devote all ofhis teaching activity to
last Monday. He allegedly shot they did not leave. In the hall. Dr. his ISP group for the semester. The students,
William Golden and his wife, Bailey repeated his threat to which numbering about 12 in each group, will engage only in
Elizabeth, on the fourth floor of Mr. Golden allegedly replied, “Go the ISP project, receivitig up to four course credits for
the center at 465 Washington St.
ahead and shoot.” Dr. Golden was
Golden then the semester’s work.
According to Lt. Leo Donovan, then shot. Ms.
In a variation of the program, students may take
hitting Dr. Bailey on
chief of detectives, Mr. Golden, a commenced
three
regularly offered courses concurrently and
former counselor at the center, had the head with a hammer. Police
for credit in a fourth course, which would
participate
that
Dr. Bailey
been fired on August 30 after a reports charge
her
the
be
an
seminar arranged and taught by the
in
responded
by
shooting
integrating
$250,000 budget cut from Albany.
head.
instructors
of
the
courses.
three
He continued to put in time,
Golden
was
listed
critical
Mr.
in
and students is voluntary
Participation
by
faculty
though, and demanded a paycheck
condition
in
Emergency
Hospital
and
courses
be
worked
will
by faculty members on
Center
out
the following Friday.
officials told him that he had no with a gunshot wound in his back. the basis of competence and interest. The ISP will be
check coming. He then threatened Ms. Golden was also listed in open to students after their freshman year. The
to return on Monday expecting to critical condition at Buffalo
Intensive Study Program broadens Trinity’s “Special
get paid.
and
Dr. Bailey Study Programs,” which depart from the traditional
General Hospital
Dr. Bailey then notified Campus was treated at Buffalo General for outline of required courses, and allow the student to
tailor his own program of study.
Security who called the police.
head cuts
checked
his
finding
record,
They
The Co-operative Center, which Unspecified period
an outstanding traffic violation,
and arrested him when he returned prepares high school graduates who
The faculty also approved in principle an
to the center Monday. Mr. Golden aren’t
ready to enter college, was Alternate Degree-Program which would permit a
was released on bond, returned to
student to earn a degree without following a definite
the center with his wife and closed Tuesday, but is scheduled to
sequence of courses, and over a period which could
resume normal activities today
confronted Dr. Bailey.
vary from three to five years. Under the ADP, a
student will work on several projects and prepare for a
series of examinations in order to qualify for the
degree. Normally, bachelor’s degrees at Trinity are
awarded on completion of 36 course credits and four
The Student Legal Clinic requests the patience years of study.
of all those who have tried to contact them at
Allied with the Intensive Study and Alternate
831-5275. The Clinic is presently having difficulties degree programs is the Open Semeater, already part of
in opening their office and will resume regular hours
the curriculum, which allows students to engage in
beginning Monday, September 18.
some full-time independent study, either here or

Police have arrested Dr. Charles
E. Bailey, Jr., director of the State
University of Buffalo Co-operative
College Center, for shooting and

—

••

Legal aid

elsewhere, or to serve as an intern with a government
agency or private organization for one semester.
The first form of ISPwill follow the pattern of the
Open Semester but with some differences. While the
Open Semester involves a single student in some form
of independent study or work, the ISP will involve a
faculty member and several students in a single
project. The second form of the ISP is a modification
of the normal course sequence, allowing students and
faculty to work together intensively in a seminar on
issues which arise in the individual courses.

The ISP was proposed last summer by a special
planning committee which maintained that the
“frequent desire of students and faculty to explore
subjects in great depth is often too precluded by
simultaneous involvement in several courses,” and
that “intellectual relationships between faculty and
students are often too brief and too artificial.”
According to the faculty’s Curriculum
Committee, the two forms of the ISP which were
approved are “desirable and logical” extensions of
Trinity’s present curriculum which was revised in
1969 to find a “middle way” between required
courses and a totally free elective system.
Trinity President Theodore D. Lockwood has
called the Intensive Study and Alternate degree
programs “attractive curricular alternatives which
logically extend our present approaches and
imaginatively anticipate future trends.”

difficulties

Life Workshops

-

Room

223

COME SEE GUSTAV REPRODUCE

!!!

Room 355 Norton Hall

831-4630 For Information and Pre-Registration

Workshops'Offered

DECISIONS, DECISIONS, DECISIONS: WHAT SHOULD MY MAJOR BE?

Leader: Bertha Cutcher

An opportunity for you who are undecided about your major to investigate

life workshop/
means you're part of a community
of 30,000
or it means you’re one of 24,000 students, or 2,600
faculty, or 5,000 staff. Don’t just ‘‘blend in!" Join a free workshop!
Working or studying at

SUNY/B

and examine some alternatives for yourself while at the University. The prospects
of the employment market, emerging career trends and life style forecasts for
college graduates will be discussed. The valuable process of decision-making will
be the focus
Oct. 12
Nov. 16 Every Thors. 3-4 p.m. Norton Hall Room 232
NOW THAT I'VE GOT MY MAJOR, CAN
Leader: Larry Drake

I

GET EMPLOYMENT?

To probe and explore the possibilities for employment and graduate study
after having assessed your individual strengths, experiences, and education. What
are the realities of future employment or career for you given the major you have
selected.
Oct. 11 Wed. 4 p.m. Hayes Annex C, Room 6

-

Life Workshops has been organized to provide small groups in which
learning experiences outside
people can share interests, skills, ideas
-

the classroom.
no money, no credit hours, no long-term commitment!
to share something
just a way to meet people
something new.
—

-

to learn

everything
The workshops focus on virtually every human concern
from
from Knitting and Crocheting to Transactional Analysis
Interpersonal Communication to Horticulture.

FACILITATORS' WORKSHOP
Leader: Faith Hiller
Students staff and faculty who are interested in taking a more active role in the
Psychomat, may join this group which concentrates on processing the personal
feelings and responses of the facilitators, as a result of their participation in In the
weekly Psychomat sessions. The emphasis is on expanding one’s
self-understanding, increasing awareness, and acceptance of others and developing
new communication skills.

MARRIAGE MOCK-UP
Leader: Arlo Nau
A workshop on human sexuality, marriage alternatives, birth control,
divorce and other areas of interest or concern suggested by participants.
Nov. 21 Every Tues. 3:30-5 p.m. Norton Hall, Room 232
Oct. 24
(Except Oct. 31st session which will be held in Room 332)

abortion,

—

Life Workshops can be originated by anyone and are open to all
members of the University community and their spouses. They are
voluntary on the part of the leaders and free to all participants.
Got an interest? Get a group!
propose your own
participate in a preformed group
suggest an idea

STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS BUSINESS PROCEDURES
Leader: Lester Goldstein
This is primarily a workshop for treasurers of organizations and clubs
concerned with student fees, but other members and advisors are encouraged to
attend. Included will be: explanation of operations and procedures; REP forms
and other forms; methods of writing and presenting budgets; and maintaining

organizational continuity.
Nov. 9 Every Thurs. 3-4:30 p.m. Norton Hall, Room 332
Oct 5
—

Contact Life Workshops at 831-4630 or stop in Room 223, Norton
Hall.

Many more workshops will be offered for the Fall Semester. Watch for the Life
Workshops Brochure.

Wednesday, 13 September 1972 The Spectrum Page five
.

.

�EdlTORIAl
One year ago...
of the raid, of the
Attica. The one word says it all
the
thirty-nine dead,
siege, of the desperate negotiations, of
of
continued
evidence of
of false police reports, and
the
brutal prison conditions.
Attica is not a word to be forgotten. Yet, machinations
by state and prison officials are attempting to gloss over the
issues and the facts of Attica. The state is not concerned with
an investigation into the causes of Attica, but only excuses
for their actions. Commissions appointed by Governor
Rockefeller are suspiciously burdened with members who
have vested interests in the affair and who are directly
responsible to him, the man who ordered the prison assault,
the man who wouldn't even meet with the Attica inmates.
Soon after the September rebellion, prison officials
shipped prisoners connected with the uprising to other
penitentiaries; no hint that a rebellion occurred was to
remain. Additionally, the erection of a monument outside
the walls of Attica commemorating the deaths of slain
employees but not inmates is the latest sign that there is to
be no reminder that prisoners rebelled and died.
But, Attica cannot and will not be forgotten for it needs
no concrete monuments or individuals to attest to what
—

...

happened.
We strongly urge all University members to participate in
today's memorial services. It is necessary that the State
realizes that Attica, although neglected, cannot be dismissed.

Reform essential
Plagued by the non-interest of most students and
prostituted by the self-interest of a few students, student
government on this campus has historically been both
ineffective and irresponsible. Such traits are most clearly
visible in the representative legislating body of the Student
Assembly.
Established as a forum for student participation, the
Assembly, it was hoped, would legitimize the Student
Association. Rather, the actions of last year's Assembly

'BUOSI BUGS EVERYWHERE!!'

TRB

from Washington

All across Canada today electoral enumerators
are rapping on doors, asking who’s eligible to vote,
and preparing voting lists for publication and
display. Canada is holding a general election
simultaneously with ours, the vote coming October
30. Checking the votes in Canada and overseeing the
election is a federal job. If the U.S. operated that
way, our government enumerators would be out now
in Harlem, in Watts, in Mississippi, in Alaska. With
the population ten times Canada’s, the comparative
cost in the U.S. would be about $135 million. It
would be a more honest election with a bigger
turnout; only 61 percent of U.S. eligibles voted in
1968; Canada expects about 75 percent this year.

Canadians have many quaint notions about
elections. One is that the process should be brief.
Just about the time the U.S. has begun to warm up,
the Canadian election is all over; the U.S. takes a
year or $o, Canada 60 days. Prime Minister Trudeau
dissolved Parliament only last September 1.

besmirched and dirtied all notions of student government.
Concerned solely with money, last year's Assembly of
self-interest groups avoided any type of decision-making and
neglected such real student concerns as academic
Living side by side, it is amazing how little the
representation. In light of this, the proposed reforms of the U.S. knows about Canada. In a general way, of
Canada doesn’t
SA Executive Committee to reorganize the Assembly are course, most Americans realize
separate powers, as we do, between the White House
both desirable and necessary.
and Congress. But perhaps the biggest difference is
In addition to altering the Assembly's representation, the that whoever gets elected up north
will be able to
proposals will redirect and realign student priorities. Already, govern. He will have a mandate. If he doesn’t, he
will
this year's Executive Committee has secured several triumphs just call another election. Diefenbaker won in 1957,
by placing students on long neglected University committees. for example, but lacked a workable majority; he
If the proposed revision of the Assembly succeeds, it will act called another election the next year and got the
as both a bolster to past actions and an impetus to future biggest parliamentary majority in history.
Mr. Nixon won in 1968, but he was a minority
moves.
Student government has lived on borrowed time. If this President, with a Democratic Congress the whole
time. It’s funny how often that happens. Gen.
attempt to effect a viable Assembly (and, for that matter,
Eisenhower had an opposition Congress six of his
Student Association) fails, there can be little hope that eight years. European politicians stutter with
student government will ever be anything more than the incredulity at the idea.
mechanical disperser of student fees that it is now.
Sometimes in Washington the machine just
stalls. More often things just drag along: programs
for health insurance; welfare; taxes. It worries people
who doubt the very instruments of democracy. It’s
not confined just to hippies. Here is tough-minaed

The Spectrum
Wednesday, 13 September 1972

Vol. 23, No. 12
Editor-in-Chief

—

Jo Ann Armao

Managing Editor
Jeff Greenwald
Lynne Traeger
Asst. Managing Editor
Business Manager
Jack Herlan
Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
Production Supervisor Mike Lippmann

,

-

—

—

—

—

.
.

Backpage
Campus

.

Drama
Lit.
Music
&amp;

.

Feature

vacant

Dave Saleh
Karin Skeldon
. . . Marty Gatti
Claire Kriegsman
. . .Howie Kurtz

Off-Campus

.

Copy

Graphic Arts
Layout
asst

Photo

.

City
Composition

Ronni Forman
Janis Cromer
Ron Sandberg

. .

Sports

.

George Reedy, former special assistant to Lyndon
lohnson, who worked inside the White House. In his
compelling book, The Twilight of the Presidency he
gloomily predicts that things will get worse. The
“probable outcome of our current difficulties will be
a ‘man on horseback’,” he says flatly. Will the
present “museum” system reform itself, he asks?
“The prospects are dim,” he says.

Tom Toles

Maryhope Runyon
Cathy Bastin
. Michael Sllverblatt
Billy Altman
vacant

Mickey Osterreicher
Kim Santos
Barry Rubin

The Spectrum is served by College Press Service, Intercollegiate Press
Bureau, United Press International, The Los Angeles Times Syndicate. The
New Republic Feature Syndicate, Publishers Hall Syndicate and The
Register and Tribune Syndicate.

Republication of matter herein in any form without the express consent of
the Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.

He’s not alone. Clark Mollenhoff, Washington
bureau chief of the Des Moines Register and
Tribune who served for a while in the Nixon White
House, says this Administration, in some respects, is
twice as isolated and monarchical as Lyndon’s. His
book will be out next year.
,

Pat Moynihan, Mr. Nixon’s pet liberal,
interviewed the President in last week’s Life
magazine. He notes all the important programs that
got stalled in Congress. “Such failures suggest to him
[Nixon) that we face a crisis in our ability to
govern,” sayd Moynihan, “that the machinery of
government is obsolete. It is, after all, 18th Century
machinery.” Exactly. It comes back to the old point
can the American government govern? As we
come to the end of the 20th Century, the two great
issues are Race and Poverty. Can either Nixon or
—

Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page six The Speqtrum Wednesday, 13 September 1972.
.

.

McGovern, if elected, work the clumsy machinery to
do much about it?
While

Congress

has

steadily lost power, the

Canadian Parliament remains as strong as ever.
Canada is no political Utopia, but at least after an
election, you know who has the ball. That’s not true
in Washington; the present guessing here is that if
Mr. Nixon is re-elected, as expected, he will have a
Democratic House or Senate, or both
The odd thing is (and a reformer might as well
admit it) that our queer system works pretty well, so
far anyway. The problem is the future. Things
happen faster. Problems are worsening, changes
increasing, doubts deepening. Furthermore, Congress
is deteriorating.

Congress is a worry to anybody who examines
it. In a negative way it can function all right; it can
stop things from happening. All its favorite controls
and little veto powers operate for the status quo. For
example, the House Ways and Means Committee and
the Senate Finance Committee are stacked to the lid
with men from the oil states, all genuflecting to
Depletion Allowance. Washington is a harem full of
special interests, and Congress is the Grand Eunuch
guarding the seraglio. It has diminished its positivepowers, making the President more and morepowerful.
When

the

new

congressman

comes

It)

Washington next January he will not find much
party discipline (unlike Canada) but he will be
bound almost as strongly by conservative precedents.
The seniority system, for example! They laugh their
heads off in Ottawa, in Canberra, in London at the
US seniority system.
The difference between the President and Prime
Minister is extraordinary. Mr. Nixon is king and
political leader rolled into one. That makes him
aloof. Walter Hickel quit the Cabinet because he
couldn’t get to see the President; George Romney is
quitting for the same reason; John Volpe threatens
to quit if chief-of-staff H.R. Haldeman keeps him
waiting for a month again before letting him in.
In Ottawa the monarchical-ceremonial part is all
handled by the Governor General. Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau’s job is down-to-earth government.
Aloof? Look at him on the front bench at “Question
Time,” the first hour of each day in Parliament. The
questions are oral and unrehearsed, leveled by the
opposition right at Mr. Trudeau and his cabinet, and
they bring noisy protest if the answers are evasive.
Imagine the scene in Congress; dream about it; Mr
Nixon being asked about Vietnam; or John Mitchell
about the Watergate bugging! “Why, Mr. Secretary
Butz, did you reverse dairy control policies after
secret campaign gifts from the big milk interests?!!
This scene is accompanied by participatory audience
noises from the Opposition of desk-thumping
catcalls and cries of “Shame.”
Mr. Nixon escapes this. Even with the press he
has held only 27 formal conferences since taking
office. Under the quaint Canadian system only
speeches actually made are officially reported. And
at national elections the government minimizes
dishonesty by managing the thing. But the biggest
difference is that the Canadian government can
govern
get things done or fix responsibility. That’s
the weakest part of the US system.
—

�feedback

»###########»#####

Out

ofthefrying

by Bany Kaplan

pan

HOW FICKLE THE MASSES! From “Long live the King” to “Death
to the King” is only one short step. Our country, supposedly a
democracy, is not lead by a king, but the truism about the masses still

To the Editor.
Enclosed please find my check for $4.50 for
which, I am sure, will be a good investment, namely
a semester of The Spectrum.
How come I want, even need, to get The
Spectrum Well, just to maintain sanity is the first
reason. I’m a grad student at Indiana University.
Indiana University is very noticeably a member of
the Big Ten. Boola. As a result, the place is crawling
with fraternities, sororities, jocks and repressive
administrators (Bob Ketter &amp; A1 Somit are saints
compared to these dudes!) In short, this school is
hardly a trip coming off of a place like UB.
Secondly is the gutter quality of student
journalism at this god-forsakeft school. The paper,
known as the Indiana Daily Student is put out by
the School of Journalism. The School of Journalism,
being part of I.U. gets its jnoney from the
administration in large part. Guess what that leads
to? To answer that, let me ask you this? How would
you like to get The Reporter, and only The Reporter
seven days a week and have to pay $.15 a copy?
Small wonder that even the jocks refer to it as the
?

Daily Stupid.
Lastly, it’s difficult to express in words the vast
difference in the quality of people that I see on this
campus where 1 am now, and our campus. It has
once been said that walking around the city of
Buffalo is like walking into a 1948 movie. Well,
people, how would you like a whole campus like
that? I’ve met many really together people; but they
are the exception rather than the rule. To say the
least, it’s depressing. No matter how beautiful a
school is, no matter how good the facilities are, a
school is nothing without good people, and Indiana
just does not have good people
or rather, not
enough good people. If I could, I would trade ugly
UB for beautiful Indiana any day.
There are almost an infinite number of things to
vent one’s ire upon: the Union, the new football
stadium, the ripoff health center; but what it comes
down to is the fact that the school is blatantly
and is proud of the fact.
bourgeois
One of your former staff photographers, Tony
Medaro, has just fled this place for UB. Talk to him

reigns supreme.

(D
(D

about my letter and he’ll tell you that I’ve been soft
in my condemnation of the place. Also, say “hi” to
him for me.
I did a lot of complaining while at UB. I
complained that the birth control clinic had
difficulties getting started; 1 complained about the
state of the Colleges, and I complained about many
people who didn’t share my biases and opinions.
Here, there could be no birth control clinic; there
could be no colleges; and an adverse opinion at UB is
better than lack of opinion and ignorance here.
You people still in Buffalo, cheer up! You may
not have all that you want to make the school what
you want, but it is infinitely more than the typical
school has. And the people around you are people

03

Thus, the McGovern campaign took on the atmosphere of a religious
crusade which would save the country, clean it up, and turn it back to the
“people.” This mood of adulation, however, couldn’t last and didn’t.

I

In the last column that appeared here, this observer noted the almost
unreal and unthinking devotion to McGovern, and commented that “He
is the only hope we have of effecting change
but don’t count too
heavily on him and don’t make a crusade out of his campaign. He is only
one man and only a politician.”

0

-

Now that McGovern and his campaign seem to be wallowing
temporarily in the muck and mire of Senator Eagleton, the “Jewish”
vote, his muddled economic policies, and other gaffs, many political
pundits have completely written him off as a political figure; and while
many of the same people who only a short time ago praised him to the
sky, have muted their voices and lowered their opinion of him.

bn

C

Such is bullshit once you get down to the nitty gritty.

1

People forget that the original purpose of McGovern’s candidacy
not wind it down, or
was an attempt to end the Vietnam war
exchange yellow bodies for white bodies! We seem to forget that
although Americans stop dying, we are responsible for the deaths of
hundreds of thousands of human beings. Dick Nixon is selling us down
the river and trying to appease the voters (especially the young ones),
when he calls for a volunteer army, no draftees in Vietnam, ad
nauseum, etc.
-

The fact is that McGovern, once tagged as a “one issue” candidate
due to his opposition to the Vietnam war, is the only candidate with
any chance of ending that war! If he only ends the war, and reneges on
everything else, it would still be better than Richard Nixon.
It must always be kept in mind, that however sincere and
motivated, George McGovern, (like any other politician for that
matter) is still a politician, and must cope with the realities of
compromise and retreat in order to gain some of his objectives. Thus,
his constant movement away from his original stands, represents a
realistic evaluation of the fact that America will not elect a President
favoring legalization of grass, or favoring abortions, or a radical
redistribution of power and incomes in this country.
Therefore, McGovern, unlike McCarthy, will not sit and sulk and
write poetry, but will move with the currents in American life in an
attempt to gel elected. This is not an apology for McGovern. It is only
a restatement of political facts which many people, especially in the
universities, have not yet grasped.

-

-

(D

George McGovern, a short two months ago, appeared as the new
savior to many disaffected elements of American society. His dark horse
position in the race, coupled with new promises and programs, excited
and captivated many people.

I

■ft
id

The Eagleton affair, and McGovern’s wavering on economic
policies, have earned McGovern a great deal of mistrust. Logically, if
McGovern can cop out when he publically said he wouldn’t, the entire
myth of McGovern as a people’s candidate, as well as a credible
candidate, just flows out the door. Well, that myth was just a crock of
shit to begin with.

not automations.

However, don’t give up fighting against
administration policies, sub-standard housing, ripoff
prices, community hostility, or whatever your
interest is. If you don’t use the right to fight, you’ll
lose it and wind up like Indiana University, and that
would be sad.

We built that aura around McGovern, we contributed to that myth
using childlike hero-worship instead of rational thought. McGovern is
not a savior or the radical answer to American society.
McGovern is a shrewd and canny politician who built up a
Democratic organization in Dakota through hard work and political
wheeling and dealing. He presented a traditional liberal democratic
image in 1968 when he opposed the war in his futile attempt to inherit
Bobby Kennedy’s mantle. It was only after ’68 that McGovern and his
workers began to reach out for the disaffected and alienated in
American society in order to gain a springboard to the presidency.

Dave La Rond e

Well, we must realize that McGovern is human, his organization
and workers can make mistakes like any other human creation, and
that he is basically a decent man who is a politician and realizes what
he needs to win in November. If we keep in mind both his human and
political sides, we can avoid making him into something that he is not.
Read his new economic proposals. See him for what he is. Then,
consider the alternatives!

Attica tribute
Editor’s

note:

The

Student

Association

published the following open letter in sympathy
today's Attica

has

for

Memorial.

This Wednesday, September 13th, marks one
year since the New York State Troopers stormed the
“D” Block at the Attica State Correctional Facilities,
"Oh well. Easy come, easy go

...!"

murdering 43 prisoners and guards.
A memorial rally is being held at Humbolt Park
at 6:00 PM and will be followed by a procession to

the Shaw Church on Porter Avenue. There will be a
service held at the church, in memory of the 43 slain
men, at 10:00 PM.
Inhuman, inadequate prison conditions still
exist at Attica despite all the official rhetoric about
prisbn reform. We feel the memorial rally and service
are very worthwhile projects to commemorate those
who died and improve the prison conditions.
We urge students to attend and continue to fight
for a better system of criminal justice.

Wednesday, 13 September 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

�■t

■MffJ

WHISTLE STOPS

ESPANOLA N.M., Senator George McGovern refused to
comment on alleged reports that the Democratic Party had
placed an informant on either the Committee to Re-elect
the President or the Republican National Committee.
Although he refused to comment on the reports the
Senator also refused to rule out the possibility that such an
informer did exist.
Both the Los-Angeles Times and the St. Louis Post
Dispatcher reported early Monday that an official of the
Republican Campaign had been providing information to
Senator McGovern concerning attempts by the
Republican’s to “bug” his campaign.
The report followed by one day accusations by
Senator McGovern that the Republicans had tried to bug
his campaign headquarters in addition to the now famous
attempt to evesdrop on the Democratic Headquarters in
Miami.
In that statement Mr. McGovern claimed that on the
night of May 27, 1972 an unsuccessful attempt was made
to break into his headquarters. He linked the attempted
break-in to a Republican attempt to spy on his campaign.
Calling his information “absolutely true” the Senator said
that it came from “a source that was very close to what
happened that night.”
-

LOS ANGELES
Chicano activists, chanting and jeering,
prevented Senator Edward Kennedy from making a speech
Sunday on behalf of Democratic presidential candidate
George McGovern.
About 30 hecklers, clapped rapidly and chanted
“Chicano power, Chicano power,” as Senator Kennedy
tried to speak to a crowd of about 500, mostly Mexican
Americans at East Los Angeles College.
After commenting that “I’d forgotten what is was
like to be heckled,” the Senator offered to give the
microphone over to the “activists” to speak for 7 minutes
*.
and then let him speak 7 minutes.
After one of the protesters spoke for 7 minutes the
-

*

*L w 7*

•

JHIBM ■■

MPfi/MPW

crowd again began chanting and jeering when the Senator
returned to the microphone. Sen. Kennedy waited several
minutes and when the noise hadn’t subsided he finally gave
up.

participation of Latins in the voting proms and jury
selection.

The 125,000 member Ohio
Polish-American Congress has endorsed President Nixon
for re-election, the first Republican to get its support in its
28 year history.
CLEVELAND

Senator George McGovern has
WASHINGTON
contended that the administration’s wage price controls
had been a disaster allowing inflation to accelerate.
—

In a statement released Monday the Democratic
presidential candidate called the President’s Price
Commission “an almost total failure” because it has been
more pre-occupied with “maintaining profits, instead of
controlling inflation.”
“The inflation has not stopped,” he continued.
“Consumer prices rose at a rate of 3.5% in the eight
months between Novemqer 1971, and July 1972 only a
little below the rate prior to the controls and considerably
above the 2.5% goal.”
The candidate said that inflation was actually
accelerating because over the last three months the
wholesale index has risen at a rate of 7.4% faster than any
time during the last 12 months.
The Senator later warned a group of Minnesota
farmers against “Fifth Avenue farmers” taking over
American agriculture and stated: “unless we act quickly,
the names on the mailboxes of rural America in 1980, will
no longer read Smith and Jones. They will be Tenneco and
Ralston Purina and Dow Chemical,” firms heavily involved
in agriculture.
Senator McGovern called for the passage of
legislation to “prohibit giant non-farm corporations from
engaging in farming directly or indirectly.”
‘The time is long overdue” the senator continued,
“for America to bring you into the mainstream of
opportunity in this land.”
Sen. McGovern also called for bi-lingual education
programs, aggressive recruitment and the promotion of
Latins in the federal civel service, and guarantees for fuller

-

“We are opposed to the takeover of the Democratic
Party by a new element, the type of persons that are
behind Senator George McGovern,” George Wrost,
president of the congress said.

"

WILKES-BARRE, PA.
President Nixon saved the day
last Sunday as he visited this flood-ravaged community.
-

When the President learned
that sponsors of a picnic in a trailer home park which had
been erected to house victims of the summer floods were
having financial problems, he promised that the White
House would foot the bill for the fe*t. Six White House
mess crew members brought the food which consisted of
100 cases of soda and 2000 hot dogs and hamburgers,
along with the necessary rolls.

...

flood relief troubleshooter,
Nixon
on his four-hour visit to the area.
accompanied Mr.
President’s
presence made things happen quickly, and
The
he stated that the coutry would “provide what is
necessary” to help re-build Wilkes-Barre. One man that the
President met on his tour, and who had been living in an
attic with his wife since the flood, was told he would be
provided with a temporary mobile home “today or
tommorrow.”
Frank

Carluccis,

A check for $4 million was given Dr. Francis

Michelini, president of Wilkes College, which was hard hit
during the disaster. The check represented the first
payment to a private institution under a recent
admendment to disaster relief legislation.

•

RELAX UNWIND
in the newly redecorated
-

TIFFIN ROOM
(2nd floor Norton Hall)

SERVING:

LUNCHEON
HAPPYHOUR
DINNER
COCTAILS

Page eight. The Spectrum Wednesday, 13 September 1972
.

11:30 to 1:30 p.m.
4:30 to 5:30 p.m.
4:30 to 7:00 p.m.
4:30 to 7:30 p.m.

�1

f

I

Recycle this column
I———

■111 .1

'

by Ellen Greenfield
Editor’s note: The following column will be a regular
feature of The Spectrum. Focusing attention on the
growing ecological mess this nationand the world is in,
the column will appear every Wednesday.
there was no garbage. But
In the beginning
then, there were no people, either. Today, however, is
another story: with 3.5 billion people inhabiting this
producing, consuming, using and
tiny planet,
discarding, the problem of waste disposal has become
one of singular importance. Bringin’ it all back home,
as the man says, let’s look atihe mess we’re all in and
see where it comes from and where it’s all going.
Having raked through my own and several Mends’
garbage, I have come to the conclusion that in the long
run, “urqan American garbage’’ averages several
common daily components. (If you are a bigger
skeptic than most you can do your ownraking.) They
are: glass bottles; aluminum, steel and bi-metal cans;
paper items, including waxed or plastic coated cartons
and newspaper; plastics, mostly in the form of
wrapping, bags and bottles;and food scraps.
Each of us produces about 2 to 5 lbs. of trash
every day, or almost one ton per year. At an average
cost of S30/ton for collection and $4/ton for disposal,
a large city such as New York handles 25,000 to
30,000 tons per day twice this amount is expected
by 1985. Thefinal resting ground for this not-so-white
elephant is becoming a prime concern of city planners
and environmentalists alike.
At present just about all of the trash collected
becomes so-called “sanitary landfill.” Of the collected
garbage, 20%-22% is first incinerated and then used as
fill. Its “sanitary” status is dubious, since water,
moving through the permeable residue, leaches out
foul or dangerous organic and inorganic compounds
which are transported to the water table or seep out at
ground level and into the ground waters.
These landfill sites differ from the old “garbage
dumps” mainly in that instead of a mound of garbage,
the waste is somewhat compacted by 20 ton tractors
running over it until it blends with the surrounding
ground level. Soil, thrown over each day’s deliveries,
allows for some composting and is an attempt to avoid
the noxious odors to which rotting garbage is prone.
These sites are frequently used as new land for
construction. The ecology of areas used for landfill (in
regions bordering on water, mainly low-lying
~wetlands) is permanently altered due to this use, and
in the near future virgin landfill areas will be
impossible to find in the vicinity of the large cities
which need them the most.
While that percentage of refuse which is
incinerated cuts down on the bulk of trash to be
buried, it adds to the air and water pollution. Cinders,
mineral dust, soot, and charred materials can be
picked up and scattered by the wind, causing lowered
visibility as well as eye and lung problems. Incinerated
plastics liberate hydrogen chloride which combine
with water vapor to form hydrochloric acid. Other
potentially dangerous emissions are sulfur oxides,
nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxides, hydrocarbons
-

—

and lead.

Obviously, alternatives must be found and PUT
INTO USE soon. Both institutional and personal
changes must be made if we are to avoid being buried
beneath our own waste. On a personal level, here are
several possible ways to cut down on the amount of
waste we each produce:
1. Avoid buying paper items when you can get a
cloth equivalent (napkins, towels, plates,
utensils, etc.)
2. Store leftover food in a reusable container
instead of foil, and reuse bags that come with the
bread and other food you buy.
3. If you buy paper products buy white and not
poisonously dyed colors.
4. Don’t buy things that are over-packaged
if you
do, cause little trouble and leave the unnecessary
packaging in the store Done often enough, by
enough people, this could have an effect on what
the store orders.
5. Keep your garbage OUT of palstic garbage bags.
6. Wrap nespapers separately when putting them
out for pick-up.
7. Or find someone who buys old papers and
returns them to the mill.
If centers are set up, USE THEM. If
8. Recycle
not, agitate for them.
On an institutional scale, technology is being
developed to handle the problem, but lack of
sufficient funds coupled with inefficient spending and
the cities’ reticence to accept change is making this
work very slow. Below are mentioned some promising
possibilities which will be discussed in detail in
-

-

-

-

another article.

Pyrolysis
Basically, this is charring the refuse in
an oxygen-free environment at a temperature ofabout
500 degrees Centigrade. The products are a residue of
charcoal and mineral materials and a mixture of
organic gases and liquids which can be burned as fuel.
The solid residue is magnetically sorted to remove iron
and then disposed of at a landfill, considerable
diminished in bulk. Monsanto plans to build a plant
capable of handling 1000 tons/day in New York City,
and Torrax Systems has installed one in Erie County
which handles 75 tons/day.
Composting
Several systems have been
developed to efficiently allow garbage to decompose
into a substance which, when mixed with nutrients,
yields an organic fertilizer which can be sold.
Separation Recycling
This is the only realistic
way to comqat the waste disposal problem because it
strikes at the heart of the problem and is a
conservation measure, as well.
As its name implies, this process
Shredding
involves tearing the refuse into smaller pieces so it may
be more readily handled by disposal machinery.
Compaction
This, too, is self-explanatory, and
neither anything new nor anything terribly helpful in
the long run. It has been found that compacted refuse,
coated with plastic for use as a building material has a
tendency to explode as the methane gas, produced by
the decomposing garbage within, builds up pressure.
The mjyor problem with even the most
ecologically sound of these ideas is that present
capacities for each system are far too low to make even
a dent in large scale waste removal.
—

Golf team looking to

lengthen win streak
Buffalo’s intercollegiate golf
program started its 36th year
yesterday with an away match at
Geneseo State.
The overall record going into
this year stands at an impressive
169 wins, 84 losses and 12 ties.
However, for coach Bill Dando,
now entering his second full year,
there is a more important record
on the line. The Bulls, who have
never lost under Dando, are riding
a 21 match winning streak. The
Buffalo record for consecutive
wins is 30, set in the years
1961-1964.
This year’s fall schedule has the
Bulls with ten matches, six in dual
meets and the other four as parts
of triangular meets. This gives the
Buffalo golfers a chance to break
the record before the fall season
runs out. The added possibility of
having dual meets within larger
tournaments could help run the
streak even further. There are
three such large tournaments. At
two of them, the Tri-State and
Brook Lea tournaments, Buffalo
finished first and second,
respectively, last fall. The Fall
Invitational at Utica College later
this month is a new one for the
Bulls. As usual, the season will
end with the ECAC regional and
final tournaments.
Last year’s Bulls finished with
a perfect 16-0 record and were
eighth in the East. But now the
linksmen find themselves without

-

writing.

Dando admits that the team
will not be as good as last year,
but remains confident. Dando is
satisfied with his squad thus far
and remarked: “They are all good.
If a boy shoots 80’s I don’t take
him. They all shoot 70’s.”
Incredibly the roster lists 13
golfers shooting in the 70’s. The
Bulls first real challenge is
expected to be at home versus
Canisius on September 20.

FROGS

GIVE YOU GORTS

IR

—

-

-

-

Need Money ???
SELL YOUR OLD BOOKS

their top four players of one year
Jim Mohan, Dale Dolmage.
Steve Ahlbin and John Lanz.
As expected, last year’s fifth
and sixth men are now in the top
two spots. The two. Chuck Prorok
and Marty Fink, played well last
year but were somewhat erratic. It
remains to be seen if Prorok and
Fink can handle the top two spots
as well as Mohan and Dolmage.
Third spot goes to freshman
Jim Batt, who, like Prorok, was
graduated from Buffalo’s Bishop
Neumann High School. Dick
Zelwanski will' play fourth with
the final two spots open as of this
ago

-

BUY USED BOOKS

in the

STUDENT

DR'

Bookstore on Campus

ASSOCIATION

Book Exchange
231 Norton
Sept. 14th
BRING IN BOOKS Sept. 11th
BOOKS WILL BE SOLO Sept. 11th Sept. 21st
-

-

-

Exchange closed Monday, Sept. 18th

-

FINAL DAY

-

Sept. 26th

LEAVE THE SELLING JO US AND COLLECT THE PROFITS
COME IN LOOK AROUND
MONDAY
FRIDAY 10:00 a.m. 3:50 p.m.
-

-

-

-

-

-

Wednesday, 13 September 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
.

V. X' tw

V

n

.

�Leo Richardson to face rough
going as JV basketball coach
Three years ago, when admmistration. An undergraduate
Buffalo’s black varsity and biology major at Morris College,
freshman basketball players staged Sumter, South Carolina,
a boycott, one of their key Richardson went on to a Master’s
demands was for the appointment degree and is currently working
of a fulltime black coach. Last on his PhD in health education
week, the Bulls announced the and ecology.
Richardson will be faced with
the task of tutoring a squad which
will be formed without the use of
grants-in-aid. Since a state ruling
passed last year forbids the use of
state monies for basketball aid,
the Bulls could only afford to
bring in seasoned junior college
talent in Rayfield Goss and
Horace Brawiey.
This year the Bulls will return
to junior varsity play now that
freshmen are eligible for varsity
play. However, Varsity Coach Ed
Muto reports that few if any of
the freshmen that were recruited
are ready to step up to the varsity.
Without aid, Richardson, who
coached the past four seasons at
Richardson, to replace Jim Home the National Association of
as junior varsity basketball coach. Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA)
Horne, also black, had held the stalwart Savannah State, will have
post on a part-time basis for the his work cut out with a schedule
past two years. However, this including St. Bonaventure,
year, Home found the burden too Niagara and Canisius v
great and will now devote full
time to his job with New York Varsity schedule
State.
Two weeks ago, the varsity
Richardson, a native of South basketball Bulls announced a 24
Carolina, has had an extensive game slate, which features 15
coaching career in basketball, games against NCAA University
football and athletic division opposition. The Bulls,

Leo Richardson

I

Bible Truth"!

I

AUTHORITY OF SCRIPTURE
“All scripture is given bj
inspiration or God" —U
Tim. 3:16
‘Holy men of God spoke as they wen
moved by the Holy Ghost.”It Pet.

THE BIBLE HAS THE ANSWERS

who open up at home with
Syracuse University on December
2, will meet seven squads that
appeared in last year's post season
tourneys. Syracuse, Niagara,
Maryland and Lafayette all
appeared in New Yorks National
Invitation tourney. Akron
(national runner-up), Buffalo
State and Gannon all participated
in the NCAA College division
tourney.
Another feature of the Buffalo
schedule is a Christmas
appearance in the Erie, Pa. Gem
City Classic with Lafayette,
Bucknell and Gannon. During the
course of their schedule, the Bulls
will meet four new opponents in
Brown, Oglethorpe, St. Francis
(Pa.) and the University of
Tenessee at Chatanooga.
The schedule: Dec. 2,
Syracuse; Dec. 9 at Illinois State;
Dec. 11 at Northern Illinois; Dec.
16 at Northeastern; Dec. 22,
Georgia State; Dec. 29-30 at Gem
City; Jan. 13 at Fairleigh
Dickinson; Jan. 17, Akron; Jan.
20, Samford; Jan. 24 at Cornell;
Jan. 27, Brown; Jan. 31, Niagara;
Feb. 3 at Colgate; Feb. 7 at
Albany; Feb. 10, Stony Brook;
Feb. II at Maryland; Feb. 17,
Army; Feb. 19, Tennessee; Feb.
21, St. Francis (Pa.); Feb. 24 at
LeMoyne; Feb. 28, Oglethorpe;
March 3, Rochester; March 5,
Buffalo State.

Hear, O Israel
For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone
875-4265

'

-A

'

w

OVERTIME
by Barry Rubin
Sports Editor

The recently concluded summer Olympic games have merely
served to reinforce the notion that politics gre as much a part of sports
as the games themselves. We have seen in recent years that sports have
been used as a vehicle for social change in our nation, and we have seen
how an Olympic year can be completely dominated by events of a

political nature.
From the ousting of Rhodesia to the controversial US-Russia
basketball game, the XX Olympiad was shrouded with drama. Some of
the most disturbing events of the Olympics surrounded the judging,
which proved to be partial more o
However, for this columnist
the biggest farce of the games was
the expulsion of US black
sprinters, Vince Matthews and
Wayne Collett, for standing at
ease during the playing of the

national anthem. Their ouster by
the International Olympic
Committee surely appears to be a
game of racial politics, played
with a vengeance. A similar
situation involving distance runner
Dave Wottle was passed over with
hardly a mention. Dave Wottle is
white.
The murder of the Israeli
athletes was deplorable and serves
to tragically illustrate that despite
their aura of athletic purity, the
Olympics are in no way immune
to such societal problems as
violence and hatred. Furthermore,
these murders and the political
events of Munich show that the
Olympics in particular and sports
in general are fully entrenched in
realism, rather than the world of
fun and games.
Returning to campus, we find politics also playing a major part in
the sports program. With the proqlem of attempting to run an athletics
and recreation program without a budget, the professionals at Gark
Gym are again involved in a controversy with the Student Association. t
Despite assurances that much of the “fat” has been cut from
year’s budget, the SA Executive Committee still prefers to let the
budget gather dust. With competition set to begin this week in the
intercollegiate sports of baseball, soccer, tennis and golf, the Executive'
Committee ought to get down to business and dispose of the budget
issue.
Additionally, if at all possible, the SA should maintain its policy
of admitting Buffalo students free of charge to home intercollegiate
sporting events. Admittedly, there is a possible increase in revenue
through use of the new Holiday Ice facility.
However, what is being forgotten is the student who supported
the Bulls in the days of the tiny Rec. Center and the mandatory
athletic fee. After all these years, those students whose money built
the program deserve a break now that the Bulls have ample space for
seating in their new arena.

Feel Rite

HEALTH FOOD SHOP?
1451 Hertel Avenue, (Near Norwalk) 837-7661
681 Niagara Falls Blvd. 834-3385

Gallery
of

Wei comae

Han.

you. "ta lks,

moat unique skop in.
Buffalo. We Jo oar
OWN,' buying, directly

•from tKe Artiwaus to
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bring you. thz. finest

&lt;janlfty KenJcrufteJ
Arfc, Fab »n cs,Clo1koy
omd Jevelry from,

around fKe World
1518 Kertel Av«.
Mon.

—

Page ten The Spectrum Wednesday, 13 September 1972
.

.

Featuring

-

DANNON YOGURT

SPECIAL DISCOUNT 4/984 on Plain, Coffee &amp; Vanilla
Also Natural Honey 494 a pound for orders of
5 lbs. or over. Bring your own container.
Discount prices always on Natural Vitamins &amp; Foods.
—

�CLASSIFIED

A

AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED AOS may be placed In
355 Norton H*H, Monday thru Friday,
9 a.m.—4s30 p.m. The student rate is
$1.25 tor 15 words or less and $.05 for
every additional word.

STUDENT to assist professor's family
with housework and babysitting
Tuesday and Thursday afternoons,
Delaware-Ferry area. 863-1892.

RIDE BOARD

-

BABYSITTER
wanted Tuesdays
8:30—4:30, Amherst area. 632-1367.

HELP WANTED ads cannot
discriminate on any basis (l.e.,

ONE FULL-TIME and two part-time
workers for Lighthouse Restaurant,
Call 896-9791.

FOUND AOS will be run tree of charge
for a maximum of 2 days and 15
words.

STUDENT

■■preferably" Is discriminatory).

family, three-bedroom lower flat, air
conditioned, refrigerator, dishwasher,
self-cleaning oven. Will rent furnished
or unfurnished. $300/month. No
Utilities Included. I or 2-year lease.
Security deposit in advance. Call Mrs.
Schrelber at 875-3612 or 741-3962 tor
appointment Information.

BLIND MFC student living In No.
Tonawanda needs ride to school for
Mon. &amp; Wed. evening classes
call
694-3200 daytime
after 5 p.m.
692-3595. Ask for Dan.
—

—

675-7132 after

condition. Phone
p.m

5

FANTASTIC
Univox guitar amp. 2
Jenson 12”, $75; tuneable bongos,
good
UM stereo, $30
$17.50;
874-5978

Granada Theater

1968 MG midget. Excellent running
condition. Low mileage. Many extras.
Must sell Immediately, $495 or best
offer. 837-5831.
40” ELECTRIC stove, $25; VW trailer
hitch, $10; large 3-part desk, formica
top, $70; large leaded-glass bookcase,
mirror
cabinet,
$95; bathroom
French doors, chairs, household
miscellaneous. Cheap. 836-8698.
—

to live
Large room,

mother's
helper.
private bath and
good food provided in exchange for
babysitting.
Close to campus.
837-8106 after 3 p.m.

•

WANTED
PART-TIME secretary
15-20 hrs./wk. to work
—

typist

—

on The
Newsletter on Comparative Studies of
Communism. Must be neat typist. Must
be
available on Tuesdays and
Thursdays. $2.50/hr. Contact Prof.
Fred Fleron, Political Science Dept.,
4238 Ridge Lea or call 836-6610 or

831-1361.

EARN $3 an hour. Transportation
provided. Make your own hours.
DON'T PASS THIS UP. Call 631-5327,

631-5326.

WANTED: Witnesses for the arrest of
Robert Stelnhorn last March In
Norton. Needed for trial. Call anyone
at 882-7181 or contact SDS.

HOUSE FOR RENT
MULTI-BEDROOM furnished house,
excellent location, available
immediately, very
reasonable. Also
furnished rooms available. 896-8180.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
ROOMS
UB
2 minutes. Matured
light cooking. $65-$70/mo.
male
Lease. 834-5312. Also furnished apt.
for rent.
—

—

—

(COLLECTORS

|

f

ITEMS

I

I
I
I

McGovem-Eagleton

Bumper stickers
$1.00 Each—10 for $5.00

I

Write,
Bumper Stickers

fi

Box 4411
Silver Spring Md.
20904
-

I

y

j

FOR SALE

as

In

ZENITH STEREO record player, $35;
card table, $30; reclining chair,
$25; end table, record player, $30 and
other miscellaneous items. TF5-3282.
poker

FORD 1967 country sedan wagon,
V-8, 10-passenger, automatic, power
steering, new power brakes, good tires.
Excellent condition, $795. Call
634-0112 till 9 p.m.

1964 FORD Custom, 6 cyl., 4-door,
radio, automatic, good transportation.
$175 or best offer. Call 836-2010.
FOR
SALE: Stereo phono,
A-l
condition. For details, call 893-3665.
typewriter:
PORTABLE
Smith-Corona, $30 or best offer. Call
854-2214 between 5—6, M—F.

REDUCED for
quick
by
sale
transferred student
*63 Cadillac
Hearse, *500. 773-3392.
—

FURNISHED,
f o u r b e d r o om
apartment
near University for rent.
Call 937-7971.
-

—

AVAILABLE tor "group
living;"
excellent condition, well
Call 856-5140
located, private.
between 9 a.m.—5 p.m. and 632-6677
after 6 p.m.
HOUSE

1964

PLYMOUTH Belvedere. Good
condition. Good snows, $300
833-5359.

running

or best offer. Call Bob.

CONVERTIBLE

—

’68 VW. Beautiful

condition, $850. Call 675-0670 after 6
p.m.

special sale price,
INDIA bedspreads
72”xl08", only $4
assorted colors
and prints. Also hand-blocked, printed,
batlked, Rajastanl Kallamkari spreads
at "The People," a folk arts boutique,
144 Allen. 882-6283.
—

—

part camper equip.
1969 vw bus
48,000 miles. 2 snows. Excellent cond.
Call 833-5589. Ask tor Lee.

10-speed Iverson racer.
WOMEN’S
Many
Almost new.
extras. Price
negotiable. Contact Clement Hall, Box
L343.

ENGLEWOOD AVE.
near U.B.
suitable
for 4 students or facult

1969 MG

miget

yellow.

Just

—

convertible
Inspected.

—

color

Excellent

—

YOUR WORRIES are over
call The
Insurance Guidance Center for your
lowest available rate on auto and cycle
Insurance. 837-2278. After 5 p.m.,
839-0566.
—

NEED MONEY to pay tuition, buy
books, augment your social life? Sell
advertising for The Spectrum. 15%
commission on sales. No experience
necessary, but car useful. See Jeff
Reiman in Room 355 Norton or call
831-3610.

FOUND:
One
Resembles fox
835-4034.

&amp;

—

1968 VW

Bug, $500.

837-9609

COLLIE puppies
AKC
sable/wht.
Great dogs, furry. Intelligent, playful,
peacetovlng, $75, $100. Call Laurie,
837-6092.
—

—

door
Home

—

ZONE STUDIOS INC., N.E. needs high
caliber musicians for studio work. Call
for audition, 894-2400 or 894-2401.

LOST

1972 CB750 Honda, 2300 miles.
Reasonable. Call 881-1150 or
883-9062 after 5 p.m.

please

EARN AS much as you want
to door canvassers needed
improvements. Call 836-6345.

—

FOUND

brown dog.
full grown. Call Jeff
light

ROOMMATES WANTED
ROOMMATE
wanted
furnished Allenhurst
832-8528.

to
share
apt.
Call

COUPLE seek same to share apartment
near UB. 834-9502.

UPRIGHT piano, good condition, can
arrange transportation, $100. Call Bob
after six p.m. 881-1092.

ROOMMATE

classic gultarsi banjos. Fine
and hand-made Instruments.
Gurlan, Gibson, Guild, Gallagher,
Martin, etc. All Harmony guitars, 25%
off until Sept. 20. The String Shoppe
524 Ontario, Buffalo. Hours 7
p.m.—9 p.m.
daily, Saturday 12—5
p.m. 874-0120.

ONE FEMALE for large house
own
bedroom. $65. Call John 873-6384.

FOLK,

factory

—

CONVENIENT room for student
Interested In sharing family life in
exchange
for reasonable rent or
contribution to chores or someone able
to give piano lessons. 838-2671.

MARGE DEWEY, my name Is Scott

v 883-4451. Kaep trying,

to

look at
the
most
Inexpensive, oeautlful looking dresses,
handicrafts, batiks, paintings, antiques,
jewelry
silks,
from India. Call
836-4148 after 7 p.m.

WANT

wanted M or F, own
Incl. utilities. 2741
Delaware. Jesse or Terry.

room,

$60

—

1 OR 2 people (male or female) for
house at 29 East Oakwood. Own
bedrooms, 832-9760. Leave message
•

tor

Vlnny.

own room,
MALE undergrad,
furnished apartment, $57/month, plus
835-4034.
utilities. Dave
TWO MALES needed to share large,
convenient, furnished apartment. Own
Visit 9
room, walkable, etc. $59
Kermlt (Bailey) after 6:00.
+.

GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC
Jeweler Optician
41 KENM0RE AVENUE

THE COLLEGE OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES

—

is offering the following courses this semester:
COMPUTERS AND CALCULUS
MAS 102
SYMMETRY
MAS 202
GAMBLING
MAS 209
MATHEMATICAL MODELS IN
THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
MAS 261
TUTORING
MAS 301
KIDNEY STUDIES
MAS 303
HORMONE DYNAMICS
MAS 305
MAS 307
MATHEMATICAL ECOLOGY
MATHEMATICS FOR
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
MAS 355

(at University Plaza)

BUFFALO, N Y. 14226

Sycamore.

f‘

nS
o
*pZ. vv

G

&lt;1

(

95&lt;t5//i

ii

'

-

CHECK

LIQUORS

\\

Sangria

i;

99* 5th

I oelTstudent

LExptresSep^6/72
LOWEST LIQUOR PRICES

!;

;
,

j:

!;

j|

Imported

Sparkling Rose
$1.99 5th

;:
;•

“MIA"
HVims
$149 5th

■'■■■*■ ■ ■

j

QQ 0
mmmmmmm—mmmmmmmmmJ
-

COUPON
STUDENT DISCOUNT ON SOLID CASES OF WINES
aH_

Professionally
TYPING:
done
business or personal. Term papers.
$?4'0/page. 877-S234-.~after; 5 p.m.aa
Anytime
S
S.
A
M
F .
Sheridan—Elmwood.

Beds,

—

student working Vier way
needs part-time job on
Call 873-6290.

FEMALE
through
campus.

college

IS THE FUTURE PREGNANT WITH THE PAST?
OR IS THE PAST PREGNANT WITH THE FUTURE
Take History Courses and find out for yourself!
For courses, teachers, programs, and
opportunities, ask for booklet, "Studying History”,
at 231 or 233 Diefendorf.

Apple wine
89% 5th

�##/####/#######

L1EBFRALIMILCH

-

imusUAL~sraocKi.fr
and Pakistan at “The People," a folK
arts boutique, 144 Allen St. 882-6283.

823-1800.

$19.95.

1282 Clinton St

1.00 5th
1-99 '/iGal.
1.69 5th
1.59 5th
1.48 5th

DONT PAY MORE!!!!

■■■■■■■■■■■ ■■■■■■■

!

BART’S Bike Repairs has cheaper
parts, service, accessories and a few
rebuilt bicycles. 92 Wallace, 835-6739.

YOU NEED us and we need you
try us. EVERYMAN'S BOOKSTORE,
3102 Main St.. 2 blocks south o* the

«,

Henri Marchant
Orange Duck
$1.29 5th

STUDENTS

20% to 50% OFF
All major brands
fully
of
stereo equipment
guaranteed. We care
we’re U.B.
students. Call Carl, 675-3172.

refrigerator,

dressers, $19.95 up.

PERSONAf-

Joone’s Farm Wines
S panada
Ingelnook Wines
Almaden Mt, Wines
May Wine

�####»###&gt;»»##»»#»»»&lt;

Spanish
Wines

MISCELLANEOUS
USED

NO EXTRA CHARGE

1.79 5th
1.99 5th
2.89 5th
3.99 !4GaJ.
149 5 th

'.

—

—

(Near Allenhurst &amp; Princeton)

:;

student

831-2020.

TX4-3183.

—

450 Niagara Falls Blvd.

Lambrusco
$1.59 5th

female

non-cigarette smoker, own room, split
rent ($75), utilities, Marcia. 837-0112,

BUY NOW. Hot plate, electric fry pan,
Iron, dishes, glasses and much more
Call Diane 895-3854.

—

at

Yago Sangria
Vinya Rose
Mateus Rose
Alianca Rose
Liebfraumilch 1970

and

—

Contact the College office 831 1704 or 35, 4244 Ridge
Lea for further information.

-

stoves

REFRIGERATORS,

SERIOUS

Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. D&amp;G
Appliances, 844

.

CHILLED WINES

TWO GIRLS wanted to share master
bedroom suite In large house.
835-7579 anytime.

DRESSER,
cfcesk, bedframe
headboard. All In excellent condition
48 E. Northrup, 837-3757.
washers.

.

CHEAP
BOOZE

FORD Fairlane. Excellent engine
condition. Perfect transportation. $85.
837-0874 or 835-2720.
1962

P.S. Allenhurst bus goes past us!

835

Playgirl
Hair'm
iJO
w

mm*

785 Englewood Ave
Town

ofTonaWanda. N.Y.

14223

We specialize in haircutting! Any length Hair
You’ve Tried the Rest; NOW TRY THE BEST!

Wednesday, 13 September 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven
.'Wii' nfc'tVV. or.
.

.

i*

J

�The Student Film Club will meet today at 8:30 p.m. in
Room 332 Norton Hall. A general election will be held. All
people interested in filmmaking are invited.

A backpacking seminar will be given tomorrow at 3
p.m. on the athletic field in front of Clark Gym.
The UB Outing Club will hold an organizational
meeting today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 337 Norton Hall.
Anyone interested in forming a Science Fiction Club
please contact Orlando Sato at 61SS Goodyear Hall.

The Conflict Simulations Club will have a display table
tomorrow and Friday from 12—4 p.m. in the Center Lounge
of Norton Hall.

The Undergraduate Student Association of the
Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese will hold a
general meeting today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 233 Norton

The Book Exchange wifi be located in Room 231
Norton Hall. Books will be accepted until Sept. 21 and
checks will be given out until Sept. 26.

The Amateur Radio Society will meet tomorrow at 8
p.m. in Room 266 Norton Hall. All interested in ham radio
are invited.

The Civil Engineering Department has formalized a
social engineering program. The social focus of the social
engineer concerns the solution of social and environmental
problems such as health care, transportation and housing.
Two courses are being offered this semester: CIE 371
Society and Technology and -CIE 37S Mathematical
Modeling of Social and Urban Systems (crosslisted as CPS
375). Contact George Lee or Wilfred Recker at Parker
Engineering for information.

U.S. Hospital Committee for Vietnam will meet
tomorrow from 7:30—10:30 p.m. in Room 334 Norton

p.m.

The Management Assistance Program is accepting
students interested in working with inner-city small
business. Apply at 125A Crosby.

p.m.

Anyone interested in tutoring mathematics for credit
should contact The College of Mathematical Sciences
831-1704.

Hall.
The Student Transfer Council will have a discussion
2—4:30 p.m..in Room 337 Norton Hall.

group today from

UB Riding Club will hold its first meeting today at 4
in Room 332 Norton Hall. Anyone interested in riding
this weekend must attend.

Performance Research Unit will meet tomorrow at 6
at the American Contemporary Theater, 1695
Elmwood Ave.
Tau Beta Pi will hold its first meeting tomorrow at
12:30 p.m

Hall.

UB Photo Club will hold an organizational meeting
tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 330 Norton Hall.
Psychomat meets regularly on Wednesdays from 6-9
p.m. in Room 232 Norton Hall and Thursdays from 3-6
p.m. in Cafeteria 118.

UUAB Dance Committee will meet tomorrow at 7
261 Norton Hall.

p.m. in Room

UUAB Video Committee will
Room 60 Norton Hall.

meet

For anyone interested in presenting a production of
Pajama Game, there will be an organizational meeting today
at 3 p.m. in Room 330 Norton Hall.

today at 5 p.m. in

CAC Environmental Action Corps will meet tomorrow
at 7 p.m. in Room 262 Norton Hall.
Terrace House (alcoholic and homeless men) needs
volunteers Mon., Tues., and Thurs. evenings from 8—11
p.m. If interested, call Cathy at 837-1265.

UUAB Arts and Coffeehouse Committee will meet
today at 5 p.m. in Room 261 Norton Hall.

Sports Information
Today: Varsity soccer scrimmage at Erie Community
Canisius and Eisenhower, I p.m

College with

Friday: Varsity golf, St. )ohn Fisher at the Amherst
Audobon Golf Course, I

p.m.

Saturday: Varsity soccer at Fredonia Slate, 2 p.m.; fall
varsity baseball douqleheader at Monroe Community
College,

I p.m

Monday: Varsity golf, St. Bonaventure and Gannon at
the Amherst Audobon Golf Course, 2 p.m.
There will be a meeting this afternoon for all wrestling
team candidates at 4:30 p.m, in the wrestling room of the
Clark Gym basement.
There

will

be

a

meeting for

candidates in Room 322 Clark
—Osterreicher

What’s Happening
Exhibit: Sam
%

.Knox

Francis: Paintings,

Gallery
Thursday, September 14
Film: Major Dundee

Wednesday, September 13

Film: Growing Up Female: 4s Six Become One, I p.m
Diefendorf 148 and 7:30 p.m. Hochstetter 144.
Film: was a Male War Bride, 7 p.m., Capen 140
Film: Son Francisco ,9 p.m., Capen 140
Concert; Pure Prairie League and Country Granola, 8 p.m
Baird lawn
/

9 p.m., Diefendorf 147
Film: Doc , Conference Theater, check showcase for time
Film: Growing Up Female: As Six Become One, 3 p.m
Hochstetter I 14
Concert: tstes and Black Sheep, 8 p.m. Baird Lawn
Discussion
Showing: Tapes for Democratic Convention, 8
p.m., Haas Lounge
,

7

basketball

p.m

Intramural roller hockey action returns Saturday
morning at 10:30 a.m. in the parking lot adjacent to Rotary
Field. The new court was recently resurfaced. All new
players are welcome.

1947-1972, Albright

Exhibit: Susan Knopka, Mon.—Fri., 11-5 p.m., Gallery,
Room 219 Norton Hall, thru Sept. 22.

varsity

Gym this afternoon at 3:30

and

&amp;

All intramural football entries are due tomorrow in
Room 11 3, Clark Gym. There will be a mandatory meeting
for all intramural football team captains on Friday at 4 p.m.
in Room 113, Clark Gym.

There will be a meeting Thursday at 4 p.m. for all
those students interested in football officiating. The
meeting will take place in Room 11 3, Clark Gym.

Ronni Forman

Du* to printing difficulties, Monday's edition of The
Spectrum did not appear on campus until Monday evening.

This is an isolated occurence and in the future The
Spectrum will be appearing Monday, Wednesday and Friday
mornings. We arc sorry for any inconveniences caused by
the late publication. If you desire a copy of Monday's
paper, please come to Room 355 Norton Hall.

Backpage

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                    <text>T'S

The SpccTitnm
lilrl

Vol.

23. No.

11

State Univanity of New York at Buffalo

I H

Monday, 11 Saptambar 1972

jb

�Summer events in a nutshell
Editor’s note: The following is a round-up of news
items that occurred during the summer months and
were covered by The Spectrum. The date of the issue
in which the full article originally appeared is listed
after each summary. Copies of these issues are
available in The Spectrum office, 355 Norton Hall.

Sigglekow, vice president for Student Affairs was
directed by Dr. Ketter to begin a study that would
implement the proposal. (Friday, July 14)
Dorm problems

Irregularities in dormitory security procedures
and an escalating verbal exchange between a campus
security officer and a dormitory resident led to
by lan C. DeWaal
Contributing Editor
another controversial incident in the residence halls
L.C. Smith was arrested for resisting arrest, third
It became known early in the summer that a degree assault and disorderly conduct after his
plan to reinstate football at the State University of refusal to show a dormitory student security aide
Buffalo was being seriously considered by both residence hall identification resulted in a heated
students and administrators. The new program arguement.
Mr. Smith, after becoming verbally abusive,
would differ from the previous intercollegiate
competition
in that no scholarships would be took offense at a retort-made by James Britt, a
-Erlabtchar
In the process or being grilled by
members of the Student Press is involved and participants would not be recruited but security officer at the scene, and struck the officer
SA President Debbie Benson. The would just be interested volunteers from the The resulting altercation led to Mr. Smith receiving
thirteen stitches and Mr. Britt suffering a possible
questioning occurred on WBFO's University community.
A new league would be formed with participant concussion. The week after, the dormitory security
Interface Broadcast last Thursday
:
schools following these new guidelines for procedures were distributed to the dormitory
■
competition, while also arranging for the interchange residents for the first time during the summer.
¥ Iff/I ft/*/? uO\y
Cf'f of academic resources among the schools. A program (Friday, July 21)
of this sort would answer many of the objections to
Irregularities in the administration of dances
the previous high cost of the intercollegiate program conducted by the Black Arts Guild (BAG), and the
in football while also .helping the participant stabbing of a security aid hired by BAG ended the
universities ease the shortage of funding for future of discotheques sponsored by that
academic programs. (Friday, June 2)
organization in Norton Hall.
The name of the game was Dr. Harry Frisch of the athletic
BAG did not file financial statements normally
money Thursday night at board asked MFCSA to make a
Wages and prices
of organizations using state property for
required
members of the student press
contribution that, when added up,
The Board of Directors of the Faculty Student fund raising and did not report on the use of the
quizzed representatives of the came to double the present
Association (FSA) voted an average 6% wage profits. The black dances had become quite popular
various State University of MFCSA budget. This would have
increase
for its employees and then citing increased and were attended by upwards of 1,000 people
meant a substantial increase in
Buffalo student governments.
material costs, approved an average 3.9% before damages to a Norton Hall men’s room and the
labor
and
The student
press-student MFCSA fees.
the cost of items sold in its four divisions. stabbing ended their success. (Friday, July 28)
increase
in
government encounter
was
A personal protest was lodged The highest increase was a 6.9% hike granted to the
featured on Interface, which was by ethos’ Supervising Editor, Stu
Food Service. Smaller increases of 2.3% and .7% New people and policies
broadcast over WBFO-FM (88.7). Berger, over the alleged injection
were
allowed for the Bookstore and the Service
A new dean of the School of Social Welfare
Of
“politics” during Sub Board 1
Questioning was first centered
respectively. No increase was requested by assumed office on July 1 and immediately immersed
Center,
,on the future of the athletic Inc.’s publications budget
the Vending Service. (Friday, June 2)
himself in a boiling controversy of his own creation
budget. Asked to comment on hearings, ethos had been denied
Sherman Merle, in a memo dated July 10, stated that
rumors that the Student funding over what several Sub
Voting snafu
only thirty majors would be admitted to the school
Association Executive Committee Board members termed lack of
The primary victory of George McGovern in the during this school term. A group of concerned
was about to cut the intramural “quality.”
New York primary was marred by voting
students immediately formed and presented an
budget for this year, SA President
Mr. Berger said that Sub
irregularities in the Buffalo area. Election booths in alternate proposal which would guarantee admission
Debbie Benson replied that she Board’s criteria over the term
the 37th Congressional District, which includes parts sometime during the year to all those who had
did not know what the Executive “quality” was questionable. He
of Erie and Niagara counties, instructed voters to currently applied for major status at the
time of the
Committee might do.
claimed several members were
choose six delegates and three alternates instead of dean’s memo.
She said, however, that she injecting their own politics into
the eight and four ratio allowed by state law. A
The dean later clarified his limit to include one
didn’t “think the athletic budget the budget hearings. The result
grand jury has been considering indictments in this to one replacement of all those who graduated
should be defeated.” Ms. Benson
was that no criteria had been
case. (Friday June 23)
during the summer and the school year. The
referred to a referendum last year used.
in which students overwhelmingly
An academic plan is being drafted which will alternate proposal was later accepted by the dean
After a second hearing, ethos
favored retention of the athletic was again funded but, according
define the educational and financial priorities of the and Frank Hodges, the director of the undergraduate
University. The concept of an academic plan was program who replaced Connie Fredriksen in that
program and continued funding to Mr. Berger, on a level below
by the SA.
endorsed by the Council of Provosts which is position after she was dismissed by Dean Merle.
subsistence. Later, another
currently working with Bernard Gelbaum, vice (Friday, July 29; Friday, August 4)
She also mentioned the meeting was held and a suitable
president for Academic Affairs to create the initial
discussion about the possible amount of money needed for
Ernest L. Boyer, Chancellor of the State
revival of football at the State publication was obtained.
draft of the proposal. The plan will try to organize University of New York, revealed the master plan
University of Buffalo. Ms. Benson
and orient the plethora of programs which were which will guide SUNY through the next decade In
While admitting that a lack of
said that the idea “was in the back suitable criteria was used, Mr.
developed during the period of expansion in the seeking &lt;to get away from traditional forms of
of” that administration’s mind Bunting, a Sub-Board member,
State University during the sixties. Student input education, the plan emphasized the development of
will reportedly be sought once a more definitive new academic schedules which will vary the time
even though State University of questioned Mr. Berger’s use of the
Buffalo President Robert Ketter term “politics.” He also said that
proposal has emerged. (Friday, June 30)
needed to complete a degree, while also creating a
told her personally that.it could a newspaper or magazine cannot
A buried committee recommendation that had “university without walls” for off-campus
not be done this year. She said, merely be given money as
been approved by the Faculty Senate to establish an completion of degree requirements. No new
however, that she feels very Sub-Board would then be shirking
Office of Teaching Evaluation was uncovered during construction projects will be undertaken in SUNY
negatively about it at the present its responsibilities to students.
the summer. The resolution, adopted on May 9 of with the exception of projects already contemplated
time.
last semester, would mandate the consideration of for the University centers at Stony Brook and
Switching the subject, Ms.
teaching ability in tenure decisions and would Buffalo. Five new programs to
Benson noted the difficult drive
be developed include
Money
establish the mechanisms to objectively evaluate an urban studies center, a research and learning
that the SA has made towards
Ms. Benson told reporters from
teaching effectiveness. The resolution was never center on aging,
more student representation in
a center for migran studies,
ethos and The Spectrum that the academics. She said that there forwarded to the office of the president, but after an environmental studies, and educational programs in
funding of athletics should be have been many meetings between article appeared in The Spectrum, Richard government and policy studies. (Friday, August II)
y
taken off the hands of the members of the SA and faculty
students and be taken over by the and administration officials
New York State government.
concerning more student
Jack Bunting of the Millard representation in academic
Fillmore College Student committees on both the
Association voiced his approval of departmental and Faculty Senate
this proposal. He also noted that level.

Inquiring press

#

J

press ks. government quiz

M

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�Athletic budget for
equipment approved
symposium will feature such
Executive Committee passed the public figures as Norman Mailer,
athletic department’s equipment William Kuntsler, Ramsey Clark,
budget request for baseball, Bernadette Devlin, Daniel
soccer, ice hockey, swimming and EUsberg, Jack Kemp and Jane
fencing last Friday. Student Fonda.
Association treasurer Jeff Osinski
Objecting to the absence of
said the entire 1972-73 budget people from “the right side of the
will be reviewed shortly.
political spectrum,” National
The budget, originally Students Affairs coordinator Ed
estimated at $326,000, now Wolf referred to the selection of
stands at $227,000 pending SA speakers as a “ridiculous
approval. Mr. Osinski pointed out imbalance” representing only the
that this figure does not include “elite left-wing” viewpoint.
the athletic department’s Responding, Mr. Kossover
projected income for the coming maintained that a great many
year.
left-wing speakers would not
According to Jon Dandes, appear if certain right-wingers
chairman of the Student Athletic were represented.
Review Board, individual teams
Moreover, Mr. Kossover felt
request new equipment every four
that during a confrontation, such
years. Since the teams will be
as the one between William
competing soon, he said, there
Buckley and William Kuntsler a
was an immediate need for
while ago, words are often
funding.
by rhetoric and as a

The Student Association

obscured

“Crash culture shock”
Other committee action
included discussion of the
forthcoming Public Affairs
Symposium, entitled Awareness
and scheduled for October
10-17. Student Rights
coordinator Andrew Kossover sees
this weeklong program of guest
speakers aqd workshops as an
opportunity for “heightening
awareness” and “keeping people
involved.” Already termed as a
“crash culture shock,” the

result lose much of their meaning.
He further maintained that a
majority of students are more
interested in hearing a speaker
than in viewing a confrontation.
At their next meeting, the
committee will be discussing the
Attica Memorial Service,
scheduled to take place this
Wednesday, both at Attica State
Prison and Humboldt Park
downtown. The sponsors are
currently seeking $500 and SA
endorsement.

Creativity program
There will be a meeting of all students interested
in registering for Communicative Creativity in Room
114 Hochstetter tonight at 7:30. The course has
been moved from College A to the Department of
Physical Education, Recreation, and Athletics
complicating
registration
procedures.
Communicative Creativity, which helps handicapped
youngsters from the Buffalo community, is the first
College' course to be incorporated into a
Department’s class offerings.

HUNGRY ?
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9

Vending Service
LOWEST PRICES AROUND!
Owned and operated by Y O V R
FACULTYSTUDENT ASSOCIA T/ON

Contract boycott

*

~

Unfairfoodpractices charged

In addition to the yearly complaints involving
the quality and variety of dormitory food. Food
Service is currently being attacked for having
recently abolished the one semester board contract.
Students now wishing board contracts must now
sign a year-long contract, a policy considered unfair
by IRC President Gary Cohn as well as by most
dorm residents. For this reason, Mr. Cohn has asked
all those considering board to boycott Food Service
by not returning their board contracts. Mr. Cohn,
who wants the boycott continued until September
17, had openly criticized Food Service in a letter
sent to all dorm residients during the summer.
Among the charges levied against Food Service
was that it has made a consistent profit on
dormitory board contracts for the past eight years.
According to Mr. Cohn, this money goes to cover the
losses from other Food Service enterprises, notably
those in Norton Hall. IRC is thus demanding that
any profits made from dormitory operations be used
to improve the food for board contract students.

$2800. He continued that 20% of that $14,200 net
profit came fron non-board outlets such as catering
and snack bars.

Exception to rules
Amid the controversy, two dorm students have
recived half-year board contracts. According to Mr.
Cohn, the students, Stuart Altmeyer and his brother,
have recently been told that their half-year board
contracts are no longer valid. In a meeting held on
Friday, Mr. Bozek reportedly told Mr. Altmeyer that
he was now faced with two choices: I) to agree to a
full-year contract, or 2) to have his money returned.
Among the reasons given for Mr. Bozek’s
decision was that the contract was not signed by two
parties. However, as was pointed out by Mr. Cohn,
food service contracts need only the student’s
signature to be considered valid. According to Mr.
Cohn, Ron Stein of the Office of Student Affairs
reported that the contracts were legal and binding.
Disagreeing with this judgment, Mr. Bozek said
that Dr. Stein apparently had not seen the contracts
and thus was in no proper position to judge its
legality. Unless the situation is resolved, Mr. Cohn
promised remedial action. He cited, for example, the
initiation of a class action suit. According to Mr.
Cohn, support for his position is strong as witnessed
by the 50 students coming to the IRC office daily
requesting half year contracts.

Indigestion
The problem originally began when 40% of the
dorm students on board last year dropped their
contracts at the beginning of the second semester.
When asked why they decided not to continue
board, most students replied that they were tired of,
and disgusted with the little concern paid to the
preparation and selection of food. Many reportedly
registered gripes, but according to most students, the
quality of the food remained consistently bad. Mr.
Cohn feels that such a sizable decrease should serve
as an incentive to Food Service to improve the
quality of their food and service.

Revised meal plan
To help matters, Mr. Bozek said that Food
Service now has a new meal ticket option. He
explained that students may purchase books of
coupons for ten dollars redeemable at any Food
Service outlet. As the tickets are sold at a 3%
discount and are not subject to the 7% sales tax,
they represent a 10% saving.
There is one bright side to this gloomy tale,
however. According to Mr, Cohn, Gene Cappellini,
manager of Goodyear Food Service facilities, has
met IRC demands for I) a salad bar, 2) ice cream
served in the dining room, 3) lemonade during warm
weather, 4) sandwich foods available during lunch,
S) choice of potatoes, rice, or macaroni with all
entrees, and 6) occasional dessert specials.
But IRC isn’t through. They plan a petiton drive
to return to the semester contract. They also want to
see Food Service’s financial records and demand that
all board contract profit be used to improve
dormitory food.

Bookkeeping blues
Donald Bozek, manager of Norton Hall Food
Services, maintained, however, that the reason why
half-year contracts were no longer available was
Food Service’s desire to facilitate bookkeeping.
Responding to Mr. Cohn’s accusation that Food
Service monies must go to restore food enterprises in
Norton Hall, Mr. Bozek said that losses have been
cut considerably: “The biggest deficit came from the
Norton Hall cafeteria and the Rathskeller, which had
been ‘ripped-off almost constantly.” New serving
procedures, he claimed, have reduced the amount of
stealing.
Additionally, Mr. Bozek said that last year
Goodyear Hall made $17,000 while Tower lost

Grad school testing
The Educational Testing Service has announced that undergraduates and others
preparing to go to graduate school may take the Graduate Record Examinations on any
of six different test dates during the current academic year. The first test date for the
GRE is October 28. Scores from this administration will be reported to the graduate
schools around December 4.
Students planning to register for the October test date are advised that applications
must be received by October 3 to avoid incurring a late registration fee.
The other five test dates are December 9, January 20, February 24, April 28, and
June 16. Choice of test dates should be determined by the requirements of graduate
schools or fellowship sponsors to which one is applying. Scores are usually reported to
graduate schools five weeks after a test date.

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�Meditation; revival of an ancient art
hypothesize that “the low level of lactate found in the
subjects during and after transcendental meditation may
be responsible in part for the meditator’s thoroughly

by Ron Sandberg
Campus Editor

relaxed state.”

Retaining an aura of'mystery despite its growing
popularity, transcendental meditation, concisely known as
TM, is an ancient practice rapidly being revived in this
country. The technique, as yet -unexplainable and plagued
with abstractions, has become for many an effective, easily
learned and uncomplicated means of attaining a greater

TM and drugs

sense of inner fulfillment.
Simmy Summer, a teacher of TM currently involved
with the Students International Meditation Society
(SIMS), sees transcendental meditation as “providing a
unique sense of rest” along with having a “mind clarifying
effect.” According to Ms. Summer, TM involves the
shifting of one’s attention inwdrd enabling the meditator
“to experience his own thought processes” and thereby
reach a “finer level” of concentration. This level, she
explained, is simply another state of consciousness that is
latent within every man capable of thinking.”

.

Ms. Summer likewise describes this “finer level of

However, tests dealing with the physiological effects
of
meditation, with particular regard to oxygen
consumption, carbon dioxide elimination, and arterial
blood pressure, have yielded quite “impressive” and
affirmative results, Ms. Summer maintained.
ivvvvvvyvwvwyvyvyvvvv!

I

“

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

without

continued

•

REFERENCE BOOKS
SUPPLIES
STUDENT AIDS
COLLEGIATE SPORTSWEAR
COLLEGE JEWELRY

•

•

•

”

MEDICAL

NURSING
DENTAL
SCIENTIFIC

NEW TEXTBOOKS

BUFFALO
TEXTBOOK STORES, INC.
11 September 1972

renders

results

be speaking this Tuesday, September 12, at 8:00 p.m. in
147 Diefendorf. Enthusiastic about the lecture, Ms
Summer urges all interested and skeptical students to
attend.

PAPERBACKS

.

and

To better familiarize students with the intricacies of
TM, Charles Donahue, East Coast coordinator of SIMS will

833-7131

-

instruction

immediately.

FOR

-

USED

.

.

Once familiar with TM, the meditator usually
practices it twice daily, for 15 to 20 minute intervals. Ms.
Summer indicated that new meditators cannot help but
marvel at the “effortless spontaneity” of the technique.
Unlike other forms of meditation, she said, TM is practiced

PROFESSIONAL CENTER

REQUIRED TEXTS, NEW USED

Page four The Spectrum Monday,

.

explored.
According to an article which appeared in Scientific
American (February 1972), tests conducted with 36
subjects at the Harvard Medical Unit at the Boston City
Hospital and the University of California at Irvine showed
that during meditation there is a substantial decrease in
carqon dioxide elimination. In addition, arterial blood
pressure fell to a relatively low level.
While pursuing the question of why meditators
assume such a relaxed state, the experimenters discovered
that there was a considerable decline in the lactate level in
the blood (“an indication of . . . metabolism in the absence
of free oxygen ”) A rise in the blood-lactate level, the
result of anxiety and tension, caused the experimenters to

WELCOME STUDENTS

STUDENT CENTER
FOR

transcendental

“Effortless spontaneity”
The learning procedure for TM is quite simple, Ms
Summer explained. Consisting of seven steps, TM begins
with an introductory lecture explaining the phenomenon
to
the prospective meditator. Next, there is the
preparatory lecture which is followed by a short personal
interview with the teacher. Remaining are four days of
specialized instruction during which time the meditator’s
long range goals as well as the changes he undergoes are

happiness.”

Biological changes

comparing

new beliefs or strange style of living.”
Interestingly enough it was pointed out that after
meditation, “drug takers reported they no longer feel the
need for drugs, and that if they do take drugs the
sensations induced are very distasteful in comparison with
those experienced during meditation.”
Accordingly, the Yale Alumni Magazine (February
1972) indicated that out of 1862 meditators, 80% of
which had used marijuana and 48% of which had used LSD
prior to TM, only 12% continued to use marijuana, 3 to
4% took LSD and 1% used narcotics, amphetamines or
barbiturates.

Ancient technique
Until a revival by Mahareshi Mahesh Yogi,
transcendental meditation in its pure form, had
disappeared for centuries. Mahareshi, considered the
closest link to the traditions of TM, sought to increase its
usage at a time when communication made it easy to do
so. Defining TM as “the natural tendency of the mind to
seek a field of greater happiness,” he has concluded that its
practice culminates in arriving “at the source of thought”
which serves as the “reservoir of energy, intelligence and
thought” as the point at which there emerges a coexistence
of bodily relaxation and mental alertness. She explained
that unlike waking from a sound sleep or even a short nap,
the meditator is not groggy but, on the contrary, is quick
to perceive and act. Additionally, recent studies have
shown that meditators habituate to stimuli at a faster rate
in their waking hours than do non-meditators, she said. Ms.
Summer explained, though, that since these tests were
administered to small groups, they are not yet conclusive.

when

Moreover,

meditation to sleep, it was found that during TM oxygen
consumption decreased more rapidly than it did during
sleep. This again accounts for the meditators “revived
feeling.” As reported in the London Hospital Times
“These effects
come about rapidly, easily and quite
automatically and do not depend on the adoption of any

�Legal Dope
Editor’s note: This column will be a weekly feature of The
Spectrum and will appear every Monday. It is designed to
provide basic legal information fo the University
community.

by The Legal Aid Clinic
The State University of Buffalo Legal Clinic is
designed to provide legal “first aid” only, to deal with
student legal problems for which the immediate retention
of counsel is not required. It is also intended to fill the
time interval between the emergence of a legal problem
and the subsequent necessity of retaining an attorney.
Where a legal question affects a student’s rights in
regard to the University administration, another private
individual, or the state, the legal clinic is available to
provide information and, or advice on alternative legal
courses for the student to pursue.
The clinic is staffed by ten students at the
University, four of whom are law students. In addition, a
member of the New York Bar, Norman Effman, has been
retained to guide and advise both clinic members and
students in general. Should the clinic be unable to handle a
particular legal problem, or should the particular question
progress beyond the stage for which the clinic can provide
adequate assistance, the student may, should he so choose,
privately retain a lawyer. To assist in this regard, a list of
cooperating attorneys has been compiled.
The Legal Aid Clinic is located in Room 361, Norton
Hall, and may be reached 24 hours a day at 831-5275.

A lease; advantages and disadvantages
The purpose of a lease is to enumerate the rights and
responsibilities of the two parties, the landlord and tenant.
It is intended to provide protection to both parties by
defining, in writing, the “rules” under which the tenant
must live by, and at the same time, preventing the landlord
from arbitrarily evicting the tenant or from creatine new
rules subsequent to the signing of the lease. In short, a

lease is equivalent to a binding contract
except that it
relates to the rental of real property.
In signing a lease, the tenant should read it carefully
and, if any sections are unclear or unacceptable, he should
clarify such sections or negotiate them before signing.
Once the lease has been agreed to in writing, unless the
clause is illegal, the tenant is bound to it. But it should be
remembered that if the prospective tenant can, as a result
of discussion, modify a provision so as to make it more
acceptable to him, the landlord must also live with it. In
other words, it is worth the time to discuss a lease before
signing.
The following is a discussion of provisions which a
landlord may seek to include in a lease. A full
understanding of each should assist the tenant in
knowledgeable formulation of his apartment rental.
(a) Rent: The lease should include the monthly, as
well as total rent due under the lease. The length of the
lease should be sure to be included. It is recommended
that no provision for a change or renegotiation of the rent
during the term of the lease be included.
(b) Utilities: The lease should specify whether the
landlord or the tenant shall pay utilities, such as electric,
gas, heat, etc. Obviously, if the tenant must pay all or
some of the utility bills, this is tantamount to paying a
higher rent. If the tenant does pay the utilities, provision
ought to be made for the tenant to see the monthly bills
and, if the bills include more than the tenant’s own
apartment, then a procedure to apportion should be
worked out.
For example, if the tenant must pay a share of the
electric bill, but there is only one meter in the house and
the landlord lives upstairs, the tenant must devise a
method with the landlord so that he does not pay part of
the landlord’s bill. This might be done by apportioning
according to the number of rooms or outlets, etc.
(c) Pets: The landlord can prohibit the tenant from
maintaining a pet. If the lease is silent on this matter, the
landlord cannot subsequently prohibit a dog or cat, unless

they represent a significant health hazard (for example, a
pet monkey). In short, the tenant is protected by the lease.
(d) Deposit: A security deposit is intended to
provide insurance for the landlord from damage by the
tenant. The landlord must keep this money separate from
his own funds. Procedures should be incorporated in the
lease whereby damages will be determined at the
termination of the lease. It is highly recommended that
this not be left to the unilateral determination of the
landlord. Should he refuse to return the deposit where he
is not so entitled, the tenant can sue in Small Claims
Court.
It should be emphasized that it is not legal for a
tenant to refuse to pay his last month’s rent by telling the
landlord to “keep the security.” The deposit has nothing
to do with rent, per se, but is security for damages only.

(e) Immoral conduct: It is fairly common for
landlords to attempt to include clauses controlling the
moral behavior of their tenant. The landlord cannot
prohibit behavior which does not otherwise cause
disturbance (noise, health, etc.) unless it is otherwise
illegal.
For example, last year in a New York City case, a
landlord evicted a female tenant whose boyfriend had been
remaining overnight in her apartment. She had not caused
excessive noise nor a health hazard, nor was she violating
any other law.
The excuse for eviction was that, in the landlord’s
view, the tenant was acting in an immoral manner. The
Supreme Court Justice ruled that this was beyond the

scope of the landlord’s concern and ruled the eviction
void.
In short, the tenant is entitled to the reasonable

enjoyment of the apartment and the landlord cannot
enforce his own morality under the guise of some higher
property right

Monday, 11 Septemqer 1972 The Spectrum . Page five
.

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Rage six The Spectrum Monday, 11 September 1972
.

.

ALE HOUSE

�Controversy rages
over dike bombings

Afresh start

Problems plague orientation
Everything that can be said about the first days better. Mr. Nesin was desperately trying to line up
of college has been said. No matter how big your bands to replace the “$500 Primma Donnas” who
high school, no matter how many of your friends cancelled out at the last minute.
have come up with you, you’re bound to suffer from
The main problems, however, were mechanical,
not personal. Mr. Behnke explained that the
university culture shock. At every college and
university, therefore, to ease the transition, orientation fee had been left out of the bill mailed to
orientation has become a familiar and entrenched freshmen and transfer students. Since it would cost
approximately $600 to reprogram the computer and
institution.
This year, the University Union Activities Board re-issue the bills, UUAB had to arrange for a loan
(UUAB), which runs the orientation program, has from Sub Board I,
Unfortunately, the money was unavailable until
managed to put together a full and interesting
schedule despite a great many problems. You’d never two weeks ago. This resulted in cancellation of a
have guessed that there were any problems if you’d traditionally popular event, the annual all-night free
been in the UUAB office last Thursday.
film festival.
Wednesday night, Nazareth, a rock group which
had performed at the recent Change of Season It’s free
festival in Leicester, performed exceptionally well in
In consolation, though, there will be free
the Fillmore Room. Everyone in the office was outdoor concerts every night on Baird lawn for five
pleased with the way the* concert was received. It or six nights depending on Mr. Nesin’s success in
was UUAB President Walter Behnke’s birthday (he replacing performers who cancelled. Free coffee
was give a 7 foot Charlie Chaplin poster), and a houses and reduced rates at movies are also planned.
To top it off, the Buffalo Philharmonic will perform
coffee machine was finally being installed.
in Rotary Field, Tickets are free to freshmen and
transfers.
‘‘$500 Primma Donnas”
Despite all the problems there should be plenty
But if you listened to the telephone
conversation between Jeff Nesin, who is in charge of of activity for everyone. If you have nothing to do
concerts, and a band promoter, you'd have known you have no one to blame but vourself.

Editor’s note: Yves Lacoste is a professor of geography at the
was a member of the
University of Paris VIII. He
“International Commission of Inquiry into American War
Crimes in Vietnam, the same delegation of which former
Attorney General Ramsey Clark was a member. Most of Prof.
Lacoste's investigations were made at the base of the Red
River Delta. His conclusions were published in the French
newspaper LeMonde on Aug. 16, 1972.
”

In the controversy where, for
the jiast several weeks, those who
denounce the bombings of North
Vietnamese dikes oppose the
American administration, it is
possible to assemble a dossier of a
nature, arising from a
new
geographic analysis of the points
where the dike network has been
hit with bombs. From April 16 to
July 31 (the bombings continue as
well in August), the water works
system
of the Democratic
Republic of Vietnam was made
the object of more than 150
attacks; it has been hit seriously in
96 different places.
The International Commission
of Inquiry into War Crimes,
among others, has particularly
studied
the effects of these
bombings of the dikes of the Red
River delta. It is really in that
region containing the major part
of the population where the
of bombed
largest number
locations occurs; 58 out of 96.
The Commission preferred to

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Fill in coupon or send postcard No
purchase required. Entries must be
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by an independent lodging organization.
In case o( lie, a drawing determines a
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James Beard$4.95

|

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concentrate their investigations on
that region, the one on which the
menace of floods weighs most
heavily because of the might of

Greek

—

American admission
American administration,
first denying the dike
borpbings, has since admitted that
the waterworks could have been
hit because of the presence of
military
objectives “in their
immediate neighborhood.” The
American administration has
energetically denied that these
attacks could have been aimed at
the waterworks in a deliberate
fashion.
If one examines closely the
map which has the bombed dikes
marked, a first pattern emerges:
with the exception of four cases
(two close to Hanoi and two on
the sluice at Phy Ly on the River
Day), all the bombed locations
The

after

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50 NBWSmDS'
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(54 out of 58) lie in the eastern
part of the delta, in the district of
Nam Sach in the north, the

providence of Thai Binh, and the
provinces of Nam Dinh and Ninh
Binh in the south. The American
administration, moreover,
recognizes this fact and pretends
this puts the argument in their
favor, declaring that bombings

intended to cause severe floods
would aim at the western part of
the delta, near the upper reach of
the rivers, which is precisely the
safe region spared. The
examination of geographic
conditions permits one, on the
contrary, to reach opposite
conclusions (to the American
administration).

Geographical data
Indeed, schematically, the Red
River delta can be divided irUo

two parts: in the west, in the high

delta, the rivers flowing directly
mountains undergoing a
terrific erosion, have built up
numerous alluvial deposits; not
only those which form the banks
of the river, but also those arising
from numerous changes in the
river course before the dikes were
built. In the east, in the low delta,
the rivers deposit the major part
of the silt. The rivers flow in
natural levies, which are lower
than the alluvial walls in the high
delta. The terrain there is made up
of vast low stretches, more or less
flat.
The major flood danger area in
the delta lies where the arms of
the Red River
toward the
sea. While in the high delta, most
villages are located on the heights
of the many old alluvial deposits
which rise well above the low
areas, in the low delta, on the
contrary, most villages are lower
than the river, right in the flood
danger area if the dikes were to
break. It is exactly the eastern
part of the delta which has been
bombed almost exclusively. If the
bombings did not aim at dikes,

from

—continued on page 11

Need Money

???

in the

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ASSOCIATION
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STAPLES IN THE JAR

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Six and twelve session courses
Small groups
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Sept. 14th
BRING IN BOOKS
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LEAVE THE SELLING TO US AND COLLECT THE PROFITS
COME IN
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MONDAY

FRIDAY 10:00 a.m.

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DAYS. EVENINGS, WEEKENDS

p.m.

Bronchos in Major Cifiti in U.S.A.
Tht Tutonmg Sekoci mOk ike NmUomwtdt HyMM

■

Monday JJL,September 1972, The Spectrum Page seven
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Munich

36 meti

No fanfares of praise or acclaim will mark today's closing
of the Twentieth Olympiad. It is only a deep sense of relief
that can be felt
a relief that no more people were killed or
defeated or disheartened. Such a feeling naturally stems from
the events of Munich 1972 which have robbed the Olympics
of its traditional purpose as an arena for international
cooperation and pure athletic competition.
Munich 1972 will not be remembered for its superb

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athletic performances nor for any supposed contribution to
world understanding but rather for the exclusion of countries
from competition, terrorist attacks and murders, the
punishing censor of sportsmen and the jingoist bickerings of
countries. The name of the Games, in short, was politics.
A
From the decision to ban the entry of Rhodesian
athletes, to the American refusal to dip its flag, to complaints
pocroR
by U.S. coaches about "communist-bloc" judging, the 1972
summer Olympiad was tom by controversies. In light of such
events, the continued declarations by Olympian officials of
the Games' neutral and apolitical nature can only be
considered hypocritical and foolish.
Especially outrageous was the decision to ban two black
athletes from all future Olympic competition for their
alleged "disgusting display" when receiving medals. Clearly,
Olympic officials were attempting to force a respect and
reverance no longer felt for the Games.
If anything pointed up the folly of declaring the Games
non-political, it was the tragic and totally reprehensible
murder of Israeli athletes by Arab terrorists. That massacre
showed the impossibility for any individual, team, or nation
to withdraw from the political realities of an embroiled
world.
The failure of Olympic officials, participants, and
observers to recognize international problems and realities To the Editor
has dehumanized the Games. Thus, as was Berlin 1936 and as
The foreign student population on campus is
Montreal 1976 may be, Munich 1972 will not easily be steadily increasing. One recognizes the need to assist
these students in becoming integrated into campus
forgotten or forgiven.

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Expanding International program

Boycott
It has become a yearly ritual for students to criticize,
malign, and threaten boycott of FSA's Food Service. In the
past, however, the threats never materialized and students
were forced to swallow both their words and the food they
objected to.
Fortunately, this history has been reversed as an
IRC-advocated boycott is presently enjoying considerable
success. Wjille we recognize the many problems connected
with managing an operation as large as Food Service,
students have too long endured the liabilities of all remedies.
Specifically, it has been the students who have suffered from
ever-increasing prices, poor service and inedible food.
In light of such conditions, abolition of the one semester
board contract can only be seen as the proverbial last straw.
Such a contract places students in an irreversible,
unnegotiable position
they would have neither the
bargaining power to deal with Food Service nor the
alternative to obtain such service elsewhere.
While it is encouraging that some IRC demands have been
met, it is vital to continue to support the boycott. Only then
will the student complaints finally be resolved.
—

The SpccTityiM
Vol. 23, No. 11

Jo-Ann Armao

-

Managing Edit of
Jeff Greenwald
Aaat. Managing Editor Lynne Traeger
Jack Harlan
Bus neat Manager
Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
Production Supervisor Mika Lippmann
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Janis Cromer

Backpage
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Ron Sandberg

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Lit. &amp; Drama
Music

Dave Saleh
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Claire Kriegsman
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Off-Campus

Photo

.

.,

Tom Toles
Mary hope Runyon
Cathy Bastin
Michael Silverblatt
Billy Altman
vacant
Mickey Osterreicher
Kim Santos
Barry Rubin

The Spectrum is served by College Press Service, Intercollegiate Press
Bureau, United Press International, The Los Angeles Times Syndicate, The
New Republic Feature Syndicate, Publishers Hall Syndicate and The
Register and Tribune Syndicate.
RSpublication of matter herein in any form without the express consent of

thi Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.

Editorial policy Is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page eight. The Spectrum Monday, 11 September 1972
aatuiiavae ayui rnjjuaaqo aiu
aeamejqec; n ,yBDnoJV)
.

.

.

government.
Hatem El Gabri has proposed several ambitious
and admirable programs of endeavour to directly
involve foreign students in making of decisions that
affect them. He proposes to establish definite
University policy regarding the opening of a dorm

for students during vacations; develop plans for
off-campus housing; establish a foreign student loan
scholarship fund; organize foreign student
participation in departmental councils and

somewhat

over-inflated

ego

and

as

a

mere

duplication of other University departments, are a
waste of time, energy and monies.

In closing it may be useful to inject certain
considerations which have evolved around Hatem HI
Gabri and his office. Why is the communication
between the Coordinator and the fofeifen student
organizations at such a low point? Is the Coordinator
waiting for these organizations to approach his lofty
perch? How does one reconcile the self or regional
interests and ambitions with considerations on an
international basis?
It’s said that power corrupts; how much
contamination is there in this case? Would tininterests of foreign student organizations be best
served by a single Coordinator or a committee
composed of heads of these organizations? Why has
he assumed the position of the Treasurer of
Sub-Board when there is so much work to be done
on the SA level and certainly does not serve the
interest of these groups?
David Sancho

‘Let them eat
To the Editor

Monday, 11 September 1972

Editor-in-Chief

life. On the level of student government, the Int’l SA
Coordinator, presently controlled by Hatem El
Gabri, assumes this constituted representation.
However in the light of bureaucratic red-tape, there
is a growing desire to review this office.
The role of the Coordinator is simply defined
as: (1) Chairman of the Int’l SA Committee of the
Assembly and, (2) establishing and carrying out
programs designed to integrate the foreign student
with university and campus life. In other words, the
Coordinator has an obligation to first realize the
special need of diverse foreign student groups, and
then to continue seeking their interests in student

committees and press for greater participation and
responsiveness to students’ needs by University-wide
committees (The Spectrum 2-28-72). However, one
only wonders if these proposals result from a

the roast beef at dinner is prepared completely by
service workers at a greater expense than the

food

I was surprised to read in The Spectrum (July pre-cooked foods.
21Food Service Boycott) that Mr. Becker, Director
I have no idea which of the two meats were of
of Food Service is quoted as having said the same
higher
food was being prepared as it always had been. As point quality or if they were the same, but the
is that changes in the food were discussed and
chairman of the I.R.C. Food Service Committee I
made due to the need to save money.
participated in the menu planning meetings for
When I began attending these menu meetings 1
Goodyear and Tower cafeterias attended by Mr. A1
harrassed
these sincere people with questions,
Taylor, manager of Goodyear cafeteria and Mr.
Parks, manager of Tower Cafeteria as well as M. P. requests, and suggestions but the lack of funds
squelched all but the most minor of these requests.
Derme, Dietician.
Things were so tight that Mr. Parks of Tower
At one of these weekly meetings also attended Cafeteria complained
that since Tower was the older
by the man who does the ordering for Norton Union of the
two cafeterias, its employees had worked
cafe, the discussion consisted of deciding which there
longer and were consequently paid more.
brand of waffles would be served at breakfast.
I was told over and over again that the Food
After
discussing the quality and the prices of the two Service must be
self-sufficient and depend solely
brands, the inferior of the two was chosen to replace upon board
contract
monies and now it appears that
the brand already in use. This decision was made the dorm
cafeterias made sizeable profits which went
solely due to the prices and the need to
cut back into the FSA Food Service budget as a whole. I ask
food costs, even at the loss in quality, and was made all dorm
students to write boycott on your board
with true regret with this loss
in quality by those contract and to support this boycott until all profits
people mentioned.
are used to improve the food in the dorms.
There was constant discussion at these menu
meetings of the new use of pre-cooked foods
to save
Bob Role
money. An example of this is that the
roast beef at
Chairman Activities Committees
lunch is pre-cooked meat, heated and served,
while
and IRC Food

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Guest Opinion

-

Editor’s note: The following is a guest opinion
column submitted by a member of the University
faculty. The Spectrum welcomes all such columns
from any sector of the campus community. For
further information, contact The Spectrum
Editor-in-Chief at 831-4113.

MOTHER'S
HEART

by Pierre Aubery

Professor ofFrench
It seems rather difficult today to take at face
value' the pious platitudes about colleges and
universities as “places in which old and young gather
in search of truth- in all forms” or about
“communities of scholars.” Universities today arc
organized along the same lines as any business. They
stress competition, survival of the “fittest,”
adjustment to the system and the pitiless elimination
of those with the wrong allegiance.
In the winter of 1970 we lived, on this campus,
a striking episode of the academic comedy. What
began as an apparent confrontation between the
most conservative element of the academic
Establishment and radical students developed into a
power struggle among two contending schools of
administrators. The conservative, usually to be found
in the professional schools, had a great deal of appeal
to the segment of the community which believes
that social harmony is primarily a matter of
authority which is backed, whenever the need arises,
by various forms of political pressure.
Martin Meyerson and his followers represented a
new layer of the affluent classes which had but
recently gained access to top executive positions.
The Meyersonites wished to prove that they were
more creative administrators than the old-style
University officials. They wished to show, as

THAT WAY
SHF 6CTC.
WHAT SHF
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WHAT

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7-50

Moral values

?

To the Editor
Two contrasting realities stand out in my mind
and heart this September 6.
First there is the grotesque event of yesterday in
Munich. The purposeless waste of at least sixteen
lives resulting from the maniacal hate of the Black
September guerillas has succeeded only in casting a
dark shadow over the Olympics, over the German
people (still trying to live down, without forgetting,
the ingominy of Dachau located only a few miles
from Munich), over the Middle East and over the
whole fraternity of men - just as it was enjoying one
of its finest moments with more than one hundred
twenty nations gathered in peaceful athletic

Meyerson himself had indeed proven at Berkeley,

that the interests of the Establishment were better
protected by diplomats than by disciplinarians. The
major claim of the Meyerson administration was in
fact that it could bring the best specialists in all
fields to Buffalo
not to advance social change or a
(in which Meyerson had little
cultural revolution
interest) but to emulate the sophistication of the Ivy
League universities and make a training ground out
of SUNYAB for the managerial elite of the
-

—

post-industrial society.

The concept of education and culture that
underlied this policy was indeed impeccably
traditional and aristocratic. In order to illustrate his
point, Meyerson recruited star professors, who while
indispensable to the growth of the graduate school
and often personally admirable and likeable, were
also used as a political weapon. They contributed to
give some substance to this most ancient myth of the
business world: that “there is room at the top’’ and
that bright minds always manage to happily survive
the rat race, no matter what happens to the
unemployed, the draftees, the aged, the black, the
Vietnamese and other victimized and less visible
members of society.
Moreover, they tended to coax the student body
into intellectual awe and submission by the sheer
strength of their well-polished brilliance. The
socio-cultural distance between the ordinary Joes
and the select few was increased in order to

competition and comradship.
Second, there is the beginning of the ‘72-73
school term today representing one of the great
hopes of mankind that, perhaps, through education
our world might yet learn to expend its energies

constructively.

With these opposing sentiments fresh in mind a
reference to the biblical perspective that “the fear of
the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” seems most
appropriate. Can there be any question that the kind
of humility, recognition of higher authority and
recommitment to the supreme values of love, mercy,
truth and moral responsibility to which this passage
challenges us is a definite and urgent need in our
world and university this September and always?
I wish everyone a good year.
Rev. Arle J. Nau
Lutheran Campus Pastor
Ressurrection House

Letters to the Editor should not exceed 300
words, and all must be signed with the name,
telephone number and address of the writer
included. A pen name or initial’s will be used
if desired, and all letters will be kept in strict
confidence. However, no unsigned letters will
be considered for publication. All letters
should be addressed to The Spectrum

Clarification
To the Editor

In connection with the article in The Spectrum
concerning the search for a new chairman for the
Pathology Department, I wish to clarify the remarks
which have been attributed to me.
First of all, in talking to The Spectrum reporter
I emphasized on many occasions that the problems
facing the department of Pathology were not
unusual for a department without a chairman and 1
was surprised that this situation could be considered
a

demonstrate the necessity and validity of the
meritocratic principle, the latest attempt to
individualize, rationalize and legitimize class
structures and hierarchies.
So far the new administration of this University
has brought no change in this picture for faculty and
students who still have no stake in the power
strugge among administrators, and stand not so
much for the institution as it is conceived now than
for a truly open university. In the present setup,
search for “quality” allows to operate the University
as an instrument for selection, rather than for
teaching and educating those less affluent and less
sophisticated students who really do need all the
learning help they can get.
Even “state” universities tend to become, in
spite of token concessions to the most visible
underprivileged minority groups, more and more
universities catering to the needs of that layer of the
population which used to patronize Ivy League
schools. State universities do not move at all in the
direction of a new definition of what culture is
about at present, but rather towards aristocratic
intellectual exclusivism. (See Edgar Z. Friedenberg,
“Report on the Niagara Frontier” The New York
Review of Books, May 7, 1970, pp. 29-30.)
Moreover, knowledge and intellectual
sophistication are no panacea to our ills. Many
educators still profess that man finds his salvation
through rigid self-discipline and by striving in the
marketplace. They refuse to see that the forces
which drive them
competition for recognition,
money, social prestige
are spiritually deadening
and produce people like themselves hardened to the
humanity of others. No amount of scholarship does
make up for the loss of charity and understanding of
the poor and the weak generated by our system and
its so-called “educational” branch. Learning and
intellectual speculation have obviously not been
enough to educate and humanize those advocates of
elitism who certainly know how to manipulate their
environment, and reward their clientele but at a
dreadful cost to their personality.
Questioning the University as it is, its
hierarchical structure, what it makes of us and how
it affects us, might be the only way out of an
awkward and uninspiring situation. Rather than
acting as a screening agency, an elite institution,
open only to thoSe who are already smart enough to
educate themselves, the University might welcome
those seeking to obtain rapidly a professional
diploma, but also those wishing to cultivate
themselves and looking for guidance in order to keep
in touch with the life and development of disciplines
of their choice.
—

-

No longer an “ivory tower,” such a university
would help build a community of equals rather than
create a new closed elite of cognoscenti. Instead of
being an appendage of the business world, the
university would strive to become the free and open
ground on which emerging proletarian and Third
World intellectuals would demonstrate the validity
of their claim to become an inspiration for all by
their innovative lifestyles, their disinterested
commitment to the cause of the underprivileged and
the relevance of their inquiries.
Editor-in-Chief, Room 355 Norton Hall.

The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or
delete material suqmitted for publication, but
this will only be done for reasons of style,
grammar or length. The intent of letters will
not be changed.

“news item.”

Secondly, I am concerned that the article could
be interpreted as implying that the acting chairman,
Dr. John Sheffer, has not given the department any
leadership during the past year. I must point out that
Dr. Sheffer has been most successful in fulfilling
what is presumably the most important role of the

Pathology Department, that of presenting a
successful Pathology course for medical and dental
students. In recognition of his great efforts (made
very difficult by his duties as head of Pathology at
the Deaconess Hospital), the medical class of 1974
presented to Dr. Sheffer an award “for his insight
and dedication to teaching.”
I
Alexander C. Brownie, Ph D
Research Associate Professor of Pathology

rr*

'OH, OH

.

.

.

QUICK, LOOK INNOCKNTI'

Monday,

11 September 1972 The
.

Spectrum Page nine
.

�TRB

Editorial

How does the campaign of a moninee for
presidency get airborne? Some of them take to the
air immediately. Some stagger or limp or never get
into the sky like Goldwater’s in 1964. Sen.
McGovern was all set to begin his campaign after the
convention when he had to go back and change
engines. It was one of the most humiliating bungles
in the history of presidential campaigns.
Now here we are in September. Sen. McGovern
will be pit the road almost steadily for the next two
months. On a trial run in New York City recently,
the McGovern campaign, I believe, finally got on the

presents radical notions in such a mild way that you
almost forget they are radical. Now he proposes
calmly the abolition of the tax loophole on capital
gains. It would save the Treasury about $8 billion.
His tone is not casual, exactly, but it is persuasive
and sensible. Not for nothing has McGovern survived
all these years in conservative South Dakota, he a
Democrat, they Republicans and they like him. He
can make revolutionary things seem matter-of-fact; if
Karl Marx had been McGovern, South Dakota might
be Communist. Well, maybe.
Anyway, the meeting breaks up .and the
well-dressed crowd goes out saying that McGovern is
maybe not such a nut after all, and next day Paul
Samuelson, most celebrated American economist,
praises the McGovern package as sensible and
admirable. That night McGovern goes out to see a
play. He has built a good stretch of his runway.
So now it is next day. I am sitting in a large,
pastel green assembly hall for a meeting of the New
York Board of Rabbis with a lectern in front, about
700 or 800 people fammed in, many men in skull
caps, a couple of squads of TV men churning
around, an electric tension in the air and a human

I was there and watched it. Here are some

runway.
notes...

It is a noonday meeting of the Society of
Security Analysts in the heart of the New York
financial district. This is the second of three
confrontations McGovern must make, very much
like the confrontation of Jack Kennedy on the
religious issue with the Baptists in Houston in 1960.
The first was with the American Legion to defend
his proposal to cut the Pentagon budget $10 billion
each year for three years. They were hawks, he a
dove; he spoke boldly, they responded politely-and
that was that. He had a face-to-face mission to
accomplish and did it as an old bomber pilot should.
Now here he is for another confrontation in
Wall Street. The hall of the Security Analysts is big,
stuffy and inadequate. You can almost feel the
amused skepticism. So this is the oddball the
Democrats dredged up! But he doesn’t look like a
wild man. He speaks calmly, mildly. He follows text
closely. His spspeech is detailed, humorless and long.
But it is also vital to his candidacy. It is his basic
speech on economic policy. He has dropped the
$1,000 grant idea which sounded good in economic
textbooks (like Milton Friedman’s “negative income
tax”) but was poison in politics.
What McGovern is here to say is that popular
revulsion against tax loopholes is getting explosive
and that the affluent had better do something about
it quick or face a lot more desperate changes before
long. It just isn’t right, he says (and here his moral

We of the UB Veterans Club condemn the
slanderous editorial in the Friday, August 4, 1972
edition of The Spectrum attacking our brothers of
the Third World Veterans’ Alliance. The Third World
Veterans’ Alliance is one of the most realistic,
progressive student organizations existing on this
somewhat docile campus. The elementary brand of
racism exhibited by The Spectrum in this editorial
labelling third world people with physical
intimidation of the predominantly white power
structure (SA) to attain their goals can be considered
nothing but reactionary and racist.

passion shows for a moment), that Standard Oil pays
a lower percentage of its income in taxes than an
ordinary worker does on his wages.
The funny thing about McGovern is that he

1972 Harrison-Blaine ofNew Jersey, Inc.

co

To the Editor

from Washington

The New Republic

f

yl/an

£

Donohue

President. SUNYAB Veterans

Gail L. Graham. Jr.
Treasurer, SUNYAB Veterans

%

Mb
Mo&lt;

babel that sounds like surf.
The crass politics of it are simple. Forty percent
of 5.9 million American Jews live in the New York
metropolitan area, and they voted 85 percent for
Humphrey in 1968. If McGovern’s percentage falls
below 70 percent, as seems quite likely, he will

lose the state.
McGovern comes down the central aisle a head
taller than most around him. He is a good-looking
man though not striking; looks a bit like Bryan in
the lines down from the mouth, though the
comparison may not help him any. He makes the
toughest anti-Nixon speech I have ever heard him
make. What you forget about him is how hard he can
be, it is a kind of moral fierceness. You disagree with
him, perhaps, but after a few minutes you decide
that he is a pretty decent guy at that even if he is

p

probably

—continued on page 20

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to the existential dilemma

IN ROOM 205 NORTON ON WEDNESDAY, SEPT.
13th.
TWO POSITIONS WILL BE AVAILBLE TO
INTERESTED STUDENTS.

756 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 852-7550

TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION
os taught by
MAHARISHI MAHISH YOOI
•

POUR IN COLD WATER
DELICIOUS COFFEE BREWS OUT
—

IMMEDIATELY

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PROVIDES DEEP REST AND RELAXATION
LIFE EXPANDS IN FULFILLMENT

INTRODUCTORY LECTURE
Physiology of Consciousness

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, at 8:00 p.m
147 Diefendorf

STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL MEDITATION SOCIETY-876-5109

GORTS

Pape ten The Spectmm Monday, 11 September 1972
.

.

COMES!!!

�Dike bombings...
but at “military objectives,” they
would have been distributed
within the whole delta. The high
delta and the region of Hanoi has
been bombed repeatedly.
Curiously, the dikes have not been
hit there.
Worst effect*
One could conclude that the
concentration of the dike
bombings in the eastern part of
the delta, the region most densely
populated and most important
agriculturally, betrays the
deliberate character of these
attacks since they are localized
exactly where their effects would
be worst.

of the most striking
is furnished by the
southern part of the province of
Thai Binh, between the Red River
to the south and one of its arms,
the River Traly to the north.
These two rivers, both flowing on
alluvial deposits, form the borders
of a long drainage system opening
toward the east, toward, the sea.
The improvement of this area,
where 600,000 people now live,
has been made possible by the
construction of river dikes and
also coastal dikes keeping back sea
water. But it is necessary to
release excess rain water at the
ocean end of this vast drainage
system during low tide. This is
done by the important sluice gate
of Lan.
One

examples

.

.

k** 1
bombings

.

.

v.
have
aimed at
The
the key point, of this complex
system of waterworks, and above
a
Bet en
h
May 24 and July 29. it has
been
attacked rune rimes. Desp. e this
damage, three new raids took
place in he first week of August
on the sluice gate, obviously to
make repairs impossible. The
far from all other
sljdce gate is Thus
the waters.
unable to flow into tiic sea, are
beginning to accumulate in the
rice paddies where a good part of
the crop may be considered lost,
Moreover, four bombings have
hit the dikes of the River Traly to
thc north and three on the dikes
of the Red River to the south,
These bombings were aimed
against the concave part of the
dike which is subject to the
greatest pressure of the current at
flood peak. In two places,
delayed-action bombs have been
‘

.

r

—continued from page 7—

used: for example, of the 14
bombs dropped on July 14 on the
dike of the Red River near the
village of Tan-Lap, 13 have
exploded at different intervals
(some six hours later and others
up to 21 days afterwards).
So, the “operation” on the
southern part of Thai Binh
province can be summarized as
follows: to cause, on the one
hand, breaches in the dikes at the
weakest points, vulnerable despite
repairs to giving way at the time
of highest water (it is, in fact, very
difficult to properly pack down
the earth which already absorbed
too much water from the summer
rains; hence the dike repairs are
very fragile); on the other hand,
to block the sluice in order to
hamper the flow of water to the
sea.
Thus, at a minimum, part of
the rice paddies are ruined and the
subsistence of 600,000 people
compromised. At the worst if
very strong floods result, there are
numerous villages located lower
than the alluvial banks which are
in danger of being flash-flooded in
the case of a sudden breach of the
dikes; either those places where
the dikes have been repaired
imperfectly because of the season,
or those where peyv bombings will
take place.
It is important to underline
that, while the dike bombings of
the “Johnson era”-haltetf for the
most part before .the-' season of
high waters, those of the ‘‘Nixon
do not sccm about tQ
lod
tQ be
River
attacked as well as the coastal
dikes which are constantly
bombarded „ thc Seventh Fleet
Jhe jluices afe
rticularl
vaJuable objectives since their
destmction
duce cither
accumulation of too much
wgter
the settled or cultivated
of floodi
b sea watcr
which makes the goil impossible
cuJtivate for xveTtd years .
Finally, one will have an idea
of the total and systematic nature
of the operation taken against the
waterworks system of North
Vietnam when one leams that thc
factory Nha May Gho Khi (near
Hanoi) which furnishes the
material necessary to repair thc
sluices and other water works was
destroyed on August 5 by a
bombardment particularly intense
(2000-pound bombs) and precise.
*

-

.

.

JUDAIC STUDIES
FALL 1972
101 Jewish Traditions: Ancient and Modern
1:00 -1:50 p.m
Monday Wednesday Friday
335 Hayes Hall Silverman
—

-

Jewish history and culture throughout the ages.
Jewish thought including philosophy and mysticism.
Study of the classics of Jewish tradition. Lectures and
slide presentations, optional term papers.
Also, in the evenings

—

Millard Fillmore College

101(c) Judaic Studies
Tuesday Thursday —6:50 -8:05

210 Foster Hall

-

Silverman

201 Israel and the Ancient Near East
Fricah 11 00 11:50
239 Hayes Hall Silverman

Monday Wednesday

—

-

The history and culture of ancient Israel. Judaism
from its emergence to 587 BCE. Its relations to ancient
thought.
Near Eastern culture. The emergence of biblical
papers.
term
optional
Lectures and slide presentations,
For further information call Dept, of Classics

—

2816

Monday,

11 September 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven
.

.

�WBFOfeature

Past festivals come vibrantly
alive in planned rebroadcasts
The notion of people gathering at national,
regional, or local fairs, carnivals, festivals and
outdoor celebrations is an old one. From the
Medieval fairs to our present day Olympics, people
have put a great deal of emphasis on the spirit and
excitment of coming together in a communal display
of their skills, musical traditions and native crafts.
The original notion of a festival was a public
celebration of religious or supernatural significance
often occurring at the times of planting or
harvesting. Commercial' fairs would be held,
sometimes in conjunction with the religious festival,
when merchants needed to replenish their stocks.
People could travel great distances to one central
location and see on display a great variety of goods.
A “pleasure fair” would often accompany the
commercial aspects for a good measure of frolic.
For the most part we probably have little
understanding of the significance of the fairs and
festivals in the lives of the people. The continuation
of the commercial fair today is readily seen in the
conventions and expositions held by industry to
display their latest products. These include those
dreadful boat shows, car shows and home shows that
are forever held in Buffalo’s Masten Armory.
Numerous festivals held
The continuation of the entertainment and the
display of crafts has been carried into modern times
much more successfully. Various folk music and
crafts festivals are held all over North America from

early spring to late fall. Each year the music division
of the Library of Congress publishes a listing of Folk
Music Festivals, Fiddlers’ Conventions, and Related
Events in the United States and Canada. This year
they listed no less than 77 music festivals held from
mid-July through the end of September.
Two of the closest and most diversified festivals
were visited by memqcrs of the WBFO radio staff.
With festive hearts, and tape recorders in hand these
folks visited the Fox Hollow Folk Festival in
Petersburg, New York and the Mariposa Folk
Festival in Toronto. With eyes and ears open to these
events as full cultural exchange fairs we hoped to
bring back as much bf the spirit as possible.
If you didn’t get to take in any of these outdoor
celebrations this summer there is no need for
despair. There is only needed an FM radio and for
the price of a little electrical power you too can visit
these festivals. WBFO FM (88.7mhz) will try to
broadcast as much of the audio atmosphere of these
festivals as possible. That means music by well
known and little known musicians alike.
You 11 be treated to performances by Kilby
Snow, John Arpin, Taj Mahal, and the Penny
Whistlers. Interviews will present the present day
craft of black smithing, instrument making and
demonstrations on the little understood vielle or
hurdy-gurdy. The performances may be heard every
Thursday evening from 9:00pm until 10:30.
David Benders

photos by Sandner

Page twelve The Spectrum Monday, 11 September 1972
.

.

�*

Social Welfare

Acceptance policy changed
by Janis Cromer

enrollment in the undergraduate
program was about 380.

Campus Editor

been undermined
The bylaws state that all policy
decisions shall be submitted to the
faculty-student house for
consideration. The decision by Dr.
Merle to limit the number of
undergraduate students was
termed an administrative decision
and consequently not submitted
to the legislature of the School for
consideration.

Students in the School of Objections revealed
Objections to
Social Policy and Community

the dean’s
proposal arose when a
recommendation by Constance
Fredrickson, then Director of
Undergraduate Programs for the
School to limit new acceptances
by the undergraduate program to
100 this year, was overruled on
July 10 by the dean, in favor of
his 30 student limit.
Advisors for the Division of
Undergraduate Studies were also
concerned about the possible
limitation for several reasons.
Many students believed that upon
reaching junior status they would
be admitted to the School. Also,
transfer students may have
changed schools because their
former colleges did not have such
a program. Thus, the advisors
feared that their credibility would
have been jeopardized.
in addition to the concerns
that students who had planned to
major in the School would not
now be able to do so, members of
the School expressed concern that

Services have succeeded in their
dispute concerning the limitation
of majors to that department.
Last week, Social Policy students
were informed that Dr. Sherman
Merle, new dean of the School,
had accepted the “alternative
proposal” drawn up by a student
ad hoc committee.

Earlier in the summer, Dr.
Merle announced his decision to
limit acceptance of new majors to
30 students for this academic
year. He believed the department
could not offer an adequate
program to more than 250
students and that cutting down
the size of the program could
facilitate a review of the School.
At that time, the School had
210 declared majors. The addition
of 30 newcomers would raise the
total to 240, providing a leeway
of ten spaces for pressing cases.
Approximately 170 students
graduated from the school last

CHEAP
BOOZE

Ad hoc committee
Soon after Dr. Merle’s
limitation announcement, an ad
hoc committee of concerned
students met and submitted an
alternative proposal. The students’
proposal provided that 31
students who have 80 or more
credit hours as of Spring 1972
would be accepted to the School
immediately. Any applicant who
has 80 or more credit hours
through summer sessions would
also be accepted this fall.
Acceptances in January 1973
would be limited to those juniors
among a group of 54 students
with 65 to 79 credit hours who
would need to be accepted in
order to graduate on time.

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Sherman Merle
remaining juniors who didn’t was relieved of her duties as
require acceptance in January for director of the program and
timely graduation would be replaced by Frank Hodges, an
admitted before summer sessions associate professor in the School.
in 1973.
The DUS advisors backed the
This plan was initially termed
student alternative proposal by
“unacceptable” by Dean Merle,
writing a letter to Charles Ebert,
but has now won approval in a
dean of DUS, urging him to also
message reiterating that “the
support the ad hoc committee. In
students with the most hours will
correspondence to Dr. Ketter, Dr.
get highest priority. No student
Ebert expressed support of the
who has been accepted will be
student plan but noted that much
required to attend school longer
of
the problem was due to
than the normal time required for
misinformation and a lack of
graduation.”
communication between all
involved parties.
Involvement denied
Ms. Fredrickson had originally
Steve Glassroth, a member of
drafted the alternate plan for
the ad hoc committee, termed Dr.
admissions that the ad hoc group Merle's acceptance of the student
later obtained. Ms. Fredrickson plan as “a victory for both
denied that she had personally students and the Division of
passed her proposal on the Undergraduate Studies advisors.”
student committee. The students He added that this situation
also upheld that Ms. Fredrickson demonstrated that “students who
had no connections with the do not sit by passively can effect
actions the committee were the decisions that vitally concern
taking. However, Ms. Fredrickson them.”

THE LITERATE REVOLUTION IN GREECE
and the
TRANSFORMATION OF WESTERN CULTURE

The Department of Classics, SUNYAB, announce
a series of public lectures during 1972—73 by Eric A.
Havelock, Raymond Professor of Classics, SUNYAB,
and Sterling Professor Emeritus, Yale University.

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Seminars and workshops will be held in conjunction with the
lectures for students wishing to earn academic credit. The
undergraduate course is Classics 351 -352; the graduate course is
Classics 607; Seminar in Greek Literature. It is hoped that the
course will be cross-listed in other departments, such as English,
History, and Philosophy.
Professor Havelock will deal with such topics at', oral
communication and culture in the Mediterranean; the oral rules
governing composition and thought; the persistence of orality
into the classical age; the Greek drama as oral performance; the
advent of literacy; Plato and the invention of the Concept; the
creation of an educational system; Plato and the invention of a
university; the invention of movable type; the rise of science
and its source in the alphabet.
For further details please consult the Department of Classics,

SUNYAB. 390 Hayes Hall. 831-2816

STUDENT DISCOUNT ON SOLID CASES OF WINES
P.S. Allenhurst bus goes past us!

LOWEST LIQUOR PRICES

Monday,

11 September 1972 The Spectrum Page thirteen
.

.

�'

RememberAttica:commemorative ratty
Against Repression (CAR) has
announced plans for a mass rally and series of memorial
services commemorating the first anniversary of the Attica
massacre. In a statement released Friday, CAR accused the
State corrections system of combining “physical terror”
and “official lies by those in high places” in keeping the
public ignorant of conditions at the prison.
Calling the corrections system “an institutionalized
program of dehumanization,” the State was charged with
attempting to cover the truth in telling the public what
took place since the beginning of the uprising last year.
The statement also claimed that events since last
September 13 have demonstrated that the State continues
to deny the men humane treatment, “beatings have
continued, many prisoners have been kept in isolation for
months on end and on numerous occasions the press has
been denied entry.”
The

Coalition

implement the reforms they had agreed upon at the time
of the massacre and said; “Whether or not those 43 men,
both prisoners and guards, who lost their lives in this
official, state sanctioned, racially motivated slaughter, died
in vain will be determined by whether or not the State is
forced to put into effect the 28 reforms demanded by the
men at Attica last September.”
The plans of the Buffalo community for honoring
those who died on September 13, 1971 according to CAR,
“are in sharp contrast to those who, with State approval,
erected a monument last week at the prison.” That
monument only listed the guards and state employees who
died. The prisoners who lost their lives in the massacre
were not included. CAR is hoping that a large turnout on
Wednesday will demonstrate that all those who were killed
must be remembered.

No reforms implemented
In addition CAR accused the State of failing to

Plans include an 11 a.m. rally at the prison

to

commemorate the massacre and an attempt will be made
honor all those who died
there. This will be followed by a 6 p.m. rally at Humboldt
fork. Speakers at these events will include attorney
William Kunstler, Assemblyman Arthur O. Eve, two
former Attica inmatds and various other community and
to erect a monument that will

religious spokesmen.
A memorial procession will follow the later rally.
ending in a memorial service at the Shaw Church at
Plymouth and Porter streets at about 10 p.m.

Members of CAR who are sponsoring the events
include the Altica Defense Committee, the Attica
Observers Committee, the Attica Survivors Committee, the
Angela Davis Committee, B.U.I.L.D., the Vietnam
Veterans Against the War, the National Lawyers Guild and
others. Those interested in going to Attica for the service
should call the Attica Defense Committee at 884-2863.

New IDs given
Students may pick up identification cards
throughout this week on the second floor of Norton
HaU from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. The lengthy waiting lines
have somewhat diminished due to the additional
procesang equipment now in service. After
September 19, students must go to the basement of
Foster Hall for ID cards and will have to wait a week
before the finished cards can be picked up.

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Monday through Thursday

MONDAY
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TUESDAY

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Sept. 12

THURSDAY

Sept. 13

Sept. 14

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and

BAIRD LAWN 8 p.m.
THE BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC presents

•

A
ALSO
.

ACT V
All campus Television
presents a varied program
in the
HAAS LOUNGE

presents an exhibit
by
SUSAN KNOPKA
Second floor Art Gallery
Norton Hall
Sept. 8th
22nd

Monday
Sept.

.

—

Thursday

11* 14
Programs available at
Norton Information desk.

-

B

-

All Shakespeare Festival

UUAB ARTS COMMITTEE

~‘S■

FRIDA Y-Sept. 15th 7:15 p.m. Rotary Practice Field
Tickets $1.00 at Norton Ticket Office.

an

Admission Free

—

urns

NEEDS COORDINATORS* POP THE FOLLOWNING POSITIONS:
Program Director, Film Committee Coordinator, Drama Coordinator, Literary Arts
Coordinator. Publicity Director. Ridge Lea Activities Coordinator. Please apply bv

Wmoon Wednesday
Rags-fourteen

,

™

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE COMMITTEE
presents

JOHNNY SHINES
and
LARRY JOHNSON

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
(Sept. 15
16) 9:00 p.m.
Norton Hall 1st floor Cafeteria
FRESHMEN TRANSFER STUDENTS FREE
Students $;75
&amp;

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Faculty, Staff, Alumni $1.00
General Public $1.25

—

SffcV'ij

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*

*****^V* W*l^l**W
1

•

,***

e

*

The Spectrum Monday, II, September. 1972
*

-■

®

*w*»eeeeeeeB»»BBeee»eeee»e»eeee»ea»e

�Memorial heldfor
slain Israeli athletes
by Mike Feely

Spectrum

Jewish people.” Yet, she pointed
out that when Ethiopia refused tc
take part in the Olympics unless
the Rhodesian team was expelled,

Staff Writer

A memorial service for the
members of the Israeli Olympic athletes from all over the world
contingent
slain recently in united behind the North African
Munich, West Germany, drew a nation. Subsequently, Rhodesia
large crowd to the Norton was not permitted to participate
fountain area late Thursday in the games.
afternoon.
The brief demonstration Police should have waited
Ms. Rosenblatt also felt that
expressed the sorrow of the
Jewish people through Hebrew the Munich police “should have
prayer and song. A brief waited longer” before opening fire
chronology summarized the on the guerillas at the military
events of Tuesday, Sept. 5, which airport. It was during this action
led to the deaths of 11 athletes that the Israeli captives were
and team officials at the hands of killed by a hand grenade
explosion of their helicopter. Ms.
Arab guerillas.
Later Thursday, The Spectrum Rosenblatt condemned the police
interviewed Karen Rosenblatt, a for allegedly ignoring reports from
member of Activist Youth for Israeli, French and Belgian
Israel (AYI), which along with security forces that warned of an
Hillel and Students for Israel, Arab threat days in advance.
Disapproving the threat by the
sponsored the service.
Jewish Defense League to
assasinate Arab diplomats in
Not surprised
When asked if AYI or either of retaliation, Ms. Rosenblatt
explained that this would only
the other organizations supported
the renewal of the Olympic further separate the Arab people
from the Israelis. “What is
Games, Ms. Rosenblatt responded
that, while she did not personally
needed,” she maintained, “is to
approve the recommencement, educate the people of the Arab
countries that Israel is not their
the group members were split on
the
enemy.
However,
said,
issue.
she
the
continuance of the games after
only a 24-hour delay did not Military reprisals
It is the Arab governments, she
surprise her.
“The world," Ms. Rosenblatt pointed out, with whom the
pointed out, “has never been Israelis fight. While disapproving
concerned over crimes against the of mass assasinations, Ms.

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which was received at the time of registration. When
writing to the board, include your full name,
election district and assembly district (it’s on the
card), registration number and permanent a dress.
Also include, of course, your present mailins adress.
You will receive an application for an absentee ballot
which must then be returned by Oct. 31. If you lost
or misplaced your reostration card, send the board
your full name, permanent adress, birthdate, the
date you registered (if remembered) and your
mailing adress.
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Monday, I l.Septembar .1972. ..ThaSpaetrum. Page .fifteen
*

�Page sixteen The Spectrum Monday, 11 September 1972
.

.

�Section II

The Spectrum
State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 23, No. 11

MUNICH
A somber mood prevailed
Wednesday as the twentieth Olympic games resumed
following Tuesday’s guerrilla attack in which 17
persons were killed. The games recommenced several
hours after a special memorial service was held to
pay tribute to the three weightlifters, two wrestlers,
four coaches and two referees left dead in the wake
of the Munich violence. Over 83,000 people
attended the funeral which featured five speakers
including Shmeul Lalkin, chief of the Israeli team,
who condemned the killings as a “rape of the
Olympic spirit,” but pledged that “Israel will
compete in the future again in the true spirit of
-

brotherhood.”
West German police, meanwhile, held a press
at which they blamed the Israeli
government’s adamance for ultimately leading to the
airport massacre. Police officials joined in a
statement with ministry officials which claimed that
the survival of the Israeli hostages depended on the
Israeli government’s acceptance of the guerillas’
demand for the release of 200 Palestinians held in
Israeli prisons.
‘The Israeli government kept delaying their
increasingly political decision,” the statement
charged. “For them the release of any prisoners was

conference

impossible.”
‘This is an answer to criticism that another
decision could have spared the lives of the hostages.
The answer was that it was not within therealms of
the Germans to decide.”
Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban supported
the West German statements, disclosing that Israel
backed the use of force by German police to free the
hostages. Eban said Isreal had told WEst German
authorities it would not give in to the Arab demands
for release of the Palestinians. “...The tragedy is
that...the desired results were not obtained...,” Eban
remarked. “We have no arguments with the Germans
they didn’t kill the victims.”
In the wake of the violence, WEst German
police girded themselves for the possibility of further
violence occurrin over the Rosh Hashonah weekend.
A broadcast by a Palestinian guerrilla radio station
accused Munich police of “brutality and thirst for
Rilestinian blood,” and threatened that West
German interests would become a “principle target”
for future Palestinian action. It claimed that the
West German
police shot first and the guerrillas shot only in self
defense.
Bonn issued a warning to security officials
throughout West Germany that terrorists might be
sending explosive letters and packages through the
mails. Security was increased at airports and public
buildings which might be targets for Arab reprisals.
-

BEIRUT
Arab reaction to the massacre was
mixed, with Lebanon expressing sorrow and Jordan
expressing condemnation. However, a Cairo
newspaper AI Akhbar said in an editorial, “the
betrayal has failed and the hostages were killed. The
guerrillas acted courageously and cautiously, killed
the Israelis and fell martyrs.” Jordan was the first
Arab country to condemn the massacre. King
Hussein denounced the incident as a “shameful
crime. It is the work of sick and low minds, whose
principle target is to damage the Arab name.”
—

Monday, 11 September 1972

The Lebanese government was second to express
its regrets and sympathies. A cabinet statement
issued by the Lebanese Information Minister stated:
‘The Lebanese government voices its regret for the
incident at Munich, for which Lebanon is sorry, due
to the human losses involved.”
DETROIT
Former Teamster Union boss
James R. Hoffa said Thursday night he was forced to
cancel a trip to Hanoi to seek release of American
POW’s after a news leak negated the secrecy pact he
had with the North Vietnamese. Hoffa and two
assistants got as far as New York Thursday where the
recently paroled labor chief said he planned to catch
a later plane en route to Hanoi. The State
Department revoked Hoffa’s passport validation.
State Department officials said that Hoffa’s passport
was stamped by an unauthorized official under
“expedite procedures”, which led to revocation
when the affair was brought to the attention of
top-level officials.
“It’s a very sad mistake on somebody’s part,"
Hoffa countered. “It had to be intentional because
everybody understood it was not to be publicized.”
Hoffa said that he had received an official
invitation for a one week visit from the Hanoi Trade
Union to discuss “problems concerning trade unions
and also to discuss the war situation and meet with

Kennedy tour ofBuffalo
debunks Nixon policies
by Dave Saleh

—

prisoners.”
In Paris, an official at the North Vietnamese
delegation to the peace talks said that Hoffa had
never to his knowledge received an invitation or a
visa from Hanoi to visit U5. prisoners. “It is very
clear that we never would have received such a
delegation,” the official claimed.

NEW YORK Attorney William Kunstler has
called for a special grand jury investigation of
Manhattan District Attorney Frank Hogan. In a
motion for dismissal of charges against two alleged
leaders of the 1970Tomqs prison riots, Kunstler said
recent statements by Hogan had prejudiced his
clients’ chances of getting a fair trial.
The motion, submitted Thursday in Manhattan
Supreme Court, asked the Court to institute
whatever action against Mr. Hogan it may
legitimately undertake, including the convening of a
special grand jury to investigate his role in the case.”
Following the acquittal of three others accused
of taking part in the Tombs rebellion, Hogan said the
jury in the case “had made a political statement”
and gone beyond their oaths and rules of the court.
He further charged that the outcome of the trial was
a “miscarriage of justice.”
-

Kunstier told a news conference that the district
attorney’s remarks were “intended to intimidate”
prospective jurors.
The two defendants, Herbert Blyden and
Stanley King are accused in a 72-count indictment,
returned in January 1971, of kidnapping, unlawful
imprisonment and possession of weapons. Blyden,
who is said to also have been a leader of the Attica
Prison uprising last year, is now awaiting trial in the
Bronx House of Detention. King is in the Ossining
State Correctional Facility.
The motion to dismiss the indictment
scheduled to be argued Septemqer 14.

is

City editor

Senator Edward Kennedy lashed out at President Nixon
Friday night for his refusal to follow the lead of George
McGovern and reveal his “secret proposals” for tax reform.
In a campaign tour of the Buffalo area with Congressional
candidate Max McCarthy the Senator called the past four
years under the present administration “four years of
failure” and claimed “we can’t afford four more.”
Speaking at a rally
in arranged his trip to China. He
Tonawanda, Sen. Kenndey said: then challenged the State
“Just hours ago on the floor of Department to disprove that
the Senate, I introduced an statement calling it a “sure fact.”
amendent to a revenue sharing
The point that appeared to
bill, calling for the President to most concern the Senator was
reveal by the end of October his what he called the President’s
that policy of special interests favoring
tax reform proposals
amendment didn’t get a single “the people of Wall Street instead
Repuqlican vote
They (the of the people of Main Street.
republicans) claimed that the
“The International Telephone
President has a secret plan for tax
Telegraph Company (ITT)
reform that he will reveal in and
special consideration by
given
was
January, i believe his secret
formula is just like the one to end the administration because of a
$250,000 campaign donation they
the war, it doesn’t even exist.”
made to the Republican National
At a Lockport rally. Sen. Convention. This came in the
Kenndey
attacked the form of a decision by the
administration’s economic record, Anti-trust Commission of allow
saying: “The President has put the ITT to merge with another firm
economy through a shredder. despite anti-trust laws which
We’ve had four years of Richard forqade it.”
Nixon’s rising prices,
unemployment and government
Where’d he
...

..

for

giant

.

monopolies

...

go?

and

Mr. McCarthy reiterated the
Senator’s views on the tax reform
issue when he said: “1 strongly
endorse Senator Kennedy’s health
insurance program. It will
establish a system of
com pregensive national health
insurance for the United
.capable of bringing the
States
same high quality of health can
to every resident.. .Health care is
a right for all, not just a privilege
for the few.”

America is fed up. Instead of four
more years of a government for
the giant monopolies and a
government for special interests,
let’s have four more years of what
we want, peace and prosperity.”
Hits “mechanized air war”
The Senator later turned to the
President’s foreign policy in a
speech to students at Niagara
University, and called for an
immediate pullout of American
forces
from Vietnam
“conditioned only on the release
of the American prisoners of
war.” He also accused the
President of re-escalating and
mechanizing the air war with a
war policy that “defies all logic

..

Although the whole Buffalo
tour progressed smoothly with no
reason for alarm, events took an

interesting turn. On die way to
the engagement at Niagara
University, the motorcade
suddenly made a series of
unexpected, puzzling turns, and
then abruptly stopped. As those
in the procession tensely
approached the Senator’s car to
see what had happened, most
were surprised that the Senator
was not in his car. After further
investigation, a team of alert
reporters Anally spotted Sen.
Kennedy partially surrounded by
some very nervous Secret Service
and FBI agents on his way down
the road on foot for an abreviated
tour of the Falls.

and humanity.”
“How far do you really think it
is,” he continued “from Munich
to My Lai, from the battlefields of
Vietnam to the Olympic Games in

Germany.”
Turning to the India-Pakistan

conflict, the Senator accused the

Nixon administration of favoring
the
Pakistan
in its “repression” of the Bengali
people only because the West
Pakistani government had

Monday,

11 September 1972 The Spectrum Page seventeen
.

.

�iilll
:|il
lujr

California pdl may show
national Me Govern trend
SACRAMENTO (UPI)-The young

man
rallying
youth
with
California
charged
around Sen. George McGovern blames a
high turf, gentle ocean breezes and warm
sun for the coolness toward his candidate.
“Young people have been at the
beaches, taking it easy, sunning it up. Once
they come back from vacation and get the
sand off their feet, we’ll be okay,” predicts
Ron Sufrin, a UCLA economics major who
is 19 and is working in his first major
political compaign.
Eugene Wyman,

a Beverly Hills
attorney, is 48 and has been putting the
touch on fat cat Democratic contributors
in more campaigns than he can remember.
He doesn’t think the beach is the problem.
“I don’t think McGovern is as well
organized as he was during the primary.
Nor has he the momentum,” says Wyman,
an important member of the Los Angeles
Jewish community and pre-convention
supporter of Sen. Hubert Humphrey.

conservatively

agree generally with the
latest California Poll which shows the
President out in front by 8 percentage

I15i|

points.

|l|li
■S1111
in
ill
unis

Still, this potentially surmountable lead
is a far cry from the 34 point bulge
enjoyed nationally by Nixon in the latest
Gallup Poll. And McGovern strategists say
they see signs the tide has turned in
California and that this ultimately will be
reflected nationwide, as political trends
here so often are.
“California and the Pacific Coast
generally look like one of our strongest
areas,” says Richard G. Stearms, 27-year
old western coordinator for McGovern.
“Our biggest problem now is to assure
people that the campaign has found its
foot and is moving ahead. A minor
problem,” he adds, “is clearing up some of
the issues.”
Not Overly Enthusiastic
One such issue is McGovern’s recently
discarded $1000-a-head income
redistribution plan. Stearns says after the
California primary, which the South
Dakotan won by less that 5 percentage
points, a private poll found that the J1000
scheme “was probably the most unpopular
issue associated with McGovern.”
“It caused more disaffection than
anything else,” he says. McGovern was
encouraged by visits last week to two
the
traditionally Democratic groups
Jewish community and organized labor
which have not been overly enthusiastic
about his candidacy.
The senator drew standing ovations
from the Southern California Board of
Rabbis when he charged that Egypt and
Lebanon were chiefly responsible for the
Olympic killings, and was endorsed by the
International Association of Machinists at

Sitting It Out
Like some other old-line California
Democrats, Wyman is sitting out this
presidential election and concentrating
instead on raising money for congressional
races.
Beth Labson, at 18 a Democratic
candidate for the State Assembly says:
“Young people are a little skeptical of
McGovern right now. They think he has
lost some of his pureness.” She cites the
Eagleton affair and “compromises he has
made.”
“If you want my opinion,” says one
major California union leader, asking for
anonymity, “McGovern would be better
off if he dismantled his staff and took a
two month cruise.”
With eight weeks remaining before the
election, there is no question that President
Nixon leads McGovern in their quest for
California’s 45 electoral votes, the biggest its annual convention.
bloc in the nation
Nixon, meantime, probably has the
McGovern’s perhaps smoothest campaign operation in modern
Both camps

.1
5*5

I

—

—

Page eighteen The Spectrum. Monday, 11 Septern qer 1972
nootemi-^rii. nwjvwqZ erfl. £Tf&gt;I "ednvnqv8 11,,-wbmh}
.

party unity are no problems. And Nixon
youth director Gary Hunt, 23, reports no
trouble recruiting young volunteers-even

off the beaches.
“We just hope our people don’t become
overconfident. If they start thinking we’ve

Lyn

former

Nofziger,

director for
Committee

the
who

communications

Republican
is

Nixon’s

National
California

campaign director.

Nixon carried his native state in 1968
despite a Democratic registration advantage

�Fall festivities

Photos by Santos

Monday, 11 September 1972 The Spectrum Page nineteen
.

.

�"“"""Peel Rite"**"

'

from P*fl«

EALTH FOOD SHQ

supposed to have fuzzy ideas and his cause is
hopeless. Then you may ask yourself how he acts his
effects. He has no oratorical tricks. In this instance
he is saying, again and again, put my record beside
Richard Nixon’s; my support for Israel began
publicly as a moral issue in Congress in 1963,
Nixon’s interest in Israel is only abstract as a pawn in
his Mettemich confrontation with Russia. The
Administration’s objective is not to insure the
security of Israel, he tells the Jews grimly, it is to
expel the Russians. It is mechanical and has no
fervor in it.
This time he departs from text, ad libs, warms
to his subject; the applause changes from polite to
vigorous. You feel it grow. His speech covers a lot
more than Israel. There is scathing sarcasm at
Nixon’s claims to reducting crime, and about the
“miserable” war in Vietnam. He uses a short, choppy
gesture with the left forefinger; he has the power of
a humane and compassionate man who is genuinely
stirred.
So that’s the next McGovern confrontation. It.is
success.
The take-off runway has been extended a
a
bit further.

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IS THE FUTURE PREGNANT WITH THE PAST?
OR IS THE PAST PREGNANT WITH THE FUTURE?
Take History Courses and find out for yourself!
For courses, teachers, programs, and
opportunities, ask for booklet, “Studying History”,
at 231 or 233 Diefendorf.

10—

Scene Three. Here I am sitting outdoors smack
the
middle of the New York garment district at a
in
temporary grandstand off the intersection of 7 th
Avenue and West 40th at a noontime rally for Soviet
Jewry. A random gleam of sunlight somehow pokes
down through the architectural Grand Canyon,
down through the clouds and skyscrapers and smog,
onto the, stage where McGovern speaks. “Squires
BURGER Shop” is across the way. The amplified
voice thunders up the walls. The street is blocked off
and the traffic light flits from red “Don’t” to a green
“Walk” unheeded. The secretaries hanging out 20
stories up hear McGovern wonder if Mr. Nixon is
more interested in “the little Russian girl Tanya”
(whose tragedy he is always talking about) or in the
live Jews from whom Russia demands a kind of
exit-visa ransom to let them immigrate? The crowd
yells. They like it. Ex-preacher McGovern quotes
“A time to keep silence and a time to
Ecclesiastes
this,
he
tells Nixon harshly, is a time to
speak”;
-

speak.

I come back to Washington a little shaken. This
isn’t quite the nice, gentle fellow (poor guy) l
thought. This man has a killer instinct. And his
campaign is finally off the ground. I think.

Radical Education
Social Science College

GUS like* to meet people that'* why he only charges $.08 a copy to Xerox
your notes, papers and other things that always seem to need to be copied.
he does it fast, he does it clean, and he does it
Copying is GUS's specialty
receptionist
(so
our
who works GUS). Simply walk in to
with a smile
does
GUS offer* even better rates if
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Hall
and
hello.
his office in 355 Norton
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the
tame
original $.07 a copy for 4-6 copies,
you want multiple copies
GUS guarantees satisfaction, or
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copy
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Critique of American Education
Radical Perspectives in Athletics
The Military: Its Role in the U.S
American Labor History
Political Econ. of Social Services
Pop Music
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Radical Political Theory

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Society, Sex Roles A Liberation
Indochina; Myth and Reality
Radical Perspectives in Economics
Homosexuality
Critical Studies in a Dying Culture

-

Medicine A Health
Leveling of the People
Independent Study

Editor's note: Make a Xerox machine happy

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contact our table in Norton Lobby or call 5385

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Page

The Spectrum' Monday,11'September 1:972'

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student’s attendance must accompany such a request.

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Students may drop courses, as was done before, until two weeks before the
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December 1

3

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must be established within the six-week period. However, the only exception
is that one additional independent studies unit (one to four hours) may be
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In the public interest
by Ralph Nader
The New Republic Feature Syndicate

Should schools, colleges,
hospitals and other recipients of federal grants be
allowed to purchase or use needed equipment from
the federal government’s property supplies, or
should they be required to buy these items on the
market at much higher prices?
WASHINGTON

-

This is the question that has pitted the Nixon
Administration and a powerful coalition of
wholesalers and distributors, with annual sales of
$300 billion, against an unorganized group of federal
grant recipients in the educational, health, research
and local governmental fields.
*

0

It all started in 1967 when the Johnson
Administration initiated a policy permitting the
General Services Administration, the government’s
buying agent, to open its supply sources in
fulfillment of grant programs. Also, GSA excess
property could be borrowed by these recipients,
under the 1967 regulation. The idea was to stretch
the federal grant dollar. Professor Fairfax Leary
claims it is saving taxpayers about S400 million a
year.

There are other advantages to the GSA policy,
which the White House has now demanded be
revoked. For example, a southern city’s department
of education says the policy saves on inventory
tie-ups and paperwork and permits quicker purchases
at about 25 percent savings. Another state
department of education notes not only savings of
almost 44 percent, but more realistic, competitive
bids from private suppliers. Rigged bids, collusion,
and outright monopolies have long been associated
with state and local government procurement
practices. Private hospitals and other research and
educational institutions which have to purchase
diagnostic, therapeutic and scientific instruments
have had similar experiences. The comparatively tiny
GSA regular and surplus supply outlet helps keep
corporate price gougers less greedy and a little more
competitive.
Items purchased by federal grantees from GSA

-

'"Tssassr-

"Ask your broker about us"

surplus are not frivolous; they indude office
supplies, school laboratory items, cleaning materials
and other essentials. From spark plugs to garbage
cans some purchase prices have been as much as SO
to 65 percent lower.
NAtional Association of Wholesalers
and
its allied trade groups, have been
(NAW),
for the past five years to
strenuously
lobbying
overturn government attempts to devise government
procurement policies that save taxpayers’ money. In
1969 they succeeded, also through the White House,
in blocking GSA from coordinating purchases with
state and local governments. GSA buys directly from
the manufacturers. Most state and local governments
buy from wholesalers, paying over $6 billion a year
in markups and commissions. This inefficient
procurement pattern often benefits campaign
contributors and corrupts state and local politics.

The

So powerful was the lobbying effort of the
NAW coalition on Congress and the White House
that the GSA dropped its plan in 1969, just as it is
now about to implement a White House directive to
close its doors to federal grant recipients. In recent
weeks, some of these recipients, such as junior
colleges, are mounting a protest from all over the
nation. They are demanding a public hearing so that
all the facts can be considered openly and not in
closed-door exchanges between Budget Director,
Caspar Weinberger, and trade association
representatives. Financially hard-pressed local
governments and vocational schools want to state
their case and show how they have been able to
purchase or use needed equipment that they
otherwise could not have afforded. Their chief
supporter in Congress has been Senator Walter
Mondale of Minnesota.

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Mr. Weinberger likes to talk about economy in
practices waste and distorts the
GSA program with misleading alarums about minor
abuses. Instead of seeing that abuses are stopped, he
wants to throw out the entire program. In an
election year, a booming $300 billion wholesaleand
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Page twenty-two The Spectrum Monday, 11 September 1972
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�AUen’s newfilm an impotent comedy
by Keith Shandalow
Spectrum Film Critic

The Reviewer had, frankly, a very realistic attitude
towards Woody Allen’s abilities and shortcomings. He
believed, simply, that Woody Allen was a god. Allen could
do no wrong in the Reviewer’s eyes; could not possibly, no
matter how hard he tried, be unfunny or make a film that
did not put all other contemporary film comedies to utter
shame.
But like all other idol worshippers the Reviewer was
bound to be disillusioned, and he has been. Allen’s latest
piece of visual creativity, Everything You Always Wanted
to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask, is far below
the quality established by Allen’s other films, and ends up
as not much more than an embarrassing failure.
»,

Do-it manual
Allen has taken Dr. David Reuben’s bestselling sex
information book designed for today’s liberated, with-it,
upper middle class Americans and has come up with seven
sketches, each taking a chapter heading from the book as a
starting point (e.g. What is sodomy? Do aphrodesiacs really
work?) and each in some way spoofing a film genre or
style (Antonioni films, monster movies, TV game shows).
The result is just one sequence that works, four
sketches of mild interest that might have found their way
onto The Dean Martin Show if we lived in more sexually
liberated times, and two sequences that the Reviewer
found to be excruciatingy awful. For another comedian
that scorecard might be interpreted as an honorable
performance. For Allen it is a near-disaster.
Allen’s comedy technique in.prior films arises from
(a bumbling,
the nebbish-ness of his screen
insecure, neurotic loser) and from his presence in strange
or outlandish situations. A dynamic relationship is
established between these two components and the
totality is usually brilliant humor.
The Fielding Mellish (Bananas)
Allen Felix (Play It
Again, Sam) persona is so well-handled by Allen (as the
Little Tramp was utilized by Chaplin), that his presence on
the screen is almost guaranteed to start viewers giggling
and smiling. In Everything You Wanted to Know About
Sex that persona is absent from all but one sequence, while
Allen himself is absent from all but four sequences.
-

Thus the comic burden is placed solely on the
ridiculousness of the situations, and though this might
bring a brief smile to one’s lips as one contemplates that
outlandishness, it soon leads to banality and boredom.
Thus we have the spectacle of Lou Jacobi going into his
daughter-in-laws’ bedroom to dress up as a transvestite,
and hiding in dress and all to avoid being discovered. Ha
ha.

Thus we have Gene Wilder as a successful doctor
who falls in love with a sheep and has an extra-marital

intercourse. Tony Randall and Burt Reynolds direct the
operation as all the personnel in the body strive to make
the man’s performance adequate.
They must contend with an Italian dinner,
momentary failure to achieve erection (hardhats working
in the boiler room strain to uplift what looks like a huge
erector set), and the Conscience being tied up by Guilt
(dressed as a priest). Allen has a brief role as a neurotic
sperm cell.

Sticky fingers

In another sequence Allen is at his comic best as a
medieval court jester who tires to make it with the Queen
(Lynn Redgrave) while the King (Anthony Quayle) is
away. Allen, once again working with his usual
characterization, is superb as he delivers a monologue that
”),
bombs out (“It’s great to be back here at the Palace
as he “cops a feel” on the royal body, and as he gets his
hand caught in the Queen’s chastity belt.
It has been the Reviewer’s contention for a long time
that 30 or 40 years hence, Woody Allen’s films will be
thought of in the same way that Marx brothers movies are
thought of today. It is the Marx brothers form of verbal
witticisms and jest coupled with zany antics and slapstick
(exemplified by Duck Soup ) that Allen is direct and
greatest heir to. Add to this the close identification of
Allen with his persona, the kind of character that so well
describes the kind of paranoic inability to cope with the
kinds of pressures of modern day-to-day life that many
people are afflicted with, and one recognizes that Allen has
the potential to be a really great comedian. Certainly Take
the Money and Run and Bananas have almost attained
classic status already.
The Reviewer has so long believed in Allen’s
infallibility that he is forced to believe that Allen’s latest
...

'

affair with it, complete with hotel rendezvous and a
divorce from his wife for infidelity. Thus we have the
television game show, “What’s My Perversion.” The initial
premises are funny momentarily, but when they are played
out logically, step-by-step, they are nothing more than bad
situation comedies.
The high point of the film comes with the last
episode, which depicts what happens within the mind and
body of a man during a date with a woman that ends in

film is nothing more than a slight mistake, an experiment
that backfired. And yet he wishes it didn’t happen.

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex but
Were Afraid to Ask reveals to the Reviewer something he
always wanted to know about Allen but was afraid to find
out. Woody Allen is capable of failure.

College E/Critical Communications &amp; Media Ctr.
Fall 1972 Course Offerings
(CCMC)
PRINT
431
Exp., DUS Copy Editing
Lou Villano Th. 1-3
-

COMMUNICATIONS

SOUND

463
Exp., DUS Ethics
Ron Stein Arr.

341
Exp. Investigative Reporting
Alan Christopher Arr.

231
Exp., DUS Writing Workshop
Sue Greenwood Arr.

337
Exp., Commercial Copywriting
Lorretta Angline Arr.

367
Exp., DUS Communications Law
Earl S. Carrel W/F 3-4:30

161
Exp., DUS Critical Reading
Claude Welch Arr.

245
Exp., Radio/TV: Commercial Aspects
Sid Ehrenreich Mon. 7-10

283
Exp., Mass Media &amp; Contemporary Culture
Dare Karpoff Arr.

447

267
Exp., Creative Listening
Jim Sotet Arr.

371
Exp., Illustrated Mediums
Tavis/Siegel Air.

Exp. Photo Journalism
Hart/Osterreicher Air.

Cross Listing/Bulletin Board
311

Journalism 311
Lou Villano Th. 4-6

Cross Listing/College A

339
Exp., DUS Public Broadcasting
Jim Campbell Arr.

308

Introduction to Public Relations
Jim DeSantis Arr.

343
Exp., DUS Radio/TV Announcing
Jim Santella Arr.

For course descriptions and additonal
information pick up Supplemental College
Catalogue at College Office, 133 Crosby.
Registration numbers can be obtained by calling
The Colleges at 831-5545 or 831-3810.

FILM

VIDEO

301

353

2A Symbolic Form: Film
B Symbolic Form; Film

Exp., DUS TV Journalism—
Its Elements &amp; Meaning
Sue King T. 6—9

C Symbolic Form: Film

Monday,

11 September 1972 The
.

Spectrum Page twenty-three
.

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9

UNIVERSITY PLAZA
and
MAIN &amp;EGGERT

�Bright future seen in Buffalo
track by Coach Me Donough
by Bruce Engel

Spectrum Staff Writer

last spring’s track
season, Buffalo’s track and cross
country mentor of 21 years,
Emery Fisher resigned due to a
conflict between his coaching
duties and Park’s Department
position. After a year in which the

Following

McDonough comes to the Bulls

after five years of coaching and
teaching at Kent State (he will
also teach Health and Physical
Education at Buffalo) which was
preceded by a successful high
school coaching career. As
assistant cross country and track
coach at Kent, McDonough
tutored several All-Americans and
nationally known track stars.
Undoubtedly qualified in the
mechanics of coaching, one must
nonetheless wonder how well
McDonough will fit into Buffalo’s
program, as the Bulls’ level of
competition is not nearly as high
as that of Kent State.

McDonough remarked: “At Kent,
architecture is a very rough course
of study and some architecture
students had to be discouraged
from going out for track. Here 1
may have to do the same with
pre-med.” Later he added, ‘1 will
have to make allowances for
individual cases. I want to be an
advisor and helper for the kids
and not just a coach. I think I can
help with academic problems and
with joqs and I want them to get
good grades. 1 think that is very
important.”

Bulls work hard
The new coach is certainly
going to work hard for a winning
team. Right now McDonough has
Adequate budget
the cross country runners doing
Though largely unfamiliar with two tough workouts each day.
Buffalo’s program and still However, success will not come
learning his new job, McDonough from breaking any rules or by loss
definitely seems headed in the of integrity. “I have a cynical
right direction. ‘The budget little saying,” McDonough said.
seems adequate for the program,” ‘The biggest winners are the
McDonough said confidently. biggest cheaters.” McDonough
When asked if he will be insecure feels that recruiting will come
and frustrated by not having the from the local area and all
scholarship athletes, McDonough candidates will have to be good
replied; “It is a relief not to have students. He also hopes to find
scholarships. They are a big undeveloped and undiscovered
administrative problem.” He
talent in what he calls “low power
track program suffered and explained that Kent
State did not programs.” These would be small
athletics generally underwent
have enough scholarships for towns where potential stars have
much attack, it was conceivable everyone and that it was rough
little chance to develop.
that Fisher’s replacement might deciding who would get aid and
Now McDonough faces the
be little more than a lame duck, who wouldn’t.’Tt leads
to a lot of
stiff test of a program that has
while the program was slowly cut
jealousy on the team,”
many limits placed upon it.
down or even phased out. McDonough added.
Keeping his present enthusiasm in
However, the Athletic
Department has hired the highly
McDonough also seems to the face of these limits may prove
qualified James McDonough, realize that there are problems at difficult, but Coach McDonough
4#iereby making a renewed a school such as Buffalo where the seems to know his problems and
committment to track excellence. athletes are primarily students. has some definite plans in mind.

James McDonough

Athletic budget controversy
Sports Editor

As has been the case in recent years on the
Buffalo campus, the semester opens with a great deal
of controversy surrounding the budget for
intercollegiate athletics, recreation and intramurals.
At its last meeting Friday afternoon, the Student
Association Executive Committee began to pass
certain items of the budget affecting sports that
open during the coming weeks.
However, Jon Dandes, chairman of the Student
Athletic Review Board (SARB), is still unhappy over
the treatment the athletics budget has received thus
far. An irritated Dandes commented: “I’ve had this
budget ready since last April and the Executive
Committee has just stalled and postponed its
passage.” Dr. Harry G. Fritz, Buffalo’s director of
athletics, is just as irritated as Dandes, and called the
proposed $247,000 budget, “an honest one
formulated by the review board and our coaches.”
Dr. Fritz went on to point out that $75,000 had
already been trimmed from the initial budget
requests of the athletic department. Commenting on
the relationship between the SARB and the
executive committee. Dr. Fritz added: “If the review
board is to be a serious group, it cannot have the
Executive Committee breathing down its neck.”

Weighty decisions yet to
come to wrestling Bulls
Despite the fact that the wrestling Bulls posted a 17-1
record last season, last year’s starters are by no means
immune to losing their positions to challengers. In the
heavyweight class, Pat Russi is expected, to mount a
formidable challenge to the incumbent, Tony Policare.
Russi, who finished second during this summer’s Junior
World Championships in Trieste, Italy, holds his opponent in

it happens every year
by Barry Rubin

Pat Russi

income figure” that the SA was hoping for.
There are now discussions underway to charge
Buffalo students for admittance to intercollegiate
events. However, Dr. Fritz asserts that the
department is against such charges. Presently, the SA
is examining the potential income to be derived from
Buffalo’s new home hockey ice, the Holiday Rinks
Inc. facility. The facility includes twin rinks, with
seating capacities of 2800 and 800 respectively.
After a proposed deal to play in the Grand Island
Pavilion fell through, the Bulls were lucky to find
any facility large enough to house their growing
varsity, intramural and recreational ice skating
programs. Varsity hockey coach Ed Wright, who
recently added six new skaters to his ECAC Division
II runnerup skaters, hopes to open practices
November 1, a mere ten days prior to Buffalo’s
home opener with Kent State.

Referendum a possibility
Jon Dandes of the SARB has also discussed the
possibility of calling for a referendum in order to
guarantee a budget for athletics. Last semester, such
a referendum was held with apparently favorable
results for the athletic department. Dr. Fritz, who
felt that the results of last semester’s referendum
were arbitrarily passed over, added: “It’s as though
there were no referendum and no Student Athletic
Review Board.”
Despite completed intercollegiate schedules and
Income offset
The present request of $247,000 is expected to equipment orders waiting for immediate action,
be offset by a $20,000 income projection, derived there is no athletic budget as yet. Additionally, for
from gate receipts and guarantees. However, ’the first time in years, it is likely that Buffalo
according to Dandes, the SA is attempting to find students will be faced with admission fees at
further income in the budget. According to one intercollegiate events. Following the trend of recent
source in the athletic department, “Buffalo is three years, athletics appear to have slipped to an even
or four years away from reaching the $40,000 flower notch in the priorities of student government.

high regard. “Tony’s a very good
wrestler, but he has to respect my
ability. 1 have improved since last
year. I am also in better condition
that I was in last year, having just
recuperated from a knee injury at
that time. I think that it will be a
very close battle for the starting
spot

15-1-1

Junior

Buffalo last

rather

than

Policare and Russi use sharply
contrasting styles. This point in
his development, I would classify
Tony as a finesse wrestler,’’

’’

the

for

under freestyle
collegiate rules.

in addition to finishing second

in

record

season, finished seventh in the
Olympic Trials at 220 lbs The
trials, like the Junior World
Championships, were conducted

World

Championships, the transfer from
Ashland has an edge in size (6-S,
2S0) against his opponent.
However, Policare, who stands
S-9, topped Russi in the finals of
last year’s East Stroudsburg Open

observed Bulls coach Ed Michael.
“He tends to use his quickness to
overcome the height and weight
advantage of most of his
Many of his
opponents.
techniques, as a matter of fact, are
common to lightweights. On the
other hand. Russi, who is larger in
stature, uses his strength and size
to great advantage. He has several
polished moves and is quick for a
man his size. Assuming that both
wrestlers maintain their
competitiveness, they could make
each other great."

Tournament, and sees no reason
why he shouldn’t be able to
defeat Russi again. k

Policare remains confident

“I beat Pat last year and I am
that I can repeat the
performance," reasoned Policare.
“I have about three times as much
experience as he does and have
faced many more top caliber
opponents, with the exception of
Chris Taylor." Taylor, the 1972
NCAA heavyweight wrestling
champion, pinned Russi in the
Olympic Trials.
Policare did not rest on his
laurels during the summer, either.
The senior, who compiled a
sure

Although this will be Policare’s

final season. Russi has three years
of eligibility remaining. Therefore,
barring
any
unforeseen
circumstances, the Bulls should be
strong in this key weight class for
a few years to come.

&gt;

AUTO and CYCLE INSURANCE
IMMEDIATE COVERAGE
Ri|vdM of age

3800 HARLEM
——

Monday “11

1*0

or record

.........

(Near Kensington

-

*.

■

,.

837 2278

Night Phone 839-0566

——

The Speotram*. Page twenty-five

*

�CLASS! BO
AO INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED AOS may be placed In
355 Norton Hall, Monday thru Friday,
9 a.m.—4:30 p.m. The student rate Is
$1.25 (or 15 words or less and $.05 for
every additional word.

HELP WANTED ads cannot
discriminate on any basis (l.e.,
“preferably" Is discriminatory).
FOUND ads will be run free of charge
(or a maximum of 2 days and 15
words.

HOUSE FOR RENT
MULT I-bedroom furnished house,
excellent
location, available
Immediately, very reasonable. Also
furnished rooms available. 896-8180.

NO SCATS RESERVED NO CHAIRS ON AM*. LIMITED NUMRSR OF ADVANCE
TICKETS MJCl NHEH THESE ARE flOHE All TICKETS Will BE *5.50

APARTMENT FOR RENT

-

Tickols m toh

or*n

MW

at Baffala Festival Tickat

OHIa. Statist Hilton lobby (moll

wMt tlanpad, satf-addrastad on.olopo); US Norton
CoHopo Tickof OWto. falls Tltfcft, MoohoHo flaia, Niagara Falls.
atcaptad

Hall; Start

FURNISHED,
apartment

—

near

four-bedroom
University

—

HOUSE

AVAILABLE (or “group
excellent condition, well
Call 856-5140
private.
between 9 a.m.—5 p.m. and 632-6677
after 6 p.m.
CONVENIENT room for student
Interested In sharing family life In
exchange
for reasonable rent or
contribution to chores or someone able
piano
to give
lessons. 838-2671.

CAR REPAIRS*
that LAST at

ROOMS

UB
2 minutes,
Puritan-type male
light cooking.
$6S-S70/mo. Lease. 834-5312.
—

—

—

ATTRACTIVE
twin-bedded room,
private bath, light Kitchen privileges,
garage. Call 839-4293.

INDEPENDENT

FOREIGN CAR
SERVICE 839-1850

ENGLEWOOD AVE
near U.B
suitable for 4 students or faculty
family; three-bedroom lower flat, air
conditioned, refrigerator, dishwasher,
self-cleaning oven. Will rent furnished
or unfurnished. $300/month. No
utilities Included. 1 or 2-year lease.
Security deposit In advance. Call Mrs.
Schrelber at 875-3612 or 741-3962 for
appointment Information.
TWO-ROOM apt. with kitchen. All
utilities. $80/month. Private entrance.
TT5-7962.

BABYSITTER
wanted Tuesdays
8:30—4:30, Amherst area. 632-1367.

NIKKOMAT
w/case. Black

SITTER for one IV* old child. Any or
all of the following times: Monday,
Wednesday

Thursday

Tuesday,
Directly across

afternoons;

mornings.

television.

1963

FORD

MEN WANTED to make good money
In their spare time. Phone Steve
evenings at 692-8345.

1968 VW bug, $500. 837-9609

WANTED: Babysitter In professor's
home for
16-month-old child;
part-time; long term. No other chores.
Hcrtel—Starln area. Phone 838-2050.

COLLIE puppies
AKC
sable/wht.
Great dogs, furry, Intelligent, playful,
peace-loving. $75, $100. Call Laurie,
837-6092.

ONE full-time and two part-time
workers for Lighthouse Restaurant.
Call 896-9791.

UPRIGHT piano, good condition. Can
arrange transportation. $100. Call Bob
after six p.m. 881-1092.

STUDENT

classic guitars, banjos. Fine
hand-made Instruments.
Qurlan, Gibson, Guild, Gallagher,
Martin, etc. All Harmony guitars, 25%
off until Sept. 20. The String Shoppe
524 Ontario, Buffalo. Hours 7
p.m. —9 p.m. Daily, Saturday, 12—5
p.m. 874-0120.

to live In as mother's
room, private bath and
good food provided In exchange for
babysitting.
Close to campus.
837-8106 after 3 p.m.
helper. Large

—

WANTED: Witnesses for the arrest of
Robert Stelnhorn last March In
Norton. Needed for trial. Call anyone
at 882-7181 or contact SDS.

RIDE BOARD
RIDE WANTED to New York
28, 29, 30. Call Ronnl 837-2771.

Sept,

FOLK,

factory and

FOR SALE; klngslza
heater
almost new
$25. Call 838-4022.
—

WANT

waterbed and
both for only

at

look

the

most

Inexpensive, beautiful looking dresses,
handicrafts, batiks, paintings, antiques,
silks. Jewelry from India. Call

836-4148 after 7 p.m.

—

APARTMENT stove with oven
$10. Call 895-7721.
broiler

and

—

40” ELECTRIC stove, *25; VW trailer
hitch, $10; large 3-part desk, formica
top, $70: large leaded-glass bookcase,
$95; bathroom mirror-cabinet, French
doors, chairs, household miscellaneous.
Cheap. 836-8698.

1965 COMET statlonwagon. Fantastic
transportation. $&gt;125. Also black-white

—

REFRIGERATOR for sale: suitable
for dorm use. Excellent condition. Call
837-4185.
TWO KITTENS: Landlord says "no:"
affectionate, seven weeks, shots
already
given. Call
evenings and
weekend. 832-4837.
batlked T-shirts, each one
only $5.50 at
Individually hand done
“The People,” a folk arts boutique,

HAND

—

144 Allan St. 882-6283.

”

OLDS 1964 convertible Jetstar 8 .
original owner. Best
Good condition
offer. 875-9014.
—

AN

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER

11th from 9:00 a.m. to 5!00 p.m

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER

12th from

1:00 p.m. to 11:00

p.m.

FILLMORE ROOM

.

TO

—

FORCE parka
excellent
AIR
condition. Must sell, sacrifice, $50. Call
Jim 834-3171.

FOR SALE

ON ALL ACTIVITIES AND PROJECTS

ITS PROJECT

Page twenty-six. The Spectrum Monday, 11 September 1972

—

—

A GIRL’S bicycle In fine condition.
Price negotiable. Please call Rita after
5:00 at 837-1561.

OPEN HOUSE INFORMATION

-

van.

1972 CB750 Honda, 2300 miles.
Reasonable.
Call 881-1150 or
883-9062 after 5 p.m.

GOMRIONITY ACTION CORPS

HEALTH CARE
DRUG
RELATED

Econollne

old,

1969 VW bus. Part-camper equip.
48,000 miles. 2 Snows, excellent
condition. Call 833-58 £ Ask for Lee.

STUDENT to assist professor’s family
with housework and babysitting.

AREAS:
TUTORIAL AND RECREATIONAL

50mm,

STUDENT to manage small business.
selling.
No
Short
hours.
$300—$600/month. Write: INF. Box
508, Boulder, Colo. 80302. Include a
few personal details.

PEOPLE to attend a meeting of the
Student Film Club this Wednesday,
Room 332 Norton Hall.

HOLD

F1.4,

Mechanically sound. Body Is in perfect
shape. Good tkes, $300 or best offer.

YOUR COMMUNITY

NEEDS VOLUNTEERS FOR ALL

FTN

Good

Call 826-1828.

—

WANTED

WILL

cabinet.

body, 1 month
$250. Negotiable. Jim 832-8256.

BECOME AN ACTIVE PART OF

CAC

Blonde

from campus. 832-4894.

special sale price,
INDIA bedspreads
assorted colors
72"xl08", only $4
and prints. Also hand-blocked, printed,
batlked, Rajastanl Kallamkarl spreads
at “The People, a folk arts boutique,
144 Allen, 882-6283.

-

2024 Kensington at Harlem

picture. 684-6485.

(or

rent. Call 937-7971.
living;"
located,

LAS T,

Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.
Delaware—Ferry area. 883-1892.

ACTION COMMITTEE
SOCIAL SERVICES
DAY CARE

�CLASSIFIED
MS
Perfect; transportation. *85.
837-0878 or ■ aa-mv.

UNUSUAL smocks from India,;.Mexico
an&lt;j Plk|$tan
t .T he Pao p le
a folk
arts bout | que 144 A |,en st 882-6283.

DRESSER, desk, badframa,
headboard. All in excellent condition.

PERSONAL

condition.

48 E.

Northrup.

837-3757.

r«WMr«tnr'
refrigerator.

«

Cheap.

Catl B»3-zan!».

TRIUMPH

1968. new

BOIHMVIM

engine, clutch, tire* and helmet. Bert

offer.

,

_

Larry

877-8269,

st
R E F R IQ E R ATORS
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
Appliances,
844
D*Q
guaranteed.
Sycamore. TX4-3ID3.

j

°***

—
—

After

S p.m.,

TWO MALES needed to snare large,
convenient, furnished apartment. Own
room, walkable, etc. $59 +. Visit 9
Kermlt (Bailey) after 6:00.

NEED MONEY to pay tuition, buy
books, augment your social life? Sell
advertising for The Spectrum. 15%
commission on sales. No experience
necessary, but car useful. See Jeff
Reiman in Room 355 Norton or call
831-3610.

—

GROPE AND VE SHALL FIND . .
The Spectrum general recruitment
meeting tomorrow night In Room 355
openings tor
Norton Hall &lt;t 7
photographers.
writers, artists,
«“'«•
No 0 pw ' enc#
necessary,
*

EARN as much as you want
door canvassers needed
Improvements. Call

—

836-6345.

All major brands
20% TO 50% OFF
fully
of stereo equipment
we're U.B.
guaranteed. We care
675-3172.
student*. Call Carl,

who?—&gt;shhh!)

—

—

USED OFFICE furniture, Including
several sizes of desk* and filing
cabinets. Reasonable. 876-5893 or
836-0517 after 1 p.m.

WSC 355 Theories of Feminism Is still
open. For Info call 886-1647 or
882-1978.

TWO GIRLS wanted
to share master
large house.
bedroom suite In
835-7579 anytime.

WILL BABYSIT your child In my
hours flexible.
home near campus
836-2281.

TWO OR THREE roommates wanted
twenty minutes
for house on Transit
from campus. Call 634-4951.

BART'S BIKE REPAIRS has cheaper
parts, service, accessories and a few
rebuilt bicycles. 92 Wallace, 835-6739.

—

kitchen, laundry
WEEKLY
Grad students preferred.
Female. 833-0111, 5 min. by car.
Sheridan area..

done
Term papers,
$.40/page. 877-5234 after 5 p.m.,
Anytime
S * S .
M
F .
Sheridan—Elmwood.

*.

—

,

full speed
BATTEN down the cranks
ahead) Gettln' enough Mary? Shamus
ain’t gettln’ any.

—

—

door to
home

—

LOST 8i FOUND

■

$15

RING left In Health Sciences 2nd floor
ladles room. Please return. Call Gall
834-3850.

SERIOUS

TWO PEOPLE needed to share a room
In three-bedroom furnished apartment.
Kensington—Bailey area. Call Mike or
Shelley 835-2657.

LINDA P. (out of the city limits, that's
p.) is not beached (or bleached either),
just to keep
things straight among
friends.

TWO GIRLS wanted to share room in
very nice furnished apt. with two other
girls. $57. IVi miles from U.B. on'
direct bus or hitching route. Call Janet
838-4576.

YOUR WORRIES are over
call The
insurance Guidance Center for your
lowest available rate on auto and cycle
—

female

student

Professionally

TYPINQi

—

prlveleges.

ROOMMATES WANTED

Thanks for
been great.

—

—

UPPER luxurious house
three
bedrooms
Amherst area. Two female
graduate students. $75
Call Denise,
838-2263.
—

LINDA has red toenallsl (Linda? Linda

ZONE studios INC., N.E. needs high
caliber musicians for studio work. Call
for audition
894-2400 or 894-2401.
—

While you wait offset printing. 10% off
for U.B. students. 3171 Main St. (near
Wlnspear). Just a few blocks from U.B.
Call 835-0101.

—

keep
smiling
BARBARA
Remember, love Is eternal. Al.

*

lew MILLHOULAND
all your help. You've
Jo-Ann.

LATKO PRINTING and Copy Canters.

—

buy

—

Spectrum office, 355 Norton Union.

—

—

NOW: Hot plate, electric fry pan,
more,
Iron, dime*, glasses and much
Call Diane $95-3854.

to receive a free copy ot
NUTSHELL should go to Tha
wishing

MALE ROOMMATE: $42.50 plus
Andy, Paul, Dave.
utilities. 837-2686
Available now
furnished.

—

.

E
P °jinri
PORT^?h
n «l
rt«w*
arm ehrtr, Tfr.'u«

837-2278.

Insurance.
839-0566.

business

or

—

personal.

—

—

non-cigarette smoker, own room, split
rent ($175), utilities. Marcia,

FEMALE

student

working

her way

through college needs part-time Job on

837-0112, 831-2020.

campus. Call 873-6290.

MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING:

THE STUDENT Film Club meets this
Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. In Room 332
Norton Hall.

Efficient, prompt. Editing

extra. Will pick up and deliver. Call
839-4293.

ANY FRESHMAN or transfer student

\

inc.

51 aixen smeer
BUFF3LX3, new VOTK 14202
reiePHone: Tie/ssa 2222

PILLOWS

•

PILLOWS

•

PILLOWS

Patchwork Velvets
Quilted Satins
Printed Velvets
Belgian Bolsters
Denims &amp; Cottons

NEW

AS

ALWAYS

Moroccon
African

Naked Lady Tie-DYES Fake Fur

SPREADS, RUGS,TAPESTRIES
FROM:

-

andthe

Spain
Morocco
Java Coast
Poland
India
Pakistan
Belgium

:usa

WATERBEDS OF
UNRIVALED QUALITY
The Mattress
24.9S
in all sizes
Chemelex
Heaters

$40.00

COMPLETE PACKAGE W/
Frame, Heater, Liner,
Mattress &amp;
from $95.00
Upholstered
Platform
Framers
from $150.00

WHAT’S NEW IN FURNITURE??
§ PLEASURE FARE §
«

m

THE AMOEBA CHAIR f
THE PASSION PUFF |
CUBE TWO
THE MOD ROCK

j

ALL WITH 2 ZIPPERED WASHABLE
COVERS;

PURE FOAM CONSTRUCTION, WIDE
CHOICE OF FABRICS AND TWO

)

YEAr|

WORKMANSHIP GUARANTY.

Monday,

J

I

I

11 September 1972 The Spectrum Page

£V9 J wdmsijjsg

.

.

i

J

.

-?d

'.

twenty-seven

vy '*&lt;n3&gt;V3

�f

*x

Sports Information
Tomorrow: Varsity golf at Geneseo State, 1 p.m.;
Varsity tennis at Geneseo, 3 p.n^.
Wednesday: Varsity soccer scrimmage at Erie
Community College with Canisius, Buffalo and Eisenhower,

Back
Announcements
Council of History Students will hold a first meeftng
in
tomorrow at 3 p.m. in Diefendorf. All those interested
invited.
courses
are
taking history
SOS will hold a general meeting today at 4 p.m. in
337 Norton Hall.

Room

The Buffalo Rugby Club will be practicing Tuesdays
and Thursdays at 6 p.m. in Delaware Park opposite the
American Buffalo.
' The Creative Craft Center will be open Mon.-Thurs.,
12-10 p.m. and Frl.-Sat., 12-5 p.m. in Room 7 Norton
Hall. Call 831-3546 for more information.

Videe Conexlon wilt hold a meeting tomorrow at 7:30
p.m. in Room 360 Norton Hall.

Protect Head is needed for CAC job corps program.
Anyone interested, please contact the CAC office, 831-3609
or come to Room 220 Norton Hall.
New College of Modern Education is holding a meeting
today for anyone interested in setting up an Alternative
Buffalo High School at 7 p.m. In trailer 9.
The Inter Virsity Christian Fellowship will hold an
orientation meeting today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 330
Norton Hall.
Any student Interested In becoming a member of the
Student Activities Committee for the ’72-’73 academic
year, please contact Diane Zwolinski in Room 205 Norton
Hall or call 831-5507.

All club presidents are asked to contact Diane
Zwolinski in Room 205 Norton Hall or call 831-5507
before Sept. 15.
Student's International Meditation Society will hold an
introductory lecture by Charles Donahue tomorrow at 8
p.m. In Diefcndorf 147.

The Student Film Club will hold a membership
meeting today at 7 p.m. in Room 311 Norton Hall. The
Executive Committee will also meet today in Room 311
Norton Hall at S p.m.

Communications Creativity Class and Workshop still
has openings. Contact Bambii Abelson or Kertzman at
831-2934.
Schussmeisters Ski Club Inc. is now taking applications
for a corporation Board member. Please submit resumes to
Ski Club in Room 318 Norton Hall.
WNYPIRG (Western N.Y. Public Interest Research
Group) will hold a meeting for anyone interested in doing
research or Joining projects already In progress today at 8
p.m. In Room 334 Norton Hall.

1

Through an error, the course "Introduction to Public
Relations” was cancelled from the computer listing of
offerings for this semester. As a result, anyone who
registered for it was “closed out.” Anyone who attempted
to register for the course and who still wishes to take it
should report to 142 Hayes Hall with a student schedule
card. Information on the time and place of class sessions as
well as procedures for re-registering will be available in the
office of the Director of Information Services, Room 142
Hayes Hall.

UB Students for McGovern will hold an organizational
meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. In Room 337 Norton Hall.
All students and faculty interested in working In any
capacity, are welcomed.

persons

•

.'

Friday: Varsity golf vs. St. John Fisher at the Amherst
AudoBon golf course, 1 p.m.
Saturday; Varsity soccer scrimmage at Fredonia State,
2 p.m.; Varsity baseball doubleheader at Monroe
Xommunity College, 1 p.m.
Intramural football league entries are due Thursday in
113). Football play
the Clark Gym office (Room

commences Sept. 18.
Intramural soccer entries

are due Sept. 21 with play
opening on Sept. 25.
Intramural golf entries are due Sept. 28. The tourney
begins Oct. 2.
Anyone wishing to officiate football and basketball
games for the intramural department should sign up in
Room 113, Clark Gym. Officials are paid on a per/game

basis.
There will be a co-ed volleyball mixer at Clark Gym on
Tuesday, Sept. 19 and Sept. 26. League play opens on
coming Tuesdays.
Fall Clark Gym recreation schedule: Mon. 3—10 p.m.;
Tues. 3—10 p.m.; women only, except for co-ed activities;
Wed.—Fri., 3-10 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun. noon-10
p.m.

The Student Association will pay students one dollar
an hour for manning a table. If Interested, contact Shelley
Taylor in Room 205 Norton Hall or call 831-5507.
SDS will hold a meeting to plan an anti-Nixon rally
tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Room 334 Norton Hall.

North Buffalo Community Food Co-op will hold a
pot-luck feast today at 6:30 p.m. at 3225 Main St. Bring

Fall
Tuesdays

Clark pool schedule: Mon.—Fri., 7—10 p.m.;
women only; Saturday 1—3 p.m.; Sunday 2—5

—

p.m.

Women’s Field Hockey team will hold first meeting on
Tuesday, Sept. 12 at 3:30 p.m. All full-time undergraduates
are eligible; no experience necessaary. For further
information, contact Miss Anderson, Room 210 Clark Gym,

831-2941.

your favorite dish.

UUAB Music Committee will hold a meeting today at
7 p.m., Room 261 Norton Hall.

p.m.

UUAB Film Committee will hold a meeting today at 6
in Room 261 Norton Hall.

CAC will hold an open house today from 9—5 p.m.
and tomorrow from 1 11 p.m. in the Fillmore Room. CAC
needs volunteers In health care, social services, day care,
drug counseling and action committee.

All undergraduate women interested in forming a
women’s golf team, meet in Room 2098, Clark Gym, on
Sept. 11 at 3:30.. For further information, contact Miss
Poland, 831-2941, Clark Gym.
Women's Varsity tennis practice will be held tomorrow
at 3 p.m. in Room 315 Clark Gym. For further information,
contact Miss Pavlis at 831-2941.

—

Rachel Carson College will hold an organizational
meeting for the workshop in outdoor living, tomorrow at 8
p.m. in Haas Lounge.

What’s Happening
Continuing Events

Sam Francis: Paintings, 1947—1972, Albright
Knox, thru Oct. 29.

Exhibit;

Applications for grants for graduate study abroad and
assistantship for overseas teaching during the 1973-74
academic year will be considered this fall by the Institute of
International Education. U5. citizens who have received a
BA or equivalent from an American or Canadian university
before Sept. 1971, and who are proficient in an appropriate
foreign language, are eligible to apply. Information available
in 107 Townsend Hall. Applications must be submitted no
later than Oct. 1.

Monday, September 11

Film: Growing Up Female: As Six Become One, 7 p.m.
Hayes 335
Film; 'To Parsifal and Moss for the Dakota Sioux, 3 and 7
p.m., Oiefendorf 147.
Concert: Repairs and Slim Chicken, 8 p.m. Baird Lawn

There will be an organizational meeting of all students
faculty interested in working for the McGovern
campaign staff. This will be a meeting to both review the
McGovern campaign from this summer for out-of-town
students interested in working on the McGovern staff this
fall, and an organizational session for all those who will
work on the fall campaign. As one McGovern staff worker
put it, ‘This will be our initial attempt this fall to get the
students who want to work off the campus and onto the
streets.”

Tuesday, September 12

Michael Tilson Thomas will be teaching Music 215
(22S0S6), Different Ways of Hearing, during the fall
Nov. 21,
semester. The class will run from Oct. 17
Tuesday and Friday, 2:00-3:30 p.m., in Room 107 Baird
Hall. The course is worth two credits.

Note: Deadline for all announcements Is noon, Monday,
Wednesday and Friday for papers appearing Wednesday,
Friday and Monday respectively. Items for the Backpage
must be submitted In writing to The Spectrum office. No
announcements for any one event wilt be run more than
once per week. Announcements from last semester must be
resubmitted.

and

—

from the University community
interested in taking the official Board of Elections voter
registar’s course, contact Andy Kossover, Room 205 Norton
Hall, or call 831-5507.
Any

p.m.

-

Ronni Forman

As Six Become One, 3 p.m.
Townsend 204
Film: My Darling Clementine, 3 and 9 p.m., Capen 140.
Concert: Pearls Before Swine and Dona and Guerr, 8 p.m
Baird Lawn
Film: Barrovente, Brazilian Film Festival, 8 p.m. Conference
Theater.
Film; Growing Up Female:

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                    <text>The Spectrum

Vet’s loan repassed as
compromise is reached
by Dave Saleh
Off-Campus Editor

Vol. 23. No. 10

Pathol

State University of New York at Buffalo

ydei

Friday, 11 August 1972

artment

In search ofa new chairman

Confronted with a search for a new chairman
and several faculty resignations, the Department 6f
Pathology is currently facing, internal problems
which could seriously affect the functioning of the
School of Medicine.
According to people within the department,
these problems arose following the resignation of Dr.
Robert McCIuskey, the chairman, who left to take a
job as head of the Pathology Department of the
Boston Medical Center. The
Children’s Hospital
difficulties were accentuated by the resignations of
three members of the Pathology faculty to take
positions elsewhere.
Dr. John Sheffer was named as acting chairman
of the department to take over Dr. McCluskey’s role
until a permanent chairman could be found. The
search is currently being made, but, meanwhile,
dissatisfaction has been expressed by several
Pathology faculty members regarding the lack of
leadership within the department.
Dr. A.Q. Brownie, a Pathology faculty member,
acknowledged instances of faculty dissatisfaction. He
termed it “typical in a department where there is no
chairman.”
—

Med School threatened
He noted, however, that the Phthology
Department, small though, it is, plays a very
important role in the second-year Medical School
the basic
the link bef

sciences and the clinical sciences, an important
adjunct for physicians. According to one medical
school student: “It is of incredible support to the
Med School.”
Given the possibility of a significant number of
resignations due to the dissatisfaction caused by the
lack of leadership. Dr. Brownie admitted that the
medical school could be placed in a very precarious
position.
Concerning the search for a new chairman being
headed by Dr. Edward Marra, chairman of the
School of Social and Preventive Medicine, Dr.
Brownie expressed hope that the administration
“can make an attractive offer” to some qualified
pathologist.
He said that the department is currently
suffering from the state budget crisis and that, as a
result, a permanent chairman is needed. Dr. Brownie
said that an acting chairman does not have any
power in the real sense of the word. A permanent
chairman, on the other hand, would be able to fill
vacancies and fight for more money.
Clyde Randall, University vice president for
Health Sciences, agreed that “some members [of
Pathology] are unhappy” with the present situation.
He said, however, that the search committee has
been at work and several candidates have been
considered. He also noted that some candidates had
been considered from within the department. How
long the selection process will last is still uncertain.

In what became an
anti-climactic ending to a very
tense situation, the Student
Association Executive Committee
voted last Tuesday to loan
$10,372 to the Third World
Veterans Alliance for a national
convention of Third World
veterans currently being held at
the State University of Buffalo
campus.
Despite the passage of a
$12,200 loan last week for the
same purpose, the motion was
reconsidered, the committee
having discovered that it did not
carry a sufficient number of votes.
In a meeting last Friday, the
Executive Committee decided to
put the issue on Tuesday’s agenda.
As the meeting began, the
controversy intensified as Frank
Miller, chairman of the Black
Student Union, confronted The
Spectrum reporters at the meeting
saying: “We refuse to allow our
pictures to be taken by any
Spectrum reporter . . . Any
reporter who takes our pictures
We
will do so at his own risk
also have no comments to make
to The Spectrum and request that
no quotes be taken.”
Mr. Miller then said that any
The Spectrum reporter who
“writes down” what is said “will
be killed.”
...

Responding to the threat The
Spectrum Campus Editor, Ian
DeWaal pointed out that they
were attending an open meeting
and that anyone who wished not
to be quoted should leave the
room.
Calm
The meeting commenced with
no further outburst but the
environment was at best
“uncomfortable” as items on the
agenda were discussed prior to the
vets loan.
When the loan finally reached
the floor, a motion to reconsider
was passed followed by a
statement by Jeff Osinski that the
present repayment plan drawn up
by the vets was invalid. Claiming
that much of the revenue to repay
the loan was originally scheduled
to come from on-campus dances,
Mr. Osinski said that this was no
longer feasible ‘‘since the
Administration has cancelled all
such discotheques for the next

year.”
Ed Gamble, Student Affairs
coordinator and a representative
of the Third World Veterans
Alliance, replied that although
on-campus discotheques were
banned, the money to repay the
loan would still be raised from
off-campus dances and concerts.
When further questioned about
the use of funds from the BSU to
on page 2—

—continued

over’s Master Plan

‘Campus without ricks idea unveiled

Touted as this decade’s
“agenda for responsible change and a
springboard for specific action,” the 1972
Master Plan was announced this week by
Ernest Boyer, Chancellor of the State
University system. The Master Plan,
required by law every four years, is
incorporated into the overall state policy
governing public and private higher
education in New York.
Stressing “free —form” higher
education, the document outlines
expanded educational opportunities to
serve a more diversified student population
expected for the 1970’s. Such new
students include working adults,
minorities, women and retirees.
To accommodate this varying influx of
students, the University, according to Dr.
Boyer, must get away from traditional
forms of education. “Clearly,” he said, “we
are being summoned to build within and
upon the University’s established structure
in this decade as baldly as we did in
creating that basic structure in the decade

ALBANY

—

past.”

Ernest Boyer

v

He continued, however, that “our
building this time will be less with bricks
and mortar and more with people and
ideas. What we face, in short, is a decade of
reform and reaffirmation.” Offering greater
flexibility in educational patterns, the
Master Plan recommends programs
enabling students to delay their admissions
to college or to “step out” during their
university stay, or gain credit for
off—campus activities, or continue their
study throughout the years.
Such ideas will, according to Dr. Boyer,
result in “the length of learning (becoming)
more flexible and extended.” Additionally,
he pointed out that students will be
“spending more and more time off
campus.” The location for study, he noted,
does not necessarily have to be confined to
the university setting.
The Chancellor said; “While most
students will continue,to follow traditional
patterns,' the University must recognize

that society is becoming less tied to the
idea that a college education has to be
obtained in a campus setting in four
consecutive years that immediately follow
high school.”

‘More with less'
Although innovative, new programs
contained in the plan are not expensive and
their implementation, according to Boyer,
could hold costs per student at present
levels. Additionally, he announced the
possibility that such new programs could
possible decrease University costs over the
coming years. Stressing the need for cost
accountability, the Chancellor maintained:
“We will have to do more with less in the
coming decade.”
Accordingly, the Master Plan proposes
a cutback in construction for the 72
campuses of the state system. However,
construction projects already in progress at
such campuses as Buffalo, Stony Brook
and Purchase will be completed. Dr. Boyer
explained that there will be a more
effective use of present University facilities
a “118% use” of SUNY resources is in
order, he said.
Combined with this increased usage,
Dr. Boyer reported that community
facilities should be utilized for educational
purposes. He cited as example the
proposed use of city media for emerging
journalism programs at Albany and
Buffalo.
-

Best framework
‘Included in the Master Plan are five
new programs designed to help turn SUNY
away from traditional education. Suggested
by the plan is an urban study center, a
research and learning center on aging, -a
center for migrant studies, environmental
studies, and educational programs in
government and policy studies.

After the presentation of the Master
Plan, Chancellor Boyer was quizzed on die
finer points of the document. He explained
that he saw the major highlights X)f die plan
as 1) the organization of the University

system, 2) responsible educational patterns
and judgment and 3) the managment and
accountability of the plan.
Speaking on the application of the
plan, Boyer admitted that past master
plans have not been followed as closely as
they might have. However, he maintained:
“We are hopeful that we can correct that
situation and use this master plan as the
best framework for development.”

Mini-master
According to Dr. Boyer, while the
Master Plan is committed to opening up
the Board of Trustees
to make it more
“touchable”
it does not go as far as
placing a student on . the Board. However,
Dr. Boyer stressed that SUNY Central
Administration is concerned with
consulting and being involved with
—

-

students.

He explained, for example, that the
whole make-up of the Master Plan was
concerned with this concept. “Students,”
he asserted, “were involved at every level
of the plan’s composition.” Additionally,
he announced that he would be meeting
personally with all Student Association
presidents this coming fall.
Dr. Boyer also mentioned his
consultations with SASU as part of his
effort to listen to students. Yet, he
explained that he was somewhat wary of
recognizing SASU as the one voice of all
students contained in the system.
On the question of tuition increase, the
the Plan remains
Chancellor noted
“mute:” “We’re not committing ourselves
to an increase in the plan.
we don’t rule
out the possibility.. .it remains an
open-ended administrative policy plan.”
The Master Plan, already approved by
the university’s trustees, must now be
submitted to the Board of Regents and
ultimately to Governor Nelson Rockefeller.
Additionally, Dr. Boyer announced that
each campus is being asked to formulate its
own “mini master plan.” Such plans are
expected to be completed within the next
nine months.
..

,-

•

�Loan compromise...
repay the loan, Mr. Gamble
simply replied that this was

possible.

It was at this point that the
loan seemed doomed as it was
noted that the BSU is currently
$14,000 in debt and that any
money taken from their budget
would have to be raised in
addition to a planned repayment
of one-third of the debt.

Requirements
Mr. Osinski then stated that
the only acceptable loan plan
would be one in which specified
members of the vets group would
be personally responsible for its
payment. However, many
The Spectrum it published once a
week on Fridays, ten times during
the summer academic teutons by
Sub Board 1, Inc. Offices are
located at 3SS Norton Hall, State
University of New York at Buffalo,
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New
York, 14214. Telephone: Area
Code 716; Editorial 831-4113; Business 831-3610.

members of the committee
seemed to feel that there was too

New

mere eight dollars for the two
nights. Notification of this rental
hike the Vet’s spokesman said,
came at such a time as to make
the loan a virtual necessity if .the

high a risk involved to make any
such investment.
Subsequent statements by Mr.
Miller and Mr. Gamble seemed to conference were tobe held.
openly affect the committee
After a 45-minute
members. In objecting to the idea adjournment, the committee
of contracting the BSU, the Third approved a $10,372 personal loan
World Vets and other minority
for the conference, contingent
groups for repayment of the loan,
upon one major requirement. A
the contract was called “a racist
five-dollar registration fee had to
act gf oppression” in which the be doubled so that the actual risk
administration was attempting to
on the loan would be reduced to
use SA as a tool to “oppress all
$3750.
minority groups on the campus.”
In addition, SA was urged to
In other action the entire
“take a stand against the athletic budget was returned to
administration’s racist policies,” the Athletic Review Board for
thus avoiding an “all out war.”
further consideration as a large
One further point made by the gap was cited between budge
allocations and the actual figures
Black representatives concerned
the housing charge of $16 for the submitted by the department. A
two nights. It was noted that at a request by the BSU for a $7392
recent Student Association of the
extension on its budget was also
rejected in favor of a $2351
State University (SASU)
conference, the charge had been a version offered by Mr. Osinski.

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In response to irregularities
marring the operation of recent
discotheques, as Well as “unique”
requests for use of campus

further described the
responsibilities of the group:
“One question must be of how
the

University community can

protect itself againSt financial loss
groups, President Robert L. in the use of on-campus facilities
Ketter has authorized an ad-hoc by non-University groups.”
committee to investigate possible
The administration is looking
problem areas and to make for a means of assuring that
recommendations for new policy income generated through the use
v
of state facilities is expanded
regulations.
The ad-hoc committee,
comprised of interested student
groups and administrators, will
primarily concern itself with the

facilities by

non-University

use of Norton Hall and residence
hall facilities. “We have been
working in this direction for at
least two months,” explained
Ronald Stein, associate director of
the Office of Student Affairs. “We
have seen the development of a
policy for use of facilities for
on-campus groups and have
developed guidelines for income
generating activities by those

groups.”
Dr. Stein felt that the
discotheques were only one
impetus for the convening of the
group, though he noted that Dr.
Ketter had desired to be brought
up to date on the events of the
last three weeks during which he
had been on vacation. Other
problems that have arisen are the
dormitory areas, and include a
request by the Community Action
Corp to use the Fillmore Room
for weekly bingo games next
semester.

SALE

Durango,

New campusfacuities'
policy to he determined

Further responsibilities
Richard A. Siggelkow, vice
president for Student Affairs,

ns so

Ron Stein

irreicher

within the guidelines issued by the
Chancellor’s office of the State
University in Albany.
Those involved in the ad-hoc
group include representatives of
Norton Hall operations staff, the
residence halls, Norton Hall House
Council, Office of Minority
Student Affairs, EPIS, Student
Association, Graduate Student
Association and MFC Student
Association.
“We are getting a whole gambit
of activities that are not covered
in the current guidelines,”
concluded Dr. Stein. “What we
looking f
'

�,

Shriver began, campaigning Wednesday, admittedly off to a “bad start,”
but hopeful that they could defeat President Nixon in the fall. Mr.
Shriver, former director of the Peace Corps, was almost unanimously
nominated by the Democratic National Committee Tuesday night,
replacing Sen. Thomas Eagleton who was dropped from the ticket
"v 4..V.
because of past psychiatric ailments.
Although the South Dakota Senator called the past three weeks
“hard and painful” and conceded that switching vice presidential
candidates was like “starting all over” he said; “I have a feeling that
this will draw us closer together. .. We’re ready to go.” The referring to
the Republican vice-presidential candidate Mr. McGovern said “the
nation must wish that the Republicans too had made their choice with
greater care.”

WASHINGTON Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D.-Mass.) filed
a court suit against the administration today, charging that President
Nixon unconstitutionally pocket—vetoed a Kennedy bill in 1970. The
bill was to authorize a three year, $225 million grant to hospitals and
medical schools for training family doctors. It passed the Senate 64-1
and the House 346—2, but died when the president failed to sign it.
Sen. Kennedy called this “a promiscuous use of the pocket veto,”
and a “transparent but unconstitutional attempt to override a regular
veto and another example in the long line of actions by the
administration in derogation of the powers of Congress under the
Constitution.” Although the bill was not signed and Congress had
adjourned for Christmas when it expired, Sen. Kennedy said a vote to
override the veto that should have been taken when the Senate
re-adjourned three days later never took place, making the veto
unconstitional.
-

FSA to sell Amherst holdings;
control still under contention
The Faculty-Student Association voted last
week to sell the 511 acre tract of land it owns in
Amherst. Proceeds from the land would be used to
create an endowment fund for student projects, but
control of the money is still undetermined.
Original plans to use the land for recreational
purposes were finally given up because, said Edward
Doty, FSA treasurer, no agreement on how the land
should be used could be reached.
The FSA purchased the property in 1964 for
$786,000. Of this, about $325,000 of the money
came from then administration controlled student
fees, entirely without the consultation of students.
The past eight years has seen little agreement
between student groups and the University
administration concerning control over the land and,
or, money derived from the sale. Presently, Sub
Board I, Inc. the fiscal arm of the student
governments is in favor of the money from the sale

of the land being turned over to a group of trustees
rather than FSA.
No concession
After the action approving the sale had taken
place, the student representatives on FSA stated for
the record that “the minutes should reflect that the
Student Associaton and Sub Board I are not by
virtue of these actions recognizing that the FSA is
properly vested with title or control over the
Amherst land.”
President Robert Ketter successfully moved to
appoint a four member committee to “coordinate
the sale of the land and investigate possible
investment areas for the proceeds.” The committee
will consist of one student, one administrator, one
faculty member and Dr. Ketter. The President also
intends to independently appoint his own committee
of three to monitor the activities of the sale.

Senate action

National no-fault bill doomed

WASHINGTON (UPI)
The
Senate Tuesday shelved, and
probably killed for the rest of the
year, a bill to establish a national
no—fault automobile insurance
-

system.

By a 49—46 vote, the Senate
sent the measure to the Judiciary
Committee for further study with
no deadline for completing its
study.

fault in the accident.
Under the present system in all
but the handful of states which
have adopted
the no-fault
concept, damages are paid by the
insurance company covering the
car whose driver is found to have
been at fault for the accident.
Sen. George S. McGovern of
South Dakota, the Democratic
presidential candidate, returned to
Washington from a campaign trip
to Miami Beach to vote against
sending the bill back to the

ALBANY
Leonard Woodcock, president of the United Auto
Workers union said Tuesday that most UAW local leaders will support
Backers of the no—fault
concept argued that the Judiciary
the Presidential candidacy of Senator George McGovern.
In a local radio interview Mr. Woodcock noted that the union’s ‘Committee was certain to be the
committee.
“graveyard.”
national executive board had recomipended supporting McGovern and bill’s
Critics contended that this
Senator John O. Pastore,
added; “1 have reason to believe that a substantial majority of the
often leads to lengthy trials, years
(D-R.I.), said the bill, if sent to
union’s local leaders are supporting the McGovern choice.
the committee, “is going to go of delay in making payments and
Mr. Woodcock also expressed praise for the choice of Sargent there to die there.” Under the bill, inadequate compensation for
particularly those too
of motor vehicle accidents victims
Shriver as the Dejnocratjc Party’s Vice-Presidential choice saying: “he victims
poor to hire competent lawyers.
would be paid for their injuries
is an excellent addition to the ticket. He is a good campaigner and has
The critics contended that the
and economic losses by the
good relations with labor and some other elements where McGovern insurance company covering the “fault” - system wasted money,
has had some problems.”
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fees rather than to pay victims of
accidents.
The motion to send the bill to
committee was offered by Sen.
Roman L. Kruska, (R-Neb.), who
questioned the measure’s
constitutionality.

Opposition to
the measure was strong. It came

from

the White House, from
of the insurance
industry and from trial lawyers,
who earn $ 1 billion a year in legal
fees Jightiog negligence suits.
segments

Sees consumer setbacks
Senator Warren G. Magnuson,
ID-Wash.), the measure’s
sponsor, blamed lobbying for his
defeat. “1 suspect there was some
pretty, good lobbying going on by
the trial .lawyers,” he said. “1
think it’s a real blow to every
American consumer”’ He said he

saw tjie defeat^ coming in the last
few'days. He sffnsed’a strong
feeling among senators to leave
the issue to the states
the
positon
taken by the
-

administration.

Magnuson said in advance of
that approval of the
Republican motion to shelve the
bill would postpone congressional

the vote

consideraton of the issue for
another two years.
In that time, he said,
automobile accident victims
would lose $10 billion in
insurance premiums devoted to
paying legal fees rather than
accident victims.

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Friday, 11 August 1972 The Spectrum Page three
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Presently in progress at this University is a convention that hopes
both to organize and facilitate the communication of Third Wdrld
Veterans. If the events surrounding its staging are indicative of the
convention's real worth, it will prove to be a failure a farce created
by the actions of the administration. Student Association officers and
—

third world organizers.
Although themed around communication, organization and unity,
the preparations for the convention have been marked by duplicity
and divisiness. First, the Third World Veterans' Alliance were not fairly
treated by this University's administration. Inflated housing and
security costs for the convention justify charges that Hayes Hall made
conditions as difficult as possible for the vets.
Moreover, the administration's reluctance to negotiate openly and
honestly resulted in the eventual dumping of the entire mess into the
lap of Student Association. Within two short weeks, the SA was
required to resolve the situation either to provide monetary support
and make possible the convention or to veto such an appropriation and
thereby doom the convention.
Morally unprepared and ill-informed, the SA Executive
Committee grappled with the problem. Their resolution of the matter
proved, however, only to create more difficulties: on two separate
occasions, SA voted its approval of a loan that many openly doubted
would be repaid, for a convention that few thought should
appropriately be funded by student fees. Accordingly, SA abdicated its
responsibility to it constituency by failing to carefully deliberate the
—

matter.

SA approval was given because of fear
fear of blocked
entrances, discreet displays of knives, and voiced promises of violence.
While we understand their reasons and can sympathize with these
fears, we cannot condone their action for by allowing themselves to be
—

intimidated. Executive Committee members have legitimized the
tactics of force and recognized the power of fear.
Finally, it is the actions and words of some Third World
spokesmen that constitute the ultimate farce. Ostensibly committed to
peace and a type of brotherhood, some convention supporters are
utilizing tactics whose use they publicly condemn. Such actions while
not necessarily representative of the entire group reflect on and
undermine its credibility and efforts.
For much too long of a time, we have played games of ego, and
among ourselves. One Black leader commented that the
of power
time for real work must begin now. We agree.
—

—

Summer vacation
"Student

government on this campus has never been particularly
it has further suffered in these past two weeks. The
controversy surrounding the loan to tha Third World Veterans'
Alliance clearly pictures the rather frustrating positions of power
occupied by most Student Association officials.
The only clout, the only governing mechanism possessed by SA is
the power of the purse. Vet, it presently appears that SA is unable to
exercise any type of control or discretion in the dispersement of
student monies.
Such a development must be reversed. Reason and responsibility
must be introduced into our student government. Financial policies
and guidelines must first be formulated and scrupulously followed.
Secondly, the Executive Committee must reform itself into a body of
leaders able to cope with all tasks of government both the glamorous
and the unpopular.
We urge that a moratorium on all SA activities be effected for the
remainder of the summer to allow a rethinking of purpose and goals. It
is only then that last semester's promise of new officers, ambitions and
aspirations will be realized.

healthy;

—

The Spectrum
Vol. 23, No. 10

Friday, 11 August 1972

Editor-in-Chief

Jo-Ann Armao

—

Managing Editor
Jeff Greenwald
Business Manager
Jack Herlan
Co-Advertising Manager Susan Hory
Co-Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
—

—

—

—

Production

lanC. DeWaal

Campus
City
Copy

.vacant

..

Feature
'

Supervisor

..
..

Graphic Arts

Peggy Edwards
Karin Skeldon
vacant
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The Spectrum is served by United Press International, College Press
Service, The Los Angeles Times Syndicate, The New Republic Feature
Syndicate and Publishars-Hall Syndicate.
Republication of matter herein in any form without the express consent of
the Editor-in-Chief ■&lt;: forbidden.

Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page fovjr The Spectrum Friday, 1J*August 1972
.

.

-

Postering protestations
To the Editor:
As one of the two SDS members arrested for
postering on campus last semester, my name had
been thrown around in the last couple issues of The
Spectrum. I’d like to make my position clear.
First of all, in a letter to our lawyer printed on
July 21, President Ketter stated: "... As you
probably know, Miss Dick and Miss Ramsey declined
to give their names or identify themselves in any
other fashion when requested to do so by our
security staff.
This just isn’t true. A receipt of
property filed at the 16th precinct lists specifically
my UB ID card. Security Officer Snedden testified at
.

the trial that

an identification card

had

been

presented but it was not validated. Actually, the gold

validation stamp had worn off.
The arresting officers knew who we were and
knew where I lived in the dormitory. They offered
to call my dorm room to see if anyone else from
SDS was there. One of them even said to us, “We’re
going to put you down as Mary and Jane Doe to
make it hard for you to get bail.” Secondly, Snedden
testified that Security had been on the lookout for
SDS’ers postering for a couple of weeks. It can
hardly be said that our membership in SDS had
nothing to do with the case.

In the last issue, Campus Security Head Lee
Griffin said that the reason we were arrested was
that we were postering with paste. The two
violations we were charged with were loitering and
illegal posting of advertisements, neither of which
had anything to do with whether we were using tape
or paste. In addition, Lin has been harassed while
putting up posters with tape.
Both letters neglected to mention that these two
arrests were among five other arrests of SDS
members on campus in the last two months of
school. The charges were disorderly conduct,
obstructing governmental administration, trespass,
resisting arrest, etc. They are all violations or
misdemeanors and all vague.
Lin and 1 were arrested, had to spend a night
and day in jail, were released on bail, and had to find
money for a lawyer. The loitering charge was
dropped immediately on the day of the trial, and the
posting was dismissed for insufficient evidence
Security had no case. Despite the fact that they lied
Campus Security guards have said to me, “Don’t
call us cops, we’re security officers.’’ What would
you call them?
Sylvia Dick

Students for a Democratic

Society

CAMPUS UNREST
clear the air, to either allow a start to be made
toward resolving these differences or to once and for
prove that both groups are hopelessly racist and
Student
Association
Executive
Committee
all
The
that compatibility is an ill conceived pipe dream
met Tuesday afternoon amidst rumors that the loan
for the Third World Veterans’ national conference This resolution should not require that either group
was going to be “zapped.” Before the afternoon was lose its cultural identity but demand that an effort
over, this The Spectrum reporter was advised that if will be made and tolerated by both groups to see
any pictures were taken or any notes transcribed, he that mutual contact is encouraged and that death
would be “killed.” A registration fee for the threats aren’t the standard persuasive arguments as
conference was finally agreed to by both parties and to the merits of a pending program.
the loan was approved after statements that if SA
It is fashionable to emphasize that the leaders of
refused to confront the administration on relevant Third World groups on campus do not have the same
issues, such as their poor handling of this request, needs or wants common to the Student Association.
the “revolution” would in all probability commence How are they different? Student Association
in the conference room in Norton 205 that very proudly supports the Community Action Corps for
afternoon.
its work in the community. The Black Student
Threats were made by the Third World Vets to Union and the Black Arts Guild sponsored dances to
facilitate passage of the loan and they then denied get their “community” youngsters out of their
that coercion was being employed to sway the minds ever-play environment. PODER attempts to sponsor
of the Executive Committee.
a Day Care Center in the community for working
Despite such a denial, the tension between the class mothers. The difference is that if one thing goes
two groups was apparent and the fears of Executive wrong with these
minority functions, their whole
Committee members were etched in their worried existence is threatened.

by Ian C. DeWaal

-

grimaces

In the end a ten-minute recess was held and a
compromise decision to have a $10 registration fee
for the conference was agreed to by the Veterans’
organization. Ironically, much of the mistrust and
threats could have been avoided if this solution had
been prpposed a week before when Doug Webb
moved that $25 registration fee be charged of all
conference participants.
Comments after the meeting included the
statement that a confrontation had to be avoided
and. successfully was. What becomes the issue now is
how much longer this looming conflict between
white and black on this campus can be postponed.
The rhetoric becomes more threatening.
Cooperation between the two groups is limited to
those times “white” funding is needed by Third
World groups. Both white and minority students
remain in their isolated pfeef groups wondering what
evil plots are being discussed by the other. The
resulting cultural gap leaves both groups wallowing
in rumor, convinced that their existence is in

jeopardy.

Perhaps

a. confrontation, is,

.what, is, needed do,

A language gap between white and black
becomes apparent as well as a lack of experience by
the Third World groups in administering programs
For example, Ernest Smith, after a BAG
discotheque, admitted that someone had walked off
with the ticket revenues. Yet it wasn’t too long ago
Student Association was plagued by comparable
misuses of funds. Lack of experience shouldn’t be
grounds for denying experience.
Someone is going to have to make the first move
if anything positive will come of the potential
cultural exchanges that are available on this campus.
White students on this campus are befuddled and
angry. They don’t want to feel that their sole
function is to accede to Third World demands. At
the same time, it would be ironic to ask a people
who have been oppressed and cheated for so many
years to turn around and be the first to say, “let’s
talk.”
With luck,’ the mutual agreement that is
necessary to begin any kind of common contact
won’t have to be precipitated by a physical

confrontation..

.

,

.

.

�‘Foolish facades*
To the Editor.

My compliments to the Writer of the editorial
dealing with the SA loan to the Third World

Veterans. I don’t blame the black student! for their
tactics. They only show the foolish facades that
white trifle' 'gfve',to'black! because of their'
alienation and fear of blacks.
How can they hope to gain some respect if they
cannot give appropriate responses to foolish
requests? By treating minority groups as separate
entities, you do not help them as much as establish
them as oddities.
Bruce Gitter

Space waste
To the Editor.

This is in answer to Prof. Robert J. Good’s letter
published in The Spectrum July 28.
It seems possible that everyone would admit to
some degree a measure of his own naivete, but for
Prof. Good to reveal such a gross part of his share is
indeed unexpected of a professor. He not only
thinks we missed his point, but does not answer
some of our basic questions, which we again place to
him.

Prof. Good does not answer our claim of
prejudice. Maybe he realized that he shouldn’t have
said something so ludicrous and chose to ignore the
issue in his answer letter. If such is the case, we
suggest that the good professor put an end to his
rhetoric and to his unfounded, misinformed
opinions. If he chooses to continue this blatant
abuse of good Spectrum space, then we will continue
to answer him.
one that should not be
Our point is simple
missed even by Prof. Good. It’s an address to his
sense of justice, a principle hard to define and even
more difficult to apply. It is not a discussion of
items or of one single event, but rather an analysis of
whether an injustice to the Palestinian people
the stapd.ipf
actually has occurred or not, and
-

an educated
injustice.

man

should be towards such

an

To try to be sickeningly funny and say that we
are “writhing with faked paranoia, because [we]
actually are Jews or are directly working for Israel”
could only indicate that either Prof. Good thinks he
can make a tragic story assume sarcastic proportions
or that he happens to watch too many bad espionage
movies on the Late show.
Prof. Good, where did you get the notion that
we are not attempting to recruit friends for the
Arabs? We believe that the Arabs have the facts on
their side; it is due to this that we do not need the
support of such a fact twister as Prof. Good.
Since Prof. Good seems to profess a statistical
basis for his statements, what has he to say regarding
the fact that Israel has space for another three
million alien settlers, and this space is being
continuously denied to the two million aboriginal
Palestinian refugees.

A. Abu-Ayyash
Tsrek H. ElGabri

MICHELIN X
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Six mental health systems
devised to improve service
by Dave Saleh
Off-Campus Editor

Mental health services in Erie
County have risen from near
failure in 1968 to the point where
“we now have one of the best
programs in the state,” according
to government officials.
In a recent interview. Dr.
James Warde, County Mental
Healtn Commissioner, pointed out
that “since the establishment of
the Mental Health Department in
1968, the scope of mental health
services in the county has
increased over 250 per cent. In
that year mental health services in
the county reflected by any
standard one of the poorest
pictures in the country. Eight
voluntary programs, a county
hospital and three state facilities,
all unrelated to each other,
constituted the service base.
Each agency provided service
as it saw fit,” Dr. Warde
continued, “with no one agency
having a clearly defined set of
responsibilities . . This made a
number of agencies too selective
by pushing the responsibility for
helping people onto other
agencies. Consequently patients
would get lost in the gaps, often
spending long periods on waiting
lists, and frequently finding no
service specific to his needs.”
.

New system
To alleviate this problem, Dr.
Warde said that a completely new
system of mental health services
had to be drawn up in order to
eliminate such gaps and to “fix
responsibility for dealing with
each patient on a specific agency
so that patients won’t get lost in
the gaps.” This is being
accomplished, according to Dr.
Warde, by dividing the county
into six management territories or

“cachement areas” and then by county.”
bringing all state, county and local
Mr. Regan pointed out that the
mental health agencies into “six county had the power to make
single systems, each serving one of drastic changes in the overall
the specific territories.”
mental health picture by exerting
The new system seems to have pressure on those agencies which
attained reasonable success as the are funded by the county to
County Department of Mental improve services where it is
Health, acting under the Mental necessary.
Health Services Act of 1954, has
taken complete control of Progress made
numerous mental health
Deputy Mental Health
institutions in the area, bringing Commissioner David Reynolds
to 41 the number of agencies claimed that of the areas covered
contracted by the county. Area by the Department of Mental
leaders are hopeful that they may Health, the picture is “improved”
have “finally begun to put but still “uneven.” “We have
together a sound system of mental made tremendous progress in the
health services” where obsolete field of helping the adult mentally
and inadequate services will retarded and we now have
become a thing of the past.
developed a very successful
program in this respect,” Dr.
"Satisfied'
Reynolds said.
County Executive Edward V.
“In other areas, though, such
Regan commented that he is as treatment of alcoholics and
“satisfied” with the progress being providing geriatric services for the
made in the mental health field elderly, we have only been able to
and that he was completely outline what has to be done and
willing to leave the are still a long ways from being
decision-making up to “those in able to provide completely
lower positions who have, in my adequate services.”
opinion, sufficient ability to
County officials estimate that
handle such matters.”
another two years will be needed
Mr. Regan also said that the to initiate all the plans set forth
recently established Health by the Mental Health Department
Services Commission headed by in 1968. However, most agree that
Dr. Kenneth Eckert would also the picture is hopeful and the
deal with further improving six-year plan for fulfillment of
mental health services as “a part these goals is well on its way to
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Friday,

11 August 1-972 The
.

..

Spectrum . Page five

�RECORDS
A Song For You, The Carpenters (A&amp;M)

Never A Dull Moment, Rod Stewert (Mercury)
Dear Rod,
What can 1 possibly say? Should I say you deserve
every one of those lovely 16-year-old girls who spend their
time grouping and groping after you just so they might
have the chance for a little bit of fun and later be told that
they’re of a “rediculous age” and “that south of the
border you have to be older,” so goodbye? (“Well, I
wouldn’t tell you no lies, heh, heh.”)
Well, I could say that, but Roddy, you know that
already, though you certainly don’t flaunt it. The inside of
your album cover is a perfect example; the first section
showing you performing before the masses and the second

Without a doubt, the very next best thing to Isaac
Hayes and his grandmother on the Oscars was definitely
Karen and Richard Carpenter doing the theme song from
“Bless the Beasts and the Children.” There’s something
about them that brings back the very best of sterile
adolescense. The very best of America.
They began their careers by winning the College
All-American Amateur show one week. Other than
six-footed Mick Fleetwood, Karen’s the only drummer
who plays with perfect posture, just like in charm school.
And she’s not that tall, either. A hint of buck teeth on
both of them, and Richard has a lisp, which is why he
doesn’t sing too many solos. Ah, America! Land of
opportunity.
A Song For You is their glorious new album, with no
less than four hits, all on side one. The arranging and
orchestration is by Richard, and it’s all letter perfect and
never excessive.The famous Carpenters harmonies abound,
showing definite Swingle Singers overtones. These kids got
class, you know? And the solos are incredible.
On the title cut, even though the production on
Karen’s voice is not as echoey as it might be, Bob
Messenger’s sax solo transforms the entire song into a
brand new experience. And the latest hit, “Goodbye to
Love”
Richard wrote it, so all you snobs who think that
they just rip off other people’s songs better shut up. It’s
heavy, man! A guitar break by Tony Peluso that’s straight
from 1967, the year.
Red Rhodes makes a guest appearance on pedal steel
on ‘Top of the World,” the country number, and he plays
so well, he doesn’t even need a solo. Garcia, eat your heart
out. Mellow yourself into eternity, Jerry, you missed the
boat.
Side two explores the other side of the Carpenters,
that being Richard’s exceptional keyboard playing. He’s
got an instrumental, called “Flat Baroque,” on which he
-

section showing you and your boys lined up in front of a
soccer net (you even have a soccer ball).
It’s just like you were going to play as soon as the
photographer finished like anyone else would. Well, we all
know that you really do play and that ain’t no lie.
Say, one thing 1 always wanted to ask you is how do
you write all those fantastic songs. Without a doubt you
write the best adolescent songs for post-adolescents that
I’ve ever heard or sung along to. You always provide an
interesting story line or point of view (a rather elevated hip
soap opera) to your songs, but always a bit tongue in
cheek. Just pick any one of your songs for example. You
won’t? Okay, 1 will. In fact, I’ll pick them all.
Take “True Blue,” about being on your own and
having a father “with a lot more money than sense (cents?
scents? pick your own; they don’t print lyrics); or take
“Los Paraguayos” which is about toys in the attic. Then
there’s “Italian Girls” which is self explanatory.
The last of your songs, “You Wear It Well” is about
getting in touch with an old lover, and is my personal
favorite as well as my choice for a single in the tradition of
“Maggie Mae.” But then again, I’m not Mercury and they 11
probably make a million on something else.
Getting back to how you write-songs, I must attribute
it to some magical touch. Surely analyzing your songs
structurally is quite a ludicrous idea, but you certainly
don’t seem to conform to any rules of songwriting (if there
indeed are such things). It might be simply due to having
too many divergent musical styles running through your
head, and not having the musical knowledge to merge
them slickly.
But that would destroy the essence and grace that is
Rod Stewart. Though the meter never seems quite right,
and the lyrics a little strained, and the production a bit
confused and out of place, the end result is nothing short
of fabulous. Oh, Roddy, what can I say?
Least I forget, though, let me take note of the other
jewels on your album
namely, “Mama You Been on My
Mind,” a Dylan composition (keeping with the tradition)
which you’ve rendered with your usual grace. Nay Judy C.
and Joan B., neither of whose version portray the right
balance of wistfulness and (I’m hedging on using this
word) stoicism.
You also did well on the two other songs written by
rock and roll legends
Jimi Hendrix’s beautiful “Angel”
and ‘Twisting the Night Away,” by one of your vocal
inspirations, Sam Cooke.
All and all, this is easily your best effort to date.
Since you’re one of the best song interpreters around, it
would be a shame if you only did your own, and this time
you choose songs you are well suited for. Since I’ve always
enjoyed your songs, this album provides a very nice
-

—

-

balance.
One last note. Don’t take the remark about soap
operas wrong because I love every minute of them. There’sNever A Dull Moment.
Your humble critic (RAR)
RobbieLowman
»

I

«

p

e r

Page six The Spectrum Friday, 11 August 1972
.

.

immediately displays more taste than Keith Emerson or
Doug Ingle (well leave Mark Stein out of this: he’s into
Beethoven, after all).
Then he sings a tune called, “Piano Picker,” which
kind of explains his career (“After years and years of
practice/and awful allergies that made me sneeze. And now
the other guys are out playin’ with their girlfriend, and I
was still bangin’ on the keys”).
Love between man and piano see Jimmy Webb for
further information. Maybe that’s why he told somebody
at the supermarket to “fuck off’ when they asked for an
autograph. Karen may dream of driving down Sunset Strip
in a giant El Dorado or something or other, Richard
dreams of Wurlitzers and Baldwins. Who needs people
when you’re rich and famous. Another Brian Wilson in the
making.
What it all boils down to is the fact that female
singers are sorely lacking in popdom. Dionne Warwick
hasn’t emerged since her baby, and Diana Ross, well
bless the plumbers and the Carpenters, “for the world can
never be the world they see.”
-

-

of fact, for me, music is a type of charm and it takes a
certain personality to work its magic. Jimmy, as proven by
his past, is certainly able. Not to be redundant
there is a
difference; Jimmy also makes it work quite charmingly.
In case the name Jimmy Webb has slipped your mind,
he’s the man responsible for writing all those hits a few
“Up Up and Away, By the Time 1
years ago including
Get to Phoenix, Wichita Lineman,” and the incredibly
pretentious “MacArthur Park.” Since then Jimmy has
decided to write exclusively for himself. Letters is his third
album, the preceding two remaining virtually unnoticed.
Letters certainly isn’t a real grabber, but it does
generate enough appeal to make you want to play it again
and not just file it away (an easy alternative considering
the volume of new material and size of my collection). To
say that the album grows on you is a bit of an inaccuracy.
Rather it’s one that is hard to react to upon first
listening. It’s sort of like having someone walk up to you
and say: “Would you like to hear these songs I’ve written.”
So not to disappoint him, you say, “yes,” and when he’s
finished, your only response is: “Yes, they are quite
lovely,” and: “Yes, they’re quite good” because they
really are, but. . .
Webb’s songwriting is a very strange hybrid. For
someone who could write a number one song in 35
minutes (“Up, Up and'AWay”), Webb is no stranger to pop
music. What makes his new music difficult to react to is
that it is neither wholely pop, nor wholely personal. For a
number of reasons, including the satirical content of some*
of the songs, it also doesn’t fall into the category of pop
with personal traces (Carole King).
I guess that leaves only one other possibility which is
a personal style with elements of pop. Some would argue
that Webb .doesn’t sing very well and shouldn’t record his
own songs, but I simply cannot agree.
I’ve always been one to believe that the writer of a
song, especially those songs that seem personal, always
adds something in his performance that no one else could.
That’s not to say that someone else couldn’t do an
exquisite version, but there’s something about someone
singing his own song.
There’s a perfect example on Webb’s album in the
song, “Galvaston.” Glen Campbell’s version was extremely
polished and professional, but it didn’t really move me.
Webb’s version with his open-tuned guitar is really quite
striking and evokes the images and feeling of the song
much more clearly and movingly. (Maybe this is the auteur
theory of music.)
The content of Webb’s songs have quite a range.
“Campo de Encino” is a satirical look at middle-class
hipsters written from their point of view in the best Randy
Newman style. The laid back Mexican influence in the
song is really quite nice with its lovely “Ayi yi yi’s” and its
chorus “But most of all, 1 want to soar away” which
makes you smile as you sing along.
“Simile” and “Hurt Me Well”
take yet another
look at love. The rest of the songs are slightly satirical
looks at himself except for “When Can Brown Begin”
which is self explanatory and “Piano” which is a sort of
loving end of the day song.
Ultimately it’s all there. Webb never lets you get
away. Sometimes charms just sort of sneak up on you and
Letters is kind of like that.
—

-

-

-Robbie bowman

Billy Altman
Letters Jimmy Webb (Reprise)

If you were listening to a song and suddenly heard a
line like, “love; is like a stove, it burns you when it’s hot’*
and that was consistent with the rest pf the song, I’m sure
if you were like me, you’d be wincing with embarrassment
However, in JimmyWebb’s version of the Boudleax-Bryant
composition, “Love Hurts,” that moment soon passes as
you become enveloped in Webb’s charm.
Charm is easily Webb’s biggest commodity and 1
certainly don’t mean that in a derogatory way. As a matter

forgot We’re sorry
Happy Birthday, Michael

We

—

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The Spectrum. 15% commission on all
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NELSON GRAVES and Trum Rlttllng
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Extension ladder provided. All
expenses paid. Including breakfast at
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There will be a Graduate Student Association
Senate meeting on Monday, August 14, ’72 at
7:30 p.m. in 337 Norton. All Senators, Alternates, and other graduate students are urged to
attend. Visitors are welcome.

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your
Mounds, we'll miss your
Marlboros, but most of all, we’ll miss
your mumbles. If every word we
say . . . Love, Da Institute.

**

tnoxdWH aara
,\

••

iVH.'l,

Call

PERSONAL

***

•Sf'AW

asnoHTiiH i6i isnonv

6-cyllnder.

CHRYSLER New Yorker
1965,
excellent condition, AM-FM radio.
snow tires, $675.
brakes,
New
836-3865. Good transportation.

C5

o'- ’ito
w*&lt;^*V'
&gt;&gt;&gt;'*'

Twin bed.

sell!

'65 MUSTANG green,
837-5771 after 6 p.m.

«A °v,i'‘iv v

make

HAGSTROM
(hollow

tc

&lt;

as Is

MOVING. Must sell stove, refrlg, TV,
bike,
drapes,
chairs. Call
rugs,
837-9853.

i -j^

%^i

must

—

—

’66 VW camper, like new. Extras,
60,000 miles. Best offer, cross country
vehicle. 683-4340, 741-3110.

••

8 ***#
&lt;

GUTSY! Join The Spectrum.
Openings for writers, photographers,
artists and reviewers. No experience
necessary. See Jeff Graenwald In 355
Norton, extension 831-4113.

BE

LOST

&amp;

FOUND

.

jo

i.w,

GOLD and white, adult, male cat
lost vicinity of Princeton Apts. Extra
toes on three feet. Answers to the
name "Muggles." Call 837-9121 after 2
p.m.
—

FOUND. July 24th, girl’s high school
ring. Ridge Lea Campus. 831-1672.

MISCELLANEOUS
2 AFFECTIONATE cats need home3-year-old spayed
owner allergic
females. Call 881-1805.
—

term papers,

TRINITY DAY Care Center Is now
accepting enrollment applications for
children 2Vr to 5 years. We are located
at 371 Delaware Avenue and offer a
varied program of art, music and
recreation. Call 853-3583.
NICE HOME In
female student

tor

exchange

633-6664.

for
In

WHUamsvIlle
plus

—

salary

mother's

helper.

SCHOOL
an alternative
needs volunteer staff
for
group
Afro-American
secondary
German,
history,
French,
drama,
librarian. Call 836-0360 for Interview.
CAUSE
school,

—

—

CERTAINLY
here!

ICE

CREAM

Is

now

PROFESSIONAL typing
business or
personal
term papers, theses,
briefs,
resumes,
dissertations, legal
manuscripts. Call 937-6050.
—

—

—

U.B. AREA house available for late
August vacancy. Family room, garage,
3 bedrooms, IVr baths. Landscaped
Hendricks—Rosedale Blvd.
privacy.
location, upper $20’s. Adele Benley
Real Estate 839-4454, 839-9838.

t

»///&amp;

V'

3-speed

BIRCH CHEST, drawers with desk,
$23:'sunlamp, floor modal, $23:5 ft. x
3 ft. steel-drawered linoleum surface
desk, asking $130: dehumldlfler, $63;
floor lamp. $9: 8-track tape player,
$40: mahogany AM-FM hl-fl cabinet,
$20: skis and poles, $20; hedge
trimmer, $40: 150-foot extension cord,
$15; snow tires, 14 In. x F28 belted
premium, used season, $40. 836-3865.

v#

to

—

TYPING, experienced, neir U.B. $.40
per page. 834-3370. Fast service.

experienced
TYPING
Selectric. $.50/page. Call

j- I.B.M

83^4808.

EXPERIENCED
personal. Term

Typist A-

business or

papers, theses, etc.
Sheridan—Elmwodd location. Call
877-5234 after 5 p.m.

dissertations, theses, term
TYPING
papers. Professionally done by former
owner/operator of a professional
typing service. Call 833-1521'.
—

V

.

2 months ago
837-3788.

ZENITH stereo record player, $33;
pdkeT card table, $30: reclining chair,
$25 1 end table, record player, $30.
TF5-3282.

.---*?

*

*'

—

condition. Call 882-3806.

-

(V

$1500.
leaving

—

table,
drop-leaf
(jugs,
refrigerator-freezer. All excellent

-r*

w

&gt;,

...

—

etc.

1971

ffcfilfy/I

YOUR WORRIES are over
call The
Insurance Guidance Center (or your
lowest available rate on auto and cycle
Insurance. 837-2278. After 5 p.m.
839-0566.

TYPING, experienced,
833-1597.

FOR SALE

MOVING

-*

S

your

furthering

—

w

E

—

'63 CHEVY II wagon
offer. 892-7579.

§

V&amp;3&amp;*

4#//&amp;

THREE-bedroom apartment, $150 per
deposit, flve-mlnute drive to
campus. Main
Fillmore area.
Available Sept. 11th. 838-4912.
month,

Friday,
SALE TODAY
11. Books, hardbound, $.25,
paper, $.10. Furniture, records. 85
Merrlmac. 837-8914.

TV r

to

*

ENGLEWOOD AVE.
near U.B.
Suitable for 4 students or faculty
family, three-bedroom lower flat, air
conditioned, refrigerator, dishwasher,
self-cleaning oven. Will rent furnished
or unfurnished. $300/month. No
utilities Included. 1 or 2-year lease.
Security deposit In advance. Call Mrs.
Schrelber at 875-3612 or 741-3962 for
appointment Information.

August

�

A,\ /*A \

Close to
834-3844.

YARD

****

.

J&amp;&amp;J’

&lt;?L Q.

wanted for
with garage,
stove. Saml-furnished.
U.B.
References. $80.
apt.

efficiency
refrigerator,

—

m/wm;
*#, V’/Vv a/
Hill
I
%*.
g

boarder

FEMALE

BIKE

RIDE BOARD

I*-—^
*

U.S. AREA (Hartford Rd.)
modern,
wall-furnished, 3 bedrooms, IVi baths,
duplex. Finished basement, near bus
line. Sept. 1st. 633-8643 or 633-9455.
—

$3000 monthly. Expenses
overtime,
sightseeing. Free

paid,

Graduate Students:

H

to

$700

Manor

18) 833-713

£} F ’S.B

INTERESTED In
voice? Call 631-5327.

—

—

STCKE8,HK.
3CM Alii St.

y hi

counselors. Part-time
Call 6-8 p.m..

salary negot.

885-6390.

•

BOFFALO
TEXTBOOK

O- -8

aids

—

•

•

s’J
0

of

position

•

•

person

knowledgeable in financial aids must
have admin, skills, organize &amp; direct

"A* Your Broker About

ywvCOLLEGE

S T U D E N T-oriented

A

FURNISHED room with a vlaw
Kanmora. Two windows, a traa.
Informal
kitchen privileges. $60.
876-5893 or 836-0517 after 12.
—

ALL Campus Television needs
cameramen, newsmen, artists, film
freaks, producers, directors, etc. Join
the new madia, ACT V, Rm. 60 or Rm.
261. See Ed Mallnlk.

874-5330

THE SMITHS ARE HERE!!!!
—

WANTED

Specializing in Volkswagen,
.Triumph, Volvo, MG, Austin
Healey,-Toyota, Datsun and

*

APARTMENT FOR RENT

FOUND ads will ba run fraa of charge
for a maximum of 2 days and 15
words.

REPAIRS

»*•#••••�••••••••••••••••*
:motorcycle
IMMEDIATE FS-l-ANY SIZE J
•

ciMtinn

SHERIDAN

For gams from th«
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone
875-4266

hsohtih shi
»

v.;*'. ■■&lt;

iH-fi&amp;frJ

r,l

fli.'l

I

I

■*

M

,

Friday,

I i

*

I I

NATIVE Frenchman, experienced
tutor, witling to give French lessons.
632-6767 and leave message.

EXPERIENCED
theses

Cynthia

typist

and manuscripts.
Fischer.

papers,
691-9480

—

ROOMMATES WANTED
ROOMMATE
wanted to share
furnished
expenses of
fully
two-bedroom apt.
Call Donna
832-8528.

roommate wanted. Grad
FEMALE
student or over 23 preferred. Available
Sept. 1st. Near State. Call 881-1581.
FEMALE graduate student needs two
roommates to share expenses for
gorgeous furnished $40,000 home In
Amherst: family room, fireplace, loads
of privacy. $100/mo. rent each, which
Includes all

utilities. Call

.688-9043.

Keep trying.

WE HAVE a huge three-story house.
kitchen and pantry. Front and
back porch. Two balcony-terraces.
Back yard. 2V&gt; baths. We need two new
roommates. Own room.
Rent
moderate. Llnwood and W. Ferry. Call
Margot Fein (at work) at 831-3546,
p.m.,
5
12 and
between
Monday—Friday. The house Is huge, so
we are looking for people who want to
keep It wall, happy and cared for.
Large

ONE MALE or female roommate
needed to share apartment with male
student Immediately. Ten minutes
away from U.B. Rant $60 Including
utilities. Furnished. Call 837-2511 or
837-3740 and leave message.
GRAD STUDENT looking for room or
a student to look for and share apt.
837-3788.

APARTMENTS WANTED
FEMALE needs own room in apt. neat
campus for Sept. 837-1241. Audrle.
MALE needs own room In apt. near
campus fqr Sept. 837-1241. Leave
message with Audrle.
TWO GIRLS need a place to live for
fall within walking distance of U.B.
652-5932.
TWO FEMALES seeking 2 or
3-badroom flat or apartment,
preferably In U.B. area, before Sept.
1st. Call 831-4113 before 5 p.m. or
83/S-2673 after 5. Diane

1

11 August 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

■i$

.

ftv

;C v&gt;.v.’

*

�Announcements

Psychomat is taking place on Wednesdays, 7-10
p.m., not Thursdays as it states in the Summer
Activities booklet.
Draft Counselors from the Draft Counseling
Center of Buffalo will be available on campus
Tuesdays, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. in Room 260 Norton.
Men with lottery numbers 1-100 are urged to come.
(This is a Student Association/GSA sponsored
service to students.)

An interdisciplinary credit-free course in
Environmental Education and Environmental
Awareness is being offered this fall to all elementary
and high school educators, and education students in
the Buffalo area. This course is sponsored by the
School of Architecture and Environmental Design in
conjunction with the American Association of
Collegiate Schools of Architecture. Enrollment is
open for the fall term. If interested, contact
Margaret Goglia or Dan Shimberg, 882-6200 days, or
837-1617 evenings. There will be no tuition charge
for this course.
MFCSA will Jjold its executive committee
meeting on Monday, August 21 at 8 p.m. in Room
205 Norton Hall. All interested MFC students are
welcome to attend.

A Folk Conceit will be held in Chestnut Ridge
Park next Sunday, August 20 from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Various local folk artists will perform. Admission is
free.
Ten volunteers are needed to spend time
weekly, on a one-to-one basis, with recovered
psychiatric patients at Meyer Hospital. Only people
who will be able to continue volunteering during the
fall semester are needed. Call Marilyn Dunckel at
837-8184 or Community Action Corps at 831-3609
for more information.
The Albright-Knox Art Gallery in cooperation
with the Department of Art will offer a two-semester
Museum Training Course starting in the Fall of 1972.
Donald C. Robertson, chairman of the University’s
Art Department announces that qualified senior art
history majors and graduate students may enroll in
the course and will receive full credit.

Roller Hockey Returns: Watch for exciting
announcement in the next issue of The Spectrum.
Polish up those wheels.
Gay Liberation Front will sponsor a Summer
Gay Festival Dance tonight starting at 8 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room, Norton Hall. Everyone is welcome
to the dance sponsored by the gay people of Buffalo.
Donations requested. Costumes welcome and
recommended.
UUAB Video Committee, Act V, will hold
training and plaprling sessions for those interested in
television and video production on Wednesday,
August 16 at 7 p.m. and Friday, August 18 at 4 p.m.
in Room 60 Norton.
Students For

A

Democratic Society

are

sponsoring a spaghetti dinner this Sunday, August 13
from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. in Goodyear Hall. The price is

$1.25 per person.

The Black Drama Workshop will present Games
on August 19 and 20, at the Studio Arena Theater,
681 Main St. For tickets, call 885-4187 or go to the
Black Drama Workshop, 1762 Main St.

India Student Association is holding a
Congregational Chanting of the Name of God on
Sundays, 7-9 p.m. in Room 334 Norton.'For
information, call 833-2818.

The new summer schedule for The Unnamable
Will be Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. at the
American Contemporary Theater, 1695 Elmwood
Ave. There will be four final performances prior to
their New York engagement.

Backpage

UUAB Arts Committee is sponsoring an art
exhibit by Al Hollingsworth in Gallery 219, Norton
Hall through August 26. Gallery hours are 11 a.m. to
5 p.m., Monday through Friday and 2-5 p.m. on
Sunday.

What’s Happening
••
'•*»»»

Continuing Events
Art Show: Paintings by Al Hollingsworth in Gallery
219 Norton.
Friday, August 11
Play: The Unnamable at 8 p.m. in the American

Contemporary Theater, 1695 Elmwood Ave.
Film: Alex in Wonderland in the Norton Conference
Theater. Check Theater Showcase for times.
Saturday, August

12

Play; The Unnamable at 8 p.m. in the American
Contemporary Theater, 1695 Elmwood Ave.
Film: Alex in Wonderland in the Norton Conference
Theater. Check Theater Showcase for times.
Sunday, August 13

Film: Alex in Wonderland in the Norton Conference
Theater. Check Theater Showcase for times.
—Osterrefcher

As The Spectrum closes its door for the summer, rumors abound that the World Chess
Championship being held in Iceland will too take a break until The Spectrum and its ace
chess analyst Fred Rook, resume publication on Monday, September 11. Deadline for all
advertising, copy, letters to the editor and Backpage information is Friday, September 8.
Until then, remember: Q-KB4

Monday, August 14

Film: The Passion (1970) directed by Bergman
and 9 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.

at

7

Tuesday, August 15
Available at the Ticket Office
August 22; Des O’Connor
August 24; Anne Murray
August 25—27: Circus International

Shaw Festival
Thru Sept. 2; Getting Married (sold out)
Thru Sept. 10: Misalliance

Melody Fair
Thru August 12; Promises, Promises
August 14-19: 7776
August 21—26: Sergio Franchi and Corbett
Monica
August 28 Sept. 2: Cabaret
—

Chautauqua
Opera and Theater
ask for brochure for
symphony and amphitheater specials.
—

American Contemporary Theater
The Unnamable
Canadian National Exhibition
August 17-20: Scottish World Festival
August 21: Ray Price

August 28—29: Engelbert Humperdinck
August 30: Merle Haggard
August 31: The Guess Who
Sept. 1: David Cassidy
Sept. 2: Sonny &amp; Cher
Sept. 3: National Trumpet Band Competition

Summer Film Institute: Panel: The Aesthetic
Dimension of the Documentary, Moderator:
Stefan Fleischer, associate professor in UB’s
Department of English, Guests: Filmmakers
Willard Van Dyke and Frederick Wiseman at 8
p.m. in 140 Capen.

Wednesday, August 16
Summer

Popular Concerts
August 13: Chicago (M)
August 20: Pete Fountain (MF)
August 15-20: Jesus Christ Superstar (K)
Sept. 3; A Change of Season
Lester, N.Y.,
starring Deep Purple, Fleetwood Mac, Ginger Baker,
Buddy Miles, Nazareth, Elves and Silverhead.
—

KEY
M Memorial Auditorium
K Kleinhans
MF Melody Fair

Film

Institute: The

Documentary

of

Consciousness: Bruce Baillies Quick Billy with

Gerald O’Grady, assistant professor in UB’s
English Department. Screening and discussion of
Quick Billy (1970) at 8 p.m. in 140 Capen.
Films: Night and Fog (1955) directed by Resnais
and Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959) directed by
Resnais at 7 and 9 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.

Thursday, August 17

-

-

—

Films: Salesman and Meet Marlon Brando at 7 and 9
p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
—E.G. Miller-Smith

�

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

■Utt'

State University of New York at Buffalo

Vol. 23, No. 9

Friday. 4 August 1972

Student-made proposal
for acceptance rejected
by Ian C. DeWaal
Campus Editor

Controversy intensified this week in the School of Social
Policy and Community Services, as a petition supporting an
alternative plan for admission to the department was rejected
Tuesday morning by Sherman Merle, dean of the School. The
proposal would have replaced Dean Merle’s limit of 30 new
majors in the school next year.
Advisors from the Division of
Undergraduate Studies (DUS)
caucused Tuesday morning,
concurrent with the dean’s
rejection and unanimously
endorsed a statement (see box)
supporting the alternative
proposal put forth by an ad-hoc
committee of students.
The students’ proposal would
see 31 students who have 80 or
more credit hours as of spring
1972 accepted immediately. Any
applicant who has 80 or more
credit hours through summer
sessions would also be accepted
this fall. Acceptances in January
of ’73 would be limited to those
juniors among a group of 54
students with 65 to 79 credit
hours who would need to be
accepted in order to graduate on
tijne. Finally, 48 juniors and die
remaining juniors who didn’t
require acceptance in January for
timely graduation would be
admitted before summer sessions
in 1973.
Actions proposed
An ad-hoc group of disgruntled
students and former student staff
members of the school met this
past Sunday night to discuss
methods of implementing the
alternative proposal. In addition
to deciding that any actions
would be pursued right through
the fall semester, the group
discussed plans for rousing
community support and decided
to present the proposal with a

petition to Dr. Merle the
following day.
When the group returned for a
reply on Tuesday, Dr. Merle
reportedly asked the
representatives; “The plan
enunciates a plan to accept more
students, am I correct?” When the
answer was “yes,” he replied;
“Not acceptable.”
At the time the dean was
making his reply, the DUS
advisors were drafting a letter to
Charles V. Ebert, dean of DUS,
which supported the alternate
proposal and pointed out the
effect the decision would have on
the creditability of the advisors
who had previously advised
students that {daces would be
available for them in the school.
In urging Dr. Ebert to support
the students’ proposal, the
advisors pointed out that “their
proposal has taken into
consideration both Dean Merle’s
concern for the necessity to
reduce the numbers accepted and
the students’ right to be accepted
as promised
It is a fair and
reasonable solution to the
dilemma and we the Division of
Undergraduate Studies Academic
Advisement Staff wholeheartedly
support it.”
In a memo to Dr. Ketter on
Wednesday (ace box lower right),
Dr. Ebert expressed support of
the “general thrust of the
advisors’ opinion.” However, he
pointed out that much of the
problem was caused by “a great
...

Editor’s note: The following letter, dated August T, 1972, was sent to
Division of Undergraduate Studies (DUS) Dean Charles Ebert by the
DUS academic advisors.
Our concern over the recent decision of the Dean of the School
of Social Policy and Community Services to limit acceptances to the
Department to 30 for the year is twofold: first, and most important,
is the effect the decision has on the students who have been working
toward acceptance and ultimately toward a degree in Social Welfare
and who are now excluded and given no assurance of future
acceptance so as to obtain the degree within the normal time span.
Further, there is little chance they can get places in the required
courses. Our second concern is the way in which the decision affects
the credibility of this University. If the students cannot trust our
word to be true nor our policies to be firm and just, how can the
University stand as a respected institution in learning?
We are confident that you as Dean of the Division of
Undergraduate Studies share our concern and will join with us in
urging that the students’ alternative proposal be accepted.
Their proposal has taken into consideration both Dean Merle’s
concern for the necessity to reduce the numbers accepted and the
students’ right to be accepted as promised. They are advocating a
gradual acceptance plan which will allow them to continue toward
completion of the degree requirements within the time they woe led
to expect it without overburdening the resources of the Department.
It is a fair and reasonable solution to the dilemma and we the
Division of Undergraduate Studies Academic Advisement Staff
wholeheartedly support it.

-DeWael

Alternatives discussed

An ad-hoc committee of students concerned with
recent cutbacks in the School of Social Planning and
Community Services met l«t Sunday night to
discuss alternatives to the admissions plan being
advocated by Sherman Merle, Dean of the School.

deal of misinformation and a lack Program at the school had
of appropriate communication originally drafted the alternate
between all concerned.” He plan for admissions that the ad
revealed that he had met with Dr. hoc group later obtained. Ms.
Merle on Tuesday and was Fredrickson denied that she had
confident that “a workable personally passed her proposal on
solution was on the way.” He to the student group and the
further endorsed the concept of a ad-hoc committee vehemently
general teview of the denied that she had any
undergraduate program in the connection with the actions they
were taking. However, Ms.
school.
Fredrickson was relieved of her
duties as director of the program
Figures clarified
The conflict was originally on Tuesday and replaced by
touched off when Dean Merle Frank Hodges, an associate
issued an “administrative professor in the school.
decision” to limit the number of
Dr. Merle assumed his new
to
30
new
majors in position July 1 after serving as
acceptances
the school next year. The figure associate dean of Academic
was later clarified to include an Affairs at Catholic University in
additional ten student cushion for Washington, D.C. The enrollment
hardship cases and a one-to-one of the school is approximately
replacement of those students 5500 with 3500 being graduate
who graduated or left the program students. The School of Social
after the fall and spring semesters. Welfare had 250 majors with the
Constance Fredrickson, former average undergraduate class size
director of the Undergraduate being 25.

Charles Bland, Assistant to the
Dean for Administration at
Catholic University noted that Dr.
Merle was “quite well received by
students.” “Last semester,”
according to Mr. Blayd, “he
taught a class in Social Work
Methods Theory and in a student
evaluation of the course received a
4.6 on a scale from one to five.”
Dr. Bland did reveal that he has
been quite close to Dr. M^rle.
‘It is an interesting experience
as a first exposure,” stated Dr.
Merle in referring to the week’s
events. “At Catholic University
there was nothing resembling this.
One thing that surprised me
[speaking of the state of affairs in
the school] was the Sense of
disorder that was reflected in a
situation of this kind.”
In commenting on the past
week. Dr. Merle once again
emphasized his commitment to
providing students with a quality
.

—continued on paga 2—

Editor's note: The following memo, dated August 2, 1972, was sent by DUS Dean Charles Ebert to
President Ketter, vice president of Academic Affairs Bernard Gelbaum and The Spectrum; in reply to the
letter addressed to him from the DUS academic advisors.
The Divison of Undergraduate Studies advisors sent the attached memorandum to you, and I wish to
add the following comments.
1. The advisors, through no fault of their own, were not aware that Dr. Walter Kunz and 1 had ;net a)
with student groups and b) with Dr. Merle and the new Director of Undergraduate Studies in Social Policy
and Community Hanning. As a matter of fact I had been in contact with Dr. Merle for about two weeks
about the situation.
2. Dr. Merle, Dr. Hodges, and 1 met yesterday and I believe that most student concerns can be met.
particularly since hard date, as to numbers involved in various categories, is beginning to surface. I found
Dr. Merle very understanding of the problems involved.
3. I agree with the general thrust of the advisors’ opinion. It is quite abvious that they feel very bad
about having advised students according to the previously available guidelines and suddenly being faced
with a very new and drastically different situation. 1 disagree with their work “promised” in the first
sentence of the third paragraph, which probably should be replaced by the word “expected” or

“anticipated.”

‘

In dosing, I wish to point out that I a) feel very confident, after yesterday’s meeting with Dr. Merle,
that a workable solution is on its way, b) believe that a great deal of misinformation and lack of appripriate
communication between all concerned made the problem appear much worse than it actually is. and c)
agree with Dr. Merle that the undergraduate program is S.P.C.S., for a variety of very good muons, must be

re-evaluated.

.

..

�Buffalo Renaissance

Festival depends on students
The Buffalo Renaissance Festival is an conceivable occupations engaging the members of
ethnic-cultural event to be held on campus from the Buffalo community. Workers from Bethlehem
Tuesday, Nov. 28 through Saturday, Dec. 2. The Steel, policemen and postmen are among those who
project, however, becomes a reality only to the will be asked to soeak on their particular perception
degree that more students get involved with of Buffalo.
But once again, Ms. Felix stressed the bulk of
coordinating the many imaginative areas of interest
and overcome what Festival coordinator Linda Felix the work rests in the activities of students who have
calls, “the pervasive apathy and non-involvement in yet to volunteer their time. Credit will be granted to
anyone wishing to participate and money is available
the community.”
for expenses such as gas, tolls, etc. The project is
Plans include a foods festival, a music event, a being funded by the Student Association. Ideas and
all
crafts exhibit, a dance and theater production
suggestions will be accepted but more than anything,
from the broad range of mixed cultures present in the desire to work towards the implementation of
the City of Buffalo.
these ideas is paramount. Further information can be
by calling Linda Felix at 886-6907.
be
from
all
received
speakers
Additionally, there will
-

Acceptance rejection
—Craig

Accusations cloud issues
of prisoners, bombings
A State University of Buffalo
graduate student, who has
recently returned from a meeting
with delegates from the Vietnam
Peace Talks in Paris, accused the
United States of systematically
bombing the dikes in North
Vietnam. At a press conference
last Tuesday, Martin Feinreider
claimed that the U.S. was
purposely bombing North
Vietnamese dikes and other
non-military targets in rural areas
which were causing heavy damage
to the country and its people.
“During the rainy season,” Mr.
Feinreider claimed, “the damaged
dikes throughout the country will
not be able to contain the
current
the result will be
floods of great proportions.” Mr.
Feinreider also produced photos
of injured North Vietnamese
(some fatally wounded) who he
claimed were victims of napaln
bombs and anti-personnel
weapons being used by the United
States.
...

Mr. Feinreider also referred to
the use of pellet bombs and
plastic bullets which he called
“vicious weapons” use of which
during World War II was
considered a war crime. Hospitals
are also being bombed, according
to Mr. Feinreider, killing “up to
1000 people at a time.”
“Will not broken”
In addition, Mr. Feinreider
commented on a meeting with
David Lambertson, press liaison
for the American delegation in

Paris.

According-to Mr.
Mr. Lambertson
denied the use of such tactics,
saying: “We are not bombing the
dikes in North Vietnam, and we
are not using ‘evil weapons’.”

Feinreider,

Mr. Feinreider further
commented that the “North
Vietnamese are not willing to
negotiate away their people. The
will of the North Vietnamese has
not been broken, even though
Richard Nixon is committing the
same crimes for which the Nazi’s
were convicted of in the
Nuremberg trials.”
Concerning the prisoners of
war, Mr. Feinreider stated that

although President Nixon denies
receiving a list of names of
American POWs and men killed in
action, the North Vietnamese still
claim to have delivered such a list.
Mr. Feinreider further asserted
that throughout history, POWs
have never been returned until
after a war and claimed that
American POWs are receiving
better treatment than the North
Vietnamese prisoners whom the
South Vietnamese keep in “tiger

cages.”

At the end of the conference,
Mr. Feinreider talked about the
“pure harassment” he and the
other 13 members of the anti-war
delegation received during their
departure at Kennedy Airport.
“We were searched, questioned
and then threatened with arrest.
We were even followed by a South
Vietnamese governmental agent.”

education and illuminated his
reasons for rejecting the alternate
proposal. “What I objected to is
that the students wanted what I
thought was a guarantee that they
would all be admitted before we
had a rational review of the
program,” explained Dr. Merle.
‘1 felt relatively comfortable
that the greatest bulk of students
would be served by my plan,” Dr.
Merle continued. ‘This afternoon
[Tuesday! for the first time I got
a hard list of names of applicants
and the number of credit hours.
The 210 students already in the
department will in no way be
jeopardized by the new plan.”
Little problem
In June ’72 there were 41
students with 80 or more credit
hours. The dean saw no problem
in admitting these students. There
are 50 to 55 students with 65 to
79 hours and approximately 50
with below 65 credit hours.
Dr. Merle also saw little
problem in dealing with the group

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The Spectrum is published once e
week on Fridays, ten times during
the summer academic sessions by
Sub Board 1, Inc. Offices are
located at 3SS Norton Hall, State
University of New York at Buffalo,

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—continued from page 1—
...

100-student cut in the school was
facilitate a general review of
the entire undergraduate program.
‘I will start as soon as possible to
convene a committee of faculty
and students,” noted Dr. Merle. “1
am most concerned that there be
deliberate input from students
who are consumers of the
years.”
program.” Early fall was the date
A larger issue was suggested by revealed for the establishment of
Dr. Merle as being involved in this the review committee.
case. “When students are admitted
Dr. Merle explained that the
to the University, they aren’t committee would be given an
guaranteed that they 11 get into explicit charge and that a mutual
any department or program. It is deadline would be established. “I
unfair to place the problem on am not anticipating a long drawn
out review,” concluded Dr. Merle
any individual unit,” he stated.
“Hopefully the report will be
Rumors dispelled
finished by not later than
Dr. Merle also attempted to January.”
dispel rumors that have been rstirred by his actions. ‘There is a
rumor that this is a first step in
pre-trial
detention, suspended sentence and
the jettisoning of the program. At I
expulsion. Trafficking, maximum
the present time there are no
5 years,
U S. Embassy:
i
plans for that.”
10-5 Akasaka 1-Chrome
One justification offered by
Mmalo-Ku. Tokyo
Tel. 583-7141
Dr. Merle to defend the
of students in the 65 to 79 credit
hour range, since approximately
40 students will graduate in
January. ‘There is no problem in
dealing with a residue of 15,” said
Dr. Merle. “They are upset
because I won’t give an absolute
guarantee. I can’t even guarantee
that the school will exist in two

to

I

Japan.

■

&gt;

L

!

�Decision reversed;
fees initiation halted

Reversing a decision by Harvy
Spindler, State University of New
York (SUNY), vice-chancellor .for
Finance, Management and

Business, Chancellor Ernest L.
Boyer, has reportedly rescinded
authorization for individual
campuses to implement any new
fees for the coming semester.
Future restoration of the fees will
be contingent upon the report of
a State University-wide committee
that will discuss the entire issue of
fees.
The fees that were to be
initiated or increased at the State
University of Buffalo included a
late registration fee, a drop and
add fee, the transcript fee, a
bounced check charge and a lost
key charge. Edward Doty, vice
president for Operations and
Systems said, ‘‘we haven’t
received official notice of the
action, though 1 suspect we will.”
Alan Schwartz, director of
Research and Public Information
for the Student Association of the
State University (SASU)
explained
the actions that
precipitated the Chancellor’s
reversal. “In 1970,” stated Mr.
Schwartz, “the Board of Trustees
authorized the Chancellor of the
State University, or his designee,
to establish fees or charges for
violation
of institutional
regulations, late registrations,
damage and breakage and special
services.

“At that time,” he continued,
“the Chancellor appointed Mr.
Spindier as his designee. Last
spring Mr. Spindier sent a memo
to each campus listing the new
fees that were to be authorized
and/or mandated. There was no
student participation in the fee

Night school st

Despite allegations by the Millard Fillmore
decision and the action came after College Student Association (MFCSA) that
common
. .
,
Chancellor Boyer had previously
strat,on Wlth the da
is
discriminatory,
Y
“p
assured student body presidents
-^" e new procedure will begin this fall,
that there would be no new fees—
Jack Bunting, new president of the Millard
year
this
Fillmore College Student Association (MFSCA), has
Letter written
been dealing with the problems of a night school
SASU then sent a letter to Dr.
student being what he termed “a second-class citizen
Boyer requesting that the new or
increased fees be rescinded, that in the University,” in attempts to negotiate
any
unauthorized fees on administratively concerning the assimilation
campuses be discontinued, and
program. “I talked to Richard Siggelkow, Vice
that a State University-wide
President for Student Affairs and Ron Stein,
committee with student
associate
director of the Office of Student Affairs,
representation be formed to
and
have
I
written a letter to Dr. Ketter. 1 also will
review all existing and proposed
be meeting with Student Association President
fees for the University. The
unauthorized fees included lab Debbie Benson concerning this matter .. . this looks
fees, graduation charges and room
bad for my people.”
deposits which were collected at
The new plan, according to Mr. Bunting, makes
isolated campuses.
little
sense from the night school standpoint. Night
Previous to Dr. Boyer’s
students
who work during the day, Mr. Bunting
decision, debate had occurred on
this campus as to which fees were
explained, or are otherwise unable to rush to
merely authorized and which were
Admissions and Records to register for their courses,
mandated. Deborah Benson,
might find themselves closed out by day students
president of Student Association,
and Mr. Schwartz had argued to who prefer courses in the evening. He continued that
Dr. Ketter that only fees that if a night student is nosed out of a course he needed
were mandated should be
for graduation by the equal registration plan, there is
implemented. Dr. Ketter insisted
little recourse.
that all the fees were actually
mandated.
Future plans
However, in a list of
Looking to next year, Mr. Bunting noted that
administrative policies of the
expenditure
priorities for MFC’s budget will show
State University, fees such as late
slight modifications. “It is a service organization and
registration charges and lost key
charges were “authorized” while I would like to see activities slanted more in that
fees for late payments and direction,” he said. “For example, more stress will
returned checks were termed be placed on the undergraduate library. However, he
“mandated.”
did say that such social activities as beer and pizza
Dr. Boyer’s acceptance of nights will continue since these are events with good
SASU’s alternative plan came a
participation.
week ago after Mr. Borenstein,
When questioned regarding MFC’s relations to
chairman of SASU, had a private
Sub
Board I, Inc., Mr. Bunting, who is a Sub Board
meeting with the Chancellor in
Albany.
member, replied that they have very definitely
'

..

The Student Association will sponsor a blood
drive on August 7 for students, faculty and staff in
the Fillmore Room. Donors must register in advance
either by going to Room 205 in Norton Hall, or by
calling 831-5508. Volunteer workers are also needed.

DlSCO^J

w

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THE WELL EDUCATED
DRINKERS

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Jack Bunting
improved. He did comment that Sub Board’s
priorities as a funding agency “should not be
affecting decisions on publications.” Commenting on
Sub Board’s priorities, Mr. Bunting stated: “1 don’t
think they’ll be doing as good a job until they leam
to walk before they run. They must do one thing
and do it well.”
Mr. Bunting expressed frustration with student
government and the apathy involved. According to
him, part of this apathy is because “a minority like
MFC with 5000 students suffers just by virtue of the
fact that they cannot attend 2 p.m. meetings.”
Mr. Bunting’s main interest is in protecting the
rights of the MFC students. This interest, at the
moment, is seeing that night students aren’t cheated
out of the night courses they enrolled in school to
take.

Methadone Program enacted
for east side’s heroin addicts

The Drug Abuse Research and
Treatment (DART) Program of
Buffalo has initiated plans to
establish a Methadone
Maintenance Program for heroin
addicts on the city’s east side.
Fred Willis, director of DART,
called the Methadone Program:
“A part of a full scale of services
for drug addicts” which he hopes
will finally begin to alleviate the
problem.
According to Mr. Willis, the
Methadone Program will be
designed to “use methadone to
intervene in a heroin addict’s
habit and to arrive at a methadone
maintenance level to get the
person off the heroin.” Mr. Willis

stressed that’ the methadone will referral aids, along with actual job
not be a permanent substitute for placement and recreational
heroin and claimed that while an facilities for the patients.
The DART Program was
addict will be given methadone as
a heroin substitute, he would initially founded as a research
receive help with his program in 1969 by Mr. Willis and
“psychological and physiological is just now heading towards full
problems in order to ultimately development. The program is also
help them to live without heroin funded by the New York State
or the methadone substitute.
Narcotics Division and the Office
of Economic Opportunity who
distribute funds for the program
Services
through the Erie County Mental
Full medical services have Health Department.
Any interested person can
already been established for drug
addict* along with group therapy obtain further information by
and private counselling. Other either visiting the DART Center at
services offered include 402 Broadway Ave. in Buffalo, or
educational and employment by calling 853-0350.
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Friday,

4 August 1972 The Spectrum Page three
.

.

�Trie LiCHlim Sme
circuit expansion, you’ve got to
be a party to it.
As I was the other evening
when Newt Faglie from down the
street invited me to dinner over to
his place for a cookout.

by Dick West
Reacting
increasing
WASHINGTON
pressure from party officials, Senators George
McGovern and Thomas Eageton met here Monday
night and announced that Sen. Eagjcton would
withdraw as the Democratic Party’s endorsed
Vice-Presidential candidate.
The anno'*-"
it came only six days after
had disclosed that he had undergone
Sen.
psychiatric treatment in the 1%0’s. Sen. McGovern
said that the announcement to drop Sen. Eagleton
from the ticket was made because he felt that
continued debate over Sen. Eagleton’s fitness would
divide the country and divert attention from the real
'

-

.

.

issues.
At a lata evening news conference. Sen.
McGovern said he “supported Sen. Eagleton 1000
per cent” at first, but stated that “as the days went
on, it became clear to me that his past medical
history literally dominated the news... and I don’t
think that it’s in the best interest of the party or the
country that this discussion continue.”
Syndicated columnist Jack
WASHINGTON
Anderson apologized to Sen. Thomas Eagleton for
prematurely releasing a story accusing the Senator of
having been arrested six times in his home state on
charges of drunken and reckless driving, in a direct
confrontation between the two on national
—

television.
Speaking on CBS’s Face The Nation, Mr.
Anderson claimed that competition for the story
made him release it before he was able to verify it
100 per cent. Although he offered his apologies for
releasing the story prematurely, Mr. Anderson
refused to retract it claiming that he wanted to know
“the whole truth” before he made any further
committments.
Sen. Eagleton skeptically accepted the apology,
but attacked Mr. Anderson for refusing to retract “a
false statement.” The Senator’s vindication came
Tuesday, though, as Mr. Anderson fully retracted the
statement and apologized for the harm he caused to
Mr. Eagleton’$ candidacy.

“your

An indefinite delay has
confronted the trial of Daniel EUsberg and Anthony
Russo on charges concerning their release of the
Pentagon Papers.
Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas
ordered a 30-day delay in the trial last Saturday to
give defense lawyers a chance to present their
arguments to the Court concerning a wiretap
controversy. The Court is in recess, though, and it
seems possible that the trial could be delayed until
after the Court re-convencs in October to act on the
wiretap question.
The defense has been seeking details of a
wiretap which the government says inadvertently
picked up the voice of someone connected with the
defense. Both the trial judge and a federal court
judge refused to allow defense lawyers to see the
wiretap transcript prior to the hearing before Justice
Douglas.

WASHINGTON Sen. George McGovern failed
in a major legislative move Tuesday to carry out a
key plank in his presidential campaign platform by
cutting military spending immediately.
The South Dakota Democrat offered an
amendment to the- Defense Department
authorization bill which would reduce President
Nixon’s budget figure by $4 billion in the fiscal year
which began July 1. The move was defeated though
after a short debate by a vote of 59-33.
-

Most
WASHINGTON (UPI)
of us have become relatively
immune to statistics. We are no
-

longer

flabbergasted,

thunderstruck or bowled over by
figures that are flabbergasting,
thunderstriking or overbowling.
This is particularly true in
Washington where the smallest
unit of exchange is the billion and
the national debt is computed in

After-dinner speaker

The other guests included the
Flinchers from farther down the
street and a stranger whom Faglie
introduced as Wellsley Fairtongue,
“our after-dinner speaker.”
Sure enough, once the
barbecued muskox disappeared
from the grill, Fairtongue arose
and presented a 45-minute lecture
on “The Care and Feeding of Cost
Accountants.”
During the question-andanswer period that followed,
Fairtongue told me there was a
big demand for guest speakers at
neighborhood cookouts, family
dinners, etc.
“Americans have become so
accustomed to after-dinner
oratory that a meal isn’t complete
without it,” he said. He predicted
that the next development will be
room-service oratory. When hotel
and motel guests order meals
served in their rooms, the tray will
be accompanied by an
after-dinner speaker, he explained.
Fairtongue added that he
personally was looking forward to
becoming the first guest speaker
at a honeymoon breakfast in bed

light years.
Despite being statistically
jaded, however, I found myself
reeling a bit this week before

some

data

“staggering”

that

emerged from the Internationa 1
Platform Association (IPA). Here

for the organization’s 70th annual
convention, an IPA spokesman
unleashed some updated estimates
on the extent of the oratorical
epidemic that is raging across the
land.

Drop in the bucket
He said the IPA, with a
13,000
membership of about
speakers, lecture bureaus and
program chairmen, would
generate at least 195,000 speaking
engagements this year. And that is
only a drop in the bucket.

Or, to choose a more
REYKJAVIK, Iceland Bobby Fischer moved
the tenth game of the World Chess appropriate metaphore, a wheeze
Championships with what seems to be a in the windstorm. For it is
calculated that more than two
commanding Ste-3 Vi lead over Boris Spassky.
—

into

Many experts said that Spassky was “greatly
concerned” over his game and was in deep trouble
because of “severe mental stress” which caused him
to ask for a 24-hour postponement of the ninth
game. The ninth game was played to a draw after the
postponement, but most experts at the tournament
are now saying that Fischer is in firm control of the
match and may roll on to crush the champion in the
remaining games.

million speeches will be made in
New York City alone.
“We can’t give a hard figure”
on the national total, the IPA
official said. “The estimates are

staggering.”

r Ubanon.

to

years in prison Trafficking. 3 to

\

But stastics as previously
noted, are comparatively
meaningless. To appreciate the
true magnitude of the lecture

i
possession,

I
I

15years.
U S. Embassy;
at Rue Aiv
MreiwAi. Beirut. Lebanon
Tel 240-800

University Bookstore
on campus

bulous
AFTER INVENTORY SALE

”

save 50%&amp;
more
on
BOOKS

T°

&lt;

nth*

Page four. The Spectrum Friday, 4 August 1972
.

BOOKS

BOOKS

BOOKS

m

H

�Future uncertain

Anti-war rider passes Senate
WASHINGTON (UPI) For the second time in 10 days,
the Senate voted to cut off all funds for US military
operations in Southeast Asia.
The latest antiwar legislation was approved 49-47 last
Wednesday night in the form of an amendment to a $20.6
billion military procurement bill.
The
arms
bill
was
later the same day.
approved 92-5 and sent to a
The procurement bill, however,
conference committee where has too much support to fail since
it will be reconciled with a it carries authorization for
military research, weapons,
House-passed bill.
—

the
Although
antiwar
amendment was expected to die
in conference, Sen. Edward W.
said
Brooke,' R-Mass.,
it
sentiment
to
expressed growing
use congressional spending power
to force an end to the war.
Brooke
the
sponsored

amendment, which would cut off
funds within four months after
Hanoi
provided
enactment,
releases American prisom ;rs of
war.
Earlier attempt foiled
A similar Brooke amendment
was approved July 24 as part of a
aid
bill.
The
foreign
Administration
rounded
up
enough votes among Democrats
who oppose foreign aid and
Republicans to defeat the bill

Wednesday, Stennis charged a
legislative cut-off of US war funds
would leave the United States at
the mercy of North Vietnam. He
also argued that “in all of
American history there is no
precedent that the legislative
branch could move in and cut off
actually appropriated funds for
conduct of a war.”
Sen. Barry Goldwater,
R—Ariz., said end-the-war
ammunition and ships for the 12 amendments amounted to a
months that began July 1. Actual “grasp for power by the
funds to carry out the proposal
legislature. It would give false
will have to be voted ih a separate encouragement to our enemies. It
would prolong the war.”
appropriations bill.
Brooke declined to speculate
Among those arguing for
about the future of his antiwar legislation were Sens.
amendment in the conference, but Alan Cranston, D-Calif., and
Sen. George Aiken, R-Vt.,
Harold Hughes, D—Iowa.
predicted it would be deleted.
Cranston said President Nixon had
“1 don’t expect it to stand up failed to end the war as he
in conference,” said Aiken, the promised in 1968. Hughes said,
dean ofSenate Republicans.
‘There is no longer any doubt
Leading the conferees will be that we have been destroying
the chairmen of the Senate and Vietnam allegedly to save it.”
House Armed Services
Before final passage the Senate
Committees
Sen. John C. approved an amendment by Sen.
Stennis, D-Miss., and Rep. F. Jack Miller, R-Iowa, that would
Edward Hebert, D-La.,
who forbid withdrawal of LB forces
have been vehement opponents of until the Communists accounted
antiwar legislation.
for all American servicemen
In debate before the voting missing in action.

Olde time music

—

—

Mike Seeger, John Cohen and Tracy Schwartz,
known collectively as the New Lost City Ramblers,
will perform next Thursday night in the Fillmore
Room. Also appearing is Buffalo's one and only
South Happiness Street Society Skiffle Band. $1.75
admission charge covers unlimited beer
consumption.

S A votes

La*t Tqesday's SA Executive
Committee meeting approved the
request of the Third World
Veteran's Alliance for a $12,200
loan. The money will be used for
a National Convention to be held
August 10, 11 and 12.

Vets convention to raise
issues, action; not money
A $12,200 loan approved at right
to set conditions.
last Tuesday’s Student Subsequently, the motion was
Association Executive Committee defeated.
meeting will enable the Third
The resolution to approve the
World Veterans’ Alliance to loan, however, was passed 7-2-1
conduct a convention on Aug. 10, after Mr. Miller explained the
11 and 12. Themed “Imperatives Third World Vets and BSU’s
for Mobilization, Organization, repayment plans. Included in this
Communication and Alliance,” plan, according to Mr. Miller, are
the First National Convention of such money-making operations as
the Third World Veterans’ discotheques, a community
Alliance will attract 370 bookstore, record and book sales
participants to the State and a band. Profits from these
University of Buffalo campus.
enterprises would be split SO-SO
Originally scheduled for July with SA to pay back the $12,200.
IS, 16 and 17, the convention has Also, Mr. Miller stated that the
been delayed three times because convention registration fees would
of, as explained by one Third be used to offset the loan.
World Vet,
“hassles with
administration ovei* facilities.” Ed Threatened futures
Gamble, SA Student Affairs
However, some SA officials felt
coordinator and a BSU that despite such repayment
spokesman, explained that the plans,
the loan would better be
University required bonds for
termed a gift. They explained that
Clark Gym and deposits for neither the Third World Vets nor
housing accommodations.
the BSU could realistically earn
enough money to repay the loan.
Free recent board
For example, it was noted that in
Additionally, the Third World light
of last weekend’s difAcuities
Vets plan to provide free housing with discotheques (in which one
and food for all members of the student was stabbed), any future
convention. As explained by Mr.
dances would be forbidden.
Gamble, the people attending the
SA Treasurer Jeff Osinski
convention are financially unable
maintained, however, that SA
to absorb such costs. However, SA
Vice President Doug Webb extended the loan demanding and
expecting repayment. According
objected to this expense saying
that no other conference has ever to him, both the Third World Vets
provided such accommodations. and BSU have laid “their futures
He moved that the registration fee on the line.” He said; “It has been
for the convention be increased made perfectly clear to the Third
from $5 to S25 to cover room and World Vets, to BSU, and to the
administration, that if the loan is
board costs.
not paid back, there will be no
are
Mr. Gamble objected: “We
here to have a convention, to do more money for their activities.”
real work not to make money."
Nonetheless, the loan has been
Additionally, Frank Miller, Third
approved subsequent to a contract
World Vets spokesman and being drawn up between the Third
member of the BSU Coordinating World Vets and SA and also the
Committee, argued that SA has no approval of the administration.
-

BORED
with inauthentic courses? If you
don't like it, spit it out and ted
us why. Study guide on courses,
teachers, programs, and
opportunities available at 231
and 114 Diefendorf. Composed
by Undergraduate History
Council and Faculty.

Friday, A August 1972 The Spectrum Page live
.

.

�■p

0

Position
U

I

The p olitics ofpower

To the Editor.

repayment plan. However wellTh« summer has traditionally been viewed as a as evidence their
repayment
plan is both overly opintentioned,
the
during
It
is
testing time for student governments.
by any figures.
unsupported
completely
and
timistic
and
set
the
tone
these months that student officials
has
a monopoly to
Miller
stated
that
BSU
Frank
Accordshape the character of their administrations.
however,
discotheques.
forgot,
He
weekly
to
conduct
action
apingly, the SA Executive Committee
of
dances
Norton
in
possibility
report
that
the
World
Vets
to
prove a loan of $12,200 to the Third
best,
at
stabbing
is,
weekend's
the
after
last
as
irreHall
marks this year's undergraduate government
of
such
mention
was
made
although
Moreover,
intimidated.
slim.
sponsible, debilitated and easily
sales,
as
book
and
record
enterprises
money-making
There is not one cogent reason why the loan
presented.
should have been approved and there exist too many no information on profits or income was
uncertainties that should have prevented its passage.
But then no serious questioning of either the
As outlined by the Third World Vets and the convention, the repayment plan, or the tw* organiBlack Student, Union, 372 veterans will travel to zation involved was tolerated
either by SA officiBuffalo for a throe day conference; they will have als or by Black spokesmen. And it is here that the
provided for tfiem free room and board. Such a Student Association allowed itself to be intimidated.
proposal is ludicrous. No other student group, no Afraid of being labelled "racist,” afraid to turn away
other conference funded by student fees has ever a minority organization, the Student Association Exprovided such accommodations.
ecutive Committee blithely surrendered $12,200 of
The, argument that participants in the conferstudent fees in a transaction that few could morally
ence are unable to shoulder such expenses cannot be or ethically support.
supported for no data exists on their financial conIt is interesting to note that the two SA officials
ditions. Additionally, organizers of the convention at
who
voted to defeat the loan were called both "racno time considered the possibility of charging for
ists"
and "Slominskis." Such charges of racism are
room and board; no careful assessment was underuseless and childish. Doug Webb did not propose an
taken to determine if such free accommodations are
increased registration fee because he secretly and
vital to the convention.
vehemently detests alt non-whites. He would have
More serious questions, however, surround the
the same of any organization, be it Chinese,
chances of the loan ever being repaid. Many SA asked
officials admittedly doubt that the $12,200 will ever Jewish or Irish.
be returned. Perhaps, they remember their folly of
Theirs was not the racism; yet racism was apparconduct
a
concert
downtown
Bufit was present in the exceptions that were
in
late spring to
ent
stunning
a
loss
of
falo
that fiasco resulted in
made and the rules that were bent; it was obvious in
Student
Association.
$14,000 for
the votes of SA officials who feared violence at the
Yet, BSU and Third World spokesmen are quick meeting; and it existed in the arrogance of those who
to assert their intentions to repay the loan; they cite demanded special treatment.

I am deeply distressed that the weekend
discotheques did occur and that a grave problem
developed resulting in the injury of one party-goer
on Saturday night. As I stated throughout this
dialogue, I am firmly against the use of Norton Hall
by any group that is not recognized by the various
associations and I am even more deeply shocked and

—

—

—

Dean’s debut
Those following the controversy that has escala
ted in the School of Social Policy and Community
Services have been befuddled by various confusions
of numerical combinations. Moreover, its participants have taken adversary roles behind polarized

have been avoided if Dr. Merle clearly and fully
explained all aspects of his proposal. Instead, he
took a stance, issued novrationale, and believed that
all his actions were above questioning.
Some have suggested that Dr. Merle was moving
to assert his leadership and prove his authority.
While it is true that there are serious problems in the
School of Social Policy and Community Services, Dr.
Merle's actions exacerbated these problems rather
than resolve them. He did not conduct himself as a
leader.

proposals.

Vet, it appears that when the many numbers are
unjumbled and explained, no real differences exist.
Sherman Merle's acceptance plan of 40 students clarified to include a one to one replacement of new
majors will not jeopardize students expecting places
in the program. Using different phrases and figures,
the ad hoc committee's plan makes the same provi-

Leadership is not issuing unexplained proposals
nor is it hiding behind the prerogratives of a posi
tion. Instead of barking "not acceptable" to a group

sion.
The controversy that exists is an argument of
semantics; one that has been further nourished by
poor communication and faulty leadership. Dr.
Merle commented that he is amazed, as a new Dean
at this University, at the "sense of disorder" surrounding the affair. Yet, it is his actions which
created the enflamed situation.
Dr. Merle first alarmed many persons by issuing
a blanket statement that only 30 students would be
accepted into the school. This announcement was
made without any hard data and without any clarification. No proposal should have been reported
until exact figures of those students involved was
known.
Further, much of the misunderstanding could

of students presenting an alternative proposal. Dr.
Merle should have conducted himself as their Dean
by negotiating and talking with them.
Additionally, Dr. Merle chose to further paint a
picture of himself as dictator by curtly dismissing
Connie Frederickson. While there may have been
working difficulties, her dismissal appears to be the
result of a difference of opinion.

Dr. Merle has started off badly. To resolve this
issue and to heal all unopened wounds, we urge him
to reach a workable compromise with students by
assuring them that his proposal will not exclude
them from the school and by relieving fears that the
undergraduate program is endangered.

The SpccT^iiM

Vol. 23, No. 9

Friday, 4 August 1972

Editor-in-Chief

—

Managing Editor
Business Manager

Production Supervisor
Campus
City...
Copy-,.

•..

.Ian C. OeWaal
vacant

..

.

...

Peggy Edwards
Karin Sketdon

-

-

—

Jo-Ann Armao

Feature
Graphic Arts
Layout
&amp;

Drama

Co-Advertising Manager
Co-Advertising Manager
vacant

Tom Tolas
..

.

Maryhope Runyon
Michael Silvarfolatt

-

-

Music

Susan Hory
Jeff Reiman
....

Off-Campus

Photo
Sports

Billy Altman
Dave Saleh
Mickey Osterreicher

....

vacant

The Spectrum is served by the United Press International. Collage Press Service, The Los Angeles Times Syndicate
The Now Republic Feature Syndicate and Publishers-Hall Syndicate.

Republicotloo of matter herein in any form without the express consent of the Editor-in-Chief is forbidden

Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chiaf.

Page six The Spectrum Friday, 4 August 1972
.

.

eg

ns
CD

disappointed in those recognized student groups that
fronted for those organizations. The financial
irregularities are matters that will only lead to a
deepening distrust, which none of us can afford.
It seems clear to me now that there will be no
way to continue having discotheques for the rest of
the summer because of the breach of faith and the
broken communication lines that have developed. It
is my hope that those people who wish to sponsor
dances and mixers of any variety seek out the help
and the advice of the entire Norton professional staff
as well as myself and maintain open lines for
discussion.
I recognize and support the need for various
ethnic and racial groups to identify and feel proud of
their heritage. I also encourage and applaud all
efforts for university students to come together and
engage in activities that enhance their heritage
However, I will not condone any activity where the
possibility of jeopardizing a student, physically or
mentally, is clearly apparent. I invite any student to
come to my office in 216 Norton Hall to discuss this
with me at any time.
Carol Raynor
Chairman
Norton House Council

Discotheque
dealings
Editor's note: The following letter was sent to James
Gruber, director of Norton Hall, by 5/1 Student
Activities coordinator Diane Zwolinski.

I will take this opportunity to express my
disapproval of the actions taken by the Student
Association Executive Committee on July 26 in the
passage of a motion to sponsor (through the office
of Minority Student Affairs) discotheques on the
28th and 29th of July, and to allocate money for a
$500 bond to the sponsoring parties.
Regardless of the fact that I was made aware of
the situation several weeks ago,

I had no idea that
the principals in question would let the matter get so
obviously out of hand. One could possibly attribute
this to naivete on my part. I choose to attribute it to
improper, if not poor, direction on the part of
persons who exposed knowledge beyond that of the
general awareness at a time when the issue reached
an uncomfortably crucial point.
I must make it clear that at no time did the
members of a group calling themselves BLACK
ARTS GUILD come to my committee for
recognition, even though they received the
procedural rules firsthand from Ms. Ann Hicks,
assistant director of Student Activities, on more than
one occasion. Reservations which were signed for the
never-existent BLACK ARTS GUILD were made in
good faith by an authorized party with the
assumption that recognition had been applied for
and that a club constitution was in the process of
being written.
My reasons for voting against the proposal were
moral and ethical in nature. It was hazardous for the
Executive Committee to presuppose each other’s
knowledge of the legal ramifications of such a ruling
and then proceed to vote positively on a motion
which was not clear in its points.
In the coming weeks, I will lend my availability
to the proper parties in question and look forward to
the time when we can get together to
draw up a set
of guidelines covering the areas which need
“patching up.”
We must stop the inconsistencies which plague
us.
Diane Zwolinski

Jeff Greenwald

Jack Harlan
Lawrence McNiace

Lit.

w

explained
•

The Spectrum erroneously reported in its July
23 edition that a discotheque was conducted by the
Black Arts Guild through the official sponsorship of
the Black Student Union. Although several BAG
members were involved in the BSU at the time of the
BSU sponsored dance, that particular
event was
arranged and conducted exclusively by the BSU and
not the Black Arts Guild. BSU spokesmen report
that there is no connection between their
organization and what they term
the “renegade”
Black Arts Guild.

�A sticky matter
To the Editor

I would like to respond to the letter published
in the Friday, July 21, 1972 issue of The Spectrum
by Richard J. Rosche, attorney for Sylvia Dick and
Linda Ramsey; As stated in Mr. Rosche’s letter,
posters are placed all over campus by students and
various student groups. However, one very important
point should be made here. These students and
student groups do not use a glue mixture to put their
posters up and, therefore, they are easily removed
after their announcement has served its purpose.
However, when posters arc glued to exterior
surfaces, it necessitates the expenditure of
unnecessary man hours on the part of Maintenance
personnel to remove the posters and restore the
surface to its original condition.
I think the difference in the manner in which
postering is done is the key to the whole incident.
The organization that these two girls belong to has
placed posters both before and since this incident
without any action taker! against them because the
posters were put up with scotch tape or put on
bulletin boards in a manner which did not result in
any maintenance problems.
Leon E. Griffin
Assistant Director

Self determination

undermined
To the Editor.

I have been to other schools before, worked in
other institutions before, but have never
encountered an academic bureaucracy as
irresponsible as Dean Merle’s School of Social
Welfare. It is truly amazing how one person can play
the role of dictator, threaten the academic future of
a sizable group of students, and yet still operate
within the framework of bureaucratic rules while at
the same time he is breaking those rules.
Clearly the credibility of this man has much to
be desired. A, sizable amount of students were told
from responsible sources that they will be accepted
to the department when they fulfill the requirements
set down by the department. These Requirements
were also posted ill the University catalogue whidh is
supposedly a legal and binding contract between the
students and administrators in regards to degree
requirements of various departments. How one man
can come in afresh and completely turn these
regulations inside out and still get away with it (it
still isn’t over, though) is clearly a breach of
credibility between the administration and the rest
of the university.
His policies are clearly anti-student. A proposal
was formulated and offered to him that would cut
the number of students in the department and at the
same time allow those who were told they would be
admitted, to be admitted. His response to this was
not only an outright “not acceptable” statement,
but a purging of all staff members from the
department who were involved in proposing this
most equitable solution.
He has avowed that he owes no responsibility to
the students (in private of course). He refuses to be
quoted on the serious issues at large. In spite of his
“love affair with the students” (could it be rape?) he
clearly has no affinity with the students, no respect
with the students and will have none until he wakes
up to the fact that students realize they have a right
to self-determination.
That Charles V. Ebert endorses Merle’s policy
also has important implications. Could this be the
start of a reformist (conservative) movement at this
university?' Is it possible that the administration is
attempting to “put the student in his place?” Will
limitations as drastic as this, will administrative
bureaucrats as tyrannical as this, continue to fill this
university in an effort to hold on to power?
I have never observed a bureaucrat break all the
rules of the bureaucratic game until now. Will this
set the stage for the future for administrators to
break, change and alter the rules as they see fit? Are
we headed for a police state in academia?
Furthermore, it is an outrage as well as an insult
that after making this decision Merle will be on
vacation by the time this publication is out. Is this
your responsibility to the students, Dean Merle? Do
you think you can ignore us?
It should be the concern for all students
attending this university for while this problem is
presently manifested in the Social Welfare
Department, undeiflably it will spread to the rest of
the university and continue to violate the students’
right to self determination.

Take permanent vacation
To the Editor.
The recent events within the Social Welfare
Department should indicate to the student body the
direction which the administration has decided to
take.

Since July 1 when Dr. Merle assumed the
position of dean of the School of Social Policy and
Community Services, the following decisions have

been made:
1) The Graduate School, which will have 85
students in the Fall, is more important than the
accredited Undergraduate School, which currently
has 210 students.
2) Only 30 students will be admitted to the
major in the Fall, leaving 140 juniors and seniors
without a major. In a letter these students received,
they were informed that they should transfer to
another school!
3) Connie Frederickson, who is director of
Undergraduate programs for the school, has been
dismissed for supporting students.
4) The work-study secretaries have been fired.

The alleged reason is that no student could be a good
secretary. The real reason is probably that the
'
secretaries have access to the school’s files.
S) Dean Merle has refused to consider legitimate
student demands that the J.40 students be admitted
to the major.
Most conveniently, Dean Merle is to go on
vacation next week. He has been at the school only
four weeks!
The Student Association realizes and wishes the
students and faculty to realize that these sorts of
changes are not limited to the Social Welfare
Department. The 140 students have legitimate
grievances and we urge them and their parents to
write letters of protest to Dr. Ketter and Chancellor
Boyer in Albany. Court ation should also be
.
considered.
The Student Association strongly supports those
students turned away and offers them any and all
•

assistance.

Executive Committee of
Student Assocation

‘Is it love or is it rape?’
To the Editor.

In your Friday, July 28 issue, you quoted the
dean of the School of Social Policy and
Community Services as saying, “I have a long and
deep love affair with students and I’m committed to
it.” As director of the Undergraduate Program in
that school for the past three years, I suggest we
look at facts and behavior rather than rhetoric.
July 10, the dean called me into his office. He
wanted to inform me of the decisions he had made
about the Undergraduate Program, his having been
on the job all of ten days. He didn’t bother with
formalities like asking to be informed about the
program. His decisions were (I) he was dropping the
student assistant/secretary line and the student
receptionist line. These are the staff who have helped
me run the Undergraduate Program. When I had the
administrative job as director, the previous dean had
agreed to my request that the Undergraduate office
staff be students. My rationale for this request had
been twofold; (a) a school is a service to students
and therefore, we should hire recipients of the
service, and (b) since schools are to serve students,
students should be in roles that allow them to
monitor how the institution is being run. Dean Merle
refused to allow this student staff to continue even
though the salary of one of the lines is three-quarters
paid by. Work Study and I proposed the other line
could also be transferred to Work Study funding.
After eliminating student staff. Dean Merle then
proceeded to eliminate students. (2) He was not
going to permit acceptance of 136 applicants to our
department, in spite of the fact that 170 had
graduated during the summer. Instead, Dean Merle
made the decision to accept only 30 new students
for the year. In response to my protests that
students would not be able to graduate from this
school and that it was too late to transfer for the
Fall, I was told that we had no responsibility to the
student applicants. Some love affair!
(3) On July 17, I sent a memorandum to Dean
Merle documenting the effect his decision would
have on students and on the credibility of the
academic advisors and my office. Last February, our
new

department had put a freeze on accepting new
applicants. 1 had to find out how many were
graduating from our program by summer and how
many applicants were waiting to get in. This was to
make sure we could service all the students who were
waiting to get in. DUS advisors cooperated in
compiling this info. The results were that

approximately 150 of our majors were planning to
graduate at the end of the summer and
approximately ISO students would be applying to
the department. Based on this information, for the
past six months, prospective majors were advised
that there would probably be no problem in their
getting accepted to our program. I also documented
that “by leaving the administrative decision of ‘30
new majors’ and ‘no promises as to what happens a
year from now,’ you will place over 85 students in
the position of having ter find a new major or a new
school. Surely, none can transfer to a new school
this Fall, when they will not receive this info until
the last part of July.”
1 closed the memorandum with a proposal that

over the year would have admitted all present

applicants to our department and still have cut the
number of our majors by two-thirds in one year.
Dean Merle rejected the proposal. Students
obtained a copy of this proposal and petitioned the
dean to implement the proposal. Dean Merle then
wanted to know from me how students would have
obtained a copy of the proposal that I sent to him. I
told him I didn’t know but that 1 didn’t think it
would be too difficult since students had access to
anything I do in my administrative role. Dean Merle
then said he was holding me responsible for the
students’ actions and that he was withdrawing his
letter of July 13 in which he requested that I
continue in the Undergraduate Program

administrative role.
So, here we have a man who eliminates student
staff, student majors and a student oriented
administrator and he calls this a love affair with
students. I believe screwing people without their
consent is called rape, not a love affair.
C. Frederickson

£#

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A victim
(Name withheld for
fear ofreprisals)

Friday,

4 August 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

''

�RECORDS
Saint Dominic’s Preview Van Morrison (Warner Bros.)
To be frank, I had considered myself quite finished with the music
of Van Morrison when I heard Tupelo Honey. “Wild Night” was a great
song, sure, but after that, the album just fell flat on its face.
Moondance was simply a perfect album, and Van made the unfortunate
mistake of trying to re-enact that brilliance on Band and Street Choir
and Tupelo. The result was easy going and highly boring music that
never quite caught the spirit of songs like “Come Running,” “Caravan,”
or “Into the Mystic.” Living around Woodstock had mellowed Van out
a bit too much for my tastes.
He’s in California now, and Saint Dominic’s Preview shows a
definite movement back to excellence. The energy is back and this
album might be the best record of this long summer. The best points of
Moondance and its predecessor. Astral Weeks (another masterpiece) are
in evidence, with none of the surface starch and country whimsy.
There are four short songs and three long, enveloping works, and
they all are memorable. The Ip starts off with a tribute to Jackie
Wilson, which is to my mind a fine place to start. “Jackie Wilson Said
(I’m in Heaven When You Smile)” is a bouncing tune that begins at a
level that most songs never get to. Van’s word-slurring, a major feature
of his vocals, is perfect, especially on the word “Heaven
“Gypsy” is simply beautiful,
full of wedding ceremony
saxophones and vagabond
tambourines. It captures
completely the life and spirit of
the gypsy life, something with
which Morrison seems highly
enamored. “I Will Be There” is a
jazz-blues, with fine horns and
piano, arranged by Tom Salisbury
Nice big band sound
“Listen to the Lion’’ ends side
one. It’s a long, complex number
with Van growling in good form.
Percussion and vibes by Buffalo
lad Gary Mallaber help the song get that transcending sound
Side two has two long numbers, “Almost Independence Day” and
the title cut. Both have that airiness and softness of Astral Weeks, with
Ron Elliett dueling with Van an accoustic guitars on “Independence
Day.” Buffalo even gets mentioned on “Preview” (“it’s a long way to
Buffalo, it’s a long way to Belfast.”). Who could ask for more?
For Van Morrison latecomers, this album might seem like a big
letdown. But if you’re like me, and you hummed “Mystic Eyes” on the
way to school and “Brown Eyed Girl” on the way home, and had
grown weary of the country mellowphilia get this record. Your faith
will be restored.
”

‘Rare treat 9

Page eight. The Spectrum Friday,
.

UB was given a rare treat last Thursday night when
singers/songwriters John Prine (pictured above) and'
Randy Newman entertained. Prine managed to get
through broken strings and picks in both shows with
his funny stories and perceptive songs. Much like
Early Dylan in his playing and singing, he did many
of his well-known tunes like, “Your Flag Decal
Won't Get You into Heaven Anymore" and “Sam
Stone."
Randy Newman was his usual self, full of biting
sarcastic wit and beautifully constructed songs. After
doing his bomb song, "Political Science," he said
that ha "hoped there ware no Canadians in the area.
After all, they're less than ten mites away." Some of
the audience had difficulties in deciphering Randy's
comments, but everyone enjoyed his songs.

4 August 1972

,

Billy Altman

�RECORDS
Carney

Leon Russell (Shelter)

Leon Russell is tricky. Deep inside this master of hard rock, there

has always been an clcjnent of what record clubs call “easy listening.”
Songs like “Superstar” and “A Song For You” have been judged
musically wholesome enough to be performed (in castrated versions) by
soft pop stars like Andy Williams and Karen Carpenter. This element,
however, had always been contained within boundaries that were

tolerable to a hard rock purist. That is, until the release ofLeon’s third

solo album, Carney.
The album begins deceptively, with the one cut which would have
fit into previous work like Leon Ruxsell and the Shelter People, a song
called “Tight Rope.” Significantly, it is also the one song which is an
instant classic. Leon’s lovable voice croaks in its old, fine style
throughout the simple but perfect song, and the rhythm puts out three
minutes of solid joy.
But the rest of the album in no way exhibits the energy or soul of
The Shelter People. “Roller Derby” is written and arranged in exactly
the same style, but fails to even approximate the quality of the
previous group. Actually, the only
Shelter Persons who are missing
on this album are the vocal
back-up duo, Claudia Linnear and
Kathi McDonald. And, as could
have been expected, when Claudia
Linnear is missing, Claudia
Linnear is missing.
Their substitutes, “Phyllis and
Mary Anne,” can’t even be fairly
judged because the sound quality
of their track is so poor that the
best stereo equipment available
may possibly bring the tone up to

that of an old car radio. Further,
the rhythm section lacks their former spirit (possibly also the result of
poor engineering and mixing), and Leon’s vocal starts to lack the old
rough-edged dynamics.
The final blow is that the exciting “live in the studio” feeling of
The Shelter People is replaced with a definite “formal production”
quality. In the end, “Roller Derby” is a good cut, even though it could
have been a great cut. Many of the songs on Carney share these
problems to a greater or lesser extent.
But Leon goes even a few steps farther than this in at least one
song: “This Masquerade.” Rather than wait for The Carpenters to rip it
off, he presents us with a pre-castrated version. Except for the vocal,
the cut is indistinguishable from an Andy Williams record, and although
Leon’s voice doesn’t quite sound like Andy’s yet, the old Russellian
inflections have now totally disappeared.
Using rhythm, orchestration, and chord changes borrowed from
bossa nova (remember “The Girl from Ipanema”), the song attempts to
be
gasp lovely. And, I guess, it succeeds. But Russell purists will be
Ipst in the lovely flute and lovely accoustic bass lines and lovely string
—

-

section.
“Cajun Love Song” is a very familiar folk refrain that should have
been sung by the Beers Family in an Appalachian cabin. “Me and Baby

Jane” is an old hat “long lost childhood sweetheart” tearjerker that is
partially salvaged by the twist that the heroine is now a heroin addict.
Altogether, the songs are not nearly as well written as those on his
previous albums, neither musically nor lyrically.
The mere fact of his changing style on this album is not necessarily
a bad thing; it is the drop in quality of both songwriting and
production that may be criticized. Still, Camey is a very enjoyable
album indeed, and probably worth three and a half dollars. Apparently,
a genius like Leon Russell can even make a good bad album (like the
Beatles’ Let It Be, maybe). But no one can make a great bad album.
-Norm Wahl

BACK TO SCHOOL

MID-YEAR CLEARANCE

This is the one that reduces your collision
insurance rates 15% at Allstate.
Fuel Injection
Front Wheel Drive

4 Wheel Disc Brakes

,

Heated Driver Seat
Roll Cage Const.
R ea r Heat Ducts
Tinted Glass
Rear Window Defroster
Reclining
Front cSears
Folding Rear Seats
Bumpers Exceed 1972 Safety Regulations

John Cale: genius brought to
light in rawest musical talent
The Academy in Peril John Cale
(Warner Bros.)
John Ode’s history is one filled
with hard rock’n’roll and
classically
oriented
experimentations. After a long
stay with the Velvets, Cale went
on to produce records which are
present day classics.
Nico, another former Velvet,
has had a successful relationship
with Cale on two magnificent
albums, Desertshore and Marble
index, as well as having Cale’s
presence (and Lou Reed’s) on her
first album Chelsea Girl
(especially on the absolutely
frightening piece entitled “It was
a Pleasure Then”). Cale’s
production work is also displayed
on the new Jennifer album.
Yet, Gale’s individual influence
seems to go by unnoticed except

487 KENMORE AVE.

Oh* Mn.. WkI.. W. 'HI

-

-

-

-

-

-

-Joe Fembacher

all. He brings the rebel leader to justice and kills the
land baron who is determined to snuff out the
insurrection with hired killers.
This is not as simple as it sounds. What finally
happens is that Joe Kidd convinces Luis Chama, the
guerilla leader, to give himself up and fight the case
in court. But what we are really left with is the
image of Kidd, the “you must go through the
courts” liberal, shooting the land baron from where
he sits in the judge’s chair in the courtroom. A brutal
image if there ever was one. Quick and righteous
justice. Then, in the last scene of the film, just so
nobody feels Joe Kidd has become completely
respectable and socialized, he punches the sheriff
and rides off.

by Alex Cohen
Spectrum Staff Writer

John Sturges has made several good films: The
Old Man and The Sea, The Magnificent Seven, The
Great Escape, The Satan Bug. Knowing that, I was
expecting Joe Kidd to be a better than average
western. It isn’t. Another mistake was that I thought
the film would be in the tradition of Leone’s
spaghetti westerns: Clint Eastwood was starring, and
all the ads on television pointed in that direction
fast action, unbelievable gunfighting, and nameless,
almost mythic characters.
-

The good, the bad, and
Sturges himself seems to want us to think that
this film is a continuation of the Leone-East wood
Bounty Hunter With No Name Trilogy. We arc told
that Joe Kidd was once a bounty hunter, that he
hates the sheriff, and is unpredictable in his loyalties.
Joe Kidd will not only stand his own against any
man, but he also seems to have a cynical disdain for
...

Incredible
The contradictions are incredible. On one hand,
Kidd pisses on the legal system, and on the other, he
metes out “justice” from the judge's own chair. With
his own eyes he has seen the court throw out tht
Mexican-Americans’ case, and yet, somehow, he cat!
bring himself to convince Chama to go through the
same legal system he once desecrated.
The problem here is brought out by the fact
that Sturges does not continue or even mention what
eventually happened in the courts. We all know the
Mexican-Americans were screwed out of their land.
In fact, the battle is still going on today in New
Mexico.
Sturges must decide between a guerilla
movement which is obviously in the right as opposed
to that great American doctrine of going through the
courts. He knows the results of working in the legal
system, but it is impossible for him to side with a
guerilla movement so he leaves the film hanging and
Joe Kidd rides off unaware of the consequences of
his actions.

the legal system.

The setting of the film is also right out of
Leone. It is in the Southwest and there are a lot of
Mexican-Americans.
But Sturges is not Leone, and the film is not
a whitewashing of the
only poor, but a perversion
character which Leone created in Eastwood. One
gets the feeling that what Sturges is trying to do in
the film is to show us that Joe Kidd, the Man With
No Name, is really a respectable citizen despite all
outward appearances. Since this is basically
impossible to do, the film falls flat.
—

Contradiction
I don’t want to get into the plot too deeply. It’s
not that the plot is too complex, but because it’s not
really worth repeating. What is important to the film
are the basic contradictions which Sturges either
does not notice or simply refuses to deal with.
At the beginning of the film we leam that the
Mexican-Americans are fighting for their land rights
as documented in the old Spanish land grants. Joe
Kidd has been arrested for, among other things,
urinating on the courthouse steps. When the
Mexican-Americans lose their case in court, a group
of guerillas break into the courtroom, bum the
ranchers’ deeds, and take off to the mountains to
start an armed struggle for their land. At this point,
one would expect Joe Kidd to be on their side.
Instead, he takes the judge to safety and, because of
a personal feud, kills one of the guerillas. At least he
refuses to join the posse that is formed to hunt down
the rebel band.

Technique
I haven’t said anything about film technique so
far, because there isn’t much to say. The color is
pretty. Besides that, the action is slow, the dialogue
nothing to remember, and the camera work boring.
There is possibly only one shot in the whole film
worth mentioning.
One of the land baron’s hired gunmen is on a
roof shooting down and the American flag is waving
next to him. In almost any other film this shot might
have been worth discussing,' but in the context of
this film I think it was more of an accident than
anything else.
So if you feel like going out one night and
seeing a crummy movie go tee Joe Kidd. It’s playing
at the North Park with Play Misty For Me. If,
however, you want to see a good western in which
Clint Eastwood becomes Death Incarnate with a
6-gun, wait until one of the Leone films comes
around again.

Liberal gunman

In the course of the film, Kidd fluctuates from
side to side. What Sturges is trying to tell us is that
Kidd, although a misfit, if really a good man after

1

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.

836-2033

great AM single)
is called “The
It features Cale
playing an old style slide guitar
with those awe inspiring
orchestrations poured into it
creating an atmosphere of
the song
foreboding and evil
smells like an ancient castle
The other interesting cut
features Cale directing a television
crew as they are filming Cale
playing the viola Norman Mailer
rock’n’roll at last gasp!
Yet, the thrills of the album
come whpn Cale does his work
with a full orchestra to say the
least the effect is quite startling.
All in all this stands as the best
Cale work to date and betides I
give an 8S cause ya sure can get
funky to it.
Philosopher.”

‘Spaghetti bended

,

CHECKPOINT SALES
Advantageous European delivery for tourists

potential anyway (it would be a

9

.

.

for those whose knowledge of the
New York music scene can recall
his legendary performances with
the Velvets as well as his
experiments with killing plants
through screaming at them.
Cale is certainly a unique
musical talent. His viola and violin
work are exquisite. His genius
comes to full light, though, when
it is seen at its rawest, as in the
first album by the Stooges. This
record will stand as the most
important document of this era,
second only to the live Doors
album.
Yet, the rock’n’roll side of Cale
is also combined with his
classically oriented side. This
latter side is displayed on his new
release to staggering proportions.
The opening cut, and probably
the best cut on the Ip
the one
with the most commercial

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Friday, 4 August 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
.

.

�Epicurian reminiscences
of a mad hamburger eater
by Jay Boyar
Spectrum Staff Writer

You know those stories. The hamburger
joints are reported to serve horsemeat and
string. People say the meals at fish stands
include worm delights not offered on
menus. Pepperoni on pizza is said to be,
well, let’s drop it.
Whether or not the stories are true, they
should be disregarded. All they can do is
aggravate you and upset your stomach of
stomachs. Still, there are three specified
areas which food stand squires should
strive to improve; eye appeal, soulfulness
and stomach regard.
Under the first category are those
aspects that one sees upon entering the
establishment. Nobody would want to dine
at a raunchier-looking place than Frosty
Treat, cached away at the comer of Colvin

and Taunton. It has squatted there for the
past 14 years and it seems as if the same
outdoor tables have been there as long.
Saturated
Those tables are saturated with
scratched out grafitti from leg to counter.
It is not at all pleasant to have one’s french
fries resting upon “Daryle loves Christine”
as one sits on “King Farook ate here” (sic)
while one’s elbow covers “Taunton Street
Terrors.”

In addition to this, there are two signs
posted by the management place,” mind
you, but “a eating place.”
Few people like to be threatened while
they eat and so it is unfortunate to see
what is found at Pico’s at 3195 Bailey Ave.
A billboard poster in the parking lot
shouts, “20 Minute Parking For Rco
Customers Only... All Illegally Parked
Cars Will Be Towed Away.”

Although it can be a great pleasure to
drive in and park knowing that you are a
full-fledged customer and that your car is
parked according to regulations, it can get
to be quite a bother getting into your car
and driving it to another parking spot every
20 minutes.
I advise that you take advantage of
Kco’s delivery service. The cost is only
$.25 and it will avoid all that anxiety over
whether or not your 20 minutes will expire
before they can prepare your order.
We all recall affable Arthur Treacher,
Merv Griffin’s aloof Anglo-foil, and the sad

day a few years back when he took British
leave from Merv’s unintelligent talk-show.
Shortly thereafter, Arthur Treacher Fish
and Chip stands began popping up all over
the country, and when all the popping was
over, one of them found itself a home at
3382 Main St.
The strangest thing about the place is
that although Arthur Treacher is English,
and although “Fish and Chips” is an
English dish, the stand flies an American
flag proudly above its batter-spattered
tables. I won’t deny the fun of flag-flying,
but an American flag in this British
emporium is as incongruous as a fish out of
water. And, at the risk of telling tales out
of school, I have seen this flag flying at
night, which is clearly against all
regulations.
Soulfulness
The soul of a stand is the people who
run it, and that funky Frosty Treat is
owned and operated by one of the most
consistently courteous guys ever to broil a
burger. Bruce Benner, the owner, has a
unique, quiet manner as he speaks of how
he tries to second-guess the students that
patronize his place. ‘If they say ‘soda’ with
a New York accent, they don’t want a
soda, they want pop. You gotta try to pick
these things up.”
Ray Noell, manager of the Red Bam at
3380 Main St., is not quite as courteous as
Mr. Benner, but he has a zillion stories to
tell. The place had been robbed the night
before I visited it and frequently the
garbage bins are set ablaze. “Probably high
school kids do that. The kids at the college
are very nice.”
Fine and dandy, but I still wonder what
he tells the reporters from the high school
papers. And, if you really feel like talking
to someone while you eat, go to Deli-Place
at 3588 Main. Mr. and Mrs, Dolgoff who
have managed the Deli for the past 20
years have more stories than dill pickles. I
wouldn’t know how to begin to tell them
to you without using my hands.
Stomach regard (i.c., the food itself) is
probably the most important aspect of a
restaurant. No review would be complete
without a mention of McDonald’s. There is
not one among us who has not, at one time
or another, visited the golden arches,
partaken of the broiled bounties therein
and judged for himself the merits thereof.
Discussion will be limited, therefore, to the
newest addition to the McDonald’s menu:
ATTENTION
V.W. OWNERS

The Tripple Ripple
This ice cream concoction has won the
third runner-up award in my own personal
“Most Unlikely Names for Ice Cream
Treats Contest.” Second and first
runners-up are, respectively, the Buster and
Dilly Bars available only at Dairy Queen.
To be fair, it should be mentioned that
the Fribble and Junior Fribble, specialities
at the Friendly Ice Cream stands, were in
the running, but were disqualified when
confusion arose as to how they should be
pronounced. One waiter calls them
“Free-bees” while 1 cannot see how they
can be anything but “Frib-bulls.”
The hands-down winner of the contest
is the Sprinkle Dinkle dispensed solely at
Anderson’s on Sheridan Drive. Nothing is
funnier than ordering a Sprinkle Dinkle in
the correct manner. You saunter up to the
window, wait a second or two and say, “I
want a Sprinkle” as if “Sprinkle” were the
entire name for the treat. Then, after a
short pause, you say (as the movie
cowboys say, “dance” in the phrase
“dance, partner”) “Dinkle.” If timed
properly, this will elicit a smile from even
the most callous of soda jerks.

Deadly sigh
The specialties of the house at Pico’s are
pizza and submarine sandwiches. Since it is
impossible for me to make choices, I
compromised with a pizza burger
submarine sandwich. I knew it was all over

Thc SpccnpM

AN ECOLOGY EQPD
Engine need not be ANEMIC

when, upon hearing the order, the waitress
sighed.
She looked up at me with one of those
half-sad, half-apologetic faces that Stan
Laurel did so well and said, “Really sir, our
pizza is much better than thatV' Bravely, 1
clung to my original order. Let this be a
lesson to everyone: when the waitress
sighs, change your order.
Italian sausage at Frosty Treat is indeed
a treat. They use real link sausage, not
lousy patties, and the meal is cooked
order.
The realm of burgers is strange. The Red
Barn’s Big Barney and Bambuster are
better than McDonald’s Big Mac and
McDouble Burger due to better
organization of components (lettuce,
tomato and such), but the Burger King
beats them all with the Whopper. It is. We
won’t even discuss Longo’s Bigger Burger.
It isn’t.
I would like to continue, but behind
this mocking mask is the face of a man
enamoured of hamburger stands. They are
my life. The reason I wake up in the
morning. The reason I exist. How I would
like to relish each greasy fry, to articulate
artfully each pock-mark on the face of a
McDonald burger, to write elegies to the
Fish-a-ma-jig in iambic rhyme. How I
would like to continue forever, but the
stands are calling me again. Ronald, I hear
you. Tippy’s, how I yearn. I’m coming
home.

MM

CUflMD AO POOM

CM**

The Spectrum

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Page ten The Spectrum Friday, 4 August 1972
.

.

(5&lt; each additional word)

14203
TAR

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�BLUES!
Mr/

PLAYED 5 NIGHTS
A WEEK BY

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WYSl and WFhO

“SUMMER OF It
MUSIC FESTIVAL”
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JESSE
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In the Spirit

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(John Lennon's back-up group)

•

&amp;

HIS OUTLAWS

ADDED ATTRACTION
HIOHUOHTS of OAHOLADESH
MOVIE WIU be Shown
-

—

featuring—-

GOVERNOR’S

Harrison • Billy Freston
• Eric
Clapton
Russell
Bob Dylan All Tog Bodfinger
gether In One Great Movie I

e
•

George

lean

•

INN

SUNDAY, AUG. 6, 1972
et

MEMORIAL AUO, BefMe. M.Y.
Alt Seats Reserved

$4.00—$5.00—$6.00

621 Sycamore
854-9844
-

Hills ktoU:

.

-

NO COMPARISON
IN
WESTERN
NEW YORK!

mil

Bubo's —CMmmo; Fredonla Blks
Shoo; Rod TUB-***# Stuwrs Rflsd.
_

OR house In country for 6
people; will make repairs. Call Ina
691-7248.

FARM

THE SPECTRUM will ba published
Fridays during tha summer.
The
deadline for classified ads Ik Tuesday
by 4:30 p.m. Ads may ba placed In
355 Norton
The Spectrum office
Monday thru Friday, 9 a.m.—4:30 p.m.
—

2

Graduate Students
There will be a Graduate Student Association
Senate meeting on Monday, August 14, 72 at
7:30 p.m. in 337 Norton. All Senators, Alternates, and other graduate students are urged to
attend. Visitors are welcome.

Immediately.

FURNISHED room with a view
Kenmore. Large, two windows, a tree,
informal. Kitchen privileges. $60.
876-5893 or 836-0517.
—

HELP WANTED ads cannot
discriminate on any basis
(“preferably” Is discriminatory).

—

THREE-badroom apartment,

FOUND ads will be run free of charge
for a maximum of 2 days and 15
words.

$150 per
month, deposit, flva-mlnute drive to
campus. Main—Fillmore area. Available
Sept. 11th. 838-4912.

WANTED

Available Aug. 1st.
1W&gt; miles from U.B.
Suitable for 4 students or faculty.
Centrally air-condltlonad. 3 badrms.
lower flat. Carpeted and draped. LR,
OR, kitchen'with dishwasher,
refrigerator, self-cleaning oven. Will
rant furnished or unfurnished. $300
par mo. Utilities not Included. Security
deposit In advance. Two&lt; year lease
required. Call Mrs. Schralber 875-3612
for appt.
FOR

SENIOR medical student to help In
program and slide
research
examination, $3 per hour, 8 to 10 hrs.
wkly. Phone after five on Saturday.
TR3-6310.
REFRIGERATOR needed, Cheap and
In good condition. Call 632-6767 after
6 p.m.

FOR SALE
'63 engine;
’61 MERCURY Comet
automatic; snow tires; new battery and
mechanically
perfect.
Bast
ball Joints;

money?
August.

offer. 835-7995

GRAPHICS now being accepted for
Fall Issue of Earth’s Daughters
a
feminist periodical of the arts. Black
and white wbrks preferable. Call
883-5189 or visit 350 Unwood.

MOVING
TV, rugs,
837-9853.

—

MODELS

needed

for
—

adult
Box 659,

OVERSEAS
JOBS for students
Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa,
etc. All professions and occupations,
$700 to $3000 monthly. Expenses
paid,
overtime, sightseeing. Free
JOBS
Information
write:
OVERSEAS. Dept. E5. P.O. Box
Calif.
92115.
Diego,
15071, San
ADDRESSERS needed. Homeworkers
earn to $150. For Information, sand
$.25 and stamp addressed envelope to
Box 12213, Gainesville, Fla. 32601.
NELSON Graves and Trum Rittllng to
palnt-EmpIre State Building. Extension
ladder provided. All expenses paid

DAILY RIDE needed to Lf.B. from
W. Ferry—Dele were (or "Elmwood) erea.
Leaving around 8 a.m. and returning
around 5 p.m. Call 881-3286 evenings.

“I

Greece.

Possession, minimum
2 years in jail. Trafficking, maximum
10 years plus fine
U S. Embassy:
91 Vasilissis Sophia s Blvd
Athens, Greece
Tel. 712951

|
|

|

possession.

I

L

BECOME A REGULAR BLOOD DONOR NOW!
IMPORTANT

*

IMPORTANT

*

IMPORTANT

AH donors MUSTsign up or call to volunteer BEFORE August 7th.

PLEASE sign up at205 Norton Hall or call831-5508 to register.
PLEASE HELP-HELP HER!
Volunteer workers are needed-help out for an hour or two!
AUGUST 7th FILLMORE ROOM
-

classic guitars; banjos. Flna
hand-mada Instrumants.
Martin, Gibson, Qurlan,
Qallaghar, Eagla, Oma, ate. Tradas
Invltad. Tha String Shop pa, 924
Ontario, Buffalo. Hours 7-9 p.ih. dally.
Saturday 12-9 p.m. 874-0120.

FOLK,

factory and

Guild,

GUITAR amp $79, good starao, $29.
Call Larry 833-0979.

PERSONAL
MARY FRACES SMITH: Happy
Birthday! (a faw days lata). Vou'ra not
you’ra gattlng bat tar.
patting oldar
—

Maka

ATTENTION;

nota

of

tha

Ernla and Mary Smith
following
accompanlad by offspring will ba In
Buffalo tha waakand of August 11th.
—

YOUR worries are over
cell The
Insurance Guidance Center for your
lowest available rate on auto and cycle
Insurance. $37-2278 1 after 5 p.m.
839-0566.
—

QUTSYI
Join The Spectrum.
Openings for writers, photographers,
artists and reviewers. No experience
necessary. Sea Jeff Qraanwald In 355
Norton, extension 831-4113.

BE

&amp;

FOUND

SMALL bureau drawer found on Main
St. near Lisbon. Call 837-8554.

MISCELLANEOUS

air cond., power st.,
•71 VALIANT
disc br., aut. trans., 10,000 miles,
(Blue Book)
than
2525
new,
batter
2195. Free sno tires, AM-FM.
330
Leaving for England lata August. Call
831-1238.
—

—

•

VOLKSWAGON Bus
1970.
Excellent condition. Good rubber, 1
owner. 37,000 miles. Call 886-2436.
—

wire wheels,
MGB-GT 1969 yellow
new rubber and batteries. Clean. Low
mileage. Call 832-1613/831-2511.

sophomore wants
NIGERIAN
pen-pals: Victor Izegbu, c/o Ministry
of Justice, Banin City, Nigeria.

MOTHER with ten-month old child Is
willing to babysit In your or my home.
Call 835-1827.
SCHOOL
an alternative
needs volunteer staff for
Afro-American
secondary group
German,
history, drama, French,
836-0360
for Interview.
librarian. Call
CAUSE
school

—

—

—

■

U.B. area
HOUSE FOR SALE
Flower St.; perfect for couple or small
family; 2 bedrooms, bathroom 2nd
floor; LR, DR. kitchen 1st floor;
maintenance-free Insulbrlck siding; low
taxes; excellent structural condition;
needs redecorating; very economical,
comfortable living In slightly ugly
house; asking $12,000; owner. Call
835-8112.
—

—

CERTAINLY Ice Cream Is now haral
PROFESSIONAL
dissertations,
manuscripts.

typing, business or

papers, theses,
briefs, resumes,
Call 937-6050.

term

personal,

legal

TYPING, experienced, near U.B. 8.40
per page. 834-3370. Fast service.
experienced
TYPING
IBM
Selectric. $.50/page. Call 838-4808.
—

—

EXPERIENCED typist
business or
Term papers, theses, etc.
Elmwood location. Call
Sheridan
877-5234 after 5 p.m.
—

26 Inch; good
condition; »25. Call 837-1735. Leaving
Bu*. soon.

personal.

top
GT 500
SHELBY 1969 Cobra
condition. Best offer. 10 a.m.—6 p.m.
853-2052.

TYPING
dissertations, theses, terrji
papers. Professionally dona by former
ownar/oparater of a professional
typing service. Call 833-1521.

BIKE

—

3-speed,

—

—

Good
offer.

194 1 CHEVROLET coupe.
condition, *500 or best
837-2935.

'68 BUG. AM radio, needs work on 1
tail-light to pass Inspection. *750 or
bast offer. Call 691-6115 after 6 p.m.
12-strlng

—

—

NATIVE Frenchman, experienced
tutor, willing to give French lessons.
632-6767 and leave message.

APARTMENTS WANTED
WANTED: Three-bedroom apartment
wanted within walking distance of UB
for Sect. 1. Call Frelda at 833-7760,
Susie at 834-1993, or Myrna at
833-5246.

—

J

New addition to our menu!

CHICKEN

WINGS
celery &amp; blue cheese
dressing$1.50 reg. $2.00 large

HIO-. M.

—

—

electric guitar
body) with dual pick-up.
(hollow
Excellent condition. Includes case.
$150
or bast offer. Challenger
amplifier (33-watt, PA amp.)
*30 or
best offer. Olson, 12-inch speaker, $10.
or
bast
offer.
three
for
cash
All
*175
Call 837-6724 anytime after 1 p.m.

sentence

I

MU

—

3-spaad, good condition, must
cheap! 882-9289. Keep trying.

HAGSTROM

or fine. Trafficking.
maximum 3 years plus fine
U.S. Embassy:
Mehlemer Avenue
53 Bonn-Bad Godeberg
Bonn. Germany
Tel. 02229-1955

I

axeallant condition.

attar 9 p.m. h
MUST SELL, 1970 Harlay—Davidson
Sprint
chaap, $970 or
390 c.c.
bast offar. Excallant condition. Also a
FuJIca SLR with 90 mm F14 and
Takamar Flshaya. Call Larry at
836-8008.

LOST
excellent
open for

—

—&gt;

Germany,

NEEDS

chairs. Call

bike,

drapes,

1969 Mustang Fastback. Dark green,
sell

NEED MONEY? Sell advertising for
The Spectrum. 15% commission on all
ads. Contact Jeff Reiman or Susan
831-4113. No experience
Hory at
necessary but transportation helpful.

FOR

BLOO

must sell stove, rafrig.,

—

HONDA 1971 CB 450
condition. Asking 8900
negotiations. 838-1911.

photography. Excellent pay. Discretion

assured. More Information
Buffalo, N.Y. 14205.

—

91900. Call Janat 834-7929

-

—

f

HER

RENT

Englewood Ave.

RIDE BOARD

SHE DEPENDS ON YOU

ROOMMATES wanted. Available

Fully
furnished. Call
834-2158. 5 minutes from campus.

THE STUDENT rates for classified ads
are: $1.25 for the first IS words; $.05
for every additional word.

GOING AWAY and/or need
I'll pay for use of car during
Call 873-6290.

1971 VW Bug
Asking

—

APARTMENT FOR RENT

—

ARTIST wanted to design posters for
rock
concerts. Write Campus
Productions, 617 Tacoma Ave.,
Buffalo 14216.

'

KMDREO
sal Spwial fi«Mt
BILLY FRESTOB

•

Including breakfast at Tiffany's.

AD INFORMATION

(please allow 15 min. or call
ahead for fast service).

Never Brfort Available
In This Area
Now IP/
homs cmowtC

ONE MALE and one female need own
in apt. near campus for Sept.
837-1241, 5 p.m.' —7 p.m. Audrle.

rooms

CHOI
BOK
(Chinese Cabfcaf)

Considered The Choicest
Of Leafy Vegetables
In Aala
Great In Salads
In Chinese Cooking
Now
We Have Fresh
.SNOW PEA PODS
ItMAN 8PEOUT8
•
•

...

Many Other Pins

f

,

IT

'

J 1

—

»

1

wlf
m

ROOMMATES WANTED
THREE males need roommate for own
room In Mg house. 845 plus utilities.
838-3192; i.

,,

*

Feeds

—

I

.

TSUJIMOTO
Foods
Gifts

Oriental Arts

seeking 2 or
TWO FEMALES
flat or apartment
3-bedroom
preferably In U.B. area before Sept.
1st. Call 831-4113 before 5 p.m. or
838-2673 after 5.

&lt;

...

;

§1

CLASSIFIES

\

m

CERTAINLY ICE CREAM
isherel
Across the street from Goodyear
Hall-next to Deli Place.
OPEN 12 noon to 12 midnitfitl

\

—

Use Your Master e BenkAmertcard
A Empire Card
DAILY It to* Bern. Ito •

8KM\

&lt;

—

,EGE TEXTS

IONAL BOO
DENTAL

•

TIPPY’S

TACO HOUSE
23S1 Sheridan Dr.
(acrom ftom putt putt golf)

—838-3900—.

nm,

MM Mata It.
Friday, 4 August

=5~

1972 The Spectrum
.

.

Page eleven

�beginning classes In exercise and meditation
Yop classes
are held every evening at 7 p.m. at the Ashram on 196 Linwood
Ave. Classes are also held on Mondays and Wednesdays on campus
at 4 p.m. in Room 344 Norton. For further information, call
—

Psychomat 1$ taking place on Wednesdays, 7—10 p.m., not
Thursdays as It sullies in the Summer Activities booklet.

Student

Association is sponsoring Red Cross Blood donations

on August 7 In the FHImore Room. Please sign up In the Student
Association office (Room 205 Norton) before August 7.
Volunteers are also needed to be present on August 1 to help with
the drive.
Draft Counselors from the Draft Counseling Center of
Buffalo wilt be available on campus Tuesdays from 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. in Room 260 Norton. Mon with lottery numbers 1-100 are
urged to come. (This Is a Student Association/GSA sponsored
service to students.)

tickets, call 885-4187.
A paper drive is being held in front of Amherst High School
this Saturday and Sunday, August 5 and 6, all day.
,

An interdisciplinary credit-free course in Environmental
Education and Environmental Awareness Is being offered this fall
to all elementary dnd high school educators, and education
students In the Buffalo area. This course is sponsored by the
School of Architecture and Environmental Design in conjunction
with the American Association of Collegiate Schools of
Architecture. Enrollment Is open for the fall term. If interested,
contact Margaret. Goglia or Dan Shimberg, 882-6200 days or
837-16JLZevenings. There will be no tuition charge for this course.

Shaw Festival

Thru Sept 2: Getting Married (sold out)
Thru Sept. 10: Misalliance
August 5-9: Concerts

881-0505.
folk or blues to play for nothing at
Musicians are needed
August
on
20. If Interested, cill Wayne at
a concert to be held
£62-3347 or 662-5808 after 5 p.m.
-

-

UUAB Arts Committee presents an art exhibition with works
by Al Hollingsworth starting Monday, August 7 in Room 219
Norton. The gallery hours are 11 ajn. to 5 p.m., Monday Friday
and 2-5 p.m. on Sunday. There will be an opening reception on
Monday, August 7 In Gallery 219,8-10 p.m. All are Invited.
-

-

The Black Drama Workshop will be presenting Games starting
Friday, August 11 at Studio Arena Theater, 681 Main St. For

Available at the Ticket Office

Anyone wishing to form a Science Fiction Club next year,
please contact Orlando Soto at 214 South Goodyear.

There will be additional swimming hours on Sundays
Faculty,staff and family, 2-3 p.m. and students, 3-5 p.m.
India Student Association and the Office of Cultural Affairs
co-sponsor Mera Noam Joker, a production of Raj Kapoor. This
presentation is a part of India’s 25th Independence Day
celebrations. The movie consists of two independent parts.
Showings are as follows: Friday, August 4 at 7:30 p.m. in Acheson
5, Part I only. On Saturday, August 5 in Diefendorf 147 at 6 p.m.,
Part I and at 8:30 p.m.. Part II. Admission will be charged.

Backpage

Melody Fair
Thru August 5: Mitzi Gay nor
August 7—12; Promises, Promises
August 14-19: 1776
August 21—26: Sergio Franchl and Corbett Monica
August 28 Sept. 2: Cabaret
-

Chautauqua
Opera and Theater
amphitheater specials.

—

ask for brochure for symphony and

American Contemporary Theater
The Unnomable
Canadian National Exhibition
Tattoo
August 17-20: Scottish World Festival
August 21: Ray Price
August 22: Des O’Connor
August 24: Anne Murray
August 25-27: Circus International
August 28-29: Engelbert Humperdinck
August 30: Merle Haggard
August 31: The Guess Who
Sept. 1: David Cassidy
Sept. 2: Sonny &amp; Cher
Sept. 3; National Trumpet Band Competition
Popular Concerts
August 4—5: Harmony Music Festival (B)
August 6: The Grassroots (MF)
August 6: Badfinger and Cactus (M)
August 13: Chicago (M)
August 20: Pete Fountain (MF)
August 15—20: fesus Christ Superstar (K)
Sept. 3: A Change of Season
Lester, N.Y. starring Deep
Purple, Fleetwood Mac, Ginger Baker, Buddy Miles, Nazareth,
\
Elves, Silverhead.
—

KEY
B
Bennett All-High Stadium

V,

/

—

K
M

—

—

MF

Kleinhans
Memorial Auditorium
—

Melody Fair

What’s Happening
Friday, August 4

Film: Take The Money and Run, starring Woody Allen in
Check Theater
the Norton Conference Theater.
Showcase for times.
Films: Turkslb (1929) directed by Turin at 7 p.m., The
Ghost That Never Returns (1929) directed by Room at
8:30 p.m., The Rain (1929) directed by Ivens at 9:45
p.m.. The Man with the Movie Camera (1929) directed
by Vertov, The Wonder Ring (1955) directed by
Brakhage and A/.Vi, N.Y. (1957) directed by Thompson
at 11 p.m. in 140Capen.
Saturday, August 5

Film: Take The Money and Run in the Norton Conference
f
Theater.
Sunday, August 6
Play: The Clowns, i performance for children, sponsored by
the Member's Council of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
on the Gallery steps at 2:30 p.m.
Film: Take The Money and Run in the Norton Conference

Theater.
Monday, August 7

Films: flour of the Wolf (1968) directed by Bergman at 7
p.m. and Red Desert (1964) directed by Antonioni at 9
p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
■

-

Tuesday, August 8

Film: The Man with the Movie Camera (1929) directed by
Vertov at 7 and 9 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Summer Film Institute: Screening and discussion of Sean
and Natural Habitat with Ralph Arlyck, documentary
filmmaker at 8:30 p.m. In 147 Diefendorf.
.

Wednesday, August 9

WBCE—FM:

Forum at 9:05 p.m. Bernard
of English at Kent State
University discusses US's Joyce collection and the
Summer Program in Modern Literature.
Films: Ritual (1969) directed by Bergman at 7 p.m. and
Vivre Sa Vie (1962) directed by Godard at 9 p.m. in
147 Diefendorf.
UB

Bernstock,

Thursday,

Arts

professor

August*10

Films: See You at Mao (1969) directed by Godard at 7
p.m., Pravdo (1969) directed by Godard at 8 p.m. and
FHm (1972) directed by Benson, Ferullo at 9 p.m. in

147 Diefendorf.

-E.G. Miller-Smith

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Discotheque’s problems
demand
resolution
“Illegalities and irregularities have occurred
There are
definite problems,” declared Carol Raynor, Norton Hall
House Council Chairman, m she commented upon the maze
of difficulties that have accompanied weekly discotheques
held by the Black Arts Gu3d (BAG).
..

Although BAG is not a
recognized student group, it has
conducted dances on Friday and
Saturday evenings in the Fillmore

Room

under the official
sponsorship of the Black Student
Union and the
Association’s office for Minority
Student affairs. The dances, which
most admit are quite successful
and worthy, are designed,
according to Ernie Smith, a
former BAG member, as
entertainment with “a total black

The Spectrum

.

dances have either been
break-even or losing propositions.
Contributing to problems with
dances is $366 worth of damage
to the building that occurred on
the night of one function. To try
to resolve these problems, an
administrative meeting with
representatives from BAG, Norton
House Council, Norton Hall Staff,
Sub Board I, and BSU was held
last Tuesday.
Cooling-off

perspective.”

Bob Henderson, Associate
Director of Norton Hall, described
the meeting as “a gathering and
sharing of information pertaining
on and that is good.” However, to income generating activities.”
problems have developed that
Ms. Raynor reported that she
threaten the continuance of these
suggested a “cooling off period,”
weekly affairs that attract from in
which no more dances would
participants
1,000
800 to
be held until the “problems were
talked about very seriously.”
Compelling reasons
However, according to Mr.
Ms. Raynor explained: “There
are too many compelling reasons Henderson, he wouldn’t be
that have to be resolved before surprised if two dances were held
this weekend to help pay off BAG
the dances should be allowed.” At
last Monday’s Sub Board I, Inc, debts owed to both outside
meeting, she reported that one of organizations and Norton Hall. If
the biggest problems is that BAG the dances were conducted, he
does not have recognition by the reported that university guidelines
SA
as an undergraduate for financial accountability would

Mr. Smith continued that the
dances represent “the first time
that a black function has caught

Vol. 23. No. 8

State University of New York at Buffalo

Social Welfare

School sets thirty student limit
by Ian C. DeWaal

required, in any case, in order to find employment in

Campus Editor
An administrative decision by the new dean of
the School of Social Policy and Community Services
to limit the number of majors that will be allowed to
enter the school this coming year has caused much
alarm within that school.
This decision by Sherman Merle, dean of the
School, has additionally triggered a debate
concerning the right of the dean to make such a
decision and to what extent the faculty-student
legislature of the school should have been consulted.
Dr. Merle, who assumed his position July 1,
made the decision to limit acceptance of new majors
to 30 students for the upcoming year because “it
was apparent to me that the undergraduate program
per se had not had a careful deliberative review for
some time. The program had mushroomed in the last
couple of years; we had to slow the machine down a
bit in order to do a total review.”
“In my frame of reference, our primary

responsibility

is in providing a quality program,”

continued Dr. Merle. “In the long run it is in the best
interest of students to know where the program is
going. It seemed to me, on the face of it, that we
could not adequately offer an undergraduate
program to more than 250 students.”

organization.

have to be met.

A cushion

According to her, the Black
Arts Guild has not followed
established procedures as checking
proof of age at the door (beer is
sold) or. following the rules
pertaining to income generating

He also said that some type of
bond would “most likely be
posted.” It was the concern of
many that “special” procedures

The School currently has 210 declared majors.
The addition of 30 newcomers would raise the total
to 240, leaving a cushion of ten spaces for pressing
cases. Approximately 170 students graduated from
the School last year. Until that point, the total
enrollment in the undergraduate program was about

activities. “We have,” she said,
“no idea where the money is
going.” She was referring to any
profits that might be earned from
the $1.50 admissions charge.
At one time, BAG members
reported that donations would be
made to the Sickle Cell Anemia
Research Foundation. However,
Mr. Smith reported that no such
donation was possible because the

are being applied that are not
normally

employed.

Mr.

Henderson

admitted that this
might appear true, but that new
guidelines are now in effect that
have to be followed. “Time will
be the gauge,” he said, “to
determine if we are making special
provisions or if the procedures
will be employed for all
organizations.” It was his opinion
that precedents are being set that
will be adhered to in the future.

Jarvis Tyner

Jarvis Tyner, vice-presidential
candidate of the Communist
Party, spoke before a rather
receptive crowd of about 40 last
Monday in Norton Hall. One
reason the crowd was so receptive
was the barring of a handful of
members of the National Caucus
of Labor Committees due to what
one Communist Party member
termed ‘irreconcilable political

the field. I don’t think many seniors will be
affected."
These points were strongly refuted by Ms.
Fredrickson. “It is as easy as any social science in the
sense that if people’s heads are into it, they can
easily say the concepts make sense,” she retorted.
“We take students who are interested," noted
Ms. Fredrickson concerning departmental
admissions. “We don’t make artificial barriers. Our
admission standard has been the same as that of the
University: a 2.0.” Ms. Fredrickson also took
exception to an allegation by Dr. Ebert that the
School’s undergraduate program had grown
relatively fast. “The number of students isn’t
different. As more students wanted to be majors, we
lessened the amount that could take the courses as
electives.”

Not so
Ms. O’Brien also found fault with

Dr. Ebert’s

statements. “I can’t recall a student going into the
program saying it was easy,” said Ms. O’Brien. “They
go into it because of interest
social concern, and
—

sincere interest.”
Dr. Merle was more cautious in commenting on
the remarks of Dr. Ebert. He noted that there “has
been communication of an open kind between Dr.

380.
Constance

W.

Fredrickson,

director

of

undergraduate programs for the School, had
originally asked for a freeze on majors last semester.
“I recognized that if we kept accepting students,”
explained Ms. Fredrickson, “we would need
additional funding for undergraduates. That is not
my decision to make.”
Objections to the dean’s actions arose when a
recommendation by Ms. Fredrickson to limit new
acceptances by the undergraduate program to 100
next year, was overruled on July 10 by the dean, in
favor of his 30 student limit. Margaret O’Brien, an
advisor for the Divison of Undergraduate Studies
(DUS), outlined the possible problems.
“The advisors are concerned about the situation
in terms of having told the students something and
then it being changed,” explained Ms. O’Brien. “We
have been giving students the impression that those
who have junior status would get in. In addition we
have transfer students coming whose initial school
didn’t have the program. It doesn’t say much for our

credibility.”

—bv

Friday, 28 July 1972

More worries
In addition to the concerns that students who
had planned to major in the School would not now
be able to do so, members of the School expressed
fears that the School’s bylaws may have been
irreparably undermined. The bylaws state that all
policy
decisions shall be submitted to the
faculty-student house for consideration. The
decision by Dr. Merle to limit the number of
undergraduate students was termed an administrative
decision and consequently not submitted to the
legislature of the School for consideration.
“My thought is that 1 cleared it with the people
I needed to,” stated Dr. Merle. “It was represented
to me as being in the realm of the executive of the
School to decide the size of the school and
allocation of resources. 1 thought, comfortably, that
it was in my administrative perogative to decide the
adequateness of the academic program.”

In defense

Charles

V. Ebert,

dean of the Divison of

Undergraduate Studies, acknowledged that he had
been contacted by the DUS advisors concerning the
problems of reducing the undergraduate program,

however, he defended the actions of Dr. Merle. “I
have a feeling that the undergraduate program was
inflated,” stated Dr. Ebert.
“It is my understanding that it was a relatively
easy program and that many people ended up there.
It is my understanding that a graduate degree is

—Ost*rr«lch«r

Sherman Merle
Ebert and myself. 1 don’t know how much substance
there is behind the feelings expressed by Dr. Ebert,”
continued Dr. Merle, “I am not refuting them. I need
an opportunity to collect hard data to come to grips
with those beliefs.” Last year, at one time, rumors
cropped up that the School was about to lose its
accreditation.
“We are putting it all together, not losing sight

of the fact that this affects what is primary on
campus: the student,” explained Dr. Merle. “We
would be acting more responsible to see where we
are going and what we are providing for students.”
Dr. Merle indicated that the 30 student limit is
not a hard figure, but that in addition to the
previously mentioned ten place cushion, students
who graduate or leave the program during the fall
semester will be replaced on a one to one basis in
January. “I am going to try within the limits of my
ability to help all students,” emphasized Dr. Merle.
Alternatives have been suggested for students
who are refused admittance. One would be the
development of an ad-hoc major program. In
addition, Dr. Ebert revealed that his proposal to
create Faculty-wide majors is stalled in the
Educational Planning and Policy Committee of the
Faculty Senate and were it to be approved, students
could receive a degree from the Faculty of Social
Science and Administration.
“I’m not looking for the easy way out,”
concluded Dr. Merle. “I didn’t want to take the easy
way out. I did care. I cared about the size of the
department. If you do it slowly [reduce the size],
it’s not going to be easy either. This dean has a
commitment to students. In this commitment is a
- commitment to top quality education. I have a long
and deep love affair with students and I’m
,;
committed to it.”
'

,

�Conference will cover
Higher Education

contracting procedures
throughout the state. An alternate
plan would see a SASU “rider
clause” included in Union Board
contracts containing all the
necessary clauses providing
protection for the Union Boards
involved.
&amp;
the same time, a SASU
committee on student rights will
hold its initial meeting. The
formulation of a “Student Bill of
Rights” will be a prime topic of
concern. This document would be
designed for incorporation into
individual student body
constitutions.

issues in Higher
Education, Union Board
contracting procedures and the
drafting of a student bill of rights
will confront participants in a
conference currently being
sponsored by the Student
Association of the State
University of New York (SASU).
The four-day state-wide
conference which began yesterday
is being held in Norton Hall.
Representatives of the
Department of Higher Education
at the State University of Buffalo
will lead the seminars in their
respective field. Walter Hobbs,
Department of Higher Education,
conducted the first seminar
Current

—Ostarrelchar

What was supposed to be a heated ideological debate
turned into no more than a mild exchange of ideas
last week, as Harold Segal, Department of Biology
(right), met with Robert Dillon (center) of the
National Caucus of Labor Committees to discuss the
concept of zero population growth.

Deflated debate
Zero-growth debate?

Man held to control future
by Mike Feely
Spectrum Staff Writer

Representatives of the National Caucus of Labor
Committees (NCLC) and Harold Segal, Department
of Biology, met last Thursday night in what was to
have been a debate on the issue of zero population
growth (ZPG).

The Labor Committee has attacked Dr. Segal in
the past as being a proponent of ZPG, the
controlling of the reproductive rate so as to protect
our present environment and conserve “shrinking”
natural resources.

Mr. Dillon agreed with most of what Dr. Segal
energy
human
human

had said, but stressed that, since the present
and environmental crises are a result of
technology, they must be solved through
technology. However, ZPG proponents, he

noted,
see man as an “animal,” incapable of controlling
nature or remedying his own weaknesses. They have,
he said, “an inhuman view of human nature.”

Concern is present
Optimal population, Mr. Dillon maintained, is a
long way off and our main concern now must be the
conditions for development of society. Contrary to
ZPG beliefs, he asserted, fertility rates have declined,
not due to-abqrtiens and birth control, but because
“people see no way to raise their children in a

The opposing parties, however, discovered that
Segal did not sympathize with the .ZPG
movement, but rather that he and the NtLC’s'
Robert Dillon agreed on several basic points. Both
manner they see fit.”
Dr. Segal and Mr. Dillon recognized that desperate
The solution to our present problems, Mr.
energy depletions and ecological problems do exist.
Dillon concluded, lies in action through technology
However, they held that these problems can be by a unified working force. “Our point of
overcome through technological research.
intervention in nature,” he held, “lies in human
Dr.

Resource people from the
State University of Buffalo will
make their expertise available to
both committees. Ron Stein from
the Office of Student Affairs and
Norm Effman, an attorney
retained by the Student
Association, will participate in the
discussions on student rights.

yesterday.

Topics that were considered
yesterday include, “What learning
for whom;” “Philosophy of
Higher Education;” “Who should
participate in university
governance;” ‘The law and Higher
Education;” “Financing of Higher
Education;” and “Tenure.”
Additional participants in today’s
sessions include J. Bruce Francis,
Department of Higher Education
and Peter F. Regan, Department
of Psychiatry.

Sol Davidson of the Norton
Ticket Office, Ann Hicks and
Conni Burnham of the Norton
Hall staff, Walter Benke, chairman
of UUAB and Richard Lippe, an
attorney retained by SASU, will
attend the committee meeting on
Union Board contracts.

First meetings

The seminars' will be open to
all interested students. The session
will commence at 9:30 a.m. on
Friday
and tomorrow at noon
Union Board contracting
with
room
numbers available at
procedures, will discuss the
the
Norton
Hall
information desk.
possible standardization of

Tomorrow,, two SASU
committees will hold their first
meetings. The first, concerning

SHE DEPENDS ON YOU

interaction.”

Sources remain
Dr. Segal, speaking first, cited “limitless”
sources of energy such as deuterium from the ocean
floor and solor energy which, as yet, have not been

explored in great detail. Because of the existence of
these sources, he maintained, “no valid reason for an
energy shortage exists.”
Dr. Segal also asserted that optimal population,
the basic doctrine of the ZPG movement, “is not the
critical problem it is made out to be” and that
“people have the right to control their own
reproductive rate.”

YOU DESERVE

ALLTHE
BRAKESYOU
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disc
All our Volvos have

•

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•

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HER

Mr. Dillon, however, accused Sen. McGovern of
a “false populist
notion” that our
problems can be solved by distribution of the
wealth. This, he said, will only create “uniform
misery;” what is needed, he asserted, is development.
setting up

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Both parties were asked whether they approved
of the economic policies of Sen. George McGovern
as a reasonable solution to present social problems.
Dr. Segal responded that he felt the Democratic
presidential candidate’s policies were a “useful
option” toward future progress.

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The Spectrum is published once a
week on Fridays, ten times during
the summer academic sessions by
Sub Board 1, Inc. Offices are
located at 355 Norton Hall, State

University of New York at Buffalo,

3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New
York,
14214. Telephone: Area
Code 716; Editorial 831-4113; Business 831-3610.

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Osculation: 10,000

-

-

Page two. The Spectrum Friday, 28 July 1972
.

u

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BECOME A REGULAR BLOOD DONOR NOW!
IMPORTANT

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AH donors MUSTsign up or call to volunteer BEFORE August 7th.

PLEASE sign up at205 Norton Hall or call831-5508 to register.
PLEASE HELP-HELP HER!
AUGUST 7th

FILLMORE ROOM

-

��re

Spaghetti dinner

hare incense and

Fundingfi r proposed hospital
ion League is
t to raise money

for Vietnamese
7 p.m. at the
Elmwood.
:al, named the
Ngyen Van Troi Childrens Hospital after the South
Vietnamese electrical worker and “liberation
fighter," will help repair the broken bodies and lives
of the Vietnamese children. These children have
been among the hardest hit by the war in Vietnam as
victims of the B-52 bombings which destroy their
kindergartens, nurseries and schools. Many are
burned and mutilated by napalm.
Life expectancy in Vietnam is approximately 35
years. Infant mortality is about 255 per 1000 births,
and half of the children bom die before reaching the
age of five. Cholera has increased 100%, reportedly
due largely to U.S. bomb craters which are breeding
grounds for mosquitoes. Malaria has reached
epidemic proportions; smallpox and polio are
it

ft^rai.*S&gt; Uou

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*•»_

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$500,000 goal

BLUES!

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PLAYED 5 NIGHTS
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This project is being sponsored by the World
Federation of Democratic Youth, an international
youth organization claiming representation of over
200 million young people, including such
organizations as the Young Workers Liberation

League which has

branch locally. The goal of

|

$500,000 has been set to build the hospital; in the

U.S., the goal is $50,000.
The Young Workers Liberation League is
kicking off the fund raising drive in Buffalo with this
dinner. The local fund raising committee, the U.S.
Hospital Committee, has demanded: 1) the
immediate and total withdrawal of all U.S. forces
and equipment from Vietnam and Indochina, and 2)
the withdrawal of all U.S. aid and support to the
Thieu government.
The dinner costs $1.50, or $1.00 for
unemployed. There will be a film or slide
presentation, and further information concerning the
committee’s activities.
All proceeds from the dinner will go to the U.S.
Hospital Committee, which will forward the money
to the hospital’s bank account.
Other activities for fund raising will be
announced, and all concerned individuals and groups
are invited to attend.
Once the $500,000 has been collected,
international work teams will go to Vietnam to build
the hospital at its site in Hanoi.
For more information about the dinner or the
committee’s work, call 886-7121. Send
contributions to: U.S. Hospital Committee, P. O.
Box 600, Ellicott Street Station, Buffalo, New York

14205.

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-

Friday, 28 July 1972 The Spectrum Page three
.

.

��EdlTORIAl
Mish mash

The pattern of events in any situation involving blacks and whites
is always identical issues are skirted; motives are obviously "sincere;"
actions are embarrassingly cautious; and the word "sensitive" is
euphemistically employed. All combine to result in a labyrinth of
confused and obfuscated behavior.
The questions and problems associated with the black discotheques
are just such a litter of happenings. Mishandled from the beginning, the
whole affair signals another failure for both our society and this
-

University.

No one has disputed the value or the operation of the weekly
dances. In fact, the discotheques have been termed "well run, well
organized and well behaved." Additionally, the dances are significant
for it is the first time on this campus that a totally black venture has
been successful.
MAN'S

In short, the dances themselves have been no problem; it is the
actions of Norton Hall staff, BAG members and SA officials that pose
all the problems. First, it appears that university procedures and
guidelines were not adhered to.
Carol Raynor commented that she feels very uneasy about a group
with no SA recognition utilizing the largest room in Norton Hall to
make money that goes unaccounted for. Uneasy is an understatement.
The weekly dances constitute quite a bit of money. Vet, there exist
neither figures nor records. It is apparent that a well-detailed
explanation of that money is in order. Until such a document is
presented, doubts and suspicions will surround all persons and
proceedings connected with the discotheques.
The seriousness of no financial accounting is further intensified
considering that an organization which utilizes mandatory student fees
is involved: namely the SA office of Minority Student affairs. In order
for the Black Arts Guild to be able to conduct the dances, the
coordinator of that office, Brenda Smith, officially sponsored and
assumed responsibility for several of the events.
We can understand her motives for using her office to make
possible the dances; as it is obvious that black activities on this campus
have long been absent. However, by reserving the Fillmore Room
through SA, Ms. Smith more than signed a piece of paper. She made
both her office and SA accountable for all affairs connected with the
dances. It is a responsibility that cannot be forsaken.
These problems might not have arisen if the Norton Hall Staff had
better overseen the whole affair. It appears that at no time were such
procedures as financial- accountability or liability explained to BAG
members. Instead of investigating and explaining all procedures, the

Norton Hall Staff made up the rules each step of the way.
It is this "play it by ear" attitude that gives rise to charges that
"special" procedures (i.e. obstacles) are being employed. Members of
both BAG and BSD feel that they are being given the run-around. As
pointed out by one BSU member, before the first discotheque could be
held, three demands had to be met
the number of demands now
stands at ten. It is also interesting to note that never before has bond
been required of any organization reserving a Norton Hall room.
-

Additionally, serious questions have been raised about a bill
presented to BAG for $336. Many feel the bill has been purposefully
inflated to discredit the dances. To answer these charges, the bill must
be carefully examined for explanation and support of repairs.
About the only thing that is obvious from this muddle is that in
the future there will be no more discotheques
black or white. But
then this was obvious from the moment the list of demands grew from
three to four to seven to ten.
—

The Spectrum
Vot. 23, No. 8

Friday, 28 July 1972

Editor-in-Chief

Jo-Ann Armao

-

Managing Editor
Jeff Greenwald
Business Manager
Jack Harlan
Co-Advertising Manager Susan Hory
Co-Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
Production Supervisor Lawrence McNiaca
—

-

—

Campus
City
Copy .
..

Feature
Graphic Arts

.lanC. DeWaal
.vacant
Peggy Edwards
Karin Skeldon
vacant
. . . Tom Tolas

Layout

Lit. ft Drama
Music

.

Uaryhope Runyon
Michael Silverfelatt
.Billy Altman
..Dave Saleh
Mickey Ostarraichar
vacant
.

Off-Campus

Photo
Sports

The Spectrum is served by United Press International, Collage Press
Sendee, The Los Angeles Timas Syndicate, The New Republic Feature
Syndicate and Publishars-Hall Syndicate.
-

Republication of matter herein in any form without the express content of

the Editor-in-Chief it forbidden.

mined by the Editor-in-Chief.
■
v-

Editorial

-

.

Page four The Spectrum Friday, 28 July 1972
.

.

eedbac
It's a shamfe)
To the Editor
This is truly a campus of great contradictions.
Students cry for tolerance, yet they demonstrate
daily intolerance toward any who do not think or
dress as they do. Students cry for subject matter
relevance, yet when great efforts are made in that

■

.
•

direction, even somber graduate students complain
of the amount of work, or ignore the professor
completely. Students cry for a respect for the
environment, yet our lawns and fountain squares are
constantly full of litter. Students cry for
governmental honesty, yet they lie every day.

S. Hassel Back

Anti-racism bill
To the Editor

SDS is internationally fighting against racism,
not merely as a theory, but more importantly as the
material oppression of minority people. We have just
completed an anti-racism bill which is to be
presented at the Democratic Convention in Miami,
and which is currently being circulated on campuses
throughout the United States and Canada as a
bill is as follows;
“After the Nuremberg Trials the United Nations
had a Convention on Genocide. There, they defined
genocide as ‘any of the following acts committed
with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
national, ethnic, racial, religious group as such:
a) Killing any members of the group; b) Causing
serious bodily or mental harm to members of the
group; c) Deliberately inflicting on the group
conditions of life calculated tb bring about its
physical destruction in whole or in part;d) Imposing
measures intended to prevent births within the
group; e) Forcibly tranferring children of the group
petition. The

to another group.’

Article HI of the Convention provided that ‘The
following acts shall be punishable:
a) Genocide; b) Conspiracy to commit genocide;
c) Direct and public incitement to commit genocide;
d) Attempt to commit genocide; e) Complicity in
genocide.’
We indict the U.S. Government for racist acts
and genocide at home. We indict the U.S.
Government for abominable acts of racism and
genocide abroad, in S.E. Asia and Africa in
particular

—

—

BEST FRIEND

....

Whereas racism and genocide on Black, Latin,
Asian, and Native American people in this country is
deliberately being committed directly and indirectly
by the U.S. Government, we demand that the
following be acted upon immediately and made into

law:
I
A. No Federal troops shall be sent to ghettoes
to suppress demonstrations or rebellions against
racist treatment.
B. Any State, Local, or Federal policeman or
other state, local, or federal government official who
murders any person shall be deemed to have
committed a federal offense punishable by life
imprisonment.
J
C. Any state, local, or federal policeman or
other state, local, or federal official who assaults any
person, except in provable self-defense, shall be

deemed to have committed a federal offense
punishable by not less than ten years imprisonment,
depending on the severity of the offense.
D. Anyone on trial for any offense shall have his
or her choice of lawyer. The government shall pay all
fees
II

A. Repeal the Talmadge Amendment
B. There shall be a guaranteed annual income of
$10,000 for a family of four, available to anyone
without legal exceptions.
C. Children shall not be taken forcibly from
mothers and fathers on welfare
III
A. Repeal the racist immigrations quotas
B. People residing in the U.S. and born in other
countries shall not be deported or harrassed.
IV. No college or university , public or private school,
which employs officials who commit acts of racism
against students, faculty, or other employees, or
which uses texts that propagate the view that black
or other minority people are culturally or genetically
inferior shall receive any federal aid
V
A. Medical researchers who experiment on
any person without his or her full understanding and
consent shall be deemed to have committed a federal
offense, punishable by not less than ten years
imprisonment and
with a maximum of life
imprisonment.
B. Medical researchers who experiment on
minors shall be deemed to have committed a federal
offense punishable by not less than ten years
imprisonment and with a maximum of life
imprisonment.
C. Anyone who practices forced sterilisation or
lobotomies shall be deemed to have committed a
federal offense punishable by life imprisonment.
D. Captive populations such as prisoners shall
not ever be experimented on or medically abused.
Anyone who commits these crimes shall be deemed
to have committed a federal offense punishable by
not less than ten years imprisonment with a
maximum of life imprisonment depending on the
severity of the offense.
SDS realizes that even if this bill were passed in
its present and complete form, mass militant action
would be necessary to see that it were enforced.

However, we believe that this bill can be part of a
mass movement to smash racism and racist ideology.
Sign the petition. They will be available at the SDS

table in Norton Union.

Students for a Democratic Society

�fnn Jin n|r
mJuOiv XWuP&lt;iCK&gt;**«*********************«

Time to talk

Condemners curbed
To the Editor

apparent. First, we believe that the Nixon forces,

To the Editor

In The Spectrum July 21, there were published
two personal replies to my letter of July 14, in
which I had pointed out that letters defending the
right of Palestinians to commit atrocities (such as
murdering Katchalsky and other innocents) actually
make friends for Israel.
Perhaps the two correspondents, Tarek ElGabri
and Abu-Ayyash, completely missed my point, being
blinded by their own pre-conceptions. Mr. ElGabri’s
letter was relatively reasonable, containing only two
personal insults, such as that I lack reasoning
capacity. But Mr. Abu-Ayyash’s letter was filled with
words such as “racism,” and he says 1 “deliberately
misinterpreted [his] whole letter,” etc. He concludes
that my attitude (which he provoked) “will make us
ever more determined to defend our threatened
existence.” Such an attack merely proves my point:
He does not want to recruit friends for the Arabs.
Thankfully, The Spectrum headline writer did
not miss my point. Each act of war, each injustice,
justifies a greater act of revenge, and so on, back and
forth. There is no end, save total destruction of the
weaker of the antagonists or of both.
But there is a better explanation of Mr.
Abu-Ayyash’s letter: Perhaps he is actually a Jew,
and is faking this paranoid hate against Israel in
order to provoke people such as myself into reacting
against the Palestinians! (How’s that, Mr. ElGabri.
for reasoning capacity? It’s called “second-level
-

thinking.”)
From now on, I intend to be charitable towards
who write in defense of the right of
100,000,000 Arabs to exterminate 4,000,000 Jews
who are menacing them. Such writers are the best
friends Israel has; either they are so blind with hate
that they cannot see how they are hurting their own
cause, or else they are writing with faked paranoia,
because they actually are Jews or are directly

people

working for

Israel.
Robert J. Good
Professor

In the last two years, the Vietnam Veterans
Against the War have been the pivotal group in
awakening the American people to the horrors of the
war in Southeast Asia. No other group has been able
to expose so well the fraudulent nature of Richard
Nixon’s Vietnamization program. It is for this reason
that their large support within Nixon’s own
constituency poses a substantial threat to Nixon’s
re-election. Because of this, the Vietnam veterans
warrant the Democratic Party’s strongest support.
Because of their unimpeachable credentials to
speak out against this war, the Nixon-Mitchell forces
have felt compelled to use the most desperate tactics
in an effort to discredit the VVAW.
Late Friday afternoon, July 7, between 20 and
40 Vietnam veterans from around the country, many
of whom have come to Miami to dramatize their
opposition to this continuing war, were abruptly
served by FBI agents with subpoenas to appear
before a Federal Grand Jury in Tallahassee, Florida
on Monday morning, July 10, The basis for the
issuance of the subpoenas was an open Southeast
regional planning meeting held by the veterans in
Florida more than a month ago to discuss plans for
activities at both national conventions.
Admitted FBI informers who have already
surfaced make it clear that Mitchell and Kleindeinst
have known about this meeting and the discussions
there since the moment they occurred; yet no
actions whatever were taken by the Justice
Department until the eve of the Democratic National
Convention. It is plain, therefore, that this entire
Grand Jury proceeding is nothing less than a blatant
attempt by the Republican Administration to harass,
intimidate and discredit its most eloquent
antagonists. It is nothing less than an effort to deny
the men who deserve it the most their most
elementary constitutional rights to peaceably
assemble and express their grievances. By
subpoenaing the vets at this moment, the Nixon
Administration sweeps them from the streets of
Miami as effectively as would wholesale illegal
arrests. The motives for such an attack are readily

through the Grand Jury, are concocting another one
of their preposterous conspiracy charges painting the
veterans as a powerful indictment of the
administration’s policies by these very vets.
Secondly, by tying them up in a protracted Grand
Jury investigation with the threat of summary jailing
for contempt, Nixon hopes to physically remove his
opposition from the streets of Miami when the
Republicans gather here in August, and if such jailing
should provoke a confrontation by non-delegate
forces gathered at the Democratic convention who
support the vets that will be another bonus for the
President’s re-election campaign.
This most recent outrage is but another attempt,
through the abuse of the Grand Jury system, to
silence a peace movement which despite the
President’s wishes, will just not disappear.
As attorneys for the veterans, we call upon the
Democratic Party to take immediate steps to bring
this Grand Jury persecution to a halt. We are seeking
a federal court order to quash the subpoenas served
upon the vets, at least until after both national
conventions are completed. This party can support
our legal efforts by announcing pubhcally its
condemnation of this Grand Jury proceeding. A
resolution to that effect, a copy of which is annexed
hereto, will be introduced on the floor of this
convention; we call upon all delegates to support it.
We ask that concerned delegates immediately send
telegrams to Richard Kleindeinst, at the Justice
Department in Washington, demanding that the
Grand Jury proceeding be brought to a halt.
We cannot permit the men who fought and bled
this ugly war to be denied their rights to
demonstrate to the American public their unyielding

in

opposition to its continuance.
Anyone interested in donating money, time or
work can contact representatives of U.B. Veterans

Club, 260 Norton Union, 831-3447, or the West
Buffal o Women’s Center where community
collection will take place.
Attorneys for

Vietnam Veterans

Friday, 28 July 1972 The Spectrum Page five
.

.

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rjcrr

i

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M

■

back at half the speed they were recorded at, but this
experiment only adds to the annoying sound of the cut.
It’s a shame that neither Emerson or Palmer apparently
can sing rock, otherwise they could alternate vocals the
way Mountain alternated between clear and willowy Felix
Pappalardi and bawlin’ an’ shoutin’ Leslie West.
Of course, since the trio hasn’t changed much, not
only their problems, but also their highlights are still
intact. Emerson, the cornerstone of the group, is still a
marvel. The group as a whole is dynamic and lyrical,
coherent and tight. If you don’t own any of ELP’s
previous three albums, then Trilogy is definitely worth
having. But if you do, then this album may not only make
you tired of itself, but of the others as well.
-Norm Wahl
“The Phlorexent Leech
Howard Kaylan (Reprise)

&amp;

Eddie ”, Mark Volman and

“Bang a Gong.” It’s the Flo and Eddie show, not to
be confused with the Mauve Magget and Zimbo, or maybe
it’s to be confused with Captain Paradox and Zak, or

of Change

—

Peter Fnunpton (A&amp;M)

Hi, fans. It’s nice to be back in print again.
It’s time once again for me to begin my slow,
The basic crunch about this socio-cultural document
upward
climb after falling into the dregs of the defunct
ever
be
vapid
Niagara
that
it’s
as
as
Falls
it
should
if
is
Undercurrent.
But that’s not why I’m on this page
turned into Mazola Oil, which might make it the best rock
sandwiched
between other Fembalowmaltman
in
year
of
the
it’s
all
concerned
with
’n roll albuih
revelations. What I am here to write about is an album by
accessibility.
Frampton, ex-Humblc Pie guitarist, now solo-arti:t.
Howard Kaylan and Mark Volman are secretly billed Peter
Peter’s major beef surrounding his departure from
as the Phlorescent Leech and Eddie, and they secretly have
the Pie was one of musical direction. He is prone towards
something to do with groups such as the Mothers, T Rex,
jazz and Steve Mouthiott wanted to rock on, so it was a
etc. And that’s as far as it gets, etc.
justifiable farewell to Pete. But why did Marriot replace
is
fact
that
Actually, the best part of the record
the
with Dave Clempson from Colosseum, a jazz-rock
him
they put a lyrics sheet in the album jacket. Now Mark
Then we hear from Frampton that he plans to
band?
was
Volman might have been a viable lyricist when he
with
the Turtles, but since he decided to become one of the follow up his jazz leanings and record a solo album.
Wind of Change is a richly textured album of rock,
folk, funk, and pretty things. ‘Tis a very moody album,
with strokes of genius inherent in parts, but the trouble is
there’s not enough of it to make a lasting impression of
Pete’s music on a newcomer. So I really can’t say whether
you’ll like it or not, and it is far from the intentions of this
reviewer to persuade you to run right out and attack the
stores for it, but do pick up on it and give it a listen.
Whaddya got to lose?
maybe

Trilogy Emerson, Lake and Palmer (Catillion)

Wind

-

-

Almost the best thing about Emerson, Lake and
Palmer’s new albumm, Trilogy, is the picture that graces
the inside of the sleeve. It’s a slightly surrealistically tinted
photo of a gnarled autumn woods; twenty different people
are seen looking out from between the trees, and all of
them are Emerson, Lake and Palmer.
The vinyl, which also features multiple Emersons,
Lakes and Palmers, also has several highspots. “From the
Beginning” is one of Cireg Lakes’ best accoustic guitar
songs. Aaron Copland’s famous “Hoedown” seems to have
been written for ELP; the transition from orchestral
arrangement to rock arrangememt was made leaving the
excitement and integrity of the piece intact. “Abaddon’s
Bolero” is a devilish cut in which a simple march begins
quietly and simply, and builds in volume and intensity
over an eight-minute period. The development is so slow
and so uncomplicated that it shouldn’t work, but it does.
Unfortunately, bad news balances the good news.
“The Sheriff’ is ELPs sour imitation of Elton John’s
Tumbleweed Connection, and “Living Sin” sounds like a
musical impression of a headache. The group has always
been schizophrenically capable of alternating between
great highs and rotten lows, like a young pitcher with
incredible speed but poor control. Even more
unfortunately, though, the saddest news is not any one
individual cut, but the album as a whole.
Development into new directions, even if they’re not
necessarily better ones, is the lifeblood of a group. Didn’t
each of Jethro Tull’s albums make you wonder how they
could improve their style on the next one, and didn’t they
always come through? ELP’s fust two LP’s made me think
that if they can start off that well, then after a couple of
years, they’ll be incredibly good. But here it is, a couple of
years later, and they’re re-recording the same album over
and over. Not only are their assets wearing thin, but their
faults are becoming more and more obvious.
Bitch number one
Can’t Greg Lake stop writing
pretentious and vague philosophical lyrics? This time
around, it’s a song called “The Endless Enigma” (Parts One
and Two, yet). Part One includes the obligatory Lake line:
“And still I don’t know who I am.” It ends with the plea:
“Please open your eyes,” but, after four albums, we still
don’t know what to open our eyes to. (That must be the
Enigma.) Part Two finds Greg beginning to find success in
his Search for Truth; the last, climbing line is, “Now that
it’s done, I’ve begun to see the reason that I’m here.” Gee,
Greg, that’s terrific.
Bitch two; Emerson’s keyboard work is unrelentingly
complex. Forty minutes of flying Angers and oddball
chord structures can be a bit much; simple songs and
arrangements can be an effective change of pace.
Apparently, if Emerson can’t flaunt his amazing technique
on a song, he won’t bother to do it. “Abaddon’s Bolero,”
however, is an exception and is definitely a step in the
right direction, as a change of pace.
Bitch three: Lake’s voice is clear, precise and has an
impressive range, but it lacks variety. There is only one
sound he can get out of his vocals, and seems better suited
to folk than to rock. He has a shouting tone which he’ll
use on a phrase occasionally, but this is only a minor relief.
The first few vocal lines of “Living Sin” seem to be played
—

Whaddya got?

off, the grabber (it tore me away from
O’Connor’s “Wise Blood”) is “Jumpin’ Jack
Flash,” much publicized as the best version, better than
the You-Know-Who’s. Andrew Bown’s bass shines on this
one, as does Peter’s flashy Wes Montgomery beginning and

First

Flannery

solos.
Pete uses the usual "Jack Flash” riff, carries it a bit
slower and fuller, exhibiting an absorbing piece of flowing
guitarwork, until it evolves into a different set of music,
complementing the first brilliantly. Marriott has probably
ruined countless pairs of pants realizing what a genius be
let slip through his fingers. The only other hard rocker,
“Plain Shame,” follows, well worth the time and trouble
of marketing it as a single.
The rest of the album crosses between the realms of
beauty and boredom. Del Newman’s string arrangements
Frank Zappa clown troupe, he should’ve remained a (on two cuts) are generally out of place, but it was Pete’s
member of the Frank Zappa clown troupe and not idea, so I won’t complain. The subtle beauty of the
attempted to become a Turtle again.
opening cuts “Fig Tree Bay,” a string-accompanied
But there is one superb song on the Ip; its complex Hendrix inspiration, and “Wind of Change” (my current
lyrical symbolism is highly Bergmanesque with slight favorite of the month), an echoing acoustical builder, will
overtones of Fellini, “1 been born/again/again/again and I shine on after a few listenings. Finally, the sleepers are
been born/again.”
“Lady Lie Right” and “Oh for Another Day.”
Others include the "Flo &amp; Eddie Theme”
“I’m
Frampton quickly cooked up a back-up section
The Phlorescent Leech, he’s my partner, /Eddie/He’s The composed of members of other bands for this album,
Phlorescent Leech, I’m his partner/Eddie/We hope you’re though I think it’s time for Pete to settle down with some
ready/For Flo and/Eddie;” and “Nikki Hoi” which permanent members. Oh, I s’pose I should mention that
includes Moe Lakai &amp; The Island Singers . . .$
Klaus Voorman, Billy Preston and Ringo Starr (yeah,
Actually the only serious and nice thing on this him
Sheesh!) play on one of the cuts, and thank God,
entire record is the guitar work of Gary Rowles. Others on it’s only one. What Frampton doesn’t need right now is a
the Ip include Aynsley Dunbar, Jim Pons, Claude Williams, musically-restrictive setup for him like Peter Frampton and
Don Preston, Lynn Blessing.
Friends, etc.
But who needs nice things when you can possess in
Sadly, the cover is one of the more unprovocative
vast quantities such things as bad taste, imbecility, senility, designs of the year so far, but consider also Todd
my word. About the only saving grace of this record is that Rundgren’s “Something/Anything” cover. What was it that
if you snort some D-Con, do some downs, mainline some Willie Dixon used to ssing . . .?
Alberto VOS, you should only find out what that secret
Pete’s puffy voice and arranging merit keeping an
the album sounds exactly like Wagner’s
ingredient is
eye on, ’cause when he clears up his rough spots, boy, are
“Ride of the Valkyries” played at 78 rpm backwards so we in for a string of good albums. And when I clear up
if you like . . .
mine, matching reviews shall follow.

EGE TEXTS PROFESSIONAL BOO K9"««
MEDICAL NURSING DENTAL
PAPERBACKS

-

.

-

—

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•

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Page six The Speetrum Friday, 28 July 1972
.

to

WTO

*

m

V-

—

.

ENJOY

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                    <text>Dormitory brouhaha
triggers investigation

The Spectrum

by Ian C. DeWaal
Campus Editor

escalating misunderstanding resulted in both a
dormitory resident and a campus security officer being sent
to the emergency ward of Edgar J. Meyer Memorial Hospital
last Sunday night. Also, two dormitory residents were placed
under arrest.
officer drew his nightstick, Mr.

An

Vo». 23. No. 7

Stats University of New York at Buffalo

Friday. 21 July 1972

The incident was apparently Smith exited up the Goodyear
a
when
student staircase and after allegedly being
security aide, Tony told that he was under arrest fled
Lewandowski, entered into debate down the stairs and outside
with an unidentified resident who Goodyear Hall. Mr. Smith denies
refused to produce identification that the possibility of arrest was
as required by dormitory rules for ever mentioned until later that
residents. The individual was later night when he was returned from
identified as L.C. Smith, a junior the emergency ward.
at the State University at Buffalo,
The officer pursued Mr. Smith
though not currently enrolled in outside of Goodyear Hall in an
summer session
attempt to complete the arrest. In
Reports
agree
that
Mr. doing so, the officer struck Mr.
Lewandowski requested and was Smith once with his club at which
refused to see identification. The
time the two grappled. When
units
additional
of campus
security arrived, Mr. Smith was
sitting on top of the officer. Mr.
Smith received thirteen stitches
while Mr. Britt exhibited several
bruises and was diagnosed as
having a possible concussion.
triggered
dormitory

Charges pressed
booked for
third degree
assault and resisting arrest. Mr.
Coles, who engaged Mr. Britt as
Mr. Smith was being placed in the
to
security vehicle, allegedly
prevent Mr. Smith’s head from
the
being
against
forced
was
for
doorframe,
booked

Mr. Smith was
disorderly conduct,

obstructing

governmental

administration. They were later
released in the custody of Jamil
Hassan, the Legal and Housing

Pat Glennon
aide

had

companion

allowed
at

the

Mr. Smith’s
time, Earl

Coles, to enter the dormitory
without producing a door key
since he was recognized as a

resident.

Superman?
As discussion became heated,
witnesses stated that a campus
security officer,
James Britt,
emerged from a telephone booth
where he had been making a call
and attempted to convince Mr.
Smith that the aide on duty had
authority
the
request
to
identification.
The
debate
continued.

coordinator for the Office of
Minority Student Affairs.
Varying reports'disagree as to
the amount of force used in the
arrest, the struggel put up by the
defendants and the intensity of
the debate that developed when
identification was being sought.
Campus Security alleges that Mr.
Britt’s head was being slammed on
the pavement while Mr. Smith sat
on top of him; however, the
defendant denies this, saying he
was only holding the officer to
prevent him from continuing to
use his nightstick.

Investigations

Campus Security and Albert
University
executive
vice-president,
jointly
are
exactly
what
investigating
Smith
later
revealed
that
Mr.
he had taken exception to the happened. Pat Glennon, Director
security aide’s request because he of Campus Security, admits that
felt that the aide really knew he he wouldn’t be surprised if an
was a student. Mr. Smith had independent investigation was
reportedly been allowed to enter sought.
Monday, in Dr. Somit’s
the dormitory earlier that evening
when
Don Gross, a resident absence, a meeting was convened
in
Goodyear,
advisor
had by Richard Siggelkow, vice
informed the aide that Mr. Smith president for Student Affairs in
order to once again review the
was a resident.
existing rules and procedures
Mr. Smith continued to refuse governing
both the actions of
to produce any identification and,
security aides and campus security
as
described in
the campus
officers in the dormitories.
security report, continued to be
Representatives of the minority
verbally abusive to both the
communities on campus were
officer and Mr. Lewandowski. The present as well as members of
security officer then made a campus security and the
statement to which Mr. Smith University Housing Office.
The
great
took
offense.
Charges will be pressed in City
companion officer of Mr. Britt, Court since Mr. Smith is not
Eric Freischlag, attempted to currently enrolled in summer
apologize for the statement, session, thereby eliminating the
Britt possible use of the Student
Mr.
witnesses
said.
reportedly later felt he was wrong Judiciary. Mr. Smith is
in making the statement.
com tern pi a ting the filing of
countercharges.
Hot pursuit
President Robert L. Ketter
Mr. Smith, who was at this stated that the incident would not
time still unidentified, admittedly affect the release of the Report on
swung at the officer. Mr. Cole Campus Security which is
tried to intervene by keeping the scheduled for publication in late
two separated, but when the summer or early fall.

Somit,

Food Service contract boycott
by Miriam Rohrer
Spectrum Staff Writer

by 6.9% and oly increased the dormitory board by
3%.”

University dormitory residents are being asked
to “boycott” board contracts by Inter-Residence
Council (IRC) president Gary Cohn, Mr. Cohn’s
action is being taken primarily in response to a
recently announced $20 price hike in the contract
cost. The new charge will be $620.
Mr. Cohn, who is “asking kids to send in board
contracts unsigned with the word ‘boycott’ written
across it,” wrote in a letter to Thomas Schillo,
director of Auxiliary Services of the Faculty-Student
Association, that “at a recent meeting of the FSA, it
was stated that Food Service was operating at a loss
of approximately $20,000 (through March) in its
Norton Hall operations. It was also stated that,
overall. Food Service was operating (through March)
at a profit of approximately $20,000.” Mr. Cohn
goes on to say that it “seems the dormitory board
contracts are operating at a substantial profit which
is being used to defray losses in other areas of Food
Service.”

Other points
Not only do Mr. Becker and Mr. Cohn hold
contrary opinions on the issue of where profits
should be spent, but they also differ as to the facts
involved. Although Mr. Becker admits that the
“$10,000 to $15,000 yearly profit of Goodyear Hall
does help defray losses in other areas of Food
Service,” he believes that ‘The Tower is going to
lose money” next year. Mr. Becker also insisted that
Norton did not have a $20,000 deficit.
Rather, he said: “Norton cut back in services
and cut back in hours according to the
recommendation of the office of the President of the
University. Second semester, Norton was in the
black.” In addition Mr. Cohn’s figure of a $20,000
profit for the entire Food Service through March was
substantially higher than Mr. Becker's figure of a
“yearly profit under $5000.”
Mr. Cohn reported that he was told by Robert
Kole, chairman of the IRC Food Service Committee,
“of cases where the quality of the food was being
cut because of a claim that Food Service was losing
money.” Mr. Becker, however, asserted: Tt is the
same food and the same people cooking it.”

Oflsetting increases
Although Mr Cohn admits that the increase
“may be a cost-of-living raise,” he thinks “the
(Faculty-Student Association] should only raise
prices to break even. If a profit is being made, it
should be used to improve the quality and quantity
of food for those students who have a contract with
the Food Service, and not to offset losses in other
areas.
In Mr. Cohn’s opinion: “It doesn’t seem fair
that kids who eat in Tower should have to subsidize
Norton Hall when they only eat there once or twice
a year
Raymond Becker, director of Food Service,
disagreed with Mr. Cohn. He commented that
because “Food Service is one department, one area
must offset losses in other areas.” He also
emphasized that “Norton Hall is a service for all
students including those with board contracts.” Mr.
Becker does believe, however, that “cash-price items
should pay for themselves and that Food Service
should break even in the Union.” It is for this reason
the Faculty-Student Association “raised cash prices
”

More for the money
Mr. Becker said; “Dollar for dollar the student is
getting more from us than say the student from
Albany who pays $650 a year. The student at
Buffalo pays about a dollar per meal, or about three
dollars a day.”
Mr. Cohn feels that “Mr. Becker is not taking
the boycott seriously enough. I’ll be shocked if the
present board contracts are not cut in half. It is my
opinion that they can’t run board with 400 to 500
people. They can’t help but be responsive to the
needs of the dorm resident. I hope,” he continued,
“before the year starts they will make some moves
to let everyone get his money’s worth.”
Although Mr. Becker did agree that “we would
have to cut back if we had a substantial drop of
students,” he was “just sending the board contracts
out” and had “no way of knowing” how many
students would sign for die board contracts.

�Communist party

Parliamentary rules
vex/serve delegates
The sizzling conflict in the
Democratic Party which pitted
the party’s established regulars
against its “fresh faced” reformers
was, according to many political
experts, the final battle; one that
could very well split the party and
subsequently kill it.
Although this conflict failed to
split the party at the convention
and Senator George McGovern
won the Presidential nomination
in an outwardly smooth fashion,
signs of previously concealed
tension became evident towards
the end of the gathering. The
convention seemed to be doomed
to a sour ending on the final day
as a number of minor conflicts
began to take their toll on the
delegates. A series of procedural
battles on the convention floor
finally came to a head Thursday
with a walkout by over one half
of the New York delegation
during the middle of one roll call

vote.

Jarvis Tyner to speak here

The walkout was caused by a
in the delegation over
selection of a slate of eight
national committee chairmen as
part of the reforms instituted by
the McGovern Commission in chairman in which the reformers
1968. According to the rules were looking to dump party
changes the New York delegation chairman loe Crangle, the man
was
to
eleven who was supported by most of
select
representatives to the National the delegation’s regulars. In this
Democratic Committee. Of the case a
compromise
electing
eleven, three were to be officials Crangle along with three other
of the party (the chairman and delegates, Lillian Roberts, Robert
the two vice-chairmen). Of the Abrahms and Maryann Krupsak,
remaining eight, four were to be was worked out.
elected by the delegates and four
were to be selected by State Party Political sdf-destruction'
officials.
While Mr. Crangle could not be
split

William Hoyt

reached

to

comment

on

This

caused

a

tremendous

uproar among delegates from the
New Democratic Coalition (NDC)
from New York City as they

demanded that all the national
committeemen be elected by the
delegates instead of the prescribed
ratio. The delegates failed to solve
the problem in an afternoon
caucus, and when the reform
charter came up for a roll-call vote
the walkout began. At first the
Western New York delegation
failed to leave the floor as they
“refused to hold up the roll call
vote and thus postpone Senator
McGovern’s acceptance speech”
according to Deleware district
Councilman William Hoyt of
Buffalo.
Finally after much persuasion

ar, 0 Israel
For gams from the
JEWISH BIBLE
—

riiOflB

parliamentary procedure to gain

their own ends
this was the
case in their attempts to break
from the party regulars.”
Mr. Osinski also said that if it
could the NDC would have split
the delegation and alienated a
number of party leaders whose
support
any
is “vital”
to
Democratic chances of carrying
the state in the fall.
.

.

The UUAB Video Committee ia conjunction with Video Connexion will be
sponsoring a two-day showing of video tapes on the newly formed “All Campus
Television" station (ACT V) on July 26 and 27. Viewing screens wfll be available in Haas
Lounge. This program is hoped to attract persons interested in all aspects of the video
media as the station expands to the point of originating its own programming. Anyone
interested should contact Ed Meilnik, chairman of the UUAB Video Committee.

J.G.PHOTO
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the summer academic sessions by
Sub Board 1, Inc. Offices are

HIS OUTLAWS

located at 3SS Norton Hall, State
University of New York at Buffalo.
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875-4266

Page two. The Spectrum

.

“

Video Committee’s ’Act V’

the

convention, Mr. Hoyt and Jeff
Osinski, treasurer of the State
University at Buffalo Student
Association and member of the
New York delegation, spoke to
these
Spectrum
The
about
developments. Mr. Hoyt was
“extremely disappointed in the
NDC leadership for their efforts in
political self-destruction of the
delegation by over-debate . . .”
“They also seemed to feel that
they had a monopoly on the
world’s politics and they would
prefer to hear themselves talk and
make points of order instead of
getting a vote on the issues before
them,” said Mr. Hoyt.
Mr. Osinski seemed to agree,
claiming
the
NbC
“used

Jeff Osinski

and a mass peace-oriented cultural, recreational,
athletic, and health project, especially for young
people, are also included in the platform.
Additionally, they call for an end to discrimination
against women, equal pay for equal work, free child
care centers, six month maternity leaves with full
pay, and abortion leaves on a similar basis.
The Communist Party feels that its election
campaign and platform offer solutions to the
deepening problems facing the American people, and
that by offering these solutions, they will help to
build a strong independent left force throughout the
country. This in turn, they hope, would pressure
other candidates to take up these issues and move
further to the left.
Jarvis Tyner is recognized as a national and
international figure. He is a former Teamster and
black civil rights organizer. He is the national
chairman of the Young Workers liberation League,
and a member of the National Coordinating
Committee of the People’s Coalition for P£$£and
Justice. Mr. Tyner is also a member of the'Pblitical
Committee of the Communist Party, and is on the
Executive Committee of the World Federation of
Federal crimes
Democratic Youth, which claims the representation
They advocate a free national health care of 200 million young people around the world.
The meeting is being sponsored by the Youth
service, and free quality education through the
University level with open enrollment for Committee for Hall and Tyner. It will be held in
working-class, black and other minorities. Racism Room 337, Norton Hall, at 2 p.m., Monday July 24.
and racist practices would be made Federal crimes; He will also be on WBFO at 3:30 that same day. For
job training would be given to all, especially more information, call the Youth Committee for
Hall and Tyner, located at the People’s Bookstore,
minority youth.
’
Community control of the police and schools. 882-0988.

Jarvis Tyner, Communist Party Vice-Presidential
candidate, will be at the State University at Buffalo
next week to speak about the 1972 Communist
Party election campaign. He is traveling through New
York State, along with Gus Hall, Communist Party
Presidential candidate, to help build the up-coming
The convention floor walkout petition drive to get the Communist party on the
was preceded by another battle ballot New York
state.
in
over the election of a delegation
Mr. Jarvis, Mr. Hall and two other Communist
Party leaders, Rasheed Storey and Joseph North,
recently returned from a trip to North Vietnam.
While there they took cover in underground bomb
shelters, and witnessed the bombing of North
Vietnam by UJS. planes.
The 1972 election campaign platform of the
Communist Party supports a program of "peace, jobs
and justice.” The Communist Party calls for an
immediate withdrawal of all United States troops
and equipment from Indochina; an end to the draft;
an end to the wage-freeze and Pay board; 30 hours
of work a week at 40 hours pay; and full
unemployment compensation for all strikers and
first-time job seekers.

City the rest of the delegates
agreed to leave the floor. After a
20 minute caucus the delegates
decided to return to the floor and
vote on the charter rather than
further delay the vote.

Circulation:

iy,

21 July 1972

10.000

at

621 Sycamore
854-9844

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�Drug abuse program News Commentary
investigators impotent Honeymoon is apparently over
by Dave Saleh

Editor’s

Off-Campus Editor

The Research and Planning Council of Erie County has
initiated plans for a study of all drug abuse programs in the
area. A study by the Council’s predecessor, the Community
Welfare Council of Erie County, ended in disaster two years
ago and it seems to this reporter that the second study is well
along the same path of self-destruction.
Most of the participants in
these ventures agree that the
studies usually turn into political
footballs, it becoming impossible
to get anything accomplished. In

News Analysis
the case of the study two years
ago there were signs of political
foolishness right from the start.
By the time the study had ended
it w i evident that the people of
Erie County had once again
invested money in a worthless
piece of material; one in which
much was said but nothing done.
Two of a kind?
The study

presently being
developing similar
trends. The Research and Planning
Council has already begun to
make arrangements to research “a
new type of study” which will
making
concentrate
on
recommendations concerning the
various rehabilitation programs in
the area, as was requested by
County
Executive
Regan.
Although this is a good idea and
Mr. Regan seems completely
sincere in his commitment, many
of the people who have taken part
in the preliminary meetings of the
Council seem to lack a similar
planned

is

sincerity.

While there were signs of
interest in the first meeting, the
mood has changed and there are

definite signs of sabotage towards
any serious proposal that might be
made. A meeting of the Council
which took place last Friday more
resembled a crucifixion of the
study than an attempt to get
anything done.
Doomed divisions
At
meeting
this

control as director of the meeting,
was the sole occupant of the
second category. The next two
groups included all the remaining
participants; some who refused to
participate in the discussions, and
others who attempted to sabotage
any productive efforts.
It is because of these divisions
in the Council that the drug study
has run into trouble, and it seems
as if the study’s salvation will be
most
difficult.
The
most
interesting aspect of the meeting
was that Dr. Warde and Mr. Vetter
were the only two people present
who were members of the earlier
task force. It would seem that
their positions would therefore be
very

considered

strongly.

However, despite their obvious
competence, just the opposite was
true.

Epidemiological rejection
It was Dr. Warde’s suggestion
comparative
and
epidemiological studies of the
drug problem be initiated, which
that

seemed most solid, yet these two

proposals met firm opposition
from most of the other committee
members.
Similarly,

proposals

Mr.

Vetter’s

concerning

determination of which programs
should be labeled “professional”
were also rejected by the Council
as they were two years ago.

The fact that such a study may
fail is typical of the County but
the best way for it to be saved
seems to be by taking it out of its
rut at
present
Research and
Planning. This can be done only
by Mr. Regan and his sincerity in
the matter leaves the impression
that he could make such a plan
work.

the

participants seemed split into four
categories. The first consister of
Dr. James Warde, Dr. Marc Lipton
and Joseph Vetter. These men
were the most outspoken. Their
concern with making changes in
the study seemed to be an
make
it
attempt
to
more
productive. William Hairston, who
did an excellent job maintaining

The study’s present do-nothing
leaders should be replaced by
responsible
community
more
members such as Dr. Warde and
Mr. Vetter.
Additionally, the absence of
Judge Joseph Mattina, considered
one of the area’s top drug abuse
experts, is a perfect example of
the inability of those presently in
charge to handle the situation.

note:

As a former Student Association

president, Ian DeWaal is qualified to discuss the
many problems in the functioning of Student

Association.

The following is his evaluation of
annual problems that are now becoming apparent in
this year‘S Executive Committee.

by lan C. DeWaal
Campus Editor

Each May, a bright-eyed collection of freshly
elected Student Association officers eagerly seizes
the keys to Norton 205 and sets upon the task of
“reordering
priorities”
and making Student
Association a visibly worthwhile organization.
Unfortunately, the camaraderie and unified spirit, so
overbearingly apparent after the election results are
announced, rarely survive the picturing of wide-smile
faces in the following editions of campus
publications.

Last year the result was three resignations late in
the year by Executive Committee members when the
infighting, bitterness and lack of collective direction
became overwhelming. Currently, divisions are
developing in the present Student Association which
may predelect the usual disintegration of unity that
too often stifles the functioning of the organizations.

Clues numerous
The indicative clues are numerous. The student
secretarial staff complains of low wages while
coordinators rarely make an appearance that would
justify their stipends; officers complain of a lack of
cooperation and basic trust between the members of
the Executive Committee; and coordinators in a
desperate search for finite directions, condemn the
alleged lack of leadership while concurrently refusing
to cooperate with the most sanguine proposals that
would foster batter cooperation between members
of the organization.
One such proposal previously scrapped would
have seen the Executive Committee under the
supervision of a staff member from the Student
Counseling Center participating in an encounter-type
session. Such an encounter would have hopefully
eased the tensions between
members of the
Committee. The plan was sabotaged when two
members balked at the idea, without being able to
offer any well defined objections.

It becomes apparent that the expectations held
by prospective candidates and the at-large campus
community in relation to the purposes and abilities
of Student Association are that suspect, becomes
apparent because the mistakes are repeated each year

and the disillusionment is annual. Perhaps what is
needed is a re-evaluation of the foundation of the
Student Association itself.

Appearance of unity

Each year, the group of students that bands
itself into a party that gives appearances of unity, is
historically guaranteed success in their quest. This

Pick a Winner!

RIUNITE
‘‘Ree-you-nae-tay”!

Softer than Beaujolais.
More lively than a
Portuguese Rose!

Ww

duplication of the national electoral process ignores
two important factors.'

The first is that there are no ongoing party

structures that can assure continuity between the
yearly replacements of personnel. This exasperates

the second fault in that upon banding together, the
candidates give more consideration to filling aU
available positions than to clearly knowing the
thoughts of each contender to insure compatabihty
within the ticket. The hidden disagreements and
fears only come to light later, with disasteroua
results.
Student Association offers a wealth of
experiences to its participants. Too often the
number of opportunities is overwhelming and the
members scurry from project to project, be it
membership on Sub Board I, or rummaging through
the president’s mailbox, rather than concentrating
on the position that they were elected to fill.
One short year
It is quickly forgotten that the members have
one very short year to accomplish anything and the
results might be more noticeable if they could
concentrate their efforts in a few specific areas. One
of these might include displaying some trust for the
other members and their actions.
Student Association could be a successful voice
for student opinion. However, it is hard to garner the
necessary credibility for an organization in which
everyone wants to be president, while nobody wants
to coordinate. It may be unglamourous, but it seems
that much more could be accomplished. A year is
not that long.
If the president makes independent decisions, it
is not because she is trying to undercut the
importance of the Executive Committee; but
because as spokeswoman for the group, she is valid
in assuming that a trust of her judgement should
exist. The Executive Committee should take note
that its membership is comprised of fellow students,
not subterfuging ogres.

Without bias
This is not to suggest that all judgements are
beyond question, but rather that they should be
listened to openly and without bias. This would be
reflected if the member* reordered their personal
priorities.

Members should put a priority on attending
Executive Committee meetings consistent with an
effort to show up at the scheduled time. If all
members began listening to a full debate rather than

continually meandering out to receive disruptive
phone calls, a positive step would have been made.
An accent should be put on positivism and action
rather than inexcusably delayed reactions.
Maybe the members should make a concerted
effort to take personalities off the conference table
and work harder to achieve harmony, if not unity.
Something might even get accomplished. Hopefully,
it will be more than the bi-annual adoption of an
entirely new constitution.

Life Workshops
presents an

Alternatives Symposium
July 21, 22
232 NORTON HALL
FRIDA Y

7:30 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
An exploration of strengths
and abilities in preparation
for discussing alternatives
—

—

SA TURDA Y 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m.
Three workshop* offered
9:00 a.m.
12 noon
AND AGAIN FROM
1:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m.
-

-

-

'COLLEGE TEXTS PROFESSIONAL BOO
MEDICAL NURSING DENTAL
•

•

•

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PAPERBACKS

BIFFAL9

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STMCES, IRC.
3CI« Mail St.
'16)

633-713

—

•

Alternatives to Institutional Religion
Leader: P. J. Jensen

fa
rstf

FrH parking at

Unlvartlty Manor
(naxt door)

Alternative Life Styles
&amp; With
Whom)
Leader: Marie Peck man

(How You Live

M or White.

Alternative Vocations
Leader: Kathryn Hansen
bag lunch on Saturday Dr vending it
eveilable

Please bring a
FREE SYMPOSIUM —For pre-registration call 831-2511, 225 Norton

fn*lay,21

July

197.2 T£e
.

.

f 39? three

�perea

Ediropul

F a-isreR
AUP

THI^

Security problems
“We have come to realize that a truly effective campus
security program relies not only on an efficient, professional
security unit but also on understanding and cooperation
between the security force and the campus constituencies it
serves.

-

Spew,

r

um-iace

rep

Auety

Avao
FACTOR

WfAtSO

President Robert Ketter in hit charge to the Committee on Campus Security
(December, 1971)

wo,
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knowledge.

Yet, our education is becoming costly. This time, two
students were arrested and two persons (a security officer
and a student) were injured. Moreover, the incident has
precipitated feelings of ill-will between students and between
students and campus security.
The weekend confrontation has been termed both
"misfortunate" and a "misunderstanding." Disturbing is a
better word, for what occurred could have been avoided
Prior to the incident, rules governing the dormitories had
not been distributed or explained to residents. It appears that
all residents were not aware that they are subject to demands
for identification. Moreover, such a procedure requiring
proof of identification is not consistently enforced. Rather,
it is the discretion of individual security aides that decides
what rules will be applied when. Such a policy lends credence
to the suspicions of some residents that they are being
singled out for special treatment.
The actions of security aides raise serious questions. In
this case, it appears that better judgement and cooler
handling by the aide on duty might have precluded any
arrests or injuries. The need now exists for a careful
evaluation of the security aide operation for arguments have
been raised that they are neither qualified nor trained to
cope with potentially explosive situations.
Also necessary is the commitment by the University
administration for a well-trained campus security unit.
Although it appears that the officer involved was not totally
responsible for the confrontation, his actions and words
exacerbated an already dangerous situation. Despite the new
brown blazer look of campus security, problems with their
operation are apparent
Yet, the problems are not new-born they existed in the
spring of 1970; resurfaced last winter in the Jerry May fiasco;
and live today to plague the University. To solve these
problems of inexperience, poor training and inadequate staff,
a Committee on Campus Security was appointed at the end
of last year.
Presently, the findings of this committee sit on the desk
of President Ketter. In light of the Goodyear incident, it is
extremely important that the President release the
committee's report. Its disclosure and possible
implementation can only lead to the beginning of what Dr.
Ketter termed "a truly effective campus security program."

l

«L
p»

"

Again and again, this University has learned that it
doesn't possess a professional security unit nor do basic
understanding and cooperation exist. Last Sunday's incident
in Goodyear Hall is simply the latest reinforcement of that

BSCK-

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FROM

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Keep him posted
note: The following letter was sent to
President Robert Ketter, SA President Debbie
Benson and Student Rights Coordinator Andrew
Kossover.

Editor’s

1 am writing concerning a situation which I
believe is of interest to you in your present position.
Recently, I was retained as an attorney for two of
your students, Sylvia Dick and Linda Ann Ramsey.
They were arrested by University of Buffalo Campus
Police on the 19th of April, 1972. It is the subject
matter of this arrest that I am concerned about.
They were arrested and I will quote the
complaint lodged against them, “both defendants
did paste posters and slingers of Dr, Ketter wanted
dead or alive, racism must go, and oppose army
recruiting on the walls of Diefendorf Hall without
permission, and did loiter and remain on grounds of
State University of Buffalo without permission from
school authorities both contrary to provisions of the
penal law.” Essentially, these two students on your
campus were arrested for putting posters up. There is

additional evidence that

they were also harrassed and

arrested because they were members of the Students
fora Democratic Society.
As an attorney and alumnus of the State
University of New York and Buffalo, I realize the
President of the University has an obligation to
protect the rights of students to express themselves.
The charges were dropped against both of these
individuals. Obviously, because there was no law
violated. I am hopeful that this problem will not
continue on the campus.
1 have always been of the opinion that it is a
student’s right to express his opinion either verbally,
or through leaflets or posters on the State University
of New York at Buffalo campus. I have seen
numerous posters placed throughout the whole
campus and I have never seen any individual
arrested, therefore, 1 am asking you and your good
offices to look into this matter and keep me
informed as to the developments concerning these
particular arrests. It is my hope that a solution can
be found and the rights of students involved

protected.
Richard J. Rosche

I’m listening

—

The Spccri^uM
Vol. 23, No. 7

Friday, 21 July 1972

Editor-in-Chief

Jo-Ann Armao

—

Editor's

note: The following is President Ketier’s
of July 6 to the above letter and the
questions it raises.

response

Thank you very much for your letter of June
19th. I certainly share many of the concerns
expressed therein. The right of free expression is one
which must be safeguarded and by all members of
-

the

University

community,

administration alone.
think
I
mentioning:

the

following

not

simply

points

are

by

the

worth

1. Student rules and regulations for 1971-72
provide (Section IV, Norton House Rules and
Regulations, 4.00) that “No advertising material or
other literature in any form may appear on the
exterior surface of Norton Hall, including entry
ways.” A copy of these rules and regulations is

issued

to

every

student upon

enrollment and

republished annually. The dismissal in City Court, if

1 have been correctly informed, was on the narrow
technical ground that the District Attorney did not
have available the University’s rules and regulations,
so that the action of the court reflected a failure of
proof rather than a finding on the merits.
2. As you probably know, Miss Dick and Miss
Ramsey declined to give their names or identify
themselves in any other fashion when requested to
do so by our Security staff. The request that they
identify themselves was a reasonable one and I
believe that, had they done so, the entire matter
could have speedily been resolved.
3. Since they were not known to our Security
people, I would question the statement that they
were arrested and harassed because they were S.D.S.
members. I would appreciate being advised of
whatever additional information you might have
which bears on this point.

Robert L. Ketter
President

Means to an end

Managing Editor
Jeff Greenwald
Buainaaa Manager
Jack Herlan
Co-Advertising Manager Susan Hory
Co-Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
Production Supervisor Lawrence McNiece
—

-

—

To the Editor

—

-

Campus
City

Ian C DeWaal

Layout

Lit. &amp; Drama
Music

vacant

Copy

Feature

Peggy Edwards
Karin Skaldon
vacant

Graphic Arts

...

Tom Tolas

.

Off-Campus

Photo

Maryhope Runyon
.

.

Michael Silverblatt

Billy Altman
Dave Saleh
Mickey Osterreicher

Sports

.vacant

The Spectrum it served by United Press International, College Press
Service, The Los Angeles Times Syndicate, The New Republic Feature

Syndicate and

Publishars-Hall

Syndicate.

ilication of matter hefain in any form without the express consent of
litor-in-Chief it forbidden.
Editorii

policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief,

Page four. The Spectrum Friday, 21 July 1972
.

If we consider Prof. Robert J. Good to be an
educated man, and if education gives one the power
of reasoning, then, unfortunately, it is safe to
conclude that Prof. Good has lost an important
elemenf of his education, mainly, his reasoning
capacity, somewhere in Parker Engineering.
I realize the seriousness of such an accusation,
however, in light of the written warning of prejudice
levied by Prof. Good against any Arab student
should they unknowingly stump into his class, and in
light of the fact that simply not all Arabs agree to
actions committed by one group, I find Prof. Good’s
remarks, to put it mildly, out of place.
There does not exist, in my mind, the possibility

of a Utopian world; however, as educated as 1 would
like to think of myself, I strive for a just world. It is
impossible in the name of justice (which has been
repeatedly abused) for myself, for Prof. Good, or for
any one for that
matter, to condone the
displacement
of approximately two million
Palestinians or any one else, to make room for
another two million people. Is, then, the principle of
struggle (o restore such lost rights and property,
unjustified? (Although we might disagree in what
means to use to achieve the end.)
I ask Prof. Good, and those who side with him,
to think of this question of justice. Only then can
man reduce his inhumanity to man.

Tarek ElGabri

�eieuim)
aQ

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m

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Guest Opinion

FACTOR

06!
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Editor’s note: The following is a gyest response written by members of
UB SDS who attended the Democratic National Convention last week.
They contend that The Spectrum’s convention coverage gave a
distorted image of what they fee! occurred. The following is their
chronicle of last week’s events.

“SfCRT

feedback
Sexual concerns
To the Editor

Pregnancy Counseling Service is NOT an abortion referral service
The Spectrum article of July 14, 1972 seems to imply. We serve any
woman who is concerned with any aspect of pregnancy. This includes
the woman who seeks to carry her pregnancy full term as well as the
woman who is interested in termination, prevention, or verification of
her pregnancy. We provide free pregnancy tests; and we provide
referrals for birth control methods and pre-natal care, as well as
abortion referrals. As we are concerned with human sexuality in
general, we will deal with inquiries pertaining to any other area of
sexuality, and we can provide referrals for those with homosexual or
bisexual questions.
Many women who find themselves with an unwanted pregnancy
are undecided as to what their next move will be. We try to help the
woman make up her own mind. In no way do we encourage any
particular course of action. Our counseling seeks to provide the woman
with a supportive climate in which she can comfortably act on her
decision. Financial aid is available for the woman who wishes to have
her baby, as it is for those who do not.
For anyone seeking any further information, our phone number
is 831-4902, and we arc located in 343 Norton Union. We are available
from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.,
as

Monday through Thursday.
Pregnancy Counseling Service

Self perpetuating
To the Editor

On Friday, July 14, The Spectrum printed an open letter to the
Arabs from Prof. Robert Good in reply to my letter dated June 23. It is
regrettable that Prof. Good has distorted and deliberately
misinterpreted my whole letter. I have called for the condemnation of
all violence without justifying terrorism. Dr. Good directed his letter to
all Arabs as if the responsibility of a small group such as that of The
Popular Front For The Liberation of Palestine is the responsibility of
the whole Arab nation. Those Palestinian zealots can be compared with
the original Zealots: an old Jewish group who also fought oppression.
Isn’t it ridiculous to condemn all Jews because of the acts of The
Jewish Defense League?
It is rather strange to see Dr. Good adopting a biased and
subjective position which is not the nature of a scientific man. Prof.
Good has failed to mention the Hasbaya massacre when the Israeli
phantoms killed 40 helpless Arab women and babies by “technical
error.” He failed to condemn the'destruction of thousands of acres of
our crops in the West Bank by the Israeli army a few days ago. And the
professor did not seem to give a damn for the tragedy of two million
uprooted refugees. How do those who do not care for the lives of the
Arabs expect the Arabs to care for their lives?
In short, your letter, Dr. Good, has urged more killing, death,
destruction and senseless violence. Your letter was intolerable and full
of blind hatred, character assassination, defamation, racism and
anti-Arabism. The professional haters of Arabisim will never intimidate
the Arabs; on the contrary, they will make us more determined to
defend our threatened existence.
A Abu-Ayyash

SDS went down to the Democratic Convention to present the
Anti-Racism bill. The bill is against racist practices in welfare,
immigration, medical care and against the racist theories invented to
justify them. Activities in Miami were on several levels. The bills were
circulated all over the city and signed by thousands. Some members of
SDS and UAG (University Action Group) went before Democratic state
delegations speaking about the bill. And SDS sponsored demonstrations
and supported the demonstrations of other groups.
On Sunday night, SDS and other groups went to the Playboy Plaza
Hotel, where the big-money sponsors of the Democratic Party like
Henry Ford and l.W. Abel were having a dinner. Five Hundred
picketers controlled traffic into the hotel, allowing only people who
were working there in. With chants like, “Dare to struggle; dare to win;
Henry Ford won’t get in!,” the pickets kept the sponsors out for two
hours until 200 state troopers moved the demonstrators out.
Monday, the National Welfare Rights Organization and SCLC
marched to the convention center to demand 750 seats on the
convention floor for poor people and a guaranteed annual income of
$6500 a year. After the rally broke up, the demonstrators became
disorganized and one person was arrested for breaking down the fence
around the convention center. Several people got maced.
On Tuesday, SDS and NWRO picketed a ladies’ tea given by the
wife of Florida’s governor. At the tea, a fashion show was given by Saks
Fifth Avenue with dresses costing up to $1000. Six women went in to
give a “poor women’s fashion show,” making the point that some
people only have as much to live on as the dresses cost: “We need jobs;
we need clothes; what do we get? Fashion shows.”
Eight hundred demonstrators went to confront McGovern on
Wednesday about his changing stand on the Vietnam War and about
signing the Anti-Racism bill. After occupying his headquarters for seven
hours, we got to see him. McGovern came down, spoke to the
demonstrators, refusing to sign the bill. People left chanting, ‘The
bosses won’t, but the people will sign the Anti-Racism bill.”
Early in the convention, a top aide of Humphrey’s ran over a black
woman from Miami. He was speeding, but cops gave her a ticket for
jaywalking, and turned over their badges so none of the witnesses could
take their numbers. The woman, Dorothy Christian, ended up in the
hospital with a broken pelvis. SDS confronted Humphrey and the
police, demanding that the cops drop charges and the aide pay the
woman $10,000. Miami SDS will continue this fight.
One of the big things people were talking about in Miami was 21
subpoenas issued to members of Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
These guys were given subpoenas and taken to Tallahassee tight before
activities started in Miami. Six of them are charged with conspiring to
disrupt the conventions with weapons like slingshots and smoke-bombs.
People in WAW are angry about these phoney charges and are going to
Tallahassee to fight them.
Anybody interested in going down to the Republican Convention
and organizing in Buffalo and nationally around this bill, Tndkt the
U.S. government for genocide,” call 837-4055, 838-1783, or stop by
the SDS table any morning in the Center Lounge, Norton.

'MR. FISCMIR SUMS TO Rl RIADY NOW

.

.

.

SHALL Wl COMMINCI, MR. SPASSKY?'

Friday, 21 July 1972 The Spectrum Page five
.

V

.

ij'„j

V.

&gt;'■ i

�Marvellous Marip

-Cohen

Music Editor

Another year at Mariposa, the folk festival that
attempts to work on a “no stars” principle. So who
shows up for this three day gathering at Toronto
Islands? Well, do the names Jackson Browne,
Gordon Lightfoot, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell or Bob
Dylan ring any bells?
Yes, they all were there and other than Dylan,
they all played unscheduled surprise sets, much to
the amazement and delight of the thousands who
were there. I guess you could think of it as a giant
bonus for all the faithfuUfolkies who come each year
to take part in a festival that places more importance
on the people that attend it than on the money that
they spend.

While that first paragraph is sinking in, I’ll
backtrack and try to reassemble the festival as best 1
can. Arriving in Toronto a bit behind schedule late
Friday afternoon, we went over to the island on the
old ferry boat that somehow fits in perfectly with
the whole spirit of things at Mariposa, It’s a friendly,
somehow personal ride even though there’s lots of
folks on the boat.

Programs, programs
There are six workshop areas at Mariposa, and
they run simultaneously from ten each morning till
dusk, which can drive you nuts if you don’t have a
program, but that only costs a quarter so everybody
buys one. Then you know for sure that you’re
missing Bonnie Raitt while you’re seeing Taj Mahal
or vice versa. Really everybody plays at three or
more workshops, so you do get to see everyone by
the time the whole thing’s over.
The first person 1 saw Friday when I got there
was Michael Cooney, which figures, cause he plays at
at least half of all the workshops. He’s a jack of all
trades at Mariposa, hosting anything cause he knows
everything.

The first big surprise of the weekend was a band
thirties barroom singers, Martin, Bogan and
Armstrong. Guitar, mandolin, fiddle and standup
bass. The fiddle player had three different pairs of
sunglasses, one for each day. They did outrageous
versions of “Tiger Rag,” “Downtown Strutter’s Ball”
and “La Cucaracha.” Every time they’d finish a set,
the mandolin player would say “The sun’s gonna go
down now, cause more stars have gotta shine.” Each
time they played, people went crazy. Now 1 know
where Dan Hicks stole all his hot licks.
Taj Mahal was around doing a concert, and it
was great. He really got people happy, and he’s really
coming into his own as a solo performer. “Ain’t
Nobody’s Business (but your own)” was a big
of

Page six The Spectrum Friday, 21 July 1972
.

.

favorite, as well as “Fishm' Blues’
“Corrina.” Unfortunately, he sang
and it started raining pretty hard. W
;

by Billy Altman

our fortunes on Yonge Street, Tore

After Murray, yet!
Saturday

began

on

a

gooi

Pennywhistlers did an inspired se
amazing Balkan songs that conve
without translation In one slow &lt;
people began dancing in a circle arc

was very moving. Utah Phillips an
Fred McKenna did a workshop on
plays his guitar on his lap, walking o
with his fingers, and he's got thousa
his adventures hitchikmg through C
train man himself, with a husky vo

of bad jokes.
It was only after Michael Cc

workshop that 1 found out that L
played a few tunes. She came c
McLaughlin, whom 1 can’t stand. SI

songs, “Clouds,” “Woodstock” (sip
piano with her), and some others
African band, who played electri
possibly have heard her distinctive
other end of the island Needless to
ruined.
After a workshop on Hank
featured McKenna playing his am
John Prine forgetting all the verses

started pouring.
it
attempted,
Woodstock, we left as quickly as pos
Somehow, it cleared up Satun
was sunny and hot on Sunday. I
fiddler’s
Rambler

workshop, hosted
Tracy Schwartz

by

Bob who?
Around this time, some fnc
informed us that a certain Mr I)y
around with his pal David Bromber;
to play at a singaround in a hit, so w
in case. Also at the singaround wei
and Leon Redbone, who was decke
bowler, white shirt, vest and slacks,
falling asleep as usual, revived ever;
some inane number like Mane or
Top of the World” in that absurd o
of his.
As

I said, we knew
question of when he’d
be on your toes.

Dylan was th
jump on a st

Bonnie Raitt was scheduled so
ran over to see her. Instead of her
was doing an impromptu mini sho'

�riposa delivers

-Cohen

—Prusansky

ell as “FishirT Blues” and, of course
ifortunately, h sang a song about rain
raining pretty hard. We left and sought
in Yonge Stre cl, Toronto’s Broadway.

yet!

■ I

began on a good note as the
did an msp rured set, full of those
n songs that convey their message
ation. In or
slow song, a group of
dancing in a ci ircle around the stage. It

i

ang Utah Phi illips and blind phenotn
did a work .hop on bums. McKenna
on his lap, w ilking over the fretboard
s, and he’s g
thousands of stories on
hitchiking thi rough Canada. Utah is a
self, with a hr isky voice and hundreds
ily after Mi tiaei Cooney’s fifteenth

I found oul that Joni Mitchell had
tunes. She came on after Murray
horn I can’l sland She did a few new
;r),

“Woodstock” (she had an electric
and some others. Thanks to the

who

played electncally, I couldn’t

heard her distinctive voice over at the
he island Needless to say, my day was
workshop on Hank Williams, that
enna playing Ins amazing leads, and

rgetting all the verses to each song he
t started pouring. Remembering

1

left as quickly as possible.
it cleared up Saturday night, and it
hot on Sunday There was a huge
shop, hosted by New Lost City
Schwartz

who knew
at a certain Mr Dylan was hanging
is pal David Bromberg. Bromberg was
garound in a hit, so we held tight, just
it the singaround were Cooney, Prine
bone, who was decked out in a black
shirt, vest and slacks. He sat on stage
is usual, revived every so often to do
mber like 'Mane” or “I’m Sittin’ On
rid” in that absurd old drunken voice
hrs

time

mie

(nends

Dylan was there. It was just a
veien knew
he’d jump on a stage. You
to

had

itt was scheduled somewhere, so we
her. Instead of her, Leon Redbone
mpromptu mini show. I don’t know

i

how he got over there so fast. Anyway, Bonnie came
on after a bit, and announced that Jackson Browne
was going to play a little. We all went nuts, and
everyone looked at us (guess they don’t know him
yet up north). Joni Mitchell was hangin’ out,
encouraging him to get up there and play. I think
they’re going out together. Miss Raitt showed off her
incredible slide playing on her old National Steel,
and after a few tunes, Jackson came out.

He’s shaved off his moustache so he looks like
his picture on the album cover. Very cute, indeed.
He sang a song about rednecks as Bukka danced
around him. Then he did “Sweet Little Sixteen,”
with Bonnie on slide. And he knew all the words.
Good to know he can rock if he has to. Then “Jesus
in %’s” and ah, yes, “These Days,” which was first
recorded by Nico many years ago when Jackson
played guitar for her.
It was a great treat to hear him play, especially
since I missed him when he was here. The rumor
about Neil Young had brought 'thousands to area
five, and sure enough, Bruce Cockburn, an excellent

songwriter, brought him out. Neil did a candy set,
with “Harvest,” “Helpless,” “Sugar Mountain,” and
“Heart of Gold.” A real wimp bunch, but it was neat
to see him without a flannel shirt on. These country
hippies. God.
Speaking of country hippies, a hot tip led us to
the performer’s area, and there’s Bob Dylan! A real
legend, thirty feet away. Click, click Bob. Give us a
pic, huh? His hair’s getting long’again, with a red
bandanna around his head and a pair of jeans on. He
looked pissed, and we found out why. He had
planned to play at that singaround with Prine and
Bromberg (he’s also a good friend of Redbone’s, so
there’s still hope), but Cooney was afraid a riot
would start, so he told him he couldn’t.
He left around six thirty, but then he came
back, I guess convinced that he should try to sing a
few tunes. Some yo yo announced that he would be
at area three, and Dylan got caught in a crowd that
was rushing to see him. He tried to get through, got
halfway around, gave up and left on a special water
taxi. Personally, it was more fun to see him than it
would have been to hear him, because he just would
have done some cobwebs anyway.
Through all of this mayhem, Gordon Lightfoot
had parked himself under a tree and began playing
for a few hundred people. Atta way, Gordon.
We finally left around nine, our heads
swimming. With Leon Redbone and Bob Dylan
sharing the sarfie common space, I was sure it was
the apocalypse, but I’m still here, I think. 1 was
disappointed that that great jug band, the South
Happiness Street whatever, didn’t play. Well, maybe

next year.

Friday, 21 July 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

�Finite resource theory
proven false by history
Commission (AEC) funds for this
$30 million in 1971 +■’
have dropped three million since
‘
1960.
Total expenditures oh fusion
research have been less than the
cost of one Appollo moonshot.
The reason for this is that vast
to
government
pork-barrels
private utility companies (through
the AEC) have built up enormous
interests
in fission
existing
addition
to
the reactors. Effective fusion power
In
demonstrably false method of would render fission reactors
of obsolete, thus threatening the
arbitrary
projection
theoretically unanalyzed growth whole credit structure built upon
rates into the future, the second existing power plants.
In a similar manner, world
major premise of the MIT report.
foodstuffs production is presently
high
prices
constrained by
Com men tar;
through price supports and “land
retirement subsidies,” in order to
namely the finitude of resources,
maintain the liquidity of large
also crumbles upon investigation. food production and distribution
Had the MIT group been empires, commodity speculators
around at the late Paleolithic and land mortgages.
period,
they
would
have
confidently predicted (on the
Basic flow
basis of the latest methods of
The reason why the MIT group
pebble counting) the end of the
see
fails
to
the potential
human
race
due
to
the development of fusion power
is
combination of climatic changes
indicative of a basic flaw in their
and man’s own success as a approach. They
cannot perceive
hunter, which was then causing
fusion power around the bend
the rapid extinction of large
because it is not on the capitalist
grazing animal species upon which
agenda. Throughout their analysis,
depended
he
for
survival.
where they think they are
Nevertheless man did survive. He
growth or
invented agriculture and on the indicting economic
industrial investment for human
basis
of this invention his
use, they are actually blaming,
population increased by a factor
and
a
sense accurately
in
of 60 in the Near Eastern site of portraying,capitalist degeneration
this invention within about six
or involuted growth
and they
millenia.
are extrapolating it into the
Resources are not finite. The
very concept of “resource” is a future.
By mere extrapolation of the
progressive product of man’s
direction of capitalist relations of
civilization, of his transformation production,
the “Limits” authors
of nature into his own subjective rightly
foresee
disaster. But by
pr active life process. Man is
hiding the premise of capitalist
continually creating new natural
relations and calling for a halt to
by
inventing new
resources
“growth” as such, they have
processes of transforming nature
created a potent propaganda tool
to his purposes.
for the capitalist class.
Despite this dominant trend of
Part of the rationale for
human history, the MIT group
Democratic Presidential hopeful
claims that we have now reached George
McGovern’s predehction
the end of the line. Ironically, a
for dropping the already meager
no-growth economy can never dependency
deduction from the
produce
these
necessary
tax system (aside, of
national
breakthroughs, since it cannot
generate enough surplus value course, from the crushing national
debt) has
been to provide
to realize
required
scientific “negative
reinforcement”
for
discoveries. It thus would doom
those who choose to procreate.
perhaps just a
human existence
This helpful suggestion can only
little further into the future than
be seconded by Nixon, Reagan, et
the MIT group is presently al
who are desperately attempting
looking
but nevertheless doom to
end “redundant” unemployed
us to ultimate extinction.
population on welfare by using
them as cannon fodder in the
Partial agreement
attack on organized labor, or
Bui the MIT group is actually
through
California’s
Family
correct in claiming as they do that
Plan,
Assistance
which
no technological inventions alone
“encourages”
sterilization
of
can .solve the problems created by
welfare
mothers.
huhian development. However,
Already, the “people pollute”
they render themselves incapable
school
has been leveling its orgies
of' seeing the real problem of
of
“self”-denial
at insurgent
“development”
present
by
regarding “social and economic trade unions with arguments
factors’Vas external to the explicit derived directly from various ZPG
assumptions of their “formal manuals. In short, the only
model” (see page 46 of Limits to usefulness of the Limits to
Growth ideology is as just that
Growth).
a
convenient justification for the
The stagnation of fusion power
austerity measures which are the
research is a case in point
capitalist agenda for the future.
demonstrating that it is actually
capitalist
stagnation
induced
which is now preventing real
growth on a world-wide scale. In
the U.S. there are almost no
“private funds” (i.e., capitalist
profits) going into fusion research;
and annual Atomic Energy
Editor’s note: The following is the
second in a two-part series on zero
population growth submitted by
Samuel Garth of the National
Caucus of Labor Committees.
Each part is written as a critique
of the premises used in The Limits
To Growth published by the Club
of Rome. This final article will
discuss the conception of "finite
resources.

research

-

A concert of the first order it
in store for all next Thursday
night in the Fillmore Room at the
UUAB Music Committee presents
Randy Newman
John
for two shows.
John Prine b a country-styled
singer. Up until a year and a half
ago, he was working at a mailman
in Chicago. He gave that up. began
playing around and hat rather
quickly carved out a huge
foN owing. Hit songs have been
recorded by many people and he
reminds tome of early Dylan with
Ms vocals.
Randy Newman hat been going
about his singularly peculiar way
for quit* a few years now, but it is
only within the last year or so
that he has bean getting the
recognition he so well deserves. A
skilled pianist who spends his
spare
time
and
arranging
conducting for the strangest
assortment of entertainers (he
scored and conducted Peggy Lee's
"Is That All Thera Is?"), he is
perhaps this country's best pop

"

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Page eight. The Spectrum Friday,
.

21 July 1972

songwriter.

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�Number one

Toronto crowd all ears
at Rolling Stones concert
by Billy Altman
Music Editor

The Rolling Stones were in Toronto
Saturday, in case you didn’t know. They
are approaching the end of their monster
tour, and one might have expected them to
be a trifle bored and mucho tired, but it
sure didn’t look that way at the late show
that somehow dried up all the rain that had
fallen on the city that afternoon.
It was the first time I’d seen them live,
though 1 do have total recall of all their TV
appearances on SShindig, Hullaballoo and
Sulli
'd hr

V roll band of all time. You 11 get no
argument from me on that statement.
They’ve got it all sewn up from almost
every possible angle. From Mick down to
Charley,
everything comes together
perfectly. Keith runs the band, and Mick
runs the audience.
But I’m getting way ahead of myself.
It was raining fiercely all afternoon, and
after getting drenched at Mariposa, 1 didn’t
want another personal flood. It finally
stopped around 8:30, which was just the
time that they startecf letting people in.
And me, the foot, the checkered demon
and the European son prepared to leave the
car and wait in line forever. But, as we
walked up to the entrance, an officer said,
“If you got your tickets, go on in.” And
we did. No pushing, shoving, nothing.
After purchasing. the souvenir picture
book, chock full of neat candid shots of
Nicky Hopkins as well as the band, we
went up to our seats in the balcony (who
ever heard of a balcony, at a hockey
arena?).
Mick in the middle, of course, with a
goofy hat, denim shirt hiding gold jump
suit that unbuttons to the waist, red scarf.
I guess if everyone’s gonna stare at you,
you might as well get dressed up for it.
Directly behind him is Charlie Watts, who’s
got more class than the entire population
of Detroit or Cleveland. He always has a
good time on tour ’cause he gets to show
off and show you that he’s probably the
cleanest and steadiest drummer in the
universe

remember Dean Martin introducing them
for their first ever on Hollywood Palace?
Or Mick telling Jimmy O’Neill to shut up
cause he was talking over the Wolf? Or
mumbling the words to “Let’s Spend the
Night Together’” cause Ed Sullivan
shuddered to think what might happen if
Middle America heard the real lyrics?
So you see, I’ve always wanted to see
the Stones live, but somehow I just never
got around to it. Not till Saturday anyway.
And was I glad I didn’t blow it again.
The Stones are the number one rock

Mick Taylor still looks out of place
after over two years, but so what? He’s a
good guitarist. And off to his right are
Bobby Keys and Jim Price, who play mean
horns, and a piano that is alternately
manned by Nicky and Ian Stewart, the
Stones’ resident greaser.
They start with Brown Sugar, with
Keith leading it off. They have gotten so
tight, it’s not fair. On “Bitch,” Keith takes
the solo and wipes out the whole place.
People are not falling all over me. I can see
and 1 can even hear the piano. The sound is
that good (when you put on a show for
half a million people, like Chip Monck did,
how can you go wrong with only 20,000 or
so?).

Happy Happy
After a terrible attempt at ‘Tumblin’
Dice,” which, like “Gimme Shelter,” really
needs the female backup vocals, Keith sings

“Happy.” He gets so involved with playing
facing Charlie that he almost forgets to
make it back to the mike to sing the verses.
There’s another ’69 rerun with “Love in
Vain.” Frankly, I’m sick of it. “Sweet
Virginia” is better than the album cut, with
Keith and Taylor on acoustics and Keith

faster and faster. Red lights at the Boston
Strangler part. Swift. Then the lights go on
for “Jumpin’ Jack Flash,” then “Street
Fighting Man” (Keith’s got his cap on
again), and it’s over, with Mick throwing
water at Charlie and the audience.

even singing some harmony.
A lot of stuff from Exile done well
too. “All Down the Line” was sheer
frenzy, as was “Rip This Joint” with a neat
sax solo done at a frantic pace by Keys,
who had a sax stepped on during the first
show.
Mick is dancing around of course,
doing his Mick Jagger imitation. Everybody
gets off on it, and that’s neat, but I’d
rather watch Keith any day cause Keith
embodies all of rock ‘n’ roll in his stoops
and arm sweeps.
Perfect example is “Bye Bye Johnny,”
done at the end of the introductions of the
band. Keith has it all inside him and he
brings it out with all the recklessness and
audacity of a ’56 Chevy. Drivin’ rock ‘n’
roll.
“You Can’t Always Get What You
Want” is very satisfying, with Mick singing
great. His singing all night sounded much
better than on the last tour. He’s a great
lead singer, and when you’re in front of a
band like he’s got, he better be.
The big finale consists of “Midnight
Rambler,” with Charlie and Keith going

Wonder and Wonderioves
The crowd kept pouring in and the
temperature went up about 20 degrees, but
who cared. At about 9:30, Stevie Wonder
came on. Let me tell you, he puts on a
show. Backed by his band and girl singers,
called the Wonderioves, Stevie ran through
a few hits and got the place moving. He
played piano, organ, moog and drums
besides his little fingertips harmonica. And
he didn’t make a big deal of being led
around the stage, which he could have. He
even sang a bit of Bill Wither’s “Lean on
Me,” and that was a class touch, especially
if you had to drive around Toronto all day
hearing that one song every 15 minutes.
Stevie finished up and intermission
was upon us. People started getting ready
for the surge downstairs, but there were
security guards at every entrance all around
the Garden. This concert was probably the
best run affair I’d been to in ages The
folks who crowded the aisles downstairs
were made to clear out or at least sit down
and they did. Upstairs, no one was standing
yet. I became hopeful that I might get to
actually see the performers for a change.
The Stones came out, the lights went
on onstage. Holy Shit!
not top
the lighting they had. Floodlights in back
of the amplifiers, each individually run.
They were reflected off a giant mirror that
was up over the front of the audience. And
a row of lights, also in back, that moved up
and down. The stage was tiled with dragon
designs on it, and Charlie’s little stand (I
think he and Dino are the only ones left
that still use them) was decorated like the
stage floor.

Right to left
Working from right to left; Bill
Wyman, oldest, quietest, dressed in pants
that looked three sizes too big. That might
be why he didn’t move more than an inch
or two all night. He’s tricky, though. He
sure plays a lot of notes without anyone
knowing it.
Next is Keith Richard, the pride,
integrity and the real heart of the Rolling
Stones. He’s got the tips of his hairs dyed
white, white top, black slacks (who needs
color whenyou’re a killer). The king punk,
ready to murder you with his guitar.
So it’s over, and that’s the Rolling
Stones, 1972 style. Maybe not as
rambunctious and challenging as 1965, but
there aren’t any like them nohow.

Friday,

21 July 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
.

.

�Evolutionary tactics

Time to quit monkeyingarotmd
As the picture opens, the time
is 1991, just 20 yean after the
intelligent baby ape was bom. He
The Flanet of the Apes. is called, with sledgehammer
Beneath the Planet of the Apes. subtlety, Caesar. During his
Escape From the Planet of the formative yean, he has been cared
Apes.
And now. Twentieth for and concealed as an average
Century-Fox presents Conquest of ape by kindly, old-fashioned
the Planet of the Apes. It wean a circus owner, Armando. Ricardo
kiontalban’s
as
performance
little thin.
A few yean ago the studio Armando succeeds in keeping the
made The Planet of the Apes first third of the movie alive.
which was based on the novel by
Sureness in his stride, strength
Pierre Boulle. That story tells of in the set of his chin, all betrayed
earth astronauts who journey to a by a hesitation in the way hit eyes

by lay Boyar

Spectrum Film Critic

2nd ANNUM SUMMER

and somehow understands what it
is like to be a slave. Such
relevance! It drips with moralizing
that should be reserved for pulpits
and soapboxes.
Law and order
Opposing the furry forces is
the Governor and humanity, all
garbed in dark clothing, least we
forget who the bad guys are. The
apes, incidently, are dressed in
multi-colored monkey-suits and
kept on chains in public. Don
Murray portrays the Governor
with all the overacting he can
summon. He is too surly, evil and
mean to be believed or even
elected. Well, perhaps elected but
not believed.
With about a third of the
movie’s time left to kill. Director
J. Lee Thompson dwells on the
battle between apes and men.
Caesar shouts “charge” and the
Governor gulps “oh, no.” Apes
crack skulls and men try to stop
them. There are at least two
“head ’em off at the pass”
decoy
wherein
sequences
monkeys lure men into a narrow
area, while other apes surprise the
men by throwing a net over them
and swarming in for the kill
(gorilla warfare?).
It is hard not to lose patience
somewhere along the line, since
this sequence is as overlong as the
last night of the Democratic
Convention. Still, it is expertly
handled (the sequence, that is)

planet controlled by apes. After
several suspenseful misadventures
one of the spacemen, Charlton
enters
the
planet’s
Heston,
“forbidden zone” and sees the
Statue of Liberty dirty, in ruins
and half-hidden in the uncaring
sand. The implication being that
the earth, as we know it, had been
taken over by simians. Cut! Print
-

it! The End.

I shall return

focus in a slightly-too concerned
fashion, 'these
characterize
Armando as a man with dignity
who carries Caesar’s secret alone.
The slight tinges of silver in his
hair and beard, and the very
presence of a Vandyke in a
modernistic
and
otherwise
clean-shaven society, reveal a
character who is the last of his

kind.
...

No. They produced a sequel,
based on the characters but not

the plot of Boulle’s book, this
time recounting the frolics of the
last remaining astronaut beneath
this gibbon-ridden globe. It ends
with
the
unquestionable
destruction of the entire world.
The End. Right?
Not
yet. Unbeknownst to
anyone, three of the intelligent
apes escaped in a spacecraft and
traveled backward in time to our
society. They receive a lukewarm
welcome resulting, at the end of

this third film, in their death; but
not before they conceive a baby
chimpanzee. They are killed.
People think that allowing their
survival is asking for trouble.
Obviously they are thinking of the
possibility of a future takeover by
the
descendents
of
these
intelligent apes. The baby chimp
survives, however. He is hidden in
a carnival and is thought to be a
normal monkey. As we all know
by now, this is not the end.
The latest ape-outing insists
upon showing in excruciating
detail how the young age
spearheads the conquest of Earth.
Writer Paul Dehn writes defiantly
on, in spite of the fact that the
plot for this movie is spelled out
in broad terms in the preceding
monkey movies.
If you have been keeping score,
you know that neither Boulle’s
plot nor his characters survive to
reach this film. We are left with
only his general and generatable
idea that apes will take over the
earth.

as
Montalban
Armando,
portrays him, does not actually
talk directly to most of the other
characters in the film. He is
beyond and, at the same time,
behind them. While rejecting all
he sees, he understands it. As
Armando speaks with Caesar,
warmth is heard in his gentle,
Latin voice and fatherly manner.
It is almost believable that the ape
to whom he speaks is his own son.
But before things get underway,
Armando dies, and, incidently, so
does the movie.

Revenge of the apes
Organizing the apes is Caesar’s
mission for the next third of the
film. Roddy McDowall in the

.

building in the governor’s spicker
and spanner state with the apes in
charge and
the Governor in

Caesar

an
embarassing speech perverting the
old “Let my people go!” theme,
and

then

this

makes

monkey

Moses

outlines a plan to conquer the rest
of the world based solely on the
principle
see,
of “monkey
monkey do.”
Unfortunately, the film leaves
a few loose ends, but this is no
cause for alarm. Everything will
be cleared up in the next flick,
Beyond the Planet of the Apes or
the next. Around the Planet of
the Apes in Eighty Days or Gidget
Goes Bananas, or Abbot and
Costello on the Planet of the

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Apes.

And, don’t look now, but
they’re planning on turning the
whole thing into a television
series.

previous ape pictures had played

Caesar’s father, but in this one, he
is Caesar, a chimp off the old
block. As Caesar, he is just as
plain corny as a Frito chip. The
actor apes an ape without appeal.
Actually, the special effects boys
really know how to throw the old
monkey make-up around, and
Roddy walks and moves in the
slightly simian manner for which
the part calls.
His shoulders bob, his hands
crouch and his head lowers; all of
which suggests either an ape-man
or a guy who just received a hard
blow to the stomach. After four
movies, though, you’d have to
hope that they’d have these
effects perfected.
Aiding Caesar in freeing the
apes that men have made slaves is
one
Mr. McDonald, played
adequately by Hari Rhodes.
McDonald helps Caesar because,
you guessed it, McDonald is black

Page ten The Spectrum Friday, 21 July 1,972
.

and additional accolades are
distributed to the special effects
fellows for creating a believable
battle in the confines of a
hard-to-swallow premise.
The fight culminates at night
on the steps of a spic and span

chains.

Haadquartars for fht
most compiata matarials
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Largs sal act ion in
karats. Judo, kando. kampo
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THE SPECTRUM will be published
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U.B. area
Flower Sti perfect for couple or small
family) 2 bedrooms, bathroom 2nd
floor) LR, OR, kitchen
1st floor)
maintenance-free Insulbiick siding, low
taxes, excellent structural condition,
needs redecorating, very economical,
comfortable living In slightly ugly
house)
asking 81200) owner, call
839-8112 after July 24.
—

tt

to someone who will help me do
paper
research
on
Israel.
Call
631-5327.
—Czala

Watkins Glen

‘A race weekend is’unique
by Bruce A. Czaja
Special to The Spectrum

It’s that time again. Time when all slightly
demented and moderately perverted individuals are
packing their tents, pot and six-packs for another
race weekend.
Today marks the start of practice for Watkins
Glen’s biggest summer race weekend. Tomorrow,
drivers like Mario Andretti, Jackie Ickx, and Ronnie
Peterson will compete in the final event in the World
Manufacturer’s Championship Series.
They will drive special racing Fenraris, Alfa
Romeos and Lolas in a six-hour endurance race
which begins at noon. On Sunday, Peter Revson will
attempt to defend his crown against drivers like
Denny Hulme, Jackie Oliver, George Follmer and
Andretti in the Fifth Annual Glen Can-Am. The
Team McLaren’s five-year
biggest threat to
domination of the Glen„ events will come from
George Follmer in the Roger Penske prepared LAM
Porsche.
The car, which won at Road Atlanta two weeks
ago is the biggest thing to hit the series since its
inception seven years ago. The car is propelled by a
twelve-cylinder turbocharged Porsche engine. The
speeds it has attained have left the other teams
talking to themselves. Indy S00 winner Mark
Donohue was scheduled to drive the car, but serious
injuries suffered in a practice session crash have
eliminated him from driving for the remainder of the
year.

Preview
Those of you who have followed racing or at
least attended a sports car race know what a race
weekend is like. For those of you who have never
had the opportunity, a little background is called
for.

A race weekend is driving for several hours to
wait in line to get to the track. A race weekend is
buying seven pounds of hot dogs and hamburgers on
Friday and finding out that no one brought ice; by
Sunday, it’s all bad. A race weekend is getting
smashed Friday and Saturday and sleeping through
the race on Sunday. A race weekend is standing in
line for 30 minutes to go to the crap per only to find
some joker has dropped in a cherry bomb
porcelain splinters gladly removed at the First Aid
building.
A race weekend is finding someone to share
your sleeping bag. A race weekend is taking six shots
of Jackie Stewart with your Instamatic and then
finding out that Stewart was not at the race. A race
—

ywwwvwwwvww

weekend is watching the bikes and creatures at the
bog: “The bog wants a pig.”
A race weekend is getting one of Mario
Andretti’s mechanics to autograph your program
while you think it’s Mario. A race weekend is going
into the den to pick up some townies only to find
that the townies are all at the track trying to pick up
the drivers. A race weekend is sharing a urinal with
Paul Newman. A race weekend is getting sunburned
to a crisp and having to put on a chaffing raincoat
when it starts to pour.
A race weekend is all night parties in the
camping area. A race weekend is drinking beer from
all over the country as you share your Genny with
some clown from East Aardvaark. A race weekend is
hearing a stereo playing Jimmi Hendrix’s version of
the National Anthem at five in the morning. A race
weekend is standing behind the pits and wishing you
could be there while most of the people there wish
they could be doing what you’re doing.

A race weekend is about 48 hours and winds up
costing about a quarter an hour. A race weekend is
finding out that state troopers can be pretty decent
when compared to rent-a-cops. A race weekend is
bitching that you can’t camp in the in-field, but
commenting how nice it is to be able to walk around
the track without having to climb over 718 tents and
97 U-Hauls.

Fun and sun
A race weekend is waking up and finding your
tent under three inches of mud from the rain during
the night. A race weekend is a visit to the infirmary
to treat what you brought back with you. A race
weekend is watching the bastards going into the
paddock club and wondering what the hell is so
special about them. A race weekend is waking up
with a hangover so bad that you’re afraid you’ll die
and then you worry that you won’t.
A race weekend is getting past the guards into
the pits. A race weekend is cheering women’s lib and
the bra-less look. A race weekend is watching the
bog devour a body. A race weekend is meeting
someone from your hometown. A race weekend is
having someone ask you do you know so and so who
goes to your school of 20,000. A race weekend is
lining up in traffic for three hours after the race
because the driver knew a shortcut. A race weekend
is fun.
As that much over-used commercial goes, “Try
it, you’ll like it.” Throw a sleeping bag in the car and
take the two-hour drive to the Glen. If you haven’t
gone, you can’t imagine what it's like. Go and find
out; it could be one of the best weekends of an
otherwise dull summer.

SALE uwuum
BOOTS! BOOTS! BOOTS!
Hava we got boots! Boots by
Shaw,
Georgia
Endicott Johnson.
Giant. Trust. The US. Army,
Converse, Minn-i-Tonka. etc.
Boots for Guys and Gals!
Far-out, funny, freaks and
serious boots. Gat the good
ones and save money. Shop
Durango,

Army-Navy :

TENT CITY

730 Main At Tuppar 853 1515 Oiv. Washington Surplus Center
Master, Empire, Bank Amer
1/2 Hr. Free Parking
—

SALE

Bible Truth
AGAIN

YE MUST BE BORN
lesus says: “Except a man be
born again he cannot tec or
enter into the kingdom of God."
-John 3:3-7
"Being born of God."— John 1:13
“By the Word of God."-/ Pet. 1:23

*

AUDIO MIXER: Must be able to set
up and operate large sound systems at
rock concerts throughout eastern US.
and
Canada.
Must
have
audio
experience, enjoy rock
music and
willing to travel 3-4 weeks, have good
driving record and be responsible.
Voung company with excellent growth
record. Serious Inquiries to Bill Levy at
Seneca Sound, Inc., 636 Sheridan Or.
■75-5682.
MODELS
for
NEEDED
adult
photography. Excellent pay. Discretion
assured. More Information
Box 659.
Buffalo, N.V. 14205.
—

NEW COMPANY seeking people to fill
full and part-time pocitlons. Excellent
Income for the right person(s). Work
your own hours. Call Dave or Jim
683-2626.
BABYSITTER, occasional day and
evening
hours, one
18-mo. child,
walking distance from campus. Call
832-4894.

FOREIGN CAR

REPAIRS
Specializing fat Vdkswqpn,
Triumph. Volvo, MG, Austin
Healey, Toyota, Datsun and
more.
877-9303

874-6330

HAVE

most

the

unusual,

bast-looking Inexpensive clothas you’ll

find outside of Oroaca, Pakistan, India,
Maxlco or Quatamala. ”Tha People," a
folk
arts boutlqua.
Allan.
144
M242I1.
MAN’S, ona woman's Huffy
naw. $40 aach. Ona Saars
portable TV
naw, $35. $94-6724.
ONE

racar,

—

FOLK,

classic guitarsi banjos. Fins
and hand-made Instruments.
Guild,
Martin,
Gibson,
Qurtan,
Gallagher, Eagla, Oma, ate. Trades
Invited. The String Shoppe, 524
Ontario, Buffalo. Hoursi 7—9 p.m.
dally; Saturday 12—5 p.m. $74-0120.
factory

LOST ft FOUND
FOUND: 2 pairs of

glasses; ona with
ona tortoiseshell
Claim at
sunglasses.

NEED MONEY? Sell advertising tor
The Spectrum. 15% commission on all
ads. Contact Jeff Reiman or Susan
Hory at 831-4113. No experience
necessary, but transportation helpful.

black

OVERSEAS JOBS for students
Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa,
etc. All professions and occupations.
8700 to 83000 monthly. Expenses
paid,
sightseeing.
overtime,
Free
Information
write:
JOBS
OVERSEAS, Dept. E5. P.O. Box
15071. San Diego, Calif. 92115.

TO ALL SMITHS; Beware of brick
walls and basement windows. PS. I
snuck off to Buffalo.

—

APARTMENT FOR RENT
STUDENTS:
bedrooms

1st. Call
825-0399.

furnished apts
819S. Available Aug.
between 12 p.m—5 p.m.

2

frames

prescription

—

Harrlman Reserve Library.

PERSONAL

HI
Brown Earth rasldants. From
Harrison Avenue dwellers.
—

YOUR WORRIES ara over
call The
Insurance Guidance Canter for your
lowest available rata on auto and cycle
Insurance. $37-227$ after 5 p.m.
—

$39-056$.

each.

U.B. AREA
Furnished three and
two-bedroom
with
apts.
parade.
Suitable for four and three students.
Resp. $220 and $180 Includes utilities
(except
One-year
electric).
lease
required. 837-2586; 689-8310.
—

SEVERAL well furnished four-eight
bedroom apartments, targe, excellent
available
locations,
immediately.
896-8180, evenings preferably.

GUTSY!
Join The Spectrum.
Openings for writers, photographers,
artists and reviewers. No experience
necessary. See Jeff Greanwald In 355
Norton, extension $31-4113.

BE

OKAY SUGAR BEAR: Now this IS
our final farawall. So will ya laava
already’
We're still waiting
Your
loyal compatriots In disaster.
—

ROOMMATES WANTED

furnished

apt.

881-0279.

RIDE HOARD

to

share,

can

RIDE WANTED to Chapel Hill, North
Carolina, mid-August. Ride wanted to
Brooklyn
July 28. Karen 832-4964.

wanted
ONE
ROOMMATE
tor
two-bedroom furnished apartment In
Allentown. Near Main. $S5/mo plus
electric. Call Don. 881-4254.

FOR SALE

MISCELLANEOUS

Selling dresser,
MOVING:
dinette,
tables, chairs, washer, dryer; prices
very reasonable. Call today, tomorrow
874-4237.

FREE KITTENS to good homes, seven
weeks old, litter box trained, some
long-haired. Call 688-6610.

—

'68 BUG, AM radio, needs work on
one tail-light to pass Inspection. $750
or best offer. Call 691-6115 after 6
p.m.

STEREO
Put
the

—

Students Buying

Co-op.

highest
quality
hi-fi
(Flsher-Oual)
In your own room.
Unmatched prices. 832-4950 evenings,

weekends.
12-string guitar.
YAMAHA
$125. Sharon, Box J, Norton

Asking
or

5115

Goodyear.

PROFESSIONAL

business or
theses,
papers,
dissertations, legal briefs, resumes,
manuscripts. Call 937-6050.

EXPERIENCED

manuscripts.

KRAFT

EXTERIOR

’63 engine; automatic

Engagement
Economy Wedding Plan

TELAAK

STUDIO

Publicity Photos A I.D.

3090 Main St.
834-5470
-

-

-

Painters

-

For free estimate, call Karl between
5—7 p.m. 894-4631 or 894-0996.
TYPING, experienced, near U.B. $.40
par page. 834-3370. Fast service.

TYPING

—

papers,
691-9480.

quality work, for reasonable expense.

p.m.

—

—

typist

theses and

TYPING

—

typing

term

personal,

HAGSTROM 12-strlng electric guitar
body) with dual pick-up.
Excellent condition. Includes case.
Challenger
*150
or
bast
offar.
ampllflar (33-watt, PA amp)
*30 or
bast offar. Olson, 12-inch spaakar
*10. All thraa for *175 cash or bast
offar. Call 837-6724 anytlma aftar l
(hollow

'61 COMET

SHERIDAN

WE

-

experienced
IBM
Selectric. 8.50/page. Call 838-4808.
—

—

EXPERIENCED typist

business or
Term papers, theses, etc.
Sheridan—Elmwood
location.
Call
877-9234 after S p.m.
—

personal.

dissertations, theses, term
papers. Professionally dona by former
owner/oparator
professional
of a
typing service. Call 833-1521.
—

NATIVE FRENCHMAN experienced
tutor, willing to give French lessons.
•38-4091.

APARTMENTS WANTED
UNIVERSITY professor desires to rant

3-bedroom house with fireplace and
garage In either Boston Hills or
Eggartsvllla,
Snyder
Call
area.
•31-3717, *—5 p.m. or 839-3074 after
6 pan.
WANTED) Three-bedroom apartment
wanted within walking distance of UB
for Sept. 1. Call Fralda at 833-7760,
Susie at 834-1993 or Myrna at
•33-2486.

Friday, 21 July 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven
.

.

�Announcements
Psychomat is taking place on Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m.,
not Thursdays as it stales In the Summer Activities booklet.

UUAB Arts Committee will hold a meeting on Monday,
July 24 at 5 p.m. in Room 261 Norton. Anyone interested
in working on the Arts Committee, please come.
The School of Management has been given independent
status as a school, President Ketter announced.
CAC is holding a foods and equipment drive for
Terrace House on Monday, July 24 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
the first floor of Norton. Foods needed are canned fish,
peanut butter, any meat, crackers or other preservable
foods. Also needed, cards, checkers, chess, etc.
Beginning classes in exercise and meditation are held at
the Ashran on 196 Linwood every evening at 7 p.m. For
further information, call 881-0505. Classes are also held on
campus on Mondays and Wednesdays at 4 p.m. in Room
344 Norton.

The Democratic Youth Coalition needs ptople to work
in local congressional campaigns. Faculty and student
volunteers are needed as researchers and writers. If
interested, call 852-3369.
The India Association of Buffalo will sponsor an Indian
movie, Guddi , on July 22 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 147
Diefendorf. Admission will be $1.50 for members and $2.00
for all others.

There will be an organizational meeting for Video
Committee’s ACT V on July 25 in Room 60 Norton at 4
p.m. All those interested in video programming and
production are urged to attend.
Student Association is sponsoring a Red Cross blood
August 7 in the Fillmore Room. Sign up
drive to be held
in the Student Association office before August 7.

The Buffalo Black Writers Workshopp, under the
direction of Celes Tisdale, will present its first Annual
Celebration on Sunday, July 23 at 4 p.m. at the Masten
Community Workshop at 1221 Main St. Charles "Magnus"
Harrell, well-known local artist, is the Masten Community
Workshop director.
CAC Project Night People needs volunteers. Come
downtown and rap with the indigents and alcoholics of
Chippewa St. We are open 9 p.m.—3 a.m. For more
information call Jim, 842-1059.

Draft Counselors from the Draft Counseling Center of
Buffalo will be available on campus Tuesdays 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. in Room 260 Norton. Men with lottery numbers
1 100 are urged to come. (This is a Student
Association/GSA sponsored service to students.)
—

Botany: Useful Plants, an identification course in local
edible, medicinal and fiber plants used by Indians and
pioneers, will be given through the Credit-Free Program by
R.H. Zander of the Buffalo Museum of Science. Four
Saturday afternoon fieldtrips will begin July 29. Call
831-4301 for information.

Bernard Benstock, professor of English at Kent State
University, will present a lecture on James Joyce; The Creed
on July 25 at 3 p.m. in Norton
of the Farsoonerite
Conference Theater. This is the third in a series of four
lectures and readings to be given by participants in the
Ninth Summer Program in Modern Literature at SUNYAB.
—

An exhibition of over 100 works, Continental Painting
and Sculpture, 1942-1972, in the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery, will open today with a preview for members at
5:30 p.m. The exhibition will be open to the public at 10
a.m. on Saturday, July 22 and will continue through
Sunday, August 27.

The new summer schedule for The Unnamable will be
Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. in the American
Contemporary Theater. There will be 12 final performances
prior to their New York engagement.
The Browsing Library/Music Room is now taking
applications for Fall employment. All students are invited
to apply in Room 257 Norton. No applications will be
accepted after July 31.
Anyone who has been hassled as a result of either the
Housing Ordinance regarding more than two unrelated
persons living together in Buffalo or incorrect information
derived from Data Bank Centers regarding job placement,
insurance applications, etc., contact Andrew Kossover,
Student Rights Coordinator, Students Rights Office, Room

205, Norton Union, 831-5507.

Backpage
Available at the Ticket Office
Shaw Festival

Through Sept. 2: Getting Married (sold out)
Through Sept. 3: Misalliance (sold out)
August 15-19; Concerts
Melody

Fair

Through July 22: Englebert Humperdinck (sold out)
July 25 30: Peggy Fleming
July 31
August 5: Mitzi Gaynor
August 7—12: Premises, Promises
August 14-19: 1776
August 21-26: Sergio Franchi &amp; Corbett Monica
—

-

Chatauqua
July 21-24: The Flying Dutchman
July 22; A Doll's House
Popular Concerts
July 22: |. Cells &amp; Blues Project (B)
August 6; The Grassroots (MF)
August 6: Badfinger, Cactus &amp; Billy Preston (M)
August 13: Chicago (M)
August 20: Pete Fountain (MF)
August 15-20: Jesus Christ Superstar (K)
American Contemporary Theater
The Unnamable

KEY
B
Buffalo State
-

Kleinhans
Memorial Auditorium
MF Melody Fair

K

M

-

—

-

—Osterreicher

What’s Happening

Tuesday, July 25

Friday, July 21

Concert: An Evening of Erik Satie, under the direction of
Frederic Ford and Robert Willoughby at 8:30 p.m. in
Baird Recital Hall.
Musical: Touch, a rock musical at 8:30 p.m. in 233 Norton.
Summer Poetry Festival; Anthony Hecht, Pulitzer prize
winner in poetry in 1970, reading from his poetry at 8
p.m. in Norton Conference Theater.
Films: Satan's Choice, directed by Shebib. We Are the
Lambeth Boys, directed by Reisz and Scorpio Rising
(1963) directed by Anger at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. in 147
Diefendorf.

Play: The
Unnamable at 8 p.m. in the American
Contemporary Theater.
Film: Two Lane Blacktop in the Norton Conference
Theater. Check Theater Showcase for times.
Concert: Student Recital with Robert Winter, piano at 8:30
p.m. in Baird Recital Hall.
Musical: Touch, a rock musical at 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. in 233
Norton.
Film: Mother (1926) directed by Pudovkin at 7 p.m. and 10
p.m. in 140 Capen.
Films: La Marche des Machines (1928) directed by Deslaww
H20 (1929) directed by Steiner, Films (selection)
(1935 —40) directed by Lye, and Films (selection)
directed by McLaren at 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. in 147
Diefendorf.

Saturday, )uly 22
Play: The Unnamable at 8 p.m. in the American
Contemporary Theater.
Film: Two Lane Blacktop in the Norton Conference
Theater
Musical: Touch , a rock musical at 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. in 233
Norton
Sunday, July 23

Wednesday, July 26
All Campus Television: UUAB Video Committee presents
Act V, All Campus Television, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. in Haas
Lounge.
Musical Innovations: WBCE-FM at 9:05 p.m.
Musical: Touch, a rock musical at 8:30 p.m. in 233 Norton.
Films: Conversations in Vermont (1970) directed by Frank
and Naked Night (195 3) directed by Bergman at 7 p.m.
and 9 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Film: Bed and Sofa (1927) directed by Room at 7 p.m. in
140 Capen.
Films: La Souriante Madame Beudet (1922) directed by

Dulac, La Petite Marchande d'Allumettes
directed by Renoir and Un Chien Andalou
directed by Bunuel at 9 p.m. in 140 Capen.
Thursday, July

Musical;

Touch, a rock musical at 8:30 p.m. in

(1927)
(1929)

27

233

Norton.
Film:7"K'o Lane Blacktop in the Norton Conference Theal

Monday, July 24

Summer Poetry Reading: Pol Ndu of Nigeria reading his
poetry at 2 p.m. in Norton Fountain area.
Film: The End of St. Petersburg (1927) directed by
Pudovkin at 7 p.m. in 140 Capen.
Films: Entr'act (1924) directed by Clair, Menilmontant
(1925) directed by Kirsanov, The Seashell and the
Clergyman (1928) directed by Dulac and Etoile de Mer
(1928) directed by Man Ray at 9 p.m. in 140 Capen.
Films: Scramble (1964) directed by Emshwiller and
Dreams, (1955) directed by Bergman at 7 p.m. and 9
p.m. in 147 Diefcndorf.

Film; Chafed

Elbows in Norton Conference Theater. Check
Theater Showcase for times.

All Campus Television: UUAB Video Committee presents
Act V, All Campus Television, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. in Haas
Lounge.
Concert: Randy Newman and John Prine, songwriters and
performers at 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room.

Touch, a rock musical at 8:30 p.m. in 233 Norton.
Film: Children Adrift (1959) directed by Luntz at 7 p.m. in

Musical:

147 Diefendorf.
Oh the Bowery (1962) directed by Rogosin at 7:30
in 147 Diefendorf.
Film: Lonely Boy at 8:30 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Film: The Quiet One (1948) directed by Meyers at 9:15
p.m. hi 147 Diefendorf.

film:

p.m.

-E.G. Miller-Smith

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                    <text>‘The man for America’s future...

’

by Jo-Ann Armao
Editor-in-Chief

MIAMI BEACH
The 1972 Democratic National
Convention
its votes and its spirit
belonged to George
—

—

—

McGovern.

The fact of McGovern’s hold on the “New Look”
convention was recognized when he secured a first ballot
victory early Thursday morning to capture his party’s
presidential nomination. Yet, the convention’s vote selecting
the South Dakotan was merely a formality
His victory was assured early in
the week when his adroit political
1894.95 delegate votes, a number
organization won the challenge to well over the 1509 majority
151 California seats. At that time, needed for nomination.
McGovern predicted: “Victory is
In speeches nominating him,
within our grasp.”
McGovern
praised
was
as
If there were any doubts after “strengthening the party” and
the California triumph about who being in “tune with the challenge
would win the nomination, they of the future
not tied to the
were
when
dispelled
top past.” His nomination was placed
contenders Hubert Humphrey and by Senator Abraham Ribicoff, a
Edmund Muskie dropped out of friend who also nominated him
the race. McGovern was thus four years ago.
actively opposed by four other
According to Senator Ribicoff .
candidates;
Chisolm, “The country needs a President
Shirley
Henry Jackson, Terry Sanford and and a party willing to trust in the
George Wallace
inherent decency and common
sense of the people . . . George
Party’s choice
McGovern is
the man for
It was obvious, however, as America’s future.” In an appeal to
Senator Muskie pointed out, that party regulars frightened by
McGovern was the party’s choice. McGovern “radicalism,” Senator
Subsequently, it handed him Ribicoff argued: “[McGovern]
—

—UPI

has

the

finest
political
organization in the history of
American politics to help defeat
Richard Nixon.”
Seconding the nomination,
Valerie Kushner of Virginia
explained that she represented a
very special “minority”
the
wives of men who are missing or
imprisoned in Southeast Asia. Ms.
Kushner told why she backed
-

The SpECT^UM
Vol. 23, No. 6

State University of New York at Buffalo

Friday, 14 July

1972

Recommendations in limbo

Teacher effectiveness studied
by

Ian C. DeWaal

Campus Editor

On May 9, 1972, the Faculty Senate adopted
the recommendations of its sub-committee on
Teaching Effectiveness which included a proposal to
establish an Office of Teaching Evaluation. As is
with
such
Senate
customary
Faculty
recommendations, they were delivered to Hayes Hall
for Presidential action. Implementation was set back
by concern over the 1973-74 University budget.
Today, two months after the resolution was passed,
no action has been taken.
Subsumed under the Educational Policy and
Planning Committee of the Faculty Senate, the
sub-committee took its direction both from the
charge given it by, at that time Faculty Senate
vice-chairman William Baumer, and from questions
that had been raised by the Task Force on University
Goals in its final report issued in 1970.
Task divided
The sub-committee on Teaching Effectiveness
was convened under the chairmanship of Allen
ICuntz, Director of Instructional Services and
Testing, and immediately divided its task into two
sections. The first was to be an evaluation of what
exactly teaching effectiveness was and methods of
determining its presence. The second area was to be
a study of the methods of implementing a reward
system for effective teaching. The sub-committee’s
report to the Faculty Senate covered only the first
section of its task. The second report is forthcoming.
The recommendations of the sub-committee
were strengthened on the floor of the Faculty
Senate. Instead of requiring only classes of ten or
more students to participate in teaching evaluation

procedures, all classes would be participants if the
plan is implemented. In addition, the proposed
Office of Teaching Evaluation would be jointly
supervised by the Offices of Student Affairs and
Academic Affairs rather than falling under the
exclusive purvey of Student Affairs as was the case
in the original recommendations.
Recommendations endorsed
the
sub-committee
In
accepting
recommendations,
the Senate
endorsed the
“assessment of teaching performances by student
evaluation of teaching.” Additionally, it endorsed
the inclusion of copies of the evaluations as
“evidence of teaching effectiveness or lack thereof in
advancement procedings.” It also asked that the
University provide “funds adequate to attract and
keep outstanding staff to direct the Office of
Teaching Evaluation.”
Richard Sigglekow, vice president for Student
Affairs, expressed his avid support of a systemized
plan to effect teaching evaluations. ‘Teaching
methadology is a pressing topic of concern on the
campus,” commented Dr. Sigglekow. “I am very
interested in the development and will work together
with students and faculty if the recommendations
are to be implemented.”
Gilbert Moor, Chairman of the Faculty Senate.
is currently investigating the status of tbffy
recommendations made by the Faculty Senate oh
May 9. However, his involvement began recently
since he only assumed office on July first. Dr.
Sigglekow has also been hampered by his
unfamiliarity with the 'situation since he returned
from sabbatical only two weeks ago. However, it was
suggested by several sources that progress would
become apparent as the fall semester approached.

McGovern: “1 knew he would
bring my husband home. But even
more importantly, he will bring
America home, too.”
Reactions
Following the roll call vote in
which Illinois had the honors of
carrying McGovern over the
required majority, his supporters
rose cheering. Some delegates
celebrated with wine and danced
to the tune of “Happy Days Are
Here
Again.”
Everywhere,
delegates were congratulating each
other, some shaking their heads in
disbelief.
mood,
however,
The
of
workers m McGovern’s "boiler
room” was subdued One newsman
observed
that
“these
revolutionaries of today are very
placid.” Perhaps, their reserve
reflected an awareness of the
serious work required in the
months ahead.
McGovern is first faced with
the immediate task of healing
party wounds and uniting the
Democratic Party behind him.
Already, he has met with labor
leaders and Democratic governors.
Additionally, he plans to see
Chicago Mayor Richard Daley
who lost his seats during the
Illinois challenge.
Such plans designed to assauge
party regulars have, in turn,
aroused the suspicions of some
McGovern supporters. They fear
that he will compromise issues
to
woo
and
convictions
Democratic backing.

Several hours before McGovern
was named as the Democratic
Presidential
candidate,
he
confronted demonstrators camped
in the lobby of his hotel
headquarters, the Doral. Chanting
“We want George, Talk, Now,
Talk,”
they
were
clearly
concerned
with
McGovern’s
recent statement that as President,
he would maintain a “military
capability in Southeast Asia” until
prisoners are returned.
One protestor explained that
McGovern
was
his
losing
credibility by backing down on
certain issues such as abortion and
marijuana reform. A McGovern
youth delegate explained that he
backed McGovern mostly for his
commitment to withdraw all
troops from Southeast Asia. “It
bothers me that we might be sold
out.” Signs detailed the fate of
others’ political promises; “LBJ
promised peace too in 1964 and
he didn’t deliver.”
But McGovern is determined
not to be like other politicians.
Against the advice of secret
service agents, he chose to explain
in person to the protestors that
his statement does not represent a
change in position, but simply a
clarification of a stand that was
not fully articulated before.
Yet, there exists both in the
lobby of the Doral and across the
nation those who are
not
convinced
They will be
watching the actions and listening
to the words of the mid-west
Senator who wishes to defeat
Richard Nixon.
....

"A national convention," H.L. Mencken ramarkad, *1$ aa faacinatint aa
revival or a Hanoino." This week's Democratic Convention contained
elements of both from the Jems Freaks in Flamingo Park to the "Stop
McGovern" movement. For more convention information, saa ptpa
seven through eleven.
■

•

wvw

w*

ae

v

vise

ween e

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vwsiaansv^na

�SunshineHouse finds a

Professional Staff Senate

home at 106 Winspear 'Viability is the key concern

After several months of legal difficulties encountered in efforts to
obtain a house, Sunshine House, which serves as a crisis intervention
center, recently moved from Norton Hall to a residence at 106
Winspear.
According to Ken Sharpe, public relations coordinator ofSunshine
House; ‘The range of calls has increased and the range of clients has
gone up” since the move. Mr.
persons should call the
Sharpe said, ‘The house is very Sunshine House at 8314046 for
conducive to counseling. The these and other problems such as
members of the house are a lot
medical problems, a family
closer and find it easier to work run-away, draft problems, or any
together. It is more or less like a Qther information.”
ome
Sunshine House has sometimes
“At Norton, it was very been
for
being
criticized
difficult to talk on the phones,” non-professional. The staff, which
he continued, “because *we were is comprised of 25 members for
[Community the summer, is mostly students;
located in the
Action Corps] office. Also, it was both undergraduate and graduate.
sometimes necessary to use the Mr. Sharpe agreed that the
women’s lounge when a person “operators of the house are not
needed personal counseling.” At professional in that they have no
the house a large room contains profession
degrees,” but he
three or four phones and has emphasized that the operators are
enough space for Comprehensive “well trained and competent.
referral files. A small bedroom has
“Also,
Sunshine
House
been converted into a counseling maintains a professional staff on
room for persons who need call. There is a doctor and a social
immediate help.
worker who are on call 24 hours a
day.” Additionally, Mr. Sharpe
Many problems covered
said that the “non-professional
Mr. Sharpe noted that a “large staff is more of a peer group
variety of clients call up: parents whom persons will call in a crisis
worried about their children using situation whereas they back away
drugs, those experiencing a drug from professionals.”
Also,
crisis such as an overdose, those
he
stressed
that
experiencing an emotional crisis, “Sunshine House is a crisis
those wanting legal information, intervention center for short-term
and those wanting birth control counseling. It is to help persons to
information.” Mr. Sharpe says become rational.
“

TIRES ARE IN AT Ij

INDEPENDENT

\

\

FOREIGN CAR SERVICE
KENSINGTON at HARLEM

839-185

will be continued by the statewide Senate
Professional Association (SPA), the recognized
bargaining agent of the professional staff for the
State University.
Allen Kuntz, recently elected chairman,
described the function of the new organization.
“The Professional Staff Senate will discharge a role
for the professional staff in the governance of the
University,” stated Dr. Kuntz. “It represents the

formation of SUPA and its recent withdrawal in
favor of the Professional Senate.
“SUPA started several years ago prior to SPA or
any other organization,” explained Dr. Hostetler. “It
was evident that SUPA wasn’t a deliberative body It
was an executive committee that had no way of
polling its constituency. The professional staff now
becomes a representative body where deliberation
can take place.”
A statewide SUPA organization is still in
is
existence,
however, its role
“undergoing
redefinition” as described by Dr. Hostetler. Despite
the fact that its original bargaining agent functions
have been subsumed by SPA, statewide SUPA will
continue to have representation from the State
University of Buffalo, even though there will no
longer be a local chapter.

Staff concerns
The Professional Staff Senate will maintain
contacts with the Senate Professional Association by
instructing that organization about staff concerns
over working conditions. Aside from this function
and the actions designed to promote professional
staff involvement in the governance of the
University, the Senate will try to fill other important
functions.
of
promotion
professional
The
“the
development of individuals committed to careers in
higher education” as well as the establishment of
“professional peer review in order to establish
professional standards for its members” are two
additional functions outlined in the organization's
new constitution.
i Dr. Kuntz emphasized the campus community’s
need to discriminate between the roles of the Staff
Senate and SPA. “In attempting to establish
workable university governance, the university
internally must distinguish between union and
professional function,”

recognition of a large number of professionals on the
part of the administration as having a rightful and
meaningful role in University governance.”

STEEL BELTED RADIAL

ji

The labor union functions of the local SUPA group

Allen Kuntz

4-

MICHELIN

The newly constituted Professional Staff Senate
recently conducted elections for officers to pilot the
fledgling organization through its transitional period
following the dissolution of the local chapter of the
State University Professional Association (SUPA).

3S Senators
The officers recently elected are now presiding
over the election of senators. The 35 senators will
represent four areas of the University in proportion
to the numbers of professional staff in those
divisions. Cliff Wilson, a member of the elections
committes, revealed that a “bullet” system of voting
was being used both
subsequent elections.

for nominations

and

the

The four areas defined in the constitution and
their representation are the Faculties with 11
The creation of the Professional Staff Senate
senators; the Office of the President, Academic
was the result of hard work by many individuals
Affairs and University-wide divisions with ten,
including the last chairman of SUPA, Norman
Systems and Operations, University Relations and
original
about
the
Hostetler. Dr.. Hostetler talked
Computing Service with eight and Student Affairs
with six for a total of 35.
The hardest part in establishing the Professional
Senate was the determination of which members of
the University qualified for general membership. The
final decision was that all professional employees of
the State University of Buffalo would be members
with the exception of persons who spend more than
one half their time teaching or in academic research,
Civil Service (classified) employees and persons in
Hard work

intem-type positions.

SUMMER

1972

Officers elected
There are

NEWMAN
CENTER

MAIN ST.

&amp;

531 members in the general
membership and each will have six votes to split or
cast for a single candidate. After the elections are
concluded on July 24, an executive committee of
about ten members will be constituted.
Other officers elected in the recent balloting
include Eugene Martell, director of Placement, vice
chairman; Robert Wagner, assistant to the provost

NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

834-2297

for Natural Sciences and Mathematics, secretary, and
Will Brown, assistant to the vice president for
Academic Affairs, representative to statewide SUPA

Sunday Mass
SAT. 7:00 p.m.
SUN. 8:30 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
11:00 a.m.

12:00 n
7:00 p.m. (Espanol)

Cantalician Chapel
3233 Main Street
[
-

NEWMAN CENTER

Daily Mass
MON. FRI. 8:00 a.m. &amp; 11:30 a.m.
SAT. 10:00 a.m. NEWMAN CENTER
—

Hall Hours
,

DAILY 8:00 a.m.

—

9:00 p.m.

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The Spectrum is published once a
week on Fridays, ten times during
the summer academic sessions by
Sub Board 1, Inc. Offices are
located at 355 Norton Hall, State

University of New York at Buffalo.
3435 Main Street, Buffalo. New
York. 14214. Telephone: Area
Code 716; Editorial 831-4113; Bus
iness 831-3610.
Represented for advertising by Na
tional Educational Advertising Ser
vice, Inc., 360 Lexington ave , New

York. New York. 10017.

Subscription rates are $4.50 per
semester or $8.00 for two semes
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Second Class Postage paid at Buf

falo. New York.

Circulation: 10,000

�Campus clinic deals
with human sexuality
A vital service coordinating a new Pregnancy Counseling
Center with the Birth Control Clinic and the V.D. Speakers
Bureau is now available on campus.
Bom out of a persistent demand for abortion referral
information at CAC’s Sunshine House the idea of a
pregnancy counseling center
attitudes. Also the service can
as a separate entity was
make financial arrangements for
realized as an “urgent necessan
abortion
with
certain
Noting that counseling at the
center is geared towards all
aspects of human sexuality,
project head Carol Glazer said:
“We’re not only for pregnancy
and we’re not only for women,”
though most calls do reflect the
need for accessible birth control
information and actual pregnancy

government agencies such as
Medicaid.
Every abortion case handled
through the center if followed up.
Thus, a constant re-evaluation of
the service is facilitated according
to what the woman says about her
particular experience. At the same
time the subject of future birth
control information is brought

coun cling.

out.

Free
pregnancy tests are
available at the center and all
information is held in the strictest
confidence: only in cases of
medical referral is there a transfer
of any information.
Done with care
and
Every
gynecologist
obstetrician the center refers to is
and
sympathetic
highly
recommended. All abortion clinics
referred to are examined and
rated
by
those competent
counselors who, for example,
assess
operative
facilities,
emergency facilities and the staffs

Boy tickets early!

the
Though
Pregnancy
Counseling Center makes it
possible for virtually anyone
wanting an abortion to have one,
training
counselor
sessions
emphasize that a person makes
her own decisions. The center acts
only in the capacity of short-term
counseling; in cases of long term
counseling the person will be
referred to other reliable family
by Dave Saleh
and social agencies.
Off-Campus editor
The hours for the Center
The Research and Planning Council of Erie
during the summer are Monday v
through Friday 1 -4 p.m. and in County has begun a study of all drug rehabilitation
and reference centers in the Buffalo area in an effort
the evening, Monday through
to establish some kind of order in the present maze
Thursday 7—9 p.m. in room 343 of drug agencies.
Norton.
In a meeting of area leaders in the drug

County-wide study

Drug program overvie w begun

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rehabilitation field last month, County Executive
Edward V Regan called for a plan to “inventory and
attempt to evaluate all non law-enforcement drug
programs in the county. This will include services
extended front all, community agencies from the Boy
Scouts up.”
Mr. Regan said that "any recommendations that
will be made to me during the study will be given
absolute priority and considered very seriously .”
After the meeting, a six member subcommittee
was chosen to draft an outline of the study The
committee
consisted
of
Health
County
Commissioner Dr. James Warde, Joseph Vetter,
Director of Addicts in Distress (AID), Dr Peter
Russell of the Veteran’s Administration Hospital, Dr.
Marc Lipton of the County Health Department, Dr
Edna Grexton from the State University of Buffalo,
and Dr. William Hairston, chairman of the Erie
County Narcotics Guidance Council, who acted

ex-officio.

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study will be submitted to a Community Task Force
in order to develop recommendations to the County.

Vetter replies
According to Mr. Bryant the actual study will
begin by the end of July, but the duration of the
study is still unknown.
The only member of the committee who was
willing to make a public statement was Mr. Vetter,
who said: “County Executive Edward Regan, to
make sure that agencies which tax monies are paying
for will become productive, set the pace for our

committee at the first meeting, explaining to all that
he wanted a large commission to check out
everything from the Boy Scouts Drug Addiction
Program up to the highest government rehabilitation
agency.
“Following the leadership and direction that Mr.
Regan gave us,” Mr. Vetter continued, “I quite
enthusiastically agreed to be part of the five-expert
team that would direct this drug abuse study. It has
long been
felt that some criteria should be
maintained for drug abuse workers and methods in
both
and
rehabilitation
private
government

programs.”
‘Only national authority’
Mr. Vetter, who recently received an award
from the American Legion for “outstanding and
meritorius service to the community” for his work at
AID (where he claims to have one of the highest
success rates in the country), pledged the project his
support as “the most experienced and the only
national authority representing the private sector of
drug rehabilitation. 1 have also sent word through
Mr. Hairston to commissioner Warde . . . that Erie
County with its new executive can as always in the
last 1 5 years count on me to give counsel and help
wherever needed.”
Commenting on the growing possibility of a
drug program at the State University of Buffalo, Mr.
Vetter said that if such a program is initiated, he
would be most willing to act as an official counselor
“even though AID is now a national organization
having received extensive press coverage in over 2400
newspapers across America.”

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In a closed meeting an outline of the study was
drawn up in which a three phase study was planned.
The plan, according to James Bryant of the Research
and Planning Council, would include an inventory of
existing programs in the county, a comparison of
these programs and evaluation which is “still in the
early stages of development.”
The study will not only identify the type of
programs in the county, but according to very
reliable sources a detailed review of all the programs
involved will be made. This study will identify the
purposes and goals of the programs, review staff
structures and funding, note operational costs and
sources of revenue, and compare the programs’
results to their purposes and goals.
In addition the study will include interviews
with staff, board members, and clients to determine
how
effective the program is. The involved

rehabilitation center will then be toured and an
observation of the program in operation will be
included. Finally, the information gathered in the

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14 July 1972 The Spectrum Paige three
.

.

�Sub BoardIaccessible
graduate activity source
The point of entry into the mainstream of student

activities for graduate students is with Sub Board I, so says
new Graduate Student Association (GSA) President Bob
Dugan.

Mr. Dugan feels graduate students have very limited
opportunities within the University to contribute their broad
expertise in valuable ways.
His office is working on special
All too often “grad students
projects which would encourage
come to school for classes members of the Buffalo business
and go straight home and community to use the graduate
never feel like they’re part of school as a resource for their
the school,” Mr. Dugan benefit. “For instance,” he said,
commented.
“if the Chamber of Commerce or
More funding from Sub Board
1, he said, would enable graduate
students to organize clubs which
“give you an early inkling of what
the field you’re in is all about.”
He cited a club, SARC, an
organization for graduate students
in rehabilitation counseling, as

a political leader wanted research
conducted, he could hire a
graduate student’ instead of a

professional.”
The GSA office is also
establishing stronger relationships
with other governing structures in
the University such as the Faculty
FSA
the
Senate
and
Faculty-Student Association
also with aspirations of a collected
effort towards more graduate
student activity.
—

the
political
Discussing
he
has dealt with
entanglements
thus far, Mr. Dugan described the
workings of a task force directed
at compiling university figures
concerning minority stipends,
and
assistantships;
hiring
information which was requested
from Dr. Ketter’s office.
With this information and
more research in conjunction with
Dean of the Graduate School,
MacAllister Hull’s office, the GSA
office will hopefully be more
equipped to inform and aid the
students concerning what is
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Suit filed

Model Cities’ jobs limited

A civil court suit filed against the Buffalo Model
Cities program seeking an injunction against the city
for “unfair hiring practices,” has put a serious
damper on another of the city’s federally funded
“self-improvement programs.”
This move coupled with the recent series of
errors which virtually killed the Mayor’s Summer
Employment Program has threatened to produce a
long hot summer for the city’s youth and for many
of those who hoped to find some kind of relief from
Buffalo’s sweltering 8% unemployment rate.
The suit filed by the Reverend Robert Jackson
called for “[an] injunction against the City of
Buffalo, Robert Penn [director of the Model Cities
Program] and the Housing and Urban Development
Commission [HUD] from funding any more
programs until the rules and guidelines set up by the
Federal Government concerning the employment of
Model City residents are followed.”
‘Political hack’
Mr. Jackson also lashed out at Mr. Penn, calling
him a “political hack” and he accused the
Corporation Counsel of the city of refusing to allow
the Common Council to make a decision on the
matter. According to Rev. Jackson; “the Mayor of
Buffalo along with the Common Council is
responsible for complete and continued control of
the program, but the Corporation Counsel of the
City of Buffalo will not allow them to act on the
matter. In fact the Common Council only approves
the budget of the program and does not take any
other form of action.”
Among the chief complaints against the program
is the hiring of blacks outside the Model Cities area
which Rev. Jackson claims is a political move aimed
at “giving jobs to rich blacks instead of poor blacks.”
Rev. Jackson claims that about 40% of the big
paying jobs are going to blacks living in the suburbs
of the city and that one worker is earning over
$50,000 a year and is living outside the model cities
area on the east side of the city.
Black Studies dispute
Rev. Jackson also stated that a number of
people in the model cities area have been passed over
for such jobs despite being adequately qualified. “In
one case,” the Reverend pointed out, “(a woman]
was passed over for a job as ‘overqualified’ because
she had earned her masters degree at Buffalo State.”
In addition, Rev. Jackson claimed that of the
800 students sent to the Black Studies Program at
the State University of Buffalo by the Model Cities
Program only 25 were from the Model Cities area.
Mr. Penn, in response to Rev. Jackson’s
statements, denied that the hiring practices were
unfair, saying that “85% of the jobs provided by the
program are held by Model Cities residents. The only
place where the situation is not good is the Model

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Cities staff where we have a problem obtaining
people with adequate requirements.”
Model Cities priority
Mr. Penn denied unfair hiring practices, though,
claiming that the Model Cities program first looks
for people in the Model Cities area who meet the
requirements for a given job. ‘If a person is found in
the model Cities area who meets the requirements
for a job,” Mr. Penn said, “he will be given top
priority for the position.”
Mr. Penn also said that there was a training
program underway for Model City residents to help
them meet the standards set by the Program, and
improve the rate of employment in the staff jobs. In
addition, Mr. Penn denied that there was any black
studies program at the State University of Buffalo
which was sponsored by the Model Cities Program.
Pat Gore, assistant to the director of the Black
Studies Program at the University, also said that she
has no knowledge of Model Cities funding of any
student in their program. According to Ms. Gore: “It
is possible that some students who are involved in
the Model Cities Program are also enrolled at the
University and are taking Black Studies courses, but
as far as anybody being directly funded into this
program by Model Cities, to the best of my
knowledge, this is not so.”
In the court action, the case was adjourned until
today as Mr. Jackson was given time to reply to a
motion to dismiss the case. Mr. Penn claimed that
the case would be thrown out of court soon and that
Rev. Jackson “doesn’t even have a case.”
Crime control flop
Along with the problems confronting the Model
Cities Program, the Crime Control Commission
kicked off an 800 job program for local youths on
Monday to the disappointment of much of the
community. The disappointment was caused by the
inability of the commission to bring about a program
which would resemble last year’s 22,000 job
program.
Crime Control Commissioner Grant Hanesworth
claimed that the reduction in jobs was caused by a
“difference in ideology” between his office and the
Crime Control offices in New York. According to
Mr. Hanesworth, these differences were caused by a
reluctance on the part of the people in New York to
provide an employment program for youth, “since
the problem is so huge throughout the country that
they feel that their efforts in this area would do little
good.”
Despite the reasons for the problems that caused
the turmoil in these programs, the fact that two of
the city’s most important projects to lower the
unemployment rates this summer are endangered has
severely hindered its efforts to regain control of the
soaring crime rate in the city caused in part by
extensive gang activity.

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Page four The Spectrum Friday, 14 July 1972
.

ov't

.

3*1}

-1

i

i

&lt;/

1

•

&lt;

Rad

*r White.

�Zero growth forecast as folly

Editor’s note: The following is the first of a two part series
on zero population growth, submitted by Samuel Garth of
the National Caucus of Labor Committees. Each part will
be a critique of the premises used in The Limits To
Growth, a book published by the Club of Rome. This
week’s article will discuss "excessive" population growth.

out of the raw materials and food necessary to sustain
*

As the faltering economy propels us from one social

and political crisis to another, despair and demoralization
are spreading among many layers of society. Not least
among these are the university scholars and scientists. In
the absence of competent and credibly organized socialist
alternatives to the problems caused by the collapse of

Harder look
This equilibrium state is then presumed capable of
maintaining human society “far into the future” without
reaching the limits imposed by over pollution and
exhausted natural resources. If at first this sounds
attractive as a solution, then ponder the following
problem: a large portion of the United States population
(perhaps one half) presently finds its wages inadequate to
prepare its children to play a useful role in society through
advanced technology jobs (as if indeed such jobs actually
existed in adequate numbers). In addition our hospitals,
schools and housing stock are, to put it mildly, inadequate
and rapidly deteriorating.
Such are the conditions prevailing in the US. today;
conditions throughout they world and in the
underdeveloped world are a nightmare by comparison.
By way of anticipating such objections, the MIT
group advocates continued industrial growth until 1995"so
that a worldwide standard of living measuring half the
current US. level may prevail before calling a halt to
growth. Since the authors certify themselves as
egalitarians, presumably they are also advocating a halving
of US. and European wage-earners’ incomes!
More importantly, it is assumed that a capitalist
world economy presently on the brink of depression will
still be creating any real growth at all. The US. sector of
the world capitalist economy has in fact produced a steady
fall in real incomes since 1965 and shown an absolute
stagnation in industrial output for the last several years.

capitalist economy, many so-called scientiest are turning to
subjective and reactionary “solutions” such as the
academic racism recently advanced by Shockley, Eysenck
and Jensen.
The current rash of zero growth ecology movements
which propose to halt economic growth prominently

Commentary
represent this reactionary trend. Such movements see
“economic growth” and technology as the enemy, rather
than actual capitalist induced stagnation. It is no
coincidence that their call for lowered consumption as a
conservation measure perfectly coincides with government
austerity policies. For the wage-earner this means sustained
attacks against his standard of living for the purpose of
shoring up faltering credit and national currencies.
The “ecology movement’s” latest and most heavily
publicized attack on economic growth recently arrived in
the form of a book entitled "The Limits To Growth
published for the Club of Rome, a group of about 70
technocrats and industrialists who describe themselves as
an “invisible college” convened to solve world problems.
The authors are a team of MIT systems analysts who used
a computer program devised by MIT systems analyst Jay
W. Forrester to project current economic and population
trends into the future.

”

Drop predicted
The group contends that if present rates of economic
and population growth continue, both these rates will fall
sharply within the next hundred years or so. They claim
that pollution, non-renewable resource depletion, and
declining per capita food production will cause a
precipitous drop in population and industrial capacity in
the relatively near future unless these trends are halted

Follow the lines
The report is strewn throughout with impressive
looking graphs produced by computer print-outs. The
authors claim superiority for their “formal models” over
mere “mental models” which do not utilize computers.
Actually a computer is no more capable of producing
conceptual knowledge of the world than is a pencil. A
computer is merely a highly sophisticated adding and
collecting machine. As a recent The New York Times
review of The Limits To Growth slated, “garbage in,
garbage out” is an old computer programmer’s adage
It is precisely in its fundamental assumptions (its
garbage input) that the whole zero-growth argument falls
apart. The argument that exponential growth will finally
be halted by finite resources holds up in neither premise.

now

Their basic argument is that the material resources
upon which our existence depends are finite. Therefore,
exponential increases (that is, accelerated rather than
linear increases) in the rate of population and capital
growth will rapidly run up against the limited resources
and pollution-absorbing capacities of the earth. Simply
stated, burgeoning industry and population will soon run

Only you can

The method of extrapolating developmental trends into
the future on the basis of a limited period with No
theoretical consideration given to the actual causes of such
rates is nothing less than intellectual charlatanry.
The population extrapolations are a case in point.
Seen from the perspective of the world as a whole,
population has indeed been expanding exponentially; this
increase is apparently casually associated with an
exponential increase in industrial output.
However, when the industrially developed and
underveloped countries are examined separately in this
regard, a different picture emerges. The industrially
developed countries have actually exhibited a decline in
population rates to a linear expansion, while the
underdeveloped countries which are generally exhibiting
little or no real growth in industrial output have
exponentially increasing populations.

Explanation
The reason for this is the “value” and “cost” of the
addition of a new human being to society (in particular to
the family) in each case. In the “industrially advanced”
countries each new human being is potentially far more
productive than in the undeveloped world, however, the
“cost of producing” him is correspondingly greater (food,
housing, education, etc.).
Also, the time delay before he or she will become
actually productive is greater due to the increased
education and social maturation time. Thus there are
strong pressures on the family to employ birth control
techniques which will limit their family size and thus
reduces birth rates in society as a whole.
The situation in the underdeveloped world is the
opposite. Especially since the vicious capitalist looting of
the ‘Third World” throughout this century, jobs are
characterized by labor intensity, low wages, and generally
low levels of skill or educational requirements. This type
of “industry” has absorbed
we should say consumed
millions of children in the Third World. Thus, although to
the average family in the underdeveloped sector the cost of
raising children is actually relatively great compared to his
income, each new child rapidly becomes an additional
source of family sustenance.
The population problem in such areas is not how do
we supply birth control techniques, but rather how to
offer incentive for their use which will not destroy families
by lowering their already miserable income. The answer,
strangely enough, is industrialization! The real need is for
high wage, highly capitalized productive jobs which will
also produce the desperately wanting material values for
the underdeveloped world. The more likely conclusion to
draw from all this is that the only real solution to the
world population problem is the most rapid, balanced
worldwide industrial development.
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As a solution to this apparent dilemma the MIT
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births to the level necessary to merely offset deaths in the
world population. In addition, capital investment would be
limited to the rate required merely to replace that capital
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«

Friday,

14 July 1972 The
.

Spectrum Page five
.

�EdlTORIAl
The Peoples’Party
Miami Beach, 1972.
For months before, political analysts and national observers
predicted that the Democratic Convention would be chaotic,
unmanageable and confusing. Some even forecasted the political suicide
of a party torn by divisions.
Looking bSck, however, the convention ran with the orderliness of
a staged production
the McGovern crack organization handily
triumphed in the California challenge; on cue, Humphrey and Muskie
withdrew, guaranteeing a first ballot victory for McGovern; and protest
demonstrations were so controlled they teetered on boredom.
Yet, surface tranquility belied the real excitement of the event
the excitement of change, of new forces and ideas, and of a new

jjjfrf

Ik

—

—

democracy.
Even though the party was in the throes of major reform, the
convention was noteworthy for its openness and fairness. Democratic
Party Chairman Larry O'Brien must be praised for his impartial
treatment of all challenges and disputes. Furthermore, contenders
Humphrey and Muskie stymied partisan divisions by withdrawing from
the race and by acknowledging McGovern as the choice of the
Democratic Party
But the convention's success was the success of its delegates.
Reforms formulated by the McGovern-Fraser Commission enabled
long-ignored minorities to participate in and determine party policy.
Women, Blacks and youth are able to point to very real victories
Daley was deposed, anti-busing was squelched
McGovern was
—

nominated
As an organized caucus, the women were especially effective in
voicing their concerns; they decided important issues and were able to
negotiate with presidential hopefuls. It is unfortunate that the Youth
Political Caucus was unable to sufficiently organize itself into a
coherent body. Yet, recall that only a year ago, the National Women's
Political Caucus was such an unorganized idea. Hopefully, both the
youth and the Black minorities will experience similar success.
Particularly refreshing were the actions of individual minority
delegates. Rather than behave as mini-politicians, young, female and
black delegates were simply themselves.
It had been feared that the political naivety of new delegates
would result in cooptation and dilution of their interests. Instead, their
naivety constituted an unwillingness to compromise. As one young
alternate asserted: "We've come all this way without compromise . . .
Why should we now compromise and settle for shortshrift?"
Such an attitude transformed McGovern from a political absurdity
into the Democratic Party presidential nominee. And it is this kind of
attitude and commitment that must be continued into November.

Student Press
Considered illegitimate by both party regulars and established
media, the student press has, hitherto, been excluded and ignored. It is
thus a healthy sign that the Democratic Party officially accredited and
invited the student press to cover their convention.
While some problems existed in the way of treatment and
arrangements, most of the student press welcomed the opportunity to
report such an event for their audiences. In turn, the Democratic Party
enjoyed more popular exposure.
It is, therefore, interesting to note that not only has the
Republican Party failed to attract the student press, they are even
hesitant to consider any student requests for credentials.

The Spectrum
Vol. 23. No. 6

Friday, 14 July 1972

Editor-In-Chief

—

Jo-Ann Armao

Managing Editor
Jeff Greenwald
Businas Manager
Jack Her Ian
Co-Advartising Manager
Susan Hory
Co-Advertising Manager - Jeff Reiman

LOVE CONQUERS ALL

eedbac
Reactions against racism
To the Editor

Some people maybe wonder why we make such
deal out of guys like Prof. Halstead and
magazines like the “Humanist.” They say, “Why all
this fuss over racist ideology; it’s overkill.” Well, we
think it’s dead serious. There is a nation-wide
movement of “experts” pushing racism in this
country, in a campaign similar to the one against
Jews in Germany before the slaughter of millions.
Right now the ruling class is attacking minority
people more viciously than ever. Lousy housing,
incredible unemployment, welfare cuts, harassment
and murder by the cops, inferior education and
medical care: all these things add up to one thing
the bosses are turning the screws on blacks and latins
to make more money. Superexploitation means
superprofits. Racist “theories” arc being put into
a big

-

practice.

The universities promote and protect racism.
But this should come as no surprise. They have been
anti-worker, anti-women, pro-imperiaiist,
elitist, racist and generally anti-people trash for
years. From training ROTC officers for Vietnam, to
harboring racists like Edward Banfield, author of

Ian C. DeWaal

Campus

City
Copy

To the Editor
Your editorial about absentee ballots did not
really upset me. It was only too typical, and besides,
I was here in Buffalo. I had my voter registration
card, and I hadn’t moved since I registered. So
Tuesday, I strolled into my local polling place (I had
a little trouble finding out exactly which one it was),
and took out my card. Then came my first shock.
My name was not on the books, and of course you
may not vote unless your name is on the book. I was
told to call the Board'of Elections. So 1 called, and
they said that it was very possible that my name was
not on the books and was I a first-time voter (yes, in
New York State), and my age (25) and of course,

Lit.

vacant

. .

Peggy Edwards
Karin Skeldon
vacant

Feature
Graphic Arts

. .

&amp;

Drama

Will you please print an open letter to the

Music

Billy Altman

Dave Saleh
Mickey Osterreicher

Off-Campus

Photo

Tom Toles

Sports

vacant

Tha Spectrum is served by United Press International, College Press
Service, The Los Angeles Times Syndicate, The New Republic Feature
Syndicate and Pubfishers-Hall Syndicate.
Republication of matter herein in any form without the express
the

Editor-In-Chief

it forbidden.

Editorial policy is determined

by

the Editor-in-Chief

Page six The Spectrum Friday, 14 July 1972
A
.

-

tiU

/

.

V

.

.

.

S

.

•

•

•

,

I

•

.

ilst/A.

consent of

—

hospitals, in the schools, and ultimately a movement
that will overthrow the government and establish
Socialism, a workers’ state. Only under Socialism can
racism be totally destroyed.

Smash Racism! Power

to the

Workers!!

Progressive Labor Party

Buffalo

Club

when did you register (Feb. 1, 1972)
well, that is
why. To vote in the primaries, you had to register by
last October. And that was the first time I heard that
law. So I could not vote on Tuesday. Probably many
of the students who were registered in the voter
registration drive here at school in January and
February were in the same situation. As we all know,
ignorance of the law is no excuse, but it’s interesting
that the law exists at all. In order to register, you
have to show residency, and then five months after,
that is still not sufficient for one to vote in the
-

primaries So what’s new?

Michael Jackman

Rationalization does damage
Arabs

Maryhope Runyon
Michael Silverblatt

Layout

seven SDS members have been expelled from U.B.?
We are for academic freedom
for working
people, not for racists. We think that to smash
racism, we need a mass movement to Tight it
concretely in all its forms: on the job, in the

October deadline

—

-

"

teaching

To the Editor

-

both The Unheavenly City and the inhuman Family
Assistance Plan, the universities serve the rich bosses
of this country. They turn out teachers, social
workers, doctors, etc. filled with four years of lies
like “workers are dumb” and “education will solve
all your problems.”
One of the best ways they have of putting this
stuff over is under the guise of “academic freedom
What we want to know is - academic freedom for
whom? For those students expelled from Harvard
University for fighting Reserve Officers Training
Corps? Or for Prof. John Halstead on whose behalf

An Arab wrote a letter to The Spectrum
justifying the use of terrorism, of blind slaughter at
Tel Aviv, on account of the justice of the
Palestinian
cause

If I were Jewish, 1 would urge every Arab to
continue in this kind of pleading. Every time such
an
appeal is made, it alienates another hundred
or
thousand non-Arabs; it sways people who were
neutral, or even sympathetic to the Palestinians, over
to the Israeli side. If an Arab is morally justified
in
recruiting Japanese phychotics to kill non-Jewish
tourists, well
would not Jews be justified in
defending their own lives, and those of their
families,
against an open and repeatedly
announced, explicit
threat, to kill them all? (And please don’t tell us
such threats were not made, and are not
now being
-

made, with the intent of a holy war, a jihad and of
performance of the same.)
Aharon Katchalsky was not just a truly great
scientist; he was a superb teacher, a large-spinted
human being. His murder sent a shock throughout all
of science. No professor of science can ever again see
an Arab in his classroom without thinking
Katchalsky!
It is obvious that the Palestinian guerillas neither
know what they have done, nor do they care. And
they would have been equally happy, or more so, to
mow down Einstein.
Yes, you sympathizers with the Palestinian
zealots, you should continue to defend your
co-paranoids. With you as its enemies, Israel will
have no lack of friends.
Robert J Good

Professor

�analysis

Minorities gain momentum
by Jo-Ann Armao
Editor-m-Chief

subserviant,
underpaid or powerless
position to which female human beings are
consigned
..

Miami Beach is a city
MIAMI BEACH
of extremes. At one end of Main Street
Collins Avenue, resettled senior citizens
sun themselves outside box-like hotels, at
the other end, invading hordes of
fashionable tourists occupy show palaces
like the Fountainebleau or the Eden Roc.
There are even opposites in temperatures:
outside, the sun heats the island to degrees
over 80 and forces inhabitants into the
artifical chill of their rooms.
The Democrats chose an appropriate
city for selecting their nominee for
President of the United States. Reforming
itself to include many new forces, the
Democratic Party is rapidly becoming the
party of extremes.
After the 1968 debacle at Chicago, the
Democrats created the McGovem-Fraser
Commission to formulate rules designed to
make the convention more accurately
reflect the composition of the population.
The final 1972 delegate roll call gave ample
evidence that minorities
women, youth
and blacks
have substantially increased
in numbers. In addition to numerical gains,
the minority delegates banded together
into caucuses, thus consolidating new
strengths and powers. This past convention
week has brought both successes and
defeats to minority groups’ attempts to
secure their interests and assume leadership
in the Democratic party.
—

—

—

Reshape society
chairman,
Gwen
NWPC
Cherry,
maintained that while the increase in
women delegates showed that “we really
turned it around,” the real work begins
now. According to Betty Friedan, this
work involves acquiring a political power
to reshape institutions and society.
Friedan stated that these “new human
politics” would be dedicated to peace and
“a human life worth living” rather than
war and poverty.
Although the caucus supports different
presidential candidates, it has taken stands
on such issues as abortion, day care and
higher education. In addition, they are
drives to
secure
the
spearheading
appointment of women to the Supreme
Court, the Cabinet, and other federal, state
and local positions.
Speaking for the group, Liz Carpenter
maintained that “old barriers are coming
down . . . people have realized that this is
not an all-white, all-male world and that
these are not all-white, all-male times.”
‘There is,” she concluded, “no more
exciting revolution in this country than the
women’s revolution.
Youth
The youth stood out at this convention
both in numbers (young people
30 and
under make up 21 per cent of the total
number of delegates in contrast to four
percent in 1968) and in convictions. Yet,
no viable youth caucus could be compared
with the women’s organization.
Overcome by serious organizational
difficulties, the National Youth Political
Caucus held several abortive meetings
during the week. According to local
delegate Jeff Osinski (37th district), the
National Youth Caucus “sucks”, adding
that it has been unable even to reach a
quorum because of its disjointedness.
The youth strength lies in their ability
to influence local delegations. As Osinski
explained: “We are making our views felt
through the local units.” He continued that
such efforts are eased by the sympathy of
many older delegates for “youth” issues.
Agreeing with this, one young alternate
noted; “It is amazing how many people are
leaning towards youth ... there are some
over-30 delegates who are as vehement, if
not more so, than the under-30 delegates.”
Many have cited as one significant
youth victory the two-day battle to select

The Youth
the New York delegation head. Here, the
line between old and new politicians was
clearly drawn between State Democratic
Party Chairman Joseph F, Crangle, and his
opponents, mostly the young delegates.
Faulting Crangle for first backing Muskie
and then later withholding support from
McGovern, many were suspicious of just
how hard Crangle would work for
McGovern’s election.
So instead, the young threw their
support to Bronx Burrough President
Robert
and
Abrahms
Amsterdam
Assemblywoman Maryann Krupsak. To
prevent serious party divisions and conflict,
a co-chairman compromise was agreed
upon. Crangle, Abrahms, Krupsak and
Black leader Lilian Roberts shared
alternate co-chairman positions. Presently,
most of the young are committed to one
to elect as President George
goal
McGovern. Osinski remarked: “It’s the
McGovern line all the way.” One New
York alternate added; “We are McGovern
delegates; we are committed to electing
McGovern; we will do everything to ensure
his election except compromise.”

—

-

The Women
1972 is a record year for women at the
Democratic National Convention as they
more than doubled their numbers from the
1968 Chicago Convention, increasing from
13% to 38%.
This year also marks the first
anniversary of the National Women’s
Political Caucus (NWPC), which emerged at
an organizing convention of 300 women in
July, 1971. Based on the conviction that
women must unite to achieve political
equality, the NWPC has developed into a
broad-based movement linking caususes in
47 states and involving more than 30,000
women at the local, state and national
levels.
Celebrating both its anniversary and
past achievements, women delegates met
early this week to hear their leaders and
Democratic Presidential candidates. Gloria
Steinam explained their purpose in
organizing the caucus: “We wanted to
reach out to every woman whose abilities
have been wasted by the second-class.

—

-

The Blacks
Although nearly 700 black delegates
convention, it
attended
this
was
questionable whether this presence alone
could further black interests. Thus, fighting
for a poor people’s platform, a $6500
guaranteed annual income and 750 seats
Hall
for
their
inside
Convention
representatives, many black delegates
joined a coalition of the National Welfare
the
(NWRO),
Rights
Organization
Southern Christian Leadership Council
(SCCC), and the National Tenants
Organization (NTO). Making itself heard.

Members of a Stock coalition staged a sit-in

TheBlacks

1

m to *■
at Miami t&gt;aacn
s convention nail to sacura
750 saats for their representatives.
—

Si!

m

■

«■*

-

-

0.-00

A—-

A
compromise
selecting
four
co-chairpersons to head the New York
State Delegation was considered to be a
victory for young delegates.

TMdP
H'limrn
M OK Wrumen

the
coalition
several
engaged
in
demonstrations this past week.
With chants of “Seats, Now”, a body of
about 1,000 persons invaded Convention
Hall last Saturday. They asserted: “We
have our seats and are sitting in them
now.” During their two hours of
occupation, they listened to speakers who
urged them not to support the Democratic
Party in the fall unless their demands were
fulfilled. They promised: “If not heard, in
November we will be noticeaqly absent
from the Democratic rolls.”
NWRO Executive
George Wiley,
Director, explained: “If our demands arc
not met, there will be disruption -.not
only of the party and of this convention,
but of the Democratic chances to win the
election in November.” He continued:
“Our ultimate disruption of the party will
be to deprive the party of the election.”
Better position
Such a defeat the coalition reasons
would bring a better bargaining position
for poor people in 1976.
Throughout the week, blacks with their
leaders marched outside Convention Hall.
Subsequently, New York State gave all its
guest seats to the poor people’s coalition.
Black delegates, as one New York
delegate described, tried to get things
together... we have a common identity
and a common cause.” It is the feeling of
many that blacks must gain and use
political power as a weapon in the
Democratic party instead of relying solely
on protest marches and demonstrations.
Black caucuses throughout the week, with
input from all delegates tried to forge such
a weapon.

Mia Abzug pondarad while Gloria
Stainam raftaratad to dia National
Woman'* Political Caucus thair purpose in
orpmizing.

Friday,

14 July 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

�Running mate chosen
George McGovern ended
MIAMI BEACH
speculations about the Democratic Vice Presidential
candidate by selecting as his running mate Senator
-

Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri.
A border state liberal, Sen. Eagleton originally
supported Edmund Muskie for the presidency. A
former lieutenant governor of Missouri, Eagleton was
chosen after McGovern’s number-one draft choice,
Edward Kennedy, declined for personal reasons.

‘New politics’campaign
won before nomination
Editor’s

note: The

following

article

Editor-in-Chief of
of Rochester

So Humphrey men, caring
nothing about who won in South
Carolina, wanted only to have the
“aye” vote fall in the “Twilight
Zone” (their term, not mine) of
1493 to 1509. McGovern staffers,
although they hoped the challenge
would win, gave A-l priority to
any
cost, a
preventing
at
“Twilight Zone” vote.

author of the

is a former
the University

Campus

Times.

by Charles Campbell
Special to The Spectrum

At I 1 p.m„
MIAMI BEACH
July
George
10,
McGovern’s campaign for the
1972
Democratic
Presidential
nomination was some 19 months
old.
One hour and 20 minutes later,
(after the longest roll call in the
party’s history), following an
amazing floor performance by
McGovern
and
the
people
intricate
unweaving
of
an
it
was
parliamentary
web,
finished. He had won.
The vote was on the first
credentials
of
the
challenge
evening: the challenge to South
Carolina’s delegation that women
were
under-represented.
Twenty-one of the 32 South
Carolina delegates were challenged
and therefore ineligible to vote on
the question, leaving 2995 eligible
delegates.
A majority of the delegates is
required to pass the challenge, but
is it a majority of all 3016
delegates or a majority of the
ones?
Larry
2995 remaining
O’Brien, temporary chairman of
the convention, was prepared to
rule that it was a majority of 2995
rather than of 3016 that was
necessary, but he would only do
this if it was “germane,” in other
words, if the “aye” total was, in
fact, between 1493 and 1509.
-

Monday,

Pattern
The roll

call

begins.

Some

states pass, some of the smaller

are able to announce their
total the first time through. After
about 40 or'45 minutes, a pattern
ones

—Osl terrelcher

has emerged.
Wayne King, chairman of the
Ohio
h e a vil y H u m p h rey
-

was

delegation

apparently

instructed not to give his vote
until last, come what may. It is
also clear that while the challenge
may come close, it cannot be sure
of a 1509 majority.
Now more than an hour has
passed (Average 1968 roll call
53 mins.) Ohio is now the only
delegation not to have announced
its result, and a Twilight Zone
vote is in reach.
are
A n t i M cGovernit es
-

-

presumably desperately trying to
figure the right vote for the Ohio
delegation, and to communicate
that number to chairman King,
who

is

meanwhile

trying

to
simultaneously
persuade
Secretary Bush that he is unable
to add, and to tell his loyal
delegates who should vote for
what. Then, of course, he must
count the votes accurately and
carefully so that no delegate is
misrepresented.

California
His

ruling

would

then

be

appealed and perhaps overruled,
since
151
especially
anti-McGovern delegates would be
voting to overrule. Then, in the
all-important California challenge
it would be necessary to reach
1509 rather than 1433 “aye”
the
original
votes
to
seat
McGovern delegation, and that
1509 might be unreachable.
Without his California delegation,
McGovern’s first ballot majority
would dangle on slender threads.
But
if the appeal of
could
O’Brien’s
be
ruling
postponed until California, then
151 delegates
the challenged
could not vote to overrule, so the
ruling would all but certainly be
-

sustained,
so
McGovern’s
California delegation would all
but

certainly

be

seated

and

McGovern would all but certainly
win.

V

Non-delegate campsite

A mystery maneuver
This pattern emerges, and these
things are clear, by the way, only
to a few political operatives. The
vast majority of the Convention
Hall
delegates, press and guests
has a dim idea of the state of
the count, for there are no tally
boards, and it has no idea of the
parliamentary technicalities.
So the whole thing depends on
quick
thinking
leaders and
flawless floor organization of the
old style. With the convention
dangling unknowingly on the edge
of a McGovern victory, states like
South Dakota and Wisconsin
begin to change votes from yes to
no. Puzzling. Are these solid
McGovern states slipping? At least
one major network begins to talk
about
the serious McGovern
disturbing
setback, reportedly
McGovern staffers who know they
priceless
are
a
executing
—

-

maneuver.
Within ten minutes, enough
votes are switched so that Ohio
Humphrey men cannot make up
the difference. The minority
report fails by a sizeable margin,
and George McGovern is the new
nominee. There is a lot of hassle
left, but from now on the pieces
.are falling into place.
The drawn-out campaign of the
is
politics
new
won in a
100-minute virtuous performance,
one of the most impressive
political performances of the
century.

Page eight. The Spectrum . Friday,

14 July 1972

Camaraderie inFlamingo Park
by Rosemary Armao
and Jo-Ann Armao
Special to The Spectrum

TV viewers know the non-delegates in Miami
Beach only as the wildly incoherent demonstrators
in front of Convention Hall or as the moronic skinny
dippers in Flamingo Park One other aspect of the
group was left uncovered.
It was the spirit vocalized in the successio
rock concerts; in the greetings of campers to
temporary neighbors; and in the slogans
ubiquitous buttons. The non-delegates
disorganized, petty, unable to make effei
protest. But many were also sincerely if naj
looking for heretofore elusive states of peace
brotherhood
Their senses of humor and tolerance
memorable When the only free food available at
point was peanut butter and jelly sandwiches
student bit into a sample happily
“Hey, at
there’s no class distinction in peanut butter.” W'
fanatic Jesus Freaks interrupted private meet/
they were playfully taunted: “Ah, give a bib]
McGovern.”

Photographers were banned by popular demand
but some recorded the scenes nonetheless in sketches
or writing. Welcomed, however, were resident senior
citizens who in turn welcomed the chance to turn
tourist. They also enjoyed the park scene and its
non-delegates:
“It’s a good thing here,” “I understand now
you want to change the
what you are saying
world, to end the war. Well, 1 want the same thing.”
—

—

Alphabet soup
Rennie Davis, Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffi
were obvious in their presence there with SCLC,
PCPJ, SDS, the MMC, etc., etc.: it was a stam
challenge to decipher the alphabetical combinatf
Many also had difficulty in distinguisl
between the various demonstrations. But agaii
was all in good fun as one woman answered wl
queried; “I don’t know what this demonstratioi
for but looking at the people it must be for a g&lt;
cause.” She joined it.
Posters and buttons proclaimed their attitudes
“Nixon doesn’t care” . . . “take the rich off
welfare”. . . “God has a program,” “Boycott
lettuce” .. . “Only 10 days to save the world,”
“Stop the war... the bombing , . the killing.”
But it was the concerts
with all their
Woodstock banality
that proved the point best.
Periodically and without planning, crowds haunched
or stood or danced in the mud around guitarits.

—Osterrelcher

Attempting to influence the Democratic Party to
incorporate marijuana reforms into its platform.
Flamingo Park residents held a free and open pot

party/smoke-in.

-

-

Senior power
“Wow, man this is station W . . P . . . O . . ,
T!;” an orchestrated happening; everywhere people
instrumentalized with be.it beer cans and sticks; and
everyone clapped, swayed or stomped as future
Joplins and James Browns performed solo.

A 75-year-old resident aided a Vietnam veteran in
pitching a tent; a wizened woman tasted the
delicacies of Hare Krishna.
Political activists attempted to recruit support
and numbers for their demonstrators: “Let’s leave
you can go to a park 365 days a year
let’s march
out!
Who wants to stay here all day smoking pot
and eating watermelon? ...”
Again the melody rose: “Joy to the world
the boys and girls!”
—

—

�Analysis

McGovern’s success
is a booklet failure
by Peter Brown
Special to The Spectrum

1971’s political joke has turned
MIAMI BEACH
into I972’s superman. Whether George McGovern can leap
Richard Nixon
his tallest building
is something only
time will tell, but he’s already been more politically
powerful than a locomotive and his organization has
moved faster than a speeding bullet.
The betting is he won’t, but then McGovern has given
the bookies a beating since Jimmy the Greek tabbed him a
50-1 long shot for the nomination last summer.
As everyone knows McGovern’s success has been due
to a fitly tuned organization. Even more importantly, the
South Dakota senator has brought people into the political
area who had always fancied themselves as spectators.
Witness Ron Steinhoff of Platteville, Wisconsin.
Before McGovern, the part-time student was about as
political as the John Deere Tractors h6 helped produce.
McGovern has been the catalyst that propelled Steinhoff
to become active in local politics and brought him to
Miami Beach this week.
—

—

—

Historical parallels
Steinhoffs fellow badger, Geraldine Kincannon, is
another whom McGovern has turned into a workhorse. In
fact, the only reason she was in Miami Beach was due to
McGovern’s reform party guidelines that provided for
greater participation in the political process by women.
It will take every Steinhoff and Kincannon that
McGovern can muster to unseat the incumbent. The last
time an incumbent President woke up on the wrong side of
the bed on election day was 40 years ago.
The coincidence underlies the fact that to win,
McGovern must become the new Franklin Roosevelt. He
convince the
has to
as did FDR two score ago
that
there
must
be
fundamental
change.
American people
Just as FDR sold a skeptical American public on public
interference in the economy, McGovern must win
acceptance of his stands on foreign policy and freedom of
tolerance to win the $200,000 year job.
—

—

Presidential relief
Reports from the White House have told of Nixon
licking his lips over the prospect of running against
McGovern. One, however, recalls that similar sounds of joy
were heard from Edmund Muskie’s camp when McGovern
dared to enter the New Hampshire primary.

A Nixon-McGovern runoff should shed light on
America’s priorities. McGovern will stress the economic
ineptness of Nixon’s four years in the White House. The
President will counter by trying to paint the South
Dakotan as a radical who supports efforts to destroy the
American dream by advocating too much welfare,
marijuana, abortion and other aspects of the counter
culture Middle America shirks from.
Speculation this political year should see more dirt
than has been seen in recent American politics. The
Committee to Re-Elect the President is rumored to have
on tape every nasty thing Hubert Humphrey said about
McGovern during the primary campaign and is champing at
the bit to take up where Hubert left off.
Dedication
McGovern won’t be running a lily white campaign. If
for no other reason than that his supporters are known for
their lack of tact. Add to this that many of McGovern’s
followers are politically inexperienced and emotions
among these people run high against the President.
As Jim McNaughton, of The New York Times said
after covering the McGovern miracle. “McGovern will be
the beneficiary of five million young people willing to
work to defeat the President, motivated by pure hate.”
Keeping these followers under control may be the key
to victory. The nomination couldn’t have been secured
without them and it’s hard to imagine a Democrat victory
without taking a huge share of the youth vote.
There’s one thing everyone agrees on: McGovern’s
chances of beating Richard Nixon are infinitely higher
than his chances of 19 months ago to secure the
Democratic nomination. The dirt should begin to fly in
early September wear a hat.

Photos by Osterreicher

—

Friday, 14 July 1972 The Spectrum . Page nine
.

�V

(Jean

Gene

Lost politics of a bygone era
XT

No one illuminated the good humor, many present at the conference felt
MIAMI BEACH
differences between 1968 I and 1972 more than that he was embittered towards the Democratic
Eugenti McCarthy. At a press conference early this Party. One McCarthy supporter of four years ago
but McCarthy is like a
week in Miami Beach, Sepator McCarthy explained lamented: “It’s too bad
his presence at the convention as trying to ensure ghost out of the past. Everyone and everything has
that certain procedures and platform issues be deserted him . ..”
A McGovern delegate said; “There is no place
supported.
he’s been passed by. McGovern
Specifically, the senator who four years ago for him anymore
spearheaded the “Dump Johnson” movement is the name now, not McCarthy.” A visit to the
declared that some reforms enacted by the McCarthy offices at the Americana Hotel supported
McGovern commission were not being enacted.
this assertion with its paucity of workers.
Ignored by the media, the senator’s offices were
Supporting the challenge to 151 California delegates,
McCarthy explained that the winner take all manned by three young women workers who spoke
principle is “one departure from the reform longingly of 1968. “It’s not really fair,” one
volunteer complained, “McGovern is where he is
mandate.”
However, he continued that on the whole this now only because of the chances that McCarthy
convention was a forward sign for party reform. It is took in 1968.”
better, he maintained, that “we have good rules that
are sometimes not followed rather than bad rules
Be clean for George?
Even McCarthy displayed some hint of hostility
that are strictly adhered to.”
at the youth who deserted him. During Monday’s
press conference, he castigated one campus pressman
1948 rewrite
Terming the Democratic platform, “too vague” for questioning him about his possible support of
and “not specific,” McCarthy admitted that it was a McGovern. “We’ll wait,” he retorted, “for a senior
little late to do anything about it. According to him, member of the press to ask that one.”
the last good platform was in 1948 when “the
Reacting to McCarthy’s handling of the young
people then understood what we stood for.”
reporter’s question, a newsman from the Fort
He continued: “Twenty-four years later, we’re Lauderdale News, commented: “It really makes me
still rewriting the 1948 platform despite 24 years of wonder whatever happened to McCarthy’s affection
significant change.” Those topics the senator felt had for the young.”
been hazed over included the Vietnam War, amnesty,
“I guess,” another reported noted, “that it hurts
basic foreign policy, tax reform, assured income, McCarthy to be reminded
of McGovern’s success
jobs, national resources and drug laws.
member of the college press, a
In a letter to delegates, McCarthy stated: “1 especially so by a
press
that four years ago supported him
hope that the Democratic convention will amend the
[McCarthy].”
platform to make it more responsive to the needs of
“Everything’s been reversed. McCarthy points
our time.” He was not, however, optimistic that the
platform would be improved, hinting that issues up just as Daley’s difficulty to be seated does, that
were purposely blurred to prevent serious party these past four years have meant a 16t of changes for
a lot of people and issues in the Democratic party.”
division.
Although the conference was low-keyed and
uneventful, it was apparent to any who hadn’t
Faded, embittered legend
Although McCarthy appeared relaxed and in realized it earlier that 1972 is not 1968.
-

...

.

.

.

—

A

—

Eugene McCarthy

Miami demonstrations disappoint many
by Rosemary C. Armao
Special to The Spectrum

opening the props boxes, and pulled out tear gas guns and
clubs.
Their chorus lines were straight and unpenetrable
although one seasoned protestor did note: “Ahh, the pigs
in Washington looked much better.” A five-year-old black
kid
his mother had brought him “so he would know
had a good laugh at “that
what was really happening”
bald one with the fat stomach.”
—

MIAMI BEACH
Opening night of the Democratic
delegates Convention was to be answered with opening
night of non-delegate protesting
necessary personae
dramatis present (police, kids, media)
roles memorized
for they played this act before
LIGHTS .. from
—

—

.

.

.

-

.

hundreds of flashes, TV strobes
CAMERA ...The
Spectrum’s photographer alone had 70 rolls of film ready
to go ACTION!
Dramatic reviewers of the opening ’72 demonstrations
will be hard pressed to fault the performance.
A crowd began marching toward convention
headquarters from Flamingo Park, the non-delegates’
campsite, only a few minutes later than their well
circulated playbill had promised. Right on cue, next ABC,
local TV, AP, UPI, Time in short THE MEDIA roared up
in sound trucks. The Miami police, Florida highway
patrolmen and the National Guard accordingly began

-

—

-

-

-

Medics, RCLA counselors, and Outreach volunteers were
but neutral.
media men were in their glory. When the
toppled a whole block of fencing around
demonstrators
the hall and waiting police guards jumped out with raised
clubs to the sidewalks directly in front of the invaders
they went to work:
“I got a great shot by standing behind a guy with his
club raised
dramatic shadow you know.”
A freak
pleaded with one wire service man to stop making such a
deal
“It just causes trouble and 1 don’t want to see
anything happen,” “Mind your own business.”
There was a tendency to exaggerate however. When
one protestor spit in front of a guardsman four reporters
ran to find out why? “I chew tobacco.”
present
The

—

—

-

—

...

Type cast
The demonstrators direct from a rock concert gig in
Flamingo Park
were obligingly (for the press) grubby,
unorganized, articulate, humorous
in short colorful:
Hare Krishna people chanted and burned incense (“boy,
that smells better than mace,” another veteran observed).
Jesus freaks (direct from Explo) passed out Bibles and
papered telephone poles with “Jesus Saves” stickers. Other
factions included the National Women’s Political Caucus,
the people’s alliance, the National Welfare Rights
Organization and a nameless group who wanted “ecology”.
-

—

—

—

—

Pain in the
Supporting players
commonly called Innocent
Bystanders
were unenthusiastic. “1 don’t know
it
annoys me - the idea is they gave ’em a place to have their
ball why do they have to come here now.”
“No, I’m not scared are you?”
—

-

-

-

-

“Well, there’s a lot of hate here you can see it but
you just have to expect it
It seems people arc so easily shocked these days. But
then
even classics can get stale like: bearded recorder
players beseeching star-faced national guardsmen to get it
together
like protestors yelling “pigs
trained killers
they’re the ones who take special courses and know how
to beat up on you the best”
. and like nervous elderly
witnesses quoting philosophy from Time magazine to each
other: “Fear leads to over-reaction, you know .
—

”

-

-

-

-

-

.

.

.

Stubborn
Demonstrators are not so easily satisfied these days
either
after about 30 minutes of marching from the park
to the Convention Hall north wing to the south wing to
the “other gate” back halfway to Flamingo “LET’S GO
BACK BACK TO THE HALL GET THE IDEA
The word was out to leave the bruised fencing and go
back to the concert “the whole thing is boring
people
want some action
They want us to go back
to eat
watermelon and smoke pot some more, I guess.”
Then over the mike: “Go back for planning
tomorrow’s our day
we are not helping the poor people
here there is no use for a conflict.” So they went back:
until tomorrow’s play
-

-

-

-

—

—

—

—

—

—

Hare Krishna hare rama

YIP YIP YIP
curtain down

Page ten. The Spectrum Friday, 14 July 1972
.

�Student press

Uncustomary convention coverage
For

the first

time in any national convention,

members of the student press were formally accredited and
seated in the Convention Hall. Totalling 296,
representatives from colleges, high schools and student

organizations watched convention proceedings from their
ceiling gallery.
According to Phil Seib, special assistant to the
chairman, the drive to include student press evolved out of
the passage of the 18-year-old vote. Mr. Seib, who
pressured the Democratic party to establish the youth
press gallery, explained that it would result in “more
exposure for the party to young voters.” Because of this,
he continued, the idea was well-received by Party
Chairman Lawrence O’Brien.^
He noted that there was no resistance to recognizing
student press; “It just seemed appropriate.” Mr. Seib
admitted, however, that mechanical problems in setting up
the press existed; “We weren’t exactly sure how we could
administer it.” Most of the established prfcss, he explained,
have permanent galleries that handle credentials and
arrangements.

Good section
To organize the press, an ad hoc structure was
established by Chairman O’Brien which sent out a special
mailing to all newspaper editors and radio station managers
of schools with enrollments of over 4000. Additionally,
several high schools and non-school organizations were

approached.

convention.”

Marring flaws

Flaws, however, marred the press arangements and
resulted in some disgruntled feelings. “Obviously,” Scott
Gurvey of Princeton’s radio station pointed out, “we are
the lowest priority.” More bluntly, Mr. Asinof termed the
arrangements “shitty.”
Specifically, he faulted the gallery’s poor location,
inadequate time on the actual floor of the hall, shoddy
accommodations, poor transportation, and inadequate
working space. “Total unorganization,” he said,
“prevented us from adequate work space and had no
consideration of our efforts.”
Both Ms. Brennan and Mr. Seib explained all problems
as “bugs in a new system.” “You have to remember,” Mr.
Seib remarked, “that we had nothing to go on.”
Nonetheless, Mr. Seib was pleased overall with the
functioning of the student press: “I spoke to a number of
regular press and convention people who were really
impressed . . . they thought it was a very healthy idea.”
—Ott«rrelch«r

according
to
Pam Brennan
(superintendent of the college press gallery), was a good
cross section of schools from Stanford and Berkeley to
small liberal arts colleges.
Most of the student representatives said that they
came for the excitement and the experience of covering a
national political convention. Most of them personally had
to undertake expenses which averaged about $350 per
representative.
Although a few had regrets, most felt that any
expense was “well worth it.” Richard Asinof of Hampshire
The

College’s Climax maintained that “in terms of experience
and contacts and the opportunity to observe and
participate,” the $450 necessary to sustain him in Miami
was well spent. For Warren Shoulberg of Fairteigh
Dickinson, covering the convention was “the chance of a
lifetime.” Agreeing with this, Lucy Robins, Case Western
Reserve University, explained: “It is just amazing . . . few
people ever have the opportunity to attend a national

outcome,

“your

Circus convention
On the other hand, Ms. Brennan admitted:
“Unfortunately, I’m a little frustrated. With such a huge
operation, there can’t help to be a lot of confusion and
some people are unhappy. Many of the young reporters
while incovenienced, were thankful that they were
included at all. “Campus press have never been accredited
before, this is a new thing, a good thing,” said Mr. Gurvey.
Further, many were thrilled by the challenge of
covering something as large as the convention. One
reporter commented that the convention represented “an

opportunity to find out just what kind of reporter you

are.”
So, the student press scurried to various conferences,
connived their way into closed caucuses, suffered through
long parliamentary entangles, cornered candidates and
delegates, and went without sleep and food to observer the
“circus” of the convention events.
By Friday, all would agree with one belabored
student: “It’s good to be here but I look forward to seeing
the Republican convention on TV.”

University Bookstore
on campus

”

BONANZA BOOK SALE
on Fabulous Gift Books!

save /s to
&amp; more
1

1/2

starts MONDAY JULY 17 th
Friday,

14 July 1972 The
.

Spectrum Page eleven
.

�ORGANIZ

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Both Western New York and the students of the State
University of New York at Buffalo have suffered the absence of
any type of media program. Presently, efforts are beginning to
organize and formulate courses that might eventually be part of
a Center for Media Studies.
Because we feel there is considerable interest in such a
program, we invite anyone interested to an organizational
in Room 232 Norton
meeting to be held July 19 at 3:30
Hall. Any questions about either this meeting or the center can
be directed to Jo-Ann Armao or Jeff Greenwald at 8314113.
The presence of all interested on July 19 would be of
tremendous help in the reelization of a Center for Media
Studies.

be tun

of

�Portnoy’s Complaint

RECORDS

This dirty movie entertains

School’s Out Alice Cooper (Warner Bros.)

by Jay Boyar

I walked into the room and immediately saw the variety of
pain-pleasure instruments hanging next to the silver satin blue
lace
curtains. On the chair in the center of the room, Nathan Cooperling
situated between his spread eagled knees. Just finishing an exquisite job
of sucking him off was his tall blond sister Nadine, flashing across the
room from monster speakers hidden from view were the lilting lyrics
“You’re so very picturesque/You’re so very cold/You taste like roses

on your breath/But graveyards on your soul.”
As I walk in and slip into a soft leather easy chair Nathan stands
up, wipes off his cock, slips it back into his see through lace underwear
steps into his skin tight purple leather alpine shorts, throws a three foot
long scarf around his neck, steps into his black and silver stacked boots
walks over to the comer and pops
to
be
appears
what
an
REPORT CARD
amphetamine tablet (later it turns
CfltfTtl.

out to be capsulated Drano). He
turns and sits next to me.

Meanwhile Nadine has left
the room
I hook up my microphone
and tape recorder and fidget with
a few dials until everything is
set

...

r

VT

th "port card with Ih.
laachrr at tfaetr aarfaaat oonwanwnca.
aafMcially if tha school
growth ia daairahia bahtu and attitudaa ara
unulu
“

tod 10

SCHOOL

TS

“

'a

3 3*

.

“!!What is your opinion on
the latest album by Alice

5 V*

Cooper?”

“Fuck you, man!”
dwaatoH.
“Well does that mean that
you like it?”
“Fuck you, man, I think it’s fuckin’ great.”
“Well, doesn’t it seem like their use of the horns and the piano
arrangements takes away from the fact that they always work better
without them?”
“Stick it up your ass, man, I think it’s a fuckin’ great record, and if
you don’t you can go screw a goat, besides who the fuck da ya think ya
are anyway?”
“Well, it does seem that a lot of the album is just a series of boring

repetitions

....

“Yeah, that’s the fuckin’ beauty of the whole thing” (all during
this time little did Nathan know that by saying the word “fuckin” he
was triggering the secret juices which flowed within this reporter and
turned him into the famed European Son).
Suddenly he, the reporter, tore off his clothes, displayed his ivory
encased manhood, smiled at Nathan who cringed when he recognized
the famous war cry of the European Son: “Eat shit, you son of a
bitch.”

Nathan started to run but couldn’t escape the claws
Son. “Tell me bout records you little twirp . .”

of the enraged

.

As Nadine walked back into the room she fainted for in the center
of the room stood the European Son eating the paper panties from the
Alice Cooper album, while buggering Nathan in a tub of Planter’s
Peanut Oil, and then, and then, and then, a green gloved hand slowly
made its way to the light switch, suddenly darkness .

Bible Truth

Hear, O Israel
For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

SEARCH THE SCRIPTURES
"Faith cometh by hearing, and
hearing by the Word of God.”
-Rom. 10:17
‘Blessed is he that readeth”

875-4265

"Blessed are they that hear the
Word of God and keep it.” Luke

Rev. 1:3

Spectrum Film Critic

What am I supposed to do? If I
say I liked it, everyone will think
I’m a jerk. If I say it was terrible, I
won’t be very honest. Well, here’s
another fine mess I’ve gotten
myself into.
Portnoy's Complaint is a film
enjoying a publicized run at the
Boulevard Mall Cinema II. (So far,
so good. I’m neither dishones nor
a jerk). It’s a dirty movie. That’s
what you wanted to hear and
that’s what I’m telling you. Even
the promotion for the movie is

designed
to underscore this.
However, it is a dirty movie with
only about three seconds of
nudity. Everything else that you
wouldn’t want to talk about to
the kiddies, or to Portnoy’s
mother,
is
either suggested,
spoken of, executed off-screen, or
glossed over. Still, to deny the
inherent dirty tinge in the film’s
attitude toward itself is to deny
the obvious; and denying the
obvious is not my domain, that is
left to Portnoy. But I’m getting a
little ahead of my story . . . our
story . . . their story
....

You read the novel
The story in question is first
and foremost the brainchild (do
people
still say “brainchild”
anymore?) of Philip Roth who
wrote the best-selling book upon
which the film is based. It is a
good book, a funny book, and a
book I shall not review any
further here. The book is distilled,

pulled
pasted
apart,
back
together,
forgotten
and
remembered by director and

Lehman,
screenwriter
Ernest
Converting prose to pictures is a

difficult job, in this case because
the book follows Portnoy’s life
well
into
from
childhood
manhood.
As Alexander Portnoy, Richard
Benjamin is misused. It is clear
that he is one of the world’s
greatest subtle reactors. Nowhere
is this clearer than when the
Monkey, Juliet to his Romeo,
talk
about
the
begins
to
possibility of marriage to him. His
entire
tenses
body
up
so
at
the
horrible
wonderfully
thought that it makes one wonder
why this talent of his to react

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NO COMPARISON
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NEW YORK!

with straight-man-like charm is so
underdeveloped in the picture.

this man who understands the
character he plays.
In the role of the mother,
Sophie Portnoy, is Lee Grant. In a
role that cries for a stereotype she
gives us stereotype. In a part that
demands an overprotective, prying
mother, she delivers that to the
hilt. Had she done anything else
we would have been disappointed.
I kind of wish we were

Perhaps Benjamin is trying to
expand himself as an actor. If this
is so, then in the process he is
losing much of what makes him
unique We saw it in Goodbye
Columbus, but not in this one.

Graceful transition

Lehman has Benjamin, as
Portnoy, portraying the character disappointed.
at different ages. It really does not
work. Adult Benjamin portraying Undescended testicle
Our hero, Alex, is the victim of
pubescent Portnoy rings as false a
note as Jack Benny telling us he’s this
culturally,
environment,
thirty-nine.
Some
sad paternally,
physically,
and
combination of inefficacy in continually kicked about. He loses
acting and, granted, Benjamin’s what used to be called a capacity
physical appearance
makes it for happiness because, because,
difficult to believe that Lee Grant because! Because the bugaboos
is his mother. From here it looks and
and
shelterings
taboos,
like those scenes should have been
handled differently, or avoided.

saccharine
anachronisms
that
surround him force him to defy
what is. The fellow denies the

They are funny, true, but
throughout there is an uneasiness
fostered by a lack of credibility

reality that women are people.
They become, as the saying goes,
sex objects and this, we are told,
they definitely are not. He is
unhappy until he finds a lady, the
Monkey, who seems to fit the bill,
or whatever else she is supposed

which even dramatic license can
do little to excuse. And while
excuses are on the table (I was
never very good at transitions,

anyway) listen to this excuse for a
plot. Boy meets girl. Boy gets girl.
Boy loses girl. Of course, that’s
not all there is to it, for the
interest, humor, and all-around

fit.
Karen
beautiful
to

Black
is absolutely
and stupid
as
the
Monkey, and simian, if that is not
too imcompatible with beautiful.
Perfectly cast and delightfully
acted, the role, with all the
potential for failure, blossoms
with warmth. And warms with
blossoms. If the last line failed to
elicit a smile, try reading it with a
Marx
impression.
Groucho
Although she can’t spell, moves
her lips when she reads, and is a
trifle
than
more
indifferent
sexually. Monkey thinks and feels

merit of the movie are drawn
from understanding who and what
this boy is.
From the couch of Dr. O.
Spielvogel, a less-than-glib shrink,
his
story,
narrates
portrayed in blatant flashback to
lovely music by Michel Legrand
(Summer of ’42) Alex is a man
who grows up in a cramped
household with a constipated
father, an overbearing mother,
Portnoy

and

dreams. Perhaps not as
permanently or as deeply as Alex,
but a dream is a dream, after all.
And there is the rub, proverbial or

and a non-descript sister.
from
Straight
his
record-breaking commercial as the
Aika Seltzer man who, momma
mia, ate too many spicy meatballs
is Jack Somack as Portnoy’s pater.

otherwise.

My complaint is that although
movie is funny, it is too
“jokey.”
That is, the lines
smacked
of a pre-arranged,
contrived quality. It’s hard to
accept the dialogue and therefore
the plot and characters suffer But
the point, that is, Portnoy's

the

Poor Jack! From a commercial
where he eats too much to a
movie where he is constipated.
The fellow can’t win. But he is
ever so funny as the somewhat
out-of-touch daddy; a grouchy,
stuffed-up, All-Bran munching complaint,
does survive and
cross between Willy Loman and endures to make this movie
Edith Bunker who tries to do well something entertaining.
by his family and his bowels.
How about that? I reviewed
Some of the funniest and, at the Portnoy's
without
Complaint
same time, most touching lines in using the word “Jewish.” Mazel
this film fall from the mouth of tov.
-

Friday,

14 July 1972 The Spectrum Page thirteen

I yjlP'

.

on"'.
.

muvsay?

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�RECORDS

&gt;

Vindicator Arthur Lee (A&amp;M)
Arthur Lee is one artist who has not had the easiest time of it
pursuing his particular interests musically. As founder and leader of
Love, he was responsible for many of the most unnoticed classics that
Los Angeles ever saw. Forever Changes and Four Sail were simply
excellent records, with the Changes album representing one of the
earliest effective use of acoustic
guitar rock songs
The group had more than
their share of internal hassles,
kept changing personnel, moved
over to Blue Thumb, where
Arthur Lee became Arthurly,
which was smart, cause his music
for a while was so bad I tend to
believe that someone took his
place-on those records. Of course,
you have to keep in mind that his
friendship with Jimi Hendrix was
taking over his work, which is
understandable, but Arthur isn’t Jimi, which is also all right, cause
Arthur’s okay on his own terms.
Now he’s on A&amp;M, with a sole album called Vindicator and
Arthur is definitely moving. It’s in two opposite directions, but he calls
himself Mr. Hyde on the album, and he’s pictured on the cover as both
a janitor and a rock star, so at least he recognizes a good case of
schizophrenia when he sees it.
His music is split into two, one being regular old Love-type stuff
and the second being the newer Jimi Hendrix influenced material. I like
the older sounding tunes better, being basically a reactionary listener,
but the other songs are better than the last two albums. Arthur’s got a
couple of different voices at his disposal, and he uses them well.
There’s an anti-McDonald’s song, about dead cows and other
delights, called “OT Morgue Mouth.” “He Knows a Lot of Good
Women” is my favorite cut, about lying and cheating hustlers.
His Hendrix-type songs are pretty fair. He does a truly remarkable
imitation of Jimi vocally, and guitarist Charles Karp is a good
complementary foil for the vocal. He isn’t that good a writer in the
Hendrix style, and occasionally he picks Jimi’s own lyrics to fit into the
,

Pete Ham and Badfinger, pictured
above, will appear along with Billy
Preston, Kindred and Cactus at
Memorial Auditorium on Sunday,
August 6. Cactus, an old-time
Buffalo fave, and Badfinger have
never been here before. Tickets
are $4, 5 and 6.

Peckinpah film

New challenges old in Western
Editor’s

note: The following article was written as a
feature to The Spectrum by WHfredo
Nolledo, a visiting novelist. Department of English.

special

Sam Peckinpah’s graphics of violence that
eviscerated The Wild Bunch and later gave Straw
Dogs a PhD imprimatur, has now de-escalated via the
tone of elegy in his newest film, Junior Bonner.
“JR" Bonner (Steve McQueen) is a • former
rodeo champ who makes an indefatigjble pilgrimage
to his hometown in Prescott, Ariz., to ride the
“unrode” Brahma bull called “Sunshine” for the
heroic 8-second record it takes to earn immortality
in the sunset arena of the Wild West.
This time around, homecoming promises no
range, only rancor. The patriarchal spread, along
with its tawdry memorabilia, is being leveled into a
housing project by a pair of dinosaur-like bulldozers.
Bonner Senior (Robert Preston), himself an ex-rodeo
hotshot, has been pensioned off on a weekly
allowance by his younger son Curly, the Babbitt of
the Bonners, who has also put Mom (Ida Lupino) to
work in his curio shop.

Like father, like son
Bonners Sr. and Jr. are spurs of the same boot,
natural men who cannot be caged by practicality.
While the favorite son wants merely to stay on the
unrideable Sunshine, the old bronco aches for a grub
stake so he can lit out for gold in Australia.
At a July 4 rodeo parade, father and son ride
tandem on JR’s horse (an Aeneas-Anchises theme in
reverse) for one dizzy romp before the demonds of
prefab modernization corporate tourism "set in. JR’s
climactic triumph over Sunshine enables him to
release the old galoot from bondage: the prize
money buys a one-way ticket to Australia
the
perpetuation of a lifetime madness.
All this trembles with the corpus of a myth,
were it not for the unconscionably Homeric lentor
of the telling. Perhaps as a change-up and as a
possible sop to the Mannerist Cinema, director
Peckinpah here stops the clock, belabors his material
with minutiae in the grand design of Significance,
and allows his lockjaw ed personae those loooong
cerebral pauses when all they are doing is ordering a
beer. If the suggestion is that this is the authentic
decibel of the Twilight Frontier, then, by all means,
let the next sage saga come from that Superstar of
Catatonia: Andy Warhol.
In lieu of the fabled Peckinpah kinetickicks, we
get an obligatory saloon brawl, poorly staged, with a
tacked-on satirical message of true-grit dimension
which is vintage John Wayne, but didn’t the viewer
get the impression from the elaborate wind-up that
he was going to ride side-saddle with Fellini on the
plains? Local color permeates the scene like lethal
fertilizer.
-

m

**

Page fourteen The Spectrum
.

.

In Wrangler Country where half the population

wears shades, young bucks booze it up in their
ethnic waterhole; senior citizens seem to have been
glued to their Stetsons and stranded in perfect
stolidity on the very spot where they must have
lassoed the steer of their youth.
Anachronism gets both barrels from imagery.
Luoen Ballard’s cinematography reinforces the
elegiac mood with bleak landscapes and perforated
sandlots whose-real estate renewal is as inevitable as
the Arizona sunblight. As composition. Junior
Bonner is John Ford with absinthe. The opening
credits are insightfully mounted on that scourage of
nouveau-riche verite: split screen.
Happily, the device succeeds here as it does an
emblematic slide of Steve McQueen whose anatomy
is juxtaposed with frames of his relentless battles
with Sunshine, a rendering so noble it comes off as
details of destruction, in one brief commentary
indeed, we can appreciate the wages of such

bullheaded sublimity: McQueen, stripped to the
waist by the roadside where he has parked his wheels
and rested his horse, appears to be grazing more than

the animal.
Whenever they are not contemplating The
Vacuum of Today’s American West, the principal
actors perform with uniform taste and economy.
Robert Preston endows his inveterate dreamer with
the tragic candor of a once-and-fixated champ; he is
a bardic cowpole whose ultimate territory, in essence
at least, is Mount Rushmore. Many a good man has
been turned into stone by progress.
Ida Lupino doesn’t really have to act at all. Hers
is that marital mask worn proudly by rapidly aging
wives who have ritually lost their husbands to fool’s
gold. In the title role, McQueen is still an engaging
one-on-oner. But his scripts of late haven’t provided
him with his essential tools — snappy dialogue,
motivated action, etc. If he keeps this up, he’ll begin
to resemble a hired hand who has just come in from
the mold.

X-rating
Junior Bonner might have made indelible tracks
where once the covered wagon dug in to consecrate
the history of the Wild West. However, mixing
attitudes and genres can be a heavy bag. It’s quite a
ways from Abilene to Antonioni. True, Peckinpah’s
singular approach to
man’s dark underside,
particularly in The Wild Bunch and Straw Dogs, was
highly X-rateable; nevertheless, it did offer some
kind of catharsis.
All that brouhaha over stricter censorship and
gun legislation has nipped a primitive artist in the
groin. Meanwhile, catharsists are enjoined to trade in
their surplus arteries for some good ol’ down-home
artifacts. This way then to Shane Revisted and
Sometimes A Great Rodeo.

Friday, 14 July 1972

songs.

Vindicator as a step in two directions, is a pretty good album.
Arthur Lee is a very talented young man. And he’s got a great friend up
in the skies pulling for him.
,

BA

The Chuck Berry Sessions (Chess)
The London Chuck Berry Sessions are the second in the London
session trilogy, the other two being Howlin’ Wolf’s and Muddy Waters.
The lineup isn’t too impressive, at least in comparison to the other two.
But it’s always been Chuck’s big ego, well deserved, admittedly, that’s
kept him from doing much recording with other big stars. I mean when
you ask Dr. John and Keith
Richard to leave a stage because
you don’t think they’re fitting in,
you must have some ego. Of
course, he did do Two Great
Guitars with Bo Diddley. Oh,
well.
Anyway, the only musicians
of note on this Ip, which is one
side studio and one side live, are
Ian McLagan and Kenny Jones of
the Faces on piano and drums

respectively. They do an adequate
job, nothing special. That isn’t
surprising cause the Faces are nothing special, either, Derek Griffiths is
on rhythm guitar and there’s no bass player listed, though there is a
bass. That’s the studio side. The live side features great stars like Owen
McIntyre, Dave Kafinetti, Nic Potter and Robbie McIntosh.
Both sides have Chuck doing his particular brand of rock ‘n’ roll,
the kind he’s always been doing. Exchanged and unmellowed by the
years, he’s still the king of the duck walk. He still does splits onstage,
and his guitar hasn’t stopped driving people to a frenzy. The live side
has the tail end of a performance in Coventry, with the audience going
bananas throughout.
There’s “Reelin’ and Rockin’,” a Timex classic about looking at
your watch throughout a night of mayhem. Then is “My Ding-A-Ling,”
Berry’s big audience participation number, with gobs of cute little
double entendres and girls and boys singing different parts for sexual
comic effect.
The live side ends with “Johnny B. Goode.” It starts out with
Chuck singing “Bye Bye Johnny” the sequel, but everybody thinks it’s
“B. Goode” and they start singing the chorus, so Chuck gives up and
does that one. Just goes to show you that no one listens to lyrics
anymore.
The studio side isn’t as high keyed, but it’s interesting anyway.
Berry does Little Walter’s “Mean Old World” with class and taste.
People forget he can play the blues rather well. There’s a neat

instrumental called “London Berry,” full of every Berry lick possible.
But he created all of them, so why not. He is the original, and also the
best.

BA

�Turning points within

Keith Jarrett album

occasional day and
evening
hours,
one
18-mo. child.
Walking distance from campus. Call
832-4894.

BABYSITTER,

A birth is quite a natural thing. I wonder how many
times a man dies and is reborn within a lifetime. We call
these turning points.
Some men feel women are these destructive elements.
Others accuse the same life force which gave birth as being
of life itself. Man does
change the spirit of other men
too, so in acknowledging that
which is alive, a man will notice
that nothing remains constant for
long and spiritual mistakes are
made as well as forgetting to feed
thick

the cat

Keith Jarrett was the young
flash on piano with Charles Lloyd
in the mid-sixties. He liked to
show off his chops. He plucked
the strings of the piano for an

extra-dimension.

Viewers wished

were as eccentric as Keith
Jarrett. Charles Lloyd became a
household word in view of the
fact that he was the leader of a
group that had an ingenious
pianist that could play but got
silly once in a while. Lloyd tried
hard to develop his own sound,
they

constantly haunted by

was

but

Coltrane’s influence. This did

not

the public from considering
Charles Lloyd as innovator, thus
his records sold as far-out jazz.
slop

taken a strong black
awareness to reveal that Coltrane
was the real innovative force in
the jazz of the sixties and it was
Coltrane that purified the music,
making it a separate entity from
music like Charles Lloyd’s. Fewer
people were being fooled into
thinking that Keith Jarrett and
It

has

Charles Lloyd were playing black

jazz.

They

were playing

good

but in relation to the
genuine energy of Coltrane and
McCoy Tyner, Jarrett and tloyd
seemed
muddled, schizoid, a
be
frustrating
attempt
to
identified as separate and original.
music

It’s good to hear from Dewey
Redman again. His playing with
Ornette Coleman was beautiful
and his tenor playing is strong
here also. Charlie Hnden is on bass
and Paul Motian is on drums.
The music is young and fresh.
It has just been bom. When the
mortgage on the turning point is

paid, 1 hope the music will
destroy itself to be young and
fresh again. It is the spirit of this
music that will not allow me to

describe

it.

It

has

certain characteristics which can’t
be masked. It has a better side.
This music manipulates me
while allowing me freedom to
remember the past and study the
past as it influences today. But
even this is short-lived because at

points I forget my memories and
they remember me. Such are
sounds played off of the life
They echo and recochet.

oscillate

They

past

into

They swing and

present

and

scream

A scream will eventually end up
with

STUDENTS
needed
to
conduct
marketing research surveys. Earn $3.47
per
Call
834-3450
after
July
hour.
15th for appointment.

HELP WANTED:
household products
or better. 832-6545

Sell
—

the

earn $5

an

finest
hour

(5—7 p.m.).

for
NEED MONEY? Sell
The Spectrum. 15% commission on all
ads. Contact Jeff Reiman or Susay
Hory
at
831-4113. No experience
necessary, but transportation helpful.
advertising

OVERSEAS JOBS for students
Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa,
etc. All professions and occupations,
$700

to

Remorse
when

death

death is

necessary,

arrives. Then
again.

It
dies

it

generally

the process begins

Such is Keith Jarrett-Birth
and ends, lives and
like us.

begins
,

.

.

Joe Brancato

OH€K)

fe\/OLJf

unusual,
best-looking, inexpensive clothes you’ll
find outside of Greece, Pakistan, India,
Mexico or Guatamala. “The People,” a
boutique.
folk
arts
Allen.
144
882-6283.

most

the

OLD UPRIGHT piano for
881-3991.

'64

CHEV

$100

sale.

convertible.
$75.
Call

transportation.

838-4761.

Good
Greg

f Voo

FOUND

of glasses; one with
one tortoise-shell
prescription
sunglasses.
Claim at
Harrlman Reserve Library.

2
frames

FOUND;

black

—

ROOMMATES WANTED
ROOMMATE wanted
own bedroom,
share bath and kitchen. Buffalo West
Side area. Call 886-6798.

FEMALE roommates for summer.
Main—Hartal vicinity. Rent negotiable
own bedrooms. 837-0395 nltes and
weekends.
—

NEEDED
females.
876-0610.

UNFURNISHED room, bath, kitchen
with appliances; In Tonawanda, 5 miles
from campus; $45 per month Incl.
utilities. Sharon
51 IS Goodyear or
Box J, Norton Hall.

—

-

-

KARMAN GHIA

dependable.

—

—

Blaupunkt

and refrigerator. Both in very
Also other household
Moving. Call 837-9853.

STOVE

condition.

good

turn.

FEMALES
July

31

now thru Aug.

rooms.

Own

or 2

Call

wanted for
Near campus. Call

roommates

—

August.

and

1

—

Cheap.

834-0508.

—

Fisher
Dual. Students
Cooperative.
No tricks,
no
gimmicks, savings! Try us. 832-4950
evenings, weekends.

STEREO

—

MISCELLANEOUS

—

Buying

two-bedroom apartment. Ideal
for four students. Pets OK. $200. 312
Summer Ave. 832-7368 or 885-8100.

LARGE

LEAVING BUFFALO
Must sell,
cheap: twin bed, typewriter, photo
equipment, books, records, etc. Call
Greg 838 4761.

GUITAR

teacher will teach folk guitar
finger
picking. Call
Ft. Erie
416-871-2580. Near-campus lessons.
and

—

U.B.

Large

AREA

garage apartment
Includes
utilities
832-7368.

two-bedroom

Pets OK. $200
885-8100
or

well
furnished
four-eight-bedroom apartments, large,
available
excellent
locations,
evenings
immediately.
896-8180,
preferably.

RIDE BOARD

FOR SALE

1960

good

—

MOVING
tables,
very

sale
The

—

chairs,

items,

substantially
People,” 144 Allen,

In
Take

VOLKSWAGON

condition,
automatic.
payments. Call 826-4342

over

dresser, dinette,
washer, dryer; prices

reasonable. Call

today,

tomorrow.

VOLVO WAGONS

DON’T STEAL
FROM THE
FRONT TO MAKE
ROOM IN THE
BACK.
There's

space for two

six-footers (driver in front,
sofa in back).

—

Call 937-6050.

papers,
EXPERIENCED typist
theses and manuscripts. 691-9480.
-

KRAFT

1959 JAGUAR sedan. $400 or best
offer. 834-7054.

NATIVE

EXTERIOR

-

Painters

quality work, for reasonable expense.
For free estimate, call Karl between

5—7

p

m.. 894-4631

TYPING,
per page.

or

894 0996.

experienced,

near UB.

$.40

834-3370. Fast service.
experienced

Frenchman

tutor, willing to give French

lessons.

838-4091.

PERSONAL
SUEZITS: Holy Chee/its, New
Mexico IS farther than we thought?
Won’t you miss us so? No more hangln'
out
for you Sugar Bear. Warmest
DEAR

regards. The Chump-House Gang.
selling

typing
business or
term
thesis,
papers,
legal
briefs,
resumes,

—

dissertations,

FOLK, CLASSIC guitars; banjos. Fine
factory and hand-made Instruments.
Guild,
Martin, , Gibson,
Gurian,
Gallagher,
Eagle,
Ome, etc. Trades
String
Shoppe,
The
Invited.
524
Ontario, Buffalo.
Hours 7 9 p.m.
dally. Saturday, 12—5 p.m. 874-0120.

condition

radio,
heater,
automatic,
air-conditioned, $85. 834-8962.

of
LOTS
reduced “at
882-6283.

personal

manuscripts.

1968

SEVERAL

RAMBLER

PROFESSIONAL

good

call The
YOUR WORRIES are over
Insurance Guidance Center for your
lowest available rate on auto and cycle
—

Engagement
Economy Wedding Plan

INTERESTED In learning about the
freedom of camping � canoeing?
Inquire
at
Mr. Moose Backpack
Canoeing

and

Camping

School,

852-7850.
TVPING
Selectric.

IBM
Call 838-4808.

experienced

—

$.50/page.

—

HOME REPAIRS
Twin Castles, a
company formed by U.B. grad to serve
high
cost of home
homeowners and cut
Improvements. We offer the following;
painting, gutter work, Interior painting
and paper hanging, etc. Call for free
estimates. 881-0141.
—

business or
EXPERIENCED typist
personal.
Term papers, theses, etc.
Sheridan—Elmwood
location.
Call
877-5234 after 5 p.m.
—

TELAAK
STUDIO
Publicity Photos

&amp;

dissertations, theses, term
TYPING
papers. Professionally done by former
owner/operator
professional
of a
typing service. Call 833-1521.
—

ED.

SUB LET APARTMENT

3090 Main St.

DELAWARE MOTORS

VOLVO

2380 Delaware A»e.

-

834-5470

OWN ROOM In apt. July and/or Aug.
Near zoo
rent cheap. 834-7 785 after
5 p.m.
—

-

875-1500

BUFFALO STATE SUMMER ACTIVITIES COMMITTEE prmnts

J. Geils Band
Blues Project
800 aCTW of Uw filMIt
TRAIL RIDING IN N.Y. STATE

SAT. JULY 22
at 8:00 pin.

h

&amp;

pairs

very
new brakes
AM-SW radio.
885-7638, 833 2347.

—

arm

!

LOST

—

(one performance only)

&gt;
( £

WE JUST OPENED! Come In and see
our stock of all camping equipment.
Mr. Moose Outfitters, 756 Main St.
852-7550.

APARTMENT FOR RENT

&amp;

Wf*yJ*A-

QUTSYI
Join The Spectrum.
Openings for writers, photographers,
artists and reviewers. No experience
necessary. See Jeff Greenwald In 355
Norton, extension 831-4113.

HANDYMEN (2) wanted; to live free
in beautiful neighborhood (near UB
area), in return for two-hours work per
day. Call 837-6809 after 3 p.m.

only

is necessary. When

HAVE

BE

OWN ROOM In house on Amherst
Street. Furnished, available Aug. 1.
Rent negotiable (includes utilities).
838-3192.

anytime.

real

PIANO for sale: Upright, good working
condition. Asking $125. Call after 6
p.m. 881-1092.

WE

Insurance. 837-2278. After 5 p.m.
839-0566.

—

BEAUTIFUL hot pink shag carpet,
double-bed. bookcase headboard, bed
frame. 886-2021 anytime.

—

All else is

becomes

—

OWN ROOM In furnished apt. $57 per
month Includes utilities. West Side.
Call Nick 886-4985.

overtime,
Information
write:
JOBS
OVERSEAS, Dept. E5, P.O. Box
15071, San Diego, Calif. 92115.

No other evidence is necessary
fringe

HOUSE FOR SALE
UB area
Flower St.; perfect for couple or small
family; 2 bedrooms, bathroom 2nd
floor; LR, DR, kitchen 1st floor;
maintenance-free Insulbrlck siding, low
taxes, excellent structural condition,
needs redecorating. Very economical,
comfortable living In slightly ugly
house; asking $12,000; owner. Call
835-8112 after July 24.

ONE MAN’S, one women’s Huffy
$40 each. One Sears
Racer
new
new
$35. 894-6724.
portable TV

paid,

monthly. Expenses
sightseeing.
Free

$3000

GOING TO Long Island on July 20.
Will take one rider. Call 886-2021

UUAB FILM COMMITTEE presents

fwVrlA,

—

the reality that You exist

Birth marks a rebirth for Keith
Jarrett.

i

UNDERGRADUATES:
Help
investigate learning so that instruction
may be Improved! Participate in a
experiment.
learning
two-hour
Compensation
$4.
Please call
831-3946 between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m.

certain

markings, as do all newborns, that
distinguishes itself from another.
It has a profile that stands out,

force.

874-4237.

WANTED

Birth Keith Jarrett (Atlantic)

the capricious whirlwind that
turns one’s spirit around in the

euftinn

“

“

BUFFALO STATE GYM

OfMM-E JKf/

(Elmwood Ava.)

jjJUMO
gyU|

Tickets Students $1.00
Non-Student* $2.00

Ticket* at Buf. State Ticket Office and
Norton Hall Ticket Office

Friday,
„

y

n

&lt;

Reservations Daily I

fifteen
The Spectrum Page
1972
14 July
t'ii
i:t'« jni! 5|0d i
I
i
i i
.

.

t

MaVa

j

,i

|

;

.

�•j

Psychomat is taking place on Wednesdays, 7—10 p.m.,
not Thursdays as it states in the Summer Activities booklet.

Anyone needing tutoring in undergraduate math courses,
contact the College of Mathematical Sciences, 4224 Ridge

Lea, 831-1704.
Draft Counselors from the Draft Counseling Center of
Buffalo will be available on campus Tuesdays 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. in Room 260 Norton. Men with lottery numbers
1-100 are urged to come. (This is a Student
Association/GSA sponsored service to students.)
Beginning classes in exercise and meditation are held
every evening at 7 p.m. at Guru Ram Daj Ahram of
Kundalini Yoga on 196 Linwood Ave. For further
information, call 881-0505. Classes are also held on Monday
and Wednesday at 4 p.m. in Room 344 Norton Hall.

The India Association of Buffalo will sponsor an Indian
movie, Guddi, on July 22 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 147
Diefendorf. Admission will be $1.50 for members and $2.00
for all others.
Ruthven

Todd, a multi-talented author, will hold a
poetry reading on July 18* at 3 p.m. in the Norton
Conference Theater. This is the second in a series of four
lectures and readings to be given by participants in the
Ninth Summer Program in Modern Literature at SUNYAB.

Botany: Useful Plants, an identification course in local
edible, medicinal and fiber plants used by Indians and
pioneers, will be given through the Credit-Free Program by
R.H. Zander of the Buffalo Museum of Science. There will
be four Saturday afternoon field trips beginning July 29.
Call 831-4301 for information.
A Transcendental Meditation Lecture will be held on
Tuesday, July 18 and Thursday, July 20 at 8:30 in Room
330 Norton Hall, sponsored by the Students International
Meditation Society. Teachers of Transcedental Meditation,
Susan Dreyfuss, Eileen Felmet and Nancy Ross will speak
on the mental and physiological effects of Transcedental
Meditation as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.

An exhibition of paintings by American artist, Ellsworth
Kelly, which have never been previously exhibited will open
in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery at 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday,
July 11 with a Members Preview and will continue through
August

A six-week summer workshop for advanced amateur and
semi-professional photographers will be taught by Richard
Santuci at the Storefront Gallery, 23 Wadsworth St. in
Allentown. The two-evening per week course starts July 18.
Prospective students must submit examples of their work at
the Gallery between 5 and 8 p.m. as the enrollment is
limited.
The new summer schedule for The Unnamable will be
Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m., American Contemporary
Theater. There will be 12 final performances prior to their
August 19.
New York engagement scheduled for July 14
-

The UB Riding Club is now sponsoring two regular
weekly rides (Saturday mornings and Monday evenings) at
Scrabble Hill for members only. New members are welcome
to join. For more information, call Stephanie 883-5663 or

Dottie 773-3978 after 6 p.m.
Chabad House will hold Shabbos Services followed by a
Shabbos meal on Friday, July 14 at 8:30 p.m. and
Saturday, July 15 at 9:30 p.m.

27.

Backpage
Available at the Ticket Office
Shaw Festival
July 16 - Sept. 2: Getting Married
July 19 - Sept. 3: Misalliance
Melody Fair

Thru July 15: Liberate (sold out)
July I 7 22: Englebert Humperdinck
July 25-30: Peggy Fleming
Concert on Ice
July 31
August 5: Mitzi Gaynor
—

August 7-12: Promises, Promises
August 14-19: 1776
August 21 -26: Sergio Franchi &amp; Corbett Monica
Popular Concerts
July 16: B.B. King (MF)
July 14-16: Mariposa Folk Festival (T)
August 6; The Grass Roots (MF)
August 6: Badfinger, Cactus and Billy Preston (M)
August 13: Chicago (M)
August 15-20: Jesus Christ Superstar (K)
Theater

The Unnamable (A)
Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung you in the Closet and
I’m Feelin ' So bBad (D)
KEY
K - Kleinhans
Memorial Auditorium
M

—Osterreicher

—

MF

—

Melody

Fair

Toronto
American Contemporary Theater

D’Youville

College

Monday,

J uly 1 7

Film;

Winter Light (1962) directed by Bergman at 7 p.m. in
147 Diefendorf.
Films: By The Law ( 1926) directed by Kuleshov and Odessa
Steps Sequence (1925) directed by Eisenstein at 7 p.m,
and 9 p.m. in 146 Diefendorf.
Film: Quick Billie (1971) directed by Baillie at 8:30 and
9:30 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Films: Rhythmus 21 (1921) directed by Richter, Retour a
la Raison (1923) directed by Man Rayy, Symphonic
Diagonale (1921-24) directed by Eggeling and
Anaemic Cinema (1926) directed by Duchamp at 7
p.m. and 9 p.m. in 140 Capen.
:

What’s Happening
Friday, July 14
Play: The Unnamable, an authorized adaptation of the
novel by Nobel Prize winner Samuel Beckett in The
American Contemporary Theater at 8 p.m.
Film: Women in Revolt, directed by Andy Warhol and Paul
Morissey in Norton Conference Theater. Check Theater
Showcase for times.

Concert: Student Recital, An Evening of Songs and Duets at
8:30 p.m. in Baird Recital Hall.
Coffeehouse: johnny Shines in the first floor cafeteria,

Norton, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Film: Tom, Tom the Piper's Son (1969) directed by Jacobs
at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. in 140 Capen.
Film; Ivan the Terrible, I &amp; II (1944 &amp; 46) directed by
Eisenstein at 7 p.m. In 147 Diefendorf.
Saturday, July 15

Coffeehouse: Johnny Shines in the first floor cafeteria,
Norton, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Play: The Unnomable in the American Contemporary
Theater at 8 p.m.
Film; Women in Revolt in Norton Conference Theater.
Sunday, July 16

Tuesday, July 18

Modern Literature Series: Poetry Reading by Ruthven Todd
at 3 p.m. in Norton Conference Theater.
Summer Film Institute Lecture: Hiroshima: Documentary
and Romance with John K. Simon, chairman of UB's
Department of French. Screening and discussion of
Resnais' Hiroshima Mon Amour at 8 p.m. in 140

Capen.
Concert; Music Across the Centuries at
Recital Hall.

Film: Nanooh of the North (1922) directed by Flaherty at
7 p.m. and 10 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Film: Angotec: Eskimo Boy at 8 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Film: Child of the Future / and II at 8:30 in 147
Diefendorf.
Wednesday, July 19

Musical: Touch
A Rock Musical with the Posthorn
Players at 8:30 p.m. In 233 Norton.
-

Film: Women In Revolt in Norton Conference Theater.

8:30 p.m. in Baird

Silence (1963) directed by Bergman at 7 p.m. In 147

Diefendorf
Films: Yellow Horse

(1965) directed by Baillie and Quixote
(1964-65) directed by Baillie at 8:30 p.m. and 9:30
p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Film: The Cloak (1926) directed by Ko/inter, Trauberg at 7
p.m. and 9 p.m. in 140 Capen.
Films: Ballet Mechanique (1924) directed by Leger, Emak
Bakia (1927) directed by Man Ray and Ghosts Before
Breakfast (1927) directed by Richter and Fischinger
Films (selection) (1929-39) at 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. in
140 Capen.
Thursday, July 20
Summer Film Institute Lecture: Politically Engaged Film in
Socialist Yugoslavia with Vladimir Petrie, professor at
the Academy of Theater, Radio, Film and Television in
Belgrade. A screening and discussion of Dragon
Nikkolic's When / Am Dead and White at 8 p.m. in 140

Capen.

Musical: Touch
A Rock Musical with the Post-horn
Players at 8:30 p.m. in 233 Norton.
Film: Hunters (1958) directed by Marshall at 7 p.m. and
9:15 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Film: Head Man at 8:15 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.
Films: God is dog Spelled Backwards (1969) directed by
McLaughlin and Space and Perspective in Painting
(1966) directed by McLaughlin at 8:45 p.m. in 147
Diefendorf.
—

Continuing Events
Art Show: Paintings by Oliver

Norton, Monday—Friday,
through August 4.

Bonner in Gallery 219
11-5 and Sunday, 2-5

-E.G.

Miller-Smith

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>The SpccniUM
Vol. 23, No.

4

State University of New York at Buffalo

Friday, 23 June 1972

Myles Slatin resigns his
directorship of libraries
Myles Slatin, director of
libraries at the State University of
Buffalo since 1968, has resigned
from that post effectiveSeptember
1. Pending the appointment of a
permanent replacement, George S.
Bobinski, dean of the School of
Library and Information Studies,
will serve as director.
Discounting rumors that he
received administrative pressure to
resign, Dr. Slatin remarked: “It
seemed about time for me to

Specifically, members both of the
University community and of the
library staff charged Dr. Slatin last
fall with mismanagement, lack of
professional competence and poor
communication with his staff.
However, Dr. Slatin reported
that he did not resign because of
any library problems. He explained
that while there have been “the
good times and the bad times,”
there doesn’t exist any “one-to-one
relationship”
between
his
and
difficulties.
resignation
library
New director
He continued that he realized
that “as with any job, you can’t
always do what you want to do as
fast as you want to. My ambitions
for the library,” he said, “would
not get done as fast as I wanted.”
Yet, he is convinced that “they will
get done eventually.” But, he
added, it will mean “a lot of people
and a lot of work.”
Dr. Slatin feels that a new
director will help to transform the
library into a great one. In a
memorandum to the library staff,
he reported:
.the process of
finding a new Director will soon
begin. Like you, 1 hope that the
search will be successful from every
point of view; your abilities and
hard work, and your presence on
the staff will help to attract
someone who can work with you
to make this the great library it
must become.”
Slatin
Dr.
Additionally,
suggested that a “new director
from outside . . . with substantial
professional experience .. . might
be more successful” in directing
the libraries. President Ketter
reported that staff, students and
one community member would
constitute a search committee for a
new director,

Complicated process

Universities'budget formation
By Ian C. DeWaal
Campus t'dilor

Editor’s

note: The following is the first of a two-part
dealing with the preparation of the State
University of Buffalo budget. This article concerns the

series

mechanical aspects

of the budget.

.

Myles Slatin
leave.” He explained that when he
accepted the position under the
then University president Martin
Meyerson, there was “a quiet
understanding that I would serve as
director for three years
I have
now served four and a half years.”
...

Dr. Slatin’s resignation came as
a surprise to many members of the
library staff. As one library
employee commented; ‘1 didn’t
think Slatin would give up the
directorship for anything in the
world.” However, Dr. Slatin
maintained that he has been
discussing with various University
members “the possibility of
resigning” since lastSeptember.
Transition

In accepting Dr. Slatin’s
resignation, President Robert
Ketter cited his “dedication and
hard work during the past four
years, a most difficult period of
growth and transition for our
University libraries.” Dr. Ketter
was referring to a series of budget
cuts and staff freezes that have
plagued the library for several
years.
Because of these difficulties,
both thelibrary and Dr. Slatin have
been subject to much criticism.

Future plans
In the past, many university
members have supported the idea
of a professional librarian for the
post. (Dr. Slatin did not possess
such a degree.) Accordingly, they
hope that the search committee
will be instructed to select a

professional librarian. However, all
that President Ketter would report
is that the committee will be
“nationwide to come up with the
best possible candidate.” The
announcement of this committee
will be forthcoming.
Dr. Slatin reported that his
future plans indude getting
through the summer, cleaning his
desk and teaching English. Joining
the staff in 1952, Dr. Slatin has
held the positions ofassistant dean,
associate dean and acting dean of
tbs University's College of Arts and

Sciences.

The State University of Buffalo is currently
engaged in the preliminary steps of budget drafting
that wiU culminate in the presentation of the entire
State University of New York (SUNY) budget for the
1973—74 academic year to the Governor’s office next
fall.

Though the process began in March, University
administrators had little guidance in determining what
they could successfully request until the middle of last
month. “We launch into budget preparations for the
next year when we don’t even have the current
operating budget,” stated Albert Somit, Executive
Vice President. “The pending budget isn’t approved
by the legislature until mid-April or May.”

Sketchy guide
Each year, the vice presidents of the University
are directed to prepare preliminary requests around
April 1. Since the legislature usually has yet to act on
the current request, the previous year’s figures must be
used as a sketchy guide. In order to prepare for all
possibilities, four separate estimates may be
requested: a budget with a cut in funding, one without
change; one with a modest increase and one with an
eight percent increase.
The entire budget process is punctuated with
decisions in priorities. Alternatives are debated up and
down the chain of administrative command with final
decisions in the academic areas being made by either
the vice president for Academic Affairs or the vice
president for Health Sciences. Often decisions may be
made at lower administrative levels with the vice
presidents requiring subordinates to rank order their
programs by importance.

Consultation sought

“Each provost makes some decisions in
priorities," revealed Dr. Somit. “The department
chairmen sit with their people to get input. The

process of consultation goes all the way down.” The
provosts generally have policy or executive
committees that are available for consultation.
“Their combined requests will be larger than what
the University can ask for,” noted Dr. Somit. “The
vice presidents will then turn back and issue
instructions that cuts must be made.” The cuts will be
allowed in a limited number of areas due to several
constraints.
la the case of matching grant federal programs,
the University must make sufficient resources
available to fulfill its obligations under the program.
Other federally sponsored programs may require the
University to supply the necessary supportive services
■

that will insure the completion of the grant.
Secondly, SUNY may make “directed” funds
available for University use. These monies may be used
to implement specific programs that the University
has authorized to further its goals as a system. Prior
commitments also tend to limit options available for
budget trimming. In order to entice a faculty member
or administrator to join the University, certain
resources and independence may be offered in the
form of commitments which must be met.
Currently, a new structure for determining
academic priorities is being drafted by the office of
Bernard Gelbaum, vice president for Academic
Affairs. Though the “academic plan” has not been
officially released. Dr. Somit indicated that it would
“state the objectives of this institution. It will state
which program areas must be developed, maintained,
cut back or eliminated.”
Obligations upheld
The plan will respect the inability of drastic
changes to be incorporated into the University budget
in the space of one year. “We have students in the
pipeline and have obligations to them,” explained Dr.
Somit. “Phasingout may take five years.”
Recent shifts in enrollment patterns from the
hard sciences to the social sciences have highlighted
the mechanical difficulties in redirecting the personnel
resources of the University during a time when no new
monies are available for expansion. “Programs are
staffed by faculty who are increasingly tenured,”
noted Dr. Somit. “It would be difficult for an engineer
to teach English.” The University is currently above
the 60% tenured mark.
Until the last two years, the University was
experiencing a rapid growth rate. Money was easily
accessible and many programs were added in a short
period of time. "The first day I got here my chairman
said I had $30,000 to get rid of by that evening,”
chuckled Dr. Somit. “It wasn’t that easy to do.”
Good and bad
“Some of the programs were good and some were
bad,” he continued. “When the money stops, you
can’t touch bad programs that quickly. Money for new
programs disappears. At this point the administration
must take actions which don’t endear them. The
University has to develop new programs. Therela only
one way to do it. The system is Irrational in this

respect:”

..v.-

When savings are effected within the individual
units. Dr. Somit felt that it would be likely tor the
legislature to dedpct that amount from the next year’s
1
budget. “There Is no reward for good economy,
stated Dr. Somit.
The monies that are aaade available to the
University come under thirteen categories according
to function and purpose. Sometiaaea money may be
Milled from category to category, bat It mad be
*

�Amherst issue
mishap
Voting machine
sale
land
for
drafted
Plans
victory
mars McGovern
the 248 delegate position* on the
ballot, with a large number of the
Off-Campus Editor
remaining 30 positions to be filled
An apparent victory by Senator by his delegates. In addition the
George S. McGovern in the New senator confidently predicted that
York SUte Presidential primary “I’m convinced now that we will
was clouded Tuesday by a voting win the nomination in Miami
machine mishap with delayed Beach.”
election returns and threatened to
With only 42 delegates
results
an
entire
to be chosen before the
remaining
in
undermine
district.
Miama Convention, the New York
Senator McGovern
Election booths in the 37th victory will put
delegate
mark, only
near
the
1350
district, which
congressional
short
of
the
1509 vote
159
vote*
includes parts of Erie and Niagara
nomination.
total
needed
for
the
counties, were supplied with faulty
are confident
voting machines which caused mass McGovern forces
that
the
remaining delegates will
confusion in a number of areas.
come from uncommitted slates and
On the machine, voters were
from those committed to Senator
instructed to select six delegates Edmund Muskie.
and three alternates from a slate of

By Dave Saleh

24 candidates instead of the eight McFarland wins

delegates and four alternates who
were scheduled to be chosen. The
machines often locked after nine of
the candidates were chosen,
denying many of the voters their
full vote.
This caused a flurry of court
action on Tuesday in which

McGovern supporters challenged

results in the 37th and State
Supreme Court Justice Ann Mikoll
ruled that polling places in the
district should remain open until
11 p.m. instead of the 9 p.m.
deadline set for most other
districts. Judge Mikoll also ruled
that results in the 36th and 38th
districts be delayed until after the
polls closed in the 37th.
Results challenged
Action in the Appellate Court
division renewed the controversy
as the election results were
challenged and the possibility
looms that the actual election
results may not be known for a
number of weeks.
Meanwhile Senator McGovern
claimed a victory “beyond our
wildest expectations” as his
supporters won as many as 228 of

Although he was the only
candidate to enter slates in some of
the state’s election districts.
Senator McGovern said that the
200 plus delegate total was a
“distinct victory” because of
uncommitted and pro-Muskie
slates which were placed on
primary ballots by Democratic
Party officials in what was called a

“stop McGovern movement.”
Other primary results showed
Assemblyman James T. McFarland
easily defeat Republican endorsed
candidate John J. Phelan in a hotly

contested battle for the State
Senate seat in the 59th district.
This primary contest became a
most important one for State
Republican Tarty leaders for a
numberof reasons.
McFarland ran on a primarily
anti-Rockefeller campaign. Phelan
ran as a party regular with very
strong support from a number of
the party leaders including GOP
Senate Majority Leader Earl
Brydges and Republican Party
Chairman Alfonso Bellanca. The
McFarland victory has been widely
interpreted as a stunning setback
for the Republican Leadership.

Alumni merits awards
At a recent meeting of the State University of
New York Confederation of Alumni Association, the
Alumni Association of the State University of
Buffalo was presented with four awards for
outstanding performances. The Buffalo Association
was cited for marked improvement of ita total
program activity as well as its comprehensive nature.
The additional two awards concerned the innovative
features of a new project directed at undergraduates
and young alumni and the UB Alumni Association’s
communication program.

Pursuant to a request forwarded
Faculty-Student
the
by

Association (FSA), Sub Board I,
Inc. is currently drafting plans for
the disposition of a $05-acre tract
of land in Amherst owned by FSA.
The officers of FSA Had also
requested that proposals be
submitted by the individual
student governments but Sub
Board is asking each such
government for permission to act
its representative in the
forthcoming negotiations.
According to a position
statement accompanying the Sub
Board proposals, “accounting
records of the FSA (show that] the
funds for the purchase of the lartd
came from the University fee
charged to students.” This
justification had previously been
as

advanced to support Sub Board’s
original efforts at obtaining an
outright transfer of the land to Sub

Board.

Input sought
Though originally favorable to

such a' transfer, FSA has been purchase existing housing within a
edging away from its previous radius of several miles to the Main
intentions and is now investigating Street Campus. It is the hope of
selling the land and using the Sub Board I and the housing
proceeds to establish a fund which corporation that they will be able
would “benefit the students of the to relieve some of the student
University.” To that end, FSA, at housing problems in the Buffalo
its last meeting, directed its officers area,” argues the Sub Board
to seek input from Sub Board and statement.
The statement continues: “In
the six student governments as to
the use of the sale proceeds.
regard to Health Services, this is a
is
Sub
Board
Currently,
new area which the Board has been
emphasizing two areas in its
discussing over the past several
program: the development of the
student housing corporation and months. It is the Board’s desire to
the expansion of health care improve the existing facility on this
facilities available to students at campus in the area of student
the University. Sub Board has health and to expand the improved
proposed the establishment of a services to the Amherst Campus.”
management committee which
The
proposed investment
would oversee the expenditure of
the
of
fund
the generated interest
committee
management
will
and which would channel “the consist of two Sub Board
income from the trust fund [to Sub
appointees: two from FSA and an
Board] conditional upon it being
selected jointly
the single corporation most additional member
representative of all SUNYAB
students.”
“The immediate goals are to

by the other four members. The
appointments will be for three-year
terms on a staggered basis.

bu

University

...

—continued from

pag*

one—

the individual units for budget guidelines.
reviewed by the legislature.
The total budget “will reflect a concerted effort
In order of increasing importance, changes may
SUNY
Master
Plan
incorporate
the
reach the University President, the office of the to
Chancellor of the State University or the Division of recommendations,” emphasized Dr. Dullea. A master
plan is drawn up for the entire State University every
the Budget in the Governor’sOffice.
Last year the Central Administration of the State five years as mandated by the Legislature.
The next budget hearings occur in the Division of
University distributed guidelines during the initial
budget proceedings. This year no such help is the Budget of the Governor’s office. In addition to the
forthcoming. “Last year was an exception to normal total SUNY budget, the Division of the Budget may
procedure,” stated Henrik Dullea, Deputy to the seek justification from the largest four year
Chancellor for Governmental Relations. “Last year institutions concerning their individual budgets. After
Vice Chancellor Kettler was seriously ill so we decided continual feedback, and further budget cutting, the
on informal meetings. We’ve returned to normal this Division will successfully mesh the SUNY budget with
all other areas in the Executive Budget which the
year.”
The University may be allowed an increase in governor presents to the legislature in January.
The fiscal committees of the Legislature are
budgetary funds for several reasons, as outlined by
Charles Foget, assistant to the executive vice presented the budget requests of the State University
president. “Because the number of students is concurrently with the presentations to the Division of
the formulas the Budget in the Fall. When the Governor’s budget is
changing, there is a workload allowed
are established in Albany. Based on the number of finally presented, the Legislature has had an
students, so many dollars must be spent in various opportunity to review the initial requests without the
areas such as libraries security, administration. changes effected in the Governor’s office.
Sometimes it depends on Full Time Teaching
The Director of the Budget and the Chancellor
Equivalents (FTE’s) and sometimes on the actual head and his staff appear before the Legislative committees
count.”
In February, the committees hold open public agency
hearings. Final approval of the budgets occurs no
Individualhearings
sooner than mid-April with appropriations for the
When these considerations have been concluded supplemental budget coming about three weekslater.
on each state operated campus, each unit attends a By this time, initial proceedings for the following
budget hearing in front of State University fiscal year’s budget have already begun.
representatives. After a total State University budget
is realized, SUNY will then deliver its instructions to Next: Academic considerations.
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Page two. The Spectrum. Friday, 23 June 1972
apa* .

DATING
AND
MATING

June 27-open
T uesdays
3:00 p.m:
232 Norton

v w:'i

INTERPERSONAL
COMMUNICATION

J une 29-Aug.
Thursdays
7:30-9 p.m.
232 Norton

3

HORTICULTURE:
BASIC GARDENING

JulylO &amp; 12, 17 &amp; 19
or Aug. 7 &amp; 9; 14 &amp; 16
Mon. &lt;&amp; Wed
1 2 p.m.
-

232 Norton

WOMEN AND

CAREER CHOICES

July 10-Aug 14
Mondays
7:30-9 p.m.
232 Norton

N 9 T £ ! For information and registration call LIFE
WORKSHOPS 831-2511 or
stop in 225 Norton.
Anyone interested in leading a workshop or
suggesting one for the Fall
Semester, please contact us.

■

mrmymis bodi stops
SUt Mate st
2 blocks foutk of

The Spectrum is published once e
week on Fridays, ten times during
the summer academic sessions by
Sub Board 1, Inc. Offices are
located at 3SS Norton Hall, State
University of New York at Buffalo.
3435 Main Street, Buffalo, New
York, 14214. Telephone: Aree
Code 716; Editorial 831*113; Business 831-3610.

�n

Common Council upholds City
ordinance restricting housing
The Buffalo Common Council
failed again last week to repeal a
controversial housing ordinance
restricting occupancy in multiple
dwellings. A bill sponsored by
Councilmen George K. Arthur and
William B. Hoyt calling for removal
of the ordinance from the city
records was defeated by the
council after a prolonged battle
which may soon be carried to the
courts.

The ordinance, passed early last
year, states that no single place of
dwelling in the city can be
occupied by more than two
unrelated persons. This provision
has been the source of substantial
fear within the student community
since its strict enforcement will

force the eviction of large numbers
of students from multiple dwelling
apartments throughout the city.
None of the Councilmen could
be reached for comment on the
ordinance or its possible repeal, but
a spokesman for theAmerican Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) said that
further action within the Council is
likely in the near future.
Court action possible

If the Council fails to act on the
bill itself, ACLU lawyers will begin
court action on the ordinance
sometime in September, and are
hopeful that the ordinance will be
ruled on shortly thereafter.
Claiming that they will enforce

the law throughout the city, a
spokesman for the Buffalo Housing
Board claimed that they have
already begun to hand out eviction
notices to violators of the
ordinance. In addition,he said that
the city “is ready to take these
violators to court and has done so
on a number of occasions.”
Although the ordinance poses a
serious threat to off-campus
housing in the University area,
Robert Dombrowski, head of the
Off-Campus Housing Services at
the University said: “To this point
we have experienced no real
problems with the city concerning
enforcement of the ordinance, and
we see no real difficulties arising in
the near future.”

Allegations heard

Percy claims America's

Emprise faces Crime Committee ‘vitalinterests
by Mike Friedman

of the purple gang in Ohio, Anthony Zerrelli and
Giacomo Tocco. They were identified by the
McClellan Commission as Mafia lieutenants. Mr.
Steiger additionally named Big Bill Lias of Wheeling,
W. Va., who the U.S. Naturalization and Immigration
Service was then trying to deport.

Specialto The Spectrum

Editor’s note: Mr. Friedman, City Editor for the
University FM radio station, WBFO, has been
following the activities of Emprise Corporation, the
world’s biggest sports concessionnaires for many
months. During this period, the U.S. House of On theroad
Representatives Select Committee on Crime has been
Following that release, Steiger dogged the tracks
investigating aspects of organized crime as they of Emprise from one racing commission hit to the
pertain to horse racing. Emprise owns a large number next; from one State Liquor Authority to the next,
of racetracks and has in the past been linked to speaking out against the corruption that he insists is
organized crime, most often by Congressman Sam prevalent wherever the company operates.
Steiger. The following article was originally read on
In all, Steiger has testified before over two dozen
WBFO last Friday and is based on Mr. Friedman’s state authorities about Emprise. But, the company
impressions of the House hearings and previous news
stories.

News Analysis

Today is unusual for us. There was nothing from
the normally volcanic House Select Committee on
crime. But the first four days of the week saw a wealth
of rhetoric and polemic, as well as a number of facts
bandied about; mutually exclusive, and highly
improbable.
One of the improbabilities is that one man,
Congressman Sam Steiger of Arizona, could take on a
multi-million dollar conglomerate corporation,
Emprise, and attain a standoff in face-to-face
confrontation. Rep. Steiger has been a foe of Emprise
Corp. for many years. He reported in March of 1970
that Emprise had M afia connections.
At that time, Steiger charged several with
underworld activities, including Sam Tucker, allegedly

was not taking Congressman Sam Steiger lying down
either. The vice president of Emprise, Max Jacobs,
assembled a file on the representative, including
information derived from a divorce proceeding against
the crusading congressman, spiced with gossip elicited
from his neighbors.
Jacobs testified before the House Select
Committee this week that the file was assembled at his
direction only for historical interest. However, he
admitted that a number of his friends had copies ofit.
Rep. Steiger had been alleging for some time that
Emprise also had his phone tapped, and the man who
did the actual wiretapping also appeared. But
—continued on page toui—

Bible Truth
Gospel Mean* Good News

Hear, O Israel
For gams from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

.

‘‘How that Christ died for our

sins according to the scriptures,
and that he was buried and the
he rose again the third day
accroding to the scriptures.”
-/ Cor. 15:3, 4

875-4265

INDEPENDENT

Senator Charles Percy, speaking
in Buffalo Monday night, said that
the United States should not try to
“Americanize” other peoples of

the world and should withdraw
from all foreign relations not
“essential and crucial to our vital
interests.”

The Republican senator from
Illinois was the guest speaker of the
Buffalo Council on World Affairs
at a dinner in the Terrace Room of
the Statler Hilton. Senator Percy, a
member of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, expressed
strong feelings against the United
States’ continuing role in Vietnam
and the administration’s actions
during the India-Pakistan conflict.
Calling the Vietnam War “the
biggest single mistake this country
has ever made,” Senator Percy
demanded that the United States
“get out, lock, stock and barrel.”
He cited the fact that South
Vietnam, as a result of American
aid, now has one of the largest and
best equipped armed forces in Asia,
fully capable of carrying on its own
fighting.

demonstrated in the recent war in
Bangla Desh. The major opposing

forces, India and Pakistan, he
noted,
each
used
both
American-made tanks and Soviet
MIG aircraft. In an attempt to halt
any further occurrences of this
nature, Senator Percy asked that
his audience support a bill which he
voted on last Tuesday prohibiting
all arms sales to any nation in
South Asia.

‘Vital interests’
Conversely,
Senator Percy
pointed out that the recent
Kennedy bill calling for an increase
in financial aid to Bangla Desh
from SSO million to SI 00 million is
an instance where foreign aid is “in

our vital interests." He also
asserted that armsaid to Israel is “a
major difference from Vietnam” in
that it is a country only trying to
protect its land and its people from
the larger and more powerful Arab
nations.

Senator Percy extolled the
recent SALT talks between the US
and the Soviet Union as setting “a

new
foundation of peaceful
Turn the cheek
co-existence.”
He condemned
noted
he
Senator Percy
that has
those who continue to stress the
introduced a bill to Congress that
need for American arms supremacy
would limit the war-making powers saying:
“We’ve both got enough;
of the President. He emphasized,
sufficient is sufficient.” A leading
however, that this bill is not meant
opponent of President Nixon’s
as “a slap in Nixon’s face,” but
proposed
anti-ballistic missile
simply a safeguard against any
system, Senator Percy stated that
further “undeclared wars.”
“The ABM isn’t worth the money
If passed, he explained, the bill it would cost to blow it to hell.”
would permit the President to
enter American forces into a
In concluding, Senator Percy
foreign conflict for a maximum of noted that, as a result of improving
thirty days at which time either relationships with Russia and Red
China, the United States is entering
Congress must declare war or all
troops must be withdrawn.
into “a very, very exciting
Senator Percy also cited “the
threshhold" in which America will
Kop
nature”
of again “nation-build at home” and
Keystone
American foreign affairs as “become a model for the world.”
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3
Friday, 23 June 1972 The Spectrum Page three
.

.

�•

,

i

Emprise accused...

—continued from page thr#*—

Federal

grand jury investigation that he knew
something of it. And he would have reason to wreak
revenge upon the two legislators, since they cost him a
great deal ofmoney.

yesterday, Jeremy Jacobs, president of Emprise, said
that he and his brother are blameless in that matter,
and that the wiretap was instigated by their Arizona
partners, Albert and Bradley Funk.

Involved again
Almost certainly, the prosecutor in the Pordum
the
life
and
death
duel
and Ludera case, James G. Richards, did not come up
hearings besides
apparent
and
Jacobs.
That
other
that
between Steiger
interest is
here for a small bribe case, being the head of a special
of the Pordum and Ludera bribery conspiracy trial. U.S. Justice Department strike force. He is, in fact, the
Insiders in Buffalo have long said that Sports Service same assistant U.S. attorney who convicted Emprise
of Buffalo, one of over 100 Emprise subsidiaries, was on charges of conspiracy to hide gambeUing interests
involved in the Dome Stadium scandal, but the in the Las Vegas Frontier hotel.
There was little reason to invite several Erie
connection is not an easy one to make.
The indictment of the Erie County legislatures County legislators to Washington to testify this week
Fred Pordum and Frank Ludera, and their subsequent if the cases are not intimately involved. One of the
trial and conviction, is a long one and does not bear lawmakers who testified, John Hanny, is a long-time
repeating now. But some of the backstage maneuvers friend of Jerry Jacobs, enjoys some financial backing
seem to be similar to the ones used by Emprise in other from the Jacobs family and friends. He was for a long
Another ode
There is another angle of interest to the Emprise

areas of the country, according to both testimony
heard before the Committee and also a report that
appeared recently in Sports Illustrated magazine.
One possible connection is that Emprise wanted
very much to have the concessions at the proposed
dome, an agreement that the Kenford Corporation
may have been unwilling to make. Kenford, which
wished to build and operate the Dome, did not have
enough votes in the Erie County Legislature to pass
the bill authorizing the construction construction
which would of course have given millions of dollars in
—

time.an avid supporter of the DomeStadium plan.
Hanny testified that it is commonplace backing
members of the Erie County legislature to receive
financial backing from Jacobs, and this was backed up
by legislators Norman Wolfand Walter Floss.
Legislator Albert Abgott, who Hanny said also
received aid from Jacobs, was scheduled to testify, but
the committee ran out of time before he spoke.
Abgott, incidentally, sponsored a resolution before
the legislature in 1970 praising Emprise. That did not
pass.

profits to Kenford.

WliisTLE STOPS

WASHINGTON A federal investigation into the break-in at the
Democratic National Headquarters is now in progress. Five men,
including the chief security officer for both the Republican National
Committee and President Nixon’s re-election committee were arrested
early last Sunday inside the Democratic National Committee’ suite of
-

OffiCeS.
The Washington Post reported earlier thisweek that two of the men
carried address books with the name and telephone number of White
House consultant Howard E. Hunt. All of the suspects plus Hunt have
been at one time connected with the CIA.
William F. Ryan defeated Bella Abzug for the
NEW YORK
Democratic nomination in the 20th Congressional district in the New
York State primary last Tuesday. The race between two of Congress’
most liberal members, thrown into the same district after a Republican
led reapportionment, ended in an easy victory for the 51 -year-old Ryan.
-

WASHINGTON (UPI) Military troops will be positioned in the
Miami Beach area for the Democratic and Republican national
conventions. Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst and Florida Gov.
Reubin Askew announced last Wednesday.
In a statement issued by the Justice Department, they said: “These
conventions must be conducted in an atmosphere of respect for the
constitutional rights and the public safety of all persons, including
delegates.”
It is not yet certain whether the troops would beactive dtyy GIs or
-

National Guardsmen,or both.

The statement also said that “planning will include arrangements for
equipment and logistical support and the prepositioning of military
forces in the Miami Beach area.”

NEW YORK
Appearing on ABC’s The Dick Cavett Show last
Monday, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D. Mass.) said: “I will do everything
I can in the next six months” to ensure a democratic victory in
November. He declined to speculate, however, what his personal role
would be.
Earlier Monday, Kennedy had said that while he “would not”
consider the top spot on the Democratic ticket, he “would have to give
heavy consideration” to accepting the vice presidential nomination if he
was convinced that was the only way the party could win.
-

Motion denied
Several weeks ago, Fred Pordum attempted to
gain a new trial in Federal Court in Buffalo. This effort
was wasted as Judge John Henderson squashed the
request summarily, but according to at least one
source, the U.S. authorities have finally gotten to
Pordum. Previously, Fred Pordum told me that Mr.
Richards and his men offered him a deal if he would
testify against Emprise and Sports Service,but at that
time, he insisted to lhe Justice Department that he
really knew nothing.
However, it now appears likely that Pordum will
appear before the House Select Committee when it
meets again in July. And it is also likely that Pordum
would not appear if he were merely going to repeat his
previous protestations ofinnocence.
Of all the information that has come out of the
hearings of the Select Committee, the most damning
to Emprise, and to American politics, is not what
happened at various racetracks and sports stadiums,
but rather the effects of large scale innocent looking
political contributions by corporations and the very
rich, upon local and state legislative bodies and
regulatory agencies.
*

Interested in concessions
Previously, Emprise had sent a letter to the Erie
County Legislature indicating that they did not wish
to build and operate a stadium, but were anxious to
operate the concessions there.
There is some speculation that Sports Service
bought back the votes of legislators Pordum and
Ludera who were sentenced to three years for
conspiracy in selling their votes to Kenford,or rather,
Kenford’s agent, J. Lloyd Walker.
In his testimony before the House Committee,
Walker said that he did not know why Fred Pordum
picked apart the Kenford contract after Walker had
bought his vote. An explanation for this remarkable
occurrence is that Sports Service, in twisting
Kenford’s corporate arms, put pressure on Pordum to
holdup approval of the contract. In other testimony.
Walker said that Pordum told him that he, Pordum,
could get more than ten times the bribe amount from
Sports Service.
In fact, it seems that since apparently Edward
Cottrell of the Kenford Company instigated the

WASHINGTON (UPI)
A federal judge ruled Monday that the
Democrats may require state party organizations to give all segments of
—

the population a voice in choosing convention delegates, but it may not
dictate the actual makeup of the delegations.
US District Judge George L. Hart, Jr. ruled that the party’s key
reform guidelines aimed at achieving proportional representation of
women, minorities and youths could not be used to upset delegations
chosen in a democratic fashion.
Party spokesmen said that was their position all along, but moved to
appeal Hart’s ruling that the guidelines, applied to the actual decision of
the electorate or party members in choosing delegates were
unconstitutional.
Hart ruled on a suit by Chicago Alderman Thomas E. Keane, one of
59 uncommitted delegates in the Illinois delegation headed by Chicago
Major Richard Daley. Keane faced the possible loss of his position in the
delegation if the party’s Credentials Committee had upheld a challenge
to the Daley slate.
U

WBt It.'

The Spectrum
AUTHORIZED

adaptation foe performance

Samuel Beckett’s
THE

UNNAMABLE

Iv

800 aom of tha finwt
TRAIL RIDING IN N.Y. STAY
Opm 7 dayta wwk

132-4112

§32-4112

rrh-f
ir’-ti rft

Ranrvations
Page four. The Spectrum Friday, 23 June 1972
.

Daily I

�Drycleaner withholds taxes,
confiscates agents clothing
Memphis (UH) An irate dry it bounced. He brought it back, he
cleaner who wouldn’t pay his taxes said, android Hudson: ‘It was no
forced three state revenue agents to good.”
march naked out of his store last
“He whipped a gun out and
week and held a fourth agent said: *Start taking off your
hostage for seven hours until Gov. clothes,’ added Mabile. The three
Winfield Dunn flew from Nashville were then made to walk naked
to talk to him.
from the store. The fourth,
Black militant dry cleaner Duncan, was held as a hostage.
Hudson
LaSaunders
dived Hudson said Duncan wouldn’t be
headlong out the door of his store released unless Gov. Dunn talked
into the back seat of a waiting car, to him personally.
driven by a black city official, and
‘1 certainly hated to walk out
was whisked away to a suburban the door without any clothes on,”
motel to meet with Dunn.
said Mabile. ‘1 was embarrassed.”
Don Duncan, chief of field
operations for the collection A good show
division of the Department of
Word of the collection effort
Reyenup, staggered out of the BHK had apparently raced through the
cleaners moments later, haggard neighborhood and when the three
but unharmed.
agents stepped gingerly into the
After his hour-long conference sidewalk, “a crowd of people had
with Dunn, Hudson, 29, was taken already gathered on the street and
to jail. A spokesman for the they cheered and clapped when he
governor said Hudson told Dunn walked out,” Mabile said.
that “it was impossible for him to
The agents, hiding their nudity
pay the taxes and take care of his from the bemused blacks as best
family and two children. He they could, hobbled frantically to a
realized he has done wrong and parked moving van and wrapped
that he has to face the themselves in furniture pads until a
the sympathetic pastor provided them
consequences.”
Dunn,
with ill-fitting trousers.
spokesman said, agreed.
Police barricaded a two block
Check bounced
section to traffic and tried to hold
The siege on Park Street, a black back the crowd, which swelled to
business neighborhood, began over 1000 as word of the action
about
noon
when Duncan, spread.
Soul singer Isaac Hayes joined
accompanied by revenue agents
Vince Tuminello, Lee Mullins and police
in a Black Panther
John Mabile, went into the dry headquarters next door to the
cleaning establishment to collect cleaners, and police began passing
$197 in back taxes. Tuminello and notes to Hudson. A college student
Mabile are white, Mullins black.
who said he was a friend of
Hudson and his partner in the Hudson, scurried out of the
cleaning establishment sent letters Panther headquarters, stuck the
recently to state officials refusing notes through the mail slot of the
to pay taxes because “it is BHK cleaners, and when a reply
impossible for black citizens of the popped back out the slot, he
state of Tennessee and of America picked that up and took it back to
to be on a par with the other police.
After the affair ended, Dunn
citizens of America.”
Mabile said Hudson gave them a flew back to Nashville and Hudson
check for $197, and while the was hauled to jail, where he was
other three agents waited at the held without bond pending
store, he took it to the bank, where unspecified charges.
—

”

Be a friend
Terrace House, a way station for homeless men
in need of volunteers. Having people to talk to
outside their regular peer group is usually a great
boast to the men. Interested volunteers should
contact Cathy Klein of CAC, 837-1862.
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T

(

HFirfday, 23 June .972 The Spectrum Page five
ttxf. SE
ramK»«|i5 *&lt;*’? . t»®V eq%H
.

.

.

-

�ffit • Ijfcv.Livtjfcrife

EdiTORiAl
New direction
Libraries signals the
The resignation of Myles Slatin as Director of
was an era marked by
end of an era for the University libraries. It
criticism of library
and
severe
hiring
on
budget cuts, state freezes
service.
alt of the libraries
It would be unfair to fault Dr. Slatin for
and
shared much of
of
the
blame
most
difficulties. However, he bore
is the
libraries'
problems
for
the
the responsibility. Also responsible
of
academic
policy
its
avowed
couldn't
back
administration who
Albany too, has
excellence with a firm commitmartt to the libraries.
at this the
library,
the
condition
of
contributed to the disgraceful
handling
hostile,
even
Indifferent,
by
center,
its
university
.

.

,

largest state

of the budget.
merely laying blame and
Yet, the libraries will not improve by
Dr. Slatin
finding fault for past sins that may have been committed. As
the joint
only
through
great
libraries
become
will
pointed out, the
people.
many
efforts of
given
In addition to obtaining a new director, the libraries must be
librarian
professional
a
have
many
suggested,
as
new direction. First,
schooled to deal with
must be sought for the directorship. Specifically
professional librarian
the many problems of operating a library, a
to
build
both this library and
and
work
past
problems
would help solve
complex.
plan the Amherst
It is, therefore, imperative that President Ketter specially instruct
professional library
the search committee to nominate a candidate with
training.
Administrative involvement cannot end in simply securing a new
Hayes Hall must rank the
director. At this time of budget planning,
There
is also the need for the
top
of
its
priorities.
library as one
plan
academic
to include a sense of
Vice
President's
Academic Affairs
urgency in improving the libraries.
Aside from this, the administration must use all of its influence to
convince Albany to allocate funds needed to restore past library
services and to offer new benefits.
This University has already suffered for the neglect of its libraries.
Faculty have left this campus citing as reason the libraries'
inadequacies; departments have been unable to attract prominent
faculty because of a poor library; university research has been stifled as
the library simply does not possess necessary texts and periodicals; and
students have had to contend with curtailed hours and pitiful resources.
If the library situation isn't changed, the University will suffer
additonal, possibly more serious liabilities. We have lost much, we
cannot afford to lose anymore.

The failure of the Common Council to repeal a restrictive housing
ordinance really shouldn't surprise anyone. Particularly since the
Council merely acted as it has in the past with narrow-mind ness and
bigotry rather than reasoned judgement.
It is apparent that the Council, long hostile to students, is utilizing
the ordinance to hinder students in finding suitable housing. The
ordinance which restricts occupancy in multiple dwellings has been
termed both "unjust" and "unreasonable." Apparently, however, the
Council doesn't consider legalities or fairness in deciding issues.
We can only hope that the courts will show the judgement and
wisdom that the Council lacks when the ordinance is tested before
them. If they do, there is no doubt that this discriminatory law will be
-

repealed.

The Spectrum
Friday. 23 June 1972

Vol. 23. No. 4
-

Jo-Ann Armao

Managing Editor
Jeff Greenwald
Business Manager Jack Harlan
Co-Advertising Manager Susan Hory
Co-Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
Acting Production Supervisor Lawrence McNieca
-

-

-

—

—

Campus
City . .

.Ian C. DeWaal

C«PV

Peggy Edwards
Karin Sheldon
,■.. .vacant

vacant

Feature....
Graphic Art*

.

...

...

Tom Totes

Layout

Lit. &amp; Drama
Music .
Off-Campus

Photo
Sports

Maryhope Runyon
Michael Silverblatt
Billy Altman
Dave Saleh
Mickey Osterreicher
Steve Lipman

, .

The Spectrum is served by United Pres* International,College Pres* Service,
The Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Publishers-Hall Syndicate.
Republication of matter herein in any form without the express consent of
the Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.

Editorial policy it determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page six The Spectrum. Friday ,l23: June
.

1972 &lt;

rne peceie

TRB
from Washington

The New Republic

c. 1972, Harrison-BUdne of New Jersey. Inc.

sky full of
We are having lunch six miles up
popcorn clouds. “Red or white?” asks the pretty
Malaysian hostess in a stunning Oriental dress. Weleft
the Singapore Hilton at 6 a.m. and will end in
Honolulu at some incomprehensible hour, for with
this International Date Line you never know whether
itis yesterday, today or tomorrow. The captain’s voice
over the intercom says casually, “On our left the
Mekong Delta.”
The sea is deep blue and some of the beaches of
Vietnam below us are yellow sand. Those may be toy
airplanes on that matchbox field.
“Passing on the left, the city of Vinh Long,”says
the captain informatively. Some of us look down from
our pressurized jet. At 500 mph, the tortured land is
soon passed. The lunch is abalone with minced pork,
wine, “Savarin aux fruits.”
We are fighting a depersonalized war down there,
to save our national honor. Mr. Nixon has said he isn’t
going to be the first President to lose a war. The Harris
poll says 79 percent want a U.S. pullout, but, on the
other hand, 45 percent (to 38 percent) would oppose
peace by accepting a coalition government that
included Communists. So we must fight. We can’t let
our President down.
Any day now the Communists may throw in the
sponge and let us end this senseless slaughter. For our
boys, fortunately, the actual killing has become
increasingly remote. In the bombers, anyway, the
soldier is separated from the consequence of his
action. The difficulty is that a seismic detector can’t
always differentiatebetween a truckload of arms and a
school bus. But that’s the hazard of war, isn’t it? We
can be complacent, for our side is free from the fear of
retaliation.
The fields of Vietnam are being scientifically
cratered. It’s a small country, but even at that, Mr.
Laird says it will cost us $3 to $5 billion more to do the
job. Between 1965 and 1971 bombing dug some 26
million craters with an average depth of 25 feet and
diameter of 40 feet. Along with that herbicide
spraying killed perhaps half the hardwood forest west
and north of Saigon, and maybe half of all the
mangrove forests. We stopped that a year ago after
devastating around 5.5 million acres largely because
foreign nations were saying nasty things about us.
Some of the countries at the Stockholm conference,
for example, rejected the U.S. as savior of the
environment while practicing ecocide in Indochina.
There has been a price for this at home, of course,
of helplessness and frustration, of dejection and
despair. Worse still, probably, is the loss of confidence
of many people in their institutions and their
government. A lot of people have avoided this simply
by closing their minds to the war; tuning it out. You
can numb your mind if you set about it properly,but
it is an art and some people are better at it than others.
On the other hand there is always this uncomfortable
question, whether killing women and children in
villages is as bad as not caring about killing women and
children in villages?
America is in this fix, I think, partly because of
our odd form of government. More and more we have
been getting away from shared responsibility in
Washington, and massing power at the top, largely in
-

.

Common Council fails

Editor-in-Chief

see rue awesess.

the President. The abdication of authority by
Congress has been the most conspicuous change of
government in Washington in SO years. Congress has
been found an unnecessary dement in carrying on this
war, and so has the press, and so finally has the public.
They all oppose the war, but it goes on. The important
factors are the Pentagon and the President. They are
going to save our national honor and they are going to
preserve Mr. Nixon from being the first President, etc.
Curiously enough, the original theory of our
government was that the Chief Executive would be
subordinate to the legislature, but things developed in
precisely the opposite direction. Rexford Tugwell
wrote about this in 1960, “The Enlargement of the
Presidency,” and even then saw that the legislature,
under the pressure of a high-energy economy, was
“gradually being reduced to argumentation, to
investigation and to acquiescence.” This reporter sat
with majority leader Mike Mansfield at a breakfast the
other day, a gentle, likeable man, who frankly
bemoaned Congressional passivity on Vietnam. Well,
he is not the type to sound a tocsin. The record of
Congress on the war has been contemptible, and the

White House has treated it with contempt.
Everybody lies to Congress. Congress banned use
of funds to subsidize foreign troops in Laos, but the
Administration flagrantly violates the ban. Congress
approved $10 million in humanitarian aid for the
Pakistani government which the General Accounting
Office now finds was diverted into fortifications: a
senior official at the time assured senators that there
was “no evidence” of such irregularities.
The army lies, and Congress is the last to hear
about it: New York Times man Seymour Hersh just
revealed the suppressed secret army report about the
1968 Mylai massacre; the report found that the
cover-up was “made at every level” from bottom to
top. You remember the photos of Mylai? They were
ultimately exposed by the press a pile of women and
old men shot down in cold blood, with the buttocks of
one slain baby showing in the foreground . . Well,
national honor, you know.
When Mr. Nixon was in Moscow, Comrade
Brezhnev must have envied him his power. Comrade
Brezhnev doesn’t go through our election process, but
he has to clear a lot of things with others. The
American President can order an invasion of
Cambodia on his own. Under a parliamentary
democracy, if Heath should fire his foreign secretary,
Sir Alec Home, the latter would still have his powerful
seat in the Commons. If Mr. Nixon fired Kissinger, he
would just have to go back to Harvard. Mr. Nixon is
boss.
Franklin Roosevelt had two press conferences a
week; Mr. Nixon held hislast formal one June 1,1971;
yes, over a year ago. Jeer if you want at the press, but it
is a safeguard of democracy; it links the President with
reality. The Nixon Administration has deliberately set
out to downgrade it. Mr. Nixon is the most isolated
President since Hoover. That is the trouble with our
system of elected monarchy, particularly where you
have a man who is reclusive and introspective, lacking
warm and easy relationship with the public. The
problem goes deeper than Mr. Nixon, though. We have
elevated the symbolic office of the Presidency so that
we feel it must not be tarnished; it must not be
diminished by military defeat.We must save face.
—

.

m

�OFF BALAMa
by Jeff Greenwald

mm
Fa gotta try
To the Editor

I want to respond to your evaluation of the
Faculty Senate because the questions you raise also
apply to the student governments and because I
disagree with some of your descriptions and
conclusions.
I find it naive to consider “excitement” to be a
for
effective legislative action.
prerequisite
Excitement is generally either the result or the cause
of conflict. If conflict can be reduced by hard
preparation and prior discussion, then thereis no good
reason for exciting rhetoric or inflamed dialogue. As
an example, the report on teacher evaluation, was so
thoroughly prepared and adequately presented that
there were few loopholes for criticism despite an
undoubted aversion among many faculty to the
concept of outside evaluation of classroom
performance.

No “excitement” and yet the changes in teaching
patterns are likely to have more impact on the
academic experience of students than any other issue
the Senate considered this year. The Collegiate

g
0»

Prospectus also produced minimal “excitement,”
though it also was passed consistent with the wishes of
the Collegiate Assembly and despite underlying
opposition, because it was well prepared and
presented. The excitement is in the documents, not in

the dialogue!
I also don’t agree that those elected are
moderates. Anyone who suggests that Yeracaris,
Hochfield, Finegan, Schoenfeld, Planck or Baumer
share the same opinions among themselves, much less
the entire Senate, has not listened to the debates. Even
if the majority arc “moderate,” that clearly covers a
wide spectrum of opinion.
This leads to the criticism you made of the size
and attendance at the meetings. As mentioned, size is
geometrically related to social inertia; the more
people, the more opinions there are to be heard, even
if they’re the same ones. The reason we have
representative government is because it is expedient; it
gets the job done better of considering and acting on
issues of importance. As for quorums, you must
consider that the few times when quorums were a real
problem, fell during exam periods or were multiple or
recessed meetings.
Nevertheless, the Senate’s track record was far
better than the old assembly. Maybe there is a need for
tighter standards, but I attended virtually all the
meetings and it seemed as if there was ample, even too
much discussion of the issues.
This leads to my disagreement with your
statement that the present format does not provide a
place where all voices could be heard. First of all, the
old Senate was even worse because of its size; by
definition, not everyone could be heard, only the loud
ones. Furthermore, no students spoke on any but
exceptional occasions. In the present Senate, all
members (either faculty or student) of Senate
committees, have the rights of the Senate floor to
speak, not only on issues before their committees, but
on any issue.
I suggest finally that “the power and prestige of
the Senate” is up to the the Senate to define, despite
the tedhnical power of Dr. Ketter. Just as the
executive branch has taken excess power in
Washington, so it has happened here, not because of
rules, but because of a lack of desire by the legislative
branch. The Faculty Senate is as strong or as weak as it
wishes to be.
John Greenwood

There’s something about a presidential campaign that forces one to
consider American politics. I suppose it’s the' politicians. With apologies
to that great warper of freshman political science students’ minds. Bob
(legitimate) Samberg, an outrageously oversimplified partial definition
of politics is in order. Politics is the system through which thecountless
legal jurisdictions of this nation choose theirleaders.
That’s strike one right off the bat.
In the past few years, the term “politics” has been tagged onto
numerous cultural phenomena (many of them having catchy
book-selling titles); The Politics of Experience The Politics of
Confrontation, Sexual Politics, The Polities of Martyrdom. Some even
suggest that politics has pervaded such events as baseball and hockey (the
politics of the puck?).
When considering politics in general and campaigns in particular,
however, there are two subsets of politics that especially stand out,and
even if they don’t deserve recognition, they are going to get it. I refer to
the politics of compromise and what may be called the politics of
personality.
Compromise, as we all know, is the basis for the American political
system. It is a very simple regression from scratching someone’s back to
kissing their ass in order to get something you would like, and, or
vice-versa. Maybe you would like to believe that America is the
wealthiest, the most compassionate, the strongest and the best country
in the world, and that’s fine with me. But never forget that it’s also got
the ass-kissingest bunch of people on the face of the earth. But that’s
compromise and that’s politics.
Some recent events vividly illustrate just what compromise has
meant to our great land. A mammouth aid-to-education bill, whose
passage may possibly stave off impending doom for a number of
desperate universities, could get through Congress only by having what is
known as a “rider” tacked to it.
—

Interesting term: rider. The irony is pathetic, because of course, the
rider mandated an extended moratorium on forced busing to achieve
racial integration. By the way, children are about the best pawns for
compromise that you can find. If they agree, you’re only doing what
they want;if they don’t,what do they know anyway.
That’s not all though. Don’t be too surprised if you wake up some
morning to news reports of Health, Education and Welfare Secretary
George C. Wallace. Or maybe it’ll be Director of the Budget. You see,
George McGovern said that there might be a place for Wallace in his
administration, maybe even in the cabinet. Oh, it’s not really McGovern’s
fault. It’s simply compromise, and that’s politics.
Strike two.
No one can truthfully say that politics isn’t interesting, even if the
most impressive newcomer to blast his way into the political scene this
year is Arthur Bremer. But there’s even a lot in the candidates themselves
to captivate the imaginations.
The most curious thing about personality politics is the way the
politicians with no personality whatsoever can capitalize on their
tremendous dullness. Nixon is coldly and pragmatically dull. McGovern
is sincerely and compassionately dull. Some have gone so far as to say
McGovern is charismatically dull. Not only that, but have you noticed
that McGovern seems to be even duller than usual lately, like he’s trying
especially hard. Someone should tell him he needn’t try so hard.
That’s not unusual though. It’s as though all politicians exaggerate
their natural personalities out on the stump. After all, Humphrey can’t
possibly talk that much at home, and I’ll never be convinced that anyone
could be as big a bastard as Wallace appears to be when he’s campaigning.
Strike three.
Next batter? It would be nice, but there doesn’t appear to be
anything else on deck. Not a thing.

WILL, YOU KNOW WHAT I MIAN
YOU HAPPINID TO M LOOKING FOR A VP, I'M AVAILABLE IS WHAT I MIAN!'

TIODY, IF THINGS OET DC AOLOCKID, AND IP

.

.

.

...

IP

Friday, 23 June. 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

�Committee plans forum

-more
Scientists

objective?
To the Editor

On Friday, 16 June 1972, The Spectrum
informed us about the “Scientific Community Reacts
to Killing at Td Aviv Airport.” 1 am, as a Palestinian,
in no position to defend the killing ofinnocent people.
However, I would like to suggest to the “Memorial
Committee” that instead of condemning “Arab
Terrorism,” let us condemn all acts of violence at all
levels. The very basic principle of any scientific
community is to be objective and look at both sides of
the story, rather than promoting one side and
suppressing the other. 1 want to tell this scientific
community that the “PFLP” organization occupies
the same extreme point on the Palestinian continuum
which the JDL occupies on the Zionist linear scale.
The “committee” is asking that the petition be
addressed to the United Nations. I would like to
remind the “Scientific Committee” that this U.N. has
recently condemned the Israeli government atrocities
against the Palestinians as war crimes. Moreover, Israel
has defied more than IS resolutions, taken by the
international body, asking for the repatriation of the
two million Palestinian refugees in exile. Therefore,
how does the Committee expect the U.N. to condemn
a group of oppressed people whom their very
fundamental right to exist is threatened?
The deliberate bias from the side of scientific
people will never remedy the situation, but rather
complicate it.
Do not let the Palestinians swallow the bitterness
of their tragedy and ask them to be wise at the same
moment. Do not make from Menachem Bagin, who
murdered 25Q helpless Palestinians, a hero, and ask the
uprooted refugees not to be violent.
Once all of us in the Scientific Community start
to realize sincerely that violence begets violence, let us
condemn all acts of violence rather than condemning
only one act.
A. Abu-Ayyash

spm

Graduate Studen t

The National Caucus of Labor Committees
opposes Jensen-race science, Zero Population
Growth and Skinnerian night-mare proposals which
are properly considered proto-fascist developments.
Paul Kurtz, as editor of UCRA house organ the
Humanist and an organizer for Sidney Horde's
University Center for Rational Alternatives, covertly
advocates such developments. The proof was given in
a symposium in April sponsored by Kurtz and his
friend Harold Segal on the “Ethical and Sodal”
implications of such persons; the NCLC spoke in
opposition to these persons and presented certain
editorial excerpts from Kurtz’ magazine which
demonstrated his and UCRA’s role as liberal
towel-boy for Jensen, et. al.
Unwilling to answer the specific charges and
material presented by the Labor Committee, Kurtz
has taken the “offensive” to charge that we
“disrupted” the April Symposium. This is in a
“reply” to printed excerpts from our document
presented to the symposium, which appeared in the
May 11 Reporter. Neither has he been courageous
enough to reply to the account of his and other
UCRAites purging of several left professors and
students at UB, the account of which appeared in
the May 25 issues of New Solidarity.
Neither has Kurtz been courageous enough to
speak, as invited, against Eric Lerner of the NCLC at
a public forum on “UCRA-Race Science and ZPG;
the Development of Fascist Ideology” on 28 April,
at UB.
Rather, Kurtz adapts to a more familiar tact. He
charges that LC’ers are “disrupters,” thus attempting
to prepare a campus community for possible
expulsion of the Labor Committee from campus,
thus finally avoiding a debate with us. In addition, in
the cited Reporter article, Kurtz incorrectly charges
the NCLC was the organization which “disrupted”
Prof. Halstead’s classes.
Even if NCLC’s comments at the April
Symposium on the subject are irrelevant, as Kurtz
charges, that does not constitute disruption. But the
very reprint of NCLC excerpts accompaning Kurtz’s
charges in the Reporter prove that we do indeed
address ourselves to the “Ethical and Social”
implication of Jensen, Skinner, Zero Growth, etc.
NCLC members spoke in an orderly manner, in fact,
only when called upon by chairmen Kurtz and Segal!
The interruptions which did occur happened when

-THE HOME OF

THE WELL

EDUCATED

LAND OF

in

speak.

1. June 20, 1972 at 7:30 p.m. “ZPG and Forced
Work: Government Attacks upon Welfare and the
Organized.’* Speaker: NCLC. Invited: UCRA, SDS,
Young Workers Liberation League, union locals, etc.
2. Time and place to be announced; ZPG and
Forced Work: Science or Genocide. Speaker: Arthur
Castle. Invited: Harold Segal.
The Buffalo Labor Committee

a n
-

_.

—

—

M

___

“The Graduate” again
or for the first time.

JANACONE,
ANACONE’S INN isn’t for everyone
it’s for YOU, the 20* draft fan.
3178 BAILEY AVENUE

At the symposium, Kurtz and Segal stated their
agreement with the goals and views of the ZPG
movement. We consider that issue the properly
scheduled topic of further debate between
Kurtz-Jook-UCRA and NCLC. ZPG, a movement
funded by-the Rockefeller family, proposes to view
the underproduction and unemployment caused by a
world-wide depression as “over-population.”
Therefore, it proposes to reduce the world
population, the “excess” people, by two billion.
Practically that could only be accomplished by
massive genocide. Such a developing policy of major
concern to working people generally of Forced
Labor Plans is being used in New York State, New
Jersey, California and elsewhere. The policy
accomplishes three main purposes towards this end:
lowering welfare subsistence to below that required
to physically maintain the 14 million welfare victims
in the U.S. This is identical, economically, to the
“cost reduction” accomplished in the Slave Camps in
the Nazi economy. Secondly, Forced Work uses
welfare victims as forced scabs to break strikes and
generally drive down living standards of the
employed. Thirdly, related “austerity” welfare
policies are used to drive tens of thousands off
public assistance entirely, as is being done most
notably and recently in New York City.
ZPG is based upon the notoriously incompetent
theories of Parson Maithus. The proper focus of
debate, if Kurtz and Segal are courageous enough
this time, therefore is ot) ZPG. The Labor
Committee is scheduling two such forums at which
Kurtz and Segal are hereby publicly challenged to

Now you con soo

UlUM

DRINKERS

r

Segal and then Kurtz would leap from the stage (in
defense of free speech) to grab the microphone from
NCLC speakers shouting all along that our comments
were irrelevant. (Dubious readers can consult the
tape recordings of the symposium which were
broadcast over WBFO.)

To the Editor:

BEEF

JOSEPH E. LEVINE

BEER

•»..

BILLIARDS

BUFFALO
836-8905

This
is

Benjamin.

He’s
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his
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■'si K

MK,IANCnFT_ DUSTIN HOFFMAN KATHAMWDOSS
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SHOWING AT THREE THEATRES!

�Alice Cooper ’School s Out "(QNY0S29)S(3:29)
‘

glorious joy, enigmatic energy rush, orgiastic sentimentality, the
emergence of the spider kings as they laugh and bathe themselves in the
sweet, sweat-encrusted palms of their own devil may care deviance,
pranksters from the land of Twonkyites (close relations but not quite the
same as Troglodyte’s), spreading o’er the land in a pulsating rush of
rhymes and rhythms
?anyway
Alice Cooper can sway his ass, strut his stuff, and just
plain rook V roll better than that whimp Jagger and he’s certainly as good
as Marc Bolan, but that’s as irrelevant as everything else in the quagmire
existence usually accompanied by cultural awareness.
!!
and besides, he even thought about the overcrowded, stale
smelling, marble echoing hallways he once stepped and strutted through
after his final flip of the coin on his final answer for his final multiple
guess guess, the last wad of gum squished under someone’s seat, the last
time he told his homeroom teacher to flick off (under his breath, yet
- . 'iP* •?':
audible).
■■■.
But if Alice Cooper’s latest single “School's Out” isn’t nostalgic, then
it’s a revolutionary statement which has to be heeded by us twenty year
old farts whose contact with daily existence is slowly fading as timegoes
by and each of us slowly approaches ourlatest 19thnervous breakdown.
and who could argue with “School’s out for summer / School’s out
forever / School’s been blown to pieces” even though he really thinks that
the best lines in the whole song are “We’ve got no class / And we got no
principles / And we got no innocence / We can’t even think of a word that
rhymes...
Besides, school is out for the summer
-

-

-

'■

-

D

r resenting

n

.

?„!

Chris Smither will appear in concert this coming
Monday night at the UUAB Coffeehouse. The
nnger-so ngwriter from Boston has two fine albums
out on the Poppy label. Thera will be two shows, at
7 and 9. Admission is $.75.

.

ismiiner

Mi scastingapparent

-

Nathan and Nadine CooperUng

Alice Cooper ‘CutterCat"

'The HotRock lacks subtlety
9

This is the flip to “School’s Out" and it’s the feline West Side Story
told only in the way that Alice could tell it. It’s a demonstration ofAlice’s
absolute control over his vocals, it’s slick with a recitation injected right at
the perfect time “Midnight, cat fight, neck bite” crossover into the
riff from West Side Story this isn’t quite as good as “School’sOut” but
it’s sure a titillating look at the new album, which should be out shortly.
-

What a great idea! Take a team of thieves, point
them in the direction of a priceless diamond, and have
them spend the next two hours of film-time trying to
heist it. But don't stop there. Throw in enough
complications so that the crooked quartet has to
bomb a museum, storm a jail, raid a police station, and
swindle a bank in order to get the diamondand finish
the film. In certain ways The Hot Rock resembles
Woody Allen’s Take the Money and Run in that little
things keep going wrong to prevent the crime. The
difference is that in The Hot Rock the diamond is the
object of the quest from start to finish so that, in
essence, the same theft is committed at least four
times.
The casting
There is only one thing wrong with the idea. It
doesn’t work. Sure, sure, the crime finally succeeds,
but the movie keeps missing the mark throughout.
There are several reasons for this, but the main one is
casting.

George Segal plays Kelp, the owner of a
locksmith’s shop and the master locksmith of the
dishonest foursome who are after the gem. The part
calls for someone who can connive, lie, wheel, deal,
and become egotistically amazed at his lock-cracking
talents.
Unfortunately, though Segal has shown himself
to be a master nebbish in other properties, he is unable
to convincingly connive or wheel or deal or any of the
rest. The most he can muster is a good job of
wheedling, but wheedling is not enough. If only
someone like Phil Silvers had had the role, the entire
movie might have come alive.
The strong, silent leader of the mob is Robert
Redford. He is strong, but surely he should have been
silent. With dramatic lines like “That diamond
either I’m going to get it or it’s going to get me,”
silence is golden. But, poor dialogue notwithstanding,
Redford is still miscast. The naivete his face conveys
makes it hard to believe the complicated maneuvers
going on in his mind while planning the job.
_

...

Hilarity in character

The other two members of the gang were just
They played their parts with the exaggeration
necessary in a film whose premise is absurd. Ron
Liebman is a greaser-type getaway driver who ends up
piloting cars, a truck, and a helicopter (of all things)
before he’s done. Clearly, Liebman is a fellow who is
going places.
If you happened to see Where‘i Poppa, Liebman
played Segal’s older brother. He was as funny as he was
bald. His physical transformation in The Hot Rock is
astounding. Such diversity is the mark of an actor who
has reached an understanding of his craft. Twice when
he explains how he arrived at a meeting by a complex
pattern of streets and avenues, the humor works
great.

largely because of the great characterization he builds.
Paul Sand as a freaky explosive expert, Alan
Greenberg, is funny because he lets out most of the
stops. The scene where Sand, as Greenberg,
demonstrates bombs for Bedford is amusing. “This
one is kind of European. I learned it at the Sorfoonne.
This one is something I picked up at Berkeley." “You
like to study, huh?" And when Sand feigns insanity
and attacks his cellmate (“I hate your feet, Otto!”)
while Otto screams for the guard, the laughter in the

theater is deafening.
Zero Mostel was a disappointment.' He is cast as a
wealthy lawyer and father of the explosives expert. It
is impossible to fault Mostel for not burlesquing his
part enough. In fact, it may just be that he is one of the
very few actors this side of Jerry Lewis who had never
been subtle.
The problem is that he plays the part with his
usual Mostelisms and goes all the way with them. The
weird walk, the funny faces, the flaring nostrils, and
suchlike are all included. He goes far enough in the
role, but he is pointed in the wrong direction. Actor
Burgess Meredithwould have been much funnier and a
more appropriate choice in the role.
Not surprisingly, this poor job of people-picking
results in a chain-reaction of other difficulties. The
movie resembles a fine automobile with a number of
beautiful components that never starts because the
components don’t fit together exactly. The comedic
life is just a hair’s breadth away from slapstick and just
as close to subtlety. Result: neither fish nor fowl.

Plotting
A loose dramatic thread stretches through the
action. Redford, as John Dorfmonger, is a recently
released ex-convict. His obsession with heisting the
jewel brings him close to an ulcer by preying upon his
mind for the duration of the film. It becomes a
personal thing with him, driving him and the story
forward. Sadly, this is never intense enough. The
violent undercurrent of the character’s personality
that must emerge for the device to work, does not. We
are only given the slightest suggestion of any real
emotional conflict. This superficiality probably the
handiwork of the film’s director, Peter Yates.
One point of the film that worked very well is that
despite the crimes that the gang commits (or perhaps
because of them), the fellows come off as entirely
loveable. It is hard not to want to see them finally get
the jewel they are after and you cannot fault them for
being criminals.
The Hot Rock (at the Holiday III)is not a great or
even a good movie. It is a film that could have been
good but wasn’t. And that’s a shame considering how
many movies don’t start with the potential that this
one had.
-Jay Boyar

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experience* and the experience of music was
overlooked. I don’tknow what people were
listening to, but as I sat in some concerts, I
knew it wasn’t the music.
Mass cultural 'experiences like getting
stoned at a Grateful Dead concert can be
accounted for the most part, but somehow
the stereo system seemed to be out of
balance. Either that or everybody spent too
much time listening to the right speaker
while missing the left, and ultimately the
whole effect.
Since it’s known that 1 get bored a lot
more easily than most people, it usually
means that in any given performance, a
group has to be doing something
cither
musically, theatrically (Alice-though their
music shouldn’t be overlooked), or
spiritually (say with the spirit of rock and
roll) to keep me interested.
With this in mind, it’s very difficult to get
me to listen to a jam over five minutes unless
1 really think that there’s something going
down. That’s why (hateful Dead live albums
bore me and Allman Brother albums keep
me listening. (No, I don’t think G.D. has any
spirituality. I’m no California fool.)
There’s really quite a difference between
the groups though I don’t doubt that many
of their fans are the same and look at the
groups in the same way. I really don’t think
I’m exaggerating any of this since such a
lame group as the New Riders can get $5000
per concert and their best recommendation
is that they’re an offshoot of the Grateful
Dead. Oh well, the age of technology may
yet overtake music. Maybe Phil Specter’s
right when he says back to mono.
Speaking of Phil Spector
One group
that has kept constantly high musically is
the Beach Boys. And most of those good
vibrations are due to resident California
genius Brian Wilson (he ain’t no California
fool for sure) who has stated that “Be My
Baby” by the Ronnettes (a la Phil Spector) is
about the best record ever recorded. That
only goes to show how much Brian admired
Phil and all those girl groups that he

arc a lot of things going on vocally and
instrumentally. But ultimately everything
blends together without anything seeming
superfluous. The only difference is that
instead of those famous Beach Boy vocals,
the vocals are produced by two lovely
women, Marilyn (Brian’s wife) and Diane
&gt;
Rovell.
This album isn’t supposed to be one that
knocks you off your feet, but it will
certainly give you a lift. Anyway when’s the
last time you heard a good girl singing group
(other than Motown), and it’s about time
(by the way, don’t overtook Fanny),
With Brian producing most of the album
and doing most of the vocal arrangements., as
well as some background singing, this album
really had little chance of going wrong. The
choice of material was also good, including
four of Brian’s songs, one of Dennis’, and
two Coffin-King as well as “Tennesee
Waltz.” “Everybody” by Tommy Roe,
“Mama Said” (There’d be days like this) and
“Superstar.”
About the only weakness in the album is
that Spring doesn’t really have a stellar lead
singer. Their forte is rather when they sing
together, and since there is of course some
overdubbing, that makes it even better.
The only two songs that fall below par are
“Superstar,” and “Now That Everything’s
Been Said.” (Carol King’s vocal on the City
album is too overpowering for this version to
have much of an effect.) But in songs like
“Mama Said” and “Everybody” the vocal
arrangements are joyous with everybody
singing and who knows, you might even
/

...

want to join in.
So why not? You can’t be heavy all the
time and mellowing out gets boring. You
could always buy the album just to listen to
Brian’s production, but I think you might be
missing something. Anyway, we could all
use a little bit of spring ndw and then as well

as a littleBrian.

-R. Lowman alias YO YO Jackson

-

..

produced.

So Man now has his wish to produce a
girl group Spring. There is a bit of a Beach
Boy sound of course, which means that it’s
superbly produced, which means that there
—

Machine Head Deep Purple (Warner Bros.)
No, this isn’t about sucking off the
tailpipes of’57 Chevys, technosexology isn’t
quite upon us, yet. This is simply a record to
sit back in your easy chair with, snort a little
bit of Drano, maybe do up some D-Con, or
maybe just converse with your favorite
Twonky. It’s a record concerned with

matallingus, before the kiss a prosthetic,
Peckinpah rock V roll, born of bored

violence, bred on the energy from a short
circuited copper nipple attached to Channel
2, it’s a mutated form of third generation
rock ’n’ roll madness.
While not as primitive as Mark, Mel and
Don, and nowhere near the potential
violence of Black Sabbath, Deep Purple’s
latest. Machine Head, is a crossover
synthesis, or better yet a quintessential

Eaglet Asylum Records

The last time I looked at the Billboard
charts, “Take it Easy” had only been on the
charts for a couple of weeks and was already
number fifty with a bullet. Not spectacular,
but certainly impressive enough and
deservedly so. The Jackson Browne—Glen
Frey composition is easily one of the best
singles of the year. It’s a regular summer
trucking song with some ear-catching lyrics
by Jackson and the production genius of
Glyn Johns.
With that promise I was looking forward
to what might well be one of the albums of
the year, especially considering my
preference for country rockers and Jackson
Browne. Unfortunately the album turned
out to be rather ordinary with some good
moments of production.
The main source of the problem is that
the groupcan’t write interesting songs either
syrically or musically. 1 wouldn’t at all
doubt their ability as musicians (especially
Bemie Leadon on guitar), but they should
have gathered their material from other
sources. If they would have had the insight
to do that, they might have had a killer
album. Instead they have a rather ordinary
album with long waits between interesting

REPAIRS

95 Allen St.

Buffalo. N.Y.

Specializing in Volkswagen,
Tijumph, Volvo, MG, Austin
Healey, Toyota, Datsun and

The album opens with the breadwinner
“Take it Easy.” From the opening, Jackson
Browne chords to the exquisite vocal
harmonies
and instrumentation and
sing-along chorus. It’s an absolute gem in
production
letter perfect. The song
—

begins:

That phrase ends in a major chord. Then it’s
repeated with a slight variation:

Publicity Photos

I.D.
3090 Main St.

-

877-9903

Page ten The Spectrum Friday, 23 June 1972

874-6330

Only you can prevent forest fires

"I’m a running down the road trying to
loosen my load.
I’ve got seven women on my mind.”

TEXTS PROFESSIONAL BOO
MEDICAL NURSING DENTAL

,

mote;-

-R. Lowman

moments.

TELAAK
STUDIO

DRESS SHOP

.

-Joe Pernbacher

SHERIDAN

FOREIGN CAR

.

That phrase ends in a minor chord adding a
little more emphasis to Jackson’s worries.
Not a major point, but it does show how
much care was taken with the song.
The next song more or less tells the taleof
the album. “Witchy Women” written by
Don Henley (the drummer) and Bemie
Leado" is almost as the titlewould indicate.
I can’t fault the production any. The song,
sung with a latent Steve Stills vocal by
Henley is boring. The next two songs are
Glen Frey compositions; “Chug All Night”
and “Most of Us are Sad.” Both of them are
quite ordinary indicating that Frey probably
had very little do to with writing “Take it
Easy” except that “Take it Easy” isn’t one
of Jackson’sbest songs which might indicate
what hehad to do with it.
The last song on the side is another
Jackson Browne song called “Nightingale.”
It seems to be Jackson’s attempt to write a
rock song. I don’t know how successful it is
but Jackson at least gives them something to
hang some production on. The song is filled
with a lot of cliches which Jackson has put
together in such a way as to lift it (at least for
me and 1 think you you) from the cliches.
I was thinking that Jackson just might
have written it for his friends the Eagles, but
I seem to remember hearing him do it a
couple of years ago. As a matter of fact I just
heard it again on the radio and it sounded
pretty good, and 1 think I like it though 1
don’t know about dancing to it. But that’s
okay for me because basically I just jump
around in an imitation of dance.
Side two starts off with a Gene
Clark Bemie Leadon song “This Train
Leaves Here This Morning” which is one of
the album’s better cuts and gives Bernie a
chance to sing. The only other song worth
mentioning is “Peaccf ul Easy Feeling” by
someone named Jack Tempchin (it could be
Steve Noonan revisited). It’s really quite a
lovely song, though nothing extraordinary.
Compared to most of the songs, and the ones
that surround it, “Peaceful Easy Feeling” is
like an oasis.
Unless you’re a fanatic Jackson Browne
fan and want to hear “Nightingale,” buy the
single of “Take it. Easy” and save some
money. The only thing that I have left to say
is that the Eagles’ album is like a promise
unfulfilled.

Engagement
Economy Wedding Plan

CEJAY

in the Heart of
ALLENTOWN
882-8551
Open Tues.-Sat. Houn 12-6 pjn.

electrocution and freeway accidents it’s a
prime example of sonic dehydration:
Machine Head is a primer for the third
generation of rock V roll maniacs. It starts
off with an ode to fucking tailpipes with
steel encased cocks, its love of machine, its
“Highway Star;” “1 love it and I need it / I
bleed it yeah it’s a wild hurricane / Alright
hold tight I’m a Highway Star." It’s fast, it’s
lubricated, and it’s rock ’n’ roll. This is the
best cut on the album bar none.
Now for the worst cut on the record,
which might make it the best cut. I’m not
sure. It’s called “Smoke on the Water” and
it’s seven minutes of one boring riff, it’s
really quite bad which makes it really quite
good, if you know what I mean.
Now that’s all you have to know about
this record, what is the good cut and what is
the bad cut. So I’m gonna plug myself back
into my light socket and get a recharge until
we meet again.
-

Spring is all over, but ifBuffalo summers
seem hot and oppressive then 1 have a
suggestion that might blow a little light
at least musically.
spring wind your way
Actually, it’s not really a new musical idea or
anything like that. In fact, acts like this used
to be one of the biggest things in rock and
roll. That was until everybody got heavy
?relevant? irrelevant.
Somehow a lot of good music got lost
then. Music was then used more to augment
(not like an augmented chord) other

Clothes to Fit
Your Life Style
at the

Tm a running down the rriad trying to
loosen ni y load. } ,
I’ve got a world of trouble on my mind”

technorock’n’roll with the excitement of

Spring (United Artists)

.

synthesis of third generation riffology circa
molecular agitation. It subtly combines all
of the bad taste and mediocrity of

834-5470

&amp;

•

•

•

I

«

•

PAPERBACKS

•

H aBHJH|
*roo

parking at
UnivariHy Manor

-

(nont

833-713

door)

�cumnn

FR$L KiCI^

AD INFORMATION
THE SPECTRUM will be published on
during the
summer. The
deadline (or classified ads Is Tuesday
by 4:30 p.m. Ads may be placed In
The Spectrum offlpa
395 Norton
Monday thru Friday 9 a.m.—4i30 p.m.

Fridays

by Dan Bidding

—

Politics has a way of rearing its ugly head at everything. Even the
most innocent ofthings becomes political. Therefore, it is no surprise that
Washington, D.C. has been awarded a National Hockey League’franchise
to start play in 1974. It is not a surprise, but it is a shame.
Washington, that great and proven sports town, has, in three years,
lost three different pro sports franchises (the baseball Senators, the
basketball Capitols and the soccer Darts) because of poor attendance.
The professional ice hockey history of Washington covers all of four
years, the last puck having been dropped in 1949. Attendance was good
enough to warrant thedub going bankrupt.
Yet Washington has been awarded one of the two new franchises to
start NHL play two seasons from now (Kansas City, Kan. is the other).
Why were the Capital dty’s credentials better than proven hockey towns,
such as Cleveland and San Diego, which were rejected?
Senate minority leader Hugh Scott has sent telegrams to the
chairman of the NHL Board of Governors, William Wirtz, lobbying for an
NHL dub.

The subject of Mr. Scott’s latest message was the financing of
Washington’s proposed new sports arena, the Eisenhower Memorial
Center.

Mr. Scott states that the House of Representatives has adopted a bill
authorizingCongress to enter into lease-purchase contracts for the private
development of buildings.
This means that though Congress will not put up the money to build
such an arena, it will enter into a long term lease (reportedly 30 years) for
the center
Although the sport of hockey stands to become more diluted than
ever, the NHL could gain plenty by having the Washington frahchise.
First there is the minor point of the $6 million franchise fee. That is
the going rate for the right to set up operation in the NHL and draft
castoffs from the older clubs. There is a total of 21 players and works out
to $285,714.44 per man.
More importantly, a team in Washington with the Government
holding the arena lease would be invaluable to the NHL in case of
anti-trust action.
If the new World Hockey Association gets off the ground and forces
some sort of arrangement with the NHL to stop a potential price war for
players, this arrangement would likely have little opposition in Congress
to get their necessary approval. Any party filing an anti-trust suit against
the leagues would be up against the Congress.
It is too bad that dties like Cleveland, which have waited for years to
get into major league hockey must take a back seat to the political
considerations involved in awarding an NHL franchise to Washington.
Too bad, but predictable.

—

WANTED

HARLEY DAVIDSON motorcycle
1970, 390 cc. Excellent condition, low
mileage (only 298 lbs. for cheaper
Insurance rate). Call Larry anytime.
833-6008.

Openings tar writers, photographers,
artists and reviewers. No experience
necessary. See Jeff Qreenwaid in 3SS
Norton, ext. 831-4113.

IMPORTANT NOTICE

Please Reed
Win FREE-FREE-FREE Win
Invitation and All Expanse Paid Trip to
inauguration and Inaugural Ball in
January
Sand dollar for registration
Washington Weekends
toi
Corporations, Post Office Box S76,
Southport, North Carolina 2B461.
-

—

—

838-4968.

NEED MONEY? Sell advertising for
The Spectrum. 15% commission on all
ads. Contact Jeff Reiman or Susan
Hory at 831-4113. No experience
necessary, but transportation helpful.
WANTED TO RENT: 3 or
house. September
July. Good school
system essential (9th, 7th, 8th grade
boys).
Mrs. Williams, 831-1635;
1-284-5240.
—

sales,

repairs,
service. Underwood portable, $49 new.
Royal portable 949 new. Others very
cheap. 832-5037 Yoram anytime.

TYPEWRITERS

DESPERATELY want used girl's bike,
good condition, 26”, to gat around and
(eel healthy.

TICKETS to Stone's Concert In
Toronto July 19; tint show; good
835-2912. Keep trying!

(Mtsi

—

STEREO
Fisher
Dual. Don't buy
anything before seeing the bast prices
around. Students Buying Cooperative.
832-4990 anytime.

RIDE BOARD

-

—

1969 VW camper, rebuilt angina, new
transmission, front and work, $990 or
best. Call 883-0880.
1969 VW bug. Excellent condition.
Blue owner has mechanical experience
and has kept car In fine shape asking
91190. Call Bud 837-1715.

RIDE NEEDED on or soon after July
8th to Miami or New Orleans (or
nearby either clty|. Contact through
mail at 124 Jewett Pkwy., Buffalo.
Thanks. P. Landsman, will shara
expenses.
RIOE NEEDED to Lawrence, Kansas
In mid-August for one or two girls and
dog. 837-6390.

—

OVERSEAS Jobs for students
Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa,
etc. All professions and occupations,
9700 to $3000 monthly. Expenses
paid,
overtime, sightseeing. Free
Information
write:
JOBS
OVERSEAS, Dept. E5. P.O. Box
19071, San Diego, Calif. 92115.
—

—

HELP WANTED: Student* needed to
conduct Marketing Research survey
$3.78. Call for Interview. 834-3450.

SUB-LET APARTMENT
SPACIOUS carpeted 3-bedroom apt.
for July and August. Walking distance
UB. $125 mo. 834-4234.

8 MOS. old gas range
self cleaning.
Must sell Immediately. 832-0417.
—

HONEYWELL Pantax H-1A camera,
exterior llghtmeter case, $60 or bast
offer. 876-0692 Lauren.
SONY 621
FM/AM stereo cassette
recorder with (our separate speakers
(4W" bat* and 3" tweeter). $220. Call
835-5459.
PANASONIC AM/FM stereo receiver
and speakers with 8SR turntable. Four
months old, excellent condition. Mutt
tell. $125. Warren 834-2529.
classic guitars: banjos. Fin*
and hand-mad* Instruments.
Martin, Gibson, Qurlan,
Gallagher, Eagle, Ome, etc. Trades
Invited. The String Shoppe, 524
Ontario, Buffalo. Hours 7—9 p.m.
dally. Saturday 12—5 p.m. 874-0120.

FOLK,

SEVERAL well furnished
bedroom apartments, large, excellent
locations, available Immediately.
896-8180, evenings preferably.

Guild,

APT. completely furnished. Needs
students. Details call 832-2656 after 4
p.m.

factory

RENT:

Available

July 1.
Spectacular, beautifully landscaped.
3-bedroom ranch boasting hug* living
dining room
room
6
with
wood-burning fireplace and cathedral
celling.
Wall to wall carpeting
throughout.
1&lt;4 baths featuring
ceramic tiling, panelled family room,
kitchen with bullt-in's Including range,
oven, dishwasher, disposal and
refrigerator. Mammoth yard partially
fenced with patio. Don't miss this!
$32S/mo.

634-9182.

&amp;
3-BEDROOM furnished
2
apartments available In Elmwood area
“where It's happening.” Responsible
landlord desires only responsible
tennants for nice pads. 881-0141.

FOR SALE

ROOMMATES WANTED
ONE ROOMMATE needed to share
apartment with three girls. Own
bedroom, $33 not Including utilities.
Available June 15—19th. Call
835-5375 Lucy.
furnished apartment
MALE
own
room. $40 plus utilities. Five minutes
walk. Call 837-0290 after 10 p.m.

1968 completely
VOLKSWAGON
rebuilt engine, 1999 body, standard
shift, excellent body and engine
condition. *300. Or. William Stewart,
836-1105.
—

—

—

FOUND i PuiMmd golden retriever

—

Mlllenport-Eggert area June 4. Owner
or good home. 873-1184.

MISCELLANEOUS
GUITAR teacher will teach folk guitar
and finger picking. Call Ft. Erie
416-871-2980. On-campus lessons.

NATIVE Frenchman, experienced
tutor, willing to give French lessons.
838-4091.
AUTO TUNE-UPs Points, plugs,
condenser, rotor, adjust carb., timing.
6 cyl: 817iS cyh $20. 833-2119. Work
guaranteed.

VINYL CAR roofs Installed
12
guaranteed) lowest prices In
colors
Buffalo. 881-3480.
—

1 OR 2 roommates wanted. July and
Aug. only. Rent cheap. Call 876-0610.
(one) for
ROOMMATE
spacious 2-bedroom apt. (own room).
For July and August. $34-4234.

FEMALE

CLASSIC apartment
summer
roommate needed July 1 to August 1.
Own room.
Furnished. Congenial
roommates. Call $35-3947.
—

wanted July, August.
Furnished apartment, &lt;4 block from
campus. Call 837-4S93.

ROOMMATE

PERSONAL
still awaiting your after-work
LIZ
appearance. Stop by next week. 79
LeBrun. Ian.

10% COLLEGE student discount for
everyone presenting college 1.0. card
for purchase over *1 on Mondays and
Tippy's Taco House,
Wednesdays.
2351 Sheridan Or. 838-3900.
BE

ANGLO AMERICAN Antiques, 3112
Main St. Something for ovary student.
Coma In and browse and meat Edna.
experienced
TYPING
I.B.M
Selectric. 8.90/page. Call 838-4808.
—

—

—

—

COMET 1964 automatic radio, heater.
Very good running condition, 47,800
mileage. Call 852-0778.

FOUND

—

—

FOR

&amp;

—

—

APARTMENT FOR RENT

APARTMENT for rent: 3Wr bedrooms,
kitchen, bath, living room, dining
room, porch. Right across campus.
Available July 1. Call after 5 p.m.
837-1135 or 833-4388.

L06T

Balley-M Innasota area
LOST
female Irish setter puppy, 9 months.
Please help. Reward. Ariaen 833-0979.

GUTSY!

Join

The

Spectrui

HOME REPAIRS
Twin Castles, a
company formed by UB grad to serve
homeowners and cut high cost of home
Improvements. We offer the following:
painting, gutter work, Interior painting
and paper hanging, etc. Call for free
estimates. 881-0141.
—

PAINT your house. Hire students to do
it. Reasonable price. Call days
824-3282) evenings 836-2314.
EXPERIENCED typist
business or
personal.
Tarm papars, thasas, ate.
St. location. Call
849-9746.
-

Main-'-HIgh

Quality
CRAFT exterior paintars
work at raatonabla axpansa. Fraa
estimates. 894-4631 or 894-0996.
—

TYPING, dissertations, theses, tarm
papars. Professionally done by former
professional
ownar/oparator of a
typing service. Call 833-1921.

SUB-LET APARTMENT
LARGE APT. available now to Aug.
31. Rant negotiable. Main—Hartel area.
Call 836-6241.

"■tunning, haunting"—N. Fal/t Garaffa

Before you buy theirs,
drive ours.

SamuelBeckett’s

UNNAMABLE
1M6
Elmwood Ava.

—

887-9063

VISIT

CITY
TENT
HAVEN FOR
FAMILY CAMPERS,

BACK PACKERS,
CYCLE BUGS!

We have the lightest,

j

MONDAY’S AND WEDNESDAY’S are

j COLLEGE STUDENT NIGHTS .j
a

ITppy’s Taco House!
23S1 Sheridan Dr.

10%DISCOUNT

p

OVER $1.00 ON PRESENTATION OF I D.
WE HAVE DRAFT BEER

!

838-3900|

most

This Is the one that reduces your collision
insurance rates 15% at Allstate.
4 Wheel Disc Brakes
Fuel Injection
Front Wheel Drive
Heated Driver Seat
Roll Cage Const.
Rear He at Ducts
Radial Tires
. Tinted Wass
Rear Window Defroster
Reclining
Front Seats
Folding Rear Seats
Bumpers Exceed 1972 Safety Regulations
.

■

TENT CITY

CHiCKPOINT SAW
Advoutoy«o«« Eoropton ddirerj

497 KENMORE AVE.

for

Oimr Mm.. W«S.. hi. 'HI 9

oy

ran

Surpfcw CMrtwr

tomrutt

730 Main St. n«ar Tuppw

836-2033

Ml-Hr. fret Parking Off Tupprr

Friday, 23 June 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven
.

.

�Ticket* arc available at the Norton Hall Ticket Office for
especial excursion to Godspell in Toronto on July 2. There is
a limited supply of tickets.

r

Psychomat is taking place on Wednesdays, 7—10 p.m.,
not Thursdays as it states in the Summer Activities booklet.

UUAB presents Chris Smither on June 26 at 8 p.m. and
10 p.m. in the first floor cafeteria.

U.B. Sports Car Club is sponsoring the club’s annual car
rally and picnic on June 25, at Tr ansi town Plaza. Registration
is at 10 a.m. and is open to all. $5 includes beer and hot dogs.
For information contact Marcia Doran at 692-7773.

Obelesque Magazine Gallery is accepting artistic, literary
and mixed-media contributions for its nexr issue at Norton
nothing can
desk. EVERYTHING WILL BE PUBLISHED
be returned, the magazine appears Mondays at 2:30 p.m. in
front of Norton Union.

'•

Available at the Ticket Office

-

Draft Counselors from the Draft Counseling Center of
Buffalo will be available on campus Mondays 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. in Room 260 Norton. Men with lottery numbers 1—75
are urged to come. (This is a Student Association sponsored
service to students.)

Shaw Festival
Through July 9: The Royal Family
July 16—Sept. 2; Getting Married
July 19 Sept. 3; Misalliance
August 5—19; Concerts
—

Red Cross desperately needs blood donors for the
Hemophilia Center of Western New York. One pint yields one
unit of Cryo-Precepitate and four to ten units are needed to
stop one bleed for just twelve hours. Please call Red Cross for
an appointment, 786 Delaware Ave., 886-7500.

CAC is sponsoring a Carnival for the residents at the West
Seneca State School on June 25. People are needed to help
with the construction of booths and to act as escorts on the
day of the festivities. If interested, please contact Mary at

The Psychology Service of the Veteran’s Administration
Hospital is planning to continue its Student Companion
Program during the summer. Each student will spend several
hours every week as a companion to a psychiatric patient.
Group sessions are held weekly to provide an opportunity for
student companions to share experiences in the program and
to offer perspectives on mental health in general.
Psychological staff will supervise the student throughout the

675-0594.
Computer Center User Services announces a seminar in
Computer Language Orientation to be held on Monday, June
26, 7—9 p.m. at 4238 Ridge Lea, Room 10. The instructor
will be Mr. Harvey Axlerod.

Melody Fair

June 23—24: Last of (he Red Hot Lovers
June 26 July 1: Eddy Arnold
—

July 3—8: Sandler &amp; Young and Pat Cooper
July 10—15: Liberace
July 17—22: Ehglebert Humperdinck
July 25-30: Peggy Fleming Concert on ice
July 31 AugustS: Miui Gaynor
August 7—12; Promises, Promises
August 14-19; 7 776
August 21-26: Sergio Franchi, Corbett
—

—

I

Monica

Trinidad Steel Band
Baird Hall Concerts

June 27: LeoSmit

The Masters Write /art

American Contemporary Theater

Continuing: The Unnamable

Buffalo Theater Workshop and Creative Associates (D)
Through June 25: Strindberg's A Dream Play and The
Ghost Sonata
Musical Theater
July 19—30; Touch

(on

sale 6/26) (N)

Children's Theater

June 28:

The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
July 12: Susan and Bob of Sesame Street
July 19: The Bugs Bunny Show
August 2: The Princess and the Pea
August 23: Snow White and theSeven Dwarfs

Popular Concerts

June 25: The Irish Rovers (MF)

July 2: The Association (MF)
July 4—5:TheStampeders and The Platters (S)
July 7—8; Buddy Guy and Junior Wells (on sale 6/26)

(N)

July 9:Tiny Tim and Chubby Checker (S)
July 11: Sonny &amp; Cher (on sale 6/26) (R)
July 14: Humble Pie and Edgar Winter (on sale 6/26) (R)
July 14-16; Mariposa Folk Festival (T)
July 16: B.B. King (MF)
August6: TheGrassroots (MF)
August 13:Chicago (M)
August 15—20: JesusChrist Superstar (on sale 6/26) (K)
August 20: Pete Fountain (MF)

KEY
K Kleinhans
M Memorial Auditorium
MF Melody Fair
—

—

—

D- D’YouvilleCollege
S Skylon
—

R
N
T

—

—

—

Rochester
Norton Union
Toronto

Monday, June 26

Coffeehouse: Chris Smithers

What’s Happening
Friday,

June 23

Play: The Unnamable by Samuel Beckett presented at The

American Contemporary Theater, 1695 Elmwood Ave.
7:30 p.m. General admission is $2; students, $ 1.50.
For reservations, call 877-9053.
Film: Masculine-Feminine (1966) directed by Godard, 7
p.m. and 9 p.m. in 140Capen.
Film: Two Thousand Maniocs and Night of the Living Dead in
the Norton Conference Theater. Check Conference
Theater Showcase for time.
at

Saturday, June 24

Play: The Unnamable at The American Contemporary

Theater, 7:30 p.m.
Film: Two Thousand Maniocs and Night of the LMng Dead in
the Norton Conference Theater. Check Conference
TheaterShowcase for time.
.
Sunday, June 25
J
'

Film: Gallery-A Viewof Time at the Albrlght-Knox
Auditorium. 1 ;30,2:30 and 3:30 pm.

Gallery

Silent films will be screened, 7
p.m. and 9 p.m. ip the first floor cafeteria, Norton Hall.
Film: Blood ofa Poet (1930) directed by Cocteau, 7 p.m.
and 8 p.m. in 140Capen.
Film: Alphayflle (1965) directed by Godard, 9 p.m. in 140
—

Capen.
Film: Ramparts of Clay (1971) directed by Bertucelli, 3 p.m

in 146 Diefendorf and 8 p.m. in 147 Diefendorf.

Tuesday, June 27
Exhibit: Olympic Posters at the Albright-Knox Garden
Restaurant to be continued through Sept. 3.
Lecture; Wilfrido Nolledo, reading from his fiction. This is the
first In the series of four lectures and readings to be given
by participants in the Ninth Summer Program in Modern
Literature at the State University of Buffalo. It will be
held in the ConferenceTheater at 3 p.m.
Films: Mashas of tha Afternoon (1943) directed by Oeren,
Fireworks (1947) directed by Anger, and Flash of
Morning (1956) directed by Brakhage, 7 and 8 p.m. in

i

147Diefendorf.

Lecture/Recital:

Tha Masters Write Jazz with Leo Smlt,

pianist and lecturer at 8:30 p.m.. Baird Recital Hal.

and how to per /r in the Norton
FHm: Tha Knack
Conference Theater. Cheek Theater Showcase for times.
-

Wednesday, June 28
Films: Strike (1926) directed by Eisenstein and The Hawks
and the Sparrows (1965) at 7 and 9 p.m. in UOCapen.
WBCE-FM; Musical innovations at 9:05 p.m. David Sussman,
president of the Undergraduate Music Student
Association and classical guitarist playing and discussing
the classical guitar.
Film: The Knack
and how to get it in the Norton
Conference Theater.
-

Thursday, June 29
Film: Les Carablnlers (1963) directed by Godard at 7 and 9
p.m. in HOCapen.
Films: Ritual In Transfigured Time (1946)
directed by Deren.
At Land (1944) directed by Deren, Window Water Baby
Moving (1959) directed by Brakhage and Songs
(1964-69) directed by Brakhage and 7 6 8:30pjn. in

147 Diefendorf.

F«m; The

Bad Sitting Room in the Norton Conference
Theater.Check Theater Showcase for times.
-E.G. MIBer—Smith

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                    <text>The Spectrum
Vol, 21, No. 3

—mcniaca

Stats University of No* York at Buffalo

Friday, 16 June 1972

—Oit«rr«lch»r

�New College H will
offer health courses
by Miriam Rohm

Counselling and the Community,”
“Volunteers in Health Care
Programs,” and “Student Health”
“We feel that there is a crisis in are a few examples of the courses
the health care delivery system of which will be offered in
this country,” states nurse Gaye September.
The courses of College H will
McCabe, one of the organizers of
be designed in part to help the
the new College H,
Ms. McCabe, with two other student “make better choices in
nurses, Betty Felton and Kathy the acute care system, in life-style
Wood, helped organize College H decisions, in public health
to investigate this crisis in health programs and in health
care; to educate the average legislation.”
person to be an intelligent health
College H will also give
consumer; and to provide a academic credit to students who
communications center among work as volunteers in the health
those who are consumers, care projects of the University’s
educators and health related Community Actions Corps
professionals. The philosophy (present settings indude Buffalo
which serves as a basis for College
State Hospital. Meyer Memorial
H, says Ms. McCabe, is to view Hospital, Veterans Administration
“health as the complete well being
Hospital and the Cerebral Palsy
of a person and not just the Center) through a course called
absence ofillness.”
“Volunteers in Health Care
College H will involve Programs.”
undergraduates from every area of
Ms. Felton believes that these
the University and all other
“volunteers
leam, grow and
interested people. Betty Felton
emphasizes that College H is change through their experience
intended as “an experimental unit in CAC.” By giving academic
where faculty, student and credit to this work, the University
acknowledges “the learning which
community members who are not
traditionally part of the health is a joyous experience. This is
what we are looking for in this
sciences, can have a chance to get
college.”
into health courses.”
She suggests that anyone who
Ms. McCabe, Ms. Felton and
is knowledgeable in any aspect of Ms. Wood emphasize that they
health care, delivery such as health would welcome any students,
insurance, hospital administration, faculty or community member
health legislation, or who would like to contribute to
pharmaceutics would be welcome the study of health care and the
to teach or participate in a course. development of the experimental
A minimum of nine courses are health college, “College H,” they
currently planned for the 1972-73 say, “can use volunteers.” Ms.
school year. “Changing Health Wood can be telephoned at
Patterns and the Black 693-S738. Ms. Felton can be
Community,” “Genetic reached at 837-0584.
Spectrum Staff Writer

-

Bible Truth

Campaign trail

Chisolm encounters resistance
Espousing her candidacy for the Democratic
nomination for President last Friday, Shirley
Chisolm addressed an attentive crowd at the State
University.of Buffalo. Ms. Chisolm, surrounded by
eight visibly nervous Secret Service agents, told the
large Fillmore Room audience that “never before in
this country has anyone who was Black, or anyone
who was a woman, run for the office of President of
the United States.
Ms. Chisolm stressed the differences that set her
apart from the other candidates. ‘1 have always been
a catalyst for change. The minute I made the
decision, I knew every controversy would be
unfurled around my head.
“1 am not interested in being a politician for
life,” she insisted. ‘Tf I were, I’d act quite
differently. You aren’t going to help people with a

lot ofrhetoric.”
‘There are people in the country that said to
me: ‘Mrs. Chisolm, we need change.’ I said I would
promote this interest,” the Congresswoman from
Harlem continued. “People still ask if I am seriohs in
my campaign. Do you think I have been traveling for
seven months, thousands of miles, for my health?

ETERNA

Ms. Chisolm decried the current politicians
“Expedient liberalism gets to. me. We know fully
well they don’t have the answers nor the solutions.
Just look at the mess we’re in.”
Attacking the financing of politick campaigns,
Ms. Chisolm charged that all the other candidates
were indebted to big business. “Rich contributors
are much too important,” she declared. “He who
pays the piper calls the tune.”
She concluded her prepared remarks arguing for
“revolution
a
in politics. Many politicians are
concerned because they don’t know what I am up
to. I am the freest political animal roaming this
country. I don’t mind being politically expendable if
I can initiate change.”
A question and answer period followed. An
inquiry by one radical student visibly angered Ms.
Chisolm, but she initially instructed listeners to ‘let
him finish." Then she ominously asserted: "1 know
where he is coming from."
Apparently changing her mind, she next turned
back to the white student at the microphone. “Sit
down,” Ms. Chisolm commanded. “I won’t answer
until you sit down
I know what you’re trying to
...

was repeated with a few more
the meeting was abruptly
Ms. Chisolm demanding that her
own platform. Don’t use mine.”

tore

The UUAB Coffeehouse
Committee
presents

Spider

Koemer
s*

o
.J
Saturday
fPnelir
June 16 &amp; 17th
1st Floor Cafeteria
•

„

.

..

«

(Norton)

7:00
Second am Pottage paid tt Bui
fate. New York.

Reservations Daily I

Circulation: 10,000

j

Page two The Spectrum Fi
.

COMING NEXT WEEK!

.

iy,

16 June 1972

Night of the Uvin 9 Dead

2000 Maniacs

&amp;

9:00 p.m

Admission 75$

�Scientific community reacts
to killing at Tel Aviv airport

Kathleen Kennedy

McGovern support
sought inBuffalo visit

Members of the scientific
of the State
University at Buffalo are
attempting to rally worldwide
support among scientists for a
petition condemning the terrorist
attack that recently left 26 dead
in a Tel Aviv airport. Among
those killed in the terrorist raid
was Aharon Ksitchabky, former
President of the International
Union of Applied and Theoretical
community

Kathleen Kennedy, eldest daughter of the late Robert
Kennedy, spoke to students and faculty during a rapid tour
of Buffalo last Thursday in support of George McGovern.
Talkuig first in the Student Association office, Ms.
Kennedy urged student*'to become active in the McGovern
campaign, telling them; “You can make the best
contribution.”

The war and the economic
crises at hpme dominated Ms.
Kennedy’s remarks. “We have tb
decide not to continue the war in
Vietnam, but we also have to stop
the unemployment at home,” she
said. “Who can believe President
Nixon? There isn’t a sense of
planning for the future.”
She spoke of the importance of
the upcoming New York primary,
“What we have to do in New York
is win really big. We don’t Want
the party hacks to make a deal. It
is a people’s campaign.”
Ms. Kennedy reminisced as she
turned to her reasons for
supporting Sen. McGovern.
‘‘When my father was
campaigning, he used to quote
George Bernard Shaw: ‘Some see
things as they arc and ask why? I
dream dreams and ask, why not?’
I believe George McGovern has
that dream

Biophysics.

Robert

Rein,

of

the

University’s Center for
Theoretical Biology, stated the

purposes of the effort: “Scientists
are thought of as involved in the
laboratory and not involved in
public views. We want to express
some public feelings.”
The Aharon Katchalsky
Memorial Committee is focusing
on long and short range responses

to the killing. The petition of
condemnation has b$en

distributed both in the United
States and throughout the world.

A longer range project may focus
on the establishment of an
international fellowship in tribute
to Dr. Katchalsky.
“It will be interesting to see
how sensitive the scientific
community is to this incident,”
mused Dr. Rein. “We would also
welcome signatures from
students.”
An upcoming conference of
the International Union of
Applied
and Theoretical
Biophysics will be held in
Moscow. Dr. Rein spoke of an
effort to insure that a symposium
at the conference be dedicated to
the memory of Dr. Katchalsky.
The actual petition is addressed

to

the United Nations,
International Union of Applied A
Theoretical Biophysics and the
American Association of
University Professors. “As human
and fellow scientists, we
were dismayed and angered by the
senseless, savage murder of Prof.
Aharon Katchalsky,” reads the
document. “He and 25 other
innocent bystanders fell victim to
Arab terrorism at the Tel Aviv
airport on May 29.
“We feel that the academic
community has the responsibility
to react, to condemn this and all
such acts of terrorism, and to
extend proper tribute to this
outstanding member of the
scientific community. We
therefore ask each of you, in your
specific .capacity, to organize an
appropriate tribute to Prof.
Katchalsky.”

”

—Ostarralcnar
When her inquiry as to how the
campaign was going on campus
was greeted with blank stares, Ms.
Kennedy seemed visibly affected.
“I wasn’t campaigning either until members having been on the
four months ago. President Nixon opposite end of the scale.”
says we have decreased American Quickly
focusing on the
casualties as if American lives are campaign, she warned: ‘Tt is a
the only ones worth saving. It is crucial time in the United States.
morally unjust and wrong to let We can’t continue as we have for
innocent people get killed. I The the past four years. We have to
McGovern campaign] is one build an organization, for
answer to apathy.”
November . . . they can’t take it
away from us in July.”
‘‘It is a people’s campaign,” she
Historical parallel?
“I would get angry enough to again emphasized. “Most
tell my friends to get angry. It is contributions don’t come from
written in the Egyptian tombs, corporrfldha who don’t want
‘and no one was angry enough to McGovern. We send personal
speak out.’ They died in the responses/ to people who express
interiesT in specific issues. They
tombs.”
Ms. Kennedy continued her think George McGovern believes
remarks at the Faculty Club. “It is in them. He cares about their
scary to be among faculty lives.”

Ms. Kennedy

-OMorMchn

First stop

McGovern visits Buffalo plant

Bunting announces victory

r

Jack Bunting announced at the last meeting of
Sub Board I, Inc. that the Millard Fillmore College
Student Association election dispute had been
resolved and that be would assume the presidency
for the upcoming
Mr. Bunting had won the
contested election by three votes. Official
notification will come from Robert Berner, dean of
the School of Continuing Education.
■pMinnaMBmiaiMnan^BBamnaHh

Mike’s Giant
Submarine
Sandwiches
plus our regular subs
We have steak &amp; cheat subs, roast beef
AND coffee made fresh every 20 minutes!

with presentation of U.B.
I.D. card 10% off

47 Kenmore Ave.
University Plaza

a
a

838-3340

!

j

I

Senator George McGovern, making his first stop
in the Buffalo area, said Tuesday that he was a
candidate capable of keeping the Democratic party
united.
Speaking at a news conference at the American
Standard Inc. bonding plant on Rano Ave., the
South Dakota senator declared: “I think 1 have the
best chance of all the candidates of keeping the
Democratic party united.”
“Especially,” he continued, “I will keep the
bulk of the young people, the 18-21 year olds, in
the party. At the same time, my service in Congress
demonstrates my ability as a party regular.”
The senator also predicted that he will wip at
least 200 of New York’s 278 convention delegates in
this Tuesday’s primary and that by June 20 he will
have around 1300 of the 1509 delegates needed to
win the nomination.

Moving middle
Answering charge* that he was modifying his
positions on various issues to appeal to “middle of
the road” voters, Mr. McGovern asserted that no
such modification was occurring. ‘The positions 1
have taken,” he explained, “have become acceptable
The center has
to a large majority of Americans
Mr.
McGovern
campaign.”
moved toward the George
McGovern continued that he planned to “stick” to
the “principles and convictions” that have
characterized his ciampaign.
Fielding questions about these, convictions, Mr.
McGovern attacked the present welfare system as a
complete failure that “no one likes” and alluded to
his plan as a viable alternative. Additionally, the
senator criticized administration policies concerning
the war. He promised: “If 1 become president 1 can
-

...

insure and guarantee that the War in Vietnam will
end and end soon.”
Regarding the present political situation, Mr.
McGovern ruled out any possibility of a
McGovem-Wallace or WaDaCe-McGovern ticket.
According to him, it “is simply out of the question”
for Wallace and he to run on the same platform.
Warm response

The senator Was questioned on his relationship
with state party chairman Joseph Crangle who has
shown reluctance in supporting the senator for the
presidential nomination. Mr. McGovern explained
that “on a personal basis Mr. Crangle and I arc good
friends” but political rivalries do exist. However, he
did report that he had been in touch with Mr.
Crangle and plans to visit with him when hg,is again
hi Buffalo on Monday.
Preceding the press conference, Mr. McGovern
touted the American Standard plant and visited with
its employees. According to him, he received a
“warm and cordial” welcome from the plant
employees whom he said represented a good
cross-section of the working people of the dty.
Most workers reported that they would vote
either for McGovern or whoever was the Democratic
nominee. However,. there were apparent a large
number who expressed their support for Wallace
and/or Humphrey.
After leanring Buffalo, McGovern proceeded on
to Albany but his Buffalo campaign continued with
a rally at the State University of Buffalo to gamer
volunteers. Other plans include a McGovern return
visit on Monday and a possible visit by Ramsey Clark
and Mrs. McGovern.
.

Friday, 16 June 1972 The Spectrum Page three
.

.

�Involvement stressed

Delegates have similar hopes
by Dave Saleh
Off-Campus Editor
Running on similar platforms which they feel
“exemplify the feelings of most youth,” four area
students have been selected to run as delegates in
next week’s presidential primary.
Jeff Osinski, Mary Ellen Doerr and Patricia
Higgins are among 32 Democrats running for the
eight delegate positions to the Miami Convention.
Sheila Kee is also running for one of the two
alternate positions on the ballot.
Although they were chosen to represent
different candidates on the slate, all the delegate
hopefuls expressed strong support for progressive
platforms and declared that they win go to the
convention firmly committed to that candidate who
represents such a change.
Calling Sen. George McGovern the “only present
candidate who represents change in the system,” Mr.
Osinski and Ms. Doerr hope to go to the convention
on the McGovern slate. They also hope not only to
nominate Mr. McGovern as “the change candidate,”
but to insure that the convention “adopts a platform
to call for changes in the party attitude* towards a
number of the major issues.”
End war and tax loopholes
‘This includes,” Mr. Osinski continued, “an
amendment to end the Vietnam War, which I feel
most people oppose. We will also call for major tax
reforms which will close the $29 billion in loopholes
which were exploited last year.”
Agreeing with Mr. Osuiski, Ms. Doerr added;
“We are also going to support any measure which
will bring about a reduction in the defense budget
and change our spending priorities to include such
domestic measures as the economy and cleaning up
the environment.”
Both delegates hope to pass a measure calling
for complete amnesty for Americans who left the
country to escape the draft. They also support a
proposed stand oh the busing issue which would call
for the establishment of a metropolitan school
system as an answer to the present problem.
Ms. Higgins and Ms. Kee, who were both

selected to represent Sen. Muskie on the ballot,
expressed strong support for revisions in the party
platform and said that they would support the
candidate at the convention whom they felt would
best “represent change in the party.”
Ms. Higgins called Sen. McGovern’s success a
“sign of the changing trends within the country,”
which she feels “were caused by the involvement of
youth in the political process.” Along with the
changes proposed by Mr. Osinski and Ms. Doerr, Ms.
Higgins called for improved social welfare plans to
help lower income people and increased educational
loans for students.
She continued that “increased aid to middle
income students who are presently caught between
being refused aid by the government and by their
parents, and a proposal to lower the retirement age
to 60, along with increased social security benefits,”
will be two proposals which she will endorse.

While dynamite

Continued involvement
All four delegates agreed that a liberal candidate
will need a cooperative congress to be effective.
Ms. Kee claimed that “to work out any kind of
change within the system, a liberal change candidate,
such as Sen. McGovern, must be elected, along with
a congress which is cooperative to his proposals.”
However, all seemed to feel that this could be
overcome by the involvement of people. Ms. Docrr
noted: “If the people continue to express their
involvement after the election by getting in touch
with their senator or congressman and demanding
such cooperation, this problem can be overcome.”
The “youth” candidates have all been involved
in local politics for a number of years and were
selected to become delegates based on their
participation in both local and student government.
Their feelings concerning change within the system
were best summarized by Ms. Kee; “I was a
freshman when the student riots took place in 1970.
To me, nothing was accomplished in the riots except
that the people became aware of the problems which
face us. if change can be effectively accomplished
within the system non-violently, then it would be a
much better achievement, and it would hurt a lot
fewer people.”

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Friday, 16 June 1972 The Spectrum Page five
.

.

*

-7

�Hce&amp;iaao

EdiTORul

IOATIOW

You probably can’t...

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However, it is a recent state court ruling coupled with a New York
State election taw that presents students with an inescapable Catch-22;
Persons residing away from their 'Ttome" district and who cannot
prove permanent residence in the town in which they live most of the
year, can only vote through absentee ballot in their "home" district.
Yet, election law bans the use of absentee ballots in the state primary.
Thus, anyone not in his "home" district on primary day (including
many students) has no vote.

eoroep

For those voters able to bypass the legal myriad of election laws
and residency requirements, Tuesday's primary offers a welcome slate
of delegate hopefuls. Specifically, running for positions for the Miami
convention are four area students.
The young have long been excluded from the workings of the
American political system. As a result, disillusionment and alienation
have characterized youth. Such feelings have coalesced into anger and a
sense of hopelessness.

All the "youth delegates" are committed to changing this past by
representing young voters at the convention. Moreover, the system will
benefit from added dimensions and new perspectives.
We urge all eligible voters to acknowledge the commitment of
youth by selecting as delegates Jeff Osinski, Mary Ellen Doerr, Patricia

Higgins and Sheila Kee.

The SpccrityiM
Friday, 16 June 1972

Vol. 23. No. 3
—

Jo-Ann Armao
Jeff Greenwald

Managing Editor
Busman Manager
Jack Harlan
Co-Advertising Manager Susan Hory
Jeff Reiman
Co-Advertising Manager
Acting Production Supervisor Lawrence McNiece
—

-

—

—

—

Ian C, DeWaal

Campus
City . .
Qopy

Feature

vacant

....

Graphic Arts

Peggy Edwards
Karin Sheldon
.vacant
.

.

.,
.

Tom Tolas

Layout

Lit. &amp; Drama
Music

.

.Maryhope Runyon
.Michael Silverblatt
.Billy Altman
Dave Saleh
Mickey Osterreicher
.Steve Lipman

..........

Off-Campus

Photo
Sports

.

The Spectrum is served by United Press I ntornationai,Collage Press Service,
The Los Angeles Timas Syndicate and Publishers-Hall Syndicate.
Republication of matter herein in-any
the Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.

form'without the express consent of

Editorial policy is determined by. the Editor-in-Chief.

Page six The Spectrum Friday, 16 June 1972
.

.

I

MB OUR
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Coalition backs McGovern
To the Editor

On Tuesday, June 20, the New York State
primary elections will take place. We believe it is
important that everyone who is eligible exercise their

franchise and vote. It is unfortunate that many
people choose not to vote in the primaries then
complain about the lack of choice between
candidates in the fall election.
In this spring’s presidential primaries voters
across the country have shown that their vOice and
vote when exercised makes the political climate. In
concert With the majority of independent voters

across the country we endorse the candidacy of
George McGovern for President of the United States
We ask all students, faculty, and staff to turn out on
primary election day and vote for the democratic
convention delegates supporting Senator McGovern
(first row). We particularly wish to endorse two
delegate candidates who are members of our Own
group and fellow UB students: Jeff Osinski,
McGovern delegate, Trisb Higgins, Endorsed
delegate.

Democratic Youth Coalition
SUNYAB

Radicals toot ‘white irrelevancies’;
Chisolm demandsattention respect
,

this campus, to speak out against these familiar
polemic tactics.
unfamiliar
the
Ms. Chisolm wasn’t rattled by the confrontation
dectricity
through
raced
An
Fillmore Room last Friday afternoon. It could have as had been John Lindsay when hostility greeted him
been two years ago during the events that disrupted in the Fountain area earlier in the campaign. She
the campus. All the elements were present: campus demanded respect and attention and wouldn’t
police gathered in the Union; Buffalo City police proceed until she felt their presence.
cars in Norton circle; students crowded around the
Here she was emphasizing the importance and
one-floor microphone attempting to outshout the impact of a Black and a woman running for the
speaker at the podium.
Presidency. The Black audience was experiencing her
At the same time, something was different. in a way that other observers could only attempt to
Minority group members of the campus were empathize with. Here was Ms. Chisolm stressing the
prominent in the audience and the person they had need for a “gut commitment to people.” Here she
come to hear hadn’t just returned from Vietnam nor was decrying the distortions and indifference of the
had he just been arrested for hitchhiking. The white media to her campaign.
speaker was Shirley Chisolm.
How did our white radical orators respond to
Ms. Chisolm came to the State University at this? The first launched
into a five-minute exposition
Buffalo as the first Black and the first woman to that
made efforts at being a question, but ventured
the
United States. She more often
seek the office of President of
into a discussion of the plight of workers
came demanding a “revolution m the political
the United States, strikes in various parts of North
in
had
moved
the
system.” She
purposely
vanguard
to
America and Ms. Chisolm’s use of her race and sex as
of this upheaval. She came proud and she came
dements of the campaign. The second attempted to
angry. But she came to relate her struggle
distort
an answer that Ms. Chisolm had offered to a
personally
.'to people.
preceding question. It almost seemed pathetic.
Our campus has long been known for its ability
Ms. Chisolm wasn’t one to tolerate pathos. She
to embrace all political persuasions. The philosophies
presented have been as diversified as those of John told the audience that she “knew where they were
Halstead and John Spritzler. The moderate majority coming from. 1 know how they arc funded and I
has satisfied itself with shunning the resultant know what they are trying to do. I’ll be back in
rhetorical debates that seem to co-opt every viable September to tell you all about it.”
issue on this campus. Their vehement objections and
She ended by asking a question that has nagged
feelings of helplessness remain internalized.
me during my stay here; “If they have all the
Such “radical” elements seem to be vestiges of a answers, then when! are their followers? Where are
fame this campus no longer deserves. Nevertheless, the workers?” Some day, these students who claim
they were in the Fillmore Room Friday, attacking in to be the allies of workers will ask themselves the
the only way they know and attempting to spread same question. It is hard to build a revolution when
their “answers” to people who refused to make only 15 people consistently show up at mass
meetings.
themselves available at other times.
Yet the audience hadn't cOme to tolerate white
, Shirley Chisolm moved me in a way I hadn’t
radical philosophy. Shirley Chisolm didn’t come to previously known. I knew that I was finally seeing a
be used as a vehicle for their rhetoric. The Black real revolution after having been deceived for four
community didn’t come to listen to white years. I have my seat all reserved in the Fillmore
irrevelancies. But it took Ms. Chisolm, a stranger to Room for September.
by Ian C. DeWaal

.'.

Editor-in-Chief

I

eedb

Clearly, these laws are intended not only to restrict young voters
but to control the impact of their votes. Committed to working within
the system to effect a change in party politics, youth has startled
politicians with their involvement and with their success

.but if you can

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Most reasons for this law explain that the use of absentee ballots in
primaries is too Expensive, too unwieldy and too time-consuming. Yet,
it is. significant that only New York state finds their use too
cumbersome and so bothersome.

..

awiam
i

1,1972.

Their success is reflected in the fact that George McGovern, a man
supported by a large segment of the young, a man dismissed by
political "experts," will be nominated as the Democratic presidential
hopeful. He will be nominated largely because of the efforts of his
youth supporters and workers.
America , has long feared the potential power of its young; such
power is now trying to be realized in the 1972 election. Yet, the
outcome is still uncertain.
If there is no change in the thinking that spawned the ruling on
absentee ballots and outmoded residency requirements, there will be
little difference between an election of 1968, '72, or '76.

&lt;$e issue

05AT6U.

BKAUS6..

Not all of New York state will vote in this week's presidential
primary. Such voters have been excluded from tuasday's election
through a maze of state legal restrictions. Paradoxically, the bulk of
voting in
those disenfranchised include 18-21 year olds who will be
election
this
fall.
their first presidential
New York court rulings coupled with election laws seem almost
specifically designed to deny youth its rightful vote. Among these legal
obstacles are requirements that all new voters except eighteen-year-olds
be registered in a party by last October 2 and that any previously
registered voters wanting to switch parties must have done so before
January

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Phelan endorsed
To the Editor

Mr. lohn J. Phelan is the endorsed Republican
candidate for the Republican nomination for the
59th State Senate District. The determinationof the
candidate for the S9th State Senate
District will be made in the primary election on
Tuesday, 20 June 1972. We wish to urge your
support for Mr. Phelan in this election.
John Phelan has served as the legislative assistant
to Sen. Bail W. Brydges, the majority leader of the
State Senate, and in that position has demonstrated
his ability to get things done in Albany. Specifically
with regard to the University, Mr. Phelan was
instrumental during the legislative session just closed
in securing the funding of the libraries and the
summer sessions m the supplemental budget, in
securing the exemption of State University from the
ban on sabbatical leaves, in securing the passage of
legislation providing deferred tuition {dans for
students in all colleges and universities in the state,
and in securing funding in the supplemental budget
for continued construction of the University’s
Amherst Campus.
John Phelan was also instrumental in securing
legislation to provide for state payments in lieu of
real estate taxes to the Town of Amherst for the
Urban Development Corporation’s “new town”
adjacent to the new University campus.
We think that John Phelan will be a very
effective state senator for the 59th District, which
includes the Towns of Tonawanda, Amherst,
Clarence and Newstead, as well as portions of
Genesee County. His general knowledge and
experience of the legislative and governmental
processes in Albany is excellent; his ability to get
things done is equally excellent and proven by his
Republican

I

by Bury Kaplan

0

While glancing at one of our local pervaors of fact (or Action,
depending upon your political beliefs), I came across a small article

(0

neatly tucked away in one of the more obscure regions of the paper.
The article announced that Sen. Phillip A. Hart’s wife (D., Mich.) is
refusing to pay her income tax as a protest against the Vietnam War.
Instead of including a check of $6,200 on her quarterly return, Ms.
Hart wrote that she “cannot contribute one more dollar, toward the
purchase of more bombs and bullets.’’ This seemingly isolated act by
the “heir to a Detroit manufacturing fortune” only underscores a rising
tide of radicalism in seemingly conservative bastions.
Radicals on the left have constantly criticized major American
corporations for their callous indifference to the lives arid goals of
individual human beings. Criticized for being part of the
military-industrial complex, for polluting the environment, gouging the
consumer, and building products that dissolve like tiny time pills after a
required period of Arne, et al (ad nadseutn), the corporations have now
decided to lead a radical attack on the American government with the
purpose of ending the Vietnam War and cutting military expenses.
These corporations, realizing that military expenditures account for
two-thirds per cent of the national budget have followed Thoreau’s
advice and refused to pay their taxes like Ms. Hart.
According to highly reliable sources, if corporations and wealthy
individuals continue to avoid taxes on moral grounds, the American
government would be bankrupt by 1975. The most recent Agures
supplied by the Internal Revenue Service indicate that 37% of all the
corporations Aling returns (this of course does not include those Who
didn’t file) did not pay any taxes.
In the fiscal year ending June 1970, of 1,670,000 corporations
that filed, 620,000 paid no taxes. These figures naturally do not
indicate how much they paid in relation to their earnings. The reason
that was given to the Internal Revenue Service for their lack of
payment was their claim that they had not earned enough money to
pay taxes. Any astute follower of radical subversion knows that this
cannot be the answer. The radical tide that has kept the country in
turmoil for the last decade has now reached American corporate
business and caused these corporations to withhold money that would
help the American military war effort.
Corporations are not alone in their brave resistance to American
imperialism. Many of the wealthy elite in America, like Ms. Hart, have
also refused to pay taxes. According to the Internal Revenue Service, in
the fiscal year 1971,200 persons with over one million dollars in assets
paid no taxes at all. These people who had the courage of their
convictions were followed by other wealthy men and women who paid
a fraction of their assessed yalues, but did not have the moral courage
to stop payment completely.

°

•

\

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6

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-

This wave of civil disobedience which has swept the highest
echelons of our country could have great consequences for without this
tax money, the military could starve to death, and the Vietnam War
could die from financial strangulation. The government could collapse
without the necessary oil to run the ever thirsty-wheels of government.
Of course this seems outlandish, yet there persists a curious rumor that
Richard Nixon requested a $400 million loan from ITAT. Such reports
can only add to the speculation of our country’s impending.plight.
However, there is a great threat to American monism and
radicalism. Sen. George McGovern (D., S.D.) wishes to “reform” the
tax laws so that the people who can afford to pay taxes would actually
pay them. Rather than raising the oil depletion allowance as Nixon
desires to do, he wants to abolish it completely.
McGovern’s tax reform laws would raise billions in increased
revenue which then would feed the American military machine. These
proposals are directly aimed at the wealthy, moralistic members of
society that have refused to commit their sons Or money to further
American genocide. By catering to “reactionary rabble” which have
contributed to the American war effort, McGovern is trying to
undercut America’s true patriots. Remember in November, it’s not just
Nixon vs. McGovern (if nominated), it’s American readiness of civil
disobedience vs. equality and conformity.

record.

Anyone who would wish to help in the
campaign should contact Audrey Amdureky (ext.
3721) or W.H. Baumer (ext. 2223) immediately.

Your energies and support are needed.
Audrey Amdursky

W. H. Baumer
Co-chairmen, University Committee
for the Election of John J. Phelan

Letters tq the Editor should not exceed 300
words, and all must be signed with the name,
telephone number and address of the writer
included. A pen name or initials will be used if
desired, and aB letters will be kept in strict
confidence. However, no unsigned letters will be
considered for publication. AB letters should be
addressed to The Spectrum Editor-in-Chief,
Room 355 Norton Hall.
The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but this will
only be done for reasons of style, grammar or
length. The intent of letters will not be changed.
TTU TAKI AT HAST Till 1*74 i

.

.

AND THAT'S ONLY AN ISTIMATII'

Friday, 16 June 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

�■■l

Theater

I

‘Unnamable’ deals with self
of the'mind are enemies, even the outside infections cannot be
body must be escaped. What we immediately achieved. The
are presented with in the theatre, spectres cannot be ignored, they
Editor’i note: This it the then, is an “1" endlessly revolving must be dealt with. “Pint dirty
second part of d review which in a black-curtained cylinder. The then make dean” becomes the
began two weeks ago in The basic sound is the sound of
motto.
Spectrum. This section will breathing, the deep breathing that
The tortures of the world are
attempt to evaluate physical
begins- meditation, the beginning
then rendered with ferocious
aspects
of the American of the journey. “I” is haunted at detail. They are accompanied by
Contemporary Theatre’s first by all of the terrors of real two parallel plots that mimetically
production of Samuel Beckett’s life, he is' led into deeper
imitate the basic journey into the
The Unnamable. The first section obscurity by the characters he has self. The tint of these plots is
presented a sort of theoretical created (in Beckett’s world these about
an imaginary
geography of modem theatre
characters include, of course, “homecoming.” “I,” on crutches,
Molioy
this section will re-emphasize the
and Malone). They pass battered and weary, marches,
importance of a theatre-piece of through his mind like the crawls, whines his way toward
the intensity of The Unnamablehalf-eeen figures of nightmare. home, toward the center. He loses
and will hopefully diminish some They are always there. Then come his arms, his legs, his body
of the difficulty of initially the figures who exist apart from substance. “Keep going, going
“relating” to the production.
“I”: the teachers, the liars, the on,” he tells himself as he hean
terrifying avatars of a societal self
thf patronizing voices of his
The Unnamable is concerned who distract “I” from the family singing hymns and
with the descent into the self, into important business at hand
querying his return.
the soul or essence, if you will. self-hood.
This plot eventually vanishes.
The descent isn’t easy
the
What is the good of losing body,
“thisness” of the physical world is The process
an enemy, time is an enemy, the
“I” slowly realizes that total moving painfully toward the
—continued on page 10—
imagination and evasive constructs escape from his creations and the

By Michael SflveiWatt
Lit. and Drama Editor

-

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BL^flBy*ftl
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a theatrical production so
unique that it made me aware
that theater is far from dead...
Something much more vast

that entertainment is afoot...
This is a production that
foundations should finance,
that scientists should marvel at,
literary and theatrical people
should be in awe of.
The Spectrum

Samuel Beckett’s

adaptation tor performance

THE AMERICAN

CONTEMPORARY

THEATRE, Inc.
1695 Elmwood Avenue
Buffalo, New York
General admission $2.00
Students $1.50
—

-

Tickets on sale
at

Norton Hall and
the Theatre
Reservations 877-9053
—

Sponsored by College B,

UUAB,
Student Theatre Guild
and U.B. Veterans ——■

Page eight. The Spectrum Friday, 16 June 1972
.

MT
B

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._.

,y.

ABB .-■MBBUB

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I mean to say that this is
what it’s about, this American
Contemporary Theater
production of Beckett’s The
Unnamable,” and that if you’ve
got the slighest concern Jpf
theater as art or for youself as a
person that you should see it,
too. One shouldn’t miss it.
Buffalo Evening News

"

&lt;

I

6,17,18,20,21*22

B

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-

�RECORDS
Exile on Main St. The Rolling Stones (Rolling Stones
Records)

To begin with, the controversy continues to rage
over the correct spelling of Keith’s last name. We’ve been
led to believe that it’s Richards, but on this crazy new
album, they keep alternating between Richard and
Richards. The label doesn’t help any, either, ‘cause it says
Richard throughout. (Did he really change it?)
The other big question concerns the bass playing on
Exile. Of the 18 cuts on the double Ip set, Bill Wyman
plays on only eight. Some guy named Bill Plummer plays
standup bass on four songs; Keith plays bass on three, and
Mick Taylor on four. Adds up to 19, you say? Plummer
and Taylor both play on one cut. Maybe quiet Bill Wyman
fell asleep for half of the sessions. I mean, if he can snore
on record, and moreover, right after the only Stones song
he’s written, who knows what he’s liable to do?
Anyway, Exile on Main St. is the new Stones album,
held up just long enough before release to coincide with
the tour. Of course, all of this is a perfect example of
linear tongue. You wait a year for a new Stones album.
Then you hear it, so you want to see them live. So you
wait a month till tickets go on sale. Then you wait on line,
fully expecting the guy in front of you to buy the last 40
tickets, one to keep and 39 to scalp.
The New York concerts are being sold by computer
automative tongue. Anyway, if you get a ticket, you
wait till the concert, always an endless wait. Then you wait
on line to get in. Then you wait five hours till they come
on. They play for an hour or so. Then the whole cycle
starts over again. Any questions?
The album is fantastic, of course. Whatever you may
think of the Rolling Stones, you better be aware that they
make great music. Great rock ‘n’ roll music above all. And
there’s plenty of it on Exile.
With Mick away from France for so long, it was
rumored that the record would be basically Keith’s trip.
And though Mick is there throughout, I still believe that
it’s Keith’s record, above all else. He’s always had a deep
love for country music and there’s plenty lot of country
flavoring in the vocals and the lyrics. Plus a little Chuck
Berry and Slim Harpo thrown in.
Things get off to a good start with “Rocks Off,” a
country rocker that gives a couple of fakes as to the nature
of the album. For about the first verse or so, you can
actually hear the lyrics. Then all the instruments come in
and you’re lost. Nicky Hopkins on piano, Jim Price and
Bobby Keys on horns are on almost all the tracks and even
-

get billed right under the Stones themselves. And of
course, Ian Stewart is around whenever the right touch of
raunchy piano is needed cause Nicky’s really too pretty to
play mean. Anyway, “Rocks Off’ is a great street song,
and the horns really make it snap.
The next tune is “Rip This Joint,” an incredibly
energized number reminiscent of real early Stones
mayhem. Keith pulls off the best five-second guitar break
in history, and Bobby Keys goes nuts on sax. The lyric* are
impossible to catch, except for “Ying Yang, you’re my
thang,” and that’s only because it’s written on the sleeve.
Course it also sounds like “Yang Ying, you’re my thing.”
Yes, folks! It’s the amazing Rolling Stories
sweepstakes. Who else but the Stones could put Out
“Tumblin’ Dice” as a single when even they sound like
they don’t know the words? And make it a monster as
well?

Oh, yeah. I skipped over “Hip Shake.” A Slim Harpo
tune. Still paying their dues, they are. Fine lads. Complete
with echo on drums and vocals. Good harp by Mick. And
“Casino Boogie,” which sounds like “What a Shame/’

another oldie.
Side Two’s got

a good dose of country. “Sweet
Virginia” features that immortal line, “Got to scrape the
shit right off your shoes.” “Tom and Frayed” has some
pretty pedal steel engagement by A1 Perkins, which is
about as close as Steve Stills will come to being do a
Stones album. “Black Angel” sounds like, if you’ll permit
me Jeff, Mick and Keith relaxing on the beach somewhere
in Haiti with the entire population behind them on
percussion. “Lovin’ Cup” is saved by Charlie Watts.
Side three starts off with a Keith Richards lead

vocal, his first since “You Got the Silver." This one has
him wailing, and I heard they’ve been kicking off their
concerts with it. Good choice. “Turd on the Run” is
another maniacal quickie.
The next one, “Ventilator Blues,” about murder and
other whipped delights, has the first guitar solo of the
album. Mick Taylor lets loose with some great slide work
here. Then a little jam in the back room.with Jesus, with
Keith on electric piano and dypdmite backup vocals by
Venetta Field and Clydie King. That slips into “Let It
Loose,” with good piano by Nicky (If that was him on
Between the Buttons I take everything back) and Dr. John
and his gang moanin’ in the back.
I like side four least, all except for the old blues tune
“Stop Breaking Down," which is my favorite for the whole
record. The whole band plays flawlessly, yet relaxed, as
Mick Taylor plays some more slide, Mick does a nice harp

solo and Ian Stewart makes fais presence known. “Soul
Survivor,” the last track of the record, gets started a little
too late as Keith gets it shaking. Oh, well. Catch the rest of
it next time.
If you’re going to be exiled on Main St. for awhile,
and it looks like we all will be, take this along to keep you
going. If you don’t have a portable, it’s okay too. Robert
Frank’s pictures and the set of twelve post cards is worth
the price of the album, which really can never be too much
when it’s the Rolling Stones.
-Billy Altman

Crowd doesn’t hamper
Zeppelin’s good sounds
of the 16,500 Led
fans were migrating
toward Memorial auditorium and
the bitter chill of that June 10
evening didn’t seem to bother the
anxious crowd a bit. It is the night
of my birth and I am feeling fine.
So fine, in fact, that my lack of
press pass and ticket didn’t worry
me in the least. This was the first
concert I had ever photographed
and even though I had no
credentials 1 figured the
promoters to be reasonable men.
They were and I was inside the
concert in two minutes.
I was escorted to the stage area
by
a huge offensive tackle
disguised as a security guard and,
within minutes, was shooting
The

last

Zeppelin

away.

The Aud was sold out and the
stage area was mobbed with
t eenyboppers,
struggling to reach the flashing
purple pants of lead singer Robert
Plant. Zeppelin was in the middle

Plant’s vocals were strong and
clear as willowly Jimmy Page
scooted about, his six string
Fender screaming the familiar
Zeppelin rhythms. John Paul
Jones was distinctly heavy on bass
and John Bonham’s pounding
drums highlighted one of the

tightest

concert

performances I

have ever witnessed. Led Zeppelin
is exactly as its name implies:
heavy
yet, at times, smooth and
flowing. While they have been
written off by many rock critics
-

at most major concerts
nowadays, couldn’t bring Led
Zeppelin down.

of ‘‘Communication Breakdown”
the superb sound system

the mammoth Zeppelin
sound with studio accuracy.

generated

fine books from small

and large presses;
literary, film A drama
periodicals; imported art
oards;.unusual gift itetns.

cvtpynatfc booh store
3102 Main St
2 blocks south of
Granada Theater.

Hep Zep

present

spaced-out

and

—Cohan

as “loud and repetitious,” on this
they were powerful and creative
and they had only begun a set
that was to last nearly three
hours. Even a typically violent,
immature element, seemingly

Stage streetfighting
Lead vocalist Robert displayed
excellent style and a great deal of
patience in dealing with the wild
Zeppelin crowd. Some idiots in
the upper balconies were throwing
strings of firecrackers down
toward the stage area, along with
sparkler flares, packs of burning
matches and assorted debris.
Being in the stage area was
comparable to an urban riot;
security people and ushers were
shielding the stage with their
bodies, while packs of crazed
freaks, often using a comrade as a
battering ram, charged the line,
crushing toward the stage. Robert
Plant broke out of a vocal,
paternally scolded, “Stop that,
children,’' and the conflict halted
briefly.

But

that

basically,

was

kick around like a soccer ball.
They jammed, loud and clear to
cap a long happy concert and even
the firecrackers and stage area
streetfighting couldn’t ruin the
beautiful vibrations created by a
mature, polished hard rock group.
I left the concert feeling nice,
unaffected by the bitter cold and
Running Bear?”
Zeppelin was really hot and thoroughly convinced that Led
even when they switched into an Zeppelin, despite the criticisms
electric version of “Running and stereotyping the group’s
Bear” (vintage 195$), no one imgge suffers, plays good
Seemed to mind. Page did one of hard-rock music blended with
his violin bow solos, long but good stage presence.
I may not see them again in a
listenable and John Bonham’s
(introduced as “Moby Dick”) professional capacity, and a
lengthy drum solo (seemed like photographer should be given
ten minutes) couldn't bring the hazard pay to work in such
violence, but I’ll check them out
Zeppelin fans down.
They tried to end the set and, again, because good live hard rock
of course, all 16,500 fans went music is a worthy experience for
wild and stomped and screamed anyone.
until Zeppelin, reappeared with a
-R.J. Hill
balloon which they proceeded to
and a couple of tunes from their
fourth album. Then they launched
into the last hour of the set that
Really got the crowd going. The
Crowd went wild as they broke
into “Whole Lotta Love,” clear
and booming.

the

theme of the entire concert. Being
in the area and pushed, shoved ans
hassled, i was amazed that
thrpugh it all Plant was smiling
and Zeppelin seemed to be having
a great time.
Plant was looking slick in
purple embroidered bells and a
black top, prancing around and

when the second freak leaped on
(exhibiting some fine broken
field running) and hug-tackled
him. Plant kept on singing and
pleaded “easy . . easy” as the
stage security draggled the happy
teenybopper off stage. It seemed
as though the object of the stage
area violence was to get to mess
up Robert Plant’s hair or perhaps
throw some debris at Jimmy Page.
Zeppelin rested a while as
Plant, Page and Jones sat down
for a few accoustic guitar
numbers, including “Lemon Tree”

Robert Plant, left, and Jimmy Page working out
during Led Zep't accouttk set at the Aud last
Saturday nitfrt. From its heaviest sounds to its
mellower tunes. Zeppelin provided a fine show.

stage

.

.

Friday, 16 June 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
.

.

�Our Weekly Reader

I

Obscenities by Michael Casey, Yale Series of and the pieces are often lent power from the sheer
reality. Part of this reality comes from Casey’s
Younger Poets, $5.00.
Crow, by Ted Hughes, Harper and Row, paper, beautiful ear for dialect and spoken English:
«.95.
In Advent, by A1 Poulin, Jr., E.P. Dutton ft Co.,
I grabbed a two by four
An started biffin them back
Inc., $6.95.
Christ almighty
They not cutting me no slack
There is more to the selection of these three
poets than review copy shm-pickins from the
I’m not cutting them any
“The Box Riot
publishers, or my simple caprice. Compering two
Ft. Leonard Wood Stockade
good first books of poetry to a great one by a
July 26, 1969”
veteran like Hughes places all the works in revealing
Juxtaposition and fills that relative vacuum in which
reviews of first works so often Suffocate. It is,
Obscenities is conceived as a whole work, like
admittedly, unfair but interesting.
Crow, but its intention is entirely different. Casey’s
To begin with, Hughes’ book. Crow, is a book is true pictures, only as intense as
singularly intense vision and a technically striving multifaceted reality and the mind-filters of his
piece of art. Not actually a new book but just now unselfconscious observers allow. The emphasis, in
available in paperback, Crow is the darkly sexual, Casey’s book, is on the power of understatement.
grossly organic and excremental fife of the symbol For instance, a scene in which a wounded and scared
and character of its title. The work’s power is old man bows and prays to the U.S. soldiers ends
visceral, direct, and sudden. We know Crow because this way:
we arc Crow. The ending of the first poem (“Two
It made all of us
Legends’’) can serve as an introduction:
Americans
Where sun and moon alternate their weathers
Feel strange.
“For the Old Mar.”
to hatch a crow, a black rainbow
Bent in emptiness
over emptiness
The terrific understatement of “feel strange”
gives this piece its strength.
But flying.
Technically, Casey’s lines are neat and short, as
The first great premise of Crow’s beginning is his he apparently uses breath pause for line break. The
indenture to death, yet his Birth “evidently” result is a staccato overtone, strengthened by
overpowers death, at least temporarily. The organic
mantra-like intermittant repetition of certain key
life breaks down before death. Crow is real life in lines.
this process of spoilage:
Casey’s Obscenities is a good book, especially
for a first book of poems. An easy work with
While the bullfinch plumped in the apple bud
powerful moments, it is ultimately more “modem”
And the goldfinch bulbed in the sun
if less moving than Crow. Finally, though, this book
And the dipper peered from the dewball
of Vietnam poems seems a natural outgrowth of
Crow spraddled head down in the experience rather than a painful search into life, and
beach-garbage, guzzling
leaves me wondering what Casey’s second book will
a dropped ice-cream. be about.
“Crow and the Birds”
A1 Poulin teaches at Brock port and has edited,
among
other things, a very good anthology called
Crow's, power comes straight from Hughes’
Contemporary American Poetry. In Advent the first
technical genius. Disturbing line breaks, unexpected
book of his own poems, is, at times, startling and
accents and recoiling soft syllables contribute to this
very strong. Like Crow, In Advent deals in
end. In as much as Crow is a total vision, the
grotesques, in darkness. The trouble with Poulin’s
structural aspects and the meaning of the words are
darkness is that it tends toward unredeemed and
one.
superfluous
nastiness, to petty gross noises where a
Hughes’ book is as Carolyn Kizcr notes in
satanic ambiance is needed. For evil to transcend the
Poetry (Feb. 1972), the “caw of the survivor, spat
simply disgusting it must be lent huge stature. Ted
out from its torn orifice, that conquers all
Hughes succeeds in achieving this height. Caskets,
reservations.” It is not a book for the squeamishly
angels of death, corpses and so on can only be the
idealistic, Or even the sentimental, but it is true and
Addams Family unless this stature is reached.
will stand.
Many of Poulin’s poems avoid this tendency
It is, as was noted, unfair for me to make
Michael Gasey follow Hughes' act, but Obscertities, towards unintended irony. “Budda and the Pirates”
his first book and winner of the Yale Series of is a strong poem precisely because some dialect,
Younger Poets Award, has a few things that Crow however one sided, is recognizable. Beyond this,
doesn’t. Most notably it has a casual tone, and an Poulin is a deft craftsman and all his poems are tight
ironic mood that Hughes does not attempt. While and technically interesting. Nevertheless, a vision of
Hughes’ attack is a frontal assault, Casey attempts to darkness that turns its own ugliness into a kind of
Outflank the reader, pointing out the horrors of beauty needs a titan’s power to give it life.
Vietnam amid the beautiful or funny moments.
(’but CaseyVbook is really ’‘real”
Crow is
-James Paul
,

«

y

rail

1-1

T

The Vmamable.

center if one’s family is all there is
to be reached?
The second metaphoric plot

construction involves the
embodiment of another imaginary
“I," this time he is encased in an
urn-like structure, administered tb
by a woman
he is de-liced,
wiped and treated with a cursory
tenderness. He can hear the
sounds Of a nenby
slaughterhouse, he hears the bleats
of the dying sheep, the animalsand the men who eat the animals.'
“I,” immobile, begins to sac the
physical world as a quasi-dialectic
which has immobilized him; his
only choice is to turn
ts
find peace at his own'center. This
second parable initiates, the Mai
journey inward for the real ■“’I*.—-..
but the struggle has only begun.
—

continued from page8—
..

breathing and
turning cylinder.

the

endlessly

Unique experiment
As I indicated in my first
article, the production left me
physically
depleted. The
Unnamable is the most Unique
theatre-piece I have seen. It. is the
first such production 1 have
witnessed in which the set,
lighting (the actors light
themselves, there is no bulky
overhead aparatus) and sound
values play as important a part as
the actors do themselves. The
audience reaction (if I am a
representative sample) It so
dosely regulated that I found
myself to a major extent a
participant in the I’s journey, or
to state it more correctly, each

audience member becomes the

1 and They
"They” with their infuriating
noise, their lessons, their lies end
their tights harass and infuriate
the propess of .“I.” The sections
that follow are the long war to rid
'
the self of the other.
In production terms this prikrlg
rendered with over-gluts of sound,
with appearances ndddisappearances of the fictional
selves that “I” has erected, with
continual reappearances of MoBoy
and Malone. Slowly, however, the
physical body of “I” vanishes. Hi*
fights grow stronger, all that IgfijP
of him is his voice, the spokssmhh
of his essence. The body reappear*
briefly, begging the “I” to taKf
the body is dying, it
him back
cannot live without the centnfity
of essence, but “I” is
Then comes the total descent,
the rush of words thait comes with'
deepness, the joy, the acceptance,
fire peace of achieving peac*. The
noise is gone, the lights fladnolh;
die growing perception of the *1”
on one hand, but also with t|ie
indication that the journey is
beginning to end, that “I” wiU
have to return to the surface.
The production ends with tte
end of the journey. The lights
begin to return ({he piece is done
in almost {otal blackness, with
stabs of lights which allow mental
half-perceptions), the sounds
vanish, we are back at the
beginning with the sound of deep
•

‘

-

adamap^i.

'

Certainly The Unnamable is a
well-nigh unbearable experience.
It is harrowing, it left me feverish.
. But
why should we desire
simplicity and bcarabifity? Art
doesn’t have to be impotent. It is
•!,

the

present

harmlessness arid

impotence of art that leads us to
talk in sage cliches about the

death of the novel,

.

.

trik

the

death of
The American
-ton temporary Theatre’s work
proves to me that theatre, at least,
i* far from dead.
Certainly the work is difficult
to understand. It has about it the
same toughness of a good film of
Renais, or for the matter, the
tough brilliance of Samuel
Beckett.
The Unnamable was directed
and designed by Joseph Dunn and
bja Koljonen. The cast consists of
•Jack BcnAry, Maury Chaykin,
Prances Feurman, Michael
Sklaroff, Thomas Szczaspy,
Douglass Woolley and Kathleen
Forbes. MiSs Forbes enacted the
role of ‘TV the nights 1 saw the
performance and certainly she
does a more magnificent job than
any other “university” performer
1 have ever seen.
Tickets for The Unnamable can
be purchased at the Norton Hall
Box Office or at the theatre (1695
Elmwood Avenue). The piece will
be performed every night except
Mondays. Curiam rime is 7:30.

Page ten The Spectrum Friday; 16 June 1972

,

unces the opening
of aaotljii* store...

Jus—tot

2 LOCATIONS

EVANSTOWN PLAZA
SHERIDAN
EVANS
and

•

81 ALLEN ST.
N*o

Fine Handcrafted Jewelry

*

DELAWAEE AVENUE

�TeamMclaren wins opener;
sixth series seems cinched
by Steve Serafin

CLASSIFIED
AO INFORMATION
THE STUDENT rates for classified ads
are: 61.25 for the first 15 .words; 6.05
for every additional word.

Special to The Spectrum

WANTED

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and All Expanse Paid Trip .to
Inauguration and ' Inaugural Ball, In
January
Sand dollar for registration
Washington
Weekends
to:
Corporations, Pott Office Box 876
Southport, North Carolina 26461.

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MOVING

Dennis Hulme, by winning the series opener at Mosport
Park, Ontario, last Sunday, showed the racing world that

MODELS WANTED
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Team McLaren is not yet ready to qease its Can-Am
dominance. HulmeV bright orange McLaren M20 got the
checkered flag after inheriting the lead from teammate Peter
Revson who launched his engine only two laps from victory
in the 80 lap, 200-mile event.

NEED MONEY? Sell advertising for
The Spectrum. 15% commission on all
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house. September
July. Good school
system essential (Sth, 7th, 8th grade
boys).
Mrs. Williams, 831-1635,
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The McLarens have completely

can Challenge Cup Series for the
last five years, having won 37 out
of 43 races and this year, as
happens every year, racing fans
have been hoping for a giant killer
to come along and topple Team
McLaren from its Group 7

pinnacle.
Last year, the hope was super
driver Jackie Stewart in a brand
new Lola that proved not to be up
to the task. This year, Mark
Donohue and Roger Peruke came
up with a Porsche 917-10 that
may yet prove to be the undoing
of the McLarens. The
turbocharged, 12-cylinder engine
is rumored to put out nearly 1000
horsepower and Donohue at the
helm is no slouch.
.

Won’t be outdone
But the McLaren cars have also
been quite a bit improved. Side
mounted radiators afford better
aerodynamics, while a- longer
wheelbase and new front end
geometry improve the handling. If
that should prove not to be
sufficient, it’s believed that
designer Gordon Coppuck is
hiding a turbocharged engine
somewhere in the McLaren shops.
Jackie Oliver in the lead-free
Shadow Mk3, Milt Minter in a
Porsche 917-10, and Peter Gregg
in another turbocharged Porsche
917-10 made up the balance of
the serious contenders at Mosport.
A new and improved Lola for
David Hobbs is expected to debut
at Road Atlanta next month.
During Friday’s qualifying
sessions, Donohue blazed over the
2.43 mile road course in 1 minute
14.2 seconds to set the qualifying
1:15 flat
’aged
pace. Revs o'
with
-

After setting lap records on laps 6,
9 and 10, Donohue answered the
question on lap 19 by pulling into
the pits with a stuck valve in the

turbocharger unit. Revson then
took over the lead with Hulme 10
seconds behind.
After 2V4 Ups, Donohue
stormed out of the pits and
proceeded to reel in the leaders.
In less than 10 laps, he gained
back one-half lap and passed
Revson who was now somewhat
less than two laps ahead. At this
pace, Donohup could conceivably
have caught up! But Rewie Wasn’t
ready to let that happen and once
Donbhue was by him, he got on
the loud pedal and set his own
blistering pace, setting the lap
record at 1:15.2 and 117.720
mph on lap 39.
Never sure
Once Revson was on it,
Donohue never regained a second
and the race looked nearly run.
Hulme steadily dropped back
between Revson and Donohue.
But as Donohue remarked after
the race: “You don’t have the
race in your pocket until the last
lap . .” and Revson came by the
pits on lap 78 with a blown
engine. This left a very surprised
Hulme with the lead and suddenly
everybody started counting
seconds between the remaining
McLaren and Donohue, but
Hulme was nearly a lap ahead and
won easily. Rcvson’s 78 laps were
good enough for. third place with
Minter’s Porsche in fourth and
Peter Gregg’s turbocharged
Porsche, fifth.
The next race in the series will
be Road Atlanta in July and the
series looks like it may be more
-itith than it has been since
.

USED CAMPING equipment needed;
tents, sleeping bags, etc. Please call Sue
838-2768. Thank you.

10 days till happiness.
HEV BILL
Get off your ass and ask her out, you
frightened shit.

'69. Excellent condition
VW BUG
Bastoffar. Carton 931-3932.
—

RIDE BOARD

PBE-MO VINQ garage sale. Saturday,
June 17, 10' a.m.—6 p.m., 46 dan

RIDE NEEDED to Lawrence, Kansas
In mid-August for one or two girts and
dog. 637-6350.

Troy, Williamtvllla. Household goods
prtoad to sell.

FOR SALE

MISCELLANEOUS

HAQSTROM BASS, 675. Small amp
650. Portable typewriter $20. Nylon

TEACH ME to drlva with car. Will pay
•4 'hourly. Call Abljah 836-8929 after

tent 625 and lots of other shit. Call
Steven 837-0163.

4 p.m.

CHAL-ATE paint Siamese cat

—

FOUR-MONTH old stereo. Perfect
condition. Still guaranteed,'6180. Call
832-7877.

OVERSEAS JOBS for students
Australia, Europe, S. America, Africa,
etc. All professions and occupations,
6700 to 63000 monthly. Expenses
paid,
overtime, sightseeing. Free
JOBS
Information
write:
OVERSEAS, Dept. ES, P.O. Box
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SAAB
1865. Excellent running
condition. Call Jim 831-1187,
688-6272.

APARTMENT.FOR RENT

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bedrooms. Fantastic fireplace. Sea
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—

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500

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TRIUMPH

motorcycle 1965
accessories. Full
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,

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HOME REPAIRS
a
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AUTO TUNE-UPt point*, plugs, condan
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HARLEY Davidson motorcycle 1970
390 cc. Excellent condition. Low
for cheaper
mileage (only 298 lbs
Insurance rata). Call Larry anytime
833-6008.
—

STEREO-FISHER-OUAL. Don't

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832-4990 anytime.

VOLUNTEERS naadad for CAC to

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excellent condition, gat
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—

business or

personal. Term papers, th****, etc.
Main—High St.
location. Call

874-3056.
836-5435

«-

your horns? Want to
purchase a hom*?UB gradual* now a
llcantaa raaftor. Swing th* University
community to gtv*
you panonal
sarylca designed (or aaclt Individual
head. Call Laonard Ardlata at
••1-0141 attar (rOO.

SELLING

884-6405.

•4S-S746.

two

years).

quality
CRAFT axtarlor painters
work at raasonabl* expense. Free
—

EOELRID climbing rope
Perlon. 150
ft. S«h Thomas matronoma, Hoovar
Inexpensive
Pixie vacuum, toaster. All
and In good shape. Must sell. Him
834-2762.
—

ROOMMATE
WANTED: *32.50
mqnth, own room, furnished. Hertel A
Colvin. Nice area. Call Nancy
874-6029.

-

—

TYPEWRITERS, sales, repairs, service.
Underwood portable, $45 new. Royal
portabla, 849 new. Others vary cheap.
832-9037. Yoram.

ROOMMATES WANTED

—

HAVE A photo-portrait by SUNYAB
students) mounted 8"xl0”, print for
•9 1 JAMAR STUDIOS, 220 Lexington
Ava. Coma Saturdays, 10 a.m.—9 p.m.

furnished
SEVERAL WELL
four—eight bedroom apartments, large,
excellent locations. Available
Immediately.
896-8180, evenings

FOUND: Pure-breed golden retriever,
June 4.
Miller sport —Eggert area,
Owner or good home. 873-1164.

female

experienced
IBM
Salactrlc. •.90/paga. Call 8384808.

Ft»R SALE: 1966 Volvo 122S, 8500.

LOST ft FOUND

—

spaded- Free, 674-3096.

furnished
2
A 3-BEDROOM
apartments available In Elmwood area
happening.”
Responsible
“where It's
landlord desires only responsible
tenants for nice pads. 881-0141.

preferably.

—

bade,

—

PANASONIC AM/FM stereo receiver
and speakers with BSR turntable. Four
months old, excellent condition. Must
sell. *125. Warren: 834-2529.
KINQ-SIZE BED, bureau, dresser, twin

Simmons HMe-A-Bed. drapes,
lamps, safe. 875-8336 after 6 p.m.

bed,

aatlmata*. S94-4631 or *94-0996.

those*, term
&gt;,
TYPING -r dl
papers. Professionally don* by former
ownar/oparStor of a professional
typing sarvlca. Call S33-1921.

garagas,
BLUE RIBBON carpantry
cottagas, panailing, ganaral ramodallng.
Wa can do Itl 85S-0407.
—

WILL TUTOR In physics and calculus.
Exparfancad. Call Sandhu at &gt;37-2432
If not thara, 831-3817.
-

SUB-LET

APARTMENT

3 PEOPLE to tub)at housa with 2'
othars, ■Bw through August. Own
room. C* 837-0401.

1964 RENAULT (Man. 30,000 mUM,

”

very

rest

•uni

*»^PWIT

STMCES,

SIM Mala St.

03-713

FrM parking at
Unlvartlly

Manor

(rmI Poor)

GUS will Xerox this Friday,

!■■■■■■■■■ eamiMM

June 16

-

June 23 for

the cheapest rate in town!

|

mi mm adi

m

Friday, 16 June 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven
.

,

ft I&amp;HHh

�CAC’s Terrace House project desperately needs volunteers. If
you are Interested In playing pinochle, ping-pong, checkers, or just
rapping with people in need of a little companionship, please call

Psychomat is taking place on Wednesday* 7-10 p.m. not
Thursdays as it states in the Summer Activities Booklet.

Cathy

Computing Center User Services announces a Seminar in Pass
to
be held on Monday, June 19 and Thursday, June 22, 7-9
IV
p.m. at 4238 Ridge Lea, Room 10. The instructor will be Harvey

The Ippon Judo Club of The University at Buffalo is starting
a new beginners judo class for the summer. All interested should
report to the wrestling room at Clark Gym on Mondays and
Thursdays at 5:30 p.m.

Axelrod.

CAC needs independent tutors for all subjects, elementary
through secondary. Contact the CAC office, Room 220 Norton,
831-3605 or 831-3609 for more information.
Shabbos Service followed bs Shabbos meal will be held at the
Chabad House, 3292 Main St., Friday. June 16 at 8:30 p.m. and
Saturday, June 17 at 9:30 p.m.

ai 837-1862.

CAC is sponsoring a Carnival for the residents at the West
Seneca State School on June 25. People are needed to help with
the construction of booths and to act as escorts on the day of the
festivities. If interested, please contact Mary at 675-0594.
Summer Excursions is sponsoring a Swim Trip to Crystal
Beach, Ontario on June 24. If you are not a U.S. citizen, you must

have a passport with you. The price Is $1 and tickets are available
at Norton Hall Ticket Office.

Kundalinl Yoga Classes, The Yoga of Awareness are held at
196 Unwood Ave., Guru Ram Das Ashram seven days a week at 7
p.m. Call 881-0505 for further information.
Oballsque Magazine Gallery is a new, literary and art
magazine. Contributions are being accepted at Norton desk.
EVERYTHING WILL BE PUBLISHED. Submissions cannot be
returned. Oballsque appears Mondays at 2:30 p.m. next to the
mailbox

In front of Norton.

A summer

bowling

league is being organized.

Anyone

interested in forming mixed four-member teams should leave their
names at the Norton Hall Recreation Desk. The league will
hopefully begin Thursday, )une 22, at 7:30 p.m.

Sunshine House is now occupying its new facilities at 106
Winspear Ave. Open twenty-four hours a day, the House is staffed
to handle drug emergencies, drug-related problems, problems In
living and referral services. The telephone number is still

What’s Happening

831-4046.
Friday,

June 16

WBFO; At 12 noon, Spirits Known and
Unknown
jazz with Fred Eyre.
WBFO; 9:30 p.m., From The Hills and Hollers:
Appachia 1972. Alton Pritt, a former school

Sports I reformation

—

Today is the last day for summer softball applications. Play begins Monday.
Players, managers and teams can register in Clark Gym, Room 113, or by calling
831-2924 or 831-2926.

teacher, talks about his experiences teaching
in a one-room school house.
WBFO; 11 p.m., Codfish Every Friday with Dave
Benders.
Film: The Music Lovers

Other summer Intramurals entry dates and first dates of play are
respectively: Handball, until June 9, June 12; tennis singles, June 19 to June 23,
June 26; tennis doubles. June 28 to July 7, July 10; tennis mixed, July 13 to July
19, July 20; frisbee, June 26 to June 29, June 29; bowling, June 26 to July 5,
July 6: co-ed volleyball, June 26 to July 5, July 6; paddle ball, July 3 to July 10,
July 11; golf, July 10 to July 14, July 17; archery, July 19 to July 25, July 26;
horseshoes, July 26 to Aug. 1, Aug. 2; squash, July 21 to Aug. 4, Aug. 7.

Intramurals are open to all

in the Conference
Check Conference Theater
Showcase for times.
UUAB Coffeehouse; Spider )ohn Koerner in the
first floor cafeteria at 7 and 9 p.m.
Admission is $.75.
Theater.

Saturday, (une 17

valid I.D. or recreation pass needed

UUAB Coffeehouse: Spider John Koerner in the
first floor cafeteria at 7 and 9 p.m.
Admission is $.75.
Film: Women in Love in the Conference Theater.
Check Conference Theater Showcase for
times.

Backpage

Sunday,June 18

Film: Women in Love in the Conference Theater

Available at the Ticket Office

Monday,

Shaw Festival

June

19

Film; Pierrot Le Fou

Through July 9: The Royal Family
July 16 Sept. 2: Getting Married
July 19 Sept. 3: Misalliance
August 5—19: Concerts

(1965) directed by Godard

in 140 Capen at 7 and 9 p.m.
Ballet: Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and
Festival Ballet of New York at Kleinhans
Music Hall at 8 :30 p.m. Tickets are available
at the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra Box
Office, 885-5000 or 882-1396.
WBFO: 10 p.m., The Ten O'clock Muse
poetry

—

—

Melody Fair

-

June 12-17: Tom Jones (sold out)
June 14—24: Last of the Red Hot Lovers
June 26—July 1; Eddy Arnold
July 3-8: Sandler &amp; Young, Pat Cooper
July 10—15: Liberace
July 17—22: Engelbert Humperdinck
July 25—30; Peggy Fleming, Concert on Ice
July 31
August 5: Mitzi Gaynor
August 7—12: Promises, Promises
Donald
August 14-19: 7 776
August 21-26; Sergio Franchi, Corbett
Trinidad Steel Band

with Marty Cohen.

Tuesday,

WBFO: 11 a.m., Ain't / A Woman, with Fran
Delinsky and Jan Root discussing the
women’s movement today.
WBFO: 1 p.m., History of Rock 'n' Roll with
Prof. Murray Kirch.
Clinic
The Philidor Trio: A clinic on
performance problems of early music, 3
p.m., Baird Recital Hall.
Film: The Brig (1964) directed by Mekas in 140
Capen at 7 and 8:30 p.m.
Concert: The Philidor Trio: A Concert of
Baroque Music from France and Italy, 8:30
p.m., Baird Recital Hall.

-

-

Monica,

Baird Hall Concerts

June

13; The Cleveland

Quartet

and Stephen Manes on

Piano

June 20: The Philidor Trio
June 27: Leo Smit The Masters
—

June 20

Write jazz

Wednesday, June 21

Children's Theater (MF)

Film: Sandra (1966) directed by Visconti in 140
Capen at 7 and 9 p.m.
Film: I/Indiana (1961) directed by Bunuel in 146
Diefendorf at 3 p.m. and in 147 Diefendorf

June 28; The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
July 12; Susan and Bob of Sesame Street
July 19: The Bugs Bunny Show
August 2: The Princess and The Pea
August 23: Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs

at 8 p.m.
WBCE-FM: Musical Innovations at 9:05 p.m.
WBFO; 8:45 p.m., The Stonewall Nation
News
of the gay community and commentary on
the gay liberation movement, with Mike
Leu the.
WBFO; 9 p.m., Naturally Yours
WBFO: 10 p.m., Soundstage
A series of radio
dramas produced by theCBC and distributed
in the U5. by National Public Radio.
Tonight, Pongos, by Frederick Spoerly.
-

Buffalo Theater Workshop and Creative Associates (D)

June

14-25; Strindberg's A Dream Ptgy and The Ghost

Sonata

—

Popular Concerts

June 18: Guy Lombardo (MF)
June 25: The Irish Rovers (MF)
July 2: The Association (MF)
July 9: Arlo Guthrie (MF)
July 14—16: Mariposa Folk Festival (Toronto)
July J6: B.B. King (MF)
August 6: The Grassroots (MF)
August 13Chicago (M)
August 20: Pete Fountain (MF)

KEY
M Memorial Auditorium
MF Melody Fair
O D'Youvilte College

Thursday,
—DeWaal

June 22

Film: Vivre Sa Vie (1962) directed by Godard in
140 Capen at 7 and 9 p.m.

Summer Institute of Film Lecture: Rocha and
the Revolutionary Film, with Prof, Thomas
Kavanagh, Department of French. Discussion
follows screening of Rocha's Antonio Das
Mortos (1969) in 147 Oiefendorf at 8:30
pm.

-

—

-

-E.G. Miller-Smith

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                    <text>The SpEcritUM
Vol. 23. No. 2

State Univanity of New York at Buffalo

‘A republic, ifyou can keep it’

9 June 1972

�it

Davis trial ends in Aitipiittal;
‘Justice shouldbe routine*
jt

'■

•

\

Aquitted on charges of murder, kidnap, ind conspiracy last
Sunday, Angela Davis was resting after her 13-week trial, but vowed
%.. to give all I have to free all political prisoners as oppressed
v

people.”
An all-white jury deliberated only 13 hbuw; after srtoolhing out a
rumored deadlock, and delivered their verdict to. a shouting, jubilant
courtroom Sunday afternoon., Trying. to \ju|et the demonstration,
Judge Richard Aranson threatened to cleat the courtroom; Ms-Davis,
however, her body shaking with sobs, hugged friends and embraced her
parents as the judge closed the proceedings.
'

'’

,

.

’

&lt;.

Angel* Dwi» if shown daft) mhtw» first arrested,
California
Oct 13, 1970 in connection with
courtroom shootout. The adjoining photo pictures
Ms. Davis embracing her mother in celebration of her

Metamorphosis

•

acquittal.

History traced

Angela: Freedom at last?
by Bill Vaccaro
Contributing Editor

Angela is finally free
Her acquittal was the end of a long, nightmarish
ordeal that began over two years ago and ended last
Sunday.

On the morning of Aug. 7, 1970, 17-year-old
Jonathan Jackson entered the San Rafael Superior
Court as three convicts were being sentenced. He
came armed with several rifles and a pistol.
The young Jackson freed the convicts and they
fled into a small van with five hostages, including
Judge Harold Haley. Before they could leave the
building, however, they were met with a hail of
gunfire from nearly 100 deputies, prison guards and
policemen that converged on the van. Judge Haley,
Jackson and two other convicts were killed. Another
hostage, a deputy district attorney and convict
Ruschel Magee were seriously wounded. The other
three, all women jurors, escaped with slight injuries.

It saw her controversial dismissal as a UCLA
philosophy instructor, her flight and subsequent
arrest on charges of murder, kidnapping and
conspiracy in connection with the shootout at the
Marin County courthouse, her at times tortuous
confinement in prison for over a year and, finally,
the trial itself.
The verdict Monday also lent much credence to
her own contention that she had been framed by
Contpbacy? t ..tstic*.»sur,i,t
federal and statsauthontJcs bent on silencing,her. As
San, Fnpciaco Exaquper
Four days'laterw
Howard Moore, one of her attorneys said: “If Angela
used in the shootout
reported
pistol
that
a
rifle
and
Davis, were not Angela Davis, she would have never
belonged
to
Ms.
Davis
and
that
Jonathan Jackson
been prosecuted.”
Ms. Davis’
background contradicts the had served recently as her bodyguard.
Warrants were issued for her arrest on charges of
impression given to many people during her trial.
Brought up in a very serene and middle-class murder and kidnapping under a California law
atmosphere, her life was filled with piano and holding that anyone aiding or abetting in a major
dancing lessons, the Girl Scouts, a good education crime is as equally guilty as the direct participants.
However, she was nowhere to be found.
and financial security.
After, hearing reports that Ms. Davis fled to
She considered her purchase of the guns that
were eventually used in the Marin County Superior Canada, the FBI set up a nationwide hunt for her,
Courthouse shootout not unusual. “For a black placing her on its “Ten-most Wanted” list.
After two months, she was apprehended in a
person who grew up in the South, guns were a
New York City motel and indicted on murder,
normal fact of life,” she affirmed.
kidnapping and conspiracy charges. At her
arraignment, she proclaimed her innocence and
Studied under Marcuse
Her revolutionary, philosophy was raised and declared that she, was the victim, of a political
strengthened during' her stay' at&lt; Brandeis University,. framerup by .state and federal; authorities who were
where she worked under the tutelege of radical out to. silence her and other radical activists..
Before her release on bail in February, five days
philosopher Herbert Marcuse. Marcuse called her
after
the California Supreme Court ruled the death
“the best student I ever had in the more than 30
penalty unconstitutional, Ms. Davis spent most of
years I have been teaching.’*
Later on, she studied at the Sorbonne and her time in prison in solitary confinement. This
traveled to Frankfurt, Germany to continue her action on the part of the authorities provoked
doctoral thesis on Kant’s analysis of violence in the considerable criticism not only within the United
French Revolution. Afterwards, she went on to States, but throughout the world.
teach as a philosophy instructor at UCLA. It was
there that the first of her many crises were to begin. Question of fairness
On Sept. 19, 1969, the conservative University
Concern over whether Ms. Davis would receive a
of California Board of Regents, led by Gov. Ronald fair trial was expressed by such people as Georgia
Reagan, voted 1S-6 to dismiss Ms. Davis. Her State Representative Julian Bond and Southern
supporters argued that the real reasons for her Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) chairman
dismissal were: she was black, a woman and an Ralph Abernathy, both of whom called for her
admitted member of the Communist Party.
release.
A number of serious internal clashes occurred,
Concern also reached the Soviet Union where
as a result, which nearly tore the University of several leading scientists pleaded with the Americans
California system apart. Both UCLA Chancellor to judge Ms. Davis’ case with “full impartiality and
Young and the university faculty gave all-out humanity.”
support towards Ms. Davis’ right' to continue
During the pre-trial hearings, lasting over 16
teaching. So great was the breach, that a series of months, Ms. Davis fought for and finally won the
legal actions were undertaken, going all the way up right to act as her own co-defense counsel.
to the California Supreme Court.
However, |ls. Davis’ health was failing as a result
of continued confinement. Her doctor joined her
Court rales
family and attorneys, claiming that she was in failing
In a momentuous decision, the court ruled the health and voiced special concern over her eyesight.
law barring Communists from being under state
Such arguments did not convince Trial Judge
employ unconstitutional. Further, it enjoined the Arnason, who was to continue her confinement until
regents from spending any more tax money in their the February California Supreme Court ruling.
effort to oust lls. Davis, calling it “anathema” to a
Following her release on bail and much to the
free system of government.
dismay of herself and her supporters, the
The regents, however, defied the court, prosecution used its influence to stop any eligible
dismissing Ms. Davis with a dubious claim that she blacks from serving on the jury. Faced with the
was a “poor teacher.” The regents action was soon prospect of an all-white jury, the trial began.
to be overshadowed by more tumultuous events that
Thirteen weeks later, -it ended and Ms. Davis
were to shape M» Davis’ life.
won back her freedon, for now....

Page two .The Spectrum Friday, 9 June 1972.
.

&gt;

v

•

■

-UPt

•

Ms. Davis conceded that she
“This is the happiest day of my
life,” she later declared. The was in love with Jackson, but said
28-year-old black revolutionary her love was spiritual, not
had faced the charges for 22 physical. She denied the existence
months, spending 16 months in of a plot. She was not present at
jail, until she was freed on bail last the Marin County shoot-out, but
the prosecution contended she
February.
bad supplied the weapons used by
Jonathon Jackson and three
Unfair by definition
Acting as her own co-counsel, convicts ,in that abortive escape
Ms. Davis maintained that the was attempt;
“totally” innocent and was being . However, Ms; Davis argued that
railroaded. “A fair trial would the guns, which she admitted
have been no trial at all,” she said, owning, were for the defense of
Nevertheless, she hugged and the Soledad Brothers headquarters
thanked each juror at the end of and for her own defense, since she
the trial , and; told them she was the subject of many threats
thought they presented a new after dafblosing&amp;et membership in
mood in .America'.;-;*;
the Cbnjmunlst Party J
HpaT-threats .havi'increased,
Howard Moote,*lc* one of Ms.
Davis’ four attornies; stated: “It. said Ms. Davis, 'in-the past few
took a worldwide movement of weeks of the trial, but she added:
people to acquit Miss Davis. iTm not going to allow that to
Justice should be the routine of Are vent me from becoming active
the system,” he added. Leo
the liberation struggle.”
Branton, another defense
Ms. Davis has delayed any
attorney, though, praised Judge decisions about her future until
Aranson for “the even-handed she recovers from the trial,
manner in which you have Friends said they were urging her
handled this trial.” He called to attend law school and work
Aranson’s work “a credit to the through the courts to achieve her
judiciary and thecountrjr," ;; ;;;
after
Despite.the explosive potential
'In the'-meaiftimc,:
her freedom, Ms. Davis
of the trial, which was followed
.

,

,

.

internationally

putt

cause celebre for
there

proceedings

conducted'*

were

'

-*

under elaborate security.
In fact. Judge Aranson .
all the particiapants and sait
as a result of the trial, all
who walk the streets of
society can hold our heads
higher than before
Yoi
conducted yourselves admiral
“

.

.

'God blew you’
In the tearful, j
atmosphere after the judge
the proceedings some
hugged Ms. Davis and her mi
others wished her good lur
one woman told a di
attorney; "God bless you
celebration later that night
of the jurors joined Ms. Da&gt;
her supporters at a San
'

nightclub,

returning

hugs

kisses from Ms. Davis’ frien.
family.

Although many of Ms.
supporters had feared that
and political bias would prc
fair trial, the 12 jurOrs ap;
to have little trouble in read
verdict, despite reports that

were deadlocked late Saturda&gt;
They declined comment on how
they had reached their verdict or
what factors might have swayed
them.

Most observers felt, however,
that the government’s case, which
took seven weeks of testimony
and was presented in minute
detail, was largely circumstantial.
The prosecution had theorized
that Ms. Davis was madly in love
with convict-author George
Jackson, one of the Soledad
Brothers -7 three black convicts
charged with killing a prison guard
and conspired with his younger
brother Jonathon Jackson to free
George from prison. They plotted,
said the prosecution, to invade the
Matin county courthouse, take
hostages and exchange them for
the Soledad brothers.
-

\

flight mard.

Lfcff,

Th« Spectrum is published once a
week on Fridays, ten times during
the summer academic sessions by
Sub Board 1, Inc. Offices ere
located et 355 Norton HeH. State
University of New York et Buffalo,
3436' Mein Street, Buffalo, New
York, 14214. Telephone: Arse
Code /IS; Editorial 831-4113; Bus■

iness 831-3610.

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Represented hr advertising by Na-

tional Educational Advertising Service. Inc., 380 Lexington eve.. New
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paid at

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Buf-

�*&amp;■

■:

-ji-

-■

ft:?.:

r

4

■*

New structure; old criticisms
'

bylan;€.DeWaal
[Ctmput Editor
.•

Urge body wa* unwieldly and couldn’t accomplish
anything.”' Dr.'Connelly "was and remains .a staunch
proponent of thgtown meeting format.
The major arguments for. the representative format,,*
at the time, wens, advanced by John Hubbard, Faculty df
Natural Sciences: and- Mathematics as reported in Thr-l
Spectrum, October- :iS&gt;&gt; 197th-John Hubbard
criticized the present
meeting} format for four.;
reasons: (1) one.' cannot be sure 6f the 'validity of any
action; (2) many, faculty members are unable to attend J
Senate meetings either through fear of intimidation'of'
because of teaching: or research commitments; (3) the
University is suffering a very dangerous loss of public
esteem which cj»j&gt; .be regained only by responsible action
of a faculty unit;-and (4) the 1University is becoming,

I

.&lt;

T-

*

•

•

-

*■*

Today, the representative Faculty Senate is over a

and approaching t its second-half birthday. It
which included the
entire facfldty of ,thb University 'as its voting membership.
HoweverVthh town meeting system was decried by some
'
as unwieldy and non-representative.
On' Wcdnesday. Febniarjr 24, I971, the Faculty
Senate of the State University of Buffalo met for the first
time as a newly constituted representative body aftiid
acclaim for its expected success. However, many of the
criticisms that plagued the old system are presently being
aimed toward the revamped
year

old

'-

replaped a town me&amp;ng structure,

Jtown

-

-

-

seriously polarized through

Structural change

.

politicalisation,”

.

'

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The crtd Faculty' Senate' “appeared to people to
suffer from S boom o* bust phenomena,” observed William
Baumert current ohaihnan of Hie Senate. Dr. Baumer was
executive vice chairman .of-'the. old Senate when the
transition occurred. This was, in effect, the ranking
position since the President of-the University served as a
non-active chairman.' ,4lt [the town meeting system] was
not a -totally dispassionate decision-making process,”
continued.Pr. Baumer, “We had to have i hot topic.”

Haunting criticisms
However, interviews with participants in the Faculty

Senate -revealed that the four previously advanced
criticisms have returned to haunt the functioning of the
existing representative Senate.
Specifically, according to many Senate members,
there currently exists a problem of*pbor attendance. Dr.
Baumer explained: “Those who get elected tend to be
fairly active in other affairs. We have ten to 15 excuses per
meeting." The Senate membership is 9p with SO per centc
V
required fora quorum.
Ifr 'Moore outlined a more critical situation:
'‘'Attendance has not been particularly good. We have had
'difficulties at thb'laSt four olf five meetings maintaining a
quorum.” Dr. Connolly further emphasized the situation;
“The major problem is lack of attendance. At many
meetings, we had to proceed without a quorum. The
quorum of 50 per cent is unrealistic.”
Concurring with this, Ira Cohen, Executive
Committee member, noted: “The participation is not what
people hoped it would be. It is hard to get a quorum. The
faculty often don’t know what is going on.”

1

'*

*

“&lt;*-.* *

&lt;/

1

•

it
tit
facility apatny

Gilbert Moore

*

its function should rather be one of a funnel. I would be
inclined to agree with him,” concluded Dr. Connolly.
Nevertheless, Dr. Baumer feels “the Executive Committee
has less power now.”
In response to the question of success for the new
representative government, feelingp were mixed.. The
Sqsate.
last year
a UTetty
it has cijreg .ja
$&lt;*ntfTW
Dr. Baumer. “The Senate has Been ntow effective in
getting at academic policy.” As examples, he cited action
on admission policies. Faculty personnel policies, teacher
effectiveness, procedures for academic integrity for
students, and the establishment of grievance mechanisms.
Charged yean
Dr. Connolly objected to this analysis. “More
academic matters were handled during the open meeting
Senate than in the last two years.” He pointed to the Stern
Prospectus for the Colleges; the EPIS program; grading
reform and the institution of the four-course load.
“1 don’t want to make any severe judgment too
early,” cautioned Dr. Moore. “The University has been
thlough four of five charged yeara
claude Welch
Dep
of Political Science, spoke of the quality of
the de |iberations on
Senate flopr. »| don’t ,di»ce,n

A number of explanations have been advanced to
this apparent faculty disinterest Recent
administrative actions such as President Kettcr’s decision
Pn °: C?n,^Vr°".L U
I„
&gt;Irtinsti
maki
cul y
dl
eC

Xient

interpret

H« ,/“ i

!

“”

;

though a number‘ofpfopMalS this year, whht will happen
to them,

was thought we should have a better
representative voice of the University if we weren’t to
represent segments," continued Dr.
tuner describing the
rationale behind the change in structure, “We needed to be
able to make more intelligent decisions."
“No one thing precipitated it," noted Gilbert Moore,
chairman-elect of the Senate, at *be explained the
transformation. “It was a time of a whole host of actions
and .reactions. Some people fe)b that issues, were

..

intuitively felt-that
“However,”
there was a cadre of hetopje whcT carr|e Regularly and tried
to act re»popsibly..£jlpp’t think it waSas random as some
people maintatfiedr rape
a peddrto get more people
consistently invbifednh getfernSAde. Nbw we don’t have to
depend &lt;sh the hotncss'of issues

.

W

rnemoer of-the .Faculty Senate
last executive vice
Executive Cortumttie, was one of
chaifihen to he#d ug4he old Senate: i‘W? changed because
of the. feelings crfcoJfrge part of the faculty that ip an open
meeting type of governance they
be present all the
•

‘Masticated?’
Criticism has also been directed at the internal
structure of the Senate. Some charge that the Executive
Committee exercises too much power. “The business on
the floor of the Senate is too highly masticated before it
gets there,” complained Dr. Pruitt. “The Executive
Committee has always reworked the reports of standing
committee,” added Dr. Connolly .Dr. Pruitt feels that
committees should report directly to the Senate.
“Prof. Berdahl, chairman of Higher Education,
thinks that perhaps the. Executive Committee.is doing too
mych-legislating before something, comes to the floor and

|

1

ii

■

&gt;MSf

\

»t’s for YOU, the 20«draft fah.;
.

3J74 BAILEY AVENUE-

.

'

iM3S»

;
;

OF
•

complaints about-the Seua*eaw*r*«he Uoklaf-i
thaaccountability ot : their
repregenUtivet; 1he advisory nature of the Senate, and the
influence of the chairman in determining the direction of
the senate
don&gt;t think the faculty take the Senate seriously
cnough to ask for rcports
stated Dr Connolly . -Legally
thc Senate ls at best an advisory body&gt; though traditionally
the faculty sets many educationaI policies

’"Mculty Mot.rest Mir

;

-

..

”

Senate’s future
“A significant factor in the Senate is the chairman,”
noted Dr. Cohen. “We ought to try the Senate with
different leadership. One respondent, requesting
anonymity, emphasized “there should be a great difference
in the year beginning July 1st (the day Dr. Moore assumes
his position]. The chairman should be a spokesman for the
faculty. I'don’t think-it operated .that.way this-year: . I
think the chairman ■&gt;U»1usofttH.interpreted,adotiniatsatlop
,
&gt;i
'pdlidy to the faculty.*':
"Mu' h./Hic./ *(fr nrl-i
'
The future actions of the Senate will predicatethe
length of its survival. “Has the Senate carved itself a place
from which it cannot be dislodged?” questioned Dr.
Baumer. “It is up to the Senate. If it does its job, it will
have its place. If it doesn’t do its job, it won’t.
Dr. Welch noted:. .“It is fair to say that the
effectiveness of the Senate ultimately depends on good
work by committees.”
However, the general consensus agreed that the
Senate needed a longer infancy before final judgment
could be passed.-“There hasn’t been a real test,” stated Dr.
Pruitt. Awate of the confusion caused by constant
changes. Dr. Welch suggests “keeping the .representative
Senate for a few more years.” •
:
•

?

'

.

,

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administration are not working closely” enough together.
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thV'Cdrtnofly.' **TReypr&amp;etit65 charge? that sucli a

-

presented and well represented. There will be differences.”
•, Another Executive Committee member, Dean Pruitt,
theTilghtr
' underlined this pOiift;’ aThc

�*&gt;&lt;.:*,

\

’

”

politicized,,&lt;PtoplfIbecame increasingly

Major argdmante.

■
Senate in
"

...

•

disenchanted..

'

“The view of the
the general faculty has
changed,” said Dr. Connolly. “It used to have more
respect.” TTiere is a general faculty disenchantment (with
the Senate) that can be experienced at present. There is a
turning inward
to scholarly work. They are turning
their backs on administrative functionings. He added:
“Most coUeaguial respect comes from parties working
together
Regarding this. Dr. Moore explained:
“The Faculty Senate and the administration have
not worked out the best method of interaction.” He
continued: “We must make sure that each view is

“It

continually being

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a name coined by artist Ethel
“Epic sculpture painting”
Schwabacher to describe her work is being exhibited at the 2nd floor
Gallery in Room 219, Norton Hall. The showing began June 2 and will
remain through June 22. V
The New York artist was on hand the evening of June 3 to talk
with students and explain her works. A charming, gracious woman, Ms.
Schwabacher went from painting to painting, relating the stories behind
them.
These pi intings, depicting interesting in their variance,
stories from Greek mythology,
Ethel Schwabschcr’s style of
Greek plays and the Bible, ate her painting is quits unique. She uses
most recently completed set. Ms. bright, vivid colors to depict
Schwabacher chose the classical feelings, moods and contrasts. The
themme 'because," she says, it is positioning of colors is a kqy to
one that can easily be reapplied understanding her paintings. rOr
again and again with a new example, in one painting, she has
one surrounded by
interpretation. The classics, she two figures
feels, are constantly being referred blue and another by yellow with
green between them to show their
to in naming basic things present
in all life and human nature. For spiritual connection.
The artist also says she “thinks
example, it wasn’t too long ago
that Freud named a child’s sexual closely to music” when painting
love for a parent of the opposite and that this can be seen in her
sex “the Oedipus complex.”
art.
Ms Schwabacher says (he is a
-

-

'

-

“Prometheus Unbound,” can be
seen as relevant today with her
interpretation of Prometheus as a
revolutionary fighting against the
establishment (the gods) in order
to protect a weaker minority race

the right to coordinate her work,
marriage and family. She says she
is “not battling to be

(mankind).

family.

.

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'COLLEGE TEXTS PROFESSIONAL BOO
MEDICAL NURSING DENTAL

-Linda Trotta

Black populace representativea have joined all
directois of the Office of Student Affairs in
discussion of the grievances put forth to President
Robert Ketter last April. At that time, three
meetings were held between Dr. Ketter and the
Black students during which respective positions
were clearly stated.
Presently, committees are working separately on
the specifics of the problems cited by the Blacks.
Committee progress is qnknown.

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&gt;,

Ethel Schwabacher also
Ethel Schwabacher’s goal in
describes her paintings as painting is to immortalize what
“landscapes of the mind” in that she paints so that her subjects will
she paints her subjects from their live in the minds of others even
psychological point of view. Her after death. An examination of
paintings of ‘‘Orpheus and her “epic paintings” will indeed
Euridice I” and Orpheus and provide viewers of at least a new
Euridice II” excellently illustrate and interesting interpretation to
this. In one painting, she paints classical characters, if not distinct
the scene as viewed through immortalization in their own
cr v

*

•

independent,” but that is because
she has been lucky having an
understanding husband and

t.i'teen thfoughiEudduJe’rieycs Betted
versions seen together are quite

ope of a nuipber of .‘‘Strange”, rules that the state
enforces during th£ primary. **I don’t know why the
state does not have an* .absentee ballot for the
primaries because to the best of my knowledge, it is
doesn’t have one.”
the only state which
1
i.
NewfYork courts recently ruled that all persons,
Mr, Coulter continued: “I don’t agree with the
including out-of-town students, who cannot prove
permanent residence in the town in which they idea that it is impractical because, there are states
reside, can only vote by absentee ballot In their with primaries as early as March which have absentee
“home” town. Additionally, a New York election ballots that are complete and effective.”
law states that the use of absentee ballots in the state
primary is illegal. Thus, anyone not in their official May be repealed
place of residence on primary day, has no vote.
Despite chances that this lag may soon be
Democratic Party chairman Joseph Crangle, repealed, it represents another obstacle to the youth
calling the law . “practical,” explained: “The vote which may become a decisive (actor in the
legislature has had bills put before it attempting to upcoming general election. This law coupled with
remove this balloting restriction but none have two other state ruiinp which have haunted young
passed.” He further commented that “the argument voters, have made it. very difficult for a young voter,
given against absentee ballots is that it is physically in particular, to take part in the primaries.
impossible to print up and distribute absentee ballots
Election lews also state, for example, that all
for the primaries when the ballots are not even
finalized until one week before the primary.”
new voter* except efghtefcn-ycar-old* must have
registered with a party: before last October 2, in
order to be able to vote in the- upcoming primary.
‘Seteulier deadlines’
Additionally, any previously registered voters
“The only solution to this problem,” Mr. wishing to switch their party affiliation mus6 have
Crangle continued, “is to set earlier deadlines for done to before January 1, 1972, to vote in their new
prospective candidates to file their petitions. This party’s primary.
#ouM "'give the courts more time to act on
A recent Supreme Court ruling temporarily
questionable petitions, but even after this problem is ■'
solved there are others to consider.” Any “other" upheld the constitutionality of the former provision.
Petitioners had claimed the law discriminated against
problems, however, were not mentioned.
the young. The court has agreed, however, to review
A board of elections official also commented on the law again later this year, after the primaries.
balloting,
procedure
it
“a
chaotic
calling
absentee
which is too troublesome to use in the primary
Although the effect of these problems may
system.”
never be fully realized, it is the concern of many that
Douglas Coulter, a coordinator of the George a number of people will be deprived of votes in an
McGovern presidential campaign in the state, important primary because of laws some call obscure
asserted that the absence of an absentee ballot was and others term discriminatory.

Many voters in New York State attempting to
obtain absentee ballots for this month's June 20
primary, have run into a boondoggle of state legal
restrictions.

.

Ethel Schwabacher art

performances donated by

Peter Yarrow

Marry Chapin

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�Bill signed

Campus Security gains
powerfrom the State
.
A bill signed by Governor
Nelson Rockefeller Will allow
ckrapus security .officers to
execute and.deliver warrants apd
issue appearance tickets.
Previously, campus security
officers were strictly defined as
“peace officers and had little
more power than ordinary
citizens.” said Kenneth P,
Glennon,Campus
Security at the State 'Uhivetsity of

Buffalo.

'

,

While police officers pf.the city

or state ar« on call 24. hours a day,
this new jurisdiction will allow
campus security officers these
expanded powers only while they
are on duty or at the University.
‘The main benefit is that it
establishes the- status and
authority for campuS security
officers,” noted Mr. Gleunon. Tt
establishes the authority for
campus security to do what the
bill says we can do.”

be granted by each local
president.
"Any warrants placed in our
hands can now be executed,”
pointed out. Mr. Glennon.
Previously when ah individual on
whom there was an butstanding
warrant was seen on campus, city
police had to be called to make
the arrest
4

"*

training'program

'l

......

Each

security . officer must
complete four weeks training and
receive Municipal Police Training
Council certification within six
months. Many already hold this
certification.
Appearance warrants are issued
for minor misdemeanors. Issued
by police officers, they, require a
person to - appear, in court on
certain day. Certain infractions
may additionally require
fingerprinting and photography.
Mr. Glennon assured that the
result of this law would not be
“raids or mass searches” by his
force. Campus police will be
authorized to execute search

The bill had originally been
worked out in conjunction with
counsel for the State University of
New York and the Governor’s warrants
office. It does not give the officers
'‘Jurisdiction extends only as
Jar
as the campus and University
to
and
permission
carry firearms:
does not alter the relationships facilities,” concluded Mr.
‘It
already established between
£yen extend

camp^S^^^^^^E^yet*except

the land.”

Benefit concert

r

Original music by QSL and Bill Edwards-Bili
Bachmann will be featured in a concert of
contemporary music to be presented June 11 at
Buffalo State College to raise funds for Project
Pathway, the newly opened out-patient mental
health facility serving both E J. Meyer and Buffalo
State hospitals.
Tickets for Sunday’s 2 p.m. concert ($1.50) are
available at Norton Union Ticket Office at UB;
Buffalo State Ticket Office, and at the door.
mmi

ITT*

$9 95

a

'

“1

ALL SIZES AND
■SHAPES IN

I
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MW

13

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~

&gt;

Early spring vacation

Semester calendar change
For the second time within three months, the

John Sullivan, provost of the Faculty of Arts
and Letters, gave the basic reasons for the change of
vacation,B*po&amp;.
ton* Weak
winter, it’s better* for-’both , factflry and student
morale. Secondly, the short teaching period [there
would be only about three weeks between
Spring break will now begin with the close of classes resumption of classes and the end of the semester] is
on March 10. Classes will resume on the 26th. On bad for teaching.”
Also, he said, “Like it or not, the State
the first officially approved schedule, vacation began
University does not consider religious holidays in
April 7, and ended the 23rd.
The schedule was originally altered to conform devising a schedule.”
Dr. Christian commented that “the positioning
with an edict from State University Chancellor
Ernest Boyer’s office, stating classes could not end of registration would be better if classes started a
before May 15. This past year, classes had ended on week earlier and ended a week earlier.” This,
April 28. Neither of the latest changes has affected however, is not possible according to Albany’s
the first semester’s “exams before vacation” format guidelines. She explained the the Central
Administration in Albany felt that last year’s
instituted last year.
schedule didn’t allow enough! time in school, thus
the
causing
better
‘A
change’
Noting some'student discontent over the fccent
Diane Christian, Department'of English, and a
member of the Faculty Senate Executive shifts, Dr. Christian suggests that students make their
Committee, feels that the new calendar is “a better sentiments known to Albany if they do indeed feel
As long as we must deai with the ruling the schedule change will not affect the academic
change
status of the University.
'from the Chancellor .. it’s the best thing.”

academic calendar of the State University of Buffalo
wa? -officially shifted last Tueylay. The change came
o£ tE2»pAv ostt and President Ketter.
uyGb
-While the first change affected the entire year,
this time only spring. vacation was repositioned.

,

*

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The annual Allentown Arts Festival will take place
tomorrow and Sunday in the same restricted area, on
lower Delaware Avenue, into which it was forced last
year. Despite the Festival's numerous problems, it is
still a worthwhile event, and Buffalo's very own.

Call to reason

RED,

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Nil!*;
Friday, 9

June 1972 ..The Spectrum Page five
.

if,.,.

�_,

.

■_

EdlTORIAl
__

amt
woivtv

Senate troubles

'WeRe at
Mi.kW
THAT (S
mv r 6av

Emasculated by a representative form of government, the Faculty
transformed into a docile and indifferent
Senate has been tamed
the
body. Moreover,
representative Senate neither provides e forum*for
of
major matters nor any true account of variant faculty
the discussion
,
,.
opinion.
The most obvious symptom of such afflictions is the Senate's poor
attendance record. Despite attendance requirements, recent Senate
gatherings have had difficulty in maintaining a quorum. Even-when
more than 50% of its members are present, Senate discussion has
proven to be, at best, uninspired.
THe Senate is no longer interesting or exciting and this is due to
the very nature of its format. Those elected as delegates are moderates;
they were elected because they are moderates. Thus, there are no
extremes of opinion which once made the town-meeting Senate so
interesting. Instead of eccentric or dissident or divergent opinions,
there exists a homogeneity of thought.
As unwieldy as the old 1365-memberSenate may have been, it was
both democratic and representative for it provided a place where all
voices could be aired. Such a forum was too valuable to be discarded
for expediency's sake. As one faculty member remarked as he spoke
against the amendment which eventually changed the Senate format:
“Democracy is cumbersome but it's one way that certain values are
—

romir.,
LOIU MOT
mo to i

Another feature of the tdwh'meetirtg Seriatfe was that it attratted
the interest and concern of many all University faculty were aware of
Senate action, discussion and debate. Presently, most faculty are
"disenchanted" with the Senate for they are convinced of its
powerlessness. Unfortunately, the University administration has
contributed greatly to this disillusionment with the Senate.
Specifically, President Ketter's decision to alter admissions policy
without consulting the Senate severely hurt the power and the prestige
of the Senate. Moreover, it is disturbing to note that that display of
administrative insensitivity was nof an isolated incident. Obscured by
rumors, there presently exist reports of an academic plan being drafted
by Vice President for Academic Affairs Bernard Gelbaum. So far, the
Faculty Senate has had no input into that plan nor has it been briefed
of its contents. In fact, the Senate is still uncertain if such a plan really
exists. It is inexcusable that the Senate is so ill-informed.
Some Senate observers
character of Executive Committee leadership; NamWy, they fadli
Chairman Baumer for acting as an administrative designee to the Senate
rather than as a faculty representative to Hayes Hall. Further, they
hope that the upcoming reign of Gilbert Moore will revitalize the
Senate.
Certainly, Dr. Moore will be a welcome addition to the Senate and
undoubtedly the Senate will undergo some needed changes. However,
the Senate should be able to maintain its position as a viable legislative
body despite any vicissitudes of leadership.
We suggest that the Senate needs more than a new chairman. While
it is still too early to return to the town-meeting style of government,
the Senate must make more provision to involve the faculty at large.
Procedures must first be adopted to institute some method to recall
Senators. It is only through such forms that the Senate will be
c ‘ ’
‘ ‘
accountable to the entire factiffy.''
1"
In addition, we urge that all faculty be allowed to introduce
legislation on the Senate floor. Such a privilege will entice more faculty
to involve themselves in the workings of the Senate.
Too long, have University members retreated from their
responsibilities to this institution. As a result, the very morale and
quality of campus life have suffered. If the Senate resists change and
continues its role as mere advisor to the administration, there is little
chance that this University will ever become significant or exciting.
1

—

maintain'that

‘

‘

’

""

'

The SpccTi^uM
Friday, 9 June 1972

Vol. 23. No. 2
Editor-in-Chief

—

Jo Ann Armao

Managing Editor
Jeff Greenwald
Butin an Manager Jack Harlan
Co-Advarti*ing Manager Susan Hory
Co-Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
Acting Production Supervisor Lawrence McNiece
—

—

-

-

-

Campus
City
Qopy ,
....

Graphic Arts

.Ian C. DeWaal

Layout

vacant
Peggy Edwards
Karin Sheldon
."
.vacant

Lit. &amp; Drama
Music

..

.

Off-Campus

Photo

Tom Tolas

Sports

.

Maryhope Runyon
. Michael Silverblatt
Billy Altman
Dave Saleh
Mickey Osterreicher
Steve L ipman

Republication of matter herein in any
.

eone
men
(to

Vietnam

AT SDMT
TIME W
THE

future

out. PuMi*H*nuHail SyndlmU

Extended explanation
characterization is inappropriate insofar as it suggests
that they are poorer than is reasonable to expect of
any human judgment.
In suggesting the unlikelihood of ad hoc
graduate programs in general, I was referring to a
direct translation of our undergraduate ad hoc major
model to graduate study In the sense of a program
being individually designed within broad limits, all
graduate programs are more or less ad hoc.

To the Editor.

I should like to expand briefly on a couple of
points included in The Spectrum report of a recent
interview with me in order that possible
misunderstandings not be propagated so early in my
of office.
answer to the question about how the
Graduate School implements the University motto, I
pointed out that professional judgments concerning
a student’s ability to be capable of being what he
wishes to be are difficult and that there is always an
area of uncertainty in denying an applicant’s entry
into a given program or of terminating his
fftftKipaftMi&lt;In Mic to'.which he has been admitted.
term

In

Beyond
this, I hope to encourage
interdepartmental efforts at research and graduate
education where these are academically sound
enterprises. As an example, I cited an interest in
environmental study whichinuK well focus in this
' LWay,.*M:
v|« my experience, faculty responsible
*;;nWHfc« ol &lt;rtj»er possibilities occur to
decisions try to err, if they must, on the side of one as well/1 hope that such associations of faculty
trying to accommodate the student’s desires, while and students may be able to ameliorate some of the
nevertheless maintaining the high standards of structures of departmental organisation, such as
scholarship for which graduate study must be known Claude Welch mentioned in his Guest Opinion,
if it is to be justified. While the recognized where these are perceived as occurring.
imperfection of professional judgments might be
characterized, therefore, as being of “questionable
McAllister H. Hull, Jr.
Dean, Graduate School
validity" in an absolute &amp;nse, the implication of this
&gt;

Guilt-ridden
anti-personnel bombs which send glass-like slivers,
undetectable by X-iyys, into the limbs of their

To the Editor

victims. We are.guilty of playing the role of an

We, the undersigned, Christians of the Rosary
Hill College community, wish to acknowledge our
guilt for supporting our country’s involvement in the
Indochina War. We are guilty of dropping napalm,
which clings to and bums flesh, on our fellow human
beings. We are also guilty of destroying whole
villages of innocent women and children in Vietnam
and taking over 1,000,000 Vietnamese lives.
We are guilty of being the aggressors in a war, an
unjust war, a war which has violated our
Constitution and cost us over 50,000 American lives.
We are guilty of manufacturing and using

all-knowing, all-powerful God who can control the
destiny of millions of lives.
Being guilty of the above crimes, we hereby

disavow our support of the Indochina War and
accept moral responsibility for the attempt to seize
FBI files in Buffalo, August 1971.
Mary Fran Bauer
Joanne Capone

Edward

the

form without the express content of

Schedule inexpedient
To the Editor
We respectfully address this letter to the
Department of Elementary Education. As junior
members of the Elementary Education
year
Department, we feel that we have a right to
participate in discussions that will determine our,
£
final year at UB as student teachers. ,
,

Decisions have been made that will rearrange the

Job Interviews
1) faster is an opportune time to go for job
interviews and with the proposed change, half of this
vacation would be efirhiftated
2 ) We Jri|» have finished student teaching by
Easter and thus have twice as many experiences and
recommendations in competing for a job;
3) Interview, jitet in Uie.year might necessitate
missing strident teaching days.*
'

spring semester next year. The new schedule is a
Classroom’Responses:,
reversal of previous years. It has been recently and
tentatively decided that we will have seven weeks of
Students seem to behiord attentive apd
methods courses, and then conclude the year with responsive- to .education between January and March
student teaching. We agree that the schedule change rather than April to'lupe;' .; jvVr :
is disadvantageous to both our learning experience as
2) We Will be better able to'apply ourselves
student teachers and for job opportunities. Realizing before the pressures of graduating are upon us.
that student teaching is one of the most critical
We ask that you seriously consider our request
phases in out preparation as future professionals, we
feel that the followingreasons justify our request To? Ij? I
The JUnior Class of the
changes
Elementary Education Department
.

'

:

*

Editorial policy is determined by the

Page six The Spectrum
.

.

Edttor-in-Chief.

Friday, 9 June 1972

Cuddy

Barbara Morris

*

The Spectrum is served by United Press International.Collage Press Service,
The Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Publishars-Hall Syndicate.

ft* If

R£ffT
A6A(fJ

1
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upheld."

Feature

t/o;

VM

�w&amp;t
mvw
vese at

OFF BALA HCm
by Jeff Greenwald

&lt;OM7Z

ifites

It has become increasingly apparent that Richard Nixon’s primary
goal upon assumption of the Presidency has been achieved. Deciding
cases with the humane concern of four-year-olds for ants, and writing
opinions with the judicial reasoning of Bullwinkle Moose, the Supreme
Court, Nixon’s Supreme Court, has moved with leaps and bounds to
erase the scars left on America by the crime-coddling Warren Court.
In light of what has taken place in the nation’s foremost Hall of
Justice in the past few weeks, it has become a test of courage
(fortitude?) to pick up Tuesday’s newspaper and read the previous
day’s edicts.
Item
It is no longer necessary (if individual states so desire), to
attain a unanimous verdict for conviction in a criminal trial. In cases
involving Oregon and Louisiana statutes allowing less than unanimous
guilty verdicts, the Court ruled that votes of 9-3 and 10-2 were enough.
In writing the decision, Justice Whizzer White declared that since 12
member juries are no longer sacrosanct, a vote for conviction by nine or
ten was the same as a unanimous vote in the event there was a nine or
ten-member jury. He really said that. He also said that dissenters on a
jury merely had the right to be heard, not to block conviction.
Item
Until recently, a witness could be forced to testify only if
given complete immunity froth prosecution for anything discussed in
his testimony. Not any more. The testimony still can’t be used. Neither
can any “leads” attained from the questioning. But prosecution can
proceed provided evidence is, obtained .independent, qf the cojnpelled
'
testimony;
item A Texas welfare law allowing lower benefits to dependent
children (mostly Black and Chicano) than to the needy aged and the
disabled was upheld by the Supreme Court. Justice William Rehnquist
asserts the statute is not discriminatory, despite glaring figures to the
contrary. Rather, Rehnquist argues, these children can bear the
hardships of living at what the United States government regards as

L-H

-

-

”

%

•*

Free clinics
To the Editor.

three-quarters of the minimum subsistence level. He rationalizes this,
saying the children have a greater hope “of improving their situation in
the years remaining to them.” Of course, the starving child cares little
for education; the uneducated adult is at a disadvantage in trying to
“improve his situation;” he therefore makes little money with which to
feed his children; and they in turn go on Texas relief at three-quarters
of the United States minimum subsistence level.
This trend is merely beginning. Just what could happen in the
coming years is open to speculation. Consider these:
Washington, June 10, 1975
The Supreme Court today upheld
the MureicttM.&lt;*««•« Moines, Iowa yagr*n(.
Whli!fcefWhHft’ stated: “Despite the fact the jury voted 8-4 for
acquittal, any fool can see a 8-4 vote is the same as if there were a
unanimous vote by a four-man jury.”
In a companion decision, Justice White, for the court, wrote that
12 people voting for the acquittal of a “hardened revolutionary,” were
merely dissenters. He said the trial judge had been correct in
considering the 43 letters he had received and regarded as “a mandate
from the people” for conviction.
Dismissing a defense claim that evidence
Atlanta, Oct. 16, 1976
obtained during mandatory questioning of the defendant at an earlier
trial had been instrumental in the conviction, the Supreme Court

In the April 26, 1972 issue of The Spectrum,
there is a letter from a “Concerned Student” who
wanted to know why certain routine medical tests
weren’t available other than through a private
physician and at a lesser fee.
There is a place where these tests are offered
and for free. The place is the Erie County Health
Department located on the second floor of the Rath
Building, 95 Franklin St.
At the Rath Building, there is a free Cancer
'CUhlO' fop wotnenv which includes a pap smear
1&lt;J
infchteA ttS»t: diabetes test and VD check. In addition,
there is the regular free VD clinic, diabetes clinic,
lead testing, chest X-rays and TB detection, teen-age
clinic, pregnancy and abortion counseling, hearing
test, plus other services.
I, myself, was not aware of these services until
serving a clinical affiliation with the Health
Department as a student. I think it is of increasing
importance that the public be made aware of these
free clinics. Further information can be obtained by
calling 846-7690.

-

1

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,

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.

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upheld . . .
In the written decision. Justice Sam Yorty declared the court had
“no reason to disbelieve the prosecution’s claim that the evidence
which led to conviction actually came from a little birdie.”
Birmingham, May 6, 1980
The Supreme Court today ruled that
a Mississippi statute allowing the state to issue a pair of bootstraps for
every member of a welfare family in place of the standard food stgmp
allotment was indeed valid. Wrote Justice Rebnquist: “They’ve just got
to learn sometime. This way, they’ll learn a little quicker. Won’t they?”
Absurd exaggerations? I suppose they probably are
but don’t
laugh too hard. You might wind up choking
on a search warrant; the
one the judge said they didn’t need.

Marie Lebron

Wincing down the war

-

-

-

A subject for inquiry

the Air Force ground booming tests of the late

To the Editor.

sixties were about. This, and other charged gases, are

—Reprinted courtesy of Pro]

From a home high in the Boston Hills, which
the County of Erie urgently want us to leave, if
assault by workmen, invasion by deputies and
directions to sell are any indication, we spotted a
rather unusual weather effect Friday, May 12.
Slipping quietly off to the north, past the
southtowns, from 3-4 p.m. until twilight, was a river
of pink mist we call “pacification pink.” It moved in
greater concentration and quantity on the first three
days of May 1969, at a time when we later learned
there were rumors of impending trouble in Buffalo.
At that time, there were heavy extra loads on lines
and transformers south of the Orchard Park area,
and persons and animals here were affected as it
passed, at a height of a few hundred feet.
Friday, there was no such discernible power
load. One ground discharge was seen as the pink mist
passed to the north.
It is believed moved by communications impulse
or transmission, charged as it {Ms, and drawn or
held by area-wide “ground sounds,” which is what

projected by a sympathetic jump-charge from patrol
vehicles (Federal Law Enforcement Assistance) to
individuals, crowds or. building wiring. Gas can also
be shot, not in spectacular lingering clouds, but on a
jump-charge from a hand weapon.
Area-wide activity in gas movement, the use of
non-uniformed armed personnel in every phase of
public and private activity and gatherings, the clear

and apparent involvement of county radio and fire
radio systems, federal coaching and assistance,
including in the disguise of medical effects, and
effects on agriculture, makes regional policing of this
sort of fair subject for investigation.
The double functions of tax-supported public
services, of public works, fire, police and medical
services, in support of government-sponsored
projects in regional gas moving and testing and
refinements of administration, is also a legitim ite
subject for inquiry and protest.
*

i

&gt;

t

Carol Corrigan

Friday, 9 June 1972 The Spectrum Page seven
.

.

121VB

�WhIsTLE STOPS

Poetic rock

Lou Reed, undisputedking

LOS ANGELES
Mayor Sam Yorty has ended his bid for the
Democratic presidential nomination by supporting Senator Hubert
Humphrey of Minnesota.
In a statement released last Monday Mr. Yprty said “Our
Democratic party is threatened with suicidal radical! zatiop by Senator
George McGovern’s lavishly financed campaign of deception and
-

;

.

demagoguery.”

ys

...

It is not certain what effect Mr. Yorty’s withdrawal will have on
the race. Mr. Yorty had shown poorly ip all the primaries he entered
and had won no delegates to the national convention.

,

The primary elections have become hazardous
WASHINGTON
political health of twofold line” senators seeking re-election.
, Senators
and John McClellan, of North Carolina
and Arkansas respectively have faced stiff opposition to their seats and
I4r. Jordan has already been defeated by Rep. Louis Galifianikis in a
runoff election for th&lt; Depnocratk; npjpinatwn bpld last Sunday. Mr.
,'
McClellan faces Rep. David Piyor ip a June, ii ruitoif,
j;
5
Pryor
Galifianikis
and
are
jfoth
Mr.
Mr.
favored sweeping reforms in the conservative line held by Sen, Jordan
and apparently mirrored the voters’ feelings.
Mr. Pryor is being backed heavily by money from the political
arms of major labor unions, the AFL-CIO, USW, and the Teamsters.
-

to the

1

01

B
his

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LOS ANGELES After wins in all of. this week’s four Democratic
primary elections, George McGovern’s delegate strength has grown to
over 900. McGovern’s victory in California was decisive, but
substantially less than the 20% victory predicted in many pre-election
polls.
sLi

his

votes.

McGovern is now viewed as virtually unstoppable. He is expected
r

*

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yrtihtrgWy
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(and that balance can be heard on S-M crowd because of their harsh
the Atlantic Velvets live atMax’t, 'soriits and black T-shirts (which
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suburbs
the halls of Frtebort,
Long Island. Loaded the last
Velvets’ album is a living
testament to Lou’s eternal rock
V roll soul.
'

,

.

.

*

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„

,

.

„

.

,

’

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Page eight. The Spectrum Friday, 9 June 1972
.

.

,

*

'

M#9V&lt;?mbjMidwagon.

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-

were worn only for the purpose of
having images projected off
them), the Velvets soon lapsed
into a band as complex and subtle
His recent hookup with Richie
as the city that made them Robinson and RCA records has
relatively known to a small and gj ven him the security he’s needed
loyal cadre of fans.
to become the master of his own
Yet, always it was Lou Reed art.
who stood for the essence of that
.
rock n
n
8 rea s P ,t
city. Like his predecessor Delmore ro11
he s attached
vast talents
Schwartz, Lou has been one of
to
r
g back u P ou P
the few poets able to express the
r(Mn
Wht(f
IwnS-*..
Pure rock V roll ■'-&gt;
s
of
feeling
. .■
New York City. From
,,K 'AiUfcas the song goes on his
“Mils;*' toiKHas
j- triu ihfetftli
maWd to encompass’ the dirt,1, solo albutn, ‘You gotta walk it
Hk I bariwii
the the grime, the streets, and the ,ike Xa talk else ya lose that beat,’
Velvet Underground
mid sixties. Back
group beauty of New York City in his sod L° u certainly walks it like he
established itself as a definitely voice, in his words and in his talks, and that’s why he is Lou
Reed and he hasn’t lost that beat,
loud rock ‘n* rol band with the guitar.
overt tinge* of evil bestowed upon
Hell be spreading the rock ‘n’
it by a critical
Out on his own
ro ll gospel tonight and tomorrow
ignorance and hunger for
After three brilliant albums night jn the Fillmore Room at 9
sensation led them to a with MGM and an unforgettable p.m sponsored by the UUAB
misunderstanding of the group s summer at Max’s, Lou left the Music Committee. Tickets are on
potential as rock ‘n’ roll pure band to seek refuge in the only sale at the Norton Halt Ticket
\ted ith thf
form. Alwthat
citthe

Kansas City, just released), but it
seems to be that he had to go out
on his own. And that’s exactly
what he’s done.
As a songwriter, Lou Reed has
always possessed that unbelievable
connection between space and
time. The people that inhabit the
world of Lou Reed songs are
probably more real than most of
the people we will ever meet.

■.

HOUSTON Ah effort by southern Democratic govertloft to keep
Senator George McGovern from the Democratic presidential
nomination, has failed to get off the ground at a governors’conference
~

...

,

..

here,

Governors who believe that McGovern would split the party in the
November elections favored a more conservative candidate, but
disunity about who the candidate might be and a lack of interest
among northern governors led to the demise of the effort.
Many governors feel that McGovern is “unstoppable.” Others, such
as Milton Shapp of Pennsylvania say “the only movement I’m in is a
stop Nixon movement.”

r~ BibleTruth

JESUS CHRIST IS ALIVE
"I am HE THAT Livelh;and was
dead; and behold, I am alive
forevermore. Amen, and have
the keys of Hell and Death.”
-Revelation 1:18

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fc, Volyp, MG. Justin
'tpyota, Datsuri and

For gams from tha
JEWISH BIBLE
Phona.,
.

jybe
during that last summer at Max’s
wflfc-the Velvets, he attained a

to go to the July convention with about 1350 delegates pledged to him.
and pick up the other 159 he needs as delegates switch to join the

aui

ICTIBII

—

In New Jersey, the senator from South Dakota did much better
than expected, gamering about 80 of the state’s 109 delegate votes.
Unopposed in his native state, McGovern swept South Dakota’s 17
delegates, while he and George Wallace evenly split New Mexico’s 18

so
foi
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au

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�NASL promotes
soccer
3
:'ir
as major league sport
-■

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•

-

'[ by Dan Bidding
Spectrum Staff Writer

•

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£

Though they had no sanction,
the NPSL did have a television

Whethfcr y'ou Know It or not,
professional soccer is alive and
kicking hr North Anierica.
The North American Soccer
League (NASL) has established
itself, after six years, as being
stable and is promoting pro soccer
as a major league sport.
The NASL has eight teams in
two divisions. The Northern
Division has the Rochester
Lancers, New York Cosmos.
Toronto Metrit and Montreal
Olympic. In the South are the
Atlanta Chiefs, St. Louis Stars,
Miami Gatos, t)allas Tornado.
‘Is this the same soccer league
that was on TV a few years
back?” you might ask. The answer
is yes and no.
Amid hopes and expectations,
the National Professional Soccer
League (NFSL) formed ten clubs
in August, 1966, to start play the

contract with CBS to broadcast a
“Game of the Week.” The NPSL;

used this money to lure players
into the league. Players who
signed were threatened with
lifetime suspensions from soccer
but many felt that they should
take the money while the taking
was good.

Races promise excitement

Attendance poor

by Bruce A. Czaja

'

finished the
season with heavy financial losses.
The attendance ranged from 2500
to 6500 per game, far short of the
mnnn
lO
OOO projected break even
pomt The champions of the
NPSL were the California
(Oakland) Clippers while
Wolverhampton of England
playing as the Los Angeles Wolves,

—Ci«J»

an-Am challenge

Both leagues

Denny Hulme, winner at Mosport last year will
handle the second team car.

Special to the Spectrum
**
*“ ve
*°“
found out by now,
Buffalo isn’t the most exciting place m the world
during the summer. It Un*t asbad during the week
when school occupies at least some of the time, but
weeken ds
Take heart, there is finally
something to do. This weekend marks the annual
revival of Canada’s answer to Woodstock,
Better known as the 1972 Canadian and
_

...

Paste* yet
u
en
cbaUenge *
from Mark Donohue driving a
turbocharged Ponche. In tests at Mosport last
pnd*y. the car broke the exutmg Can-Am tmck
record by almost foui seconds. He was even more
|h«p a second below the out-nght record set by_a

Tbe

b,ggC,t
..

.

.

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.

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.

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&gt;

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J

wUl be held
After the season, under
t6
ofc nqueJts
rom FIFA to solve their
challenge for the lead is
Another
car
that
could
«oo has become one of the more
differences, the two leagues rkld* several years ago
th “Shadow” driven bv Jackie Oliver little is
toboth f r
m g.d .„d .„„ou„cd
next year.
e
At the same time, 12 groups formation of the Nonh Amerion,
exotic doing, concernin, it h»e been heud The
Thc inMd
dunng
bi8 p,rty
**
n«
fo
f th
got together and formed the rival Soccer League. Of the 22 previous
tnings wilh eiyonc having, good time and the
tbe traC reC0 d at
S®ca by several
United Soccer Association (USA). dubs, four teams folded, four O.P.P.’s generally making themselves scarce. I’m 081 br
f
conds 1 *** on form bccause
rc 18 s “PP osed
They were to begin play in 1968 teams merged to form two others, certain that those of you who like crowds, sleeping
a
new
version
It may be
super-quick
hiding.
but seeing that the NPSL was two moved to different dries and in a lent, car, other people, and continual parries are
Unve,led at Mo8 rt w,th the car be,ng shown now
P°
well aware of what such a gathering holds.
ready to start in 1967, the USA the others remained the same.
use 38 a aca eRwk festivals offer the same thing, but Mosport
CBS again televised a “Game of
decided to start play a year early.
the Week.” Top foreign teams 8&lt;&gt;es one better. At Woodstock, all you could do was
radio and Should be quicker
toured league dries and drew Usten to music HeU y° u can tum on
Capitalist venture
tbe
same
Mark
Donohue
thing
Try
finding
Other entrants in the race include Francois
in a
Many of the owners in both crowds of 20,000. On the field
900 horsepower D
Porsche on your dial. Which, in
Cevert,
dffid iWH»net
Stewards
leagues owned major league strength was dramatically shown (Qme wrt of
incoherent manner brings
to
of last year’s
baseball teams and got into soccer as both Cleveland and New York
of Team McLaren car* from last year. Another will
purpose of this waste of paper and ink
to get more revenue , front theu defeated the famous Santos club
be Milt Minter who wen the Trans-Amraoeheld this
stadium leases. While the NFSL of Brazil, boasting superstar, Pele. Blah, blah, blah
past weekend at a certain track in Ohio. Milt will be
clubs signed their own players, the But regular NASL games were not
The press releases have once again uttered their driving a new Porche which he told me was now
usual, ‘This year’s series will be the most exciting several seconds faster than the car he had last year
USA teams imported whole clubs well attended with only slight
from overseas to play the season. increases shown throughout the yet” drivel, which is always given out, even before a and should be quicker by race time.
I could go on and on
drag race between two garbage trucks. However, in
but by now you should
Two major points of conflict league
of
this
Can-Am
turn
out
be
the
idea.
Rather
than me sitting here
year’s
may
getting
themselves,
spite
from
this
developed
situation:
to be quite go§d.
babbling, it would be much easier if you went to the
television contracts and sanction Plans dunged
Team McLaren will be back to defend their title race yourseltand see who and what is there. Mosport
The Atlanta. Chiefs were the
by the Federation of International
for the sixth year in a row. The team suffered a bit
is about two and a half to three hours by car from
Football Associations (FIFA).
first NASL champions and it
of a setback this past week when it was discovered Buffalo. Take the Q.E.W. to Toronto, then Route
FIFA, through the various seemed
they would be the that Jackie Stewart would miss at least the opener at 401 to the Peterborough exit.
national soccer organizations is last. The league voted to disband Mosport. Stewart has been in the forefront of those
If you want to skip Toronto, there is a bypass
the ruling body for all organized*and ftinn ope
They pushing for safety improvements attacks.,
whiQh take? you up tqjgpl (The
soccer played in the world. Both also were to pursue 0te
Jfcllpw the
Expressvvayj bcfora yqu
Apparently, the sight of all
the NPSL'andUSA'sought
development of Soccer at local concrete walls at Indianapolis offended. his sign. Take route 35 portb-frotn the Peterborough
blessing but while the USA was levels. However these plans fell sensitivities. They probably also offended his exit. Follow the carsHafc the signs end you’ll get
are somewhere around
willing to pay a membership of through and five clubs Atlanta, stomach, as a bleeding ulcer will keep him out of a there eventually. Ticket*;
7
of
loss
for
the
weekend.
It
$10-12
race
isn’t
much
a
sounds like a lot, but
for
several
weeks.
There
car.
S 100,000 per club, the NFSL was Baltimore Bays, Dallas, Kansas
Peter Revson,
that for the whole weekend, look what you blew for
for
the
driver.
in
replacement
quality
not. tie NfSL was declared an City Spurs and St. Louis
ly and Cher at the Aud.
—continued on peg# tenoutlaw
_

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TIMES: 1:4b1 4:10,6:30,0:00 pjn.
Friday, 9 June 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
.

.

A

-

�a
•MOTORCYCLE

INSURANCES

| IMMEDIATE F8-1-ANY SIZE
8 No Poo! No Nonsense/

•

NASLpromotes soccer,.4

decided to play as the NASL in
8 UPSTATE CYCLE INS. I 1969.
They revived the concept of
o»ll 694-3100
J
%•
"A*k Your Broker About
importing foreign teams, having a
tournament of five teams, each
representi
ng a league City.
LIFE WORKSHOPS-—!
who had won the
Wolverhampton,
The System A the Student
USA title as Los Angeles, won die
What You Always Wanted t? tide as Kansas City. They received
Know About Student Fees-and-' the International Cup for their
wantedto Say 6/15efforts.
Dating &amp; Mating 6/20Kansas City were also regular
-831-2511 rs
A r&gt;L
it
season champions, defeating
•

-

•

*.i

.

Atlanta by one point in the
standings. Attendance picked up,
especially for die international
games, so they decided to play
another year.
Baltimore dropped out but two
new teams, Rochester and die
Washington Darts joined ftOm the
semi-pr ofessional American
Soccer League, increasing the
NASL to she teams.

—

« •

Pagestafe 3^Sj&gt;ectxJomiSfrtla^^PJi*^t9^^Efan^

Playoff turnabout

Ti

j

ae

-i."

«“W.
W"* ;
Toronto. Montreal, and New,
~

"“*«

YorJCWere added and Ka$sb4(3tjr
was dropped. League play steadily

improved, showing balance «nd
constotency.
C
International Cup teams had
cut put for themselves,
Rochester woo the Cup and both
Dslfas and Rochester were
undefeated in four games against
foreign opponents. In four games, lines of football and basketball.
Dallas had not even allowed one Buffalo State’s Cal Kem and Jean
both chf ' by
"

''

t

S

■it

c%

�SALE
BOOTS! BOOTS! BOOTS!
Hava we got boots! Boot* by
Shew’,
‘Our 'tlM go
Georgia
■ Endioott Johnson.
Giant. Truit. The U.S. Army,
etc.
Converse, MitHi
H Boot* tor Gov* and Gals!
Far-out. tunny, freak* and
serious boots. Gat the good
ones and save money. Shop
V‘mv Mb'■'S ,i

i-ToitkiJ

-

TENT CITY

730 Main At Tuppar 853-1915 Dlv. Watftington Surplus Canter
1/2 Hr. Fraa Parking
Mastar, Emplra, Bank Amar.
—

.SALE

s

a

a*

eumnn

.0

*

AO INFORMATION

THE SPECTRUM will
Friday*

mileage. Call Larry 832-6323.

M

»„

....

the *umrmr.
The
deadline for classified ad* I* Tuatday
by 2 p.m. Ad* may be placed In Tlw
Spactrum offlca
3SS Norton
Monday thru Friday, 9 a.m.—2 p.m.
during

HELP WANTED ad* cannot dlscrlmlon any

basis

-

(prafarably

STEP VAN. *59 Ford, parfact for
traval, topnotch condition. Prtca negotlsbla Bob, 839-5828. Oaaparata.
—

Is

discriminatory).

*65
VW BUG
excellent condition.
Bast offar. Carton 831-3532.
—

FOUND ads will ba run fra* of charga
for a maximum of 2 days and 15
words.

Anyone who saw
the attempted arrest (in the cafeteria)
or the arrest (by Information In
Norton) of Robart Stalnhorn on March
13 and 14, plaasa contact Lin,
837-4055 or Sylvia 838-1783.

INEXPENSIVE

power lawn

mower

839. Man’s golf clubs

197 2

NEWMAN
CENTER

MAIN ST.

&amp;

NIAGARA FALLS BLVD

834-2297

Sunday Mass
SAT. 7:00 p.m.
SUN. 8:30 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
12:00 n
7:00 p.m. (Espanol)

DRUG REHAB Program with radical
approach needs director, staff. Call

EQUINOX 918-434-1202.

MODELS wanted for ‘The Woman,” a
photography project. Call 885-6831.
OVERSEAS JOBS for students
Australia, Europa, S. Amarlca, Africa,
ate. All profasslons and occupations,
•700 to &gt;3000 monthly. Expanses
paid, overtime, sightseeing. Free Inforwrite; JOBS OVERSEAS,
mation
Dept. E5, P.O. Box 15071, San Diego,
Calif. g2119.
—

APARTMENT FOR RENT
FURNISHED

—

three bedrooms

-

NEWMAN CENTER

Daily Mass

NEED TUTORING for CS 148, 241,
340, atef Call Harry. $77-7090 after 7.

890. Sat of

PRE-MOVINO garage sale. Saturday,
June 17, 10 a.m.—6 p.m., 46 Dan
Troy, Wllllamsvllla. Household goods
priced to sail.

GUITAR teacher win teach folk guitar
and flngar picking. 41$-$71-29$0.

NATIVE FRENCHMAN
experienced tutor, willing to give Ftanch
lessons. $30-4091.
—

PAINT YOUR HOUSE hire students
to do It. Reasonable price. Call days
-

824-3282) evenings 836-2314.

'63 Falcon, 890. Good mechanical
Inspected.
condition.
Call
Jim
894-1642 or 893-6102.

EXPERIENCED typist
business or
personal.
Term papers, theses, etc.
Main-High St. location. Call 849-9746.

PERSONAL

CRAFT
exterior painters, duality
work at reasonable expanse. Free
estimates. $94-4631 or $*4-0996.

WOULD VOU Ilka a taste treat that’s
different. Try our zasty Mexican food.
Tacos, burrltos, enchiladas, tamales
and more. Snacks or dinners. All foods
prepared mild, hot sauce optional.
Tippy’s Taco House, 2351 Sheridan
(across
from Putt-Putt
Golf
Dr.
Course).

838-3900.

L.C.M.
Isn't $35 a month a little
high for storage space?
—

IMPORTANT NOTICE
Please Read
Win FREE-FREE-FREE Win Invitation and All Expense Paid Trip to
inauguration and inaugural. Ball In.
January
Sand dollar forr%*fttration,
to; Washington Weekends Corporations, Pott Office Box 075, Southport,
North Carolina 28461.
-

—

—

ATTENDING Akron law school In
September
need someone to find
and share apartment, Jeff. 6744109$.
—

TYPING
dissertations, that**, farm
papan. Professionally dona by former
ownar/oparator at a profaatlonal typing service. Call 333-1521.
—

BLUE RIBBON Carpantry

Oarages,
cottagai, panalllng, ganaral ramodallng.

Wa can do Itl

—

355-0407.

—

—-

walking distance. *34-3253.

Cantalician Chapel
3233 Main Street

—

810. 634-3069.

(new or used). Call Linda 831-3602.

SUMMER

VOLUNTEERS needed tor CAC to
work at Buffalo Stata Hospital. All
Intarastad piaasa contact tlia CAC
office In 21$ Norton Hall.

—

STUDIO BED with storaga sactlon,
weights,

WANTED: Wltnassas.

cyli $17) • cyti $20. $33-2119. Work
guaranteed.

—

—

—

nata

REFRIGERATOR, dining room (at
oak wood datk, fuH-alza bad. 633-6227,
49 Highland Orlva, WllllamtvHla.

tloni and tickets avallabia. For Information call B33-453S.
Only *2101
SUMMER IN EUROPE
Call toll fraa (300) 225-2531. Fraa
Ptannarlll
Traval
Unl-Trawal Corporation.
—

2 • 3-BEOROOMS furnished. Apartments available In Elmwood area
"where It's happening.” Responsible
landlord desires only responsible tenants for nice pads. 881-0141.
FURNISHED apartment for rent,
• 125,
lets utilities. Bedroom, bathroom, living room, efficiency kitchen.
In Princeton Apartments, 5 minutes
from campus. Available June 15.
832-9248.

LOST •&gt; FOUND
smooth
LOST; Men's wedding ring
gold
rim, rough gold band with
letter-llka design on It. Reward. Call
Mika 875-4160.
—

ROOMMATES WANTED
ONE ROOMMATE needed to share
apartment with three girls. Own
Incl. utilities.
bedroom, S33 not
Available June 15-19th. Call 835-5375.

WILL*TUTOR In physics and calculus.
Exparlancad. Call Sandhu at 337-2432
If not thara, 331-3317.

SUB-LET APARTMENT
furnished apartment,
10
MALE
minutes from campus. Dartmouth.
340. Call Ian 837-4533 after 5 p.m.
—

to sublet: two-badrpom
PLANTED
August or SaptamJaaitM house
—

January.

*75

EBf campus area. Call
daytime after 10 p.m.

May

month.
689-0323

per

11 SHED gpt. —-two... bedrooms
EngtawOM|MMPBflNBM|. 1.
036 dnormty rTT sao-jJWEher
27.

WANTED: 2 people to sublet 4-bedroom apt. with 2 other*. Now 'til
August 31. 837-128S.
LARGE apt. available now to Aug. 31
Rent negotiable. Main
Hartal area.
A
Call 836-624 1 .
—

APARTMENTS WANTES
FIVE STUDENTS need house to rent
or share for fall. Must be near U.B.
Phone 834-0582. Ask for Michael or
Art.
ROOM OR apartment to share for
summer and fall. Needed urgently. Call
Oava at 838-2248.

WANTED: 4-bedroom apartment near
campps In September. &gt;95-3775. Joe,
»«'■
Marly.and Cassandra: .
-~

•

■

Pick a Winner!

RWNITE
V? "Ute nse
you

tsy”!

Softer tiuw Beoujolais.
More lively then a
Portafoeee RoeM

■MarWhite.

Friday, 9 June 1972 The Spectrum Page
.

.

eleven, :'i

�Sports Information

Announcements

Off-Campus Activities

CAC is running over a dozen projects In Health Care,
Drug Counseling, Day Care and Head Start, which still have
a great need for summer volunteers who can spare as little as
two or three hours per week. Project listings and more
information in CAC office, Room 220 Norton, 831-3605 or

of the Veterans
The Psychology Service
Administration Hospital is planning to continue its Student
Companion Program during the summer. Each student will
spend several hours every week as a companion to a
psychiatric patient. Group sessions are held weekly to
provide an opportunity for student companions to share
experiences in the program and to offer perspectives on
mental health in general. Psychological staff will supervise
the student throughout the summer in an attempt to
achieve maximum benefit for both student and patient. All
those interested, especially those with past experience, are
invited to contact Al Benson between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.
at 834-9200, ext. 254 or'325.

831-3609.
Psychomat is taking place on Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m.,
not Thursdays as it states in the Summer Activities booklet.
Any women students interested' in participating in a
field research project reflecting Buffalo's ethnic culture, call
Linda Felix, Women's Studies College, 3405 or 886-6907.
Bicycle Life Workshop

-

proposed touring and repair

Effective immediately, the Reserve Room at Harriman
Library will extend its hours through the remainder of the
summer session (to August 2S) to provide service until
midnight on Mondays through Thursdays. There will be no
change, however, in the hours for Fridays (9 a.m.—6 p.m.);
Saturdays (9 a.m.-5 p.m.) and Sundays (1 p.m.-5 p.m.)

-

P|ay will be Monday
Thursday, rain-dates, Friday.
Players, managers and teams can register in Clark Gym,
Room 113 or 'fey calling 831-2924 or
-

Applications are also bethg taken for intramural

831-292e!
handball,

tennis (singles, doubles and mixed), frisbee, bowling, co-ed
volleyball, paddle ball, golf, archery, horseshoes and squash.
Handball starts June 12. Persons interested in forming other
intramural sports should contact the recreation office.
Intramurals are open to all summer I.D. or recreation pass
-

needed.

University tennis courts are open 7
Correction
a.m.—9 p.m. daily. By reservation only
2 p.m.-8 p.m.
weekdays and 2 p.m.-6 p.m. weekends.
Tennis, handball, paddle ball and squash courts may be
reserved by dialing the recreation office (831-2924 or
831-2926) from poon to 8 p.m. Monday thru Friday and 2
p.m.-6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Reservations may be
made two days prior to use. The reservation slip should be
picked up at the Reservation Office prior to play:
Reservation may be made for one hour only.
—

The American Civil Liberties Union is looking for
steady volunteers. Those interested, please contact Joyce at
838-0945.

225 Norton or call 2511.

sessions. Come to Room

Applications are being taken for summer softball until
play to begin June 19. Competition will be
divided into slew and fast pitch leagues of about ten teams
each of 10-15 players. The season will last flvl or six weeks.

June 16

&gt;

Meet and greet Shirley Chisholm Friday night at 7:30
p.m. at Lincoln Memorial Church
Main &amp; Masten Ave.
—

Meet Student Delegates for McGovern on Friday, June
9 in Room 266 Norton Hall. The delegates are Jeff Osinski
and Ellen Doern.

—

Special guest permits ($1) may be obtained at the
Recreation Office, Room 113 Clark Gym. One guest per
I.O. card. The sponsor Is responsible for the guest and must
remain with the guest at all times. A guest permit does nor
include privileges of equipment checkout.

A memorial service for the victims of the tragic attack
at Lod Airport In Israel will be held in the Hillcl House on
Wednesday, June 14, at 8 p.m. The service will be
conducted by Or. Justin Hoffman, director of the Hillel
Foundation and Cantor Bernard Savitz, Temple Shaarey
Zedek. A prayer will be offered also for the recovery of the
70 persons who were injured in the airport attack.

Backpage
Available at the Ticket Office
Shaw Festival

June 12

July 9; The Royal Family
Sept. 2; Getting Married
Sept. 3: Misalliance
August 5 19: Concerts
July 16
July 19

-

—

-

—

Melody

Fair

June 12—17: Tom Jones (sold out)
June 19—24: Last of the Red Hot Lovers
June 26 July 1: Eddy Arnold
—

July 3—8: Sandler &amp; Young and Pat Cooper
July 10-15: Liberace
July 17—22: Engelbert Humperdinck
July 23-30: Peggy Fleming
July 31
Gaytior
August 7-12; Promises, Promises
August 14-19; 7 776
August 21 -26: Sergio Franchi and Corbett Monica

—Osterrelchet

'

—

Popular Concerts
June 9: Lawrence Welk (M)
June 10: Chuck Mangione (MF)
June 11: Benefit Concert for McGovern (K)
June 18: Guy Lombardo (MF)
June 25 : The Irish Rovers (MF)
July 2: The Association (MF)
July 9: Arlo Guthrie (MF)
July 16: B.B. King (MF)
August 6: The Grass Roots (MF)
August 13: Chicago (M)
August 20: Pete Fountain (MF)

What’s Happening
Friday,

June 9

Concert: An Evening of Music for Flute and Guitar at 8:30
p.m. in Baird Recital Hall.
Film; The Conformist in the Conference Theater. Check
Theater Showcase for times.

Play: The Unnamoble by Samuel Beckett. Nightly through
this week at 7:30 p.m. in the American Contemporary
Theater, 1695 Elmwood Ave. General admission, $2;

students,

$

1.50.

Norton Hall Gallery thru June 22.
Coffeehouse: Gay Liberation Front, Room 232,7-11 p.m.
Saturday,

June

10

The Conformist in the Conference Theater. Check
Theater Showcase for times.
Buffalo Gay Pride Week: For information on events, call the
Matachine Society answering service, 684-5315. To
continue thru June 18.
Conference: New York State Coalition of Gay
Organizations to be held Saturday and Sunday. Consult
Norton information for exact rooms and times.
Film:

KEY
M Memorial Auditorium
MF Melody Fair
B Buffalo State
K Kleinhans
—

-

—

—

please see summer

Monday,

June 12

Coffeehouse: Drag and Gay Marriage sponsored by Gay
Liberation Front, Room 232 Norton, 3-11 p.m.
Tuesday,

June 13

Art Exhibit: Paintings by Ms. Ethel Schwabacher in th*

American Contemporary Theater
The Unnomable

For various summer excursions,

are to be used for the activities program at Project
Pathway,
Exhibition: Work from the Creative Workshop for Adults of
the Education Department of the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery. To be held through July 9.

activities

brochure,

Sunday,

June 11

Film: The Conformist in the Conference Theater. Check
Theater Showcase for times.
Concert: Original music by QSL and Bill Edwards-Bill
Bachmann at 2 p.m. at Buffalo State College. Tickets
($1.50) are available at Norton Union Ticket Office,
Buffalo State Ticket Office and at the door. Proceeds

Members Preview: English Painting and Sculpture Since
1945 in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery at 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday,

June 14

Play: A Dream Ploy and The Ghost Sonata, both by
Swedish playwright August Strindberg. Will open June
14 and play alternate nights until June 25 at the
D’Youville College Theater, 320 Porter Ave., 8:30 p.m.
Thursday,

June IS

Coffeehouse:

Homophobia and Gay Women and Men
Working Together sponsored by Gay Liberation Front,

Room 332 Norton, 3—11 p.m.
Film: The Music Lovers at the Conference Theater. Check
Theater Showcase for times.

Film: Breathless, directed by Godard. Playing in 140Capen
at 7 and 9f p.m.
-E.G. Miller-Smith

�</text>
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                    <text>�The Spec™UM
VoJ.

23. No. 1

Friday. 2 Juna 1972

State University of New York at Buffalo

Studies initiated to promote football
by Ian DcWaal
Campus Editor

Conflicting reports this week have indicated that a
feasability study on the return of football to the State
University of Buffalo has been undertaken. This study
additionally includes a survey of possible exchanges of
educational resources between those schools that might
choose to participate in the formation of a new athletic

conference.
Harry Fritz, Director of the Division of Physical
Education, Recreation and Athletics, while attempting to
dispel the recent emergence of overly optimistic rumors,
did admit that “discussions are underway.” Dr. Fritz
explained; “We are carefully considering intercollegiate
football on a lower level than before.”
President Robert Ketter and A. Wesley Rowland, vice
president for University Relations, have been involved in
the exploration of possibilities for the establishment of a
consortium of urban universities in the middle central and
midwest United States. This would be a cooperative
program in a wide range of areas, not just athletics, among
a group of schools with many of the same problems. The
consortium would be aimed at seeking common solutions.
Endorsements questionable
An article in the Courier Express (May 30, 1972) said
that “several high-ranking student leaders strongly favor
football’s return on the proposed level of play.” However,
questioning of members of the Student Association (SA)
Executive Committee indicated that such claims were
unfounded.
“1 never gave any statements,” stated Deborah Benson,
president of SA. “John Dandes (Chairman of the Athletic

Review Board] asked me about it and told me there was a
proposal. I didn’t give any opinions. I want to look at it
before making a commitment” concluded Ms. Benson.
The officers of SA did agree, however, to an
investigation of the feasability and effects of a return of
football. The authorization of the study was contingent on
the requirement that no funds be sought until all the
necessary facts could be presented in a justifiable report.
Mr. Dandes accused those individuals who had leaked
the story of “headline grabbing.” “Rick Wells, Chairman
of the Golden Bull fund of the Alumni Association, and I
have been talking for three months,” revealed Mr. Dandes.
“We wanted to avoid the pitfalls of the past.”
Cost crucial
“Nothing will be done unless we are positive, to the
penny, of how the money would be spent. The coaches
and the players would work on a voluntary basis.” This
would reportedly eliminate the grant in aid program whose
cost had contributed to the previous demise of football.
Mr. Dandes indicated that a first year budget for return of
the sport in 1973 would be approximately $10,000. It was
emphasized that talks thus far were merely in the initial
stages. “All discussions up to this point have been
preliminary,” asserted Dr. Rowland, ‘Twelve of 13
colleges and universities are exploring the establishment of
a broad consortium of urban institutions.” Schools
participating in this investigation are from Michigan,
Illinois, Missouri, and Ohio.
Tt is a very incipient sort of thing,” cautioned Dr.
Rowland. “A questionnaire has been circulated to find out
what fields besides athletics could develop an exchange
agreement, how much the schools arc willing to spend,
what are the sizes of the schools, in addition to rather

relevant information.”
Aside from the possibilities of this new consortium,
there has been discussion concerning expansion of the
State University of New York Athletic Conference
(SUNYAQ to include football.
‘The Alumni are ail behind any revival of football,”
emphasized Mr. Wells. ‘The thing is to get it established. A
well-rounded athletic program including football would be
great,” he continued. “We will do all we can to help and
assist it.”
If football is to be returned, “we have to create
believability with all segments of the campus again,” noted
Dr. Fritz. “We want to get many groups involved. Ever
since we dropped football we said we wanted it to resume.
We are not talking about the demise of any other sports.
We will continue to build up club and varsity sports.”
Effects uncertain
Mr. Dandes hesitated on this point, commenting: “It is
doubtful that football could be brought back without
affecting other sports unless SA or the Alumni could come
up with additional funds. The point is we are just in
infancy and we are not doing anything until we know
where we are going. We arc still not ready to move. We
might even decide we cannot do it.”
However, to date, apparently no snags are hindering the
progress of the investigation. Mr. Dandes revealed that
“the Athletic Review Board is incredibly favorable. The
response has been overwhelmingly favorable.”
Current discussion focuses on the return of football in
1973. Dr. Fritz feels that “as time goes on there will be
more definitive ideas.” He warned against exaggerating
current progress. “What we want to do is maintain a good
climate for discussion.”

MUlardFillmore election
may be declared invalid
by Mike Fedy
Staff Writer

Spectrum

A special meeting of the
Millard Fillmore College Student
Association Executive Board last
Thursday night failed to produce
any solution to the problems
resulting from the recent election
of new officers.
Consequently, previous
MFCSA president Brad Roberts
announced that he would
relinquish the “ad hoc position”
he had held while attempting to
break the election impasse. He
also warned those present at the
meeting: “1 will hav* to
recommend to the administration
that all Student Association
fee-collecting policies be
suspended” should no solution to
the problem be immediately
forthcoming.
The problem, which has left
the MFC student with no
executive officers at the present
time, stems from charges by

defeated

presidential candidate

Joan Hurlbut that the elections
were “unconstitutional.” As a
result, no winning candidate from
the April-May election has been
allowed to take office.
Ms. Hurlbut’s accusations were
sent in the form of a letter dated

May 7 to Nicholas Kish, assistant
dean of Continuing Education. In
that letter she stressed four
separate instances in which the
elections deviated from MFCSA
by-laws. These instances were the
mailing, receiving and validation
of ballots and the date on which
new officers shall assume
responsibility. Ms. Hurlbut
concluded that, since the elections
did not hold to the constitutional
by-laws concerning the four
{joints above, the election “should
be declared illegal. A new election
should be held.”
According to the constitution,
said Ms. Hurlbut, ballots were to
be mailed to MFC students five
days prior to the April 19 Student
Congress meeting. Actually, she
continued, no ballots were mailed
until at least six days after the
meeting. Secondly, she
maintained that the constitution
provides that only those ballots
received by the end of April shall
be declared valid for the election.
Therefore, as Ms. Hurlbut
asserted, Mr. Roberts’ extension
of the voting deadline to May 5
was unconstitutional. Thirdly, she
accused the Nominations
Committee of not validating the
ballots and, in fact, of not
—continued on

four—

under the aegis of AGORA if the
oft-postponed project is finally approved by Sub Board I and the Administration. For the
story on AGORA, turn to page 5.

Larry Backilman, a lemonade vendor, will be working

�State’s revenge

Faculty provost named;
Sociology head selected

Attica inmates transferred
by Dave Saleh

alternative proposals
further development.”

President Robert Kctter has
recommended that the State
University Board of Trustees
appoint Edwin P. Hollander as
provost of the Faculty of Social
Sciences and Administration. Dr.
Hollander had been acting provost
of the Faculty since Dec. IS.

Off-Campus Editor

In what was termed “a retaliation for the legal
actions brought by inmates of Attica and the Attica
Defense Committee (ADC) against Gov. Rockefeller,
Commissioner Oswald and the State Prison
Authority,” the State has begun a massive transfer of
Attica inmates to other facilities around the state.
Attempting to stop this action, the ADC has
organized a strong court battle on the grounds that
the transfers are “a deliberate attempt by the state
to deprive the inmates of their constitutional rights
to have access to counsel and to prepare adequately
for the threatened criminal prosecutions.”
ADC lawyers daim that many of the 74
prisoners to be transferred have legal action pending
against the state and may also be tried for alleged
criminal acts committed during the uprising.
Lawyers also pointed out that presently they are the
only legal counselors for the prisoners and to move
the prisoners during state legal action will be
depriving their right to counsel, which is
unconstitutional.

Levine named
In addition to the appointment
of Dr. Hollander, Adeline G.
Levine has been named chairman
of the Sociology Department. One
of the few women to hold such an
administrative position at the
State University of Buffalo in a
is
not
depfrtment
which
traditionally xwomen-oriented, it
will be her responsibility to give
direction to the department and
to handle personnel recruitment.

In a letter to members of the
Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration, Dr. Ketter noted

Levine was a college
dropout in her early years. She
later returned to school after
raising a family. ‘1 was like on a
high the whole time,” she says of
the experience. She feels that her
children and husband were “very
and
that
her
supportive”
educational experience helped her
and her husband “share and
develop together.”

Dr.

Adeline Levine
that Dr. Hollander joined the
State University of Buffalo in
1962 when it merged with the
State University ofNew York. Dr.
Ketter said it is appropriate that
Dr. Hollander “assume this key
administrative role at this time . . .
as we prepare to launch the
University’s second major phase
of development.”

Entering the Department of
Sociology in 1968, she achieved
the rank of associate professor
before her new appointment. Dr.
Levine has continued with her
interest in the sociology of
women at work, teaching such
semester’s
courses
as
last
“Women,
Work
and Social
Change.”

The major task Dr. Levine sees
before her is to develop and
understanding of society’s need
for sociologists. She wants to
preserve the pursuit of the
aspects
theoretical
of
the
sociology discipline as well as
“perhaps expand in the direction
Dr. Hollander stated that he of the community as a resource”
was “gratified and challenged by in putting theory into practice.
this opportunity to serve the Basically, in her leadership role,
University and the Faculty in this Dr. Levine feels she needs “to
capacity. I look forward to have a number of ideas and be
discussions within the Faculty of willing to see them die.”

I

BLUES!

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The Spectrum it pubiithad once a
Fridays,
on
tlmat
hmak
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duringthe •
summer
academic
sasstiont by Sub-Board 1, Inc.
Offices are located at 355 Norton
Hall, State University of New York
at Buffalo, 3436 Main Street,
Buffalo,
New
14214.
York.
Area
Telephone:
Code
716;
Editorial 831-4113;
Business
831-3610.

for advertising by
Educational Advertising
Service. Inc.. 360 Lexington Ave..
New York. N.Y. 10017.

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some prisoners have lost up to 50 pounds in “The

Box” and have been denied any form of a medical
examination since the rebellion.

Subdue not correct
In addition, ADC lawyers claim that all mail and
reading materials have been censored by prison
authorities. According to the ADC, such conditions
combined with the fact that none of the 28 prisoner
demands has yet been implemented illustrate that
the “State is out more to subdue the prisoners than
to correct the problems.”
Moreover, ADC accuses the state of trying to
whitewash the events at Attica by appointing a
prisoners.
member of the State Police Force to head the
Beatings reported
inquiry into the uprising, by appointing a biased jury
However, reported beatings by Attica guards to deliver indictments and by illegally obtaining
have been as recent as February 1972 and ADC evidence against prisoners. Despite this, probes into
lawyers are attempting to bring civil contempt suits the uprising continue by the courts who the ADC
both against the state and those responsible for the claims have the responsibility to ensure that “real
beatings. Here again, ADC lawyers have encountered justice” s obtained.

I

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“And ye shall seek me, and find me,
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Page two. The Spectrum-. Friday, 2 June 1972

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Dim outlook
Although a long legal battle has been fought to
keep the prisoners at Attica, 45 of the prisoners have
already been moved to prisons around the country
with only a remaining 14 given the right to stay.
Appeals against the move are still pending, but
according to ADC lawyers, “the outlook is dim” as
hearings have already been denied by bodies as high
as the Supreme Court.
In other legal action, ADC lawyers have
attempted to obtain rulings from Federal District
Judge John Curtin to force the state to improve
conditions within the prison which they claim have
“progressively worsened” since the uprising. The
first of these concerns reported beatings of prisoners
by the guards. In December 1971, Judge Curtin was
ordered by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals to
issue an injunction prohibiting State Corrections
Authorities from beating or verbally harassing

-

fine books from small
and large presses;
literary, film A drama
periodicals; imported art
cards; unusual gift items.

various procedural questions which have resulted in
an indefinite delay in the hearing’s scheduling
Regarding this, ADC lawyers have accused Judge
Curtin of purposely stalling and “refusing to enforce
his own injunction.”
Other conditions which the ADC claims to exist
and which they are attempting to correct include the
“maxi-maxi” wing of the prison called, ‘The Box.”
ADC lawyers allege that remaining prisoners who
participated in the rebellion are confined in ‘The
Box” where they receive meager food rations and
poor medical treatment. It has been reported that

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�Campus traffic violator
stillfaces city sanctions
Traffic violators at the State
University of Buffalo will still be
subject to off-campus sanctions
although a bill was recently passed

that enables local administrations
to better enforce on-campus
parking
tickets payment. In
effect, the bill grants State
University
administrators the
power
to withhold teachers'
salaries and students' grades and
transcripts if on-campus parking
tickets are not paid.
Explaining why the State
University of Buffalo is not going
to return to a campus-operated
ticketing system, Robert Hunt
(director of Environmental Health
and Safety) reported that the
present system of fining Violators
through the City of Buffalo and
Town of Amherst police is a more
equitable and adequate control of
campus parking. Until 1970, the
University
operated
on
a
campus-based system of fines.
According to Mr. Hunt, this
system failed for several
important reasons. First, he
reported, the traffic court which
was composed of students, had
authority only to hear thd cases of
student violators. This court, Mr.
Hunt pointed out, had no
jurisdiction over faculty and staff
violators, and thus they went
un fined.
In addition, Mr. Hunt
remarked: “The traffic court was
not completely detached from
personal relationships.” He hinted
that some persons were forced to
pay parking fines, while friends of
court members were often
exempt. Finally, Mr. Hunt
explained that the student court
did not adequately enforce

parking regulations because they
lacked direct authority.
Although the present system
seems more equitable to Mr.
Hunt, there are complaints that
the $5 paid by the parking
violator is too much money.

some argue that

University.

At the State University College
of Buffalo, the administration is
considering the reinstatement of
their campus-operated parking
system. The Buffalo State
newspaper, The Record recently

quoted two high

who

suggest

administrators

that

under

a

campus-operated system, violjriprs
would be fined only $2 rather

than the present $5. In addition,

they are reported as believing that

the money could better be used

by the campus than by the City of

Buffalo.

Strictly enforced
Ho wevcr, Mr. Hunt
commented that the State
University of Buffalo does not
consider these reasons as
sufficient grounds for returning to
a campus-based parking system.
Further, he doubts whether fines
could be reduced if the University
changed from its present system.

According to Mr. Hunt, under
the student-campus system in
1970, violators were paying $10
for a parking violation instead of
the $5 now paid to the City of
Buffalo. He also pointed out that
when “fines go down, violations

fine

&gt;A enterprises

Price increases scheduled

Meeting last week (May 25), the Board of
Directors of the Faculty Student Association (FSA)
approved operating budgets for the 1972-73 fiscal
year. The budgets mandate an average 3.9% increase
in the cost of goods and services. This increase
offsets an average 6% wage increase for FSA
employees.

position,

The stiffest increase will be an average 6.9% rise
Food Service, while the Bookstore will
implement an average 2.3% increase in prices. The
Bookstore increases will not be felt in the textbook
area but will be spread over all other items. Vending
plans no increase while prices will rise .7% in the
Service Center.
Student representatives on the Board and in
attendance argued for alternate methods of financing
the proposed wage increase without passing the cost
to students. Michael Nicolau, former president of the
Graduate Student Association (GSA), asked the
Board to “manipulate the stated depreciation rates
to free up monies that could offset the wage

return to the campus-based
ticketing system because it was
not only an inadequate system of
regulating parking violations, but

Depreciation rates are established by FSA to
allow the accumulation of reserve funds to replace
it wears
out. Each year -a
equipment as
predetermined amount is placed in FSA depreciation

go up.”

Lacking authority

Further,

money goes to the benefit of the
City of Buffalo rather than the

Mr.

Hunt

continued

that

parking fines should be both
strictly enforced and high enough
that some penalty is incurred.
Regarding this, he reported that
this University had fewer parking

violations this past year because
of fines was easily
enforced by off-campus

payment

authorities. Summing up his
Mr. Hunt maintained
that the University would not

because it was
students.

unjust

to many

for

increase.”

accounts.

However, Charles Balkin, FSA secretary,
asserted: “If the proposed budget were to be
disallowed by Albany because of the manipulation
of depreciation rates, FSA couldn’t do any busirtess
until a revised budget could be approved.”

Other discussion centered on comparisons of the
wage scales used by FSA and similar national
industries. It was revealed that FSA scales rank
above National averages in the Food Service and
vending

areas.

'

Price surveys conducted during the past year tp
document lower Food Service prices than those of
surrounding restaurants were presented. Edward
Doty, FSA treasurer, noted, however, that “the
comparisons were only on the basis of availability of
items rather than qualitative comparisons.”
Effort to silence
After an unsuccessful attempt to close debate,
Dr. Schindler continued the discussion: “The wage
percentage of the total price is of ultimate
importance.” He said, “The actual efficiency of
service should be discussed.”

Mr. Balkin pointed out “reflections of*an
improved efficiency” by revealing that Food Service,
while still exhibiting a deficit for the current year,
had greatly reduced the $70,000 loss incurred in the

1970-71 fiscal period.
A second vote to close debate and the
subsequent vote passing the budgets were identical.
Acting Vice President for Student Affairs Anthony
Lorenzetti joined Mr. Doty, Mr. Balkin and Dr.
Schlindler in voting yes, while Robert Dugan of QSA
and Doug Webb of SA voted no on both items. When
President Robert Ketter stated that the budgets had
passed, Mr. Doty added, "by the standard vote.”
The disposition of the Amherst land was once
again discussed by the Board. Previous discussion
had ranged from complete transfer of the property
to Sub Board I, Inc. to a sale of the property with
the proceeds to be used for the benefit of students.
Authorization passed
,
j
Dr. “Kefter’s suggestions authorizing PSA
officers to gather the information required for sale
of real estate and to concurrently investigate the use
of the proceeds were passed. Dr. Ketter instructed
the officers to include the suggestions of Sub Board
I, Inc. and the six student governments.
The meeting of the Board of Directors had been
immediately preceded by the semi-annual meeting of
the general membership of FSA at which time
elections for the new Board of Directors were
conducted.
The new membership of the Board includes
Robert L. Ketter, President of the State University
of Buffalo; Edward Doty, vice president for
Operations and Systems; Charles Balkin, assistant
vice president for Operations and Systems; Bernard
Gelbaum, vice president for Academic Affairs;
Anthony Lorenzetti, acting vice president for
Student Affairs; James Schindler, representing the
Faculty Senate; Doug Webb, Student Association
and Robert Dugan, Graduate Student Association.
One position was left open pending the outcome of
the contested results of the Millard Fillmore College
Student Association (MFCSA) elections.
Additionally, elections were held for new
officers. Named were. Dr. Ketter, president; Mr.
Balkin, secretary and Mr. Doty, treasurer. The
election for vice president, traditionally a student
position, was deferred again, pending settlement of
the MFCSA controversy.
,

,

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ARNLEY-AMCO-LUCAS-BOSCH-STEBRO-CARELLO
Friday,

2 June 1972 The
.

Spectrum Page three
.

�Committee actions

SA expenditure is refused

A special Community Action Corps (CAC) issue
published by ethos has created problems for CAC,
ethos, Sub-Board I, Inc., and the Student
Association. Attempting to settle any difficulties,
the SA Executive Committee decided not to
ethos for the $400
sanction CAC’s payment to
publication.
SA treasurer Jeff Osinski explained that CAC
was not authorized to commission such an issue, that
ethos overcharged CAC, and that ethos
demonstrated “journalistic irresponsibility” in the
issue’s production. Such irresponsibility, according
to SA officials, stemmed from the reproduction
without permission of other publications’ material.
Included in these other publications were The
Spectrum the Courier Express and the Buffalo
Evening News. &lt;,
Ethos’ Supervising Editor Stuart Berger argued
that ethos had no control over what was contained
in the issue. He pointed out that all material was
provided by CAC and that ethos merely went
through the mechanics of publishing it. However, SA
members countered that since the ethos nameplate
appeared on the issue, ethos was responsible for all
material contained in it.
“See you in court’
Attempting to persuade SA to reverse its
position, Mr. Berger explained that any complaints
.

of journalistic irresponsibility were settled by a
previously arranged compromise between CAC,
ethos. Sub Board and The Spectrum. According to
Mr. Berger, this settlement would have blocked out
the ethos name on every issue with a blank white
sticker. Despite this, the Executive Committee
refused to reconsider or reverse its decision. Mr.
Berger promised the Committee that he would seek
legal action through the student judiciary.
In other Executive Committee action, Mark
Borenstein, SASU chairman, explained the aims of
that organization. Mr. Borertstein remarked that it is
imperative that the State University of Buffalo SA
renew its membership in SASU.
He pointed out that the SASU legislative
program includes such crucial issues as free tuition,
an insured loan program for students, and changes in

current registration policies and the voting rights of

the student.
He continued that SASU is working on many
programs of benefit to the student. For them to be
successful, he stressed, the importance of SA
support. However, no action was taken by the
Executive Committee who tabled consideration of
SASU membership until today’s meeting at 1:30
p.m. Also to be considered today are summer
budgets and the National Student Association
convention in Washington.

Revitalization

Three magazines to
supplement yearbook

—Cohen

MillardFillmore...
accounting for 50 “green ballots”
that were ,to be distributed to
those students who did no tl
receive mail ballots. Finally, she
protested the belated May 10 date
on which new officers were to
take office.
Certain delays

,

Jack Bunting, president-elect,
and Brian Coyne, vice
president-elect, countered that
Ms. Hurlbut was fully aware
beforehand that certain delays,
such as the re-scheduling of thp
Student Congress meeting finr
April 12 to April 19, would
render the
electi ojii
unconstitutional in some aspects..
Mr. Coyne pointed out that Mr.
Bunting himself announced at the
Student Congress meeting that the
then present election process was
continuing unconstitutionally.
Since neither Ms. Hurlbut tjor
anyone else objected at that time,

he could see 5 no reason for her
objections wow. Ms. Hurlblujt
replied that the closeness of the
presidential election results (a
difference of three votes)

compelled her to take this action.
Mr. Roberts explained that his
extension of the voting deadline
was made necessary by the delays
in the mailing of ballots and
pointed out that while less than
100 ballots had been received by
the previous April 30 deadline,
more than 400 had been received
by May 5.
Neutral party
Anthony Lorenzetti, acting
vice president for Student Affairs,
who lent his office as a neutral
party for the tabulation and
validation of the elections ballots,
was also present at the meeting.
He assured Ms. Hurlbut and the
others that his office would
validate all the ballots as soon as
the election problem is cleared up.
Explaining the missing “green
ballots,” Mr. Coyne informed Ms.
Hurlbut that eight of the ballots
were distributed pnd the names of
the students receiving them listed.
The
were sfiQ in MFC offices, where
they had been since before the
election. At Ms. Hurlbut’s request,
Mr. Coyne and Mr. Roberts later

Page four The Spectrum Friday, 2 June 1972
.

.

—continued from page one—

produced the missing ballots.
The May 25 meeting was called
by Mr. Roberts and Dr. Lorenzetti
as a follow-up to an earlier
meeting at which they sought to
avoid any further difficulties, such
as a new election, by finding a
legal solution, mutually agreeable
to both Ms. Hurlbut and Mr.
Bunting.
Those present at the meeting
agreed that the establishment of a
Judicial Committee could best
bring a quick solution. This
constitutional provision calls for
the parties involved to choose,
from ten MFC students, three
students with whom they are not
acquainted. These students would
review the situation and make a
decision binding on both parties.
Mr. Bunting and Mr. Coyne,
however, saw no need for a
Judicial Committee and sought,
instead, the simple validation of
the total ballots. This solution was
unsatisfactory to Ms. Hurlbut.
Mr.« Bunting was forced to
leave the meeting early and
therefore could not be present for
any final agreement. No further
meetings were scheduled.

“Yearbooks tend to be viewed
in the same light as fraternities
and sororities,” commented
Lynda Teri, newly elected
Buffalonian editor-in-chief, as she
explained her ideas to revitalize
the University’s yearbook.
Basically, her plans include
making Buffalonian “more
relevant” by moving away from
traditional yearbook concepts.
Involved in this, according to
Ms. Teri, is
publication of
three soft-cover literary magazines
and one yearbook rather than the
annual production of one
hardcover, expensive and lengthy
yearbook. If successful, Ms. Teri
explained that the three
magazines and one yearbook
would combine to fit into a
binder.
Material for the literary
magazines will be solicited from
the student body at large and
judged by a panel of Buffalonian
staff members for publication. In
addition, Ms. Teri said, the
Buffalonian staff would
contribute to the magazines. “By
providing three literary magazines
and one traditional yearbook at
the end,” Ms. Teri remarked, “we
hope to meet the tastes of every
student.”

Training ground
She continued: “As for now,
there is no publication on campus
for those students who want to
print their work. On a campus this
size, there should be at least one
publication for the new authors,
poets, or artists to spread their
wings.f! Such a magmzine,
according to Ms. Ten, can “offer
students the perfect place to try
their artistic or literary talents.”
However, she maintained that

each magazine would be properly
organized around some type of
central theme; “I don’t want a
haphazard display of talent
each magazine will revolve around
one or two central themes
Combined with these structural
changes, Ms. Teri plans to select a
new name for the yearbook
Buffalonian, she remarked, “is the
name for a yearbook and not for
literary magazines.”

”

Tentatively, Ms. Teri plans to
publish quarterly at the end of
November, February, April and
June. However, as Ms. Teri argues,
“the only way we can hope to
carry this through is with
additional fpnding.” Presently,
she is exploring warious channels
of support for her ideas.
Positive feedback

Hopeful that she will be able to

obtain additional money, Ms. Ten
explained that she is “really
excited and enthused about this
new idea
I think it is a really
break
from tradition
important
and 1 hope others will agree.” So
far, she continued, feedback has
been pretty positive. “I’ve been
speaking with various people from
all segments of the University
they all sound pretty excited
about the new format.”
...

Another problem faced by the
Buffalonian, Ms. Teri remarked, is
its need for interested staff. As
she explained: “Since it is a new

idea, staff members aren’t that
numerous. j Still, we want to get
many.people involved.” Anyone
in helping to transform
the
intdtf*' student
literary magazine is encouraged to
visit the Buffalonian office, Room
356, Norton Hall.
.

Interested
kuffhlaniin

�AGORA: student vending in Norton
by Bill Vaccaro
Contributing Editor

AGORA has been resurrected. Or at least that’s what
it will be if the administration and Sub Board I, Inc. let
Norton Hall House Council head Carol Raynor have her
way.
She and other members of the House Council have
begun an effort to revive the long dormant project.
Originally, it was envisioned as a centralized University
market and forum area in the Norton Hall center lounge.
AGORA (the Greek term for public forum and
marketplace) is now seen by Ms. Raynor as “an
administrative and information disseminating organ for
those [student] organizations wishing to function in an
information and vending capacity.’’
In less formalistic terms, the AGORA project would
simply be an “organ” through which a student peddler
whether he or she is selling leather belts, crunchy granola,
or The Complete Works of Chairman Mao can sell his or
her wares without fearing the heavy restraining hand of the
administration or Albany.

Mr. Lummel said that the proposal was sent time and
time again to Sub Board 1 for approval. However, Sub
Board I kept returning it for “technical reasons.” The most
obvious of these was a state law which proclaimed that no
one could sell anything on a state university campus unless
he had a license to sell with the appropriate faculty
student association (PSA).
He also pointed out that there were internal squabbles
over AGORA’s inception. Mr. Lummel noted that there
were “strong reactions from one of the participants
“against cooperating with AGORA. The group felt that
AGORA wasn’t a justified vehicle for what they wanted to
do.”
Sununin

initiated to cover damages that might result during vending
operations, especially those to the lawn area. Although an
“actual price hasn’t been established yet,” she offered as
an example, two dollars a week as a reasonable figure.
She noted that there are some problems that still have
to be contended with, such as food, outside noise levels,
security and coordination with related outdoor events
sponsored by UUAB or the Theater Department.
Additionally, another difficulty is proving to be a major
a certain state law. At the May 23
stumbling block
House Council meeting, discussion dealt with this state law
that requires the collection of a state sales tax for every
-

transaction made.

ipproval
those
iber

-

—

Administrative organ
AGORA would not only be used to secure the “right”
of every student to sell his handcrafted items or political
pamphlets, but it would also help relieve the obvious
congestion that plagues the first floor corridors of Norton
Hall.

The AGORA proposal would eliminate such
congestion requiring that each student vendor reserve a
space in the center lounge with the option of being able to
move into the fountain area of Norton during the warm
weather months.
The proposal
At last Tuesday’s Sub Board I meeting, the AGORA
proposal was tabled until its next meeting to work out
some minor changes in the proposal. If, as it looks now,
AGORA is approved by Sub Board I, the following things
would result;
the implementation and administration of AGORA
would temporarily fall under the responsibilities of the
House Council until an appropriate council and director
were approved by Sub Board I;
the AGORA council would be composed of at least
five members, of whom at least three would be
information and/or merchandise vendors in the project.
This, however, was questioned at Tuesday’s Sub Board 1
meeting and may be amended;
the council would act as an administrative body to
deal with the administration and as an information
gathering and disseminating service for its participants. Its
director would be the Sub Board I Norton Hall Division
Director until a suitable replacement could be found;
most importantly, the council would relegate all
responsibilities for conformity to its recommended
guidelines to AGORA’s participants. Its role would be that
of a mediator rather than executive enforcer.
-

-

AGORA space?

-

-

Vendor responsible
Ms. Raynor noted that under this proposal, the vendor
would be totally responsible for his or her own actions.
“We would advise him of his responsibilities and the
possible consequences” for failing to meet them, she said.
AGORA could then become the arm to deal with the
administration; the representative body for 'all those
participating in it. By working in this mode, Ms. Raynor
believes, “AGORA can move e .. .as a body to deal with
the administration on a one-to-one basis.”
She recognized the fact that this would limit AGORA
from what it was originally conceived as of being. But, she
maintained: “It may be the best way.” By doing this, it
would ‘let the vendors do what they please.”
The idea for AGORA began in May 1971, according
head, Jim Lummel. The project was initially
the joint project of Norton Hall staff members Ed Dale,
Bill HeUwig and Ann Hicks.
to its former

The proposal consisted of devising an open forum
whereby students would have a place to sell their items

without being hassled by either the administration or
Albany. Mr. CShunel assumed the chairmanship of the"
project in September 1971, with the idea of finalizing it
and making it an actual reality.

They argued that the project was doomed to failure if
groups were allowed to work outside the structure.
According to Mr. Lummel, the arguments boiled down the
obvious conclusion that if this took place, things would be
the same as before.
Internal hassles
With this problem still unsettled, an effort to revive
the proposal was initiated last spring. However, more
problems loomed to stall the project. Mr. Lummel
reported that the House Council put a hold on the entire
project. He continued that Sub Board I “still hadn’t
approved the entire working model,” but only its concept.
“Finally,” he remarked, “it (the project] just got to a
dead end. That one state law [concerning licensing with
FSA] kept popping up.” Mr. Lummel pointed out that
one possible reason for AGORA’s initial demise might have
been that they “went into it too hastily.” Ms. Raynor
suggested another reason for the project’s initial setback.
“House council made its decisions without consulting
those people who would be in the vending and
information” area, namely, the future participants
themselves.
However, she is very enthusiastic over the prospects of
assigning space for vendors during the warm weather
months. Under this proposal, space would be allotted both
inside and outside Norton for each vendor. It would then
be up to the vendor himself whether he wanted to go
indoors or set up ;(u8 stand outside.
,
V

OtfftWr

The possibility of a registration fee was also raised t&gt;y
the House Council' chairman. She said that it would be

The fountain area between' Norton Hall and Lockwood
Library will be utilized by student vendors during the
warm weedier months should the AGORA project be
approved. The proposal is expected to be passed by Sub
Board I at its next meeting. According to its supporters, its
biggest obstacle appeers to be the support of the
Administration.
and sign a letter attesting to their “intent” to file a “casual
sales" tax return. Such action is necessary before the
administration gives its final approval.
A great deal of vocal opposition was raised by Pete
Aronson, a representative of People’s News Service and
member of the House Council. He felt that by filing the
tax return form, the House Council would, in effect, be
enforcing the state’s laws for the state itself.
“It would seem ludicrous,” he asserted, “that we
would ask the state to enforce their own laws.” He
complained that in order for the state “not to Screw, us,”
the House Council was asking students that “we screw
ourselves.” He asked whether the House Council was
working for the interests of the state or for those of the
.
student body.
-

Will it succeed?
One House Council member disagreed with this
contention; “What’s to prevent Kleinhans or a Christmas
Studio [a novelty shop on Elmwood Ave.] to come on
campus in order to rip off students and also not pay
taxes?” Another House Council member explained that to
pay the sales tax would be “self-agreement so we can be
cool about it, pay the tax and get what we want.”
After debating on the issue for over an hour, it was
finally agreed that the statement of intent would be
requested and not required for membership into AGORA.
Whatever problems it might cause the House Council in
seeking the administration’s.approval remain to be seen.
1 : With the-TproWem of certain state laws still unsolved
and the administration’s approval still in the balance, the
inception of AGORA remains to be seen.

Friday,

2 June 1972 The Spectrum Page five
.

.

�Strengthen programs
i. ■

•

&gt;

V

,

Graduate school necessity
-

~z~i

*

1$

forced to do
As
something else.
an example, he
cited the aerospace industry:
“Here are people who have the
intelligence to be re-trained but
haven’t got a place to start. How
are we to help?”
Dr. Hull feels that graduate
programs have to find out what
their “mission” is and once they
do, must come as close as possible
to accomplishing it.
Regarding the role of an “ivory
tower scholar” in society, Dr. Hull
maintained that the place is an
one field and

graduate school a necessary

part of a university or just a
“frill?” That is one of the many
questions McAllister Hull
acknowledges he must f ce as new
head of the Graduate School.
In a recent The Spectrum
interview, Dr. Hull said that there
is an attitude that must be
corrected on the part of society
that graduate schools might be
“unnecessary.” He noted that if
there is criticism of a graduate

program or disenchantment with
it, he would like to make sure that
is justified: “We have no right to
expect support just because we
we must be accountable
exist
to the society.”
He cited the mismatch of
supply and demand of degrees.
“We have to find out if there are
not enough degrees to fit the
need, or are there not enough
needs for the number of degrees
we hand out.” He stressed that
this is a question which must be
answered before judgment can be
passed.
...

Problems previewed
The six months spent in office
as acting dean, Dr. Hull said, gave
him a “good view of the job,” and
made him more aware of
problems that need to be worked
on.
Another difficulty Dr. Hull
sees facing graduate schools is the
role they should play in “mid
career re-training” of persons who
become dissatisfied with their
present job; or have specialized in

aie

yet.

K

Some have suggested ad hoc
programs in graduate studies, but
Dr. Hull said their development is
improbable. ‘To some extent the
graduate school is “a4 hoc,” he
explained. “A large part of
obtaining a degree is the person’s
thesis, which he does for himself.
But [ad hoc study] is unlikely in
general because it doesn’t fit the
graduate program as well as it
does the undergraduate.”

Attempting to fulfill the
University motto of “Let each
important one: “We need the become what he is capable of
their being,” Dr. Hull reported that the
“ivory tower scholars’
activities increase the quality of graduate school works with the
life.” He explained that there is a students to find their own levels.
need to explore the spiritual He remarked that there are
stresses,
aspects of life. Although he is a stringent standards and
of a
the
denial
of
entry
and
that
would
be
physicist, he says that it
study is
disastrous if the mental part of person into an area of
a
and
only
judgment,
professional
situations were left unaccounted
of
questionable
validity.
for. “We need the intellectual to
Dr. Hull perceives his role as
take these things into
one
of an advisor, both to
consideration,” he added.
students and to the administration
and feels that as long as his
Strengthen programs
colleagues thought he was capable
According to Dr. Hull, there is
to do the job, he would accept
a need in the graduate school for
that responsibility.
more, but especially better,
Although there have been
programs. It is imperative, he
strained relationships within the
noted, to make the “already
...

strong programs stronger” and to
strengthen other existing
programs, rather than add
programs for the sake of number.
He added that there has been
consideration of expansion into
specific areas of study but that
nothing had been approved as of

administration, expecialiy
between President Ketter and a
number of provosts, Dr. Hull does
not foresee any such problems. He
explained that his role is advisory
while the provosts are managerial.
Dr. Hull expects a good working
relationship.

Me A Ulster Hull

Dear Jeff,
You thought we wouldn't
find out, didn't you?
But our spies are everywhere
&amp; find out everything.
We know the most intimate
details of your private life.
There's nothing you can
keep hidden from us.
And now we're going
to tell the world.
Everyone will know

Don't try to stop us.
There's nothing you can do
It's all over for you,
Jeff Greenwald.
(It's your birthday!)

HAPPY!!!!

THE

BLACKSMITH
SHOP

1375DELAWARE AVL
*6ATE$CatOI

2- v J»

PROUD TO
ANNOUNCE
THAT ITS
STUDENT
MENU
and the
ONE CENT
SAtE
’

through the
UM_MER

Page six The Spectrum Friday,
.

.

2 June 1972

�■TheBuffalo’out on probation
Judge cites Hove ofcountry
9

by Paul Palo

The word is justice.”
The defendants in the trial of ‘The
Buffalo” openly admitted in the
The trial of ‘The Buffalo” is now courtroom that they were in the building
history. On May 18 in Buffalo Federal on the night of the crime and that they
Court Charles Lee Darst, his wife Maureen, intended to “liberate” draft and military
Jeremiah Horrigan, Marie Masters and records. They argued, however, that they
James Martin were sentences to one year committed no crime and that the real
probation each in connection With a raid crime being committed was the war in
on the old post office building last Southeast Asia.
Special to the Spectrum

summer.

U.S. District Judge John Curtin placed
the five on probation, but Said they could
attend rallies, make speeches and visit with
their friends during that period.
Throughout the two-week-long trial it was

They maintained; “We acted only to
save lives and stop the killing.” Their
defense was directed towards proving that
point. The testimony relating to the war
and U.S. involvement had never before
been heard in such length in a courtroom.
The trial was, in fact, much in contrast to
that of the Catonsville Nine where
testimony relating to the war had been
ruled irrelevant. This is especially
interesting since Charles Darst’s brother
had been a defendant in the Catonsville
trial.

the Southeast Asian war and the moral
convictions of the five young people which
had really been on trial.
In passing sentence. Judge Curtin said,
“Your love of country is above that of
most other citizens. If others had the same
sense of morality, the war would have been
over a long time ago.” Maximum penalties
the five could have received were 12 years Inspiring example
in prison and $12,000 fine.
Charles said he had been greatly
influenced by the struggle of his brother in
‘Surprised and elated’
the peace movement. Charles also admitted
A seven-woman, five-man jury found that he had never felt prouder than when
‘The Buffalo” guilty on April 27 of he burned his draft card before 3,000
conspiracy and intent to commit third people at Notre Dame. All of ‘The
degree burglary, but acquitted them of an Buffalo” are woven from the same moral
additional charge of removing military fiber and deep religious roots. In their
records. Supporters of ‘The Buffalo” were words, “We are for life, love, laughter and
surprised and elated when Judge Curtin’s for children.”
decision was announced. They even went
During the trial the five acted as their
so far as to hold an impromptu picnic on own attorneys with attorney Vincent
the lawn near the new federal office Doyle as co-council. The most shocking
building.
testimony of the trial came from several
Jeremiah Horrigan’s father said, “Judge Vietnam veterans who told of secret
Curtin has proved the word above his hatchet flights into Cambodia, of war
bench in the courtroom means something. crimes committed against the people of

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In it the two superpowers pledged to Conduct
The Cold War turned cozy last week as President “their mutual relations on the basis of peaceful
Richard Nixon and Soviet Communist Party leader co-existence,” to “do their utmost to avoid military
Leonid Brezhnev closed their week-long summit confrontations and to prevent the outbreak of
talks with a joint call for the “strengthening of nuclear war/’ and to “do everything in their power
so that conflicts or situations will not arise which
universal security and international cooperation.”
Overlooking their obvious differences in would serve to increase international tensions.”
Additionally, the principles stressed a mutual
Indochina and the Mideast, the United States and
Soviet heads of state issued both a joint commitment to promote economic and cultural ties,
communique and a declaration of principles which calling for the establishment of joint bodies to reach
underlined their desire to replace their nations’ these ends.
stand-off frigidity of the past 25 years with a “more

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Falling into smiling satisfaction at the end of the
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Kosygin to visit the United States. The Soviet leaders
accepted without setting a date, but White House
officials reported such a visit was unlikely until after
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Nevertheless, several important points emerged
which signalled a certain amount of yielding by both
sides, including:
possible “reciprocal reductions” of forces in

Though little apparent progress was made
toward a Vietnam settlement, Presidential security
adviser Henry Kissinger affirmed: “It is our intention Europe;
to bring about a framework that permits a
a European security conference to be held
resumption of fruitful negotiations. How soon that “without undue delay”;
general support for “consideration of further steps
will be accomplished I don’t want to speculate on,”
added Dr. Kissinger. He also announced that the to bring about a military relaxation in the Middle
mining of Haiphong harbor and the U.S. bombing of East”;
North Vietnam would continue despite growing
an agreement to limit both offensive and defensive
Russian opposition.
strategic arms, called
major step toward curbing:
The joint declaration of principles, an unusual and ultimately ending the anna race”;
addition Ip the usual communique, was initially
the immediate establishment of a U.S.-Soviet Joint
proposed by the Soviets and accepted by President commission to “increase economic ties.”
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Long, difficult and detailed
Finally, the principles declared that “the
development of U.S.-Soviet relat
The joint
communique, hammered out over private talks
which White House officials termed “long,
sometimes difficult and very detailed,” was little
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two escaped. Agent Don Adams claimed
that seven pair of shoes had been found in
the building, and thus deduced that
two
people escaped.

•

BIPFALI
TEXTBMK

r

If the shoes fits
The chief prosecutor in the case, James

GraWe, presented oniy witnesses who
testified about the incidents that occurred
in the old post office building. One FBI
agent testified that there were seven people
involved on that night in August and that

Joint call

•

•

Vietnam and torturing of North
Vietnamese prisoners. Another witness, a
social worker and journalist, spoke of how
he was asked to leave the country by the
Saigon government after he exposed the
famed “tiger cages.”

-

Friday,

2 June 1972 The
.

Spectrum Page seven
.

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individuals
The scene was one that had become all too familiar
on trial for acts of protest and conscience. Yet, surprisingly the
outcome differed as 'The Buffalo" were spared prison sentences and
fines. Instead, Judge John Curtin placed all five on probation and
declared that their "love of country is above that of most other
citizens."
The decision was declared a victory for both the defendants and
for the anti-war movement. However, while the five questioned the
M) OF
slaughter in Vietnam, Nixon was launching a devastating attack in
Southeast Asia. While 'The Buffalo" picnicked on the lawns of the
Federal Building, US bombers unleashed thousands of tons of bombs
/r
QXHUOST
from one end of North Vietnam to the other. And while we all
congratulated ourselves on such a fine moral triumph, mines were
planted in North Vietnam harbors to cut off the flow of foreign
supplies to Hanoi.
Reactions to such atrocities ranged from caution among politicians
to a sense of futility on campuses. Protest was stifled by a sense of
a feeling that we had all been there before so what is the
helplessness
use in trying.
Judge Curtin proclaimed that if other Americans had the same
sense of morality as 'The Buffalo," the war would have been over a
long time ago. He was wrong. What is to be learned from 'The Buffalo"
is that there is no way to protest. Neither words nor marches nor acts
of civil disobedience seem to change the minds or sway the actions of
those decision-makers in power.
Despite this, some good may have been gleened from the trial of
"The Buffalo." Precedents were started by both allowing the
defendants to argue their case and by hearing testimony relating to US
by Claude E. Welch
involvement in the war. Such precedents if continued will hopefully
create the consciousness needed to avoid the next Vietnam.
A ssociate Professor Political Science
It is time now to discover new meanings for the word protest. It is
not enough to mouth the words and repeat the gestures of past
A few years ago, campuses exploded into
movements. Moreover, instead of punishing protestors as Judge Curtin
riotous
participation. The tumultuous events of
that
all
are
suggest Gandhi and King were punished, it is imperative
1969-1970,
in particular, prompted many
encouraged to challenge that which has previously been blindly
shook their heads in wonderment,
Many
responses.
accepted.
bemusement, or disgust. For some legislators,
campus unrest led to budgetary retribution; in
California, the governor used his line-item veto for
two years to deny faculty pay raises. Not all
responses were negative, however. The public
questioning of the values and moralities of university
When intercollegiate football was discontinued in the fall of 1971, education occasioned a major rethinking of
few regretted its demise. Past experiences showed that this University is university structure. In particular, thought was given
unable to muster enough moral or financial support for football to to channeling the spasmodic, often
anomic,
survive. Such disinterest was mirrored in the poor attendance records
of
1969-1970
participation
or
in
“regular”
every
game.
that plagued
Vet, there appears to exist several campus factions, notably the “constructive” channels.
The basic problem, of course, arose from the
administration and alumni, interested in a football renewal. Thus,
recent attempts to revive football must be viewed with both skepticism
fact that university channels for governance are
and alarm. It would be disastrous if this University committed itself to rarely clear-cut or defined. Habit, inertia, friendship
a highly expensive athletic program that few were interested in and emnities, as often as not set the ways in which
supporting.
decisions were made. In many schools particularly
However, initial reports of a feasibility study and a consortium of those with small
enrollments
the prevailing mode
universities are encouraging. Such reports indicate that the whole issue
of
resembled
governance
that
of
the club, with the
of any kind of revival is being approached both carefully and
attendant deference and black-balls. How could
reasonably. Concerns for expense, the continuation of other sports, and
students leam the by-ways of such clubs, even if
the establishment of an academic program must be applauded. Also
commendable are the wishes of some athletic members to avoid the they could get in the back or side door? Problems
multiplied in larger, more complex schools, where
"pitfalls of the past."
It appears, though, that one of these pitfalls has already been decision-making seemed to rest in a never-never land,
encountered publicity leaks to the city media have clouded the issue far from the desk of the individual with whom one
with false and incomplete information. If, as Dr. Fritz suggests, the chanced to speak.
Athletic Department wants to create believability with all segments of
Some schools have experimented with
the University, such tactics to secure publicity .must be immediately university-wide
assemblies, representing the student,
stopped.
staff
and
faculty
constituencies. Such experiments,
Moreover, attempts must be made to inform campus members of
as notably (in New York) at Binghamton and
the progress and direction of all studies and actions.
Columbia, cut counter to the emerging modes of
decision-making. The current trend, it seems to me,
is increasing faculty control over major academic
decisions
with the obvious exception, in
publicly-supported universities, of the budget.
Faculty senates or faculty organizations are tasting
power not theirs in recent American academic
history.
Friday, June 2, 1972
Vol. 23, No. 1
What explains this state of affairs? What
implications does it hold for student participation?
Editor-in-Chief Jo-Ann Armao
The increased size and complexity of
Managing Editor
Jeff Graenwald
universities has necessitated decentralization. The
Jack Herlan
Business Manager
hold of the academic department over curriculum
Co-Advertising Manager
Susan Hory
and basic staffing remains unchallenged. Disciplines
Co-Advertising Manager
Jeff Reiman
and departments in effect become synonymous.
Acting Production Supervisor
Lawrence McNiece
Then, too, the faculty voice in decision-making
Campus . . .
.Ian C. Oewaal
Lit.
Michael Silverblatt
Drama
has
been enshrined in’ university charters, even in
Copy
vacant
Billy Altman
Music
state wide contracts and legislation. The recent
Off-Campus
Feature
vacant
Dave Saleh
Graphic Arts
Mickey Osterreicher
Tom Tolas
Photo
announcement by the AAUP of vigorous pursuit of
Layout
Maryhope Runyon
Sports
Steve Lipman
collective bargaining spells the end, it seems to me,
of the collegial, club-like model of smaller schools
The Spectrum is served by United Press International, College Press
years ago
the fond memory to which many cling.
Service, The Los Angeles Timas Syndicate and Publishars-Hall Syndicate.
University administration itself shows two
Rapublication of matter herein in any form without the express consent of
contradictory
trends. On the one hand, there has
the Editor-irt-Chief is forbidden.
emerged a corps of professional administrators the
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.
deans of students, the manager of food services, the
ubiquitous administrative assistant who undertakes
-

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. .

....

....

-

-

Page eight. The Spectrum Friday, 2 June 1972
.

administration as a full-time career. There is little, if
any, opportunity for such individuals to undertake
teaching or research. On the other hand, there is the
second trend (one rapidly weakening, I must note)
of administrators drawn from the faculty,
attempting to maintain some semblence of scholarly
activity. Their service may be short, witness to the
pressures of administration and the relative comfort
of “normal” academic activity. (In less than a
decade, the average tenure in office of a college
president has slipped from eight to four years.)
The implications for student participation derive
from the decentralized, increasingly faculty-oriented
mode of decision-making. The Uni-ve rsity actually
represented semi-organized anarchy, a form of
institutionalized Di-versity. Efforts to be
campus-wide strike me (at least at the moment) as
doomed to sterility. Yet, in opening “regular” or
“constructive” channels for participation, the
entry-way for students has often been through
university-wide assemblies (fruitless debating
societies) or through token representation on some
university-wide committees. The most effective
means for participation seems to be more grassroots,
more via the academic departments.
I am led to these conclusions on the basis of a
personally unsatisfactory year as chairman of the
Faculty Senate Committee on Student Affairs. This
committee is charged with examining and reporting
on
all problems affecting or of interest to
students.” You could not ask for a more sweeping
set of opportunities. Yet I found it practically
impossible to uncover any undergraduate interest in
working with the committee. The answers may be
easy to find; the Student Affairs Committee “can’t
do anything;” “I’m too busy cramming for my
MCAT;” “Who cares about the University as a whole
anyhow?”
Such statements can be reduced to a few simple
statements of fact. A group such as the Student
Affairs Committee may have too broad a scope and
too little influence to arouse interest. The days of
mass, unfocused participation have passed, and
channels for individual participation remain
uncharted. Individuals have other, more important
things to do. A sense of university-wide community
scarcely exists. What is needed, it seems to me, is a
concerted interest in student participation at the
departmental level, for it is there that key decisions
are often made.
I’m sorry about the apparent apathy, as
detrimental in its own way as the earlier
explosiveness, about student participation. Are there
any ways of creating a sense of community through
responsive, responsible participation? Any
suggestions would be gratefully received.
“

...

Editor s note: The above is a guest faculty opinion
column written by Claude E. Welch
of the Political
Science Department. The Spectrum would like such
faculty opinion to be a regular feature. Any faculty
member wishing to contribute a column on any
topic should contact Jo-Ann Armao. Room 355
Norton Hall, ext. 4113

Let ten
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by Jeff Green waid

many months it has been fashionable for
political “pros,” “pundits” and “analysts” to dismiss
McGovern’s candidacy simply saying: ‘The
Democratic party will never nominate McGovern.”
It is apparent now that there was at least a slight
inaccuracy in that forecast. Indeed, unless
Humphrey manages to stop McGovern in California,
and that is unlikely, McGovern will almost certainly
be the Democratic nominee for president. It would
be unwise, however, for one to completely dismiss
that initial prediction. For while clearly McGovern
a fine chance to be the Democratic standard
bearer in November, it is not at all so certain that it
is the “Democratic” party that will be nominating
him. Not what we would have considered the
Democratic party four months ago at least not the
party of Daley, Johnson, Stennis and Meany. Oh, of
course, it was also the party of John Kennedy, but
was the candidate of Daley and Meany, and
hadn’t been endorsed by Abbie Hoffman.
The Democratic party this year is more than just
the party machinery as many disgruntled party
veterans will tell you. It’s a party that includes some
familiar faces and names, but mostly, it’s a party of
just plain democrats and in many cases people using
the label “Democrat” out of convenience sake. In
fact, statistics estimate that nearly 90% of the
delegates to the Democratic Convention will be
attending their first convention.
McGovern’s delegates are in some cases coming
bound to him from the primary states. Some have
come through traditional party mechanisms. But
thus far, the real story of this campaign lies in states
like Arizona, Texas, Georgia, Idaho, and even
Humphrey’s own Minnesota. These are among the
states where McGovern supporters have packed the
precinct caucuses, booting astounded party regulars
out of their expected convention seats. These are the
states giving McGovern a vote here and a vote there.

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Let ten to the Editor should not exceed 300 words,
and all must be signed with the name, telephone
number and address of the writer included. A pen
name or initial’s will be used if desired, and all letters
will he kept in strict confidence. However, no
unsigned letters will be considered for publication.
All letters should be addressed to The Spectrum
Ediior-in-Chief Room 355 Norton Hall.

rive

ited

The Spectrum reserves the right to edit or delete
material submitted for publication, but this will only
be done for reasons of style, grammar or length. The
intent of letters will not be changed.

Sickle cell misquote
To the Editor

Your article on Sickle Cell Anemia (The
Spectrum, April 24 and 25, 1972) by Al Benson,
deserves wide attention. It is the kind of thing we
need to provide information on many aspects of
sickle cell disease, at a time when it has become the
subject of much public discussion, some of it
ill-informed. The article quotes a paper of mine on
some of the wider problems, “Hereditary Anemias in
Society,” in press in Symposium on Heredity in
N Y. State Birth Defects Institute. Mr.
Society
Benson quoted from a draft of fhis text and thereby
perpetuated a minor error, since corrected. 1 wrote
that Dr. Samuel Johnson never married. I was wrong;
he married a rich widow but had no children.
A more important correction concerns the
verbal quote attributed to me about the supposed
stigma of having sickle cell anemia. This is a
misquotation of an Italian paper about reactions to
thalassemia in families in a certain part of Italy,
which I mentioned as an example of how people
may react to the presence of hereditary diseases. 1
doubt if it applies to sickle cell anemia.
Furthermore, in discussion of supposed neglect of
sickle cell anemia, my main point was that apparent
neglect was merely a part of past and present
unevenness in providing adequate health care to
whole populations
a problem not unique to any
country.
In this part of the state, many individuals and
agencies are working to improve individual health
care and counselling for sickle cell anemia and the
carrier state, sickle trait. Activities are being
monitored and coordinated by the coordinating
Committee for Sickle Cell Anemia on the Niagara
Frontier. Interested persons may contact the
Committee’s secretary, Mrs. Mary Northington,
Comprehensive Health Planning Council of Western
New York, Inc., Suite 300, Genesee Building,
,

lity

Is a
the
ms

on
cal

wh
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—

wide
854-4812.
Public
education
and
a
understanding of the problem in the community are
necessary to sustain this work, hence, again, the
value of your article.
Robin M. Bannerman, M.D.
Medical Genetics Unit
SUNYAB

■

where no sane person would have expected
McGovern to be known in June, 1972, let alone
controlling substantia] portions of their convention
delegation. These are the states which have made the
McGovern candidacy and will likely make him
Richard Nixon’s opponent this fall.
But the phenomenon that has been “Campaign
’72” is not really significant as an isolated
occurrence. Much more important to consider is
whether those persons, those “Democrats,” that
have taken it upon themselves to make George
McGovern their man of the year will in 1976 or
1980 be the “Democratic Party.” It is doubtful.
McGovern may like to talk about his blue collar
votes, but the fact will remain that his candidacy was
made by the disaffected youth, as was McCarthy’s in
1968. It is unlikely that following a McGovern loss
in November and four more years of Nixon the
young will still *be willing to do what they’ve done
this year. Without them, a McGovern can go
nowhere. This is not to say that all those who have
participated in McGovern’s campaign will forsake
politics. On the contrary, many of them will indeed
become a part of the Democratic establishment, part
of the “Democratic Party.” But will they then be
able to support, work for and give their money to a
George McGovern or whoever it is that time? In
general, the answer will be “No,” for their stake in
the old status quo will be too large.
And in four years the “Democratic Party” will
be ready for any attempted blitzkrieg. Even in the
past few weeks McGovern’s forces have not done as
well as hoped for in some states, as the party regulars
have also jammed preliminary caucuses.
So don’t be fooled and think that the
“Democratic Party” has nominated George
McGovern if he is nominated. On second thought,
perhaps the analysts, pundits and pros were right.
The “Democratic Party” will never nominate
McGovern; not this year, not in 1976, and maybe
never.

Transcript request trouble
To the Editor

determination of an individual’s future. While I

realize that a university like Buffalo is dealing with a
tremendous volume of transcripts, I have heard too
many similar reports of rejections and requests for

!n preparation for my graduation from UB last
December, 1971, I requested that several transcripts
be sent out from Admissions and Records to the
transcripts that were never filled. It seems that the
schools to which 1 was applying. From one of the probability of such things occuring should be small
four universities, I received a notice that my enough that I should not personally know of a
transcript never arrived. I forwarded this notice and
number of cases.
an accompanying letter to A&amp;R, and received no
If Admissions and Records cannot be relied
reply. A second notification of non-receipt and a
upon to fulfill student needs, perhaps some
second letter from me to A&amp;R (also with no reply) arrangement can be made, similar to that in use at
were followed by a rejection from that university.
other universities, whereby the student will receive
In March of this year, I again requested a written notification at the time his transcript is sent
number of transcripts be sent to various schools. I out. At least, in this way, transferring and graduating
have no way of knowing whether or not they were
students will not have to play hit-and-miss with their
actually sent at this time. However, several of my grades being sent out. If we are to be charged for a
acquaintances have been receiving notifications that service, that service should be rendered.
1 sincerely hope that there might be something
their transcripts have not been received. Since the
transcripts were paid for at the time of the request
you could do to help clear up this situation. I’m sure
andMhe individuals in question have a clear account that there are many students who have suffered
at the bursar’s office, I can only attribute this to because of it.
inefficiency on the part of the staff of A&amp;R.
Thank you very much.
In sending out a transcript, or failing to send
one, the university is playing a large part in the
Sharon A. Weber

Office

not negligent

Editor’s note: The following is a copy of Admissions
and Records’ response to Sharon A. Weber who
criticized AAR’s services (above letter).
I have the copy of your letter of April 28 which
you sent to The Spectrum .
I am sorry for any problems you have
encountered with transcript requests but wish to
assure you that all transcripts which you requested
were mailed from our office within a reasonable
length of time. Yoa do not indicate in your letter
which University said that your transcript had not
been received but 1 believe you are referring to
Queens College. According to our records, a

transcript was mailed to them on October

7. 1971

as

per your original request. This was not returned to
us so we would assume it was delivered to Queens
College. In any case, after receiving your note with a
form from Queens College dated December 3, 1971

we sent another transcript to Queens (with no charge
to you). Since we have encountered problems with
other students indicating that Queens did not receive
their transcript which we sent, I can only suggest
that the fault lies with Queens College or that
transcripts are not being directed to the correct

office there.
May I point out that within the past seven
months you have made requests for transcripts to
ten colleges and all of these have been sent as you
indicated. Due to the reduction in our staff over the
past two years and the increased volume of
transcript requests, it would be impossible for us to

notify students when each transcript request is
fulfilled as this time consuming procedure would
delay the preparation of transcripts during peak
periods. However, if students leave a self addressed
post card with us at the time they make their
request, we are glad to mail this to them at the same
time the transcript is mailed from our office.
1 do not feel that your statement that transcript
requests are not filled and that the Admissions and
Records staff is inefficient is a fair one. It would
seem that all of the facts should be learned by
writing to Dr. Kaiser or one of the supervisory
personnel before sending letters elsewhere. Our
office attampts to give the best service possible but
in an institution of this size I readily admit that
delays and errors can occur. Howeverf these are not
due to intentional negligence on the part of the staff
and we do strive to rectify any errors which are
made and attempt to prevent their recurrence. I
personally am available to see any student who has a
particular problem with a transcript request or
record. Other office personnel also see students at
any time during office hours in order to answer
questions or explain University procedures.
I hope this letter will clarify any questions you
have. However, please let me know if there is any
further information you need or if I can be of
assistance to you at any time.
Carolyn Haensly

Assistant Director for Records

Friday, 2 June 1972 The Spectrum Page nine
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Page ten The Spectrum Friday, 2 June 1972
.

.

��WhIsTLE STOPS

Presidential hopefuls George
IDS ANGELES
McGovern and Hubert Humphrey have begun a series
If three nationally televised debates. v
I Appearing Sunday on the CBS news program,
Face the Nation, the two candidates for the
Democratic presidential nomination confronted each
&gt;ther on a number of issues. These included the war
n Indo-China, defense' spending, aid to Israel,
ntegration of schools by busing and welfare.
A second meeting was broadcast on NBC last
Tuesday night and the other will be held on a special
Sunday night telecast of ABC’s Issues and Answers.
NEW YORK George McGovern picked up three
important endorsements in his bid for the
Democratic presidential nomination last week.
California farm labor leader Cesar Chavez; Coretta
King, widow of Martin Luther King and Brooklyn
Democratic leader Meade Esposito have all thrown
their support behind Mr. McGovern.
The senator from South Dakota is hopeful that
Mr. Chavez and Ms.
King will be helpful in cutting into Hubert
Humphrey’s big lead among minority peoples. The
endorsement by Mr. Esposito is one of the first for
Sen. McGovern by a Democratic party leader, most
having supported the candidacy of Sen. Humphrey.
Doctors attending
SILVER SPRINGS, Md.
Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace have given
permission to the Democratic presidential candidate
to attend his party’s national convention in Miami
Beach next month.
His physicians say that he should have sufficiently
recouperated from his gunshot wounds to attend the
July 10-14 convention. They have not said, however,
i

-

'*“"

-

—

-

Companion Program

Rehabilitation center
is publicly endorsed

At what may have been where the organization is on the
whether they will permit Mr. Wallace to resume considered one of the more verge of tremendous success, Joe’s
active campaigning or whether they will move him to mediocre area social events, four reward will be to get that
of the communities’ more recognition for the good he’s done
another hospital to perform major surgery to remove
the bullet still lodged in his spine. Gov. Wallace has prominent citizens made an and I know he’s going to get it.”
announcement of tremendous
Judge Mattina also commented
asked that he be moved to a hospital in Birmingham impact
on local drug that AID’S success is due to it
for the operation.
rehabilitation efforts. At a being one of the few organizations
Gov. Wallace is anxious to return to Alabama celebration “of the Third
to take in hopeless cases: “While
since under Alabama state law the Anniversary of Addicts in Distress many organizations refuse cases
lieutenant-governor automatically assumes authority (AID), a local drug rehabilitation and accept only easier ones to
of the governor should the governor be absent from center, Judge Joseph S. Mattina maintain a high success rate, AID
the state for 20 days, until the governor returps. and three other community accepts these hopeless people and
Gov. Wallace has not been in Alabama since before ifteftiben publicly endorsed the makes success stories out of
center and its founder Joseph A. them.”
.
the shooting.
Vetter.
Miani
Beach
MIAMI BEACH
Convention
’White "accepting a plaque as ‘Unknown radical'
Center authorities have demanded that press, and
' “Mr. Drug Abuse Preventer of the
radio media covering the Democratic and Refhiblican
Judge Joseph Sedita . claimed
Year,”-Judge Mattina (one of the that
national conventions to M'held here 1 must vacate thehe watched Mr. Vetter “meet
leading drug rehabilitation experts both success and failure” in his
convention hall during the time between the two in the county) called Mr.
Vetter rise from “an unknown radical to
gatherings.
“one of the most outstanding the best in the business.” Judge
Norman Litz, executive director of the center, citizens in the community” for his
Sedita noted that he has' been
said that the eastern part of the hall (where press, work in drug rehabilitation.
most impressed with Mr. Vetter’s
wire services and radio networks are centered) will
Further commenting on Mr. ability to always come back
not be available from Aug. 9—IS because of a prior
Vetter’s accomplishments, Judge stronger than ever. Agreeing with
booking and that the media will have to leave during Mattina said: “I always think of Judge Mattina, Sedita also
that time. The Democratic convention ends July 14 Joe Vetter when I get an award endorsed AID as “an organization
and the Republicans move in Aug. 21.
because he deserves many of these absolutely on its way to absolute
This does not affect the television media, as they awards and he hasn’t gotten any.” success.”
are housed on the west side of the hall, but would He continued: “When Joe started
Erie County Legislator Stanley
give only five days to the other media to set up the Suicide Prevention Center H. Zagora remarked: “What is of
sight or nine years ago, there was most importance in this
operations for the Republican convention.
no other suicide prevention community is the fact AID has
Technicians say that more than five days are needed
facility in the community. He did done so much and Joe Vetter has
to set up the intricate equipment needed to cover
i tremendous amount of work
so much to this
the convention and that coverage could be getting it started and getting it to contributed
community and that they are now
substantially reduced.
the successful position it has on the way to success. All that has
reached today, but the been done is being returned in
community never accepted this. recognition
of these
’

-

—

The Psychology Service of the Veterans Administration Hospital is planning to
continue its Student Companion Program during the summer. Each student will spend
several hours every week as a companion to a psychiatric patient. Group sessions are held
weekly to provide an opportunity for student companions to share experiences in the
program and to offer perspectives on mental health in general. Psychological staff will
supervise the student throughout the summer in an attempt to achieve maximum benefit
for both student and patient.
All those interested, especially those with past experience, are invited to contact Al
Benson between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. at 834-9200, ext. 2S4.

JUNE 2,3,4,6,7,8, at 7:30RM.
t
“FOR

,

ADVENTUROUS

/•

&lt;

-

to Judge Mattina, celebration was Mr.' Vetter’s
“has always been there announcement that his lectures on
in the fields of drug abuse and
drug addiction and other
micide prevention when the rest socio-economic problems are
of the community hasn’t, yet he going to be translated into six
hasn’t gotten the rewards he different languages
and
deserves. After three yean Of distributed around the world in
nursing AID along to the point the near future.
According

Mr, Vetter

Sub Board installation

THEATREGOERS...*

stunning,

haunting, ‘environmental’
on is exquisitely tuned
itensities.’

si

Niagara Falls

Gazette

id a striking physical

“...‘total’ theatre...inte«
conception...a sti

-Buffalo Evening News

r

P

I
by Joseph Dunn
and Irja Koljonen

ALL SIZES AND
SHAPES IN

$2.00

Tickets on ante a

Buffalo, New York

RED,

STOCK.
BONE,

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ALSO
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8

THE AMERICAN CONTEMPORARY THEATRE, Inc
1695 Elmwood Aveni
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AUTHORIZED
adaptation for performa

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General Admission

Elections for new officers were conducted St the
annual meeting of Sub Board I, Inc. on May 18.
Elected to one-year terms were: chsirman, Doug
Webb, Student Association vice president for Sub
Board chairman; Brian Coyne, vice president of
Millard Fillmore College Student Association vice
chairman; and Hatem El Gabri, Student Association
Foreign Student Affairs coordinator, treasurer.

-■
_

production
lighting,

accomplishments.”
Among other highlights of the

Nursing along

—

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than.

Barefoot
.

exercise

&lt;3g&gt;

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,CJ■pzeSm.
-

877-9053

sponsored by College B, UUAB, Student Theatre Guild and U.B. Veterans

HERZOG’S DRUG STORE!

mufti

■

■■T

Friday, 2 June 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven
.

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START!OF

Summer Session Sale

Page twelve The Spectrum Friday,
.

.

2 June 1972

�vVW &lt;VWWVVVW*Ji-

Audience reacts

m•* *

*

Conventional theatre challenged
Editor’s note: This is the first of a
two-part essay. This section will
deal with the state of modern
theater. The second part will
specifically comment upon the
vectors that make the production
of The Unnamable the unusual
work of art that it is.
the

Certainly

theater
Orgy of

department’s April
Theater Energy was a worthy
endeavour. It provided the
possibility of witnessing
performances and lectures by
those supposedly in the foremost
ranks of the avante-garde. The
energy the Orgy released was,
,

however, unfortunately composed
of extraordinary docile atoms.
Discovering that our major
experimenters are only concerned
with vitality and not with radical
development was a grave
disappointment.

Vitality
Vitality was the word that the
critics of the thirties used to
describe say, the Rodgers and
Hart musical comedy. Babes in

Arms; it is a word used to describe
the youthful ambiance of a cast,
the delight of an entertainment, it
is in no way an indication of
quality, or even of vigorous
attempt. As an adjective for

modem theater the word should
be obsolete. We need vitality in
the way we need more revivals of
old musical comedies, in the way
that some idiot might say No No

Nanette brought new light to the
scene.
For those of us who still
believe that camping on thirties
movies
and musical comedy
conventions is a valid ground for
theatrical experimentation, the
orgy
must
have been
unadulterated enchantment. For
me the offerings were pallid,
uninspired, unintelligent; the
“energy” released was recycled
and deadening.
The question, then, is where
can one find theater that is truly
vital, not merely re-vitalized;
acute, and not merely cute?
Revitalizing an old idea is
comparable to whipping an
exhausted horse into a grotesque
imitation of frenzy. Cuteness is a
quality of the garish, loud, tacky
Broadway

and brassy Broadway fare. It is
and,- indeed,
{predictable that the. work of a
so-called experimenter like Tom
O’Horgan can slip into The Big
Street with hardly a lifted
eyebrow or a sweated brow.
Nudity waa Hit come-on, the
attraction that made the
freak-show popular
that
“newness” having been stifled
back into a yawn, O’Horgan’s
work in Hair and Lenny can be
seen for what it is brassy, tacky,
etc. and distinctively, Broadway.

interesting

—

-

Rutted inaction
Why is theater behaving like a
rear tire caught in a mud rut? It
grinds, it makes whining noises, it
goes nowhere. The answer is that
most theater is rooted in
convention. Most experimental
work is, at best, a tricky
re-vamping of an already tired
convention.

It does not have to be that
way. Today we know more about
the
nature of response
(information theory and
feed-back mechanisms) than ever
before. The behavior of the mind
in receiving
stimuli is an
field. Theater, being

important

the most immediate
art-forms available, should be
engaged in dealing with response,
with the structure of the reacting
involved in short with
organism
the very field-states that science is
one

Forest fires destroy trees and flowers
and chirping birds and TheodoreJthe
squirrel!!! Support Smokey the Bear!

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a

time when the

that should renew it.

Pure creation
The occasion

for

this

proto-manifesto is a theatrical
production so unique that it made
me aware that theater is far from
dead. It is a tough, dense,
confusing and harrowing piece of
art. Samuel Beckett has

1866 Sheridan Drive

WHY BUY FROM US?

i’

was

nniia cm
IIMIM

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There

discovery of a new art form was as
exciting as perceiving the nature
of a chemical change. What we
need, what we have always
needed, is an art as multi-faceted
and pure as crystal. Theater, art in
general should make use of the
technology at its command. We
are dealing with art in this
country that straggles fifty years
behind the very developments

SHERMAN

Butler

f

just beginning to explore.

Buffalo

Specializing in Volkswagen,
Triumph, Volvo. MG. Austin
Healey. Toyota, Datsun and
more.
877-9303
874-6330

authorized

and approved an
of his novel The
Unnamable. The adaptation was
written under the direction of
Joseph H, Dunn and Irja Kiljonen.

adaptation

I intend to discuss the
particulars of response in my next
article, but let me begin by saying
that the production throws to the
wind any conventional notion of

dramatic structure. The well-made
classical play has no bearing upon
this work. The initial conception,
I imagine, is to replace on-going
story (dramatic tension, climax,
denoument) with on-going
not a word used.
process.
Identification (that
Comedy is of the essence but it
soap-opera word used to describe
is
dire comedy. Comedy whose
an audience’s involvement with
sense
eludes the censor but whose
is
watch)
the characters they
pain and hilarity pervade.
replaced by reaction. The extreme
area
a
performance
is, essentially,
pure space, an uncharged
Compulsory attendance
force-field which will house the
ay that you
There is no
pure communicative mechanism should excuse yourself from
of stimulus and response, the viewing this performance. It is a
on-going process, in the theater compulsory experience. The
(as in Beckett’s novel) is the theater is located at 1695
movement into the self, into the Elmwood Avenue. Tickets can be
soul or essence. It is a movement purchased at the theater or at the
as frightening as the movement Norton Hall Box Office ($1.50 for
toward death. 1 left the theater students, $2.00 for the public).
unable to stand. Enjoy is not a The production begins at 7:30
word used. Enjoy is a word every night except for Mondays.
rendered useless by the
Next week I will deal at length
production at hand. Something
the work itself. I hope that
much more vast than with
you will have seen it. 1
by
then
entertainment is afoot. Colors arc
hope to receive your response to
controlled as is sound, light, sight
it
I hope to deal with this
and other pathways to the senses.
response in the next article.
Clothes to Fit
This is a production that
Your Life Style
foundations should finance, that
at the
scientists should marvel at,
literary and theatrical people
should be in awe of. The least you
can do is see it.
—

-

CEJAY

j

DRESS SHOP
95 Allen St.
Buffalo. N. Y
in the Heart of
ALLENTOWN
882-8551
■ Open Tues.-Sat. Hours 12-6 p.m.

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THE WELL EDUCATEDS
DRINKERS

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ANACONE'S isn't for everyone
it's for YOU, the 20t4nft fan.
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Engagement

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Publicity Photos

TELAAK

STUDIO
Economy Wedding Plan

3090 Main St.
-834-5470CAN YOU. HEAR THEM?

ANACONE,
New fork

The American Comtemporary
Theater have a fuller grasp of
“participatory” theater than any
group 1 have ever seen. I was not
asked to leave my seat, nor was I
pawed, pummeled or in any way
physically assaulted by the cast.
Nevertheless the participation and
power of the assault is complete.
Understand is not a word used.
Comprehension is of only limited
importance in the realm of the
work. I suppose I make the piece
sound pretentious. Let me say,
then, that the piece is of the
pretense is
highest intelligence

THE COOL SOUNDS Of

OF
LAND
BEE^F
■

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This weekend drive out.
thOM founds
enjoy
and
...melodic

fj0
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MANY INTERESTING styles
Weeeief e fkmkt
Try nfrehingty dWarwit

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-

WIND CHIMKS

”

’

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1

by Michael Silverblatt
Spectrum Theater Editor

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BIL LARDS

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Ow Vaar Mate * ~f

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Friday, 2 Jupe 1972 The Spectrum Page thirteen
.

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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 21, No. 80
In a series of meetinp conducted over the put two
days, members of the University's Black populace
confro nted the administration with a list of demands. The
fint meeting wu held in Capen 140 last Wedneday
afternoon at I :30 - it was short and abrupt and
constituted simply of written atatemenu being read aloud
(these demands appear on pages two and three in complete
form) . At this time, President Robert Ketter was given 24
hours in which to respond .
Promptly at I :30 p.m. the foUowin&amp; ThursdJty,
President Ketter, accompanied by Executive Vice
President AJbert Somit, Actio&amp; Vice President for

Stat. Univ•lity of N- Yorit et Buffalo

Acadenuc Affairs Anthony Lorenzetti and Campus
Security officials, presented his response to the Black
representatives (his statement 2ppeara on this page) .
At a aubaequent meeting held later the same day, a
Black spokesman for the 200 people in a Hayes Hall
conference room reported to President Ketter: ''We hne
looked at your response to t he Black Populace. You were
presented with a detailed proposal and a summary of tbe
demands of the Black Populace. You have not dealt with
the specific questions which were outlined in the
document presented to you."
He continued : " lltis administration t.as uked Black

Response to the statem en ts received from the Blotk Student
Union :
Yesterday, after a m eeting with black students, I was
presented with three documents. I shall focus this statement
primarily o n the document which presents five " Demands
from the Black Po pulace at U.B." I do this because it seems
to be the latest document and also because the pro blems
ratsed in t ht:se five pom ts tend t o subsume most , tho ugh not
all, of the problems raised in the Qther documents. At the
conclusion of this statement 1 will indicate ho w I think those
other questions might mos t constructively be approached .
Before turning to specific questions, a preliminary
comment is m o rd er. The d ocum ents given to me call
attention to a variet y ot problems and concerns. Many of
these are very real anu we s houJd do whatever ts possible to
co me to grips w1th them .
If the history of the past several years has taught us
anything. however, it ts that we do httle to o;olve problems
when , even for the best of motives, they are sta ted tn the
fo rm o f d emands. I can understand the Circumstances and
the fuctors that lead to the use o f th is form . But I think we
have all seen that even when genuine problems are s ta ted in
th is fashion, a const ructive solution may he impeded , ra ther
I h an accelerated . TI1ere are more fruitful ways o t
a pproaching these remarks
Tummg now to the five-item document, let me take up
the points in the o rder in wh1ch they have been raised. I

I . Black Studies
Ac hng Pro vost Hollander of the Faculty of Social
Sciences and Admtmstration informs me that , over the past
several weeks. there have been discu ssions looking to the
redesignation o f the Black Studies Progra m as a Department .
A formaJ pro posal for s u ch redesignahon was made by h im
to day to the Po licy Committee o f that Faculty I am happy
to inform you that the Polley Committee h as unanimously
voted to set tnto motion t he procedures requtred fo r tht:
Progra m to achteve full departmental status.
2. Tenure and R~iew Procedures
Tenure and related faculty personnel recomrnendattons
are made at three levels
depart mental, Facult y. and
all - University . I think you know that I have already
established the pra~:hce of having minonty representatio n o n
aiJ llnivers1ty-wide search committees. I am request ing all
departments and all Faculties to moctJfy . if necessary . their
personnel procedures so as t o ensure mtnonly re presen tation
on all committees which make such recommendations. 1 will
also take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that the
aJI-UnaversJty recom mending authority will haw mmorit y
representation as o f the acad enm: year I Q7 2-7 3

3 Professors Banks and Gay le
It is essential that the fa cts m these t:&lt;~st&gt;~ be tully
understood
Pro fessor Bank:-. is already assured o f a three-year
reappoin tment a t the University . What is a issue ts not his
continuation at the Universt t y but his request that he be
promoted to Tenured Associate Professor. Tite procedure in
s u c h matters IS as follows : first, a departmental
recommendation ; second , a FacuJty - in this case the
Facul ty of Social Scien ces and Administration
recommendation. The Department o f Anthro pology has
recommended promo tio n ; the Faculty Personnel Committee,
however, has recommended that considera tion o f promotion
be d elayed fo r ano ther year. since Pro fessor Banks is only
now completing his third year at this University .
Under these ci rcumstances, the matter now goes before
the all-University facu lt y personnel agency. the President's
Review Board. The Board is scheduled to consider Professor
Bank~ ' cccle tomorrow . It would be improper and, m fact ,
possibly prejudicial to Pro fessor Banks, for me to make any
s tat e ment on this issue until I have the Board's
recom mendation before me. I expect to receive this
recommendatio n tomorrow.

Friday, 28 April1912
Populace to share theu desires in reso11jn&amp; these matken in
abstraction and !lymbolica. Our pa.ition is very definite lbat the~e are no alternatives to our apecific demands. The
demands must be met in full and not in the Adminiltration
controlled world of abstraction and symbolism."
When President Ketter attempted to fully delineate b..ia
position , the Blacks left the conference room declarina the
whole meeting a "waste of time: • At press time, a meetina
was ICheduled to take place because • one Black
representative declared : " Let's go p:t toaether because we
know we know bow to deal with the man from here on
out."

Now the case of Professor Gayle. Professor Gayle is in
the second year o f a three-year appoin tment which runs until
June 1973 The Department o f Music has overwhelmingJy
voted no t to renew that appointment. The Personnel
Committee o f the Faculty of Arts and Letters is curre ntly
reviewing the case . The objectio n has been raised that there
has been no minority represt&gt;nta10n o n the two Faculty
entitles which have dealt with this case . Given this situation,
I plan to appoint a special committee, on which there will be
mmonty re presenta10n, to study th1s matter in careful depth
and to make an appropriate recommendation t o rne.
4 . Oialogue with Minority Pro fes..,.ional and Graduate
St udents
Over the past two yc:1rs. I have met •• number o f ttrm''
wtlh minonty students from lh t.' School of Law and from
severa l of the Schools tn the Health Sl.tcnces. Others m the
Pres tdent's Offi~e also have had mecttngs with s tudents from
these areas I would be happy tu co ntinue these mee ttngs.
cll her on a periodtc basts nr as sredfiL • ~sues requtrl' O ther
grdduate !'iludent groups could al-;u bc inctuded in th e..,~
discussions

5 . Regular Dialogue Between President 's Office and Minority
Students and Fac ulty
As you know, I have regularly reserved Tue-.day
mornings for meet ings w1th studen ts, faculty and staff A
numbe of members of the m tnority community at the
University have taken advanta1e of these opponunities. \ n
addition, t meet, from time to limo, with the various
advisory g:Toups and committees that have been cons tituted
to recommend courses of action on partrcular issues. Here
again, a substantial number of minority individuals a re
included in these sessions. At their request. more or less
regularly scheduled meetings have been held with officers o l
many of the o rganized groups on t:ampus I would be ha ppy
to explo re whatever arrangements might be necessary or
de irable t o 1mprove or rcgulanze these already cxtstmg
modes o f communicatiOn .
I believl' that the d t'I&lt;:Usslono; wh11:h wo uld oct:ur tn thl.'w
dtalogue'\ offer the rnost lruitful and &lt;:ons truL'tivc mean-. ol
ta ckling and rcsolvtng some of the ~) th er problems •dcnt ilieJ
in the documents given to me. Thts admtntslratJOn sha rt'')
your d esire that these problems he resolved tn manne" wh11. h
will provid e optimal benefit fo r our m1nonty stuu cnh anJ
for the entire Untvcrsity com mumly I arn prepared t o begm
these dtscusstons wtth your rt·prt·scn ta ttves ;..tl the earlies t
posstblc oc..cas10n.
I shoultl strcs,, though . thJt three t'O IIth llon-. ..trc
necessary tf these d1scusstons are to be as produlltvc a~ w~· .til
want them to be.
F1rs t , they wtll have to be a pproached by all part1e' With
a since re desire to amve at a constructive solul ton I lcln
assure you of -.uch an a ppmach o n the part ol lhts
admtn tstratton . I look forward to yuur rnllaho ratto n
Ser&lt;&gt;nd . as indtcaled carhcr, tht• &lt;.:uncerns you ll avl'
raised must be a pproach ed a!. comnwn problt'Oh, whml'
solution ts 1n the com mon mtcrest Wt: must he willing to
exammc alt emattve soluttun'l tn term' ol thctr pos,tbk
merit s
hnally . I fully agree that the resolu tton o f these 111atter.
wtll req Uire o n..going discus.')tons. At the same time, I am ::.u rc
you will agree. the student partictpants trl these dtscusston'
must be representative ot, and be recognized by thetr
stude nt constituents. I ask. therefo re, that you proceed to
designate the individuals who are. t o nH.'et with us 111 these
discussions
It may be that , in the o ffid al you have already deLleJ .
you have the represen tatives you wish . it may he tha t you
wish to h old other elections for this purpose. I ask st m ply
that , by whatever mechanisms you wish to employ, that you
identtfy and authorize those individuals who are t o serve as
your representatives. I ho pe you will proceed to tht"
authorization as soon as possible.

- R ober/ Ketter

�Editor 's note: Ltnt Wednesdlly afternoon,
250 memben of the Blllck
populace at the S tate Untvenity of New
York at Buffalo maued in Cilpen HaU to
confront President Ketter with a list of
demands. President Ketler WIU fiven 24
hours In which to re&amp;pond to these
de m a n ds. Acco rdi n gly, Bl ack
representatives present at the meetirlg
stated to Presid ent Ketter: ''With respect
to our demands the Black populace wfll
assemble for yow response In 24 hours. "
Subsequently, President Keller's
respon se f see page one/ proved
u nsatisfactory. Tlte mmplete set of
demands appet!r on pages two and three,
approxi~Mtely

President Ketter:
There are sins of ommission
and sins of commission.
Your hatchet men have committed
while you have ·ommitted.
You have turned your head while
1. Professor Gayles is terminated an music (yet
Professor Halstead remains). Professor Gllyles cannot go.
2. Professor David Banks is discriminated against and
den,ed tenure. He is eligible a11d has to get tenure.
3. Mrs. Eddins was forced out of the School of
Nursing. She is being considered for an appomtment
full-time in Black Studies. We students wish one extra line
for two courses : " Health Related Problems in the Black
Community," and ''Social Problems in the Black
Community." We need a minonty lule for this course to be
taught by her. We do not wish to use the llne vacated by
James MiUcr for this purpose. We are interviewing
Afro-American male~, Wi\h PhD'1, \Q fiU hmq Miller''
faculty \ine. We dernand an additionlll line.
4. Dr. Arthur Anderson was unduly cased oul of the
Cooperative Community CoUege. His elimination was
tustified on some tremulous grounds of alleged errors.
(As if whJte administrators have not ever unwisely
ipent UniverSity funds. Somehow 'errors' are a pnvilege of
the Ruling whjte overlords.)
He was replaced by a female administrative assistant,
yet Mrs. Arnold was considered ineligible for EPIS.
5. Mrs. Arnold, who had acted as director for E:.PIS
was shoved out under pretext that she was never officially
appointed. (This, despite the fact that she had been an
efficient assistant to Mr. Pea.~an t and had covered the
program for over half of 1he semt:ster w1th staff and
student support.)
F11rther .
Attempt$ have been made to harrass Mrs. Arnold out
of her job, declare her inefficient, and to force her ofl the
campus. Mrs. Arnold had greater credibility or at least a~
much as Dr. Anderson's replacement (or any o ther like

m--•VISI'J'--..

Love those S.U.N .Y. smiles!
Picture Yours

TED
CITY
HAVEN FOR

Telaak Srutf1o
30Y0 Main St

l

We have tf.e ll~htellt, mo.t
CIOm p.tet -.uipmt nt 1ft ten ts.
ltOVet, sleepfltt betS,

pecks, foodt, etc.

herrtlli•t for ttte u mplft9
femilr on dltpler at tfte
fowest discouftt pricea
;,. W.H.Y.

Rt~pre~t~ntlld for lldiiiJrtising by
N•tion~ EducatiofJIJI Adllrtrrising

SIJfVIcll, Inc., 360 Lexington Aw.•
New Yor4, N. Y. 10011.
Sublcriprion
remwt11r or

nttll$

11r11 $4.50 ,.,

$8,00 for rwo Stlmlln«1..

S«:ond CJ-. Pb~ PIJid 111 Bufhllo,
f*w Yort.

McGovern needs your help

FAMILY CAMPERS,
lACK PACKERS,
CYCLE BUGS!

834-5470

The Spectrum il publilh«/ tlmw
t im111 • w•ttk. ...,'Y Mond•r.
~n.-y 111)(/ FrlcJ.y; during thft
"9JI11r .«:MitHTI/c yetJr by Sub·Board
t. Inc . • Offic• ar11 /OQtlld •t 365
Norton Hall, StJrhr Unillllfllty of N11w
Yorlc 11t Buffalo, 3436 ,.in St.,
8uff11to. New York. 14214.
Ttll•phoM: Ar-. Cod. 716; Editoriel
83t..fl 13; BuslniiSI. 831-3610.

administrative replacement in the university) M11. Arnold constituted ourselves as our own committee on minority
affairs advising you to address yourself to thes&lt;: problems.
cannot be forced out of the University.
Knowing the tactic of "setting up an advisory
6. Mrs. Emma Reynolds was forced out of EPIS (for
commission
to solve the crises among the ruatives;" we, the
whatever reasons) in such a manner that she is ineligible
minority
populahon
at U.B. constituted ourselves as the
for unemployment benefits. A termination date, 4-6 weeks
later would have avoided this personal tragedy . Mrs. Commission.
We have decided to offer \he solutions:
Reynolds was no lesa efTJ&lt;lient than the counsellon who
were left behind. The students gained more from her than
Administrative 5trueture
some who have been left behind. Despite petitions there
I . Minority Students Office ·
was no response to students' requests for reconsideration
Set up a committee to review by the 15th of April ,
of her
Who will fall next by the "efficiency experts" yearly, the compliJlnce of each Faculty and department
within the University to Office of Equal OpportuOily
hands?
Wnat redress do you have fot those abused during guidelines.
The committee should be composed of mif\Ority
this school yea•~
f•culty and students from the various segments of the
F urther:
University.
You have turned your head while :
This committee shaU ~ established by the minority
A Black Pyramid is created on th1s campus
a
faculty and students and have four Tepresentatives on the
vent able university within a university .
This Black Pyramtd relieves you and(the unyielding University-wide compliance (or affirmative action) hody.
(Described under Office of Equal Opportunity , OEO)
racist faculties from having to truly integrate.
Rather than integrate with minorities there has been
a c reat1on of a Black ghetto within the University system Rmructuring of minority programs into one black pYnUnid
We feel minority programs are being structured mto
with its new ass•stants to 1mperialistic bureaucratics
sanctioned and manipulated to manipulate us for the a segregationist concentration plan where the Univers1t y
administration . We have seen this strategy of containment appomts overseers under the guise of efficiency to remove
the sizeable representation of minorities from the campus.
before.
We are being tricked mto taking unjust o rders This plantation-style operation is an evasion of integration .
because the messengers that hring them are of ou1 own We Minority administrators are to be as accountable to the
are not satisfied with the token placement of Black faces minority population on this campus as are the wh1tc
faculty and students.
10 either departments or adminlstrdtlve positions.
White provosts, chairmen and representatives to the
Lutes of communication do not flow upwards in the
mmunly pyramid. Orders now down through 11 from the v1uious structures of power are voted upon or at least
move up m the structure through affirmation from their
white overlords.
For these grievances we, the tninority people, have
-continued on Pl9• 3-

I
_

Fau LAYAWA Y oa USI
MASTER CHARGl

I
_

TED CITY
w• ""'-- s..,.... c.....,

130 MU. St• ...., T1pp11
..... 111m., Fri. 'til 1
\~·Pfr. Free P4r.,tng

Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, 28 April 1972

-.ms

RONNI or PETE
at 854-3300 or stop in at
Call

McGovern lleadquarten
851Main St.
VOLUNTEERS ARE NEEDED

Niagara Frontier Citizens for McGovern

�'Sins of omission~
colleagues and constituency.
However, the University iJuists on containing
minorities by imposing ..white approved'' administrators
upon the minority students and faculty .
As of this day :
Minority Faculty by vote lhalJ have determination
on candidates for administrative politiona in all parallel
situations where white faculty vote for white
administrators.
Candjdates for top adminiltrative potts, who are
brought in should be introduced to the minority faculty
through at least two weeki advanced review of vitae. In
interview teaiona conducted with the edministration, the
minority faculty will have 2/3 rcpretentatives and two
atudenta or be permitted to bold an interview lep&amp;fately.
An advisory dedsion will be sent to the president from the
minority faculty of the minority student unions as a group
advice after theae interviews.
MJaority ltudemt weHate
I . OrieDtadoo l'ropu:a

Ea&lt;:h year the Office of Minority Studenta Affairs

with the minority s&amp;udent union&amp; (POOOR, BSU and
Indian Students Aaodation) should have funds for a week
long orientation prosram for ln-comina minority students.
(a) Here there lhouJd be an input from the
University Placement Office to provide information on the
lona range prediction~ on job opportunities and to
familiarize students with functioning of that office. This
would have to be conducted by minority and a white
officer from University Placement and a representative
from Minority Student Affairs Office. The white offtcer
should be of the ~enior staff in Placement who have facts
to offer.
(b) Through the Minority Student AITain Office and
Mmority Students Auociations, a &amp;erics of workshops to
familiarize students with the departments, their
requirements, and the types of occupations possible for
graduates in each area .
Remediation
Relatively u.nwmplicated, Sea npeMin and above
all, integrated remedial programs, wttich would be
effective. could be implemented through key departments.
I . Remedial couraea do not have -to form a
segregated block within the Unlv~nity as 1f only minorities
need remediation.
The Department of English should attach a
oomponent of minority faculty to give an intensive
program in Grammar Compr~hension (not Black literature)
and speed reading. The student would be requared to take
these two courses if his reading level fell below scores
provided by a generally adtniJ!istered test for Blacks and
whites.
The University would be responsible for emphasizing
that this be a quality grammar and comprehension coune.
During that semester, students would be permitted to take
one course )C$5 and have two two-hour sessions every other
day fo r a total or SIX classroom houn per week . Students
,..ould be tested at the end of the semester and be allowed
to repeat this course once without credit penalty.

~ntll•~

e

There aha1J be a list of 12 members, Blaob, PUtrto
Rkans, Indians, the representation of eacb BJOUP to be

trom .,... 2-

e

If remediation Ia found nece3SI.ry in natural sciences,
then mathematics and physical science departments should
serve these funcUona in the manner that the English
Department would.
We object to being set off an intellectually
incapacitated. 'there are wtUtes with disadvantaged
background I.

A tenure review commJttee: for minoritia
Such a committee shaJJ be established with two
minority representatives from the faculty within which
minority candidate comes; two advisory minority

Demandt from the Black Populace at U.B.

determined in consultation with the Office of Equal
Opportuni~ . For each hearing, there lbouJd be a.OOy of
six. There should be a repretentative from each IJOUp wiU.
one faculty and one student, wherever such faculty are
available. At leut two faculty should always be present in
the sroup of six.
·
They may hear minority student Jrievancea and
faculty grievanc:es. On faculty pievanca faculty
representation should be at least 2/3 of the poup
vice-versa for studenta.

T1le faculty ltllate
The structure of the Faculty Senate demandin&amp;
representatives by intent or ovenisbt eltcludes
representation from minority components. A minority
faculty from mch f'aculty shall be pretent in the F.eulty
Senate (specifically Blacks, Indians and Puerto Ric:ana)).
C....-iculum .-lew coaunitteea ol t.caltia

I . That Black Studiu be tanmedlately enabllahed •
a fuD·fiedaed clepar11beat.
1. Tlaat a tmun: Mel rniew procedure be ""ted to
that aUDority poup peopk ReeiY~ peer IJOUp
Judtmulllt in aach matted u promotton and teabn:.

a.ure

3. That you betln immediate dlalotue with minority
poup ltUdmta iD profa.ional uciJnduate IIChoola for the
pa.rpoee of .Umatiat dam probkma.
4 . That Profa.or Charles Cayla and David Banb be
lmmedi8tely n:appoluted • IMOdate profe110rs with
~euure In their respective depar1mmb.
5 . That these FOUR demancla be adopted
lmmedlately and ltepe be taken whereas a perpetual
clialotae be eet up between the Praident'a Off"ace and
Black ltUdmu and {Kulty ; with repraent1tion bein1
choeeu by Black atudenta and faculty with prinleaed
communication and channeb.

Since Puerto Rican Studies and Black Studies
Faculty are not justly "'presented on these committees.
We are &amp;latin&amp; that this Ia dilcrimatory.
It allows traditional clepertmenta to voa. on COW'ICS
clearly dupllcatin&amp; the content of these prottUnS and abo
does not allow for supportive d.iJcuaion for OOUJ"'eS
coming from thCf.C components. The University knew
these faculty were not group to be tenured when they
were admitted. Therefore, non-tenure is not justification.
In any event under any circumstances the
Curriculum Review Comnullees shall have a minority vcrice
(i.e ., Black Puerto Rican and Indians).
Uoiwnity .mea
University Placemeat
This office has been approached and has given the
usuaJ ..liberal run-around."
We need two rniaority placement officers as of tJus
budget year who are experienced with the nature of the
job market .
Houaina

representatives from o utside the University of Buffalo who
are established in the academic area of the candidate, and
any tenured minority member of the department from
wtuch the canduiate comes. The committee to be
constituted in consultation with the Office of Equal
Opportunjty. This group will tend ita vot• to lhc Praident.
ff the departmental vote diffen, then the Mlnortty
Tenure Commjttee ahaU meet with the depertmenb
committee, the President, and an officer from the
Compliance Body discussed herein.
If there is a grievance then it passes into the
compliance office, if not al returns to the President for
decision.

Grievances
A minority grievance Board will be established
through elections by mino rity faculty and students. They
may hev separately mmorily grievances and will be
represented at every proceeding by the ma.an universaty
Bfievartce body.
The Jist of memben will change annually as elections
should be held annually.

Pick a Winner!

If there is racaal confl1cts m the dorms, why has thas
been hidden from the public?
A committee of minority students and Black faculty
should be set up to uwestigate the problem and offer
solutions. Thas committee should be among names
submitted to you by the Blac:k students and {KUlty . ln lhe
am• mut'lU that Seatch Comml\lee$ are easal)Ht.M4.
Beyond this we wish to have a writteft commitment
from the Onmr'lity enAtrlng houlins for minoritie. in the
new University complex.
Amhent Site
The University tS bemg asked 10 stale 111 wririnx
unequivocally, where at plans 10 locate Black Studies.
Pueato Rican Studies and EPIS on the new site
Black Studies Department ·
(a) Include African Studies in essentially white
con trolled turf.
(b) will expand into a Caribbean Studies component .
(c) will l.&gt;e allowed to develop an anter-disciplinary
graduate program.
(d) will be g~ven space for faculty and reading area

tmmediortly!
(e) will be g•ven commitment for library facihtu:s.

HIKE &amp; BIKE Inc.
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More linly tlwa a
Portquae R.oM f

Noone •
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our chicken wings.

They're the Woodshed'" new~t taste sensation,
mild, medium or hot. Swirl'em around in tangy
blue cbeeRe sauce, and finish the experience with
crispy celery sticks. Non-stop peanuts are on
the house, and spirits are 50r after 3 P.M. The
Woodshed ... where the kitchen'a alway" open
and the music's always on. We' re right nest to
The Pac~t Jon in North Tonawanda, just over
the Delaware Avenue Brid«e. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann: The Woodshed' a
open from 11 : 30 A.M. eve.r y day except Sunday.

-n.IE Wlli»SttEt

cydotourists spedalists

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complete backRGcking,
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Friday, 28 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page th""

�Views exchanged

Money to be restored
To protest Vice President for
Academic Affairs Bernard
Gdbaum's recent decision to cut
back funds In four social science
prosrams, members of the Faculty
of Socia l Sciences and
Administration met last Tuesday
with President Ro bert Ketter and
Dr. Gdbaum. Both admJtted "an
error bad been made" and assured
that monies would be " partiaUy,
tf not substantially" restored to
cut budgets.
Lester Milbrath, associa te
provost of the faculty , saad the
meetina focused on the rationale
behlnd Dr. Gelbaum's decision
and tus role 10 financial matters.
In what was termed "an exchange
of vaews," Or . Mil brath
reproached Dr. Gelbaum, cha rging
that the cuts were made "rather
arbitrarily" without forewarning
or debate. Likewise, Raymond
Hunt , director of the Survey
Research Center, felt the decision
usurped the power of the provost
tn dttermimng economac: pohcy
Conlin uing, Dr . II unt ell! mcd
he wa5 unaware of the dedsaon
and fell
it warranted
re-evaluation He added that he
opposed such an "extens1ve,
c entralized decas1on makang
pro,css" even under the pressures
Dr
Gelbaum reportedly
encountered

cuts were the result of a flaw in
com puter proarammina. He
explaioed there is an Information
Aow System which documents
the budaet and tells of the
University's sta tus and
commitments. Apparentl y, Dr.
Gel baum discovered t hat the
computer had not accounted for
$300,000 in salaries for peopl~ on
leave . To remedy this
miscalculation. Dr. GeJbaum
proceeded to cut t he budgets tn
four social science programs.
When members of the fa c ulty
questioned this action, Or.
Gelbaum reportedly told them
they would have to relocate
pnont1es and restore the cut
funds from other sources, such as
de pat 1ments. Edwin HoUander,
acting provost of Soc1al Sc1en~es.
told Dr. Gelbaum that tha~ was
not a viable alternative stnce
fin:ancalll commatments were
already madt to departments.

80% reduc tions

\ommenta ng on the meeting,
Dr Hollander said he received
reports that all went well and
added that he was satisfied with
Dr Ket ltr's assurance to restore
monaes
As reported an last Friday's
Tht Sputrum, the cuts would
hive mantmtzed the budgets as
follows · Psych Clinic from last
Letson lcut~ed
year's level or $5000 to $1000 ;
Respondang, Or Kc:tttr said he the Social Science Research
hoped the Uruversaty could profit lnstatute from S 16,430 to about
by the deClSlon and would avoad S9000 ; Speech and Hearing Chnic
suc h actions an the future . Dr
from about S5500 to S 1100 , and
Hunt termed Dr. Ketter's response the Vocational Counseling Center
"satisfactory," and satd that now from S 1000 to $400. Dr Hunt
" the role o{ the provost w\11 be said the cuts were puhcululy
supported rather than eroded ."
dlaturt&gt;ln, lilncc people, and not
According co Vr. llunt, the o nJy fi1ures, were mvoJved.

Proposed FSA budget asks
for- raise in employee wages
by lanDeWul
Sp«trvm Sttlff Wriur

srant the wa&amp;e increues without a concurrent
increase in prices.

Tbou&amp;h listed last on the aaenda, presentation Defayed action
Action on all budg~ts except that of Norton
of proposed bud&amp;ets for the 1972 - 73 school year
highlighted the Faculty Student Association (FSA) Hall wu delayed in order to allow all new student
meetina laat Tuesday afternoon . The bud~ts members to assume their seats in the general
recommended by the manageR of the FSA membership of FSA and to aUow new elections for
Enterprises and Thomas J. Schillo would mclude the vacant seats on the Board of Directors. nus
salary increases for employees averaging 6% but move, suggested by Dr. Ketter, will delay final act1on
wo uld also stipulate price tncreases averaging 3.9% on budgets unW after the MiUard FiUmore College
elections on May 10.
with some prices increasing by as much as 8.4%.
The Norton Hall budget, presented by Norton
The Board of Directors was presented wtth
com parative charts whic h listed the actual results of Hall Director James Gruber, wu unanimously
the FSA divisions in 1970 - 7 1, t he original a nd approved, totaling $250,840 with income sources
revised budgets for the c urrent year and two balanced by operating expenses. Norton HaJJ has two
proposed budgets, one which would maintatn the additional budgets, one from t he state and one from
status quo except for a projected decrease in sales, Su b Board I, Inc.
O th er maj o r discussion at the meetang
and one which would anclude both a salary and pnce
concerned a letter addrcaed to the board by the
increase for next yeu.
Overall sales of the FSA are projected to dtop Civil Servants Employees Association (CSEA) an
$270,000 wathout a pnce ancrease and remain about which the Assoc1ation asked the FSA directo~ to
stable af a pnce tncreasc is granted . Without a wage voluntarily recognize it liS the bargaining agent for
increase , wages, benefits and taxes paid to employees the PSA employees.
Mr. Schillo informed the board that CSEA labor
would decrease S91 ,000 as compared to the current
year, wh1le if salanes were to increase, the new organizers had been on campus for a week and were
amount would still be less than the current totals by asststed in contacting employees. At that time, they
pthered declarations from interested employees
SJ ~.ooo
stating that they wiShed to be represented by CSEA
"The letter htnts tha t they haven't garnered enough
Surplus
Wlthan the guideline..~ of the recommended support," stated Mr. Schillo. He referred to the tau
budgets, all divisions excepting the Food Service that CSEA was seckin&amp; voluntary recognition by the
would experience a drop in o veraH sales. The board rather than an eJection of the employees.
increases 1n pnces woUld allow Food Serv1ce to
The board decided to mll'ltain the neutr.JI
mcrease ItS net income mar&amp;Jn of .2% to 2% on gross stance toward employee unionization tlut it had
sales. This would be the surplus left after aJI adopted last year The feeling of the drrectolli wall
expenses have been paid 1n comparison to total sales. that It would be presumptuous to assume the wLShes
Mr Sch11Jo def~ded his recommendations for a of their employees by reCOIJlll.lnJ CSEA M stated
price increaae noting that It was the opinion of by Dr. Ketter : "It would be improper and imprudent
management that on sales or over $4,300,000, an to accept the arac1ous offer of CSEA."
o perating margin of 2% was necessary to guard
Other busmea that came before the board
against any miscaJculataons He pointed out that mcluded a request from Sub Board I , Inc., for the
Food Serv1ce was projecting a loss of S II ,000 for F'SA to mamlaJn three Sub Board employees of the
the current year as opposed to the ongtnally PSA payroll untal May 31, at which time Sub Board
predic ted SJ 115 surplus He attnbuted thls to the will be able to aAume the retuement benefits the
f11ct that wh1le the ongmal budget was predicated o n employees currently receive from FSA
a 3% yearly ancrease m the cost of food thla amount
Ed Doty announced that there would be open
had jumped to 4 ,5% in \he last three month!!. It wai biddina on the farm equipment that Sub Board I hall
&amp;1110 noted tluat the vcndin1 1erv1ce would be able to
borrowed for use at Poverty liill in the near futur e

SALE: MAY 1-MAY 6
tA

I

MAIN ST. ONLY-MAIN AT ENGLEWOOD

Jeans-Tops-Belts
Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, 28 April 1972

�Niagara Square rally

Students gathered
to protest the war
by Barbara Mink
Sp«trum Staff Wrun-

Tuesday was sunny and cool,
and a substantial group of area
anti-war protesters took advantage
of the weather t&lt;_&gt; participate in a
march and rally " showmg the
wo rld what we feel."
The march began at I p.m .
after several short speeches in
Haas Lounge. Tom Kolmeyer .
who had been jailed at one time
for destroying draft records, said
that " we have been lied to by
l1beral and conservative legislators
al1ke . They are only now
agamst the war because we are
starting to lose." He suggested
that America exchange Attica
pOI1t1cal pr iso n e rs for the
Amencan prisoners of war in
V1etnam
"Once we get rid of Rocky and
his class," he concluded . " we can
end the war. And it has been
proven that we can't get rid of
them an a voting booth the o nly
way t o do 11 IS hke the
V1etnamese people
w1 th bullets
and guns. R1ght on
take
Sa1gon! "
Approximately 100 students
then circled Hayes Hall , carry mg
s1gns and banners urging America

to get out of Southeast Asia , to
support striking workers and to
free the Buffalo Five . The
organizers of the March were no t
able to obtain a permit , so the
contingent had to remain on the
sidewalks and obey traffic lights.
Several motorcycled policemen
accompanied the group down
Main St. The pace was steady, and
the to ne o f the march was tinged
with humor - some suggested
using " Make the light " as a new
slogan .
Strong commitment
At Canisius College , between
30 and 40 students joined this
University's representatives. A
member of the Vietnam Veterans
agamst the war told the crowd
that · " We have to reach a level of
commitment comparable to that
reached by a man who decides to
wreck a bomb b o und for
Vietnam , or the airfield worker
who leaves a lit de sign on the seat
of an aircraft saying: 'Will this
plane land today?' ... We have to
be willing to take nsks."
Joe Meyers, a member of the
Phil oso phy Students
Organization , and an organizer of
the march , said : "We are on a long
rna rch both literally and

figuratively - 11 is a march fo r the
liberation of mankind."
By the time the marchers
reached Niagara Square, they were
joined by other colleges. tugh
schools and State UniversJty at
Buffalo students and faculty
members. The crowd grew to ove r
500 people, and were addressed
by several speakers. One, a South
Vietnamese woman, expressed her
thanks for the action of the
demonstrators, and said that the
Vietnamese people want " the
Un1ted States to get out of
Vietnam, complet ely and
uneondit ionall y ."
The demonstrators then filed
up Court St to Main , and down
Mam to Lafayette Square. The
crowd seemed more exc1ted as
line dancers wound their way
through the mass of peo ple in
time to chanted slogans hke,
"one, two, three, fo ur, we dnn 't
want Wall S treet's wa r" and
" mill1 ona u es profit off uf
Vietnam , millio naires profit off
the wage freeze ." They then

moved to the YMCA building,
where workshops were scheduled
to run until I 0 p .m.
It was in fro nt of the YMCA
that the only clash with police
occurred Alfred Cairo, 23, of
Alden , was charged with assault ,
res1 sti n g arrest , refusmg the
reasonable request of an officer
and harrassment. According to a
report by Patrolman Rocco Dima,
Mr. Calfo tned to cross the st ree t
1n heavy traffic . When asked to
remain on the curb, he allegedly
knocked P.dlro lman Diina down
and atarted to run. He waa
apprehended by several other
policemen.
A controversy has arisen as to
whether the policemen that made
the arrest properly 1dent1fied
themselves as officers of the law .
Two men had long hair and wore
work shirts and jackets that hid
th eir badges Apparently th1s
enabled them to mix w1th the
crowd more eas1ly They removed
their Jackets as Mr. Cairo was led
away.

The crowd started shouting at
the policemen. but no further
action was taken . One officer
pushed several observers out of
the street and yelled : "Go home,
all of you. ·· The demonstrators
and the more than 50 policemen
slowly dispersed.
An ACLU lawyer later
explained that the police did not
grant a perll\Jt for the march or
rall y because o f the mconve01ent
t1me They pledged thw full
cooperatiOn m seemg to the safety
of the demonstrators, but u
Comm.bllonet of I-oUce Frank
Felicetta reportedly explained t o
Mayor Frank Sedita over the
telephone : " I am no t going to
have them fuck up traffic."
Organ11ers of the
demon stra tion expressed
sa11sfact1on at the turnout and
activities, especially considenng
that this time of year 1s a difficult
one for students . As one speaker
saJd . ..We are not do1ng our own
thtng, but domg the thmg that has
to be done ."

'Showing the world what we feel'
Top: police undtwcover agents check in with
uniformed pa'trolm.-. during the rally. left : a South
Vietnamese woman thanks the crowd for their
actions and expresses the hope for total U.S .
withdrawal.

Photos by Osterreicher

Friday, 28 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

l

aetion line

Q : I will be u o und here durina the summer , but I will not be
reautered for 1ny cowses. Can I make Use of the Health Services while
I am here?
A : ·The Health Services facilities are for the use of registered
students. Therefore, you can make use of it until the first day o f tho
summer sessaons, after which you are no longer registered. So, to
answer your question, you may not make use o f the Health Servaces if
you are not registered for classes.
Q : Is there any place in the Buffalo aru where cabinet making is
uuaht?
A : We talked to the Carpenters' Unao n antl they tell us that most
teachmg of wood workang, cabanet makmg, e tl ~~ d o ne on the JOb . In
o ther words, you have to work at at under a JOUrneyman However, the
vocational hagh schools in Buffalo do havt" cou r ~c~ an woo dworkmg and
we found out that Erie Community College offers some t.:o urses in
constructio n Another o;ource may lw the .tc.lull ed ucat1 o n programs
offered by vanous sch ool systems an the area. But we cannot find any
comprehensave tisting of the courses they o ffer So, you will have tu
contact them mdiVldually to fmd out 1f they have any su ch cour\cs in
the1r evenmg courses.

Q : I ClUed the Buffalo Evenin1 News and tried to place an ad for
rublertina 1n 1partment. They refused to take my ad over the
telephone. What gives?
A · The Buffalo Evening N&lt;•ws explluned their po lu:y to uJo. They
told us that whe n someone wanh t o place an o~d to sublet an
apartment, II IS requared that they have a personal telephone number
for billing purposes. If they du not have th1s, they are asked for the1r
place o f employment Tlus as to m surc payment of the atl . In th e case
of students who have neither (or o ther persons o~s well), the newspaper
demands payment in advance. Th1s can be d o ne m tw o ways.
You can go to the News Office and place the ad, paying for it at
that tame. Or you can call them and tell them what you want an the ad
and they wLII tell you the cost You can then maal them a check wllh
the ad , and they wall run th e ad when your c heck has arrived . They
were firm , h o wever, m telbng us that prepayment ~~ required 1f one
does no t have a regular telepho ne number and ha, no place of
employment .

On April 25, someone set fire to the cartons stored n•r the basement exit
Norton Hell. The fire was contained by Campus Security and Norton J*'IOf'Mt. Hopefully, thes
policy of storing refuse in the open will be modified in the future for tw.lth and safety reasons.

Bangladesh concert
Tboup Ben,b Desh i&lt;i now an independent nation , it 8 still :mffering the tragic
con.Jequenoes of its recent war. Starvation, rampant before the war, continues. Tomorrow
evening at 8 :30 p.m. in Norton HaU'a First Floor Cafeteria Coffeehouse, folksinger
Arthur Miller, wiJ appear in a benefit performance, with all proceeds going to the
Emergency ReUef Fund for Bengla Dab.
The nent wa orpniz.ed by Charles Planck, Department or Political Science , a
recent viaitor to Benlla Desb and bead of Action Ben&amp;fa Desh, and Miduld Frisch,
Department of History. Both feel that ra~ thaa anotha- evenmg of hearing more of the
catastrophic conditions in Benp Desh, the concert will provide a pleasant atmosphere
and evening while at the same time contribute to a most worthwhile cause.
Tickets for the benefit are $2.50 for studenta and SS for non•tudents. Tbe need for
money is cnonnoua. P\e:ale attend.

Q : Where can I find our about the L1nauaae Placement Tests?
A · These are offered by the lnst rucllonal Servaces, wh1ch IS located
o n the tturd Ooor of Harnman labrary

Q What do we do with the dlt1 forms o nce we h1w filled them
out?
A · You are asked t o return them to the AdmiSSitlOb anc.l Re co rds
Office m Kayes An nell 8 . u soon as you c11n
Q : How c1n I ch1nae m-.iors?
A : This can be 1 com placated affau becaube it IS so per.;onal. It
depends on whit co urses you have taken, prerequisites, ho w filled the
departments are, etc , et c. The best advace w e t.an gt ve you IS to sec
your academiC advtsor and he o r she w1ll be glad to help you solve your
problem.

~f

'W".zzaf?

r-------------------------------------------.
.

I
I
I

.

~

Epilogue Thu wt/1 hi' the last Act1on l.me ttJ/u mn j11r thts
umeslt!r. Th e comptler of thts cnlumn would lik&lt;' t11 take&gt; tills
npportumty tu thank tltt• t"dltors and Stafj of The Spt"t.trum jor tltt•u
hdp and encouragement Wt' hope that Acllon L me has helped students
thrnugh so me of th e burt'aucruflc mazt's Dunn/( the summer wt• hllf'&lt;'
to run thr A C'(Ion !.me hnoth m Nmtnn on u ltnutetl hoses untl, oj
(Ouru, the teltphone number. ~IJOO, IJ alwavs m opnatum /h e A 1tum
Line propam t.r sponmretl h1 th&lt;' 0/lu-e nj Stutl&lt;'nt 111/atrs 111 .!01
llarraman Ltbrary . IJ you havt' qut•sfwns or prublems w·· Urt' II'Uti V unu
able to help .YOU all uunnx the summt'l Plea!c' jt'CI Jrt•c• to /HI" /lll r
serwces by culltng 50()0 or hy 11jtfwg ui 111 /Jarr11null

r-------------..,
ALFA ROMt-.0
• FERRARI
• MASERATI

TELAAK STUDIO
3090 Main

834-5470
1day Mrvtc:e with thiS ad

__ ...........
_,

--------------,
:
STEPHEN STILLS
I

Sales •Service •Pans
USED CARS

I
II

Motor Cars, ltd.

I

1
MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM I
tn

1

concert

May 9th at 8:00p.m.

:

l-------------...1

___ _

--BOBCOR-1974 EJI«t (Near Bailey)
834-7350
, _____________
.J

,.... .,. wora SOf" A c.an ..,. ,o...

~....,..,.... ~ _, fV'OCM
Md 'ow COt4 ICC~I!Oftt. '" ~
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f"'iiiin OtoM (Vf"OPMn fifi..IOf\et s.~

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- 1 0 SO'AI'EUIOOI"UN

S TU()( NT fAAV(L C£NT(A l T1)
~7111 St. II•• v..~ . 1002211212~2010

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, 28 April 1972

~.

It's graduation day and silver wings as an Air Force
there you stand . .. diploma pilot or navigator.
OTS is your chance to
in hand and future in doubt.
You could go on to ~aduate break away from the crowd
school. Or you could look for and be recognized. For all the
a job in today's ever~tighten~ facts, mail in the coupon. Or,
ingjobmarket.Or,youcould call800~631~ 1972 toll free:
put your education to work
Remember,with an Air
immediately by aRplying for Force future, the sky's no
the Air ForcesOfficerTrain~ t·1m1·t. • In New J~rK'Y c11ll &amp;'0-962-2803.
ing chool progral mf.
r~iR;oRei:RD.U'm'NQ;p,Vicr-:;;;~
0 on qua i ic at i0 n, 1 otREcroRA
n oF ADVERnstNc , R$AV 1 1
llANOOLPH AIR FORCE BASE
yo. u'll ind kourself b. egin~ I TEXAs7sa.e
I
PI&lt;OR •nd " " ' - on(o...,.tlo&lt;o
All Forct on I
mng 12 wee s o f spectalized I
study designed to prepare I Addrc:_-=_-=_-:=_-:=_-:=_-=_-=_-_-=._-_-_-_~---_- I
you for the challenge and I o.,.ofa..,h
sn
I
responsibilities ofan officer's I c."'
Counrv
I
.
'
A
d
'
I
Suu
Zl
I
commtsston. n , gtve you I OortofCroduarion
School
I
the chance to go on to flight 1
aundentaoddln-e~&gt;noobh1...on.
1

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L-----~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~-~~~-----~

�'Rites of spring'

Dr. Franklin relates incidents
surrounding Stanford firing

Bike hike will be held
One of the most popular
"Rites of Spring" is bicycling. The
Bicycle CoaliHon of Buffalo will
provide on Saturday, May 6 an
opportunity for avid pedalers and
closet-cyclers alike to get some
exercise, unhampered by traffic or
muddy trails.
The coalition, an organiza tion
comprised of 12 area bicycle
clubs, is sponsoring a rid ing rally
t o •·highlight cychng as an
amporrant and ne cessary
component of viable, balanced
transportation." The rally wall
start at 9 a .m from the
Main-B:uley parkmg lot at the
State University of Buffa lo
campus, and ride up Main St. to
the Main Place Mall A pnze will
then ~ awarded to the oldest
person to complete the ndc.
There h a~ been a growing
mterest an bacycle nding an recent
years, as evadenced by the
presence of over 70 millton nders
in the United States. The entire
US . bake productaon fo r the
spnng of 1972 was commJIIed to
dealers by the fall of 197 I Two
Western New York legas lator~ .
Chester R Hardt (R, Amherst)
and Thomas F. McGowan (R.
Buffalo) have antroduced a ball in
the New York state legislature to
"authonze future construction of

STEPHEN STILLS
in concert
MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM
Mly 9th 11 8:00 p.m.

bi cycle and fo ot p at hs in
conjunction With state and
fed era II y- funded h ighwa y
projects."

by Clma Colucd

combination of views," the report stated, "makes
incitement almost a way of fjfe ."
To further illustrate that he wu innocent of the
charge of tncitement, Dr. Franklin told the audience
thai some letters that he had written ten days after
his allegedly inciteful speeches were presented as
evidence. ''Apparently, one can commit incitemenC
ex post facto
an idea which woold intrigue Franz.
KafKa and Lewis Carrol,'' joked Dr. Franklin.
Continumg, Dr. Franklin quoted from a large
sectaon of the report entitled ..Differing Perceptions
of Reafjty." It said that Dr. Frankhn's "perception
daffers drastacally from the consensus in the
University." SpecificaJiy. the report said his
perception differs in hls opposition to defense
research at S tanford

Spt'Ctrum Staff Wrltrr

"About the only freedom that exists in most
unaversities is academ ac,'' quipped H. Bruce Franklin
to a laughing audience Monday night in Hochstetler
11 4. Dr. Franklin, fonnerly a tenured assocaate
professor of English at Stanford Universary. related
the story of his firing for "urging and incating"
violence on the campus.
Du ring demonstrations held last year tu protest
Stanford's mvolvement tn defense research . Dr ·
Franklin gave two speeches which the unaversity
claimed encouraged violence. The uruversity charged
him wrth ulCitemerH and also w1th disruptrng a
speech gJven by former amb:lssadur Henry Cabot
lodge (he was acquttted on the second charge )
Uke an 1rc:ademic Lenny Bnace . Dr. PrJnklin Sick perception?
regaled the crowd wat h 1he details of 1h&lt;.' l'vcn ts
"What arc you goang to do wath a person who
lcadmg to J sax week heanng .11 wluch rt wa., dccadcd ha~ :.a perceptaon of realaty as sack n that?" asked Dr.
to fire ham
hankhn Readmg further. Dr. Franklin quoted a
pas&lt;;age about rchabilitataon " We are high ly
R~arch commitment\
dubauus," stated the report. "that ~habilitation as
Before deahng Wtlh the charge~ brought agamst useful en this case "
ham, Dr I rank lin out l1ned Stanfurd's com matment
Further an the report the panel made a
tu defense research, part acularly as at was applied to statement that Dr. raankltn helaeved was an
the war 10 I ndochtna and what he termed .tdmissaon of has mnocence "We hcheve ham (Dr
"impenahsm" an the P-Jcific Accord eng to Dr Franklm) wh&lt;.'n he expre~scs h1s regret that h.is role
Franklin, il was at the Stan ford RI!Search lnstttute an converting the Universaty to ·~rve ahe people' as
that the "strategic hamlets" strategy wa..~ develope* It mired by practical considerations to advocacy ."
and where the electronac battlefield as curren;IY Concluding the section. the report sa ad · "Barnng a
bemg worked on. He also told the audrencc thJt the drasllt. change an perceptaon" the Unaversrty had no
Computataon Center was workmg on a plo111 lm an clmace hut to fire ham
amphabious invasion of North Vaetnarn .
In response to questaons after his speech. Dr
Dr. Franklin explamcd that he was annoccnt of Franklin critaca/ed standards for appomtment and
"mciting to vaolence Nothang that I allegedly uaclled promotion iu must m:tJm unaversities According to
was agaanst any laws or Standord Uruversaty Dr Franklm , the preva1ltng vrew in departments as
regulations." He pointed uut that no one had been "Our cratena for appointment and pt omotton are
charged Wtth performeng any allegal Of violent gseat and the proof of the pudding tS us " The
activity and he expressed astorushment that o~nyone studeuls an the audaence roared with \aughter at thls
could be convict ed of mciting nothint.
but moat o£ the p rofeuon d\d not He also called for
the hiring of women and minonties . ' 'Why have they
' Way ofUfe '
excluded womcon, why h11vC! th ey excluded black and
Readang the heanng report. Da l-rankl111 4uoted hrown people''"
ats recountmg of lu~ pohllcal vaews, wha,h he
When asked tf h1~ deMre to reluzn to Leaclung.
helreves to be the reason lor his dismissal The aeporl wuuld mterfere wtth lm pohtll~l actavaly Or
noted that Dr . Frank lm believed that Stanford was Franklan answered that 11 would rll&gt;t ''The fact ol
:an 1mpenallstic, repressave instalutaon, wluch was an lhe matter ai that , aftea the.' ftr~l live years , berng a
accurate assessment of Dr F rankhn ·s beliefs ' 'Tius professor anvulve ~ almost 1111 worl."

'Healthful exercise'
Asse mblyman Hardt feels
' Wath all of the wuJespread
concern for the preservation of
the envuonment, I thank a faalure
to prom ote and e ncourage
hacycling would be a grea t
mastake. Bikes are a non·pollutmg
form of transportation, they are
mexpensave for the consumer,
provide a healthful means of
exercise and will save the state's
taxpayers a great deal of money in
hag.hway maantenance and rep:ur."
Senator McCowan alsu noLed
that the state of Wisconsin has
already set up extensive bike
routes, and "t here as no reason
why New Yurk, the 'Empire
S tate,' can't begin to provide the
same facdllies for 11s residents"
From the response to the rally
receaved ~u far . Ene County
rtsidents see m more thau
enthusiastac 1 he media coverage
Wtll be extensive, and local
legaslators, such as Councilman
Wilham Hoyt f10m the Delaware
dist riel , will be on hand to
partictpatc.

Hear, 0 Israel
For gems from the

JEWISH BIBLE
Ph oM
875;-4266

JUDAIC STUD IE S

Tht Dtpartm.. t of Clmics w~l offer two courses in
Jud•c Studies in Fall, 1972. For further infonnnon
write to the Otpartm ..t 11 390 H•v• H•ll end you
will receive coune diSICriptions as soon • thty .,..

*************************

tv~il•ble .

Last issue
Today·~ ISSUe of Thr Sputrum will be the la.~ t piJX&gt;r of tlus semester 7 ht Sptctrum
wall ~ tart to publi~h for lh ~ ~ umnu•r ~mester un June 2 wtlh "II copy and advertisin t~ due
in by May lO
rhr Sprc-trum WC)uld hke- to lake lhl~ II I)PflriUIIIIV Ill Wl\h .til ··~ ft'lldt'r'&gt; luck Ill
thrar finals and a happy 'ummcr v:lCottiOtl

*************************

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Friday, 28 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�Testimony,is given by Buffalo Five
Wednesday - the defense rested its case in the trial
of the "Buffalo" - a group of five anti-war activists
char,ed with raiding an Army intelligence office and draft
board offices in the old Post Office building on the night
of Aug. 21, 1971.
Charged in the case are 22-year-old Charles Lee
Darst ; his 2 I -year-old wife, the former Maureen Considine ;
22-year-old Jeremiah Honigan; 26-year-old Ann Marie
Masters, all of Buffalo, and 26-year-old James Martin of
Micb.ipn. Wednesday was the sixth day of testimony in
Buffalo Federal Court.
The courtroom of Federal Judge John Curtin has
been filled to capacity with spectators for the entire six
days of this political trial. Before defense rested its case, all
five defendants took the witness stand to testify about
what they stood for, their feelings about the Vtetnam war
and why they chose to act as they did o n the night of
Auaust 2 1.
Ann Masters said she became clearly convinced of
the immorality and unjustness of the Vtetnam war after
listening and talking to returning Vietnam veterans. She
said she had been ' 'confronted by the courage of these

men" at the winter soldier hearings In Detroit ln 197 I.
Masters said that according to the Geneva Accords,
t he United States had been in violation of international
law . Jeremiah Horrigan said : "For three years the war has
been part of my life. I now consider myself to be part of a
non-viOlent community of reststa nce."

Inspired by brothers
Another defendant, Charles Darst, reflected on why
he was on trial : " I wouldn't be here today if it were not
for Ute deaths of 50,000 Americans and a million
Vietnamese ...
Darst's bro ther, Davtd , was one of the defendants in
the Catonsville Nine Trial and was later kalled an an
automobile accident. Charles said that be had been
InSpired by IUs brother who o nce told him : "Jail is a small
price to pay for not being a party to murder."
Under cros.'l examination by the prosecution , Darst
said : " l know what I was doing, and I know I had to do it
to be a good citizen. I don't think I am any more &amp;uilty
than a person who breaks into a burning house to save
Jjves."

Also on Wednesday, a mother of two children from
suburban Blasdell testified that she and 100 others
admitted that they too are part of the Buffalo and share
their guilt.

Sharing the 'guilt'
Bar bra Doherty also read part of a statement : "Some
of the Buffalo still roam to restore freedom and dignity."
Three times during aoss examination, the defendants were
asked by Herman Grable, the JOvemment prosecutor in
the case : "Who were the two people that sot away on the
night of Aug. 217" Each time Grable asked this question.
spectators in the courtroom would stand and admit they
were there on the niaht in question and thus share the
guilt.
Several spectators were asked to leave the od\lrtroom
by Judge John Curtin after their verbal response to
Grable's question. Grable has contended all alona that
seven people were involved in the raid , because FBI aaents
said they found seven pain of shoes in a bq inside the o ld
Post Office building on the nidlt the defendants were
arrested.

STEPHEN STILLS
in concert
MAY 9th It 8:00p.m.

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th ;~n it does to you.

Now, as to looks. tlw only
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$20,000 Ferrans.
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Page eig~t . The Spectrum. Friday, 28 Aprill972

eokJno I'll
~-e. M. L.

�'

Economy is top issue

McGovern wins political poll
George McGovern wu the o verwhelming victor
in the political poll publiahed in The Spect rum last
Mo nday and Wednesday. McGovern, witb 82 of the
J J S responding votes, beat o ut his closest
competitors, Shirley Chlsholm, Edmund Muskie and
George Wallace, who received six votes each . Edward
Kennedy came in with five votes, Henry Jackson
wit h four votes, and Hubert Humphrey fmished last
with a poor two votes. Write-in votes for J ulian Bond
and John Lindsay numbered o ne each.
It was an even split on Question 2, as 56 people
said they would vote for President Nixon as opposed
to certain Democratic candidates. However, of those
who said they would vote for Nixon , 47 stated they
would d o so only if George Wallace won the
Democratic no minatio n. The other candidates who
would not be voted fo r as opposed to Nixon each
received approximately ten votes an this category.
Fifty&lt;i&amp;hl people said they would definitdy not
vote for Nixon, no matter who wo n the Democratic
nomination.
Third Party favored
Almost 70 people sa1d they would suppo rt a
Third Party movement, as opposed to the 41 who
would not. What was anterest1ng in this category was
the fact that although 60% totally sa1d they would
support a Th11d Party , R7~ of those who voted for
e1ther Shuley ChiSholm or George Wallace were m
support of such a movement
O ne of the most mteresllng facet.s o f the poU
~;arne to hfe an the question concernmg what ISsues
people thought were the most Important in thiS
~:amp!ugn . Unexpectedly , the economy was p1cked as
most Im portant by (.2 persons, as o pposed to
Vu:tnum With 48. Taxes a nd the credibilit y gap m
lhe gCivemmenl eac h took three votes. Other issues
mentioned were fatlure o f moral leadership, fighting
commu11isrn. and increasmg tbe defe nse budget.
A majonty of those. whu took part in thiS poll
thought t hat the HI 2 1-year-old vote would play a
~1gmfi can t part in thr upcoming e lection. The vote
here was 73 40. In a breakd own o n this questiOn,
61% of those tn th t: 18 21 group said that the1 r
peers wo uld play a significant part in the election.
Ho wever, the group over 21 were mo re optimiStic
Jhout the yo unaer voter II ere , 74% said that the
Ill 2 1-yea r-olds wo uld be Important m the election .
Most o t those who took part 10 the poll (77 as
opposed to 37) were 10 the new vo ter aae JJOUp. But
thiS dtd no t seem to deter them from the next
ttuestion . whtch asked 1f they had reg~stered to vote.
Here . lOS sa1d the y had , and o f those who hadn't.
"-time were either not lJ S CitiZens, or hadn't had the
lham:e to reg~ster llS yet
Almost everyone sa1d they would vote 10 the

upcoming dection ( 108- S), but one inaenious
person said be wilhed tbey bad someone to vote for ,
rather than apirut. Wo.t of t he five who said they
would not vote in tbe election, could not because
they were eit her too youna o r not U.S. citizens.
The vote split down t he middle on the question
of whether they would "approve of a student stnke
as an expression of protest aaainst the extension of
the war in Southeast Asia." The only interesting
resul t t hat came from t his question was that 53% of
those in the 18 21 bracket sa1d they favored such a
move, wttile 44% of those over 2 1 said they
approved of such an idea . There was only a fo ur vote
difference tn each age group, and a much la rger
di fferen ce was expec ted in the o lder age group
'Why make il harder?'
Many people felt that such a stnkt: would not be
very effective, since not hing would change One
person said he wo uld like to see a marc h a nd a
demonstration, wttile another sa1d he wo uld like to
see a general cihz.ens marc h Olher lOm rnents o n thL~
question tncluded the statt'ment thai 11 would make
the North VIetnamese feel better One ohv10us
McGovern supporter sa1d wh y make 11 hJrder lor
McGovern to wm , si nce the had pubh~:tiY wo uld nul
do hiS cause any good Ano ther com menter 'iald that
d stnk e was a bas1c nght, "-'long as the Umverstty
was left o pen fo r o then.
Below a re some of the figure.. Lom ptled from
trus poll , and set u p to s ho w several 1nterestmg
pmnts brought o ut 1n the results. We w1s h to lhank
Thomas PaJak, o f the S tat1s11cs Department , fm hL\
help 1n compiling t h1s po ll

ISSUES
Candidatt
McGovern
Others

Econom)'
44
17

v,~lnum

Othnt
'i

35
1:!

STUDENT STRIKE
Ag~

Ft~r

AllOI/111

l iS 21
Over ll

)q

i5
19

Aft

Stgmfttattr
47

IS

NEW VOTERS
18 2 1
Over 21

28

Not Slgnt{lranl

2'1
10

Index available
The ten •olume Index to the Human Rdationa
Area Filet, a powerful oew tool for aocUI acieuu
reeeareb, II now a..U.ble at tJ.e RMip Lea Library.
'Tlle index pro'fidea a limultaneoUIIy topically
orpnlud iadex to m ore thu a tbouaod boob and
teclmk:al articlea on about two hundred eodetia
aro uud the world. FuD instruetio1111 for the -.e of t he
lndn are contained Ia ita ln uoduction , which eo.t
about SSO,OOO to compile.

Billie Kirpizh will leave
to accept dance position
T his Saturday evening at 8 and
I I p .m ., the culmination of a
semester's dedication to the art of
dan ce will be performed in
Harriman Ubrary S tudio. The
perfurmancc will be given by the
lJ n1v e rs it y Dance Theatre
Wo rksho p undc1 the d1recllon of
Billie Kirp1ch The group, which
1ncludes R1 c hJrd Andrews,
Magnus BenLJng. Wendy Btller,
unca (ray . Adrienne FabnellJO,
Stewart Goldstem, Vic kJ Johnson.
B o nnie MacFayden
Frank
Manuc 1ello, Raphael Me1ron,
Marjone Schwartz, Don~ Se•den,
Joy Sheppard, Debb1e Sohr and
L.n1n Walker presented a new
work . Syang (Box) at the
" Women 1n Arts" festival at Finch
College in Manhattan earher this
yea r. The program will mclude
improv1sa11ons taken from class
exercises in the d ynam tcs nf
movement , se veral piece s
choreographed by the st udents
('"On Education , Amencan llllll ,
Energies, Tempo R ubatu .' and
" Ma1d!1" ) , aml two maJOr works
A Drwdtc Ceremony. and S y411g.

ntlROPARTY
Conditkl tl'
McGovern
Wallace
Ch1shulm
Other~

For

AI(QtnSI

47

11

s

Cntnt winner
Ms Ktrptcll who has danced
huth
natrnn:t lly and
1nt~rnatwnally. w1th the Dudley
Maslo w Bales Co . the Cene
Irdman Co , lhe New Dance

I

~

I

11

H

G roup, and was a 1971 recipient
of a New Yo rk S tate Arts Council
Grant for Creative Artists, has
accepted the chairmanship of the
Department of Dance at the
Un1veulty of California at
Fullerton for September. Several
members of the group are also
leaving, many to pursue dance
further at schools in New York.
Brockport, Oregon and Europe.
The1r general dissatisfaction with
the limited number of dance
courses and the unresponsiveness
uf t)ur admm1stra!lon to r the
encouragement l&gt;f 1he art form is
very ev1dent
Ms. Klrp1ch has enJoyed a
un1que relallonstup with her
students with dance . "We share 11,
grow from it a nd learn together
Dance 1s a function of the human
experience To approach it 111 any
les.~ o f a way ts to deprive the
ind1V1dual and bcltttle the art "
M5 K 1rp1ch 1s 111deed a fine art 1st
The members of the group also
have a beauhful, almost reverent ,
lJhlloaophy £or the art . '"to dance
is to live
and to bve is to
dance."
T1ckets for the perforrnanl't'S
Jrl' available free al rhe Norton
Hall tu:ket uftice
Fran~

MarasclrteliP

Being the adventures of a young man
whose principal interests are rape,
ultra-violence and Beethoven.

Runs on a Premium Blend of rock
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a careful blend of golden oldies w1th
the best of whafs new 1n rock.

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EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT

~voJ

Dally &amp; Sunday: 2-":-40-7:20·10
Sat.: 2-":30·7-9:25-Late Show at 11 :45

Friday , 28 April 1972 The Spectrum . Page nine

�I

EdiToRiAl
IFSA fiction

The Faculty -Student Association Board of Directors is
once again taking advantage of the University community . In
a projected budget remarkable only because it is far less
believable than usual, they have called for a sustantial price

/

increase.
This price boost is justified on the basis of a tremendous
drop in sales volume. How the FSA can anticipate such a
reduction is beyond the fringe of comprehension. The
population of the University will increase, not decrease, nest
year and there appears to be no sound basis whatsoever for
these expectations. Unless some justi fi cation is provided to
document any expected decrease in sales vol ume, we will
have to assume that this is just another piece of fam tltar FSA
sophistry.
Lest there be any doubts about the unlikelihood o f these
projections' accuracy , it should be noted that sales volume in
Vending alone has steadily increased over the past three
years. Now, FSA amazingly c1tes an expected reduction in
Vending's sales volume
It •s obvious what FSA IS attempting. They want a pnce
mcrease, not to offset any decrease in volume of profits, but
to mcrease their profits and build up a large reserve fund
This reserve would then be utilized to develop new FSA
facilities on the Amherst campus. Stated more succinctly ,
this means that the current University populat ion is being
charged for the future ~xpansion of FSA.
Another interesting aspect of this demand for a price
increase is its timing Why does FSA always ask for pnce
hikes at the close o f the regular school year or during the
summer? Obviously because it minimizes public scrutiny of
their operations.
FSA doesn ' t exist m a vacuum Thts nation is in the
midst of a long in flati o nary cycle and their price hike request
anlv serves to extenuate that situation. If they truly feel an
irrepressible desire to increase somethmg, they should
increase their servtces, nor profits o r prices.

Peace move?

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol . 21 , N o 80

Fnday, 28 April 1972

E.ditor-tn-&lt;..hief
Oenrm Arnold
C.o M~ "-'1'"1 Editor AI lhn&gt;un
Co M~n~g•na Eduor M•l..e l lppm~nn
AsSl M~ n ~~'"~ Ed11or :!&gt;u\AII M u"
lJuJ~nt\&gt; M.i n ~ger
I,,d. II rriAu
Adverlls•nw M ~n•ger &lt;.u\Jn M•llt•ntlnt

Co p y

Aut.
fe~ture
G ro~pht &lt; Art~

Amy Ahrend
JoAnn Arm~u
lrll (,reenw•ld
ll owte Kurlt
l •nts &lt;.rom er
konn1 ~or man
MArry Gallt
tl•lrt Kttrl(\man
I yndd I eo

Sports

rom roles

A•~t

MMyllupr Runyun

L~ yout

Aur.
Lit &amp; Or~m~

MUJI C
Off-&lt;:.~mpus

Asst
Pho to
As~

V,fl jHll

M1ch•el ~llvt'rbldtl
.BillY Altm~n
l ynne T rdtgc:r
Ydt..Jnl

. M1lkty O)tcrre•~her
. . Kim S411lu\
. Ba rr y Rubin
Howie r atw l

c.

'''f• fttml

'' served by United l'ress lrHern•t •onal, College Pr~
tl&gt;e lu&gt; An~rlh Tm1c\ rret Pit&gt;&gt;, the Lo&gt; Angelei T1me1
Syndlldlt Jnll l•herattlln New\ Scrv•ce.

Tht•

~ervllt,

Repubh,4111ltl ol nHtter herein wtlhou• the
Editor-111 t 111~1 '' lorllld\lell
Editono~l polo,~

' 1~6 l..l~

A 8ABC/

f-In . God tlamn, another o n e gone already Entl
u l year ~.:olum ns arc! not so easy t o write it seems
fh e re 1s a se n se of wan ling t o order th e expenen ces
o f 1he last eight months , an d a reahz.atJ on th a t to do
&lt;,O 1~ protlably l mP&lt;&gt;SSihle. f ven if it were possible 10
do that for mys.c lf, whal se nse w o ultl 11 mak e t o
you? Wh:1tcver expcnences you had tn the lasl year
ar~: yours, and the value you aSSign t o them as
something t hat wtll c hange o ver 11me
&lt;' hange 1 hat 'lee rn s t o be a c nt1 ca l w o rd I n
many wn~s 11 tS tmpossib le for m e to rem ember
where I was , nr who I wa~. last September My
readaon to tht5 st t uahon IS t o assume that lhe re has
hn·n 'ttme change Whalh h opefully ha.~ been some
k.tntl o f &amp;ro wrh anl.l eKpans lon II IS a loser to lry a nd
\Cnse where t am goang to be,
a~ well Wh1 ~h leaves me nght
1n thl' madlllt: o l now HI then:
now . do you happen l o know
when· we are ttl1
Oh. you
tuo?
Well , I ' ve got some
hurgantly lefl over from the
lolk fes1 1va l and
Dtgressaon BuffaJo f-olk
f-est iVal II wuuJd have bel'll
by Stcac
OJll' tf It w ere som e wh a t
war1ttcr o~nl1 liner, but ut h er wrse la rge amounts of
.rctl!l .;('t:rn due tn the p eople who co nt.:c!IVetl and
t:lleluft•d the th re1· tl ay ex travagan za last week e nd
! 11 tr y and cvaluall' t ill.' whole th1ng on an ad hy act
ha~as would he a lo~er Overall one o f ~~ f!Ht~t
ttnprl'""Yl' tlung~ l u m e was the rwmt&gt;er ~~f pt'\•rk
rwrfurrr1111g whu scemeJ to al' t ually CrtJ UY whallhry
WNl' clwng F nthusaasl lt: c red1t to lho~e ulnu:rnl'll ,
Jlld 11 ~houl&lt;J hdppe n agaan n ext yea t
Wha1h hnngs us to the unfortunatt· pnml '''
whcthn anythtng IS goang lo h a ppen anywht"rt: on
lht\ l.llnpu' ever a11a•n Am "''t ~ur(" whne lhc
m.1nt1a1ory lcl' legJ\la t aon wall stand when tim
111lt111111 JfiJlCJr\ IHII II IS ~arnet hmg yciU h~lt~r thanl..
.th••ul Would ll\:1\lln JII y ltkc- 10 'l't' IIW leglslalltrt•
evtn I lung.:. up hy P·''~"'&amp; J llrllt&gt;ull..twmg naandat.1ry
IJ\Jiton In tullh IIH' puhh~ and p er:;Clnal sphere~ my
uhwrvJ IIon '' thai there are an awful tot ,,f penrh'
Jruuml who ~y lhcy wanl tlung.~ hut tlon'l want '"
wurk or p.ty for lht·m Mandatory fees seem w1·ll
• IIIIIJlJied to IJ'e' l•vt-rylmdy ~liT\e' ..t lt&gt;l .thuul
thnu . Jlltl ht~w lhry Jre 'pent
hut lh.:y arc
nne"•"Y 11 lhr Ullnmunaly 1:. to fundaon II may he
dt· ;tit' r hy the I IIIII' yuu \l't' 1has , hu 1 as ,,, now 11
.appl'J" a\ 1f thiiM' whn w.trll It• gel o~nythang frum
lhr llrl!ve,...,lly ~lllllllllllttty h.1d hclh'r gl'l 1Jtf lht"ll
J\\ Jlld \l.trl Worklltl: l"ht• Student 1\sso,I,Jit&lt;lll
nllt..:t: wuul11 he d ttt•ud pla.:c tu 'l.ttl ftntlang 11111
what nu.:h l h e tlnnc I nd tl•gres~1on 1 I"or nnw .)
Now'' l}lt yt·~. I hat', "' hal we wert• 111 I hr.: nlllldil'
111 J way' IMdc w.t .. n ' l 1t? 1 h~rt' set·rn~ to he a
ltrUJi n nghlnt''' 111 en tlmg J Sl'llll'\ll't/J ,dlool year
u\ the 'pnng 1 h1s 1s hawd IJrg&lt;"lY on t h c sense of
tran\llaon thai araany of'" 'lt!l'llt 111 havl' 111 fan~ now
lhc ha~\lc' .Jhnult•lh,, aud wh.11 to d,, next yt·ar , JH"
.all Jround II' C"nnlu\ltllt " rampJtl Yl'l thas same
unll~rtatnty means thai lh.:rc l' J twg•nntng ol rtl'W
111111(1.\ for a lol ul p1'1lplc. lh.tl anhl·n·nl tn Slldt ~rt\e'
" o111 opporluntty to go new pl.llO hulh mMdl' Jud
nut Wha.h lla.ay o~t.lun'lrclly he .1 hllk h..1rtl tu 'l'l"
wht·n Yllll •H~: worried 11111rl' dhout \I.IIVI!l!! lu tle.ath

The

Wtth the decision to restore the ongmal fundmg levels of
several Faculty of Soctal Science research programs, the
con flict between that Faculty and the admmistration may be
over Whtle the bitter memory of Hayes Hall msensittvi ty
may still rankle some individuals, a relationship of mutual
trust is undoub tably best for both stdes.
Last summer , ano ther Faculty was involved 10 a h eated
battle with the administration . The matter was finally settled
in accordance w1th the Faculty 's w•shes and relations
immedtately omproved . We would hope that the Social
Sciences Faculty and Hayes Hall use the Arts and Letters
situation as a model. This University has enough enemt es
without creating additional ones internally .

Ctty

NJ0 ACT-

e~o,pre~•

,on,rnt ul the

I&gt; determmrd h't the EdtiOr·m&lt;:h•el

Page ten . The Spectrum Friday , 28 April 1972

grump

My need/des ar c for o rder/control has het"n
rnenlloned fre qu e ntly h erern of lat e These feeltnll.'
are eas ily tnggc:red when 1t co m es lime to lravt·
so m et hing and so so m e place e lse. Fear seems ICl ht'
my mam response rhat so meho w I am going to foul
th e new s atuallon o r new person , and that lhrre
will b.: neither tame o r roo m to recover from my
mistakes. N c wn ess ts so mething whu.: h ~e m s to tw
twth attrarlav.: anti re p e llen t The sy ndro m l' nl
buytng new cars a nd penocltcally need a m•w
hed ma l e sctm dearly enoug h vt~ah lc to n eetl hlllr
t.:om m ent P ersona lly I seem t o havt' heen maswm·d
on many of lhu\e connec laons If at works. keep 11
ttll at doe\n'l
Vel newness an th e sc n~e o l c hange IS a mud1
more maxt"d blessang When you hav r to ~t art
functJontng 11Uts1de a co mfQrtahly bu1l1 nat:hcanxtcty ~c:tmb to nse And a round h ere th.u bappem
Jl th e ~ta rt of every ..cmester, and especaally at Lht·
end ol every year M y own fear seems e.l.\11)'
JliOJc!t.IJbl(" ont•&gt; the rest of the world Seem' ~~~ al
rx·opll' st.Jrl lo hack away from e a c h o ther af therr 1s
a n y doubt ahoul w h o as go1ng lo he wh ere an lh t•
fu t ur.: Wh1 c h .!VOid!&gt; th e t!&gt;\UC of what peupk t.,n
~ve each
other now , t o the exlenl th.Jl \Uth
avo td ance looks dehherate , as tf rl were safer nul lu
gel Jnythang than 10 nsk lostng sornet htng.
Aga1n, I h e IJn ly people who dun 't ulJk•·
m~tJk cs arc t h ose wh o d o n 't do anythtng
A
rt"3\l•nahlc cor re la ry uf whal seems to he thai I he
on ly way n,,, tn lose an ~t htng ts n o t to hav.:
ttnyth1ng 1 h ere \t:cna tn be a lot of people g.elluag by
nn k~\ t h an I h ey ncetl to hecau'&gt;c they do not wa nt
111 hl' an a ~alua h on wher e they could lose somtt lH ng
It 1\ hMtl lo pu~h anto sca rey places, to makl'
ynutsdl take nsks 1n new ~llu allo ns and/or w11h new
1x·opk My o wn !&gt;t:l un that ts co mplicated hy
hav•ng, apparently, more fear of nut testang my own
"""" than o f beang reJec ted/ fatll ng Not lhat rl 1\n"l
J pn:ll )I light an d agon11ang dcc..tsaon f requently
.tn)(hlUS, anx iOus, a nxio us
The trulh , or some part •lf at, he~ tn the reaJtt)
of the great one way s agn an lhc s k y ( Am azing whJI
\lflltllcS a )l p or two of strought Jac k Danteb wtJI
produ~:e
or w as t h an an a nal ugy'n Anyw ay onu
Jnd once o nl y you get t o take the nde thiS par11 (U I.Jr
gu1se m'fneniJs. Under s u c h Circu mstan ces the moll'
spent t1me spent co w erang
under t ables ts a n 1~1·
place for 11 , tf the labledot h IS la rge enough
thr
k's lime s pent an more productave/construdtve/
l'IIJliYahle ways My favorite personal inanu y t~ thl'
way I JVoad reachan~ oul t o people beca use of a ft:Jr
nf he1nt!. rt.')Ccted, o~ntl then b1tch about being londy
Only tn lakang nsk~ IS there o pportunaty F or gontl
Jnd had unfollunatcly , but what th e h e ll . ~0 'iO
odds ·~ the tlc\t het in town . (Lan dlord! More J alk
Danie ls! J
So, a ll you lqlk\ lh:sl a111 l go t n o choit:e annul
dtang1ng lhtng., .H!&gt;UIIt.l maghl w; well relax a n d mak•·
11 a~ easy J' pm~ahl&lt;· 1f 11 '" goang to happen , nJ•·
w11h •I 01 J ltlltc you nugh l ~.:orne out a w1nnc1
I rav.:l wl'll c:.wd llllk af yuu Jrc tlo:parltng. To o~ll ••1
gootl 'ummcr dl&gt;lll~ whalt:vcr l·rom 'um&lt;" dt:l"f)
Wlt·r dnt''' u•lltl' ,In ampubt• lu say I' ll mass yutl II
mu .. t hl· the JJ(I.. DJnlel~ If you're hat.k next yt.:dr I
fiiJ~ h&lt; Inn Who knnw\ mit: w11h 11 \Ieese """'
l Jke l ~le

''P

It is ru
f11 rft,•

hc/11,

I n Re h u
Arral, 1'17
111~1 ,,n't true

n. ,

Parag
Til tht• hJtror

1 he!
/111

I WISh In •
mul rlJIIun

S ( Ill (

(II

.ornplelel)' tits

"' a result, 1m
'"'llttnl 111 tnl·
dati Ollt lnlc.'Ol
lashrun The tv
I o I· tc!d /1
11\l' WISh that
,hanc o n t'Vl"r)'
leave.- my •npy
lllt cgrt ty for I·•

'Buyer

We olll'rt
ll uw true 11"
My husha
fltlliHCl&gt; tal..l'n
lt tgh~Jie We
I hal hap(lc.'Oel
reJder' JUII.:c f,
Wht•n w••
thc111, ...,,. we
rlqtaltvc'
NP
at.ldattunal ptll
p lHdo
t o tu
oul ra,.;t'Ol" Pill
I h en I to
r. prnutlll' the
.11 J llt:Jrhy dru
I h·· t:UII" I
•H

\he ha' to

ultl!tronal , up•

�SA snubs WNYPIRG
To the Edito r:
The more one tries to become aware and
rnvolved in the enrichment o f university life , the
easier it is to understand why so many peo ple revert
ro " apathy ." As soon as someon e tries to reach out
and organize a projec t that is educational and
beneficial to both students and the community they
are co nfronted with a bureaucracy of opposition
with enduring perseverence som e gro ups manage to
reach th e end of the maze co nstructed by the
administration. As disheartening as it may be, most
people expect adminiStrat tve difficul ties. But even
more disillusioning is trymg to deal w tth our own
student government
supposedly those who
champton our interests.
This past Friday I sa t m on the SA meeting.
Towards th e end of the meetmg a representative
from WNYPIRG o utlined o ne of th e group's research
projects, a full scale investigation of th e Ed u ca t ional
1 esting Service. This is the service that gives us th e
S ATs, G R Es, LSAT and the Med Boards. The proJect
ts betng coordina ted in Was hm gton, D.C th iS
sum mer by Ralph Nader's staff and each PlRG grou p
tn t h e nation is sendin g a researcher for the three
month~ and
paymg tiS share of lhe expenses

WNYPIRG wanted S7SO from the SA so that a UB
student cho sen fro m thoee that applied could
participate Needless to say. someone quickly rose,
attacked WNYPIRG . . . poof . . . great idea ...
tabled. Another opportunity to expand the services
and scope of o ur university experience was snubbed
o ut.
The irony of the defeat (temporary, I hope) was
that the next matter on the agenda was Michael
Levtnson asking for SJOOO to go study conditio ns in
Vretnam I don 't want to question the worth of Mr.
Levinson's proposal, but I use this as an exa mple of
student government responsibility . The same
indivtdual that rose to question t h' credibility o f
WNYPIRG, an idea approved by 10,000 students
(remember their petition drive?) llad the audacity to
vote to G IVE LEV the m o ney . Responsibility?
Prionties? Government? Obvtous lack of leadership
such as sh own Friday just further aids the aims o f
I hose in Albany and Hayes Hall II also malces it a lot
e.mcr for more students here t o feel justified in
ljl,llunng sl udent government and s.itttn&amp; around
play1ng the UB blues.

Jt/1 Janowit:

Dubious dismissals
T'n thr f:tlttor
wou ltl Like to ~onngra tulate Ray Mo ll y
\.o ldberg on her perceptive and rousmg teller or
Ap ril 24 conce rning certam tlubtOu!&gt; academ ic
dtsm&amp;als made recently It ts clear that mort' tha t
academic qualtfica!tons were mv~llpted to
determtne the fates of those who have bet&gt;n dented
tenure Aspects of these academtcs' ltves, whether
th ey be political optntons, ltfe styles, sex, or skm
roto r , have been constderetl where they should not
havt' been. Both faculty and atlmm1s tration llre
~utlt y ol uSing thetr own subJel.ltve "world -vtew" as
a hasis for decidmg upon acadenm matters

It is rwt true

I hb lnmt: proves once .tnd ror dll tha t the
faculty and the adrn1mslral10n know nothmg abo ut
ilcatlem 1c freednrn Their totally unenlightened
atttlude~ anti esott:ri c selfiShness rnu.'l be opposed
now by all those who truly beiJeve a uruversity
should he a free and open "academiC marketplace,"
free from poi..Jllcal purges fro m both the nght and
the left, and free from outstdt" \.buSiness and
governmeniJI mOuences
I Jutn Ro~ y Molly Guldherg tn L&lt;~llmg for action
now to rect1fy thes&lt;" ummous diSmiSsals. and to
prevent ~ut.h Ol.~urante\ from ever happerung ag.ai.n

,..,.,,, Silandnlow

'IUegal postering'
In Re f-m What It', Worth (The Sp~rtrum 1tl
1\pnl I Y72l whJtrver llarvy Ltpman wad ahnut me
IU~l l\11'1 I rul·

wJ

VIH

I(Jfll

Paragraph distortion
"/o t i lt' I·.Jifor

I wl\h to t:xprt:)) my mo'll vt:hcment nutrage ost
the 111\IIJI,tlllln ul my column an the 1\pnl :!o t!&gt;Sue of
/"hi· Sflt'( (tll/tl
rh e setond parJgrarh Wd~
u'"tpleldy tll~l()lted by the removal of \l.'veral hnes
A' .t re~ull 10\Uit~ meant fur Harvey Wern\tem were
omitted 111 nw;takenly atlnbuted to t-red Aueron I
tl1d not 11111mtl It&gt; m~ull F-red. at ka.sl nut an that
ld,hllln I he two ~t:nh:nle~ 'hould have reo~tl
To f-red 1\ueron I leave my bn"' nf uayuu' o~nJ
the wtsh thai hi\ v1hranl personality tilnlmul· II•
ShiiiC on cvnyunc hl· meels r 0 Harvey WI'IO\Il'lll I
kave my t&lt;lf')l uf 1\ ltundrcJ and Onc Way' lu l "t'
lnle)tnly fo1 I un Jlld Prnfll
1/IJt II /t(lltlt/11

'Buyer Beware'

Jo tht' tdltor

A ll B student arrest ed lor po~tenng('?) (tllepl
poslennc). by our campus aecunty for~'l Thill .a
c:lther a farce or we are comma on some really bad
ttmes
FtrStly l"d like to tdenlt fy my~etf as nol a
member of the S.O.S • commun1st party et 1. et~o I 'm
tust me, und me ts Silk of all th1s cra p .
What has happened to free sreeclt in th e
11n1ver.n1y? IIJegal post ering? Really. tllegal postering
.,n the U.B. cam pus? That's ~td L1kt: a disease
lestenng 111 a warped mmtl My g&lt;&gt;d
tllegal
post enng the poor ~h1t head whu dad tl IS •n nr w~
lll Jail
And who are 1hese rdwts whc) .urested thiS

Crllnmal for hll&gt; hetnous ~nme dgamst the nunds of
so.:tety's duldren!
our campus ~e,unty force. I
have always been undeT the assumplton that they
wete here to proteq. ua not harm us
1 mean the
dop aod the clubs and maybe even lite guru, !here
to protect us ngbt? Not to hurt us I rnean I thud
thai t h ey're here to prot eLl us but t hnse dogs still
make rne wary and gun\?
they lnl[tht kdl all of us
Ynu know, we'll pruh.t hly 11l'vcr .~gaan become
involved tn ~uch st nfe as were were h.Hk 111 the t1mes
of Camhod1a and Kent Stale Jnd m~yhe th4t'~ good,
hul don't let those people J1ld 11lca\ d1c 1n vatn
r&gt;un't lt:t Yl'IH m1111,h .1nd hear I\ the at ll B
.fnl'l Brnnt•tt

Day Care Center
I r&gt; thl' fd11m
Th&lt;• pan·nts,

~1.111 .

voluntccr,, .Inti

l'~penally

lh&lt;'

&lt; htldr1·n ul the II H l&gt;.•y I .Ill' C cnlcr want tu lo~kc

1111\ oppurtUnll)l to lh,Jilk the e&lt;htors of n11•
.\fln tnun for your l'OIIIIIIUIIIjl n, prt·'""" ol &lt;mH t'l n
l·,,t·nttally lht' mml trllpml.lnl ..11111 \.II our
lCIIIt:l l\ Ill pCovtdt: ltlfl(lfl/ltJII\ qu,tllly .:h1ltl GUt"
1 h~: yrculy nnn"IY ol ..1 hudgt:l trtSI~. dOd the
lttllncdt·•l JH:te&lt;;.\IIY ul hc\legm~ 11 ayes ltallm ottlcr
to ohta1n fund~. " d WJ\ll! of l'llo:rgy 1n terms of 11111
gt•nt ral program II luntlln~ 1 hl· tenter I\ 11 mo~ltl'r of
tfn!ver\lly·l 0111111111111y JliiUOIIt'!&gt;, lhl·ll lh&lt;"C

prhtrllll"' \llnultl he t\t.thll\hl·d It• np&lt;'n and
tfntVt r\lly With• dl~l U\\1110\
1 ht" prt'\c.'nt
tklt:ttltlll,ol n1n .,1 ll\c al prH&gt;II!II"'· \&lt;. hi• h l'll• ourage!i
.omprlllt)t lltiiSttlllt'Ocle!\ lo ll~hl 11 11111 1n Or
" ''ttn', w.ulllll-t wo111 , t~ tle,tru&lt;IIV&lt;" .11ul LIIVI\IVI'
I Ill" lt&lt;'Jit11t'lll tile [)ay ( Jl\' ( l"flll.'l ftJJ. ltcCIVCtl
lr.1111 lht: ..ttlnnnt~ltall"n w11h rq~..trJ l• t lul&lt;tllng, 1~ Jn
l.'l\J mrlc• ul
I he hutt:dlldJ lllt'd Jnd
rnl raltzetl
.IJIJIIIIJI hIll ohlllllnl\lf..tliUII 1111 I hi' • llllf'll\
'illl&lt;/11 ( IJII( I

'''"""'Ill.

ljlltllfon

\ ' lt "t't//1).1 ( tlllltlll(lt'f

I ' H ll.n I ·urt• Inc

We uflt:n hl'JI tlw cxprcs~tun "Buy••r Bcw.tn· · •
ll nw I rue tt 1~
My hu~hauJ and I rcc(·utly hJd 'ome wcdd111~
flu. tures tJkt:n o~l .1 11hotograph shop un Mam Sl neat
H1ghgclle We wcrc !&gt;urpn\('d o~t a numlwr 111 linn~'
tiUtt ho~ppencJ Jnd woultl JUSt Ill..: to lt:t "lhcr
rt:o~dt:r' tutl~t: lor theul~clve'i.
Wlwn wt· rC(t'IVt:d our ptdllrt'' Jlld jlJid lm
lht:m Wl' wcr~· tnh.l that we ~.ouiJ not get th•
n~ga11ve'
No t:xpla11at1on was g1ven
I o get
JtltliliOn,ll ph (IIIC~ \"i IIIU\l he p.m.J (II l(t:l dll X'&lt; Ill
phutq I o lnl" off lh1s, lllx lb Lhargcd 1111 lht~
&lt;IUir:lgi!0\1\ rrt~t:
flwn 1 lounJ uul that 11 would t'mt $1 '" t!l
rt:prolllll&lt;" thc· ncg.JI1vc .mtl S I 7Ci f•H Jn lh 10 phntn
.1( .J llt:Mhy JIIJ!(..\(ttll'l
I he UHI\UIIII.'r 1~ re..tlly getllnt!. t.;~ppt·tl whc•n h•·
•II 'he ""' to (I.Jy npolt pn~e' l~•r ru,l gcllllt!' Jll
.tdtllltnnal t opy ot " rholo

' I'M SOllY, MI. KISSINGU IS TOO aUSY WOIKING ON FOUIGN

Fnday, 28 April 1972 . The Spectrum Page eleven

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.

.
.

.

.

....... •....•••

. ..

.

.

.

.

.. . .. .,..

QdWileQ
. tQe SQOW !lad
goqe BQd ~riQg bUrst
OpOQ tQe lqQd,
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tbepeople

rejoiced W]d
drBQkof

spriQg

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white wine and natural frui t fl avors. The new wine
that captures the c;pirit of spnng. Pure wine that's as
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And celebrate !

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Friday, 28 ~pril 1972

�'You gotta walk it
like you talk it,
or you lose that heat'

For courage above and beyond the call of
counter-cultural duty. for lou Reed integrity in the
teeth of direct degradation, for steadfastly
maintaining his gentility and equanimity in the face
of the commercial onslaught of the cultural
charlatans, the Inn/tutti for Rock 'n' Roll Studies
pt"esents the Firn Annual Proditpl Sun Man of the
Y•r A WINd to Gentleman Jim Santella.
As many of you know, last Monday night (his
33rd birthday) Jim efoquently resigned from
WPHD-FM at the beginning of his usual nine o'clock
show - a show which during the last three years has
been the sole bastion of truely progressive radio in
the Buffalo area.
long dismayed by the continual erosion of

artistic freedom and mounting cultural repression,
Jim was faced Monday night with the prospect of
the ultimate in restrictive and oppressive formats. If
you haven't noticed by now WPHD is programming
almost exclusively from the top half of the Billboard
charts and is limiting its disc jockeys to "That was,"
" This is," " I am," "and now a message from," and
"now the news." Confronted with this hypocrisy,
one which is fast becoming the totalitarian wave of
the future in American media, Jim refused to
compromise his artistic and personal integrity.
This act of courage in the face of impending
financial and professional ruin, cannot pass
unacclaimad . We hope you will join with us in
honoring Gentleman Jim Santella, Tht1 Prodigal Sun
Man of the Year.

�I

RECORDS

Som~thin6/Anytllin6

Todd

Rundpn (Beunille

2BX2066)
Todd R ondgren is a class punk from way baclt.
Most people w tto heard the Nuz always though t
they were fro m England, when, in truth, T odd and
his boys came from the st reets o f Philadelph ia. Y es,
they did try to sound EllJ}ish, but t hen ag&amp;Jn, how
many people d o you know fro m Philadelph ia who
so und Englis h? Ho w many people from Philadelphia
do you know at all?
Anyway, t he Nan dug being English so much
they actually went t here to hana out for awhile.

T odd got tus hair shagged (almost three years ago.
Fashionable young lad, am't he?) tm cloth es
m odded , rea1J1ed t hat the res t of the group wa~
noltung more than a cheap 1mitat1on of himself, and
splJt to become the Runt. Through thts characture,
Todd made mUSJc that he played all by h1mseH,
every in strum ent. Though he IS bllSJC.'.all y a guitar
pl1yer . and a good o ne too, he p1cked up drums,
bass, keyboard and ho rns He also taught h1mself
how to smg ltke ten d1fferent people (no, not at
once)
All this 11me Todd Rundgren . the teen11ge punk,

\"Mito"icvtii"iisuRAicEl
11.-.EDIAT£ FS-1 - ANY SIZE 1
I NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! l
IU P S T A T E C Y C l E I N sl

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April 28. 29 lit 3 0 th
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was in th e studios, l&amp;norina the Runt for a while to
learn ho w to ma.lce records, Engineering, mixina,
producing, the works. I n ract, be got so good at it
that Jesse Winch ester and the Band used him as
en&amp;iJlecr an d producer. Next thins you know,
George Ha rrison is callin g him up and h e's producina
Badfinaer. Todd Rundgen's reputation as a studio
man is rismg day b y day .
Mean while, the Runt is ha rd at wo rk trying t o
be a star. He teams up with his pal Todd und
together, t hey come up with a hit, " We Gotta Get
You a Woman .'' And now, Lo and Behold , Todd and
the Runt haYe ~:ombmed for a double lp on
Bearsville , entitled Sumnhini(/Anythinf( . They seem
to have finaJiy reconciled their differen ces, :m d the
album's a knockout
Todd's musu: ISn't t oo heavy , bul11 moves wdl
A lot of the um e he sounds JUSt like Carole Kin&amp;.
especially on side one In fa~.ot, Ius new hit single " I
Saw the L1ghi," L~ better than anything on M u.fit
Great Badfinger guJiar break , great backup vocals A
k iller pop ~ mg)e. It runs around in my head all thelime.
It 's followed by ~nother dynamite tun e "II
Wo uldn 't llavc Made Any Difference." 1 odd'~ lyric.\
are st raight , ob nox1ous teenage dribble and I love 11.
" Wolfman J ack" 1s a Motown t ype tunc abou t the
le~endary C'atiforma OJ. The Wolfman dug it 'IO
much that tt's new h1s thtmc so ng.
Stdc two features T o dd ' s " Stud1o vllrnc," 10
which the h~tener I\ g1ven cl ues as to the natu re ut
different producllon !&gt;Ound s, hke tapes runn tng o ff
reels and tusses Neat Then comes a mess o f
keyboard tunes, the best be1ng the "Night the
Carousel Burned Down." It 's rivaled by " T o rch
Song" o n side th~e . a tnte little torch song that
somehow makes it desp1te its boring Iynes and SJIIY
words.
On s1d e four, Todd give~ us a basement tape of
himself dOJn&amp; " Money " Sounds like a teenage band
practicing m the ;afternoon before the Folks get
home for d111ncr " PLSS Aaro n '' ts about 1 guy wh o
p1sscs aJI over the place, and "S lut .. is a good rocker,
wath good sax parts. " I d on't care if you ' re a slut, I
love you ." Hmmm .
Anyway , Todd the Runt IS OK 1n my twok
Punks are scarce these days

Billy Altm(ln

=:::iJ:I
STEP!fc~~T ,.!!ILLS
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presents

"my night at maud'a
waa for me the flne•t
film In the t..uval (New

SATURDAY
(April 29th)

Eric Rohmer's

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" By far the best picture
in the entire competition (Academy Awards
1970).One of the biggest
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movlegoing year.··
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with
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BLACKSMI1'H

SHOP

1375 DRAWARE AVL

.,ansc•cu

101 Good Reasons
lo enroll for summer s tudle1 In the Washington Square
College of Arts and Science of New York Universityand every one of them is listed below.
The 102d reason isn't lis ted below, but It's Important:
as much as 50% savings In dorm space 11 you prefer
not to commute or you' re coming here lrom ovt ol town
We welcome allthoH lntarntad In our blslc and •peclal
lntare1t undergraduate coui'Hs, u wall a1 1tudents who
want to .ctvance their pr8-9fofeulonal atudiH for medl·
cine, dantlatry, law, and education.

Two sessions: June 12 to July 21 : July 24 to September 1
For more Information. use the coupon. phone us (2 12)
598-2425, or v1slt us at Wash ington Square

MAN: HIS CULTURE AND HIS SOCIETY • MAN: HIS
EVOLUTION AND PREHISTORY • ARCHAEOLOGtCAL
FIELD SCHOOL • MAN IN THE BIOLOGICAL WORLD a
PRINCIP\..ES OF BIOJ.OGY • COMPARATIVE ANATOMY
OF VERTEBRATES • PLANT ECOLOGY • INTRODUC·
TION TO ANIMAL BIOLOGY • GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY
• HISTOLOGY • INTRODUCTION TO MODERN CHEMISTRY • COLLEGE CHEMISTRY • ORGANIC CHEMisTRY • PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY • THE TRAGIC DRAMAS
OF GREECE AND ROME • CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY •
CfVfLIZATION OF GREECE AND ROME • THE HOLV
MEN • SHAKESPEARE AND THE EltZABETHAN THEA·
. TRE • THE AMERtCAN ECONOMY • ECONOIIIIC PRIN·
CIPl.ES • LABOR ECONOMICS • MICRO-ECONOMICS
WfTHOUT MATHEMATICS a EXPOSJTORY WRITING •
INTRODUCTtON TO LITERATURE • LITERARY HERI·
TAG! (MELVILLE TOT. S. ELIOT) • THE KING JAMES
SIBLE AND ENGLISH LITERATURE • A SURVEY OF
THE AMERICAN SHORT STORY • THE NOVELETTE •
CONTlNENTAL WRJTERI OF THE ROMANTIC MOVE·
MENT • FORMI OF FICTION • HISTORY OF ART I (TO
THI! RENAISSANCE) • HISTORY OF ART II (FROM THE
RENAII8ANC!) • MODI!RN ART • ELEMENTARY
FRENCH • IN11RMI!DIATE FRENCH • INTENSIVE
FRENCH REVIEW • THE CLASSIC THEATRE OF
FRANC! • EVOLUTION OF IARTH: MAnER TO MAN •
INTERMEDIATE G!RMAN .- BASIC ISSUES IN THE
NEWI • REPORTING f • THE FEATURE ARTICLE •
REPORTlNQ II: ADVANCED REPORTING OF PUBLIC
AI'"FAIRI • COPY EDITING AND MAKEUP • HISTORY
OF INIITEAN CIVILIZATI()N I AND II • HISTORY OF
THe UNITeD aTATES I AND II • IUROPI! IN THE 20th
CENTURY • EUROPE: AENAtiSANa TO THI FRENCH
REVOLUTION • SOCIAL DIALECTOLOGY • LANGUAGE
• INTRODUCTION TO MATHEMATICS: A CULTURAL
APPROACH • PRECALCULUS MATHEMATICS • ANA·
LYTIC GEOMETRY AND CALCULUS FOR THE SOCIAL
SCIENCES • LINEAR AlGEBRA • CALCULUS I a CAL·
CULUS II • CALCULUS Ill • ADVANCED CALCULUS I •
ALGURA I • LINEAR ALGEBRA WITH APPUCA TIONS
• INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC OF THE WEST, FROM AN·
TIQUfTY TO 17$0 • INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC OF THE
WI!ST. FROM' 1750 TO THE PRESENT • INTENSIVE
ELEMENTARY HEBREW • INTRODUCTION TO PHILOS·
OPHY • ETHICS AND SOCIETY • PRACTICAL REASONING • CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY • HISTORY OF
ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY • INTRODUCTION TO PHYSICS
• GENERAl PHYSICS • COMMUNISM: COMPARATIVE
POLJTICS • INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL ANALYSIS
• CONFRONTATlON POLITICS • RUSSIA AND THE FAA
EAST • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY • PSYCHO·
LOGfCAL STATISTtCI • PHYSIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY I e PERSONAlfTY • SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY a
ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY • ADVANCED SEMINAR:
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN PSYCHOLOGY a MOTIVATION • PSYCHOLOGtCAI. TESTING • THE MEANING
OF DEATH • EXISTENTIALISM AND RELIGIOUS FAITH
• JESUS AND THE JEWISH WORLD • MYTH AND THE
BIBLE a CONTEMPORARY SOVIET LJTERATURE (PASTERNAK. SOLZHENrTSYN, VOZNESENSKI) •
THE
SHORT STORY IN 19th-CENTURY RUSSIAN LITERA·
TURE • FREEDOM AND SOCIETY IN 19th-CENTURY
RUSSIAN LITERATURE • MAN AND SOCIETY a THE
AFAO·AMERICAN • THE CITY: ITS ROLE IN CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY AND ITS SOCIAL ORGANIZATION a
CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL PROBLEMS • POLITICAL
SOCIOLOGY • CRIMINOLOGY • ELEMENTARY SPANISH • INT£RMEDIATE SPANISH • INTENSIVE URBAN
SPANISH PROGRAM • INTERNSHIP SEMINAR AND
FIELDWORK IN METROPOLJTAN STUDIES

New York University
Was hington Square College
of Arts end Science
910 Main Building
Washington Square
New York, New York 10003
_ Please send me the catalog and regiS tration forms ro r
the 1972 Summer Sessions ot Washington Square
College.
_ Please make_an appointment for me to dtscuss my
summer stud1ea program and living arrangements
Name___________________________________
Stree.___ _ _ _ _ _ __!.,_ _ _ _ _ _ __

CONFERENCE THEATRE
• • • • • • • • • Div. of Sub. Board I, Inc . . . . . . . . . ..

Clty_ _ _ _ _ _ _ state _____""'zlp Code_

_

�First night highlights of Folk
Festival include Doc Watson
Depending upon your moral, spiritual, social
and/or financial situations, you either should have
been at the Memorial Auditorium (for the Alice
Cooper spectacle), or at the opening of the First
Annual Buffalo Folk Festival last Friday evening.
Personally , I really couldn 've gotten off on ~eeing
Alice hang in the gallows, but it also would've been
difficult for me to pass up an evening of really fine
folk and country music.
The show started promptly at 7:30 with M.C.
Owen McBridge doing some traditional Irish folk
tunes. You know. a couple of rousing drinking songs
(one about the burning of a bar a Ia Goodbar). but
then he brought down the mood with a song that
was applicable to the present problems in Ireland. He
was well received. but refused to dv any encores
because of the large number of ~cts tu toltuw. and
proceeded to introduce Hedy West.
I was not familiar with her at all beforehand,
but I enjoyed her set very much. She started out on
banjo but after one song the temperature, a factor
that would continue to put a damper on things as
the evening wore on, forced her to do her next song
acapella because it was JUSt too cold to pick .
Anyway, she played both banjo and gu1tar and sang
both traditional and contemporary songs. She got
her biggest audience reaction on Rosalie Sorrell's
drug oriented "These Are A Few Of My Favorite
Things Revisited "
--&lt;t&lt;.aufm•n

The mellofN htrmonles of
folksinger Paul Siebel helped

PaulSiebel

warm u p the audience during the
weekend Folk Festival held on
campus last week.

concert promotion associates
and

d 'you ville college present...

ALEX TAYLOR WITH FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS
also cashman cl. railcen
d 'youville coJleg..center
thursday, may 4

7 :30 and 10:00 p.m.
Tickets: S3.SO at the door

$3.00 in advance
Tickets available at: D' YouviUe College, 329 Porter
Ave. UB Ticket Office, Norton Union , Buf. State
Ticket Office.
ronurr Promotion Associates - 4/fi ·22~·R1//

W.N.Y. Premiere Wed. May 3 at 8 :30p.m.
Benefit of Bangladesh Relief Fund

The Greatest Concert of the Decade!

NOW YOU CAN SEE IT AND HEAR IT...
AS rF YOU WERE THERE!

Paul Cadwell
As the temperature continued to fall, and with
the tent providing a bit , but not too much comfort,
classical banjoist Paul Cadwell came on. He started
ofT by saying that his first appearance in Buffalo was
in 190 I, which gives you some idea of his age . It was
strange to hear the banjo used the way he used it,
since classical banjo is now just a once popular brand
of playing. He was extremely amiable and seemed to
really be enjoying himself, and both of U1ese facts
helped him to win the affection of the peop\e under
the not nearly filled big top.
While the stage crew set up for the first electric
act of the night, J.D. Hutto and the Hawks, McBride
filled in with another folk ballad and also gave a plea
for the continuance of mandatory student fees . J .B.
is a black Chicago bluesman and he promised to take
us down "Blues Alley ." He sure kept h1s promise. He
was totally uncompromising in both his act and his
music (whereas a B.B. Kmg knows the differences
between his white college aud1ences and his black
club audiences)
He and his band put tlown seven or e1ght urban
blues numbers, any uf wh1ch could be used as an
example of a stereotyp1c blues tune. The riffs were
predictable. but they Wt'fe really raw and cut tin g.
The action generated hy J.B. also helped to take
everyone's mmds ofl their owrt uncumfortahlcseating arrangements on the damp ground . My only
regret 1s that I wasn' t able to expenence J.D. 10 hrs

natural playing environment, a small, crowded, hot
Chicago club.
Let down

What occurred ne.xt was a big letdown , as a
result of an error in programming. Hutto was
foUowed by the Beers Family, a husband and wife
team who do really "cute" stuff. After being
electrified by the Hawks, I just wasn't in the mood
for such gentle, at best, and limp at worst, music.
The Beers Family fell short in trying to keep the
energy level somewhat high .
But I didn't have to wait long to be rejuvenated
because the legendary Doc Watson appeared next. As
usual, Doc was accompanied by his son Merle (whom
I've yet to hear speak a word) . There's not too much
to say about Doc except that he js probably the
finest acoustic guitarist in the world . He ran through
nine songs, although he didn't do as much flat
picking as the acoustic boog.ieers would have liked.
Before doing an encore of "Browns Ferry Blues." he
apologized for not being able to pick as well as usual
because of the weather. He then proceeded to pick
faster, clearer, and with more control, than anybody
I've ever heard. Aside from h1s hot picking numbers,
Doc also slowed things down and did a beautiful
verst on of " He Had A Long Cha1n On ."
Sound problems, broken strings
David Bradstreet , a young Canadian folksmger.
had the unenviable task of following Doc. Not only
that. but his set was hampered by problems with tht!
sound system and broken guitar strings. I can't say
too much about him because by this ti!Jle the ctull
was almost down to my bones, and I would've left
except that I wanted to see Leon Redbone . I wtll
say. though , that much of the audrence, whose
collective spint remamed surpnsingly high the entire
evenmg, seemed to enJOY hun .
I had never seen Leon Redbone before, but \
wu looking forward to seeing him sim9ly from
hearing stories about him. He's from Toronto, and
he gives his address as ll pool hall, and hiJ telephone
number as dial-a-prayer. On top of that , he looks l1kt'
a charicaturt' cross between Bob Dylan . Frank Zappa
and Groucho Marx . He appeared on stage weanug a
long trench coat (whkh he didn 't take off). ~un
glasses, a string tie and his harmonH:a lwldt'r doubled
as a holder for his cigar
All in all. he's an t)Utragcuus lolk1e. whu.:lr sort
11f goes agamst the rules o f the g.tllll' All th1s. plus
the fa &lt;.:I that he sounds like the uldcst , hlackcst blues
stnge1 yuu've ever heard . You wouldn 't hrlrcve that a
guy who looks the way he due~ &lt;ouiJ \ll UIIU like
that He 's a real folk pcrS•IIIUIJt )'. ~nnwtlnng thl' tnlk
world could use more of
In the end, desp1te the wt•atftt•r the lust 111gh1
111 the Ruffall\ Flllk I c\!tv.JI wen t quilt' welt

r---------•

Tan• LJrom/Jerg

TilE RA c.; S HOP

920 Niagara Falls Blvd .

WINNER OF
THREE
ACADEMY
AWARDS!

k '--\.
~\.\'

'Fiddler
~on the screen

TONIGHT at 8:15p.m.

c;

Plaza North

G R ANADA

~nin1_nM!!t ~NOred
~

WYSL/WPIID Radio

Tlcketr ~~Vaihzble at
UB Ticket Office and Theatre Boxoffice

lhl • • F. ILVI. U+1SI1

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NOW OPEN
Featuring

* J 1:.4 NS &amp;

PAHAVISIOH"

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COlOR

Tickets
Available
At Box Office
Before Each
Performance.

~

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for

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10·00 u.m .- 10:00 p.m.

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Sales • Service •Partt
USED CARS

- -BOBCOR -Motor Cars, ltd .
1974 Eaert (Near Bailey)
834-7350

�Baseball Bulls win dual meet
with St. Bonaventure Indians
by

Oa~ ~ringer

Spectrum Staff Writu

Winning what were termed "must " games by
head Coach Bill Monkarsh, the baseball Bulls scored
early and coasted a pair of victo ncs over downstate
rival St. Bonaventure. The wms, by scores of 7 3
and II 2, came in Wednesday afterrw&lt;m\
do ubleheader at Peelle Field .
"If we are to be selected to rt.e NCAA playoff s.
these games are 'must' wins," observed Monkarsh. ''I
am very pleased that we were able to come thro ugh
with big wins in these key games. We must contmue
to come up with such complete team effntts if we
are to succeed."
The Bulls turned bo th games mto routs by
scoring early and often . Buffalo notched two runs m
each of the fust three rnnmgs lO take the opener
from the Bwwn Indians. Rightfielder Mark S tanko
Singled home two runs in the openrng rnnmg and
knocked in two more with a home run two frame$
later. Stanko's circuit clout rarsed his ci rcuit mark to
a team-leading four. The JUnio r rightfieldet who
starred at Hutch Tech also vaulted rnlo second plllce
in the BuffaJo RBI race with 12

Simhr script
Following the pattern of the lirst game. Buffalo

seated the verdict early in the nightcap. The Bulls
paraded 15 bailers to the plate in the first inning to
score nrne times and seaJ the fate of St. Bonaventure
starter P.,wl lu.o. l1.zo did not retire any of the five
bailers he faced, being driven from the box by
leftflelder Jim Zadora's grand slam home run. The
four-bagger was the first of the season for Zaldora
While Buffalv's hitters were poundrng the
Bon rue:.' prt l.hrrrg staff, the Buffalo moundmen were
keeprng the Brown l ndrans in check. Lefthander
Mrke Cahrll worked the first four 111nrngs rn thc
opener to ga1n ocdlt for the victo ry. Cahill raised his
won-Just mark tu 3-2 wh1le pcrmrthng the lndran ~
therr three run ~.
Southpaw Jon Roth, scheduled to hurl Monday
at (.'olgat e, wlurcw;tShed St BorlaVCIIturc durrng hrs
four-rn n.ng stllll tu prck up Ius first vrctory agam~t
twu losse~ . Roth allowed three hrts and fanned crght
as he w;,r ~ ~tar...ed tu an 11 -U lead.
J oll owmg therr double vrctory. the haseball
Bulls Wlll lut the road for seven consecutrve road
games before returnrng to the frrendly confines of
Peellc h eld May 9. Tonight , the Bulls will meet
Sc ranton before facrng the Orangemen at Syracuse
to morrow afternoon . After facing Syracuse, whrch is
fieldtng a varsity baseball squad for the last year, the
Bulls wtll return tn Buffalo to face cru!.Stown nval
Buffalo State

Jo~ 's Tht!atr~ BarlJ~r

lOSS Kenmore A.eaue
(A t Col11in TltHtre)

WIGS •HAJR COLORIN
~~~D87 7-2989DSS'315S~

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
•

: STE PH EN ST ILL s :
•
•
:
in concert
:
MAY 9th at 8:00p.m. :

i

:•...............•.........••

,. . _,. ,

~-=

II'I1N fllD
1tCHA1D IMSTOW
PERFORMANCES: WED. at 7:30 PM (l'ldeta at LO BLAW'S •THURS. A
PRI. at4 : 1S A8: 1S PM • SAT. at 10:30 AM, l:JO A 8: 15PM
• SUNDAY II 2:30 A 6 :30PM

SAVE
ON ICJDS UNDER I
• BOTH SHOWS THURS. • FRIDAY
• SAT MORNING

...

_.....

EMPtRl
CAflO

AT: BUFFALO FESTIVAL TICKET OFFICE,
SAM A A STORES •M ALONEY A o·coNNER TRA
BURiBivd.
• ALL AUDREY A DELL RECORD STORES • UNIVERSITY OP BliF
Norton HaD Ticket Office •SEARS, Niapr1 Palls A Lockport
•FOR TICKET IN FORMATION CALL 8S4 7780

ftMia.&amp;Y

I

~~HAIRSTYLING-­

~fiB~
e.~~ptorin::e

MA II O R DI-.'RS Send s elf-addnued, ltamprd euvetopr, with
r hrC'I&lt; nr m on r y 111drr. tu . RINGLING BROS CIR CUS, Statlrt

Jltlrun Hotrl, 107 Drlawarr A Yr Buffalo N Y /4 202

fltm'a meaning
and 1ntent thiS broadcast features :
MALCOUIIkDOWa.L
Ster ol f t\e Film

ANTHONY IUROU.
~vthor

ol the Book

ROBERT HUGHI!S
Art Critic for TIME

NORMAN KAGAN
Author 'Cin•m• of Kubrick'

HAT HINfO"'

'Village Voice• Columnitt

UB CREATIVE ASSOCIATES

EVENINGS
FOR NEW MUSIC

Full range of undergraduate and
graduate courses. special institutes
and workshops Residence halls
available.

Planned by Lukas Foss and Lejaren Htlfet

2 sessions .
June 26 - July 29 and
July 31 - Sept. 2
(day and evening).
Phone (516) 299-2431 or mall coupon

Featuring
A. Murray Schafer'5 " REQUIEMS FOR THE PARTY-GIRL "

Sunday

April 30th

8:30p.m.

Tickets available at
Norton Ticket Office
and at the door.

Students $1.00
General Public $2.00

And next time you pass
C. W. Post .. don' t
Come ln.
You'll see one of Amerrca's
most beautiful campuses.

----- - - --- ------ --- ------Summer Seaaton Olflce
C. W. Poat Center
Greenvale, l . 1., N.Y. 1 1S..8

CP

Please send me Summer Sessions bulletin

ALBRIGHT-KNOX ART GALLERY

H8mL--------------------------------------

Addr•n._------------------- - - -- - - -CJty·-

.zz•------

- - - - - - - - - ---.Ste,.
.._ _ _ _ _ _

II • lolling 11\HHnt, whiCh c:ollege..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Page sixteen . The Spectrum . Friday, 28 April 1972

...

,.

~

�Triaagular meet

OVER11.,IME

Brockport defeats runners

by Barry Rubin

Brockport, N.Y. - Wednescby at Brockport
State, the trade Bulla were ldleduled for a triangular
meet against Brockport and Roberts Wesleyan. At
the start there wu some contract confusion
concerning the atatus of the meet.

Sponr Edit«

Thll put year proved to be i year of transition for Buffalo
athletics. Formerly the sports program revolved around football; but
now the program appears more balanced with hockey, basketball,
wrestling and baseball aJI in the spotlight. Still, OWly problems exist as
this semester ends.
First of all, the Bulls are faced with a facility problem, which is
spelled s·h-o-r-t-a·g-e. Should Grand Island fall through , Buffalo will be
stuck with many hockey game contracts which call for 7 :30 p.m.
starttng times. At this point, it is extremely doubtful that such times
can be picked up at the Amherst Rec Center.
Also, the hockey Bulls could be faced with the problem of finding
a new varsity coach. Eddie Wright admits that he'd have to give up a lot
to leave Buffalo. but if the right deal comes along he'll go. 1ltis would
cause an unbelievable situation in the Athletic Department if a budget
line for a new hockey coach cannot be obtained. Still, Wright musJ be
given credit for setting hockey on the right road, with strong student
support.
In basketball, the coaching staff IS facing the prospect of the end
of grant·in-aid . In fact, all indications pornt to a confrontation between
varsity Coach Ed Muto and the Hayes Hall admin istration. Muto, who
is as much of a realist as anyone in the Athletic Department wants to
know what is going to be done tu the program for the future . A drop
dnwn tn the college division m the fu ture seems likely. more of a State
University or New York-type program. Whether Muto will agru to
remain as coach under a low level set up rs yet another question facing
the Athletic Department.
The basketball Bulls already have signed one Junior college guard,
Rayfield Goss; und a f&lt;lrw;ard 1s expected to join the fold soon. This
week, 6-7 forward Neal Lance will make a decision on Buffalo. With
these two players plus a solid nucleus led by Curt Blackmore, Jim
Tribble and Bobby Vartanian , the Bulls should have a fine season next
year. But , as Muto and anyone close to the basketball scene knows, one
cannot play a Unrversrty div1s1on schedule Without talent.

When the air was cleared , the meet was a
tnangular meet as well a&amp; a dual meet between
Brockport and Roberti. Strategically, this oould have
given Buffalo an advantage. The advantage could ·
have occurred because Brockport and Roberts were
running against eadl other as weU as against BuffaJo,
whereas Buffalo was only involved in the triangular
meet.
However, Buffalo's possible advantage could not
offset better perfonnances by Brockport and
Roberts. The final score was Brockport 78, Robetu
58 and Buffalo 35. Both Roberts and Brockport hurt
Buffalo by winning in Buffalo's strong events.
Even the javelin, which has been Buffalo's top
event thus far, was won by Brockport's Dennis
Roslowskl, with a fine throw of 180 feet. Mark
Reger of Buffalo was .econd with a toss of 176 and
one-half feet . Don Van Oeuson and Rick Schatz.
were thltd and fourth for Buffalo m the J&amp;vehn.
Schatz also placed in the high JUmp, taking third
place with a jump of S-8 .

J1m McClurkin broke the Brockport track
record by four seconds in the three-mile event w1th a
15-mmute and 5.5 second timing. McCiurktn of
BufTaJo, also took second in the mile, losing m the
str~tch to Brockport 's Bill Rogers.
It appeared as if the Bulls' Roger Capan could
als&lt;' set the track record in the discus, wh.Jch was a
mere 148 feet. Capan threw 157 in pcactice, but
~;ould only muster 145 when ll counted Mike Bouck
Wd.\ second m the drscus to complete BuffaJo's only
l)fl~ ·tWO finish . BuffaJo's only other indiVIdUal first
rllace wu Bill Heim who won the 440 intermediate
hurdles in 58 seconds.

Jim McClurkin
Larry Mentkowsk.i ran a gteat second leg m the
mile relay to put Buffalo well rn front. However, Bill
Heim made a bad pass to Bill McCarthy before the
last leg and McCarthy was just able to hold off
Brockport's Blll Hardy to wrn the race for Buffalo.
The BuUs, who failed to qualify for Friday's
Penn Relays, return to action Saturday mornmg 11t
the State University of ~lbany . AlOf\&amp; with lhe
Danes, Buffalo wiU faco·Ahe SUNY's other two
univerlity centen, Bingflamton and Stony Brook.

eei-Rit

EALTH FOOD SHOPP
f•tunnv
OANNON YOGURT
4198¢ plain, coffM, vanilla
LOW, LOW, PRICES ON VITAMINS &amp; FOODS
·······················:·····C&gt;PErJiNG.~A\'i····
1451 Hertel Ave.
•
new store at
837·7661
:
681 Niagara Falls Blvd.

n.xt Fall.

. . ..I
r
AUTO SERVICE
COMPlETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Rehable

:

I
:

•

Imported &amp; Domestic

1:

- 808COR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
74 Eggert - Near Bailey
834·7350

L ..

··---~

elect Bregenz,
Austria! Wagner College's
European Campus

Opera Lovers

Apply now to experience one of the most
exc1tmg 'year abroad' programs ava1table.
centrally located among Europe's finest
w1nter sports areas
Live w1th an Aus111an lamlly • No language
requirement lor admiss1on • Learn German by
using lt • Independent travel and organized
excursions throughout Europe • Skiing and
ski Instruction • Fully accredited
CURRICULUMS INCLUDE.

Art, Art Hlatory, Ec:onomlc1, Educetlon.
Engllth, Langu~l, Hlttory, Mutlc:,
PNioeopllr, hrc:hology, Sociology end
Phyllcel Edue•tlon.
ep.n to .ophomoree. junlot'l end ..nlor• from ell
ac:credlled college• Fot d•ftlll Wille.

WAGNER COLLEGE
BREGENZSTUOYPROGRAM
Wagner College
Staten Island, New York 10301
(212) 390-3107

The remruning Buffalo sports appear to be in good shape for next
year. Baseball under Bill Monkarsh. contntues to expand successfully,
while wrestling and golf both should continue their great success. For
all the nalc the sports program has taken, it achieved a high degree of
artistic success this past year
AthJettc's bigyest problem at Buffalo 1s rts !leermng lad. of support
on campus One looks back at thts year and past years, and sees
conatant crises concerning the propam and its financial Npport . Still,
most at ctark Gym figure that their situation cannot get much wone .
Solulions to the problem of mtercollegiate scheduling appear dim ,
but recently there was a meetrng rn the midwest to discuss the
formatiOn or J new athletiC Cl.mferen ce Of mUniClp:ll universilleS
Included among the schools were Akron , Youngstown Wayne State ,
Oltcago State, Chtcagtl C'rrcle. Day ton and Cleveland Stale Apparently.
uthletu:s WtlUid b~ JUSI one adjun~t of th1s unron. whu. h would he
primarily bast•d upon academics.
Still, athl ~t tc~ at Buffalo hinge Or\ the lcv~l of fu nd1ng supplied by
th~ Student Assocratron . On~ can ea.srly see that undc1 such a systeul ,
athlct1cs rem am at a mmimum level of secunty lsn 't rt about t 1me that
the state rc al 11~d 11s obligallon to cover the costs or athlet u:s at aJI of
tis State Unrvcrs1ty branches?
1 he level dt&gt;esn't have to he brg 11m~. but a lewl tl at Wlllmtcrest
the Univers1ty co mmun~ ttes, as well as presentmg some degree of
artistic succes..s. l~robably the most ago1uL.ing tlung abuut athletics in
the SUNY system rs tit~ lack ot coheswn among member schllols, and
wurry about Wt&gt;fl·lmt record~ But everyone at Clark Gym . .rnd anyone
connected w1 th sp&lt;&gt;rts at llus Uruvers11y knows and ha~ faJth in the
ideal th:ll when the latest problem rs cleared up. there wrtl always be
one tu take rts plan·

One way from JFK London. Pan~ .
or Am~l erdam Round trip ' 195

by 707 and 747 Jets
Student power does rl 1 Our mter
naltur•.JI servo c~ 1ust tor students
gets vou spe&lt; ral 1et atr fare~ to
and throughout Europe Conformed
seat~. pre scheduled departures
Complimentary meal~ and bar
service Avoid h1gher summer
rale~ by boOkrng now Also fl lghls
to Tel Av1v, Zunch. Fre~nklurt.
Rome. Athens, and others.
For full infomultlon all~
(212) M&amp;-8980
or mall coupon

-------------Nation• I Un._ of Students Travel

s.mc.. Inc.
30 E. 42nd St . N.Y , N.Y. 10017
Nome _ _ - - - - - -

Stree•- - - - - - - - Cltv' -- - - - - - - - -

-------------Slate &amp; Z•P- - - - - -

BIANCHI &amp; MARGHERITA
of
GRE ENWICH VILLAGE, N.Y.C.
presents
Solo ists performing arias from Great Operas

La Boheme
Madame Butterfly

LaTosca
La Traviata

etc.
Dontt by th~ Grt»t Artis~ of the Of)(NB
in the NBIIpoll am milliner.
Frktay. April 28
s-turdily. April~
~ . April

aD

TICKETS AVAILABLE

1:00 p.m

lkltt.lo Fe.tlnl Office

7:00p.m.

Norton Ticket Office
F..te Ticket Office (HMiberia Plazal
~ lit the door.

Admillion 12..60

PEACE BRIDGE EXHIBITION CENTER

Friday, 28 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seventeen

�,
\
Allwtl31·1081 .

AD INFORMATIDN
CL.ASSIFI'£0 ADS may 1M piKed
Monday thru FrkMy betwMn 9 a. m .
and 4 ::SO o .m . 1t 355 Norton Hill .
TH E. STUDENT rates o f 111 ad fo r one
day IJ 1 1.25 for the first 15 words and
1.05 for ~ ad41Uonll word. a1 .00
for each eddltlonal day . The deadline
for Mc&gt;ndey Is Frldqa for Wed..-a.y,
It Is Monday, and for Friday, It Is
Wednes41y by 4 : 30 p,m.

WANTED : Micro Nllctcor.P tens, other
Nlkkor , . , _ , Nlkor .:c-ortes.

MALl!: MAY er.O to foote tor and sna,..
apertmlftt 111 Manhattan .._,nntne
IUmmet'. 137-5960.
TO LEASE : Seot '72- June '73. 3 or
1-0iclroom houJI. GOOd ech-1 system
-ntlal CSth, 7th, lth erac!a boys) .
M._ Williams 131 · 1628.
BACHE LO R dutras part·tlme
houMtceeoer. Houta near camou-. Call
832~50 1.

STUDENT to live In a mothw 's hiiP«
In exchenge for r - IIICI boMCI.
Wllk lnt dlstanct~ to c.emous. CIOJI to
!WI. Start In SeptwniMr. Clll 837·1106
after 4 p .m .

137~578.

AEI'"AIGEAATOA wented ~Msoer•tlly
Cfi. .PO II I
mldt . Ca H Owe

-

ua-uu.

CAT .S ITT E. A daperetety n&lt;Mded May
5 - May 21 . Will pay. Cell Meryl
137&gt;0456.
HARD SHELL tultar ~ wanted to
fit Qulld-Ol5 tultlr. Call Cathy
U!l -1007.
STUO£NT TO live In • mother's
heloer In Wllllamwllle home. S a la ry
de.,..,dent on duties - u rned. Start
enytlrne up to mlo.July. 831· 2735 .
9 : 3G-4:30 Wllkdi YII 6.)4-0611
........ds.

MCGOVERN NIEEDS YOU I Stop In 11
651 Main St. or Ull S51· 3300.
PHYSICS 11~111 lib e xpe&lt;lmenls.
URGIENTII C ell Aide 693· 7990 after 6
p. m .

SUMM ER JOB oPinlneln l!lrOIIIC, N . Y.
$ 2 .5 0 hr. RequlremenU : ptlyslc.elly fit ,
Mtesmanshlp, c.epM&gt;IIIUa. Call Rich
192·2317.
USIEO BICYCLE wentlci In e-el
cond ition . PI_. call S usan 833·7571 .
PAA T· TI ME STUDENT - POrterlnt
eno errands. 12. 00/hr . Cell 112·3101
for IIIOOfntment .
TWO GIRLS nMd plec:l to snare wltll
other~ for fall near campus. Own
r-ms desired . Ca ll Ellen 838-4199.
PEA SO NS of various occupations
r111rdlnt N. Amwlc.e end overseas
oppcwlunttl•, up to 12600 monthly .
For complet e Information, write to
J08 AIESIEAACH, Bo• 125 3, St.-A,
Toronto, Ont . Enclose 15 to CG~r~r
cost.
OVERSEAS loOt for students Austr1ll1, Europa, s. America, Africa,
etc . All r&gt;rof-lons an0 oc.tupattons,

8700 to 13000 montllly, Expen,.
paid, overtime, lllha..tne. l'"r11
lnformllloft, write: JOe$ OVERSEAS,
Dept. 1:5, P.O . 84»1 15011, San Dleeo,
caM. t2115.
STA~T

lit per hour Mtary plus bonus.

wortc -...a p.m. wa.lcdavs. 10·2 p .rn.
Saturdays. CMI 135.,103 or TFt-0402.

FULL OR .....t·tlme )Gels av1ll1ble with
B•ttlne Inc. Call Art 886· 2094 or
Mike 135·5215. M•tlntl at EICecutlve
Ramada 1M.

f'U~ISHEO apartment, 2 bedroonu,
4 bedS, bar, w•n.r, dryer, acro• Main,
122 0 . 137.0115 June 1.
ROOM IN HOUSE available for
summer. Full kitchen facflltl•, •c.
Acrou street from camous. AvaUMtle
May 1 . Call Don 131· 2248.
;J-BEOAOOM aoertmlftt - ~P~Cious,
fu rnl lftelt , $150 + utlll tl a11
Hertei· ParkllcleJ .,. .t place ; keep
calllfle. U6.o686.
HERTEL-VIRGIL ar111 3 Olclr-s 1135 ln clu d l ne utllltl• bUy
furniture. GOOd ..... Call 87 ...822.
Avallllll• June 1st.
I!IEAUTI,.UL. 3-BEOROOM OuplelC
walllltle. Complete ptlwec:y. GOOd
- 1 ,.or cletalll, Clll AndY IJ5 · 1125,
131-5507.
HOUSE fiOR RENT - completely
furnlsllelt . Suitable for "Group
L.lvl ne .•• lsolatad . Available
lm.,...letlly. C lll t e. m .-5 p .m .,
156·5110 or 632-6677 .

FURNISHED apa(tmlftl with kltdlen,
Mwlnt room, ._,oom. Avalllbte May
Uth . All utllltl•, 110/mo. Call
TT5 ·7t62. """· Zlfk-.
HOUSE avellable for summer and/or
wlnttr . Ctoa• to c.empus. N ice
blckyMCl, Clll ·~-4317.
THRI!E..eEOROOM loww 1175/mO.
l' WO· btdroom upper, 1125/mo.
IM..a04a.
OHI! B . A.

ecwwt.

avail . lmmed . for
---~ Mllt y•r. GOOd location.
Call 196..a110 .,._,
~ICK,

..,.. rooma furnlsfled cootclne pnvil..... N - bus lines. Call
177·7602,
CLO$E TO CAMPUS - Houta for rent
- for S.. 6, 7 , etc . Call now. 133-6134.
• ·•EDAOOM hous e, furnished .
Mlnn.ota aM Main, aYIIIIble JuM 1.
1275. IM·U&amp;7 .
THRI• .ei:DAOOM hOUM for rent
from June lit. Ex~ lent condition enlt
partially fu"'*'-'· Mila from c:amous.
Cell aft• Six. 1·32·1724.
SUMM,JtR and/or fall1 2 blocks from
camout: L.M.. 3-«&lt;eetroom. Alk fo r
Mike. 833-4710 after noon.
L.AAQE FURNISHED 4-o.ot- apt .
Herte4.Cotvtn · GriiCWata stuOIIIts
S~Nferred. Very ,_onaote. 175· 1150.
PAIVA TE ROQMS for rent, ptl.ate
ent r - L..IYiflttl. 1 10&lt;415 ...,.... ly .
U3·2l47 ,

ua

(Sh erldiii-MIIIersoort ar. .), 3
tlattroomt, 1,. batns , finished
belerllent , orlwtte entrance. N - bus
11111. 9 or 12-montll 1 - -. June 1 to
Sapt. 1 . Aeconl«&lt; m11M111 633-9155.

THREE
B ED ROOMS
Kltcftan · dlnetta, llvlnt room. All
furn~.
four PIOI'Ie - each
165/ mo. Walklnt distance. Avelllble
Mey. U7·8111. 9 e. m.- 7 p .m .
.J;

,.or

;

3·AOOM a.,.nment In Ton-ancsa.
Avllllbla June 1ft for IUmmet' or
longer . Clll876-4977 . Steve.
LEBRUN ..,. . . aoartment lrom May
lttll for y . .r . Two/thr• mat•.
162.60 eac:n. 5 miN. from campus.
•l-4·3920 .
FOUA·BEOAOOM apartmen t ofl
Bailey. 15· mlnute welk from camput.
FurniShed, ,...onable. Avalllbll fo r
MaY 1 llld neiCt Y -· Shelly 834-0e66.
HOUSE FOR RENT - Amherst - 3
laree bedr-1, etcwe, refrigerator,
dlsttwllfiW, Olrt»lll'l dlsPGNI, outCI-r
berbacue, carpeted tft r ouehout .
Suitable for 3 or I students. L_.
required. AVIIIIble J une 15tll. 1275
per montll . Call633·1736.
L. AFA Y ETT ~
APARTM~ - 20

HEIGHTS
min. to campus.
Fully furnlthect, lfflclencv studio anc1
studio IUite aoattmant.. No leeM
requlrect. HYIM Parte Blvd. at ~avette
A,_, N ....r• Falll. C lll COllec t
214-5711 .
FURNISHED, 3 -oec:lroom epartment ,
BIIII Y• OIIIvan .,... $110/montft
lnc111411 utllltl•. 8H- 1S29 efter 1 1
p.m.
R OO MMATES
neetted for
four-oedroom house for MICt v-ar.
N . . t to Allenllurst anel Toppt. 1 250 .
Call 8 37-95 41 .

R1Dl80ARD
RIDE NEEDED to Q - s for ~~~
dQ9. Anytime. lxcellent trawler , 16 .
136·2499.
RIDE N EEDED to Chlc.IIIO around
May ht . Call Joyce 834 -l9t3 .
PANAMA CITY, Panema. Alders
wanted. L . .VInt IDOUt MIY 10. AIOIY
Box 3 4 Spectrum.
RIDE NEEDED to Clllfornll or Wen
Coast. Anytime after Mly lst . W ill
'" er • dri ving lnd e xr&gt;antft. Call
Ch ristopher 137·3915.
RIDE WANTED to Troy or CIPitll
dlftrlct efter M•Y 4 . Call BOb
133-6631.

FOR SALE
1968 OPEL Kldltt , 2-&lt;:lr, 4 ~pd . ,
ltlndard trlnsmlulon, console. eo hp .
Good condition . Snow llrli. &amp;650 .
134-9210.
GOL.F CLUBS com p lete Mt or
Wilson statts. Will sell Irons MPirately .
Blit offe r . a36-o616.
FURNITURE : s o f a, beds, etc .
Excellent condition, good prices. Call
Diane , 1 37· 2877.
BUICK WILDCAT , 1969, 1tlnyl roof,
2· dr . hlrdtop, aut o matic, power
stllrine , 33,000 miles, Still under
Wltra ntyt 831·2065 .
MICROSCOPE 1200X ; Citizens b and :
HE · 20T, turner • 2 . Excell ent
cond ition. Best otrer . Ca ll M1rt y
1 36·1102.
FOR SAL.£ - beclr-m furnitur e slntle bed , dreuar and diSk. Ca ll Sandy
837.0192.
1963 VW - 900d COndition, a250 ull Pit 196-4991 .

a

All you've got to do is walk.

PO R TABL.IE wasnlng mM:IIIne fo :
a p artment use. S peed Queen . Excellent
condit ion. 1100. 1 77 · 3055.
I ·PL Y VW tires C6 .00x15) . Lik e new
Make offer . 175·7612 .
FURNITURE - grldulllng, movln9
o ut Sunday. Mus t sail : sofa, ruga, bed ,
coffH table, lamps, sllelves, kltcttan
u tensils, mor e . Will definitely
negotlata. Call 676·2226 .
DORM RES IDENTS buy now - small
refrigera t or, hot pla te, broiler.
E1Ccallent condition . C all anytime.
Diane. 131· 2950..
OOUBL.E BED 1 15. D r - 110 .
Ch1lrs, couch $5. Waslllng maclllne
us. Call 185-6823.
MOV IN G - must sell furniture (beets,
dreuers, tabiiS', lie. ). CHIEAP. C all
874·5962 after 9 p..m,
FOL.K - CIIUic 9Uitlrs - new&gt;UJICI
Martin, Guilds, Gibsons, G u rte n, etc .
Eagle llllnlos, 00!091 dulcimers. Tile
St rine Snoppa, 524 Ontario, 7 p.m .-9
p.m ;Sat . 12-5 p .m . 1 7 4.0120.
COOL. DEAL. : Off·b o.Hd MICt y. .r7
Llfge.SI.red refrllllfltor IVIIIIbll May
9 . P ric e ni9Qtllbll. C811 Lynne
831·2197.
•
1970 WHITE Tr iumph Spitfire, Dieck
convertible top. AporoiC . 11,00 0 miles.
As women's 3~ bicycle . Gill,

ET
yS

p I

*******
***** *

IN CONCERT
H l MAY
8111 1t I p.m.
EL

NS

Page eipteen . The Spectrum . Friday, 28 April 1972

~

.

�U7 ..e97, J Of\1' 632..017 6.
1966 C H EV A O L ET pow er st- Ing,
IIUtomnl&lt;:, heat, radio, Juat lnapec:ted .
This ear k CIMn. 5 0 ,000 origina l ., .....
RM IOIWible. Call 13&amp;-45 11.
1963 FORD Falr1a n t l t.lltlon . Good
tt a ntportatlon. Alkl nt t90. Call
838-4360.
'65 FORD van, 6 llr•. plus much
mort. Good eonctltlon . Call 839·2124
after 10 p.m .
COUCH - 2'1JI.U bla ck IM ther·llkt.
woode n legs. Lllet new. Perfect
conclltlon. 836· 3869 after 6 p . m .
CHEAP I
FURNITURE• Beds, small rtfrlveutor,
dreuer and other Items. Prices
IWCJOtlabte . Call 618-5087 or 831· 3860.
HARLEV·DAVIDSON cycle 350 cc,
1970. Good condition . Call after 5
p.m . 832.0323.
MOVING - two apartmenu full of
ru9J, drap es, tamps for ule. 137-8143
and 835·S943.
BEAUTIFUL wood d ..k . Must sell.
Call 834.()562 or 137-4070 anytime.
TRAVELERS 1964 International
HUYtlttr lt~CM~a n. SIM ps lhrN.
Paneled, 111sutatad, 1970. Factory 11ew
tMine, t650 or - t offer . I :U·38 44 .
SITAR FOR SALE. S250 firm .
ReunifY br0u9ht from I 11dla. Reply
Box 34 Spectrum
FOR SALE : AMP£0 B l2 amp tor
Vltar, ban, or9Aft . C all 135· 7579. FrN
kiU .
FORO TRUCK 1959 Oooel tn91nt.
GOOd transmlulon. N - tl,.., Also
French flute. Call Ginny 662 · 7591 ,
R EFR I GERATO RS, 1toves and
wullen R«:ondltloned, dtlh•eted a"d
guaranteed. O .. G Appllanc", 144
SyumOfa . TX4· 3113
FURN ITURE • One quMil-slzed bed,
dren«, vanlty-cltlk with chair Call
886 7639.
OON NAMARIE
re9lstereo
etectrot091tl soeclallzln9 111 trlt remCNal
ot unwe11ted or supeffluous hatr
Mec31cally approved . Complimentary
t onsuttlllon l)y appointment
!l-'5-8978, 233 ·5949, Aatorla, New
V ork

------------------&gt;&lt;

F 1sHE R

P · 7B speaker systems.
sea l eel
F lsher S · ytar
gulfant. .. 12" woofer, 2·5" midrange,
2 3" twMte&lt; Only 1100 ea Call AI

r •ctory

835~6)7

DOUBLE BED w llh box spring. S2S
896·0285 K"P ulllng
CttEAP• Stell, c:oucll, c:natrs, end
tabiM, c loset , lamps, appllancas. AlSo,
two 26" bikes. C all 836 -6542 .
AUTOMATIC ..,ashiD9 ,.,achlne GoOCI
c ondit ion. Ca ll 132·1294
2 0 0 cc OHC Oucall motorcycta, reel,

O•tOdy seat, two h elmets with DuDDI",
w tndShletd, $ 245 C a ll 833·5678,
ClouDit-Ded, I t ame,
F U R N I TU R E
s1nqte bed, dreuen, cha in, tcltchen
••ole, H$Orttd other qooeltes, rut
Reason aDte rates to reasonable people
Call 837 2877 or 132· 7012 A.._ l or
Ro bbie or Stenc:ll .

lOWER HALL, 4th floor
I
aglllnu Eutnan.sla until I met you
HE MAY llave b"n a lousy campu'
editor, but he'' 1 good lay! (For lhtetl
c;enu a nlqht, 1 c.an 't compla in)
TO ALL the be.tutllut people I've met
durlf19 my 4 yeats. From Alan t o
ZurDa . lllank you . Have a QOOd tile
Abe .
Jo·Ann · You c ould at least have done
n Defore the end of tile semener "'we
&lt;uutd put on a ctaullleo for you•
(Where there' s " will, there are always
ways
1

-----SEX on the p a rt

~dllren ·tn -chleteu

Write

BOJI

26

FLEUFOOT MACK trvdcln g 1 Low
p rice s o n trunlu, fu rniture , etc: .
PKk... CI- s. Paul 133-6503 Jam •

l l l-406L

'

HARVY: Not to ltave your column
unansw ered: NOTt:t!NGI Alre.Oy m lu
you t nyway. MICige.
DEAR H, Cllg your potata. on your
birthday or put up your ctukt~, Love, t .
TEDDY, welcome home to the a rctic.
Watch out for cold sores. PuPC)y.
COME HEAR about Baha •u• llah.
Bahtl Wor1d Faltht Room 262
Norton . Every Friday 8-12 p m or cati
837· 3252,
. •
MOTORCYCLE • auto lnsura"c:e.
Instant FS·1 regardteu of age or
driving record. Willoughby Insurance
1624 Mal" St., Buffalo, N .v:
815·8100, Mon.- Fr. 9-6 p m Sat
9-2 p . m .
•
· "
·

LOST &amp; FOUtotff'
14..CARAir c:ll•rmDracetet Fri. night 111
Tow.,. ca~ttrla after movl•. Call 4715 .

ROOMMATES WANTED
ONE MALE, grad stuelent preterred,
for Ma y 1 and/or next y . .r. S4S •
utllltltts Call Dave873-734 1.
FEMALE NEEDED to sublet own
room In house tor wmm« . J·mln.
watk from camous.. Call Sanely a t
831-4056 or 837-6627.
COED FURNISHED aPt
n•c»
c:onSICierate roommat•. summer/Sept.
a minutes to c.amous. Rent nttoti4Die
831 ·27 . ..

ot the new
will not 1&gt;t91n until

OWN ROOM - male. May thru Aug.
5-mln. walk, S40 • . Bruce. 836·2304.

DEAR CHUCK: Where are you• Bll
t he w•y, before we INve, Is tnyDOCIII
feeling all c:lluc:ked upl

TWO ROOMS sublet on Llllbon.
W&lt;lllklng dlltanct. Rent neeatlablt. Deb
832 · 3144 . Sue 832·5440. ROI)bl
832..0756.

ROO MMATE lor summer . O wn room .
Air c:ondltloneCI, mOCiern apartment, 5
min . wall&lt; 10 c.ampus. Call 837 ·2565 .
2-eR AP'l . to sllare wllll c:ouple lor
summer and possibly fall . S· mln we~lk
to campu s
Furnished
S35
Mc:htmonth . 834·9502.
MODERN TWO bedroom apartment
Townhou" . Own room . Ne.ar Rldqe
Lea . Call 69 I 6282 K . .P trying .
CLASSIC •putment desires 3
roomm1tes May- Aug. Your own
room. S50 Ne&lt;)Otlal)te. 25 Greenfield

2 FEMALE roommates wanted Own
rooms Starling June 1, S46 2!&gt; •
Hertel are• . Ellen 837..0696 .

rwo FEMALE roommates to r
summer Own tooms. F1ve minutes
rrom c:ampu•. Avail&lt;~l:lle May I
837 ·3650
SINGLE OR couple to share ap&lt;~rlment
for summer . Modern, c:onvenl ent , close
to campus. Reason•bte rent 836·2 4g9 ,
NICE PEOPLE need two roommates IO
share our llou~. 94 Olympic. . Own
rooms. FurnllheCI . $55 • . Come over or
call 894·9359.
$37/ MO .
OWN ROOM. 10· mln .
hitch to U .B. Now or June lSI .
S ummer and Fall . 832· 9760.

VOLUNTEERS art needed to nell)
support the campaign o l Sel'l.
Mc:Govern. Call or stop In a t 651 Main
St. 854·3300.

OWN ROOM - m.ale - ~ min. from
campus, $50• _ Start May 1 Call
132-8256.

ADVANCED LAW ltudents with ur
nMdeel by student lor corroboration ol
husband'a obvious adultery
No
retallves, broke, helpl Appreciation

MALE ROOMMATE lor the summar.
own room (furnlslled) Five-minute
walk from campus. Only $55 . Call
836·8429.

FANTASTIC location Wlns~r
Avenue, 4 w a nteel, own rooms, cna.p
..-nt. Call Jane 837·3109 . Shelley
132·7682.
2 BEDROOMS available for summa. . 1
mtn. trom campus, Females. Call Betsy
or Dale 132-5594,
AC ROSS FROM campus, tent.asttc
apartment for four. Available May
thrOugh August . Fully lurnl51led. Call
835·2111.

APARTMENT on Wlnspear, two ot
three 9lrls. May 15 - Aug. 31. O wn
rooms.. 838·3919.

LOOKING FOR cheap apartmen t close
to campus lor summer and/Or I1IP
kitchen, Olnlng room, living
room, attic , Own room and only
137.50 • utilities. 831-4 516.

3 BEDROOMS, 3-4 peaple, 3 min .
from campus, $50 montll. Furnlsheel .
1134 -1507 Avtllat&gt;le Mty 15

Lar~~e

FEMALE ROOMMATE n-ded lot E
Northrup ..,artment wmmtt •net tAll
C all Mer yl 837 · 0456 or Joan
837· 3209.

to c.empu•. own room , re•son•ble rent

ROOM In llouse starting May
Excellent toc.allon . 134 1993.
BEAUTIFUL turnllfleel apartment , five
minutes from campus. Need one to
four roommates. Call Torn 131· 2396 .

there, Maybe
alropnv .

you

ell

wilt

die

of

MY UNCLE hal some furniture wlltc h
goes back to Louie the 14th 1t 1\e
CIOtln't pay DY tile t4tll, II goes back
to Louie Tile Chief
BICYCLES REPA IRED
all kind~
clleap anCI carefu l service Bart Jones.
92 Wallace, 83!1~739 .
TYPIN G
bullntss or personal
term
papers, lllues, mau mailings
Reason •ble rAtM Call 93 7.00!&gt;0 .
'63 CHEVV wagon , great buy,
Summet roommate, own rol)m
ttouu
Cheap, &amp;962 ·SAAB.
1181 1674
IF Y O U Clepend on you• ur , yOu c1 n
depend o n 1ndeper1dent ForeiQt! C ar
ServiCe. 839 1850

EXPEAT
TUT O RING lr' Frent.h
available Contac t Murtel 8/l J 2 50
POLITI CS ALRE.ADV&gt; V o u bet
Come work tor John Phelan 1n the
New vorl&lt; S t•te Senate r• ce Suoporl
the man th•t supporteel 18 year o tCI
vote C..all 842~095 Ask lor Peg o r
Ellnnr
l YPING
expettent.ed
etc Call 8J3 1~97

PROFESS IONAL TVPING dune In
nome. s .:OO/f)lge Furrnerly operated a
proteutonal typing servlc• . 22 9A.
P~rkslde Ave nr c all 838-4808
INlERE..STEO In gotng to Munich tor
the Olympi c gamM thll ~ummer&gt; For
Info rmation, phono 833· 4638 .
AUTO RADIOS .tnd tapes. Sales ~nd
service , 10% discount with this •d.
Grupp Bros. 817 · 2250 .
AUTO INSURANCE - ~peclattztng In
young drlv«s: no cnarge t o r accidents
cw traffic wlotetlons, Immediate FS · 1,
save up to 1100/year . 683..0022.
~NTIQ\JES

anCI modern furnit ure,
certmlcs, china , etc. SN SICI at
Yestttday &amp; Tomorrow Shop, 1439
Hertel Ave.

8 £AUTI FUL apartment , very c,IOM to
c:ampua, 1--4 oeoPte, ,.,t ~table,
su m m. suble t. C e ll 8 32-8473.
HOUSE FOR 3 01' 4, 5 ml"utt~ ffom
cam out.. June Ut to Sept . 1st. Call
Latter 0&lt; Howle •t 832·5311. Very
nevotta t&gt;M.
PRINCETON COURT to sublet June Auvust . Five-minute walk to U.B. abedr oom futnltfled, 8 125. Call Steve
832-6111.
BEAUTIFUL clx-«Mccroom. 2-famlly
house . Fully turniJhtd , c:arpeted,
washer a nCI Clryer, 111rage, d a rkroom,
low rentl Summer only . 833-8112.
2 BEDROOMS, 3 people, 5 min. walk
to U .B . 550 tach . Call 133·1717. Paul.
J«Ty .
3·8EOROOM house to wbtet . 5 min.
from campus. Rent very t"tasonablt .
Call Lorin 837..0301.
BEAUTIFUL apertment available June
ht till August 31. Four bedrooms.
C IOM to camous. Prlct neeatla ble. Call
831 · 226JIU59.
t - 5 l)tOJ)It needed for soaclous
5 · btCiroom house . Com pletely
furnlshtcS w /plano. Aent VERY
negotiable. 5 minutes to campuJ.
FREE utilities June thru Augurt.
131-4060, 831· U70.

ROOM FOR MAY - S30 Pou lotllty
ror summer . 519 N laoara Falls Blvd
Near AlltnhUIIt . Drop bY

ONE · BEDRO O M 41partment, 10
mtnut" w1tk l o campus. Furnished.
Sl 10/month PIYl utilities. Available
May 10 - S epteml)tr 1. Call Scott at
134-5901.

ONE FEMALE - own room, .l..,.,..lnute
walk. S37.SO Cell 834..0776
ROOM TO SU8LE'Y - 9reat toc:atlon
one blOCk from campus
IJO Call
Emily Or Nora . 13\ -3097
3 -B EO ROOM apartment lurnlslloCI
Htrtei..Colvln area . Avallat&gt;le June 1 to
Sept l. Fully equipped kiiCilen, lll'en•,
T .v., porch . Reot negotiable. Netr Inn
lines. Call 873· 7103.
SPACIOUS lour •DeCiroom hOuse,
corner ot Main and Merrlmat Air
conditioner, d ishwasher . tne &gt;epen,tve
Call 838-4840 anytime.

8~"UTIFUL
furnlmtCI hOuse, 2
t&gt;ed~oom• .
Avlllablt. J.mtnult walk
rrorn c ampus. M.ay - S epttmDet Ptrce
negottaql\ Call 835·!1007

HANDWRITING ANALYSIS - Send
In • on•·~• wmpte o f your or 1nyone
elsa's h•ndwrlltn9 on unlined paper (to
be returned) 1nctuCie Mill. &amp; 1941 ol
writer &amp; S 5 . Vou w ill receive a detalleel
analysis Absoluttl)l conlldtntlat, Rose
DemlrqiAn, 3098 Main St , Bu ltalo,
N . Y . 14214

FOUR4 EDROOM ajNirtmtnt - elOM
t o c:am CNL Call BoO Of Sol 831--4015.

a

or•••

Y&gt; BLOCK to camous apt
bedrooms - r . .soneble rent C all Mark
136.ao5o - Lenv 837-3209

ROOM TO SUBLET Uart1n9 May 1&gt;1
In lurnlsheel hOUMI with otner studentl
Call Nell 116-46U, 5 -1 p.m.

AFFECTIONATE enCI ptaytul c alic o
cat frN to 900CI home She lla~ .all
shoh wendy 133-5398

PALA CE 5 35 per penon, M•ln -~~
Merr i m a c:, fOr t w O, C)l\ont
Ken.
U5·5216.

3 · BEDROOM apL alr-condltlonlnq
porch, MalrVFIII mOf't S 150/mo. Call
832· 0114 after 10 p . m .

MISCELLANEOUS

----------- ----------TOWER HALL Atll floor, hang 1n

MA LE
ROOMMATE wanted :
non 'moltt&lt;, older or graCI student
~eterreCI . M ln n..ate Ave. Furntshtd.
Own bedroom
Available Mav 10
...,manent. S60 • uttllll". .137·27115.

MALE OR temate roommates wanted
rot summer. s 35 • utilities. Own room
Llnw ooct-Summe r artl 886-4985.

THREE EXTRA large bedrooms
•v•lllble from M a y ht till Sept. Very
,..sona blt rent, Five-minute w all&lt; from
campus. Call 831·3244

GIRLS WANTED to share apartment
for summer. Two blocks from campus.
$45/month. 837·3757, 831 ·3582.

LEAVI NG BUFFALOl We'll deliver
your trunka, etc:. to N .Y .-Long tslanct.
Ooor -to·door servi c e . 882·3277,
884-4951.

ROOMMATE wanteCI lor June 1. Own
room In llouse, 10 ml11utes from
campus. Call 83A·1993 anytime.

837·~73.

3-eEDAOOM aptrtment , furniShed,
off H.,ttl, 5 100 per month . Avalltble
May to August . 871-4901.

ONE FEMALE roommate wanted. One
block from c.a mpus. Ow" room S5S
C al t C athy 831·2566 or Stettte
831·26 ' ·

MALE ROOMMATE wanted t or
rour· man Alltnnuflt Apartment Ca ll
831·2362, 831 ·2354 .

FURNISHED 2 bedrooms, 1 mlnUttl
to C:empus . O N LV 8 12.00. 8y
Ev e ryrn.n's Bookllort. Call Mike

ROOMMATE W411teel, female, 5
walk , modern apt . for
fall -winter. 1972· 73. C.all 131·3592,
131·3584.

MALE - P&lt;tfer uppor..clau or 9rad.
Own room, May 1 and next year. S4 S .
11l· 1341.

TWO FEMALE roommates - e d
Own rooms In furnlsheCI apartm en t.
S65 • . Call B .. , or Sue 832· 1149.

N E E D ROOMMATE: for summer,~
m Oflthl. •so(monltl t o sub-let. N Nr
ldt oot, lfNt Dl~l (~ kldd l "-1· Ca"'
o.tvld 8 33--4~23.

minute~

NEEO A WA V to trensport your
belongings to Long Island In May1
DependaDie urvtc:e, price reaaonabte
anCI negotiable. Call Arthur 835· 1276
or 138-4046.

MA L E
ROOMMATE
wanted
s 12/ WMk, Inc luding utlllly Own
room 1~ mtnutM walk 832 ·21~4

DEAR FUTURE C41tl1PUS edltOr(S) I
May tile bluebird ot n'shama (sick ) lay
eggs In your cam pus s•11 1t maiiDox.
You too, Ron S hllom - Your lo ving
Hebe.

ONE FEMALE roommate own
1oom, furnished, 563/mo . lO·mln. ride
from campu1. Ctll 833..0204.

Call 838· 373!1 .

LO VER, I lust !&lt;now wne11 I'm In yoUI
embrAce, tills world Is a happy place
and •omethtng happens to me tllai'S
\Ome kind ot wonder ful I tove you.
Rena .

smlllnQ and
I'll miss you .

ROOMMATE wanted for summer.
Own room. CIOM to campus. Call
Laurie 131-4073,

SUMMER ROOMMATES nMCitCI lor
apac:lous 3-beelroom ept. l..,.,..lnute walk

83~ · 3947

BARBARA
k..p
everyt11ln9 will be O . K
At .

TWO FEMALE tran1feu need l)lace to
there with otnen for fall near
CM'I'IpUI, own rooms dttlrt&lt;l: call Laurie
131 · 2660 or etll collect. Ruth
212·TY2..0512.

ROOMMATE wanted for sommer
O""n room neer campus. Rent
negotiable Call 134 7461.

June I 111

MARCIA
In silent splendor, lOve
lt t&gt;ws on endlessly. Thank you tnr our
love and happy times. SS RedhudS
rt1ake hntullc lovers.

THREE FEMALES w ant eel to lhare
h.,.. , _ on AmiMotlt . Fall eeme.ter,
two Dedl'ooml a nCI atudy. A vailable .
Rent 1 53. Ca ll Bonnie, Fren, Eltaa.
832-9420.

SU MMER ROOMMATES neeCied , 2
larqe l)edrooms. 1-mlnute walk from
camous C all Cathy 1131 · 31S2 Steve
131 ·l214

NEEDED - two or lllr" roommal"
for summ« . Across the ur. .t from
c:ampus. On corner of Hulh ano Main
Own room . C &lt;11ll 132·8771. Rent
negotiable.

1 75·575 4 .

IUB-&amp;.ET APARTMENT
ROOMMATE WANTED to lh art hou•
fCH &amp;tie IUmmer, 10 minutes from
cam pus.. Call JCMII . 6 1 1•9557 .

ROOM FOR rent for summer acrou
the JtrMt from campus. GOod rent .
Easy living. 1137·154g,

MALE , own room In furnished
thrH-beelroom apt, $37 plus ont · lhlrd
utilities Sterling mid-May. 896·3911

PERSONAL

O RAL

tfte r • • tt t ement.
S oectrv m .

HOUSE IN BEAUTIFUL Tonawanda
- sun a nO fun with lour t&gt;ec3rooms • nCI
tar9" backy•rCI Pool and park nu rby
with tenniS taellltles hanoy C all Mike
838 - 1167 or 8JI 2897 or Fred
8J l 2453 .
THREE
5 -mlnu te
furnished.
8 31 ·3963:

BEDROOM •Par lmenl
wa lk rrom c;amous F u lly
C all Howle 838 1167. Bob
or Larry 834-666 1

HOUSE - llve ·Deelroom c ompletely
iuml1hed. Groups or tndi•ICiuals June
Au9uSI, $45 N Ch N...,l Allenllurst
on N lag••• Falls
Reallv nlcet
831 · 3556 .
5 BEOROOMS on Anoi10r\1 and
ParksiCie (a;rou trom Det•ware P•rk)
tor summer months. Call 874 60S 1

BEAUTIFUL
avallaote June
Lisbon, 5 min
Price f1090IIable

bec3room 11Cruse
I lhru ..,ep t I On
walk tr o m c:ampu\
Call 835~127

3Vt

----

COMPLE 1 E L Y f urnl\1\tCI l arge
2 bedroom apartment YoCIIk lng d l\l• n &lt;e
ro um1pu• o n Matn ~I Available M"Y
August
Rent n e9Qit.,ble
l'O
8l•· 97l9
FOUR · BEOR O OM HOUSE
~ UU
FIVE ; 5 ·mlnule walk to c:am p u \ W1ll
rent IndiVIdually 01 qroups
MAV
S ept. 1 $40/ mo. 838.4576
4-BEOROOM apartmen t, 10 min u te
walk to campus. Cheapr May IS
Aug
31. 831 · )962 , 8 J 1 2 550,
831· 2114
TO 6 bedrooms avall4bl&amp; rw o
kllcllens, two bathrooms I!&gt; minute
walk to campus. Call 831 386 2.
831 · 3957 Rent nt9Qtlal)le
f'REE May
rentl l
M o dern.
alr · condltloned, fully c•roeted,
dlsllwashar, washer &amp; dryer. IO · mlnute
walk. Rent nf90IIablt. Room tor I 2 .
837· 2 154.
CHEAP - 3-Dedroom lurnlsheCI apt
lO·mln. walk to campus. Available May
15. Call 831-4011.
AIR CONDITIONED I Pt. lor l or 2
Two blocks from c.ampus. Summer.
Call EIIM 132·3844, 836·1102, Robin
831· 2114.
ONE FEMALE sublet May
September . Modern apartment
com pletely furnlslled . Own room . Near
umpus. Call 1131·3861
S·BEDROOM house to
Available May 10. Very

FABULO US moCitrn apt . lor sommer
availa ble, 3 beelrooms. S minutes wal~
Ca11Judyl3135114 , 8313592 .
3 · 8EDROOM aot. for summer .
Avalltl)le lor 3 Or 4
peopt•.
B allev· Ktn&amp;ln91on area. FurnlsheCI.
SilO per month, "eec&gt;tlable. 131 ·3664,
831·3666, 836·3136.
BEAUT IFUL 4 -bedroom apartment
for summer . 5·mlnute walk - price
negollal)lt . Call831·2270 or 8 31· 3987.
SPAC IOUS HOUSE, five beCirooms
available . Llvlnll room, den,
Main- Fillmore area May - Sept . Rent
ne9ollat&gt;le. Call Linda II 34·6466 .
2 ROOMMATES wan\tG for •Paf\mtnt
In Mtl~lmOt't .... cturlnq the
aum..-. C:ell &amp;'17 · 26&amp;6.
T~ AEE · I!IEOA OOM
tutnlfneCI
af)&lt;Ortment n-om Mav .,. June fhru
Septemoer, 51 20. Te rry or Jeue
873 617 -'
Th•nk
y ou
Ktnmor-Delaw••e Area

4 BEDROOM •PI
101 summtt . S ll ll
Fillmor e
Rll'll
832 6 . .

tusem ent,
furnllute

~·•9"'·

MAin •t

t•tkable .

N o rm

l BEDROOM house lurnlsheo , S 120 •
montn , 5 minutes lr o m c a m pus.
Available May 15 832 ·314~

3 MONTH - l:leelroom , living 10 0 m,
kitchen , til for 1 62 50/ m Onlll In
Elmwood area 11e1r Br inks Call T o n o,
886-4252
2 FEMALES w•nted to lul:l· let ;&gt;
rooms lor summ.,. . One from M1y 1 Augu61 ll, And c.ne rrom July 1
AuQ J1 C all 834 t 993 anyllme
H O USC '" 910rlous T on•w• nda t o
sublet tor 4 people. Poo l •nd p•rk
nearby Plent)l u l sun •rod fun. Call
Mike at 838· 1 167 or 8J I 2885 o r Freel
at 831 2453
turniJhea , 5 mi n walk
t ampus ; ull Je•t 8J9 42 2 3

~ BEDROOM ;

1u

Nt C. E FURNISHED ~paot m e n l ,
Kenmore-Delaware aru
May 1111
&gt;tPt Rusonable rent Tnree -bedroom
AlySia 1116·5020

APARTMENTS WANTED
APARTMENT needeCI to r a CJN O
couple ror M•y J u ne. poulbly Jul y
6 88 510? evenings . 8ll -lb7 5 IllY\
Mrs. Kim

'1 0

REWAAO
Co uple neeCi s
unfurnished apartment near U B St ove ,
refrigerator, surtlng June or July t
tnrou91l
1973
S165 o • under
634-6588 alte r 6 p.rn

-------

DESPERATELY need lo sub ·lel' We
nMd a summer p t•c e . Call Janis ,
831 · 2395

-------

COUPLE seek p13ce to sllare ne~&lt;t fall
Has to be walktnQ/blktnq d•stan&lt;.e In
campu•. 834 9502
WANTED ; J ·bedroom apt. In UB Mea
lor ne~t Sept . Call Howle 838-4892
HELPI I n . .d a place to stay ror the
summer anCI tall. C~ll Snaron
136· 2304 .
WANT £0: 3-t&gt;eelroom apt. In U .B area
ror newt Sept . Call Howle 838-&lt;~892 .
FEMALE TRANSFER student need~
.apt lor Sept. Call Sherr vi 83 7- 1384
I&lt;Mp trying.

Friday, 28 April 1972 . The Spectrum Page nmeteen
!o\'\'J lnqA

8~ .

iGbh'i ,

HtU1J ~l !'q2

9rfT

l 't ) 'l't;u ~~_ E &lt;f

�Sports Information
Ahnouncements
Put - time student employment Is ilvAllllble,
Applkilllons 1re now belns accepted for tht positions of:
Norton lobby~ounter attendilllt illld asslstint nlaht mill'lilltr
fo r the fAil. limited appllcitlons may be pl,hd up d url na
the week from A . J. E rmMtovlcs, ~slstilnl director of
()p41riltlons, Room 1 15 Norton Hilll
People Interested In dbcuslna sutlstical Pf'Oblems In
,..,..vch and datil analysis, or modetlna of systems involvln&amp;
uncertainty or rindom processes, please contac t : Howard
ThAler, S tatlsllcs Grllduite Studtnt Consullln&amp; S ervice,
4230 Rldse Lu, R oom A·21, phone 1136.

The time o f the Co mmunicative Crut ivlty brunch on
Su nda y has bten chinaed from noon to 3 p.m. In Norton
Hitl All s tuden u and faculty in Communoc~llve Creilttvlty
are welcome; st udenu should bring fin.tl pipe~ ~nd proJects
since this will be the last class meeting.

fllmt by John L•nnon and Yoko Ono will be shown,
Monday , Tuesday and Wednesday at 6 p .m . .tnd 9 p. m . In
Diefendor f 14 7. There will btt "" ;adm ission charge.
Thul)d~y ~•

UB Percuulon Ensemtole
ouuide or Hus Lounp .

12 ;30 p.m .

Election hudquarten for Judie M . Dolor~ Oenmilll •s
Jt 12 I Del~w.tre Ave. Volunteers 1re needed.
Conl.ttl h tildquute rs o r c.tll Buffy Bu rke at 836·2276.
loc~ted

The G rilduate linauktln Club presenu Dr. Ch~rle, f.
Hockell of Corn ell Unive rsit spukin1 on " Wh&lt;~t's Nexl on
Llnguostlcs7" Mond4y ~t 8 p.m. In R oom 333 H~ves H.tll.

v

Office hou" for prt-f'tllstr:~tlon and pe rmission of
inJt ru ct o" fo r Women's Stud ies Colleae woll be held 11 108
Winspe.1r Ave. (83 1·3405. 3406) tod.ty. Monday &lt;&amp;nd
luesdily .

The Women 's C lub Will hilve Ope" WOI1.\hop, on M.ay

6 ill 2 p .m. in B•lrd

H~ll

Chab1d House w1ll ho111e
p m . In the fillmore Room

CAC Vhtec ProJect needs volunteers r here h • f;~mtly
whose house must be p.lin t ed in order lor lhem 10 move In
hint o~nd tromsportalton will b&lt;" supplied Piltnttnll surts on
Sa turd•Y ~~ 2 p m. (.ont.lct lefr In the CAC offo~e.

8 3 I )609.
Chabad House os sponsonng • chilrttd bus to L.ub.avotdo
He•d'lu•rters lor the Sh.1voos Hohd•y Bus will le•vc Mo~y
I~ •.nd return M.1y 11 r ur more onfoorn~hon r ~II td1·54111
Of II !J-8334
WBfO will be sponscmnK • 19~0' 'lod. Hop In lht'
fillmore Room In Norton tonight .11 8 : 30 p .rtl Prllts will
be liven for a number of con tes ts o •tludont~. bco.l 50\
d.nltr, the areasoesl are...,er, the best de.or41ed ~&lt;&gt;&lt; ks .tnd
more. Prize' will 1ntlude new lp's .and ~Ingle rc.ords. The
fir~ I 100 people 10 •r~ lve will receove free ~lbum\ , r lc kt ls
~re now .lv~ll.thle It Norton H•ll T1tkel OffiLt or .al lht
door AdmiS510n Is $ 50
Pre-medical •nd pr~ ·denUI nu d•nt~. tod•V IS the lut
d~y for peer aroup .tdvlsement. Be wre th.ot cveryjhinl! IS
.ellled before luvlna for tht summer. Office huors will bt
from 3 - 5 p m In the Undergr.adu.ttt Mtdlc •I Society olhu
In Clem entll•ll (01\1 noor, we~t wing)
llv~ In Ne w Yor\ Suter Don't be bored thl\ summer
Help the EX-OFFENDER In your tommunoty Thcv
prob.tbly ~re not .twuc ol thcl• vullnfl rtfl))h You ,."
IMorrn them . C .tll Doris l:dwud&gt;, BJ-4 · 7663 L~auc u l
Wom rm Voten of Buft.tlo.

The N 1111ra Frontier Cltlzcnl for Mc&lt;.overn
headquartcn I\ now opcnln&amp;. Volunteers irt weiLome . (All
854- 3300.
The Atl0tl4 tlon ur Women l .tw St udcnu 101 the $1101e
Unlvenlty at Buffalo IS I &lt;. lively reuuteing women rnteresl~d
In .ttlendlng law school I I you w~nt answers to your
Que~IIOns ,
t All Buffy But1ce, 811) l27b Ill TriCI.a
Semmelhock .al oS2 1712
A Coordin ating Commouee mtetln~ for N.ttlon•l
Moratonum 011y (MAy 41 will be held ~und&lt;~y ~~ 7 10 p m
•• the Western New Yorio. Putc ( enlcr , 2~ C •lurnc1 Pl&amp;e.
Bu If•lo.
The UB Blu~ need people lnlelt\ted on mu~l&lt; Mu\1
o• pl.av tnstrumcnt ,, both CAll 818 -n 111 lo-.tph
OuotoJn, lor An •udillon

""I

Hillel w1ll hold • ~.obb•th .,ervoH lhl\ evenon~t •I 8 p "' ·
1n the Hllld Hoo.e An Onett \h.ahb.tl will tollo•

Ltbnry Summer HourN ( May 22

Aug

Art library
Lib Studies lah •
Health Scten,~ Lib
MUSIC
Science &amp; Eng. lih
Chenust ry
Law
Ridge Lea
Bell Sdence

Ram

10 p m

II .t. m .

10 p m .
'-J a . m. - 5 p .m .
IJ a m 9 p m
~a.m - 9pm

9 a . m .-5 p m ••

Ra .m - Qpm.
30 ll.m 4 JO p rn
H 30 a .m S p.m • ••
9 a rn . 9 p .m
9 a.rll. 5 p.m.
~

t

~tov.ll

on Mond.&amp;V 41

Au~ntion

interested students the deadline for
for the Board of Directors uf the
Student Housing Corporation has been extended to
Fnday, May 5, 1972. All applicant~ mu\t subm1t
resumes to Sub. Board I Inc., Room 216 Norton
Hall.
applic.ttton~

An open conf• r•nce, "Ora.anlzlna Strike Support
rtsllt Phase II," will be held tomorrow \Urtlng ~I I 0 .&amp;.m 10
Norton H~ll . Th e 'onference h.u been endorsed by lhe
Bufhlo Labor Committee (NC.LC). PODE R , BRAG US
Vets and BUILD ilmong others The o~~end.o ~~ 10 • . m
Morning Plnel : The Economlt Crtsh, Conference The•ter.
EIJ Sp .ltlno~us (NC LC), Mildred Prtm (BRAG); 1 p . m.
A fterronon Panel Work In&amp; CIA.SS OriiMIIlona, Room 231
Norton, N.mty Sp•nn.tus (~K L C), AI Donohue (UB Vets)
t.eof Hool, (TNS). J p.m.
W orlt; shap~ Stri ke SuPitOrt
Mid Welf~ re, 240 Norton , E.leulon '7:.1 : Pupul•• F ruul
Unit ed front Mid the Rol•e ol tht ~CKoo~llsl P1rtles, 242
Norton, The StJt e of the L abor M ovement Strike Support
Or11•noii01!, 244 N orton, 4 30 p m
P lcn~rv
C h1b&lt;~d House will hAvt • \~tVIlf •I 7 IS p m . ll)nol(hl
lollowcd woth a arut sh.obllO\ lllt.ll, ~plfol, \ln(!lnl And
llinllng 'J JO • m . tomorr&lt;1•w ~ • serviCe lollowtd woth •
tnt41 .

The Griidu&lt;~te Llncul~l•u Club wrll hAvt t&gt;r flru.e
ol the llni!IJI\IIc Re..e•r~h lnslllutc ul ijo,loo
~ptAitoona '"' • You Don ' t AlWAY\ 'i.ty WhJI You Medii· un
M•y 4 AI I! p m on Room 3ll H•vr~ Ht~ll
~ rA\tr

M.ort~la KOllkOVJI And lUCllt fohn~on olun ho~opo\1 ~ ul
lnt.-on•toon .. l rttlulc , will prtsent .1 &lt;Onlert •• 4 · 1() p m
M~y 7 on 1he .tudttnroum or rhr 1\lbngho !&lt;.no" Arr C.o~llerv
fhe progro~m Will lndudf Pltlt' by 114ndcl, Vov4h1o
D~bu\'V •nd R•••l

Saturday

topm

9 am 6 p.m .
9 a . m . 5 p .m
9aut 6pm
8 am S p m
9 a . m 5 p.m
8 a .m 5 p.m.
8 ·JO am - 4 :30p.m
R 30 am 5 p.m
Q am 6 p m.
9 a . m. S p.m.

•
The Ltllary Stud1es laboratory will be open
the hours ltsttd abovl' dunng Summer Sl'SSion 11
(June 2~ Aug. II ), dunng the I st and 3rd sesstons,
hnun. will be Q a . m . - 5 p m .• Mo nda y Friday: closed
on SJiurtiJy dOd Sunday

Chimpoon~hlps

filculty .tnd 1Uff M o nday evenln1 aolf leaaue woll hold
• happy hour org;an iulion.;al meetln&amp; M ond .ay. M.;ay 8 from
4:10 6 p.m. In Room J4S, Nort on ~Iiiii Thos will be •
nine-hole h;andic.&amp;p lugue tor men .nd women . All
interested pl.tyers or duffer~ .tre welcome C•ll Norb
Bo~schoo~~el, 2936 if otis Impossible lor yoo to •uend.
There will be a meet lns M ond•y .11 II i .m , for thcxe
onlerrsted on f.;all v.lr\IIY gull

Avallablr at the Tickel Office
Studio Aren;a Thuter
A p111 W M •Y 28 Mun ul l o Mq"''"'
Moo~y ll June tt fhf Pro(W\11/on
Populu Concert~
Aprol 28. Three Du1 N •&amp;l\1 (M )
1\pfll JO · lljththouse .&amp;nd Mah.ov1~1&gt;nu Or&lt;.hnlr•(K)
M•y 4 Ale&gt;. T •vlor o~nd t .tshman •"d R•l lo. tn (D)
M.1y f Tht Byrd~ and Livingston I ;~ylur (E)
May 9 Soeptlen Sulls (M)
Bufblo Phllhumonoc Orcht"r• ( K)
April 18 Mitch M illeo
M•y S O;an'e I he•trt or tl"oltno

T~ C Uli'-en for

Banal•d~h

Moo~v 3 (G)
Th~

American Conttmpvr.ary rheillt

rh,

llrmumohlt!

H.inalln1 6rothcn &lt;: lrcus
M• v 10 H · (M)
~luw

fesuval
June I} lulv 'J Th' No .-111 f am1ly
July II\ \ epl 2 GntllltJ Moml!.J
futy 19 Sept J M I\QI/nJnt'
Aug. S 19 C.oncrrh

Com ma Ev~nu
M •Y 27 : D•v1d L ~~icJy I on ~~le ~/1) (M)
lun~ 2 ~onny ~nd Chcr (on sale ~ /b) (m)
J•1nr 9 l AwrrO&lt;t Wello. (M )
l unc I 0 . Chuck M ~njlwt\1' loll \Ale S/ 1) {M I

I

KFY
II.

M
f

Memo11•l /\udo1o11urn
E.rle Community C.ollrl(t
O ' Youvtlle College
0
G G!4n.acJ• I hcatrc
Ml
Melody • .all

Cho~b&lt;~d tt ouse lnvole. "" IJruver\oly , mnmu11otv 1u
help &lt;tlcbr.atc the ltwosh holld•v. lag 8'0norr I ht I'•"IY
...II hr held Ill lht r '"'""'"~ ....... Alii" n. Mund-y

Friday

8 am

~

The Oep1nment of M u\lc o f t he Sure Unoversity •I
Buff• lo woll present loti Ch..d.tbe, dtrcttor or the El~tronot
Music Studio .11 the Stile IJnlverslty 41 Alb4ny, on a
progr.1n1 entitled , "DA ISY' : 1\ Conte II Sculpture" on
Mond ~y .ot 8 p.m. In 8&lt;~ord !Hall , Room 100 Th.. kets for lhe
perform•nce woll be S I.SO tor gentr~l ~dml\\oOn , J I UO lor
faculty .and st•ff and $.50 for studenh 4nd •rc •vaolabl~ ~·
Norton HAll Ticke t Off1te.

f tit"' 8/uOI Pun the" A Hepmt .onll Mcllullm
\uuqq/1'
ftu frtf.'dQm pte~ented by lllr ( 0\IOLII uf H o)tuoy
')tudenh , 9 "rt1 in Ootfendorl Anntlt. J.
p m on
Ooeftndorr l4b
Rco..ott~l Wlllt~m .1\ppleby , ele1.1r0n1\ mU\1( lhrec pocL~~ I no
mdgnettc upe, 1 p . m ., Balfd ReCJUI H~ll.
Mectong · Consumer F ro~~ud With !&gt;~)Ulcer~ l•tl Sto~llo.hou&lt;K of
the Feder~l Tridc Lommos~oon .ond Ln1~ Meyer ul rhr
food and Drug Admonl)lrillon , I p m , '&gt;t•tc
Unovtl)oly tull ege at Ouff•lu , CommUIIIloiloUII\ Center,
l tl lure H.tll!,

25)

Mu n . Thun

lu.. kwood
llamman Reserve

~

Tonlcht : VallhY baseball &lt;It Scranton , 7:30 p .m .;
va,.,lty track n the Ptnn Relays, noon .
Tom0110w : Varsity baseball 11 Syrac:use, I p.m.;
virslty trac k ;at SUNY Albiny, unlve lllty tenter meet , I :30
p .m .; t lub crew &lt;~I Connecticut Cofleae with Cinlslus, New
London, Conn., 10 a.m.; Ju nior nnlty basebAll, Jamestown
Comm unity, Ptelle fi eld, 1 p. m .
S unday : Junior varsity b~eb.tll, Alfrl'd Tech, Peellt
Field , I p. m .
Mond&lt;~y : V.;arslt v baseb1ll at Colg.~te, Hamilton, N .Y .,
1:30 p. m .
Wednesd.ty· V.trsily trac k, Fredoni.t S tate , Rollry
Field, 4 · p.m .; vusity spring golf at SU NY Albillly
I nvitation~!. Sir.ttoga Sprin(ll, I :30 p.m.
R e malnlna sprlnl schedules for BuffAlo teams: Varsity
bastb.tll: M1y 6 il Kent S ute ; M.ty 9, Rochester, I p.m.,
M iy II it N l.tgua ; M ily 12, Pltuburah , I p. m., May 14 II
l th •ca; May 17 at R ochester.
V.trsitv track· M.ty 6, US lnviu tional, R o t uv F ield,
noon; M.ty 13 11 the New York State Ch ilmpionsh i p~.
Roth~ter, 10 a...m.
L.crosse Cl ub . Mily 6, Monroe Comm uoot y, Rotary
f leld, 2 p. m .
Crew C lub: M;ay 6 •• the New York M etropolft •n
Ch.tmplonsh lps; May 12·1 1 ~~ the Phrladelphla Dad V;ail

'I

a m

Spm

4 .t m . Spm
I p m 5 pIll .
4 am. 5 p .m

Yam Spm
Closed
'Jam. - Spm .
9 a .m Spm
9 a .m 5pm
I p m 5pm
('losed

Sunday
I p rn
I p m
Closed
Closed
I pm
Closed
I p .m .
Closed
Closed
I p m
Closed

.'i P rn
.'i p .m .

5 p.rn

5 p .m

S p . rn

••
From May l2 - Aug 15 the Mustc LtbroJry
will be o pen 9 a .m. - 9 p .m . on Mondays and

Wednt:sdays.
• ••
On Tuesdays and rhursd ay , Law L1hrar y
will be o pen unltl 9 p .m.

~.oturd.AV.

April 29

Evenong ol 0Jn~c: Pr~entrd hy lhc UlliVt'lsoty Da11'e
Thutre Workshop ~~ the Sute Unovt'r,lly ~~ Bufhlo, 8
p m ~nd I I p m., HArr lm•n Studio fht~tre, tree 11o..lo.~1~
n1&lt;1y he picked up at the Nnnon Hall Tld&lt;ct Offoce
l onLtrt
Conlert for B •.ngloo~desh, wrth folk rocl.
~•nKcr ·lomposer Arthur M iller, spon~ored hy
the
( mcrgency Relief f und lor Banglade~h. 8 \0 1 1 p no . .
Norton Caleterl•. llo..ket s "' the douo
Sunday, April 30
Lono..trt The t.cnler ul the Cre.ltove •nd Perloonllng ARt)
of the State Unovtrsoty at Buffalo wtll v•esent the lonll
Eveorngs fo1 New Mus" LOncert ol the se.ason •• 8 : 30
~ .rn .• Albnght· Knox Afl G1llery audotorium, .tdmosslon
IS ~I for students, lacully .ond st•lf, S2 for the gcner1l
puhhL.
f ilms for Lhildoen ; fhl! 1\pp/e •nd Wulnbird&lt;, o1 p .m.,
Albrighi·Knox Auditorium, J-25 adm•~~wn.

·1 mv 11/rrrnd

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>Spectrum, The, 1972-04-28</text>
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                <text>1972-04-28</text>
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                <text>application/pdf</text>
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                <text>Newspapers</text>
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                <text>LIB-UA006_v22n80_19720428</text>
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                <text>Spectrum</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1351804">
                <text>LIB-UA006</text>
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                    <text>Vol. 22. No. 79

Wedneldav. 26 April 1972

SUte University of New Yortt at Bu,.o

tl

UB Day Care Center

·Funding commitment sought
by Jo-Ann Annao
Campus f:duor

Plagued by funding problems. the UB Oay Care
Center faces an uncertain future. Accurd 111g to the
Day Care Center's Steenng C'ommtttee "wlule we
have prov1ded needed and valuable servtccs to the
Untvcrstty a.\ a whole. we still do not have any linn
or on-gomg commttment from the Untver~tty for

Environmental Design 's involvement with the center.
A four-credit course, the Proximate 1-.nvtmnment m
that department Wldertook. m SIX weeks. the
complete designing and constructton llf Jn out~tdc
playground Ms . Walker remarked " Both the
students and the day care center benefited
the
center gut a new playground and the students got
both the cred 1t ,Jild the expcnence involved m a real
projeCt "

~upport . "

Spcc:tfically.
members
ot
the
Stt•ertng
C'ommillcc laulted Hayes Hall for not supplymg that
commttment "The admmtstratnm," remarked the
Steenng C'ommtttee member B B Walker ... ,~ ~tmply
bored wtth U), they want us oil thetr back:. ... Ms
Walker alluded to events of last sprmg when the
center was threatened wtth closure because of a
s1mtlar lack of support.
At that time, they both negollated w1th and
demonstrated aga1nst the admmtstrallon to secure
some funding However. as Ms Walket remarked :
" Whllc we dtd recetve support m terms of matenals
and labor (Ill make necessary renovatiOns tn the day
care plant). we never. at any tunc. recetved any
money ur any firm comm1tment lor continued
support ..
No policy

The o nly Jssurancc the center ha~ rcce1ved, she
contmued, 1\ that "we have a comnutment to ex1st.
but no comnutment for money .. Another problem.
accou.llng to Andrew Richter (Steenng Cumm111ee
member) IS that there ex1s 1s no state-wtde poltcy on
day care "There ts no SUNY policy lilt day care
except 1hat ,,·s okay There ts no pohcy to set '' up
or to rund II ..
Accordmg to t'xecullve Vtce Prestdent Albert
Somll, the center must JU\IIIy 1tself as an
educattllllal program Therefore. he explameJ. the
day care ..enter must be part ut the acatlcm•c
program ul the School of Soc1al Polley and
C'ommUJuty Semces Involved here, Or Somrt s~11d,
•~ the nece~stt y uf the center to go thwugh " normal
de pall mental channels .. for fund mg.
However. both day care officmls and Oliver
G1bson (act1ng dean ot the School ol Sowtl Polley
and Community Serv1ces) contend that these
channeh have heen fully utthJed Or Grbsun
explamcd that wh1le day care extst~ 111 the school lor
··paS!&gt;·through arrangements," they arc not funded c1~
a part of the S&lt;:hool. ··Fund~ for the ccntct ." he s;uJ.
"come from other parts of the llr11vemty " The
problem. he agreed. ts exactly where the fund~
should come from
University-wide
Day ca re offinals feel that nghtfully the
Untverstty should fund the center " We offer our
facllt tie!&gt; and provrde many servrce~ to the whole
campus. nut JUSt nne department or constituency:·
they argued Llsttng these programs, they explamed
that
such
departments
as
social
policy,
anthropology . nursmg, speech therapy, psychology.
new college of education, the women's college and
environmental design have all utilized the center.
For example, they outlined the Department of

Expanded program
According to the Steering Cornmtttcr. such
service~ to the U111vers1ty were able to be offered
because of the cen ter's accomplishments stnce tis
inception two years ago. Included m these
c~ccomphshments arc the o ffic1al licensmg of the
center and tts mcorporatron as a non-profit
corporation Addillonally . Mr. Richter reported that
the entire statT will be going to school to
"professionalize rtself...
The center has also expanded its program for
the children w1th the provision of both hot lunches
and instruct ton. However. as Ms. Walker pointed out,
such an expansiOn has resulted in the need for more
funding because more people are rcqutred by law to
staff the center "We have mo re use of the center,"
she said. "so we need more people ."
The cen ter needs a S61 .587 .50 budget to
operate but IS requestmg S23,012.50 from the
Untverstty . Grants from the student assoc1attons and
lund ratsmg projeets of the center account for the
rest ol the money According to Mr R1chter " In
terms of what the Univers•ty derives fwm the cen ter.
$23.0 12 50 IS mlnnnal, at I he least "
'Worrisome·
HPwcver. a~ admm1st raltve olltctals ptlllll out ,
the state li~cal budget tillS year ts very lunttcd Or.
Som•t cxplamcd that 1f money were u\ed lo1 the
~enter. money would have tu be taken from other
program~ T ernung tlus ex plana tron "'wornsmne,"
Ms Walker commented " It is a prevalent and an
annuymg atllllHliStrattve attttude whtch says that 'In
order to grt llHlltcy. you have to compete w11h other
people anu ot her worthwhile programs' ..
In an attempt to gather mme information about
the center\ tundmg problems. ttxlay·s Faculty
Senate I' xccut •vc ('ommtttee w1ll d1scuss the whole
mJtte• Oean Pruttt. executive comm1ttee member,
was rc4uc~t cd to collect mformatltln about what the
center tS duu1g and "what exactly the facts arc .. Or.
PrUitt commen ted that he personally beltcvel&gt; the
center "ought 111 be funded so that they can surv1ve
and conltnuc to provide the serv•cc~ they have
provtded 111 the past." Another executiVe committee
member Shonmc Fmnegan termed the whole
situa110n "very discou ragtng." She noted : " Last year
the situa tion seemed to be settled when the quarters
were renovated . t-lowever, the problem has not really
been solved."
Agreemg w1th this, day care members are
determined to secure some type of cummttment so
that they can remam in operation . They state : "The
administratton is annoyed with us; they find us
irritating because we keep on bothering them .. .
Yet , we have no other choice ~»-e'll continue to
irritate until this whole matter is ':l!ed."

.... ....

Photos by Cohen

�Mandatory fee action

State Assembly Committee

kills Schermerhorn bill
The Schermerho rn bill t o
abolish
mandatory
student
activities fees on State University
of New York campuses was
d efeated last Monday in t he State
Assembly's Education Committee.
The bill will now be considered by
the Assembly Rules Committee
which may overrule any other
Assembly comrrutree's deci.sion
Sources close to Assembly
Deputy Majority Leader J a mes
Emery said the likelihood of
passage was slim. Legi.slallve
contacts
of
the
Student
Assocaation
of
the
State
Unrvenaty (SASU) concu rred. If
app r oved
by
the
Rules
Committee, however, the bill
would be voted upon by the
entire Assembly. Passage there
would send at to Governoa
Rockefeller for final approval
The bail ha~ been under heavy
attack
from
the
Student
Assocaataon sance ats passage in the
Senate. At a press conference held
last Monday morning, Debbae
Benson, Student Associatio n (SA)
PreSJdent and Machael Nacolau,
Gradu1te Student Assocaation
(GSA) President , expressed deep
concern over the bill's possible
ramaficalions. They saad the bill
"would have serious negative
consequences not only on the UB
c.ampus. but also on the Western
New York community "

According t o Ms. Benson , such an
ac tio n " would d ecrease the power
o f the Board in determining
University policy." S he explained
that adoption of the bill would be
"short circuiting the legitimate
powers vested in the Board of
Trustees ... to govern the mselves
and let policies as to the internal
taxation mechamsm ...
Continuing,
Ms.
Benson
emphasized that in a State
mandated referendum last April,
well over 80% of the student body
supported mandato ry fees.
This, however. was not the
findang of Rjchard Schermerhorn,
the b111's sponsor. He maintaaned
that only "6 to 20% of the
student body" IS in favor of
mandatory fees and man y have
openly opposed them.

Econorruc ~~rcussions
In a JOint statement. Ms
Benson and Mr Nacolau saad the
bill
would
result
in
the
elammataon of "more than one
hundred
and
twenty
organiz.ations" on campus as well
as "some one hundred and
seventy·five JOb) at UB and
salancs to tahng $150 thousand
annually "
Addat10nally , they
noted, at was stated that watlwut
student aCIIVatac~ fees, the athletu.:
program and " many unaque
communaty scrvaces would be
abolished ."
Abu comadered werl' the
restru.: tauns the btll would place
~m
I he
BuJTd uf Trustces

Save the country !!
He explained that requests
were made to him askmg for the
ehmanallon of these fees on the
grounds that they were beang used
for "ant1·American, subversave
activities to ruw the cou ntry "
As an aJternattve to mandatory
fees, Mr Schermerhorn suggested
that each universtty review its
clu bs
and
student
run
organ1zat1ons and anclude them an
their
operating
budget.
In
additaon, he felt that voluntary
fees
could
be secured for
organizations wtth madequate
fund s.
One Assemblyman opposmg
the Schermerhorn bill as Franz
Leichter. who feels the bill to be
representallve of the conservatave
v1ewpoant held by many of his
colleagues. He said that many
lega s lat ors
are
blatantly
masmformed and· tend to vote
without accurate anformattun He
suggests that concerned s tudents
alert the assemblyman of thear
respecttve dastncts w the ball
In the event the bill comes
before the Assembly, the Student
Assocaatton urges all students "to
come
forth
and
coordinate
ac t ivital'S wtth othe1 student
governments to defeat the ball "

~ --,jj,j~)N;;-MTt::-&lt;;---1

••••••••••••••••••••

I
I
I
I
I

'~"""" """'"

I •
fI •

S ar•~•

I •
I

TIHIIIIf)WAR

"~

~~ H
!\ C ~ UUJ "'uuk,luh ut
II uthu11 H u111t I'• c:&gt;&gt;

I I I fltdlatd

'Wzzaf?

A new fonn of dl. . . . caused by cigwett•7 No, just 10111• "*"ben of 1he Student
Theatre Guild gettini medeup for one of their latest productions. Lack of edequ~ t.clllties has forced
the guild to improvise their own necessary equipment. So don't go calllnt the Surveon General, okay?

Editor :r note · The following letter, daud Apn'l
24 and wntten by State Unt11emry of Buffalo
President
Robert
Kettu,
conums
the
Schermerhorn bill to abolish mandatory actill/ty
fees on all S rare UnilleFsiry campuses ('opies are
bemg unt to all Western New York state
leg~slatnrs and State Un111ers11y Chancellor Ernest
Boyer.
I would very much hope that the currently
proposed legislation ~Senat e BilJ 7526, and
Assembly B1U 9363) deah n g wath mandatory fees
wall not be enacted anto law I s;sy this for the
following reasons.
I Authonty as to whether there should or
should not be mandatory fees 10 SUNY 1s one
wh1ch should conta nue to resHie in the Board of
Trustees of this Unrversity . The Educataon Law,
No 355, holds the Board of Trustees o f the State
Unaversaty o f New York reiponslble for the
operat iOn of the University . In my op~nion, at
would be undesirable t o place t:onstram ts, of the

Rllpres•ntfld for lldvtlrtlling by
Net• on~~l

Educllttonsl Adverti11ng
360 Lflxingron Atilt
New York. N. Y. 10011.
·•

Sllrv~ee, Inc.,

Sui»crtption ret• are $4.50 f»r
01 $8.00 for two s•m•tiHS.

twn.-ter

S«:ond CllW Postt~g~~ paid at Buffelo

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Your ammed1atc c.:onsaderat1on o f thiS ma!lcr
would be most sin t:erely appreciated .

CONTEST!

••
•••
••
••

•
••

type sugcsted , on this area of its responsibility
2. No legiSlation endang ma nda tory fees
should be passed unless, and unt il full proVISIOn
has been made in the State University Operatmg
Budget for the University to fund essenllal
1ctivities c urrently being finan ced from these fee
revenues. As mailers now stand , the State
Unaversity of New York at Buffalo has nellher
the funds nor the legal authority to assu me these
o bUgations.
3 I believe that student govern ments at thiS
mstitutton
have
demonstrated
mcreasing
responsibility in the manner in which they have
handled student fee monies. This increased
respons1b1lity should be taken into account, both
by those inside and o.utsade of thiS Umvers1ty.
when ruaking any decisions with reg11rd to the
manner in whis h student ac t ivities art to bt
funded

CONTEST!

L_ -~:.n_:::_N_v_t~~---J
The Spectrum 11 publ11hlld thrfHI
rimes •
week, .....,ry M ondey,
Wwd~y end FfiO.y, during tiHI
r._,ler «:Mitlmic yMr by Sub·Board
1, Inc. Offic• ere IOCJ!It«i et 355
Norton Hell, Smte Univeniry o f New
York et Buffalo. 3435 Mein St.,
Buflelo, New York, 14214.
Tel11phone: ArN Code 116; Editoriel
831-4113; BuDntns, 831 -3610.

-osterrelcl'let

Erilz
_JEWELERS

••
81 allen st.. l&gt;vftalo, n. v.
•••••••••••••••••••

HOW? Answer the following questiOns and subm1r your answers wt h
number to The Spectrum office no later than Tl
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t name, address, and phone
detail and correctness.
wrs. Apfll 211h at 4:00p.m. Entries will be judged on

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2.
3.

What happens when rabbits get toge-ther? (Elaborate on Elephants and clowns )
The quiescence is a b ---.
Why does a sternutation interrupt your intimate activities?
A counteract is a d - - - -- -, or maybe a bad pass .
Concierge is a name for a - - - - - - - - - - or - - - - - - - - - - She consented to a change in p-------.
·

�Student demonstrations against
bombings enter second week
Protests against the stepped-up bombing
More than 30,000 persons ftled into San
in Southeast Asia entered-1l second week
Francisco's Kezar Stadium to hear speeches
on Monday. Police arrested scores of . by a.:tress Jane Fonda, Dick Gregory and
protesters in eastern areas of the nation .
Bobby Seale. Angela Davis, forbidden by
On Sunday, 2 1 anti-war demonstrators
court order to appear at sus:h events, sent a
were arrested at the Earle Naval
tape-recorded message to the San FranciiCO
Ammunitions Depot in Middletown, NJ.
rally .
after they tried to delay the loading of a
In Atlantic, Iowa, a Vietnam veteran,
munHions ship believed to be bound for
who won two purple hearts during rus tour
Vietnam.
of duty, entered a Catholic church Sunday
At the same time, several boats were
and fired an M-1 rifle at a crucifiX during
reported in Sandy Hook Bay, also manned
mass. Authorities said Robert Pigsley,
by protesters, who were attempting to stop
dressed in fuO Ani\Y uniform, was subdued
the ship, the US.S. Nitro, from sailing. The
by an ofT-duty policeman and teveral
ship is reportedly partially loaded with
parishioners and dragged from the church
munitions for air craft carriers stationed
yellins: "Make love not war: That's what
off Vietnam. The boats attempted to block
he died for."
the ship's docking last Wednesday, but had
Running battles between police and
too few boats.
demonstrators at the University ofTexas in
On Saturday, more than SO,OOO Austin ended shortly before dawn on
demonstrators marched two miles in
Saturday with at least IS arrests. As many
pouring rain through the heart of as 1200 students tried to occupy the
university's main building and stoned the
Manhattan. Mayor John Lindsay isaued a
Lyndon Johnson Ubrary.
statement saying: " I join all Americans
who on April 22 will speak out for peace."
Eftllta coady
Celebrities speak out
Police in Madison, Wis. reported thlll
Despite the weather, the crowd listened demonstra tH&gt;ns by University ofWisconsin
with enthusiasm to spokesmen for the studenu and local residents since last
National Peace Action Coalition, which
Monday had already cost $90,243 in police
sponsored the march and rally , John
overtime and property damage. The police
Lennon and Yoko Ono, Ben Gaz.z.ara and chief in Champaign . III. and two of his men
Jerry Cordcn, national coordinator of
Ossie Davis.
were among the dozen injured in Friday's
the National Peace Action Coalition and
The ranks of the protesters also demonstration at the University of Illinois
Fred LA&gt;vgren, head of the Student
included Reps. Edward Koch and William campus.
Mobilization Comm ittee, discussed plans
F . Ryan , Dr. Daniel EUsberg and John
I
for
future protests in a news conference at
At the University of Maryland, scene of
Kerry of Vietnam Veterans Against the
the Loeb Student Center of New York
War. Leaders o f the rally estimated the last week's most violent confrontations.
University .
national guardsmen and state troopers
crowd at nearly 200,000 and said it clearly
Earlier Sunday, 637 students from I I 3
mdicated a renewed commitment to the relieved College Park, Md. police. Friday
night,
guardamen
wert
pelted
with
eggs,
colleges
and universities. 32 high schools,
anti-war movement in the US. Unoffscial
bottles
and
rocks.
They
made
five
arrests.
one
junior
rup school and two etementary
police reports put the crowd in the
including the Episcopal campus chaplain.
schools - all representins a total of 28
30,000- 75,000 range.
states - met in an ..eme~ncv US.
John lennon told the crowd : ..We're
Organizers of the weekend anti-war
Student Antiwar Conference" a1 the
here to bring the boys home. But let's not march in New York City vowed Sunday to
center.
fof#t the machines. let's bring the boys keep up the protests until American
and machines home." Lennon and his wife involvement in the war is finished and
The students charted plans for "Out
Now Day" demonstrations scheduled for
then Jed the demonstrators in several announced scheduled marches across the
choruses of "All we are saying is Give country this week, a student strike on May
cities and campuses across the nation and
4, and a possible march on Washington .
Peace a Chance."
the May 4 moratorium day, and campus

It's a gas

Prince George County police fire ...- ga at
anti-war protestors during niGht of
discwchra at UnivwsitV of Maryland.
strikes commemorating the students slain
at Kent State and Jackson State
Universities two years ago.
Mr. Gorden said anti-war activities could
include a massive rparch on Washington. He
said mobilizing large groups of activists in
the Nation's capitol has ..to be considered
• a possibility but a lot depends on what's
happening in the war."
AJked if his group woWd oo~
endonift&amp; Sen. Geof'F McGovern or any
other presidential c:ootender, Mr. Gorden
said : "We put our emphasis oo massive
demonstrations out in the streets. We doo 't
endorse cancfjdates.
•7he emphasis has got to be in the
streets," he said. '1f we put millions of
people in the streets, well end the war
without Congress or whoever's president.''

FLEET FOOT MACK T RUCKING
•

UB CREATIVE ASSOCIATES

EVENINGS
FOR NEW MUSIC

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Students $1.00
General Public $2.00

April 30th
Tickets available at
Norton Ticket Office
and at the door.

for imported cars

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INDEPENDENT
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2024 Kensington Ave.
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ALBRIGHT-KNOX ART GALLERY

839-1850
Wednesday, 26 AJ)Till972 . The Spectrum . Page three

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or additional deposit of $5,(X)() or more:

Gifts In pertOfl or by mall.

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Social Seaorlly No

Town of Amherst Offlce :
3980 Sheridan Drive near Harlem Road, Amherat. N.Y. 14226
Telephone: 852-5130

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. . . OMce: Main, Huron. Genesee end WuNnaton Streets • 3134 Baney Awr
nue 8t Eut Amherat Street· 2198 s.neca SttMl near Cazenovia Street· 3837
Delaware Awnue near Sherld8n Dt1Ye • Walden Avenue and Hartem Aoed •
3980 Sheridan Drlw near Hartem Road • FREE PARKING AT ALL OFFICES

Page four. The Soec.trum. Wednesdav, 26 Aorill972
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,

Cultural Conference enriches
every aspect of black culture

Political Poll
Editor'l note: Tire following u 11 poU dUII'fed to find out the
opinioru of SUNYAll 1tudentr on the upcoming election. PletUe
turn thu poU in to The Spectrum office by Wedne1dlly, April 26 no
litter tluln noon.
I

1 I.

Who would you like to see win the Democratic Presidential
nomination?
a) Shirley Chisholm 0
b) Hubert Humphrey 0
c ) Henrery Jackson 0
d) Edward Kennedy 0

e) Georae McGovern 0
f) Edmund Muskie 0
a) Georae Wallace 0
h) Other ________________________________

2. Wo uld you consider voting for Presadent Nixon as an alternative
to voting for any of the above? Yes 0 No 0
If so, who? - -- - - - - 3. Wo uld
you support
movement? Yes 0 No 0

the

adea

of

"

llurd

Party

~ - What do you trunk will be the baggest issue in th~ upconung
election?
a) Vietnam 0
b) Economy 0
c) Draft 0
d) PoUution 0
e) Other : please specify .

Do you thank the 18 - 21 year old vote wall play a stgruflcilnl part
m the upcommg election? Yes 0 No 0

&lt;;

6. Are you an the 18 - 21 year old bracket? Yes 0

7. It ave you reg.stered to vote? Yes 0

The Third AMual Black Political and Cultural
Enrichment Confe«nce, 1972 version, took place
last weekend at SUNY at Albany. The weekend
featured a diversified ~election of entertainment
from places such as Howard University, Philadelphia,
New York City, Ithaca and many other colleges and
locales around the New York area.
Among the featured perfo rmers were the Blac k
Experience Family, a group of stage performers and
musicians dedicated to Blac k love, a vital force for
Black existence. They strived to express a feeling of
total togetherness thro ugh singing, dancing and
music. Other events included the Sun Cltildren,
Blac k theater groups such as the Drama Worksho p
with Kimako Baraka and the Mo ments o f Truth ,
Bisel poetry readings. varaous Black speakers, Black
p zz, soul and blues.
Of the potpourra of cntcrlamment featured at
the En richment Conference , one performer St()(&gt;d
out among the rest. The dynamac voace o f Soul Ststcr
Number One, also known as Lady Soul . left J WC tn
the heart of every listener

Feelgood" while she waa "Daydreaming., about a
"Brand New Me." '1 Say a Uttle Prayer.. for the
group~ who preceded her becallle '1t's a Shame" to
have so much IOU.! compacted into just one room.
The King Pens just went along with "Soul
Seranade."
A documentary film on Angela Davi.s was shown
and depicted a breathtaking presentation of Ms.
Davis' events at UCLA almost up until her
courtroom scene at San Rafael, Calif. The film was
made by a yo ung French woman , Galande du Laiart,
a fo rmer UCLA falm major. Ms. L.a.iart, who shot the
film in 1969-70 , engaged the help of independent
filmmakers and fellow students when her project was
not approved. She was able to finish editing the film
with the aid of Frenc h television and the Enrichment
Conference represented the first American publ!c
show mg.
A dmner for students of all coUeges and
unrversitaes who attended the conference launched
the weekend . It seemed almost a shame to have so
muc h blac kness on one campus for three days.
h wchmc nf Conference? Yes, it was very ennching
m every aspec t o f Black c ulture, fr om politics with
Angela Davas to a bag booming dance with the
M.Jc hmc, and. of course, enrich ing to ever y Blade
persun whu heard Lady Sou l sang

Sang her heart out
Are tha Franklm , wrth hl•r suul-scarclung vur~:c
and review. sang her heart uu t I ll the masses of S lack
faces . She made the m stt up wath " Respec t ," whale
she told them about the ''Sptnt 111 the Dark ." S he
made them ·"Reach Out J nd T ouch " for " Doc tor

Darctal Simms

No 0

No 0

If not, why not? _ __
!L Do you plan to vote in this year's election'/
If not , why not? - - - - - -

Yes 0

No 0

'1 Do you approve of a student stnke as an expression of pro test
;~gautst

the extension of the war m Southeast Asia? Yes 0

No 0
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ltiCHAIO MISTOW

PERFORMANCES: WED. at 7 :30PM (Ticllela at LOBLAW'S •THURS. a
FRI. at 4 : 1S A 8:1S PM • SAT. at 10 :30 AM , 2:30 A 8: 15 PM
• SliNDAY a t 2:30 A 1.: 30 PM
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Wedn~y ,"26' Jfprll' 1972 . The'S'peHrum . Page

five

�[

I

EdiToRiAl

Support Day Care

The UB Day Care Center is again threatened with
financial difficulties that may hinder its operations.
Although, the center has been able to provide needed and
valuable service to the University, they face an indifferent,
even hostile, administration.
Using the tired arguments of a tight state budget and
lack of available funds, Hayes Hall refuses to provide any
permanent commitment to the center. Instead, they direct
the centeT's steering committee to other segments of the
campus for support. Additionally , they maintain that
" proper channels" must be utilized in order to obtain funds.
The administration is unwilling to rightfully commit
itself to the maintenance of the center. Executive Vice
President Albert Somit has explained that the administration
is willing to support day care "as weft as we are able to
support other ptograms." Such an explanation reflects an
attitude that seeks to divide the University in a struggle for
money.
Last year. the center was told that if money were made
available to it, the American Studies program would suffer.
Accordingly Hayes Hall reports that this year the Colleges
will suffer.

The administration would have us befleve mat they
support the 1dea of day care. Robert Ketter capitalized on it
in' ]lis annual presidential report last summer, Admissions
and Records attracted students to the Linguistics Institute by
publi~izing the center, and even Or. Somit mailed a crate of
Florida o ranges to the center. Yet, when day care requests
funds, they are given excuses. explanations, reasons, but no
money.
Moreover, the administration has attempted to mmimize
the whole issue of day care. There are, they argue. more
important protects that need funding. Additionally , some
administrators have remarked that if women want to go to
school, they shouldn 't have had children.
Today, the Executive Committee of the Faculty Senate
will be discussing the center. Reportedly, there exists a
feeling by some Execut1ve Committee members that the
Faculty Senate should not concern itself with day care We
urge the committee to resolve the inequities surrounding the
center's funding by committing its full support. Additionally,
it is incumbent on every member of this campus - faculty,
students and staff - to communicate their support of day
care to Pres1dent Ketter
If successful, the center can d1spense with Hayes Hall's
day
political absurdities and get on with its real concern
care.

' AMNUTT 101 DUn IUIITIII, INDIIDt IVDTONI II AlWATI TITfNO TO MAICI Ul
LOO« IADt'

Is there a doctor in the house?
ro the- Edrtm
I need some help! How could someone get a
&amp;ood health checkup and tests for maladies without

the red tape and expense of "famil y d octon." Ours
doesn't seem t o ex. mine thoroughly , but makes sure
he balls us wtthout faH
At:tually . I was thin lung o r som e type o f t:he.p

Vol. 22, No 79

Wednetday, 26 April 1912
Editor· m.(.href

Denrm Arno ld

Co-M,uwalna EdiiOf Alll&lt;'n•on
M~n.111n1 Eduor
Mt.. e L opf)m~nn
A~ . M•n~l'"l Edotor
~u~n M ·~~
Busineu M.an~,er
l.at k Hcrl.an
Adv«tosina M•n~tet
Su&gt;.~n Mdl enltne
Co

8ack~re

C ampus

C oty
Copy
As.sl
feature .
G~phtc Arts

Amy Ahrer1&lt;1
Jo·Ann A rm .ao
ltlf Grreuw•ld
Howoc Kurlt
Jane&gt; Cromer
Ronne forman
M.arty Galli
C.l.alfc Krerlt)m4n
. Lyntl• Ted
. Tom Tol~

l.ayout
Ant .
lit It Or.am.a
Musi~

OH.C.ampus
As.sl
Photo
As.st,,
Spotts

Aut

M~ryhupe

Runyon
v~t..

M e&lt;h .acl

.. nt

~ elvetbl.au

. Belly Attm.m
. . L vnne Tr.Kl(cr
.v.c.anl
Me~; .. cy 0\lctre"her
, Kem

S anto~

. . 8.1rry Rubin
Howot F.aewl

The Spectrum I&gt; ~rved by Unlled Pr~s rntetn~IIOn.al. Collf&amp;C Pr~
S ervin , lht Lo) Angel~ Tem~ Fret P t~. the L&lt;h An~les Times
Syndiute and Liberation News S erv"e.

Republication of m.Uter herein withoul lhe cxpr~ consenl of the
Edltor·in.Chlef Is forbidden .
Edltorilll policy Is determined by the Editor·lrt-Ch ief.

A cnnurnt!d (/ ll Studc•nt

Grievance mechanism
T11 the £d11n r
Thank you for repotlln&amp; th e meetmg wl\a1.h the
President's
Commatlee
on
RecrUitment and
Promohon held last Tuesday and for giving 11 prior
pubhci t y. We would like to clan fy two pomts wl\ach
were covered in Tht! S~ctrum artacle.
I Allho u&amp;h the Comm11tee is interested 1n
kno wing about gnevance cases it is not part of lh t
gnevance mec:hanism o n campus. We reco mmend
that women with graevance pro blems &amp;O directly to
the appropraate unit o f S PA , and t o Ms. Barbara
Sams, Direc to r o f the Office of Equal OpportunitY,
for .. dVIce and consultation

2. In fairness to Or . ~lbaum and the Provosh
of the SIX faculties wh1ch report to htm we wo uld
like to acknowledse that the four l.tnes receaved by
th e Committee ca me from them . We appreCiate then
cooperati on. Although yow article stated that " th e
Commrttee's efforts, partac ularly in lhe llealth
Sc1ences. are considered an accomplishment ," we
h.ave so far made abso lutely no progress whatsoever
in dealmg with the Health Scaences Facult y
However, we have another meeting sch eduled ancl
hope to he ahlc: to reJ)()rt some progn:ss after 11
Bernu·c I fr1u
han A lht' fll

Plagarisrn issue

n, the Edrtnr

I was chagn n ed t o nute that, o m:e agam, T'h t!
Spet trum is advertt~Jng term papers fo r sale.
As sh ould he widely known , purc hase of a
researc h paper constitutes plaparism , itself a serious
b rea ch o f academal standards and pro pnety I a m
sorry that Thl' Spt-t·trum sh o uld make available 11s
col umns, for .1 few shekels, t o firms that may lead
lhe unwary purchaser anto an unenVIable pos11Jo n . A

student wh o plagian ~es IS bable to potentially lievcrc
sanctiOns Why ho ld out lbe te mptation" Sh1luld
advertasang be turned away if tiS empac t IS possthlc
weakerung o f academic vaJues?

('laut.ll' E Wdcll
Allo&lt;'Wil' Prnjrtwr

Edttor :r note As of today such advntwn~: will
no lo nger be accl'pted by The Spectrum

For what it's worth
by H3rvy Lipman

THE SpECTI\UM

hospital latina or clinic ex.amination (for adults as
well as students!). Blood , urine, VO, X-ny , etc . , are
a few examples or possible tests. Is there something
better than c~tting with a doctor about his golfing
record s?

I hi\ , Jo~ ...hc~ and ~cn tl cmcn, es 11. The last, final,
ncvl'r l o he-sccn-ag;un. farewell Uutfa1o, etllumn
nu~rc a re d 1111 of very IOlJltHtant ad 1vi11es goulg o n
presently m lhl~ world . Nt xo n ~~ t ry1ng to blow us
up, I he sl.atc L' allernp hn g tn ktll mandatory fees .
and &amp;encrall y. pct•plc are bc1ng JUSt plain nuscrable
all nwr th o: place In all probahility so mething
llbPifalmnal and mo vang sh nuhJ tH! said ahou t all
I hc~c I h111~ , and 1f I felt o.. aJl abl e o f domg su, 1
wu uld But you've .1U bee n Stllen g on yo ur ass~ all
yrar Jnd l ' vc bn·n se lling o n m y ass all ycJr, so 1f
hombmg Nurth Vt cl nam does n 't gel you to movt'
(wh1ch by the lime this ts pnnlcd I hope will have
c hanged al I he d ~)wntown rall y) don 't cx pe..:l me to.
I had a l'&lt;iU ple u f cut e edca.\ for th1) column !lui
I 've wnllt:n fifty p.Jg~ worth of p.1pers in lhc ' pasl
week and I don't particularly l ed l.tke e nt c rt.umng
'4n ybody . Instead I thmk I'll leave weth 11 few
co mm entaries o n peo ple and fJia ..:cs andthm gs better
left agno rcd. Maybe I ought lo ..:all this my Buffalo
last will and test amen t. Or w ishes for some people 1
kno w. To Fred Auero n I leave my copy o f A
llundred and One Ways lo Use Int egrity for Fun and
Profit. To Jan OeWaa1 I leave a brand new
pseudonym
I also expose him as Ed Jaffe so h e
can' t use that o ne anymore. To Jo-Ann Armao 1
leave six thousa nd of t he United Air Lines "fly me"
ads, In ulce r-proof stomach, an iron will and the
wish that she'U hne more wiSdom than o ne natwit
«he knows who o nce endoned Warren Hunter for

treasur er. To Warren llunter I leave a very ~~·od
law ye r To Spot Guberman I leave a fir!.! n ame 1 n
Eric Sd10en feld I leave the M1. Obnox to us of the
Cen tury Award and the pro mise that he was a lousy
cam pus ed1tor. T o M1cha el Levm so n I leave J\
qwckl y as posstblc
T o Slew Berger I leave a lo t o f luck and lhl'
ye nlu nf th e year award. To r edd Levy f l~v c 1he
wish lhal l1 c find len mo re people likc himself ~n
thai th ey may dclu.llly ch.1ngc something. To Mark
Bo renst em I leave :.1x pounds of !&gt;IICk·l o-etn e~ so
that h e may some day actually hang around long
enough to make sure o ne of Ius 4.:reallons keeps
working To Steve Slrahs 1 leave my sy mpathy for
having t o hve wtlh Jeff (I also leave a co upl e of
inc hes
you' re too s hort . Steve). To Jeff Greenwald
I leave a whip With whach he might be able to gel
so me work out of those lazy bastards T o Madge I
leave three cheerful d ays with wh1 ch to k1clo.. the
habit To Rocco Termrm I leave a forty minute
recordmg o f Joe Crangle going " th at's a good boy,
Rocco."
To J.)ebbie Benson I leave the h ope thai by ne.l( t
spring she'll shU ttunk at was a good idea to run. To
AJ Benson I leave th e best pre·med st udent edttor on
the staff award. To Helen Scott 1 leave my pla.~ ll c
mariJuana plant. To Jac k Herlan I leave th e wish that
WaJter may grow and multiply. To Dennis Arnold I
leave this last column and tbe knowledge that h e,
more than anyone else, is responsible for lha.s
monstrosity havin&amp; to appear each week.
l

�End-the-war amendment 'We are artists'
approved by Democrats Buffalo State symposium to
A vote taken by the Democrau
in a House of Reprete~tatives
caucus could possibly mean that
an end-the-war amendment might
be passed by Congress. The vote,
taken last Thursday, showed two
interesting results : there are
enough Democrau tn favor of

pe.ssed the Mamfield amendmen t ,
which declared it to be "the
policy of the United States" to
militarily
disengage'
from
Indochina within six to nine
months_ 11W was never accepted
in the House. and lost once by a
vote of 21 S-193.

imposing a military withdrawal
Tentatively scheduled for floor
date so that they could, with an action in the Senate this Thursday
addition of very few Republican o r Friday, is a State Depar tment
doves ,
swing just
such
an spending authorization bill which
amendment ;
the
Democrats contains
the Senate Foreign
joining this "date cer~in" bloc R e 1a 1 i 0 n s
0 m m it 1 e e • s
include
such
senior
House amendment setting a Dec . 3 1,
members as Speaker Carl Albert ; 1972, termination date fo r U.S .
Majority
Leader Hale Boggs, tnvolvement
in
Indochina
Chairman Wilbur Mills , head of Meanwhile, back in the House, a
the ~ouse Ways and Means vote is scheduled for today on a
Commtttee, and Chet Holifield of · resoluhon by Rep_ Bella Ab zug
the
H ouse
Government which
would
direct
the
Operations Commtttee_
admints tration to furnish detailed
The caucus vote,
1 35~.
reports on troop st rength as well
m eant an adoption of a resoluhon as a target date for complelton of
pro posed by D emoc ratic Wlup the Vietnamization program and
Thomas O'NClll which denounced ot her
tnformallon
abou t
the U.S_ bombing of Vietnam as a lndochma
"dangerous escalatwn" of the
war It called for a pro mpt se tttng Otfeat upected
of the Wtlhdrawal date and
The Ab1ug measure ts expect ed
dtrected th e members of the
to be defeated SJnce, says the
H ouse F orCtgfl Affaars Committee
:~dmintstration, tl Wl)llld expose
to come up wtth appropuate
scnsiltve
info rmation
to the
legislation in th e next 30 days. An
enemy fven so, 11 will provide a
amendment
to the proposal,
forum to discuss and debate the
co ndemning
th e
North
war •ssuc rn the House.
Vietnamese "military invasion" of
Sponsored by Sen s. Frank
the South, picked up &amp;ddtttonal
Church and C'lifford Case, the
votes. and passed 144-58
Senate amendment would cut off
all apprup nati ons fu r "land, :;ea
CondHioned withdrawal
For certam House members, .md air" warfare hy U.S. forces
:tfter the Dec J I date. Tht:
~ud1 as Hale Boggs and Carl
Albert , the vote marked the first condrtwns Imposed are the release
lime they hall even c:ons1dcred uf pnsoners of war and an
accuunlrng for the nussmg The
ac:ccptmg the sellmg of a fixed
wtthdrawal date llowever thl\ amendment 1S not expected tu
wtthdrawal date&gt; depends upon the llJSS, and mstcad, the Ma ndlc ld
return
of
Amertcan measuu: ('OUid he adopted 10 tiS
place Sudt an adopt11m would
pn~oners-of WJI
and
olll
\llll fix d wtthdrawal deadltriC, hut
a~c:ountmg nf thuse mtssmg tn
would not tnclUdl' the power 111
ac:Lwn
the pur~e~tnni!.S
The Senate_ tn 1117 L had

c

Wome11 olllJ'
Th~ JewiSh (t'nter or Gruter BuHulo ~and the
Women 's Committee of the Center ·~ Ph ystcal
l::ducation Department co rd1all y invites women o nly
to "Tht' Woman 's Role In Modrrn Ph ysical
1-duca tion" tomor row at 787 O elawate Ave . The
pro(lram will consist of exercises from 10 IS J1 ·4S
11 .m ., volleybaJI and swimming, a luncheon »I noon . 3
,,anel cli-~cus.~ion at 1 2 \0 , guest spea k er Or O ia n~ L
OeBacy, profc~sur o f phy,ical education 111 the Stllll'
Untvel"itly o f Buffalo, »ntl a movie call~t..l Wome11 111

lhr hratl1 Arm~·

Opera. Lovers
BIANCHI

&amp;

MARGHERITA

of
presents
Soloists performing arias from Great Operas
La Boheme
Madame Butterfly

LaTosca
La Traviata
etc.

Done by the Great ArtiSts of the Opera
m the Neapoltran manner
28

Saturdlly, April 29.
Sur&gt;eby, A~lllO

B.OO p m
7·00 p.m.

Phone Orders - 8824276

TICKETS AVAILABLE
Buf1ato F.n1vat Of1ic.e
Norton T1cket Office
Fells T1cket Oftoce (Haeberle Piau)
or at the door.
AdmiSISion $2.50

Ms. Kassman R.icheTt pointed out Oat the

by Susan de Jonah-K.earf
Sp«iizl ro rhe Sp«Tnlm

nin~ay

symposium/festival is only the first step.
Through th e workshops and exhlbits, women will be
able to establish contacts with other women artiatl
and to discuss with them feminine imagery and
expression_
Amy Hamouda Bice, a local sculptor who has
worked closely with the symposium/festival, stated
that feminine imagery u different from masculine_
She has found in her own art symbols of
"enclosure," and, in an ampromptu midnight preview
of the self-Juried exhibition on display in Upton
Hall , she cited examples of "enclosure'' shown in the
arl of o ther women .
In addition to the Upton exhibit, there is an
extribit o f crafts , "from Wo men's Work to Art
Objects" on display in the BuUer Libruy.
Workshops
and
presentations
will allow
symposi um / festival parttci pants and guests lo
exa mtn e femtnine dance, mus ic, poetry and theater,
and will afford them th e oppo rtunity t o discuss the
role of women tn advertJsmg, media , c rafts ,
sculp ture, pnntma)ong, life drawing , literature,
poetry and drama In a workshop atmosphere, Ms.
Kassman Rtchert Uld, women will be able to discuss
"theu co mmon goals_ Jre.ams. problems - and more
Slgrtlfit:anlly, tllcu •magery '

Primitive societies divided tasks according to
bio1oaical roles. Because the male could not bear
children, he went out of the home to hunt, to find
other food, to cultivate and harvest materials to be
used for food , clothing and shelter.
Because the female could bear children, and
because her pregnancies were essenhal to the
preservation of the tribe, she remained close to the
home. Her task was to take the raw materials and
make of them food, clothing, sh elter and decoration .
She made baskets. She wove cloth . S h e joined skins
into wearing apparel.
The male was t h e technologist. It was his duly
t o tmpr&lt;lve hiS hunting and ftshing tmplements. He
learned from the sun and th e seasons the best
methods of planting crops.

M.a.le an myth
Ms S\ha1~h satJ to the mJle, 'm a woman, her
hetome&lt;&gt; everylhtn(l ·· M) llamouda Btce added ,
that women are often cu nfronted w1th two
problt:ms Lumpetlltnn With nthcr women , and sex
wtth men Ms KassnlJn Rtthcrt l!tl,J'eed " II IS a very
rare male who rJn re.11ly empa ttuzr wtth feminine
art , be~:aust of the pcrV,I\tVe tdea that art must be
male-defined , and st rung,'' \ he sta t ed. All three
women fell the rnyth of malt: an ~~as damaging tn
llltllc a rt1~ts .IS Ill females
"Thrrr arc mc1lt' art•~" who have soft. or
ft:mimne t·haractemlh:~,'' M s Sd1a1ch believed . Ms
Kassman Ru:herl posed th~ 4uestion
" We've
rus.. overe d that many nl the gJCal Tmloretto's were
done by lmtorelh&gt;'' dau&amp;hter
does lhts mak~
them les&amp; &amp;Jtal7"
~~x

The wt~man was the a rtist All nf her cultural
tasks cned out (llf creatlvtty, ctnd m ~ve1y SJmple
hasket or pot ~he made, in every stttch 5hc took in
leat her or cloth , rnto each pi~ce u f fsbric sh e
de~tgned , she wovt' a statement of h .. r,elf as "
person . d wnm.1n and Jn Jrtl\1

Consciousn~

We are
It " ""'"" .ttl(lt..l 111.11 th1· ~1t'JI1ve urgl' 1r1
wot!l\"11 '' ,&lt;JI 1\lt~tl hy dulclhe.trHig Jnd l htldr.n~mg
It ,, equ.1l1V Jlj.:IIL'd th.11 th~· Jlll\lll 1111pube 1n the
llldk 1\ \ltll[liY v..HIIlh I'IIVY fii,IUl' l.tngthk 1 ht: tunr
"·" ,oun· to t:XJIIIIIII' .111 ...., .1 untfylntt hunt.Hl
IIIIJllllw ,11111 111 tl'tot).:flllt" th.11 through ·~: t:J4 h
1
rnJ1v1 1 lu.tl 111.1k~·' ,1
\IJtt'lllcn l
.thuut
Jll"l'l"ll o~nd h1 1 llllll-,
I he '"~ .Inti Jll!:lll\h '"'J'Ifi!'&gt;!I~J 111 IIIJIC' .1rt
, .111 nul ht: 1Ill' ,,IIIII' ·'' I h~· l"Y .111~1 Jnl(UI~h 111 It: llt.tk
ttl too mud1 llol' hJflPl'fll'll to Jltt'll.lll' lhc.- S~ \1:!.
When .1 111o~l~ liCJtl'' J pte~-.. 111 .111 he \.JY'· I .1m d
111111 ' lll'lorc lw ,,ly\ 'I .1111 .tn .ttll~l' lie 1' nul put
dt~wn N" ''"e '·•Y' ' What ... ''''' httlr hllhhy ,'' 111
" hll 1 th.11 n11 r
or • ll ow tnlt:rt•,tlll!t"
1\1 llull ...,t.1l.: th" wed y11u v.tll \l"\" hundreds ul
\\&lt;HIIcll Bd .. r•· the') '"~ ' We Jr~ o~rllst,, · · ~~·, .ut'

'''""V

rhe th e ft of art
R1d11·11 ''pl.unnl lhl' " lhcll ' "'
'WJ~ . \II 10 'WIIIllell h.l\ hc.-111
~11\&lt;UUT.JjtCt..l htf "'Ill\ IIIIIC II V.,l\ llll(l&lt;l\"ltflo lui
tJkntl'tl women Jfll'l' 111 ••·•nh' propt·r 1r.11ntn~ "'
rncntly ,J,
I'\'\'\
I"""'·"
I .tl-11"
"'
th1·
l'c.'ni"Yiv.IIIIJ /\~.111t'111y .lllownJ 111.111· \IUJ•·nt' Ill
IIIJ ... ~' hi~ Jr,IWIIII!-' ul huth lhl" lll..rl&lt;' .111\J ll'lllolfto
unt..ltJpeJ ftgurc I •'IIIJic \lUII&lt;'nl~ IIIJ\k Ill•· Jr.IWIIIf.;.'
ltf lh~· lOW
11111 \'Yl'll lht: /o11//, till' lOW"
Wn111Cil who wctl' .JdllllllcJ to .trl sdmul\ wl'H'
t.IUI(hl hy tnalt' tead1t:" /\~ a l\111\l:l(lh.'mc, th1·~
)J,kcd th e "rule 111mkh' rtnt',~JIY It• &lt;onlllllllll~
them,elvc~ a~ arllsh
ll.d\\111,111

10 ' " "

Oliver Beauty Salon
5957 MAIN ST REE T
WILLIAMSVILLE, NEW YORK

~ -••

I
•

633-5437

"

I'" I

Y1•1 ·" 111 .111 Jll the f&lt;JI \(31t:llll'lll tn.1dc 1~
ne1tht:1 ' I Jill ,1 111.111 ' 11111 "I Jill ·• WOntolll' II I~
\lltlfliY "( Ulll •
1\1111 .111 c r yuu VI\ II the n.lu h11\ 01nJ f'Jrll&lt;'l pale
111 lhl' worl.~h•lJl' Jl Ill~· 'Ynt J1USIUIII / It:l&gt;IIVJI tillS
wecl-, l'r11 ~ure yuu v.tll J~ll'&amp;: tllJI the 11111e ha' come
to kt W•lfllen ar llsts ,,..

The

"Your ltatr, styled the way you want tt

w11l
hr an our
Out 11 wun I Sl(lp

tlll'rc
M' ll.a~mo.1n K1dtcrl '' 'umpthn~ J Wt·stem
N~w Yur\.. Women\ i\ rt Rqu't ry. whJ ch will 1-~ep on
ftlfo, ,It de\ \hClWin~ I he ht'\l WtHk \ uf lt1.:al Jrllsts
Duphl.!IC ,ltJe, w1ll he wnt to W 1- 8 (West Fast
Bag) , .1 nat1o11JI wnrnrn\ .11t re~'try whtdl ~~rvt~e'
0\11\t'UIII\ WII h 1." lllllt'tll \lli.(gC\llltnS
A I(JIIliP" now hc.-1ng lurmed tn \tully the eff&lt;'t:l
111 Wc,t e rr• N&lt;'"' \"orl.. W1•m.:n .trtl~l' on the lustury
.,r /\IIH'rHan art M' Sh.ndt , .• ys thJI n""' ycar·~
k~t1val trl.JY locU\ un "t he hL\Iun,·al tnflut'II&lt;C of
W•lmcn 111 Anl~"rtL.If1 .trl

lrorn u' "
M'

raising

'ympmrum/fc~t•V,II
&lt;~lll\lln u~ncss r JISIIl~ r lt pertt'n, c

J'he

Women today
At the State: lllltve~••Y ( 11lh:gr .. r Butl .. lo th1\
wed,, Apnl :! I .!•1, modc.-rn W1lmen Jrt' rc:.df1rn11n~
thc.-msclvc.-' and thrtr L'rt'Jllve tMtmll~ Tht: Wunwn
111 the Art\ Syni~H"Ium/l·e,tlv.ll "tuudet..l m part by
the ('entennld ( ckhral1u0 J.un~l
An1&gt;rd1ng
Ill
Shnlcy
1(,,,,111an
R•llwrt
•lrtl!Jn.. tnr o l tht: wmpch1U111 k\IIV.I) till'" nl111a1"'
\lgnth~,)lllC hel,IU~t: "W\IIIIl'11 In the ,ILJtkllll~ ')/'1&lt;'111
havt: hct:ll "shortLhan~ted .. I hl'fl' ,If\' r..-wt:l Y,IIIIH'Il
tcaLhllll/. lrt lht: arl\ I hl'y rt:l'l'IYl' ICIWI'r \OII.trtt:'
\ln ll l now, they h.JV\"11 "1 1\"l' t'IVt:d IIH· ll'll'l\nlllon
thry ~hould have c.'llh&lt;•r 111 elluL';JIItHl nr 111 lhl' Jrh"
1)1Jnt' Sdu11d1 pod Jllll uuthor will• lcJch&lt;·~ .Jl
Bullalo S t Jtt:, ,Jtllt h," ,,,·tl'd J' 'nmd1naHtr fe~r tlw
~ym po\IUIII(lc\IIVJI , \lrl'\'l'd that lhl' le, IIIIJI 1\ ••
logt~.tl \II'J'l tn till" W\1111\'tl·, lllollll'llll"nl ,J, ,1 whole
" I t 1\ .111 oltl~"lllfl l lo lwc\11111· hUIIl.tll Jg,Jill "'"'' \.1111
' 1111• t'ni'IIIY
tl tlu•fl• 1\ .111 t'llt:lll~
" 11&lt;•1 1111"
IIIJit: IIlli tht• llll'OIO!:Y ,,, lht lt•thllllliJ&lt;Y Wlllllell
hdVt' ltt:l'll lfi'JII'd ,1\ 1111/l"llllllll\ Ill &lt;'llh,llh'' til• fll,lk
cgn
I hi\ " .t llc'hunt.llll/111~ ph•·n.-n•c""" Arl
t.klllll'tl ·" .1 fl·'"'"""'r 111 .IllY&lt;' ur~t· h." lt,•,·n IJI-1'11

ICIIlllllnt: Jrt

GREENW ICH VILLAGE , NYC

Fr~day, A~tl

explore the creative woman

I

1

"

L••

••

··~

THE ECONOMICS OF
THE COLO WAR

hy

Robert Sm1th

$1 25
At yoUt bookstore or
Hudson Rand Press
111 Orchard Street
Monroe, N .Y. 10950

••

•

I
I

•

..J

�Sickle cell disease: negfected ~
Edt tor's note: 17u fnllnwtng u an abridged version
of a lengthy report entitled. "Sickle Cell DileQSe:
A Case 8f Slow Advancement from Serious Neglect
tv New Concern. This is the /IMI 1egment of a
two·part series. Monday :f The Spectrum tnucht!cl
upon biological tmp/ication.f uf sickle cell diiUl.fe.
Today concerns sociological impllratiom. Anyon~
cnterested 111 the bcbliography should come It) The
Spectrum of/lei!
by AI Benson
Cu Mafl11gin~r Editor

The: above has attempted to summarize some
ol the literature researching the baology of sickle
ceU trall and Sickle cell anem1a There IS much
more that could be saad, more that could be
debated (e.g. testin&amp; procedures - pro and conJ
nus nataon, indeed the world , however, must
challenge not only the baology of sickle cell but
also the soc1ology of the duease. As Richard Shaw
( 1970) has saad
''We thus have something
llpproaching ult1mate know ledge about the
molecular basas of sackh:: cell anenua, but virtually
none about the effect of the sickle gene on anfant
nwrtallty, life s pan , and family Site."
Some of the social problems should become
nbvious. Dick Camphell, executive darector of the
Foundation for Researc h and Education in Sickle
Cell Disease ( 197 1 ), ponders "the implications of
the disease in a black family, whic h means 'poor'
o r With very hm1ted financial resources at best "
Itt quotes Yvette F Francis, darector, Stckle Cell
Chnu.:. JamaJca Hospatal, NYC, and , Doris L.
Wethers. dtrector of P~d1atracs. Sydenham and
Knackerbocker Ho,pltals, NYC, from a prospectus
anJ.AM.A (May, 1970) ·

"One chronicaJiy all chald m a family,
regardless of ats economac carcumst11nces, ca n be
devastatang The ex1sten~e of more than one, or
even the threat o l Its occurren ce can be
overwhelmmg From cuhesl mfancy there is the
problem of med1cal attention wtth suffenng and

Support through testing, researchtng, et~o for Sickle cell has m the past la\.ked momentum An
example would Include Scott's report an lAMA (Oct 26, JQ70) where he lasts senral of the National
lnstatutc of Health 's (N IH) 1968 grant supports for sele~.:t~d chaldhood thseases Su.:kle cell receaved
low pnoraty when compared to other "tmportant" diSeases
Acute Jeukemaa
9 2 gr11nts
Muscular dystrophy
M
Cysti c fibroSis
6S
PKU

41

Thalassemaa
12
Glycogenoses (a fa1rly nw: dt~ease)
2.l
Sackle cell anemac1
2::!
It IS also tnteresttng lO gi.Jnce al th&lt;' I &lt;.loR
M ~~~~ ular dystros1hy
$7,20 ~ .000
(. yst 11. I ahrosas
S I IJ'IX 7 I"
Sad.l~ .ell Jnt:ma.a
~&lt;ill()()()

I&lt;'VtnU&lt;'~

n t ,, ft•w vnlunt&lt;'er group\

,.,,,..n,.· lu lh~· 1.JW •II "hnnt J!(&lt;' ~.haldrt."n
••111'-IJ III ..ahwuu·, I rum "hn11l an ,JJdtllllll 111 the:
la.:tlu•·nr h1111l\ ••I p..alll ..aa11.l l..atagm· , Jll" J ~t'vere
h.an•lh Jll 1•1 \dlllvl ..adlacv..·ua~:nl Ordanary physa.:,al
.Jdavalt ~' hmall'll &lt;.uanpl'lallv&lt;' '~'~"'" .Jrc nut
J.:,ar.ahh' • .ancl the t'lllllt' •·du~.JIIIIIIJI pru~ralll
,..r,·, I Hili 1111"1 he ~t·.Jn~l.l lu lin: anl.lavadu.tl''
ph)'l&lt;.tl • ..apahahll&lt;"'
"lh1• &lt;htllu' of .I YtK,IIIttll 1"1 lh•· 111\JIVII.IUJI
wath ' ''""" •l'll da\t'.i&lt;.t· 'huuhl ht· madt· wath .:aac,
"'11,1111 JliiVIIIO ollt' IIIJdVI\,al lt• IIIUIVIIIIIJI~ Wllh
lht• '&gt;t'Vt'IC lllrtll &lt;II th&lt;• Jhi'J\l" •Ill' lllllllt:d Ill
\t·th'IILHy 0&lt;1. U J'IJI 1111h h llploycr~ tt l pJIICIII' w ilia
'It k k 1 ell dast'ast• must h.tv~· au undt·r~t.andang ot
I ht· allnt'ss, .anJ 11111s1 lw walling lu Jl.&lt;l'jll ,111
&lt;'lliplnyt'&lt;' whil •nuy jp,,• 1111' ,·tt tlllll' lrtoltl wurk .
"1\ 111a11 wath sa~kk l.l"ll ant"lllla anay land 11
uallandt Ill hold .• toh and 'oliJ'IIhlll .I l.lllllly A
WOIIIJil With I ht• Ul\l'.ISC 'iliJil'TIIIlflthl'' J dltlllll\
tllll&lt;''' on t111· problem ul hoam· llaJI-.ang. Sht· 111.av
h.tlrc 'l"H'P.: da lltualty walh .til ph.t't'' nl ht•r
Jlit")l.ltJIIl)' and l.lchvt'r~ I hi" talc 'P·•n 11! anJav1JIIJI~
wath sad..lc u•ll .tncn11.1 '' hllllll'd h·w ltvt· ht·yt•nl.l
thc11 lorttcs."
Mr t'uanrttell d~daac' "Ntl wt•ntlca the Y11ung
bla~.k
mtlatant stul.lcnt, when lulu thJI the
Foundataon's rt:quc~tt
lm fund' twm the

~ge eight

''1ile 'Spectrum Wednest\ay, 26 April 1972

government to cont10ue research and educat1on
would not be forthcomang, responded, 'Genocide
baby, genocade•"
Thus we are forced to cons.ader new phases,
neglected phases, of this black dasease: at becomes
Lm possible to 1gnore awareness. the govemmenl,
the mihtary, counseling and chants o f "Black
Genocade"
Awareness and Support
Coping with any problem requtres primary
awareness of that problem and event uaJ realistiC
combat support
Luck of black co mmunity
knowledge of and low priority support for sickle
cell anemia have brought forth cries of alarm
throughout professional , political and social ci rcles.
Even the Journal of the Amencan Medical
Auociotwn has taken a stand editonally (Oct 26.
1970) ·
"The level of general agnorance concerning the
nature of sackle cell 11nemaa remaans depressmgly
tugh, despite substanllal scaent1fic advances an our
undentanding of the condit ion . Even more
mcredi ble as the fact that very few people an lh c
black population at large have been offered
pertanent anfo rmat1on about Sickle cell anemt.a and
the mode of liS lransmwaon
. Sackle ceiJ anemia
IS one of the most common long-term illnesses of
black children The economac amp1Jcat1ons are
staggering
Vu:llms of the dasease encounter
employer rejection, insurance rejectton, and high
medacal costs. At a tame when aarhnes, for anstance,
are expandmg JOb opportun1t1es for blacks, many
qualified apphcants are bean&amp; turned away because
they are carriers of Sickle cell anemia "
Dr. Francas, et al ( 1970) reports . " Many
medical practitaoners are unaware of the tliseue
Even when it is known, it may not be recognized .
Many plltients with sickle cell dUiease are treated
for diseases which have simtlar sy mptoms Even
wh en detected, some physicians o nly prescnbe to
relieve the sy mptoms of thts blood dasorder, as one
maght recommend a.,parin for the relief of a
headache or rest ft&gt;r a enid "
Most startling as the lack of knowledge
110ssessed by black commun11tes. Lane and Scott
( 1%9) performed u study of 1457 blacks, or
varyang age and educahonal background, tn
Ra1..hmond . Va They Jsketl four questaons
I) Have you e\lt:J heard of sackle ~:ell anema11''
If the an\wcr is "yes"
2) Whal sort of ~a~.kness as at'&gt;
\) llavc you ~·v,·r t.n(1wn any,lnc With the

Medictne (Jan 15 , 1970) Dr Scott stated "Our
experience in R ichmond wllh Negro young people
shows that th ey arc anxaous to learn about sickle
cell anemia and welcome the possibility of
screening for sickle traat . The responses have been
first, 'Why haven 't we hea rd about thts before?'
and, second, ' Ho w can I get tested?' Anot her
question ('Why as thiS limtted to Negroes?') is
frequently asked aocf reflects in part sensitivtty to
the false beUef that hereditary ills ore 'defects.' The
survivaJ advantage due to protection against
malaria by sickle trail must be made known to
emphasize the natural explanation for such a hi&amp;h
gene frequency . Only wrth thorouah understandang
of these evolutionary forces can thts socaal
sensitivity be laid to n:st."
In another letter to 77•~ New England Journal
of Medicin~ (Jan 15, 1970), Dr Mortamer S
Greenberg dascussed has 1967 study tn which he
screened 650 children, from the Boston Head Start
Program, for sickle ..:ell traat Dr. Greenbera found
that 7.3% showed a posltave test. He co ntinued ·
"We then intervtewtd the parents to determme
their reachons to learnmg about the test results 1n
the child and to bemg offered an opportumty to
have themselves tested . Althouah 47% of the
parents had heard of sicklt cell anemta none were
aware that at is transmitted from parent to chald .
OnJy 65% und c~tood th e difference between an
inherited and a coo tagrous o r 1n fectlous disorder.
"However , anterest on the p11rt of the parents
is evidenced by the fact that 94% agreed to have
themselves tested for the sackhng tra1t and 35%
wanted mort' than o sample and superricaal
explanation "
There is h•&gt;l't', however, an that more anti more
co mmunity groups, ancludang 1he Black Panther
Party, are organ111ng in major Clites across the
country . Tht! Foundataon for Research and
Education 1n Satkle CeU DISease (NYC) especaally
has provided ~agna fu:ant hl'"lp for' Harll'm and ot hl'r
communities Its goals are far reachmg m scope and
mclude unaversal ttstang, basac and educational
research, and , educataonal pt"Ograms for medacal
personnel, lt'J ~he" gua&lt;lance and vocataonal
counsellors, psy ~ hulog.asts, affected famll1es 11nd
the popuJataon Jl lllrge Fanally, the Foundataon
states (JAM A . MJY , 1970) that "t he care of
patients wath sackle cell dtsease is scattered .
haphazard and geared to emergency care o nly , a c ,
ll ignores comprehtnSI\'e, .:ont1nual , preventative
care. the type of care that (I) cuuld keep pattents
with sickle cell d~ase at thear optsmum mental
and phySical condllaon. (2) reduct to a minimum
the crises and comphcatao ns, und (3) en able them
to pursue theu edu~:a taon , earn o Irving, and rear
their familaes "

The Government
"it

Medical Wurlcl NtwJ (Dec J. 1971) stated that
is cruel crony ttlat o ne segment of the

Jt,~df\\"'.,

II lh~ ans~cr "• }c~· .
4l What relatwn hi yuu w..as the pataent?
1\ mcrt." JO.J·~ l.ll ull.l ..answer "yes" to questiOn
on•· "'Only an cstamatt'cl 20'7, ''' th1:. number knew
th.al \ll·kk 1..tll JllCillHI as a blood tlasease
(Hl·domauantly Jftc,tang Nt'grot."~ 01 the 88 who
ji.JVt: "good dd111ala1•m ul ,a ... t.h.: ,~·II Ullt:lllaa, 30
Wt'rC nur,c~ . favc wen• phy\lliJil,, .?'i Wl'Tl" lcadaers,
I 'i wn~: ancua,al l&lt;'1..hlll\ aans, and Ia vi.' pcrMin~ !.new
ltl lht' JISI:d\1: h~'l"&lt;IU\l" IIICII1ht'f'- ol their f:amlltCS
wen· ;JifladnJ with II .. Only ll'i s•y, ul those
IH'r,\111~ (J42) v.hn lt.ad Jl least ~llllll! college
t·duc ... twu J..nc~N .IIH•ut ~ll·kll.' ,c-It " 1\wart:ness of
'"·kit' .:lll Jtl\'1111.1 w." dnwlv rclatl·d to the
cd u~...t Itt 111.11 lew I nt 1h~· p.:a \O .,, :.urvt'yl!tl ,
Although lh1.• rondatwn '' &lt;1111' of tht.' most
~.ouanwn .:hrlllltt. tllnc"c' Jlllllllg "(,·~•o d11ldn:n,
th.: 'ur\cy 'howell lh,at tht' lcwl ot public
krttlwlt'dgt'
ol
tlw
~.ondtlaun
1'
grossly
dtsprupurtaouJt.: 111 "' ampa1rt..a11~c tu tht' Negro
.:ommunaty '
In d l&lt;'tter tu /111 \'•'II" I "RIO lit./ Joumul oj

Sickled blo

�.,.,.,. negfected killer
15, 1970) Dr Scott stated : "Our
experience 1n R ichmond wtth Negro young people
sho ws that they arc anxtous t o learn about sickle
cell anemw and welcome the possibility o f
screentng for stck le tra1t . T he res po nses have been
first , ' Why haven ' t we heard abo ut this befo re?'
and , second , ' How can I get tested?' Ano ther
question ('Why 1s Uus limlled to Negroes?') is
frequentl y asked and refl ects in part sensitivity to
the false belief t hat t\credtta ry Ills are 'defects.' The
survtval advantage due to protection agamst
malana b y Sickle tratl must be made kn o wn to
emphastte the natural e~planatlon for such a high
ge ne frequency. Only with thorough understa nd tog
of these evolutionary forces can this soc1al
sensitivity be laid to tUt.''
ln another Jetter to The New England Jo urnal
of Medfcme (Jan 15 , 1970), Dr. Mo rtimer S .
Greenberc diSCussed hts 1967 study in wtuch he
screened 650 chtldreo, from the Bosto n Head Start
Program, for sickle cell tratt Dr. Greenbera fo und
that 7 .3% sho wed a poSJllve test. He continued .
" We then tntervtewed the pare nts t o determine
their react1o ns to learning about the test results in
the child and to bemg offered an o pportunity to
have themselves tested . Although 4 7% of the
parents had he~rd o f su:lcle cell anemia no ne were
aware that 1t IS transm1tled from parent to c h1ld .
Only 65% under~tood the d ifference between an
mhe nted and a contag.ao us o r mfec t1ous d isord er
" Ho wever, Interest on the part of the parents
IS eV1den ced by t he fact that 94% agreed to have
them5elves tested lor the ~tc..klln&amp; tratt and 35%
wa n ted more than a ~•mple and su perfiCial
e xplanation "
There IS hope, hu we vt:r, rn that more and more
communrty grouJX, tncludrng the Black Panther
Party. arl" organ1z1ng tn maJO I cllres across the
country The Foundatio n for Research and
Education 1n S1ckle CeU D rsea.~e (NYC) especially
has fll'o vided stgnif1cant help for' Hartem end o ther
commun1tres Its goals are far reachrng in scope and
1nclude umversaJ tesflng, bas1c and educatiOnal
research, anll. educational programs for medrul
personnel, teachcl1. gu1dance and vocational
counsellors, psychologts ts, affected famtlt es and
the populalron at large Fmally , the Fo undatio n
states (lAMA , May, 1~70) that "the care of
pattents wit h stckle lCII d1sease is scattered ,
hapha7.ard and geared to emergency care o nl y, 1 e,
11 1gno res comprehen'IIVe , c..o nhnuaJ , preventattve
ca re, t he ty pe of care !.hat (I) could keep patients
with Sickle cell dJ.Seas.e at thetr opt1mum mental
and phySical cond11100, (1) redu ce to a mmrmum
the cnses and wmphcallo ns. and (3) enable them
to pursue thelt education. earn a living, and rear
their fam thes "
Medrcm e (Jan

The Government
M ed1cal Wurld Nf ws (Oe\ 3, 1971) stated t hat

" tt

IS

cruel uooy tllat

one segment o f

the

government recommend!; that diseased perso ns 'eat
lots of milk , meat, fish, eggs, cheese , fruits , and
vegetables . go to wo rk doing t he kind of work.
you feel able t o do .. .' when many diseased blacks
don' t kn o w what a balanced meal o r a jo b is.''
President Nixon and Congress have perhaps
attempted to reverse such sentiments (although
there are still no all-encompassing federal testing,
research and treatment programs for sickle cell) as
IS e xemplified b y Nixon's February 197 1 message
to Congress making sickle cell "a targeted disease
for concentrate d research" since " It IS a sad and
shameful fa ct t hat the causes of thiS disease have
been largely neglected thro ugho ut o ur history . We
cannot rewrite this record of neglect. but we can
reverse it. To this end , this administration is
increasing 1ts budget for research and treatment o f
sickle cell dJSeese fivefo ld , to a new t o tal o f S6
million."
On May 12, HEW announced that it had
establtshed a natao nal sickle cell advisory board
headed by a deputy director of the NIH's Natio nal
Heart and Lung Institute (N HLI ) Later that year
this committee recommended :
"-that S2.5 million be allocated for the
establishment o f up to 5 comprehenstve research
and commumty servtce centers. Elu.h center would
be o rganned around o ngo mg programs m s1cklc:
cell disease; and would bndge the gap bet ween
fundamental research, cllmcal apphcation, :~nd
community se rv1c e.
" - that S I milho n be .dlocated for the
establishment of fro m I 0 to 20 model Screening
a nd EducatiOn C linics in vanous reg~ons of tht:
country for the purposes of I) screening, 2)
definitrvc d tagnosts o f SCD, 3) educat ion o f the
po pullt1on at nsk and of health personnel , 4)
referral of pat1e nts w1th SCD to appropnate
sources of therapy and followup care , and S)
acquisition of detailed data on methodoloay .
"- that S 1.5 million be atlocated for baste :and
applied biomedical research mto the nature and
treatment of src kle cell disease.
" - that
educallonal
and
mformational
materials be prepared. tested , and made available
through 8 centraJazed cleanng ho use for sickle cell
drsease information
"- that training of black physu:1ans, scte ntlsts,
and allied health personnel in all 1spec ts of sickle
cell disease be en couraged .
" - that the Department o f De fense screen all
black recruits fo r sickle cell diSease.
" that a survey o f federal programs be
conducted for t he purpose o f 1dent1fymg those
that o ffer po tentaal for assist ing the Sickle Cell
D1sease Program in achieving 11s goals."
Congress pro posed the Sickle C ell Anemra
Prevention Act which would give S25 million per
year for three years in grant aid: this would allow
" hospitals, med1caJ centers and local healt h
departments to eatablish Sickle ceU programs. ·•

Normal blood cells
Also
included
would
be
the
Veterans
Administration , Pubbc Health Service a nd the
Armed Services. The Sena te Sub,ommlttee o n
Health of the Public Welfare Commtttee (Edward
Kennedy, chairman ) and the Ho use Public Health
and Environment Subcommittee o f the Interstate
and Foreign Commerce Committee (Paul Rogers,
chairman) began hearings on th is bill last
No ve mber. Kennedy calls Nixo n 's $6 millio n
" inadequate to the task " while Senator Tunney
says that the prestdent's proposals " u.ll for no new
funds
they sr mply allocate e xtsllng madequa te
funds in an madequate manner for a program that
rtself •s madequate ." The admmistration . rn the
wo rds of H EW Deputy Assis tant Secretary Jo hn
Z11pp, retaliated by say1ng: "We feel that 11 is
unnecessary to establish new authorr71ng legis lation
for the s tckle cell dtsease Program ." (M WN)
In O ctober 197 1, Gove rn o r Rock t fcller of
New Yo rk s1gned rnt o law State Senator Joseph L
\.aljber's "Sickle Cell Anemia 81ll "
The government has been attacked by mo re
than j u~t the politicians. Michaelson ( 197 I) quo tes
Dr. ,Scott : " All is ~haos now , with 8 lot o f
researchers runnlnJ around flq-wavtna. heidllne
grabbing, trying · to qualify for the thera py and
screening jackpo t, wtth the government treatment
fo r h yperkalemra I an e lectro lyte 1mbalance I and
hypotension , a wa y. and we Blacks w tll be left wllh
the problem ."
Respo ndrng rn ht! o wn word s, Mr t:haclson
comments: " Almost certainly he (Scott I IS
correct. The current e nthusiasm for sickle cell
anemia may rn the e nd reveal less about 1hrs killing
dt!eas e than about conte mporary Amencan
pohtics. It may be part of the large effort to 'save'
no t black chtldren but an obsolete and ehllst
system o f medic11l ~:arc whu.:h has oppressed
p.ttrcnts o f aJI races and dasses (though espectall y
wo me n, third wo rld people, and the poor, o f
course) for a century and which rs no w . wt last, o n
the verge of collapse And if past cxpcnence IS an
tndex, the c urrent fad can be ex peeled , as Dr
Scott suggests, to co me .Jnd go, leavan, t he black
people of th1s country rn thetr usu.JI wnd111on of
til-health .1nd powerl ~ness. wh1le proV1drng !herr
(largely
whrte I profc'&gt;l.ronal Jnd ~or pnrat t!
' bendac tors' With new uvcnue~ lor ..td van lt:rncnt
and pr C'~hge, profi t ~ and power '
The Military
Even the Armed hH•C' lt.!Vl' lw.:n ..ttf,•dcd hy
th1: ctn:umstan\.C~ '"""undrn~ ~rddt: lt:ll ,tnt'ml.l
"Between Milu:h I' I(IX , ,Jnd I dHuary l'lh'l. (..tt
Ft Uh,s. J cx . l lnur death~ IIHIHrl'U Jlllollg
ap p rux rr ua tely 4000 Nl•gt~H!\ undngo111g Anny
biiMl combat tra1nrng at .J fl(l't Jt .111 Jlflflldc pf
4060 kct. All Wl'll' .app:m:ntly healthy lldd 110
fanuly ha~ lory of ancn11J t~nd tlll!llll,ctnl lrnm
low-allltUdl" ar ea~·· (nrc Nt··· ,.,,)!lund /oumul ,,
M C'dtc/n£', Fd'l S 197()1 I hl'\l' would Jflfl&lt;'JI to hl·
m~t.IIH.:C~
of "tl.rlt" l.ltrlt'l\ .. ultcnn~ the
cnn\equenl'c&lt;; •&gt;I \ld,llntt tullu .... m~o: a rt:dlllcd
OltYI\I:n ICnSIOII ~l lllafron ( c\ef11tol1 II lid hrgh
altitudd
Below 1~ .111 c&gt;..ctpl ul '''"' 'llldil'l', • ,,,c
\Uttlmary

Sickled blood cells

( AS !- I •· w J J .! I year·olll 111.111 . l oiiJpwd
and losl "'"'lll&gt;ll'lh'" .tiiL:r .t 40·yard low \.rJwl
ltlltl a 300-llll'lcr run dunng lm l~t Jay of lr.tlnllll(
Attt'r adm1~~1on 111 the hus(lltJI he rt ga1nt:d
co nst:~ou sne~, and lOtnplarncd o l shortncs:. of
brcat h and fai ntne~'· On ex a rnrn.lfll&gt;n ht: was
acutely ill . Ont: hour later he bt:camt:
hypotenMvc and lOillhativc and lost l'O nscrousness_
OeS1111c vrgorow. t rca t mcrH tor h ypcrkalenua (an

electro lyte 1mbalancc l and hypotension, he
remained comatose. Nasal he morrhage increased .
He died 24 hours after the milia! collapse. At
autopsy,
the
lungs
were
heavy ,
and
serosangurneous I thick bloody I Ouid nowed fro m
the cut surfaces. The bowel was filled with dark
bloody fluid . The vessels in all microscopical
sec tio ns were packed with sickled red bloodd
cells .. Hemoglobin e lectropho resis revealed SA
he moglobin."
Dcsp1te
these
deaths,
there are
no
pre-1 nduct10n d1agnostrc screemng requirements for
hemoglobin S by the military, although the Army
has begun offering tests at tw o military bases (Ft
Kno x, Ky for o ne). One Defense Department
spokes man rnsists that " personnel found to have
the tra1t are sllll considered quahfted for general
duty" Dr Wilham J Stone wrote a letter t o Th ~
Nt'w EnKiun d Journal of Medicine ( Jan 15, I ~7 1 )
complatnU\g that dunng Ius o wn "recent m&amp;htary
service l learned that the army does not recoaniu
SA hemo&amp;~obin as a potentially da.naeroua
condition and tl\erefore does not test for \ts
prescnse in recruits. •· The Black Panthers have
demanded draft exe mptio n for trait earn ers to
prevent this fo rm o f " genocide "
In ano ther letter to Tht&gt; Nt' w England Journal
of Mt&gt;dt cme , Dr. M1chael B Mosher supports draft
exemptio n for blacks With srckle ceU trait "If as
stat ed 1n thetr paper lr e the arttcle on the soldJen'
deaths 1. o ne l.!l n expect 7 to 9% o f drafted
Negroes to have the trait , this means that 280 to
360 of their 4000 black draftees were at risk . Since
the y record four d eaths, the rate of mortality I! in
excess of 1%. I canno t help wo ndering, therefore .
whether the presence o r SICkle cell trait should no t
exempt one from t he draft. Presumably, combat
condatrons would produce mortality 1n excess o f
baSil tra1n1ng, wtthout the intervention of enemy
soldie rs In any case , a 1% death rate due o nly to
bas1t train ing seems adequate gro unds for
exempuon Such a suggesh o n ought to be seen in
pnnl"
Two prommcnt phys11:1ans have g~ven theu
t)plnrons, rna personal mtcrv1ew , concerning draft
e'&lt;emphnn
l&gt;r Dons L Wethers. D~ret;tor of P ed1atr1cs,
Syllcllb.tm :md K n1ck~rlllllket B osprtuls, NYC .
''Nt•, l ht:ll' should be 110 draft exemptiOn , but it
ltrol\ t l .. Jwuld be taken rnto cons1dcralaon befo re'
J\\ll.trllth.'tll The nsks art not that grea l , but
~autron '' nt:~cssary "
Or Rubm M Bannerman. Med 1~al GenettCS
lJrut , l h·partme nt of Medtc rne . SUNYA B and
HutfJi n I il·neral Hosp1tal "The nsks or\! such that
dr.Jit l"H'111pt1on should be cons1dcred , besades it
l'oUl~l hi.' h.1d busrneS.\ ior t he rnilrtary s1ncc they
mt)thl h.tvl· tn pay the fannhc~ Involved I shtluld
tl11nl. 1he~ wuuld be wtlhng to contl.'dl' "
Conrt,C'Iing a nd Prevention
It
"
apparent
tho.~t
the llllnplrl.tled
mJnrlt''t.rlluns o f hemoglobm S warro~nt no e.t~Y
\&lt;llutron Suggestton~ urgrng lht' c~t.Jhh~hment ••I
gcm•tt• uHIIl~chng. .-e ntas may wt.:ll ln~hlen hla1·k
peopk whcl canno t , Lmd c r~ tand th e my~tcrrc' ,,f
gene' ""l11d1 they Lannol SCl· . thls le.tr ~n.umpJS\C'o
a pcrll'IYl'd thn~at that ~lHIIC guvt:rnment or some
&lt;~rgartii.Jiron OIJY l..tkl' 11 upon rt'elt lt1 prtllllllrt the
mJrrral(e hl'tween .-ertalll BIJlk' (rhmc wtlh lrJII I
a11d th t• nght to duldbtrth they lcJr hie LOntrol
M..t ~' \crecmng 1)1 tht: bla~·k .:ommunrty may hi.'
h1nd ~red 'incc. as Dr Nalband1t1n datms · ·'The
pover t y level of ;o many uf lhl' sufferers
com plicate~ the problem uf 1dt:ntrfica tro n and

Wedn-n~,

'&lt;;'fr

continued on pa911

261,c;
April

~972 .

.

10

The
SQectrum .. Page nine
' .,l , r:- r1. 1

�•
•
•

treatment" (MWN, Dec. 3 , 197 1). Nevertheleu,
~ centers have been act up across the
country by many different organizations. The
Washinaton , D.C. City Council has &amp;ive:n
prel.imlnary approval to a replation which would
make sickle ceU testina mandatory for every child
in the public school system. Other examples
include Black Pfllther tettina programs and those
of The Foundation for Research and Education in
Sickle C eU Disease, one o f which, in District 4 ,
Manhattan . hopes to " test every school age
younpter in the District in aearch for incidence o f
the sickle cell trait and o ther physicaJ defects; to
provide lecture sessions for patie nts and
community gro ups about sickle ceU d isease and t he
im portance of early detectio n and contro l ; to
provide inservice training for te achers in the area
that they may become aware o f the sympto ms o f
sickle ceU disease within the classroo m and have
knowledge o f refe rral routi ne; and to provide
supportive health services to the yo ungsters in the
area in order that their school 11tte ndance , school
perfor mance and learning abilit y will greatly
increase." (lAMA . May. 1970). The F oundat io n
also u rges that "clubs, lodges, churc hes, PTA's,
fra te rnities. soro rities and o ther o rgan izations o r
black people . . _ ad o pt aid pro gra ms that will
benefit th ose ca rry ing on the fight."
C um berland Hospital 10 Bro ok ly n IS cur re nt ly
Using a van fro m Consolidated Edison to test those
willing 10 black neighborhood s. A Pub lic Servt\.e.
T ra ining Gran t has hel ped pu blish a colonng book
to t each black children abou t sil:kk l'l:ll.
The
following
mdivid ual~ mvolved
hemoglobm S

~un tau1s

w1 th

t he

Robilt M. Btlnnerman (in press in the
Symposium on ..Hore4it.ary and Society") : " To
achieve tbia (prevenllon) by dcsian. It would, of
coune, be necessary to detect hetero zygotcs.
Pre-matrimonial testing is too late, and the ideal
qe mia)lt be at 15 , in high school. Around this age
would seem to be particularly strategic, with an
accessible population which is educable and
generally not yet committed to a marriage partner.
As to methods, for sick.li.n&amp; a variety of new
screening procedures are now being elaborated and
advocated. Perhaps the most promising is the use
of electro phoresis from dried blood spots."
coun~eUna:

Pearton (Children , Nov.-Dec., 197 1): " Study
of hemo&amp;lo bin could be incorpora ted in the
premarital blood test, but by th is t i me the results
would probably be too late t o affect the couple's
decision to marry.
" It is my belief that the purpose of testing
pro grams is t o provide individuals and couples who
carry the sickle trait with the info rmation they
need to make personal decisions abo ut marriage

quol~s
trnm
1mplkatious of

Testrng
Howard A Pcar~on (Childr.:n. Nc&gt;v .-Un .,
19 7 I) " I helteve the major rationale for s~recmng
procedures after tnlam:y ts to id ent1fy ind tv1duals
11111h Sl ~k le .:ell tra1t .
Because the re 1s no c ure
lor sick It' cell ancnua, preventiOn offers the only
mc:l hod currently avallab le to avoid the problem)
tnhercnt In hav1 ng a ch1ld wi th the ths~11s~ In my
opmJon the majo r am1 of sneemng programs 15 to
idenltfy persons with Sickle cell trJII so thu t th~y
can be Infor med about the genet1t tmp!JcaiiOIIlo
Each earner ~hould know thai 1f he marncs
ano ther pers,,n wtth Sh.kle tell lrait ,thc1rch1ldrcn
may have Sllkk ceU ancm1a
"Screening
programs
must
1ncorporutc
me11ning£ul eJ uc1111on ahout the rulure of SJLkle
cell an erma and its mode of in heritance, as well as
mdrVJdual counseling. I nforma tion about s1ckle ~:e ll
duease could be easily lntroduct!l.l into t he scit:ncc
and biology ~:urncula of t he schools. Certainly
sickle cell ancm1a and tra1l offer a more relevant
Illustration of gcnetll prtnllf)lcs than fruit fltes 01

rcas!
"The: 1dcal lrmtng for tt'st111g programs has not
been determmed If the utm of testing 1~ to provnlc
-.arner~ of the su:klc cdl tr:ut w1th ~nlormatwn
ap plicable to marriage lestln(l. tn rnfan-.y or early
ch ildhood may be ton early . fhe teens would seem
to be a rartJcularly advantageous age A tuntor 01
senior h1gh school student 1s usually receptive to J
sick le cell edu~attonal progrJm when he lc;uns the
results may hJve personltl rt:lcvan.:e , he .1lsu 1~
accessible for li.'Sl1ng and ~·o tmsellng "

und childbeanng. Most people wo uld not
knowingl y b n ng a child in to t he world wit h a
pamful and incurabk d1sease tha t has major
emotional and finandal burdens."
Bannerman (in press) . " Detection IS o n ly the
very first step, and t o set u p a detection p rogram
w1 t hout a sophist icated and effective follo w-up
would ~e mischievous. The second step wo uld
1nvolve t he means to inform heterozygotes of t he
nsks un d ergo ne to prospecllve offspring in
marrying anot her heterozygote. Certainly a card
could be lS)ued. but thiS by 1tself is by no means
certain to be cffc.:live a nd it requires a suitable and
extensive educat ional program give n by people and
in a form acceptable to the popula t ion und er
~ onsJdcrutton. Havmg theore ticall y achaeved these
two steps, t here IS at least a third, and that js a
means of determining whet her such counselling has
had Jn effect, and th1s would have to be planned
un a longer term basis It could best be done by
mt:ans of relatively automatic reco rd lin king
processes (.IS used for tnslance '" t he record linkage
program m the Oxford regton of England). which
~ould uutomatJcall y score the ma rnages of people
who had prev10u~ly b~cn tested and subseq uently
'~ore the heal t h re.:ords of t he child ren of such
rnarnagcs This presuppose&lt;. rclauvely del iberate
.md ~tabh! path:rns of llv1ng, matmg and
reprod uction in t he popula t ion. which are not

always necessarily present.
"Such a proaram would attempt to interfere
with the randomness of mating, which, of course,
is not random in any case. But it would want to
"head o rr• only a surprisingly small proportion of
all marriages. There is probably a certain range of
population frequencies and heterozygote mating
frequencies which would be most profitable, as it
we:re , t o consider, perhaps in the range I in 20 t o I
in 300 marriages in the population. This does no t
sound too formidable . Arranged marriages, in
which the partners have no real choice, ue the rule
in many parts o f the wo rld and many people wo uld
be astonished to think that they should have a
totaUy free choice of marriage partner. This recalls
the words of Dr. Samuel Johnson , who said ,
" Marriages wo uld in general be as happy , and o ften
more so, if they were all made by the Lord
Chancellor" - but Or. Johnson was a lifelo ng
bachelo r."
Linda E. Anderson (Californio '1 HIUllth , Nov.
197 1) ; " As the situation no w stands, most couples
in danger o f producil\g a child with sickle cell
anemia are no t even aware tha t they are carriers,
and the rfore they do no t have any o pportunity to
cho o se whether o r no t to take that cha nce. Dr.
Jo hn Williams of the b ureau o f chro n ic d iseases,
Ala meda Coun ty Health Department , says, ' Many
white health pro fessionals d o no t believe black
peo ple wo uld make wise d ecisions.' He fee ls tha t
this prej ud ice serves as a rat ionak for d oing
no thing to provide the people with the
o pportunity for res po nsible d ecision-mak mg."
Medical World News ( Dec. 3, 197 1 ): "Genet ic
cou nseling o f sickle ceU vic t ims and carr iers is
widely endorsed , b ut clin icians are extremely
cautious abo ut making any ' recom mendations' t o
persons w ho seek it. Most autho ri t ies stress t hat
they o nly lay o ut the ' facts' abou t the possibilities
of transmittin g the d isease. Moreover. some
segments o f t he black com m unity are resistant and
suspicious when it comes to any hint o f
reproductive contro l, especially if it comes from
whit e investiga t o rs. Bu t fo u nd ation head Campbell
believes tha t 'whe n peo ple choose to marry and if
t hey choose to have childre n they have a right to
k now what t he facts are.' Dr. Nalbandian regard s it
as '1mmoral' to id entify and inform a sickle cell
pat ient witho ut a t least offering the option of
ge netic co u nseling.
" Or. Wethers adds . ' I would never presu me t o
advise anyo ne to do any th ing. But I would
certainly present them wit h the facts abou t then
physical co nd ition and let t hem know what
alternat ives t here were. Physicia ns sho uld presen t
racts to pa tien ts. T he patients sho uld have t he fi n1l
decision about what they do with t heir !Jves
There's another reason t hat t hesc young pa11ents
should be identified early ."
Michael G. Michaelson (Ram parts . O.:t. 197 1)
"The
hheral
medical
establishment's
new
ent h us1asrn for th1s "m tcresting pathology" of
Blacks shou ld nol be allowed to obscu re the fal' t
that 1t has done so little. and is still d oing little to
prevent t he malnutrition whiCh causes anemia , tht!
peeling le3d paint which poisons habies . the rats
and the roaches. And when money for SC A begms
to appear - if in fad il ever does (reportedly
N1xon has earmarked the ted~ra l research funds for
white friend s tn t he South, p11rt of the: Southern
strategy for 197 I)
tt should be regarded wtl h .)
-.:ontlnued on oa9t&gt; I I ·

STUDENT ASSEMBLY
MEETING
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••

(!\\Q.t\~t

TnAVEl CENrllE
·'• '

•

,-

I

.

THURS.-APRIL
27th
.
2:00p.m.
Fillmore Room
••
•
••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Budgets will be reviewed

ALL MEMBERS MUST ATTEND!
Page ten . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 26 Apri1 1972

�Sickle cell disease ...
~ontlnued

BUtter up a
Jaster tan with
Coppertone

oewa l o-

Genocide
Charges of black cenocide are so .erious tb.a t
most generally they stir heated political and social
debate . For the most part, in discussi.q sickle cell
disease , people avoid t he word "ceoocide" but
refer to the previous lack of oon cem as an
imposina and dancerous nel)ect whicb exemplifies
the racist attitudes that permeate American
Society .
The Black Panther Party would take exa:ptioo
to any word but cenocide. Sb.alimar Colt of tbe
New Yortt City Panther Party denounced the white
man's solutions or non-solutions for sickle cdl
prevention as "complete and malicious blac:lt
aenocade ." Surprwn&amp;ly, however, when asked
about the Boston Panther testinc procram, Colt
cnt tazed at as "a cover up and too much emphasis
was placed on sack.le cell anemia since there were
more amportant thJnp that should be done - the
Panthers should recocniu: that the white man is
usang scare tactaL'S ap.inst the Blacks and sickle a:U
a nc m11 IS a convenaent tool."
Robert Powell wrote an the Black Student
Unaon's (SUNYA B) Unit)' 1'1uue One (July 9,
197 1) that "an certaan villages an Greece, 17 .7 to
37% of t he tnhabatants have been found to have
the traat. This fa ct s ho ws that the trait was given to
us by another race, and It 's destro ying us. We have
to faght 1t! To do thas we must have o ur o wn
llcalth Revolution and help kall this enemy of tbe
people. The B.S.U and the student Black Health
Assocut ton IS offenng 1 health program for
duldren of the communaty ."
In another arhde Po well claimed . "To confute
the people, medacal terms sucb u drepanocytic
anemua and menascocy tOSl.S, have been used to
descnbe the killer sickle cell anemia. By no w , t he
danger of thtS "''"'Y of the people should be well
re~.ogn11ed fven though much hu been brol18bl
o ut about s1ddem&amp;a, much more can and should be
hruughl out about thiS lallt'r
Brothu and
mtt•rs I make a plea to you to undnstand
everythang o~hout Sh.kle ~ dlanemaa , and try to help
an makang 11 poS!&gt;tble lor us to stand SJde by side
and org;~n11 e •gaansl l{t'n octdt' by the Stt:k whJte
o,ouet y that rules thas natio n of racum andd hate
ag.aansl o ur o wn pcoplt' H everyone works and
J1.hh to the .: au~e 10 thear own way , th en and only
t hl'n will we have a tree health natton If we're
dymg fr (l lll rrd.nt•ss. dueau , and d o pe , we can't
po~ ahly ~.·o ua e to get her A Ileal I h Revo lution will
mJke U\ /If Jru.l Jlrt'pare us to o vert hrow our ma;or
t'flt' mY
We ~an't do at af we' re dying so come
togethn and ~llp(lort all (lrograms that are gotng to
hd r k all off d1sea~e' such as stcklema.a."
Mah.l t'r tn to ne, the Mt&gt;d1 cal World N e ws (Dec.
I, I '17 1) :.tales thJt " the Amencan blacks' struggle
fur tdcnltty .tnd equalaty has spotbghted the
1ndalfe rr: n'-c tu Mddc cell anemaa as one of many
"'ual ln t'QUIII&lt;'• fhu \, a medacal problem as a
t rJgll ~o m po ncnt ut larger , emo t1o na.l pro blems of
1.tu:. 111 , C\. IHIO ffi l t.\ , o~nd pohtu.:s.• l n the view of Sen.
Jo h n V I unney I D C ahf 1. o ne of the CO "Sponso~
o t th ~ Natu1 no~l St1. kle Cell Anemta Prevention Act,
whach h.t' been t"xam1ned an House and Senate
hc.mn jl.'. 11 IS faar to say . and research figures
JIHive t he fJ ll. tho~t af :O il'kle cell anemta afflacted
whit t' pc:n plc 1nste•d of blacks, we would have
II1Jde J ,u mnutment long ago to end thJs disease."
/ oclu l' s 1/ealth (Dec 1971) reports . "There IS
.111 o~ll ll•o o bvao us re.l)on for the neglect of sickle
, dl o~n em aJ 9lJ'ii o f those who have it are black . ln
lo~d , the dc.e a~e was once sated by racists as
evu.le n.:c o f blal.k tnfeno nty aro nicaJiy. today the
~..om p.aratiVt' ncglell of the dasease IS seen by some
blac ks as evtdence of socaety's lack of interest in
blac k problems "
Dunng re'-ent intervaews, th ree individual
members of the Prcsadent's Ad Hoc Com mittee on
Sack le Cell Disease expressed their opinions on the
genocide·neglect debate :
Ruth L. Aikens (Assocaate Director for Health ,
Na taonaJ Urban League, NYC and Chairman . HEW
Su:kle CeU Disease Ad vtsory Committee): " It
manors a racist reflect ion which eJtists primarily
because of this country's racist attitude ... I
betieve that Blacks sho uld have more options
avatlable to them, unhindered by supe~titions, and
that Black.s should not fand tbem9Cives forced into

Tanning Butter
Coppertone Tanning Butter has extra coconut oil and
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why more people butter up with Coppertone Tanning
Butter than any other.
Coppertone Tanning Butter. One of 12 great
tanning products by Coppertone.

fiJ

fr om

oertaln cauuon. Becau.e u Nixon and the d octors
enter the sickle cell sweepstakes, armed with
prop11ma and patents a nd promiles, 1 new set of
dancers pretents itself: tb.at blade people will
continue to be uted, u they b.ave tnd itionaUy
been, as ' n:searcb and teachina material' by white
doctors ; that whatever re.earch does take place will
be desi$fled by and for physicians and will have as
its primary aim profeaional ad van a: ment in
academic medical circles rather than inaeasina tbe
lilcelibood (however llim) of direct therapeutic
benefit to the muses of black people; at 'aenetic
counsclin&amp;' from outside the black community
miaht evolve into 10ciaJ oontrol or economic
sanction ."

Offtclal Sun Care Products ot Flor1da'a Welt Disney Wortd

-contlnuecl on pate 12-

Wednesday , 26 AJki}l972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven
•

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....

u.

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i

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�Sickle cell disease
...
__...,.,.,...from ....
11-

tomethina tboy do not want." (refers to pnetic
counaelinaJ .
Dr. Doril Wethen (Director of Pediatric:a,
Sydenbam and Knickerbocker Hoepitab, NYC):
..It would be bard put to prol'e mllice or
forethouaht ; but, this disease affects Blacks and
becau~e of this fact, there bas been lerious
neaJect."
Dr. Robin M. &amp;nnermt~n (SUNY AB, Buffalo
General Hospital) : " In the past , sickle ceU anemia
hid a stiama attached to it - it was somethin&amp; to
be ashamed o f and concealed from others other
than those in the immediate household ... There
has been widespread ne&amp;Ject o r the poor
thro ugho ut the United States, especiall y in the
South , with sickle ceU being just a little part of the
whole picture . Sickle cell anemia has no t been
specifically ne&amp;Jec ted and the medical pro fession
has sho wn no large scale ne&amp;Ject ; but , there as,
ra ther, Ia rae scale ne&amp;Ject by the United States this re nects poor health care "
And finally, Machaelso n ( 1971) ~.:on cludes his
own report as well as thas, wath the language of the
new left . "The I.Jberal medacal elite . . will try to
head off any counter-anstll ut1onal development
wha ch
t h reatens
to
d1srupt
the
white-male-professaonal domanated haerarchy of
medacal care an th1s country And at IS an this
context t hat the sudden dascovery by the medacal
establishment and R1ch.trd N1xon of sackle &lt;.·ell
anemaa becomes rather more clear Thear re~:en t
tnfatuallon with SCA IS an attempt to prove !hill
Amencan doctors ore respon~ave to the needs of
the black communlly , 11 as an attempt to denate
pressures for radacal change. and pe rhap~ the
begmmng of an att empt to gam &lt;.On tro l of People's
Medacal Centers. 11 as . a~ Dr Scott has s uggestl!d ,
although not an ~o many words, a np-off.
I am not suggest mg that government and/or
med&amp;..:al empire mo ney a nd eq uapment (if and
when 11 becomes available for SC A) should not be
ltccepted . It should be accep ted, With a knowing
smile. llfith hol h hands o ut fo r more, indeed wit.h
milita nt demands for mo re For the current liberal
ent husiasm abo ut sackle cell anemia leaves
deliberately unexamaned the real roots o f the black
communaty's chrome ill health It does not get at
.,overly or vastly anadequate nutntaon , at rac1sm or
peeling lead paant, capatallsm or rat'i , at the absence
of easy accC11S to free, dJ&amp;mfled med1cal care, at
professionaliSm o r sexasm, at what a docto r "as,"
1ndeed at what 1 human beang IS , and un be, •nd
must be The health movement is betpnnang to get
at those thmas. and shaU continue to as it grows
and struggles to serve the people , as the wortce rs at
the Marie Clark Center say, body a nd soul.

John and Yoko

Schermerhorn bill endangers
intercollegiate sports funding
by Bury Rubin

THURSDAY &amp; SAT.
(April 27 &amp; 29th)

"my night at maud'e
waa for me the flneat
film In the featlval (New
Yortt 1969)."

Eric Rohmer's

¥~..,..C.,., ..... YO'Il '"""'"

''By far the best picture
in the entire competition (Academy Awards
1970).One of the biggest
thrills of this or any other
moviegoing year."
-.,..,• • S,...N fNYttt. . VD~JoUo

" The most thoroughly
mature film that has
come to the sc reen in
years.·· ....... . _. s....... - ...

QAIR'S
KNEE
wtth
Jean~laude

Brialy

CONFERENCE THEATRE
iv. of Sub. Board I. Inc

A U T 0 and C Y C l E

Review Board of the Student
A$sociation recommends how
. much· fuiinclir si~Jtport eac h team ,
Possably . o ne o f the most club sport and intramwals will
overlooked aspects o f the e nd df receive.
mandatory student fees, wo uld be
'
the
end
of
intercoUegiate Daodes
expected support
substda u tto n by students. While
Even witb iU leader Dr Harry
some mtght argue tha t this would
henefit the athletic de partment , a G. Fritz out of town in
ques taon remains as to who would Washlnpo n, Jon Dandes of the
Student Athletic Review Board
fund intercollegiates next year.
expec ted
m ore
One wo uld th ink that with this (SA RB )
great funding crisis fa cing the m , cooperation with the coaches and
the athletic department and its o fficials of the department. Last
Dandes
announced :
coac hes and stude nt a thletes Sunday ,
would be up in arms. Ho wever, in " There will be no fundin g of
talks with athle tic department intercoUegja te at hletics should
o fficaals and coaches, one notes a voluntary fees return... Oandes
surprisang sense of apathy. The indicated , however, that some
feeling a mo ng several athletic support wo uld continue for
intramwals and recreation.
offl~ aals IS that the Schermerho rn
btll
IS
a
prelude
to ward
One of the most perplexang
tncorponthn&amp; all fees into o ne uems of the Senate vo te 110 the
general Unaversity fee, whach Schermerhorn bill fo r at hletic
wo uld
an c lude
at hletics. department people a ppears to be
Obvaously , thi.s would take away Senate Republican le..der Earl W.
~tudent
contro l o f at hletics. Brydces' tie-breaking vo te. Just
Prt:Sently, the Student Athletic two year's a&amp;Q, Sen.tor Brydces
Spons l:."dttor

UUAB FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE
presents
FRIDAY &amp; SUNDAY
(April 28 &amp; 30th)

Tonii!M a I and 8:30p.m. In OW.Mtorf 1.7. the
films of John l.-.non (form• a...te. If you still
remember who the Beatlel wwe) and Voko will be
tftown. The fHms 1W1f1 from Voko's 20-minute
atnv~~g~nze on a fly exploring the nude body of •
woma\ to the birth of • buRdine.

INS U R A NC E

III.ID FS·I

P419e twelvtr . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 26 Aprill972

was one ol the most helpful in the
fruatful attempt at klndin&amp; State
11d fot Buffalo's defunc t football
procram. Bob Oem1n1. Buffalo's
assastant athJeuc director and
fo rmer head footbaJI coach,
re marked . " I don't understand
the Brydr,es' vote. Who kn ows
what the Senat e really has an
mmd." Oemmg was just one of
s everal
athletic
department
o ffi cials who felt that the Senate
his something else in mind ,
besides
stopping
"subversave
gro ups."
No
o ne a t the athlellc
department ~ ye t to consider
the problem of the passage of the
bill in the Assembly. AJthough
suc h schedules have not Men
made public as of yet, it is kno wn
that
Buffalo
has
already
contracted 22 basketball games as
well as 22 hockey games for next
year Even though , there have
been reassurances tha t mandato ry
fees will re m11n, the futwe of
athletics could be gri m sh o uld
these fees faiL

�'\ (

Runners beaten by
Cleveland's VIkings

Boston Unil'ei'Sity honor

Wright: an outstanding coach

at 51.~ in the 440, which was
good enough for third. The only
other Buffalo points in the

by Bruce Eftld
Sp«trum Sr4/{ Wrlrn
~

I c was very windy in Oeveland
last Saturday and several of
Buffalo's
better
perfonnen
weren't there, but it would have
taken • lot more than these
factors to stop Cleveland State.
Track Coach Emery Fisher could

running events came from the

nUle relay team which won fol the
fane time thia spring. Dout Cake,
urry Mentkowsk.i, Bill Hcim and
Bill McCarthy combined for a 3
minute 303 second timing which
il about average for the quar-tet .

only describe the Vikings u "one
The BuiJs lost 10me points in
fantastic team." The 114-29 loss the field events because weight
was the worst dual meet drubbing men Mike Boucle and Roger
that Fisher could remember in Capan could not make the trip.
recent years. '1'hey were strong Rkhard Schatz beame the third
and deep in everything right down Bull ~pear thrower to win the
the line. Their times were sreat . javelin contest in as many meets.
and they had no weaknesses at This time Mark Reger, last meet's
all," he said, in praise of the CSU winf!er, was second . Other field
V1kings.
pacers were Jerry Williams (long
Another

indication

of

{1tveland's strength was the fact
that a school record perfonnance
by mtermed1ate hurdler Bill He1m
merely took tturd place 10 the
m~t lleim's time of 57 seconds
flat broke his old mark by a tenth
ul a second . Another Buffalo
rcwrd was set by J 1m McClurkin ,
who won the three mile in 14
muiUtes and 50.5 seconds, a good
IS seconds under the old r&amp;:cord
uf Ed Fuchs. McClurkin also took
scwnd in the mtle wllh a fine
clockrng nr four minutes and ~ 2
!IC\.onds
Tarcan

http~

times

Many uf Buffal~'s tunes were
very good due to the excellent
tartan track on whi&lt;;h Cleveland
rw1s 1ts meets. Bob Gower and
Brll McCarthy took second ollld
thud m the half mile with theu
best times of the aeason (2 :00 and
2:00.6), Dous uu wa docked

THI WOOLY LtAMA
aQ Elmwood Ave..
DoAy 10.5
882· 1082

jump) and Bruce Tietze (triple
jump) both with thirds.
BuffaJo faces Eagles
Today the Bulls travel to
Brockport for a meet with the
Eagles and Roberts Wesleyan
Brockport IS usually fatrly strong
and very deep Little 1$ kuown
about Roberts other than tht• fact
that they blasted St Bonaventure
over the w~kend.
In lacrosse news. it was
disclosed that first line midficldcr
Curhs Axelson, who sustained an
mjury in the Brockport game w1ll
be out fur the rest of the season
Saturday the Bulls beat Ntagara
for the second time to even Hs
rec:ord at 2-1. The Bulls won R-4.
Sconng was done by Ken Bolte (4
goal! as well as one assist) and
Perry Hanson and Pat Abrarnt
whu had two goals ~ieee John
Howell and Frank Szob each had
two ass1sts. Buffalo's first line
defense was excellent and gualte
Bill Smith's dears were much
better. Coach Frank Sz.oka reports
that the second team started
against Niagara and did almost as
well u the first team.

,..Hear, 0 IsraelFor gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE

Phone
875-4266

f

Much has been written and said about Buffalo'•
vanity hockey coach, but still his recognition
continues to come in. Wright, who last week was
named co-recipient of the Student Athletic Review
Board coach of the yeat awud, added an award frOm
his alma mater this week. Friday night, the youthful
Buffalo ice mentor wiJJ receive a special recognition
for "1lil outstanding coaching performance at the
University of Buffalo."

Kelley joins WHA
In additinn lo Wright , outgumg Terrier heJd
coach John ''Snooks" Kelley will be honored Kelley

Bulls face doubleheader with
Bonaventure's Brown Indians
.\'11ro lr/1111 .' itill/ Wrrtl'r

of
for

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HOT PANTS .. .... 6.00

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1974 Eggert - Near Badey

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UUAB CONTEMPOARY ISSUES COMMITTEE

~J!~DS

Nobel - Laureate
Dr. Joba C. Ecda
presentina a series of
Wednesd~&amp;y lectures on
COMMUNICATION IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
Lecture No. 3
Wedn~ay,
F~(e

Buffalo ballrng urdc1 , has been
h1tlmg at a UJ drp. The Jumor

from Ntagara .. all\ has taken some
Wtl h I hl' ..:ruuJI flJ r1 ul the
lll the pre~urc uti th{' other Bull
bascl&gt;all sca~111l about lu begur ,
lui tcrs
the
Bulls
tal..c
on
St
Fronl..line
hurting
Bonaventure's Brown lndrans thrs
The Br11wn lndrans aJC an
afternuon at Pccllc held ·1he
" I am plcast:tl wrth the prtdung unknown lJU&lt;~ntrty as far as
doubleheader will bcgm at 1 p m \If OdadHIWskt, C.1h1ll otlld K•1th
~trength
rs concerned
St.
If the Bulls art h&gt; return hi the S41
far,"
rcruarked
\l&gt;ach
NCAA playoffs. they must w111 Monkarsh " tiuwevcr , we ~~\uld Bonaventure dropped a 4 - 1
conSistently dunng the remamdcr use svmt rmprovcd sc:"ond-hne dec1s1on to Cannon m its opener
of tlte seuon ·-we need twu wnts prtching Orv Coli dtd • go.:1d JOb
before ft)l&gt;rD8 two games 10 bad
this afternoon," s.atd Bull head 11l rel1ef agarnst Can1s1us and, as a
Coach Bill Mvnk.;mh ··1 hesc result. I may start h1m Sund&lt;~y wcathet Tht.&gt; squad rs headed by
games agamst Sl Bonavcntun: wtll afternoon ." l he Bulls' earher hurlers J un Wallace and Mtlce
be key contests "
ramout .agamst L'TO~town nval Munllu Munllo, a freshman
Ruffalo
State has been shrfted HI
Monkarsh
ubvuwsly
1s
rrghthande1 , also holds d1\Wfl the
Sunday
at
the Bengals' campus
rmpre~ Wllh the ltnpmt;ul\:C ul
The hull hrtllng h.u also been ught held jXlSI fur tht Bunn1es
Lhts afternoon's twtnbtll and he
has nommatcd southpaw Jon an tmpurtant factor m thetr when he 1s not scheduled to pitch.
Roth 10 pttch the upcncr Ga1y vic tones and will ~1111 rnue to play Southpaw Wallac~ compiled a 1·3
Odachowskr and Mike \alull wrll an 1mpmtant role m delermmrng
record last season . Thr Bulls wilt
split puchmg chores (()I the the success or f:ulurc of the
second game in order tu h:~ve the season. "Our hrttrng has bttn m~t probably face Morillo and
two hurlers primed for the duublc pickmg up." offered Monkarsh
Wallace this afternoon if the
bill at Syracure on Saturday . ..Our younger players have been aforementioned duo did not hurl
Roth , who hru. a 4 .03 ERA h&gt; g\l gaining confidence at the plate
10 the Bonnies ' twmbill against
With his ().2 record so far , leads and rt has paid uff" Centerfielder
tJle Buffalo staff nl stukeouts Joe Pisco tty , hithng fifth in the Cants1us Monday afternoon

!
!

Imported &amp; DomestiC

MAXI Die$ .. ..... $18.00
MAXI 5IQIT. • .. • . • 15 00

JO 111 ltl, 1-l ltllllng~ uf
prld1111g.
fhe
natrve
uf
1 unawanda has pttdtcd well (m
the Bulls, and has deserved 11
het1c1 fate utr ~evcral uccast un~ .
WII h

:

Honest &amp; Reliable

the newly fonned Western Hockey Association.
There had been JOme longshot speculation that
Wrigbt might be tapped for the lucrative BU job, or
• frosh coach for the Terriers, but Leon Abbott of
RPI wu hired Jut week.
As an undergraduate at BU, Wright wu noted
for his tenacious forecheck.ing and penalty killing
ability. Wright earned Blfs "most improved" awatd
as a junior and W'tS named ''the aenior that best
exemplified the spirit of a BU hockey player." After
working for a year toward his Masters degree in
Education at BU, Wright joined the Bulls in 1970.
one year after Buffalo gained varsity recognition.
In Wright's first year, BuffaJo went 8-7-1, and
this year posted a 14-8 record. After being seeded
fifth in thiJ year's ECAC division II playoffs, Wright
steered the Bulls past Boston State and Vennont
into the diviSion II finaJs Although MasuchusettJ
stopped the BuDs 8-1, both Wright and his BuJis
became the talk of Eastem collegiate 1ce hockey .

The award will be presented at the Boston
University Vanity Oub's annual Hall of Fame
banquet. A Boston University graduate, Wright
teamed with Herb Wakabayashi and Serge Boily on
the 1966-69 Terrier ice squads as the "U.N . line ."
The line featured a Black, a Japanese-Canadian and a
French-OCanadian .

···················-······
!• LARGEST SELECTION :•

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

il leaving BU to coach the New England Whalers in

April 26th

4 {)pt!n to tlt(e l"ublic

AU lectures are in Diefendorf 146 and bqin at 7 :30p.m.

. . ..
r:
I
AUTO SERVICE
COMPlETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp;

1
:

Imported

.I

Rth~l•:

o Domesttc

- IOICOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
74 Ewert - Nur Bailey :

P~

HAIRSTYLING
Jo~ ·, ThNtr~ &amp;rlur
l OS S K.au:II()K Awn~
(At Colvitt

WIGS ttHAIR COLORIN
b31~15S3187 7. 2989u:!llS.Sd

L .. ··---""··I
••rraLe
834·7350

Tlra~tr(ej

GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
Jeweter - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

COLLEGE TEXTS • PROFESSIONAL BOO.,a.""""'wurt;
MEDICAL• NURSING • DENTAL
• PAPERBACKS •

TIZTieK

n.BI,IK.
3-1e A• I• lt.

Free parldnl at
Man or

Untwerslty

11) 833-713 i.N'\NVYirN'IIIP\I\IW\N\II'W"'I

Wednesday, 26 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Paqe thirteen
~\\

11ql\ 0~

1

,o.o2511L ·~ . t 01l'I JJ9qc.. !ul.

'-'•

�CLAIIIPIII

1966 CHEVV NOVA stallonwiiiOft.
Excellent eondltlon. Power-st•r1"9,
eutomatlc;, hNler, r.Oio, snow tires,
a320. Call 139-0653.

FURNITURE:
Oouele-bed,
frame
11"91e Met, d~. Chairs, kllcl\en
tMIIe, - t e d other eoo&lt;lle5, ''-'9·
A~le rat• to ,._onable people.
C all 1137·21177 or 83.2-7012. Ask for
RObbie or Stencil .

a .m . - 7 o.m.

AD INFDAMA TlON
CLASSIFIED ADS may be plac;~
Mon~y tl'lru Fr1clay between 9 a . m .
-CI 4 : 30p. m . at 3 !5 Nonon Hall .

3·BEOROOM
furnllhed upp..- on
Ef\91-ood. 1 block from school . C ell
IIS4-32S3.

"HELP
WANTED''
.OS
~nnot
dltcrlm lnate on tl'le IH&amp;Is of wox. c olor ,
c reecl or natlonM orl9ln to any extent
(I .e.. l)felerably Is still CIIKrlmiNIQO').

3-ApoM J~CN~rtm.,.t In Tonawanda.
A"allable June 1st lor summer or
longw. ca11 176-4977. Stewe.

"'A9A

LEBRUN
apartment from May
19th for
T•otthr• malft.
162.SO uc:h . S mlns. from e.ntl)us.
83-4· 3920.

Y--

"FOUND" ads will be run frM Of
~ys and
l5 woreh.

d\M,. lor a maximum or 2

HERTEL -VIRGIL arN , 3 bedrooms 1135
lnc ludlnt
utilities
buy
fu rniture . G ood cteal. C all 11 76 -41122 .
Av•II•Dte June Ut.

WANnD
BACHE LOR
dellres
part -time
he&gt;u,...•~- Ho,.. , _ , campus. C all
132-4501.

MODERN tw~Mctroom apartment.
Townnouwo. Own room ,..., Ald. .
LN. C •ll 691-6212 . K•otrylnt.

WANTED :
Sm all
com fCIOable
apwtment lor wmm• . For one. Rent :
cr-p. FurniSheo. C all BOO anytime.
836-02!1.

A5 OF M AV ht , 4 bedroom• acrou
from ~mpus, rent c hNp ; M9Qtlabte.
C allll35· 1l05 .

STUDENT TO ll"e In M mother's
IMI~
In exc l'lant41 for room and
IIIOerd. Walklr&gt;il Cllstance to umpus.
CtOM to b~ Stat1 In S eptember. C all
137.a106 aftM 4 p . m .

WESTS IDE
fully
lurnl~ .
2-o.droom apt. - a&gt;~all able May ht.
Call 111.0S77, Marl, Bill lot cMtalli.

SUMMER l Ob QCMinl"ii In Bronx , N .V.
12.50
l'lr.
Requirements •
mate,
PhYSI Cal I y
fit ,
saiUm~hlp,
Gal)abllltl..._ Call Rkh 192· 2311.

FOUR-BEDROOM
a-lment
o lf
Bailey. IS -minute w.tk from campy~ .
FUf"n llheCI, • -onable. AYallable for
May 1 anCI ne•t y. .r . Sh.. ly 11 3 4 .0966.

MANUAL TV PEWAITEA, used, t00C1
COnditiOn, •-onable. S twe 8112-21l6 .

HOUSE FO R RENT - Amherst - 3
lar~
bedrooms, s to~ . retrl,.rator.
Cllsh•asher. tarb.,. dlsPOWI, outdoor
barbeCue,
~rpet.a
tl'lrQu9hOUL
Suitable fa&lt; l or 4 SluCienU. L MWO
required. A"aiiAt»le June ISth 1 27S
PM month C a ll 633 - 1736

USED BI CVCLE want-&lt;~ In 9QOd
condition. P I - c.CI S utoan 1133 -7S71 .
GIRLS 3-speed • -. C all 131-41U
and,. ...,. m.wge lor R onn l.

MALE SE EKS piau to lhare ,..,
umpus with sa m e . Own room deSired.
Pt\one I31 -30S7.

LAFAYETTE
HCIGHTS
APAR T M E NTS - 20 min. 10 campu1.
Fully furnllhed, efficie ncy \tuCIIo a nCI
studio suite al)artmenb
N o •- •
required . HyCie Park BIYCI. al Lafa yette
A"•· Nl.,.ra Falls . C all collect
114 -5711.

BASSIST, drumm•, lwnale "ocallst
wanted for wot1&lt;1nt comm• claJ I"OUII.
137· 0111 . L name and number.

3 BEDROOMS, I~Otmo Cotner ol
Partcrld,.
and
KeMi"9t on.
C a ll
136-6206 £My access to K h ool

WANTED : Oropnlc Chemistry e liMn S..
DOCtor Wudl Instructor. Will IMY I Call
Pt\11 at 1· 21-4·932 1

3-BEO R OOM
furnished acJartment.
Available June 1, Hertei -PArkSICie. Call
136-0616 . K - ll"lflnt.

MALE GRAD student-s room.,.,.,
umout, May 9 - June 3. 131 ·2614.

'6S I"ORO VAN, 6 ti res, plu• much
more, 9004 condition. C all 139-2124
•ft•r 10 p . m .

USED FURNITURE for sale • bed,
sofas, chairs, dresser, dati&lt;, rugs,
refrl,.r•tor. 11 31 -5451 or 11116-49115.

COUCH - 2~ blac;ll( INI~ ·IIIce.
Wooden l..,s. Like new. ...,feci
c:ondltlon. 1136·31169 after 6 l).m .
C HEAP!.

REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
and
washers. Reconditioned, dell~red and
9Uaranteed. 0"0 Appliances, 844
syumore. TX4-3113.

H£V DIANE Heye 1 wonderful
summer, you Hebe. Love , the Ot her

FUANITURE r Becb, small refrigerator,
drend
other
Items.
Prlcles
M9QIIaole. C•II61111 -SOII7 or 1131· 3860.

FURNI TURE : One qu•n~lzed bed,
dresMIJ, "anlly-clesl&lt; •lth c;haf r. C all

LARRV, your patlef'ce Is • w indow .
your strentt'a a mirror .

VOLKSWAGON
19611
91'Ul
condition. radio , ,.._r t;pe.ak er, good
rubber . Cell Stu 873 -7 2l4.
•

OONN~IE ret~~•••~ electrolotlst
Sl)&amp;laUJin9
In
the
remcwal
or
unwM\ted
~
JUperlluous
1\alr.
Medically apl)ro.,..,. Comt&gt;llmentary
c;o nsultallon
by
apPOintment .
545 .. 971, :t33-5949, Astoria, N Vortt .

FURNISHED, 3-«&lt;«troom apartment.
Balley -Oelnan
area.
t140/mont h .
lnctuoes utilities . 896 -1329 alter J 1
p.m .

TWO GIRLS r-.:1 D'ace to shere with
for fall. NMr campus. Own
rooms o.lr.a . C all Ellen 11311-4199.

ROOMMATES
NEEDED
for
four-bed room hous. foo- next ~t
N . . t to Allenhu"t ~nd Tooos.. 1250.
c~u 137-9S-41

ott..n

O F ,.,,~n ouupatlons
....-calnt N . A.._..~ .nd - ~unite., up t o 1 2600 monthly
For complete lnfonnortlon, write to
JOB AESEAACH . B&amp;liC 1253, St_..A ,
T - to, Ont. Encl- 15 to
a.t.

P£ASOHS

RIDE BOARD
RIDE ..E£0£0 to QuMM lor tmall
dot. Anytime. Excellent trav.,.,_
$ 5 .00. 1 36-2 499.

c.,.,.,

AlOE NEEDED oul West , preferaoly
rrom N .V.C. w ouno end of June.
P l - . call A.-s 131 ·2072

OVE R SEAS .lOBS lot stuoents AIIS9ale., Eurape, S. A,.,_lu, Africa ,
etc. All oro'-lons and occu pations.
• 700 to 13000 monthly Eapens.K
.,...,
cwertlme,
14thtseel"'l.
Fr. .
lnf~m.tlon. Write, .JOBS OVERSEAS.
Qeclt. E5, P .O. Box 15071 , $ a n Dle9o.
C alif 9211S.

RIDE NE EDED to Chtc.90 •ound
May ht . C .tl Joyce 134· t99 3.

LAOV, piNMI IOYe me now. I am dead.

MUST SELL two lf•plnt
EaQellent
eondltion;
ci\Np ,
1136 .. 1 7 1.

b• .
Call

HAALEV -OAVIOSON cycle 350 «
1970. GOOd condition . C all aflw 5
l).m. 132-6323.
MOVI N G : two epartmenu lull of rugJ,
Clrapes, e.mps tor sale. 11 37-a 143 anCI
135-5943.

AlOE W ANTED to Tro, Ot C • PII illl
district Alter
May 4
Call Bob
133-653 1

APARTMENT FOR RENT

COOL DEAL: 011-t&gt;a.t CI ne• t y. . r?
LM ~ Sil eCI re lri . .r ator .,allable May
9
Price
negoiiM:&gt;Ie. Call L ynne,
1131 2197

LARGE FURNISHED 4 -o.droom API
Hert.. .Col.,ln .,.._ Graouate stuo enu
prelwrecJ . Very .--oNot:Me. 1175 1 150

1970 W HITE T RIUMPH Spitfire. b lacl&lt;
conv... llble top. APOro• . 17,000 mil. ..
Also woman 's J-sc»eed o lcyc:le G•ll,
1137·9697. JOhn 632~176.

PRIVATE ROOMS lor rent , private
entrance. Laley e tte . 110-115 w-ly .
833· 2347
BEAUTIFUL 4--tMdroom, 10 minutes
from umpys. Mull buy fu rniture .
137·9211 . A"ate.ble June ht Females.
UB CS~IO.n-M IIIenport .,. . , - l
Mdrooms.
1.,_
balM,
finiShecJ
!Naem.,t, l)fhl•te entrance NNr ow.
line 9 or 12-month 1 - June 1 S-.,t. I. Aecordeo mMU. . 633· 94S5
Alive 1311 · 10111.
L I V ING ROOM hall•ble for one Of
two persons In hlffte ap.- tment . $60
month. C •ll Naomi 113 4 .08 21

NEW 6 cu . ln. Pt\lko refri9W•tor .... th
ample
ttee1et
Sl)a c e
f or
d~m/apartment
use.
C all
Aaye
831 -3592.

SITAR lor Mle . 12~0 llrm. Recently
br~t from 1 ndla. Reply Boll 3 4
S pectrum .

F\JANITURE at _.y reaonabte c:ost .
Movlnt F rlca.y . Need to tel rid of
ch•lrs and Cllnlnt room table. Other
AS$0rted .,oct.... 133-9645.

STEREO
~S--watt amplifier , BSR
turntAtlle,
SI)NkWS
ano
Su ~~Mell
hudpflo,..., a 190. NagoiiM:&gt;Ie . C all
137-0477 ..,.nlngs.

FOUND: Mar oon IIWNI• left In blue
car Tuft., AO&lt;II 111 while h ltch ln9
eso...n Kenmore to

DOUBLE 8£0 with bOx sPrlf\9, 125
896.021S . K callll&gt;fJ.

FOUND : Red-ftalred S etter/mutt on
NMih Main. C all 1 32-S32l.

FOR SALE: AMPEG B · l2 amp for
Vllar, o-.s , o ,..n. C all 83S · 7579. FrM

CHEAP! Beds, couch, c:halrs, end
tablft, ctowt, laml)s, al)pllanc..._ Also
two 26" bikes C all 136-6S42.

THREE
BEDROOMS
kitchen,
dinette, ll"lnt room . All l umlih.O For
four ~pie - each 165/mo Watktnt
dbtanc:e. A "all•ble May 837 81111. g

TERM
PAPERS
Researched,
wntten
and
professionally
typed
All
wnters have a nunimum as,
BA deJUee Instan t Serv11:e

CALl TOU FREE

(lnywhere ut the country for
utformation and rates)
80G-638-G852

or
CaJI Collect (30 I) 656-55 70
EDUCATIONAl MStAIICH, INC ,
~530 Wisconsin A ve.• Su1te I 690

EXCELLENT two rad l• l Ur .., uwo
only ror 2000 mn... A 7 11 -13, t6.S0-13J
Art 137.0a35.
SPt:NOING the summer In Buffalo&gt;
En~oy II w it h a "Fr...,le" - a 100
of 9004 ti mes •~ as. 137-621 4
1969 BSA VIctor S pecial. E~ecellent .
Many extra. 5000 miles. 8 32-6614.

I
:

I

~'nn nn~'
31 02 Main Street

I

1 biOt'b xmth of Crt~~ nu..tu

1

buctcly

Siller • S«t~i~ •Pant
USED CARS

- -BOBCOR- Motor Can, Ltd.
J97-i E.., (NaF Bdey)

834-7350
_____________
J

ible Truth
THE CH RIS TIAN'S GUARAN TEE
"These th lntS h..,. I • rltten
u nto you that bell.,. on the
Nme of lhe Son ol God, tl\at
you m • y know. that v• 1\ne
eterNI life ."
l John ~:13
-Bell.,. God's Written Worct-

VISI'I'

CYCLE IHJGSt

VI• ....,. ....
c.-.Mt

H~,

......... .......

_,

F'HI LAYAWAY oa USI
MASTa CMAaa

I

.._...n...- ........
. . . . . . . . . . ete.

THE RAG SHOP
NOW OPEN
featurio&amp;

OPEN

Wuhingtoo D .C. 200 15

Page fourteen . The Spectrum Wednesday, 26 April 1972

FOR S AL E - b . .utlful dres.Mif with
full mlrroo-, Cles.k with c:natr l nd lim!)'.
1137-9014, 131 -3764 .

FOR SALE - Nlkon F um.fa DOC:Iy,
LuN pro ltlht . meter. 175 -23 72 .

920 Niaaara Falls Blvd .

for
'/IE ' &amp; 'S HE '

AUTOMATIC w-"1"9 mer:l'llne. Good
condition. C.tl 1 32 -1294 .

FURNITURE FOR SALE: Coucl'l,
tabl81, c:rt.t"· 'U1P. ..trl,..at&lt;M' , dOYe,
Mctrooms, etc C eiii34-SSlO.

I
--------.-------..J

• JEANS cl TOPS •

137-256~ .

FORO TRUCK 1959. Good en9ine
Good tr ...~m iUion . N - tires. Also
F renc:h flute . C all G inny 662· 7SM .

HAVEN FOR
FAMILY CAMPERS,
lACK PACKBS,

ev..,....·s bid 8fUII r

PEAFECT 1971 C B 450, 3000 mi.,
access. and ,....meu. 197S. C •ll F red

'69 TRIU MPH 2SO ex motorcycle.
Under 300 IDS.. Only 2600 miles. 1400.
C all Stu •t 1 32-51181.

r-------------~
ALFA ROMEO
• FERRARI
• MASERATI

I
_

TEITatf
.,_..,...-.....Center

l30MU.St. ...

-\~-Brn.n
.. ffl. 'til • •
hH l"'lritbog Off

LOST• FOUND

e xcellent

TAPE RECORDER Ook~Cief Model
7050, 3 motor , 6 heeds, aut ~werw ,
sound on sound, autQ-9r09'ammln9,
&amp;200. C alll36· 7577, 1 to6 p ,m

1963 FO RO F • trlane sta tion Good
tr.,.it)Oftalton
Askll&gt;fJ
190.
C a ll
131-4360

I

MOTORCYCLE + auto Insurance.
Instant FS-1 ,...,olea of A9A or
Clrl.,l"9 recorCI. WII1Qu9hby I nsu••nce ,
1624
Main
St. ,
Buffalo,
N .V.
IIIS.,.IOO, M on. -Fri ., 9-1 p .m . S al
.-2o. m .

TAAVf:LERS
196-4
l n t• n atlon•l
HerY•ter
St~·Van .
S I. .Pl ll'lr...
per\eleo, Insulated . 1970 factory . - .,...,.. 1 650 Ot best Off., . 8 32·31144

TEIT ...
~;l...
tY

You mron yuu haven '1 bmw~d

CO ME HEAR a bovt Baha 'u' llah
Battal wond Faith! Am . 2 62, Norton.
E"•Y Frtce.y , 8- 12 p .m . or ull
lll7-32S:t.

1969 VOLKSWAGON - clean, new
.,..nt, 45 ,000 miles. Or191nal owner .
C-1111 bet__, 1 130 - 4 :30. 197-0751 ,
83S..636.

TWO
TIRES,
6 .95•14,
c ondition . C all US-5371 .

1966 CHEVROLET oower st-ln9
autom•llc, hNt. raolo, Just Inspected
This ~· Is c r.an. SO,OOO orl9fnal mil..
Renonable . C a ll 1136-45 11

·--------------·
I
;,1

MaY y041, a.ll y041r life, flnCI
YOII"ii machine l.,.,s the rl9ht l'leltnt
M.S .

FURNITURE - two Clr-", one w ith
mirror. 131·2144 .

FOR SAlE

$U MMEA AflO/Ot f• ll - 2 bloc k' from
~mpus .
Larfte 3-baorc:.om Astt for
Mike. 8 33-4760 atter noon .

suzv,

BE 'UTIFUL wOOd Oftk . Mu.st Mil.
Call 134~562 or 137-4070 any time.

RIDE N EEDED to C alifornia or w ..t
Coast Anytime • "., May Ill Will
Share
drlvln9 ~nd e11pen~
C ~ll
Crtrtstopnw 1137-391S.

FULL OR PArt -lime lObi a"allat»e with
a.s111ne 1 n&lt; C all At1 886- 2094 or
Mllce 83S-521 S . MMIIn&lt;JS a t e ltecutlve
Aaml&gt;da Inn .

1 am a saint . I can be cruel, but make
me be gentle to you. Curt.

FIS HER
XP-7B tcJeMc.er systems,
fac;tory Milled Ft.lhet S-yeer gua&lt;'antM,
12" woofer, 2&lt;5" ml(l,a,.., :t-3"
I - t e r. Only 1 100 N . C all AI
135-6637.

PA NAMA CITV,
Panama
AI.,_,
wantecJ. L . .vlf\9 about May 10 Reply
Bo• 34 S pectrum .

STAAT 1 2 p..- hO&lt;Or salary plus bonus.
W Mtt 4 -a p . m . w . .koays ; 10· 2 p . m .
Saturdays.. C all 13S-3ao3 or TF!Hl-402.

o ne.

U6·7J~9.

klu.

PART TIM E -stu«Mnt - oot1erlnt and
.,.,ands.. 12.00/hr. Call 8112 ·310 1 for
AC)CH)inl,_,l.

PERSONAL

200 ca: OHC Ouc.atl motorcycJ• , r-.
two ,....mets with ll)ut)f)._,

-t.

14 CARAT cha•m brACelet, Frl night In
Tow., ufeterla aftet mcwle. C all 471S .
LOST• Ptastlc ~ holdlf\9 " ari 041J
IO's . Ptease ~~~ 133 .. S40 If found .
R E WARD.

o.taw••·

Roo.MTU WANTED
ROOMMATE WANTED : O ne mAle
roommate wanted to t summ• months
Own bedroom In lu•urloon ao.vlmanl
- fl....mlnute w ..ll from umpus. Jull
What y-'W been waltlnt lor. C aii.Jelf
131-4113 or 137-4183.
FEMA LES t o sub-let t:Mt
hOUM
on WIM9Ur for
$-4$/ mo. plus utllltl81 . C all

beautiful
SUMITMf .
837~063 .

SI NGLE or c_pupte to snare apattmen t
lor summer . Moelefn, co,_tenl, c iOM
lo campUs. R-onal)le renl . 136-2499
SINGLE BEDR O OM In a four-room
apt . Avallat:Me now . C all 8311 -21 44
UAGENTI
NI CE PEOPLE need tw o roomm.t• lo
share OU&lt; hG&lt;~w . 94 Oly mo~&lt; . Own
rooms.. Furnkhecl. I SS +.Com. over or
C.ll 19+93$9,

,---ovERSEAS sruov--,

"S I G H G 0 N E"
A Rap By
Michael Steven Levinson

WEDNESDAY
April 26th at
2:00 - 4:00p.m.
Con ference Theatre
PnHt&gt;"t~d by

UUAB COFFEEHOUSE

I AI

Otdsbury

I Educateon ,
I EnaJ,Ind Fall

Collqe

or

t.hn c hes t~r.

197.:!

semcstet .

I

1
1

I
I
I For juniors and scneor&amp; with I
I educatio n majors or mutors. I
: Courses, classroom observateon :

I and
i ndependent
study I
1 nulable.
I
Off't« of Onneas
I
1
Academic Proanms
:

1

Dadhne May 1st.

I

'---~!.!2!.~~~~---'

Runs on a Premium Blend of rock.
And you can hear the difference
on WGR/F M . stereo 97 ..
a careful blend of golden old ies with
the best of what's new in rock

�137/ MO - OWN R O OM . 10·mln. hllch
to u .s . Now o r June lSI. S umme and
fall . 832· 9 760 .
O WN ROO M
c4rnpus, s s o
8.f2· 125 6 .

mala. S·m tn. f r o m
+, Start May 1. Call

MALE R OOMMA T E for tna 5u m mar.
O wn ro om (fu rnlsnac:l) . Ftva-mlnuta
wal k fro m campus. O n ly SSS. Call
836- 8429.
1·2·3 ROOMMATES for su m mer /fa ll.
M ain-Fillmore area. $65 wl!n u tilities.
C all 834~66.

2 FEM ALE roommat es . Own room~.
150
plus utilities. N eat
cam pus,
~paclo us house. Really n lca. C all Ruth
or Gayle 831-405 2 .
ROOM M A T E W ANT ED to share house
for the summer. 10 minutes from
campus. Call Joel. 688·955 1.
fHREE FEMALES wanted to snare
t,uge n ouse on Amhar~t. Fall semester
- two bed rooms .an d 5tud y. Avail able
- rent $53. Call Bonnie, Fran, Elissa.
832 · g420.
2 ROOM MATES wanted. Share very
large bed room. Furnished . 10 minutes
to campus. Rent
reasonab le. C all
837·g697.
FEMALE ROOMMATE w anted for
summer A N D FALL - own room,
lO· mln. w al k ing d istance. Call Judy or
Margie 837· 0 4 56.
TWO FEMALE transfers need place to
snare wltn otner~ for fall n .. r
campus, own rooms d esired; call Laurie
831 · 2660;
or
call
collect
Ruth
212· TY2·0512 .
ROOMMATE W ANTED, May 15
Sept. 1. Own room . Furnished . 1 blcx.k
from
campus.
Rent
negottabUI
831 · 2282, 83 1· 2284, 831-2370.
ROOMMATE WANTED summer
and tall . 10-mln. walk to campus. $33
mo. +. Call 836- 2423.
ROOMMATEwanted for summer. Own
room. Close to umpus. Call Laurie
U31 -a073.

837· 32 09.
O N E F EMALE roo mmate wlntac:l t o
1hara e xtra-large attic roo m ; 'h b l ock
fro m campus. Call 837·2846,

I NTE REST ED In 901119 to Munich f o r
t he O lympic gam• this summer? F or
In formatio n , phone 833-463 11.

ROOM FOR 3 or 4 llltOC)Ia. Mld~ay­
Auoust. FumiShact. Rant neeot latlla, 10
mi nutes t o ampus. Call 837-9697.

SUMMER O NLY , 1 65/m o . O alawlfa
o ff K enm ore. O wn room. 83 1·4 096
after two.

A U T O RADI O S and tape&amp;. SalK and
Mnrlcoa, 10"' d isco u n t w ith this ed.
G rupp 8rCH. 877-2250.

PA LAC E $3!5 par pefSon, Main a nd
Merrimac,
for
t wo.
Phone
K en
835·5 286 .

ROOM MATE WANTED for f urnished
for summlf ( option t or
fall) . Rent 1 70 + util i ties. L ocation :
Main Street, across from U niversit y.
Own
room. Call John or O.Va
837-2471 .

AUTO I N SURAN CE - specializing tn
young drivers • n o c har9A f o r acci dents
o r t r affic vtoleUon s, Immed iate FS·l.
Save u p t o 1100/yaar . 6 8 3..0022.

F OU R -8 ED R OOM apart ment. Close to
cam pus. C l ll B o b or Sot 83 1 -40 85.

.apa~tmant

OR
FEMALE
roommates
M ALE
w anted for summer, S35 + u t ilities,
ow n room, Lln wood..Summar area,
8 8 6-498 5.
SUMMER ROOMMATES needed, 2
large b edrooms, l minute w alk from
campus. Call Cat ny 831 · 3152, Steve
831 ·328 4 .

MISCELLAN EOUS
COUNCIL OF HISTORV stu d ents
w o1nts graduate senool c.atatogs o t all
sorts. R ather than tn r o w yours away.
don•t•
them t o us " ' Rm. 202
Olafandor I so that people may use
wnlle
h assallng
over
post-college
decisions. Help out fellow students .
FREE KITTENS - two mates, one
female, p.art Persian, 9 weeks old . Call
684 · 3578 .
'63 CHEVY w agon
groat buy• $100 .
Summer roommate
own room. Great
hOUse,
ChNp. 1962 SAAB, $100 .
881 · 167.1.
TYPING, experienced, nur U .B . $ .40
per pa9A . 834 -3370. Fast sarvtce .
INTERESTING sates work . Part-lime
or full-time. Any .area. Help yourself
•nd tne envoronment al the nme tome.
Ptoone 832-66 10 weekdays.
YOUR CAR h no more aependallle
t h &lt;Jn Its matnten.ance . Call 1n&lt;lependant
F o reign Car Service . 839·1850.
IF VOU DEPEND on your c.ar. you
can depend on lfld ependent Furelgn
Car Servi ce. 839· 1850.

A NTI Q U ES and mooarn f urniture,
u r am lcs, china, a te. See Sid at
Yesterday &amp;. T omorrow Shop, 1439
Hartel Ave.

SUB·lET APARTMENT
HOUSE IN b . .utlful Tonawanda- sun
and fun wltn f our bedrooms and lar!)fl
l&gt;.tCI&lt; yar d. Pool and p.ark nNrb\1 with
ten nis facllllleoJ handy, Call Mike
838· 1 167
or
83 1· 2897
or
Frac:l
831·2453 .
THRE.E ·BEDROOM
apartment,
5 -mlnute walk hom campus. Fully
l urnlshecl. Call Howle 838· 116 7, Bob
831 ·3963 or Larry 834~61.
HOUSE - five-bedroom completely
furnished . Gr o ups or lndhllduats. June
- August , 5 45 e4ch . Near Allenhurst
On
Niagara
Falls .
Really
nlc81
831 · 3556 .
5
BE.DROOMS
on Amherst
ano
Parkslde (across from Delaware Patl&lt;)
for summer months. Call 874-6057 .
BEAUTIFUL
Jv, bedroom house
available June I thru Sept. 1. On
Lisbon, S·mln. walk hom umpus.
Price negotiable. C all835-612/
COMPLETEL V FURNISHED • lar9e
2- bedroom
apartment.
walkong
dlst.ance to c.ampus, on Main S t
Available May 20 - August Rant
nacjOtlabla. 834 ·97 39 .
FOUR ·BEDROOM
HOUSE
FOR
FIVE S· mlnute walk to ca,rpus : will
rent Individually or 9r o ups
May
Sept . I. $40/mo 838-4576 .

TUTORING
In
French
Contact Murial 873 3250 ,

4 ·BEDROOM apartment, IO· mtnuto
walk to carnpus. Cheap! M•y I~
AU9
ll
831 3962.
831 ·2~50,
831 -2174 .

TWO ROOMS sublet on Lisbon,
watklnQ dlnanca. Rent negotiable. Deb
832· 3844,
Sue
832·54a0,
Robbl
832·0756.

VIDEO COMMITTEE m•llng tonlljht,
7 : 00
In
Room
262
to dttcuu
UniverSity
~Ideo
system . All o~re
lnvltac:l .

I
TO 6-beclrooms avall.able. Two
kltcnens, tw o bathrooms. 15 ·minute
walk
to campus. C all
831 -3862,
83 1· 3g5 7 . Rent nego tiable.

TWO MINUTES walk from campus,
own room In a beautiful apartment.
Call 836· 45 1 1 a f ter sllc p.m

DRIVER wttn •an na.dac:l to nelp
someone move April 30 , Will p ay C all
Carol 837· 0go7 .

ROOM M ATE
WANTED,
t.mata,
5 minutes walk, mOdern apt. for fall,
wtnltr
1972-73.
Call
831 · 3592,
831 · 3584 .

EXPERIENCE
people :
come
to
Psycllom.tt,
Wednesday
3-6
p .m .,
Norton C.afeterl.t 122 .and TnursdaV
7 · 10 p . m . Norton 232

FREE
MAY
RENl !!!
Modern,
atr· conolttoned,
fully
c;:a rpatad,
dtsnwasner, wastier &amp; dryer, 10-mlnute
w•tk, rent nego tiable . Room tor 1·2 .
837 ·2154 .

GIRLS WANTED to snare .apartmen t
tor summer. Two blocks from campus.
~~5 / month. 837- 3757, 831 ·3582 .

POLITICS
ALREADVI
You bet .
Come work l or JOhn Phelan In tne
New York State Senate r•ce. Support
the man tnat suppor1a&lt;l t8 . year-old
vote . Call 842-6095 Asl&lt; for Pao o r
Elinor .

ONE FEMALE roommate, own room,
lurntsnad, 1 63/mo. 10- mln. ride from
campus.. Call 833·0204.

LOOKING FOR cheap apartment close
to campus f o r summer an&lt;I/Or fall!
L.arge kllchon, dining room, llvlflg
room, attoc
Own room an&lt;l onty
'37 . SO • uhillleJ. 838 ·a586
F EMALE ROOMMATE nee&lt;led tor E
Northrup apartment summer and fall
C all
Meryl
837 · 0456
or
Joan

Flllmcwa arN . M ay Sept . Rant
neeottabla. Call L inda, 834-6466 .

t7!5-!i 7 5 4 .

EXPERT
.ovallo~ble .

TVPING ,

experienced.

term

papers,

etc . Call833 · 1597 .
PROFE.SSIONAL TVPIN.G done In
nome. $ SO/ P.t&lt;Je. Formerly o perated a
orotesstonal
typ1n9
servic e . 229A

CHEAP . 3-beclroom furn ished apt .
IO·mlnutc walk to campus. Available
May 15 C•ll83l-4081.
AIR CONDiT I ONED apt. lor I or 2,
t w o blocks rrom campus. Summer . Call
832 ·3844 .
836 · 1 102
Robin
831 · 2184 .
Ell~

FEMALE
sublet
May
O NE
September .
Mooern
•partm onl
C ompletely lurntsned Own r oom near
campus . Call 8 31 ·386 I
5 BEDROOM
h o use
Avaolable
MAY
I 0.

to
Very

sublet
c n eap

********************

Stephen Stills

THR EE B ED R OOM S cheap ; cl ose
(acr CH$ the st reet). fomf o rtabla. Ju ne
- August . Call 8 3 ·3180, 83 1...1186,
8 31· 30 9 2 .
BEAUTIFU L apartment , vary close to
cam p us, 1-4 people, ran t negotiable,
summer sublet. C all 8 32 -84 7 3.
HOUSE FOR l or •. 5 min. f rom
umpus, June Ht t o Sept. Ht. Call
Lester or Howle .at 832-538 I . Very
114190tlabte .
FEMALE. ROOM M ATE wanta&lt;l lor
June 1. O w n room In house, 10
minutes from camp us. Call 834· 1993
anytime.
PR INCETON COURT to sublet June Auvust . Five-minute wall&lt; to U.B One
bedroom furnished, 1125. Call Steve
832-6817 .
BEAUTIFUL slK-bedroom, 2-famlly
nouse .
Fully
furnished,
carpet ed,
washer and dryer, garage, dar k room ,
Low rent• Summer only. 833-88 12 .
2 BEDROOMS, 3 people, !1-mln . Walk
to U .B . $50 each . Caii833 · 17J7. Paul ,
Jerry.
3·8EDROOM APT . o n Englewood .
Available Juno 1st. l-minute walk . Call
831 ·2465, 831 -2755 .
3·8EOROOM
nouse to sublet . 5
minutes from c.ampus
Rent very
reasonable . Call Lorin 837 ·0301.
BEAUTIFUL apartment available June
l SI 1111 August 31. Fout bedrooms.
Close tn campus Pr ice nego tiable . Cllll
83 1·2261 / 2259
MODERN FURNISHED two·beclroom
~•• -c onditioned apartment. ten -minute
wall\ Dlshw.asl'ler, carpeting. Juno
Aug , Nacjollabte, Call Helen, D o nn.t ,
Cneryl. 835 · 7093 .
1·5 PEOPLE NEEDED t o r spacious
S - bedroom
nou".
C ompletely
furnished
w / pl.tno .
Rent
VERV
negotiable
5 lf1Jr1utes 10 Cllml)uS.
FREE utilities June !IIIlo Auguu
831 -4060, 831 · 3570 .
3 -BEDROOM apt . Alr -(; nndlttonl ng,
porch . Main/ Fillmore, $ 150/ m o. C•ll
832-&lt;l814al\er IOp.m .
ONE-BEDROOM
aoertment,
10
minutes walk to cempus FurniShed,
$110/montn plus utilities. Available
May 10 - September I Call Sco\1 a\
838· 51101 .
FABU LO US

1ournm.er

M O D E RN
•ot.
f or
.3 bedroonu, 5
C all Judy 831 -3584,

•v•tt•bfe,

minutes walk
831 3592 .

MAY9th at 8:00p.m.
- BUFFALO MEMORIAL AUDITOR IUM A special 2% hour concert, featuri ng all those musicians just named .

EXCELLENT TICKE ISnow
,.

available at:

University of But. Ticket Office, Norton
Buffalo State Ticekt Office
Buffalo Festival Ticket Office
Falls Tickets - Haberle Plaza

f u rni shed
T HREE-BEDR OO M
apartment fro m May o r Ju ne thru
Saptam-. $120 . T erry or Jesse
8 73-6174 . Thtnk you. K anm OI'a Dal•ware area .
apt .
to su b t•t for
3 -BEDROOM
sum mer. R aason.ab le. Ja5osa or Terry
8 73 -6 174.
FEM A L E to Share apt . w ltn an other
for summer. O w n room . Walking
dlsUo nca , $50 . Wendy 836·51 69.
4-BED R OOM
a p.a rtmant,
1-mtnute
from campus. M ay - Sept., rent and
length o f sta y IS ver y negotiable. C • ll
Julian 831·23 60 .
APARTMENT to sub-tat Starin
Hartel area. 3 bedrooms. May 15
Sept. 15. 837-6575 .
4-BEDROOM apt . basement , garage,
for summer. Soft fu r nitu r e. Main at
ta lkabte.
N orm
Flltmor a.
Rant
832·5888 .
3 ·BEOROOM- house furnished, S 120 •
month, S minutes from camp us.
Available M1y 15 . 832·3745.
3 -M ONTH - bedroom, living rooms,
kitchen. All lor $62 .50/ mont h In
Elm w oOd are• nur Brlnl&lt;s . Call Tom ,
886-4252 .
2 FEMAL.ES wanteo to sub-tel 2
tooms tor summ111 One from Ma)l l
August 31 and one from July 1 - Aug .
31. Call 834 · 1993 .anytlme.

HOUSE In glori o u s Tonawandt to
sublet for 4 people . Pool and Park
nearby. Plenty of sun and fun . C all
Mike at 838·1167 or 831 · 2885 or Fred
It 831 -2453.

5 BEDROOM ; furnished; 5 -mtn. wal"'
to ctmpus Call Jeff 839-4223 .
ROOM In apt. to be sublet . Available
June to August. Rant negotiable. Apt.
o n Amherst . Call 834 · 7785 .
NICE
FURNISHED
apartment
Kenmora· Detaware arN . Mav 1111 Sept ,
RNsonable
rent
Three-bedroom .
Alysia 876~020 .
6-6EDROOM house on EngtawoOd.
Avalltbla June HI. 2-mlnute walk .
Price
negotiable.
Call
831 -27S3,
831 · 2568

APARTM ENTS WANT ED
COUPLE n . .ch unturnt• hed apertman\
wltn stove, ref rl9er etor, near ue .
Junet.Juty J. 1150 or undar . 634-6548
after 6 p .m .
SENIOR and gr • d deoJperatel)l need
2-bedroom .apartment near campus CH
Ridge L N . Helen 831 -3970 .
TWO FEMALES desire 2-bedroom apt .
on west Side tor summe• ano fall
8 3 7- 1208.

J -BEDROOM
apt
too
suo-nmer
Avai lable
to r
3
or
4
peopl~
Baotev Ker1&gt;1nqt o n
area
F u rn,.heO
$130
pC!r
month
Nog otlabl~
831 · 3664 , 831 J6b6 , 836 -3 136.

REWARD tor 1 be&lt;lr oom o r
studiO IPt
lor
M•Y
C all
837 ·6848 .

-apartment

BE.AUTIFUL 4· beclr o om
l o r sum m eo . 5 -mlnute wal k - Price
negoll•bl e. Call83 1-2270 or 831 ·3987 .
SPAC IOUS HOUSE, live be&lt;lrooms
av•ll•blt . L ovinll room, dan. Main -

large
Julie

WANTED : 3 -badroo m API . I n UB area
ror next Sept . Call Howle 838 -4892 .
~•Et.. Pr 1 need a p11 ce t o stay fo r tne
sumrner
and
t.all.
C all
S har o n
836-2304.

WANTED : )·bedroo m apt on U. B .area
lm next Sept . C All Howle 8 38 -~89 2
TWO OR l h•ee people need • vac•nt
Ap.trtment lor Mav and Ju no. CAll Su e
838 · 277S .
FEMALE traMfa r st u cton t needs apt
r o o Soot . C all S herryl 837 · 1384 KfiBP
try l n9.

THE ALBUM- MANASSAS,
THE CONCERT-

HOUSE FOR any num- of people.
F ive bedroom&amp;. Close. Rant n19otlable.
S tave 8 35~015. 8111 8 3 1·295 g ,

TWO·BEOR OOM apt. 5 mon . walk
!rom campus . Fully turn oshed . C all
Ellen 837 · 3741, Mona 837 ·2 195

********************

a beautifully
recorded double Lp, featunng the likes of CHRIS HILLMAN (from the Byrds).
AL PERKINS, JOE LALA. DALLAS TAYLOR, PAUL HARR IS AND FUZZY
SAMUE LS. It will floor you. On ATLANTIC RECORDS &amp; TAPES now
availab le at your local record outlet.

2 ROOMMAT ES wan ted fo~ apartment
In M ain FlllmOI'e araa d u r i ng the
summer. C all 8 3 7·268 6.

TERM
PAPERS
Researc hed .

wnt t en
o~nd
pro fesst o nally
type d
All
writers have! .t rntntrnUtll liS.
BA t.letuec ln ,to~lil Se rvt \e

CALL TOLL FREE

Or,. w.ov l roiT• Jf K l l)ntl&lt;'"· Paro ~
t,r ''"

11

n' rrr

RrlifllU

l••ll 'It 195

t)y 70 I J lld 74 7 Jets
',t ,,,, l fl' IWI' t t!nr". ft' Cl11r

800.638..0852

HtiPr

11,,1!()1 !1 I IYI\ t' IIJ ,t ft1t lH(Jt•n(\,
f/('1. y&lt;J•o · 11•' o tl w' ,,.r f,Hf", In
,pel ttlfiJ\lJtllou t t 11ror'~' L''"'"'nrrt
.,, • 11· prl' .• 1·•·&lt;1 ,lr•li rlo•p,Oi turt'\
t:f)tr1 C1111tlnn L.,ry nw.JI , ,tiHf h-_•r
~ r'IVP r Avoo{l l uRhE"r "-trnomer
r.tl•• IJy bOJUktnf: n&lt;)W ALO flt&gt;:lol•.
I J lt•l Av ov. Zuro• to. I qnkl.rlt,
FINne· All ('II~ .... ncl o t her~
For tull onformatoon caii M
(212) 986·8980
or maot coupon

-------------NatronaI Union of Students Travel
S"rvoce, Inc.

!O l

(anywhere •n the ~: uunt ry fo t
llllo rtnatiun and rat es)
or
t Jll t'o ll ct:t (30 I) 656-55 70
EDUCATIONAl

A~UARC H ,

INC.

~53 0 Wisc onsm Av e .• Su1tc I b'IO

Wa shington D.C

2001 5

ALFA ROMEO
•FERRARI
• MASERATI
Sales • Service • PaNJ
USED CARS

4 bHI5t , N Y NV 10017

--BOBCOR-Motor Cars. Ltd.
13

--------------

197 4 Eggert (Near Bailey)
834-7350

., WednesdP.y , 26 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen
\ t.- I
1'1 0~ (1,u-'9fl)l· ,
.r II • "I' _ I
1 ~:;,

�Announc:ernents
The History
0epu1menl ha deulled ~rse
descriptions for &amp;he fall In Room 231 DlefUidorf. ScudeniS
wtl'o piM~ to ulce m~or semlnus In the fall 5hould
pa-realster for them this week Mid next In Room 23 I
Diefendorf.
The Norton House Council ~nnounces th.u ~tutlns
todiy both Rooms 334 U~d 337 are iviilible In Nonon fo r
purposes of st udying for exims. Check it the lnformi t lon
Desk for other rooms iS they ~re m1dt IVlllllble.
The Beh.11vlor Modlflutlon Study Group is p resen ting
their Second Annu •l 8th.11vlor Modlfk,.ion Work~ op on
'-by 5 lit the C hildren's Psyc hiat ric Unit, West Seneu S ure
School Realstr~tlon is $). C.11ll 83 I ·240 I for realstrlltion
lnformlltlon .md formi. Open to st udents .11nd tht generil
public.
Club Sllverwheeh will hold its 4nnu~l " Wheelch.lltr
Footbill G•me' ' tomorrow mght ~~ 7 · JO p m In the llYm lit
Kensington High School.
C AC BuffliiO Su te Hosplul need~ vuiiJnte~r ) for
summer progflm. Ple4se lOme to the C AC offllt. Room
210 Norton, fill out t he blue ' heel dntl put It tn the Uutf•lo
Sute mllilbo ....
The UB Outina Club wrll h1v&lt;" d xetter•l meellrrl(
tornonnw "' 7 p m In Koom 2~-1 Nnrtun All memher, who
wrll bt here du11n,~t the ,ummer, plu~ •II proptr wr\hllll( tn
110 111 the Adrrrrrul•• 1., o~ rt ur11ed trJ •llen!l

A UUAB VkMo meellfll will be held tomorrow •t 7
p.m. In Room 262 Norton to dlswu i student televiJion
sutton, AliNe Invited.
ICundallnl Yop beainnlna tliSses in exercise ;and
medlutlon are belna held d1lly at 7 p.m. lit 196 Linwood
Ave, C•ll 881..0505 for lnform.ttlo n.
The North Buff.alo Vouch Center. ton ted at 216
Burd, Is ill cen ter for high school·ilge people lind need s
volunteers to help In vulous ilreu - org;anlzing sports
~ r ivlties, su pervision, discussio n 1roups. If Interested, coati
8 33-38 33 Mondlly , Tuesday , friday or Sund1y night from
7 I 0 p .m • .lind iSk for S huon .
Office hours for pre-reabtrlltlo n ;md permission of
Instructors for Women 's Studies Collep will be held"' 108
Wlnspeu Ave, (8 31 · 3405, 3406) on April 26, 11 , 28 .and
M.ty I •nd 2.
The Underaroaduoatc Socloloi!Y Association w ill h;IVe ll
mee trnK tull•y ~~ 2:30p.m tn Room 42, 4224 Ridllt Le.i
RCC 2 10 Wilderness S urv ival wtfl be held from June
30 on A hrm in We~t Vtrgonoa. I or Informa tion, t all
Ro~&lt;.hel C.t rso n &lt;.ollel!e,l!'ll 11'2 I
l'l

Real seer to voce by •tHen tee b.11llot. r he tleadltnc "
M.ty 20 Re~¢"1er on p~rent'' \OirnJI dhtrtcl .and hrrng proof
ol Age . For lht' prrrtl.try, vuu mtl\ t vote rrt p.lftnl', dl\l rt•l
ollltt

~ports InformatiOn

Thr numbc-r' 1111 the m.1p nl Nt.'w Yor~ \t,tll'
corrc\pond w thr number ot thr Av.cmhl~ d"lrtll' of the·
assemblymen lr~tcd below lilt• Spt'&lt; trum UI)(C' Jll 'tUdenl\
to
corre~pond
1n "Hllnt• w.ry wtlh thcrr dc(.tcd
rrprc~cnl o~lrvc~ ·" ~'"&amp; lhcm lo ""'\' .tgJtn\t
'&gt;c.:hermcrhorn b1ll 1u Jboh\h m.rndJtury Icc\
I Perry B. Ourye•. Jr
2 Peter 1. Conl t~n
3 C ~rt e) A, Jer~bel&lt;
4 Rnbttt C. Wert t
S Wllll.11 m L. B urn~
6 John G M cC~rthy
1 JosephM Reilly
8 Mutln Gtnsb t rl!
9 Philip B Hule y
tO Millon Jonu
11 Sunley Huw ood
11 Joseph M. MUIIOIU
11John'i Thorp,Jr
14 Arthu r J. Kremer
15 E.ll
16 Georac j . Fllrrell, Jr .
17 John E. klnpton
18 Irw in J . Lande~
I 9 Herberr A. Posn er
20 jose ph I Kuntem•n
2 1 Mut in Rodell
22 John T . G alt.taher
2l leonud Prlct Suvislo. y
24 Arthur 1. Cooperman
2S Eminuet R. Gold
26 Guy R Brewer
17 Herbert J. Miller
'18 Alfred D. Lerner
'29 Frederick D Schmidt
30 John T Hack
31 joseph F Lou
32 John G. Lo presto
H Joseph S C.tlbrtrt.t
34 Rosemoaty R , Gunrrona
3S C he,ter J Str~uh
36 Peter G. Mtrt o
37 S.t mutl 0 Wrt&amp;ht
38 Vito T B•llr)C.t
}9 St.tnley Ftnk
4{) Alfred A L~nu
41 Sunley S teinf1uC
42 Brian Sh•roff
43 Georse A. Clncotu
44 Mel vin li Mlllrr
45 Stephen J. Sol•u
46 Leon•rd M. Simon
47 Siilvu orr J, Gnecn
48 Leon.11rd SllvermM&gt;
49 Domtnitk L Dt( •rto
SO Robert F Kellv
51 Vlncem Rr ldo
S2 Joseph M M4ftu,cell o
53 Fr•nk J Verdrr•me
54 V.tnder L Butty
55 Thomil$ R. F(lrtune
56 C .. vln Wlllrams
S7 Huvey L Strthin
S8 Lucio F . Russo
S9 Edw.ud I Am.t r"'
60 Louis DeS•I vo
61 Anthony I .Oif.t lco
62 Andrew J, Stein
63 Wflll.tm F. P.tss.it nnante
~ Petet" A. Betle
6S Rfc~rd N. Gollfmd
66 Anconlo G. Olivterl
67 Albert H. 81umen th•l
68 F111nk G . Rossett i
69 Franz S. Leichter
70 Hllf;an E. J;ack
71 S(ephen S. Gottlieb
72 Georae W. Miller
73 John J . W:alsh
74 Mllrk T. Southall

w:.,..r

15 Harry Kraf

lh1•

76 Seymour Po•ner
77 ArmAndo Monuno
78 Lt•ul' Nlnr
79 M•nuet ~Amu~
80 FC!rdln.1nd j . Mondello
8 I Al•n H oc.hbe•K
81 A tcx •nder Ch.ltt.tn~u
83 Burton G . H ~cht
84 Oliver G Koppell
8~ Anthony I Mercorell.;
86 Anthony ) . St ell~

In

Thom~

I

l o~ph

R.

The Krlshnl Vop Society Is holdlna Bufbto's first
Tr•nscendental Fine Arts Exhibition tomorrow , Pteue
contact the society for funher lnform•tlon.
The Dep11tment of Music will present Joel Ch;adabe,
direc tor of the Electronic Music; Studio &lt;~t the Sute
University &lt;It AlbM~y, In ;a program enti tled , " Daisy : A.
Concert Sc;ulplure" On M;ay I at 8 p.m . in Baird Hli\J, Room
100. The work will be performed In half-hour runs ~'ll(een
8 p.m. lind 10:30 p.m. Tickets for the perform;anQe,
OlvOlllllble at Norton HOlll Ticket Office, &lt;rre $ 1.50 for gencl;al
idmlsslon, $ 1 for f;aculty and suff Olnd $ .SO for stud~nli.
Ticket holders m;ay utend one or sever ;at perform&lt;rncts..
John Gudner, founder of C ommon C~use , writ be
spu klng .tl t he Puce Bridge Exhtbrlion Center tomnrrow
nlghl 4t 8 p.m. Free bu)e~ ro the telture will be leav ing t he
front of Norton Hall at 7 p .m .
Si&amp;h Gone . " A poetry redding l or afficianado&gt; only,''
Mithael S tephen Levinson, Conference Theater, Wed nc~ll.ty
1·&lt;1 p.m
The Council of History S tudenh rs )ponso11ng ll pArt Y
tomorrow •t 3:30 p m. At the b~tl.y.trd o f W tn~pea' 112
6rer, h.1mburgn~. ~004 av4rl.tblc tor tree SIUdent&gt; lind
ldtUIIy .re rnvoted to •llentl

What's Happening ?

I ud ~ y :
V 4r,rty
h.l\~bJII
Olfublche,rtlcr,
St
Hurr .tvtr)lrHC, f'erllc 1-ocld, I p.m , tUnto r Vdi,IIV bJ&gt;eb4ll dl
£ Ill' l lirtlll\tJfltl y ( rillr.l(t, I (l ,ftl ; YM\IIY tr.tlk .tt Oroc:kp&lt;lrt
'&gt;t• lr wtth Rub•·•h Wnll·yMt, •I p '"
frtd~v · V'""'Y bJ,rb~ll 41 '''dttl"" · 7 111 r• "' ·• vd•~•lv
11 ,, ~ • rill !reid .ot lh&lt;' Perrn Kel.- y,.
S.tturtl•y V .tr \rl~ h4\l'h•ll .rt .,, , .., "'" I 11"' • 1urr1111
vJI\tl'f h.t,ChJII
l•rnr''""'n C rnnmvrrotv, I p "' , VM\11~
lr,, l. Jl '&gt;IINY AlbAny UniYtr\11\1 l cnlt'r mt·el, I Ill p.m ,
oluh trrw •• ( 11rr11t• tu ull olle~;c wtth I .Htt\lu'
~urrd.ty V .tl\lt y ll1~dJ1II .tl t\rrll AIH \tdl~
I he Student Athletic Revtt'w Oo•rd wrll ntt'rl tllllrl(lrr
111 fott)trrrr JU~ NOttllll 11411
Ruiter huckey • clwrr w1ll 1 IIIIIOIIUI' "•lrllo.J.rv '" tile
M.t1n H•olty pJrl.rng lot Jt ICl · II),.'"

I """ NIIJ/1/ und I uq ·1110 f rwm(lh ul th•· Wt/1 pr~,ented by
!he t.r&gt;urh.ll ol I lr)torv !&gt;tutlr:nl\, 7 !() n m , Ac hhnn 5 ,

rr r1 c '' • !lo~umento~ry on tht' N.11t te11o r w'cc m
r\f)CLtJIIy tho· tOnter"r•twn L.tmp .. , Jn!l the nlhrt '' J
p1Uf141(4rHl4 presen141t&lt;H1 rrl thr I 4 \4 Nuremhrrg pJrly
r•llv cmboJvrng lh•• mdttrr thrmrs uf N•11 ntuD.II(dll!l•
I'IX't rY rt A!I tttl(' l.h4rle' M.lrttn , wonne r of the- 11:170 Be-,
Hohn ;\w4rcl , wrll fi!Acl lrurrr 111, purtry, X fUll
t.unfercnu I ht.tl cr pre~rrlrd hy th1· O•'JIAtlrnent ol
I fll(lt'oh dlld the I ncnd' ot the t r~t l.wood Mem ofiJI
I ibr.rry
I v·· lll fl '71· P•·to·r ll.llbelt..A, Un(' ul ( UICJ(IC' IC Atlrllr,
tn!lependent ltlmrn•kel'o, wtll \llt'l' ll MU.I d l\lU" ht)
wurl., II p .m ., Alh rtl(ht· Kno\ A rt (.,JIIIfV
I r·cturc Mr YddlUV C)rldnd . ' ''•elr ,(.!1111,11 111 rc.,o!ltnc&lt;! •I
lht Jewrsh &lt;.enter wolf \fiCdk nn "hr .tt•l 411t) lhl' Srv&lt;·ro
Arh," J 4.JO p .m . Norton II JII

l hur'd"y, 1\pnt 17
'lctntnAr P rul D f B ruit-~ ul lhc Utp•r ttncnr ot l:hcm~&lt;•l
( "ktnre llnl! , (. tem\Urt Uru~ rl\ rtv '\y,tcm' \tudoe' lrr
tltr Mrlfll&lt;.lflU141ton" lp ,m , AdiC\Ufl 112

Mcl nern~v

88 G enrae l V.an Cou
89 Alvin M. Suchln
90 Gordon W. B urrow,
91

An Evenlna of The:ater aJven by the Unlvenlty DUlce
The:aler Workshop - S;aturd;ay at 8 p.m. M\CI 11 p .m. In
H,urlm;an Thuter. Entr1nce tlc;keiS are avlll;ablc free of
chuae it Norton Hall Tlc;ket Office.

Pr~nl

91 [dw41rd J. Meyer
93
94
95
96

Prrer R. Biondo
Euaene Levy
Oenj.amln A. Goln,.u
L•wre nce Herb\t
Willi s H . Stephen'
98 Emeel S. Be tros
99 H CIMk Bell
100 Cl.trente D l • ne
101 Netl W Kelleher
102 Thomlls W . Brown
103 rred G Field , lr
104 M.11r y Anne Krup\.11.
lOS Cl.ark C Wem ple
106 Fred Orums, Jr
107 Lllw rence E. C ~~r hell, I•
108 Andrew W. Ry.an
109 Glenn H. H.rrr\
I 10 Daniel R. H o~ley
t II Donald L TAylor
I I 1 Oruutd I Mitchell
I I 3 Edwyn E M••on
114 Rtch.rd A Bruw n
I IS Wllli.am R Sur,
116 John T Oudde y
I 17 Eow.,d f CrAwford
11 8 Leono~rd F. BersAnt
I t 9 H ym•n M Miller
I 20 EIJw•rd M. Krn\ell.i
121 Tho m.u J, Murphy
12'2 Lloyd Srephen Rifvrd, Jr
11l Kenneth!&gt; . Le.nure
I '24 F rancrs 1 BolAnd
12S Cun~t•n te E. Cuuk
126 L Rich•rd MushAII
I 27 Ch•rled D Henderso n
128 f rederltl. L Wo~rder
ll9 lu,peh C frnley
1 JO Don.1ld C Shoe m1 ker
ll t RAymond f . L til
132 Wllll.lm S. R o~nberg
1JJ runk A. Co~rro ll
I 34 Wl lllo~m M. Stei nfeldt
13S Dun W . Cook
I }6 l•mes L. Emery
137 Sum ner V Curoll
138 Rich.ud I Hog.lln
I 39 Michull McCIIt hy
140 l .tme1 T . Mcfa rl•nd
141 C hester R. H•rd t
142 Stephen R Greco
143 Arthur 0 . Eve
144 Albert 1. H•usbeck
14S fohn B. Lrs
146 Francis J. G riffin
l&lt;f7 Ronild H. Tilts
148 Frank Wa lkley
149 lloyd A. Russell
150 John W. Beckman

en

~EW YORK

ASSEMBLY

.

+

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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....

•.

In a surprile action, the state ~ate nanowly

THE
. pECTI\UM

S

State Uniwnity of New Yortt ft 8ufflllo

Vol. 22. No. 18

..

Monday,2.4 April 1172

State Senate
passes bill
abolishing all
mandatory fees

(jJ

CII . . . . . tlull ...., ( . . . IPf Ill. tit . . till)
boUeve Ceea an .... to '1laldble, c:iltl,.,.
.etmtiel to nda tile CXJCJDJJy... ....-...y ...........
he stated, ....,._. iaocmt cbildl• finearine ......

peued a bill lut Fdday to prohibit the trustee. of
thc,.Sta~ Univeliity from authorizing the ...ament

Ffnloo."

of a mandatory student activity fee at aD SUNY
campwea. Such action wu approved after more than
two houn of heated debate and delpite warnings
that it would destroy student activitiet.
Scheduled to come before the Aaacmbly
t&lt;&gt;metime tttia week, and sponsored by Senator
Richard£. Schermerhorn (R-Comwall) the fee ban
puaed by a 29 to 18 vote, the minimum needed in
the 57-man Senate. The deciding vote wu cut by
Senate Republican leader Earl W. Brydges who was
summoned to the legislative chambers. Senator
Schermerhorn and proponents of the bill argued that
student activity fees were being used to foster
!rtudent newspapen containing obscene and
pornographic material, to pay controversial speakers
and to provide bus transportation to anti-war rallies
in Washington.

Surpriled ~-.
A11o JllaruUnl to vote apinat the biD ate local
Aaemliyman Micb.ld McCarthy (D), Jama
Mcfarland (R), and Stephen R. Greco (D).
McCarthy explained that in order to have·any kind
of student activities, "you have to have mandatory
student feet. .. Ap:eeing with thk, Mr. Greco
remarked: '1'm with you all the way." While
Republican McFarland baa reservations about how
fairly and honestly the money iJ administered, he
hinted that he would oppoee it because some
method of collection is necessary. Additionally, he
feels that state guidelines governing student fees have
abolished much of their abuse and provides for some
accountability.
Reaction to the bill's pasage among legiala.ton,
students and admin.iatratora, bas been one o{
utoniahment. An legillators contacted reported that
they were greatly surprised by the biD and were not
acquainted with its specifies. ln addition, Marlc
Borenstein, chairman of the Student Aaociations of
the State Univenity {SASU), admitted the bill'a
passage came as a "complete and total surpr:ise" to
them. He explained that their legislative contacts in
Albany had assured them that the bill would never
make it to the Senate floor : ""We were ctisarmed and
not concerned about it ," Mr. Borenstein stated.

·And-American•
Remembered for his sole dissenting vote against
the 18-year-old amendment last year, Schermerhorn
said he opposed the mandatory fees because they
were administered by "the organized radical group."
According to him, "this money is used for anti-U.S.
propaganda, pornography, making donations to gay
Lib.''
Reports from the Albany S tudent Press
explained that Schermerhorn was especially incensed
over recent student demonstrations against the
Vietnam War escalation. AdditionaUy, they report
that Schermerhorn has criticized as anti-American
both publications and radio stations at the Albany
campus. Reportedly, Schermerhorn objected to the
publication of Sweet Fire and advertising for the
campus radio WSUA which proclaimed that at is "on
the left hand side of your dial."
Schermerhorn announced to the Senate that he
received letters from parents and veterans objecting
to the "anti-war profll{lity" M such media. He
explained that "'you can print all you want but don't
force people to pay ... It's demeaning to people to
support something that they don't agree with ."
Concluding his remarks, Schermerhorn stated : " l
wouldn't let my kids go to a school that publishes
papen like these."

Studeot support
Opponents of the biU, who numbered J8,
countered that the imposition of student actJvity
fees was voted on and approved by the students at
each campus and that the legislatu re would be taking
away their rights. At the State University at Buffalo,
the fee was overwhelmingly approved by a vote of
2605 to 455 in a student referendum conducted last
April. Additionally, Buffalo State CoUege voted 874
to 252 in favor of the mandatory fee.
Moreover, those Senators in favor of the fee
explained that it is used not only for campus
newspapers and speakers but also to support athletic
activities and ethnic, cultural and educataonal
programs. However, Schermerhorn contended that if
university officials felt that these and other activities
were needed, " they o ught to put them in their
budgets ''
Senato r Thomas lavern (R - Rochester) and
chairman of the Senate Education Commjttee,
charged his feUow RepubUcans of being emotional
about some of the happenings on campus and said
this often resulted in "irrational things." He
continued that students as part of a coUege
community have a right to tax themselves.
Bill's future uncenain
Agreeing with lavern, Senator Manfred
Ohrenstein (D- Manhattan) charged that the
Republicans were "taking a few o f the far out things
that happen on campua and condemning
everybody." The bill will now go to the Assembly
where its future is uncertain. Contacting various
legislators, Tlt~Spectrum discovered that opinion iJ
split u to whether the bill will make it out of the
rules committee. and if it could eventually be
approved by the Aaembly.
Democtat Rk:hard Gottfried ..seriously doubts
that it will pass in the Aaembly." He explained that
the Senate il more conservative than the Aaembly
and that the biD wD1 have a tousfw time in the more
liberal Aslombly. However, he did remark that a
pollibility cxiata that the bill could be rushed

duoup on a Cut ron

call vote.

()ppoli.nJ the bill, Aaemblyman Gottfried
explalned teiiOnl for ics support. Actordins to him,
thero e:x.iltt a minodty of COI•natiYe atu4encs 111d
adWb who are anti&lt;Olleae and wbo have • their
objeet:ive, -.huttina down student pem.meots. He

'f1aWII in aystem'
Additionally, he commented that their
1gnorance about the bill revealed ' 'flaws in our
system." This system he continued includes an
attorney in New York City and assistants in Albany
who review all bills. Both Student Association and
Graduate Student Association officials also
expressed their astonishment at the bill's emergence.
surprise
wa~
shared
by
University
Such
administratoB Albert Sornit , executive vice
president , and Anthony Lorenutti, acting vice
president for Student Affai~ .
Dr. Lorenzetti explained that he heard of the
bill only over the radio late Friday afternoo n. His
reaction at the preaent . he aald, would have to be
...,ery guarded" until tht run implications of the biD
are ltoown. Howewr, he clid say d\at while "we
should see how tJW\gs are and no t panic . . . I am
obviously terribly oonc::erned abo ut future planning
Ofl thil campus.•• He added that once alJ the facts
were known he wouJd ''make my voice heard."
Also shocked by the bill , Dr. Somit commented
that local university administrators "weJe not told
anything like this was in t.he works - it comM a.~ a
surprise
to everyone ." When asked what
adm inistrat ive action would include, Dr. Somit
declined to comment unhl "all the facts are known."
At this time, Prestdent Robert Ketter 's positio n on
tJw matter is unknown as he was unable to be
reached for comment.
Planned action to opp&lt;me bill
In a meeting early Saturday momiJ\g, various
student leaders gathered to plan actio n against the
bill. II was the general consensus of all ptesent that
the abotition of the mandatory fee wo uJd result in a
VIrtual shutdown of all student activities. Included m
Utese activities would be UUAB movies, athletic
programs, concerts, guest speakers, club funding and
publication support.
However , aiJ were also agreed that students
shouldn't overreact. Setting up a multi-phased
program, they decided fint to gather information
about the bill and its probable outcome in the
Assembly. Speaking for the group, GSA President
Mike Nicolau stressed the importance of contacting
legislators, SUNY central, Governor RockefeUer's
office and local administrators and supporters of
mandatory fees . Mr. Borenstein reported that SASU
already conucted about ten legislators who said that
the bill will probably not pass in the Assembly.
Additionally , Mr. Borenstein announced that
there are several legi!lators committed to ~ the
bill. SA President Debbie Benson also stated that she
spoke to Mrs. Maurice Moore, chairman of the Board
of Trustees, who voiced her opposition to the
measure and her intention to fight it .
One of the first activities of the students i&amp; to
hold a pre:aa conference today at 11 a.m. in Norton
Hall. The purpose of such a conference ia to educate
the community and students through the media
the bill's imptications. Additionally, both the SA an4
GSA u.rp aJI students to contact their Jepdaton
about this bm and the need for ita defeat. Accotdina
to student leaden. meetinp will be held on an
oo-JOins buil all this week to deal with lituations u
they arise.

or

�Committee support

SA votes in favor Q{

Normal university schedules
disillpted by stUdent protests

tlte anti-war movement

Strikea apinst the eacalation of the Jndo&lt;:blneae The major quettJon whicb wu to hwe been brought
war brou.Jbt classes to a halt Thursday at CoJumb.il up at that meeting, and was_ never reached, was
University in New York, u well as diarupting nonnal whether or not to agree with the atudent call for a
3. free aU political priaonen; tchedules throughout the country. Violence was not momtoriurn. Instead, Dr. McGilJ decided to cancel
by Ron'SandbaJ
free 'The Buffalo...
the usual scene, but National Guardsmen were tent clasaes. Moct of the rest of the day wu peaceful on
Sp«trum Sr111! Wrltw
4. End the wage freeze and to the campus of the University of Muyland at the Columbia campus, but tiUI could have been
Despite warning\ of financial support striking workers.
Colle«e Park to enforce an overnight curfew.
attributed to the rainy weather.
According to reports, the rally
and lepl repercussions, the
Gov. Marvin Mandel of Maryland declared a
Student Auembly voted last is scheduled to begin in Niagara state of emergency Thursday and ordered the guard Bolton Han~~~ment
Friday
to
participate
in Square at 4 p.m . ..where speakers to the campus to quell three days of disturbances.
At Boston Univen.ity, damage was done to files
tomorrow's scheduled mass rally. from B.lack Worker's Congress, Police armed with tear gas and anti-riot vehicles
in
the
adminlstration building, as well as to
Specifically, the Assembly moved Vietnam Veterans Against the chased 2000 riote11 who had blocked U.S. Route I
telephones
located there. After a one-hour
support
the
anti·war War, WNY Rank and file Steel in the morning. At thAt point, Gov. Mandel imposed
"to
of
workers in the building, the students
harassment
movement and to set up a Workers Committee, The Buffalo, a 9 p.m. ' to 7 a.m. curfew and activated 800
I
000
students at the acflool voted to
left.
Almost
PCPJ
and
People's
News
Service
committee to work within" the
guardsmen to patrol the 36,()()().student campus.
begin
an
Indefinitely-long
strike Friday.
Buffalo People's Coalition for will briefly address themselves to
Efforts to set fire to the ROTC armory were
Elaewhere,
ROTC
*&gt;uUding\
at the University uf
the war . .. "
Peace and Justice.
foiled, and the Governor declared, '1 'm fed up with
Massachusetts
at
Apthent
were
taken OVCf by two
The
coalil.lon
is
presently
Referred tp as the "Day of
this violence and deatruction of pubJjc and private
Action resolution," the prop&lt;llW mobilizing students from all property, and I fully intend to see thAt it ends." dozen protestors. Entrances to the administration
sought SA and GSA aJSi.stance an nearby schools and wiiJ conhnue Damages during the previous days' activities will cost building were also blocked, but thC!e were no major
obtaining a parade permit, sound to do so until tomorrow
arr estimated $8000. In an attempt to prevent more incidents.
t.tuck equipment and media
About ten percent of the student body at the
damage from being done, the guards were employed
coverage. In addition. it was Propoa.b defected
to hmit access to the campus, with the power to Unive11ity of Pennsylvania set up picket lines around
The Assembly also focused on arrest or detain anyone without a legitimate reason the campus Thursday. However, leaders promised to
requested that the SA develop " a
liaison" between other student the Stephen Sttlls concert to be for being on the campus.
allow those students who wished to attend classes to
organizations an the area as well as held May 9 at Memorial
Mandel's order also provided for the prohibition do so without incidence. Other disruptions occurred
and
Michael of any demonstrations This section of the order was at the University of California at Berkeley, Oberl in
assembling a well ·snformed staff Audrtouum
to make people aware of the Levmson 's renewed proposal to used to prevent the start of a candlelight march College. and other schools tn Oruo.
fund h.is "peaceful mission to wh1ch had been scheduled for 9 p.m. Thursday.
demonstral.lon.
Joe Meyer, a spokesman for South Vietnam."
May 4 moratorium c:aJJed
Jt was proposed that SA Pofice at Columbia
the coalition, said that rally "will
In Washington, an antiwar coalition, backed by
be samilar to t.h~ one that purchase 2500 tickets to th~ Stills
Major protests in New York led to the over 20 Cong,essronat leader~, called tor a
occurred spontaneously during Concert at the cost of $8750 tu summoning of police to the Columbia Univenity moratorium May 4 to protest the escalation of the
the
Cambodian
invasion." be sold at a 1 2~ discount to campus for the first time since 1968. Classes at the war . The date was chosen since it marks the second
Stress ang
the
need
for studeu~ . A major fear was the school were cancelled Friday, on orders of President anniversary of the demonstrations at Kent State two
non-violence, he said the crowd probability of a financial loss, Dr. WilHam J McGill . McGill, in announcing the years ago which led to the deaths of four students.
would disperse at lafayette since the concert is scheduled for cancellation, said : "Given wtlat we have been Congressiorlal leaders backing the moratorium said it
Square at wh.ich time teach-ins May 9 when most students wUJ through during the last several days, I feel that we will serve to shake ''Congress out of its lethargy by
and wor k1hops would be taking have already left. It was also the should take a day off and see where we are going as a public opinion," as well as act as a ''national primary
place, hopefuUy irl ll nellrby cootentjon of most that the SA univen.ity .'' Although the students hAd requested a against the war for peace."
church. Mr. Meyer added that the should not get involved in the one-day moratorium for Friday to protest the war,
Dr. Daniel Ellsberg, speaking at the news
demonstrallon would be "fuUy ticket selling business, especially McGill refused to call the cancellation of classes a conference announcing plam for the May 4 date.
legal" even 1f a permit cannot be when unsold Jiclc.ets could not be moratorium.
said that Congress must hear ..the voice of the
In light of this
~eCured. l n such a case, the returned.
Police never really ~l foot on the campus, but people demanding an end to the war.'' Ellsberg also
coalition would have a sidewalk argument, the Assembly voted l 7 were called to clear away pickets from in front of said that if those Congressional leaders againat the
ro I nor to purchase the tickers. the School of International Affairs. The presence of war could not get ltlfsfation designed to end the war
march.
pohce outraged student demonstrators, and I SO of passed , they should obstruct normal legislative
le\l 's loan ~futed
Crisis moWJtinJ
them tried to push their way into a Senate meeting business by f&amp;.Hbusters and other activity.
Also voted down was M1chael
Contmu.ing, Mr Meyer said
"the present cnsas IS equal to, 1f L.evin~n 's $3000 loan request to
not greater" than what US go to Vietnam "to transliterate
ApproKb 13- 30, spol\IOf of regional orientation mapzina, is sponsoring a
officials deem il to be. He sa1d long ~tnd delicate wrappings into
collqj.ate journalism competition with S2000 in ldlolanbip priza to participatins
thAt 1f the UOJted States contanues lingo the Vietnamese people
with its plans to block the port of speak . . " and to produce "a
JChoola and S 12,000 is cash prizes to winnina student•. The purpoeea of the contesl ,
Haiphong, then it is IJl essence world-eyed video transcrypt · 17•~
according to its promoters , are to mcounge YOWl&amp; writen, provide col.leaa with financial
"declaring war on the rest of the True Sin Vietnam.
belp to ef\COuntJe writing and to secure an article aboul campuses to be published In the
Voting in favor of M1
world " by VJOial.lng "the ngha t&gt;f
Buf&amp;Jo rqional maptine, Buffalo In ll Nutshell.
the seas."
Levinson's proposal were Bob
Anyon~ interested in entering the conteat should contact Jo-Ann Ann.ao at The
In Hght of what he called an Convissar, Shetley Taylor, Jim
SfJ('ctrum
office, 831-4113. Deadline for all mtires is May 21:
"impending cri~is," Mr. Meyer Drucker and James Venn .
emphasized that the rally mu$t be
AdditionaiJy, the Assembly
a weJI organized effort if it as to killed WNYPIRG's request for
g~ve "guidance and dircctaon '' h&gt; S750
to fund one full -time
others. The four bas1c demands tlf rese1uche• in Washington.
the coalition are ·
I
lmmed11te and
total
Wllhdrc~waJ of aJI US. troops and 1.-EOIATE FS.1 - AMY SIZE 1
(o.-...a....otua,
machines from lndochiJla
1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE/ )
2. $6500 guaranteed annud.l
THIS WEEKS SPECIALS Il l MONDAY, TUESDAY. &amp; WEDNESDAY 1Apri124, 25, &amp; 261
Ulcome for a farnily uf folJI , and fU P S T A T E C Y C l E I II S II
c:.A1 694-31 oo
I
defeat
of
Naxon 's
Famuy I
!
"
A*
v..,....
AaMNt
UC"'.Assistance Piau
4 pJU . ro )
Bar Li uor

Journalism competition

fllofOicvCi"fliSURMCEl

Webster
Didionaries
Library size. un•bridaed
edition, brand ntw, still in box.
Cost new :$45.00

We'll sell for $15
Deduct I 0% on ~
of 6 or more

National LiQuidators
30S3 Main Street
Bul&amp;lo, New Y ort

837-1110

The SpectnU'ft 11 /1fllbl#l/l«&lt; lh,_

lim•' • w•.t, ....,

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R•pr•1•nted
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for «hwt/1/n, l1y
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liftlf Ybtt, N.Y. 10011.

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. . ............_.REMEMBER: The Beef &amp; Ale is No. 1 for Lunch!

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday 24 April 1rrn
I

�MFC: election forum

(}mdidates discuss

Fountain rally ·highl~
day of anti-war activities
by lao OeWaaJ
Sptctrum St11/f Wrilu

In an attempt to revitalize the
anti-war movement on campus,
the
Student
Asso c ~tion
sponsored a "day of action " on
friday.
Propams
included
speeches by representatives of
anti-war groups on and off
cam pus and wortcshops to d.isc1.111
plans for future actions.
A mass rally in the Norton
foun tain area hi&amp;hli&amp;hted the
events bein&amp; held in conjuction
with
the
National
Studen t
Association's call for action.
Durin&amp; the afternoon's events it
was an nounced that 164 schools
were
sponsorina
nationwide
anti-war activities. The rally wu
temporarily delayed when Carol
R.aynor of the Norton Hall atarc
objected to the placement of
microphones on the Norton Ka1J
steps as being a physical hazard.
Andy KO$Sover, Student Ri&amp;bta
Coordmator, initiated the anti-war
rally
by
introducina D~e
Zwolmski,
Student
AcliVlties
Coordmator, who chaued the
events.

have to lower the overhead ."
Joe OreachJer attacked Mr.
Levinson's "antics." " 1 am upset
when a rally is turned into a farce
by Michael Levinson. You have to
drop cynicism, drop individuality
and talk about how we are going
to brinaabout change."
Lynn Ramsey of SDS pointed
out that there is "still military
research
on
campus.
The
administration is saying that the
war doesn't matter anymore.
Vietnamese
are
dying,
not
Americans. The racism revealed in
the Vietnamese conflict is the
same as that perpetuated by Dr.
Halstead." She ' announced that
there would be a mass raUy in
Washington, D.C. on April 29.
former
National
Student
Affain Coordinator Keith frankel
attempted to rouse the crowd to
action. "It is really cool to put up
with a bunch of bullahit speaken
to lay out ideoloiY . What do yo u
want to do people, what do you
want?" be demanded .
Paul Weakley defended the
participanl:3 at the rally . " We
don't
need
to
have
our
intel.ligence insulted by crazy
poets or people saying we aren 'I
doing anything. We have to have
an idea of the total strugle. II
won't be as much fun as rioting m
the streets, but we have to begin
building a political movement."

Apology for atrocities
The first speaker, Hugh Basset ,
apologit.ed to the people of
Vietnam, the American people
and the world for his participation
10 atrocities." A veteran of the
war, Mr. Basset argued that 'On to the streets '
students were wasting "four yean&gt;
"A couple of courses of
in bullshlt, chasina a piece of oraanizaUon,"
stated
Bobby
paper" when there were no jobs. Faust, "are open to us. We have to
Mr. Basset represented the make ourselves visible to people in
Third World Veterans Alliance the street. Let 's go down town
and the UB Vets Club. He now."
demanded "direct act1on ,'' saying
A member of the Oakland 7,
that
Buffalo students
must Jeff Siegal emphasized . " We have
approve of the war Slnce they to bring the war borne. We have a
can't even get a turnout at the military
situation in whJch
rally. Approximately 300 students American peace proposals have
were in the fountain area to been revealed for what they are.
observe the speakers.
There is an Air force base m
Mr Basset furt her noted that Nsagara Falls ; there should be
"this country u going down the
political actiVltiet around it. We
drain. I don't love Amenca but need a public show of force ."
I'm here. We need your help, we
Mr. Kossover concluded the
need the dop' hdp, so put the rally by annour~cing workshops on
sliJlS around their necks."
vo I er
reaistration,
tbe
Ron Van Nostrand pointed out computeriz.ation of the war, and
a different avenue of action : " I workshops by Claude Wdcb, Chip
ap-ee with the partiality of the Planck and Jerome Slater, all of
previous spealcer, however, we the Dept. of Political Science. The
must develop an anaJ)'Iil o f what rally wu followed by a march o f
is aoina on . Studenta are memben I SO people to Hayea Hall, to join
of the workina clus. We are pven a crowd of about 200 black
ti me off for study but m01t of us students already there protestina
will eventually become work en." the firlna of Charles Gayle, Dept.
of Music.
The reception of the anti·war
'l lappu• rapped
When Mr. Van Nostrand demonatraton by the B)a(:k.s wu
Michael
Stephen cool. Blac:t students yelled out ;
concluded,
LeYinson. the Comili: Wrapper, "There better AOt be any
adYanc:ecl to the microphone. ..In roc:k-tbrowiq. We are here to pt
tiM forty-.CYtnth hour tbe eomethina done, oot fool uound.
Piealdent had a wet clrea.m aod tbe lbe Blact ltudentl had occupied
dQ ~ent the Oeet." W:r. the administration orne. aacl
t..mm0Jt tumed to
oc:onomy. firat Qoor in Hay• Hall to
" You can't raiJo the noor deDWld action from Dr. ~etter
(auuanteed family income), you c:oncemi.na Mr. Gayl6.

nnt

the

A larae ptherina of ni&amp;ht students attended last
WednCid11y'a apeda.l M.i.l.lard Fillmore Colleae
Student Aaoclation meetinJ to " Meet the
Candidat•=a" for next year's executive committee
The electiona will be conducted by a mail ballot t~
be turned in by May 3. Last week's meetina was
tailored a.s an opportunity for all the candidates to
Pf'Sent tl:lei.r platfonns and ideu.
Spealtina first , presidential candidate Joan
Hurlbut i&amp;r&amp;Ued ttJ.t : "This past year hu been a
difficult one for all involved in Millard fillmore
Co~eae Student Association." According to her,
divisions •were caused by " the sincere desire of all its
memben. to represent the MFC students." Problems
occurred, she continued " Iince, there was no
concrete way to determine bow the MFC student
wished to be represented ."

•

ISSUeS

Inc. and the institution of some kind of veteran'•
bureau to repreaent the intereab of veterans.
lntroducina himself as "the husband of the
pmlidentia.l candidate," Roser Hurlbut outlined h.ia
plans if elected vice president. Accordina to him, tb~
vice president would first act u ex-officio member
to all committees to offer advice and JUidance.
Secondly , he explained : ..If I am elected, 1 will
represent the MFC student in carryina out the
policies of the president elected."
Criticizin&amp; this year's MFCSA as "not meetina
the needs o f students," vice presidential candidate
Bmn Coyne explained : "None of us here are
representing the studenta." He continued : "We're
not lookina into the areas of housing. We're thinldna
of aettina out of Sub Board which represents us,
(and) gives us the same things as the day school at
1/6 the cost .

Student rtdem1dwn
To n:tmedy this a:ituation, Ms. Hurlbut proposes
a student referendum o n all policy. services and
activities of the MFC. "The resul ts of the survey,"
she said, " would provide the MFC executive board
with the •expressed dea:ires of the MFC student body
which cotllld then be used to determine the policy
which the MfCSA would enact for the next
academic year." Other plans of Ms. Hurlbut include
the scbedulina of a MFCSA calendar, recruitment of
new people, constitutional revisions, and better
utiliz.ation of the Midnight Oil .
The other presidential candidate, Jack Bunting
ap-eed wit:h Ms. Hurlb ut on the need for a polling of
atudenl o•plnion. Additionally, he maintained : " I
would ad•dre• myself to issues which I think are
mainly th e concern, o r should be the concern of
students." Such concerns, he noted would include
" responsible participation In the affairs of tiW
University ."
Speci1fically, he explained MFCSA should
become illlvolved in University governance and
possibly commwlity housina. Further, Mr. Bunting
pinpointed a potential threat to the ni&amp;ht school.
Accordina, to him , a plan for common repatration
would "present a danaer to the existence o f the
evenlnc SIChool. He continued : " I don't think we
want to ltte aubject to the whims or the political
ploys of II he d ay school. They are the majority, we
are the minority. So I think we have to maintain o ur
autonomy·"
Responsible participation

To effect this, be suagested "common and
united a1:tion ." Mr Bunting's fmal proposals
included responsible participation in Sub Board I,

Healed rempen
Concluding his remarks, Mr. Coyne stated :
" Niaht school students really care about two tb.inp :
courses and money . lo terms of counes, I give you
the sum mer schedule to look at. The MFC student ia
beina beat on summer school thiJ year and I blame
this essentially on the administration." Mr. Coyne
hopes to be able to correct this.
Runruna for treuurer, GeofiiC Kraus explained
that his major concern is "the future independence
of MFCSA." Specifically , be faulted MfC
participation m Sub Board : "Our participation in
Sub Board I , Inc was done without approval of our
evening students ." Because of SA and GSA
" dominance of Sub Board ," he believes "that
continued MFC participation . . will result in loss of
our independence."
On the issue of housing, Mr. Kraus stated: " I
don't think the majority of evening school students
have a need for housing." The other candidate for
treasurer, Anthony Lewandowslti was not present
Wednesday ni&amp;ht .
Runruna for corresponding secretary are Edjth
Duft and Joyce Ko pf. Ms. Duft finds communication
very important and requests that if abe is elected
that studenll write to her with anevancea or
sugeationa. Ma. Kopf, on the other band , proposea
the institution of an opinion poll. This, sb• feels,
would aive the MFCSA information to work with
wben they dbcuss issues.
The fmal candidate was Patricia Mincben who il
run nina
unopposed
for recording secretary.
Following the statements of aU the candidates was a
question and aruwer penod. Unh.l May 3 when aU
the ballots are received , the candidates will conduct
their campaiiJls.

aa.ck ltudenta m...t a.t Friday in .upport of the ,..n...,.,.t of Chart• Gayte, Depwtment of
Mutic, ~tho wa recendy nottfled of hb lmptndlng dilmillal from hb Unlverahy post. H..-d firat w.we
..,_...by aevenl BI8Ck member~ of me Unlwwlity community et T~ H..l. att.r which the
orowd miCMd Into Robert K.n.r't Hav• twl office demanding to ... me pmklent.
Aft• being informed ttt.t Dr. Ketter w• out of town but would ... them todlry, the gathering IMde hs
way to tta. lountt. There, some piMS werw rMde for today. TIM mtlin ,temanct for todey'a IMWng
wll be for Dr. K.u.r to ..... tip • (J.flftite time, piece and~ to fu..U. dbcu11 Mr. Gayle'a dbm-...
If thlt falls, me Blackt teem. . . . . . . tMt ttt.ir onty ..umauv. would be "to do• this piece down."
Mr. Geylle epob tnet ..W tMt _ , Bllctt t1Udent on ampua wa needed to confront Dr. K.n. and
that 811 I!Uack ~ werw to lhut down for 1he ct.y. He •id • BSU m..Unt would be allied to
eotllider .., heuet to be cltce:md with Dr. K.n.. He emphaalmd 1hat then would be "no
,.._, Dr. K.ttw wa IMt.

-..-on"

Ma.tday, 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Pa(JI three

�Playbill inaugurated

Alumni reconizes
campus privileges
The official commencement of
a University -wide Alumm
Recognition Program was marked
by last week's inaugural issue of
the VB Playbill. Sponsored by the
Alumni Association , the program
" is unique anywhere and is
designed to promote the best
interest of a rapidly growing State
University and the people
responsible for &amp;ts growth and
existence."
Under the recognition
program, alumni are mailed copies
of the VB Playbill , a weekJy
calendar of University events.
Fred Tamalonis, ciJrector of
Undergraduate Programs and
Special Programs, explamed that
prior to the establishment of the
recognition program, alumni were
excluded from such campus
events u UUAB movies and
requited to pay general public
prices at such functions u Baud
HaJJ concerts.
He continued that the alumnus
who wanted to attend an activaty
found himself excluded from the
University
"his former
privileges rescinded , a distanl.!e
c reated between the alumnu.~ and
the active community " To
correct thas situation , last Fall Mr
Tamalonis contacted vauous
University o rgann. allon s
requesting spectal recogmtaon foa
alumni.

is that because alumni arcn 't
continually on campus, they find
at difficult to understand any
changes the campus might have
undergone. "But,'' he remarked ,
"if the recognition program can
get alumni to keep on coming to
the University, then they can Jive
with the changes.
One of the benefits of tills
program, be said, is that it is an
''on-going program," and not just
a "one-shot deal. " The problem
with special events, Mr . Tamalonis
explained, is that they try to
cement relatJons with alumni for a
limited specified time. He,
therefore, argued that a fuU-time
program must be implemented to
rna)ce '"the graduated student feel
at home on the campus.''

University and community
Another strength of the
program, he continued, is that at
Wlll add to the strength of existing
events and activities. With more
participation, he argued, it is only
logical that programs wiJJ become
more popular. Because of this
demand Mr. Tamaloni.s believes
that students wiJJ be able to plan
more activities.
Officially. the program was
recognized Feb. 18, 1972, when
Edmond Gicewic1., President o f
the Alumni Association, signed a
resolution which stated that " the
Alumni Association of the State
'Overwhelmina'
University of New Yoric at
·The response," he reported, Buffalo does hereby announce the
"'Was overwhehrung " AccorciJng Alumni Recognation Program
to him, he received over 60 letters JOintly with the students,
pledgang su pp ort fo r and admuustrataon, and faculty of thas
cooperataon with the Alumru Un tversity and furthermore
Recogmtion Program . These commends these groups for their
letters, he noted , included such positive attitudes and actions, and
organizatioos as Baird Hall , e)(presses particular pride in our
UUAB, Norton Hall , the Athletic students for their willingness and
Department , academi c determination to work for a
departments and student better socaety through creative
associations.
means ." Mr. Tamalonis js
Mr. Tamalonis feels that the gcneraUy pleased with the initial
Recognition Program will be prgress of the program and hopes
helpful in bindang graduated that at will help to build a strong
students t o the o n -going Alumni Association that wiJJ bring
University . A problem he together the University and
explained an effecting such a bind Community

University Students ~rticipate
in inner city math instruction
The course is entitled " Improving Inner-City
Instruction in Mathematics:· and it takes an active
approach to that problem. Listed under the New
College of Modern Education, it is being taught to
"bridge the gap between the Unive.nity and the
black community." to "bridge the gap between the
University and the Black community."
Students in Mr. Hill's coune travel to the inner
city twice a week, working with individual seventh
and eighth graders at P.S. 37. Under the program,
University students are assigned to a particular
teacher, who designates to them which of her pupils
are in dire need of help in maf,b. These students,

Mr. H ill

Lack of diJcipl.inc and lack of motivation are
indeed problems of inner city acbools, but these are
not insurmountable, a&lt;leording to Mr. Hill. "We have
changed their attitude," ho declares proudly ...Give
any of the kids a helper's name and they11 teU you
what days he comes. The lc.icb are anxious for us to
come."
Mr . Hill requires that · his students be
well-dressed when they are on the job, both for
public relations reasons and be&lt;:ause it impresses the
kids. "I have nothing at all against dungarees,"
e:x.plained Mr. Hilt, "but for on the job, if you walk
in there with a suit on, the kids just seem to have
more respect for you.'' Mr. HiD related a typical
conversation between him and one of the kids.
Kid : Arc you really going to a University?
Hill: I'm a teacher at the University.
Kid: You mean white people Jet you teach at a
University??
Hill: They1J let you, too, if you get it together
10 school.
'These kids dream about going to college,"
reports Mr. Hill. " I tdl them to take one grade at u
tune." Tutors from the College presently help out
only at P.S. 37, but Mr. Hill hopes to expand his
program to other schools next year.
Teaching, or even going to P.S . 37 is no mean
feat, however. The school is in a "very dangerous"
neighborhood which is typicaiJy plagued with gangs
and violence . It Is the type of school and type of
neighborhood that people shake their heads at but
wouldn't actually go there. Mr. Hill feels, however,
that this is precisely the type of school that needs
help the most. He points out that the kids in the
inner city aren't any less intelligent than anywhere
else (though this would appear to be true
statistically), but are disadvantaged because of their
environment.

Mr. Hill also teaches the fint part of the Inner

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April 26th st 4 :00p.m. Entrl• will~ judg«&lt; on
dtt~il snd correctniiS$,

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What haippens when rabbits get togatber7 (a-borate on Elephants end clowm.)
The qulMCenCe b a b---.
Why dcMI a stwnutation int.rupt your lntirMte actMtlel7
A coun-.ct Ia a d
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She c:onsented to a daang~ In p-----

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, 24 April1972

New ioceotite

most of whom are underprlvcleged and black, are City coune, "Mathemat.icl from a Anthropological
then diagnosed by means of a standardized test, Penpective." Born in Alabama, he worked for a few
which helps determine jwt where their deficiencies years with the Buffalo Board of Education as a
remedial math teacher with the federally -funded Plus
lie
Mr. Hill feels that the educational experience is Program. '1t was then that I became interested in
definately two-way. ' There's no doubt that new approaches to de-mystifying mathematics," he
Umversity students learn a great deal about practical explained, "and wanted to work with students o n
teaching problems through this experience," he the coUege level so they could teach it to the inner
explained . Student tutors have encountered city kids when they become teachers." Mr. Hill feels
daS&lt;:ipline problems as well as a host of others. that University students participating in his course
'These kids arc turned off to math and to school "can show the community that they are interested in
altogether.'' said Mr. Hill. 'They need the personal their problems and are wiJiing to be a part o f the
attention that many of them don't get from their solution. New ideas can be put to the test , instead of
family life. There are fatherless students who need a just being topics for discussion , remote from real
father image. Some of the kids have gotten so situations."

CONTEST!
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and won't let go," continued Mr. Hill.

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The trial of the Buffalo five bepn last Monday. The
defendants, three women and two men, are accused of
raiding draft boards and Anny Intelligence offices in
Buffalo last August 21. They are chaJged with conspiracy,
theft of government property and destruction of
government property. If convicted, they face a maximum
sentence of I 5 yean in jail a.nd a $2,000 fme.
Among the first week's activities, the defendt.nts
have had a jury selected, have been granted permission to
remain seated while the judge enters and exits, and have
been denied a motion to subpoena the head of the
Selective Service to appear as a witness.
The first day of the trial was ,directed towards
selecting l 2 jurors and four alternates. Questions
pertaining to beliefs on war, violence, civil disobedience
and the credibility of the government were directed to
prospective jurors by Federal Judge John T . Curtin. The
defense, acting as their own attorneys, submitted 29
qu~stions for Judge Curtin to ask the jurors. These
concerned the ability of individuals to bring about change
and the responsibility of American citizens for the acts of
their government .
Denied direct questioning
Vincent Doyle, c&lt;K:ounsel for the defendents,
petitioned the court to permit the five to personally direct
their questions to the jury rather than have the judge ask
them. Mr. Doyle said in his request that the "entire
atmosphere should be getting the jury to realize what
happened and why " Judge Curtin ruled against the
motion and proceeded to administer the questions himself.
The defendants' earlier request that they be exempt
from the usual pro tocol of standing when the judge enters
or leaves the courtroom, was approved by the judge. Both
the defense and prosecutJon agreed that this request was
not made with intentional disrespect, but rather to
maintain a relaxed atmosphere in the courtroom.
A1J but one of the jurors questioned from the Panel
of 68 prospective jurors favored immediate U.S.
withdrawal from Indochina. The jury finally consisted of
seven women and five men . J udge Curtin told the jurors
that in order to fine the Buffalo five guilty, they mtsst
prove, beyond a resonable doubt, that the five did, w1th
criminal intent, commit the crimes they are accused of
perpetrating last August
Government property
Asst. U.S Attorney James Grable opened the case
for the prosecutio n on Tuesday with a second reading of
the indictment and then introduced evidence to prove that
the old Post Office building. where the defendants were
apprehended, was actually United States Government
property . Mr. Grable. reiterating the judge's warning told
the jury that their only duty was to the facts nt hand and
to deetde if the five defendants comm1tted the three
counts against them, with criminal intent
One of the five, Maureen Considine, 2 1, a!fed her

belief to the jwy that the United States is committing
blatant war crimes in Vietnam. "'ur oompooty in thoae
crimes is what we are here to talk about," she said. Ms.
Considine continued, charging that. prOIICUter Grable was
not dealing with the real issue of the trial - the
inhumanity of the Vietnam war and the U.S . involvement
in it.

"One h.ad a beard and hair protrudina out !tom the
sides," Mr. Adams said. He added that JeVen pl.ln of shoes
were found next to bap of draft files. "And ( know that
five people don't wear seven pain of shoes," he auced.

FBl bani tape
On Thursday Judge Curtin let FBI Agent Charles A .

Ahart talk about a videotape he secretly heard the five Cllt
Altered betiefa
Another defendant, Chuck Lee Darst, then described
to the jury how he had dramatically altered his belic;fa. He
said he used to Oy airplanes and had wanted to become a
military pilot, but changed his mind when he realized the
destruction caused by pilots' actions in Vietnam.
Jim Martin, 21, spoke of his disillusionment with
America upon returning home from serving as a Peace
Corps volunteer in Africa. He told the jury that they are
answerable to no one, including the law, judge, or relatives.

Buffalo five
trial: jury
is selected
lie said, ''No one can pun1sh you •f your dec1s1un 111 th1s
case is made by your conscience Your consc1ence
certainly can't be wrong."
The other female defendant , Ann Mastc!1, tllld the
jury she wasn 't ~here to r.Use fear or condemn an yl)nc
"Crimes are being committed tn my name. I feel compelled
to act ... In Nuremburg we saw how the 1ssuc of war
crimes went deeply into Gennan society," she declared
Two 'got away'
The prosecutiOn's first witness, Arch.ibald Miller,
building manager of the Old Post Office buildmg, testified
that he found the front door ajn~ on the night of the
alledged crimes. Later, upon being questioned by Jim
Martin, he also testified U1at the building is controlled by
Ute people of the United States.
The trial took an unexpected turn when FBI ageut,
Donald F . Adams. testified that he believed that two
persons "got away" on the ntght that the five were
arrested He said that he ar rested two of the four persons
he saw on the second Ooor of the Old Post Office building
and he never saw tl1e other two agarn He believed that
they escaped down a stlurway

after their arrest despite Mr. Doyle's demand for
submission of the tape itself so excerpts could not be given
to the jury out of context. Mr. Ahart aaid that a local
television station arranged for him to monitor the tape
session from a room in the studio without the lcnowledse
of the defendants.
Mr. Ahart said he recalled hearing Jim Martin say,
"We have to face it, w~ were caught in the buildina and
didn 't see what military intelligence records we bad. They
were probably innocuous and wouldn't have furthered our
objective much ." Judge Curtin explained that he denied
Mr. Doyle's challenge to agent Ahart 's testimony because
he has permitted the defendants to question witnesses at
length.
Also taking the stand on Thursday was Army Capt.
William J . Maloney. who spent a year in Vietnam before
taking command of the 108th Military Intelligence group
in Buffalo, Capt. Maloney said he found his office in
disarray when he was called there on Sunday, Aug. 22,
1971. He identified as records from his office documents
the five are accused of stuffing into laundry bags prior to
their arrest.
MiJilllly role questioned
Ms. Ma st~rs. Ms. Consid1ne and Mr. Horrigan
questwned Capt. Maloney closely about the role ol
Mthlary Intelligence. He admitted t11at Army agen ts at o ne
time investigated people involved in antiwar activities but
stopped domg so when it wa.~ determmcd not to be a
funchon of army intelbgence.
Mr. Marttn asked Capt Maloney if he though the
present government of South Vietnam was democratic He
replied, "The Th1eu regime, I feel, is pre-natal democracy.
It's democracy moving toward dem~Xratic means." In
answet to ano ther question , he said, " I believe most of the
V1etnamese would p refer no gove-rnment at all." Also
under quesllonmg fP1m Ms. Marlut, the ~plain admrtted
that the U.S. might have violated mternational law by
usmg napalm and poisonous defoliants Ill Vietnam.
In addition, the Buffalo five asked Judge Curt111 to
subpoena Curt1s J. Tarr, natiOnal director of the Selective
Service to testify. Mr. Martin sa1d he needs to hear from
Mr. Tarr because of his confrontation with him laa\
:rummer in Washington. Mr Martin tried to place the
director under dlizen's arrest bul fell to the noor whn Mr.
Tarr attempted to st rlke htm. Mr. Martin said this incident
made Mr. Tarr 's ap~arance here relevant to th e present
tnal. The five mamtajned that m Mr. Tarr they will have a
witness who c-.wnot duck responsibility by passing it to
someone else. The subpoena motion was denied
The rial resumes at 10 a m. today. Federal Court
Build1ng.

,.....,

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Monday , 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�Non-academic fadities usage
in question since pop concert
by J .M. Jaegi
Spectrum Staff Writer

The fate of concerts at this University has
recently become uncertain. Larry Stein, president
and director of University Union Activities Board
(UUAB), succinctly stated the problem : ''There is
not enough space." His dissatisfaction with such a
situation reached a high point when the New
Riders-Commander Cody concert was nearly
!Cuttied.

To further complicate matters, Mr. Folts then
informed Mr. Rosen that a new procedure was in
effect to attain campus facilities for non-academic
use. This procedure required the student group to
sign a contract with New York State and further
mandated it put up a $2000 bond and S300 liability
insurance. As this was next to impossible in the short
time allowed, Mr. Balkin and Mr. Goldstein were
able to reach a compromise agreement.

Ambipous in spots
Mr. Stein recognized these mandates as a part of
In a letter to Charles Balkin, comptroller of the proposals for non-academic use of University
Financial Services, Lester Goldstein, Sub Board I, facilities suggested to him by John Telfer, vice
Inc . business manager, wrote : "The hassle, president for Facilities and Planning. After reading a
aggravation, and last-minute worry which both you copy of Dr. Telfer's proposals, Mr. Stein expressed
and I and a great many other persons were subjected concern over the lack of space for student use.
to over the use of Clark Gym by the UUAB for a
In part, these proposals state : "On the basis of
pop concert April 12th is a good indication that the
availability of space, necessary services, review of the
current procedure for securing campus facilities for
eve nt for propriety, and properly executed
non-academic use is both c umbe rsome and
documents of authorization, the request (for use of
inefficient. "
facility] is accepted or rejected." In Mr. Stein's
opinion the proposals are in spots ambiguous. "For
Communication failure
example," he explained, "little mention is made of
When contacted, Mr. Balkan expressed a desire who will interpret an event's ' propriety'."

John Gardner, founder of the "citizen's lobby,"
Common Caute, will be speaking at the Peace Bridge
Exhibition Center tomorrow night at 8 p .m . Mr.
Gardner's organization, now 130,000 strong, was
formed to "press for a reordering of national
priorities . . . for the revitalization of the public
process and to make the political and governmental
institutions more responsive to the needs of the
..tion and will of its citizens." Free buses to the
lecture will be leaving the front of Norton Hall at 1
p.m .

for a "better mechanism of solution" to avoid
"complicated messes at the last moment." Not
wishing to "name names," Mr. Balkin indicated that
the recent Clark Gym concert ''fiasco'' had resulted
from a "failure in communication ."
Th.is breakdown wa.~ first detected by Paul
Rosen, chairman of UUAB Music Committee, two
days prior to the concert date. Recalling the events,
Mr. Rosen reported : " Maintenance informed me
lhey had received no indication of their services
being required for that Wednesday evening." Union
law dictates that only maintenance personnel may
set up and take down the gym. Burr Folts, assistant
vice president for Physical Facilities, refused to
assign men on such short notice.

Both Mr. Balkin and Mr. Goldstein agree that
insurance coverage for concerts is a valid request and
a desirable condition . As Mr. Balkin pointed out ,
"Facult y .Student Association uses this policy, and it
is only logjcal that the recently independent Sub
Board I, Inc. should follow its parent group's
procedure."
The need for rationing facility use is dictated by
the crowded situation at this campus. Mr . Stean
voiced his hope that "the final set of laws governing
use of campus facilities will represent all the needs of
the University community in a non-discriminatory
manner." He added : " I would also hope that any
restrictive measures necessary now will be modified
once facilities are ready at the Amherst campus."

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Paqe six . The Spectrum . Monday, 24 Aoril 1972
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Universities feel impact
of student demonstrations
by DawSaleh
Spectrum Staff Wrlto
Student demons t rations
protesting the escalation of the
war in Vietnam continued to
build in intensity Friday and
anti-war groups throuahout the
country are planning to extend
Friday's action into this week. On
most campuses Friday's events
were hi&amp;hliahted by a national
student strike which bad mixed
effects on class schedules. A
number of rallies were held in
major c ities throuahout the
country in support of the striking
studen ts, and a few turned into
major confrontations with police .
In New York City, classes were
canceUed at Columbia Uruversity
in support of the student strike,
and a mass anti-war protest was
being planned for Saturday in
Central Parle According to
members of the stud ent
government, the rally was being
o rganjzed to "coordinate the
efforts of local and state anti-war
groups in order to show our
outrage over continued American
illvolvement in the war."
In other parts o f the state.
students from Ithaca's two mlijor
colleges planned to travel to New
York. in support of Saturday's
r ally following massjve
dem o n s trations in downtown
sections o f the city o n Friday .
Abo ut 1000 students marched
from Cornell University to a
downt o wn intersection where
they met 500 students from
Ithaca CoUege. The combined
rallies were held peacefully and no
incidents or arrests were reported .
In Syracuse, 30 people were
a[l'eSted as an estimated group of
about 2000 pwtestors staged a
picket and sll-in outside the

Armed Services recruiting center
in the heart of the city. This
action followed a mass meeting by
students Thura(by niaht in which
a number of students pve their
support to what a student
aovernment representative called
"a partially successful strike" on
Friday. Further demonstrations
were planned for this week as a
mass meeting was held Sunday
night to try t o reorganize the
effort to close the recruiting
center.
In Massa chusetts, students
remained in cont rol of
Massachusetts Hall at Harvard
University, and then~ was no sign
that they were about to be driven
out by local potice. There bad
been 11 number o f demonstratio ns
last week in support of t he
students, and at one point police
were forced to close the gates to
Harvard Square adjoining the
buUding for fear of violence.
ROTC nlllsacked
In Ann A rbor, Michigan ,
S J 000 - 5000 damage were
reported in the ROTC offices of
the University o f Michigan where
students entered the building and
damaged records. One person was
arrested as students cut off Rout e
33 for nearly an hour.
In Albany, 1000 students
marched on the Federal building
Friday and read a list o f demands
protesting the war. A rally at the
University of Maryland was
planned to protest the II :30p.m.
~.:urfew imposed by authorities in
an a ttempt to curtail anti-war
activity. The University or
W'tSconsin was also the scene of
an ti-war protests as Friday's strike
was caUed "putially effective" by
a student official.

WASHINGTON - A bill t o repeal federal
criminal penalties for personal possessjon or pnvate
use o f marijuana was introduced in the Senate
Friday. Sen . J acob K . Javits of New York and Sen.
Harold E . Hughes of Jowa sponsored the bill which
would let stand criminal penalities in the law for
selling marijuana for profit. In a joint statement, the
senators said they were unable to ..ontend tha t
marijuana is totally harmless " But criminal penalties
for its use and possession in private are so
disproportionate to the degree of mental and
physical risk invo lved that there can no longer be
any justification for t.heir imposition," they said
Under the bill, it wo uld not be unlawful to possess in
public three ounces of marijuana if the owner had no
intent to sell it for profit. According to federal
figu res made available to the legjslato rs, arrests.
convictio ns and sentences of imprisonment invo lving
manJUana all increased at federal and state levels in
the latter 1960's . Bureau of Customs a rrests, for
example, rose 362% between 1965 and 1970
ALBANY - Underground news papers whrch try
to "rip off the establishmen t " by print1 ng telephone
credit card numbers and other frauds could be found
guilty of a misdemeanor under a bill passed by the
Assembly , Thursday Assemblyman R obert F. Kelly
of Brooklyn said complaints b y the New York.
Telephone Co. prompted hun to file the bill . It was
appro ved and sen t to the Senate after a handful uf
liberals claimed it could not be enforced " What 's
happening Is they ' re p ranting c redit card num bers,
telling people how to steal phones, how to make
calls from a friend ':. house, and how to make boltes
to use the phones illegally ," Kelly sa1d
He presented seve ral ~meographed sh eets titled
the " Yo uth Inte rnational Part y Line" of Room 504,
1S2 W 4 2nd St., Man hat tan, which told how to ste;~l
telephones and bill calls t o friends , natit&gt;nal
companies o r even dead persons . They included the
number for President Nixon's fo nner law tirrn.
Under the bill , persons found gudty o f pnnllng such
numbers could be sentenced up to a year ill Jail , if 11
were proven they did 11 With " mrcn t .. tu defraud .
The offe n se would apply to pnnltng the
in fo rmation , o r transmru mg it orally Ass~: mlllyman
Richa rd G o ttfncd said the penallles might be
avoided simply by printing a d1sclarmer . telling
readers not to take the acuon.s ''What we arc J01ng
i.s no t preventin g the np·off of the phone ~:omp&lt;llly ,
but permitting the npping·off lll the vutcr , by tetltng
t hem we arc d oing th1s , when tn !act we are d u rng
not lung at :til."
NEW YORK
A company that solc.l term
papers to students , wht1 tn tum submtlled them to
teachers as the ir own work . was tcmpo rarrly
enjoined in Manhattan Suprernc Court r ucsday frum
doing busirress. J usuce Abraham Lelluroff ordered
an early trial of charges leveled b y the stare atturney
general's office against T ermpaper, Inc and several
o ther fi rms under whose namt.."S rt conduc ted
business, that it was rmparnng the rntegrrty o f the
educational process.
"The court 1s convrnccd ," &lt;:ellmofl sail!, "that
defendants knowangly arc a1ding and abettrng

students to attempt to obtain by fraudulent means a
diploma, degree o r certificate in violation of the
Education Law . Assisting and promoting plagiari5m
- the most serious academic offense - strikes at the
core of the educational process and thus at the very
heart of a free society,'' Gellinoff added . Stephen
Mindell, an assistant attorney general who handled
the case, told newsmen that the decision established
"a national precedent ." " We expect that oth er s tates
now, o n the basis o f this decision, will move in and
prosecute companies engaged in selling tenn papers
to s tudents."
ALBANY - The State Senate approved
Thursday a bill to promo te sex equal1ty in public
schools, including the increased mixing of girls and
you ng men in sports . T he measure, which no w goes
to the Assembly , was approved in the Senate by a
vote uf J 1-20 after an hou r of d ebate that included
some dubious humor and heated argument. The bill
would pennit the Commissioner of Education to
determine, afte r public heanngs, in which sports the
gul$ and boys might mix . The bill also opens up
:sch nol courses u shop tralnmg to girls.
The Senate also completed legislative ac tron on
a h1ll which would pennrt girls to hold jobs as
" newsboys" o n ncwspapct d elive ry routes Tfte bill.
approved 52-3 and sent to the governor. was passed
earlier th is year by the Assembly " While we have
had some reservatio ns about using t2·and
13-year ·old g.rls fo r c;trrrers, we now believe that,
unde r the Labor Law, we can use them with
discretion,'' W Melvin street. ex ecutiVe director of
the publisher's group stud . Sen John E F lynn of
Yonkers , the sponsor uf the bill , sard rl would bl! up
to parents anu :-rewspaper management to make sure
that girls were not assigned routes where they would
be in danger .
WASHiNGTON - The Daughters of the
American Revo lution (DAR) began consideratio n
Tuesday of 14 proposed resotutro ns reple te with
warnrrrgs ag:unst trade wr th tl1e Communists and lhc:
pu ss1blc adverse effe~: t s o l co nslrhHronal
amendment&amp; to ;~voi{i ousrng o r promote equal nghts
fo1 women The rcso lu 11on. which Will be voted on
by ~rme 3000 DAR d elegat es on Wednesday,
incl uded stands agalllst amnesty for draft evaders o r
dcsc1ters. and expressed fears over mcreased
1rnmigraUon fr o m Asra n ;urd southern and eastern
Eu ropean cuuntnes The DAR rm pused ~ume ~trtct
ru les ab u ut news cuvc ragc of therr lrac.lrt mnal
rrsolutt11ns at thts Mi st C'on trn t&gt;n tal Congress and
barred reporte rs from listening to debate and t11e
vote on rcsuluhons Wednesday .
The: DAR adopts pt)IJcy recom mendatrons for
ItS 200 ,000 members each sprrng , and the resolutions
to tw vuted on Include reaffirmation uf past stand s
urg111g the U.S tu wrthdraw fwm the Uruted
NatJ UIIS. O ther po laCICS IIH:Iude L. ntrcrsm of the U.N .
lur lcttrng members 111 arrt'lHS 11n dues vote on such
tssucs mclud1ng admrs~1011 uf mamland Chma and
cxpul~run of Nattonalist China f hc re5olut1o ns also
tncluded cxprcssrutb uf t.llfll.:crn o ver such matters as
na twnal se(Urtty , crrnw , pomugrsphy ami pollutiOn,
and the p reserva tion t1f ~wn esr unbrascd news
re port wg.

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Monday, 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�I

EdiTORiAl

I

Kill the bill

Surprite and d isbelief were the reactions o f most to the state
Senate's approval of a bill thai would abollstl .,, mar)datorv student
activity fees on stat e campuses. However, their action should surprise
no one for it reflects an attitude long apparent in legislative circ les·
hostilit y and suspicio n of student activities. Viewed against the past
1
week's protest demonstrations against 1he Vietnam War escalatlon, the
anack on student fees can be easily understood.
Moreover. the Senate displayed a gross misunderstanding of what
student fees fund . Conservative Republican Senator Schermerhorn
declared that the fef!S supported anti·American profanitY in student
media. He further anacked "the corurol of student monies" by "radical
w-oups" who subsidize such prograrns as gay lib and buses to anti-war
demonstrations. What he failed to mention Is that the bulk of fee
monies goes to cultural, educational and recreational, not political,
events. This would include support for athletic programs, movies,
concerts and guest speakers.
Also disturbmg in th is whole affair IS SASU's virtually total
ignorance about the bill's status. For an organization that bills itself as
t he student lobby, its (legligence may have proven disastrous for the
future of student prow-ammlng on all state campuses. T he only
explanation posible tor its lack of knowledge is that it has dangerously
limited itself to one concern- the tuition hike. Bv focus.ng on an issue
destined to maximize Its reputation, SASU negleeted all other areas.

lrT " THOUSAND FLOWIII ILOOM

Policy of purging
To th4' Ediwr

l would like to congratulate the faculty and
in thejr efficient job of purgin&amp; (m
the Style o f Hitler and Stalin) some of the best and
most annovative teac hers o n this campus, and the
students for taking their normally apathetic stance,
Oasphe this. we are encouraged by the current actions of student all owing themselves to be maruputated to the point
government leaders in for mulating a massive fact ·finding and where they don 't take action even an things directly
affect ina t hem.
informlltion pr~am designed to defeal the measure in the Assembly .
In reviewing t.hU past year at SUNY AB , I have
This, howevw. is no small task , since the legislature has often shown come to realize the power of mass psychology Just
itself to be quite insensitive to student interests.
like Hitler, the faculty and administntion has been
Local university administratiol'l$ must involve themselves In the wise enouah not to take o ne geat action to rouse
the 'an,er of the student body . lnstead they do
iswe both for their own and for students' interests. It is apparent that tttinl$ piecemeal , making people less. aware o f the
our administration hM a vested interest In the continuance of d'le danger involved until it's too late. There wu no
mandatory fee, since the operation of Norton Hall and the sudden mass firina. Instead, one day someone
mter-&lt;:OIIegiate athletic 1)«9'am are both directly dep(!ndent on student doesn 't get tenure because he basn 'I pubtiahed
monies. The chance of the state willingly picking up the tab for these eno ugh A couple of weeks later. someone's contract
isn't renewed because he doesn ' t fit in. Someone else
activities IS at best mintmal.
is pressured rnto quitting, a slower process. But it aU
Therefore, Hayes Hall must make 1ts voice heard in Albany agamst adds up t o a mass purge. And JS it merely
coincadental that these people tend to be women ,
thl$ bill. Additionally. it Is neceuary for both student leaden and the
blacks, and men with ideas more to the left of those
gencnl 1\uden\ populace to intorm their legbhnors of tt\e ~rrepareble in power? This information is hardly publJcized and
dam~~ge likely to stem from the bill's passage.
ro people are vague about rbe facts and nothing Is
done
a~dmuustration

This is not the only form of manipulatio n
practiced by t he administration . They deliberately
cut the budget of the CoUeges so that when
everybody gave a sigh of relief when the budget was
restored, theu JOY made them overlook the fact that
the budget for the CoDege:s should have been ,really
mcreased 10 accordance with the phenomenal growth
of the CoUeaes.
And we Je t them get away w1t h all this, thinp
we could ha ve prevented from ha p pening. I can only
feel frustration and anger at myself and the rest o f
the student body, for feigning ignorance and refusing
to act upon what we knew ; the dismissed faculty. for
abandoning us and refusing to take definite steps to
protec t their nghts; and the ad ministration and
faculty responsible for using such totalitarian
methods in st ifling any opposition and preventing
the natural yowth of this Univenlty

It may be late but it can't be too late and now I
mtend to fight and I llope I wt.ll not be alo ne 10
fighting apuut those whose actions, wtuJe ma.lung a
mockery of the concept or "academic freedom ," are
also selfishly dc:nyina us o f the best education
obtainable.
Ray Molly Goldbup

March for peace

last Fnday, many colleges and universities engaged 1n anti war
demonstrations. The University of Buffalo engaged in a meaningless
farce. The minimal turnout for a symbolic protest speaks poorly of our
ant1·war commitment.
Tomorrow, we have a chance to redeem ourselves There 1s a march
downtown desigr~ed to show opposition to President Nixon 's latest
moral outrage and belligerent escalation. We urge full involvement by
all segments of the University commun1ty. Many mdividuals no doubt
feel anxieties about engaging in the type of protests that charactemed
this campus in the past. While we fully appreciate and support "the
desire for a peaceful demonstration, we are not convmoed that a
rational protest implies the total apathy and non participation of last
Friday.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol.

Monday, 24 April1972

22. No. 78

Female security aids?
1'o the l:illtm

1 he content and tone of yow discussion 1n the
fTont page artacle about Campus Security of Apnl 19
in reprd to aUowing w omen students to be secunty
wds is unfortunate . All the substantive content is
onHtted It may be of interest to the unaverslly
commumty to know what was actually discussed . It
is my unders t anding that at present women are not
allowed to be security aids. Smce exchwon of
women students seem5 to be the present policy, and
I believe that this poticy should be changed , the
mclus10n o f women as security atds should probably
be speUed out in the d ocument , Obviously . one of
the eaSJest and most e ffective ways of keepmg any
group d o wn IS to refuse to disc uss unwritten codes.
There are two basic reasons why women should
be allowed to be security aids. One is that o f
fairness . Women, as well as men, may find the JOb
interesting, convenient , and they may like to have

t he income it generat es. The other reuon is based ou
an interesting observation that has been brought t o
my attenlton. It IS possible that while our society 15 a
sexist one, women may be more effective in many
areas of pollee work than men. One policewoman
reported that male suspects were very easy for her to
opprehend, en fa ct , even polite. It is not hard to
imagine that male suspects do not feel the need to
try to best o r bully a woman as they wo uld a man
Hopefully. we can gradually change our
structure so that men d o not feel the need to
IJteraJiy push other men around or t o put women
d own
and, ho pefully . keep them an their place
by ridic ule as so superbly illustrated by the reportmg
of ttus topic.. an The SpectnJm .
f)aphne 1/are.

M.n

Eduor 's nure Wh y, may we uxk. wa.r your Inter
Dear Str.l.

addr~:ss~:d

[ditor·in-Chief - Deon1s Arnold
Co-Mai\AI)na Editor AI Benson
Co M~Mifnc Editor M1l..e Ll ppm~nn
Aut. Manaalna Editor Suun Moss
Business Moa~r J~c k Herlan
Adv«tlslna MliNfe' - Suun Mellen tine
8ac:k~e

Amy Ahrend
. Jo-Ann AnnliO
Jeff GreeowJ!d
. . ... . ...•. .Howle Kuru
City
.... , , •
Janis Cromer
Copy . . . . . • • . . . Roool form lin
. . •. . . ,
... M1ny Gatti
AMI. .
. . . . Cl~re Krie&amp;Sm.&amp;ll
Fts~ture ••. . ... . . . . . Lynda Ten
Gnp hlc Arts .
. .. Tom Toles
Campus

Layout .
Moaryhope Ruoyon
Auc
. . . .....• .v~unt
lh. A Onmot
MichAel Sllverblau
Music . . . . . . . . ..Billy AltmMI
Off~.ampus • . . .. Lynne Tr...:aer
Ar.U. , ,
....... .. v.K.ant
Photo •••... Mic key Osterrelc:her
AMI ...•..••.. . . .. Kim S1nlos

Sp«U . . . • . . . . .. . . . Bury Rubin
Ant

. . • . . .. Ho wie F.alwl

The S~ctrum IS served by Unlccd Press lnlern.ation.al, Collqe Press
Service, the Los Anaeles Times f~ Press , tht Los Aoaeles T1mes
SyndkOIU and Liberatloo News se:vtce.

RapubllcuJon of m1tte r herein with out the express consent of Ole
Edltor~n.Chlef Is

forbidder!.

Edltor13J palky Is determ lo ed by the Edltor·ln~h lef.

Page ei9bt . The Spectrum . Monday, 24 April 1972

'Ihe critic's choice
To tlie 8dltor
I trust what I read an Apnl 19th's Spectrum was
Norman Salant's letter of resignation thinly dJSguJSed
as a commentary on Charlie Mariano's New Atlantic
Album . What else could it be? Nonn himslef 11Sks,
" Why do we need reviewers and critics?" God knows
Ne dOn't need Reviewers like tum .
Perhaps a cntic's job IS not to pass judgement,
but to criticize and analyze are legitimate activities
for a record reviewer. Sal.ant, himself, does some of
this, but whare are his bases? In the cue of the
record in question, Mariano's face ("Can You See
It?" Sorry, Nonn, not in The Spectrum), how hard it
is to make it as a musician , and the fact that Mariano
141cepted commercial pressures and input in order to
act this record o u t. (Bu t isn't "commercial
art . .. intrinsically
and
humanly
valueless"
according to Salant?)
Would Norm change 1us opinion of Mariano if

he knew that tlus record isn't Mariano's first btg
break? He turned out a fine record for Bethlehem
about 15 years ago, about the ume tlat be ~Was
taking a lot of lhe alto solos with Stan Kenton's
Band Not so many years ago I x 2 Momriso Tosruko
Ariyoshi and they recorded an exceUent lp FM
candid under the name of the Tostuko Mariano
Quartet. Even more recently he almost stole Charles
Minors' " Black Saint And Sinner Lady" album fro m
its nominal leader. I have a couple of tbrae sides, and
if Norm would like to do his homework ric .
By the way, the Spanish-Latin influence in jazt
isn't quite so new u Salant thin~. It goes as far back
as New Orleans. In more "modem" styles, I 'd
recommend Dizzy Gillespie's recording of "Cubano
Be" and "Cubano Bop" for anyone interested in the
roots of this movement.

ThomllS Krenbit!l

�-----------------------------

Political Poll

Dr. John AlcDonald views
industrial society P(oblems

Editor 'I note : The following is a poll duigned to find out the
opinforu of SUNYAB 1tuden11 on the upcoming election. Plea1e
tum thil pol/In to The Spectrum office by Wedne1day , April 2 6 no
later than noon.

CaUlng Ame rica's present industrial society
"outdated" and no longer workable , Dr. John
Mc Donald , professor of Health Sciences at the
University of T oronto, said last Wednesday that
man y of the social and economtc pro blems wh1ch are
threatening bo th the Umted States and Canada are
so deep that Immediate changes are necessary to
correc t them

2 WouJd you consider votmg for President Nixon as an alternative
to voting for any of the above? Yes 0 No 0

Speaking to .1 small gathenng at Klemhans, Dr.
McDonald connected a wide vane ty of problems
such as ..pollutton . war and overpopulatiOn ·• Wtth
the basic dectston·making processes o l the
government. One of the most evtdent problems.
according to Dr McDonald , wa.:. that of heaiLh cate
and tts effecttvc distributmn '1"he problems wtth
heal th care t hat we are havmg today are evidcuce of
the problems wh u;h extst 10 the general framewnrlo..
of our society

lfso, who? -------------------------------------3.

Would

you

support

the

tdea

of

a

Thtrd

Party

4. Wha t do you lhtnk wLL.I be the btggest ISSUe in the upcommg
eJection?
a) Vietnam 0
b) Economy 0
c) Draft 0
d) Po Uution 0
e) Other : please specify

' Unrestricted technology •

5. Do you think the 18 - 21 year old vote wtll play a stgoificant part
in the Upcoming election' Yes 0 No 0
6 . Are you in the 18 - 2 1 year o ld bracket'! Yes 0
7 lfave you regJstered to vote'! Yes 0
If not, why not? __ _

No 0

No 0

8 Do you plan to vo te: m this year's elecllon? Yes 0
If not, why not? _ _

No 0

-

I
9 Do you approve of a \ tud ent stnke as an expresston of protest I
against the extension of the war in Southeast ASia? Yes 0

No 0

~chnology.

by Dave Saleh
Sf&gt;«trum Staff klmu

I . Who would you like to see win the Democratic Presidential
no mination?
a) Shirley Chisholm 0
b) Hubert Humphrey 0
c ) Henrery Jackson 0
d) Edward Kennedy 0
e) George MeGovern 0
f) Edmund Muskie 0
g) George Wallace 0
h) Other _ _ __

I movemen t7 Yes 0 No 0

Olanges necessary

I
I
I

----~-----------------------~~

" We arc the VICltms Cll an unrc~l rtcle&lt;.l
technology, " contmued Or McDonald , whtch we
h:we alloweJ to gel out nf control Thtngs have evt•n
gotten lo the potnt where uur ledHHllogy ts a\lually
runnmg us and ntJt hcl ptng us Wttlt health ~arc, we
ate slowl y lcarnmg t hat the prohl~·m~ we are tlcahng
wtth are pohltcal, ccnmliWc and \ttCtal Th1~ 1\ where
t&gt;Ur thmlong musl chJnge anti wht&gt;te we ulust real11e
that there are other lJUCStlllll\ "'he ,111~wered 111 tim
ltcld besnie~ tedt~~tcal une\ '
1\llhoug.h he slashed rechn11logy u~ ont.: ''' the
rnalQ causes of our pwblems Or McDonald claune&lt;l
lhat "the lruc cause~ of lhc~r problems he' twl 111

the merits
but in the decisio n·making
process and how technology .., used. The
corpora te·government system which controls o u r
socie ty has been using techno logy to help itself and
this is where the basis of our problem lie."
SST marked decline
Dr. McDo nald went on to propose the basis for
change in society when he said. "The first signs o f
change m our society became evident Wtth the defeat
of the SST project SST was a corporate projec t
backed by the Prestdent. but defeated by the publtc
who was more concerned with tiS harmful effects
than Wtth flying coast lo coast tn less than 60
minutes. This shows a general trend m society where
sctenltst~ wtll replace tndusrnahsts tn con troUmg
technology. and technology wtll be u~ed to he Ip
humantty mstead of huttmg us lor the sake ul
effictency Jlld advancemen 1."
Ttus change m soctety 1s cumtng much !Ott
slo wly The only way fur the pubh&lt;:. to uhla111 these
Lhanges ts "through lhe pultttcal expresstun of the
values of society . " Dr McDonald further noted ,
'1"he only way we can effectively ch;111ge ~octety tS
thf\1ugh pubhc plann.ng and parttctpattnn "
Th" \11-callcd "parltctpatory plannmg" wouh.l
on changwg S\ICtal value~ and the present
tltret:ttull of M&gt;ucty . alllng wtth all&lt;!mpltng to find a
prupct tl'latuntsh1p hctwccu techn11logy and pohltcs
111 wht~:h netlh ·~r tcrmmate~ the othl.'r Dr McD&lt;mald
locu~

al~•• w;nncd that thc~c change~ wtll he "very d1ffi~ult
aml 11&lt;&gt;1-..y JJtd w11l Jl'finllel)' not lead hi the
uhtJIIIIHCilt llf a Utuptall SIKtety ," bu 1 he dtd cla1m
thai they wtll heir &lt;~Vert the environmenlal and
ecunum1c catastrophic~ wtuch face u~ wtthin the
IICX I dccac.Jt•

S TUDENT DISCOUNT
on all
redecoratlll!J needs
"' t ~uppl1es. p1cture lrarrltng
D.M. AECH PAINT CO
3209 Batley Ave.

UUAB Dance Arts Comm1ttee
Presents the dance film

"Lovers of Tereul"

TERM PAPERS

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Monday, 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Editor's note : the foDowina II ao abdd~ venion
of a lefllthy report entitled: "Sickle Cdl DiJeUo;
A Cue of Slow AdYUK.emmt from Sedoua NCIIlect
to New Concem." Tb.il II the fint of a Kriea tnd
i.nvotfes the biololieal implications of sickle cell
d.iseue. Part II c:oneerna IOCiolotleal impUcatiolll.
Anyone i.nterated in tbe bibtiopaphy ahoul4 come
to The Sputrum office.

Definltiona (aimplifled)
Gene - an inheritance Wl.it or a unit of information tnnsJnilliol) ftom one aenention to another
(Leamer, 1968 ); a unit, compocecl of DNA, orpniud on partic\llar areu of the duo~01omea ; Jl ~t
coeposed of f ~equence of nucleotidea which determine the ~equonce of amino aada in a protem
(Lmno, r 962). Half of the parcnt'a aenea a3 present in every ca or spenp produced . Tbua, a cb.Ud
inberitl half of his ~tnes from one parent and balf from the other.

by AI BetUort
Co-Mana!Pna Editor
Michael G. Michaelson of the Medical
Committee for Human Rltbts (MCHR) sugeau
that Riclutrd Nillon and the Black Panther hrty
may have roached, for an InstAnt, partial accord on
an issue c:oncernina over two million blaclc
Americans. Althoup tltia aarcement may only be
momentary, the seriousnea of an inherited
patholOIY, sickle ceU disea~e, hu forced political,
community, retearch and clinical 11oups to take
some form of action.
The "aick.lina" and donption of normal
(spherical or douahnut shaped) red blood cells is a
b i oloaical phenomeno n with baoloaical
justifications for its presence ; however, as is true
with many human diseases there are also profound
sociolo~cal impllcatlona. To obtain even a weak
arasp of tbe overall si,ruficance of 1uch factors it is
important to survey a vanety of opiruoru and
dinical procedura. It is in tbe scope or thil paper
to attempt a poeral e:umination of both the
biolol)' and •ociolol)' of sickle ceU diseue to
encompus incidence. history, JeneJjOI, teatina
procedures, preptancy risk&amp;, sovemment and other
11oup action, effects on children and the family,
and Selective Service dra f1 exemption. There is also
a discussion on tbe question : Hu tbo preyjous
non-&lt;:omrn!tment to a fiabt apinat lickle c:cJJ
disease been a conscious, purpoceful, malicious
form of Black Genocide ; or, hu 1ucb been an
inltance of serious nealect lhroulh lack of concern
and/or ianorance?
H~motlobtn (obnormt~l ):

H~mortobl" S (NbS - 1tcl:lc etl/):
Sicl:le cell 'rnJlr' (HbA/HbS) - Those persons
wbo inherit the aenetic hemoaJobin type HbA/ HbS
are beterozypuu "carrion" of siclcle cell dilease.
Altbouafl they thenuelve• are for the matt part
••normal," I hey will pass the HbS aene from
Jeneration to generation In the heterozyaous
&amp;tate, usualJy less tban 40% or the red blood ceU's
bemoaJobin is hemosJobln S witll hem&lt;&gt;clobi.n A
accountina for the rcat . Harvey A. Jtano (1959) h.as
written that hemoatobln synthesis is completed (or
nearly so) in the erythrocytes o f peripheral blood .
Upon maturation of the reel blood cells,
hemoafobin proportaons are uncbanaina. Althouah
the maturation time is not known for erythrocyte$
possessina hemoaJobin S, it ia possible to pther
" relative net rate&amp; of ay ntheais" from heteroznous
or ''trait" red celll. ltano majnt&amp;ina . "Since the
two hemoalobins of heteroznotee are produced ln
the same- cell, the ratio in which they occur IB the
ratio of their cellular rates of synthesis, uerapd
over the entire maturation bme" (ltano, 1959) In
most inltances of sickle cell trait, hemosJobm A ts
more abundant than hemoaJobin S and thus has a
more rapid rate of synthesis . It is because o f tlus
biaJler syntheeis rate that the deleteriout effecta of
bemOJiobin S are minimiz.cd A low concentration
of hemOilobin S also •everely depreaaes tbe chance
of &amp;ick.lina In 11t11o (internally) under usual
conditions. With reduced oxypn tension, red
blood cella (HbA/HbS) will siclcle '" vrtn
(externally. ttl a test tube).
Althouab for the ma.t pllrt there 11 no anemia
and no reduction in life expectancy or fertility
associated with tickle cell tra.it, there bave been a
few uceptiona. Under unusual conditions of
reduced oxy&amp;en tension or decreued blood volume
auch as h.iab or even moderate altitude (u in an
unpreuurir.cd airpla.ne), exceaive penpiration ,
anesthesia administration and extreme exhaustion
(MediaJI World New1 , 12/3/7 1), the liclclin&amp;
phenomenon bas occurred. Some of the raults of
such lick.lina include: s pleen infarction, retinal
hemorrbaae, low urine concentration, severe
abdominal pain, stroke, heart attack and deatb.

Sickle cell anemia (HbS/HbS) - Sickle cell
anemia, a far more .erious condition than lickle
cell tna.it, is a homoZYJOUS atatc whereby
bemoslobm S predominates in the reel blood cells
to the near exclusion of bernoatobins A and F .
locwable, chronic and matked by ita ability to
reduce life upect.ncy (thua also affectin&amp;
reproduction rates), lickle cell anemia is manifest
botb lA a steady atate or. condition of chronic
eae:mla aod Ln reoccurri.na episodes of "1ictle cell

HomoiYfOIU - when a trait is inherited from both parents; i.e. each parent transmits the aene (by
means of the chromoeomes) for that trait to tbe child, the child ia homoeyaous for that trait.
Heterotyf014 - when a trait It inherited from only one parent the child b beteroz)'lous for tbat
tralt. A heteroz)'lous individual is often called a "carrier" of a trait.
Hemoglobin (&amp;eneral) - Prcaent in the red cotpllSclea (red blood cells) or erythrocytes of blood ,
each bemoaJobin molecule consilts of four molecules of heme (an iron containina &amp;rOUp) attached to
one molecule of Jlobin (a protein). 11UI iron-containing respiratory protein transports oxYJen to the
tissues of the lunp; pluma is the colorless blood fluid and contaills no hemoaJobin. Linus Paulin1's
research in 1949 revealed that any acnetic differences in bemoaJobin (i.e., normal vs. abnonnaJ) were a
result or difference. in the Jlobln, not the heme, aroup of the molecule. Two alphl chains (each
c:ompo~ed of 141 amino acidl) and two beta chains (each cornpocecl of 146 amino acids) fonn the
molecular composition or the Jlobin . There are two special "structunl" aenes, one for the alpha and
one for the beta chain. Yfhich control the number and the physical ltructure of the amino acids on
their respective chains (F01ter, 1971)
Hemotfobln (normal . HbA) - Normal hemoaJobin is one of the adult hernoaJobins referred to u
hemollobin A. SymbolicaUy, one acne of hemoaJobin may be written : HbA. A nonnal individual
would receive an HbA acne from each parent, thus becoming homoZYIOUS for hemoaJobm A
HbA/HbA A normal red blood cell matures in 91 hours , enpsinJ a synthesis of 800 molecules of
bemotlobll\ per second per cell. The ave race erythrocyte will live 120 days.

c.rWa." In aeneral the steady stale procas CONtJts
or tbe constant formation or (rape, elonptecl.
twisted, riJid, pointed, red blood cells, resultina
from bc:moslobln crystaliation due to OltYicn
deprivation (deOllY&amp;en.ttlon). This internal
procedure of reduced oxyaen tension steadily
proceeds, u the red blood c:elb transport oxyaen
to tho body tiuues, durint venous circulation . The
abnormal siclcled cells are formed spontaneo11sly
durin.a tJW circulation and the body cawelcly
remova t.heae cells from the bloodstream since
they are very fraple and CIUlly broken down
(Pearson, 1971). Jn other words, the body Is
deltroyina the liclcled cells far more rapidly thin Jt
would d.iminate nonnal crythrocy1es, and thus it
can nor replace old cells with new cells in a
balanced fashion - anemia thus ensues. Tbe
ellternal 1ymptoms include " poor physical
development, pallor, weakness,U.Uessneas, chronic
ulcers on the anlcle, a yellow cut to the eyes or
severe abdominal paina (Campbell, 197 I).
The "siclcle cell crilis" Ia primarily launched
by tissue dama1e or tissue death. Oamaae occurs as
the sictlecl cella " loa Jam," cloaina toaethcr in
mass formina blood clota and hinderioa blood Dow
throuah tile tiny blood vessels . By nature of their
shape, the abnormal cells experience more friction
as they attempt to pass tllrouJb capillaries and
vessels, thus minim.i:ljna Ollygen transport and
reaiU&amp;nce to infection. This endansers vital oxygen
dependent orpns (Campbell, 1971) as the lunzs .
lddneys, braan and liver Bone marrow and tbe
spleen, both of which normally have low blood
flow rates, are Cllpecially vulnerable to low oxygen
tensions (Foster, 1971). A cbild's spleen may
become enla111ed , eventually decrcuina in size until
it is quite small.
X-rays have revealed a thJckeruna of the slcuU.
lnfants experience painful swellina in the hands
and feet while older children suffer tmmobilir:in&amp;
pain i.n the arms, lep and abdomen . Vessel
obstruction i.n the brain and eyu can result ttl
urolce and blindness; severe chest pain and
breathina diffu:ulties arise with the blocltin&amp; of
luna YeSSeb. 'With so many complicated symptoms
attributed to it , siclcle ceU anemia iJ known u the
..IJ'Cit imitator" {Pearson, 1971 ).
Emotional or physical stress, colds, bactenal
and viral infectiona and fatiaue can also initiate a
c:r:UU situation . Any development, such u hypoxia
(reduced OllY&amp;en flow) or stasis (reduced
circulation), which produces prolonged
deoxyaenation of tissue can indeed implement
these erisa. Sue Foster ( 1971) nicely expands such
phenomena and manifestations in several ways. lf
Jiven enouah oxyaen, asckled ceU. will assume a
normal abape . M orcover, altbouah both
oxyJenatecl hemopobin A and bemoatobin S
experience identical aolubility, deoxygenated
hemoaJobin A sboWJ a decreased solubility by 50%
while deoJtYFil.lted b.emoaJobttl S is SO timea leu
soluble; decrcuin&amp; tho oxY&amp;en supply will areauy
increue the viac:OI.ity of bernoslobin S and
effectively t.tao.sform the shape of the reel blood
cella. Blood Yilcosity is abo increued with UPiets
io hemotlobin coucentrationt. Dehydration and

Pa91 tm . The Spectrum . Monday, 24 Aprill972

eventual crisis occur throuah vomitina, diarrhea
and an inability to· fonn concentrated urine. TbCIIe
facto11 contribute to a 11eater amount of "idled"
hemQJiobin which in tum increa~ea the total
number of liclcled cella; blood vucosity is thus
increased with aludiPna a.nd final veesel bloclcage
endina the cycle. Dehydration also f'Ciults in
~erious weiaht toaaae since more flwd ia lost than
can be normally tolerated.
Furthermore, the disease is associated witll
orpn, pulmonary and cerebral infarction: fevf:f',
pneumonia; abdomin•l wall riJidity , let ulcers ;
~nal bemorrbap; and, a lowered pH 1111ce plasma
bicarbo11.1te is aratly reduced in an attempt to
buffer the lactic acid which aoevm"'-atCII whDe the
Krebs cyde is inhibited dwina hypolda (acid-b..e
balance ia re~tored upon aitil termination).

lnddotnce and Sidde Cel Mi~Jatioa
Sidtle cell trait and aickJe cell anemia ha~c
assaulted the black people of the world, altbo\JI)\
not exclusively. Centuriea aao, the homQilobin S
aene c:ame into e:d.stence, probably by apontaneoua
mutation, and dominated in the malaria infested
reajons of equitori.al Africa and the Medlteoanean
cout. Documented evidence bas revealed that
siclcJe cell malaria paruite (the pesuite "aoids"
blood that can sickle), both morbidity (Ulneu) and
mortality (death) ratce have ahown apajlica.nt
decline. Thus, accordin&amp; to evolutionary theory,
there would be a natural selection for thote people
with sickle ceU trail . Anemic people, howevec,
would die; and, one out of four offapri.na or those
parents both possea:in&amp; llickle cell tra.it would
inherit sickle cell anemis (I.e. a Mendelian ratJon
whereby one child would be normal, two children
would have liclcle cell trait, and one child would
have sickle ceU anemia).
ne viaorous slave trade from the 16th to tbe
I 8th centuries area tty 1pread hemoaJobin S to
other countries including those where malaria wu
not a threat (thus remoma the advantaae of
anyone carryin&amp; hemoaJobin S). Today, the sickle
cell gene permeate&amp; areu south of the Saban and
north of tbe Zambesi River. Honeyman ( 1971)
reports I licJcle cell tra.it incidence o f 31 .J, for the
Nearoid VeddoidJ of Southern India and • trait
incidence of 45% for the Pipnoid population of
East Africa. To a far lesser extent, there are
instances of sickle cell trait invoiVUlJ the non-blaclt
people of Latin America, Puerto Rlco , Italy,
Greece, Asia, the Near East and tbo Caribbean.
Robert Nalbandian, a Mlchipo pathologist,
bas &amp;aid figures reprdina the incidence of siclcle
cell disease are "charotic, pe.rocbial and
inaccurate" (Todfly i Hulth, December, 197 J ),
Robin M. Bannerman, from the Medical Genetics
Unit and Department of Medicine at the State
University of New Yorlt at Buffalo and Buffalo
General Hospital, bas attempted to compile some
si&amp;nificant statistics involm&amp; wortd incidence. In a
soon to be published paper be wrote.
"The problem ne&amp;.reat to hand .is sickling in the
Nearo population of the United Statce. Of a total
U.S. Nearo population of approximately 19
million, 8% are heteroey1ous for bemOilobin S. It

'

follows that about one thoUDnd btrtlu per annum
will be new cues of sickle celJ anem~a . They will be
arislna. however, from relltiwely small numben of
maniagt8, only 1/1 56 or ,approximately 6 per
thousand, will be marria&amp;CI between two tickle
trait individuals. The table 1howa .un.u.ar
caiculatioo.s Cor a few otber countries (Table 0 :
WHO. Haem~obinopatfla and Allied Diaorders.
Technical Report Seriu, no. 3J8, Geneva, 1966 ;
Uvinptone, 19671 Ia Nile ria, with a tot.!
population of over 55 million , the aaclcle trait
frequency ranps from 18 to 40%. Auui11U\I an.
averaae of lS,, tbere wllJ be 14 mill:ion
bete:rozypea. This time, 1/ IS or 6 per hundred
ru.&amp;I'@PI are likely to be between heteroZYFtct,
and llcre will be approximately 62,000 new cues
of lieJcle cell anemia per annum Other eumplea
chOIOD, t&gt;ec.use data are eas1ly accesstble, are the
1maller countria of Gbana 17 .J million total
popuJation, 15% trait, 2500 new homozyaotea per
annum, 1{44 marnaaes between hetcTozyaotes I ,
Chad (2.8 million total popuauon, 20% trait,
1800 new bomozyaotes per annum, I /24 mani.aaes
betw•n heterozygota I and Toao ( f .6 million
total population, 13% lr:ut, ratio whereby o ne
dilld would be normal , two cluldren would have
llclcle there are some JS .Urian countries in which
there is a very siaruficaD1 frequency of aickhne.
They mate up a total populauon of over 2SO

Some intereallng stah~tie~ have been com
the Americon /tl~d.ltal AstoC14tlon (October c
ceU anenua with other major diseases in the
with an incidence of one child born with 11
prevalence of sicltle cell disease il comparabl•
commoo d.isea'cs The followina fiiUJ'CS arc
rate which includes 3.496 million white birtt
withstand the current trend with the excel
decreased ttl new cuea reported .

Incidence of hcrtduary childhood duetuu
Sictle ceU anerru.a I ·soo (black births)
Diabetes mellitus I 2500 (btrtlu - 2 : I, wtu
Ac11te leukerru.a (non-bercdttary) - I .2880 (cl
Cystic fibrotil - I 2940 (Births : 93~ ¥4Ute)
MuscuJar dystrophy - I SOOO (birtha)
PIW - I :10 ,000 (white bartbt)
Estimated new caJIJ of tlu~allll"' th~ US., I~
Sickle cell anemlll black 1142, white : 13
Cystic fibroSlS - black . 17. wlute. 1189
Muscular dystrophy - black I 14. wtute 699
PKU - black : 0, white 350
he~~alen ce e.f(imottl . ttlccted long·tt!rm illnts.
under /6 yean) {%toto/ black popullltion
bkzck; Detroit · 47% black; WtUhtngton, D
Sickle cell anemis Ptuladelphia ; 61, RJchmo
Diabetes mellitus - Ptuladelpb.i.a . SO, Richmor
Nephrosis - Pbila~phia . 15 , Richmond : 16,
Cystic fibrosis - P.nadelpbia : 10, Richmond
Seven of the ten lllrgest cibea in the nation ba'

.U"

AJ&gt; a sumii1J,f1.Duon , m the United Stat•
people suffering {rom sickle cell anemia and
cell trait.

�~lectetl killer·

If

lt
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y

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I,

0

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's

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foUoWJ that about one thouand births per annum
will be new cases of sickle cell anemia. They will be
arisina, however, from relatiwely small numben of
marriaaea, only 1/ 156 or approximately 6 per
thousand, will be m&amp;Tru~gcs between two sickle
trait individuals. The table shows similar
calculations for a few ottJec countries (Table 0 :
WHO. Haemoclobinopathiea and Allied Disorders.
Technical Report Series, no. 338, Geneva, 1966;
Li"rinptone, 1967 I . In Nigeria, with a total
population of over 55 lllillion , the sickle trait
frequency ranpa from 18 to 40%. Assumina an.
.averaae of 15~, tben will be 14 millton
heterozyJ(&gt;tea. This time, 1/ I 5 or 6 per hundred
marriaces are likely to be between heterozyaotes,
and tllere will be approxmately 62,000 new cases
of sickle ceU anemia per annum. Other examples
chosen, because data are easily accessible, are the
smaller countries of Ghana 17.3 million total
population, l S% trait, 2500 new homoeyaotes per
annum, l/44 marriages tletween hetcrozygotes I .
Chad [2.8 million total population, 20% trait,
1800 new bomozygotes per annum, 1/24 marriases
between heteroeygotes I and Togo ( 1.6 million
total population, 23% twt, ratio whereby one
child would be normal . two children would have
sickle there are some 35 AJrican countries in which
there il a very iign.ificant frequency of sicldina.
They make up a total population of over 250

million and at a roueb • tllllate tlwle may be 30
m.illiOtl sickle coil trait cauiers in .U of tbom."

Geoetica
Richard F . Shaw (1970) b.u supported the
fairly new aenetic concept of relatina fitness (i.e.
Darwin's n~productive fitnca - "surrival of the
fittcilt ..) to mortridity (aickneu rat~). PUn• per se
ooncorna itself with a succcaful reproduction rate;
hOWeYCIT, if an abnormal JflllOlype (a pei'IOD'S
JCDetic compolitloo) is pre~ent, an indJridual
milbt "look ill.. docrealina eN,... of mania...
Fwthennore, even if a penon doea marry. b'e
mia:bt die prematurely because of illness, limitina
bia reproductive capacity.
Hemoclobin S il an example of Mendel's
autosomal recessive pne. This means that HbS is
not located on a sex c.hromoaome and that
heteroeyaotes will in most cues appear normal. (If
the HbS aene was dominant, the heterozygote&amp;
HbS/HbA would suffer from sickle· ceU anemia as
do the homoeyaotea HbS/HbS .) The hemoglobinS
gene is also· a representative sample of a balanced
polymorphism. This, in effect, is an equilibrium
state which maintains the superior fitness of the
heterozygote, or heterosis (Shaw, 1970). In malaria
infested countries, the heterozygote (HbA/HbS,
balanced polymorphism) had a decided advantage
over both the homozygous "normall" (HbA/HbA)

Some intereatmg statistia have been compiled by Robert B. Scott, for the Journal of
the American Medual Association (October 6, 1970), comparin&amp; the incidence of sickle
cell anemia with other major diseases in the United States. It is important to note that
with an incidence of one child born with sickle cell anemia per SOO black births, the
prevalence of sictle cell disease is comparable to and indeed exceeds that of many other
commoo diseases. The following fiaures are derived from tbe 1967 United States birth
rate which includes 3.496 million white births and 571 ,000 black births. These numbers
witbstan4 the current trend with the exception of phenyketonuria (PKU) which has
decreased in new casea reported.

Incidence of huedi{IJry childhood dlletz1es :
Sickle cell anemia - I :500 (black births)
Oiabet« mellitus - I 2500 (births - 2 : I, white :black)
Acute leukemia (non-hereditary) - l :2880 (children under 15 , majority white)
Cystic fibrosis - I :2940 (Births: 93% v4Ute)
Muscular dystrophy - I :5000 (births)
PKU - I : 10.000 (white births)
&amp;timated new ca~1s of diuattl in the U.S .• J 967:
Sickle cell anemia - black : 1142, white: 13
Cystic fibrosis - black : 17. whit~: 1189
Muscular dystrophy - black : 114, white : 699
PKU - black : 0 , white 3SO
P,ewllence estimatu selected long-term il/nel~tJ (whi:e and black catel/100,000 children
rmder /6 yean). {% total black population - Philadelplti4 : 32% black; Richmond, Va.:
#%black; Detroll : 47% black; Wa~hington, D.C. : 68% black/ :
Sick.lo cell anemia - Philadelphia: 61, Richmond : 84, Detroit : 89, Wasbinaton : 129
Diabetes mellitus - Philadelphia: SO, Richmond: 47, Detroit: 46, Washinaton : 39
Nephrosis - Philadelphia: 15, Richmond : 16, Detroit : 16, Washinaton : 16
Cystic fibrosis - Pla.iladelphia: 10, Richmond : 8 , Detroit : 8 , Washinaton : 5
Seven of the ten largest cities in the nation have more than 30% black population.
As a sumrna.riz.ation, In the United States today there are 45 ,000 to 75,000 black
people suffering flom sickle ceO anemia and another two million people carryina sickle
cell trait.

and anemiga (BbS/HbS). HbA/HbA would die
from mala.ril and HbS/HbS would die from sickl.e
cell anemia while HbA/HbS would either be mildly
afflicted wl\th malaria or would completely reatrain
the pe.raai'te. "This is due to the fact that
erythrocyt«ll conta.i.nin&amp; hemoatobin S provide an
i n hospitalble environment for Pllumodiulft
faldparum (malaria). lbe reault of such heterosia
il that th'e HbS aene reachC8 an intermediate
equilibrium1 frequency (with HbA) and stays
there." (Shaw, 1970) Of course the liclde oeU trait
carri.. are NQOilllble Lfor pmcluciJie anemic
Cbildren, du• there rematna a balanced oondltion
between th1e ..,ood .. and the " bad."
lnherit.ance will be discussed aaain very
briefly. If two "normal" people mate (HbA/HbA x
HbA/HbA),, they will produce normal children . If
one parent has trait and the other is normal
(HbA/HbS x HbA/HbA), a ratio of I : I wW evolve
(i.e. two children will be normal (HbA/HbA) and
two childre:n will have tiait (HbA/HbS)). If both
parents hav·e trait (HbA/HbS x HbA/HbS) a ratio
of 1 :2:1 c•ccurs [i .e. one child will be normal
(HbA/HbA) , two children will have trait
(HbA/HbS) and one child will have sickle cell
anemia (HbS/HbS)). The chances of anemic people
mating is mtinute since those afflicted generally die
before 20 years of age .

Treatment •and Teatina
Until mcently, treatment to combat sickle ceU
has been limited to coping with each crisis as it
OCCW'I and lfor the most part bas been unsuccessful.
Oxyaen administration will prevent further sicklin&amp;
and unsicltle cells in the blood cil"culation ;
however, uxysen cannot bypass clotted blood
vessels . "Anticoagulants, carbonic anhydrase
inhibitors, s.t eroids, cobalt and blood transfusions"
have yielded few positive results. (DiJp, 1956;
Foster, 197' 1). Partial blood transfusions attempt
to maintain IS to 40% hemoalobin A by aivina3SO
c.c. of wh1ole blood and remoYi.na 500 c.c. of
diseased bl·ood every six to flilbt weeks. Tbis
method tends to limit the number of sickled ceUs
and decrease blood viscosity; however, "hepatitis,
hemochromatosis and reactions to the blood
trantfusions" are hazards. (Anderson, et al , 1963 ;
Foster, 1971 ).
Dr. Robert Nalbandian bas deviled a new
treatment utillrinJ urea, a component of urine
which can be artificially prepared easily and
cheaply. Uirea is administered intravenoualy to
keep the blood urea nitroaen (BUN) level at ISO
rna% to 2100 ma%. This procedure effectively
"breaks the hydrophobic (water reaiatent) bonds
(between 11djacent hemoglobin molecules) and
reverses the: sicklina proceaes, restores normal
circulation, and relieves pain." (Mediet~l World
New1, Dec. 3, 1971 ). It also helps to end the crisis,
increase th1e life span of red blood cella and
"relieves the~ enormoua metabolic load on the bone
marrow qq~." (MWN). The method, mentions
Dr. Nalban.dian, is "rather expensive, requires
hospitalizatlon, and represents treatment alter tbe
vasco-occlwive episodes and attendant tisaue

injury." (MWN). Moreolier, the danpr or extreme
diureaia (20 to 30 liters or urine excreted) may
occur dwina a 24 to 36 hour period . Without
careful control, such could result in dehydration
· (Ouid and electrolyte imbalance) and eventual
shrinkap of the brain (Focrter, 1971 ). Dr.
Nalbandian bas abo IUcceafuDy experimented
with oral prophylactic urea, limitinl tissue damqe
while costing "pennies." Cerami and Mannina have
bqun teats utillzina potlaiwn cyanate which
requires 1mall conceDtratioos and lnevenlbly
lllhit.its llcldinl' uDiike the wea dola&amp;cs wltleb
must be maJ,oramOd at b1P leVdl (M WN) .
There are several tC8tinl procedures currently
employed in scree.nint for sickle cell disease. It
should be noted that sickle ceO testing is not
posaible for children under five to six months of
aae Iince bemoalobin s levels have not been
maximized (hemOilobin F predominates during
early post natal life and heavy hemoglobin S
production becomea noticable after three months
of age). (Nalbandian , et al, 1971 ).
Mass screening for sickle ceU disease can be an
effective detection device only if the methods
utilized are extremely inexpensive, quick to
administer and readily available to the black
population throu&amp;h clinics, etc. The followin&amp;
represents synopses of current testing procedures
as taken from Linda E. Anderson's report in
California i Health (november, 1971 ).

I) H~moglobin dectrophoreiu - enables very
accurate identification of any hemoglobins present
in blood, and is recommended as confirmatory test
when other screening procedure bas yielded
positive results ; requires expensive laboratory
equipment and biabJy sltilled technicians ; utilizes
cellulose acetate, salt solution, and staining
materials ; takes a few hours and costs S15 per test
commercially.
2) Nalbandian automated procedure
(automated dithionite test) - a very new method;
requires autoanalyzer system, re•aent solution;
reduces personnel time, re-.gent usage, and cost
per teat, but is only efficient in numbers of 50 or
11eater; costs five cents per test, accordin&amp; to
Nalbandian.
3) Sickle cell preparation - requires skilled
technicians; utilizes microscope, slides, Petri plates,
and sodium bisulfate reaaent; needs only a few
drops of blood; takes about two hours, cost $3- 5
commercially.
4) Sickledex tube tell - available in ltits from
Orth-Diagnostics, Raritan, N.J.; does not require
laboratory equipment or skilled technicians; taJces
2-3 minutes, cost $11 -75 for a ltit of 12 , $47 .60
for a kit of 100.
5) Slide elution test - a very new method ;
does not require very skilled technicians or
laboratory, althoup microscope recommended for
novices; is a visual test utilizing a few drops of
blood, slides, staining materials, and hand lens or
microscope; takes 22 minutes, is inexpensive (exact
amount depending upon type of personnel
performina test).

Monday, 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

..

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l1ke a 1275 c.c. overhead valve
Just the right size for you, your
engine, mag-style wheels, radial -ply
friend and enough gear to see you
tnes. leather steering wheel cover.
reclining bucket seats, full carpeting
through a weekend .
and three -blade windshield wipers.
You'll discover that the real
What do you pay for this small
meaning of " sports motoring " has
econom1cal sports car? Of all the
nothing to do with ¥4 -mile strips at
abandoned airports.
)
proven winners now in national SCCA
....sports car racing , it's the one with
It has to do with roads that taka
the lowest price tag .
to the hills where the scenery and
fresh air are . Roads that turn and twist
A little for a lot of sports car.
and meander down the other side,
For the name of your nearest
faithful to the contours of nature.
Austin MG dealer and for information
That's where terms like rack-and- about overseas delivery, dial (800)
pinion steering, front disc brakes.
631-1972. In New Jersey dial (800)
race-seasoned suspension and a
962 -2803. Calls are toll-free.
close-ratio 4-speed gearbox. start
making sense to the uninitiated.
And you'll wonder how you
MG. The sports car America loved first.

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Monday, 24 April 1972

�I

I
TM I*rid of RNI The Ralcals (Coluwbil. KC3 al63)

Predicted cbampons

Auto race momenJs of truth
by Bruce Czaja
Sp«tol to The Spectrum
Spring is the time for lovers,
nowers, and prognosticators.
After long months of hibernation ,
tlte crystal balls of the so-called
experts in the sporting wortd are
broken out and instantly, the
champions in every swnmer sport
are procla1med. As is wually the
case, these fearless purveyors of
the future wind up loolting like
asses when their predictions tum
out to be as accurate as the one
made by the fellow who said that
the Titanic was unsinkable.
However, even w ith that thought
in mind, I wil l perilously submit
myself to ridicule and foolishly
declare the winners in the world

of motor racing.
In racing's premier series, the
Grand Prix, Jackie Stewart will
capture his second Driver's
Ot.ampionship in a row . The
TyrreU-Ford he drives has been
relatively free of mechanical
problema and Stewart is in a class
by himself when his cars work
property. Even though Denny
Hulme is leading the series after
the first two races, the tiny Scot
will P'"ail. Other challenges
could come from J acky lckx in a
Ferrari or Ronnie Peterson in a
March, but it is doubtful if they
can w ind up in the winner's circle
often enough to dethrone
Stewart.
In America's foremost sports
car series, the Can-Am, Team

McLaren will win its fifth tiUe in a
row. With Jackie Stewart JOming
Denny Hulme in the bright orange
cars, the only question is which
driver will capture the individual
crown. The cars will again be
powered by aluminim Olevrolet
engines which generate nearly 800
horsepower from their 500 cubic
inches.
A threat to the McLaren
domination could come from
Marie Donahue, who will be
drivi n g a factory sponsored
Porache. The car has a small 300
cubic inch engine but it is
turbocharged and turns out over
800 horsepower to match that of
the McLarens'. The car has broken
the track record at Road Atlanta
-.::onllnu.d on pa941 I ti

SA-GSA Speakers Bureau
Presents

BRUCE FRANKLIN
(Recentty d ismissed tenured faculty member
at Stanford University )

The other ni&amp;ht I was listening to the incredibly soulful
"Tem ptations 'Bout To Get Me," from the Rascals See albu m. When it
was over, I started searching for another record to p ut on when I
realized tha t only the undisputed Icing of tenderness, Smokey, could
follow it up. So I pulled out Going To A Go·Go and listened to "Tracks
Of My Tears, Ooh Baby Baby,
Choosey Beggar," etc. Needless to
say, Smokey was able to come
through for me, but I'm not here
to discuss his enormous talents,
because in the words of one
Jackson Norton , "superlatives
would seem quite silly at this
point."
The reason I rela ted this story
to you is to point out just how
much I love the Rascals, and that
when news of their new album
reached me it was lime for great
celebration around my neck of
the woods. Before I go on, let me
explain why 1 dia them so much.
It centers around two trunp, one being very tanpble, the other not so
tangible. The ftrst is Felix 's vocals, because in my mind be is the most
soulful (and classiest) whJte singer around . To top him, you must look
to, apin, someone like Smokey or Otis. Secondly, the Rascals have to
be, by far and away, th ~ "good vibes " band of aU time. More love and
feeling come out of one Felix song than an entire Grateful Dead
concert or five Jefferson Airplane shows. I guess Felix is a cosmic Pete
Seeger. Or, in hoop terms, he is the Nate Thurmond of rock and roU.
Always doing a super JOb, but never, except for scattered instances,
aetting the fuU recogrullon he deserves.
Anyway, back to the matter at hand , that beina the new Rascal
album, Th~ lllond of Real I was a bit wonied about thetr next record
betng a real letdown, because I couldn't tmagine them coming up with
something comparable to their previous effort, P~auful World.
P~aceful World was my favorite album of those released last year, and is
also one of my all hme fa'(Orites . Well, this second Columbia outing is,
just as 1 expected, no comparison to Pt-aceful World (there aren't many
at.bu~s that are), hut it ~ure is one fme record. It doesn 't show any
directtonaJ changes and aome of the sonp just plam don't make it, but
those that do completely dtSpel any thoughts about the lp.
"Lucky Day ," the opening cut, is one of the tunes that really,
really makea it. In fa ct , this son&amp; alone would be wortb the price of the
record. The tune iuelf \S typically Rascal-ish. Beauuful, spirited vocals
by Felix, with very able a.aaistance from MoUy Holt and Anrue Sutton,
and fine, liaht back-up worlt. And tbe lyrtca, well it's Felix , nl)\t.,
" Must be my Juclcy day, even the trees are bendlna my way." Felix is
one of the few people around w ho can tum the darkest hour into the
bri&amp;htest sunshine.
The next tune tells the story of a gtrl from Dallas who arrives in
the big city, finds a guy, but then dum ps him for a rock and roll star.
It's a good rocker with Felix wailing really weJJ (especially near the
end), and Joe Farrell (who added a lot to the sound of Ptacefuf World)
blowmg a super fine sax . The tJtle "Sap of New York," fits perfectly
" Jungle Walk" is Buzr.y Feiten's attempt to out-Sly Sly, and I
tlunk he succeeds HIS playmg tS restratned through most of the album,
but on thiS cut (plus " Island Of Real '' and "Lament") he daes some
stepping out.
"Brother Tree" deals wuh the oneness that Felix feels wtlh nature
and I imapne that tl's a btl unnecessary . But JU.~l llstentng to hJm stng JS
the song's savtng yace. Tlus leads into " Island Of Real ," a Pea.ceful
World-ish type song (as tS "Buttercup"), with some mce flute wo rk
from Joe Farrell agatn. The song deals Wllh , as does much of the album,
stripping away the soctetal fuck-ups we've been buried under and
getting dow n to the baste goodness that Felix feels we all have.
" Humnun' Song" opens the second side and tls filled Wtlh that
infectious Rascal mapc that I seem to be so heaVJly tnfected with . The
opening guitar part ts really Slmilar to Paul Stmon's " Me And Julio ,"
but that's cool cause they're both good old New York boys anyway .
Of the tunes that don't make it , "Echoes'' and " Be On The Real
Side" are the poorest The former (Molly Holt' s (rst lead vocaJ) sounds
JUSt too much like Dtonne Warwtcke and the latter is a btl too trite.
There tS much too much outstanding mustc on tlus record to let a
few mediocre cuts stop you from gelling tl. And tf the musjc tSn't
enough, Dino has once agatn done some fine cover artwork. Enjoy it.

..,

Terry Bromberg

·-····-•

Speaking on:

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Monday, 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�QdWileQ

tfle S~QO~W !lad

goqe BQd spriQg bUrst
OpoQ tQe ll!Qd,
tbepeople
rejoiced aqd
&lt;IrBQkof
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: :: :
'-91 fourteen . The Spectrum . Monday, 24 Aprill972

�Sports awaiting contract for facilities
by Bury Rubin
Sportt Editcw

As anyone who attended lut season's Buffalo winter
sports knows, the Bulls lack athletic facilities. The problem
of facility shortage is also acute in the recreation and
intramural area where the average student participates.
However, the possible solution to the facility shortage for
the next few years appean only a contract away from
completion.
The contract in mention is for use of the proposed
Grand Island Sports Pavilion, a 20 -minute ride fro m
Norton HaJJ. According to Dr. Harry G. Fritz, Buffalo's
director of athletics, "a 15 page document covering all
aspects of the facility has been worked out between our
attorney, Bob Upp, and their attorney." "Their" refers to
a subsidiary of the CaldweU Development Corporation,
which is involved in much of the construction in the Grand
Island area.

..

__....

Up to now, the project has hit several snags,
lncludina a power compeny dispute and a switch ln site
pam. However, the Bulls and the Student Association
expect to si8'1 a contract within the two weekJ prior to
May J . According to Dr. Fritz : "The contract that we
hope to si8'1 will give us two weeks, until May IS, to make
our final decision on acceptance of use of the facility . Our
acceptance depends upon their demonstration of several of
the items of the contract."
Should the facility fail to be finished on time (the
ice Bulls start practice Oct. IS), Buffalo will be forced to
reschedule the I 5 dates already scheduled for the facility.
As of Friday, Buffalo has already scheduled II home
hoclcey dates, along with four buketball dates for Grand
Island .
Intramural hockey llated
In addWon to intercollegiate competition at the

pavilion, intramural and recreation activities will also take
place thel'e. Dr. Pritz has indicated that there will be one
night of recreational ice skating each week , along with one
night of intramural ice hockey.
In addition to problems over the contract at Grand
Island, BuU officials are worried about a possible
state-wide construction strike, schec!uled for June I . Any
such strike action would finish ofT all possibilities for the
construction of the 4{)()().seat pavilion.
According to proposed Athletic Department plans,
students will be admitted free of ch.arge to games at the
pavilion u weU as parking on the grounds. Dr. Fritz
concluded his interview with this reporter by commenting:
"We played in a patchwork manner last year, and I do not
want this to happen two years in a row. In alJ of our
contract negotiations, Jon Dandes and Joe Ashwal of the
Student Association h.ave been present. The actual
contract will be with the Student Association of the State
University of New York at Buffalo."

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Monday, 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�Auto-·race moments ...
durin&amp; tests earlier this year,
showing itself to be fut enouah.
The main problem will be
reliability. Few other can entered
can be considered serious threats
unlea the front runners break.
Although they won't win, they do
add color and cars to the field .

New awa are C..c
For the left tum fanatics, both
types of oval racing, USAC
" Ind y" cars and NASCAR
stockers will be interesting. In
~AC, the driver's title and the
(ndjanapolis "500" will go to
Bobby Uruer. No one knows for
certain what makes the new Eagle
so fast and they probably won't

until much later in the year. In Richard Petty is strualinl aJona
tire tests at Indy recently, Unser with the rest lookina for his wins.
cin:led the track at better than Petty, who lw dominated the
190 m.p.h., 12 m.p.h. futer than stock car racina scene for the Jut
the tJack record! Several drivers few years has found binuelf
will have brand new cars this year, without the blcltina of the
with the Viceroy team of AJ Chrysler Corporation. He is
Unser, winner at Indy the Jut two discoverin&amp; that hit car doesn't
years, J oe Leonard, and Mario run as well on STP'a money.
In the races run thus far, there
Andretti being the most
formidable on paper. Mclaien have been several djfferent
will be back with new cars for winners. With two race winner
Mark Donahue and Peter Revson, A.F. Foyt goin&amp; back to drive in
but little is known of the cars at the USAC races, the dominate
this time. As strong as the other figure would have to be Bobby
teams appear, none will be able to Allison. His Olevrolet is fut and
match Bobby in the car designed reliable and will give him a ride
by Dan Gurney.
into the title at the end of the
For a change, in NASCAR year.

The fair city of Buffalo baa one mile radius of Buffalo there are
advantage if you're a racing fan , several other tracks, such as
ita location. Watkins Glen and Mid-Ohio, Lime Rock in
M01p0rt Park (60 miles east of Connecticut, Michigan
Toronto) are both only two and a lnternational, and Bryar Motor
half houn away. These tracks will Park in New Harnpdtire which will
host the only two Grand Prix enable the fans to enjoy a full
races 'held in North America this
ear ofauto racin .
year, with the Canadian G.P. run
in September and the U.S. in
THE RAG SHOP
October. Both tracks will also
920 Niaaara Falls Blvd .
host Can-Am and Trans-Am sports
NOW OPEN
car races during the summer.
Featurina
Pocon o Speedway, in
• JEANS &amp; TOPS •
Pennsylvania, is about a four hour
dri e. The track will host a
fo r
SOO.rnile USAC Championship car
'HE'&amp; 'SHE'
race in July and a 500-rnile stock
OPEN
car race in the fall . Within a 400

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Pag!l sixteen . The Spectrum . Monday, 24 April 1972

�Baseball Bulls win over·the

Hest Virginian Mountaineers

Incredible suecess

Tennis team undefeated
Aa of this writing, the ~uffalo

by.Dirte~
Spec/TUm Stllff Writer

Savina their fireworks for the end, the baseball
Bulls scored in three of the lut four inni.op Friday
afternoon to hand the viaitina Mountaineers from
West Viflini.a a 3-2 defeat. A scheduled
Saturday afternoon with the
doubleheader
Mountaineers was wubed away by the rain.
Lefthander Jon Roth, who again pitched well
enough to win, wu not around to earn his first
victory of the seaaon. The junior from Tonawanda
allowed both West Virginia rum on o~y two bits in
his seven inninp of work. After allowing a firat
inning home run to Mountaineer second baseman
Don Schultebeinrich, Roth breezed through the next
six fra mes while pitching one-bit baseball.
()dachowlld cops win
Righthander Gary Odacbowski, who relieved
John Mast in the eipth after the latter bad allowed
the first two batters to hit safely, pitched out of the
inning and burled three inninp of one-hit relief to
earn his third victory of the year against two
setbacks. Odacbowsk.i, who is scheduled to work in
the doubleheader against Syracuse this Saturday,
lowered his ERA to a staff leadina I .85 .
While the BuD pitchers were stifling West
Virginia's attaclc, the Buffalo hitters were beina
stymied by Mountaineer riabthander Kim West. The
nephew of Los Anaelea Laker, Jerry West , had
~h~elson
permitted the Bulls just one run on five bits through lo let Joe hit away in that situation," reasoned BuU
the first seven stanzas. West pennitted more than head Coach Bill Monkars.b. "Even though he has to
one base runner in an innina only twice, once when make contact in that situation , with the runner
Buffalo managed to tally its lone run to that point. ~ing, I consider him a good bunter and all that he
''I feel that West was the beat pitcher that we had to do was aet the ball down on the grass. With
have faced,'' remarked Burfalo'a leadin&amp; bitter, On Weat pitchina from a fuU windup, he was at a
('ott. "He had good control and a very good curve. disadvantaae in that he couldn't stop hia delivery
However, he had a tendency to get the baU up, and when the runner left third, or be would have been
called for a balk ."
that was what coet him.''
With one: out in the eighth innin&amp;, the BuUs had
The Bulls notched the winning tally in the tenth
two runners in scorina position. With one strike, frame. With two outs, shortstop Rick Albert sina.Jed
centerfielder Joe Piscotty laid down • perfect bunt to left and stole second . West, still on the mound for
on a suicide squeeze to deadlock the aame at 2...U..
the Mountaineers, was faced with the prospect of
retiri.n&amp; Cott with a runner in acorina position to end
Monkanh stratqy wocb
the threat. However, Cott laced a pitch deep to
"I feel that it wo uld have been more of a p.mble oel)ter field to score Albert with the winnina run.

The

Loving Cup

tennis team sports an undefeated
3-0 record. But this is not the
most significant part of the story.
The fact is that the Bulla have yet
to lose as much as a single point in
any of their matches. As reported
earlier Buffalo State went down
9-0 in the season's opener. Then
last Tuesday, the squad traveled
to Niagara for what prorrtised to
be a much tougher match.
The Purple Eagles ~re no doubt
the best team the Bulls have
played thus far, but the score was
s t ill the same. The Bulls'
incredible success is partly due to
an easy schedule, but it is equally
true that Buffalo's players are
skilled. "If we had one big hitter
in the front we could challenge
almost anyone in the East," says
Coach Sanford.
With the schedule providing for
nine matches within two weeks,
the team rarely gets a day off.
However , inclement weather
postponed one match with Erie
Community CoUege last Thursday
and caused two others to be cut
short. The first of these was
against Fredonia and it still has
yet to be finished. Here the Bulls
lead 4-0 with AI Engel's and Dan

Always
hold matches

till cold.

Heukrath's singles matches still
outstanding.
The other shortened meet was
against Can.isjus Last Wednesday,
and th.is contest saw the doubles
get rained out after Buffalo swept
the singles to win the match. This
match was the first time that the
Bulls did not win all matches in
straight sets. AI Engel, at first
singles, was not properly warmed
up and played poorly, losing JUs
first set 4-6 to the Griffms' Kevin
Mcloughlin. But Engel came back
to win 6 - 0, 6-0. Dan Heukrath,
at fifth singles, lost the middle set
to James Anderson, who should
have played in a higher position,
but was late in trying o ut for the
Canisius team.
The constant matches do not
really take much out of the team
for some matches are little more
than practices. In fact the squad 's
toughest competition is within
itself where the order is always
changing. Recently Paul Parelli
beat Steve Sesody and Dennis
Dunning to move from fourt h to
second seed .
It is expect~d that the Bulls
will be Wldefeatcd going into
tomorrow's big match against
Rochester, the best team on
Buffalo's schedule . last year the
Ye II owjackets embarrassed
Buffalo 9-0 early in the season
when the Bulls weren' t ready
But, tomorrow the Bulls will be as
ready as they will ever be and the
match on the Rotary field Courts
should be a close one (3 :30p.m .)

..

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6:00PM
Monday, 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seventeen

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MALE ORAD stuelllnt needs room nMr
c:ampus, M~ 9 - June 3 . 1131·26114 .

Doctor Wudl lnttruc tor. Will pay l Call
Phil at 1· 2..,..321.

WANTED to bUY - MMplftt bat In
decent condition . Paul 133-1367.

1 NE£0 MVen PlltMI of o ld French

RDL L INQ STONE Ma,.zlne
Opening• for o n ·c ampu a rept.
Subscription sa~•, product aampUng,
promotional campaigns. E x t*lan t
commbJJons, frH aummw rouncs-trlp
tlckett to Europe for top aal•peOCJie.
Write Immediately : 'Rolling S tone
Cllmput, 71 E . 56th St., N - York,
N .Y. 10022.

tranlllltecl before April 28. Will pay for
cotl-nt trantlaUon. Call 137·314g,
SUMMER ROOMMATE fernllle,
own room. Fum1St14MI, 1-mlnute walk
from campus. can tUren 131-4072.

MALE SEEKS place to share nur
campus with same. Own room deSired .
Pho ne 1131 ·3057.

PART·TIME student - porterlnt and
errAnds. S2/hr. Call 112·3101 for
a iiC)oln tment.

BASSIST, drumme r, femele vocalist
wanted for working com mercial group.
137·0411 . LNva na m e a nd number.

TWO G I RLS nMd place t o Share with
othen for fall - nMr campus, own
rooms dellrecl. Call Ellen 1138-4199.

TERM PAPER for History of
SoclolotiClll Theory o r an lndlvlduel
sucn as Ourlcel m o r St. Simon. Call
1132·139~. Leave m ..sage.

GIRLS 3-speed racer. Call 1131-4114
and IMve m•aga for Ronnl .

USED BICYCLE WAnted In goOd
cond ition. PIMse call Suaan 133·7&amp;71.

PERSONS

o f vartoua oc:c:upa tlons
reg~rdlne
N . America and oversMI
opportunttl•, u p to $2600 monthly,
For complete Information, -ue t o
JOB RESEARCH, BolC 12S3, St•A,
Toronto, Ont. Enc:loae $5 to cover
cost .

WANTED : O rganic: Chemistry e1wams,

The maney we s'-end
an Uletnammulil
rebuild East Harlem.
Halp AmariEa.
Write your Congressman today.

OVERSEAS JOBS for students AustrAlia, Europe, 5. AmeriCll, Afrlc:• .
etc. All professions and oc:c:upatlons,
1700 to 1 3000 monthly, Expenpald , overtime, $lghu.el ng. FrM
In formation. Write : JOBS OVERSEAS,
Dept. E5, P .O . Box 15071, San Diego,
Calif, 92115.
START 12 per hour llllllry plus b onua.
Work 4-1 p. m . wMkdays ; 10· 2 p .m .
Saturda ys. Call 113!1·3103 or TF9·0402 .
FULL O R part· tlme jobs available with
8estllne Inc:. Call Art 1186·2094 o r
Mike 135·!1215. M-lng&amp; at Executive
Ramada Inn.

,

APARTMENT FOR REN T

HelD Unael The W•. lo•IOS, F.D.R. . . .ion. New VM. N. Y. 10022

3 BE DROOMS, 8 50/mo. corner or
Parl&lt;rldge and K e nsington. Call
836-62~ . Easy~ to school ,

lilt uttlltl.. lnclucted. t!IOt mo. with
stu!lllo prlvlle..s . Call 886·3616
morning&amp;.

1 OR 2 femllle roommet• w•ntlld for
fumlllled 3-tledroom apartment, 2Y:I
bloc:ka from c:ampua. 850 +,Call Ginny
or Sally 836-4Ul. Sumn;t• and/or fall .

3 · 8EO R OOM furnish ed APartment
...,elleble June 1; Hertei..Parkslde. Call
1 36..()616. K..., trying.
FURNISHED, 3-bedroom aPArtm ant,
Belley- Oel•van ·arM. e1•0tmonth
Includes utllltl... 896· 1329 •tter 11
p. m .
CHEAP apartment for ren t only *60 a
month . Three beelrooms . C all
873·3007. ASk for Jim.
L AA QI! 3-bedroom ap utmant.
Hertei ·Parkslda MN . Rent 1180 +.
Ave"-ble May 1. Mull buy furniture .
Call 1 3&lt;t-6&lt;l&lt;tS.
HE RTEL · IIIROIL area, 3 bedrooms $135 I nclu di ng ulllltl.. buy
furniture. GoOd dNI . Cell 876"'822.
Aveltable June 1st .
BEA UTIFUL a - bedroom hou ..
avalle bl•, Hertel area . RMsonable.
Fernal.. only. Call 837·039!1 .

UP9EA HALF o f lloua, vwy large,
avai!Mie June Ut. NMr campus on
Main. Fully fumllhed. Call 832-5607
or 135·11523.
FOUR · BEORO OM a partment off
Bllley, 15-mlnute walk from c:ampus.
Furnished, rwuonable. Avalleble for
Mlly 1 and n ex t yMr . Shelly 834-0966.
HOUSE: FOR R&amp;NT -

Amhant - 3
large bed rooms, stove, refrigerator,
dlshwllher, garbage dispOSAl, outd oor
barbecue , c:ar pa ted tllrouthout .
Sullllbla for 3 or " studenta. L requlracl. Available June 15th. $275
per month. Call 633· 1736.
LAFAYETTE
HEIGHTS
APARTMENTS - 20 min. to Cllmpus.
Fully furnished , efficiency ttudlo and
studio suite aPArtments. N o IMse
requlraa . HYIM Parle Blvd. at Lafayalle
Ave. N lll9llra FallS. Cllll Collect
u• ·57U .

RIDE BOARD
RIDE NEEDED to CallfMnla or Weft
COlllt , Anytime aft« M•Y lit . Will
sh•re driving and expenses. Call
Chthto pher 1137·391&amp;

two-bedroom apartmeni.
Own room . NNr Ridge

L M . Call 691-6~ ~trying,

RIDE WANTED t o Troy or capital
district after Mey 4 . Call Bob
833-6!131.

AS OF MAY 1st, " bedrooms acrou
from cempus, rant chMp; negotlabla.
Call 135· 1 305.

RIDE WANTED to Colorado, leaving
soon Will Share driving and elCpanses.
Call Jane 83"-6596.

SEMI -FUR NISHED stu diO apt . C h .. p .
Couple wanted . Available May 111. C all
aflar 6 p. m . 812 ·34911 .

RIDE WANTED to C ellfornla on or
Mound • prll 24 . Will sher• d riving end
expense.• C»tl Oa,. at 89!1·3466.

WESTSIDE
fully furn ished ,
2·badroom apt , - evallat:Jia May Ut .
Call 8810577. M&lt;trl, Bill fo r detail s.

FOR SALE

MODERN
Towon~.

FULLY FURNISHED ll x· r oom
liPllrtment fM rant, with utilities.
AnllabJe June hi . Sullllbla for 4
studen ts. PIMSe Cllll aftar 6 p .m.
837-8181.
ART MAJORS only Living

A ru~allale seal

a good car a little bella
So does a rear door.

quartet~,

-------------------

1911 HONDA C835C, 3350 miles.
Fine condition . ASking S700. Call
Eddlall 87.. -6057 .
STE REO COMPl.EX with Chippendale
amplifier , AM · I"M tuner, BSR
turntabla, ll ·trac k tape unit and
speak ers. Only II months old, condition
alCc:ellant. Going wast , must sell , $1 25
Call G a ry 1177· 2462
LAROE SIZE refrigera tor. cn up In
elCcellent con d ition. Call Clllhy
1131· 2566.
EXCELLENT lwo rad ial tires, usad
on ly tor 2000 miles, A711· 13 , (6 .SO 13)
Art 837.0113S
PANASONIC 8 · track tapa unll w ith
n oma spNI&lt;ers. GoOd o ffer
Call
117 7-665 7 .
PONTIAC 196", In goOd con d ition
ASking $ 225. C all O avel&lt; 884.0278
RUD GE BICY CLE 26" , J ·ipeed
bulll· ln generator, g oOCI condition , $ 50
or b•l o ffer . Lorin 83 7·0301.
SPENDING the summer In Bulfalo 7
EnJoy II with a "fr..ble" - over $100
ofgoOCitlmasforS5 837-6214
I HAVE swivel -rock e r, c:trasser , Single
bed, desk and chair S elling whole
tn ln g at very reasonable pri ce .
Excellenl condition 8JJ.Jb55.
1969 BSA Voctor Special. Exc:allent
Many e x tras. 5000 miles 1132-668"
'69 TR IUMPH 250 c.c. motorcycle
Unc:tar 300 lbs. Only 2600 miles. Ca ll
Stu 11 8 32-58811.
FORO TRUCK 1959, goOCI e n gin e,
transmlnlon . N- llras. Also
Franch ftuta . Call Ginny 662·7598

OOoCI

FOR S~LE - N lkon F camera b ody ,
Luna Pro llotot mater. 87~ ·2372 .
1966 C hev y N o va stat1onw1gon
Excellent cond ition. P owar stMrlng ,
a utomatic, haater, rac:tlo, sno w tires ,
$320. C all 139.0653 .
USED
sof 11,

FURNITURE for sale : bad ,
c:h elrs, dresser , desk , rugs ,

--VJSJr--•

TEHTCitY
HAVEN FOR

FAMILY CAMPERS,
lACK PACKEIS,
CYCLitUGSI
w......... 11....., - -

IV17 P1ttro l vnobcNt ~-~~ wUh oorku'l-01 whlre t l d•woH tlte ,,
DQMII !'ftOidlne ond occef\f g,ovp,

tot._.,

.....................
,.............

--..-. ..,l,...t . . . . . ..

'vVhen )QI make o JO!id, sensible, economrcolllttle cor you doni
change it. Ex~ lo molce it bener.
Now !hot we're ll'lOkmg !hot klndol cor ogotn,ltlor's !heonly klnd
of change we're goong 1o rnobt,
For fJICampie, we've mode o Rllnobout model ollhe Ford Pinto.
It Ia o rear door the basic Panto doesn't hoYe.lwJ rear seals that fold clown
for fJICiro cargo space !hal's fi¥8 feet long. e-ything else is !he some.
A gully lif#e engine that gets !he some «llOIOf'llicol klnd ol gas
""leoge OS lhe lillfe ~

welded -

A~ four lpll8d IT'CJI'\WI'lission $pons cor sMering. A
body with $1)( coalS ol potnt.
Pll-.c&gt; is wide and sdlAe, but not big It'$ got piiW1Iy olleg and

shoulder room, but d'a ~ '" lnCheilonger lhon the leocing I~
Thent )QI ~ it. The basic Pinto, 0 good little car. Ovf Pinto
Runol:x:M: o lillte beller good lime CXJr.
See !hem ~ yoor ford deal«'$.

.._,.. ... ._. •• MsktrYH .., IMM• te fwtl

FORD PINTO
FORO DIVISION

s.,.. ........., ....
Page eighteen . The Spectrum . Monday, 24 Aprill972

�,.,,l..,ator. 831&lt;ti4Sl or 886-4N$.
R£FRIQ£RATOR5, Uov ea and
watners. RaeonciiUonect, cMII..-.d and
euaran~.
tu.G Applla"-, 144
Sycam~. TX4-3183.
FURNITURE and AUOfted thlnQS.
ChNP. Matchlnt tolas, tamps, rues
kitchen utenalls and appllanc-. Catl
876 -2226 .

SAAB 1963 n - -eln•. 7 tires, 2 n-.
2 lfiOW, AM·FM, a460 t also lOOW
Cap ehart r• c •lv•r . AM·FM.
pushbuttons don't wort&lt;, two 3-way
s p•ak•n. BSR turntaDia, tc.I..H-41
tapecJaek, hNdphonea, n - tills YNr.
Must s.ll . aJOO. Movln9 to T . .u . Call
Rick 833-5718.
bed

875~261.

-

Cheap. C all

Marte.

SMALL 41-cu. relrl9ef'ator. Walnut.
GoOCI condition. Call R onnl 131..-114
01 Sandy 837-6627. B•t offer.
SCUBA eQUipment Twin 53's, form
flttad back, pacl&lt; reoulator p lus, Call
Bruca 873.. 132 tor CSetalll,
DONNA MAR IE
r•tlstared
e~acltoiOOIU SCMClallzlnt In th• removal
of unwanted cit' tupat'fluous hair.
MediCAlly approved . Com ptlm.,t ary
consu ltation by appointmen t.
545 8978 , 23 3--5949, Astoria, NYork.
1969 VOLKSWAGO N - CINn, new
paint. 45,000 miles. Original ow ner.
Call betw . .n 8 :3&lt;&gt;-4:30, 8117~751,
83S.e636.

T.K.o MUddy nllfll$ with you make
even 1 •30 a.m. ~ofound ,

ROOMMATI!S W~TEO - tummer
encvor fall - or-t .,.. house - walking
dlstanca - diNp. 13.4-1461.

3 ROOMS for 14"1N Of couple, 1 110.
AvallaD,. June 1 . C ell 886-5737. Alk
for Cathy. N . .r c ampus .

ONE MALE roommate w1nted for
tummer months . Own bedroom In
luJCurtoua apartment five-minute
Wllfk trom campus. Just what you've
been waltln9 for . C111 Jeff 831-4113 or
837-4183.

S PACIOUS four-otCSroom apt. f~o~lly
f urnished lor ffY• peopt• &lt;Surtnv
summer , Welklnt diStance. Call
835;4596.

D.O. - I'm not th• Blactl widow but
I ' ll eelmlt ther•'s • ltrlklne

PSVCHOMAT Is a time Whe11 you can
IPUk and b• under1t00e1 1 a plac•
wtlera you wilt want to llat•n end
fNIIy hNr anothe r ,..-son. Attend
Wed~ay, 3-6 p .m .. Cafeteria 122 or
Tnul'tday 7·10 p .m., NortOfl 232.
HOME CONTRACTING llr.cs o f
h leh prlcu •n&lt;l low qu•ttty
workmanshlp1 Twin Castles co. nu
Dean formed by former u.a. 9reduete
to answer aucn • question. Now vtvlne
free estimates lor the folloWI'I9 work ,
house painting, WIIIP1perln9, vutters
ciNned, ,.paired, small JObs the large
e xploiters turn awev . Call now before
busy season eats underway . Afl•r 6:00
p.m . Leonard 885~831
CO ME HEAR about Balla 'u' llah.
Bahal Wortct Fatthl Rm. 262, Norton .
Every Friday. 8-12 p.m . or CAll
837·.3252.
MOTORCYCLE + auto Insurance .
Instant FS· 1 regerdless of a9e or
drlvln9 nacord. Wlltouvnbv lnturance
1624 Main S t ., Buffalo, N.Y . 885-8100
Mon.-Fri., 9 ·1 p .m . Sat. 9-2 p.m.

systems,
guarant...
12" woofer, 2~" mld·ranee, 2·3"
tweeter
Only IJOO N . Call At
835-6637
a~&lt;c• llan t

NEW 6 cu. ln. Phllco r•frlga rator whn
•mple
freezer
space for
oorm / apartment use. Call Rave
Ill JS92
FURNITURE at ,.,.,. rNionaDie COlt.
Moving Friday . Need to get rid o f
chllr&gt; and dining room table . Other
auorted QOOCIIes. 833·9645 .
DOUBLE BEO wltn DOX1prl n9, a25.
896·02115 . K - calllnv.
fOR SALE: Apanment full or
lu • nlture. BY piece or tot
Call
•nytlme 836-6542.
PERFECT 1971 C84SO, 3000 ml
Atelll a"o hetmeh, 5975 . Call Freel
837 2~6!1
HONDA '70 SL 350. 3300 miles Gr. .t
condition. etectrlc sta rter. riel&lt;.
837·8799 after 6 p .m.

20th

EVE, c:ome fly wttn m•. The sea of
TrMqulllty 11 as h . .van ltsetr. Love,
Adem .

F 1 S HE R
)( P-7B SCM~ker
factory ~led, Ftstoer 5 -year

rwo TIRES, 6.95 • 14,
condi tion. Call 885-5371.

a.a.

MAR CIAo A very hiPPY
Dlrtnday. Love, B.S., E.S •• L . l .

------------------------------,
STEREO, d r - n. elaetrlc nove,
double

cam put. a55/monttt. 84S.l.Sf7.

~blanca.

FURNITUREt Ona queen•lr:ed bed
oreuer, vanity - Cl- with Chair. Cati
886·7639.

1 FEMALE roommate - own room fl~lnut• walk to campUs. GOOel aeat
for Januwy orad. Start seot. ' ·
837·1342.
SUMMER O N I.. Y - 165/mo. Dtlew1r•
off t&lt;enm~. Own room. 831-4096
ett•r two.
ROOMMATE wanted lor furnlsned
for aummer (option fOf
fJOII) . Rent a7o • utilities. Location:
Main StrMt, a&lt;:rou rrom Unlveulty .
Own room . Cell Jotm or Dave
137·2471.
~rtment

MALE ROOMMATE wanted : Five
mlnut•s from RlcS9• Lea, air
conditionin g, pool , Cell 691-6518 or
856-104!1.

LOST&amp; FOUND

FOUND: Red-nelred Setter/mutt on
N ortn Main. C all 832·5321.
GOLO PLATED pocklll watch In
4246, Room 38 Rlctge LU. Call
675~1142 . After 3:30. R-arQI
FOUND - Psyel'l R•actlngs, Ach"on S,
4 /19. Pat v . Cla im •t S pectrum office.
FOUND: Eya tlaues - behlna Baird
Hall on Tues., 4/18. Claim at Spaetrum
Office 13!15 N orton) .

ROOMMATES WANTED
TWO MALE roommates want*l ror
fJOII ••m•ter In a speclou• ept .•
3 · mlnute walk to cam~s. Rent
•6 7/montn Include utilities • your
own room. C ell 838·3735

the btil

str. .t llr• you can buy. Independent

Forel9n Cer Service. 839· 1&amp;50.
YOUR CAR It no more clepenCSablt
thin IU malnttr11nca. Call 1ndepan&lt;Sent
Forel9n Car S""loe 839·1850.
IF YOU deoend on your car. vou un
depend on I ncleoenclent F oretgn c.,
Servlu. 139· 1850.
EXPERT TUTORI NG In French
available. Contact Muriel 873-3250
WANTED : Merch 1972 lstue of
COS M OPOLITAN with c.e nttr·fotd
Intact. Wlllln9 19 PlY · Call Marton
ell-3592
EXPERIENCED typist. personal anCS
business, electric: typewriter,
reesonabte r a t es . tum paoers,
1 .40/P111A· Ce ll I45 ·S746 JoAnn.
VIOEO COMMITTII: E m•t1n9 tonl9flt,
7: 00 In R()om 262 to Cllscuu
Un lv.,slty vi Cleo aystem
All are
Invited.

TWO FEMALE roommates wanted to
snare apt. Owfl rooms In SPiclous apt.
$ 50 plus utilities. IO·mln w alk to
umpus. Ptease uti Gayle or Rutn.

POLITICS ALREADY1 You bet
Com• work ror JOhn Phelan In the
N- VOfl&lt; Stat• Senate race Support
tl1• man t n et 'upporled 18 y.. r·Oicl
vote. Call 842-6095 . A$1&lt; for P89 0 1
Elinor.

831~052

FREEZER : 5 cu . ft. 8 monfhs n -,
C.ll 837 1203 Must sell .
USED REFRIGERATOR for sale.
E'tellent conaltlon . Alkln9 $30. Call
831 38 72 . Available tmm.dla~ly .
VERY GOOD STER£0 must be soldf
Scott amp, ConcoAI dacl&lt;, Elco
'P~kers. nln• , . .IS of tape eoual to
approxlmataly 40 records. Call Mart&lt;
831 -3683.
STEREO - !15·Watt ampllfl•r. BSR
turntable, 4 SC)Nictn and Super•JC
hWdphonas, a190. Neootlaole. Call
837-()477 evenings.
FOR SALEo White, fuii·IIU
refrlv•r a tor -freazer . E•c•ll•nt
c:onattlon,
Of -..t off•
Call
834-6519

••o

FOR SALE1 AMPEG 8 •12 emp fat
lflta r, D. ., Mgen, CMI 0.3$-75711. Fr. .
kiK.

\

4..0EOROOM HOUSE to sublet Hertel
area . R easonaole. C all 137..0315
Females onty .
3 · B EO ROOM

IPl. alr -conclltlonln9 ,
porch. Maln/FIIImote, •150/mo. c~ll
832~14 after 10:00 p .m
0 N E-8EOAOOM aoutment, 10
minutes wellc to campus Furntslled ,
a1 10/month plus utilities Available
May 10 - September t C all Scott at
834 ·5901 .
FABUL.OUS mode&lt;n •pt. for summ...
flllalleble. a bedrooms. 5 mlnut~ wall•.
Call Judy •aJ -3584, 831 -3592.

TWO..SEOROOM •Pl. 5 -mln. walk
from umpus. Fully furniShed . Ca ll
Ellen 837 -3 741 . Mona 8l?·219S

REFRIGERATOR l or sale. Bl9 frMzer,
nlc.e fur dorm. Price Is reasonable. Call
831-4052

FURNITURE: Doubl•bed, fr1me
"n91e bed. &lt;Stassen, chairs, kitChen
•abte, nsorted other 90odles, rug.
Reasonable rates to rwsonabte people.
CAll 837 2877 or 832· 7012 , Ask for
Robbie or Stencil

838~160

EXPERIE N CE p•ople , come to
Psychomet, Wednesday l6 p .m.,
Norton C•re t erla 122 •no fnurselay
7· 10 p.m .. Norton 232 .
EXPERIENCED typlnll term PIP41".
S.40/P198. C•ll C1rot 837·2711

COOL DEAL: Off-board next y . .O
L.,ge stzea refri gerat or available May
9
Prtce n"9otlabla. Call Lynne,
8)1 2897

3 BEDROOM, completaly lurnlshed
5 min . to camou• Av•flable
lor sum mer . •13 0 negotiable

~rtment,

PER MAN EN T
roommale wanted
st.artlt~g May
Jst Own room Fully
furnished, S50 C111 832·3708.
ONE MALE roommate want•cl lor
.,artmenl, own room. 10-mlnule walk.
can Joe 831·3964.

PIANO FREE for price or moving.
87J 7341.

1·5 PEOPLE N EEDED for spacloul
5 - be&lt;Sroom house . Complete ly
f urnlsne cS W/plllno. Rent VERY
neeotlabte. 5 minutes to campus . Fr. .
utlllltes , June tnru Auvust. 831..ot060,
831·3570.

3 BEDROOMS available May lsi
Acrou ureet from campus on
Mefrlmac. Rent ,.,..ollable. 835· 1276

TAPE RECORDER Dokorder MOCiet
70~0. 3 motor. 6 , . .ell, auto-r_,.a, ...
sound on sound, eut()"i)rooramln9,
s 200 Call 836· 7577 . 1 to 6 p. m.

200&lt;e OHC. Duutl motorcycle, red,
bUOdy ~~. two helmets with bubbles,
wonashleld. 1245 . Call 833·5678 .

BEAUTIFUL 3-4 bedroom, furniShed
house. !1-mlnut• walk lrom campus
M1y - SIOI•mt&gt;er . Price MVOtleble
Call 835-5007.

DRIVER with van needed to help
someone mo..e April lO. Will Pill - Call
Carol 1137~907

FOR SALE Bwutllul clre,ser With lull
tnlttor, desk with chair end temps,
837 9014, 1131·3764 .

fURNi l URE lor sate: Couch, teDies,
rugs, rerrtvarator. stove.
oeorooms. etc Cell 834-5510.

3..SEDROOM apt . to tub· let for July
'"d Auvust. Fully furnished. Rent
nevotlabt•. Call 832·3708.

MALE GRAD Uucl«&gt;t
two
roommat... Summer or na•t yNr.
Tnr" bedrooms. kitchen, Delh , et c.
Call 874- 0358

s.-

ROOMMATE WANTED ror summer
only, • 40/mo. utilities Inclu ded,
rurnlihed own room Calf 836·817 I
FEMALE ROOMMATE wantecl for
summer In spacious 5-t&gt;edroom house.
$48. WatklnO cllstlnce. 635·1044.
MALE GRAD s. .kt an other to find
o1nc1 .,.,. tpartment . from fall. Ed
RlchStone, 1011 Routtar, Rocnesttr.
1~42· 8289 .

TWO-MINUTES walk from CAmpus.
Own room In • beautiful al)lrtmen t.
Ca ll 1136-4511 after sl• p.m .
ROOMMATE WANTEO . ltmate.
5 -minutes walk, mOCiern apt. for
fall -winter, 1972·73. Call 831 3592,
831· 3584
COUP\.E or single to sh~re moder11
aCNnment nNr CAmpus for summer
Low rent. Call 136·2499.
GIRLS WANTED to share apartment
for summer. Two blOCkS from CAmpul.
$45/monlh. 837·3757, 831 ·3582
LOOKING FOR Cl'INP apartmenl
to CAmpus for 1ummer and/or
Larva kltcnen, dining room,
room , tttlc. Own room ano
$37.50 + utilities . 838-4586 .

close
fall1
livin g
only

FEMALE roommate n..Oed tor E .
Northrup •oartment summ• a nd fall
Cell Mer yl 837 ·0456 or Joan
837·3209.
ONE FEMALE roommate wanted to
shar• e~&lt;tt•·••rge attic room1 lh block
from campus. Call 837· 2846 .
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted lor
summer o nty . Own toom. 7-mtnut•
Wllk from campus. C ell 133-47•1 o r
1131-3763.

LADIES! 8• way out thlssumm.,t Get
yourwlf orlflnally &lt;Sestvned h a nd-made
"Kurtax"/CI,_ from Pakistan with
tlaU·wOf'k •no 90111 or sliver tnreacl
embroidery. C all Defore 10 :30 am 01
7&lt;9 p. m. 837·5811 .
AVAILABLE I Voung woman to clean.
D&amp;Dyslt, help with •nythlng. Av111ao••
May 1. Write Bo• 30
NEED A WAY to transport your
belongln,a to Lon9 lslen el In M1v 1
Dependlble S""lc.e, prtc• ..-.sonabte
...a neeoti•Die. Call Artnur IllS 1276
()( 133-4046 .
fYPING, axparl•nced. Term pap«s,
etc. Call 133-1597.
TYPING - Dulin . . or parson••
term
paperl, theus, mau mailings.
Reasonable rates . Call 937·6050.
LEAVI N G 8UFFAL01 We'll Oellver
trunks. etc. to N V.C .-Long l•lend
, . . . 1 I 0 trunlcs. 884..ot958 or
882·3277.
PROFESSIONAL TYPIN G clone In
nome, 1 .50/page. Formerly operated a
professional typln9 sef¥1c•. 229A
P~tkflcle Ave. Or Clll 138-4808 .
INTERESTED In going to Munich to r
the Olympic ea m• this summerr For
lnform•llon, pl'lone 833-4638
AUTO RADIOS and tapes 58181 a nd
lK &lt;lllcount wltn t his ad.
Grupp 8r01. •77·2250.

_..,tc;e,

AUTO INSURANCE· - &amp;peel•llzlnt In
vou111 &lt;Stl...,.. , no Cl'laree lor a"ldenh
Of tral11c viOlations, Immediate FS· l,

111..,. up to 1100/vMr, M3~0122.
ANTIQUES •ncl
c •amk:$, cnlna,

modern furniture.
etc. s.. SicS 11

for

2-8£DROOM apt. to sublet . 10-mln.
Wllk ff'om camput. 1110/montn. Start
June 1. El,.n 835-1!157.
4.SEDAOOM houM, furnlsned, wastier
and dryer, snort welk , May 15 - SlOt.
1. ChMp . U3·7849.
FEMALE to snare apt . \111111 anotner
fOf summ•. Own room . Walktnv
distance. $50. Wendy 836-5169.
4 ·8EOROOM apt
to sublet
Aml\•rst/Maln , Rant nevatlable .
874-6057, 836-8!117 (pets allowed) .

APARTMENT to sub·~lt Starltr-tiertll
.,..., 3 bedrooms, Mly 15 - Sept 15
137-6575.

TYPING exp.,tenceel, IBM Selectric
$.40 per Plge. 8l8..otll01.

NUMEROUS housenolcl Items sucn 11
Oeclt oo m, cllnln9room, kitchen,
appliances. etectrlc belt, mallnas.ses,
COUCht\ Re.sonlbfe . 837-6525

sublet

BEAUTIFUL al)lrtment available June
lit till Auoust 31. Four bedrooms.
Cl ose to campus Prlca negotiable Call
131· 2261/22511

MODERN 2-oeclroom IPl. avall~te
May 1 - SlOt. 1. Furnished. carpeted.
CllShw..ner, air conctltlontnv . Available.
u.s. ar. .. Rent negotiiDie. 8 37·7970
1.31-4964.
•

MISCELLANEOUS

to

.,. . . Of Tarrv.

•CNrtment, 1 minute
May - Sept. Rent and
t-eth of stay Is vlf'Y negotiable. Call
Ju lien 831.2360.

SUMMER ROOMMATES n..o.d, 2
taree bedroomt, 1· mlnute w1lk f'r om
campua. C all Cathy 831·3152 Steve
831-3284.
•

886~985 .

873.. 174.

apt.

R...arut~ .

3..0EOROOM nouse to IUbl•t . S min .
from camp~o~s, R•nt very rNsonaDt• .
Call Lorin 837~301.

41.SEOROOM HOUSE to wbtet June I
- Sept 1. f&lt;uml.tted . t&lt;enmor~tarln
.,. .. Rent reasonable e nd n89ott•ble
Call Gary 137~301

AUTOMATIC wnhiOQ machine, GoOCI
condition Call 832·129•

&lt; na 11~.

SUMMER EVENIHQS o n the front
porch. Vas, frltneb, YOU t4t tnls and
more. W•'ll throw In • completely
furnished apt ., !1-mlnute walk to
campus. bedrooms for 2·3 1)40t)l•.
Utilities Included end air condltlonln9 .
ChNp . Call 837-4674.

MODERN FURNISHED twO-bedroom
air conditioned apar tment . Ten-mlnule
W.lk, &lt;Sttnwuner. carpet1n9. June Auv. Neootl•bte Call Helen, Donna,
Cheryl , 835 ·7093.

MI CHELI N x..,adlel tires FOUNO • Maroon sw. . tet tell In blue
car T u•.. April 18 wnlle hltcnlnv
down Kenmore to DelllwMe,

J·8£DROOM

M.tmmw.

MALE OR FEMALE roomm1tes
wanted for summ«, 13!1 • utili ties.
own room, LinwOOd-Summer ar...

INTERESTI NG sales w Of'k. Part -lima
or lull-time. Any erN . Help yOUrMII
~t~&lt;t tn e environment a t the ume time
Phone 132-6610 - k Clays.

TWO ROOMS sub let on Lisbon.
Walking cSIJtanca. Rent nevallabll.
OeD . 832 · 3144, Sue. 8.32-5440,
ROODie 832~756.

-----------------

FEMALE ROOMMATE IOf' own room
In 2-0eclroom apt. 1Cknlnut. walk to

4 TO l, ~. 3 to 1 odds that Billy
~~m -Yum 11 In troubl•? LOft, B,l. 6

4-8EDROOM
~om

c;.~mpus.

THREE · BEDR OOM o~partment ,
5-mlnut• walk from campus. Fully
furnlsned. Call Howle 838·1167; BoD
831 ·3963 or LatTy 834-666l
4..SEOROOM apt. ouement, gereee..
for summer. Soft furniture Main at
Fillmore. R•nt U lkabte . N orm
8 32-S 81.
l..SEOROOM noUN lurnlllled, U20 a
month. !i mlnutas frorn um~s
Avelllble May 15 . 8 32-374 5
OWN ROOMS In nouN on Wlns.p. .r to
tublet May tnru Auvusl. Rl9flt a t
University entranc e . Rent negotlaDie
Call 836 -1779.
3-MONTH - bedroom, living room,
kitchen. All for e 62 ~0/month In
ElmwOOd atea n.,r Brlnles Call Tom
186~252
•
BEAUTIFUL spacious aloc-t&gt;edroorn.
two-family, nouN. Fully furnlslled,
carpeted, WoUiler ln d dryer, eara')e,
D.Kement with derlo. room . Close to
c ampus . Summer orolyl Rant
nevoti•Die. &amp;33-88 12
2 FEMALES wantaa to suo-tat 2
rooms for 'ummet Ona hom M•v J
Auvust 31, ano on• from July 1
Aue. 31. Call 834 - 1993 enytlme.
FURNISHEO houst to Jubtel tor
aummer. Thr. . block\ from c.tmpu(.
Rent chup, neeotlaote Ce ll 838-&lt;1426
Fl VE-8EOROOM ap1rtment furnished
Amhent ar. .. AvatiiiDte May 15 to
September Call Lou 833.0103 or D•••
1138 ·39&amp; 2Prtce • 175/montn
ONE FEMALE roommate, own room ,
nice no~. &amp;50. May U thru Au9. Jl
Hertel and Voortl- . 131-&lt;~816 .
4 BEDROOMS ror !1. •1 I 5 plu&lt;
utilities. Herta! and Colvin Mav J tnru
Autull 31. Call838..ot61!1.
DIVINE rout DeOr oom 1parlmWtl
3-mlnute Will&lt; 10 CAmout S1 75 relit
Call 132·1 145. May lhru S ept
HOUSE In !Jiortou• Tonawancl• 111
wbl•t for • oeople Pon• and parK
nurby . Plant)' of tur) and tun . C1l1
Mike at 838 I 161 o r 8J I l885 or Fted
at 831 ·2453.
5·BEDROOM. lurnlaheo . 5 min
to uompus, Ctll Jeff 839..ot223

well&lt;

3 ·8EORO OM Apt
l or summer
Available for
3 ot 4 people
Battey Kensington area
FurniSh.O
1 130 per month
Nee ottabl•
831 ·3664, 831 3666,836 l1li&gt;

ROOM IN APT to be tublet AvellaDte
June lo Augull Rent rt1090habte Apt
on Amherst Ce ll 113• HilS

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom •pt Available
June 111 thru Sept lSI '100 per
month. Hertel a. Parkstcle area C•ll
Ronnie 896·2652, Danny 835-4304

NI CE FURNISHLO apertment,
Kenmore- Oetaware a,.a
May lilt
Sept R ..aonable rerll Thrfle-beclroonl .
Aly&lt;la 876·5020.

2 · 8EOROOM 4Pt
3·mlnute Will&lt;
137,50 • Call 8341..0176 Available
June tnru August

6 ,8EDAOOM hou•• on Envtewoocl
Avallebll June Ill . 2 minute walk
Prtce ne9ot i iDie Call 831-27!13 ,
831 ·2568

8EAUTI FUL ~ bedroom tpartmenl
for summer. 5 mtnuta wallo
price
nevollable Call 831 ·2 270 o • 831 3987
SPACIOUS HOUSE, five Declroonu
•vallabte . Llvtng room , oen
Main- Fillmore area. May
Sept . Rent
nevotlable. Calll..lncl• 834 6466 ,
2 ROOMMATES wanted t or aPMitnent
tn Main-Fillmore •r.. c1urtn9 the
summer. Call 137 2686
TWO BEDR OO MS avallaiDie lo t
summer
I
minute lrom campus
Females only . Call eeuy at 832~594
3 !i BEDROOM apt
fl ll
Hertel ,
Furnished, 2 porchas. ftrept•ce,
U20/mo. May 111
Seot
1st
GAEAT . 832 7482

BIG BEAUTIFUL nous. sublet a
bedrooms. Av•llable Air con&lt;tllloner,
Clllhwasher. corner ot Merrtma&lt;:
Available May 15 - Sept. 1. 138~1140
2~ FEMALES apanment lor summet
Sunporc n , bac:kyard, gar•te · On
Merrtmo~c .
Fully furniShed . Call
831· 2894 .

HOUSE FOR any number of peot)le.
Five bedrooms. Close. Rent nevollabte .
Steve 835-5015 . 8111 831 ·2959.
FANTASTIC location summer
roommat• w1nted. Wlnspear Ava.
Reuon&amp;Oie ,..,t. C all Jlne 137·3209 or
Snelle\' 832-7682.
THAEE·BEOROOM furnllned
apartment from Mav or Ju,.. tnru
September 1120, Terry Of' J 873 · 6174 .
Thenk
you

3 BEDROOM IPt
on Englewood
Available June 1 u . 1 ml,.ule wall&lt;. C111
I l l 246S, 831 ·275
APARTMENTS WANTED
(.0 UPLE
N £EOS unlutnllh•Q
apartment with stOYe . refrl')erator
NMr UB June/ July 1 si~ O o r undeo
63t 6588 alleo 6 p ,m
ROOM WANTED \tartonv around Sept
l Call Steve anyllma beh.tre 1 .00 e.m
133·8055.
2 F'EMAL.ES n..O I or 2 ·beclroom IPI
starting May 1 Cnup. 836-6190.
SENIOR and tracl dll1peralely niiOO
2 bedroom apartment nur camous .,,
Rlclte LU Helen 831 ·3970
TWO FEMALES cl•lre 2 bedroom apt
on W•st Side tor summer en&lt;t fell
837-1208.
APARTMENT for two near umpus
Will take apartment as soon as
nac:esury. Ptoone 836·7802.

-----lllrge

REWARD for 1-bedroom or
stuello a pt. ror Mav. C all
837-6848.

Julie

WANTEO: 3-oeclroom apt. In US ar..
for neoct Sept. Call Howle 1138-4892.
HELPI I need a place to stay lot the
summer end fill . Call Sharon
836·2304.
WANTED• 3-oeclroom apt . In u.a. ar ..
for n.,.t Sept Cell Howle 838~892 .

Monday, 24 April 1972 . The Spectrum . PaC}It nineteen

�.....
..

• M l·I·JJ

.C....... ,_ ..,...,

I 1..

*

CAC neecb votuntn"
ltle wmmw for a pre&lt;ollep
eduudon pro,_l. If lnt.eres-.d, contKt ltete~~eh
Jnd Oewlopmlflt, Room 2 20 Norton, or ull l31·3609.
remedl~

The TraMfK Ad~tsory Council will m" t today at 7:30
p.m. In Room 234 Nonon , to d ~uss common problems
Md solutions for transfer students. If you are ln terated In
orpn lzlna or aldlna fellow transfe", please come.
An Art Festival will be held In Wilson, N.Y., May
I 7 - 21. I nclud ed will be a ph otoa raphy sh o w ( 1
com peti tio n) and a slid e com peti tion. Poslble entries for
the competlllons and those whh ln aln formatlon conce m lna
ei ther of th e shows sh ould write to: Rae Tyson a t Wilson
Centr.,l School, l alct St., Wilson , N.Y. 14 172.
WN YPIRG Is loolti na for people Interested in woritln a
on 1 na tional multi·PIR G Usk forte whose aoal will be to
meuure the Impac t o f Ed uullon al Testina StNices'
methods and philosophy on the Americ an Ed uu tional
System . All .applicants must be lb le to devote th emselves to
research from early June lhrouah Au p n t .an d p refe rably
early Septemb er. fo r more In formation ~&gt;te the WN YPI RG
bulletin board outsid e Room 220 Norton or call 8 3 1·3609.
App liutlons will be available In Room 220 Norton stanina
tocby.
C'5 441 , Cultu re throuah Tech noiOI'f , final exam will
be av11lab le In Room 133 Crosby tomorrow. Return exams
by M.ay S.
The UndKp aduotte Socloloay Auoclatlon will have an
open house week , today throuah Friday in Room 42, 4 224
Rld,e Lu. I nformallon otbou t the Soc ioloay Depar tment
courMs, the new Underaraduate Assocl.tllon and Alp ha
K~ppa Delta will b e avall i ble. A party will be held Friday
from 2 4 p.m . In Ro om 42. Guest speaker will be Theod o re
Mills

lit lloMr Ill 1..-1 t~ence
Oav, 'NMnl YaakO¥ Oftand, a poet In retldence, who will
..,..t akut lsnell CrucfvltY In ltle Arts, a.omorrow at 2
p.m. In ltoqm 346 Norton.
An unUIUII portfolio ef pftotoaraphs and .tdllna, the
o f a seven-year collaboration between artist Jim Olne
and photoarapher LM frledl~er, will be on ex h ibit In
Hayes lobby throuan May 16. Hou" are 9 a.m .- 5 p .m .,
Mo nday throulf! friday . The exhlb lc h sponsored by the
O ffice of C ultural Affairs.
rtit~l t

So you tot a hlp lottCH)' numbw, but you 'd like to
suy on c.vn pus next y u r? Look ln co Col leae 0 Mac:Oonald H~l - ~&gt;te Or. Borst
Volun t"rs ate needed to help p ut up Almadtn Wine
Botr/e P1e", 1 sculp tural envlronm enc to be exhib ited
Thursday, April 27 In Room 1, Annex B (E n&amp;lish Dept.)
and possibly el~&gt;twhere on campus In May. Pie~ call Judy
Kerman , 88S·5 48 S or leave a note in her mail box In the
En&amp;Jish office .

Backpage

The G r~uate S tudent Association Senate will elect
new o fficers at Its meet ina to nl&amp;h t at 7 :30 p.m. In Room
23 1 Norton. All senators and allernues •re uraed to attend .
The Offl~ of S tudent Accounts, Hayes A , 111nounces
that th e fed eral aovemment considers It mand atory fo r all
students with NaUonal De fense loans who cease attending
this University or wh o drop b elow one-h al f time statu' (six
h ours) to auanac an EX IT INTERVIE W. The lnteNicw
enab les students to clartfy the ir rfahts •nd respon sibilities
concernlna repaymen t and to determ ine a repayment
schedu le.
If you are araduatina or termlna tlna this semester,
p lease call 8 3 1 473S to schedule ;an appo intmen t for an
EX IT INTERVIE W.

Today : V;arsily golf o~l Roch es te r Tec.h , 1:30 p.m .
Tomorrow : V~rsh y ao lf .ttlhe University of Rocheste r,
1:30 p .m. ; junior var sit y b&lt;~~&gt;tball at Nl&lt;13 ar a Com mun1 ty, 2
p.m. ; varsi ty tennis , Rocheste r, Rotary f 1eld Cou rts, 3 . 30
p.m.
Wcdnuda y
V ifliiY bii.Seball doublehu der , Sl
Bonaven tu re , 1 p.m. Peelle f1eld,vars11y tenn1~ al Syruuu ,
2 p .m., Ju n ior vu slty bueb all at Ene C om munity, 3 p m . .
vu~lly tr ac; k at Broc kport S u te wnh Roberts Wesleyan, &lt;1
p.m.
Th ursday : V.Jrs lty ten nis, Erie Communi ty, Ro t•'Y
Field Courts, 1 p .m.
friday : V.11rsi ly b •seb •ll at th e Un1vers11y £I f Scra nt o n .
7: 30 p .m. , varsi ty tr•ck •• the Pen n Rel,;avs. noon.
Saturd.Jy : Varsi ty b.uebilll u Syracu~e . I p .m . , jun1or
varsll y bueb all, Jamesto wn Community, Peell e F1eld , I
p . m .. varsi ty tratk .11 SU NY Al b llny With SU NY
Bmghamton •nd SUNY Stony Broo._ , 1: 30 p m ., club u e w
at Conntc tiCUI College w11h C anos•u ~
In last weeke nd 's first annual UB Bowllnglnvi UII o nal,
C amstu• fin1sh ed firs t wnh 1649 pms The Bull ~ edaed out
Bu ffalo Sute for se~o ond piau 258 3 to 2531 . Th e Be ngal~
Don Burley had the three -game high w11h SRI , wh1lr
single-game high wen t 10 Mike W1erzebedd
The student ~thlell c review b oard w1ll m eet Wed nesd Ay
even ing .11 S : 30 p .m. tn room 205, No rto n Ho~ll.
Any undera nduate wom.1n In teres ted in In tercollegiate
golf for next foall , ~h ould o~u end a m eeting in roo m 1098 ,
Ctuk G'fm thl~ Aft ernoon AI 3 . 30 p.m For further
ontorm at1on c .olt M1~s Po lAnd at 8 3 I 294 I

l ibrary Schedule
lockw ood Llbroary
E)(.&amp;m Se\SIOn (Moiy I 9)
Mond1y Thu rsd ay :
8 • .m. mldn1gh1
Frid ll y
8 a .m.-9 p .m.
S aturd .J y
9 a.m.-mldn1ght
Sund• y .
2 p.m .-midntght In te rim Se~1011 (M•y
10·21)
Mo nday f nd ay ·
9
Satu rday :
Cl osed
S unday :
C lo i&gt;Cd

o~.m .- S

p.m.

Tuesday , Aprt l25

Exam S ession
Monday- Sa turday:
9 a.m.- 2 a.m.
Sunday:
2 p .m.- 2 • .m.
Interim Sellion

...anfm111

Rtten~e

-oatwreknor
and Auto Acciden ts: A Prototype of P rofes~tonal
Padding," 12 :30 p.m. , the l aw Sch ool, 77 W. E1&amp;1e St.

Monday , April 24

Harrlm111 ResMVe

Monday- f riday :
9
Saturday :
CIGied
S11nd1y :
Closed

What's H &lt;~ppeni na?

a.m.-s p .m.

will close at 5 p .m . In Tuesd;ay, May 9 .

Fil m : 2001 - A Spact Odyssty , direc ted by S tilllley
Kubric k, C ;apen 140,9 p.m., $ .7S .
OIS(;usslon : The Colleae of M ath ematlco~l Science will hold
an lnform•l d iscussion with Prof. P atrlcla Eberlein, 1
p.m., RoomS 1, 4244 Rldae Lea.
Symposium : " Explo rations In Urtl.tn S tud ies lltld Scxll.l
M ~b lllty " p rese nted by
t.h e Gradu ate History
Association ; speakers Include: Vlra lnill Mcl.;wah ll n,
Herben Gu tman , Michael Katz and M ic:h ael f risch, 2
P.f!\.1Diefendo rf 146.
L•tu ,.: 1J.etrrey O'Connell o f the Un iversity of Illinois
SqhCIOI o f law will be the n ext spuker In the 197 1·72
M, tch el l Lecture Fund S eries; the topic h : " Attorneys

I
I

I

Special lecture : " Psycholoay, Science and the Moon w b y Dr.
I;an Mitroff, Asscxlate Professor of I nformiltlon Science
i t the Unive rsi ty of Plttsb urah , Ac heson 362, 10
a.m.- noon.
Poetry read in a : John Lotan ilnd MJX Wk kert, 9 :30p.m.,
On•Eyed Cat, 28 Bry;ant S treet, sponsored by
Ou trid ers; lh h Is the flnotl re~lna In the JPrtna 1972
series..
film : Tqnlolfr O!}(!r wi th Entllsh sub-titles, presented by the .
Germ111 Club, 7 :30 p.m. , Norton 23 4 , free.

- A m y Ahrfnd

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Mass protests against
escalation in Indochina
b y Lynne Tl"'lflFJ
Off-Cttmput Editor
Amid promises by presidential
hopefuls to end the war within 60
days of takmg office, protests
ac:roa the country were held this
week in an effort to force
President Nixon to end the
newly -esc alated a c tion in
Ind oc hina . M ost of the
demons trati o ns started o ut
peacefully, but others ended with
arrests, damages and injuries.
Jn San Francisco on Tuesday,
I SOO persons surrounded a
downtown federal office building.
Canyina red Viet Cona Oaas or
p oa teu pr ocla.imina " Naxo n 's
Peace Plan-is a Bomb," some 29
persons were arrested after they
"seiud " an Air Force recruiting
station located outside th e federal
b u ildlng. The occupiers were
arraigned o n the s pot by a federal
magistrate who crawled m the
window, and cbaraed them with
obstructing federal business. A
heanna was set for Tuesday m the
case, where chAraes can bring
sentencc:a of up to 30 days in jail,
along with a $50 fine .
O f the approximately 13
people arres ted o utSJde the
re c ruattn&amp; station, ont wu
accused of thro w ina strawbemes
at t h e pollee. Others wete char&amp;ed
w1th tryina to assault U.S .
marshals and security auards, u
weU a~ disorderly conduct. The
protest was b ro ken up by
ri o H:quipped officers carrying
bato ns It was reported that tw o
o f th e 29 persons arres ted o utside
the federal buildJna were cl ubbed
by San Francisco pohce

Baet le.ds prou.tl

A la.rJe cro wd ur prolellters
pthered - out.Ude the Alameda
Naval Air Station, a cross the bay.
to protest the use o f tax m o ney to
suppor t the war About 40 of the
over 200 demonstra t ors w ere
arre~ted Folksinger J oan Buz. led
the pro t est , but was not IU'Tested
The prot estors had attem pted to
prevent workers fro rn cntenng the
mtlltary mstaUa t1on , wh1ch IS
home base to several carri er&lt;~
upe rilttng m VIetnamese wJ tcr'
A. demonstratiOn wh1ch began
pea\;efully at Harvard Umvers11y
Tuesday evenmg ended 10 ftres ,
damage and th e use o f tea r gas to
~uell the distrubance Onginall y
haU ~d M a peace ma rch , 11 began
as a rally on Boston Comm on,
then turned into a n assault on
Harvard's Center for International
Affa1rs .
Th1rty studen ts spht o ff from
th e m a rch when It reached
Harvard Square an Cambridge.
They broke windo ws in some
st o res and the post office, and
then proceeded to the center,
where more windows were bro ken
and furniture was overturned .
" Avenge H anoi" and "N LF Wins"
slogans were spra yed o n the walls.
Tear gas and leashed d ogs were
used by th e pollee to quell the

incident, u three demonstnton
were arrested. A 9 p.m .-5 a .m .
CUTfew wu declared.

Rock - dc.dly weapon
Fourteen persons were arrested
earlier Tuesday at the University
of Maryland and ch arged with
canyina deadly weapons
rocks.
Windows in an ROTC buildina
were broken , and U .S. Route I
was blocked by pro testers for
about an h o ur by ?5 students .
Apin, lear gas and leashed d ogs
were u sed t o disperse the
students. Severa l injuries, b o th to
s tudent s and p o ll ee, were
repo rted.
In New Yo rk , stud en ts at
Col umbia U niversit y and New
York University's Bronx campus
also demonstrated agams t the
renewed b o mbing in Vietnam .
Abo ut I 000 students voted t o
strike Wednesday, but declared
they wo uld not bar m hers fro m
auendina classes.
Bot h Col umb ia Pres1dent
William McGill a nd Rep. Bella
Abzug (D., N. Y.) appeared before
the strike n11Jy McGUI arJued
against the s trik e, sa ying :
"Coercina o th ers 1S a VIOlation of
people's riaht:c, and we will not
tolen1te it." Ms. Abzug, on th t
o ther hand , w&amp;s of a d1fferent
m1nd
" I ca me h ere t o
co ngratulate you. I ask that what
you d o toda y re mains w1ttun the
confinell o r the unive rsit y I agree
with you - o ut now ."

THE SpECT
Vol. 22, No. n

State University of N.w Vork 11t Buffalo

Anthwr spirit

National student strike plans
by Howie Kurtz.
Campus EditCN

On campuses across the country lh1s week,
renewed anh-war protests and eve n vio lence were the
reaction to the recent heavy bomb1ng of North
Vietnam by th e United S tates. H arvard University
students ransa cked o ffices and smashed windo ws and
doors Tuesday nigh t in Cambndge, Mass., and
Ha rvard Square was sealed off hy riot-garbed po h ce.
The student newspapers o f the eight Ivy League
schools endorsed a common edito naJ . d esigna ting
today for ' ' a o ne-day mo rat o rium o n business as
usual" and urging participation in " massave
demonstrahom o f pro test 10 New Yo rk , Los Anaeles
and San FranciSco" tomorrow . A protest march at

Meanwhile, the French Department o f the Stlt'C
Uruversity a t Buffalo issued a joint student-faculty
statement, su pported by a majority o f both, in
su pport o f the national student s trike for today . The
statement, whic h took the form of a circulation
petition , "stro ngly condemned'' the bombin&amp; or
V1etnam and demanded " the immediate cessation of
all military and econ o mic support of the Thieu
reg~ me."

·wane for ur~·
The usc of o~n l 1 personnel w l!&lt;lpons an bomhing
WtlS utcd by Rev Sh erman Wednesday as bemg
"10 VIOla ti o n of 1nternatron.tl law " After the
pettlJon~ljl.niO!l Ji l afayelte Square tomorrow , the
pro tes ters w1ll " to~ke a waH. fnr hft&lt;" down to the
Stutl t&lt;r· IIJit un wh ne "we hope tu ~111 audttn c:c With
('o~rdnlal l'nnkr ~nt.l B1s hop Mc Naull y ," explamed
Rev '\hl'IIIIJII " We w.1n1 ''' qu~twn lhe1r Silence o n
\U•h mJIICf' Jlo the tw rnh1ng of ' hlldH·n o1nd the u~e
,f 11nmoral we.r pons ut war ' the Reverend
lUfllJOoeJ
r.ud~

C'olumbt,l .tnd th1· ..:all1ng of .1 11Jt1 nn Wldl! stutll:nl
~o 1 r 1k c
hy lhl! Natwuul Stut.l~:ut As.~uuallon
h1ghhghted thr rcawakcnm~ ol the campu~ ,11111 w.u
)Ptr ll wht\.h has larn dormunt ,,nu: M.,y I •no
At the State Umver\lt Y ,11 Bulralu thJt
teawaken•ng wa~o slow hut lJilll' non~thch~"
Members of the S tud ent A ~\ou o~11 o n \ l xnulllll'
Committee d ebat ed the mertl\ n t 'tnke v.. no \tnh
until latt: Wednesday even1ng whc:n they t.le\ldcJ tu
declare today "a sym holic day of lll'tlun :.Jg;tln\t thr
war "
f h e t:Hefully· preparcd \ loitement flU\hcd
through With unammou~ 3pprov11l repru&lt;Jlhell the
N1xon adounl\trat1on lur c:o ntlnU.tllon of the w.ar,
and asked students , falulty &lt;~nd \tJH to follow then
consc1e n te) t1 nd part 1upatl! 10 work~hop\
discu.•!.,ions and voter reg1~tratum climb "J~ thry ~ee
fi t ..

Noon rally planned

The Nixon Admini.stratao n has perpetuated the Vietnam War
for four long years. Despite the thousands of deaths, millions o f
maiminp and incomprehe nsible destruction of the Vietnamese
countryside, Nixon has constantly ignored the voices of reason a nd
con cern .
AJtho ugh we do not expect him to hear us, we hope to rea ch
the American peo ple by joining the National Student Assoc1ation
and the Student Association o f the S tate University in declaring
Friday , April 2 1, a symbolic day o f ac tion against the war We urge
all stud en ts, faculty and staff to foUow the dictates o f their
con sci ences and participate in wo rkshops, d iscussio ns and voter
reg15tration efforts as they see 6t.

'No bulin~ .. wual'

Rev Ke nneth E. Sherman, mvolved in the
"Unsell the War" ~ mpaign , urged people to oome to
Lafayette Square at n oon t o m o rrow for the
petitlon-11igning o f three telegrams. One would be
sent to Pres1dent N1xon asking him to end the 81J
war ; o ne to Congresman Thaddeus Dulsk.i asltiJlg him
to vote "no" Otl the war appropriations bill ; the
tturd to James B~ncer , Ptesident o f the Ho neyweU
Corporation. Honeywell m Minneapolis has been
targ1:ted in 3'7 caties by con cerned clero and Laymeo
lO "c.euc and deAlt" '" the pro4uctio n of
~~~. .~~~~~~. .~~~. .~·c~cor~u~ato Rev. Sbcnnan .

-&lt;Onllnued on Pelle 4 -

Editor :r n o te ~ The follo wmg u the unammow/y;Jpprolltd /UIIII
ltattm ent of the Executtlle Com m ittee of th e Student Assoctatton

" day of action" apinst the war, and the term.inoloa:Y
"strike" wu tacked o n by the newa media. W1.
Benson hoped to tel Claude Welch , Department o f
Political Science, to conduct a wo rlubo p , and to cet
Carl Rogers of the "UnseU the War" campaipt to
stay o ver in Buffalo and spealt at the noon rally.

The Frenc h protesters called for "no business u
usual" and dascussed such possibilitJes as cancelling
classes and meeting o utdoors to disc uss issues for
their o fficial form o f protest. Some Frenc h
Department students voiced d is.a ppointment in the
actio ns o f the S tudent Association " I talked t o SA
and t hey're d o ang shjt," commented o ne student.

Cornell procesc I!Cheduled
PreparatJons were begun at
Cornell Uruvenity for a pro test
d enao nstrallon as the campus
senate voted 67-38 t o appr ove a n
anti-war rt110lution. Tbe prot011 is
scheduled fo r today, Ill aTe other
protests at sch oolll lhrou&amp;flo ut th e
country .
D»le R
Corson, C"umell
UniVersity pres1denr turned down
a request to can..:el classes for the
day , but about JOO stud en ts who
met Tuesday night 1111id they
might l ake over th e stu~ent un inn
bu1ld1ng a.. ll pro tes t o~gain't tht&lt;
w:.r tt o wc:vcr ('orson ~au.J that
sch ool w1ll ''respect .tnd honm th r
lntentHHh uf those tn " fl pu,ltlon
111 the war· But , he stJttd, the
nghts nt those who wtsh to
t~(ondud or remain in cia~ mw;l
also be respected . Any c.:la~es
can cell ed fo r tht: prott:St wtll huvr
to be made up at d later t1m e
Other schools whic h took part
1n the demonstrations m cludtd
Slanrord, Pnn r etnn
t he
U nlv erslly of I llin OIS, thco
Umverslty 1&gt;l Flonda, and ll o ly
Cross Three college pres1den ts
have s po ken out agam~l the
escalihon. They are Rev John
Brook s or tt oly Cross, John
Kem eny of Dartmouth and
Donald Ho rn1g o f Brown
W eek-lon g activat1e) are
sch ed ul ed to climax this weekend
when two maJOr antt-war march es
take place, one 10 New Yo rk and

M

Exact plans for today wt:re mdef101te oil ptess
lime, but SA was try1ng to set up workshops and
discussions a nd obtain speakers tor a noon rally 10
the fountain area behind No rt on llall " Peo ple must
make up the~r minds individually what they fetl they
should do Friday to protest t he war," 6aJd SA
President Debbie Benson
Ms. Benson has asked faculty to par11c1pate by
either cancelling thear classes or devoting them to
anti~war dascuss1on. She also tned to persuade Hayes
Hall to offic1ally call o ff classes today. but was
unsuccessful
Calling S A 's proposals "bastcally the sam e as
those of t he NSA ," Ms. Benson firmly advocated the
NSA stand of "no business as usua l " for toda y . She
explained that t h e NSA had o ripnally called fo r a

I h l· f l"ll• tt~&gt;n' 111 Huff11lu tn the mrreased
h&lt;llllhlflg Ill North Vldnam Wl're ~lo w 10 rornllng
o~r~«J Jul not to~kc "IO'IIfil'ant fo r m until new~ of
p!O&gt;Il''' o.tt otlwr untvr:rs1tie~ rcat:heJ the area . Some
, ludcnl\ ICflla111eJ af)Jthctll. , hut mo.llly slumhenng
,JlfiVI\1\ wne oulratted and Jwdkenc:d by the
t"'\.oiiJIIOn o l the illr war TI1ere were wadespread
'upp&lt;trt lot the NSA 's o ne-day mnra tonum on
b\J\Iness as usual t oday and suggestiOns of
workShtJJ)S. rnl11e~. cancellrng classes or devo ting
dasscs to spca k1ng ul'lout Amen can Involvement in
the V1ettiam War

Demonstrations and prole&lt;d
"II there 15 a pohtJcal sy,tem 1n thtS country
th.Jl has as any basis, the o pinions of ats people, a
strong stan d must be taken and t he governmen t must
bsten," said Qne st udent. Tile French Department
st ated support 1n ats petition for " the s truggle of the
VIet namese people for self-determinallo n "

One of the .:enters o f protest achvity will be an
anh· war mar~.h aJo ng Cent ral Park West in New York
C1ty tomorrow wtuc h is expected to attract
thousan ds Pro tes t activity an the Buffalo area will
consist of Rev. Sherman's " walk for life" at
Lafayett e Square t omorrow and a PCPJ-sponsored
rally at 4 p. m . Tuesday in Naapra Square . with
speakers fro m the Buffalo Five, People's News
Servace, and Vietnam war veterans.
Protest ers across the country hope that tbetr
weekend efforts will reach the admantSlr.ttion and
produce a halt m the recentl y mc reased heavy
bombings of No rth Vietnam. " Ma ybe 1f this country
had ever undergone the daily trauma of beina
bombed ," remarked one Buffalo protester, " we
wouldn' t be so quick to innict it on anyo ne else."

�Fall positions

Appointments .imminent
Appointments to three high
administrative positions are
im.nUnent, Th~ Spectrum learned
earlier this week. They ue
MacAllister Hull, dean of the
Graduate School; Rollo Handy,
provost of the Faculty of
Educational Studies; and Shennan
Merle, dean of the Sdlool of
Social Policy and Community
Services.
In September Dr. Handy
announced his resignation of that
same post to accept a position u
director of research project in
Switzerland. His resignation was
but one of many during that fall
period. A seuch committee,
however, subsequently
recommended Dr. Handy's
ruppointment as provost.
Commenting on his decwon to
accept President Robert Ketter's
offer of reappointment, Dr.
Handy stated: ..In terms of what
the deliberations of the search
committee were and (considering)
some of the discussions within the
faculty , I felt it would be best if I
accepted the position when
offered."

One year bre.k

over a year 180· Dr. Merle will
replace R . Oliver Giblon who has
served u acting dean . Dr. Merle ia
presently a professor at the
Catholic University of America in
Washington. Talking to The
Spectrum from his home, Dr.
Merle said : '1 am extremely
pleased. I look forward with
expectation to taking up my
appointment." His tenure is
scheduled to commence the
beginning of July .
Dr. Hull has presently been
serving as acting dean of the
Graduate School, a post to which
he was appointed following Daniel
Murray 's resignation in
September.
Dr. Hull commented that he
''was pleased as the confidence
expressed in me by my colleagues
on the search committee and by
President Ketter in appointing me.
I look forward to serving a
broader gro up of students and
faculty than I have in the past."
Dr
Hull spoke o f the
experience he has gained in h.is six
months as acting dean and the
expectation that it would help
him perform his difficult task
ahead

Dr. Handy's position oveneas
Additionally, John Lane has
will constitute a one year's leave
been appointed to a three year
of absence after wltich he will
term as chairman of the
continue in his role as provost. In
Department of Political Science
the interim, an acting provost will
beginning September I . Or. Lane
be appoin ted. Action concerning
will
replace Vaughn Blankenship.
this is expected shortly.
All nominations must be
The School of Socaal Po\icy
approved
by the State University
and Community Services has been
without a full-time dean since the Board of Trustees before officiaiJy
resignatJon of Franklin Zweig well taking office.

Calling young writers
Approach 13-30, sponsor of regional orientation
mapzi.nea, ia lpOOIOriDJ a coJ1eajate journalism
competition with S2000 in acholanhip prizes 10
participatina achoob and S 12 ,000 in cub prius to
winnina studenu. The purpoees of the conteat ,
accord.ina to ib promoters, are to encouraae youna
writen, provide coUega with fliWlciaJ hefp to
encoura~ writina and to secu~ an article abou1
campuaes to be published in the Buffalo regional
map:Dne, Buffalo in a NutsheU.
Anyone interested in entering the contest
sbould contact Jo-Ann Arm.o at Th~ Sp«trum
office, 831-4113 . Deadline for aU entries is May 11.

Women's Committee meets to
r6port goals and future action
The President'• Committee on Recruitment and
Promotion of Women, mot in an open session last
Tusday aftemoon to report their progress and beu
sugeationa for further action .
One of the coJDmittee's JO&amp;ls is to secure jobs
for qualified women in faculty positions. Committee
member Jean Alberti, director of University
Research and Instructional Services, reported putial
success of that aim.
She said that after much investiption and often
frustrating work , four budget lines have been
obtained for female faculty . Dr. Alberti noted that it
was a bepruung of progress, openinl up fields
traditionally c losed to women. Thus, the
committee's efforts, particularly, in the Health
Sciences, are considered an accom plishment.
Education is another aim of the committee
which Is necessary in the University. Dr. Alberti
described the " frustrating experience" of certain
committee members in havina to combat a "total
lack of understanding" concernina the importance of
having female faculty members. She doea feel ,
however, that consciousness to the problems women
encounter in the University has been raised
enormously.
Other problema
Bernice Poss, acung cltatrwoman of the
committee, stressed that the comnuttee was formed
to improve the lot of women University-wide.
Though its initial emphasis was directed toward
acquirina faculty positions, aU problems that deal
with women on campus are the concern of the
committee. Subcommittees and ad hoc comm1ttees
are worlcina in other a~.
N otina the rather small turnout in the
Conference Theater for the openina se!Sion , one

member of the ptberipJ suaested that non-faculty
women didn't feel included since the main thrust of
the committee's work bu dealt with faculty . The
committee, wbicb include~ seYeral men, will ~eek to
expand their efforts to better aerve aJJ women.
It wu recently reported that the committee was
ll'nted a tine to hire a director. Active recruitment
will belin shortly while specific qualifications for the
pocition are beina worlted out, It wu noted that 1
knowledae of the women's situation on campus will
definitely be a requirement .

Difficult to prove
AD grievances dea.lina with sex discrimination or
other related problems ahould be brou&amp;ht to the
committee who will, in tum , channel them to the
proper offices. One such place .i.a the Office of EquaJ
Opportunity, headed by Barbara Sims. Ms. Sims
spoke at Tueaday's meetina, discuasina the Jepl
advisement her office pves to such problems. A case
of sex discrimiiUition is very difficult to prove, she
noted .
Muclt of the discussion was concerned with the
possibility of compilina a list of all available
University positions, so that women would have a
fair chance to compete for them. The publishing of
such a list would eliminate the filling of positions
before public awareness or job openinp.
Many women were adamant about this pomt ,
demandina immediate action, even if it meant
sending letters to the secretaries of department
chairmen, who would have such k..nowledce.
The session wu termed mutuaUy beneficial by
Ma. Poss, who said there would be more in the
future, each possibly aimed at a more specafic
segment of the female population.

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speakers in the field of Jewilh famiy Ufe,
W1111t~d

A aoaaJ hour wl1 follow witb re&amp;eabmmta to be aened. Any questions reprding
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Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, 21 Aprill972

. .,.11

�-

Threatened budget cuts
leave scars of mistrust
by Jeff Greenwald
Campus Editor

Despite likely restoration o f threatened
budget cuts to four programs w1thin the
Faculty of Socia l Sciences and
Ad mmis tratwn , it ap pears that hard
feelings c rea ted over the manner in which
the cuts were Jone wtll not be so easily
pacified
On Ma rc h ::!.1, a tlle mh~r o f Ytct
President for 1\ eJc.h:nur AffaJTs Bernar r:l
Gelbaum's staff anforrncd a staff member.
o f Edwin Holland er , provos t of Socw l
Sciences, that suppo rt mo nies for the
Psych ological Clinic, the Social Sci ~:nee
Research Institute (SS RI ), the S peech and
Hea r ing Cltnic and th e Vocilt tonal
Cou nseling Center were all bemg greatly
reduced
Ra y mo nd Hunt , dtrt:cto r of !he Survey
Research Cente r (SRC). tec hnically a part
of SS RI ex. plained 'that funds come from
tw o budget cat egories. lines and salaries,
and su ppo rt m o ney . Lines and salaries pay
basically for perso nn el while suppo rt
money, d epending on th e pro gram . IS used
for such things as te mporary sc rva ces,
trav e l, e quipm e nt and suppli es and
contra ctual services. Such support mo nies
are often termed the "life blood o f th e
organi zat ion . "
Witho ut rt, physical
o perallons must be c urtail~cl

Just proposals
The proposed cuts wo uld decrease the
support budgets as fo Uows · Psych CIJ.ntc
fro m last year's leve l o f $5000 t o SIOOO ,
SSRI from S 16,430 to ab out $9000;
Speech and Hearing C linic from about
$5500 to about S 1100 ; and the Vocational
Counseling Center from S 1000 to $400.
Dr. Gelbaum maintains that the cuts
were merely in the form of proposals,
necessitated by insufficient time . ' 1We had
to present some bud&amp;et or the lstate I
legislature would have made up its own. We
had to move with some dispatch ." Dr.
Gelbaum said , ho wever, " it appears now
that walhan a week we will b e able to help
out those o riginally cut as was o ur hope all
alo ng. We are hopeful."
While allmvo lved welcome the probable
restoratio ns, many fed that that was not
really the iss ue in the four week long
contro ve rsy
J osep h Mashng, c hairman of th e
Department of Psydaology, utlder wh11.'h
the Psy ch C lmtc and the Vocational
Counseling Center o perate . recognizing th e
financ ial state of the U niversa ty , sa1d that
the anger "most o f us have IS not that the
c uts have been made , but that we weren ' t
consulted Some cuts truly have to he
made. In whatever dire c ti o n , there will be
screaming. The questaon as the p rocess an
whi ch they are done ."
To further discussion
Commenting further on the
administrative action , Dr Masling stated .

"It's difficult to serve in the I chairman's I
role . I was notified without taking part in
any co nsultation." He added that Dr.
Gelbaum told him the cuts were a means of
facilitating discussion . When told of the·
am pending restroation, Dr. Masling said ·
" I I 's about time.''
Dr. Hunt and J ames Marea n, directo r of
the Psyc h Clini c ~ssentially shared Dr.
Maslmg's feelings " Regardless of whether
they restore the mon ey or not," Dr. Man.:ia
remarked. " th e -;tyle in which they were
done as most dis t urbang .. ll stinks."
Dr. Hunt agreed "One thing, no matter
what happens, that ca n 't be cha nged, is the
manner an whi ch the administrative actions
took place," he declared . " There was no
co n s ulta tio n . no forewarning that a
sagn ifh:an t ttudget cut W&lt;IS 11npc nd1ng."
Les t~r Milt"trath . direct o a ol th e SS RI ,
terrned Dr. G elbaum 's 111it aal a\:1 ions as
"capricious."
Future changes seen
Dr Gelbaum see ms to regret the furor
ca used by d efended his dccibJO ns asserting:
" I think II co uld ha ve been done much
better 1f we had more lime " Refe rring to
the way Dr . ll o llander was informed of t he
cuts , he said that t h ere were "contacts with
I Dr. Ho llander l at d1fferent limes . The
pro per degree was no t possible due to the
tim e problem " H e noted that this was the
first year any l- UI S were necessary and that
"if possible, I I w ul be done b etter nex t
ti m e . No bo dy pro fited fro m 11 "
Damage to three o f lhe n~nll o ned
programs. the Psyc h and Speech and
Ilea ring Clinacs and SS R l (and therefo re
S RC as its main entity) would be
stgnificant if the expected recommitments
fail to materialize .
Dr. Marcia desc ribed the Psych Clime as
"the pnmary training fa cility for all
&amp;raduate st udies in Clinical Psy chology . All
their practical counes usc the clinic's

facilities."

,

He explained that "und~r the auspices
u f the clinic, and thro ugh the c linic, people
are working in about 12 comm uni t y
agenc1es . [The agen ctes ) use clime
supervisors and o ur tnterns get release tinu:
to w ork 1n the com munity"
Grant feared jeopardized
Dr Marcia noted that m ut h o t th ~
clinacal psycho logy program watlun tht'
Psych o lo gy De partment gets 1ts money for
staff from a yearly S 104 ,9 37 gran t from
the Natao nal Institute for Me ntal Health
(NIMII ) . Contmuation of the grant, soM
up for renewal, according to Dr Ho llander ,
is partly predicated upon ho w much the
llntversJty IS willing to support the 1-llmca l
program.
In a JUSilficatJon of the clini c b udget ,
wntten to facilitate funds restora t iOn, Dr
Marcaa wrote : "Any cut in current clim ~
operating funds will have tw o e ffect s it
will lead to a perception thut the
University 1s no lo nger mterested an the

mental heaJth needs o f t he Buffalo
co mmunity ; it will e ndanger renewal of the
current NIM II trammg grant
I w ould
assum e that the fed eral grants agency
w o uld be s usp icwus o f th e Unive rsity 's
support for tlus training pro gram should
such an already small o pcratan~ hudgct he
reduced."
Or. Gelba um acknowledged the grant ' s
importance but argued that 11 was never 10
any danger because of the pro posed cuts .
" We w ould never allow th at ," he affirmed

A hydra
Or
Masling commented that "one
bra n c h o f Hayes Hall doesn ' t know what
another branch is doing. One part wo uld
like us to accomplish. as \1JUCb u ponible
(in terms of community Service and such as
the Psych and Speech and Hearing C linics
dol and another part would take away the
resourc.:es."
SRC 1 whic h takes up the vast majo rit y
o r SSI R's funds, also wouJd he tn jeo pard y
wit ho ut rest o rati o n One of t he prob lr. ms,
ex plamed Dr. Hunt , as that of the ty pe uf
scrvace S Rt' supplies " If wt: tak e an ~
proJect , an d o verhead (~u pph es. plume
~ervac.:e , l' um puter resou rc.:cs, etcJ IS ~pent ,
there.: as no way t o mak e up that overh ead
except for a University contributi o n , th;al
bemg support money "
If, however, S RC andutlctl lhe over hl·ad
~· osts 10 the fee, hargetl al s clients , at would
" pnce llself uu t of the market "
Essentials
Cert11in t hut~ . Dr Hunt said, ar~
needed just to mamtaan themselves , su ~ h as
pho ne servtce and their IBM keypunr h ,
"At the beg1nning of the yea r we had
already overrun on ou r co ntra ctual sefYlces
line just by having th ose !lungs."

Mary Mann , director of the Speech and
Hearing Clinic simply said : "One way or
another we w o uld have to have funds." She
co mmented that the fund s are "primarily
to support a training program _ The primary
purpose for the clinic's existence i8
laboratory work, without whi ch the
tea c hing of tratntng methods is of much
less value ,"
The Speech and Hearing C linic, as does
the Psyc h Clinic, lends help to the
community . " We d o o ffer services to
students within the University as well as
peo ple in the community ," Or. Mann said .
''I'm very happy if the money has been
restored," she added . The impact o f
unrestored cuts upon the Vocational
CounseUn&amp; Center would be minimal.

Open wounds
While the probable restorations have
soothed some, o thers have mdicated their
bruises will no t h eal so qu1ckly. Dr. flunt
lamented : " It's th e sort o f thing that isjust
a bad show Whether the amount is big or
small, it WliS handled very badly , very
badly .''
Dr. Marcra descn bed tumself as keling
"so o ut o r ~ontrol , po werless, alienated .
Someo ne whom I've never met. wh o has
never met me, who has neve r been to the
clinic , may be tak1ng away my money ...
Or G elbaum stated t hai he ' 'realized
sume people have hurt feelings and it iB
unfo rtunate We are now an the process of
rectifymg th ose feelings"
Appar e ntly o ne met hod of s uch
rectificahon will be a meetl.llg between Or.
Kette r and those drrectly invo lved with the
projects 1n question . The meeting is
sc heduled t o take place next Tuesday
Official wo rd on the state of the budget
cuts is expected by then also .

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Friday, April 21 -

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Sunday Apri 123

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CONFERENCE THEATRE
Friday, 21 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Mass protests. ~t'"U:frompqeJ- Ethics Symposium proposes to
expose humane side of science

the other in Lot Anples. Thia
"Emerpncy March for Peace"
wu called by both the National
Peace Action Coalition and the
Student Mobilization Committee.
The New York m¥Cb will begin at
10 a.m. on Central Parle West and
72nd St., and will conclude with a
rally opposite Bryant Parle
sometime between l and 4 :30
p.m .
In t ernationaJ demonstrations
are also scheduled in Belgium,
Ca nada , Denmark , England,
France, Ireland , Lebanon ,
luxembourg, New Zealand,
Scotland, S weden and
Switzerland . Speaken at the New
York raUy will include Rep. Belir.
Abzua, Ossie Davis, Senator Mike
Gravel and Andreas Papandreou .

Political reaction
Reaction to the new escalation
of the bombing in Indochina has
not been limited to coUege
campuses. Both Sen. Edmund
Muskie and Rep WiJbw Mills,
contenders for the Democratic

presidential nomination, bave
stated that they Will pull all U.S.
troope out of Vietnam if elected.
Mus.k.ie said Monday tbat, if
elected, be would pull aU
American forces out of Indochina
within 60 days, as long as the
Communists released all U.S .
prisoners of war and accounted
for men missing in action. He
cb.uged that Nixon had "broken ·•
h.is promise, and this " frightening
escalation" might "carry us to the
brink of a world crisis" by
involving the Soviet Union or
China.
Mills , in a new stan ce on t he
war, urged i mmediate and total
withdrawal of all U.S. forces fro m
Vietnam . He commented that 1f
be bad been President. "none of
our troops would be there because
I would have bad them out of
VietR!m a lo ng time ago."
Sen Henry Jackson, on t he
other hand, said "such bombing ls
necessary to stabilize the military
situation . . so as to enable us to
co ntinue our withdrawal and
bring our priso ners horne."
Another Democratic hopeful , Sen.
HubeTt Humphrey. said Nixon's
course o f actio n is the same one
whic h literally forced Lyndon B.
Jo hnson to resigJl
Sources for the U.S. and the
Soviet Union tn Washingto n said
Tuesday that the renewed
hom bing of Hatphong and Hanoi
co uld Je o pardize President
Nixon's s ummll trip to Moscow,
sc heduled f or next month .
However. there is so much at
stake in the summit t11lks, that
neither side can afford to cancel
the meeting. There have been
sharp exchanges trus past week
between Moscow and Washington
abo ut alleged damages to Soviet
ships in Haiphong harbor.

"There is an anxiety wide and arowlng among
sclontilts today about the inhuman application of
science," commented Harold S~pl (Department of
Biology) as he explained the purpose and theme of
today's Sympotium on 6'thical and Social Problem1
In Human Biology .
Slated to begin at 9 a.m. and continuing until
4 : 10 p .m. in tho Norton Hall Conference Theater,
the Symposium is sponsored by the State University
of New York at Buffalo Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics and Th e Humanut , a national
magazine published in Buffalo . Additionally , four
speakers will be featured (see schedule below).
There is, accordi ng to Dr. Segal , "a sense of
urgency o n the part of scientists regarding the need
to assure that science be applied humanely ."
Included in the inhumane use of science, Dr. Segal
noted : l) the use of nuclear energy to destroy cities ;
2) use of fundamental knowledge in plant science to
destroy the vegetatio n in a whole count.ry; 3) use of
sophisticated chemiotl , weapo ns to immobili:u

people both at home and abroad; and 4) use of
technology to create a society in which people have
been reduced to role of consumer machines.

Unified action
Scientists, Dr. Sepl continued , "can no lo nge r
assume that tbe res!llts of science arc automatically
and inexorably good but that they have to be
directed towards applications that will lead to
human enlargement." To do this, Dr. Segal suggests
the necessity to inculcate into the scientist a need to
watchdog science. Involved here, he said , is unified
action to o ppose the inhumane uses of science.
Concluding his remarks, Dr. Segal stated that 1f
the net effect of science is deleterious to human
welfare, "then all science shcruld be sto pped "
Additionally , he wgcd all interested to attend the
symposium explaining tbat while "very real and hard
questions will be asked , any 'intelligent layman • n o t
familiar with the intricacies of biology will be able to
undentand all concepts ."

Ethics Symposium Schedule
9 :00 a.m .· lmrv ductron
Dr. Bernard R .
Ge/lxrum. vice presidftnf for Academic Affairs,
SUNY, Buffalo, N . Y.
9 : IS a.m.: "Nomwtivl' Ethics and Public
Morality " - Dr. Daniel Col/alum, direNor, Institute
of Societ y, F:tl1ics and tire Life Sciences.
1/astings-on·Hudson. N Y.
9 .55 a .m .: Commentary
10: I 5 a.m.: Open Discussion
10:55 a.m.: "[)eiJe/nping the Potential of
Human Genes "
Dr. Verle E. Headings, assistant
professor of Pedtztrics and Medicine, Hvward
Universiry College of Medicine. Washington, D.C.
II .35 a.m.: Commentary
II : 55 a.m. : Open Discussion
1:30 p.m.: "Designing Man ''
Dr. Evalyn P

Segal. director, Institute of Child and family
Develo pm ent and Professor of Psychology,
University of North Carolina, Greensboro. N.C.
2: 10 p .m .: Commentary - Dr. Ludwig •·m1
Bertalanffy, faculty professor of Natural Sciences
and Mathemut lt'S and Socilll Sciences and
Admi11istration.
2:30 p.m.: Open Ducussion
Dr
2 :50 p .m .: "Science for the People"
Ethlln Signer, associaft' professor of Microbiology.
Bk&gt;logy Department. Ma$SDChusem Insrlrutl' of
Teclmnlogy, Cambridge, Mass.
3 ~ 30 p.m .: Commentary - Dr. Humid/,. Segal.
professor of Biology. SUNY, Buffalo, N.Y.
3 :50p.m.· Open Discussion
4 . 10 p.m.: Adjoum

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ID cards·checked at door

Paqe four . The Spectrum . Friday, 21 April 1972

�International Studies gets
slight budget curtailment
In line with the present
financial crisis, the Council on
International Studies has received
a slight c urtailment in next year's
budget. According t o Albert
Michaels, acting executive officer
of International Studies, the
budget represents a victory for the
council, for it comes "at a time
when International Studies funds
are being cut back all over the
country." In addition h e said the
curtailment "is less than the
general University cutback."

Dr. Michaels feels that ''the
University administration has
shown a great deal of foresight as
well as a firm commitm ent to
in t emational programs in far
excess o f the commitment being
made by m ost other large
universities." The study abroad
programs which represent the off
campus facet of International
Studies are expected to be funded
as well .
Of special concern, however, is

Wolfgang Wolck's Latin American
studies program which is presently
in need o f funds . According to Dr.
Wolck , this country's knowledge
of Latin and South America is
"sadly lacking" as reflec ted by the
United States' Office o f
Education's comment that Latin
American studies is a matter of
" low priority."
Dr. Wolck referred to this as "a
ridiculous if not dangerous
co mment ," but one which
unfortunately is representative o f
the United States' attitude toward
these countries. Dr. Wolck added
that he received the same negative
response when asking for funds to
study Quechau, an inidgenous
language spoken in parts of Peru
and Ecuador by at least seven
million people.
Continuing, Dr. Wo lc k said
that although the present
situation is at best dismal, h e is
co nfident of the program's
long-range success.

Faculty Senate meeting

Academic dishonesty defined
Interrupted by arguments over syntactical
supervisor of the program" and filed in the
structure, the Faculty Senate finally accepted the
department office.
definitions of academic dishonesty as formulated by
MacAllist er Hull , of the Department of Physics,
th.: Comrruttee on Academic Integrit y.
moved to add two sentences to the third t&gt;roposal.
The committee had been formed in November After some discussion the motion was accepted, and
after an elaborate document outlirung t h e the approved recommendation now reads :
con sequences of academ i c dishonesty was
"Enrollment in independent study shall be with
introduced . The document was acce pted into the written consent of the faculty supervisor. A
University policy pending a definition of the term written evaluation by the faculty supervisor , bearin&amp;
"academic integrity ."
his signature, shall be filed with the grade for the
Claude Welch (Department of Political Science), independent study and this evaluation shall be
chaitman of the committee, felt that it was included in the student's permanent record .
imperative to act on t h e proposals now, sance final
"Faculties, departments and programs may set
exams are in two weeks. The six sections. d ealing such additional requirements for independent study
with plagiarism , cheating, falsification of a~.:ademic of f e red under their auspices as they deem
materials, and distribution or acceptance o f appropriate."
examinations. were approved, but a ques t iOn arose as
Since the number of senators needed to
t o whether these sh ould become part or Univers1ty ..:onstitute a quorum had gradually dimmished, no
law .
formal action cou ld be taken on the
Several senat ors maintaan ed that they were recommendatio ns of the Committee o n Teaching
valuable ansofar as informing the students as to what
Effectiveness A..:ting Chairman Gil Moore, however,
they could or could n o t do , but should not become a asked that th e body remain and discuss the proposals
formal amendment. One suggestion o ffered was that to get a "sense of the house" before the next
the definitiOns should be included in undergraduate meeting.
and graduate handbooks, "as inform ation if not
The Subcommittee on Teaching Effectiveness
University regulations."
was assigned to evaluate t h e quality o{ teachln&amp; at
Ultimately . t h e definitions were prefaced by the .Univenity in July 197 \ . After extensive suney•.
their Jastt5ection, which read:t-in part: '"Ale sanction questionnaires and observation of teaching
applied s hould reflect th e unique characteristics of procedur e, th e co mmittee produ ced five
each case," and the c hairman of the Faculty Senate recommendations for "discussion. revisJOn and
was requested to "assure the wades! possible endorsement" by th e Faculty Senate . Three were
distribu tion of the rnat enal."
dascussed and modified by the Senators.
The senate next turned its attentiOn to the
They incl uded a faculty endorsed assessment of
acceptan&lt;·e of a proposal by the Independent study lt•ac hing performan..:e by st ud ent evaluation. and a
committee calling for a "writt en evaluat ion by the \ l1pulatao n that these evaluations be "made available
faculty s po n sor." Two previous proposals by l he to st udl'nts and fa..:ully , and be included as eviden ce
comnutlee had been ddcated hy the senate 10 of tca..:hmg effe..:t1vcncss or lack thereof, an
Marc h .
Jdvancement procedures."
The first requ1red a prosped1ve mdcpendcnt
A mud1f1ed vers1on CJf the "Davis, California
st udy student to "submit a wntten proposal
pl11n lor s tud ent t:valuataon of teaching
descnbmg the nature of that co urse nf study , what performam:es" would also begm 10 September 1972 ,
he Intends to achieve , and how he intends to al·haeve to last an ex penrncntal two years. These proposals
it ." The second stipulated that the tndcpendent Will ht• formally ..:onsadered at the next Faculty
study plan be "approved and signed by the fa~.:ulty Scualc rucctang .

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC .
., Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

STUDENT ASSEMBLY
MEETING
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
:
•

:•

~•
••

TODAY !
••

······················~·······························

3:00 p.m. 233 Norton Hall
ALL MEMBERS MUST ATTEND!

GARDNER WILL SPEAX

Jolin w. Gardner, National Chairman
of Common Ceus., will spe.k It a
p .m. Thu ~dly, April 27 In the
PMceBrldge Exhibition Cent..- 1t the
foot of Porter Avenue. Admission Is
free.
Sponsored by Common Ca uM of
Wute r n New
York, Hugh G.
Carmichael , Coordinator.
For furth~r lnform~~tion writ~:

Suite 2205, Main Place Tower
Buffalo 14202

Friday, 21 April 1'972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�Drunk-driving and VD

I

Legislature vetoes social bills
New . York state legislators have rejected two
proposals intending to curb two important social
problems: drunk·driving and veneral disease . In the
Assembly, a bill to lower the permissible alcohol
content of blood was d efeated Monday after
opponents questioned the validity of the
breathalyzer regulations in stopping drinkers from
driving.
And in the Senate, a proposal to allow the sale
of prophylactics to persons under the age of 16 was
defeated. The bill was argued most strongly by those
who believed passage would encourage increased
sexual activity .
"Passage of !Jus bill would imply that this
legislature thmks there 's nothing wrong with
promiscuity among young people," said Senate
Majority Leader Earl Brydges.
Backers of the bill said at would help prevent the
spread of venera! disease. " We're not taJiung about
hirth control m this bill ," said Sen Roy M.
Goodman. "We are talking only about devices t11at
would stop V.D.
a prescription would still be
requ1red for the pall "
Aimed at stopping V.D.
Sen. Goodman, who has sponsored a more
Liberal bill permitting the sale of cont raceptiVes
outs1de drug stores, said IJ1e measure "was the
rrununum essent1al to stop the mcredible forward
advance of V.O ." The bill was sponsored by Sen
S1dncy A . VonLuther, who tabled the bill after 1ts
defeat, hop1ng for a more favorable roll call later 111
the session.
The blood·alcohol pro posal had won c.asy
approval in the Senate last week, but tut surprJSJng
oppos1tio n tn the Assembly. The measure fell sue
votes short of approval after o pponents questioned
the validity o f the tests 3.\ a means to combat drunk
dnvers.

Other Assembly business dealt with on Tuesday
included the approval of changes in last year's
welfare refonns and passage of the repeaJ of the
one·year residency requirem ent which the federal
courts declared unco111titutionat. The welfare
changes, all sent to the Senate, included requiring
the minimum wage for recipients required to talce
work ; allowing local officials to exempt persons 60
or older from the "employable" category; and t o
permit children in welfare families to keep money
earned a t jobs witho ut lowering the family's welfare
payments.

Q: WiU the bUieS to Ridae Lu be runnina durina exam week?
A : They will be running. However, the schedule will be changed
We don't have enough room here to publish the entire schedule, but
there are copies posted throughout the campus and also available at the
Action Une table in Norton . Remember, that durin&amp; exams there will
be a Specilzl Schedule ; so don't go by the usual one. Please also no te
that there will be no bus semce on Sunday , May 7 .
Q : When does reaistratlon close for the summer aeaion?
A : There will be three summer sessions this year. Re,istration for
the first closes on Friday, May 19. Registration for the second closes on
Friday, June 23 and registration for the third session closes on Friday.
July 7 . In each case, instrucllon begins on the following Monday.

In addition, the Assembly approved three prison
reform bills to aid inmates and also voted to put
harsher penalties against rape. The reform biiJs, part
of the package recommended by Gov. Rockefeller at
the urging of the Jones Commission on PenaJ
Reform, were easily approved and sent to the
Senate.

Q : Can I take evenina courses durina the summer?
A; Yes, you may. The Millard fillmore College will offer three
summer sessions : one for seven weeks, one for ten weeks and one for
14 weelcs. All three sessions will begin on the same day , May 22.
Registration for Millard Fillmore students will be held from Apnl
14 - April 28. Open registratJOn for other students will be held on May
10 from 6 :30 8:30p.m.

Furloughs and parole
The measures provtdcd
- To let 1nmates be furloughed for up to two
weeks' t1me, for famiJy visits or job interv1ews;
T o let exconvicts regain such rights as driving
o r fishing ljcenses by special permission even if
convtc ted o f more than one felony. Current law
restricts the privilege to first offenders ;
T o g~ve priso ners sentenced before 1967 penal
code reform the same parole eligjhal1ty as those
sentenced under the new law.

Q : How many credit hours can I take durina the summer?
A : You can enroU for one c redit hour per week of attendance plus
a maximum of two addjtJonal credit hours. The following wiJt
LIJustrate : If you enroll for any one seven week session you can tske
run e hours. H you enroll for the first and third sessions (1 4 weeks) you
can take 16 credit hours. If you en ron for the first and second ( 12
weeks) you can take 14 hours. Or if you enroll for the second and third
sessio ns (9 weeks) you can take II credit hours. These llrruts will he
stric tly adhered to and as far as we can tell , no exceptions will be made
Q : You had an answer in last week's column about whtrt
companiea aet the names and addresses of araduatea. But what do we
do with all the junk mail that comes throuah the ma.ila? Do we have to
accept it or what?
A . No, you don' t have to accept it. What you should do IS mark
"refused" o n the outside o f the envelope or package .tnd put your
irutials under this. Then give it to the mailman or place it in a mailbox
It will be returned to the sender by first class mail and that compan y
will have to pay the postage.

Also approved, 129·9 with no debate , was a
measure by Assemblyman Frederic k Schmidt ,
changing first degree rape from a class B to a cJags A
felon y. The change means a sentence of 15 years to
life, mstead of the c urrent I 25 years, and ;1
possibility of probation . The same bill passed the
Assembly last year but died in Senate committee.

Q : My landJord has just informed me that he is increasing my rent.
I thouabt that there was a freeu on prices and that this was illegal . Is
il , o r am I wrong?
A · We have had qwte a few mquuies about rent mcreases and
called the Internal Revenue Service to find o ut the answers Landlords
can increase thear rents 2~% and they can add to the rents any m crease
m taxes for the commg year If they make any cap1tal Improvements
they can make an increase o f I 'h% of the cost of these. Otherwise, they
cannot m crease rents beyond these. amounts and , if they do, they are
liable fo r penaltJes . There is an exceptio n to the rent \.On trol and t h1s IS
where t he landlo rd Uves 1n the ho use and has had a lease with rh e
tenant for the last SIX mo nths In thiS Cl!Se, there IS no rent control
when the lea~e IS renewed ThiS exceptJon IS for housmg umts of five u1
less The IRS has a written handout co ntainmg all the ru les . 11 ynu
want o ne, they are available lrom : The Internal Revenue Servu.:e Ill
Wesl Huron Street, Buffalo, New Yo rk 14 20 2. Their telepho ne nu~lh!!r
~ H42-S960

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$f.OO
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COLOR IN THIS "M INI -

PRESIDENTIAL
1. Buy a bunch of Flatr f)ens. You need

brown, red, blue. oranoe. purple and yet
low (You need them a•.y-Nay for school)
2. Now-color •n the p1c.ture accordt ng to
these color gu•Cie numbers (5). Brown (2).
Red (3) Blue (6). Orange (9). Purple (7).
Yellow Please do not color unnumbe red
areas.

·'~/3. c~!~i~~v~~~,~~~!

genume full color porlra•t of someone
you know and tovc Maybe. If he or she
•s not your tcwortle f)restdenltal cand•
date, hclv•: prtltl'nce. You'll see your favor
I 1te soon tn th~ Fla11 Elec.tton Collect toni
(Don't forg et to as k about Fla~r's running
mate, the Flair Hot liner.)

Gillet1e C9mpany Pep.:oMate Division 0 1117?

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday , 21 April 1972

leLop11.os

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�Medical It

Editor's note: Medical questio118fproblems on your mtnd? Medical/, a
weekly column containing health related questio111 from the Untvenlty
community, II now tn operation through the cooperation of the Office
of Public Health Education of the Erie County Department of Health
with consultation from the Medical School, Univenity Health Service
and the Office of Student Affairs and Services. Just dill/ 831 ·5000
Action Line Extension or vi1it the Action Line booth in the Center
Lounge of Norton Hall. Names will be kept in strict conficence.
Do toot hputes claiming a bript er t ~th and cleaner teeth injure
the enamel?
Toothpastes, in general , will not hurt the tooth's enamel. If you
clean your teeth regularly removing stains and food particles, you will
have cleaner an d therefore brighter teeth. The use of dental floss to
clean between teeth is probably as important as brushing.
What causes " Pink Eye?"
What is commonly referred to as "Pink Eye" is an acute contag10us
inflammation of the lining covering the white of the eye and the eye
lid. Usually, the eye appears red and there are flakes of discharge or
pus. Pink eye, o f course, can be treated successfu4y~mpli ca tions,
also can develop, a scratch on the eye may become infected , for
example.
Does being overwdght add stress to the bear~?
Yes, Yes, Yes. The heart must pump blood throughout the body
including fatty tissue. Thus, with each extra pound of fat , the heart
must work harder to get the blood through the fat and o n to other
parts of the body. II is estimated one out o f five American men and
one out of four American women are overweight. How about you?
What can be done about an itchy case of Athlete 's Foot?
Athlete's Foot is caused by fungus . It lies dormant in the callouses
and scales between the toes When the body resistance breaks d own,
the fungi propagate into the infectious stage, in which the skin of the
toes and soles of the feet , or both, become itchy, reddened, scaly o r
blistered. The same condition could be caused by shifting by tigh t
shoes or socks or a sensitjvity rea ction to shoes, leather dye, o r
substances in rayon, nylon or other materials. Dabbing on various
preparations seem to do little good . The fungi seem to thrive on soggy
and soft skin . Therefore, preventive m easuJ"es include keeping the skin
of the feet and t oes dry. Enough toe room and shoes permitting air
circ ulation is h elpful. Cotton or wool socks will help absorb
perspiration . After swimming and bat tUng, dry feet thoroughly.
especially the skin between and around the toes and toenails, without
vigorous rubbing. Use a little talcum powder. In severe cases, see your
physician .
I have

1 serious cue o f dandruff, What can I do about it?
Everyone has some dandruff. Oiliness and Oakiness are normal
with most individuals. Sometimes o ne person will have a more severe
case which requires treatment. The cause of simple dandruff is
unknown . (Ho wever. il can be contro lled . Keep you r scalp clean and
healthy by shampoomg at least o nce a week With a simple shampoo or
plain soap If it is severe case, see your family ph ysic1an who may
reco mmend special treatment .) It is a combination o f scaling, secretions
from the various glands, dust and germs.

UUAB Arts Committee
Presents:

Rennie Davis speaks

Peace program is proposed
by Clem Colucci
Spectrum StDff Writer
" We've go t to begin to really
take ourselves seriously again.
We've got to come out of our
depression . . • and work against
the Vietnam war until it's ended."
Addressing an audience that
fill ed Hochstet ler 114 last
Wednesday night , Rennie Davis,
former member o f the Chicago
Seven and an organizer o f the
I 9 7 I Mayday demonstrations,
called for renewed efforts to end
the war in Indochina.
Mr . Davis s pok e after a
presentation of a slide show by
the group for National Action
Researc h on the Milit a ry
Industrial Complex (NARMIC)
d epicting new de velopments tn
automated warfare in use in
Indochina t o day .
To the cheers of sections of the
crowd , Mr . Davis to ld of Tuesday
night's attempted burning o f
Harvard's Center for lntemauonal
Studies, the strike vote at
Columbia, and the burning of an
Army recrui t i ng st.ation at
Stanford . He predic ted that such
actions would increase in prote:-&gt;t
of the recent b o mbing in North
Vietnam and declared ; "If Ntxon
continues his madness 111
Ind ochm a, even the Untverstty of
Buffalo will find itsell on stnk t:'
and closed down ·•
Collapse imminent
Pacmg back ami forth anoss
th e front of the roum, Mr . Oavts
to ld the crowd that the South
Vte tnamese army is on th e vergt:'
of mihtary defeat and that present
U.S . p olicy is aimed at preventing
this at all costs. " lt wo uld be
hard," asserted Mr . Davis, ''to
exaggeptte the e&lt;1mmilment o f
Nixon and Kissinger t o wmning
t rus war."
H e said that the military had a
great stake 111 winmng I he war so
that the new automa ted weaponry
shown in the.: sl1de ~h ow could he
developed " Whate ver the stake~.
(the military l will not sufft:r J

,..Hear, 0 Israelgems from the
JEWISH BtBLE

For

Phone

875-4266

defeat at the hands of the Viet
Cong,'' be stated.
Mr . Davis then put forth some
of the plans for the new attack on
the war. He told the crowd that
the National Student Association
voted for a strike Friday (today)
at over 150 schools across the
country. He also said that there
were plans for a May 4
Moratorium durina whic.h many

Laos and Cambodia will be
stopped.
Mr. Davis called for people to
co nfr o nt all p residential
candida.t es with the pr&lt;&gt;lfam and
refuse to support them unless
they vowed to follow its
prescriptions. He outlined plans to
begin mass demonstrations and
confrontations as the candidates
continued their campaigning and
to hold a " massive, legal and
nonviolent march" on the
Republican convention in San
Diego.
"We are at a point in history,"
said Mr. Davis, "when tbe war can
end , not through a revolution of
working c lass people but throuab
the electoral process." Anti-war
forces h o pe to turn the election
into a "referendum on Vietnam ."

Momentum must continue
In addition, he said. there must
be concerted efforts to keep up
the campaign's momentum during
the summer. T o this end, Mr.
Davis told of a " Talk to the
Peopl e Campaign," in which
students would go t o community
groups and show ftlms and slides
and talk to the peo ple to get them
to support the "Three Point Plan''
v.ac.atro
and put an end to the war.
But if this d oesn't work ? "AIJ
o ptions are o pen ," Mr Oavi&amp;
prom1nent people, in cludmg warned . "This co untry , th.i\
Senators and Congressmen. wnuld government must be brought to
speak out against the war
its knees ."
After his speech , members of
Ellsberg's plan proposed
the audience took Mr. Davis to
But the mo!lt Important part of task for a lack u f "ideological
the n ew d fort , declared Mr
purity" in suggestin&amp; that students
Oavis, was the promo tion of the try another allianctl with the
''Three Point Pro~Jam for P~ce in \ibenlt to end the war.
H\dochina" suggested by Daniel
The crltics demanded that the
Ellsberg. The prognrn's three war tss uc be inteJfllled in a total
poi11ts arl! I) that the President, plan t o unite the working clus to
the d ay a fter h e is inaugurated, bring about a proletariat
cease all military o perations in rrvolut1on . One member gave a
Jnd o.:hina . 2) that he set a day, long speech about an Imminent
nut lunge1 than lhret• nwnths world-wide de pressiOn and saw
dtstant , o n which all troops Will this as an n pportunily to intensify
h.!VC: heen withdrawn, and n tllat
efforts to a revnlut1onary

Rennie Davis

pru~am

rMOTORCYCLEINSURANCEl
~IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE 1
1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! )
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····Your Brolc .. About U&lt;" · -

International Studies at SUNY ·Binghamton
Offen

A Grand Study Abroad Opportunity
ATTENliON . ROMANCE LANGUAC,E

MAJOR~

4te vou trlft'tt&gt;1h"d 1n pursumg two romunu! lunl}uage' und
tiJIIUit'l

be set a date, not more than 30

days away, when all support of
the "puppet regimes" in Vietnam ,

1

Are you mrere1ted m tht' 1/IQredlenr.' l/1ul guvt• the1e
t ulture5 their disltnt live fluvl)r '

.

Mr
D a vts replteu to t he
.:harges. assertang that the war
~;nuld he ended now hetore any
~ffeltlV~ plans for u revnlu t1 on of
the.: workmg class Lould he put
1ntu effet·t When the speak er
tqnk the floor. a group of Mr
Dav1~ · ~uppurter.. renewed their
applause and kept it goi ng unlll
thl.' speaker gave up 111 diSgust.

Pick a Winner!

~UJ'f!IJJ
Softer than Beaujolais.
More lively than a
Portuguese Rose!

Are you interested 10 the mcmtler in whllh the)' underwent
und absorbed the culluw/ currents tl1ut }wept over
Southern Eurvpe from the ecM und the south transforming
Roman into Romom.e?
Are you intere}ted m today·~ Mediterraneafl wlture::. und
the rich heritage that reflect In the south of the Romance
countrfel?

Then spend a semester in Malta working on your minor
and a semester in either Barcelona, A lx-en-Provence or
Palermo working on your maJOr .. Spanish , French, or
Julian .

Or simply the second semester working on yoUI major.
Enroll in the SUNY-Binghamton program in Mediterranean
Studtes, Romance Languages Component. Wri te to :

Shows April 24, 25, 26 at 6 p.m. and 8 :30 p.m.
In Diefendorf 147. Tickets: 75¢

Professor John Lakic h
Department of Romance Languages
SUNY ·Binghamton
Binghamton, New York 13901
Oe~line

..........

ITALY'S PIUZE WINE

date: Mily 31, 1972
Friday , 21 April 1972 • The Spectrum . Page seven

�I

I

EdiToRiAl

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A

H-\IRCVT.

A

\

Day of protest
T he latest escalation and mass bombing raids over North
Vietnam are one more outrageous crime against humanity
perpetrated by the Nixon ad ministration. Under a blanket of
catchy phrases like " Vietnamization, phased withdrawal and
protective reaction strikes," America is once again waging a
fu ll-5cale war in an effort to permanently secure the position
of a corrupt dictatorshi p.
While the President points to his supposedly impressive
withdrawal fi gures, the real truth is that men are simply
being replaced by war machines capable of dealing death and
destruction on a greater and more efficient scale. While the
number of Americans in the war zone should continue to
decrease, our presence in Southeast Asia will be maintai ned
by t he might of our military machine.
This saga is far from new. Two years ago it was
Cambodia, last year Laos. American youth spoke out in the
spring of '70, only to be met by scorn , hatred and bullets.
Last spring wit nessed a catharsis unprecedented In student
annals. Now, it appears that the anti-war movement is
attempting a phoenix-like resurrection.
We believe all members of the University community
should participate in and support today's activities. We do
not expect an o fficial cessation of classes, but the faculty can
certainly oontribute by cancelling classes on an individual
basis. While the immediate utility of demonstrat ions has been
quite questionable in the past, we believe that any activity
which serves to focus attention on the war is valuable.
As a minimum, we hope the Student Association is
successful in organizing a noon rall y at the fountain. If not.
however, others certainly will . In any event. we urge the
entire University to turn out for such a rally . One can predict
only a dim future for a nat ion with a silent conscience.

High-handed actions
Members of the administration have again acted in a
cavalier. high-handed, almost despotic fashion. The latest
fiasco concerns budget cuts in several Faculty of Social
Science programs. While significant portions of the cuts are
likely to be restored. the fa il ure of administrative academic
personnel to seek any input from the program directors is
another damning indication of centralization gone wild .
It would seem proper, both as a matter of courtesy and
academtc ethics, for high level administrative officials to
consult department chairmen, program directors and
provosts in regard to any proposed budget cuts. While there
is np guarantee that this administration will pay any
attention to such input , their esteem and respect on this
campus would undoubtedly increase if they began an active
solicitation of outside opinions. Isolation and secrecy begat
mistrust and fear and before long we are afraid the Ketter
administration will reap a harvest of bitterness and suspicion.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 77

Friday, 21 Apnl 1972

Editor- in~hief
()cnn~~ Arnold
(C)-M~n•grng Edrtor
AI Ben-o n
Co M•n•glng Editor Mrl..e ltpJ&gt;rn.u•n
As.st f,hniging Edrtor SU\.tn Mo"
8usin~s M•n•ge r
)~t~ Hell on
Adverusing M•n•ger ~U\~11 Mellrnlttlt·

. Howie Kurtl
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CrotT~e•

Music
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..... Tom Toles

Aut
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Photo
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rh~ Sputrum IS ~erved by United Pr~s lnternilloon.il, (..ollege p,~
Sendtc, th" Los Angel"s Tim~ Free Pr~s. the Los Angc:les Times
Syndlute ~nd Llber.ulon New$ Service.
ltcpubli,~tion of m~tter herein WithOut

the exprt:S) cons~nl Uf l he

Edltor-ln&lt;hief Is forbidden .
£dllOtl~ pcilicy

is determined by the

Editor-in&lt;:h~ef.

-

Pa9t eJgbt . The Spectrum . Friday, 21 April rt12

'

6eT A
SO{T.
\

r - - - - J t .'JfJ/ff':l.

Writing this column is frequen tl y an upsetting
experience. Sometimes because il is difficult to think
of anything to say, and at other times because there
is too much in my bead to comfortably order. A
relatively new problem seems to have arisen now,
however. There is a sense of bein&amp; reluctant to
commit anythin&amp; to paper when there may be
something very different in tt 's place in the very near
future .
Over the past few weeks thinp have been
basically down, which iB a bummer. Now thinp seem
to be a.U over the place, and that is really hard to
handle when your detire is to have as much control
over yourself as possible . (You can't have any
control over the rest of those crazies runnjng around
loose, you better bave some
over yourself ... or who will
mind the store?) Trying to
write a column -when there is
no consistancy at aU in either
feelings or subject . . . NO!
that is not the way they have
all been written . . . scares
even me.
ln the 24 houn preceding
by Steea
this effort at communication
my mood has changed
drnst1cal.ly no less than five times, and that may be
leaving out some unremembered ones, It is hard for a
control freak like me to oscillate in such a way
There is a sense of being on a roller-coaster ride in
my head ; up and down, up and down . Wheee Stop
the machine, I want o ff.
In the initial stages of trying to conceive of what
in hell could be written in such a state there was a
clear effort to stay away from saying anything about
feelin~ . The effort came out of stubbornly resisting
admitting that I could/did still feel bad about
recently losing the major relationship so frequently
mentwned herein , llsere was a pervene pride in
refusing to acknowledge that I was bleeding, that
there seemed to be no real way to deal with cet1ain
kinds of pain except to sit there with it and hope it
went away . . and that Jt wasn't. People don't
usually pay attention to other folk's needs or pain as
much as they do thetr cswn anyway
The pomt being that tn trying to write one of
these thin~ the way I do, if what is bemg felt is not
permitted mto the copy , except m ca maflouged
wa ys, trouble results. There ts a need to sit there and
monitor what is being written, to avoid anything
which might adm1l to besng fucked up , or hurt , or
depressed, etc. The alternative to this current mess,
for example, was a keen travelogue about Toronto,
and all the tlllnll.i wh1ch occurred up there over the
weekend. (Ed's Steak Room on K..ing Street , West
does deserve rnentson, however, regardless of what
else may oc.;ur. Fine, nuddle price range steaks, and
if a tnlle l&gt;Yer-Jecorated It's colorful and in an old
timey fasttion ) Now , it ss entirely possible that
many of you would rat her hear about To ronto than
my head . Tough; it rs JUS! too damn hard to wnte
any thing that has to be constantly censored
Feeling bad around the tclationshlp is necessary
to talk about because it l'hams ullo a major
discovery
which I should probably .tlready have
known, about me anyway. It turns out that nobody
put aU those bad feeuniJ.i sn my head . They were
already there . The whole blot:k of stuff about
rejection. a1J the feelings of loneliness and loss, can't
be laid on one person. No matter how questionable
the other person's behavior is, what you feel is your
own craziness and your o wn fear. That significant
other iB capable of making you feel rotten in their
own nght, of course. Rejection is never pleasant to
so through, and there are ways that make it even
wone than it bas to be.
This is where a great deal of confusion can
result. How In hell is it possible to gain control of

The

grump

:11$ ~

feelings which are so damned basic long enough to
.Wgn a percentage of responsibility? If you are
scared and lonely and hurting it is very hard to start
trying to be rational and attemp t to locate the "true
source" of such (cclinp. When something hurts at a
very basic and primative level you want it to stop.
Dealing with it u an abstract while you are
swallowing down teara may be valuable on some
levels, but it doesn' t seem to make me feel a whole
lot better. Maybe it does more for you .
As noted earlier there does not aeem to be sny
way in particular to handle intense bad feelings . You
can cry a lot, but so far nothing seems to have
dissolved in/for me by using salt water as a solvent.
Do seem to sleep better, but there is a real question
about what has gone away or been dealt with. And
being thoroughly brainwashed to believe that one
must deal with one's problems - even if one is never
told how to do same - there is a SC1\$e of
unfulfillment. We're aU just one big math problem
aren't we? There is, writ somewhere in 24 karat gold
script, THE ANSWER .. . isn't there?
It is really a drag when you get into having
defenses for your defenses . A typical riff could go
this way . Bad feelings appear about having been
replaced in and removed from the lady's life. Qu1ck
counter-thrust iB made on the grounds that much of
the hassle belonp in me, no matter how crazy whllt
is going on might be. Which results in an
overwhelming and immobilizing panic, centered' on
how much bad stuff is in there, and feeling anything
at aU is difficult - on some levels this is restful.
however unsatisfying . Me? Go 1n there
si.nglehandedJy and weaponless to wrestle with the
forces of darkness? Sorry, but that section of my
head is off limits.
If you'D promise not to send me away I will
now try to explain how feeling so rotten results tn
occassionaUy feeling good. Being bas1caUy good
Americans we aU know that nothing of value is ever
simple or easy, right? The good old Protestant Ethic
on wruch most or this country rests is relatJvely clear
on this point. After all "It's darkest just before the
dawn!" - but watch the light at the end of those
south vietnamese tunnels . This kind of perverse
rationalization, and masochism , aside, there is a
sense of movement, of growth .
Somewhere inside my head a filt er keeps letttng
more and more stuff out that has to be dealt with at
some point. Being a true believer in purposefulness
and control freakiness my only choice is to believe
that someone in the murky reaches of my head
knows what the hell IS going on. (Tite other choice lS
that there is in fact no purposeful behavior in all
this, and that chaos and madness are abroad in my
head . As noted, my only choice is A , and I'd rather
nl&gt;t talk about B. thank you.) So that in between
new loads of stuff to be dealt with - "i'd need a
dump truck , baby to unload my head " - it
occassronally strikes me that . I) things are still
afloat, even if listing a trifle, 2) there seems to be a
small pile of stuff wttich had indeed been work.:d
th~ough and improvements made, and 3) there JUSt
mtght be a reduction in rate of flow (of such stuff)
somewhere down Lhe lin e. (An end seems grosslY
overoptimistic.)
Essentially hope seems to stem from the fact
that I am still alive and grumbling. What the hell , il
beats checkers. Due to increased North Vietnamese
infiltration large scale nuclear weapons will be
dropped on Peiping and Moscow this week . H~ve u
good weekend , the grass is greening rapidly outside
the city and the folk festival is about somewhere.
Cheer up, you can't be any wierder than I feel. Oo
you suppose the tight at the end of the tunnel is
really a hungry cyclops? lost , one head, reward if
found. Available, one slightly used madman. Pax.
good people .

�~~.
\

,.
Subject rationalization
To the Editor:

Student polluters
To the Editor.
I'd hlce to co mplaJn of polluLJon o n campus. We
1dealist1c students have spent muct\ time m the last
few years vehemently condemrung the conduct of
our elders We have blamed them for the war.
ghettos, hunger, pollution We have blamed business
speCifically for pollution of our natural resources
Yet, we are so blind that we overlook the natural
rexource m Norton Square, hVJng things and how
they communacate
How refreshing tl was to re-create m yself in the
square during the warm sunny morning of April IS,
197 2. What h elped enrich Uus re&lt;reational
expl'Tien ce was ,he couple enj oying one another's
company by throwing 11 hand ball back and forth .
There were o th ers talkmg and laughjng with one
another. A young mom and dad walked by w1th
their small child running behind them . He was of an
age ilnd appearance that must nave enspired Schultz's
lovable Charlie Brown characters. The birds were
singing too It was then clurpmg together with
people's laughter which ptovtded the music to which
life dunn&amp; this Lime was attuned . It seemed proper
that ttus lJfe.filled setl.Ulg should be m mollon to the
sounds of this mUSJc
Then. 11 was aU destroyed •
rhe polluters reared up' They looked hh u~
and they acted hke us, but they d1dn't thtnk hke us
1'11ey t!X~&lt;hanged thoughts through the medium uf
mmd goggJ1ng noiSe Immediately sucked from the
once tranquil se t11ng ww. the baby'!&gt; bumbhng words
only he and hes mother and father could understand.
The ben.ls' mus1c was lost to the dreadful noJSe Gone
too was the eJtrerience of warm human c1u.hange
between young lovers and o ther beautiful people. No
more laughter or fainl whJspcnngs of words carried
along by the gentle wmd could be heard
It ww; as ef everyttung died and ont! was carried
ento a hell where re-creation of mind and body and
emo twn was non-e~tu;lent Where the people and
other hv1ng thmg..' whach ~:ontnbutt' to the
ennchment of rt'createon were ~:rus hed before the
overpowenng noise eman.tllng from 1ht• hlack d1sc
:li)U tUmtahlc t::amed by thOSe who thin .. th.-y cHC
dmni the students a favor by Jtlcmptlntl to boggle
the1r mmds
Ah! Studenl\ 1 Wh.J! a beauteful narrow·mmded
breed W~: puntSh ll11.• hus1ne~men pollulers, but we
overlook I he student pollulcr.o 1 hese nol.l&gt;t!m.tker!l
deny me the chou:c ut wh.ll I should hear They
subJeCt me 1(1 thcu no!\~· wllen I muc:h prefer to hear
the nnw~ n{ btnl) .1nd lauJ!.hler ol people They deny
tlus choli. e to 111e 111 the m1Js1 o l an mslltutJOn
cuns!J tUteli &lt;lf people wh11 flh.&gt;fe-;' Ill believe en free
chou:e
Rock com~ no when:! near the sound of pc~1ple
bughing and buds chur1ng 1n 11 setllng of people
n:&lt;reating
l'an 'I we ._re('l Nurtun S~uJtc .l re-creatiOnal
area?'/
J esllt' Szas:u

My letter lS to all the graduating sociology
seruon who for the past two or more years have
been striving for the pinnacle o f achievement, a B.A.
degree in Sociology .
.How doe~ one rationalize this endeavor? It lS my
the11s that students, in particular sociology students
draw certain conclusion.s about their field of stud;
and also try to see ho w tbeir study will relate to
their future
let's consider some of these
conclUSions m ost liJcely to be drawn.
First there's the "A" student accepted at the
Unaversity of Ch icago Grad School concludtng:
" There lS reaUy noth1ng wrong with society 1 think
someone, perhaps even myself, should prove to the
cri tics society is for the good of all Naturally there
are some bad 11pples m society such as crime in the
ghetto but it is crime we must attack and cha nge ,
not th~ whole system" Certatnly we can assume this
student would be appalled at the burning and looting
of the central business district si nce this would bt
detnmentaJ to ~ciety's func:tion (i e to function for
tht good of all) We also assume that thlS student
would msist that the Central Business OtStnd
functions for the good of all This type of thinkmg
I ea ns t h es s I ude n I towards the structural
functaonaltst view For th1s student society doe,s not
change, 1t merely funct1ons bke a machine What
would have Washmgtore done if thts student was hiS
mll1tary adVIsor, or for that matter what would Mao
have done en 1949? However sance that w~ su~h.,
long ttme ago thiS student probahly h:ts lorgotten
about revolutson!i
Then !here's the "B" (~lightly Jbove or below
mediocre) student who through no fault of htS or her
own co mes to the c.onclus1on "Soc1ety Ill dehnetely
lngg:~ng 1n basec reform~ However such rt&lt;forms (une
of them would be to elect John L1ndsay pressdent 1
would , 1f lftlllated, do away weth the ulc.l ways (i e
the old refo r ms) of doing th1ngs " The hrackets ure
mane, for lhe purpose of keeping the ruder frcm1
be1ng loo sym pathetic: w1th thJS student'§

lu

tile•

Lastly , I would like aU seniors to make
co n cluswns .lbout thelr eduo.:.1t10n experience. If not,
you1J lir.~t, pmvt' my thts1S wro ng, and second,
you'll havr o nly lrunell the suhJeCt matter and not
lhe JUS!Ifi~auons fiH I he subJect

Phe/tp Wheeler
S11nolog-v Senior

en

J!."dtt&lt;~r

Thumbang throug,h the fnllcmating book FOOl&gt;
POLLUTION (by Gene Mllrine and JudUh Van
Allen , Holt , Rmehar1 and Wtrtston ; !'r~w York ,
I ~72), wtu ch 1.'1 a fa&lt;icinaiJng acc:ounr o t me
pollution of our enner ec:ology through thc- (,')Od we
eat, I 've found a few mlereshng things I 'd hke to
me nu on
The bonk tall..s ..1bou1 Monosodeum Glutam;~te
I MSG) wherh make\ the rounds qu1tt: trcquently tn
uu1 everyday food~ Its use has not been banned Yt'l
even thuuah there es quete ,, t-arrage of supprusnJ
;svers1ve ev1dence that et!. use IS far frolll clur hest
mteresh . A rew rco~snns m.tY he lh.lt II IS 4Uih~
profitable to endustr111l food prmc&lt;&gt;~lH'. 1h.11 et C&gt; a
tlaii(H enhancer and neakc' fol)(h ta~te bt'tler , I hal
ll1ere has nclt heen Jn organe7ed mass of ~;OIItt'rocd
consumers lo pnsnt lhe~ cvedl'nu· c~f c.lanJ!.er 111
evt!ryclnt'
The ( R( IIANDUOOK ldl~ thl' purpose uf
MSC. en food~ " II acts un ~1 ne . .Jnd pos.~ehly two,
ty('le~ ol n~rvt' endlnt~.-' (those u1 tht' 1astc huds anc.l
th e tactile reteptors o f the mouth 1. II .·ontrihute' nn
flavor of 11~ uw n when used en nnrmal &lt;;Ill all
quanhlles and 11 scr111\ to Jfft•l'l the imprcs~wns of
ha..~•c..· l:tste as well '" pwc.lutr J fct'hng nf sau,f,J._IInn
throughout the enwc oral cavtl)l ·
In plaan bnglesh, a dJIIj!.erou' dll'lllll·l'" tl"'li "'
fnol our bu1.hes Jb(lut our luod
llowever , the Jmenc.lec.l J-cderal Fund l)tug .tnJ
Cosmcll• Ad
"(1\t!dlon 40:!,b..ll D.nnage 111
mfenoreiY 10 a good must not he .:om:ealed m o~ny
manner
Also "( Scdh&gt;n -n•w ,to 4) Nu Suhst.uH:e
may be added t o a lnod lo '"'' rcase '" huU.. l&gt;r
weeght or make 1t dppcdr ul greater value than 11 " .''
And that's not all
Take these scr~nllfrcallv tndrsputahlt' fatls II
The clllSS of chemiCals known as polycychc ar om.tlll
hydrocarbons es umversally suspecl as larunogenec..
(canccr•mctllng) 2) ALL certified c..olors now tn use

''"'c'

foods en Amenca are polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons 3) Almost a.U of them are K.NOWN
~:ardnoteru l.n teita involvin&amp; other forms o{
adm\n\atralion besides feed\na. 4 ) The feeclina tCIIts
on which they are JUdged to be safe involve feeding
tbem apart from othct add1t1ves; 5) There are roo
many ammal teats s h owmg that carcmoeens. not
normally absorbed ento the body by diaesrion, ARE
SO absorbed whl'n eatt'n m combination with
cmuls1fiers. 6) The use or art1fit:1al colors and of
emulsefitrs IS ~o w1desprt'11d 1.11 Amenca that 11 lS
c.llffic..ult to 1magJne a day·s p.assang w1thou1 most
Amcm..tns e&lt;~tena somt u f both
Now, c..·otors 110d emulsafiers art used
TOGFTIH· K "'''~' frequently 1n margarine and 1n ~~
Lrearn cake ~ume ~mds o f hreac.l, and candy When
yc•lH k1d une d.ty ~on tro cts o.:ancer as an adull (or
maybe you. for lhat matter), Jtunk of the guodly
~:hu nk t•r h1s dll't oi'&gt; 11 young one Itt- lh.cumula ted
I.IITc.Jnngens ilrul
well, thl.\ MA 'a have been the
l':tuse fol' had nn nne co11ld pn&gt;ve It then
l enally, for thr ume he10g, here IS an .sd from
11 oft rnJn·L•t Rod11.· , llll , whkh m.1kes 1tself dear
.thuut lh~ lmpolrlame of 1b Mad Sc1enttsts u1
relalloll 10 thl' rn,mn~ wlu~h t:XL\Ied k•ng hefore
thrrn
No~l&lt;lrr h.l\ w.ty\ t o lll.il..l' fnud\ gonJ
R1•d1r h.1&lt;&gt; way' 10 rn11ke lltods heller
Nowo~d.JY~ tc•u1h llh' hellt:r Sll"lle 1n many uf
llwrn you ~et .tn .Jdded holnu~ ol a nsky "up~ly o f
JX•tcnual c.&lt;:~ runogen,, teratogen~ and mutagens I
~uprose thJt \ J \Ill .til pn .. c to p.1y 1n ••Iller t o have
lund:. l.tslt: ht'ller•
There •~ .t cop) ol 1-00D POLLUTION in our
Un1vt:~IIY Bunl..slor~ 1n thr 1-culnttY sedeon (where
d!&gt;e?) II )t:ll~ for SM '15 If you hl..e :.tunes of honor,
I here es nul .A. hi'IICf h~u,(.. lln tho: prc!&gt;ent mar .. et for
the money
rhc 100\l h&lt;lfnhlc \hlOt!S Ull.' true 1

War politics
To the f:'diwr

To the I::ditur

It es hoped that the teleVJSed meettng Monday
between Stcretary of Stat e W1lliam Rodgers and the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee concerning the
renewal bombing of North Vietnam will serve to
reaffirm many people's simple, long~tandmg
observa tao rts : The Nixon admirustration will
continue to provide acllve United States military
support to our lndoctuna "allies" as long as the
communists threaten them . Nixon will continue to
evade lelislative efforts to c:urb this support. The

8 Wa/tt'r MesfliJrd

By chance 1f any semor reading this bas found
the many myths 1n sociology, I have this to say to
you Be ~;n ll t'al of most sociolopcal theory, mainly
because 11 glonfies soc1ety and it's culture rather
I han o lfcnng ex planation or msight. Refute
pessemlSm as a real1ty ll JS a tool o f those who don't
want chan11e and are content w1tb the status quo.
Put your edeas 1nto action You will see that the
beauty o f an edea es only revealed when acted upon.

You eat pollution

'What is normal?'
Re · Douglas Hol'lhaver's letter complam1ng of
Tole's Easter cover
1f he is unable to appreciate
the 1rony and excellence of Tole's ca rtoorts and
&amp;J'tistry he must be in trouble.
I should lilte to ask h1m
what ts normal'/ Not
1\ts opimoru of art l hope.

conciUiion. Unfortunately this student balks at going
to grad school, mainly because be got poor
recommendations from his professors. Instead tbe
student chooses a government job i.n S&lt;&gt;ciaJ work .
Thus it can be stated that society is able to cbanae
through reform. In simple terms o ur "B" student is
considered a revisionist.
The "C" socioiOIY grad· to-be is ortly glad be
took statistics pass·fail His conclusion is fortluiaht
and honest : " I've read a lo t of bullshit during these
years and such an endeavor 1S worth a "C." It's li.lce
learning all the things my parents b•d taupt me all
over ap.~n , ortly this time they use fan cy words and
t.Ues. Such ttungs like : social class can explain
human behaVIor. Funny. I thought human behavior
explained social class, weU I ' m confused . Anyhow
it's all bullshil to me ."
II is too bad th.at ttus mdividual probably won ' t
make much o f his de&amp;ree. Pro bably because he feels
it's not worth pursuing sociology anymore. It's
worse that his conclusion is nothing but confusion
and bitterness. Of all the above tbi.s person has
wasted his hme. I won't tell him that, since he'd
want to feel good for graduation, being that his
family will he 1here

( om m\1/IL~t\ , 111 tum , wtll resiSt nur prescnc...e as long
as we are there fhey will , 10 fac...t, con tinue their
revolut1on whether we are there or not, but our
presence tS catalyt1~: A hllllon elabor.ttJVe words can
be spoken e1 th er way. but unl~ tlus November, we
elect a president wbo accepts the fact that the
Unated States cannot h:tve everything tts own way
with these 12,000·mile dlStant cultures, and acts
accordingly, we will guarantee at least anot her four
years of American partic1pat:Jon
Mark Twichell

Friday, 21 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

'

�If you haven't written
your Congressman to end the war
maybe it's because
you don't know his name.
ALABAMA
l JIICio. Edwards (R)
2 Wolloam l Olt~tnson (RI
3

Geor~ Andrew~ (0)

.t Wllloam Nichols (0)
5 Waller W. f'lowe!'l (0)
6 John Buchanan (R)
7 Tom Bevill (0)
8 Robert E Jones 10)
AlASKA
Rel)fesent•tow at
Noell Beaoch (0)

•••&amp;•

ARIZONA
John J Rhodes (R)
Motm K Udall (0)
3 Sam Steraer IR)

1
2

ARKANSAS
I

Boll Aleunder (0)

2 Wolbu• 0 . Mills (0)
3 John P Hammerschmlclt IR)
4 Oevod H Pryor (0)
CAUFORHIA
I Don H . CIIUMn (R)
2 Harold l' JohnloOfl tO)
3 John [ Moss (0)
4 Robert L. LIJ11111 (0)
5 Phollop Burton (0)
6 Wolloam S Matlliard (R)
1 Ronald V OellumJ (0)
8 Georp P Miller (0)
9 Ooo £dwuds (0)
10 C!Mrles S. Gubser (R)
II Paul N McCloskey (R)
12 Bun L Talcott (R)
13 C!Mrlfts M Teaaue (R)
H Jerome R Waldot (0)
I !I John J Mcfall (0)
16 B r Soslo. (0)
I 7 Glenn M Anderson (0)
18 Robert B. Malhln (I'll
19 Chet Holifield (0)
20 H Allen Smith (R)
21 Au&amp;ustus f Hawlltnl (0)
22 James C CorrNn (0)
23 Del Clawson (R)
24 John H Rouuetot (AI
25 CNrtH S Wlgons (R)
26 Thomas M R - (0)
27 S.rry Goklwetlf Jr (R)
28 AlphoculO Bell (R)
29 Gear.. E. ~- (0)
30 EdWirCI R RO)'btl (D)
31. CN,_ H. Wilton (0)
32 era• Hosm« (A)
33 . Jwry l. Pettis (R)
34 Richard T Hanna (0)
35 John G. SchmiU (l'l)
36 Bob Wilson (R)
37 Loonel Van Deet11n (0)
38 Victor V. Veysey (R)

COLORADO
1 James 0 McKevtll (R)

1 Donald G Brotrman (R)
3 frenk E Ev.ns (0)
4 Wlyne N Aspinall (0)

COf4HECTICUT
1
2
3
4
5
6.

Wtlllam R Coner (0)
Rober1 W Steele (R)
Robert N Giatmo (0)
St- n B. McKinney (R)
John S. Monapn (0)
Ella T GraMO (0)

0£lAWARE
Repretentallw·•• lara•
Pierre S DuPont IV (R)

Fl.OttiDA
I
2
3
4
5
6

Raben L. F. Silles (0)
Ooo Fuqua (0)
C!Mrles E. Bennett \D)
Wilham C!Mppell. Jr 10)
LOUIS Ft9)', Jr (R)
Sam M Gobbons (0)

LOUISIAHA
James A. Haley (0)
C w Vouna (R)
Paul G. Roprs (0)
J Herbert Burke (Rl
Claude Pepper (0)
12 Dente B f'ascell (0)
GEORGIA
I G. EIIIOI Hapn (0)
:1 Dawson Mathos (0)
3 Jack Bttnkley (0)
4 Benjamtn B- Bl~ekburn (R)
!I Flelcher ThomPiOO (R)
6 John J Flynt, Jr (0)
7 John W Oavos (0)
8 Wtlham S. Stuckey Jr (0)
9 Phtl M Landrum (0)
10 Robert G Stt(lhens Jr (0)
HAWAII
1 Spilrk M M•tsuruoa• (0)
2 Petsy T Mmk (0)

7
8
9
I0
II

I 11. . - A. McClure tRI
2 Orv•l Hansen (R)
IW..cm
R•lph Melc11lle (0)

I

5
6
7
8
9
10

II
Jl
13
14

15
16

17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24

Molpn f Murphy (0)
[ct;qrd J Oe,....nskl (R)
John C Kluczynalu tO)
Georae W Collons (0)
frank Annun110 (0)
Den Rostenlo.owllo.l (0)
Sodney R VIles (0)
Harold R Collter (R)
Roman C Puclnakt (0)
Robert McClOry (R)
Phllop M. Crane (R)
John N. Erlenborn (R)
Ch,lotte T Reld ( R)
John B. Anderton (R)
l'tllle C. Arenda (R)
Robert H. Michel ( R)
Thomas f. Rllltb.tek (R)
Peul findley (R)
Kenneth J Gray (0)
William L. Spfon,er (R)
Georae E 51\tpley &lt;D&gt;
C!Mrlu M Pr1Cl8 (0)

'"OIAHA
I flay J M.sa.n lO)
7 uri f Lind&amp;reba (R)
3

4
5
6
7.
8
9
10.
II

John Brademas (0)
~I'd Roolll lD)
EtWIOI)od R. Hllllt (l'l)
William G. Bray (R)
John T. Myert (R)
Roaer H. Zion (R)
lM H. Hamilton (0)
Oevld V O.nnta (A)
Andrew JtcotiJ, Jr (0)

J

IOWA
I
2
3
4
5
6
7

Ft9d Sch-nael (R)
John C Cu.._ (0)
H R GrMI (R)
John H Kyt (R)
N•l Srnoth (0)
Wtley Mayne (R)
Wilham J Scherte (R)
K.loth G Sebellus ( R)
William R Roy (0)
Larry Wlnn, Jr. (R)
Garner E. Shriver (R)
Joe Slo.utMiz (R)

KENTUCKY
1
2.
3
4
5
6
7

MICHIGAN
I

John Conyers (0)

2 M1rvon L Esch (R)

••

3 Garry E. Brown (R)
.t Edward HutchlniOO (R)
5 Gerald R. Ford (R)
6 CNrltt E. Ch1mberlaon (R)
7 Donald W Rle&amp;le, Jr (R)
8 Jam.. Harwy (R)
9 Guy Vlnder Jlil (R)
10 Elford A Cedarbera (R)
II Phthp E Ruppe (R)
1:1 James G O'Hara (0)
IJ CM"-s C Oops. Jr (0)
14 lucten N N41dlo (0?
15 Wllltam 0 FOfd (0
16 John 0 Oincell ( 0
17 ManN W. Gnfllths (D)
18 Wlllllm S. Brootnlteld (II)
19 Jtclt H McODneld (II)
MIHNUOTA
I Albert H Ouoe (R)
2 Anc;her Nel$en (R)
3 , Bill Frenzel (R)
o4 Joseph E. Kerth (0)
5 Donald M . Frazer (b)
6 John M . Zwach (R)
7 Bob Ber&amp;land (0)
8 John A. Blat noll (D)
MISSISSIPPI
I Tl~as G Abemethy (0)
1 Jemie L Whitten (0)
3 CNrtes H Grrtlln (0)
4 G V Montcon-y (0)
S Wtlham M Colmer (0)

MISSOURI

KAH&amp;AS
I
2
3
4
S

3 Edward A Garm1tz (0)
4 P1ul S Sarb.t~ (0)
5 lawrence J Ho&amp;an (R)
6 Goodloe E. Byron (0)
7 Perren J Mitchell (0)
8 Gilbert Gude (R)
2 Edward P Boland (0)
3 Robert r Oronan (0)
4 Harold 0 Donohue (0)
5 F Brld'ol'd Morse (R)
6 Mochael J. Hemn&amp;ton (01
7 TO&lt; bert H Macdot111d (0)
8 Thomas P O'N_.II (0)
9 louo)e 0 H ICks (D)
10 Marprll M Heckler (R)
II James A Burke (0)
12 Hastln&amp;s ~etth (R)

1 Abner J Mokvl (0)

Frank A Stubblefield (0)
William H Natcher (0)
Romano Manolo (0)
M G Snyder (R)
Tom L Carter (R)
John C Willa (0)
Car1 0 Perkins (0)

I
2
3
4
S
6
7
8
9
10

Wolhem Clay (0)
J1mes W Symon&amp;ton (0)
Leonor ~ . Sullivan (0)
Wollllm J Randall (D)
RocNrd Bollin&amp; (0)
W R Hull, Jr. (0)
0ui'WIII'd G. Hall (R)
Rk:hard H . !chord (0)
Wllll•m t Hun~le (b)
Bill 0 But ilion (0)

MONTAHA
I
2

Rlc:!Mrd G Shoup (H)
John Melcher (0)

~i"' to' recent G.Hup Pofl 7 out of 10 Amencanatndated they wanted
oe~r troops out of VIetnam bytheendot 1971. They're tired of teeinaour so6diendie
lor~ loit uuse; our wealth aquandered to help • nation 9,000 miles away wflile our

own cities ~re crumbli"'.
fortuiUitefy, there ia a croup of men who un put an end to the bloodletting and
waite: our reprewntatives in Concreu.If they vote aplnst awopriations for the

war it aim ply un't continue.

HEIUtASKA
I Charles ThoM (R)
2 John G McCollister (ll)
3 Oevld T M1rt111 (R)
NEVADA
ReptHentattve-at·l•r&amp;e
Walter S. Sarona (D)

NEW HAMPSHIRE
I Lo\lo' C Wyman (R)
2

Jemes C. Cleveland (R)

HEW JERSEY
I

MAltYLAND
I l/ac:lnc:y
2 Clarence 0 Lona (0)

MASSACHUSffi$
I SIMo 0 Conte (R)

IDAHO

3
4

f Edw•rd Hebert (0)
2 Hale Bous (0)
3 Petrocll f.-CaHery (0)
4 Joe 0 Wa11on,.r (0)
5. Otto E Passm•n (0)
6 John R. Rarick (0)
7 Edwin W Edwl!rds (0)
8 Speedy 0 Lon&amp; (0)
MAINE
I f&gt;eter N Kyros (0)
2 Wtlh•m 0 Hathaway (0)
I

1
3
4

S
6
7
8

9
10

JJ
J2

J3
14

John E Hunt (R)
Chariea W Sandman Jr (R)
James J HOWllrd (0)
Frank Thompson, Jr (0)
~ H.B.f'relin&amp;fluywn (R)
Edwin B F'oraythe (R)
Wtllllm B Wodnall (R)
Robert A. Roe (0)
Henry Helstoskl (0)
Pwler W Rodino (D)
Joaaph G. Minlsl'l (0)
Florenc' P Dwyer (R)
Cornelius E. Glilla&amp;he• (0)
Domonlck V Daniels (0)
Edward J. P1"en(O)

15
NEW MEXICO
I
2

M•nvel Lu11n. Jr (R)
Harold L Runnels (0)

HEWYOftK
I Oils G Pilla (0)
1 JlmH R. Grover (A)
3 Lester L WoiH (0)
4 John W Wyctler (R)
5 Norman F. Lent (R)
6 Seymour Halpern (R)
7 JoMPfl P. Mdabbo (0)
Ben11mtn S Rosellthal (0)
Jamtt J Delaney (0)
Emanuel Caller (0)
Frenk J. Bresco (0)
11 Shorley ChoshOim (0)
IJ Bertram L Podell (0)
14 Jolin J Rooney (0)
1 Huah l Carey (0)
16 John M Mvrphy (0)
I 7 Edwlrd I Koeh (0)
18 CNrtes B Ranael (0)
19 Bell• S Abzul ( 0)
20 Woltlam F. Ryan (0)
l H41rm•n Badillo (0)
2 JameJ H. Scheuer (0)
23 Jonalhltn 8 . Blf1Chootm (0)
24 Mar10 Biapf (0)
25 Pwter A. ~"' (R)
26 Qcden R. Reid (R)
27 John G Dow (0)
28 Hamollon Filii, Jr (R)
29 Samuel S. Stratton (0)
30 Carleton J Kina (R)
31 Robert C. Mc:E-., (R)
32. Ale..nder Plmle (R)
33 Howard W. Robl.on (R)
34 John H Terry (R)
35 JatMS M . Hanley (0)
36 f'rank Horton (R)
37 Bart. B Conabte, Jr (R)
38 Jamn f. Hutlnp (R)
39 Jack F Kemp (R)
40 Henry P Smith Ill (R)
4 I lhaddeos J Oulakl (0)
NORTH CAROliNA
I. Wllter 8 , Jones (0)
2 L. H Foontaln (0)
3 . O.vld N H41nderson (0)
4 Nk:k Gallflanakls (0)
I) Wtlmer Mizell (R)
6 L. RICNrdiOil Preyer (0)
I Alton t.nnon ( 0)
8 Earl B. Ruth(~)
9 CNrles R. Jonu (R)
10 Jamn T Broytlotl (R)
II Roy A T1ylor (0)

8.
9
I0
11

s

i

NORTH DAKOTA
1 Marll Andr-s (R)

2 Arthur A Lonk (0)
OHIO
1 William J lteatin&amp; (R)
2 Donald 0. Clancy (R)
J Charles W W!Mien , Jr . (R)
4 Wlllllm M McCulloch (R)
5

Delbert l Ll"a (R)
Wtllllm H Ha~N (R)
7 Clarence J Brown. Jr (R)
8 JtckiOO E Betts (R)
9 Thomu L Ashley (0)
10 Clarence £. Miller (R)
II J Wolllam St1nton (R)
12 Samuel L Devone (~)
13 Chlllea A. Mosher (~)
14 John F. S!eberhnl, Jr. (0)
15 Charlu P. Wyloe (R)
16 Ftank T Bow (R)
17 John M. Ashbrooll (R)
18 Wayne L. Hays (0)
19. CNrle~ J Carney (0)
20. James V Stanton (b)
21. Lou Ia Stokes (0)
22. C!Mrlea A Yanik (0)
23 William E Minshall (R)
24 Waller E. Powell (R)
()I( lAHOMA
I Paa- Belcher (R)
2 £d EdmondiOO (0)
3 Carl Albert (0)
4 Tom St.-1 (b)
5 John Jarm1n (0)
6 J N H Camp(R)
OltEGOH
l Wendell Wyatt (R)
2 AI Ullm1n (0)
3 Edith GI'Mfl (0)
4 J R. Oellanb.tck (R)
PENNSYLVANIA
I W A. Barre" (0)
2 R N. C Nlx(O)
3 JemH Byrne (0)
4 J. Ellber&amp; (0)
5 W J. GtM&lt;I. Ill (0)
6 Gua v.tron (0)
7 L G Wllllems (R)
8 E G Sinter, Jr (R)
9 John H W.t9111 (R)
10 J M Mco.de (R)
II O.nlel Flood (0)
6

12 J I, Wllotlltf (A)

13 R L. Cou.,.lln (R)
14 W. S MoomMd (0)
15 f'red Rooney (0)
16 E 0 . hhlemen (R)
17. H T Schneebell (R)
18. R J. eoro.tt (R)
19. G. A. Goodlin&amp; (R}
20. Jowph Gaydos (0)
2 1 John H Dent (0)
22 John P. Saylor (R)
23 A W John~on (R)
24 J P. Vtptlo ( 0)
2S f'renk M C.. ~ (0)
26 rt.om.s Mo&lt;Dn (0)
27 J G Fulton(~)
ltH()O( ISI.AHO
I F J St GerrNon (0)
2 R 0. Toemen (0)
SOUtH CAitOUHA
I l/ac:lnc:y
2 Floyd 0 Spence (R)
3 W J B Dorn (0)
4 JamH R. Menn (0)
T S Gettys (0)
6 J L McMollan (0)

s

SOUTH DAKOTA
1 Frenlo. (.DenhOlm (0)
2 Jemea Abouru:k (0)

tENNESSEE
I

J H Qutlltn (R)

2

John J Duncan (R)

3 Ll Mar Bellar (R)
4 , Joel. Evon$ (0)
5. R. Fulton (0)

6 . W. R Anderson (0)

7 R1y Blanton (0)
8 . Edwa•d Jonos (0)
9 o Kuykendall (R)
TEXAS
I Wn&amp;fll Patman (0)
2 John Dowdy (0)
3 J M. Collins (R)
4 . R1y Robet'ls (0)
5 Earle Cabell (0)
6 Olin Teeaue &lt;D&gt;
7 W R Archer (R)
8 Bob EckNrdt (D)
9 Jack Brooks (0)
10 J . J P~eklt (0)
II W. R, Poalt (0)
12 Jom Wrl&amp;ht (0)
13 G. Purcell (0)
14. John Vouns (0)
15 . E d•I•G8rza(0)
16 RlcNrd Whitt (0)
17 Omar Burleson (0)
18 Robert Price (R)
19 C.Orp Mahon(O)
20 H B Gonzalez (0)
21 0 C Flaher (0)
22 Bob Cawy (0)
23 A Kuen. Jr (0)

UTAH
1. I( Gunn McK.ay (0)
2

S P Lloyd ( R)

VERMONT
Represantaltve ' ' tarp
R l . Staltord (R)
VIRGINIA
I T. N. Oowntn&amp; (0)
2 G. W, Whotehu&lt;il (R)
3 0 Satterfield til (0)
4 W M Abbitt (0)
5 W C o.n;.l (0)
6 RIChard Pol1 (R)

7 J ~~~ RoblnJoOn (R)

8
9

W L Scott (R)

w e WIM~(R)

I 0 Joel Broytltll (R)
WAStiiHOTOftl

I. Thomes P.lly CR)

2. Lloyd Metoda (0)
3 J
Hanlll\ (0)
4 Mlkt~k(O)
5. Thonlls foley (0)
6 Floyd Hieka (0)
7 Brock Adama (0)
WUTVIROlNIA
1 R H. MolioNn (0)
2 H O.Stauer'I (O)
3 J M. 61ack. Jr (0)
4 Ken Hechler (0)
5 J a~MS Kee (0)
WI $CONI...
I Leslie Aspon (0)
2 R K.lstenmeler (0)
3 V W Thomaon (R)
4 c. J. Zablocki (0)
5 Henry Reuss (b)
6 W. A Stetpr (R)
7 O.Yid R. Obey (b)
8 . John Byrroea (R)
9 . Glenn Oevls ( R/
10 A. E. O'Konakl R)
WYOMING
Rtpresentallve 11 tar&amp;e
Teno Rouc:~~llo (0)

a

PUEifTO RICO
Resodent Commlssooner
Jorae Luts Cordova Oou (N P)

Your concreuman'a nM"M and diatrict number are listed ~bcwt . If you don't know
your con1reuional distrid number, uti the leaKUe of Women Voters wtleAYer you
live, and they win be &amp;1ad to tell you. The Nlme c.orrespondinr to that number it your
c.o"'rtl$11'1\ln' s .
Write him.
And let him know that if he 11n't prepared to vote apinst _ , 1pproprialiona now,
you won't be prepared to ¥Ote for him on eledlon dar.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•

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Dear Congressman_
I am one of the majority of Americans who believes all our troops should be out
of Southeast Asia. I feel this will happen only if you and your fellow Congressmen
vote against further war appropriations.
Sincerely,

I

I
I
:

1

1

I

• • • • • • • • • • • HAVEN'T WE GIVEN ENOUGH?• • • • • • • • • • •
14etp U....a TheW.-. A Protect ot CleraY and Laymen Conctrned, 637 W. !25th Street. New YO&lt;t&lt;. N V. 10027

��Dlulaul poetry muliq.

'Politics of the soul'
fonnallud IP"(h of the song, of
~.

One of Buffalo's few remaining
natural resources Is poetry. Pa.try
is a way of life. A lot of poets live
here. Others have been here In the
~ - Cher1es Olton, Rob«t
Creeley, John Wieners, to name •
few. Still othen come to reed, co
talk. to share their current worit .
Recently, Robert Duncan showed
up from the coast. He reed at
Ca ni sius College. under the
auspicies or b lessings of, one
.-umes, the Pope or someone like
him ~it was the State University of
Buffalo's poetry people who made
It down Main Street to hear him ,
however . With a fire in the
fireplace and lots of fam iliar faces,
the event took on the sense of a
family reunion . We're all related
by our words.
Black Mountain wudition
Robert Duncan is assoc1ated
with the Black Mountain PQe'tS. a

group that grew out of the
experimental college of the same
name. The college shut down for
the usual financial reasons in the
fi fties. but the writers in this
group continue to be one of the
principle forces tn modern
American poetics. Duncan's 1s
perhaps the most erudite poetry
of any of the Black Mountain
people It abounds in rP.SOnances
of other times. of classical myth,
art and literature of the med1eval
and rena,S53nce penods, as well as
reference~
to alchemy ,
Neo Platonism and other modes
of metaphys1cal and occult
thought Styhst1cally, 1t 1s th1ck.
nchfy adorned, a texture of sound
and rhythm approx1mattng not
common Amer1can speech but
rather . the more-than-common

Pa.pon &amp; 1.0 Pt1otc.

TELAAK STUDIO
134~70

1d.y MNI~ tollth thit 8d

Poet and c r itic Kennett.
Rurottt has drawn a diltinc11on
betwMn what he calls " eye..
poetry Wld ...,. .. poetry. visoal
poetry on the page • compared
to oral poetry meant to be recited
aloud. WiU'I its complex rhythmic
st ruct ure and ~eming of
tOUnd·dutters, Duncan's poetry
makes excellent "e~W " poetry .
D u n c an h imse l f re ad s
superlatively .
F or h is p e rform ance et
Canisius he opened witti a new
work, a long group o f poems that
were a sort of reaction or response
to English J)Oe'l Th orn Gunn's
"Molly." In answer to a request.
he read an old et" work , "Poem
Beginning wiU'I a Line By Plndar "
Shorter and "lighter" poems were
reed as bridges between the longer
works, including a charming
poem. a ne&lt;Hnedieval chant
d'amour put to a lilting melody,

P/Jly Strindberg' a repetitious
piece of overaml?itious drama
by EJHot

Krie9ar

It may be true that history repeats itself in
tragic and comic cycles. Nevertheless, I Me no ~.n

O.th is lnt•estlng In that lt ls a SJtCUII•Iy good ·
example of a writer tnntfonnlng his hi~ ly
tubjective Interpretations of events from hi$ own life
Into very public material - It Is a warped confession.
But there is no dearth of suctl material in
Strind~'s wor1&lt;s. Its interest as a drama is, for me,
remote.

why drama should likewise repeat itself. And tf It
mutt, 1 tee no re.son why the repetition need be
stilted and wooden and " alienating " - at least let It Strindb«t blllitUed
Durenmatt's idea. that DllnCe of D•th is not a
I» comlcl
suitable
tragedy for " today." does not seem to me a
F reder ic h Ou re nmatt•s Pf•y Strindbtlrg ,
particularly brilliant in1ight. If he is trying to show
currentl y at th e Studio Arena Theater, strikes me as
actually nothing more than a rather bizarre that there can be no " t ragedy" o n today's stage, he
r• lntegratlon o f the diffuse materials o f Strindberg'a should not have reworked such a doubtful example
of the genre to prove his point . If, however, he is
Dllf)C(J of Dflllth. I'm not sure that Dureomatt has
honestly
trying to reach some understanding of
any right to claim the play as " his.'' for h is
Stri ndbero - either the societ y about wh ich he
contribution to it seems to me to be no more than
wrote or the strange manner in which he did so - he
that of an over-ambitious director's. I don't have a
oould not have done so wittt 18Sl faith in the validity
of his material.

Modernl1t wlte
For his final p1ece. Duncan
chon to present the ei!llt
completed parts of a proposed
ten·part suite of poems based on
the English metaphysical poets of
the 17th Century. Taking the
problems posed by the
metaphy'Sical poets concerning the
nat ure of human and divine love,
Duncan transposes the essence of
th is crux into contemporary
time-space location. to explore
the difficulties of man's soul in an
age of anxiety and in the time of
war The atrocities of Vietnam.
the abberattons of a corrupt text of Dance of l»ath available, but I don 't think
poltt1cal structure. are seen as that Duren man d id very much to alter the nature of
defamations of man's possible Strindberg's material
human and spiritual nature
Ult1mately, his poetry proposes a
Rehashed tngedy
politics of the soul
It was a good reading. In fact .
Stnndberg's material 1s, by nature. masstve, and
It is what poetry readings should
the Dance of Dearh 1s the largest ot his dramas It 1s
be - an intimate shanng, a
in two parts (only the ftrst part is "a&lt;.lapted" by
communton of words that
succeeds in holding an audience, Durenmatt) and includes clear character
charming them, and leaving them representations of all of the sometimes manifest,
feeling that a magic presence has always latent Strindbergian themes. Edgar IS the
been summoned Maybe tt's the threatening but somewhat ridiculous father . Alice is
Muse, or someone like her
his tyrannical and destructive wife; Kurt is their
superficially normal but ultimately diabolic fnend
Dance of Death, Parr I is St rindberg's grandest
attempt to dramatize the sado-masochistic decay of
t he bourgeois marriage - people hopelessly bound to
each other and torturing each o ther to death through
physical and financial threats and blackmail. It IS
also Strindberg's courageous if failed attempt to
come to terms w1th the background of his first
marriage (precipitated by his entry) and to h&lt;Ne that
shed light on the destruction of their marriage

Str1 ndberg 1s not interpreted, he is belittled,
ridicu led . I presu me that the goal of a
re-Interpretation is to give the play new meaning, not
to deprive it of all meaning. PI• Y Strindberg shows
nothing more than that Strindberg at his worst,
when played in bad faittt, is nothing more than a
humorless comed1an How now?
Televisio n deca y

I don't think that we need any more decaymg
domesticity on our stage. There is enough of that on
television. and the English -speaking theater has
explored both s1des of the issue - Albee 1ts noise.
Pinter its Si lence_
Durenmatt may well feel this way too, but
alienating your audience trom the play by the
conceit of hav1ng the characters by partic1pants m a
prize fight 1s just childish - it' s not even "camp." it's
day-camp.
We don't believe for a minute that we are
watchmg a prize-fight, nor do we believe that the
actors are " restmg" when they are "off-stage" m
llllhat are meant to be their "cotners." I suppose th1s
dev•ce saves the actors from having to belteve in their
roles. but who 1s to save us7 If even the ill-&lt;:ancetVed
re·mterptetat1on 1s cast as nothing more than an
actor's exercise, what in God's name have we leh?
I really don't know how to Judge the tndlvidual
performances, for I don't know what effects were
intended. Robert Symonds (Edgar) seems hke he
might be an accomplished comic actor, and Ray Fry
(Kurt) gave a dextrous and lively performance. under
the circumstances. Priscilla Pointer (Alice) doesn't
have a particularly powerful voice. and maybe a few
decibles could have livened up her role The
turn~f· the-century costumes by James Berton Harr1s
were of particular interest . And Dan Sullivan's
direction was crisp and alert, 1f not very pointed I
wonder, though, toward what goal one could hope
to point Play Strindberg.

To close on an opt1m1st1C note. Studio Arena
has instituted a policy of followmg the Tuesday and

Noone •
canrestst
our chicken wings.
T hey're the Woodshed's newest taste sensation,
mild, medium or hot. Swirl'em around in tangy
blue cheese sauce, and fin ish the experience with
crispy celery sticks. Non-stop peanuts are on
the house, and spirits are 50; after 3 P. M. The
Woodshed ... where the kitchen's always open
and the music's always on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North Tonawa nda, j ust over
the Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann. The Woodshed's
open from 11 :30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

ttfE WllD~HE~

The play may be gf'and and courageous. but 1t is
wandly flawed . too. I have been told that It " plays"
Vf!IY well, but I don't belteve it. Dance of 088th
strikes me as more pathetic than dramatic, as
over-long and as pitifully unbelievable. Dance of

Wednesday performances, at least of this production,
with panel discussions of the plays. There was none
scheduled on the ntght I attended. however the idea
seems mteresting to me, and I hope proves
suooessful.

WK&amp;W and BUFFALO FESTIVAL p,....nt

s..... ~~~ ll, 7 ' ·"'·
IUea....... Ma.alc Hall
Ma tn Floor $6 - 15
Balcony $5 . H

Fri., April28, I P.M.
Memorial Audit1)rium
All S.als Reserved

$6 . 15 .

$4

NANCY WILSON*
3-DOG NIGHT
Added Atfrocflon: ICIHDR.ED

�Theater ·orgy: 'Chineese Wisecrackers'
by Julie Lepic:k

.Wsecntcken is fun, and that's enough. Pleasure and
entertainment provide in themRtlves sufficient ,../son

Sp«trum Th•r.r Critic

d'tltrtl.

It's the San Francisco Mime Troupe without the
politics. Or maybe the Story Theater without the
professional slick. No, it's The Chicago Project, .a
workshop of Young actors under the direction of Don
Sanders. The Chicago Project, In Buffalo as part of this
week's Theater Orgy, presented their production, ChinefiSll
WisscrtJCktlt"S, Friday and Saturday nights in what passes
for a theater in the Harriman library,
Too much of a good thing is too much. While the
Chicago Project tended to go overboard at times, it has lots
of good things - e)(uberence, vitality ~W~d lots of
enthusiasm for the insane inane. The actors are young,
attractive and most of them move well on stage, There are
still lots of rough edges, however - a lack of defined focus,
of incision, of control.
Myth 1nd parable

Mention "China" about now and the association game
sees red . red stars, red flags, lots of Little Red Books. You
go expecting Maoism or maybe just plain old-fashioned
Marx1sm, to discover that these people JUst ain't doin'
political theater. As the saying goes, Je suis Marxists,
tendsnce Groucho. It's midnight movies and popcorn, not
polem1cs. ChintJeSe WisscrtK:kers is a montage of Greek
myth and oriental folk tale camping 1t up in Salvation
Army rejects from the thirt1es, a survey of sex and Zen in
the style of the Late late Show
We are treated to the tale of unfortunate lo's
transformation into a cow, Pomona's steadfast refusal of a
more·than -w1lling suitor and Anarexida, whose stoney
reJection of love tums her into a statue (petrified by fear,
perhaps?) Venus, however, IS always in control, a mother
of a lady who hates a "hard heart ." The myths themselves,
accordtng to director Sanders, embody " person (read
tnterpersonal) failure .
how you can deal With personal
rejection '' The Oriental vignettes, 1n contrast . express a
certatn "soctal w1sdom." One IS susp1c1ous here of an ex
post facto attempt to justify the performance bY the
imposition of a meanmgful message But Chineese
TOUII TARO CAN I f
atAUli'Ul , •• Wlllf A

I

• lovely Japo- o...~e ..
f_.Mitr for T - Y.,d
,
0. . . If You ,,.,.,,
I WI" Ovlde Yov l~t Ito

USED CARS

v-aw...

BOBCOR - Motor Cars, Ltd
1974 Egert (Near Bailey)

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The d1scussion then turned to accusations of male
chauv1n1sm, sex1sm and anti fem1ntsm . The interesting
thing was that the d1stinct1on was completely blurred
between mater1al - the ong1nal body of myths - and
matena1tzat1on
the show ttself Any elements of
ant1 fem1ntsm must be traced back to the myths
themselves. while the dramat1zat1on may serve to
l)erpetrate those elements, d1scuss1on of sexism does not
prov1de a useful crit1cal entrance Crtt1cal evaluation got
lost in a ha1e of had feelings Ultimately, the value of Ms
Munk and company's critique was questionable
Desp1te all the post performance rhetoric Chmeese
Wisecracktff'S remaons a k1nky and ktnda cute production
It may not revolutiomze the theater world, but it might
shake up • few people - after all , entertammen\ am't that
easy to come by in BuH1.1Io

-

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t

BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL

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April 21-22-23
3 Evenmg concerts

performers mclude

Daytlme worksh ops

B HUTIO AND HIS HAWKS • PAT SKY

BONNIE RAITT • JOHN HERALD &amp; FRIENDS

N Y 's C 0 U N C I L 0 N T H E A R T S
prest:nt

DAN HICKS &amp; HIS HOT LICKS

WHISTlE

EARL SCRUGGS REVUE • UTAH PHILLIPS
''A ll

undrrwater listening I' I' en 1 ·· by

DOC &amp; MERLE WATSON • HAPPY &amp; ARTIE TRAUM
MAX NEUHAUS

********************

ADMISSION FREE W/Ttcketsltmtted w 30 per show

STUDENT ALL FESTIVAL TICKETS $6 00

FRIDAY Apri/2/st

7.JO. 8.JO 9 10 /0 .W &amp; 11 lO

fu:kets at Norton T1cket Ofticc
CLARK GYM POOL
Swim su ats &amp; caps rc41urcd

Student evening performances $2.00

t
t

For further information come to 261 Norton Hall

t

Sponsored by SA &amp; UUAB

--

--- -------

SHIP YOUR TRUNKS TO:
DOOR TO DOOR SERVICE -

SPEEDY DELIVERY - FULLY INSURED "'All items prepaid. - Ask your friends, they'll tell you what a good job we did last year.

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NEW YORK CITY &amp; LONG ISLAND TRUNKS $10.00, OVERSIZE $13 00.
CALL JOHN 834-1993 or H ERBI E 833-7537( pluse CJii-between t 1

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J

C R EATIVE ASSOCIATES &amp;

WATER

Erika Munk, editor of Scrlpr. and Perlorm.nt::e
magazines, was on hand for Saturday night's performance,
.,d the final fadeout was followed by a come-down
aitique, led by Ms. Munk and 4nvolving director Sanders,
members of the cast, and the audience (which,
incidentally, was sold out) . Curiously enough, Ma. Munk
looked immediately for a didactic " purpose" to the
production. Unfortunately and underJtandably under the
circumstances of Ms. Munk's barrage, Sanders felt impelled
to search out a few pertinent points of morality, before
admitting that the play was to some extent his reaction to
frustrations in his own life
unrequitted love, or
somethmg of that sort .

I

Sules • Servtn• • Partr

ott •,

Yov Melpf,l Uleroture lo
f,..,b.. You to II• It on

Critique

---------------------

*FERRARI
• MASF.RATI

I Will Oetlgft o..d b - •

...4

These days, a theater piece whose primary intention is
Entertainment with a capital E is bound to raise eyebrows,
hackles, or protests from those individuals committed to
didactic or political theater Theater of the Absurd
dramatized man's existential dilemma in what was
conceived as a basically nihilistic universe. Absurdist
theater broke down the social realism of the thirties and
freed dramatic expression from the constraints of logical
development and rational consciousness. As a further
development of alogical or post-logical theater, theater of
the ridiculous may in fact prove to be more revolutionary
than that so-called "revolutionary" theater
The urge for d1dactic content, for a concrete meaning
or m0111l value, is in essence a reactionary pos1t10n For a
work of art to have no purpose for existing other than
itself, not justification, motivation, or casual factor, is to
be absolutely radical. Such is the case w1th concrete art
and musique concrete.
Chineese Wisecrackers 1s an entertaimng show, but rts
success is limited by certain flaws in 1ts performance. At
times, it gets boring
this is a reaction to the repetitive
formula of each episode, to a constant unvaried energy
level that IS frenetic to say the least, and as a result,
problems w1th timing Good lines are thrown away or
m1s timed, and are m1ssed Movement on stage 1n
unfocused, d1tfused In fact , there 1s so much gomg on up
there, that the best moments yet lost rn the crowd
This concentration on phys1cal tra1nrng has meant iJ
neglect o f voice training, which results 1n problems with
line delivery . In any tra1ning company, there is bound to
be a dispanty between mdiv1dual actors, with a
concomm1ttant problem of ensemble The company does
have several actors who can get out there and take the
stage
who have the ab1l1ty and tra1n1ng to project a
strong on stage presence And they carry the show Qune
effic1ently
The ftnal episode of ChtntHISIJ Wisecrackers tell' rhe

ALFA ROMEO

JAPANESE
GARDEN
c-...wt~-

Abturdltt 1h•t•

(for a mange) happy ltory of Psyche and Cupid . Atw
certain d ifficulties aeated by Jealous sirters on one hind
_,d a jealous mo1her - our lldy Venus - on the other, the
couple Is restored to marital blia:s end promptly produce
the child of their love; Pleuure, whose birth and continued
existence Is l• ud ad as a genuine
jp'and-finale-production-number. Given the premites, tf the
.show produces Pleasure, how can we say it doesn't
succeed?

~

m - 8 p m.)

�HMS Binky Brown becomes
haven for Buffalo bar flies
'

-osterrelc:her

Tonight the Department of Music's University Opera Studio will
present a Festival of Myths in Miniature at 8:30p.m. in the Baird
Recital Hall .
The Operas by Darius Mllhaud, are being performed in honor of the
composer's eightieth birthday, and will include The Abduction of
Europa, Ariadne Abandoned, The Liberation of Theseus, and The
Woes of Orpheus.
Mllhaud calls the first three works Opera-Minutes because of their
length. The Woes of Orpheus is in three acts and a substantially
longer work. The program will be presented through April 23.
Tickets are available at the Norton Hall Box Office and the Baird
Hall Concert Office.
UUAB OANCE ARTS COMM,
Tu.sdey, April 25th
8 :00p.m.

vote

Conference Theatre
"Lovers of T~uel"
Admission Freel

The

Oliver Beauty Salon
5957 MAIN STREET
WILLIAMSVILLE, NEW YORK
633-5437
"Your hair, styled the way you want it! "

They still haven't salvaged the wreck of the
Titanic which sank years ago with the gallant
choures of "Nearer My God to Thee" echoing across
the frozen waters of the Atlantic. Ah yes, the
Titanic, the ultimate in sea-going decadence, the
ultimate in pleasure cruisers, the unsinkable haven
for the rich and poor alike.
Or at least that's what they'd like us to believe.
Well, I don't really know how they did it, but there
is a place located somewhere deep in the pit of the
West side that has re·emerged as the picture of
pleasure palaces. Like ~me babylonic tower, though
squat in appearance, a new temple for the worship of
dionysic ravelry has been seen floating in and out of
the ozone ether - four bartenders in search of an
alcoholic .
Yes indeed, Goodbar has gone into 1ts Phoenix
phase, and shall rise from its own ashes sometime in
June, but in the meantime, a beacon is being sent
out to all of the old Goodbar regulars to meet once
again on the H.M.S. Bink.y Brown.
The lost sailer
Now in case you don 't realize it, Bink.y Brown
was the long lost sailor son of Mr. Goodbar and
Granny Goodness He's been away for many years
searching the world fo r the magical elexlr of eternal
vermouth.
Now taking this 90 proof triumvirate in tow is
not an easy task, it can only be accomplished by the
most seasoned of veteran bar flies And yet it 's open
enough to challenge from the bravest of bonded
infants, the ozone fledglings who could if they
would, but can't if they should because you
shouldn't if you couldn't - anyway.

As you walk throuitt the wrought-iron portals
beaming forth scripture-like name of Binky's, you
spy scrawled in the cement (and I'm not sure that it
was done w~ the cement was wet either), the total
philosophy of the place, flashing into your usually
blurred field of vision, "Welcome in Peace" and
that's not a bad sentiment these days.
Next you come to the entrance of the funhouse,
the door swings open and there it is waiting to have
beer spilled on it, lovers quarrels captured by its
walls, the essence of humanity sweeping through the
air of its passageways just waiting to be Inhaled and
exhaled, the interior, the inner sanctum, the hall of
mirrors, the den of demon alcohol.
Binky's is a place resplendent with silvery
chromatic archways, two bars at right angles (that 's
for you math buffs), a large section of booths, the
mad booths of Buffalo, a magical music box
commanded by Steven the Mad Hatter, seas of
bubbly refreshments, the smiling face of Pat the
Bouncer who's a wrestler at thts school , a nice guy
and I still think he's Carl Wilson, the omniprescences
of the Aliotta's Joey and Bobby whose homage to
Oionysis is not going by unnoticed, a peanut gallery,
plenty of room to go crusin' for some love, a drag
race machine to find out how drunk you really are
or ought to be, and just plain goodtime vibrations.
So if you're in the neighborhood, or if you're
tired of watching Ray Milland chase bats, come on
down to Binky Brown's and join the mayhem and
say hello to Beatie, Jimmy Miles, Shawn, Bobby,
Joey, Pat, Russell, Steven and me, because I'll be
there chasing my own bats.

And what of Bink.y's?

- Joe Fernbacher

Nickel Theatre
I

The Student Th.-ter Guild will present the Nickel Til•tre, 11 collection of short
plays and scenes, original and OtherwGe, toni~t and tomorrow night at 8 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room of Norton Hall. Admission to the Nickel Theatre is $.05. A splendid time
is guaranteed for all.

Being the adventures of a young man
whose principal interests are rape,
ultra-violence and Beethoven.

I'AII' EY

ICUIIIUCK'I

®
From Warner Bros
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT

ua.~-~M!!!

I

~YO.

Dally &amp; Sunday: 2-4:40·7:20·10
Sat.: 2-4:30·7·9:25·L•te Show •t 11 :45

�...
-Jim McFW'IIOn

Black Magic M.-d\a Aeev• and
Vandellas (Gordy G968Lt

the

Martha Reev~. her sirter Lois .,d
Sandra Tilley are back with a smash hit and
a new lp. Martha is, in my opinion, the best
group - female vocalist in the Motown
family . Along with the Marvelettes, Martha
and the VandeUas dominated AM radio in
the early and middle silttlts. Songs like
" Dancing in the Streets," " Heatwave" and
"Jimmy Made" hiMI rtood the test of time
as great and memorable songs.
This new album features some really
k1ller tunes and, unfortunately some weak
ones. But on the whole, It's a good record.
The latest h it, "BlaiS You ," is just
phenomenal, w ith a vood bridge and a
!P'eat sin1JIIIong chON$. They attempt the
Jackson 5's "I Want You Back ," but it
really doesn't work too well , even though
there's the usual great Motown produc tion
and musictanship.
Martha's treatment of David and
Bachrach 's "Anyone Who Had a Heart" is
tasteful and strong, and "Hope I Don' t Get
My Heart Broke" is a powerful clincher to
the album . Just wish that the selection of
tunes will get better as Martha climbs back
up to the top, where she belongs.
l1ve Cream Volume II (ATCO SO 70051
' Well, you thought the 16ildfl() winm
Would bring you down foreVN
But you roMJ upon • lttlllmttr
ro the vlolfl()ett of the sun."

What this new release o f old " live"
Cream material is, is an acute exerc1se in
sado·triadtsm . The anachrontstic renewal of
the conceptual three is a calculated
perpetration on the part of Atlant1c
records.
Who else could possibly compete with
Grand Funk Railroad? Certainly not the
Vardbirds (too many in the group so it
interferes With your visual attention spanl,
or Thunderclap Newman (who's that?) . So
why not resurrect, just on time to remind
everyone who really started it all . Cream,
once described as "three blind men running
the hundred yard dash" now certainly
qualify for the roct&lt; n' roll mile aher
having a goodbye album, a farewell movie,
and a live Cream volume one. My god Eric
must shudder at the thought .
Of course, I must admit that for me the
only time I ever got palpitations over
Cream was when I heard "Tales of Brave
Ulysses" which usually only occured
CI(OUnd the time of the vernal equinox, the
day of spring, which was Monday 1f your
reading this on Friday A great piece of
religious molecular agitation, this always
had transttional qualities for me. so this
year I get to hear it done alive.
Sure enough, at the first strike o f the
symbols I get palpitations as well as
feedback flashes of the first time I played
" Parchman Farm" and "Summertime
Blues" by Blue C heer on the fabled
Vinclb/J$ Eruptum a lbum (PHS 600-624)
with the loudest guitar ever played by
leigh Stephens (whose solo album Red
Weathsr was an incredible contradiction. It
has Mick Waller on drums and Nickey
Hopkins on piano for instance, as well as
the nicest cover of its time, but the strange
thing was the fact that the guitar on the
album was so underproduc:ed you could
hardly hear it at all .) .
Dick Peterson was on bass. and the
fastest drummer ever Paul Whaley . I mean
like man you couldn't even see his hands
they moved so fast . Now that I took back

on it Leis;~ Stephens even lookad a little
like Alice, as a matter of fact, he was so
~etty that we even thought he was a girl. 1
stJII remember that ominous buzzz behind
the curtains on the Steve Allen show, so
loud you could just about hear old Stew,
and the amplifiers were only turned on. (It
really made that supposed mass of
amplitude on the cover of this Cream
album look very paltry indeed .)
Besides, I had been turned on to rock n '
roll trledism by that really bizzaro group
"The Strangeloves" whose hit "I Want
Candy" still pleases me even though its
usually sandwiched in between "L.A.
Blues" and "Iron Man ."
Do you even remember The
St~a~loves (Bang-211) with their kinky
skm tlght leeth8f pants, zebra skinned
vests, and wow, those Masai drums w8fe
neat. All this and the fact that they guy in
the middle could almost double for
Clarence White and he was the only tong
hair in the group, and they were from
Australia.
All brothers, they were born on a farm
in Armstrong, Australia 10 Mr. and Mrs
Wilmot Strange. Their names were Miles
Niles and Giles and they helped thei r fathe;
in raising sheep and as the story goes, at
the young age of 16, Miles, applying his
vast knowledge of cross-breeding developed
the now famous breed of long hair sheep
known as the Bottehrer sheep The boys
registered the breed with the
Feldman-Goldstein Company Lld. In
Australia and have become independently
wealthy from royalties accruing to them
for each sheep born into the Gottehrer
breed , (Which inc identally are the names of
people who wrote most of their songs and
the producers o f the album were also
named Bob Feldman, Jerry Goldstein and
Richard Gottehrer .1
Their first big hit in Australia was a tune
called " Love, Love, love" which hit the
charts big in 1965 and for the record N1les
played the Masal drums, M1les the lead
vocal and tamborine, and Giles played
p1ano as well as extra drums when needed .
Of course, their follow up hit to " I
Want Candy" was "Cara·Lin" both of
which and Eric as usual plays his seem1ngly
meaningless guitar extensions throughout
the album wtlich also contains a live
vet"sion of "Sunsh ine of Your Love" wh1ch
stands as the all time Cream classic and

liVE

C~F.:AM
II

VOLUMt

perhaps the all ·t1me classic of lhat penod, I
mean it did take a certain amount of genius
to think of that particular c:l'lordal
progression at that ume.
Rounding o ut this blast from the past IS
Enc's lame attempt to pay homage 10 the
man he stole all his licks from , Freddy
King Even a thirteen minute forty two
second cut of Freddy's " Hideaway " which
IS really ''Steppin' Out" couldn 't do 1ustice
to the debt Eric owes this man
Gee, maybe now Eric will jam w1th
Freddy and do a ninety-five minute version
of "Hideaway" and call it " Low Tide" and
call the lp Vincibus Eruptem , but can
anyone explain the reason for three '" rock
n' roll7
Also on the album are live vers1ons of
' White Room, Politician" and "Deserted
Cities of the Heart ." All in all I guess I like
it.
- Joseph ft!mbacher

R.E .O . Speedwagon (Epk: - E310891
It's funny , ~ut the present trend today
in roc k n' roll is the old 1950's sound .

We need more groups like A.E.O .
Speedwagon today simply becaute we teem
to have found coo many things to be
depressed ~bout. An ~mple supply of
plea~ur• and good feelings are desperately
needed to countenlet the bad thing&amp; that
exist today. Music takes up a large part of
young people's lives .-\d can be used as a
means to reach pure and simple happinet:s.
R .E .0. Speed wagon can definitely
contributAt to the young people's cause by
playing In the old roclc n ' roll tredition thst
has always brought ev«vone's heed up.

We've seen groups like J. Geils, Sha Na Na
and Commander Cody making it big in the
music world today. Well folks, we now
have 11 new group ready to explode in the
good old 1950 's tradition. R.E.O .
Speedwagon has incorporated the beat and
flavor of the 1960's sound into their music.
Lately, I have been trying to analyze why
the old rock n ' roll sound has become so
popular. My guess is that the t..ids today
want to listen to music that moves. They
WWit to get off that hard gym floor and
dance_ Youth needs pure and simple tun
and_ listening to groups like Sha Na Na, J .
Getts, Commander Cody and R.E.O.
Speedwagon Injects that badly needed
enjoyment into the kids today.
A.E.O . Speedwagon realizes at the same
time that a group can become too totally
immersed in a particular style of music. To
remedy this they have added their own
!:wand of lyrics and riffs to their sound . At
times they sound a lot like Led Zepplin,
Ten Years After (bummer). J . Geils and
Chuck Berry , Gary Richrath's guitar work
shines on brightly throughout the whole
album . He lends a modern touch to A.E.O.
Speedwagon's first album, especially on
"Anti-Establishment Man." Terry Luttrell
does all the lead vocals and sounds much
like Jimmy Page The group harmonires
very well and their tight vocal
arrangements is exemplified o n " Five Men
Were Killed Today " Neil Doughty is on
the keyboards and his beautiful organ

c6: . . _ _ n.__ II.,._,,_

- -

= :-:; :..:...._

I

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;;-:~-

..:.:

work , behind the tight harmonizing, works
rather well
I admire R.E.O . Speedwagon very m uch
because lhMe's nol one mstrument that
dominates any one cut. Their music is V8f'Y
well balanced and the group 1s extremely
t1ght. Alan Gratzer plays drums and is very
talented He makes their music move with
a driving force .
"Gypsy Woman's Passion" is a cut that
makes you feel like getting up and rockmg.
R1chrath's riffs are quick and clean. and
the song has a fast moving beat to it. In the
middle of the cut the mejody builds up to
a tremendous cr~ndo that is terminated
by a lone run on the drums.
" 157 Riverside Avenue" is a good
boogy number The cut contains soma
good ragtime piano work whicn combines
well with the 50's guitar and drum
progressions. The lyrics are "bluesy" and
help bring ' '157 Riverside Avenue" up to
date.
' We 'r~

Detroit (Par.mount PAS 6010,

doing the town on Sund8y,

Nobody C.rti'S about Monday
TNt's rich boy,
That fast boy.
ThMtl 's fat boys too,
Evtlf)'body's on 151 River-side Avenue.
Shacking up is no whertt,
The girls come and just show wear
So good.
So baby,
Couldn't help fee/in' blue.
Not enough time,
There's so many things to do.

The song ends in good rock n' nil fashion
wtth a descending roll on the piano .
R .E.O. Speedwagon's first album is
excellent. They fit into the modern trend
of reviving basic melodies and progressions
from the late 1950's rock scene. Vet their
arrangements are sufficieotly put together
so their mus1c retains the old rock flavor,
but Is still brought up to date enough so
their sound isn't "square." R .E .O .
Speedwagon's songs are· written by them
and are sung in an old rock tradition. Their
music is great for a depressed head .

I

The word has got to be spread. Mitch
Ryder is back, and the enet"gy of the old
Detroit Wheels has been miraculously
resurrected, 1972 style. This one record
has more sheer rock 'n' roll than the last
ten new records I've heard lately.
The Detroit band sounds like a
combination of Mountain, lee Michaels
end the old wheels. Mitch is singing better
than ever, and the riff rock principle has
never been used to a greater effectiveness
than on Grand Vizir Lou Reed's " Rock ' n'
Roll." If you have 1 song with a title like
that, you better do it and do it right. And
Detroit certainly d08i. This riff just m~t
be the ultimate one 8Ye(yone -rehe&amp; for .
'V'onguea galore, •pedel1v by ~st W.R .
Cooke and drummer John "Bee" Badanjek.
The band does great rendition' of
classics like " let It Rock, " "long Neck
Goose," and " It Ain't Easy." There's a
country tune with acoustic guitars. This
album has everything. Just put this record
on and say to yourselves, "OK, kids, It's
rocking time "
Ululu Jesse Ed Oav1s (Atco SO 33-382t
Utulu 1s Jesse Davis' second solo album.
His first, released last year and most
favorably reviewed here, drew very little
attention . Davis is known In better circles
as one of the finest guitarists in around. He
played with Taj Mahal for a long time, and
Tal's music has noticeably skidded without
Jesse's Telecaster tones. And in case you
haven' t seen the Bangle Desh film, it's
Davis who plays most of the exciting
back -up guitar.
Anyway, all of the promise of the first
lp has been fulfilled with this record. The
muSicianship is firs1 rate, with Doctor John
on New Orleans piano and organ , Duck
Dunn on bass, Jim Keltnet" on drums and
guest appearances by larry Knechtel, Leon
Russell and Buffalo legend Stan Szeleste
(I'll remmd you again lhat he's playing
f!Nery Monday and Tuesday at Granny
Goodness, along with Sandy Kon1koff and
Ernte Corolla).
Jesse's song select1on 1s just perfect for
his high p1tched Tulsa voice. He pulls off
great renditions of "St rawberry Wme,"
"Aicatraz," and even "Oh. Susannah." His
original tunes, lit&lt;e " Red Dirt Boogie,
Bro ther" and " My Captatn" are first rate.
Beatie Influence is subtly evident on a
few tracks. The t1tle track comes complete
with soaring harmonies and " It Don' t
Come Easy" Lesley monitored guitar. And
th8fe's f!Nen George Harrison's tune about
the Beatie split, a rocker called "Sue Me,
Sue You Blues."
All of the songs are spiced up by Jesse 's
great slide and regular guitar. Jim Keltner
plays the best drums I've ever heard from
him, and I think he's one of the best
drummers playing today. Doctor John
plays subtly, bot powerfully. It's just a
17eat record .

�CLINTON, N.Y. (UPI) - 1breo coUeae students
from the Soviet Union debated with three of their
American cou.nterparts at Hamilton CoUeae TUesday ni&amp;ht,
in the first or a series of discussions at several coUeaes
arou.nd the country.
Backer1 of the d.ialoaue said it was the first time
Soviet officials have permitted Russian students to come
to this country to enpae in open public discussion.
At the beJi.nnin&amp; of the program , attended by 2,000
persons in the Hamilton Gymnasium, the moderator
stressed that the subject at band was : "How Can the
United States and the Soviet Union Work Together to
Promote World Peace." But, after the opening remarks by
each of the panelists, the familiar subjects of the Vietnam
War, the Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia, the Jewish
immigration problem became the main topics of
duc ussion.
There was a distinct difference In the appearance of
the visitors and the American students. The Soviets were
obviously older - in their late 20s at least - and one was
bald and looked closer to 35.
The proaram started when one of the American
students - Betty Jean Hagerty , a senior from Kirkland
CoUege, Hamilton's wter school - stated that she and her
fellow U.S. panelists were opposed to the recent bombing

· of North Vietnam and were prepared neither to support
nor defend the U.S. move in the ensuin&amp; discusaion.
The statement met with an ontion from the crowd,
altbou,h a few boos were beard as well. The topics then
moved throuah d.l.sa.rmament, environment, peaceful
C&lt;HJxistence and cooperation.
The other two ~erican students were Gary Vensel,
a junior from Malone, and Michael Clinger, also a junior,
from New York City, both Hamilton students. The three
students from the USSR were L.P. SaaJtyan, fint secretary
of the Armenian Republic Youth Leadership Program ;
Vladimir A. Kavtaradze, a member of the presidium of the
Committee of Youth Orpnizations of the USSR; and
NickJoi N. Muk.hin, Secretary of the student orpnization
of Morsow State University .
Kavtaradze, responding to one question about
Russian persecution of writers who disacree with the party
line, mentioned the shootings at Kent State, the Black
Panther shootings in Chicago and the Attica prison not.
Audience reaction to the comparisons was hissina.
Kavtaradze also presented a list of obstacles to
Russtan-Amcrican relations, which , he said , typified an
Amencan double standard .
"The U.S. 6th Fleet bas been hanging around the
Mediterranean for years," he said, "and America said at

was just protecting the peaceful nationa in that repon.
"When the USSR put a Oeet of warabJ111 in the same
area - even thou,h it is near our borders - the United
States called it an act of near agression," he Aid.
"When the United States was buDding an arsenal of
nuclear weapons during the lut decade," he continued, "it
was to preserve peace in the world. But when Russia did
the same thing, the Americans said it was for just the
opposite reason."
Saakyan, responding to the expected question of
why were the Jews not allowed to leave the USSR, said
through an interpreter : " Many of them have been aUowed
to leave, and many of them have been allowed to retwn."
Robert Hall, executive secretary of the Speech
Com muni cation Association the international
organization sponsoring the tour ~ announced after the
program that a similar dialogue scheduled for tonight at
the University of Maryland had been cancelled for fear of
violent demonstrations on the campus.
Remaining stops on tour are -'be University of
Wisconsin at Oshkosh, Southern Illinois University at
Carbondale, Chico State CoUege in · California, Cerritos
College in California and Brigham Young University in
Provo, Utah .

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Page sixteen . The Spectrum . Friday, 21 Aprill972

..OR TH£ KIDS

�Spritzler arrested
Assistant Oinlctor of Campus Security Lee Griffin
arrested John Spritz!• in front of Norton Hall at
10:35 a.m. on Wednesday. Mr. Spritzler, who had
been suspended by the H_.ing Commission and
ord•ed to stay off University property during the
suspension, was arrested on charges of criminal
trespass in the third degree and resisting arrest. In
another arrest at 12 :55 a.m. Wednesday, two girls
were found on campus with a bucket of glue and
posters saying, " Wanted Deed or Alive: Prasident
Kettef." They were subsequently arrested on charges
of loitering and unlawfully posting posters, two of
which were found posted in Diefendorf Hall.

Abortion law repeal: a volatile issue
by Janis Cromu
City Edllor

Albany legislators indicated on
Wednesday that they were
anxious to avoid a vote on the
issue of repealing New York
state's abortion law in an election
year. However, sponsors of the
bill to repeal the statute said they
would use a parliamentary
maneuver if necessary to force a
vote on the volatile question.
" I don' t know what we're
going to do," said Senat e Majority
Leader Ear1 W. Brydgc:a of Niagara
Falls, an opponent of liberal
abortion laws. " It's an explosive
i~sue .

" The governor has indicated he
would veto a repealer, so it might
be an exercise in futility for us to
go through the motions of passing
11 - if we could." Sen. Brydges

ible Truth
AT CHR IST'S RETURN
"The dead In Christ Shllll rise
nrst, then w e w hich ue llllve
•nd remain Shalf tie CAught up
tO&lt;,Iether with th em In the
crouds, to meet the Lord In t h e
air.
1 Thes. 4al6, 17

added.
It was lllported tlult both Sen.
Brydges and Assembly Speaker
Peny B. .Duryea were taking an
informal head count to determine
if the lllpeal bill could pass in
both houses. While the Assembly
vote was undecided, an informal
survey showed tlult the vote of
one senator could swing the
balance in the Senate. When the
original law was passed, the
margin in the Senate was three
votes.

One vote may decide
Since then the abortion bill
author, D. Clinton Dominick has
been defeated for re-election and
Edward J. Speno has died. That
leaves a margin of one vote, that
of Sen. Norman J. Levy who has
not indicated how he would vote
on the measure.
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The abortion question has that the abortion laws in that
become more heated , and sta te· violate a woman 's rights to
advocates of repeal have begun a freedom and privacy and are,
moll' active lo bbying effort this therefore, unconstitutional.
week. Monday , two priests were
'' We think that by these
arrested for attempting to block statutes Connecticut trespasses
one of the main doors of the u n j usti fia bl y on the personal
Capitol. On Tueaday, three privacy and liberty of its female
women broke past the Assembly citizenry," wrote Second Circuit
Sergeant of Arms and staged a Court o f Appeals Judge J. Edward
sit-down on the chamber fl oor, Lumbard. He said that since the
causing the house to !llcess for laws were passed in 1860, the
nature of woman 's role in society
more than an hour. \
Sen. Brydges also said that a has changed and that the state no
"middle Ground" might be longer can justify sanctions
attempted. He did not elaborate against abortions.
on the idee, but there have been a
number o f proposals submitted in Prohibits aid or advice
The Con nec ti c ut statutes
ll'Cent years to shortrn the length
of time in a pregnancy during prohibit abortions, attem pted
which an abortion would be abortions and any atd , advice or
encouraJement to bring about
allowed .
Meanwhile deputy Assembly abortions, unless necessary to
Minority Leader Albert ~ . preserve the life of tbe mother or
Blumenthal, one of the early the fetus .
''In 1860, when these statutes
advocates of liberalized abortion
laws, urged women throughout were enacted m then present
t h e state to "co nverge form, women had few nghts ,"
immediately on Albany to make Judge Lumbard said . "Since then,
know n their support for the however, their status has changed
dramatically ." He cited women 's
present Jaw."
At t h e sa m e time on suffrage, the growing number of
Wednesday, a three-judge fed eral women holding industrial and
panel in Hartford . Conn . ruled professional jobs and the pendi n~t

federal equal rights amendment.
"The changed role of women
in society and the changed
attitudts toward them reflect the
societal judgment that women can
competently order their own lives
and that they are the appropriate
d cc ision-rnakers about matters
a ffe c ting their fundamental
concerns," be said .
In addition, Judge Lumbard
said that the old laws could not
anticipate the present concern
about the population explosion .
He said Connecticut's
anti-abortion statutes violate the
Ninth Amendment and the due
process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment of t h e U .S .
Constitution .
The ruling came in the case of
a 34-year-&lt;&gt;ld pre&amp;nant married
woman, one o f 8S8 women who
formed a group called Women vs.
Con necticut to challenge the
anti-abortion laws. Deputy Atty .
Gen . C. Perrie Philips said his
office would review the decision
for poss1ble appeal and
Republi can Gov. Thomas J.
Meskill. a Catholic, said he may
ask the legislature to enact a new
abortion law .

University's calendar revised
Revisions in the University 's academic caltndar will be in effect for the Fall 1972
semester. Major changes in the new calencbr includt an additional full week of time ?ff
during the spring vacation which has been nine cbys, and final commencement occurnng
May 27, 1973 as opposed to May 14 , this year's commencement date.
The revision was prompted by a set of ,Wdelines for the development of campus
instructional calendars, which was sent from the office of Ernest Boyer, SUNY
ChanceUor, to aU presidents in March. These auidelines caU for a minimum ~f 30 weeks of
instruction excluding registration and examination periods. ''If the conve.ntiOnal .semes!er
plan is fo Uowed, no single semester shall consist of f~wer th~n 1.4 weeks mstruchon, with
a total of 30 weeks instruction for two semesters . . . the gwdelines state.
Commenting on the caltndar change, Arthur Kaiser, director of Admissions and
Records noted that " although the new calencbr appears to bt longer, it actually contains
about the same amount of instructional time as in previous years." He continued: ·:tn
terms of instructional time, the first semester is shorter than tbt second semester, wtth
the first semester consisting of 14 ~ weeks and the second consisting of 16 weeks."
The calencbr revision was formulated by an 11 -member committee appointed by
President Robert Ketter. The committee included fow students and was chaired by
Charles Jeffrey , assistant vice president for Academic Affairs.

Friday, 21 Apri11972 . The Spectrum . Page seventeen

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Page eighteen . The Spectrum . Friday, 21 April 1972

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WASHINGTON D.C. - Democrats in bolh
houses of Congress escalated their attacks on
President Nixon 's bombing policies Wednesday .
House Democrats meeting in closed caucus agreed to
take a vote on a resolution designed to force a
reluctant House Foreign Affairs Committ~ generally a war policy supporter - to send anti-war
legislation to lhe House floor. Republicans termed
this, and the debate in the Senate over the bombings.
as ''yelping" and claimed that Hanoi was counting
on just such a ' 'knee-jerk reaction ."
Chairman of the Senate Foretgn Relattons
Committee, Sen·. J . William Fullbright, denounced
the new step in the war as "barbaric, inhumane and
obscene." Sen. Alan Cranston, D- Calif. , demanded
that Nixon either set a date for total withdrawal or
follow former president Lyndon Johnson's
precedent and renounce re-election hopes " to
remove any appearance of polittcal motivation tn the
furt her conduct of the war.
"Our problem, the nation's problem, is that the
President still thinks he must prove America's
manhood," Cranston continued " He stilllonks upon
Vietnam as a test of America's courage and
perseverance."
Several Republicans did not qutte share the
same view . Sen. Barry Goldwater. R Ariz .• shouted
that he hoped American bombs had h11 every Sovtet
ship that was in Haiphong harbor last weekend . " I
say if we hit a Russian ship, that 's too damned bad! "
Goldwater exclaimed. "l hope we hll tht:m all.
They've got no business betng there ."
Strom Thurmond, R- S.C., added his thoughts
screaming. '"Tyranny' Ty1anny! Tyranny ' That 's
worse than war! Tyranny •~ 1he altemallve tu war m
Vietnam."

people and wildlife of the area as the Hudson is
graded for bathing at Croton, where there is a
county beach.
In addition, many sea and land birds such as the
bald eagle and the herring gull feed in the area. Both
birds are protected by the federal conservation laws.
The pollution also involves danger to bass, shad,
herring, blue fish, white perch . sea trout and others,
the complaint maintained .
Conviction on the criminal complaint carries a
maximum fine of up to $2500. Failure to report a
spill is punishable by SlO,OOO fines on each counl
ALBANY
The New York State Council of
Churches 5.3id Wednesday it favored the liberal
abortion taw passed by the legislature two years ago.
"We of the Protestant Christian faith have a very
high regard for life and we regret any loss whether il
be by accident , war or capital punishment ," stated
the Rev. Robert T. Cobb, associate execu tive
director. "We must stand on our position in suppo rt
ol the law
'Ths does not agree to uncounseled or
llldtscriminate abortive acts, but a medically.
psychologically , and religiously counseled decision
with regard for both the agonizing decision of a
pattcnt and the regrettable loss resulting from such 3
dectSIUn.
"The loss to mankind of the freedom to mak~
dectstons, fallible or !lllallihle, demes the redemptive
love o f God "

ALBANY - The State Senate Wednesday
uppmved the women's rtghts amendment to the US
Consti tution. The measure must now be approved by
the Assembly before New Yurk Jmm the II other
NEW YORK The l'cnn (ent rJI T ransport aiHHI states whtch have taken \lmt.lar rattltcat10n achon.
Co. was indicted by a special federal grand (IH Y
The Senate origH•ally p31.sed the women's righu
Wednesday on 21 counts of polluhng the Hudson amendment a month ago, hut had to act a second
River At the same t im~. ll.S . Allorney Whtt ncy ttmc because 11 was in the w10ng form . The measuu•
North Seymour J r. filed a civil complaml seckulg an pass~d ovcrwhelrnmgly with nnly three senator).
mjunction to halt any fu1 ther discharges of {&gt;rl by James D Griffin, D Buff.JIIl , Ualwm J Niles.
R J ohnswwn and R11:harJ I Sdt&lt;'rmerhorn.
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Friday, 21 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nineteen

�Buffalo vs. Canisius

Bulls win double-header
Coming from behind twice in fine style, the
baseball Bulls upped their northern record to 4-2
(6-10 overall) Wednesday afternoon as they bested
Canisius twice in a doubleheader played at Delaware
Park. After coming from behind, the Bulls erupted
for I0 runs to seal a 16-6 verdict in the first part of
the twin bill. Buffalo won the nightcap going away,
11-3.
The Bulls fell behind early as Canisius scored
three times in the first frame en route to a 4-0 lead
after three innings. Second baseman Chris BurriS
singled home the Griffins' first run and scored as
catcher Paul Orkwis singled home two more.
The BuUs cut the Grifrs lead to 4 -3 in the
fourth and took the lead for good in the sixth
inrung. Jim Scime, playing first base in the opener,
drove in the tying run with a fielder's choice. Scime's
RBI set the stage for left Fielder Orv Cott 's two-out,
bases loaded s.ingle off Canisius starter and loser
Mike Brennan . Cott's blow gave the win to Steve
Kr.tiJ, who worked the middle three innings after
relieving starter Owen Tober in the third.
Buffalo iced the game with an incredible 1()-run
barrage in the seventh and Jut inning of the first
game. Shortstop R1ck Albert, who came into the
twin bill hitting .357, drove in two runs with a
single, while triples by Cott and second baseman Jim
lalayanis .recounted for three more Bull markers. "I
Wal reaUy pleased with the way we came back,"
remarked BuD head baseball Coach Bill Monlutrsh.
"Despite faJling behind early, we hung in there and

got the hits when we had to get t hem"
The second game started off like the first as the
Golden Griffs grabbed a 1.0 lead in the(r fint chance
at the plate. BuD starter Mike K.Jym wu reached for
two hiu by the first two Canisius batten. Klym, who
earned a save by finishing the first game, was
touched for an unearned run but pitched out of the
jam without allowing any more tallies.
The Bulls ripped Canisius starter Bob Crawford
for three runs in the second inrung to take the lead
for good. Crawford , who threw an unbelievable total
of eight wild pitches in his four inning stint, was
rapped for Scime's RBI single and a three-bagger by
rightfielder Tom Matikosh.
The Bulls scored four more times.in the top of
the third inning to seal the doubleheader triumph.
After failing to score in the fourth the BuffaJo squad
had to sweat out a Canisius stall in the top of the
fifth, an inning marked by frequent visits to the
mound by the Canisius coaching staff. The Griffs
were try ing to have the second game cancelled . The
game was being played in a downpour at that time.
The game, halted by the weather after six
innings, saw Cott notch his first victory as a hurler.
Cott did not allow a run in tus three inning stint and
evened his record at 1-1.
Following the doubleheader, Buffalo will return
to newly-named Peelle Field to face West Virignia
this afternoon at 3 p.m., and in a doubleheader
tomorrow at I p.m. Jon Roth will face the
Mountainers thiS afternoon while Gary Odachowski
and Mike Cahill will get the nod tomorrow.

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bos&gt;c volues Oepeudoblity. Economy of money ond style Good moleoge
ood long lofe
Those bosoo ore our bu1hploce The Model T. !he Model A. !he
fors1 moss produced SlohOn wagon-name o bos&gt;c odeo, ond chances ore
Ford buoltot

Now to Ford Pinlo
Ponto is as simple ond solid o small cor os there os '" !he WOI'Id.
And ot's proced lower than the three leading ompom; lower than oiS mopr
U.S. compelotor Yelot has ~ bdSic modern necess.~
A gutsy lrttle eng•ne !hot geb !he same economoeol kond of gas

moleoge os !he lottie omports.
A ~oekn.o-rock four speed lromtnossion. Sport$ (Q( steering.

A ......elded steel body wrth SIX coat5 of poont
Boll-pnl front suspenstOO, ond 0 wide sd&gt;le slonce Otlthe rood.
Ponto •s one small cor that doesn't ha.oe to feor o sopem.ghwoy.
And fonolly. Pinto g._ you cQm!ortoble io1enor leg and ~
der room- yet ot's at~ly I~ onches longer than the leodong little impon.
See the Pimo ol your ford dealer's. It's 40 yean ne-r tt.on the
Model A - but it's still the same basic ideo

•••
••
•••
••
•••
•

•
•••
•••

• .... , ••••• .,••k , • .,...... , ••••, .,••k ,. ,.,...

FORD PINTO

•

FORD DIVISION

•

i.......................................~.~~-~-~!f!l~~........................................
PaCJt twenJY.. The Spectrum . Friday ••21 April 1972

I DayBal

Plll£291
•

Bfferylltl. .

'll

PBICB
Pfrn - S.r

Subs - Sp.g/11tti
SIIMJs - Rwioli
PRIZES
..OR THE KIOS

�Buffalo recruitment

Goss signs with hoopsters
by Bany Rubin
Sportr Editor

The basketball Bulls' junior college recruiting
program bore its first fruit yesterday when 5·10
guard Rayfield Goss signed an athletic grant-in-aid
with Buffalo.
Goss, a two-year star for the Orchard Ridge
campus of Oakland Community College, graduated
from Chadsey High School in Detroit, Mich. befo re
attendiJlg. the Farmington, Mich. junior college. The
signing of Goss, leaves the basketball Bulls, one full
two year grant, which will either go to a forward or
be held for a BuJJ player who does no t presently
receive financial aid.

stymied as Niagara Community's Joe O.arles signed
with Rhode laland and leicester Junior College ·
forward George Thompson signed with Southern
Illinois. However, all along, Coach Home contended
that Goss wu the best prospect available at guard.
A sociology major at Oakland , Goss was
AJI-America honorable mention and earned a 2 .6
grade point average in addition to serving as team
captain. Starring for a l 9-6 Raider squad, Goss was
named all region three and ali-GOnference for two
straight yean. It should be mentioned that region
three comprises the junior colleges Uuoughou l
Michigan , Indiana and Ohio.

Buffalo freshman Coach Jim Home was the man
who discovered Goss at the region 12 National
Junior College tourney. It was in that tourney that
Goss and the Ridge Raiders fell to powerful two-year
National champion Vincennes. However, Home
re por ts that Goss turned in a spectacular
performance, scoring 32 points and breaking a full
court Vincennes press.

The double pumping Goss figures to join
Buffalo's MVP, 6-2 guard Bob Vartanian in the back
oourt for the club's opener, Dec. 2 with Syracuse
The Syracuse game will be one of at least three
games to be played at the new Grand Island fa cilit y.
Buffalo's schedule presently stands at 21 games.
following the additio n of Cornell, leMoyne and
Colgate. The Bulls are also set to announce U1e
addition o f Brown University for a home game in
late January .

Buffalo arsiJtant varsity coach and head
recru1ter Norb Ba.schnagel commented : "Goss is
qu1ck and can beat pressure defense With his great
speed." Goss is also rated a fine playmaker and
averaged 7.5 assists per game this season m addillon
to 21 pomts per game. According to Coach Home,
( ioss was ready to sign a National letter of intent
w1th Ohio Valley Conference member Murray Sl&lt;lte,
hutmstead chose Buffalo.

Buffalo's recruittng efforts now are keyed un
finding a fo rward-center swing man . Reportedly. 6·7
Neal Lance as the top prospect, but Lance ~~ also
being sought after by Virginia Tech and Appalacluan
State. The Bulls are also hopeful that Bryant &amp;
Stratton's 6·5 outs1de shooting forward Ken Murray
will enroll at Buffalo. Murray, who averaged 23
points per game for the downtown Tigers is bc1ng
hung up by credit transfer problems.

Filling gaps
Earlier,

Whatever the result, the Bulls are sl1ll ho(X'ful
that thelf late recruiting start will fill the gil p~ 111
their squad

the

Bulls'

recruitmg effo rts wert

Track team boasts
another new 'star'
by Bruce Eqel

strong perfonnance the BuJJs had
in the throwing events. In fact,
Buffalo scored 3J out of a
maximum 33 in the lhotput,
It seems that whenever you
discus and javelin. This was no
tum around, the Buffalo track doubt the major component of
and field team tw a new star. The
the BuDs ' victo ry. Behind Capan
latest to join this group is junior
in the discus were Mike Boucle,
Roger Capan , who broke the
John Wallace and Mike Gaeta.
school record in the discus
Mike Corbett was third in the shot
Wednesday afternoon in a
while Mark Reger won the javelin
triangular meet at Buffalo State
with a ftne throw of 179 feet.
with the Bengals and Canisius.
Reger was followed by R1ch
The Bulls came out on top with
Schatz and Don van Deuson.
85 points to 65 for State and only
Wlule State could not score m
25 fo r the G nffins.
the thro wing events. the BuJJs
Capan started his coUege career could no t score m the jumps.
at Southern IllinoiS. but was Enter Frank Arnold and Joe and
forced to withdraw fo r financial AI Cappola from Canisius. This
reasons. Roger's lack of fund s tno was successful in drawing
may be o ne of the best breaks the enough pomts away fro m State in
trdck Bulls will ever get. After the JUmps m o rder to put the
several years m the service. Capan meet out of reach for the Bengals .
enro lled at Buffalo and a couple
The Bulls outran the Bengals,
of weeks ago, Ass1stant Coach winnmg SIX of the ten events,
C1luck Brenner talked h.im mto 1n c ludmg a pair of one-two
th ro w ing th e d1 scus again
finrshes These mcluded BiJJ Heim
Wednesday, Capan 's throw of I SO and Fd McN1ff m the 440
feet and six mches not only won tnlerrne&lt;hate hurdles, as well as
the meet but bro ke the school Kellh Noren, who surprised
record by more than two fee t everyone w111n1ng the mile in the
Just as a warmup to his strong qUJck four minutes, 32 seconds to
performance m the discus, Capan upset teammate Jun McClurkin
placed second 111 llw shut
McCiurk111 lat er won t h e
three·m1lc
The spnn ts were just as strong
Strong Buffalo throwing
as Jerry W1lhams. Gaylord Kent ,
But, Capan ·s was not the unly
Bill Hannah and Charlie Quinney
wun the 44Q..yard relay l n
adtlllllln, WIUtams took the 220
and Quiuney won the I 100
For all occasmns
Happtly , th l.' team w1ll rravel to
LILA ROSENBLA IT FURS
HS Allen ( 11ear Delaware)
Clevelaud lonum uw lo fac.:e
MS:!-7200
Cleveland Slate The Vikings'
track 1s supposed tu be nne of the
Fa:::IQ~~=IJ;::I~~:n:lR~~ best amund ami many good trmes
The
are ex pected
WOOLY LLAMA
~
rm
J'
Spectrum Staff Wrltl'r

Furs Rented

ECONOMICS Of THE COlD WAR

................_.................
·~··· ·-·

-.

Hf C). ......

... _ _ .. '

I

•••ttl

10..0

- - - - Cl1p /In(/ ~.rvrt ----

Htllld ·e mhrotd&lt; '' cl f!t!cirUIIt
dntlung from h 11ucJ,,, uvutlahle
m man\' !I ~·It'! /elf /•nth 1,'10 r &amp;
glff\

Murlllll l'

wu~hal•l,•

/rtl/11 $111 (/{)

Opt''' Jatlt Ill

~ I'

m

480 Elmwood Ave
(nfllll

w u I ICI St

882 1082

I

"'"1

RESEARCHCTERMI PAPERS

1Wtt co vtlt "" tu/11/y 1111 top1cs . ~II
I ~lftm llttt cOif'fJ• grads sptK:Jalwng
I m your .,,.
I O RI GIN AL PAPERS $3 50/ page
I Sttnd rop1c dtiSCtlptJon and montty
I ord6r ro Pepers, 1nc.
1
P 0 Bo• 121 59
I
Hanford Conn 06112
PAP£.RS
$3 25/paoe
I ORIGINAL
OR IGI NAL PAP£' AS
$3 00/ paoe
I FILE COPIES
$2 OO/ p1198
I
1 For rh• ~~~;~~~~'ru" c• lf·

Walk in a ltght-footed shoe that' s as rugged as a heavywe1ght. It's the
softest sand-colored suede with sturdy weatherproof Malayan crepe ~ol es
Handsomely styled with unique front stitch ing and a leather heel kicker

t6::~R~~:IJ;;:IR~~;n::R~;;ua L - - -. Cl1p ilnd uvo - - - - -

MN8UNIIiiiYPI.YM8UIH
LIDDON'S BOOT SHOP, Buffalo
SQUIRE SHOP OF SNYDER, Snyder
GOLDMAN'S SHOES, Blvd. Mall, Amherst

ALI.CE COOPER

Stetson-Plymouth Shoes, Whitman, Mass. 02382

.

WICIW AND BUFfALO FiSTIVI..i P•• ..nt

ALso'SPIRIT'
April 21st at 8 P.M.

. I Au d Advance
Sole Tidcek $4.50
Memona
Tieken at dOOf $5.50
Tidr•.. en oDI• _.., .. lvHoo4. '•oriv•l rid!., OHic•, Hot•l S.•tl. Hlh..,
~y; U I , . _ Hat!. ~ Avtll....,,.. k• Offlc• • .,..,, ~Y
.. ..

~.M. NO CH AIRS ON FLOOR\

Friday, 21 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Pag~ twenty_-one

�---

ncr•

CLAIIIPIII
AD INFORMATION

etc. A ll p roressloni an d occupat ions ,

Clawlfe d ads m a y be piKed M o ncJay
tl'lru Friday DotwMn 9 a .m. a n d ~ :30
p.m. at 355 Norton Hall .

$ 700 to t3000 monthly. l!:xpemes
p aid, ov ert ime , sightseeing . F rH
Informa tion, write : J Obs OvtnNS,
Oopt . ES P .O . Box 15071 , San Diogo ,
California 92115 .

Tne student rates or an ad for one day
Is t l.25 fo r t ile first 15 word s ilnd $ .05
for N Ch additional word . S1 lo r each
additional day. The dNdllne l or
M ond a y Is Friday - tor Wed nesday 11
"
M onday a n d lor Friday 11 Is
Wednesday Dy 4:30 P.m.
" Help wanted "
ads c ann ot
discriminate on tho basis o f se .. , color.
c reed, o r national o rigin to an y o.octent
(I.e. prefera bly Is still d lscrlmlnii Ory).
"Found" ads w ill be run lreo -ol -c harge
lor a ma.oclmum ol 2 days and IS
words.
WANTED
Male seeks p lace to share nur campus
wllh same O wn ro om desuod Phone
831·3057
BASSIST, DRUMMER , femal e ~oc a iiSI
wanted lor working commerCial oroup
837 · 0811 L eave name and number
TER M PAPER
lor hiStory or
sociolo gic al theo ry o r an lndlv laual
such as Ourkolm or SL Simon C a lf
832· 8395 , luvo message
WANTE D ORGANIC c hem iStry
e "ams, Doctor W udl lnst• uctor W ill
PlY' Call Phil at I 284 · 9321
I N E E D seven pages o r old French
translated before April 29 . Will pay ror
coh erent tranllallon . C all 837·31149
SU MMER ROOMMATE Female,
o wn room, lurn lshOd. l · mlnuto walk
from c a mpus. Call Karon 1131-4072
ONE SI N GLE bed and one convertible
sola oecs. C a ll 833· 78~9.
US E D BICYCLE wanted In good
condition. PIN se c.ll Suw n, 833-7571.
S MALL AUTOMATIC car lor pra cll co
with licensed driver a nd take road test,
will pay. C all o.Dblo 886 · 1611.
PART- TI M E STUDENT - porterlng
and errands . t ~ hr . C oli 882 · llOJ fOr
appointment
A BAND to play semi-tradition al music
a t 1 Friday, June 9 woeldlng reception
C all 1!75-4952 In tho evening. KHP
tryin g! I
T w o GIRLS n Md place to tharo with
othon lor fall - n Nr campus. o wn
room• ciO!SirOd . C all Ellen 1131!·4 199
WABT EO • LINGUISTICS paper 1 1
1•s1 ""' .,_,.. long. Willin g t o po y,
call Fred 1136· 0737
PERSON S OF va rious occupations
regardi ng N orth Amer ican and
O versNs O pportunities, up t o t 2600
monthly . For complete ln ro r mallon ,
wrl\o to Job R - . rch, Bo)( 1253.
Sta·A. Toronto, Ont. EnciOie S 5 to
cover cost.
OVERSEAS JOBS lor stude nts Aun ra lla, Europe, S . Amoflc.ot. A frica,

Ava ila ble Juno 1st. N ear c.ml)us on
Main . Fully fu rnished. Call 8 32· 5607
or 8 35·S523.
4 · BEOROOM apt. $ 220/month.
utilities inc:ludoct . 164 wend• StrMt.
Call 896-556 3.

START $2/hr. salary plus bonus. W o rk
4 ·8
p . m . woekcUy s
10 ·2 p . rn .
Satu rdays, C all 835 · 380 3 or TF9.0402

APT . 3 bedr ooms o ff Hertel. Ava ilable
May 1 , S 180 a month •. Must buy
furniture. C a ll 837 ·6682 .

FULL OR part time jObs available with
Best L ine Inc. Call Art 886·2094 or
Mike 835 · 52 J S mMtlngs at El&lt;ecullve
Ramada Inn.

2-BEOROOM apt . Ma in near Oepew.
Brand now. S 16S htel. werytll lng.
Starts May. 837 -6848 or 632· 7936

A PARTMENT FOR R EN T

FOUR · BEORO OM apartment, S 175 • .
Parkslde and Amllerst. Near z oo.
Furnrture S 900
Call 8Jl 76'•9
Available June I

3·BEOROO M , FURNISHED aPI. . 5
min. walk to c ampus, l grad students,
quiet $11!0 • utilities, C all 833 -78 2 8 .

FOUR BEDR OOM apartment ofl
Bailey , IS · mlnute walk !rom campus.
Furnlsheo, rea~onaDie. Avarlable lo r
May 1 and no .. t~ar . Shelly 834· 0966 .

APARTMENT FOR couple starting In
May, S1 25 Includes utilities, furniture,
attic, p o rc h . CaniSius College area,
886· 278 4

HOUSE F O R R
T
Amnerst
l
large bedroo nu, uove, ref rigerat o r ,
dishwasher. garba~ d ls.pos.al. QUtcloor
baroe c. ue, r..orpolocl II'H OU!IIlOU I
SullaOhl lor J or 4 studonll L NS.O
required . Av• llablo Juno 15th S 275
per monln C all 633 1736

4 ·BEOA OOM FURNIS ttEO apt. n. . r
campus or 8 bedroom n ouse ava ilable
May C • ll 832· 8677
NICE FUR NI SHED room available
Near bus lines InCludes garage. C all
877 7602 .

TWO
BEA U TIFUL l urniS III!d
apartments In hOuse; available May
Sept . 3 people/ apartment ; 5 rnln walk.
negoti able . 831 22 85

AS O F May I, 4 bedrooms acrou h om
umpus , rent cheap, neg otiabl e c..otll
835 · 1305
MODERN , TWO bedrOOm Oln ene,
oat hroom. All lurnHnlngs and
appll,.ncos. For 4 stu de n ts
S150trnon th C a ll886 2 146

SUMNER ·ELMWOOO area , I and
2·boclroom apu . available. Furnished .
$ 150. to $ 250 885 ·8100 or 8 32 7 368

---

LAFAYE T TE
HEI GH T S
APAR rMENTS
20 min . to ca mpus.
F u lly lurn1snoc1, elfl clency s tud iO and
studio suite apirt ments. N o IN50
required Hyde Park B lvd . a t La layette
Avo. N iagara F alls. C a ll collect
2 1!4 -5711.

SE MI FURNISHED STUDIO apt.
C h e ap Cou ple wanted AvalloiiOie Moty
I. C a ll alter 6 p ,m . 8112· 3498
W ESTSIDE
FULLY furnished 2
bedroom apt . - ava llotb le M•y I - C a ll
881 0577, M arl, Bil l, fo r details.

-----

RIDE BOA R D

BIG BEAUTIFUL h ouse fo r rent Juno
1 and fall, 5'1• bedrooms close to
campus 837 1208

M ODERN 3 bedroom apartment
K I I c n • n el l nell e. 11v1 n g
room ,
ba tl'tloom , All f u rn itu re and
applianc e~.
Four students $65/mo
ea ch
Wa lking dlstanc.o to UB.
Avallaole May 1 C a ll ll!l 2lQ3, 9
.ot.m., p. m

----

ART MAJO RS only, living quarters , all
u111111 .. In cluded . $5 0/mo. w ith studiO
prlvllac;tes. C all 886 · 361 6 mornings.
BEAUTIFUL 3 ·b0droom a pt 1 mile
lrom campus. Backyard access to
Lincoln Park . Must b uy furniture at
re as on able pri c e . Really , I t 's
reasonable
837 · 1202, BOb, o .. vo,
Lou II.
UPPER HALF o f house, ve• v large.

FURN ITURE for sale : COKtl , tables,
ch a irs, ru g s, refrigerator, stove,
bedrooms, etc. Caii83~·5S10.
SU MMER EVENINGS on the front
Vas, frie nds, you gal this and more.
we 'll tttrow In a completely furnished
apt. , 5 - mlnute w~lk to c ampus,
bedrooms lor 2- 3 peo p le, utilities
Inclu ded , and air concllllonlng . Cheap .
Call 837.0674 .

FU RNITURE and assorted things
Cheap . Matchln9 sofas, la mps, rugs,
kllct10n utensils otnd appllancei. Call
876 · 2226.

BI CYCLE lor sale. C heap • M ust sell
26" Truck bike. 834 ·0562
FURNITURE lo r s ale D esks, large
dresser, lamps, living room table.
C heap l M ust s ell . 8 3 4.()562
200 cc OHC Ouc• t l mo torc ycle, red,
buddy Seal , two helmets with bubbles,
w ind shield , $ 245 . C alll!33 ·5678
PIANO FREE
873 7341

lor price o l movrng.

COOL DEAL : O ff· boucl "'" ' year 1
Lar9•slzed refrigerat or available May
9 . Pri c e negotia ble. Call Ly nne.
831 ·2897 .

STE REO, dre sserJ, electric stove ,
double be&lt;l
cheap C all Marge ,
87 5.0268

FURNITURE
Double bOd, f ram e
si ngle bed , dresser s, c nafr s, kitchen
tabl e , assortoel Other goodies, tu g .
Roasonablt rates t o r Nsonablo people,
Call 837 ·2877 or 832 · 70 12 . Ask lor
Robbie or Ste ncil .

'65 CHEV Y II st a llonwagon, 4 new
llros , 55 ,0 00 mu os , 6-cyllndor
standard, S~ 25 . 691 · 72116.

---

RIDE WANTE D to Boston otroa leaving
thiS Suncl~y or M ond ay . C a ll Jim
8337160

VERY GOOD
Sco tt amp,
speakers , n1no
•ppr o"lmately
831 ·361!3.

IF YOUR NOT GOING TO
EUROPE THIS SUMMERCOME TO
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••

FUR NITURE : Ono queen SIZed bOd ,
dresser vanity desk w ith c ha ir C all
886 · 7639.

EX CELLE NT two radial tires used
on ly lor 2000 miles A78· 1J (6 50· 13)
Art 837.08 35.

USED REFRIGERATOR l or sale.
Exc ellent condition Asking $ 30. Call
831 ·3 872 . Available Immediately .

AlOE WANTED t o C alifornia on or
ar ound A p ril 2 ~ . w ill share drivi ng ilnd

1969 vw fastba ck AM- FM, 4 -s peed
transmission , g reen with white 1n1er1or
Vo r y good condition
M ust sell'
834·9731.

19 71 VOL K.S WA GO N SuporbMIIe.
ora n v-, AM/ FM, 2 snow s . 9000 miles,
garaoocl, o the r eltlras
E"cellent.
83•1-115119 Doug alter 6 p ,m

AlOE WANTED t o Bost on or NV C,
Wednesday , April 26
C all Arnold
896-4256 (befo re 9 p .m.).

2 GIRLS desire com panion$ with ur
lor cross-country trotv..s Mil)' .. June.
PIN SO call 83 3 ·75 71.

VOLVO 164, 1969 automatiC. A/C,
AM·FM radials. gara ged and pampered
Perfect condi tiOn M ust be driven
831 38~2

S AAB 1963 (lOw engine, 7 tires, 2 new,
2 snow AM·FM , $4 50. A lso 100W
Capehart receiver. AM · FM pushb u t ton s
don't work , two 3 ·way speake rs, BSR
lurntable , K LH 41
tapoclec k ,
hNdphones, n - thiS year Musl SOli
S300. Moving 10 Texas Call Rick
833 · 571 8 .

S MI TH-CORON A portiiDie typewriter
super sterling - lin e cond ition - 211r
yNrs Old, t4 0 . C all 8 37.07 11! alter 5.

AlOE NEEDED to Ann Arbor this
-kond or next. Pl 0410 call 8 32 ·9~20 .
Ask lor Ellna .

TWO NYLON Mountain tents , ooth In
OKcollont condl\lpn . One two-man and
o ne throe·mln, ro.uonable 1!38·2S6 7 .

FORO VAN 1962 Sh&lt;, good condition
me&lt;:han lcally ; body Isn' t terrif ic, but
noll her Is yours 832 · 355 1'

RIOE WANTE D t o Color ado , leotv ln g
soon W ill share drlvlnc;t and ... penses
Call Jane 834-6596

LOOKI N G lor ri der t o Twllpa, Fl orid a
INvlng on or arouncl May 7 . Snare
e xpe nses. Call 8 37· 1617 .

REFRIGERAT ORS, s t ov es and
washers. Recondltlonoel , delivered and
guaranteed . o ..o Appliances, 844
Sycamora . TX4 -31 8 3 .

T WO A·R 4 ·X ~pNkors, $100 or best
o ffer . Brand now . Call O ebble
886 ·1 611.

FREEZER : 5 cu . II. , 8 months now ,
cell 837· 1203 . Must sell .

RIDE NEE DED to Plttsburgll o r
Cleveland tttls F r iday 4/12 and return
trip . C all 873 7953. Ask fo r AI

1964 V ALIA N T In ••cellon \ shape,
8 30 0 . Calf 832.0716 evenings .

PARAC HUTE l or sale
24 · 11 . white
sil k , g oo d
con d ition, unlimited
possibilities lor use . S30 . 83 7.0674 .

DRIVER NEEOEO to snare pick-up
tru ck t o and fr om N . Y.C. • round May
1 834-056 2 .

FU LLY FURNISHED sl" room
apartment t or ronl , wllh utilities.
Avotllotble June I
Suitable lor 4
students . Please ca ll alt e r 6 p m
877-8907 .
ONE BEDROOM apartment o n Crider
ac ross from Meyer Memorial Hosp ital .
S 100/month . Availabl e Juno I KMp
callln e 1!96.0285

MO"TOA CVCLE 1968 Klwasak l 3SO
tt. V ery good condition, t 500. Cllll
Harvll)l 8 37· 27!U , 8 36·5186.

FOR SALE

STEREO must be sold ;
Concord deck , Elco
reelS o f \ape eq u a l to
40 record s C a ll Milrk

STEREO
55-watt 1mpllller, BSR
turntable, • speakers end S upore x
tiNdphonls, Sl90. N-oollable Cill
837-()477 evonlnes.
FURNITURE : T w o dressers and I
student's desk GoOd conditi on. Call
1138·2 144 alter 5 P .m .
FOR SALE :
Wh it e , lull size
r efr igerator lreo2or. EAC ell o nt
conditi on. $~ 0 or best o llor C a ll
83~~5 19
1969 BENELLI 109 cc, go m pg, 2200
mi . Excellent condition, $ 345 or best
o ffer. 633 ·536~

197 J HON DA C B 350, 3350 miles,
line c.ondltlon. Ask in g S 700 . Ca ll
E dd ie at 874·6057
PANAS O N IC TV, 2 yurs old
E "collont condition Reasonable price
C illl Lynn 837 ·2195 .
'67 VW Squaretlack, n ew b rakes , good
b o cl y 1 g r Nt engine . AlmCHt any
r01sonable o ffer accepted . 634 .g 3~5
S MALL ~ cu refr igerator , walnut
Good cOndition C a ll R onnl 831-4 1 1~
o r S anel y 1137~62 7 Best o llor.
SCUB A
EQUIPMENT t w in 53's ,
lorm -flttoel back , pa ck regulator plus
C all Bru ce 873~ 132 for de\otlls .
S HADES O F GREV
k itt ens . C~ll 88 3 8754

two black lree

OONNA M ARI£
r o g lsUr e d
Olec:troiOQISt spoctalltlng In tho removal
Of UOWa ntoel Of 111perlluous hllr
Medically approved . Comp limentary
co nsult•llon by app ointment
545-897 8 , 233·59~9 , Asto ria, New
Vorl&lt;
TWAN G - Fencler tolecatler •pro-CBS'
good cond ition w / case, t 1SO Vox
a mp. ElCcollent conditio n , 2 sp . .ker~.
t i OO. Bo tti lor t 200 833-9760.
NIKKOR MAT FTN with 50 mm .and
105 mm . Nlkon len ses and acc e sso ries,
$ 300. C otll Seth 875 8195 .

1966 CHEVY Nove statlo nwagon .
Excellent con d ition
P owor-st Mrlngr
• utom ot tlc, neatot, radi o, snow tires,
$3 20 C all 839.0653 .

759~671!

USED FURNITURE tor sale Bfld,
solu, c netrs, dresser , desk , ruos,
refr igerat or 83 1·5 45 1 or 886-498 5 .

'6 1 BUI C K 67 ,000 miles New tires ,
up hol s tory , ba ttery . Excellent
c ondition , $JSO . Jack 836-6234 .

APARTMEN T lull o l f urnitu re lor
sale. Very rNso nablo. Com o buy Sat
I :OG-5 :00 182 Colvin.

1968 V W bug 50,000 miles. E&gt;tcelltnt
cond ition, sl.oc tires, A M· FM , rea r
defroster , t1200. C a ll 897 -3663

FOLK Ct..ASSI C g u itars
N - ·usOd
Marli n, Guilds, Gibson s , Cullan , e tc .
Eac;tle banjos, Oorovl dulcimers . Tho
St ring S h o ppe, 5 24 Ontilr lo, 7 p .m - 9
p .m ., Sat. 12·5 p .m . 874.0120 .

1969 VOLKSWACON - cl ea n, n ew
paint, 45 ,000 miles . O riginal o w ner
C all bOIWMn 8 : 3G-4 :30. 897 0751 ,
835-86 36.

1963

PONTIA C

S IOO .

'66 C HEVY nll eotmper,

See Charlie

e• e•e•• ••e• aeeae•••••e•••· ·····
WHERE YOU'LL FIND A LARGE SELECTION OF
MORROCCAN TAPESTRIES, PlLWWS .
HASSOCKS, HAND WOVEN BLANKETS.
CAMEL SADDLE CHA IRS, HANDBAGS

CJ.mbe Chapbn

Many assorted spreads from
SPA IN , FRANCE, PERSIA , POLAND &amp; INDIA
SP ECIAL!
From Now Until
MAY 1st, 20% o ff with
Student J.D.
Also : Complete Waterbed syste ms
from S64.95 including bed, frame liner, foam pad .

51 allen street, buffalo,n.y.14202
Pag~ twenty-two . The Spectrum . Friday, ~ April 1972

~

"MODERN
TIMES"

Wnnrn. pn..Ju.eo&lt;l anoi &lt;III'«IC\1 ~ {)yrJt., Ch..rlm

Rdt'4-o('\lr hn.'UI:h C~olumh&lt;,; 1'-.rurl."-

NOW
S HOWING!

884-2405

Call

J ell

Insulated,

�under 50,000 miiM, 6&lt;VIIndw, ltd.
shltt. bc.IIMtt condition, 6 exullent
tl,.., t6e5. Call 135·3051,
FISHER XT·78 14)NI&lt;M syst-.TU,
faotory -led, Flfher 5-yur ou•r•nt. .,
12" woofer, 2·5" mid-ran~ 2·3"
t-ter. Only t100. Call AI 835-6637.
FOR SALE: AMPEG 8·12 amp for
Vlter, baSS, Of91n. C•ll 835·7579 . Fr"
I&lt; ISS.
PERSONAL
DEAR CHUCK: Where are you? You
c.an c.all some of the people all of the
ume, and all of the people some of the
time, bUt It VO\I Ull all Of the IMOQI.
all of the tim., tne lines will get
Jammed.
EVE, c:ome ny with me. The Sea of
Tranqu ilitY Is es huven Itself. Love,
Adam .
f&gt;4S : How could you choose Stu B«ge~
over fr. . propnylec:tlcs? Mryhp.
SIL.L.V YUM·YUM II e dum-&lt;!um. L.ove
B.L. &amp; N .
P5YCHOMAT Is I time when you c.an
,peal&lt; and .,. understood; • place
wnere you will want to listen end
rully hear another PM~on . Attend
Wednesday, 3·6 p .m., Clfltlrla 122 or
Thursday, 7·10 p .m ., Norton 232
HOME CONTRACTING tired of
nigh priC!Il and low QualitY
workmanshlp7 Twin CU1141l Co. hU
been f ormed by former U .B . oredu11e
to answer such 1 question. Now giving
ftH estimate&amp; for the following work :
hOuse painting, wallpapering, gutters
cleaneo, repaired, small Jobs the Iaroe
exptollers turn ewey. Cell tlow before
busy season gets und-ay. After 6:00
p.m. LeOI'Ird 885-6831.
wOULD THE person who wllnessecl a
flgnt betw•n a German Shephard
security Guard 000 end an I r lsh Setter
on tne night of April 12 at 8 : 30p.m .,
please call Sue at 835...548 or Steve at
831 5502.
TRAVEL. COMPANION wanted t o world - over 21. C .all Roo 674-2125.
COME HEAR about Ban• 'u' 1'-h.
ean al world F.althf Rm , 262, N orton.
Ev ery Friday 8· 12 p .m . or call
837 3252.
M OTO RCYCl.E + AUT O lnturance.
Inst ant FS · 1 ntg.trdless . of age or
driving ,.cord. WilloughbY I nsurenco,
1624 Main Sl., Bufhlo, N v
885 · 8100, Mon.·Frl., 9-8 p.m., Sat. 9 2
p.m .

LOST So FOUND
LOST : Brown wallet, Main fl oor
Nonon men'J room. At INst return ell
papers Norton Lost &amp; Found . No
QUeiiiOOI Uked.
GOl.D·PLATEO pOCket walctl
In
4246 Room 38 Rid~ L N . Cell
675 6942 after 3•30. R-ardf
FOUND : Psych rNdlngs, Acheson 5,
4/ 19. Pat v . Clelm o1t Spectrum office.
FOUND: Eye glasses . Behind Baird
Hall on Tu• .• 4/18 . C laim at S pectrum
Olflce {355 Norton).
"WHEN YOU'RE dMd, you're dud.
M•k• love while you can . It'' 90od for
vou •• - Kurt Vonnegut, Jt.
L.OST: Red wallet In 147 Olef., Mon.
evening . PLEASE return . Extremely
Import ant
pape.s, pretcrlptlons.
Spectrum Office.
FOUND IN Clark Gym on April 14th.
Pair of girl's sneakers. Call 838 ·2567.
Ask for 81n"Y .

AOOMMA TES WANTED
O WN
ROOM, $60/mO . utilities
InCluded . Summer and/Or fall. Call
Nick 883· 3522 Avallabll June 1.
PERMANENT
roommate wanted
S!orlln g May 1st, $50 t I block from
campus. Own room. 837..0403 .
MAL.E ROOMMATE for the summer
O wn room (furnished! . Flve·mlnule
walk - onlY 155. Call 836-8429 .
CO UPL.E WANTEO for summ•r. Hug&lt;t
1 minute walk
be&lt;Hoom, double bed
to campus. Cathy. 831·3152 . Steve
831 ·3284.
rEMALE ROOMMATE n•ded f or E
Northrup apartment, summer and fall .
C all Meryl 837 - 0456 or J0o1n
837·3209.
ONE FEMALE roommate wanted to
~hare extra·large attic room, 'lz block
lrom can1pus. Call 837·2846.
1 or 2 female roommates. Walking
distance. Call E tl.se or Meryl 832·3844,
836 ·11 02, 831·5389.
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for
summer only. Own room, 1 minutes
wall&lt; from campus, Cell 833 ·4711'1 or
831 ·3763.
FEMALE roomm~te f or own room In
2·bedroom apt. 10 minutes walk 10
campus, $55/month. 835 ·1557.
ROOMMATES wanted
summer
an d/or fall - great big house - walking
dlstar~ce- ChNp. 834 · 7461.
ONE MALE roommate wantad for
summer months. own bedroom In
luKurlous 1partment five-minute
wall&lt; from campus. Jus1 what you've
been walling for. Call Jeff 831-4113 o r
837-4183.

1

FEMAl.E roommate, own room,
ftv•mlnut. w•lk t9 c.ampus. Qood deal
for hnuery
Stan Sept. 1.
837· 1342.

.,.cs.

ONE FEMAl.E
own room,
t63/month lncludlne utilities. 10
minutes from campus. 833..0204 .
SUMMER ONLY. t65tmo, Delewue
off Kenmore . Own room , 831...096
efler two.

_..,let, lO&lt;Ifo diJCOunt WIUI thh .CS,
Grupp Bros. 177·2250.
AUTO INSURANCE - 19Kiallzln9 In
YOYnt drivers • no Chal"!ll for accidents
M traffic vloletlons, Immediat e FS·1,
Wtve up to 1100/year. ~3-0022 .
ANTIQUES and modern furniture,
ceramics, c:tllna, etc. s" Sid at
Ywtefelay • TomMrow Shop, 1439
Heriel Ave.

SUB-LET APARTMENT
ROOMMA'TE WANTED f or furnished
ep.artment for summer (09110n lor
fall) . Rent 170 + utilities. Loc.atlon :
Main Sti"Mt, acrou from UnlverJIIy
Own room. Call .lOI\n or Dave
837·2471 .
MALE ROOMMAT E wanted : Five
minutes fr om
Rldoa l.et. Air
conditioning, pool. C ell 691-6518 or
856 · 1045.
O NE OR TWO malo roommat es
wanted for modern apartment louted
two blocks from Allenhurst bus .
Occup.ancy ne~Ct ~estet. For further
Information c.afl 836-4169 .
MAL.E OR female roommates wanted
lor summer, 135 • utilities, own room,
L.lnwood-Summer area. 886...985.

6PACIOUS, furnlilled l-bedroom apt .,
3·mlnute walk to c.ampus, evallable
Mey through August, rent rNsonabla.
Caiii38 · 37J5.
TWO BEOROOMS available for
summer, 1 minute from campus.
Femeles only, Call Betsy et 832·5 594 .
3·5
BEDROOM apt. on Henot.
Furnished, 2
p orches , flrepiKO,
t120/mo. May ht Sept , 1st.
GREAT. 132· 7482.
2 or :1-BEOROOM apartment, 1S·mln.
ride to campus, $50 per room •
utilities. 8g2·2317 .
1-8EOROOM ept. furrtlilled, 5 min.
watl&lt; from umpus, Avellable May{ June
- Sept . 1n eKponslve Call 8l1·206o4.

J ROOMMATES male/and femJit ,
June and/or Sltl)tember , 3-bedroom,
furniShed apartmel't, 145 each •
utilities, 198 Minnesota. Call Ellen
837 ·2 658, 5-rnlnute walk to c:empus.

BIG BEAUTIFUL. hOuse W bllt , 4
bedrooms. avellable, Air cond itioner,
dlshWISher. Corner of Merrimac.
AvalleOie May 15 - Sept . 1 . 8 38 -4840.

FEMAl.E GRADUATE student
wanteo to illare tlouse, Amherst . Own
room, $65/month , sterling May 1.
692 ·2088, 692·2190 .

2 ·•
FEMALES
•par tment l or
summer. Sunporch, oack\lard, gar•g&lt;a
On MerrlmK. Fully f urnlsned. Call
831·2.89o4 ,

ROOMMATE wanted Princeton Court
Apts. Own room. Call 837-4052 after 6
p.m. or 831 · 1704 during diY. Ask ror
Gupta,

HOUSE FOR •ny number of people.
Five bedrooms. CI05e. Rent negotiable.
Steve 83S·S015 . Bll1831 · 2959 .

SUMMER r oommates needed, 2 large
bed rooms, 1 minute walk from
campus. Call Catnv 831 · 3 152. Steve
831 ·328•
ONE ROOMMATE, own room, two
blocks from campus . Summet only.
Call 837-418!; or 831 ·2085.
FEMAl.E ROOMMATE wanted
Septaml&gt;et 1st, Own room In mod ern
IPartment with dishwasher, fully
carpeted . Wilking dlltance t o campus.
Mu st love dots. C all 8 34·108 7.
O WN ROOM flv•mlnute walk from
Qm p us, bright, clean. June 1st or Sept.
tst or 1&gt;om . Call 837..0790.
TWO ROOMMATES, male, grad
students praferred, summw and/or
next yur . One vo~canc:y ucn beglnnlnQ
M•Y l. June 1 . 145 N ch • utll l lles.
C ommonwulth. C all Oave 873 · 73.41

MISCELLANEOUS
EXPERIEN'C !ED typing term PIP«S,
S.AO/peee. C all Carol 837·27 18.
POl.ITICS A LREAOYl You bet.
Come work for John Phelan In the
N - Yortl State Senate race. Supp ort
the man that supported 18·year-ola
vote . Call 842-6095 . Asl&lt; for Peg or
Elinor
l.ADIESI Be way out this summefl Gel
yourself ori ginally desl9ned nand-made
"Kurtas"/dresses f rom Pattlst•n with
9 tau- worl&lt; and gold or sliver thrua
embroidery . C.all be fore 10:30 a.m or
7·9 p.m . 837·5881.
AVAILABl.E: Young wom•n to clun,
babYsit, help with anything Available
MaY l . Write Box 30 .
SAVE OUR SCHULTZ! from SPCA .
F riendly malo dog needs new home.
'Pleaw call 886 · !366, 885 -9185 .
NEED A WAY to transport you r
belonglnQS to Long Island In May!
Dependab le service, price rusonable
end n119ot1eble. Call Artt~ur 835 ·12 76
or 83&amp;-4046.
81CYCl.ES repaired all ktnds c:neap and care f ul service, Bllrt Jones,
92 Wallace, 835-6739 .
TYPING, experienced ,
etc . Call 8 33-1597 .

term

pal)ers,

TYPING - business or personal - term
papers,
theses, m•ss malllugs
Reeson.a.bte rates. Call 937-6050 .
EXPERIENCED typist, pe rsonal and
business, electric:
typewriter,
reasonable rate$, term papers,
$ .40/p.Jge. C all 845 · 5746 JoAnn
TYf&gt;ING OONE, e&gt;tcellent work,
reasonable - '"" 'L.ee' at 675·6337
after 5 v .m . for details.
L.EAVING 8UFFAL.OI We 'll deliver
truniU, etc , to N v .C • Long I stand
area . $1 0
trunk~. 884-4958
or
1182· 3277 .

FANTASTIC L.OCATION - tummer
roommates wanted - Wlnspeer Ave ,
Reasonable rent . C•ll J•ne 837·3209 or
Shelley 832·7682 .
BEAUTIFULLY
FURNISHED
three-bedroom •partment for 3 or "'
Sunporch,
free utilities , TV,
community pool, sewing m.chlne.
June - August 20 ·mlnull walk Call
831 ·38 85 .
THREE-bedroom furniShed apartment
from May or JuM thru September,
6120 Terry ot J - 873-6174 . Tfl.onk
you . Kenmore·Delawaro Ave.
HOUSE - five bedrooms
completely
furnished. Groups ot Individuals. June
- August . s4 5 Nch NUr Allenhurst
on N l ag ar• F aiiJ . Really r~lce .
831·3556.
l · BEDROOM apt
IO sub ·let lor
summer . Reasof1able . J~e or Terry
873~17• .

2-&amp;EDROOM ept . to Wb·let IO·mln.
Will&lt; f rom Cllmpus. t90tmonth . Start
June 1. Ellen 835 · 1557 .
• ·BEDROOM house fur nished. washer
.,,., dryer, short wall&lt;, M ay IS - SePt
I ChNP- 833· 7&amp;4 9 .
FEMALE to shire apt. with another
for summer. O wn room . Walking
distance. s50. Wendy 836·5169 .
4 · BED ROOM a pl. to sub · let.
AmherSt/Main
rent negotiable.
874-6057 , 836-8517 (pets allowed) .

3-IIEDROOM house tumllhed, tl20 a
month, 5 mlnut41J from amput.
Available. May 15, 83W7U,
APARTMENT on Wlnspear - 2 llr11,
own rooma.. Mid-May Auouat.
Rusonabl•. OM roommoto needed
September. 831 ·3919.

BEAUTIFUL co· ed apt . needs people
lor summer. 4-mlnutes to campus.
Furnlthea . Rent nogotllbfe. 831 2794
APARTMENT to sub·let Starln-+hrtel
area . 3 bedrooms May 15 - Sept. 15.
837-6575 .
L. UXURY apartment l or tnree t o
•ub·let
surlln9 Mav or June.
DIShwasher, go~rba911 disposal and wall
t o wall carpeting, 15 ·mlnute walk from
campus. Call 832 ·60S2 .
FEMALE
roommateo wan ted f o r
beauttlul nouse on e block from
e.~mpus
June
to Aug. 31. Call
837· 0395 .
MODERN
APARTMENT
being
suO·IOtled fr o m M.av 10th lhru the
montn o f August, IOC... ted two blocks
from Allenhurst. Rent neqottoble. Call
836-4169 .

FOUR-eEDROOM houM on Am,_.t
bloCk from Main. JuM - Auou~
Rtnt n..,Uable. Call Danny 835·7S71.

-

AIR

POOL., blrttec:ue, dlthweh•, wathef,
dryer, n•r c.ampus. Price negotiable. l,
2 or~ gllrls, 3 bedrooms. 131· 3195,
831·3182.
SNYDER - thr-Ndroom. furnlah~
house available lor June. July, Auoua~
Nur Moln Sti"Mt. Nur tennis coortt
and pool. 1225/mo.. lnc:tyCIIng utllltle.
139· 3754 or 831 · 3130.
TWO FEMAI..E.S wanted to share
PUu tltu l furnished op.artmMt. Wilking
dlst1nce frorA c.ampus . Reasonable
..-nt. One Ndroom aveiUtble lor fill
sem•ter. Call 838 ·2091 .
ACROSS FROM campus - fenlattlc
apartmen t f o r
four . Furnished.
Available May through August. C•ll
835·2811 .
OWN ROOM S In house on Wlnspear to
suiHet Mev tll r u August. Right et
University entrance . Rent negotlebto.
Cell 836-17 79 .
3'h· BEOROOM HOUSE available June
1 - Sept. 1. 5 m inutes from campus ,
Very reuonable. Call 83$-6127 .

4-BEDROOM apartment, 10-mlnute
walk to umpus. Chupt May 15 Aug. 3 1
&amp;31 · 3962 , 8 31 · 2550,
831·2174 .
l-MONTH - oeesroom, living room,
l&lt;ltchen . All for 162 .50/montfl In
Elmwood 1rN, n u r Brinks Call Tom,
886-4252
FURNISHED HOUSE rlgt\t across
from c.ampus on Englewood l or
summer , 4·5 people. Ront $4 5'.
832-4133 .

CONDITIONED 3-bedroom
for up to 5 people to aub.Cet
fM aumm•. W ~ D, dllhwahet, full y
Qtpeted. Call 831 -3768 .
~mtrlt

$-8EDROOM1 turnlthed ; 5-rnln. wall&lt;
to c.amOU$1eA11 JeH 139-4223.
ROOM IN apt. to be sub-let. Al'lllable
June to Auouat. Rent negotiable. Apt.
on Amherst. Call 834·7785 .
175/month. June S~tember. 3
bedroom, furnlsheCI ..,artment with
sunporch . Main
FlllmOO"e ..,.• •
832-9044 •
FREE MAY RENT! Modem IMng In
II u ff at o with dlshwllhet, washef,
drY•, two Ndroomt. Available Me)' Aug. 31. for femala. 10-mln. wahl
from campus.
Rent
neeottat~te.
836.a624.
SPACIOUS t wo-tloor, four-bedroom
epartmWil to sub·let JuM l - Au_..a
31.
Rent negotiable. Exc:ellent
loc.a tton . Call 131·U79, 8 31·2281 .
NICE FURNIS)iED opartm•nt.
KenmMe·Oellware eru . May till StOL
Roes o n•ble rent . Tnr-.bedroom.
Al~la . 876-5020 ,
6-&amp;EDROOM HOUSE o n Engl-ood ,
A vailable Ju,.. tst, 2-rnlnute walk.
Price n egot i able. C alf 131 ·2751,
831 ·2568 .
FROM MAY lit tO August .llst, 4
bedrooms on Lisbon . Cell 8 31-4069 01'
831-4067. Good condition.
BEAUTIFUL. ep.~rt mo nt available June
1st till August 31 . Four bedrooms.
C lose to campus. Price nogoiiJble. Call
831 ·226 1/2259 .

BEAUTIFUL specious six ·bedroorro,
two ramlly hOUM Fully furnished,
urpeted, washer .and dryw, g.trage ,
basement with darkroom. C I058 to
cam pL.. . Summer onlyi
Rant
negotiable 833-8812 .

STEVE LIPMAN , congratulations on
your
recent a ccept ance to tne
Northwestern Qreduate Program In
Journalism . Curt , Rena, Tim

BIG BEAUTIFUL 6-bedroom hOUM 3
bi&lt;Kks (f) from campus May 15
Aug1,1st. Cell Jo.tnlo, 832 · 5440 .

NEED two roommates from May 1 to
Sept. 1., $5 0. Furnished , bNutlful
•rea . Olg a nllc size, conven ient.
835 ·3947 .

2 FEMAI..ES w•nted to SOb·lot 2
rooml for summer. One from Moy I August 31 ones one f rom July I
Aug.
31 . C.oll 1134·1993 an ytime.

3 ·BEDROOM apt . 01'1 En91ew ood.
Available Ju ne ht. l ·mlnute wall&lt; . Call
831 · 2465, 831·276 ]

FURNISHED tlouse t o sob~et tor
somm•. ThrH blocks lrom campus.
Rent cheap, negotl&lt;111&gt;le. C.all &amp;38-4426 .

BEAUTIFUL 3-4 bedroom, fu rnished
!louse, 5-mlnute walk from campus.
May - September , Price negotiable.
C lll 835 ·5 007 .

FIVE · BEOROOI¥1
ap1rlmont
furnl•h.CS Amtlerst a rea. Available May
15 to September. C .all Lou 833.0103
0t De.,. 838·39~8. Prlee 8175/month.
ONE FEMAL.E r oommore, own room,
nlea h ouse, 150. Moy 15 tnru Aug. 31.
Hertel ond Voortt-. 838-4816 .
4 BEOROOMS for 5, U 15 plus
vliiiUos, Hertel and Colvin Moll 1 thru
August Jl.Call838-4619.
01 VINE
tour·bedroom ap•rtment.
3-mlnute walk to campus, s4a rent.
Call 832·814S M•v thru Sept.
HOUSE IN glorious Tonawanda to
wb-101 lor 4 people. Pool end P&lt;Ork
Ptenly of tun ena fun . Call
M ike •t 838 · t 161 or 831 · 2885 or Fred
at 831·2453 .
neo~rbv.

4 · BED ROOM apartment, l ·mlnute
from campus May - Sept., rent and
length of illY Is very negotl•ble. Call
Jull•n 831 · 2360

Walldng d•une. to amou• on Meln
St. Aval..biO Mey 20 - AUfiUit. Rent
negotiOble. 134-9739.

2-&amp;EDROOM, J •person turnlsned apt .
S·mlnute Will&lt; . M•Y 15 IO Sept l. $
rNsonable Call 831 ·2282, 831 -2284,
83H!370
SUMMER H O ME for studenu Tnree
bfldroo ms on Bailey. Call lor price
otternoons 837 1202.
H O USE TO SUB·LET, ~ b.Orooms.
Available M•ll 15. Price negotiable
875 · 51S4 .
THREE ana lour·bedroom furnlsned
apartment. llve · mlnute walk to
campus SuO·Iet trom Mev 15. t 120
and $1 40
837 3984 , 884 ·3592,
835 ·5265 .
TWO S EORUO MS available tn large ,
furniShed apartment on Englewood for
June to S eplemOot . Colli Ellen,
831 · 3963 or Debbie 8J2 · 5S9A
FURNISHED

2 -oedroom

APARTMENTS WANTED
SENIOR and grll4 desperat ely f\McS
2.0octroom apertmon t "*'r campus or
Ridge LU. Helen 831 ·3970 .
WE N£ED en ap• rtm ent t o sub-lei May
througn June. PINt&lt;~ call su,
838 ·2775 . Tllanlt you .

TWO FEMALES aoslre 2-0edroom apt.
on west Side lor summer and 14111
837 · 1208
APARTMEN T lor t w o nur cam p us.
W 1II t ake ap.artment a1 soon as
flec essary Phone 836 · 7802 .
REWARD lor l-bec:lroom Of
•tudlo apt. for May. Call
837-6848 .

1ar9e
Julie

$10 REWARQ , Couple need1 one Of
two -bedroom apaflment close to

com pus M•yfJune, 886 · 1805 .

---

ART STUDENTS l'leed two-bedroom
apartment suortlng Sept. Preferably
close to campus Coli $37· 3984 or
1134 ·3401.
COUPl.E NEEDS apt. nur US l or
'72 '73 yNr Call8•th 833-6134 .
WANTED: 3-bedroom apt . In UB area
lor next Sept. Call Howle 838-4892 .

HELP• 1 need a place to stay lor tne
summer
and
fall
C all Sharon
836 ·2 304 .
wANTED : 3-0edroom apt. In U .B . ilrU
lor ne&gt;tt S ept. Calf Howle 838-4892
ROOM WANTED for Septomb•r
Pre fer to live near campus wlln
conSiderate people. Call Art 831 ·2685

apartrnont

FEMAL.E TO SUb·lot apartment Wltll
two others Juno August. Own
furnished ro om. Genesee-ealley
s30tmo. 893· 11 25.
THREE · BEDROOM apartment ,
5·mlnute walk from campus . f'ully
furnished . Call Howle 838·1167 , B ob
831·3963 or Larry 834-6661.

TWO black and white 8· week Old
kittens need 900d homes. C all
1139·0518 after 6 p.m

FOUR · BEDRO O M
HOUSE FOR
F I VE Bnutllul! IO·mtnute w.all&lt; to
campus Will rent lndlvldu•IIY or
9f'Oups - May
Sept , 1. $42/mO.
838·4576.

RECENT UB grad offers lree advice on
lifo Insuran ce and neattn lnsur.ance to
$1ude nts, young marrletl or other Call
Herb 634-6050 or 634-6870 .

3·BEOROOM apl. 4 2 Custer . June I to
Sept. 1, S150 a month. Call Joe
832· 6127 .

PROFESS I ONAl. TVPING done tn
nome. $.50/page. Formetly operated a
pro lesslonal typing service. 229A
Parl&lt;slae Ave. or ull 838-4808 .

4 ·BEDROOM apl . basement, go~ra~ .
For summer . Soft furniture. Main at
talk•ble. N orm
Fillmore . Rent
832·5888 .

INTERESTED In going to Munich lot
the Olympic g•mes this summer~ For
Information, ptlone 833 · 4638.

BEAUT! FUL. old nous.o. Close to
campus. Summer. Furnlsheo . Two
bedrooms. Available Price negotiable.
Gary, 834· 1415.

AaM~pa• IM"'IQU:.g. C'1oWtU• tn l Ut~
_.fOM~a1tOM ~ ...,...,.

.-net to. cou

Mltd.ly wf~ anct hot~..
tw)rA
dun .... , IJU ., Kl """
. . . . . . . ""'""' ftM..aol...

AUTO RADIOS and tapes , Sales .and

Friday, 21 April 1972. The Spectrum . eaqe twenty-three

�Announc:ements
TIM Hole-d Boya Club needs volunteeR - judo,
hr~te and fentlna lnstruc:tol'l. Contxt Bob lelpler,
exec;utlve dlrec:tor, Holland Boys Club, 51 South M~ln St.,
Holl~nd , N .V., S37-9370.
The UB Veta Club •nd VIetnam Veterans Aplnlt the
W•r will h~e ~ meetJna today at 5 p.m. In Room 260
Non on to dlsc;us.s the escllatcd w~r.
CAC will run the Allentown CommunitY Center over
the summer. Volunteel'l ;are needed for the day camp ~nd ~
teen proaram to ~ held In the evenlna. ContKt Ole CAC
ofOce, Room 220 Nonon , or call Mike , 837~732.
WNYPfRG's Home Safety proJect needs volunteei'J.
Anyone Interested , plu.se c;onUct Kuen Liebert, c/o Bo~&lt;
20 Norton Hall or call 8 3 1·2663.
The french Club Is sponso ring a coffee hour from
7 ·30 8 :30p.m. tonlgtlt In Room 234 Nonon . Everyone Is
cordia ll y invited to auend .
The Underaraduate Medical Society woulll like to
announce that Juniors m;ay now pick up AMCAS request
cards from Fran In Diefendorf 106. Pie~ c:heck with uch
school you plan to appl y to for each one's own speGial
requirements and dudlines .
Hillel will hold a S~bath Service this evening at 8 p.m.
In the Hill el Hou~oe to b e followed by an Oneg Sh~bbat.
Colleae f will have a softball
today, nur Clark Gym. All invited.

~me

The WNYPIRG R-uc:h lind Community R._,na

The Hillel T&amp;lmYd Clau will meet on Sundily at 3 p.m .
In the Hillel House library.

Commit~ will meet todlly ~t 4 p .m . Consult bulletin for

loc:nlon.
The Hllel c:IMe In Co~tlonal Htb.- (adnnced)
will meet on Sunday at 12:30 p.m . In Room 262 Norton.
The elementary c lltSS meets lit 1 :30 p .m .

The Hillel Ca-In Torah With Com,..,tarlea wWI meet
tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. In Dr. Hofmann's home, 12 COlton
Dr.

Europt~~n Styles - photoar~hs of peCJC)Ie and places In
Eui'Ofl• by Mkkey Osterrelcher on e~&lt;hibi t throush April 23
in the Center Lounae, first floor of Norton H&lt;~ll.

The Student POl ish Culcure Club will have 1 meetln&amp;,
dec;tions and a leGtu re by Dr. Stanlsl1w Ooabrow~ l on " An
H istori cal View o f the May 3 Con.scitutlon" Sunday In
Room 233 Nonon. Meelinl and elec: tlons oac 7 p ,m. , lecture
at8 p.m.

Final 1udltlons for Strindbera's Dream Play (directed
by Terry Moore o f C rutlve Associates) ;and Gh ost Sonata
(directed by Elizabeth Axelrod of Buffal o Theoatre
Worttshop) will be held tomorrow from 1- 3 p.m. l l
D'Youvllle Colleae Theatre. Actorl, singers Vld dancers are
needed . Production dates ;are May JI-June 11.

The UB Bicycle C lub will be riding up on the Canadl;an
side of the Niagara River t o the falls on S unday. It Is a 60
mile ride for e~&lt; perlenced cyc;lists. L eaving from in front of
Norton ;at 10 a.m. Brinalunch and identification.
The UB Rldlna Club will be holding elections todiiy 11
3:30 p.m. In R oom H2 Norton. Anyone interested in
running tor an office must attend the meeting.
CAC Envlronmenul A ction is sponsoring a glus
recycling drive ;at the Allenhurst bus stop tomorrow from
I 3 p.m . All participation ;and help as appreci.Jted

at about J p m

Tonlaht the Depattment of Music's University Open
Studio will present a F estival ofMythsinMinlatureat8:]0
p. m In the Baird Reclul Hall .
The ()peru by Darius Mllhaud , are being performed In
honor of the comp&lt;Ker's eigtltleth birthday, and will mclude
Tht Abduction of Europa, Arlodnt Abondoned, The
LfbeiTJtlon of The:stuf, and The Woes of Orpheus.
Mllhaud calls the first three works Opera -MulUtes
bec:ause of thetr lenath. The Woes of Orpheus Is In three K ts
and 1 subuanti all y longer work. The proarilm will be
presented througtl April 23. Tickets are avail~ble at the
Norton Hall Boo: Office and the Baird H&lt;~ll Concerr Office,

Hillel's Operation Greenllaht will hold Its c:toslna afbir
tomorrow oat 8 :30p.m. in the H illel Hou~oe.
WNYpt RG Is looking for people who have ideas for
resurc;h projects. Please luve your name and telephone
number In the WN VPIR G mallbo~&lt; In Room 220 Norton or
send It to : WNYPIRG, P .O. Boo: 70 N orton Hall, Stoate
University at Buffalo.
A Symposium on Modernist lnterpf'eUtlon of Anctent
L oaic will be held today •nd tomorrow In Room 14, 4244
Rldae Lea. Today : 9:30 A.m., Distinctive Feacures in
Cueaorlu; 10:45 &lt;a .m., Aristotle on the Meaning or Names ;
1 p .m ., G reek Logi c and Greek Mllthematlc.s; 2:15 p .m.,
Aristotle's Nlturil Deduction System; ilnd ]:30 p.m.,
Corco riln on Aristotle's Logical Theory . Tomorrow . 10
A.m., Modem Noutions for Ancient Logtc; II : IS a.m .,
Deduction in the Scoles; ;and 1 .30 , final pilnel. Sponsored
by the Departmeot of Phllosopl)y 1n cooperation with the
dep•rtments of CliiSStcs, lln&amp;uiUics ilnd Mathematics

Sports Information
p.m .
Tom~rrow · Varsity baseball , West Vlrgrnlil, Peelle
field, 1 p .m. ; junior varsity boasebilll doubleheader .at Alfred
Tech, I p.m.; Club lac:ros.se .at Nloagaroa , 1 p .m.; varsity tr.ac:k
.and field at Cleveland State, 1 p .m., cl ub crew .at the Wc \ 1
Side Rowing Club with Wayne Sute .ilnd C•ni\lus, 2 p.m .
Su nd1y : Club crew ill the West Side Rowing Club will)
Bulhlo State, Canislus and Grind Vi.llev Sute, 2 p.m. ,
1unlor varsity baseball, Nl•aar.a County Community (.ollege ,
Peelle Field, I p .m .

Mond.ay ; V M~ilv \pr ing goll al Rot.hesttr I e~h . 1.10
p.m
Tuedoay Varslly \Pring golf at the UntVfl\ih u l
R &lt;X:heste r. 1 ; JO p .m .; 1unaur varshv baseball .at Nt..g•r•
Commun at y College, 1 p.m.
Wedntsd.ily . V.aBity b~b.illl doublehe.ldcr , St
Bonavencur~. P~elle Field, I p .m ., juntor v•rslty b.a.seb.all 41
Erie Community C.ollege, J p .m , v.1r~t1y tuch 1od fteld .at
Brockport Su te wtth Robtrts Whleyo~n, 4 p.m
Roller hockey .u:cron conttnue\ So~turdiy mornan~t .rt
10 30 .am an &amp;he M•m·B••Iey p.ar.,ang lot behtnd C.oodyur
tt.all.
There woll be • bicycle rue Sdturd.a y 41 II o~ m behand
U.arl- uym I hrrf' wall ht \P• tllllerent d U \ ( \ t&gt;f r•lt\ lw
men •nd women

Available at the Ticket Offic~
Shll w Festlv.al
tunc 1 J. July 'l· I hi' Rovullumll•
July 16 Sep t 2. C.t•rtlnq Mllrrlt'cl
tul~ 19 '-crt l M11ullumu·
Aug. ~ 1'1 lnnlfrh
- Osterrelcher

Whal's Happening?
Friday, April 21
2001
A '&gt;ptJtr Odl'l'~'&gt;, d~&lt;ected by Sto~nley
Kubnck , C•pen 140, 9 p m , •dmtssaon chuge, ai•O
shown tomorrow o~nd Mond•Y .
Nickel rhutre : 8 p.m ., Ftllmore Room, also presentel.l
tomorrow , prhented by the S tudent Theatre Guild
admission $ .05 .
'
Aprtl Orgy of Thutre Energy. State Unlverstty ;at Buffalo\
Ed Smith, "Movements an Black The•tre," 4 p.m.;
Street Sounds, play by Ed Bullins, directed by Ed
Smath, 8 p.m., both in Hamman Studto Thutre.
UUAB folk Fesllvill: Doc Watson and ten other groups,
7:30p.m., tent on Clark Gym Field, admission charge.
University Operil Studi(): "A Festival of Myths in
Miniature" by Darius Mllh•ud; Arladno Abundonedd,
The Abduction of E.uropt, fhe Liberation of Theseus
and The Wolvrs of Orpheus, 8 :30 p.m., Baird Hall,
admission charge, illso presented tomorrow and
Sunday.
Film: Mirac/t in Milan (Italian), 5,7 •nd 9 p.m., Diefendorf
147.
Evening for New Thutre : Thret N(Xtllrnts . A Sonotu for
film

A • lots, 8 10 p m . Albright ,._no" Audttottum.
ddmassaun thMKr, dho pre\ented tomorrnw •nd
Sund•y

Sacurday, Apnl '21
UUAB Fol,_ fest.-al · P,u Sl-y, Ho~ppy o~nd Arty Tr•un ~nd
others, 7.30 p.m. , tent on &lt;.l•r t.. Gym foeld
Apral Orgy or Theatre l:nergy l•t•n Amerttdn r All of
Optnton, followed by crataque dnd le~ture by luh•n
Beek and Judtth M41tn .a, 8 p m., H .urtm•n ~tudto
TheAtre , .admtsston ch~rge.
Film : Le M/lfion (FrenLh), 5,7 dod 9 p .m., Olefendtltl 147
Rugby game: Buffalo Old Boy\ Rugby Club, I p .m .,
Delaware Park, opposing Toronto Sar.a£ens.
Film: Anand , presented by the lndid Student A~\ottatton ,
7. 30 p.m., Acheson S, )tudent\ $1, non ·studenas $1 SO
~unday,

April '23

UUAB Folk F esaiv&lt;~l : [arl Scrugg~. Fred McDowell Jnd
other\, 7:30p.m., tent on Cl.arl. Gym Fteld , Jdma,saon
cl).arge.
Films for chtldren
Twu Tor~ and (hf Mu5/c 8oJo.,
Albrtght-Knox Audatorlum, ~ p.m., o~dmt~~ton . S.1S .
Am&gt; Ahrtmd

Studio llrenil fhe;atre
Through Ap11l 21 Ploy ~lflndb~r&lt;J
Mdy 4 28 "''on nl /11 Man&lt;11a
M~v Jl
tune 4 fltt Propomtimr
Popular Concenl
Apni2J · Aht.eloopcr (M)
Apnl 23 N.ant.y Wti\On (K)
Apnl 21 H Buffalo Folk ~csllval (U H)
Apnl 28 Three Dog Ntght (M)
Apnl 28 The Clumbers Brothers (S)
Aprol 30 . l•ghthousc •nd Mothavashnu Orchestr• (K)
May 4 Alex T .ayloa (D)
MJy 9. Stephen Stalls (M)
Buffalo Philhumoni c Orchestra (Kl
Apnl 23 &amp; 2S: ls.uc Stern
April 28: Mlteh Miller
May S. Dance Theatre of Harlerns,
Ringling Brothers, Barnum •od Bailey Clrws
Rlnsllng BrC'Ihers, B.unum and B•lley Circus
M.ily 10 14
Creative As.soclltes
Through April 23: Nocturne~ (A)
The American Contemporary Theatre
The Unnamoblt'
KEY
K - Kleantaan)
M Memorial Auduoraum
S St. Bonaventure
D - D'Vouvlll e
UB - State University at Buffalo
A - Albrl&amp;ht·Kno:o.. Auditorium

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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3

Committee delays report
about Campus Security
The Committee o n Campus
Security last Monday d ecided to
delay final revtSJOOS of their
repo rt for another week to all o w
m o re time to consider new
info rmatio n co ncerning the issue
o f arming certain members o f the
securit y force .
Calling this " one of the tw o
fundamental ques ti o ns" to whic h
t he re port bad to address itself,
William Greiner, Facult y o f Law
and Ju risprudence chid ed th e
com mittee fo r sp ending so much
lim e " fl ys pecki ng the dra ft'' an d
leaving the matler until lat e in th e
meeting. Some of th e committee
members had al ready left and
ot h ers were ohv10usly anxaous to
leave.
Mr . Cremer called for th e delay
wh en comrnat t ee c h aarman
MacAllister !l ull , prod uced a
memorandum fr o m C.Jmpus
S~&lt;.unty
OareLtor Kennt:th P
Glennon fhc memo recou nted
~everal inctdcnt~ an whach Jrmed
ou t ~aders
confronted unarml·J
wtunly personnel Lee C:nflin ,
'"~•~ tant
darcll nr of C'.Jmpus
\cluraly, \Uh\tantaatcJ Mr
C, l cnnon·, , !.Jam s .1nd the
UHlllnatte&lt;' voted to Ul\tU\\ th &lt;'
qul·~t•nn n~:xt MonuJy .
( on trol d isc tJ.~~ed
rhe (llhcr "fund.tlll~llt .ll
qucst1nn'' ~ ... , e'tprc-....cd h)
De puty P o l• •e Commts,ttHu:r
r hnmas Bl;llr •. , though t t he Idea
lu: re was In keep .as mu~ h co ntrol
••I the campu' on the cJmpu\ a\
pos~thle"
I he l'o mmlltee ~ pent
mu ch ltm&lt;' 'o n s• denn~t the
pruhlcm pm~:d hy the students '
''Piton t u ~~~ ~ • redress tn 1h&lt;'
l(I UJI\ rath&lt;'r than wtlhan tlw
l lntvcrsaty
Commi~toncr BlaH obJeded Ill
"·vera I pJ~~ age!&gt; 10 the re port
whcre hl· th ought thl' wurdtrt!:

wo uld " encourage" studen ts to go
o ut s ide the Un i ver s ity
Community . " Why don't you
make it c lear," he asked, " that the
Unive rsity co mmunity has a d esire
to handle things internally?"
Dr. Hull countered , sa y ing:
" We're no t tr ying to close any
d oors." He warn ed that th e
committee must p oint o ut every
ave nue o f redress to th e stud en ts
or t hey might become sus picious.
" Y ou'd be su rp rised at the
pa ran oia on this cam pus," h e
added .·
Mr. G riffin p o in t ed o ut that
" m ost studen ts h ave ve ry little
fai th In intern al methods (of
solvtng gnevances) at present "
However , most of the ph rases
were ch anged to the "Witsfaction
o f a ll involved .
Bro ad d iscussio n
The \Cct mn of the rt• ptut
dt:ahng wtth student snunty ,uue~
came under lire from Daphne
llare, a mcmher of the uHllmittee
She noted thai , though IIH' repurt
~a ad
no t lung about 11 . ('.1m pus
se.unty wuuld pruhJhl y end up
o n! y hm ng men for 1he Jnh' Sh1·
wanted th e ~um m•tte c 11• \.JY thJI
hoth m ••lt•, anti fem.Jie!-. should ht·
111 red .
John Boot , who h &lt;ld l'.Hiu·r
u hj CLied to her lll\1$1enn• that JJI
rclcrcntc\ t o " he" (thr 'tudent I
he n: pl.tu:d hy "he or ,hc" or
claman.tted .altogeth~r . argued .
"Any mt•nt •on of ~t'l!. 1n th"
docunH•nt ,., o ut c1f piJ•t'
we ' re not Ul\i..USMng wll., Wl r.•
da~.:u~"ntt 'e~unty ..
Or ll ull \lUtpped " Yp u 'vc JU\1
.:hanged your standang from male
chauvan1~1 In male c.: hauvlnlsl pag "
As Ms II arc pressed her point .
Co m m~wner Blan decla red, ' T nt
not get ling anto thL\ om:"
Mr C.nffllt told the l'&lt;&gt;lllllllll ee

Vol. 22, No. 76

State University of. New York •t Buffalo

Wednetday, 19 April19n

Vaccaro

The co mmitte on Campus Secu ri ty m e1 Mo nday and
co ntan u ed discu ssio n o n possabl e revisto ns and
c h anges an th e Campus Securi ty fo rce

Arms talks
thJt ht.&gt; had ~el' ll only unt• klli.Jk
.arrhtanl lor a wc.:unty pt~IIIHII
and &gt;ht• wu' .thout fivt&gt; fct&gt;t t.ttl
and &lt;1'\ pound' 'oa~1n~ wct
Energies subve rted
M r C ret ncr ohwd ed to the
tone o f t h e d tSI.Usston " T hts tsn ' t
a grat uatous rl'mark thrown 10 to
,how th at Women's Lab's pt11n1
h.!\
hec:n m.JJe " Mr
l:h•ut
,ln,wcred thJt hy mention•nl!. the.:

lllrtn!! el f Wtlllll'll tit~· LII IIIIIIIII Cl'
Woiii.J ' .llhl .1 tot nf IIIII~ .llh.J
l'lll'll!)' (Cl ht• U\l'U lUil\till'll ll!: tht\
wtuk aw.:lnllll!! mon· 1111port.1111
Jrl'd\ for lltlJlr&lt;lVelltent
M• ( ;n·•ncr .ag.Jtll "ht&lt;'• lt•J.
" II ·, ..t 'iC rt ll\1\ lJ Ul'\IIC til .t nJ Wl'
"·"' thruw tl m .JS a cnlllltll'lll , hut
1t 's hardly the most &lt;·o ntrovcrs1al
que\111&gt;11 tn the report " Ills
o;uggcstton to leavt' tht• .~,cxual
won..!ln~ o f tht· report Ulh h.~ngcJ
.1nd I n Jdtl a n&gt;n1111ent .tl the cnJ

ut I hr \l'tllun w," J'.l'i'l'd
I il l' r&lt;'fl&lt;HI , flrl'\t'allly Jbout 1.!
po~gl'' tun~ . \hclllld hc rc.u.ly 111 a
f,•w ~·ek' It will tlu:n hc wall tn
l' n·\ldl'nl Kcll&lt;'l who " expectn.l
1&lt;1 rclea'e 11 to lht• llmvcr\ll y
utmm unlly o;h Clrtl )- thcreo.~fter Or
ll ull e xpressed th ~ tnmmllt ee·.,
hofll' tha t the rl'port would he
flntshed in lime for it to be
~:nn \ldcretl and rt'Hd hy evt&gt;ryonc
' t u d 1." n I \
I ..1 l u It y .1 n J
.H.lnllnl\lration .Jlat..e

Resnikoff dismissed from University
111 a lcttca rt~etveJ IJ\1 wee k . Marvtn
Dept
ol l'lty!&gt;u;s anc.J
i\, 1rLHH&gt;tn} W:J\ nu tafieJ nl Ius removal
from all Jutt e~ Jllvolvmg th e University
.Jiter lhe 7~ 7l acac.lemll: year "The letter
WJ' a s tandard form Jeucr, wht ch grves no
rt•..tsons for da!&gt;nnssal ," stated Dr
Rc !&gt;ntkoff lie added that he feels hts
removal wa\ "because I look dllterent . anc.J
.tLI tltfferent ..
Havmg tall!!ht Jt Bullalu lor four and
Re ~ tt•kuff ,

one·hatr year~. Dr Re~ntl.olf l&lt;.'eh that he
Ita~ fulfilled al l rcqua rement~ lor tenure
" My record ts good," hl' l'ommcnted "I
have a large \tuden t lo lluwmg. I rccetvl.'
more than my share of rc,earc h nwne~
and my servtcc tn the communtty has been
nHlrC than adeq uate."
MacAII tster llull. chaarma11, Dept ol
Phy ss and AstrtJnomy . c 'prcs~ed
dts3 ppoantmcnt w11h Dr
Resntlwrr,
da~m tssal. "I was able to take tt bcyuttd tlw

11t'p.ut m e111 hut to no .a~;.ul · 1&gt;1 Hull ,,nJ
" It wa' \l llctl) .1 tud ~l' tlll'tltal thlltg
Both th e t.lepartmc111 .u1tl thl' I aru ll\' (ell
NatuaJI Sll l'lltC\ .111d MJthcm;•t•ol
htcru ttvc ( unulltllcc Jl·u t.l ctl thJt I )a
Rc,ntk u lf, n.:.q)pco ullltlt'lll "·" uot 111 tltt·
hc~t tnt erc\t ot till' llaiiVl'l\lt} " Dr !lull
~latet.l . lie tlllll't.l tltJt ll'lllu~· Vllltll!! 1' d 1111l'
by \CCil'l hallol Wcth IICI ll'IJlllll'lllelll\ l111
the voter\ ltl 't.tlt' the ll'.t MIIIIIIf hdu111l
lht•tr IICt i\Hlll\
l&gt;l'\ jlltl' till' l.ll' l th,tl Itt• "Cllll ctl J '""·
Ut
R n n1~ u ll l'' P"' ''l'd "" J'll', lt
t.lt\:Jjlp0111110l'tll Ill hi\ 11'11111\,JI 1111111 lltt•
l rtiVl'r\ll'r

lmtc.:.Jtl . It t• ' ''t .I th;at Itt' "

'ltl\11114 mtt·t~' '' '" ct.,· I ""''1"1) Jml
UIIIVt'l\1(\ \'r\(l' lll\
I ll- 'pol-l' ol.t ''ltu tlllll ~ tl t:,, · tll:tttl&gt; II"W
t:ll)!lll lu l~ 1111' 1111 1Vt'l\ll\ Jlltl cotht•r, " l11
t ltl' P ·"' tltt'rl' ";" t:\l' tt~nwnt Jilt.!
e\JlCfiCIIl'l\ , hut tlctV. IIC&gt;Ihllt)!. \till ol J
)!l'IICral Jjl.tlh\ 1 l;t'll till' ll'.Jthl'l' 'l'l' lll Ill
ht• J!.lllllj.' tlllettt!41• tht• llltltltlll\," l &gt;t
Rl'\ll tl-olllJIII CIItt:tl
,/\, tor fttiUJl' piJtl\, I&gt;• l&lt; nllll.ttll 'Jl''~•·
uf tcadl lll)! Ill (htlt.: clll J lllllrttlJIIttll )!1.1111
IJ... abo IIICIIIIIIIlC.:d ,llll'lldlll!! ( llllll'IJ
lJnJver~IIY With tl1c hupl'\ ul Ol't'ctmtttg J
Vl'!Crlll:JIIall , Ill Jlll\\lhly it:,lllllll)!. to hl' a

-

- Vaccaro

black~mtth

Anuther prttJCc.l thJt

-osterrelcher

The hang dog expression in this picture belongs to Sam, an Irish setter who had a
slight run·in with the law. A victim of alleged police brutality, Sam' s owner has called
for an investigation. for complete details see story on page 2.

n.

RC\ntktltl hJ\

looked tnto '' the tc.lca ol &lt;1 ltcc unavers •ty
l:.lahorattng. he sa 1d " I would lake to take
20 or 30 apprertl•ees in pltys1t:\, anc.l wurl&lt;.
With them on meaningful pltys•cs problem~
tha t are soctctal m nature··
Pu tting together a free un1vers11y would

Dr. Resnikoff
be quite dtl ficult Dr. Rcsn1koff admitted
T he m ain prohlem is getting peo p le to gave
thetr lime wt th out pay . As he n o ted ·
"There's no money to be made in a free
university "

�History Council

Students well represented
If the Studen t Assembly is set up along
academac hnes next year as proposed, the various
departments wall have to set up committees of
undergraduate students to re presen t the students
that department. One such comnu uee, already ex1sts
111 the History de partment
the ('uuncil uf History
Srudcuts.
f-ounded 111 IQ(lCJ . thr Cuum:il of •flstory
Swdents was established with two main goals in
mmd "We wan ted to adequa tely represent history
studrnts." cxplaaned member Steve Kessler, "and we
wanted Ill crea te a communi ty spiri t
" We want ed t o ex te nd faculty-student
relallonsh1ps outstdc oithe classroom; have them get
together as colleagues in stud y rather than in a
formal sett•ng," conlinued Mr. Kessler. He fee ls the
Council has "succeeded pretty well " in these initial
goals
The (ounce! consists t•f a prestdent. secretary.
treasurer and students "rnterested 111 tustm y one way
or anmher." according to member Steve Strahs. Mr.
St~ahs hsred 1he council's functaons as includrng
"sponsoring films and lectures. play1ng a parr 10
departmental det.tstons, representmg students. Jod
p n1v1d1ng sttmulat ton fo r acaderntc d ascussaon
uurstdt.' o f the classroom. such as by sponsonng
sympm1ums and ddtscusston' ..

or

Campus police dog
bullies Irish setter
Sue Wolfman wa~ wdlktng h!!r
fnend's Irish setter, Sam. on ~bm
St. near Townsend Lot Jllout
S .30 p m. on Apnl I 2 when "a
frigh tenlllg 1nc1denr " occurred
Accordmg to M-; Wullman Sam
was suddenly engaged m a ftghl
wit h one of ~ampus ~e,·unty'~
poll ~c dogs. Trytng It• ~cpar.Jte the
two fighting dogs, ~h Wolfman
grabbed Sam hy the collar .1ntl
pulled . bur "norlung happened
The German shepherd had h"
mouth ar(lund Sam's throat ,"
cxpla1ned M, . w,,Jfman .
Whtk lrytng to separate the
two c.1nmes, M) Wolf111an W.Jl&gt;
bl ltl'n on the hJnd "detirutely hy
the or her dog, he cause Sam's h!!Jd
would havl' had to he on
h.tckwards" Ill h.1ve htllcn lwr
M' Wolfman cl,um~ thJt the
.:"mpus S&lt;'l unt y o fflu:r vcrh.tiiY
lned to get the flllh le do~ 111
desa~t. hy repeatedly Yellin~.
" Mtke, stop 1" hut thh had nu
dfed Witness Steve !JIJzmd.
mentaoned thai Itt!! Ciermo.~n
shepherd's ,·hokl' l&lt;'llJr lell n fl
dunng thl' laj.:hl 1\n:urdang lo Mr
Z.a Ia z md, rlw ul her ,·am flU'
\CC\lnl) ulftlt'l IJIIIl' ttUI uJ the
l.H and J\l,.ed thl' lu't ''l ltu:r tl he

should ''gel the leash."
Dlreuor of Campus Snunty
P,ll Glennon datms thai Sam w.ss
" runmng war huut a leash" and
datm~ that 11
was Sam who
altal ked the police dog, who
at:tct.J "nnly 111 defense ."
" Arter thc fi~hl had well
proyc,,cd . the r.1rnpu~ l&gt;t:luri ly
o fta~er
ttnally su~.ceet.lc:d 1n
~eparJitn!( the dogs hy pulling the
poh~.c do~ hy the tatl ," c:xplai ncd
Ms Wult rnun She wJ..' taken to
the tn ltrrnary for the httC on lu:r
thurnh . where ~he d;u ms the
l:lrrlpu~
\Cl'Unt y nff~t·er said
"somclhtn~ot lu the dfccl that the
dog w:1sn't properly lr;unct.J "
A' .t re,ult 111 t h e ftghl , Sam
underwent \Uf!ll'l y Jnd nec:ded .1
twu day ~ l.1y .at an .1n1mal
hus p1t.tl B.trry K:rptan , Sam',
''wnrr . ..., ,1~ llfl\CI Jllvut thl' fJll
IIWI lh1· polr,e d ol( LJtlt'LI to heed
t/11' ~ecunly officer's l'O mmDnd~
Mr Kaplan slated · "Thl' qul·~ tlllll
tltJI 1s fnghlc:rnng In me 1\ thl\
Why lhl' hell I\ .t tramed ..tllJll''"!t Jlltt\H"d 111 run lrec on
lJtn pu' when· people Jfl' .md ''
I h 1\
I h1.• o.~u.e pll'U
pt~ltl}'
nl
lJm pu'

"Significant influencr ·
Mr Srru h ~ fccb the council has "stgntficarrt
t110ucnce m departmental pultcy." and play~ a "vital
w lc 111 the de11ValuH1 of the currrculum ." Mr. Strahs
fee ls the C\•uncil has tncrcascd 11nportance now that
rt has hcert recogn11ed by the hisrury dcpar tmcn 1's
new by -laws
T he council ha~ a gt•ncral mtcntatum mceling
every semeste r for ullcrcstcd students who are
lustllrV majors. taktn)! lustory courses. and freshmen

and sophomores who are unsure of their maJors. One
such general o rientation meeting will take place
tumorrow at noon in Diefend orf 148 and w111
introd uce the department and the funct ioning of the
counctl Another advantage o f the History C'ounc11 1,
that they now have their own o ffice
20~
Diefendorf.
The counc1l has come far SJnce us inception 111
1969, but its members are looking forward to more
ad vances. Tina Dolgopol feels the new office " wtll
e nab le us to operate mo re efficiently .~nd
effectively." The council also wants to start a career
guidance service, which will basically intnrm
students what can be done with a B.A. in HJstury
"We also want lo start compiling graduate school
catalogues," explained Ms. Oolgopol.
Attitude •favomb le'
The h1sto ry department has a " pretty favutable "
attttude toward the council, and regards them w1th
"a general feehng of respect ," according lo Mr
Straits Mr Kessler sa1d working o n the councd has
g,ven h1m "a person-to-person relationsh ip wuh
facu l ty" and retterated thai ..we're gruwmg
together" 1-lowcver, Mr Strahs emphasiZed that
"we're alsu movmg 1n a d1rectao n away from the
department. there's not total accord . We hav~ ttl
push the facu lty somctt mes, sance many unm 111 tht&gt;
tJmverstt y don' t move that fast " As an example , Mt
Strahs noted lhe S('ATI-' teacher evaluation form~
wh1ch the h1story de partment 1s admirusteri ng ncx1
week. wh1ch was speeded along by " the couuctl \
push ."
T he future of the ('ounctl of History S t udent ~
wtll largely depend on student parllCJpau on and
Interest, as well as the developmen t of the Student
Assembly along academic lines. As Mr. Kcs..\ll' r
described the C'ounctl · " We're open and flexible •·

Antiwar activities
Antimwar proponents have scheduled a fuU slate of activities for thi.-: week . Rerullt'
Davis, former member of the Chicago 7, will discuss present antiwar effo rts and how I hey
can be woriced into the presidential campaigns, to night a t 7 ~ 30 in Room 114 Hochstetler
llaJI. Al'o featured will be the NARMIC (National Association for Research o f the
Military-Industrial Complex) Air War Slide Show. Cart Rogers , mttionaJ chainnan of the
campaign to Unsell the War, will be discussing " Unsell" In Haas Lounge tomorrow night
at 8. Finally. there will be an antiwar demonstration in New York City o n Sat urday .
oril!inatint at 10 a .m . at Central Park West from 7 1-77 Sts.

\l'I.Un l} ., ..

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
MocJ Styles fo r Guys and Gals
Come take the shoru nght off our
back1 Save 20% on nnythong w oth
short sleeves. H undreds of ro"'l
sleeve tops, 7,000 pao" o f Bells
Jacket s to match . leat h er 1ac:kets:
boots and pari&lt;IIS . lee Levt
Wrangler , Campus, landlubber :
Malo, etc. Be " on" - Save Money

j,

E.NT-CiT"Y
8~ J

I !II S O•v

Wd~htngt on

Surplus Center

The Spectrum 11 pub/llh«J ChrtHt
t1mt11 B wttttk, ttlftlry M onday,
WttdnfiSdsy and Fflday. duong thtt
rtlgulttr IICtldttfTIIC yMr by Sub Bollfd
1, Inc OfftcttS ilr'tl IOCIIttld ar 355
Norton Hall, Stttttl Unt~tlr6ity o f Nttw
York ar Buffalo, 3435 M8tn Sr.,
Bulfalo, N ttw York , 1 4 2 14.
Telephontt · A rfNI Codt/716; Edltooal
831 4 113; Bus/neu, 831-3610.
Rep resenrtHi for ltd~erming b y
N tHtona/ EdUCIIrtonal Ad~ttrti1ing
StNYice, Inc., 360 Lumgt on A vtt.•
N ew York. N. Y fOOtl.
Subscription rllttl$ .,., $4.5(} I»'
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S.Cond Cl,.., York.

Postllfltl pstd at BuHttlo,

Ci~rultltion

16,()()()

Page two . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 19 April 1972

All c l u b~ who

ctre

nuw rt'ceiving fund ing from th e U ndergrad u a te

S tu dent A ~socic1 t ion nlll!&gt;t ap p e ar betore t he Fi nance Com m irtce. Club!&gt; who
haven't h t~d h e.ui n gs ) h ould !&gt;lgn up in Room 205 to meet n n T h ursc.oJy, April

20th , bet ween 3-7 p.m .
No clubs will be reviewed after tha t date.

�Human sexuality: a W..r crimes f0111m
most popular course International law questioned
by aem Colucci

On a crowina number of
college caurpuses the most
popular course is a human
sexuality class. You can fail it just
like any other course, but you're
not apt to fall uleep. At Stanford,
I 000 males and females are
enroUed, and 1400 show up. At
San Francisco State, the llraest
auditorium is filled at 8 a.m. with
700 st udents.
In a few years, most coUeaes
will have 1 course like this, says
Bernard Goldstein, a San
Francisco State physiologist. He
isn 'I talking about the kind of
terse sex education that is
sandwiched into a hygiene or
physical educatjon course alon&amp;
with advice about brushin&amp; your
teeth. His c outse contains movies
for which attendance is
o ptional
of intercourse,
mcluding homosexuallovemwng.
"Nobody ever walks out, although
each is free to do so," he says.
Golds t ein, 36 , says the
students o ften carry the candor o f
dass dtSCu5&amp;Jon home where they
toss climcal t erms around the
livwg room. He says, " Then , for
the f~rst time , uncles and
grandmas start respondmg m the
sam~: terms, and that pleases m e
no end " Bes~des o ffenng d e tailed
h o w l o- d o it instructiOn,
Coldst~:1n's
co urse Includes
c;ect 1o ns o n · co urtship, love and
law A s po pular as the co urse is,
Jhuu l ten per cent manage t o
n un k

Not

leo ea~

I n th e s 1m1lar
Dr
SIan I'' r d

l:O UTS~

:tl

H e ran t

Carl Rogers

Katchadourian, a · psychiallist,
says: .. For some students the
course is a breeze. For others, it is
very difficult. " Stanford
profenors , in this time of
women's liberation, strive to treat
the subject from the viewpoint of
each sex.
One of the fint such courses
was offered at the University of
California, Davis, where Milton
Hildebrand, a zoologist, teaches
1700 s t udents a semester.
Hildebrand thinlcs the need for
the courses is no greater now than
In the past , but it is only now that
the society is wiiJjng to accept
them.
" I believe that is part of an
international phenomenon, the
demand for individual liberation ,"
he says. "ConservatiYely, 50 per
cent of married co uples in thi11
country have or will have a sexual
disfunction. This is something we
have straddled ourselves with . It is
not inherent in tJ1e human
cond1hon ."
Hildebrand says he has rect:ived
no co mplaints from pare nts o f h is
stud ents. Political cri ti cs. h e says,
would b e h elple&lt;;s because "there
tSn't mu ch they ca n do w11h 1700
satisfied s tud ents." The teac hers
d e ny 1 he co urse e ncourages
premantal Intercourse, saymg that
1f st ud ents want premarital sex,
"they Will d o it anyway."
Go ld s t ein s ay s puhli c
ac'-eptance of the co urse ·~ 10
general Ill: ex pel' Is to ~ce 1he m on
telev1sJon wtlhm a year . li e 'W!YS,
" mere are people who need th1s
Information more th an the
&lt;ttud enls, namely the paren t&lt;&gt; "

M•A •s•H and made Catch -22 loolt like kid st u ff.

S{H'Ctrum Sulf Wriler
Disillusioned youth met idealistic elders in
friend ly confront8tion Friday afternoon in a forum
on "War Crimes and theu Vic tims" at the State
University of Buffalo Law School. The symposium,
sponsored by the MitcheU lcctwe Fund and the
International law Club, featured Seymour Hersh,
Pulit~er Prize winning reporter and author of My JAr
4 : A Report o n the Mauacre and its Aftermath , and
Benjamin Ferencz, counsel at the Nuremberg trials
and a noted authority on international law and war
crimes.
Thomas Buergenthal, the moderator, performmg
under the forbidding glare of Woodrow Wilson's
portrait, introduced Mr. Hersh, who with rumpled

Or. lawyer's presentation
Buergenthal th en mtroduced Mr. Ferencz . 1n
contrast tu the rumpled , ramhhng reporter, Mr.
Ferenc7. was impec.::01bly groomed and o rganized ,
kno w1ng exactly wh at he had t o say and saying 11
w1th nu t " wasted word
It was a lawyer's
prcs~:nta11 on as he argued tl11: (.as~: for the po te ntial
o f 1nlernat1onill l.tw
Mr h :rcna. beg..~n hy a~ktng the: ;~ud1ence t o
" put thangs 1n perspel"ltve " li e pom ted ou t that t he
very nnllon nf antema11onaii.Jw wa\ new. Accordmg
t o tum . Nurl'mher~ wa\ ,, (U"CJI step forward toward
il
"rJ IIon,ll world unll"r" Il l' th en gave hlS
sugge., I H•n~ for tiH· tmprnv&lt;'nll'tll of the curre nt
syst em ol 1nle rnal wnallaw
" I ... ,., ~how nHtrl' 'ymp.tthy lor the VICtimS
rathet th,J11 fht•lf llllltdctcr," li t• JdVOI."JICd a WSICm
or reu•mpcn~c lt•t "'~ IIIII\ ''' w.tr en me&lt;&gt;, Clhng a
Cd!&gt;c 1n I II I 'I when a I 1 ( ;ulll'y .!~~•den ta lly ~hoi a
woman on ,, raft wl11le tryanlt to ,hdse .1way some
h:qu1l.1 ~mu~e'' 1\ t,~w.,ull Lh.t t~ng the Umted
St.tles with ne~1gcrH hurnu.1d e was ruled upon
bvorahly Thi.s. he assnh:d, WJ., .tmrlc precenden\
fo r .,ueh a "rcc,Hnpcn,e" ,y\ll 111

~peaks

Carl Rogers, nttional coordinator of th e Un~ll
the War campaign will ~ speaking in H11as lounge
tomonow night al 8 . Mr. Rogers ' appearance is being
sponsored by the Democratic Youth Coalition and
the UnseU the War Committee. A Slide show of ' 1'he
Auto Narmic Air War'' will also be shown.

Seymour Hersh
ha11 dnd an umJun~: Ill', lnnk\'d ·'' lhnul!)l h..- lt,ulju'l
ru,hcll 1n lrnm th..- &lt;IIY '"""' "' th~: N•" )
Trmn
li e bt&gt;g.tll Willi OJ H"\ltt.:'W "' th&lt;' My I .11 .tfl.tll
thumhtnr. throur.h .1 ~opy 11f "" m·,. ,..,.,1,.
( mrr Up Jnd runntn~ t!.IWII .1 l1111t: "'' nl 1.11 ' '
Most nf his mlorm.tlll&gt;ll t.:JIIIl" rr .. m ·'" ""'' ••• 1
P,·ntugvn rc pori 1.. now 11 ;J\ 1he l'l''"" ( tolllllll"'""
I{(· port I hi' It flllfl n111 lllh"IHk•l lu IH' tll.ath' puhl11
he fo re Mr lll'"h ••·vc.tl••d tis t'XI\Il'II•C '"" ' ·""'""
page~
of le~IIIIIIIIIY .ahnttl lht· i\1111&gt; \
illl'l!l'd
Lnvcr·ur nf lht• 111.1"·'"•·

,,J,

Who will answer''
T h \' ~ 1u 1:' 11m l"

IEEP liE
&amp;lASSI

Mr. Hersh recounted one incident straight out of
Joseph HeUer.
An officer who witnessed theMy Lai massacre
from a helicopter was asked durllfk the Commission
hearings why he hadn't reported it to his superiors
He replied that regulations did not permit rum to
make ·a report unless he received authorization from
above. When questioned, his superior said that he
couldn't order an investiption unless be ,ot an
eyewitness report .
Mr . Hersh's Investigations, culled from the
Commission report and talks w it h and letters from
G.l.'s who had been there, led him to the startllna
conclusion that , "no less than 200 officers of the
rank of captain or above It new what h.ad happened at
My Lai within three days."
He termed the system of military justice a farce
and Insisted that international law (" International
law. ha 1 ") 1s a t o tally madequate mechanism for
deahng w1th war cnmes. In closing be called fo r
co mmutation of WiU1am Calley 's sentence saylna:
"as ev1l as h e 1s, as stup1d u h he IS . • . why should
he be the o nly one to suffer?"

'

l1 q
11 f .11 r '" 11 tl''
111d
111..tllcl ol f.ad lr&lt;'.tllll.:lll
,,, llltlfl' prupnl)' 1... 1.
ol trt:atmenl
h)' th&lt; 1\rmy ot.J.Jc J 111111 lo.t.:ty nt

'Primillve stages'
li e r~:·pl·ated that lllft•rn,tllrltl.tl I.JW was 111 11 '~
"rllmtiJvc ~laj!e~" atul wt·nr on '' ' ourlmc wh.ll wa!&gt;
m•cded
I I lllliii i&gt;Ved 1.111 ltndtng 111.11 hiiJt•ry !1&gt;r
lllft'tll.tllon.tiL.t ~e., (~Udl J\ My l al)
'II\ dt'lmtlhln ''' J!l.lt"''-''"n
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IIIIJltotl.tlltl' n f lund,lllltllt.tl hUIII.JII 11ghh
Wl· t.ul lu lndo•IJIIIJit' our llll"l" lilt 1111"
•mpPri.JIItC "' human 1111-hl'l l.l.t' l.tlll•llllllt&gt;LIIInalc
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llum.m 11~hl\ llll"l llt'J,!JII 111 hunun
lll'JII\ ," Itt• \oltd
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tli111l. "'JIIHI\Iy .thou! lllft•fll.llltlll,tl l.tw. l.".l lhn~ 11
"'pn h .flh lht 111'"' 1 h.1lkng1nf! tlt~&gt;lll!-h ''"' lht: nHt~l
fl'llllllll"IJIIVt" ltt•IJ Ill th&lt; lt:~JI pttllt:'&gt;SI0/1'
II• """·ludnl hy ur1:n•~ then• to he .tWMt' of
tltn1 '"It- ·" ldWY•'" 111 L••nliiiUIII~ lht&gt; progre~' ma1lc
tl ~UICIIIhl"rl: .11111 to lt)!.hl fur the t'\IJhh\hnll'/11 u{ J
\"'r~mg ..,y,IL'Ill t~t mlcrno~llltfi.JIIaw

:MEN'S HAIR STYLING
hy ( l•t~rlw t '""'"'' •
1nvn Ill

ownrr

v•··'" l"'P"''' '" ·· )

LONG HAIR
SPECIALIST

IAt AltJT GFTrtMi .Uif/fflte D
(JNLE.S 5 I C !till Gf T MY
HAAil&gt; C ~A~TE 0
OIAhfOA/D

EMf"-'1(jE/tf£.V7
Rtlllfi liT ERJI('S

~\

• RAZOR CUTS • t OU&gt;KIN&lt;,
• S&lt; AI.PTREAI"MINIS
• UEARD l\ MllS'I ACI IE SHAPIN&lt;.;
h't• Spt'et&lt;lll :::t• 111 Slroi[JIII,(I I u/1 h 't_~,
If VOI.I WANT A NfW HI-AD UF H All~ .
WF ARC MJ\N UFAC'TURfRS &amp; DESt(;NEI~"&gt; Ul
CUSTOM MEN'~ HAIRPIECES
ACCESSORIES -REPAIRS
REJL VENATIN&lt;;

~€\-V€l€RS
584 MA'7N S1' (Nex t to University Plaz..r)
~~~==~~==~~R37 -J III~~==~==~~=-·'

81 a ll en st., buffal o , n.y.

Wednesday , 19 April 1972 . The Spectrum Page three

�Great Lakes cleanup

Nixon, Trudeau ink accord
WASHINGTON
About 150 anti-war protesters w~r~ arrested
;u:ross from the White Jfouse last Saturday. The demonstrators were
engaged in a protest against the United Stutes military activity ordered
by President Nixon t o counter the Communist offensive in South
Vietnam . Those arrested were among an estimated 700 persons who
took part in the dem o nstration organized by the National Peace Action
Coalition (NPAC) and the People's Coalition for Peace and Justke
(PCPJI
The clemunstrators rallied at mid-morn1ng at a church notlh of the
While llouse and then marched t o Lafayette Park.
When they reached Pennsylvania Avenue facing the White
House. they were met by a line of U.S. Park. Police and told to move
back. Most complied with the request but abo ut 150 sat down, ignori ng
the police warning of their tmminent arrest on charges of conducting ao
illegal public as.~embly as they had no permit. Following the arrests, the
group mar.::hed to the Washjugton office of International Telephone
and Telegraph and then to the South Vietnamese Embassy. The two
sponsoring organizations said the demonstration was part of a
workshop session planned to dtscuss larger protests intended for the
Miamt and San Diego national pohllcal conventiOns this summer.

'
WASHINGTON
America's only giant pandas arrived in good
health from China Sunday with greater airport security than accorded
Prestdent Nixon. The two pandas, 18 months old, will be o ffi cially
welcomed to the National Zoo by First Lady Pat Nixon in a few days.
The pandas' arrival was a secretive alfa.ir. Reporters were k.ept inside
the airport terminal and did not glimpse at the animals before they
were shuttled off to the wo
Arriving with the ammals were Dr Theodore Reed , dtrt clor o f the
zoo: Dr. Ting Hung. director of the Pekang Bureau or Public Service,
and Yang Hung, a panda keeper who wtll anstruct the National Zoo on
ho"' to care for the rare animals. The pandas wall be kept in an
exclusive a.ir~ondationed qWJrters wtth an a&lt;:re of ground oulstde t o
roam. Their neighbors will he gtraffcs and antdope.s
STANDO RD, CALIF
Stantlord Universaty Schl)ol of Medtcine
has devised a new system of lifelong educatwn of physiciaus in
practice. The prog.ram IS decentraliud .tnc..l for the most part uses
•o mrnunity hospitals as centers of teachtng. Student doctors do not
only attend lectures, lhey also tea ch . Local education needs are
percetved by the doctors themselves and are es tablish ed by audits o f
the hospital patient re~:orc..ls . Teachtng effectiveness will be cvHiuated by
ampro vements made tn pallent l'are befo re hand and after they take the
~.:o urse . Dr Edward Rubenstetn , a pradtsang physacian in San Mateo
and • hm..;al professor of medtune, developed the approach. He satd.
"The tradattonal approach uf keeptng doc tors mformed about th e latest
.tdvances trl medtctne ha~n 't wvrked o pltmally-"

President Richard Ni.xon ended his 40-hour trip
to Canada Saturday by signing a multi-billion dollar
agreement between the United States and Canada1o
clean up the Greak Lakes. The trip was intended t o
mend hurt feelings on the part of the Canadians.
They apparently viewed the President 's trip as a big
plus, especially after he expressed Canada's right to a
se parate politica l identity and economic
independence.
Mr. Ni.xon discussed world af(airs and bilateral
relations with Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau in
private talks. He also addressed a joint session of
Parliament , where he received a standing ovation and
desk-pounding approval from the members. In this
speech, Mr. Nixon accused the Russians of sendtng
arms to the Communists, thus escalating the
Indochinese war.
"The great powers must use their influences to
halt aggression and not to encourage tt," said Mr.
N i x on The Presiden 1 also warned that the
encouragement of the "aggressive use of existing
weapons" could Jeopardize the current negotiations
at the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks between the
United States and the Soviet Union.
Frivolity abundant
Although the Presiden11al v1sat was marked by
tight security measurC1, there was plenty of time for
frivolity . Nixon toa.~t ed the prime minister's
four-month old son as he said : "Tonight we11
dispense with the formalities . I 'd like to toast the
future prime minister of Canada - Justin Pu~rre
Trudeau." Trudeau (Pierre. not Justin) returned the
toast : ''I hope he has the &amp;race and sktll of the
President."
T he Great lakes agreement was signed dunng a
formal ce remony conduc ted under cut-glass
chandeliers in the ornate Confederation Room of
Parliament. It calls for tough water quality
standards, but does not give the details as 10 how
these standards are tu be met. The treaty, worked

In .tddttton, Mr Lmd ..atd, "lh~re •~ evtdcn~c •&gt;I currcrH.y
rnantpulattun and black.mJrket ad tVJitc~ oy I he USO rcf\onucl. whtdt
~enously cnn nr ct wtth thr Interest uf both our &amp;&lt;&gt;Verntnent dtld tho~c
nf the ({epuhlt l: of VH:tnarn" l'he newly cl~l:lc&lt;l USO pre~tdent , rcnn·d
Arm y M.tl Gen FrJnu~ L Sampson, satd th e l hargcs tnvolvcd "lerta tn
fur mer uso persunnel Ill v IClflam ... Th&lt;&gt; Dcfen~e n~rJ!l rncnl SJHJ that
the \IS O had been advts\ld u l the allcgattuns and w.t..' cuc&gt;pl'ratlng 10 tlw
IOYt'Stlga liOn
FT Lf:.VENS . Mass
A Western New York Jrmy pnvute who ha~
l harged hiS supenors with bnngtng htm lo tnnl fnr an!l ·w&lt;tr vaews, h11s
been •onvicted at a gem:ral co urt marital .tt•d g~ven a bad conduct
discharge . Pf'c. Michael Daley. 24 , of Buffalo wa.' ~entenced at the
~..o nduswn of the one-day trial. The sentence also tncludes loss of all
pay allowances and st:ven months hard labor to be irnposed
tmmedrately . The &lt;:o uvtclton and sentence are subjel.l to dUiomatac
appeal. Pfc . Daley was court-marttaled for go mg AWOL. hut last
Wednesday he filed c harges of hts own agatnst three superior officers
Pfc. Daley had surrendered last Oct. 28 at Ft. Deven~ after having been
AWOL smcc Aug. 7, 1970 from Ft. LewiS , Wash . where he had been
scheduled to go to Vietnam. He wd he had asked for an achnantstrative
diS Charge and that the Army declined to recommend court martial
a&lt;:tion unttl Jan . 17 , a day after he took part m a protest
demonstratiOn .

COLLEGE TEXTS • PROFESSIONAL BOOK
MEDICAL• NURSING • DENTAL
• PAPERBACKS •

laFFALe

TEM rTiettlr
ft.BS,IK.
3-1tt A• I• Sf.
Page four . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 19 April 1972

Clean -up time

Preliclent Ridwd Nixon
end Prime Minister Pierre
Tructe.u met in Ot1awa
tNa past weekend to discu •
ean.Han·Americ:an
relations.

out over a six-year period, carries a SJ billion price
tag on the part o f the United States, with Canada
spending between S250 and S400 million.
Met by protestors
Governor Rockefeller hailed the agreement as
· ·an outstanding example of international
cooperation." Rockefeller, in a statement Saturdt~y
shortly after the signing of the treaty, said, " We tn
New York welco me the President's leadership and
we will continue to do our share."
As Nixon walked o ut of the Parliament building.
he was greeted by about lOO members of the
Canadian Liberation Movement.
protesters,
standing in the sleet, changed : ·'Nixon go home," as
they demonstrated against what they considered
US . domination of Canada. Nixon respond ed lo the
demonstrators by waving, smiling and saying: "Hi."

The

.
ALICE COOPER
ALSo'SPIRIT'

............................. ...................................................

:

UUAB CONTEMPORARY ISSUES

•:

:

Nobel - LIIUrHttt

:

Or. John C. Eccles

:

•

•:•
:

WASHINGTON
l)efeme Secretary Melvtn I{ l atrd saul hu.lay
that a Pentagon tnvt'stlgatton of activitaes of the Unllo.'d Scrvtce
Organt7.attons (USO) 111 Vu:lnam hall un covered trtdu.:auons of fraud
mvolvmg "very wh~tanttal" sums o f money W1tho ut gtvwg spectft(
details. Mr . l.atrd andu:atcc..l tn .1 letter to R~p . f ~dward IIebert that
the alleged lraud tnvulvell U .S. per~nnnl'l an Vtctnam wllcl Cllplnttcd
US . serv1cemen Mr l :md ~:11c..l that he had dt~pat c hed a ~rcual team
lrum Washtngton to Jld (:en t'rttghtnn Ahrosms , com mander of lh~
tJ S fur~es tn Vtetnamtn the trwc~llgauon that began Od I

- UPl

:
:
:

, . _ " ' ' " ' • Mrtes

••

ot

:

Wtldned-v lectures on
COMMUNICATION IN THE
NERVOUS SYSTEM

:
:
:

:

Lecture No. 2

:

:
:

Wctdntnday. Aprtl 19
F'" end Open to the Public

:
:

•

•

i ::.~ ':;'n"':, ~~~.C::,~fendorf 146 :
s••••••••••••••••••••••••••:

WICIW AND BUFfALO fHTtVA\ .. , ...,.,

April 21st at 8 P.M.

.al A d

Memorl

U

Advance Sole Tickets $4 .50
Tickets att door $5 .50

CHAIRS FLOOR

Tic\••• Ctt • " '• now af tlvffalo F•thval nell .. Office, Hot•' Statt.t H•hn
\ololoy , U II Norto~ Holt. MeMcwial Awtllto•l""' lolf Ofli,e open• tocfoy
4 H\ NO
ON

a•

UUAB FILM COMMITTEE
presents
an exclusive
First performance outside New York
of the remarkable motion picture

MEDEA
with

MARIA CALLAS
A Euro-lnternational color film by Pier Paolo Paaolini
Produced by Franco Roaellini

··MEDEA is, from the point of view of art, th~ best 0 (
..the fihm of its author ... Pasolini is prolific indeed.
~e h.as found here ~gain th~ wonderful style of his
Ocdtpus Rex' and has not hcs1t'\' d to confront the
tariblc and sublime Callu."

C/4uth Mnritlc"LE FIGARO LI1TERAIRE"

Thursday, April20- Sunday April23

~

�A weekend festival of folk music
This weekend, for those of you who
don't know, there's a folk festival taking
place on this campus. Sponsored by the
Student Association and UUAB, it's the
kind of large scale event that unfortunately
rarely occurs at this University. Remember
the annual Pop Festival which lasted one
year? Somehow, those who have the
money around here are extremely reluctant
to undertake culturally important ventures.

The festival is costing roughly $17,000
and both the quantity and quality of the
entertainment is surprisingly large : 26 acts,
three evening concerts and seven daytime
workshops . Among the performers
schedu led to appear are Woodstock
favorites Happy and Artie Traum, who
have ex·Blues Magoo Eric Kaz in their fine
band; Pat Sky, who came out of retirement
last year to play at the Coffeehouse and

has realized that his fans have not deserted
him after all these years; classical banjo
player P.clul Cadwell and J .B. Hutto and his
Hawks, one of the last uncompromised
Chicago blues bands.
There's the legendary Doc Watson and
his son Merle; the Earl Scruggs review ; aged
bluesman Mississippi Fred McDowell ;
singer Bonnie Raill , son of John Rrutt ,
Toronto myth Leon Redbone, the sleeper
of last summer 's Mariposa Folk Festtval ,
gospel singer Bessie Jones: the Putnam
County S tnng Band: Dan hicks and his ho t
licks and many more .
Woritshops scheduled
Among the workshops wtll hc cl
songwntcr \ workshop led bv Pat SJ...}. c111
mstruntl'lllal worl-.shop ll'tl h) Juhn llcraltl
anti a d;m~e worl-.~l111p ktl h't Utll V ,lllJVl'r
lK·J...l'l p111:l'\ .nc .tnl.J/tllJ,:I) low ( ol'lll't.tl
atl nussHIIt tur .all thl' l'Vl'lll~ " ""~ doiiJr~
lor Sllldl'lll'. l'tp.ht tor l· :~..:ull )' ,IIIU ,t,tll,
.111J 11.'11 Ina .all 111ltn~. Srngk l'V&lt;'IIrtl~
l'l111l:l'll lllll'l'\ ,II&lt;' lWII, lllll'l' .lltcl (IIIII
11'\I'IClltVd\ Wt\tl,,h.ap' olllt'. IV.11 ,tlld
I ltrl't•
lllhlllllll.lh'l\ lot .tiJ l'OIIU'IIH'd V.lll\ h
\luntltl lw t'h'I\IIIH' o11h .Hollllld I~~~
url.l·t ~ h.Jh hl'l'll '"ld lkt \I ll.anJ k r .allll
Jol.tiiiiC I IUC, ptllllllll'l' 111 tltl' ll'\ll\.11, .Ill'
II II J l'" I il}l d il h l y
1:0 Ill'(' IIICU .tlld
dl\apptlllllcd I he lc~taval t!&gt; l:tl..llt l: pl.tt:l'
olutdtlllr' 111 .1 lt'lll ..Jtld at lrtuJ..., ltJ...c J l111 11l
lll't•pk atl' llt11tl-.11tg "' ua''""~' 111 ~l'llltrl\
wall he .L\ ltJ:thl :" possablc ..nul tltow
students who wash to he pJrl of th~:
secunty staff ~h,&gt;uld sagn up an thl' IIUAB
offi ce, lo I Nmton

Patrick Sky

Leon Redhone
/1. fol of fll'11pil' lt.IVl' Wllll.l'd Vl'l)- hattl
all \ l',ll 'l'lltll!' II p t h 1\ Wl'l'J...l'IHJ of nlUSil'

Pk·a\l' ~l'l hd1111d them. hu" o1 tad.et or two
nHHC than ~·1ur llltllll'y\ worth Jt
the BuffJin l·o1lk l' l'\ltval

;md gcl

Brlly Altman

TODAY
SA-GSA Speaker 's Bureau
Presents

***********
BUCK ROGERS

FLASH GORDON

BUSTER CRABBE
CAPT. GALLANT

TARZAN

***********
3:00

Swim at Clark Gym- balcony area
See him compete with the Water Safety Instruction Class!

•
8:00 Movies-and rap sess1on
Acheson 5

Wednesday , 19 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�QdWileQ

tile S~QO~W !lad
goqe aqd spriQg bUrst
OpoQ tile ll!Qd,
tl)epeople
rejoiced aqd
ilraqkof ,,
spriQg
----e.~

Stilrt your own ~pring celebrat ion with ryrolia, California
white win&lt;' ctnd natural fruit fldvors The new wine
that &lt;c1pturp~ th(' spirit ot spring. Pure wine that's as
light dnd bright as thclt first c;pring day. With the
cnsp, &lt;..lectn ta &lt;)tp ot orangt.&gt;~, lemons and flowery
spi&lt; es. Drink Gallo lyrolld, the wine of spri ng.
And &lt;Plt&gt;hrdte!

Page six . The Spectrum . Wednes&lt;ay ,.19 April 1972

�Viet veterans suffer guilt _feelings
NEW YORK
UPI
"We have the God-awfuJ
lifetime job of having to atone for the Vietnam war, or at
least some of us do."
This Vlew has been expressed by one of the
thousands of Vietnam veterans wh o have returned to
civilian Jjfe co nfused, disillusioned, demoralized and
~tranged from thetr fellow countrymen and even their
families. ll is only a t&gt;art of a picture that is now coming
into focus.
Some vet~rans feel deep guilt ; o th ers have numbed
themselves against any moral concerns. A Harvard
sociologist who has spent three years studytng the violence
potential among retumet'&lt;J says h e has "never met a veteran
who underwent combat 10 Vietnam who does not h ave a
..:on tin ujng sense of undeftncd danger" us J result or
mvolvement In the world's first maJOr guernlla war .
" Man y have great diffi culty 10 .:ontrolhng violent
reactions to this sense of danger, such as assaults un
people ." said llarvard's Dr. Charle!&gt; Levy. " I've bet'n
Involved in several t nab of veterans who have commtlted
murder. In a case 1n BuffJin , the defendant was completely
detached , wa,n ' t aware nf Ius cnme until he read about 11
111 the newspaper. Later he talked about tl as though he
h&lt;Jd seen II 10 d IIIOVIC "
ThiS veteran was re('llrtcd tP hJVt' worn t.J muunag~d
lU veralls and smeared Ius fJt:t: hwwn, J~ though for tungJe
t:omhat , bef,He allegedly ~om milling the dnuhle rnurtkr
with wh~e.:h heW£ l h.trged

"They are getting very large veteran populations that
a re ex tremely hard to work w&amp;th," Garcia said. "Many
have guilt fecl.tngs which complicate the problem of
readjustment
We are just beginntng to sense the
dimensions of this SlhHJtion "
One o f the first danger sign.tl~ was .. Little-publicized
study of 435 Vtet era veterans who were psydtiatric
pattents at Minneapolis Veterans adrntn tstration Hospital
in 1969 . The findings indicated that these veterans had
greater tendenctes toward diS Co ntent and delinquent
behavior than veterans of Wo rld War II and Korea in the
s.~me insti tuti on
V1et veterans sh owed " less respect for others. IC's~
trust and dimmtShed feelings of social responsibility,"
according to th is study Compltcallng the picture was th~
use of liquor Jnd narcotics ..s props by many Cis.
Even more ularmtng is a survey of 204 veterans frnm
all parts of the coun try
Ol•ne ol them In psychiatm:
insl1lulions
hy SOl'lal htSiurian Murray ll uln~• He beg;111
hiS investigation HI 1967 and the results will he puhlt~lwd
•n J ll n lt . R1neh.HI W1n~tun puperh,•~k , "No Vtdory
Parauc~ ... 111 Muy.
" l'olncr, who 1.!&gt; cxct:utlllt' ass1slan1 tu the dtanldlm
of 1 he New York C11 y puhhl· school~ . cont &lt;'nt r.tt t'1l on men
whn expenen;.ed \U\Ialncd nunhJI 'crv••e hct" cen l'lh4
and fllt.l/ All. he n11teJ. werl· trutH lown ntJtldlt· Jrltl
worlo..u1g d."' IJilttht:s l'lc&lt;allw "u•mp.11.111vcly few men
frorn othe r \U&lt;I.JI d.1ssc' wcrl' lt•l•etl h• light' 111 V1c1no~m

One of five distrubed
No one J...nows fur sure the nurnt&gt;er ul dtSnuhc:.l
ynung men amnng the ! 'i m•lhon vt•teran\ ol Vtctnam
hut a hiSILlnan who h..s tnt erviC~wcd hundreds ,,f returnee~
c:'lllmale~ 11 .Jt une nut of five l':.ydllalnsts have nnled
~ymptoms nf I.Jtenl psyl hlalne d1ff1culties tn enough men
tu gJVe thetr pecul•at cnmhtnat1un nl probh:m&lt;; medlt,ll
numendatun:
l'os t V"'tiiJtll Syndtutne, o r PVS
Dr
Roherl Jay L1hon, rescart.h profnsnr ol
psy;.htJtry .tt Yale lln1vers1ty, wurn!t lhJt the pcnod ttl
.tdJuslme::nt fut the&lt;&gt;e men wtllcntatl J htgh SOCIJI \lht '"
the n.1t1011 L1fton Levy and ~evcral other sctent1s1s whu
art d~vottng full llflll.' to the prnblt'fll Jrc .!greed \ln &lt;lOC
lh1ng
the kderal Veterans Admtnistratiun VA "
mt:apahlc uf ropm~ With these des pamng youth~
" l'hc VA ha:. no scn~;e Clf the problem , nllr dncs 1&gt;Ur
\tlllcl y '" general, .. SOlid Levy .. rh~re has been J deniJI on
the part ul lhl· Amcn r an puhlll thai thiS wart:. a~ du~c a~&gt;
11 t\ to Jlt ,,r U\, dnd nevt•r more \11 now thai so many
veteran~ o~re 1n our rntd:.t ·
Jo\' (;Jrl'IJ, h&lt;ead ofSeJI!It''' V~tcran' A&lt; linn(. enter,
reporh V\'lt'IJ!l&lt;, AdrntnJ~trlltl t'n llmptt .JI tn J'Jfl'} fhe
tmtltng.\ lndh..ltt•d th.JI lnth&lt;Jil'S that I'V'i •~ lllal(Oifll'd •n
J.ngt' urh..rn lt'nlcr~

''Rqwrdi\'Q. ol th\'11 u•n••d~&lt;•n' .d,.•ut w.1r 11l.1ny
"';;HJ tl11:y we1e ,J~.JIII\1 &lt; ''"""u'"""
I'IJlll~.lll)' evt·ry
veter.w I 'pnlo..e w11h •n.!e..11nl rn ,, v.Uill\ ul w,,y, ""
\11\fll\lnn lh.Jt hl· h.1d heen "'""'flul.•tnl hy ,, t!"vcrnuwnt
lho~l W.J\ nnlhllll( twt J l.1rdt·~, 't h\'111 , · l'nlnct \.Jid
Jun e .Jiter lillie , velna11' Iotti l'••lnn lht·y ~ouhl
mal.e no ,cn~e nul ul tlw w.1r n1uld "''' 1dcntlly lht n·.1l
l'rH'tiiY Jlld '""ld ""' llt-tu•e uut why th1·y .onJ tht·H
huddlt'S had been totll.'d tu uudngP 'Ulh hrutJit/111~
t'Xpt'ncnre~ l•cw, he
h.1d ht't'll .1hlc to stifle the
gnaw1ng Sll\f'lllttll th.tl "1t w." ,,II ftu nulhllll\." .oll huul(h .1
1\Uillhl'r Solid they W\'lt: trYIIIg Ill WIPl' lh&lt;' war 11111 cof IIWII
mind' lort·v r r
"'1 hcrt• '' J \lt)llll.o ·''"'' h•·•l 111 I hi\ w.•r. J ~lj!.ll "'\Ill
that rt·marrl~ Ull!&gt;fl"'-on Jud wl11d1 kw w"h tu t.1lk ahulll ,''
l'olnet ~au!
A' ,, re~ult
Jll&lt;~r,hng
t11 l elton. v.mou,
po.ydwlow&lt;o~l d•~twh.Jtt&lt;&lt;'' Jlt: .JJll'l'&lt;lftng 111 V1ct vctcr.1n~
rangtll~ lro111 rn1ld w•tl1draw..tl ••I t~rtollt~ dcpr~\\lllll 111
~ever.· PWlhO\\HilJIIl dN•rdt'l' wh•&lt;h IIIJY ltthl outlt'l\ Ill
\llnknt·e '" '·'"""' It• wh1th lht· 111t:n hnJrllt' h..ri'IIU.tlctl
t.lunny th e w.u
Lllt11n ,,,., tht· Ht•·ran ·" ..., p~&gt;ydlulugt •. tl .rullhl,·

'"".I

of t h e entire coun try's doubts and misgivings about the

war.,'

Gl guilt abounds
C h a1m Shatan, ao;.~octate professor of psychology al
New York Umversity, satd group rap sessions organized by
veterans showed common concern over guilt feelings for
victims of both Sides of the war. He said veterans also
express scapegoat feelings over anadequate G l medical and
educa tional benefits and exoneratiOn of senior officers for
war at rOCities
"The mO'lt po tgnant feature IS anguished doubt
about theu con 11nucd Jbt.lttY to love and trust o th er
human be1ng.' again, and to ac.:~pt affection," Shatan
oh~crved

A re.:urrent theme m Poln~r·s tnterviews was the
co mpla•nt that Amerrcans were blase about the Viet
soldier'!&gt; sacririccs, llid uot support the war as the y did
tho~l' uf the past . and ignored the veteran
or criticized
hun
whe::n he re t urned hC&gt;mc . Some veterans have had
the shaltenng expcnemc t.ll heing turned ou t by their
I&gt;Jmlhc~ when they rcveall•d thcn true feelings about the
"Vctt·ro~ns s,1y the y had gJI.'JI dL~trust of anyone who
"'"' JI!Jrrhl tlh· wat wht•n IIH·y wt'nt tn Vtelnam but later
lurrtnl on th l.· hJwks, ~ayrn~ 'lr you support the war why
don't you wrul your 'nn~" '" l'nlner reported

Mure benefic., n~ded
Arlie"'!! th ll\t' wurk111~ tl• ltt't a helt~r deal for
Vreluam (;h..,,. the Na11onal l t'aguc of ( 1l1t'~ Nl(' and
lht• II S ( ••nlcr.:nn· ol MJ yor-. I hen dforl5 ntd.Jnly ar.:
.llmt'll ,,, lu•lp1ng lctw,•r '"' 11rne H ll'IJJ\~ m,1kc heller us,. nt
tlw c .t H11l'-. pr.1v"'"1" lnr ,.,IUlJitnnJI o ppurtuntt•es and
l(c'llllll! I hnu '"'" •HHh-t IIH' I IIH'r~tt'm y hnpl1• ymenl 1\11
K ~tbnt
llut hll ell .11 the Nl ("s Wa,hll\gllln
h.:.H.htu.ltlll\ '·'"' he 111111!..' lhe •urreut \7'&gt; d month
,oV.II(,ohit- Ill \111111'111 Vl'l&lt;'l.lll\ will \IH1t1 h1• r,ll\l'd to ~210,
Jt.ldlllg 'hul tft,ll \ jll\t kn·pllll! llf' With tllfiJtiUII . " Jhe
I(OVl'ltiiiiCill dOL'\ 1101 Jl.IY l11r vetl'Llll\' IUitiiiiiS anti lt't:S
.111.! 11111\t 'tuch•ul\ ;..11\1111
" W,· II' wurl-m~t '"',,,ph i t"h pro~rJrll wherl'")' two
,111olent V&lt;'t&lt;'r·''" •·Ill sh..trt' ,J tnh prnv1drll under the
hner~tCII l)' l11q1l~tyuH·nl All," Bothw,•ll ~111tl " Juh~ arc• a
vctcr.1n'' '""'" &lt;:tlll&lt;t:rtl hul hc tllrtl\ 111 l'tiU&lt;JIIUtl .ss a
~l\lln tl dlcll&lt;l' ,1\ ,I W.ly Il l lll.lkllll! hiiii\Clt ltltllt: allt.JdiVt'
to t'tlopluy,•r, '
l\Pthwt•ll lt'lctrt•tt Ill gi\Vt'I!IIIICIII lltt.UIC'\ IOc\lt.JIIng
I he llllt:IIII'I"Y"II'I\1 r.11r: .JrtiiHII! .1lt ve terJn' 1' lwtu~ thJI of
I he tt.t:rll't,cl P••JIIII,rtll•ll tn tht•tr ·'Itt' ldtejl.orv
"You • .111 I hlo~rll&lt;' Vl ... lll.JIII veterJns lur tet'l~nJ.
n.·,tkded h, -..11tl
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Wednesday , 19 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�GAT E 4
' •'' V'i

I

I

I

&gt; '~·\h':;lo NG

No guns
While any further delay in the release of the Committee
on Campus Security report is regrettable, there is consolation
in the fact that the delay can be attributed to consideration
of a vital and controversial question: The arming of campus
security members.
We have never looked favorably upon the use of firearms
on campus by any segment of the University Community.
Guns simply have no place on this campus. To either amend
this belief or exempt Campus Security from this tenet, there
must be some overwhelmingly persuasive need to arm the
security force. We, however, see none.
There is a serious crime problem here . There are
numerous thefts and oftentimes physical harassment or
assaults. We cannot ignore these facts. The effect upon these
trends of arming Campus Security seems limited at best
Hiring more security members and increasing their visibility
would do infinitely more towards reducing violent crimes
and thefts. This is where the efforts shou ld be directed .
From another perspective, the idea falls short of
justification. The campus police have demonstrated in the
past their occasional inability to exercise either restraint or
proper use o f their equipment. The officiall y-documented
blackjacking of a student five months ago by security
members should serve as a vivid reminder o f their limitations
in weapon control. Also, last week's incident where a campus
policeman totally lost control ~f a "trained" police
attack -dog IS similarly indicative.

' CHICK ONI LmU-OLD· LADY TYPE. SWEET fACf, MILD DISPOSITION , HAIMLISS

~clar1te
by Ellzabetta BoUa
Dear Stan ley :
In addition
didn't you see thai tiny fis h 10 tht:
dea r water following your boat?
You are much faster th:tn I , but somet1mel- ,
when your boat man IS tired, I reac h your keel. See, I
have only my tall ICI drive me ... I was obsemng
you the last few days. I saw you eat1ng the fru11 , I
saw Y•JU .:omplatnang about the fruit YOll co uldn't
n:adl I ~aw th e desire in ynur eyes
Yuu'lllellrn
y,1u w11l l~am to seize things only by look111g at
them, to deepen yuur s1ghl by abstaining from the
desire uf possessto n Deep clear water IS almighty , so
your eyes will be
I have ro relr:un lrum all i.l~:Sires. I ca n't even
reach the fruit you are eatin g w1th such pleasure
hut I have le:trncd to see, tc• accept what 1 see. I
ac.:cpt others do thmgs I wo uld enJOY to do, I a ccept
the beauty of an unreachable fru11

The festival does have a serious problem : crashing. Many
people, apparently convinced by the limited deterrence of a
tent. are not buying tickets, but rather plannmg to fo rce
their way in . This would be truely regrettable, Many
individuals have expended much effort to make this affair a
success and they certain ly deserve better than the willful
destruction of their labors.

I would l1k c to end this Intramural quibbling
and (()I all I h r only really great edito r that the
1h1rd Oom h;u ever see n (who was late and lamented

Rece ntly the students at UB sponsored a
wcek· lo ng sy mposium on Appalachia . I attended one
day's activttaes and was very unpressed by the sco pe
and quality o f what wa..~ available
The breadth of talent and resources betng used
provided an admirable mix of daffenng viewpo1nts
11nd pe~onahties . Crafts, skills, films , speakers,
panels , di.~ptays and aud1o-visual presentations gave a
untque opportunily (nr an educational experience

Vol . 22, No. 76

Wednesday, 19 April 1972

Editor-m.Ctuef l&gt;enm' 1\r 11nlu
Co M' na~rnl( Ed11or AI Br·tl\1&gt;11
to - fvl.lnal(lllg Editor M1~ c I rppm J'"'
Ass! M•nagrng Edolor ""'''" Mu"
Busone~' Manager
l4• ~ llo·t1•11
Adv~rt""'K M•n•ger
')'"''" Mt'llo·rolotto·

Asst. .
Gn~phlc

Anoy Ahrcnd
A1111 Arm•o
jell C...rernwdld
Howle Kurll
1~nl\ (.romer
Ronno FormAn
M•lly G• ll•
Cl•llt Kfi"K&gt;m an
lynd• Tcri
Tom lole;
j11

FeJture
Afls

~tran~e

a roasted ftl&gt;h

even wh1le she was among us) was Paula Brookmur
How you co uld tgn o re th1s paragon o f tournaliSII L
ideals is incom prehensible

l'iJ I Mu lmrt ,,

lAY!tUI

M-''"hopt'

J(Hfl\Ufl

A~~t.

'v~l

l•l &amp;. Or.an••
Mu~· ~

OH..C•mpu&gt;

Jr11

Mtdt.H' i ... IIY!'tlll.lll
Btll1 Alttn•n
. l Vll lll lr•~ &gt;*•

Aut

. ~4l4111

Photo

M" ~&lt;'~ lhi&lt;'IIC!lhcr
K1rn S•nto&gt;
6.rrv Rubrn
H11w 1~ f diWI

Asst. .

Sports
Asst

Til~ Spectrum I&gt; •erved l.ly Unrted Pres; lntCIIldlltln.ll , ( ottc~c Pre"
Service, the Lo, Angeles Times Free Pres;, lhf! lu\ An!(cle; T1me'
Syndlute and Llbcr~lion News Servl~e.

Republlcuion of matter herein without the
Edllor·ln..Chief is forbidden .

e"P'~~~

&lt;Otl\tnl of the

Editorial poli'Y is determined by the Edltor·m.Chlc:f.

II

'

.

Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 19 April 1972

whiCh was almost a complete ~..outse rn ttst:lf .1nd
more mdusive than many co urses
Jt is probable that few tn the comm un1ty lak ...
advantage of the vast resources for co nttnu1ng
education. stimulatton and rnrer-(;ommuoe~o.stion
whach the Untversity prov1des.
Brave to the UB students tor th e •unbt tloll\
undertakmg. Thanks lo thrm tor the publtt
tnVI taiiOrt
M Moorr

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman

Rip-offs will simply hurt other students. because any
losses will have to be absorbed from student 1ees. Therefore ,
be cool this weekend .

Coty
Copy

And o thers will say How
Oytng thro ugh the air'

un~e

To the Hdttor

This weekend there w ill be a folk festival. On a campus
where such occasions of cu ltural excellence are rare, this is
no mean feat

a..~ kpage

Then my only w1sh wtll he to JUmp out of tiH•
water and let my fins bnng me IJke wtng:. to the s un

Appalachia appreciated

Be cool

C1mnus

l

Journalistic paragon
/ iJ lite l:dllm

Classes will end next week . The ideal situation would
evision the Committee's report in the public domain before
then . We would hope this is possible

But I'm constantly in danger. These hunters'
Other little fishes like me, bigger ones, you fistung
passionately on your trip ...
My anxiety results from the know ledge of lilY
destinatiOn . I 'm no t free because of the nver whic h I
can't escape, I' m not free because of the se,1
expecttng me. Of course rm free to deliver mysel f t•'
you all will you eat me fried in batlt~r o r put me iu a
howl on the dining room table'/
My colors are vanishtng. My tall ts s1ck of
ste enng me through th1s endless wei. I 'm alra1d of
rny tired ness. I mtght let my fellow fishes ca tch nH·
1c1 hu1ld up a nest, to grow up duld ren I've got no
lime I've sc• l11tle energy tell
I want t o reach lhe
s~a. mrH/ reach the sea

Somehow 11 lnuk~ all too familiar I rnel!n Jt 1s
1'17 .!, 1~n ' t tt '1 We h.1vrn't ue~cended th rough some
I 1111e war had, tn I 116H, have we? This IS the new
Republican prestdenl wh ose secrel plan would end
the war. nght'l £'hen tell me, Dadd y, why are all
thnsc men dytng SIXty miles fro m Sa1gon'1 And
where d1J those bombs falhng over Hanot come
lrnrn? Aren't lhose Arnencan planes st ill shooltng at
V1etnarnese clvtlians'&gt; And Whllse warships are those
~ ht!lling the .;oastltne?
Don't worry , son , !he new Republi can pn:sident
u end1ng the war. Yes, there are all lhuse deai.l
hodie!. on the supper ti rne news (I WISh they
wouldn't Jo thai , Martha , not while we're eat il'\g),
but don 't worry
they're all the wrong color. Now ,
don't rmsu nd erstand me, I hke onentals . After all ,
look how I cheered Ius tnp to Ch1na! Bes1des . ll's
beuer than hav1ng Americans d1e. Isn't it? llvw can
you com pare a Vtetnamese to an American? What do
you mean Amencans are dymg t oo? Those airplanes
don't count. tiaven't you heard the president say
that all the Arneri.:an combat units have been taken
out of ac tion? Everybody knows that bornbeM and
pilo ts don't count as combat troops. And when was
the last time you heard of an American sailor being
killed in ac tion?
I don't know what can be don e to end thiS
madness, hut somebody hetter thtnk of something
quick. T here are a bunch of lunatics loose in the
land, and their headquarters is in Washington .
Already the subtle hints have begun being dropped.
Of co urse, says propaganda m inister Ziegler. it is th e
president's ''intent, hope and policy" to ~;onlinue
Amencan troop withdrawals bu' we must
remember he is now faced with "a different set o f

drcumst&lt;Jnccs." In point of facr. the only ll'a~&lt;ln
Nixon hasn't unleashed the entire Ammcan ar.~t&lt;tral
on the Vaetamese ts Ius fetish for gettmg. re-eleded
Don' t throw away your d elc rm~·nt ~ yet hoy ~. llh'
color of the hodtes JUst might change agaw . After all
Unde Cretg.h ton could ge t very )(lnely •We1 there
W1th only 70,000 troops to play with.
Perhaps what ts needed an this c:ountry ts a lew
bombing raads. Maybe then we wouldn't he qutk sn
eager to lest our destru c ttvt ca pac1 ty on ulhec
peuple . We could start with the Capitol huildrng atrd
work o ur way down Pennsylvania Avenue to DiLkie ·~
house . I tmagine that part of the problem 1s thai
Americans have never experienced and d o nor ex pect
to expenence the hav oc and terror of hav1ng d
bomber drop its lolld oulside their IrVIng room
window~&gt; . I wonder JUSt ho w glo n o us a place war
wo uld rrl:t1n in our culture tf most had to ltve
through o ne 1n o ur own backyard. Maybe then we'd
slop paytng atlenllon to all those s tupid o ld men in
ridtculous umforms who we allow to parade through
our streets every few wec:ks. AJternatively we could
send those same "old fools ' ' (to quote Rich.1rd
Gregory) back to fight the wars they find so nobl(.'
and patriotic.
But never fear , the president will find some way
to calm thmgs down befo re the fall If there 1s one
thing R1chard Nixon believes in more than the free
enterprise system it U; Richard Nixon. He would do
anything (incJuding ac ting "liberal" and gotng to
Ctuna) to get re-elected, and unless every sign is
betnK read wro ng by everyone from The New York
1imes to The Chicago Tribune, he won't he able to
do that if Americans are reinvolved in Vietnam. That
doesn't mean he won ' t continue to allow the
slaughter of Asians.
After all, who gives a shi t about gooks?

�Procol Harum, TY A

RECORDS

Excitementjust wasn't there
It is truly a great shame, but watching Procol
Years After was almost Like being a
witness to an anachronism. There was Gary Brooker
on piano for the Harum, sing~ng "Salty Dog" for the
ten thousandth time and wondenng if Keith Reid
put his point across. And AlVIn Lee wearing those
same wh1tc clogs and sang~ng "Coin' Home" and
playang h1s guitar with a drumstick ogatn
These things would be very great viewutg,
however. 1f the former power and drive of these two
lllUSJCJans was sllll ev1dent But tn the cavernous,
ominous depths of the Aud , I fell shut out of all the
excitement Procol ll arum and Ten Yea rs After were
creating.
For Procol thrum, I co uld sense that they and
Keith Reu.J had finally written t h e epi t aph for their
long and classic death I rip None of thc1r selections
drove me dow n to the R1ver·scyx as they had done
so oft en before. And there is good r~on for thls.
Chns Coppmg is a peanut on th e organ co mpared to
Olympic Matthew F1sher, who wuh hls dark, evil
Hammond spread bad t1d10g..' when most were
h.sihng a bn~ht new world Dav1d Ball o n lead guitar
IS mcongruous w1th the gmup, and no mcrease oi
volume or speed ~an st.tnd next to Robm Trower's
h owlmg, mourmng note~ thut he seemed to pull out
uf the souls of the auidence Ba~SI\1 Alan Cartwnght
I!&gt; non-extstent and n1lthmg more
And th e re L~ B.J W1lson , ont~ of the. gre.sl
drummers 1n the wo rld of hard rm:k. who n o w
'truggles to ~o.arry 1he hand, who dues n1l! need 11 ~olu
un " Pu wer 1-.ulun:" to exh1b1t 111!1 awnome strength
.1nd explodmg beat:. And Gary Brooker s1mply
~~·cm~ to have lost itll h1~ mag1c 10 the vo1~:e a.nd on
lht' PlllOl\
"Sh1ne u n Bnghtly" st.trted off the set as a
portent of thmg.s to come The notes were very clear
aml preCise but did not cause a npple m my mmd .
l'hen on to "S1mple S1ster," Ke1th Re1d 's f1rst s~x ual
l.1nt.ssy, recogn1zed as a good song hy the nowd hut
111 my mtnd a~ a less than h on&lt;'~t attempt til hyp~c"
l~arum and Ten

Withered new songs
The llarum antruduled three new tunes,
mdud1ng an aamlc~s dittY called " 8nng1ng H omt" the
lhslull " rhe new mallmal seemed 1nnO\.UOus at best
.md wom .md w1therec.J at w u~l I began to ret real
mto C&lt;Jtd!oniL wonder a~ the ernpare crurnhled
" Whaling ')torses." the classac VISIOn of
Armaggeddun. was re~cued from eternal damnat1on
by Watso n, ·Who ~ JIWolYS a million miles ahead or
your tappmg foot
The h1gh pumt uf pa~t Procol Harum -.;on~rts
lOuld ,ilways he found 111 the performance of their
re.sl nlot.\terp1e~es ntat I.'UIU1011 of so-called classical
rod., tillcc.J now hy ··y ~" and l:.l&amp;P was always
he.sc.Jed by Pro~:ol tl.srum ( It '~ funny, but Gary
Broul.er alw.sy, d cn1ec.J th e claSSI\. mnu ences. and
nvw thetr fnrth~:om1n2 alt&gt;um 1ncludes a collusion

with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra.)
"Conquistador'' was 1-ood , real good, and 11 was here
that Gary BrookeT and B.J . drove hard and
successfu Uy and brought Ball and Copping in on
their coa tta ils. And just as I sat up an an llcipation I
heard canned seagulls
yes, ...Seagulls
and 1
wondered what the heiJ was co mmg off. It was
"Salty Dog ,'' and as Gary Brooker t ook us through a
studio recordmg session I started to get enormously
revolted

Mirror Charlie Mariano (Atlantic SO 1608)

What it aU adds up to is I dig Charbe Mariano. I k now nothing
about him except what I can fantas1ze from the mus1c on IUs album and
the picture of him on the cover, but there 1s definitely something to
this man.
First, look at the picture. !Iss face - ~:an you see 11? H ow can you
pass hjm along Wit h ou t a thought? l gnonng the Do you realize how
hard it is to try to live as a mus1caan? Not a co mmercial artist or
showman, but a serious, dedi cated mus1c1an . They're all over the world ,
Paler s hades
but this country is especially hard on 1ts arllsts. (That's because in this
But the final act 111 the tragedy of Prm:ol Harum
country art must be ~ellable and to tally powerless and mindless, which
occurred 1n theu encore. And with t h at first o rg.an
makes it not art at all, and whatever real art there il. is stifled, ignored,
note, they regrouped and c harged into the Valley of
downgraded and generally ground into the pavement.)
,
Death like good soldie rs on the back of " Whit er
Musscians face Impossible odds agamst then malong 11
a hattie of
Shade of Pale ." And for a moment, 1 felt the old
the man versus the system li e's go t to make money to Uve. Mo ney
chill just hearing "one of six t een Vestal V1rgins, who
comes from club dates and re cord contrac ts, whlch he must get in order
were leavmg for th e coas t ," that same ~::oast from
to survive. But th e club o wner ~ays you ca n't play unless you've cut a
wlu.:h Dylan's Angel had tust arnved frum . But the
record. and the rtcorc.J com pany suy~ you ca n't tut a record unless
chill was short hved as the tune got caught up 10
you've got a name for yourself. A whol e lifetime of physical and
Copping's sluggish organ
psycholngical t o rment
the average hfe txpedancy of 1azz musicians
So they left to considerable applau\e, beam 111g
i~ bdween 3Z and 36
Gel!mg that one break With a
in superf1c1al re cognition, c1nd alte1 a while the
(')\,.\ \:.
re~ord ..:nm pany ca n mean the
~ople SIJ rted calhng for the1r pln·up L.1ng, who't'
."'("'Y
sex uality never qu1te m.Jtched Jagger\ or Jame-.
~
~A_ c.Jdft'renl.'e between ltfe and death .
Bro wn '!., dlllt&gt;ng othe" l:lut he w.c. there, :ill of .s
~
l:veryont: pays the dues, but few
~udJen, w1th R1~ I cl.', Leo 1 yon\ .tnt! C'h 1 ~k
ever {CCI anyth1ng 10 return.
Chur(hlll
And the mght unlulded strangel y,
So C harhc: M.mano got his
induc.Jing a torch·hk e d1~play ul matl.hes ,wd burnmg
IHedk lrum Atl.snts c Reco rdmg
paper 1 e n Ycarl. After hJc.J n()t l.llllle une step 1n the
Lr Corporati on and made a record
past two anti d hc11t ye.sr.. It wa.' good c.Jnvlntt mu.o;1\., ""
What the mu."l. renetts IS an
no c.Juubt .shout 11, but llltln,Hunnu' .Jnc.J .sll t 11o
Afro t.JIIn hunllhty-t.autious, not
predictable It sounded hke orw lung gUitar ~olo w11h
ion h~:.svy u1 dar1ng , but
an occasaonal break lor the rest ul the hand
ct•ll~l\h:nt
m sense and flow .
Sttll, thcrl' were ~ullle gol)c.J anl)mt·nt~ Alvtn Jlltl
(',,,,,.,,cJ, ' I he musacal se ttang
Leo still work out really wdl ttn "Gnoc.J Morn 111 g
IS Slrnll:lr to that o f Gato Barbien
Little Schoolgarl," and thetr ~tmlc wa~ not h1okcn
the r:urly new Spanish-Latin
on " I Can't Keep hom ('ryang,'' although nne st1ll •
10fluenl.e 1n )817 . I he thythm
wonders what a fifteen mmute gtutar nff 1ndudtng
section~~ light us huhhle !(UOI lhluJ,
Kay lt11.:a~. Aut o Morc1ra and
all sorts of Mll7.uk ll•c hauqucs h.J.~~ In du w11 h AI
Rul ph Md)nnald 110 Ill' I urs~11111 Tony l.cVlnc. &lt; ;eorgc M ra7 o n electric
Kuoper's so ulful cnlnl'&gt; 111 that
" (;ulll ' l l on~t·"
anc.J stnn11 has.~cs , l•at Rehlllot on elertnt p1:an n &lt;lOU organ Dav11.1
was, well , "Go11l' llome ' and w1th the :rud1en~· c
Spann77&lt;r nn guttar
gettmg up and H'ally danl.lng tor the\t" ~~~n~. you
The rc~o.o1d ha' ll• lh he~ otl l..lllfl ltlerl'l.shly
one ol the songs is the
really c.:;1 n ' t Lo tnplaiO ah1)UI .1 lu'-5 of s hnwm.sn~hlp ur
tht'me frum Summ,·r 11( '42, and the: notes un the back arc
~·o ndes~;endmg pseudo Jiall~:n cc to nuke 11 vny d~ar that Charhe LS
charis ma , only Jbvut the repetition You wonder
how long they La n get away w1th 11 Two nff·t hc~uft
uSJng two different nutc'&gt; on the song
all ol wl\lc h makes me like
encores, and 11 was over
C harh e Manan11 even more. hel.ause only h)l puttmg up wtth slUt like
Maybe my head has c t\anfled , but 1 leave Prcx..ol
that ~.;o ulc.J he get rc\.onlcd I Ill' ulher ' ut~ on the album .tre all good,
Harum after nsne v1ewmgs 10 "ttte1r own fate J wdl
und Judgtnjt hy I hem I wnuhl 'UAAc~t you go \CC h1m pl.sy hve if you
still hstcn t1l their relords, ulnVInl.cd fo rever th•ll
gel the ch.sn c&lt;'
tlus waJ truly a gre.st bun ~o.h u l ro~k m~l\.l.sm but
I don't want In go .rny furlhcr w1th .rnaly~"· hco..su'e there's no
unwslhng tCl snOatc that bubble whu.:h J \mall but
~mll tu It and •t\ nut f.11r anywJy lluw m.sny 11111(';) h.ti a mUSICian
fanatil. group of hstenc~ had luxunou~ly hved 111
work~:d h1s ball\ ull to )(l't hy lln.slly gutten, dlJIIu~ tl• reo.otd , and
si nce that fateful summer uf 11167 lhl· wa1tcr" not
then get ~u t apart by the ~n~~~~' What ue the fUnll1nns ol these
bnnl!)ng any more trays 1he harncade~ are hruk..:n 1 rn ll l~? J n cnllute . .snaly te and pa" JUc.lgernenl 1 n 1n Ouenl·e o ther
walked o ut a little s.~ddcr hut o1 lnt w1~er
JX'OJ&gt;Ie's op11111tn&lt;.
Thosl' l-111d~ ul \1111~' don't 111.slo.e 1110:.1\. tlll'Y hv1· oil 11 lhey're
nnt really a pari nl the mu\1~ ,lene. ex1.ept p.sr;c;1tn.ally The ~ri ll e can
deSlrliY rnu\ll..lan,, thcH rcplll.lllon~. ~.oareer:. o~nd hvehh1•ods, but he1/
keep l&gt;O nn.aklll!; .s 1Jv1ng IIH· potwcr ut the &lt;JII o.rlll• )hould not be
taken lightly anJ nc:11hcr \ huu ld the absu rd1t)l ol h1s rule Why do wc
nerd rCVIl'Wl'C.. .111tl lrlll.:._'l
l'ure art '' rwt \ollll'lhan~ 1•1 he lot\\ed t~muntl unc.J ktcked ahout,
but ln mllll'f l'l:tl art "llltrlllSil:ally anu humanly valuelr\~ OllOUI'Se, we
all have our nwn ~tan diHd' ol whut ts ptue and what 1~ co mmercial,
what 1~ ahvl' and growmg .111d what •~ ~:ntpty and ~!Jgnt~ttng We all have
dtfh·rent IJ''"'- But try to e.~amu tl.' how they developed Why d o you
have the \ IJildatc.J, th,ll you h:rvl''1 Arc they vo~lrd'1 !h e ouly way to
.rdueve c~ny \eO\t' ul urlturt' 111 thl\ lll\IOtry IS to land the answe~ to all
lht why', th.lt you &lt;.Ill tlnnk ol

MA "''/

-&lt;"

·Q

(j

'""g

IF YOUR NOT GOING TO
EUROPE THIS SUMMERCOME TO

l(}!!!~!~!tl!!h!!:S

Norman Salonr

See Charlie

WHFRF YOU'LL FIN[) A LARGE SE LECTION OF
MORROCCAN TAPE.STRI ES, PILLOWS,
HASSOCKS. HAND WOVEN BLANKETS,
C AMEL SADDLE CHA IRS. HANDBAG~

Cluulle CLapba
fiffi

Many assorted ~p rc.tds fro•ll
SPAIN, FRANCE, PERSIA. POLAND &amp; INDIA
SPEC IAL !
From Now Until
MAY tst, 20% off wirh
Student 1.0.

''MODERN
TIMES"

\\'ron&lt;'ll,l'f•''"'l"t And dm•, ,,,1 k Ch..,t..,, Ch..,.lm
K.-tr."(,llhn'U.:h C.~un•N• I'"'ru"''

Also: Complete Waterbed systems
from S64 .95 including bed , frame ltner, foam pad.

51 allen street, buffalo,n.y.14202

STARTS

North Park

______________
_.
111-7.11
TOMORROW ._1.:11
HIITIL

884-2405
Wednesday, 19 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�-HAIRSTYLING~

Joe 's ThNtre Barber
lOSS Kenmore Avenue
(A t Colvin Th«~tre)

!*WIGS •HAIR COLORING
877-2989

Furs
Rented
For all occasions

LILA ROSENBLATT FURS
85 Allen (near Delaware)
882-7200

The Undergraduate Medical Society

Presents
Or. Robert F. Ehinger
De pt. of Social and Preven tive Medicine
Sp eaking on

HEALTH CARE IN AMERICA

Mr. Alice Cooper
Altce Coopet' and his band bring
their own br8nd of musical
insanity to Memorial Auditorium
this Friday. Their reknowned
antics on rtage culminate in one
grand finale of cold air.

Where it's been
Whe·re it is n ow
Where it's going

A lso : Important information for Juniors
TONIGHT. 8 :00p.m.
ROOM 246, HEALTH SCIENCE
TUTORING AND G UIDANCE~
SINCE 1938
•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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e
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•
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MCAT- OAT

Only 2% could be
tomanh ••.

LSAT-ATGSB
GRE

• Preperet .on f or tests requiAd f or
lldmi~n to gr8duate and prof. .
sloneiiChools
• Sox and !Wetve - •on coursn
• Small groups
·voluminous material for nome study
pr~ared by experts on each f'-ld
• Ln10n sched ule can be tailored to

m eet ondwodual needa L-~
c an be spread OYer a perood of
several mont hs 10 a vnr. o r for
ou t o f te-n nuden u . a r&gt;«ood
o f oncwNII
• Opportuno ty for revoew o f past
lesaons voa tape at the center

Spec:~l

ComJ)Kt Counes during
Weekends - lntenesions
Summer Sessions

•••

•

•
•••
••
•••
••

•

••
•••
•
••

STANLEY H . KAPLAN
EDU CATIONAL CE NTER l TO.

,.,.. •• ,,~s-......~ .. .,
(212) 336- 5300
(618) 538-4566

u·
-4

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Itt\'\ t\tl"-tNGS Wtl-.tH(A

•

•

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•

Onto way from JFK London, Paros
tor Ams terdam Round trop $!95

by 707 and 747 Jets

but 100% can be heard here.

••
••
•

N.ttonat Unoon of Students Travel
Service, Inc .
30 E. 4 2nd St , N Y . N.Y. 1001 7

••

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••
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Sloodent oower does i t ' Our in ter·
n,;loonal servoce ,u-.t tor Mudenls
pel'&gt; you speLoal ,et aor lares to
and throughout Europe Conformed
Sedt!&gt;, pre·scheduled departures
Complrmentary medls and bar
~ervoce Avood h igher summer
•dies by booking now Also l hg ht s
to Tel Avrv. Zurich. fran kfu rt .
Rome. Athens, and others.
For full in formation call ~
(212) 916·1910
or mail coupon

•••
•••

Dear Mr. Congressman:
I strongly urge you to use your vote to stop the
killing and the senseless spending in
Southeast Asia. Let's end the war. and bring
all our troops home - now.
Name ______________________________________

•
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Nam• ------------------Streel - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Helpllnlell the Ww, 637 W. 125th Street, New York, N. Y. 10027

Clly· - - - - - - -------- -- -- - -

-------------Siale &amp; ZIP- - -- - - - - -

•

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Page ten. The Spectrum . Wednesday, 19 Aprill972

�Baseball team has
first road victory
All organiutions funded by the Undergraduate Student

T eaneck,

Association must have REP fo rms processed by Monday ,
April 24th. No REPs can be processed after that date un til
the summer sessions.

flouse
of w•eels '•c.
Spart and Bicycl• Shap
featuring

Peugeot
Bianchi
Steyr
Gitaine
/111/ 1111&lt;' of

nJm~ 11/1/mrl'l
f lUff \

Lightweight \Crvtc-t' 'JWc.: iali\t\
M "" Wt."tJ r n 1o .1 111
l ut."s I hur' &amp; S.ll I 0 "

,,
111

11 m
h I'

Jeuey

-

defen11C and powerful hitting, the
Buffalo basebaD Bulls got their
first two wins on their New York
City road trip, Sunday afternoon.
The Bulls ripped Seton Hall twice,
2-1 and 9- 1, before losing Monday
afternoon at Fairleigh Dickinson,
10.8 in the finale of their road
I rip.
"Odachowski ptt c hcd
consistentJy well throughoul the
game," observed veteran Kansas
Ci ty Royals ' baseball scout Dan
Carnevale ... He had good control
of hrs prtches and seemed to get
stronger as the game progressed."
Carn e vale WJ' refern ng to
Odachow~kr \ tluee lut vu.tur y rn
lhe upcner ul lhc Schm Hall
I wrnhrll
The ex- turn er htgh
\l.:hOttl star wa,s so overpowenng
lh.tl the Bulls' oulfield rcg~stercd
only lwo put unts Wtth the
vrctory . Odachowo;kr . wl1&lt;1 threw
hul I 0 I pit cites. lowered Ins t- RA
In I XO C:ary 0\ l&gt;lll~tn~ Ja,th.ill
l .tUSCd Ill Pu:tll"\ to lut the hall
on 1he ground
Stanko :rupplic~ powt'r
Right flc.'ld rr M Jt~ ~ IJII~II
supplied lhl" hallnt ~ putr....lt hy
slamrnmg a two 11111 hunt\' rtllt 111
Ihe
sec ond 11111111!-\ Ill ~tVl'
Od :r c how~l..t all
till' run~ hl·
needed to w111 St.JIII..u l"llllllftttl'd
his ballrng hcrot;.;\ 111 thl' )Clll lld
g:unt• I k douhlcll h•trnr the Bulls
third run 111 thl' thud rtulmg ao&lt;.l
blasted a nul her Iwo run :.hut liVer
the wall '" tht: nex t hamc tn cap
the Buffalo ..c.11rrng fur lhl· day
lclthandcr Mrkl· Cah1ll hurled

IIJIIrtflg &lt;'C{llf/1111&lt;'11 I tlll cl

'l't't wit\

New

Combining good pitching, good

·a ible Truth

111

RESURRECTION

U~

T HE. DEAD

··Fo'" stnre by m•o come Cle•tn ,
by
m•n
con••
• ho
tno

8560 MAIN Sr.

resurrec.ltUtt ot tha de•d

tn

411

die. even

For .,

w

Hear, 0 Israel
For gems from the

JEWISH BIBLE

1n

Phone

Cnrt~l sn•" • II be m •&lt;Je •""• ••

~2-~ r

r Mile • .., of Yr•,..,

Ad4n'

a complete game victory in the
second gam e. throwing 108
pitches over seven innings. Cahill
allowed just five en emy safeties
and d rove in what proved to be
the winning run with a second
inning double to cen terfield. T he
victory raised the southpaw's
record to 2 - l , and his ERA was
lowered to 2 .70.
The Bulls' two game win streak
came to an end Monday afternoon
whe n t h ey dropped a 10-8
decision at Fairleigh Dickinson .
Shortstop Rick Albert led the
Bulls' attack by driving in fo ur of
the etght Buffalo runs. Albert
slammed a three run home run
over the nghl field fence in the
third mning and added an RBI
srngle In center two innings laterBuffalo entered the fifth inning
w1 th a 4 · 1 lead . only to see it
drsappcar when FDU scored six
trmcs Three of the tallres were
uneamed as a result of two ermrs
J oe P1 sco tt y·s double llt
centerfield t1cd up the game at
&lt;;even-all 111 the sevent h slant&lt;~
Ho wever. f'ahrll , wh o had
dcfca lcd Srton Hall the day
before , Wa) vrctullrt.ed by lhrce
Rurfalo l'rror~ a~ the Knrghts
nolched two unearned runs tu
l.t~c the lcJd fur go,KI Cahill's
own throwrng error allowed the
l1n;t n111 lo &lt;oCOre and ano l11l'r
lluowtng errl\r by catd1er Cary
fox allowed yet an11lher run to
~.:r11'\.\ the plate .
flu: Bulls I akc 11n crus.s·h lwn
rrval Canmus thrs aftcrnoun at
Delaware Park and open then
humr -.cason l· rrday aftcrnonrr at
~ p rn .tgautsl Wc~ l Vrrt:rnra

I Co•

I~

21.

n

8754265

:~~---------------~
sa1e ,. . . .,. . . . ,. . .,. . .,,. . . 1
BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL
April 21- 22-23
3 Evening concerts

performers mclude

1

1

ever&gt;y~Aaa·s OOdt Sf(ft

1. ---------------•• •• •• .. .,

L

:n02 Main St.

2 /Jiot h w utlr oj tlw C r,mada rht·utre ....

i

: $895

Dayume workshops

** ******** * ***** * ***
J .B HUTTO AND HIS HAWKS • PAT SKY

BONNIE RAITT • JOHN HERALD &amp; FRIENDS
DAN HICKS &amp; HIS HOT LICKS
EARL SCRUGGS REVUE • UTAH PHILLIPS
DOC &amp; MERLE WATSON* HAPPY &amp; ARTIE TRAUM

* * *** * ** * ** * ** ** ****
STUDENT ALL FESTIVAL TICKETS $6.00

Student evening performances $2.00

I with

-

-

- ·

jthis ad

:~~LAS~ZEE~ A~~
1!~~~.K~ B~~~·

Better
11

i:

1

i. s::~~s La,.~root.lI

I:

8 - 13

f!f;f,JJa
_____ . .

exercise •
sandals •

For further information come to 261 Norton Hall

IHERWG'S DRUG
•

••

sroiui

3\~8 MaJ.n St, ••

••..:

Wednesday, 19 April. ,l972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�Get a Free Gl•ft

when you open a new savings account of $5,0CX&gt;

STARnNG MONDAY, APRIL 3

or more.or $500 or more.or $50 or more- or make
an additional deposit of $ 5,(X)() or more.or $500 or more -during the Grand Opening.
These balances must be maintained for 12 months. One gift for an account white

.....,.. .._. Duriftt Cahll

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the supply lasts Open Your Account In Person or By Mall.

Take your choice of these free glfta for a new eccount
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Take your choice of these free g ifts for a new account
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•-·l -

Gttls '" person or by mal t

.etol•

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Gilts In person or by mall.

7-Plece
C*wNt Sel. Lined
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c.noinl W8tt Trie Stl

CIHSOC, t U y IO&lt;Itan
t *•art

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Take your choice of these,,.. glfte for •

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Int e rest guarante ed I rom 21o 5
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$ 100 Also ava1lable !&gt;"'•"'- a year
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Dectrlc C:l«t. l uml
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S% o r eor Ia IHI dlvo- -~1!2!1!ll!t9
Of.!'Y one! c•ed&lt;led qw,.rlf Paid lOt
~·"'l' c14ty your

..

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no

meu..- • ""-"' rou Mlhdfew-c:wo-tkted •
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Yov 1"1\aY cteoos•l u mu.ch •~ you w1.n
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BUFFALO
SAVINGS
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ltl•m N t F•Ht el D• POtU lnaut•ttc• CotPOt•non

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el ,...,. ,,... .,. riiU•.,

Your ecCCHIIIC. must be opened In thla on~. but your
banldM)ok INY be UMd at aft on~. of tne bank.
Main Office: Main, Huron, Genesee and Washing ton Street s· 3134 Bailey Avenue at East Amherst Street • 2199 Senec a Street near Cazenovia Street • 3637
Delaware Avenue near Sheridan Dri ve • Wal den ~'l.ttO.~_and Harlem Road •
3980 Sheridan Drive near Harlem Ro ad • FAD PAIUUIIICi AT ALL Of'ACU

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Wednesday r 19 April 1972

~

te • ..,..

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• ••••1111

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lklffalo ....,._ . . .. l980 Sfwidan Ortwe. Am._..., New Ycw11 14226
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S~" I Yur Speclll Ttn11 Sllll1111 Acco.~nl
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S'lrt R..ul tt O.J of O.poJI!Io 01y of Wltl!driWI I Savi na • Account

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SotiOI Security llo

Add tess
City

TO TltAHS,.Ol ,.UNDS TO
eU,.f"ALO SAVINGS aANI(
plt UI lill OUI tillS COUpOFI. (,..
tl~t blnllbOoll of xcount to
t.. ,,.nslorrtd 1rld mail to us
We' ll return your b an~ al
lor lilt 1r1nslor ll comp ltltd

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ACCOOitT IIUM8£R
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CIIJ. Stole, Zip

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to "'J Pfnllfll 1&lt;&lt;-1 #

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( My O.nktlootl Is lfiCioMCI )

Slr n• turo

To wn of Amherst Office:
3980 Sheri dan Dri ve near Harlem Road, Amherst, N. Y. 14226
Telephone : 852-5130

ev M AIL

_ USE nti S COUP'ON TO OP£N YOVIt ACCOUNT
(.,.,. t..h~ •

tt•il!\ltrt,.

DOllARS

�Lacrosse club beaten by National tourney
Rochester Yellowjackets ·Dixon is table tennis champ
In a game that was a
throwback to their o pener, t he
Buffalo lac rosse club suffered
their second loss in three games
against Roc hester last Saturday.
The game was reminiscent of the
season's o pener at Brockp ort for
several reasons. First there was the
rainy weather and quagmire field
conditio ns. Second 'Was the poo r
defensive play, which gave up nine
goals to o nly five fo r the Bulls .
The game was very close until
the fourth quarter when the
Yellowjackets got three goals and
kept Buffalo scoreless. At the end
of t hree periods the score was 6-5
m favor o f Rochester, and it
looked like the Bulls could come
back and win after dominating the
t hi rd quarter. Ho wever, ten
penalties in the final stan za sealed
Buffalo's fate.

Weakness on defense
"Our overwhelming weakness
1s in c lose d e f e nse," said
player-coach Frank Sroka. " Aside
from (Tonyl Pisarski, the whole
defense is very inexperienced."
1ndeed more practice may be aU
that is needed to improve this
aspect of the game.
Goalie Bill Smith had a good
day an the goal accumulating I 7
saves. But once outside of the
crease, Smith had a lot of trouble.
Smith's clears were bad , and o nce
he passed the ball right to a
Rochester stickman who easily
scored o n the open net. Smith
seems to be waiting too lo ng to
get rid of the ball.
The extra man offense wo rked
much better against Rochester
than it had previously . It

produced two of the Bulls' five
goals, both of which were scored
by Perry Hanson on passes fro m
Steve Hersc hopf. Hanson had a
hat trick as well as an assist to
bring his team leading goal
produ c t io n to seven. Sroka
recorded t he other two tallies
against the Yellowjackets. Hanson
and Szoka, both c enter
midfielders, not only scored , but
consistently wo n the faceoffs .

Tennis BuDs win
Friday the varsity tennis Bulls
opened up their season with a 9~
blasting of Buffalo State . In the
practices previous to this match,
so ph o more Allan Engel beat
Dennis Dunning and then Steve
Sesoday to tak e over top position.
Engel wo n in straight sets as did
the rest of the team . The winning
margins were: ftrst si ngles Allan
Engel 6~ . 6-1, second single
Sesody 6-1 in both sets, Dunning
6 -2 in both sets, Paul Parelli 6~.
6-1. Joe Dinoffer 6-2, 6-3. and
Danny Heukrath 7-S, 6 -1. At first
doubles Engel and Sesody won
6~. 6 -1, second doubles Dunmng
and Parelti wo n 6-3, 6-2 and Elliot
Sigel and AI Boardman finished it
ou t a t third doubles winning 6~.
6-1.
Saturday's m atc h against
F redonia had to be stopped with
the Bulls ahead 4.0 before the
rains ca me. Friday , Coach Sanford
will take Engel and Dinoffer to
Fredonia to try to win their
singles mat ches. Both wo n the
first set a nd are ahead 4-3 in the
second. Sanford expects little
trouble until t he Rochester matc h
on April 25.

\

A sport such as table tennis can easily be
o bscured by the more glamorous and publicized
sports, but for Jim Dixon table tennis is the game.
Dixo n , a 24 year old Buffalo junior kept his amazing
and growing table tennis record intact as he finished
ftrSt in the national American College Union
championships at Whitewater State College in
Wisconsin .
Dixon , who has held the Buffalo City cro wn fo r
five straight years, advanced to the Whitewater State
competitio n with a first place finish in the regional
ACU action at Oswego State last month . The
regional at Oswego State was o ne o f I S regional
tourneys held across the country involving college
unions. Last year, Dixon finished second to fo rmer
Buffalo student Manfred Jahn in the ACU, but this
year Jahn returned to his native West Germany to
leave the competitio n to Dixon. According to Bud
Manning, director of Norton Hall recreation , Dixon
will soon be ranked among t he nation's top ten table
tennis players, with a shot at foreign competition.

Formerly at State
Prior to his attendance at Buffalo, Dixon
attended Bu ffalo State after an ill ustrious baseball
career in high school. An all-tugh selection , Dixon
pla yed in the Detroit Tiger cha1n at Lakeland ,
flo rida before ret urni ng to Buffalo and the start of
his table tennis dominance.
Expressing confide nce. Dixon remarked · " I 'II be
ranked in the top I S. Besides prestige this ra nk ing
en titles me to tnals for the na tional team."
Of course, D1xon co mmented {In the Wble
te nnis ex ploSion that has hit the nat1on Dixon
remarked . "Table tenn1s IS o n t he upswintt. People
saw it on te leruion last Saturday . In the past people
didn't reali1.e t hat there was that much rxert1on in 11.
I'd lik e to see it in the public schoo ls, and &lt;ther
gradual ion I ' m going to start clin1cs and
ex hibitiOns."
A proponent of the power offens1ve game ,
Dixo n sees the United States' national team as "not
up to world cahber, because they need lo tram

Jim Dixon

-cotten

Jim Dixon and Norton Hall director of recreation,
Bud Manning hold the American College Union
trophy for first place in table tennis. Dixon, a
five-time city of Buffalo champion won the trophy
for one year with a big victory at the ACU national
c ompetition at Whitewater State College in
Wisconsin.
more." D1xo n hi mself t rains by runmng, " about
three of four miles every other day ." A physical
educatiOn maJOr D1xon's next move IS to get a
sponsor tn o rder to com pete in the Pan American
games. Don't look JUSt yet, but soon o ne of the
Unite d States· national players might be Jim Dixon,
c halleng~ng t he Chinese for table tenniS dommatton .

~oobe_ iM

,,

Wednesday , 19 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�AD INFORMATION

CLAIIIPIII

Call 135-50.7.

Cl..ASSIFIED ADS m•y De pt•c.d
Mon~y thru Frl~y between 9 • . m .
•nd 4 :30p.m. •t 3SS Norton Ho111 .

ART MAJORS only: living quarters, •II
uUIItle5 Included. 150/mo. with stUCIIo
PIIWII..... Callll6· 3616 momlf9.

THE STUDE NT r•t•~ of an old lor one
~Y IS $1 .25 for the llrst 15 words and
$ .05 for uch addiUon•t word. $1.00
for ~h addition•• a.y . The ae.dUne
lor Monday k Frldoly; for WeelnetOay,
It Is Mona.y , o~nd for Frldoly, It Is
weonesa.y by 4 : 30p.m.

BEAUTIFUL 3 ·beelroom ac~t . 1 mile
from umpu~ BKkY¥d ac:cas to
Lincoln Pan&lt; . Must buy furniture at
reasonable price . Really , It's
reasonnle, 137· 1202. Bot!, Dave,
Louk.

"HELP

MODER N 3-Dedroom o~Pt. 1: Olod&lt;s
hom campus
Av•llnte ~Y 1.
Females only . c.u 83 2..0249.

WANTED "
ads "nnot
on tne balls of Ml&lt;, color,
creed or nallono11 origin to o~ny ••tent
(I.e ., Preferably Is sflll dlscrlmln•tory).
Ol s.crlmlno~te

LAROE 3-0ectroom apt. n•llable M•y
1. Elmwood near Ullu . C all 883·9163.

"FOUND" ads will be run free of
char~ lor a mar&lt;lmum of 2 d•ys and
15 word~o

WANTED

UPPER HALF o f hOUM, ,_y tar~.
.wall•ble Ju- 1st. Near umpus on
M•ln. Fully fornl~ed. C •ll 132· S607
Of 835 · 5523.

S MA LL AUTOMATIC ur for practice
with licensed driv« end t._ke r&lt;&gt;o~d test .
Wilt ~Y C all Debbie 8116·1 611 .

• · BEDROOM APT . S220/monlh,
utilities Included . 164 Wende St Call
896 ·5563.

PART TIME student
porterlng eno
errandl. S 2 .00111r Co~ll 882·3101 for
•ppotntment.

APT. 3 bedrooms, o ft Herlel Available
May 1. S180 a month • . Mufl buy
lurnlture. C•ll 837-668 2 .

USED
UPRIGHT
lhr...Quarltr Silt oeo
834·0827.

2-8EOROOM o~partment for 2 Of 3.
S 1 2 0/month . Must Duy furniture
5 - mlnute w•tk from c ampus
834..()772 .

plano ano
John or Gall

WANTED · S &amp;H GrMn Slam p bOoks.
$2.50 uch . 833·0416

GIR L FOR •ummer lOb May
L abo r
D ay, oncludlnq two weeks at ....snore
Lrve·ln ana helP wll n J Chil dren 9,7,2
Y . . ". Otl1wo1re P~tk area 8abyslttrnq
relerentts ana driver's llt.enwo reQuired
873 7&amp; 72

STEREO. dressers , etectrlc stove,
douole bed
cn . .p . Call M•rge
875..0268 .
COOL DEAL Off board ne•t vear'
Oorm·Siled refrigerator .v•llable May
9 . Pnce ne 9ot1•ote
Cltll Lynne
831 2897
'65 C H E VY II ttall o nwo~gon , 4 new
t ires, 55, 000 tTitlts. 6 cyll r10er
stand•rd , I0:? 5 6917286

HOUSE FOR RENT
Amherst
large OedroomJ, stove, r eh tc)e,•tnr,
dlshwfther. garb•9Ct dlsp&lt;&gt;ul, o utooor
b.orbe c ue . c arpet ed lhrougl1uul
Suitable to r 3 or 4 sluoenls 1. ease
rtQulteO Available June I ~In S-' I~
per mnnth C all 6J.J 1 7J6

PANAS 0 N I C
l V, l
yeor&gt; 010
E ll c ellen t roflOIIIOn R -o nable pr1ce
C al l Lvnn 8 37·2 195

J BEDR OO M apart m ent
Starin, 1 1'&gt;0 • month
lutn11111e C' oil 838 )&amp;:&lt;'tl .

"'
l)uv

VW S ouareback
new or.akes,
qooa Oudy , Great englrte Almost 1ny
'"'" on dble o ffer a cc ep tea . &amp;J4 9J4S

TWO
BEAUTIFUl
lurrHSioea
..lo•rtments. tn huuse, Av41 11 .tbl~
MOlly S ept 3 peo p let •o.art rnen l '&gt;min
walk N eqollable . 8J I ::'28'&gt;

S MA LL e tu
relrl~~trll or
Walnut
Gooa conalllon C •ll Ronn1 8ll-41ll"'
or S •ndv 8J 1 6627 Best offer

FEMALE SE EKS pia&lt; e lo sh•re with
o thers fur summ.,. andtor fa ll near
c.ampus O w" room oesl!eO 631 &lt;?6 1r l

S UMN(~

u yuu neea • toomm •t•

2 b*'r uoru •Ph

'&gt;L UIJA

EQUIPM E NT , !wo n '&gt;J's
fo rm ltll"d bltc k, pori&lt; re&lt;ju lat nr pill\
C. all BrUte 8 7 l-8 I J2 lor det•ll~

rnler mec:ll~ le skiers
8J7 I&amp; JO

RIOE NE E{)EU
weekena ,...,, ,,ext
Aslc for f. tHd

r UR N ISH£ U
"~ ru"l&gt;l
tor ten t , weth u t1tttlet1t
June hi Suotal.&gt;le lot 4
Please cal
.titer &amp; p nr

t t• ,

11 v 1

t

o orn,

bollnr ot•m All furniture &amp; applianc e s
f '"" stuaents l&amp;S/mo M C il W ~ll&lt;mg
diUance t o U.tl Av,ll&lt;ible May 1$1
C a ll 8J!&gt; lJ03 9 a .m 6 P m.
Bf.AUll f'UL J 4 bed rt&gt;uni futno~ned
t.ous e , S m•nute walk fr om ca rr~pu s
Avall•ote Moly 1~ P11ce ne9otoo~ble

1963 PONTIAC ,
759-6678.

SIOO .

C•ll

h•lt

•••
•••

•••
•

••
WOOLY LLAMA •••
••
•
••e
••
e
••
••
•

The

••
e

•

rr

••
••

The

Oliver Beauty Salon
5957 MAIN STREET
WILLIAMSVILLE, NEW YORK
633-5437
'Tour ha1r. styled the way you want it!"

Authentic Bohvtan peasant
c loth now mede rn fashionable
h ot pants, gauc hos, slaclls,
mfdtS, mBKIS, VestS, pnocl&gt;os,
11es From $8.00

•
:

:

480 Elmwood Ave.
(near W Ut•ca StJ

882 108 2

•
•••

••
•••
••
•
:

:

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday , 19 April 1972

REFRIGERATORS, stoves and
WMtlets. Rec:ondltlorseel , ctellvereel ano
eu.er•nteed . 0&amp;0 AppllanGts, 8•4
Sycemore. TX4-3113 .
ENTIRE a~rtment o r ret•Uvety -w
furniture. Good ae.t for cou ple
looking to furnish a place. Call S ieve
838 · 2211.

Jeff

PERSONAL

VW CA MPER , '69. E•cellent
condition . Not dtl\111'1 In w inter .
-o,ooo 1\lghwav miles. 681..0979.

CAMPUS CRUSADE announc.s mass
birth corstrol meeting to prepere lor
the Coming of Chri st . Hurry - •volel
the bl9 rusn1

'61 BUICK 67,000 miles . N - tires,
upholStery, b•llery. EKcell ent
corsdltlon. S 150. J.adc 136-6234.

HOME. CONTRACTI NG thee! of
hl9h
prices and l o w Quality
workmanship ? Twin CHiles Co. hH
been formed by former u.e. gro~dvete
to answer sucn a question. N o w glvln9
fr . . estimates for the fottowln9 wOI'Ic :
hous-e painting, .vallp•perlng, eutters
cleaned , repalrtO, small Jotls the ••rge
exploiters turn aw•y. C•ll now oefOfe
busy .-on 9tiS underway. After 6
p .m . L eon•ro 885-6831.

ONE 5000 BTU air conditioner , tnrM
~rs old, easily lnslo~lleel . Price S 70 .
Call Freel 136..0737
1968 VW BUG 50,000 miles. E•ullent
corsdltlon. Sl1&lt; Urft, AM · FM . Rear
defroster, s 1200. Call 897-3663.
135 mm 12.8 Vlyatar for Nlkon, CIIM,
Skylight , 52 mm step.Oown ring, $60
or trOICie. 837·2512.

WOULD THE person who wlln tsnd e
fight between 1 German S hephard
Security Guard d09 and an I rlsn S ette•
on tM nlgnt or A Pill 1 z •t 9 , Jo p .m
plea~• call s ... •t 835-454 8 or Steve ••
831 · 5$02.

'69 VW BUG, SO,OOO miles, S850.
831 2310 .
1969 VOLKSWAGON - cl eo~n . new
potlnt, 45,000 miles. Or~gln•t owne..
C •II oetwMn a 3cr • · 30. 897-()75 I ,
835-8636
'6&amp; C HEVY VAN umpet, InSUlated ,
under 50,000 mil" 6&lt;yllnOer. ltd
Shill Excellen t co nd itio n, 6 ti•Celtent
tires. $69!&gt; C •ll 8 35 30~ l
FISHER XT-18 speaker systems,
sealed FisherS-year gultrantee,
12" woofer. 2 S" m ldr•nge, 2 ·3"
tweeter . Only $100 C all AI 8 35 66J 7
FOR S A L£: AMPEG 8 · 1 2 AMP for
Vllar, ba.s, or9o1n . C •ll 835 -7579 f"ree
kiSS

Webster
Diet ionar ies
Library si:rc , unabrid&amp;td
edjtion, bn~nd n~, still in box ,
Cost new :$45.00

We'll sell for $15
Deduct I 0% on ordtt
of 6 or mOft'

National LiQuidators
30S3 Main sr~t
Buffalo, N~w York

837-1110

TWO NYL O N m oun tain Ients, o olh •n
excellent rnnolllon One two-man •nd
n ne !Ioree n••n Reasonable 836 :&lt;&gt;5111
TWO A R 4 X speal&lt;ers, s 100 ot oes1
oiler
Br.ano new
Colli O ebb oe
886 1611

FOR SALE- nome with on~edroom
apt . Furnished upSt•l". Renting S 125
mOt\th. C lose to U .B. Low 20's. Will
ho44 mort,.ge. Ttl . 134·5864 .

TRAVEL CO MPANION w.tnted 10 soe
world. O ver 21. Call R09 674 2125
HOW EARLY" tne Dawn . Is II really
befo re lh lima. Fl"d OtJI Fr iOay
CO M E HEAR about Ban• •u· ll•n
ean•l world Fall~!' Rm . 262, N Otion
Every FrtOay, 8 I &lt;? p m
or &lt;.411
137 3252
MO TORCYCLE • .tulo onsurance
lnst•nt FS-1 re~rdless o f al)e o• drlvln~
record Willoughby Insurance, 162 4
Main S t ., BuffalO, N .Y. 88S 6100,
Mo n Frt , 9 - 8 p . m ., S at 9 2 p m

,-------------,

:College
I Admission
:
Arranged

I
I

,,,,( illlitil/1/ ,,,

lhlfltllll f'luc

c'llll'//1\

O LAW
11 MEDICAL

U GRADUATE
0 VETERINARIAN~
O COLLEGE DROPOUTS
fl COLLEGETRANSrLRS
&lt;.ull/wrJte Dr. Page
(212) 27S 2900
I n/1~1/c'

!lt/m"'""" ( ,.,,,.,

•I \ I

I IJ.I W 1)rn.,.,, Hit cJ
I o• n l IIIII,, \ I // 1

--------------

MICHELIN

~~~

Must

194t6 PL VMOUTH, 6 · cyllncter,
autometlc, radio, hell«, gooo
condition. Asklne •325. 838 · 3191 .

NIKKORMAT FTN With 50 mm and
105 mm. Nlkon lenses and accessories .
$300 - CJIII Setn 875-8195.

No dealers . uch vnlume
specificaiJy stamped not for
resale.

1964 VALIANT In e•&lt;.elleHt Shape,
$300 C.o11ll 8J2 071(, evenwg'&gt;

apartment
u9

suoetflunu'

Vork

FOR SALE

Ol8~

~

n•

aPP&lt;oveel C om p llment a&lt;v
&lt;. u n s u 11•1 t u 1\ D y • P P 0 I II I me rll
!&gt;4 !&gt; 8 9/1\, :?.J J 5~4"1
A•turta , N11w

Ann A•bur 1111\
83] 9ll ..'Q

RIDE WANTt.O In C. • llfornla on nr
around Aprrl 2 4 Will sf1~te Clllvlf\9 _,.ll
o.penses C ~ll Dave at 8 9!1 346f&gt;

apartmllnt on Grider

J oeoroor..

to

l r.t HLS clesore cornpa1110ns w•U• r ~r
for &lt;.tnu t.l)un tty h.tvtth Mctv &amp; Ju• ~ et
Ptea~o &lt;.~II 8 JJ.f!) II

Available J•Jne l "· l&lt;eep

d 1n

un\N•"ted

M~O itallv

Pte~u tt ~All

AlOE NEE DED to Onto, Aprtt 1'1
Aprol 20 C a ll Ruth 81!1 1628 .

.\Lt'OU fttJnl Meyef Metn()f lal H O\Pttall

M OOE R N

nf

RI DE WANrto fur trnu co11n1rv
lt•vt't&gt; M•y June W ill snare o rovlng
.and expenw.s C •ll At88J 916J

FOU~ BEOHOOM nouse
L.alayelle
off M&lt;un, ' 110 mo N n ••••e ease"'"" '
4ttd o il strut P4rkltt'l 881 0115

h t t r t'\ e n.

free

RIDE Nt.E UEO lu WMI I. n asi Leav lrtU
2ne2, Jrd ur ta\t w&amp;ek ''' M.j '/ Wlfl
•hare Ollv•nq ~ experuon Call Jim
834 71611

APAATMEN1 FOR RENT

&lt;4111&lt;'9 89&amp;

bla c h

LOOKING lor riO"' In I amp a F II&gt;• lOa
Ll!olv lng on or .arouno Mol y I Sndlf'
expen~es Cfii8Jl l 611

FUI L OR O•rl If not' IUD\ a&gt;ari.ODI~ w 11n
Besllone Inc C411 1\rl 11&lt;1&amp; 2094 ur
Mil&lt;e 83~ S &lt;' 15. M.,. tlngs at Executove
Ad"'•da • nn

s 100/ monlh

l 20 C olli M• IIV

DON NAMARIE
regl\lereo
41111&lt;.troloqlsl speciall,lng 1n the rernoval

RIDE NECOEO lo Pollsbu•gh nr
Clevelartcl this frocl•y, 4 / 1 2 o~na return
trtp L~ll 87J -79!&gt; j A\1&lt; lnr AI

SrART $ 2 per hnou saldty plus b•mu~
Work 4 II o .nr """ekCl•vs, 10 2 p no
Satu&lt;daV\ C ~II 835 J60J o• I F9 0402

BFO~ lHJ M

~ f'\0

VOl KSWAO O N OU&gt; lor sale,
1~ 50 New engrne a nd P••nt E •cellent
running condition C rill 8J8 - 112~

U.B AREA
), 4 4rtd ~ Oedr oum
oJpartrnenh fr om 2 bl ocks to IV, miles
from campus . C tll b.l.l-9455 fur
recoreled rnm,aC)e on ltH... uon

OVE'RSCAS JOSS lor S t udent~
Australia, F\Jtope. S l\ttle, ,c.4, A'"'-4,
ett A ll utu f esstons •nd Oc..t..upcth Ott\,
l 100 to $JOOO mon thly f•oen.es
O.t•d.
nvetttme. -a lqhheeln9
Free
lni&lt;'Hm•t•on
wr ite
JOI;IS
UVEASE.AS. O e ot
ES, 1' 0
Go•
ISO/I '&gt;•nDoeQu (.4h l &lt;};&gt; li S

Available
&gt;l uoenl•
81111901

lj t)nd

bee}• nnet 1o

SHADES of Qrey , IW Q
k ittens C all 883 8 7~4

AIDE BOAAO

dParlmenl

lnt

1964

"l'lSt

fUlL V

'&gt; I&lt; IS •nil poles

ME fA I

COOOI\ I('HI

occupatwn~

re~ralnq
N
A m ~ r~ca and Overse.a)
c&gt;p portun ltles, uo to l 1600 mnnthly
For com plete ln hl rr11dll c&gt;n, write tn
JOB RE SfA R C ~t , Box 12SJ C,t~ 1\
Tnrnntf&gt;, Onl Enclose $~ to cover

O NE

M u~l

'f&gt; 1

LAFAYET l £
HfiGHI'&gt;
APARTMENTS. 2 0 nlln It&gt; umpus
Fully furnished, effic ien c y ShiOIO dnO
s tuOio \ulle olpolrl menh
N o l.. se
requl rtld Hydt' Park B lvd at L..•t•yclle
Ave
N 1aqar4 F •lh &lt;.all tt&gt;lletl
;&gt;8 4 !&gt;Il l

APPL.t&lt;.A li O N S now Oelng t•ken tor
tour 9u1 0e&gt;, nostesst'l, esc ort servi c e
.ana mOO ell Call 884 4 991 b elw" n J 0
am and ~ p m
vdriOus

Hertel

EL MWOOD Me•
I MIO
•v•"•hte I urrHstu~o
'1 SO t o ' &lt;''&gt;0 811 5 8100 or 832 1.11&gt;8

USED Bll.VCLE wa nt eo •n Qnoa
con01110n Please COlli Suw n 8ll 1~ 11

Of

191 I HONDA C B 350, 3350 mile&gt;
Fine condit ion ASking 1 700 C • ll
Edote ~• a1• &amp;057

'69 RENAULT statlonwagon .
..... 1900. 137-4958.

STEREO AM-FM tune!' and matched
~ken. Good condition, $65, or belt
offer . &lt;;all Steve 833-8532.

to~elory

WANTE 0
L onqulstiCS po~per at least
frve pages long W 1111n9 tn pay C all
Freo 83b 0737 .

PER SO N S

1965
CORVAIR
good
tr.nsport•tlon, cheap! C•ll 881..0996
between 11-5 efler 6 :00. 816 -5 899 .

recently

NEW SANVO portable television . H.as
UHF cnannets. GOOD rec;epllon Only
S65 Call 838~586 .

LOOK NO FU RTHER ! Ap.trlmenl for
.J bedrooms, f ully furnished . 5
minutes t o campus. C all Milce or Howie
8311 1&amp;7 or 831 · &lt;'897

GIRLS 3-spted ro~eer C •ll 8JI 4114
and le.ve message for R onnl,

FOR SALE: Used plano,
tuned, s 100. Call 832-o61J .

SAAB 1963 - n - engine, 7 tires, 2
new, 2 5I'IOW, AM· FM, 1450. Also
lOOW C ef)ehart receiver, AM· FM puSh
buttons don't work , two 3-•Y
spe•ken , BSR turn...Oie, K.LH~1
UoptOec:k , htllldpnones, new this year .
Must s-ell. 1300. M oving to Tt~&lt;ft . C a ll
Rick 833 · 5718.

4

TWO GI R L.S n..O ptac e to snare with
others for 1~11 1 - near umpus O w n
rooms desired C a ll Ellen 838 4 199

MUST SELL
leaving country .
Garrard Syndlrolab 728 turntable •nd
HUthklt ;amplifier. C•ll 833-1341
between 5-1 p .m.

FURNITURE : OM Qu_,-slzeel bed,
d('tsstf', vanily-4esk wltn Ghelr C •ll
886 ·7639 .

FOUR BEDRO O M apartment o ft
Bo~lley
15 minute WAlk f rom umpus
F ur,lsheo. reasona ble Available for
May I an d next year Shelly 834..0966

DRIVER w ith van nHCied for Bullato
Fot~ Festival Please co~ll 831 · 5112,10
a . m . ~p.m.

VOLVO 164, 1969 eutom•Uc, A/C,
AM · F M , ndlolll, tat•ged end
pMnpereel . Perfect condition. Must be
driven . 131-3152.

1969 VW FastbKic AM·FM, 4 ~peeel
transmluton, green with white Interior .
Very 9000 condition . Must s-till
834-9731.

FOUR BEDROOM a ~rtment . s 175 • .
Parkslde •no Amnenl . Near zoo.
Fur nil ur e S900
Call 833 · 7659 .
Available June I.

A BAND to pl•y ttmHradlllonat music
•• •
Frld•Y. J u ne 9th wec:IQing
reception. C all 875 •9S2 In the
evening l&lt;eep trytngl •

TWANG - Fender T e t - t • 'PI'...CBS'
- ltOQd condition, W/~, $150. VOII
amp. E•c.ltent condlllors. 2 spe;e~tws,
UOO. Botti f&lt;H $200. 133-9760.

ELECTRIC GUILD S tarflre 9UII.er .
F•nt.estlc. 1200 neeotlebte . H•rd shell
use InCluded. C•U K*' 133·7 160.

2-8EOROO M APT . Main n . .r Depew .
Brand new. S 165 Incl. ..,erythlng.
Starts M•y . 837-6841 or 632·7936

BEAUTIFUL tortoise ''"" ut needs
900d nome dep«et.-y. 1 am te•vlng
Buffal o •no must give h« •way C all
L• ura 838-4.609.

FURNITURE and usorteel ttllntSCneap. M•tenlng sofas, tampS, rU9S,
kitchen utensl.. .net •PPII•nc.s. C•U
176·2226 .

STEEL BELTED
RADIAL TIRES
Now available
for 1mported cars

at
INDEPENDENT
FOREIGN CAR
SERVICE
2024 Kensington Ave.
at Harlem Rd

839-1850

�LOST

&amp; FOUND

LOST:
Blue spiral
Economics
notebook, I left •t Conference The•ter.
Frldty at about 12: 00 a .m. If found,
all Mtrk at 631·5327.
FOUND In Clilrk Gyn~ on April 14th,
PAir of girt's sneakers. C•ll 838·2:16 7.
Ask for B•rrv
ANTHROPOLOGY PAPerback book
found on HillS Lounge fireplace before
vacation. C •ll end Identify. 837·0861.
FOUND: JACket, Maln·Balley parking
lot. C•ll 831 ·35 88 .
ONE LIGHT b rown knitted mitten by
Pnarm.cy entrance to Health Sciences
Building. C il ll George Huse 833·1660
alter 10 p.m.
ROOMMATES WANTED
R OOMMATE Wilnted, 142 month •
·u tilities. Henet·Colvln area . May ht.
Call after 4 :00. 873 ·8228.

f•ll. BMutlfut •p~rtment. own room.
Short wAlk to umpus.. Upper ctauman
or gred preferred. C all 838 -2633.

li fe Insurance and heattn lntur•nce to
students, young married or other. Call
Herb 634~050 or 634~870 .

SUMMER ROOMMATES needed - 2
large bedrooms, 1-mlnute walk from
CAmpUs. Cilll C at hy 831·3152 . S teve
831 · 3284 .

NOWII MIChelin X · rildlal !Ires. t'l'e
~t
str"t tires you un buy at
Independent F'oretgn Car Set~tlce.
839- 1850.

1, 2 or 3 PEOPLE ror room In house
on Wlnspeu . May
only . $40 .
837- 2304

TYPING - experlen~d - near U .B .,
1 .40 per page. 834 · 3370 . Fast service .

ONE ROOMMATE - o w n room, two
blocks tram campus. Summer only.
Call 837· '1 185 or 831·2085 ,
FEMALE ROOMMATE
wanted
September HI. Own room In mOdern
apartment wit h
dishwasher, tully
c•rpeted. Walking distance to campus .
Muu love dOgs. Call 834·1087 .
TWO FEMALE roommiltes nHded t o
Sh.tre beautiful 5-bi!droom house.
10-m tn
walk
to campus
Call
834 · 4510

AUTO RAOIOS and tapes . Sal es and
service. lO'IIo dl5count with this ad.
Grupp Bros. 877-2250.

ROOMMATE wanted for
ON E
3 ·bec:lroom apartment. 5 minutes hom
campus, own room, furn ished , $66
Inc ludes utilities. For S ept. Call
8311 · 4046 Bob or Dave.

SI NGLE or cou ple wanted to sn.ue
apHtment
lor
summer. Modern,
con venient,
ctose to
campus .
Re.a&gt;onabte rent. 836 ·2499.

WANTED ·
Summ et roomm ~ t es
(femate)
for 2 -bec:lroom apart m•nt
with bal cony Across from college Call
831 · 2886

THREE
!&gt;mi nute
furnished
8 3 I 3963

f'E MA LE
ROOMMATE to snare
5·room apartment ' with grad male .
Rent very, reason•bte. 833·5224 .

TWO ROOMMATES wanteo H.ttttng
Ma y IS . O wn r oom s, 15 -mln walk
C all Ri c h at 837·0074.

FEMALE
GRADUATE ~&gt;tudent
wanted to snare nouse, Amners1. Own
room, 165/mon th, starting M•Y l.
692 2088, 692· 2190 .

TW O
RO O MMATES , male, qrad
students preferred, summer and/or
next year . One vacancy each beglnnlno
May I, June 1. S4S eacn ~ utltttles.
Common wealth Call Dave 8 7 3 · 1 34 I

FOUR BEDROOM
HOUSE FOR
FIVE · Beaulttul 1 10 minute walk to
campus wilt rent Ind ividU ally ur
groups
May Sept.
I
$4 ?/mo
838 -457 6

Cou n APts O wn roum. C all 837-4052
arter 6 p m or 831 · 1704 dur ing day.
Ask for Gupta

NEED A WAY to transport y t&gt;•l r
Mt ongrngs to Long Isl and tn May &gt;
O ependable service, price rusonolbl8
and n t9oliable Call A rthur 835 1271&gt;
o; 838 ·40•6 .

- - - --Princeton
- -ROOMMATE wanted

TWO FEMALE roommates wanted.
O wn rooms
L arjle furnished apt ,
H ertel nur Ma in. Starting May or
S eptember Call 837 · 1887.
FEMALE

- - - -w.lnted
--for

ROOMMATE

ALFA ROMEO
• FERRARI
• MASERATI
Sales • Service • Pans
USED CARS

BOBCOR- -

Motor Cars, ltd.
1974 Eggert (Near Bailey)
8J4..7350

MISCELLANEOUS
TVPING
834.08 72

4·BEOROOM h ouse to sublet : June l
- Sept 1 furnished, Kenmore &amp;
Starin area
Dogs allowed . Rent
reasonable &amp; negotiable. C all Gary

ACROSS from c;.,mpus
tantastlc
apartment
for
f our
Furnoshed
Available May through August C all
835 -28 I I .

THREE BEDROO M S. For ~umm er and
possibly next year. Mile from umpus
Rent negotlaDte Rick 835 -2657

4-BEDROOM .tp.artrnent, 10 minute
walk to campus C neapr May IS
August
31
831 3962, 831 ·2 5!&gt;0 ,
83 1· 2174

SUB -l.ET APARTMENT
BEOROOM
apatt m ent ,
wall&lt; from campu' l'ultv
Call Howle 838 · 11 67. B o b
or L arry 834· 6661

BEAUT IFUL
summer ap•rtmen t
5 min wall&lt; to c ampus Perfect l o r
couple Fron t porch F urntshed C all
834-8962
l·MO N TH
Dedrn""' • llvlnq r oom,
kit c hen
All l Or Sb2 !iOtmonlh In
Elm wood drea
Bt lnl,s C .tll To m,
88u-425 2

"u'

BEAUTIFULLY
turn tsh" cl
thr ee bedroom apartment tnr l 0 1 4
Sun por r;h ,
lree UIIIIIIU
TV,
C:c&gt;n,mun•ty pnol, stwtn9 •u• cht neo
Juri&lt;'
August .&gt;O mtnute w•lk Call
8J I J88!&gt;

J·BEDROOM apt
42 Custt'r
J uml
I t o Sepl 1. $50 a month C all Joe
8326 127
4 BEDROOM 1\Pt
Da•Crnr.rtl, 9•r&lt;~9&lt;'
for sumrne• Sufi furnltute M" '" 4lt
tal k 40ie

TWO FEMALES wanted to share
beautiful furnished apartment . Walking
dtst.ance from campus
ReiSonabre
rent. One bedroom av•ltabte fot fall
semester Call 838 -2098

3'1•·BEDROOM l'!ouse available June I
Sept. I. 5 minutes from cam pus.
Very reasonable . C all 835-&amp; 127

ANTIQUES and mOdern furniture ,
c er.amlcs, chin a, etc
See Sid at
Yesterdav &amp; Tomorrow Snop, 1439
Hertel Ave .

~ent

N n •f"

83 ? '&gt;888

f I JRNt"iHEO h Ou•e rtr~lll • • rn\\ foom
\.1UnOU1o on En9tewood to r \UfYUnt'!r 4 .:,

HOO M AVAil ABLE lor wmmer I uti
kttc..hen.
et c. Ac.rO\S 'treet l rttnl
Cd iiiP IIS Grad \I IIden I PIC! lOr red L dll
838 ·2 248 .

peiJpte Hent S45 8J? 4 I ~1)
II

LEAVI N G BUFFAL0 7 We' ll d eliver
trunks, et c
to N .Y.C · Long Island
•rea
No
10 trunks. 884 4958 or
882 3 2 77
SECURITY meeting - Buffalo F oil,
Festival
all I nterested, April 20
Room 234, 6 , 00 p .m.
T W O BLACK .tnd White , 8 wee~ o le
kittens
need
900d homes
l.al
839· 05 18 illter 6 p .m .
RECE N T UB grad o ilers free adv"e or

H~ EE

BEDROOM .opt lur •urrlmer
mtntJ ie\ trnrn c.ar"P U\, '""'lsheCI
verv ruson4bl(l Call 8J/ IJ44 Abbre
t t'f\

c lose to U .B . C all E •teen

NEED A WAV 10 tratuport y our
belong! nos to Long 1 stan d 1n Mav '
Dependable service, priCe re.asonable
and ne9otlable C all Arthur 835·1276
or 838 · 4046 .

BEAUTIFUL trld house
L I 0\1' tn
Catnpus
SumnHtr
Furnt\ hed
tw o
bedr ooms, .Ava-Ilable .,,._ tt neqot•~Sble
r:~ry, 8J4 ld 15

rwo BEDROOM S .available In t arge,
furnished apartment on Englewood for
Jun e
to Sep tembilr
Call Ellen,
831 · 3963 or 080bl e, 832 ·5594 .
I :&gt;
FEMALES w•nted to sublet
beautiful 5-bedroom nouse M.ay-5ept.
10 min
wa lk
to c ampus. C all
834-4510

FURNISHEO 2 bedroom apartm.,t .
Walk in g dista nc e to c.ampus on Main
St Available MAy 20
AuguU . Rent
11egottable 8J4 9739
f- OU R-8EOROO M h Ouse on Amherst
Dlocl&lt; from M.a tn June
August .
Rent negotiable Ca ll O .anny 83!&gt;-7578
AIR
CO N DITIONED
3 · bec:lroorn
ap,Htment f(,. uP to 5 people to sublet
lor \ummer w &amp; 0, dtshw"ner. tully
t .ttpeted. C all 8 31 3768
APARTMENT
to \ u b let IPr th ree ,
•vallabla May
I !&gt;
to A u9uU 31
Lebrun . Three mtnules wall&lt; trom UB
P11 c e neQollable 8J:&gt; 831&gt;0
:&gt; BEDR OOM
lurnl\hou ~ ntln w•lk
10 cam PU\ C•ll Jell 1139 , .,,3

biJSCfnant

R OOM IN .apt 10 De &gt;utltet Av~llabl~
Junu lu Augu&gt;l Runt 11eyut1•ble API
un A tnhutil C .atl A l 4 1 18~

with

ct~nlpu t~

ClMk

rnnrn

L fn\e

•untv•

~ur,tllet

to

f.te"l

ne9ultabte 8 .H 8812
BIG BEAUTIFUl 6 DO!tlrt'&gt;llll1 rlllu~e l
olock~ (II
h om &lt;anop.., M•v I'&gt;
August Call Jo.ante, 8l2 ~440
2

4 BEDROOM apartment , ;tl\n "nglo
room,
furn•shed, ~•shet tJrve•. J
bloCkS fr om CdnlP uS
JllnC! Allljll\1
Best offer 83 2-65 7 I

IT'!:. LARGE

,, ?

APARfMENT "" Wmspe~t
o wn
fOOrns, mtd Mav

FUnNI'&gt;Hlt'l

FEMALES w• nted tn su b ret 2
rooms t or summ~r One hon' M.sv 1
AuC)ust J 1 and Or)e frnm JHIV I
AuQ
J 1 Call 834 · 1 99J •nvllrn•
~rHnHie

1\u~u .. t

c.""

I I ) ,,.,
831&gt; 41 b'), IIlii d~~ I

f

Itt

Vt

fll

\unlel

from

I

''"

o.H11r,;u ..
.:14)ft

l .,.. A \8

(JU~t•lM

.tt,),l• t •tC'r I
1\v,t l.tUip M,ty
I'&gt; IU ~eptt••t~lit•r I ,til I Olf fl t J n Hl)
' " (t.tvt! 838 1'J';)ti Ptll' I 17~ U1•11t1
I

t,HUI\h~d

~u

n p ort.h
832 9044

F REE MAV R£NTI M o der n llvln9 In
B uI I• t0
wll h
dtshw.asher, w,uh er,
Two bed•oonu

dryer

Aug

ror

J I

ArHIH"'~\1 .uno)

• , Ml\1 t

fiHJU\IIt.)lt•

'"'~h•u\t,,•rn ~,,,

WlfH I
(~pp 1 01 f a 14'1

• STIC}(Eil

2 FOA Sl ' OO
·BUTTON - 3 (1{4")fOR S1.00
!at JOYt w or room_
Or IUMIIUit

• SWEATSHIRT

(o t T -s hirt)

Geld, S c ~rlct or Crn

SmrMea,L 1.

l~lltt'"''''
H HI

ttt·tlt•l.,tiHI \lluhhf"t0 \

1\II~II'.J

836 8624

J J
H~nt
II&gt;&lt;ACrun l ~II
H

.ill H t

I

j

w.t iiij I i ')

htlll! t111t1

tH

i ,IIIIU"

r

(

()(ll

ol\hflll 1!'111
! I\ l1 Ill

Wllfl

lit

..VAl ...

fthiU

.,~,,

"utJcul\

test .

5;ttu

·M0.-no CIUn
~GWENEVER£ ASSOC.

~"'
¥•\

,llf

f\H~NI!J~ItiJ

..t~ htrtt•tl"nt

,,,.,f'

Ht

If'""'

llHI

1\f.llt..~WntU.

t

til

hlltl\1

lull!
1\1
flf"flllllllt'll t

•' litUIIIh:

WJI~

II II

, •t

til

"·.~ .. R

ntt

M .... H !li d'PI

t 1-ttlM MJ\'V 1\1 1tt n ,qlf\1
lh'c:
rh f1••• .,,,, ••• l t\l1••, L , 1 H •1 r1llt,,
t \1 U,t I ( .. I ntS t
f\ J•tl ''

Gt ld Cur "

Il l

J

MOUH' ,

,._,.,", .. ,., pei.'IY~.- '"" .... _, M.tv 1111 '&gt;t'l 1
•~ •• 0, ._.,.,, •• Olf'
, ,. nl
J
t1t't:hno"
Aly·.l+l Hlh :..O,"U

Jlt '('

.l Ut l•flftt M
'' rHtiHatt

I

IHJ,l)tltlfl
t~l-ltl
' ' htll•lJt•Jt"
' t
I til ... ,..,~." J I
I • II 1. ,,...,.,,
(ltt\t IH\.l"llh"- ftltl.r-ltU•l ,Uitf' f"Ait
t\" '))t 1 ?~·,

Ped. 8 1we ..S Ml

WJ

J~

8

Modern

\tiii(JitiClnHlQ,

ue• ruu • ·' h t
I J 1 tf,
A.,..tdahlt'

L.h·oul.tllW

$4.so ~m

S3.2 S

\UUitHl~f

thl\

tp,,ti!Hf'UI

NIL(

T- ,hir'f'.

ltSI Ct iOf·Stlt

tuq• t1edrnon
l
Augo\t
11equ11~tlle
t H&lt;'IIOnl
II II ~~ 19. 8J I 2281
June

10 '''•ll~tl ft'

h

f t HIll

two thuu

AC)-.l•t tT'rtnt tu su hl et

c ,Ill K Hi 1!•1"

·,,

wat~

tt eQoti AbJe

11

lKi h

ttt.IJ.ftH 1M'\
""
•••
,.. , ••
I) II
11 trnl•t!-. lt!tl1°1 rr \ d c •hitft M.l'v' a thql

I \1 1J INt6 J!lltl\ltl

M•y

Hl noln

n ... nt

111!.1

llllfl

'""''

•v~u.ole

ren•••es

r •r n pu\

·'''Y''"''.
(lNl

Jun•
Sep tembilr
3
tutn t\he&lt;l aPIIllt\ent wUh
M• •n fttlntot•
••••

bedrooms.

SPAC:.. I OUS

H CHJ!:.l

\UifUPel
t nrce• OIU\,.loq,
n~n· I he.lp IH!4UII•tUIC

lutl"dCd

Sep tember . 838 -3919

$7 5tmontl\

fro rn

w11lk h on1 '.JH •U••\

1110 ~um mer

"" "'' "I\

rnort~tn.th'

THREE and four-bedroom furnished
apartmenll,
five-minu te walk
to
cam pus Sublet from May 15 . 1120
and
1140
83 7·39 84. 884 -3592,
835 -5265 .

EI£AUI lfUL •P • &lt;IUu\ \1~ b('drvom,
twn fctm.ly hOU\C
r ully
fu,.H\he&lt;J,
And dryt"r, g•raye ,

J 8£ OROOM nouse lurri!StleO, I :&gt;O •
n\Onth~
5
m t nute~
lu,;HT\
t 4\ff\Ou\
Avaii•Die M.av 15 83 :&gt; 37 4 5

One

HOUSE TO SUBLET
5 t&gt;edr ooml.
Available May 15 . Price negotiable
875-5754 .

c,,,oe\ed . wa\her

I IOU!&gt;f
lrve b"dr ooms ~ornpletetv
turn!She:l,
group\ nr
tndrvrdual\
June Au;ust
$ 4!. ltt,tc.tt
Ne••
Atte nhotrst on N taqara F all)
He.ally
ntce• 8ll·J55b

~C d1oon ao1 e

VERV LAR GE furnished live -bedroo m
nouse and attic . 90"Second walk to
scnoot. 833-6134 .

OWN ROOMS rn house on Wrnspear to
sublet May lnr u Auoust
Right .at
University entrance
rent negotlaDie .
Call 836·1779 .

AUTO INSURANCE - specializing I n
young drivers : no charge for accid ents
or tratflc violations, Imm ed iate FS·I ,
t~ve up to $100/vear. 683·0022 .

f tllmo•u

2 BEDROOMS, 3 people, $50 each .
5-mtn. walk to U .B . Call833- 1717. AI ,
Paul .

837~301 .

FOLK GUITAR lessons, popular song,,
finger and flat picking styles. Jeff
882·184 7. Folkstnglno for parties

3 ROOMMATES, mate/and female
June and/or September. 3-bec:lroom,
tutn lsh ed ap~rtment, S45
each
utilities, 198 Mtnnesol•· C all Etten
837 2658. S minute w.ttk to umpus

SU MMER HOME for students. Three
bec:lrooml on Bailey. C all for pric e
afternoons 837· 12 02

SNVOER . Three-bedroom lurnlsnec:l .
House avallilble for June, July, Auou st.
Near Main Street . Near tenni s court~
and
pool. 1225/month lnclu41ng
utilities . 839· 3754 or 83 I · 3 130.

INTERESTED In going to Muni c h lor
the Olympic games tnls summer• For
Information, phone 833-4638

OWN ROOM - l i ve-minute walk from
campus. Bright, c tean . June lsi 01
Sept lSI or Doth . Call 837-o790.

LARGE four -bedroom apt. furnished.
Hertel near Main. Sometime May
through August . C•ll 837 · 1887 .

POOL, barbecue, dishwasher, wiHher,
dryer. Near campus. Price negotiable.
1, 2 or 3 girts. 3 bedrooms. 831 · 3195,
831 · 3182 .

PROFf'SS I ONAL TYPING done In
home. 1 .50/page . Formerly operated a
professional typlno service . 229A
Parkslde Ave. or c•ll 838-4808 .

HUGE APT .. Main-Amherst area, lost
or room for I person or couple,
starting May or now. 1 75/month,
tnclu cllng llll utilities &amp; laundry
machines.
Grad, Arts &amp;
Letters
pretorred. 837 ·2 297.

ROOM IN HOUSE Near U .B . 162
available May 1. Call Joyce 834 · 1993

Ca ll Karen 832·5634 .
FEMALE to sub·let aPArtment June August. Own
furnlthed room.
Genes ee - B•Itey .
5 37/month.
893·1125.

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'--------------- ---------------·I
Wednesday, 19 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�Announcements
State Univenlty of Buffalo Common C~use will be
holdlnll • meetin&amp; tomorrow ~~ 7:30 p .m . Pln~e call
Rebec.u •t 839·0518 for pl;ace and .additional Information.
The Outinl Club will mret tomorrow at 7 p .m . in
Room 264 Norton to discu\s c limbin g ~nd hiking trip to the
Adirond..ck ~ this weekend .
Any student intc~ed in workln&amp; for t,4 cGovem In
petluoninR or hudquute ~. contKI Ronni r o rman at
831 ·40'i6 or 831 ·411 5.
CAC needs voluntee~ for Its wmmer program ill
Meyer Memonal Hospiul. ContKI the CAC office, Room
220 Nort on, 1609: Manlyn Dunckel, 2858 or Arthur Finc k ,
'2685.
The Undercr~du.ue Socio logy Auoci.ation will have a
~eencr•l meeting tOdily •t 2:30 p.m . in Room 46, 4224
R.odRe Lu At the mre11ng, wor~ will begin on a Cilreer ~nd
cu rrolulum h.mdboo~ lor .111 ~tudenl\ intere~ted in
\IX.IOiuRy
All undergradu~tn Ukins french cou~n .and dll other
ontere\led people. ple&lt;be pod.. up atopy ol the French (.tub
new.,Jeuer toda, on Room 214 Cro~by. Th o\ 1\ the 1•~1
edition lor tho~ year .
Alph• Kippa Oelt.t , ,, OdliQn~l W&lt;. tOIOI(h. JI honor
,ocoetv IM undergradudle~. i~ now •ueptinR Applol~tion~
lor the \prong '72 te rm lnlormJIIOn ilOIJ o~pploc• toun, md~
be obwned on Room 1&gt;·1, 1114 R.odl(e LtJ
The Brod11e Club woll nul hold J duplol .tiC 'l'"'""
tomorro"' 1t111 will hold J '"'''on ne\1 flio r\ddy.

CAC's Buffalo St~te Hosplt~l Project Is looking for
three usl$tant project huds to coordlnllte volunteers; 6
hou~ per week working In hospitlll, plus 4 credi t s.
Prder.ably voluntee~ who hllve had experience worlcln&amp; at
the hospiul .

Sports Infonnatlon
T~y : V•rslty bASeb~l vs. Canlsius at Oelawve Park ,
double-header lit I :30 p .m.; vu~lty track lind field 011
Bufflllo Sute with Co~nlslus.
friday : Va~lty bueball, Wnt Vlrglnlll, Peelle Field, 3
p.m .
Saturday : Vllrslt y bl!Seb.&amp;ll doubleheader, Wnt
Virginia, Peelle Field, I p.m.; Junior vo~rsity b ueb~ll ill
Alfred Tech, 1 p.m .; Club !~crosse lit Niagllrll , 2 p .m .; vusi t y
tr~c k and field~~ Cfevel~nd Slilte, I p .m. ; Club crew at West
Side Rowin&amp; Club with Wllyoe Stille .tnd Caolslus.
Sunday: Club c rew lit the West Side Rowlnll Club with
Buff~lo Stllte, C~nlslus and Grand V•lley St~te, 2 p .m.;
Junior va~i ty buebllll, Niagara County Community College,
Peelle Field, 1 p.m .
Monday: Varsit y spring golf at R&lt;x.hestcr Tech, I :'30
p.m.
Tuesd.ty: V •rsoty spring golf at the Un ive~ily of
R ochest er, I :30 p .m .• Junior var~ity b.aseb•ll dt Niaga ra
Com munit y, 2 p.m.
Roller hockey utlon co ntinues S o~tu rday morning al
10 :30 a.m. with a t hange in court , S •turday's •chon tak e..
pl•ce in the Main·Batley p•rkong lot , behind the dorms.

ChE 212 : Introduction to Chemlnl En&amp;ineerinl Is a
new cou~e th~l will be offered In spring 1973. 11 will
introduce the student to the broad S9(ctrum of a.c tivily In
m~ny scientific and hum~nistlc discipllnn ilSSOCi~ ted wit h
the profession or chemiul en11lneering. The course will be ~
requirement for the Bachelor of Sc ience degree in Chemic41
Engineering.. The instruCtor will be Prof. J. Gregory
Vermeychuk lind the prerequisltn are : Mllth 242
concurrently ~nd EAS 204 concurrentl y.
The Sute University of New York Dance Cl ub I\
presenting Its annu~l concert, Dance Dem ons tration '7 2,
Friday and Sllturday a t 8 :30 p.m. at Erie Commun ity
College Thut er (Mai n and Vou n~ Ro~d) . The admission I\
free ~nd both s tudent\ and the public are onvhed.
Millard fillmore Colle11e Student Auoclation will ho~ve
Meet t he C o~ndidJte N igh t (all MFC Student Assocoatton
~,.ndi do~tc)) today at 10 p .m. In Room 141&gt; Ooefendorf
C AC 's Buffalo S t&lt;tte Hospll lll Pro1cct needs volunteer\
to worlo. durin!( the \Umm er. Contac t theCA(. o rroce, fill out
blue dPPii&lt;dtion Jnd Protell Hedd wil l ca ll you
The Undersr~du~te Medoul Socoe ty woll h.tve l)o
R obert F . [honge• of the Oepdrtment of Sou~l dntl
Prc.,entrvc Mtdlll ne ~pe •k•nR on " H ealth Ldrc rn Amcrll4 .
Whc1r 11\ hcrn, where 11 " nnw .rnd wher e 11'~ I(Oinl(" toddy
.ot K p.m. in Runm i 16 f l rdllh '&gt;&lt;oCoH.C&gt;. f hror will ,, l,u h~
""'"'"""' tn lno m•trun lor fUntlll\,

The H rstorv Oep.utmtnt " rrere~l\ltronj( \IUIIt'nh fur
lun 1111 '&gt;tmtnJr\ ftlr the thr(r 'urnmtr '&gt;t'\\ltlll' """'.
Prrrt)ll\lldlllln dJ I~\ lu r tlor 1•11 'emltldl\ woll be dtlllolunud
\OOn.
C AC 8uffillo Stille Pro1e&lt;l Hc.uJ nl~ttnll wolf he hdd
lont,l(hl "'
If) r.m. " ' the CA&lt;. olfo.t 10 r'IJIU~It lht
•olun tte r rwgr4 m If 'olunttef\ h4vt ""~ v ll u o~tllc lOt·~, ul
ho v. tO HHJHO\"C lht prottll fll jU\I w dOl Ill t•llo. ,Jhout
C\Ptllt'n~e... Jl the IHI\ptt~l . plt.i\C lCinlC
l hr Undergr~du~le Pwchotogy A•soct.Httln v.rll h•H
llr '&gt;hlumu 8retnll l lrorn Heb r~v. Uomel\11~ jrru,.tl&lt;'m,
•PeJI.rnl( o r1 "Cognllt'lt Protn\e' Untfrt \tre", .. '"'"''~' ,JI
1 HI r m on Room (.- I I 1:? IU Rod,Rc l ,.••

future ul M• n )rtnut•r writ ht l(l'ltn on llw f.tlf /.!.
•.cno t \ h:o h'r M.u ' .mtl J orn l&gt;4n1ello l nrollmntl o· to \I
mtel\lt" nnlv ...ntf h o~lf thr t'ttt&lt; lllmcnl woll Ill 11111n
\ lud ent\ •lrt·ddy 0 11 IIH' ''""I'"'· t .111 h II I Ill hdutt• M,1y
\ lor Jn lllltt"lltew.
An •H•e nutwn m«hlll( fur •II h,...tury m•t"" ·"'''
010\Ptlll\t m.JI"" ¥1111 ht hrhl """'"'"" lrnm nunn I lU
p.m . on Do c trntf ur I I·IX
The Grrrt. Club "''" ,, .. ,., '""'""""' o11 I 111 11 '"· "'
kuon• }h, NtHI••tt tn tft ,u u(l,Ufnrn.: ' '-lt\lltc:'
fhr '&gt;t41C Unovel\rly .at Hulf~lll Ant41tor R••lou
\ucoetv wrll pre-.nt ' U H 1f .u11 I luh D .•t" lu&lt;L• Y f 111 duh
V.l il (I~ ll(lt'l,jllllj.\ Ill tilt lt1Ur lydrJ .oil tf,l\ Arid will h.IVl' J
'l't ll.ll '"""'1111( ul the frlm llum• 1~ 11/t II mtrJ '" tlu· I'H""'~
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111 th e ( unlctt·nu K&lt;Jorn ul the '&gt;tud• 111 "'"'"·''"'"
""""'·JUS Norton Bud)o\ch woll b e d"'""c'l
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(A( lnvor&lt;Jnmen t.l l Actou11 (IIIP\ "'II"·'" ,,
Jt 7 .I() t• m on Rnmn I I) Nuotun

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1 he ChiiSI!dn '&gt;crcrtc t' OrgAnit~II OII will prc,cnl thr·
rh&gt;&lt;.u rn cntdly film, """' 111 IIC'ul lhl' Wwltl , wrlh AIJII
Vnonl!, tumorruw olt! Ill rIll ttl Room 111.2 Nurtun It Will
he lullowed bv ~ d"'u"""' rr,•Jd

Pr o1ee1 4590 (Amheru (.rounsch ng) "''" he con llfllll'tl
IIHIIIll(h the &gt;Ummcr. Vuluntctl\ dre nee d•··· fur Mol\', lolll,
fuly .md Aui(U\1 I rdlllln)t will ' ''"t 111 Mdy Volunteer \
wurk wtth luuwo llol(h """' ll ol(h '&gt;chool &gt;lotlenl\ on l(rtoup ,,
rml rvuJuJIIY .rncJ lhruul(h " ll ntlonn ' All onltrt:\ ICd, pfl"•w
.oli o· rut the met II Ili&gt;! '"""'"""' ,,, K r"' Ill Ronm I\ I
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A '&gt;ympll\lum '"' Modt' llll\l l uterpretillllll\ of ,1\ncotlll
will too hdd i11tl.1'r o~lld 'Hiordd~ .11 th•· Rod~te L t d
L • rrtpu' I t '' ''""'"""&lt;.! hy thr l)ep.trlnll'lll ul Ph •IO&gt;ophy
on lOOI'CIJIIIHI woth the ()t)IJ/IIIH,n l; ol Ll.l\\1• ., L tni(U"IIl \
.rnd M•tht'n1•1•l • I he ..._hcdult• ul c-vt'nh '' Frod• y: •1· 10
.uu , Ut,llllt 11vc f ~ •• ture, 111 CJtei!OII.tl'. 10·4'\ J.rn.,
""''"''e nn th• M t'·"'"'K of N ..nu·'· I p m, &lt;.ret·~ l UI(Il .md
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I ul(rc,of I hcooy, 'r.oltt&lt;d.oy Ill J.l1l, Morfco n Nut.IIIHih 1111
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h~ Mo.. ~!'~ O'terr&lt;Odu r un c\hohrl from Apnl I I
t11111UI\h l I 111 llu l ~ntcr I uutl~c Ill\ I lloor ul Norton I IJII

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                  <text>Spectrum, the University at Buffalo's Student Newspaper</text>
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                  <text>&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 75

Monday, 17 April197 2
by Bubara Mink
Spectrum Staff Wriur

"I've bad a certain affiliation for lost causes I've supported several, and on certain occasions I've
even given them the little push needed to make them
lost causes."
With wry humor and an underplayed style of
speaking, John Kenneth Galbraith , the noted
economist, Pres idential advisor, and former
ambas'Sador to India, campaigned for Geofle
McGovern in Haas Lounge at the State University of
Buffalo last Friday afternoon.
Dr. Galbraith com pared Mr. McGovern to Adlai
Stevenson , calling him a "man who makes sense,
talks sense ... The idea that be has no political
future bas been proven wrong in WISConsin , and will
be proven wrons in Massachussetts." He referred to
the "Galbraith first law of politics: 1f the Alsop
brothers are for something, you'd better be against

'Lost cause' affiliations

Galbraith favors McGovern
of fervor throughout the nation is McGovern's plan
to cut $33 million from the United States defense
budget .
Dr . Galbraith defended this suggestio n ,
maint.airtin&amp; that this wowd leave more money for
"the essential purposes of government, for tax relief
for the poor, for welfare and for educatJon ... the
arms program would no lo nger be an instrument for
the enrichment of wealthy participants m t ht'
military in dust rial complex .''
One of McGovern 's most po pular campa1gn
slopns IS "equabty." A McGovern button has the

II . "

Dr . Galbraith stressed McGovern 's early
oppoSJlJOn to the war 1n Indochina, recalling that he
was ''one of the small and lonely band of people
ex pressing discontent." He differentiated between
people who are against the war as "a matter of
foresaght and those as a matter of hindsaght. "
The foreign policy of Richard Nixo n and Hubert
li u m phrey came under particularly vehement
lTitlcism. President Nixon was termed a "redeemed
"'nner," and Dr. Galbraath sard onically "welcomed
the transmagTlltion of the Nixon soul. The man who
unce equated negotaahon w1th treason 1s emerg111g as
the Pnnce of Peace" McGovern, on the o ther hand .
IS a man of "origanal v1rtue."
Experuive education
liubert Humphrey , who bas lately emerged as
McGovern 's most senous chaUenger an the race for
the presJdency , was thoroughly discounted by Dr.
Galbra1th " I have no doubt that Hubert Humphrey
IS apmst the war, but at has cost 40 o r 50,000 lives,
and S 150 billion to educate Hubert against the wn.
Hubert is a good man , but that's a bell of 1 lot of
money, and a hell of a lot of blood to invest in the
educataon of one man."
McGovern's views on the operation of the
e;.;onomy, equality of the races and sexes, and the
protectJon of the envuonment were also elaborated
upon One idea that has caused a substantial amount

Jo/m Galbraith

College B stresses
intellectual thought
by Ro~ Kurtz
Campus Editor

''Loo k at the wa y t he
departments at this Umversity are
set up," continued Mr. Hatch .
.. There 's n o feedback or
co mmuni cation betw een
departments. instead they vtew
each o ther as rivals be&lt;:ause of
competition for the budget. "
According to 1ts policy statement,
College 8 "addresses itself to the
relationships between a liberal arts
education and current vocational
Cl pportunities . . there is a
widespread sense of cultural
alienation amongst those who
have studied the liberal and fine
arts. and can fmd no place in
society where their talents and
insights can be utilized."
In ·other words, CoUege 8
wants to create the weU·rounded
man by re-emphasizing libedl acta
and performing arts in a society
which is becoming more
specialized and increuingly
technological. ''We want to
restore the balance of the
Renaissance," commented Mr.
Hatch. He and other Collegians
feel that' despite America's trend
toward a apec:iapzed society. there
i s a very real need for
wdJ.rounded, cultured penons in
many areas, inc l udins

"We're in the busmess of
desagnutg courses that fiU
in tellectual needs, not
requHements "
ThiS is the capsule ~escription
of CoUege 8 as given by BiU
Hatch, one of its members.
College 8 is a residential coUege
presently situated an MacDonald
Hall , where 65 s tudents
parttctpate in a '1iving and
learning environment.'' The theme
of College B's approach to
education is inter-disciplinary which means an educational
open·mindedness that transcends
rigid departmental, cultural and
o ne·scbool.of·thought way of
thinlung.
''We're taught by society to
think in a certain way," explained
Mr. Hatch. "'For instance, all the
p1Ychology that's '-ught here is
taught from a-n American
empricist approach. However, in
European psychology, there's a
humanistic approach which is
more theoretical. CoUep 8 is
ttying to expose people to these
cultudl differenoea, to make
people aware that they C!llilt."
Interdiaciplinary thinkin&amp; in JniDaleRU:Gt. CoiJCJD 8 ia Offering
American ochw:ation il ''nil.'' YOCI tiona) pidanee to make
accordina to member Jim Dobulh at.adents aware of these

possibilities.
According to memller Larry
Yagoda, the Coflcge "has the
advisors tlut not the audaence "
Expla101ng that most st udents
don ' 1 seek Job counselling unt al
thetr senaor year, Mr Yagnda
wants tu bnng adv1sors "into the
dorms to get freshmen and
sopho mores thinking about career
o pportun111es " Lower classmcn
would be encouraged tu "pursue
theu o wn tnterests" but to be
aware of JOb alternatives. Mt
Hatch illustrated the need for
career awareness by pointing oul
that in areas like English and
philosophy there are 20 PhD's
being trained for every one JOb
that exists.
Uke all the other CoUeges,
College 8 is undergoing grow~ng
pains. This is its first year as a
residential College, and its 65
students share MacDonald Hall
with College D. Next year they
plan to accept 150 students and
will . share SchoeUJcopf Hall with
International College.
The idea behind the residential
setting is that "education doesn't
end in the classroom." This
supports the inter-disciplinary
theme of the College since the
Psych major who eruolled in the
program to expand his horizons
will learn from the philoaophy
majo r next door and the political
acience m ajor down the hall, who
nave alao eruolled for the same
reaaoo. ..Woa majon at th.il
adtool just interact with membm
of thdr own d.,-tment and their

red "female" symbol in place o r the "o" tn
McGovern's name, and his views on racial equality
and busing, Dr. Galbraith asserted, have always been
adamantly liberal. Or. Galbraith prai&lt;led McGovern
for articulating ltis views, saying ''Hubert Humphrey
had aU the stabili t y o f a bam door in a high wind "
on the issue o f busing, and that Edward Muskae
"kept Jus proftle low ."
'None bad on ecology'
In reference to the problem uf e~:ology, l&gt;r
Galbraat h feels th.at " none of the candidates will be
bad on I he ass ue of environment No one wants to
des poil I he env•ronmllnt . hut il is part of o larger
issue. The question IS who will stand up to the
despoilers."
Dr Galbraith said that we are "safer an the
hands of ~omeone finan ced by small contnbutors
and duec.;t mall than someone tnortg.aged lo the
executives of large corporatiOns " McGovern, he
noted , was ong~naUy the only candidate who was
willing to reveal tus campaign expenditures, since he
had no ties wat h a ny large bus1nesses.
Dr Galbr.uth concluded Ills speec h w1th pra1~e
for the college yo uth, and urged them to take an
ac.:tive pan 10 the ca rnpaJgn. " We need energy
we
need peo ple who are wtlling to take o n a personal
commattment Naxon has alienated farmers , students ,
the AF L C I O , b la c;ks. and the academic
c::ommunily . These arc all mmonlies, but m1no ritaes
add up. Yo u l·a 11 o ft en learn more poundmg the
st reets for Mr&lt;:overn thlm you can tn thr
classroom"
Afte r deiJvenns speeches at t'amsaus C'oUcge , a
businessman's luncheon, and tapmg ~everal televunon
and rad1o appearances, Mr. Galhraath attended 01
fund·ralSing cocktail party later that evenins al the
home of John P. Sullivan, newly appointed provo~t
of the Faculty of Arts and Letters Dr Galbra1th
reitenated some of his previous comments. and stated
that "the coUege generatio n are the workhorses of
this campaJgn. They're the o nes responsJble for the
victont"~ m New Hampshue. WISConsm . ~tnd will
ho pefully help us wm in the futuac ··

vacwpo11lls arc necessaril y
l imited , " sa1d Collegian P..tt
l:nckson

Anotllet College B progmm
rel igaMI Courses bke these
.ud relataons walta the Buffalo
cummw1aty (who have generally
t:tken a da.m vu:w uf the CoUeges)
smce "you're buytng one of thear
behefs and you're teachmg wha t
they warat thcia kuJs lo learn,"
said member Art Levinowtti' .
Courses such as aehgaons and
w o tld c ullurt' ~ take an
antcmationaJ approach to rei.Jg~on
and study tt o bjec tively as a force
w1tlun soCiety. Without attachang
value judgments so that students'
minds can be opened to accept all
poants of view and make their
own deciSions
~tudies

Revolution in management
Mc tnb ers feel lhe c urrent
faca lataes fur College 8 are "very
crowded ," which prevents them
from domg certain things such as
teaching courses in the dorm
(which is sometames done 111
MacDonald lounges) and havtng
facul ty resade 10 the same dorm as
students. All look forward to the
Amherst campus where College 8
(and o ther Colleges) will have
donn space for 600 students, ats
own library and faculty offices,
and a nearby bookstore and craft
CoUege 8 wo uld like to have
center
more faculty~tudent contact but
Co ll ege 8 's management
''we just don' t have the facilities,"
program reflects the coming
according 10 J oy Ca tania.
changes in that young field, wh1ch
However, since the faculty of
Mr. Hatch terms "a revolution."
College B are instructors who have
The program integrates a liberal
volunteered their time for no pey,
arts educatio n w1th teaching o f
most of them seek more
basic management principles to
interaction with students and wait
provide for '"the growing lack of
around after class
competent man•gers,'' accordmg
to Mr. Hatch.
Their time is unfortunately
As an example, he cited a limited, however, due to required
position such as manager of teadUng loads, lenure-mduced
Kleinhan 's Music Hall, where a pressure to publish, and personal
broad cultudl background is as concerns which tend to limit the
necessary as management time they can spend with at~entl
experience. Other theories of .,.d, aa with a1J open·minded
manaaement are now being professors, leun from them. One
taught.. from other cultures and Collegian suggested that if the
countries, besides the American administration counted class time,
..one-boa" pyramid ltructure, prepuation for lectures and time
once the wuliaputed Bible of spent with studenu with equal
man.aaement thoupt in this weight u publlshin&amp;, tenure
country.
-&lt;Oftltnueo- .,.... -

�Father Eagen advocates
drug problem is worse
by Daft Saleh
Sp«trum Stt11f WWttr

In the basement of an old
Buffalo church, 150 of the city's
elite old men sat with their
families, anxiously awaiting the
start of what should have been a
boring religious affair.
The affair started out as
expected with the introduction of
the introducer of the introducer
of the main speaker, Father
Daniel Egan, better known as the
"Junkie Priest."
Eventually thin~ speeded up.
As Mr. Joseph Vetter got up to
antroduce Father Eagan, he stated
that his introduction would be
bnef and to the point. He fint
began to describe his relationship
w1th Father Eagan and seemingly
surpnsed the gathering when he
I a s he d o u t at I he I o c al
community , including "a number
of people listening to me talk
right now ."
The attack Wit$ d1rec ted at
those who have cnticiud and
rqected his work with drug
add1c ts to the point where in
1965 he went to Father Egan
1 otaJJy discouraged about his
career in the field o f drug abuse.
Mr. Vetter credited Father P.agan
with helping hun get his program
started again m the area and
clatmed tltat1t was Father Eagan's
dedacatmn wtuch mspiJed him
when he most wanted to g.v~ up
IUs pracllce

believe, and called it " a problem
of the white suburban
community."

•ae

Concerned cnu
Another aspect of the problem
which Father Eagan expressed
concern over is the age of the
addicts he il now treating at his
New York center. '7he average
age of the 39 girls whom I am
treating at Newvoke Manner is 16
• coma-red to 25 two yean ago.
This fact really scares me and it
shows that the drug problem is a
lot deeper than most people
expect.
"Orug1 are not just a fad as was
beHeved a few years ago, and
contrary to recent sentiment, the
problem will not cure itself in
lime ... The roots of the problem
are deep, and in fact , the problem
will breed itself and become worse
if it is not checked ."
'7he answer to the problem,"
Father Eagan con tinued. "ties not
in the drugs themselves, but in the
problems which tie beneath the
dru~ . We not only have to solve
the drug problem on the streets,
but we also have to find o ut why
pel)ple have to tum to drugs "

'Source of the supply·
Another aspect of the drug
problem wtuch Father Eagan
commented upon was that of
cutting o ff the drug supply before
it gets mto the hands of the
addict. '"There are t wo important
thm~ m t11e sale of drugs: supply
and
demand I don't think that
Emo-donaJ reunion
Pres1dent
Nixo n should send any
Tht ~
•nt ro du c 11on wa s
ht ghhghted by an e motio nal tw o·blt congressman over to
reun iOn between Mr
Vetter's F ran c e to try 1o solve a
ass1stant director at Addic ts m presidentjaJ problem.
"Eighty-seven per cent of all
D1stress and Father Eagan . He had
last seen her as a prostitute and the heroin that was caught
heroin addic t who m he conSide red ent e ring this country came
thro ugh Marsailles, yet Nocon goes
mcurable.
Ev e r yo ne soo n b eca m e to Chma o n a political trip and
tho ro ughly engrossed w1th the refuses to go to France to try to
small frailloolting Father Eagan as help solve a pfoblem that ts killing
he bagan his talk. Pomtlng o ut far mo re people than anything
that the drug pr o blem , that 's coming o ut of China.
''Our policy should also be
unde rneath all 1ts fan cy names
and stigmas, IS a pro blem of released fro m the wasteful task u f
deaJmg with "seo$1llve people p1c klng up the lods carrymg o ne
who do n 't kn o w what to do w1th ptll o r two joinu of mariJuana,
their feelin~ .'' Father Eagan and all ttus time should be spent
expressed a deep concern fo r the hitting the deaJers , the non·addic t
intensrt y o f the drug pro ble m at pushers who are making all the
pre~ent
He also 'l3rd that the money off drugs and (who ) arc
pro blem rs no t con fined tu gl1etto th e so u rce of th e s uppl y
areas as man y people seem to proble m."

Webster
Diet ionar ies
Library size , unabridgfd
edition, brand new , still in box ,
Cost new .$45.00

We'll sell for $15
Deduct 10% on order
of6 or m~

837-1110
No dealers , each volume
specifically stamped not for

resale.

Ukranian FestivaL scheduled

~IM

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831-4113; Buli,_, 831-3610.
R•pr•••nr.d for Mltlwthlng by
N•tiOMI Eduutlon#l Adv.rti1/ng
Inc., 360 LexingtOn Aw...
N- Yorlc, N. Y. 10017.
Sul»criptlon , . . .,. 14.60 PK
~ or $8.00 for two .-mm.n.

S«:ond Cl- Pwt11f/11 p11/d •t Buft.lo,
N- Yorlc,
Ctrcukltlon: 16,(J(J(J

who learned the skill by watdting the ritual in the
villages of her nAtive COWllry. Uk.rai.nians decorate
their Easter ega for the beauty and tradition. The
egg is used as a symbol of man •s rebirth and
Ulcrainian 's color two types of Euler eggs. The
pysank.a is the egg which is Wlboiled and covered
with geometric and other written motifs. The
lcrashanJc.a is hardboiled and intended to be eaten
when the Lent fast is b roken.
Ceramics, as a creative art will be demonstrated
by Chrystyna Dziuba. Red clay is used and
decorated in many colors and motifs. Nature themes
are often represented in the ceramic objects as are
geometric patterns of indigeno us regions of the
Ukraine.
Embroidery hu long been a popular and highly
developed art in the Ukraine. Ohla Ctmola will
demonstrate stitches and pattertu which range 10
geographic areas. Arrangement of patterns as well as
their appearance on the cloth contribute to the
beauty of Ukrainian embroidery.
Folic dancing from the Ukraine hu a history
which can be dated back to prehistoric times. Over
the centureis the dance has evolved to its present
state and will be uught in a workshop by Zorianna
Cunola.
Th.ia is 1 unique o pportunit y to become aware
of atl ethnic entity which helps comprise America.
All the events are open to the pubUc and everyone 1s
urged to attend .

Sharing U.krainian heritage and culture is the
prinwy soaJ of the Ukrainian Festival of Arts. The
featival began last Saturday and will run through
April 22, ending with a formal ball.
It ia the hope of its orpnizen that the festival
will bring about a better Wlderstanding of the
Ukrai nian people, a large segment·of which reside in
the Buffalo community. Marta Pereyma, president of
the Ukrainian Student Club, expects the festival to
provide a cross section of culture to the University
community. greatly benefiting its participants.
Events scheduled during the week include
exhibits, lectures, workshops, folk-dancing and a
concert. The exhibits portray Ukntinian folic artJ and
books. Icons and Enamels will be on show in the
Norton loWlge. Ukrainian Books Through the Ages
will be on display in Lockwood Library.
O reat Subtelny, a dt.....ortl student at Hanard
University, will lecture tonight at 7 :30 p .m . in the
FilJmore Room on ''Denationalization in the Course
of Ukrainian History." Mr.s Irene Lawriwsky. o
Ukrainian actress will spea.k tomorrow evening at
7 :30 p.m . in Room 233 Norton concerning
"Ukrainian Folklore and Culture." Taras Za).ydalsky
a doctortl student at Bryn Mawr CoUege will lecture
Wednesday night in Norton Room 231 at 7 :30p.m .
on ''H. Skovoroda : Socrates of the Ukraine."s,
Workshops will cover Easter egg designing, folk
dancing, ceramics and embroidery. The art of Easter
egg designing will be presented by Tanya Krynytxk.a,

Exam changes
Dean of Underanduate Studia Charla H. V. Eben reporU tbat tbe &lt;Ute of •
rrcheduled nnaJ eummadon cannot be chanaed unlNa all student~ concerned aaree on
such a c:hanae. He continued that thil il abaolutely necaaary to IYOid barclahip aituation11
ror atud entJ, aucb u c:loee apaclna of enminationa or eonOictintlcbedula .
I n adcUtJon, be anno unced t h at all cban,a of location IIJWt be approved by Che
Office of Sdleduliot , l Bayea Hal, ut. 4713.

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COLOR IN THIS "MIN I -

J'

"

,'t:

POSTER" OF ONE OF THE

PRESIDENTIAL
1. Buy a bunch of Fla•r pens. Yov n1•cd
black, brown . ted, blue, yellow and 01
ange (You need th1~m anyway tor school J
2. Now-color 1n the p•cture accordm(l to
these color gu•de numbers. (1). Black(5).
Brown {2) . Red {3) Blue (7). Yellow (6). Or·
ange. Please do not color unnumbe red
a reas.

.

I
1

.•.

CANDIDATES!
3. Co,..gratulat.ons! You have c reated a
genu•ne full color porlratt ol someone
you know and love Maybt.:. If he or she
1S not your favon tc ptes•denllal candt·
1 date, have patrence. You 'll see your favor·
tie soon In the r lalr Election ColleCIIOnl
(Don't fo1got to ask about Flnir's running
mate, the Fla1r Hot Liner.)

I

Glllelle Compa ny PapcrMale

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday , 17 Aprill972

;

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The Spectrum ;. publl6h«&lt; til,_'
rim•• • w•ek, .....,ry Mond•Y. '
~Y Md Fr/dlly; during r1»

~.

3053 Main Street
Buffalo , New York

'Cross section-of culture'

D1visoon 0 11l7?

�Restoration of Amherst
money seems probable
After meetings between
University officials and state
l egislato rs last Wednesday,
~storation of the $34 million in
constructi on fu nds for the
Amherst campus seems certain .
President Robert Ketter; John
Telfer, vice president for Facilities
Planning; John Neal, director of
construction and planning; and
James Loughnan, one of his
assistants, met with the Senate
Finance Committee and the
Assembly Ways and Means
Committee in an attempt to have
the m o n ey put into the
supplementary budget after it had
been CUI from the 1972 - 73
budget.
Accordtng t o Dr . Ketter, the
legislators onginally el1minated
the f und s because of a
misunderstanding concerning h ow
much preliminary work had been
done . I n meeting with the
Republican leaders and area
representatives, the~e problems
were resolved and University
officials received promises that
the committees would support
restoration of the funds .
Dr. Ketter pOUlted out tl1e
value of the campus construction
to the Buffalo communit y· "The
UD project 1n Amherst 1S
1mportant not only to the
University communit y but to
every as pect of the econnmy of
the Niagara Frontier.''
have .t
high
unemployment ra te in the Buffalo
area . . The UB project affects
the Buffalo banking community.

•· we

Positions decrease

Law school applicants rise

the construction industry, the
labor wtions. It's an economic
chain reaction," he said.

Water plant vital
The funds will be used for a S9
million chilled-water plant , a
S I 0 . 5 million education and
phil osoph y building, a $4.2
million industrial and engineering
building, and a $9.8 million
physics building. Of these, the
most crucial is the chilled wateT
plant . If it is not built , the new
Law School will not be able to
o pen as planned in September
1973. All four of these projects
are ready for bidding a11d
Universi-ty officials hope to awa rd
coni racts and begin construc tion
by mid-summer.
Dr . Ketter IS also hopeful of
receiving about $28 million in
additional funds. These would be
used for a general library, a
general administration building, a
food commi ssary and an
administration and se rvi ce
building. Dr. Ketter reported that
neither comrruttee was willing to
promise more money Without first
t aIk i n

g

wi 1 h

G o v e r n t&gt; r

Rockefelle r, but was assured the
govemor wo,dd be approac hed

Any amuunt finally dec1dcd
upon

w iII

be

put

in

the

supplemental stat e budget. T he
budget is expected to be acte4
upon in the legislature at t he end
of April.

Birth control info
htformation about tht recentl y established
CAC Birch Cootrol Clinic c•n be obtained by calling

831-3605 or 83 1-3609.

HISTORY DEPARTMENT
ORIENTATION MEETING
for

In today's economy there exists an adverse
equation that is u nbalancing many a man's destiny :
the number of positions available for any given
situation is remaining constant or decreasing, as the
number of applicants for those positions is
increasing. This is especiall y true in the professions.
The proble m cannot be better illustrated than
by looking at the situation in this country's law
schools. According to David prospective Law student:
By taking the ILaw School Admission Test (LSA T) 1
for the past five years of applications to law school:;
in aU areas of the Unit ed States.
Dr. Kochery noted that the State University o f
Buffalo Law School had 2300 applica n ts th is year
for 160 places. Simple arithmetic shows that the
applican t t o this law school had one chance in 14 of
being a ccepted.
Summer exam suggested
Pre-legaJ advisor, Jerome Fink . o ffers t his advice
for the prospective law student : By taking the I Law
School Admission Test {LSAT)J in J uly, the st udent
will have u fairly good idea of what range of ~chool~

he or she could apply to in early September."
The LSAT score plus the student's grade point
average are then compiled for and supptie'.J to tbc
schools which one applies by the Law School Data
Assembly Service {LSDAS). ibe figure the service
arrives at is known as the "success predictability
average."
Ronald Kaminski, Division of Undergraduate
Studies advisor, is o ptimistic that the law school
admission system will improve. He feels more
schools will soon receive accreditation.
Mr. Kaminski noted that "there are 147 law
schools in the United States which are accredited by
1h c
American Bar Association," and advised
interested students to "start investigating the
possibilities." Also, he assumes the flood of
applicatio ns will soon recede, students having
achieved a beller idea of their true inclinations.
Dr. Pink wishes to stress o ne other point : "ff
one sho uld take the LSAT in July, wait until
September to begin you LSDAS, since the service
terminates all contracts m Augus t: •

Athletic Department meets
with SA to resolve differences

l&gt;ifferences betw~en the
A I hletic Department and the
Student Association are rn lhe
process of being resrtlvt:'d
according to members present at
last Friday's meet ing between lhe
two parties. Scheduled a ft~r the
public release of a fmaocial report
c harg1ng '' irregularities, " la'&gt;l
week's meeltng was tntended to
dlScuss " those athletic financial
matters ahout which then: is some
queslion."
Shortly after his C(lnference
wi I h Athlettc Director Harry
f·rit7, SA Treasurer J eff Osinski
reported that meetings with the
Atl\letic Departm~,'Tit would be
held next week and throughout
the su mmer to set up gwdeline5.
lie contwuoo · " We realized
tlull there are r;:crtain inequities in
f he system
. we decided to try
to resolve them by meetmg and
formulat1 n g p o licY and
guidelines."
Spedfically , Mr
Osinski
elabo rated on s~vera t points that
were dlScussell with the Athletic
Department. The questiOn of
unsupportable REP forms, he
said, wa s explained b y the
existence or bureaucratic hassles.
Agreeing with this, Dr. Fritz
slated : .. Receipts weren't actually

an issue between us. The rece1pt
problem was due to a time lag
caused hy the new sysh:m . But , all
advances have been accompan1ed
by full rece• piing."
Mr. Oswski also sa1d that new
policies concerning meals and
travel would be arranget.l with the
Athletit
Oepartmenl .
\omme ntmg on the m«:4:tmg Dr.
Fr111. rl.'mark ed "'There was real
good unders tand1ng 111 lhe
met:llng, whh:h we should have
had earlier."

When questioned about the
absence of administrative scrutiny
on athletic expenditures, Mr.
Osinski explained that that was a
mall er bet ween SA and the
Universi t y administratio n . With
this tdea , Mr. Osinski plans to
meet with President Robert
Ketter to "either get someone
besides lloward Duell ro act as
ad ministra tive desitu~ee or to see
that the standards are applied
across the board "

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
Mod S tyles for Guys and Gals

MAJORS AND PROSPECTIVE MAJORS
Thursday, Apri/20, 12:00 - 1:20 p .m.
148 Diefendorf

Beef &amp;

i·················~~\rVf~~·················

:

fO.-.. a.. 01 ua)

•

Ol!udllnl! for oppl/cotion : April 21, 1972.

SUMMER

•

M~drid,

8 c rcdits

~ulturo~l

activities, roond trip (New York·Maarid).

Cour..ts: Beginning Spanish through

liter~ture.

:

Deadline foropp/lcolfon: May 8, 1972

•
:

8 credits

:

Cusr· . $ S75.00. l r~ciudes: tuition , room and board, wltur~l

:

Counes: Beg•nn1ng \pan•sh through hterature.

•
:

•:
•
: I

•

•

o~etlvrtrr;,

Quarter Nights
~

Sraln Summer Pro.J!am

(lulv ·Augus1 18, 197:.!1

Cost: $745 .00. Includes! lurtion1 room •nd bo.ud,

Caribbean Summer Program
(June 26·August 10, 1972)
round 1np (New Yort.. ·San Juan·Santu Domingo).

Dl!aJiiM for oppl/wtinn: Mav 8, 1972

Dr. Johnson Looper, Oorec10r

nr "'"''' mlurmullon about thelt prOI)rOm), International Studies
pleuu write tu.
Slate University Col lege

O~wego,NewYork 1 3126

House

3111 MAIN ST.

SPANISH PROGRAMS

YEAR
SUNY·Unlversily of Puerto Rico
Student Exchilnge Progro~m (Augus t, 1 972·M ~y. t97l)
Lo.~t: $1 ,500.00 yur Includes: tuition , room Jnd boo~rd cullutdl
A(llvi ties, and huhh insurance.
'

~le

••
••
•:
•
:

•

:
:

liiiiGffTa ONLY:

MONDAY, TUESDAY. WEDNESDAY ..................

}

25~

:

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Moq~y , lr7, April 197~ .. Ther SJ!&gt;&amp;C~um .. Page- three' ·

�College B ...

Medical It

pressures

to publish might

be

eased.

Editor's nott · Medical quution3/probltms on your m ind? Medlca/1 , a
wulcly column containing health rekJted que3tiom from tht University
commumty, Is no w in operation through the cooperation of the Office
of Public Health EduCIJtion of tht Erit County Department of Health
wtth consultation from tht Medical School, University Health Strvlce
l)nd tht Offict of Student Affaln and Str vices. Ju3t dial 83 1·5000
Awon Lint Exttnnon or visit tht A ction Line booth In the Ctnttr
Loungt of Norton Hall. Namu will bt lctpt tn 1trict confidtnet
l 'vt heard there are o nly three aood birch control methods. Is this
true?
No There are at leut ten different types or combinatio ns, some
more effective than others. Their effectiven ess lies wit h th e mdwiduttl
and the physician. Like so many o ther things involving health , barth
contro l m ethods must be andividualiud .
I hell a lot about different dieta. There is o ne where fruit ,
arapefnait , for example , reduces the number of calories in food . How is
this polllble?
ll 's not. There is no food that takes away calones from other
foodJ There are, ho wever, many food fads. And many o f the present
certun dangers
insufficient carbo h ydrates, mmerals, vitammll,
proteans.
Is It danj~eroua to remove comt?
Yes, it could be. Corns, ttuck and horny, appear on the feet and
are caused by shoes that fit improperly , o r badly run-down h eel! wruc h
cluo w t h e feet into an unnatural position. T rying to take care of severe
condtuons by yourself may cause infections and complications. Like w
many o ther conditions, preventive meas ures are best. Change t o pro per
fittina shoes, d o not apply home remedies particularly if infected or if
you are a diabetic, and consuJt your phySICian o r podiatrist.

I see many younaer men turnina bald. Can anythlna be done about

Grading in College 8 courses
depends on the iunslructor, and
varie s fr o m the traditional
A,B ,C.D ,F to writt e n and
self..valualion. Mr. Hatc h stressed
that there arc n o gaff cou rses in
College 8 , but "the emphuis is o n
education , not gracling." He listed
the basic problems facing College
8 as m oney, facilities. and finding
the right students - " those who
want to expand then horizons."
Mr.

Hatch

offered

a

final

·-rw

analogy .
the pre-med
student at this University," h e
explained . " There's a big
superhighway he muat foUow to
achieve his goal of becoming a
doctor, with big billboards every
so o ften telling him what he must
do ho w many letters of
r ecommend a tion. h o w man y
science courses, h ow many years
of antemship. In College 8 , the
student mwt travel otT the ~a ten
path and create his own ro ad. The
billboards are blank. We try to
provide him w ith all the
alternatives so he can choose his

direction. Afte r
info nnation . ••

programs, College 8 iJ holcling an
o pen h o us e this week in
MacDonald Hall to provide such
infonnation. The open h o uses will
include: tonight, 7- 9 p.m ., Depth
Psychology Program ; Tuesday,
7- 9 p.m., the General liberal
Arts Program; Wednesday, 7- 9
p .m ., the Fine Arts Program ;
Thu rsday, 7- 9 p.m .. the uberal
Ar ts Managemen t Program ;
Friday, 7- 9 p.m ., Studies in
Religion and Myth .

BUFFALO FOLK FESTIVAL
April 21-22-23
3 Evening concerts

1 Daynme workshop

performers include

thia?

Normal male-type baldness LS not caused by marked oiliness or
dandruff as many people beiJeve Male: baldness is primanly an
tnhented disorder about which nottun&amp; can be don e . Baldness cannot
be c ured by drugs, manipuJations, h o rmone; or agents taken by mouth
Patchy loss of hair may indicate a diJease and sh o uJd lead to m ed ical
c:onsultatio n The o nly " cure" ss a tou pet or wag.

J .B. Hutto and His Hawks • Pat Sky
Bonnie Raitt • J ohn Herald &amp; Friends
Dan Hicks &amp; His Hot Licks

Will th e birth control pill prevent venera! disease?
Barth contro l pills prevent con ceptio n
fertLiir.atto n o l t he femalr
()V\.Im by the male sperm . The barth control p•U will not prevent vc:neral
dlsease On the o ther lund, some health authonlles feel the barth
control plll has added to the venera! dtseue problem bee&lt;1use there 1\
I ~ risk o f pregnancy. and therefo re o ther methods 10 prevent venenl
diSease are not used .
Ia it true that tf f 'n had a lo t to drink , a few cups of cofree will

act

rid of alcohol?
Absolu tely not. Alcohol is absorbed into th e system thro ugh thr
intestinal tract Only tame, indiVIdual differences , and the am o unt
consumed w ill have much bearing o n ho w fast o ne dascharges alcohol
fro m one's system . Coffee has no angredaent wtuch changes the effect
of 11lcoh ol

Earl Scruggs Revue • Utah Phillips
Doc &amp; Merle Watson • Happy &amp; Attie Traum
STUDENT ALL FESTIVAL TICKETS $6 .00
For further mformation come to 261 Norto n Hall

Sponsored by SA &amp; UUAB

I ftnd If very diHicuJt to act to sleep Oo you han any .tUJiltation•?
lnsomma may be caused by many dafferent things It may bt:
caused by worry, late: b o UTS, poor health The fust thing yo u sh ould do
IS t o cbeck to make sure you are an good health and that there IS no
physical reason for your msomrua Second, you may have a
psych ological reason for yo ur insomnia . This sho uJd be chec ked Search
yo ur own mind as to why you arc not ab le to go to sleep, Other
suuestions wo uld anclude relaxing bef&lt;1re bedtime , have u quiet 100m,
a comfortable bed , and regular hours
I 'm OYetwf'lbt, and a friend hu ainn mr some weeaht contro l
pilll How a&amp;fe are tbey1
Any type or wetg.ht control palls &amp;Jven to you by anyo ne , except
your physic11n , LS a defirute n&lt;Hlo Wetg.ht control is an indaVJduahzed
pro blem and must be done under the darectaon of a pbysiClan . The(e IS
one cause o f overwel ghtness. This is taking m more calones than you
need . The reason you overeat may be psych o logical or physical
Therefore, it is extremely importan t fo r anyone WlShin&amp; t o lose WC1J1.ht
to be under tbe care of a physactan. Trur " glandular" reasons fot
ovcrw etghl are very rare.

All o ur water poUution problem• are bec:auae

o( industry . Riaht?

Wrong. About 80% of our water pollution problems stem fro m
m adcquately treated munu:ipal seweraae from households , busan~ ,
r;c:hools . Abo ut 20 % ts from industry

lews from &amp;II over the world h&lt;~ve joined t otethef to build &amp; n&lt;ltJon
You ~.o~n be~ put of It by putld~tlna in
SHERUT LA 'AM - SERVICE TO THE PEOPLE
Pro gr o~m s In lsrul
Workin&amp; •n .t d~veloplna o~ru or on 1 klbbuLL c• n be
.l m&lt;XI rewo~rdlng educo~Uono~l e.&gt;~peoence.
C:.:O!&gt; 1 (l•ldudlllg rou nd tnp fo~rc~. room &amp; b oard for ahe ye.1 r, &amp; m~dlc1J cover.lgr )

$635

$535
7 month kibbutz proar•m
I yu1 'ollege gr•d &amp; proresslon•l progr•ms.

OR MORE INFORMATION CONCERNING PROGRAMS
'\(NI)

NAME ............................. ................... .
ADDRESS................................. ..CITY
STATE

How effective are mouth waaheaT
Mouth washes for hal.itosts or bad tast e are primarily used fot
cosmetic purposes. They have a pleasant taste o r odor. Tiley serve the1r
purpose. Any mo uthwash strong eno uJh to kill genns may have some
effect o n the oral cavity . If you are constantly bothered by bad b reath,
however, see your physician or dentist .

The

Oliver Beauty Salon
5957 MAIN STREET
WILLIAMSVILLE, NEW YORK
633-5437
" Your hair, styled the way you want it/ "

P,a.gp ~qur . The $p~trum . Monday, ~ 7 Aprl;ll972

aU, choice is

AGE.

..ZIP .................................
. ..PROFESSIONAL STATUS ...............................
COMETALKTO CATHYGAY,
SHERUT LA 'AM PREPRESENTATIVE

OR

TO : Sh enH La'am
515 Park Avenue
New York, N .Y . 10022

WEDN ESDAY,A prll 19,

3 ~ p .m.

l.onteren'e Thu. )ec )h o nl srul1 fll~.k~ .all d•y 11·7 , po~n of

ISRAELI INDEPENDENCE CELEBRATION

�Various methods used to save art

Editori note: Th13 iJ the third In a
suits of three articles on pollution and Its
ef{ecn on worlu of art. Today the
1olurio111 to the problem are reviewed.
Co111ervaton , even If they know how to
save a piece of art from death by pollution
may be prevented from dolnK so by
financial or aesthetic reasons.
~m.yArmao
SpeciJII to The Spectrum

"Where would man be, " asks a recent ad
for the Armand Hammer Foundation,
"without his books and misic and art?
Maybe up a tree."
We may soon find out for sure. Already :
- Art conservators estimate that unless
sa I vage exceeds the present rate of
poUution and weather destruction, Venice
will lose her artistic heritage within the
century.
60,000 works of German art nee&lt;t
repau, according fo Viennese scientist Ava
Frobel- Kraft.
- "No one knows how many works . .
11re Imperiled," says Newsweek Art Edit o r
David L. Shirey. And the chances of
salvage overtaking d"truclaon?

•

•

• • •

UNESCO offic1al All Vno m clatms
' ' Experts are perfe c tly c apable
o f . . protecting bulldangs and their
arhstic t reasures aga1nst damage from &amp;Jr
and water
Nevertheless, g.la.'IS
conservator Ro but Boll confesses . "We
won't solve all t he problems an time to san
all the works."
This is so because the major problems
confronting art r~toren and preservers are
not technical so much as aesthetic and
financial .
Just who
to begm with
IS
responsible for financing art preservation?
In Germany the churches, which own
much of the state's endangered art, are
fundin&amp; some conservation. Italians,
however, are demandJna mort from
covemment. Fabled for Ill aaiJeri~ . Italy
presently spends JUSt S7 mi111on a year on
art an: New York Caty's MetrCipolitao
Museum spend$ S6 million.

European iodultly

UIUapOosift

American atizens tend to reason tltat
since industry is a lllJl,jor cause of the
problem , at should also be the major healer.
Dr. Brill and co-worker Bruce Adams both
employed by the Coming, N .Y. Glass
Works, further reason that research often
"turns up findinp applicable to the
commercial process."
European 1ndustrtes unlike theu
American counterparts, argue that
conservation IS not their concern but the
worry of museum c urators and art dealers

The media may also be responsible, if
not for financing, then at least for rallying
support behind art conservation attempts.
Newsweek'S Shirey and The New York
T1me:' architecture columnist Ada
Huxtable have done much in this respect.
Presently the major supporters of
restoration are several intematJonal,
humanitarian aaencies. UNESCO is the best
example, having created Le Centre de
Rome to study techniques in research and
practical presei'VIltion. is helping to salvaae
Venice and aided in Florence's recovery
from floods in 1966.
Also important are the International
Institute for Conservation and the
International Fund for Monuments. All
agencies, however, are limited by small
budgets, too few personnel and too many
possible projects. UNESCO, charged by its
constitution with ·• . .. protecting the
world's inheritance of books, works of art
and monuments of history
" has only 11
$60 million budget for I 9 7 I 2
~uperconaerwtors'

sough&amp;
Even with money appropra1ted , o ther
obsta c les may bloc k c onservataon
Qualified conservato rs must be rec ruited
No mean problem constdenng what
" qualified " means here! The S mathso ruan
Institution's Free Gallery recently
announced they were snrchang fo r a
''chemist-conservator" •· . the positio n
demands a wide vanety of skills . wet
chemistry ... microc hemiStry , diffrac tiOn
and c rystall o graphy , petrography
statiStical skill ; art htsto ry . especu•IIY
that of the Near and Far East , studio art of
any k1nd ~ foreign languagee
ab11lty ... archaelogical expenence
"
Such an arttst-scientlst has no t lavc41
since da Vinci - and whether even he
would work for $12,61518 doubtful
What's more, conservation may he
hindered by the experts ' disagreement o ver
just wh.at to do. AJthouah the Rome
Center may change this , no orpmzatton of
conservators now exists that can compale
and evaluate different meth o ds .
"Professaonal jealous)'," says Boll, "stops
the orpmud effort that u needed to save
our art."
Even w1th c o o pt&gt;rabon , ho wever .
method evaluation may be restraaned by
the difficulty of aetting art on wi\Jch to
experiment . Dr. Brill , who is analyuna the
cCfiaency of certan "protec tive coatinas"
mtended to save stained sJas.s from the
dements, has found hill researc h bocsed
down. Not surprisingly , "people just don 't
wiU\t their twelfth century glass cons umed
by lab chemicals and testing."
Unskilled , o r insuff1 c aenl
experimentation causes stJII a worse
problem · on c e undertaken , the
c onservation step may pr o ve
unsatisfactory h may even further damage

Cleaning is often all a damaged .,..ork
needs to be restored and a number of
methods have been devised. Each has iu
own advantages and disadvantages.
C hemical bleac hes and solvent1, while
efrective, affect some paints. Mechanical
tools can cause abrasive scars and the most
drastic measure, grinding and polishing
surfaces (of stone or Blass) are "almost
obscene" according to Syracuse University
Fine Arts professor, Meredith Lillich.
After cleanina. the next restoring chore
is repairing miss.in&amp; design parts. It is the
most controversial part of the process. One
school of artists argues that nothing should
be added to the original ; another school
that all o f the old design should be erased.
The contemporary compromise is Dr.
Brill 's maxim : ''Unless forced to do
something, do nothing."
Co n solidati on, securina the work 's
mechanical support, is the last step.
ConsoUdatmg a painting involves, first,
reattachina blistering paint to canvas with
atue or resans delcately administered by
hypodermics and , sec ond. covering tbe
surface wath wax adhesive.
(' onsolldatmg stained at ass involves
reftnn&amp; pamt, reglwna fragments or JOirung
the m wath stnps o f lead and platina. or
bat kana the panel with a dear glass
support
SaVJng frescoes that have been attacked
by polluted water and air is a more
compltcated problem . Two techniques
allo w ..:onservators to lift such paintings
fro m wall.s and remo unt them onto canvas
o r wood
With tbe strappo method ,
coruservato rs detach the color layer alone ,
stacco removes a fine layer of plaster as
well. Then a sheet of canvas is glued to the
fa ce or the fresc o, wtuch is beat off. cut
loose from its support and pulled away .
Once mounted in its new place the canvas
is removed from the race and the fresco is
now an easel pamting.

the work u in the case of some orpnic
restorative compounds. After they'd been
applied, they were found to feed fun!P and
algae that chewed at paint.

'Black a ever'
Finally, conservation may be Simply a
stop gap way to save art from the menaces
of its environment. The case of &amp;he London
Mo nolith illustrates wl\y. In 1952 scientists
decided to clean the pnite, E&amp;Yptian
monument which had been blackened by
years of English soot and sm~. Solvents
loosened the grimy mm and afterward the
men also put down a layer of wax to
waterprooof the monolith and protect it
fro m frost. By 1955 it was as black as ever.
Only two sure safeguards are known for
exposed works. Stringent anti-pollution
law s are presently unacceptable to
industry-minded economies. The other
choace ts hermetically sealing art Jnside or
withan som e kind of c overang .
Undetec table o rganic and morganac
coatan~ wear Clff after a sho rt Lime or else
QUs e h.armful side effecb o n the wo rk
Ptexaglass or plastic then seem our o nly
guarantee to safe art
And Mrs Ric hard N1 lCU n
when she
saw some White House c urtaans that had
been larmnated agamst cuno us to unst
fangc rs
re ce ntly e vllluated thiS
cQnservatJ o n method as " ahsolutcly
tudeo us!"

•

•

.

.. ..

/\II thlS lS not to say , however, that
conservators are totally helpless. If they
have been less than successful with
methods of preservahon, their methods of
testoratlo n, fixmg works already mjured ,
are advanced .
Art la bs eqwpped with photograptuc ,
chemacal analytic and mecttantcal tools can
seemanaly do miracles on ailina
masterpieces . Comervation texts are filled
wath "before and after" pictures more
strikln&amp; than those from a reducin&amp; ulon
advertisement.
Don.tello's wooden statue of Mary
Magdalene was one such rruracle. Caught m
Florence fl ood waters, Magdalene was
found mud11tained, cracked and 50
water-loued 1t could not bear ats o wn
we~aht. Scaentists lifted at onto a ri&amp;id spht
and covered at with wet moss. Whale wet ,
wood keep; its shape; drying warps and
shrivels. Safe m the lab's water bath, the
statue lS photographed under mfra-red Llaht
for close inspeclaon . Then water is slowly
replaced 10 the bath with a liquad that
solidifies inside the wood and prevents
contraction as the wood dries. LatUe,
however, can be done about the cracks or
ingramed mud .

• •

•

•

•

Restoration methods, it should be
remembered have been dCVlSed to stay
weatherana damaae. not the more
rapad -a c tana detenoratJon caused by
pollullon.
Lat Ue L1 yet known about pollutlon ,
about h () w at affects 11rt , let alone bow to
stop those effects o r to prevent tbe
pollutaon atself
·
Until we do know these thmgs , smog,
smoke, sulphur, ozone and exhaust wtJI
contanue to erode marble bro nze, glass and
wood
And also trees, nvers, city 8.l1 .•• " Yo u
know," said Dr. Brill lookma about hi:l1ab,
"we're taUcing about what pollution does
to things hell thank about what it does to
people! "

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Mondayl 17 A;&gt;T-il 1972 The Spectrum . Page five

�Sebring driver busted on grass charge
the track officials kept Bob from being towed away with

by Bruce Czaja

his car.

Spi'CiDI to Tlrl' Sputrum

SEBRING, Fla .
Anyone who has ever attended a
sports car race has run mto that rare breed of animal
known as the "rent·a&lt;op." These normally meek and mild
mannered individuals, once given a badge and gun , become
ravtng terrors for the weekend, hassl.mg everyone in s.ight
At the recent race at Sebring, Florida 's rentals went out of
their way to prove that they were the world's best, or
worst as the case may be. They spared no one in their
mswts and assaults, spectators, press, and dnvers included .
Tired of picking on "long-haued tupp1e type"
s~ctators, an industrious "fuzz. for 48 hours" decided that
a few long-h:ured fore1gners should be in1ttated to
"southern hosp•tallty " OM preceeded to arrest Bnllsher
Davtd Hobbs and ..:o-Qnver Slup Scott for dnvmg on the
grass while they were tr y10g to get into the track before
the race.

'The pig image'
The most ab~urd thJng about the whole mc1dent was
that Hobbs, who w.u the passenger at the t1me, was g~ven a
tu.:ket for reckless dnVJng. The reasomng beh1nd the mo ve
ha.~ nevo.:r been ex.pla&amp;ned Another gent dec1ded that driver
Boh Grossman's car constituted a haUJrd where it was
parked . The effi..:1ent devil proceeded to have the car
towed away . fourteen hours after 11 had beo.:n parked
Cro~man happened on the scene as the truck was movtng
the car, and needll'S!&gt; to say, became QUite upset li e
com menced to tell the lawman tn ~.-harge JUSI what he
thought of Sehnng, Flonda , the South, Jnd the manta!
status of the trooper '~ mother. Only the tntervent10n of

The press people had their share o r problems wit h
the locals who really did an exceUenl job at upholding the
pig image. It didn't matter if your credentials allowed you
to go somewhere, if the cop didn't want you to, you
couldn't. John Wilcox, director of ABC's Championship
Auto Racmg senes had a partic ularly hard ttme as he was
punched and nearly arrested, by an over zeaJous shemff,
for try1ng to cross the track o ne hour before the race
started .
Chauvinism?
The repress1ve a.ar carried over 10to the pits, where
track officials were not gomg to be out-done by the
rentals. Peter Revson was- black flagged for supposedly
pa.&lt;1sing while a caullo n Oag was out When he came 10to
the pils to find out what was wrong he was approached by
a track steward. Peter raJSed the visor of his helmet to hear
the man and inadvertently knocked the gent's hat off into
a pool or otJ. Being a poor sport, the officJal decided to
keep Peter there for a n1ce long chat. Smce the Alfa was
still m contentiOn at the time and Peter felt he hadn 't
pa~ed, he dtdn'l tal.e lundly to the fatherly advtce . Fed up '
With the delay , he gave the universal s1gn for copulatiOn
and drove off. 1he steward wa.~ qwte diSmayed by
Revson's c)(enase of free s peech and promptly diSqualified

rum .
On a different note, Playb oys Ms Apnl was at the
to present the trophy to wmners MJ no Andrett1 and
Ja'-kY lc kx. l-or the hfe of me I do n't know why the
wo men's libbers .ue mad at Uugh Hefner. If 11 weren't for
turn and the ahihty of Playboy's photo touch-up man , the
ra~.-e

poor gi..rl would probably still be teamed up with a sled "(jog
somewhere in the frozen wastes of Minnesota. ExplOited?
Hell, Playboy was the o ne beina taken. You couldn't even
say she had a mce personality .
Politics bit r11cing

rr you happened to miss the local evening paper\
"extensive" coverage of the race, ABC is showing hi-lites
or the event on this Sunday's Cbamptonship Auto Racmg.
Twelve hours is a long lime to watch cars g01ng aro und and
in the case of this year's Sebring race, a half-hour
condensation will cover anything worth seeing. One
wonders how the plan ro have a closed circuit telecast of
the 24 hours or leMans will tum out. You don't mind a
long race if there is e nough booze and other distractions to
keep you occupted. However, the management of the local
theater might frown if some of the race fans mdulged 1n
their normal activities.
In a side light to tt)e Sebring race, politics is rearing
its ugly head in New York State motor racing. It seems a~
if some little old lady who lives near long Island 's
Bridgehampton sports car course com pl.atned to state
Attorney General Lou1s lefKowttz about the noise theca~
created. Since 1h an election year, Lefkowitz is pushmg
the thing for all tis worth . He has filed swt ag:unsl
Bndgehamptun and the SCCA to have noise abatement
equ1pment tnstalled on race cars .
I asked Bob KeiJy, press directm at Watk.ins Glen .
ho me uf the U.S. Gra nd Prix what be thought o f the
proposed su1t AU he could say was : "Can you ima&amp;Jne u.~
callmg Enzo (Ferran) and telling h1m he has to put d
murner on tus ~.-ars ?" If the suil IS won , every track and
drag strip 111 the stale would be affec ted . It could be the
end of maJor r.1c1ng events in New Y ork.

Stuart Enterprises and WPhD Brin&amp; You

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APRIL 18th

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Page.six ...TheSpectrum . Monday, 17 Apri11972

�A U T 0 and C Y C l E

I NSU RA NCE

IIIEIIID Fl·l)

R9f'dl• of ege or record
low
terms

NEW YORK - A bill was passed by the New
York State Assembly on Friday to permit an elected
achool board in Buffalo. This bill is an outgrowth of
the current dispute over racial busing in the city. The
bill would let city voters decide in November
whether they want to replace the current
seven-member board which had been previously
appointed by the mayor. If the referendum carries,
the Buffalo Common Council will decide whether to
have the school board election in either May or
November 1973.
Assemblyman Albert J . Hausbeck, who
proposed the bill, stated: "Th is will give the people a
voice in who should re present them on the school
boar d." Assemblyman Arthur Eve felt that the
propo sa l s h ou ld go further , and ioclude
decentralization of school control and removal of
the board from the arena. He feels that the proposed
measu re will only serve to increase the polarization
wllhin the community as far as the proposed bus.ng
plan. The current board has voted 4·3 to defy
education Commissioner Ewald Nyquist's order
direc tmg the city tu •mplcrncnt a new Integration
plan .
WAS HI NGTON On Thursday, the Senate gave
approval to unprecedented legislation that would ha1
presidents from involvmg 1\ me rica in undeclared
wars ltke those m Korea and Vietnam. The measure
w o uld requi r e that a president get prior
congressional approval before committing U.S
forces to any prolonged fightmg abroad .

NEW YORK - The New York. Medical Society

has urged doctors to report aU cases of venereal
disease in an effort to curb a nation-wide epidemic.
The society atated that failure to report such cases
was a critical factor in controlling social diseases.
One aspect of control efforts requires that persons
with the disease divulge the names of persons with
whom they have had sexual contact.

NEW VORl - A high ranking police o fficial has
stated that the mounting toU of underworld
executions in New York seems to be more o f a
spring cleaning than an open gangland war. Seven
men with known underworld connections have been
slain in a two-week period and I S have died since the
assassination attempt on J oseph Colombo. Sr. The
same official went on to state that the killing of
"Crazy Joe" Gallo was in retaliation 'ror the attempt
on Colombo's life

NORTH ADA MS. MASS .
The students at
North Adams State College staged a "drive in" on
TilUrsday to protest p:uking conditions at the school
and the man ner in whit:h local merchants were
allegedly treating them. Commuter student~' c:ars
were parked at every parking meter along the mam
street leading to the college . The purpose of the
strike was to protest the poor parking facilities at the
college and get municipal support in solving that
problem.

Buffalo Five trial
DUETOTHE
HORRIFYING SCENES
NO ONE ADMITTED
WITHOUT A

the first film
rated
for violence

v·

·sTOMACH DISTREss· BAG
c-iW* tlw • tal oft'icla)
• All AOlS ~MITTED I PARENTAl ESCORtS ENCOURAGED

I&amp;ANMAfl

START1NO

WEDIESDAY!

L!JtJtus BUFFALO
~

The tritl o f the Buffalo Five is scheduled to begin toda y at the Federal Cowt
Building. The Five, three men and two women . face charges of conspiracy , theft of
government property and buralary stemming fro m an attempt lo steal draft files and
umy intelliaence records lut Auaust. St. Peter 's United Church of Christ , located al
Genesee and Hickory Street.s will be the trial center. Dinners and hee activitie\ are
sch eduled there every rdpl of the first week of the trial. Events include :
Today - A war tax resistance workshop.
Tomorrow - The Narmic slide show on the air war in Indochina.
Wednnday - .Unsell the War workshop, detailina the national and local activities in
the advertiain11 campeian to unsell the war.
Thursday - Speakers to describe the anti-war activities presently bems held in
Rochester.
Friday - Movie nigh t : political, student and experimental films .
All activitie8 are being coord inated by the Burfalo Defense Committee. All t&gt;vents
are planned to beain at 8:30p.m. at St. Peter's Church . All are welc()me and encouraged
lo participate.
0

Hey bub ...

Out tout! We let

want big achon
th1s summer?
I can get you

red blooded college
youth e.arn the
fu ll count at Good
Humor ... no1hinq 1o
buY. rent, spend. we
provide every thing
... and it ·s all theirs

one hundred

and forty five:f(
love notes or
more

~Neekly

... less mv
cut of course',,,....,...... _,

or more!

Down t he bamer

$145* or more

Anna, I'm headtng

a week ... you're
both polluted.juiced
on

.. .$145*' a week

for the summer

placement diroctor
or .student aid
off tee!

V-B fumes .. . prove
the big talk!
Eagev youth ... love and peace
IS yours ... Check these facts:

OFF TO SERVE KIDS &amp;GIUlW-tfS
THESE FAMOOS GOOD ~UMOR
teE CREAM PRODUCTS

of the students who worked 10
or more weeks last summer
about lout of 4 earned more
t han $160 weekly- abou11
out of 5 ea rned more than
$185 weekly. Guys and gals
qualify if@ over 18. ® have
valtd dnvers llcense,candnve
a 4 on the floor ®Have gocxj health

APRIL 19th

Monday, 17 Apnl 197.2 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�MG MIDGET

It's a lot of sports car for a little price.
These days you don't have to look
very far to find a small, economical car.
But to find one that's economical
and a pure-bred, SCCA-winning
sports ear- well, that leaves you a
choice of about one
MG Midget.
Just the right size for you, your
friend and enough gear to see you
through a weekend .
You'll discover that the real
meaning of "sports motoring" has
nothing to do with Y4-mile strips at
abandoned airports.
It has to do with roads that take
to the hills where the scenery and
fresh air are Roads that turn and twist
and meander down the other side,
faithful to the contours of nature.
That's where terms like rack-andpinion steering , front disc brakes,
race-seasoned suspension and a
close-ratio 4-speed gearbox, start
making sense to the uninitiated.
And you'll wonder how you

'\

,~

.

Page eight . The.Spectrum . Monday, 17 April 1972

ever drove without full sports car
instrumentation: an electric tachometer,
separate gauges for oil pressure.
water temperature and fuel level.
There's even a trip odometer.
MG Midget sports other standards
l1ke a 1275 c.c. overhead valve
engine, mag-style wheels, radial-ply
· !Ires, leather steering wheel cover,
reclining bucket seats, full carpeting
and three- blade windshield wipers.
What do you pay for this small
economical sports car? Of all the
proven winners now in national SCCA
sports car racing, it's the one with
the lowest price tag.
A little for a lot of sports car.
For the name of your nearest
Austin MG dealer and for information
about overseas delivery, dial (800)
631 -1972. In New Jersey dial (800)
962 -2803. Calls are toll-free.

MG. The aporta a~r America loved first.

�I

I

Now or never
With the agreement to restore the $34 million of
constructi011 monies to the supplement state budget, the
latest threat to the Amherst campus appears t o be over. As a
result work will be started on four new buildings.
Additionally. the new law school building will be able to
open on schedule by September of 1973
The battle, however, does not end here The gradual
erosion of the Amherst campus' scope, combined with the
growing reluctance of high state officials to publically
support this project, has made its completion hazy and
distant

No expertise available
To till' &lt;"dlfor

The outlook for strong legislative. help for the campus is
also bleak. Until qwte recently, the area legislators had
conten t ed themselve!. with total silence on the issue Then,
seem1ngly more emburrassed by their own 1mpoten~e than
the economic and educdtional consequences, they haltingly
offered to work for the restoration of the slashed funds In
retrospect, it seems that their mot1vat1on stemmed not from
any comm1ttment to building a large educationa l complex in
this area, but rather from the fact that other areas received
add1t10nal funds at the same time money wa&amp; being cut from
Western New York prorects.
Neither SUNY Central or the local admm1strat1on leaves
th1s affair with untarnished images. The mere fact that the
cut ever occurred IS strong evidence of failure. The potent1al
loss IS far more than $34 million Unless an effic1ant,
~ompetent and coordinated effort is launched by SUNY and
UB officia ls to speed up the construCtion schedule we may
never see a completed campus.
The s1mple reiteration of the $650 million committment,
vaunted b.,. administrative officia ls several months ago, is
worthless. Despite the cutback in size and scope, the actual
cost of all remainmg projected buildings IS well beyond that
f1gure . With construction costs contmu1ng to rise rapidly the
longer away the completion date, the more untenable the
$650 million committment.
The local legislators may increase their efforts on behalf
of th1s institution. After all, this is an election year. But they
will not do so because of administrative platitudes on
local preference admission plans. What is needed is a
marshalling of all the area forces who stand to gain from a
full scale Amherst campus. Until the labor, contractor,
financial and political communities of Erie County are
brought in to work for a full and rapid completiOn, our
struggle will be a lonely and possibly fruitless one

THE SpECTf\UM
Vol 22, No 75

Monday , 17 April 1972

Editor in.Chid
Dcnrm 1\1 nuld
Cu·M•n•g•ng Edllor AI 13rm&lt;ln
Co M•n•gmg Editor M1lo.c I •PP'"·""l
Au t M• nAglng Edllor ~~.~,.n Mu"
Builnn~ M~nager
ld&lt;k llcriAn
AdvtrtiSinK Man.1ger )u'•" Mo·ll•·"""~
Am~

Ahrend

c~mpus

I" Ann

A1111~u

City

Jell C,rtttlw,,ld
lluwl&lt;" Kurlt
~~~~~~ l tumtt
Rumu Otm~n
Mdlty C..JIII

thckp.asco

l•yuul

C l~11r

As!.l .
Fe.ature

OH-Campu~

Kunyun

•••·m•

M ~&lt;h•tl '&gt; tlvrr ltl•ll
B•llv Alimdn

1 """' T 1&lt;~rgr•
~,u,_

A sst

PllOIO

.HH

M•&lt;lo.ey l)'ll"llrldWr

l&lt; flt!l\llHI\

Am

l ,nJ• Teo

Spnns

Tole~

AS!. I

I nm

Gr.1ph1c Arts

Or•m•

lll &amp;
Mu!.l t

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Copy

M~·~llupr

As~l

!-.1m ') JIIIU\
ll.~rt ~

ltuw11·

R•1t11n

I "'"I

I ht :,pt'c trum ·~ )ervet..l t•y United Pres~ I ntt't n•ttcm~l, &lt;..ullrl(t p, r"
~tfVI&lt;t. the Los Angeles I .m~ Free Pres, , rhr l o' Angrk' lomr'
)yndiLate Jnd Lollct•IICin New) )e•••&lt;t
Republll.!IIOn

oi

(dltO• ·•n-Chlel

·~

Edrton~l

mdller

her ell\

WJlhuul

Ihe &lt;'\PII .. , 1 nr,wl\1 "'

lotlllddrn

poltcy is delermtned by the EditoHn.(..hlef.

•

I

I'

lllr

&lt;nmprehens1ve loxu:nlngJ1..al aualylttJI wrvices

II rs well known that I JWf\llndlly .oru ~upporiiVl'
••I lhr ~nah ol Sunsh rn c II IIU\l" ll owl'Vt'f , lim
lkpartrnent lund the lln1ver~IIYI has neilher lht·
cxpert1se nor the scrvi1..t' faulltle~ to pruvide fnr

f'&lt;'drtr M Smith. MD.
Pr11jo'l!nr und ( "hutrnran
/Jc{IO/flfll'r/1 of fhurmaco/ogy

Try International Dorm
I o till' J.dltm

A' the lil.tldemiL year ned(~ 1U, ('fld a mnrrll"nlol
rt'flt: Cl11111 lllUY ht.' Ill order , II IIlii al ll'ast enJOyah)c
and hopefully cdu.:alttlllal
As a transfer sludenl JnJ .t\ u n1crrlber ul tlw
lntcma110nal durm. I wrsll tu IIIJkc my reflf.'( tluns
puhhL
II Wt\) very helpful (murc hl.c- Jn rx~.eption thau
the ruk) In lind on lht\ campu~ , J rnendly ,
comft•rtable place Ill wh1ch t o hve
Secondly at the InternatiOnal d u 1111 , one ,en~ed
a teellng o f com munity , a feeling where d1versuy IS
common and no I untquent."ss , a charuder and o ft en a
sennu~ lailurt• ol lhe .. lonventtonal dorms"

by lhe Attica Ot-fen~ Commiefee
Srvt'rcJI weeks ago tn tht:. ~.olullln we sa1d '" When
enough Jlt"nple demand that the law he
.:mnpr{'hcns1hh: and understandahle. th~n a lo~wle~
nunonty won't he ahle to rule .. A ~.orrellary lo thai
statement t) the demand that the law and
particularly the C'onshtut1on he enforced . fhese
were arnon&amp; the demands of thc mrnates at Attica,
San Quentin, Folsom , Rahway , and numhemus
o ther Amencan pnsOI\~ . lnd11..a11ve of these demands
ar~ those made by the Ill mates al the Federal
f(eformat ory for Women at Alderson , West V1rg1nra
who on September I 4. I 1171, the day after the
Allt ca massacre, staged d demon~trat10n rn support
of the pn&amp;(lntrs a t AUrea. Among thesr demands,
formulated In August 1971 , were the demand for
counsel, a law hbrary , requmng the Parole Board to
give reasons for Its decis1ons, grant1ng IUl mmate
.Jccess to all the matenal tn her tile that the Parole
Board used to JUdge her case, r~ppeal of parole hoard
densions. wntlen cntena t.ovenng the st ep sysl~m.
frHdom of assoctatlon .tnd 1opeech wlule on parole
and an open mail policy
All of these rights can be found in the fina mne
amt&gt;ndments to the ('onsttlullnn . They have ht:en
den1ed to mosl 1nmates (the CaUeys enJOY them land
that the strata ofsocrety from wh1ch they come,1.e,
tht' poor, Blac k and Spamsh speakmg. The weallhy
and theu bureaucrats have done all m thetr power to
ensure that the law serves only thetr interests . They
have mystified it and h1dden tt away 10 co mmon law,
thus th e mmates' demands fur law Libraries and
com pet an I counsel. They have en forced it arbitranly
and t.apn ciously w1thout even a modiucm ol due
process , hen ce the demand lor wntten oprn1ons and
an appeal procedure They tuve taken absolute nghts
and created ambiguities where none eXISted e.g.
subvertmg the first Amendment nght of free speech
by qUahfymg It
no one can cry fire in 11 theater
thus allowmg Nixon and Mitc hell to determine that
everyone under thirty with long hair in Washington
on Mayday was crying fire . The inmates hav~:
demanded an end to the arbllrary rule of pnson
a dmm1s1 rators and tnsist upon wntten codes
enu merating therr rights and alertmg them to what
acts are protubtttve thereby opemng these codes to
challenge wht.'n they infnnge upon co nstitull!lnal
right.$.
The struggle for these rights IS not an easy one.
1t took a revolution and a c1vtJ war to create them
and long hard stuggles to have them apply t o
working people, e.g. the labor and civil rights

J hudly , II I~ Jllllu~l hy drfllllllon Ihat o ne IS
huuud to tram troru hcang 1n the lnl rrnatlonal dorm,
l11r no whcre t·.ln one •n .1 shorl 111111" ,Jnd al school
learn a~ much bu1 as many dtrfl"l t:rrl (Jcuplc than an
I he: I ntern.Jitunul dorm
I ~trungly urge all lhose who ..re ured of
~.unvent1onal Lam pus housing, all thll\t' who diSliked
ulf~ampus huu~1ng and think tl t:. rr1ore convenient
to live on ~.:3mpu' to those wlllrntt In try ~methang

new, to J()tn us m lhc lntern.llllln.ll llorm
I 97l·I97J Try II ynu'll hkt' til

for

Swrl bl K herhen
lnt'/ floor

movements and recently rnoverucnl\ hy women and
elementary and high school students fhuse who
Jeny all peoplt: 1he1r baste nght~ . phHe many
ruadblo~:ks 10 thr path of those who asp1re to them.
Fur example Dunng the: Septemher 13th massacre
and thereafter, the State Pollee and pnson guards
llloted prioncrs cells . After stealing everything of
value (watt... hes , rings etc .) they destroyoo everything
else (books, furniture, photographs, clothing, legal
papers). In mates In New York Stale are considered
c1villy de.td , thai IS they can lile nn ~UJI against the
SIJle for the1r lost property u11tll they are released
from prison. To file a c laim upon release, tnmatc:a
hrst have t o have liled an "Intent to File a Claim"
by Decem her I 0 , 1971 w1th Ihe Stale Court of
C'la1ms tn Albany Very few inmates knew this, so
1 he A llica Defense Commlltee prepared the
necessary forms and a cover letter explaming the
necesslly to lite and the procedure tnvolved. They
were sent 1n to tnmales still in At11ca and to those
trnnsfened to C'llnton, Great Meadow and Green
Haven. Pnso n and State a:Jthonlles were appalled at
the idea of 1nmat~ betng mfomred of their rights
and made every effort to make d1slnbut1on of tbe
forms difli cult tf not impossible. Allica refused them
because the cover letter made note that inmates had
heen wounded and beaten on the 13th and could file
a clatm for personal InJuries recetved ThiS rejection
came a week before the deadiJOe for the forms
necessrtallng tht: ADC to run, assemble, and add ress
approximately 1200, 6 page new forms m one rught .
The Warden at Clmton didn't allow mmates there t o
recei ve thcH forms until t h e day before they were
due. Greenhaven 's Notary Public just happened to be
on vacation m December and late November when
mmates were filing the forms (the Co urt of Claims
reqwred each form to be notanz.ed to be valid).
Despite th.Js har.tssment upwards of one thousand
valid claims were ftled and the AO&lt;' will struggle to
gel the rest accepted
Another example of these roadhlooks ts the
status of those inmates held in Solitary Confinement
euphemistJcally called segregation One federal judge
ruled ttut no admmistrative heanngs couJd be beld
w1th these tnmates while another federal judge ruled
they could not be aJJowed out of segregation
w1thout adnunJStrattve heanngs thereby insuring
thetr non·judrc1ally admtnJStered pumshment for an
indeterminate period.
We can and must leam from Allrca and continue
to struggle to change a legal system that mystifies
rather than enlightens and oppresses rather than
protects ..

Monday, 17 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�If you won't send in
this coupon,
shut up
about the war.
You, who say all the right things about the war, but won't
even bother to write your congressman, are prolonging
the war by your inaction.
You don't think it will do any good.
But now there's a real chance it will.
Now is the time when writing your congressman could make
a crucial difference.
The number of them who want to set a definite withdrawal
date is growing.
So is the number of congressmen who are sitting on the fence.
You can push them off.
They will back an act of disengagement if they feel their constituencies will back them at home.
They need to hear from you. They need a pile of evidence on
their desks that will make them feel they can get re-elected
even if they speak out.
It's an incredible notion that after all this, filling out a simple
coupon and sending it to your congressman could stop the war.
But just think. It could.

r---------------.

I

I
I
I
I
I
lcg"latJOn pendmg Congre'' to
I the warm Southea!.t Asia. As a concerned citizen. I urge you
I
' upport th1s Jeg1'ilation. lf you
you w1ll have my 'iupport.
I
I
I
I
I
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L--------------..1

1

To: Congressman _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
The House of Representatives
Washington, D.C.
Dear Sir
under.tand

I'

10

e nd

do.
Sincerely.

to

/ 'f' ( , ,Jr

for the Mme

of

,our Coftcrnaman, eall the U.,U. ol Women Yot.,.,

H411p UIIMII The War. A Project of Clorl)l and laymen Concerned, 637 W. !25th Street. Now York, N Y 10027

P~g~ ~en . Th~ .~pectrum . Monday , 17 April 19_72

�DRI admits its military.application
DENVER Colo (CPS) When students
at the University of Denver march on the
Denver Research I nstttute (DR)) protesting
war-related research, assistant director Jack
Craig meets them wtth coffee and donuts
The first question inevttably is, ' Do any of
your projects have dtrect military
application? .. Cratg pauses as he passes out
mimeographed lists of all research projects
to the protestors, looks at the questtoner
with a slightly puz7Jed expressiOn, ant.l
inevitably replies, ''Why yes, of course. all
our projects have a mihtary application."
Research institutes on college campuses
across the nation have been under attack 111
recent years for the1r acceptance ~
Department of Defense (DOD) contracts
for research prOJects Acttv1sts have
charged that aJI research funded by DOD is
war-related and therefore should not be
allowed on campus Admtnistrators and
researchers, however, have countered that
their research rs ''b8.!11c" and adds only tu
the storehouse of knowledge tn "pure··
science. The debate still rages
How to make friends
Jack Crarg, then . IS somewhat an
anomoly 10 h1s pllStllon Whtle
counterparts deny the most tenuous
linking of their research wtth war
technology. Crwg freely adm1ts 11 , and h1s
candid approach has defused several
explos1ve situatrons at the llnrve1s1ty of
Denver
For the past several years, protestors
w1th passions mflamed by the cuntmumg
war, have demonstrated aga1nst DRI's

presence on campus. To their surprtse, the
shirtsleeved Craig greets them and inv1tes
the marchers into a meeting room where he
answers questions on the institute and its
projects . March leaders d1sagree
philosophically w1th Crrug's posit1on and
cons1der him a master at coopting protests,
but his honesty cngcndc~ thw hegrudgmg
respect.
Seeing the handwnt1ng on the wall in
the early '60's, all research at DRI ts now
unclassified and Cl)ntracts with tlbviou~
weapons technology orientaltun arc
refused. When a rnolotov co~ktail was
thrown through one researcher 's window
just after Kent State, thl' en ltre un1vers1ty
commuruty condemned the act and
student leaders voluntanly patrolled the
campus to prevent furt her incidents even
though thousands ol students were
involved in a strike that ulttmately resulted
m the Nattonal Guard's presence on
campus.
.. And influence people

DRI also aids student in1t1ated prOJect~
such as migrant housmg and has been a
major supporter of the multl·medta
project, a technology - hungry
presentatiOnal art lorm on campus 1)\J
senior, Tom Feldman , coordinator 0f thr~
year's endeavor, enthusrast1cally 1cports
that "DRI has provided us with the
rel.ources to des1gn and acqutrc the nwst
advance technology availahle fur Ultr
project ."
While Cra1g has won many fnent.l~
among tlte DU student boJy, 11 ·~doubtful

that his attitude endears h.im to his
beleagured colleagues at other institutes
"Anyone who claims that DOD funded
research does not have military application
is either an id1ot or a hypocrite," says Craig
111 h1s second-Ooor office at DRI . He finds
ludicrous the situatron at Stanford
Un1versity where researchers were recently
astlmished when Pentagon representatives
freely admitted to students 111 the Stanford
Workshop on political and social 1ssuc~ that
no research was fuuded unlcs~ it could tw
proven tn ult1mately have a duect m1litary
application. ''No one has ever been able to
demonstrate to me a piece of research that
did not m some way have a military
appltcation "maintains Craig.
'Purer than thou '
He tsn 't surpnsed that some rcs~archers
tlelteve that their work 1sn 't war-related
"Setenluts can't debate the 1ssue
mtdligently e1ther," say.s Cra1g. "I have sat
through dozem of faculty meellngs where
researchers have argued that their work was
' pu re r' because 11 had less defense
orienta \ton . That's l1ke debattng how much
a v1rgin someone i:. "Who 1S worse , the guy
who actually designs the bomb, m the man
who researche~ the phys1cs on 1t," asks
Cra1g.
The myoprc st&lt;tnce of many rcsearche"
is attributed by Cra1g to an attempt "'
rdllnnahr.1ng away feelings of guilt "In
Germany afte1 Wurld Wat II, people
argued that they drt.ln 't put the bodrcs 111
the oven. they merely ran tllc camp The
Mtuat11m IS the same as trymg to place the

ultimate gu1lt for My l..a.i.' ' The entire
national research p1cture is skewed toward
defense, according to Craig, because the
" prioritjes are m defense spending and
these pr1orit1es are established by
leg1slators elected by the people of this
country "
Few people wlSh to accept the
respunsrb1lity for weapons development so
most researchers "deny that their research
has any application to society at all ," Cra1g
says "I t'~ a big game between the DOD.
Congre~s
and the researchers," he
continues, putl1ng a hand through his
tousled, sandy hatr and pokmg at hrs
overflowmg desk. DOD has different task
t.lescript1ons for projects because "they
have to appeal to both pro- and anti-war
legislators. An anti-war congressman won't
;allocate funds that are for war research,
while the pro·war congressman wants to
see the defense appltcat1on. It's all a matter
of salesmansh1p on the part of DOD," he
adds
Cratg feels that the problem for a
unrvers1ty IS to dec1de, by a consensus of
students and faculty . what research it
won't tolerate. where the ltne IS to be
drawn Tim 1l. the real rssue in the
controversy that has centered around
u111vers1ty research mst1tutcs . it has no
S1mple sulut10n . Aut.l tim 1s the problem
Cra1g hands the stut.lent actrv1s1s along with
coffee and donuts when they crarn 111t0 his
office every year Although disgruntled
protest leaders cla1m h1s ph1losophy IS
atmed at prevent1ng d1srupt1on at least
Jack Cra1g dllesn't rnsult theu Intelligence.

STUDENT ASSEMBLY MEETING

Friday, April 21
3:00p.m.
233 Norton Hall
ALL MEMBERS MUST AT"'END!
Monday , 17 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�The Student Housing Corporation
is looking tor

BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEMBERS
Eight positions ue available. At least one member should be from each of these areas:
Undergraduate, Graduate, MFC , Professional.

What qualifications ore necessary ?

1. Enrollment in any student division of SUNY AB
2 . Sincere interest in th e success of a housing corporation run on the
basis of cooperative spirit
3. Willingness to devote much time to the corpor;ation
4 . Ability to easily commute to SUNY AB during the Fall and Spring
Semesters and during the summer
5. Ability to serve for a term of one or two years (once elected , a studenr
does not have to relinquish his term on the Board of Directors if he
graduates, as long as he stays within the easily commu table distance.

What 15 the application proce~ ?

1. Complete resume form printed below to the best of your ability
(additional forms av;ailable in Norton 214).
2. Call the Housing Committee at 831 -5502 for answers to questions you may
have, or for more information.
3. Return your completed resume to Norton 214 by noon on Tuesday April
18, 1972.
4. An interview will be set up later th&lt;~t week by the Screening Committee.
5. All appomtments will be confirmed by Sub Board I.

-------~------------------------~-------------------------------------·-

RESUME
For Student Housing Corporation Board of Directors Membership

NAME
ADDRESS

PHONE NUMBER

WHAT DIVISION OF SUNY AS ?
WHAT LEVEL?
WHAT DEPARTMENT'

WHAl DID YOU DO THIS YEAR?
WHAT DO YOU PLAN ON DOINC, NEXT YEAR?
WHAT, IN GENERAL , DO YOU PLAN TO DO WITH YOUR LIFE?

WHAT ARE YOUR INTERESTS?

WHO ARE YOU'

..
Please feel free to write more than the space 1s provided for!

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Monday, 1'l :April -1912 ·

�Cosell was his normal
idealistic and honest self
by Bruce Engel
Spectrum Smff Wnr~r

Despite one postponement and
repeated reports that he would
not attend, Howard CoseU arrived
at Buffalo's sixty-third "Block B"
banquet and proved to be his
usual outspoken self. The crowd,
announced at 5 I 6, included many
Buffalo student-athletes as weU as
alumni and University officials.

This reporter could detect a
slightly pained look in his face ,
although certainly Sornit said
nothing Dr. Fritz didn't already
know.

Cosell later commented on
Somit's eventual desire for a
better program. CoseU remarked :
'1 hope you get the program you
reaJiy deserve. But keep it in
reason. Don't try to be Syracuse.''
Cosell sees college athletic
One of the most impressive scholarships as the first corruption
things about Cosell was as always, of a youug athlete. CoseU went on
his honesty and idealism . First to say that they are deplorably
and foremost, Cosell emphasized unfair in the face or the fact that
tha t he considers himself a academically better students
journalist committed to the truth cannot get in . ''t'm dead set
and the exposure of injustice. against big-time college sports,"
However. besides the keynote CoseU added. When asked if he
address by CoseU, another of the thought Buffalo could get football
evening's speakers was equally baclt, CoseU said: ''I hope you do.
truthful and honest - Dr. Albert But play Leheigh. Play Delaware.
Somit, executive vice-president of But for God sakes, don't try to be
Notre Dame."
the University.

Philbin emcees

Co.ell plans show

Somit opened up wtlh a couple
of JOkes after being introduced by
Emcee Gerry Philbin, who traded
digs with CoseU lhroughout the
evening. But then Somit alluded
to Buffalo's fiscal trouble in
basketball and went on to add :
"We cannot now cons.ader fielding
a big-time team in any sport,
part•cularly football." He added
that we cannot expect immediate
SUJ?JX&gt;rl from the alumni and that
unless there is a sudden revel'!lal in
the State Legislature, it will take
two or three years before an
improved program can possibly be
started. Somlt admitted that the
University probably had the most
an.:haic athletic plant aro und .
''HopefuJJy, we can improve Clark
Gym facilities and bring them into
the early 1900's."

Towards the end , CoseU was
almost livid about the necessity of
destroying the myth of the purity
of sports and spommen . Cosell
criticized as illiterate anyone who
has criticized him for merely
speaking his mind . Indeed, he
does speak his mind and does so
very strongly . When Cosell really
felt strongly about something, he
said it loudly and wilh an
aggressiveness that bordered on
intolerance. The drama, idealism
and overt honesty thai is Cose ll
was at its best.

ThiS last jocular remark was
actually too close to the truth to
be very funny although it did get
a lot of laughs. Throughout most
nf SomH's Wk. athletic dtrector
Dr. Harry C. Fritz just sat there
on the dais with his lead leaning
on his hand and looking down.

Right now "Humble Howard"
is planning on going 11110 o thet
Uungs partly because sports is not
int.ellectually stimulating enough .
A nationally syndicated talk show
is one future possibility. Cosell
feels that sports is not important
for itself, but rather for the olher
area of our culture that it invades .
Our law. our sociology and even
our politics - but he can't see
people getting so excited about
who wins, who loses and by how
much . "It's not a religion It's just
a damn game," Cosell blasted .

In celebration of Israel Independence Day
Hillel

and Students for Israel
Present

"THREE DAYS AND A CHILD"

Tomorrow at 8 :30 p.m.-Conference Theater

Students' Lntemational Meditation SocieCy
Announces a talk on

Transcendental Meditation
as rauabt by MAHAJUSHI MAHESH YOCI,

LECTURE
Tuesday, April 18 8:00 p.m . in room

140 Norton HaD

Bad days for Bulls

Poor weather
·
put
stress on track competition
by Bruce Engel
Sp~ctrum

Staff Writu

Poor weather just seems to look for Buffalo's
athletic teams these days. Saturday, the rain and the
mud forced the track Bulls to move to Buffalo State
for a triangular meet with the Bengals and powerful
Cortland. All times and distances were off due to the
poor weather. The fact that two of Cortland 's top
performers were hurt and couldn't make the trip
combined with surprisingly strong performances by
the Bulls and Buffalo State kept the match close .
The final tally read Cortland 78, Buffalo 58 and
Buffalo State 42 .
The fi~t race of the day was a big one for the
Bulls as Jerry Williams, Rich Hall, Bill Hannah and
Charlie Quinney took the 440 relay in 44 .9 seconds.
Good running and flawless stick passing left Cortland
far behind as anchorman Quinney held off Buffalo
State's anchor at the tape. Quinney and Hannah also
placed second and third respectively 10 the 100 yard
dash while Williams was a disappomling fourth in the
long jump.
Gower cops half mik
Another pleasant surprise was Bob Gower in the
half mile. Gower upsel the Bulls' own Bill McCarthy
and Cortland's Mike Paulsen who had run the mile
earlier. Gower came back from third to win the race
in 2:01.2 . McCarthy went up from fourth to second
to complete Buffalo's one-two finiSh . The other
one-two finish was Don van Deuson and Mark Reger
in the javelin . Van Deuson 's 162-2 won easily while
Reger's throw of 143~ was poor for him. Mar.k
appeared more noticeably affected by the pom
conditions than did the other competitors
The otl1er weigh t even ts were strong as
expected, with two Bulb placing in each event Mike

Jerry Williams
Bouck was second in the discus and third in the shot.
John Wallace placed th1rd in the discus wlille
freshman Mike Corbett broke the 40 foot milestone
to cop fourth tn the shot
The onl y other winner for the Bulls was BiU
Heim who took the 440 hurdles going away. State's
Mike Sipko could have given him a race but Sipko
was too busy placing 10 four other events and
gathering a meet high 17 points, more than a th1rd of
his team's total . ln other events, Doug Lake came
from behind but could not quite win the 440 due to·
foundenng on the last straightaway. Jim McClurkin
took seconds in the mile and the three mile.

Baseball Bulls blow chances
fbr a successful road tour
by

O::av~

Geringer

Spi!Crmm Staff Wnrer

Jamaica, N.Y.
The baseball
Bulls complele the1r New Y01k
City road trip today at Faulcigh
Dicktnson in bad need of a win
TJle Bulls lost two games to the
weather and one to St. Johns
before meeting Seton Hall 's
Pirates in a doubleheader
yesterday .
The Bulls fell behind early as
St
Johns rea c hed starting
lefthander Jon Roth fot three
runs in the first inning and three
more in the fifth . However,
Buffalo could not capttalize on
several chances to score before the
Redmen put a lock on lhe
outcome with six tallies (five
unearned) tn the sevenlh stanza.
"We had a chance to get back
111
the game several times,"
obse r ved head coach Bill
Monk.arsh. " However, we haven't
been making good contact. We
haven't gotten our confidence yet
and are in need of a win. I think

that we'll be all right as soon as
we get a few VICtories under our
belt."

Johns' 12 tallies. Three of the
errors occurred in St. Johns'
six-run seventh mning that took
the Bolls out of the game.

Ruffalo flubs chances
After fallmg behind the Bulls
squandered several opportunities
to get back into the baJI game.
Buffalo had two runners in
scoring position in the fourth
lllning with onJy one out.
However, Joe Piscotty and Mark
Stanko failed to deliver the
runners

Buffalo was to have played
cross-town rival Buffalo Stale last
Thursday and Brooklyn Poly
SaturdAy, but the contests were
washed out by bad weather.

The Bulls notched two runs in
the six U1 in nmg to cut the
Redmen's lead to 6-2 Piscotty
slammed a double to centerfield
to drive home the first Bull run.
Pinchhitter Doug Wh elan
delivered the other run for
Buffalo with a sharp single. The
inning ended when Jim LalayaniS
was called out on strikes with lhe
bases loaded .
The Bulls were not at their best
in the field either, committing five
errors which lead to six of St.

eei-Rit

EAL
TH FOOD SHOPP
14Sl Hertel Ave. Near Norwalk 837-7661
FRESH NATURAL PEANUT BUTTER 88¢lb.
(Made while you wait)
also f•turing DANNON YOGURT 4/98¢ plain, coffte, vanilla
OPEN 9 :30a.m. - 9:00p.m.

Mond•y thru Saturd•y

LOW, LOW, PRICES ON VITAMINS &amp; FOODS

Mond-ay,

1,7 Ap.ril

Righthander Gary Odachowsk.i
( 1-2) and soulhpaw Mike Cahill
( 1· 1) were scheduled to face
Seton HaJJ m yesterday's twinbill.
Today che Bills are in Teaneck,
N.J . fo r the last game of the
roadtrip. Lefty John Mast (~).
who was to have faced Brooklyn
Poly, had hls start moved back
until today . The Bulls return to
Buffalo to meet the Canisius
Golden Griffins in a doubleheader
Wednesday afternoon at Delaware
Park (I :30 p .m.). Buffalo wilJ
open at home Friday afternoon ,
facing the powerful Mounaineers
from the Universlly of West
Virginia. The game will start at 3
p.m.

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; R1tliable
Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

197~ . The Spectrum . Pa~ thjrteett,

�CLAIIIPIII
AD INFORMAnON
CLASSIFIED ADS may be piKed
Monday thru Friday ~ween II a.m.
and 4 c30 p ,m . at 355 NortOft Hall.
THE STUDENT RATES of an ad for
one day Is a1 .25 for the first 15 words
and a .05 for NCh llddltlonal word.
t1 .00 for uch additional day . The
deadline fo r Monday II Friday, for
Wednesday , It Is Monday, and for
Friday, It Is Wednes41V Oy 4 :30p.m.
"HELP WANTED" ads cannot
discriminate on the basis of se11, color,
crMd or nallonal origin to any ••tent
(I.e ,. preferably Is still dlsc;rlmlnatorv) .

MARAIIEO COUP\.£ would like to
wbtet 1me11 acNttment for aumm•.
~--- furftlstled. Call Jim 134-2762.

JOB RESEARCH, Boll 1253, S~A.
Toronto, Ont . Enclose t5 to cover
cost.

DESPI!RATEL. V waftted t
bicycle.
can 134-5136.

WANTED • Good 11. .1 nrlnt euttar,
Call 153-9t56, e11t. 2 , M-F, ~.

PI-•

3-stMed

GIRL FOR summ• JOO - May-Labor
O.y, lndudlnt t w o w•ks at .... hore.
LlvHn and help with 3 Children, 9, 7,
2 yean . Delaware Park a r . ..
S.byslttlnt refeten~ and driver's
llcenM reQuired. 173·7672.
WANTED : Llntulsllcs paper at IMst
rive P.t9ft long. Wllllnt to pay . Call
Fred 136-0737.
FEM~E

"FOU ND" aeb will be run frM Of
char!lll lor a maximum of 2 days end
15 words.

WANTED
DRIVER WITH van nM&lt;Ied for BulfiiO
Folk Festival.
call 831·5112, 10
a. m .- 5 p.m.

PI-

TWO GIRLS need place to shAre with
o thers tor f"l - nMr campus. Own
rooms d ..lred . Call Ellen 831-4199.
0 1 RL'S J-lPeed tkar. Call 1131-4114
and l.,ve m~SS~te tor Ronnl.

...ks place to share w ith
othen tor summ• and/o r tall Mar
campus. Own room desired. 1131 · 2161
If you nM&lt;I a roommate.
USED BICVCLE wanted In 900&lt;1
condition.
c:.an Suun 131· 7511 .

PI-•

APPLICATIONS now being taken lor
tour guides, hostesses, esc ort servic e
and models. CAll 184-4991 betwMn 10
e .m . and 5 r&gt;.m .
PERSONS of various occupations
, ... ,Cling N . America and overseas
oopartunlllll, u p to •2600 monthly.
For comotete Information, write to

OVERSEAS JOBS for 1tuctents Aultralla, Europe, S. America, Africa,
etc. All prof-Ions 1nd occupations,
t700 to $3000 monthly. ExpenSIII
palo, overtime, slghtsealftg, FrM
lntorm1tlon
write • JOBS
OVERSEAS, Dept. E5 , P.O . &amp;ox
15071, S1n Diego, Calif. 112115,
START S2 per hour UllrY PIUS bonu".
Work 44 p .m. wellcdlyS ; 10·2 p .m .
S1turdayt. Clll 135·3103 or TF9-0402.
FULL. OR part·tlme JOOs anll1ble with
Best line 1nc. Call Art 116·2094 or
Mike 835 -5215. MMtlngs at Executive
Ramada Inn.

4 •8EDROOM APT . 1220/month,
utllltl• Included. 164 WencH St. Call
896·5563.

IWOUR · aiEDROOM apartment off
S.lley. 15-mlnute walk from campus.
FurniShed, .-onable. Available fOr
May 1 and next y11r. ShellY 834-0966.

APT. :J 8£0ROOMS, off Hertel.
Avella tile May 1. $110 a month • .
Must buy furniture. Call 137~612 .

LAROE

2-BEDROOM 1partment for · 2 · Or 3.
~ 1! C)/month. Mu"t buy furniture.
5 - mlnute walk trom campus .
134.0772.

-kendl.

2·BEOROOM APT. Main n~~~r Depew .
Brand new. tl65 Incl • ..,e~hlnt.
Stuu May . 137~141 or r.32·7936.
2·8EO R OOM

APT .

Meln·FIIImore

aru. Avalllble May 1. 131·2055.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
two
and
Call

FOUR-BEDROOM apanment , $115 + ,
Parkllda and Amhllst. Nllr zoo,
Furniture S900
Clll 133·7659.
Available June 1.

APARTMENT AVA ILA BLE for
summer and ne111 VIII Two bedrooms,
com pllllly furnished , nlcl p la ce. Call

1·BEOROOM Aplrtment . Avallabll
May 1. S 100 + uti lities. Frlcste. n o ve
P&lt;Ovlded . S· mlnu tl walk from U. B.
Call 137-2432 afllr 5 p .m

FOUR·BEOROOM nouse only
mlnut •s t o Alllnhunt . bus
supermarkll . R~atonAble rent .
837· 9541.

Doesn't General Electric
realize the days ofenormous
corporate profits are over?
There was a time, fifty nr sixty
years ago, when a major l'Orpm·ati(Jn
in America might expect profit~ of
•twenty oa· even twenty-five C(IOtE~ on
the sales dollar.
Those dav s are over. But not
e'\"erybody realizes it.
What would you

~all enormou~o~?

In 1970, Fortune's Top !)00 industrial corporations realized an ave1·age
pa·ofit of about 4 cent~ on
thedolla1·.
General Electric fa a·ecl
slightly hettea· t h an
average. Last year,
ou1· profits amount ed to about 5 cent~
on the dollar.
We are occasionally attacked, alon~
with busines~ in
general, a s be1n~
"too profi t-orien terl."
People argue that if social proga·es~
is to be made, business must make it.
And that profits stand in the way of
social progress.
We would argue quite theopvosite.
The busjness of business is not just
business.

The purpose of a business, as we see it, is to produce and distribute
necessary goods and services to the profit of society
... and the busine.. C&gt;S itself.
A business must reflect society's needs. Economic, political, legal
and moral , as well as
social. It must change a s
society changes and, to
some extent, influence
those changes.

But if society pi'Otits and the business does not, the business will fold in
the sho1·t run . It wi ll have no operatin~ funds.
How mu c h
profit i~ enough to
keep a business
opHati n~ ? How :v
much is too much?
l
It's ha1·ct to ~ay.
t\ ~
I'
However, the
,...,
[/
companies making only margina l ~ I
pt·otit are not the j
companies provi dinJ! new employment. creating new
pt·oducts or adding to m&lt;ln's scientific
and technical knowlrd~r.
Marginal companies are not the
o n ~s making the important social contribution~ today. F'o1· tt simple a·eason.
They can't a ffo1·d to.
No responsi bl e t'ompany want.~ a
retUI·n to the days of the robber barons. No respon~ib l e company want~
"enoa·mou!'" profitR. Rut no company
ran ~ ul'vive wilhout the p1·otit ~y~tem .

.....

.....

II

.....

--

--

General Electric jg a b1g, technological company, with the capabilitief\
to do a great deal of problem solvin~
in this country.
We thin'k protit.o.t have a dil·ect
effect on ou1· ability to 80lvt&gt;
problems. But we t·ealize the issue of p1·ofit.q is one with two
sides. By telling you our side,
we hope we•ve moved you to
think aboutyourside. Perhaps
even write us about it.
We'd like to hear what you
have to say. Please wl'ite to
General Electric, Dep t. 901
570 Lexjngton Avenue, New
York, N .Y 10021.

ROOM FOR RENT Sl2 weekly. Mele.
10 minutes rrom campus. C•ll after 5 .
832·2734.
HOUSE FOR RENT - Amherst - 3
larte bedrooms, stove, rlfrlj~erator,
dlshwesher, prb... dlspoul , outdoor
barb e cu e, cerpeted tnroutnoot.
Suitable l or 3 or 4 &amp;tudents. L_.
required. Available June 15th. $275
r&gt;er month . C•ll 633 1736.
THREE-BEDROOM ajNrtment, U
minute welkln9 d is tance from tempus,
Av•llable May 15. Call 1134-4624
3 · BEOROOM •partment. Hertel AI
Stari n, $150 ot mon t h. Mu$t buy
furnlturl . Call 831 -362 4 .
THREE-BEDROOM furni shed hou.,_
for rent
Avallabll lmmedlatlly
6J4 .0219.
TWO
BEAUTIFUL lurni Jhl d
apattm•nts In nouse; av•ll•ble M•Y
S •Dt. t 3 peopll/apartment; 5 -mln
wAlk ; n eeotla b le . 113 1·2215.
LOWER LEVEL o f two-family nome
- 2 b1dr ooms. Flllma&lt; • Main • ••• · 10
minutes from tempus s 1JO/montn.
Call 837· 95 73 .
3 BEDROOMS . Kanmore aria.
S e ml · furnlsnecs . $185/month plus
utilities tsummer 1ess1. Call 8 77·7 921.
SU MNE R ELMWOOO arloll, 1 otnCI
2·bed room aoh. av•llable . Furnished
$150 to S250 11115-8100 o r 132·7361.
LAF AYETTE
HEIGHTS
APARTMENTS 20 min. t o umpus.
F'utly furntsnecs. effic iency stuCito ana
st u d io sutte •oartmenh. Nu leotse
reQu ired. Hycte Park Blvd a t L •fayette
Ave - N I•t• r •
Falls. Cot ll collect
284·57 11 .
U .B AREA
a PlHtmenh from
from ca m r&gt;us .
recorOid men•t•

.l,4 ano 5 · b80room
2 b locks t o l 'h miles
Ca ll 633 -9455 fo r
on location.

RIDE BOARD
RIDE NEEOEO to OhiO Apri l 19 or
April 20 C all Rutn 835· 1628.

J"'"

- .... - - ..".....

Why are we running this a d'?

aru .

117~57.

L.A,AGE THRt:E · BEDROOM ept.
H•tll and Parkslde. R-onable rent.
Must buy furniture. Call 135-4356.

TWO BEDROOMS, MIY 1, furniShed,
heated .,,.... H•tai.Colvln aru .
8150 . J Llnvl-. Alter 6 and

FURNISHED 4-tledroorn
tor ....,t H~ttei.Cotvln
Available June Ut. Call

apartm~nt

[7
•

2 GIRLS csas~re companions wltn car
for cross -country tr a vels May &amp; June
Pleat• "" BJJ 7~71
AlOE WANTED to Ca liforniA on or
around April 24 Wilt thare driving and
expenses. Call One at 195·34 66 .

FOR SALE
1964 VOLKS WAGON bus fo r sa le
S 4 50 New • n t lne Ana paint . E•cllllnt
running co nditi o n Call 838· 1125 .
FUR N ITURE tor Wl l - cheap - beG
coucn , ramos , rugl, curt• lns, odds an&lt;l
ends. Call 1137 2826

-------

OO NNAM ARtE
regis te r ed
llectrolotlst ~pe clallzlnt In the remova l
of unwantiO o r superfluous hair
Med ically otpproviCI Complimentary
cons ultat ion by app ointm e nt
~ 45 ·81178,
233·5949, AUorla, New
Vork ,
MOTORCYCLE 1968 Kawasak i J50
cc . Ver,.. good condition, s 5 oo. C 111
Harvey 837·2791 , 836·5 186.
SCM PORTABLE tyr&gt;ewrlter w ltn U$1 ,
Very g oo cs con dit ion. C all tra
834-6455
TWANG
Fend1r T elecaster •pr~es·
- good COnditiOn, W/ CIM, $150. VOl&lt;
amp. E•cellent condllloft, 2 Sl)kr~ .•
S 100 ; b Oth for $ 200. 833·9760 .
MU ST SELL l. .vlng country .
Garrard S ynchrotab 72 B turnta ble a nd
Huthtclt amplifier . C lll 833-1341
belwMn ~ ·II p.m.
1965
CORVAIR
good
trAnsporllllon Cheaol C all 881.0996
betwMn 11·5 •tt•r 6 : 00 886·S899.
STEREO AM · F M tuner and m atch ed
spaakats. Gooo condition, S65 o r best
o ffer . Call S teve 1133·8532.
NtKKORMA T FTN wttn 50 mm And
10~ mm . Nll&lt;on lenses and ..ccesrorles.
S 300 - Call S eth 875 5195.
196 3 PONTIAC
759-6678 .

UOO.

C•ll

Jatf

V W CA MPE R, •69
Excellent
co ndition . N ot driven In winter .
40,000 hl9hway m iles . 681-0979.
OE N O N 40 · wall stereo. Garrar&lt;l
turnt•bte AM FM stereo radio. A lso
20·watt n•r•o AM · FM BSR turn table ;
8 -track nome tape player , tapes best
o ffer Must sell. 876·8140.
F'OR SALE
lO ·SPNd
n ew Call Joe 886 7075

GENERAL. ELECTRIC

bll&lt;~

Almcxt

'61 BUICK
67,000 miles. New tires.
u pholstury,
battery
Excellent
cond lt ton, S 150. Jack 836-6234 .
f'l NE 5000 8 ru air conditioner, tnree
•ears old, e.ully In stalled Ptlut: S 70
.111 Ft ed 83b 0737

Paqe.fourt.een . l'be Sp~uum . MondiiY, .17, APfilll972

�196f VW IIVQ 50,000 miles. E~te.ll...,t
condition, Sh• Ur•, AM-FM . RNr
csefro.aw,
Call a97...3663 .

euoo.

FU RNI TURE for ulet Desks, d~.
bedJ, cttaln and oddltl•. ReMOnlltlle
and I n to04l ll'lape. f34-4562 .
135 mm f ..2f Vlvatar for Nlkon, caM,
fky llghl, 52 mm ttep-down ring, a 60
or t rade. 8 37·2512.
'69 vw auo,
831·231 0 .

so,ooo

mu... U 50.

FURNITURE: Large desk, dres"r,
sln9le b.cl, rug, Ch airs, night table. Call
Mlcll. .l f38 · 3255 after 6 p .m .
1967 AUSTI N American needs repair
- $75 . Call 136·3613.
'69 HONDA C50 ; n..c~ work 1 b•t
offer. 5038 Allenllu~t.
J969 VOL.KSWAQON - clean, new
oalnt, « 5,000 mil. .. Drlulnal own•• ·
Call betw•n llt3o-c:30. 1197.0751 ,
835-8636.
'66 CHEVV VAN campw, Insulated,
under 50,000 mi.... 6qllndw, std .
shift. Excellent condi tion. 6 excellent
tlr•• · $695 . Call 1135· 3051.

corsoltlon. Call Judy t37.0CS6. Aft« 6
p ,m .

SUMMER ROOMMATES needed - 2
..,. . t~.c~room1, 1-mlnute Wlllk from
campus. Call Cathy f31 ·3152, Ste¥e
131· 3214.

FOR SALE• HOf'l'le With one-oedroom
ept . FurnlsMct uPStairs. Rentlf\9 a125
month. CIOM to u.e. Low 20''· Will
hOld mort..... Tel, I3C·SI6C .
CAMERA

PRAKTI CA -L

SLR

1,2 or

PEOPLE f or room In h ouM on
Wlmpe.r. May only. 140. 137· 230C.

with

caM. Also . .po.ur• m.tw, a 50. C all

ONE ROOMMATE - o wn r oom. Two
blocks from campus. Summer only.
C MI 113~111!1 o r 131·201!1 .

S uei37~CO.

THREE GREEN rup : 12'9"x9' ll'ICI' - 9'x9' - Also 90" venetlen
blind - 2 electl'lc Iron' (n-1 - ,......,,
pieces carpet - C ell 132· 1294,

FEMALE ROOMMATE w11nted
September Ut. Own room In modern
apartm...,t with dlshw..her, tully
carpeted. Walking dlltance to campus.
Must to w d091. C all lle-1017.

JOB RESUMES
professional,
confidential conlultatlon . special rates
f or stud ents. rec:•nt graduAtes and
v.terans, 135-CC73.

T WO FEMALE r oomm11tas w11nted to
sttar• furnished h ou se on Minnesota
with ~oame. 831 ·2193, 1137-4956.

REFRIGERATORS, stoves And
w.shers. Recond itioned, dellver.ct end
guar ant..c. O &amp;.G Appllenc.., ICC
SY'C~ore , TX C·l1113.

TWO FEMALE roomm ates needed to
share ~utlful 5·bedroom llou".
10· mlnute walk to campu s. Call
1134-4510.

ENTIRE APARTM ENT o f relatively
n - furniture . Qood &lt;leal for couole
lool&lt; lno t o furnish • place. Call Steve
838 ·228J.

TWO ROOMMATES, mate or femolle,
to shar• laf'lle room . 10 min. from
campu1. Avellable In June . 1137.0406.
M al or M ike.

PERSONAL
THE DAWN Is comlnu l Watch tills
SCMce to find out what Dawn Is ell
about.

FISHER
XT·78 spMker SVJtems.
Factory s•a l ed . Fish e r
!I·Y •a •
DEAR· HARV L., Howle K., 8111 V ,
901 rant•. 12" woofer, 2-6" mldranuoe,
Call AI
2·3" tw. .ter Only $100
~I(JI L ,, Jo-Ann Ms., and Curt M . - I
835-6637.
...Jleur.a'lt outl Tile all -time trNt C.E . II
Jel(..Qr. .nwlldl LOire, Ell Emerltul.
FOR SALE • Volvo Jtatlonw-oon.
( Would you believe Jan Doane
1967
AfklnQ 8500
Call Howle
m aybe'l
837-6092.
HEY GRI N GO, my senter . • Pf
FOR SALE AMPEG 8 ·12 amp f or
Vllat, ban. o rgan . Call 835·7579 . Fr. .
CO M E HEAR about &amp;aha 'U' llan
811111 World F111thl 11· 12 p.m . or call
WIU
837·l2U.
VOLKSWAQON 1969 buv . Excellent
MOTORCVCLE
wto Insurance
")ndltlon. 11100. Call lllll.C4111.
IMtant FS·l r~rdl..s of ege or
MEN~ BI CVCLE 31PM(I, n - tires.
drlv1"9 record . Wlllouullby lnwrance,
162C Main St . , Buff1110, N .Y .
M1ny n parts . Must sell , aco . Call
115-8100, Mon.-Fri .• 9-1 p.m .. S1t
Georue lll4 ·79a9 .
9-2 p.m .
' t.9 RENAULT ttatlonwauon. Must
LOST• FOUND
"'"· $900. 837-69511.
1966
PLYMOUTH, 6-cytlnder
aut o matic, radi o, liNter. Good
condlllon. Afkln9 1325. 11311...3 191.

FOU ND : A brow n lcey can cont•lnlnu
a red GM ~&lt;•v. Cl• lm at tnform•tlon
Deale N orton .

LAFAYETTE LT· 725A AM·FM stereo
tuner, 8 months old, per fect cond ition,
iel" new for a1 30 . Yours for 1 100,
ln t tudlnU call i ... 8 3 1 ·2082 .

ANTHROPOLOGY paperbacle book
found on Hus Lounge fireplace bel pre
vacation , C all and IdentifY 837.0"1

VOL.KSWAGON
8UQ 1969, red,
••CliO, snow tire., 311,000 miles. GoOd
condition Call 11115· 51122 days. $ 900 .
196l FALCO N , 53,600, enulne and
tr•nsmlulon excellent. Nine mounted
ures, bOdY ne.cts wor11 . 9:0o-5:00
Ill I 5171, lOll.
1q69 FORO ECON-LINE van, blue,
t frpeteo and paneled . Renonable
DOlCe Call Richie I l l 1674 .
U~EO

FURNITURE for ute : beds,
so ru. ch1ln, tablti, dr.."'s, defki,
ru9s 3nd refrlverato• 831&lt;5451.
PuRPLE Petermax bUI:kSicln midi COAt,
site IS . N - ~rlnotnl"9. 895 ·9314 .
BMI offer! Keep trylnol
U!&gt;EO UPRIGHT plano tor wte. GoOd

•ed
,\,
Furs
Rell
Fora1Jocc4Sion
1

FOUND: Jacket , Maln-6alley paft(lnu
tot . Call 131 · 3!1811
ONE LIGHT Drown knitted mitten bY
Pnarmacy entrance to Health Sciences
BulldlnQ. Call George HUH 1133· 1660
after 10 o .m .
FOUN o . Reel
oascnund
M.
Gutellen. Llcen" number 499743 . C all
a.lt-4501 t~efOtw p.m.

ROOMMATES WANTED
rwo FEMALE roommates wanted.
O wn roomL Ltrue f urnlthed ap t .
Hertel near Main. StartlnQ MaY or
September . C•ll 837·1887 .
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted lor
fill. B..,utlful •partment. own room .
Short wall&lt; to campus. Upper c1assnun
or vrael preferred . Call 138·2633.

G RA DUATI N G male SMI(s same to
loot&lt; for and Share epartment In
Manhattan beotnntnt summer
137·5960.
ROOMMATES Wal\led for summ• and
fill , m111e ot femllle for Iaroe IIOUM
near campus. 150 •. 132· 7!133.
OWN ROOM - flw•mtnute waltc from
campus. BriUht, ci Nn. June ht or
Sept. hi or both. Call 137.0790
ROOM IN HOUSE, NNr U B . a62 .
Available Mev 1. Call Joyce 1134·1993.
ONE OR TWO roomm etes for next
yNr : 4 -bedroom llouM - 10.mlnute
Wlllk to campus. 150tmo. 1311· 4576.
ONE
ROOMMATE want e d
for
J.bedroom •oartmet'lt 5 minute from
campus, own room, furnl•hed, 1 66
Inc I u des u ttlltles t or Sec&gt;r
Call
1131-40«6. Boo or Dave

- -882·7200

-

I
I~~~~.K&amp; 8~~~: Better
11
I. s::o:1s La,.~root.lI
I
I

8 - 13

t.ift~!A
. . _ ..... ..-

:

exercise
sandals •
I

~HERZOG'S D~UG STOJu1

•

••

3\~8 MaJ.n St...

••.J

JOB RESUMES
professional,
confidential consultation. Special r etes
to. stud• nts, r - 1 s.raduat.. and
veterans. 135-CC73.
AUTO INSURA,...CE - 5peci1111ZI"9 In
YOU"9 driven : no charge for eccldents
Of' traffic violAtions, Immediate FS·l,
Mve up to UOOtyear 613.0022 .
ANTIQUES A N D modern furnlturw ,
cwamlc:s, chi na, etc . S• Sid at
Y esterday a. Tomorrow Shop, 1C39
Hertel Ave.
N EW THEATER : " N octurnes" by
Richard Reichman - Wednesd1y, April
19 at ll olO, Albrlght·Knox Art Qallery.
$2 with student I o .

SUB-l.ET APARTMENT

NEED A ROOM for tne summer' 140
per month, near campus. Call Mllce
after 5 p.m. at 836·2650 .
FEMALE TO share .tPIIrtment Own
room . One-minute lrom campus . Call
Dale 1132·5594.

wanted Centtal Park
Available June Ill

FE MALE ROOMMATE lor 3·bectroom
ap t. off Hertel and Norrh Park
Avenues. Call 876-0610.

MISCELLANEOUS

PROFESSIONAL TYPING oone In
home. $.50/paC)e , Former l y operateo a
proreulonal typlnu service
229A
Parkslde Ave. or BOll 10 at the
Speclrum 0111ce (IUve pnone number
there) .
1F THE Clealers c ould m atch our work ,
they'd mat c h
Out IIUarantee
1 ndependent Foretvn C 4tr Service,
839 18~0
TYPING EXPERIENCED
IBM
Selectric - $.40 ger page 838 ·4808 .
EXPERIENCED TYPIST. penonal and
bull ness, eloctot c typewriter .
reasonable r ates , term pagers,
$.40/page. Days 845 574&amp; . EvenlnQs
877-5234.
OPENING : weonasday Aor 19, 8:30,
"Nocturnes" bY R lcllard Reichman .
AlbriUht·Knol! Art Gallery S2 wlln
student 10. A c.ompletely new form ot
HALF SIANIESE kittens tree Sill
WMMS. Very cute Alan 83~ ·708 2 Kate
1133·0031.
INTERESTED In vo1n9 to Munich for
the Olym pi c games thll summer&gt; For

132-9044.
FREE MAV RENTI Modern living In
Buffalo w ith dishwasher, washer,
ctrver, t w o bedrooms. Available M•Y Aut. 31. f o r rem•t•. 10..,1n. walk
from c ampus . Rant
n..,otlable.
836...62« .
ACROSS FROM CAMPUS. 4 metes
wanted . A-nellie rent f~orn June to
Sept . CaH Jen• t37· 3209.
FO UR.aEOROOM 1partment .,allable
Mey 15 thru Septem.,_ J . Acrc»s
street from cam~KK- Call 1311-48«0
2-6EO ROOM apartment - lCHnlnu t•
wlllk from campus - $ 120/month. $30
f or wmmer utllltlet - evlllabte May !5
- Sept . 1. C all 837...3572 after 7 p.m .
SPA CIOU S two-floor, f our-Oeelroom
epartment t o sub-let June 1 - Auvust
31. Rent
n eg otl ab l•. ElCcellent
location. Cell 11 3 1·2279, 8 31·2281 .
BE COOL THIS SUM M ER! Modern
apertment wltn elr condltlontrsu.
10·mlnute wall&lt; from SChOOl . 3
stud...,U. • !16 Pet month Neh. C l ll "''
anytime. 83!1...395. Available May
MODERN 111rue hOUM available for
summer . 2 bloctn from campul. Rent
rusoneble, Call833-4760 .

FURNISHED, walk ing dlltlnoe from
campus. For summer. Two bedrooms
for 3 o r c . $165 . 831 · 3CII7 .

NICE FUR N ISHED apartment
Kenmor..Oelllware area . May till S ec~t .
Reuonebte rent . T hr• b.clroom .
Alysia 1176-5020.

LARQE FOUR · bedroom IIP l.
furnished. H ertel near Main. Sometime
Mey throuull Auvust. C all 1137· 11187.
~U MMER HOME for studenh. Til'"
bedrooms on &amp;alley Call for pr1ce.
Attemoons 137· 1 202 .

THREE~EOROOM

summer .

TWO
ROOMMATES, male, Dfld
st uct....ts p,.ferreCI , oummer an&lt;Vor
ne" t yNr. One vacancy . .ell be111nnlng
May 1, June 1. a4S ucll • utilities
CommonwN ith. Call Dave 873 · 73e1 .

a75/MONTH . June - S eptem.,.-. 3
t~.c~room , fUmlaiWid apartment with
sunpor c h . Main - Fillmore area.

""t·

s tlO. Nevotleble. Cell 8311,.860.

TWO TO SHARE tnt. .•bedroom
apart ment near zoo. Avllllllble M11y.
Grads preferre&lt;!, SSS plus. 837•636«.

CLEAN four..o.ctroom AC)Irtment with
pordl . 2-mlnute walk to u.a. May t o
Sept. flt-45Cl.

FOUR·BEOROOM ap.ettment tor
1ummer on
Enulewooo
R•nr
reason~~ble.
Apartment I&amp; fUrnished.
Call Karen 832-663C .

TWO ROOMMATES wanted Stllrtlng
M•y IS . Own rooms.. 15·mln wall&lt;.
Call Rich at &amp;37·0074

FREE SCHOOL. lakl n9 applications
Tile 1ndependent School o f Buffalo, a
puent · operated, Summerhllltype
scnool wllll a policy ot racial, rellulons
and etnnlc tntegr•tlon, hal places for
children aged 5 11 nelll tall . C all
875-6640 before 3 p .m
Evenlngl
6l4-4S87

I

FOLK G UI TAR t•sons popular so"91.
Fln9t( and flat piQ&lt;Ing atyl•. Jeff.
112·18C7. F ollellntln g for parties.

2 BEDROOMS, 3 people, 1 50 each .
5· mln. wall&lt; lo u.e. Call 8 33 -1717 . AI,
Paul

NEED A WAY to transport your
Delonulngs to Long ISIInd In May'
Dependable 5erv1c•, price teoHonable
and nevotlable. Call Arthur IllS 1276
or 1138-4046

: ALL SIZES AND
S HAPES IN

AUTO RADIOS and ta~. Slllet an&lt;l
service. 101' dlscounl with this act.
Qrupp Bros. 1177· 2250.

81 G
4 -6EOROOM house , T r11n1lt
Ro1d. Country t•nd In back .
R oommates 1e11vln9 May-J uly. I'CIIIke
to k . .p tllrouuh next y . .r . Will be I n
law scl"'ool Sept. Call Howle 634-&lt;W62 .

ROOMMATE
Plaza ar•• ·
134· 2158.

~.!:;:::;;:;;;:;::;;;:

7.

TWO BEDR OOMS
f urnished
apartment 15 mlnutet to camous.
Storege In garege , C llll 837-9468 lfllf
6:00.

renl
l FEMALES for large house
IncludeS utilities - S-mlnute wall&lt; to
campus. 83«-3850.

GUSTAV A. FRISCH. INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

WILL TUTOR meth/ CifiVIICl/cftemlstry
to "lgll SC,.OOI/COIItoe stuct....ts.
Contec:t &amp;en 137· 2«32 between 5 and

WANTED : Summer roomm a tes
(r.male) for 2·bedroom ap•rtment
with balcony Acrou fron' cotteoe. Call
831 ·2116.

,. .. ··- .. .. .,
: $895
:
I with "; --- .. . I
ithis ad I
LILA ROSENBLATT f\JRS
85 Allen (near Delaware)

~

TVPINQ - but!~ Of penonal - t..-rn
papers , theses, rnau mallln_..
R-onlltlle rat •. C all 9 3 7-6050.

Five

apanm~ t

minutes

to

~r

campus.

----

VERY LARGE furnlsned llve~eoroom
house end attic. 90~ono walk to
sctloot. 133-6134.
4-eEOROOM hOUM to Wblel June 1
- Sept. l. Fumlsl\eel Kenm0fe-6tarln
area. 0091 allowed Rani reasonable &amp;.
nauotlable. Call Qary 837.0301
THREE~EOROOMS

For summlf ana
possibly n•• t veer . Mile rrom campus .
Rent nevollable. Ate.. 135·2657 .

-----

GORGEOUS, 'pac l ous, mOdern,
three-bedroom apartment. IO·mlnute
walk from campus. Call Monica. Susan
835 · 7093
HOUSE li&gt;bloek rrom campus 5-6
people . Furnished Pooch, 2-c:ar uarave,
front -bacle yard•. 831 3756, 131 -3050 .
HOUSE TO SUBLET : ~ bedrooms.
Available May I S Ptlce nevottable
875·5754 .
rHREE and FOUR · Oedroom furniShed
•Pa•tment,
five minute walk to
campus. Sublet from May IS. S 120
and 5 lAO . 137 ·3984, 884 ·3592.
83~· 5265 .

fWD BEDROOMS available In large,
l urnlshe&lt;l aoartment on En91ewood for
Jun e to Sept ember
Call E llen,
131 ·3963 or Dabble 1132 ·5~94
I S FEMALES wanteo to sublet
oeautlful 5-bedroom house May-Sept .
walk
lo c ampus
Call
JO · mln
834-4510
FURNISHED r 2·bedroom apartment.
watl&lt; lnv dist ance to campus On Main
St AvallaDie May 20
Auuust Rent
neuotlable. 1134·9739 .
FOUR ·BEOROOM house on Amnerst
- block from Main Jvne
August .
Rent negotiable Call Danny 835 ·1578 .
BEAUTIFULLY
FURNISHED
rhree•bi!Oroom apartment ror 3 or 4 .
Sunporch,
utilities, TV.,
community pool, 5ewln9 m•chlne
June - August 20 Minu te walk Call
831 3885 .

rr••

SPACI OUS 3~EOROOM apt. for
summ.. nNr park, zoo. Off Hertel.
Call 137..()454, 1131.0301 '".. 12 .
RNIIY ch. .p .
6~EOROOM HOUSE on E"91-ood .
Available June ht. 2-mlnute wall&lt; .
Price nevotlabte. Call 1131·2753,
831 ·25611

MELLOW SIX-bedroom house right
oH Main. Two blOCks from paf1o&lt;. Call
1137· 2647 . a 250 month.

-------

FRONt MAY hi tu AUQUll llst. a
bedrooms on L.llbon . C •ll 831-4069 or
831-4067. Good condition.

BEAUTI FUL APARTMENT evallable
June
hi
till Aueust 31. Four
t~.c~rooms.
Close t o campus . Price
fM!IOtlllble . Call 131-226 I/22S9
BIG BEAUTIFUL 6-bed room houM. 3
blOCks( 11 from campus. May 1!&gt;
Auvust. Call Jo.ante 132·5440.
SUMMER ROOMMATES needeCI tot
houM .,.., umpus . Own roomt..
Cheap. 832.0756 , 1131 ·3973 Mound
dlnn«tlme.
SPACIOUS, furnished, 4 bedroom
house available June - August. Hertel
area . Call Carol 832 · 7682 or Elyoe
837 ·52112 .
THREE 8EBROOM, furnished houiA
av11llable May 15 Five nllnute wall&lt;
lrnm UB Call 132·3745 .
completely furnls~.
l~EOROOM
Male, female couple . Month or M1y
n-ootlabte.
831 ·2087 ,
free!
Rent
831 · 27112
ROOMMATE WANTED - May I or
June J to Sept. 1. Own room,
furnfsned, one blOCk from cam puS. a40
• . 1137-oiOJ
SPENDING tile summer In Boston1
Sublet a huue l ·bedroom •partment,
big enough fnr two . M OCiern kitchen,
bathroom, llvln9 room and a1c01re .
L.OCited In the Back B•Y Jun&lt;~ I
Auu . 31
Only $ 1!10/ mo
Cont•c t
Elayne
St&lt;l Club Office, 318 Norton,
831 ·214!» tor lurtner details or call
1-617·536-411176

APARTMENTS WANTED

r

WANT TO SUBLET
Couple with
small child wanu clleaD, unfurnished
2·bedro om houie or apartmenL May
30 thru JUly IS Call 693 3640 . After
6 : 00
J OR 4
FEMALES want 3 ur
4-oed•oom apt starling In summer or
rail Call 837 ·0861. Keep IJylng

WANTED : 3·bedroom apt . In UB are•
r ot next Sept Cell Howle 838-4892 .
HELPII 1 need
su mmer and
836 ·2 304

a pll'e to
fall

•••v Sharon
lor the

C all

AIR CONOI JIONEO
).Oeclroom
apartment lor up to S oeople t o sublet
ror summllf . w &amp; 0, Ollhw,.ner , tully
urpeteo C1ll 131 ·37611

3 OR 4 BEDR OOM apartment or
hou se needi!CI fo r thiS S eptember . Near
campus prelerred C all 831-4052

HOUSE · FIVE·bedroom . Completel y
1 ur nlslled W/ sunporch and garotge .
Avall;~ble June - August. BlOCk lrom
Allenhurst on N iagara F•lls . 831 · 3~56 .

COUPL E
WI rH
BABY
need
IWO · bedr o om oparlment
stove,
rofrl98t61o r U .B areA . Sl 10 1ncludln9
utllllles. 8l11811

APARTMEN1 to sublet for three .
Avalleble May 15 to August 31
Labrum. Three-minute w•lk from UB.
Price negotiable 832-836() .

COUPLE WITH DOG want to live In
country fOr Sept Wlllln9 to share. C~ll
Ntck 838 2 715 .

SUB·LET
3-bedroom house
campus. May
September
without or best offer 83C -6332 .

near
190

5~EOROOM;

rurnlsneo; 5-mln walk
to campus: call Jeff 839_-4
_ 2_2_ 3_ ._ _ __
ROOM In aPt. to be sublet . Avotllabte
June to August. Renl ne9ollable. Apt .
on Amnern . Call 83a · 7785 .

110 REWARD Couple needs one or
two -bedroom aoartment close to
campus Mayt June 8116· 1805

------

WANTED 3 -bedroom apt. In U .B . aru
for next Segl. C•ll Howle 838-4892.
ROOM WANTED tor September.
Prefer 10 live near umpus with
considerate people. Call Art 831 · 2685 .

Monday r 17 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�Announc:emenu
Womtn's Studlw CoiMI' will h.ve pre·realstntlon for
lhe summer tocby throuJh April 28, 10 Lm .-4 p.m . .11 108
Wlnspur Ave. Any women who w'"t lnform.1tlon o n
summer courses cafl 831 ·3405 or s top by.
Monday, Apri117
UUAB VlcSeo Commlnee will meet tomCKrow 11 6 :30
p.m. In Room 266 NCKton.

Film : lt11J/ano Brwa Genre, 5, 7 ""d 9 p.m ., Diefendorf
147, f ree admission, p.1n of the Sprln&amp; Film Festlnl..
l sr~ll Independence Celebr.1tion : Yuc:ov Orl'"d ~e~kin&amp;
on lsr.1ell An, 8 p.m., Temple Beth Am , 4660 Sherld'" ,
sponsored b y S tudents fCK ls"el
Tu~y .

Kundallnl Yop betlnnln&amp; ciJSSes In exercise ;and
meditation ue ~every evenin&amp; ~t 7 p.m . at 196 Linwood
Ave. Cl~es 1re held Mondays 1t 4 p.m. in Room 8
Diefendorf .and Wednesdays 11 8 p.m. on Room 331 H41yes.
For further lnform.1tlon call 881.0505 .

April 18

CB 114 , USU4111y held today
c oancelled.

Film: G11rdtn of Dtllg/lts (Sp.1nish), 5 p.m., Diefendorf 146 ,
7 1nd 9 p.m., Diefendorf 147, free .1dmisslon - put of
the Spring Film Fesllv;il.
Lecture : "Thorn~ More .nd the Europun l ntellectu~
Tradition," by the Ab~ Germ.1in M.1rc 'h1dour,
p ro fessor of English o~Catholic University of the Wtit
Angers, Fr1nce, 8:30p.m., Diefendorf 146, ~onsored
by N ewm.~n H.1il and th e Oep &lt;artmen t of History.
Poetry reading: A. Pouli n and Tony Piccione (B rockport
f.Jcull y), 9:30 p.m., One·Eyed C1t, 28 B ry&lt;~nt S lfeet ,
~onsored by Outriders.
hro~ell Independence Celebr;ation: Students for lsrilel ~nd
Hillel present the Prize-winning hruli film 3 Days and
u Child, 8:30 p.m., Conference Thuter; film will be
preceded by 1 memori;al service.
Lutu re: "The Art of Eruure" by Pu ll t1er prile·winnortll
poet Richard How1rd , 4 p.m., Conference Thuter.
L~ture : Jose Nun, professor of PoUtlc.al Science from the
Universily of Toronto will ~uk on "~hrgln•llty 1nd
Ou~ism on l.itin Amerlc•," I :30 p.m., Oiefendorl
Annex Room 10, wonsored by Club L1t1no.
Play Tht Unnomobf~ by Samuel Beckett, previews tod1y
.md tomorrow At the Amerk1n Contemporary Thuter,
1695 Elmwood Ave., tilkets 1V.lol1ble 1t the NeKton
T ocket Office, price for prevoews 1$ $ 1.50, .1fter
1 hursd.1y, $3. Perform;ances will uke place Tutid.ly)
through Sund1ys 1t 7 ·30 p.m.

.u

12:20 p.m., hu been

C AC's Be-A -Friend project desper1tely needs • few
volunteers to xt ~ Big Brothers or Sisters to children who
need comp~nionshlp over the sum mer. If In te res ted , pluse
con tx t Bob Moss or Arleen Gordon In Room 220 No rton.
The Hillel class In Bealnners Hebrew will meet
tomorrow ;U noon In Room 262 Norton. The 1.lass In Jewish
Ethics will mee t at I p.m.
The Underar:adu1te Blo loiY Assoclatihn will mee t
tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. In Room 23 1 Norton Or. Miles,
chalrm;an of the dcp.1rtmen1, will ;peak ,_nd .nswer
questions concerni ng the Biology Oep~rtment.
Blkew.~ys for Buff1lo ts pl1nning a massive peuuon
drive 41nd bicycle ride In .n effort to publicize the need for
better bicycle p.iths In Bufr1lo. Anyone in te-rested on
or~nilln&amp; and/or po~nicip.ulng in th~ demonstro~tioo m&lt;~y
1.0ntxt Mr Merle Smith .It 856 748S or 883· 1055 ; or
Shelley T 41ylor 41t 831 SS07 .

Study prOifllms overseu· A semester or year of
compar111ve study in Sweden is beong offered by the Office
of Overse.~S Audemk Prosnms for the .ludemic ye•r
1972·73 or fall semester 1972. The progr&lt;~m is open to
masters or doctOrJI c .. ndidates tn humN~ities, soci1l sciences
or erwlronmenul studies who .11e doing research for theh
theses or disscrt.uoons. Participants will spend the ttme 11
the University of Upps11i, Sweden. For funher lnform•uon
and .ipplicitlons, contx t : J&lt;~mes A Mlchielll, director,
Oversus Ac ..demi' Pro&amp;rams, 107 Townsend Hall, State
University it Buff1lo, te lephone 831 4247. The de&lt;~dl ine for
•pplic.ulon~ Is M1 y I, 1972.

- Amy Ahrend

Open meeting for women : All women In the University
community are Invited to meet ·with the President's
Committee on Rcc rultment And Promutlon of Women
tomorrow from noon I : JO p m. on the Norton Conferent.e
Theilte r.
Acll vtst Youth for hr.ael wtll be holding elcttoon\
tod;ay At 8 p.m. tn Room 14fo Nonon
Study In En~tt.and The &lt;;t4t" Unov.,rsoty at Bufl•tu hdS
•nnounced 1 study llrOIIr•m •t Ordsbury College of
Educ41tion In M o~nchest er, Engl41nd for the fill term 1971.
The progr.llm, open to SUNY JUniOrs and seniors, eng&lt;Jged on
efement41ry or second1ry te~her tr.llining, offers courses in
history, philo~phy 4nd ~O&lt;;ooiOJY of educAtoon, educ1tion1l
lind development411 psychology , art .1nd dcs1gn, musoc ,
dr1m~, sciences .lind phystc•l educ.ltoon. Opportunities for
independent st ud y and for ciJSSroom observ•t&gt;Ons 1re 1lso
1V1ilable. Further onform•t•on and .lpplic;Uions 41re av&lt;Jilable
In the Office of the Oorector of Overse.u Academoc
Prognms, 107 Town"&gt;end H.ill, 831 ·424 7. The de•dhne for
oippltc41toon~ h~ been extended to M~y I.
CAC Envlronmenul Action ;announces the open1ng of
gi1Ss recycli ng centers In th e b~ements ol Tower ~nd
Goodyear H1lls (by the elevuors) .
FNSM '2'272: ''Controversies In Science - Conflict 1nd
Resolution" meets on Tuesdays and Thursd1ys 1t 10 a.m. in
Ac heson 362 Thh week there will be ~ stud ent lecturer. Mt
Joel A. Cohen. Vi$itors Me welcome.
Colleae EYalu1tlon for COE 101, COE 301, section 1,
COE 42l •noJ COE 499. C~ll 831 · 1125 for an .tppointment.
The Ukr.ain l.an Festlnl of Arts woll h;avc a workshop
todo~y 411 4 p.m . on Room 240 Nonon on ukr1inoan E~ter
Egg Designing.. At 7 : 30 p.m there woll ~~lecture on the
FlllmCKC Room on "Oeno~tion1loution in Uk r1ini1n
History" with Orest Sub telny from H.arv.1rd Unoversll~ .
-511verst .. n

Sporu lnform&lt;ation
Tocby. Vi rsoty b~b•ll .u F1orlelgh Oicktnson, 3 · 30
p.m ., Tuneck, N. J.
Tomorrow · Ju nior vo~rsity b1SCb.lll, Erie Community
Colle11e, Peelle Field, 3 p.m.
Wednetd.1y: Varsity b~b ~ll .lit C .anisius, Del•w•re
Po~r1t , I :30 p.m.: v;arslty trxk .llld field u Buffalo Sute with
Ca.nisius, 3 p.m.
Fricby: V.arslty b1Seball, West Vira inla, Peelle Field , 3
p.m .
S.aturday: Varsity b-ball , West VIrginia, Peelle Field ,
I p .m.; junior varsity b1SCball ;~t Alfred Tech, 1 p.m.; Club
l.acrosse .. , Nlag.ara University, 2 p.m.; V.llrslty tr1ck and
field at Clevel.1nd Sute, 1 p.m.
The followlnl received .~Wllfds .1t the six ty·lhird annu.1l
" Block B" boanquet Thursd.1y nl&amp;ht: h ockey - Dale
Dolmqe; sw imm ln&amp; - Muty Barron .and footblll - Bruce
Fr-r received the C.C. Fum~ schol~rshlp .~Wuds..
Buketblll's Nell Lmaelier won the ECAC medii of merit,
lnd Bruce Frl!Ser received the oilumnl S(ftolastlc xhlevement
iWJrd. In a newly Initiated Jward, wrest11n1 Coaoch Ed
Michael ;and Hockey mentor Ed Wrl1h t sha~ the Student
Athletic Rrew Bond Coach of the YUT.-Ird.

The CrNtl,. Associ ates o f the Center of the Crutl ve
and Perlormlna Aru 11 the Sute Unl¥enlty of Buffalo 1nd
the AlbrlghH(no~&lt; Art G~lery woll pre~nt the play,
Nocturnes, In the &amp;111ery o~udotonum April 19 23 The
pt1yw right, Mr. Rlcho~rd ReKhm1n, does not incorpol.lt"
Illy music wtthon th is show, but does use the musiul form
of the sonata as lu b~ic structure. Tickets ue $ 2 for
students wi th 10 c.ards and $3 for the pner.al public.
WN YPIR G will h.ave .1 loc.1l bo;ard meeting tomorrow
6 p.m. In Room 264 Norton H.all. All loc~ board
mem~rs must attend. All those Interested In joining o1
GOmmlttee are Invited.

u

European Styles - Pho toarap hs of people o~nd pi xes In
Eu rope by Mickey Osterrelcher on exhibit from Ap ril 17
through 2J In the Center lounge, first floor of Norton Hal l.

\

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~

THE SpEcTI\uM
Vol. 22, No. 74

~

Univnty of New Yen at Butt.ao

6)
Friday, 14 April1972

See story page 3

�Anti-war lull

Bill introduced to end
the war in Indochina
Legi&amp;lation to end the war in
Indochina was introduced Into the
Senate and the Hou.e of
Representatives late lut month.
The bill, sponsored by Senator
Gravel with seven co-sponsoring
senators, would, in effec t, bring
an immediate end to the
Indochinese air war and, w1th.n
30 days of enactmeut would have
all ground troops o ut of
lndoch1na. The bill was
mtroduced into the House of
Representatives by Represent&lt;~llve
Drinan, w1th 35 co-sponsors.
Section I of the biU cuts off all
funds w1thin 30 days of
en&lt;~ctment wtuch would have been
used to deploy any military or
paramilitary personnel " under the
control of the United States m or
the co nduct of military or
paramilitary operat•ons m or over
the Republic of V1etnam. the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam,
Cambod11, or uos."
No funding would be g~ven to
bombing from th«' sea o r a.~r.
unle$S "the President determmes
any such bombardment m a1r
operat1on clearly to be necewry
to provtde for the tmmed1a1c
safety of United States Armed
Forces dur 1ng th eir
wuhdrawal

·a ib le Truth
AFTER DEATH, JUDGEMENT
"And •• II IS •ppol nlflc:l unto
m•n one lu doe bul after lhl\

I NO POOL - NO NONSENSE' I

tha

IU PST ATE CYClE IN sl
" A• V0&lt;.1r Brc*_, About Us" • _,

Hear, 0 Israel
pub/nh«&lt; tllr~ '•
rtmtts •
w•~.
M ond•l'.
WedMSdft y •nd Fmllly; during thtt
r~lftr «Miffmic v•r by Sub·Board

For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE

The Spectrum n

Phone

ALFA ROMFO
• FI:RRARI
• M 1\S[· RATI

.,...,.,

1, Inc Off~eftf •r• IOCftttNI •t 355

875-4265

~l

Norron H11ll, St•t• Umttttntl'tf of N•w
York at Buffalo, 3435 Mam St .
Buff•lo , Nttw York,
14114
Tlllttphonfl A,. Code 7T6, Edllon,ol
831-4113, Buunns, 831 3610
Repruen ttNJ

for

ltdvermmg

br

N111 io,..J EducflliOI)ftl A~tmng
SMv~ee, Inc . 360 Le~tmgron Avtt

New Yorio.. N Y 10017

Sah•s • Serl'lcl' •Pan.~

Suoscflptron

USED CARS

ratttS

are 14.50 pttr

Utmflfttlr or $8 ()() for 1...0

BOBCOR
Mocor Ca~. Ltd .

St!cond Cl.u Potri){Jtl pa1d
Nt1w Yurk.

sem•ten

•r Buffalo.

1974 Eggert (Near Bailey)
834-7350
1 ••n• n/

f"'""ulltur

v\JIIt tilt&lt;

l

vncl
,/'1 ""It I/o 1 111/o J:o Jlfr'\r Ill

AU: X TAYLOR WITH FRI ENDS ANU NE'IGHUORS
ol,oo ~d\ lllli .JII &amp; l..tll..tll
J 'yoouv tlk I.O IIl-~t· u'l\11'1
t h u t'idi! ~· 111..1~ •I
' HI .mc.J Ill IJO p 111
f'1~kcb . S~ ~0 at tht dvvr
'B .OO in advancr
lll' ket' avatlalJJr: at D'Youvtlle liJUege , 32q PortN
Avr: Ull T1cket Olltl'l', Norton Unton, Buf Stl!IC'
T u: ket 01 flee
( '111111''1

P&gt;om••t•"n 1!1'"''1'''''

4ft, . 1,~ ~'1/f

••NOTICE••
There w1ll bed Public Auction at 2·00 p.m . on
Fr~day , Aprol 14th 1n Room 205 H Norton Hall by
SuiJ Board I Inc;
Iterns to be auct1oned onclude
1 Home Lite AutomatiC 150 chaon saw
2 Craftsman 7 inch electnc saw
3
50 foot extens1on cord
4 Y, onch 1/3 H.P. Craft sman Drill
5 M1sc Hand tools
Goods are to be pa1d for 1n cash only (no
checks) at ume of sale.

Sp«trum St11f! Writtr

The People's Coalition for Peace and Justice has
called an "Emergency Action Conference" this
weekend , April 15-16, in Washington D.C., in
response to the new escalatjon of the war in
Indochina . A demonstration will be held at the
White House and willmcJude civil disobedience.

sentiment during that summer, the bombing dropped
to 55,000 tons per month. But as anti-war protests
began to die down, the bombing increased to 90,000
tons per month at the beginning of 1971 .

Then after the great May Day demonstrations in
Washington, D.C.• the bomblnp again dropped to
around 55,000 tons per month. During the summer
and fall of 1971, the bombihp rose again . By
December 1971, and January and February 1972,
The demonstration will attempt to confront when the anti-war movement was at a terrible low,
Nixon with the demand that all US. bombing of US . bombings rose to the highest they had been
lndoch•na be ended, to withdraw support from the since 1968; at least 130,000 tons dropped per
Thieu dtctatorsh•p, and to resume the Paris Peace month.
talks.

Wh1le a long lull m the ant1-war movement has
the Nixon administratio n a free hand to
escalate the war to the greatest height since 1968,
the PCPJ hopes to spark the anti·war movement to
ltfe. Much of the lull in the anti·war movement is
attnbutcd to w1despread feelings that mass anti-war
marches do hllle good. Yet recent stud•es show that
there have been sizable decreases in US. bombings
after the large U.S. anti-war upsurges In 1968 and
1969, :m bombmgs were the h•ghest ever, ,veragmg
130,000 tons per month
g~ven

In
student
lowest
studen t

lht spnng of 1970, dunng the national
srrike , ;m bomb~ngs began to decrease to the
ltvcl since 1966 Immediately after the
strike and ant1-war upsurge 1n commun1ty

AJI-d\1 t

WilT

With th e '"'' · war movemen t still not
responding, Nixon arre&gt;glllltly ended the Paris Peace
talks. and launched an all out war against North
Vietnam. The North Vietnamese in Pans have
reported that they expect Nixon to bomb Hanoi and
Haiphong, •nd recommit massive &amp;round troops to
Vietnam.
The PCPJ feels that a mass turnout 1r1
Washmgton, D.C this weekend is urgently needed 1n
order to sto p NtXon 's intensified war effort
Saturday at I p.m., civil disobedience is planned at
the White House . On Sunday, a national anti-war
conference will be held to plan further actions. The
local PCPJ urges people from Buffalo to attend

Attention borrowers
The Office of Student Aecountl, Haye. A, announces thai the federalaovemment
considen it mand1to ry for all studen ta with National DefenR loans who c:eue attending
this University or who drop below one·half time statUI (aix hou,.) to ananae an EXIT
INTERVIEW. 'The interview enables 1tudenta to clarify their riahta and re1ponsibllitie~
concerning repayment and to determine a repayment lcltedule.
If you are araduatina o r terminatin1 this semester, please call 831-47 3S to tchedult'
an appointment for an EXIT INT ERVIEW.

lvc:t~tn ent . "

tllbrew• 9 27
"How ~all we Meape, 11 we
n19le&lt;l \0 9reat wovallon "
Hebrews 2-l

I

call 694·3100

by h ut Krehbiel

Another section of the bill
provides for a 20 day period for
the return of prisonen of war. If.
by the time the 20 days :.are up,
the returns have not been made.
then the 30-day enactment period
in Section I would be extended
another 30 days, and the Congress
could authorize "further action as
tS recommended by the President
to secure the release and
repatriatiOn of Amencan pnsoners
of war."
The second part to Sectaon 3
states: "Nothing in th1~ section
shall be construed to affect the
authooty of the Pres1dent to
arrange asylum o r o ther means of
protection for ind•viduals who
might be physically endangered
by the withdrawal of United
States rnilitary or paramilitary
personnel from the Repubhc of
Vietnam , CamtxM!Ia or Laos. or to
arrange for the return of Un1ted
States equipment or stores from
the Repubhc of V1etnam."
Rep Mtct.acl Harrington (D .
Mass). t&gt;11e llf the b1ll 's
co-sponsors, 1n tended to t•ffer 11
as an amendment to the M1litary
Procurement Authortzat1un btll
Th1s will Will be presented to the
House near the end vf Apnl or the
begmnmg uf May

I M OTORCYCLE iNSURANCE.
: IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE ~

I
~-

PC Pi plans demonstration

�Inclusive 'Unsell' againstVietnam war
by Lynda Teri
Fe~~tur~

campaign which "represented over a million dollars worth
of taJent and materials - the largest contribution ever
made for a single peace effort."

Editor

The American public hu been sold a bill of goods.
They have been convinced and cajoled into accepting the
Vietrwn War as the American way of life. Uncle Sam
appears to countless radio and TV auclienc~:~ stating: "I
want to join you! " The ')-)ew modem army" encourages
volunteers for new adventures and excitement . The
Pentagon is selling the American public "its version of the
Indochina War" and they are buying it .
After a CBS presentation, ' 7he Selling of the
Pentagon,'' a Yale student, Ira Nerken, decided if the

Cbanpna the c:Ofl*l
"Let's not just wind it do wn, for God's sake, let's
wind it up." The focaJ point of the UnJell campaign is to
call attention to the Prisoner of War Release Act which
proposes a de~scalation o f air and ground forces in
Vietnam combined with ~ release of POWa. The bill, also
referred to as the Gravei-MondaJe E nd-the-War bill, stated
current forces should be withdrawn without leavi ng them
unprotected at any time.
According to Rev. Kenneth E. Sherman, member of
the Cle rgy and Laymen Concerned (CALC) and
co-chairman of UnJell, the movement 1s non-partisan. They
are encouraging all to write their congressmen 10 protest of
the war and to ask them to support the bill 10 question.
Rev. Sherman believed Unsell IS "doing a publtc service"
and attempting to end the war.
Petitions agamst the war are being circulated by

Unsell which read : "Total involvement in Indochina has
been wro ng and immoral ." Their goal is to make it clear
that the war •s sllll a big issut. Rev. Sherman stated lh;tt
this as an election yea r and the tssuc uf War should be
confronted

He further stated lh&lt;tl lhe currenl au warts jusl JS
bad as the ground wat has been The only rlung the
governmenr has done is to ''change the color of rhc
corpses," he sat d . As one TV Clllnmcrcaal adamently
demands. "Slop 11 1 "

Equal representation
Majvr media have al ready cooperalec.l by run11u11:\
bc~n dlmatcd hy some and
purchast'c.l frmn others. MaJOr camp:ugns are underway In
increase appearance of Unsell advcrttsements.

Unsell ads Ttme and space has

Ken Sherman
Penragon could seU the idea of war. members of the pea~
movement should be able to unsell it. Thus. Umellrhe War
began. The campaign has. accordmg to tis brochure, one
theme . "to Unsell the War in lndochma and to sell new
pnorittes for the country ."
Unsell IS an attempl to end the war "through
accurate and effective advertising." Every type of media ts
represented: billboards, TV commercials, radio spots, print
ads, posters and buttons. Major advertisers created a

If any publtcalions or statrvns refuse to prcJ.Cnl
Unsell ods they will be met Walh a fighl, :~ccording Ill Rev.
Sherman . They wtll go to coun, tf necessary, he sta red
Under rhc "fatrness docl llnC," broadcaslers musr "try to
achieve a reasonable balance '" the prescnlalion and
treatment of controversial tssues of publrc •mportancc "
Since man y stattons adverr ase and rc(l(ltl admmisrrattvc
releases, Unsell contends that they shm.tld rccetve equal
adverttstng ttme since 11 would "balance thr scale "
Rev S herman stated thJt rl was the old polrcy of
mOil media to present governmenral announcements as a
"seMce to the community ." In the same regard, Unsell ads
should be shown . Now , the govrrnment has begun to
purchase adverllsmg time. bur Rev . Sherman contemleu

this has happened within a year or two.
An extensive drive is underway for the weekend of
April 20-22. Petition drives are pJann,ed for the Eastern
Hills and Main Place Malls. Boulevard Mall is another
projected site. Media presentations will be ac&lt;:elerated.
Unu/1 the War will tum all its efforts to obtaining 50,000
signatures on the petitions against the war supporting the
Prisoner of War Release bill .
The petition also asks that no funds be further
allotted to the war effort. Funding is a main focal point of
Unsell and many advertisements approach the war as
something which is taking money away from more viable
and ne~ssary projects. In addition to murdering the Uvea
of those overseas, the warts strangling those at home.
Us.tng the apple pie as the symbol of the tax doUar,
Unsell accents the big piece going to war. One commercial
shows Uncle Sam serving his tax dollar pie to a group of
Amencans : black, labor, children, aged, poor, etc. The
largest piece 15 given to a cigar·smok.tng general who
..wo lfs'' tl do wn. "When they divide up the pie m
Washington, tJo you ever wonder who gets tile biggest
slice?" the announcer asks.
"Most of your taxes go to pay for ars - past ,
present and future. What does your moo
buy? It buys
you V1etnam. And wtlh 11 mf1att . unemploymenl,
d1sunity and death It bu}'s yuu
~tead of schools,
defoltatron msread of dean a1r and water. l':.nks instead of
tratn\, and d~troys homes mstead •&gt;I bu1ld1ng them Isn 't
II rune we got '1ut of thetr country and back into ours?"
Speak out now'
Urad/ allcmpt~ to tell "pe rhaps fur the fir5t lrmc.
many l:r~:t~ that Americans Jn nol yet know about thrs
war" I t •~ an allcmpl 10 mform them of what the war
mea"' ahrnall and al home I n lherr own words. ·•most
rmpnrtJnl, lhc campa1g11 uq~es people It&gt; acl NOW!"
Scopic'
Vanous campatgns bnng out the effect!&gt; of war on
llw Amcncarr people at home They speal.. of monetary
loss. hvcs lost, homes disrupted. They 3lso speak of the
c ll ccr~ rl has un thl' people~ of Vtetnam . 'The real tragedy
of war i~ il~ survr vor~." one po~lcr reads.
All till' po~lt'rl- an t.ll·ontmcrcrab ~ Ire~~ that audiences
'hould wrrle their rcprescnlal rve~ und t.lo ~olll cllung abour
lht• war All repeat a11d repc:~l lht• hurwr' ol w~rr and the
IIC~oeS~Ity uf 3CIJClii . I10W
A~ furmet lt John .. Kerry .stared " How do you
.&amp;SI. ,, roan lo be rhe las l to d1e 111 V1etnam'~
How do
yt1U asl.. a man lu he I he lasl lu dre for a nllstake?"
Unsd/ the War IS an allempl 10 reach everyone w1th
um· hasrc message . "Write yout congressman Tell htrn you
want to end the war now."

PROTECT YOUR CAR ; TRUCK ; VAN ; etc.-

STATE UNIVI!RSITY OFNEW YORK AT OSWEGO

whh the

LIBERAL ARTS PROGRAM
in
Pisa, Italy

Solid State Electralay
ANTI-INCURSION ALARM
complete-band crafted circuitry, ELECTRONIC SIREN
ask to ... our demonstration carl

Safeguard all property
&amp; possessions
(homes, offices, wwehouMI, stor•. etc.)
with a
CuSlomozedSecuroty Syuem- TAILORED TO YOUR NEEDS
AND BUDGET - BURGLAR ALARMS • &amp; FIRE ALARMS

FOR
INFORMATION, ASSISTANCE &amp;/or APPOINTMENTS.
eall Of write-

Constant Alarm Technology
Security Systems
876-7076
875-8324

P.O. Box43

..........

Kenmore, N.Y. 14223

~

FOR ENGLISH SPEAKING STUDENTS

Eam 1 7 acdirs each semester in the fields of
ARCHEOLOGY
ART
f:.CONOMICS
HISTORY
ITAUAN LANGUAGE AND UTERATURIMUSIC
Participants can enroll for fALL or SPRING

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable
Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834·7350

SEMESTER or the ACADEMIC' YEAR
This program is open to students 10 all maJors.
Knowledge of Italian is nol requned
COST . S 1.200.00 for Fall or Spring Serncsrcr.
$2,100.00 for the Academic Year.
Cost includes transportatiOn to and from Pisa. full
room and board, field lnps (four days tn Vrntce,
seven to ten days in Rome and N,aples) :tnd vtstts h)
Padua, Milan, Perugia. Siena, Assisi. Bo lugna.
Enrollment Limtted Apply early
ror further infonnotion. wnte to.
State University Coll£oge
Prof Dominick Romeo
Oswego. New York. 13126
Assochlre Director/PiSIJ Prozram Telephone: (315) 341·2185
\

'triday, 14 April 1972 . the Spectrum . 'Page three

�.

Opening Mondlly

aetion line

CAC 's Birth Control Clinic
by HowieKum
Crmpca Edircw
In January 1971. CAC was approac hed by
Planned Parenthood and asked to consider the
possibility o f operuna 1 birth contro l clinic to handle
the o verflow of studen t clientele seekina birth
control.
On Mondly, a frustr1ting 15 months late r, t he
C AC Birth Co ntro l Clinic will open o n campus.
Students will pay a fee of S4 for the fust visit to
the chnl c and S I for each subsequent visit . F or this
c harge, they can avail themselves of all the clinic's
servtces whi ch include : free pap tests, free VD t est s,
breast and pelvic examinatio ns and co ni rnce ptive
d evices such as all types of birth co ntro l piJis, IUD's,
diaphragms and co ndoms, man y of whi ch can be
pro vided for at no charge.
After paylllg the init1al S4 fee, females must
fulfill o ne additional req u1rement before t hey can
get an appo1nt rnent wtth a d od or : attend a class.
The class will be o1 co rnprehen'lave onc·hour session
taught by med1 cal and nurs1ng stud en ts, and ca n be
waaved tf the studen t has att ended the sam tlar course
offered by Planned Parent h ood
The daS) ~ betng requm~d bc4.:.1U~ " we: want
people to have 11 gOt1d 1deo1 of the alterna ti ves
avaalable to them bcforl' they ...n me tn ··said Nam:y
Lev1ne , c h&lt;~armiln of th ~: Student IIC'illlh 1\ssocaa!ton ,
the cllntl''!&gt; t~fftl' IJI name

The lint m.,or obstacle for the clinic was a
State University d irective wbicb stated that no
student health associ1tion can open a birth control
wnic. Howeve r. a student health orpnizaho n WIS
allowed to rent space to an andependent corporation
to open a clinic.
T o take adv1nt.aae of this, the Student Health
Association tried to incorporate and become that
independent corporation ; however, they ran into
many leaal complica t ions in trying to incorporat e.
After months of tryin&amp; to in corporate and working
w ith the assistant State Attorney General to push
the papers throUJh, the clinic learned of a
modification of the St ate Univcrsaty directtve in
January 1972
lkgiog and pleading
"The m odificatio n !&gt;Uid that if the health center
ssw the need fo r a birth co ntrol clinic. 11 co uld help

H(llle a probkm? Nt«&lt;help? Do you find It impossible to untangle
the University bunaum~cy? In coopmztlon with the 0/Ji~ of Student
A{fain and Services. The Spectrum $fJO'UOfl Action Line, a weekly
mzder ~eni« column. 77trough A ction Lint, indivldwl students CQn
8(!1 answm to puztUitf quatloru. find out wht!t't t11td why Univmity
decisions art made and get action when dulnge il nudtd.
Jwt dial 831·5000 or vWt the Action LiM booth in the Cenur
Lounge in Norton Hall for Individual attention. T1rt Offl~ ofStudent
Allain and Services will Investigate all quesrioru 111td complaints, and
will answer them individually. Tht name of the Individual originating
the Inquiry iJ kept confidtntial under all circumstan~s. The more
common questions will be answered in this txJiumn e4Ch week.

Q: When is the last d1y to drop or Mid oounet?

A. The last day just happens to be today! At high noon , yet ! So, tf
you have not added or dropped the courses you intended lo. make sure
that thas is done by noon today, or it will be too Ia tel •

ntina

Q: I just found out that I job I had
f« me this IUDU11er is
no longer available. It lookl Uke I will need aome financial aid next
year. It if too late to apply now?
A . The c ut o fT dat e fo r applications was March 1 Ho wever . you
can st all apply and your appltcation will be marked " Lite Applicati on
Subject to Funds Available ." This means that you will rece1ve
financaaJ a1d af there IUe stall funds avaalable when your turn comes
Q . When does the new tuition rate go into effect and what will it

Paranoia •bout sw~nts
M~

Levane ~lrl"~H·d th&lt;~l .til ~tuden ts'
Involvement wa th t he bart h l tllllrlll dan tl would be
"comple te ly confidentaal ," meanang th at th e ce n t ral
Infirmary will have no rec;orch o f th e duHc'' clients
a nd that the s tud ent~· h &lt;trne~ w1ll not he co nta c ted
She ex plat ned that sume student~ are paranoid
abou t ~eki n g b11th t' un t rol devl ~l"' )tn ~e th ey fear
tha t thet r parents wall he tnadvcrtllntl y wn tacted at
.!lome tame or anoth er Tht~ t•vcntualtty will not
occ u r wath t h~: cumpU) ~: lint ~ . " Nnw that reopk hotv~
their own htrth r ont rol d ana.· on t:aiiiJl U'I, theac·~ nn
ex~ou~e o 1tl lc&gt; U\e 11 ," ~.n mmcntcd M ~ l cvt nl"
The d1111l wtll tw Cl!H~n th" Monday and
Wedm:~day cvrmn~ tn tlw hawlltl"llt of Mlt:h .~el II all .
pruhahly h om K 10 10 p m I· Xdl:l lim(' t Jil he
fuund out oil the ntollltl.!lt&gt;ry dot'' sc:.~mn
lnlo rmJtt nn Jbuul lht tunc Jlld hKJlttllt ol thc'lc
cJaSSC') can be nbl.un ed "' 1 h ~: ( AC oltttl" ( l&lt;otHn
220 Nmton . IUI -.106" . 8J I -1Qoq In thl· nc.1r
futu re. the lltrlh ~..o ntrctl d1n1&lt; w11f rrnhJhly hJvc '''
own u llllt' at Roo tn 14 l Nurtnn Jflll ctller fJ trly
re~ulu dul.lo f\ · hour~

Coun~lling 1vaiJable

" fhe danu.. wtll Jho ho~ve tr.uned tmltvuJuab lo
offer ~..nu nselhng an t he are a' ul pregno~n t y , ahm t mn
1eferrals and other al t e rnllltve~ . c~nd hum;tn
sexualit y ," c x.plaaned Ms Lcv1ne S he ha' pcNr)nall y
led the 15 · m un t h struggle :.g;aa ns t ltlm munaty
pressures and te,al hasslu l u ~cl th~: d lnt t
established " We arc th11nk ful In the .tdllll n t~tra lwn
for thctr cooperall&lt;&gt;rt lind tu the dttdOr\ wh o h:~ ve
volunteered to staff the 1.hnu: witho ut pay," ~aid Ms.
L evine

be?
A : The new tui t ion rat e

tu

cstabh~h

one tlu t n o t to lund at ," cxphsincd Ms
1t1rth ~ untrnl dtntt: 1~ t ltt~rcfore a b ran ch
of t he ll t!alth ('ente r hut funded hy Sub Board I
Stn~e JJnu ary , Ms t.evm c and o thers have b een
trymg lu stl t he ~lana .. up and uhlaan do ctors to
volunlt:er tho::u ~rvt-.c , ··w e wt•nl to atwu! 70
dm:r or~ 1n the Buflalo area 11llU hcAAcd
we we re
&lt;~hk to get J I or 12 to volunteer," sa ad Ms I evine
There wcr~: o ther ha~~IC) a:; well. ib "every dey
new ttungs ...,me up " fh e dtn tl could n't get
malprJl.ltve 111\UfJ illl' lur the d od or~. lor m~tancc,
\an -.c they were nul a nHJX•ra tto n lt t1Wevt·r , they
hct.Jint' IMu rc:t.l hy t he stc~tc wh en th ey becam e a
tH&lt;~Ilt h of th~: he.slth l'Cnll.-r l herc were a m ult at ud e
n f o l he1 pwhl e m~ . an dud IllIt athe r~e t.om murut y
re.ldtnn. but th•• 11\.JJOr h,uraerlo have been hu rd lcc.l
t&gt;y I !i llronlh' ttl h.trd wurlo. . .1nd I he t: hna.- w all
nflh·1ally upcn un Mu nd ay
S tud e n l~ who lift.' 10 need nf VI&gt; m pap t ests,
want tn t:)(ant t" c uln t ra~epta ve alte rnatives and
c h vu~ the h~:~t o n1· fel t
thctr nec:ds. nb tlltn
prcg nam.: y o a ahort 1o n counselltng or any other
relute d sc rva ~e or inl ormataon shnuld take heart
there tS now a barth ... o ntro l dmu.: on t:;unpus .
Levan~:

T'h ~:

Drop-Add revisio11

•

A new policy will be instif uled for the fall ~emeatrr of 1972 co ncernina drop add
pro«dure, which will affect underaraduate, traduate and nlaht tchnolstudenu Student.
may drop c ounea, 11 at Pfe#nt. until two weeki before the bejtnnina of final exam• (the
exac t date wW be announced each sem4:1ter). New cQuna may only be added duriaa the
first dx weeki of lnstru ctic;m u or th is fall .
Exception~ wiU only be l'oade with permW.ion of the dean of th e re1pectlve
division, for 1uch ~uons u Ula.-, computer failure , etc: Independent study c:ouRH will
be viewed u reaular couraes and wiJI alto havC' 1 ••-week limit , except for one coune
(one ro four credic.) wbich can be added until two week$ before the end o f tht semester
with departmental approval

GRADUATING?
Last chan« to insure delivtry
11{ yt~ ur

Cap &amp; Gown Rentar
TODAY

1010 effect fo r the summer sesliinn

ur

April 14 . t972

st uden ts; $400 fo r upper undergradua tes (completed more tha n Sh
c redit h o u rs): $600 for gradua te studen ts; and $800 for professio nal
sc hool students . The fees for part· time st udents from New York State
are : $21.50 per hour fo r lo wer division undergraduates: $26 .75 JX'r
credit h o ur for upper division unde rgraduates; $40 per credit ho ur foa
graduate students: and $53 .50 per c red it h o ur tor professio nal school
stud ents .

For fu ll-time studen ts out-of-state, lhe costs will be : $537.50 fm
luwer division und er graduate$, SOSO fo r upper-d ivisio n undergraduate).
$750 for graduate students; and SIOOO for profe~ional school
students. f·or parH1me studen u from &lt;&gt;Ut-&lt;lf·state th e tu atio n wrll be
$35 .75 per cred1t h o ur for lower davaston undergradua tes: $43.50 per
credat h ou r for upper d1v.saon undergraduates. $50 per crcd1t hour fot
graduat e studen ts. and $66 75 per c ~dat hour for pr(lfessaonaJ school
stode nts. I t should be noted that the above costs for full -ri m e stud ents
:tre for o n e semester and these d o not m clud c fees, etc.

Q I am interested in worltina with the State Department in foreign
countries. Whert can I find out about this?
A : The Plllcement Office may be able t o help you with literatuac
on F oreign S ervice It tells u.s that the IICX I written examination for
entry into the Fo reign Servtce is te ntatively ach eduJed for December
197Z.. For more info rmation you are requested to write to · Board tlf
Exam men, Foremg Servtce, Washington, D .C.. 20520

Q: I am •bout to .,aduate and all of • sudden I am receiving all
kinds of literature from companies for cn:d.il c:ardl, instant etedit .
special offerinp, etc . Where do thea compania eet our o.ames and
~? Doa the Ida~ pvc them out?
A . It ts firm policy of SVN YAB no t t o give o ut the names and
addresses of any students to anyooe for any reuoo. Even parents
cannot..1et this inform1lio n . However, there are a number o f pl ace~
where companies can get thas an format ion .
They can get a copy of I he student dltect ory . These are norm ally
wid o nly to reg,st e red students, but there ts nothrng t o prevent a
student from !JCilang one to 1:1 non·studcnt. An o ther source of
tn formataon may o r may not be the companu~s that d eaJ wath
prospec t tve graduate~. e It those tha t rent robes o r sell nngs, etc.
There are many JVerlues o l obtaanin g t h iS information and aJmost
no way of prcvcntm~ 11 Out o bservatton as that it is just b cginn1ng.
Such ma1l Ctlnll'S 1\1 you ill through life, at least life in chis generatiOn
1\nd 1hc hest wo~y we k n ow of handling it 1s to ignore it. What we
would lll.c to Ut'lll l\l&lt;' r ·~ how baby furniture companaes find out when
· a woman IS pregnant I hcv Sl'Can It&gt; liald our before husbands!

Q. WiU th~ ~tvi ~·t·, ol the Placement Offia be avaJiable rhb
s ummer &gt;
Yc), lltL'\ wlll h.: W,• should nt•t r here Jlt.Jl the Unt\:t:l~tl\
a11d &lt;Jl co•t ( .utJ.ulc.:c O t ficc lists seven sr. rvict'' l iHC;,
C&lt;&gt;unsclh•l..(, 11 JII 111nc .1u,j \llllll ncr placeme111, coll~·gc w nrk·~tudv
l&gt;CI ,~ IIVl' ~l''''•t: Ct&gt;IJIISt'lllllj!. ,J rc cr lahrJry , graduate Si.'hoolllllllllll&lt;~l lllll
anJ 1..arcc• piJu~lllcllt l&gt;ttiiiiJ;; the ~111nmcr m onth~ the foii&lt;IWtn!( will be
av;ulahlc 11\tlltg..\ nl IOlllll'Uiall' ''Pfllllljt~. c.:Jiccr counselling st:rvu:cs ;111d
crcdcnta.rl wrv1cc'

1\

11t

goes

1972, whic h is th is summer. The rate per semester for full · timc
students from New Yo rk S t ate arc : $325 for lower undergradu ate

Pla~clllcllt

' ' (lllf

University Bookstore
Vorton Hall

Page fou r . The Spectrum . Friday, 14 April 1972

�Athletic report

Departmentalprotests
by Jo-Ann Armao
Campus Editor
A financial report by Student
Association Treasurer Jeff Osinski
c harging "i rregularities" in
Athletic Department expenditures
has prompted protests in that
department. According to Mr.
Osinski, the Athletic Department
violated State Board of Trustees
auid clines with unsupportable
allo c ations and withou t
underg oi ng any kind of
admmistrat1ve scrutiny
Explaining that any
irregularities could be explained,
both Ath letic Direct or Harry Fntz
and Direc tor o f the Athletic
Revi e w Board J o n Dandes
criticized the failure to contact
the Athletic Department before
the re port was re leased . " This
whole thing," Dr. Fritz said,
"could have been resolved if

JohnDandes
wmeonc 1n the department was
conta.:t ed fo r mformat1on " lie
contmued
" AI no 11me, was
a ny o n e tn uur dcp.~rtment
c.jUCSitoncd o~houl our clflt:rdiiOn
At nu 111ne. wert: we quened
At 110 tulle, were we Jware uf
JrlY rruolcrns "
Mr l&gt;a nd ~-s agrel'tl lh.tl "no
effort wo~~ m.tde to fmc.! uut Jhout
these th1n~' .. In o~dt.llllnn , tmth
Dr l-r11t .tntl Mr Danch'' IJult~d
'Hu· Srwrrwm lor 1101 '&lt;•II~ 1ttng
tn forlllatwn from th \: Alhletll
Depart ment 111 " ' LCJ\ICfJgl' ''' the
rernrr .m J\pnl I~ Mr O.tnt.lc'
dlJIKec.l llut
Spulrtllll " "
gUilty "' lhc: hl (!,hc~l ln rm ut
ye llow huurn.lll\111 f h ~· t•thlnnal
1S lull uf m.th&lt;lous he' 111 term' ol
what Jdl''i lei\&lt;HI ._.1111 "

n, ..

wouldn' t h ave gotten any
place."
Basically , Mr. Osinski objects
to "the double st andard'' of
administrative revie w . He
ex plain ed that the Athletic
Departm ent underaoes no
administrative sc rutiny but
utilizes one of its members. On
the other hand , he continued ,
student groups are required to
su b mit all allocat t o ns t o
administrative d esignee Howard
DueU for review and approval.
"Th e way in whi ch th e Athletic
Department rev1ews its
expenditures w o uld be the same
thing if Debbie Benson ISA
President I acted as adm inastrative
des1gnee for Student AssoCJallon
o n all ocations," Mr
Osin~k1
remarked .
Efficacy and worth
Commentmg on thiS statement,
Dr. Fnt1 explamed "l-Ither I'm
co mpetent to do the program or
I'm no t
I believe I am " In a
letter to Mr Osmsk1 Dr I- nti
agam asserted thai "u:r1a1n o l lhr
expend1 t u re~ negat1vt:ly rckrred
to should have been presented
wtth appropriall.' expll1natmn ..
F or CX.Jillflh· . l&gt;r
1 1111
explamcd dn .lllcu.aiH•II tu \t·nd
Wllham Sdnlnr&lt;l to .1 Lonvt:IIIIUII
Acc.:ord1 ng to l&gt;r l· nlt " Mr
Sanfor d 's 111p was ong,nall v
scheduled fnr lund1ng lrom tll1.·
re1mhur&lt;&gt;o~hk
'\at uniJy Mornulg
Sw1m Pr o~tr.J IIl fo1 \. hlldren
ac.:LOunl When out-(lf...,t.tll' travel
res tn c.:tton~ were IOJflosed on th •·
Sl ate TCIIllhUr,ahk JC.:tOUnlS, II
was deullcd 1&lt;1 put&lt;-hd\c.: \IJrttn{!
hlcu. l..~ fnr lht' sw1m tt·.sm from
t h c.: Saturday Mormng Swun
l'r\lgram o~ec.ount
and fund Mr
Sanford 's .. wun team huclp.et " li e
conc.luded •• rh iS transa\.II On was
fully discus.~ed .1nd o~pflruvcd 1n
advan ce and Jclually rc.:su llt:d 1n ·•
~VIngs to the stud cnl·suppurted
'1w1 m t eam hullget "
ll o wever
Mr
O"n'~l
Ill~ tn ld med
that he· w,t, not
4UCstiOIIIIlg l hl' way If\ wh11: h
nHJnry was oh l.t111t'd, only t h e
l."ffi\.JC:Y .11111 worth ul ,.-ndlnj!.
\\llllCtlnt• Itt .Ill I I ll.ly UIIIIICIIIJIII\
tor $~X a d.t y I or I h 1' fl',J\Oil he·
sllgl;l'\1\:d lhJI 'land.Jid r••hcy
.1houl c.unvt·n ttttn' ami IIH'al\ hc.:
.Hinpl t•d Rl'f\J'thll!! nh·,ll Jhlhcl\'\
M1 Oant.J.-, •'ll.fli.IIIII'U th.tl lh•·
whole tl' "~tr a 111 w.t' t.,t,tlly
fi'V.JIOflt:!.l WVl'T.JI wcd,, .1!(11
Meecing planned
Tu
r r r v l'
nl111111Uilll.Jllt111

No scandal
~pet:lfit,JIIy ,

thq nhtetll'd Ill
nil Spt•Urum \ .tlleg.tiiCHI lh.JI
"1noney WJS \toll'n " Agrl'emg
w1th lilts. Mr
0\tusJ..t
commented " Wh1Je the art1clt: in
It ('
{J I ' I' I r u m
h a ~ I l a II y
'u m man red the report lJUi t e
accurately, my report nevc:r sa1d
that anyone sto le any money "
Explaining that the rcp&lt;it l was
tnlended " t o get some q ues1 1ons
answered ," Mr Osinski remarked
that he d1dn ' t plan the report to
be "a scand alous expose of t he
Athlet ic: De partment . ·• ll owevcr ,
Mr Osinski did agree tha t he was
in error rn not contacting the
Athl etic Department wh1le
formulating his report.
In add ition , Mr. Osmskt regrets
that he d1d no t distribute h is
repo rt to th e Athletic Department
before its public rel ease. Y-et, 1t
appears that Mr. Osinskt d oes feel
that the report was su ccessful in
h elping to get some serious
questions answered : " If I had
simply asked for mformation
I from the Athletic Department I,
I doubt just bow much really
could have been accomplished .•.

r

s

Revised College Prospectus
main topic of Faculty Senate
The revised College Prospectus
and the proposed Universi ty
governance system were the main
topics of discussion at Tuesday's
Faculty Senate meeting.
John Halstead, chairman of the
Faculty Senate subcommittee o n
the CoUeges, presented a slightly
modified version of the Stem
Prospectus, which de fined and
elaborated on the functionings of
the CollegJate System. Three
major changes were mtroduced :
l)the direc tor of the Colleges
w o uld be a "full - tim e
adminiStrative officer at the
provostial level ,

amendment be deleted, on the
younds that it merely adds to the
..increasing bureaucracy."
The phrase "coiJectively o r
singly," was ultimately dropped,
and the amendment stipulated
"an extramural rev~ew board"
rather than "boards." The
prospectus was then unanimously
passed, 48 .0. The Colleges will
operate for two years under the
propeciUs, subject to review.
New University governance
Marjorie Mix , Fac ulty of
Ed ucational Studies and chairman

proposed assembly were streued;
George Hocbfield, Department of
English, said that it was no mor~
than an advisory body, and wu
even too large and unweildy to act
effectively in that capacity.
Nicholas Goodman,
Department of Mathematics, and
a Govern a nee Committee
member, maintained that the
assembly symbolizes "solidarity."
He said : "It can truly represent
the views of the campus
commumty . Two years ago there
was no o rganized group that could
aopeal to the president, and no
'II

2)
res1dent t al
and
administrative expenses w11l also
be tncluded m the allocation of
funds to the Colleges:

or

3) t h e programs
the
Colleges, "e1 th c r I!O IIcc tively or
s1ngly .'' would he rev1cwed hy
"ex tra mural rl'VIt'W hoards ol no
more than nvc mcmherll" under
thl' ausptce~ ot the bcully Senate
C'onumtt cc nn I h t· Colleges.

Amendment debated
Konrad von Mul tk c, tl111.'t'lor ol
College~. a~rcctl W1th 111ost uf
th~.·
chJngc' mad1.• by the
c.omm1 ttec
hut cxprel'\C:&gt;
miS!'JVIIIg' about the Jtllentlment
LV Jl (Crtl l ll~ I'X IIamuraJ
ICViCW.
Sc•veral H'n..ttors JIIIIJ)osed
lhang~ng the :uncndmcnt. ('hark'
Planck. Dep artment uf Pollt1cJI
S1.:1ence, IIHIVNI that th e five·man
review hoaul be "ol national
prumincncc. selected hum names
~uhm11 ted by
th e Cnllegmtc
Assembl y" Charles !·all, !-ac u ity
of J.du ca t1 u nal St ut.l1 e,,
tCliHn m cndcd that the cntuc
thc•

TSUJIMOTO

-

of the lln1W1~lly (,uvcrnan~.-c
( 'o rnm t ll ce. 1n11 o du c:ed the
ptoposed "A rt1clc' o f &lt;.iovcrnancc
ft11 a lliiiVCI'SII} As.,embl) " lhc
Assemhly ~~ de~igncd fl) " p ruv1tlc
a means wh e reb y th e wuwus
COIISi tluc nc•es of th e U111VCIS1ty
call cuuperat e 111 'deliberatiOns on
Un1Vers11 y po licies, Iandi can
mak e rctorn mcnd &lt;Jitllns upon
these It• th e plC\IdCII I o f lh t•
lJIIIV('ISIIy "
Dl M P( IIIVtlcd rc!&gt;p011\l' lu tht•
,Ji lldes ftulll the ~llJh'. and
rcc.:ctve tl hoth CfltiU\11l .111d
~u pplHI
I he secmut~ la c:~ ,,,
power and "1mpotcncy'' of the

4
- F ox

body lh3t th e prestdcnt could
Spt'3k IU "
Another '&gt;CnJtor suggested that
more autlu111ty sh ould be tnvested
111 the budy, perhaps th e Facult y
Senat e cnuld be dtssolvcd and
HICOI po ratcd in the University
Assembly, or the senate could be
furmed as a standmp. committee
u t the a.s.,,embly.
Dr Mix remind ed the senate
that th' a.~sem bly Wlluld come
under rcv1ew '" tWtl years. so rt
Wc•uld not be a lung·term
c.:ommllllll'lll. anti UJgcd th em tu
continue ll• "help 11H1d1fy th e
plans."

Art Auction

O RII':ICTAL A'&amp;T ~IFT &amp;- f'OODt

o...

l'••r Mu'- A C..•l,.. at•rp
at •• ..._.." · I te I

f)~U .Y

MM -•u 81. ca.L. Ul 1':'-, JII.W.
1 •lin
&amp;ulNl
of 2-Jl"
YnoJI~ (1J.Ii ttl
. __
__
_ _ _....

11 1

1 11 c 1 h ,. r

JJlU

llllt l rlll.tllllll

IH I ,under,lan!.lln~'

lrom
urnng, Dr Fnt t "JI\1\C.:'Inl " I I
you I Mr (l\lnsk tl or 1Hhl'f\ 111 the
St udent AS\Ol.lallon .H&lt;' ml ercstt:d
1n cncnuragtnl( those who are hl'rt:
ll• help you an ti fa1rly pH·~c:nttng
the fact s. we inv1tc you to tl1~cu:.~
WII h Ole , Jlld With .tthletiC
bwnn~ off1n: per~unnt!l. those
athlellc fin.Jn1.:1al maller.. ahout
wh1t:h there 1~ ~cm11: 4uesllo n ."
Mr Osinski rcp{lrts thJI he h~
~chedufed
sut"h a mc:d1ng fur
today at 2 p m
Dr Fntl o~lso in d lett.-r 111
l-.xetutive V1t:t: Presttlent Al Som11
rc:4uested that Dr. Som1t's o ffi t:e
"d1rec t an mdependent aud1t o f
all Sub Board I , Inc. transactions
1nvolving th e expenditure of
student fees tn actiVIties d1rected
b y the st aff of the Divisio n of
PhySical F du catJOn, Rec reation
and Atlllettcs."
Conclud1ng tus remarks, Dr
Fritz remarked thai the report
and its resultant publicity was "a n
empt t o disc redit us at the time
budget hearint!' . . . We are
rvin&amp; a large number o f students
. . . the whole thi ng is
regrettable."
till

J.

uver anti Brown Kl&lt;'t'
'alifurnm S wutgc1
Hamburger Stroganoff
Small Sulum Stea
Boneless)
I 45
I 65
Clucken Roquefort
eef Bourgu inon .
I 7.
h oice Omelet ...
1.3.
round Beef(Organ1t')
1.45
I 95
Pet1te Friel Mignon
egetable Scallops

rown Rt~.:e
oast Sesame Chicken
gg Plant Parmesian
and many daily spec1als

ONE CENT SALE
ON NOW!

BLACKSMITH

ongrnal works of graphiC art etch1ngs. ltthographs,by leadtng 20th century artists.

Pa hiP P11. a"ll

J,,hnm htcul.tc.nd.:r

S.tlv~Jpr

Aln;tnlkt (';tllkr

r&gt;alt

GL·nrgcs Rt,uault Victor \ a!&gt;:t rdy

M.m ( ' h;1gall
Jo&lt;tn Mim
and o the rs

SUNOA Y , APRIL I 6th at 3 :00p.m.
GOVERNOR'S ROOM - EXECUTIVE MOTOR INN
DIRECTLY A C R OSS FROM TH E AIRPORT

SHOP

EXHIBITION OF WORKS I :00 - 3 :00p.m. ADMISSION FREE

.sansc•m

ALL WORKS CUSTOM FRAMED AND MATTED

1375 DRAWAII AVL

Friday, 14 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�The Student Housing Corporation
is looking for

.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEMBERS
Eight •positions are available. At least one member should be from each of these areas :
Undergraduate, Grad~te, MFC, Professional.

What qualifications are necessary?
1. Enrollment in any student division of SUNYAB

2. Sincere interest in the success of a housing corporation run on the
basis of cooperative spirit

3. Willingness to devote much time to the corporation
4. Ability to easily commute to SUNYAB during the Fall and Spring
Semesters and during the summer
S. Ability to serve for a term of one or two years (once elected, a student
does not have to relinquish his term on the Board of Directors if h e
graduates, as long as he stays within the easily commutable distance.

What 1s the appl1cot10n process'
1. Complete resume form printed below to the best of your abilit y
(additional forms available in Norton 214) .
2. Call the Housing Committee at 831 -5502 for a nswe rs to questi o ns you may
have, or for more information .
3. Return your completed resume to Norton 214 by noon on Tuesd ay April

18, 1972.
4. An inte rvie w will be set up later that w eek b y the Sc reening Comm ittee.
5 All appotntment s will be confirmed by Sub Board I.

---------------------------------------------------------------------RESUME
For Student Housing Corporation Board of Directors Membership

NAME
PHONE NU MBER

ADDRESS

WHAT DIVIS ION OF SUNYAI3 ?
WHAT LEV EL ?
WHAT D EPARTMENT ?

WHA T DID YOU DO THI S YEAR ?
WHAT DO YO U PLAN ON DOIN G NEXT YEAR ?
WHAT , IN GEN E RAL , DO YO U PLAN TO DO WIT H YO UR Ll f[&gt;

WHAT AR E YOUR INT ER ESTS?

WHO AR E YOU?

Please feel free to wote more than the spcJLe

Page six . The Spec trum . Friday , 14 April 1972

IS

provided tor'

�World masterpieces pitted by pOllution
Editor's note: This Is the second in a ~rles
of three articles on pollution and itJ effects
on works of art. Today, three ewe studies
thow lust what pollution htu done and
wlttJt hi# bun - or lull not - been done to
fight back.
by Roean.y Armao
Sp«IGI to th~ SfH~tnlm

"A nation's art products . . . are not
mere national property; they are
intemational po!Sesslons, for the joy and
senice of the whole whorld. The nation~
hold them in trust for humanity, ..
the writer Havelock Ellis sennoni:ud .
Today. art conservators agree 11 1s a trust
many nations have betrayed. O.P Agrawal,
chemUt for the National Museum, New
Deihl, writes:
only a tiny portion o/ what must
have been CN!Ilted by the artists during . .
{ITUin 's/ long period of art acriviry remains.
The re11t has been lost. Man, although
proud of his artistic pa3t, has not shown
enough concem for its safety."

• • •

•

•

In a world that ranks by GNP. mcome
per captta and producttve output, few
states are overworned about protectmg
beauty Budgetary priorities are asstgned to
industry and only the Sierra Club and the
lntemat•onal Institute for the Preservatton
of Artistic Works are apt to bemoan
damage to natural and man-made treasures
Stn~ the destre for wealth and world
powe1 IS un.versal. so also
a~ the
followmg three ca5C studies are meant tn
suggest JS the degradation of art

·No where IS the illustration as clear as 111
Ven1ce, where cranes and smoke stacks 111
the Mestre·Marghera vie for mastery llf the
city skyline with the bronze horses of St
Mark's Cathedral. The ·'city of 10,000
masterpieces.·· once the "Queen of the
Adnallc," Ventce, ts actually two c1t1es
now On the mwnland adJJCt:nt to
lust1.mcal Old Vemce 1s the New Vemce.
home of 21 1 chemtcal, petroleum and

fer t iJ i.zer plants, Italy's third largest
industrial ~ea.
Conflict between these two has
st rengtbened the already monumental
natural enemies of Venetian art: the sea
and the salt air.
Several large-a&lt;:ale industrial projects,
for example, may be increasing the threat
of acqua alta or Ooods to the city . At least
some European experts feel that draining
the "dead lagoons" to make way for new
thermoelectrical installations, dredging the
lagoon for harbour facilities and industrial
pumping of underground water from
beneath the city are altering the
hydrodynamic structure of the Lagoon.
Further, divenion of mainland rivers,
blamed for deprivmg Venice of new alluvial
deposits, the exceaJve weight of the new
buildings (ancient Vemce congsted almost
entirely of wood) and offshore drilling for
methane gas may even be sinking Venice .
Certainly the number of heavy Ooods has
jumped alarmingly over the last 25 years.
An auxiliary problem is that the
tncrea.sing amount of motorized traffic in
the water
shippers and tankers to
Marghera - •s cauSJng waves that beat
down city foundatiOns
Several solutJons to the problem have
been suggested The llnited Nations
Educallonal , Sc1en11fic and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) and the ltalia
Nostra favor constructio n of giant movable
gates that would close off the mile-wide
entrance of thl' lagoon ftom the Adnallc
whenever acqua alta is threatened
Cost deemed prohtbitive
A Dutch lirm has proposed a huge
rubber tube at the boctom of the entrance
When storms swell the AdriatiC. these
would be inflated Jjke uusages (to use the
descnptJon of NCB I tal ian correspondent
I R. Levine) to block the lagoon
So far, however, Ma1ghera sh1pp1ng
111terests, v1tally opposed to closrng the
waterway at any lime . have vetoed all such
proJects And . that $7J mtllmn tab nu one
wants lo p1ck up ~~ alsu blockmg
prcservat11&gt;n work

Mixed with the city's damp salty
atmosphere, smog is "one of the greatest
threats to Venice.'' says Terisio Pignatti,
vice director of Venice's civic museums.
The smoggy chemical mix eats bronze
and marble. Numerous statues have had to
be fitted with iron crutches and braces. But
paintings and stone aren't safe either.
Venice's air, poUuted with sulphurous
compounds that change with water into
acid are uncleaned by the photosynthesis
of any trees or plants; the city has none
The poisoned air can pulverize paintings,
sculpture. even the limestone walls on
which lhey rest. Smoke and residues from
frelghten, ferries and oil furnaces crumble
stones, ro t wood and blister frescoes .
Again the cures are known . filter
Marghera 's smoke st.aclts; regulate levels of
pollution ; convert from oil to gas bum.ng.
And again tndustry and government demur
from such costly schemes.
So. with 5% of her frescoes and 6% of
her marbles eroding annually, Venice's case
is summarized by a UNESCO study . "
It is not at all certain that a caty whtch has
become a museum . . and whose
economic resources are problematic, w11l
be able to defend 1tself agatnst nature and
the harmful effects of human aCIIVlly "
Stueeptible Co ffecay
Like Ven1ce , York Cathedral is an ISland
surrounded and 111timidated by a sea of
industries. At stake as the cathedral's
medieval sta1ned glass.
The art preservator 's problem IS
liOmewhat different in Ymk thau '"
Venice He deals w1th a corrosum that cats
mto the wmk rather thau sunply butldtng
up on the wurk 's surface.
Mcnd1th Lillich , fine arts profe ssm .md
a spec111list m sta1ned glass at Sy ra~.:usc
University , N.Y.. theonzes thnt the outer
surface of a panal is actually a prolcct•ve
skin. Process111g of glass has removed ffill~ t
uf the alkalt from th1s area and 11 1S tht'
Jlkall mgret.lu.·nt uf glass that ~~ mo~t
su!&gt;cept1blc Ill de~.:ay
Should the surface he "' atdll' d or
damaged, huwt-vcr the gl as~ 111l~r1111 "
opcucd to th&lt;.' elements and tmy ptt~ lurm

in the glass. The sharp edges on these pits
are then chewed up, further damaging dtin.
More pits fonn and eventually they tunnel
into each other.
Dr. Robert Brill, administrator of
!Cientific research at the Coming Glass
Museum, Coming, ~Y., concun with and
has done research that supports Prof.
Iillich 's theories.
"like craters on the moon!" Brill
described one fragment of York glass.
'"This sample is about three millimeten
thick; the pits go down a half mill.i. I've
seen samples where the holes actually
penetrate through the glass! "
Actually York glass is more heavily
corroded than damaged glass found
elsewhere. Pits cover the inside as weU as
the outside surfaces. Brill attributes this to
the nearness of English tndustrial concerns.
And Dr. Lillich agrees : "Salt and pollutants
can both scratch glass and exaggerate decay
once pits are already started .''
Nothing spared
In addition, ''Grime and the accretion
of the centuries," says Dr. Bnll, has been
"etched into scratches on the glass."
Opacity and blotctung that results, severe
m York, are rypicaJ to some degree of most
panels. No o ne knows of stained glass free
from such blo tches, totally luminous.
Blotches like the patana on some statues
have had to be accepted by our aesthetics .
The only pract1cal solution to the
ca 1 hedr.tl's problem IS double·glazing.
sandw•ching each panel be tween slices of
plasttc :md plate glass But then, Or. Brill
says disappiOVtngly. "the glass belongs to
the plash' nut to us•··

•

•

• •

Unlike Vc111ce. Alloy, W. V~r houses no
ma s t er p• eces. ll n l1 ke Yo rk . Alloy 's
churcht·s Jo 1101 date back to the eleven th
11r twelfth cen tury Nun&lt;.'theless. Alloy too
ts J battleground m the C&lt;lnO.c t between
111du~lly and Jrl R1d1culuus·1
Well
tndccd Jrt ~onservatmn IS
tllfrC&lt;JUl'lltly re-garded J!&gt; a \CIIUUS ffiJitl"r Ill
the l lmted .StJtes What treasure'&gt; '-"l' have
dcquued are safelv cn~ctln~etl 111 museums
Our CXJ)O\Cc.J work~ a1e newer anti of more
durahle n1atcuals than l-uropes; P.casso·s
New Ynrk ,ul(l C'hu.:attu stutucs are cast in
11011, l!11 CX,IInplc J'lw need Ill attend to
the111 1~ 11111 \II ur~ent
But what we l&lt;11.k 111 vullage, we Jrl!
nt.Jiullg
llfl
foo1 With JOIIIUIII Vf
lliCI.h .tlll/.1111111
;\I11.•JU\ , 11111 t'Vt:n ..1
ll'ntUI) oold.
Lnu.:oln Menwnal IS
··J '"oiV111g hi.&lt;.' ,J g1a11t AlkJ-Selt1er
t&lt;.~hkt ..
M.a.hk JIH1 111\lriJl llllllh Ill
hutldtrl).t\ Jll•h~ lhc ullllliiY JH' bemg
t •,Jit'll aw.ty lw •liOill' .ual lltll tl. .a~tt.l trom

•h··

bul.l .u1

I yp1cal nt lht· wi111IC Slluation •s the
lll) uf AIJ,,y Au l'llll\\11111' ther~.· from .a
l tlllllll l ath,dc l orr kllo.llloy plan I were
\ll had th.al 111 1'170 &lt;it
Mary\ C.atht•lu..
Chu 1~ h ~ndn,~d II\ outduo1 ~IJ I lit' 111
piJ~tll

.

'

,'~~

.l·. ·-

-\~~
\

F

\

N1.•t grc~al a11
s11 1Cally no lug deal
until J NJder\ RJtder , Donald R o~. began
using •t as an example ,,r Industr y·~ harm
tn the Cllvuonrncnt U111llll Carh•de 's reply
to R oss' allegations pcrtalll to thilt
dlSCUSSiUII
"Ferroalloys are e~u t1al 1ngred1ents ul
stainless a11d other aJiuy steels which lire of
such cnttcal tmpmtance to our natums
secunty and cconom1c: well -bemg"
Monday

Can N?:&gt;tllrtJtiVII overtake th(•

present raft&gt; of art destroctwn ?

Friday 1 14 April 1972 . The

Spectru~

. Page seven

�I

I
Reassessment

In an editorial Monday, we leveled a serious allegation at
the Athletic Department. It now appears that what we
interpreted as criminal actions was really an exacerbated
procedural conflict•and communication breakdown between
the Student Association and the Athletic Department. We are
firmly convinced that the department has receipts in their
office - which incidentally is not their proper repository which will account for all cash advances for travel.
Accordingly, we categorically retract our allegations of
criminal activity on the part of Athletic Department
personnel.

50 ffi:)StCUTC

CRIHI~L..S!
I

Lest there be further misunderstanding, we still maintain
our feelings about the Impropriety of certain expenditures
being financed by student monies. These would include
tuto ring for athletes, t ravel funds fo r coaches a nd excessive
spending on team meals.
Another point to be noted is that the continued double
standard of no administrative review for the athletic program
is disturbing. Harry Fritz's comment that he is "competent
to do the program" does not deal with the issue of
preferential treatment for h1s department. No one is
questioning his competency to administer such a program
but rather the unique relationship the Athletic Department
has as the only organizatio n funded by student fees that does
not conform to State Trustee guidelines o n fee disbursement.
Finally, because of r.he va rio us po licy c onflicts and
procedural disagreements that exist between the several
groups involved in funding the department, we reitera te our
call fo r an outside audit. Only by such actio n will the actual
areas of disagreement be bro ught mto clear foc us.

Freedom to choose
It 's lo ng overdue but the opening o f the CAC Birth
Contro l Clin ic is welcome nonetheless. The clin1c will be
pro viding the quite necessary service of offe ring birth contro l
information, ad vice and materia ls to the Un iversity
community.
In the futu re, we believe. that more etfort sho uld be
given to developing service programs of this nature and
supporting them t hrough student fees Surely the o peration
of this clinic is m ore worthwhile than the end less coffee
ho urs and purely recreational expend itures that usuall y
empty student coffers.
Above all , we commend the Community Action Corps
for tak ing the 1n1t1ative and supplymg the leadership
necessary to make the clinic a reality .

Vol 22. No. 74
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Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, 14 April 1972

S pent a week an New York Ctty ove r vaca t 1o n.
A bou t lwo blocks from Mad 1son Square Garden/l'en
S tat10n t o be prec1se Ne w Y o rk frequentl y ca uses
me d ifficult ies
stze and denst l y o f crowds, feehng
Aeographia 1lly lost m uch of t h e hme - b ut t he
o pe m ng event o f m y st ory was a scumce f1ction
conve ntio n , l un a con '7 2, an d that seems to have
m ade th e u l ua11on some what worse than It usually
w u even
Scien(;(! fi ct ion IS somethrn&amp; whJch I h ave read
for a lo ng time, m most of tt s d1verse gu1ses. I read
lletnlei n , and sword an d mag1 c fan t astes, wtth equal
fo ndness. T he re IS a sense of bem g ab le to suspend
norm al lim•it s wh1le reading suc h ma te ri al. of being
ab h: to n:ach ou t and se~ thi ngs m a fresh
pers pcc t tvc. Readi n g scie n ce
ftc:lton t h us ~erves the
fun~: t1 ons
of
est.apc/wcthdrawal from both
lh.: real world, and from my
o wn m tcrnal ng~dittes . M y
feehngs •1ft! rughly lavorabh:
IOWilrd~ 11 . w h ether you w1~h
111 call 1t scten ce lict 1on , or
spe c ul at1ve f1 c t1on or
wh at eve r
Srcem:c fictro n conventiOns. ho wever, st nke me
as IH~rng ve r y wc mJ My las t p rev1ous ex penenc:.: w as
a wo rld -co n tn Berkeley seve ral years ago. 1 o w h 1ch
my respom•es were s1m1lar. People seemw mu~: h
llltiiC: mlc:res tecJ m the c:osl umc ball and the fOU)IIng
rn:th:he'
ft hcrc: wo~," mcdiCV¥1 !heme to the whole
thtng Ill 'iOIIIC: way I nc:vc:r 4U1II: underst ood
than
111 Jny l.. md uf mtercsl 1n thc rcal world Wh1c h
wu'e' mc ..:onfll\llln Snmchnw my oncnt.JIIfln
lnW,Hlh e&gt;. 1\tC:ntc: 1\ hiJWd m the dtrntlo ll 1)1
'flt'ndm~ lime: t:cttmg lu know wh o I am , and whu
olht•r pc:nplc: arc , Jnd )U\1 generally getting into the
world .J' 1111 1dl as pusMhk Suentc: fH.twn ha~ hclrwd
n11· do tha t . No l eve1yo1H' ~l'em' to tw 1ntercstt'd m
lt: J itty howt•vt•r
Ncvc:r trcally have: hcc:n a l·u nvcntwn g1vc:t by
ll..tturc whu. h leaves me hlllc: Itt ti't' a~ .1 ~IJnt.lard ul
tt• mpan~un lhcrc: w"' .1 dblurhmg .,cnw ahnul th1~
~&gt;ne ul m a ny JW•lplc rushtng dllC1ut lo(•t..lllg lur
IIHng.\, hut wtth no ~nsc o f JU\1 whdl wJ~ hcmg
lrmkc:d ror ldcsm~d M y ..nntcwh.ll Ot:IVIlU\ ..ens··
Jh1uncJ m Jn y pJrtlc' hJ' hecn frc4m:ntly mcnlto nnl
m tlw. 'PJt.C ( unvcnlllllt\ lout.. the 'Sllllll' hut mor~
~~~ Let\ c:vcryhudy ru'h Mound 11ntl have .1 gou\1
tunc
h111t wtthnut ••vcr really "ttrug down aud
dcn d mg Jll'il who~t J "~nud 111m:" 101!\hl b~ llave .1
''run~ -.cn•1e that tl you haVl' nn td c&lt;t •&gt;I tlh'
appc:arant:c or led of wh.11 Y~'ll .If&lt;' 1ry1ng '" 111111,
lm:at10n o f that t.lt•s~rc d l'nd l)llllll hn"IIIC:' wllmtl·ly
llltlh.' dlffiLllll
So what h.Jppc:n' " I hang out lnr .1 wlult 111 .1
'1tuat111n where I Jill hav1 ng .111 tht'"' Iunny
lcchngs;strange v1hratu&gt;n,, dOd then n111h"""' \IJI h
to set m AU these people Jrc dutng th l\, 'u •t 111u-.c
hJvc some sense of mcamng
yes·• 1 hcrl' " ,
dtft'! c ul t y in trustmg my JUdgement when
ou tnumbered 500 to I I he reasoning hct.:ll ll t&lt;''t
somet hing a long th e h nc' ot , " Wl'IJ , all th" rno~t be
~e rving som e sort o f purp&lt;~~c Nuw w hy can't you
f1gure out wh at it 1s?"
( P urpos.e . tn lhts sense ~:over~ d rnull1tud c of
s1ns. At thc rock botto m of wh1o.:h IS the t.&gt;X flCl' fali&lt;&gt; n
t h at people· d o tht ngs for reasons , that humdn
bdlavtor IS casu ally o n en t ed ThJ.S IS r01.:k bottom l nr
me because if it a.m' t so then the wh('lle world may.
in fact. be as chaotic as I secretl y suspect I sec re i Jy
suspec t it is. There must be some order in thl'
u n iverse, somewhere ... musn't t h ~re7)
I have I.his th eory, see
. th at all theorists are
bask aJiy contro l freaks wh o are workin g very ha rd at

gru1mp

ma k mg an un in telligible world personall y t o lerable
My pe rso nal diffi culty is bemg ve ry gullible. Peo ple
te ll m e that th ey are d o ing t tungs t o good
re aso n/ purpose. E ve n whe n th ere is a stro ng sen se o f
d oubt a bout the effect ivenes..~ o f th e m e thod t o get
to t he sta ted goal my tend enc y is to k ee p m y m o ut h
sh ut If som eo ne is abo ut to pou r gasoli ne on a fire
lhtn k1n g il is wate r , o r tf th ey are d ri vang west o n the
thruw ay to gel to Ne w Yo rit C ity , m ention of thiS
w tll b e m ad e . O t he rwiSe, see ms as 1f II IS th e1 r
busmess h o w t hey get from one place to another If
sctence fiction co n ven tio ns t u rn peo p le o n . see m s as
1f I can't argue w1th t hat A!"iutn g with o ther
peo ple's feeli ngs neve r go t an ybod y an y whe re,
any ho w .
My confusio n from t he conventio n came
bllslca ll y fro m fee bn g to tall y o ut o f touch with
reahty Bem g surrou nd ed by people who loo k as 1f
t hey baSicall y want th1ngs from ot her people b ut
:tren't gett m g t hem m ak es me fee l ve ry nei"Yous
Wh~~:h may he because I get so fouled up w he n t h e
'11l uat10n of u nfulfi lled wants extsts bet ween
wmeo ne else and myself S uc h a Si t uat ion feels
stutty My respo nse ts an an x1o us tenden cy t owards
Otghl . so that all these people ha ve t o be ge ttJng
som ethin g to sta y - bu t w hat th e h ell IS tl? M-asst ve
co n fusJO n - o n m y pa rt , no tlhei r's
It ts ha rd to ba ck o ff lh tngs once you have an
lnv..-stmenl
Wh ether 11 he a scie n ce-fich on
co nven tiOn o r a perso n
Yo u eit her have an
expect at1 on of wh al should hap pen , or of what
hdppened once and w u good , so you hang m there
an d hope a lot Only. 11 seems, to be even more
d tsappomled w hen such e xpe ct ai iOn s/ hopes/ w iS hes
11re not met People must have reaJi y deep needs to
hang m m suc h occastons Som e of t he people I
!..new who had been to w nters work shops m
~o.o nnclllon wit h conventmm, were lOm pan ng notes
abou t t he people t hey had bo t h seeu at the three or
lour eve nts t hey had bee n to . I f someb ody w asn't
g&lt;.'tlmg somet h in g they w ould even t uall y stop
lOiru ng back alter it beca m e dear th at t here wasn ' t
o~nyt h mg t here
wo uldn't they? The same goes for
people who work on suc:h CVl~nts It ~eem~ obv1o~
t hut I here must be some reward for as much eftor1 as
they expend Peo ple d o n't work h&lt;Ard JUSt 10 feel
lrust ra tcd
do t hey''
( &lt;&gt; nlu~10n
A seno;e of wrongn e~ .1nd
unlullf1llmenl, hut 11 keep\ un happ~nmg so 11 must
bt&gt; real on soml.' h:vcb Or nc:uruttl Or hnth M y
f..-e h ng IS th at as p~o plc s tart to open up and have
m111c Sl.'nsc.of w hat~~ rmrnrtant tll lhem. as t h~y gc:t
111 lllU I.. h w1 t h tlun~' c:xtcrn.JI anti perh up1&gt;. for thcm
mnrc.• rcJI, they ou tgrow uscll'SJ&gt; c:xpc nd lturl"' c1t
c:ncr~y But then I .Jiway' Wall " ra t 10nahst o n o ne:
\Ide, and .1 rumanlrt. o n the other, and who know\
wh1d1 ~•de IS s peakmg no w ll .1v~ a !!OCHI wcd. l· nd
Spnng when~ an t hull

ADO E:.NOU M I wo u ld feel rem 1ss tl I •ltd n 1•t
ment1 o n T he C'omm11tee lor ReJe ction ol 01HWXII1US
Cornrnc rcials (CROC) I h •~ mga ntutto n , f (H $1 ~cnl
lu C ROC, Box 1022 Minm•apohs, M1nnesota , wtll
send YllU a bumper \Iicker, etght card~ of p rol cst to
'end to sponson., a butto n , a rnem bersh1p t:drd and
two orlictal C ROC ballots Wit h one y o u gel t o vole
fo r t ht 10 most nbnolu o os lO m merctals and t he
ut her IS to vo te for the t en m~ l enjoyable. They
throw 10 free a hst ol 8 1 n.Jit('lna l co m meretals
n o rn1nated by C ROC members, cncl udmg a
de~cnp llon of t he ad s in q ues t ion . But, h urry vot ing
doses Apnl 30th , and there real ly has no t bee n an
o pportu nt ty li ke t his si nce Paulsen ran for presid ent
'" 't,8 (And w here is P. P. when we really need him?)

�Emerson,
Lake
and Palmer

Musical
experimentation
by Norm Wahl
SptiCtrum M us•c Cflttc

The appearance last Saturday
mght at the Aud of Emerson,
Lake and Palmer, preceeded by
Dr. John the Night Tripper. was a
two-part lesson in how to be, and
how not to be, respectively. a wild
and colorful showman
Dr . John, let loose on stage
l~rst. had every thing gomg agamst
h1m a crowd angry at the more
than half hour delay in the start
of the concert; a very bad sound
system, and a parenthetical,
also ran status on the bill (wh1ch,
It k e the vice presidency. is
somet1mes not worth a p1tcher of
warm sptt) . However, the N1ght
,.,.pper h1mself was ult1mately hts
own demise. As he plodded
through 50 minutes of bonng
Voodoo music, several members
of the audience who had been
famil1ar w1th h1s earlier albums
agreed that Dr . John 1ust ain't
what he used to be.
Dr
John entered with a
matestlc stride as h1s band
throbbed away at their Jungle
rhythms. Apparently believing
that a "colorful" personality is
one who fits the descr1pt1on on a
literal level only. the bearded
Tripper sported a purple, ptnk and
yellow feathered headdress, a
stnped African robe, furs and
assorted baubles, bangles and
beads. He then cast fruit to the
aud1ence and sprinkled showers of
silver sparkles across the stage.
However. his personality
resembled that of an old drunkard
about to fall asleep, and his
mus1c1ansh1p was hardly better.
H1s vocals sounded like a
stupefied Captain Beefheart, his
gu1 tar so loing was totally
umnsptred and his p1ano work, a
ltttle s1mple honky tonk . must
have been making Ke1th Emerson
g1ggle backstage . H1s band
persistently kept up the African
rhy thms . repetitious riffs in
strange minor modes and
harmon1es with one or two-chord
patterns. The effect was quite the
oppostte of that apparently
intended 1t was suffocating rather
than hypnotizing. The audience
was appropriately unmotivated :
over half the crowd was totally
Silent at Dr . John's ex1t .
Walls of equipment
The road1es took 45 m1nutes to
set up for Emerson, Lake and
Palmer, and it was no wonder.
The stage was jammed w1th : a
three-keyboard Moog Synthesizer,
crowned with a vast panel of
knobs and switches, facing which
was a normal-sized organ with
Moog contraptions inside it, plus a
grand piano, and a small electric

harpsichord (all for Emerson) ; a
full·s1ze drum set, two gongs, one
of wh1ch was immense, and
various bells, chimes, and
woodblocks and so forth (all for
Palmer) . and equipment for a bass
guitar. lead electric guitar,
acoustiC guitar. and lead vocals
(all for lake) .
Not to mention the walls of
speakers, 1nclud1ng the
extravagant sum of four revolvtng
Leslies for Emerson's organs, and
a tape recorder to be used for
playing the fourth man on one of
their songs. It was well worth the
wait for the crowd, w ho filled 1ust
over hall of the Aud, and who
amused themselves (as usual) by
playmg mus1cal chairs to get
better seats. There was a
surprtsingly large number of
teenyboppers m the audience.
some o f whom were annoyingly
teenyboppensh .
Finally, the tno entered . The
open1ng song was an instrumental
(what else7) based on the old sea
shanty heard on Old Sp1ce
commercrals (whatever the hell
it's called). and was app roprtately
fa$t and flashy . White lake and
Palmer hung back and kept up the
rhythm on bass and drums.
Emerson's hands ran over the
Moog and organ keyboards lik e
Bobby Hayes running the
100·yard dash . Obviously tak ing
relish in his musical feats, Ke1th
stood hunched over the keys, feet
planted well apart, head bobbing
up and down, often reaching up

here and y&amp;lnk out a cord there,
oonsequentty changing the Moog's
sound instantt.aneously.
The Moog fulfilled its purpose
well, consta·ntly changing rnto
rainbows of tone colors as well as
assorted bleeps, gurgles and wails.
An essential feat for any
three ·man group trying (and
succeeding) to sound like n1ne,
Emerson ofttm stood between the
Synthesizer lind the organ, facing
out to

either side of h im , running
complex ly over both instruments
at once.
ElP's seoond "song" was
actually a sui te · "Tarkus," from
thetr second album, probably the
ftn est side they've yet recorded .
" It's got a story to it on the
album sleeve, but we prefer you
to use your own imaginat1on."
Emerson announced . Which is just
as well, because the science
illustrated

on the album IS embarrassrngly
stupid, and the music rs powerful
and brilliant.
Greg l ake delivered h1s f1rst
vocals here, as well as h1s only
electric gu1tar solo. and d1d a f1ne
10b of both. although the vocals
(and the bass) were sometimes
hampered by crackmg speakers.
Lake, the fyrtCISt of the group, is
the least flashy of the trio, but he
holds down his many duttes well .
Although the Iynes are usually
overwhelmed by the collective
tnstrumental complex1ty beh1nd
them. a careful l1stentng reveals
some f1ne ltnes
Audio·visual Moog
The Moog Synthesuer proved
1tself to be a total aud1o·v1sual
E'xpertence. After the beaut1ful
"Stones of Years" sect1on of
Tarlws, Emerson removed what
looked like a three foot sect1on of
a two·by ·four out of It, wh1ch was
connected by an electron1c
umbilical cord to the mother
Moog and wh1ch emttted an
earspl1tt1ngly loud wa1l , and
walked around the stage w1th 11
Playmg a melody on tt by
sltdmg some sort of regulator over
It , he staggered as 11 he were a
wounded animal clutching h1s
horn (probably supposed to be
part of the Tarkus story), and, to
the total surpnse of the audience,
leaped onto the floo1 wrth 1t He
walked thtrty teet up the center
a1sle and back with 1t, f611owed by
the orange spotl1ght The other
main surprise 1n the surte was the
omission of a few parts near the
end and the subst itution of an
organ improvisation built on
conllnueo on the following P•!le

-&lt;ohen

�intemity. After llight minutes,
howev., it had grown to rather
Intense volume and voluminous
intens ity. The tape recorder
somewhat of a disappoin tment. played a violin sectio n sound,
However, Emenon's piano solo which certainly Keith could have
was the high musical point of the played himself had he only had
concert. With his hands arched o n e mor e f i ng er. To
high over the keyboard (as his • commemorate the ~dden birth of
piano teacher must have told him the four-man group, the trio could
in grammar school), he ran have given the tape reoorder a
through a fascinating spectrum o f name; perhaps something like Hal
improvisatio n built on the piano would be nice.
The regular set was closed with
riff from "Pebble," each hand
working madly thro ughout the the last seventeen minutes of
10-m inute d isplay.
ELP's version of "Pictures at an
E x hi b ition." After all, there
Bologna's Bol•o
did n't seem to be any reason not
The tape recorder came 1nto to start the suite in the middle :
play in the next song. " Bologna's the p1ece has been hacked and
Bolero," from their torthcommg changed throughout Its existence
album. to be released 1n the States Written 1r1 1874 by Russian
in July The tune lacked the composer Modest Mussorgsky as a
vanety of thetr other pieces and collection of piano pieces
suites, It was a m llitarv ·sounding intended to suggest a d1splay of
song (w 1t h Pa lm er p laying drawings, paintings, and d esigns
marching-&lt;lrum style th roughout) by a recently deceased artist
whose only movement was a fnend, "Pictures" has undergone
gradually tncreasing volume and
two separate transformations 1nto

Experimentation ...
-c:onUnued fro m the prec.clllng page-

Greig's " In the Hall of the
Mo u n ta in K ing . " The fine
25· m in ut e piec e d eservedly
received the most enthusiastic
ovation of any slngle song.
'Take a Pebble," fro m ELP's
first, tu rned into another
25·minute extravangaza, featuring
ex tensive so loing and t he
sandwiching of their only AM
rad1o h it , "luc k y Ma n ."
Hampered by a few wrong notes
in Emerson's in troduction (played
by strummmg h1s fingernail across
the stnngs ins1de the grand piano)
and bad control 111 the first vocal
verse by lake, who 54Jddenfy
sounded as 1f he needed hrs vocal
chords retuned. t he piece
returned and stayed at ELP's
normal level o f tec h nical
precis1on lake soloed on acoustic
guitar only very bnefly before
seguemg into "lucky Man,"

orchestnll tcores.
l ast year, Emerson, lake 11nd
Palmer re co rded their
inter pret atiOn live , t o tally
omitting she of the ten " pictures"
and Inserting a few of their own
pjeces - which were to tally
unrelated and ludicrously out of
place. However, the last half of
th e ir vers ion , wh ich th ey
mercifully chose to play, stuck
ver y cl01ely to the original score,
luckily. in sections such as th is·
ELP does a very fine job . ''The
Great Gate of Kiev" is particularly
powerful, 1ncluding a climactic
vocal by Greg l ake and two
beautiful. quiet organ interludes.
The end of the piece was
some t hing that certamly
Mussorgsky never mtended. but
was a fascmatmg s1ght anyhow.
Emerson, who had been dabbling
1n the aforement1oned cosmic
bleeps, burps and squeals on h1s
Moog here ancl there, now
indulged himself 10 a ventable
orgy of electroniC noises. The
scene was rem.niscent of Hendrix

Why doesrit General Electric
talk about thermal pollution when they
talk about nuclear power plants?
Gener;tl Eledr i\· Ita:-; hl't:n talking

nul'l~at· poWl't' plant~ &lt;&gt;ver !'I ince we
pion~a·ed them in lhe fiftiE'~ Anc1 we

think lht&gt;y &lt;·nn lwl p solve America'"'
in the 70',!-; anti HO's.

~ner~ Jwoblt:m~

_
'

_

it i£•s h&lt;lVf&gt; been financiallv involved 1n
aon :-.uch stu(lie~. .

()\'('1 '

(;ood t&gt;l1' ect. &lt;!

Rot we'n• ;al:-;o awa r·t• that nuclea1· l t's been fou ncl, in Hom~ cklst!s, adding
power· ha.s prohlt.•m.s of itR own. heat to wate1· can ac·tually lx• bent!...........~ ......_ l'rohlem.s wodh led king fkinl. Wa r m iaTig&lt;tlion wate1· has ex·
lenclt'&lt;l g 1·owing ~ect~ons~
~ ~. ~~""'\. ah(lul. Like thC'
Wa1·m w:at&lt;•r has
~
'-"" ~ , ] ) t•nvinmrrwnl.
&lt;·n•alt•cl tl&lt;'W
•
·•- ·• ~
~·'f{
Al·Lually, Wt? fl·ll
\\ antt•ring po11dt.·~~~-• • ...."· • , ..
""~: ...
on(• of llw g-r&lt;&gt;al&lt;&gt;sl alon~
w&lt;tlt&gt;l'·
! ' ~
~~,,
~
atlvantag-efl of
mi~1·ation ~K
..Jil!\l
\ ~·, nuel(•:tl' IXlWt•r· fowl
ruult&lt;s. ·F lorida · \ '·
• d. ); \\o a :-. l·nvi l'llf1 - is usi n~ it to ~row sh1·1 tnl• an&lt;llnh~t.et·
.
• • • ,~ 1~n tal.
In Tt•xa~. i I '~'~ in&lt;'n•asing tlw Wt·i~hl of
c·ommPn:ial t.•at Iish lty as much :1~ filii I',·

~~l.tU~~

~

fec·l on aquatic life. Mo re than 97 uti I

~J.t:11..-

-·

----.

Unlik&lt;&gt; fo~~il - fut~l&lt;'tl powf&gt;t· plants,
tlwr&lt;' is 110 smokt! lu pollull•llw air.
But ltkt• fossil -fta'h•tl pl:mt~, tht&gt;t'«'
n; warnrE•tl walt•r rPieas 1•d lo sur rounding walt't· way~
{ 'oohng i t.

Wt• r·rrogn I~(· lhenna I pollution as a
~ t·t·io u~ Jll'ohh·m. And C E ami Amt&gt;l'i&lt;':t ':-. ut ilit i(•R :11'e worl&lt;ing on lhea·mal
prohlrm:- al nuclt:&lt;U' sites.,.-.....,.....,.....oll a plan t-hy-plant has is.
Many people do n' t
•·ealize, for exampl t&gt;, that
ul ilittf'~ a•·e t·equil'ed by
fede •·allaw to design and
ope,.ate thei1· plants with·
in I PmpHatu re limits
f11'Psc·•·ihed hy the states.
So utilities arespendrnJ.! mdliom~ of dollars on
dilution control Rystems,
('ool •ng- ponciR anrl cooling
to\\'t•r..; to c•omply.
Hut. m addition, utiltt it·s al't' sponsoring basicl£-.-....;:.l~.l.U...-111
t'Pst•:11·c·h on hNlt (''\l'hangc a n() its ef·

Work to lw d one.

Li sti11g tlwsr hrnellts rs llnl In bt.•g-llw
rs.s1 w. Tlae1·mal t•fft•t·t s t·t•m;tin a tough
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plant m u ~t he t•ou.sidl•rt-d iruliviclu
a lly. in it~ own t•nvi1·onment. :rnd this
is hei nJ!' rlcme.
(;C'nel·a l F.lt&gt;&lt;·trk. tlw utihlll'S anrl
C'n,·ironmenl&lt;lli.sts will continut• tn
work hard. RN·ausr \\t' think the ad
V&lt;mlages of nudt'&lt;ll· puwt•r· far· out
weigh the cl i s advant;~ges.
Why a re we r unni ng th is ad?

It's one arl of a se ries on th(• Jll'oblem:of man ancl hi s envi1·onment torlay.
An!l t he ways technology 1s ht&gt;lpin~ to
solve them
Th(' JH·nhlcms nf IIlii' envu·unmcnt
(not just nudea1· powct· probl ems 1
concel'n us l&gt;&lt;'rause thev wtll afft•ct 01&lt;·
future of this countt·v itnd thi::; planet
We have a :.take in that futm·e. A~
busineRsmen. And. si mply, ns people
If you arc concerned too, Wf\'d like
t.o hear fr·om you. Wl'ite Genc1·aJ Elel'·
tt'ic, Dept. 901-CN. fi70 Lexington
Avenue, New York, N . Y. 1()(122.

GENERAL. ELECTRIC

at Monterey Pop: both the sight
end the sound w• pure mayhem .

Nuttockw
After the last triumphant chord
of "Pictures at an Exhibition "
the group left, only to be recall~
by the enthusiastic crowd. The
encore was yet another 25·m inute
pieoe, opening with a hun k o f
91tfbage called " Nutrocker." This
is a variation on Tschaikovsky's
" Nutcracker Su ite," credited (o r
discredited) on the record version
to o ne Kim Fowley. Ki m Fowley
shou ld be d ragged into a backyard
and shot. The piece sounds like a
33 RPM record of the original
played at 78 and backed with a
1950 's rock beat. If ever an
otherwise excellent grou p lapsed
into bad taste, this is it If the
government ever forms a corps of
Music Police, this w1ll be the lnst
p1ece to get busted.
Thankfull y, the group then
moved in to variations on Dave
Brubeck's "Rondo a La Turk," a
p1ece which Emerson had played
w1 th his prev1ous group, the Nice .
After a few mOfe war cr1mes on
the organ, Carl Palmer took h1s
turn as solo1st . The eight mmute
solo moved along 1mpresstvely
True to the nature of the group,
he did his share of
one man bandmg ; he cl1maxed the
demonst ration of h1s percuss1on
1nstrument collection by
thumpmg a syncopated bass lme
w1th h1s feet, doing a mass1ve roll
on the two gongs beh md h1m wllh
his hands, and grabbing a rope
dangling from the clapper of the
bel l hanging above h1m 1n h1s
teeth, playing it with Jerks of h1s
head.
This v1sual wonder was
followed by Emerson's thtrd and
cf1mact ic atrocitY orgy. If this sort
of t hing had been going on tn
Sw1uerland in 1954. the Geneva
Convent1on would have outlawed
Moogs. Emerson maltreated h1s
organ (not the giant Moog, but
t h e medium~ized organ with
Moog devices ins1de it) in a
manner t hat would have reduced a
normal B- 3 to a smoking pile of
s p i inters and tra nsistors. He
mounted tt, rocked it across the
stage hke a bronco, let It fall on
top of h1m (and played 1t there,
despite the fact that the keyboard
was backwards to him). and
finally stabbed 1t wtth a large patr
of kn1ves. Any doubt that the
knives were real was removed IJy
the roadie who, after the show,
unstuck them from the speaker
cab 1net Emerson subsequently
threw them into .
The group exited after an hour
and three·quarters to tnurnphant
mus1c from the tape recorder . The
crowd seemed well pleased with
the spectacle of mus1cal (and
non mus1cal) events, and nghtfy
so. ELP is mov1ng into areas that
few. if any. other groups are
experimenting with in quite so
who l e · hearted a manner
adaptatiOn of class1cal themes 8f'ld
pieces, extensive use of the Moog
(whiCh the Moody Blues and Pink
Floyd have done fine work w1thl ,
and the multiplication of a
three man sound to an orchestral
sound
Somebody should
exper1ment w1th this stuff, and
this group 1s domg an adm~rable,
if not infallible, job ot 1t
As for keyboard wtzard
Emerson. he may fall short of. say
Leon Russell's soul or Elton
John's lyricism, but no man '" the
h1story of rock has a more
flawless l&lt;eyboard techmque, the
strength, speed, and precision of
his hands is simply amazing.
Rolling Stone recently called him
"the Alvin Lee of the keyboard, '
but th1s is obviously a very weak
analogy ; Emerson's musical
complex1ty, variety and sense of
lyrtcism 1s someth1ng that
llghtntng·ftngered guitanst lee
will nev::lr have And he sure does
beat Dr John the Night Tripper ·

�Humble Pie: ego trip at Auditorium
' {hi) story begins in a car on a hitch to Main Street . I
ask the front seat if they know anything at all about
Humble Pie, and they say they don't , but their friends like
them. Wishing to keep the conversation going, I ask about
t he other group playing tonight, Sweathog. ( I d on't ask
about King Crimson because I already know who they
are.) Anyway. when I mention that Sweathog is playing at
this concer1 tonight, the fro nt seat reacts. "Sweathogl
Let's go! Wow, they're great . You gotta see them !" I tell
them I will If they'd please drive a little faster . It's late.
On the bu5 down Main to Buffalo Square Garden, I
meet a member of Karma. That's the name of his rock 'n'
roll band. You may have heard of them - they played at
one of the Undercurrent benefits. The group is from
Chicago, and it was there t hat they cut a record (a 46) fo r
a company called Onk . He had a little box of about fifty
reco rds and asked me if I wanted to buy one. I asked him
if it sounded at all like Pharoah Sanders' Karma and was
d1sappoented when he said no, one side 1s a version of a
Cream song and the other an original . We were both
headmg for the same place, but he was gomg there to sell
his record I had no record to sell, so I had to settle for a
rock concert
Turnstiles and umforms
Finally instde First I' m struck by the seze of the
lobby, then the large numbef of tue nsteles to enter through
(how can I choose). then by all the uniforms, brass
t&gt;unons, hats and suits There weren't really so many, et
JUSt seemed like the whole show was run by Edmund
Muskee (whech 11 wasn' t!)
All the ushers were faerly old men who weren' t at all
a part of the scene there. What I' m trymg to say is that the
concert was Quite blatantly JUSt an extenseon o f their
commer c ial, tolerable if·it·means·money, poisonous,
parasiter.al, self-destructeve ever ravenou!. non-culture . It is
precesely that non-culture whec h we have got to break
away from . That opening impresseon lasted all night and
gave everyth ing an air of ridicu lousness, making it more of
a spectacle than a musec concert .
About ten minutes later, after lots of moving
around, I found my seat. It seems the ushers were so busy
chasing kids out of seats that no one bought tickets for
anyway, and not letting anybody stand up (stand up!) that
large crowds of people who could have used an usher were
left waetmg
Sweathog was tremendous. They have two guitars, a
bass, piano, and drums, and they made t he absolute most
of them all . Very rarely did anyone solo, and except for
shouts of joy, no vocals. Everyone played almost all the
ume - an sort o f soloing together, and the result was
almost transcendental. The inner harmonees whech came to
the musical consceousness were so full o f life«1ergy that it
was impossible not to feel it, let alone smele. Their entere
set, much too short, consested simply of a song called
"Sweet Lady ," not yet released 1n thes country . which
they all improvesed from Though theer playing was not
partecularly ennovatlve, there is much to be learned from
them about potenteals tor musical expresseon of mstinctual
human compatabelity and spiritual harmony Well ,
someone's got to do it tf the others are goeng to follow
Kmv Crimtcm
King Crimson now comes on, but there es trouble
The sound system isn't workmg right, so it's not very loud,
among other thmgs. And m a mammoth canyon like
Buffalo SQuare Gard en, the sound has got to be perfect to
be loud enough, or it'll never drown out the echo. So

they're struggling along and the c rowd gives them hell .
It wasn't nearly a fair fight . Thousands of voices
yelling " louder, louder, louder, louder'' versus a pootly
powered mellot ro n playing "Ciritus." I was getting into the
song - it has a very nice flavor to it at any volume -and I
even let a few hecklers have it with a truly vicious HtJyl
IMiy don 't you llwt uplll, but the masses won out and
King Crimson stopped in the middle and walked off,
disgusted.
A member of the Buffalo Festival then told everyone
that the sound has to be fixed , it' ll take about twenty
minutes, then King Crimson will be back . I was su rprised. I
had assumed that they were fini shed for the n ight. I guess

it's harder than I thought to get angry at thousands of
people trying to shout you down. Maybe I just don't
understand rock ' n roll . So, for a while anyway. it's canned
music . Speculations during canned music :
The drummer looked cool. Mr . Clean saw a pecture
of him and it was captioned lan Mc Donald . The singer
sounded like Mel Collin5, but Mel Coll ins plays sax and the
sax player o n stage sounded semelar to the recordings I've
heard . And the singer was also playing bass Gordon
Haskell7 I don't think he was the one who sang ' 'Cirkus"
on Liz¥d, but he did play bass. Or was that Peter Giles7
Of course, the answer is that Greg Lake is back . And mat
does look like Keith Emerson. Maybe I' m at the wrong
concert.
The sax p la yer was Mel Collens
the records don' t
lie. And of course Robert Fnpp played gue tar He actually
plays the electnc guitar sttung in a chair, wh1ch means
somethmg, but h•s solo wasn' t too meaningful . Sull, •t was
better than all but the best There was a long sax solo , but
it sounded too electriC whete to be mterestmg . There was
no mellotron playing at all except for the aborted attempt
at "C~rkus, " and that was a desappomtment . The th ummer
took a long solo and was pretty createve and musecal. but
at the end of et he was completely exhausted and could
hardly play their last number, whech was 2 1st Century
Schizoid Man .
But there was sometheng wrong With even that song.
It 's 1972 now, and It was written by early 1969, even
earlie~ . So It's at least three years o ld Surely in all that
time a song goes through changes. Well , 2 1st Century
Sch izoid Man didn't sound a day over In The Court Of The

Crimson King. Or a day different. Was it the Fountain of
Youth? Immortality? Or a tape loop? Most rod( ~ups'
live performances bear remarkable resemblances to their
records. Question : Is this coincidence?
What King Crimson succeeded in doing was to
eliminate all the characteristics which make it unique as a
rock band and not even bother to replace them with
anything. The result was kind of stale. And not very loud
either.

Hu mble Pie
So it's time for Humble Pie to come on. First
everything on stage is moved up much closef to the edge.
They obviously want to bring the ir music closer to the
people. Then the group comes bouncing out on stage.
They are th ree guitars (one a nifty four·stringer) and the
drums. And they began . Loud Very loud. And all o f a
sudden there 1s a row o f Marshall Amplifiers lined up side
by side the length of the stage.
Question : Why didn't Humble Pie let King Crimson
use thelf eQuipment? I can think of only one answer, and
it's not founded on any humanistic princeples Didn 't
anybody listen to Sweat hog 7
Suddenly a photographer appea• s 11ght '" front of
the stage Flash/ And he desappeared as fast as he came
Humble Pee es Stell at II, but n·s really not so bad It
may be a little bonng and repeteteous. but there es no
vulganty (of a certaen type, 11 can be quete otfenseve for
some reason) and they make tew demands on my attention
- my mend 15 tree to wander . whech es ruc e. But even weth
thrs lu xury o f tree thought, I spend most of the teme
watcheng the hand
The spotlight ·~ very bnght tomght. I wonder if
Steve Marnott. standeng rn the meddle o f •t. noteces
hmmmm
change the H to an E
get
Humble Pee
nd of the UMB
the L to a G
hmmm
no E ..
the P to an 0
and
uhhh
that's et The name of
thes game is E G 0 , over and over agaen Agam the
photographer appears Flash I And d1sappearrs

The boys in the band
Who are the Humble Pees? Dave Clempson the lead
guitarist , es new to the group. He was recently purchased
from Colliseum for warvers, and 1t looks good tor the
Humble Pies He ded okay weth his fingers, okay with hes
voice, and was very mto the whole act I think he's also
pretty much a mus1cean (my own standards apply here) . I
hope he enjoys what he's doing for a while, but for some
reason I doubt that he'll remaen happy for very long. Still,
he'll have to stick around untel hes contract expires.
There was a bass player , who dedn't do much, and a
drummer, who ded enough to surprese. but not to satisfy
me. And fenally there was Steve Marnott, a showman at
heart, an ex Small Face, and very functeonal vocalrst. He
turned on everybody who came, and they all stood up (at
the end) , sang along a Iettie bet. and clapped hands Also
there were a lot of Woohs and Ooohs floatrng around the
echo chamber It had a nece effect, and 1f I was mto It I
txobably would have le ked 11 a lot more Steve belted oul
the songs ancJ Juml)8(1 around lel..e a stae, and when et was
over , everybody stood up and screamed, a fresh , c lean ,
green steeped to wel was waetmg for each Humble Pee and
theer managt!r fo llowed them ento theer cJressmg rooms
carrymg an attache case full of dollae bills their share of
the gate receepts It was a very romantiC scene
- Norman Slant
Pa•port &amp; 1.0 Photos

rELAAK STUDIO

St u art Enter prises and WPhD Brln&amp; You

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~:;.:1

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APRIL 18th
M EMORIAL AUDITORIUM-7·: 30 P.M.
Reserved Seats-$5.50, $4.50 •

General Admission-$3.00

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�Smokey Robinson:
a great artist retires

Avant garde

April orgy of theater energy
The last four of five years hav•
brought with them a new concept
o f the avante garde Pop culture
has become mass culture. Susan
Sontag m ight now be expected to
redefine her early sixties
definition of Camp because camp
has made a comeback . The group
theater movement (mirroring our
growrng tendencies toward
communality and group activity)
is rega thering Itself tn new bursts
o f ac tivity. The Public Theater has
expanded Its capacity a nd is go1ng
nat iona l. The Chelsea Theater
Center in Brooklyn is, easi ly, o ur
most vttal model for future
expert mental art pertormance
spaces.

Superlatives would seem quite
silly at this point. Smokey
Robinson 's retiring from touring
and from now on unless you have
some kind of "in" at Motown,
like knowing Beny Gordy, the
only way you're 90ing t o hear him
perform is on record . Now if you
missed Smokey and the Miracles
last Friday n ight at Kleinhans
then you better start lookmg up
Gordy's pho ne number; although
making friends won't be all that
likely a possibility - say about as
likely as putting Ali and Frazier in
the same ring and not h avi ng one
of them throw a punch The only
other alternative I can think o f IS
being a super rock cnt1c or
something like that. but I'm not
sure an yo ne would want the
dlstmc tion .

Theatre Orgy

So of you mtssed Smokey's
concert whether rt was because
you were elsewhere, or you didn't
have the cash. or you were 1ust
too lazy. well that's def1n1tely
you r loss. It w1ll just be one less
th1ng to tell your grandchtldren
when you're old and graytng and
they're asktng you what 1t was
hke rn the qlonous s1xt1es and
seventies. Come on man. when tS
the last t1me you heard people
scream ing at a concert 7 I mean,
they were screaming w1th actual
del1ght, no t because somebody
just stepped on th em

Thos month's Orgy of Theatre
Energy (sponsored by the Theater
Department by way of a grant
from the Pfe•fer Foundation) ts
both retrospec t•ve of where
moc1ern theater has been gomg tn
the last few years. and. more
Impor tant. tt ts an tndtcattOn of
dtrect1ons for the future
The very na t u te of th•s
untvers•ty's new Center for
Theater
Researt.h and
Pe. formance Laboratory •s c~n
example of th e concentrated new
energy that tS betng used to
formulate new thedtet dynamtcs
The Orgy. wh1ch llegan
Monday , wolf cont1nue unt1l April
28, all events w1ll take place m the
Hamman L1brary Studto Theat• e
Tontght the Chtcaqo Protect (d
per fat mance company based at
Columbta College tn Ch1 caqo) w1ll
perform thetr play ChtneSI!

Webster
Diet ionaries
Library s in . unabridged
edition. br.md new. stiJI in box ,
('ost new .S45 .00

We'll sell for $15
Deduc t I 0% em ord~r
of 6 o r more

National Liquidators
3053 Main Street
Buffalo. New York

W1secrackers The ptece u t ili zes
Zen parables. Gree k myths, 30's
mustc. T .V. commercrals, and
whateve1 else can be found . The
performance will be repeated on
Saturday, followed by a cntoque
headed by Er 1ka Monk, th e ed1tor
o f Performance magazine. Tickets
lot the performance cost $ 1 00
and w1ll be on sale at the Norton
Hall Box O lf1ce

Ridteulous theater
Sunday n•ght at 8 p m bnn g&lt;;
th e Broom Stteet Theater tn dll
Open Rehearsal of thetr
ll' O&lt;hortoon of A M1dswnmer
Night 's Dream The Broom Street
Q&lt;OUI) dre a sort ol mtd Wel.tern
theater of the Rodtculous Theu
tHoductiOII replaces the Pyo am us
and Tht~lw farce wt th an act frum
Tone Our lor Ginger. a football
comecly
The rehearsal w1ll be followed
by a Crt t1que headed by R1chard
Gtlman. formerly a crittc lor
Newsweek and Commonweal . Mr
Gilman w1ll be leading a
t..IISCuss1on o f Peter Handke's wurk
on Monday, April 17 a t 4 p tTt
The dtscuss1on wtll he

M11rHJtly thnJ

/\1)::, n1ay he
F- ncJ,vy between

resale.

lltf ~'''11 £Nl
' ''' "

t\

1

UH! hi\•
4~r1dthurMI

\1\lt.RH' A

4 ' 30

p.no

on the screen

TONIGHT at 8:15p.m .

Plaza North
ISSt .. r. ILYI. U4-1Slt

·. '

:.,.J

/

'-

ANGERT'S
651 I IIOADWAY
IS2 · 17JO

o,.. nen. '

ddler
~~
PANAVISION-

COlOR

llndad ......

Tickets
Available
At Box Office

rtR ST DIKF.

~:., I•. ~~..~~~~~~!".!~~~v ..J

15 wurds dUd

i·'

~-

Sttll the amount of adula tton
Smokey rece1ved (he deserves
every btl of tt) simply amated me
I was shuffling back to nw seat
a ft e1 intermission having JUSt
fintshed a gin a nd to nt c (a writer's

1- 3-5-10 Speeds

' U'!;t fur e,u. f,
Wtlfd S I ()0
fut edt.n AcJdtltOndt day f t1e df!adH"e
f u r M onaav 1\ Frtddy f or Wedne\0\)V.
t t\ Monday, dnO t ot I • lddV •t ,._

NOW
~
:-...
IN ITS
.
THIRD
MONTH

d ,.,

••t ie\ uf _.., dllltu •1ne

St 1 ~ ~ tor

weoneso.tv ov

.

Deserved adulation

COLUMBIA
·s

ploll ll&lt;l
~

"uHI •l ]0 lJ l fl .H ..l~S N o ti Oil H\JII

No dcal er&lt;o , e a ch volume
specaficaJiy ~t amped nol fur

When •s the last ume you hea1d
people swooning as they d te1 when
Smokey h1t those oh so lovely
high notes7 Maybe they do at the
Osmond's concerts (whtch was
gotng on at the same ttme), hut
Donny's no Smokey. and I don't
know 1f those screams had the
same ovet tones When Smokey
sanq "we could make tt baby."
one of hts ardent adm.rers
shouted back "we sure could " I
don't know if th1s type of ty 1ng
happens at the Osmond's (maybe
tt does in code). because I'm not
and can never be twelve years old
aga1n no matter how hard I try

AD INFORMATION
o I 1\';)'&gt; I~ I( I I

837-1110

accompanied by a readmg of
Handke's Self A ccusat1on
The Broom S treet Theater wt11
be perform tng thetr Hot Wankel
play on Monday at 8 p .m . The
p1ece has been descrtbed as
" Amencan Pop w1 th Kabuk1
over t ones . " Ttckets can be
Pltrchascci at th e box Qffrce
T h e following three days
c:onstst ma1nly of a series of
lectllles The frrst , on Tuesday ,
A p11l 18 a t 4 p m . w1ll be o n th e
process of playwrtghttng,
delovererl by Robert Montgomery .
Jutho1 o f Svb1ecr To Fits On
Ap11t 19 at 10 am. Ntkos
P~rhdtOI)Oulos w1ll be conducttng
" workshop •n scene study At 8
p m he w1ll lead a cn ttque ol
three short plays wesented hy the
Student Theater Gu1ld
JOSeJJh Papp wtll deltver a
lecture ca ll ed "A Popular
Theater" at 8 p m . on Apnl 20.
Mr Papp rs the founder of the
Public Theater and ts th e Producer
of the New York Shakespeare
Festtval
Rev1ews o l these events and
th11 schedule for next week will
qpea1 in the next Prodigal Sun

h L ' "'

• h•dln~ :r·\\'h~~l f"n a nd Tandt"ms. 9,.._,.,
lrnm s:w.so. ;\h.. ur . F.mplrl', BanJr..Amt'rl

ru • tl hmhwl h ·rm•'

3 BIKE LOCAT IONS

•

Sue" 1t BalleJ
121- 1600

o,u '-•n ' rro. '"'

The money we spend
an Vietnam
Eauld make fish
spawn in lake Erie.
Help AmeriEa.
Write your Congressman today.
Help UnMII The Wet . 8oal03, F.D.R. Station, Hew York. H. Y. 10022

Performance.

affectation) when Smokey end
the Miracles appeared on stage. I
don't think ft would be too muctt
of an exaggeration (though some
writers have been known to
exaggerate for effect), to say I was
nearly trampled to death by the
crowd trying to get back to thei r
seats. Though dazed and confused
the concert was a refreshing bit of
life espectally in the light of the
last few concerts I've attended
And speaking of life, as the
poet said "life" isn't that what
Smokey's songs are all about
Smokey captures the joys and
pams o f living with just a bit o f
self reflection thrown in to tak e
his songs that extra notch h1gher
But this isn't the place to talk
abou t the songs. I suggest you go
ou t and buy a co up le of the
m.racles' albums, preferably some
o f th e earlier ones, and give them
a listen Alter domg that you
certatnly won't need anyone to
te ll you how good they ate
Actually you don't even have to
do that All you have to do •s tune
up your AM radio consciousness
and remember "Tracks of My
Tears" etc
That should be
suff1c1ent.
Speaking of AM radto hns the
first song that Smokey and the
Mtracles did was ''Tear6 of a
Clown." Smokey didn't have an
orchestra as he dtd on the smgle.
but he did have Marv Tarplin
playing gu1 tar li ke he was the
orchestra
Ma rv 1S also th e
co writer o f a number o f
Smokey's hits 1nclud1ng "Tears of
a Clown " Smokey also had
someone (I forget who) playtng
flute and dtrectlng the band.
He was dressed tn an all red
1ump su1t which was ptettv flashy ,
but he had to be in red you see
'cause Smokey and the Miracles
were all dressed tn vtrgmal wh•te
JUmp su•ts with silver boots Not
that that made any dtfference
because they would have sounded
90od no matter what they were
weanng Havmg them dressed tn
wh•te though was almost dazzling
enough so that they didn't have to
smg, but smg they dtd

lovely and powerful voices
Smokey and h1s high school
pals the "Mtracles" were in top
form . Although they sometimes
didn't remember all the words to
the songs that they audience had
request ed and that the Miracles
grac1ously accepted to do , the
parts of the songs that they did
were noth1ng less than perfect
Ne1ther is Smokey's 1101re In the
old days people used to thtng that
Smokey was a gtrl , but now they
know better What I d1dn't know
however was JIIS1 how strong h•s
vo1ce ts Smokey could hold hts
mtcrophone at h1s navel and st1ll
smg loud enough to be heard
throughout Kletnhans. and sttll
'eta1n the lovely ~ualtty that we
have all come to tdenttfy h1s vo1ce
With
As I satd at the begtnning
supetlattves at thts potnt seem
qutte Silly St1ll 1t would be a
grievous overs•ght not to say that
Smokey's 1n a class where few
others belong The only th1ng that
comes to mind at this pomt 1s that
old blues line "It's not whdt you
do, but how you do it " For
Smokey the line needs some
alteration. It's not only what he
does that makes h im grea t. but •t 's
how he does it. At Klemh ans
F • tda y n 1ght was a perfect
t!xample, and unfortunately t he
last time we're ever going to get to
see tt
-Robbie Lowman

�by Stanley Dayan
I

In add itio n t h ere are radio st atio ns whose sole
purpose i.s t o deliver the word of God, to t ell us
abo ut o ur salvatio n thro ugh th e sacrifi ce of His
o n ly-beso tt en iOn J esus. The new C h ristians h ave
more zeal and con fid en ce than at any t i me I can
rem embe r. They are filling the air; one should trust
in God and J esus and yi eld t o God's w ill. They
counsel n ot to atte m pt the fo lly of being responsible
for one's own destiny
bu t to let God b e master.
I f suc h tlti ngs are spoken so o ft en they m ust b e
true. Y et again th e anti-ch ristians h ave not spok en
But can o ne cast doubt on the benef1t of Ch ristian
teaching? Is thue maybe some other reason why the
enemies of Christianity are silent?
Now the believers give us the Word 10 words. We
could not have seen t he message ourselves. fhey
repeat it day and night . They not only tell us the
Word bu t they keep telling us o r we forget it. But
this is very con fusing .
When a man or a woman mdwells, looks so
deeply into himself, the disclosure ~:an not he told.
least of all an words. The strong, whr)se truth comes
from their bowels can hardly say what they know
nor would any understand .
T he Christians 11 seems have made God
knowable and tangib le. T hey. speak of Him as
seten tists speak of quan tity
w11h complete
assurance. But IS Jt not sacrilege to pretend that the
anguish ed cry is answered? Can one ever k n ow,
really y , what he 1s or even where?
An essential part of the human condllton IS the
ability to ask w here there 1S no poss1hle answer

•

..

•

•

Unsati~factory

Price of geatrress
In reference to E.l . Schoenfeld's letter 10 the
Aprtl I 2 tssue of The Sputrum, I would like tu
dmty some deta1ls Firstly, typos will happen (Tch
I ch . L As to your tmming que..~t ion, I ca n only
assume that you have so qu1ckly forgotten t he truths
llf h1~tory M1tch lane was never a great campul&gt;
ed1tor (he was, however, o ur res1dent Star Trek
Jnalyst I I wtJI refrain from ma.kmg any derogat ory
\ldlement~ about ''The late and unlamented BtU
Va~larCJ" (to use your own language) I refuM~ In
&lt;.tuup tu your gutter tactics F1nally, wh.ile I wtll
Jdrn1t that you were a harely capahle cam pus edt1o1
yuu r memury has nev er been associated w1th
greatnl'ss I arn afraid that modesty prevents my
rl'veahn~t the Identity ot "on e of the aii-Ume great
&lt;.Jmpus edllur&gt; ·• Suff11.:e 11 w say that you Mr
'idlm:nfeld wen: never even t.OnSiderer1
II I / .t(lmtm

Support CAC flicks
/ 11 the fdttllr

I he l ornmuntiY A&lt; lion I nrp' hcgJn ~hnwmg
"'''VIl'~ dunn~ the spnntt ol 11170 The follow1ng
:tl:adcnttl yea r ( 1970-71) we mSI1tuted a mov1c

program whidt •nduded ahcwt I~ lilms Thts y~:ar
"Ur program has been augmented to oltcr hl•th .1
greater number and wider diVI!r'illy oiiiHlVICS
Pnl&lt;.:erd\ from our muv1e., 1.\liC:&gt; to wppmt IIIJnv
•I ou r &lt; A&lt; prOJe~·ts Spcuf•~'ally lllUVII: lund\ lll'lp
1Jn;1nu· huob lor hbrJfle,, Jnd lfiP' fcH Jnn&lt;'r ut)
• htldrcn .1\ wdl :..s subs 1d111n~ mMIY othn ( A&lt;

So o n ce again I ' m here - t o drink t o the drep
the fact o f my own e xisten ce. It is so painful to be
ho n est - to open o ne's eyes and admit w hat be ia
reaU y feeling - to see the d et ail, t h e stark detallJ.
It's so euy to live in a fog y w o rld - to pretend that
everything aro und you basically con form s t o your
fee lings and needs. How weird - to imaaffie t h at o ne
can come to gri ps wit h t h e ph ysical fact s which
surround him.

r fee l lik e a man stuck on a boat. T h e boat is
traveling thro ugh a jungle on a t ri bu t ary. The b o at
also tr avels whet her I wan t it to or not. Som e ti m es
we run und er low hanging fru11 trees - pick the fruit
and eat. But sometimes tt 1s thorn bushes. And
others the fruit , desperately wanted , IS above our
rea ch
and of cou rse we pass helplessly under.
The problem I!&gt; that 1t is 1m possible to te ll w here
the boat is going - the dnver won't taJk although be
seems to k n ow . Maybe he thin ks 1t is bet t er that I
don't know . O r maybe he doesn't want to tell m e
that I will d ie before the boat gets anywhere o ther
than thts JUngJe. At any rate, I have not been able to
get an answer from tum and I am sick from fallmg. I
guess I accept the ride because I haven't got a n y
~lrength left to do ot her wtse.
So, tired of the fruJt, and no longer afratd o f the
thorns and snakes I've begun to examine the boat
and the water. The boat at first seemed so clear; as if
11 were what 11 IS and n othmg else. But now I realiz.e
that II looks different every mom1ng AI!&gt;O I have
trouble d1stingwshmg bel ween the boat and the
water and the jungle. And the water . my God, t h e
water , what an •mposs1ble mystery Clear deep water
~~the most pa111ful of all .

gym system

Tu the Editor.
The gym seem~ t o be ~on 11nu1ng m an
mefric1ent manner Fnday I called up the gym and
they said the gym would be open from 7.30- 1 I
p. m . So I went over to the gym and played
basketball till Q .45 p .m . when the Jam tors ~.:arne into
the gym and said t hey were closing up at 10 p .m.
With as large a budget the at hletic department has
can't they afford lo keep the gym open till I I p m

as they lold me? Or IS 11 t hat the staff wants to get
htlme early because 1t IS Friday night" Are these
people gethng pa1d for that ext ra hour they say the
gym w11l be o pen" These are JUSt a few o f the
quest1ons that can be raued. I feel the whole gym
system and its management should be investJ gated to
make su re we the students aren't betng cheated out
of our ac tivities fees wh1 ch we pay each year

What's an EJ.S.?
Ti1 tht• Hdt/or
I , too, have , 111 l.1ll, ~everal hurntn!: qUc\lltlll' lu
as!. concernmg that recent uolaJJll'OtJhk lclln Clf
late (nu• Spt&gt;c'tntm, 12 Apnl, IY7Z) n Hh.errung Mr
ltp man doll my\ell wh11: h somdlliW ~tnt ptcl.cd nut
uf 1he wast epa per ha,l.. et hn J\1\1: the prml ud 1011
\I.! II needed \OIIIcthln!! In fill up 'fiJ• c when thl'y

rllt~plu,cJ a Planned l':ucnlhnnd J(l. Onr what·~ .1n
l .l Sdt oenlcld o~nywdy ~ Dnes 11 rrallv ex1st '~ If \II
w1ll they tlc cxh•h•llnl' 11 111 Bultdlo ,nnn'1 It 11 dun
1.-t me- ~11\IW !&gt;I' I l .JII lt•.tvt· ln~o~. n tn1 J II:\'&lt; ~o~.crt..~

l'01 t'Uft

k' )
( ollll/111\

I

Jtfrlf

I

lnl rrfUI

Graphics 'insanity'
(II !lit' 1-.lt/tlf

I he Ma rdi 24 l"llt'\ ,over WJs &lt;llll' ol I he llH\\1
tll,~u\llng thin~'

that I ok' h.b hct'n pcriHitt&lt;·d I"
u1vn h1s war pcd nnatunallllll ha~
,. ~,ceded 111~ ( hrl~lllt.l' .ove r I tl11n I know ""h.1t
h:tllt! 11p h1· Jl,l\ hill hi' ,IJ1111IcJ l111d ,J h&lt;·lh'l W ol)' ••t
pnnt

W11h

c&gt;tprc:""'l&gt;l hJJn\dl '" Jlt'tlph' l..nn\&lt; hi.'\ ll&lt;'rlliJI I
don't hlanlt' h111 1 lur tllllllfll~ lh~&lt; U~th 1t11 tit•· c:c.l1llll
,1Joul!l lt,IV&lt;' /IIIII\' 'l.'rl\t.' lll..ln !11 ll"' \lldl Hh,IOI'
JIIJII' /1,11 ( OVl'l\ IJI..I.' 1111, cfrJg till' Jl.lp,·r dl1"' 11

lh1~

/JII/11&gt;(/U\

//11/!htll•''

.I ~ IIVIIIC\

As you ~ll&lt;•w .o ur lfll&gt;VIe' JIC ,h .. wn 111 (Jptn
140 whllh wa!&gt; line as a kl·ture hdll "lit lllJdeqUalc
.1.~ a lllliVIe the:.ter Ahout one yrar o~g.o we hegan
niJnnwg tv 1m prove the qu..tllt y ul our produltHJn 111
l apcn 140 Dunng the fall wme~tcl w.: ..tdt.let..l IWtl
new proJedor.. and a thirty loot l'lncma:..:ope screen
(lh lo~rgest one on cam pus) R..-..:ently, a new sou nd
~ys.c:m .:onstsllng of two new speak..:r.. ant.! carpetm~
on the walls (which serves IH"'!h lo tmprove the roon•
VISually and aco usti ~:a lly) was added . llnwever. tho.:
Improvements will not slop here a~ we dre planmn~
lu mat..e other •mprovements 1n the ncar futun:
We mvite you all to VJew our next two nwvtes,
lj and !UO/
A Space Odyssc\ lhanb t o aJI ol
you who have supported our prev1ous efforts We
hope that you continue to su pport and enjoy out
movies.
Sincerely,
Jeff Retmon
Al'til'llies Coordmator

THIE liGH T AT THIE IENO Of THIE TUNN El •••

Friday, 14 April 1972 . The Spectrum Page nine

�S.A. SPEAKERS BUREAU

and
THE DEMOCRATIC YOUTH COALITION
present

John Kenneth Galbraith
(NOTED ECONOM IST' A ND FO RM ER A M BA SSA DOR TO INDIA)

TODAY
HAAS LOUNGE

NORTON UNION
1:30p.m.

STUDENT ASSEMBLY MEETING

Friday, April 21
3:00p.m.
233 Norton Hall
hge ten The Spectrum Friday, 14 April 1972
0

0

�Pornomania

Additional program
Skin flicks tickle and titillate for, the Open House

It was the bluest c ultural event df th e seaso n as
nearly I 000 student&amp; packed the Fillmo re Room and
the Conference Theater for an evenina of refined
en terta in ment at Pom omania , t he second bi-ennual
pomograpruc faJ m festival .

" Pornography" is derived fro m two G reek
wo rds : pomoe, meaning dirt , and graphos, meanmg
pic ture. The evenly mixed aud ien ce got their
pornographic fill in two o f the better examples o f
t~ genre, M o111l the Virgin Nymph , and Schoolgirl .
Unlike the Ulual run o t porno llick s, with their
boy meets girl ; &amp;irl m~u gi rl ; boy meets girl , do g,
roommate and t h e startmg line-up o f the New Yo rk
K.n iclts plo ts, th ese tw o films h ad an inkling of
intelli~n ce. As S aul S cruffnn , o wne r o f Sher Pix
t he New York fLim d istributing firm t ha t hand le.&lt;~ th~
movies sajd : " This is a pict ure t h at teiiJ a story and
hti a sound ua ck ." They were even an color.
Aft e r s everal minutes of vanous sex ual
en count ers, o ne bepn to wo nder. " Am 1 a
ho mosex ual?" Even when Debo rah (Schoolgirl)
encou ntered the fa ther and so n sex t eam (don't
bother rereading tha t las t lme, it wo n't help), one
couldn 't gel t oo excited ,

Oral gratification
SchoolgTrl was an un us ual film T h e st ory (yes,
t here was a st ory) in volved Debora h , an eager,
young, nubtle soc1o logy student wh o lS domg a t erm
paper on sexual sub cult ures Her research m ethods
are nol m vogue a m o ng th e mo re est ablished
memben of th e aca demic commun it y b u t m odem
socaal 'ielence would profit from t he increased
spontaneity of theat subJects' behav1or. Deborah
.answer; the dass1 fied ads m the Berkeley Barb

By the lime t he film is over sh e has m ade at w11h
her lover, a couple wit h a b1sexual w1fe who enJOYS
watching her husband have a young gut on his
ha r t h day, her roomm at e, h er professor, t he
prc:vJt&gt;u\ly menllnned fa th er and son , a sex cluh,
and. as a spec1al tr~:111, t he first documented example
o l mterc.c)urse by teleph o n e Unfort unate ly, the fi lm
encftod before we knew what he got for her effo rts
Mt~no

the

V~rgTn

that the manager o f t he G ranada Theat er was busted
for showing t he film . This story was qu ite unusual.
Mo n a is a nymph omania c, as t he Iitle sugaests, and is
also a virgin . She made a promise to her mot h er t h at
ahe would be a virgin when she was married and
since she is engaged , she has to ~I her fun someh o w :
She became a m aster (mistress?) at the art o f fella ti o
'
wit h h er father's expert tut elage.

Practice m.kes perlect
During t h e cou rse o f the m ovie, Mo na, whose
ligh t , t o ngu e-i n -c beelt st y le (of act ing! ) is qu it e good ,
p racti ces o n her fia n cee, a stranger she mee ts o n the
street , a hooker an d a guy in a m ovie . Whtle she is so
engaged with the fello w in the t hea te r , he r fiancee is
mwng it w it h rus fut ure mot her-in- law . When he
firushes, he 10es to t he movie a nd catch es Mo na in
t he act.
He get s his revenge by calling all Mona 's
previOus pa rtn ers (she made a poi nt of ge tting the 1r
n umbers) a nd all four of the m do a number of
in creda ble thin gs to her. The movie en d wi th t he
no w -defo tiat ed Mo n a collapstng m her mo ther's
arms The aud1ence was n oticeably disappoi n ted as
th ey were th e o nly people who hadn't had 5ellual
rela llons t oget h er.
Professo r Don R oberts of the Sch ool o f Library
and I n fo r mahon Stud1es and h.is class ( 'iOR
Intellectual Freedom) planned and exe,ut ed the
progra m He te rmed the event "a great succeSli "
After the show, several studen ts cro wded
around Mt Schtffnn to rtnd out how they could
break mto t he business li e told them that t here was
a great market for we ll-wntten mt clhgenl,
well-prOJU ~Cd Sk in ni('kS, fi t~ JdVILC' wa;. f01
prospective mov1emakers to wnte ~ ~n1pt , 111m Ill.:
mOYle ( 16 mm, plea!&gt;e) and \:nmC" to New 'r ork
where he wo ultl v1ew thr movie
If he likes It , he wall blow at UJl tn \'i mm.
dl.,tnbute 11 .1nd !&gt;Jllll tlh' profit\ SO-\() St·veral
st udents left prmn1stng to \Ce tum ag.a111 walh a muv1c
m a few wt•ck"

Ny m ph

.. untested 1n federal court

LS cu"enlly beang
Mr Sch1ffnn explam~:d

C.:lt'm (olunr

Edi tor 'l nou: Th ~ f ollo wing ar~
addit i o n.r to this Sunday :r
program for Commumty·Univusi ty Doy

BairdHaU
An open reh earsal o f fo ur o ne-ac t
o peras by Darius Milhaud , " A
Festival of My th s in Minia t u re,"
will be in fi n al sta ges of
pre paratiOn , a ffo rd ing t he pub lic a
be hind-the-scenes view o f the
malti ngs of a full-st age opera
pro d uct io n. Direc ted by Munel
Wo lf. R ecita l Hall/2-4 p.m
Multi-m edia work " Doors" by
Crea ti ve A ssocia t e R 1c h ard
T ryth all, for slJd es, film and tape .
R oom I 00/ I ,2 ,3 p.m.
Three mini cham b er concerta hy
a d vanced sl u dent ensembles
(stnngs, p tano. clan n et) in works
by Beethoven and Dohna n yi.
un der the s upervisio n of Paul Ka t z
and Fnna Boldt Room 101 / 1 30,
2 .30, 3 :30p.m.
Tours of elec tro mc m usic studio
will include a den10nstratao n of
st udio equipment, andud ing Moog
synthesizer, under superv1s1on of
Ramon Fuller. 1-4 p .m
U/8 Sympho n y Band , wath guest
alto saxaph on1st lames Ragg,.e,
under dire\:taon of f'r;ml.. {'1polla,
and
IJ I tJ &lt; "II r g t a 1 e J ,, 1
E nsemblt:, under c.Jarelllnn of
Gary S:am ul\kl, an a vaucd
progn1m Nnllvn llo~ll , l· •llnwrC'
Roorn/ l p m
Oiefe ndo rf Hall
lectures 111 Room 204
Dr . J-rank J.:n , " I IIIJIIlldl
Prohkrn~ of 1ndiVIc..luab " I I 4 'p. m .
Dr Mlihlll l'lesur , "lhc: llearth.:at
10 the Wh1le ltnu'e A\Pt'• h n l

Now that you can fly to Europe for peanuts,
here's how liHie you shell out to get around:
$130 for'IWo Months of unlimited rail tnwel in
Austria, Befclum, Denmark, F'rMce, Gennany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg,
Norway, Portupl, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
You shell out $130, and get a Student-Railpass.
All you need is the bread and something to show you're
a bona fide student between 14 and 25
Our Student-Railpass gives you all that unlimited
rail travel on the 100,000 mile railroad networks of those
13 count ries. For two foot-loose months. So with low atr
fares and Student-Railpass you've got Euro~e made.
Our Student-Rai lpass gets you Second Class
travel on our trains. You'll fmd that there's very little
second class about Second Class. Besides being comfortable, clean, fast, and absurdly punctual, the Euro-

pean trains have some other advantages for you They
take you from city center to city center, so you don't have
to hassle a1rports. And the stations are helpful homes
away from home, w1 th Pictograms that give you 1nformat1on In the universal language of signs, and d•ning rooms ,
bookstores and other helpful fac111ties
Now, here's the catch You can ' t get your
Student-Railpass or the regular F1rst Class Eurailpdss 1n
Europe- you have to get them before you leave the country So see your Travel Agent soon . Meanwh ile. !:&gt;end in
the coupon for a free folder, complete w•th railrodd map

--------- - - - ----- ---- -- - ----------- ~----------------------- ·
The w ay to . .e Europ e wi thout feelin&amp; lik e • touri•t.

sru~·RAILPASS

Eurailpass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal ,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
Eurailpass, Box 90, Lindenhurst, New Yoril 11757.
Please send me your free Eurailpass folder w1th railroad map. 0 Or your Student-Railpass folder order form. 0
Name________________________________ Street ______________________________________ 192C
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ state _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

Presiden tial Health," 2-2:4 5 p.m .
Dr. C. D'Amanda , " Drug Abute,"
3-3:45 p .m .
Dr. Henry lee Smith , " Where Arc
Yo u Fro m ?'' ( the ch arac t eristics
o f reJio n al dialects in the U.S. and
Canada) 44 :45 p .m .
I nformation about th e City
Rotunda/ I -S p .m .
Dr. Charles Notess , Depa rt men t o f
C1v1 l
E ng a ne e flng , o•
transportatio n proble ms in the
City .
Professors Joh nso n and Tatje.
De part m ent of Anthrop o logy. oo
the anthro p olo gy o f BuffaJo.
Dr Wo lfgang Wo lck, Depart met~t
o f Linguist ics, with lingWJt:ic
i n for m atio n about B uffalo .
St ud en ts will be availa ble to
ex pl.aJ n research (with m aps) oa
eth nic-tmguist lc groups 10 Buffalo.
FMter

HaD

C P. Snow Colle-ae will prese nt a
S1mulat1on "Youth Culture
Game ." Basement rooms 19a-b
and IOa-b/1-4 p.m .

Harriman library
The Thea t er Depart men I will
present a performance by t.he
.. Br oom Street Tit eatre" o f
Madison , Wisconsin (w h ich has
heen descnhed as Amencan Pop
w11h J&lt;dbuka overtones ) .
1-ollowang the production, ll
cril14ue wall hc gJven by wn te:r
1. ra I IL
and
prof e \ S&lt;H o (
pl&lt;~ywnghtang .Jt Yale , Rilhard
Galman Adm•,~um u. free b u t
lll'l..t·ts for adoussaon w1ll be
dt\lr1hutcd on a llr~I"\.OOle,
llr'&gt;l .,crvc ha\IS .11 the Norton Hoa
Olllt:e dunng the week of Apnl
Ill
ll arnman Theatre/ Perfmm
an Lt' 7 p m , C'nllque I 0 p.rn
Hayes A
Mall ard

f illm ore Co ll e ae
w11l \'&gt;.:available to
Jll\WCJ !jlli.'\llon\ 1111 ~UnJIIH'I ,lJid
IJII pn•grJIII\ Appll, dllnn' ~all he
oiVtlti.Jt&gt;k . I obh y/ J-4 rIll
repre~ nt ati ve&lt;~

•lenlth S&lt;'ience~
I ht• 'ldaoo l " I "'ur,lll!l wall Ja ,t\1&lt;' .I
l.trttt' '"'~''·'Y "I ~ ~·.,dun!! IIIJI~:no~l&gt;
111 R tuolll ! ll !o,IIJJih'l cll~pl.1y' of
'lutll'nl plliJl'll' will h&lt;' twld u n
I tw , r,·nnd nool ( ·''" d 1\pl.t)' nf
" IIIII .d I h ,. 'l:' I ll" I l ""'
( tlllltnuanll I du , JIIon .an d
lnlcrnataunal Nur""IL mal&lt;'rJJI'
w1ll hr l'\hallt11·d o n llr;l llonr
( tollll\elo f\ will ht' JVJIIJhlt' IO
da H u~' th r V.Jti\IU\ pro gram•
oltcr ~tJ l•y lh•• '&gt;dtoul nl Nul\lng.
Krlu· ,hnH·nt~ '.l.dl tH• ~rved an
Knum IJ I
Lc.ckwood Mt'rnc•rial library
The libra r y will '&gt;POI\\IH J g~· nl'nl
c• pcn ho&gt;ll\&lt;
t ••llr.
will he
~ unJu.-trd .onct \ Pt'.t JI .-ollelllclll~
Ja:.pl.ay.:d
T h e Enghsh 0t' pllrhl1C"OI wul
PH'\C'Jll pn .-lrv ae.n.lantt.' h)' 1hrer
f'llCI~ fwm IIW l)&lt;.'p.Himcnl JJ)d I
Vhlllllll P&lt;ll'l fr o llt BIJirJ llow.ud
Wolf. John Nclu ami JJm&lt;·' r•,,ul
Ruum :!OH/ ~ I' 111
4240 Ridgr Lra
Expe rimen l al fi lm\ lno~d&lt;' hy
( '0111111Unl ~ dlll&gt;ll\ {)l'\1)\ll \11Hk11b
n l the Art l&gt;epJ rllll t'lll 'Will he
\h o wn
K1J~t'
I ,.J 1\rt
(iallcly/l ,l,.l ,trhl -1 Jl 111

4HO Ridgto Lt:a
1 h t' Geography Oeparlrnrot wall
offlor a dt~pt,~ y "" "''l' 11111
!(Cil llltlrph&lt;ll&lt;l!;Y Rcouo 1 ( lll / I 4
pm

4 246 R1dge Lea
T h t' DelllHirru·ut ul Matht'rnal •t'N
Wllf fl.JVe all I' J'l' ll fl oHI\t: Jllll 1&gt;1
II. .11 .H 11111 f I
It t c
l)cpdtlllh' nl
( ' h.tlllliJn 'Will 'l'l'oll.. un 'llnw thr
J),•p.arlllll:lll

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M.olhl'JII~III ~ \

·~

\Jlt'ndmg_ IJXII.JVI'f' ' llllllll'Y ;md
wllJI the I.J\fi .JY l 'l lt'l CIW\ In
rl'lurn" Ruom l~i fl '0 -1 1() I'm

Friday, 14 April 1972 The Spectrum Page eleven

�Black Culture: truth is on the way
Editor's note: The f ollowing is written by David N.
Scot/, a S tate University of Buffalo student, and
reflects his hopes for and the theme of BSU's BIIJck
Cultttrol Weekend.
by David N. Scolf
The Black Students Union at the Universrty of
Buffalo will be presenting a Black Cultural weekend
April 14, 15. 16 . The theme of the weekend deals
with " tru th ;" that having to do with serious Black
Culture, and all the events of the weekend will
tellcct this.
Starting th1 ngs off Friday April 14, at 10 p.m.
will be the Herbie Hancock Sextet. Herbie did a long
stint With Miles Davis and IS a very serious pianist
whose muSIC IS a reflec tion of his beauty. Also
playmg the same evemng will be the Zimbabwe
Natulnal Ry thym T roupe, wluch IS one of the finer
local group~ around town
On Saturday Apnl 15. Gary Bartl, one oltlu:
llnc~t Jllu players awund w1ll be pcrformmg With
lm NT U rroupc Al\u playmg on the S&lt;!me cvemn~:
w1ll be the Charle' (rayle Qumtel Charles Gayle,
h~rdc' herng nne of the fe"' knnwlcdgJhk
111~1rudnr\ ol Bl.n.k MU\11. Jt th!! llruvcr\IIY (all&gt;ng
w11h Arduc c;;hepp) 1:. profiucnl not •mly on the
tenor .1nd !&gt;oprano 'a". but also on prano and h.np
MC('(' oy Tyner and Paul Gresham
On Sunday c:vl·nurg, the lc~tlval WllluiiH.Iudt• hy
pre,cn1111g the McC11y l yncr Ouarlcl and the: Paul
( .resham Qumtcl M,Coy 1 yncr who W&lt;l ~ the ptalltSI
lor th~ la te anti great John Colltanc. 1\ orw o l lh1•
most s~riUU~ Bl.tl.'k mu~ll'HJns altve, and wtll 11111
l' tllllprtHIII~t' h" 11\ll\ll because ~orne p1mpll' l:t~:cJ
l~en:.tger ~.:art'l tltg 11 Paul (,,c~harn 1s also nrH' ol the
hc&gt;t local b.mds who tlcl&gt;crvcs 11111Ch more
recugn1111trl than the JCUIIU1al pcopk who cnritrol
mll~ll 111 Bullalo hav~ g1VCil hun
The: ohJCCtlvc uf the wcel..c:nu . as w,,, ,tlreally
\l.llell, •&gt; In dep1l:l Juth~tlltl Bla~ol.. Cult111t .111t1 '"''
\Uinl' hall J"-'ed " Julra ' type slut Jo untler:.tantl
~cr111us Black Mu\ll , one fir~t ot all has tu
nndcr&lt;;lamJ wl1a1 nlU\tl 1!&gt; Jnd. sc~.nndly. what hc111g
Bl&lt;~l' k m Arncrtla" .11111 ltuw lh.ll l'UIIllrt'" rl.'aded
Ill til lllU\IlJI 11.'1111\
Mu~c

a lift&gt; ' tylr
trad1t1un,IIIY w;" IICVCI .1huut Ill.' Illullll'l\
who en tcrt.nm:d !111 J)JVIII)!. alltlll'lll.l'' II w'" .1 pa11
nf lht: ltlc ~lyle ul pcupk It &lt;ll:1.11111paruc:tl peopk
Mu~1l

----

hvl'\ What the Bl.s~.l.. StuJcnl Uruun 1s dosng ~~
prnent111~ 1h1s so people t:&lt;m apprcctate the nc:h
~.:ultural henlage tllJI we havl.' J.\ Black Peopll' and lo
ma\..~ JICliJ}Jt: ,!Ware: Jlld cJcvale our COOSCIOUSOeSSC!&gt;

Be a part of the world ...
Join a Union Board Committee

un!versity
un1o n
a c tivit ie s
board

--

wh.ile doing wo rk , reflecting pro fo und ideas, so we do n't get caught up in the same kind o f
relaxing, o r whatever they felt it should. It was non-&lt;:uJture that exists in America, and is ever so
participated m by gro ups of people and no stars. present at the State University of Buffalo.
Peo ple made their own music to express their
feelings about the world. A musician was anyone Support a 'true heritage'
who felt like expressing his emotions.
T here will also be an Art exhibit featuring the
ThiS approach to music is rad ically diffe rent wo rks of many of our fine local artists, who have
from the western conception o f music. The been faced with many o f the same problems as our
d ifference besng that Western commercial art is not mUSJcians. Art is another creative process on wh.ich
interested in art but in money. When music ts prices should not be placed, but left for people to
created to fulfill a market that the industry created , enjoy. There will be a Peoples Marke t run by the
they are no longer creating music but something that beauti ful sisters o f the Wantu Seconi selling
is and sh ould be called something else. In 1 ra d it ion a I A f ra ca n c lo th ing, jewelry, and
contempory western society if you do n't prostitute mstruments. The Play "EI Hajj Malik' ' will also open
your music to fulfill the desires o f people who are at t h.is weekend at the African Cultural Center. This is a
best an ti thet ical to any social outlook a Black
one act play touching upon the manhood of
Music1an could have, you are faced W1th no
Malcolm X The festtvaJ 1s deal ing with all areas of
recognst1on. no Ctln tracts or records, and worst of all
the Arts and not presenting merely one aspect. In
no work . When une looks at the bullshit groups that
domg th ts Wf feel we can present a truer, and to tal
arc gettmg puhhc1ty sn th1s town hke•Biack MJnah
ptcture ol what senous Black Culture 1s T he unity
Jan Bruce Douglas. Capta1n Beefhart, and the New
between the~c d1fferent areas ts the theme promotsng
R1ders of the Purpll' Sage. and then listens to the "truth," bcC&lt;Jusc lllack Arb acc reflective of Black
heautllul mus1c n l Paul Gresham. Charles Gayle or
ltfc
the Rythym Troupe 11 IS no comcidence that the
All the~ beau11ful th1ng.'i will be happening at
hulbh11tCI\ JI C &amp;l'lllng Jll lhl' pubhc1ty and the
lhe
Afncc~n Cultural Center at
350 Masten ,
money
appropnately 111 th~ community, whtch 1s where 11
should he l h1s IS nut happcnmg 111 Albany but rtght
•Acultural tundra·
here 1n Buffalv The ~uppurt of all those who claJm
Mu~u.. 10111~ of tim ~..alsbcr ~huuld not have to he
to be Bbck and ltvc tn th1\ 1.ommun11 y and gu 111 the
play1ng under thl' &lt;;haduw' ol th1s kmd of lame Crtlp,
:.dwol " necc~a r y hc~..au~e 1f we ~:an 't ~upport lht:
11ladc pu1cly 111 ~ell to alll!,\rllnanl aud 1ence, l1ke the
true herttJgt' and trad111nm wt• arc a part of. then
nues who even cun~nJcred pay111g $20.000 Ill
that IS JUSt ltJ...c lrymg lo ~end 11 thmugh changes ltkl'
\1101Clllle hkc Steve S111l~ who doesn't even have a
westerners have donc If there IS to he anything else
~·•mccp 1 11111 ol rn ussc, much less an ahtlily to play st
of lh1s natuse , and I du heltevc there as (stnce
I guess th1s ~~ ahout all onl' could expect from till\
cverytme t alk~ abou t how larnt' llulfalo IX) there
a~.ultu t al lundra Just like all the we~le r n slut th3t
'huuld be full \Upport by all those c.:onc:cmed Stnp
C'&lt;l\1\ m A111crtca . the llllt~H: i11dustry has tncll, wllh
away any rnrn ltkc actums that w uld keep you from
f}.HIIal SUll.C:SS. tu stangh.• the Black Culture. They
cx perten~.m~ the truth that ts 111 be presented
tdl II\ whtt Soul liwlhcr and S1ster number une tS,
Runnmg t~ff 111 :.uppmt nthcr ventures when th1s 1S
they 'uppmt ami help creclll' shit to try to
happenmg a I home IS hemg a ~n p out. and a turnmg
~..nmntcrll.lllle Blat.:!.. Mus11.: as well Thq helped to
create Blttt:l.. Moses, Osana Ross und others who are of the back on Bullalo\ fine~t l&lt;x:al talent and some
not Hlllll:a ltve nf the soctal 1tutlouk Black people of the country's most crcauve artists. It IS a
havl' 111 till\ l.Olllllr' 111 sp1tc ol Jll thb, there st11l ds~\erv1 ce because tf the person l..m'w about ltfc aJHJ
hrs culture, he would see a rare opportumty w c.ttch
C'( l\1\ \I.' II Oil\ Blal.k IIIU\11.r3tb whu don 't cater to thss
J ur114UC IC\IIVal filled with no1h1ng but trutlt and
lypt.• o l usltur.sl \lrangulatmn and l:lllllllllle 111 play
mu.s11. that " (11hcrcnt w1th thcu kehngs and the11 beauty

.After all

r II all thO!&gt;l' that want ltl find nut what rcJI
lilal.k Culture ~~. your golden oppor1111llty 1s her e
And lo .alllhose who \.\Ill already dt{! 11 and dl&lt;' gumg
tu chccJ... 11 uut, Peale Re Wtth Yuu
UUAU

it's Y 0 U R world!

(}.Jnce Arh Committee

UUAH FIN l- AIU S FILM COMMITTE£

prc~e n b

llrt'M'IliS

friday and S u nday. April 14 &amp; 16

Sa turday . Ap ril 15

"The Even Is Prct·eding and
fu llu wing and Including a

Ucheading uf Alice"
Tlst' 8arbat3 Gardner

First Truffaut gave us
'The 400 Blows.'
Then 'Stolen Kisses:
And coming

Construetaon l o.

Satunlo1·. lpnl 15
V 00 p

m

CLARK GYM
TKkets .
Students $ 1.00
Genera! Adm . $2.00

Cia~.

From Columbia P ictures

TECHNICOtOfte FROM WARNER BROS.®
- CONFERENCE THEATRE Shows before 6 p.m . SOc Shows after 6 p.m. 7S¢

Frtduy, Apri/14. JO ·oo
12 ·oo Noon
In Dark Gym

Faculty S 1.25

-------~--------------------------------------------------------------

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Friday, 14 April 1972
I

- I

I I

'I

I

•

�Some new additions

OVERTIME
by 8aly Rabin
Sportr Editor

Last Wedneaday, relations between the athletic department and the
student prea reached a new low. After the release of Student
Auociation Treuurer Jeff Oainsk.i•s report on the athletic department.
a major eootroversy developed over an editorial in Th~ Spectrum.
It is true that 43 people did partake of a pre-game meal prior to
the Syracuse Univenlty buketball game, but such a number is normal
when one reallz.es th.at there were 24 players, eight cheerleaders, one
reporter (Barry Rubin), three managers, one train.er and four coaches
along with a bus driver. Without doubt, the reporting of the "Osinski
report" did not even include any mention of comment from the
athletic department. Ridkulously enough, Mr. Osinski admats to have
met Dr. Fritz for the first time only yesterday
Really, at stake lS the athletic department'' seeming autonomy on
fiscal matten. According to Mr. Osinski, what the SA reaUy wants is for
tlte monies spent on athletics to come under the State University fee
guidelines. Still we are left With the tarnishing of U1e reputations of
several athletic department officials whose guilt is questionable. Mr.
Wrlltam Sanford , whose eleven-day stay at the Ft. Lauderdale Swim
f·orum was criticized, was only al the convention because as past
prcstdent of the NCAA swimming coaches he was requ~red to be there.
What the SA is trying to do is question the athlet•c department's
ptacttcc of sending coaches to unlimited conventions. Still, Ostnski
admits that he sees nothtng wrong with sending coaches t&lt;&gt; the
LUtwentions involving their sport, for scheduling purpo~~es.
Whtle the athletic department and the SA seek to re-establish
w mmuntcalton lines at a closed door meeting today in room 205, one
~huuld ask who the man was behind a great deal of Wednesday's yellow
he..tdltne scandal .
The man gloating behind aU of the coverage given to the Osinslo
report i~ none olher than Dave "the rave" Katser, who Osinski admtlS,
"1hd a lot of the research " In fact, it appears as if Kaiser dtd everything
!&gt;hort of wnting the report Kaiser makes no qualms about h1s role rn
tlus Untverstty, and has set himself up on many key SA commttlccs
where he tS attempttng to do his damage.
KaiSer's key goal tn the athletic realm ts to place the department
nn an income offset budget, which will re5ult in students being charged

lm a!lending athletic_ events and particapating in intramurals. When
Katser was asked if lhas new budget would result in a decrease rn
\ludenl acttvity fees, K.atSCr remarked : "No, we don't provtde enough
~rv•Les as 11 is. I'd like to see more money go to WNYPIRG . legal atd
and the new hoUiing corporatton." Of course Katser cares ltllle about
the results of the SA's referendum on athletics which indicated ~u pport
for the retention and maintainance of the budget at $240.000.

Through his actions, Kaiser has also indicated that thr only ~pmt
not due for a cut in funding is the ice hockey team It appears as tf
Eddte Wnght, constdered a prima donna in the athletic department , has
danced his w~y rnto the hearts of SA. But just wonder, how many
students ate going to pay to see BuffaJo at the new Grand Island
factlrty? Monday, the Bulls will sign a contract for eleven home hockey
ganiC:s and three basketball games at the new facility in Grand hland
Dr Fritz.. who has faced many a storm in his short h:nure at
Buffalo appears ready for an aii-&lt;)Ut fisht With the SA over supposed
miSuse of funds. Fritz tndicated : '1'm calling today for a complete
ouiJldc audit immediately." Still one wonders if this chasm between
the athletic department and the studentJ can do anything but weaken
an alre11dy shaky progmn.

Track team getting stronger
In the now..Jmoct cWs:ic
tradition of the Buffalo varsity
track team, a recent addition to
the squad tw made the team
stronger where it is already strong,
although several glaring
weakneaea atilt loom large. Junior
Mike Bouck, not previously
expected to return, is now back
with the team and appears to be
the BuUs' best perfonner of the
weisflt events.
Bouck took a ve£)' close second
in the New York S t ate
tournament last year with a throw
of over I 38 feet. He could take
the titJe this season. Mike also
puts the 5hot in the 44-foot range,
which as also the tops on the
squad, but only slightly better
than Mark Reger.
Strong weights
The addition of Bouck also

takes a lot of pre.ure off Reger,
who now needn't throw the
discus. This will allow him to
concentrate on the shot more and,
more importantly, on the javelin
where he is truly a clau
competitor. Don Van Deuson
adds to Buftalo'a strength in the
javelin. The weights generally look
very strong.
The rest of the field men have
been getting in good practice,
despite the poor condition of the
track which has held back the
runners considerably. They have
yet to get out on Rotary Field
and have not yet been timed this
season.
The muddy condttion of the
Rotary Field track may force
Saturday's opening meet against
Cortland and Buffalo State over
to Buffalo Stutc's all-weather
track . Bill He11n and Bill

Despite some rough mistakes
Lacrosse Bulls are victorious

Kaly was heavily scored upon but he also torned
back 34 shots Early tn the contest tt was obvious
that the Bulls could control the ball. work for a shot,
then gel tt back and control 11 agatn . So everyone
was cncouragcd tn shoot However. the offense was
careful and delrberate and most of the shots were
legtltmate. Prub:.tbly the team's btggest rmpcovement
was m its paSl&gt;tng game. Buffall.l's passes were
accurate and most often caught flawlessly

by Bruce Engel

Spr&lt;·trom Staff Wrttrr

"The defense made a lew nustakes today We
have In lalk to each other more o tt defense We ~1111
have a few rough spots but generally we have
Improved a lot " These were some of the commcnb
made hy lucroue player-coach F· rank Stoka after the
Bulls' first win ever in cite fir~t lacrosse game ever
played at Rotary Field. Hts lase remark wa~ ccrc:unly
an understatement Anyone sccmg both thrs game
and Buffalo's opener at Brockport two week~ .ago
wcte probably amazed "' the day and ntght
difference.
One could tell from the start that thurg¥ wuuld
he beltcr for the Bulls rn thts game The opening
raceorr was won by the Bulls' Lentcr tntdflelder
Perry Hanson , another player,oach (tim team~ 1us1
loaded wtlh player~oachc)) . Aga111st lhm:kport the
Blue took very few faceuff~ huth they gnt most of
them tn the Niagara game Altet .111 even lirst lew
minutes the Bulls opened the !)COring with a goal by
Larry Rauschon un a pbS tmm Ken Bolte t-rnm
then un Buffalo donunated lhl" game . and won
handtly 10 2

-shevetson

Buffalo power play
Aga.ms• Brockport , Buffalo faHel.l to score til the
" m»n up" sacualton but had c;everal 'uch scores tn
the Niagara game Brockport hlOk good advantage of
Buffalo's ouscakes Wednesday Buffalp drd the aame
agaJnat the Purple Eagle~ The best example of tJus
Wl&amp;S an e(rant pass · Uuown from Ntagara go&lt;~lie Jim
K.aly right to Ha':'SOil , who IOl'k II right back Ul for a
goal, tW JeCOnd of four Two goals were scored by
Rausch as well as singleton~ from Ken Bolte (on an
incredible centenng pass ftum Steve Herchop(). Pal
Abrami, Don Hoyle and John Howell Howell and
Herchopf each tad two assists

Bull goalie Bill Smtth had only nme saves but of
courK the control offense took a lot of pressure off
hun He had minor trouble wrth clears, but wu
ne;~rly always able to dump the ball oO' to one of the
defensemen. whose clears and chec.ks were both very
good. Tony Puarskl and Bob Ruthazer were
parltcularly eCfeclive
There was a pretty good crowd lit Buffalo's first
home lacrosse g.ame whtch nlJide a post game
announcement sound even better A 1h.1rd home
~me has been 111dded wrth the Kenmore Lacrosse
club un Apnl 29. Monroe Communtty CoUegc on
MD )'&lt;&gt; wlll ftntsh the home season for Buffalo .

HAIRSTYLING
Jo~ 's Theatre &amp;rber

P:~£S:~

love those S.U.N Y . smiles!
Picture Yours
T~laak

30/JO Mam St

I OS5 Kenmore Avenue
(A r Colr11n Thratr~)

Studio
834-5470

WANTEDFemale
Models POSITION, Semt nude
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AMHERST

Apply : 45 Allen St., Suite 5
Buffalo, New Vork of ctll

THE BODY SHOPPE

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE A VENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

like

honour.

tnteontv ,

cor•f1dlen•,. end intelheenc- -

-"
~

-ned .,.d wonced for-

PAV. $10.00/hr.
HOURS. Ftexible

Spec•el Set Bet~rn Mat1 ne11
An-usl .oo 'til 2 ·00 P .n

McCarthy, who will run in three
and two events respectively.
should be the squad's best in the
middle distances. Distance man
Jim McClurkin should h.ave a good
three-mile race with Cortland 's
Bob Pfeifer.
The Bulla have no pole
vaulters, but have come up with a
couple of pretty good freshmen
for the triple jump. l(jnzy Brown
still CIOf\Ot run so the brunt of
the sprinting will go to Jerry
Williams, Dick HaU and Bill
Hannah. Cortland, led by Tom
Brunetti in the shot put, is strong
and deep in every event and
should take the triangular meet
with comparative ease. The Bulls
can only challenge them in a few
events. However, they should take
second over Buffalo State, which
cannot match Buffalo's running
depth

m~~ing

WE
NT AGGRESSIVE AND
•IIM A'U INATIVE COLLEGE MEN
AN D WOM EN - ro wont. t~.
tnd 10 earn top pay we are C.A.T .
- new to New V ott. State. but

powing, come grow woth us.
OUt' ad or wnte Mr. lance
P.O . Boll 43. KenmOte N .V 1

Fnd.ay , 14 April 1972 The Spectrum Page thirteen

�,._call 133·7571.

I LAlli Pill
AD INFORMAnON
Cl.ASSIFI£0 ADS mill lM placed
Monday thru Friday lletween 9 Lm .
ano 4 a30 l).m . at 355 Norton Hall.
THE STUDENT RATES of an ad for
one dey Is 11 . 25 for the nrst l5 woros
and 1 .05 for eectt additional wcwct.
11.00 for eecn eddltlonat ctav.. Tile
ONctllne for Monday b Fr ldaYt for
Wednes4aV, It II Monday , ano for
Friday, It I• Wecl~ay I»Y • •30 p , m
"H ELP WANTED "
ad&amp; cannot
ctttcrlmlnate on the balls of ..x . cOlor,
creed or national orltln to •ny eanent
(I.e., prefetll»ly 11 still ctberlmlnetorvl.
"FOU ND" .ach will be run frM of
c nar" for a maximum o t 2 Ollf' anct
1!1 WOfOS..

o.t.

~

P.O. llox 1&amp;071, San Oteeo,

Calif. til l S.
STAAT 12 l)er hour ..tary !)Ius bonus.
Work 4-1 p.m. weekdalfl, 10..2 p .m .
Saturdaya. Cell 135·3103 or TF~2.
prULL DR l)art•llmaiOOt evallable wllh
Bed line Inc. Call Art 116·2094 or
Mike 135-5215. MMtlng~ at Executive
Rameoatnn.

USED BI CYCL E w • nt e ct In 9000
cond ition. Please call Suwn 831 75 71
APPLICATIO NS now belnQ take n for
tour guld•. llorteues. eKOrl ""'lc•
and mooeta . Ca ll 884-4991 DetwM n 10
a.m. and !I p .m .
PERSONS

OF various occuo•ll ons
r~rctlng
N . Amerlu •net ove n e u
opponunllles, u p to S2600 monthly.
For com plete lnform•ll on, w rite 10
JOB RESEARCH, Box 12!13, S t•· A,
Toronto, Ont. Enclose $ !&gt; to cover
COli .
WANTEO o Good stHI &gt;trlng ou ll e r.
C•ll 8!13· 9956. ext. 2. M- F , 9-5.
OVERSEAS JOBS for students
Aultrllle, Europe, S . America, Africa ,
etc . All professions and cx:cupatlont,
a 700 to $3000 montllly . Expens~
paid, o ve r time, Sightsee ing
FrM
In formation Wrlle o JOBS OVERSEAS,

May

15.

Call

-----------------------3-IIEDAOOM furnltn.d apartment for
3 male Ruelents. On+ohalf mile from
eampua. Available Ma y ht for 1 yur
• -· $200/Montn lnch.tdlf\9 utilities.
137·6809.

3-BEDAODM tor fall . Mutt 11e female.
Call Bob, DA¥a, Louie 137·1202.
LOWER LEVEL of two-family home
- 2 bedrooms - Fillmore-Main area.
10 mlnut• from umpus. 1 130/month.
Cell 137·9573 .

THREE·BEOROOM
n ou n .
8alley· Kenslntton .,. . - evaii.Oie for
summ• and next yur . Furniture must
be bouettt. Rent 1175. Call Oery or
Dave at 835·5151.

3 BEDROOMS . Kenmore M . ..
S eml - furnlshect . IIS/ month plus
ulllltl• (Summer t•s) . Call 877·7921 .

Mav l eno naJCiy. .r. SliMly 83... 0966.

3-BEDROOM tl)artmen t - ~ertel a t
Starin, 1150 a month . Mu st buy
furniture. Call 8 3 8 · 3624.

SUMNER·ELMWOOD er•a - 1 anct
2-bedroom apU. a¥allable. Furnl~.
&amp;150 to &amp;250. IU·I100 o r 832·7368.

LOOK NO furtlltf - ai)IN'tment few 4
3 bedrooms, fully furnlall•ct, !I
minutes t o campus. Call Mike or Howle
131· 1167 or 831· 2197.

BEA UTI FUL LY
furn1Jhe4
two-bedroom •PI
Vou must ....
SpaciO&lt;.II llvlnt for two quiet nuoenu.
5 73-1441.

4 ·8EDR DOM furnlahecl epl. Allalllble
In Mey nNr c empuJ. Calll32·86 77.

U . B . A REA 3.4 •net 5..0eclroom
•partmenh lrom 2 blocks t o l'h mile
rr om campu1. Call 633-94!15 for
recorded mes.... on t~tlon .

LAFAYETTE
HEIGHTS
APAR T MENTS. 20 min, to campus.
Fully turnllhed, efficiency studio end
S1Uctlo aulte apartin.nts. No , _ .
required . Hyde Park Blvd , al Lafayette
Ave. -Niagera Fells , Cell collect
214 ·5711 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT
I"OUR · BEDROOM

apartment

off

. .lley, 15-mlnute walk from cem pua.

Furnlahecl,

r-onaOie. Available for

WANTED
FEMALE SEEKS place to &amp;here with
Others lor •u m mer and/Or fall n. .r
campua. O wn room cteslrecl. 831 · 2161
If vou need 1 roommate.

campus. A,.,,.Oie
134-4624,

THAEI!·IIEDAOOM ,
modern
~ment , Kitchen, Cllnette, lllflnt
room, beelroom - hlrnltf&gt;ecl - RO¥e
end refr1..,ator. Wal"'nt diStance to
Unl-.lty . May lit . I l l Met\ for four
persons. 137·1111. t a . m . -7 p .m .

3·Bf.ORDO M ept: Carpeled, l urnlalle4 .
1 200 • utilities. 89 Custer 5 1. Call
upllalra.
LARGE FUR NI SHED 4 -Dectroom
apartment for re nt - H e rtei.Colvln
area . Av a i l ab le June hi. Ca ll
817· 6657
ROOM FOR RENT - Sl2 WMkly
Male. l 0 minutes I rom c • mous. Call
after !1.
HOUSE f'DR REN T - AmhtrU - 3
le r jje Dadrooms, st ova, rel rl gerltor,
dltllwesner, g•rbage d lspotal , outdoor
barbecue, cupet ect tnrougnout .
Suitable lor 3 or 4 studenU. L Nse
reQu ired. Avellable June l!ltl'l . $21!1
par month Call 633· 17 36.
APARTMENT •v•llaDie Mey lsi
Bailey -Walden Ave
k ttc llen , d ln ong

' o om ,

PA tf ot.

o•tnro o m .

tw o

De&lt;Jrooms C• lt 893·9517
THREE BE O R O OM •P•rtment ,
15 m i n u te walh ano dttlanc e lrum

THREE · BEOROOM furnished house
for rani . Av•llable Immed iately.
634..0219
LARGE 3 -bed room a partment HeHai·Parkslde .,.. Ava ll,b le M •y 1
or June 1 Must l)uy furniture Call
134 -64 43
•·BEDROOM •ot. Av• llable June J .
$ 225 plus utlllll ... Main at Fillmore.
C•ll 837· 1265 .

O NE M ILE fr om JCIIOOI. Blocks from
Loblawa . Three bedrooms wltll
oatem ent ace.... S 130 per month •
u t llllle a . Pleaae c all aft8fnoon
137·12-&gt;2.

RIDE WANTED to California on or
IN'OUnd April 24. Will ' " - driving and
eJC~. Call One at 195·3466.
AIDE DAILY - 7-7a30 a.m. E.'Vt!U
and w••k•r to :no Wlnspur.
4 a0o-4 a30 p .m. Wlnspur to Eatt
Utica, Welk•r. IIS-1059 aft• 6 p.m.
State wealcly cost.
AIDE NEEDED to Harrlsi»UJV erN or
Plllllldalphla f'rldalf . Call Charlotte
831· 3250.

fOfUAU
FURNITURE for " ' " DeskJ, ct...-a,
beds, chairs and octdltt- . ReasonaDie
and In ltOod ll'lape, 13ot-o562 •
BEDS - t wo m e l t , _ and boiCSprlng~
- ~ condition - mo..l n9, must sail
- will oarg~~ln . Call 839·1990 .,.nlnta.
STER EO FM converttf for ear Which
already 1111 AM ractlo. Nwer used. 1•0
886· 3027.
135 mm F2.1 Vl¥ater fo r Nltcon, ease,
skyllettt , 52 mm step-down rlnt , 860
or trade. 837·251 2.
'69 Vw Bug,
131·23 10.

50,000

miles. 1 850

FU RNI TUREa Lerg~~ dtik, d r - r ,
single bed, rut, cllalrs, nlollt tab le . Cell
MlchMI 838·3 255 efter 6 p.m.

RIDE BOARD
AlOE NE EDED to O lllo April 19 or
April 20. C•ll Rulli 835 · 1628.
2 GIRLS desire companions wllh c ar
lor crou -countrv t ravels May &amp; June.

FIFTY ODI..LARS per montn .tvallable June ht corner Meln· f'e rry .
Pa rtl e lly furnlslled . C•ll 582 366:1 .

1967 AUSTIN America n needs repair
- 175. Cell 836·3613.

'69 HONDA 4501 nMctl work; betl

The

Oliver Beauty School

TWO BEAUTtf'UL furnlslled
apartment~
In !louse, ev•l t•Die
M•v - S ep t ; 3 people/ep•rtmenl;
S·m ln . w•lk ; negotiable 83 1 2255

5957 MAIN STREET
WILLIAMSVILLE, NEW YORK

AVAILABLE May lsi
J ro oms kttcllen •no Dlltrt . 8 OIOCkl from
umpus FurniJile&lt;J w ltn uti li ties P•t
8 32 0824

633·5437

'Make or break'
If you drive a
foreign car .. . .. .
we speak its language,
with a complete line of
parts and accessories.

Bulls open four-game roadtrip
by Oavt' Gningc:r
Sp1 &lt;1m m .\loll WfiiN

Dutu)g each season, tltcu: t~ usually a g11111p 111
games whu: l1 a team ffht$1 Wtn u1 mJ ~ r til h,.vc ..t
successful season . That part ol cite schctlulc, usually
referred to as that which will "make or l'lreak " a
team 's season. could come as early as totluy for the
baseball Bulls. Buffalo. after opening ut home
yesterday ag.~inst crosstown nv:.l Buffalo State ,
opens a tough four-game ro&lt;tdtnp this afternoon
against powerful St. John's tn New York Ctty.
Bulls' head Coach B•ll Monkarsh , who \ l:tted
earlter that the BuUs would have tu lake four ul the
games on thll&gt; top, feels that the Bulls can du 11
However, he acknowledges that lhe oppo"lton wall
be tough.
"St Jolu1's is nuted fur lheu uulstanding
pitchmg and tn field depth ," ob-.ervcd the Bull
mentor. "The Redmen arc ranked in the top ten tn
the nation (second an the East) and stack up, on
paper, a.~ perhaps our toughest foe Seton Hallts .tlso
an exceUent team . They are ranked fifth tn the East
and they were the team that knocked us uut of the
playoffs last year. In addttion, fatrletgh Otcktnson
always has a tough ~quad . "
Bulls lose Kalobius
Buffalo wul have to facr these o pponents and
perhaps the rest of thetr schedule wuhout
righthander Ernie Kalobius. Kalobius. who was
expected to be one of the Bulls' top starters this
season, is suffering from an undiagnosed illness.

A. ~ do lhc Bulls. Sl
John's. Buffalo 's lil\t
npponcnl. ltgurc:. to have a stronger team than they
tltll l01\t \ e..t.\ 1)11 The Rcdmeu &amp;re led by thcu own
'Btl; Thte~: •• 111_/,hlhandet~ Mtke Pruly aud Uuh
llurnmcl and ~tt uthpaw Marry Dwonarsk•
In adtltltt&gt;n tu lfu,sc thrte, St John 's h:t'l
freshman Steve Ratzer, whn won the PSAL baschall
charnpiunslt ip fm Bowm: lligh School by pttching a
no hitter in the final playuff g:~ me . MVP Ru!!s Bove,
a li1~t baseman who h•t ..342 last season, rcturttl&gt;. The
rt~w recruils arc led by Marto Hewitt, whv played for
1he ll S squJd tn the Pan-Amencan Games. llewtlt ,
a Chtrd ba~emart , h11 a tomd .43 1 10 Sl John's fall
program The Sl John 's Mtuad should prove a tough
oppunc:nl ftu Bulllefthander Jon Roth
Cary Odachowsk• and Mtl..e Catull , who wtll
draw the n~agnments 111 Sct()n HaJI, will ntll have an
easy chore either Coach Owen Carroll has h•s usual
contingen t M gutJd p•ldung. J oe Flannery, who won
several pivotal playoff games la.\1 spring, and Atlantic
Coast League star Dun Miele head tht mound staff
Center ftelder Paul Caffrey , whn holds the Pirates
home run rewid, leads the altack for the men from
South Orange, New Jersey
Munday aftcrnocm 's game agam$1 foatrletgh
Di,ckmsun wtll also be a tough test for the Buffalo
squad Ex-maJor league backstop John Ors1no, coach
of FDU, gamtd a do1en freshmen (including several
high school all-stars) and he, too, has a fine pitching
staff. Roge r Kreut'ler and lou Turco head the
mound staff for the squad from Teaneck. Orv Cott
will be on the mound for what could be a cructal
game fot Buffalo.

TOPS 8t BOTTOMS
Mod Sty/n for Guys Mid G•ls

1065 Main Street, Buffalo
886-7006
A diviston of MI CA EAST, Inc

eei-Rit

EAL
TH FOOD SHOP
1451 Hertel Ave. Near Norwalk 837-7661
fRESH NATURAL PEANUT BUTTER 19clb.
(Made while you wait)
also f•turinl DANNON YOGURT 4/98¢ plain. coffH, vanilll
OPEN 9 :30a.m. - 9 :00p.m .

LOW, LOW, PRICES ON VITAMINS &amp; FOODS

Bent Wick Watershed
I

All candles $1
~ IQ

~

CITY

Olv. Walhlngton Surl)lus C.nter
-

l/2 Hr. Fr. . Parking

Mo nd11y thru Sat urdlly

I

a

'· .

i Waterbeds $15

1

o

1 ~~o

)

182 Allen St.

r

I

180 Allen St.

Sale- Fri. cf Sat. Only

Hours:
friday 4: Saturday

II :00 a.m. - 6:00p.m.

�offef l 5038 Allenhurst .

rU91and refrl.-rator, 831~451.

1969 VOLKSWAOON - dNn , NW
l*nt, 45.000 mi.._ Orl9inal own«.
Call ~--- 1 •3()-4: 30. 897~751 ,
1135 ..636.

PUR~

Petermax buckskin midi c:o.t,
llze 15. N - sprlrsgthlng. 195-9314.
e.t offer l Keep t rying!

PORTABLE SANYO television Mt
with 0000 reception on ALL
dlannels. lnclud• UHF. 170. Call

S I Z ED school bua c amper.
Completely o utfitted fo r 5 ad u lh.
Exc ellent
runnln9 c.o nd l t lo n .
136-4412.

1131~516 .

' 66 CHI!:VV van um!Mf, Insulated ,
onder 50,000 miles. 6-c:yllnder, std .
snlft. Exc:allent condition. 6 oKullent
ures. 1695 . Call 135·3051.
F IS HE A
llCT· 78 speAker systems.
Fa c t o ry s ealad .
Fhher 5 · year
guarantN. 12" woofer, 2-5" mldoofante,
2·3 " twNter . Only 1100. C all AI
1135 -6637 ,
F O R SALE : V Olvo st atlo nw1190n.
1 96 7 . A lklng 1500. C all H o w le
1137-6092.
J 964 INTE RNATIONAL Harv•tet
Step Van . C ompletely reconditioned .
M u ll lN to •ppr•clat•. H ighest o ffer .
11 39·2 3 48 ,

FOR S A L E : AMPEG 8 · 12 amp for
guita r, bau , or~n. C all 135- 75 79 . Fr•
k in.
VOLKSWAGON 1969 bug . E Mc:all• nt
cond itio n . 11 1 00 . C all 111~49 1.
M E N 'S B ICYCL E, 3 ·speed . N - tires.
Ma n v new p a rts . M ust Mil. $40 . C a ll
G aorte 1134· 79119 .
'69 A E N AUL T statl o nwA9()n .
s.all, 1900. 1 3 7 -6 9 5 8 .

Must

1966
P LY M OUT H
6 - cyllnd a r,
a utom a t ic
r ad i o , hea t er. GoOd
conditio n Asking S 3n . 838·3 1 91.
F OL K·CL A SS IC
g uitars , n - -&lt;~sed
Ma rtin, Gu ilds, Gib son s , G urian, etc .
E agle b a nJos, oorogl dulclm e~. T h e
String Sho ppe, 5 24 Ontario. 7 p .m .-9
p .m S at : 12- 5 p.m . 11 74~12 0 .

vw

BUG 1965, goOd cond ition. sOMe
new p a rts, 57,000 mil es. NM&lt;Is mu f fler
only 11 2 4 -S 16 7 after noons.
LAFA VETTE L T 725A AM ·FM star~
tuner , II month \ o ld , per fect cond it ion.
sells new fo r 1 130 . Vou n for I 100,
Including cables. 8 3 1·208 2.
VOLKSWA GON BUG 1969 red .
Radio, s now tires, 31 ,000 mi . Good
tondltlon Call 11115·511 22 days . 1 900 .
1963 FALCON , 53,600. Eng ine a nd
transmlnlon axcell• nt, nin a mount ed
wes, bOdy nMds w ork . 9 :0~ : 00
831 ·527 1,3011
1969 FORO ECO N ·LI N E van, blue,
c arpeted a nd pane led . R N sonable
price . C a ll Riehle 118 1· 1674
USED FURN ITURE lor sale; b edS,
\ot•\, c nalrJ, t• ble-s, dres.sen . d esk •,

19611 VW Fastback AM· FM , 4 ~peed
transmlulon, grHn with wnlte Interior.
Very toOd condltton . Must sell!
134-9731.
USED UPRIGHT p lano fo r sale. Good
conditi on . C all Judy 8 3 7 .0456 aft e r 6
p .m .
1966 VOLKSWAGO N b Ull. 130 0 c.c
engine. 1nterlor and DOd y In g oOd
shape. 1 550 C all O o m 8 3 3.09 2 3 a fter
5 p .m.
FOR S A L E : H o me w ith o~edroom
apt. F urn iSn.d u pstairs . Ranting I 1 25
m o n th . C IOM t o U .B . Low 1 2 0 '1 . W ill
h OI4 m ort9age . Tal. 134·5164.
F URNITURE fO&lt; Ill roomu d Ouble
bed , desk , lcltc:hen set, so ra. M o ra .
C a ll Frank 138·214• .
CAM E RA Puktlca-L SLA w ith ca50.
Also OICpOSura meter, t 50 C a ll Sua
837 .()640 .
THREE GI\EEN ru gs - 12'9"119' 1 1' KII ' - 9 'K9 ' . Also 90" ve n e tian
b lind - 2 electric Irons (n- ) - s.evera t
pieces carpet - ca ll 832·129 4

Reasonable.

COME HE.AR abOut
•u · uan .
8Ahal WCHid Faith! Room 2 62,
Norton . Evwy Friday 11-12 p .m . o r
call 137· 325•2 .

IF Y OU a~te quality , you'll
apt~NC~ate Independent F~gn Cw
S ervice, 2024 Kensingto n Avenue,
Amhlnt. 839-1150.

SPACIOUS 4~room apartment f o t
Nd»let M-v thfOUih S -.pt. CIOM to
campus .
RAnt natotlab l a . Call
131·2667.

EXPEAIENtCE PEOPLE: Come to
Psyc;homat, Wedn-.day ~ p .m . In
Norton cafeteria 122 and Thunday
7- 10 p . m. r~orton 232 ,

GARAG E SAL.E S aturday - Eugan•
and T r•mllne-KenmCH"O• ru111. c:ouetlas,
bed, t1tHos, misc . c:h. .p .

4 BEDROOMS furnlsned, 1115 plus
utilities, Hertel and COlvin . May 1 thru
August 31. Call ISI-4619.

TYPING DONE for cheap fast,
officiant servic e - term papers, etc:.
1 .40/page, 343 Norton . 8!1 · 5511. Ask
lot Julia .

BEAUTIFUL apartment available June
ht Ull August lU . Four bedrooms.
C IOM to c.ampus. Prlu n.gotlabla. C all
831 · 2261/ 2259 .

L.OST &amp; FOUND

HALF S IAM ESE kittens lrN. She
wNks. Very cu te . Alan 8 3 5 - 7082 . Kate
8 3 3..003 1.

BIG BEAUTIFUL 6-Gedroom house 3 blOCks ( I) f rom c.ampus. May 1 5 A u eust . Call Jo.nla 132·5440.

FOU N D : A brow n ka y uta conta in ing
a red G M il&lt;ey . Cla im at 1 nforma tlon
O.k . N or t Oil\.

INT ER ESTED In going t o Munldl few
the O lympic gam• tills s u m m w t F o r
In for m ati on, phone 83 3~6 311 .

4-BEDAOO M sum mer apartment n-.r
Main II FlllmCH"O Plaza . WaJhw, d ryer .
cafpeted . Easy lllt c:h. Rent ~tlal)lo.
Fran 13 1 ~194 .

FO UN D:
Red O u chund
M.
G u tchen , Ll unse n u mber 4 997 4 3. C a ll
8 3 1-450 1 bctfore 5 p .m .

TV P I N G - buSinesa o r penonal - t lfm
papers , t h e s es, m 1 n
m a lll n~ .
R easo nable ra tes. C all 9 37-605 0 .

F O UND : A blue, w ool p o n ch o - lett
by hltc:hlk.,. In my car o n S u nd a y n ita .
C all 839· 28•t6 .

W I L L T U TO R m ath/ OhYSICS/C hern ls t ry
to h igh lC h OO I /C:OII'98 students .
Contac t Ben 137·24 3 2 b etwMn 5 and
7.

JO B
R ESU M ES
profautona l,
confide ntia l consulta tion Speci a l ra t e s
lor stu d enu, rac.n t gra dua tes and
vete rans . 8 35-4473.
REFRIGERA T ORS, stoves a nd
w ash e rs Recond itioned , d l llvered a nd
g u a ra ntM d . O &amp;G A p pli a nces, 8 4 4
Sycamore . T&gt;&lt;4· 3 183 .
CI-4EAP : Sh e lves , rug, bicycle, dresJOrs,
O.sk, t a ble s, Chairs, la mp, k it che nware.
C a ll 831 · 1232.
BU ICK ELECT R A 1963 . Vary good
eng ine . Pow er steering, bra kes, mu$1
sell. M ake offer . C a ll 83:.&gt;-61138
APART M ENT of rela tively
new f urniture. Good dNI tor couple
IOOI&lt;Ing to furn ish a p l. u C a ll Steve
1138 2281
ENTI~E

PERSONAL
U .B Look a t yours.tt 1 Vou are O)etllno
lat••Right K a thy? Love M .T L .

Electrical Engineering
INFORMATION &amp; PROJ ECTS
Sunduy, Apri/16

5.00 p m
ot
OPEN H OUSC
2·00

wt-. a,. you t

a-..

M O TOACV•C LE + auto Insurance.
Instant FS · 1 ragardleu o f age or
d rivi ng reccord , WlltOullhby Insuranc e,
162 4 Main !&gt;t ., Buffalo , N . V . 811 5 ·11100
Mo n .-F ri. , ~ p .m. S al . 9-:Z p .m.

L OST : Cortn tenor UICOPhOne . G ray
m o lded c a·s.a : Jus1 bef o re va utlon.
PINse call Paul 8 33-6503
FOUN D: L.edles gtovft outside Olaf
An ne• on Wed. 3 ·29·72. Cla im b y
Ide n tifying 111 Spectrum.
FOUND : Sc:hool rtn9 f ound n N r A ldl)e
L M bus. C a ll RObin 11 31· 2 1711

PETRI SLA 35 m m 1.8 le ns fl a~h With
outle t cord , tigh t m eter , case, 111 0
89 7 · 3 9 25 R Ote&lt;.
N EE D A WAY t o t ranspo rt your
belo nglrsgs to Lon g l ll a n o In May ?
O ap•ndabla servtee, prtc;a rNs ona bte
and n egotl ab l• . C a ll Arthur 1135 1276
o r 8 3 8-40 4 6 .

ROOMMATES WANTED
G AA D U ATIIN G mala seekS same 10
look t or a n d share a partment• In
M anh a ll a •n
be gi nnin g
summ e r
1137-5 960 .
O N E FE MA LE roomma te needed .
J une l n . Merrimac O w n room . s SO .
C a ll 8 31-251&amp;6.
THREE ROOM M ATES w a nted Cor tall
ana/o r surTtm., House a crou street
hom campul on M errimac 1135· 1276 .
ROOM In house
Nur U 8
$62
Ava il able M ay 1 C a ll Joyce 1134· 1993
O N E OR rwo roommates tor neotl
IO ·m lnute
y N r : 4 bec,room house
w a lk to c ampus SSO/mo. ll38-4516
FEM ALE to share fu r nl\hed ap t on
Main, beginning Mav
1\t
C all
836 8615 .
ONE
ROO M MATE
wanted l or
3 bedroom a parament S mtnutes from

umpus.

O'Nn room .

furne'lhed

I nc I Ud OS u I llltiiiS lor
8311-4046 Sob o r Da•e
WANTED

$ 66

S ept

Summer

C all

ro omm •tes

( le maiO)
for 2- bedroum a p a rtment
with balcony. A c ross from college C all
831 2886 .

TO

SHARE """&lt;' ued 1uu10o
nea• 10u Mv•lltt tlle M•v
CraO&gt; p1tl!lrre&lt;1 $ :.0~ piu\ 8 II (, lfr4
THREC F C"l! R \unllliCH, !J rnuua t e\ Wttf~
,,u,-,-, tarn pu\ U wtl hiH'll~ht'd rocun-.
$ !.!&gt; each 8 J 1 ()61•1

TWO

111~1~

ROOIIIIMAT£',,

111~4

\t udenh
preleHt!d
~unuut!f
41Ud/Ut
nexl v~•• tJne vat•nt y td'- ' ' o~q!nrun\1
~· ~ ea• h • u1111l1t!\

M ay I, Junt I
COilHf\(OIIWC:AIIh

L • ll

n.we

8/ J I J41

N E. l u A ROO M lUI ,,. \UIIOfllt!•

t.•u

1\ea r &lt;.4ntpu~
alter ~ p "' al 8Jh lt&gt;:&gt;O
per

~

moutf\,

f- M At f

to

sf1Ar~

•v.,, r •111'"'

One rnUhlle hUn I 4.•1lti0H\o
837 ~~·94

tOOtTl

D•le

DOUBLE
SlDIItii)M
l11
bcgt nntng 1n May L a ll II Jtl ~ J 44

J FEMAI E'S IL)I

:w

-rttE WCJD~KE~

,4 0
Ml~t.­

t )wn

c· ,,II

1e11t

IHli .. O
I UIOI
!J '1'1f"HHO Wdtk fcJ

cantpu\ 03·4 3850
R OOM MA ll: WANIE(ll~llltdl
Pl•la .trtla
A¥.tii.Oie JUI!e
834 2158
Nt:A T

ROOMMAT t

sutntttet

o wn

~partnoent

'oo'"

Walkllll~

w dHieO

'"

I',Oik

I &gt;I
''"

be~hJU f ~.t

dt\l311le l..all t.-rv

o r Dave 83!o 7 760
SINGLE OR couple wantoo to

ttP••trnent
t o r iunuuet
c.;.ouvenle" t · clo,c t o

~nare

Mo de• n,
~. .- rnpu~

Reasonable rent 0 )6-249g
FEMALE t=tOOMMA T( tor J Pt'dlllorn
apt , o ff
Hertel dnd Nortll Park
Avenues. C .111 0/6-0610
COUPLE &lt;H tw o n1a1e~ f 01 S ePI&lt;'ntOer
M&lt;&gt;der n, 1 wo bedroom apa1tll1ant
Fttteen monute walk tu o.;aon ou\ Call
Jtm or Cheryl 8J-'·l 171
CREATE your own "SunorTUII "' '11"
In a room 1 ust ngtll l or you I 111: 1t'nt 's
nego tiable, loo 8JO·J 19::'

MISCELLA N EOUS
MOTORCV C I IS I c,

~.1111

e~ lr•

11311~576 .

JO B
RESU M ES
professiona l,
con t 14entl a l cons u llaUon . Spec lll rat e s
fo r s tuden ts, r ~ nt Qf'ldu a tas and
ve t e ra ns. 11 35 -44 7 3 .

APAR T M E N T to su b ·l et fo r tttree .
starling May 1. Main an d Mlfrlmac .
~r
month . Ph o ne Milc h
1 125
1135 ·5 2 116 .

AUTO IN SURA N CE - s pecla tll lng In
you n o driVefl : no ch arge f o1 a ccldanll
Of tra ffic viola tions, Immediate FS -1,
save up to l l OO/vN r. 6 11 3.0022.

S P AC I OUS
l · bedr oom h ou se
w t sun deck. A vail able May 15 - Au9.
11 20/mo . C e ll 11 3 1 - 3 0 63,
3 1
8 3 1· 3065, 8 3 1 3 0 71 a n y time .

A N T I QUES a nd mOdern furniture ,
ceramics, china, etc . S M S14 . at
Yest erd a y &amp; Tomorrow Shop. 14 39
Hertel Ave .

3-8EOROOM 1pertm an l - su b ·le t on
C a iiOdlne - 5 ·minute w alk to cam p us.
Elise 8 3 1 · 3396, Am y 1131 ·33 98 .
SPACIOUS , furnished. 4 ~ ed room
hOuM ava ila ble Jun-Au gust H ertel
a rea . C a ll C a rol 1 32·1682 or Elyse
837-5282.

SUB·LET APARTMENT
A C ROSS FROM ca mpus
4 m a in
wanted . Reason able rent from June to
Sept C a ll J a ne 837 · 3:.&gt;09

THREE-8EOROOM , lumlstted house
••• li a b le M ay 1!1 . Fi ve-m inute walk
from UB . C a ll 832 ·37 4 5.

• ·BEDROOM apa rtment a crou stre et
from c.ampus on Merrimac Availab le
Ma y through AuQust R ent negotiable
835 - 1276.

BEAUT I FUL old house close to
campus. Three b edrooms aveot able
Summer. l n dl•tduaiS o r grou p s , Price
noootla bla. 834 - 14 15 .

3 · 8EOROOM apt
kit c hen, living
room, din ing room Tn rM ·m lnule walk
from c a mpus Call Arthur 83$· 1276.

-----------------

TtiREE BEDROOM
furnished
apartmen t ,
minute walk to
c.ampus Sublet from either M e v hi or
.July Ut "20 1131 ·39114 , 1184-3592

II••

FOUR-8EOROOM apar tment availa ble
M ay 15 tnru S et:&gt;lambe r 1 A crou
stre et from c.ampus C a ll 1138-411AO
~PEND

THE

~OKlOU\

5 oeoroom

summer

w a lk to c ampus
113 1·:.&gt;7 85

tn

nouW~

Prtce

IIOU'&gt;t
t..ublet

1n

qiOriOUI

oeoote

ror a

ne4,b)'

Plenty

uf

~--fTt,nule

negollaote

;&gt;88~

fh••u.

lht\
wl'h

----------

J BEDR OO M com ptelely furnished
Mate, lam ..e &lt;OUPie MOIIIh Ol May
to ee o R e nt
n egoto a Oi e
831 2087,
Oll 2182

C.llt

ROOMMA 1 ( WANT ED
May 1 01
June I
10 S ept
1 O w n 100m,
lurntsneo, ont' blnck from cam p us J4 0
pe• • Ol7040J

u1 1'1 ed

'"'" ht!d•u•&gt;"'

10 tnii\Ute

wo)lk

studc"ts.
dll)lllme
lu\1

\ ~.tCr

OJ~

' •II

M nde , n
tundiltu'''"9,

4J'I'J

e~u

t1

L.«ttl

llv.oli~o t e

Hjt.H,Hn.t 1 ei

u~

neyOII a bl~

Ma~

SPfNOtNC,

SuOif!l •

the

llu•l~

b•9 enouqh

th~.tp

' J BEORIHlM dj.l~tiOII~''I Md'&lt; I'&gt;
~cue
1 v n11H
wAH'
tn , .trttpu\
Available luo '&gt; cplen\Uo• 11 I~ ~376
1
flfte• ~ c,,e,ap

.tvarl.,tDie

4

&lt;;0

eel

nlin

to

M.tu•f"~"

negnttablf'

tor

!tunu"f'' ,,. Bo\.hUt"'
I beOrul'lm fP.Orlnoc.,l,
twu

¥L'0~''' k•trhen.
.Jttc1
dllt-IYfJ

f0010

,_umrnet

IJ

w ITH

u p L E

u b 4rt0t Ot&gt;tlt

tw

0 .. b

v

• o artnu~nt

II ~ ~

II

slov-.

i,, tudutt~

10 ""nul• w a l'"
tt nrlt
C4 "IJUS
Rt!.. sonabte oen I Call Antut' 8 J 1 I J4 '-'

teh1 9fHat or

rl VE Gl RLS $4 0 •, '''"' mtnut• w.tlk,
J•: oedroonu. tt vtr\9 tt&gt;nnt, dHtHHJ

COU PLC WII H DOG want 10 tove 111
&lt;ount ry tor S e pt W1lllng 111 sha•e. C•ll
Nt tk 1130 ·2175,

room, ual cony, b~throom
evenings. 037 3209

~•II

Llare

b·BEOROOM hlluse un Englewood
2 .-t111Hite walk
Avaolable June hi
t.. all OJ I ? l ~J.
t&gt;r1c e
negollible
OJ 1· :.&gt;560
MELLOW S l X·DII&lt;I ooono house right
o ff Ma1n, two bln,.k\ from pdl t.. C •II
8J7 264/, S :l!&gt;O month
APAR T M E N I 10 s1oblel Ju11c lilruuglo
AuguSl
Fully
turno\hC!&lt;l
C.&gt;ll
831 2 094

I

,p,.tmelll

su1nr•uH, 5 rnu1ute walk. tftlll'\

Friday,
t. t

, .. , •

U .S . area

4 bedr (tt)IU
huuw
WANT ED
ap ;u tmeot ne•r c.anlpu \
Mav
September Ca ll OJ !&gt; !&gt;007

'"
"'

~ 10 R EWARO
Couple llt!C!l' '""' 111
two bedroom •part•n en t l.lu'e '''
c .. mpus M.t~y /Jun e 80C&gt; IRO~

WANTED l bedoounr •PI 111 U 8 •'""
lo • r1ex1 S epl C alltl o woe 830 IIO 'J l
NEED 3 8EOROUM apa1t ment w11ro
walk1n9

dtsLanc..e

tu

u

H

11

tru

September M1c.hele, M r11&lt;tv II II 7;• /I ,
D•~ne8JI227J

ROOM

WAN11:.D

l•oo

'&gt;o•plerro ll CI

Ptcfet
tn
IIVt!!
t\thtt
• .unpu~;
COIISII)f'f~l 8 P~Ople l ,;II I\ II 8 I I

lOt

wtth

lio0'1

&lt;. ~ n1 pu s.

l4 Apnll972 . T h e Spectrum
l '

i I tO.

u111111es. 8J1 1811

FROM MA... Ul In August I hi 4
oearooms on l.&gt;SDon Call OJ I 4069 or
OJ 1-4061 Gno4 conOtl""'
FO UR - BEDR OO M

&lt;A&gt;II

\llblet

APAR TM EN TS WANTED
c

r,u

In

('u"''"e') ,

llytnq

8 18 J91 'l

APAR TMEN I

oo 21

I

LPt .t t cHJ ''' the B,,'- k [ td V June l
1\Ug
l l Uo\ IV ~1'10,mll
Luoold&lt; l
[ l.lY''"
~~~(..tub Qn'lr f! • .sl(J N nr1nn.
t\j l .:0 )A~ lUI turlh~r deUII\ 0 1 toil
I t•ll )Jn 887b

~UBLET apt !J "''._ ftVtl' ~MHOU\ h.')•
~
ten,ale\
nud Mlllilv
lflt \"lUt)h Au~

Reasotlabl~

M~y

1WO
A f' (H

831 l7?4

lle.•llv

I•'

NE. E Ill 0

futnt,hf'O .Jpt
4o.arl1pus,
•ent

'",.PAL.•OUS
J bC•1111cHU ollll
llu
'""n''"e' teAr p~tk, /l•n ''" Ht!Hel """'

8.J7 0'-'!14 , 8J/ OHJJ dill'•

01

O"e

"•''"ttct

Av••l~bl•

IJL OI&gt;L!;

R~rtl

bhn"' \ '''"" ( ••nUll\
ted!lUOII['t'l" l All it t J 4/bU

too

ten

8JIIJI97

1\t\tt\tl 4'fii.:U I.,ble ,,,,

..'

lOOk 111&lt;)

lllliPL l

3

sehoul ,

ftrlfH

,,,, Htnrun

MO( IEPN LI\J·H , (

\Utntne•

I WO BEUAOOM ll\ode1n 4P.trtment,
1u1 mshed. dtshw4\har ~a r poto ng wall
waU, J~ 1n1nu1e Wl51~ to c a n,pus
lint'" C' heov1034 J 171

h.t

\llffHltOr

.tlt

apt . A "allabla
distanc e . C a ll

WAI~ I ng

F OUR BEDR OO M
hou\8,
1 40
Wtnspea1 , May I 5
S ept. 1 Rani
ne&lt;Jntlable Nic e landl nrd 831·3589,
J511l 3~81

.JPd ttruent ••• ~unl et June I
AtJQU\1
ll
nent
ne9o1101.11e
E·~~ll e n l
ocKbl•nn C~II8JI ?.1 /q, OJI 2:&gt;81

t:J~
l ntH
.iP4•tn\er\t

~room

TWO.ftEOROOM apartmlfll • ••liable
M a y :.&gt;2 to August 31. Wal,.lng distance
olt Belle y C all 8 34 ·5 J 66 .

T on •waf\da In
PHot ••u2 par._

' ' ' " 41 nc:J fu"

M oke •• 838 lit&gt;/ uo lUI
a1 8JI 24!13

SPAc•ous '""'''

SPACIOUS 4
lo&lt; summ.. .
635-4596 .

luotury 0

bdll\tiHJil't,

lUI)~

InClude'- \dtlltleS

They're t he Woodshed'... 1wwesl lll:-.lt• sensattorl,
rni lcl, rnedium o r ho t Swtrl 'em around tn tangy
hl ut• r heese sa u t'P, and tintsh the I'Xpt•rience with
ni"PY cele ry stick s. Non-s to p rx·B n ut~ are o n
the ho use, and spirt II' an• !11)( After :1 P M T lw
Woodshed
wh t•rt• th(• kll&lt;·hen's alway!- Opt'n
an~ the mustl' 1 S alway.; on We' re r1~ht next to
The Pac ket I nn 10 Nclrl h Tuna wanda. just over
t ht' Delaware Avenue Bndge Dnve out Delaware o r take the Youngma n n. The Wnorlshed':-.
optm from I I : A.M . ~very day exc·cpt Sunday

7

F OUR · B E DAO O M
H O USE FO R
F I VE : 10-mlnute walk t o campus May 1 5 - S 8C)t , ). Prl c:A 0090Uabll.
SUMMER ROO MMATES needed for
house near campus. O w n rooms.
Chup . 83 2~7 5 6, 11 31·3973 around
d inner tim•.

2 B ED R OOM apartment, IO ·monut"
walk fr om c.t~m poo s
6 120/montn S30
lor summer ortllllt~S
'vallable May
15 S eol I C .t~118l7 3!.72 aile • 7 p.on

wo

S EA RCH N O
M O RE ll Spaciou s
t n rM-Gedroom apartm ent With terrace :
4
Available
a cco mm o dates
June-August. S h Oft w•tk t o campus.
83 1·3580 or 811,..196.

QUIT AA 1-.so n s
pOpUlar
son ~. finger a nd f lat p lcklnll styles .
J eff . 8 8 2 · 184 7 . FOlkSinging t or parties.

BIG
4 - BE:OROO M huU\C
T1•nso1
Country
tano 111
bAck
R 0 4d
R oo mmate,, leav ing May JuiV I'd llkt1
t o keep lh!OUCJh next veal Wi ll oe Ill
law school S ept. Call t1nw te 634 44b .?

1

Call

FOLK

2'·8EDR OO M apartment lor •ummel
S 100 • utollliaS, IS """ ride fr om
umpus . Furn•shi'O 89 2 23 t 7

TWO ROOMMATE!&gt; watoll\d st••llnCJ
M•y J ~
Ctwn roOfll\ I) '"'" w4lt.
C all Rtcr• ~~ 8 l l 001 4

On

132~634 .

AUTO R A O IO $ and I IP'l. S ates and
- vice. 1 0~ discount w ith t h is ad .
Grupp B ros . II 77·2250.

5 R OO MMATES nceooa tnr \paclous
hOuS&lt;t, 5 milnute wal~ trun• cam pu •
$ 62 eACh 031 ·2705

.ap•' tment

Noone •
can restst
our chicken wings.

Ef191ewood.

Teach me to ride. C all 193· 3234 noon
to 3 , Friday.

CHUCK :

' , r

r

f "

'

• ,

•

Page, fiftt:ten
It •

11

�Available at the Ticket Office

Announcements
Studio Arena Thuter
Through April 23: Play Strlndbug
May 4 - 28: Man of La Mancha

Clifford C . Fumue Collea• will hold an inform~
coffee hour on Sund;ay ;at 8 p.m . In the m;aln lounae of
MxDonald Hall. The event Is open to myone Interested In
lurnlna about the colleae and participating In Its resldentiotl
proarotm.

Popular Concerts
April 14 : Herb ie Hotnca&lt;:k and Gary Botrlh (AC)
April 15 : Ferrante ;and Teicher (K)
April 15: Jethro Toll (C)
April 16: Carlos Montoya (K)
April 16: T en Years Arter md P ra&lt;:ol Harum (M)
April 16: Don Ellis (B)
April 18 : S;avoy Brown, MillO and Fleetwood Mac (M )
Aprol 18 ; It 's A Buutiru l O;ay ;and Ta1 M;ahal (S)
A prrl 2 1 · Alice Cooper (M)
Apri123: N•ncy W ils on ( K )
Aprol 21 23: Buffalo Folk Festival (U B I
Aprol 28: Th ree D og N igh t (M)
Aprol 30: Lighthouse and Mah dvosh nu Or.:hestr.s (K)

Protect "Self Help " dcsper~ltly needs a summer lllld
project hud . Phy si&lt;:~lly hand i&lt;: apped women need
friends ~nd &lt;:omp;anoons. PleliSe &lt;:onuct llnd;a ott8 3 1·3579.
f~ll

Hillel w ill hold a S abb;ath S e rvice tonoght ~• 8 p.m on
the Hillel House. O r. M ohon Plesur of the Departm ent of
~l isrory w ill spuk o n , "Jewish Youth Today .''
The Underxuduate Medical Society o~ spon\OrtolK 4 Uop
111 the Ont•11o Sl!en~oe Center tomorrow . All ontere,tcd
mernber\ who h~ve not prt&gt;viou,lv \ij(ned up, le.tve your
nJmc dnd phone nur11ber on the LIM ') oflr&lt;e r.Jnnr rn
Uem.·nt H o~ll.

Bufhlo Pholh.um onoc Orc ht) trit (K)
Apri l 14: jdu/RO&lt;I&lt; N ight
Aprtl Ill &amp; 18: M ich .sd rrl~on T hom~
Aprtl 2) &amp; H. h•d ~ Stern
April 211. Mltdr Mtll cr
Mdy S: O.mce I h e.u cr ul ll .rltm

Pholo Conlest
While you'r e on ca mpus take a
111llurc ol th e cam pu s, an ac ttvi t y
.111d {or an eve nt and e nt er th e
1.o nlc~t for rn l&gt;nc y pri1es. Fir~l
rm.tc \.:!5, seco nd pnze S I S. th in.l

The UB Bi~ycle C'hr" wtll he q&lt;.hnt\ lhro•vl(" the Br.11
Ru.ll!r BMKe C.dn•l torncltouw ,~.,, tlnlo( dt 10 .t.m. &lt;IIHJ ICJ\11111(
lrnm tht Norton il dfl b ot.. r ••&lt;"'· 111" flf\1 ru.k wilt ~olvCr
''"' unl.ic1 \()mil~' I nidi, rnlht nl ot on ~&lt;.l"fll&lt;. ru•dl drc,&lt;\ .oud
(VfiYIIIIC \hnuh.J hdVC 1111 truuhlr lllolklll~ II All Jrl' IIIVIt~oJ

rrll~

(. hdbdd Huu ~e wolf h.ovr .o C.h.1bhu\ \trvo&lt;e runo~:ht •I I
p 01 lnllowco.J hy • lull ...,lo,obht» mc•l, \PIIIt, ""Kill~(

$ 10

~ntry

hlank~

tnfurmJiton are dllallahlt: at
tnlo n na l tnn hoolh'

.,,cl

d~ll&lt;.tlll(

Credlive Associd t es
Aprtl Ill . Wutc·r Wl/1\1/1' ( J )
AIHII 111 ! I lVII&lt; IUII'IIt'\ (A)

and
1111•

Only fvol' Arc~~~~ (1)
Atllll I\

fhc UU Sl.r I e•n• 1\ lout..uo..: fuo ,, nll'mhco ul !101
!.11 ull~ tlltronlr&lt;.f 111 f!O"Iflllll( I he 11'•1111 I ll lht.
1'1 I.! 7 I
'r·""" Lnnt.,&lt;.t Bud I'JI.odorw .or" I I~~. 17 or .11 rh• l'•l11hoo
on ll.ort.. (,ym •Ill "uii.JJ~

Rulh'r Derhy (M)
1\pfll .?0
Rllll(ltllK Urnlh~r\, UJrnum dlld B~olt-y ( orcu' (M )
MJ\ I I II

UU O.,purh lAr Uuh wtll "·"' .o •·•• o.oll~ """"'"I''
.tiiiJOO" .II Ill Ill •• '". lor,t l~' " " ,, II Ill ..... "'I\
or the I·"' '\urw, Voll.r~r· ..,huppnll( I'IM• . l ur .utolotooHI rl
'"'' " rn,otuu• ,.,It h'"' .or IS I 1 71 I\ Oncn t•• di l
I&lt;O'II0\1

fhe

NldJIAt~

Fruutoer ( h.rpter uf the

N~w

(.nmtnJC lvrnh jon \dlr Arnot 17)
M.o) •I '"l'"' \1111' IM )

Yurk f ovol
1\ [Y
1\
1\lnooh.lll\

L 1htflft\ U1UUfl ~ttl hulcJ lht·u .tnnu.tl HIC.t.'IUIK un \uruJ.•y .tl

r

u, ..

II)
rn Jt the llrHIJIIoHI
,.,,,,,o,l t hiJI&lt;h "'"
(inl"''""' Avo I"'" \hlllt follll\ "'II h&lt; \hllwn A w.:nllrol ul
If '\molht•r, u,olhtl\ '-,hu~ v.tH~h " th~vuh•tf lu f'U\IHY .•
'"'~It llU~\tlllrt
how 111111 It clu yo11o ~'"'"' ,,hou t tl11· IIIII ul
f{t~lrh' .snd tho I IIC. rttll ul R•llhh l'&lt;ril 1 11111 I lot cvotl ''
lrct· Jnd op~n 111 th o fluhl••

M ~""'"·'' 1\trtlolnnum
liull.tlo 'ot,lt~ t •lllrt:•
')
'&gt;t ll011oAVCrlllllt'
(.
l oor rH·II Un o vo"l\ol~
IJII
O.,t,otc Unlvt"l\o t y .Jt lllrll.tlo
f
ft'"-"h ( Cllll'f
A
Alhnl(hr·l\rlll' All ( .. tllt•ry
Al
Allltdll C.ul tutdl ( t•nlf•o
r I C01!PI•· O.,l)dJII'~ /edt·~.
M

li

I he ~l ollel ( unve,.rtltlroAI H ehrew cl.s" (•dvdl1fed) "''"
r11Ct'f "'' \unrl.ol .1t I! tO p . lll rot Ro&lt;•m /r, • Nnrt(lll. I hr
t'lt·nH•nf.try ll.t'' "'tllmn•t .rt I Ill p r11

'\Ill)"''"" Avt•

\ tudtftC\ fnr hr.At l " 'I'Uf1'\cHtn•~ 1h1 nHJ'-" ,if Unit
1 ,,;/~ •I"' \at/, "''"tlh '-"Ill ,,, . fHt''t IHt·&lt;t , ..
.Jl X tO

,.,,.,.ow

\p(lrtS lnfor mat ion

r

nr tn I t.·nttll• \hJdlr¥ /o·olr~ . ""' \t.o11o Ave• 1\clrn""'"'
" ~ Itoo ·• lull\ .,..1 ~) luo \tuckn" 1\11 ""''"' ,,,. olour lll'rl
tu lit, ht.u·t I ttHt):.t'lt&amp;" t u"d
th AhA tS U uu~ wttt

tuv•·

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luh11 \ Utmcr\ltl,
N 'VI ~ Ult• ,,.
I nmmro&gt;w 'vII\&lt; I~ h,l\l'h•ll .ol Koun~lyu l'nl1 I p 111.,
I luh I .u
,ol tho lln.-t 'l\11\ nt Kut..hc,tc• 2 p.m , "·''"tY
''·" ~ .oruJ foctcJ hunto• up .. uo·• .tr liufl.tiQ ~141&lt;' t Pliq(t ""h
lluft.olu '&gt;t.oll· .11111 t wtlorl{l I 1&gt;.111. duh lit"' Jl tilt Wl\t
"'l.it K""' '"" l luh """ l ~nl\ttl\, Bulf~lo StAte .on&lt;.l
Mllq•huht, 'fl m. roll•·• hO&lt;I.C\ "' th&lt; (.open P•I~Hl~ lui
ol II .t 111
..,unll•Y \i '"''~' h•\dl411 olonohti'IH",I(Itl ~t \r run IIJII ,
\outh (ll.tn~&lt;. No•"' lt•H~ I fl 111
M undAy
V dhlt'r h~'eh.oll ,,t I ,llfl&lt;rlth llH "III\Uf1
I, o~~•r•~ N I I 10 II 111
I ut\cJAy 111111111 v.H\IIy lo,l\o h.ilt "
(tor I '""llllllllf~
i ullt·)(o·.l'...-11&lt; I odcl. lpm
f.tllt.IH •••

"'"I'

111

th&amp; \-

,,. wtt ... ' ttu Ut-.: Ut·.•J '"

fullu"t'&lt;l h\ ·• "''·'""'" fr".l\1

\ludtnh fur l'r.er l ""Ill h.t\•,: .ut '"·u-1• ltukpnhlt'th •
( dt·IH.IItUfl c.u11"'''"); ul .1 ru.u, ft ,uul r,tll\- nn 'uull J't f fu

"'""" "''" lu .ol
1• m .or I o·nu•l• "'·'·''~' I "'" ~ . (,rfl•rllr
.uul thl' r.oll\ .11 I 11 111 •I I unplt \h.o.ut· l~roh·~ "'·""'
I ht 1\ v..tfl Jl"' ht.· ,, ..,...l't.:t.. tuu)t "hl·lhak uf ''"''"'' hq,:11utu1..:,
t••r"''""""' wtlh ht.u·lt f ult.. tl.lll'"')( lruru • &lt;. p rn trt fht
f tl rHttl\ Ruu111 1\t·~~tttrHn•~ \urul.t'y lht rt Will h• ,. -... •
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1\l,odo Art t •lnflll .11 rho
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1

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W~dnr~l.i~y V oil \It\ h•,rh~ll l.iotuhirhc,,.kl .11 t ·"""'"
I ltl p 101 , v,ol\11\1 ''·"~ .111t.l lrdo..l ,ot Hull,tloo O.,t.oro· "''"'
t .ttll\1\t\
~utter hockl'y dCIIIIII •c1u11• "&gt;,oturd.ry IIHiflllnl: ,ol II
.t "' "' rl"· I .open 11 .111 (lJO~on~ lot.
I he vo~r"ty h••eh•llliull~ """""Ito ,,ompu\ &lt;~&lt;.twn nt\1
I lld,tl· wllh tht• Wo•, t V"ll""" Uro ovo·r&gt;ol y Muunl.srneer , •I I
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                    <text>--- - - - - - - --·· ---·

--·

THE
Vol. 22. No. 73

SpECTI\UM
S~te

Wadn.day. 12 Apri11972

University of N.w York at Buffalo

A different poker gante?
See story

p~

three

�University-Community
Day: an open house·
of /.inked
Tnxether for Mu tual Progress , the
Univcrs1ty is p repari ng for
Community-University Day I 972.
Sch eduled for. April 16, such
dCVICCS as 0yers, posterS and
r c lev 1sCd messages are being
ttlllited 111 publicaze the event.
According to its coord111atn1 s.
ll n 1vc 1Slty.('ommuni(y Day is
111tended to introduce the
co mmu nity Ill the scope of
progress being made at the
University . John Bucrk. general
coord inator of Community Day
A ffairs, explained that while
relations between the Universaty
and the Buffalo commumt y have
been somewhat estranged 111
previous years, the lJnlversaty IS of
utmost economic a nd soc1al
tm portance to Bu ffalu . In
addition, he con11nued that the
Buffalo communary as needed by
the Un1versity .
Because of thts . he
commented : "It IS only natural
that the two should be ltnkcd
together for mutual progress."
Involved 111 the program will be
a University open house on April
16 111 which members of the
communtty are mvited to VISit the
campus. At this lame, a deta1led
program will be distributed whic h
With

a

motto

will include campus events and
p rograms. In addi tion to this
program, there will b e several
infor mati on bllOths scattered
across the campus. According to
Mr . Buerk. most programs will
occur betweeu l and 4 p.m. with
some events lasting beyond the
alllHted tame .
(lenerally optimasllc and
enthus.:1stu: about the event , Mr.
Bueak cxplaaned Commun ity-Una·
versity day as "a total campus
effort .·· He pointed out that at
least 2000 students participate in
the affair through their various
departments and that this is not
JUSt an administration-sponsored
affa ir. " There is," he sa1d, '' a
tremendous amount of student
anvolvement, not only on the
surface level, but alsn beh1nd the
scenes."
To 1nvolve all of th e
commun1ty on April 16, Mr.
Buerk explained that th is year
there w1ll be buses to bring
inner-city resadents to the campus.
Additionally, he rema rked that
spec1al care was give n ro publicize
the events to m inon ty and ethnic
communities.
For schedule o f events, please
see page seven .

LmO TCX1HHER Fa

11)~ IIQOGll€\S ~

APRil16, 1972

~TAl€ UNNERSITY OF NEW ~

AT ~0

Bible Truth

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable

HELL ISN'T FOR HEROES
The Bible wvs. "In HOII he lift

up
his
eyes,
bolng
l in
torments ... And ne cried And
wid , 'F ather ...have mercy on
me... f ot 1 am tormer11ed In this

flame.· "

Lulie 16:2 J, 24

Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

Limelight
( 49 Ed ward St.)
presents
JA CK GEORGE

and
TOM NAPLES

Tonight
Wed. April 12
9:00p.m. - J:OOa.m.

The Spectrum is publ/1hlld thrtH.
time• •
weell, """''~" Mondey,
Wednesday end Friday; during the
,. , . , «:Mhmic yNr by Sub·Board
t, Inc. OfficiiS llrrl IOCIItlld et 355
Norton Hell, Sr.te UnitttHJity of N...,
Yorlc et Buffalo, 3435 ~in St.,
Buffelo , New Yorlc,
14214
TtllephoM: Anu Code 716; Editonal
831-41 13; Buslnll#, 831-3610.

Selection of directors

Housing Corporation debate
Debate hecame quite heated among members o f
the Housing Committee at Monday's meeting, as
t hey analyzed the possible stru ct uring and criteria
for t h e selection of a Board of Direct ors for the new
Housing Corporation . Two major points were finally
resolved : I) a resume, to be completed by
prospe~tive board m emqers, was accepted and 2) the
~riteria for final confirmatio n of board members
would be decided upon by the Screening Committee .
The resu m e, drawn up by He lene Scherer, Alan
Kurtz and 'Kenny Katz of the Housing Committee,
consists of the cand idate's name, address, telephone
number, divis io n , status, department and t h e
followmg questions: What did you do this year?
What do you plan on doi ng next year? What are yo ur
general interests?
Ms . Scherer said that t h e use of a resume, rather
t han a pet it iOn , would he more effective in attracting
"people who are sincere" about the job . In o rd er to
g.ve all ap,lican ts an equal chance, the wrille n form
will be o nly o ne part of the screening process; every
~a n didate will also be interviewed personally . "Th e
questiOns asked wall come out of the resume,"
explatned Ms. Scherer. "They will not he standard
qucst10ns "
' A plus'
The Scree nmg Committee will be composed of
three representaltves of Sub Board I , Inc., and three
IIH~ mbers
of the H o using Committee. This
arra ngement. suggest ed by Sub Board , originally
~ailed for thl" three re presentatives o f the Housmg
Commtttee to be the officers; this was decided
against. however, sm ce several may be interested in

being o n the board themselves.
A question arose as to whether experience IS a
prerequisite of a board me mber . Several people felt
t hat someone in the School of Management , for
exam ple, who is interested in serving on th e
management committee sho uld be given "a plus"
over a candidate with no knowledge of management ,
but who is willing to Jearn. Others maintained that
" I nterest generates it s o wn experience;" if the
person is interested enough, he will do a good job . It
was decided that since the selection process would
necessarily be subjective, the ultimate decisJOn
would rest with the steering commallee itself.
Function disputed
The function of the Board of Directors was also
disputed. As co n ceived by the three-man
subcommittee, the board would act as an executave
body, as well as making policy decisions, with ead1
member serving on a standing committee . A
discussio n en sued as to whether an execut1 vc
committee should be established as well as a Boartl
of Dire~tors, o r if t his would merely add to the
"bureaucrati c hierarchy" found in many large
corporations. The question will be resolved at a later
date .
At one point Dave Steinwald called attention to
the co-op spirit t h at sh o uld underlie every
undertakmg of the Housing Committee, and urged
that t he group stop and re-evaluate Its goals. J enny
Wash burn, chairman of the com mittee, agreed , but
ansisted : "If we want to get the money in
September, we have to stick to the business at hand
. Time is growing short."

Women's Meeting
The Presid ent's Committee on Recruitment and Promotion of Women invites all
women in the University Community - faculty student , operations 111d syste m s, clerical
and professional St l!ff - to an open meeting on Tuesday fro m noon - 1:30 p .m . in the
Norton Conference Theater.
The committee will report brieny on its activities. The rest of the m eeting will
provide 111 o pportunity for women to ask questions, present their points of view and
make suagestions to the committee.

UUAB Video Committee
Presents

Represented for lld""'rti1ing by
Netionlfl Educetionel AdvtHti•ing'
S.Vice, Inc., 360 Lexington A....,. ,
N..., Yorlc, N.Y. 10017.

"HUBERT HUMPHREY"

Sublcripdon ,..,_ ere $4.60 PM
..,_,., or $8.00 for two sttm.ref5,

"The Best of the New York Erotic Film Festival"

s.cond Cl- Pon.ge Pllid et Buffelo,
N- York,

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Circultltlon: 16,000

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IMMEDIATE FS·I

Regardless of age or record
Low down n.o''""""'

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Page two . The Spectrum . Wednesday r 12 April 1972

and
Thursday - 8:30 p.m.

�AtnPerst campus fund
restoration seems likely
Vice president for facilities
planning John Telfer will meet
today with the staff of the State
Assembly Ways and Means
Committee to request restoration
of $34 million cut from the state
budget allocation for the Amherst
campus.
Dr. Telfer is optimistic that the
funds will be included in the
governor's supplemental budget,
to be presented to the legislature
befort' the end of t.he month. It
was reported in last Tuesday's
Courier-Express tha,t Western New
York legislators ''are apparently
making headway" in getting the
monies restored.
These delettons would delay
construction of the education,
philosophy, tnc.lust nal en8meering
and phys tcs buildings and
\ttcwork, and a ch1lltd water
plant, Jes1gncd to prov1de central
..:oulmg temperature control for
the academic cure of the Amher~t
'am pus I nciU!&gt;IUil of t h e~e fumh
wuuld put Amherst constructtcm
1111 a !K:hedule for completiOn Ill
I !J7&lt;). ~a1 d Or Telfer
A pos..;ibiJity
In addttHHI , tl11• l l ntvn~IIV ha\
asked lor ttrlothcr S2H rntlltun lor
a gencr .~J hhr:trv , :t general
admmtslr.tiHHI hUJid111g. a loud
cummts\.tly and an adtllllll~lraiiiHI
and scrvu.:e bluldtng These Items
wert' nut 10 1he urt~wwl buugc 1
prupn~al
.~c; \~ere
the uthcr!&gt;

However, James DeSantis,
Director of Information Services
says it is "within the realm of
possibility" that the $28 mimon
will be granted. If this were done ,
Amherst completion could occur
by 1978.
Discussions of the cutback's
impact have been proceeding for
over a week between Univenity
officials and state legislators.
Etfects emphasized have been an
increase of · about SSS million in
the cost of the entire campus
project as planned (through
inflation) ; reduction of capability
to serve students by 2900 full
time equivalent daytimeI students;
reduction by 3 10,000 net square
feot (almost 10% of available area)
an usable space delivered at
Amherst under the present S6SO
milli on ceili"ng; a delay in
occ upation of facilities now
planned until 1980. and a delay tn
occupat1on of facilities neanng
completion , such as the law
school.
Univers1ty ollu..t:Jh have also
~:ontcndctl that rhc c:n111c Wc~t ctn
New York re!)tl&gt;tl would su tfcr
becaUH &lt;tl the coJtstructtnn
delay~ They cite the dccleasctl
capabtltltcs Ill cdu~o.::r t e studentl&gt;,
lu~ ttl abtllly llll.llttlltbUIC IU the
grvwtng manpower shvrtage m t~u:
ht'alth related professtons due to
delay 111 phystcal e&gt;.pansto n, and
the loss uf econonuc sttmulus.

••NOT ICE••
T here wtll be a Publt&lt;: Auction at 2 00 p.m on
Fttday, Aprtl 14th tn Room 205 H Norton Hall by
Sub Board I Inc
Items to be aucttoned tnctude ·
1 Home Ltte Automattc 150 c. ham saw
2 Craftsman 7 tnch electr 1c saw
3 50 foot extenston cord
4 •,, tnch 1/3 H P Craftsman Drtll
5. Mtsc Hand tools
Go6ds are to be paid lor tn cash only (no
checks) at t1me of sale

SA Trea s~ rer questions

'l"egu/ar'athletic expenses
chargedafteraccntmt audit
Allt!ged discrepanctes in Athletic Pcpartment
expenditures were charged by Student Association
Treasurer Jeff Osinski after an informal audit of that
department's account. In a report thar will be
presented to the SA Executive Committee at their
next meeting, Mr. Osinski catalogued numerous
instances in which. as he maintained , the "Athletic
Department was found to be in violation in part , if
not in total violation ," or SUNY Board of Trustees
guidelines.
Specifically . Mr. Osinski explained that the
audit revealed that the Athletic Department f'il ed
$36,390 of their alloca ted $240,000 in
unsupporta~le Requisition - Encumbrance - Purchase
(REP) forms. Such an amount, accord ing to Mr
Osinki's report , represents approxtmately 25% of
their to tal expendtture to dat e
Additionally Mr Ostnsl.t reported - "A largf
percentage of th1s total was travel adva11ces fo1
va n ous coache) and admtntstraltvc offic1als who
n ev~r turlleU tn lull rt'Cetpts ur returned any part of
the mnney .. To substantiat e hts charges. Mr o~mskt
uffereJ UOCumental IIlii of ~cvcral IIH.JIVIdUal CJS('S llf
tt.tVt:l .tJ..,ances lhJt W('H' lll'VCI SllpflllriCU
Numerou\ and wide!lpread
Jlowcwr. Wlllk tcpnrllng ..tllllllel\111\" cttHI
·· w1tlc ~p r ead ·
trregttl.trtttes, Mr Oslllsl..t did
ttlalntam "The preceding mfnrma111111 ~hnultl ntll hl'
taken as J dcnunctalt~ltl 111 the Ct\ ltt c Atltkttc
DcparlnH'tll " In ;tddtiHHI to ttrc!!ular l.':t~l·~. Mt
Osmski ctauncd "We found u nlllflllity of llll&gt;tam'l'~
whwc the A Ihlettl. Department telt~tou~ly folluwL'U
I he sta ndurtl financtal poltetes regarding st udcnt
actlvtttes fees." Specifically he outed !larry I rttt,
Athleuc Duector, as he1ng "cspectally dthgent 111
fulfilling all financl•tl rcquuemenh "
Mr
Ostn~kr
faulteu the Utllvers• t y

administration for putting "it&amp; trust in the Athletic
Department " ,and not requiring them to undergo
administrative review. According to Mr. Osinski:
uwe believe that the administration made a mistake
when they granted them their financial autonomy.''
Such autonomy with no administration
scrutiny, Mr. Osinski argued, is both contrary to
sta te gu1deli11es and allows "questionable"
expenditures to occur. While "mo11t of these
questionable expenditures can be explained", he
continued, "they are so numerous that some
members of the Athletic Department have been
irresponsible in handling thetr financ1al affairs."
Nob~akdown

1\s an uample, he cited Athletic Depanment
contrtbullons to such organi1ations as the Naismith
Basketball Hall of Fame and the College Athletic
Busmess Managers Assocrat1on However, as Mr
Osmsk1 pomted out, when C'AC wished to donate
SIOO 111 the Umted hmd. their appropriation was
ruleu to be aga1nst state gUtdelines.
Mr Osm~kt termed thts allocatu111 mmor when
~~~~•~•llcteu agatnst more questwnable expenditures.
•. rhe ltlll~l que~ti\lnable w~... he ~Ia ted, "tht!
dep.trlmcn t\ d~altn81i rltrough Shanly Travel ·· lie
l'X plaJttcd th:tl ttl mmt ol lhcu bills thc1e wa~ no
breakdown in cx pen'&gt;e ~ '1 he unly tunc that we
l.'ltUid Wl' th"t the1e wa~ "htcaJ...llown ~howed thJI
lhl· lkpattllh:tll llitld ;t htiiiWil.'e."
0Ul'l&gt;lllll1tttl! the matlttl'r ttl wh id1 1CIIIl1111CIII) lliC
lttttdl•d Mr Chtn~kt l'lllh.. ludcd " I 1 appcats that Ihe
cntln.• p!.ICitce 111 Jllocaltml~ lm meals by the
AthlctK Dcpatltttettl ~lwukl be tnvestigutt!d" As an
cx;unple, he cttcd payment fur meals served to tlu:
ba&lt;&gt;llctball team ''The breakdown snows that 43
llCnplc were ~('rvcd (lre-game meals, a rather htgh

COLLEGE TEXTS • PROFESSIONAL BOOK
MEDICAL • NURSING • DENTAL
• PAPERBACKS •

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0mpan1es Wtlh nl!e(ls 10 VOUI field
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Otltnct5l Fo1 1nforma11on Nartonat
Resume Service p 0 eo~ 1445,..,

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MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM--7:30 P.M.
Reserved Seats-$5.50, $4.50 •

General Admlaalort-$3.00

ITALY'S PRIZE WINE

Ttclc... en ..,. etr JuHalo httlval, Granfty Goocfneu, luHoto ltot•, CovagH, Notfon Hall,
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Sound hy S.neco
Wednesday, 12 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Ki ss of death

World art .endangered
by eroding pollutants
It is als o diffi c ult t o con firm that
poUution harms art because damage done
by nature - weathering, for example can n o t usually be distinauisbed from that
done by po Uution. Pollution apparently
attacks in the same manner as nat ure : glass
pits: s t o ne e rodes ; metal discolors.
The one differen ce is th:ll poUuhon
appears to s peed up th e disintevatJon
process. Even the ca utrous Or. Bnll aarees
that ev1d e n ce of th1s ex.ists . As one
exa mpl e, scientists in b omb-plagued
Nure m bu rg during World War II feared for
the Cat h ed ral'~ stained glass panels Many
were, therefo re , removed from thctr frames
and packed off to nearby co untrysu.l ~
Today 11 com parison o f th ose two se ts
of panels show a start hng differen ce in
the1r degree of decay Whrle t h ~e s tored
look tn near-perfect co nditaon. t h e
w1ndows that remained uposed to
Nure m berg's all and smog a re gutted and
gnt-ent:rusted Serious de cay, this suggc~ts ,
has only h.rp p ened Since 1945, ~tnee
!&gt;er10us mdustnafiz.allon m Germany In
add1tion , if this presen t ra te of dec ay
co ntinues , art co nservators prediCt t h a't the
world may lose tiS c~rll~li~ heritage wtthln
the next 50 yertrs.

Hcltfor's noll.' This IS th e first in a suies of
tlm:e arllc:les un (lullutwn and Its efft&gt;cts

on works u[ art. Muclr has bttn '&gt;t earJ
ubuut mans destruction of h1.r natural
enll(frlflmt'nl 1l11s IS the stnrV of mallS
t1 cs triJ£' tlnn o ( hIS own a r II ftcral
l'fiV/TIInml.•n(
RosemaryArmao
S(l&lt;'ciolto The Spectrum

"A thtng of beauty ," the poet J ohn
"is a JOY forever·
it wtJI
never
Pass Into nothi ngn ess
Bu t automobile e"haus t , ll.')ltflc'
restoration consultant Kenneth hsenberg.
IS dissolvmg the L1n..:oln Memondl "like .;
g~ant Alka-Se lt7er tablet.''
All passes. A rt alone
Endunng stays to us
wrote the poet
Henry Dobson.
But In 1966 Oil-capped nood WJY(")
destroyed Flore n ce's thirteenth '-l.'nt ury
"Cru~.o1fixion" by C1mabue .
Beauty IS eternr t y gazrng dl
Itself 10 a m1rror
wrote.- rile poet
KahW Gtbran
But the Parthenon, weaned by tounst s'
teet a nu Industr ia l fu r. es, slowly
(ltStnlegra t e~
anU IS threatened With
,ollapse
Kellt~ wrote.

PoUudon

villains
Gaseous au. olly Willer. overpupu latton
pollutiOn v1llluns already loudl y c h ;ugcd
wllh the J'~11Uit of ou r en~ 1 ronment dnd
~~otldufe ntJ) be stealthily strangling yet
another Vh:llnt
wutld drt Jntl lmtono..al
tn:awre\
P()(:t\ UOll' mMvtlcd al munu111\'llh Ilk~·
the Yor~ ( athedrJI ur Rnmt', PdiJ&lt;.:~ ol
[lht.'rlll\ th.Jt
rciiiJIIICd lnl.td JOd
1n~red1bly heautllul lks rllt' cent unes o(
w eat hennf( and h umlln plunder
l ht·y
woultl ht• dll.••·kl·d todJY Ill st·~ York\
fltlted \IJI!l&lt;'J giJ~' Ul flht.&gt; !IU\' llllliOOU\
&lt;r31.'kS llw:r wnuld j.\a'r al the kprm~
ndtlllng S! \1 .11~ \ \llj)fll.:r hurW\ Ill v~'IIIU'
or a I I he 111ud ,1.11!11111,\ l)on.tlt•ll.l\
"Magdalent· ..
"But
ldUIIIlll\ K ubnl
Unll
o~tlmml\t rJI•II nf \tll'ntlllt rc":.1rd1 .Jl tlw
Cornmf \1uwum ol &lt;, LJ". ·no h.;1d
ev.pntml'ntJI c.lo~ta c\1''' rh.;t .onhrrn'
JIHIIIilHlll hJ~ had cfkd~ till Jrl •·
I ur •lne thmg lhl\ 1' '&lt;l hn.;uw to dJh·
httk ~Y\Il'111Jtll. rc:o,.-ar•h h.JS hcen uom· 1111
polluted Jrl
l t·w Jlt' J\~Jrc .rt lh~·
(lroblem, knowlec.lg~ I' j,I!IIICtl Jo~rgdy l11 a
h,1n.tlul nl expt'rl\ 1n ag~ntle' ~~~~
l "''I'-,( I) o~ntl lhc l nltrll.tliOnJI lnst1IUIC'
lur ( &lt;111\I.'I\'JIIllll llnl~ t.JI.tlliiiiC' like tht·
'tot• I l•l!t'llt:l' lluotl til Vt·n1.e\ "Jqu.t
.1111 U\l' J'IIJHIIa t
.JIJIIII tt\Cr Ill&lt;'
A It"'·
dc~IIU• IIIII\ •rl Jll
Lack of fund!.
More· Jt,t.tHifdglng for rt'":ardlel' h till'
IJ&lt;~ ol ,rvall.rhle funds I v1:n 1 1.11~ whoM·
&lt;ltte' an• trra)un· 1 ht·~l'o ol art o~nd whose
l.'t"llrhlfiiY tdle' hcd~ll\ till the IIIUII\1 pull
t~l th;ll an . dc,ntn JUS! \7 mlllmn a ~car
(I'! ol "' budg~l' Ill uplo.t•cr s~ICnll\1\
cstuuate lhJt Sl!o million ll&gt; nt.'~:ded

Acidic surroundings
Wh ile all pollution forms art.' phllrsunes,
the most in vidious art destroyer seems to
he con tllmtnated ;ur Car ex haust peppers
the atr With oto ne .rnd n1tnt. actd ,
Industries and furnaces With s ulph ur .rnd
carbon compounds thut m1xetl with
moiStu re bct:CIITH' s ulphun c nr ' arhoru e
3Cid
In
Fngland, llln~~:rva t tll II J
Plend~:rlc1th hd~ t:aku ldt e tl "l h e .r11nual
tlltdl of )UII&gt;h 111 '0111 pounds Jlttllull ng the:
.ttmospherc
~~~me' In 1 he cqUJVal\·nt ol
n1ne lllllhnn ton~ of o,u lphun c.. alld "
S tatues anu hUihJrng~ thut huve Wllh~tnutl
yeJI' of w1ntl and lltl\1 ··annul h1't a
dc,Jdt· 10 ~ut.h audll' ~urrountlmg~
1\11 " .rlsn the wl11de of sunt .1ntl tlusl
lh 11 uhdtlnr' metals o~nd ~rc:.t\lly ,udl\
J'ollllllng' .1nd !lungs ~ct wnr'e 1n .:ua\lal
1\lanJ 111 tlc,ol ntiC\ ll ere, J)llllul,lnl\
u1111 lmw w1lh 'all or 'anti and allat:k wllh
t'v~·n gre.;ler dhi.J\Ive power
WJter wrth lh ah1llty to llln ..llor,,
llll~t· fre~t.nn o.1 1ld rot wood Ita~ o~lw,1ys
heen &lt;~ n.11ural ~nemy vf Jrt , Mll\b haVl'
h.ru alwo.ty' 111 con renll with r.•lll. f~e1sf,
\Ct'P.rl:e .rr1d n,\lural Ul\a~ler~ Wh at "
'""''ll'nf IIlii.\ " th.tt ofren tlu: 111\J\Ier,
·•h'n 't n.rt ur ... l
111 Vcnlte. tor exa111plc, ".r4ll•l !tll.t," 1H
lu11h wJil'r' .. ,ed to t•ngulf the uty nn.:e
t·vcry len ye.rr~ or -.u I n the pa~t Sl~ yeJr&lt;~.
hliWl ~C:r the~ h.JVl' hl'llllll\' SO lrt'llUt:lll
111.11 '"'"ldllltl. In ;111 Nil( lOrrl'Sflllll Ul'lll
I R
I t'VIIIe. w.1t.:hmen havt• hecn
till ploy.:t.l
" L 1k..: tim~· ol a met11evJI
\\.1lltod 1t1wn they keep J nmstant v1g1l for
'11!11' "' lllV.I\IOn not from th e sea. hut b1·
I h l' ~e .t
fhe tlnml\ that WC.Jkt'n
l!tiiiHl attom .rnc.l ernde ~lnnc' arc at kast
pJrtl\ tlul' Ill lh~: fl\ICII(IIng .m.J land
1\'IIIC\ ,1) Jd 1\lllc::. llf 1nd 11~1 !I CO, Ill rtt•J rhy
\1.rr~:hcr.r

&lt;\ 1h11.J vllla111 mc~h~nlletl vehu.:Jt.',,
''"'up wuv&lt;'" ur v1hraiHIIh hurmfulto urt

lt euvy traff1c c an s hak e frescoes off wa.ll s
and statues o ff redestals. Mo torboats and
freighters as tn Vt.'ntce weaken foundatwn s
Arid 1n Fngland , the vtt:ars of ch ur ehe~ on
Otght pat hs fear lor tht!tr steeples.
"U~:auty IS tn the eye of th e beholder."
gm·, t he atl age, but heauty in the hand ~ 11f
the hehnltlers
the tounsts. 111 o ther
Wl&gt;rd'
r:; rn I rouble.
• •uNt.SCO authont1e~ have fuuntl lllle ul
I ht• most llenuu~ danger~ faun~ 1he
l'a rt lll'non IS the wear and ll'.rr to
hurllrllllal flag~tunc~ c.:auwd hy I hous.rml'
"' 'huflltng feet
•• Sn111l' women toun'ih m II.Jiy huvc.: 11
f)J\,tonJtt• h.!hll of lo.l~lll!l~ mal.- \IJIIIl'\
Some may he d dl\lt.'rtng thl' l.1ss ell Jc.11 h
th,•ll hrst~t:k con tam~ atltl~ lethal II• 'tunc
••1 n the 8J,Ilr'-J San MJ H1l, wun~l ~u1d •. ,
.ne till' .tt t.;OIIIphces of ~ulrhur fume' 11.111
ol IIH' dturo.:hes 500 p11lar~ have bt:erl
chl'llllut lfy l hangc d tn some d egrct• hy
mllullt nal lunll'll, \o th.tt I hell -;u rf.tl~\ an·
,h.rlky GUide~ pmnlmg 11111 delJII'i, lUll
the1r linger~ Jllm' the l'Oium ns an cl rhe
llu'l tilt'S off
Not JU~t mod1•m industry ~~ 10 hla1nc
l.'llht•r A rc..:e/11 Jd fnr the St R e~" Papc1
&lt;'ompany argues thai the l\166 Flun:rh·e
Ot)(lU may hJVl" llcen c.ruwd hy an,·lenl
Romarh . Bcl.',l ll!&gt;t' the y 'tnppc!l the upl.uuh
of lorcsls long ago, rw ll',lly t·:mop) ha'
tl)( ..,lcd Ill IHcJk the fall nl lnrrt'lliiJI r,tln,
10 lh~o: twc.:ntrl'lh lelliUI)'
ll.t•vcrt hdco.;\, ""hen K ttl Ill' c&lt;~rhlll&lt;'l&lt;'tf
Ath,·m. 11 cwrrr:111 .1nu oblllelafc•tl lh ,111

UUAB CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
Nobel
Laureate
Or. John C. Eccl es
presentmg a series of
Wednesday lectures on

)AM ES

J ANKO W SK I

h\0(10(('

( ni• &lt;"f'&gt;i/1

111111(\\111

Ill Hlllolll

" ' (ll(llf.Jiill .JI

Huultl···

Whe n th e C h nst 1uns conquered the H oly
land , the y overran and obliterated 1ts ar1
And likewise today , as ind u!!try conqut·rs
the Old Order, 11 too ts overrunnmg 11~ .Hh

All decay
uf I he dama~t•' 1 No o ne en'll
hnw many work' of art Ml'
1rn~nled Art hl\torrJn C:tmcppe Rolllntlt
n•lle' th.tl 111 Italy Jlonc "~•Ill rllcvt'ry 100
work' of urt
90 .rre 111 nn·d ol rcpJtr"
VICitlleSl' Sl'lellll'il Av.l f·rohei-Krall
1.J I alo~ ltO,OOO ~as." works 10 l"''
(icrmany th.tt tll'l'd t real mcnt
Bur I h e hallie ratte' beyll!1d l uropc 1111o
the U.S, .tntl author W1lham 8 1111\tc.ld
Ollll.'~ .
" Th e c..OilsC /'Vd(IOII pruhlem Ill
Pa.:1fK o~nd AsJUn \I.!IC~ alt' \lllH.IIIr II ragn
.ltiO'\.\ JIJ lhe lll&lt;'dl;l, ra1nl1!lg, \~Uiplllrt
gla~~ even I ndiJO ~:Jvc dr..twmg.o. hJve llc~·~~
damugcd by soot "
T o proll!et art from pollutHin "
~,met1mes undt:llr.thle, sornetune'l '""
dlfflt' ull. alway&lt;&gt; ~.xpcn~t"'c As Or R111l
rem!Hked
" We won't ~lve aJI lht·
Pfllble IllS I0 I llll C Ill \lliiC all I he work~.'
It may he th at only pvct W1llt.11n C'w)
wrnlt' 1he I rut h
All hcJurcuus thtn~&lt;~ for
w luo.:h we hve
ll y law~ o f lime .tnd 'fl~ ..,· dt't·:ry
'I

h ~ t'Xlcnt

knr)W'i

f llr/111'
3r'l'r rtJI

Tht• S&lt;'l'tlllr/ pari WI/I tJro/ w/1/1
"' tlu hullft•Jielul '" tlr• .. ur
hrt kll'• n tnrlustllo/ ter1•t&gt;r .rntl tlr•• artntr•
''''"' r I l'rrtt •'. } 111/.. uncl AI/III'

--------------,
College
Admission
Arranged
~flrt itJhtlnq 1n

COMMUNICATION IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
Lectme No One
WEONESDA Y APRIL 12
"The Nerve Impulse in Peripheral
Synaptic Transmission

r ree and Open to the Puhllc
All lectiJies are '" Ocetendorf 146 anrl begm .,1
710pm

Oill•t oil l'lucl'mrnt\

" EGYPT ON THE ROAD TO REVOLUTION"
Wrdnc~ddy, Aprd 12

l 00 p m.

Room 312 Townsrnd
Spun~ored
M ''·

ll.tll

by

/1)1/ \tH "'I\ 111 ( I JIJI/)tlfJifH (' /iel \f't' J t H

Cou nt I/

011 lntr!llltllwnul

5tttdt 1 ~

O LAW

0

MEDICAL

0 GRADUATE
(.]I VETERINARIANS
DCOLLEGE DROPOUTS
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P.HJE' fo111

The Spectrum W"rlneo;dav . 12 April 1972

----------------

�Student discouraged by
unavoidable line waiting·
by Clem Colucci
Spectrum Staff Writer

Our ht.ro was lucky ; las t
semester he didn' t have to mak e
any repairs after SARA go t
It's been a bad day for o ur through with ltis sch edule. But h e
hero. It's a Monday , th e first day ~d ltis chance to suffer all the
back from va cation, he slept ~,:me . How was he to kno w that
through ltis eight o ' clock class . 100 people showed up half an
and n o w be has to wait in line f ol .... hour b efore every movie? No body
his lunch . He kno ws that it won' t told him that everyb ody eats a t
be worth the effort of eating and II , 12:0 5, 5 and 6.
no w h e h as the added b o the r o f
Why would he ex pect dozens
standing in line fo r te n minutes of peo ple to be waiting in line fo r
before he confronts it.
tickets to Garcia , or Winwood , o r
To keep his courage from the Kinks no matte r what t ime he
flagging, and to take ltis mind o ff went? And who would have
the rumbling in his stomach , our b elieved that so man y people
hero thinks of ltis prospects for wanted t o get their registra ti o n
the immediate future . The future material the same time h e did?
holding unpleasant thoughts But h o pe, like bile, sp ri ngs
study , exams and unem~loym ~nt eternal and o u r hero ex pect ed t o
are no t the most stamulatmg avoid th e who le schmeer th a t n ext
subjects - h e .wo nders where the semest e r. He kn ew ho w to get out
past went wtth su ch mdecen t o f wai t in g in lines. Never agai n !
Who in their right mind would be
haste.
Ca n the yea r be .over al read y? at Diefe ndo rf a t 8 a.m. t o gel
Our hero resagns ham self to th e t he ir sch edul es? When our hero
chocolate pudding as the last few arrives h e mak es a mental note to
mon ths o~ hts li f~ pass .b efore hi m. rephra;e t h e q uestion . Wh o I.J m
He as ks h1 mself tf th ts ts som e sort their n ght mind, he asks. as he
of wam tn g as he reach es for th e waits a t the ta il end of a li ne of
.:ottage ch eese. Visions of dorm peo ple t h at snak es from the far
life, class cuttin g (who wo uld end of 114 to t he twttom of tlw
hl!lieve t hat our h ero is the sam e st airs
,;event h grader who had one legal
o~llse n ce o n his record?). and oth er The supreme sacrifice
hats of los t innocen ce ru n t hro ugh
Maybe he was fooled ortn: ,
has mind until a very minor facet
m uses our h ero, hu t lw won't lw
of college life re mai ns
lines.
fooled dgaan . He de me~ htm~df
t he pleasurt'S of Max, manJU&lt;Ina
A geometric progression
His first semester, of lOU flit, and male ~.:hauvm•srn on &lt;1 l· nd,ty
nigh t and get~ ftl hea l CJrly \0 hl'
was utter chaos No matter where
he wen t. he had to waat 111 ltnc H e can get up and buy ha!&gt; tHH)I.&gt; tu~t
n•mcmber.; how Ill· spent :!0 thing Saturday mmnang wh,·n
manutcs wai tang for h as schedule nobody will be able tn funrflnn
.and two and one half hours In a supreme ad l&gt;f wall , he to~ll&lt;.
walling for his 10 p icture, anti he asleep a~ the swed smell 1&gt;1
can nah1s filt.:rs under the door
h.u.l to huy hooks When he saw
Bleary·cyed and di~nrit•ntt'd
t hl· lint of eager stud ents wai tmg
to pur~:· hasc their sta nd·by t ack et s our hero s tumhles over to Norton
to th e land of wisdom, he uttered confident that he wiil finally get
h1s books. li e IS m no londation tn
0111 o h scenll y a nd retu rn c:d later
As we all k now, the ltne only got ~..onfront what awaat~ dnwn!&gt;tan&gt;
Our hero goes antCI ~hmk when he
h
r.
sees tht: mass of students wallmg
w it h grins and dilated pup1h .
AL FA ROMEO
unaffected by thl.' prevwu.' n•ght's

• FERRARI
•MASERATI
Sales •Service •Parts
USED C A RS

--BOBCOR- Motor Cars, Ltd.
1974 Ega1 (Near Bailey)
834-7350

~.:arous1ng .

A oon y elouw hnng.s our hcral·~
m tnd back to eart h by way ot a
pain m his ribs After constderable
d ifficulty, h e d ed ict:s in favor o f
the t urkey, reason mg that t hey
mJgbt m a ke it righ t just once .
'' Th e r e's a movie to morrow
night ," h e mum bles to hi m selL " I
must m ake a po mt of getti ng
the re early."

HIKE &amp; BlkE.nc.
3260 Main st., auHalo, N.Y. 14215

cydotourists specialists

NOW OPEN

complete ·bicycl~sales,
parts, serv1ce
complete backP.acking,
camping, dim&amp;ing shop
FE.ATUIING :
Denali frames &amp; pack equipment
Camptrails frames &amp; pack equipment
Ascent• down equipment
Mander down equipment
LeTrappeur boots
Addias shoes

Herman Schwartz, professor of
law at the State University of
Buffalo, will receive the annual
award of the ACLU at next
Sunday's meeting of the
Niagara Frontier Chapter of
the New York Civil Liberties
Union. Mr. Schwartz is being
honored for his involvement
with the Attica uprising. In
addition to this award, two
short films will be shown a t
the meeting hosted by Steven
Rowan.
Scheduled for 7 :30p.m . at the
Unitarian Universalist Church
on 695 Elmwood Ave., the
meeting is o pen to the public
an d will f ea ture free
refreshments.

Martin Sostre case

Plea for retrial dismissed
Despite plea~ fro 111 nu mt·rou'
sources, (.'ouuly Cutllt J udgl'
hank Bay~:er. T hur\Uay Marda
].() , dasmtsscd Mar1111 Smtrc\
motron lor a retnal.
Mr Sostre, now .;('tvlllg a
J I 41 year sentence nn a 1Qf&gt;X
COilVH.:IIOTl ror selling heruan and
assaulti ng a policem an , called for
a new 1rial when the prosecu Iton's
chtef wttness, A rto W1lliam s, filed
an affadavt t saying th at he had
been part of a frarne up allegedly
engineere d by th en c h ief of th e
Bu ffa lo city police narcottcs
squ ad Michael Amico and former
police se rgeant A lvin Gnstmacher
Mr. William s, who could be
prosecuted for perJu ry, has hved
in Ven ice, Cali forn ia to avoid such
possi ble p rosecu tion and d id not
appear at t h e hearing. For this
reason Judge Bayget disrrussed Mr.

Sostrc's mo tion say1 ng: " I hcl tcve
Mr William s will neve r appeal 011
your hchal f

cha rged Mr. Sostre .

Le tters of support

1-'nlier th at T hursday, the Ad
floc Comm it tee to Free Martin
Sost re (A HCF MS) held a press
conferenc.:e. Noted international
~lwlar Mrchel Fouca u lt , a visi tm g
prolessor of French at the S ta te
Unive rsity of Bu ffalo a nd head o f
Grou p for In form at ion on Prisons,
issued a statem ent de manding a
r etrial fo r Mr. Sost re . The
AH CF MS h an d ed out p ress
releases w ith statem en ts from
Rev . Ral ph Abern at hy, William
Kun tsler, R ennie Davis, Fr. Ja mes
G ro ppi and others.

Mr Sost rc moved to haw Mr.
W illiams' test imony taken by
de p osit ion in Cah fornta, but
J ud ge Baygcr denied the request
sayin3 that test1mony can only be
taken th is way for a t rial. "You've
really got the deck staa:kcd,"

Me mbers of th e AHCFMS
could not be reach ed after the
tria l , but it is assumed that they
will conti nu e the in terna tion al
peti t ion drive to h ave Mr. Sost re
released on b ai l and to gran t him a
new In a] .

" When the day c.:wnes thai yuu
..:an prodtu.:e your wrtnel'.~ 111
L:our t , Yllll ean bfulg ttt wthcr
motion:' fudge Baygca told Mr.
Sustrc . II erman Schwar11. .
p rofessor a t the State Un1versrty
of Buffalo La w School, ap peanng
as Mr Sost rc 's legal adv iser , told
J udge Bayger t hat he was h aving
difficulty t ryrng to sub poena Mr
Williams.

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
Mod Styles for Guys and Gals
Come take the shirts right off our
becks. S.Ve ~ on anything with
short .,. ...,... Hundred~~ of long
Ilene tops; 7 ,000 l*n of Bells,
Jedlets to rNtch . Lwthw ieckets.
boots end pertla. L.. Lwi,
Wr•ngl«, C.mpus, U.Mitubber,

Mete, etc. Be " in" - S.ve Money
- Shop Army-HIIYY .

CITY

Falcone
Houn : Mon. -;Sat.
10:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.

Wednesday, 12 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�Students use ingenuity for profits
l:ilit''' 't note: The following story is a reprint [or the
(iJI/cxt' Preu Serlltce. The author is J. Michael Rawson.
Recently a Colum bia Universi t y student, Leeam
Luwin, quit college just ten credits shy of graduation.
Lowm, who was an amateur dabbler in the stock market ,
mvested an $800 student loan in the common stock of
Ling-Temco-Vought. He also began investing for relatives,
friend s and friends of friends, until he had about a dozen
claents. Lowin made a quick succession of wise trades,
taking impressive p rofits for himself and btS clients in
l -T -V and several other stocks.
Today, a couple of years later, Lowin has made
quarter-millionaires out of several of those chents
multiplymg thear initial mvestments 300 times. His own
mcome as well anto the seven figure bracket.
Lowin , surprisingly enough is only an exception an
the degree of success he has accumulated. At UCLA some
students capllalazed o n the recent health food fad
sweeping the country by settang up a chain of o rgan1 c food
~:arts around the campus.
AI the Unaversity of North Carohna a missio nary
that recently returned from Chma to cont1nue has
schooling established has o wn campus nckshaw chauffeur
service. And at hundreds of o ther JUnior co llege.~ . colleges
and untversihes across the co untry student entrepreneurs
are developang mnovat1vely creattve ways that , 1f aren't
maJong them mL11tona1r~s. are at lea~t helpang them to
meet the spiraling costs of a college educataon
Defrays tuition expenses
According to U.S Nc'""f and World Rl'(lllrt last yeJr,
the average cost for one yedr of college was S2400 And
the same maga11ne stated that thl) year the maJo rity ol
lolleges reported tu1t1on 1ncreases of hetween 10 and JO'l
By the tame JUniOr hats college out
play-before-you-pay cred 1t economy has ats teeth sunk su
deeply into dad's pay ~heck that for most of rniddlt:
AmertcJ an extra two or three thousand dollars IS more
lhJn JUSt the provttbaal strav. So more and more the
college student htmself 1S nJJde to hear at least a portion t)(
hJS college cost. A(-cording to a recent survey taken on
universaty c:tmpuse~ aeroSol. the naraon .. more ) tudents Jre
work1ng thetr ~o~..sy thruugh ~..ollcge aod.1y than ever
hefure ..
And 111 a ~~ y lc ty pt1..JI of I he ~:ollc);c llh•vd &lt;)I I he
"70's m.1ny )tudent~ today o~re H'lelttng the old \ IJJH1h y~ ul
lerktn~ \lid~ . moprung ollld ~weeping theu w.ty thruugh
'chm1\ , 111 fa \I{)( ul J httlc l'ntreprencunn~ I he) feel .ts
Cayle Ml Munav doc\ "Wh~:n I got nut of the tHmy I

made up m y mind that I'd never work for anybody else as
Jon&amp; u I could t h ink: for myself."
McMurray, a senior at Brigham Young University ,
bas done a lot of thinJdna in the two years he's been out of
the service. last year he put one of his ideas to work . H e
read about a man who made a million dollars printing
"pia" ·tee shirts and selling them to polic~ departments
around the coun try. So after payin&amp; his semester's tuition
and fees Mc Murray, who looks like a cross between t he
Irish and J ewish boy next door, took his last $50, bought
some silk-screening equapmenl and some tee shirts and
began printing instgnias and designs on them .

that out. A mon th before final exam week be sent out
letters to the parents of fre.shmen and sophomores
volunteering to buy a sack of &amp;oodies for the kids to
munch o n whiJe studying. The auoceries cost $2.50 a bag
and Martin charged the parents $5 .00 for his "personal
catering service."
"for weeks after I mailed the letters I was a nervous
wreck," Martan recalls. "The postage alone cost $200."
The response finally ''trickled in" - about S600 worth the
first semester a.nd over S I 000 the next

The big bluff p~ys off
But most college students have a hard enough tJme
just meeting their college expenses. T hey JUSt don't have
'B.S. Product ions
Today McMurray as the presadent o f Bart Smut's the ca pataJ for a specuJatory venture like Joe Martin 's. For
Productions, a company that expects to gross $20,000 thas those hopeful business promoters , Chuck Henry has a
year. Not bad considering t he compan y consists of two full solutaon.
Henry , a Hazlehurst , Georgia, graduate student
time college students : the company's founder an; president
fo und a way to finnagle credit that would make ~
and has partner, U 8 . Arnett
" I hired H.B. off toilet cleanang," Mc Murray jokes. corporation prestdent proud . He saw a need an htS
" Yea. I was workmg from 4- 7 as a janitor and was pretty hometown for a quaJity music store. But what bank wtiJ
desperate," Arnett re~:alls . In the year since " B.S." has sold malce a loan to a college student with onJy an idea as
tee sh1rts to high schools and colleges throughout collateral? So Henry borrowed from firendi to buy a store
Callfom1a, Utah and Idaho, and recentl y sold a s1zable that would house his music shop and though it was empty
he set has grand opening for Saturday, just a week away .
order to the 81g Boy restaurant c hain .
On Friday he went to Atlanta and vtsited the Sony
More than just a silk-screening enterprise, McMurray
and Amett lake to thank of "B.S ." as a factory house for Electronics Company where he charged some tape
adeJs Exc1ted about thear tmtial busmess success, BYU 's recorders, amphfiers, consoles, record players and other
junaor linan~'lcrs branched out and tnvest ed 1n such daverse stereo equtpment . They asked him for credit references
areas as catt le, concessaons, and institutional food and Chuck lasted the Panasonic Company. To carry out h1s
bluff he wen t across town to Panasonic and hsled Sony dS
..:ompany a nd advertasing
Thcy·.,.r been lucky so far AJI their 1deas are makmg a reference.
Before the two compames had figured out what was
money . Just before the new BYU presadent's mauguration,
Arnett bought space in the s tudent newspaper t o the tune going o n , C huck's music store, stocked with the finest
of S 160 He then sold that space to 60 downtown electrOniC sound equ1pment, had a succe55ful grand
merchants who pa1d SJOO to g~ve the new university openang and the fast talkmg Southerner had two checks tn
president congratulatory cum phmcnts from thear places of the mwl Monday mom1ng to cover hJs bluff
bus1ness
Contr&lt;Ht t o businessmen
Jnd~pendent radio
Part of the "t.olor" those creatave t.ollegc
Oavad Pavlo~ous ~el up a rntna ra dao stat1on in has entrepreneurs proVJde I!&gt; the contrast the y make with the
.1partnaent. Statton KRIV dtdn't carry past h1s apartment busaness community. Long haJr and blue Jeans seem J~
com plex but those 5000 potenttal hsteners proved t o he much a part of the1r unaform as the !)lack pin stn pe .;u1t
enough The o~partnaent owner ~.:aught on to the 1dea and was to the old Wall Streeters.
beg;~n halhng Ill\ dp.Htmenl l:Omplex al. the only one tn the
DelVIng anto has o wn expenencc, the man fr\ltn
city w1th 11lt own radao stata nn Th1s hrou~lll some "B .S .," H .B. Arnett, says the best motavator to success 1s
.. t o go hungry for a few days." Mayhe the college student
commer.:tdl ha~o:k1ng whach kCJ'' KRIV llpl!rdttng and
Pa' lu~ous tn c: ulh:ite
or today compared wtth the college st udent or yesteryear
Par~nt' ~oJn he quue dependable commerlllll hac~ers
is o1 lot hke the ol' tortoll&gt;t 1n has unmortal race w1th th~
tuu Jm Manna , d Umver~tty of Tennessee s!Yd~ot, found
hare . If he as any less energet1c he as twice as enterpnstng

Would you share malt liquor with a friend?
~ure. Nm•· rhere'~t no question ahout ir . Because now malr liquor has a ~tooJ
name. Bl'O\\'EISFR. BUDWEISJ·R Malt liquor is 100%-malr, malt liquor ( nn
o ther ~rain, are aJJeJ). Thi ~ makes BUDWEISE R the fint malt liquor
that really is . . malt liquor.

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.

Jeweler - Optici.m
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Untverstty Plaza)

BUFFALO. N.Y. 14226

JMOTORCYClEINSURANCE-,
: IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE :
I NO POOl - NO NONSENSE' 1
fU P S T A T E C Y C l E I N SI

I

t_

Qll 694-3100
" Ask Your Brok..- About

KEEP THE

&amp;lASS!

Page six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 12 April 1972

I

U~" ·~

�Induction revived

Pentagon sets quota
at 15,000 for Draft

Steve Stills and hb new bend will be ..,.,..Ong on M.y 9 at Memorial Auditorium. Tiekm for the 2% hour
show go on ale today It the Aud box offic:..

In general, however, current and to enroll in the adva nced
Selective Service policies dictate course, if accepted. He also agrees
tha t fewer and fewer men will t o a ccept a commission, if
face pos si ble induc ti on . offered, and , if o rdered, to serve
Tightening regulations and the on active duty for at least two
elimination of certain deferments, years.
however, also mean that those
Trus Deferment Agreement ,
liable for the draft have fewer and however, is not a binding
possibly more dtfficull choices co ntra c t, an d n o m il ita ry
than ever before.
obligation is incurred by signing
Those subject to the draft are it. Military obligation IS incurred
the men who have literally lost 1n when the st udent signs a " Reserve
the lottery Out though the Contrac t " at the beginnrng of the
number of upt1ons is reduced, JUOior year The Deferment
choices arc sttll ava1lable to these Agreement docs nul !&gt;pccify any
men .
sanct 1on except loss o f the
One uf these optwns which IS deferment if a man drops the
little unt.lcrstoml 1s the I D ROTC' program at any time prior
deferment for cullcgc ROTC'. Thc 111 srgning the Reserve Contract
1-D dcfermcnt 1s now av:ulable t\l
The 2 D. or dtVIfltly student
any undergraduate enrolled 111 Jcfetment," yet another
ROTC who stgm the "ROTC .rltcrnatrve for new students. Th1s
Deferment Agreement " Wtth the deferment I!&gt; JVatlable to two
elimUlalion ot all new st udell 1 ~.:a lcgories.
( 2-5 ) deferment~ the I·D 1s one of
Th e 2 S. or regular
the few way~ an mcom111~ undergraduate deferment, 1s only
freshman can get a deferment
.rvadable to men who have
l(uahfied as fu ll·trme students
Nol binding
pnor to the sum mer sessron of
By s 1gnmg the Deferment I 971 . Formerly a secure
Ag r eement a man agrees to sanctuary for college students, a
complele the baste ROTC' course 2·S rs no longer obtainable by
students entenng school after the
crted cutoff date.

MAIL
MART

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Our ~~P 1 c..tmP.! .,.,.,tc-m turn~o, out \\Hf~ •I nutnl.Jif)" tJ\.t·"'
'You tktn r nc.~l.1 d;ulrnum tCooc_tb)r &lt;hf'm•cJt\ mtxm,.;
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6 And copy lhrm rn prontlorm
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8 And

rTU~kc ulho~·ht"h-ttJnltJ .. I

hn&lt;' CttflV flrtnt\ tu \tit'

9 lfu proc:r-.&lt;eamt'l~ Ynu un m.~k&lt;' -cn.."""l tl""l'

to sire. too

10 lr• • &lt;~udro umt'r.r Tum Ihe whol&lt;' c~nwr,l "'1&lt;-w•Y'
ond ••m 11 •'l'lN'Pf&lt;o or 1hrn~

Olh~n ldlw •n agonr11n~ lwo mrnute~
And N&gt;l IN&gt;I yuu c•n Jl«&gt; &gt;~vr mon&lt;oy
Thr MP·l "&lt;'J'V In l&gt;l'll'rJie Jr'&lt;l """'"you J wrd&lt;• ••"K~
nt Jllm' .lncl.l((\·~~JUC.'\ Ht·n~t"' cJnwr,, hJfh l.'IC ~
II writ hJflrffc Jft I I PotiJifllcllJncf lolm\ Jnd non&gt;! w•l
l"r&gt;Ct"&lt; Irim'
A"""' \y\lrno CO&lt;oiS J' Ioiii&lt;' J&lt; S6&amp;4 N•lur•ff1 lh"
mmc you •rkl lhl• mmc:- tl &lt;&lt;&gt;&lt;" II yuuw•nl t'Yt'l)'lhrn11
rt CJn l(o J\ hr11h J• $1M7
V.hrch •&gt; &gt;loll J lw•j~.&gt;•n
10 c•mcr"'·• studoo

15 "'Con&lt; I'

.11t&lt;.l •

dJr~roum

For Free Demonstration-CALL

[lMhn

u llii'aphlc

,,....,.,,,_j,o

716-254-5705

IRe. 308 Driving Park Ave., Rochester, N.Y.

~

Mo '11 ,..,.,.,,

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l.Jkewtse, a I.S (c), a deferment
p ost poning for otherwise
non-deferred studen ts for one
cal e ndar year, is no longer
avadable. I nstead, students faced
wrth possible 1nduc11on dunng the
academrc year can defer mduclron
un11l the end ol the semester or
quarter in whtch the mduction
order was ISsued Graduating
r;cn1nr'. however , arc able to
po,tpone mduct1on until the
wmpletron of the full year
Anyone Wtth que~11ons about
the draft i!. urged to sec a
coumelur 111 person tor the
&lt;lddre~s of nne near to you,
~.:onlact The (cntral Committee
lor Con~CICillll.lU\ Objectors
(l'(TOI at any uf the fnllowmg
Jddresses lOin Walnut St .
Ptuladelph1a, Pa J910J. 711 S .
Dearborn St., C'hrcago. Ill. 60605;
140 Leavenwort h St .. San
franCISCO, Ca. Y4102. 1460
Pcnnsylvama St., Denver, Colo.
X0203 , or 734 Monroe Dr., N.E ..
Atlanta, Ga. 30308.

The money we spend
an Vietnam
IDUid help
euerv drug addi1t
In the stare.
Help Amerit:a.
Write your Congressman today.
Help UnMtl Tlle War, 8oal03, f .D.A. IUitloft, New YOftl, N. Y. 10022

Wednesday, 12 April 1972. The Spectrum. Page seven

�Open House program
Center for Curriculum Planning - 220A electo-cardiogram diagnosis, fllms
foster HaU ; Staff personnel wiJJ be present
Eng. Sci. : strca strain relations in
to explain the center's function and answer plexiglass, films
questions relative to its operation. An Nuclear Eng.: demonstration of neulron
audio -s lide presentation explaining howitzer. audio·visual electronic counting
Computer Based Resource Units and how equipment, neutron activation of metals,
they can assist teachers and learners wUI be films
available for viewing.
Aero-Space: hover craft demonstration on
Chemistry Department - Acheson Hall ; Parker Lawn, manpower aircraft display ,
Student guided tours will be given in
model aircraft contest
Acheson Hall fro m I :00 to 4 :00 p.m.. I.E : humar. factors demonstration,
beginning an the lounge area where coffee operat1ons Research Presentation
and donuts will be served. Tours will be Comp. Set. : snoopy calendars, on·line
run approximately every twenty minutes
computer interaction ( Computer Science is
ubs will be open and demonstrations also listed separately)
going on .
Chern. Eng.. demonstration of a fract1onal
Computer Science Department - Parker d1stillat10 n chamber
Engineering ; "Interactive computmg" M.E.. computer controlled model ra1lroad
di splay s. Pe op le will be able to Add1t1onal d1splays wtJI be on hand
commumcate wath a computer and have faculty of law and Jurisprudence - 146
instant results. "Snoopy" calendars for Diefendorf : Presented will be the
instant distribution.
..U mversity. Ecology and the Law."
Credit-fru Programs - Hayes A ; The Professors Milton Kaplan and Robert Reis
Office for Credit-Free Programs w1ll agatn will be showmg a film of about~ hr taken
rafOe two free regastrations for the Fall from the aJr, on land use patterns in this
semester of Cred1t·Free Programs A area. revea ling some problems of
display of art work whlch has been e nviron men tlll quality and ecological
produced an th1s program will be shown .
phenomena
OencaJ School
Health Sciences; Oral Germa n and Sl;m c
Crosby: The
Cancer Detection Modern methods of Deparrment of Fren&lt;.:h, Germantc and
preventive dentistry Demonstrat1on of Slav1c, and Spantsh, l taJ1an and Portuguese
sealants ro control dental decay Literature are jomtly planmng a unguagc laboratory
on career opportun111es m dentistry Dept
demonstratton lesson It w11l be held m 7
of Orthodontics will present a seues of liayes C.
slides demonstrating the correct1ve Instructional Commwticacion Center - 10
treatment of malal1gned teeth Dept of Foster HaJJ , You .uc: mv1ted to sec the
PeriodontiCS wtJI have clln1cs fo r the "behmd the scenes" act1V1I1es wh1ch affect
evaluation of patienb related to the soft classroom inslruc twn HI the University
tissues. S1dewalk cafe in front of Capen Y1s1t the l nstructu111al Commun1ca11on
Center ( I CC) teleVISIOn stud 1us and
with a small musical group.
Division of UndergJaduate Stud~s
broadca\1 fac1ht tes t&gt;f WDG 55 See the
Oiefendod ; Advisors wtJJ be 111 D1efendod vancty ot our wurk u1 pllotography,
J 14. They hope espec1ally to talk with
tn(llion pictures, and graphic arts. Sec the
guidance counsellors who havt" been mc.-dia wh ich make t ns tru ct ion
mvited. Adv1sors w1J1 al~o be 111 twu th!&gt; 1n ~: ommuni C 3ttve and communlcatton
Norton.
mst rucllonal
Parker Engineering,
linguistics
Hayes Hall ; Students will
E.E.. nunature rad1o station. tclev1sto n expla1n map s and r esearc h on
demonstratiOn, radar veloc1t y mcasunng. cthnl c-ltngulsttc grnuos m Buffalo ;

televi&amp;ion tape on bilingualJsrn in Buffalo.
Medical Sdaool; The Black MedJcal
students organization wru present a talk on
SickJe-cell Anemia in Butl~r- Aud. (Capen
UO) from 2:00-3 :00. A question period
will follow. There will also be testing for
sickle-ceU anemia in the lab from
J :00- 2:00 and 3 :00- 5:00.
0 c cuP at I ooal Therapy Booth Diefendorf; Audio-visual equipment - film
strip maybe. Posters. Handout information.
Demonstration of OT media. Any
questions call Stephen Heater 837-3650 or
Patricia Uskiewicl. 837-C285.
Physical Edua~tion - Clart Gym
Sports Club Exhibition - each club will
have a space to demonstrate their activity ;
Judo, Ski, Scuba, Cheerteading, Bowling,
Gymnastics, Riding.
The basebaJJ team and the Men's and
Women's Intercollegiate Athletic teams will
hold practices, weather permitting.
Research lab will be open to lhe pubHc.
Underwater sound equipment wilJ be
demonstrated in the pool.
Open RehearuJ in modern dance dtrected
by Rae Ann Hawkes w1ll be in the Dance
Studio.
U.B. Blues will be performing 3- S p.m. in
Oark Gym.
School of Architecture and Environmental
Oesip - 2917MalnSt.Theywillcontinue
the1r exhibit thro ugh April 16. There will
also be a lecture by Konrad Wachsm2nn.
School o( lnfonnation and Library
Sciences; The Ubrary studies lab of the
School of Information find Ubrary Studies
w11l be open (Harriman Ubrary Building,
room I 54S) - exhibits created by the
students; staff and students will be on hand
to a nswtr questions. Sll.S graduate
studen t!! presentahon of a multt-media
program will be m P.,uker Engineenng.
School of Manqt'menl - Crosby Hall ;
Re prese nt a t 1ves from three of our
programs 10 attendance m Room IS I
Undergradua te Program in Bu&amp;~ness
Administration , MBA Degree , and
Management Assistance flrograrns will be
represented.
Sdtooi of Pharmacy - Health Scien~
BuilcUna; Health EducatiOn Programs Drug Abuse, Poison PreventiOn, YD.
Pharmacy Career lnformatjon - Special
programs for prospective pharmacy

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

flouse of Wlteels '•c.

students, informal counaelling 4. advUory
interviews with faculty, Opportunltiea for
women , Filmatripa and Informative
literature.
Tadaer EctacadoD - 319 Fe»ter; Slides
describing tho Toadler Education prosram
will be lhown. The program will be
repeated throlJihout the afternoon.
Watem New Yodc Nuc:leat lteactor; Open
throughout the afternoon l :00-5:00.
Periodic lectures 4. tours, contact person :
Bill Hall.
Toun of Nortb Campua in Amhent and
bta~et to IUdae Lea; Tours are planned to
the North Campus in Amherst. Buses will
leave periodicaJJy from the parking area in
front of Lockwood Ubrary. Buses to the
Ridge Lea campus will leave periodically
from Circle Drive next to Diefendo rf
Annex . (There will be tours and di!plays in
Geography, Anthropology, Mathematics
and the Art Department at the Ridge Lea
Campus.)
Hayes Hall; President and Mn. Ketter with
the immediate Presidential administrative
staff and theiJ wives will be in the offices
in the East-wing first fl oor. They will be
happy to meet and discuss various activities
and programs of the University with
visitors. Model of North Campus will be set
up In Room 201 Memben of the staff of
f~~Cillties Planning will be present t\)
explain new developmenta.
EncJish l&gt;qJartmeat Poetry Radin&amp;. 208
Lockwood u'brll)', 2 :00p.m .
RJdF Lea Art Gallery ; Experimental films
made by Communications Design students
Coordinator : Paul McHeneh.an.
Gerry O'Gndy't Media ~tation .
Trailers l and 2, l :00- 5 :00 p.m.
Hochttetter Hall Room 114; PhySJcal
Optics DemoostraiJons
twenty minut ~
program begmnmg on the hour and on th~
hitlf hour : ruby laser, neon-helium laser,
how lasers work. poi¥Jzed light effects.
magtc wandows . In addition th~
Observatory on the 6th noor wilJ be open
to the public at 7 ;00 p.m., it will rem am
o pen untiJ midnight. In cue of cl oud ~
there will be a demonstratio n of the rad1o
telescope.
Ac heaon HaD - Moon Rocks; Dr
Cadenhead Will give his lecture on moon
rocks twice, once at I :30 p.m. and again at
3:00 p.m. Room 5 Acheson Hall.

Art Auction

&amp;part and Bicycl• &amp;hap

featuring

Peugeot
Bianchi
Steyr
Gitaine
full/inc• oj rulmg llfJ{Jarc·l

rourmg equipment und
lflt'C' IU/1 r {Wr/1

orig1nal works of graph1c art- etch1ngs. lithographs. by leading 20th century art ists.
P.Jhlt' Pll",l'"'
Jt•hlln~ Fri~t.Jia~nll~r
Milrl" Ch•'l!·lll
Salv:Jdor Dal1
Ak·\:llllkr Caltkr
J uan Min•
(.,l·nr~l·~ Rt•uault Victor \ al\ard~
and lllht:rs

Lightweight service !&gt;.pe~:ial ists
Mon.-Wed -J·n 10 a.m
IJ p rn
rues. T hu rs &amp; Sal I 0 a rn
6 p.nt

' .... .... .,8560
7rw,., MAIN
Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 12 Aprill972

Sr.

SUNDAY, APRIL 16th a t 3 :00p.m.
GOVERNOR'S ROOM - EXECUTIVE MOTOR INN
DIR ECTLY AC R OSS FRO M T H E AIRPORT
EXHJBITION OF WORKS I :00 - 3:00p.m. ADMISSION FREE

02-~1

ALL WORKS CUSTOM FRAMED AND MAITED

�Unique methods

AID rehabilitation successful
by Dave Saleb
Sputrum Staff Writu
Addicts tn Distress, a local
organization founded to aid area
drug addtcts and people with
other r elu t ed problems has
recently announced what may be
the rughest success rate for drug
rehabilitation in lhr country
J oseph A Verter, o ne of the
nation's leading authonties on
dnl&amp; rehabilitation and founder of
AID, co mm en ted in an 1nterview
last week that ''70% of all the
people who co me to AID and whn
und ergo three months of our
therapy pro gram don't go ha ck to
their problems" lie con tm ued .
"This not only includes drug
addi cts Jnd abusers, hut abo
a pplll'S to alco hohcs, former
mrntal patn•nt~ . ~Uil'ld.Jis.
h omos e x u J 1\ . c ' 111 h 1t 1o msb.
tr ansve'dlte,, pmslltute~ and
people \\tlh other '~-'nnus
SOCIII·Cl01l011lll prohlent\ ..

Joseph Vet ter

In an Interview IMt week, Jo.ph
Vetter, fou nder of Addicts in
Distress (AID), said that '70% of
all people who come to AID and
who undergo three months of our
therapy program don't go back to
their problems."

Combined therapy idea\
Mr Vetter, whose suo.:cess 111
the field of SUICid e prevention la1d
the foundations for h1s work 111
drug n:hJhlht.lllon. pla~cd the
cred1t lor the suo.:&lt;:css ol h1s
organ11at1on on a number of
reaso n) "Th e found;lttons of AID

therap y lie in the wo rk of three
men, including myself. I took the
Ideas of Fathe r Dana~ Egan, the
..Junkie Priest" and of Chuck
Diectrich, the founder o f
Synanon , whic h is the largest drug
rehabilitation center m the
country , and combmed them wllh
my own expenence w1th drug
abusers. Then combming these
ideas on rehabilitation w1th the
well t ested has1cs of Alcoholics
An onymous, Reality Therapy and
Re covery I nc., I developed the
A ID therapy as it is today ."
Although Mr. Vetter stat ed
thdt many of the tcchmques he
uses were hast.&gt;d on the
foundations of the~e c&gt;t her
organi7atl0ns. he Jl~&lt;• expressed
the uniqucneSl&gt; ot lm progrJm and
its advunla1!l'S over othe r tlutrapy
programs " Thl' fact 1hat w~:'vr
eXISted Ill I he f1cld elf drug
rehd h1iltJ 1111n t,H 14 yeJ r' w11 h nn
community ~up port , wtult' m.my
people 1n ' "" \.Ommumty hJve
heen trylntt to dc'&gt;truy 1ny work.
\hows our strength

Blame&lt;; professional jealousy
No separa tion from cummunlly
"In fJll .. Mr
Vetter
contmueu." dunng thosl.' 14 yt.&gt;ar..
J
great number ol othrr
organantu1ns hJVI.' s prun(t up Jn•l
died whth' we'w tust hq:un tu

A rUIIable seat ••ICICle a good car a rdtle beHer.
So does a rear door.

t9n ' •~•o

tv~•

t.ho ..A

o" ..,.,.

~Wtth c;o,.OM»t ~ ., . ••d• ...
fOd e r OOf'-• l ""'iefu'IQ Ol"'d O((.ftt OUNP

When 'fO'J moke o solid, seruoble, econom~&lt;ol lonle cor 'PJ don't
change II Exceplto moite II benef
Now !hot we're mokonglhot k1nd of cor ogoon, thor'~ the only kond
of change we're go.ng to moke
For exomple, we'YI!I mode o Runabout model of the Ford Ponto
II has o rear door the bo$1C Ponto doesn't hove. And reor 5e011thot fold down
for extra corgo space thor's love feet long Every~tung else os the some
A gutsy l1ttle engone rOOt ~ the ~ economo&lt;ol k1nd of gm
mileage as the linle 1mport3.

A solod&lt;ls-o-rock lour ~ lromtnoUI()(I Sports cor !&gt;leeflng A
welded steel body w11h sox coats of poonl
Ponto os wode ond 510ble, but nOI b4g It's go1 plenty of leg ond
shouldef room, bulot's barely 1111 onc:hes longer thon the leodong ompon
There 'fO'J hove ol lhe bosoc P1n10 o good lonle cor Ovr P1nlo
RunobcM o l1nle better good l1nle cor
See !hem 01 'fO'J' Ford dealer's.

Whe• yew eet lteclt teltasiu, yew t•t ltecla te fer4.

FORD PINTO
FORO DIVISION

See,.. ........., ....

ex pand our programs. The reason
that we have been able t o exist for
so long with minimal funds while
these ot her programs have failed .
IS because these otber programs.
1ncluding S yna non, separa t e the
addict from socie t y in a cente r fo r
addicts called a halfway house. We
are able to c ure the addio.:t
without isolating him in this way .
and thiS helps us in three ways.
"First of all , our method of
cu ring addicts i.s much cheaper
than ownin g and operatjng a
halfway house. Secondly, our
puttents d&lt;'n 't have to stay with us
for life, as they are in contad
w1t h society t hroughou t and there
IS no worry about their returning
to soc1ety after they are cured as
they never leh 1t F1naJiy , we ..:an
al~o
have 1he people in the
l·ornmuntty and on tpe1r own
1n~tead of ~ooped up Ill a halfway
lwu"~ 1 hey are then able to ~·orne
to u\ fur thc:rap}' h:lsed on thc1r
need .md do not havt' to stJ} here
Jll the t1mc"

tus program 1.'&gt; so
Mr Vetter doe) not
c~red h1~ 1dea~ to be anepted 10
the near future lie ~lis th1s
\llUJtlon "unfortunate" and
hlame'i d great deal of the problem
on professional jealousy hnked
h.11: k to h1s work m su1c1de
preventllln " In the I 'I 50's and up
until 19fl0,'' he recalled, " I wa~
the lead1ntt ex pert 111 the o.:ountry
111 the field of ~ul~'ldc: prevention .
Among
my
greatest
a~.:complishments 111 that field was
the founding of thl' Buffalo
S u1&lt;:1d e Prevent ion Center .
Around thiS lime, though, a
number of professionals in the
nrea of sutcide prevention began
to allat:k my theones , and I was
forled to leave the center because
t•f thiS pressure
It was aJso
hc. .. use uf these professional
Jt!Jd.s t hJt nuny of my theones
wen• lftnorcd for nearly ten years
.. nd 11 WdS only reo.:en tly that my
1llcJ~ m thl\ field have be .. ume
Jllepted
A It hough

,u,~e~sful.

Must .. play waiting game"
" I he \.Jille thtng IS now
happenllllt 1n the drug held," Mr
v,·tter noted ." whJJe th&lt;' ~late has
ll.l~l
annuun.:ed that 11s $YO
nulhon drug program 1~ a flop,
they ,ontinue to follow the wrong
nh:a' ~nd make the same mtstakes.
I ' m Jfra1d that the same thtngs
will happen here that happened
bdore, and I will JUSt have to play
1 he
wa~t1ng
game until they
eventually come to me "
Mr Vetter'~ work 1n the drug
held extend s batk to 1958 as a
p.1rt of h1s work 1n SUICide
prevention AID was founded m
l'lbl! m tus home, but he moved
the center t o 1ts present location
.tt 118 Pearl St as the first '&gt;tep
towards the expansiOn of their
fauhtlel&gt;
Under Mr. Vetter's
su perviSIOn, AID has begun to
expand to o ther cities and a new
AID ce nter was recently opened
m Washmgto n, D.C. Other centers
are bemg planned for Niagara
Falls, Toronto , Ro c he s ter ,
Crucago and New York.

-MONEYlike

honour, integrity. • "
and intelligence - must
.,. ..nect end woriled for- WE
WANT AGGRESSIVE AND
IMAGINAnVE COLLEGE MEN
AND WOMEN - to woril,
end to am top IWf· - ... C.A.T.
, _ to , . _ Y ooic Su., but
.,_tne. come trVW with 111. See
- .t ot wriee ~. L - Fertit.
P.O. Bo• 43. Kenmote N .Y . 14223.
conf~

t_,_.

Wednesday, 12 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�I

I
A stink in the gym

The revelation of drast ic fi nancial miscond uct on the part
of the Athletic Department is appall ing. While it is c lear that
the misallocations are not part of any organized attempt to
defraud the Student Association, the documentation of
dishonest practices has served to create an aura of mistrust
over future athletic budgets.
The initial problem is the Administration's iaxity in
allowing the Athletic Department to by·pass the Trustee
guidelines of administ rative review. We can see no
justification whatsoever for t his action. Besides t he actual
violation of the fee guidelines, there is the much more serious
inequity of allowing one unit total financial freedom, while
all other student organizations are caught in a vise of
rigorously construed regulations.
It rs Student Association Treasurer Jeff Osinski's
contention that all Athletic Department funds should be
placed under administrative review. We fully support this
notion. However. we think a further step is necessary : a
tull-scale, official investigation by the University of the fiscal
affairs of the Athletic Department
The reasons for this should be obvious. First. money was
stolen . When only one member of the athletic staff ever
returned excess funds from cash advances for travel and
recruitment expenses. there can be no explanation other than
the personal allocation of the surplus. It is interesting to note
that two years ago students were indicted by a grand JUry for
stmilar actions. We are left with a moral conclusion that to
steal for politics is wrong; to steal for athletics is right.
Secondly. the expel')ditures of student monies to tutor
athletes is indefensible. Why should one group be singled out
for this special treatment 7 There are numerous student
holding jobs or intimately involved in extra·curricular
activities that require large amounts of time. yet they don' t
receive tutoring at the expense of other students
Another fiasco is having 43 persons attend pre and
post·game dinners on a basketball trip. Or sending a
swimming coach to Fort Lauderdale for eleven cold and
wintry days last December. We believe enough irregularities
have been uncovered by Mr . Osinski's investigation to merit
an in depth investigation. We further think the Athletic
Department itself should call for such action. Otherwise. the
University com munity wilt have no alternative but to believe
that the Athletic staff supports this midconduct.

THE SpECTf\UM
Vol 22. No 73

Wednesday, 12 April 1972
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Page ten . The Spectrum . Wednesday , 12 April 1972

lht

Broad-base major
To rhe Edwu
A~ Duel:lor o f the Muter Science in Soctal
Sccences degree Program , an interdisciplinary
approoch to graduate work in the Social Sciences, I
want to record my enthusiasm for Dean Ebert's
re co mmendation of an undergraduate
interdisciplinary major tn the areas as represented by
the Faculties. From the experiences I have had on
the gradua te level , and from my knowledge of the
advantages that can come from a broad-based

undersradUite major, I feel it ts t1me to uuilltu tc
such a pro.,.am
I endorse, too, your editorial in the wue of
Marc h 27. 197 2. in which you note the advantllge to
s tudents o f vahd addllaonal options.

Milton Plnur
Praft!sso r of llmorv
D1ruwr of the Mast er of
Science in Social Snt!nct'
Pr11f(ra m

For what it's worth
by HaNy Lipman

and Assembly Speaker Perry Duryea . They art held

in the same reprd by Albany as the fifteen year old
As I wnte thiS u 's foui- o'clock Sunday morntng
and I've aot a paper that I should be doing for a
course that I need to graduate except that I don't
really feel hke writing about Russian foreign policy .
Besades, I 've been on "vacation" for over a week
now and a large segment of that time has been
consumed by thoughts IJlawang at the inside of my
skull Thts LS quite unusual - normally I spend my
lime at home sleeping to outrageous hours in the
mfternoon and losing as much contac t as possible
with re»hty
a Knick pme Tuesday, the Rangers
Wedn esdlty . The pattern seemed to be the same this
(ime around. ext:ept that reality kept rearing its ugly
head and danng me to take a swing. Then I used up
my supply of grass early in the week and while I'm
quite certoin it is possible to score dope in
Woodmere I'm a little out of touch .
Actually, the week didn't start out too badly I
spen t Monday night watc hing the Knicks win and
Monday viewing Slauahterhouse Five. J think the
tlung I &lt;ipprecaate most about Vonnegut is his sense
o f the absurd I guess one of the preponderant
fnctors en my JUd&amp;ment of people LS how well they
handle absurditau. Anywa y, the McGovern vcctory
made Tuesday be&lt;~rable. fhe fact that Wallace,
llumphrey , Muskae and J ackson combined for o ver
SIXIY per cent o f the vote was slightly disturbing,
however.
Subsequent events have not been quue so easy
to accept. One has been most distrubang. There is a
facaltty an New York City called Wtllowbrook. It LS
~upposed to be a 'tate hospataJ for the care of
severely mentally retarded children whose parents
cannot afford the ex p ense of hlnng highly skilled
pravate attendants A cou ple of m onths ago
WA BC' TV newsman Geraldo Rivera entered
Wallo w brook with some cameramen after heanng
complain ts from parents What he found was enough
to turn even the most devout cynic's stomach :
c haldren !yang in vanous degrees of nudity on the
noor, excrement on the noors and walls (and the
resultant sten ch), o ne attendant for every hundred
or so k ads. Rivera was qutte properly appaiJed by the
situation and proceeded to headline the story o n
several consecutive news programs.
Sint.e that tame scores of polillcaans have visited
the tnstJiutaon, studtes have been begun and people
hiiVe generally reacted quite vocally over the shame
of Willowbrook. To see if any of this had
accomplished anything Rivera went back to
Willowbrook a couple of days ago - and found that
absolutely not lung has changed . Evidently, retarded
c hildren are o f no interest to peo ple Like Rockefeller

beroln addict who can't get into a treatmcrll
program because Duryea and Rocky mutilated the
drug budaet o r students en the state uruversaty who
find pro111m after proaram bemg cut because thr
Albany aovemment decaded to teach us a leSlton
after we refused to be nat:e httle cltildren and wat~h
Vietnam and Kent State go by peacefully No,
Rocky LS much too occupaed btttenng up the
construction unaons and companaes. How couJd ht
possibly find t1me to care for retarded ctuJd ren whrn
he is so busy spendang a billion or more dollars on
the Albany Mall? After all , retarded kids don't vote
If there is any shred of decency in anybody who
reads thLS and in any other way hAs heard of
Willowbrook t h ey'll be moved to take some sort of
action. If nothing else, write letters of indignant
protest to Riclcefeller, Duryea and your own
assembly man . Maybe 1f enough potential voters
threaten these unfeelihg ldio~ they will be forced
off their fat bureaucratic asses. The only hero in thiS
st ory is Rivera. He has forced tlus issue on the publl ~
consciousness and refused to Jet go. In a t1me that
seems overrun by the co--o p tion of JdeallSIIl
principles has crusade shcnes like a jewel.
Meanwhtle the filthy war on the o the r stdt' u l
the Pactfic forced Itself on us aga.Jn . The color of the
bodies is different, but the American prescnct
contmues as despicably as ever. So now we're bad
to bombang North Vietnam to stop VJetnamese from
cnvading Vietnam. Between that achon and walkang
out of the Pans talks the Naxon regime has reached
new hecghts o f pompoStty and stupidity The
admanastrataon continues t o spew forth the same
garbage that l yndon Johnson attempted to foast on
the Amencan publtc s.tx years ago. Hopefully the
C'ommunast o ffensave will force an end to the
American mvolvement. A co uple of fnghtenang adeas
to constder · What do you suppose wo uld happen
here if Naxon decided to protect Thieu by reinstattng
Amencan troops or using nuclear weapons (there is a
contingency plan lor that)? It couJdn't happen? I
h ope not - or Kent will seem like tiddly winks .
If any or all of thas makes you depressed and
disgusted
good! Maybe you'll get off your be hand
put down the hash pcpe and get to work . I don't ask
for anythang so o utrageous as an unmed1ate, total .
twenty·four h ours a day , seven days a wed..
commitment. Maybe just a couple of free hours on
Tuesdays and Thursdays to get your feet wet. After
aiJ, thangs aren't really that serious
just ask the
Vietnamese, or the parents of the k.Jds tn
Willowbrook. or some ktds an the ghettos of Buffalo
Don't worry, there's plenty of time

�Strikes are no-no
Up the organization
To

th~

Editor:

the hike In tuit ion, the housina business, the vot e u
well as some factors in the classroom.

In reference to Harvy Lipman's column of 29
March, 1972, dealing with t he election of a new
editrix-1n&lt;hiefess for The Sputrum, namely one Em
Ess A r mao (by th e way, Harv, you spelled it
"unpreten&amp;ious." Tch. Tch .), I have o ne burning
question. That Is, when you say that Jo-Ann was "of
course, t utored by one of the all-time &amp;JCit campus
editors," do you mean me, or were you referrina to
the late lamented Mitch lane (or even tbe late and
unlamented 801 Vaccaro, commonly known as
"That Clod!?") I eagerly awalt yout 11 ue confessiOn.

£.1. SchCHn{tld
Campu.t Editor Emerltw

Senior advice
To

rh~

I 'd just Wee to say that a lot of my clusmatea

arc ta_Jidna about a student strike this spring, due to

I just thin k that a strike il not the :mswc:r. l b
p retty clear t hat t t rike. d o n 't work 11n d j us t s lo p w ~:
sefious st udenCI fro m aettina t he edu~tio n Uw t we
paid for.

Graduate representation
To th' Editor·
The Graduate Student Association is proud to
announce tl\at the Divisional Committee of t he
Faculty o f Social Science~ and Adminiattation voted
o n 20 Match, 1972 to recognize the valid and
sianificant role o f 1f8duate students in academic
decision maklna.
They voted to seat one representatively selected
lflduate student from 'ach &amp;Jaduate pr011am 1n the
Faculty, all of whom would serve as members of the
Divisional Committee. The GSA would like to
publically commend Chairman Conklin&amp; and
repre~entativet Butler, Boot, Ganyard, Hayden.
Hovor1ta, Koehl, Lewis, Otterbein, and Wolck for
their forthriaht an d precedent-setting decision on t he
Divisional level

Each departrnet~tal sraduate student associ at ion
should Im m ediately initiate actions lcadin a t o the
eJec tion of their departmental represen tative. tr the
organization either belts the r~sources necessary to
do so or if there is no orpniution, the Univenity
Graduate Student Associat ion stands ready to aid in
est ablis b i n a a nd im plementing the selection
procedures. In fact, the GS A would like to h elp the
existin&amp; or emef1Cn cy student orpnlutions or
individual studentJ in any way possible. fmancial,
political, or orpnlzational lust contact the GSA at
20S Norton Union 831-SSOS an y lime fro m 9 -S
weekdays.

John

c,~nwood

Pr'sld,nt
Graduatr Studtnt Anodation
Vic"r

Edttor·

As a senior about to gradu.ate , may I o ffer th1s
o pen letter of counsel as my swan sons? It "
addressed to all students at U .B.
If you are lucky enouJh to still have tune left
here at U.B., use it wisely . Read everyttuna you can
get your hands on and assimilate closely to them .
learn from your friends and from your enem1es how
to smoothc the course of human anterac t1on Do
so met hma prac tical so that your IVory tower won't
crumble anto du.st when you try t O make at an the
"real world " Don't undermine the value of
memonz.atlon. Jn an age of Informatio n st o rage and
retrieval, at is absolutely vital that you be able to
namt that wluc h you wish retrieved .
The workaday world may not prove conducave
tn study and to the further broademn&amp; of your
m1nd's honzons. Your o pportunaty is now , If you let
II s hp by, the loss pro btbly won' t b« Irretrievable,
but 11 wall certainly be costly
Uu thls place in every way you c an And when
yo u discover some of Its secrets. perhaps you w11l be
m a posifioh to .Wake It a lit tic bit better for the nt:Xt
guy 1n line
Pt:'uu

Un

171f W11 a· 0111

Program funds
I u thr Etlunr

There have been repeated att a~:ks and
' ouoterattacks nn the funding level of vanous
programs an the Universaty such as Phyaaca. the
{ olleges, the labrary , etc The future common to
most of them (not all) 1s the attempt t o justify
krvang o ne pro gram at the expense of the otherl It
has become a dog-fight m wtuch the top dogs &amp;fiiW
the bones of dying programs WhJie we may look lake
an1mals (porcine or otherwiSe),lf the Un1verslly 1s to
4:ot1t1nue to exist. we must start acung like rat1003l
hemgs. Either an thr n11me of "academic excellence"
or "common survival," each of us must rea1u:e that
the momentary manor victories of one or several
programs are table scraps, thrown to quiet th e
loudest barkers. These scraps serve several purposes
but the most pern1cious IS that of setting one unat at
the throats of other umts in a vaan attempt to avo1d
starvang The problem 1$ larger than the relative
needs of all desemng programs. If thas LS to be a
University. all must 11ant allegiance to tht tnme
l'-4mpus program and not continue the "s&lt;.rew you, I
got mane" type of altatude now present , at or near
the surface of every urut's publJc stance The whole
ts the sum of its parts, e&lt;~ch part dropped leaves an
upandmg hole in each of the rem11n1ng parts No
1 nd IVIdual
program can exist functionally or
academically without having its companso n programs
operating on a sound basis. If the Unaversity d1es,
don't blame it on Albany or the President (here o r in
Washington). just ask yourself wh11t you dad to save
It

John Grunwond
Fxtunal Affairs Vrc~ hflldl'nt
Croduatt Student Auc)('latwn

Cite~ Grievance Report
To th' Editor:
The two letten recently pnnted tn support of
Prof. Graham are made aU the more noticeable by
the1r oonsp1cuous refusal to deal with the char&amp;~ of
intamJdatlon whach I clearly leveled against Prof.
Graham tn my March 6 letter to Th' Sputrum
Ne1ther of the affirmative letters, moreover, demed
the fact that Prof, Graham continues the lung
history of faculty mtimidation m the Department o f
Soctology Furthermore , the fact that a number of
araduate st udents and an ovcrwhelmang percentaae
of t he faculty in Sociology so obviously embrace
Prof. Graham in spite of the acta of intlmidataon
confirma another point rn my letter. namely, that
there is vtaoroua support 8J¥en, particularly by the
fwl profe~~ors. to rampant corruption 1.n the
Department.
Onu more, I draw upon the findinp of wrona:t
contained in the official Report by the Ad H&lt;X:
Gnevance Committee to substantiate my charaes I)
on p. 4, the CommJttce concludes, "We find the
Chatrman (Theodore M. Malls I at fauJt" an handhna
a request for a salary adJust mcnt and. on p. 9, the
Committee declares Chairman Mtll.s guilty of
" improper" conduct in handling »n off1caal
Department responsibility; 2) the Committee found
(p 4) "that feeling I of a departmentally sponsored I
w1tc h hunt I aga1nst certam memben of th r
Soc1oloty Graduate Student Assoc1atmn I d1d and
does e1u.st, and IS, in Q.Ur opanaon, qwte realistically

perceived I by the affect ed &amp;Jaduate students I , due
to a large vanety of unspeCJfied Uttle comments,
events, attitudes, and rulinp collectively crcatina an
atmosphere of. mutual to be sute, animosity and
dutrust . kft bt/lt'llt o toodly number of /tociOioy I
facultv, for rf'tuons thot may bt undnttandablt but
niH
qultt
atmosphtr~ .''

/ UI II{I'ablf'.

rontnbuud

to

thiJ

When ~n official Commtttee faults a
chairman of a department and finds considerable
evsdence of witch-huntin&amp; by raculty m embers, is
there any doubt but tllat the Ocpartment of
S&lt;x.1ology. ruled over by a Chairman found guilty of
•ubstantial wro np , 11 vu:ioua?
Although the 1\d Hoc Grievance Committu,
appointed by the Fac ulty Senate, found many
wronp, tltrrt 1!411'
ntJ tf{rdlllt corrurloru ro
datt' a.mpty hecauae the Administration at this
University refUses to do an ythln&amp; abou t the tam pant
corrupdon in Sodolosy and b«:..uae fa culty .nd
I!Tiduate studentJ in Sociology, u evidenced by the
two letters mentJoned above, demand people ,unry
o( improper behaVJor {i.e.. Prof Graham} to be
candJdates for the pos~tion of dwrman! Until the
present Admsntstratao n acts pocitively 1n spate of the
Department, then: will continue to be abusive and
amproper co nduct by tlle faculty . And I predict the
corruption will, bke cancerous growth. spread even
more in the year to tome.

b""

SldMY M Witlhtl"'

AuncUTtt' Pto/tuor

You are the Eggrnan
Ji, the f.utttu
After n:admg the llrtldc by I ggman, the: Murch
14th ISSUe of The• Spt"Urum, I lin understand why
he IS USing an assumed name If l ever wmte
anything as full of lflaccuracae.s. half truths jaf so
lu.:ky t o be SO percent true), and dull unong~naht)',
I , too. would be afraid to ~1gn my name. Of course I
should have reah1ed he WkS no gourmet when I re¥d
1 hat h1s 1dea of a cuhnary deught IS a llot dog and
french fnes. but Buffalo ha.~ eatmg places fnr even
that type The fact that he eats hll&gt; meals 1n teo
mmutes also makes tus claam to betng a conmseur
qu1te suspect - d1dn ' t anyone ever tell h.tm he could
get indigestion that way?
One of tus f1rst b1g statements 1n his attack uf
Buffalo as that "New York
has ~staurants, and
se11 food and Chinese food and Italian food " lie
must be refernng to what IS obvtously hiS h ome
town. where one m1g.ht enJOY a good meal 1f he IS
lucky enough t o make 11 from hts car to the front
door o f the restaurant Witho ut gettmg mugged ll1s
rather apparent thai dunng h1s slay here In Buffalo
Eggman hasn 't been too observant, havang miSsed the
great sea food o f Allee's or the Snup,gler's Inn, the
Chinese food at ShanghaJ V11lage , and the ltahan
food at Barrone's o r Eduardo's, not to mention the
great Japanese. Polynesian , and even Hunganan food
that IS available here. But the bigest thing th at
seems to have escaped his notice IS the fantasti c beef
on week that is indiginous to the Western New York
area . Even Sheridan Drive, which Mr. Eggman seems
to have dnven down wath his eyes closed (a very
dangerous practice, I mag.ht add), boasts the Pnme
Rib. or if he reaUy wanted a hot dog, there are

lllways Put 's, Ted's and the Jolly C1nwn . all of which
have excellent &lt;.harLoal broiled hots
Our fiM fnend IS also diSappOinted to ducovtr
that everyone duc:&lt;;n"t talk hkc he does, o.~nd that tus
beloved '"hero" 1s of a different appeUatio n m
Buffalo . Of ~;ourse 1f he could expand h1s horiz.ons
beyond New York &lt; 1ty, be would know that the
partil ular type of sandwu:h to wluch he refers to
also vanou.~ly known as a gnnder , a bomber, and a
Dagwood m d1fferent regions of the country
In ~.-ase brother Egman (I never dad get his first
name) 1s wundenng where I got my chum of
unong~nalaty (or rather whJch Instances I caught), I
shall cue twQ r•ther blatent example$. Referrina to
Buffalo as the Am1pit of the F.ast, a name made
mfamous several yean ago by a S11n Francisco sports
wnter, IS becomang very cliche. II an aspiring
JOurnaliSt must resort to name calhng. he could at
least ttunk o( somethmg ong~nal He maght even
make ~ name for tumself (bes1des the ones people arc
caJhng htm now) One of o ur fnend's problems
seems to be a d1grtsslon from his ong.anal topiC,
probably JUSt to WISte tlme and to f1ll space . But
even ' :ere he st11ys true to form and indulges in a
l11tle literary li&amp;ht·fingeredness (I hear he just got a
great offer from McGraw-Hill) HtS solution to
violent sex cnmes IS rematkably Similar ( that 's a n1ce
way of saymg almost word for word the same) to the
o ne proposed in the PLAYBOY A her Hours of the
latest issue of that magazine.
AU of this leads me to the conclusion that the
full name of o ur budding author could only be
"Scrambled" Egman ,

DaVId Mcl.aughlln

Wednesday , 12 April 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�f

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Page twelve. The Spectrum . Wednesday , 12 April 1972

Name
Stanaturt
4ddrtu
City

TO TltAHSflll fUNDS TO
BlWfAI.O SAVINGS 8ANK
pltllt 1111 out tills co.opon. In·
c iOJt banUJ- ol occo.rnt to
be t ranaftrotcl Inc! m.all to us
We' ll ttlurn yo.or bankboo- tf·
l tr lilt transfer Is compttltcl

........ ,.. ..-...

I""'OITQl: PINit tt lWt

Soc111 Stcutlly No
Slalt

.....,_

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S..tt . . IIH-IIhfU.ho. wlilulll ' • ""\
P1y lo lht orotr ol Butlolo Sovinas lank

Zip
• til . . ,,. l"',ffr rH

IWHtf ~~ .,..0¥111 or INlltKf' of M r~ Owr Ac U wftU

DOllARS

$
ACCOUNT NUW.BU
SIGN lllACTLY AS IN BANKBOOK
Dalt
S•cnoture
Numbtr tnd Slrttl
Coty, S~lt, Zip

- -·-- - · --

------- -- - · - -- - ----- -- - --- ~

'

�Ath/etic expenses questioned. ..~onunu•c,.om

PROTECT YOUR CAR; TRUCK; VAN ; etc.wi1h 1he

number considering the number of team members."

Solid State Electralay
ANTI-INCURSION ALARM

the Athletic Department Violated its own meal
policy of $5.00 for supper, $2.50 for lunch and
Sl.SO for bre~kfut .
'Moral wrona'

ask to ,.. our detnonstrltion c:.rl

Safeguard all property

&amp; PDSSessions
(homes, offices, ...-ehoutes, stores, etc.t
~

with a
Customized Security S vst.rn - TAILORED TO YOUR NEEDS
A ND BUDGET - BURGLAR A LARMS •

a

F I RE ALARMS

FOR
INFORMATION, ASSISTANCE &amp;/tH APPOINTMENTS;
call tH write-

Constant Alarm Technology
Security Systems
876-7076
875-8324

Other allocations questioned by Mr. Osinski
included the renting of cars, paying for traffic
violations and subsidizing undergraduates to tutor
athletes. Such tutoring, Mr. Osinski stated, if not
against the directives of the Statt' Board ofTrustees
involves " some moral wrong to spend student fees
to tutor athletes when this option for paid tutors IS
not open to the general student body."
Mr. Osinski strongly objected to an allocation he
termed ''highly irregular." Thts expenditure of
1347.00 was allocated to William Sanford for meal
and lodging charges at the Holiday Inn Oceanside tn
Fort lauderdale. Florida for an all day period m
December . According to Mr. Osinslet : "We find this
irregular since I I days is a long time for a
conference."
However, the most unusual thmg, accordmg to

P.O. Box 43
K•m«e, N.Y. 14223

approximately $1 5,000 and as Mr. Osinski reported
"to date o nly $3,100 in income has been turned into
the Norton Hall Cashier in Room 225." Mr. Osinski
feels that this discre pancy stems from the fact that
the Athletic prosram does no t enjoy the support of
as many people as the deputment claims.

In addition, Mr. Osinski referred to instances where

compl~ c:tafted circuitry, ELECTRONIC SIREN

Mr. Osmska, "was the fact that the Athletic
Department revtsed tts budget after 11 was passed "
Originally. the budget called for an income figure of
$3 I .SOO. Subsequently , this was ch an~ed to

Be a part of the world ...
-Join a Union Board Committee - ...After all

Recommended actio ns
To correct such "irregularities" from
reoccurring. Mr. Osinski feels that an administratiVe
official, the SA treasurer and a member of the
Student Athletic Review Board should sign all RE P
f-Hms. Additionally. he suggests that "some
agreement must be made as to what conferences
must be attended, by whom and for what length of
time." He continued tlut the meal policy of the
Department must be more clearly defined and stuck
to. His final suggestton called for a complete
mvestigation of all dealmgs with Shanty Travel.
In concluding his report, Mr. Osinski warned ·
"This report should not be taken as an attack upon
the Athletic Department . . The department has
offered many worthwhile progr~s m the past and is
capable of offering a continuing program . However,
the sudden diSCrepancies may cast suspicton on any
future activities of the department. We think that
this should be rectified as soon as pos.sable."

it's Y 0 U R world'
Oanct' Arts Commitc«
presents

UUAB fi~E A RTS FIL M COMM11TEE
presents

Thursday and Saturday. April 13 &amp; IS

first Truffaut gave us
'The 490 Blows.'
Then 'Stolen Kisses.'
And coming

page ;}-

I
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friday and Su nday, April 14 &amp; 16

Th~

Barbara Gardner
Construction Co.

',
'

SacuNJay , April 15

l

I

Due to the policies of Warner Bros .•

we find ourselves unable to screen

9 ·()()

pm

CLARK CiYM

"TH E DAMN ED" as scheduled.
Please check the Ticket Off ice for
new movte for FRIDAY AND SUNDAY.

Tickets :
Student!&gt; S I 00
General Atlrn

n

00

Cla'\Se&lt;.

From Columbta Pictures

f11fu:rJu I', A rml I .l. ~ 110 p m
tn MtlltJrd l•il/mrnr H. 11rlflt
frtdu Y, Apfll /-1 , If)()(}

1-: 00 Noon

- CONfERENCE T H EATRE
Shuws before 6 p .m . SO¢ Shows after 6 p m. 7 5¢
Faculty $ 1.25

111

Otuk (i•·m

----·-·----·---------------------------------------------------------------------univers ity
un1o n
a c t ivi t ies
board

--

TheUUAB Music Committee&amp; SUB of SUCat Buffalo
COLUMBIA RECORDING ARTISTS

and W PhD

is proud to present Jn concert

The New Riders Of The Purple Sage
and
PARAMOUNT RECORDING ARTISTS

COMMANDER CODY
And His Lost Planet Airmen

Avauable at
GRANTS&amp;
TWIN FAIR

NRPS

CLARK GYM
T 0 NIGHT 1 April 12

8:00 &amp; 11 ·30 p .m
Tickets
now on sale at
Students $3.00
Norton &amp; Buf. State
Non-students $4.00
Ticket Offices
Free albums given away on randomly picked ticket numbers!

·------------------------- AOtv of Sub Boerd I.Inc. ------------------------~~~
Wednesday, 12 April 1972. The Spectrum . Page thirteen

i

�Butter up a
faster tan with
Coppertone
Tanning Butter
Coppertone Tanning Butter has extra coconut oil and
cocoa butter for an incredibly fast deep tan. That's
why more people butter up with Coppertone Tanning
Butter than any other.

Coppertone Tanning Butter. One of 12 great
tanning products by Coppertone.

liJ

Olli cllll Sun Care Produc ls o l Florida s Wall Disney W orla

~

CountrY rock show
promises good vibes
There's goi ng to be a rockin ',
count ry flavored show in store fo r
a ll tonight at Cla rk Gym.
Appearing there will be the New
Riders of the Purple Sage and
Commander Cody and His Lost
Planet Airmen . While both groups
have been playing for quite a few
years, it's onJy in the last year
that each band has re leased its
first lp's and have been wildly
received by all who've heard
them.
The New Rtders are led by J 1m
" Marmaduke' ' Dawson who wntes
the group's material and handles
lead vocals. Dawso n got his break
when hts old friend and neighbo r
Jerry Garcia , who he played With
in the early 60's, brought the New
Rtders mto the Grateful Dead
camp, having them ktc k off then
shows. Response was great and
the Riders have been fl ying stnce .
Though Garcia no longe r plays
with the band, Spencer Dryden
does. and David Nelson (is that
really his name?) and Dave
Torbert are fine m~trumen talists
on gUitar and bass, respectively
The band's matenal ranges
from s tandard country fare
ballads to the usual "on the road"
songs, all done m a sweet style
that comes off well hve The1r
new album is due 10 the 'to re~ any
day now.
Now the Commander and Ius
Airmen play country mus1c, but

the accent here is on the stra igh t
SO's country rockabilly style . The
Commander is a living legend in
Berkeley and Ann Arbor, the two
places that the band call h ome.
Mr. Cody is probably the last of
the great boogie woogie piano
plunkers. When he beats you ,
Daddy, he beats you right to the
bar . His pricele ss, but
unfortunately rate vocals, rank
htgh on the grease class charts.
Most of the lead vocals are
sung by young Billy C. Farlow. a
re1 n carna ted Gene Vmcent.
Hold1ng on to his unmiked
acousttc, he swmgs htps w1th the
best of them. The rest of the
Atrmen aJI chip in admirably.
from red-headed Andy Stein on
fiddle and sax down to Buffalo
Bru c e Barlo w o n the bass.
S hit -kickers all the way.
The group's lone album is
already a classic . They manage to
bridge the redneck freak gap w1th
tunes l1ke, " Wine, Do Your
Stuff," "Lost in the Ozone,"
"Family Bible," "Down to Seeds
and Stems Again ," and " I Took
Three Bennies and My Semi-Truck
Won't Start." They are a
get-u p-and-go gro up, and exh1b1t
some of the best vibes around .
The shows, at 8 and 11 ·30
p.m . are gonna rock, so don't
mtss them . May we all be "lost m
the OLOne" agam .

Join Furnas College
Clifford C. Furnas Colleae is loo king for people
to participate in ita residentiaJ proaram, "a
liv ina -lurnina experience." Accordina to •·~
members, the Colleae stresses scholarship 11 ·
communication between the sciences and tbe
humanities. AI the core of its proaram is the
encouraaement of cloae faculty ..tudent relationships
exemplified by its reaearch tutorial course open to
all members of the CoDeae.
Anyone interested in joinlna the CoUeae should
vilit the information booth in the Norton Hall
Center Lounae or c ontact Steve Serafm at 83 1-2774 .
In addition, a coffee hour to acquaint prospective
members with the CoUeae will be held April 16 at 8
p.m . in the M~eDonald HaD main lounae. Anyone
intcyuted II invited to attend.

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday , 12 Aprill972

�Athletic banquet to
go on as scheduled
The o n again, off again
sixty-third annual Buffalo Block
"8" athletic banquet is on again,
at a new date. The banquet , which
annually h o n ors athletes fro m
Buffalo's interco)legiate, cl ub and
intram ura ls, bas been rescheduled
for t omorrow evening at the
Hearthstone Man or in
Cheektowaga. The ch ange in date
w as made i n or d er to
dcc.:ommodat e Howard Cosell, th e
banquet's guest speaker.
As many know, the banquet
ran into u snafu just two w eeks
ago when CoseU indicated that he
would not atte nd aft er earlier
&lt;1gree1ng to speak . Thus, Buffalo
offi c1als were forced to ei th er
re place Cosell or cha nge the date
o f the affair. Cosell's reason for
the attempted pullout was hiS
sho w wh1c h IS taped on Mondays,
;!BC's Mnnda11 NIRht SportJ . It
was also learned that Cosell will
,et fro m Buffalo immediately
fo ll o wing the ba nqu et oo
i\rn encan Airlines' new OC-10
late mght flight to New York .
Repo rtedly , CoseU has an early
rno mtng tap1ng for anothe r "Fruit
o f th e Loo m" cn mmerc 1al

Dylan biography

The man behind the music

s p o rtscash:r, New York Jets'
defensive end and former Bulls'
football great, Gerry Ph1Jbin wilJ
serve as mast er o f ceremon ies. T h e
affair. unlik e banquets o f past
years , will not feature the
announcement of every award m
every sport, instead selec ted top
awards wilJ be announced . Some
of t h e key awards to be
ann ounced are the Clifford C .
Furnas Graduate School
scholarships and the ECAC Medal
of Merit. Last year, a woman, Ms .
Na ncy Cole man, became the first
of her sex to earn a Pumas grant .
Another award t o be
announced wiU be th e newly
instituted St ud e n t Athle tic
Review Board Coach of the Year
The SARB, a committee o f the
Student Asso ciation, will prese nt
a plaque to the winner. The
SA RB 's newly app o int e d
chairman. Jo nathan Dandes, will
present the award .
Tickets for the banquet are still
available at Clark Gym , whil e new
outlets have o pened up this w eek
in Norton Hall and in the Tower
li all Inter Residen ce Council
o ffice . Buffalo students ca n
purcttase u ckets at a redu ced S5
pnce . Dandes estimates a cro wd
o f 600 for th e banque t at th e
Heanhstone.

Philbm appurs
I n add1t1o n to the guest
Jflpe3r d nle b y lh e famed

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••

•••
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••
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only •4. 98 per pair/ •
•••
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••

Bob Dylan, An Intimate Biopaphy by Antho ny
Scaduto (Grosset and Dunlay)
Well, after all is said and done , " th e town has no
need to be nervous," Anthony Scaduto's book is
certainly o ne of the most thorough documents ever
written about Bob Dylan .
The IJylan baiters will use the bo ok as evidence
they were right all alo ne about tus ruthlessness, his
callo usness, and how th1s man has n o right to claim
the godhead o f Rock . The Dylanologisl may be
ready now to do a chn1 cal analysis o f Bob's Oed1pus
Comple x . And so on d o wn the lme , with each
argument taken to th e "nth " degree of absurdity.
But the prt"mier value o f 1h1s biography ties in
allo wing us a little better msight mt o the musi c of a
personage wh o, all arguments aside, IS one enormous
volum e of music.: histo ry all by himself. An an1st
cannot help but have his work ha ve some origin tn
the depths o f Ius mmd No l even n ecessarily lhe
depths, but th e surfa~e as well
We see, fo r msta n ~e . th at th e n:venge songs hke
''Posl!ively Founh S tre et " .tnd " Fo urth T1me
Aro und" are no t merely exeruse~ 10 cos mk rh et o m :,
but have b8Sis 10 Dylan's cverydJ y hfe All t hose
wo men - Johanna . the paras1te SISt er , ~w .:ct Mane
are no t JUSt gh osts but are fl es h and blood S•mplc
statements, but to the point (excruciatingly to the
poin t ) As fo r I he o ld p ro test songs, the read er
perceives thai lhere was dt"ftml e .mger , the re wus a
co mn111 ment to so m e d egr ee
Andersen o n Dylan
The re are co untlc'&gt;.~ numhen. o t truly me m urahl e
passages, a nd all of the m we re put forth h~ peuple
o ther tha n Sca duto lhs few o pl!mn p:s fur Lu mmenl
u n his subject are o ft en t ed 10us hand -wn ngm g fo r
the bad and alm ost pral \ e-Qu t-o f-s h..-er-a wc fm 1h..goo d His t un e b y tunr treatises on /ltflh WIII' fiJ
f?1'v/sll ed and J oli n W.•sfr' \' 1/urrltrrR arc a It til e~ ~ rong
\ot•r my tast e
But th ese 1nt e r, ec11un~ ar c n o t cn o ur.h to IJI.. ~
awa y fro m Scaduto', WISe dec1s10n t o \ lay 1n th t&gt;
bal kgro un d and le t o th er peo ple d o th e t ailing H I)
~:o n c lu s 1 o ns
art" n ot reall y t:o nclustn ns , JU~l
o pen-e nd ed sta t e ments It 1~ the people th.JI O ylan
..:a me 1n ~ont llt:l WII h .mel were part o l h" htst flry
th a t m ak e th e h ool.. 10l n8Uin l'o
And thc1r
" t es trrr11m y " (some IO iflhl vre w tim h oo l.. .s' a tn.JI I
enn.:hes o ur th u ughls .shoul 1111:. 111an t- vL·rt rlw
peo ple h l' d ffel..led wt·re ··a ul( hl Ufl 111 Ius vt·r y ht·• ~~ ~
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PROTECTION UNLIMITED. DEPT 12
2701 Sterltngtoft Road , So1tP 132, Monroe , l il 71201
P'ea&amp;e send m e the q ua nt tty n l &lt;;po rt C las'&gt;I'S c hec kt'cl t.Jet ow
(l•m•t two ) If no t fully sa t1 SitN I t w1 ll rf'll ll ll t hr rneu tl.tnrll &lt;.f'
w1thtn ten da ys fo r a full rPfund
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ll ul 11 lhl'"' f1·"'· ' ~' " ln· tlth• tti VIh il l\' d l.t p i&lt;' J
d t:vnlnl I ll Jt•.l ll 11, \ t / ' f«Oiillllllll' '1.11\1 II -'IIU
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1\1 lll.tl..e .t lo&gt;llll\ h 11111\ll ' lh l111 tll,u ft• III JII ~ l t'J ~III)!

But for me, the most memorable ima~c I
received was Dylan the musician . O ne woman who
caught a glimpse of Dylan saying " let there be
musi c" describes it th.is way

It was amazmg t o Sl'~ htm wor/.. on a so n!{ Jlr·
w ould have th~ po~ try oj 11 wo rkl'd o ut tn hts hl'ud
and h ~ w nuld say to R n bbtt (R u b ertsu n ) " 1-rstt'll ,
R o b bfr, rust tmagm~ thiS cut who rs val'
/;l1 zab~tltan , wit h gar"rs and a lo ng slteplu.'rd s horn ,
and h t s cnminR uvn th t lui/In th r morning with /Itt'
sun rismg b~hlnd htm . n1ut :r tlrf' so und I wunt ..
And th en tltey would begin t n play, anti out of this
wut4/d t' omt• some kine/ o j rhl' tJiftl , and then /Itt'
muric· would takt' shapt' .
There are , as I said , unt o ld gems a nd I co uld
re wnte the b ook and ment1o n them all In the end,
Dylan emerges the sa m e great mus1 c1an wllh the o nly
differen ce bemg a m~1v e ftl e o n tus b ehavior , n o w
ava1l able fo r pubhc scrutiny A fnend o f mm e to ld
m e he refuses to even lo ok at the book , because a
man 's penonality should be 1g11o red , and he sh o uld
be j udged o nly o n his co ntributi o ns as an art1st

A Yeats poet
Those ~o ntnhull o ns arc, lor th e mo~t pa rt ,
must cal gen 1us and abilit y ttl 111vnlve th e hste ner and
desll o y the gap between a rtis t an d aud1em:e f ven 1f
yo u never read this b ook , you w11l ~t tll kn ow Bo h
Dy lan , and ho w he says ttu ngs you kn o w yo u feel
yo ursdf bu t Lanno t ex pre~ 1n suc h n ch l' Olon..
Bob Dyla n Sf') o ke to r m.my peo ple , and 1t l!t t h1s
res po nSibilit y thai fo rced h1m to sh y a wa y fru m
J'l(tso nal ~:on t ad With h iS wn~ht u e n cy " I can't be
res ponsible lor their hves," Oylan o,ay~. and t h1s 1~
true In o1 sc.· nsc. Dyla n wa~ th e ~Lapegoa t , th e
sal·ntk 1al lamb wh o b ro ught all th a t gu1lt and
pel tiness o nto th l' airwaves 11nd all c1 wed u~ t o revel tn
h1' ~u11t w11hn ut feeli ng n u r o wn ~ h urt~ o mmgs .tn d
h .sii ~UPl&gt;

!Jut , 11 must he s.ttd all-d in th.tl Dylan ''&gt;
•nonume n t "' ht~ mu '\'ll no t h1~ P'&gt; YL.h c When o ne
h~t e ns lu Bl,wJo · on Bl11nJc• 111 141 1 11 IS su U as
l!c:sh , a~ de~:t n• . .1s dlo~ llentuns d\ 11 w J~ to 1966 H IS
t h o u~th lll .11111 h 1' m u ~• • \ l rp t hl' ~1 d rll~hl lo .tnd m o ve
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d•tllll'· ltut ll uh ll \ l.tll

Ph•loaophf' r author and teac he r wtll
speak at Carneg ie Hall on the basic
problems of hu man e xtslence
• Saturday, Aprll2t- 11 am
• Sunday, Aprtl 30-11 am
• Saturday, May 6-11 em
• Sunday. May 7-11 am
T1cke ts $2 OQ-$5.00. The complete
se11es $8.00-$20.00. Ava ilable at the
Carnegre Hall Box Office Sponsored
by the Krishnamurtl Foundation. P 0
Bo_. 216. Ojal. Californ ia 93023

Send TWO at tile barga m prrce o f S9 49

Krtshnamurll's American unlvers1ty
talka tell us to become our own
teachers and to look within ourselves
to bring about a transformation of
the world
Pape r. $1 95

: City, State. Z1p

:

•

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I h it I

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• DI.IIMONO

YOU ARE THE WORLD

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J. KRISHNAMURTI

Se nd ONE only I e nclose $4 98

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/) doll/

used bo dies along the way . And throughout all &lt;1l
this, Dylan genuinely thought hi m~ l f to be the une
who was used .

: £t/6~9£/laHIT
: RtNGS

•
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Ern{
_J€W€l€RS

81 all eo st.. bullal o.n. y .

•••••••••••••••••••
Wednesday, 12 April 1972 . The Spectrum Page fifteen

�LAST YEAR 2~000 KIDS
WERE LOOKING FOR A BETTER PLACE
TO SLEEP IN
__...-··
........... -·

J

THIS YEAR TWA OFFERS STUTELPASS.
lf you're planning to ~o to Europe this summer.
There's nothing more to do.
don't be surprised if you find yourself sleeping in
No taxes to pay.
an uncomfortable place.
No sen;ce charges to pa_,._
With more students than ever planning to take
No advance resen·ations to make.
advantage of low airfares. decent sleeping accomAnd for every 20 ,·ouchers , ·ou buv TWA throws
modations are going to be tou~h to get.
in I) speciaJ vo~chers. \\'hich ·&lt;:an be-used for
Not that back-packing it isn 't fun . But after n
tickets to a play in London. the use of a bicyde
while the ground starts getting kind of hard.
in Ams terdam, tickets to a bullfight in Spain. a
You could play it safe and make reservations
three-course meal in \'&lt;'nice. tickets to the Olympia
long in advance. But that can take all the fun out
~ J usic HaJJ in Paris. a smorgasbord luncheon
of traveling, since you may want to s tay longer in in Copenhagen and more.
one place, less in another, or change your plans
All thi s for $4.80 a rfa,·.
altogether.
TWA's Stutelpass. ·
That's why TWA has come out with Stu telpass~
Now you don't han' to worr_, about finding a
For only $4.80 a day, you get a decent place to
decent place to sleep.
sleep, continental breakfas ts, tour discounts,
""'-lutt~lf'ot''l .. u """"" h-..lnurk '"'"•"'I, '~ lu ... ,\ ,
1\\.-\
mail -drop services and more.
PLEASE SEND ME MORE INFORMATION
Stutelpass works like this.
When you purchase your TWA tickets. you can 1
ON
's STUTELPASS.
1
also purchase the Stu tel pass for 20, 40 , or 60 days.
At only $4.80 a day.
nr.-\ . PO. Box 876 1
The Stutelpass booklet contains 20 vouchers,
•.....~Jlj~--;~Farming-daJe. KY. 11735
which can be used every day or every few days.
In any 50 cities serviced by Stutelpass. If you
don't use them all. just return them for a refund .
All you have to do in Europe is either phone or
City
visit any one of 12 Stutelpass offices before 3 PM.
State
-Zip
Thll them where you want to go and they'll arrange
everything.
My 1ravel Agent i!' - .," ~
When you get to the guesthouse or s tudent
hotel, just hand t hem the voucher.
L ~......:~-~---- J

,---------,
1, \ ,,

I

I
I
I

Page sixteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 12 April 1972
'.'

�Shaky start

Baseball Bulls prepare
Lacrosse club has tough opening for their home opener

eight-inning opener of a twin bill
at the Spartans' field . Cahill
Spectrum St11f{ Writer
fanned seven in recording his fin;t
With their home opener only a win of the year. Both Buffalo
At Brockport State, on March 31 , on a field that
day away, the baseball Bulls wins on their southern tnp were
prepared to meet crosstown rival registered via whrtewashings.
looked like if had been rut by the great Oood. the
Jon Roth, who rounds out the
Buffalo State (Thursday, 3 p.m .)
Buffalo lacrosse club played its first game. Not only
after
returning
from
their
annual
top
three, lost a heartbreaker "'
was this their first game, but 11 was the first test
:.oulhern
tour
The
Buffalo
squad,
hjs
final
start down sout h. Rtllh
under anything even close to game condit ron~.
whech has never won more than allowed just one run and three
In the short time prior to the Brockport contest
three games on any tnp to the hits, but lost to St Leo's, I - 0, as
south, posted a 2 8 record on Buffalo stranded 12 runners.
111 wh1ch the team had been practtcmg outdoors,
this year's Florida Jaunl .
The bullpen was as ineffective
there had never been quite enough players present to
'1'hes should be consrdcred as a as the Bulls' b ig three starters
~tage a lull field scrimmage. The game plan was to
learning expenence," observed were effective in Florida . Owen
~low down the action so that Brockport's better
Buffalo head Coach Bill Tober,countedontobetheBulls'
condltlonlllg could not dominate It would have
Munkarsh "I was pleased with the top relief pitcher, was hit hard
ra~en more than a slowdown to reverse tlus day's
way we hustled and never gave up while an Florida. Steve Krall and
events
despite beeng bchmd We were Mike Kl ym also failed to
hun by the loss of a rew players , dist ingu1sh 1hemselves while
Brockporl won the game J I - 2 which IS not as
nmably the absence of Rtck working out of the bullpen. As a
bad as 11 sllunds. Lacrosse can be a very free -sconng
Alber! and Jim lalayanis, who result, the Bulls must find a rel1ef
game, as witnessed by some of lhe game played
m1ssed the first three games pitcher who can come out of the
rcccnlly by natiOnal powers (Cornell over
because of 1llness. As a result, I bullpen and pitch consrstently
Dartmouth, 17 7; John Hopkins clobbered Brown ,
had
to use younger players who well. It is hoped that Tober.
One coulll wonder how defensive ~tandout Tony
II 4, Maryland beat Easl Carolina , 2 J I , and
were
not used to tlu~ typt' uf despite l11s poor showrng thus far ,
Pisarsk1 at Ius Slle (about b I. 190 pounds) could
Yirg~n1a destroyed Duke with an incredible 29 goal$
compe11110n
llowever, I tlunk wtll be able to fill the bill
have played defensive line for the freshman fomball
1 ha 1 1he cxpereencc
W11l be
to unly 1wo for the Blue DeVIls).
team last yea1 . Obveously, aggressive play was part ut
valuable to them ·•
(ott emef'ges
NMetheless the Bulls' play wu nearly u sloppy the reason Pisarski plays a hard-nosed brand of
The Bull~' muund cor~ was
On the other s1de of the ledger,
.._, the field, which certainly could have been lacrosse that IS rncred1bly rough yet surpnsmgly strengthened by the perlorm.1n~e ferst ha&lt;&gt;eman Orv Cott has
or three StartCI) who Were em~rged a~ the Bulls' lOp hiller
expected for the first time out. There were two main legal.
The club hll!. 1ts first ul two horne garne~ the~ wns1dered to be the :.quad's top Coli , 1he b 2 first baseman, hJt a
problems The first was that Buffalo could not
hurlers. Gary Odachows~l. J tornd 500 on 18 hits for 36 at
control the ball. The Bulls won very few faceoffs and afternoon at 4 p.m against htghly rated Nr3gara
lheu passing and cradling was sloppy. But these This contest would be a great opportuuery lor t hu~ returnee trom la~t yc:u ·~ te:tm , bats. Short~tup Reck Albert, who
drew the opcneng day :~ss1 g11ment led the Bulls in hilling a year agu
1h111gs emproved as the game went on as Buffalo who have never seen the game tcr sec why 11 "o11c ul
for the ~ccnnd stratght ~c.e~on
by postmg J 41 R mark. npped
'lowly lost ets opening game jitters ln the later Amenca ·s fa~le~t growmg sports rhc gamt• Will he
The ex-Brshop lurncr lttgh enemy petdun~ to the tunc of
,,,~~l·~ of the game, Brockport was no longer
played on Mrllersport field, at Mellcesport and Maple &lt;\chnol star whn ha\ not allnwed .361 111 rank Wl:tlllll .unoug the
Jommatrng the ac t1on.
m Amhersl.
an earned 1un tn lu~ two ope11111g Bulls batsmen Albee\ ml!t.~Cd
day dSSignments .~~ a !lull . 'lhut three gam~ Wllh an ellnes~ helll~
out 1-aerfield lluevcr~ll)' by a :.cure on~ nf several Bull~ whu Wd~
ol 'i 0 111 th" \C~on\ ledhhcr \ldehm·c.l anoth(l reJ~un lt11 lhl.'
lie: w;el~··d ouly I wu St.r~,:!&gt; Jlld flu It''\ \ h 11 wm~
I&lt; e~ellr:rnlkr
l..rrltet·d 1«:11 111 rl'lofdlll~ th1· Hufl, · I lllll' KJlllhlll\, ~·IUIIll'J 1111 ~~~
11111e:ll vu.:tor) Od:~deow\k t WJ' IIIJII\ 111 lrll thl' 111k J\ llil' Uulh '
hc&lt;JICII
Ill 111~ IIC.\1 I"-P \1,111\ lottllh \IJIICI, Jed IIIII Jllld1 Jl .rlf
holWl'Vl'l. 111~111~ .1 ~ • verdr11 ltl dul' 111 1lltll'\\
S1 Leo\ Ut:\f)lll' ,elh•WIII!! •1111\
"i&lt;'VI'IJf JOb\ Wl'll' ~011 1111 1111'
IWit &lt;',lllll'd llllh .11111 Jeorp111!' .r ••'lllhl'lll IIIJl j,,,. 111\11111\ . Ill Ill~
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everyila"·s booli stor&gt;e "f)CilCI wh1dt " " I""IH·J ltJ(J... J
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b
by Dave Geringer

by Bruce Engel

But the b iggest problem was on defense where
the Buffalo players continually failed to pick up
their men and guard them tightly. Brockport
stickmen cutting toward the goal unmolested was
the source of many of their scores. The goalie rs
almO'lt helpless tn this Situation, but Bull goaltender
Bill Sm11h stopped a few of them Smilh also did a
respectable job of clearing the ball dcsprte lillie help
from his teammates rn the early going.
Buffal o'~ offense actually did a gooll 1uh a11d
scored only two goals because they rarely held the
ball. In fact, they scored on the first sho t they IOL)k
(Urockport already had three) midway through the
first penod 1 has came on a pass from middee Pen y
Hanson to at Iackman John Howell
AI Burczak was also impressive on attack, hut he
had to leave after getting hit in the knee w1th a
flying slick. Steve Herchopf came off the bench tu
score Buffalo's other tally unass1s1ed The d1menutrve
Herchopf proved tumself to be the Bulb' best
one-on-one player.

St"ctrum Staff Writa

..

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CHARLIE'S
Barber Shop

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across from Goodyear in the
University Plaza

..

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OJ.

"o1

POSTER" OF ONE OF THE

COLOR IN TH IS "MINI-

CANDIDATES!

PRESIDENTIAL
1. Buy 1 IJUnch ol Fla1r f&gt;li1 S You need
onnoe, purpl.:, bro t. n, red, I •l u~" and ol
ovE' n ou need them anyway Jnr school I
2 Not. -~ Jlor 10 the pecturc ac:c.ord1ng to

I•, .e colo• gu1de numhe•s 161 O•ilfi(IIC
lVI. Purp le (~ l. Brov.n (2 J Red ( ~l ~lut·

112J Otr~.e . Ple&gt;ase do not color •Jnnunrbc•r ed Jreas.

3. ( , •
J•
( 011 VI

1

net ,

u , ,,(Jn;,' •o 1 h'l"

Jl
i

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" ;Jir rl

d

LONG HAIR SPECIALIST
BEARD TRIMMING

r 1.1 f r,i •• 1 J ! 0' '-

JIP '
1 •10•1 1 ~ ,

,I

If

I)(; 0 1

·~· ~,,,,,

!,I:

rand

• da t.;;, I 1 f 1 &lt;' • t:OCl! ' 11 II :..er 1 1 • I ,. '
ete sc.o" rr 1ror 11a'r f.lt .-•,on Coif,. ,,,1
(Qo r, 'l lcrq ~;' iO &lt;eSI&lt;
I f
11' &lt;. IU '
Iq
111C\ '•~ rt .. I I ·" Hot L" • 1

on men's hairpieces
Call

837-3111

Wednesday, l2 April 1972 Th~ Spectrum

Po~&lt;•e ~F&gt;vent•1 '' 11

�1963 FALCON, 53,600, engine anCI
transmlulon excellent, nine mounted
tires, body neeels work . ~ :o&lt;&gt;-S.oo.
831-5271, 3011.

CLAIIIIIIII
FULL OR PArt-time lObs available with
Best line 1nc. C•ll Art 886 -2094 or
Mike 135-52U. M . .tlnp at Ex~utlve
R•mada Inn.

1969 FORO ECON·LINE van, blue,
carpet ed •nd paneteCI . RNsonal)le
price. Call Riehle 811-1674 .

RIDE BOARD

HOUSE FULL of furniture for s.le
Immediately •nCI reuonable. Contact
836·3270. Evenings best .

AD INFORMATION

WANTED

CLASSIFIED ADS m•v be pleceCI
MonCI•v lhru FriCIAY between 9 a.m .
•na 4 • 30 p m At 35!1 Notion Hall.

SWOLLEN green erotic currency for
used tl'lree-speed bicycle. Sounds oood7
FeelS better! Dave 838·2890 .

THE STUDE NT RATES of •n aa flr
one a•v IS S 1.25 for the first 15 worCis
•nO S.OS for ..ch aCICIItlonal worO.
S 1.00 for eKI'I ACIOIUonal Clay. The
Cle•CIIine for Mond•v Is FriCIIy; f or
weanesCI•v. It Is MonCI•y , •nCI for
Frlaav, 11 ts WeCinesCiay by 4 : 30 p.m .

DISCUSSION "l eader " volunteer for
teen group from slngle ·PArent l'lomes .
NMCieCI for summer. Lennie 833-9632.

RIDE NEEOEO to H4rrlsburg erN or
Phlledelphle FriCiay . Call Cl'lerlotte
831·3250.

o v EASEAS Jobs for lluCienu Australia, Europe, s . America, Africa,
etc. All professions anCI occupAtions,
$700 to $3000 monthly. E•penses
paiCI, ove rt ime, slghUeelng. Free
Inform ation
write•
JOBS
OVERSEAS, Dept. E5, P.O. Bo•
15071, SAn 0119&lt;), Calif. 92115 .

LAFAYETTE L T · 725A AM -FM stereo
tuner, 8 monttu old, perfect conCIItlon,
Jells new for 1130. Yours for $100,
Including cables. 831-2082 .

STAAT $2 p..- l'lour s.la ry plus bonus.
work 4 -8 p . m . weekdays; 10-2 p .m .
Saturdays. C•tt 83!1· 3803 or TF9-0402 .

GUITAR Gibson like HUMMING
81 R 0, OOOCI ShAP e, tone. $200. Upright
plano, SlOO. 834 -2762 .

"HELP WANTED" aCis c•nnot
dlscrlmln•t• on the oasis of se•. color,
creea or nation•• origin to any ••tent
(I.e., preferably I s still Cllscrlmlnatory).
"FOUND" aa.s wilt be run free of
ch1r91 for a me•lmum of 2 dAYS enCI

FOR SALE

UPRIGHT Plano Sl50. Call 838 -4541.

'69 VW BUG,
831 - 2370.

HAIRSTYLING

Joe's Theatre &amp;rber
JOSS Kenmore Avenue
(A t Colvin Thratrr)

WIGS •HAIR CO LORING
bs:~~D877-2989KSS~~

USED FURNITURE for s.le; beOs,
sofas, Chairs, tables, dressers, Clesks,
rup •nd refr1Q4rator. 831 -545J.

SO,OOQ

FOR SALE• Home with o n e-bedroom
apt. Furnished upstairs. Renting $125
montl'l. Close U.B. Low 20's. Will hOICI
mortQAQ4. Tel. 134-5864.
FURNITURE f or 111 rooms• Clouble
bed, Cleslt, kitchen set, sof a. More •.
Call Frank 838 ·2 144 .
CA M ERA Praktlce-L SLA with case.
AlSo e•posure meter, S50 . C all Sue
837-0640.

1969 stanCIArCI. ElCcellent
Must sell . S 1095. Call

THREE GREEN rugs - 12'9" x 9' 11' x I ' - 9' x 9' - also 90" venetian
bllnCI, 2 electric Iron s (new). Several
pieces carpet . Call 832·1294.

PURPLE Peterma• buckskin miCII coat,
size 15. N - spring thing. 895-9314 .
Best offer' Keep try lngl

P!!TRI SLR 35mm 1.8 lens, flesh with
outlet corCI. Llgh l meter, case, $80.
897 -3925, Roger .

.lfo Sl ZEO
school bus c amper.
Completely outftttea f or 5 AOuiU.
E• cett ent
running conCIIlton .
836-"412.

NEED A WAY to transport your
belongings to Long Island In May&gt;
OepenCial&gt;le service, price reA~OnAble
•nCI negotiable. Citll Artl'lur 835- 1276
or 838 -4046 .

CAMARO
condition,
856 -76 15.

miles, $850.

STEREO 60-wAtt Olsen amp. G"r•rCI
turntlble, 3-wAy sp"kers, S 185. CAll
Steve 5 p , m .-7 p .m . 874 -2274. Must
s.ll
--VOLKSWAGON BUG 1969, reel,
rACIIo, snow tlr81, 38,000 miles. GooCI
con Oitlon, CAll 885 -5822 Clotys. S900,

shape. S550. Cell Oom 833·0923 after
5 p . m.

1969 VW
FASTBACK AM-FM,
4-speeCI transmission, green with white
Interior. V ery good condition. Must
sell' 834-9731.
USED UPRIGHT PIAno for Hie. Gooo
condition. Call Juay 837-0456 After 6
p.m .
1966 VOLKSWAGON bug . 1300 cc
engine. Interior •nd bOOy tn gooa

JOB
RESUMES
professlonll,
confidential consutt •ll on, special rates
for stuCienU, recent graduates anCI
veterans. 835 -44 7 3 .
REFRIGERAT ORS, stoves ana
wiSI'Iers. A~ondlt loneCI, ClelivereCI •nCI
guaranteed. O&amp;.G AppliAnces, 844
Sycamore . TX4· 3183.
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YOU I&lt;NOW ••••
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Thai~ Whcit you 11@1 when

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· They · con t
tell you what to
wear anymore . The day
they stopped making m1n1s
was the doy you started mok •ng them . Because no one
knows better than you what's
best for you. There ore fads
:&gt;nd fosh1ons m monthly pro
ectton, too And they II try to
rell you the old -fosh1oned
-Nays ore w1ser Or the new
3immicks ore the answer But
tau know best
You know you con rely best
:&gt;n Tompox tampons. For comfortable, dependable, invtsi
ble protection. And you know
r'Ou'll get the absorbency s1ze
that's right for you. Because
only Tompox tampons offer
three sizes: Regular, Super
and Junior
But you know that
Our only lnle,.at Ia protecting you

•••
••
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•
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Only lemon UpJtas the natural iuke of • whole lemon•••
controls oily skin and hair naturally.
Most lemon beauty products
just give you lemon perfume. Or a dab
of lemon extract .
Only lemon Up gives you the natural
juice of one whole lemon in every
bottle. And lemon juice is nature's
own grease-cutter.
So lemon Up Shampoo cleans
cleaner and rinses fresher, for brighter,
longer-lasting shine.
Lemon Up Facial Cleanser wh1sks
away dirt and oil and leaves your skin
naturally fresh and glowing.
And there's Lemon Up Anti-Blemish
Lotion, a special cleanser for
complexion problems.
It cleans pores and kills bacteria
on skin with Its anti-bacterial formula.
lemon Up, the only lemon beauty

products In the world with the natural
juice of one whole lemon. And that's
a promise we keep.

Lemon Up

:
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•eeeeeee•••···········~····••••eee•••••••••e••••••••••e•••••••e•••ee••••e••••••••••••e•••ee•••••e••••••eeeeeeee:

Page eighteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 12 Aprill972

�SINGLE or couple wanted to share
apartmen t
f or summer. M odern,
co nventent, ct ose I o
c ampu s ,
Renonabte rent. 836-2499 .

PERSONAL
EX PER I EN C E
people: come t o
Psyc:l'tomat, Wednesday, 3-6 p .m. In
N o rton cafeteria 122 and Tl'tu rlday
7-10 p .m. Norton 232.
MOTORCYCLE
aut o Insuran ce .
I nstant FS · 1 regardteu of age or
driving r.cord . Willoughby Insurance,
162 4
Main St., Bu ffa lo, N .Y.
885 ·8100, Mon. - Fri., 9 - 8 p .m., S at.
9-2 p.m.
BARBARA You mull be happy
one cannot stop feeling . Keep smiling•
AI

FEMALE roommate for 3-bedroom
ap t. o ff Hertel and North P~tl&lt;
Avenues. Call 876-o610 .
COUPLE or two males for September.
t wo-bedroom apa rtment.
M od e rn,
FlftHn-mtnute walk to um p us. Call
Jim or Cheryl 834 -317).
TWO FEMALES wanted - acrou hom
campus reasonable rent own
rooms - Cell Jane 837 ·3209; Shelley
832 · 7682

LOST &amp; fOUND
GREEN VAN on Cleveland Drive
saturday, please return purse left tn
o,"k oesperate• 838 2098 M,lltt.
FO UND. A blue, wool poncho
tell
oy nltchtker In my car on Sunday nile
Call 839 ·2 846 .
GLASSES (prescribed)
lOst
tn
Lnck w OOd
llbr&lt;Hy, April
9111
nespe r ately needed fur
lectures
Return to Spoetrum office Reward

C REATE YOUR own "Summer or
'72" In • room Just rig h t ror you . The
rent's ne&lt;;toltable too. 838 -3192 .
FEMALE roommate: own room, ''e"t
ye•r starting June 1. 10-rnlnute walk
$SS • Mlndy/Karen. 831 ·2278 .
TWO

h"uso

FEMALES

tor

wanted

summer.

to

Own

share
HJOOH

I O· &lt;Ttlnute walk. Lori . 831 ·3 88 I.

MISCELLA NEOUS
LOST : Purp le WOOl cape
Geneva Buffalo. Please c;att
8JJ 2784 . Thank you .

hitching
Rebecca

t..OS T : Conn tenor ~o~xophone, gray
motded case; lust before vautton .
Ptuse ull Paul 833 6S03
FOUND · L adles g loves ouUide Olef
Anne• on WftiO , 3 29 72 Ctalm by
•denllfylnO at Speclrum .
FOUND: School r ing found nNr Rtdge
Lee ous. Call Robin 837·21 78 .

ROOMMATES WAN TED

WI Ll.. TUTOR math/physiCS/Ch erntstry
to high
SChOOI/COIIe&lt;;tll SludenU
Con t act Ben 837-2432 between s and

7
SAAB owner's association
1182-66 74 lor Information .

forming

BRAND NEW for the student rail
traveler
In Europe. STUDENT
RAILPASS TRAVEL GUIDE conta ins
240 pages ot schedules, maps, tips ano
more. Send $2 .7 ~ cash, chKk ur
money Or der to RAIL- EUROPE, Bo•
J255, Alex andria, VIrginia 22302 .

ROOMMATES wanted for fall and/Or
summer O wn room Ctose to umpus
Call Bruce 831 2369

AUTO RADIOS and t a pes. Sates and
Service
10~ d iKounl with thiS ad .
Grupp Bros. 877 ·2250.

ROOMMATE
wanted. May
lSI
~tertle.Colvl n
Own room. $4 2
ullllltes. C all after 4 p.m 873-8228 .

FOLK GUITAR lessons, popular songs ,
linger and flat picking styles Jert
882 · 1847 Folkllngtng tor Parties.

ONE OA TWO m at e roommates
wanted tor mOdern apartment located
two blocks f rom AllenhurJI bus.
occ upancy ne.. t semester . For further
mfnrmatton, call 836-416g .

TYPING - E1tP41rlenced - done tn my
nome .
Term
papers ,
theses,
dissertations. 1192· 1184.

ROOMMATE wanted - C e ntral Park
Ptota area
Available June
h t.
8Ja 21!&gt;8
TWO FEMALES t o share big bNutlful
hou•" on Wtns pea r. S4 !&gt;/mo • uttlltltl.
C all 83 7 0063 .
NEAl

summe'

"00 MMAT £

Own

room

wanted

tn

fOr

bNu t l'ul

aparton ent Walking diUanc:e C all G ary
o• Dave 8lS 7 760

TYPING, e~tpertenc:ed , nNr U .B. S.40
per p•ge . 834 -3370 F u t service .
JOB
RESUMES
professional,
confidential consultall on . Special rates
tor studenU, recent graduates and
ve terans. 83S ·4~73 .
INTERESTED In gotn9 to Mun1ch for
the O l ympic go~mes this summerl For
tnrormallon, phone 833-4638 .
AUTO INSURAN CE
Spectallllng In
young driver\ no charge for acctoenu
Or traffic violations, Immedia te FS 1

save up to $100/y. .r . 683.()022 .
TAX SERV I CE only $3 t or both
federal and state. All WOrk gu ara lltMd.
683.()022 (bu siness returr\1 only SSI.
ANTIQUES •1\d mOdern furniture,
ceram ics, c n tna , etc . SM Sid at
Yesterday &amp; Tomorrow Shop, 1439
Hert el Ave.

APARTMENT fOR RENT
LARGE
'l bedroom apartment
Hertet- Parkstot area . Available May 1
or June I Must buy f urniture Call
834-6443
APT FOR RENT Available May . F ou r
b eorooms tO minute watk to ' ampus
Call 837 9697

LAFAYETTE
H E IGHT S
APARTMENTS
20 mi nutes to
cam pus. Fully furniShed. E fficiency
studio and studio wlte apartments. No
INse required . Hyde Park Blvd . at
Lafayette Ave. - Niagara F alls. C all
collect 284 .s 711.
ONE MILE from school. Blocks from
Lootaws.
Tnree bedrooms with
basement .access. s 1l0 per montn •
utili t ies
Please
c all
atternoon
837 - 1202.

SUB LET APARTMENT
4 BEDROOM sum.ner ap11tment ne~r
Ma1n &amp; F111morc Plata. wasner ·dryet

NE EO tour
female roommates
Jurut- MaY . 2 rntnute walk, S50
Share bedrooms C 411 (..t ~oe even lnC)s.
8.37 · 3209
4·BEOROOM apt Available June I ,
$Z2!&gt; plus utilities Ma111 at Flllmo•e
C all 837 126!o
4 ·BEOROOM aparlment for summer
on Engtewooa Ave
2 tnlnute walk
lrom u .B Call 838-4541.

Carpt!led. Easy tlllch
F ran 831 ~19~

Rent negotiable.

M tJ DERN
APAR 1 MEN l
oetnQ
sub·le\ted from May 10 "'"' the
month or August. locateD two Dtocks
hom Allenhurst ; rent nelfOitabte Call
836-4169
SEARC H
NO
MORE' Spacious
th ree-bedroom apartment with terrace,
accommodates
4
Available
June ·AUQIISt Short walk tu Lampus
831 · 3S80or 8314196

F IF1 V
OOLI..ARS
pet month
available June 1St
c orner Ma•n· F erry
Partially furnished . Call 882 -3665

FOUR-BEDROOMJZ§;SE FOR
f'IVE
10-mlnute w 1&lt; to campus
May I !&gt; - Sept. I.
lice negotiable
838 4S 76 .

TWO
BEAUTifUL
furniShed
apartments In
house. av•llaote
May -sept 3 peoptet apartment, !&gt; · min
walk: negotiable 831 2285

SUMMER ROOMMATES noeOed tor
nouse ne•r umpu5
Own rooms
Cheap . 832 -0756. 1131·J97J around
dinnertime

AVAILABLE May lsi
3 rooms.
kitChen and Path
8 bloc ks hom
campus F urnlshed with utilities Pat
832 ·0824

2 BEDRO O M S tn great apartment 10
minutes from campus May August
$ 57 1nc. Utilities 8311 ·2098

THREE bedroom. mOdern apartment
Kitc hen. dinette, 11v1ng room, oedr oom
lurn"hed
stove .tno relttgerator
Watktng cJistance to UniverSity May
1st
$6 !&gt; NCh 101
tour
persons
8378181 9a .m . 7pm

APARTMENT TO suD · Iet for three ,
starting May I
Main •no Merr tm a&lt; .
S 12S
per month Phone M itch
835 ·5286

J·BEOROOM lor fall Must bt temate
C all Bob, Dave, Lout• 837 t202

SPACIOUS
l bedroom
hOuse
Aug
w / •unoeck . Available May 15
J1
Sl20 t mo
C a ll
IIJI 3063,
831 - 3065, 831 ·3071 anytime

APARTMENT , marriedS May
Furnished
Utlll'tu, garaQe
Hertet.Cotvln aru ' I !10 t 1..1nvtew
after 6 p , m

3 ·BEDROOM apArtment
\ub ·let nn
Callodme S· mlnute wo lk to ca mpus
Eltse 831 -3396, Amy83 1·J398

LOWER LEVEL Of twO·Iamtty home
2 bed rooms, f'lllm ore·Ma•n atoa 10
minu t es rr om campus. ' t lO/ mO C all
837 95 7 J

negotiable . 834· 1415.
THREE - BEDROOM
fu rn ished
a par tme nt,
f ive - minute w.alk
tq
umpu1. Sublet h om either May lst ot
Jul y ht. $1 20. 837 ·3984 , 884 - 3592
SPAC I OUS 4-bedroom apt. available
f or wmmer. Walking distance . C all
835 -4596.
T W O-BEDROOM apartment avall~bte
May 22 t o August 31, walkmq distanc e
off Bailey . Can 834· 5166
FOUR BEDR OO M
no use.
1&lt;10
Wtnspear . May I !I
Sept
I
R~nt
negotiable, ntce talldlord 8J I J!&gt;8'l,
35113, 3!&gt;8 I.
J BEDR OO M
completely '"rnl\lled.
Mate, remalll couple . Month nl M&lt;.~Y
tree•
Rent
neqotlaOte
831 2081 .
831 2182
ROOI\IIMATE WANTED
May I Ut
J to Sept.
1
O wn toUtll.
f urnished, one block lrom rarnpu~ S40
pl)l • 837 •0403 .

June

1 WO· BEOROOM mOdern apartment,
t urntsned, diShwasher. carpeting, wall
to wall. 15·mlnute walK to campvs
C all Jim or Cheryl 834 -3171.
COUPLE LOO KIN G lor o ne Ot two
Rent
100mm11es
fo1
summer
negotiable. Available May
or 21.
8311- 3192.
PEOPLE NEEDED to •u blet c o -ed
furnished •Pt. (Summer), 4 minutes to
c •mpus, rent negotiable
M•ureen
831 - 2794 .
HOUSE FOR RENT May 1 - August
31 Furnished, 4 -bedroom . RNsonADie.
Off Hertel. 2-c4tt 9"r•ge. C a ll 833·7777
SPE NDING THE summer In Bolton &gt;
Sublet a huge l -bedroo m apartment.
big enou9h for two . MOdern kitChen.
bothroom. living room and alcove
Located I n the B•ck Bay June I
Aug
31 Only S 150/mO Contact
ttayne
Ski Club Offic e. 318 Norton,
83 1 214~ tor further details or call
I 617 · 536 ·88 76

APARTMENTS WANTED
WANTED : J bedroom •pt . tn UB MeA
for n ext S ept . C all Howle 838 -4892
J·bedroom apartment wllhtn
distance to UB l ot September.
MI Chele, M indy 831 · 227!: Diane
831 2273

NEED
SPAC IOUS, furniShed, 4 ·bedroom
house available ,June- Au9u\l Hertel
• rea. C • ll Caro1 83Z· 7682 or Ety•e
837 - !&gt;282

3
BEDROOM S
Kenmore area
Semi - furnished . S185tmonth
plus
uttlllles (summer tess) Call 8 77 792 1

THREE BEDROOM , lutnl\nea hOu\e
available May I!&gt; Five minute wall&lt;
hom UB. C All 832· 374!&gt;

SUMNER ELMWOOD area,
1 and
2-oedroom aph. available FurniShed.
to $250 11115· 8100 or 1132-1368.

uso

3 OR 4 BEDROO M apt . F urn ished. 3
blocks from campus . A"allaDit t or May
•nd tall . 837-o696.

w•l~&lt;ln9

~OOM
WANT ED tor Septemoer
Pre f er
to live near campus with
c onSiderate people C all Art 831 · 2685

COU PL E
BEAUTIFUL OLD HOUSF. ctosa tO
campUs. Tnree bedroom\ ~vattable
Summet tndtvtduats or groups Prtc e

NEED S
one - bedroom
•~Mrtment starting May / June or Sep\
C all 831 22110 or 831 · 2284

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.
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WKBW &amp; Harvey

~

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cfc

a

STEPIIEN STILLS

~

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in concert

M

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MANASS~S

~
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HILLMAN

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SAMUELS

HARRIS

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JOE

PERKINS

LALA

MAY 9th at 8:00p.m.

.::'~€:CC!

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. A d .
pm
, • APRIL I 2. I 3. 14 at M emona1 u 9 00 a.m. - 5 00 ·

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FUZZY

:a . Tickets on sale

a
R

DALLAS
T~YLOR

CHRIS

~

~

.a
¥

~

Corky present

sufTALO~~:'~=AlTs~s:~;

~

a

a
$6,$.1,$4

"We KIICJW you hat•e tests. exams und all thai other garbage
and Wt'
k.nuw wme oj you have to go home. but if you can S T A y FoR s T 1 L L s
·

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Wednesday r 12 April 1972 The Spectrum . Page nineteen
_,,_·.

•·"'- "):...' · ' '' " ' '

\ ~~····

'--•'l'.J'''

•

�Announcements
The Outina Club will have a meellna tomorrow at 7
p .m . In Roum 262 Norton. It is the fin~ date for dues and
thc:rc: will be a discussion of this weekc:nd's activities.

UNIVERSITY.COMMUNITY DAY

The Underandu•te AnthropoiOJY Club will meet
tod.ty .at 4 p.m . in Room 330 Norton. Information Jbout
\ummer field work In New York State will be presented.

Norton Hall
Balemeut

The Bike Club will hold Jn elementary bike repair
today at 8 p .m . in Room 246 Norton. Covered will
be Wlh iterM .;as fixing flats ilnd ad fusllna brakes. Anyone
lntere\ted is Invited.
lc~on

CAC Envlronmenut Action Corps is meeting todily .Jt

):IS p.m. in Room 262 Norton .
The Undrraraduate Medical Society w1shes to remind
all junior pre-dental students th;ll the ch.Jlk c uvtng segment
of the OAT will be included on the up comi ng exam. Any
person taking this ex am and who woullillke to participate
in • chillk cilrving dass, ple.;ase sign up in the UMS office by
Friday.
The French Club will meet today at 4 p.m . tn Room
234 Norton to d isc uss plans for the upcoming coflre hour.
The Housina Commlnee of Sub Board I .mnounces
that everyone who worked in the housing referendum c~n
pic k up their money tOd4y In R oom 216 Norton from 10
~.m.- 5 p.m. Anyone who c~nnot com e in tod;ay $hould c~ll
831 -5502 and ask for Dave.
UB Photo Club will meet 1omo1row it 8 p.lll. in Room
332 Norton. Guest le:cturt.r Paul MtKenn• will &gt;prd~ on
form ind content.

Any •Judent wish•ng t o work • s a member of t he
Student A ctlvtti e~ Committee or Spuker·~ Bu reau lor the
1 ~7 2·7 3 \CJson must contdc t 01anc Zwoltmk 1 Jt 8 1 1 S ~0 7
befut c F11d •v

233, 262,264,266

Bookstore will be open 1-5 p.m.
Craft Center Exhibit
Recreation area will be open from noon
on. featuring a table tennis
tournament, chess tournament,
bowling tournament and a trophies
exhibit replete with pictures of past
events.

fint Floor
Center lounge will feature a Ukranian
exhibit and Student Affairs
information booths.
Co n f ere nee Theater will present the
University Performing Corps.
Fillmore Room will be the site of a concert
by the U.B. Band from I -5 p.m.
Haas lounge will have exhibitions from
special programs.
Second Floor
Communicative Creativity Workshop
Roo m 23 1. 240, 248
Department of Engineering Meeting Room

Japanese Organic Paper Room 242
Indian Hand Painting Room 244
Photographic Essay (Buffalonian)
Gallery 219
Campus Ministry Room 232
Happy Hour (J-5 p.m.) Tiffin Room 235
Administration Office Room 225
Community Aid Corps Room 218
GSA Room 215
Student Association Rooms 205-207
Sub Board I Room 21 58
U.U.A.B. Room 261
Music Room - Browsing Library Room

257
Third Floor
Buffalonian Room 356
Assistant Coordinators Office Room 323
Ethos Newspaper Room 302
University Press Room 343
Leather and Publicity Room Room 307
WBFO Radio Rooms 325-327
Spectrum Newspaper Room 355
Amateur Radio Room 324
Sunshine House/Drug Abuse Exhibit Room
332
Chess Tournament Room 339

C lifford Furnas Collexc w1 ll m r•r•t w11h M r Rdtulv Rtlc
nl the Oflk. e of A rdt ll tU Ut JI Pl.rllllnl( todJY Jt 8 r .m. '"
M•&lt; Oun~l d HJII Luungc Mr Rt&lt;&lt; w1ll f)lt\ Cnl pl.tlh lur th e
•\m hel\ 1 cl n rm i to•i&lt; &gt; In the C ollrl(r An1 uru· !lllt•ll•\ ll·cl ttl
IOtrllrt).ll h c Lul lrM&lt; 1\ wtkum c lu Jllcnd
lit«' Rtcharc..l R Dry Mcmur1AI I thrAt y uf Etlc
&lt;.ummunuy (ullcwr v.l\1 le,t111 &lt;t' •'" ,11 1 nhthtl u l ' " '" " " ''I
•&gt;ll.t,, lertHl tr ( IC\Ifi,t..t, 1•11 H Jh&lt;'l '&gt; ll dl 1111 l\11rtC l t J I\ .!IHI
I III!Lt., L ···· " ' " ' Jl lllltt~lt Aplll !M ' '"' ,., ... ,, , "U[J t• tf IU
thr puhll&lt; tlur1 n~ lt 'I(UIJt lt iH ·"I '"''" '· M~t~&gt;tJ,t ~ I h t" 'l l.t ~
" 1.;.1 111 't(lm .u ltl f llt.l.l l· l ~ttll
p iH
AU

•r11ere,rcd 1n v. nlln)( tl'\un.c·, .uu l t H Tl lt n)(
uunr lCt R onrH ~ ~ ~ • N oH n n I OO H HIII~ ~• •
\I' •n. llltre "' 111 Pt' lo•n• .:utdt:' .tnd t\pt••u· n ,cd 111 upho
'ltt\(Hl\

l+rt· hrlt~ Mttf uJ t'd\

ll. lflh.t

K•PPA Deltol
tl.tl lilll.tl '" " "" " '' tt'l\ ''"
u"d t: t j:.f da.i u,t h'\, " riU Y. .Ht"'fl i Hl K .tppl t \,t~ t lll h l ot
lf t t' \(HI U'( l'#7 ! 1~'"' Apnh L .\t i UH\ ,tnd tnltt~rn.ti i i HI ,n,f\ ht'
uhl.lltl&lt;d 111 Ruunt h I , but lti tnJ( 1..'..' 1. R•c..l~:c · l ,.,,
·•JI.iUit)~\.

J tu.her ,.,,. .tpJH' MtH)tt 11 1 ~ kll t h .tn \ nn
"' H lt) ,. m r II ~ •• , , ..... " " " ·" .lll.thlt• '" IItt•
r hedi Ct '&gt; ctcf•\ u.. , () l iter ,, 7 I M.!lrl '&gt;I., Uu ll,ll" ' " phu llC
F torr.ttlfC AHd

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~~ h

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T he SlAte Untv~r"IV ul B~tfldlu ll1v1~ton uf ( ontlnultl)(
Etluui"HI " ~pun, ortn l( "" dr&lt;.hc&lt;.•lu)(~ lUll I 1n M''' " " · I\ UK
lU 16 . Ku und tllp , hut(l •nd btt'•"-'•''' c0 \1 $l'Jtl. A ~ ~ 0
dc po\11 '" ceQutred now tu 10111 thr group U41dn&lt;r '' P•'V ·•ble
\S d•Y' hrfore depd lt ure . MJI..t d1 ec l.. s PJYJhlr ttl t •·•ttltt·•l
f1•vel TOIH' Jnd send lhr m to 10·10 P.cyn c Ave. North
Tono~wo~nd .l , N.Y . 14120 .
fhe Europun Mrd•c•l Students P l ~ ceme nt~ Servi ce.
Inc. of ll. lbenson , N.Y now h•~ • comprthen.lve prCrj(rdm
to aid ;md .JSSI$t • l1m1trd number of QU&lt;iltlled ~todent ~ to
sec.ure i.dm1ssion ;~nd o~ch t eve &gt;Ut..t..e\s ful dd&lt;~pt•lcon 111 ,,
rec. ogntzcd E.uropr.m Med1c.al school. It con,,. h o f dn
mtensive eight week ortentdltOn course to help lhr \tudrnl
o~dapt to the new LOuntry, cui lu re dnd •lhool en vtr nnment
o~nd •n lnten~t ve e1ght wet!lo. spe l! JI IHJ&lt; Ill al •nd ldnguo~gr
c our~c . progrimmed lo r the Amctlc dfl \ ludent. Th e&gt;e
courses ore g1ven 1n the c ountry where lhr student w1ll
•llend school and the Pldcemenl ')ervt&lt;. t' wtll •rr•nl!r lodgmg
du rl ng this period Therr ale mo~n y orher serv1ces dvo• l •blr
outlined 1n a brochure. Student~ who Will h•vr r~Lciv~d
lhetr degree on or before lunl' 19 7.l can wme fur 4n
•pphcauon form •nd bro,hurt tu · Euro pean Mr!l lc.il
Students Placemenl Serv1&lt;.e , I rt&lt; ., l M1. K1nley A v•·,
Albertson , N .Y . 11 50 7. fhere " nu 'h•l!(t fu r 4fl(lltl•ll llltt
lorm a.nd .ub,equen t •ntervtew

Sports Information
Tod•y : Club L.;&lt;rO~~e v~. N l d~dld Untvrl\lly , R&lt;~IM y
f1eld, 4 p.m .
Tomortow V ~·~lly baseb.tll , Bolf.;lo St.He, Pcellc
F1eld, 3 p.m.
Friday : Vdrsity bas~bdll .;t Sl. lohn·~ Untve rstty,
J.tmaica, N. Y., 3: 30p.m.
S.uorddy ; Var~ity baseb.;ll ~~ Brooklyn Poly, I p .m . ;
Club Lacrosse at Roche~ter, 2 p.m . ; varsity tral~ and field,
Buffalo State and Cortland , Rotary Field , I p.m.; club crrw
with Canisius, Buffalo S tate and Mercyhu rst at the Buffalo
West Side Rowing Club.
S und.;ay : Vu~ity b.oseball doubleheader at Set on Hall ,
Sou th Orange, New Jersey, I p.m.
Mond.;ay : Varsity b.;aseball at F.tirlelgh Dickinson,
Tuneck, New Jersey, 3 p.m.
The Buffalo Block " B" athlet ic bilnquet originally
sc heduled for Monday , April 10, h.;as been sw itch ed to
Thursday evenlna.

What's Happemng f
Wedn~dly ,

April 12

Eye·con '72: Ken la,obs screens ,md disws,h ht' l tltll \, 8
p.m., Conference ThNter.
Concert: Commo1nder Cody and h1s Lost Planet Atrmen ,
New R ider~ of the Purple Sage, 8 p .m . and II p .m ,
Clark Gym, ;~dm lssion ch arge.
Lectu re: Kon r;~d W01ch smann, pioneer &lt;~nd innovator In
building indus trialization, "The World Around u; ," ll
p.m., Albrlght·Knox Art Gallery Sculpture (.ourt,
,ponsortd ~ y lhe School or Architecturt Mid
Environmen t~! Design.
Film : Moral/Sad~. 8 p.m., Oltfendorf 14 7 , free ,
Lecture: Pro fessor John C. Eci.le~. Nobel Iaure ale , w1ll 111•r
a le&lt;. t ure on Com m untc~tion and the Ncrvou$ S ys tem .
7: 30 p .m ., Diefendorf 146, all siUdents interesled m
biologico~l a11d phllosophl,al concepts ol beh.tvtor and
bra1n function are onv iled.
film : Tht Rlu of Louis XIV by Roberto RosHIIInl , 3 p .m .
in Die fendorf 146 and 8 p .m . m Acheson 5, sponsored
by the Council of H istory Students.
Lecture: Professor )ames Jank owski or tht U11iver~1ty ot
Colorido will ~pe ak. on .. R ooh of the E!!YPii •ln
Revolu t ion," J p .m., Room 311 T ownsend , sponsored
by the Councir on 4n1ern.111onal Stud 1rs o~nd the
Department of Sociology,
Thur~cby ,

April 13

Fitm: Mark of tht Vomplrt directed by Todd Crown1ng and
Whitt Zombie d irected b y Victor H~lperin, 7 p .m . an.d
9 p.m., Capen 140, free.
April Orgy of Theatre Energy : Robert Kalfin, artistic
director of the Chelsea Theatre in New York Cit y,
.. Goosing the Amerlc;~n Thuter," 7 p.m ., H;uri m an
Studio Thuter.

-Amy Ahund

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                    <text>SUte University of New York at Buffalo

Vot 22, No. 72

...

WedQftdav, 29 March 1972

�Survey by Placement Office
on campus recruiting process

Nursing School

Faculty discrimination
Edltor'l note: Women's place on professors in the School of
tltls University have oft been Nursing had an average salary of
ducwsed and debated. Compoud $3924 less t han the University as
uclustlltly of women, the school a whole Associate professors were
of Nurs i ng provides on S677 l ower than the ir
opportunity to contintu tltu co unterparts, 11nd assista n t
investigation. The followmg is a professors made '1196 less.
study of that school and an Instructors and lecturers made
Dttempt to answer the question of Sl863 less than those in
what role women play both in rhlt comparable positions.
Promot1on~ and tenure go hand
Univtwry and in wciety at largt.
an hand In the University
hierarchy , lind there is a defimte
by Barbara Malmec
problem with tenure in the School
Spurrum Staff klrlur
of Nursina. Of the 58 fuU time
"Preparing students for today 's members of the faculty, 25 are
challenges, and tomorrow's as tenured or 43%. Many faculty
well," asserted Dean Ruth members feel they are
McGrorey IS t he primary goal of diScriminated agaJnst tn tenure
programs in the School of decisions.
Nursing.
Presently, litis aim is achieved Ten ure di:scriminacion
despite m11ny obstacles. The
"I have to be full, and honestly
obstructions are not unique to say that those fac ulty members
this school, over-worked faculty who were denied tenure, with the
and staff, overcrowded facilities exception of one, did not meet
and a lack of funds . What is with the University's
peculiar to the school, however , q~altfications," noted Dean
She added, one
are the Intimate roles of wmnlln McGrorey
and nurse wtUch closely relate to qualifying factor that was not met
current difficulties.
was that the faculty member is
According to SylVIa Hart. ex pected to ennch her teaching
usociate professor and by research and publication .
"Research needs the proper
chairwoman of the Undergraduate
Curriculum : "Tht big1est problem climate und my faculty's work
racing the School of Nursing IS tiS load, al present, is not conducive
general second class ~latus in th is to tt
Teaching 1s the most
UniverstiY ." Reportedly . women 101portant thing we do, and
University-wide are underhired, unfortunately, at tenure lime,
underpaid and underpromotetJ
consideration for quality is not
great enough," Dr. McGrorey said .
R~rse discrimination
The faculty feels particularly
Reverse discrimination occurs diScriminated agajnst 10 tenure
regard ing hiring practices wtthtn dectstons. acknowledged Dr . Hart ,
the School of Nursing, that IS, the in thai other demonstrations of
entire fa.cully is compnsed of competence could hu used to
women . It IS the hope ol relieve t he pressures of research
administrators that they will be For eltarnple , the experience in
able to attract male Instructors 1n 1ea chtng ga1ned from clinical
assignments over a period o f tillle
the future .
Salary diScrimination is, as Dr . could be measured with the
Hart points out, appart-nt aft er affects of one's own research has
examining the statistics . In a upon o ne's teachrng," she
faculty salary analysis done in explained
Apnl 1971 , results show !hal
-contlnueo on p.age 8

About this time each year many seniors are
consideri ng the employmen t possibilities awaiting
them after graduation. Unfortunately, the bottom
has fallen out of t he college job market. The Office
of Placement and Cueer Guidance, located in Hayes
C, last year recorded a 35% decrease in r~cruiting
from the previous year among companies that
normally seek students on this campus; and
rec ruiting has fallen by an additional 15% t h us far
this year.
.
This situation is not atypical. Recent reports tn
popular and technical journals indicate a widespread
slump in college recruiting. Paced wit h t he prospect
ol' possible unemployment after graduation, students
are signing up in unprecedented numbers for
interviews with recruiters from compan ies tha t are
still hiring. However, these students receive very
JHtle information about the inner workings of t he
college interview process beyond a vague suspicion
that good manners and a neat appearance may be an
asset.
Recently, a study was conducted by Larry
Drake, associate director of the Office of Placement
and Career Guidance, and Russell Stone and Roy
Kaplan of the Department of Sociology to find out
more about campus recruiti.n g. The investigators
mailed questionnajres to orpnizations which usually
recruit students at the State University of Buffalo.

Personality important
Among other things, the quesuonnalres yielded
information about the types of candidates being
sought. When asked what attributes recruiters seek in
candidates, it was found that ambition and
motivation and the capacity for good interpersonal
relatiom were deemed most important. The
researchers concluded that ''being able to get along
with others and having a strong drive to get ahead
are highly prized by recruiters, partic ularly in
organizations that depend on personal contacts with
clients and customers such as the sales and semce
industries. ·•
Being able to express oneself was considered a
very important characteristiC of candidates. Smaller
and newer companies (i.e ., those orpnizations
employing less than I 0,000 persons and less than 50
years old) were more interested In a candidate's
personality than o lder and larger firms . There was
also a strong desire ror candidates with leadership
ability. panlcularly among oJder and laraoT firms.
Por some time there has been discussion
concerrung the advan tages of a liberal va. a technical
edul:ution. Some executives have commented on the
value of a liberal education . However, when it comes
to hiring, the liberal arts graduate is often considered
lie! I . Two questions in the study tried to clarify this
apparent conflict between word and deed. In both,
the word "technical" implies engineering, applied
science, mathematics, accounting and business
admimstration. "Liberal arts" includes arts and
leth:rs, social sciences and humanities.
In the first quesHon respondents were g~ven
three choices ; liberal arts graduates preferred,
technacal gradu11tes preferred, equal interest In both
types of graduates . A techmcal background IS more
strongly favored by most firms ; however . sales and
administration are the areas of greatest o pportunity
for the liberal arts graduate .
The second question offered more specific
cho aces concerni ng academic background . pure
liberal arts, liberal arts with technacal background,

technical with some Uberal arts, pure technical. The
most important finding here was the preference for
technical graduatu with some liberal arts
background. This was especially true among the
smaller and newer companies. Such candidates were
ActuaiJy preferred over pure technical graduates
It seems that there is not a conflict between
executive rhetoric and the recruiters' activities, but a
breakdown in communication between management
and the student. Apparently , when the business
executive says, "liberaUy educated individual," he
means a technical graduate with a specific skill, who
has some familiarity with the humanities and social
sciences.
This co mbination will probably become
pre-eminent as the business world acknowledges its
social responsibilities in modem society . It is
interesting that even firms trying t o fill engineering
positions preferred the te.chn.i cal graduate with some
liberal arts (65%) to the pure technical graduate
(33%).
In view of this, it is conceivable that the liberal
arts graduate could greatly improve his range of
opportunities in business or industry with a strong
minor in mathematics, accounting, bu.~iness
administration or one of the other t echnical areas.

Minorities sought
Four-fifths of the orpnizations were act ively
seeking minority group candidates, and nearly
three-fifths expressed a strong desire to hire women .
Slightly over 40% said that their organizations
favored "affirmative action," I.e., they would hire
special interest group members over o ther qualified
students. Larger and newer companies were more
actively in search of special interest groups and
favored affirmative action more often than older nnd
smaller firms.
The majority of the recruiters said thai
gaduating students being hired could normally
expect to participate in policy-makin&amp; decisions
within five years. This opportunity was especially
prevalent in o lder firms and among organizations
involved in sales.
Often students wonder who makes the decision
to hire them aCter this initial interview Most
organizations viewed the campus interview as a
screening mechanism to ftlter out unsuitable
candidates. The researchers found that the majority
o( the firma loft the hiring decision to the
department head seelcing t o fill a position; however,
in 40% of the companies, the interviewer and the
department head shared this responsibility . It was
clear that the interviewer plays a crucial role in the
hiring process.
Over three-fourths of the respondents said that
his recommendations about a candidate were very
important ; and in two-thirds of the orpnizations
studied, the int erviewer makes Ute decision to seek
additional information about a prospective
employee. Furthermore, nearly two-thirds of the
respondents said that the interviewer's impression of
a candidate was given more importance in the hiring
decision than the candidate's grades. extra~urricular
11ctivities and the courses he has taken , and nearly
three-fourths said that the interviewer's opinion
carried more weight in the final analysis than the
candidate's resume.
A report detailing the findings of this study w1ll
be available to students early next month at the
Office of Placement and Career Guidance.

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present

!Engagement - Publicity Phutvs

FOUR BIG SHOWS

l:.'conumy Wedding Plan

Fri., April 7, 7 P. M.
Kleint11n• Mu•ic

Telaak Studio

3090MainSt

-

834-5470

ihe Spectrum it publlthtJd tllnttr
timet • wsttk, ..wry Mond•y,
Wednerd.ty snd Frid.y; during the
regu,.r ~MJ.mic y•r by Sub-Board
1 , I nc. OfficiiS lfW IOCIIIH I t 365
Norton H•ll. Sr.te Unl.-mlry of N1w
York •t Buffllo, 3435 Main St..
Buff•lo, N1w York, 14214.
TNp/loM: AIM Code 716; Editor/sf
831-41 t3; Bu6in-. 831 ·3610.
R•preun ted for «JIIflrtlllng bv
.N•tiontl Educ•tioflal Act...rtitlng
Sltrvlct1, Inc., 360 L•xmgton Aw.,
NNI Yo'*. N . Y. 10011.

Subcript/on ,.,. ,,. $4.50
., . , . , or $8.00 for

P«'

two_,_,,.,_

Cirr:ullltion: 16,000

Hall

~Binl&lt;fll

M••n F'loor S5 50- 54.50

raptOWI

S&amp;t., April 8, 8 P.MMeMorial
Aud itor'iu"'

\J

POC&amp;IIud
BHSPBCIIL

Served Mon. thru Fri.
Until 11 a.m. and

Sun. thru Thurs.
AFTER 9:00p.m .
Sun. thru Thurs.
3 BUTTERMI LK PANCAKES
OR TOAST PLUS 2 COUNTR
FRESH EGGS, as you like 'em.

65¢

3300 SHERI DAN DRIVE

Page two . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 29 M~h 1972

B&lt;~lconv

s•.so-s•.oo

$5.50-S•.S0-$4 00
Ail .eab reserved:

Sun., April 16,
8 P.M.
Me"'orial
Auditorium
All Se.ns

re~rved:

$ 5 .50-$4 . 5~$ •

. 00

Su11., April 23,

7PM

Kleblh- Mua.ic Hell
M.ain Floor $6-$5
B•leonv $5-$4

SMOKEY ROBINSO·N
*
EMERSON. LAKE &amp;PALMER
AID THE IIRAOLES

TEN YEARS AFTER
&amp;.PROCUL HARUM

NANCY WILSON*

�It's a Ms.

MFCSA accounting process
is challenged by Sub Board

Armao elected editor
r

Jo.Ann Armao. campus editor,

Controversy concerning t he format of the final
sprina budget and the actions of the no minatjon$
committee highlighted the Executive Committee
meeting of the Millard Fillmore College Student
Association (M FCSA) last Mo oday.

has been elected as next year's
edit or-in-chtef of Th~ Spectrum
by ttus year's edjtorial board. The
first female editor·in -cluef since
linda Hanley two years ago will
take o ffice o n Jlme I.
Ms. Arrnao, who ha.s served as
campus editor for almost two
years, has many plans for next
year's Tile Spectrum. Of primary
importance is her intentio n to
recruit an enlarged staff for the
entire p aper. She hopes to
accomplish this by mailings to
mcommg freshmen and recruiting
at summer orientation sessions.
She also sees a shift in
emphas1s on news coverage.
"Although thts 1s a cam pus
newspaper, and campus news is
the backbone of the paper, w e
will be g.tvmg increased coverage
to local and national news next
year. espectall y m VIew of t he
1972 e lect1ons," sa1d Ms Armao
Ms. Armao expres.~ed ophrnssm
about the poss1bll1ty of a da.ly
The· Specmun by the m1ddle o f
next year, but sau.l tiHJ t th1s would
not occur untd ''econ urn 1c
fcas1bth ty, sta ft SllC and sta II
feeli ngs were Ct1nstdcred ." Sh e
:tlso men11oned th at an mcreascd
~tall would be ;1 pre requisite for
ROtng da1ly .
Ms Armao expressed th e hope
that 11 Sehoul o f J ournalism could
be established on the State
Unrvers11y uf Buffalo cam p us. S h e
views The Sp~crtum as a "logscal
1 ra1mng g r ound .. f or the

1

Representatives fro m Suh Board l , Inc. charged
that the MFC s pring and fall budgets presented a
d ist o rt ed financ1al p1ct u re
.Steven Blumenkrantz., exe~utive director of Sub
Board , po mted out that d esri t e t he fact that the
"indicated acco unting penod ran from Sept. I ,
197 1, expenses from b efore that d at e were mcluded
in the sta t ement " Sub Board felt that a misleadin g
finan c1a l pscture may have induced th e slash in th eir
alloca ti o n as com pared wsth last semi!Ster .

ms

Jo-Ann Armao
establishment of such a sch ool
Ms Armao, 20. will be a semor
and 1s majoring 1n h1story. S he
hopes to establish more coheswn
Within the newspaper Itself, w11h
m ure coo p erat1on and
com municat ion between such
staffs as campus, feature, c 1ty and
n ff .ca m pus ami pho tography.
pro du ct ion and adve rtisi ng .
"Cohesion is necessary fo1 a
good newspaper," explained Ms.
Armao. S he w ill de te rmi ne all
editorial policy. but hopes for
increased staff and editorial anput
m the form of col umns and news

analyses.

Apphc:atoons for the posiltoon oi
Edltor·ln -c:hoef of the Buffaloman for
the 1972 73 .uct.moc yMr woll be
taken untol March 31

Gcorgt' Krau~. MF\SA Finane!.' C,lm llltltct'
chairman . argued " I cop1ed t he figures righ t from
th e books of Sub Board (t he Board IS th e accountmg
and disburssnp agent forM H 'SA l lie further stated
" The memher., of the Fxctullvc \omm1ttec would
agree that we have never hatl a more I horough
st atement I put 9 lnt nf 11mr •ntn thl\ wh1le hniJm(!
a fu ll t1m c tob

' M.ab them talk'
ll nwevC'r Mr Blurncnt..ranll nhJected " Mr
Kraus know' J' well ~ Jnybody cbe that you CJI\
put figure:. an any order .1nd make them taiL." Alter
Bryan Cnyne asked ahnul Mr. Blumenl..ran11'
,redenuab . 11 W.b n•veakd that he l Blum ent..r.ll)tl)
had a 8 .$ 111 an.nunt1 ng and was pn.:panng teo l.at..e
the la~t seriiCln nf lht• C I'A quallfymg \!!tarn , havang
prevtou&lt;&gt;ly pa~o~ed the O)l hl.'r three 'c\'llon~
Nu.: hola\ Kt\ll, hn ully ati Vi'O)f lo M 1-C ' Si\
questioned whether thcrc wnulll he :.. summo,&gt;r fcl'
litis year Mr Kra us J'X1111ted lHJI lhul IIH· ~t.llt•
gutdehncs nn ~• utlenl tel'~ prollulut the allumulatwn
of cxcesstvC' resc1vc~ l ie· fC'lt that s1ncc a S4000
su rplus wa.~ proJI.'ded for thl\ wmester. th&lt;'rc woul,l
be no need lor a MFCSA summer fee .

accounting mistakes. The m o tion addHionaHy
retamed the summer fees as originally approved.
Discussion quickly shifted to tbe procedures
used b y the Nominat ions Committee in drawing up a
slate of endorsed ca ndidates for the upcoming
MFCSA elections. E&lt;tch year the constituti o n
mandates the Nominations committee to present a
ballot cont aintng at least two ca ndidates for each
pos111o n , while further mandating them to endorse a
slate of off1cen; and afford them first position on the
ballot. C lara Kuehlewind (Nominations Comm ittee
cha irman) reported that th e Nominations Committee
"was the m ost honest in a long time'" and that
endorsements h ad been made.
At this point , Bryan Coyn e, candid ate for vice
president addr~"-Setl five questions to th e members o f
the t:Onl llllllcc. They con ce rned th e morality and
et h1 cs of 1he comm1ttel! making endorsements
without pcrsunally mterviewing each candidate:
usmg proxy vot~ 1n the committee when the
l::xecullve ('omm111.:e was prohibsted from a ccepting
them . the appurcnl diSclosure o f 1he endorsements
h&gt; Mr Kraus the d.ay befo re they were available to
o lh N members tll the Executive CommJtlee; and th e
Committee\ selnt1on of endorsements before the
deJJhne f,u rctummg nommating petitions had
pJSsed
Not presidential race
V ,lflllll' n~t·mlwr' n l lh1• ltlmllllllee replyed In
tlw .lllett.~tull\' II wo~' stated thJt peNnnal mtervrews
Wt:lt: not nt:l'C\\iH}' \lnt:e .. po~rllupanl uhservat1on~ at
mecllnll-' WJ..\ JU'I 3!\ good " 11 h.1tl heen .mnuum:ed
Jl prcv1"U' nwe1111~.., thJt lhcrc WJ\ J deJtlltne hor
pt'IIIHHI~ ol thus\' ,,,ndtdatt:' ~eet..sng l'IHioor;ernrnls.
Jnd lhc pro!ty would ht.• Withdrawn he1. a11st· of " tilt.•
ltltlC'Ill'\\ llf J'l&lt;'Ofllt: '
M ~ Kuc h lcwuul Clll(lh.i,llt:ll " We .ut: lu\·ky to
gl:l people 111 run What do you llllnk thiS IS. ele~:tiun
fur the Jl re;~dent ot the U111ted Stales'~"

i\ motion to reject the endorsements failed.
Dr KISh Informed the hotly that reservn ~annot Jtuwcv.:r 11 comprorruse that would only place the
accumuldlc w1thuut J d~:Stgnated purpose He noted endon;etl cand1date,o, first on the ballnl wuhout any
that other student ~uvnnments only had !&gt;UrpiU\t"S ••ther lndit:diiOfl nf eJ1dor..$!menl t:tthl·J on the b.~llot
frolll the tllnt: that r&gt;arlmg lt:e\ Wl'll" ,·ullc:ct ed 1111 vr II\ !he Mulmg/11 fh/, was ~unes)ful
campus and llw. wa:. rukd rllegDI Lester C.old~l''"' ·
Sub Board bll~lnl''' manager, t~•futed thi~ hy
Other hU)tll~ mducJect an .Jcuplanee of
announnng thul Student A-.sot:ldiHln "h a~ h.ld .t ' ntend for the M f- C\A ALadenllt. SLholarsh1ps
..ljlpruval nl ht\JIIIIO' fur thr ln~t,,llmt"nt Donner .1nd
surplul&gt; e11(.h yo:ar ror o~t lco~~t fm1t y&lt;".lro. ·
I .muly l'llllll and tht: Jppulntlllt'nl of Frank
'HhUO,IIH'r Ill IOVI''IIj,!Jie the ltllC&gt;IIVenlent
Nominating procedure..
\U rl.tllllll'lll ool hh rJ I Y holU" dunnj! the Spn11g n.·,·e&lt;;s
Tht&gt; ddld l c on hudgeh W&lt;L\ 1e~olved wtlh .1
Icor M I C ' ' udenh
motion hy )oly~t&gt; l..: opf whu;h ancptt•d tht: n:vl't'd
I ho: rn o:,w ll llll'l'l111!1. "'Ill r.·c oonwne .ot Ill p 111
hudget as prnt:nlnl , hut ducdcd Mr Jo.r.tlh '" mt•t•l
wllh ()1 K1sh and Mr lllunwnt..~&gt;tult 111 \IHrnl tht· o n i\pnl Ill

Apploc:atoOM for Buson-. Layout ,
Co py , Produ.:uon and other
potltlons are atso available In Room
356 Norton.

Gun investigation co11tinues

CALL 831 ·2505 for further Information

,\o investig11tio n int o h1~t 1-rulav\ ull ewc(l J,I UII mc iclent 111 a meeting of the Blac k
S tudent Un ion .,, rnntmuin11 wi t h a lull ro:pcorl be1 nli re11dy. perhap~&gt; hy totby President
Ro herl Ketter ,ajJ (ampu' c;~,., untv " eurr cucl y "l rymJ,r t o ge t ~orne mtorrnation
togeth C'r " li e s tutetl " I ll'll ., J)ro•limllliHY report and th rre are ,e.-eral others ge tting
\l~tt l'lliCll ts now _..

/,+i

If you drive a
foreign car ..... .
we speak its language,
with a complete line of
parts and accessories.

NOW
IN
THI RD
M ONTH

WdT GETTING

M"~~leD

{JNL£.S5 I C lf/11 GfT MY
HA/IIl&gt; C f?~~TE 0
OIAhfOA/0

EAIO.Il(jE/t!E#T
RINfi )fT ERIK'S

£?_\

~«»

............
PANAVISK)N"

COl.OA

TONIGHT at 8 :15p.m.

Plaza North
IMt L r. ILYI. 1M-1SS1

Tickets
Available
At Box Office
Before Each
Performance.

1065 Main Street. Buffalo
885-7005
A division of MICA EAST, Inc

_)€W€L€RS
81 allen st.. buffalo. n.y.

Wednesday , 29 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�I

I

EdiTORiAl

C1ear mandate
The results of Sub Board l 's housing poll are a clear
indication of the importance the student body assigns to this
issue. Of over 1300 people voting, nearly 1200 of them
supported the motion of Sub Board providing initial funding
for a non-profit housing corporation.
None of this is surprising. As stated many times
previously, housing is the most basic need of this University's
students. It isn 't a glamorous or exci ting issue. but it is an
area of great difficulty, since the simple logistical problem of
finding a sufficient number of housing units is complicat ed
by the financial constraints of most students.
If this wasn't enough by itself, the existence of
deep-seated communit y paranoia regarding student housing
creates an almost insurmountable hurdle.
Because of this, there is no room for the petty politics
and personal pandering that has characterized joint efforts by
the several stud ent government. Cooperation, not
grandstanding, is needed. While others may believe it to be
too optimistic, we are convi nced that a large-scale housing
effort , launched immediatel y after Easter vacation, can result
in the creat ion of new dwelling units by the Fall.
Aside from the immediate goal of more student housing,
there are other things to be gained. A successful venture
would raise Sub Board's prestige. Also. the community might
develop greater respect for student endeavors and finally, the
University just might learn how to run an Off-Campus
Housing operation.

MFCSA fiasco

If the MFCSA does not start showing signs of mending its
mendacious and counterproductive ways they should be
thrown off of Sub Board I . The Board is on a difficult course
of providing services f or the student body and the immature
tactics of the MFCSA worsen, rather than solve, the
problems. The night students have significant contributions
to make to t he University community. Unfortunately, their
leadership thinks this means pizza parties.

THE SpECTf\UM
Wednesday, 29 Mardl1972
Dl·nrm Arn•1ld

l&lt;o-1\-bn;aglng Editor
AI tlrlh Wl
Co M•n•ging Ed trur
Mtlo.t· I tpf)tfloHln
A~~t M.an•gtng Ediror
')u,.on Mu"
8u~1ne~~ Manaser
l•• 1.. Ho·IIMt
Adverttsing M.lnager '"""" Mell\'111111\'

City

Copy

Asst.

feature
GraphiC Arh

Amy Ahrt'nd
. lu·Ann AIIIIJU
Jeff Greenw .oi!J
ltrJWt( Kurt/
)Mil'• L rnmeo
konnl r urmJn
M·nv &lt;., ,nrt
I l,,.,c Ktlcgsrn•n

I

Ylldd

I urn

I Cit

r vic~

MJtV II •opo· Runvmt

Ldyuut
As~t

'-' •h. Jnl

lit . &amp; Dram~
MuSil
Off Campus
A~r

Mt•h,ocl \illl t'thiJII
B•lly Allon.Jn
L VOfll'

, ,

···~···

\.H. JOt

Mlll-&lt;''t 0&gt;11' 11Ct' hrt
t-.11n !)Jnlo'
~. B~rrv RUbtn
lluwtt' r .1iwl

Phi&gt;IO
Asst ...

Sports
A HI.

Th~ 5!11'1 /rum " \crvel.l by Unll~d Pres&gt; lnletnJito&gt;n.il, &lt;.ullcge Pte~~
Sef"\l t&lt;( , the l11 ~ 1\ngele, T11ne'&gt; rree Pres&gt; , lh~ lu~ Anl(clc\ T1me'
SyndiLAit' 411d Ltbtrdlton New• !)ervtle

Republitdtion of m.111e r

h~ rein

As a matter of record, I must take issue with
some of th e amplications of To les' cover cartoon for
the 22 March issue of The Spectrum . Physics is not
this year , and has not recently been. tbe recipient of
any largesse from any sector o f the administration.
On the contrary , we have lost several teaching and
support lines and our o perating budget has been cut
each of 1he last few years . The recent restoration of
funds t&lt;&gt; th e collegiate budget puts us in the
relauvely neglected position Toles attributes to lhe
Colleg~s . In addition, the department contributes
(by reducing tea~h ing loads) adrnmaslrative talent to
the Colleges : A Master and his deputy . College

WllhOul 11tc·

c"pres~ t unsenl uf

Editor-in-Chief is furbtdden .

Editori.tl policy IS deletmtned by the Edt!Ot ·tn-Chrel

Pa91t four . ~e- ~p~trum . Wednesday, 2~ March 1972

thr

courses taught by physics faculty are taught on load ,
and thus, the depa r tment makes a fur l her
contribution .
Ho wever, these matters are less important than
what I must prolest as an inaccurate portrayal of me.
While 1 had not earlier no t iced the porcine
proclivities of T oles' characterization, I am less
concerned with this than the cigar h e puts in my
mouth . lt is well known that I .am a d evot ee of
Panatelas, and would never be caught smolcmg lhe
Blunl he shows. Such an innac.:curacy ts inconsistenl
wi th t he high standards of The Spectrum .
Ml' AI/t.ffrr II /lull. Jr

Colleges supported
Totlte 1-.'dttur ·
W.:

Frankly, nothing may be the most appropriate term for
the MFCSA. While some individuals within the night school
student government have been making admirable efforts to
accomplish worthwhile ends, others have been wreaking
havoc. The only thing keeping the current ruling MFCSA
oligarchy together is their antipathy to other student
canst ituenci es.

(ditur-in-Chief

Tv the Editor:

necessarily &lt;lUIIaged by the
h andling of the colleges.
fhey are neither stupJd nor careless and thear
dehherale taclics aimed at erroding the colleges
canr1ot be JUdged as random errors. Too long have
we hecn without adequate funding or reasonabl(
credit lor our effor ts. The issues extend tn
undcrgradu&lt;.~le tea ching, equal standing of college
wursr:s lor dtstnhutwn credtt, the info rmation gap
bel ween the admanastration and l:ollege· officials who
deserve nrore respect and information rhan they arc
~ urr c ntly rnctving. a\ well as several other related
pr.thlcrns
On April I() there will be a University· wtde open
house for members of the community to see what
goc!&gt; nn al UH. We have begun to 1111plemen1 plans to
ueale " untfted. well tnlo rmed Ioree of students to
leaflet and tall-. to comrnuntty members l20,000
came last year) oo thts day to explam how the
adminastrataon plays up lhe colleges to the medta as
arc

all

al.lminist rataon·~ recen t

• It is read1ly apparent that the Millard Fillmore College
Student Association is becoming a painful thorn in Sub
Board's side. Instead of cooperation and fulfillment of their
original funding commitments, they have succeeded in
creating an abyss of confusion remmiscent of "Much Ado
About Nothing."

Vol. 22, No. 72

Panatelas please!

being progresstve uot t s. wlule they are slighting Ll.'&gt; In
so many ways. The c olleges are a viahle pari of thrs
University wluch stand alone io the entire counlry as
an educataonal experiment of thas kind a11d
magn1tude. We cannot let them be destroyed by
admintst rative censure or student apalhy Take a
minute to consider if you would be affec ted by the
endtng o f the entire collegiate system , tht'
department whrch offers 1he mo~t student-cenlered .
exciting learning sttuattons on lh1s camp~. If your
answer is yes, you mus t extend suppurt when we
need you.
('ume to the C'olle~atc Assembly rnccllng {tn
Apral 12 to furl her thscuss the Apnl 16 proposal and
tu work on Apnl 16. In the meantrrne, wntc Ketter a
letter expreSSing your outrage 111 hr~ ne~ed o f the
colleges. If you are unwilling to extend some effort
to save the colleges, you don't deserve them
Rrt"lwrd /Jrell/

C f'

.\.!lOW ('oi/I!JJI'

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
In the greatest vtct{uy for women's lih smce
J)cltlah clipped Samson. 1'1tl' Specrrum elcc led
campus ed 11 or JoAnn Arrnao as next year's
&lt;'dllor-an-{;hief The redet..orating of the editor's
nffi~:e wtll take pla~e on June I
When questaoned on her plans for editorial
polrcy. Ms. A rrnao sard th at she hlld no I decided
whethe r to carry on "th e father image o f my
predecessor" (evidently a reference to one Dennis
Arnold). Though she dtd campaign on a pledge to
reorgani1.e the editorial hoard, Ms. Armao denied
that all men would be barred for such positions. "It
tS even conceivable," she added, "thai we might hire
a male secretary~" II sh o uld he noted. how ever, that
when the mterviewers inqwred as to her plans she
replied by casting aspersions on their l,lncestry and
sexual prowess.
C'ongratualtory telegrams were received from
such luminaries as Ger mame Gree r , Betty Friedan,
Gloria Steinem, L mda Hanley and Martha MitchelL
Similar note~ had been sent to Debbie Benson last
mon t h upon her election as Student Association
president. Ms . Armao commented that the dual
victories "demonstrated not that men are incapable
of holdrng such positions, but merely that they do
not yet have the proper training. Education is the
answer." She explained that this might t ake a fe w
more years, hut "thinS$ are definitely chan ging." She
did , however. reJect hosi n g as a solutton to the
problem .
Ms. Armao did pledge t o make a concerted
effort to recruit staff. She said that this woUld be
done "lhrough mailings to incommg freshmen,
particapatton in the orientation pregram, graffiti
the w o m en's rooms and whatever other means that
might be necessary ." When pursued on what

m

precisely was meant hy "whatever means nc~cssary "
sht: sla ted . "No .:omment!"
The women's libil e em phastted that there are no
physkal reasons why a woman should nol be every
hit as ca pable an edit or as a man. though she d td adcl
that she would be "forced to take a va catiOn Ont&lt;
week out of every rour " Sh e said that she did not
consider this a real handicap.
Let us provide some background informatiOn on
the new ruler of the third floor. She started out as a
child in the streets of Albany . Little did her parents
know at the time that t he child would nol only one
day get off the streets of Albany but actually rise to
f3me and fortune in Buffalo . Who could k.now thai
such good fortune woWd foltow this messiah whn
survived childhood bouts with m alaria, diphtheria,
yeijow fever, athlete's foot, beri·beri and tw o
hangnails o n her righ t hand? And yet, despite these
(and other) tremendous handicaps, she has p revailed .
She has prevailed because of her overwhelming spi nt ,
an incredible amount of good luck and (as always)
the little man behind the great woman.
I ca n remember when she first wandered into
these hallowed (hollow?) offices - so innocent and
unpretens10us - ho w can we forget t h ose great
moments on her way to stardom - h er first Sub
Board meeting, her first obsce nity? She was, of
co urse . I utored by one of the aJJ-ti\ne great campus
editors - but in t h e end t h e credit ca'n go to no one
else but herself.
And now, looking back ov-er my two years
association with this great writer, administrator and
liLt around nice person, I would lil(e t o leave her with
the same mspirational words that have b een h er
motto through the good tames and the bad, under
sunny skies and in t he rain
from all o f us a t 17rt'
Spectrum to all of you:
"Eat shit , J o-Ann."

�Unfair treatment?
To the Editor:
AlthoUJ)l in the true spirit of collegiality, I must
feel happy that t he funds cut from the budget of the
Colleges have b een restored, J cannot help but uk
exactly what type of action is necessary to produce
such results.
I will not repeat the figures for the Library
budget. They bave been publicized often en ough for
those who care to look at them. Let it suffice t o say
that the book budget has been going downhill since
1967-68. This year alone, about 2S percent was
lopped off. Both professional an d clerical personneJ
in the Libraries have been cu t enormously.
The CoUeges argued that their budget cut was
huge; our book budget cut was greater, both in
doll.ttrs and percentages. The Colleges argued that
they serve a large percentaee of the Urtiversity
community; the Libraries serve I 00 percent of the
serious students in the commurtity. The Colleges
argued that they received vigorous support from the
students and the community; the Faculty Senat e
passed a resolutaon weeks ago to realign the internal
budget of the University in order that the Libraries
not take the brunt of the budget c ut - no results to
date.
If we o nl y had a few bucks, maybe we could
hire Or. von Moltke to plead our case to Hayes Hall
and AJhany.
John Vo11
Libfarloll
Amht!fJI Library PlllnninK

309 Lockwood Library

Dill Europe /
To the Eduor
With spring upon us, and summer not far
behind, many students' thoughts tum to travel,
especially to Europe. However, the words given us at
the Jntemational Youth Hostellers Rally in
Nierhouten, Holland, arc especially with it. The
speaker said 'lOt to tour Europe merely seein&amp; how
many cities or countries one could visit, but to spend
at least a month i.t each country - that an opinion
of a people obtained after havins met ten people or •
co untry would not be u accurate u that pined after
havin&amp; met 100 people of that co untry . Don't be like
the traditional American who "does" Europe in a
week - London o n Monday , Paris on Tuesday,
BruBSels on WednC8day. Copenhagen on Thursday.
Cologne on Priday, Zurich on Saturday, and Ro m e
on Sunday - then he flies home to teU people that
he has "done" Europe.
Only through hitchhiking and st11ytng at Youth
Hostels can one meet the people of a ~:ou ntr y rather
than merely meeting ot her tourists
• John Joyct

~ rmy

p layground '

To the 6tl1tnr
ThiS is a local draftee wlto wnte:. tu pass o n
some of the things that go on here on D:tvts Statson,
which is on Tan Son Nhut Air force Base, outside of
sunny Saigon. the city by the wur. In four months
we've h11d two surprise urinalysis tests. To most
thC8e are a joke, but some guys have reasons to
worry about the results. Sniffing dogs bave been
through here, and why they d1dn't rind mu&lt;'h of
anything I don't understand .
This is Vietnam. nght? We get beg&amp;ed on for
hancuts as much as in the world . Also fo r clean
umforms. pockets buttoned. wearing a hat outs1de
oompany area . Just more hassle to put up with from
the lifers.
Other than that and bemg away f10n1 my girl,
this tour is decent. for an Army playground .

Concern for Colleges
To the Editor ·

1 am writing to you out of concern for the
future of the colleges at our University . And [ write
aa a person deeply involved in the community of
Buffalo , who first came on your campus as a
volunteer, recrui t ed to lead a seminar in
communication at the o ld College A storefront, who
remained out of a feeling of enlighte ning
commitment, to do little more than bring
home-made cookies and an occasional spring
luncheon to groups o f college people, and to arrange
meetings, when I was called upon , w1th certain key
people in the community whose assistance or
approbation was needed for some special projed .
Over this period of time I have observed that the
people who are involved with the colleges, both
faculty and students, are largely an outstanding
group. some controversial. to be sure, but
controven;y and foment have always be\:n the stgns
of life m univemttes, I believe
During these few years I have attended College
As.~embly meetings when Jl was p ossible. sa t in on
some of the drofting sessions for the first Prospec tu~.
greeted fire mspectors and marctung mother.; who
converged in an interesting time span Ill College A,
along with the poJjce all of whom seemed to me to
be seeing nothing but o utward and visible signs of
something that was far more Important, far more
humanly legitimate , than people want to· take the
l ime to understand . I witnessed the move from
i lore-front to dusty rose trailer. a change ill
leadership that has removed a certain amount of the
conflict, but kept u focus on communit y ~erv1ce
and J have seen that change is almost never
accomplished anywhere without conflict. And I have
rc11d dozens of in nammatory articles on the colleges
in general, the old College A in particulu, that were
full of misrepresentations and half-truths, and I have
never seen an administration of our University stand
up to the newspaper.; of Buffalo and teO them thlli
was wrona
The colleges ;ue csltCittng. H the Departments are

the brilliant mind of t h e University , to use a rather
obvious synachdoche, the colleges are at the heart, a t
the center. They provide the room for
experimentation, for success and failures in projects
and processes that are a part of life lessons, for
meeting community people, for finding a center of
con cern and identity in our huge and exceUent but ,
after aU, faceless, instit u tion . As a trustee of my own
eastern women's college, and a member of the
Association of Governing Boards of UniversitiC8 and
Colleges, I am deeply aware of how highly prized
these experimental units are within other academic
institutions. If you did not already hov~ the colleges.
you would surely be trying to invent them .
Having made this long introduction to try t o
legitimize my concern , let me say that at Jut
Wednesday's meeting (3-22-72} of the Collegiate
Assembly . it became apparent to me that some of
the men in your administration do not share my
feeling of respect for the colleges at our University. I
found it truly shockmg that Or. Gelbaum would be
permttted to co ndense Dr. Von Moltke's report to
o ne page without seeking the help and counsel of
those most vitally co ncerned . It is the sort of
demeaning action that sends o ut signals of hostility,
even tho ugh I am certain you co uld not have meant
that to happen. In an administration that surely
wants to foster skills in communication between all
o f its constituencies, it is truly difficult to see how
this could have gotten by . 1 am sorry to be
attributive and evaluative, but this is the sort of
thing that is insensitive, and that must not go by
without s protest. This I do, as an informed and
supportive membe1 of the Buffalo community , as a
gradu~tte student, hut mostly as a very private person
who I ries within her small sphere to enable and
encourage the fine wo rk of Or Von Mo ltke Jnd the
colle19ate system at our Umverslty.

Nancy Clarkson
l:.'tlHOI ·, norr Thr obnvf' lrtttr was orlflnoll)l unt ro
Unlvrr~(ry Prr&amp;ltlrnt Rflhrrt Kf'trtr.

Academic freedom?
To tht' Edw" ·
We the memhcr~ of Poll ttl Ill Slltllt't: 4 I ~ .1nd
Philosophy 34 2 Uunk the latest cxpulswn ul .J
member of the student body, John Spnt7lcr , hy the
Ketter adm1mstration 111 ~uppurt uf history pmf
tlalstl'ad poses seriou' quel&gt;ti&lt;ln~ for the cn11rc
Umvers1ty commun1ly After ~;~retul cons1d erat10n
wt· have to come to t h e followmg concluswns .
We h11ve sought both the CTJIJJt' and &lt;'fjt'n of lhu.
lat est expulsion. The effert is dear. Halstead with
the wd of Ketter, has strulk a devastating hl&lt;&gt;w
against the most essent ial feature of a Untven&gt;lly
a~;~dernic freedom
the free exchange of ttlt·as. The
forces which alignw in order to expel this student
dtsregarded the report of an investigating l'OIJlmlttee
from the history department. llH~ ~:om mtttee found
that Spritzler was not thsruptlvc . Tlus expuls1on ~eb
a precedent that jeopardi7es any \(Udent's nghts of
Cree expression. Will you ullow thl\ pre{edent to
c;t a nd unchallenged''
It seems obvious to us that tht:&lt; expulswn I!&gt; tlw
result of the Ketter administration's drivl.' to
actualize a set o f pnontu:s and telationshjps that w1ll
effectively consolid&lt;ltt" their power. ThiS Incident
like the tuition increase, t he crippling of the colleges,
the refusal t o he involved in the hearings con&lt;:erning
cat y housing laws. and other less blatant actions
demonstrate that then consohd.:ttwn mean1&gt; our

power IS diSantergrattng. l'he squelching o f a
dissenting vmce (even if an obnox1ous one) Is a
v1s1ble stgn that litis lldnlln~Stra llon does not follow
' L1heral" st andards uf conduct : it operates on a
powea pnnc1ple wltich must em:ruach upon the
sl udents and fst.ully ll ~eems nenr impossible to
.!void the conclusiOn !hat student apathy and
d1sunity IS a necessary condition lf the conservative
for~:cs ure goin~ to be successful in returnmg U B to
the SO's era.
We c hallenge the many self-professed defenders
of acadcrllil' freedom to co me to the d efense of
student's rights to d1ssent m class. Though such
people as Paul K urtl and his UCRA have puhhdy
llaunctl they defend the integrity of th e academy we
knnw heller. As wa.s the case in the past. faculty will
always hr the last to JOII1 the fight and then only
aher the students have started to make real theu vast
potentml power If you are Interested m s topping
ttus conservative d1rc..ted decay then take the
trlllhtiiVC , talk with your friend~. get yourself
con~ttiUted in small group' and contnbute to the
discusswn nccd ud to formulate an effective strategy
that will ullow us to rega111 what has been lost and
then push on to new arrange ments that will prevent
the futu re ltJOWth of admmistrative con trol.

Polillra/ Snence 41 5
Phllnsnphy

~4'J

IJub 1/nl(ond

Love that blue grass!

Report without opinion
To th(' h/:Jit11r
Whcm

I'he hl1111:: grass &lt;:Onlerl m Haas Lounge nn
Tuesday mght was really ~:ood We had lhe time of
our lives everybody 1urnetl on to that fantastiC
count ry ritldh:. Nnbody was schi1.0phn:mc that
mght.
G. Wholf.n

tcutl tht• noorly written arttllc&amp;
C' oundlman Lewandowski. I wa~
shu.:ked . l have always been proud t11 ~ay I am a
studen t at U .S ., but 1f ll owu.• Kurtz, Campus Editor.
represen tS the "average" VICIOUS nature
the kidS Itt
U. B., I'm ashamed .
Mr. Kurt z's reference to Councilman
Lewandowski'li image of a Gestapo general or
~undemning

or

referring to Jus hald so.:alr wa:. so tow. nne Wclndcr.; 1f
he has cvn wntten for .a newspaper before. If I
remember corret·tly. the object of a newJpaper
report is to deliver a story with as little per.;una.J
op1nion as possible.
For a generation which L~ trying to Improve the
wuys of our predecesson;, we &lt;tn.l doing a very poor
joh
Bonnl' Stolarski

Wednesday , 29 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Paqe five

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Get a ree GI•tt ormore.orS500ormore.or$50ormore-ormake

STARTING MONDAY, APRIL 3

............. DwtRt c •••• ,..,..

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These baJances must be maintained for 12 months. One gift for an account while
the supply lasts. Open Your Account in Peraon or By Mall.
Tt~ke

Mon~

Tues., Wed. 9 A.M. to 3:30 P.M.
Thwsdly, friday 9 A.M. to 8 P.M.
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Toke your choM:e of these free gtfta for a new account
or addttlonal deposlt of $500 or more:

your choice of these free gifts fcx a new account
or addltJol\81 deposit of $5.000 or more:
Gifts In

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or by mall.

. . . . . . ......, Cle"[iecirlc 1l1,rm with eccurele
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W/ riCL l'yfocereme.

Take your choice of these frM gifts tor a new account of $SO or more:

SPECIAL TERM
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accounts guaranteed lor t to2years.

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REGULAR DAY OF
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WITHDRAWAL
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS

1111m s-t~ 1r c-.;
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...,... ........

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U.. Clecl. 11'-!Mted
dill. Ul· llsted.

S'lf. oyear t.t..tdo•l&lt;lln&lt;l-~1!211!!l!!!!

l!lilY

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end «edlled quat1erty

Poi&lt;! 101

every day your money os
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l&gt;alonce ot S I remalnt to 1 end of the
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(Regulations do not permit a gift lor a transfer of tunds from
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We put the

----------

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QJYJ Into your aavinga

-U~f. TH IS COUI'OH TO OPOC Y~ ACCOUNT 8Y lUl L- -- --

Mt ,.,_It • tlfl fOt I ttM sftt of ,,_.)

f,.,._ U fiU.tl. .

I«OiilfK l• I .,..

- - -- w.tJ

~ w ltll)l ,_.,

Buffelo 8aY119 81111k, 3980 Sherid41n Driw, Amherst. Hew Yortt 142216
I . I enclose
01 deposit (ot) 2. I enclose flfled·o•H transfer IO&lt;m with blnllliOoL

1 wlah to open the followl~~&amp; type of occount.

BUFFALO
SAVINGS
BANK

§

6% !24 months ID 60 months.) Sj)ecfll Term Slvlnc• Account. Pltese lndlcat•- ---'MOIIthl.
S~" 1 Yut Sj)ec.lal Term Savl1111 Account.
5% Rtrular Day of Dtposlt to Day of WlthdriWol Savi ncs Account.
S-8C
rtUit ..,. . - " ' aa: 0 Individual
0 Joint Account with
111t4 ~~
0 Trustee Account for
,_
t4
t wish to m.t•e an lddlllonol deposit of $
to my preJtnt eccOUflt fl - - - - (My blllkbook II tftCfosed.)
" ' · - 11811 . . . ., .................. Jlft .. clltcUII .....,
(fS,IOO lllhlilll-)
Broiler Oven
Coo-.are Set
Udlu' LUUIII
Men's LIIU .I Je
0 loun1t
Donnenure
Blender
Eteclllc Fry Pen
SWeeper Vac

._,&lt;1..,.1

: I

Biggest end Oldest Sewings Bank In Buffalo • Depoeita Over One Billion Dollen

($500 lllilllllluM)

($50 mll\lMUIII)
0 limp

8
8

8
8

8
8

8

Comlnc Set
Can Opener
Weather eeoc•
Cooker
Rout Pan
Tote ~~
fiiW ICceunl tOIJ. Clfl MUit h •lciiM wp at TtwA of Anllltrtl Office 11J lhy 12.
0 Fry PJn
0 Pyrex Set
0 Alarm Clock
0 Bionbt

Name

/lltmbtr F•tJ•r•l O• PO•Ir lneur1nee Corpor~llon

("t.w

Slen•ture
Address

low n of Amherst Otftce:
3980 Sheridan Drive near Harlem Road, Amherst, N. Y. 14226
Telephone: 852-5130

City
TO TRANSFER FUNDS TO
BUFFALO SAVINGS BANK
please till out this coupon. En·
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IMPORT&amp;liT, Pitllt h tllrt
te tllcl110 reur ••nkiiMIL

Your ecc:ounta mull be opened In thla ofta, but your
bankbook may be UNCI at.all office• of the bank.
Main Orne.: Main, Huron, Genesee and Washington Streets • 3134 Bailey Avenue at East Amherst Street • 2199 Seneca Street near Cazenovia Street • 3637
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3980 Sheridan Drive near Harlem Road • FRE£ PARKING' AT AU. OFF1CU

Page six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 29 March 1972

•

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"
.,

Pr-l•l)- -

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Pay to tht order of Bullalo Sl•in&amp;s B•nk
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$
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SIGN EXACTLY AS IN BANKBOOk
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Number and Street - - - - - - --

~~~~ ~~t~._l!P ___-_- -

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~

�Students picket ag.ainst
U of P's tuition raise
Students at the University of
Pennsylvania are going through
many of the same traumas State
University at Buffalo students
went throuch a few weeks a_go
when the State U.Jliversity system
announced that tuition would be
increased to $800. However, the
situation at U of P differs in one
big way : tuition at the school will
be $3000 as of September 1972,
and summer school tuition will be
$200 per COUIIe.
'Tb.i.s increase of $250 from this
year's fee more than doubles the
S 1400 that wu clw"ged in 1960;
and the students at the school are,
to say the least, just a little
disgusted with the whole deal.
A meeting called by the
Undergraduate Student Assembly
last Wednesday ni&amp;ht led to a
unanimous vote to orpnize a
picket line and petition the raise
outside the College Hall. The
group did agree to allow people to
enter and leave the premises, thus
avoiding a blocking of normal
activities.
Faculty backs students
The students are backed by
some faculty members, including
Assoc1ate Professor of Philosophy
Gerald Doppelt who urged the
studen ts to "keep that picket line
go1ng every afternoon until we get
something going "
Olher ideas about what to d o
atwut the increase ~me from
University Council representative

Dick C larke, th e only
undergraduate to sit on the
Presidential Budget Committee :
" If a small fraction of the
students, say I S or 20%, held
back their tuition payments in
August and September, the
university would not be able to
meet its payroll."
Clarke said that the threat of
such an action would "make the
University willing to capitulate"
on some student demands. The
other demands that the students
want to include In their protests
are : " tbe right to a morally valid
university; the right to
preparation for a meaningful
vacation; the right of student
determination in courses, to
create new education, of the
educaton, of the budget and to
students autonomy in course
selection; open publication of the
budget; open meetings of all
university comrruttees and a
stud ent~etermined
Vice·Provost
for S tudent Affairs."
One of the problems facing
s tud ents pr otesting tUitio n
increases at the Universtty of
Pennsylvama ts the dtv1s1on which
sums to have occurred between
the gro up that wants trnmedlate
action, and the group that wants
t. o plan ahead . Doppelt had
suggested to the stud ents that
they " not go berserk and split
up;· and to use rhe '"ptc:. ket lin e t o
talk to each o ther and ol her
students··

COLLEGE TEXTS • PROFESSIONAL BOOK
MEDICAL • NURSING • DENTAL
• PAPERBACKS •

Arlene Jaco: a muckraker
by Laurie

Y~us

Spectrum Staff Writer

Muckraker v.i. - raked -rak ing. I . one who
searches for and exposes real or alleged corruption,
scandal, or the like, especially in politics. 2. Arlene
Jaco.
Will the business of muckraking always exist?
WeU , Arlene Jaco, speaker on WBFO's The Games
Politicians Play , hints that there might always be a
need for one. Arlene Jaco has been active in the
Democratic Party for 17 yean. Her past appearances
on talk shows led her to begin her own talk show on
radio.
The purpose of Ms. Jaco's program is to give the
people a chance to voice their opinions. She receives
responses from young and old alike. More important
than that , Ms. Jaco seems to attempt to make aware
to the people any corruption that exists in today's
government. When asked if she feels she has helped
the situation she commented : "I know I have."
Is the corruption a product of the polihcians or
a product of the system? Ms. Jaco feels that last year
it was a problem of the system, People were
apathetic . "K.ids began fighting their parents'
problems and getting their heads kicked in so people
have been moving."

S he ten d ed to agree tha t the "Youth
Movement'' and similar movements began to stir the
people , to touch their lazy hearts Ms Jaco feels
Lyndon Jo hnson's decline to the 1968 presidential
candidacy was due to rhe ideas of the youths today .
She also feels that the Black Movement has had
beneficial results. "So you can fight City H all ," sh~
satd .

Who tells?
One wonders where Ms Jaco g~ts her detailed
Information. When asked, s he remwned 1.1uie1 . " I
would not teU my sources because then they would
not be such I've been 10 the Democrat11.. Party for
I 7 years, so I know tht! games politicums play "

Ms. J aco feels that Joe Crang1e, Chatrman of the
Democratic Party in New York Stale , 1s the nux ol
rhe whole problem, c.ausmg corruption '" Whc:n we
set rid of lum, we will ba,ye a half ..Jc.:o:nt
government.·· She feels that the more power M1
Crangle rece1ves, the worse o ff we will be

•11F
TE
ST8RIS, 111£.
3t~1e l\al•

Speaker on WBFO

St.

Free parlo.lng at
University MatH) r

M~ . Jaco feels too many lies are producls 11f 1he
government .. What comes oul to the people IS Jn
msult to the people."

Ms Juco's muckraking manner was c::xh1b11ed
lhwughout her radio program l· nday night, as she

interviewed Comptroller George O'Connell. She
viewed her antagonism during the show as necessary.
She believed certain points could not be put in a
" honey and sugar way."
Most of the disc ussion involved deficit spending.
Ms. Jaco's major question reoccurred throughout the
entire talk: .. Where does the money go?" The
discussion became more heated when Ms. Jaco
exposed a $100 shortage from 1969. She explained
that the auditor cited this, got the $100 back and
the culprit was fired. She felt this was JOod. But in a
disappointed tone, she continued that today, in the
city of Buffalo when this occurs, nothing happens.
Very dryly, the comptroller queationcd Ms.
Jaco's resources : "You mean you've been in so much
research and not aware of the $600 shortage? O ne of
our suspects resigned." He assured Ms. Jaco that
shortages and defaults are immediately taken care of.
"One thing the city of Buffalo will not do is
delay. "s,

Book.k.eepina errors
The listening audience was informed by Ms.
Jaco that many times the newspapers excuse these
shortages as bookkeeping errors. Comptroller
O'Connell defended rus ·stand by saying that the
press is reporting the audit report. With that
comment the comptroller trapped himrelf, because
the audit report como from tbe comptroller.
Technicality appears t o obscure what is really
going o n. Ms. Jaco feels, confusing explanations wilh
e-xcuses. ComptroUer O'Connell feels there is a need
for tet·hmcality : "You wouldn't go to your
IUltghhorhood butcher, rather to an attorney ."
·rhe topic of inappropnale spending contmued
touching on I he 13uffaJo-Fillrnore Plan . On March 9,
1'17 J. Mayor Sedita granted l .R million dollars to
the Buffalo-fillmore area. Improvement of the
ne1ghborhuod would \lOst S 102,000 . What has been
do ne'' TI1c: Buffulo-FIIImore area still remains a~ it
appeared last M11rch
Comptroller O'C"onnell stated that the problem
was a littk out of his field. It is not Ius JOb to
prep&lt;~re the budget for the fiScal year.

Ms. Joco w• not satisfied: "What gets me is I hat
m~

Is In Ulc budget _ . I would like to !4e rhe
money still I hen:." H&lt;'r convcrution ended with a
swed farewell to the cnrnptrolle r "I gJVe you L'{ cdll,
you do h&lt;tve a lot of guts for comtng. ·•

After five ftnaJ mmutes 1ntroducmg pcrsorud
commenlanes, Ms. Jaco·s vo1ce faded off 1nro the
music say111g "Ou1 potit1..:1ans Me men .tnd nnt
puppc::ls."

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Wednesday, 29 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�-&lt;ontln ued from .,... a-

Nursing &amp;hool.

• •

"Our faculty here puts in lona, lona hol.ll'l in doina
their work which they receive little recoanitlon for in the
community," remarked Dean McGrorey. Each faculty
member has a teaching load which Includes visits to the
hospital to preplan the clinical assianmcnts, sel~ting the
proper patients to be cared fo r in corijunction with the
studen ts' leamina.
Thouah the ntio of one faculty member for every
seven students is considered "plush" by other sources, it is
more involved than that, for the seven patients which each
student is attendina also faU under the responsibility o f the
instructor, sugested Dr. McGrorey.
Student advisement and counselina are also a very
important part of the faculty's job. For eXImple, nursina
students face situations m01t other underlflduates don't,
such as dealina with a dyina petient. Oe.an McGrorey
observed that most of her faculty were especialJy
committed to the students, some doina counseling in their
own homes, due to space problems.

Actmwolk

This situation is felt and maplitied more in the cases
of ten and 12 faculty memben sharina an office which Ia
semktivided into tiny cubicles. Only four faculty have
their own offices, a privilege not even afforded to
department chairmen who have to share their offices with
their aecretaries. "Offices are like public arenas," cried one
.Uahtly cramped faculty member. Privacy to meet with
students, or each other, or to work is arossly lack ina." I
don't think you would find this situation to this dearec
anywhere else in the University," insisted another faculty
member.

a

'Makin the bat of it'
Or. McGrorey etted the lack of nursing library
facilities which are desparately needed . There is no central
special collection of nurse-related material, which makes
scholarly endeavor difficul:, she noted . Every department
had its own little library with a catalogue, but this creates
other problems. Departmental secretaries are assuming
part-time librarian services, which was not a design feature
of their jobs.
A common consensus reveals that it lS the students
who fed the squeeze the m01t, for they have no place to
meet and few occasions to practice thetr skills in the
teachmg Ia bora tory, as its scheduled for use constantly.
There does exist one small reading room, hardly large
enoup to accommodate 250 undergraduates. One student
summed up the situation : "We complain a lot, but what
we are do ina is making the best of it ."
Oisc~n a the image of nursing the public tends to
have, Dr. Hart explained : "Nurses have always been looked
upon as hand maidens to the physicians, carryina out the
doctor's instructions. While dependency and carrying out
the doctor's orders are important, this is only one facet of
the JOb."

Nearly aU the individuals on the faculty are involved
in community health service care. Many hours are given by
faculty and students alike, in sponsoring and maintaining
volunteer semces in the community. Such programs
mclude the IJiitiation and maintenance of initial staffing
and continued participation in the Suicide and Crisis
Prevention Center. Faculty members are and heve helped
establish, the Allentown Health Center, as wcU as the
Lackawanna Clinic.
Active work is beina done in the lnltialion of special
proarams for drua information. counselina. and family
plan.niJia:. Varied deYelopmentaJ proarams luiYe been
started by c:ertaln faculty, including demon~ ration
proarama for patient care at Meyer Memorial Hospital
(surgery), demonstration prOJeCts at Veterans
Admirustration Hospital in Community Mental Health, and Struafe for relatioosh.ip
a staff in-service prosram of Group Therapy teanu for
Commenting on the Slime subject , Dean McGrorey
psychiatric patient care at Buffalo State Hospital. A special added : "The history of nursing has always been the
program has been desipe.d for adolescent unwed mothers strugle for a nonsubsement relataonship between doctor
at St. Auaustines. Special col.ll'les on campus in Human and nurse, between men and women. The traditional role
Sexuality are offered , which were worked on extensively of nurse as a mothering, nurturina figure is part of the
by members of the nursin&amp; llacult y .
feminine mystique, and is deteriorating." She continued :
"Because nursing is seen to be so close to motherhood, the
Inadequate &amp;dtities
world believes just as any woman can become a mother, so
With so much work bean&amp; done an the communit y, can she be a nurse. This is not so. We have been
combtned with a teac:hina load , student counseling, handtcapped in recent years by the erroneous belief that
attendina departmental mec:tinp (of wtuch there are many nurs1n1 ss only comforting."
due to the inter..-elation or departments throuah the
In an attempt to clearly define for the pubhc, the
curricula), the &amp;culty has very little time left to carry on exact functions of nursing, the New York State Legislature
meanmaful r
., obserxed tbe d•n . "How• taore as passed 1 bill,. vdaich Governor Rockefeller is expected to
, Jona summ
wbicb~ be ~
rch SJJD. TJus b....,.explaina dac o~ns or proteaaonal
and wrftin&amp; pur~ ... sbe added.
nursing, where nurses 114e their lntelUgence and training to
The facilities in the School of Nursing are inadequate determine the patient 's htalth care needs. Dr. McGrorey
Itt this time, uccordin&amp; to Dr. McGrorey. The school had sees this legislation as legitimizing what nurses have been
onginaJJy been designed for 20 faculty members, it now doing for years, establishing the nurse as an independent
has 75. The school has tripled its si~e in population, but
practitioner with her own judgment and skills.
remains tn the same space.
It IS the hope that wsth sreater public awareness of

Bible Truth
10% DISCOUNT
Ottwed to t.culry a studenu 111
1M HOTEL LATHAM. 4 E. 28 St.•
off .. 5th A... 400 ,_.,., pri..bett.s. o.ily , . . , _ $ 10 ••••
$12
SPECIAL RATES fa.
•roupe &amp; •xtended ~ Few
,_...tiona cell COl. LECT.

cloubl•.

212-MU 5-8300

AUT O S ER V ICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable

Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCORAUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

fa CAe

VIIIINPalttt

.,.~•

310% Main St.
(!lei-

c..c.-r 6

L'-boJa)

------ -.-..-----,

NO SIN AL.LOWEO IN HEAVEN
"For all ,.,.,. slnnect an d ~om•
sttott· ttte wages of sl., Is d . .th
(and Hell)."
Rom . 3s23, 6 123
"Christ Jesus came Into to•
world to sava tin net's."
1Tim.lol5

Dr. McGrorey

nursing, it will receive more support in the academic
world . Dean McGrorey noted : .. I believe that there is less
than I 00% complete support of the Ullivcrsity concept of
the School of Nursina." There lS a powerful uend in
nursina which is community health care, and the dean
acknowledged the nursing program's orientation along
those Jines.
Financial cutbacks plague the entire University, and
the School of Nursing has important programs in jeopardy
due to job line freezes. The budget is cut to the bone,
reported Oe.an McGrorey, and with expansion of provams
and space to meet present needs and a cutback in funding
and faculty, a serious situation eXJsts.
" TraditionaUy women's roles aet In th~ way of thear
real function. The women on this f¥.~ty are doiQI a
tremcmdo1.11 Job in traini.Da and teachl.na our students,
despite everything. I beUove ln thla school, in its potential ,
in the things Its trying to do, in the sincerity a.n d
dedication of Its faculty. OnJy if we begin to teU our story,
well and clearly, are we going to get the recognition we
deserve, concluded Dean Ruth McGrorey, of the School of
Nunina.

Love tho~ S .U.N .Y. smiles!
Picture Yours
T~loak

Studio
834-5470
3090 Main St.

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

College
Admission
Arranged
Spttlolitlng In
Dill/cult Pluc~mtnu

O LAW
0 MEDICAL
0 GRADUATE
0 VETERINARIANS
OCOLLEGE DROPOUTS
0 COLLEGE TRANSFERS
Call/write: Dr. Po11e
(212) 275-2900
Co/ltv~

Admls.sions Ctnttr ul NY
10)-30 Queens Blvd.

- -...!.!!!:.f.!!.i!!J.,:! 't-'.1.1~- - -

3-7 All Cocktails

Bar
Whiskey

LIVE
MUSIC
Wed.·Fri.&amp;t.
(No cover charge)

Good Friday Service
of Meditation
Sponsored by UB Campus Ministers

Conference Theater, March 31

12:00 to 1:30

Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 29 March 1972

BQna
Vista
1504 HERTEL
836..a985

-santo•

Noone •
canrestst
our chicken wings.

They're the Woodshed's newe~t taRte sensation
mild. medium or hot. Swirl'em around in tan~
blue cheeAe sauce, and finish the experience with
t•riRpy celery sticks. Non-stop peanuts are on
the house, and sp1rits are 50r after 3 P . M. The
Woodshed ... where the kit,(•hen's alway~ open
a net the music's always on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North Tonawanda, just over
the Delaware Avenue Brid~e. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann. The Woodshed's
open from 11 :30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

fi.fE

~

�-

Matmen name Tony Policare
team's most valuable wrestler
The wrestler wllo singlehandedly pulled out two
key victories this season and personalJy saved
another close match , Ton y Policare, has earned the
supreme accolade from his teammates. The
dtminutive Buffalo heavyweight was voted the Bulls'
Most Valuable Wrestler for the past season.
Policare, another of Buffalo's transfers from
Comin&amp; Community College, snapped ties with
Army and Maryland by winning his bout on each
occasion to climax two key come-from-behind
victories. He downed West Poin t heavyweight Dale
Moc-gan in the opening match of that quadrangular
meet and topped Terrapin ACC Champion Mark
Retd in t he second match to give the Bulls theu two
biggest victories of the season.
''Tony is o ne of the classiest wrestlers that I
have ever had the opportunity to coach ,"· praised
Buffalo head wrestling\ Coach Ed Michael. " He
exhtbits a great variety of moves and techntques. He
was able to defea t many opponents who are larger
than he IS by using his head ."

Policare beats odds
Indeed, the 5·8, 220-pound heav ywetght. a
favorite of t he crowd at Clark Gym , had defeated
opponents t hat d warfed him m size . He pinned two
300-lb . opponents during the season , o ne of them
being New Ham pshire's Russ Walters tn the
semi-finals of the Eastern regional tournament at
Ci
ali.

Two additio nal awards were announced by the
wrestling squad . Roy Guarino, Butfalo's regular at
134 pounds, was named the team's most improved
wrestler. Guarino, who finished fourth in the Region
Ill Tournament last year, compiled a 13-3- 1 record
and took second place at the Eastern Re&amp;io nal
Tournament.
" Roy showed a great deal of improvement
bet ween last season and this one," remarked
Mtchael. "He IS starting to hve up to hiS potenllal
and I think that he can do another excellent JOb for
us next season."
The o ther award went to Ro n Brandt , t he Bulls'
190-pound stalwart , for amassing the most team
points d urin g t he season. Brandt, who lost but o nce
in his 18 decisions while compiling the to p wo n-lost
mark for t he squad ( 17- 1) earned 82 team points for
the Bulls. Brandt notched seven pins. tying the o t her
Bull co-captain , Ted Lawson, for the te.1m lead 1n
that department. Brandt also qualtfied for the
national c hamptonslups, but was unable to compete
at Maryland because of Illness.
Buffalo's lq71 ·7'!. wrestling squad, the most
successful 10 the school's Ius tory. wa.~ ranl..ed
sixteenth m the final poll issued by Amateur
Wrestling News. the "btble" of amateur wrestling.
Buffalo moved up from its mid-season rankmg of
nineteenth to become the first wres tling team at
Buffalo to be ranked among the top 20 teams in the
country
·

TonyPo/icare
•

unjversity

••
presents in concert . an evening of jazz with the

The UUAB Fine Arts Film Committee presents

:

gg~~tiesCharles Gayle Quartet!
--FREE TO ALL -

Thurs. Mar. 30-9:00 p.m. i
FILLMORE ROOM, NORTON HALL

:

••
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~~~~~
:
••
UUAB Video Committee
••
Presents
•
••
•
•••
••
•••
•
:

.

t

WR-MYSIERIES
OF THE ORGANISM®
Brilliantly original
with gleeful
lrreverance. -

N£WSwtEK

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY, March 30 &amp; 3 1
Shows before 6 :00p.m. 50¢ - Shows after 6 :00 p.m. 75¢
Times and Tickets at Norton Ticket Office

unJversity
un1on
activities
board

TheUUAB Music Committee&amp; SUB of SUCat Buffalo
COLUMBIA RECORDING ARTISTS

is proud to present in concert

The New Riders Of The Purple Sage
~

and
PARAMOUNT RECORDING ARTISTS

COMMANDER CODY
And His Lost Planet Airmen

Available at
GRANTS&amp;
TWIN FAIR

NRPS
now - don

Lost in the Ozone
sold out over Easter!

CLARK GYM
WED. APRIL 12

8 :00 &amp; 11 :30 p.m.
Tickets now on sale at
Students $3.00
Norton &amp; Buf. State
Non-students $4.00
Ticket Offices
Free albums given away on randomly picked ticket numbers!

Wednesday, 29 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Tennis Bulls shape up for season
by Bruce Engel
Speclrum Staff Writer

Tennis Coach Bill Sanford smiles when he talks of
his four best players, Steve Sesody. Dennis Dunning, AI
Engel and Paul Pacelli. And weU he should. If in any
particular match they should aJJ win and then combine to
win the top two doubles matches, the Bulls would have six
points right there, more than enough to win a nine point
match . " I don 't have a real big hitter," says Sanford, "but
these four are very good and very close."
Collegiate tennis consists of five singles matches and
four doubles matches. This is an increase from the high
school variety , but there is a far more important st ructural
difference. The difference is that the players are allowed to
play in both the singles and doubles competitions. In fact
it is to the benefit of a team if its best players can play
both.
Obviously this requires being in very good shape,

something the high school player may not be used to.
Sanford explained : "Some of our new men don't know the
meaning of being in shape. In a close match the player in
better shape is likely to win." Indeed for the skilled
schoolboy player this is unknown. He is limited to one
match and he often wins it before there is a chance to get
tired.

First four Bulls
As previousl y stated, the top four Bulls are very
close but the present order is Sesody, Dunning, Engel and
Parelli. The first four are set but the fifth spot is l.lp for
grabs. Probably the leading candidate is sophomore Eliot
Siegel, who is playing singles exclusively right now . But the
spot is also open to any member of the third and fourth
doubles teams which includes Dan Heukrath ; freshman
Joseph Dinifer, a star for Tonawanda last year; AI
Boardman and sooh Marc Miller.

Heukrath is a transfer from Erie Community and will
be playing for Buffalo rather than against the Bulls this
year. Unfortunately , this year's squad is not very deep and
below the top nine or ten there is a considerable drop.
Luckily, eight is the minimum number of competitors
needed.
lately the top two doubles teams of Sesody-Engel
and Dunning-Parelli have been taking turns beating each
other. Sesody and Dunning are the squad 's only seniors
and it is probably no accident that they are paired with
sophs Engel and Parelli.
This year's squad , which loses only Mark Kofler
from last year, is expected to better last yea r's fine 7-2
record. The .schedule is not yet finalized but Cortland ,
Rochester and Niagara have all signed to play Buffalo.
Other probable adversaries are Erie Community, Buffalo
State, Syracuse, Canisius and Fredonia, with Syracuse the
only big threat.

_.,promises.
Thai§ Whclt you 1@1 when
other beauty products talk about lemon.

Hear, 0 Israel
For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE

Phone
875-4265

874·5330
LET OUR EXPERT MECHANI CS
KEEP YOUR CAR IN GOOO
RUNNING CONDITION!

S.HERIOAN
FOREIGN CAR
REPAIRS

'I I I

1066 Shtridan Or.

TONAWANDA

6 99

FRONT END ALIGNMENTS
Che&lt;:k &amp; Set
Caster - C a m ber
Toe-I ns
F ront end parh
Road t~t

Plus pa rts

At list...
l:llltriCiptlva

tll1llglt till
prtvacg If the uL
Whether you live in a bic city with '"
&lt;ulw&lt;kd drucstores. or in ~ small town
where peuplc know each other so weU ,

uhtatning m ale

conuaccpti~s

withoat

~mbarl1f.&gt;&gt;mtnt can bt a problem.

Only l.etnon UpJ•s the natural iuice of one whole lemon•••
controls oily skin and hair naturally.
Most lemon beauty products
just give you lemon perfume. Or a dab
of le mon extract.
Only lemon Up gives you the natural
juice of one whole lemon in every
bottle. And lemon juice is nature's
own grease-cutter.
So Lemon Up Shampoo cleans
cleaner and rinses fresher, for brighter,
longer-lasting shine.
Lemon Up Facial Cleanaer whisks
away dirt and oil and leaves your skin
naturally fresh and glowing.
And there's Lemon Up Anti-Biemlah ·
Lotion, a special cleanser for
complexion problems.
It cleans pores and kills bacteria
on skin with its anti-bacterial formula.
lemon Up, the only lemon beauty

Page ten. The Spectrum . Wednesday, 29 March 1972

products In the world with the natural
juice of one whole lemon. And that's
a promise we keep.

Now, Populalion PliUllting As~iatcs
has solved llle problem ... by olferioa
reliable, famous-brand male contra·
cq&gt;~ives through Lhe pnvacy of tht
msil. Popular brands Ulte Trojan and
Suhaq, Tbe ucitina pre-&amp;baped Conlure. 1llc supremely sensitive Prime
And many mon:. All are ele&lt;:tronically
lc~tcd a nd meet ri11orou3 government
&gt;lllndallh of reliahilily.
We'll bt alad to IICnd yw our free
illustrated brochure whieb dHcribe$
the produ~ts and ~erviccs that we b.avc
been brinai lll 10 10,000 rcaular CU.·
tamers tor nearly two yean Or Knd
just S3 for a .ampler pack of a dozen
LOntnu:eptives - three each o( four
leatlin 11 brand• - plus our brochu re.
Money back if not dtlit~bted !
F,., fru bttocltur~ or SJ som plrr
mai!~d in ploiu pockogr. wrilr.

__ .... _______ _

,.,.latitt rlaullc Asseclltaa
105 llertll Cella•~~.&amp; Dt,t. LL

CllaJtl Mill, N.C. 27:114

Please rUih me In pt •ln pacbae :
0 S~ltr pack of 12 assorted coniiOmJ-thr.. each of four brands- plus
llluslllled brochure- $3
0 lllustreltd brochure onl~, 2~
Name
Addreu

Lemon Up

City

Zip

State

L

191

�CLAIIIPIII
AD INFORMATI O N

EDUCATION
RESEARCH paper
wanted • Equa l
Qpp, Edu~tlon,
Minority Ed ucation area. Will pay .
Reply Bo" 75 SSMCtrum.

CLA SS IFIED AOS may be placed
Monday thru Frld11y betwMn 11 a .m .
and a :30 p . m . at 355 Norton Hall.

START $2 per h our s.tlery plus bonu s.
W o rk 4 · 8 p.m. WMkdays: t0-2 p .m .
Saturdays. C all 835·3 80 3 or TF9-D&lt;I02.

T HE STUOENT rates of en ad lor on e
day I s $1.2 5 for the first 15 words and
$ .05 tor NCh addit ional wor d . $1 .00
ror each additio nal word . $1.00 for
eac h ad d itional dey. The dNdllne lor
M onday Is Frldly; for Weelnesd1y, It Is
Monday and for Friday It Is Wednesd11y
by 4 : 30p.m .
"HELP WANTED "
ad s cannot
discriminate o n the buts o r sex, colo r,
cr eed or national origin to eny extent
(I.e. , preferebly I s still dlscrlmlnetoryj.

WANTED : U$ed lO~peed b icycl e men's. C ell Ca ron 883· 0539
CO MPUTER O PERATOR - 360/00S
e~e pertenced. N lgnt shift. 3 : 30 p .m .
midnight. Send resum e t o : Data
Proc..,lng, P.O. B o x 1086 Bullat o
142 40.
WILL PAY for someone t o take CAre o r
cat eod k ittens 3 ·28 to 4 -9. 835-604 2.

FENDER gutter with c ase and Fender
amplifier , S250: C ra ig 8 · track cartridge
tape deck with two speal&lt;en, $60 .
759·2140.

Uver and Brown Ric.e . . . S 1.85
alifom1a SWinger . .. ...•. 1.9
Hamburger Stroganoff .. , . 1.4
.... . ..... . Small Sirloin Ste
Boneless) ........
1.45
Ch.icken Roquefort
I .6
f Bourguinon .
I 7
oice Omelet . .
I .3
round Beef (Organic)
1.4
Petite Filet Mignon
1.95
cgetable Scallops

4 BEDROOM house
wa lking
diStance to campus. Must rent by A pr il
l. C ell 8 3 8 ·4761 Anyti me.

CAPEHART st e reo, . 35 , firm ,
turn tabl e d oesn't turn, you !IM It, $ 75
value ( 4 mos. Old) . C a ll 8 3! ·2857 or
831 ·2692.

A
VIRTUAL
O.drooms w llh
837 ·0302 .

steal at $ 200, 5
e p ossi ble 6
C all

FOUND : German Shepherd, len•ele, 1
year old . C all 833· 2119, Marty h
FOU ND: Pa ir Of brown 1Uth81 g loves
lost Dy hltcner to Ferry and Oetaware,
Monday
Call Geo•ve 831 · 1124
between 9 and 5
FOU N O :
House key on Dlue
medallion. Call Pete 8 33-8055 to
Identify and claim.
FOUND ; Key ring DetwMn G o o dyea r
and Cl em ent, Monday a ft ernoon C a ll
4055 .

ROOMMATES WANTED

tune

ONE ROOMMATE, own room ,
st11tln11 M ay thru nel&lt;t yur, • 60
E nglew OOd . Call Sua 838 · 3642 .

'66 VOLKSWAGEN v1n, n ew engine,
set up for
c amping , e~ecell ent
condition, Clll 886 ·0856 .

T WO FEMALES to share big bNUtlful
house on W lnspear, 64 5/mo. • utilities.
C All 837..0063 .

OLSEN 60W amp 2 speakers. Garuord
turntable. Costs $ 325 new - 1 )IN•
old, $185 . Call 831-4 5 0 7 .

FE MA L E
wanted
lo
H••r•
two - bedroom
apartm e nt
on
Main-Jewett , I 70/mo. C all 837 · 9066

JOB
R ESUM E S
professional,
confidentia l consultAtion. Special ra tes
f o r students, recent gr aduates and
veterans. 835-44173

I NEEO a roommate by April HI

I
have a smell two-bedroom hOu$e. Rent
Is 145 mo. •nd n atr the utilities C all
634-D89a . Debbie

N EEO A RIDE t o N . J. YIA BlniJhamlon
April
1 1 Shere el&lt;pen ses
Judy
838-482 7

FORO Econo-Hne van '63.
1300 . C•ll 8 111 126-42 84 .

TWO OR THREE -roommates lor apt .
Five-m inute w•tk lrom campus. C all
837-4593 after 7 p .m .

RIDE N EEOEO to end from N Y l Or
Easter . L earlng enytlme alter
Thurtdly . C111 Larry 835· 5851 .

ALMOST n - ww lng machine Sl noer
tAbl e model WO&lt;'th new 1300. Will ..II
fO&lt;' S1 75 . C all 874-41135 betw. .n 4~
p .m .

AN VO N t!:
N t!:E"Ot,..O ~ICie t o
Wathlngton or vt.,lnla , Friday, March
31St . C ell Sue 873- 7983 , ret urn ing
April 71h

ltEI"RIOt!:ltATORS , e t ovn anCI
washers. Reconclttloneel , detlve•ect and
guaranteed.
Applia nc es, 844
Sycamore. T X 4· 3 18 3 .

RIDE BOAR D

BLACKSMITH

on

SUMMER roomma te n eeded for house
nu r c.a mpus. Own room and chNp.
Call Jo-Ann 834 7910.

FOUR · BEOROOM •partment ort
Belley , 15·mlnute walk from camJX.Os.
Furnished , reeson•Ote rent Av•llable
f o r summer and Sept . C ell Shelly
834-0966.

ONE Ci!NT SALE
ON NOW!

In

FOUND : T• pe recordw found
campus. C all 8 34-6!&gt;34 to ld en llly.

FOU N O : On e black leathe~ men's
glo ve (White fur I n side) ou lll de
Spectrum o fllte on 3/24 . Cl aim I n
SJ&gt;Kt rum office ( 355 N orto n Hall)

1969 VOLKSWAGEN , clean. New
paint. 45 ,00 0 miles. C all Detw ..n
1 : 31)-4 : 30. 8117 ·0751, 835·8636
uprf9ht

In
In

LOS T : Nikki, ta n, b ll ck nose, rl'(e
montns, Germ•n Sh eph erd mhl ;
Saturday , on campus, Peter . 633-40&lt;1 2

FOR SALE : 1970 Ttlumph splt rlre
AM/ FM r adio, Exc ellent condition ,
Mak e o ffer . 8 3 2-4079 .

PIANO beeutlful
834 · 2762 .

FOUND : Keys on a rlniJ left
Spectrum office 3/27
Claim
Spectrum o tllce .

DUAL-temperature control Fr igidaire
washer 1nd Westinghouse electric dryer
wltn triple tempe.-ature heat control
B oth I n e xcellent w orking cond ition ,
$1 25 lor pair. Phone 633-4582

APARTMENT for 3 or 4 . In Kenmore.
Furniture ror sate. C all 876· 2226.
Starting May 1st.

rown Rice . . .
oast Sesame Chicken
gg Plant Pannesian ... .
and many daily specials

LOST &amp; FOUND

1966 1RIUMPH TR4A/IRS,
w lrewheel s, eMcetlent cond ition, open
to o ffe r . 8 3 8·3093 afternoon .
FO R S AL E • AMPEG B · 12 g ultar ·ban
- organ amp., SilO. 181· 3271 .

LAFAYETTE
HEIGHTS
APAR T M ENTS . 20 m in . to CAmpus.
Fully furnished, efficiency nudto a nd
studio suite epertmenu . N o leue
required. Hyde Pe rk 8 1\'d . at L Afayette
Ave. - N i agara F alls. C all Collect
284 -5711.

GAMBLING blood7 Acquaintance
desired or w om an 18·22 who Is lean
and attractive with w.,m, mild even
disposition by man {25} who likes
favored odds. I nqulre Box 70 .

\lo LENGTH w om an's Afganlstan coAt,
blue with fl o wered embroldef)l : hOOd,
very werm; Ills someone w ith medium
build, about 5'5": $65.00 or best offer ;
a1so short blAck fur l ecket, 810 .00 C All
833 -7956 .

ROOM AVAILABLE $50 mo. ShAre
large apartment with 2 girls Call
886· 505 2.

UB (new Area) M lllenport· SIIerldan
Orlve, eiCceltent , well furn ished, 3
bedrooms, 1V. batn, private basement
with two finiShed rooms. Near b u s line.
Students welcom e. l31·108l.

HAPPY Bl RTHOAY
mush-mouth
from Bulberry O Z FOTUBB

FOR SAL E

124 A NIGHT - paid nightly six IJO·gO
dan c ers needed, Radices, 711 w.
Chlppew1 , Apply after 4 p.m.

4 · BED R OOM , furniShed , fireplace,
porcn, off Kenmo re, Jun-August
Rent negotleble. C•ll 8 31 ·2 0 7 4 or
831 · 2080.

original by Library Science graduate
student , Box 8 7 .

RIOE WANTED to N.Y.C . and/Or
t,.onsporUIIon of IUIJ9aQO. Will pay .
Call Shelley 886·320• .

1964 VOLKSWAGEN bus. Engine
new . Good r unning condition . M ust
sell . $4 50. C all 838 · 1125 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT

WANTED

Colored o) to Buffalo anytime from
April 5 - 10. Will share expensas - pay
fair. Cell 837-4285 ,

FULL O R part-l ime 10bs available with
Bestllne Inc. Call Ars 88 6·2094 or
M i ke 835·5215 . MMtlngs at E~eecullve
Ramada Inn.

TW0-8EO ROOM apartment, Mtln and
Depew, Available Mey 1. C all Barb.,a
or wendy , 836·5169 .

"FOUND" ads w 111 0. run free o f
charge l or a maximum of 2 days and
15 words.

u.a.,

TYPING, ex.,..-le nc«S, near
1Mf ~- 834-3370. Fast -wlce.

AP&lt;Ing

T WO ROOMS ev• lleb le In hon&gt;e of
elderly lady reQuiring companionshiP
end
mlnlm•l
su pe rv i s ion
Commonwullh-Hertet area. FurniShed.
AMtoneble rent . Contact M rs, 2 M
873-6632.

o•o

2 ROOMMA TE.S wanted Seotember .
lor 4 to sublet ea rly M• v
thru Au g. Ma in -Amh erst . 836-8517
Av a ll~ble

SHOP

RIDE WANTED to Colorado end or
March beginning April. Contact Suwn
8 32 · 349&lt;1 . S here driv i ng, expenses

.umc•ru

R I 0 E N EEDE D d•peretely I rom
Oenver, Colorado (or anywher e In

1375 DllAWARf AVL

TONIG H T!
An Eye-wttness account

" BANGLADESH REBUILDS THE AMERJCAN RESPONSIBILITY"

MISCELLANEOUS

CAMILE - I 1 enythlng Sho uld change
- if you shoul d reco nsider - please Itt
me know .
WIL L THE pef'lon who round • Dlack
walle t whllt dlgg ln on humb le pie tt
the au d ., please c e ll 8 83-6298 B 11D N O
que$Uons
REWARD.
BARBARA canno t st o p

you must be hAPPY- One
Keep sm ll u'g' A I

'"""II·

TERM PAPERS , boOk t eports, esuy&gt;,

----------

---------

EC ONO MI C S major do term o•pe r l o r
undergrad. W il l pay . Contac t eo. :;s
(Spectrum office)
AFFEC TIONAT E femlle C ellco c;.at
lrM t o a good nome s ne nas sh o h
C all Wendy at 1136 .:; 169 or 8 33 ·5 398
TYPING
experienced
d o ne 1n my
hom e .
Te r m
P • Pe r s,
the&gt; e t ,
d lnertallons 892 t784

BY

Dr Charles R. Planck
Dt pt oj folillcal s ,·ien,·e, SUNY/ AB
233 Norton Hall
8:00p.m.
Sponsored by ·
Coum·rt on lntet}latiOnal StutJtrJ

ct

6 PERFORM ANCES ONLY - DIRECT FROM HIT N.Y. RUN !
"CRISPER, SLICKER THAN ANY
IMPROVISATIONAL GROUP
I HAVE EVER SEEN."

$ .40

TYPIST ewallab l e term papen ,
dls.sertatlons, etc. S.40/p.ll90. 873-1938 .
FEMALE
N EEOS
home f or
Septembef. Prefer own room and ciON
to CAmpus. PINH CAll Janet 838-4576 .
JOB
RESUMES
professional ,
con fidential consullallon. Special rates
for students, recent 9fedua les and
veterans . 835-4473 .
DOCTOR KNOW writes term papers
on most everything . ChNp, tailored,
rest end local. Cell t h e Oocto r at
832..()242.
INTERESTED In 1101"9 to Munich for
the Olym p ic gam• ttols summw7 F o r
In form ation, phone 833-4638.
AUTO INSURANCE - SCI«lellzl ng In
youniJ drivers: no charge f or accldenu
o r trefflc violations, l mmeellete FS · 1,
seve up to $100/ YNr . 68 3 ..0022 .
TA X SERVICE o nly $3 for both
federal end stat e, all work guaranteed
- 683..0022 (busln•s returns only •5) .
TVPt NG professionally d o ne, electric
typewri ter, wil l deliver, term papers.,
r esurcl'l work, $ . 40/paj~e . 145-6746,
Joanne.
A NTIQUES and modern furnltu,.,
c eramics, chine, etc. S•
Sid et
Y esterday &amp; Tomorrow Shop, 1439
Herte l Ave.

SUB -LET APARTMEN T
6-8EDROO M house right o ff Ma in. 3
blocks from Del aware Par1t
price
n eg otiable . Available May
1. C a ll
837 -26 4 7 .
3-8EOROOM •pertm ent - sublet on
Callodlne - 5 minute wetk to CAmpus.
Ellse,I3 1·3396 : Amy. 831 · 33 98 .
2-8EOROOM furniShed 5 min
walki ng dlstanc., 2 w-s f r M r en t .
AvalleDie M1y 10
Sept 1 1 3 4 ·3770
SPE NDIN G l he summ et I n BMton7
Sublet • huge 1 oeoroom • pertment,
big enough for two. Modern k itchen ,
bathroom , living room and etcowe .
t..ocateel In t he 8Kk Bey . Ju ne l Aug . 31. O nly S UO/mo. Contect
Elayne - Ski Club O ffice, 318 Norton,
8 31 ·214 5 for further details or call
1-611· 536-8876 .
MODERN, 4 · bedroom, furniShed
Pa tio , barbe cu e . Near ca.mPU ~
Available May thru August. Rent
negotiable. 132·71 4 3 .
A PARTMENT t o .ub-let. C 4111npletely
furnished. 5 -mtn . rrom campus. C all
Howle, 831 · 1167 , Bob 8 3 1·3963 or
L arry 134-6661.

HE L PI 1 ThrM.Oedroom •Part m en t
~eel lmmeellatet y . R....onable rent.
C • " Joe 63 2·3 176
OCCUPAN CY anyt ime soon, senior
'-ds one or two b edroom place with
privacy . Prefe r ably n.ar campus. C all
Andy a .u.:;5o7. Leave m essa1J41.
WANTED TO RENT : A house In the
t ountry tor the summer . C ell Sue
ll38· 2775 .
rwo -eEDROOM apallmern needed
tor September , but will take for
&gt;ummer. Also reaso nable rent Terry,
lesse 873-6174 . Thank you

----

O WN ROOM wanted lor neJCt year ror
f emale student
Mull De Wilk ing
diStance from campu s. Call 834~510
o r 837-4593 . Ask tor Oonna
APT . WANTED for ltll wmestet, $1 0
reward. Must be 3 -bedroom
C all
437 1202
FEMALE wan~ own room I n nouse
wll h other ~t udents lor September
" ' " 833-7571

- Vlllal)e V o lt;e

Act1on Ban ladeJh

REWARD $ 20. We nHd !l Ouse o r
- part m ent
oe91nn1ng June 01
Septembe r. Four Dedr o on11 . Walklnl)
distance 831 ·22 59/2 261

------

HELO' " we n eed a 4 bedr oom a p t . l o r
Sept I U w it h in w•lkl ng d i stance fr om
t lltnPU&gt; C all Ma ry , 8 3 1-41 53; Benll • .
8Jl 20&amp; 2 or A rTiy , ll l l 239 7

-----

FREE

Hayride
Friday March 31 9:30 - 11:30p.m.
AMHERST

Sign up in Clark Gym, Bus will leave CLARK at 8 :30p.m.

H .. 1114111 ST. UC.JUS

Wednesday , 29 Match 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�I

Sports lnform;~tion :
frid~y :

Club LKrosse opener u

Brockport Stile, 4

p.m., Brockport, N .Y .
Saturdily : Varsity bMeball vs. Filirfleld ill the Unlv. of
South Floridi, T~p~. Florid~.
Sundity: Vuslty baseb~ll \'\. F~lrfleld , 2 p. m., T;amp~ .
Fl ortd.L.
M ondo~y :

VusllY

bi~.seb.lll

doubleheitder

11

the

Unive n1 ty ofT •mPI.
Tuesday · V•rsity b~eb~ll at the University ofT ~mpil,
3:30p.m .
Cl~rk G ym houn over va cation ilre · Apnl I 2. dosed,
April 1·9 , 10 • m . II ll m . Normal houn rewmc on Ap ril

10
Club L•croue scheduln: M .1rch J I •• Brodport Stat e;
Aprrl 8 .11 (1\enhower (.ollege, April 12, Nro~g.1r• University,
Aprrl I~ .11 the Un1ver~1 l Y of Ra&lt;.he\ter ; Apnl 22 at Nligara,
M •y 1&gt;. Monroe Commun11y (.ollege.
VlrSIIY s prlnJI JIOlf sc hedule April 24 al l{ochc~ltr
fe t h ; April 25 Jl the Unrver\II Y o l Roc hes ter ; MJ y 3 al the
S UNY AlbMlY l nvlt•tron•l , SH410f!a Spnng~, New York.

Wh.at 's H.appening ?

'7 1 Hollr\ f r•mpton Jnd E.rmr C.:.rhr \Lteen .tnd
therr trim\, II p m, ( onlert•n•e [heater.
forergn lrlm fe,l~&gt;al I u 1ofr1f\l· iii1Ji" ( 1418) , dH« lrd In
Jean Renorr, 5, 7 Jnd ':l p rn Urefendorf 14 7
Th&lt;~ler OepMcmenc Repertor\ · ( tllmir nmin drrt'ltrtl hv
Gordon Rogofl , II 10 p m, ll •rrrm•n Studrn [healer
.tdmrHron ,h.uge
f rim 51Jndrd ( 1965) drreded hy V"tonll , "'tlh &lt;.lJudr•
(.ardrnJie, 6 p.m, 01elendorl 1·16, ,pon\ored by lhr
Oepdltment of F rend•
Con, e rt· (_ rt.lllve A\\OLIJ!t' Rclllal VI, Rotltrl I •ntrr
d•rinell\1/tompo..er, work' by Smrth Ch•d.lbl' , P erle
and L•nert, 8 · .)0 p.m ., B•rrd Re&lt;n • l tL.&lt; II
Lruurr Joe B~\~, founder ol Underground l:•&lt;~nJ!el"m
&gt;Ptdkrng on !he Chti\IIAn opllfe"lon heh1nu ~run Jnd
b•mboo &lt;urt&lt;~ln,, 7 JO p m., ll. no\ Unlltd Pte,byrefl.tn
ChufLh (Elmwood ~no Krn,ry rn Kenmure) , 'rwn,nrrd
by the H o u \e of L ric.
~.on

(ye

drHu~\

f•lm

RtJom \rn tlf ( llJ Ill) wrlh lhr M.t&gt;. 1\wlhL'"·

I'm

•nd 9 o "' l. •oe n I ·IU
Fore1Rn trim lr~ltv J I Mn rrtm Hu' Rttlt .md I"'"' I\ tlttwl
Brttld cJtrctled h\ I Ul\ l)runucl \ 7 ~1111 •r J1 m
O rcfenuorf 14 7.
The,iler Orp•rlmenr Repertory Or I cJll•ru• liiii'Litd hy
D•vrd Ch•mbrl\, II lU p m, H•rttm.tn '&gt;ludw I h.-.. rcr ,
&lt;~dml\,ron &lt;h••l!r
C.omrrt C.r&lt;~duo~ce rt&lt;lloll, I••~Uel)nnr I eon•ru , -.1niH1,
work' by Bee thoven .1nd Ho~ydn II 10 o rn ., Ro~rrtl
Rr&lt;ttAI Ho~ll
(.onurt Scudent retlldl, I p m, B•rrd Ho~ll
Contert Ch•rle~ G • ylr l:.n\tmbt.-. 'pon,ortd by UUAB.
I! HI p.m., ftllmore Room , lree .tnd open lo the publ••

Announcements

-5anl01

N ~wrnan

H~ll writ
t.h .pel on:
rrrd•Y Jl 4 r m., H uly
'&gt;unddy dl K.IO. tO, II d

hold H oly Week ..ervltes d l the
tl oly Thund .iy at 4 p .m .; Good
S•lurdAy dl 7:30p.m .; And Ea5te r
m . .1nd noon .

One·G allery exhib it ion : Winslow ll omer · A &gt;eler..t1on
of wate rcolors, drawmgs And pnnls from the Melropolrun
Museum of Art w1tl be on v1ew rn lhe Albllghi· Koo"' An
Gallery April 7 M•y 7.

The Chmese Studenc AS\Ociiltlo n of che Sto~te
Un1versrty of Buffalo pre\tOl&gt; d one-&lt;l•v wm pus1um
~nlrlltd, "(..hrnd roddV ,' fed!Urtfljt ldiJ..&gt;, open diHU~\IOOS,
Lolor \lrdeo. Jnd Chrne&gt;t frlm&gt;. Event&gt;, whiCh ldl..r pl.i&lt;C on
Apfll I, 4rc
10 .t m noon W1111.1m H 1n1on "Chmd'&gt;
Revolucron Tot.IJy ," 1.11 \f)On&gt;nred by SpeaJ.. er' BureAu; I 2

UmYersity Bookstore winners. The o.olored TV w•s
won by Charle&gt; M c&lt;.. .. nhy, And !he tree flnJt WAS won b y
Terreme McCur.

L&lt;~lllalr.r•n

T he CAC Meyer H o\pll• l progrAm wrtl h•· &lt;onltnu~d
rhruughout !he wmmrr Volunc ee rs Mt needed In mU&gt;l
Area, lt&gt;r t.l.tY\, eventnl!' LH wakend\ . Contdd the LAC
offiLt, !1)0'1, M&lt;l rilyn Dun.t..el, 28Stl, or Arlhur r rOLl.. ,

21lll ~

10 p m m lh( v.omrn·,
g) m . Be~rnnef\ Jft' WtlL nnll dlltllfnc All ~rt ctll our~jted to
aurnd

There wrll be • Student A s~mbly meeting WdA~ Al 1
p.m. rn Room J.ll N orwn

" M ~ l mprt'\\IOn&gt; of C.hln•;" 1 1.10
'' Poltlr.ul ul d Chrne,.- (. ommune J nd J
~·"'"I," l · t~
p,m. on~n JI\(U\\1011 "Thr T.lllo\dfl
Qur,lllln," 1 -1~ ' 10 p.m., A do&lt;umcnr"'' lrlm w11h
do'r Ill" ul \Cvc:IJI 'ourhe1n Lhtnc't Lilli'&gt; 7 10 fl m .. Lee
Wu Yen HuJ &lt;..hun t"runl( .md Jn oprn di\LU\&gt;ron '"
t h111e". IU I I p m.. A do&lt;umen ldr\ lrlm on !he
ln-.IJIIIJn.•l 1 ,tbiL' rrnn" I ournJmenl 1n l'c:J.. 1ng. All&lt;'v&lt;'flb
'"be held '" the L tJflferen&lt;e fhco~rcr . Nurr un Unron.

r&gt; m. J•J&gt;eph Dre"n.:r
p m , IIJ\Id Nult

I he UH l&lt;t

'&gt;kAIIn~

( luh .. 111

h~-.

• trrr h.r\ntlr nn

MJILh I I ''""' I Ill I I Ill fl m I lu•rt " ruur11 lur l !
l'tuplo "~" op trilla•~ (,1rn . \ llu• "Ill k.tH lho tnnt Jl
I!. HIp m
P\yLhurnAI "111 111 tuJ.t\ troru I '\ p .m
,,.rrlt'll.t
Nurtnn

""'

'""'""o"' '"""

7

111

Ill p.m. rn

lht Nor !uri

l(ot&gt;m

ll!

I he Brlll~e thrb "111 l~t&gt;ld .r duplr,~lc IUU1fldfl1''"'
lOOICiffU"' ·'' I I'm Ill l&lt;own } II Nutltlfl All,.,. 111\llC!l lo)
'-Om~

~l ud y

I he 111&gt;1 lur~r11n scudy progrdm rn the
Amerr&lt;•n ~tudenh wrll open at
The Anrefl~dn l ollegc ot Am,terddm rn September 1972.
All lfl&gt;lrUliiOn w11l bt g1ven 10 Engl1~h. A full IS-&lt;:red1t hour
curn~ulum " \lheduletJ
Tur11 on per ~emescer is $85 0,
studenb m&lt;~y &gt;pend A ~em ester or a yeiir &lt;~broad . Living
OK commod•IIOn\ rn s tudenr holels a nd with Du tch fiimilies
are ~Viill.ible. For •ppllcauon forms and further informiltion
wnte to : U5 . Office, The Amerlciin College of Amsterdam,
•bro•d

Nelh~tldntl\ ~'Jlr&lt;l.tlly lm

62 Monucue St., Brooklyn, N.Y . I 1201.

•

I ...

The DepArlment o f Music o f the StAte Universtly of
tjuffal o wrll be h&lt;J\t lu the New Y or~ S!J lt' thJpler &lt;111he
AlllCrrlJO Mu~ti.OIOKILJI so~ r ely for lh trr '&gt;P fl"&amp; mcettng
Apfll X dOd ll Jl Bmtllldll. Th e rnceltn~ wrll be h i~hltghtcd
w 1 t h a p c r I u r m .1 n &lt; e b y
r h e D e p d 1 1 m c n 1 ·'
quMtct · ln·re&gt;rden•c, !he C:. leveldnd QuMICI, on April 8 .11
8 JO p.m. 111 Bo~rrd Rc~rt dl H o~ll dOd ~ ~open 10 che publrL ,
T lli..Ch for the performo~nLe are $3 fo r genero~l adm1ssron,
$1 for f.tLu ll y, staff .tntl UB alumni dnd $I lor siUdenls.
They .He av~ll able at the Norcon Trcke t Offllt and at the
Concert Office on the evening or the conc e rt.
Edwilrd F . Fry of New York, au thor, leCiurer and
proft'S$or, will give "" Illu strAted le c ture on "Cubist ~nd
Cons truc tivist Sculpture Si nc e World W&lt;tr II " at 8 : 30p.m.
on April S an the iUdltOrium of the Albright· Kno-" Art
Gallery.

Today is ttie last edition of The Spectrum until
April 12. All copy and advertisements for the next
The Spectrum must be in Room 3SS, Norton Hall no
l;~ter than noon on Moncby, AprillO.
Happy Eil.ster ;~nd Good Yomtov!

�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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4

THE SpECTI{UM
Vot 22, No. 71

State University of New York n Bufblo

Rev. Abernathy

C~m

Colucci

Sp«trum S toff Wrllf'r

"I'm going to give Amenca hell until it laves up
to its pronouncements," swore Reverend Ralph
Abernathy to a small but enthusiastic crowd at
D'YouviUe CoUege Thursday night . Rev. Abernathy,
president and c~founder, with the late Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC), exhorted his
audience to "march on the ballot boxes" and "drive
the reactionary forces from the command posts of
this country."
Rev. Abernathy's vibrant baritone rang in the
classic manner of the black Southern preacher,
ranging from calm, smooth, measured tones to lire
and brimstone and teh fear of God At crucial
points, with an llctor's sense of timing, he relieved
the emotjonal preMure with humorous jabs at the
audience or the more insistent members of the local
press and with feigned befuddlement and groping for
the right words.
"Up South" racivn
After some jokes about Buffalo's spring
weather, he swung Into hJs speech. "The whole adea
that I r.-cisrn I is found 'down South' 1s nothing but u
myth . racism is just as alive 'up South' here 1n
Buffalo.
" If you share my concern to set thJs nataon on a
new course toward peace and justice, then you
~hould join the movement now,'' urged Dr.
Abernathy. He decried the growing political apathy
among the youth of America. To show the student
audience that they were far from helpless to put an
end to the corruption tn politics, Dr. Abernathy told
of the results of an organized camp;ugn started by
black and "progressive white" youth m h1s home
!!tate, Georgia.
In the recent election of conven11on delegates all
32 delegates who had pledged to support George
Wallace were defeated, 42 pledged to Sen Muikte

Monday, Z7 Mwdl1972

Cohn oppose Leach
on student fees issue

Course qfpeace and.iustice
by

funds called for in the University
bud,el which made cuts in library
aiJocations necessary.

met with the same results . Because of then efforts.
the students removed "the old , stale black politicians
and the Uncle Toms."
The state cha1rman of the Democratic party lost
and the governor of Georgia beat a black student by
less than ten votes. " And this was in the 'Deep
South'.'' saad Dr. Abernathy sarcastically, ''don'tteU
me that 5tudents can't do their thing."
Vote on issues
" It was a day that heralded the new polttrcs or
the people." Dr. Abernathy declared He callrd for
the people to demand that all candidates say pl:unly
where they stand on the issues He asked them h&gt;
wait and not vote for anyone until he had seen 1he
candidate's specific proposals. Quottng a phrase that
coni lnued on P•9• !I

University Counsel John E. that "autonomy is important" to
Leach has decided, as expressed in IRC and that they don't want to
a memorandum sent to President become an SA club. " We see
Ketter, that the Inter Residence ourselves as a government within a
Council (IRC) should not be able government," explained Mr.
to collect its voluntary activitaes Cohn.
fee "on the campus at Buffalo
He also explained that in the
where by referendum a future, donn students on the
mandatory fee system has been Amherst campus wiU consi!t of
adopted ."
gtaduate and night students u
His legal 0p1mon. an effect , 1s well as undergrads, and it
that IRC should not be able to therefore would be improper for
collect its voluntary fee because IRC to be funded by
University students have already undergraduate SA.
opted by referendum to pay a
Mr. Leach stresaed in 1\JJ
mandatory fee to Student memorandum that a voluntary fee
As~ociation .
could not be collected on a
IRC, whach ts the student cam pus which ha s already
government for dorm students. instituted a mandatory fee . He
presently collects an activit1es fee ordered that "voluntary fees
of $8 50 per semester from dorm should be dtscontinued." and that
students, but students can choose arrangements should be made to
not to pay 11 s1mply by sigmng a fulftll any financaal commitments
wa1ver Newly-elected I RC already made by IR(' Mr. Leach
Prestdent Gary fohn reacted to also stated that no voluntary fee
Mr. Leach 's memorandum by could be collected until such time
stut1ng. " We are working 10 an as a student referendum opted for
honest system of cooperation "a change in the nature of the fee
through Un1versaty channels to try to be collected ."
to arrive at a solution that wall be
Less than 10% of the donn
faar to everybody."
students waive their lRC fees ,
Should the administration act wh1ch provide them with movies,
on Mr. Leach's edict and forbid ac tav i tiu, housing during
lRC from collecting its voluntary vacatjons, parhcipations in IRC
fee , fR C would either cease to businesses, such IS refrigerator
exist or would have 10 oblam rentaJs, WIRR. or worlcing al the
fundang from SA. so that I hear Grub or Undergrou.ld, as well as a
&lt;~CtivitH?.\ would come under the
$7000 annual payment toward
SJngle SA mandatory fcc .
the operalron of the Allenhurst
Bus, wluch would "stop running"
90%pay
wrthout IRC funds, said Mr
However, Mr Cohn stres.&lt;;.:d Cohn .

'Fron1 111iserah/e to OH!(ul'
by Mike Feely
Spi'Crrum Stoff klntl'r

Members of the Mathematrc\
and History Departments havt'
assailed library director Dr. Myles
Slatin for proposing what one
member called "a malnutrition
budget "
WJII1am Allen , H1stor y
Departmcrlt , told The Spectrum
last Frrday that Dr Slatttt ~
recommended library budget cuts
will result tn a "malnutrat1on
budget
The qual1ty of the
labrar1es c an on ly gu
backwards . . from m1serable w
awful."

Myles Slatin

"We feel we've been Singled
out," claimed chairman of the
Mathemat1cs Department Nichola~
D . Kazarnioff. While other
depntments' library budgets have
been cut proportionately (on tlte
average, by about 26%). he noted
that Mathematics Department
appropriations will be completely
erased by Dr. Slatin's proposals.

Dr Ka1arn1off asserted !hal
members ul the MathematiC\
Department "use the ltbrary J\
much as physrcrsts 111 d1c11ml\
and that the cumplete Withdrawal
of last year's SROOO applllprtaiHHl
" would be a se nou~ hlow'' to the
department

nl•cd We coltkl ~pcml our cttlltt
drscrt:11unary fund~ on t· ngltsh
h1~tory tn I he r udur Pcnod .. If
th1s wer e tlouc. he added.
~outttle~~ other h1stoncal pcrtnd ~
woukl have; tube 1~nured .
Through the rnglish l..aiiKUage
Approval Pl3n , Or
All en
ex plarned . the l1br:uy obta1m
every moucrn publ n.:atlllll
available tn the ... nghsh language
These boClks are 1n turn sorted out
lor qualrty, he conttnued , and the
library finally re1a1ns ''&lt;)()l',f. of
what is published "But. he added ,
the ltbrary 's a pprup~tatton s o l
d1~rcttonary funds , wluch are
used 10 purchase publications rn
foreign languages and books from
earl1er years. ..are totall y
inadequate."

Decline
When dSkeu 1f the H1~tur y
Department hall ,uflcrcd fP•m
hbrary budget cut~ 111 that field .
Dr Allen responded '1'h-:rc's no
qu es lr vn aht.•ur that
whatsvever
If we have hi ltvc
w11h the budget (proposed lor the
Hist ory Department)
we
would see a decline tn the library
h u iJin~ in hastory . Tlus 1S
inevitable."
Dr. Allen noted that surveys by
the History Department shvw that
"we haven't got half' of the 'Totally inadequatr'
"The enttre budget is totally
holding1 the library should have rn
history. Wrth the 26% reductron madequate," replied Dr. Slat1n
in appropriations recommended when asked for his comments on
by Dr Slatin , he continued : "We the problem. He added that he has
can't buy the basic books we opposed the reduction in tibrary

llowcvt'r. through negolJataons
wllh Vrce Pr~1dcnt for Academic
Aflairs Bernard R. Gelbaum, he
11 o 1 e d . u d oi 1i on a I I i b r a r y
appropna tions arc ex pee ted by
Apnf I Dr Sfatrn expects the
.tpprupnauons to come eather rn
rhe lorm o l supplementary funds
01 from the allocation of a
purltott of the tu1t1un increase .
' ' I 111 11 ,, t ' c r e w i n g
llhtthematiCS," he asserted . ..There
a1 e a number of areas in lhe
UllJversaty where commitments
have been made for collections
ll1br:.rry hold1ngs) " Many
departments have suffered drastic
reductions in their library
budgets, he added, though be
agreed that none of the other
budgets had been cut as harshly as
was mathematics. " Mathematics,"
he concluded , "is one of lhe
things I am very concerned
about. "

I
1\

�'Act of God'

Appalachian Symposium is an
experience of another culture

Yablonski eontends
miners sold short

The first floor o f Norton Hall was jammed wjth
its typical traffi c. students rushing t o class; studenu
commg in o ut o f the sno w ; students go ing o ut into
the snow ; ticket bu yers on line and p eople standing
around talking. A sharp left turn into th e Fillmore
Room , however, revealed a departure from the
everyday hurrying into the sights and sounds of
another culture.
Walking inside. one sees a ple th ora of tables,
each exhibiting a different craft. It 1s, of course, the
Appalachian Symposium. The room was filled with
Un1versity st udents, walking from table to table,
talkmg to the c raftspeople, buying a few item s,
taking it all in . Many Buffalo residen ts of all ages
also visited the Fillmore Room, as their little kids
raced around the room and the o lder ones surveyed
the exhibits and asked questions.
-santos

Learning the loom
Rebecca's knot, Solo mon 's seal. pme knot,
J11uble bowknot. These weaving patterns were
J"played on a bulletin b oard over th e weavtng table,
where an elderly wo man operated a weaving
ma.:hme. On th e table. h er wares were tl1splayed .
heaut1full} woven towels. ptllows and handcloths of
VJrvm(! designs and colors. The weaver. Bermce
( offman, said . " 1 learned to w eave when I was a
littk gtrl. My grandmo ther had a b1g o ld-tunc loom ."
M1chael Snyder. a blacksmith from Wymer, West
V1rgmia, stood and chatted with stude nu by a table

I

l_

call 694·3100

I

Sa.'iSafras an d cornbread
Bask ets of every si1c an d sh ape filled one large
table. 1..:lpable of holding anyt hmg from Faster eggs
to pic n1c lunches. The creato r , Ms . Wilham Laml .
talked With people nearby and compl:11ns about the
Buffalo cold S11ting on a ~mall hand-made stool. ~he
remark ed about her cullccl 10n of 400 wmxlcn
giraffe~ at hnme. Nl'al thi~ ex hibit. large rug' and
t a p cstncs hung frum the waJI~. w h1le s1gn~
announced au CVCIIIng ol Appalachran mus1c m t hl'
F1llmnrc Room thJt llll:(ht a~..cornpan1ed by \d\~.JirJ~
tea ami Clllllh1cad
At a tahk lcatur111~ wood ncat1on~. ~real
mtere\1 w .JS thtcctcl.l towar~l t he lung ltue ul Wtl\Kieu
p ipes. l' tlrllcoh J&gt;l rc~. hwmns ami he au I d ully
assembled Wl&gt;oldcu foil.. dolls c..lonl' 111 hl..cucsscs of
farmers an d hor~l' ami lJriiJf,:C'
Throughout the hllllhHC Ro''"'· mtcrc~t wa~
lugh and tlu· ·''"""Phell lrtc1ullv Vl\111'1'- rl'Jctcd 111
the Appalad11a11 guc'b 111 v.lllllll' way,
··outragl'll"'' ..
" What ~~ th.rl .:.1lkd''"
' llcy . look .11 thew
" I low long th1c' 11 t.ll..t.· Itt 111akt.· tllll' "' tltll\l' , ..
l he hu:ntlllllC" ol tlw Vl\lto" htllll Wc't
VH~IIIIJ WJ' 111klli11u,, J\ pCtlpk quc~tllliiCd them
JUIItut.•d lhl'lf \\ord~ autl Jfllllt:CI.lted the "mpk yet
a111,t11.' ~1C:111111l' l11~pluvcd •m thJ tahk' Pc11plc who
look lillll' 11111 f111111 111,11111):: thlllllgh tll l' fir,t 1lo1111 til
Nor11111 ll o~ll IJ~I wct.•l.. "'•'It' 11cated 111 .1 f.t \LIIlaltn~
cxpcnctllc. t.'\Jl&lt;l,llfl' to ,1 lhtle1C11t culturt.• .nul
may he .J lt.'W !&gt;IIUVt'llll~ 1 ltJt (lliiiCOh p1J'X' ~ oUid
cnrne 111 handy.

Woodworker
fMOTORCYCLEINSURANCE-,
~ IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE :
I NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I
IU P S T A T E C Y C l E I N S I

whjch displayed such pro ducts as fireplace irons.
La ter. he pic ks up a statue-sized hunk of walnut and
con llnued his whittling, carving an intrica te design in
the wood . Nearby, Appalach1a n veterans are playing
dulc1mers. a sw cet -so undmg string instrument. wlulc
Bu ffa lo nov1ces are extracting strange sounds from
the same mstruments

Bible Truth

-Hear, 0 IsraelFor gems from the

SPEAKING OF HEAVEN
Je,u\ wy~ : "I an t.~e WIY, the
Truth and the Life. Jonn 14 ,&amp;

" Alii Your Brotc ... Abot.lt Us"· - '

Mod Sryles for Guys and Gals
Come take the shuu right o ff our
bec:tcs. Seve ;zo,(, on anythlnt with
lho" ll•ve~. Hundreds o f long
.,..,e fops; 7,000 pain of Bells
J.dleu t o m.tctt. L•ther ~ect~eu'
boots end petit• . L•t. La.i '
Wranttfer, Campus, l a ncJiubb er'
Male, e tc. Be "in"- S.ve
- Shop Army-Nevy.

MoneY

CITY

The Spectrum
•

11

weak,

publiU.tJd
ell'8ry

thr_l

Monday,

Wadnact.y and Frid.y; during the
ratJU'-r ttc«Hmlc .,.., by Sub-Board
1, t nc Offic• are located at 355
Nonon Hall, Sutw Univ~~nity of Nhol
York at Buffalo, 3435 Mam St.,
Buffalo, New York, 14214
TalaphotHI: Area Code 716, Edi tonal
831-41 13; Buvness, 831-3610.
R•pre~t~ntad for «ilfflrtivng by
Nation.,/ Eduarional AMrt/6/ng
S.Vice, Inc .• 360 Lexmgton Avs
H8w York, N. Y 10017.
·•

SublcoptJon ret• are $4.50 per
sttmanar or $8.00 for two tamanar6
Second Cl. , PostBge pa1d 11t Buff111o
N11w York.
'
CircuJ.tion: 16,000

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday , 27 March 1972

T onigh t at H p .m . WBFO's Crrmtall&lt; program
w1ll feature a di~cussion of Buffalo's dasputed
housmg o rd in ance and th e s1uden1 h ousmg probfem
Pa rll cipan t~ well be University Das tn ct Councilman
Charlt&gt;s Volkert. Delaware Distrac t Coun cilman
William Hoyt , ACLU lawyt&gt;r Carmen Perrino. GSA
r1resident M1ke Nicolau. Sub Board I , Inc. exec ut1ve
director Steve Bl um enkrant7. a11d On·Campu'
Housing Direct o r Cliff Wilson
Top1cs willmcl ude · th t&gt; dt~tinct1om between the
va ri ous cit y houll mg. zoning. and lodgmg house law ~
communit y ructio ns to !he !&gt;t ud ent housing
problem ; alternative m easures for detiing wllh
problems arismg from st"udent'l livm@ off campu~ .
and the University 's p ro blems with lil udent bousm g.

Hlk( &amp; Ilk( Inc.
3260 Main at., Buffalo, N.Y. 14215

NOW OPEN

875-4265

timet

owned the dam that broke and
caused th e Oo od .
Mr
Yablonski called thl'
hearings 1nto the Oood J
"'travesty" because the witne~e'
were afraid to te~ttfy agatn\1 tht.
com pany for fear of losmg lhe11
JObs.
However. h e d id find snnH'
encouraging developmen ts . One uf
these 1s 1nrreased pohllcal
.Jwarene~'
and soph1.~tu:at1on
Jmong the mmer\ Mr Yablon\1..1
said th.Jt they wantcd John n
Rockefeller IV to be eledetl
governor beuJUse they believe he
w1ll help them l it: was aho
encouraged by the mteresl shown
by Ra lph Nader, whll IS organmng
d campa1gn agamst Consohde~ted
Coal Co . wh1ch M r Yahlonsk 1
called " We ~t Vugtnta's h1gge't
pollult:r. 1ndu\lnJI luller and
per hap' h1ggest h xer "

'Crosstalk'

Phone

v• will oot com~ to me.
tn•t ve m19hl hive llv~ohn 5 ,40

TOPS &amp; BOTIOMS

' A ct of God?'
In rt:\fH•n:.c to when J
nlll1onw1de ~oat rnmers' stnkc
m1ght onur
Mr Yablonsl..1
stated
"Anothe r major mml'
dtsa&lt;;ler t.:tlUid do 11.'' H e then
&lt;;poke about th1s year'~ Buffalo
Creek !l oud
Though West
V1rginia ofru.:1al~ t.:JIIed th e Oood
an "e~.:t llf God." Mr Yablonsk1
msi~ted that 11 wa' &lt;.Jused by the
negl1gen .. e of the Pttt stun
l'orporat1on, parent company nf
the Buffalo M 1nmg Co
wh1d1

Yablonski ~havelson

cyclotourists specialists

JEWISH BIBLE

"A nO

ONLY

" We ~:an tum off America's
lights," warned J oseph "Ch1p"
Yablonski last Th ursday at th e
Appal a~:. h1an
Symposiu m
Accordmg to him , th e recent
natio nwide coal miners ' strike in
Brita in proved to American
miners t h at "th ey are th e most
powerful people in the country ...
Mr. Yablonski, son of the
murdered leader of the Umted
Mine Wo rke rs o f America , i3 a
lawyer and the head of Miners Cor
Democra cy . T his o rganiz.ation of
miners, datmed Mr. Yab lonski,
are threatened w it h the loss of
thetr JObs. h ealth or life
Accordmg to Mr. Yablonski,
th e coal com pames, with the help
of the UMW . exert inOuence on
th e West V1rg101a state leglslatute
and the F ed eral Bureau of M ine~
Because the UMW pens1on fund
gets S 60 per ton of coal m1ned.
union off1 ~1als bet.:ome "pc1rt ners
with 1ndu~try in m creas1ng
produt.tllln" Mr
Yablonski
at.:cuo;.:d unmn leaders of puttmg
productiOn before the welfare of
the worker'

complete bicycle-sales,
parts, service
complete bqckP.acking,
camp1ng, d1m&amp;1ng shop
FEATURING :
Denali f~amea &amp; pack equipme~t
Camptraals framea &amp; pack equipment
Aacente down equipment
Moncler down equ ipment
LeTrappeur boots
Addlaa ahoea
Frejus
~Jackson's

Falcone
Hours : Mon. -:. Sat.

10 :00 a.m . - 9 :00 p.m .

�Dean Ebert proposes additional
baccalaureate degree program
Citing a need for "additional
options," Charles Ebert , dean of
the Division of Undergraduate
Studies has submitted proposals
for the development of two
additional baccalaureate degree
programs.
Presently there are two courses
open to students at the
undergraduate level. One is the
traditional departmental major;
the other is the somewhat
restricted special major.
The first of Dr. Ebert's
proposals calls for a "Faculty
major " He terms this a
" baccalaureate program which has
a general tltrust (Social Sciences,
Natural Sciences, etc.), but Is not
housed in a department . It is an
tnterde partmental , hence
interdisciplinary, program
developed at the Faculty level.''
Course groupings could be worked
out, Dr E~rt suggests, or perhaps
new courses could be developed.
One difference ln this proposal
with the current special major
classification is the SliJX'rvision
required . A special major e mploys
two advisors as part o f the
program, while the student who

would be earning a faculty degree
would not need the advisors
though would have some less
structured supervision.
Dr. Ebert emphasized that
"several combinations around a
core program could be
developed ." The 32-hour
distribution requirement would,
however. still be in effect.
A degree in what is tentatively
called ''General Studies" is what is
envisioned in Dr. Ebert's second
recommendation. Under this plan
40 hours are mandatflry and
consist of a balanced, liberal arts
core program that all students
must take . .. with letter grades."
One possible degree c urricula
could include one year of natural
sc1ence, one year of college
mathematics, one year of social
science. one year of English
(literature) and one year of a
modem language or clas~ics or
fine arts. These would likely be
lower level courses.
The coUJses would have to " be
taken in regular offenngs ... not
m independent studies . The
remaining 88 hours may be taken

r

WBFOdeba~

lfl )'1

Ordinance legality
by :oart.ra Mink
Sp«trum Stoff Writer

at the discretion of the student as
long as they do not duplicate
transfer courses or the level at
which a subject was taken at high
school.'' The 40 hour core
program would be expected to be
completed during the freshman
and sophomore years under the
direction of the Division of
Undergraduate Studies.
These proposals are now in the
hands of a subcommittee of the
Faculty Senate Educational
Planning and Policy Committee.
Ca rmeUo Privetera, committee
chairman said he expects one
segment of the degree proposals
to be . taken up at the April 12
meeting of the Facully Senate
Executive Committee . He
explained the plam were heing
discussed "seriaUy rather than
together."
Any new degree program
would then have to be approved
a 1 the higher level~ of tlus
Umvenuty's administration and in
turn by the S tate Llmvrrstty
Central Administration. Dr. Ebert
feels a "rea li ~ tr c goal for
implementation" would be fall of

IQ73

Frightened members

BSU &lt;~11n incident investigated
Duector of Campus Secunty Pat Glennon s~ud
security received a call that ''someone was waving a
gun around Room 333 Norton." When he and
several other security officers got there. M1 . Glennon
An eyewitness to the incident (who wished to ~id, they were told that the disturbance was over
remain anonymous), which occurred m Norton Hall Campus Security is conttnuing an mvcstigatlon to try
about 3 p.m. told The Specrrum that he was m to find out what actually did happen, Mt. Glennon
WBFO when a group of girls came running in asking said.
to use the phone They also asked for the number of
Jeff Greenwald, campus editor of 71u·
Campus Security. As they called security. tl1e Spectrum, arnved at the BSU office shortly after the
witness looked out of WBFO's door and saw a group gun was allegedly pulled . One attendant of the BSU
of black girls, who had been standing near the corner meeting told Mr. Glennon that security 's presenct'
of the hall, start to run rapidly .
was a provocation, according to Mr. Greenwald
Another attendant asked why Mr. G reenwald
"I then saw a short black guy with gray pants,
was
writing something down, and then sem:d h1s
holding a revolver at his rear right hip," said the
note$
and destroyed them. The facts 1egarding
observer. The girls then ran into WBFO, and told
Friday
afternoon's incident may becurne dearer
him how a BSU officer who was in the process of
when
Campus
Securi ty completes its investigatwn of
be1ng deposed by election, pulled a gun. People left
the
incident.
very quickly, the girls said.
Confusion is surrounding the inc1dent at the
Black Student Uruon office last Friday, where an
eyewitness claims that a gun was pulled in tha1 area

GSA senate meeting
The Graduate Student Association will have a special senate mertina tomght at
7 .30 p.m. in Room 337 Norton HaU. AU senators and alternates are asked co 111tend .

The housing code prniotllly

read that, "No person may lease

l n a WBFO program to be
broadcasted tonight at 8 p.m., a
round-table discussion was held
concerning the legality and
possible repeal of a housing
orditlance prohibiting more than
two unrelated people from living
together.
The participants included
University District Councilman
Cha.rles Volkert , an arch
proponent of the ordinance;
Delaware District Councilman
William Hoyt, wh o has
consistently spoken against the
ruling; and representatives from
the American Civil Uberties
Union, On and Off-Campus
Housing, Sub-Board I , Inc .. the
Graduate Student Association and
the WBFO radio station.
" I have nothing personal
a~inst students - 1 graduated
frorrt this Institution myself," said
Mr Volkert. "I am also a realtor,
so I know the problems involved
wllh hous1ng . But as a
touncilman. I am also concerned
about other residents" He
referred to the ne~ghbors of
st ud ent-populated homes who
complain about garbage, noise and
lack of parking space. c iting ''2 S
to 28 calls a month . Some." he
admitted, " just call to make
trouble." He also felt that by
reducing the income of absentee
landlords, who tend to ne&amp;lect
their property as long as they
receive payment for it, they
would be forced tu 1rnprove the
condJtinns.

or rent a dwelling to over four
unrelated persons.•• The code also
defmes a lodging house as a
"building in which three or more
persons are accommodated with
sleeping privileges. Jim Campbell.
publications director of Sub
Board l , pointed out that this iJ
an example of "rodundant
legislation ," s in~ the fint
definition violates that of a
lodging house.

lnh«ftnC pi'Oblems

Mr. Hoyt also said that there is
a problem with the definition of
tlte terms "related" and "family."
One is related either by blood,
through marriage, or in the sense
of a fraternity or sorority . A
family is "one or more related
persons, with no more than two
lodgers." This definition of family
was passed one year ago.
According to Cliff Wilson of
On-Campus Housing. there are
6000 students living off campus,
and it is not always a matter of
choice . He con tinued that
Univers1ty dormitories and the
Allenhurst apartments house only
2250 persons, with 400 students
hllned away in September. The
only reason Allenhurst residents
(who live five to a flat) cannot be
evicted is because they are in U\e
jurisdiction uf Amherst, rather
than Buffalo.
Additionally he said that while
there are vacancies in the Buffalo
State CoUege area, there are also
problems. Mr . Wilson explained
that while housing regulations are
different , the question of legal
Jurisdiction would have to be
'Satpegoats'
S teve Blumenkrarltl., CXCLUitve solved , and the " logistical "
that of transportation
d1rec;ttH of Sub Board I, sauJ that problem
would he very mvolved .
one should nut use the students as
He added that the new
a vehicle to get to the landlurds,
dormitories
Ul Amherst, if ready
but should deal, dtrectly with
111
the
coming
September, would
them . Mr Volkert agreed that 111
afford
835
new
rooms: but that is
1his case, thr students were
stall
uncertain
.
Mr
. Blumcnkrantz.
perhaps "Stapeguats."
mentioned
the
plan for
"The point 1s." maHlla.ncd
student-controlled
housing,
but its
(' uu n c d man lloyt, "that we
effectiveness
could
not
be
felt in
already have laws dealing with
the
very
near
future
.
nc&gt;1se and garba ge , ~~~ there 1s no
Mr Campbell concluded·
need t c&gt; go 1nt o bl&lt;ttautly
"There
docsn '1 seem to be
discriminatory housang
problems
that cannot be dealt
leg~slat1on." lie pomted &lt;lUI that
with
by
the enforcement o f
this ruhng would harm 110t only
already
e.ltisting
laws ... the new
students. but res1dents of v~'
half-way houses supported by ordinance is on the books: we can
,.ret kicked out tomorrow "
state mental hosprtal

Library hours for Easter vacation
During spring recess, April 1 - April 9, the Libraries will observe the hours listed beluw. Regular hours will resume on Monday, April I 0 .
April I
Lockwood
Reserve
Health Sciences
Art
Science &amp;. Eng.
Chemistry
Music
Ridge Lea
Law

Clo~d

Closed
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Oosed
Closed
Closed
Closed
Closed
9- 5

April 2
Oosed
Oosed
2- 9 p.m
Closed
Oosed
Closed
Closed
Closed
Oosed

April J~
9 a.m. - 9 p.m .
9 a.m. 5 p .m .
8 a.m .- 11 p .m
9 a.m ,-5 p.m.
9 a.m.- S p.m .
9 a.m. - 5 p.m .
9 a.m. - S p.m.
9 a.m. - 5 p.m .
8 :30 a.m.-9 p.m.

April 7
9 a m .-5 p.m .
9 a m .-5 p.m .
8a.m . 9pm
9 am. 5 p.m.
9 5 p.m.
9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
9 a.m. - S P-01.
9 a m .-5 p.m.
8 :30 a.m.-5 p .m.

AprilS
9 a.m .-5 p .m .
1- 5 p.m.
9 a .m .-5 p.m
I 5 p.m.
9- 5 p.m
9a.m. 5 p.m
Closed
1- 5 p.m .
9 a.m.- 5 p.m.

April 9
2- 10 p.m
}. 10 p.m .
2- 9 p.m .
2-6 p.m
2-6 p.m.
Closed
Closed
I 5 p .m .
I - ll p.m .

Monday , 27 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Environmentaf. hearing
A public iepllldve hearing is tchecluled for Tuesday evenin&amp; to pther testimony on
the state-propoeed St .2 billion environmental quality bond isaue. The bll,spoMOnd by
State Assemblymen Smith and Lane of the Standin&amp; Committee on Co~U~t~Vadon will deal
extensively in the areas of water and air pollution and land contenation.
Callin&amp; for wide student pa.rticpation, Commissioner Diamond wbo wW praent the
program said lhat It will be the youth wbo will " .al the bil." The hearioa wiiJ take place
at 7 p.m . in the fint Ooor conference room of the Geoa-al Donovan BuidinJ, 125 Main
Street.

Combat conscious

Senate ratifie,~ ame11dment
qf won1en~~ eqttality rif(ht,fi
Despite prote$ts that American women would
be "slaughtered and ma1med" 1rtwar, the Senate, by

a roU call vote of 84 to e1ght passed a cons1tiluional
amendment which would guarantee women equaJ
nghts W1th men under the law.

Pointmg out that less than 1% of the 1.9 million
men who were eligible for the draft tn 197 I ever
went mtu combat, Bayh predicted that an even
smaller number of women would ever get to see
combat. However, Bayh conceded that there was no
way to guarantee that women would not go to
batlle, since right now ..a significant number of
wonlerl are In the serv1ces and many Of them are 10
combat areas." Ervm 's exemption lost by a vote of
73 to 18 .

Pend1ng ratification of the states. the
House-approved amendment will become the
twenty-seventh Amendment to the United States
ConstitutJon and will read ''Equality of nghu under
the law .shall not be demed or abridged by the
Umted States or by any state on account of sex The
The first amendment to mvolve women since
Congress shaJJ have t.he power to enforce, by the Nineteenth Amendment gave the female the
appropnate leg~slat1on, the provisions of this art1cle. r1g ht ro vote, the proposed Twenty-seventh
Ttus amendment shall take effect two years after the Amendment must first be rat1fied by three-fourths,
or 38 of the 50 states. Hawaii became the first slate
date of ratrfication."
to rattly the amendment, only two hours after it was
No changes were written Utf&lt;l the amendment ~
g,ven final congressional approval. Bayh predicted
it came from the House of Representatives. although
that final ratdicatltln would come wilhlll a year ur
Sen Sam J Ervin Jr (D-N .C.) had pleaded Tllesc.lay
two.
for the mcorporat10n of a draft e.xempt1on for
women
trvtn . who has dlmust s1ngJe-handedly blocked
Senate actllln on a equal nghts amemJment for years,
satd ··t dl'\n 't want anyoot&gt; to vote fot my
amendment unless he believes Ill hts heart Lhat
women sh()uld not be drafted and sent to war and
slaughtered and mlllmed by bullets and grenades and
bombs and napalm uf the enemy "
Off to the combat

zo~

Floor manager for the amendment S~n Such
Bayh {0-lnd ) refuted t-.rv111 by say1ng that he gave
the 1mpress10n that "every mnOler m the couutry 1S
going to he led k1cku1g and screaming from the
cradle of her child," to a combat 1\lnC lie 5tated
that Cllngress could. as 11 has done 111 tl1e pJst fu r
fathers , grant exemptiOns fur mothers

'National commitmeflf
Twu of the Democratic contenders for the
prt~1denttal nommation, Sens l:.dmund Mu:.ku: dnd

Hubert Humphrey, voted for the amendment, while
Sens. George McGovern and Henry Jackson did not
vote at all on the amendment. Muskie stated that the
Senate vote "s1gnals onJy a commument u national
cumm ttmcnt
to the remaining task uf makmg
equalrty fur women a real1ty in practtce.'
E rv tn had only tlu~ to say about the
amendment. '"Sadly the women wh o have bel.'n
pre!.SIIl&amp; for th1s are like the maJortty nl members ul
the Senate and llouse 111 thcu lack of knowledge
about what th1s would do " He lamented that it
would destroy " the handiwork of &lt;..od ·• who had
created men and women drfferently

Stunnrer .\·choo/ cuts
Director of Summtr Sessions Jim Blackhurst has announced that no summer school
courses will be cut until at least five weeks after registration begins, which is April 3.
Students should not let. fear of being dosed out of courses interfere with their Easter
vacation plans since students who register for summer courses after vacation will receiv~
the sam~ consideration as those who register on April J . Mr. Blackhurst said his office has
been besiegfif by caJis from students who w:utt to go home for wcation but don' t want to
be closed out of summer COLIIKS.

Hear

L JOE BASS
Pn..'S1dent and Founder of

Underground Evangelism
Rl'\:cntly retumed from l::.urope reporting on

• Persecution of Belttl'tfS in Communist Lands
• Sfliritual famine Behind the Iron Curtain

• The Opportunity of Ihe Church to Minister to 1hese Persewt&lt;'d Brethren

Wed. March·29 - 7:30p.m.
KNOX PRESBY CHURCH
Elmwood Ave.
------------.J~K~·enmore,

N.atY___________..

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, 27 March 1972

Kinsey

Ad hoc committee seekS
local knowledge of Sostre
by Ron Sandbera

support and the media which she
feels has not provided adequate
coverage. She further contend~d
A newly formed ad hoc that "the newspapen are just as
committee designed to mobilize guilty u the pigs who put Sostre
t h e s t u d en t and 8 u ffaJ o there because they're leaving him
community and to coordinate there." She is convinced that if
activities for Martin Sostre's final there Is sufficient national
court heanng (March 30) held a publicity, "things will happen."
procedural meeting last
Am ong the suggestion s
Wednesday
intended to build up support were
Temporarily created as an keeping Norton HaJJ open aJJ
extension of the Vanguard night on March 29 for rallying
Defense Committee for Martin purposes at which time
Sostre, the ad hoc commtttee "superstars, freak people and
seeks t o arouse community speakers" would be present.
awareness of Sostre and the Restating the purposes for active
alleged frame-up which led to his participation, one member said
3 1-41 year sentence for t.he that if the committee ts tu
possession and sale of heroin. succeed in reopening Sostre's
Ultimately, the ad hoc comm1ttee motion and in acquiring a new
would like to see "a revitali1.ation trial for him, then it must " light :~
of the dymg movement" m the fire on people's asses $0 as to
form o f a n a t ion. w 1de awaken them to the everyday stut
mobilization committee behind that's going on." He is convinced
Sostre It s immed~;He goal, that "there is a directive from
however, is " to pack the Erie Washtngton ordermg the busting
County courtroom" o n March 30, of every black militant in every
the last day Sostre will be in major city ."
Buffal o b efo re "definitely"
Ms . Ftscher expla1ned ,
returning to Wallkill Prison .
however. lhat unlike the classic,
According to Sha~on Fischer. stereotyped polillcal prisoner.
one of the five remaining active Sostre is "the most non·rac1al
members of the Vanguard Defense individual" she has ever met as
Committee, it 1s "the 1mmediacy well as be1ng one who believes in
of the crisis" which necessitates "the liberatiOn of all oppressed
this a ll -ou t effo rt for peoples in the world." The drug
rnobil1zation. Referring to Sostre charge that has been levied agamsl
as "the Malcolm X of Buffalo," h1m, she said, is a "complete
Ms. Fischer explained that IJ1e contradiction of everything he
purpose of the March 30 hearing belteves m.'' but IS be1ng used
is " to reopen the case based on because "everybody hates a dope
newly discovered evidence." This pusher."
refers to chief Witness Arto
In a recent letter entitled.
Wrlllarns' testrmo ny that he "Last Chance To Support Marttn
framed Sostre by partakmg in a Sostre Before Legal Rip-Off,''
" phony drug sale'" which he Sostre pra1std the organt1ers or
claims was staged by the Buffalo the ad hoc comm111ee, callmg
pol1ce Williams, who faces a them "ou t standing souls of
five-year sentence ror perJury hei ghtene d Spi rituality and
upon returnmg to Buffalo, 1s political awareness to relatt: to my
presently see king refuge rn struggle for a humanistic soc1ety
Cahfornta .
where people can enjoy the1r full
Ms. F1scher cont1nued that human righ ts . .. " All interested
Sostrc nwtioned on March 21 to parties are urged b y th e
have a committee fl y to CaJifornta comm11tee to participate 1n this
to questron W.tl1ams o n l11s week 's activities and can do so by
lcstunony. The motion , however checking With the People's News
was den1ed . She attnbuted the Serv1ce for times, dates and
dental to both the lack of ubhc _locattO_ns of meetings.
Spectrum Staffk'rlr~

�Cottr.~e qfpeace ...
has become popular in the movement, he said : "H's

busing of white children had gone on for a lo ng time
"There was nothing wrong with busrng then," he
said. Amtd cries of "right on" he told the audience
to "evict Richard Nixon from the White House and
send Spiro Agnew back to Maryland "

not the man, baby, it's the plan : it's not the rap.
baby, it's the map."
Then he outlined "ten serious abuses'' m
America today.
I) While milBons of people go hungry the
federal government pays $5 billion to rich farmers
not to grow. Dr. Abernathy demanded an end to
farm subsidies tltat allow people like Sen. James
Eastland (Dem., Miss.) to make $13,000 a month to
dn nothing.
2) Dr. Abernathy called for an end to the
Vtetnam war "N-0- W, now." He critict7ed
Prestdent Nixon's poJjcy of "wiudmg down" the
war. "We don't want that war 'wo und down'," he
said, ''we want it ended."

Decent jobs
7) Dr. Abernathy descnbed the phght of the
working poor who have, in his words, "full time JObs
and part time pay." He asked the government to
guarantee "decent , prc.&gt;d uc tive jobs for all workers."
8) He wanted an end to racism . ''fhts
responsibility belongs to the Presrdent ," he SBJd. " If
he wants to get everyone together , he sho uld prove
it."
9) "The whole nation is on welfare ," said Dr.
Abernathy. He b lasted "corporate welfare " and sartl
IJ)at in America "we have free enterpnse for the
poo r and subsid12ed sociahsm for the nch."

Warondrup
3) He insrstcd on adequate health care for aJJ

and a war against the drug problem . Dr. Abernathy
castigated the FBI for spying on hm1 while organrz.ed
crime, wh.tch he didn't hesitate to call the Mafia,
brough t milliom of dollars wo rth of heroin mto the
lOUntry .
4) " Forty tho usand atomtc weapuns
don't
you thmk that 's enough?" asked Dr. Abernathy. In
demanding a cut rn defense spendang he said . " l et u~
l&gt;lop burlding these bombs and start reburh.iang uur
t:rtres, Buffalo tnduded"
5) Dr Abernath y callrd for J guarantee ol J
decen t mcome for all poinllng o ut Ur:tl 5'/1 of the
Amerrcan peo ple control 80% of the wealth.
6) lie attacked President Nixon's busintt pnhcy
.1s part of hi~ cnllcrsm of "unequal. dehumani/Jng.
trrelevant educatton " He set htmself firmly on the
~•de o f busing. "When I was tn school," remtnisct:d
Dr Abernathy, " the o nly thtng IJ)al black c htldrcn
gut from the bus was the dust " lie explamed that

~H (..'

J•n J•'

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I•· U• l)l l I·D •
I"·· J• I .n .r r /0 •r.
•)./ • LO ®lu•• • Ill

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...,. ,...
.....

OJI +&lt;ll

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Nm dad he have any lund wo rds for Preside nt
Ntxo n 's plan of $2400 a year for a fanuly of four
Dr. Abernathy suggested that Presiden t Nrxon " take
h.Js famrly o f fo ur (not counttng to-laws) when we
retire hrm 111 November and ler l11m IIY tu ltvc nn
$2400 a yea r "

1O) li e d e manded an
unrepresenlatrve government

end

tu

··sc~ rcl

''fhiS IS not JUSt Rtchard Ntxon \ nat Jon,' hr
concluded. ''fhJS rs uur nahon .
It ts 1101 Just lvr
whttes but for people " Commeurmg 1111 the new
sense of black pride he said . " I knew lhlat:k "
beauttfulj when I firs t luoked 111 tire muwr Anyone
wtth 20/20 vtston 'an ~ee me and he Cil ll sec that I
.mt bla'k and that I ..rm beautrful •·
He do~ed wrth a prom1se ' " the d tcC1111g
audience " I'm gurng Ill stay on tht• cao;e and do my
!lung unlll Amem·.t is nght u11 "

·I

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-continued from Dage 1-

... ( '11 .

.Ill •

([) ·

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.....

...]) 1j

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0~1

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WKBW and Jerry Weintraub present

.Ill •

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II[® 1·• .11 • lD
0"11 •• ~ - •·??1!

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

MOODY BLUES

Honest &amp; Reltable

Friday, March 31, at 8:00P. M.
Buffalo Memorial Auditorium

6 Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert Near Bailey
834·7350
Imported

All seats reserved: $6 00 $5.00, $4.00
Tlck•h on •a le now at &amp;ulla lo festival fld&lt;el Oftlce, Slaller Hllro" Hote l,
lullale , N '( I ,.,02, I mall orders accepted with sla"'p.d, self . addreued
envelope J, U II . Norton Hall , Slole College Ticket Ofllce ; Falls Ttcl&lt;eh,
Hoeberle ,.DID , NIDgaro Folio. Tlckeh for orden received after March 28 ,
will be held al Memorlol Auditorium lo• Ofllce

~~~~~'-~~~~"~~

The UUAB Music Committee &amp;
present

SUB of SUCat Buffalo

NEW RIDERS
wnh

~~~1.~
4pril1~

COMMANDER CODY ~rv~~
and

Ht ~ Lu')t

Pl.im·t Atmwn

CLARK GYM

(at the Univcr:.ity uf Buffalo)

2 S HOWS 8:00 &amp; I I JO p m .

Dorm fees go up While
presidents' rents lower
Reprinted from
Albany Student Press
Next year when you go to pay
your d o rmito ry rent of $650 bear
o ne thtng m mmd : you are paytng
more to live rn the dorm than
your oollegc's president is paymg
for himself and his family to hve
in their ho use
A c trng SUNY Brnghamto n
President Gordon pays $500 a
year rent for his $53 ,000 home
puchased tn 1962. Gordon has a
salary of S37 ,000 and an e xpense
account of $2000
The unrverslly center presrdent
Wtlh the htgh est salary al&lt;&gt;o uves In
the most expe nsive house, but he
~lrll pays $5 00 annual rent St11ny
Brook Presrdenl John S. Toll
recerves S4J.O•IS a year .tnd hves
m a ho use pur~:ha~cd rn 1967 for
S I '2 500 Lt.k e other unrver~tt y
~enter
presrdenls, he rclcrvc~
S.!OOO a year for e xpenses
SUNY Alhany·~ Lc&gt;uls
Bene-tel IIVt:S m thl' St..rte
( du.:atron ( ommtsSroner' home
Ill LnuJonvtllc He pay' "" rl'rtt
All&lt;&gt; nll n g I n Benoct, " we
rcque~leu
a house u t norm.tl
t ..r m rly ~II&lt;' where w ~ o.:oulll
~ntcrtJIII 1otk~c dnd llown ~Uc\t'
J\ IS IIIII lU\tOIII J he .tniiUJI
-. ~000
"
l'nlt'rtarnrnent fund
liiO\tlll-r..rhly h·" lhJn we 'PCihltn
J o even a 1111111111al JOh the rc~t
nune~

from 11~

Why ;a

f~

••

home?

Wh y should SUNY pre\lc.lt•nl'
be glYc:n whJt aduall y amounb too
~Jill u il&lt;n•:.
ho mes when they
rece rve s•lanes w e ll JtH)ve
S lO 000 plus a vanety of
· C!Kira,., •. Ao.:o.:urdr ng lo .r S l lN Y
(en tr dl !I IJit•mcnt
'' lh t·
prcsuJenl) nf lh~ o·ampu'c' uf
Stal e Unrvo.·rsrly must ;os,orrllt'
llll l'"'tan l res pons1hriJIJn lnr
\Uli.JI ancJ JUnllnl~trJIIVC
rel011 ron'h 1p\ With .. t uo.lt:nh
tJ;;ully
emp lnyn·, ,oncJ lht'
general 1 Olllrnunrty
the
prC\Illenl's !11111\e ha' crnt 1~ed as
"'' t'~'cnlral lauhl y lor l'\t'ro.l~lnl!
lhe\c re\poon,lhthloe' JIIU ur11lyong
Ihe .~ ....ouenlll lOIIIIllllnJI" wll hm
11wlf Jnd wrth 11' m:rghhm' ··
rht" ,(,l ll'nJ~nt alsn lrlti H.tl\'11,
' In mort rt·• l·nt yc,Jr\, til.- IYJ'l' PI
prc\ldt:n l \ houw hc1n~ prnvulcd
h o1 \ h 1'1 tHII t• .111 tnlfi',J\IIlj!)y
\ljotlllfio.Jill f.tdur 1n al l rarllnl( tnp
411.1hly l.olnUtJ Jh'\ 101
.llllfHI\
prt•,rJcm:Jc\ not ,., 1111h h ht• .... tu '~
!Itt· ..:anJrdalt'' de~111: tuxurtcllt\
a ttu mmoJt~lu \n,,
hut hn.tuw
4u.thl1cd .rt..rdt•fiJJl ..rdrnrnl\tr.rlo"
WJJitng
Ill ..1\\UIIIl' Jlfl'\oolt•niJ.II
rC\IlPO\Ihlhlln W.llll (p hl• J\\Urt•d
l h..rl lht'll •h·'"'''' n l c~l.lltll\ hlll~ J
\Ut c·c~s tul JOIIIIIIl\tiJIJOn .trt• not
h.Jndi &lt;J pp nl hy tn,odc•qtiJit'
IJllllll~\
, ,, , C\t'lll\lflg
..rpJHctpll.rt&lt;' k.rdcl\hrp·· l ilt·
... lii\Y ,l.rlcllrt·nl wt·nt un It&gt;
J\WII . "l'h•· rnult wht•rt \t't'l..trll( a
prntUt:lll·, hclll\t' 1~ .1 ~111.1lko
numht•r nl pntt"nl~ollly \llll.rhk
plctpcrllt"' .uotl .1 htgher ro~flj!l' ••I
1.0\h ••

Whtle the pracltce may be a
common one, so too has the
practice of raising dorm rents and
colleae fees to cover such
practic e s become almost as
common . Despite m creasing ftscal
problems, the State managed to
acquire a $135,000 house in 1967
for its then non-existent president
of sue at Purchase. The new
coUege, located in Westchester
County
noted for hl&amp;b priced
homes
announced the
appointment of its president ,
Abbott Kaplan. last year. He
receives S37 ,856 a year with an
expense budget of about S 1500.
Kaplan pays an annual r~nt o f
$500 for Ius home
Most recently, the State has
;requued a S50,000 house for the
presrdent of the AiriculturaJ and
fechn11:al CoUege at Canton. The
rent lor thr~ house IS SJOO In
I Clo9 th~ State purc hased two
ho use\ for umversity heads. One IS
d $94,000 home for the president
of the upstate Medkal Center, for
wlul h he pays SSOO annual re nt
The ut her reSJdcm;e. purchased
lor SbR,OOO. houses the pres1den1
o l the College of Forestr y at
Syrall ~e. 1 here •~ no ren tal
t harge fo r his hnme 11.
at a
cusl u l l l I ,I 00 fo r 1he home ul
the prr'!den t o f SU&lt;. at Brockpnrt
w J~ pun:hased rn
I 969, hut
budg~t ~.:uts put construction tn
llouht Th~ Brockport head , who
rco..~ive~ $)') ,4 16 plus S 1500 lo r
&lt;'X Pt'll'iCS, IS paytng SS00 d yeo~r
for .t tempor.try res:ruence on
~.t mpu s
u n ltl a permanent
altemallv~ ts lletermtned .

It''·

Only onr coUcge pres1dent can
.;..ry that he pays more ren t for lus

statt'·provtded home than SUNY
pay fo r tlus do rm rent~
Platt sburgh College President ,
George W AngeiJ , pays S7 15 a
year to hvr 1n his $30.000 home
.rcqurred hy th&lt;' slatr 10 1948
An~tell
Tl'l crve~ d
'"lary of
'l'i 77tt .tnt! an l'\flt'll\l' hudi(CI 11f
~&gt;l uden ts

''"",. ' I ~ Oil
1 h l' lt'l/.l~lullvl' &lt; om 111ts~w n nn
1- xrwndrlun· H.t•vww 'lucllcu rhr
't.tl&lt;'
h&lt;lU\IOjl.
\Uflpltl'd fur
Ctllplnyt'&lt;'' 1n mnt: \lo~lc ,rgencJC)
tnduJrnll. StiNY 1 hey lnnduded
I hat
rn1Jcn t' ~uprhcd wllh
home' ··~ un~1der theu low rcnl
houMn~ ltl he sal.rr y Jugmt:ntallun
a11d .r rJI\e rn rent hal&gt; the clfett
,,f .t '"'"' y •lit " I n Jn~tly11n~ thiS
.rrl(umrnt , thr tepurt rrad . ' I 'l'r'l
thOll!!.h \IHh hoU\II)g t'XISt~ for lh l·
l llflvCnten~·c of
th~ &lt;;tate and .
le1t1JIIy o..annut h.: ,,,n,rdcreJ
Jddrlmn.tl ~..rld!Y, tho· JH.Icll~l.' ol
Sto~ t c Jgcnul'~ 11vcr J long penuJ
would H·ncJ to 1111pl v that lhc\c
a , c n 111 m o cJ a I o n n '
w e 1e J
~overnmcnr
granted '&lt; ltpt&lt;n&lt;l I n
~mrloYl'l''"

I he report ·'''" w.·nt on to
h,ll, ''StJtr suppltcd housrn~
" IIIII J'lllVIIlcd lhrou~h .1 lttllllaJ
pr•'~~ora 111
11
rc~ull~
!runt .1
t raurtton uf supplyLn j,\ housmg '"
t:e rtaln cmroltlyees
~!Jit' I

Good Friday Service
'
of Meditation

Sponsored by UB Campus Mmisters
St udent' SJ
Non·Studcnts Sol

Ticlrets at Norto n Trclret Office and Buffalo State Trcket Office

Conference Theater, March 31
12 :00 to 1:30
I

Monday, 27 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

,

~.~.M£.

M~.

EdiToRiAl

I

Great idea
Undergraduate Studies Dean Charles H.V. Ebert is to be
commended for his proposals to create degrees recognizing a
"Faculty" major or a general studies program. The "Faculty''
major degree is particularly attrative for a variety of reasons.
First, within the Social Sciences, an interdisciplinary
trend has been slowly developing tor the last few years.
Social Sciences, while by no means the only area where such
a prow-am would be successful, is quite well suited to a
broadly-based field of study.

1.
\

The general degree program would be another welcome
option. Many students have difficulty adapting to either
specific (departmental) or general (Faculty) fields of
concentration. This option would fulfill their needs and
allow course selection without regard to most existing
requirements.
The entire concept is healthy and sound. Educational
Institutions are notoriously slow to change themselves or
even to recognize the changing needs of their populations.
Thus, when an idea as different and valid as this is actively
promoted, we are especially pleased.
We urge the Faculty Senate to ad opt these proposals and
work for their acceptance by Albany. If these goals are
realized, then we will be a little closer to letting "each
become all he is capable of being."

The Appalachian Symposium was undoubtedly a
successful affair. One of the best things to happen on a
somewhat dull campus this year. the Symposium accurately
protrayed a life style that is totally alien to most students
The mere exposure of the University community to a new
and different experience would be commendable, but the
sheer quality of the program calls for special praise.
For the first time in recent memory, city res~dents
flocked to the campus just to see the Symposium. Even last
year's open house failed to attract as many community
visitors. Such a turnout helps to alleviate still further the
fears and hostilities of our muddled town/gown relationship .
Linda Felix, who directed the Symposium, and all the
others who took part deserve congratulations for an excellent
job. Next month, the University will be the scene of a
large-scale folk festival and we hope the success of the
Appalachian Symposium will be contagious. This University
has certainly dechned as a center of cultural dynamism the
last two years and we hope these endeavors are the first signs
of a new wave of campus creativity in the cultural sphere.

THE SpECTf\UM
Monday , 27 March 1972
Editor-m~hief

Ol'1Hm A1

noltl

(u· M•n•gcng Edotor
AI B&lt;'oh•ln
Co - MJn•gmg Edii&lt;H
Mclo.t• l•PI""'·mn
Aut M.an.tgong Edotur
O.,u,JII M u"
BuSiness M•n•ger
14&lt;~ Hc·ol•n
Advert"tng M•n•ger
Su&gt;dn Mcllnllcrll'
B.atli:P&lt;tge
C.ampus

. Amy Ahocn&lt;l
lu·Ann ArmAo
. lefl ucecnwJid
.H owie Kurt/

L.tyuut
Am .
Lo t &amp; O""m•
Music

Cllv

. lancs Cromer

Off.Cllmpu~

Copy .

Runno f orman

Aut .
Phot o

Ant.
Fature

Gr.tphic Am .

. MHty Galli
Cl.m e l&lt;rteg~man
. . . LyndaTerc
fom Tole&gt;

Appalachian experience
To the Editor:
Tht Appall1Cht411 Symposium

what a great

e xperience!

Successful program

Vol. 22. No. 71

1

MJr'(lwp~

Runycut
~··Jilt

M o1h ,o ~ l \ol~ trb iJII

Sollv AllrllArl

L ynnr 1 &lt;4CKCI
. ll.a,4nl
Mc&lt;l.cv O&gt;ttr rcidH•t

ASSI

Sporb .... ••
Aut . . .

. K1m

Santo~

. 8drrY Rubcn

. H ow1e

r aiwl

The Sputrum cs &gt;e rved b11 United Press lnterniillun.al. Collej~i.' Pres&gt;
Serv ice. the Los Angeles Times fr~ Press, the Los Angele&gt; Times
SyndiL.lte and Libc r.ltlon News ServiLe.

Republication of m•tter herein w ithou t the el&lt;ples&gt;
Edilor-in.Chitf is forbidden.

~onsent

Edltorhcl policy IS determined b)! the Edilor·in.Chief.

Page six . The Spectrum . Monday, 27 Match 1972

of the

There are many, many different moments from
tllal experience that each o f us will cherish, but for
me the most moVing and at the same time most
symbolic moment of all was at Tuesday night's
Bluegrass Concert in the Hass Lounge .
In the middle of the musical performance a man
appeared in full mine r's garb, trying to work his way
through the mass o f people. When he reached the
stage, Linda Fe.lix introdu~d him as Walter Burton
Franklin, president of the Black Lung Association of
Ke ntucky. Mr. Frankli n then began to sing, without
accompaniment. His mournful, droning voice burned
nght tluough my mind and body . Th.is man , with his
dirty coveralls and hard-hat, moved me deeply . Thi.o;

r.

was a protest song which made pale all the protest
songs sung by our childish city folksinger heroes.
Yet, symboUcaUy, the mob in Hass Lounge had
better thinas to think about and talk about. They
couldn't be bothered, and instead rudely ke pt up a
constant buzz of conversation . The mob was willing
to be entertained by a fiddler (fiddle playing is in
now, they say). But after all , there are more
important things to think about than some old
miners in Kentu cky.
Things like : " Where' re we goin' for a pizza after
thi.s is over," or "What a bummer that the Goodbar
burned down,•· and on and on - ad nauseum .
I arn sure that if any of us left our beloved
ca mpU$, and ventured to Appalachia, we wo llld be
received with far more respect and consideration by
those beautiful people we so rudely ignored here.

Electtans arc perennial pro blems. They are
Intended as the fa1r and objective means by which a
democracy operates. However , tn some cases, they
don' t fulfill t he1r int ended ends. Such a case is the
Millard FiUrnore Student Assoctalton elecltons for
the 197 2-73 academic year; for presenUy they are
e mbroiled in an elec tion wtuc h reflects both
~onslltutional illegalities and ethical vtolations,
Specifically , two candidates for executive office,
Jack Bunting and Brian Coyne, have rep;istered
complaints about the way in which candidates were
rndorsed by the MFC Nominations committee. This
co mmittee released their slate of endorsed
candidates for elected office last Monday night
Both the procedures and membership o f this
~,;o mmittec IS uncertain. What rs certaan 1s that they
d id not interview all the candidates and that their
endorsements were formulated pno r to receipt of alJ
c andidates' p etitions. C hairwoman of this
committee, Clara Ann Ku ehle wind , was reluctant to
offer any explanations about these irregulanties.
When asked to comment on charges of constitutional
violatjons, she could only remark : ''1 don' t know
what t o say ... there really isn't llny story in this
W~t had the same kind o f business last year
people complaining is typical of all elections"
It is true that people complain at all elections.
Ho wever, Ms. Kuehlewind 's refusal to discuss
specific charges would substantiate the notion that
some irregularities have occurred that have not been
accounted for. Additionally, some M FC students
suggest t hal violations by 1he Nominations
Committee were e ncouraged by the Executive
Committee in order to rubber-stamp certain
candidates.
The particular irregularities of this election
misht be dismissed as a fluke. However, the past
record and recent actions of the night school's
Executive Committee support the idea that their
Association is an association only for a few . Included

th

C(

C(

a,:

fu
th
P&lt;

IIC:

Jim Redding

CAMPUS UIIEIT
by Jo-Ann Annao

e(

in their past history was a disinclination to conduct a
student referendum to decide the fate of Poverty
Hill and their action of last week t o decrease their
contribution to Sub Board 1, Inc. Combined with
this has been the repeated failure of MFC
representatives to both FSA and Sub Board to voice
their constituents' feelings and o pinions.
It is unfortunate that night students have been
so neglected at t his University; neglected by thw
own student government. There are sorne members
o n the Executive Committee who have tried in the
past to change the direction of the MFCSA .
However, aU such efforts have failed and they are
admitting defeat.

Mr. Bunting, for example, notes that he has
come to accept the political reaJjty of the situation
and ~ an't honestly foresee anything blling
ac.tomplished. Even now, while he is su bmitting
formal charges against the nominating procedures, he
remarks : " I am only going through the motions ; I
don't think it will accomplish much .''
To understand what they bave accomplished, 11
is helpful to look at a proposed fiScal budget fo r the
Spring 1972 income. Major expenditures o f lhe1r
$254 14 .50 income include S 1558 for convention,
S 1628 for o fficer's stipends and S I 994.32 ror such
things as remodeling their offices, consultant
services, office expenses and secretarial salaries.
Conspiciously absne is allocations for such services as
a student lawyer and a sufficient budget to Sub
Board .
One M FC student observed tha1 the sole
interests of M FCSA is in pizza parties and going to
conventions - their budget and recent activities
more than confirm this charge. A GSA official
commenting on MFC actions noted that "their
government is run more by a tyranny than by any
hint of a democracy." Unfortunately, it appears that
the words of philosopher Karl Barth could be weU
applied t o MFCSA : "Before you decide, a decision
has descended ."

&amp;

ha
at•
Ct.

l

Tt~

ab•
an
wa

Yo

cia.
pe&lt;
de'
soc
of ·

det
We
We

spc

cor

COl

Alt

top
Kle
fan

exc
unf
and
inc•
But

pr~

att

con
muo
prao
the

�Individual g&amp;eity
To

tit~

Edlfor.

Your account of the recent Channel 29 panel
discussion of " Homosexuality" was offensive, to say
the least. In the course o f an hour, each participant
wu identi6ed by the moderator several times, yet
your reporter " was unable to distinguish various
panel members by name" a nd so chose to lump
together the remarks of individual gay people under
the label " panel me mbers." You justify this
procedure by claiming "opinions were generally
congruent." This was just not the case. I should
know, 1 was o n the panel.
lt is not that I want "credit" for what I said,
just that I want to be treated as an individual human
being, speaking o nly for myself. r am neither "they"
no r ''the panel members" nore " ho mosexuals" In
general. Indeed, "they" said nothing - there were no
choral effec ts on the program . Instead , a number of
gay people spoke, each In his or her own na me, wi th
no wish to remam anonymous. lt is curious that

your reporter\.._ able to distinguish both Captain
Kennedy (o~Vice Squad) and Judge Mal.Ur, and
to identify each of their remarks by name, but wat
unable to dlstin&amp;ulab any of the py people on the
panel and therefore dealt with them in stereotypes
whicb, as o ne of use pointed out, "create a favorable
atmosphere for o ppressio n "
•
Surely you know that " they" is the wo rd some
people have used, throuaJlout the ages, the exctude
otben from consideration as human beinp, to create
stick figures or "invisible men" who can then be
systematically oppressed and, when they object,
conscientiously disreprded.
The only thin&amp; I am pretty sure most py people
wouJd agree on is tlut ..they" are not alike: each
wants (like everybody else) to be treated as an
individual human being, burdened with h.is own gifts.
I am neither James Zais nor Terry Marone. They are
my brother and sister, my frie nds.
Burton I. Weiss

Call for unity
To

Physics: lravished innocent'
ru th~ Editor
After rcadmg the Wednesday, March 22, 1972
edilion of The Spectrum, I must take ex~ept1on to
the mesS/lge of the front page cartoon.
The CoUeges suffered a 23% cut m funds for the
l.'oming year. The Department of Physics, when o ne
l' onsiders 197 1·72 expenditures and 1972·73.
appropriations, suffered a 22.2% ~ut an operatmg
funds. The reductions are substantially iden11cal To
the uninformed observer, your cover cartoon would
portray a false tmpreSSlon.
Tom Toles is an excellent cartoonist lfis
ac~.uracy of reporting leaves something to be desm~d
A ~artoon portraymg Phystcs as the rav1Shed
mnocent and the Colleges as overfed swtne wouJd be
«Jually accur1te
Nt'lsnn II Cosgm11r
Ass11tant w the Chairman
{Xpartmt'nl of Physrcs
and Astronomy
1-.f.illm :S nott• T&gt;lt• dt•panment namt'S on thl! ptf(j'
hacks were chosen purely at rand (Jill and were not an
attempt IV blame other departmt'nts for tit•'
Col/exes • plight

Down io earth
to the

&amp;litor

Amen to 1ony Betlanlt's letter! I also have just
aboul had it with people who put down Buffalo in
an unfair and biased way
The Western New York area IS not , d~ not
want to be, and does not pretend tC) be, the New
York City
Long Island area. Buffalo lS a working
class city, and as we all should know, working class
people do not have erther the money or the time to
develop the amusements of a more letsure~riented
socaety. We consider the warmth and ne1ghborhness
of o ur people to be adequate compensataon
AJso, we do not consider our climate to be a
debit, but an asset. The gape"'J'Owtng reg~on of
Western New York produces the state's finest wines.
We also have e number of exceUent sJu resorts, a
sport about which I have heard no complalnts lately
Our Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra 1S
conSidered to be among the top ten orchestr.u 1n the
country, and our Science Museum and the
AJbright·Knox Art Gallery, not to mention the
top-quality performers we arc able to attract at
KJejnhans, do not impress me ll!i typacal "hick town"
fare.
Bureaucracy 1s everywhere, and Buffalo is no
exception. The potholes are also everywhere,
unfortunately, but t he country being in a recession ,
and money being tight, the situation is not as
ancomprehensible as it misht seem.
As to the reportina, it does not surprise me that
Buffalo newspapel"' do not ao out of their way to
present student points of view, considering the
attitudes some studentJ hold towards our
community. I just wish that the students who talk so
much about tolerance and understandlng would
practice a little on their own . If they did, perhaps
the community miaht be a tittle more tolerant also
Sally Miller

th~

Edftorr.

T hiS is a call for untty It l.S directed to those
wh o thtnk that: admanistrators care only ahout their
own power, adYtstn "JUSt don't have the time,"
faculty members care more about research lh&amp;n
hdping students, and students think only &lt;lf
themselves.
Just recently. my adv1scr. Jerry Fahey. and
ach ng V1ce~resident for Student A ff111rs Dr.
Anthony Lorenz.eth went out or the1r way 1n ehlping
me with a peta tion to have my transfer credits from
the University of Rochester changed to W They
were mostly failures. And it was Jnother
admi.tll.!llrator, Dr Kenneth Clark, Dean of the
College of Arts and Science at U of R who sllw that
my petition would be voted on It was 11cceptcd

Faculty members do care (about you) if you
care (about lea min&amp;) I have yet to come across 1
teacher who didn't have the time to help me with 1
problem, whether general o r related to his coune.
And there are many students workins in
orgaruzations Wee CAC, WNYPIRG , and others
whkh deal with the problems of our time. Let's {ace
11 , thts un1versaty and our world 15 tn a mess. But the
daseo.se Apathy won't be cured by dissension. You
have to take the tnallatrve yourself
fhe presrdcnt puts hts panh on the same way in
the rnorntng as a freshman or a Jantlor. We all
hrcathc the same polluted aar Let'~ get away from
our trtlc~ (out "mle-shields' ' ) and wnrl together, not
llgJtn!&gt;l t'8Ch Other 1
!)on Biddkcom

Justified te nure
To tht• f:"dltor

Although ol pnrn;ny rnterc~l to Dr Ketter 01nd
the fellow~ of the Phys1cs Department at the
Un1vers1ty of Buffalo, I feel as though the
oommunlty·at·large (academic and civic) should be
tnformed of the tnJUStlce that perserveres there.
Dr
Jonathan Reh.hert l.S po.;sibly more:
mterested Ill tea~hmg and being a teacher than
.snyon•· dsc 1n I he phys1~:. departnttnt Th~ 1s why I
c.:annul understand how then~ c.:otn be -.tl rnud1
oppo~rtlon to tht· grantmg 11f tenure
I fa~t atlendcd rhe llnrvl.'r,IIY as~ freshman \Ill
years ago Upon rcturnrng from thr servu.. e ldSt
l&gt;Cm~ter, I found thul I he fre~hman Physrc.:s lab:. arc
JUSt as roorly run and equtpped now as they were
befure my le.av1n&amp; The ..ame would be true for the
sophomore lab!&gt; wctt: 11 nut lor PmL ReiChert . Ue
ha~ tnvested mul.h ul Ius own free t1mc: dunng the
summer, wathout pay, to make t he lab what 11 1s now
a rnudcrn, '&gt;uphl,lltated , rnterestrng and
W()rthwlule i,ICIIVIIY
A professor who l.'atcs abour thr wc:llarc and
lear nang ul hiS !&gt;tudcnts r~ rurc tndeed, no one 1n the
re~·en t h1story of the Ph ysr~11 Department ha) takt•n
the 111\entrvc nor Nhnw n lire mtere~t thai Ill' h;u.. II

ANY telH;her de)erves tenutc, Prof Reichert does
HI.' 1:1 very mtercslec..l Jnd get~ ~x~.ated about tus
suhJec.:t , thereby promoltn&amp; tnt~rcst, InquiSitiveness
and motlvahon tn hiS class
It ts through the contnbullng ~efforts of Prof.
Re1c.:hcrl that the rell ~otor remlllns open, despite
cfrorb In abandon rl He wa.s also mstrumental in
ac.:qumna reactor pnv1tege£ for second year Physi1.'S
students, whtt:h u. a f1NI
I he freshman Phys11."S labs are w tnfcnor that
Jhc:y arc: ~rblc for some SJS,OOO from 1hc Nat1onaJ
SliC:n~;c Foundalton 1 o obtJ&amp;n sudl funds would
lllVc'\lllc the lllgOrl)U!&gt; effort \ Of 3 dCdtcaled profeSSOr
llu: unly person who 1s aggreswit' enough for !&gt;UCh J
t.s\k 11 Prul Rc1~hc:rt
II W.b Or Rerchc:r1 who d1a1rrd thc comrn1t1et'
!hat ,tartec..l the teadl~:t evaluaiiUO sheets 10 thc
t.u. ulty ol s~,·,en\.e llnd Malh C uuttl !hiS be tht'
rc;asnn lot hu. dcnaal•)t tenure''
AI the UnrvcrSIIY kvcl therr: Jrl! too few good
rcscar~· her~ wh("' are co1n.:lden11y good Instructors,
and as Or Kcth:r c:.hums that the Umvcrs1ty desire&amp;
ctfn·rrvl' 1\·ad1c~. It 1S thts students behel that Prof
Rcu:hcrl should he granted a nd1ly JUStified tenure
John II

Raden~

'Tuition rollback'
The Inter Resu.lt:mc I uunc1l 1:. wl)fklng With
Student Assoc1a11on and SASU on the tu1t10n
roUback ctmpatin .,ledge cards stalmg thai the
student wUI not vote for .. leg~slator who does not
support the SASU proposal w1JI be distnbuted m the
dorm1tones today. In order thai these pledge: cards
may be dastnbuted to the appropnate legislators,
lhese cards mttst be turned rn by Tuesday, Marc h 2R

!'lease return tlt~e ~ards tn theIR&lt;. otfu;e by 5 p.m.
I uesday afternoon or drop them tn the boxes set up
for coUI'cllon at Goodyear, Clement and Tower
desks by Tuesday nrght
Your
1mpero~llvt'

p.utt l iP.IIto n rn tllle c.:amp8lgn
11 we are to Influence rhe leglSiature

l'rn1thnr. lnh't

1~

Gary Cohn
Cnundl

Rt&gt;srdtn~l'

A tack attacks
7il thr f:dltor
A peculiar artrde appeared an The Spectrum of
Monday. March 20 An unabashed, self ·righteous,
urstandang Paul Kurtz stood up for academic
freedom To what purpose
why had he chosen this
ume to rttl at somc unnamed "others'' who would
seek to undermtnc: our rights?
Unbeknownst to the casual audience, a tack had
been planted on Kurtz's seat. This sharp attack
appeared an the form of a leaflet which assailed
UCRA m aeneral, Kurt z m particular, for their
oompllcity m the Angela Davts frameup and anti.Jeft

d-.IIVILY on thl' ~llmpus The text or the leaflet,
wntten by the Buffalo lahor Committee and
co-signed by the Angela Davt\ Defense Committee,
Peuple's News Scrv11.:c and U .B.S.D .S., should be
printed 1n th1s Jisue, as we demand our "simple,
academac nght of rreedom of speech ," and because
Dr Kurtz looks so sally standrng th~o·rc )ht,llt lng at no
discernible adversary. Therefore, we intend to make
oursetve~ quite apparent as a most carable opponent
of Kurtz and UCRA 's other members on this
campus.

Buffalo Labor Committu

Monday , 27 March 1972 'The Spectrum . Paqe seven

�Richard Harris: lack of singing
voice is replaced with emotion
Dear Mom ,
I know you wul be glad to hear
that I am learntng a great deal
whtle I am at school. ThiS week I
am learnmg how to be a ~:oncert
reviwe r. It's really neat.
They sent me to sec Richard
llarns. Mom No no t George
Harns' son. Yo u remember. The
guy wh o played tn Camel lot , a
mov1e a b o ut a used camel
sales man . He also played a Man
Called Horse. StUY name fo r a
man, d o n ' t you thmk .
Anyhow I went to see Mr.
Hams at Kleinhan's (bo th a men's
clothing store and a must c hall ) on
Wednesday mght And d tg this,
Mo m . They gave me tw o lt\:k ets.
I dtdn't have a date and I don't
kn o w any gtrls so I W.l.S in a
quandry . Fmally, I called the
in s tant tomputer Matc h
Company and hlld them arrange a
dat e for me Mr) Fo gelhetmer,
who runs the ~crvtte says I gave
her a hard ltme bu t I d on't tlunk
~0

Ynu k nnw how I h.kc exot tc
tme1gn 1 ypt• nf g~rls wtth dark
comple~ wns'! WeU. l asked for
one of them. But I know you like
me to go out wtth J e wish g~rls , so
I al~o ~hecked a bo'&lt; for that Mrs.
Fogelhetmer was enraged and satd
~he d1dn't thtn k they would he
o1ble to ftnd o~n yone lor me
But finally .11 7 JO ( the .:om:ert
was at !! ) someone rang my
doorbell 1 here ~ h e wa' ConsueiJ
(}o ldsteln
After a ~rfumtury k•~s tu
(. o nsuela '&gt; hrtght red hp~ we
t:a xtcd d o v. n tnt he .on~~rt
Cult worship
Ru;hard Hdr nS IS the hero of
.:ull worshtp (ho w ' ' that fo r d
l&lt;"ad, Mom ) Thuc W &lt;'rl" more
than 1000 members of the over
20 ~rowd (tntcllcdu.JI' young
lovers Consuela Jnd my)t:IJ , hand
tn hand) There were dn Oth er JOO
.tssorted peoplt' between the age'
o f lO and bO And ten wnrnen
over 75 brought 111 fruut the:
S had y Rest ll ume 10 La 1. k.Jwanna
After ~n nt&lt;' lut : le
hltl
1 ha n l..t tdly l'lnd &lt;Jitcmpt~ at
hum or I•}
W"-BW '
I&gt;J O
Nc:aventh the
hcgan
f o llowmg d f&lt;tnlo~rr hy th e 30
o n-stage mu'\1~1ans the ltgh t ~ wnct
out and ~ceno.:\ from l am elot
fla~hed On a &lt;;.;rec n
[ hi\ IS lh t:
mov1e m wht.;h ll arm artfuJly
p ori rd y) K tng. Arthur
And

ain't Ht:avy, because be's in an
aluminum casket ," the affec t was
more co mic. Even Consuela
laughed mto her beard .
Luckily Harris ma.kes up for his
lack o f Hinaing voice with an went
out and scenes from C am elot
flash ed on a screen . Thi~ 1S the
And Rtchard has a lo t o f
energy too He has an unusual
style this bit o f dialogue? " Wha t
would you d o if your camel threw
a shoe .audien ce. Other times he
bends his torso and fa ces in the
o ppostte direc tio n . He finished
o n e snng with a backward s
so mersault. That's not too sho wy ,
lS 11. Mom"
Harn!&gt; lS a fair poet. He rt&lt;ad
several o f hts " h appy poems" one
about .. bhnd gJrl ; another abuut
ht~ luther's death , 311d J thtrd
about a vegetable Whl ~'h types
novels flettuce not make any
jOk ~ UI:'I \ IUt thiS).
1-'or u ftnaJe, Hams dtd hts
performe~nte o f an dlwdy~ populdr
Jtm Wcbh \on " Mac Art h ur Park "
(no 1t~ nc&gt;t about sp1ders ) He d oc'
th•~ pretty wdl. Or dt lea~t thl·
nudten ce thought so. They gave
lum an instant standmg o vntton,
even before the band played the
Uncanny presen~
llnal nott: of the so ng.
ll arr1~·
't.tgc pre&lt;;ence ts
The b.md then swt h:hcd mt o o1
un~:anny Il l.' ~·ontrols not only the_
o~udte n ~e hul
the mu'itCtans as J3llter v.er.;ton of th e ~ong c~nd
ll arm Ju mped mto the Judte n&lt;..e
well In the rntddle of ht~ second
to VISit " h1s peo pk" ThiS was a
&lt;oo ng, mud1 to the c. hagnn of th e
rather ~cda te crowd so tnstead of
m us1c1ans . he ord er ed them to
nppmg o ff hts tux edo or neck ti e,
sto p th e mustl It 'ieems h e had
they pullled ort h•~ no'&gt;e und
forgotten to say "good eve mng"
eycbrc&gt;W'l
tu ht\ aud1cn ..e
It wa,, tn d ecd an cverung lor
ti Jrrts ' ' " g '
~ongs
young lovers
Every cou ple
Un fortuno~tdy he IS not f-r an k
'ccmed en tangl ed in thetr scats at
Smat ra r om J ones, or E- nglehert
the end t)f the co ncert Consuela
llumpcrdmk tH l)mky Moore
was very ·sexually aroused She got
Wh o'!. Dmky Moore" Yes
Harns ts no t o ne ru r soft and arrest ed l[or exposmg her armptt &lt;;
tn a pubh &lt;. place.
~exy Stngulg. lft S VOICI: l'O IIICS J C:tO ,
Hope you and the &lt;lid man arc
Moru ). There were mo re than
1000 members o l the o ver 20 f eehng well after the lemon
crowd fi ts rendtiiCJn o f " Nobody'~ cullap~ed on you. See you '\OOn
Gonna Rarn on My Parade' (made
I o11t',
fdrttOU!&gt; hy ho th 8oHbra Stretsand
Curl
an d Ma yor Lmdsay) was qtule
P S Cuusuela and 1 arc gett1ng
~un:es~fu l However wh en he sa ng
maried Sa tu r da y at l rvtng's
the Pullh ca r~r's th eme ~o ntz
" He
Kosher f otl'O Palace.
remember this bit of dialogue?
" What would you do if your
camel th re a shoe a mile out of
town, Kmg Arthur?" " Why, I'd
waJk a camel for a mile."
More fanfare and then Hams
waltzed out on to stage. Wearing a
co nservatively expensive tuxedo
and bow tie. Blo nde and brown
hatr and beard . He still looked
mo re like a drunk from Ltmerick
than a world renowned dramatic
perfo rmer. And while we are o n
the subject o f li m encks, here's
o ne : There was a lady in York
who accid en tally swallowed a
cork. She didn ' t feel well and it
began to swell So ten men left
the ctty o f York
Otd I mention the httle btl of
excitement'' Well , rememb er those
ten ladies fru m th e S h ady Rest
Ho me? As soon as Harris appeared
o n stage , they all dro pped d ead
from masstve coronary embolisms.
A dodor was paged and he ran
over to them at the same tame as
Mrs Goldberg. "Gtve them some
ch u.ken 'ioup." Mrs Goldberg
sa•d "But 1! couldn't help them
They' re dead .'' " I t co uldn ' t hurt "

'"'I"'

A U T 0 and C Y C L E

More for motorcycles

No-fault insurance plan
may decrease premiums
The no-fault insurance plans problem on the fact that the
which are likely to b e passed later no-fault plan is trying to "saddle
this year by the New York State bike rider!! with an msurance pla11
Legislature may bring ca r designed to service 3110ther type
insurance costs down a great d eal , of vehicle.'' The agency urges all
but for m otorcycle drivers the interested Citizens to immediately
voice their objections with thetr
cost could be tremendous.
If the bill passes in its present local state assemblymen.
form, according to the Cycle
In anothe1 respo nse to the bill ,
Insura n c e Service Company,
Phillip H. Magner Jr ., president o f
motorcycle Insurance will increase
the Erie C(l unty Bar Association ,
by about 600%.
also attacked the plan as costly to
In a re port recently sent to its those drivers ' 'Who w11l be forced
clientele, a cycle insurance agency
tu pay costly colltsio n insurance
wa rned ahuut the effects of the
which wo ulc.l actually 1ncrease th e
h•ll . claamtng that its passage overall co~l o f compulsory aut o
co uld fo rce a present $300
insurance.
insurance policy up to $1800. The
I n Mas~J dlllselles , which ha~
repmt also called tlte plan an
attempt lo "destroy m otorcycling an insurance plan samilar to the
ami the m otorcycling busmess m ,one p H'\cll tly he fore the
New Yo rk State. This increase ts Legislature. nvcrall m~urance rates
clcJrly more than most of u s can have actu all} CJscn " Mt. MacKa)' ,
pay . In fact, tnsurancc will then firs t Jeput } supermtcndent of
cost more than the machmes th ey insurance 1!11 New York State.
went un "' say that the bill
insure
authored In th e New YMk State
Bar Assn( 10 I ton
which was
Voice objections
de
feated
e.ulu:
r
b
y
the
senat e\
The report went on to pred•c t
msurance
corn•n•ttec,
was
the
b est
that 1f "no·fault passes m i t ~&gt;
present form, mutorcycles wall be plan available, and urged Its
banned front th e roads." Cycle passage as a re placem en t for the
In surance. I n c
blames the now-pending pro posal

UUAB - is looking for people interested in the
following executive positions:
President - Director
Program Director
Director of Human Resources
Treasurer
Anyone interested, please apply 261 Norton.

Interested in FREE Stttdent
Medical &amp; Dental Service

find

out

355
Norton

Sub Board I , is inlert"&gt;ted in sp on~o aing a commitlee to
'tudy th~· fca~ihility of free .!.tudent medical and d enta l servic~ .

I NSU R A NC E

IMMEDIATE FS·J

Regardless of age or record
Low down

Medi~·al and Dental s tudents are especially needed , but

anyone tnlerest c d
or &lt;.'a ii1U 1-SSOl.

-

leave

yo ur

namt&gt; in Room 2 14

Norton

ffall

8

University
Union
activities
board

--

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present

The UUAB Dance
Arts Committee

presents

$2.00 for general public

Monday, Room 231 Norton
10 :30 - 12 :00: Voice and Movement
2:00 - 3:00 : Technioue master class
Classes are free and

to

1 :30 P.M.
ICielll'lh.,." M ...rc

HE MERLE liSTER DANCE COMPANY
Tuesday, March 28 at 8:30p.m.
at
The Studio Aren• Theatre

T1ckets: $1.00 for students

S.t., ~Ill ,
Ha~ l

Ftocv s s-s•
Balcony $4-Sl

M~ttn

,,,,,. Ap.il 7, 7 P.M.
Hill

Kle:t~h•n• Mu1'c
Mal~•

Floot S5.50-S4.SO
ll.iconv $4 $0-$4.00

s.t... ~~ I , I P.M.
Me•Mftll A!NiiterlUIII
S~•. 50-S4. 50-14

00

All ..... ~

LILY TOMLIN
SMOKEY ROBINSON
STAR OF "LAUIH·II"

liD THE MIRACLES

EMERSON, LAKE &amp; PALMER

�Problems of life

Meditation a 'macro-solt1tioti
''We find that the solutions in
one field of life may solve a
problem in that field while
creatin&amp; ten new problems in
other fields . What is needed is a
macro-sol uti o n to the
ma c ro-problem
and
tru nscendent al meditation is that
macro-colution ," accorchng t o
J erry Jarvis, national direc tor of
the Students' I oternational
Meditation Society.
Througho ut man 's hutory, he
has been searching for ways to
rea c h higher l evels o f
consciousness. Can trRnscendental
meditation serve as th e
" ma c r o-so lution" t o life's
pressures by expandmg o n e's
ahility to reac h the source of hiS
thought?
MiJte Love and AI Jardm o f th e
B~ach Boys he ld a diSCUSSIOn o n
trunscendental meditation as a
practical method o f increasing th e
capability of the m ind to learn
and absorb.
A warm feeling filled th e room

as the taU, blond-bearded Mike
Love aot up to speak ab o ut
meditation. "It is such an easy
natural metho d by which we can
gain deep. deep rest in this day o f
tensions. It's very easy. like
learning to surf," said Mr. Love
with a &amp;rin.
AI Jardin spo ke o r ho w
1 ra n scendental
meditation not
o nly can o ffer peace on an
individual level but also on the
wor1d sca.le. Antithetical to the
w e ll kn own d omino th eory,
transcend ental meditation co uld
work to JOin each individual's
"peace" with another's.
Just recently , AI Jardin ar1d
Mike Love returned from a
tea cher.&gt; training program wrth
M aharrslu Mahe s h Yop rn
Mallorca, Spain . With them were
1800 o ther people stud yrng with
the Maharis hr to become teach ers,
Scientific research has proven
that tra nscend ental med itation
slowb up the metabolic processes
to an even greater exten t than

wouJd an equal period of sleep.
While meditating, o ne ex~riences
a decrease tn oxygen consumption
and h ea rt rate. The psysiological
eff e cts o f transcendelnal
meditation may have t he potential
t o eventually be put t o practical
use.
Though bo th a physiologicaJ
and mech anrcal technique used to
enric h all aspe c t s o r an
rndividual's life, transt.~ndcntal
meditatton does not Lake on the
rel.rgious aura as some o ther form s
of m e ditati on . For m ore
information on transcendental
meditation contact the Students'
lntematro nal Med ita tion Society
Transcend ental meditation IS a
method hy whr ch we can reach
ou• ruu potential in everyday hfe
according to th e society " An yone
who can think, can meditate. You
huve to contact that inner source
o f c r eat iv e i nteUigence. It ',;
invaluable fo r a student or a
h o usewife or a doctor or a rock
star," smiled Mr. Love.

Loss of track stars threatened
by Bruce Engd
Sp«rrum Staff Writ"
f "dtwr I nl)(e Thiltl rht' lt:C'Ond arttdt' of a two part
ft'rtt'1 (Jtl rhe Buffalo 1/flrsi(V frac:lc team .

harher t hiS year senJOr Tom Pauluccr set the
'~hool record in the sh o t put with a throw of SO
feet , three inches Paulucci, last year·~ state
drampron, was throwtn&amp; quite well and had won
several to urnaments rn the indoor cJrCull, when
&lt;uddenly he was ruled ineligible.
Ovem1ght the t eam's b rgge.st st ar became the
tc:.rm's b tggest questron mark and the questron of
wheth er Tom can compete or not this spnng rs sttll
to be l.letermined Wheth er o r n ot Paolucci's
3l·cademrc ineligibility. whkh is connected with
reg~s tra1 1on problems, can be fixed rs anybody's
gue~ .11 lht.S p01nt
I he loss of Paulucc1 rs great 1ndeed but the
wnght events are still generally st rong even Without
hrrn Murk Reger and Don Van Deuson , reserve
center on the basketball team, wrll h ave to spread
th\'11 tale11ls over the three th rows - shot put , drsnrs
JIIU pvelin .
Th e stro ngest of these for the Bulls rs the Javehn
11. h 1•re
Reger plac.:t'd second rn the ~late
dl.tlllJliOnsh ips !liSt season wt th a throw of 174 feet
ll ow~v~r . Van Deuson IS JU~t as gool.l , a~ they look
turn~ heali ng each other 1n Buffal o'~ dual meet ~ l11~t
Year
Hn~

Both throw the dtSlUS rn the 130 foot r:tngc so
promrses t o be another strong event (or the

TUTORING AND GUIDANCE.s
Stt.ICE1938
~

GRE

tlr't

pltH'l'' a~ pn•~i hlt'

cJ.

Barber Shop
across from Goodyear in the
University Plaza

• Ln10n ~ehedule een be tailored to
m"t lndwiduel..-ja. l..ont

v-.

cen be~ ~,. • l)ef'iod of
or for

of town students, a peJood

of ontwwtt
• ()pportvnity for,..,.

Hrgh Jum per Phil Oortman has gone SI X ft'et
Soph o m o re sp n nter Jerry Wrlhams wrll d o uble 111 the
long JUmp and can go about 2 I feet Pnlc vaulter
Paul Gressel has done 12 feet sr ~t inches hut tha t was
a lo ng ti m e ago Gressel, four years nut n f htgh
&lt;;j,. h ool, has JUSt returned fro m the servtce
Buffalo' s runners will dcfrnrtcly hav~: to pt'rtorm
well for the Bulls to \VIII , r~..r wrth Cll Without
Pauluct1 the Blue can do hll l~ bcller than break cvcu
in the fidd events Sheer numhers cann nl make up
for Buffalo's lack of ta lent '" ~ome areas
Ag1unst th e w eaker tcurns the BuliN lan SfHI'Jd
out th e1r t a lented pnformcr.&gt;, people like Hcrru ,
Mc{'lurktn and Reger and gel hr.&gt;t plate:. out ul
them , 11lthough their perforrnan~..es may he w ca ~
from srmply dlmtt too muc h rn o ne meet ll o wevtr,
aga10st the hetter teams, thcs~ w ea~ cr performantc~
wlll nto wtn so the Bulls wtiJ be for ted to lcJve I herr
hetter co mpelltors rn the1r Ypcl'ialtres for a~ rrlJ"Y

CHART~IE'S

• Pr~ion for t..u rwquw-.d for
l!dmlaion to .,.tu.'- and prOf ...
110rel chool$
• She end twelve - o n OOUf'lft
• Smell groupi
•vo1umlooua rYWUrlal for home nudv
prepered by expens in e.ch field

OU t

Buffa lo's strencth rn th e werght~ w1ll prob31lly
not be enough to compensate for the Bulls
weaknesses in the JUmps and pole va ult . The loS~&lt; of
Do n T olbert, another in ehg~ble star w11l be severe
The Bulls field no expenen~..~d tnp le JU mper. and
o nly one experienced man 1n each of the other
JUmpi nK events

ce,sore

MCAT- OAT
LSAT-ATGSB

- e t mOnth&amp; toe

BuUs. Additionally, Reger has throw n the 'hol 4 3
feet. a far cry from Paulucct's SO but stall good
t:trough to take erther Ont or second in mo:~t meet~
Freshman Milte Corbett also hu the potenttal to
score tn the sh ot.

'*'*

LONG HAIR SPECIALIST
BEARD TRIMMING

w..lcenck - .......kMw
s..m.n. S_.Dill
.TANUY H. KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTO.

album. 1t may be indicative of the
American pub!Jc's taste that sales
of HetJdk~eper are far more bnsk
than any of his previous albumL

Hauntingly beauCifuJ
SrufHng from a surpnsmgly
good version of Elmore James'
~ou st My Blues" to his own
music, Mason shook the audience
with an exquisite version of
"World in Changes. " Playing an
amplified acoustic 12-string and
singing softly. the entire crowd sat
quietly enthralled. Later, he
achieved the sam e effect wilh a
hauntingly beautiful "Sad and
Deep as You."
The room in Buff S t ate's
s tud ent union was jammed
beyond c apacrty, but the
ambience of the crowd w as such
that the usual p ushmg and shoving
w as replaced by lundness and
con sid eratron. ll was a good night
for reaffirming on e's faith rn
humantty .

Mason l&lt;ll&gt;k off dunng the lut
half of hts set, slowly buildmg to
h is gurtar masterprece "Look at
You, Look at Me ·• He has a
t n c d ency to m ake internal
changes in the st ructure of his old
songs and the insertton of a
driving. soaung bndge on
"Shouldn't Have Took More than
You Gave" showed htm at rus
tm provisatio nal best Also of note
~as a long jaZ7·influenced coda to
Keyboa rd man Mark Jordan. ''Only Yo u Know and I Know "
featured o n Masun'" latest album ,
rs lar m o re than a srdcman.
Humble &amp; gn:at
cngagmg rn cumplcx and dtflicull
Mason ap~ared shocked hy
trade-ofTs and figures with Mason
the
depth of apprcctat toll wrlh
In part icular, Maso n's o ld Traflil
whu:h
each song wJS rece1ved
tunc. "You Can All J u rr r In," was
Allhough
c learl y latrgued , he
spectacularly ttght
played two en~orc:' undoubted
Masnrr played none of the huuyed by a h~rHllrnute standing
SIUdlll C:~ll\
fru m h1S uva tr on hunt .1 ~.wwed tlr:s t
recently releJscu llcadA.ap&lt;'T
refused tu lcavl' A' t11c hglll~
alburn ftc ha ~ sued Blue Thumb came up. lte l..cpt \Jytng "thank
Records for d amages uver the you , Utattk you" and dragged
al bu m's rcle&amp;c, daemrng that tiS himself sluwly lll f the stdge.
rnfert(ll qualtty would rurn hrs ohvu1usly deeply .rllected by hLS
reputallon and career Followmg sensational receptulll Nnt nnly 1s
tnstituttmt ol the surt , he urged he great. but humble .c. well
the pubhc 1101 1\1 buy the album,
The opcrung group, Slad..
hut relented when Rlu e Thumb
Manah.
was pm11 1rt ~ompanson.
thrcatencu rb o wn damage surt
Relying lln 1 eha shcd hlues
Now, mstead of ac ltve warfare
numb c r s and .w ncca~sional
against Blue Thumb, he has urrgJDal, the1r musK 1\ dull and
adopted a po~IIHc of passtvc
un~X~Jttng The~ h•1ast two lead
resistance by sayrng nuthrng about
gurtansts. one ol whom 1s good,
and playing nothtng from the
but
the~r
'&gt;lyle~ neither
com plement nnt .tugmen! each
EXPERIMENTAl PROGRAM
\lther's playtng, hHctng them to
in tfEALTH
engage in flashy displays ol
NEEOS YOU
substance-less lechnrque
Solid rflythm section
He appeared slightly nervous at
the start, launchrng rnto " Pearly
Queen ," but befnre long looked
like ltc'd been fron ti ng a band all
hJS life Througho ut the evenrng,
Ius rhythm sectrort
Lonnie
Tume1 on bas~. R1ck Jaeger un
drums and R ock&lt;l 07Jd7otnu 1111
congas
kept a driv an g pulsattng
bottom to his mu5ic

139 Capen Hall
Monday, 7:30p.m.

20o/o off

(11.. 5 3 1 0

fit~!-'

...... ,........ . . . -

on men's hairpieces

Call

l"'llt-. wn:Jea-

. . . . . .....,......_.,............

ALFA ROMEO
• FERRARI
• MASERATl
Sales • Servic~ • Pal'h

~

..,. ...
---........ u-- 1212)- 5300
flNr.-.~

Dave Mason hu had an
enigmatic career. Seemingly on
the brink o f super-stardom, be has
either changed musical direction
or been bothered with recording
hassles. Despite the confusion o f
his many turbulent changes, one
thing is clear - tus skill as a singer,
writer and guitarist is superb.
Thursday nrght h e treated an
audience at Buffalo State to
perhaps the best concert rn years
Perfonning on his brace of
acoustic and electric six and 12
string guitan, h e brought th e
c rowd farther and farther alon on
his excellent g~utarwork .
Not everyone knows of Dave
Mason , but those who do will t ell
you that he can o utplay any roc k
guitarist on his electric songs or
any folkie d urin g his acousltc
number s
The th1ng whrch
separates Mason fro m th e o the rs,
h owever, IS hts song·wriung firs
Iynes are usually brtlliant and hrs
music Is alwa ys so tasteful that rt
perfec tly complements t he lyrics

I)..A

of~

' - v i e acM 111 rhe
For Information about SJI«' Ial
EASTER CLASSES
CaU
BW Btank
37.031&gt;0
SpecW Com,.ct Cou.- durtnl

I)AY$

~

Dave Mason concert
an excellent success

837-3111

USED CARS

--BOBCOR-Motor Cars, Ltd.

Com1ng ro Nlw Yorlc'!

10% DISCOUNT
Off-..d to feculty &amp; nudents ef
ttle HOTEL lATHAM. 4 E. 28 &amp; .,
off 61tl Awe • .tOO rooms, priwwte
baths. o.ity fatw from $10 tint~e.
$12 doubla. SPECIAl RATES for
eroupa &amp; ·~ ~WYL For
-vatiom
COLLECT

'*t

1974 E~ (Near Bal~y)
8

7350

21 2-MU S-8300

Monday, 27 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Block B baDfluet

Cop-out by CoseO
How would you feel if you
planned a banquet, invited all of
your guests, but had the guest
speaker fail to show up? This may
be the position of the Buffalo
Athletic Depa~ent concerning
the Block B athletic banquet at
the Hea rths tone Manon in
Cheektowaga April I 0.
Originally, plans for the
b~nquet inc lu ded , Stude nt
Athletic Review Board ch airman
Joe AshwaJ introducing former
Buffalo football star Gerry
Philbin , who would in turn act as
master of ceremonies. Then,
Philbin was to introduce
American Broadcasting Company
announcer Howard CoseU, who
was to speak to the audience.
However, last week Cosell's
secre t a ry called Buffalo and
informed assistant athl e tic
Director Bob Deming that CoseU
could not attend because o f tUs
new Monday evening talk show on
ABC . According to Derntng,
CoseU's secretary would not even
give a phone number where Cosell
could be reached. To compound
matters even more, Rick WeUs, of
tbe alumni Golden Bull Fund, and
one of the architects of the
dinner, was out ~f the count ry,
while athletic Director Harry Fritz
was in Houston , Texas for a
conference.

With numerous tickets havina
been sold at S 12.50 per ticket ,
Buffalo may be forced to ~efund
money t o their patrons .
According to Demin, the Bulls
have several options open,
includina movina tbe banquet to
Thursday from its present
Monday date so that CoseU could
fit it into his schedule. Deming
rc:marlted : " If we continue with
our p,.esent Monday date, Gerry
Philbin has told me that he will
personally try to get someone of
Cose U's stature, possibly Joe
Namath.. "
The Block B banquet , which
h onors athletes on Buffalo's
intercollegiate club and intramural
cha m pions, is the sixty-third
an nual edition. Among the awards
to be announced at the dinner are
tbe John N. Bennett basketball
awa rd , the Benjamin Flaster
hockey award, the ECAC Medal
of Merit and the Clifford C.
Furnas Scholar Athlete awards.
With the banquet but two
weeks away, Bob Deming reports
that the Bulls wiJJ make their final
plans tomorrow, hoepfully with
Cosell o r Namath as the featu red
spea ker . Reportedly, former
director of at hletics Jim PeeiJe
would be glad lo s tep in and bail
out the Bulls, as he has done ~o
often in the past .

Zen Macrobiotic Diet
considered dangerous
Recently , the Erie County
Health Department released a
statement concerning the Zen
Macrobiotic Diet. It explained the
danger involved when following
the d iet strictly, and aJso gave
references to the present eating
habits of the Hare Krishna cult . In
addition, the article promoted and
stressed " good eating."
The Zen Macrobiotic Diet
differs from the Hare Krishna
Vedi c Diet in several ways,
although the aims are relatively
the same. Bo th use food to attain
"a state of well being and spiritual
rebirth." However, according to
Dr. Mosher, Erie County Health
Commissioner, the exact opposite
can happen when people limit
their food intake to only foods
prescribed by the diet.
Some of the foods designated
hy the Zen Diet are cereals,
vegetables, soup. animaJ products,
salads and fruits and a few
desserts. Even though this may
sound somewhat balanced, the
percentages of each vary greatly
among the certain categories. The
ideal following of this diet is to
reach the state where one eats
100% cereal. According to Dr.
Mosher this is not the healthiest
way to eat.

A different variety of foods is
eaten on the Hare Krishna diet.
The diet is not organized
according to vitamin or standard
health reasons, but according to
the foods the god Krishna likes.
These followers do not consume
meat, fish or eggs; they eat
basically rice, vegetables, fruit,
milk and most anything sweet.
Where the Hare Krishna diet is
associated with a certain religion,
the macrobiotic diet is not. II
originated from the Japanese
writer and philosopher Georges
Ohsawa, who !laid that "it is what
and how a man eats that
determines his ability to attain
fulftllment."
There have b~n some cases
reported to th e Health
Department where severe illness,
and even death have been caused
by stnct adherence to either of
these diets, primarily the Zen
Macrobiotic one. TI1e reason cited
for this, according to Susan
Grossman , senior public health
nutritionist with the Erie County
Health Department, is that there
is a severe limitation of foods .
For any students considering
to begin eitber the Hare Krishna
or Zen Macrobiotic diets, it is
much better to investigate before
chancing sickness.

BasebaH Bti1fS must hit wen·-~
for another trip to playoffs
Cox, a sopbomore who appeared briefly last season,
will chaJJenge Scime. Gary Kluinski will also be
Biven a shot at the regular catching job.
last season, the baseball Bulls were selected as
The infield appear~ to be almost set. Senior Orv
at-largo team to compete in the NCAA's Distric U Cott, who batted .257 while handling the regular
Playoffs. In order to return to the playoffs tl}is year, fint base job, will almost undoubtedly retain his
the Bulls must hit well enough to win, especially in starting post. Cott was the third ranking BuD regular
in the run producing department last season, driving
their contests against univenity dMsjon teams.
" I feel that one of the keys to ow suc:cess will borne 12 tallies. The ex-vanity basketball guard may
be whether or not we can succeed against our also see some action on the mound this spring.
Similarly entrenched in a regular position is
unjversity division opponents," remarked Bulls head
Coach Bill Monkarsh. "We may, for example, have to shortstop Rick Albert. The West Seneca High School
beat West Virginia twice, wtn four of six on the New gad led all Buffalo regulan with a .418 average and
York road trip and win our two games against 19 RBis last year. He was also named to the second
team District IJ All-Star squad, a major
accomplishment considering the fact that District II
covers practicaUy all of the northeastern sector.
The other infield jobs are not yet sewn up, but
two reserves from last year's team appear to have the
inside track for their respective positions. Jim
Lalayanis, a utility infielder who batted .267 a year
ago. wiJJ probably be tbe opening day second
baseman.
Guy Montour, who hit .444 in nine at-bats
while appearing briefly with the varsity late last
season should win the starting ass•gnmeot at third
base. The aforementioned duo wilJ be pushed by Jim
Marzo and leon DiNardo, with the losers in the
battle for these positions being employed in a tuility
role.
by Dave~
Sp«trum Sttzlf Write

Hittin&amp; outf"tddcn
The outfield features a wide open battle, with
• seven men battling for three regular jobs. Four
outfielders who were used in a regular role return
from a year ago. Tom Matikosh, a senior, heads the
Ust of returnees.
Matikosh topped B"uffalo With three home runs
last season, and was second witb 17 R.Bl 's. However,
Syracuse." Tbe Bulls arc playing as ftne a schedule as he hit only .183, a figure that will probably have to
anyone in the East, facing such squads as St. John's, be Improved if Matikosh is to win the regular job in
Seton Hall and Fairleigh Dickinson on the road, center field. Doug Whelan (.120), Mark Stanko
while West Virgins and Pittsburgh will visit Peelle ( .21 1) and Dennis Murphy ( .133) also return from
last year's squad.
Field.
"We should have a strong pitching staff,"
Joe Piscotty, who hit .250 in a brief appeamce
Monkarsh added. "We should be able to hold our last season, heads the group of newcomers. Two
opponents under four runs, on an average. If we can freshmen , Gary Castine and Jim Zedaro, will aJso be
score five runs per contest. we should be able to in the rumung for the outfield berths. No Buffalo
squad in recen t memory has had three outfielders
succeed."
The second highest batter among Buffalo that hit consistently weU .
regulars last season was catc her Jim Scime. Scime hit
One of the major objectives for the Bulls whtle
.294 while doing an excellent job as the regular tbey are on their Florida trip will doubtless be to
catcher late last season and during the playoffs. find three outfielders who can hit well enough to
Scime figures to be the man to beat, although Gary play every day.

Bill Monkarsh

Beef &amp; Ale House3191 MAIN ST.
fO. 8lec* Sllllllli 01 V8)

(THIS WEEKS SPECIALS) MONDAY, TUESDAY , and WEDNESDAY
(March 27. 28 &amp; 29)

35 /35 NightS

4 p .m . to?

BALLENTINE cans
35C 3for $1
TEQUILA
12 oz.

Holy Week Services
Offe"d by
NEWMAN HALL
Monday-Wednaday.. .at Newman Hill
Messes at8:00 a.m., 12:00 noon, S:OO p.m.
Holy ThWIIday
Good Friday
Easter VlaiJ (Sat.)
Eater Sunday

4:00p.m .
4:00p.m.

7 :30p.m.
8 :30a.m.

--fit

1/tte

Cllntlllkilur
C7ulpel,

ta.-

3~~it·~

1211 MIJin St.

IO:OOa.m.

II :OOa.m .
12:00 llOOD

And more "Suprise Specials"
...................REMEMBER: The Beef &amp; Ale is No. 1 for Lunch!

'

Page ten . The Spectrum . Monday, 27 March 1972

�CLAIIIFIEI
AD I NFOR MAT10N
CLASSIFIEO AOS may be plbced
Monday thru Friday bet w een 9 a.m.
and 4 : 30p. m . et 355 Norton Hall.
THE STU OENT retes of an ad f or one
dliY Is $1.2 5 for the f trSl 15 w o rds and
s .o5 lor each additional word. $1.00
lor uch additional d4y. The deadline
for Monday Is F riday; for Wednesday,
11 ts Monday, and lor F riday, It ts
wednesday b y 4:30pm.
"HE LP WANTEO" ads c.annot
dtscrlmlnate on the buts or sex, color,
creed or n a tional ori gin t o any extent
(t e ., prefe rably 11 still discriminatory).
WANTED
WANTEO: UJeel lO,spMCI bicycle men's. C all C .aron 883.0539.
CO MPUTER OPERATOR - 360/00S
uperlen ced. Night sh ift- 3 :30p. m.
midni ght. Send resume to : Oata
Proceulnu. P .O . Bo x 1086, Buffal o
11240.
BUFFALO Folk
Festival needs
someone w ith a VW bus. Anyone
tnteruted c ell 831 · 5112 from
10. 4 30

LAFAYE~T E
HEIGHTS
APARTMEN TS - 20 min. to ump;a,
Fully furnished, efficiency studio &lt;tnd
stud io su ite liP&amp;rtments. N o lease
reQuired, Hyde Park Blvd . et Lafayette
Ave. - Niagara Falls. C&lt;tll collect
284 · 5711.

CA PEHART stereo, $ 35, firm,
turnt•bte doesn't turn, you fhc It , $75
value (4 mos. old) . Call 831 ·2 857 or
831 · 2692.

A VIRTUAL steal at $200 5
bedrooms wlttl a possible 6 . C "l
837·0302.

FOR SALE: 1970 Triumph S pitfire
AM/FM radio. Excellent condition.
Mal&lt;e offer. 832 ·4079.

THIS IS the p lace you've been
drea ming o f 3 bedrooms for 4
people, 5 min. from . campus. Ava l.,ble
lor summer &lt;tnd n e xt year. Call Mike o r
HOWle at 838·1167, 8.31 2897 .

1969 VOLKSWAGEN , ctea o, new
Pllnt, 45,000 mile s. C all between
8:.30 4:30 897·0751 : 835 ·8636 .

ELMWOOD · SUMMER
and
Etmwooo - Ferry area, 2· bedroom
lurnlsnod apt , on bus line. Pets 0 K .
$200 mo. 885 ·8 100; 8.32 ·7368

FOUR -BEDROOM apartment o il
Bailey, 15·m lnute walk f rom campus.
Furnished , reasonable re nt . Avall&lt;tble
lor summer ancs Sept. Call Shelly
8Joi&amp;.0966

DUAL temperature control FriOidalre
Wather •nd West ingh ouse e lectriC drye r
with tripl e temperature neat contr ol.
Both In e~&gt;cellent working condition.
S 125 for pair. Phone 633,.582

RIOE BOARD

OL!EN 60W Amp 2 spukers Garrard
turntable. Costs S l2!1 n I year
old. U85. C a ll 838,.~07

RIOE NEEOEO to and from N V to o
Leaving anytime alter
E a ster
Thursday Call Larry 8.35·5851

Wil-l- PAY f or someone to take care ol
rat and ktllens 3 - 28 to 4 - 9
83~ 6042.

RIOE WANTED to Ann Arbor or
Detroit on 3/30 or l/31
Call
8 33 7!&gt;71.

r DUCAT ION ReHarch paper wanted •
C:Quat 01)0. Cducatlon, Minority
Education Aroa. W ill pay . Reply 8011
7'.&gt; S pec trum

RIDES NEEDED to l-ouovllle or
C inc innati over East er
Will lhare
e•penses. Call Joyce 834 · 199J

FULL O R part ttme Jobs available wttn
Beslltne Inc. Cell Ar1 886· 2094 or
M oke 83~ 5215 Meetln9S at Executive

ANVONE
NEEDING ri CSo to
WUhlnqton or VIrginia Friday , M.arc11
list, cell Sue 873 · 7953 . Return lnq
April Jtn
Rl DE WANT EO to Colorado en a o f
March
begonntng April Contact
Susan 8 32 · 3494
Share drlvmv,
expensl'l

Rant•d• fnn

J .i'4 A NI G H f
patd noght ty So"
110 90 dancers need ed. Radices, 14 W
c tuppewa. Apply a lter 4 p.m.

APARTMENT F OR RENT
LtnN'l

LIVE

•u•'m''' •te'

1n

a

slum

w•nteCI

Summer

spac•ous.

IJUttiJI!OIS hOUS&lt;' .i' DIOCI&lt;S lrom campus
Own room $ 50/rn onth 8.32·753.3
~II()M

•tt•w••

AV AILABl-E S50 mo. Share
lll)afln )ent wtlh 2 gitJ.s C a H

dllto ~0!&gt;2
1 tiF OR O OM
no use
walkonq
Ot&gt;t a nce t o c •ro•PuS Must rent by Aorll
I t.olll83 8 4 lt&gt;t anytome

I

apt turntsnod, J
l&gt;lo~tt.~ trnno l dn1pus Available lor MaY
.oil II ,., 8 31 0696
n~

4

RIDE NEEOEO desperately f rom
Oonver, Colorado (or anywl\eoe tn
Colorad o ) to Buffalo Anytonoe rr non
April !&gt; 10. Will shara e•penses
pay
lato Call837·4 285.
RIDE NEEOEO , to N .V.C 0 1 Long
Island on Wed. night, March 29 alter
JO p.m. W ill share Ortvtng &amp; e.&lt;oensos
C al l A I 835·6637
RIOE NEEDED to Cor n e ll 11n
ooautrlul d o wntown ltha c.t 'l Wed ,
Aortl 5
ret urn APril 9 or 10 Will
share drtv lng a nd e,.penses C all 8111,
8314139 between 9 a .m and I p m
CA N VOU gtve us a ride to Mram l'
3!29 P&lt;tyaolllty, droveab llo ty l-auttm
or Oeobie 834 1325 .

tl~d•vono

Ull 111ew area) Mollerlport Snetloan
111 ve, f'~C O il ent, well
furn ished
'• ht'OtuOIHS, 11 1 b•th, pnvate basement
w,u, two flnl\h•d tooms Nea1 bustln e
'&gt;llodenh wellome . 838·1081

RIDE WANTED to N 'V C
and/t•t
transportati o n o t luggage. W ill n•v
C all S 11 e11 ey 886 -3204
FOR SALE
F R El. Kll TEN, with sh Ot$, tuukttoo)
tor • gooa nome. C a ll Shelly 834·09bb

SUNY at Rullu/u

S PA CIOUS 3·bedroom ep&lt;t rtment
furniJ!Ied. A•allable May 1 - August
31. Very re.ason&lt;tble. C&lt;tll 1133~523 .

LARGE HOUSE - lots of land, ne&lt;tr
clvll lntlo n tn C larence. S 60 month
W/ O utiliti es. Ava ilable April 1st.
634..4 62 .

LARGE ONE bedroom furn ished
apartmant . M ay - August . 3 blocks
lrom UB cempus. Rent neuotlabte ,
834·9695 .

ROOMMATE wanted (malel. own
room, 5 mtn to campus, S60 month .
833-852oi&amp;.

4-BEOROOM apartment, 3 blocks
from c ampus. Alto single room
avalleble. 80th lor summer only

have a small two-bedroom house. Rent
ts S45 mo. •nd hall \he utilities. C al l
634.0894 . Oebbto .
FEMALE ROOMMA T l wanted . June
to Mdy
Qwn room
furnished,
JO·mlnute walk
M indy o r Karen .
8.31 · 2278
TWO O R thrM roommate&gt; lor apt
F1•e mtn11te walk ftCtn' &lt;ampus C a ll
83 7-4593 altet 1 P rn
ROOMMATES lot \IHnrneo on bly
nouse on Amnerst
Own toom
$50 /m onth tntlud•n~ "''"t•e&gt;
838 · 319 2
TWO
and

ava ll a nl~

ROOMS

elderly

t•dV

nom • ol

111

feQUHIIlU U)tH pJHUOnSh l p

"''"'"'Ct'

\oHO tlf'tl l•lon

Commonwealth l!eote l ,.,cd I '" ''"ned
Heasunabte rent l n11tall M rs z,ee
87.3 ·6632.
ROOMMAT ES Wdtii"U &lt;, epteonoco
Available ' "' 4 T" \lllllf' t ea•tv May
IIIIU August Ma •n-Aonne•st 8 Jt&gt; 8!&gt; 11

20 to ~0 PERCENT oil list pou e
ste•eo s.y-s.tems •nd eQu tOn•et\1 M,. uy
top Quality names. What bt.llld\ uu yvu
wan t• Try me, I might be a ble t u llellJ
Phone 882 ·5344. Ask l or Jell

AOOMM A l £, mat~ 9'"0
tv V\olt ~
'l tuon•
t ufhl\h•d t\0.,,,,,.,,,
Rt&lt;tlonono • no Utoco 88~ 20t&gt;l&gt; alter 6
om
'2 FEMALE. ttnJHHit4t ' t~\ tl~Odi'O tnt
S ept Owu •uunn , ~ 1v~ tUtth_Ht' w• fk tu
campu ' 8Jl I J42

AL MOST NEW sewing noarhonc, !&gt;1119••
tao re mOdel wort h new $300 Woll &lt;~II
for t. 1 75 C all 8 74 493~ octwcu11 •l tJ

TO SU8-LET ) •bedroom apart ment 1
mile from ce.mpu1. Available May Sept . $80 monthly 832 ·9790
SPENDING the summer In Boston•
Sublet • hull• 1 bedroom apartment,
big enou9h l or two M o dern l&lt;ttcnen,
b&lt;tth room, llvt'lQ room ana alcove
Located In '"' aack Bay . Ju11e 1
Aug . 31
O r11y $ 150tmo. Contact
Elayne
Ski Club Office, .318 Norton,
831 ·2 145 lor lurtneo deUIIS, or c;all
l-617 5J6 8876
TVPING
e"peroenced - term papers,
etc 8.3 3 1597
!.-MINUTE walk
3-bedr oom hou~e
available May 15 For 3 or 4 832·.3745
anytime
SUBLE f
A oedt oom •P t
!rom ua
ComptoteiY
lnclud lnQ front porc11
month C all8 37 067 4

FOR JU NE

IH 1 HIGE

\luvo·,

HATU~,,

HOUSE FrtR RENT

"''f'('

VIH r

11

11dOC1\ \Onttu•

t•tn

Mu•f" liJ rC'lt11e
'ltHI

Pit

QUHtU
Wtlllt'CJ ( ilf 1

Happy I 1,,

\t•''

h ' L•""•

yeM'

.. tH t iU1. •Jfl1

l

l lh111~

rth•Y

0114 .

h~vt

'1,:

t Hl11•

Uwu

fllttrH

~J R

h' ' ' ' ' ' ' '

LtiH~tHI

1

1

l't•H•

~-c ao

qataqe C a ll 833·7777

M ODERN
4 bed•oo•n. h arn,\hed
Pallo .
b.ttbecue
Ne••
c.tmpus
Avatlabl&lt;' May IIHU Auqu\1. Ren t
negol!able 8 ),;&gt; 714 J

''' .. ,Jn •et

APA R1 M f'NT

!&gt; m1n

Hnwoe 8J61J~&gt;l.
Larry 834 b!Jh I

Comotetefy

flttHl

c.tnlpvs .

knll

831 3963

c •"

oo

APARTMENTS WANTED
l M I\ l

l

f.eutt'•"lJ"'

N l t l) ....
,,,,.,,., ' '"""' "

lu r ,1ft pu\

Ptt:ll\t' ( •ttl

'I)

h .. l h t"

t ur •rtt

J IUt .. l A

I

dnlJ t.lfl\f!'

t8

c nunUy
838.'//'o

t•
ftol

'tHHhe

tf"'\1

th••

... . u un~·

t\

• ,,u

tr1t'l

Sue

•1'&gt; /I

(; ()Ul' L I

JOE\

ql~UM[.,

1 u

'''Jdt-nh.

I,,.., ·•'

f~(•"nl

*'"d

1• t\Jihlll'\

vet@r.tn!. &amp;J•, 441 J

.tPArlt"~tll

FLY

BU F FALO

'tooclo•ttt

llooji ''

111

''"''.""~ ,.,.,,." J 111e
[)I li lt :0;'/lol

UN£ ' l MAt f
~ ••u

oq;hHtWO ,

tli\l..t' '

,.

,--.wn

TWO

~[IHHIOM

,op.1011"ent

(t'tl

~ftJ,HenH)fl&gt;'.

hut

837 OJ9l t&gt;

')ul ntlH:'

OC)C r()!'l

f"Yt'I'Vftlltt~

I.IOLI'"
l ftt!d l l, I ,,II• t:O,

IERM PAPERS, book rPpwh , t&gt;·.~y\,
Orlgtnat by L.tbra rv Sttent~ 9' "tJ •J.Jt~
stuoent So" 8 7

INTERESTED '" \IUiflQ ' " MunH.It tn,
the Ol ymo•c 9anu~s tl\1\ '\untn·•• ' t u•
•ntormahon, ohunp R J t 4•, 18

HlOSt

(. ,., , th•

yooong d't lvets

11Peded .
1ake

flu

t eHY.

I "•"" vuu

r'""

~•

.tt

MARRill-' ~ QUPt t' dt=\ltt:'\ hJtt!l~hed
nne bedHu)tt
~p.utn1enl
tn UH ate•
beg r nn•ng A.,q,t\t
iBO SilO

8J I 22!&gt;:&gt;

AUTO I NSURANC~

will

tH\I"'"'·•bt,.. t ft nl

lo'• •

'a\1 ano ''"·"
832·02 4 2 .

fin

At~~~

Jehe 11/l ull~

I&lt;NOW WIOit•

l{hliU,

L'~bO•t'

(..all

8J2·t.!&gt;/l

Europe N V C l llflttHn ,.,. .., l Mo~y J 1
Augu!.t 2]. t. J _.,,, ltiiV •1
Au~u\l
23, $ 2 i9 \..CIIlltH' 1\I\)H Mt1111hi1St~U1
'l 1&gt; "'

u Seol

(.d 18JJ ? 2 80
w al'-

p111v•n9 •t VP lor 111or• l APIIJ~I
Till FlAt.
nr ~nVII11n9 ~~·~·I hiPPY
Btrthoav. 1 uve Morv•

FOUND
Qne btacl&lt; leatner totOtl'&gt;
glove
(wnote lur onsod e ) OIIIStde
Spec.toum o lf tce on 3/24 t.laorn on
Soeclrum nlfoce (35!&gt; N or t on H .llll

011 Hertel.

WANTflt

v•UII

""'lluvo "''"'

Augu•t

MI SCElLA NI: OUS

PI 111'1\ll,ft'&lt;A' ·
' .... ,dtU• ,,,.,, . ' \ UI\UI I d .l . ,,
f J1f ' \

v .. .u-. Bttl •t's

SOIUt~ \ttt'14d

M/\R V

S~pt

May

Flunt\hed 4 bed•non• Rea\onable

1..a11 81/ OltJ4

41\U

wa-.tuus ReconO•t•Ouud, Oftllvr•I\•J dftd
qucu ,nteed
t •&amp;G Auplt.Htt v\ , ti.J•\
Sv C•t """ T ..Cil J I&amp; 1

ut

•P'

Furn•shed

ltUifA J-l
new M.t tlln l) 1 0 •• \tfiHCJ
Wltf1 ,.l(ht\~11 t.~~e. lltetnlttl Woltf,ii,IV
~J~U ts~"~ '100 ) 8J.i' IM.-•1

lH

3 blocks
fuontshed,
S55 pet

FOU~ BE DROn M
110\J~l
raP
FIVE 10 nlonule wOih ttl urnpus
Pr Ic e nO Q•&gt;tl~ble M•y I'•
Sept
838 4!&gt; 76

h.Hnl,nttd

p "'

LOST &amp; FOUND

WEDNESDAY , MARCH 29
al 8:00p.m.
233 Norton Hall

SUMM ER ROOMMATE needed lor
nou se near c ampus. Own room and
cheep . Call JO·Ann 834 7980

Jl

M K

Dr . Charles R Pl.tnck

SUB ·LET APARTMENT

2 BEDRO O M turniJ!Ied, 5 -mln .
wall&lt;lng distance , 2 weelu free rent .
Av ailable Mey 10 - Sept. 1. 8 3 4 ·3770.

J

A\kmQ

TYPIN G
experienced
IB M
Sele c tric; , S.oi&amp;O per p age. 838-4808 .

1 NEEO ., roommate by Apr il lSI . I

'61 INT E RNAl lUN A I- v~n
solid
body, tebullt ero9tt•e, 9t8dt tut ~ • oh
\.Ou ntty cA mper or mnvlng V d Shlra D
twin lens retlo• wlttt c ase SoiiC'I "·'"
de&lt;l&lt;
All b6t o ffer , 838 Jlllt&gt; "'
817 8 ,? t&gt;4 ,
'b.)

WE
S P ECIAL IZ E
In utl$lled
customers at Independent Foreign Car
Service, 8 39· 1850. Student discounts ;
lllg savings.

832~571.

OONNAMARtE
tOQI\Iered
etectrotogl51 spec•••• z•nv In the retnov• l
o t unwanted or superlluous n•"
M edically appro•eo
Compllmenury
, unsu1ta11on by app o1111ment
) 4 !&gt; 8978 , 2.33·!&gt;949, Astona, New
Vort.

FORO t.cono·ttne van
S lOO Call B tll 826-4 284

ANTIQUES ana modern fu rniture ,
c eramics, c hina, etc . see Sid at
Yesterday &amp;. Tomorrow Shop. 1439
Hertel Ave.

ROOMMATES WANTED

FEMALE
wanted
to 1hare
two · bedroom
;tp,.,tment on
Maln·J-ett. S 70/mo Call 837 9066

LESS THAN
yr
Old Armanual
turnt•Die W/ du,tcover, $10
Pan~sonlc cartridge, 8 ·track w , slereo,
FM S 60 KIOQSile waterbed , S 25 Call
837·0302 .

onme. but vou·o h.tvP d

!Jt:purtment of Poliuwl Suenc e

FOUND : Key ring be tween Goodyear
and Clement , Monday afternoon. Cell
4055.

J08
RESUMES
or o leutonal,
confidential consultation. Special rate~
lor studenh, recent graduates And
vetera ns. 835-4 4 73.

LflV£.5~.

BANGLADl:.SH REBU ILDS·
THE AMERICAN RESPONSIBILITY

TYPING - business or personal - term
papen , t he ses, mau m ail in gs .
ReMonaote rates . C ell 937~050 .

LOST : C at , no t&lt;tll, fat, grey &lt;tnd wh ite
l-eroy/Brew ster a ree
Marilyn
837.0112. 831 ·2020 Hets much loved
and much missed.

FOR SALE: 2 Elvis llcl&lt;ets , $ 5 50
eacn . 832-4368. Keep trying

PER SONAl

( omef•'

FOUNO: G 8fman Jllepherd , female, 1
year o ld . Call 833·211 9 , Marty .

FOU N D: H ouse l&lt;ey on bl u e
medallion . C alf Pete 833·8055 to
Iden tify and c laim.

GUlLO 12·strlng guitar, '6 "' Fora
Falrlan e, Soars stereo, BSR turntable.
Call 883·088 0 after siK.
'66 VOLKSWAGEN van, new engine,
se t
up
for c&lt;t mp tn g , excellent
condition. C all 816.085 6

TYPING proreuton•tty Clone , electric
typawrners, wilt o.ll.. er , Terrn papen,
research worl&lt; , tAO/ page. 8oi&amp;5..S 7oi&amp;6,
832 •9276 Joanne

FOUND : Pair of bro wn leather gloves
lost bY hltcner to F erry and Oelawere
Monday , Call George 831 · 1124
bet ween 9 &lt;tn d 5 .

PIANO - beautiful uprluht In tune.
8.34 ·2762.

APARTMEN T for 3 or 4 In Kenmore.
Furniture lor ~ale. Call 876· 2226
St &lt;~rllng May 1s1.

DAVT IME babytltter wanted - spring
recess, May and, If poutble. June.
2 year·Oid boy 836· 5129 alter 5 p.m .

START $ 2.00 oer hour satary ptus
oonus Wo rk 4-8 p . m . weel&lt;days: 10·2
o '"
S at ur days. Call 835· 3803 or
TF9 0402

FOR SALE: AMPEG 8 · 12 guitar bass - organ amp , $90 . 881 ·3271.

stlape of a tlectagon est• II08s) , tn a
bled(. ''S terllne Optical" caM . PINSt
return to M
ull Kenny, oi&amp;698
Allenhursl, 832·7084 .

&gt;llt&lt;t41 /"'9 "'

no rh.u Qt- hH -' lC.IOOnU

Of' ttaff1c "'O'-'tiOn\. u•utUidl' t~ FS l,
wve up to S lOO/yoa•. 118 J 00:&gt;2

lAX SERVI CE Or11 y S 3 fur b otll
lcderal and state , all w o ot. 9uaranteed.
683 ·0022 (business reluons o nly S51

-1''"' ,, •

PI-EASt• Nee&lt;l .• budruum apt
lor
72 ·11 nt,oo• 't••r W..ttktng &lt;1tsta"ce
l nos, M1rgaoe1 81 I JR'l~ / 6
OWN HOOM wa nteo lur nt~t yea o lor
t e",dlle
' ' udent
M1at
tl~
wal~lnQ
diStance ftnm UrTtpus l.all 634 5510
o r 837 -4!&gt;93 I'H" 101 Dnnn a
APT WAN1 { 11 lOt t•ll sem'" ter, S I 0
reward. Must De l ·bedroom . Call
837- 1202
TWO ·BEOROOM .r~part m ent (lor twOI
lor M&lt;ty or Sept t..tose lo campu s. C all
831 ·2370, 831 2284 Help

Just returned trorn a ten-day trip Lo
Bangladesh and India , Dr . PlancJ...r Will g1ve a
first -hand account of the obstacles Bangladesh
faces in rebuilding, anp then focus on what
American citizenry and government must do to
prevent anoth er such cycle of human suffering.
Donations to the Emergency Relief Fund for
Bangladesh will be accepted

AppltCllttora for the posotlon of
Ed1tor rn -c:hoef of me Buff11loniMI f ot

the 1972 -73 aatdemoc yNt will be
t.P en unto( M •rch 3 1
APJ)hcettons for Busioea, Layout,
Co p y, Product I on end other
potittons ar• •l•o •vailable in Room

REWARD S 20. We need house or
apart ment beg tnnln !l June or
s eptember Four bedrooms. Wall&lt;tng
dlstenc e 831 ·22!'&gt; 9 /22 61.
FEMALE NEEOS own room starting
May throu9h ne•t year o r will occupy
3 · bedroom dparlment Immediately .
Judy 837 ·2889.
ROOM WANTEO lor ne.t S eptember
withi n wa11&lt;1n9 dtstan c~ 01 ca m pus.
C all P;tt 837-0406

356 N onot\.

Spomored by:
Council on Internat ional Studi~
and
Action Bangladesh

FEMALE WANT S o w n ronn&gt; tn house
with other st uoerH\ lot S eptember .
Call 833·75 11

CALL 831 2505 for funhef infMmetton

HELP!' I We need a 4 bedroom apt. for
Soot HI within walk tn9 dosta nce lrom
campus C a ll Mary , 8)1 4t5l ; Benita.
831·2062 or Amy , 8.)1 239 7
HOUSE OR 2·1a nolly nouu needed lor
eight homeless people Please! Call
8 3 1-345 4 .

Monday , 27 March 1972 . The Spectrum Page eleven

�Sports lnfort"Ntion
Tomonow : Ther. will be a meetlna of the Student
Athlet ic Review Board at 7 p .m . In Room 262 Norton Hall.
Friday : Club Lacrosse season's opener at Brockport
Slate, &lt;4 p. m ., Brockpon, N.Y.
C lub Luroue schedu le : March 3 1 &lt;~I Brockport St;ate;
April 8 ;at Eisenhower Colleae; April 12, N l;apra University ;
Apri l 1 S ;at the Umnnity of Rochester; April 22 at N lapra ;
Mo~y 6 , Monroe Commun ity Col lcae.
Club crew Jchedu le : Ap ril IS, C anlslus, Bu rtal o S t;ate
and Merc;yhurst ; April 22, Wayne State and Canisl us; April
23, Buffalo State, Canlslus and Gr;,.nd Valley State; April 29
at C onnec ticut C olleae Wllh C ;anlslu s, New London , Conn ;
May 6 at t he New York Melro poll tcan C h ampionsh ips; M ay
12·13 .It 1he Phil;adelph lil Dad Vail Chm~plonshlps; hom e
m atches .u t he West S ide R o win&amp; Club at 2 p .m.
Sprin&amp; nrslty aolf schedule : April 2&lt;4 ilt R ocheste r
Tech; April 25 at t h e Universi t y of R ochest er; M•y 3 ~ ~ th e
S U NY Al b any Invitat ion al, S.a ra toaa Springs, N.Y.
fhe annual varsit y baseball southern t o ur begin~
S at u rd ay, A p ril 1 agains t Fa irfield U n iv~ rsi ty at the
University o f Sou th Florid ;a In Tampil, Florid a. T he Bulls
.llso f;ace Fa11fleld on Sunday be fore m eeti na T 01m p a in a
doublehuder on Monday, April I

Announcements
FNS M 222: "COnt roversies In S cience - C onflic t and
Resolt.. Uon" m eets o n Tuesd ays and Thu n cbys at 10 a.m. In
Room 36 2 Acheson Hall. The topic for this week Is: " The
World EnertY Cr lsls - Wil l Civil izat ion Survive It?" VIsi t ors
welcome.
Ac:tlvlsr Youth fM hnel will have elect ions for the five
u eerlna com ml uee posit io ns , toch y .11 8 p.m. 1n R oom 346
N orton
The UB Christian Sc ience Oraanlntlo n m eets eve ry
T uesday at 2 30 p.m. In R oom 266 Norton. You o~re
welcom e to 10ln us.
The UUAB Dance Arts C ommittee presents th e Merle
liste r Dance Comp•ny today In Room 23 1 N orton. A volt.e
and movement clilss will be h eld 10:30 .1 m. - noon .1nd a
tech n ique master do~ss from 2-3:30 p .m.

C, S now 2H, Psych o , hysiQ I Sy,tems, w1ll meet •n
th e wome n's gym~~ 4 p.m. todo~y only.
The Gnduatt S t udent A ssociation w1 ll ho1ve a \PtCI•I
sen41t meeting toniflh l 11 7:30 p.m. In Room 337 Norton .
All seno~tors and o~ltern~te, o~r t ol5ked to .11tend .
G .ay l ib er~uo n Fronll will have o1 meeuna tomc1rrow
at 8 p m . in R oom 26&lt;4 Norton for • diSC.U\Ston or the
budBet and ne"t vur's officers.
C PS 368 , Sl m ulall on G.ames, will meet tomorrow Jl I
p.m. In } ro~ll e r S. All Jrt ~ ~ ed to .a ttend .
C AC E nvironment• ! A ul un CorJK

Will mr~t

tomo11ow

.r 7 JO p m, In Room 140 Norton.
Bison h ..d , the senior men '\ Honor Soc1ety, w•ll be
review Ina co~ndid ates amoo~ lunlo~ nut murll h ~ tudcnts'
~'ademlc records, Un1ver\lty activities o1nd ~um rA uruty
\CrviCt will be lilken Into COO\IdtrdliOn. All thO\C JUntor
men who w1sh to be considered .1re ICt ,onuet tht'
Off&lt;o~mpus Hous1ng offllt 1n Goodyur ll•ll ur ~ •II
1111 1103 Records must be rec r•ved by this ollilt by M.aHh

0

Backpage

0

0

II

Anyone lntne"ecl In wrvina on t h e Uo;ard of Dlre1 tors
th e rece ntly •p provcd Hou,l na Corpontton .t&gt;nuld
conu~t the houSinl( ~nmmillce 1n Room 21!1 N1&gt;rllln 01 ,.111

of

83l·SSOl.
A pl•n nlna mHtlna foo •n e•perimcn " l proa film In
hc;allh w1ll oe htld tod"" oil 7 30 p.m. 1n Roorn IJ9 C •pen
H o~ll. lr 1\ ~n ooponunuy for uco~ltve 1npu1 for c:du~~llon .• l
progr.tms 1n healll1 ,o~rc dtll'terv All mtere\ted vr l\nrh
pleo~sc •llend.
The U nderl(ro~du.ue Med1tal Souety w•ll meet
tomorruw M 8 I~ p,m. 1n R oom 146 01elendurl t&gt;r
ln!otph Gt:xHrey teom doctor tor the Bulfai&lt;J Bill\, W ill
di\CU\\ !..nee lnJ•Hies

I he houstna comm•llee for Sub Bo,.rd I w1 ll ht hold1n11

.a mut tn &amp; Loda\ •• 4 JO p.m 1n R oom 10\ N111wn J\11
member\ o~nd anvunr 1ntrrc-tcd In totn•nr. the lOOHt!lllte
o~re ur11ed to auend
The Graduat e Stu dent II.»Otlilt ion o~nd th~ Gr.. du•te
Anthropolo a y Assoct o~ llon pre~ent • lttlult '"'
·· 1~oge••m•ldH , A. Middle Po~leolllhtc S1lc on th~ North
(uropun Pla1n' by Or I D ~•n dtr Wuls 1.11 the Un1v~r"h
ot (.,ron1ngcn the Netherlo~nd\. A dlscuuton per1od w111
follow the Icc rurc wh11.h w1 ll be held tom orrow •• 1 10 p.m
'" Rc~&lt;m• H. 4242 Rtdgt Lu.
An or11Jniutton.il meetl na to form .1 blcyclf' club will
bt htld todo~v at 8 p.m. 1n Room .234 Norton All thtl\t who
own btl vein and/o r ,,, • l!llcrhttd In d•y Jnd weekend
&lt;Ytl1ng tr1ps, r.allng, b1kt •cpo~.r or ·n~ .l&gt;Pt•t ol &lt;~d1n~
\hould o~ttrnd thl\ metllnlt to form • potent••lly ••lu•blt

Tund•Y. Much 18

Whal's Happtntng?

orgo~n1Hllun

I he School of M•n•ge ment, in conju nction wit h the
Pl u e mtnt ,tnd Co~ ree r Guld&lt;iince O fflc:e, will SJ)00\111 ,,
'Co~tecr
v .. tomorrow 1\ number of tmporUnl comp~n1e~
wtll \Cnd rcprestnUtovt~ to mttl with liiCully o~nd \tudtnls
.. oncern1ng vo~nou• oppor1un111es ,n their rc~pcu•ve tob
markth Detailed \&lt;. hedule s will be av• tlab1e ill I 10 p.m .•u
whtth llmt an mtroductoty meeting will bt held tn tht
Millard fillmore Room . All 4rc urged to illend.

o..

Newm.an Hall will hnld tloly Week serVIle~ "' rhe
on· Holy rhursd~y ill 4 p .m ., Good
rrldo~y ~I 4 p.m ., Holy S~rurday il 7:30p.m.; .and (.ISler
Sund~y .11 8 · lO , I 0 , 11 p.m .and mi&lt;lnls/11
C~nt~lllloln Cho~pel

Art \hUw T[AM c'h1b1110n
l(ro&amp;plm • lrom lh~ I £.1\M
WUik\hop tn Oull.tlo, C! ... m. 5 p.m., lhrou~:h r nddy ,
II• ~ t~ Lobby
F1lm · :,1111/Uttl, I p.rn ~nd R p.m .. Confcrtn&lt;.e Tht•lto
Art show Gro~duo&amp;te student photoaro~phy, lhrou~th f nd.t\
9•m ~pm t 2·10 RidKtlt.l.
Fort11(n him ltsllv.il I u/11 Mon/t), S, 7 .and 11 1&gt; m ,
01elcndorf 14 7
Evtn1ng 101 New Lllcr~turt : l ohn Bo~rth rc.td m)l from
Chrmtru, 8 p m . Alhrtl(ht Knox Art G allery
Con~trl: Gradu•te rcc•ldl
Jeffrey Kowalsk y, pcrcu•s•on ,
li:JO p.m., Ba11d Recllo~l H •ll.
Stmlnoo~r: "The New Yort.. Sure Council of Etonomlc
Adv•se~ Mt»IOn o~nd Obfet~ives" by Or I Robert
Lmdso~y, E&gt;~etullvt Dtreclor of the N ew Yor~ SUit
Council of E1.onom1C Advl&gt;trs, ):jO S p.m., C.r~b y
Room I 14.

Film. \inqlnl/ ttl lltt Rum , .!1rN le•l I&gt;~ G ent' Kell y I p.m.
o~nd I! 11m. C.o~pcn 140
~ nrcign him tr~u~~l 4 nwnw Ou' M mu11. ' . 7 .1nd 9 p.m .•
D•etendurl I 17
I lltdle• Oepo~rt mcnt RepettO I~ l'untuq/tUt . dllectcd by
~diJI [ ll-111, 8 .lO p.m., lt.tmm41t Studio fhe.uer,
Jd"IISSIOn 1.ho1rge.
t.once rt : US (.horus
,ludent Lnnductol'. Jnd
~.nmpo\lllun\ , noon , Ba~rd R•~~••l HAll
Poetry rcadmg· D•v•d lgno~tow , 8 10 p m., Conferen't
Theater , ,ponsored by the UUI\8 Ltter.ory Art~
Commollee
Foil. ddn1.1nll Prnenltd b y )tudenh tur (\lo~el, 8.30- 11
p.m., F•llmore Room
Poetry re.~dlnll : St. louts poet PetN ~tn1pson, ~:30 p.m.,
One-Eyed C.u (28 Bryant Srrcet), sponsored by
Outriders.
Film : fht fast 11 Rl'd, ol revuluuun.try opera·bo~llur fllmed
tn the Pc~ l ng Opera w1ll be show n .at 3 p.m. tn
D1efendorf 148 and it 8 p. m . 1n Achnon S, \ponsored
b-,. the Atilt .a Defense Comm111ce and the Committee
to free Angel~ D.av1s, dono111o1h $ 1
Amy Ahrl'nd

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

V ol. 22, No. 10

friiMv. 24 ~ urn

Sate University of New York n Bufblo

School of Management
establishes independence
by Ron Sandberz
Sp«trum Staff Writer

The Faculty Senate, after a wide-rangina
dasc ussion, approved last Tuesday the
S c hool of Management's request to
withdraw from the Faculty of Social
Sciences and Administration. Other senate
a c tio n included the passmg of the
Acade mic Freedom and Responsibality
C o m mat tee 's rec ommendation tbat
gnevance mec hanisms be established within
certa in admutistrative units and Presadent
Ro bert Ketter's budget and odmwions
polic y talks.
The School of Management's decisao n to
establish its independence and to
subsequenUy reorganize its programs was
made last year, said one spokesman . He
cited three reasons for the shift m
c lass afi c ata o n : I) management as a
pro fessio nal school and fUlds that it must
work cooperatively with other facets o f the
Unaversity outside the scope of social
sctences ; 2) manqement was expenencina
a lack of effectiveness under the auspaces
of the Faculty of Social Sciences ; and 3)
the overall reoraanizatioo of the State
Un' iv e rsity system ne c e ss atates
Manasement 's independence.

l&gt;aoJerous precedeot
Georce HocbJield, a dissenter of
management ' s proposal, argued that
&amp;nnUna management its independence
would set a danaeroU3 precendent. He

contended that many o ther schools and
departments share management's point of
view and might submit similar requests.
President Kette r indicated, ho wever, that
what was being decided upon was
management's request and not its future
ramifications.
The Fac ulty Senate also passed the
Academic Freedo m and Res ponsibility
Committee's pro posal to establis h forums
to hear grievances fro m an y me mbe r o f the
University c ommun1ty . Noel Rose,
chaarman o f the committee e xplamed that
the forum pro posal focuses o n the 1ssue o f
how to maintain the integnty of bo th the
University as well as ats membe rs. In
addition, he said that if the U mve rsity as to
survive, it must operate on the principle of
mutual respect for its me mbers, and must
thereby provide channels thro ugh wluc h
conflicting opinions can be expressed .

Many definitions
John Greenw ood , cx lrrnal vice
pres ident of the Graduate S tudent
Association, opposed Dr Rose, stating that
the recommendahon defines neither the
grievance procedure nor a set of norms. He
continued that the proposal is structured in
such a way as to confuse and undermine
students. Concurring with Mr. Greenwood
was faculty senator Katz who urged that
the proposal include a defined set of
normative disageements and conflicts.
Accordinl to Dr Kat z, " SUI " can be
defined in various ways. In Ucht of thJs

Danxerous precedent ?
argument , the pro posal was accepted w1th
the st1pulataon that the Facult y Senat e
Execut1ve ComrrHttee be charged With
ansunng the "exas tence and accountabaJ1t y "
of these fo rums
The present finan cial c risis was also of
major concern as President Kelter stated
that if the legislature passes the
U niversat y ' s 'u ppl e mentary budge! ,
fundang wUI be restored to at leasl last
year's level
In addition , the tuition
mc rease wall replace some of the funds cut
in the budget. Thas will in tum enable the
reatorataon of many now hindered

The F..:urty SeNrte has ll()provld the
Sc h o ol of Manllfement' s n~qUest to
withdraw from the F..:ulty of Social
Sciences and Administration.
programs and facilities.
With regard t o the Uruvers1ty 's
admission s p o li cy, Prestdent Ketter
indicated that there as lillie, if any ,
difference tn the quality between studenls
coming from the Ei&amp;hth Judicial Distric t
and those c oming from elsewhere.
President Ketter also spoke of the creation
or three separate task forces in the Health
Sciences to consider the reo rganization of
certain programs within that complex, to
examine the possible "undue duplication•·
of c ourses, and to atrenathen and
re-evaluate curricula.

MFCSA sltishes recommended-budget
by lao C. DeWaal
Speurum Staff Writer

Slashang o ver $4000 fro m a
tl udge t fl!co mmended by lhe
~xecullve commi ttee, the Millard
F 1llm o re Co lleg e Stud e nt
AssociatiOn's (M FCSA) general
rnembersh1p a pproved their spring
1972 budget last Tuesday evening.
Le ft intact was a 60% reduction in
the MFCSA contribulion to Sub
Board I l oc:. as compared with

It is done ...

th e co ntributi o n made last
semetter. MFCSA will contribute
$ 5 00 7 9 7 to Sub Board as
o pposed to last year'5 S I 0 ,400
The meetang o pened w1th the
ann o un c ement that Pres1dent
Brad Ro berts wo uld be unable to
attend the meeting and tha t the
chair wo uld bt: fiUed by J une
Crawfo rd , vice president. After a
letter addressed to M FCSA fro m
Paul Cumming, chairman of Sub
Board 1, Inc.. protesting the

M FCSA Vice Pr.ident June
Cra wford p ~ CMif' last
Tuelday's ...,... membeuh ip

m.tlnt ..... ....

~Print 1972
buclpt • • IIPPf'OVId. George
Kraus Is tM Financial Committee

c:hainMn.

pro posed cut in the Su b Board
allocat iO n was read , chnllcnges
arose o ver the procedu re~ fo r
adm1tt1ng MF&lt;" ~ rudc n ts l(• the
rnee tmg

No ID's
Ro ger lturltlu t Lb.mm..tn ol
the Jud 1c1al C'omn utlcc, h..til ht'c n
rt:fus1ng ad mitt ance tu \ l lllltnh
wit ho ut pro pe r 1denttf1 ra t ro n a\
ntght students. It w a~ P•)rn ted out
that me rnb ef"\ of the Ou'\1 11 1."\~
Prater nll )l were a llllwed 11110 till'
mom wit hout In l a rd'. wll1lc
o ther \tUt.knh ulcn l dlcll "" w~h
hy C'ltl'~utrvc Lllii)Dllt tn• llll'lllhl'l'
wert: uuueu ..tllrrllllJihl' M'
Crawford ttn'&gt;Wl"rt·d lh" wtlh lht·
fa d lh..tl .s per.,on l.. now rr hoth tu
her,elf ..tml Mr
ll urlhul WJ\
refu.;ed cn tran t t' lor IJ L I. ol
pmper acJ e nllab
Aft e r I ~ m tn Uil'' nf hL·at~:\1
dt~~ u~s10n , the Ch.111 .•nn .tu nLeu
that " what IS unne, I' uclne " .IIIU
()lat d lliL&gt;(C COI\ \l'ICII IIIIU\ d fort
wo ulu he made to mf orr11 m~h l
s t u d e n t s
,, r
1 h 1 '
constllut tonally·manu..ttcd , rtl••na
fo r ad ntlltant.e to mec:ttn~.,
The teller from M r ('um nung
addressed 1tself to the pm po,ed
red u c tt o n o r s u ppon fro lll
MFCSA fo r Sub Board I, ln~: . Mr.
Cumming felt that a comm itm ent
had bee n mad e fo r the ~ urn of
S 10,400 for bo th the fall and
spring semesters stnce S ub Board
operates on a yearly budget . and
finan ci al and contra c tual
commitments fo r this tame span
had alread y been made. Mr.
C umming c harged that a
reduc tion o f support m lhe
middle of the schoo l year wo uld
lend c redence to the accusation or

" frscal mismanage me nt by s tudent
go vernments."
(;eorge Kra uss, ~:haHman of the
Fanance Committee, argued " I
was neve r to ld that we were
expected tu contn hute S 10.400
set.o nd semes t er · • U c also
t:on t1nuall y em pha.~11 e d the fact
thai he had a tt e nded eve ry Su b
Boa rd mcct1ng sance the s ummer
lie further s tat ed t hat 1f tl wa' up
1o htm . the pwposal wo uld
provtdc fo r a cnnt ri hullon o f S .!\ 0
a s l u u c nt
rat h c:r t hun t hc
propose d rcd ur11on I &lt;• \ I " 1 ,..,f
\CIIIt."'t•·r MH ~/\ •lllllrrh utcd s ~
per \IU UCIII
J o~Lk
ll un t tll~
MI &lt;SA
reprC\&lt;'nl.tiiYC to Suh llu.trd .and
Lha 1r ma11 ol the Ml C'Si\ Suh
lio..trd C'ommiii\'C, p!llntt•d nul
tltdl Suh ti &lt;lolrcl ha' t: ontra.:tuo~ l
l'!IDIII11l llll' ll h I h.tl were nt Jdl'
~" nl r n ~~,&gt;n t o n prntcrtcd tnco mc
.1nd that 1111~ ~ h o uld he r ardull y
wc1ghcu when Lnm1dcnng o nl y
red ul l mn.
I ht\ wa' t. hallenl(t'd by M r
K rau~ who c1.111ned tba l m~t
, audents l11dn'1 U'o&lt;: S ub l:toard
J t.ltVlltes and o;erv1ccs I n addt tro n ,
he mamtamed that mgh t st udents
ha ve d1ffe re nt needs and desHes
than those o f da y o r graduate
students. Ht: furthe r c harged that
I h e Student Assocaat1o n and
C ra d uate Stude nt Association
co ntroUed Sub Board . "M Ff'
sho uld be part of the total
University c ommunity ,"
andswered Mr. Bunting. " Our
participatio n in Sub Board as
totaUy voluntary and we could
withdraw at any time."

Good deal
AI th..ts point, the budaet was

co n s idered i n o rder of its
presentallo n. Ite ms reduced m the
budge t included mimeograplling,
.:o rfe e fo r weekl y mectmgs,
pub ltt 1t y, new ~ l ette r s a nd
exec ut iv e comrru llee o~ w ards.
Other tlcms su.:h as confere nces
whH: h had heen patd fro m las t
se meste r's bud ge t were de le ted an
an unclear acco untmg move Whlch
transferred the m to the previo us
se me ~&gt; t er · ~
de li t:~ t
hne (even
t ho ugh lh1~ li ne had supposedly
tnduded .all out~t a nd1ng bill!&gt; )
I he f1nal It em fo r de b.t te was
the ..ttl u .al a moun t t o h e
tro~n, f errcd to &lt;\ub Board for the
~pn ng ..crncster Mr Kra uss o n \.e
a~1n
emphasi£Cd has spotless
o~ ll e nu.anc..c re\.t.Hd Board rneeungs
o~nd ch.al lru11t h1' e'ltpenence at
..tprca rcd lh..tl t he Board was
dorrunatc:d hy Chl' grJ Jua te and
uncl c q;radual e s tud ct1 1 ~
ll o w evn , M r
B u nlang
re manded me m ber~ o f the many
serv1ccs prov1deu hy S uh Board to
th e n 1ght st uden ts eating a
readership survey which ind icated
that more n1ght S&lt;:hool students
read The Spt&gt;ctrum than th e
M1dm gh t 0 1l , the rught school
p.t p er
F ra n k Sc hubaue r, a
m e m ber o f the e xec utave
committee, outlaned these scrvtces
in depth after an unsuccessful
attempt to have the allocation
increased by $3000.
Before the ratifying vote which
approved the $5007.97 allocation,
an unidenWied student asked
what the day school contributed
to Sub Board. When told the
amount was $ 240,000 be stated
that MFC was gettina a good deal
for its money and should approve
the allocation. It did .

�offieial bulletin

Underanduate students should update their student data forma
xtartin&amp; April 10. accordina to the schedule below. {Note : The time
o ne turns in the data form will ha11e no buring on the time of
regtstrataon.)
Accurate data is essential for a trouble-free registration. The
w rrect Listing of a student's mlijor and class can mean the differen ce
between aaood schedule and a disutrous o ne.
Information on the rqistration prooess will be handed to
students as they oome in to updat e the data forms in DU:fendorf
Receptio n Area.
April 10
A - L Seniors
M- Z
II

12
13
14
17
18
19
20
:!I
:!4

25
26
27

'28

A - F
G - l.
M- R

s
T- t

A F
G - M
N R

s

l

A
G
N

F
M
R

Juniors

Sophom ores

F reshmen

s z

Governance

Articles discussed
llntversJt y-wide governan ce 1~
by anyone's defuution a con 4:cpt
that affects the e nttrc Umverstt y
communlly Tuesda y afte rnoon a
meellng was held to dis~;uss th e
first draft of lhe proposed art icles
for aovernance. Approxtmatcl y
ten people showed up, n early half
of whom were on the Umversity
Governa nce Committee.
Ma qorte M ix. governance
comnunee ~;hairman. addre~tng
the gathenng. satd tl was her hope
that ''thiS first proposal hasn't
enwuraged people to argue wtt h
11 t11 oppos~: 11 yet " The meet1ng,
Or Mtx expiJtned was bas1cally
.m 1nformatton ~essto n . Dun ng th e
open " hearing," co mment was
~'Ullled and explanattnns were
JPven 10 tho~e who 4uesu o ned
segments or the do~:um ent
Though all seemed to feel th&lt;H
governan ce wa s a valuable
concept . a number of obJeCt tons
were made concermng aspc:L"'h of
the present form . Graduate
stude nt J ohn Greenwood believe)
the ~:.h ;mman of the proposed
execut1ve committee sh o uld no t
be t he pres1dent of t he lln tverstly
ru&gt; c.: urrently Intended .
One memher of the gove rnan ce
cotn mlllee ~.:o mm ented that 11 was
"felt hy offtm ng !t h e preSident I
c h atr m a n ;md tw o destgr~ecs
I non -vot 1ng I. we wo uld be
mcorporatmg the adminLStralton
and make them perhaps more
respon~otve"
Mr Grec.-nwood ,
however. satd that many gradual~:
student~ feel the situation may he
somewhat analogo~ to the:
Heanng Co mmL~st on on Cam pu'
Disruptio n
In that -..l)C, the GSA ~en&gt;lle
voted to refuse to nominate
anyone to serve on the heanng

co mmiSSIOn
Mr G reenw ood
c.11plll tnc d that lhe graduall"
student~ are " very leery m lend1ng
support to an o rga ni70tiOn that
has no p ower and is con tro lled by
t he adm tntStratton."
Repraentation disliked
Replymg to a stateme nt tha i
" th e who le 1dea IS commome&amp;tion
and we don 't aet th iS 1f th e
p rcstdent is not there:· M r
G r el'n w ood s ugg es ted th e
pre~tdcnt he made an ex~fft cto
member
Others ohJe&lt;:t ed t o the seat1ng
ratiOl&gt; m the proposed Un1vers1ty
Assembly . Faculty d o m1nan ce an d
r t o f ess tonal s taff under ..
r epresen tat ion were the rnam
concerns. One speaker st ated · '' It
seems th e fa c ult y ( w htdl
tentaltvely was pven 40 uf the 1!7
vottng sea t s l co ntr o l~ th e
.l.SSembly . An other sa1d that grven
the number of fac ulty and btJff
members. fatrer ralto mtgh t bc l I
rathet t h an th l' pre~ent 4 I
arrangement

A me mber o l the governanlC
committee assert ed thai actually
"by JOt ning thl&amp; I!OVernanlc
~tr uc lure, the fa cult y lo:.e~ SI II Cl'
now t h ey are t h e pnmary
gove rning stru cture." and would
be sharmg thai power undet
governance
One oth er present Cllpre~ed
e&lt;1ncern that ··no prov1ston for the
large amount of Health Sc1e n"u
~ • udents"
was madl" 1n the
~ o vernance
ar t icle~
II was
explained . however , thai t hese
students were tnd eed rep resented
a s rn e m bus of ei the r th e
und e rgraduate or graduate stud en t
associ at um

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t

The Spectrum ;, pubi/UI.J til,..

• •••. - v ~.
.nt1 Frit*r: during
«MMwnic ,._.by S~Boerd
1, Inc OHK:• .,. louted •t 365
Norton Hill/, SUJr. Uttlt!Wiiry of Nt im••

m.

~
~IM

Yo'k •t BuffMo, 3435 , .,, Sr •
Buff•lo. N•w Yo'•· 14214.
T.!.,OM: A,_ Cot* 116; Editori•l
a:Jt-41 t3:
B3t-36t0.

su•-.

R•P'•••ntwJ ftx lldwwtillng b~
N•tlonel EduurJDftlll Adt!wtJ•Int l
~. Inc., .1ISO Lulf9tolt A .....
INw Ycri. N. Y 10017.
~pdon

nttw .,.. UIID pw
for n.oo ..,...,.

_.,.,.... , U .txJ

s.ottd 0.. ~ pllld 11t Buw.lo,
,.,_. Ycri.
CIICV,.IIM: 16,1100

Allenhurst drivers dismissed

Rowlrd Hoa.ney and Geny
Wydto(f, both former driven o n
the Allcnhunt Nn, c:Wm that
they were unjuatly fired because
of their uni o n activities .
Additionally, they remark that
tbey bave reputations u
" troublemaken."
Botb Mr. }leaney and Mr.
Wyckoff coordinated a petition to
intcmatlooal union headquarten
that demanded more local unio n
representation. Reportedly, the
petition was li&amp;ned by 22 driven.
A driver wh o was assured
anonymity, told The Spectrum
that at leut six of the petition's
sipers have been fired .
How ever , L ouls Ma nyano,
exec utive vice president of Blue
Bird Coach Lines, maintained that
only three employees have been
recently dismissed. In addition, be
pvc as cause fo r their d itm isaal
reasons which had no union
connection.
He explained that Mr. Heaney
was fired for missing a momin&amp;
run two days in a row . The first of
these two days, Feb. 22, Mr.
Heaney claims th at be WIJ not
aware tllat he was scheduled for
the run as he wasn't notified
3hout it . He was contac ted late r
that day and told to do the Nn
th e next day . Feb 23. He reporta,
however, that he requested the
day off as h e had been drivma fo r
IIJ day~ Witho ut a day o ff.
At:co rdt ng to New Yo rk S tate
labor l aw 16 7. whtch mandates
one day o ff per wo rkina week,
thts is illegal. Subsequently, Mr.
Hea ney d idn't report for th e Feb .
2J run
Mr Man yan o claims that Mr
Heaney tuld two days o ff dunn&amp;
the 19-&lt;lay penod in question
while Mr. Hea ney reports that he
has proof that he w o rked every
day . Desptte 1nvesttgatio n5, 11 is

unclear at this time why Mr.
Wyckoff was dismissed . He claims
that it stemmed from a oommcnt
he made to th e president of the
local union.
Mr. · Heaney reported : " We
have been to ld n ot to associate
with any e mployeet of Bluebird
and that we would be arrested for
trespassina if we stepped on
Bluebird property '' Because of
this, Mr. Wycko ff wu denied his
paycheck .
Mr. Wyckoff believes the t wo
were fired because "Bluebird
thoU&amp;ht we were troublemakers.
Fo r instance, we wouldn't drive
defective buses." Earlier in the
year Mr. Wycko ff bad parted his
bus durin&amp; the afternoon b reak
The bus proceeded to roll ac ross

Niapra Falls Blvd . and amash into

a wall.
lnvestipt ioo allegedly revealed
tlut the bus's brakes had been
defective and that the company
had attempted to fix them by
jammina an ordinary matchb ook
into lhe brakina system. However,
Mr. Mang.ana cl&amp;Jmed that an
outside inspectio n c leared
Bluebird of any responsibility.
Originally, there was little
apparent union support for Mr.
H cany and M r. Wyckoff
However, a ballot has recentl y
been mailed to union members t o
determine wheth er the union
wants ub1tratio n o n the issue.
The ballots will be o pened at a
uruon meeting tomorrow .

Suspension of drug analysis
t:dito r 's not t . Th e followm~ WQJ 111bmltted by
Jofl Younl(er. rnordmotnr Q[ publ1c relatinns
/or Suruhmt Ho!Ut.
On Friday , Mar.:h 17 , 1972, Sunshme
Ho use contuted The Spec11unt to publish an
arttcle regardang re~umptron of the drug
analySts serv1 cc wtuch was suspended in the
first weeks of January Altho ugh the onginal
servtce was pro VIded through " 'ate University
of Buffalo Department of Pharmacology, th e
~rv tce outlined in the Marc h 20 The Spectrom .
was t h rough agreement with the Meye r
Hospital Tox1cology Laboratory .
It now stands as dear t o t he staff of
Sunshine House that t he agreemen t made was.
1n part, m iSunderstood by us. While any
mdtvidual may bnng samples o f drugs to the
toxicology lab f or analy sts, servu:e
organizations are no t so sa n ctiOned .

The huty actton take n by Jon Younger,
coordinator for public relations, can, h owever
o nly reflect on Sunshine House·~ acceptance of
the community demand for identification
tmpure and potentially dangerous chemicals
sold as LSD, Mescaline and MDA .
However, while this a ctton and servtces are
" hono rable," the approac h IS not . For these
reasons as well as S unshine House'• d esne to
re main open to se rve th e community, we wish
to announ ce th e suspenSi on of the drug
anaJysis program until such time as it is
approved by t he lepl aut horit1es. This
ret ractio n and apology sh o uld, at not tim e, be
tak e n as a result of legal o r University pressure
The actton tak en is the decision o f the
Sunshme House st aff, under n o pressure from
eat h er t he city or the Untversaty. Our 11m is to
serve the communit y, but ttus wtll o nl y happen
when o ur services are beyond lcpl approach.

or

�United Auto Workers

New budget grants $210,000
to the Colleges next year

Group supporting
Lordstown strike
The lordstown Solidarjty
Committee, formed last week in
Buffalo, tw called for maasive
labor, commwtity and student
support in the three-week old
United Auto Workers (UAW)
stri.k:e against GM in lordJtown,
Ohio. The committee was formed
by local auto workers,
Ueelworkers , teachers and
community organiurs and is in
communication with the striking
auto workers in lordJtown.
According' to a committee
buUetin, the General Moton Vep
plant in lordstown has the
" fastest Une in the world,"
producing over 100 cars an hour.
Over 800 production workers
were laid off, and those remaining
must perform their job in 36
seconds. The solidarity committee
says that the lay-offs and inhuman
speed·up "stems from Nixon and
big businesses' whole recent
attack on labor and America 's

poor."
Members pointed o ut that
labor has suffered from the wage
freeze, the recent cutting of the
Longshoremen's wage settlement
and the companies' violatio ns of
contrac ts. The attempts to take
away labor's rights to strike and
barga111 collec tively, and the
reant h ea lth , w e lfare and
educatio n c utbacks have also
ptesenled hardships. info rmed the
committee, GM made S 1.9 billio n
in earnings in 197 1, even while
the entire au t o industry
func t ioned with 38,000 less
workers than they had in 1970 .

EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM
in HEALTH
NEEOS YOU
139 Capen Hall
Monday, 1:30 p.m.

,_Bible TruthJUSTIF ICATION BV F,AITH

"Therefore bel!'g Justi fied bY
Faith , we have pMce with God,
througn
0&lt;1r
L.Ord ,
Jesua
Chrht ."
Rom . 5:1
"Who was delivered for our
olfe!'ces ll'd raised again for
our justlhacatlon." Rom. 4 ~25

The average age of the workers
at Lor~stown is 24 years old, and
their union, Local 1112, is Jed by
both men and women, both black
and white. Since the strike,
workers have been laid off from
GM's River Road plant he re in
Buffalo. But autoworkers from
the River Road plant say, " ...
that the recent layoffs here are
not the fault of the strikers, but
of GMAD and their greed-mad
drive for profits. These young
people are not out for a game there is no unemployment
insurance for strikers in Ohio and
they are living on S35 a week
strike benefits. They were forced
into voting a strike, 97% 10
favor .. .''
The committee calls for labor
so lidarity, saying that GM's
attack! could just as easiJy have
been at the River Road plant here.
Some o bservers feel that this
strike could be the start of a
ma ssive rank -a nd -fi le labor
upsurge, since the strike is against
inhuman speed-up. whic h was
intended to further mcrease
company profits.

Urges wide support
The Lo rdsto wn Solidarity
Committee is strongly urging the
broadest possible support . Local
unions are urged to pa"
resolutions of support and send
them to Lordstown . The
co mm ittee is pl a nn i ng a
fund ·raising dance and a canned
food drive fo r next week because
union strike funds are limited
Unions. indJviduals. community
gro ups and student groups are
urged to contact U1e lordstown
Solidarity Committee, " to help
build (t bigger and better ~UP!&gt;O ft
committee."
A raJiy will be held at the
Riv e r s ide -Salem Church, 25
Calumet Drive (in R iverside), at 2
p .m
S unda y . For m ore
information , con t act t h e
Lordstown Solidarit y Committee
at 886.0591.

LAWYER'S ASS'T
in only 3 months -

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not as a legal secretary-in fact. you too will use the ~rvlces of a legal
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We will tuch you practical, " how to'' Information 1nd lethniques on COR·
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I A ress

Four points
The resolution finally presented to the assembly
included four main statements: 1) aoy additional
monies not specificalty encumoered be made
available to the CoUeges; 2) the Colleges be funded _
at approximately 40% of the worlc load by 1973-74~
3) the administration provide the assembly with aD
documents wed to justify the 1972-73 University
budget ; 4) the CoUegiate director be fuUy involved
with all future budget con&amp;iderations. The resolution
was passed unanimously.
By the time the vote was taken, a majority of
those who had attended left . Remaining members of
the :membly viewed their action as a general
condemnation of what transpired during the
meeting.
Elliot Smith, an assembly member, remarked :
"We blew it, " referring to the apparent Joss of
support am ong those who had attended. The
concept o f a strike was once again brought up as the
only means of showing College strength. As one
student pointed o ut : ' "The best way to get some
autonomy for the Colleges, and to let people know
our grievances, is to strike ." The meeting ut this
time, how ever, had lost most of its momentum . ami
no further actions were taken.

Supreme Court

Unconstitutional voting laws

Any state requirement of u to prevent fraud
and a year , m
yeu's residence before 11 pers&lt;m th ree mo nths, too much ."
t:an vote in state and conaressional
e l ect ion s wa s d ec la re d Thirty days enouah
unconaituUonal by tbe S upreme
Justice Marshall further noted
Court last Tuesday . The 6-1 ruling tha t Congress set 30 days as the
011ma In a Te nnessee test Clllie waiting period when it abolis hed
bro ught by James· ·Blumstein, a long term residtmce requirernent:oc
luw professor at Vanderbilt as u precondltion to voting in
Universi ty, who was barred from presid t: ntial and vacc presidcntaal
vot mg in I 970 sance he failed to dec tao ns. While conceding that
m ee t lhe year rcsadence new residents m1ght have dc:fideot
information on slate and loc11l
req ui rement.
The maJonty opinion, wnttc:n issues and that the "duralional
by Justice Thurgood Ma rs hall, did residen ce will exclude some
nol rule o ut residen cy ptJople from vo ting who are
requirements all together but totally uninformed about election
main tained · " It is sufficient to matters" the opinion maintained
note that JO days appears to b e an that the residence requi rements
ample period of time for the state are "too crude" and "exdude too
1 0 co mplete wh a t cvt:r many people who should no t, and
administrative tasks are necessary need not, be excluded ..

In a brief dissent , J ustice
Burger said it was no mo re of 1
denial of "equal protection o r the
laws" for a state to ~cquire new
~dents
wait a year to start
voting than to make youths wait
until age 18 before vo tinJ. " In
both cases, some informed and
responsible persons ore denied the
vole," Justice Burger claimed,
" while others less info rmed and
less resp onSible are permitted to
vo te. Some hnes must be drawn "
C urre nUy . 33 states plus the
Dtstric t of Columbia employ a
one-year res1dcncc rule. New York
state has a three month rule. The
one-year residence laws of the
DL~tri ct o f Colu mbia, Virginia and
Tennessee have been previously
de c lared unconsti tutional by
federal district courts.

to

Sub Board files suit
Sub Board I , Inc. has file.d sua I agamst Dav1d Daltner , o wner o f Pover1y Hill, askina
" no tess th1n S 12,500" in compensatory dam1ges and an "appropriate" sum ro r punitive
d•m•aes, in connection with alleaed interferenc~ in Sub Board's attempt to sell the
optio n to the land.
Specifically, the complaint , filed in New York S tue Supreme Court , charau that
"in conne-ction with its efforts to sell Aid optio n , (Sub Boud] learned that (Mr.
Dattnerl was fal11ely 1nd improperly d~nyina that said option could be sold and was
maliciously rnaklna other r.tse statemenbJ which were deslaned to discouraae said penona
from purchasina said option ."
It further states : " As a direct result of (Mr. D•Uner's ] actions, [Sub Board] bas
suffered monetary dam•aes in excess of S 12,500 and in addition is ~ntiiled to~ awarded
punitive damaaes because of the wllUul and nuUclous acts of [Mr. Oatener ). A bearina
date had not yet been set .

An all encompassing Social ScienCfl curriculum

SUMMEI CUSS£$ ARE NOW fotiMINI; APPLY Fotl ADMISSION IJIHT AWAY.
for pRE E

Colleges received only 5% of the total budget, they
would receive close to three million dollars.

--·-·- ------------------------------ ----------

lftter • 11ew enol excitfftt hlcl and bee- ln•olveol
Do ,,.,.,...,.,. ,....rch, onalyaiftt. 41acuMlflt enol writl!tt
Eern • hlth ea"'ry atartlnt at $t,oao Of more I"' y. .r
Accept rn.-.siWIIty
'erfar111 ontl be "'"'..., a• a po,......, ,,.clallu
Aaaaclote wlth t.wyert entl their dknh
IJICHO.. your ltr~awlecl.. and po"*&lt;&lt;tlol
leco,. a •ldn.d entl valvtlltle port of the 8'-'"' ...., lnclw"try

Call or write 1 PARALEGAL INSTITUTE, O.pt.2Y

The first two houn of Wednesday's Collegiate
Assembly meeting were spent in detiate over a
resolution. The last hour was dominated by verbal
dissatisfaction with the first two houn of the
meeting.
Konrad von Moltke, director of the asaembly.
opened procedures by announcing that a new,
tentative budget had been proposed by the
University, alJocating $210,000 to the Colleges for
the next academic year. Dr. von Moltke expressed
his disappointment over the allocation, saying that it
is stitJ below the level needed for the Colleges to
operate efficiently.
The auembly dearly agreed with Dr. von
Moltke's evaluation of the budget. 'We've had an
enrollment increase while other departments have
lost students," said one assembly member. "Yet we
still get the same am ount of money while some of
them get an increase."
Anger with the Ketter administration was a
main issue throughout the meeting. The budget was
termed "grossly inadequate," "arbitrary." and
"without significant reaJiocation ." Additio nally . the
decision to stop letting undergradua tes teach was
seen as an overt attempt to restric t the Colleges.
Vice President for Academic Affairs Bernard
Gelbaum 's assertion, in a proposed revision of
Unive rsity Self Study, that the Colleges setve 5% of
the Univers1ty was constan tly called "a lie ...
However, one student pointed olit that if the

I
I

Phone
~
..
I
"'P' · - - 1

~,.,.~qol
City
State
Zip_
- __
- - JI
' -c-1m
-- - lftRit""l
- - ' ______________

�..

. l • I. . .

.

-

.~ I t •

. I .

'
Federal government sell-out?
...

.. ... '

.-'

Jackson lectures

I

a~tioD

•I

line

Regarding this, Dr. Jackson pointed out that the
United Mine Workers abandoned workers to a
meager salary of S15 a day and no subsidies for
medical care. Such subsidies are needed, he added, to
combat the common diseases of "black lung,"
caused by constant inhalation o f coal dust, and
silicosis wtuch results from breathing in ftne sand.
Although these conditions still exist, Dr.
Jackson remarked : "I The poverty program's largest
accomplishment wasl t o teach miners square roots
and how to balance their checkbooka." Any
o rganized effort was easily halted by local
authorities, he said, who would verbally at tack
people involved m the program or, if necessary, "buy
them off." What was needed, expJajned Dr. Jackson,
was local middle class support. Such support was
o ffered . he continued, only when speci fic projects
interested them.

Q : I bad tran~Cripca sent out to ..toua medical ldloola and paid
the Admillions and Recordl Office S 1 apiece for them. At the end of
summer tcbool I uked them to aend out my IUIIUDer acbool marka,
which they did. But they then billed me S 1 for each of these. J don't
think that thil ill fair, becauae I only wanted them to send out a
au.pplement and they send out entirely n.-. trantcripll. What can be
done about it!
A: We talked to the Admissioru and Records Office and they teU
us t hat it was not made clear that you just wanted a supplement sent
out. Admissions and Records sugests that in the future you remember
to stress in such a case that you do not want an entirely new transcript
sent out but just the supplemental marks. This, they will not charge
for, if you make it known to them. They also sugest that students
have an accurat e address for the school they want the transcript sent
t o. Too many times universities have a number of addresses to which
transcripts can be sent and it is helpful if Ad.miMions and Records has
the complete address to avoid delay and error.

Strip-mining attacked
Such a project was the poverty program 's attack.
on locuJ strip-mining. Strip-mintng is not the digging
of coal veins as rn tunnel mining, but r:.ther, the
tearing up of the landscape by bulldoze rs. While this
type of excavation 1S economically cheaper. it leaves
the land barren and treeless w1th no means of
preve nting natural disasters such as Ooods He noted
th.at lhe recent Oood tn BufTalo Hollow, West
Vrrginta, whic h kiUed over 100 people, was directly
related to strlp-nuning. With anti-strip-minmg ac tion
planned, the AppaJach1an Volunteers had finally
reached Pike County's middle clas.s.
About two and a half years ago, the volunteers
and other concerned county citizens successfully
blocked bulldozers from strip-mining. Drivers of the
bulldo7.ers were inCormed, reported Dr. Jackson , that
if they bypassed the human blockade, marksmen
strategically positioned in surrounding mountains
would stop them. Strip-mining in Pike County was
temporarily halted, but the actio ns of the
Appalach1an Volunteers eventually drew them tnto
direct conOict with the federal government. he sald .

Q : Does summer ~ool reptraflon hne a deftnite date yet?
A · The stated date was March 20. but becau~ of the hassle
everyo ne has been readtn&amp; about. it has been postponed t o April 4 .

b y Mike Feely
Sp«trum SttJff ""''"

Assailing the federal government for "selling
out" the Kentucky rural poor, Bruce Jackson
addressed an audience last Tuesday as part of the
Appalachian Symposium.
An English professor at the State University of
Buffalo, Dr. Jackson first came in contact with the
poverty program in eastern Kentucky while
researching American folldore .
Dr. Jackson spoke mainly of his expenences m
Pike County, Kentucky where he lived for a short
time. Pike County bills tlself as ''the largest coal
producing county in the world ," he noted, and as
one county o fficiaJ explained it · "If yuu can't work
at that, you can't work a t anythmg."
Dr. Jackson agreed with this vtew but added
th,at while most males are at some lime involved m
mine work, permanent and often fatal Injuries and
disease force many men mto an early retrrement. As
a result, .he explained , some o f the famiJies of the
.teceased or unemployed famthes earn less than
SJt&gt;eO per yea!

•••

\

Hanntul programs
Mercenary mdustnes, 01 Jac kso n maJOtaJOed ,
S(.ttled in Kentucky to explo1t the peo ple and to
drain tbe land's resources The poverty p1ogram, he
aci.te.t, arrived trymg to undo some of t1te$C wro ngs,
but , he concluded, "did as much har m."
According to Dr. Jackson, the poverty program
came to ~ke County m 1960. Run ma~nly by a
group cafled the Appalachian Volunteers, the
program initially engaged m such thtngs as "patchtng
up" soh&amp;olhouses and buyrng books for th e- school
chihlrtn The program, he noted, did very little to
better the livmg and working condi tions uf the poor,
anti any attempt to o rganize the people met only
with fatlure . "When you organiz.c the very poor, you
don't kave power ,'' he remarked " What you have IS
a lot ef impotence spread around " The reason for
this, as Cr Jackson pointed o ut , tS that the people
fleeting program
·~uat tlon 't have mo ney "
"The poverty program fled," he stated. because
Another reason for rhe failure of the poverty of this direct confro ntation . Pike County offictab
proJram, fi)r Jackson conrrnued , 1s the anu-welfare arre)te d members of the Appalachian Volunteers for
outlook o( locaJ to wn and county offictals and sed1llon. Dr Jackson no t..:d Washington , rn turn. he
mdustry heads. He- reponed o( an mtervtew he was added, cut o iT funds for the Volunteers, and local
grantect W1th the pres1dent of a local mtning town and county o ffic1.a.ls assailed s upporters of the
company who aJso happened to be pres1dent of the blockade as "CommuniSt organizers who call
town's Chamber ol Commerce Reponedly. th 1s themselves 'Red Guards'"
president told Dr. Jackson that the Appalachian
Dr. J ackson compared the poverty program to
Volunteers and other such groups only encourage o ther mstitutions, such as pnso ns, which have
the poor to "expec t th ings that just can't happen." "failed miserably. The basic paragon for existence,"
he pointed out, " is maintenance of the institution
No chana~
with little concern for the people affected by it."
However, the truth ts, according to Dr Jackson,
When people are oppressed, Dr. Jackson
that for the poor o f Appalachia " no thing has concluded, as they are tn Pike County, Kentucky,
changed" since the Depression Famtltes still live '" what 18 needed is for the people to "crack down
shabby wooden shacks, he reported , anmincrs s till enough of the doors to get inside ... and say 'You're
not serving us' and make them serve us."
work the 48-inch-high tunnels on their knees.

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Page four . The Spectrum . Friday. 24 March 1972

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Q : When will the exam schedule be published?
A · It will be available to students on March 31

Q : l wu bitcbbikina on the Thruway and w• stopped by a
policeman who proceeded to pve me a summons. He then ~earcbed my
beuaae. Can be leplly do this?
A: We approached vanous lawyers about this and it is more
complicated than it appears on the surface. Hitchhilr.ing on the
Thruway tS illegal and signs to that effect are posted at each entrance.
But what constitutes an iUesal search is arguable. And in the end, it
could cost you a lot of time and money to prove anything about an
illegal search . So, our best advice IS not to hitc hhike on the Thruway
But, if you intend to do so, then t o be safe do not carry anything illegal
on your person or in your baggage.

Q: Is there any way I can find out how aood a certain teacher is? I
want to take a special coune next semester but I want to make sure
that the instructor is aood .
A One way that comes to mind Immediately as to talk to students
who have had him or her in the past There wu a report put out tn tht
past caUed SCATE (Student Course and Teacher Evaluation), but this
was not m operation this past year. However. a group oi students are
beginning it ~gain . They have started wtt h an evaluation of the English
Department , and hopefuUy, they w11l be able to have SCATE bac k into
opcntion before long.
Q : I recently moved our of an apartment . Now tbr landlord rduses
to refund my security even tbouah I painted the apartment and there
wu no rvideur damaae wbea I left. What can I doT
A : The only legal way to force yo ur landlord to make a return as to
take him to the Small C la.tms Court Ac tion Line pnnted the details of
makang a c~aim in lhas coun several weeks ago. The landlord probably
claims that you did damage to the apartment, so it would be good fo r
you to have someone who can testify that you left the apartment in as
good a condition as you found It It costs o nly S3.18 to taJce action
apinst someone in the SmaU Claims Court , so we suuest that you try
this avenue.

Q: When is the last day for droppina courses!
A : April 14 at high noon
Q : Maybe it's the time of year or aomethina? But I really (eel
depreaaed and would like to talk to someone. Where can I ao?
A : There a numher of options open to you. You can go t o the
Counseling Center in the basement of Harriman library . Or , any of the
staff at the Office of Student Affairs and Services 201 Harriman
Library would be glad t o talk things over wtth you.
'
And don 't forJet the Psychomat whtch tS a aroup of people who
want to rap about anythtng and everything. Paychomat meets each
Wednesday from 3 fl p m tn Roo m 233 Norton and on Thursday from
7 I 0 p.m. an Room 232 Norton Psycho mat IS a time and a place
where "you can speak and be understood
where you'll want l u
I.Jsten .rnd really hea r another person It's an expenence of honest and
open commun1ca1ton, of ltstenrng a nd sharing w1th a group of people"
Why not give it a try?

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�News commelhry

Positive response
•
•
to negat1ve act1ons
\

by Harold IOioa
Sp«trum Stt1f{ Wrlttr

letters and memO&amp; allegedly
transferred between Father Philip
Berrigan, who wu in Lewisburg
The trials of Angela Davis and Federal Prison, and others on the
the Harrisburg 8 are .a~rrently the outside through FBI informer
most publicized and spectacular Boyd Douglu. Douglas, who is
of the many cases of political currently the prosecution 's only
repression taking place around the witness, testified to the transfer of
country. As a positive response to some 24 letters, two of which
tbe negative repressive and allegedly ddcuss the possibility of
oppressive poUcies of the US. a plan "to kidnap - in our
government at home and around terminology make a citizen's
the world, the National United arrest of - someone like Henry
Committees to Free Angela Davis, . K.issenger." The credibility of this
the Harrisburg Defense star witness has alreatty been
Committee, and the People's undermined by a statement from
Coalition for Peace and Justice are his father a year ago that : ''He has
calling for a mass ''Demostration told 50 many lies practically all his
Against War and Repression" in life that I can't believe anything
Harrisburg, Pa. on April I at noon he says," and by circumstances
at Reservoir Parle Concurrently, surrounding his behavior.
there will be a demonstration on
As a prisoner in lewisburg
the west coast in San Jose,
California where Angela Davis is penitentiary , he was the only
.nmate who attended daily classes
on trial.
at Bucknell University, dated,
The Intention 1S to "turn the kept an apartment which was well
tnals around"
to make them stocked with whiskey and bo ught
1ndictments o f the disastrous a ~ar The trial has already come
policies and actions wh1ch the up With a contrad1Ct1on rn tht
US. government carries out 10 the government's case surrounding
name of the people ul thts Boyd Douglas' test1mony. The
country People in both Cl lu~s Will prosecution insisted that Douglas
stand tn solidarity w1th political was not an informer prtor to
pusoncrs and with the t)ppressed. meeting Berrigan in pnso n. and
suffering poor of Southeast As1a that he hccame " disturbed '' about
::~ nd
Ameri ca to d e mand the implications of hts actiuns
uncundittOnal withdrawal uf alter rev1ewmg the content nf the
rronps, matcnal, bases and a1r war leuers he was run mng.
dpparatus frum Indochina, and to
On th e contrary . furme•
demand that t11e US. withdraw
support for the Thieu regime and associate warden, Rnhert L
uphold rh e right uf lfendm:ks. conceded undrr uarh
s e I I de t c r n11 n .11 HHI I or tit e that Dnuglas was ''caught " hclorc
he had barely begun hi) Cllllllel
I ndncluncsc
scrvJCC :Jntl hecame Jll ut lmmcr
111111H:d 1Jicly
0\lUgla, ,d"'
Harrisburg trial
parliCIJ&gt;all'd 111 helflJ.: somewhJI ol
The rr1al ol tlte llalfl~hur g X, a pmvucalcu• . a) he wrotc a letter
here 111 tlw f Jsl. ·~ importun r o l hi s o wn e nd o J)IIIg lhc
because IIH' llefendants 1111: hcing k1dnapp1ng 1dea and propv~tflg
pt:r~ct:uted 101 then m111I:JIII and
that the act would requ1 rc a AUII
JCIIve stand agam\1 rh~· II S WJr wh1ch he could ~u ppl y lit• ·'""
111 I mhxh1nJ J I dgJr tl ~&gt;twer and
l;llll~" tCnll y 1lla111tJIIICd thai
the US government \Cems to be peaceful p1ntcsrs were "nur
es p &lt;.'l"lally 1nterc~rcd 111 en uugh" and I ha r "mor~·
d ISCredltlng the Catholic and mcan111glul " dc~t ruCtiVl' :tlllllO
rehg1ous left al 1h1s puml Thc11 wa~ nccco;.~ary
111d1c lm ent re pr esen t ~ the
reprcSSIOII of th e enr11e
movemenr·., ah•ht y In organ11e Bell demonstration
Rely1ng on a c hur c h-gomg
We must expose the hypm:nsy
majority, the U.S. government uf a government wh1ch trres
cannot lei religiOus leaders ~~ an peuple for conspiracy to comm1t
violen ce when each day it
example of the leftist activism .
As a result, Hoover has laid his perpetrates tragic destructton on
cred1b11ity on the mdictmem of the people of Southeast Asia and
e1ght men and women, mcluding the impoverished, disenfranchised
three pnests. a former priest, a of Amerrca. The local Harnsburg
nun and a former nun, and a Defense Committee , People's
Pakistani scholar on a Fullbright Coalition for Peace and Justice,
scholarship for conspinng to blow Clergy and Laymen Concerned,
op federal buildings, and ltidnap and the Committee to Free
presidential advisor Henry Angela Davis urge mass support in
K..issenger. Four months after the Harrisburg on April I .
oripnal charges were made, the
There JS also a demonstration
Ju st ice Department rssued a planned for March 31 at Bell
second indictment which played Aerospace Industries in pro test o f
down the kidnap charges and. defense contracts. Tentatively,
instead, built its case around buses will be leaving at midnight
alleged plans to destroy deaft later oo that day to arrive in
files .
Harris burg for the Saturday
demonstration. For information
and reserYdtions call Clergy and
'Star' witnas
laymen Concerned, 25 Calumet
Also, many defendants can be Rd., 14207 or call Susan Crimi or
prosecuted on several counts of Kenneth Sherman at 8814534 .
smuggling letters in and out of a The Harrisburg bus ride will cost
federal prison. These are the Sl 2 roundtrip.

Catholic college editor dares
to print 'anti-church' material
She added that "when interropted whether he
(Mr. Hickling) wu aware that this advertisement was
contrary to the teaching of the Church, be replied
that he was . . . but he had an obliption as an
cdHor-in-chief to inform tbe public.
''This is a breach of trust on the part of the
editor-in-chief. This was an improper u.e o f the
college newspaper. He hu shown no re,pect for
Catholic philosophy and morals and diarep.rded tbe
aims of this collece. He h.u failed in his
responsibility to God and feUow students and the
founders of this coUege.

by Steve Lipman

and C\111 Millu
The editor-in-chief of the Hilbert College
(Hamburg, N.Y.) student newspaper was cleared
Tuesday of charces of "breach of trust" brought
against him for runnina a Planned Parenthood
advertisement .
Dan Hickling, a freshman at the two year
C&lt;H:ducational college, was found not guilty of
charges leveled by Hilbert President Sister Mary
Edwina Bocci.
Three weeks ago Hilbert's Fourth Estatr ran a
large back page ad which read, In part : "Get to know
how the two of you don't have to become the three
of you. Or the four of you. Or . . . Planned
Parenthood. Children by Choice. Not chance." The

No attacka tolerated
"The college reserves the ri&amp;)\t to prohibit
attacks on the Catholic faith . E!very Individual 011
this campus must respect the ri&amp;bt of relilioue
freedom and that no attacks apinst the Catholic
faith openJy or by innuendo will be tolerated."
A seven member panel - four students, two
faculty members, and Sister Mary E!dwina's top
usistant
heard Mr. Hickling and Sister Ma.ry
Edwina discuss the charges for two hours Tuesday.
The hearing was dosed ; however, Mr. Hickling was
entitled to the a1d o f counsel and was represented by
Steve Ltpman . Stullent Affam Editor of the
Reporter
Mr. Lipman answered Sister Bogel's charge that
Planned Parenthood JS "pnmanly an aborHon
agenc.:y" w1th u 4uestton. He asked tf she would
allow the paper ro run an ad for the Millard FiUmore
Hospital 81J1Idtng fund Drive. She sa1d she wouJd
allow such an ad because o f I he great public service
the hn\plt.d pmv1des

Last resort
"But they ,,J,u rlt'rform

ahorlum~ ...

Mr. l tprn.m

'Wild.
" But lhJI'' unly a mmnr p...rt uf thcu dullc~ ...
Sl\tct Ma• y hlwma replied
" l'lanncd Paren thood operat es •n the sa me
way ," l1pman counten:ll " 1 hey recommend the
' ( ' hno'" L1fe' ph1lo~ophy, the rhythm method and
other met hod~ of btrth control a11 well as abortion."
Sl\ter Mary 1 dwma replted that Planned
t•arent hood ll&gt; u busmess whtle h~p1t als provide
1..harito~ble serv11.:es.
Two witnesses called by Mr . Hicldin8 had ear\l.er
-5 anto •
Student edit04', Dan t e~tified thai dunng a visit to Planned Parenthood ,
Hick I i ng, was c leared the organ 11atron 's rcpresen l!l lavelt to ld them abortaon
Tuesday of " breach of " 1h ~· "I.''' altcrnuttvc we offer."
trust" charges brought
Mr l 1pman tniNrupted the prm:ecu1ngs several
forth by Hilbert College 111111..., '"'Y'"~ " I hi\" very mlere~tang, hut lht"re are
PreSJ dent Sister Mary "'""v ·"" wh••h m.1y he .,rr..n~lve tu thJ:." r hur-.h
Edw1na Bogel
1 h1,- JI.Hih ui.JJ .ul " not 1111port;1nt I thml. we
\ hnulu ~~·t dcown '" tlw h,l\1&lt; "'I"' tll th•• editor\
, 11 1 ,1 puhJH WIVI"' Jl1111111llll'llll'lll h~ lftt N.llllltl,JI
1\uvnl"lrlf. CPUII( II , qllulc&lt;l '1.111,111.' ,,,yJn)! " Moll' fi''I'"J\'Ihilny ro 1111• ''"dt•nl\ versu.' ht'
t h &lt;~II hall nl all prc~nanc•c' l.':tdl YI'.H .trl' rt''"""'lhllil y In IIll' ( 'llutdl ."
Mr tt a,\..hn~ rc1lcrateu thai"" nhhg;.dtvn -'J' lu
Jl ll ll cn lal '
the ,lutkrth fl(llnlln!! nul S"tu Marv I &lt;lwma·, UM"
1\ wed. .l!;l• ~"lt'r Mary I Jw•n·• •. dh·tl Mr
.. t I Ill' term· \lllcl&lt;'nl II&lt;'"'PJIWr" 1n her dJ.ug&lt;'S
l lldd•n~t tnlll her oltnc .m\1 lohl h1111 h•· l.11.ed
~"'fllll'lllfl lfnlll "huol 11 ht tiJCI IIIII f'lllll Ill lht•
flt.:W\Il.Jpcr .til ·•l'••lngy '"' rur1111n!l lhc ,,J Ill· Cuidelin~ recummended
Mr IIi• l..hn~ .• 1, .. '"'J he hJd 'flolo.l'n to more
rclu'l·tl Sl'll'l M.Jry t·Jwlll,l ll•ltl M1 llh \..IIIII! Ill&lt; ,ul
WJ' .111 ';III.Jllo. on the t'alhul11. {' llllllh" Sh• '·'"'II
'"·'" 100 n l lltllwrr ·, 600 ''"d~n" 17''' t athohL),
o.~nd rh.tl "nor J ""l:ll ••nt: ~a1ll ht· w~ nffendetl by
wa~ .1 tllrc~ot ,·llnlr.IJitltun to tin· l'npL''' I'" Y• '" .tl
t ht· Jtl .•
agaul\1 tllllh , untrnl .1nll u•uhl nul :tppc;H 111 ·• l'·'l'l'l
1he hc.1nnr Jo~,t•·tl Hea1ly two hnur\, .1ftcr wh1ch
hear~nt:, the lllllq!.c'' numc
•·veryonr: hut the wven panel mcmhcr.. were sent
Obligation to ~tud en t ~
I Ill' UOJI1llll1111\ 7 0 tkctSH&gt;n was
M1 li llkhnl!. detcnJc1l runnmg lhe ..1tl 1111 the
·
M• llltkhng shall not be exreUed from
ground~ that hts pnmary noiJg;tt111n W,J, to till'
students and not to to~ C'hurl:h tic lulu S1~1cr M.uy ~c.. hoot ,
B ..: shall not he removed as ethtor-in-ctuef,
Edwina . " I have d one nothmg wrong"
.
a hsl of guidelines pertaining to the
Follo wing the mcd1ng Si\ter Mary L·dwma hied
a wntten charge which led to Tuesda y's h ear~ng She relallonslup between the ed1tor-1n-chtef and the
charged that the Planned Parenthood all "" new~paper's adv1sor ~hall be drawn up ..
It wa~ ~ugge&lt;;ted that the adVlsor's role be
unaccepl..tble ro C'a lllolll: tenets and underuune' lh~
lumled to Jt&gt;tcrrmmng h bel, not editonal com ment.
authenll1.. value\ of the fa•lh ·•

Cleared

""'

Applications for the posrtion of Editor-in-chid of the
o~cademic year will be taken
until March 31.
Applications for Business, layout, Copy , Production
ollld other positions ue illso availiible in Room 356 Nonon.
Ciilll 831 -2505 for further information.

Buffalonian for the t972-1973

UUAB - is looking for people intemt.td in the
followint executive "Positions:
President - Director
Protnm Director
Director of Human Resourc:a
Trusurtt
Anyone in..rattd, pleiSt apply 261 Norton.

•

..

Fnclay , 24 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

t

•

t

•

•••

I,

l

'

.. '

�... . .

Land· protection
z

Bessie Smith: 'han strip-lnining'
by Laurie Yankus
Sp«trum Stoff Writ~r
From tlu rich green mountains
To the barr~n hillsides
From the spar/cling woren
To the red ted waten
From the green, green mountains
To the gushling mud slidl!l
This wnd wa.r mode for you and me
This verse, adapted by Bessie Smath and Doris
Shepard , attempts to desc ribe the destructio n caused by
strip-mmmg. Sponsored by the Appalachian Symposium ,
Bessie Smith spoke on the evils of stnp-mining. She is an
o rganizer of the Women of Eastern Kentucky presently
running for the office of U.S. representative for the
Seventh district . With the intent to protec t the people and
ban strip-mininl, she said : " I have for the last year and a
half, fou&amp;ht strip-muting. I am trymg with everything and
all know-how, to stop destruction by strip-mining.''
The poiWcal forces and coal companies have been Ms.
Smith's mam oppositaon. Much violence has been caused
by the coal operators. She described the past strugle and
commented : " We still struggle." She explained what ·power
the coal companies have.
Since political force is ruled by the coal industry, no
stand ap.~nst the ooaJ mining has been taken. The
aovemment uses the people, attempt tng to appease them
through the use of poverty programs with no real gains By
doing this, the federal government IS " buyang the pride of
the people" An an1ered Ms. Smith e xplamed . "We have
sold our pnde enou&amp;}l."

Usina their own medicine
Ms. Smith plans to use the same politacal ISSues her
opponent, Carl D. Perkans, has used with o ne exception.
She believed he has dominated the people She wiJI
attempt to pin the people's pnde back . " I feel thiS man
can no longer ao unopposed. J myself wUI be able to
represent thoee people, to bring them a step up mstead of
a step backward ."
Employment is desperately nteded , Ms. Sm1th
contends . "
. we must have at
"Stnp-muung employs
only one-third of what deep mantna does, and thiS
unmediately causes unemployment

Slides were used during the Jecture to show the
audience what actua Uy ex.ists in Eastern Kentucky: The
first few slides introduced the powerful equipment
necessary in strip-mlnina. Drills are used to bust out earth
and t he coal beneath it. They pull out coal and leave
nothing behind but " barren land and acid water" that
enter streams and polJ ute t hem.
The slides exhibited tremendous holes where drills
have puUed coal out of mountains. Ms. Smith believed
these holes should be sea.Jed up. Some of the holes were
Inadequately sealed aJJowing heavy rains to wash away
whatever seOAI did exist. Innocent rain water formed into
acid in these holes now flow into streams which run to t he
inhabited city.
Greed for the fast dollar, destruction is not looked at
by the strip-miner. He does not have to live in the
destruction, because money aUowa him to move on. One
wonders if he has sympathy for the child who misses many
a day of school and play due to the hazards strip-minina
has caused.
·

Coal more important than people
Who is defending the people of Eastern JCentucky7
Sixty-six reclamation laws have been i&amp;no red. Coal
companies have been given warninp for violations, but
nothina happens. They are never fined . " And they keep on
strippin&amp; in eastern Kentucky," Ms. Smith added .
Ms. Smith continued to speak about the conditions
existina an the Appalachian area. Even the coal trucks are
b.uardous. They are too broad for Kentucky roads. They
cause roads to crack up and'create holes "large enough for
Volkswagens to fit in ." Ms. Smith explained that on some
major roads, it is so intolerable that one hu to drive at a
4peed o f five miles per hour.
In January, Ms. Smith aJded an a women's
demo nstration. The women wanted to ao to the main
operation and stop all action that was polluting streams
and destroyina mountains. They were confro nted by two
armed auards who attempted to push them out. After
waiJtina two miles with mud up to their knees, the women
found the operation "We found it by follo wina the sound
of the mac hinery," Ms. Smith added. " We kept them
closed for I 5 hours."
The foreman uked a bulldozer dover to knock dawn
a te nt the women had constructed fo r shelter. He
requested thut the driver push the women along wttll the

~

a-M Smith, org~~nlzw
of the Women of &amp;stem
Ken1Ucky IPOk• in OCJPOIition 1D strip-mining dur·
ing the Appal.:hlan
Symposium.
tent down t he hiJJ. Tbe buUdozer driver refused and was
f&amp;.red . The main purpose for this peaceful demonstration
was to represent the people being harmed .
Those in the Appalachian area believe their land ili
their home. The coal companies ignore this. Ms. Smith
stated : "He has thouaht all his life this was his land . . . he
paid tax on it, built a home on it ... " The Broad Form
Deed lives these companies the riaht to minerals even if 1t
means moving homes. This is exactly what happened to
Henry MUton. There iJ bad destruction on his land.
Ms. Smith conveyed his fedinp : "They have tom my
land to pieces. What can you people do7" Well, perhaps
the Appalachian Symposium &amp;S a start to inform people to
what they can do.

BessieSmith

STUDENT ASSEMBLY MEETING

3:00p.m.

TUESDAY, MARCH 28
242 Norton Hall
Tyro"e Saunders, Executive Vice President.

Paoe six . The Spectrum . Friday. 24 March 1972

�..

Learning alternative

Free school- philosophy:
unrestrained expression
by K.a.ren Levitch
Sprctrum St11{f Writer

be theirs. Decided on by the students, the
curricu l um consists of courses like
psychology, studies in mental health, yoga
and dance. According to Ms. Whaling. they
are "really aniO"Ginsberg and Hesse

"Ninety-five per etmt of all the
academic ll•aming that goe.t on in public
schools is meaningless blother to the
children engaged 111 tt. That the rea/lessons
these children /cam have to do with the
unpleasontneu of learning, the lack of joy
in bnoAs, tht• grind of domg anthml'lic:, the
drudgery of answering other people's
questions mstead of one 's own. the vast
distance hetw£'en themsefa,c•s and their
teachers, between any thing meaningful in
their lives and their schooling. " (A nne
Long, teacher, New School in Vancouver)
Rising dissatasfactaon with conditions in
public ~chool systems has created a
measurable growth of free schools
throughout the United States. What is the
free school and is at a viable alternative to
the ex~sting sy~tom of education?
The free school philosophy lessens the
dlttance between the ouuide world and the
children by giving students more of an
opportunity to make their school a pl2ce in
which they can freely express themselves.
"Free school allows ats students to achieve
their worth in what they are and how they
relate to others whereas our public schools
tell you who you are and what you are,"
according to Joyce Whiting, a teacher at
the Cause school in Buffalo.
A learning experience in the free school
is not one which gains its importance
because it "prepares you for college." How

of\en.

have you awallowed&lt; that lin~ eYen
believing it? l..eamin&amp; in the free tchool is -a
good deal through direct experience and
for the present . As one of the teachers at
the Independent School in Buffalo put it :
..We are giving people a place to spend part
of their lives now." There have been
studies done which indicate that chtldren
in. a very free classroom do better in college
because they are more equipped to think
for themselves.
That students should assume greater
responsibility for their own education was
decided by students, teachers and parents
at the Cause school. The initiative should

Grouping naturally
It happens so often 111 publil: school ~
that a child as pushed 11110 a group becau~c
of has performance on a test The
emo t10nal problems that result out ul
placing a child accordmg to Ills test
performance and nol his overall cmot1unal
maturity are avoided in the free school
Placing a student m an age group is not
dependent upon an intelligence rating, but
upon the ease with which he can relate to
the other members of his group. The Cause
school groups students acco rding to age
and level of maturity ; the Independent
School has no grouping at all because they
found students group themselves better
naturally.
At the Cause school, a class on pop
music is taught by Jeff Nessin, a State
University of Buffalo professor in
American Studies. Silting around m a
circle, studen ts talked about the1r favorite
types of music. One remembered the many
public school y02rs, claspang hands on an
ancient desk which had outdated inkwell
holes. Then it was heresy to talk about the
"trashy" music we heard over the radio . Of
course, we never did discuss anything that
had much significance beyond the
classroom.

There are quite a number of students
from this Unaversity volunteering at· the
school ; one ~tudcnt is getting her student
teachang experience there.
Most of the problems which face the
free schools are financial. Lack of money
lam1t1&gt; the facilities of the school which
would enable ats students to experience the
type of learnmg upon wluch the school is
based One sul utaon wo uld be to get some
of the money which is given to parochaal
schools 1nto the free schools.
Free schools are becoming stronger and
growang 111 numbers The Cause school
~tart cd ou t with seven studen ts and two
teachers 1n January I'17 I and has now
cxp3ndcd 1ts students to 45 and faculty to
five Other schools are growmg just as
rapidly .

Offering an answer
lf the free school is going to become an
educational alternative, lhen it must
receive a good deal of financial aid from
the government. As of now the Cause
school does not receive any money from
the government so that at can onJy
accommodate those students whose
parents can afford a tu1tion of SSOO.OO. In
certam cases, the school reduces the tuition
accordang to what a family can afford.
In a country whose school system has
faaled to prov1de for the real educational
needs of its kids, it is important that there
IS recogni tion and support of a free school
system which may offer an answer.

Friday, 24 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�··-·-··-- -.. ....-...

I

EdiToRiAl

Abdication of responsibility

Only one word adequatfey describes Tuesday night's
actions by the Millard Fillmore College Student Association:
irTeSponsible. Reneging on a fl'rm commitment to provide
$10,400 to Sub Board I, Inc. this semester, they stashed their
promised allocation to approximately $5,000.
The leaders of the MFCSA must bear the full
responsibility for this sorry state of affairs since It is they
who initiated the cutback in a previous MFCSA Executive
Committee meeting. Finance Committee Chairman George
Kraus may claim that no one ever told him that the MFCSA
was expected to contribute at the $10,400 level, but for ten
months he has been allocating funds ana determining
budgetary priorities based on anticipated income. The figures
used by Sub Board all year long leave no doubt that they
expected the higher amount to be disbursed .
Since Mr. Kraus attended every single Sub Board meeting
and voted for numerous allocations based on the original
projected income figure, 'his outspoken advocacy of the
cutback is a complete abdication of responsibility.
Unfortunatefy, the issue is more complex than one
Individual's actions. because the tendency of the MFCSA
within the context of Sub Board has been toward
oounter-productivity .
Last summer, when Sub Board was deep in the throes of
administering the Poverty Hill experiment, several MFC
representatives began grumbling about student conduct at
the Hill. One MFC member, who shall remain nameless,
advised calling in the Cattaragus County Sheriff to bust any
students at Poverty Hill smoking the ''killer weed." His logic
was that this would constitute a "warning" to those engaged
in such activities. This course of events was only narrowly
a¥erted.

Undaunted, the same people began pressing for strict
prohibitions of another form of conduct they considered
objectionable, namefy skinny-dipping. Fortunately, someone
managed to assauge their tender sensibilities. With actions
tike these, we must agree with statements by several MFCSA
officers who oontend that their interests are different than
those of graduate or undergraduate students.
The medical , dental and law students who participate in
Sub Board also have concerns clearly distinct from those of
other c-onstituencies. Yet one does not hear these groups
using their differences ro justify unethical and irresponsible
conduct. If anything, the Med., Dent., and Law groups have
worked to foster bener understanding, a concept for which
the MFCSA apparently has no use.
The practical aspect of the cutback is that Sub Board's
financial position has become somewhat less secure,
particularly since the MFCSA action could be a quite
unwelcome precedent. Whether they realize it or not, as a
constituent member of the Board, the MFCSA will have to
bear the legal consequences of their cutback, commensurate
with Sub Board's status as a corporation .
If the MFCSA leaders think that the constituent
differences cannot be overcome, then they would be best
advised to withdraw from Sub Board rather than continue
their negative path of problem-causing. It is unlikely
however, that they will do so, because it is a move sure to be
applauded by the graduate and undergraduate students and
we are convinced that the MFCSA would rather spite
themselves than please other groups.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol 22, No 70

Friday. 24 M.rc:h 1972

Edrtor-tn.Chitf

Dcnn" Ar rh1ll.l
Co-M,n•ginl( Ednur AI lk'""''
Co - M~n•&amp;•"lt EdthH
M1t.. " 1 lpprn .uu•
Aut M•n•11•ng Editor
Su'·'" Mu"
Buwnn1 M•n•JI~I
1Jl ~ II I'll An
Adv~rlrs•na M~rURtl
~u,4n Md knl•nc
8"kp.11e
C.tmpu•

. Amy Ahrenll
.. III ·Ann Armo~o
Jell Grttnw,lld
~IOWtt l&lt;;ufl l
l4nls Crom ~r
cacv
Copy
. Ronn1 Form.tn
M.trty G•ll•
Aut .
. Cl •lle Kriegsmo~n
Future . .
Lynd• Te ri
GrJphlc Aru . . .
. . Tom Toln

.

L.tyout
Asst.
Lit .t Or""•
MUSIC
Off-C•mpus
Asst. .
f'holo
AUI

Sports
Asst

MHyhttttt• RtJIIVtH1
\ld~ .....

Mtdt.tCI '&gt;tl'&lt;' tlliJU
8 111~ AllmJII
l vnnc I ,.,,·.:rr
v.-l.tnt

Mld•l' Y O•ltiiCtl.her
.K•m '&gt;4nto,
8 AIIY Rulltn
... Ho wot• F ~1wl

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'nleSpectrurn . Friday, 24 N.ueh 1972

ut lhc

"NIID I AM WHAT YOU WANT TO Ill MR. NIXON UOUT • • • ?'

Spnng is coming. forgot what that means, or
can mean . Constantly commit the foolishness of
believing that other people's heads are knowable,
only to be confronted by things totally unknown
and unexpected . There is a similar personal craziness,
which 1nvolves wanting to believe that I have some
real knowledge of who I am, and what sort of things
are inside me.
Those of you who have grown tired of my
constantly groping my way through the unrepenting
misery of my love life will be pleued to know that
final termination has finally occured . From some
previously uncharted and unfamiliar place in my
head came a blue darter. After reconciling myself
over the lust few weeks to be1ng basically a wann
fuzzy , it was somewhat of a
surprise to find myself holding
the lady up against the walL
The lady did not want to stay
1n the field and listen. The
lady stayed in the field and
listened . (And it matters not
that one hears much talk
about expressmg anger. and
much talk about being
spontaneous ; one does not get
physical under pain of banishment)
ThiS all occured at a party on Friday n1ght. So
that my bi·weelcJy thirty mile drive through rural
areas on Monday occured when I was feeling fu cked
up, and over, - my system has tTouble w1th
srtu&lt;~t1on s 10 which ten seconds of anythmg can
outweigh e1ght months plus. It was an tmportant
drive. Spong ts coming. That rcg~sters on a level so
pnm11tVe lhal it can't be monitored
The suns.tune on the first day of spring cannot
be lhat much different from the prev1ous day's,
when it IS still winter. So my feelings must have been
largely psychological. But 11 fell real, and it felt fine .
A sense of slow enormous power Of wa.ttng,
mov1ng. tnexorably towards act1on Green st1rnng
minutely under the st ill pale sun, the snow retreating
10 slow stubborn rivleti. The balance was shifting
Groundhogs were out , fields had been plowed. cattle
were loose m the fields , the world gathering for
another run at life
There also was a sense of some 1nte 1naJ balance
shifting. The pain was there _ important things are
hard lost
but there 1s resiltence too. That part
tends to be forgotten . The pain crowds out the
knowledge that ttme 1s an ally. But slowly and
steadily the preces are betng fit rrllo place. It 15 a
thing which takes place on an other than consc1ous
level, over which there seems to be no control. The
process cannot be forced or hurried, It occurs with
the same implacable strength that drives the massive
snowbanks and ice floes 10 slow retreat.

The

grump

Somehow all the experiences of the last few
weeks are being sorted and exammed and integrated .
Tolk1en describes an innkeeper in the Lord of the
Rings as someone who could see through a brick wall
in time. Gullible though I be, confused and bafOed
as l frequently feel , adjustment proceeds. Learning is
the product. The excitement and the reality occur
from ingesting the world, the expenences, and the
feelings, and all the wierd and wonderful folk to be
found in It , and getting still better at feeling and
experiencing. To grow - or am I being preachy
again? Probably.

Spring. There is a sense of amazement relative to
how tightly connected to the seasons my head can
be. Spent time in both Washington (State of) and

Bavaria during my semi-voluntary servitude. Both
places through ofT my ~ea.Sooal ser. Washington
doesn't get cold and snowy, u we aU know that
places should in the winter. And there are not
enough trees to turn color in the fall in Bavaria.
Somewhere at the bottom of all this craziness
may well be a massive dastrust of the world , which
gets triggered by the refusal of the weather to behave
in a reasonably predictable way. The spring thing
feels real . Exactly that. Real. The elms around my
neaghborhood have been dying and being cut since I
have lived there. Their absence is a real personal Joss.
II is disturbing to be surrounded by unremitting
concrete, to have no signs of life towering above the
tightly packed houses.
There is a row of poplars visible from the small
back porch. To watch them tum green and then to
watch them move with the winds is a goodness. For
many of the people for whom I might care much , 1f I
wasn't careful , there seems to be a need for some
contact with an unpaved world . To base one's
existence solely on a rural environment is something
with which 11 1S easy to sympathaze . Especially now
Life can be contagious.
There are few places left in thas world where a
person sees their effon through, from the very
beginning to the finished product. Land still prov1des
this. Through the cycle of growing and bearing and
harvesting one can be there and touch what is
happening as it happens. Gardens provide as much
for U1e head as for the stomach. (And 1n some cues.
even mote, depending on what is planted.)
We hve, . in the campus environment , 10 an
almost totally cerebral world. It is a world of 1deas
and head work, and 'cuttmg off your feelmgs about
what you are doing b~use you know you can 't
study if youthrnk about what you are do1ng. Livmg
in an ivory tower is not of itself a bad thing. One
must live somewhere. The problem becomes how
easy It as to forget about what lS happening 10 the
world below.
Seeing ''To Die in Madrid " on Saturday , wh1le
already depressed, was tnteresting. As wu Renotr'&amp;
''Picnac on the Grass," on Monday. (Th.anlcs due to
the Spring Films Festival for a really fine seriea.)
Films are irrevocably a passive experience however.
A ftlm about the country cannot touch me, cannot
reach me, the way that the reality did Cannot touch
the pieces of me that are rooted to the earth and the
seasons. And as long as this is true for me, it will be
prOJected on to others.
There is an mcreasing need for awareness about
the world. The people in it, and the currents wh.ich
now through it. Ecology is about that, about
harmony and reality . My head goes in the direction
of trying to get people in touch with themselves, and
with the other people around them ; that's a fonn of
ecology. of facilitating natural forces too. Because
just as surely and strongly u there is a need for a
contact with physical reality, with water and grass
and trees, there is also a need for real contact with
other people . Which seems to be a whole lot scaner .
People will feed marshmallows to a bear by holding
them above hls nose more frequently than they can
risk opening up to other people.
Do you suppose an official spring orgy and
openness week would accomptish anything? Besides
being fun, I mean. Have to bave fOOd reasons for
that sort of thing. l think I h.lve run down and will
go mumble in my mustache elsewhere. Good day .
Have a good weekend. And if the weather is good, at
Least think about taking someone out to a tree walh
you Pax.

�Pantagleize: a destruction of innocence
by MichaeA Silverblatt
Ur. and Draf1111 h'dlror
'-

Michel de Ghelderode, author of Pantllgleize ,
neo-$urrealist and quasi-visionary, was anterviewed in 1951.
This dialogue was printed as The Ostend Interviews, and it
can be found in collected works.
Ghelderode begins " If I have a legend, I have had no
part in it . It has been made for me. I have not contributed
to it; but I shall not stoop to contradict it. The matter
leaves me indifferent. The world has need of fables."
This applies equally to Pant.agleize, ttfe "hero" of the
play bearing his name. In an epitaph for this character,
Ghelderode writes: "If he has, by his profession, become a
myth, he has not done so deliberately. Pantagleize never'
does anything deliberately. not even make poems, for he
never writes, or .:arcely, and if he has talent, or if he
touches us, it is not his fault ... Yes, he has become a
myth because of the theater."
·
Atomic myth
Ghelderode, then, is a fatalistic tabulator, a
storyteller poised in the moment before apocalyf*l. And
Pantagleize? "let us say that Pantagletze Is like an older
and more knowing brother who left me in the happy days
of childhood, in the days of Eden ... when all is lovely life - and when all is good - man I .•. a brother who left
me, and whom , bearing names not his own, I meet now
and then in the monstrous cities where life is not lovely
and wher'e man is not at aU good; and who, poor
shamefaced fellow, or poor failure, hic:t. himself, 8fter

givmg a glance that is beyond words."
PantJJg/eize is a play about the destruction of
innocence and idealism ; the ruthless destruction of
humanitarian thou!ttt in a world that is resolutely contrary
to humanity
Pantagleize is a charming little man, a phalosophet" by
inclination {but not a very good one). a write~" for a ladies
fashion magazine by profession ("women are going to be
flat and spiritual . . . ") . Ghelderode allows us to be
deli!ttted with his little naif but at the same time be
repulsed by the uselessness of a foolish -phalosophet" in a
world on the brink of a revolution.
Wo rkers of t he world
Pantagleize wakes up one morning, dascovers it is his
fortieth birthday - the day his destiny will be revealed and has an intellectual conversation with his Negro servant,
Bamboola. "What a lovely day I" apostrophizes Pantaglei~e
- but lo and behold, his servant becomes wildly excited.
"What a lovely day" is apparentJy the watchword of the
revolutionaries, the arbitrary statement to key the
underground that the day of the social revolution has
arrived.
The underworld arises. The workers {Innocenti, a
waiter). the artists (Blank, a poet) and the oppressed
Bamboola, a black and Rachel Silberchatz, a Jewess) all
ioin together for the revolution. The prophesy has come
from the idiot. The day of upheaval and justice is at hand.
Wildly inventive and unexpected adventures follow
- Pantagleize, like a Quixote in a white suit with a dapper
umbrella, se11 off. Like 10me cartoon auper-hero he steals
the Mtional truaure from 1he twtds of 1he genwal

MacBoom and his governmental army of nasties. He falls in
love with a woman . He becomes the hero of the
revolution.
He fails .
The government catches up. The death of the
revolution, the death of innocence and the death of
Pantagleaze soon follow.
My personal reading of this play is that for all its
acta~m. at as a play about mottonlessness and stasis. Action
an the play is senseless - it is based on the tailtJres of
language (that great stultifier). the misinterpretation of a
password , the inopportunacy of a phrase. Pantagleize runs
and gets nowhere. The revolution gets nowhere. Motion is
defeated. At the end of the play Pantagleize is dead or
asleep - a reduplication of the play's opening; Pantagleize
is the image of slumbering innocence.
To anempt to achieve this stasas, a director must
work for a production that will let language do all the
leaping and let the actors stay where they are. This is, of
course, boring. But the world is boring and Ghelderode
knows it.
Instead, this cast has chosen to view the play as a
late surrealist scramble. Indeed , Ghelderode parodies the
surrealists - Pantagleize's poetry is an excellent display of
the mindless mental collages that the surrealists substituted
for art . When it becomes intelligent - surreali~ is
brilliant, fascinating ; when it as all flash and flourish it is
disarmmg but dismissable.
Surprisingly. thou!tt , the productaon is invigorating.
lnventaon and thorough-paced absurdity combine to
undermine the play but they Simultaneously efect an
eveni09 of challenging, exciting though oddly uneven
thAter.
Play on wheets

There are vaudevalle acts, manstrel shows, palm trees
on roller skates, circuses, tall men and midgets,
showmanship and style. At times 1n the course of the
evening one wishes that there were not as many side-steps
anto flashy digression. In a three hour evening of theater.
watchang an army d o a badly choreagraphed 'Tea for
Two" routane twace is appalling If, like Peter Handke, one
as makmg a statement about theatncahty and boredom thas
as understandable In the case of PantagleiZe th1s
overeJCtensaon is inexcusable
The cast as very clever In other producuons of plays
of thas sort (most notably productaons of Jarry's Ubu Rol)
1 land myself bored stiff wath the puenlaty of the
goings on I love Jarry - 1t is not the play It 1s the
director's lack o f amagination
the lack of the ability to
keep the thing careening on its roller skates (as at were).
Thas cast (with only small lapses) keeps the piece
rolling with the excitement of a carnival at ats peak _ I do
not agree with their interpretation. but that can be
secondary They. at least, are remarkably true to their
conceptaon
Cast and dtrec:taon
Saul Elkan has darected th1s paece wath dexterity . It
manafests once agaan his affection for apocalyptiC comedy
and "cabaret" theater. Ralph Fetterly Jr 's Escher-esque
sets Esther Kling's wild costumes and Larry Stein's
percussive accompaniment add much to the fest ivaty of the
~~ .
. .
As for the cast, this company of 17 gaves the allusaon
of a company of 50. As Pantagleize. Elliot Burtoff as a
marvellous combination of Mary Popplns and Jamany
Cricket, pathos and naivete. The minstrel-show of the
davided Negro Bamboola as a marvellous conceptaon and
well executed Watching Fred Knapp as the mvad1ous
policeman Creep as great fun Seeang him dasguised as _a
palm tree on roller skates is an amage that haunts m_e. Has
characterazation though is not as good as at has been m the
past
(his portrayal seems to me a mixture of roles he has
done in the last year or two.)
Since the director has obviously chosen
over-statment as his mode of communication , I wanted to
see more work from Mike Grodenchik, Mark Rosenblum
and Mike Levitt as the three revolutionaries. They are good
but not good enough. Marlene Rosenthal is very funny in
her role as the frenzied revolutaonary Jewess. and Steve
Heisler makes a very humorously pompous, bombastac
General MacBoom.
The most impressave thing about the production as a
whole is its vitality. The play (since they have adapted , cut
and re-interpreted it) must be shortened still more. Perhaps
the repertory set·up can allow this to be done.
The play continues performance on March 25, 26
and 28.

�~::C~2f'm•

8todMrt

a.nc~

l___R__E__C__[J__R__D__S______=_:er y_;,_y_~_':-'_m_IN __rr_..-~l
·

Duane Allman 's death l.n fall came as a severe shock to most of us. The young incredible ensemble playing I've heard ever
guitarist had just established h imself as one In a rock context. Dicky and Duane seem
o f the best players of all time, through his to instinctively know just when to go into
amazing work with Ills own group and harmonies and when to fall off. It's a
especially w ith Eric Clapton on what country-type song with good lyrics and a
proved to be the only Derelc MJd t/111 fine vocal by Betts, The side ends with
Dominos album. Of course, there were a
"little Martha," an acoustic instrumental
few folks around who knew about Duane written by Dllance. It's a haunting song
years ago . People hke Wilson Pickett, who with flowing lines and great picking by the
used Duane on h is Hey Jude sessions and
two guitarists.
came away highly impressed .
I've saved the jam sides for last because
Yet it was with his own band, led by they're the best sides o f this o r, for that
Duane and his bro ther Greg, that Duane matter, any album of the last few years.
Allman was becoming a star at the time of The music that goes d own is v1rtually
his death. Their live album, recorded at the impossible to describe. Starting with the
Fillmore East, was one of the most popular ''Mountain" theme, the group starts to
records of the year, and their next re lease swirl upwards and outwards, very much
was figured to be the one to make them like the old Dead but with an ex tra dose of
true superstars.
energy and art.
Well , that album, Eat 11 Peach . is finally
Each member of the band takes a solo,
o ut and it proves two things. One, that the never getting too far away from the other
mus1c world suffered a tragic loss when players. The drum solo is mcredible With
Duane died and two. that the Allman Trucks and Johanson trading rhythms and
Brothers Band even Without Duane IS beats so qu1ckly that it sounds like one
perhaps th1s country's most mvenuve and gigantic drum k1t S1de one ends with that ,
energized group
and the other s1de beg1ns w1th Bifry
Three of the four s1des dre w1 th Duane Oakley's short but powerful bass solo
and they're all superb One half live, half
Then the whole band shoots for the
studio Side and two s1des of the~r famous sk1es, with Betts, Allman and Allman all
" Mountain Jam," wh1ch 1s the theme from flylllQ togethet They 1ust keep sw11llng up
Donovan's " Fnst There ts a Mountam" and up until the listener feel s he's left earth
taken to mfin1ty The other s1de mcludes for good They go mto an A 'n' B change
new songs recorded w1th o nly D1cky Betts and softly glide back down, fm 1sh1ng up
on lead, and one sees just how great the wrth the beg1nnrng theme It's lUSt
ent1re band 1s.
phenomenal.
The album starts w1th a Greg Allman
The album , taken as a whole, IS the
tune called "Am 't Wast m' T1me no More," finest offenn g from an Amencan band m
about how the group must carry on years With Duane and without , the Allman
w1thout Duane Next is an Instrumental Bro thers band is a great band, and let•s
called "Les Brers 111 A M1nor,'' a Dicky hope that they will carry on as long as they
Betts com p osit ion r e m1n1scent of seef1t,tog1vemusic toallof us.
"Elizabeth Reed." Greg and Dicky do the
Intricate harmony parts and 1t's full of
those jazzy runs that o nly the Allman
Dav1d Bromberg (Columbia C31 104)
Bro thers Band can pull o ff without
sound1ng o ver -reh earsed and bonng.
Dav1d Bromberg IS one o f thosy names
The side e nrls w1th a lovely ballad by
you see ume and agam on the back of
Greg called " Melissa " Greg plays the soft album covers. e1thet play 1ng any number of
acoustiC gu1ta1 and Dicky runs through h1s stnnged Instruments 01 even try1ng h1s
flowing gu•tar lmes As. usual the thythm hand at producmg The hst of people he
section of Berrv Oaltlev o n bass, and Buu:h h as accompamed includes .Jen-y Jeff
Trucks and Ja1 Jokanny Johanson Walker, Tom Rush. John Hartford. the
masterlully weave around the melody lines
Great Wh1te Wonder himself, plus many
S1de three has the band domg two old others But th roughout •II h1s playmg t1me,
blues runes. "One Way Out,'' a Sorlny Boy he has always been m the background A
W1ll1amson song, has Greg wa1hng at h1~ story very Similar to that of J ackson
fmest, With DICky ctnd Duane tradmg licks Browne lA quick plug for Jackson, an
(Duane on shde) Next 1s a Muddy waters extremely accomplished songwnter who
song. "Tr ouble No More," and agam they has had hrs tunes done by a slew of
show how well they can do blues.
performers, and has finally put out an
But the best song on the Side IS ''Blue album on h1s own Its really excellent also,)
Sky," a D1cky Betts song that has the most
Well. after a few years of
a

THE

MOVEMENT

'Well, I got a little girl; they call h~
run-around Sue
She's kind of rank lookmg, but s:he
know
how to do
W~l now , old Su11 s:he's got a boylrtend
they call htm Gentleman Jim
I rold httr, SuSlln sweetheart, tt.s eitlltN
me or him
She Sllid, ''You lose, you 've got to suffer
ff vou want to sing the blues. "

S1mllar m nood to "Suffee" 1s "The
Holdup,'' co-authored by George Harrison.
Its a wh1mS1cal little ditty about robbers
and victims, but with lines like 'We'll

un!vers1 y
un1on
activities
board

WKIW ·T HUTRE SERIU

ISAAC
HAYES

-

supporting musician, people began to
realize how talented and versatile David Is,
and he gained quite a following playing in
small clubs, especially in New York. Then,
after associating with the likes of Dylan
and George Harrison, he was signed by
Columbia as a solo artist. His first album,
simply titled Q;lvid Bromberg , IS quite
successful. It didn't knock me out
Immediately , but I'm enjoying it more and
more w ith each listening.
It's really impossible to label his mus1c,
because h is songs cover such a wide range
of moods and emotions. They range from
deep personal reflections to down home
Delta blues to some reall y humoro us
material to excellent country pickln'. And
no matter what type of song he is
performing, you never o nce question his
sincerity, as you very well mif1ht with
someone who smgs about such varied
feelings.
The album opens w1th " Last Song For
Shelby Jean ." written by Bromberg. Its
about the bitter end of a relationship, with
David almost whispering the lyrics. H e
doesn't possess a good voice, and I thmk he
knows it, so he keeps h1s vocals 1n the
background A greater emphas1s 1s put on
the mus1c and the feel o f the sona He does
thts by talk-singmg, a technique used by
many old bluesmen A good move o n hts
part because 1f he really sang seriously, I
don't thmk his songs would come off as
welt
"Suffer To Smg The Blues" follows and
lfS qutte funny, even if it is overproduced
Bromberg is a nice Jewish boy from
Tarrytown, N .Y .. the son of a well to-do
psychiatnst He's very up front about that
fa ct, a nd he uses it well in h is
performances. " Don' t let the glasses fool
you, I' m a devil '" disguise." So it figures
that he'd write a tune about ''pay ing his
d ues."

HAYES

A WEEKEND OF
ENTERTAIN~

SOUL

TUES., MARCH 28
8 P.M.
MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM

H ortoft IJ,, _,••IIv•l Tlclleb-AII Awdror lo 0.11 Sto"''

"A MAD, MAD MOVIE. DEVASTATIIGI.Y
RINNY. AND COMICAlLY DEVASTATIIG"
-.IIIOm&lt; CR!Sl 1o41C IV

......""

The Merle Lister Dance Company present

"Exploration You "

$6-$5-$4

674 MAIN ST.

-VINCENT CANBY. N.Y TIMES

~-I

HOT BUTTERED

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WITH

THEATRE SERIES

The very bare 1nstrumenta t1 011 (Just
Bromberg and Will Scarlett on Harp) really
adds to the horror of the scene It must be
heard.
All In all, David Bromberg's first solo
venture comes across well Then ik}am
sho uld there have been any doubt He's a
Bromberg, isn 't he?

THE UUA B • FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE
pre snits

STARRING

ISAAC

Just getting the nose
wet, Tomorrow evening we'll be back for
more, •• they just might be describing an
audlence·perlormer relationlhip.
Bromberg has developed a reputation
for being a guitarist par excellance, and he
gives ample proof of it here. FiAt there is
" The Boggy Road to Milledgeville
(Arkansas Traveler)," a n instrumental done
with Norman Blake, Its 2 :12 of incrediable
~ i tar picking, done at breakneck speed
and the utmost o f clarity . Its guaran teed to
leave you with your mouth open. Then
there is " Lonesome Dave·, lovesick Blues
No. 3," on which Bromberg recruited John
Hartford and his band (Tut Taylor, Vassar
Clements, Blake and Richard Grando on
sax). A real good time country numbe1
with everyone getting in good licks,
especially Bromberg and C lements on
fiddl e.
Dav1s shows off the blues side ot h1s
playing on "Pine Tree Woman'' and
" Mississippi Blues." On the former, he does
some fine bottleneck wdrk and the latter
shows that he has learned his lessons well
from the "older guys,'' although this cut
does drag a bit .
My personal favorites on the record are
the last songs o n each side. " Dehlia" IS an
old blues song, a prison lament Bromberg's
vers1on comes from a Blind Willie McTell
rend1tton of th e song. A story of
unrequi ted love, With Dehlia being a
prostitute and Curtis being the guy 1n love
with her . H e event\.lally kills her and wmds
up servmg 99, and the song is sung by
Curt1s as he Sits in ja11
" Dehlia, Dehlla, how could it be. you
loved all those rounders and you never
really d1d lo ve me, She's all I got is gone "
The sorrow m his vo1ce is quite ev1dent as
1s the bitterness in the next sony
"Sammy's Song" e nds the record and 1s
one ot the most moving songs I've ever
heard . hs the story o f 16 -year o ld Sammy'~
inittatton to sex, a n1ghtmansh experience
with a ho rribly scarred Spanish whon~. Tht.'
song also o ffers s stinging indictment o t the
American male's Image of manhood
"His uncle brings him to a brothel:
Bemg btg he buys a drmk, rum arrrJ
coke,
Don't taste too bad.
Having Qrought him ro tht1 brink,
His unc/11 ltNJves h im w i th his drink rum
and coke, don' t tasttt too bad. "
spend all your money.

to

A tlau usmg volt e, movement, }Ound, (md en t mat enol~.
help explore t'I'Prydoy llcttom as work\ of art 11ncl u\

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY
March 24
26

rommuntciJtton

Sunday, March 26

11 :00 to 1:00
Cia~ Gym(main floor gym)

••••••••••AOim1on ot ~uo BoardAns.1c1o1m1m1•1u1ee•••••li~......
Sponsored bv UUAB Dance

. .....Goolf-

('ON FERENCE T HE A T R E
Tickets SO¢ before 6:00p.m.
75¢ after 6:00p.m.

Ttckcts at Norton Ticket Office
·A Div. o(SuiJ Btiard l .lncCI• • • • • • •. .

T i m e s• &amp;
1111

�Seals and Crofts

Folk duo lives up to their name
I have to first admit that
before seeing them at Kleinhans
last Friday night, I was pretty
unfamiliar with Seals and Crofts. I
knew who they were by
reputation. the fact that they
were in the Champs, (the group
who did "Tequila") and that they
wrote a lot of little known rock
songs in the early sixties. But that
was about tt. So it felt good to go
see them and find out for myself
if the popular folk duo were really
as good as some people have told
rne they were. I must say they're
right. A lengthy show of some
two and a half hou~ brought out
all of their musical sides and it
was a satisfying, impressive

concert.
Seals and Crofts' music centers
around their odd instrumentation
of guitar and mandolin, with
thi ngs like electric painos, violins,
and saxophone thrown in every
once in a while. Jim Seals' guitar
playing shows mainly class1cal
roots, w ith a little jazz here and
t here. Dast. Crofts' mandolin
brings out classical and rock
overtones, the latter especially
evident when he uses a solid body
with wah ·wah and fuzz to nes.
They blend well together in a
strange, enchanting way, as do
their voices, that seem to rely on
Onental harmonies for the most
part.

" ' - &amp; .,_,_"' TIARY stiUNAN

ASH

EASE IN COLOR

Continuous daily
from 1 :00 p.m.

NURSES

HX\ 4 00
700

t::'j

GRANADA

admitted under 21

Their material usually centers
around th ree themes. First ,
growing up in the country, with
the usual trees and brooks all
around. Second, ballads about
love . And third and most
important, messages about the
world and its people. The two are
of the Ba~ai 'faith, and the ideas
o f unity and oneness come across
all rhe time in the1r lyrics and
music,
They began their first set with
an Instrumental that immediately
put them and the fairly large
audience at ease. Then they dtd an
old ballad about a rich girl and a
poor "Boy Down the Road."
Definite BaroQue influence on this
song. After a tew more tunes,
Seals picked up hts ftddle and d1d
two SQuare dance numbers . They
went over so well that they sa1d
they'd do some more at the end
of the show.
Seals then d1d a little number
called "Bonaparte's Retreat," a
tune h1s grandfather taught h1m
It mvolved a tnck of the vocal
chords, m wh1ch two d1ffe1ent
sounds are produced at the samt!
t1me One IS a hummmg,
drone-l1ke sound, the other a
wh1stlmg overtone soundmg like a
distant organ He did 11 tw1ce so
that everyone could catch it, the
second t1me domg some scales
On " Ride 'n ' Thumb," another
of the growmg tunes about
h1tch1ng, Crofts sw1tched to

Sea/sand Croft
electric manolin and sh owed off
some strong rock licks. Fuzz on a
mandolin is really strange, and it
sounded really good. Then two
Ba'hai influenced songs, "Garden
o f Rldvan " and "See My Life."
After a short 1nte1mission, they
c ame back and they were
defin itely gettmg o ff o n the
audience which was getting off on
them .
They d1d a long number with
Cro f ts on both p1ano and
mandohn, the bass player, Bobby
lwho was excellent) on foot
tambourine, and thetr roadie on
percussion They m1xed '" a short,
ftft1es -type love song called
"Robin ," and then dtd another
soft tune called ''Birthday of My
Thoughts" that 1ncluded a little
flute Interlude done by the bass
player .
Seals then p1cked up his sax
and walled through a hvely

Instrumental doing some pretty
fair jazz playing. The second set
ended with " High on a
Mountam," before which they
announced that they'd hang
around after the concert to talk to
anyone in teres ted about the
Baghai religion.
The crowd wouldn't let them
leave without an encore, so they
came out and did a request from
the balcony "Ashes in the Snow,"
a lc:&gt;Vely tune that they hadn't
played 1n a long hme, bt.t they
went through 1t flawlessly . Then,
a song called " Purple Hand,"
about a dream that botll of them
had at the same t1me in different
cit1es. The prom1sed fiddle tunes
ended off the evening, with a
sp1nted rend1t10n of " Devil's
Dream " It was a fitting end to a
fine show
- Billy Altmsn

UUAB Mustc Commiuee• , Creative Associates, Department o f Mu stc
Present

'' 2 ''

NITES OF
PERCUSSION MUSIC
I
I

Saturday, March 25

Monday, March 27

I
I
I

Jeffery Kowalsky

B Percussion Ensemble:
Jan Williams, Director
pt'rlormmg

Spice Isla nd
In tt"r act 1on\

Toccata
Ostinato Pianissimo

Respon~e

SLDR lmprov-Jam

8:QQp.m.

I

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I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
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I

Cre.:Hive A~so C idt~ ~
)1 \\1\IC'U

h 1 mt•mlw r' of

U/ B Percussion EmembltOept of Music

, ,., IO IIT/1111/

f uur pil'\ c~ for T 101pani
Vole II

j.Jnbc,My Mu\ic
Arict Nu 3

( wot fd p rem 1er )

Fanta'&gt;y on jdpanesc Wood

Prmt~

Salvo~

8:30 p.m.

FREE ADMISSION
Baird Recital Hall
A 01v . of Sub-BOMd I , Inc .

Colored Neurosis

�·-

"A -'NIL
MASTERPIECEI"
D.lltMIIfUtMM, NIMIIIillill

IAft
.

I

~

lAllY IIID MAT.
....... .... "" 1

AU. SlAts ••••

e ACMIID
IIICI•-Uif..a.
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...,.._. . fOI
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,....,

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80UIIVAQO "'"'"

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..........,
.;;..~. :-;:-:- ": ~~ ~~"7 ~ r.

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NOW S HOW I NG !

.--------.

Soeciel Set.' B.f.galn MetlnH
All -uS 1.00 'til 2 :00 p,m.

By Ytlllcor Axam

'fr• Standing' by Yaacov Ag~~m is • P1ft of tho
current exhibit at tiM Albright-Knox Art Gallery
ontlded: " Mov.nont, Opticat Phenomena ..tet
Litht'' (MIIrc:h 4-April 9).

AMHERST

l * MAIN ST ett·1155

Kinetic art exhibition proves to
be an eye dazzling experience

NOW
IN
T HI R 0
MONTH

by Jul01 Joffe
Sp«trum Stflf{ ~1/f'r

ddler

~- }
on the screen
TONI GHT at 8 :15p.m.

Plaza North
lUI II. f . llYI. P4-1Qt

jg~
PAHAV15'0H"

..............
OOlOR

Tickets

Available

At Box Office
Performance.

Noone •
canrestst
our chicken wings.
They're the Woodshed's newest taate sensa tion
mild , medium or hot . Swirl 'em a round in tang;
blue cheese sauce, and fin ish the experience with
crispy celery sticks. Non-stop peanuts are on
the house, and spirits are 50r after :J P. M. The
Woodshed ... where the kitchen's always open
and the music's always on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North T onawanda , just over
the Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delawa re or take the Youngmann. The Woodshed's
open from 1 I : 30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

-ftiE WlJD~HEt

A sea of colors cloud into view and vanish;
lin88f' forms merge end separate; rhythm, time and
space unite and expose their mter-relations to our
senses. The preceding sentence may be an apt
description of the current exhibit at the Albright
Knox Art Gallery entitled Movm~ent, Optical
Phenomena .nd Light (March 4 - April 91 . but its
essent1al value lurks in 1ts relation to the nature of
sensual existence. It is here that this exhibit of so
called " modern art" succeeds where others have
failed; it infuses itself Into the world of the viewer
by relating his contemporary enveronment to his
aesthetic needs and in doing so teaches a valuable
lesson.

Kinetic art
The movement of k1net1c art 1tself ongmated
around the 1910's and was integrally related to an
1ncorporat1on of technology in art coupled with a
representat io n of the impact of Industrialization on
soci ety The initial movement labeled itself
" futurist ," and embodied names like Balla and
Marinetti. Soon after , Marcel Duchamp and Man Ray
also became involved along with a group called the
"Constructivists" who proclaimed " kinetic rhythms
as the basic form of our perception of real time,
(Gabo . Malevitc h a nd Moholy - Naby are
representative of this group.) . From that time on,
the movement has grown and some of the more
famous artists who can now be affiliated with it are
people like Alexander Calder . Juho le Pare and
Gearge Rickey.
'
Probably the best way to understand kinetics is
by consideration of Naum Gabo's statement that the
artist is now working in four dimensions,
3-dimensional space and time. What Is most essential
to kmeucs, 1s the notion of change, your eyes sk im
over the surface of th1s page, your heart beats and
space is constantly bemg hurtled at us at thousands
of miles per second. Man, has always found security
10 constancy and his art has usually been an attempt
at an enbalment of life in either oil or marble.
We now find ounelves 10 the somewhat
different position o f choosing flux as a basic
ingredient of the objects that we desire to view.
What has changed? It is my contention that this
necessity is highly akin to the accelerating
environment that twentieth century man has
surrounded himself with and Is manifest in a
compression of both temporal and spacial existence.
We therefore find ourselves in a position where

we have restructured our environment to the extent
that it has fikewise modeled us to the point where

we can no longer takrrefuge in staticity. In order to
survive we must beautify the component of our
contempo111ry existence, namely, movement.

Man and art
I do not find that the fact that this is a
man-made reaction to a man-made environment
Indicative o f a certain shallowness to which some
would like to subscribe. On the contrary, the infant
will perceive and take interest in those features of his
environment that move. This is suggestive of a more
primal relationship between man and art than even
some of the more accepted forms indicate.

One of the most impactful features of the
exh1bit itself is that the ch1ldren really have a great
t1me. Kids are great, their senses haven't been dulled
enough so that they haven't yet learned how not to
react. Try and tell a child not to grab a sculpture.
He'll wait until you turn you r back and then give 1t a
push. That's what art should be; touchable.
As far as the content o f the exh1bit goes,
Buffalo is particu larly lucky that its major art
benefactor has obviously read more than one art
book. There is quite a good representation of the last
20 yean of kinetic art and my main gripe with the
show centers around a particular work by Gabo that
was left out. I also have a certain inability in
understanding the particular s1gnifiganoe of hanging
a pamting in the dark along with a certam Le Pare
sculpture that definitely should have been better lit
than it was. But these are two out of 60 works and
the show is neither too short nor too lo ng (one
should never spend more than two hours 1n a gallery
anyway.l.
The museum and society
There is a certain naivete associated with the
concept of the institution of the art museum which
is indicative of the cultural sickness of our society .
That is, the distinction between art and life which
we syf!lbolically state by the existence of a gallery.
There as also a certain ritual associated wnh entering
a museum th81 causes people that walk around
blmded all week long to open their eyes. 1 doubt
they can with so little practice.

It is here however that this show succeeds· It
capitalizes on the phenomena of life itself. T,his
exhibit is probably one of the best ones that the
gallery has had in a long time and I would
recommend that you go. Try to make it on a Sunday
so Y?U can ~atch the kids or bring a few yourself;
th~y II love 1t. Lastly, I'd like to recommend one
th1ng. When you leave the gallery try to w81ch the
wheels of the cars or bicycles on Elmwood they're
really nice.
•

�~ll

the losers'

'Fascist of the left'

to the Editor:
As new he.d of the Speaker's Bureau 1 feel a
comment is neceuary ~prdin&amp; the incident last
Thursday at Clark Gym. Dick Greaory walked off
the staae after speaking for about '20 minutes. The
S I ,000.00 that Speaker'S' Bureau contracted him for
came from st udent monies. What occurred mi&amp;)lt
have been avoided had all concerned patties
communicated more actively than they did . We are
all the losers. For future speaking engagements 1 urge
any person wishing to take part in publicity in any
way to contact me before taking action. Contracts
are as benefiaaJ as they are a hindrance, and we are
wl.lllng to g~ve t he go-ahead on anything legally
w1tlun our !Jm1ts. We also pledge to work as closely
as possible with all recognized organiullons to
advertise effectively all prospective speaken; of
general interest.
Dlant&gt; Zwnf1n.tkt

Just sofar

To the Editor:
In the conflict between Mr. Spritzler of SDS and
Professor Halstead, Spritzler accuses the University
of wing repressive measures apinst tum because of
certain disagreements that he h.u with t he professor.
Thia may or may not be true, but some small
tncidents hne shown that then: is certainl y a
repressive side to Spritzler and to SDS.
When three organizers for Socialist Wo rke rs
Party visited U.B. last week ( 13 - 17), Mssrs. Spritzler
and Steinborn removed and dutroyed
announcements for a meeting wtuch the organizers
had posted aro und Norton. They also harassed the
SWP people and threatened lo trash t heir literlltun:
table,
When I walked by Spritzler in Norton the next
Mo nda y (20), h e stopped his leafleting to t:ake issue
w1th my SWP button. Claiming Halstead to .be a

member of SWP. Sprit'ller acCUJed the party of
ha vin&amp; the ruponsibillty for the arrest and
subsequent trial of 1i.x SDS'ers over the Halltead
affair. This is ridiculous, since SWP is not even
organized yet on the U.B. campus. 1 rdJuked
Spritzler for employin&amp; the same tactica u thoee
against whom he complains, but he stated that he
would continue to repress SWP in the future.
one can ste that Spritzler's methods, if he had
tbe power to employ them to his fuU satisfac hon,
would dtffer li tU e from those of Ri chard Daley. He
IS a fasCISt of the left
Those students who would conSider supportin&amp;
Spritzler should realize that he will not stop short o f
using repressive tactics against those who disagree
wilh him.

You had to have soul

n' th~ l:.'dunr

To the Edito, ·

II occurs to me that the preaident o f 11 muJor
umve rsity center, such as SU NY AB, would have
some say or power, if you will, to exer1 some
pre'iSure on the general community and on Albany.
Why the fuclt is it then that our president isn't
clmng a damn thing to help the over 1200 students
who could be affected by these aashole, 9Cif
nghteous legislators in Buffalo?
Well you can foraet any help by our president
because he is a little confused ; be thinks he ts
rrcs1drnt of the Buffal o PTA and not of a unlvertity .
But you can't put the blame on h1m. tie tsn't
1lmng It (Just not stopping it). Why don't we do
~ornelhing about it. The locals hate the students. we
'"'n't vote here and now we can't live here.
HrU , you know you can just push someone so

far'

Joel Greenwood
I' S. IJo you know where I can find some of IJus
.• umrnunal llvln,?" I haven' t been to a aood OI"JY
fur J wrrJ..

Whlle walkang through Norton Umon th•s past
Fnday night I happened to have noticed a b11nd
playing in the Fillmore Room . Upon appro11chmg
the door of the Fillmo~ Room I was mrormed by
the door auendant that "no wtutes would be
allowed" in th e room. Not believan&amp; that somethtng
IJke this could be possible, or loll least legal at this
University, I proceeded to the ln rormation Desk to
cnquare about this situation. There I rece1ved no
defintte statement of University policy regarding ttus
type of arrangement but was cnformed that the
Black Student Umon had sponsored this SOCial
gathering lllld was to pay th.~ Stllff of Norton Hall an
ovrrtirne salary for the occ.as•on. I was also told that
I was an fact payang for thas entertamment throu&amp;h
the pan of my StUdent UCtiVIlY fee g1Vt"n to the
B.S U
The idea or paymg an actiVIty fee 1t seems is to
offer a variety of cnte rests and scrvic6 to 1ituden ts of
which any memher of the \Jmvenaty may hllvt the

On M.trch 25, there will be a Children's SurviYaJ
an W:aslungto n D.C C htldren are suffering
frum povert y, hunger, maJnutntton, poor schools,
pom health and Inadequate houSing We must match
tu end h unger and malnutritio n among all our
t h1ldren . We mwt march for adequate housing so
that o11l children may grow in a healthy environ ment.
We mu.sl march for JObs with adequate income so
that parents may provide for thear children We must
m:m ;h to move for a com prehens1ve health plan with
emrhllsu on preventive rather than crislS care Wt
must march for universal comprehensive comanumty
CQntroUed c hJ.Id care. We must march to d efeat
II R I (FAP), Ni~ton's plan to force lf\Others anto
lllvoluntary servitude. We must march on March 25
m Waslungton D C. for the survtvaJ of c hildren
The march IS being sponsored by the Nuttonal
We i fure Rights Organization (NWRO) and IS
endorsed by hundreds of organizations throughout
the co untry .
Students were tnstrumental In malctng an 1ssue
o f the VIet Nam War But ror far too long, poverty
and hunger have failed to become a clear issue. We
must make it so Seven people d1e e.ch minutt ,
I 0,000 each day, 3Yl million each month ,
40,000,000 each year from hunger. Th1rty mill1on
Amencans are at t h e poverty lme A successful
march wUl start us on the road t owards solving these
prot&gt;lems. It's important and we need the University
community's help.
Buses for University personnel leave UB at 8 .00
the evening of Friday, March 24 . They will return to
Buffalo, Sunday morning March 26 at about 8 :00
Roundtrip tickets cost SlO and t his also rncludes
three meals. T1ckets are available at the Norton
T1cket Office. Further information can be obtamed
111 the Children's Survival March tab le in Norton or
tn room 220 Norton
It's important. Let's help feed the children and
end t he sufferins.
M~h. h

Paulll

Kdrrtlfllky
~dd

Uvy

II Top

United we sta nd
'l/1 tltt' h'duor

r;, thr Etltcur

opportun.ty to participate an recTeauonal , political
or socual activitic•. To dist inguish membership of any
group on the basis of skin colo• only would
unmediatdy disqualify certain memben of this
campus from taking • fuU advantage of the actiVltles
they themselves ue sponsorins.
The main point though, ts that raetaJ
discrimtnation has long been a delicate matter
co ncerning this University an d the entire world
which would br better off not antaeonized. The
Black populace may now ask u.s how 11 does in fact
(eeJ to be dtScrirrunated along these IJnes after tuJVInl
themselves been the brunt of this type of behaVIor
for so lllllny past generatcons. But to sustain the very
type of behavior which is the essence of a.ll human
idiocy does not seem to be the solution to tltis
age-old problem. I can see no h ope for the human
ra\:e w1t bout the understandmg to rationality needed
to hvc peacefully lottether in this world, let alone m
t lu~ Uruvemty.

We're wrii,Jng thLS to get ~orne peoplt angry or
to tell those of you that don't tu &amp;t1 nght &lt;~head and
fuck yourselves. You see, nghl n o w students .m:
be1ng pretty effeclively screwed l'ly the University
And the more we let them take away o ur freedoms ,
the more we're JUSt screwing ourscl"'~ Well. m.tyhr
~orne of you dig that
0 K , here are some thanit) to gel angry ahuut
fhe school let Sunshme Huuse's drug analys•s center
he 1.losed 'fhey seem to thmk 11'~ ull nghl to freuk
out on horse trunqullm:rs thai Y&lt;JU thought were
liCid
Thr 1uitlon at the schonl ha~ gunc up over 100%
1r1 the past few ye•rs The how.1ng ~o.ontr;act IS beang
cncrusw for nex I year The buard cu ntract •~ also
on the nse And we're getting n o great educational
advances, and we're e11ting the s.tmc cafctena shit ,
and w e're Uv1ng in the same pcb.
Maybe you've been lud.. y lately and have hac! :1
good c lass. The mstru ctor Is Involved and gets yuu Ill
tlunk for a change Then h e g~ts l.len1ed tenure and 11
doe-;n 't maller how good a teac hl'r he w11s ; he's out
J( thrngs go the wuy Kett er wants them Ill, (and
who's going to s top htm) pas.~ ·fa•l wtll be all but
elirrunated here That's to say we're not here for an
eduCAtiOn but to a~.curnulate mark~ . not here to
e~tpand ow consc•ou.snt:)..' but to compete 11g.11n~t
uur fr~en d s.
The Colleges' budget tS goang to he c ut by 22%
for neltt year. The Colleges a re th e only non-maJor
unrts on the Universtty , they are mnovative. and
provide an alternative to the ~tru~tured tnaditrons of
schools. When they wen~ formed, the~ was a
resoluti o n passed to have the Colleges funded
accordmg to thetr contribution to the University
Using any sensible cnteria (enrollment increase,
credit hours, etc.) the budget for the Colleges should
be at least doubled. About 6000 students part1c1pate
in the CoUeges. But, maybe you don't so you don't
ca re, do you?
Rdated to the fiscal attack against the Colleges
was a decision to stop letting undercraduates teach
courses. Some of the brightest minds in the
Un iversity are students. They art not so caught up in
the profession of teaching that tbey view it as a
ch ore.
The Buffalo housing ordinance that prohibcts
more than two unr,:lated persons from tivina

together IS under attack Its e uslenc" IS a thn:ut to
thow.ands of student~ Ketter, h owt'ver, IS 1fra1d ro
antagonize th e communaly and has e).erted no effort
1n t&gt;ehalf of the ~tudents
Wh y should he? He
probably has a met huuse o f hts o wn
The ~~ huol calendar has been reVIsed for next
year It's not much but the largest group afft'cted by
thr c hange •s studen ts .snd we've had ab~&gt;ulutely nu
uy 10 the ·~we
J11hn SpllzJer was e~tpdled from sdwol bcc11U~c:
he t.l1sagreed with hiS Instruc tor ami c hosr to say ~o
Pr(ftt'Hor L•vely, ChaHman of the H1story
Department , sa1d that SpritzJer had n ot dl'lrupted.
hut nt h~:r Jtssented , and said that he shlluld be
retnstated unmedtately Spntzler was subsequently
expelled hy Ketter'&amp; reVJew board . We really don't
want o ur nght to dtSSensaon tn classes destroyed But
you never .Hgue w1th teacher anyhow, nght 7
Lookmg at this sctuatton wtth e.n objechve
whole v1ew , we can see that the Ketter
ad mJnt)t ration IS systernatacally allackmg students
ngh~ and rnnovatwns, ~:leverly etiminatmg them one
by one ~o .15 n o t to arouse student actJOn. The
&lt;. ollege~ •.uc most ~enual because they provide the
cmly educat•on not controlled by the ad ministration
This IS very important, unless we feel th at we wan t
the Univers•ly run by the same State that committed
the o~troc1t1es '" Att1ca and IS part of the same
system that has waged t en years of war m VIetnam
J"he Colleges are the only alternative eduwtllon, and
because of th•s the •dmlntstrati on fears them , and
tries to d es troy th em
It Ill possible that the Colleges wLII shut down as
tbey ca nn ot operate Wlder the present budget. The
rest wtll be up to us. But what can we do? Letter
writing snd pet.Jtionmg arc under way but these
actions ruely work When workers have gnevances
against the plant where they work, t h ey go on stnke.
We must do the same t1ting. Obviously, the
Universaty cannot fun ction without us We are aware
that stnkes have taken place here In the past. and
h ave been mostly unsuccessful. But it IS ow only
power. If the boycott of classes is undertaken, and
draws o ur suppor1, the Ad m inistration will be forced
t o at leut refund the CoUeges. If we are active
enough, we can have all our demands and grievances
implemented .
We ca nnot let ourselves be divided .
503 8 Allenlumt and frl~nJs

Friday, 24 March 1972 . Thl!t SpectrUm . Paqe nine

�•

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I

�59 delegate votes

Muskie victorious
in Illinois primary
I

Sen. Edmund Muskie won 59
delegate votes in Tuesday's Illinois
pnmary, which pitted him against
Sen. George McGovern and Sen.
Eugene McCart h y, in two
d1fTerent r&amp;CC$. McGovern, the
only other Democratic hopeful in
the race who counted, w on 14
convention seats.
The Illinois primary actually
consisted of two parts. One
utvolved a presidential preference
poll where the voters merely
express a preference for one
cand1date over the other for the
Democratic nomination. It was
expected that the Maine senator
would win by about a 70%
maJonty, and he did pull 63% of
the vote in this category.
In the actual vote for the 160
dclrgate seats, 87 remained
uncumm•tted , and this is exactly
what Ctucago Mayor James Daley
wanted Daley, who had been
1olt cd when his choices for
governor and state's attorney lost
then elections, will lead the 87
uncommitted votes to the
conventiOn which begins July 10
m Miam• Beach .

victory after his poor showing in
the Florida primary, had this to
say about the results: ..This has
the taste of a clear-cut victory ."
Slated to run against Sen . Eugene
McCarthy 10 the presidential
preference portion of the race,
Muskie beat McCarthy with a 63%
majority of Ole vote to the latter's
37%. The real battle for delegate
votes was between the man from
Maine and the man from South
Dakota.
Sen. Muskie had this to say
about George Wallace, the man
who won the Florida primary :
'1'hose who didn' t enter this race
lost They didn't win a thing."
O ne of the only candidates who
hu run in all the primaries so far.
Muskie commented: ,,n the New
Hampshire primary my principle
opponent was perceived to be
McGovern. In Florida II was
conceived to be Wallace and
Humphrey. In Illinois it wu
McCarthy. Musk•e 1s in all of
them The othen change."

White team victorious in the
great 'capture the flag' game
by Huvy Upman
Contrlbutint Editor

l n a spectacle unsurpassed in
University history, the
commandos from the white team
devastated their purple opponents
Monday night in the world's
second greatest game o f "capture
the flag.'' Over 50 lunatics
participated in the mud bath.
Casualties were light, with only
one rape and three broken bones
reported
The white team enjoyed an
obvaous su peri o rity of
1n t e II igence, organization and
physical prowess; though it should
be noted that g•ven thetr
shortcomings, the purple did put
up a valiant battle. Despite the
bruises and mud, the adventure
was deemed an overwhelming
success by nearly all Involved.
In fact , due to the tremendous
popular outcry, the organizers
1\ave dec1ded to hold a second

delegates favorable Of pledged to

Musloe, who badly needed a

o 1h e r

t wo

v o t es

w et e

uncommitted.

Dynamic duo
The winning play was a
variation on the old "sneak up
bel\ind 'em and throw the flag to
somebody quick" ploy . It was
executed by the right
forward·middle halfback
combination of Nancy Luka and
Kinsey Brown (who also just
happens to be a spnnter on the
track team).
Their execution was
near·perfect , although a protest
was filed by one David Steinwald.
who claimed to have caught Mr .
Brown. The decision of the
JUdges, however. went against the
protest That decasion might have

by Egman

.

As I write this column I am observing a
staggering phenomenon for Buffalo - today 1s the
fint day of Spring and it's actually nice out. Whale
thia may seero commonplace for resi&lt;lentJ of p~
doser to the equator, let me remind you that 11
snowed on April 30 in Buffalo last year. I will refram
from any further attacks on the Armpit of the E.as1
since another columnist on this paper recently tned
that and has received scores of nasty letters fwm
Tonawanda and Kenmore residents and six
threatening phone calls from Cheektowap.
Instead l choose to talk about e»llng out
the
cuhnary vanety, not the sexual I have forgotten
what a fulfill1ng expenence eating o ut can be. Smce I
donned rny apron and made hke the Gallop1ng
Gourmet for O•e first lime th1s year, I have somehow
survived on 46 varieties uf chacken and cho p meat
In the o ld ~ays, I used to sit down at the table, eat
what was put on my plate , and leave the table Tlus
year 1 have added some new words to my
vocabulary. Defrostmg, (Of . why 1s this steak a block
of 1ce?) ; shopping, (or, what aasle are the bagels'"
and why aren't there any sour p1c kles m th1s town') .
scpuring, (or, lhe p.nk pads and lhe hlur pad~ lluth
suet. and how much 1s a d1shwashcr"1 )

Sour pickle search

or

The mherent weakness
eating at home IS that
it takes an hoUI to prepare the meal, 40 minutes to
clean everything up, and 10 mmutes to eat 1t.lt JUSt
doesn't seem to balance. Eatmg out, on the other
tland, is a whole different tn(&gt; In New York Citr
you can go to Nathan's and partake m the world s
finest hot dogs or the world's finest french fires.
New York also has restaurants, and sea food and
OUnese food and Italian food .

A
of Contemporary
Art, Photography &amp;Writing
See page 12 of this issue for
information on submitting material

been slightly prejudl~d by the
fact that four of the five judges
present a t the fmale were
members of the white team.
Along with tJus magnificent
teamwork and blazjng speed, the
white team's cause was
inestimably aided by the brilliant
strategical defense organized by
the team captain. Their defense
(renamed the "purple people
eaters'} repulsed wave after wave
of attackers recruited from the
ranka of the defunct SAMMY
(Sigma Alpha Mu).
A potential problem was barely
avoided when wh . te team
attacken climbed to the roof of
the English annex in quest of the
pennant. Members of campus
security, curious (as well they
might be) as to the identity and
intentions of the prowlers, proved
readily um1cable to the
explanation. A suggestion to enter
security 10 the next match wtll be
put under consideration

JIJsT FoR. Fdr4

On the GOP side, 44 out of 46

President Nixon were elected . The
Sadly needed victory

mstallment of the World's Second
Greatest Capture the Flag Game
this coming Monday evening. The
sponsors expressed the hope that
the two sides might be more
equitably divided this time, to
prevent a recurrence of this
week's rout.

tn contrast, 1 was driving down Shendan Drive
trying to find a restaurant. l failed to spot o~e . I ~id,
nowever, pass six McDonald's, four Arbr s, e1ght
Sha.key's Pizzas, nine delectable Ruby Reds, and 58
other varieties of Quik.Snak chains. Alas, no
restaurants. And then there's the food in Buffalo. (I
can see the vicious letters al ready.) Not only have
they not heard of a veal pa.nnjgjana hero (what do
they call it? A meatball and cheese wb?), but w_ith
every o rder you _get, free of charge: mayonn8lse,

lettuce, tomato, vinegar, p1clcles. 011, mustard,
cheese, water, and Type 0 blood for ~a.soning. 1
trunk the guy with the knife IS a little sloppy - I
once got a thumb in my roast beef iub.
11 ;00 cwcla

Then r.hcrc 's the semce. In a nc:~rby coffu shop
that will remain nameless for libel reasons, a local
waitress managed to spill an 1ce cream soda in my
lap. Anyone can make a mistake, I assured her as. she
franuca!ly apologized, but I was slightly surpnsed
when she went to wait on anothe1 table mstead M
getting me another one Guess I Just d1dn 't have the
nght accent Then there's the subtle mnuendos thiS
town uses to make students feel like fore1gners I'm
refemng 10 such subtletJes as the s.sgn o n a Bailey
Ave s tore which says "no more than two students
w111 be allowed m Uus store at any une lime ." Maybe
thltl 's where they got the 1dea for the housmg
ordinance.
Well , here 's my 1dca. I'd like to gel together a
couple of hundred thousand bills and open up
Nathan's in Un1vers1ty P1aza I thtnk I'd open 11
between Record Runner and Cavage's to attrac t the
rnus1c freaks who run bac k and forth between the
tWll stnres 10 see who's offenng the lowest pnce 011
the new Traffic album Nathan's of Buffalo would
deliver lu the dorms and AllenliUrst 24 hours &lt;a day
and offer an alternative to pepperon1 pi7za . Maybe
w~:'" even build the Cyclone in the back for
atmosphere .
Well th 1s eating h1t has earned 11le JUSt so far, w
•s
t1 m~ to switch to an alternate subject f~r
11
enlightenment I just wanted to pass along th1s
solution to violent sex ctimes m our streets w~ch
was submitted to me a few days ago. The plan IS to
broadcast porno ftlms every nagnt on TV from 9 - 1~
p.m wtuch wo uld keep our nation's deviants in thear
homes. Some freaks temporarily took over a
California TV station a couple of years ago and
substituted some lewd scenes for the Tonight Show
and crime dropped 46% during that period. Pic~te
the reaction of the beer-drinking average Amen~
male who flicks on the boob tube and sea
cunnilingua instead of Carson. I think th.e idea
deflllitely deserves consideration. Well, un~ll ne~
time, enjoy Spring, if it's still Spring by the hme thil
sees print. Peaoe

�Gruening restates McGovern
support
.
Sen. Ernest GrueninJ, former United States Senator
from Alaska, today reiterated his support for George
McGovern as the Democratic presidential nominee. In a
statement released Monday. the senator announced th2t he
is campaigning for McGovern becau.e he is the "best of the
candidates" and "the most different from President
Nixon."
Sen. Gruening, who served in the Senate from I 959
to 1969, said, " I know all the candJdates very well and
served with aU the senatorial candidates including Mus.kie,
Kennedy , Humphrey and Jackson, and I firmly believe
that George McGovern is the best candidate. For example,
McGovern is the only candidate to go on record on every
issue, and the only candJdate to publish this record.
McGovern is also the only candidate to commit himself on
a number of the major issues."
The senator further commented on McGovern's
credentials saying: "While candidates like Muskie refuse to
commit themselves on many of the issues by using
meaningless slogans in their campaigns and avoiding direct
comment on the issues, McGovern has not only taken
stand$ on the issues, but also presented answers to many of
our problems. For example, while none of the other
candidates have commented on the issue of tax reform,
Sen. McGovern has formulated a full scale plan to
reorganize our tax structures and reform the defense
budget to help fund government projects without
overburdening the average taxpayer."

"By presentin&amp; a 'new tax plan whidt will eliminate
the many loopholec whidt allow the rich to 01c:ape without
paying any taxes while we pay the bulk, a gJeat amount of
tax revenue can be pined with a much smaller burden on
the citizenry. A teCOncl.source of increased revenue will be
the defense budget. By eliminating pft, waste and
duplication within the budget, Sen. McGovern hopea to
save S30 billion, thus reducing the budget from $80 billion
to $50 bUiion without hindering national deferue at all.
This money could be used for such pressing problems u
pollution, urban development and others."
According to Sen. Gruening, this rechanneling of
defense spending would be part of "a deliberate effort to
change our economy from a war economy to a peacetime
economy. This would not only stabmz.e the economic
situation and reduce the unemployment rate, but it would
also refocus our priorities towards our urgent domestic
problems. "

Fint apinst the war
On the subject of Vietnam, the Senator noted that
McGovern was the first of the candidates to oppose the
war, and is the only one of the candidates to oppose the
military draft, commenting that "Sen. Muskie didn't
OppOse the war until only recently, when it be&lt;:ame
popular, and as late as 1970 , Sen. Humphrey expressed his
support of the President's war policies." The Senator
fuither commented on the war when he said that he

.erioUJiy doubts that any of the candidates would end the
war except ~rn. and claimed that Nixon did not
intend to end the war but was merely Uling the navy and
the air force to acalate the war along with "mercinary"
troope such as the South Koreans.

Published contrib utiona
Sen. Gruening also attacked Sen. Jacklon's refusal to
publish his campaign sources when he said, "Sen.
McGovern was also the first and at the time, only
candidate to make his carnpai_gn sources public, listing hia
total funds and every contribution of S1000 or more. Now
Sen. Muskie tw reluctantly agJeed to publish his sources,
but Sen. Jacbon bas flatly refused to publish his. I feel
that any candidate who refuses to publish these sources
must have a pretty poor reason and should not be allowed
to run for office."
Speaking on the Illinois primary, the Senator caJJed
the results ..inconclusive," but he said that they did show
that Mus.kie is definitely slipping from his "front runners"
spot and was in deep trouble. He also commented on the
ITI case saying that it exposed the incredibility of the
Nixon administration and said that the American people
should "throw the rucals out."
McGovern foUowers hope to form full delegate slates
in every state including New York and local stales will be
formed next week.

··~M;; March

31
Could be
day like
if you
forger

BuffAloNiAN
To expand the scope of the 1972
Buffalonian, we would like to devote
major portions of the Faculty (Arts and
Lattel'$, Educational Studies, Engineering
Md Applied Sciences, Health Sciences
Natural Sciences and Mathemlltics, Sociai
Sciences and Administration) y•rbooks
to the origiNI work of membel'$ of the
University community - student, faculty
or staff member who are not
ntpreMnted on the Buffalonian staff.
Entries need not be related to a particular
subject aru.
All photographs, artwork, studi•.
opinions, writing. nc., should be
previously unpublished,

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Friday, 24 March 1972
• • .,&gt; ....

r

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4

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·.

ARTS CoNTEST
All entrants whose work is published in
the 1972 Buffalonian will be paid for their
contributions.
To submit material :
1.
Color photographs must be
submined u standard-size transparencies.
Prints will not be accepted.
2.
Blac:k·and-white photoy.~phs must
be printed on 8 x 10 papltl'$ with a white
border and should not be mounted.
3.
Each entry must carry on it your
name and address. (This will be cov..-.d
during judging.)
4 . Entri• fNY be delivered to the
Buft.lonilm offiCe, room 356 Norton, or
meiJed to Box K, Norton Hall. The
errtri•, wheth• delivered or m8iled, must

be encloted in env•opea. In addition to
your name and llddress, the envelope
should also have your phone number
listed.
5. Entries will be returned only if th.y
are accompanied by stamped ,
Mlf....tdt'elled envelopes,
6.
The editOI'$ of the Buffalonian and
thoee th.y call upon will be the sole
judges, Md their decisions will be final. ·

DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES:
MARCH 31, 1972
Buffalonian Office:
356 Norton HaU
831-2505, 831-5570

�--..

1

Maitin Sostre: people's spirit
creates a political awareness
Editor 's note: Th e following letter wa.t recei ved on
March 22 , 1972 by th~ supporter: fo r Martin Sostre.
Martin Sostre u currently 1erving a 3/-4/ year
1enrence for the possessi on and sale of heroin in the
Erie County Jail.

UUh Phillips h a most amuint

Utah Phillips

charaeter. Born in Clevetand and
raiHd in Utah, he is one of Ute
greatest folktingen, ~·.,. to
...-ce a ...-. He'll be IIIIPI*Irint et
the UUAB Coffeehou• 1hlt
weekend.

Supporters :
It w as a pleasan t sur prise when I lea rned an Ad
H oc committee t o defend Martin Sostre had spru ng
up amo ng the UB communi ty.
Not having received support fro m t h e University
communit y be fo re, no r fro m the Black communit y.
and not being b acked by a nat ion al o rgan izatio n , and
even lacking support in Buffalo (V OCMS w as
orpnized t hree mo nths ago an d consists o f ab o u t
five dedicat ed perso ns) , and lac king b read, I h ad
resigned myself t o co ntin uing my struggle fo r
liberatio n al one - as I have b een doing fo r years
fro m the dungeons of solitary con fi n em e nt a nd in
the re pressive courts.
I had also resigned mysel f t o t he fact that when
I appear before Judge Bayger o n March 30 , he will
be able to ri p me off with no sta tic whatsoever
because in my p revious co urt a ppearan ces only a
small ha n d ful of support ers a nd spect ators sho wed
u p. I n fact , pigs have al ways outnum b ered t h e
people in t h e cou rtroom , and the peo ple's spiritual
vibratio n s have been submerged by t h e negati ve
fo rces of op pression.
Ma ny of us are becoming aware of the
im port.a n ce of spirituality in t he political struggle for
liberatio n . Indeed, spiritual power is t he d riving
force behind all political and revolutio nary acts. On
th e glo bal scale as well as in t h e cou rtroom the
revolu t ionary struggle boils down t o o ne bet ~ee n
th e positive spi ntual forces of liberat1on versus t h ose
o f negative oppression. Ph ysu.:al confron tation s and
act s are m erely objectJvized spiri tual aware n ess.
Sp1ri t is what moves people and creates political
aw areness.
Erie Coun ty Court - the legal ar m of t he
o ppressive state whose role is t o legitimize repressio n
- has su ch great fear of the spiritu ality o f the people
that it must reso rt to the t rick ery o f last-m inute

college campuses across the
fiQtiOn. Thl' following arttcle is
reprinted /rom tht' Universtfl! of
Kansas· newspaper, Thr Kan.wn .

In a surprising move, Ken
Kesey, counter cu lture leader lin d
au t h or of One F7ew Ovtr the
Cuckoo's

YOUR WHEELS.
Direct trom Q mpus to New York City PO N YA.
Minimum groups of 32 or m ore w ill b e taken to oth er
N.Y .C . area locat ions.
Re turn o n an y regular schedule or as a Rroup. - A ll
(or the low low fare of 0 N L Y $22.55 -a saving of $ 1
MARC H 28, 29 , 30 &amp; 3 1st

•BUSES LEAVE DIRECT FROM S UNY/ A D CAMPUS
Ken S irlin, campus agent a t
KEN SIRLIN
SUNY/ AD, can get you o u t
CAM ~S AGENT
of town in a hurry on
116 MARION RD.
special o r regular sch edu les
Phone 836-4169
with connectio ns to all
AmeG

.O

GREYHOUND

~

...and leave the driving to us.
i nsure a seat !

Martin SoJtre

Ken Kesey forms third party
Editor 's nMe Author, Km Keuy.

LET US BE

Your companero in the vangiUlrd of the struggle
for {rudom,

t'J.4iied ice cream'

ts currently on a speaking tour 11{

- SPECIAL HOLIDAY SERVICE -

changing of th e time o f the h earing in order t o dete r
the peop le fro m being p resent by confusing and
discd u111.ging supporters of freedom. At t h e last
hearing my supporters arrived in time fo r th e I I a .m .
hearing o nly to rmd that n o hearing was taking
place. When they inquired o f court attendants and
court cle rk s wh en my h earing was scheduled , these
court officials fei&amp;ned iJno ran ce and wo uld no t teU
the m o f th e rescheduling o f the h earing fo r 2 p .m .
This tri ck will pro bably b e tried again o n March 30 .
So b e alert. T ry pho ning Judge Bayger o r the D .A .'s
office to find o ut .
J do no t kno w the peo ple wh o o rgan ized the Ad
Hoc Committee. Bu t I do k no w th at t h ey must b e
o utst anding so uls o f height ened spirituality and
political awaren ess to rela te to m y strugle for a
humanistic societ y where peo ple can enjoy their full
huma n righ ts with o ut having the o ppressive st ate
st eal t hese righ ts and th e n d o le th em o u t t o th e
peo ple, a crum b at a t ime, as if it was d oing th e
people a favor.
I , ttere fore, ap peal to all sincere persons who
relate to the const ruction of a new hu m ani..~tic
societ y where we can live our ind ivid ual li ves to their
full poten tial, and e xercise our hu man righ ts in t heir
ent irely without havin g th e oppressive state
circumscribe t hem for it s in terests - to su pport t he
Ad Hoc Com mittee for my d efense.
It will be beautiful if t he efforts of t he Ad Hoc
Commi ttee, VOCMS and the people result in a
gro undswell of sptrit ual and political un it y in
Buffalo t hat will last way beyond Ma rch 30, and
rea lly show the opp ress1ve state t hat a sizable
segmen t of the people o f Buffalo fully relates to t he
liberation strusgle bei ng waged in the courtroom and
in the street. The posit ive spiritual vibrations
eman ati ng from the people will serve notice to t he
p1gs that even though t hey np me off on March 30,
t h ey will n ot succeed in npping off the people's
revolutionary struggle for uberation.

Nest

a n n o~lnt.ed

Th ursda y the form ation o f a th1rd
political party "for everybody
who d oesn't want the other two."
More than 1000 people
attended a Robert F Ken nedy
Memonal Symposium :tl t he
U n1vo.:rsity of Missouri-Kansas
CIIY, where Kescy spoke.
' "The o nly way to change t h e
~tructure (of Arnencan soctely) is
to do what we ' w never done yrt,'"
Kcscy S!lltl. "and that is to put
~omcbody ln the execut1ve office
thai we have a l.ay-so m "
The 37-year-old author was the
organ1zer of the 19b0's acid tests
and th e onginal leader of the
Merry Pranksters in Culiforma, a
group noted for Jts wide-scale
promotH&gt;n of LSD and what t hey
consid er to be its creat1vc powers.
Kesey is the subJect of Torn
Wolfe's book , Electric Koni ·Atd

Actd Te:rt .
In a soft but senous voice.
Kcsey said t h e new party would
be founded on democratic
princ i ples and would . work
through the existing political
str ucture. In order to beat what

he dubbed t h e present "fried 1ce
cream '' A mcridn system, Kesey
suggested ac tions "of energetiC
progress and goodness," and not
"bom bing or marching," "Whi'"h
only feeds t he e nemy "
"To figh t th e evil in these ways
il; only to lend evil power," Kesey
said . " We can't indulge ourselves
anymore
they're ready for an
offensivt' we haven't even thought
o f yet"
Accord ing to Kesey, the new
party's platform would cons1st nf
one or two issues on whic h most
peopl.: could agree. He sa1d
freedom of speech anti freedom of
rehg10n could be potent1al bases.
lie suggested that th1s party be
formc:d by aU those present a! the
~ymposJUm, includmg "the cop
who's guard mg the donr, the ~uy
who sweeps up
JU~l whoever IS
amongst us."
He said members o l the party
could be Rep ublicans, Democrats,
young or old . Kesey seemed
partu.:ularly . concerned w1th the
~talu i&gt; of the elderly people m
Amencan society ,
' 'Uid people gotla stand up and
bitch T he young people arc doing
all right," he said
K ese y said that if party
organization were successful in
Missouri . he would carry the idea
to oth er st ates. spectfitally to
oollege campuses.
T he author admitted he knows
little of what he called "the
political mill," but said that might

be Ius "asset ."
Kcsey has recently returned
from a five-week stay m Mexico,
where he · visited AUen Medlin,
I or mer professor of pol..tttcal
sc1ence at San Jose State College
m northern California Medlin is
Sltid to have greatly Influenced
Kesey's switch in attitude from
concent rated d rug involvement to
co n cern for a broad-based
polit1cal organiz.at10n.
"We can't" get it on JUSt by
d o 1 n g dope or breat h i ng
exercises," he em phastzed . " We
must fi n d work that relates to this
country and to this community
before we can fmd mat u rity _
When we can get down to
resolVIng the differen ces in our
own hearts, we have a ch ance for
such maturity "
Kcsey satd that the bas1c
problem ltt:s m man's rela tton to
the carth , not merely in relattons
between men and women. He said
he thought man tried to possess
t h ings instead of placing himself
m rdatJOn to things.
This pc;&gt;ssessJOn results in th e
destruction of the dtvin ity of
earth ly objects, whether a nimate
or mana mate. According to Kesey,
the danger is not to be found in
an external enemy, but rather
within man's heart.
When question ed 1f he were
happy with his present existence,
Kesey replied : "This is about as
good as it gets ."

ONLY 3 DAYS LEFT
'til the last deadline, b efore Spring Vacation, for announcements and classified ads.
(hoo•ay)
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Friday, 24 March 1972 . The Spectrum Page thirteen

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�Fftstamen ~

Dale Dolmage earns title of

N~~~~r o~~~~~~~ ~~?~~~~~~~~~v:~~J~~~K~:=

Editor's note: 11W is the first ofa
two-part series concerning the
Buffalo track t~m. 17W article is
about the nmnin1 ev~nt1 The
second part of the series wOl cover
the field eveniJ IIIUJ will alw
include a goreral wraf&gt;-Up.

Coach Emery Fisher was quite
pleased with the turnout at the
first meeting of the spring track
team. Several of last year's stars
were not- in attendance due to
academic problems which make
them ineligible, but sheer numben
may be able to compensate for
the Joss.
"We can beat some teams on
numbers alone," adnUtted Fisher.
Indeed it looks to be a big squad.
But between 25 and 30 of
Buffalo's trackmen are eilher
freshmen or new men and are as
yet untested. The Bulls have
enough seasoned veterans with
enough talent so that if only a few
of the new men can produce, the
team will be formidable

aU members of last . .eason's
440-yard relay team whioh was
third in the state tournament in a
btutering 43.2. This year either
Hannah or Quinney will be called
on to fill th~ spot vacated by
ancho'rman Gene Nance. Of

course, if Brown cannot tun, both
Hannah and Quinney will be
pressed into action.
For the middle distances
(quarter and half mile). there are
at least six solid candidates. The
top· man is Bill Heim. Actu~y
Heim's strongest event is · the
440-yard intermediate hurdlt!!l.
Last year Heim ran an excellent
57.1 in this event and took sixth
in the state tournament, wruch he
could cop this time around. Ed
McNiff will tun rhe 440 hurdles in
addition to. Hcim.

impact on Buffalo hockey. After leading the BuDs to
the runnerup spot in the Division 11 playoffs,
Oolma&amp;e was voted the BuDs' Most Valuable Player
in a poll of his teammates. Number 17, Buffalo's
fint line center edged out, graduatina aoaJtender
Mike Dunn, who will receive a tryout next fall with
the fledgling New York lslanden of the NaUonal
Hockey League.

considen that Dotm.se bad a ooo-year layoff.
Oolmage, a tranlfer from Lambton Junior College in
his native Samia, Ontario, was rulled ineU81'ble since
Canadian junior colleae transfers had to aft out a
year when shifting to four-year schools in the United
States.
Dolmage commented: ~he layoff hurt quite a
bit. You forget a lot of the game. plus I was out of
lbape. Then, I had to cut a Jot of early practices
because I was student teaching." Do:tma&amp;e also
indicated that his layoff lut year was his second
IIUCh break since playinJ Junior A in Samia.
Also one of the aolfina Bulla' top performera
this year, Dobnqe ui4: '1 like golf better than
hockey. Hockey is a very physical game, while golf is
more of a challenge to my mind." Still, Dale admHa
that be's oollliderins playing more hockey, but the
eeriousnesa of his involvement is questionable.
Dolmage summed up his professional
pouibillUes by remarJtina: '"Size il definitely to my
disadvantage. I hope to get into hockey and golf
coaching." This ye&amp;I, Dolmage switched from a
major in physical education to business
administration, but coaching is still on h.is mind.
Playing on Buffalo's fint playoff hockey team,
Oolmage has defutite ideas about the future of
hockey at Buffalo. Dolmage indicated : '"This year
was definitely a shot in the aon . We'll have a new
arena and a better schedule. Now our only problem
will be in getting good kids, especially American
kids. The good American player is getting a full ride
elsewhere. There are plenty of good Buffalo area
ldds who went to Vermont and Hamilton."
With Dolmage graduating the Bulls Jose Ute
center for their high scoring T AC line. However.
Dolmage tees newcomers Mike Klym and John
Stranges as leading. the Bulls in the future . Dolmagc
summed up the TAC Une's success by adding: "We
were good forecheckers, and forced the opposition
to make mistakes in its own end . Also , we came out
of our own end fast, just like a fast break ."
Even though the Bulls figur~ to produce many
better hockey players and teams in the future, 1972
and Dale Dolmage will be remembered as 'the turnmg
point in Buffalo hockey. Coach Eddie Wright's only
problem now is in finding more Dolmages and Dunns
to lead the BulJs.

Mile rday team
The mile relay team wiiJ mo~t
likely come from the above group.
I 1 ha s been McNiff, Lake.
McCarthy and Heim dunng the
Indoor season. with thear best
time at 3 :36.1. If this or another
Sprinting Bulls
relay team can break 3:28, Fisher
BuffaJo's sprinters are many promtses a trip to -the prestagious
When contacted at his ft . Erie, Ontario
and talented, but not without Penn Relays in late Apnl
apartment, "the bear," as he is known by his
thetr problems. The best of the
As far as Jim McCiurkm goes, teammates, was surprised at lhe honor. Dolmage
bunch lS seruor K.tnzy Brown. a the longer a race \S the better he remarked : " I'm really surprised . I figured Mike Dunn
sub ten-second 100 man . Brown IS hkes it In the lhree-mile run , would get it because he had such a great year."
Statistically. Dolmage tied freshman Mike Klym
one of the two BuUs' big stars, the McClurkm should be almost as
other being shot puller Tom gooc.l as he wq,s m cross country for team point leadership with 39 points (18-2 J) and
P1wlu ccJ, that are presen1Jy season (second in the state sparked the Bulls in the playoffs wiUt six goals and
three assists in three games. Aftor scoring in eight
ineltg~ble. fortunately, it looks tournament). McClurkin should
straight games, Dale was stopped in the 8-1 final loss
like Brown may be back soon.
also be a consistent winner an the
to U- Mass. However, DoJmage earned top billing on
Ftsher reports that among the mile Keith Noren and Bruce
the finaJ ECAC All-East squad for his playoff
o ther sprin ters, Dick Hall is Tuttle wtll aJso run the distance
heroics.
overweight and must get in shape events for the Bulls.
before he can be effective, but
The 120-yard lugh hurdles is
soph Jerry Williams and Charlie one of Buffalo's weak events
Qumney and junior Bill Hannah featu~ing only sophomore Mike
look good. Williams and Hannah Gontarek, who has but one year
have sprinted 10.2 and I 0.3, of hurdlmg experience Buffalo's
The wrestling season came to
During the past season, Bcrnatz
respectively , in the 100; whale field team will be featured m tJ1e an end earlier this month with the compiled a 4-3-2 record for the
Qumney had a clocking of 22 ext The Spec-trum track article.
NCAA Championships at the varsity wrestling squad, notching
Universi ty of Maryland , but the one pin . He boasts a victory over
Bulls have not been on vacation . Wilkes' tough Jay McGinley
GUSTAV A. FRISCH , INC.
Three of the six BuffaJo freshmen among his wins.
For gems from the
Jeweler - Optician
placed in last weekend's
In addition to Bernatz' first
JEWISH BIBLE
41 KENMORE AVENUE
Seventeenth Annual Plebe place finish, two of the other
Phone
(at University Plaza)
Tournament at West Poin t. whtle freshmen placed in the event.
875-4266
BUFFALO," N .Y . 14226
another SlX matmen placed etCher Mark Jay placed fourth at 118
first or second in the Delaware pounds after defeating the top
Park Jewish Center tournament, seeded wrestler in his opening
also held this past weekend .
match . Bill Bager, SP.eded third at
If you drive a
Ken Bematz, who alternated at 177 pounds, placed third in his
118 pounds for Buffalo thi5 weight class. Dager dropped his
s eason , placed first in the first bout , but was able to wrestle
I IS-pound class at Army The back and claim the third position.
ex-Pioneer Central High School
Three other Buffalo freshmen
star, seede d second an the were entered in the plebe tourney
tourney, won all four of his at Army. but did not place. " I was
matches. After taking Ius first disappointed that the others did
three matches, the 5'-J wrestler not place," said Michael. "l
ptnned Corning Communtty thought that all of our entries had
College's Doug Folmar in J :04 to the ability to place."
earn the title . Bernatz was vocet.l
Six other varsity BuffaJo
the tourney's o utstanding wrestlers advanced to the finals of
wrestler.
the Delaware Park Jewish Center
''I was very pleased with the Tournament this past weekend .
way Ken wrestled throughout the Eric Knuutila, wrestling at 167,
tournament," commented Bulls' and Cary Kumm, up from ISO to
head wrestling Coach Ed Michael. 158, won titles in their respective
'1n this, his first year of varsity weight divisions . .Knuutila pinned
competition at the collegiate level, Mike Crandall at 7:04 of their
he has shown improvement. With nine-minute freestyle bout , while
1065 Main Strecrt. Buffalo
experience, there is no reason to Kumm topped Greg Fuller, the
885-7006
doubt the fact that he can become son of RIT wrestling coach, Earl
A division of MICA EAST. Inc:.
a consistent winner at the vars1ty fuller.bv 1.0.
level"
This action was the first for
·~~J)ffi YJ!.~. :.~.•J ..·,or;r. ?~!
_ , {!J '.':'\.C.."&lt;' L\ 1 '\tl.•td

Dale Do/mage

Buffalo track

Bulls are not on vacation

Hear, 0 Israel

foreign car ..... .
we speak its language,
with a complete line of
parts and accessories.

if:''§

~d
s

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday, 24 March 1972

,I
\.

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---~ -~"/

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"- -

KenBernatz
BuffaJo's varsity wrestlers since
the NCAA tournament at
Maryland, but it was by no means
the last of the off-season. Several
Buffalo matmen may attempt to
qualify for the Olympic trials at
the regional qualifying
tournament several weeks hence

�CLAIIiflil

WANTED

TAM GunJI.

633-8643.

SIAMESE l&lt;lttet15 lr. . to 90od noma.
cnoc:olat• polnu. Have 111 allots. Call
Jun 139-2161.
BUFFALO Folk FIUival needs
someone wltll 1 V.W . bua. Anyone
lntereated call lll·5112 from 10-4 :30.

LAFAYETTE
~EIGHTS
APARTMENTS - 20 min to camou•
l"ully furnlahed, efficiency studio tnd
studio suite apartments. No lease
~ulred. Hyde Park Blvd. al Laf4IYIIte
Ave .- Niagara Falls. Call collect
284-5711.

DAYTIME bal)yeltter wanted - spring
recess, May anCI, If PONible, June.
2·v..r-otCI boy. 836·5129 1fter 5 p.m .

A VIRTUAL stu I at UOO - 5
bedrooms with a oonlble 6 Call
837.0302
.

WILL PAY for 5omeone to tiki c:.re of
ut 1n0 k itten• 3 · 21 to 4·9. 835-6042.

THIS IS I hi place you've b.-n
d,...mlnQ of 3 1Mdrooms for 4
PIOPie, 5 min . from campUs. Ava ilable
tor summer and ne~et year. Call Mlkl or
Howle at 838-1 167, 131 ·2897.

EDUCATIO N r-rcll paper wanted :
Equal Qpp. Education, Minority
Education arta. Will pay. Reply BoK
75 Spectrum.
WANTED • Gara~ space to store sports
ur Call Steve 131· 2774. Pr1f1r1bly
u .B . .area or Allenhurst.
COMPUTE R operator. Part ·tlma
n19h1S Muat have knowledge of 360/30
oos . c a r neciiSIIrv. Good opportunity
for advancement. Cell 139.0502.
START l2 per nour Mlery plus bonus.
worK 4 ·11 p ,m . weekdays, 10·2 p.m.
saturc:tays. Call l!l5·3103 or TF9o0402
FULL OR part·tlmejobiiVIIIable with
BMtllne 1 nc. Call Art 886·2094 or
Mike 835·521 S. M. .tlngs I t EKecUtlvl
Ramaaatnn.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
UB ARE:A , .averat 3 and 4·bedroom
turnasnea apartments wltllln 2 blocka
o l UB ca~pus. C all 633-1643 for
recorded m•s•lll on lOCation.
UB 1new lrU) Mlllersport·SIIerldan
Drove. ewc eltent, well furniShed 5
oe&lt;Jrc&gt;oms. IYt bath, privet• basemant
wlln 1wo llnlshed rooms. Nur bu111n1.
Sludenu welcome. 138·1081 or

""" ....,,

""'" .. o. .....

~·~•.:;.'.·~·n..~~·

····J•·"' ••', ..
•••,.

An,_ C•••rfwl T..

l eh Uf T•ltt.,

... l•'" ....

TSUJIMOTO

OWI totT U Aa1'11-GIJTI-f'OODI

•••T'···
~c:::a.......
It I•----.
t • ...... It
.. a • ~J!• 1•1

11~11

..~.·.:"&amp;...~';.,'~~ ~:;•·

- - - - H I 1-UJS _ _ _. . .

HERC, we're at Ull hllf lnCI are Jtlll
hapgln9 In there, Love, Hopa .

FORO Econo-ltne van '63. ASking
$300. Call Bill 826-421!4.
20 TO 50 percent off lin price stereo
systems and equipment . M•ny top
quality names , Whit bt11nds do you
want1 Try me. I mi!Jht bl lble to help.
Phone 182·5344. ASk for Jeff.

LOST&amp; FOUND
FOUND: German llhepherd , female, 1
yur otc:t. Call 133· 2119, Mart y.
FOUND : Pair of brown luther gloves
1011 by hltetler to Ferry and o•aware
M on dey, Call Georte 831· 1124
bllwlln 9 and 5

BATIK, madras, multi and solid
colour, western -style shirts,
hand-loomed cotton It Tne People,
144 Allen, 882-6213.

LOST t Cat, no tall, cat, 9rey end wh ite
Leroy/Brewster aru Merllyn :
137.0112, 831 •2020 . He Is ft'IUCIIIOVed
and much missed .

APARTMENT tor 3 or 4 , In KenmOfe .
Furniture tor sale. Call 876·2226.
SLitllng MIY lit .

ALMOST n - .awing machine SlnQ~r
14011 mOdel worth n - l300 . Will .all
for •175 Call 874-4935 between 4-6
p .m

FOUND: Key ring DIIWMn Goodyllr
ana Clement, Monday afternoon . Call
4055 .

FOUR·BEOROOM apanr.~ent off
Bailey. 15-mln ute walk from campus
FurniShed. reaso~ble rent . Available
for Summ.. and Sepl. Call Shelly
834·0966

PLEASURE horse, l our ·yur-old
&lt;tandard-bred GlldiOV, well trained
Engllsn or western . For Into c a ll Marc
834· 787g

FEMALE roommate wanted J14ne to
May . Own room furnlsnld, lO-m lnute
walk - Mindy or Karen. 831 ·2271 .

RIDE BOARD

ANGELA and Primo had l4 puppies,
'II litter, II) Labrador, UO . 875-8260
evenings or 10 a.m.- 1 p.m .

ROOM MATES WANTED : O wn room ,
IYt blo&lt;:ks from c.ampus. Contact
Ol.anna. 837.0403.

60-WATT OLSEN amp 408 Garrard
turntable, new $2 30. CHEAP r.auette
4 -c artr l dge . ChlaD
Call SIIVI.
831·4507

ROOMMATES lor summer In Dig
house on Amher~t. Own room .
• 50/month Including utilities .
838·3192.

DATSUN 240· Z. 1970, white, 15,000
miles, rad ial snows Included 13100
873-6043 after 4 p.m.

2 ROOMMATES wanted September _
Aval llbll for 4 to Wb ·lll u rly May
tnru AU9. Mlln- Amherst . 136·8517 .

GUITAR - n - Martin 0 18, 6-J1r1n9
with hardshell u.a, llfeume warrant v,
1 350 (live $)00) 832· 7462 .

~OOMMAT E,
m ate 9rad. to lhare
5 - room l urnlthld ap.art m ent .
RIChmond and Utlel . 882·2066 alllr 6
p .m.

FURNISHED 2-bedroom 41pt . IV41111ble
June lst, tlft ·mlnute walk to c.mpus
Call 833·6008 ,
·
ELMWOOO·SUMMER
ana
Elmwood-Ferry area, 2·bedroom
furnished apt. on bus line. Pets O. K .
1200 mo. 185·8100, 832-7368 .

RIDERS WANTED to N .V .C . Will
luve Buffalo Marcil 3ht. Return April
9th. Celt Judi 837-3757.
RIDE WANTED - one guy to N .V.C .,
Wednesday, March 29 and/Or beck
after vacation . Share expanW~~, drlvln9.
Lerry, 832..462.
R I 0 E NEEDED diSparately from
Denver, Colorado (or anywhere In
COioraao) to Buffalo Anyllme !rom
Ap ril 5·10. Will shari e~epenW~S
PIV
tall . C alll37-4285
RIDE N EEOEO t o Boston or nurby
tor E uler bruk (Including up lo
Albany) . Will share expenses. Rick
873·2277

VOLVO riCIIo lor Jale with
speakers (front an d rNr)
892· 7025 . C. Oavl\.

two
Cllll

$4()-S80. ClaSSICS, folk\, 12 Strings
Jonn Dauria 885·3007 . Cash •n· Carry
or trade your ctereo.

FOR SALE

1000 KILOS !01 53001 Dependable '65
Mullang. Engine good . Conta ct
Zorng y . Call 832·1170

JOB R ESU M ES
profeulonal,
confidenti al consultat ion. Speclll rates
tor students, recent graduate~ and
veterans. 835-4473.

REFRIGERAlORS, stoves aoa
WUhln. Recondllloner:t, delivered and
Gu a rant..CS . O&amp;.G Agpllances. 844
Syc:.mora. TX4-3183.

"--•• .... t1, ....
,,.,..,. Orl ' " "

FOR SALE
ona return triP
Grey11ound bUJ t!QC~ from N .V. to
Buffalo for end of Euter - tll. Call
Mltcfl 831-34554.

House key on blue
~Ilion.
Call Pete 133-8055 to
Identify anel claim.

CAN VOU g ive u\ a ri de to M iami &gt;
3/29. tseYablllty , drlveablllly . Lauren
or Dobbie 834 -1325.

ll lr \nf LltU•

INTERNATIONAL van . Solid
body, rlbultt engine, orut for crou
country camper o r moving. Y..,..lca · D
twin tens reiiiJC wttll case. Soli d oak
diSk . All bllt offer. 138·3 146 Of
877..264.

'il

muCh hiOPY blrtiiCiay. Love

FOLK CIHIIc gulta", n -· UMd ,
Martin, Guilds, GibSons, Gurian, etc.
Elgie bln)OI, Oorogl Clulclmen, The
String Shoppe. 524 Ontario, 1 p. m .-9
p.m. Sat. 12·5 p.m. 874..0120.

------------------

$24 A NIGHT - paid nightly . SIK
911 90 dancen n..CS.d. Radices, 74 W .
Chip pewa. Apply attar 4 p .m .

"~

Frvstreled.

LESS THAN 1 vr. old Armanu a l
turnteble w/duttcover, •70 Panasonlc car 8 · track w / stereo FM,
160. Kinos• ~• wateroed, t25 . Ca ll
137.0302.

Be sure to qive us

ROOMMATES WAN TeO

2 FEMALE roommates nll&lt;led for
Sept. O wn rooms, live minutes will&lt; to
e&lt;~mpYs . 837 -1342 .

ROO MMA TE WANTEO start1n9 Ma)l
or S ept. Share wltll 3 . t50 • utilities .
892· 2317 .

MISCELLANEOUS
JOB RESUMES
proleulonll.
confide ntial consultation Speci a l rates
fm students, recent vraduall\ a na
veterans. 135-44 7 3
FLY

BUFFALO studen\ 111911\S \o
N .v .CJLondoi\/N Y C
May
31-August 22. '199. July 9 - August
23, t219. Cont act Alan Marmutsteln
837..0393, 6·9 p .m

DOCTOR KNO W wrlles tlrm PfPifl
on most everything . Ch e• P. uallored.
test and local Call tne Doctor • t
832.0242 .
INTERESTED In oolng l o Munach for
the Olympic games lllh sum m e•' For
Information, p none 133-4631.

----

IF THE dealers could match our work,

your opinion on the proposed
NON-PROFIT

Student
Housing Corporation
FRIDAY
at
NORTON - 10:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.
CAPEN - 10:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m.
RIDGE LEA 4236 - 10:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m. DIEFENDORF - 6:00p.m.- 10:00 p.m
TOWER - 10:00 a.m.-5:00p.m.
GOODYEAR - 10:00 a.m - 5:00p.m.
ACHESON

10:00 a.m. -5:00p.m

"This corporation will try to provide low cost housing to SUNY AB students for
September 72."
Sponsored by rhe Hou1ing Committee
of Sub Board I. Inc.

TYPtST AVAILABLE - term papers,
Cltuertallons, ate . SA0/~ . 173-1931 .
AUTO INSURANCE - IC)eelaiiZI119 In
Y&lt;MII'II drivers: no cnarge for accidents
or traffic violations, lmmldlate FS- 1.
sav. up to 1100/YNr, 6 83.0022.
TAX SERVI CE only t3 for bOth
federal anCI state, all woriC guaranteed .
6a3.0022 (buslnes5 returns only t51 .
TYPING professionally done, electric
typewriters, will Cllllver, term papers,
r-rc:h work, t .40/P191, 845-5746 ,
132-9276, Joanne.
CLASSIC tultar t100n1 - beginners to
ICIVInc:eel. 136-4217 IYenlngs.

FOUND:

EurPC~~

TO DEPRESSED : Sorty It didn't work
out. I still like you, bul you h ave oth er
Interests. You un tal k to me anytim e .

tl\ey'd match our guarantee!
lnOet»ndent FMII9n Car Service 839· 1150.

CYCLISTS

fly
to Austria for
tour, Bicycle c omes noma
with Y&lt;MI . C all House of Wh. .ls for
datalls. 632·2631 .

two~

TYPING - business or personal - term
papers , theaes, mass malllnos .
Rusona.,le raue . Call 937-6050 .
ANTIQUES 1nd mOdern furniture,
c eramics, Ctllna, etc. See Sid I I
Vesterdly 6. Tomorrow Shop, 1439
Hettel Ave.

FOUR · BEOR OO M
apartment .
complete ly furnished Henel off Main.
Early May to Sept. I 837· 1887 or
837 -2033
~INUTE
walk , l ·bedroom nou.a
available May 15 for 3 or 4 . 832·3745
anytime.

SUBLET , 4 · ber:lroom apt 3 blocks
from U . B. Complete ly furni shed ,
includ ing front porch l55 pa r
month Call 837.0674
2-8EOROOM I PI lot summe r, S lOO •
utilities. 12 -min
ride to c a mpUs.
892·23 17
FUR NI SHED apartment availab le for
•ummer, 10 minutes walk from
campus. Couple preferred 834-9086 .
FDUR· BEOR OO M HOUSE FOR
FIVE• 10· minute walk to c.mpus
PriCI n~gotlable
May 15 - S ept . I.
838-45 76 .
HOUSE l or rent. May l - Au9ust 31.
Furnlshld 4 ·0idroom Reasonable . Oil
HeMal, 2-car garage C a ll 833·7777
MOD ERN &lt;l •BED~OOM , l urnl'hed
Patto. barbecue . Near c.mpU\.
Avalleble Mev thru Augu\1. R•nt
-liable. 132-71 43 .
hOUII \o Wbllt t Of
turni&amp;hed , 2-minu\e w•ll&lt; \O
c.mpus. Price n~gotlabla Av•llable
MIY 15 -August 3 1 Call SOD or Dave
al IJII-4046
44£0"00M
~ummer

-

J •BEDAOOM nouse •••liable mid-May
- Auq. 31 5 · 10 minute walk t o
carflpus. Renl 11 20/mo. C•llll 31 -3071
•Iter 5 p.m
PERFECT l · bedroom apa rtment
a v a ilable summer sesSion
Walking
distance off Banev Ave. Call 8l7-l.J44
Ellen

APARTMENTS WANTED

ALFA ROMFO
• FERRARI
• MASERATI
Sales • Service • Pans

USED CARS

-- BOBCOR
Motor Cars . Ltd.
1974 Egert (Near Bailey)

8:W.73SO

MAR RIED cou ple a.stte furnished
one-oearoom •partmenl In UB area
b&lt;IQinntnv August; • so IJO : 831 -2252
after slw.
PLEASE! NH&lt;I 2·bedroom apt. for
' 72·' 73 KhOOI y11r. Walkln9 Cllstance.
Lois, Margaret 831 ·3895/6.

---------

TWO·BEOR OOM •tsertment ( lor IWOI
fO&lt; May or Sept Clo•e to c a mpus. Call
831 · 2370, 831·2284 HELP

REWARD 1 20 We nHd house or
apartment beglnr\ln9 June or
Segtemblr. Four bedrooms Wilking
diStance 131 2259/2261
FEMALE NEEDS own room starting
May tnrougn ne~et year or will occupy
3 · 01droom apartment tmmedl • lely _
Juay 137· 2189 .
4 · Bt.DROOM IPt
wanted; May
'12·'13. Campus walking distance, Call
831·20h

~llniClQl

II&amp;Miwl\1

IUC&amp;IIu4
BHSPICW.

Served Mon. thru Fri.
Until II a.m. and
Sun. thru Thurs.
AFTER 9 :00p.m.
Sun. thru Thurs.
3 BUTTERMILK PANCAKES
OR TOAST PLUS 2
FRESH EGGS, u you like 'em.

65 ¢

3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE

G RAD Sl UOENT
1-oedroom apt.
J une 1st. Walktnv distance. Ca ll A&lt;lel
131 -2 221.
TWO BEDROOM apt w anted for Mal'
111 for two paOple. R e.sonable rent.
Call 137·1817

--------------

HOUSE or 2 ·1amlly house needed for
et9ht homeless people. PluM ! Call
1131 ·3454

I.R.C .
thsnks the
RECORD CO.OP
for our
Record Room
Now 50 r1100rds
Tow• Sun - Thura

9 p.m . 12 mid.

~~1XI::~::o!3Ja
~~~~~~~~~~~aa~~~~~~~~~~2!it~~~!E~~~~~~~~~~
M37UNIONROA
Ira
---•,...:;.;;·o;:
open Z4 hn. dally__~
Friday r 24 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�.

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- ---~- -------

'"""'
CAC's projKt " Setf .Help" needs :a wmmer project
hue! . Ple&lt;~Se contKtllnch lmmedl~tely ~~ 8 3 1-3579.

Interested In C AC "nd llble to ty pe moderately well. f or
more lnfonnatlon, cont.Kt D~ le CH' Ellen at the CAC
o ffi", 8 3 1·3609.
Ap~larchiNI

Buffalo Foltt Festl v~ needs someone with " VW bu~

A nyo~e Interested, uii831-Sl12 fro m 10 a.m .- 4 :30p.m .
WBFO will h old
in Studio A.

"aenero~l sto~H

meetlnatochy at 3 p.m.

Studenu ' l ntemo~lloNI

Medlutlon Sodety will h ave o~n
introd uct ocy lecture o n lrllllscendenUI m edltilt lon by Bob
Lee todo~y .11 8 p. m . In R oom 231 N orton.

Frkt.Jy , M.an:h 1-4
WOfkshop: With Bruce JK kson, 1 I a.m. - nOQn, Room 231
Norton.
M usic : "Poems o~nd Songs from Kentuck y Earth " with
Willbtm 1nd Dolor11 Cotten, nOQn 1 p.m., R oom 231
Norton; 1- 2 p.m., Cotten workshop.
Slide leclUre: " Mountain Crafts of Cro~nberry Ridge" by
Linda Felix who speclalius In fndian-slyle
broom-m.akrng and doll -mo~klng, 2 3 p .m., Room 233
Nonon .
l'oetry "Appalachliln Poetry" by Don Wesl, direq"r of the
Appillachl&lt;~n Sou t h Folklife Cen1er, 3 4 p.m ., Room
2J3 Norton .
1 ectu l ~lf"~
P-:~
rt"u'.,M
~r...,P'"'r..n'":fOnce taugh 1 In a one-room
Slhool, 4 S p.m., R oom 233 Norton
r.uewell recep tion : Cornbread, SoiSSol(r;u ltil, bluegrass
mu'lolt, 7 p.m. midnight,~~~ Lounge.

~tn u C lub wil l ho~ve 1 genero~l meet ln&amp; Sunday .11 1

T he Attia De fense Com mlllet will have " bo~nd and
dancing .and lawyers from the committee ro $f&gt; Uk In H us
Lounae today from 2 - 7 p.m. S.SO donation.
UB Rld lna Club will meet today 11 3:30p.m. In ROQm
332 Norton for .a d iscu)slon of cleuion' o~nd University
Community Day
C AC needs

o~n o~SsisUnl

trusurer. Applll.tnl

~hould

br

What's Happening?
Frido~y ,

Much ·24

Concur. UB C h.;mber Orcht1IU, RAful Dru••"·
ton&lt;ertrnnlcr of the New Yor .. Ph1lharmon1c , gu111
conduCior 4nd \Oioo\1 , wor .. &gt; by B.tth, BArtok and
Moun , &gt;POn\orcd by College 6 wlrh lhe tooper.ltion
ot the Dep.lrtment or MUSil 8:30 p.m., Baird H.all ,
Admission ch~rge
The41er Dep~rtmenl Repetlorv Cosmlcom ln, drrected by
Gordon Rotott , 8 10 p.m., H.urim.an Seudlo Thuter,
~dmiulon chu11e.
Mu" Brothers films : Sponsored by CAC, C.apen I -10, A
Night In C&lt;nablanca, 7:30p.m. o~nd 9:30p.m., $.7~.
Foreisn film : Moment of Truth by Frmcesco R osi, (S p iin),
5, 7 o~nd 9 p.m , Diefend orf 14 7.
L1ngu1stics on television : The Spec e rogr~pl'tl&lt;: A n~l yzer," 1
p. m .; "Gener•tive Phonology," 2:30 p.m ., Room 10,
roster Hill b~ment.
Suurd;ay, M uch 25
Loncen. UB Percuu•on f.n!oemble, Jan W1lli•ms, drrettor ;
'WOfk$ by Chwu, Co'Well o~nd Zonn, 8:30 p.m., B.aird
H~ll .

Thuter

Dep~nmenl

\~uf El~rn .

Rtpenory

Ponroqlt/u, dtrec t ed by

Symposium

p.m. in R oom 232 No rton. II 15 a very Im p ortan t m eeting
o~nd every mem be r should t ry to .11tend.
U B Sports C ar Club will have 1he fourth annu•l Spring
Fling CAr R•lly on Sunday. Regiilril lion Is"' 10 .a.m. fhe
stilrt is "' the M•ln ·Bo~lley po~rking lot .&amp;nd not Transilown
Plua. Trophies will be .warded for lhe top I~ 111 e4~h
&lt;:lass. Call Bobar 683·7 121 or Frank 41874 ·2965 for more
lnlorm~tlon.

cho~rge, o~lsO prncnled Sundo~y dl 8 10 p.m.
M•.rx Brolher film~: Copo&lt;ubunu, sporo\ored by LAC, 1 10
p.m . .and 9:J0 p.m., C .apen 140., $ 7~
Futeogn film•· l'ht lluwks umJ the 5{}0rrows by Pa~ol1nt,
6:30 p.m. •nd 8 . 30 p m.; Bllttr Hirr by G1useppe De
So~n11s, .S p.m. and 8 p.m., 01efendotl 14 7.
D•nce : Merle l1ster Do~nce Comp•ny w1ll gJve 4
perform•nce , 8:10 p.m, SIUdio Aren.a Thuter , 6111
M;arn St., tickcb : $I tor studenrs, f 2 for genero~l publl(
Folk dintlng : Sponsored by Students for lsrul, 2 5 p.m.,
Fillmore Room, ln$truclion ilnd requ11h.
Music : "An Evening wilh Julius E.astmo~n," o~n Interpretive
progr.am of new music ;u par t of t he Blat;k .and While
Arts FestivAl, sponsored by BAWA, 8 :30 p.m .,
Unit4rlan Univerullst Church, West Ferry .and
Elmwood A ve., t icket• : S2 for •dulls, $ 1 fo r \ludents,
o~vo~llable o11 l he door o~nd o11 rhe Buff.alo Sulc College
•tudent u nion &lt;1nd Norton ~t all.

Ava1lable at the Ticket Office
Slud10 A reno~ Thuter
March 25: Romeo and /ulftt
MAf(h 29 Aprtl I· 1ht PtOpO'tlltrlll
April 6 23· Ploy Strmdb trq
Populu Concert\
M •~rch 24: Humble Pie ~nd K'lng (. rrmson (M)
M&lt;~rch 26: Count 8uee (K)
Mo~rch 28: lsuc H 1yes (M)
M ar~h 31: Moody 6hJe} (M)
April 1: lily Tomlin (K)
April 7: Smokey Robtnson .and rhe Mlratle\ (k)
April 7: T he Osmond~ (M)
Ap1ll8 : Emerson, lake o~nd P•lmer (M)
Aprtl 12: New Riders or the Purple S;age
Commo~nderCody (C)
April 16: Ten Vur~ Arter and Prcx;o l fi•rurn (M)

Sundily, M;arc h 26
Concert : Gro~duo~ t e recit.al, Broni\lolvA Humek Melandinldi~.
plino, work~ by Beelhoven and Dohnanyi, 8 :30 p.m.,
B.aud ti~l.
D4n t e perform.ance : Merle Lister Do~nce CompAny,
prncntcd by t he UUAB Do~ncc Aru Commltt", II
~m.- 1 p .m., "Expl oullon You" In C l o~rk Gym

.onel

BuHJio Phllhllrmonlc Orchestro~ (K)
Much 24. GAy NineiiCi Night
April 4 Pttn und tht Wolf \Old out
Aprll9 &amp; 11 . luh.ak f&gt;er1m•n
Aprrl 1&lt;4 · juz/Rock N1gt11
Aprrf 16 &amp; 18 Mrth.tel Til son Thom~'

9 p m., lhrrrm.an Sludio Thuter, .Jdmisslon

Amy Ahttnd

Buffalo ChAmber M u5'( Society (K)
M.1r~h 28· Jull1.1rd Strrng Qu~rlel
8uff;alo Folk Festlll.tl (UB)
Aprtl ll 23
Or~l~·

I oafs At&lt;' 5ud (T)
April 13 &amp; IS

Huttalu Br.tVe) a.~etb.ltl (M)
March 2~ · Boston
Koller Derby (M)
April '20
l'ro BolCing (M)
Mdrt.h 17
Lom1nl(

E~ents

(on ule Mllr ch 2S)

Ap11l 11 '""' ! 1111pe1 (M)
J\p11l 2 I N•rt•\ Wol"'" (I")

KlY
K

M

"lr111h4n,
Mtm•HtJI Audoluroum

t

tl~rl..&lt;..,m

1111

l rmplr """''" ~ ltdd \1111 ".11 111 ""
~t.llr UrttHf\IIV AI (lull•h•

Sports lnformatton
mCNiec.e

Overseas Programs
1 he

Office of Ovenus Audernic Progr;ams 1s
'lotver•l 'lolutly opportunHie'lo lor studenh JbroJd
for the 'lournmer dnd ldll term

~pon'loortng

England: Didsbury College of Ed uc•lion in Manch11ter
for the fall term , 1971 ; open to SUNY juniors &lt;~nd
seniors en&amp;.a&amp;ed m elemenl•ry or secondary tuchtr
eduution, offers courses In history , p h ilosophy .and
todoloav of educo~tion, art and design, Bntlsh •nd Europeo~n
tdslory; opportunities for independen t study and for
d~ observ.atlon; dud line for appllc;allons is Ap ril 15
Enatlnd: Didsbury College in M .anchester, &lt;~ rou r-'Weck
c oune In " British Prim&lt;~ry SchOQis," June 26 ~.... July 21;
open to unde'lflld u~te and s u duate SUN Y· studen ts ;
Involves visits to el ementary schOQis operated on the

"inrorm ;al" or "ope n" pl.an now be1ng adopled 111 m.lny
American schoob; deadline lor dppltcatlons "Aprrl 1~
German : University of Cologne, for graduate and
well -q u alified upper-level undergr•duate ;tudenl'lo, academit
year 1972·73: par ticipants Will enroll 1n gradu .. re ~ou rses or
pursue doctoral research iro lhe humo1n1tie~ and soetdl
sciences, intensive fo~ngu•f!e tr•rn1ng Will be available
preced ing t he beginning or classh; de~dline for ippllcalion~
is April IS .
Leb ;anon: Amerlc&lt;~n University of Be1rul for the
1972 73 o~c.ademk yur; open to SU NY tuniors o~nd seniors,
proaro~m is in t he arts and sclenc11, no competence In Arabi'
o r French req u ired, .a ppl kJtlon dudllne Is A pril 1.
Furthu Information and applications art avo/lablr
frcm the Office of Oversell$ Audemk Progrt~ms, 107
row~nd HaN, Stole University at Buff11lo, Buf falo, N.Y.
14114, or phone 83 1-4147.

Tomorrow. lnlldmur•l roller hod.. ey al Hl 30 o~.rn. in
the C.•pen P4rl..inK lot, weAther permit ling.
V.lr~ily outdoor trac k .1nd field $Ched ule : April J.S,
8ullalo '&gt;Idle; April 19 dl 8ur14fo Slate with C.1n1sius; April
2l .11 Cfevelo~nd Sute, Ap11l 26 ~· Broclr.pon State with
Robert\ We!&gt;lcy.an, April 28 dl lhe Penn Relay ~; April 29 .tl
SUN¥ Albany with SUNY S1ony Brook at SUNY
Binglumton; Mo~y 3, Fredoni• !&gt;t41e; May 6, UB
lnvtlo~tiondl : May 1.3 New York Sl.olte Coll egio~te 1101'k .tnd
Oeld ch4mpiomh1ps at Rochesrer.
The Student Athletic Review Bo~rd will meet Tuesd•y
evcn1ng a1 7 p.m . rn ROQm 262 Norton Ho~ll. All uhlelic
refilled budgets Will be discussed.

�I .

Borcelono, Spai n

Student Travel &amp; Study

.

Countryside, Porlu!JOI

S~pplement

�SASW Expands
SASU initiited discussions with SUNY at Buffalo
University ]rivet, in the hope of expanding the SUNYAB
trdvcl ~ervice to include campuses state-wide. As a result of
those discussions, the University Travel Summer shuttle to
t:.urope i~ now offered at some 27 units of the State
University. Unfortunately, Civil Aeroniutics Board
regulations force SASU to exclude Commun1ty Colleges
from the program. Even so, w1th SASU's support,
Univer\ity Travel now reaches a student, faculty and staff
population of over 100,000 people
Of cour\e, SASU had to make allowances that
University Travel, here In Buffalo, did not. Because SUNY
units are w1dely dispersed across the State, SASU has had
to mdil the information Ed Dale would otherwise have

University~

Travel

now, been without reliable, inexpensive charter flights to

provided in person. We put together a packet of
Information that includes passport and ~lth certificate
information, and applications, a student guide and map of
london and Paris, or Amsterdam, CIEE student 10
information and applications, a student Eurallpass
application, a youth hostel handbook and more. As you
can see, the packet is quite comprehensive, but for those
who still have questions, we do our best to find the
answers that will make their trip to Europe that much
easier.

For the future, SASU hopes to provide similar
programs at the major semester br~ks - Christmas
lntersession, and Easter. We hope to help the growth of
University Travel, in a mutual effort to provide better
service to campus communities around the sute. In fact,
SASU is presently considering leasing its own plane, with
an option to purchi.se. This would give us wide latitude as
to trip dates, as well as providing lower costs.

Needless to say, the SASU-University Travel summer
flights to Europe are being reuived very favorably across
the state. Many of the schools that we reach have, up until

For the meantime, SASU and University Travel can
continue working together to improve student travel
opportunities sutewide.

.- ~~:€:1

!:t::·~~:l

Europe.

~

~.

'

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•..•..
~

M

I

UNIVERSITY TRAVEL

~

(A Division of Sub Board I, Inc.)

~ ~

R
~J
~
~

~€

Norton 323/316

831-3602/3603

~u::
~ ~

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~

~

I

STUDENT TRAVEL LENDING LIBRARY
Council on International
Education Exchange
International Student 1.0. Cards issued.
Inter- European flights
Student U-Rail passes
Youth Hostel 1.0. cards issued ,
with guide book.
Student Tour Information
Car rental, leasing and purchasing plans
Insurance programs
Passport forms, discount photo service and
health certificates.
Information on employment.
Information on boats and steamers.
Maps, tips and various C.I.E.E. materials.
Notary services.

2
,;

�I I

t

I I

I

..,.'

j

'

..

,'

.

Notice: Drug Arrests Abroad
An alarming increase in the number of arrests of
young Americans ~road on illicit drug charps continues
to be reported by U.S. consular officers. By Jantw)' 1971,
700 Americans were under detention In foreign countlres
on c:harges of possession, use, or trafficking in illicit drugs.
This represents an increase of more than 70% over last
year.
This situation is of particular concern in view of the
severe penalties involved, the primitive prison conditions in
some countries, and the very limited ability of US.
officials to assist those arrested.
Amerie&lt;ms are generally unaware that in many places
the sellers of drugs are also informers to police or customs
officials. After making a sale the seller will describe the
buyer to the police (or customs officials at ports of
entry/exit) as a possible user. The buyer is then detained
by the officials who usually find the drugs in his possession
and he is arrested and charged with a serious offense. The
seller benefits in two ways in such cases: he receives
money from the buyer, and a reward from the police or

customs for acting as an informer. Many young Americans
have fallen Into such a trap as this.
Nearly all of the US. nationals arrested on drug
charges in foreign countries are under 30 years of age.
Many of these young Americans appear to have had the
Impression that foreign governments are more permissive
than our own jn their drug laws and law enforcement. In
fact, however, prosecution of offenders is being intensified
as t he result of an international drive to suppress the illicit
drug trade, and the penalties for violations in many foreign
countries are very severe - ranging up to the death
penalty. A jail term of 6 years plus a heavy fine is the rule
in some countries for mere possession of narcotics or
marijuana ; in others the sentence is I to 3 years in a
''detoxification asylum" - usually a mental hospital - for
possession or trafficking. Trafficking in or smoking
marijuana can often draw the same penalties as possession
or use of heroin.
In addition, prison conditio ns in some countries are
deplorable, and pretrial confinement can be prolonged
in some cases up to a year. Some o f this time may be

Belgium
TE.J
61 rue Belliard
Brussels 4

....J

w

;a:
a:
~

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z
w

0

:::&gt;

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Bulfpria

BM1
10 Tzar Kaloy.tn
Sofia

Student Travel
Organizations

C&lt;~nada

During your travels, you will
certainly want to vis•t the national
student travel org.an1zations of
each country. They are excellent
sources of information on local
student activities and hospitality .
The main offices are listed below,
and there ~re branch offices '"
university towns.

TOURBEC
112 Que~t .
rueSt Paul
Montreal 12 5, Quebec
AOSC
44 St . George Street
T oronto 5, Ontario

spend in solitary comfinement. Many countries howe no
provision for bail on drug char~s.
Limits of Consular Assisbnce
American travelers should be aware that when abroad
they are subject solely to the laws of the country they arevisiting. They are not protected by US. bws.. Th~
authority of American consular officials to lntet~ on
their behalf is very limited.
US. consular officers can anddo visit and advise the
detainee, provide hlm with a list of local ~nomevs, md
inform his family or friends. T he Consul may aJso act ~
intermediary where the prison diet is below subsistence
level but prisoners' families or friends must pay for rood
supplements. However, US. officials cannot ask or ob~in
different treatment for American citizens than that gj¥en
to others under the laws of the country concerned. ln
addition, under US . law, official US. funds cannot be
used to pay legal fees or other expenses for any AmefiQn
detainee.

NUSTS
Clifton House
117 Euston Ro.1d
London, N.W. l
Finland
FSlS
48 Kampink.atu
Helsinki 10
France
CIEl
49, rue Pterre Charron
Paris 8e
OTU
137, Blvd St M1c.hcl
Parh 5e
Germ~ny

Austri&lt;~

BfSI
3 Schreyvogelga~sc
A-1010 Vienna
OH
Fuhrichgasse 10
A· 1010 Vienna
OKISTA
4 Turkenstrassc
A-1090 Vienna
Australia
AUS
344 Victona Street
North Melbourne
Victoria 3051

Czedloslovakia ,
CKM
12 Zitna ulice
Prague 2
Denm~rk

DIS
36 Skindergade
1 159 Copenhagen K
SSTS
51 Studiestraede
1554 Copenhagen V
England
BUSTA
44 Goodge St.
I !'rH'fon, W 1

Israel
ISSTA
2 Pinsker Street
1 el Aviv

RumMi~

July
SlC
Vi&lt;~ Nazionale 112
00184 Rome

Scotl~nd

Malt.l
NS TS(M)
220 St. Paul\ Str~et
Vallell.t
N~thcri.Jnds

GSTS
Dietk trchcnslra)se 30
53 Bonn

SR
Univer)t tcts~n trct

Blindern, Oslo 3
New

2~1and

NZU~A

I M.tnon St.
Wellington
Pol;and
ALMATUR
Ordynacka 9

Jrel.1nd

Ponugal

w,u,aw
S IA E.I~ T

11 St. Stephen\ Green
Ouhlin ?

SFS·Resor
Orottninggatan 91
S·l 13 60 Stockholm

Lciden

Hungary
lXPRlSS
&lt;)Labad,ay I cr 11&gt;
Budape\t V

usn

SJ).)in
VIAJESEU
88 Fernando
el Catollc&lt;&gt;
Madrid 15

6

Non~ay

ARTU
Hardcnberg,•otr a~..e 9
I Berlin l l

SUSTA
55 George IV Bridge
Edinburgh 1

Sweden

NBBS
Ra~nburg

BTI
6.S i Onesti Street
Bucharest

Av Rovi ~ro Pais
I i\bon I

Swiuetbnd
SSR
Leonhardstrassc 19
8001 Zurich

Turkry
TMTF
Babiali Cad. 40
Cagaloglu, Istanbul
USSR
SPUTN IK
Lebiangiy per 4
Mo)COw G 19
Yugoslavia
YUS
Nise Ouhade 12/1
11000

Rf!lvr;~de

GlEE-The Whole World Handbook
The Whole World Handbook. Six Continents on o Studenr
Budget. T he Handbook is CIEE 's first venture in the
publishrng field and we are more than a little excited and
nervo us about it! It's going to the printer on january 1,
and will be re.1dy for distribution by March 1, 1972. Here
is how we have described it in Taking Off·

YOUTH FARE · l1·21 YEARS OF AGE (round tri p only)

tr1formatlon on add-on fares from other US. cities, we will
be happy to ,Mist you They vary depending upon your

From New York to:

.\ houldn

Peuk

n19

"The Whole World Handbook answers all of the qucstrons
you will have in preparing to take off for Asia, Africa,
Latin America, Canada, Australia and Europe. It tells you
how to buy a round-trip ticket to Colombia for $142, join
a workcamp In Ghana or a kibbutz in Israel, study
Renaissance art in Rome, get a job in Picadilly Circus, live
in a Buddhist temple in japan, and travel by ship from
Kenya to India for $50. And that's lust a brief sampling of
the type of information contained in nearly 300 pages
d~ribing t ravel, work and study opportunities almost
everywhere in the world. The Handbook is being published
for the first time in 1972, and includes information you
won't be able to find anywhere else. Cost $2.95 ."

Dublin
n19
224
London, Lisbon
239
Amsterdam, Paris, Brus)eh, Madrid
Copenhagen, Frankfurt , Geneva, Zurrch 244
254
Berlin, Munich
269
Milan, Prague, Stockholm
2M9
Vienna
Helsinki
276
304
Rome
304
Warsaw
359
Moscow
390
Istanbul
364
Athens
Tel Aviv, Beirut, Catro, Damascus
409
314
Budapest
369
Bucharest

The Handbook will include the information previously
contained in the Student Abrood series, Employment
AbrO&lt;Jd, and the fact sheets on Africa, Japan, U.SS.R. and
Eastern Europe and latin America, plus a great deal of
new information not available before. l t is our feeling that
most students are unsure of where they want to go, how to
get there, .and what they want to do when they arrive.

Youth fare tickets are valid fo• one year commencing with
departure date from the US. No stopovers are permitted,
except to the Middle East where one stopover in Europe i~
allowed on westbound travel. However, one can return
from a different city. Reservations will not be confirmed
by the airlines until 7 days prior to departure. Weekend
surcharge of $15.00 each way. If you should need

points o f departure and .tmvAI in Europe.
REGULAR ECONOMY FARE (round trip)

294

304

From New York to:

Shoulder

~ 14

..324
334

354
346

364

$454
London , u~bon
474
Am)terdam, Paris, Bru~)e ls, Madrid
Copenhagen , Frankfurt, Geneva, Zurich 504
556
Vienna
604
Rome

$556

600
640
690
704

369
429
445

414
459
374
429

Tickets valid o ne year Stopovers .dlowed. No weekend
surcharge
22-45 DAY EXCURSION fARE (round trip only)
Same as youth fares, with the exception of the Middle

East:
From New York to:

Shoulder

Peok

Tel Aviv, Beirut, Cairo, Damascus

$539

$594

Maximum stay abroad is 45 days. Minimum st~y is 22
days. No stopovers allowed, except to the Middle East.
Weekend surcharge of $15.00 each way .

3

�STUDYING ABROAD
Overseas Study Could Be For You
There are unique benefits in store for
students who study abroad. It is an
enriching process which brings together the
class room and foreign wltural life, an
experience not afforded those who remain
on c.tmpus. Emanating from a sense of
intellectual purpose, overseas study helps
equip the student to be more objectively
critical and appreciative of his own and the
host country's institutions, values and
mOf"es. Increasing competence in a foreign
language through overseas study prov1des a
vital tool for gaining a more thorough
knowledge of d foreign civilization.
SUNY/ Buffalo's programs overseas span
the areas of the Middle East, Asia, Western
Europe and Mex1co. Some are largely for
the specialist, graduate student ; others are
designed to meet undergraduates' needs
and interests. All of our overseas programs
form an integral part of th1~ Univers1ty 's
course offenngs, as solid ev1dence of the
importance placed on study overseas.
To encourage 1ncreasmg student
p.lrticipation, effort is made, wherever
posstble, to keep program costs overseas
equ1valent to those non-commuting
students would mcur for d s1m1lar pe11od of
study on '-lmpus.
Read what we me.~n
Audemic Year Programs
8e1rut, Lebanon: Perhaps no area 1s
more eli.Citing, more tmporta nt,
immedtately relevant, and yet les~
acLe'!'&gt;Sible tn Amenca, thdn the Arab world.
Beirut, Lebanon i~ d part1cular ly Important
si~ for study betau\e tt ~~ considered,
geographically and culturally, the meeting
pla ce of lhe Lulern and Western
civll izattons. The UniversitY h.u an
enrollment of approx1m.nely 3800
students from nearly 60 countnes, and 1s
regarded by many as the leddmg university
in the Middle E.lst, \erv1ng the drea for
more than d century Cour~\ .are dVdllable
in ne.irly every discipline 10 the am and
sciences.
SUNY students who Will be IUOIOrs Of"
seniors at the time of the1t partici pation in
the progr.tm are ellg~ble to apply No
competence in Arabic or French is
required.
Grenoble, France Enter1ng 1h thud
year of operation, the program offers
SUNY students the opportunity to study
at the Umversity of Grenoble for e1ther a
semester or dn .tcddemiC year Other
attractive opuons are l) partiCipants may
take a combmation of rcguldr courses in
the humanities and SOCI&lt;JI SCiences at the
U niver\1 ty , 2) mdependent study, J)
advanced French language classes, and 4)
student tedchmg at I rench pnmary and
~ondary school~ Housing w1th French
fam1hes 1s prov1ded through the program.
fhe city of Grenoble, located tn
southeastern France near the Sw1s~ and
Italian borders, combmes cosmopolitanism
with the natural beauty of the surrounding
mount.lins. Site of the 1968 Olympics,
Grenoble is also one of the most extensive
model university communities m France
SUNY sophomores, tuniors and seniors
in all academiC fields, who have above
intermedi.tte competence in French, are
eligiblf' to apply
Nice, France · Jointly sponsored With
the three other SUNY universities centers,
the program offers SUNY upper level
undergraduates and gradua~ students the
opportunity to enroll in the regular courses
of a French university and to buome
familiar with French culture. The progrmt
features· 1) a mon lh presession in Paris
during September; 2) a month presession in
Nice during OGtober; 3) courses in various
fields at the University from November to

4

I'

mid-June ; and 4) independent study. program option is encouraged. Visits to University of Salamanca's summer session
Tutoring &lt;Jssistance IS provided for English primary and secondary schools are offers an extensive series of extracurricular
activities, including plays, concerts,
partJcipants. Students will be housed in arrmged for the participants.
With more than 1400 students, modem films, reGitals, folkiOf'e music &lt;Jnd
university dormitOf"ies, apartments, or in
Didsbury College is one of the largest and dances.
rooms with French families.
Undergraduate and graduate students
Nice is located on the French Riviera more outstanding teacher training
about thirty miles from the Italian border. institutions In the British Isles. The College who have completed at least one year of
With 300,000 inhabitAnts, the city carries is located about five miles from the center college Spanish or the equivalent are
on both French and Italian traditions. The of Manchester. The ·city and surrounding eligible for admission. By arrangement,
University, established in 1965, currently countryside provide many opportunities students who do not meet the language
enrolls 12,000 students. A progressive for study, cultural and recreational qualification may also apply, These
institution, it has attempted to expand and activities. Manchester has an extensive students will be registered In an elementary
liberalize the French undergraduate and system of libraries, art galleries, theaters language course offered by the University
and a symphony orchestra.
of Salamanca. Remedial work and/or
graduate program~ .
5on juan, Puerto Rico: The spring tutorials can be arranged.
Juniors, seniors and graduate students
Manchester, England: A four week
who have suffic1ent pmficiency in french s.emester program in San Juan offers
to enter regular university cou~s are , courses, independent study, workshops and course In British Primary Schools will be:
field work in Puerto Rican culture, held at Oidsbury College of Education,
eligible to apply.
Paris, France. The program is designed I iter &lt;1 tu re, drama, folk art, politlul Manchester, England, for the flrst time th1 ~
problems and filmmaking. The program is summer. Open to both undergraduates and
tor doctoral students who are preparing fur
their preliminary exammations and/or affiliated with the lnstituto de Cultura gnaduate students, the course will Involve
do1ng re~arch for their dissert.ttions to 1) Puertorriquena. Staffed by the leading visits to elementary S(hooiS operated oo
enroll '" any institute of advanced study 1n armts, writers and scholars in Puerto Ri&lt;:o, the "informal" or open plan now being
Paris; 2) partietpate in special s.emmars the lnstiruto 1s located in the former adopted in many American schools.
Of"g.anized by the program under leadmg Convento de los Dominicos, one of the Participants will have opportunities to
principal colonial monuments of Puerto work in classrooms and discuss the
scholar~. writers and critics, 3) .lttend
Rico. The program aims to give students an approach with British educators. Lecture~
special wlloquia on topics of interest
org.1nized for the group; and 4) rake opportunity to get into the mainstream of by British educ.ttors are also scheduled .
tutorial$ with French ~holar~ in thelf area the cultural and social life of the island .
Each participant will select a topic of
Sophomores and juniors who ~ve a special interest for Independent study.
of interest. A resident research adviser in
Paris pl.lns for the general and individual working knowledge of Spanish and a
A description of Didsbury College and
instructional and research need) of the satisfactory academic record are eliaible to of Manchester can be found in the
apply.
students.
preceding section relating to semester
PhD candidate) from any disc1pline who
Uppsola, Sweden· The fall semester programs,
have completed their course work .1re program i~ designed for master's or
Mazatlon, Mexico: A summer field
elig1ble to apply, provided their program of doctoral students to conduct research at school, held annually sinGe 1968, is
study is approved by then respecttve the University of Uppsala. Particularly conducted In connection with research
departments.
relevant research topics are comparatrve aimed at the dating and exposition of
Cologne, Germany: The a'-1dem1c year stud1es of Scandinavian-American art, art materiaJ culture of the coastal plain of
program i\ de-.igned IJimarily for gr.ldu.ue h 1st ory, politics, h1story, economics, western Mcl(ico. The prosram introduces
students Pdrtic:ipanls will enroll in I i terature, environmental studies, students to coastal aspects of West Mexican
graduate cour\es .1t the Unrvermy Of philosophy, aesthetics or social problems. prehistory, and a variety of experiences in
pursue doctoral research Pnvate and small The library at Uppsala 1S a particularly reconnaissance, mapping and eJCcavation
group tutonals will be dV.ttlable as a good one. Meetings c.tn be arranged with are offered. Instruction in archaeology,
supplement to course work, .lnd lec:.ture\ sch olars from Sweden and other geology, archaeozoology and plant ecology
dnd seminars with distinguished German Scandinavian countries in the individual's is also offered through the program, both
scholars will ~ arranged . lntens1ve area of research. An introductory course in in the classroom situation and in the field .
I&lt;Anguage tt aintng will be available Swedish would be optional for the
Undergraduate and graduate students
preceding the beginntng of un1vers1ty semester program.
with some knowledge of conversational
cla&lt;ose~.
Uppsala is located approximately one Spanish and previous archaeological field
hour by train from Stockholm. Its experience are ehg1ble to apply.
The University of Cologne, one of the
un1versity has an inrollment of
oldest in Germ.tny, offers ell.ccllent and
Funher informat1on and applications
approximately 20,000.
e.xtens1ve programs of in!lttUction in all
concerning programs can be obtained from
Ahmedabad, India: During the spring, the Office of Overseas Academic Programs,
•reas of the humanities and social \Ciences.
1971 semester, the Faculty of Educational
Within relatively easy reach of other major
I 07 Townsend Hall. Telephone :
cittes 1n Germany, Cologne itself has Studies received a grant from the United 831-4247/4941 .
sever a I fine mu\eum~ and a varied St.ttes Office of Education to support a
In addition to the programs described
semester study program at Gujarat above offered through this campus,
lheatriul and musiul life.
Universtty m Ahmedabad, India. Nineteen SUNY/ Buffalo students are eligible to
Parma, Italy. For the p.tst three years,
graduate
studenb received grants to eover apply to the more than 1()() programs
SUNY/-Buffalo ha~ exchanged a
transportation
and living expense!&gt;. sponsored by other SUNY campuses. These
cons1derable number of students with the
Parttc1pants enrolled in courses on programs are both varied and tnltlresting,
University of Parma, Italy Located
comparative education in Asia, educational and are located as nearby as Canada and as
midway between Milan and Bologna tn the
of Asi.s, survey of Eut Asian far away as Japan. SUNY / Buffalo students
sociology
Po River Valley, Parma is steeped in
cultures,
and
pursued independent \ludy may also apply to prog:nms administered
cultural attractions. Its origms daling back
pro)ects.
by accredited colleges and universities
to the founding of its schools of medicine
It is anticipated that s1m1lar grants will throughout the United States. In addition,
and law 1n the 8th century, the University
of Parma has considerable stature among be applied for to finance further nudy they may apply dirutly for admission to a
programs in Asia.
foreign university as a visiting student
Ital ian universities.
in a special program for foreign
either
5olomanco, Spain: Our summer program
For the 1972-73 academic year, the
students,
or to regular faculties of the
exchange program wtll be conducted on an in Spain offers undergraduate and graduate
university.
Students can also arrange for
to
t.tke
courses
in
students
the
opportunity
individual basis. Master's and/or doctoral
students who are highly proficient in Spanish language, literature, art and history independent study projects overseu with
Italian and who are conductmg research at the University of Salamanca. their c.tmpus departments.
Further information and counseling on
which could best be done in Parma, will be Participants live in seluted private homes,
considered for the exchange, Fields of thereby affording maximum exposure to overseas st~dy opportunities and umpus
particular importance for research are art the language, culture and customs of Spain. procedures are available in the Office of
Overseas Academic Programs. Interested
histOf"y, philosophy and musicology .
Upon arrival in Spain, students
students are requested to call the above
participate In a two week orientation
extonsion for an appointment.
Semester Pro,nms
consisting of a guided toor of Castile
For graduate students and faculty
Manchester, England: The fall semester LaMancha and Andalucia. Six. weeks of members, the Office of Overseas Academic
exchange prograrn with Oidsbury college of academic work, additional field trips .lnd Programs has information about overseas
Education is open to SUNY juniors and extra curricular activities in Salamanca fellowships, research grants and teaching
seniors, who are engaged in elementary or follow. Two weeks of free travel conclude opportunities.
secondary teacher education programs. the program.
In Addition, the library of the Office of
Didsbury College offers courses in the
Salamanca is located 125 miles west of Overseas Academic Progr3ms contains
fields of education, social sc.iences and the Madrid and 60 miles from the Portuguese many foreign university catalogs for
human ities. lndeoendent study as a border. In addition to many courses, the perusal.

�Paris t
A small number of American girls are p iau with French
families for periods of six to twelve months. The
conditions of plaument are similar to those of Accueil
Familial des Jeunes Etrangers.

Hotel and Farm Work

WORK IN
EUROPE
THIS SUMMER
SHORT-TERM UNSKILLED EMPLOYMENT
Getting a work permit for short·term unskilled
employment is next to impossible in most countries. If
you plan lo work for just a few months, you may want to
take advantage of the services offered by certain agencies
th~t arrange this kind of employment, There are many
agencies of th1s type, s.ome of very high quality and others
not . For assistanu in evaluating any program, you can
refer to the guidelines in A Word of Coutlon, a pamphlet
avai la ble free of charge from the Director of Public
Information and Reports Staff, Bureau of Educational and
Cultu ral Affairs, Department of State, Washington, D.C.

passport-size photographs. The reference form should be
given to a previous employer to complete and return to
CIEE; no application can be processed until the reference
form has been reuived. The fee of $10 must accom pany
your application. Applicanh who Cdncel before their
working papers have been issued will be charged a $5 fee.
No refund will be made after the working papers have been
issued. Work permits will be issued on or about April 15;
although applications will be accepted after tha t date, it
will not be possible to refund any fee s c1fter April 15 .

Volunteer Wori( in lsneli Kibbutzim
The Israel Students Tourist Assoc1a t1on oftea \ numerous
10520.
opportunities in Israel for students to work on klbbuwm,
agricultural settlements organized on a collective bc1s1s . I n
A last foJiows o f wme of the organizations that have
most of the kibbutzim the work is agricultural, e.g. picking
accepted American students for unskilled jobs abroad.
olives, cotton or grapes. The work peraod lc1.sts a minimum
Through CIE E, you can arrange to participate rn Summer
of six weeks but may be extended upon request . Students
jobs in Britain and Australia or Volunteer Work in Israeli Me expected to work between 36 and 40 hours J week,
Kibbutzim. There is an application at the back of thili with one: day a week free . The kibbutz o rganize\ a onc-dJy
booklet. Applications for the other programs can be · ~ghts.eeing excursion in the area where the C&lt;tmp is
o btained by writing directly to the sponsoring
loc:.ated. Volunteers reulve free accommodc~.tiom, meals
organizations.
and laundry serviu. While no special skills are required,
applicants mu~t be between the ages of 18 and 30. The
Summer Jobs in Britain and Austn1lia
registration fee for the kibbutz stay 1s $20, plus a $2
CIEE will obtain permission for you to work during the
non-refundable book in&amp; fee . The fees Include dinner , bed
summer in either the United Kingdom o r Australia. Both
and breakfast in Tel Aviv on the day before the kibbuu
Stilly, triinsportation or fare to the kibbutL, and insurance
countries are logical choices for summer employment
because language barriers are nonexistent. Summer jobs are
covering the six week period at the kibbutz. lnle rcstt'd
students should complete the application form in this
., relatively easy to find upon arrival. So there is no need to
booklet. Depending upo n availability, pfa&lt;.cmcnts will be
pre-arrange a job before you leave, although you mav want
confirmed as soon as possible after rece1p t of the
to do so if you have eonuct~ in th~e countries.
application by CIEE. Applic.ttions must be received .tl
least three weeks prior to the desired ~ldrtlng date or the
In addition to working p.tpers, you w1ll rece1ve
kibbutz stAy . If plaument c.tnnot be wnf1rmcd , the
inform.ttion on Irving and working in t he selected country,
registration fee will be refunded . Apply e.trly , ~in1.1'
including detarls on the best ways. to find a job, either
plauments are limtled.
before or .1fter your arrival abroad . As a p.uticipant you
will also receive CIEE's Student Guide to London or the
Australian Student Trove/ Guide published by the Applications for t he foll owing program~ ..nuuld b&lt;' mc1.dt'
drrectly to tht" orgarllzt~tlons .tl the tnd~&lt;:a tcd addrcssc'
Australian Union of Students. Of course, you will not
make as much money working in either country as you
Finland
would in a summer job in the U5. But sinu the con of
Tr.tinee's Exch.tnge Office
living is considerably lower abroad, you can expect to
make enough money to cover you daily living expenses
Ministry of Labour
Employment Oivbion
during your stay and possibly to save something toward
the cost of travel when you fin ish your job. It is Important
Silassaarenkatu )V
to remember that although inexpensive transatlantic
Helsinki 53
transportation is readily available, t ransportation costs to Thls government bureau plac.e\ ~tudcnt' between the age'
Australia are qui te high. Student~ interested in working in
of 16 and 25 w1th F tnnhh lamthes during tht! surnmcr
months. Students are expected to help the f.tmily w1th
Australia should make certain that they have taken into
English language practiCe and to take pc~rt 1n t he family\
account the transpor\41tion expen~ before t hey apply for
daily work, t.g. housekeeping, child care, gardening and/or
the program .
farming. In return, students receive ft ee room .tnd bo.trd
Obtaining working papers on your own for these countries and some pocket money. No work TX'rmit is required 1 ht·
deadline for applic;.ttaons" March 15
can be a complicated process. CIEE is able to cut through
thi~ red tape because of a special agreement between the
U5. government and the governments of the Unrted
France
Kingdom and Aus.tralia, which provides for an exchange of
students during summer vacations and gives them the Au Pair
opportunit y to work in each other's countries. The Accueil Familial des jeune~ ltrangers
23,-rue du Cherche-Midt
program is operated in cooperation with the British
Paris 6
Universities Studef\l Travel AsS(Xiation and the Australian
This agency arranges au pair pfacemenb in r rench tarn1hcs
Union of Students.
for girls between t he ages. of 18 and 30 for J minimum stdy
To be eligible you must be between the ages of 18 and 30, of slx months. A basic knowledge of French is requtred .
enrolled full-time for part-time as a matriculating student However, a limited number of positions is ci.V.tilable for
three months during the summer. The fam ily helper is
in a n accredited college or university and a resident dtizen
of the United States In addition, you are requrred to hjve expected to assist with the housework and to take Qtre of
the children. Room and board are provided plus .tbout S50
previous work exp erience, proof of round·trip
transportation upoft arrival in the host country, and proof per month In pocket money . S t udents must pay a
plaument fee of approximately $ 11 . The application
of minimum funds of $200 for support until you receive
deadline for summer positions is April 15.
you first paycheck.
If you are interested in this service, complete the
application fo rm and mail it to C IEE with two

Amide Mondic~.le
39, rue Cambon

Director
Camp Agricole International (CAl )
Service International pour Etudiants (SIE)
P.O. Box 42
124B, rue Fe rrari
13 Marseille (5)
The CAl plaus. studen ts in hotel jobs in Grenoble for a
minimum period of two months during Jul y and August.
They must speak enough French to be a ble to assis.t the
hotel guests. Weekly wages are about $40 plus tips for
work that averages 60 hours per week. Room and board
are prov1ded, The minimum age is 18 . Applicants. pay a
placement fee of $25.
Students are plac;ed in jobs picking grapes in Beaujolais
during September and October (the exact dates depending
upon the harvest), picki~ che rries in Auxerrois in June
and j uly, and picking wal~ts in lsere in September a nd
October. Employees live on farms and have meals with
local families. Room and board are provided by the CA l.
There is a minimum work period of ten days .tnd a
maximum of one month. Wages are approximately $30 per
week. The pl.tcement fee is $20.
Germiiny
The Zentralstelle fur Arbeitsvermittlung, the official
German government labor agency, works through
Lufthansa German Airline) to place students in jobs
throughout Germany. Applicants must be at least 18 yectrs
of age, must agree to worl.. for at ledSt two month), and
must have su ffi cient command of the Germ.ln language to
be able to carry out their assignments. Work IS available in
agriculture, industry, hot.eh .tnd restaurants, comtrucuon,
!&gt;dnlt.anum~. children \ hom~ dnd hom~ for the aged .
Whrle student~ cannot he placed in tobs a t the Olympics in
Mun ich, they may be placed, on request, in neighboring
hotels and restaur.mts, which will require extra summer
help. Applications must be rece1ved by February 28. There
is no fee for this service. Contact the nearest Lufthansa
German Airline' office for complete information and
.tpplications.
Ireland
Comhcairdcas, Irish Wor kco~mp Movrment
27 Harcourt S t reet
Dublin 2
The Union ol Stude nl s in Ireland operates work camps
from mid-June to September. Projech include building
houses for i t iner.tnt~. developing playgrounds and parks
and res toring hi,toric buildings. Volunteers, who mus t be
between the .d&amp;C~ of 18 and 30, work eight hours a day and
get free room .lnd board m ~implc .lccommodcltrom in the
rural .treas of Ireland . There 1\ a fee of S7.10 whiCh covers
10\lH Jnce fc&gt;r volun te er~.

Norwdy
The Norwegi.tn tomm1ttce liJr
lntcrnation.tl lnform.ttion and Youth Work (N ilJ )
P.O. Box 8260, liammer~bo1g

o,lo 1
NIU will pld~.e \tudcn ts cl'&gt; " workinggue~tf' on Norweg1an
Chores m.ty ll'lclude haymaking, w~ding, milking,
picking fru it .tnd feeding cattle Gtrls may combine
housework wuh outdoor work No agncu ltural experience
is requrred . Apphc.an t~ must be between the ages of 18 Jnd
30 .tnd willing to work for a minimum of four weeks.
Positions dre availablt between Mc1y and October. Students
receive free bo.ttd .dOd lodging and approxim.ttley $7 per
week m pocket money.
f.trm~

WORK CAMPS AND VOLUNTARY SERVICE
There are hundreds of work camps c~nd volun t.try service
projects th.tt recruit young pie from all over the world
Usoalfy the work is hard, the p.ty either minimal or
nonexistent and the living condition~ primitive, but
volunteers come away with the satisfaction of having done
wmcthing worthwhile with their time. The following
publications are good sources of informatron on work
camps and volunl.ciry service opportunities.
Invest Yourself. Commission o n Voluntary Servic;e and
Ac tion, 475 Riverside Drive, Room 665, New Yo rk, New
York 10027 . lists openings for Americans In work camps
and service proJeCts throughout the world. $1.00 plus $.25
postage

Work Comps 19 72. Coordin.tting Commattee for
International Voluntary Serviu, UNESCO, 1 rue Miollis,
Paris 1.5e, Franu. An annual list of work camps organi.ters
with a brief program descri ption for each. Send three
international posul reply coupons.

6

I.

�BEFORE YOU GO • • •
CHECK FIRST TOURIST DOCU
TRAVEL ABROAD
What are the major
developments an International travel?
People are tal king, of course, about the
devaluation of the dollar and the changing
United States attitude toward the People's
Republic of China. Meanwhile, on a less
dramatic level, there is the steadily
increa~ing awaro?ness among na tions uf the
world of the value of encouraging travel ,
and toward this end a number have
dropped their airport departure taxe) and
simplified their document requirements In
addition, some area~. such as the Seychelle
Islands, which recently o pened an airport,
have become more acce~sible. The
information in this chart, which pertains
only to lourisb and not to bu)mc~s
traveler!&gt;, w.ts obtamed from emba.,sie'&gt;,
consulates, Gorvcrnment tounst off ices,
United Nauum missions and other official
agencies. In many Ga!&gt;CS the fees quoted
have been ctdjusted to reflect recent
currency c hanges, but further adjustments
are likely . Since travel requirement) are
revised from time to time by variou\
Governments, travelers are adv1sed to
double check before departang.

PASSPORTS
While some Caribbean HEALTH DOCUMENTS - Since Oct. 1,
islands and some Western Hemisphere 1971 , travelers have been permitted to
countries do not require passports, most enter the United States without having to
countries do, and.certainly a passport is the show proof of immuniZAtion against
best identification for a traveler. A United smallpox if during the 14 days prior to
States passport is good in all countries their entry they have not been in an area
except Cuba, North Korea and North where smallpox cases have been reported,
Vietndm. Passports Me valid for five years Smallpox·reporting areas recently have
and are not renewable. Two signed been limited to Afghanistan, Ethiopia,
photographs are required along with the India, Nepal, Pakistan and the Sudan . All
p.mport application. The fee is $10. A $2 the countries of Europe and all the Islands
pr ocessin g c harge is added when of the caribbean have eliminated the
dpplication is made in person . Mail smallpox vaccination requirement for
applications are accepted only from travelers coming directly from the Uneted
persons who have already reuived a States. However, many other countries still
passport and must be accompanied by an insist that visitors have an up·to-date
old passport Issued within eight years. smallpox vaccination certificate, and a
When sending a pa.ssport to an embassy or number of Caribbean countries insist on it
a con!&gt;Uiate for visa, the applicant should if the trdveler has stopped off elsewhere on
use registered mail and enclose at lust $ 1 h1s journey, a point that should be
for return of the passport by reg1stered particularly noted by cruise passengers.
rndil.
Vernon l&lt;ldd
t-or Information Similar to that contained on these two pages
for Ased &amp; the Pacific, Africa, and the Western Hemisphert, contact Ed
Dale in Room 3 16 Norton Hall, or call 831 -3602 .

Nelle

THE MIDDLE EAST
BAHRAIN

ISRAEL

Passport, vi!&gt;d (obtam.tblc from British consui.Hc)

None

None

Passport, v1~a. 14·cent fee 2 pictures, letter
gev!ng iunerary in Middle East and purpo..e of
VISit

No more than 5 Iraqi dinars
m or out

S I 40

Pas~port,

No more than 100 lvaeli
pounds out

no visa for 3 months, e'ICtendablc locally

for 1 ye.tr
Passport, VISd valid for 1 year for multeple
entry , no fee, I picture

None

None

30~.ty

None

None

LEBANON

P.ls'iport, b·month vi'id, valid for 2 entric:,1 S 5 ft:e
or muluple entry "'"' • P .50 fee, applic..Jtwn for~
unnece\'&gt;drY

Nww

S3.20

SAUDI A ARABIA •

P.t~~port, entry w.a valid for I vi~it up to 3 month\
issued only to persons having relative~ or uther
'
sponsor in Sciudi Art~bi.t, ~4 .85 fee

None

s 1.35

SOUTHERN YEMEN (Aden)

Passport , v1sa no more th.sn 3 month~ old onward
ticket
'

No Indian currenc y in or out

None

SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLI C

Passport, tourist visa for 2·week stay, $2.68 fee, or
entry visa for stay up to 3 months (valid for 6
months from date of is.sue). S6.60 tee

None

None

UNION OF ARAB EMIRATES
(Abu Dhabe, Ajrnan, Dubai 1 Fujairah, Sharjah, Umm al Qal·
wain) . (Formerly known as the
fruc1al States) .

Passport, visa

None

None

UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC (Egypt)•

Passport visa good for 3 months for stay up to 1
month, ~2 .30 contribution to save Nubian monuments

No Egyptian pounds in or o ut

$1 .30

YEMEN•

Passport, visa, $4 fee, 3 pictures, letter stating
purpose of visit; $2 additional fee for visas obhinPti hv mail

No rials in or out

$2

JORDAN
KUWAITTT*

KUWA IT"

Pa,\port.r. 3·day lfanset v1s.1 70 -c..cnt fCl' or
ves.t, S1.1SO fee, onward tecket
'

�....
~UMENTS

'

'•

AND REGULATIONS
EUROPE

Country

Tourist Documents

Currency
Restricttons

Airport
Deputure
Tax

ALBANIA

Passport, VISa obuinable in Pans or Rome

No leks 1n or out

None

AUSTRIA

Passport, no visa for 3 months

No more than 15,000 shillings
out

None

BELGIUM

Passport, no visa for 3 months

None

$2

BRITAIN

Passport, no visa, sufficient funds

None

None

BULGARIA

Passport1 no viq for stay of 48 h ours to 2 month\,
transit v1sa for shorter suy, $1 fee in advance or
$3 at border

No leva in or out

~1

CYPRUS

Passport, no visa for 3 months

None

None

CZECHOSLOVAKIA

Passport,

No kroner in or out

n

DENMARK

Passport, no visa for 3 months

None

None

EASTT GERMANY

Passport, visa obuinable at border or East German
Consulate in countries recognizing German Democratic Republic, $ 1.25 fee for stay up to 3 days,
$3.75 for longer stay, prepaid hotel voucher, con
firmed reservations

No East Lerman mark\ m or
out

~ 1.25

FINLAND

Passport, no visa for 3 month~

No more than 100 markka in or
out

~2.40

FRANCE

Passport, no vis.t for 3 months

No more th.m 500 fr.1nks out

None

WEST GERMANY

Passport, no v1sa for 90 days

None

None

GREECE

Passport, no v1sa for 2 months

Declaration requ1red

s 1.35

HUNGARY

Passport, visa valid for 6 months, S3 fee, 2 picture\,
hotel reservation or travel vouchers ($ 5 a d.w plu\
$ 1 handling charge)

No more than 200 lor1nt note&gt;
1n denomination\ of 10 or 20,
'" or out (convcr\ion ul
fonnts to other currem.y not
pctmitted inside Hung,uy)

ICELAND

Passport, no viSd for 3 months

No more than I.SOO krona, m
denominations of 100 or less,
10 or out

IRELAND

Passport, no vi\a

No more than 25 pounds
sterling our

None

ITALY

Passport, no v1sa lor 3 months

No more th,m 50,000 f1re out

s l 60

LIECHTENSTEIN

Passport, no vtsa for 3 months

Nom·

None

LUXEMBOURG

Passport, no v1sa

None•

~ 1 ro S2
depending on
1k\tination

MALTA

Passport

Dt:&lt;..laratmn rcqutrrd

s1 20

MONACO

Passport, no VISJ for 3 months

None

None

NETHERLANDS

Passport, no VISd for 3 months

None

None

NORWAY

Passport, no v1sa for 3 month\

No more thdn 1,000 !..remer
350 l&lt;.rvncr out

None

HOLLAND

Passport w1th at least 3 month~ vdltdity c~ccedtng
period of stay in Poland, VI'&gt;&lt;~, 2 p•cturcs, $5 fee
travel coupons, $9 a day per person , fee to vl\it
relatives S 13.50 plus S3 a day 1n travel coupon\ ,
trans1tvisa v.t1id for 72 hours &lt;~variJble to persom
holding VISd for adjacent country, ~4 fcc

PORTUGAL

Passport, no visa for 60 days, vi\d requ1red lor
overseas &gt;o,sessions, allow 30 dt~ys for proc.C\Stnjl\

Nunc

RUMANIA

Passport, VISd for stay up to 60 dc~ys, obt.tincthle
at border, nu fee, onward t1d..ct

N11

SOVIET UNION

Passport, Vl'&gt;a val1d for duration ol tr•pi~Winabk•
in Washington). 3 p1ctures, S2.50 proccss10~ fee ,
prepaid travel vo.uchers, copy of hotel wnf•rmat1on
from travel agency

Nn rubk\

SPAIN

Passport, no v1sa for 6 month\

SWEDEN

vi~a.

•

2 pictures, $6 fee

--------------------------None

10,

s 1 711

------------

----------

None

lei 10 or

S I 15

IIU I

Ill 111

our

S I 70

No more than '10,000 peseta\
10, 2,000 out

N()ne

Passport, no VISd for 3 month\

No more than o,OOO l&lt;.roner in
or out

None

SWITZERLAND

Passport, no visa for 3 months

None

None

TURKEY

Passport, no visa for 3 month'&gt;

No more than 100 lira'"
or out

$1

YUGOSLAVIA

Passport, v1..a, no fee

No more than 200 new d1nar
m, 100 out

S1.20 to
$2 depend ·
ing on des·
unation

•In addition to smallpox vaccination certificate, other types of inocvlations of good health are required or recommended. Check consulates, the United SLltes Public
He;~ lth 1\,.rvir,. nr transoortation companies for det.1iled re~ulations.

�EASYGOING SHORTCUTS
EUROPE'S FERRY LINES:

$6 ($7- $27)
Cabin berth : $16 with meals ($18- $34)
In preparing this list, an effort has
been made to obtain the latest and
ENGLAND-NORWAY
ENGlAND-HO lLAND
most complete information, but
T hrougho ut Europe ferry lines
o ffer motorists and other travelers a
some 1972 schedules and rates are
HARWICH- KRISTIANSAND
not yet published a nd a ll prices are HARWICH- HOOK OF HOllAND
con venient a nd usually economical
22 ho urs, Fred Olsen Lines, every 4 to
6}'1 - 7~ hours, British Rail- Zeeland
means of getting from countr y to
subject to change.
5 days
Steamship, daily and nightly
A word of explanatio n about the
co unt ry and
withing man y
$25 ($13- $44)
$ 10- $ 12, cabin berth : $ 1 extra
countries - from place to place. A
list : The first figure in the line of
NEWCASTlE (via S~van,er) BERGEN
($12- $31)
prices in each entry is the pas~enger FELIXSTOWE- ROTTERDAM
f er r y can cut driving distance
19 hours, Bergen Line, 1 to 3 times a
dramatically and provide a respite
fare unless designated as the fare for
week
6Vl hours, Transport Ferry Service,
Cabin berth : $28- $75 ($1 2 - $25)
from road tensions. And the c o st , a berth in a cabin . (Cabins usually
daily except Saturday
Cabin berth : $16 ($18- $34 )
though . o ft e n apparently high a t first
range from singles to four berths;
ENGLAND-GERMANY
glance, can be quite reasonable
occasion a lly there are sleeperettes.) IMMINGHAM- AMS TERDAM
13
hours,
Tor
Line,
weekly
conside ring the moto rist 's saving in
The figure in parentheses Is the
HARWICH- BREMERHAVEN
Cab in berth : $17 ($13- $29)
gasoline (w hic h costs close to tw ice
c harge for carryi ng an automobile .
16 hours, Prins Line, 3 to 4 umes
HUll
ROTTERDAM
wha t it does in the United S tates),
Finally, it is worth noting tha t the
a week
14 ho urs, North Sea Ferries, daily
oil, to lls, hotels and meals.
British Tourist Authority, 680 Fifth
$22, Cabin berth: $5- $35 ($12 $37)
Cabin berth $22 with meals ($12- $36)
This co mp ila tion and the Avenue , New York 10019, and the
HARWICH- HAMBURG
Associated Humber Lines, fi ve times
accompany ing map indicate how Scandinavian T o urist Offices , 505
21 ho urs, Prins Line, 3 to 4 times a
a week
extens ive European ferry rout\!S a re
Fifth Avenue, New York 10017 ,
week
C.ibin berth : $21 with meals ($21)
and give pert inent information , offer booklets containing d a ta o n
$24, Cabinberth: $3- $26 {$1 3- $41 )
including rates. In some msta n ces the their countries ' ferry routes that are
BRITAIN- IRELAND
BRITAIN-DENMARK
cheap est t ic kets p rovide the most
especially h e lpful to travelers
interested in s hort -h a ul trips within a ARDROSSAN- BELFAST
in terest in g rides. Bu t travelers sh ould
4\tl hours, Burns &amp; laird , daily (more
HARWICH- ESBJERG
exercise caution . For exa m ple, one countr y's boundaries.
18 hours, DFDS (United Steamship
o flen In summer)
American girl rook a night trip from
Company) daily in summer
$5
($1
2
$29)
Srci ly to Naples for about $ 12 , and
Cabin berth ; $20.$96 ($45 ; free with
SWANSEA- CORK
since s he h ad a s leeping bag she felt
IRELAND- FRANCE
9 hours, B &amp; I Line, 7 umes a week
4 passengers)
it unnecessary to pay ex tra fo r a
NEWCASTLE- ESBJERG
~ 8 . ($23- $37)
cabin But she found tha t she had t o
ROSSLARE- LE HAVRE
19 ho urs, DFDS, 3 times a week tn
LIVERPOOL- DUBLIN
fi ght off not on ly the night damp
22 ho ur~, Normandy Ferries and lri~h
summer
7 hours, B &amp; I line, 16 ti me~ a week
but eager male passengers as well ,
Conunenul Unes, I to 2 times a day
Cabin berth : $20 S70 ($45 , free with
$1, cabin berth : $2 extra ($23-$37)
$25 ($36-$57)
Food and drink - sandwiches
4 passengers)
DUN lAOGHAIRE (Dublin)- HOL YHEAD
LONDON- COPENHAGEN
and/or full meals - are available on
3l4 hour~. Bri tish Rail, 1 to 4 time1
ENGLAND- FRANCE
2 days, Balttc Steamsh ip Line, every
a day
most ferries b u t 1s usuall y not
$5
($14
$32)
1
to 10 days
included in the fare . Ferries between
DOVER-CALAIS
$29
($21- S47)
HEYSHAM
BELFAST
countr ies normall y have currency
1\tl hours, British Rail dnd T own~nd ­
LEITH (ScotJand)-COPENHAGEN
7 hours, British Rail, 6 to 1 n ight~ a
exchange facilities (or take the
Thoresen, frequ~nt da1ly ~rvic..e
week
l'h- 2 days, Iceland Steamship Com·
currency o f both countries), b ut the
n (s9- $31)
$5, cabin berth : $2 e)(tra (S20- $36)
pany, every 2 weeks in summer
change rate is seldom good and often
DOVER- BOULOGN£
LIVERPOOL- BELFAST
$30 ($22- $26; free with 4 passen·
the cash 1er is not around when
I hour , Bfitish Rail, frequent da1ly
lOY, hours, Belfast Steamship Com·
gers) DFDS, every 2 weeks
ned ed. Sometimes there are shops
service
pany, 6 to 7 nights a week
$34- $81 ($ 32; free with 4 passengers)
selling dut y -free
or at least
$7 ($9 - 31)
$7 ($20- $32)
inex pen c;ivc - liquor, cigarenes and
B.R. Hovercraft, 40 mtnutc'
PRESTON- BELFAST
ENGLAND - SWEDEN
~~ (~ 11 $40)
candy .
12\tl hours, Tran~port Ferry Servic~.
DOVER - DUNKIRK
Travelers taking their cars u suc1lly
3 times a week
LONDON (Tilbury)- GOTliENBURG
3 Y.t hours, British Ra tI and ~ rench
Cabtn ber th $ 12 wuh meals (S 18must be a t the ferry dock from 30 w
36 hours, Swedish Lloyd , l to 2 times
R.tll , four t1mes a dity
$34)
90 minute s dhead of sailing so thei r
a week
p ($9- $31)
PRESTON- lARNE
ve h icles can be loaded aboard , and
Cabin berth : S 18 $36 ($8- $18 ; free
RAMSGATE- CALAIS
12'h hour'i, Transport ferry Service,
with 4 passengers)
on popular routes like Dover-Calais
40 minutes, Hovcrlloyd, ftequent
6 times a week
IMMINGHAM- GOTHENBURG
1n peak seaso n rese rvations should be
daily service
Cab1n berth : $9 with meals ($18- 34)
24 hours, Tor line, 3 times a week
made well 1n adva nce.
R7 ($26- $44) (up to 7 pmt!ngers
ROSSLARE- FISHGUARD
Cabin berth : $24-$48 ($8 $20; free
ride free with cdr)
3!4 hours, British Rail, 1 to 4 times
w1th 4 passengers)
Car le ngth a factor
NEWHAVEN- DIEPPE
a week
HUll - GOTHENBURG
Jl4 hours, Brittsh Rdil ,md French
Car fares are usually based on tht:
• 5. cabin ber th · S2 extr.t ($ 19 $32)
36 hours, Ellerman 's Wilson line 1 ~o
Ra1l, I to 6 t1me~ a d.1 y
length of the car, IIY, feet commonly
STRANRAER l ARNE
2 umes a week
$9 ($9- $31)
being the divtding line between what
2l4 hour'i, BTSM (Scotland) Ltd and
Cablnberth : $31 S68{$10 S21,fret
is cons1dered short and wh.u is SOUTHAMPTOM- l£ HAVRE
Bruesh Rail, 4 times a day
with 4 passengers)
6Y~ 8Yz hours. Town~nd Thore..en ,
regarded dS long. Between Italy and
S2 (S10- S27)
1 to 2 times a day
Greece, motorists pay by we•ght and
ENGLAND- FINLAND
S9 ($ 12 BS)
CHANNEL ISLANDDS
are al~o subject to a landing tax of
SOUTHAMPTON- CHERBOURG
LONDON- HELSINKI
fro m $5 to $10.
-- -- ---------5 hours, Townsend l horc~n. 1 tH'tlC\
WE YMOUTH- GUERNSEY- JERSEY
3 ddys, Baltic Steamship Company,
a day
Fare reductions are o ft en offered
4 hour'i .tnd 6YJ hours, British Rail,
every 7 to 10 days in summer
$9,cabinberth : $4el(tra(~l l SJ.S)
off season, on unpopular days of the
2 10 11 times a week
~52 Wtth meal~ {$36- S7e3)
week or at unpopular times o f the
FOlKSTONE - CAlAIS
$~ ($16-$44)
day and almost always if there dre
40 minutes, folk stone Boulognc , IY1
(Passenger·only femes connect with
ENGLAND-SPAIN
hours, British R.til , d.11ly
Larterea, St Malo and Sark)
more than two passe ngers. On m.my
n ( pas~ngers only)
ferries, the car is free wi th four
SOUTHAMPTON- Btl BAO
ISLE OF MAN
passengers, or the fare is reduced for
36 hours, Swedi~ Lloyd, 3 times a
ENGLAND- BELGIUM
wee I..
each passenger accompanying the
ARDROSSAN- DOUGLAS
~29 (S8 S 18; fre e with 4 passenger\)
driver . Chi ldren are often carried free
OOVER- OSTEND
6
hours,
Isle
of
MAN
Steam
Packet
or at partial fare .
3"l4 hours, Dover- Ostend line, fre ·
6 hours, Osle of MN
ENGLAND-PORTUGAL
Fare reductions of 10 per cent to
quent daily service
6 hours, Isle of MAN Steam Packet
5 0 per cen t are also often offe1 ed for
$7 ($ 14)
Company, I to 5 times a week 10
SOUTHAMPTON-LISBON
DOVER- ZEEBRUGGE
ro undt rip travel, and some lines offer
summer
50 hours, Normandy Ferries, weekly
4 hours, Town~nd Thoresen, 2 to 4
$1 ($7 - $27)
c;pec ial triangle-route reduc ti ons .
Cabin berth : $42 ($21)
ttmes a day
BELFAST - DOUGLAS (and Ramsey,
Night t ravel usually costs more than
$7,
cabin berth . $ I extra ($ 9- $3 1)
weather permitting)
day travel if a cabin is desired , less
ENGLAND-MOROCCO
HARWICH-OSTEND
4!h
hours, IMSP, 2 to 4 times a week
lor deck passage. Usually ferry lines
5 hours, Harwich.Ostend line, daily
$6 ($17- $30)
SOUTHAMPTON- TANGIER
Jnd railways work togeth e r on
$10 ($9- $31)
(Passenger-only ferries connect with
62 hours, Southern Ferries, every 2
schedules and facilitie s in order to
FELIXSTOWE- ANTWERP
Dublin, Heysham, and llandudno)
weeks
f.1 ci l i t ate con nections for
14 hours, Transport ferry Service, 5
liVERPOOl- DOUGLAS
$88 ($47 minimum; free with 4 p~snon-motorist s.
t imes a week
4 hours, IMSP, frequency varies
engers)
-c:onllnu-.t on ~CJe 9by Pat McNees Mancini

-----------------------

8

:

I'

I \'I

... ,. .... ,
i"" •

'

. '•' ' •'•

... ''

1\\ I ·~ I

�"'•
-contlnu.CS from

o•v• 8 -

ENGLAND-U.S.S.R.
LONDON-LENINGRAD
4 days, Baltic Stumship Company
(every 7 to 10 days, April-October)
$60 with meals ($47- $91)
SCOTLAND-ICE LAND
LEITH-REYKJAVIK
2~ days, Iceland Steamship Com
pany, every 2 weeks
$33 with meals ($65- $73)
POLAND-swEDEN
SWINOU JSCIE- YST AD
7 hours, Polish Ocean Lines, twice
daily
$8, Cabin berth: $2 $10 extra ($10$12)
DENMARK-scOTLANDICELAND
COPENHAGEN- LEITH- ICELAND
4 5 days, DFDS, every 2 week&lt;j
$66- $139 ($91)
GERMANY -NORWAY
HAMBURG- KRISTIANSAND
19 hours, Fred Olsen Line, weekly
Cabin berth . $26- $61 ($14- $28; reduced ra te for 2 to 4 passengers)
HAMBURG- STAVANGER- BERGEN
27 hours, Bergen line, weekly
Cabin berth : $28-$54 ($8- $1 5)
CUXHAVEN- STAVANGERBERGEN
22 - 23Y2 hours, Bergen Line, 4 times a
week
Cdbtnberlh . $32 $76($11 $23)
KIEl - OSLO
19 hours, Bennett Travel Bureau, 3 to
6 limes a week
$17 , Cabm berth : $20 $35 ($12- $24)
GERMANY-swEDEN
TRAVEMUNDE- TRELLEBORG
7 hoors, Travemunde- Trelleborg Lme,
3 times a day
$12, Cabin berth : $2- $6 e&gt;.tu ($12)
TRAVEMUNDE- MALMO
8 hours, Swedish State Railways, twice
•• d.ay
S12,Cabinberth : $1 S9extra ($ 12)
KIEl- GOTHENBURG
12 hours, Stena Line, S times a week
$18, Cabin berth : $2- $44 ($12 S 13)
TRAVEMUNDE-COPENHAGEN HESINGBORG
10 hours, AB Trave Line, twice a day
$12, Cabin berth : $1 $25 ($12)
lUBECK-SLITE
23 hours, Finnllnes, 6 times a month
S 18, Cabin berth : $22- $48 ($ 13- $20)
SASSN ITZ- TRELLEBORG
4 hours, Swedish &amp; Danish Nattonal
Railways, frequent daily service
$5- S7,Cabinberth . $1 $5extra
($6- S7)
GERMANY -DENMARK
PUITGARDEN-RODBY
I hour, Danish State Ratlway, fre
quent daily service
$3- $4 ($9- $11)
TRAVEMUNDE- GEDSER
3 hours, Molwu line, frequent daily
service
$4 ($11 - $13)

.. .

times a week
Cabin berth : $29-$66 (S 18·$26; reduced rate for 2 to 4 passengers)
AMSTERDAM-STAVANGERBERGEN
25}7-28}7 hours, Bergen line, 4 times
a week
Cabin berth : $32-$76 ($11 - $23)
HOLLAND-swEDEN
AMSTERDAM- GOTHENBURG
24 hours, Tor Line, twice a week
Cabin berth : $20-$24 ($8- $20 ; free
with 4 passengers)
DENMARK
ARHUS- KALUNDBORG
3 Hours, Danish State Railways, frequent daily service
$5 $7 {$12 $13)
KNUOSHOVED- HALSSKOV
50 minutes, D:Jnish State Railways,
frequent daily service
$2 ($9- $1 0)
DENMARK-F INLAND
COPENHAGEN - HELSINKI
30 hours, Ftnlandliners, 1 to 2 times
a week
$26, Cabin benh· $32- $77 ($25}
DENMARK- NORWAY
HIRTSHALS-KRISTIANSAND
4}'2 hours, Fred Olsen, daily
$9, Cabin berth : $2- $9 (S 10 $12)
HI RTSHALS-ARENDAL
4 hours, Fred Olsen, 4 times a weel..
$9, Cabin benh · $2-$9 ($10 $ 12)
FREOERIKSHAVN- lARVIK
6 hours, Bennett Travel Bureau, daily
S9, Cabin berth H -S6 extra ($10·
$1 2)
FREOERI KSHA VN-OSLO
21YS hours, DFOS, 1 to 2 times a
week
$4- $6,C.tbin berth · $9- $1 9 ($12)
ARHUS- HORTEN- OSlO
16 hours, Da No Ltn)en, 3 times a
week
$1 $21,Cabinberth : $16 $24($11)
COPENHAGEN-OSLO
15 hours, DFDS , datly
$7, Cabin berth : $11 $24 ($21 : free
with 4 passengers)
DENMARK-swEDEN
DRAGOR-LIMHAMN
SO minutes, Danish State Ra1lways,
frequent daily service
60 cents ($4-SS)
COPENHAGEN- MALMO
85- 95 minutes, Danish State Railway~ .
frequent daily service
$1 ($4- $8)
COPENHAGEN - LANOSKRONA
70 minutes, Scandinavtan Ferry L tnt\,
frequent daily service
60 cents ($4- $12)
HELSINGOR- HELSINGBORG
25 minutes, Danish State Railways,
frequent dally service
SO cents {$4-SS)
GRENAA-VARBERG (also
Grenu- Halmsud)
4Yz hours, Prins Line, Lton Ferry AB,
4 times a day
$5 ($6- $8}
FREOERIKSHAVN- GOTHENBURG
3 hoors, Stena line; Sessan Line, 3 to
4 times a day
$4 ($9-$10)
SWEDEN- FINLAND

GERMANY - FINLAND
TRAVEMUNDE-HELSINKI
43 hours, Finlandliners, 1 to 2 Limes
a week
$30, Cabin berth : $39- $91 ($25)
HOLLAND-NORWAY
AMSTERDAM- KRISTIANSANO
21 ~r~, Fred Olsen line, 1 to 2

SLITE-HELSINKI/HELSINGFORS
13}-S hours, Finnlines, 3 to 4 times a
month In summer
$14, Cabin berth : $18- $35 ($8- $12)
STOCKHOLM (Skeppsbron)
HELSINKI/HELSI NGFORS
19~ hours, Silja Line, 3 to 4 times a
week
$10, Cabin berth : $20-$33 {$10)
STOCKHOLM (Skeppsbron)-

....
TURKV/ABO
12 hours, Silja line, twice a day
$6- 11, Cabin berth: $5-$14 ($1~
STOCKHOLM (V~)- TURKU/ABO
10~ hours, Silja line, twice a day
$6- $11, Cabin berth $2- $10 ($10)
NORRTALJE- TURKV/ABO
10 hours, Sil1a Line, 3 times a day
$5, Cabin berth· $7- $15 ($10)
KAPELLSKAR-via MARIEHAMN
(Aland Isles) NAANTALI/
NADENDAL
8 hoors, Vikinlinjen AB, 3 to 4 times
a day
$4, Cabin berth : $2- $9 ($6)
SUNDSVALL-PORI/BJORNEBORG
9 hours, Oy Vaasa-Umea AB, 3 to
4 times a week
SUNOSVALL- VAASA/VASA
9 hours, Oy Vaasa, daily in summer
$6, Cabin berth : $3- $4 extra ($6)
ORNSKOLDSVI K- V AASA/V ASA
6 hours, Oy Vaasa, 3 to 4 ttmes a
week
$5, Cabin berth : $ 3 $4 cxtr.t (S8)
UMEA- VAASA/V ASA
4 hours, Oy Vaasa, 2 to 3 tiems a d.ty
$5, Cabin berth : $3- $4 extra (S8)
UMEA - PIETARSAARI/ JAKOBSTAD
5 hoors, Jakob Lines, usually twtce .1
day
n S5, Cabin berth $3-$4 extra ($6
$8)
SPAIN, FRANCE, ITALY TO THE BALEARICS
BARCELONA- PALMA (Majorca)
8 hours, Campania Transmediterranea,
6 times a week
S8 $18 ($16 $33)
BARCELONA- MAHON (Minorca)
13 hours, C.T. 3 times a week
Cabin berth : $25 $175 (S 1 S S29)
BARCELONA-IBIZA
16 hours, C.T., 3 times a weel.
Cabin berth : $19- $175 lS 1S $'29)
VALENCIA- PALMA
II hours, CT., 3 times a week
CAbtn benh . S26- SJ75 ($ 15 $2\J)
ALICANTE- PALMA
13 hours, C.T ., 3 ttmes a wee!..
Cabin berth · $26 $17S (S 15 S29)
ALICANTE - IBIZA
11 ho urs, C.T , weel..ly
Labm berth · $25 S 175 ($15 $19)
TOULON- MAJORCA
23 hours, French Line, weel..ly
Cabtnberth . $22 $46($34 S'i 2)
MARSEILLES - PALMA
12 hours, French Line, every two
week\
Cabin berth : $19 $45 ($34 $52)
MARSEILLES- IBIZA
14 hours, French Line, every two wee!.. s
Cabin berth : $19 - $45 ($34 $52)
GENOA PALMA
25- 33 hours, DfDS, weekly
Cabin berth : $26- $51 ($40)
FRANCE, ITALY
TO CORSICA
MARSEILLES-CORSICA (either
Butia, Calvi, Ajaccio)
I I 12 hours, French Line, I to 3
limes a day
Cabtn berth · $10 $34 ($28 $49 )
NICE-CORSICA {either Bastia ,
Ca.lvta, Ajaccio)
6 9 hours, French Line, 1 to 3 ttmc~
a day
Cabin berth : $6- $21 ($28-$49)
TOULON-CORSICA (either Bastto1,
Calvio~, Ajaccio)
7 9 hours, French Line, I to 3 time\
a week
Cabin berth : $9- $34 ($29- $49)
GENOA- BAST lA
6- 10 hours, Corsica Line, Julian General, weekly
Cabin berth: $13- $18 ($26- $50)
LEGHORN-BASTIA
7 hours, Italian General, weekly
$5 - $7 ($32-$55)
FRANCE-sARDINIA

TOULON- PORTO TORRES
TOULON- PORTO TORRES
11 hours, French Line, 3 to 4 times
a week
Cabin berth : $22- $42 ($34- SS2)
ITALY-sARDINIA
GENOA- PORTO TORRES
13 hours, Canguro, Italian Gener-al, 1
to l times a day
$7- $18 ($23- $36)
GENOA-CAGLIARI
20 hours, Canguro, 3 times a week
S 13, Cabin berth · $1 7- $25 ($33- $42)
Italian line, Cabin berth $11 - $39
$33- $60)
GENOA-DLBIA
12 hours, Canguro, weekly
S 11 - $12, Cabin berth: $13 $22 {$28$36)
GENOA- ARBATAX
18 hours, Canguro, weekly
$12, Cabin berth · S 13 $23 ($31 - $40)
CIVIT AVECCHIA-CAGLIARI
14Y, hours, I taltan State Railways,
datly
S 10- $30, some cabins ($14 $18)
CIVIT AVECCHIA- OLBA
7 hours, Italian General, datly
ss $11 ($22- $35)
NAPLES-CAGLIARI
16 hours, I taltan Gen('ral, Canguro,
2 limes a week
S8 $21 {$30 $4S)
PALERMO-CAGLIARI
14 hours, Italian General, weekly
$8 $19 ($29 $48)
ELBA
PORTO PIOMBINO (Italy) to
PORTOFERRAIO
I !4 hour~. C.l T . frequent daily servtce
60 cents (from $6.60)

------------------

ITALY-MALTA

-- - - - - - - - -- -

NAPLES V ALETI A
24 hours, llaltan General, weelo.ly
Labin berth · S 19 S6 2 ($65 S 119)
SYRACUSE - MALTA
8YI hour~. ltal1an Genero1l, J t1mes a
weclo.
S 11 S4 S ($33 S67)

ITALY-sPAIN
G[NOA BARCELONA
21 hour~. Canguru, 3 lime~ d week
SI6,Cabinberth S23 $35($32 S39)
GENOA ALICANTE
47 hour\ OFDS , weekly
L.sblnberth $31 $69 ( ~ S2)
uENOA MALAGA
41 huur~, DFDS, weekly
Lc1bm berth $37 -$77 (S57)
FRANCE- ITALY
MARSEILLES - GENOA; leghorn
14 hour~. Hellenic Medtterrane..tn
every 2 weeks
Cabin berth : S 17 $4 3 (S4b S65)
MARSEILLES NAPLES
44 hour~. Hellentc Mednerranean,
every 2 weeks
C.aben berth : $24 S6S (S46 $65)
ITALY- YUGOSLAVIA
ANCONA- ZAOARs,
7}'2 hour~. Jadroltnija, daily
$4-$6Cabin berth · $8- $20 ($16- S32)
ANCONA- DUBROVNIK
13 hours, Linee Martttlme dell'
$10 $11
Cabin berth : $13 $35 ($21 $40)
PESCARA- SPLIT
10 hours, LMdA, 6 times a week
$7 $8 Cabin berth· $10- $33 ($ 18-S33)
BARI - DUBROVNIK
6 hours, LMdA, 4 times d week
$7- $8, Cabin berth: $10- $33 ($18-$33)
BARI- DUBROVNIK- BAR
8}S hours, 4Yz hours, Prekookeanska,
weekly
Sari- Bar, $6,r$13 ($14- $24)
Bar-Oubrovnik, $3- $5 ($4-$ 7)
-&lt;:onllnued on

lnfonn&amp;Lion reprinted from Th• No1 Yorlf Time, Suncby, Febnu.ry 27, 1972

p~

I()-

�~

j .

GREECE- RHODES.
CHIOS, LES80

ITALY- ADRIATIC COAST

PIRAEUS- RHODES

ANCONA- SARI

18 hours, Local line, twice a week
about $10 (about $ 20)

23YI hours, LMdA, twice a week
$ 14 $1 6 Cabin berth : $17- $41
($2 1- $40)

PIRAEUS-CHIOS
9 hours, Kavounides, daily
$3-$5 Cabin berth : .$6- $11 ($ 11- $17)

ITALY-GREECE

PIRAEUS- MYTILENE

VENICE- PIRAEUS
(winter only) 2 day) Hellentc Medi·
terranean ; Epirotik1; Zim, 1 to 3 times
a week
Cabin berth : $60- $142 ($32- $37)

ANCONA- PATRAS

14 hours, Kavounides, daily
.$4- $6 Cabin berth : $ 7-$13 ($12- $20)

CYPRUS- FROM FRANCE,
ITALY. GREECEE
MARSEILLES, GENOA o r NAPLES
- LIMASSOL (Cyprus)

36 hours, Local line 6 times a week
from $28 (from $30)

2·5 days, Zim Line, monthly
from $100 (from $60)
HelleniC Mediterranean, twice a
month
Cabin berth : $79- $290 (.$ 70-$130)

ANCONA- PIRAEUS
41 hours, Med-Sun Line ; Epirotki
twic~ a week
Cabm berth : $48-$95 ($26- $42)

BRINDISI- CORFU
11 hours, Adriatica; Hellenic Mediterranean ; 4 times a day
$ 12 Cabin berth : $ 17- $48 ($16- $36)

BRINDISI - PATRAS
I 5 hours, Epirot1ki ; Adriatica ; He I

VENICE- LIMASSOL
3 days minimum , Epirotiki ; Hellenic
Mediterranean ; Zim, 1 to 3 times a
week
Cabin berth · $87- $208 ($42 $53)
42 hours, Eplrotiki ; Hellenic Medl
terranean ; Zim, twice a week
Cabtn berth· $48 $112 ($29 $35)

TURKEY- FROM ITALY
OR GREECE

OTRANTO-CORFU
OTRANTO- IGOUMENITSA
9 hours, Lou! line, 6 umes a week
from $8 (from $12)

CRETEf ROM ITALY AND GREECE
VENICE- HERAKLION

r IRAEUS12 ~

hours, Local line, dally
about $10 (about S20)

PIRAEUS- CHAN lA
12 hours, Local hne, I to 2 11me\ a
day
about ~ I 0 (.about .$ 20)

gers)
PIRAEUS- HAIFA (via DUBROVNIK,
CORFU, PIRAEUS, HERAKLION ,
RHODES, TURKEY, LIMASSOL)
2-3 d ays, Continent-North Africa;
H~llen ic Mediterranean; Epirotikl,
Zim, 1 to 2 times a week
Cabin berth : $60-$1 68 ($55- $ 79)
Zim -Cabin berth; $60-$75 ($40- $60;
reduced rate for 2-4 passengers)
ANCONA or BRINDISI to HAlF A
(via CORFU, PIRAEUS, HERAKLION, RHODES, LIMASSOL, FAM-

AGUSTA)

5~ days, E fthymiadis Lines, every 10

to 14 days
from Ancona, Cabin berth ; $58- .$ 158
(.$65- $95; free with 4 p;usengers)
from Brind isi, Cabin berth· $53- $148
($53-$63)

BR1NDISI- IZMIR

16 hours, loc.al line, 3 ttme1 a week
from$\\ (from$ 22)

21 ho urs, French line, 2 to 4 times a
week
ubin berth : $28- $61 (.$66-$1 65)

MARSEILLES- ORAN

25 hou rs, French line, 1 to 2 times a
week
Cabin berth : $33- $60 ($66- $ 165)

MARSEILLES- SKIKOA (Annaba)
21 hours, French line, 2 to 2 times
a week
Cabin berth : .$28- .$61 (.S66-R165)

FRANCE OR ITALY- TUNISIA

week
Cabin berth : $31 - $63 ($66-$ 165)

NAPLES-TUNIS
LISBON- TANGI ER
IS hours, Southern Ferrifl, every 2

23 hoors, lulian General, weekly
Cabin berth: $23-$69 ($67-$91)

PALERMO-TUNIS
10}4 hours, Julian General, weekly
$ 1 S- $4S ($ 33- $ 54)

GENOA- TUNIS

2~

hours, C.T. 1 to 2 times a day
S4-$5 ($12- $25)

25-38 hours, DFDS, weekly
C~bin berth : $3 1-$69 ($51)

ALGECIRAS-CEUT A

ITAlY - LIBYA

4-6 hours, l bn- S..touta, S time,. a week
$7 ($16-$31)
MALA GA-M ~L ILL A

ubin berth: $51- $ 106 ($11 S-$1688)

.$ 3 - $7 ($ 14- $25)

ALME RIA- MELILLAs,
every

10 days
C.tbm berth . $120 S220 ($60 $75)
GENOA (or VENICE or NAPLES)-

NAPLES-BENGHAZI
36 hours, Italian General, weekly
SYRACUSE- BENGHAD
19 hou rs, Italian General, weekly

8 hours, C .T ., 6 times a week

ISRAE L-VIA FRANCE,
ITA LY OR GREECE
time~

MARSEILLES-ALGIERS

MALAGA- TANGIER

PIRAEUS- DIKILI

MARSEILLES- HAIFA
4-5 days, Zim Line, I to 2

FRANCE- ALGERIA

23 ho urs, French Line, 2 to 3 times a

I~ hours, C.T ., 1 to 2 times a day
$1 - $2($9- $18)

27 hour~ , Walford Lmc~. weekly
from $36 (from $25)

MARSEILLES (via PALMA and MALAGA}CASABLANCA - TANGIER MARSEILLES
1 week
(Maneilles-Ca.sablanca, 3 d ays;
Ca.sablanc:a~afleilles, 3 days)
Paquet LINES' WEEKLY
·
Marselllos-c~blanc:a, Cabin ber th ·
$58- $1 so ($ 50-$80)
Casablanc:a-Tangier, Cabin berth :
$ 18-$32 ($1 2)
Tangier- M;mellles, Cabin berth :
$50-$ 130 ($50- $80)

MARSEILLES- TUNIS
MOROCCOVIA PORnJGAL, SPAIN,
GIBRALTAR OR FRAHCE

ALGECIRAS- TANGIER

42 hour,, Adriatica , weekly
Cabin berth : $115 $380 ($80-$140)

HERAKLION

times a

weeks
from $29 (from $ 17)

VENICE - IZMI R

83 hou~. Epirotiki Line, weekly
Cabin berth : .$63- .$ 161 (.$35 $42)

lO 5

month
Cabin berth: $120- $220 ($60-$ 75)
VENICE- HAIFA (via PIRAEUS and
CRETE or RHODES ~CYPRUS)
~days, Ep irotiki ; Hellenic Mediterranean; Zim, 1 to 2 times a week
Cab in berth : $98- $2 19 ; $48- $58)
Zim - Cabin berth : $11 8 - $288 ($72$ 103; reduced rate for 2 to 4 p~ssen­

PIRAEUS- LIMASSOL

lenic Mediterranean, 4 times a day
S20Cabin berth : $23- $60 {.$32 $63)
7~ hours, LOCAl line, weekly
from $8 (from $13)

11/.

3--"' d~y.s, Zim Une, l

Dubrovnik- Bari, $9- $ 19 ($1 8-$31)

II hours, Addatica ; Hellenic Mediterrane;m, daily
.$12 Cabin berth : .$17-$48 (.$16 $36)

•

HAIFA

Ferry Lines

BRINDISI- IGOUMENITSA

(•,Il l

$31 - $63($62- $108)

SYRACUSE- TRIPOLI

8 hours, C.T ., 6 times a week
$3- $7 ($14- $25)

31~ hours, Italian General, weekly
Cabin berth : .$16-$39 (.$63-$104)

GIBRALTAR- TANGIER
2~ hours, Davell &amp; Rufford, I to 2
times a day
from .SS (from Sl 5)

NA PLES-TRIPOLI
39 hours, Italian General, weekly
Cabin berth · .$29- $86 ($83- $132)

SEE THE USA National Parks
'

The designation " national park'' can be conferred
only by Congress and is Kenerally applied to areas of great
~en1c )plendor and unusual geological or historical
significance. The purpose of a national park was summed
up 100 years ago by Wilham Clagget, a delegate to
Congress from the Territory of Montana , whose bill
makmg Yellowstone the first national park wa~ &gt;tgncd by
Pres1dent Grant on Mar I , IM72· "Th1s land 1s hereby
reserved and withdrawn from \ettlement, occupancy or
sale under the laws of the United States and dedicated and
&lt;oet apart .ts .t public park or pleasuring ground for the
benefit and enjoyment of the people." Today the variety
ot our n.at1onal parks, the scenery they offer , the range of
.activities they provide, is v1rtually limitle~s . The National
Park System incorporates everything from Alask.a's
20,320-foot Mount McKinley to the V1rgm Islands' rolling
surf, from footpaths that go above the douds to
underwater lr~!ls that follow a tropical coral reef. In all,
the Nattonal Park Service administers 284 s1tes, of which
74 are natural areas, 172 are historical area.s, 37 are
recreational and 1 compri~ the parkland and monuments
in the n.ttion's c.apital.
Thts chdrt is based on personal expenence and data
!&gt;Upplied by the Park Service. It c;overs all of our 38
national parks, 8 national seashores and 4 national
lakeshores. Information on other Park Serviu facilities,
!&gt;Uch as national recreation areas and historical sites, may
be obtamed from the National Park Service, Department
of the Interior, 19th and E Streets Northwest, Washington,
D.C. 20240, and from the Superintendent of Documents,
United St..1tes Government Printing Office, Washington,
D.C. 20402.

- Vernon Klrlt:J

10

ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
Basic Facts: 4 1,642 acres; 2.455,700 visitors in 1971 ;
open ye.ar round; situated mostly on Mount Desert
Island off Maine coast wtth portions on Isle au Haut
.md tip of Schoodic; Peninsula.
D&amp;rlptlon · Acadia National Park is a remarkable
combination of granite mountains, coa.stal
headlands, cliffs, lakes, streams, bays and peninsulas.
For more than 100 years Muunt Desert Island has
been d noted summer resort, Cadillac Mountain, at
1,530 feet the highest point on the A II antic Coast,
affords a panoramic view .
l lccomodations: Campground with tent and trailer
sites (no utility connec:tions). Hotel and motel
accommodatiom in Bar Harbor and other nearby
towns.
Address: Superintendent, Acadld Nat1onaJ Park , Bolt
338, Bar Harbor, Me. 04609

APOSTLE ISLANDS NATIONAL LAKESHORE
Basic Facts: 42,826 acres; number of visitors in 197 1
not recorded; open spring to aut umn ; situated on
Bayfield Penin!&gt;Uia, Wis., about 80 miles east of
Superior, Wis.
!Nscription: Twenty picturesque islands plus 11 miles
of beaches along lhe south shore of like Superior
make up Apostle Islands National Lakeshore,
established Sept. 26, 1970.
Accommodations: None
Address: c/o Northea.st Regional Office, National Park
Service, 1&lt;43 South Third Street, Philadelphia 19106

ARCHES NATIONAL PARK
Basic Facts: 73,233 acres; 202 ,900 VISitors in 1971;

open April through November; situated in
southeastern Utah, just east of U 5 160 about 5
miles north of Moab.

Description: Giant, red rock arches, window!&gt;,
pinnacles and pedestals fill th1s newly established
park (unt1l November, 1971, it was a national
monument) . Water, wind, rain, frost .md sun have
created spe&lt;;tacular towers, shapes like men .and
antmals, balanced rocks and other forms from \and
depoSits turned to stone about I SO m1llion year ..
ago.

Accomodotions: Campground for tents and trailers
(stays limited to 14 days). Hotels, lodges and motels
in Moab

Address c/o Canyonl.tnds National Park, Moab Utah
84532

ASSATEAGUE ISLAND NATIONAL SEASHORE
Basic Focts. 39,630 acres; 1,662,900 visitors in 1971,
open May to October; situated off Atlantic; coast of
Maryland and Virginia; reached by automobile from
Ocean City, Md., or Chincoteague, Va.
Description: The splendid beach es of this 35-mile
barrier reef are its outstanding feature . Rolling sand
dunes, wild Chinc:oteaque ponies, hiking trails and
surf fishing are others. The seashores proximity to
the national capiul makes it popular with
Washington and Baltimore residents.
Accomodallons: Federal and state campgroond.
Hotels and motels in Ocean City and Chinwteague.
Address: Superintendent, Assateague Island National
Seashore, Rou te 2, Box 111, Berlin, Md . 21811
-co nti nued o n

~ee

11-

�~
-continued from

~. .

lo-

BIG BEND NATIONAL PARK
Basic Fatts: 708,221 acres; 247,400 visitors in 1971;
open year round ; situated in southwestern Texas
4 10 miles west of San Antonio and 323 miles east
El Paso.
Description: Situated in an unspoiled area of the
United States along the Mexico Border, where the
lazy Rio Grande makes the big elbow bend that gives
the park i~ name, Big Bend is part mountain, part
desert; And expanses sweep away to remote
horizons; ranges rise abruptly above the flatlands;
steep-walled canyons and ribbon-like stretches of
green vegetation define the river course. Visitors can
see the remains of animals that lived millions of
years ago, smell the creosote bushes and almost hear
a Comanche war whoop.
A ccommodatlons: Cabins, campgrounds, group
campsites, motels and trailer s1tes. Lodgings also in
Alpine and Marathon, Tex . At Chisos Mountains
Lodge, within the park, rates range from $5 .50 to
$ 14; trailer sites, $2.
Address: Superintendent, Big Bend National Park Tex.
79834

of

BRYCE CANYON NATIONAL PARK
Basic Facts: 36,010 acres; 379,500 VIsitors in 1971 ,
open year round; situated in Four Corners area of
southern Utah .
Description: Bryce Canyon National Park is part of a
landscape so spectacular that into it are concentrated
quite a number of national parks, monuments and
recreation areas From the Paunsaugun Plateau
visitors view unusual and colorful rock formations
that change wi~h every ch ange of light.
Accommodations: Campgrounds with tent and trailer
site~ (available May 1 to Nov. 15); an inn with
c.tfeteria and store near North Campground (open
early May to early October) ; lodge near Bryce
Amphithe'a ter (open from June 10 to Labor Day)
Price~ at inn and lodge range from $6 to $14.
Address: Superincendent, Bryce Canyon National
Park, Utah 84717
tANYONLANOS NATIONAL PARK
BaSic Facts: 24 1,67 I acres; 5S ,400 visitOr!&gt; in 19 71,
open year round ; situated in southeastern Utah,
approached from Moab.
Drscflpfion: The Green River merge~ with the
Colorado within Canyonland) to form one of the
wildest stretc;hes of water on the continent, a force
that has carved a forest of fantastic spires,
\Urrealistic rock filigree and canyon walls that drop
1,400 feet . Adjacent to the park h the Glen Canyon
Nat1onal Recreation Area with facilities for boaling,
swimming, camping, fishing and water skiing
Accommodations: Campgrounds With tent and trailer
~ites but no utility hookup ; primitive campsite\
along the river. (Stays limited to 14 da ys) Motels in
Moab and Monticello, Utah.
Addreu : Superintendent, Canyonldnds Nat1onal Part..,
Post Office Building, Moab, Utah 84532
CAPE COD NATIONAL SEASHORE
BasiC Facts: 44,600 acres; 4,188,300 visitors in 1971,
open March to October; situated on Cape Cod.
Description: It was on Cape Cod at Provincetown,
Mus., that the Pilgrims made the~r fir~t landing m
the New Wor1d Today the Cape Cod area offers a
multitude of vacation pleasures, including water
sports, hi kes along rolling sand dunes and fore~•
trails and evenmg entertainment
Accommodations: No overnight accommoda110m 1n
the national seashore; hotels and motels in nearby
towns.
Address : Superintendent, Cape Cod N.wonal
Seashore, South WeiiOeet, Mass 02663
CAPE HATTERAS NATIONAL SEASHORE
Basic Facts: 28,500 acres; I ,696,900 visitors m 1971 ,
open year round, f&gt;i ruated on Outer Bttnkf. of North
Carolina, reached from Elizabeth City, N C ., or
Atlantic, N.C .
Description: The Outer Banks of Nonh Carolina,
known during the days of sailing ~ips a) the
Graveyard of the Atlantic, are also remembered for
the ill-fated Lost Colony of Roanoke Island and the
site of history's first successful power-driven flight,
by the Wright brothers near Kitty Hawk. four of the
oldest and tallest lighthouses in America stand guard
over the Willers off the Outer Banks, and some of the
best fishing grounds on the Atlantic Seaboilltd are
found here. Beaches are uncrowded and billcked by
sand dvnes covered with wild oats~
Accommodations: Campgrounds (stays limited to 12
dillys); restaurants, hotels and motels in island
villages.
Addrm: S uperintendent, Cape Hatteras National
Seashore, Box 457, Manteo, N.C. 27954

CAPE LOOKOUT NATIONAL SEASHORE
Basic Facts: 24,500 acres; num ber of visitors in 1971
not recorded; open year round; situated off coast of
North Carolina, just south o f Cape Hatteras National
Seashore, reached via ferry from AtJantic, N.C., and
Beaufort, N .C.
De~rlptlon: A ghost town, the abandoned fishing
VIllage of Portsmouth, N .C., is a feature of this
national seashore, as is the Cape Lookout
Lighthouse.
Accommodations: None.
Address: Superintendent, Cape Lookout National
Seashore, Box 177, Beaufort, N.C. 28S 16

Adduss:

Superintendent, Fire Island
Seashore, Box 299, PatGhogue, L.l. 117 72

•· I

~· I

NJi iun.tl

GLACIER NATIONAL PARK
Basic Facts: 2,013,129 acres; 1,303,100 visitor~ in
1971, open June 15 to Sept. IS , siwated in
northwestern Montana.
Description: Glillcier National Park adjoins Canada'~
Waterton Lakes National Park. Together they offer
some of the most stunning mountarn scenery on
earth. During the peak tourist season, traffic jams are
not uncommo n in Glacier Park, but numerous
turnou ts afford the visitor a chance to enjoy the
sc;enery and take pictures.
A ccommodatlons: Campground), cabms, hotels,
motels trailer sites without utility connectiom.
(Camping stays limited to 14 days in Jul y and
August.) Lodgings from $8 to $34.
Address · Superintendent, Glacter Nat1onal Park, West
Glacier, Mont. 59936

CAPITOL REEF NATIONAL PARK
Basic Facts: 24 I ,671 acres, 244,500 visitor!. in 1971 ;
open year round; situated 1n south central Utah on
State Route 24.
'
Description: Elevated from national monument to
nc1tional park status in December, 1971, Capitol
~eef, which takes it ndme from a domeoihaped rock,
1s part of a 20-mile·long uplift of sandstone GRANO CANYON NATIONAL PARK
BasiC Facts: 613,575 acres, 2,402,100 v1s1tors in
containing highly colored sed1mentary formations
1971 ; open year round (North Rim closed from
dissected by narrow hrgh-walled gorges.
mid-October to mid-May) ; situated in northwestern
Accommodations: Lodge, motel and guc)t ranch,
Arizona.
campground (~tays limited to 14 days): util11y
Descrlplion: Did you know that you can stand on the
connections for trailers av01ilable at lodge
edge of the Grillnd Canyon and lool. down on
Address: Superintendent, Cap1tol Reef Nat1onal Part..
lorrey, Utah 84775
'
mountaintops? The canyon is a mile deep, 217 mile~
long and 9 mil~ acroS\, and Its varicolored walls
record more thdn 2 billion years of geolog1&lt;:illl
CARLSBAD CAVERNS NATIONAL PARK
h1story . This is one of the great vistas of the wl)rfd,
Bas1c Facts: 46,153 acres; 791,600 v1mors'" 1971,
and ob~rvation pornts along the rim enable visitors
open year round, Situated 1n Guadalupe Mountaim
to view it from many angles. For the more
of southeastern New Mexico, 30 mile~ from
tro~ils lead to the floor of the canyon,
adventurous,
Carlsbad.
where the m•ghty Colorado River flows
DescriptiOn: Theie huge caverns, the home of
Ac:commodorions · El Travor Hotel, Yavapa1 Lodge,
thousands Of bats (which Oy OUt at \Unset on
Bnght Angel Lodge and Motor Lodge on the South
summer days). are among the most spccu,ular t'IICr
Rrm (rates from •5 .50 to $35); Grand Canyon
discovered and contain a start ling vanety uf
lodge .tnd North R1m Inn on the North Rim {rate)
~talactltes, stalagmites and other formation\.
from ~6 to ~ 14) , campgrounds, trailer v1llage w1th
Accommodotlon!&gt; · No overn1gh1 accommodalron'
ut1hty hoot..ups (stay~ hm1ted to seven days) ,
within the part.. : hotels, motel~ and traller part..~ 1n
l'h.antom Ranch on ~anyon floor (rates $14)
While City and Carlsbad.
Addreu: Supefintendent, Grand Canyon National
Address. Superintendent, C.trl\bad Cavern, Natrondl
P.u k, Hux 129, (.rand Canyon, An zona ~6023
Park, Box 159M, Carl~bad, N M ~8220
CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARKK
Basic Facts: 160,290 acre\, 558,000 Vl'&gt;llOr\ m 1971.
open year round (north entr&lt;lnce Gto!oed 1n wrnter),
Situated in Cascade Mountams of snuthw~trrn
Ore~eon .

Description: Breathtakingly beautiful and incredibly
blue, Crater Lat..e 1s cradled m ttn extinct volcano
Frequent turnouts on the rim road enable vi!oitors ro
v1ew the lake from every ~ide Of special 1nterest to
motorists is the Moto r Nature Trail, mt~rt..ed wrth
plaques imparting informat1on un the area·~ history
and Indian legends.
Auommodot1om: Campground , , cabrn~. w ttc~ge~ JrH.I
hotel Lodgim from •5.50 to~ 1J
Addre&gt;&gt;: Superintendent, CrcltCI Loke Na11on.sl Pdft..,
Crater Lake, Ore. 976044
EVERGLADES NATIONAL PARK
Basic racts I ,400,533 scte'&gt;, 1,293,500 \l l~tto" 111
1971 , open year round (winter favored), \itu.ued in
\OUthern Florida, 12 miles from Home,tead un Statt'
Route 27 .s,
Descflptlon. Thl\ ~rawl10g ~htrope c.tl wildernC\\
contains extensive tre\h W4tCr and '&gt;&lt;Ill wa1c1 area~.
everglade~, prairre\, mangrove fo1e~ts and abundan t
wildlife, 1nduding !oUCh rare ~1es .ts (;(O&lt;odile~.
manatees, roseate spoonbrlls, reddish egret'&gt;, wuod
)tork) and bald eagle) Other mhabitanh are tht'
alligator, !'.nook, tarpon and p1nlo. -.hnmp.
Accommodo(lons; Cabim, campgmund), motel~ .tnd
trailer Sites Without hookup\ Motel pHCe\ range
from $11 to $19.50 from Mc1y I to Dec . 14 and
from $20 to $25 from Dec. 15 to April 30.
(Campground ~lcly~ limited to 14 day~ from Dec. 1S
to April 15.)
Address: Supenntendenl, Everglade~ Nat1onc1l Pari. ,
Box 279, Homestead, rta. 33030
FIRE ISLAND NATIONAL SEASHORE
BaSIC Faces: 19,31 I acres; 445,400 visitor\ 1n 1971 ,
open May to October, situated off south ~ore of
Long lsllnd .
Description: fire Island, a well -known vacation ~ol,
extend) for 32 m1les from Robert Moses Stat.e Park
on the west to Monches Inlet on the east, a narrow
barrier beach varying in width from one-half mile to
200 yuds and consisting of dunes, wide sandy
beach, hid~en hardwood grove\, grassy wetlands and
abundant wildlife .
Accommodations: C.tmpground at WatGh Hill ; hottls,
cou~es and private rooms in various settlements on
the island.

GRANO HTON NATIONAL PARK
Hos11 lua) : 310,350 acres, 3,284,500 visitOr) 1n
1971 , open year round, situated in northwestern
Wyoming, south of Yellowstone N~tion~l Park
D~rlptlon. lust geumg to the Gr~nd Teton~ h
el(Wing, for the distant v1ew of jagged pea"s t..eep)
urgmg one on. 1 h1s i~ high country, crowned by
I 3, 770-foot Grand T cton The reg1on o~bound~ In
lakes and streams, and tnps on ra Its holdrng up to 18
people are offered on the Snal.e Rrver, whiCh wind)
out of Yellowstone.
Accommodoriom.: C.tmpgrounds, tr.tilc• \lie~ . cabin),
motel\ .md hotel\ (rates from $5 to $ 73)
Addrt» C. rand l eton Na t11:&gt;nal P.Hio., Boll b 7 , M00&gt;e ,
Wvo 10012
GREAT SMOKY MOUNlAIN~ NATIONAL PARK
Bo}ll. Fuct5 . 516,626 a"e~. v1s1to•s 1n 1971 , open all
year 1ound, Sllu.tted on the North
Carol me~ · Tenne)see border
De'X nptio11: Th 1\ park, wh1c:.h ha) the largest
o~ttendc1nce ol c~ll t:he nat1onal part..), contAm\
umpu1lcd forest s1m1lar to what the e.trly pioneer\
found Main road~ dff•&gt;rd only t~n introductiOn . The
t&gt;OO miles of hor~ and foot traih olfer more
rewarding el(perrenc.es fhert are brodd vistas,
waterfalls, 1,400 t..md) of flowering plants, old
homestead), and an1mals rangmg from blatk bear~ to
rdccoons. The blooming of rhododendron 1n June
and july i) alwc~y\ an event.
Acc:ommodotlom Co~mpground s (stays hmlted to 7
dtty) from June I to labor Day). tra1l\1de shelter\
spaced a day\ 1oumey apart on A.ppalach1an T ra1l,
lodge with 300 furnished COtl.lges rn F on tan a
Village, Le Conte lodge, open mid-April to latC'
October and accessible only by trail (rue~ S 10),
motels and hotels rn nearby towns
Address: Superintendent, Great Smoky Mountain)
National Park, Gatlinburg, Tenn 37738
GUADALUPE MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK
Basic Facts: 82,279 acre~; visitors in 1971, open ye~r
round; situated m southwestern Texas on New
Mexico border.
Descriptions: This national park, ~tablished m 1966,
is not yet developed but is open to people who wish
to explore its huge exposed fossil reef, a legacy of
the geological era when a great body of salt water
covered the region.
Accommodations: None
Address: c/o Carlsbad Caverns National Part.., Bo,
l S98, Car1sbad, N .M. 88220
-conllnv.c~

on

~90

tz

11

.....

�..

A ddress: Superintendent, Isle Royale National Park,
87 North Ripley Street, Hougtlton, Mich 49931 ss,

U.S. Nat'l Parks
-continued from IN9• 11-

GULF ISLANDS NATIONAL SEASHORE
/Josie Facts: 163,200 acres; number of visitors in 1971
not recorded ; open year ro und ; situated off coast of
Florida near Pensacola and off coast of Mississippi
ncar Gulfport.
Description: The relatively new seashore, authori7ed
by Cgngress on Jan . 8, 1971, contains historic forts,
sandy beaches and primitive islands.
Accommodations: None
Address: c/o Southeast Regional Office, National Park
Service, Federal Building, Box 10008, 400 North
Eighth Street, Richmond Va.. 23240

SEQUOIA AND KINGS CANYON NATIONAL PARKS
Basic Focts: 386,863 acres in Sequoia; 460,331 acres
in Kings Canyon; 882,000 visitors in 1971 in
Sequoia, 896,700 in Kings; both open year round ;
situated in the High Sierras of California southeast of
Fresno.
Description: Sequoia boasts the General Sherman
Tree, the largest and one of the oldest of living
things, its age estimated at more than 3,000 years.
Visitors can also see Moro Rock, Crescent Meadow
and Crystal Cave (daily tours from mid-June th rough
Labor Day) and high mountain scenery, including
Mount Whitney, 14,495 feet. The Generals Highway
is o pen year round and winds through the sequoia
belt. Kings Canyon Nattonal Park is less developed
than Sequoia, having only one access road that dead
ends at Copper Creek. Along ib route, however, dre
four campgrounds and a dc.ytime parking lot plus a
long-term parking lot. More than 900 miles of trails
take hikers and horseback riders into the high
country
Accommoda(lon5: Gi&lt;tnt Forest Lodge, Grc1nt Grove
Lodge and Mcadow C&lt;~mp Cabim (open IdLe M.ty to
Octoher), Camp Kawcdh Ctbin\ (open all ye.:,u ).
1ra1bidc c.tmps, campgrounds .tnd trailer site~
Addre\\ · Supcnntcndent, ~equ01d .tnd King~ (dnyun
NJtton.tl P~~rks, Three R ivcrs, C&lt;1ld . 93271

HALEAKALA NATIONAL PARK
Basic Fuus ; 27,283 acres; 254,700 vt\ttors tn 1971;
open year round ; situated on ''land uf M.su• H'l
Hawaii .
IJesuiption: Haleaf...&lt;Jia cou ld erupt d~t~in (the l.tst
eruptiOn occUired •n 17YO) but .tt pre,ent no
volcanic ;ICtivity 1s visible. What •s v1~ible ,ue exotit.
fl ora and launil, including the r.trc• silvcr\word pl,~nt
(ah1nahina) Trail ~ lead into the crater, wht•rc thrc.'c
Cdbln~ for vi\itor'&gt; ate maintained .
•In ommodat1ons: Lo~mpground&lt;. .tnd l.thHI\ Lr .1 tc1
cab.n' reserved by Wlltmg the pMio. supermtendcnt
SHENANDOAH NATIONAL PARK
(Stay~ limtted to three n•l(hts.)
IJasit fuU\ : 193,539 JCfe\; 1,406,500 Vl'&gt;ihll\ 111
lddre,s : Supcrintcndcnl , H&lt;~l eaf....Jio.~ Ndtt.,n.JI Part... , PO
1971 ; open ycM round, \ltU.ttcd d\lride the
Box 456, Kahului, Maut, Hawa11 '167 12
App.tlc~cht.m M&lt;,unt,Jins ol northern VirginidJ.
/Je5ulptloo : The I OS·m•lc Skyline Drive, wh1ch
HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK
fuiiCIW\ the c..• est u f the Blue Ridge Mountdins •.tnd is
8fJSIL J-aUs : 220, ~45 JCrC\. 980J()() Vl\1(111\ In 1971 ,
·• c..ontinudlion ot the htghly popular Blue Rtdgc
open year round, \ltUated on j,ldnJ •Jf H.tWJII .
P&lt;.~rkwdy, drdw' most of thts park's vtsitors
Oesc.riptwo: The .sltr.s~twn 111 th h p.11 k " dLlivt·
Seventy-five uverluoks where muturist~ Cdn p.trk
Volt.&lt;~noe~
M,•uno LtM ,,nd Ktt .. IH:.t, M.1un.s Lu.s
dfrord vtews of the Shenando.th River Valley . There
hetng the largest dCttve volcano in tht• world. It i~
.tre, abo nt~tur e trails and naturalist-conducted field
po\siblt: to drive tu the lip of KtiJuc.t\ mo't Jlliw
tlip-..
vent, the \IIC ot the trad•ltonat humt• ot f't:le, the
'1 u ommodut10ns: C.tmpground~. lr .ttl side 'helter\,
Polyne..tan goddes~ ol volcJnucs. Other JllrJctton'
trc~il cabim dnd lodges. (Lodge rates; $10 to $ 18).
,11e Kau De..crt, ,, l.tnd of ~pdlse ve~o:et.ttlun, .tnd lu'h
Addrt!». Superintendent, Shen.tndu.lh National Park,
troptcal pl.tntlilt• on the t~I.Jnd\ w1ndw&lt;1rd 'ldr:
Luray, Vtt . 22835
At tDmmodallom. ldmpground,, i.Jbin,, Kti&lt;~Ue.t
Volcano Huu~c Hotel.
Addre}s : Supenntcndent, H.1w.w Vult..tr\111!\ N,ttm•MI SLEEPI NG BEAR DUNES NATIONAL LAKESHORE
Busic Fatts. 7 1,068 deres, number of VISitors tn 1971
PMk , Hawdit 967 I~
not recorded , open ~pnng to autumn ; ~nua t ed in
nort hwest Michigan.
HOT SPRINGS NATIONAL PARK
Description: I ncludcd in this l.tkeshore are North
80.SJC Foct5 · 3,535 acres; 2,540,100 vrs11ors in 1971 ,
Manitou c1nd South Mdnitou hl.ands as well as 34
open year round; "tuated in Mluth central Arl..dnsa,_
miles of mainland shore .tlong Lake Michig.1n The
D~cflpllon: lndtan ludition hots 11 th.tt thr: Hot
region contain\ hea~.:he~. md~)ive s.~nd dunes, fores ts
Spring~ regton wJs hc1llowed ground, a place where
.md lakes.
warrior) ld1d .t~1de thetr arm~ and b&lt;1thed tn pCdLt: In
Actommodatiom: None
l!r32 the sprtng' were -;et &lt;I'ide "' a I cd~r ,,I
Address: c/o Northea't Regtunal Office, N.ttiondl Park
reservation, giving birth to the idea thc~t the
Serv1ce, 141 South Third Street, Phtlo~delphtd 1910o
country\ natural hemage \hould be held 10 ttu\l
Two of 4 7 sprtngs, contdining remdrkdbly pure
water, are open, the other\ sealed The water~~ u\ed VIRGIN ISLANDS NATIONAL PARK
Bcn~c Fucts ; 15,150 acres; 252,600 visitors in 1971,
for bathing c1nd thera~ .
open yedl rou nd ; situated on St. John in the United
Actommodur,ons: C&lt;~mpg1ound and trJtler 'lle'
StJtes Vtrgin lsl.mds.
without ut1lity connections (S ldy~ ltm1tcc..l to 14
Description: Nearly two-thirds of the land mass &lt;~nd
days in ~ummer.) Hotels , motels Jnd bodfdmg hou)e'
most of the offshon: waters of St. John are S(!t Jside
in city, of Hot Spring~.
.t~ the only Uni ted States ndtion&lt;.~l park in the We~t
A dd1ess : Superintendent, Box Ill 9, Hut ~prtn)\~
NdtiOnal Park, Ark 7 1902
lnd1e~. &lt;1 pJrlo. with white cordi ~.snd beAches, sceml
mountain road'&gt;, qu1et cove~ and underwdter coral
INDIANA DUNES NA TIONAL LAKESHORE
g.~rdens. At Ctnnt~mon Bdy Campground, VJCJtioner'
Bas1c Focts 8,721 dLrcs, number of vl\ihH' m 1'17 I
cdn rc:nt camping eqUipment dl S3'i ·• wed. for tw o
t1eople , plus $!.{.75 11 wed. tor c:Jch Jdditional
nut recorded, open '" ~ummer, s•tu.ttt•d Jlon~&lt;:
pl'r\on . At rrunlo. Bay j, Jn Ulh..lerW.tntcr rldtUit' tr.nl
\OUthcrn ~horc ol l .tkc Michtg.tn hctwt•t•n (JMY ,md
MtChigdfl C11y, lnd
.10d d beach th,u 1\ &lt;.omiJcred one ol ttw 10m,,,,
Dl!51.nptiun: Clcdn, \.tndy bc.•chc' jldckcd hy hu~&lt;:e
bet~u llful 10 the world .
'and dune~ covered with tree~ c~nd shrub~ rnt~f...c ur
11 ~ c rm1111oduttofll : Bc\idl'' tht ~.o.tmping h.Hg.tlll
thts ndtiondl lakc~hore . Some uf the dune' .11 c 200
JV,)ti.Jhk .11 Cinnamon Bay (dmpground , t!'nl \lie'
w1thnut l'quipment c.tn ,,,,o be hJu, lor ~l ..t n•ght ,
feet high
A&lt;tommodCJtwn~ · None wtthin the l..tlo.l'\hnrt', hut
.111d cqu •pped wll.tgc' lnr $ 10 ,, ni~ht, plu' $1 lor
t'.t&lt;.h &lt;tddJIH1n,tl pcr~on . (Rt'\L'fltJitnn~ rcquucd wl'll
there Me hoteb and motel~ in nedrby ~.oommunit •c'
llddreH · &lt;)upcrmtendent , lnd•and Dune' N.IIHHI,tl
tn advance Irom Ctnnamun Bo~y C.smpground. S t
John, U ~ Virgtn lsl.tnJs OOM30)
Lake!&gt;horc, Box l2,Che)terton, Ind. 46~04~.
Atld11!~~ : ~upe11ntendent. Vn~o:in hl.trllh N.rltmMI
ISLE ROYALE NATIONAL PARK
Park, Bm, 806, St . Thoma~, U .~ V11~"' (sl,tnd~
Bus1c Facts: "39,341 acres; 15,900 mttOt) 10 1971,
00301.
open May IS to Oct. 20; ~i tuated in L1ke ~uperior
ne&lt;~r Ontano, reached by ferry or floatpl.tne from VOYAGEU RS NATIONAL PARK
liaslc Focts: 219.43 1 acres; number of viSitOrs in 1971
Houghton, Mich ., and Grand Portage , Minn.
not recorded ; open year rou nd (spnng through f&lt;1ll
De}&lt;ription: fhis forested island is the largest in Lake
preferable), situated in northern Minnesota on
Superior and is famed for its wilderness. Among the
border of Canada.
animal population are moose and timber wolves. The
wolves prey on the moose, culling the herds and
Description: Becduse it is a land of beoiut iful northern
t..eeping the population at levels the island can
lakes where the fishing Is outstanding and the forests
&gt;up port. Copper mines dating back 4,500 years have
are filled with wildlife and fl owers and berries,
been excavated. Transportation is by foot trail and
Voyageurs National Park .mracts sightseers,
boat.
c:anoeists, hikers, campers and fishermen . Established
AfCommodations: Campgrounds, cabins, Rock Harbor
Jan 8, 1971, it is one of the newer national parks
and still under development.
lodge, Windigo Inn.

12

tnfo~itton reprinted from

Accommodations: lodgings in International Falls and
Biudette, Minn., and in Fort Frances and Rainy
River. Ontario.
Address: Superintendent, Voyageurs National Park
1709 jackson Street, Omaha, Neb. 68102

WI NO CAVE NATIONAL PAR K
Basic Focts: 28,059 acres; 1,085,300 'Visitors in 1971 ;
open year round (cave open April I to Oct. 31) ;
situated on southeastern flank of South Dakota's
Black Hills.
Description: The Black Hills were sacred to the
Indians, who fought heroic battles to resist invasion
of the area. Legend suggesh that the cave from
which this park takes its name is the sacred Cave of
the Winds venerated by the Sioux . In any event,
Wind Cave is noted for the strong air currents that
blow In and out of the mouth - out when the
b&lt;~rometer is fa lling, in when it is risi ng. Guided tours
are conducted daily during the season . Elsewhere in
the park are forests, mountains, prairies, bison herd\
Jnd prairie dog towns.
Aaommodattom: Campground at Elk Mountain with
trailer !&gt;ile) but no utility hookup); motels, hotels
and trailer courts in Hot Spring~. Custer and other
nedrby communities.
Address: Superintendent, Wtnd Cave N.u.onal PJrlo.,
Hot Springs, S.D 57747 .
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK
BusiL ractJ. 2,221,773 dCres; 2,126,300 VISitors tn
1ll7 1, open Mt~y 2 through Oct. 3 1, s1tu Jted 111
rHH thwest curne1 uf Wyoming with portiom in Idaho
.md M1&gt;r1t.1nJ
Ut&gt;)t npuon.
The world\ lir~t no:~t • unal part...,
Yelluw&lt;otunc " d~socidted with bcdrs, thermal geyser'
lilo.e Old Failhful , mud pOt\, the Gr.md C&lt;1nyon ol
the Yellow\tone River , Yellow~tunc I ails and Ldkc
Yellowstone. The park Wd~ C\lt!bli,hed 100 years
ago, on March I, 1872. In March of this year publ ic
heanngs will be held on a proposal to set Jsidc:
dpproximately 1,963,000 acres dS .1 perpctudl
Wilderness area. The reason, as set forth 1n the
prologue to the proposal: "If Yellow~tone is to
survive the next 100 years, a new equilibrium nHI\l
be achieved . T he irreplace&lt;tble pdrk resources mu~t
be weighted against the humJn impdCI upon them
&lt;~nd &lt;1 new bc~lance struck."
Accommodations: Campgrounds, group camps.te,,
trailer sites, Labins, motels &lt;1nd h otel~. (Lodgings .$6
to $31 )
llddr~ss: Superintendent, Yellow,tone N&lt;1t10nal P;ulo.,
Wyo. 82 190
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK
Basic FoLts. 76 1,320 acres; 2,4 16.400 visitors in
1971, open year round, situated in Call fo1 niil's ~terra
Nevada Rc1nge, approximately 80 mile~ east of
Me•'-ed.
Oe:.cript ion : Yosemite bodsts an unsurpassed
collection of sculptured peaks &lt;tnd domes, tumbling
waterfalls, ~heer granite cliff~. groves of giant sequoia
trees, jewel-like lakes and icy rtvers. The growing
popularity of the park with both summer vacationers
and winter ~ports fans has led to con frontation~
between park officials and some visitors in the pa~t.
but policy changes, &lt;tdjustments in operations and
the banning o f automobiles from portions of
Yosemite Valley have helped restore peace.
At&lt; ommodatlons: Campground), group camp\rtes,
c.tblm, housekeeping tents, trailer parks, hotels and
lodges. (Lodgings : $6 to $32.) High S•erra Cclmp~,
dCCessible only by foot or on hor~ebc~ck, charge ~ 2&lt;J
a day including brcakLI\t c~nd dinner .
Address . Superintendent, Box 577, Yu\CnHtt: N.nrondl
P.trk, Calif.. 95 389
ZION NATIONAL PARK
/JtN&lt; F(Jus: 147,035 ..JCie\; 975,000 Vl\ltltr' in 1971,
oren ycJr lllUnd; sttudted in suuthwc~t corner of

Tht Ntw Ynrk rimes, Sutlday, february 17, t972

utUt&lt;~h .

Dl'saiptwn: Bec..Ju~e nl 11~ tndny cathedral lit..c
formc1tions this region of colorful c..dnyun~ and mcs,J\
w.l'&gt; n..rned Zton, the heavenly ci ty ot God, by early
Mormon ~ettlers. 1 he theme persists m the name~ ol
Vdrious valleys dlld lofty monoliths, such as the
Temple of Sin.twava, the Great White Throne, Angels
Landing, the Pulpit, the Th ree Patriarchs and
Cathedral Mountain. Fore~ts, fossils, geological
fea tures, rivers, waterfalls, hangi ng l!lltdens and
Indian ruins are also found in the park. Man)' of the
sights can be gli psed from the mile-long Zion-Mount
Carmel Tunnel, along which wide viewing galleries
have been cut.
Accommodations: Cam pgrounds, group campsi tes
(stays limned to 14 days), Zion Inn and Zion Lodge.
Lodgings: $6 to $14.50.
Address: Superintendent, Zion National Park,
Springdale, Utah 84767

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>THE .SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No • •

Sute University of New York at Butt.lo

W.t.-day, 22 Mwdt 1872

In 1957, the Russians shot the world's first satellite into
orbit, not onty "i11suring" the continuance of the cold war
but solidifying its continuance in American education certainly the continuance of an earlier notion of education as commodity, student as product. The trauma insured the
continuance of pretended "Value Free" methodology et all
phases of educational development - particularly in the
Orthodox Methodology of teaching. The question
continually asked was, "How?" .. . Never "Why?"
There has always been a contrary tradition that asked
"Why" - but the dominant orthodoxy was always able to
squash it, either through starvation or neglect.
The Collegiate System is part of that tradition that has
asked "Why" - has put every notion of educational form
and content up for questioning. From its inception it has u~o~,-H~
been starved and negJected by the administration - as if by\I~~~U~
design. Starved and neglected, but, up until this point it has ~~A~~~~G~~~
succeeded, because of the dedication and hard work of
undergraduates, graduates and faculty (often working
without pay) and, most importantly, the unprecedented
support of students.

.

(p~
- ·

--~~

The shelling

Of the

CollegesSee centerfold

�Auditions

AppUcadoos for the po8don of EcUtor-bJ.QJef of Tlte Spe~lfVm for t~ acldendc
year 1972-1973 will be t.lken unlil Mardt 21.
The application consiltl of a letter to Cbe eciJtorial boanl, stating reasons for
de.&lt;lirina the oppolition, quaU&amp;ations and previous jownallstic experience. The potidon
is open to any Sbiite Univenity pwluate or underpwduate student.
The editorial board wiJ interview aU candidates on Sunday, March 26.
Prospective applicants are Ufled to contact the EcUtor, Room 33S Norton Hall •
soon as possible to fami.liarize Cbem.etvcs with any procedural or technical questioM
about the position or about The Spectrum .

Sub Board approves revisions
Corporation soon a reality
The prop ose d Hous1 ng
Corporation mo ved o ne step
closer to reality last Monday night
as Suh Board I, I nc. approved
f1nal
rev1s1ons tn th e
orgam7atton's by-laws
As now planned , the still
unnamed (that ha~ been left up to
the corporation) cooperative will,
as before, consist of 11 I S·member
Board of Directors Two will be
ete~ted d1rectly by the tenants in
the rrOJCCt wllh confirmation
needed by Sub Board Of the
other 13 , etght wlll be studenta
t~nd
ftve will be non-student
members of the University,
Amherst or Buffalo communities.
The appomtment of these I 3
will be tnt!lated by Sub Board 's
exullng Ad lloc Committee on
lfousln&amp; Here, too, appomtments
are subJect to Sub Board approval.
I n the future, a s t and ma
;; om m 1t tee o n Hous1 ng with
unrestri Cted mc:mbersh1p will
mhent the ad hue committee'&amp;
functions
Procedures for ret.:illl . wlm:h
had been ano ther maJOr area of
dtfhcu\ty were also reVIsed. Under
the adopted rules, recall may be
tmhated m etther of two ways · 11
pelrllon of 500 srudenls. or at the
req u est of two Sub Board
d 1 r e c 1 u r s f r 11 m d i ( ( e r 1 n g
COnStl t uenCICS.

Hearing commission action

GSA votes not to
nominate students

Debbie Benson
d1sc r e t 1on o f the chairman .
OptiOns include presentation o f
the c harges to · 1 HoUSing
Advtsory Committee whose voting
membershtp conststs of the
chauman and treasurer of Sub
Board, and chairman and another
exe c utive o f the Ho using
Co rpor a ti on, th e sta nd 1n1
Commillee o n Housing; 1 special
ad ho-. committee for the recall
gnevan..:e , or II may be u rerso nal
tJec1~10n

Chainnan 's discretion
In both cases the cu mplatnt
would he s ut"lnutted to the
c h a~rman
of Sub Board
Subsequent Steps wo uld be at the

Fact Sheet No 6~
Repnnt

l hc- hy4aw c hanges passed
wtt h oul a dissenting vo te,
h owever ab stentiO n s by
representatives from Millard
Fillmore College served as their
pr o t es t agai nst the housmg
\.Once pt
A campus-w1de referendum ts
the next 1mmed1ate obstacle for
the II o us1 ng Cor p oration
l&gt;1s1:ussed at t he Sub Board

mcetm&amp; was the t1mmg o f such a
refe r e ndum . Those presently
invo lved in the project argued that
the lo nger plans were delayed , the
" more time for someone to pull 1
fast one o n us." They ho ped for
the referendum to take place this
week
Ot he rs retorted th a t a
premature vote wo uld result in
" po Umam a lack of mfo rmatJon.''
and they therefo re desued the
vote at the very end of March
The former VJew preva1led, .lnd
the referendum will be held
tomorrow and Friday .
The meeting also marked a
major c hangeo ver 1n the
me mbenhip of Sub Board, as new
undergraduate representatives
took thar seats. At present , the
new members are Debbie Benson,
Ed Ga mble, Doug Webb and
Hahm ei-Ga bri .

Hear, 0 Israel
For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE

Phone
876-4265

•····~··············

Body Shirts
T - Shirts

l

Ho ward Strauss, chairman of
tbe H eaTing Commission o n
Campus DISruption . met w1th
receptions that ranged from cool
to hostile at Monda y's G raduate
Student Assoc iati o n Senate
meeting. The GSA liste ned as he
expressed the administration's
desire to have nominations for
p eople from the student
sovernments to serve m the IX
atudent positions {out of 18) o n
the com miSSion.
J o hn Greenwood, exte rnal
affairs vice president . said that
submitting no minations would be
"le nd ing legitimacy" to the
commiss10n. He also asked why
there was no automatic proVIsion
for defense counsel. Or. Strauss
told him what provisions were m
t he commw10n's by-laws but Mr.
Greenwood appeared dissatisfied
with this answer.
After Or. Strauss had left, Pat
Tummons s ubmitted a mo tio n to
refuse to no mmate anybody and ,
furtherm o re, to censure any GSA
member who dad serve. Accordmg
to Ms. Tummons, anyo ne who
would serve o n the commission
was, "a low-down , son-of-a-bitcb ,
fink stool pigeon who couldn't be
trusted wtth a fucking nickel."

Down their throat
0 n e member, wh o had
followed Or Strauss out . returned
and informed the assembly that
there al read y was a hst of 18
names tr o m whi c h the
commission could pick members.
Mr. Greenwood pointed o ut that ,
" there w1ll be graduate students
o n the com m1ss1on whe ther we
appoint them or not "
Doug Gersten proposed a
solution. "The o nly answer," he
maintained, "is to blow the who le
thing wide open once and for all "
He suggested tha t the assembly
'• nominate the member most
o b J c..: t i una b I e ( rom (t h e
com m1tt~e ·s 1 vrewpoin t and have

them reject him." rttis idea had
some support but Ms. Tummons'
resolution passed by an I 1-8 7
vote.
Mr. G reenwood t hen called lor
the creation of a University-w1d c:
ad hoc committe to review the
by-la w s of the: hear1ng
comnussion Roger Cook w1shed
to expand the scope of th.:
motion so that the commi ttee
would reVJew the guidelines that
the Board o f Ttustees handed
down (afte r appro val o f the state
l eaisla t ure) . Over M r
Greenwood 's ob j ections the
amendment passed and the
usembly approved the amended
motion I S-2·7

Little lnterest
The senate also continued its
three-week I&lt;Jn&amp; discussion of
un io ni zation
Because of a
combination of arc umstances , the
final report of the com mittee on
unionization had not been typed
and distributed so t here was little
discussion .
Joe Martello mrormed t hl'
senate that of the 175 che mistry
and chemical e ngineering student ,
o nly seven tho wed up at a
meeting called to dascuss the issue
From th1s he mferred that : ..Most
of the graduate students (tn thos~
d partments) have little interest "
He also said t hat the seven who
drd co m e w e r e opposed
Discussion of the report was
tabled until next meeting.
The proposed system of
University governance came under
exa minatio n by the grad ua t c:
body, The senate was told that
the University Assembly would
serve a purely advisory functio n,
but t hat it would be "unwise" for
the ad ministratio n to go openly
a gainst their recommendallons
too often. Thus, the conte ntion
was that the proposed assembly
would be far from powerless .

.-Bible Truth20% orr

Poor Boys

••
•

PCJbli1h«&lt; rhr"
ftWY Mondey,
~~Y •ftd Fri&lt;hy; during the
~l•r «:«1.,-n~e .,_, by Sub-80¥d
1, Inc:. Ollie• .,. IOC6t«&lt; et 355

The Spectrum
t i m••

•

•••
••
•

•
•
••
••
•

11

weH,

Norton H•ll. Sure Uni~ity of New
York •t Buft.lo, 3435 Mtlln St •
B u ff• fo, New York , 14214 .
Tlllttphone A r• Codfl 716; Editl)rlill
831-4 113 ; Bu1ineu, 831-3610.

Eril{

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• 81 allen st.. buffalo. n.y. •
••••••••••••••••••••
Page two . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 22 Man:h 1972

•

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Clrcu'-tion: 16,000

JES US AT THE HEART 'S OOOA
"8ehold 1 n•nd •t t he door •nd
l&lt;no«:k ; If •nv m • n hur my
voice •nd OP41n the door, 1 w lfl
«:ome Into him."
A..,.l.tlon 3 :20
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�..

Sex, drugs and treason topics
of talk by 'Dr. HIP-pocrates'
by Diane lavonto

Sf'('C"Irum Staff Writrr

Eugene Schoenfeld, a noted counter-culture
doctor from Berkeley, add ressed a large crowd
Friday in Capen Hall, on the subject of IUs Latest
book : s~x. Drup and Tri!alon .
Dr. Schoenfeld entertained the audience in a
light, off-hand manner, reading some letters which
were sent to him through his medical colum n Dear
Dr, HIP-pocrates. These relate to sex, drugs, dietina
and other frequently asked questions concemina
health.
Or. Schoenfeld emph asized that the use of drup
is a personal ch oice and should not be restricted by
"so-called objective laws." He went on to explain tho
difference between drug use and drua abuse sayin1 :
"drug abuse is drug use I don't like."
He commented that present attitudet of youth
to wards drup are characterized in dope pmes such
as " Feds and Heads" and "Scam." He gave a detailed
desc ription of these games, modeled after Monopoly,
asserting that these are indicatJve of where soc1ety's
collective heact is con cerning tbe " problem."

Eugene Sclwenfe/d.....uutrmn

No lUI conc:em
Or. Schoenfeld talked at length about how big
dealers an d the medical rehabilitation centers are
H e mentioned Adelle Davia sayina that she "is
"both 10 favor of the continuatio n of the drug the least cnzed o f the vanous food faddiSts in fa ct
problem ." H e saJd that " the criminal orpnizatioos I don't tttinlt she's crazed at all." He also 'claimed
don't want a c hange in the sta tus quo" and that "
that the f(\od and Drug Admiru.'ltration regulates
andiv1dual dealing is the natio n's fastest growing non-harmful vitamins in o rder to enh ance the
profession."
demand for do ctor's services.
The rehabuillllon centers wtuch are funded by
the government are bu~aucratJ c, he d eclared , and With baited bruth
have n ot made any Important moves to correct the
Dr. Schoenfeld diSplayed a k een sense of 1he
problems that lead people to tum to drugs for a dramtic by waiting a judictous le ngth of time before
solution because "it is the proble ms that make them turning the topic to people's norm al sexual
run ."
problems. AI this point he read some people's letters
Though calling e xaminatio n o f th e roots o f and gave replies. Most letters were from males who
excessive drug usC!' an "excercise in futility," Dr. fell inadequate because of pems siz.c : women who
Schoenfeld also o ffered an explanation . He linked felt in adequate about achieving o rgasm : and women
drug use to the period s o f greatest social upheaval who complained about breast stze Dr Schoenfeld '$
11nd said th is cometdes With the brtakdown of the natural approach clearly sh o wed why h.is column IS
family infl u ence
such a remarkable sucess.
While lagaing a bat thro ugh hts mental cxcerc1se
Not t oo fussy
o n treason, Or. Schoenfeld did express h ts pc:rsonlll
S witc hing subJec ts, Or Sch oenfeld wd that medical ethks stressing the bond that sh o uld exist
nutniHln IS no w t h e ··new frooller" tn medtcme He between doctor and patient , muc h as a client wouh.l
commented o n some o f the vanous food fads 11nd confide in his lawyer.
faddiSts saymg that he IS more tn favor or a
Dr Sch oenfeld es poused an apo ht1cal ar•tude
nutnl1onal d1c1 than a vegetable diet Although he sayang· "fair or unfair pohtacal system~ d ep&lt;'nd nn
pref~r s
to eat foods t hat d o nol conLHn ho w they are adn11n1st e red (Sy~l e m s l ore,,., ~·wd .•,
preservallvtt~ . he remark ed that he would not st arve
llw pt'Ople m them
nu '&gt;Y'ten ~an ~u.tl.lllt•·e
htmself 11 they were no t ava1lable l•l h1m
pe rsonal and ccono mtL" lrecc.ln m ··

Stony Brook woes
•

Health Center delays opentng
Proh lcrns m Ctlnstru ctton and funding have
~l owed the w ork o n the tieallh Sc1er1ces Ccntc• of

the State Untve r.llty u t New York at Stony Brook 10
a craw l. The steelwo rk o f t he Center was comple ted
the da y before Thanksgiving. e1ght weeks a head of
~h edule. b ut const ructton stopped at that po ult ,
.tnd the d ate of operung IS up m th e au at th1s lime
The lleallh Sc1ence Complex. when wmpleted,
w1ll cons1st of six sch ools. I) school 111 nursing 2 )
-,c;hool o f .tilled h ealth p rofesmms. l) ..chuol of
soctdl welfare. 4) schuol of baSIC health sc1ences. S)
schnol nl denttstry: 6 ) m edtc al school Presently, all
the schools e xcept the dental 'iChoo l are open and
runmng, but are be111g housed m temporary quarters
and have IIISUffic1ent staffing
Temporary buildings important
The temporary buildings were constructed to
Lake care of the overflow from any o f the SIX
schools. Much like the " temporary building.s" on our
campus, these buildings, located o n the South
Campus and known as Surge one and Surge two, are
working overt ime as classrooms for the five sch ools
now o pen .
The medical school consists of approximately
30 students at the present time, despite plans to
admit SO students this year. Only another 24 are
expected to be admitted for next year's class. There
are a to taJ of 450 students in the five open schools,
and it had been hoped to have 3500 enroUed at the
present time .
Stage One o f the Complex , when finished at the
beginning o f 1974 , will conSJst of a $57 million

SlrUCIIIIC Clllltallltng rCSC&lt;ttCh a11d o tli&lt;..l' \p:tu•,
classroom s. a libra ry a nd a cumputl'f center
S tage Two is presen tl y ru1111111g 111111 m:111y
difficulties. It hau o riginally hccn plu ntl~·tl .1~ a
IOOO· hed h osp ital center, hut hudget c u i\ lo1ccd 11
become only a 600-hed center l&gt;r hl111uml
Pe llegri no. Vice Presi d ent for th e llcalth Scll.'lln''·
s.:ud th at th e 600-bed factltly wa~ uccc~~ary h~:t.au'~
"you can ' t wllracl the qualified st all you need wtlh .1
small facility
we cuns1der bOO beds the uHIIIIllUIIl
rcqutred to attract qualtficd people "S t.agc I hll"C "
to cunstsl ol th e Dental SchtX&gt;I .and ha\tt. ~·u•ut.c
tower
Grant disapproved
Ftnal approval of a $67 mllhon grant fro m th e
federal government was not granted the Stony Brouk
Health Sciences Center. One of 20 applicants for
government assistance, the Center was t o rece1ve the
largest grant approved. However . fin al approval did
not come, and as a senior Health Science&amp; officer
said : ''It is generally felt by o ur people that our
failure to get any portion of the kitty was due to
lack of political pressure by our state's
representatives, senato rs and governor."
Right now, things do not look good for a q01c k
finish or possible expansion to the center. Wo rk is
scheduled to begin again on Stage One, since
contracts have gone o ut totaling S33 million. When
the center will b e completed, and how it will finally
look remains to be seen b y th ose concerned with -the
future of the State University o f New York .

News analysis

Prqposedgovernance
by Jeff Greenwald
Campu1 Editor

It is somewhat ironic that
articles fo r a system of governance
would appear at this particular
time in this Uruversity's history.
ln the past, governance has been
looked at as either a panacea t o
the school's ills, or th e rope wluch
once and for all m1ght strangle
any studen t voice. It IS sad
however, if not surprising, that ~
&amp;overnance proposal has been
introduced at a time of perhaps
aU-time d isi n terest o n th e part or
most of the University's defined
constituencies.
The Articles of Governance
themsel ves can best be desc ribed
as inn ocuous. They prescribe a
unicameral University Assembly
consisting of 87 voting members.
Re p resen tation o f the vanous
constituencies breaks do wn as
follows: alumru
I ; ciWtSafied
employees - 5. fa c ulty
40 ,
professional staff - I 0. graduate
studen ts - 8, Mtllard Fillmore
College students - 4 , professional
st udents - J : and undergraduate
s tudents
16. In addJllon,
non-voting representatives from
the Senate Pr ofess aonal
Association and the Civil Serv~ cc
Employees Association will stt as
"observers."
The president o f the UmveNJIY
and I he choncelJor of the S tat e
Universlly wtll serve as ex-offi cio
membe rs also witho ut vote The
method o f electr on to the
asse m bly wi.JI "e detcrnnned "Y
the consllt uencies.

Specifically, no duties of th•
assembly are o utlined other than
to "at its discretion advise the
p residen t , the (University I
Council, the chancellor, tbe Board
o f Trustees and the governor o n
all matters of general concern to
the University or on a ny m atter
which may affec t more than one
o f il s constituencies." The
executive committee's functiom
are s.imilarty vaaue .
Considering th e fate of past
governance proposals at both this
and o ther schools, it seems that
· the committee's decision was a
wise one. T oo often plans for
University governance have been
stillbo rn simply because they
attempted t oo much. Any
pr o p osa l which might have
advanced a definitive explanation
of the assembly's functions could
only have met an inevi table deatb
at the hands of constituencies
worried that e,lther their power
was being usurped o r that another
group's preroptives were not
"safely" cont rolJed .
The co mmittee's effo rts
certamly do not mean that a
Um verstty Assembly will be a
successful one, but tt does appear
that t he assembly has a fighting
chance to at least do rtulf in.

N4:eded sensitivity

As so little is said by the
doc ument , there is little that can
be said in pratse o r criticism of
what has ex plicitl y been included .
nu· proposed representation o f
the asse mbly does however
des e rve m entio n . Often,
governance pro posals have been
Executive committee defintd
sabota ged by the attempted
Also mandated is an executive d o mmatton o f that body by o ne
committee o f ten voting and Atx particular constituency. While the
non-voting members. V o hn&amp; aeata fac ulty clearly bas the larpst
Include fac ulty
4 , p~ofessional
co nlin~cnt. they do n ot constitute
staff - 2. gtllduate s tudents
I , the ma Jority wbic b would
u n dergraduat~
I
M1llard undoubtt·dly d oom the propo.!llolls.
Ftllmore
I and profe"-~1nnal
Perh"Pl&gt; the most SJgruftcant
-.~hoots
thtng .1hou1 lht: proposed article!
Th r J"Ht·~nknl olllle t lnrvnstly
I~
the s pet.l rtl" form of the
WIIUJd
\O:IVC
d\
.1n t'' ttfiiL"Itl
rctnmmended system that bema
mc rnhcr w11 h vut tn~ reo we" only
tht&lt; un H..Jm~rJI house It seems
111 hrc,1~ li t'\ Otht•r non-volin!!
lhJI lhts IIIJY only be lOmmon
nwmhrr- .He 1wo rr.·~HJenu.ll
Hllse
Bt:'ltlll·' shu wtng an
d ,. ' 1 j: n l" e '
"11 l"
..r I u 111 n 1
umlcrst.JIIdlrlg tnlo the o bviOus
rcpr.:wnl.lll\lt" 11ne lllt·mhcr ol the
d1fl11 ulty of hre Jktng dnwn ten
llnrvt•r,rly t IIIIth II IIIII' .t.l"llll·d
lHII\ItiUCflliC\ Itt two. as 8
l.' lltj11 nyn· .tlld 1 h•· l h.ttl m.tn .Jil!l
lttrumaul
asscm hly wo uld . by
\l"llli.IIY
11!
llll• liiiiYl"l'll)'
d.IIOIIII&gt;O nC'IC',~IIJIC. the:
A\~ctnhly (wlht will he l"kdl·d hy
c•&lt;•YciiH.IIIl(' Ct~tnmtttcc ha~ also
th·· &lt;JO,WJIIhly I
tl•~nlay~d
a needed sc nSliiVtty
Ralll tt.:al1n11 fl"" &lt;" Ullrl'' IIIJk r
lttW.Hd .1 U~elu l definition of the
Ufl a Jll,lf\H \C!IIIIl'II J ol f he
' l IIIVt:r\IIY lVIfllllUOIIY •·
prnpo,al With rthl'ol otf IIH'
I h e lJmvcr\t tY may not be a
L &lt;I II' I I I U l" II L I C'
I l" lf ll I I Ill~(
rc t crrndun l\ ht'lun• lht• .Hi lde' olt'llw~r." y, hut rt must be a
whttk t•JIIIIy, hJVIng lt.lDg SinCe
'""Ill ~~~ 1111n died
\111h
llll(llt:llll"lll;lllllll Will hejtiO If Jlllf l'·'"l·d th.: "'""' where ll ..o uld
nnly
11
""'
ol
lhc ··~tsl tn hhsslul ignorance o f
IL&lt;•II\IIIucrH:Il"' I r•·poll ·' lll'l!·'''"l' Volflllll\ liU.Jrters of 11~ population.
It h.s!&gt; heeu d paantul learrung
\lUll'
exp~11cn~c
but many have
' " ' prur•'H" 11 t..r11 "
lll•lt"Wtlll ~~~ 11111\tly for wh.ol II
11'.111\Cd A urut..J meral body ma y
Jo.:' IIIII \JY I.JIIu:r lh..r11 lor II\ J)rovtdc tht: arena where many
\pt'Lifil Lllllll'nf
lnth~ed lhl\ WJ\
tlltlle ldn team JliSt what a
thr 't..rtcd lntcnlltln o l the UIIIVCfSIIY IS and who makes Jt
lJ n 1 v c r .., r 1 y
(, 11 v ,. r n., n' e Up fh e untverslly IS a commuruty
C"nrnn11tte~
.Js re pented hy .and 11 see ms th at the Governance
tODlOllttcc chatrwom.Jn Maf)one Commtttee IS Intent upon it being
govern ed as o n e
Mtx.

Interface
WBFO (88.7 Mhz) will present a spedal
lntt'rfact proar•m tomorrow at 8 p.m . dealina with
Unive rsi ty aovernance . Members of the
Universlty.wide Governance Committee will be
rueata, and all interested people are uraed to join the
live audience in Room 327 Norton Hall. If unable to
attend . questions may b e phoned in at 831 -S393 .
Applications for the position of Editor-in-chief of the
Buffolortlon for the 1972-1973 academic yur will be ~en
until March 31 .
Appliutions for Business, Layout, C opy, Production
and other positions are also available in Room 356 Norton.
Call 831 -2505 for further informat_ion.

Wednesday, 22 March 1972 . Th.e Spectrum . Page three

�Qualifive candidates win
four of five I RC posts
I nter R estdence Council
electwns for next year's slate of
ufficcrs resulted m large pluralities
for members of the Qualifive
Party. Last Thursday's polling
gave the presidency to Gary
Cohen, who promises to present
the IRC with a well-thought out
agenda of plans and activlltes.
!l eaded by a four-person
contingent from the Qualifive
tu;ket, next year's council will be
pushing for mo re latitude in its
operatiOns. Mr. Cohen cites
extensiOn of the fa cihttes of both
the Grub and the Underground
(I RC -matn Ia i ned retatl food
outlets m the dorms) as a pnority ,
as well as more and better bus
~ervice to Allenhurst
He also
expressed high hopes that student
nghts and entertamment wtll be
less neglected than tht'y have been
m the past.
'Vote of confidence'

Mr Cohen, who11 be a JUnior
next year. rec1eved 80% of the
vote for pres1dent. Desp1te his
regret that more dorm restdents
d1d not vote in the elecllon. he

views IUs overwhelming victory as
a vote of confidence that will
asstst him in carrying out his
presidential functions.
J erry Goldfarb captured the
vice presidency aho by a large
percentage, while a write-in vo te
for Rich Watkins garnered a
quarter of the total vote
Ehssa Katowltz was elected
treasurer and Bob Kole activities
chairman m landslide balloting to
ro und out the Qualifive victory.
The fifth member of the part y
slate , R1 ch Hochman, was
narrowly edged ou t for secretary
by mdependent Carol Stykes
All five of the victors have
a Iready begun planning as a
cohcstve unit for the success of
then admmistration. They st ress
to all IR C members that
part1 c1 patton should not be
ltmtted to themselves. '1"o
maxtmtze the benefits of what
IRC has within its reach , all
restdents should support and
partrctpate in the workings of
thetr gover nment." President
Cohen's pnme hope IS "to make
IRC an open place "

Survival March

Students'lntem1tlonal Medit1tion Society
Announce. a taJk on

10% DISCOUNT
Off..-.d to fiiCUity • studenll at
tM HOTEl lATHAM, 4 E. 28 S1.,
off 6th Aw. 400 r - . priVllta

batfla. Dally ratw from $10 Nntll,
$12 double. SPECIAl RATES fCH

There wi.ll be 1 Children 's March for SumvaJ in
Wa sh• nat o n , 0 .0
o n Mar c h 25 .
Community-&lt;ontrolled dl y care, comprehensive
health care. a S6SOO i'Jaranteed income 1nd welfare
nghts 1re •mona the issues surroundina the march .
Children's survival bu..~s will leave for Washington
from the Sl•le University of Buffalo 11 8 p .m . on
March 24 and will return Sund•y momina. Tickets
for roundtrip and three me1ls are available 11 the
Norton Ticket Office for S 10. For more information
call 8 3 1-3609 or stop 11 the Children's Survival
Table tn the center lounae o f Norton Hall .

A U T 0 and C Y C L E

The B.-ct. Boys, who have
ridden the wave of restored
popularity, will appear at
Kleinhans Music Hall
tomorrow nl""t. The a.ds from
Cltlifomia will be releasing a
double album soon, and you'll
probably hear a lot of their old
hits sprinkled throughout their
lhow. Don't miss them.

erou,. • axtendlad stava. For
,_,.tlont c:MI COllECT.

212-MU 5-8300

Transcendental
Meditation
as 11upc by MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI ,
giYen by

AL JARDIN

MIKE LOVE

&amp;
of the 'Beach Boys'
Thursd1y, Afternoon, March 23
240 Norton Hall
clrulc Norton Info deslc for trme t·onfirmatron
ADMISSION FREE

I N SU R A N C E

IMMEDIATE FS·I
s

Waterbeds
$15°~uaranteed 5 years!
King, Queen
at

WATER

SHED

Walk tn a light-footed shoe that' s as rugged as a heavyweight. It's the
softest sand-colored suede with sturdy weatherproof Malayan crepe soles.
Handsomely styled with unique front stitching and a leather heel kicker.

Next door to

MN8UNI&amp; ..nYM8111H

THE BENT WICK

180 Allen
11

Page four . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 22 March 1972

'

Steteon-Ptymoulh Shoea, Whitman, M•... 02312

LIDDON'S BOOT SHOP, Buffalo
SQUIRE SHOP OF SNYDER, Snyder
GOLDMAN'S SHOES, Blvd. Mall, Amherst

�Homosexuality: misconception aired
by Lynda Teri
F~ture

Editor

"love doesn't depend on sexual orientation."
Whether the relationship is hetero- or homo-sexual, it is
capable of becoming a strong and lasting bond between
those involved . The individuals determine the degree of
involvement; the type of sexual relationship does not
invalidate the growth of love.
Such. were the views expressed on }(ole;descope, a
Channel 29 special on homosexuality. The panel discussed
the misconceptions people have concerning homosexuality
and how these false beliefs prevent them from accepting
homosexuality as a sexual alternative, as opposed to sexual
deviati&lt;yJ · It prevents them from accepting homosexuals as
human and oppresses them in much the same way as
bigotted views oppress Black.s.
Stereotypes create a favorable atmosphere for
oppression; the legal and eltlical implications were
denounced for perpetuating stereotypes which, in turn,
perpetuate laws. It is a vicious whirlpool into which
homosexuals and other minority groups have been caught.
'Fundamental myth'
The strongest stereotype that "keeps gay people
down'' is the "fundamental myth" that they possess
"uncontrollable lusts" and "insatiable sex dnves." The
panel believed that the low opinion many have of
homosexuality as directly related to thas. They labeled
these mecharusms as defensive measures which lay the
groundwork for regarding homosexuals as sub-human and
excuses laws which infringe on their civil rights.
Homosexuals are regarded by others as incapable of
establishing and mamt.aaning any deep emotional lteS With

each other. One panel member believed this aCGounted for
much antagonism between "gay" and ..straisht" peoples.
"They believe we are only out for one thing," he stated.
Thls distrust and suspicion erodes the social status of
homosexuals and extends its influence into our legal
systems.
Fruedian theory did much in the way of providing
"logic" for the beliefs against homosexuality as an
alternative sexual style, which is how homosexuals regard
themselves. Freud labeled homosexuality a sexual deviancy
and believed it due to some maladjustment during
childhood. In short , the homosexual is an imperfect
attempt at heterosexuality . according to Freud .
The ptnel voiced the opinion of others that
homosexuals are resentful of not being able to have
children and would realty tike to be heterosexual. " 1 enjoy
being what I am," they concurred.
Must one be wronf!
The panel questioned the need to discredit
homosexuality as a viable lifestyle . They suspected
prejudices agamst it went deeper than any theoretical
nonsense. In themselves. they see a maMmy being
oppressed by a majority
One panel member believed homosexuals pose •·a
threat to those unsure of their sexualtty." lie cated the
suppression of affection as an example that most people
are uncomfortable about their sexuality Another saad
homosexuality was "natural and normal" for her. She saw
no reason why she should "war)!" to be heterosexual
"What is wrong with heterosexuals that they can't
tolerate homosexuality and want to oppa ess rt," they
asked. Being a homosexual an today's society was vaewed
in the same regard as being a member of any othca

minority group. They saw themselves facing contempt and
oppression for being different. Society is afraid of
"outsiders," another panel member stated.
Being homosexual was compared to being an
immigrant or being Black. First came the " immigrant
problem," then the "black problem" and now, the
"homosexual problem." One member asked : '1s is really a
homosexual problem or is it the problem of heterosexuals
relating to ho mosexuals?" Who is having trouble? He said
he was not trying to convince people to become
homosexuals. Why then , he asked, were o thers trying to
convance him how much better heterosexuali(¥ was?
Fallen heterosexuals
A growing segment of homosexuals are no longer
trying to hide their sexuality There is a vocal minority
who are attempting to be accepted; not as fallen
heterosexuals, but as people who have adopted different
lives. They are people - people with differences, but
people. "We are in some respects different and proud of
those differences, ·• one member slated.
Homosexuality was (and sttll ts, rn many cases)
shgmati.led to such a degree that homosexuals were forced
to hide thelf ..dafferences" One member bkened it to
trying to speak in a foreign tongue . Previously .
homosexuals would marry members of the opposite sex to
carry out the extensive facade of being "normal ." While
tlus ts no longer nec..essary to a great extent , many are still
happed antu the dual roles they and socaety have created
fm themselves.
Wlulc "people can he more comfortable being what
1hey are." withw the gay libcr:llaun movement. for many.
bemg hom~xual as somettung to run from and hope no
one knows. The panel caut1oned thai they are the most
susceptrble to blackrnaJI. o.vulgmg their "secret" can mean
any number ol disastrous tlungs for them: loss of a job,
public dtsgrace, scandal, havang their bves rUined. They hve
an ~.-onstant fear
Fear of "being tound out" pervades many
homosexual lives. One panel member commented that fear
is the strongest control With it you need little
en forcement ; thC' contwls need not be phySJcal and soon
prtsonet'll become their own guanls.
CoMCiousness
Lcsb1ans arc caught 111 the double l:ltnd of bemg gay
&lt;md heing women, said unc panel member . Often in
spcakmg of ho mosexuality rcople forget that lesb~ans
exast, ~he saad There tS a male-onented ptllure She '13Jd
her leshtan rrlataonships pwvade hct w11h "lovet, saster and
lncn&lt;.l." S he agreed that she faced the same oppression of
hetc10sexual women w1th the added "fault" of heing
homosexual This wa\ daffcrcnt than bcang a male
homosexual, she stated.
J.eshiatrt. llmttll~ 1\ .tn lH(!.allllatllln which attempts
w "g~vc women their own altcrnallves" 1 ~ gualts to help
them relate 111 each other. themselves and thcar sexuality ,
s;ml une panel member fh cre Jrc uvea 18,000 lesbians an
the BuOalu are.t accordmg tu the Ktnsey report, she
cuntanued They are cua rently 10 the process of wnting a a
sex manual fo r Lesbtans

Tht: Mauachine Soctety of NiiJgara Frnnrier was
established to ... uild a sense of community for the
estamated 54,000 homosexuals (according to the K.tnsey
Report) m the Buffalo area II attem1&gt;ts to develop
unc.lerstandtng between homosexuals and heterosexuals
through social, religious, legal and polttical actions~
Gay l.tberonvn Front defines ats aams sunilar to the
other organiz..ations with less concern on politics. Through
group discussaon they hope to bring about ''mtemal
consciOusness" wath gay and strarght people.
Laws: protection or penecution?
The legal effects of the socaal blindness regarding
homosexualtty was discussed an the presentatio n. The
central issue was the validtty of laws wtuch dLSCnminate
against homosexuals by declaring the ..open solicitation''
by homosexuals illegal. Plainclothes police investigation of
gay bars was the focal point of debate.
The pollee's main function IS "the prot~tion of aU
people," stated Capt. Kenneth Kennedy, commanding
officer, Bureau of Vice Investigation. He said the police
department had ''no quarrel" with the hom05exual
community or individuals. They fall under his jurisdiction
-continued on PA94t 12-

Wednesday, 22 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�EdiToRiAl

r

I

It's not what you say...
The most significant factor of the University Govemaf'ce
Committee's final report is its lack of apecifics. This apparently was a
oonsc1ous choice and we must commend them for their wisdom, since
every previous governance group foundered upon that very point. By
not defining the various jurisdictional concerns of their proposed
Assembly , they have raised no red flags for the existing campus
constituenc ies to charge at .
Also important is the amount of effort expended upon the
ratification procedures. Th1s, too, has t&gt;een a stumbling block in the
past and the lengthy procedural delineatrons for adoption seem to
rnsure a logical and intelligent deliberation withrn each constituency
Our only substantive complaint concerns the ratio of faculty to
students. Ttlirty·one students to 40 faculty members is certarnly not an
insurmountable hurdle for the students, but we do not believe it rs a
realistic appraisal of the rela tive importance of those two
constituencies. While the present governance efforts of the faculty are
infrnitely more organized than their student counterparts, they by no
means are any more effective.
Despite th1s objection. we do recommend ratification of the
Governance Committee's proposal. First, the faculty will never consent
to tii'IY form of government unless they substantially outnumber
students, and second, virtually any body would be superior to the
current governmental lethargy

Hands off!
Megalomania is a concept that Sub Board I, Inc. cannot
seem to forget. Normal expectations would be that last
semester's adverse student reaction to their previous
power-broker tactics would have convinced them o f the
necessity of controlling their inbred desires to achieve total
mastery of all campus activities. Unfortunately, they have
not learned from their mistakes.
After unnecessarily de4aying the format ion of a student
housing authority, Sub Board found it necessary to insure its
position of domination by a series of amendments to the
housing charter. First, appointments to the yet unnamed
housing body must be approved by Sub Board. If the Board
was a directly representative entity, then there would be
some justification for their actions. Stnce they actually
represent no one - only two members be1ng directly elected
to the Board - we wonder whose interests ·they are
protecting.
Far more objectionable is their inclusion of dubious
recall procedures. We have no objections to the provision
whereby 500 students signing a petition can initiate the recall
of a housing authority member. The problem is the
alternative method in which two Sub Board members from
different constituencies may start recall by simply requesting
it.
As a practical matter, recalls almos1 never occur. In the
last four years, no student government officer has ever been
recalled despite clear justification for so doing in many
instances. Because Sub Board has shown 1tself to be
unusually prone to personality conflicts, their recall powers
are likely to be exercised whenever the housing authority
refuses to bend to their will .
The housing authority may need a watchdog, but until
that responsibility is specifically delegated to Sub Board by
the various constituencies, Sub Board has no right to assume
that function.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 69

Wednesd1y, 22 March 1972
E.dltOr-m.Ch•ef

n~n''" Arnotld

Co M•n•grng Edolot
1\1 I~•·"""'
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the los Anlltle; Trme\ Frc~ Prt~\, lh~ Lo• An&amp;elt' frmh
Syndk••~ anll liber~llon Ne"'s Servoce
s~IVILt ,

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lorboddcn.

~oo menr

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Editori.al pol14 y "llerermined by I he Editor-rn.Chrer.

Page six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 22 March 1972

ul rht

'YICCMf'

Refute itself
Palestine Solidarity Com mittee and Youth Against
War and Fascism to refute itself.

To the Editor.
After upwards of one second's worth of
dehberallon, Activist Youth for Israel has decided to
allow the tetter concerning t he "Kibbutz Karavan"
pubUshed rn Wednesday's Tht&lt; Sptcuum hy the

Ira Sht'1k1n
A ctrvut Youth for Israel

Collegiate strike supported
To the Edlin,.
I would hke to comment on the article and
edrtonal you published on the CoUeges March 17
By mentioning in the editorial (Support the
Colleges) the idea of "striking" in the manner you
dad, the 1dea was totally taken out of its mora l and
legal perspective. The idea of a strike, brought up at
the CoUegiate Assembly meehng, was not meant to
be an Irresponsible act of violence by the general
student body. but rather an active display of a
legitimate gnevance by instructors of the Colle&amp;iate
System We d1d feel that if we were to strike, there
would be cons1derable student support that could be
fo cused mto a constructive, mea!lingful body (as
opposed tb a chaotic mob). Let me aJso remind you
lhut thiS was brougbt up o nly as an option if the
adrmnrst1atron refused to cooperate or negotiate on
any level
fh e rdt:a of some, or aU of the Colleges dosmg

down (CoUe&amp;Jate Assembly demands more funds)
seemed to be bypassed too quickly in your art1cle
There does exist a strong amount o f resentmenl
dtrected at the administration due to the1r lack of
.&gt;upport on aJJ levels. There are many people in the
Colleaes with advanced degrees and several yean
teaching experience that no t o nly get paid less than
one-third of a normal salary. but are now being told
that they are incompetent as well. At the same lime
the administration realizes (although they are ne ver
willing to admit 11) that . the Unwers1ty could no t
operate effectively without the Colleges. •If the
Colleges were &amp;hut down, wbere would the exce~
29,000 credit boun be picked up certainly not by
the m~ority of departments whose courses are
closed already . If we can't re~o:eive some satisfac llon
o n our grievances, we would be npping ourselves o fl
if we don't c lose down.
Sreve Sregel. l.rrturrr
C P Snow Colltg•

For what it's. worth
by Harvy Upman

I If Musk1e wbn the New Hampshire pnmary
but really lost , and McGovern lost the New
Hampshire pnmary but really won, and if Walhtce
won the Flonda primary but it doesn't really matter
except that everybody will swing to the right , and 1f
Humphrey tlunlts he really won the Florida pnmary ,
then : a . Humphrey can't add; b. Humphrey is a fool ,
c. Humphrey will win the New J e~ey primary , d
Humphrey will &amp;et the nomination , e. Humphrey
will lose to N1xon ap.in ; f. all of the above
2. Jack's bucket holds two p1nts of water hll'l&gt;
holds a pint and a half. The bucket at the well holds
a gaUon . If Jack and Jill wanted to bnng three pmts
of water down the hill they would : a. stop screwmg
around on to p of the hill ; b . do you really beheve
Jack went up there after water7 c. fill both bucket'
with water, poUT out the overOow, refill the large
bucket , empty the smallest bucket, fill 1t to
two-thirds capacitY and po ur the rem;under rnto lhe
middle bucket, empty the large bucket and lhrov.
away the small o ne.
3 , Dita Beard claims th~ Jack Anderson wemnr:.
a fraud . IT&amp;T shredded aU the documents invc..•lvcd
in the case. The company contributed $400 ,000 h•
the Repubhcan party out of the goodness of rh
corporate heart The White House cta.uns lo hd Vl'
been totally d1S1nvolved . The Pres1den1 has rnvokt:d
executive pnviJege to prevent one of h1s aides from
being subpoenaed to testify before the Senale
com mittee. Dick K.leindiensl was not involved . John
M1t ch~ll was not involved. Therefore : a . somebody I)
lying; b. everybody is lying; c. the Republicans are
lying: d . the Democrats are lying.

II .. Vlng offendc~ the ent1re Citizenry of Buffalo .
the Student Association, M1chael Levinson and most
of the candtdates m the student elections over the
Jlast few weeks, I decided to give myself a day off
and no t insult anybody today. The problem for a
cynic hke me is to think of something to wnte
wrthout attacking someone. Well, 111 give it a try
bes1des I he tHg capture the flag match is commg up
If that doesn't come ofr, however, watch out next
week . Anyway , I , Harvy L1pman , do hereby swear
nol to rntent1onally ofrend anybody with th1s
column
Now , where does tha t leave us? I certainly can't
say anything about pohllcs, economics, soc aal
problems. pollution , the Umversity admrmstrat1on ,
students, witHe people. blac k people. the wealhtr,
sports
oh well, I suppose 1 could always tnsul!
Fred Aueron . but Fred doesn't really mind and that
takes all the fun out of 11. I could write a lot of
pnvate, ' inside' things to people lake Jefrs room mate
Steve telling him that I reah ze he wtll inform me that
the column sucked, but that IS hardly what I had tn
mind when J created thiS monstrosity last s ummer
What I am hestlantly approaching IS the
announcement of mother L1pman poll. Now stop
pukmg all over the editonal page! I haven't do ne one
in months and anyway, everyt1me I write something
serious, people take it personally . The only
alternative I I!Bn think up is a ' Dear Harvy ' column ,
hut I couldn't do that wi thout offending several
people. Ac tually, I did make an attempt to cancel
this edition . but our mighty leader, editor-in-cluef
and all-around boy scout DenniS Arnold , insisted
4 If Charlie Finley had any brainS, he'd : a pdy
that l fiU this gap with something. Blame !tim - I Vida Blue whatever he asked for b not be Charlie
just wanted to go home early .
Finley ; c. let the peo ple who kno~ something about
Which brings me to the point I was trymg to baseball run his organizatron.
avoid ·- ladies and gentlemen, the fourth or fifth (I
5. The mean disillusionment speed in the
lost count) official Lipman Poll (no that wasn't Student Associati.on is : a. two weeks. b. four weeks
directed at any ethnic group - you speD that with an c. until the nex t assembly meeting; d . t hey'll be 111
•e; stupid!):
each other's throats by September.

�Intramural sports
To the Editor:
Having just completed compet in&amp; in lhe
intramural basketb~ playoffs, we think it
appropriate at this time to comment and recommend
the intramural. sports pro&amp;ram.
This program Is definitely worth all the money
that it was allotted in the recent student referend um.
Any change in financial support due to future
~ferendums or decisions by the student association
would be a great mistake.
Our team was one of over fony teams in
football and eighty teams in basketbalL Add to this
the other intramural sports of handball, volleyball,
track, etc., and you have over one thousand students
partici pating. Moreover, th e addition of o ther s po rts
such as softball in t h e early fall or late spnng wo uld
bring even greater student participat ion . How man y
other extra curricular ac tivities on this campus
receive as much student support?
FinaJJy, we would like to thank Mr. Wi lbam
Mo nkarsh and his assistants for their excellent
guidance and managllment o f the program which in
o ur opinion, was far superior to any intramural
fHQgram in the past. With con tinued st ud e nt
sup po rt , we're s ure t he antramural program wtU be
tv~ n more successful in the future
Ml'lnhr•r1 of XAM

Closed doors
To tht• f.drtnr
Pr ~:~l·nt puh~:y

on th is

~;;1mpus

h as bl't' n I&lt;Jward
ex pulsiOn,
brhmd closed doors not opt&gt;n to student l~ars.
With in the last rew months, six stud ents frl)m
1h1s Umversi ty we re expelled be\!lluse of th e issue~
~:cnlenng around acodemic freedom 'fhcse were all
closeu hearings.
Wake up stud e nts. Questions conce rn ing ~udent
cx puls1o n on grc10nds of J t:adtmic frecdum sho uld
nu t be:- lim1tc:d to ~am pus papers rud by the ~tud cnt
tlo d y .1s day uld news.
~:un duct mg heari n g;~. co n ~ c ml njl ~tu d cnt

/'c ·tc• R11:fwrds

Program diversity
Trt t h t! Editor

I would like to take exception to Barry Rvbrn 's
comm ent in Mo nda y's The Sputrum that the
broadcast of the two varsit y hockey playoff gamees
"sh o ws ttunking at WB FO is more tn line with
stude nt interest s th;an narrow programmmg goals.''
Mr. Rubin , a man With intelligent vie ws, is
w mewhat off base in th is argument . The main po int
of bis column was to lambast the Buffalo media fo r
the1r lac k of interest in Ur11versity spons events,
especially UB hockey.
If anything, WBFO sh ould be cornplirne nt cd for
their decision to broad cast the games because th ey
o bvio usly brought a gre.at l!l.'.al ot attention t o UB
hoc key .
WBFO is basically a communst y-on e nte d stt~t io n
and their broadcast of the playoffs was just an o th l· r
exa mple of theirdi vnti/ird programming goals
Jrm Druckn

Mask shortcomings
J()

tht EditOf

I wllJ wa,er a bit of money o n Harvy Lipman's
c huckling over the recent spate of letters In response
to his anti-Buffalo column . At first glance, 011e
wouJd suapec:t that his main o bjective was to rouse
the natives to a ri&amp;}lteous frenzy . Ordinarily, this
wouJd pass my attention as an old-hat p)ay which
basically non-interesting writers use to generate a
taste o f the word "hard-hitting," Also, it is
undoubtable that empathy was not long in coming
from the many resident students who are so
lamentably susceptible to this type of
"we-got-a-raw-deal-bey!" journalism, That Lipman's
o wn town was left unnamed was rightly so, for its
problems (one less since humble Harv leaked into
Buffalo) would detract from Buffalo's own. But I
the paranoia o f
believe that his true aim was to
the resident student$, the ire or the local students to
mask his own shortcomings - that is, Harvy l.ip1nan
IS a run-oC-th~mill writer. The sooner the local and
resident students catch on, the sooner H .L . will be
replaced by, say, a blank page.

use

D.J Lob1ok.

Censored news
To tht Edllor:
Through Its outrageously biased and
irresponsi ble coverage of the recent struggle to
e nsure free public education in New York State, The
Spectrum has effectively censored the viewpoint and
program of the New York State Coalition For Free
Public Education. In the Friday, March 10 issue,
Ellen consented to give an interview t o Jo-Ann
Armao, as a representative of the Coalition . It was
our understanding, from her, that the resulting
article would 1) appear facing the one which was
being written nbout th e program SASU was
s ponsoring for a roll-back in tuition , 2) that it would
briefly illuminate the history behind the Coalition,
and 3) that it would explore the differences in
ideology between the Coalition's and SASU's
programs, so that students wo uld better understand
the real issues invo lved in the struggle for frl!e public
e\.lucauon. We were mts kad . While SASU's program
was presented in great deta il o n page o ne. the
Coalition's program was merdy mentio ned by
com pariso n on puge three . In d ividing the problem
into two unrelated articles. and in assigning different
degrees o f tmpo nance to the two gro ups addressing
lhemselVt:s to this problem, Tht• Spectrum a~u med
an edit o rial posi tion at a time when 11 could only
serve to undermine th e struggle .
The chief purpose of ttus inlt:tvJcw was to
arouse student and fat·ult y ~ upport for the positi o n
taken by the Coalitio n Obv1ously, the mfcrior
posttton given this art1de an the: newspaper ('&gt; ), as
~om pan:d to tha t g.IVen to the arlldl' un SASU"s
eHorts, minimi1.ed the possihility nf fil Vorahlc
publicity for th e Coalition'~&gt; stand In add1t1on, an d
more uuportantly. w~: had ho p ed !hut the art icle
would serve as a preparatory annCluncement for n
meet1ng thai we won~d to .:all fo r thts Thursday
(Marc h 16). Thi~ mectuljl was ull ud cd tt1 10 th t! last

paragraph of the article on Friday, March 10.
After wading through the bureaucratic tangles
of securing a room in Norton Hall for this meeting.
we were assured by a The Spectrum staff membe r
that it would be appropriat ely announced in
Wednesday, March 15 's paper. The Spectrum , by not
announcing this meeting, hu completely killed off
the chance of a no-tuition movement succeeding this
year at Buffalo, and , in effect , has censored the
news. T he staff of the st udent newspaper of
SUNY AB has shown its class bias in ignoring the
struggle to eUminate tuition. Because of th~
"oversight'' in leavtng o ut the above announcement ,
o bvio usly no meeting has bun held to organize
around the state-wide demont~tration in Albany •
March 20 . Thus, higher education in New York State
remains a privilege for those lucky e nough to pay for
it CongratulatiOns on your splendid ' 'objective"
JOUrnalism.
Sondy Block

Jon Younger
l:.ilftor :f nott• At the time uf this rflltriJiew . Ms
8/m·k wos prrparfng /()r a mei tmg wtth SASU
reprt•,fentortl'es. It wu.r upon h er request that uny
ic/eo/igical tll/ftrem·t!.t between SASU positlon:r and
the Coolitro n br underplayed . A s Mx . Block statt:d
at the lime, she wa.t ho pmg for a reconciliation
ht•tw&lt;'l'fl th e rwu organiza tio ns. Any o bscuritieJ i n
tht• srory srt·m. n ot fro m any effort to rcnsure th e
Coulttwn, but rather from Ms . Block's unwilllngnes:s
to dt!a r/y rldinc&gt;otr h er rwsltwn . In udditt o n. The
Spt!rt rum dtd not by un I' mt•an.r c•ndnrse th t SASU
pmflrnm os t'Vt df'm•td hv th•• March /0 t&gt;dlturiul. TlicSpCl' t rum does rc•gret that fltJ unnmmcemt'nt
Of'IJl'arrd m its Marrh I .S paxn. //(JweiJer. thr
omu,rwn 1vos not an tllt•rt ta c-ensor hut on lr onest
rlll.ftOkt'

s

Collegiate budget cut
on tb ... grading poliCies or the colleges, by definin g
t he qualit y of mlitruc tors by the number of t1tles and
The gains made from 195(1-70 in 1he ureas ot
initials associuted w it h o ne's na m e, and by d en ying
.u..a d emJc freedom ond self-deter m111at1o n by counter the rights of the colleges to independently hue staff
In s t i tut io n s ufferinl!, alternative educational The present crisis induced by the budget c ut must be
possibiliti es such aS the Collegiate System arc being viewed not as an isolated incid ent but as 11
~lo wly eroded by recent retaliatory attu~:ks by the
con t in u1nt d rive by th e administration t o
Ketter Administration The c uttmg o f the bUdj~ct to con solidate and rigidly contro l the Uruvenity .
The poa1tion of the Collepate System and ita
the tune o r 23% is a ploy by which the
adminlstrat1on hopes to channel the frustn.tions nf importance as an altemlltive educational opportunity
the colleges into an in ternal struggle over mcme tary is being lhrell lcned to the crisis point o f s urvivaL Thr
i115ues. Any stude nt with knowledge of the rust o ry of Collegiate: Syst.:m Co'l nnot struggle aJo ne. Our only
the colleges realizes ' that th is should not be the foc11l practical strategy is to turn to our sisters an&amp;l
brothe rs, the students, in order to protect our
point o f the struggle.
In a series o f sys t e m a tic mo ves the sy stems and practices from repressjve destruction by
administration has attempted to under cut the u hostile ud min is tration which wishes to teturn to
viability o f the Collegiate System . The attack has the monolithi c couru :rtructurt of the early and
manifest ed itself in diverse fo rms College A w a.~ mic.l·slxtu•t The Ketter Admims trahon's policies
forced to move from its storefro nt l(lcation in th e must be sntapretcd as the end of "admintslrahve
summer of 1970 by the Administ ration's threat to liberalis m '' and an attempted return to the old line
withho ld the budget thereoy effed1vely isolating it o f the University as 1t l{lorifitd ltigll uhool and
from the community . Radi cal and progressive f£'St'a,cJt inslltutr whose major goal is to supply and
fac ulty in various department~ throughout the ~rJ)\Itual th e ca pstahst class and its rtpressive
Universit y have been purged . It 1s n o t a coinddence institutions.
On Wednesday , Murch 22 a l 3 :00 p. m . in 146
that the colleges have faced contmuing rrpre.~ion at
the same time thllt well a ppreciated teachers and Diefendo rf, the Collegiate Assembly will be meeting
critical thinking people are he1ng for~:et.lto leave this to d.sscuss and act upo n these 1ssues. If th e Colleges
Unive rsity . Many o f these peo ple have heen directly are to successfully resist this latest attack , it is
or indirectly mvolved with the Colleges . In addition, essential th at progressJve student&amp; attend and
administrative pol icy decisio ns have been d irectly participate in this meet1ng t o demonstrate support
hostile to the fun ctionmg o f the Colleges. The fllr th e coUeges an d to lilruggle against tbe Kette1
Administratio n has assertct! Its dictatorial powc:r to p&lt;lhcaes.
d1 cipHne the colleges by exerc1sing veto power over
S toff of Th e Sot:tul Srienu College
the form ation o f n ew colleges, b y pladng restric tion"
To the l:'tlttor

State of finance
to th~ Edllo,.
The Untversity's cut o f the budget of th.:
Collegiate System is both senseless a nd ridiculou.·•
One has to look at the state of finance in this
University to realize it . As reported by The
Spectrum a few weeks ago, th e Athletic Department
hu only used $90,000 of a $ 240,000 budget with
most o f the large expenses taken care of. While th is
is happening, the University cuts the budget of the
Colleges by Ill most a quarter or its total budget . The
Colleges serve 6000 satisfied students, statistics. the
Athletic Department can 't come close to as far as

servRc goes.
The University has always publicized their
Collegiate S ystem and have taken the pnmc:s fo r it,
as well. But when the chips are down, whete l.s the
Univenlty's helping hand?
J cannot and will not accept that the University
is able to cut the budget of SlX:b an essential part of
the University, and will not come to the rescue of
the Collegiate System, while a department which
benefits so few, is opera tin&amp; with such a great
.surplur..

Mrchoel Sll11t1

Description protested
To the Editor·
am participating on the Middle States
Self-Eva luation Committee and one of my
assignments was to review the sectjon on the
Colleges. Althou&amp;}l it is the general policy o f the
C ommittee to shorten the report , I made only minor
spelling cbanses and didn't think the length could be
effectively shonened . It seems reasonable to expect
some advanct notification from the admimstration

before they made suc h a drastic cbange It\ the
College Report u
appeared Monday in Th ~
Spectrum . J would like to publicaUy protest the one
page versaon of the Colleges description because it is
prejudicial t o the Colleges. If each Faculty
underwent a similar edHing, the Report would only
be nine pages long. It is ·wo derogatory and
represents a hostile minority opinion.
Waffen Felix

Wednesday, 22 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�The shelling
of the Colleges.
PURPOSE
..The new concept of a CoiJegiate unit'' was
defined in the Stern Pros~tus in an oblique but
unmistakable fashion . These passages taken
together constitute the basic definition of purpose
("CoUegiate System : Annual Report"):
"Collegiate units shall provide additionat
dimensions to education at the State University of
New York at Buffalo that supplement 'and
complement existing programs. The development
of Collegiate units will be a continuing process
within SUNY policies. taking into account the
educational needs of all members of the University
and drawing upon resources both within and
without the University community. Collegiate units
are not necessarily residential in character; they
rnay exist as groupings within the University
pursuing shared educational objectives.
"Collegiate units may be proposed by any
group of students, faculty or staff at SUNY/ B."
Taken together, these passages from the Stern
Prospectus define the Collegiate units as ad hoc
academic structures responding to the creative
needs of faculty, staff and students.
This purpose is reflected 10 the foll owing
comment of President Robert L. Ketter (the
Reporter. March 9, 1972) : "The University will
never be bound to the traditional forms of hjgher
education; it will be willing to act alone or
cooperatively m using its resources to create new
forms which will further the realization of its
aspiratiOns. purposes and goals."

•

•

pattern of living-learning. To get students and
faculty to have real communication, not just to talk
to each other.
" And the breakdown of a 30,000 student body
into groups of I000 or less, and their faculty. is a
large development ."
Organization &amp; Planning

The critical dependence upon creative change
is evidenced in the following excerpts from the

''Collegiate Organization " (the Collegiate System
by-laws) :
"The Collegiate organization is subject to
continuous review .
"The first order of business of the first meeting
of each semester will be discussing, reviewing, and ,
if necessary. initiating change of the Collegiate
organization.
"Assembly meetings will be open."
Evaluation

Evaluation is a creative process of personal and
group growth and in IUl enterprise like the
Collegiate System it becomes a way of life .
We should be moving toward a system of
periodic complete curriculum review of all units of
this campus. We would resist very strongly any
framework which would release the Collegiate
System from this obligation for regular review of
the complete curriculum of all units as a means of
fostering self-critical assessment of their work.
As a matter of fact . the Program Evaluatjon
Committee used different procedures in the process
l)f review at various times in 1970/71 . In the course
PROCESS
&lt;If rcvtewing programs for fall 197 1. the Program
Evaluation Committee of the Collegiate Assembly
The fundamental problem of Collegiate umts has begun to Lake the approach that, rather than
thus defined is the tenston between the ncces.~ities reviewing and approving individual courses, the
of institutional validation and the sense of committee will review enllre curricula at one time,
self·sufficiency one may expect in any group which sn :~s to come fu a more considered judgment as to
ts cooperatively pursuing mutually shared goals.
rite appropriateness of the vartous procedures
Nearly every Cllll lrovcrsy Cur11;erll111g the cmplo y~d tn ach1evtng the slated goals of Collegtate
Colleges has had to deal m lHIC way ur anl&gt;ther wtth units. All tn all rhe comple te offerings of each
thts problem .
Collegtale urut have been subject to scrutiny and
Agam we 4uute Prestdent Rubert L Ketler 111 dtscuss1on as nften as five t1mcs 111 the course uf the
comment o n th.Js process (Bufjalv Fvening NC'ws. past two yeats.
Dec. J 1, I 97 J )· ••
the Collegtate units have
been designed to provtde more interact10n between
PROGRAM
students and faculty tn sm:~ll er groups W1lh11t the
multi · Ur11VetSII)I SCII1ng
an im portant
Because tl IS th1· o nl y vwbk· pro~t:.llll till thl'
developmelll in a llntvers1ty &lt;!$ latge as our~.
campus workmg In prnvtde a relevant lwmam·
We are looking forward to hav1ng fact !It tcs whtcli l'ducattOn, the Coll~gtJtc sy~ICII\ ~~ c.;ontinu.JIIy in
will assure the success of the concept.
trouble With the or th odoxy . continually 'latvcJ,
"The object of the new UB ts tu change the t.:Ollltllllally nej!.lccted

~

il .,.,

Tht'H! arc rite VJt'cljlt ' n·u~~~~~~ wh ,.

WI'

&lt;ailS&lt;

trouble.
College A· 'I Ius lllltl f1rst nl;l(h• llcadlllll'l&gt; bv
havml!. the ptHH \ellM! to lhml. lh ,1 t \IUdcnt~ had
the ablltl )' I ll tudg.~· tho.:tr OWII WOtth . l..;tll'!y , Ill\'
Collegt• has moved 1ntu .1 pfltglam ~x plormg
arral ogou~ telatmm bt•rwer tt Sell Jnd ComnHttHIY
Of purt1cula1 11Hct e't 1s 11~ pwgr.tm dcal111g W1lh
over 600 Clllllllllllllf Y duldren wh1) an• Jcat. hl111d .
have n•rcbral pab}' . mu,c.;ul;n dysttophy . t'ptlcpsy .
are ernotwually dl,lttrhcJ 111 mcnt:.tlly 1eta1dl·J.
This is rhe only group ol tl~ ktnd 111 the c&lt;Htntry
and hus ach t ~ved uatlllnal r~c11gntlt•ltl
I ntcrpl'rsonal famil y relationships, sc tt1ng up
humane serv1ce msrtrution~ to deal w11h the
mentally relartled and .1 dtug program a1med at the
tratniug of those ahlc 111 cnpc Wtth problems ansing
OUt Of drug IISC, ru und UUt this meJdlesome
program.
Enrollment JIJ7II7l. 94/
Budget/971/72" $11,5()(}
College of Mathematical Sciences: Tl11 ~ Lilt •
engages in the study or concrete, practtcal 1ssue~
and th e d evel opm ent nt those issues
mathematically The applicattons include medtclne,
social and political science , .HI and music Of
increasing interest is the applicatinn of
mathematical models to ecologtcal issues and the
conservation of material resources. Because of their
own efforts, Alexander Crothendieck, a Fields
Medal winner and one of the most respected

PacJe eight. The Spectrum . w._dnesday, 22 March 1972

"SUting in rows at d •kJ with your mouths open, while a penon standint in front tqUirb jeu of
inlformcrtion into them- th8t's not education!"
(A.L. Smith, Balliol College, Oxford; Fellow 1882-1916; Master 1916-1924)

m:athematicians in the world has promised to spend
part of next semester in Buffalo. Grothendieck,
elected to teach at the University of Hanoi, during
the heavy bombing raids of J%8 , has made a
synthesis of math and social concerns. Without
additional funds, this college may fold .
Enrollment 1971172: /05
Budget 1971172:$7500
C.P. Snow College: Originally conceived as a
Collegiate wo rkshop focusing on the interactions of
so.;iety and technology, (Socio-Technical Systems),
C.P. Snow College has evolved into a
multidimensional program emphasizing social and
urban planning. This transformation represents a
natural evolution from a program of academic
anltlysis of critical problems to a complex and
varied program of planning for the future . This
"future" takes two forms : the planning of social
and urban environments, and the technology
required for survival in the present and future
urban environments. Thus, the program involves
tw•o dimensions of education : classroom planning,
anulysis and methodologies applied to real-world
pro blems in field-oriented, action-research projects.
Tlt1e analysis of the urban environment is coupled
wtt h a layrnan 's education and in emphasis upon
the basic tools of tecnological survival in the ctty .
The College feels that they arc fulfilltng an
urg,enr student need by providing a multi-leveled
pmgram found nowhere else in the Univers1ty, and
they ca n no longer teach the technological survival
courses
auto mechanics. small appliance re pair,
wtthour more financial
nut nltonal technology
ba~· ktng. It 1S precisely these anti-mystificatmn
cuurses that the orthodoxy finds threatening.
1· n r o II m t• Ill I 9 7 I I 7] : 5 3 4
R rul/{ l' I
/I.J.7! f7J· $//,000
College 8 : In a concerted. disctpltncd eft urt
has Jevotnl ruuch ttme and energy 111 the
\'llllchrnenr (If ca mpus ltfe . A varied and untque
pmgrJm nf pcrfnrmmg artist:.. an expltcil :ltternpt
In pfiiVHie relevant vocaltonal, acadcrni.,; and
psydtlllogical uHl tls£'lutg m th~ 1esidence Collegiate
con t c x t • a 11 tl a n i d e a It s 1 1c a p p lllach to
lllll'rdtsciplinary educa lltln, reflects the deep
philosophical ullerests of the College members.
C01lcgc B 1s also devcltlping a pmgrarn in Liberal
Art s management Tl1e matn thrust is J study l)f the
JUI1llllistrat11Hl ot the College whtch would relate
the e leml'nts uf m;t.nagemeul, politic~ and
cduca tl\ln at pl:ly m the College's relati(ln ~ 10 the
Untwtstty
1-'nmllml'tlf 1971172 4H4
11/lllf(N /9 71 I 72 . $] 0,500
Rachel Carson College : Thts unit has its major
i:tln•:ern, rhc envmlllment. The dedication to
mtcrdtsciplinary study expresses 1tself here at the
llnpversity , 111 rhe cummuni ty and in the Buffalo
schu~11 system . The cure of " lifestyle" courses,
cent ering on Organic and Wtlderness Survival . are
uffe red for credit und non-credit. Students, putting
themselves tit rough the rigorous trials of wilderness
survival, felt that the personal growth was far more
impoonan t than the University credit. This has led
lhe College mto an arrangement for land where
students and staff can work on courses or projects.
Another focus ts on research and study of
community environmental problems to support
legal action in the Buffalo courts. Another of the

College's most important projects has students
teaching action-oriented environmental studies in a
local middle school. The community-based lessons
aim to get even the youngest students interested in
environmental problems . Teachers' guides
expressjng philosophy on interdisciplinary teaching
will come out of this project. An undergraduate
' 'minor" program has been stifled by lack of funds.
EnroUment 1971/72: 342
Budget 1971172: S 12.100
Tolstoy College (Col.lqe F): "The study and
practice of efforts to create ( recreate) more
humane and rational lllttitutions ...
"T h e dialrc tic between changes in
consciousness and clttnges in the structure of
society.
"The study of ~eltc ted figures who exemplify
the need to integrate the private and public sides of
existence ... "
"How to Live" ..
"What to Live For~"
F.nroUmenr 1971/ 72 181
Budget 19 711n. Sf 7. 1200
International College: Tc.: achmg courses dealing
W1th specific prohlcms of trans·natio nal concern.
This unit is the nnfy place at the Universtty where
this "mtddlc ci a~~" t:unllu. t ts Ji red in its entirety .
It IS alstl the only place on campus where the
student can l'Otnprehenstvcty lea111 in small
seminars. about tltc problems''' the Third Wo rld . It
has helped to sp;m~ol sc uuu ;m and lecrures by
visiting schnla.- Jnd dtplomah I rorn South
America. Afncu and tl~t• far I asr m undergraduate
study thts untt 1~ rnd1~pcns1hk
l:'nrollnrt•rr 1 /IJ7J17: · MIJ
B11dgC't /9 7 1/7~' ~10.0011
New College of Modl'm Education : Devoted to

experunental cdut:Ji tllfl. 111 lmth free schools. and
all types of publtt wh1 Hll\ , utLiudrng SUN YAB, The
followmg projells and programs will be curtailed o r
eli minated unless mort• tunds arc made available .
/~·ducator 's /Jihlt• (an al ter nattvc JOUrnal un
ex perimental edUlJIIllltl. Alll•rnilttve Education
Resource Cenret , P 'i 17. hJX'rtmenral Tutoring
Project ; P.S J 7. S~: hunl Impruvement Program and
Ma themati ~s L..ahn1atnry . lJU Laboratory of
Radical Group Dyuanu~:, , New College Video and
Media ProJect ; Urbau l:.ducation Workshop; Mental
Institute Worko;h op. b .lltcJttonal Law Workshop ;
Undergraduate Advrscment Workshop; East Aurora
Free School : Central C'11mrnumty Schl'~tll; CAUSE
Model Schl)ol : aud tlw Independent School of
Buffalo.
Enrol/men r /IJ 71 7.! S If)
Budget 197 1I 7] SI 5.0011
Vico College : Ont· •II the tru ly tnterdtsciplmary
Colleges. The fa culty tl'prl·~e nts six departments.
The core program ntlflld uccs o;tudents to some of
the classic ideas and """"'' of western c~ lture . The
major emphasis has h ~:cn lo erase many of the
artificial Jines which d1v1de professional disciplines .
Enrollment 19 71/7.! .n
Budget/971172 SIJIJIJ/1
College E : B!!gluning from a tri·pa.rt
consideration of symboln: lnr m language, Utopia,
media - this unit h:JS evolved centrifugally and
simultaneously centnpetally While still majntaining
its initial interests - although tts media concern has
been thwarted for lack •11' supply monies - the

�College h11 moved, throurlr 1 procea of
decentralized, cooperative decision maldnJ, into
areas (still decentralized) u diverse u :
non-violence; symbolic form from 1 woman's
perspective; revolutionary wilJ and values;
educational resources; rock music; film and TV;
Shanti Yoga; and the Black Perspective - from
slavery to prisoru. OT particular interest this past
semester, College E has been offering a coune on
the transfonnation of the Crimin41 Justice System.
1lis course, made up of poUce, social workers and
community members, is unique in iU kind, has
generated an unprecedented forum for
University-Community interrelations. Role away
the reel world.
Enrollment 1971/72 (E-Z): 1325
Budget 1971/72 (E and Z): $25,000
Law and Society Collqe: The focus is on an
interdiscipUnary view of the law as literature,
philosophy and a social institution. Tltis will be
understood by a concentration on aspects of law
and social reform, or reform of law and reform
through law. Students and faculty from all faculties
are involved .
Enrollment 1971/72: 14
Budget 1971/72: 0
Social
Sciences College : Parti c ularly
pen, while • penon stan41il"9 in front ,quii1J jets of
troublesome. Tltis unit was formed to bring people
together to study radjcaJ social theory . The courses
19 16; Master 1916-19241
they have offered in the past two years have
College's most important projects has students
reached almost 2000 students. The College was the
, teaching action-onenteti environmental studies in a
ftnt program at the University to offer an on-going
g local middle school The community-based lessons
in-depth examination of the Indo-Ciuna war. It wu
a aim to get even the youngest students interested in
the first to create a study group designed to
t environmental problems . Teachers' guides
examine and expose the professional mystique of
expressing philosophy on UlterdJsciplinary teaching
psychologists and the psycltiatric profession : It was
will come out of thiS project. An undergraduate
the first to actively approach our largely ignored
"minor" program has been strOed by lack of funds.
labor history - helping to create a sense of history
a
EnroUment 1971/72. 342
' 'from-the-bottom-up" instead of from the point of
f
Budget 1971/72. $12,/00
view of the professiofllll elitist (Lemisch). It offered
Tolstoy CoiJqe (Collett F): '1'he study and
one of the few courses in this country designed to
a practice of efforts to create (recreate) more
teach undergraduates advanced physiology wltich
i humane and rational rOJtitutions ...
many members of the medical profession have
never bothered to master - proving in the process.
!l
" The dial rctrc between c hanges in
the extent of the deficiencies in modem medica!
consciousness and chmges in the structure of
operation and thereby health care. Troublesome
society.
indeed.
"The study ot selected ligures who exemplify
Enrollment 1971/72:836
the need to rntcgrate the pnvate and pubhc sides of
Budget /971/72:$ 19,500
existence . "
" How to Lrve''"
CoOqe Z: Provides the only para-legal
s
" What to Lrve I or!"
instruction in Western New York. This program is a
EnroUment 1'171/7! 181
must for Uti)an sumv.J.
Budget 1971/l! S/7.1~110
International ( ullege l eJchrng courses deahng
wrth specrlic probkms of 11 Jm-natronal concern
Thrs unrt rs the onl~ pllll' Jt the UnrvNslly where
thrs "mrddle cia~,· ~1tnl1rd ~~ :urctl rn ti s enttrety .
It rs also the unl-,. piJce 1111 l alllpus where the
student can ~:ourprciH'n\IVI'Iy learn in small
scm rnars. about till' pmhlcm~ 111 the 1 hrrd Wurld. It
has helped 111 ~P""'m ..cnnnar\ .wJ lectures by
vistting ~hnlar' .u1d dtplnmJI\ lrnm South
Amcrrca. AfmJ Jlld tht: l· ar I a\t rn undergraduate
study thrs rllttl "111d1~prn\rhl~·

Efti'OUment 1971/72 (E tutd Z): 132.5
Bud6et 1971/72 (E IINl Z): $2.5,500
COIDJiiuaicati0111 Colefe: The flrst residential
(living-leamlnl) unit. This teaching collective is
now into crafts. Disturbed with the ''unauthentic,"
"unaesthetic" functionality of much of what is
IDIICbine-produced in tJtiatoeiety . They concentrate
on malting use of artifacts that are alao creative
through instruction in ceramics, metal work,
leather and weaving. As there are only l S-20
students allowed in each section there are always
tong waiting Usts.
The act of creativity in this context, they feel,
puts a person more in touch with him/herself.
Concentrating on personalized instruction,
Communications CoUege offers the only accredited
crafts program at SUNY.
Enrollment 1971/ 72: 181
Budget 1971/72:$21,500
Women's Studies College: The largest and most
diversified (and largely unsalaried) Women's Studies
program in the country, will be curtailed if the
present budget situation is allowed to stand.
Consider what will go :
A) Prison Project - An active investigation
into the reasons and circumstances of the
imprisonment of women .
B) J ournal (As yet untitled)
A
comprehensive publication that would reach both
the University and the communjty.
C) rnterd.isciplinary approach 10 the problems
of women (men).
D) The active, organized, oppositton and
alternative to sexist teaching motions and course
content.
E) Resource center - Presently gathering
together unaccessible materials, films, old feminist
newspapers and radical jo urnals, and unpublished
schotarsltip by woman.
- The Prevailing winds of our struggle
sweep through the barbed wire and prison
walls,
through boundaries carved out at conference
Through newspaper masks of Enemy and Ours
Breath is life
and we begin by speakmg out own truth as
women.
EnroUment/971/72: 767
Budget 1971/72: $16,000
Office of dte Director Participation in the
decisiona which affect one's edt.K:ation is an
eaentlal
of CoUegllte
t - this

extends to the office of the director. With a ataff uf
one full-time aecrebry, one part-time
administrative aaistant, and one half.t;J.me director,
three wort-ctudy studeotl, one CAO intem and •
host of student volunteera, the office a.. been
respomible for the entire administration of the
CoUepate System (ICheduli.o&amp;, registration, budget,
meeting preparation, facilities planning,
appointments, etc.) This administration has also
included the tri-annual preparation of the ma.t
complete, detailed and legible catalog of coune
listings. Often times it hu seemed u if in this kind
of environment, even administration can be
educa tiona!.
Budget 1971/ 72: S/5,500

SUMMARY
Th.e situation of the Collegiate System in
relation to the goals of the students and the general
University community is reflected in the foiJowing
paragraphs from the CoUege F catalog:
·:How to live? What to Uve for?" These
questions should be appJjed insistently to any
activity of Ufe at all times.
'The greater the pace of change and the
pressures to act, the more necessary ti becomes for
small groups of people to study and reflect tOgether
on how to react. The dilemmas sound familiar: In
fighting an evil force, are we compeUed to adopt its
means? Can we work within established procedwes
or only outside them? What about the indifferent
and the uncomprehending who usually make up the
majority? Are there "historical" or "structural"
imperatives to act in certain ways that make
considerations of ..personal" morality irrelevant u
a guide to action? Who decides - you, the group or
history?"
In summary the Colleges are that lunatic fringe
of the University. including those persons crazy
enough to step out on a limb for what they
believe ..

• • • • •
Have we merely reached the end of The
Spectrum article, or are we really viewing the end
of the Collegiate System? Shall we see
experimen tation cncl o r the educational
(r)evotution continue? ...
Tom/ enrollment 1971/72. 7239
ToM/ BudKe/ 1971/72:$206,400

Hnrollme'llf I'Jlt /7.'. fl.fll

Budget /Y 7/ I 7' WJ,OOIJ
New College of Modern Education : Devoted to
CXJ)Crimental cducatrnn. rn hoth free S~:h oob, and
all types of publrc \l " ' "'"· 111dud1ng SUN YAB The
following pro1cl'h and pru~o:rams w1ll be curta1lcd or
eliminated unte .., lllOil lund' .trc tnJtle available
Educator's Rrhh (JII alrcrnatrvc JOUrnal on
experimental etltllalrtlrrl Altcrnattvc Lducatton
Resource C'entt•r P..., 17 I -:penmen tal Tutoring
Pro1ect . P.S J7. \dH•ol lmpruvcment Program and
Mathcmatr~' LJbn r.rt"' ~
l B Labur;rtory of
Radical Group IJ} 11.JOIIl' cw College Vtdeo and
Media Projed . Urharr h.lu ~:.l lllln Work)hop . Mental
Institute Workshop l 1.h1t.tl1onal Law Workshop .
Undergraduate At!Vt\l'tucul Workshop , East Aurora
Free School . Central (t&gt;rnmuruty School. C'AUSE
Model School, and tht• ludepcndent School of
Buffalo.
1
Enrollmt&gt;lll I IJ 71 - ' Ill
Budget /971/7~ ' ' ' 0011
Vico College: 0111' "' l he truly 1ntcrdrsciplinary
Colleges. The facully r•'JHC~ents s1x departments .
The core program introduces \ludcnts to some of
the classic ideas and lwulo., tlf western culture. The
maJOr emphasis has IWl' ll to erase many of the
artificial lines wtuch d1vrdc prlllcsstonal disciplines.
Enrollment 19 71/7~ -1 7
Budget 19 71 I 7:: Swmo
College E : U c~rnntn~ from a tri -part
consideration of symbulrl lorrn language, Utopia.
media - this unrt h~ evolved centrifugally and
simultaneously centnpetJII~ Wh1le still maintaining
its inillal interests - although tts medta concern has
been thwarted for lack ot supply monies - the
Wednesda~,. 22 March 1972 . The Soectrum . Page nine

-

�Testing and tJ;eatmeQt

DeStroying misconceptions aim
of VD Awareness Campaign
"There's a Jack of awareness Tomorrow night will feature a in confidence," sa id Ms.'
about venereal disease and peo ple training session for new people Feigenbauw . She said there were
tend to brush it aside," said Judy from the University who are 3000 reported cases of VD in Erie
Feigenbaum, a Social Welfare interested in participating in the County in 197 1, and since only
major who is participating in the campaign . Vo lunteers have 20% of cases are generally
VD Aware ness Campaign in the formed a speakers bureau and reported, the actual figure
Buffalo area. Volunteers in the deliver Informative talks at various probably lies somewhere between
cam paign suspect there is organizations, colleges and high 12- 15,000. "Eighty percent of
girls wouldn't know if they had
widespread venereal disease on the schools in the Buffalo area.
VD, since the symptoms aren't as
S tat e University of Buffalo
visual
as an boys," explained Ms.
aear
up
the
myths
campus and they advocate a
The training consists of viewing Feigenbaum. "You'd think
checkup if there's any doubt.
"Any person can go to any VD movies and reading arllcles about University students wouldn't be
clinic and be tested and treated VD, and wo rk ing with an embarrassed about VD, but there
free," said Ms. Feigenbaum. The educator from the Erie County is hesitatio n about it. We want to
The clear up the myths about venereal
awareness campaign consists of Health Department
films in the Conference Theater a wa reness campaign needs d1 se:~se,'' she contanued. She
tl\is week, and a table o n the first volunteers and hopes to expand men t1 oned that there IS a
floor of Norton Hall, staffed by its present staff. "Very few people world-wide epidemic of gonorrhea
uamees, stocked w1th pamphlets know that there's free treatment and syphillis wh1ch 1s also
and a hst of VD clinics m Buffalo. for VD available and that u 's kept prevalent m this country .

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
Mod Sryles for Guys tJnd GtJis

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tM tn...-nebOfl-.t 8~1 •OtNity

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o.A.r ..rYte" ev• HIIb.. ttOM SOfA
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~tude • gtWf C.t ~ The

Be. sure to give us
your opinion on the proposed
NON - PROFIT

Student Housing. Corporation
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY
at
NORTON - 10:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.
RIDGE LEA 4236 - 10:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m.
TOWER - 10:00 a.m. - 5:00p.m.

CAPEN - 10:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m.
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"This corporation will try to provide low cost housing to SUNYAB students for
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Sponsorftd by thf1 Housin g Committu
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Page ten. The Spectrum . Wednesct.y, 22 March 1972

�'--

Heroin: a prospering industry
to imagine. It is a much more
general social phenomenon, a part
of the economic life of the
country, a way of life·. like
farming or ftShing or selling shoes.
large numbers of people are
securely and comfortably plaoed
by the vast business, and the
money flows. In New York alone,
the turnover is probably around a
billion dollars annually . just for
the buying of small glassine bags
of heroin . The actual transaction
is probably a higher figure, since
most of the cash used for
by Lewis Thomas. M.D.
Reprint from
purchase IS obtained by the
The New England
mvoluntary transfer of various
Journal of Medicine
kinds of property fro m the
E.veryone agrees. or says so, citizenry to the addicts, who must
t h a1 the problem of heroin sell to merchants at subs•antially
addiction has become transformed less than cash value. Somewhere,
in il decade from a nagging worry hidden in towns like New York,
for 11 few authorities in a few there must exist merchandising
c;1ties into one of the most urgent, systems as large and complex as a
d1sasuously unsolved and, in .. dozen huge department stores,
way, ominously symbolic of all just to keep these goods turning
uur soc1al problems. We h2ve over
rarely had such a consensus on a
soc1al issue; everyone agrees that L.ai!lez-faire system
11 IS a great evil and that we ought
It IS a free-market, tax-exempt ,
to be doing something about it laissez-faire system. designed after
unmediately, on a scale to match the style of a 19th-century big
the unmensity of the problem, business, free of government
spare no expense. Put a stop to it, Interference. It operates for a
~mehow, anyhbw
single purpose · the w1dest possible
S111l, tl goes on, spreading out distribution of herom to as many
across the country, gradually new customers u can be bro ught
unhmgmg our society . We Sit into the market each day. And it
watch1ng it, reading about it, works. Any I 3-year-old boy in
wondering 1f we are finally facing Bedford·Stuyvesant can purchase
the kmd of lethal social problem a five-doUar bag of heroan as
fur wh tch there is no solution. We quickly and easily as a package of
ohserve, m deepen~ng depression, c1garettes. It is easier and auicker.
m fact, because there are more
t~ur pubhc figures going through
Y1gowus, re petitive mo tions with sellers of heroin than cagarettc
the look of ritual gestures : we stores and there are no closing
he3r of the po ss ibility of hours.
The market is as responSive as a
destroymg all fields of poppy.
everywhere, we com plam to the textbook model. When supply 1s
1- rcnch about the refineries 111 low, as happens occasionally, the
Marse11les; we drscover miJiions of msat1able demand forces the pnce
dollars worth of herotn in the up, and each bag contains rather
tnterstices of 1m ported ractng cars; less pure heroin and rather more
we fill the jails with addicts; we sugar or starch or quinine or
lllSt JII token programs for amphetamine or strychnine or
whatever else is in fastuon as filler
111~1hadone maintenance of a few
thousand add1cts ; and we ate At these tames, the actuaual odds
On SUfVIVaJ Of the IJ -year-old bo y
rllassured
We employ code words like become temporarily 1m proved It
detoxification, rehabihtatton, job is when the new shipments arnve
tratning and counseling as though that he 1s m greatest jeopardy , fo r
they had the fo rce of incantation. no w the allo tment of heroin is
Meanwhile, the number of young. more generous and h1s chance:. of
11 retnevably lost add1cts on the dy1ng W1th a needle 10 his vein are
~lreets of our cities continues to correspondangly greater
Although it is the established
Increase each month, and soon
there wtll be a brand-new group add1cts who keep the enterpnse
o~ppearing on the streets of uur going, working Lhrougll the1r days
sma ll es t towns. thanks tu with energy and resourcefulness
to keep the cash fl owing. the
Vtetnam
13-year-old boy. not yet addicted,
Invention of society
IS a central figure m the andustry .
Part of our trouble ~~ that The market must stake all 1tt
wh1le we are castmg about for a future stab1hty on him Unless he
g.ant new scheme of some kmd tu can be brougllt mto the business,
c.:o pe wit h the p roblem, a as a wvrk1ng custo mer. and
" program ," the heroin industry catered to for the next ten years
mlWes from strength to strength or so wh1ch. w1th luck, may be
before our eyes. We keep h1s llfet1me - the thing 1s finished .
ove rl ookmg the fact that a It 1s urae of the stabiliung features
powerful, highly organ1z.ed soc1al or the system that 13-year-old
meclutn1sm is already at work, boys are so pi en t 1ful and
m11' velously designed for the manageable
m~t~&gt;.lllg of m o ney . It now
possesses, because of sheer size, its Youth killer
uwn stability and strength. It is an
As a group. the established
Ulvention of our society. and add1cts are extraordinary people ;
although none of us will accept m any other circumstance they
responSJbility for its emergence, would probably have turned o ut
we are all responsible, m the sense lO be more productive and useful
that it is here and it is ours. It is than the general run of us. It is
not run from a central office, by hard t o imagine a more
just a few people, although this is exhausting. harassing occupation
the demonology m01t of us prefer than the raising of SSO or more

Editor's note: The following
(ll'ticle, by Dr. L~is Thomas, has
been reprinted from the March 9,
1972 edition ofThe New England
Journal of Medicine (Vol. 286,
No. 10. pages 531 - 533) where it
was entilled: "Notes of a
Biology·Watcher - Heroin ." Dr.
Thomas is a member of the
Department of Pathology, Yale
Univeniry School of Medicine.
The Spectrum hils added its own
sub-heads.

each day. including weekends, by
stealing, and this is what they
must learn to do. They are, of
coune, young and energetic, and
there is a form of natural selection
at work here as well. The
mortality in New York is running
around 1000 per year and going
up, and one of the reasons why
one encounters so few addicts
older than 35 is that by this time
most of them are dead . Some
become long-term prisoners and
are thus spared, and a few give up
the habit on their own, but this is
a small minority . Heroin addiction
is a disease that kills. selectively,
the young.
It is also a con tag1on,
transmttted by contact in the
marketplace. The principal vector
is money It is not clear whether
there is such a thing as natural
resistance, or immunity. Those of
w who are uninvolved like to
think that we would not have
become addicts, but we have not
been persuaded to try a few
intravenous injections, in
congenial company, just to see
what it is like. If we were, it is
close to a medical certainty that
we would be addicts ourselves,
out on the streets trying to raise
cash. As things are, it is the
children who ar~ exposed .
I used to believe, ten years ago,
that thiS wa s primarily a
public-health problem that could
be solved by quarantine measures,
and that the solution we would
eventually reach would be the
entorced isolatio n of all heroin
addicts in institutions of some
sort. I can no longer imagine this.
There are now too many addicts,

will continue to nourish, and the
romantic attraction of this
subculture of o utcasts will
continue to draw in new recruita
for the business.
For the time being, and as a
stopgap measure until someone
comes along with a better idea, it
may be necessary to provide
Governmental maintenance?
The thing to do is to get rid of heroin itself in a governmental
th1s business, and one way is to maintenance program . This is not
put the government into the hard to say, but very hard to do.
center of 11 as an unbeatable Even if it worked perfectly, it
competit o r. The methadone wo uld only be a temporary
-maintenance program, invented solution, a buying of time. It
by Dole, should take us at least would requjre that every addict
part of the way. There are a great whose habit mandate' a certain
many addjcts who have wearied of dose of heroin each day, and who
their way of Jjfe and wish to give is doomed to steal enough to buy
it up before they are killed by it : that dose in the marketplace,
mos t of these are m their would receive it in a government
twenties, and the record already clinic instead. In the best of
establishes that a majority of this worlds. with all the skill we can
group can be successfuUy rescued muster in public - health
by methadone . For them. the joy administration, and enough
has already gone out of heroin ," money, it might work .
and the main bustness of their day
is to raise enough cash to buy the Public objection
heroin that will keep them from
But trus is far from the best of
withdrawal sjckness.
worlds, and it will be difficult to
If all addicts could be placed persuade the public that Lhe jdea
on methadone, voluntarily or is even thinkable. Methadone
under compulsio n, the market maintenance is generally accepted,
would collapse , since this grudgingly to be sure, but heroin
treatment makes it impossible for is too pleasurable. in ways that
the consumer to obtain any baffle the rest of us, and it ll
sensation from heroin . Howenr , mfuriating to think of giving such
there may still be a large number a drug away to keep people from
of addicts for whom the joy uf stealing. Even if it is done in the
heroin is at the very center of life . most antiseptic and chilliest of
worth anythmg in the world , and clinics, with foolproof precautions
they will not soon be penuaded to make sure that only the
to g~vc 1t up for a drug th.at established addicts get it, it will bo
blockade$ their recepton. While objected that soc::lety wm be
theae people remain in the placina ~taelf in the aame role u
rnarketpace, the heroin industry
~ntln!IN on p..- 1,_

too young, and I cannot picture
such institutions in our society.
The industry might be depressed,
but only for a while, and there
would always be the wonderful
prospect of profit. There is always
the 13·year-old boy.

,.

Wednesday, 22 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�Homosexuality...
when they break a law or when they need protection; the
police department does not persecute them, he continued.
The panel accused the police force of stringently
enforcing laws which discriminate against homosexuality.
Sending plamclothes poticemen to gay ban was cited as
the main example. It as a minor offense for a homosexual
to solicit openly. When one attempts to pick up a
policeman at a bar (Ollt knowing he is a policeman). he is
arrested.
The panel stated that open solicitation goes on in
straagtll bars with no one being arrested. Th1s law singles
out homosexuality and as a result they beheve at unfair
and in violation of their civil rights.
Instances where policemen ''encouraged" a
homosexual advance were cited. Capt. Kennedy said that
the police force no longer operates in this fashion . At one
time they did, he admitted , but not now. When a police
officer enters a gay bar, he does nothing to encourage
advances, he sa1d. He stated police officers were there
because they receaved complamts about "disturbance of
the peace ·· and were there to investagate . He further stated
that his men were given defin1te repercussaons to the
individual TI1e panel agreed that bemg arreste-d for
homosuuahty was a trymg ordeal
O.ild molesting
It IS not the case that homosexuals are more prone
to chtJd molestang than others ThiS as a fallacy that all lOti
many betieve. In effect, the panel ~rated that ch1ld
molesting IS usually a heterosexual crame
"Public decency" IS protected by the same laws
which govern action agwnst homosexuality The laws
wluch rnfringe on thett nghts tn gay bars are the same laws
applied to cases of molestang. rhc panel refuted the
validity of applymg the law to gay bars where all parties
were "consenting adults •• "What threut does that pose tu
pubhc dtcency," they asked .
Capt Kennedy quoted HumpiHcy's "Rest room'&gt;
are rww becnm111g sex market s." lie sa ad that unsuspecting

..

.

-contlnuect rrom peg,~ &amp;--

individuals are accosted and current Laws were in Jaws. Public decency wu being protected, officials
protection of them. These places were "infested with countered. Capt. Kennerly and Judge Mazur were open to
homosexuality." he added. The panel disputed this the questions posed by homoaexuab and, in their own
adamantly and said these laws should not be applied to manner, seemed to be attempting a compromise between
"consenting adults in private." Laws on the books about laws they felt unjust and taws they felt they must enforce.
sexual advances are not extended to the bedroom of Whether they are doing enough or being fair is not the
heterosexYals; why should homosexuals live in fear?
question; they are attempting to ftnd a viable solution fot
These "crimes" are labeled "victimless" with police themselves, society must reassess its values and do the
officers playing the part of the victim. This is so 1f he same thing.
We must erue laws which preach "protection" and
enters a room and becomes molested in any way he can
press charges The panel agreed this necessary in public smack of persecution. Whether homosexuality is
areas, but refutted the logic which extended to gay bars "maladaptive behavior" or "biologically based" is not the
question dealt wilh in the presentation. It is not the
where only those who wanted to be there were present.
The enforcement of these "minor offenses" whach question society need face immediately, long-term answers
were likened to traffic summons can have disastrous to all questions would be nice, but now priorities must be
effects for the individuaL Now open to blackmail and handled . Now, while taws are being enforced; while people
simiJar crimes, they have been publically disgraced and are being harmed ; while people are being alienated ; now is
harassed . The panel saw th1s as a direct violation of the the time to look over our judicial and social systems. Why
are those who choose a different way of life labeled
''equal protection" laws.
"deviant ' ' or ·•wrong?" As the panel suggested , is it a
problem with1n the group labeled "wrong," or ts it within
Wrong, but still enforced
AI M31ur. c11y court Judge, believed that as long as the majority who cannot tolerate them? Must one be right
laws are on the book, they should be enforced He agreed and one be wrong?
Roger lund , narrator. sa1d the presentation was
that many were dtscnmanatory but, until they were taken
"objechve" and knew the discussion would ..help to
off. he would enforce them.
This rat1onale was senously questioned That laws. enhgtlten, but do not solve" the problem facmg
whether nght or wrong. would be upheld 1s a serious lack homosexual and heterosexual relations The issues must be
of sound tut!gemcnt Judge Matur stated ''Traditional examined and reassessed. One panel member hoped the
mvraltty should 1101 ftnd ats way mto the law books Un11ed States could adopt Canada's model of mosaic
anymore " But , wlule 11 was there. he would enforce at He rather than a melung pot. In a message. he stated, every
dad note: that he was not giv1ng stnct sentences and never one could be want they were
went to trial The phrasing of laws regarding homosexual f.(Jfwr1 not~ Tile above \\oW baud on a TV shnw. Smce
solicitatiOn were vagtJe and unclear. They !lhould be this reprmer wa.t unoblt&gt; to clmlnguisll van·ous panel
remodeled and 1ncludc "protection ·• only when sQmeone 's members by name, they were klbeled. "panel memben.. "
safety is demonstr:llably threatened, he continued
Opinions were generally congruent so this distinction was
Bemg on the books docs not justify laws. To enforce deemed $1lti1/actr&gt;ry. Panel members not mmtioned were
them w1th the belief that they are wrong, is not only Jamt'S leis, Burton Weiss. /'hilip Deon Parker and Terry
hypocnllcal, but dangeruu). Homosexuals stated they were Anne Marone Quotes ap~oring in this story are not
bcang unJustly persecuted by the enforcement of many verbatim. bur ore cr&gt;n.ttrut'tt!d us rlost&gt;ly as possible.

!'.ii:,...:;..,.~ ~.,.~~"£'".a::.w.a:;,•.-..:o~&gt;:a..-6""40•to;t;-,.;•v.,;w,e."'':t.!•".e;•~••:e:••;:;••;:;••~•·~·•:$4-6'~41l'~•IGIQ'~A"X~'~v.e.;•.-..:;•.,.~•v.-;••:a;ov.:.,"'•::lll:~~~~.t

... ~~•.~.~....,.._.,_..:or...~.,.••~~••~.........~ ••~...?:..~...T....."P,.....~....o!lr~.--.......,..~

R~•?.··~~ .!l'~•"-•·,.~

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a

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I

sTuDENT AssEMBLY MEETING

3:00p.m.
'fARCR 29
242 Norton Hall

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 22 March 1972
.,..,

•

I

'

..

"

a

�Basketball Bulls survey Heroin ...
junior college prospect~
by Barry Rubin
Sports Editor

In many ways the junior
college basketball training grounds
resemble a meat market, but for
more and more major college
basketball quintets, they presen t a
way to success. For the basketball
Bulls. a meager $ 10,000 recruiting
budget, forces them to Umit this
year's recruiting to only two
junior college players. Coach Ed
M u 1o assessed his needs by
commenting: "We need two kids
who can play major college
basketball. '' Along this line.
varsity assistant Norb Baschnagel
has toured various areas of the
nat1on. seeking top two year
talent to fill the bill .
The junror college player has
cume into vogue more and more
an recent years, as academic
standards at four year schools
have gone up In many ways the
IUIHOr college player utilizes his
two years as a preparation for his
last two years at a four year
tnst1tution. The addition of one or
two transfers has helped many
maJOr teams turn from mediocre
111111 winners. At Minnesota, the
suspended star Ron Behagen was a
JUCO recru at, while Hawaii
earned tournament berths In each
of the past two seasons with fout
transfers in the lineup.
At guard, the Bulls arc looking
ll•r what Coach Muto described
as "A ball handJer who can beat
pressure, handle the break, play
defeuse and establish the
\) ffens c. " Of course these
~:haracteTJsttcs would make for the
1deal ha~kcourtman, however. the
Hu tfalo coaching staff feels it has
nJrrowcd down a list of over 40
1&gt;wspccts to three players. Joe
C'hJrlcs from local Niagara
Comrnunity College appears to be
thr top prospect, regarded as the
ulan whu can turn Buffalo into a
wutner The Bulls will have to
t~u tdtstan ce St.
Francis (Pa.),
Rhode hland and ConnectiCUt to
\11:\JI Charles.

Tuugh schedule
Another guard the Bulls are

-&lt;ontlnuect from page 11-

the heroin industry, keeping a lot
of socially useless, dazed young
people in a constan t sta te of
n&lt;~ding i~capacitation. Tttis may
be largely myth, in view of the
open record o f what an average
addict manages to get done in a
day's turning to raise his cash, but
the objection will be there.
The public objection that will
carry the most weight, for either a
fuU-scale methadone program or a
combination of methadone and
heroin, is that it wiJI cost a great
deal of money. There are no
half-way measures available thut
do not carry the risk of makin~
the problem worse. If methadt&gt;ne
is made available to only a few
add1cts in the community. there
will be a black market in
methadone ; this has already
happened in some cities, and it
will worsen for as long as the
methadone programs are
in adequate I y supported .

really high o n is 5-1 I Bob Stevens
from Ferrum , Virginia Junior
College. Ferrum was quarterback
for a Ferrum squad which fi nished
second in the National JUCO
tour n am ent , second t o
powerhouse Vincennes, Indiana .
Stevens is also interested in Ohio
Univers i ty, Pittsburgh and
Rutgers. Rounding out the top
guard prospects is 6-1 Jim F ostcr
of Becker Junior College. Becker
from the Worcester, Mass. school
is being sough t by Bridgeport and
Colorado St11te.
At forward , the Bulls arc
seeking, "someone who can be
alternated anywhere in our front
lines. He'll have to hit from the
outside and rebound offen~oively
as well as defcnsrvely," described
Coach Muto. Probably the leading
candidate for the Bulls appears to
be 6-7 Eddie Hands of Nor1h
Flonda Junior College. Hands'
... mainly
other interests appear to be 1n
stcR
Memphis State and Florida State.
lot t"c Uftioentt11 .,...
Baschnagel and Muto are also
3102 Main SL
interested in 6 -7 Neal Lance
lbeh Hn c..m • t.uboloJ
(Monter rey. N.C.). 6-5 Tom
Higdon (Anderson, S.C.) and 6-7
George Thompason (Leicester, rMOTORCYCLEiNSURANcel
Mass.). Both Higdon and Lance :IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE :
are being recruited heavily by I NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I
Virginia Tech, while Thompson
IU P S T A T E C V C l E I N S I
has also been sought by Colorado
r
call 694-3100
I
State. Both Buffalo coaches feel
"A• Your Broket- About U1'' · - '
that any of the above forwards
can make a big difference an next
year's Buffalo squad
Many people have ridiculed
Buffalo's schedule, but a quick
look at the schedule shows that
six Buffalo opponents earned
tourney bids this year. Syntcusc,
Maryland and Niagara all earned
NIT bids, while Buffalo State,
Akron and Eastern Michigan
appeared in the NCAA College
drV1S10n tourney . In fact, the
874·5330
Akron Zips finished second 1n the
finals to Roanoake, Varg•n1a
College. Additionally, next year
LET OUR EXPERT MECHANICS
the Bulls face NIT partic1pant
KEEP YOUR CAR IN GOOD
RUNNING CONDITION I
Lafayette College at the Gem Cit y
SHERIDAN
tourney . If Buffalo can sign any
of the above merltioned ;un1111
F O REIG N CAR
college players, the road ao
REPAIRS
success may be reached a ltll
1066 Sheridan Or.
TO NAWANDA
sooner than people bchevc.
FRONT END ALIGNMENTS

books
w..,.._·s bcdl

t_

Cllecl. &amp; Set
LdrnOet
r oe In~
Frorll end pa(l~

ColShu

HIKE &amp; BIKE.nc.

Roactte&gt;l

6 99
PI

US PlHh

tf n

Moreover, it does not appear to be
a problem to be handled by the
p r ivate sector; the practicing
physician can no more manage a
methadone maintenance program
than operate a police station. This
is a public responsibility, requiring
intervention by govem,ment on a
far greater !ICale than the public
has yet imagined.
Even though the sum will be a
frac tion of what we are now
paying for laissez-faire heroin
addiction, it will be hard to
persuade the people with the
purse strings. There W JII always be
the argument that we can wait for
officialdom to close the ports to
heroin. o r for psychiatry to
discover a technology that can be
applied to what may soon M 11
million patien ts, or for the
pharma ceu tical industry to
produt,;e a heroin antagonist that
can be added to the waacr supply,
like fluoride. Meanwhile. we will

have the money.
J cannot imagme a greater risk
for our society than for us to gl)
on as we are, doing very li alie
while pre tending that we are just
abou t to manage . I f this
prospering indust ry continues to
expand and strengthen, we arc in
for damage at our roots. Theft is
becoming an accepted way of hfe,
and is turning out to have a
contagion of its own. We are
beginning to lose our coUect ive
nerve. Our legal mechanisms arc
breaking down, our courts are
caving in. and the social agencies
of our cities verge on founde ring.
We risk turning into a society
whose only ansWer to menace will
be fury. and once we start on tlus
line, there will be no turning back .
Worst of aU, our children are held
under daily threat of a fatal
disease against wluch we offer
them no protection, and they
know this about us.

THE UUAB· FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE
p,-esent.~

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We adminis~r missionary parishes. schools.
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lf you think you might like w share our happi·
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CONSOLATA FATHERS
P. 0 . Box C Somer8et, New Jersey 08878

Wednesday, 22 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�team
BuB's pitching staff will be Track
More practice needed
the strongest part of the team _'for upcoming season
by Dave Gerinaer
SfH!clrum Stll[f Writu

Following the pattern of last year's NCAA
playoff team, the 1972 baseball BuUs' pitching staff
will probably be the strongest part of their Team.
Buffalo will carry seven lettermen on their mound
corps.
One of Buffalo's first tasks will be to find a
stopper (or stoppen) to replace last year's ace (now
graduated}, Bill Balfoort. Bull head Coach Bill
Monkarsh plans to have a staff with better balance
rather than relying on one or two players. " We have
several starters that we feel can do an excellent job
for us," he said., "The key to the success of our
pitching staff this season will be the development of
our other pitchers."
Monkarsh plans to use at least five starters for
the current season . Righthander Gary Odachowski,
who was 3-2 last season with a creditable 2.52 ERA
heads the staff. Ltfthanders Mike Cahill (4-5,3.33)
and Jon Roth will likely join him as starters. Cahill
was also a member o f the BuUs ' start10g mound
corps a year ago. Roth, who lettered at Buffalo two
years ago, was in the service last season.

Need two starters
In addition to the aforementioned trio, the Bulls
will need a mirumum of two additional starters.
Righthanden Gary GaLSer and Ernie KaJobius are
two of the top candidates to fill the other berths
:unong the starters. The hard-throwing Gaiser, who
had arm trouble last season, will give BvffaJo a huge
shot in the arm if he is able to come th'rough . "Gary
has exceUent potential ," remarked Monkarsh . "He
will be a big help to our staff if he is able to put it all
together this season."
•
Kalobius, a standout fireman last season
( 1-1,1.90) is also g.ven a chance to become a starting
hurler. 1n additio n, first baseman Orv Colt, who wiU
be used most days at that position , may be used on
the mound, possibly in a starting role.
The Bulls' bullpen IS well stocked. Owen Tuber.
one of the mainstays of last year's bullpen , will
pro bably be Buffalo's ace fireman th1s yea r In
addition to tus bullpen wo rk , Tober may be pressed
Into sta rting servtce if one of the Bulls' starte rs
falters. Lefthander John Mast, another possible
starter, may see some relief action also
Steve Krull , rated as an "excellent rcl1cf
pttcher" by Coach Mo nkarsh, wall probably see qu1te
a bat of act1on in that capac•t y should T ober or Mast
wm JObs as starters. In addttiUn 111 Krull , freshman

HAI1 11\~

Httlll~
3-7 All Cocktails
;11!!1--~
)

Mike C a/ail/

There will no doubt be a lot of
stick-passing practice in the next
few weeks between Ed McNiff
and Doug lake, Buffalo's first
two men on the Bulls mile relay
team . Last m ont h , at the
Rochester Invitational, Lake was
slow in starting and McNiff almost
ran him down. So the two
practiced passing the baton all
week and in the next meet, it was
nearly perfec t.
But last Saturday in the New
York State Championships at
Union College, their pass was poor
again . McNiff came in so slow that
Lake almost took off without the
stick. OveraU the BuUs mile relay
team finished seventh in a slow
3 :44 partially due to Union's slow
dirt track.
However, Buffalo did have
lOme degree of success at this
meet. In fact, the Bull Trackmen
rcored in both of the other two
events in which they competed to
talce eighth place overall out of 16
teams, with five points.
For this meet the two-mile
relay team was stacked with Bill
McCarthy and Bill Heim in
addition to regulars Bob Gower
and Larry Mentkowski. Seeded in
the second fastest heat , Buffalo
ran away with the race in eight
minutes and 16 seconds, which
was good enough for fourth
overall. Trus placed Buffalo ahead
of such stro ng teams as Colgate
and Cortland in this event. The
half·mile times were imprcssjvely
consistent u well as quite fast -

Gower, 2:04 ; Mentkowski, 2:04 ;
McCarthy, 2 :03 : 1; and Heim,

2 :04.7.
McClurkin finishes third
Jim McClurkin 's third place
finish in the two-mlle was under
similar circumstances. Jim was
placed in the second fastest heat ,
but really burned the last lap to
puJJ away from the field and run
away with the race. Only two
runners from the faster section
were able to beat McClurkin's fine
clocking o f 9 :45 .8 . Better
placement could have produced
even better results for both the
BulJs' two.miler and · two-mile
relay team.
The state meet finished the
indoor season for the Bulls just as
the outdoor spring schedule was
finalized . The season opens on
April I S against p o werful
Cortland and a Buffalo State teasn
hit hard by graduahon, most
prominently Randy Smith, now a
super sub w&amp;th the Buffalo Braves.
Aside from Cortland , Binghamton
and Albany State figure to be
tough. Fredonia, S tony Brook ,
C leveland State and lowly
Canisius round out the schedule .
This year's date for the State
Universjty of Buffalo Invitational
conflicts with several other meets
so the field will be sharply cut As
of now, the Bulls will be joined by
only five schools - Can1sius,
LeMoyne , Niagara , St
9onaventure and a s t rong
Rochester contingent.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Mike Klym (who starred for the hockey Bulls) and
Gary Rodgers will also see action.
Thus, Buffalo will have a well-balanced staff th1s
season that could mean the difference between the
Bulls rei urning to the playo ffs or being forced to the
Sideline!. early. "I th10k that our pitchmg staff can
hold uu1 u ppos1tion to an average of under fo ur runs
per game." sa1d Monkarsh. " I f we can get five runs a
game. 1lur p1tchers arc gomg tl\ win plent y of games
th1s season "

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Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 22 March 1972

r------,

�C All 884-7184, PINMI

at lal-4046.

FOR SALE

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892· 7025 . C. Davis.

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ALMOST NEW -lng machine Sl09er
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ANGELA had 14 puppies -Ill aetter,
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redlo

to r

sale

with

---

APARTMENT FOR RENT

AVAILABLE In May 2-3 bedroom
apartment , with ger191, near campus
1155/month Call 833 -7655

two

THIS IS 111e pia"'• you've been
dreaming or 3 bedrooms for •
people, 5 min. from c..~mpus. Available
tor summer •nd nellt y11r . Cllll Mike or
Howle at 838-1t67, 831~11 3,
831·2897 .

APARTMENT to sub -let . Completely
turnlltled. 5 -mln . from campus. Call
Howle 838· 1167. Bob 831 -2451 or
Larry 834~661.
•
l-&lt;SEOROOM hOUS4 available. Mld·May
Aug . 31. 5-10 minute walk to
c..~mpus . Rent $120/mo. CAll 831· 3071
after StOO p.m.

RIDE WANTED to L..l. March 28
(afternoon) or 29, returnln9 April 9 .
Call Judy 831 -2769.

2-&lt;BEOROOM furnished apArtment for
J on Hertel. 1165. AvallaDte May 31 .
Call 837· 1232.
FUR NISHED 2 ·Dedroom aot . a vailable
June hi . Ten-mll\ute walk to c.ampus.
Call 833-6008.

LOOKING to sub-let 4 -oearoom apt.
2-mln, walk from campus. MAy-Aug.
C.all 831 -2457 .

ONE NEEDS ride to L.l. Leave 3/24,
return 3/26. CAll Randy 131·2785.

ELMWOOD-SUMMER
and
Elm wood -F erry area, 2~ edro om
furnished apt . on bus line. Pets O .K .
1 200 mo 885-8100,832 -7368.

Sept. first. Call 837· 1887 or 837-2033.

Rl DE NEEDED to Florloa around
April 1st. Will share driving end
lll1)41nses. Cell OeDble 892·1526.

PERFECT 3-Dedr oom apArtment
ave ll aDie summer sesSion - walkln9
distance off BAtley Ave Call 837 1344
Ellen .

RICE NEEDED to Albuquerque, New
Mexico or area, IN11In9 3/25 w•kend.
Pluse conttct Steven 837-1617.

HOUSE
four bedrooms - furn"ned .
AvaiiADie May 15th to August 3hl.

Gl RLS NEED ride to Dayton, OhiO or
nNrDy. Will snare expense . Cell Suwn
833·7571.

APARTMENT lor 3 or 4 In Kenmore
Furniture for sale . Call 876·2 226
Starting May lit.
U.S. AREA - several eKCIIIInl 3, 4
end 5-blldroom apartments within 2
DIOdes of U e. campus. Call 633-86a3
lor recorded message on IOC4tlon .
FOUR · BEOROOM apartment o tt
B111ey. 15 -mlnute will\ lro m campus
Furnished, reasonable rent. Available
lor wmmer anc:l Stpl Ca ll Sllelly
834~966

U
B .
NEW
AREA
M lllersport ·Snerl dan. E•cellent well
furniShed thrM ·Dedroom , 1 and '''
baths d uple.c
rec room - prrvate
entrance
near bus line Students
weocome. 838 1081, 633-8643 .

ROOMMATES WANTED
COUPLE WANTED lor mOdern
apartment near R oage Lea c ampu s,
available lmmedfalely ana fAit C olli
691.!)511
PERSON of dl scrtmln a\1119 I.Sie
needed to share supor · IIIOC fu rnlsnea
apartment In Allentown Own room
Available Immediate ly
$!10/month ,
utlllues Included . C all 886-6935 alter
5 30 p ,m
TWO OR thfH roomm1 tes lor apt
Five-m inute walk from c.ampus. Call
837-4593 alter 7 p .m .

rwo ROOMMA1'ES wanted mJie or
female - epertment walkln; dlltance
from campu~; rent : 155/mo lnclu dlnt
utilities. Call Mike or Mat at 137~406
TWO FEMALE roommates. Own
room. Two-minute walk to c..~mpus
Avaii1Die May 15 . Reasonable rent
Call Ma ry 834~508 .
TWO ROOMS a vellaDie In nome ol
elderly lady requiring comp.onlonshtP
anc:l
mtntmal
supervHion
Commonwealth-Hertel ••••· Furnlsned .
Reaso11eble rent Con ta ct Mrs . Zoe
873-6632.

-----------ROOMMATE wanted to live wotn tw o

837~508

PERSONAL

FEMALE needs own room starling
M.ay throuvll ne•t yoa• or will occupy
J-Dedroom apartment Immediately ,
Judy 837 -21119

WHEN I'M depressed, co ffee IJ even
more fr iendly, but It's alw an
Invitation to talk; anc:l I won't O.cau..
I don't tnlnk you want me to.

4-BEOROOM apt
wanted : May
'72-'7 3 . Campus wall&lt;tng distance .
Call 831 ·2 085 .

ANASTASIA nu found • new home.
Tnankl to all of you wonderful people
who swarmed to buy AnutesiA.

MARRIED COUPLE desires 2 Or
J·bec:lroom apartment outside or clly
limits starting May or June Paula

DEAR FRED, "Hello, Fred ." Midge

876~977

ROOM WANTED lor next September
within walking distance of c ampus.
Call Pal 837 -0406
GRAD STUDENT
1 peoroom apt
June hi Wilk ing distance Ca ll Adel
831 2221.
TWO-BEDROOM apt wanted tor May
hi lor two people. Reasonabl e 1ent .
Ca ll 837 1887
HOUSE OR apartment needed
desperately for thrM .. nlor males
snould be clo.. to c..~mpus . Call Mike
11 838· 1167 or 831 ·4113 or Fred at
831 -2453 or Lynne 831 · 2897 .
WANT TO finO In U 8 area A single or
smaller dOUDie a par lmeot lor me and
my DoOk~ . Not afrllc:l of money or
WAlking tO vet I gOOd place . Leave
word for Cavia at877 · 2109 .

•-&lt;BEDROOM house 10 suDiet for
summer - rurniSned . 2 minute wAif( IO
campus Price negollaDie Available
May 15- Augu" 31 Call Bob or Dave

----

HOUSE OR 2 lamlly nou.. needed lor
elgnt nomeleu people Pteasell Call
8Jl -345.
$15 REWARD of you can ~ure us I
l~eCirOom apt. lor fAll .. master wlt nln
walking aastance from cam pu•. Call
835 _.168 Arlo or Paula

Banana Split Sale

A ... l6¢

THRUSDAY &amp; FRIDAY. MARCH 23 &amp; 24
HOURS: Noon -11:00 p.m.

39C

TYPI NG - 111perle nced - business or
penonel, thesis , etc Reasonable rates.
Call 632·6222. ll a .m. 2 p.m .

TAX SERVICE only $3 for OOtn
feeltll'al and state, 111 work guarantMO .
683-0022 (Duslness returns only S!l) .
TYPING prolesslonally done, electric
to;1)41wrlterJ, will c:lellvll , term papeu,
·~•rcn work, $ 40/ 1)191, 1145-5746,
832 -9276 , Jo.onne.

---

FOUND . Key rong between Oooayu1
.onc:l Clement, Monday afternoon . Call
4055
LOST J/17/72
DOOI&lt; "l ne T nre~
Pill a rs ol Zen" In Capen 140 or 1 uwe•
c..~ leterta . Plea .. c all 834 1296.

THE SUN Mytn Light Snow. Ca ll to
see our free brocnure, Lee - 87S-4366,
Bill - 8 77 1636.

LOST
Male shepnar CI .. ven mos
Name Denny - 1.0 ta;s on tan c.ollar

RELATIONSHIPS (In IIIII. A M IMed
Media Environment, March 23, at 7
p m
Kenmore United Methodist
Cnurcn, Delaware Roaa at Lanaers,
Kenmore .
CLASSIC guitar lessons
b19lnnen to
advanced . 836·4217 evenings.

----

CYCLISTS
fly t o Au•lrta for
1w o-wlek tour Blc yc.le comes home
with vou Call House ol wn•ts for
details 632 -263 I

All nights are jet and depart
Kennedy International . New York

STEVE GOLD
66 SHIRLEY AVE.
BUFFALO. N .Y 14215
(716) 835-7519

TYPING
Duslness or personAl - term
papers . Th etes , m.ou mailings
Reasonable ra t~. C all 937-6050.
ANTIQUES ana mOdern lurnllurl,
c«amla, chtna, etc
See Sla at
Vest tr&lt;Say &amp; Tomorrow ShOP. 1439
Hertel Ave.
TYPING . ••Perlenced, near U.B., J . 40
per Pl!ll 834·3370. Fan 541rvlce.

--

SALE

WEEKL V PACKAGE tours : Acapulco,
Aspen, otnen . Also lllgnts Niagara
London return. 873-:&gt;660, 689·9632
11ter 6 .

ALFA ROMEO
• FERRARI
• MASERATI

50% off
ON MANY TITLES

MISCELLANEOUS
HANDSOME SETTER ml&gt;&lt;ld brMCI
lOt •c:lopllon In gooa nome. All shots
Call Lerry 137 ·0360 .

LAST WEEK for tickets to SOS
National Convention AgalnJl Racism,
Harvard . March 3D-April 2 . T 10(111 II
SOS taDie Norton Union

(After 7 p.m wukdays: all doy Sat. and Sun. )

39C Don't Miss

TERM PAPERS, bOOk reporh, eu.avs.
orl vlnal by Llt&gt;&lt;Ary Science graduate
ttudenl Bo• 8 7

AUTO INSURANCE - specializing In
younv drivers : no char91 tor accidents
or traffic violations, lmmlc:llate F:&gt; J ,
save up to $ I 00/ YNr , 68.)-0022.

$}69 ~~;nd

Col/ or wrlu

---

ABB Ill, What's your lavorlte animal •
A mlnk1 BeMinkl

FEMALE wants own room In hOuse
nlllr campus starting SeplemDer. Call
833- 7571

Summer 1972 London . Round-Trip

261 KENMORE AVE.

GAMBLING 9L0001 Acquaintance
desired o f woman 18· 22 who Is lean
ana attractive with warm, mild even
Ollpcxltlon by m a n (251 wno llklll
favore&lt;S Oc:IOS. I nqulre Bo• 70.

INDEPENDENT FOREIGN C e r
SeN!~ 839-18!&gt;0 the beJ1 work
b.oc'&lt;e&lt;S by tne be" WRITTEN
vu•r•nt•

GOLDEN EDUCATOR
TRAVEL
Starting
At

FRANK BUAGER
Que to
clrcumstances beyond our control, the
room Is not avallaDie . Sorry - Petty

HELP!t 1 we need a 3-droom aot. lor
S..,t, 1St wltnln Wilkin&lt;) distance from
umous . Call Mary , lll-4153: Benita,
831-2062 or Amv, Ill 2397 .

LOST &amp; FOUND

SUB-LET APARTMENT

WANTED • Roundtrip to &amp; from
Detroit tor 3 or 4 doiYt betwMn, l/29
&amp; 4/10. 83 3-7270. Can share ••oens•.

APARTMENTS WANTED

t&lt;raelos Own room. 837 2259 .
ROOMMATE
for
3 Dearoo"'
apa rtment Own room
,.,, res t o r
Mtrcn tnd Aprol, s ss plus
M1r cn
rent already palo . Call 836-5901

Dairy Queen

RICE WANTED : Oneonta (5••nny
Delhi), Thursdey night, Marcn 23rd or
Friday M1rcn 24. Cell Ellen 831-4 I 93

HOUSE FOR rent tor summer.
Conslsh of two four-bedroom
apartments. Wil l rent together or
sep~ra,tely. Fully furntsnec:l . Two&lt;ar
garave. Two -minute walk to campus .
CAll Barry 8 3 7 -1886 or Sanoy
837-o626 ,

MODERN 4 ·bedroom furnished hou ...
Wuher-&lt;!ryer . 15 -mlnute walk from
Allennurst , 1235/mont h. 836·1736 .

ROOMMATES tor wmmer In Dig
nouse on Amheru
Own room
t 50/montn lncludln!l utllllle s
838-3192.

Ken~nore

RIDE BOARD
RICE WANTED to N .Y .C. and/Or
tret'I'PQrtetlon of IU991111- Will PlY .
C1ll Slle41ey 886-3204.

Sales •Service •Pal'h

USED CARS
University Mano r
( next Goor)

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK STORES INC.

833-7131

- -BOBCOR- Motor Cars. Ltd .
1974 Egert (Near Bailey)
834-73SO

Wednesday, 22 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�Announcements
lbon~Mid, the tenlor men's Honor SOCiety will be
mrlewlna nndldam amona Juniors rte~~t month. Students'
~..Semlc records, Unlversfty ~ttviU• Mid community
service will be taken lnt~ consldentlon. All thOM junior
men who wish ta be c:onsldered ~te to cont~l the
Off&lt;ampus Houslna ofnce In Goodyur Hall or c~ll
831 ·3303. Records must be received by this office by MMCh
31.

TIM Frendl Club will hiYt .1 Yery lmport;ant meetlna
tochy from 4-5 p .m . In Room 330 Norton.
The Brld.. Club will hold a dupllute tournoJmen t
tomorrow at 7 p.m. In Room 337 Norton. All are cordlo~lly
IIIYi ted
Students for IVMI will hold ;a meetlna tomorrow oJt 9
p .m. In Room 3 46 Norton 10 work on proar.ams for lsroJeli
Independence Day Mid plans for next yur
CAC E nvironment.&amp;~ Aalon Corl' will meet tocby .at
7 •30 p .m. In Room 266 Norton.
The Wfttem N- Yoril 'ubllc Int-I Raearch Group
{WNY,.RG) will be holdinJI summer loul bo1rd elections
tomorrow from 11 .a.m.- 3 p.m. Check with WNYPIRG
Bulletin 8o.1rd {Rm. 220) for loudon of l.llble. All
nomln • tlons must be In lht WN YPI RG m.allbox, Room 220
Nonon , by 4 p.m. today. All nominees must rem.tin In
Buff.alo ihls wmmer and be wflllnato do research ~ well as
orpnlutloniill work, Elections will continue .at Thurs.
mee tlna, 5 p.m. Room 3-44, Norton.

Ua Veu Ch. h• ll petition c:ampalan for an eqult.lble
Gl BAI tofna on now. This b to expM!d the blllll)d brtn&amp;lt
die post•Wortd War II l~elt - aha to extend c:4venp to
Wli rep~dlew of tyj)e o f d~lllrp. If you would like to
help, come to Room 260 Norton.
Chabad H4Xi11 h~ made ~rnnaements for students to
spend ttle Seder nllhts lit luboJVIlch heac:lqu.aners In New
Yort.
those wistllna further Information should eontxt
Rabbi Gunry or ull 833-3334 or 631·5483.

All

Ul Photo Club will hliVe • meet lnatomorrow lll 8 p.m.
In Room 332 Norton. All members must come If they wish
to enter the photo contest.
CAC needs Yolunteers for VD spukers bureau. The
flrst tr~lnlna ~lon will be tomorrow u 8 p .m. In Room
240 Norton, For ..Sdltlonill in for,;~ion ull Judy •I
837· 1232.
l(undllllnl Yop be~tlnnina cl;asses In exercist and
medltiltion oilrt held 11 196 Linwood AYe. o11 7 p.m. CYCfY
evening. C&lt;~ll 881-0S05 for ln formulon.
Sub B~rd l's Ho\IJina Committee will be holdi na ol
Student Nof'oProflt Hou sing Corpor~tlon Poll tomorrow ~nd
Fridily from 10 .il.m.- 10 p .m. They o~re looking for people
to work at l.iibln ill S 1 per hoo r.
Women·, 'olitlul C.aucus, Erie County Orpnllln&amp;
Meetlna will be held todoJy 11 8 p.m . •u the Uniu rl.an
Churt;h ~ • Elmwood ~nd ferry . All women Interested ill
J!tllln&amp; women power olte urged to &lt;lttend For furt her
1nlorm.uron ull Sue ill 8 32-S l21

AcdYisr Youth for lsuel .annou n&lt;.~s the nomm.atlon of
ofOce rs for the 1972-73 yu r which will toJke ploJcc
Thursd.a y, M.ll rch 23 oJI 8 p m. In No11on ' 46 . AnybOdy
worltlna with A Yl or the S.C.C.I f . F. 1~ eligible to vole
Pfebt' brlna your 10 cud wrth yuu.

A !tudent rhytlc:al Therapy AAOCiatlon MMdna will
be held tomonow at 7 p.m. In Room 244 Norton. Anyone
Interested In JOfna to ltle ~ate convention In New Vork
City muJI attend. Eleedon of delept.es will tU:e plxe.
The Outlna Club will have 1 rock cllmblna meetlns
with H~rfan Plumley • spe1ker, tomorrow at 7 p .m. In
Room 246 Norton. Any club members Interested In 101na
dlml&gt;lna lhb weekend should .lltlend. Alto, .~ny person who
can teKh technlcll cllmblna .lind would Ulte to, pluse c illl
Harlan .11 835·2642.
A Demonstr~tlon for Soviet J-ry will uke pl.~ec
tod•Y from 7-9 p.m. with the 8lllalalk.ll DlnGers at loew 's
Buff~lo Tllt~ter. Car pools will leiYt the steps of Norton ill
6: 15 p.m. Those needln&amp; a ride or those that have a car
oJVall.able, call the Jewish Student Office ill 83 1·5 116.
lbph.llet Drullln, oil concert moiSter of the New York
Phll hllfmonlc, will aJve • concert on March 24 lit 8 :30p.m .
In 8.1ird Recllll H.llll. Tickets for the c oncen oilrc available at
the Norton Ticket Office. General .sdmlsslon Is $ 2 .50 .~nd
$I for students. An open rehursal for the concert will be
held tomorrow at 8 : 30 p .m. In Baird H&lt;~ll.

The C ullur.~l Afflllrs D l~c:usslon Group will haYe Gerlllcl
C:.Oi es spoki ng on " The History of Educiltlon In the U.S.,"
tod&lt;ly u 5 : 30 p.m. in Rooms 24~242 Nonon.
Stu den h' lnternu lon.lll MedltoJtlon Society t)
presentlna a lecture ilnd discussion by M l ~e LoYe lind AI
J•rdln of t he Buch Boys on Tr&lt;~n~endent.ll Medlution u
lilulhl by Mo&lt;~hilrishl Mllhesh YOJI, tomorrow afternoon in
Room 240 Nonon . C heck &lt;11 the Norton deslr. for l i m~
conflrmoltlon. Ad mission is free.

Tht Underandu.ue Socloloay AMoci.ulott will mee t
todoly At 2 p.m. In Room 4 2, 4224 R ld&amp;e l u. ltts oJ re11u1.u
meelln&amp; oilnd ol commit tee will be formed to work on Or.
K.tPI~n·s c.umculum project.

Wednesdll y, M~rch 22
Eye-con '72 . Vl.adlmir Petrol, prol~,or of Film Hrstury 4nd
Aesthetic.~ oll the 1\t~emy of Film Thuter, Rildio .and
Televl~on, lect ures o n " T he 1\esthetl(.s of t he Z.aarcb
School ol Anlm•tlon." 8 p m . Dldtndorf 146.
TheAter Dtpllrtmem Repertory Dr 1 &lt;11JUu1 , dirt• ted by
Doo~vld Ch.~mber•, 8 : JO p .m ., HArrlm.an ~IUdlo Tht~o~Uir,
oldmlsslon c:hucco.
Film : Hospltlll, directed by fred Wrsem.iln, )·)0 p m ., l.aw
Sc:hool, JO C hurch ~treet, Room P 1
Forcolgn film : Red Ot1111rt by M llh~l•ng~lu Anronlunt, ~ . 1
&lt;and 9 p .m ., Diefendorf 147
Musitoill l nnOYoJiions: &lt;~rtolr. 's F11~1 Vwlon SonAtA·~ the ....,,l
of dt~uuron, 9·0~ p .m ., WBCE FM.
lcuure: " Movement, Opue011 Ph enom~n.a dn&lt;.l lrght ." 8 : 30
p.m. , Albrigh t· Knox Art G&lt;~lltty AvAut.111orrum
Thursd1y Much 21
film : rht IJtg &lt;ilup WI Ill Humphrey BCIK•rl ,u1cl l .uren
B•t•ll . 1 p m and 'l p .m , C dpcn 140.
TheAter Dep,utment Rcopellory: (. fJi mlcomi o , urreuetl by
Gordon Rogoll, 8 .10 p.m , lhmm•n Stud•o Thutcr ,
oidmi~\IOn c.;hArge.
lecture · Dtnnts Brutu~. Sou th Alri, An roet on "I tler.lurc
and Commrtment tn ~outh Alrtl .a," wnrh n red b y the
81alk Studlh ProgrAm , 3 p .m., H•yrs l H
f 1Im &lt;1nd poetry reAdtng R/ljh"J' () n,l 1 A LOIIH fll lll leAIUIC
shot tn H•rlem ol lhree YOUIII! hldtlo. JIUet• , lollvwel.l by
A drslu ~ston And poetry rco~dtna~ b y f- rhpe l Ull.&amp;nu. unl'
ol the poet\ In the film , u,lo.eh AI Nu rt un $ 7~. 1 Ill
p .m, A•he~On ~. fHtsrnretl hy lh1• Olti~r nl lullur~l
A fl ,ur$.
f u rcrgn film H o w lo\1 ~ lli&lt;J' M ~ l t lllt' I ' &lt;'fllhntll/1, ~. 1
And 9 p .m .. Conferen.e 1 he.r cr
':.cm lnAr: Professor A.N. (,em of lht· ltl\lotulr uf Pulynu•r
Science, Universi t y ul AJ..run , ' Tid&gt;tll l rt'l~hihll~\,
C Avit.ation, Cr.azrng o1nl.l f rJtt urc ," 1 p .m • Al hl'\Un
3 22.
leLture : The n&lt;~ture ,ltlcJ hmtloflton~ o l Shdlo.t\pc.. rc •, ell Ill&lt;'
dram~lil universe will be ex plored by lc\111: fredlet 4 nd
MurroJy St hw•rrz in "~h.alr.l'spure Myth A Dldlogur ,"
II p.m. , Hoc:hstcuer 114, free And open to the pubht
Multl·medta presen t&lt;at ion. /omes fuy•e und Dublin, by Or
Mark Schechtner, English Ocp.mment, 1. 30 p .m .,
r acuity Club (meeting of 1\ssottAllon of lrbr,arian~ u l
the Sute Unlversily .11 Buff~o ).
Film : Cullodm, a BBC recrutron of the Stullish upfl~ing ol
1145, .in urfy ilnti·Wilr fi lm , 4 p.m., Diefendorf 146,
presented by the Cou ncil of History Stullenh, ~~~
members of the University commun ity ut lnv lled.
Col loqu ium : " Whit to R ese~rch oilnd How to Do II Once
You Get O ut of the l ~b," by Dr. l ril lscoe of the
University of Texu, 1 p.m ., Room A·9, 4 230 R idge
l~~ presented by the Department of PsychoiQ~y .
Talk: Pr-ofessor Rktt1rd Reynolds ori "Piutics," 8 :3p p .m.,
St. P;wl's lutherin Church, 4007 Milin Street,
sponsored b y the T~k Force on Pl:astlcs .iind OYer
Pxkilllna o f the Housewives to End Pollution {HEP); oil
questJon 1nd .answer perfod will follow.

- AmyAhrttnd

"

App&lt;ii&lt;KhiMI Symposium

Ru th Ann Mu sld. , " West Vlraini• Chos1 T.ales," noon I
p.m., t.onlerence T hurrr , 1 2 o .m • Room 2 j I Norton,
worlo.,hop .
Sl)c~ k er • 8~ie Smith. "Strrpmlninx: The Non ·(nfort.ement
of the L.tw," 2 3 p .m •• Confercn•e Thnter ; 3 4 p .m ,
ftoom '2) I Norton , worlr.shop
Moorii4H1 hymns ilnd fol k \ongs: Fr.ankte And l•onel Duff;
Wlll,.m T~lmoJdge, Amertc•n lolk lorlu o11 Buff oliO S tale
( ullexe, wtll gtve ht!&gt;tOroc.ll ~llings tor hymn!&gt; &lt;~nd
b.aii Ad~ sun&amp; by F r• nk te , ' JO 4 .30 p m. , Conferenu
T hc~ r tr; 4 : 30 5: 30 p.m., Room 233 Nonon ,
WUik\hOp by lionel Duff, "Old l.i(.k T .Ales."
lrll u rc H&lt;~rry C Audill, "The CIISCS or t he /\mefl'-4n L&lt;and.
rhe Problem!&gt; ol UrbAnt/.ition of .. ll iSIOIICollly Rur•l
People,"ll q : JO p.m .• HA.as Lounge

O,pceth . t.htp V•blonskr , '' Rebrllouu tn !he ( OoJI Flel&lt;.l!&gt;: II\
&lt; .ou~c~ otnd Solullun~: · lntruc.lulthott by Dr. ~nbcrt
Krller, 11 · 15 .un 12 !0 p .m ., lf4.as lounge;
f 10 2· '" p m . wur~\11•&gt;1• b\' Y .sblomk r, Room n 1
No non
H t\Wt i ~AI di'*u"lll't
l.rnrvtcvc o~nd [IIIAbrrh Wdtl.l,
" flfvcrly, Wr\1 Vtr~ttniA . An ll h11Hit 41 Ptr\pt't ltve,"
1 I p. m. R•&gt;um .n I Nurtun

lecture. ' folkhfe )lyle~&gt; In Western App.al.ach•• ' b y
l ynwooc:l Montell, .-uthor of Tht Soqo o f Cot' Ridflt'· A
!&gt; tudy In Oral If/story ; Ills lechHt Inc lud es Oriel
rcoco rd lncs. color slides &lt;IOd orher photoRroJphy l 4
p m., Room 23 I Norton.
Spuker: D&lt;~vid Mu rrell, " The Mrner olnd the loJw;" a lotwycr
for th e Applllachian Rese .;Hch 4nd Defense Fund, Mr
Murrell will spu~ .M~out lhe legoill aspech of miner,
hulth 4nd S.~fety. 7 8 p m ., Ito~ as Lounxc , 8 9 p .m ,
Room 2 J 1 Norton, poJnel d iSAus~&gt;lon on So;.lo~l ll, Ur\
Friday, t-brch 14
War~.shop .

With 8ru(e hckson , II nuon , Room 7 II
Norton
Musrc · " Poems ;~nd ';,on~ from Kentutky lo111h " wlfh
Wllll•m •nd Dolores Cohen, noon - I p m , Room J t 1
Nonon : I 1 p .m ., Cohen worlr.shop
Slide le&lt;turc . " Mounu in Cra fts of Cro~nbrrry Rtdge " by
ltnd• F rll&gt;. who spe&lt;.lill tJCs In lndloJn·slylc
broom·m•k•nll olnd d oll mAktnll. 2 l p .m Room 23)
No rton
Pot try . "Appal• t h ioln .. oerry" by Don W~l , drrrctu r uf thl'
Appo~loiCh loln Suulh Ful~ltfe Cenlrr, I 4 p m . Room
1 JJ N ur tun
letture Alt u n Pnn . Mr Prtll onc e r..ughl tn • u nr ·llltllll
%hoof, 4 ~ p.m., Room 23 3 Nurton.
~ • rrwell rl'tcpuun: Cornbreotd, U\salrd$ 1e4, bluegrot\\
ntu\l l, 7 midnight . ll~ob l ounRt

Sports lnforma1ion
Tomotrow · Cu rd vullryba ll pl~y off , bcgtn from 11· 1 1
pm
Entries for the Tug-o ·wu contest and lrd ( k and ltelo
do1y oltt due 111 oil Clo~r~ Gym by April IS , 1971. Entrlcs fo r
the bicy cle griitnd prrx r.tce .arc due by Aprrl 22
Roller hockey action continues SnuroJ~y morntng "'
10: 30 a.m in rhe Colpen Hall p•rklng lot.

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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
S1lrte Univ..,ity of N.w York at Bufflto

Vol. 22, No. ~

Mondrt. 20 Mllrda 1872

Study report tedited'

Description revision enrages
Collegiate System members
by J~Ann Armao
Compu1 Editor

Dr. von Moltke took exception to the reVIsion's
assertion that : "Until hard data, expected at t}le end of the
197 2-73 academic year are available, few if any conclusive
A propos.:d revision authored by Vice Pres.ldent for judgments about the College experiment can be
Academic Affairs Bernard Gelbaum in a University self supported."
study description of the Colleges has angered members or
According to Dr. von Moltke, hard data is and has
. the Collegiate System. Konrad von MoltJce (Collegiate been made available. Such facts, he continued, ' are
director) discovered late last Friday that over 30 pages in contained in both the Collegiate System Annual Report
t he University's Middle States Association Accreditation and from a survey conducted la.~t spring by the Survey
Study might bt: replaced by a one page account I see Research Center (SRC). Using the results of trus survey ,
hox-inl
the Reporter concluded in the Sept. 9 , 1971 issue ; "Most
According to Dr. von Moltke, "I was consulted at no members of the University community feel the Collegiate
time" and had no part in the revised description which he System has improved in the last year from its stormy
termed " totally negative and critical" of the Colleges. In beginnings and will continue to do so."
addition, he reported that he did not know that any
Five questions were asked by SRC interviewers
change was being considered until last Friday at 2 :40 p.m. about the Colleges. Most respondents were aware of the
At this time, a member of the Faculty Senate Executive CoUeges, with students and faculty feeling that they
Committee (PSEC) gave him the description under the should be funded more substantially and that College
assumption that be had already received a copy.
courses should be accepted for credit toward exJ!'Iting
degee programs (70.2% and I! 1.8% respectively of
Oefened d.Dcusion
students and 61 .4% and 75 .6 % of faculty). Administrallvr
The suggested substitution (dated Peh . 28) was responses were more varied with 53% feeLing that the
presented to the Faculty Senate ExecuLive Committee ror Colleg~s should not be funded more gubstantially :and
their comments. However, their reaponse was to defer 54 2% favoring acceptance of College courses for credit.
discussion pending Or. von Moltke's reaction to 11.
According to William Baumer, vice chairman of the New potential
Faculty Senate , "'The Faculty Senate Executive
Separate analysiS andac~ttcd that 40.8% of
Committee is re~tewing the self study . . all of the groups undergraduate students (J4 7% Q( ll1J students) had
(established to consider the study I will be returning their enrolled m a College course at some time. In addition,
comments, sugestions or critit.;sms to Or. Puffer."
61.6% of undergraduate day students (36.3% of all
Claude Puffer, who heads the Self Study Ste~ring students) hJIJ1 considered taking Concg.e courses. AJthou&amp;h
Committee, explained in a letter (March 2, 1972) to Or. onJ&gt;' very ama.U percentapa of faculty a.nd administration
Baumer : ..As you well know, the University self-ctudy actually eruoUed, 19% of faculty and 13.3% of
document hAll w too many pagea and will need to be administrative personnel have considered ertrollina. Such
oclited down qwte drashcaUy .. . One of the sections that statistics, ., tbe aurvey 1t.11alytJs poincs out, sugest• •
has many pages 1s that de.allng with the CoUege System in potential uew emphasis for the CoUcliate System.
Further survey evidence reports that all groups
Chapter 3."
He continued : "I am enclosing a draft of a one page responding to three scales indicating the past . present and
statement wtth respect to the College System wh.ich I future 5ucccss of the CoUeges in meeting their objectives,
think might very well be substituted for the severlll pages felt that they were better last yeau than the yeat before
rn the report whi,:h is now bdng reviewed by the executive .and that they would be improved in future years.
C(lmmittee of the senate." Or. Puffer could not be reached According .to the College's Annual Report : "Tiae grnt
for comment oo who wrote the revi~ion or why Dr. von advantage of thts survey is that the respondents were not
Moltke was m)t consul t~d . or tnformed or any pos..~ble specifically awar~ of the mferences to be drawn concerning
the Collegiate System , It is, therefore, safe to assume that
changes.
the results are as unbiased as any we are I.Jkely to t)btai.n ."
Inexcusable activns
However. Or. Gclb~t•lm admitted : " Or. Puffer asked 'lack of knowledge'
One FSEC memher feels th11t Or. von Moltke's
m~ to provide a ~horter vc~ion of the CoUege description
for Ote benef1t ,... r the sel '-evaluation committee." Wben original description in the study contaJ.nr.d impmtanl and
told that Or. Gtfhaum penned the condensed version, Or
real questions about what "we should be d01ng at this
von Moltke c;,,u·d only term his reaction as "incredible University ." According to this report , this IS tht: only place
diSbelief.'' lt1
releaserl statement, Or von Moltk~ where the document asks such probing qllesuons.
remarked ; " 1
insolence of some administrators in
Most members of the ex~cutive committee agree thai
deaiJng with . pie who are struggling to teach and to it is not their responsibtlity to r~place Dr. von Mottkt"\
learn as effrc t:vl '/as they .,an defies.description."
original account with Or. Gelbaum 's coodc:nsatio n. Sud\ a
Expl!U.mng that rue; l'omments were not dtrected decision, they fee l, would naturally stern from Or. ~ton
tuward the en•n c adroin• .rabon, he continued : "If Or. Moltkc. Additionally , Or. Baumer comrnesnted . "Tills a$
Gclbaum is dcJ itng witll ~·ther persons on this campus as not finil. J guess that if Or. von Moltke was less than
he has dealt w1lh me, I do not see how he &lt;:lin successfully satisfied with this condensation, he should notify Claude
discharge his duties as vice pr~dent for Academic Affairs. Puffer. "
Representataves of the Collegiate Assembly
In my opinion, there is no conceivable excuse for his
expressed
their outrage at what tbey consider ••total 11~
c~nduct in wriung such a sutement on the Colleges
watbout consultmg either me o r the Collegiate Assembly ." a nd ignorance about the CoUeges." Elliot Smith or Mod"rn
Education commented : ''It displays a Jack of kno wledge
by the administration on what's going on in their o wn
Sensdal syDopm?
University." Stressing the flexibility of the CoUeges, most
Basically, Dr. von Moltke objected to the very members of the assembly defme the Colleges as "ad hoc
negative tone in which th e arhcle was written . Refemng to academic structures responding to the expressed needs of
the section which reports that "fewer than 5% of the faculty. staff and students"
enrollments are in the Colleges," Dr . von Moltke critaci~ed
the use of tha t statistic. "As a matter of fa c t," he said, "a 'Homlity and indifference·
point that must be made I.S that . 5% rep~esents
Whether Dr. Gelbaum's assessment of tbe Colleges is
approximately the undergraduate teaching load tn the representative of the entire administration is, at trus time,
English Department."
uncertain. However, College representatives refer to
Vet, as Dr. von Moltke pointed out, Or. Gelbaum's President Robert Ketter's statement in the Repurt~r
condensation argues that ..the relatively low percentage of (March 9, 1972) that. "Tne University will never be bound
enrollment is hardly stron&amp; evidence of geat support to the traditional forms of higher education; it will be
among the students." Dr. von Moltke also feels that some willing to act alone or cooperatively in using its resources
scntenQe'S makt' no sense, but simply confuse the reader &amp;o create oew forms which will further the realization of
with "a negativism." For example, he cited o ne segment as its aspirations, purposes and goals . .." This, tbey
mean.i.n&amp;lt$5: ~·can you explain to me what the following hopefully contend, should preclude any administrative
phrase means? - 'The faculty and the administration are agecment with sentiments contained in the condensation.
On the other hand, they look to recent budget cuts
deeply concerned about the experiment and even those
who are least enthusiastic will not be disappointed if they and the ruling that undergraduates will be unable to teach
are shown that it has been a geat success: Now, what does credit-bearina couBea; they then recognize administrative
"indifference," if not "hostility" toward the Colleges.
that mean?"

Editor's note: Recently a "Univenity Self..Study
document" wos compiled fn prepal'tltion for tht
visit from a Middle States Accl'f!ditotion
evaiUIIdon team. The document included 21
pages concerning the Collegillte Sysrem.
Responding to a request by Self.Study director,
Claude Puffer, Vice President Bemtll'd Gdbllum
condensed that S«tion conaidenibly. The
follo~ing Is Dr. Gelbaum 's t'llallllltion of the
Colleges.
MEMORANDUM TO · Dr. William Baumer,
Faculty Senate
FROM. Claude E . Puller, Director of Self.Study
As you well know, the UfiNersity Self.Study
document has far too many pages and will need
to be edited down quite drasticaUy.
One of the sections that has many pages is
that dealing with 1he College System m Chapter

Ill
I am enclosing a draft of a one·page
statement with respect to The College System
which I think might very well be substituted for
the several pages in the report which is now being
rev1ewed by the Executive Committee of the
Senate. We cat1 include a great deal of additional
information as an exhibit for the team members
wlw begin to look into The College System when
they arrive here.
Will you tllerefore substitute this revised
page 111-149 for the several ~ges in tlle self-study
dnft related to the CoU9ges.

Cllwde E. P14ffer
THE COLLEGE SYSTEM
The CoUegiato A.uembly ~d the College
System aro10 from the desire on the part of some
to provide alternative: modes o~ucation for
students who found the more traditional modes
unattractive. uncon!!enial, and unproductive. The
history of the experiment is a subject for much
discussion and little agreement. At the pr~nt
tlmc there are I 5 college units, varying in
outlook or orientation from almost traditional
governing the requirements for a baccalaureate
degree , few students are ~&amp;ble to t.alc.e more
than one-third of their work in the colleges. In
point of fact, at this time, fewer than 5% of the
enrollments are in the Colleges.
The general tone of the most experimental
untts i.~ embodied in statements tba\ may be
paraphrased •·. . . to show not how much
know ledge there is but the limitations of
knowledge" The Faculty Senate Subcommittee
on the Colleges, charged with reviewiJag college
performance, proposes to begin its review in the
academic year 1972·73. To date, the committee
has reviewed and modified only Ute so-caUed
Stern Prospectus, which was the charter
document designed to guide lhe Colleges in their
early years.
One aspect of the College System has been
an attempt to make residenliality a basic
ingredient in the undergraduate experience. Some
progress has been made in this direction via
dormitories already existing on the Main Campus
of the University. When the donnitories on the
r\ew Amherst Campus are avallable they will
increase the opportuniteis for this part of the
college experiment to be carried out.
Among the Faculty and administration,
opinions about the Colleges, the experiment, and
the aims. are clearly divided. The relatively low
pcrce11tage of enrollment is hardly strong
evidence of great support among the students.
Un til hard data, expected at the end of the
1972·73 academic year, are available, few if any
conclu~ive judgments about the college
experiment cat1 be supported. The faculty and
the administration are deeply concerned about
the experiment and even those who are least
enthusiastic will not be di&amp;appointed if they are
shown that it has been a great success.

�'Indian Unity'

Hopi people seek support to
combat strip-mining project

leave earth. A handful of righte6u$ men asked to gQ
with him, but the great Spiri' inst• uc ted them on
Spectrum Staff Wrlur
how they might live in harmony tf!Ce more. One
brother,
the Ugllter-skinned, was to leave for a
''A day wtll come when all draw~ to a close.
foreign
land,
and invent many thin~. grow strong
That day has come. We are hungry. We are cold."
and
return
some
day. Tho other brot11ers were to go
This is an excerpt from a letter written by a Navajo
to
the
four
comers
of the continent, and guard the
tribe in Black Mesa, Arizona expressing the despair
felt by many traditionalist Indians when looking at land.
the future of their people.
Thomas Banyaca, a representative o f the Hopi
people, addressed a large Fillmore Room audience
Thursday night . Mr. Banyaca has traveled extensively
throughout America gathering support to combat
the Black Mesa strip-mining project.
Indian land, leased to the Peabody Coal
Company witho ut the knowledge Hopi people, is
being gutted and ruined t o produce coal for huge
power plants. The Black Mesa is sacred to the Hopi ;
Mr Banyaca compared their feeling for the Black
Mesa to the wlute reverance for Jerusalem .
John Lansa. a Ho pi elder ex plained : "Nature is
everythmg important to the Hopi. It is the land, all
Sometime in the future the light-skinned
hving things, the water, the trees, the rocks
11 is brother would return .to help the others if they we re
everything
The white brother has no spi ntual Ul trouble. o r to correct any mistakes they may have
knowledge, only technical .
Now there li a big made. The Indians were warned, however, that the11
rt CJp-mine where coal comes out of the Earth to send wltlte brother might change, and to beware. " When
electricity to the big cities. They cut across our our white brothers returned," ~oontinued M1
sacred shrines and destroy our prayers to the stx Banyaca, "we welcomed them. We helped them
directions . . Peabody is tearing up the land ... settle, and taught them how to hve through the
You can't do t111ngs like thht and have nature in
winter. But they had changed, and pushed the
balance."
lndtans across the land.''
Another part of the legend involved symbols on
Raped eartb
a rock found in Colorado A man-like figur e
Mr. Banyaca satd that t he earth has always been represents the Great Spmt. holding the upper and
the symbol of the "Mother" to the Indian people, lower paths o f life. The lower path 1s that of peace
and "strip-mm1ng is teanng the heart o f the and nghteousness, or the spiritual road. The uppe1
" Mother." He called for a return to "l ndian Unity:· line represents the material way of life . Three circle'&gt;
recalling his o wn experiances: " I recall attending represent earth-shattering events. th r third a sign ol
white schools and churches. I felt strange to my own total destruction. Men who tread the upper path ot
people when f returned . I thought I knew materialism have a chance to return to the spiritual
I.'Veryttung. I had no time to learn from my elders
life before it is too late. A z.ig-z.ag line represents the
When I studied comparative religion. I realized that I actions o f men who think they have the power to
had heard these legends before, from the elders of change the world .
my tribe."
"It is the responsibility of the Hopi to spread
A pre-Columbtan Hop1 prophecy, told to Mr
this knowledge to everyone," maintained M1
Banyaca by one of the elders, revealed that the whtte Banyaca . "The Hopi are working tu bring ab o11t
man and the lndaj n were once brothers . When they p eace and unity among the .aces of tht~
tned to imitate the anjmaJs, and invent d evices that continent . .. Man IS supposed to be the caretaket ,
would destroy each other. the Great Spmt wanted to but he is destroying the earth "
by Balbara Mink

Spritzler, two others··"·fl
arrested on campus
A poLitical week on campus
was marked by three anests by
C ampus Sec urity last week.
Robert Steinborn was arrested on
Tudsday and DaVIi Dillion and
John Spritzler on Thunday.
Mr. Steinborn was previously
expelled by President Kette r and
his letter of expulsion informed
him that he no longer had any
rights on ca mpus . Campus
Security cl&amp;Jms they approached
M r. Steinborn, who was o n
campus Monday to work on the
anti-Hahtead campaign. identified
themselves as security agents and
requested that be leave the
campus. He refused to leave and
then broke away from the
o fficers, who were unable to takl'
him into custody due to the
pa ss iVe Interferen c e of
surrounding students, accordmg
to Campus Sec unty .
Mr . Stemhorn claims he was
not resisting arrest because the
officer dtd not properly tdentify
himself as a security agenl. On
Tuesday, however. Mr. Stemhorn
was arrested o n campus by
Campus Secunty agen t J ames
Britt. Mr. Stetnh orn was processed
I h rough Campus Security
headquarters and then booked at
the sixteenth precmct.
He spent the night in ctty JBII
a nd was arraJgned the next
morning at a bail fee of $2000
wltich dropped to S 100 after the
arraignment. Mr. Steinborn was
arraigned on two counts of

resisting arrest and on two counts
of cnminal trespass. Mr. Steinhorn
clams that Mr. Brill also failed to
correc tly identify htmslcf at the
time o f arrest .
Ofiorderfy conduct Mr. Dillio n
and Mr Spritzler were arrested
Thursday in the area of Room
203 Dtefendorf HJII, assistant
c ha irman of h istory Norman
Baker's offtce. Dr. Baker was busy
when they reached hts office, and
his &amp;ecre tary phoned Campus
Security. Security agent Paul Orsi
approa c h ed the scene and
conferred with Dr. Baker. who
satd "our department called" and
affirmed that he thought the
behavior o f Messrs. D1Uion and
Spritzler constituted an a..:t of
disorderly conduct .
Accordmg to Mr Ors1. Mr.
Spnt zler was asked to leave two
ttmes. he n:fused, and was
arrested . Mr. Dillion physically
held on to Mr . Spritzler's .trm 10
an attempt to prevent the arrest
Officer Orst t old Mr Dillio n
"Please let ao of lus arm. Yo u wiiJ
be )UbJeCt lo arrest tf you don't
let go of Mr. Spntzler's arm ."
After a small phystc al encounter,
Mr. Ors1 arrested Mr. Dillion also
for obst ruction o f governmental
admtniStratton. Seven afftdavits
were submttted to the police by
students, fa culty and staff. Satd
Mr. OrSJ . " We are compelled to
foUow the law . ll'~ an etltical
thing."

Ot

Anention borrowers

Budget hearing
Milard Fillmore CoDege Student AllSOCiation
(MFCSA) will bold a budget meeting tomorrow at
10 p.m. in Diefendorf Annex 29. An officer from
MFC urga aU students should attend to voice their
opinions.
Frank Schubauer. MFC official, feels that the
budget should be defeated as the executhe
committee d oes not fairly repraeot night students.
Add.itiooally, he notes that no bUdget has been
approved for second semester. This, he continued, is
against state guidelines.

The Office of Student Accounts, Hayes A . announces t!tat the fe~~raJ aovemmenl
considers it mandatory for all studenu with NationaJ Dden.w loans whc ceJM attending
this University or who drop below one-half time 1tatua (abc hours) to · ~•nae an EXIT
INTER V1 EW. The interview enables studenb to clarify their riahts 111 rsponsibiJillf:s
concemina repayment and to determine a repayment sc:hedult
If you are araduating or terminatina this semester. pleast" ca ))3 1- 4735 to
schedule an appointment for an EXIT INTERVIEW .

r---------.,

I
I
I
I

"We only want two kids.
But if we don't have a boy
we'll keep trying!"

I
I
I
I

The Spectrum ;. pu/JIIIh«&lt; thtW
rim•• • weelt, - v Monthy,
~Y end Fridr/: during tiN
~ler .udemic .-r by Sub-8owd
1, Inc. Off~ee~ .,. loatwl et 355
Norron HMI, Sr.,_ Uni-.Jry of NYM*
Buf'-lo. 343$ Mlln St ,
Buffelo, New Yorlc, 14214.
Telephone: A,.. Code 116; Edltoml
831,41 13; Bull~, 831..:1610.

•r

rashion
desian
BFA Procr•ms
Certlftc1te Proarams
for Info contJc:t realstrar

Repre,.ntwl for ~ling b.Netl-..1 Eduutlot»&gt; Adwnillllfl
~. lttt:., 360 Lul"ffi''Ot Atl'e,,
Nfttr YM*, N.Y. tOOt1.

Suberfl'f/on ,.,. .,. UIIIJ ,.,
_ , . . . or 18.00 for

a.,_,.,.

$cotwl
NfttrYM*.

two_.,..,.._

pekl•r Buffelo,

CJteviMIOif: 16,/JOD

Page two • The Spectrum . 20 March 1972

"We Are All Lt. Calley"
Wednesday, March 22 at 1:30 p.m.
NORTON HALL - ROOM - - - -

�Housing Corporation

Editorial elections
Applic:atio;. for the position of Editor-in-Chief
of The Spectrum for tbe Kadanic year 1972-1973
wil be taken until Mareb 21.
The 1pptication c.onsistl of a letter to the
editorial board, lltating reasons for cJairina the
politioo, qullifications aod pmioua joumalistic
e:xperieoce. The politioa il open to •Y State
University pwluat.e or llflder&amp;nduate student .
The editorW board will interview all candidates
00 Thwsday' March 23.
Pro.pective applkantJ are urged to con tact the
Editor, Room 33S Nortoo Ha11 as soon • .,a.ible to
familiarize themaelves with any procedural or
technic::al questions about the position or about The
Spectrum.

Sunshine House renews
drug analysis program
Sunshine House is resuming its analyzed should contact Sunshine
drug analysis program. which House at R oom 220 Norton Hall,
s h ou ld get under way tJus 831 - 4046, fur more details.
Wednesday.
Participants must leave a first
A fo rmer anempt by Sunshines name and phone number and
House to develop a drug analysis results of analysis will be given to
p rogram Wa$ stopped by the Ene them withm 72 hours. The drug
County Sheriffs Department. A • sam pl es wdl he destroyed,
Iuter attempt to coordinate the however. after analysts.
program WJih th e Buffalo Police
Department's program also proved
Mr Younger w as not at hberty
urlsuccessful. Ho wever, John to d~lose the procedural nature
Younger. Sunshine House 's public of the dmg analysis program . He
relations coordmato r, stated· "We dtd stress that people should have
at Sunshme House stlll recognize any questionable substances
the need to protect people from checked out , since "most of the
bad drugs sold on th e street. This dru~ sold as LSD, mescalin and
pro blem cannot be ignored. The MDA in Buffalo are really PCP
problem of bad drug.\ Cl(tsts and (horse tranquilizer) " Staff of
the need for an analysis servtce ts Sunshtne House answer the
phunes 24 hours a day for anyone
paramount "
wishing m ore informauon about
the program ur for anyone who
Intails
Anyone who wants to have any needs to talk to somebody about
c apsule, tablet or powder a pro blem .

I

AUfO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable

DliDiiDD I

sculpture

Sub Board's control limited
by Butch Murphy
Sp«trum Stllff 'Wrltu
The co ntroveny over control of the planned
Student H ousing Development Corporation (SHOC )
has apparently been settled. David Steinwald, a
representative of SHOC, said : "A compromise of
sorts has been worked out."
The dispute centered upon the reco.,mendation
that while Sub Board I , Inc. should aid in the
establishment of the corporation, it should not have
any control in the corporatio n's functioninp . The
recommendations were included 10 a feasibility
study prepared by Drayton Bryant Assoc1ates of
Philadelphia for Sub Board.
One of the basic objections to the study was the
absence of any recall procedures for members of the
corporallon's Board of Directors. Mike Nicolau , GSA
president and Sub Board member had stated at the
ume that "recall would only be amongst themselves.
The Board of Directors would be accountable only
to themselves, and this is highly irregular "
Under the co mpromise agreement. reca n
procedures, ( w1th Sub Board mput) will be
1nstJtuted Additionally, a steenng commtttee
composed of two person appointed by Sub Board
and three persons from an open hous1ng commit tee
Will be estabhshed This committee will serve as a
~reemng device for tho:.e penons desinng seats on
the Board of Directors. In addttlon, tt may be the
dev1ce by wtuch recall procedures wtll be condu ued .
This has yet to be decided

Bridge the gap
The draft itself IS a rather lengthy une, ~nvcnng
all aspects of the llousinK Corporation . JncJ Its
endeavor~&gt;. II shows w-depth reportmg on the
housing problem , the need for a solutmn, the
financ1al aspects surrounding the problem, and mmt
1mportaot, a solution
As stated m the report , the proposed guals of
SHDC are· I) to provide suitable housing fo1 the
students of the State Umverstty of Buffalo in terms
of cost , quantJty and quality ; 2) to bndge the gap
between the U mvers1ty and the com mumty , 3) to
develop real world educational experience for
students working with the corpo rati on. The report
makes an explicit pomt that these aoall!l are of a
long-term nature. which makes them applh:ablc not
only to the present camru~. but lllS&lt;l to the Amherst
s1te .
The d ocument recugnized the major prohlerns
f.1c1ng ~tudents 1n reftren~:e to hnw.tng The- avulluttle
number tlf noustn~ I.H. tlllte~ th&lt;~t J.Jc open In
shldent l&gt; •~ hsted as tht matn JS~uc Hccau~c ut till~
sh ortage, ~tudents are lmced to pay too mu~h fur
hiO little . and th1c; 1' where the ..:ncs nl " np ••If"
bc~n .

BrA Protr~ms
Certtflute Proarams
For info cont•ct reaiatrar

Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

OPEN MEETINGS
Will be Held By

THE UNIVERSITY GOVERNANCE COMMITfEE
2 30 p .m . in Acheson 5

Tuesday March 2 1 . '7 2
Tuesday March 28. '72
To Discuss The First Draft of

ARTICLES OF GOVERNANCE FOR
A UNIVERSITY ASSEMBLY

* ••• *
ALL MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY
ARE INVITED TO ATTEND

• * •••
The Commiltee l.f alsu willmg to dis' uss till' draft
wtrll uttivenity groups requesting such a meeting.

Address Requests To.
Dr. Mariorie C. Mix, Cluzimllln

Community credibilit y
fh e re ptlrl gne&lt;. nn to l Lt h' lht ntat&lt;H tartur\ thai
Will (o ntnbulc Ill the ~lll~t'~' of the proWl't I ht&gt;
t..lm·umcnl l.IIIS fur support and tlart tdpallott "" all
levels nu mely '' uden 1' U ntvcf\Jt y .tnt.! ~llltl 11111111t Y
Whtle the: proJeCt 1~ \ludenl-&lt;lflrntt'd . I h&lt; rcp11rt
fCl08Jli.LCS the nctt'\SIIY nf wnrktnj.t Wllh lh1•
commun1ty and the UnlvcrstiY
Other factors that are deemed llt'(C\\Jry lot
su~:ce55 11re , redtbility. conltnUJng leaderslup Jnd J
l&gt;OUnd .tdllllllJStralton A' the report qJ(C\ , nther
~tut..lllnl curporatiom, namely Suh lJo,lfJ I. hJVc
mt·urred trouble in reference t o crcdJbJhty 111 the
(.OnllrlUilliY It LS S(;jted. lh.1t tf the tllrpll rotlJOn I\ l u
sun:eed , good standlllg 111 thc Buffalo-Amherst .treJ
IS essent1al
Contlmung leaderslup IS also noted 10 I he rt'port
as essential. The draft states " tha t a turnover in
leadershtp ear.:h spnng. as 10 the Student Asso ct&amp;llon.
wo uld not be tn the hest mterest of t he student
housmg program ." It ca n be mferred from thl) that

officers of the corporation will serve rather lenathY
terms.
Details of the adm.ini.strative structure of SHOC
are allotted a &amp;reat deal of apace in the report. l t
reiterates time and time qain the need for a
professional staff, busineas manqina, Jepl .nd
accounting services and an executive clirector. It il
noted in the report that the inclusion of an executi.e
director follows the example of Sub Board I .

Policy
The policy-making aspects of the corporation
will be taken up by a five to seven member executive
co mmittee who will also oversee all activities. The
report explicitly states that the m~ority of the work
is to be done ln sub committees, and not in the
executive committee.
A Board of Directors will also be set up, and it
has been recommended by the report that this be
two-thirds student The remainder of the board wiD
be comprised of faculty and staff from the
Un1versity, members of the Buffalo--Amh.ent
co mmumty and Uruversity-relati:d orpn.izationa
suc h as the UB F oundation.
Underlying all o f tlus is the concept of
coope rattve self-management. While thi&amp; concept has
1ts weak points, 11 is stated in the report that "a
.council wtth its part• cu lar standards and
admmiStrauon tn each of the bwJdmp, ho\15CI or
neighborhoods controlled by the corporallon would
be the mlijor factor tn estabLishing effective
C()O perative self-management ."
The baste pnnciple betund the ~tudent housing
cooperatives are I ) each housma unit IS responsible
for tis o wn matntenanc.;e under elected supervision;
2&gt; rents for each unit arc set by budgeting all
expenses for a year, diVIding by the number of
members, then each unit IS charged a per capita per
month rent, 3) cooperauve memberstup shares in the
~.o rporallon are purchased by each member.
Location important
Addition11l elements of the student hoUSUII
lOOpera tives mclude the granting of volU\1 privile&amp;CI
to members throu&amp;h the purchasin&amp; of membership
shares, residents being responsible for doinaaome of
the work on the units, and residents' ability to elect
some of the members of the Board of Oi.rectol'l. In
add1110n to thtS, the report has recommended that
the management and maintenance of the uruu be
handled by the admimstration of the corporation
with ;ul.l from the st udents This recom mendation it
b.ncd on studtes of other studen t hou.sinJ
(.\H p!llallOII.!&gt;.

I&lt;Jnkmg ne.u the top 111 basic tonSJderallons of
thr h•111SIIIg prOJCt l IS IOCIIIIUII . The report notes that
r&lt;utr hous1ng locations can cause innumerable
hcat..la~· he s
f or ~ I u d ents. along With added
trJnsportallon ~mt~ II IS re'-ommended by the
rcpurt that lllltJ.tl ttl nsJt..ICratlOn be gJVen to
Ulllltt•lhug hous111g unttl&gt; w1th1n nne mtle o f the
llntvcrsity
A\ f)UIIllt'd out by the report , the b~Jt.:
Ulfi\J t..lerlltl(lns 1hat shnultl be taken 1nto a(.count
conlerntng lm..oJtlo n arl'
I) di.Stanu~ from the
lJ nlver,tly , ~) rdatwm.htp Ill bo th the Ma10 St. and
Amhcrsl campuses, {) vanety of shoppmg and other
,erv•~e\ w1th1n walkLng dtstanr.:e of the hldltion, 4)
av,.tJiabll tty typt 6nd pn(e of huustng fo r developm'
r.:om:e ntratJon areas, 5) trends and the future of each
an•ct as to type of use and spectal problems; 6)
relaltonshlp tu transportatton systems.
lookiJlg mto the future , the report cites the
fir~t year as the cnt11:al one It will serve as a test for
the feas1bihty of the proJc&lt;:t and all administrative
a~pects as well. Beyond the fu-s t year, according to
the report, expansion will be the miJOr concern.
Also t1ed 1n w1th th1s IS the gradual extension of the
proJed to the Amherst Campus.

Students,
Man y thanks for patronizing our store for you r book and supply needs this
semester. It has been a pleasure serving you and w.e hope we can continue to do

so.

We are beginning to prepare for the su~mer and f~ll semesters, an~ to make
roo we must return many titles to the publishers. So 1f there are any ttems you
still need for courses, please stop in and pick them up.
While you're in, check our sale tables. We still have many good titles
dVailable at 75% off list price .
Good luck with your exams, and we hope to see you again next semester .

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK STORES
3610 Main Street
833-7131
(Pork free at the motel next door)

205 Foster Hall

20 March 1972 _The Spectrum . Page three

�Democratic Youth Coalition is
opposed to housing ordinance

Socialist Workers

End Vtetnam war
by Mary Anne Morpn
Sp«trufft Staff Writer
Addressing a State University
o f 8 u ffalo audience last
Wednesday, Kendall Green, the
national representative for the
Socialist Workers Party . urged
support of his party's platform.
Speaking out first against the
Republican and D e mocratiC
parties, he went o n to explain the
positions of Ltnda Jenness and
And r ew Pulley, running for
president and vice president on
this ticket.
Citing the youth vote as a
major force in 1972, Mr Green
sa.Jd that "millions of voters will
have to go through the same
disill usion ... as the 'Go Clean for
Gene' groups did ," 1f they only
look to the two party system .
Naming Pres ident Nixon ,
Representative Sturley Chisolm
and Senator George McGovern as
examples, Mr. Green said. "every
single o ne of the~ new candjdates
are against 1nd e p endence
movements" because they are not
contro Ued by businessmen and
e~pitalists as are the Republ icans
and Democrats. " Mass movements
are the o nly way to make changes
10 1972," Mr Green sa.Jd.

"turned them into anti· war
universities" by ''reducing t.roops,
increasing bombin-gs and spreading
the war" in Vietnam, according to
Mr. Green. Mr. Green further
stated that President Johnson also
had not ful ftl led his promises of
keeping us out of the war and
helpmg the Blacks. "The Pentago
Papers proved he knew he was
going to escalate the war ," said
Mr. Green.

A hoax

Ms. Jenness and Mr. Pulley are
"the only o nes building an
ant1-war movement," according to
Mr Green. Senator McGovern
"says he's been agamst the war
SJnce 1963 and yet he says tt
would take six to e1ght months to
end the war after he was elected,"
Mr. Green said . He further decned
McGovern's use o f the same sort
uf t1ct1CS as Nrxon has used, by
sponsoring an amendment "that
would extend the war
indefinttely."
Ou the tOptc of the wage·price
freeze, Mr. Green sard " prosperity
has also proven to be a hoax." He
c harged that the freeze was a
d1rect a ttack against trade untons.
wo men and Blacks because it
w1ped out some trade union
contracts and did not have 11 body
to enforce Lhe freeze . Mr G reen
Youth appeal
The major planks of the asserted that sr nce 1t was
Soctahst Workers Party are an s upported by a Democratic
unmediate end to the Vietnam 1..0 ngress and Republican and
war , the backing of mdependen t Demoeraltc candrdates ahke, that
pohllcal movements by Blacks it rs lurther testunony that voters
and MeXJcan Americans, women's must look beyond the two party
l.tberation, homosexual hberahon system.
Mr . Green also spoke o ut for
and prison reform .
Ms. Jenness, a former teacher the repeal of all anti-abortion
and secretary, has begun a btlls Sen McGovern "tlunks New
campaign of c halleng1og Ynrk Jaws are tdcal ," he satd.
candidates of 1hc two maJOr th ough these law~ prolubtt
part1es. Andrew PuUey, who led a abOriiOil after 24 weeks
suc cessful ant1-war movement pregnanq and ~all fm a rnuumum
while servmg a m ember of the charge of $200 per abort1on . Mr
army, is campaigning to urge Creen called fm free abortion on
Blacks to support the Soctahst demand and 24 ho~u chtld care
Workers Party rather t.han the center:. as baste demand) nl lu ~
Republicans or Democrat~
party
Though neither candtdate ts old
Regardmg w omen·~ hbcratmn ,
enough to serve •f elec ted , Ms. Mt Green said. "the Democrats
Henness and Mr. Pulley were and Republican~ Jle 1loly
ptcked as an appeal to the youth prnrn1S111g token womctl on the
vott across the country.
Supreme Cuurl and the cabmet,"
On major ISSues, Mr G1een wlule the Soc1albt Wor~ er\ Part y
charged that Pres1dent NtXon ha!. c al h
fm wtaJ hber:lltllll of
nut fulfiUed his pronus~s ol wumcn Fllr mutunty gruup,, Mt
lmngtng peace and prospenty to Green satd, " the Su~.:ta list s are the
the country. Rioting on campuses unly ones who g~ve oppressed
mcreased because President Nixon nat10nali I ies a chance."

ur

The Democratic Youth Coalition of the State
University of Buffalo is the latest or.g anization to
declare its o pposition to the city housmg ordinance
which prevents more than two unrelated people
from living together.
Noting the anti-student nature of the ordinance,
they have "vowed to use all means possible to insure
its repeal." R.ich Redlo, a member of the Democratic
Youth Coalition, said one tactic would be mass
lobbying. "We plan to rent a few buses and take
busloads of students down to the next Common
Council meeting that the ordinance will be discussed
at," wd Mr . Redlo. He hopes to obtain Student
Association funds for the rental of the buses.
Meanwhile, Executive Director of Sub Board
Steve Blumenkrantz said that he is in a "wait and
see" period to see if t he ho~ng ordinance can be
rescinded o r changed through legislative channels. If
this route fails, Mr. Blumenkrantz stated. he ts
considering a c lass actio n suit which would pool the
financial resources of student monies, Buffalo State
Mental Hospital funds and other affected groups
who would participate in this legal action

Day or reckoning
In the conung weeks. the coalitron wtll also be
involved W1th lobbying on an mdividual level to try

to obtain-some of the '"swing votes" on the Common
Council.., "lf. we can sho~ •. the council our ~s
support, wd Mr. Redlo, at will be a persuadtng
f?rce .in te r ms of our votes." Expressing
~ppo_Ultm~t . at the . Lack of sympathy by
Uruverstty Dtatnct Councilman Charles Volkert, Mr
Redlo sta~ed: ..Volkert ~~ ~ve to answer at the
next elec.uo~ to. th,&lt;&gt;se,UmveTSJty students who live
and vote m his distncL
Being a group which is committed to work
within the poUtical system, the c oalition warns Lhat
those who act against the interst ot students and
youth in general will be held responsible for lhetr
ac tions. I n particular, they point to the statements
of Councilmen Lewandowski and Volkert " who
refuse to weigh judgments on the issues intelligently.
but instead deal in emotional rhetoric." The
coalition feels despite the anti-student sentiment 111
the city of Buffalo, people don't want to sec
students $leeping in the streets. They feel 11 1S
important to draw city-wide publicity to this 1ssue,
which has been largely ignored by the Buffalo daily
newspapers In regard to the University's silence 011
the housing tssue, Mr . Redlo stated ''I think Lhere IS
Universrty silence on every University 1ssue
tmportant to students "

Year's first inductions

National draft call issued
The Selecttve Servtcc ISSued
thJS year's first draft caJI last
Thur.~day . Draft Director Curt as
W. Turr directed the 4100 draft
boards to order men born an 195 2
who have lottery numbers one
through I S tu report for Army
duty on dates from mad·Aprll to
Ma y 3 1
The actlun as "expected" to ftll
mo~t of the IS .000-man request
for Apnl. May and J une. One
reuon for the uncertamty of how
much of the call will be filled . Or.
Tarr )3Hl, IS that thiS 1S the firs I
tune the Umform Natio nal C.tll
has beeu used Thts ~ystem ts
des tgned l&lt;l ehmtn.Jl~ mequtttes of
the o ld prou:ss 111 whtch nauonal
headquarten. merely set a ~.:eih ng
nulllher fur I he local board~
Under the c·hance fadurs of
the nld ~y~tern , men wtth certaan
numher.; were c:tlled u("' 1n 'mne
part~ o t the country wluh: tho!&gt;e
tn other!&gt; were not 1 he new plan
remove~ ~orne of the un~.oer!atnl y
created because the local boards
eachell the old cetltngs and

many men did no t know where
they stood untal the last moment
CO's included
Se lect 1v c S erv tee offictals
estimate that between 11,000 and
12,000 will be called 10 April or
May , wtlh most men rnvolved
dasstfted as 1- A or I AO,
consctent1ous ObJeCtors wtlhng to
11crve an untform but not bear
a{ms.
A small nurnhe r of ot hers also
will be o rdered to report. These
are older men who have lost
deferment&amp; smce Jan. I , I 97 2 or
whose tmttal postponement o f
mdu.:tton e xptres tn Apnl or Ma y
rhey re~.oCIVCd their lo ttery
numbers be( o re last August
Or larr told the draft boards
to nottfy con~c aent10us ohJCCto rs
who are not wilhng Ill dn
non-combJ! mthlary duty and
were born tn 195 I with lottcrn
number.; one to 15 that the y dre
obligated to perform Jltern.1te

Beef &amp;

~le

have 60 days m wtuc.h to fllld
CIVilian JObS !;Uitable 8S SUbS!JtUIC\
and approved by the Select tvc
Service It they f;ullo find cmhau
JObs wtthm the 60-&lt;Jay pcnml ,
they will be ordered to .:ivthan
assignments chosen for them oy
the Selec ttve Servtcc
Defense Secretary Melv1n latnf
S8Jd no more than 50,000 men
w ill be drafted ttlrs year.
compared to the 98,000 drafted
last year Oraft o ffi ctaJs said they
hoped soon to be able to predtcl ,,
cei ling lottery number abov1•
which men born 10 I q 52 wtll be
~Je from mduc.tton
Or Tan sa1d the date for Jum•
caJI-up-. w11l be no later than early
Ma y

Jotn

The Spectrum
Ino pur~

n~ryl

House

3199 MAIN ST.
CO.IIIeS S... OfVII)

Three mghts only
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday---March 20. 21 , 22
4 p.m . to closing

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Page four . The Spectrum . 20 March 1972

�Interrupted speech

Refusinx to be filmed,
Gref(ory leaves podium
by James Mcferson
Sp,•l'frum Stofj Writer

Only 20 minutes after he's started, Dit:k
Gregory ended his speech last 'Thursday
night, waJk.ing out on a gym full of
incredulous people and an adamant group
of black students. Gregory, who has been
fasting for II months to protest the war in
Indochina, had swung into the body of hiS
~peech when he stopped and announced
that unless a videotape camera filming hrs
speech were armed at the Ooor, he would
leave the stage The camera remamed, sn
Gregory left.
·
Before he appeared, Cregury had let rt
be known he would not pcrmtt any filming
of hiS speech. cxplammg that he was under
contract tu a movie studto and any film
reproductt\lll would be a vrolatmn
Nevertheless, m the first few mmutcs,
whrle he was JOkmg :rbout the problems the
loss of werght has g.ven lum (he now
werghs 98 pounds) three vrdeo tape
camersas were rccordmg Ius address. He
asked that the cameras be broken down , or
:umed at the floor, but left the stage when
his request wasn't fulfilled . After some
tense mmutes, runctuatcd by shouts from

the crowd to "off the cameras," G regory
returned, to loud applause.
For the next ten minutes, he lauded
young people for their part in the bat tie
against " the old, sick, slimy degenerates in
the Pentagon." Youth, declared Gregory,
represents the most "honest, ethical and
courageous gen.:ratron" m history. Theu
continuing involvement m the peace
movement and partrcularly the Mayday
demonstrations m Washmgtnn, D.C' were
commended by Gregory During Mayday's
serres of crvil disobedrence act rons.
Washington police "showed how bnlhant
they are:· sard Gregoy, "by arrc~11ng 7000
people in a single day Jnd not getung one
cnmmal. "
Conhnuing tn a raptd, rntemc style,
Gregory joked about the problem~ J e~u~
C'hnst, an rnternahonally J...nown super~IJr,
m1ght have m a 'Secoud C'omrng' "Ju~t
think," smiled Gregory. "what would
happen 1f Christ came hack 111111 J ~ohun:h
and said . 'Yuu all got to dose down now,
I'll speak for myselr." So-called ('hrrst1an&lt;;
who abhor the long han . beards and
sandals affected by many young pcuplc
would be forced tn reject then prm:la1111ed
Saviour srmply because of Ius appcaraucc.

-5• ntos

charged Gregory.
Suddenly, attracted by a disturbance in
front of a camera to the left of the state,
Gregory notiCed the camera was filnung
rum and asked that it be broken down
Some members of the audience began
pomtmg the camera downward. but were
caut1oned by Gregory not to touch what
drdn't belong to them .
Warren Hunter. lnfo rmatiun Muusrer
fur the Black Student Unron (BSU) lnltl
&lt;..rq.tmy the camera, whrch had bCl'll
reuted by BSU , would 11111 be dis~cmhled
While Gregory listened at the pod1um ,
Hunter began address1ng the crowd from
•h~ t1uor. but qurckly mounted the \lJ!~C
and. as Gregory nffered 111m the
mrcrnplume, cxplarucd why BSU rduM.•d
to stop filrt~~ng.
''There\ a lot of bruthcrs and \l~tcr'
who cmrldu'l get here tontlloht," lhtiiiCI
stated, "and the ouly way we can get th1s
mes:.age nu t rs on closed circUit 'I V ..
Thnugh Gre1wry had made lw. nbjecttllll 111
any filmmg clear. Hunter charged that llSll
had nut been infnrmed either that Gregnry
would be speakmg on campu~ m that he
would obJCCI lo beulg lilmed
'Bu.zl.ing bewiJdennent '
When Hunter ltnl'fll'd hr' 'hurt
expl..en..eli\111
c;rc~ut\&lt;
rcplreJ th.tl
regJrdlc~' of .:onllll"b ..111d ~o.llllllllttlll\'llh..
he denunded re~pect, .md rclh.'ratcd lhJI
he would not lOilllrlUl' '"' ~pccch tl Ire
were hemg lllmcu llhtt•..eu ul J hint
\U~c~t t•d r. regory. I hlllll'r 'houlu t.l ~c hun
j(,regur\&lt; I back tu thl' cnmmuruty hve
P rocccdtng ufl the 'tagc, G • e~or y
d1Hll1Cd Ills overcoat and tJIJ...ed 4u1etly
Wtth llunter anJ a cluster ol pcuplc Jlllll!ld
lum (,regury wa~ 11111 vr~ihly angered Jrtd
treated everyone with l."asual fnncdhness
thnugh he admittt!d that nothlllg hke till\
had ever happened to 111111 hcfme
Several audience member\ were 1n lad ,
more upset than Cregnry lllmsl'lf . rnml of
the crowd, however ~at 1n tHll/111~

Directorial
Positions
Available
Two students are needed to fill directorial
positions in Sub-Board I's Publications and
University Union Divisions. Both positions will
involve management of entire operations.

Submit resumes to Room 214 Norton Hall.

bewilderment, hoping perhaps that
Greogry's exit was another false aJarm.
He did not return. however, so at 10:30
p.m. C'lark Gym emptied a confused
Lr(lWed into the sloppy winter night. There
was httle vehemence on either side, with a
few exceptions
Hunter, for h1s part, was calm and
mauHa111cd that Gregory was not angry,
hut had left to avoid an obv10us conflict.
Some members of the audience were
drsturhed , 1f not angry, however.
Mark Wt.•mer. who dnects the Speakers
Bureau, an organ1zatr;n of the Student
A ~~cmhly wlm:h was responsible for
hnng11rg Gregory tn t:ampus, was plainly
ur\J:!rllnth:d "Student fees paid for him ,"
~;mJ Wt.•urcr . "1 here ~~ certarnly a need for
~:orn n1Utllty uwolvement ,'' he continued,
"hut pnnnty \hould be set for students on
campus, blaLk and white."
Reply111~ to Bunter 's charge that BSll
had not been adequately notified ot
(,rcgory's speech, Werner contended that
he hrmsclt had mformed the organization
hack rn November lhat Gregory was
com mg. AddttiOnally. noted Weiner, there
wa' a hJit pagc .rdvrrtisemcnt announcing
&lt;...rc~ttlr y \ V1~rt 111 The Spectrum ·'They
wercn 't ,cut .ury spcual feller." he
~nnduueu
'hul tht.') 're normal stuJrnts,
lilt'\ I til &lt;t',ll l lht'

rape r ..

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20 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�·WitAIS

IL-__E_d_i-,_o_R_iA_l_ ____,_I 1IIA~r

A

~E1feR .
\

A WHAf?
(

Hostility in ~s
To date the Administration has been able to ignore most
charges ~f ~ndue interference wit~. or hostility towards. the
Colleges. The simplest way to do so was to dismisS any su ch
charges as unfounded polemics. They no longer have that
luxury since the third highest officer of this school has
documented his strong antipathies to the Collegiate System
in a shocking display of invective and close-mindedness.

~£

WHArr
I

A thorough examination of the content of Academic
Affairs Vice President Bernard Gelbaum's proposed revision
of the Colleges' self-study description reveals a remarkable
lack of respect for the individuals involved in the Collegiate
System. How anyone could describe 15,000 credit hours as a
" relatively low percentage of enrollment" is ,beyond
comprehension. Such a figure far exceeds the undergraduate
teaching loads o f nearly every department at this University .
The fact that a massave body of evidence exists which

refutes Or. Gelbaum's conclusions, speaks poorly of his
intentions and his committments to academic
experimentation. Last year's Survey Research Center study
of student, faculty and administration attitudes toward the
Colleges contains ample evidence of demonstrable student
1Upport and interest. That no reference is made to either the
SAC Report or the Annual Report of the Colleges is
damning.
Procedurall y, there is a lso much to be desired . The
proposed revision, authored on February 28th, was never
sent to Collegiate Director Konrad von Moltke. Additionall y,
neither Or. Gelbaum nor Self-Study Director Claude Puffer
had ever contacted Or. von Moltke to inform him of their
dissatisfaction with the original section on the Colleges. At
the very least, this is highly unusual.
On every other Collegiate correspondence between Dr
Puffer and the Faculty Senate Executive Committee. a
carbon was always sent to Dr. von Moltke. Therefore, the
failure of either Dr. Puffer or Dr. Gelbaum to notify the
Colleges of this revision seems to be a deliberate omission.
Frankly, this isn't too surprising, since they obviously could
have expected nothing but an adverse reaction to their
revision.
We are grateful to Dr. Gelbaum for providing conclusive

proof regarding the existence of administrative antipathy to
the Colleges. However, we urge President Ketter to publicly
disavow both the content and methodology of the Gelbaum
Collegiate description. Otherwise, the University will
correctly view these statements as the official position of t he
Ketter Administration.

Vol. 22, No. 68

Monday, 20 March 1972
[ditor-m-Chief

Dl'f1111' Arnukl
\1 Ucn"'n
Co - M~na~e1ng Ediwr
M ~~~ I 1Pf\'"·"'"
Assr . M~n•g1ng E.dol&lt;ll
'&gt;u ' "'' M'"'
Busua•s, M.i!l.IJ~tr
1~, 1.. I l t• •IJn
AdvertJ\ing Ml!IAJ(~r
"'"·'" Mrllt'ntiiH'

C u M.anag1ng E.dllur

8.ackpa~~

l•yuut

C.ampu\

AHI
Lil II. l)r~111.1

Amy Ahrr11tl
. Jo ·Ann A•m•o
ldt (.,rrrnw~lll
. Howle t-.ur11
City
J dnl~ Cromer
Copy
R.vnno f urm•n
. MMty Ga111
AUI.
. Cla11r K11egsm"n
f~ture
LyndA Ten
G~phlc Arts . . .. . . . . Tom Tole&gt;

Mu~•c

Off-Campti\
A sst
Photo .
Asst .
Sports
A sst

• , Voll Jill

M~t

1\o•y

0~1~1 rc!lher

K1m S,mto.,
8JIIY Rub1n

Huw1e f J1wl

the ewrc;, u .m wnt uf the

EditoriOIII policy is determined by the Editor·in.Choet

Page six . The Spectrum . 20 March 1972

In response to "For What It's Worth." March

I 5, 1972 . I and other Buffalonians have bad our fill
of the scathing attacks on Buffalo by people, in this
case. Harvy Lipman , who obvwusly don't know a
damn thmg about the &lt;..1ty. A Jot of the apathy
students complain about in this Umversity tS caused
by half-wit articles just Jjke yours.

Mr Lipman, no one is twisting your IUIII to stay
tn Buffalo, and if you were fool enough to stay her~
for four long years anstead of pulling out, then
you're nothing but an ignorant hypocrite. So go
bac k to 1-'un City. or wherever the hell you umC'
from and leave us Buffalo "hicks" in peace. The city
and t he University would be much better o ff
without you.
'J'ony Bellant1

URfavorablecoverage
To thr Editor:

I was co-spon'!or, along with tltl' foretgn student
clubs of UB, ol lnternattonal Month 1972. We
strongly object to the manner in which the Rtporter
covered the InternatiOnal Fesltval Ntgllt and the
International Feast on th~ lront page: of their March
16, 1972 issue.
Fu-st of all. the info rmallon whtch the Reporter
g~vt:~ there IS entirely incorrect . The dan cers pictured
Me C hinese students at UB and are perfor ming a
Chines~ palace dance. The failure on the part of a
news re pc&gt;rter to distinguish bet ween "Chinese" and
" Japanese" ts indeed regrettable. And apart from
this, the pu.:ture was not really appropriate - a short
paragraph describing the entire program would have
been better, as the Festival Wli.~ " I nternatiOnal." nnt
C hinese.
But the s~nou.~ mistake made hy the R~r,.rtl'f 1~
it~ mL~lc~tdmg statements con~.erning the Feast
wludt imply that it was ~tlmOlit a total fatlure I he
prohlcm with which we were fat.eJ on the day of the
Feast was not msuffi&lt;:acnt food, as the Rl!pottc!r
Implies. Th~: problem was simply that everything had
to be cleared away at 4 o'c,;ll)ck, liS another event was
to be held tn the same morn at 5 o'cl&lt;ll.k In
addtt10n, the Food Scrvtl·e Manager stated that fru111
her expcnenc.:e an h our and a halt w:JJ&gt; the best length
of time for su.:h an event a~ lhc Ft·asl At 11ny rail' ,
the I· cast wa:. !ICheduled for 1. u ' dork . and such ;m
affair c:snnot go on indefinitely We arc sun: thJt
thuse who were. JS thl' Nt•t•ortn st;ttt'\, "twncJ

away. or given skimpy portions" were those who
arrived after 4. It seems unreasonable. for those who
arrive at a meal two hours after it is scheduled to br
served to expect very much _
Much more was spend on the food this year
than before, and the lime spent m servmg It
exceeded the two hours tha t we had plannec1 on
This year we tried to develop all the program~
further than before and to improve them over what
they were in the past. In the past, the Festival could
only accomodat e 500 people, but this year we
succeeded "' presenting the programs t o 1.400. So
many people have congratulated us 011 the success of
this year's programs, in particular the Director o f th.:
Foreign Student Ortice, who remarked that this
year's program was probably one of the hesl so far.
In I.Jghl of thil&gt;, I cannot understand why the
Reporr,•r ha\ gtven tt such unfavorable coverage . W.:
fed that rl would have been preferable if the
Rfpmtc•r had not mentiOned the Festtval or Feast
than to have misrepresented them a.~ they did . The
R,•purtt•r has dascouraged those foreign students who
have contnhuted scJ much time and effort t0warJ
lnlerntllional Month , and it would be understandable
tf they were tn ht:satatl' to put forth any such efforts
II• the luturt~
l'l'la 1\ mrg
f.'v rm&lt;'t In tarra twnal

Affairs Coordtnntor
Student AJSCJCIIJ/1011

- ~l.lnl

M Jdl.ocl '&gt;tlv~J hl•ll
.. Bill\ Allmdn
L vnnc TJde)(er

Service

RepubllcOition of matter herein wtlhoul
Edltor·in-Chief ts forbidden.

tu the Editor:

M••vl"'l"' Rur1' un

Tht Specrrum IS served by Un1ted Pre.s lntr•nJIIonJI, (.offcge Prt&lt;&gt;s
Se rvice, the lo~ Angeles Times Free Preh, the L•h Angete~ Time,
Syndic .tit .and Liberation News

Lipman go home

by Stanley Oayan

~Xpl1Se~ hnnself as Lev did rise to the occasion . Dare
to expose yourulves. Just take a look through lhc
The preachers of medioo.rc: dcspau have put back rssues, Did anyhody. anybody at all of the
down another who dared to ltve hrs insprration : people 1nvolved expose any tl ung of their
Michel Levinson, of course , poet, actor-of-hie
mspiralton? Do you call that kind of dribble a m111g
Now if I had a hand in Lev's case. I w ouldn ' t to the conflict, Harvey Lipman?
have given him that kind of money either. But the
This year. we students are all losers But sumc of
way those slobs, sp ititual slobs put hiq1 down was us lost for real ~ we made ourselves vulnerable. Lev.
pure and simply ugly. lan DcWaal (his vote for Lev
Spitzler. myself and are stronger after the frustration
was really against him). Keith Frankel, Harold
but sorne have lost as bureaucrats lose
not
Guberman, Dave Steinwald and the petty people personal dreams, but puiJ, status, self tmage. I am
who cashed in by letters to tl1e editor.
angered because Lev's detractors are without style.
Slobs. petty people, and readers. when a man they are political and aesth~tic bores.

�Affl~a

~T~
l .

'l\1ud s /in:.iitu.!
To thl' Hclttor

In h1~ .antcl~ o f Muc h 15, Mr. Lipman lahelcd
Bu lf.llu as un1 ~ue and proceeded to run d o wn a h~l
o f unil{ue cn ttliSOIS Thas as ssmply untrue.
First
"Buffal o a luck town." Ho w ~:.an Me.
Ltpman cxpeu an are11 population o f ab o u t one
millio n to support the same quantit y and variety ()(
act ivit1es as thJt o f say, New Yorlc C ity and Its
Nu rro unding PQpulation of at least 15 million? Also.
arc there tw ~&gt; rypes of (.;t&gt;rnmW'l&amp;tics, rnegalopolillc~
and hick town:.''
" The new~&gt;la~tlng" At least tht• local staff ts not
.tt su~.-h a los:. J.S to J)H:Io.. vut all the faults of U 8 tv
fiJI l he VOid_
" The weathcr" a ~.:hma t c IS th \: wuy 11 is. O ne
cannot neglect Lo~ Angeles' goo41 poants merdy
beldU\e at rams ~o often
"On Pothntel&gt;" I I'~ mce Ll\al Mr L IJ)I1l 311
reali tes the D .P W. docs ats JOb and rehu1ld~ the
tughw ays every spnng I've heard of :.ome D.P .W .s
that let the garbage ptle up tw o st ones lugh
" The ineplltude of the Common Coun~;il."
Really now! L ook at our o wn st ud ent governments
o r St:ste 11nd Federal governments
Buffalo, hence. IS not unaqu e and 1s undeserving
of all t he smde remarks M r l1pman stnf,les out for
Buffalo. One w ould tlunk that after surviVIng foUl
years in thiS " unbearable" place Mr Lapman would
realize that Unaversity..('ommunity relut10ns arc not
goo d . He m1gh l also have reallted that UB's
relationship with the commun11 y IS a two-way st rcet
and does not need "J OUrnalist~" whu , fur Iucio. nf
better subjec:h. fill th e au r With thetr uwn
m ud -slinging.
Murk 1/utf.rtlfl

Gr'" ethant supporletl
To the

Edttor

We, th &lt;" undersagnc:c.l paduJh' ~tudents 1n
socaology, WL'h to daloassuoa te nurM: Ives frnrn the
~tttacks on the ..-haracter of Saxon C.rahJm made
recently by several md lvtduals
Whtle we are not unarn1ous an uur chOILC:S lor
the new ch aarm an of our ,clepart men! , we are unued
m reeling thaa Dr Gtaham IS nnl an unworthy
candidate anc.l that at would be an IDJUSiu:e 1f reLent
attacks were ~o prejudadal as to prevent has re(eiving
C(!Ual co nsideration for the posataon.
In our opanion, the pnmary cnteria lor select mn
to th e chairrnanshap 'hould be the candi1tJtcs'
Rch o larship and su pport among st uden ts .1nd falulty
38 md ka ted hy the lllJtl hallof hl'lll wtt h111 the
department
Wt/ltum Walt o/1
/,mt•ttu J WtllttJftlf
Ronald 8 W•'lllllfnk
Oom1u L. I'm~ tJ 111
S&lt;Iru /.urt•fltltJ

1-tlr''"" ,,,,, ,,,
/J1 J..1

1/11

l&gt;tufll' M l'indtol/
low.~t·

,,n.J

.11..... ,, ,,, , ~"'"

J.uu 7iuuJ...t
I . Cunt-...•c•{(
R ohat Wt."
I oil Mc.~r~lt

H'l t T&lt;ll

othc"

,,,lll''""' 1•'"' '"

Over tho past few weeks, we ba~ often UJed the
term "HBZ" without explanation. HBZ - or,
Housina Block "Z" - is Uut buildinl on the priJon
.,ounds, separated from the aeneral population, that
praenUy !houses those approximately 100 men who
bavo been sin&amp;)ed out by the authorities for their
"alle1ed" !Participation in the September uprising.
In "n•ormal" times the inhabitants of HBZ are
those who have mental problems, those who are
caught commitina homosexual acts, those who read
"questionable" literature, jailhouse lawyers,
religuous dissenters, those who complain about
health treatment t o the doctors, those who have
displeased their parole officer; and those other
incorregible spirits
who sometimes attempt to
oraanize t•) change prison conditio ns - who refuse
to b e brok,en by the correctional authorities.
In extraordinary times, such as have existed in
Attica for six months now (Sept 13 - March 13).
the composition o f the " Box" has become purely
politkal.
If th e pnson sy~tem ex1st s to punish the guilty
and separute the nght-doers (Naxon, Rockefeller,
Oswald, Matchdl, ct al) from rhe wrong-d oers, then
punitive sc:gregation, the " So,.," exists to ~epa nat e
the very-wrongo(joep, (Malxolm X , Roger Champan ,
Sam Mt:lvalle G roosman, George Jackson) awa y from
the "susoepllble" general rrison population
further away from the nght-&lt;loer' and the powerfull
interests I hey represent, thuse who mm1ster t u J
sy~tem th a t sees every ~rious challenge as a rnrn.
every act nf true sohdant y a threat "' thear syste m.
punishable by deach
Broth e·r " M." J forme r pantht'r, rt~t:eutly ba~:k
o n the ~lri~e t , Wa!&gt; plalell an the "Box" late m Jul y
and w.JS lc:t o ut only to he sh1ppcd to ('omst o.:k
Priso n W1tl11n hours of the mussacre on the t3th. l h'
wu held iJn HBZ during the whole of the up riSing,
and co nsequently c.l1d no t parhl' tpak Undaunted
tlw State Troo pers daily beat Bro r her ''M ," an d all
the Broth e1rs in the Box an y way
Th is was his thard time in L~ota tton t-11~ dlltrj!e
lhts tune was that he wr o te legal wnls and did o th er
legal wo rlc fo r ~o rne o f Ius fello w inmates. 1 has
spec1fac wnt (a pctataon sagn ed by tg Black and h
Wh1te Brut hers) had t o d o with clanfyin&amp; a
technlcalil)l in parole proceedings, a techmcal block
put there by a co unty judze. Despite a recent
Supreme Courl decUion ( Johnson vs. Avery) which

allowa inmatea with lepl knowledae to aid, without
pwUsbment, other inmatea, Brother "M" wu p~n a
clloice : withdraw the petition, or,1o to the Box.
In normal times, accordina to Brother "M",
inbabitantl of HBZ are atrip searclled on the way to
and from visits with their lawyen, reoeive .erbal and
physical abuse, pt only cowboy boolta to read, no
educational materials, no sehool, no reuPoua
~Crvices, virtually no medical auention except
" downers," o ne blanket (windows are always left
open), no newspapers, and no TV. Lep.l mail. ia
censored and confiscated. The cells are very small
and barren; thno concrete walls, and one wall with a
smaU barred window leading to the corridor. The
cells are stagered in such a way that when one looks
out of the bars, one sees only the opposite wall in
the corrid or. The window in the colJ is painted over
shutting o ut t he light. Showers can be taken only
o nce a week, haircuts are civen o nce a month. A
person is locked in 23 ho urs and 45 minutes a day.
The remaaning 15 minutes, at the guards discretion,
l'&lt; g~ven t o e xercise in the yard , one inmate at a time.
rhe "yard " 1.8 o n the roof of the third floor and is
a....enllally another ceU, 8 x 12, with bars for a
leiUnll,
In e 1t Ira o rdmary tJmes, the ordinary is
tntenssfied 'in 11 IS wath the Box, now populated by
I 00 so l.Jited anrom Jible wrong-doers - men who
may have dnne nottung more than possessed a
~u bver.;avl.' book ur J strong, sure walk. Conditions
san~:e Sepll'mhcr .trc be.:omang progressively worse.
fhc~e I 00 men, who may or may not have taken an
a clive part 1n I he profoundly revolutio nary act of
Septembcr aH· w;utmg to be legally purushed for
thet r guilt
111 sohdant y. Because of the nature o f
the Box , the rhystcal atonHLa t inn of human beings,
•ts uo;e in l)u) ra!&gt;c ·~an Jtlt:mpt to break the spirit of
the rl.'be lhon, the spant of the Whate-Black- Latino
'&gt;O hdartl y, hy hreakang the lfllllvadu &lt;~l 'pirts of those
Ill HBZ .
l'hc- IJrut h c r' have held. fhey last o n the 13th
nt cuch m unth In memory of the ~pi.ri t of solidarity,
in memory of the d ead, ho pang that the solidarity
will holc.l together It remwns for us to ht:lp with our
own solldan ty . We must act before the State finds
itse lf ann occnt by lindLng lls challengers inevocably
l\lllty , the "'~JJenge inhe~enUy criminal.
THP-IR LIV ES DEPEND UPON OUR
SUPPORT!

SuiJ•port Health Service
To tilt- E'd11for
I' m wntmg tim letter an hehall of JIJ tlwse
~t ud ents,

who fo r some reason or an ot her. hlid It&gt; br
(:Onlined to th e Inpatient Chnal at the Umvers11y
Infirmary
Well , you've got to admit , when you're really
sack, d o wn and o ut , it's not a bad p lace at all. Ckan
beds, good ~.;arc. JOVaul nurses, and free food! What
else can bring you happiness?
Rece ntly , I heard that the: Stute ( Rocky) feel'
that the re IS no necc.l for thts part of the l h:alth
Center What would Dr l ol.kne r , o f " Medacal
Center," ~ay''! Ro~ky wants to phase it out! rhas
was hard for me to digest for'Jee1ng that next year
thi.S mstatutaon'" population wtJI be undoubtedly
ancrcas1n11. The Infirmary only has 28 beds, which
may I add, are usuJII y full The Amherst Campus hab
no d1n1cal fac11it1es at all, but will have
approxamately a 6 hwldi ng college dmm .;omplex
housang about 3 000 student\. How can a -.tudent
population t has large ~urvive wtthout any rm:d1ral

Wa~re up

facaUtaes"
After ~umr basil resear ch, I've found out that
the Outpallent Department ~erv1ces app roxamste ly
100 st ud e nts per day. and tho: Inpat ie nt Oepurtrnent
ha~ an al11lUOI turnover 11f approximately 900
stud ents wuh 2,600 days of medical care. This does
IIH.Iudc th ose who have been referred to pnvate
[lhySJcaans tH hospual~ for a more detat.led
evaluation
My concem hes, no t on ly rm those ~tud ent s
wh o are still enro Ued , but for those: who will be
entc:nng and also for those Nur.&gt;es, Doctors, Aids,
and set:r etanes who face poss1hle JOb d isphtlement.
It IS u r to us, as the in tegnl pllrt wluch makes
up lhe megalopolls of this University, to evaluate in
our own mands the necessaty of such clinical
facalataes I urge all r hose co ncemed not to sit back
.md JOlfl the apathett~; uowd. but to p1ck up a pen o r
a pencal and wnte Dr Ketter and Albany ~.:oncerru ng
lhl\ l.rucaal problem

students!

To tht• Ediwr
Once agatn thr Ketter JdmiDISflallon Ita!&gt;
shafted the J ewis h pupulation on campus. Des p1tc
numerous pelltaon~. talls, and suppiJI.'atlons there ;are
st1ll dasscs s~.-hed uh.:d lor M an:h 30th and 3 1th ,
thcrchy dc~pnvang thc 1000 kw) on campus fwru
'&gt;Pendmg the ftr"' two ltuly day' Jl\d the \eder~. rite
'£JCC:tal l'a .... a•vcr mc:.tls wtth their fanulat:~
Js tf 111\tH·e (I&gt; ~lll'lll' that lltJny pt•np)~ IIIlo " '
untenable J ,.,,t.tltcofl mt•rc'/~· l11ttJII~• of tllc•tr
rdtJ,'IIIW h.:/it•/J Jill' I\ 1111\HIU\t) .1 l.JSI.' l.&gt;t hl.ttJI'll
.tn,l uv1•r1 .ta,, nruulallllll h~ tiH' rultng d:J"c:' aud
W\' flt1· •ldlm' 1111"1 no llliii!CI .tu:o:pl 11111 I.IIC:

PrcJudac\: ~annot be battled wtth word\, 11 must
lw diDitnJted wtth posallve ;u:t wn
PI ell!&gt;~
I) If yo u are a sym pathetiC student, Je wiSh or
non·J ew1sh, d o not atte nd classes on Th ursday and
}-11day.
~)If yuu are a p rofessor , l'3 ncel yourlhur..da y
,md .. riday classes to allow stuc.lenls to go h ome lor
rhe h•&gt;hday
II 1:. tndecd ~urrn,lng that the largest rnmonty
on lJtnpu' l.tn be '&gt;v Unl'\lUI\IIl~ally igm1red tame and
•• g.~m . Per hap~ 1hL~ small ~hl1W of ~olitlarit y will
rcn11nd the htgwlg' th.tl we \lllll'n\1

( Fv/J...

4111l'lh

~0

March 1972 The Spectrum Page seven

�Appalachian Symposium March 21-24
The ,Appalachian Symposium, being held from March
21 - 24, \NIII give University students a c:tlance to meet
people of a different lifestyle and from a different part of
the country. During these days, there will be en
information booth, book display and photographic display
of Appeluchia from 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. in 1he Center Lounge
of Nortc&gt;n Hall. There will be crafts and music
dernonstr.ations from 10 a.m . - 4 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room , speakers in Residence Workshops from noon - 3

p.m. i~ A~ 234 Norton Hall and a photographic e)(hibit
by U01vers1ty student Lonny Shavelson from 10 am - 4
p.m. in the Second Floor Gallery.
· ·
The cra~le ~ musicians encompass suc:tl
talents as ~ultmg, weav1ng, broom-making, bluegrass
m':"i~. carv1ng, bas~etrv •. woodcarving, blacksmithing,
sp1n01~ and m?Untam whittling. These people will speak
and display the1r crafts and talents and should provide a
worthwhile and rewarding e)(perience.

\

_____

_;

Page eight . The Spectrum . 20 March 1972

----

___

�•

n March 21-24

om 234 Norton Hall and a photographic exhibit
ity student Lonny Shavelson from 10 a.m. - 4
Second Floor Gallery.
:raftspeople and musicians encompass such
quilting, weaving, broom-making, bluegrass
ving, . basketry, woodcarving, blacksmithing,
1d mountain whittling. These people will speak
r their crafts and talents and should provide a
and rewarding experience.

Photos by Shavelson

20 March 1972 . The Sepctrum . Page nine

�Increase aid

Nixon: halt new busing
"There are right reasons for
opposing busing, and there are
wrong reasons - and most people,
including large and increasina
numbers of Blacks, oppose it for
reasons that have little or nothing
to do· witb race. It would
compound an irijustice to persist
in massive busing si.mply because
some people oppose It for the
wr ong reaso ns," declar~d
President Nixon on Thursday
night.
Stating that some federal
courts "have sone too far," Mr.
Nixon uraed Congress to lesislate
an immediate halt to all new
studcnt-busina orders. In addition
to his appeal for an end to busing,
he proposed to channel $2.5
billion into poor neighborhood
schools.
The President, terming busing
"one of the most difficult issues
of our time," did not speU out
exactJ y how long his proposed
"moratorium on new busing•·
would last. Nor did he give details
of the "equa l educatiOnal
o p p o r I unities act" he 1s
submitting to Congress.

Appeal to public
Mr. Nixun made a direct appeal
to citizens to put pressure on
Congress in behalf of his program.
He said : " If you agree with the
goals I have described tonight
to stop more busing now 8Jld
provide equality of education for
all of our children - I urge you to
let your congressmen and senators
know your views so that Congress
will act promptly to deal wi'h this
problem ."
The chid executive outtined
his stand two days after florida
residents voted against busing by a
three to o ne margin , and George
WaJJace , ca mpaigning asainst
busing, s wept the Flottda
Democratic presidentiaJ primary.
The White House sajd that Mr.
Nixon had made hi~ decision
before Tuesday's vote in Florida.
Courts went too far
Mr. Nixon saic.l there is urgent
need for action because or a
number of recent decisions o f
lowe r federal courts. "Those
courts have gone too far - tn
some cases beyond the
requirements laid down by the
Supreme Court - in ordering
massive busing to achieve racial
balance. The decisions have lert 10
their wake co nfusion and
contradiction in the law - anger,
fear and turmoil in local
communities, and worst of aU ,
agonized concern among hundreds
of thousands of parents for the
education and the safety of their
children who have been forced by
c.ourt order to be bused miles
away from thcil neighborhood,"
said the President.
Some opponents of busing
advocate a cons titutional
amendment to deal with the
quest10n and Mr. Ntxon said this
"deserves a thorough
consideration by the Congress on
lis ments ." However, he said that
''as an answer to the 1mmediate
problem we face of stopping more

busiq now, the constitutional
amendment approach hat a fatal
flaw - it takes too lona."
Estimatina that ic would take at
least a year to 18 months before
an amend ment could become
effective, be said, "wbat we need
is action pow - not action two,
three or four years from now."

Equal education lqjslation
In addition, Mr. Nixon said
t bat administration-drafted
legislation " would require that
every state or locality must grant
equal educational opportunity to
every person regardless of race,
color or national origin." He said
that this would mark the first
time t h at "the c h eris h ed
American ideal of equality of
educational opportunity would be
affirmed in the law of the land "
In reporting his proposal o f
$2.5 billion in education aid, Mr.
Nixon said : "It is tim~ for us to
make a national commitment to
see t hat the schools in the central
cities bl' upgraded so that the
cltildren who go there will have
just as good a chance to get
quality educa tion as do the
children who go t o schools m the
suburbs."
Without going into details, the
Pre111de nt also said the legislation
would "establish an educational
bill of r~ghls for Mex·
1can-Americans, Puerto Ricans,
Indians and ot hers who start their
educallon under language
handacaps I&lt;&gt; make Ct'llllln tha l
they , tno, w iII have equal
opportunity "

Justice Dept. cao intervene
On one pomt Mr. N1xon docs
not have to wait for Congressional
approval. He announced that he is
directing the Justice Department
to ''intervene in select cases where
the lower courts have gone
beyond the Supreme Court 's
requirements in ordering busing."
The Pres1dent said that the
busmg debate has an "emotional
unden.:urrent " that he defined as
''the feeling that some people
have that to oppose busing is to
be anti-Black." "This is dangerous
nonsense," he declared.
Acknowledging that some
people oppose busing because of
racial preJudice , he said that to
co nclude that all anti-busing
sentiment reflects preJudice "ts a
v1cious libel on millions of
concerned parents who oppose
busing not because they are
against desegregatwn, but because
they are for better education for
their child ren."
N1xon summed up his stand on
busing with these words: "Bus1ng
is a bad means to a good end."

Paul Kurtz: UCRA concerned
with freedom on the campus ·
The •Univenity should be a voice her opinions on campus ; bad
"free arena for the widest this been atopped. then the UCRA
expression of opinion s," would be involved, he continued.
accord ing to Paul Kurtz, He believed: "Whatever she (Ms.
philosophy professor. A member Oavll) wants to say on carnpw
of the Board of Directors for sho uld be said, no question about
University Centers for Rational • j t ,"
Alternatives (UCRA), Dr. Kwtz
stated their primary goal was to UnUrnited freedom
Learning and teaching are the
sec ure ac'ademic freedom on
appropriate
purpose and function
universities throughout the United
of
a
university,
according to
States.
Charges have been leveled by UCRA philosophy. The university
S tate University of Buffalo SDS ·s hould be a "center for critical
and other committees concerned inquiry and dissent." This dUsent
with the trial of Ang.ela Davis that should not be confined or limited,

UCRA has been inappropriately
quiet. They sta ted that if the goals
of UCRA were actually ucademlc
freedom they should have come
to her defen~ . Dr. Kurtz did not
agree with this issue. He stated
that the trial of Ms. Davis
concerns matters "off campus''
and the UCRA are concerned with
freedoms on campus.
UCRA is aware of ''tnternal
and external pressures to squash
intellectual questioning," but did
not VIeW the Davis trial as an
example of it. Ms. Davis is on tnal
for a criminal act, not for an
mfringement of her rights to voice
opinions on campus, stated Dr.
Kurtz..
Ms. Davis had been allowed to

WK'IW CNMI

~ALO

w.d., Mar. 22, I P.M.

for those of you who
missed the red living
room, remember
that elephants hide
in jelly bean jars.

il'Wnhons

~c Moll

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..,,. ....,

~5.$

Tfturs., Mar. 23, I

P.~

Klekthona Mu.ak Halt
Mol11 Ploor ~"
lolcony U-~

frt, Mar. 24, I , ,M.
,...._,ial Auditorium
DID YOU ARRANGE FOR THE

All

MOb , . . ., ... d ,

$5.50-S...j0-$4.00

Pa.\~;.._over

Seder?

Call Hillel now at 836-4540

Page ten . The Spectrum . 20 March 1972

~cording to Dr. Kurtz. He did
state however tha t physical
violence was not Included. The
UCRA is against such violence as a
method for protesting
i n fringements of academic
freedom.
Their goal is to maintain such
freedom in light of the increasing
inte rvention of legislative or
governmental action on campuses.
The university should possess an
autonomy aU its own, according
to Dr. Kurt~. He believed that
governmental interference is
mcreuing. Whenever any power
attempts to restrict free speech on
a campus, he believed they should
be prevented from doing so. A
freedom to express opinions

Sat., April 1, 8:30 P.M.
Kl•lrthans Muaic Holt
llo\oin floor ~-~
letcony ~-S3

FfSTNAl present

4

within the university community
should be maintained at all times.
A lea.Oet passed out by thi~
University 's, People's News
Service, Buffalo Labor Commit tee
and the Angela Davis Defense
Committee charged the UCRA
with aiding the powers that bt to
"frame" Ms. Davis. In remainmg
quiet, they believed the UCRA
had not only shirked their
responsibility but, have reacted
contrary to their stated purpose.
The issue of Ms. Davis appears
to be the k.ey issue between these
organizations but not the only
one . Whil e refut in g the
accusations made against the
UCRA concerning Ms. Davis. Dr
Kurtz was adamant about their
stand regarding acadern•c:
freedom.
The univers•tY s huuld
definitely uphold a tugh wnce111
for allowiJ'Ig multifaried opinmns.
Dr. Kurtz stated that whether
opinions vo1ced be left, nght or
middle of the road, they should
be given full freed om. The leaflet
condemned UCRA and labeleu
tJ1em responstble for establishing a
basis for ''nationw1de purges e&gt;f
left professors."
The leaflet aligns McCarthy era
tactics to t he UCRA . Dr . Kurll
~pok~ constderably about
the
oppoSite behef. " An yone should
be allowed to teach and eXpl(lS~
opinmn," he stated. This as not a
McCa r thy att1tude . on tht•
contrary Dr. Kur11 ~poke of a
symposium held by UC'RA WhJch
discussed onctemporary university
situations. He believed UCRA was
definitely involved 1n preventing
an ''erosion in intellectual
standards" and the "intervention"
of internal or external pressures
which might limit or deny
academic freedoms.
A forum between UCRA and
those in defense of Ms. Davis has
been proposed by the latter. The
leaflet ends with the "charge" of
"complicity in the vic1ous attack
o n Angela Davis" and an open
invitation to UCRA to "defend
themselves." Dr Kurtz had not
seen the leaflet. Whether any
action will be taken on this
remains to be seen.

BIG SHOWS

RICHARD HARRIS
THE BEACH BOYS
HUMBLE PIE
LILY TOMLIN
lUI Kill CRIMSOI &amp; SWUTH08

STAR OF ''1.lU8H·II"

�by Je~~e E. Lerint

hones: mwcle and power, groomed to
perfec tion. The world's futest animal, in
perfec t rhythm. Proudly . as if they knew
The thoroughbred race horse, 106 pounds
of skilled horseman, and the trial.
"Hey Julio, you gonna bring this o ne m
for me, man?" The passionate shouts
ac ross the fence and onto the track fail to
dominate the subtle sense of tranquility
that exists between man and an1mal, o~ly
minutes before the test. The sport, a
respected ceremonial, independent of the
drudgery ; even as the pounds o f green fly
o ver the counte rs, just yards away .
Somehow . even amidst this, the sport
retams its digni ty. ''Ride 'em Belmont.:,
ride him home!"

The trumpets resound ; nobly,
traditionally . And that tradition, as old as
competition itself, staunchly parades its
powerful essence onto the turf. The
electric board reads '1'rack Condition
Fast."
Faithful followers drift down toward
the lower level, score sheet in hand. The
smell of cigars and strong tobacco c utting
its way thro ugh thro ngs of unpatient
partisans. The odds board regenerates at
2Q.second intervals, as Lhe track.~ters,
adamant in aU their festive fashion , divide
th eir attention between ho rse and
Oickenng fortune , sport and business . All
ages tum toward the entrance gate. The
official voice of Ne w Yo rk Racing Do or &lt;fit
announces (in the vo1ce as old as time
fjve minutes to Post Ttme. Life stories
ttsell) . "The ho rses are o n the track!" The are parenthetically exchanged before the
gala procession gallantly 5ummons itself tremulo us enclave of pounding hoofs, and
onward
the do o r die shouts of the last dollar
The parad e con ttnues, qu1te Those that have lost everythmg,.those that
deliberately. from one end o f the grand never had anything to begin with, those
stand 10 the o ther From the box seats and that have made it their life, and those that
season tickets to the last reaches of general JUSt plain live for it. AU gro uped together
adm tssion, everyo ne gets their equal chance for these mo ments, in common cogmzancc
to VJew maJesty m all tis splendor There Alike in one respect : their love for the
ate no w e lcomes over the offic tal
track. T imeless, ageless, untainted, ltfe
loudspeaker. no souvenirs, not even a instde these castle walls remains t11e same
nattonal anthem . The New Yoric S tate Tax No telephones, no baclong o ut , no o uts
Commission kno ws that God does not Just o ne minute and 40 seconds of chance
condone gambling. And the unwritten rule And all that exists in the world fur many is
~~ that you just do n 't play the American
a chance to be purt of it. So when those
natiOnal anthem witho ut G\)d o n your side . gates Oy o pen, the world is a ho rse race,
But alas, $300,000 a dlly is enough and you're riding that odds board to
sacofic1al condonation.
heaven , or at least to the Win wtndow.
The sole hnk between spectacle and
It is now Post Time
~peLI:IhH religtously remam s a four-inch
" And they' re off." hed f'a pacella 's
11ckr1 Number 5 sir. two times. And the voice blanng o ut over the loudspeaker,
clectnc mechanism fai thfully spits o ut two hardly audible against a background of
chances to nde a wtnner T o d1ce w1th building murmur, and empassioned cm·s.
unp;llented destmy As the large clock un "Come 011 Gustines. you brought tum
1111' \l&amp;fl board read!&gt;, "F1gh t mmutes to hume at Hutleah " Cra7Cd fJns try
desperately to see the ac11on, »S masses
Po~t ltmc"
spnng to t heir feet and chmh up ontu the11
chaus. Frustrated holders of btntx:ulars try
S 10 2 o n number 4
Tht: mag~c 1S well umlerway fhe desperately, but rn vain, to avmd those
wnulnws h:.ve been open nnw for I S wretched blind ~pots I veryone IS now un
mututcs Man and hurse. oonve01ently the~r seats. t he rhythm 1s utc red1ble. "Krep
lum back unlll the stretch Baet.&lt;~,llun ' r t11e
pacJ,aged for a mere JHICC o l two dollars
Titat's five to two on number 4 , number q h1111 o ut! "
As they come ou t ol the back St1 eh.h.
ha' dro pped fr o m JO, down W eight tu
one Somebody wanders past rhe $ 100 win the moment of truth draw~ near, the last
wmllow long enough to hear an elderly quarter rmlc. twv lurlong!&gt; nl grt1C.•In1g
gcntleman tn a gray sport Jacket , turn his glory, tlw srretclt.
The 1ockcys arc pwpped up over the
lte:nl Ill rnufne, "number 7, 20 lime~.
pk'ase " The ttcket hnes th1t:ken and sn m mane of thetr hmse' Kn ee~ pac..kec.J tightly
1&gt;roportwn do the lrquor sales, as the udds agamst the rear of the neck The wlup
keep changmg and the anXIOUs eye~ never comes down evenly, 10 !.trtde to the pcrlc~:t
rhythm1c pulsattons 11f the an1mal's swill
fe1gn from the e ternal board
Oull.tdc. the jockeyed horses are com111g advance. Ve•ballm c. d ruppmg back That\
JJnuud tu g~ve the hungry cruwd a last Obstreperous ~ummg up un the uuts•dc,
tonk at what pnce glory The ltKkcys are With Casually runnmg neck and nec..k wrlh
dressed tn )()me ourlamhsh color; wlute K.mg of the Castle "Take em Baet~ . lake
and bnght orange. pmk and yclluw 'em .. The electrontc board rella~he' the
tnmmmgs. a bnghl red cap And the numbers · 3, 1. 7, bas they en ter the h\)OH'

$!re tc h . The screams are now the voice of
delirium .
The 'holy decmoo •
Obstrepcrou~ IS moving fast on the
uutside· " Watch number 7, watch 7'" As
they go over the finish line, it appears to be
3, 7, I or 7, 3, I Phuto Finish" flashes on
the odd$ board
The "Of/ictal" s.gn has not ye t appeared
un the screen All hold t1ghtly onto thetr
tu;ket~. ntlW pat ron izmg &lt;Lsc1pies of the
holy dec1s11m , still nut yet s1gned The
apparent loser5 stt back rehcently lor most,
aggravated .tnd explunng the poss1bllit1es
lur the next race Some becomt' qutte v1"-al
ahout then loss " I knew I shouldn't have
bet that 5 hnr~c. why the hell d1J I l1~1e11
to you "
The poss1bl~· W1n11er~ keep thc u eye~
steadfast o n the fateful screen lin~cr~
cros.\cd , hnp1ng, praying, hesitant to let out

that burs t of JOY that is not yet theirs.
Fred Capacella comes over the PA to
:announce the wmners. Some people thro w
their losmg tickets mto lhe air, some
mutter obscenities under thear breath,
o thers curse the jockey, still othen theit
wwes and friends . For lhe winners, the
right to procla1m the world famous track
adage of. " I told you so; I kne w it from
I he begmnmg, I called ct perfect." These
wmntng self adulatiOns continue aJJ the
way to the wm counter But as aJJ things
rnust pass, U1e next race begins in 20
mmutes. and tt1r v1ctory fades to the
oruush1ng rnumcnlum ol Race 2 Tile
Ia t tcr waller r:. tucked nea tly lfltu the
prevalent rrony ol c1gh l more races to go.
l1ghl mot~ to~c' of the electroniC dice,
;rnd e 1 ~hl c hances lu throw away
sh ort-lived cc~lat;y And somehow, t11e
unly sure Wlllllt:l at A(tucduc t, remains
Alha ny.

Forest fires destroy
beauty.
It takes nearly a century to grow the
green beauty of a tree
And only a careless second w1th a match
to leave only black uglrne:;:.
Onl ou can revent forest ftres

....
..
..
..
··---"·
. We are looking for ~--------------------~

I•. ''Miss Hot Pant.~'' .
I
I
I
I

S.U. B.

1·

an amateur Hot Pants - Bikini - Dress

•

Fashion Show is being held at the
Professional Boxing Matches
Monday. March 17th at 8:30 p.m .
at the
Memorial Auditorium

•
•

•
•

A trophy and 25$ gift cemficate to b&lt;• awaTded to
"Miss Hut Pont$" NAME

~~~---------------

ADDRESS

=SC~H~OO~L~----------

•

•1 Parricipann

~~;~

preunt
appliqation for free admission.
---F.•or.~rrher info::,arion call ~~kpert 1 4,!~ 2422 lf!l•

;

J

Concert Committee
presents

Dave Mason
plus

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO. NY. 14226

,..

Black Mariah

Thursday. March 23
- 2 shows - 7 :00p.m . &amp; 10:30 p .m .
at BuffaJo State CoUege Union Social Hall
TickeCs -studenCs S 1.50 -Non-students $2.50
(only 1,000 tickecs for each show)
available at Norton, Buf. St. ticket office

.,

I
~

environmental
design
BFA Proarems
Cert1tic•te Proa!llms
For into eont•ct reeistrar

P1rsens

~

....4

SC.IOIIIIesiDD

66 Wtst 12 St . liN YorllOOII
l\

20 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�.

Priority Allocations· ?•
Following is the list of club allocations for they...- 71-72 and their
request for 72-73. Budget hearings will start Thursday, March 23.

BUDGET

BUDGET

BUDGET

BUDGET

1971-72

1972-73

1971-72

1972-73

Contd.

Contd.

750.00
Activist Youth for Israel
470.00
A.I.E.S.E.C.
337.50
American lnst. of Aeronautics &amp; Astronautics
335.00
American I nst. of Chemical Engineers
790.00
American lnst. of Industrial Engineers
790.00
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
1290.00
Arab Cutture Club
1415.00
Brazilian Club
360.00
Bridge Club
698.00
Chess Club
780.00
Circolo ltalano
750.00
Club Latino
891.00
Council of History Students
1820.00
Dance Club
1310.00
Debate Club
942.50
German Club
700.00
H.P.E.R. Majon Club
1000.00
Iranian Student Club
915.00
Korean Student Assoc.
455.00
Krishna Yoga Society
450.00
Lemar
Native American Awareness Org .
1460.00
Nuning Student Assoc.
1025.00
Occupational Therapy Club
275.00
Pakistian Student Assoc.
580.00
P.O.D.E.R.
5250.00
Black Student Umon
20,150.00
School of Pharmacy Student Assoc.
953.70
Schussmeister Sk1 Club
14,885.00
Slavic Club
490.00
Spanish Club
1839.00
Student Art Board
1645.00
Student Branctl of Electrical &amp; Electromcs
437.00
Student Chapter A .C.M.
905.00
Student Faculty Film Club
6603.75
Student Gov't of Faculty of Eng.
1285.00
and Applied Sciences
Student Physical Therapy Assoc.
610.00

1999.00

•

1420.00
1226.00
1945.00
850.00
6400.00
3316.00
356.00
15,623.00
3200.00
5670.00
1245.00

•

•

1587 .00

•

1980.00
1785.00

•

13,350.00
2545.00
1358.00
465.00
1910.00
32,500.00

•

920.00
15,000.00
1205.00
2940.00
2790.00

•
1055.00
13,605.00

•

Student Polish Culture Club
2625.00
4720.00
Student Theater Guild
Students for Israel
1670.00
U.S . Amateur Radio Society
987.00
Undergraduate Biology Assoc.
285.00
Undergraduate Medical Society
960.00
U.S. Geological Society
916.00
1260.00
U.S. Opera Club
376.00
U.B. Sports Car Club
2920.00
U.S . Vets
225.00
International Club
1150.00
New Age Foods Club
360.00
Youth Against War &amp; F as11m
1652.00
Chinese Student Assoc.
1336.00
African Club
5125.00
People News Service
160.00
Accounting Club
260.00
American Society of Civil Engineen
335.00
Student Medical Tech. Assoc.
870.00
Undergraduate Management Stud. Assoc .
1282.00
Ukranian Student Club
2249.00
Women's Liberation
7140.00
Video Connection
H1storical Conflict Sjmulation
632.00
750.00
Third World Veteran Alliance
Photography Club
727.00
Physics Students Assoc.
89.oo·
Greek. Club
440.00
U.B. Gay Liberation
825.00
French Club
500.00
Undergraduate Psychology
775.00
Azteca
749.00
Soc1etY of Engineering Sc1ence
305.00
Undergraduate Anthropology Club
200.00
Art Histor Undergraduate Assoc.
600.00
Student Education Assoc.
550.00
U.S . Geological
400.00

3178.00
9250.00
3330.00
1317.00
1050.00
1230.00

•

2875.00
767.00
6970.00

•

•
1285.00
3565.00
7600.00
18,300.00

•

517.00
1475.00
3015.00
3380.00
4490.00
16,770.00
710.00
21 ,970.00

•

345.00
1965.00

•
1785.00
1300.00

•
986.00
1000.00
910.00
650.00
1272.40

------ ------TOTAL

1230.00

TOTAL

$121,868.00

$259,630.00

•
These clubs will not be receiving funding for fiscal year '72-73, since
- Jeff Osinskt, Treasurer
thetr budgets were not turned 1n by March 15.

Become part of
The

NEW STUDENT ASSOC.
APPLICATIONS NOW AVAILABLE FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS

FINANCE COMMITTEE
SUB. BOARD I
STUDENT JUDICIARY JUDGES
DIRECTORS OF : ELECTION &amp; CREDENTIALS
PUBLIC INFORMATION
LEGAL CLINIC
ATHLETIC REVIEW BOARD
Interviews to be held Tuesday March 21, '72. Come to
room 205 Norton for application &amp; interview appointment!

- Tyrone Saunders, Executive Vice-President

Page twelve . The Spectrum . 20 March 1972

'

•

�Berrigan trial

Letters are main evidence
WASHINGTON, D.C. - (CPS) - '1'hese are
Friday notes, May 22, the Year of Our Lord, 1970."
Thus, modestly, began a correspondence that
was to have devastating effects. It consisted of about
two dozen letters exchanged between the imprisoned
Fr. Philip Berrigan and Sr. l!lizabeth McAlister,
anti-war u:tivists who played a risky game of post
office and lost.
The letters were smuggled to and from Berrigan
in the lewisburg, Pa. federal prison by Boyd F.
Douglas Jr., a trusted feUow convict who turned out
to bt an FBI informer.
References in the letters contribu ted to the
capture of the fugitive Fr. Daniel Berrigan In August
1970, and the arrest of eight draft board raiders in
Rochester, N.Y., the following month. They also
supplied the FBI with a mass of names and other
mformation about the "Catholic left" anti.war
movement.
Read aloud in the Harrisburg courtroom last
week, the letters are now the backbone of the
government's charge that Berrigan, McAlister and
five others on trial with them, conspired to kidnap
Henry Kissinger, bomb government property and
raid draft boards.
ungthy lettn
When they were read in court, many sections of
the often lengthy letters were clearly of little interest
1n the jury (several of whose members appeared to
tx: dozing) o r anyone else except Berrigan , McAlister
and ualous FBI agents.
But other sections of the letters, which total
about 70 pages, included discussions of a series of
Delaware draft board raids the Harrisburg defendants
arc accused of conspiring to perform .
AJso included in the letters are discussions of
&lt;lther past and future draft board raids and brief
mention of "the subterranean project in the
Otslrtct," which the informer Douglas says was a
plun 10 homb government heating pipes in February .

trust. But the sacrifices are accepted in view of the
hope war is expected to achieve.
"Can those who make peace be less sacrificing
than those who make war? We know the answer
Within our persons."
Urged Berrigan : " We've got to get together
more, do more ego-purifying, learn more, work
harder, take more calculated risks, read the Gospel
more, pray more and love people more. We've made
it a little tougher for them to murder, but we ain't
stopped the murder yet."
'Hose-pipe' backbones
Berrigan and McAlister's dedication is marred ,
however, by their easy dismissal of other war
opponents who are not engaged , as they are, in
"real" activities like raiding draft boards.
"As for the movement itself," Berrigan wrote,
"our analysis still holds. To a sobering degree. There
is nothing save what our people do. I get nauseated
by music festivals, by the ambiguity of the Vii/.Qge
Voiu (when this was read in court, the Vi/loge Voice
reporter in the press section broke into a wide gnn),
by Third Party talk, by the whole gamut of
confusion and cowardice.''
Elsewhere, he wrote of ''peace liberals.•· "All of
them have been through surgery . . . getting a
hose-pipe for a backbone when they were kids. HeiJ&gt;S
flexibility - bobbing and weav10g with issues."
Accompanying tlus low estimation of others'
effectiveness is over-estimation of their own. The
prime examples is the Kissinger k1dnap propo~~al
which, as McAlister put it , would include the
kidnapping of "big wig$ of the liberal ilk .. to sit as a
mock JUry In judgment Of\ Kissmger.

New-found activism
Berrigan vetoed the mass kidnapp1ng as
over-ambitious but added : " I like the plan and am
just trying to weave elements of modesty into it .
Why not coordinate it with the one against capitol
1()71
utilities?"
The most sensatiOnal letters are two exchanged
He agreed w1th McAlister that the kidnapperli
m August 1970 , which deal with the possibility of a should demand the cessation of bombing in
plan "to kidnap - in our terminology ma.Xe a Indochina and the release of political prisoners at
c..1tizen's arrest of- someone Wee Henry J(jssinger." home as ra.nsom. In the probable event that the
Whether or not the letters are illegally demands were not met , K1ssinger was to be released
consptratorial. the jury will decide. But it is clear unharmed anyway .
(Defense sources acknowledge that the idea of a
that , along with whatever elements of corrspuacy
they contain . the letters are loaded with religious political kidnapp1ng was briefly dascussed in the
and pulitrcal conviction, evidence of a warm personal summer of I 970, when several such k.idnappings had
tclatio n s hip (although embarassing personal recently been performed in South America. But the
references were deleted when the tellers were idea never got past thl" stage of general conversation .
presented in court) , arrogance and naJvete. as well as they say.
( McA!tster exaggerated thl" scope nf tlae
all the trtv1a of any personal correspond en~ .
dascussion in her letter to Berrigan , the sources say ,
tor personal reasons. to impress him (and herself)
The path of non-violence
Pohtacs. however, is foremost. "If the poor of with the depth of her relatively new-found act1v1sm
the world demand that this country needs and to cheer him w1th new~ of a fl\lUrtshing ant1waa
non-violent revolution , let'~ supply the need," wrote movement .
(8erriguu's re ply, thc defense Jllege~. c.:onst\IS lll
Berngan. who was (and is) serving his prison term fnr
two draft board ra1ds. The way h~ saw it, the the unfounded drcammg 11f a man 111 pnsnn .)
c.:untmuation of such raids was the path non violent
Ironic and touching
revolution should take.
The 111ost ironic
;ulll perhaps tht• rnml
Students. he wrote, should " be lead to the uJca
1hc
correspondence dH'
tuuclung
sec;t1uns
ol
thai occupying buildings. going nose to nose w1th
Herngan
's
expressions
of
fa1th
in
lhe cuuner Roytl
the cops and the N .G . (National Guard) L~ passe bad politics, bad tactics. They should shut duwn Oouglas. who wa.' fa1Lhlull c.leltven11g a cupy uf every
KOTC and begin to 7.ap Selective Service in collcge kller he carneJ to the f 131 .
"T h~ kx:al mm1stcr w1th JXHlhllm ({)nuglas) has
.111d university towns."
The attitudes ol Berrigan and McAii~tc1 lllwaru emerged as the hcst thing hercahouts su11.:r poilu
:mll·war acllvity was marked by the dedtcation nl vaccine,·· Bern gan wrote
I:lsewhere he added. "Our c.:h;ugr (f)I)Uglas)
car!ter Christians engaged in holy wars.
emerges
10 truly astountltng fash1on
the values and
Apparently moved by Berngan 's inca~&lt;:cratHHI.
McAI1ster wrote : " In tunes of war, the fam1ly is concerns that occupy us are begmnmg to conl&gt;umc
brol..cn up for mon ths. years. The possibilities are him . He's thlllktng 'movemen t ' Matk rny wllr~ he
separation, death. The demaJtd IS acceptance and wiU be one ol our best people."

UB vets show discontent
with GI·Bi11 by petitions
Area Vietnam Veterans are
spo n soring a petition drive
throughout Western New Yorlc: in·
an attempt to display their
dissatisfaction with present
inequities in the Gl Bill of R.iahts.
The petition calls on local
veterans to support the drive to
defeat the House of
Representatives bill number
12828. The bill is "an insincere
attempt by the administration to
appease veterans and win their
votes m the upcomina election,"
according to Mr. Gail Graham, a
member of the State University of
Buffalo veterans.
"Under the present bill,'' Mr.
Graham stated, "veterans are
aJJowed only S 17 5 per month for
living expenses while they are
going to school. ThlS IS well below
the S214 per month accepted as
poverty level Under bill number
12828, this allowance would r11ise
to S200 per month, but under this
bill we would loose our food
stamp allow11nce which in the
long·run would make the $25
raise even less significant ."
Mr. Graham aJso pointed out
that "the petition also exposes bill
128 28 as what it really is, an
attempt to pacify veterans in
order to obtain their votes in the
upcoming election. The bill was
pushed through committee ahead
of $Uch bills as the McGovern Bill
whiCh calls for a $2 14 monthly
allowance along With full payment
of the ve terans tu1t1on. The
attempt to now push the b11l
through Congress is only an
elect tOn year move and one can be
assured that no furth er action will
be taken 1f thL~ bill passes."

"We hope to distribute this
petition to all local veterans and it
is also our hope that the drive will
expand to the national level to
increase the pressure to pasa a
more equitable bill.''
The most important factor on
which the success of the petitio n
drive hinges according to Mr.
Graham, is the support they
obtain !rom non~tudcnt veterana.
"We feel that it is most important
to gee support from vetemas who
are non~tudents, because we
realize that a areat percentqe of
veterans are not in school because
of the inequities of the present
bill. With the support of these
veterans, tho\llh, I am confident
that we can make it possible for
any veteran to go to school
without all the present hassles
involved"
Mr. Graham stressed one
stipulation concerning tha
financtnJ of these proposed
increases. "If the increases in the
Gl Bill will mean a ta.x increase.
then we don't want 1t. We know
that the additional cost can be
covered by the cessation of the
war in S.E. Asia and by a
reordering of U.S . priorities in a
more humane directiOn,"
Petitions are abailable to aU
interested vets in Room 260
Norton Hall. In add it ion to the
Umversity of Buffalo, schools
which are expected lo partH:ipare
an the petition drive include, Erie
Commu n11y College, Niagara
University, Buffalo State , Bryant
and Stratton, N1agara Community
College , Villa Mana Colle&amp;e and
Genesee Community CoUege.

Gus. Sr. will reproduce
almost anything

355 Norton Hall

LetS get rid of
Smol{ey-sear
20 March 1972 . The Sp~trum . Page thirteen

I

...

�l

OVERTIME
by 8any Rubin
SpomEditM

Even before the hockey Bulls took the ice for their 8-l loss to

U-M.ass, they had already proven themselves. Just the mere fact that
Buffalo bwniliated number one ranked Vermont was enough to put
Buffalo on the ECAC hockey map. Prior to their Vermont conquest the
Bulls were just, "a bunch of Canadians that no one dared schedule."
Now, teams l.ilce the Vermont Catamounts would Jove to get another
shot at the BuDs. Next Ouistmas, both the Bulls and Cats participate in
the local Nichols School hockey tourney.
With their newly-acquired baptism in eastern college hockey
circles, the Bulls still have yet to complete their fuU initiation on the
Western New York front. Coverage for the Bulls' play-off games was
disgraceful in the local papers. In reality the BuDs got better coverage
for their road games. About the only coverage the Bulls' recent playoff
venture received was o n campus from The Spectrum and WBFO- FM
radio. The fact that WBFO did two playoff games was tremendously
encouraging and show~ th.inlc.ing more in line with student interests
than narrow programming goals.

\

'HZzat?

w h 0. s
thet with the camera?
Probably • member of
Video -Connectio n .
VIdeo -Connection is an
on-ampus group who film
lectures, metrtings and other
campus events for presentation
to the ttudent body.

Club sport

Lacrosse comes to Buffalo
by Bruce Enael

Lacrosse has also been described as lootball w1th
Specrrum Stoff M-iter
sticks. Actually it is not quite that rough but does
feature considerable contact However, lacrosse ts
" We just have a bunch of guys who want h.&gt; have mainly running and passing with the basic offensiVe
fun and like to play the game. We are not as plan similar to basketball or hockey The ball is
concerned wtth winning as we are With seeing that passed around through the use of sticks, all the lime
everybody plays. •· These were the words of Perry loolcing for a man to elude his defender and get an
Hanson, faculty member and one of the player open shot at the goal . whtch ts a triangular c.agc
coaches of Buffalo's brand new Lacrosse Oub.
placed in a cnclc.
This attitude may seem fnvolous to some sports
The game ha~ three ba!&gt;I C pos1t1ons 10 addtllon
people but il doesn't have to be "Some people have to the goalie . The strictly offens1ve players are called
said, we are not serious but we are. Everybody is attackmen. There are three attackmen and three
really worlting hard," said the other player coach, defensemen as well as three m1dfielders. who play
graduate student AI Burc:tak . The fac t IS that both ends of the game and must constantly be
attendance at practice has been exceptional on the shifted rn and out Buffalo's roster boasts nine
23 - man club which is mostly undergrad but has a
midfielders, seven attackme11 ami s1x defenders.
sprinkling of graduates .1nd faculty . Attendance has
Burczak is in charge of attack while Hanson handles
been fine despite the fact that practices are at
the midfielders. Sophomore Tony Plsarsk1 , a former
irregular times and under poor conditions.
freshman football end lor Buffatu. IS tn charge of the
Hanson and Bruczak have been successful in
defensemen .
bringing lacrosse, one of America's fastest growing
sports, to the Buffalo campus. Two previous
Heavy Buffalo experience
attempts have failed, but now Buffalo has a club
AJI but two of Buffalo's players have prevwus
team and a six game schedule. The coaches credit
lacrosse
experience so the Bulls should not be short
Asst. Athletic Director Bob Deming as a big help in
getting the program off the ground. Right now all in ability. The problem is that none of the BuUs have
are satisfied with the club designation with no ever played together before. According to the
immediate plans of achieving varsity status as in the coaches thmgs are progressing weU and everyone
should be adjusted to each other very shortly.
case of soccer.
The club's ftrsl game will be at Brockport on

Comparison with hockey
For those of you unfamiliar with the sport ,
lacrosse prides itself on being America's fastest sport
on two feet , an obvious avoidance of or comparison
with hockey, to which it is similar in many ways.
Senior V•r Scholarship
For Women
Attend the college of your
choice; Recei ve over $400 per
month for senior year. Apply
during junior year. Serve as an
Army officer (min. 2 years).
For details contact :
Capt. Quinones
842-3263

MIJJIIIJ(JL - 110 IIQNS!&amp;8r
,.

t'

,.-,
&amp;lUI

.......

YES! I would like to work on U.U.C. as:

~ TATE CYC&amp;.I I ~ • 0 Lion 0 Christian 0 Other
CIIIIIM.a1GO

' ..,..v.,.....,ttt•• w·l-

Rome had the Colosseum.
Norton Hall has its house
council.

There is a great need for people
like you maybe, to keep this great show on the road . Bring this
to tonight's, or any Monday's meeting, 8pm. Location announced
over Norton PA.

I

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . 20 March 1972

Also, it has been reported that oqe radio station told a Buffalo
officiaJ, "who cares about UB hockey, screw UB," when he had a score
reported to his station. And ask why one of thee Buffalo Evening
News' top executives will sit at the dais at the Buffalo Block B banquet
in April. Afterall , the News gave the championship game about one
paragraph of coverage. Reportedly, thls News official was sealed at the
dais as a compromise when his or her attempt to mtroduce Howard
Cosell was thwarted.
These are the same newspapers that constan tl y put down the
Buffalo student body "Oh those troublemakers over there arc no good.
They're dirty hipp1es." Yet when over 2000 Buffalo students attended
the Ohio State (Aud) hockey game, and when the hockey Bull~
averaged over 1000 students per game, the same papers were st.len 1.
Don't be surprised to see five Couner E'xpress and five l:.vemng New~
writers at the Block B banquet . after all look what they've done to
promote Buffalo at.hJetics.
For all the cntic1sm 11 get), rhe Bulfalu athletiC program IS the
most diverse in the area . Buffalo fields competitive teams m hockey,
basketball, wrestling and baseball wh1le school~ like C'anisius, Niagara
and St. Bonaventure excel mainly in the sport of basketball. Sending
three contingents lu maJor tournaments 111 one ye.~r IS quite a feat
There's no reason why next year a s1m1lar number nl teams canno t
qualify fur post season laurels. Yet, the Buffalo papers cnnltnue to give
their coverage to skeet shoolmg. local bowhng alley result~ and
occassionally a key squash SC(lre .
It's funny , that a tearn can have a fine season and achieve success
and be ignored in 1ls local nowspape1 But , maybe as Buffalo Coach
Eddie Wright says, "not even the politicians and administrators will ht
able to stop this program." Just ask tltc scnbes at the Block H banquet
when they're enJoying their freeb 1es
Applications for the position of Editor-an-chief of the
Buffalonian for the 1972·1973 academic year will be taken
until March 31.
Applications for Business, Layout, Copy, Production
and other positions are also avail.tble in Room 356 Norton.
C.tll 831-2505 for further information.

College on May 6. These dates should be a fine
opportunity to get out and see " America's fastest
sport oo two feet."

..--------~-------------

r-liiiiifia£iiiiiiiicf1
f J. FfiATE f$.1 - AllY SID

March 3 I. Buffalo's two home games w1ll be agaJnst
Niagara on April 12 and against Monroe C'ommWlity

Why don't the Buffalo papers admit the existence of BuffaJo
hockey? Possibly. the reason is that the papers are afraid that then
baby, the little three basketball league might suffer worse setbacks with
competition from top caliber college hockey . Quest1ons should be
raised when st3.ld Canisius College continues to monopolize the
Memorial Auditorium when even the Buffalo Br.tves cannot even get a
decent Saturday night date.

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
Mod Styles for Guys and Gals
Come t•ke the shiru right off our
beckL Seve 20% on •nvthing with
lhon lleev•. Hundt-ech of long
•eeve to,.; 7,000 peirs of Befit,
.lldcets to nwtch. L•th• )lldletl
~lind l*k•. L•L Lev(

.,.er,

c.,._..,

unalullber,

Mile, etc. Be "In"- S.V. Money
- Shop Army..flleyy.

�AD INFOftMATIOH

THE STUDEN T retes ot en ld for one
~MY Is 81.25 tor the
15 words end
t.OS for uch lddltlonel word, 11.00
for uch e ddltlonel ct.y. The dNCIIIne
fOf Mondly Is FridAy, for Wednesdey It
1s MondAy, e nd for Frldly, 11 1s
WednesdiY by 4•30 p ,m.

""t

"HE LP WANTED" aas annot
CISCimlnete on the basiS of lAIIt , color,
creed or nellonal origin to eny eKient
(I.e., preferebty ts Jttll dlscrlmlnetory)
"FOUND"
charge for
15 words.

will b e run fr" of
m1111mum of 2 deys end

H.K. 630, 930 enel CAD..$. J.B.L..
Super S~f's. Used equlpments: KL.H
26, Meonec:ord 1024, Tendbvg 12
rec:order, Am pex AX·50, 897..0297.
6S.-4937, 897·3984.
1966 AUTOMATIC Valiant, oower
steering, redlo, heater runs well. E11tr1
tires, 8195. Call Chawt. 831-3336.
COLORFUL. embroidered shoulder
twigs from Paklsten et "The People,"
144 Allen. 882-6283.

1&lt;11
1

FDR SAL E

SAMOVED
PUPPIES
white
• 'hus.ky·type" d()gl. snow quality .
Excel lent family peu. Gary For d .
831·4044, 283·5640.

LAFAYETTE LT·726A AM· FM stereo
tuner. 8 months old, perfect condition,
$80. tncludlno cebles. 831·2082.

1000 K ILOS for $3001 Dependeble '65
Musta n g, Engine good. Contact
Zorngy, Call 832·71 70.

VOLVO RADIO for sale with two
speakers ( front and rear). Ce ll
892·7025 c. D a vis.

AUST I N
HEA L EV 3000 '62
REBUILT engine, tranJ., c lutch,
be ll - houllng, pressure plate ,
carburetors, NEW overdrive, batte..v,
reet w heel cylinders, top $ •175.
873-5328.

$40·$80 CLASS ICS, fOlkS, 12-strlngs.
John Dauria II '-3007. Cash 'n' Carry
or t rade your stereo.
CO MBINATION 8·tracle t a pe player
end FM radio, twelve I'INVy tel)ft
(bnlh Woodstocks) . $60 takes all .
871 · 3094.
FA IRLANE 1966, eutomellc, redlo,
excellent running condition, new snow
etres end bettery. 8ar911ln for S425.
Call 831·3922.
CIT AT ION 12, 11 , l3 Quect 33, 303.
Tran.crlptor•s ''S pec•Age" turntables.
Pt!lllps turntables. All Ba.O products.

TUTOR ING AND GUIDANCE~
SINCE 1938
•

MCAT- CAT

LSAT -ATGSB
GR.E

• Proper at ion for teata f"tQU Ired for
admi•ion to greduatt tnd prot . .
$10011 tehooll
• S•• and twohle -Ofl C:OUtMS
• Small groups

• Vo4uminouaiM1••1 fOf '-"' nudy
prepared by

••parts In leth f lttld

'LniOn K~ule eM\ be Uolkwed 10
rneet ondwrduel need&amp;. L..on&amp;
tan be spread over e period of
wver•l mOnths to a yHr, or lor
Ou t ol town stuct.nu. 1 periOd
ol one w"lc
•Oppartun•ty for ,...,lew of~
leaons VII tape et the «:en tar"

TASTER CLASSL'i

\ ,;II
BtU Blanl
37~360
Specqt Com.-:t Cou,.. d ..lnt
W. .endl - lncana' DIII•
SumrtMr S-ons

STANLEY H . KAPLAN
lDU CATIONAL CENTER LTD.
,.,.._..,..,,. _ _...,, lr •
(2 t Z) :s:..-6300
1}-,1

U'

·-·-.. -.. . . _'l_._._
(6tel538 415111

•·· · ~ '"' "'~ wtl r&lt;l -

n..T•

196 5 6 ·CY LINDER automatic
Plymouth runs well , S175. c ..n Stille
873.7 71 after 4 p .m .
DESK, ~rawer steel, flne condition.
Ca ll a fter 5 . 83~ ·2976, 836-4308.
REFRIGERAT OR S, stovu and
wesherJ. Recondlllonect , dellverect and
guarenteed. O&amp;G AppllenciJ, 844
Syumore. TX4·3183,
WE ARE NOW o pen M onda y - as well
tnru S • turday 111 30
Lm.--6:00 p.m. )
also T "h ursday until
10 p .m. "Tile People," 144 Allen.
882· 62113.

as Tuesday

WANTED

.....,..,Sc•ool••• rlwNor_..,.,......;..

.

, : &lt;It~

~·

m

~
~~

,

.,-,nra'"i
I

-~

SA LEI

FULL OR pefl· tlme Iota ave!Uoble with
Bestllne Inc. Clll Art 886·2094 or
Mike 835-5 215. MeetlnCJS el E1tecut1ve
Remecll Inn.
$24 A NIGHT
peld niQhlly. Sl&gt;&lt;
go.go d.tlnc..-s nMded . Radices, 74 w .
Chippewa. Apply after 4 p .m.

ROOMMATES WANTED
TWO OR THREE roommetes for apt.
Fllle•mlnute Y(llk from campus. Cell
837-4593 efter 7 p.m.
ROOMMATES for summer jn big
llouse on Arnhe"'· Own room.
t 50/month Including ut!lltles.
838·3192.
TWO ROOMMATES wanted : mill or
female - apartment walkl"9 distance
trom c amp.li; rent. S55/mo, Including
utlt l ~tes, Cell Mike or Mal 11 837·0406 .
I

TWO F E MAL.E roommates. own
room. Two-minute welk to c.ampus.
Avalleble Mly 15. Rusoneole rent.
C ell Mery 834..0508.
TWO ROOMS avalllble In home ol
elderly ledy reQUiri ng com pe nlon~lp
end
mlnlmel
supervttlon .
Commonweellh-Hertet erea Furnished
Reesonlbte rent. Conlee\ Mrs. Zee,
873-6632

HOUSE FOR RENT for sum m«.
Co nsists of two four -bedroom
epartments. Will rent together or
sepanotely. Fully furnlltlect. Two-car
gar&lt;1ge. Two-minute walk to cempus.
Calf Barry 837·1886 or Sendy
837-o626.
LOOKING TO SUb·tel 4-bec:troom apt .,
2 min. w•lk from c ampus. May-Aug.
Call 831 ·2457.
LARGE four-bedroom ept . fu r nished,
Hertel off Meln. Stert e arly May-'S ept.
First call. 837·1• •or 837·2033.
PERFE CT 3·bedroom epertment
evallable wmmer session, Wilking
dis t ance off Bailly Ave. Call 837·1344 ,
Ellen.
HOUSE - four bedrooms furnished .
Avellable Mey 15th to August 31st.
837-6508.
BEAUTIFUL, spacious slx· bectroom
house for summ er o nly , Fully
cerpeted, turnl•hed . wuner end drylf,
two-car garage, basement wllh CleriC
room. Close to cempus. Reesonlble .
833-8812.

LOST&amp; FOUND
WHOEVER TOOK Army le ck et lrom
Pool Hall Thursday, 3/16/72, plees.
return papers, etc., especially N. 'f .s.
Unem ployment BOOk, Box 11 Nor1on
or Undercunenl office.
LOST : Two fla&lt;JS VIcinity Tower H•ll.
Search PM lies org.tnl zed tonlte, 1 , 30
on Tower law n .

ROOMMATE dasl~d lor 2 bedroom
apartment near Main-Fillmore . A ntce
place for sumrnet . Cell 8 35·29 15 .

50 TO 100 LUNATICS for w orld's
s.cond greatMt Cepture the Fleg geme .
Tonlte 7:30, Tower-Norton 14wn.

3 FEMALE roommates, two to sl"lue.
one single, Slartlng June t : hall block
from campus ; $66 /month
C•ll
11 31 ·2 1146 .

FOUND, Approxtm•tely l · yr .·otd
female German Sllepherd neAr
Wlnspeer , 3/14 . PleaM~ call 833· ?119

CO MPUT ER o pentor . Par1-tlme
nights. Must have knowledge o f 360/30
DOS. Cer ~eu.ary. Good opportunity
tor adVancement . Call 839..0502.

FEMALE hl Sll&lt;lll room In modern
a p 1. 1!r mtn
walk lrom cempus.
Avall•ble 4/l . LindA 837-4692

LOST : Men'\ otac.k tealher gloves
Oielendort 204 on J/l'f&gt;/12 ourtng
1- 2 : 30 p m . clu,. Call 881 · 2659.

.t.PARTMENT FOR RENT

FOUND . Bleck puppy
pari bO&gt;tet In
Norton on 3/lJ. Cell Mark, 837 2565

2 APARTMENTS, sem e hous., total
seven bedrooms tor wmmet 3 OlockJ
from c.tmpus. Reawnabte . 832~57 L

APA RTM ENTS WANTED

APPLICATIONS for the position of
Edltor·ln&lt;htef or Undercurrent for
the ecadernk. year 1972·1973 will be
leken untlt Merc h 24, Tile apptlc.•tlon
consists of 1 tetter to the editori a l
~rd, stellng tiMOns fOf Oeslrlng lht
position, quallflcetlons and prevtous
lournellstlc e•oe&lt;lenco. Tile poslllon ts
()C)en to any Quallfleo person . The
ecsltorlal baird will lnlervl- ell
cendldates on Frtdey. March 24, 1912.
Prospective eppllc1nts 1re urged to
contact the Editor, Room 343 N ort on
Hell 11 soon es passlbte to famili arize
themselves with any pr oceour ll or
technlc.tl que~ll ons ebout the position
or about Undercurrent . Appllc.etlons
will also be accepted for the following
positions until March 24 : Men•glng
Editor, Publicity Director, Copy
Editor, Feature Editors, Film Editor,
Layout Editor, Graphics Editor,
Printer, Asst. AdverllllnQ M•naver.
Ant
Distribution Man-r , Asst.

•

•

'ih. . .
:K4
~

~
~

APARTMENT lor .J or 4 In Kenmore.
Furniture for ute Call 876·2226
S llrttng May hi.
U.B AREA
""erat elCcellcnl 3, 4
1nd 5 · beclroono IPiftmenll within 2
block~ of u.B c •mpus. C•ll 633 8643
tor recorded message on locetlon .
SPACIOUS l · bedroom apartment with
guest room, furntltled, $140 + montn .
Hertei· Oelawere area Cell 874· 3740
MOOERN furnhhed apertrnent. Tnree
bed roonrs, kit c hen , dinette, living
room, blthroom . Stove, rorrtgeralor,
TV, lurulture In c lud ed . Walking
distance to c antpus. Four metes
tG5
ea c h
f'oretgn students welcome.
Av•ll•l&gt;le April or M•v. 11318181, I)
a.m . 1 p.m.
6 ROOMS, J beoroorns, $9~/ mOntn
1nctude&lt; utilities, must buy furniture,
Kenmore/Oelaw•re, on l)us ""''· Call
877-662~ .

FOUR BEDROOM IPirtmont oft
Belley, 15-mlnute walk trnm c.empus
Furnished, reesonellle rent Available
for wmmet end Sept . Cell Snellv
8 34..0966.

FOUND: Brown eye -glaues In
Die fendorf 148. Call Scott 831 · 3964
PERSON who tosl man's rtng In
paddlebell cou rts on rnurs ., Marc.h 9,
tall 83::!.0209 between J-4 lo reoeem
II.

ROOM WANT ED for ne&gt;&lt;l September
within walking distance ol cernous
Cell Pet, 8.).;7..04 06
REWARD 120 - we nMd l"luu •e ur
pa1tmont Oeglnnlng Ju n e 0 1
Septem&gt;;&gt;er . Four bedrooms watktno
distance 831 2259/ 2261

1

GRAD STUDENT , I· Oedro o m IPI
June lst. Walking diUinc e . C tll Adel
831 ·222L

FEMALE wents own room In I'IOUill
neer ampus Jtartlng September. Cell
833· 7571.
HOUSE br 2·flmlly hOUIAI needed tor
eight homeleu people. Plus.! C•ll
831· 3454.
SlSJ)O REWARD If you cen s.cure us •
3-0edroom epl . for f•ll semeter within
welklng distance from cempus. Call
835-41~8 . Arlo or Paula.

R IDE BOARD
RIDE NEEDED to FI&lt;M"Ida a round
April lst. Wil l ltlare d rlvl"9 a nd
expen ses. Cell De bbie 892· 1526.
RIDERS wanted to NYC, Merch 28.
Call BOb 831 ·2683 alter U p .m.
RIDE NEEDED fo r 2 to Florida efter
3/28. Shere expen!AII e n d d r ivi ng. Call
837-4992.
GIRLS N EED r ide to Dayton, O h io or
nearby. Will share expense. Call Susan
833·7571.
NV C~I
AREA . 3/24 after 4:00,
return 3/26 for two. Call 662·7598 ,

PERSONAL
RUN IN THE MUD! Slide In the mudl
Crawl In the mud! FOfnlc.ete In the
mud! Capt u re the nag, 7:30 t o nlte.
IF YOU ARE lntltl5ted In learning
about " Nutrl llon and O ptimum
Heelth." •Join a Life Workltlop, Cell
Billie 8 ! 1·25 I I
GINNV
How curious Is the cal1 You
didn't leev e your number Of" •Cklress.
Curiously yours, Rob . Bolt 90 .
F R I ENOS I

t'm thenkfut tor the
fuck -up . You set me pretty uretght .
Life sucks. The Black Pickel Fenc.t.
TEAM PAPERS, bOok reooru, ess.eys,
original by Library Science gndu.ate
lludent. Box 87.

FOLK r UtTAR ll$$01'&gt;5, papular songs,
finger &lt;~nd nat picking styles. Good
cotr~. Jell. 882· 1847, 835· 3384.

MISCE LLANEOUS
THE SUN Myth Light Show, c.all to see
our lr~ orochure, LM
875-4366,
Bill ~ /?-1636.
~ELA fiO NSHI PS (In life), A Mixed
Medlt Envlronm&amp;nt, March 23, at 7
p m.. Kenmore Unt\ICI MetllOdllt
Cllurcn , Oetawere Ra.ct at Lano..~.
Kenmore.

CLASS IC GUITAR 1-om - beglnnen
10 edv1nced. 836-4217 evenings.
TYPING
explffencect IBM
Selectric.. S .AO C&gt;lr page. 11311....808.
TVPING - e.11pertenceo. - term pepen,
etc.. 1133 · 1~97
BAO BRAKES could give you •
smahtng success. Before thai happens,
st op at 1ndependent Foreign Car
S..-vlce. 839·1850.

T"WO-tiEOROOM aPI wanleo lor Ml\1
ht rur two people . Reasonable rent
Call 837 · 1887

C YCLISTS
Fly to Austne lor
two-week tour. BicyCle come home
with you. C ell Hou.. of Wh...s lor
deiiiiS. 632·2631.

HOUSE OR
ap.,tment needed
desperately lot lhree s.enlor m ates
Snould be CI0\0 10 ClnlPU\, Call Mlkt
~~ 838·1167 or 8314113 or Fred ot
BJI 24!&gt;3 or Lynne 831 -2897 .

TVPING
buslneu or penonal - t erm
papers , theses, mAss mailings.
Reaso.-able rates. Call 937-6050

WAN I EO 10 lind In U .B area, I single
or m&gt;~ller double apertment lor mo
•nd my bOokS. Not alrAIO o l rnonev u r
walking to vet a gooo place Le•v•
word for David at 877· 2 109.
ART STUDENTS neeo two·bedroom
apartment starting Mev . Reuon1ble
reAl Close to uon&gt;pu&gt; Pteese call
834·3401 or 837-.J984.

FL V BUFFALO 11\Jdent fllghh to
l!urope, N ,V ,C./L.ondon/N .V.C., Mey
31 - August 22, •a99: July 9
August
23, $21 9. Conllcl Alan Mumutsteln
837.0393, 6-9 p.m.
ANTIQUES and modern furniture,
c er• m lcs.. china, etc. S• Sid at
Veste rcsey &amp;. Tomorrow Shop, 1439
Hertel Ave.

., ;

·~
•

20% off

SUB-LET APARTMENT

WANTED : Instructions tn beginning
Vletnem•e during 111enlng hours. Wilt
pey . Call 89,..3825 afte. 6 p.m.

MARCH 20 - MARCH 25 Only!·"'

Body Shir1s )
T- Shirts
Poor Boys

START S2 per hour Sllery plus bonus.
WorK. 4.&amp; p.m. WMkdiYII 10·2 p.m.
Setur&lt;levs. Cell 835·3803 or TF9.()402.

ROOMMATE
tnr
3 · bedroom
epertment . Own room for re~t of
Merc;h and April, $~5 plus. March ren t
already peld . Call 836·5907.

g,_u~JVEJiSJTY BiJOKSTQ'RE'S~~~·
~
~·

U.S , N EW AREA Mlllersport-5herldln.
Excellent
well -f urnished,
thr...oedroom, 1 end lh baths duplex
- rec room - pr1vlle entrence, near
bus nne. Students welcome. 838·1081,
633-&amp;643.

WAI TRESS and cooks wanted, epptv
In penon at Bladumlth Shop, 1375
Oelewere (Getes Circle) between 11
e.m.- 1 p.m. (must be avelllbl a during
£ester vacation).

:~-~:8¢
~;~:: ~ ··l ....~st!f&lt;fl{~~~j·
~ ~t£&lt;!/ ~ • ;p&lt;t:f~ ~4?.
0

L. eyout E ditor, Aut. Photooreptoy
Editor, Book Editor, Th. .l ... Editor, 3
N-s Ecllt o" L.oal, N•llonel.
Internationa l end Advertising Sales
people. The ebove positions ere open
to •ny quellfled penons.

ROOMMATE wented to live wllh two
hraells. O wn room. 837·2259

ART STUDENT who works In gotO
rings. Commlulon on my oeslgn.
{lln ny 662·7598.

for tnhHmllhOn tbout ,,_,.,
,.-- •

HEL~J II We n eed 1 3-bedroom ..,t. for
S ept. ht within w•klng dlmnce from
ctaml)ln. Call Maf"y, 8 3 1-4153; Benita,
13 1-2062 Of' Amy, 831·239 7 .

CLAIIIflll

CL.ASSIFIED ADS m 1y be p l - d
MondAY ttwu Frida y b et w een 9 a. m .
•nd 4 :30 p.m. It 355 Norton Hell.

Joy

is the spirit of God
--==~~~-lllliiE=::=-....;.in
the midst of men
The joy of help1ng those who desperately
need help, the joy of achtevement &amp;8 you watch
your effort.&amp; bear fruit . That is the earthly ,-e.
ward of the Conaolata priest a nd the Consolata
broth.er, and there are few earthly rewards more
soul-satia!yina.
We administer miB&amp;ionary panshes. schools.
and hospitalJ in AJric.a and South America. There
are 1.200 of U8. and we are a happy band of men.
I{ you think you might like to share our happi·
ness, please write our director of vocations for
full information.

CONSOLATA FATHERS
P 0 Box C Somenet. New Jeney 08873

20 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�Announcements

FNSM 222: ''Controver~Ja In Sdence T he Allenhurst Coffee House is seeking Conflict · and RtiOWdon" rn"cs on Tuosd.tys and
votunteen to pl01y during the weekends. If you wish Thursdays at 10 ill.m. In Room 362 Acheson. The
to pby, ull ''G" a.t 832-3844 or Mike 01t 835-7773. topic fot d'tls week is: "GenetiC EnJineerlng (a) Whillt
to do mout Defective Genes; (b) Cloning ilnd In
Activist Youth for Israel will be holding Vltto Gestation of Humans."
App~lilchian Symposium
dections for officers for 1972-73 on Ma.rch 23 from
WNYPIRG will have a meeting today at 5 p.m. Tuesday, Marc:h 21
S-9 p.m. in Room 346 Norton. Nomin01tions will be
ac« pted by phone today from 5-9 p.m. Call in Room 244 Norton. Elections for the summer loc.al
831-5116. All five steering committee positions are boa.rd will be held. All are invited to attend.
Speaker: Bruce Jackson, " The Poverty Program:
open. Anyone currentJy working with A Yl or the
Selling Out the Kentucky Rural Poor;" as a
life Woftuhops will have a Nutrition and
SCCIEF is eligible to vote. Please bring your 10 GMd
folklorist, Mr. Jackson has done fieldwork In the
Optimum Health workshop tomorrow at 7 p.m. If
with you.
rural south, 1- 2 p.m., Conference Theater.
interested call Billi at 2511 or stop in Room 225
Discussion: Jim Comstock, editor of The West
The Under.,iduite MediQI Society will have a Norton.
Vlrglnlo Hillbilly and James Holloway, •
meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 246 Health
mountain historian and educator, "Appalachian
BIKk md White Arts Festival presents "An
Sciences. The topic will be, ''The Making of a
Eye. Journalist on the Mountain," 2-3 p.m.,
Doctor," and two films will be shown dealing with Evening with julius Eastman.'' an interpretive
Conference Theater; 3 - 4 p.m., Room 231
program of new music for p1ano and strings with a
mediul eduution.
Norton, Comstock workshop; 4- 5 p.m.,
slide projection commentary by t.he composer.
Holloway workshop.
life Worlcshop will hold an open hou ~ today Sponsored by BAWA and the State Council on the Seminar : Bill Worthington, president of the Black
Arts, the program will be March 25 at 8:30 p.m. at
from noo n- 2 p.m. in Room 225A Norton.
Lung Association of Kentucky and Walter
the Unitarian Universalist Church at West Ferry and
Burton Fran klin, "BI&lt;~ck lung Olnd the Disabled
The Gradune Student Associ&lt;1tion will hold a Elmwood Ave. Tickets are $2 for adults, $1 for
Mmer;" both men work for miners' black lung
senate meeting today at 7·30 p.m. in Room 233 )tudents and ~nior citizens.
benefits and mine silfety, 7 - 8 p.m., Conference
Norton. Or. Howard Strauss will be a speaker and
Theater.
The Hillel class in Beginners Hebrew will meet
the topic is the Hearing Commission.
Blue Grass concert ; lawrence Fluharty, West
tomorrow at noon in Room 262 Norton. The etas\ in
Virginia fiddler who plays in the Appalachian
CAC Independent Tutoring Project really needs Jewish Ethics will meet at I p .m.
Mountain tradition; Currence Brothers, singing
you to help elementary school kids out of the first
and playing the fiddle, banjo and mandolin ;
''Humble Pie" will be appearmg m concert on
few years of struggle in the Buffalo school system.
Dwight Oilier, blue grass banjo player 4nd
Especially needed are tutors in reading and math. March 24 at Memorial Auditorium On the same
Woody Simmons, fiddle player, 8 II p.m.,
program will be "Krng Crimson" and "Sweathog."
Please contact Amy at 36&lt;'9.
Hilds Lounge.
Ticket.s for the performance at $5.50, $4.50 and
The Stue University of Bufhlo ArNteur R~io $4.00 are ~vailable now at Norton Hall and Stat~
Wednesday, Ma.rch 22
Society wants Olnyone wishmg to be pl01ced on the College Ticket Office.
mailing list for Its "NPQ" bulletin to please sign the
Semrnar · Ruth Ann Musick, "West Virgini.t Ghost
Veter.~ns Asststance Oay is today from 2 8 p .m .
list In Room 324 Norton.
Tales, '' Dr. Musick, author of Gr«n Hills of
Newnun Hall will have a Pre.Cana Conference at the Cooperative Extension Center, 4487 Lake
Mogle, will hold a seminar highlighted by a
for members of the Univers.lty cqmmunity and will Ave., Lockport (Route 78 north of lockport) . lh
selectio n of ghost stories, noon I p.m.,
be held tomorrow .and Thursday at 7 :30 p.m. Call purpose is to obtain help rn planning your future and
Conference Theater; 1- 2 p.m , Room 23 1
Newman H&lt;aJI at 834-2297 lr yoo plan to attend.
receive counseling about veterans benefits. This is a
Norton, workshop.
public service ,rovided by the Niagara County Adult
Hillel WOlnts students who will not be ilble to get Educators and the Lockport Sun and Journal All Speaker : Bessie Smith, "'Stripmining: The
Non-Enforcement · of the Law," Bessie Smith
home for the Passover Seder to get in touch with -.ervices provided are free
org.~nized East Kentucky Women of the
them immediately if they would like to attend a
Appalachian Group to Save the land .tnd
Chmad House has made arrangements for
Seder- In Buffalo. CaJJ 836-4540.
People, a non-violent organization to outlaw
students to spend the Seder nights at lubav1tch
stripmining, 2- 3 p.m , Conference Theater , l 4
A~ la.rnbdill Delta wtll hold a meeting today headquarters in New York City All those wish1ng
p .m., Room 231 Norton, workshop.
further information should contact Rabbi Gurary at
•11 7:30p.m. in Room 330 Norton. All new and old
Mountain hymns and folk songs . hJnk1e .md
members please attend.
Chabad House 01' call 8 33-8334 or 631 ·5483
lionnel Duff; William Tallmadge, American
folklorist at Buffalo State College, will give
UUAB Video Commltt« will hav~ a meeting
A proposal for a sy,tem of University-wide
historiul settings for hymns and ballads sung by
tomorrow at 6 :30p.m. in Room 266 Norton All are aovemance at the State University illt Bufhlo has
Frankie, 3 :30 4 .30 p.m., Conference Theater :
anvited.
been release~ for "rev1ew and respon\oC " The
4 :30 5 :30 p.m., Room 233 Norton, workshop
proposed Art•clc~ of Governance submiued by the
by Lionnel Duff, "Old Jack Tales:·
The School of lnfonn&lt;Jtion md lib~ry S tudies University Governance Committee, appointed last
ilnd the State University &lt;~t Buff;llo Art Department spring by President Ketter, include the formation of lecture · Harry Caudill, "The Crises of the Amerlt dn
Jre sponsoring a media program for all students, .t University-wide Assembly to represent .111 St.tte
Land : The Problems of Urbanization of an
faculty and staff interested in multi-media ~.our~~
HistoriCally Rural People," 8 9 : 30 run., HaJ~
Univerc;ity of Buffalo G&lt;lmpus constituencies. The
lounge
facilities .tnd program~ today from 7 I I p.m. i~ governance plan will be discussed at two meetings,
Room 231 Norton. All those interested tn the open to all member\ of the Umver\ity communJty
technical, theoretical, aesthetiC or practical a\pects on Mctrch 2 1 and 28 at 2 :30 p .m 1n Room S Film Schedule (all films Tunday, J JG-6 p .m . in
the Conferenu Theater)
of communications are urged to attend .
Ache~n Hall .
Worke~, 1970: A House Divided:
Portrdy ~ the struggle for leadership between the

United Mine

Sunshine House 1s sponsoring t.he world's !.tcond
largest game of Capture the Flag All mlerested can
meet tonight on the lawn between Tower and
Norton at 7 :30p.m.

WHAT'S HAPPENIN G1

incumbent president Tony Boyle and the
miners' reform movement.
Appolochlon Genesis: View of the young people n f
Appalachia and the~r gro wing awareness or the
~urrounding economic and social structures.
How t o Moke Sorghum Molasses; By Carl
f lei !OChhauer, a documentary of &lt;;orghum
molasses mak.mg in the hills of West Virgm 1.1
where the hor\e 1\ U)Cd for power tn the
tr.tditional mounuin manner
I he High lonesome Sound and 'rhe End of an Old
~ong: Both films were produced by john Cohen , a
well -known photographer, mus1tian and
f(llklomt, and renect the mountain musit. o f
AppaldChla.
Ooybreak on Cranberry Ridge ; by Allen Grnsbcrg
.tnd Linda Felix, a wmter mornrng WIUl Mr
Tingle"

Tucw:tay, M.trch 21

What's Hiippening?

Film· Body ond Soul With John Garfield and L1lli
Palmer, 3 p .m. and 8 p.m., Capen 140.
Monday, Marc:h 20
Thea t er Department Repertory . Ot. Foustu\,
d1rected by David Chambers, 8 :30 p.m.,
Film: Death by Hanging, directed by Nagisa Oshima,
Harriman Studio Theater, admis~ion charge .
Concert: Student recital, noon, Ba1rd Hall
3 p.m. and 8 p.m., Conference Theater.
Art show ; TEAM exhibition ; graphics from the Film · Low ond Order, directed by Fred Wiseman,
TEAM workshop in Buffalo, Hayes Lobby, 9
3:30 p.m., law School, 77 West Eagle St ,
Room 110
a.m. - 5 p.m., through Friday .
Concert : SUJdent recital, David Witten, piano, works Poetry reading: New York poet Bill Zava~ky, 9 :30
by Copland, Schumann and Chopin, 8 :30p.m.,
p.m., O~e- Eyed Cat (28 Bryant S t.), spon~red
Baird Hall.
by Outnders.
Art show: Graduate student photography , 4240 lecture: Ors. Conkling and McConnell of the
Geography Department, "Opportunitres for
Ridge Lea, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m., through Thursday.
Development in Eastern Guatemala," 8 :30p.m.,
Film: High School, directed by Fred Wiseman, 3 :30
Room 334 Norton, sponsored by GTU.
p .m., Law School, 30 Church St., Room P- 1.
Fa.cuhy colloquia ; The Department of English , Jim
lin~a~istks on television : "Presupposition in logic,"
Swan, 8 p.m., Faculty Club, Red Room.
ill discussion 2 p.m.; "Intellectual Biography,"
Solomon Marcus, 2:30 p.m.; Room 10 Foster linguistics on television : "Why Study Exotic
Languages?" 4 p.m.; "Bilingualism in Buffalo,"
Hillll basement, open to students and facu lty.
4:30p.m.; Room 10, Foster H&lt;aJI ba.sement.
- AmyAhrend

Sports lnformalton
Today · AJI entuc~ rn the double:. handbdll
tourney are due today, with action slated to begrn
Wednesday.
Tomorrow: Co-ed b.tdminton continues 1ts
weekly act1on at Clark Gym .
Thursday : Co-ed volleyball playoffs begin
tonight from 8- 11 p.m.
Entries for the tua-o-war contest and track and
field_day are due in at Cla.rk Gym by April 15, 1972.
Entnes for the bicycle grand prix race are due by
April22.
Varsity bueb&lt;aJI annual Southern tour schedule:
April 1 vs fairfield at Tampa; April 2 vs. Fairfield at
Ta"'!p01; April 3 at Tampa (2), April 4 at fampa ;
Apr1l 5 at St. leo; April 6 at St. leo; April 7 at
South Florida; April 8 at South Florida (2). The
Bulls' _first n?flhern game 1s at Buffalo State (April
12) wtth therr first home contest on April 21 against
West Virginia at 3 :30p.m.
All varsity triiiiCk undidates will meet at 4 p.m.
today in Room 3, basement of Cl~ Gym.

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                    <text>THE SpECTf\UM
Voi 22, No. 67

State University of New Yoric .t Bu~o

Friday, 17 March 1972

Common Council

Housin!( law repeal debated
Students, doctors and
landlords testified for three and a
half hours befote the Common
Council Tuesday afternoon to
urge the councal to repeaJ lhe City
of Buffalo ho••sing ordinance
wh.ich states that no mure than
two unrelated people may live
togethe a in an apartment .
Following a long and heated
debate and several antagonistic
exchanges. a council vote on
whether or not to repeal t11e

ordinance was tabled for two
weeks.
About 20 State University of
Buffalo students were present in
the Council Chambers and lent
moral and vocaJ support to the
four students who testified. The
first testimony was given by
Howie Kurtz, Campus &amp;iitor of
The Spectrum, who delivered a
statement summing up what he
felt were the inequities of the
housing ordinance and ets

Tlus 1s the .fUJtl'ment deltvered to the Commvn
Council at Tuesday's hearing by Campus t'ditor Howte Kurtz .
explaming the nnfaime~ of the t'ttv hou~ing ordlnanu
Gentlemen ·
I am grateful fur tim opporlllnety to expl&lt;tlll to the Comm1111
Councel the extent of the damage bcang done by tim questaonJbhhouslllg ord1nancc
The Untvcrs1ty uf Buffalo student es stereotyped by the
conununaty as .1 Irnublemaking, longha1r. loudmou th rade ~:al fhe
" no more than lwo unrcl:tted persons" ordinance was msttlulcd 111
reacteon to another stereotype · the esuluted situa tion where tlm•c
~tudents rent .~n apartment and seven or- eeght students proceed to
move in and ll'ar it up llowevcr leg1slaltnn should not be bast•d rm
stereutypes.
Good lcg~sla lloll shuuld be ba~ed 011 real ~ituations, and thJI IS
~·er taml y nul the case ht·ec The real setuataon is that there 1!1 a
crucial housing ~hurtagl' 10 the Umversity of Buffalo area . The real
~i tuatton 1s th:ll most students are responsible adults and conduct
rhem~lves 111 a rea~onable manner, despite what communety
prejudices would have you believe. The real situation is that a
student is forced to lave weth three or four other students nut only
out of linanaal neceuety, but because there just aren 't thai many
apartments 10 go around. Also. legal experts have told rnr that the
constitutlonaltt v ul a l.tw whsch sets an arb1trary hmat concernmg
where and wetle whom yuu can hve ss defimtely suspect
Thts hou~tng ordanance 1s supposed to protect the landlord Yet
the fact remams 1hat most landlords have secured great profits by
chargtng exorbitant rents that students arc forced to pay because nf
the great demand for apartment~. and that most landlords have
tgnored this ordmance and rented to mulriple groups of students
anyway. There arc nearly 5000 undergraduate students liv•ng off
~:ampus and an unknown number of ntght school and graduate
students. The dorms only have 2550 spaces. These kids need a place
to live, and they're not going to find it by being arb1trarily lolf.l they
can only live twu to an apartment.
The Unevcrstty's own Allenhurst apartments, which are a cu y
block of apartments lea:.cd by the school, underscore the area's
housing shortn~e while pointing uut the absurdity of the housing
ordinance. All nhurst consists of two-bedroom apartments, with
five student ~ -s1gned to each apartment. Its living situation has
heen likened I•· a sardane can . yet scores of students request to live
there every year Under the present ordinance, the Allenhurst
apartments, which are sto~te-leased, are illegaJ
Perhaps m1 own livmg SIIUalton can best poant out how absurd
this ordinance es. I lrve lll a four -bedroom apartment with three
other roommates. It's a big apartment , everyone has his own room.
and 1t 's comfortable Yet my landlord has been told by the City of
Buffalo that under the terms of th.is ordinance he must evict two of
us, wh.ich would leave two empty bedrooms. lffh.is ordinance were
unilaterally enforced, gentlemen, there would be more than two
empty bedrooms an the Unaversaty of BuffaJo area. There would be
hundreds of empty bedrooms and possibly thou$3.JldS of homeless
students. Th1s .s no exaggeration.
The members of the Common Council must ask themselves JUSt
what the purpose of this ordinance 1s, and what positive things it is
accomplishing. Isolated Situations of large groups of students teanng
up an apartmeut should be treated as such - as isolated situations,
and should be enforced on that Jevel. Meanwhile, the other 99% of
the student body who conduct themselves reasonably should not be
discriminated against and should not be deprived of a decent place
to live.
On behalf uf the student body at the University of Buffalo, on
behalf of the Buffalo State hospital patients who need a place to
live, and on behalf of any other people being unfairly discriminated
against, I ask you to employ good Judgment and repeal this housing
ordinance. It b helpmg no one and hurting an awful lot of people.
R espect/ully,
Howie Kurtz
Campus f:dllor
The Spectrum
f.'dtt(lf ~~ note

-

dJSastrous effects on the 12,&lt;XXl
undergraduate and graduate
students seektng off-campus
apartments tn the Universi'ty area.
In the ensuing questioning, Mr.
Kurtz's testimony was refuted by
University District Councilman
Char les Volkert. who cited
"numerous" tnslances of citizen
complaents about student houses,
garbage mfraclltlns and nu1se
problems.
' Let 'em live at State'

An allad. was then launched
hy Co u n ( tlm.1n Raymund
l.cwanduw,J..e whu duuht~d the
n U In her II
IJttleiiiS \CCklllg

t \

aparlm~nt,,

and

mc~de

pa!)SIOilCd rcfCtt'tl('e~ IU
"~· 11111 m una I It v tnt:." ··rwl ing
~ludena," ami Ius 1ut~·r1ttllll In
· prorect the ~:ety "
l l rtder~raduatc
JcnnJicr
W,e~hhutn ICSitfiCd llCXt, Jtld
a~ked the wunc1 l " Just where
shou ld lJB ~ tud cnl\ ltvt"1 "
Cmancdman l&gt;an1 CI lltggan~
mcnttoned the high vacancy rate
til the Buffalo Stale area lo wluch
Ms Washburn cxplarned the
lrllllsportat10n problems involved.
Buffalo 's director of
Rehabilitation and Conservahon.
John Mocalusll, then enterjected
.. 0 11 t -of-town )tudents should
know where they're g1lmg 10 hve
hcfurc they &lt;;ume up here " Ms
Washllurn curnrncnted that ..there
would he a great publu.; outcry tf
you t11Cd IU CVICI luur ltiiiC old
lad ICS hvutg together. bu I \ tudcu h
arc a gvod poltltcal tatgel"
Cuunctlman Walliam lloyl stated
that "l hes mdtnance was passed
wtthqut the proper research.•utd
now 11 's come back tu haunt us."
Im

Dollar disaimU..tion

Steve Blumenkranli'. dtrcctor
nf Sub Board I. proposed an
exemphon from the law fo r
non-profit corporations, such as
the proposed Houseng
Corporation tie stated that the
mdmance was dtScrimmatory. and
replied to Mr Lewandowski's
questton ol "ho w es 11
descriminatory'&gt;'' by answenng
..It discnminates along the hnes of
mcome." An unknown audeence
member sarcastically shouted ·
''Picky . pecky! "
Michael Haggans, representing
the University's 6000 graduate
students . gave an economic view
of the ordinance's effect. "If four
people are liveng together, and the
rent ts $250, they each pay
S6 2.50," said Mr. Haggans. "If
enforcement of the ordinance
torces two of them to vacate, the
other two are stuck with a rent of
$125, wh.ich taxes then financ1aJ
capab1htees, lind the two vacated
people are in need of housing."
Councilman George K. Arthur.
whu 1ntroduced the resoluhon tu
appeal !he ordtnan~o:t•. said

Small argument
Wednesday that the tabling
motion was "merely a formality."
He feels there rs stiff opposlhOn
wtthm the Common Councel to
rescmd the ordmance and feels a
compronmc measure may ltavc au
be worked uu 1
He hupcs II• work out a bell
and have 11 nul ol comrmllce rn
the nexl couple ,,f week~ M•
;\ rlhur and Mr lloyl spuke
consistently 111 favor ul repc&lt;rl
while Mr Lcwandnwskt and Mt
Volkert were the most vocal
upponcntb.
Control. don't outlaw
Buffalo landlord Bruce Mann
tnl roduced himself hy staltng
"I'm the monster, I'm the nne
Wh{r lives off students.. He
pointed to the unfairnes~ uf an
ordanance wtuch discnmanates
against houses that arc qu1et .
well-run and ma.intamcd
" Inspectors and counc1lmen
have agreed privately that they're
not going to evict 12.000 students
o n the street," testefied Mr. Mann
"Only with problem houses will
the ordinance be enforced " Mr
Macaluso interjected that he will
indeed evict everyone. "fhere
should be some rule by which
each house could be certified for
how many people can live U1ere,
just like there is a maximum
occupancy sign in this room ," said
Mr. Mann.
When told that such a servece
would cost money , Mr. Mann sard
he and other area landlords would
be happy to pay a monthly fee to
fmance it. In answer to the
mention of the irresponsibility of
students. Mr. Mann replied : "The
answer es not to outlaw them but

Raymond lewllndowlki displayed
hi$ renowned vocal talents ~ grut
lenvUt at Tu_...,., Common
Council l'ne.tint m .,..,.. of the
d ty housi~ n ln81\011.

to coatro\ them.''
The inWaJ part of the hearing
featured te.tlmony by Dr. Yoosef
HaveUwaJa. a psych.atrisl from
the BufTaJo State Mental Hospital.
He uuthned the hospelal 's " fa.mjfy
care plan " by which three. four
and five mental pateents arc
released to l1ve with
ca rcfully·screencd fanuhes and
1hm take them ou t of the
h us p it a I 's 1n s t i 1 u 1 ion a I ized
enveronm:nJ"d lfliO a real home
Group
necessary, said Dr.
Haveliwala. because it gives the
paltcnts more people to try to
relate 10 and because it would not
economecally benefit participating
famtl1es to house one or two
pal tents
The psyctuatnst pointed out
1hal the patients ..still need
companionsh1p; if they don't get
''· they wiiJ withdraw and become
~tck again." Additionally , it costs
$150 per person a month to have
them hve w1th a family, and S600
a month m state money to keep
them an the hospitaJ.
After his taJk., Or . HaveliewaJa
was intensively questioned by
council members on the relative
merits of the program. Mr.
Lewandowski said the family care
program loses its identity when
five or six patients are housed
together . "not as mu.ch as in the
hospital, where there are 60 to 80
beds in a ward and no individual
attention at all," said Ms. Miller, a
social worker from the hospital.
Mr. Macaluso told the doctor that
"the last t1me we relaxed the
ordinance, for State University of
Buffalo students, it created
havoc." The student debates
followed the doctor's testimony.

�,.

News Analysis

Housinx hearinx 'il farce'
by Howie Kurtz
C11mpus Editor
Hdttor's notf!. Campus Edllor Howtf! Kurtz attendt!d
7uesday :r Common Counctl heanng on tht! h ousmg
11rdtnanu, both w ttsttfy as a studtnt and to report
the evf!nts for The Spectrum. Th e {ollowlllX ts his
analysis of tht! Cammon Cuunctl mullng and tlte
wues invalvt!d.
A Common Councal mel!tmg IS hard to describe:
af you've never experaenced one. Tuesday's heanng
was an explosive experience, featuring heated debate
over the "no more than two unrelated persons may
bve together'' city housing ordinance and an amazing
dasplay of prejud1ce as well as in competence.
There is little doubt among legaJ expertS that
the housing o rdinance is blatantly unconstitutional

bt~o:ause II dascnmmates along the bnes of m comc:
and ~~ &amp;Jmtd at a partacular group of cat1zens, the
students. Lackmg poiJtacal punch, the only way we
may ever see the ordmance removtd as an a federal
court case, sance Buffalo and state courts havt been
known for more than one poht1cal dects1on In my
na1vete , I had believed that the ~:o unc1 l heanng
wo uJd proVIde an objective arena for both ~1de~ to be
heard
It was a far ~.:e
F or all the inflammatory debate that dommated
the afternoon, II was largely a c.:ase of JU~t going
through the motion~. J'he ma)oraty of the
councilmen knew ho w they were gomg to vote long
before the heanng ~tarted, w1th the e)l.:eptwn of a
couple of open·mmded md1v1duab wh11 Je t ually
asked tntCU1gent qu~IIOn\
Othc:rw1~e . 11 Wdl&gt; hkl' a Rt&gt;man ~Udl~. with
George Arthur and Wilham ll nyt pu,hmg lor r&lt;'Jl&lt;!al
of the ord1nanu:, the llcry opptr.lllctn "J' lt-d hy
Charles Volkert , who had tal&lt;.-~ to 11:11 .thnut the
hornble thangs ~tudent~ were d01n~ 111 tu .. l n1wr,1ty
dLslrH:.I , and Raymond "Und~ RJ) L~wJnllu" ~l..t,
who fought aga.an~l st udenl\ Jlmthl J' hJrJ a' he
fought agam~t ht\ fellow -.uun~tlmt'n lor &gt;P.:akang
t1me
Alfredc1 Slom1nsl..1 WJ\ prc,cnt !lui
uncharadenstu.:ally \!lent, apparent I) bJ,ktng 1n the
glory ol her fron t pag~ depu.:taon tn llll"&gt;dJ) ·, Nt·w
YnrJ. Ttmes a~ an anll·bU\Ing lead~r.

seems, was hit by a couple o f well-thrown egs on
the State University of Buffalo campus a couple of
years ago and hasn't quate forgotten it. One might
understand Lewandowski's almost fanatical hatred
of Stat e University of Buffalo st udents, but several
other councilmen also dtsplayed blatant prejudjces
and an alarming lack of objectiVIty for pubtic
officials. Con~der these statements:
Councilman H1gg1n~ . "There's a tugh vacancy
rate over at Buff State Why can't some of your
~tudcnts hve over there'~"
Housmg head Ma ~. •.tusn ''Out-of-town students
should know where tht:y'rc go1ng to lwe before they
move: up here ."
Lewandowski · "I t.:annot sandton communal
living by studl!nh who ont:e ~aused notmg and
destruction. Th1s ordmance proll!d~ the c1ty ."
Mat.:aluso (A ftcr bctng told that he couldn't
reall~ucally put 12,000 people on the \lreet) " We'll
evict t&gt;vcryonc "
Isolated examples
OhJet!liVIty'' Not on your hfl! Many \:OUncllmen
couldn 't care le~' 1f 'tudcnt' have to spend hours
traveiiJng m the w1nter In get to \C huo l , hdve to find
a place to stay an Buffalo wh.alc bvmg 400 m1les
away. or have to bvc o n the street . The men who
makt the laws are pohtu..,ans and sevtral are btyond
the reach of an appeal t o common sense, for the
polit1t.:al expethency of anti-student leg15lauon ts too
tempt mg.
The te,umony of Dr Uavehwala from Buffalo
State Mental Hospital was also enlightening, as
several co un cilmen spent over an hour debatang the
med ical ments of the family care program w1th the
doctor
Handacappcd hy an obvaous lack of expertise tn
the area, they repeatedly attacked the doctor's and
the hospital's professaonal JUdgment with the same
weapons th ey used aga1nst th e students : making
issues out of isolated examples, twl~tang facts and
making undocumented and emotaonal attacks, at
wru ch they are very adept
In all faarness , there were l'ouncalmen and
observe~ that asked enhghten ed questtons and
attempted to be fair-mmded However, they were
overshadowed by the vocal extremttaes of those who
seemed to oo ns1der themselves vlg1lantes agamst
improper mediC_, c.:are, and the student menace of
"com munaJ liv1n1."
And what of the assue? The motion was
conveniently tabled for two weeks, and whether a
repeal o f the ordinance or even a compromiSe can be
effected through legJSiat1ve channds as h1ghly
questionable The ultimate resolutiOn of the 1ssue
probably lies m federal court
And m th e meanttme , what af John Macaluso
lfll!s to -.arry out h1s threat to evtct 12,000 students"
A temporary restrammg order hy Sub Board pendang
court decas1on IS ht..cly. But throughout th1s whole
1ssue, not one word of support has been uttered by
either the central administration or Off.('ampu~
Housing. The stlence is deafcnmg.

" I 'II stay r1 g h t here
Everyone here as my legal
coun~el .
The wrong man IS on
tnal
Halstead should be on
trial and we're gomg to put h1m
on tnal. "
W1th that , John Spntzler
refu~d
to appear before the
Hearing Committee on Campus
Disruption last Tuesday n1ght in
Acheson Annex. The hearing was
conduct ed without him and its
verdact will be maaled to tum The
hearing was called to determine
whether or not Mr Spnlller
should be expelled for hiS alleged
disruption of Pr of
John
Halstead's Modern lmpenahsm
339 history courst
Mr. Spntzlcr arravc:d at the
annex with a larse group of
student sympathtzers, but was
mformed that the heanng would
be closed to all but h1m, hts legal
counsel and the press, tf he so
desired
Mr. Spntl.ler refused
three separate t1mes to appear at
the closed heanng (what one
supporter termed a "kangaroo
t.o urt") before a comm1ttee
"hand·p1cked by Ketter "
Mr Spntzler was told thai the
hearing would proceed Witho ut
his presence tf he pers1sted in h1~
refusal to ent er t he heanng room .
B e again refused, but requested,
and was granted, t h at the press be
permitted to witnes s the
committee's actions A requc~t
that J tape recorder be u~ed to
tape the pro~:eedingb wa) refused
but a transcn pt of the heanng w~
made and w11l he available

Expulsion llsked
At the: ~otart of lh&lt;' hc&lt;~nng . a
~ect ton of the heanng ~.:ommlltee'~t
gutdellnc) was \:lied, wh1t.:h
pertained to refusal of the )UhJect
to appear The sec11un. the
.:omm11tee was told. pmvtdc\ thJI

the refusal of the accused to
appear before the hearing
co mm1t tee on the set dat .:
"without good cause shown, shall
be deemed to be an admission ol
the facts stated in such charges "
Prosec utor Howard Meyer w~
then permitted t o reveal th(
charaes agai nst Mr. Spritder He
cated the stgned statements of tw o
stu dents who satd they wen·
present m Dr. Halstead's course
on four separat e o~:casions when
Mr. Spnt1ler "di~rupted" the
class. On the basas of th ese
l\tatements and Mr . Spntzler\
refusal to appear, co ncluded Mr
Meyer . " I ask for the expulsiOn ot
Mr . Spntzler from tht:
UnavcrSJty"
He added that Mr. Spritzler
had adm1tted that he had not
mtended to take the course for
credat, but rather to expose Or
Halstead's " n&amp;C15l" teac hang.s Mr
Meyer also satd that Mr. SpntzJer
was a student in Millard Fillmore
College, but had reg~stered for Dr
Halstead's daytame co urse.

Mail verdicc
No defense was presented on
behalf 01 Mr . Spntzler, so th c.com mallee retired to a closed
meeting to reach l1 fmal decision
A repre~cntatave of the commatle&lt;'
told the press th11t Mr. Spnt£1er
would be mforme1l hy m!UI of thl'
nutcomt: ul the he·•·•ng and would
bl' allowt:d ten da ~ , to show JU~t
t-ause why he did n. •I appear at
the ongmJI heanng ..tnd to requ&lt;'~l
another hcanng.

~Bible TruthREPENTANCE Rt:.QUIREO
"Re~nt yo lherof or@, end be
convened , lhet your stns mey
be biOI led OUI . "
Acts 3 : 19

"And vour sins end ln c~ucues
will t ••member no mMo.'
HoC . 10 : 17

-Hear, 0 IsraelFor gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE

Blatant prejudict'
After I test1f1cd try111g to p01n1 o ur the
anequit1es ol the houMng ordmance, Mr Volkert
attempted t o repudiate my .1rgument w1th several
~tatemcnt~. some or them enoneous. Itt! . lnmed
that the number of 1nesponsiblc anJ d1&gt;r11ptive
s tudent ~ was far more than a ~m.1ll pl'r~&lt;'nlag.:.
Before I had a c hance t o respond, he left the room.
Mr l twandowsk1 look over for rum , h o wever,
cmphatH:ally staling that I had my facts wrong and
that th;: ltnut wal&gt;n't t"'"o unrelated people that ~:ould
hw togtthcr, hut thrcl! '' R1ght, Jo hn''" h i! said
tnumphantl y ro hou~mg head Macaluso, who
mforml!d hun I hat I he It mil was m fact two. This ·
&gt;llt'ncl!d Ll!wandow,kl flu Jbout \1)( second'
Ll"wandow'l..' ranii:J and raved throughout the
hcanng and cOnJIHl'J up 1111age~ of the (;e\tapo
g&lt;'nl'r Jl hi! r~·~&lt;'mhll'' ll ndt: Ra) ·~ b.1ld slalp, 11

Page two . The Spectrum . Friday , 17 March ~ 972

Spritzler refuses t6. . .
attend closed hearing

Phone
875-4265

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Cm:uflt1on: 16,000

�offieial bulletin
Undergraduate students should update their student data forms
starting April 10. according to the schedule below. (Note : The time
one turns in the date form will have no bearing on the rime of
registration.)
Accurate data is essential for a trouble-free registration. The
correct listing of a student's major and class can mean the difference
between a good schedule and a disastrous one.
Information on the registration process will be handed to
students as they come in to update the data forms in Diefendorf
Reception Area .

Breakdown Oesip tee Your Pre:Mnt O~~~a
April 10
II

12
IJ
14

A - L Seniors
M- Z
F

A

G- L
M R Juniors

s

17
18

T

z

19
20

A

G

F
M Soph1)morcs

21

N

f{

24

s z

25

A
G

F

26
27

2X

s"'

M Freshmen

Von Moltke letter

Collegiate budget inadequate
Editor 's note: The following leuer, wrillen by
Konrad 1-'(Jn Moltke, director. of the Collegiate
System, was sent to Universiry President Robert
Keller 0 11 March 15, 1972. A carbon copy was also
delivered to Bernard Gelbaum, vice president for
4ctu1emic Affairs.

I feel it is necessary to Info rm you ahuut the
current budgetary sit uation of the Collegiate System.
In fall 1970 the vice president for Academic Affairs
allocated a total budget of $206,650 to the
Collegiate System fo r the 1970.7 1 academic year.
Some $45,000 of the 1970-7 I fiscal year portion of
this allocatiOn was drawn from endowment monies
Consequently. the mitial appropnation for the
Colleg~ate System was onJy $136.155 which was
subsequently annualized to prov1de an appropnatcd
hudgetof$157,09 1 asofApril l , 1971.
At the time the 1970-71 AY budget was set up.
J commitment was made to prnv1de additional funds
1n the I&lt;)7 1-72 FY budget to make up fo r the
endowment monies wheu they were wrthdraw11 as
scheduled on March J I. 1971 In spring I &lt;J71 the
vice prestdent stated that the C'olleg.r:lle Syst~·m
would coni inue at 11' 1'170-7 1 level ol lunding
($200,6'0) through tht• IIJ71 -72 AY. On tht• bU\IS ol
tlus assurance, I made commitments for 1971 -72 to

~

R
l

Collegiate Assembly
demands more funds
'Tan wt• moh!111c and demand
tlungs from the admm1stratton or
w1JI Wt' lUSt I.Jkc all tile bullsh1l
they throw at us"'" That
\IJtcment. rn.Jde by a mt&gt;mher of
the Collegiate Assembly at 11~
meeting Wedne\day
wa~
prompted by the Ketler
admm1stratwn 's antH&gt;un~.:ement to
cut the Colleges' budget fnr the
next acad..:1111C ye.u The assembly
Jdoptetl a resolution ~.:alltng for an
Jdequate budget and tlw crealu)n
ot an ad hoc comm1ttee Ill study
problems With the admm1stration
Accord1ng to the present
hudget. the Colleges well take d
fiscal loss of 22 J':t, fr(ml
$.!06,550 t(l S 159,4 11. Ac&lt;..ordmg
t\1 Konrad von Moltke. dtreclor of
the Collegmte Assembly. the
Colleges could not operate at the1r
present levt&gt;l Without at lrast the
same amount or money they
1eceived fur the 1971-1972
academic year
In an open letter to Dr Ketter ,
read at the meetmg. Dr. von
Moltke outltned the many
accomplishments of th~ Colleges
fhese mcluded new and exciting
programs and courses. attrac110n
of well-known scholars and art1sts,
est ablishment of relauonstups
between faculty and students and
the existence of the Colleges as
the o nly non-maJOr un11s on
campus.
The mam topic of debate at
the meeting was what specific
course of act10n should be taken
by the Colleges to insure
necessary fiscal support. Dr. von
Moltke sugge~ted delugmg Dr
Ketter's office w1th letters. Many
people felt . however, that this was
not a strong enough course of
actton and the proposal was met
with lillie vocal agreement

The pms1hility ol \:allsn~ a
was Wtdely d•scu,sed Some
represrutaltves tdt that the
('olleges should refu~ tu teach
thetr courses. whtle other.. felt
that they should allcmpr to close
duwn the whole L1111vers11Y Short
of a stoke, many memher\ wanted
to have classes tumed 10 to forum~
Ill d•scuss what aclnlllS cuuld be
1.1ken by the students "If the
~•udent~ dun't
supp~nt
the
College~ when 11 comes down to
the w11e," SaJd one member , " I
}:Uess the Colleges JUSt won't
extst "
~tnke

fhroughour the meetmg many
agamst the Ketter
admmiStratton were o~1red Most
nutable was the decrs1on to stop
letting undergraduates teach
courses . These st udent-taught
courses are felt by many to he
e$Senllal to the functtunnlR of the
Colleges
gr1evance~

The assembly was presented
With a resolutton. lind after much
debate, 11 was passed
unanimously . Am o ng the
resolution's proposals was a
demand for an adequate budget
which IS representative of the
Colleges' contributions to the
University. and the creallon of an
ad hoc comm1ttee to study the
relationship of the Colleges with
the administratton . The
co mmittee will also propose
actions and dtsseminate
mformation to the University
commumty.
The mcehng ended wtth all
those in attendance agreemg that
the Colleges are faci ng a maJOr
crisis. In the opinion of one
student · " We don't realize our
strength "

Konrad von Moltke
•he variuus C'ollcglatc umts NoiHidy evt•r pretended
that $20h ,b50 constituted an ;~dClt Uate level ol
fundtng, hut we were awaH· uf the hnuldllllll~ on the
lln1ve r ~ 11 y budget and were Wlllmg 111 wort- wtth lite
limited funds available tu u~
The comm1tment to replace the endowment
nH)n•es was never mer . ne11her 10 April 1971 nw 10
the followmg su mmer Ttns left the Cnlleg1a te
System $50,000 shurt on the approprtateJ bud~et
•nd w1th an addu tonal shortfall ol SIS .000 s1nce we
had begun the 1970-71 FY w1th Jn annuahtcd rate
of expendtture of $206.000. but $1 ~7 ,000 of wh1ch
had been appropriated To meet this shor tfall uf
S65.000 we were g.~vcn a vanety of mrnor mcrements
tu the appropriated hutlget, brtngtng 11 up to
$ 167.427 We were encouraged tu cxpla1n my
predicament tu other ur11tS on campus iu lhe hupc of
gelling ass1stance m meehng my commitmenh By
dilligenl searching and contmuuus begg.mg, we were
able to meet all comm1tmcnts, that is to achteve an
ac l ual rate of expenditure of approximately
$206,000
We have now been mformed that our tenta11ve
budget fur the 197 2· 73 academrc year wtll be
$159,411 . or a reduction of S47.139 from the
amount wh1ch was committed tu us la:.t year and
which we were able to spend. In other words, the
program, which is by common consent the most
seriously underbudgeted, 1s being asked to take an
eflective cut of 22.3% 10 the available budget. I find
11 rmpossrble to see how we can operate on such a
budget. To develop Colleg.~ate programs these last
two years 10 the face of the obstacles which have
existed has required an exceptional degree of
dedica11on on the part of all those involved The
proJected cut is an affront. We ~:ann o t o perate w1th
less than $200,000 next year. In addition some
provision will have to be made to provide this office
with administrative assistance.

I am aware of the possibility that this allocation
may not have been intended as an affront; in fact , il
may have arisen from some mi.sapprehenstOn on the
part of the vice president for Academic Affairs
concerning the actual state of our fi nances. I have a t
times wondered what the criteria for making
dec1sions have been since the flow of information to
ttus office has been rather inadequate and I was not
consulted about my budget request prior to the
decision on the tentative allocation. It has taken
three weeks for me to receive routinely distrib uted
material for preparing the 1973-74 budget.
I would like to take this opportunity to outline
in general terms what we have achieved these last
two years. A hst of the specific achievements would
run I o several pages
Withm less than two years, we have developed
out of a mu;or crim, rnto an undeniably viable
program . which tS now aciUevmg national
recogn1tion We have developed new progunu, we
have eltmmar ed ~om e that were failures and we have
111111ated exciting new courses. We have learned from
mistakes and we have proven a means for expressing
J sense of eXCitt'mcnl ami ~:.ommrtment to educat10n
tm \tudents who had not been sat1sfied with what
Ihis University had to uffer them as undergraduates.
We have Jtlracted sume nJIJonally and
mtcrndllllllillly known ~holar~ ;tnd art1sts for
~umettrnes e'tendcd Vlbill&gt; l(l thts ~mpm .
Wt• ;ue well 1111 the way Inwards preparing the
movt• 111111 rc~1den11al fac1l111e~ thus prov1ding th1s
llrliVei,IIY with the un1que opportun11y of maku1g
'ra~:c a~~1gnmenl\ to already funct1011111g untts where
tll het lllSittutiou~ have taken years to non out thetr
1111\takcs. Wt· Jtt• th~· only llllll un campus wludt
llcvutc' 11~ JllciHIUn explllltly hi the problem nf
nun -ma1ur,, o~lthough ell least MY7r ul all
undergraduate students 111 all CtlUrses are taking them
tlUtsillt· their maJor depart mcnts. We have produced
the mnsl accUtate, 0\llSl informat1ve catalog$
:~va•lable anywhere on ~mpu.~
lu sp11e ut lite lolld of our nn-gotng opcratton.
Wl.l have produL~d and distributed extensive. detailed
documcn 1a111111 ol our opcratrons and have at all
trme' heen open tu pubhc scrutmy I helteve we have
CllnVtrh:ed mJuy faculty members that the Collegiate
System ts an nnagmallvc , desirable approach 10
many of the problems of undergraduate education
1111 J c.;.11npus :ouch as thl\ We have established
relatlonshtps wh1d1 never cx1sted befurc between the
at;allemtL am.l the stullrrll !llfam, ~1de of 1h1~
Uruvcrstl y
We have dou~ all tlu~ w1th a hudget that 1~ to
1h~ best of my knowledge, comparable to that of the
"mallc~t departments ~.om thts campus. and 111 the face
ot severe tcstncllons on the usc of funds. We have
had to cope Wtth mtense puhltc pressure. only some
of wh1ch was ~ll·rn01c1ed
;\II tlus 11me we have carried an enormous
teach111g load. g111ng from credit-hour enrollment of
XOOO 111 fall IQ70 to apprOXImately 15.000 m spnng
197:!. This has been poss1ble only because of the
alrnost hm1tless t1me and energy devoted by a core
group of students and faculty numbering almost
300 We Will have to make our own adjustments next
ye.u . hut tt 1!. &lt;..ertain that an unchanged budget of
$200.000 will lead to reductions m the student
credit hours taught. We are, of course , aware in
general terms of the overall fiscal s.rtuahon of this
lln1vers•ty. and have, I belreve, shown th1s by bemg
W1llrng to opera te as we have on the money whlch
was available. Even so, the proposed budget cut is
simply unjust1f.able by any reasoning. It will lead to
intense and justifiably angry reactions from those
who have devoted so much hme and energy to th1s
enterprise .
There are many who believe that this cut
reflects an intentional policy of creating crisis for the
Colleg,ate System. I trust that you w1ll act to dispel
any such question and to confirm m1 own
conviction that the current situatio n is the result of
inadvertence. I also trust that you will make
provrsions to restore a min1mally viable level of
support. I believe this matter requtres your urgent
attention. The Collegiate Assembly will be meeting
weekly on Wednesdays to discuss the current crisis.

Friday, 17 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�/

artion line

J

Have a prohlern'' Need help'&gt; Ou you fintl 11 amposstble to untangle
the Unaversaty bureaunacy'&gt; In coopera taon with the Offi.ce of Student
Aflatr' and Scrvaces, 7?re Spectrum ~po nsor' Actaon Lme, a weekly
reader ~crvace column Through Actaon Lane. amllvidual studen ts ~n
get an,wcr' to puultng questton), land out where and why Umversaty
dectsaon' arc made and get ac:llon whl·re chJ ngc 1\ needed
Ju st dial 831·5000 or vasat thl' Action L anc hooth an the Center
L ounge tn Norton Hall for indivadual atlt&gt;ntton rhe Offtce o f Student
Affaars and Servtces wtll mvesllgate all que~t10ns .tnd complatn ts, and
w 111 answer them rndtvtdually The name of the andtvtdual ongana tang
the rnqutry IS kept conftdenta al under .111 ltrlumstances The more
common ques taons wtll be answered an tlus colu mn each week

Q : 1 parked in the Tower parking lot about 2:30a.m. to ~et my girl
out and to see her into the dorm . I was gone about five mmutes and
when 1 110t back. there was a ticket o n my car. I th an k that th.is is
unjus t . 1 know that you sh ouldn't park there for any length of ttme,
but they sh ould make an allowance for seeing so meone t o the door .
Can anything be done about it?
A Nothang can tie dont&gt; at&gt;oul the ttcket you relel\ed hecause tl tS
1,wed by the Ctt} ot Buffalo But Wl' lhc,ked wtth CdntPII' St:lUrtly,
and they tell us thJI they usuJily .tllow "Hill' gran· pcpnd for lhl!
~ 1 tuataon ynu de~dtbe They ~atd that usually nu one 1~ ttd.eted tf they
park for IS manure' or le!&gt;-\
Q 1 have a fnend who is lookmg for an apa rtment Do you know
of any available?
A
We don't But we maght ~uggcst that you contact the
Off.{:'ampus Housang ofhce on the ftr~t floor of Goodyear and :.ee tC
they can help you The) matntdtn regui.H lists of hou,ang I hal t\
avatlable dose to the l'ampus .tnd nor so dCI\e to the ~.ampu~ The only
other suggestion we can offer ~~ to watch the want ad\ tn the lo~.al
newspapers.

Q When is the last d•Y that I can appl ) for th e fall semester in the
Mi111rd F tllm ore College'
A July I
Q· 1 need •letter of recommen&lt;blwn Unlortunately,l dtd notaet
to know any of my professors well enough to a.'k for lht!&gt; favor Is there
any way of gettina such 1 teller from the Umventty'
A Ye,, there t\ One ~ugge~llon ''that y(tur d,·aJcnlll Jdvl\or may
know you well enough to wnte a lcner fnr you I r you dun 't tee I free
to go to ham we sugge't that you \CI: one ot the 'tall m the Offi~:e nl
&gt;,tudent Allatr' and \erH~.e:. . ~01 HcliiiiTIJn lthr.Jry I he} v.tll be giJd
10 IOitrYICV. )' OU JOd ICI rl'VICV. your l Jreer .II l he \1 OIVl'r'll Y .I nd then
to v.nle .1 \ctter ol re&lt;.ommcnd.JliCIII tor you

Q What happened to the Bnlh Control Cllnu: that wa' ~ouppo~ed
to open on campO!&gt;'
A 11 ha~n 'tr&gt;pennl yet but 11 hope' tu Jo '" 10 the nc.1r tutun· It
has re.:e1ved lund~ng trom the Student As~on.lllon .Jnd ha~ arranged to
usc the fal'lhlles of the Health .Sl'IVIl't'\ tn Mtdtael Jlall I he prnhlcm
nght now IS getttn~ enough dodo1~ to voluntet&gt;r In m.untJin the
\CIVIle~ and thiS IS hetn(( done Jl the pre,enl ltnte &lt;;u II \hnuJd he Ill
operatton v.llhtn J 'hnrt t11ne . hnrdully
Q · I hope to gradua t e in Jan u ary 197 3 When do I h ave to have m y
degree card fi led with Admissiom and Record,~
A We l .llkd Admt&lt;o\Hln~ and R•·..:ord' JIHI the}' rt•ll '" th.tl you
~hould ftle a degree ...ud J\ 'oon .J' po"thll'

Q· h th ere any truth to the rumor gomg a round th•t next year
there wall be four :.tudents rather than fave to an apartment in
Allenhurst"
A W~ ~;heck.:d IA.llh lluU\101.( dlld they tell U\ thai 1111' I~ JU~tone
,,r the many rumor.. goang around , and It " only th.tl a rumor
Actually, no one t\ ~urc what wall happ.:n yet heo:ause everythtng
depend~ upon the avatl.tbthty t&gt;l the nt.&gt;w 111111~1ng on the Amher5t
... ampu~ llow soon till' v.tll be turned over tu the llou,tll~ Orta~.e h&gt;r
"''-upan&lt;.y L' anyone ' ' guel&gt;~ he~.o~u'c 1t depend' upon '" mJny
variable!i For exampk the power u&gt;mpJny 1~ hutldtng J n.:w
\UbStlltton to meet the clcctrt..:lll need' of thl'~l· hou''"lt l.t.altllcl&gt; But
wtlltt be ftntShed an tune lor Scpt~:rnher nr not '' Sn tht• nnly Jn,wer we
. an gave as that tnu and other rumof\ hJ..•· 11 Jre ) U'I that
run111r' We
wtll all have to watt unul September h&gt; "'1.' v.hJI h.Jppcll'
f\'otc We though th.tl muny \lod••nh rnaght '" llllcrc~lt•d 111 11111111g that
the Untvel"'itty Placement and &lt;"~H·er CutdJrh c Otf"c 111 ' '"lpcra tt o n
wtth the S&lt;.hool ot Management "pl..rnntn)!.; ( Jreer l&gt;.r\ l••r I uesd.1y
\1arch ~1&lt; . IY 7 .:! . A )Cnc~ ot semmo~r' v.tll run tr.1111 I ltl r 111
4 311
p m . Ul Rt)Olll'&gt; ~.ll , ~.lJ and ~ 34 Nnrton I l.rll I ~~~~ l' \t'llltna~ w11l
dcscnbe vanou'&gt; ~.art:er ftclds an hu~tne~' tndll'&gt;ll\1 ami govnnntent ·1 h~
Pl.H:ement Office c ordtally tnYIIl'' \IUdl·ntl&gt; trum all lli'&lt;tphne-. tn
attend

tit hurts so bad'

State ofthe State University
Ku:ktng off has remarks to the tune of, ''It hurts
so bad." SUNY Chancellor Ernest Boyer addressed
over 400 alumna, faculty and students at last
Tuesday's ftrst regiOnal Confederation of Alumni
Assoctatton dmner However, wlule admrtttng that
the State Unaverstt y system was ex penencmg "days
of un~..crtamty," Dr. Boyer stall mwntatned a note o f
opltmiSlll
Outhntng the 24-year htstory of the Unaversity,
Dr Boyer p1npoanted three dtManct penods of
growth lhe fir..t. he explatned, was a lime of
"cautton dOd constraant" when the Umverstty acted
as a holdtng co mpany At thts tame. h e noted, the
~ystcm was "born an contruvcrsy" wtth some
~ugge~ttng th&lt;tt rt was "st tllborn "
II ow ever. World Wa r II wtt h tiS accompa nymg
Cl b1ll, resulted an the awareness of a publu: mtsston
tu provade post htgh \chool educatiOn .
" H ope and dSptrataon" replac:ed caullon, and the
Unaverstty then entered tiS second phase dunng the
1960's, o n e of .. dramattL growt h " The
accomplishments of this penod included the
"strengthcnmg" of graduate s tudies and research,
cstablt~hnrent of the S tate Unaverstty ..:onstructton
lund, expan~10n of the communtty ..:ollege ~on .:ept,
foundang ul t-mpare State College dnd exten~1ons of
progrJm~ for thl' dt~advantaged .
' Dramatic shift'
In the l&lt;l60'\ , Dr
Boyer .:onttnued . the
llnaver~ttv w .. ~ noted for "tl!. l&gt;IIC , daversaty and
4uahty" 1 he pathways of learnang, he remarked,
havt&gt; IH·cn multtpltcd In addition, he commented . " I
.tm nut saytng that we ho~ve found the ftnal
anl&gt;wcr
but we have surely t ned "
Advan.:ang tnto the JQ70's , the c han cellor
recogn11ed "a dramath: shtft an pubhc mood " A lot
of muncy, he cl&lt; plarncd, wa~ piled wto the
UniVCf~lth!~ Jnd It Wil~ reah7ed th
the UOIVCr\I(ICS
dtd nul have Jll the otn!&gt;wcrs "Douht5 were planted
that the unrvcrstty " not the sole 'iolutiOn tu human
progre\S
The penvd of angua~h and campu~ unrest
o:ontnbuted to these doubh, he conttnued The

1970's are, because of these douhts, a lime ol
"pnor ity and consolidataon ." Peopl~ are presently
lookrng at the un aversity, according to Dr. Boyer
"wtth great caut1on and skepticrsm "
SpeaJong 'pectfically of the proposed tuttton
tncreases, Dr Boyer termed the ratses as "a patnlul
mrddle course" to co mbat e du ca tion c:utbacks f '11a
revenue from twt ton, he e'tplained, w1ll benefit thl'
hbranes. maantenance, increased student enrollment
o~nd the medacal st.hools.
After hrs speech, when quest toned about .1 nl'w '
release that Gov . R oc kefeller was furl her decreo~Mn~
the ~tate budget to SUNY, Dr Boyer rt&gt;affirml·d ht'
~IJtcmcnt thJt tuatton money would beneftt only th e
SUNY system "I am not goang to ratse tuttton t ..
hutld more ruads or anythang ltke that," It,·
matntarned If ~uch a rnove were allempted . Or
Boyer reported that he would not su pport tutt11•11

STUDY OVERSEAS
SUMMER PROGRAMS *
Salamanca, Spain: Spanish language and civi lization
Manchester. England : Brittsh prtmary schools and open classrooms
Western Mexico: Fteld study in archaeology

WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS!
ACADEMIC YEAR PROGRAMS

&lt;C\IJMf,t Plo Ttlff - ·

rREO ZINNFMANN S , wrv

AA£1N
FORALL
SEASONS
t::j GRANADA

TECHNICOLO~

TONIGHT AT:

7:30 &amp; 9:40p.m .

P~ae four .

Cologne, Paris, Uppsala, Sweden: Graduate study in humanities and social sciences
Beirut, Lebanon : Undergraduate study in arts and sciences
•
Manchester, England: Undergraduate study in education

[QJ

Sat &amp; Sun.
2. 4 :10, 7 :30,
&amp; 9 :40p.m.

The Spectrum . Friday, 17 March 1972

OFFICE OF OVERSEAS ACADEMIC PROGRAMS
107 TOWNSEND HALL
Ext. 4941 , 4247
• For graduates AND u ndergraduates

�The Graduate Student Association is interested in the opinions of all graduate
students concerning the formation of the proposed graduate student union. They are
strongly urged to fill out the following informal poU and return it via campus mail or
in person to the GSA office, Room 205 Norton Hall.
I . Do you want a student group to have formal bargaining rights with the state.
yes or no?
2. Do you receive a state stipend , yes or no?
3. Would you jom a graduate student union, yes or no?
4 . If yes for number 3, which would you prefer AFT, NEA o r an 1ndependent
local?
5. Please mdicate your department.

GSA conception

Graduate students' union?

Dr . Eugene Sch oenfeld of
Berkeley, Calif. will discuss his

Lect11re series

book, Dear Dr. HIPpocrates Advice Your Family Doctor Never
Gave You, tonight at 8 :30p.m. in
Capen Hall, Room G-22. Th is is
part of the Han ington lecture
S.ies of the School of Medicine.

MFCSA votes -aKainst
HottsinK Corporatio11
The Millard F1llmore College
St uden t Assoc1a11on Executive
Committee voted 7-1 Monday
mght ag:unst parllc1pa11ng in Sub
Board l 's proposed Housmg
Corpo ratton " We're going to get
tn 1 o an other
Poverty Htll ,"
warned George Kraus, Finance
Co mmittee chairman . Th e
com mitt ee d e mo nstrated 1ts
anllpathy to the idea when they
voted 5-3- 1 to slick rigidl y to the
order of the agenda and no t let
Steve ~lumenkran t z. executive
dnector of Sub Board, speak
about the corporatiOn.
Correspondmg Secretary Joan
Hurlbut IIISISted on conductmg a
r efere ndum "if i t (the
cor p orat i o n) b eco m es
controversial." Ano ther member
ca ll ed for a n "ind ividual
refe rend um " cond u c ted by
MFCSA rather than by Sub
Board. Th1~ was only one of the
many Instances where a
prunnunced con 01ct between
Ml CSA Jnd Sub Board was
l&gt;bVIOUS.
llle d1sagreement showed ttsclf
.1gam 111 d1scuss1on of the Amherst
land transfer. According to
MH'SA Prc~t d en t B1ad Rober ts,
1he plan mnst likely to be
accepted 1nvolvcd selling the land
and scttmg up what he termed a
'"quas1-endowment fund" that
could be used fur all sorts o f
unspec1 fted. uselul purposes.
subject to state gu1delines. The
argument, according tu Jack
Buntmg, MFC"s representative to
Sub Board , is over who will
cont rol the mcome . Mr. Bunting
said that Sub Board wants the
~:ontrul. wluch he and MFCSA
oppu&lt;&gt;c

Getting the shaft
Mr. Kra us ven tured · "One of
the first th1ngs they (Sub Board)
wan t to d~• w1th that mcome 1s get

1oto hou sing .. Mr Bunt Ill!(
estima t ed that the AmiH'r't
property IS nuw worth
S I ,600.000, at least three limes
the purcha se prtce June
Crawford, v1ce president, wanted
to know what the money would
be used for tf anyone else got
contro l o f it. No one had any
answers to that query.
The committee also expressed
a destre for more independence
from other branches of student
govern m ent
Mr. Bu nt1ng
pre~ented a report on Llmvers1ty
governance that asserted th1&lt;;
v1ewpomt. Accordmg to Mr
Bun ting. n1ght school ~tudents
constantly get the shaft. lie
pomted out problems in CNY's
night divisio n.
Brian Coyne's re port 1lrl a
s 1u dent-w1de judiciary showed
much the same atlltude lie
concluded · I) it was too cnstly
fo1 the amount of work 11 would
accompl1sh . 2) that smce o nly five
MFC students had been brou¥,ht
before the tud1c1ary. 11 wa' not
worthwhile
H ts re~.:um
mcndat1ons, wh1ch the ~:ommittee
act:cptcc.l o · l · l , were
I) to
rcl.'wl~ldcr MFCSi\ 's re lat ioml11p
wtlh the other government\ , and
2) talk to Nt&gt;rm l:ffman al·hlllt
legal counM!I lo1 Ml ('
In uthl't husntes~
t he
l:llm01111Ce ICVtewed the \llllllllef
h11dget , appruv1ng a cut 111 the11
..:ontnbullon tn Suh Board a~ well
as a reduc::t1UII ol student Ices
from $2 .50 I ll $1 75. ('lara
Kuchlewind 1111roduced 1he uew
nom11tating ~:ommittce, wl11ch
c lwoses from the cand1dat es
n1r1nmg lor office and endor\c\ a
~l:lle. There had been oppusl tllln
to th1s endorsement procedure
but , alter three unsuccessful
attempts to change it at othe r
meetmg~ . 11 seems more or les~
a~:~:e pted

I mp·rove d w o rk ing co nditions, adequate
compensation for wurk dune and a greater role in
decrs1011 making are all goah ~ought by gradual~
students. However, a d1fference presently ext~ts
Wlthm the Graduate Student A&lt;;S(ICiatu)n on how
these ends should be Jt:h1eved
Several members o f an ad hoc (,SA ~:omnutt cc
arc proposing the cstaht.shmenl of a graduate
student uruon based on w lle..:t1Ve h:11ga1n1ng. lim ad
hoc commillee 10 hwcst1gage the Puss1hll1ty ol a
C1aduatc Student lllllllll wa~ fmm~·d hy the.• (jSA
Senatl.' " to limnulate a pn~pn~al(~l fur a c;1aduat~·
Student Unmn. the ex pres,cc.l purpo\l' ul wh11:h w1ll
tx· to extend and prull'l.'l \tlltknt r1ghh 111 Jll JI~'J' &lt;II
\llldent 111 terest
Al'\:ordmg 111 l.'•lmnut ll'~ llll'nthl'r' 111 1,1\1111 ol
~ut:h
.1 11n11111 " l lJH\1111/,1111111 .tlllf llllfl'I.. IIV\'
bargat11111g pr11v11J~· th~· only v1,1hk .Jitt•rnatlvc 111
graduate ~tudcul~ .. Ouc llll'lllhcl, ~;un Ahh.11c
expla111ed . "The currt•nt LSI\ r~ wrthout powl·r a11d
"tneffecttve fnt dl.'ahn~ With Jll)l l..t~1tln1 tiiL'illllll~ful
changt•"

Needs neglected
Ue cuntmucd that the (,SA "hand!&gt; have been
lied hy the Board of Trustees, slate audttors and the
local admtnut ratton.. As reported by the
committee's recommendattons "There IS a defin1te
trend 10 lower the number of graduale studenls
uatronally, ratse tUJitlllli&gt;, lessen already hmrted
)tuden t autunomy (the ftlvd and record co-ups, the
colleges) and generally neglect the needs and nghrs
of ~ tudents as the ecunomy stagger~ "
The1r plan tn estabh'&gt;h an mdustrJal-modeled
graduate student unum mdude~ J four-step method
ul 1mplementat1on under the New York StJie Taylor
Law I) P£RB (NYS Puhhc hnpl&lt;1yee Relations
Board) must first recugr111e grac.luatc \tudent~ as
pubhc employee~ w1th the rtght 111 negottatc a
contract with the State nf New Yorio... :!) PI· RB
defi(les the un11 for which tht• t.:on tract will be
negutiated ; 3) the tnd1v1dual Ullll must petlttoll lor
the election ul a bargau11ng a~cnt wtth .11 lea~t 10'~
ol the chg~ble emp lo yee~ ll'pre~e111cd hy 1he
"~natures colleLted, and ~l a ~:outr;1l1 1~ th•·n
negotiated with the governor\ &lt;~I IlL~

Other preceden ts
('Jtmg precedent' lo1 \IIHic11t 111111111' l11n
Md'abe . also on the l.'olllllllltl'~'. relcm·tl to till'
lJrt1vers1ty of WI\L:OII\111 wlud1 ha' lhl' only
func.: tton1ng g1aduatt: ''"Ul'llt lllltoll that l.llll ltl hl•
llll ti.Jllcd . He cx piJtllt'd IIIJI th1·11 111111111 w." lurtlll'c.l
du1111g the strill.e nl 11&gt;711 ami h." ~UL:CL'"Iully
,III:Jckcll the •~sue~ ut t"b \t'lllll tY w111k l11;11b .u1d
Wtlfl- hours Howcve1 tw doc\ ad nut thJt tiH 11
\Ull'!'S.\ 1\ flm1tcd Ill I hat lhl'Y WeiC lllt.lhlt: It&gt; ,tdlt~'W
;my mput 111111 elluLJtlllll.tltllilnlllnl!
In Jdd1111111, Mr Me( Jh~ expiJ111cd that thl"lr
rontract ha!&gt; cxp~red and they may go •Ill 'trtk~· . JS
they have done ont:L' bcl111c llow ev~r, d a llllltltl
were lo11ned herr, the 1 aylor L.&lt;IW would prol11h1t.
any str1ke from uccu11111~ . Roger Cooke. also 111
favor of unionil3tion. feels that ;1 ~tr1l-e rmghl st ill
be poss1ble althou~h legal rl.'p\' rt.USSitlll\ could LlCcur
Mr Cook expl.1111ed tllll'l' lt:a,on~ why J Ulllllll ~~
present ly needed 1--u~t. ht: argued . taw~ Jrc
determ111cd by the Still e .1dmumtrat1on Jnd fJt.:ulty
Without "any real power h) graduate students to
make the11 rules... lie ll'rl1:11l-ed "Wt! Jre tn the
poMIIIIII llf havmg to pl.1y thcu hall game. F 11r
exam ple . we can't deba te sudl matter!&gt; as curnculu m

content or open admissions . there are no laws, no
nghts and no Rrievances."
Additionally, he commented . "Gnevances are
hmttcd to faculty breaking their own taws."
Sewndly. he continued, every dec1ston and grievance
procedure can be mod.ried by the admm1stration. As
an exam ple, he ctted a case 10 wh1ch a sociology
graduate student was accused of "overusing and
abu~mg gnevance procedure~ "
Mr Cook concluded that "wtthout some kind of
11n1on. g1aduatc students have no guarantee that
thl'rc won't he 1epnsals "Every 11me a grad student
l'lllploy' gr1evance pmcedure\. he disassociates
luml&gt;Cif fmnl the te\t ul tlw dep;ntment and •~ m the
J'HISIItnn of hc111g on the wrong side of the
dcp.Ht men 1 "
Sununmg up the argument' ln1 the 11111on , Mr
1\hhate Lllmment~d " We have no power
we'd
we'd l1kl.' a lot ·· Those opposing the
hl-l' J httll•
111111111 L'\plarncd that they aren't against the " tdea of
.1 11111011 , u11ly thl.' idea nf an 111effecttve unwn" Mike
N1Lnlau . (,SI\ pres1den t. explatned "everybody
Wt~ h e' the \all\e thing for graduate students
the
411est11m IS what approach will we use "
Effective operation
Mr N1colau feels lhat the present GSA is one
opt1on that has been funchoning effectively.
Accordmg to h.im. the GSA has proved successful in
formu lating formal grievance procedures, o btaining
administrallon recognitiOn of a nurumum level of
support for graduate studen t&amp; and manning all
1hllvers1ty committees.
Additi onally. Mr N1colau cntllized the
comm11tee for not fully researclung the fac ts,
advantages and disadvantages o f a un10n concept
' lhe charge tu the comm1t tee was to study the
fea\lblhly of a union1za11on They were to gather
data and fact~ . Instead, :~II they have produced IS
1 hetorll "
T erm111g the committee's report "totaJiy
tncomplcte anc.l h1ased," Mr . N1colau explained that
the conm111tec wa.' composed, at the outset , of
mcmhn~
totally 111 favor of unionization
AdtfltlwlJIIy . he 1epmted that the committee spoke
hefore the Se11ate twtce "The Senate found the1r
report 10.1ppropnate They were unable to answer
ll'kv:JII t question~ 111 lu pruvtde hard data.
Suh\l'qucutly . thl' s~·natc tabled the11 nwllun and
retflll'\lt·tl turtht:1 lllfntmatlllll Sllll. that
lllhlllll.IIJIIII h&gt;J~ nnl he,•n IC11thc.-nnung'
AdveNary mit-'
M1 NtL:olau abo cxpla111cd thar the 1dea 3!1
prl'\~ntlv L.IIIII.'L'IWd liul'\n't repre~ent all graduate
\tutll'lll\ 11111)' tlto\l' 1111 salaru:d hnc' (research and
tcJdttrl!! J\SI\taut') Su~.h a hody 111dudes less than
.:!\' 1 of the t&lt;~tal graduate enrollment
M1 Ntcnlau feels that further research should be
d1lll~ 111tu the fXISSibllitte~ of estabhshmg a union.
llowcvcr. he doesn't hci1CVC that a un1un patterned
aflcr an ltldU\Irtal model helung~ 111 a University
SCIIIO(:I

"An rndustnal mtxld," he "&lt;ud. "assumes
advcr,ary roles. 111 terms of cnem1es and friends.
Su~:h Jtl J\~umptHHl rs not product1ve in an
cdut.JIIIlllal \CIIlllg." Presently. he stated, GSA has
been able tu ac~.umphsh much hy "pcrsuas1on and
pcrmtcnq •· Ideally. Mr N1colau remarked : "We
\hould he Jble 111 fuuct1un .1~ rcspuns1ble student
~wvcrnments cducat111g pcuple of our needs and rn
ttun, be1ng educated to other's necc.l~ ."

Friday 17 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five
1

�Alternate program for
student loans approved

Hope for fair trial

All white jury approved as
Angela Davis trial continues

by Janis Crom«
CityEdltCN

A bill that would establish an
alternate loan proiJ"Im for college
students was uoanimoully
approved by the New York State
Senate on Tuesday.
A major provision of the bill
makes student loans available for
the first time to pupils whose
families have an income of over
$15,000.
•
In addition, the bill would
aUow an increase in the amount
that could be borrowed if
Congress makes similar changes in
its federal loan prosram as
expected . Currently a student
may bonow up to S I 500 a year
41 juron examined
to a total of $7500 during coUege
When jury selection began Feb. 28, the defense years. The increase would be to
1
25
expressed doubt that 12 1mpart1al jurors could be G$OOO. year for
total of
found and S3.1d that, at best , selecllon would take
nder Lh
several months. Only 41 prospect1ve JUrors were
h Senat Majority Leader
examined. Most of those turned down were rvjected
w Brydg calls I "defened
either because of thetr strong feehng$ ""i&amp;Q~ tuitton pflan," 8 _student tt couldUI!ve
.
a note o comm1tmen o a co eae
Commumsm or because they felt that they had been to pay Ius educaUonal costs This
too prejudiced by pretnal pubhc1ty.
note would be sold to the New
The charges agamst Ms Dav1s arc murder, York Mortgage Agency, which
Nor a jury of peen
would sell bonds to cover the
kidnapping and craminal e&lt;&gt;nsparacy. The accusations costs.
"As I look at the present JUI)'," she contmucd ,
grew out of an attempt to use a Judge, an assistant
''I see that the women and men do rencct the
district attorney and two jurors as hostages in order Sevm percent interest
composition of thJs country There are no black
The student would pay back
to free three conVIcts for San Quentin Prison . The
people sittang on the jury . All ho ugh I cannot say
judge and the other hostages were taken from a his debt , plus 7% annual mterest ,
that this 1s a jury of my peers, I can say that , after
within ten years after completing
much discuSSion, we have reached the concluston courtroom in Mann County where the prisoners Ius college career. The debt could
be s uspended and eventually
that the women and men Sttting on the jury wtll put were involved 10 a cnminal proceeding.
Ms. Davts was accused of purchasing guns that wiped o ut, however, if the
forth the1r best efforts to give me a faJ r tnal. "
payments exceed a certain
Both the prosecutiOn and defense denied that were brought into the courtroom and helpmg plot percentage of the former student's
any deal was mvolved 10 the sudden agreement to the escape attempt , which ended with the death of mcome. This would protect those
accept the jury . Albert Hams, Jr , the prosecutor . four persons m the ensumg gun battle. Californas law who entered such low-1ncome
S3.1d it had only been "understnod that tf they (the hoi&amp; accessories to a murder equally gu11ty w1th the public servtce careers as teaching
and social work .
defense) wo uld accept tt that we would accept tt." parllctpants.
Sen. Brydges wd the agency
could sell bonds at S% mtereat.
Wtth the student paytng back the
loans at 7%, he said, the margm
Appliations for the position of Ediror-in.Ch~f of Tht' SJH'rlrum for the academic would allow enough funds tu
cover the costs o f administration
year 1972- 1973 will be taken until March 24.
The state already has one loan
The applkation consists of a letter to the editorial board, stating reasons for
program admtruslered by the
desiring the position, qualifications and previous journalistic expmence. The position is
open to any State Univemty graduate or undergraduate studen t.
'MOTORCYCLEINSURANc{1
The editorial board wiU interview aU candidates on Tuesday, March 28.
:IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE :
Prospective applicants are urged to contact the Editor, Room JSS Norton Hall a.~
1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! 1
soon ~ po!liible to familiarize them~lve!i with any procedural or technical question~
IU P S T A T E C Y C l E I NS 1
about the position or about The Sputrum

Mr. Harris said there was nothing unusual in such an
anangement.
Although the jury was accepted, the national
committee involved in the defense of Ms. Davis
attacked the prosecution for using one of its
peremptory challenges on Tuesday to remove the
one black juror from the temporary panel. Franklin
Alexander, a national coordinator of the committee,
accused the prosecutor of wanting to try Ms. Davis
before an all-wh.ite jury.
Mr. Harris replied · ''We have not sought an
all-white jury . We did not want it. All we want is a
fair jury."

An aU-white jury was seated on Wednesday for
the trial of Angela Davis. After nine days,
questioning of prospective jurors ended abruptly
when Ms. Davis rose in the courtroom and
announced that she was ready to proceed with
testimony.
"t do not think that further delay m the jury
selection process will affect in any way the
compositio n of the jury," she said, ''and because we
h.ave confidence in the women and men presently
sitting in the box , I am happy to say that we
presently accept this Jury."
Judge Richard Amason of the Superior Court
then administered the oath and the jury was seated
The process of selecting alternative jurors was begun
Four alternates are being sought.
With the prospective jury of eight women and
four men in the box, Ms. Davis addressed the court :
"We have long contended that it would be virtually
impossible for me to rece1ve a fan tnal in Santa Oara
County (CaJifomJa). As you know, we have made a
number of change of venue motions challengJOg the
rulJng that the case be traed 1n Ltus county."

0

Hiabor Bducation Assistance
Corporation (HBAC) . This
corporation pa.rant~ the loans
New Yorkers obtain from banks
to finance tbeU coUe,e education.
Sen. Brydaea noted that banks
often refuae to lend money during
"tiaht" timea. Therefore, HEAC is
powerlea, be said.

Out-of•tate atude:nta induded
Sen. Brydges lllgested the
alternate approach to permit the
student to obtain money without
&amp;oina throup a bank. In addition ,
out-of-ctate students could get a
loan to attend New York State
coUeaea.
The new pro cess would
program payment&amp; to start at a
small amount and . gradually
increue according to the income
of the bonower. ''The prime
purpose of this bill is to make
available to children , whose
parents make more than S 15 ,000
a year, money to pay for a college
educahon," sa.id Sen. Brydges
" Today ," he continued, " thiS
figure can no longer be considered
affluent. In fact, with the cost of
college educations today , it lS a
very modest income. Th ~e
students now have to pay as much
u 13% interest when they seek a
loan ."
Althouah the bilJ was passed
unanimously , some doubts about
the concept were expressed. Sen.
Albert Lewis (0., Brooklyn) said
"We're not providing for a student
to hock himself to pay for a state
responsibility ." He wondered
whether the state should provide
more money to colleges, instead
of depending on the student to
carry so much of the cost. The btll
now faces passage in the State
ASJembly

Editor wanted!

I

Serv 011 over 5 .ooo utlsfled c lleotl for over 12 y urs.

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"'Ask Your Broker About Ut"

VARSITY TRACK
TRYOUTS
There will be a meeting of
all varsity track and field
candidates Monday, March
20 at 4:00 p.m. in room 3,
Clark Gym .

I

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Directorial
Positions
Available
Two students are needed to fill directonal

pos1t1ons in Sub-Board l 's Publications and
Un1vers1ty Umon Dtvisions. Both positions w1ll
Involve management of entire operations.

Submit resumes to Room 214 Norton Hall.

For more mformation calf 831 -5502

$ .08.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY E. GATT. MILLER-SMITH
Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, 17 March 1972

�Humphrev upsets Muskie jn primary
by Lynne TraeJel'
Off.Ctunpur Editor

'"This is my night, Jimbo," George Wallace told his
tw&lt;&gt;-year-old grandson Tuesday evening as the Alabama
governor walked off with 42% of the vote in the Florida
primary. The Southerner's exceptional showing won him
75 delegates to the Democratic convention wruch will be
held in Miami later this summer. As he watched the results
coming in, Wallace said: " I am really surprised the other
candidates ran so poorly. None o f them can take any
comfort in being second or third the way the vote is going ·
now.''
And Wallace was right. By the end of the night, none
of the other Democratic hopefuls looked aa if they had
any hope in this, the second of seven important primaries
throughout the country. Hubert Humphrey ran a
surprising second, talting 18% of the vote, as well as the
other six delegate votes. Henry Jackson, aiming for the
same votes as Wallace finished third with 14% of the vote.
Edmund Mu.skie, who showed poorly in the New
Hampshire primary a week ago, came in fourth with a
meager 9%.
The Democratic left, in the form of John Lindsay
and George McGovern, gleaned 7% and 6% respectively,
Lindsay just beating out McGovern for fifth place. The rest
of the votes were spread around the other five Democrats,
New York's Shirley Chisholm getting the lion's share of
what was left . Vance Hartke, Sam Yorty, Eugene
McCarthy and Wilbur Mills divided 20.000 votes among
themselves.

would consider "getting together" with one of the other
Democratic contenders, Wallace said : '"They may want to
get together with me now. I think all of them have been
badly hurt." The governor's plans call for an entrance into
the Wisconsin, Illinois, North Carolina, Tennessee,
Maryland, Indiana and Pennsylvania primaries, along with
his pledge to "continue our campaign for God and
country."
Humphreyp~

Humphrey's results are sticlting close with his game
plan. He had hoped to take advantage of Musltie's
vulnerability in Flordia and puU ahead of him there, even
if Wallace beat them both. He then hopes to do a bit better
in each succeeding primary. proving to the Democratic
delegates that he can still draw the vote when necessary .
Humphrey did well in his old constituency - among the
blacks, labor and the Jewish vote, what he calls "the
Regular Democrats," and commented : " My situation looks
heavy, encouraging and build10g.' '
However, he lost heavily in the precincts dominated
by college students. and it is here where he might lose
more ground . There wtll be a potential of 25 million first
voters come November . and Humphrey muSt prove hiS
worth among young and old in order to gain the
nomination. He 1S running on what he has done in the past ,
and the older people accept thts view What remains to be
seen, though , is how well this 60-year-old veteran can do
among the new voters.

Conservative vote competitive
Third place contender, Henry Jackson had to
compete with Wallace for the conservative vote, and he
BusinB referendum carries Wallace
Wallace was expected to win in Florida , since a probably would have done better if Wallace had not run.
school busing ban vote was also on the ballot , and Wallace However, like many of the candtdates, he must prove his
is an outspoken candidate o n the issue. The referendum worth in other primaries. Like Humphrey. Jackson appeals
went against court-ordered busing by a 74% majority. to the otd-fashioned voter, but how many votes can be
However, residents of the state also gave a 79% vote for harvested from that sort o f campaign ts a still unanswered
equal education. The third question on the ballot, that of question. Quite an unknown , many Floridians thought
legahzmg prayer in public schools, was approved by an "Vote for Scoop'' was an advertisement for another
aerospace project. Another deficit on the Jackson side is
80% vote.
Governor Reub~n Askew wo n only half his battle in the fact that he bears the label "hawk "
Edmund Mustue was deeply hurt in this primary .
an attempt to $\Jppc&gt;rt equal education was weU as keep
Having
received only 48~· of the vote in the New
court-ordered bus10g. Upon hearing the results, Askew
Hampshire
race, Muskte would have hked to prove himself
said, " I think it is the first t1me any Southern state has
10
the
Flonda
pnmary He had hoped to sweep the first
expressed a commttment to racial equahty 1n school." He
four
pnmanes,
thus g.vtng himself a momentum wh1ch
stated that th1s proved that the people of Florida "were
not consciously racially mot 1vated" in their disapproval of wouJd carry him through the o ther three big races. Th1s
strategy, tf tt had been successful, would have made him
bustng.
The Blabaman governor was particularly encouraged the major contender , w1th Itt tie hope left for the other
since Flonda "is a different sort of state. It is made up of candidates.
Muskie 's campa1gn IS based on people havmg
people from all sections of the country. ·• When asked if he

-U PI

confidence in him, as well u his projection of the trait.
Unfortunately, he seems to have lost something along the
way, especially on the trip down south from New
Hampshire. In order to stay in the race, Muskie must do
exceptionally well ltl the IUinois primary, where hiJ only
opponent is Eugene McCarthy. as weU as the April 4
Wiso ncsin race.
In an emotional speech, Muskie pledged himself to
fight Wallace '"with everything I've got" saying: " I hate
what he stands for." Considered the front -running
candidate of the party by the press, Muskie must live up to
the title. To date, it has been hard to " Believe Muskie'' as
his campaign buttons proclaim.
The Democratic left split the vote between George
McGovern and John Undsay, the latter coming out on top
by only 1%. Votes were split down the middle since the
two cand1dates vied for the support of the Blacks and
young of Flonda.
··t• ••
Long bard campaign
As a party newcomer, Lindsay must put up a good
fight. Hls long, hard expensive campaJgn gave him almost
nothmg m return Although Undsay's record leaves much
to be desued, he ha.s the chansma which is missing from
many of the Democrats running
Lmdsay can draw crowds, but the problem wtuch
anses here ts whether or not he can draw votes. His next
step 1s the W1sconsin contest , and he is given an outside
chance of wmnmg that race. Unfortunately, the primary
Lindsay is expected to do wrost 10 is the New York
contest the primary undsay IS expected to do worst in IS
the New York contest. If you can't w1n at home, where
can you win?
George McGovern is the proverbial early btrd .
Whetl1er or not he catches the worm remains to be seen.
Having run a strong second in the New Hampslure race,
McGovern almost tgnored Florida, looking ahead to the
more important W1sconsin test.
McGovern's followers are those who supported
Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy in 1968, but he
lacks the chansma that either of those two had then, or
lJndsay has now. His campaign IS well organized, and this
mJght be ro tus advan tage. However. 11 costs money to run
a campa~gn , and although McGovern may have started
early. he st11l has to put on a good show to keep those
ca rds and checks comtng 10
Chisholm does well
The uther five c.andu.lates 1n the Flonda pnmary
have ltttle chan~c ot dt~~ng anythmg 10 future pnmanes.
About the ouly exciting pwspcct among them IS
Congresswoman Shuky Clushulm An mtense woman, she
was descnbed by T11111' magat1ne as "a petite bundle of
energy" Runnm~ w1th almo~t n111.ampaign funds (u1d y11u
know 11 cost~ mor~· than e1ght 1111111llll dollars to run a
campaign·'). Ms Clmholm d1u rJth~1 well fm herself tn
Flonua Thl' unly ot hl'l p11marv whne ~he cuulu give a
goo1d ~h11W111g" thl• 1111t: lllltl· ~0 111 Nt'"- Ylll l..
New 1ul~:. h.tw m.uk tht· ,dt:lllllll of delegates to
the Dcnw•liJ II'- tiiiiYt'IIIHIIIIII July .1 hltthtlerrnt from the
smokr·ftlleu hacl.. roolll\ ol ve\tl'lyc.u One nf the new
gu1dcl1nc~ \CI I•Hih lall\ tur ,, grcall'r representat1w1 of
women. lilac!..' JIHI youth among the delcgJIC\
Arwthc1 gu1dl'111ll' lJih lo1 thc \Ckdlllflllf delegates
Ill thtl\l' \t,IIC\ 'AI11d1 tl11 11111 hold pt1111Jrte\ lllllCCIIf at the
local ll'~el tathCI thJII Jl \tJIC \\IU~ l'llll\ellllllll~ fh1s WIIJ
alh•w JIIV ICj!l\lt!II.'U Jknlllllat to partiCipate 10 the
&lt;,elec t11111 ot thew dele gat c&lt;,, rJ 1he1 1han party busses.
Bargaining affected
Twn othc1 new gu1uchnc' w1ll J llcct the hargam10g
pos1ttnn of favo11tc sons, frunt·runners and labor. One of
these alluw' anyone ~cckmg a delcg:Jte pos1110n to declare
wh1ch Ci111d1date he w11l su pport . The second of these
forbids delegate~ to vote as a umt at the naltonal
convention As a result, faVIHitC Stms cannot go into the
convenllnn with the full cum plement of state delegates
comm1tted 1•1 them, labor w1ll be very limited in thei r
numbers of uncomm11tcd delegates, and the front-runners
m1ght ga111 those vute~ wh1ch would have gone to favonte
sons.
All m aJI, these new gu1delines will probably make
for a less mtercstmg convent1on. But it couldn't be more
bonng than the Republican conventiOn. Anyone want to
guess who won the 40 Republican delegates 10 the Florida
primary? Your first two guesses don't count.

Friday, 17 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

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Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, 17 March 1972

Zip_ __

�ITT- Justice Department
scandal hearing continues

The 1972 CMinnM of the 35th Annual Nnonaf Wildlife Week, film star-ecologist
Robert Redford, uid: "It may be a wild idea to believe we can revene environmental
destruction to protect the bald eegle and create a quality life for man, but this
country was founded on the wild idea of independence, and not so long 890, a wild
idea took us to the moon. Ecology is another wild idea that will work."
Nadonal Wildlife Week, Mlln:h 19·25, istpOntored by the Natlonel Wildlife Federation
and its state affiliates. Memben will be urging people throutttout the U.S. to consider
their relationship to the naturel wortd and make commitments to help achieve
envirorvnental quaUty. As for the symbol of this yeer's campeiF. Redford said: "The
bald . . . . ... is a symbol of strength, freedom and quelity of life."

When do you drink malt liquor anyway?
Anytime you feel like it. That is, if it's BUDWEISER Malt Liquor.
BUDWEISER Malt Liquor is the first IOO'· malt, mah liquor around (no o ther
grains added). It's the first malt liquor that really is ... malt liquor.

WASHINGTON (UPJ)
For mer Attomey General N.
Mitchell told Senate investigaton;
Tuesday he discussed general
antitrust policy last year with
ITT 's president but sai d
suggestions link.ing ham to a
settlement with the corporation
were "totally false and to tally
without foundation. ·•
Mitchell, who resagned recently
as head of the Justice Department
to become President Nixon 's
campaign manage r. denied there
was any mentaon o f the
lnt ernataonal Telephone and
Telegraph case an has talk with
Harold S. Genecn. head of ITI
The Se nat e Juda..:rary
Committee as anvesllgatang charges
thai an out of cou rt ~ctllcmcnt of
three anlltru~l act10ns .Jg;unst ITT
was mvolved an a pledge by the
gaunt cor porat ion to help
underwr it e the R epublican
Nataonal Convcntaon by as much
as S400.000 The former cabinet
m e an be r c mph .llacally denaed
allegations m a memorandum by a
ITI lobbyast. DatJ Beard, that
Mitchell was ''helptng us" an the
antatrust case
Col umni s t Ja ck Anderson
published th e memorandum ,
st tang off the investigation into
the fitness of Mitchell 's deputy,
IUchard G. Kleindaenst to become
attorney general.
A member of the committee,
Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton (0. Mo.)
demanded that a White House
aide, Peter M. Glanagan, be calJed
as a witness. Glanagan 's name has
come up during the heanngs and
Eagleton described rum as "a man
who works in the shadows ...
only with the fattest cats."
Matchell told the commattee he

wanted to address himself to "my
relationship
or rather my
non-relationship" - with the case.
He told of twice having had
contact with Geneen. The first
time, Mitchell said , was at a White
House droner May 27, I 970, also
attended by 45 business leaders.
He sa ad that was " purely social."
" My second contact with
Geneen was on Aug. 4. 1970, in
my office," he continued. " My
office calendar shows that this
meeting could not have lasted
more than 35 minutes. It might
have been shorter. The meeting
was held at Geneen 's request to
dascuss the overall antitrust policy
of the department with respect to
conglomerates I assented to the
meet ang nn the express condition
that the pending ITT litigation
would not he dascussed. Geneen
agreed tu tim condition. The
pendmg ITI latagataon was not
discus~cd at thas meetang."
ITT assued a statement in New
Yurk Monday sayang Geneen met
last year wath more than a score
o f h agh government officials ,
includang Matchell and Glanagan,
t o pr o te s t the J u s ti ce
Department 's antitrust policjes.
Mit c hell testified that he
disqualified lumself from the ITT
antitrust casr because his former
law firm had done legal work for
an ITT subStdiary . Mitchell said
that after this, he never discussed
or communicated with anyone in
the Jultice Department 's antitrust
division about the cases. ·
" A 1 no time have I . talked to
any representative of ITT or any
of its subsidiaries concerning the
ltt iga ta o n o r thr settlement
negotiations." Matchell said.

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Friday, 17 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�I

I

EdiToRiAl

c~:~o~~~n ~~u~i?~!~!:~ been known fo: i~

enlightment, but during their consideration last Tuesday of
an anti-student housing ordinance. they reached new lows.
Although it was only a comminee hear_ing, some. of our
elected officials managed to earn the1r reputations as
buffoons.
To no one's suprise, Raymond Lewandowski behaved
like a neurotic jackass. Mr. Lewandowski, who perceives
threats to society in everything, delivered his typical analysis:
"I cannot sanction communal living by students who once
caused ritoing and destruction . This ordinance protects the
city."
The greatest disappointment, however, was Charl es
Volkert, University District Councilman. Instead of
demonstrating any sensitivity toward an understanding of the
housing situation, he simply anacked students at every
opportunity. Also, he served as Alfreda Slominski's
messenger boy by reading questions from notes she kept
passing him throughout the hearing. Fortunately, Mr.
Volkert only won by 300 votes last time and he should be
easy to defeat in the future . Until then, however, University
District residents will have to realize that it is Slominski, and
not them, that he represents.
Housing authority head John Macaluso, a Sedita
appointee and close confidant of the Ma~or's ~remised. to
evict every student living in violation of this ord1nance. W1th
actions like these, one need not wonder why last fall's youth
vote went so heavily against Sedita.
Meanwhile, the University is still maintaining its silence
on this issue. This helps no one. Since the dorms can only
hold a quarter of the undergraduate population, we view Dr.
Kener's ignorance of this matter as a gross dereliction o f
duty .
Unfortunately, the students cannot wait for
administrative a1d. Unless a massive campaign is launched
immediately to convince the Council members of the
repercussions of continuing this legislation, we will all be on
the streets by Easter. If this fails to materialize. we deserve
the consequences

Support the Colleges
The Colleges are fighttng agamst a huge budget cut,
amounting to nearly a quarter of their entire budget . At a
Collegiate Assembly meeting on Wednesday, vanous
strategies were discussed
One idea was to call a stnke. For two reasons. we th1nk
th1s is a poor 1dea. F ~rst, it is unlikely to draw any
widespread support and secondly , we feel the Colleges have a
valid case for budgetary increases without resorting to such
measures.
Konrad Von Moltke's letter to President Ketter is an
eloquent and moving plea for full support. There is little that
can be added to his words ; they speak for themselves. We
fully endorse his position and hope that the Univers1ty
community will follow suit

THE SpECTf\UM
Friday. 17 March 1972

Vol . 22, No. 67

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Page ten . The Spectrum t Friday, 17 March 1972

1111"

UNITID llllAND

This should be an interesting experience. Had a enjoyment.
It is also purely escapist. My height is nowhere
very disttnct fantasy earlier in the day. It concerned
having a large, warm, fuzzy (fox-like) tail. The near seven feet, and my coordination has slowly
fantasy was simply curling up w1th my tail around gotten it together enough so that falling down is a
me and gotng to sleep. The end point of such a nap relative rarity. There is no great speed or
wa~ feeling better, but no clear time period was coordination th:tt will send me on some impossible
uwolved It was reasonably clear that tt was more driving lay up to win the game as the crowd goc'
wild. (Did send a crowd into hysterics once by
\lnltlat tn lubernattng than napptng
So, you have beftHC you a tned and not too making a steal and then crop-kicking the ball out ut
together psyche Whrch •~ housed 111 a none too bounds while going· for the unchallenged lay up
healthy budy For two days much of my energy has however.) If younger and really wanting to plJy
been dcvutNl II&gt; e~tablish1ng the routes to. and basketball, then 1u watch the best people do tl , ami
avallab1hty of, the nearest toilet Whtch ts no great learn from them. makes sense Otherwise there ts J
fun C:cltmg ~tck t\ rarely fun AII those scattered passtve and Wtstful qualtty about it that seems "'
mernurres of van1lla tce cream feasts, endless speak of baSil. disatt~ficatf\111 about ~elf and the
quauttltes uf gtnger ale, and the days off from school pre1.cnt.
What seems 1u be happemng to me IS J t&gt;Wt:rs'
arc rmsleadtng The few good moments probably do
of
understandmg
what 11 tS I want and where I w;s111
ltKIIII la1ge because of the bleakness surrounding
10
go
It
may
well
be happening at speed somewhal
I ftC Ill
One of the major less than the average rate ot progress of a glacier , but
d1fficulttes betng s1ck seems w things are happcnmg. Wtth information about goal ~.
he able to cause is a disruption the selec11on of direction comes constderably eas11:t
o I the somewhat tenuous There ~ecms to he a very real desire to get close lo
cunncc11ons between head and people, and to 1mprovc rncam for domg that Th"
hotly There ts a sense of seems m both rational and aftect1ve term,. to hl'
betrayJI on some levels "'fhe somethtng productive and personally benefit:1al It 1\
\ystcm has gollcn away from also not easy tn dv wlule walchmg a basketball
mr' ··. seem!&gt; to be the game. dom~ a N~ saw punic. or otherwise t.hvtdllll'
by Stear
1 h oughl
Whtch " clearly attcntton or avotdmg people.
\.lying that ··me·· 1s m the
Gtven 1hat lhts 1s somcthtng ttlwarus whu:h I
hc.tJ Ill l&lt;lfl~tiiU\IlC\\ , and has tHIIhlllR IU du Wtllt wr~h Ill mnve 11 starts to effect hehavt&lt;H On less nl
.111 lh,tl tllht•r pwlopl."m
tim Jnd mllle of that Read thc!r.C hooks tn\tt:Jd ut
In lhl .trmy, tht: ~upport ~upply triH•P) .tlway' thmc Rcqu11e 1111\ kmd ot ~uppml 111stead of th.tl
U\t:d Ill bth.lt .Jhlllll hetng tgnured rhcrc ~CCIII~ Ill he II. as dtd Jonathan I.Jvmgstune Seagull. you rcalh
a ccri:Hn .mwunl ''' realtty JbtiUI the fact that the WJnl 111 do somrthmg, you can probably be ver}' .
11udy only ~el\ tllltu:ed tf tl 1sn 't functtl&gt;nlll~ well vc1y guud a1 tt If you work. ('(early there tS a
When IIUitced under such cnndtltuns, wh1ch range l1mited pusstballty of Oymg 1n our natural state , but
from pa1nlul In embarrassing. the emotiOnal content knowmg people 1S perh:t~ :.omewhat mmr aJn
amenable goal
!&gt;t.'Cill~ 111 he ~mewher c around fear and/or anger .
F-ear that the trouble wtll continue or get worse, and
Somewhat. One of the things that none of u'
anger that 11 happened at all There are so many has con trol over 1s the past of people we meet fot
other thmgs to do besides get s1ck .
the firs1 lime The history and expenences nt
II you have a ccrta111 warped sense or humor not another person arc their's, alone and unshareable. In
all IS lusl however. It is d1fficul1 for patl &amp;of my head gettmg close to people there becomes clear a reahry
nt'l to note the ludicrousness of an argument uvcr that one cannot be all tlungs to all people. Nee~s dn
pa\SIVIIY and control in a relauonsh1p, when the not Jlways, or even frequently, overlap enough 111
llt~~~~~tOII ~~ ~parodtcally tnterrupted by spnnts lor
produce mutual satisfactton . Not mfrequently, what
Mr Ctappers m1ghty madune There are thtng.~ sallsfactton IS produced cannot be evenly divtded
wh1ch do not seem to be under my immed1atc fh tS leads to the painful situation of unequJI
t:tHitHll, at least at t1mes. And certaJOiy in th1s involvement.
\OCtcty havmg con trol of your sptuncters threatened
Such mequal1ty IS an uncontrollable SJtualton,
mark~ vou as less than a totally functiOning person.
based on needs predating the existence of the
II 1hts wercn 't a great family newspaper a hne relationship. Which does not help with the aruuety.
Jbout lhat bemg enough of such shrt would go well anger, and pam . Any more than kicking yourself"'
at tlu~ pomt After a week of crap, who needs more the bottom ts liable to help with diarrhea. But you
on I nday Jftcrnoon? There is some addllaonal would like to at limes. The issue of wanting to do
m1lcagc lube had out of tallung about control. After somethmg, be something, also fits here. If people
a long ttme tt ~ecms to be possible to think m ~rms have to move, have to grow, and need help to do so.
of what I am, and who I am, rather than what, o r they will find the necessary support somewhere
wlw, I am not.
The pain and anxiety of trying to get needs mel
Ba$kethall has a high personal emotional from a relationship in which people are going in
potential lvr me. If there is self doubt and questions different d~rections is probably directly connected to
about cffecttveness il becomes a fine thing to watch how powerful it was before the changes began Tt•
someone demonstrate effectiveness at something. lose good ones, even at the gain of new parts ol
For my taste this •s clearly seen in basketball . The yourself, tS a grimly disturbing experience. And
fine shooters arc a JOY to watch, even if the action stupid column 1sts who stt around and preach about
has no real meanmg. Having spent time being taller their ways of conceptualizing the pam whJch results
than most of the people around me, there seems to are probably vet y httle help. What might help a Httle
be a tendency to identtfy most closely With centers. more, tf you are anywhere near that place, or should
To watch one of the really good big men, Russell, unfortunately arrive there in the future, is that at
Jabbar, Dave Cowens, Bill Walton, working weU and least one other person has been there . That is
dommating a game is two hours of very real shareable perhaps. Take care. Have a good week.

The

grump

�Motion defeated
To the 'Editor:

Participate/
To the Editor:

I found The Spectrum's evaluation of local radio
broadcasting generally perceptive and atccurate. I wu
a bit dismayed, however, at the one sentence
dismissal of the "alternative" stations (listed by The
Spectrum as WPHD, WUFO and WIBLK). We, at
WBFO-FM, believe our programming fills more than
one of the gaps in radio fare available to Buffalo
listeners. Anyone who's done any amount of
listening would realize that classical, folk , jazz.
"underground" rock, avante-prde and oriental
music, are readily available at 88.7 on the FM band .
Panel discussions, public mcetinp, lectures and
addresses by people of renown are a1J regular
featu res.
To answer the charge that "Audience
participation Is lacking in both AM an~l FM radio," I
would like to point out that guests orl the program
"Interface" can be questioned by listcmers over the
air simply by plaCJnB a phone call to the studios.
This is Radio ... (weekdays 2- 5 p•.m .) revolves
around the idea that anybody may h1tvo something
to do or say at least once that at le.ast one other
petllon may be interested in hearing. AJLL are invited
to partactpate.
Pat Maloney, The Spectrom staff, and anyonr
within our broad cast range 11&gt; invited to tune rn.
P.S . · Has ;anyone seen our copy of "Pu1ppy love " by
DonnJe Osmond?

W'olly Ga,ewskl
MuJic Virutor, WBFO

This action by the Senate should serve as an
llllSWer to the sceptica who believe the faculty has no
great concern for the libraries. We would also Uke to
believo that thilt action will perauade President
Ketter to rescirld orders liven by hia administration
to the Library to further red uce its staff by five and
its operatina buda,et by $46,000.

In your March I 0 issue you state that the
Faculty Senate voted to delete the section urging the
president "to realign internal resources to provide
sufficien\ additional support for the Libraries to
preclude the further down~ding of library services
and holdinp.
Your report is incorrect - the motion to delete
was defeated with the result that this section has
been retained .

Lowtll Schoenfeld, Ch11irman
Senate Committee on JnformQtion
and Ubrary Re1ourcu

A list for help
To the Editor:

pl11ce to live is ridiculous. We've had no complaints
from those who have bouJht the list , and we took
time to explain to them aU we knew about the places
we had seen.
And about tl!lose 'countless' phone calls, Gail,
they cannot be a result of our lists. We have sold
precisely two of th1em - is that a countless number??
Also, be aware th1at your lancllord has answered ads
in Th~ Sputnlm dassified regarding apartments and
has given your address to others. That is how we
came to see it - sent by your landlord. And that iJ
Where those ·~ountlcss' phone calls may be coming
(rum.
You shouldn' t anclude yourself as living in an
"excessively ex ,,ensive broken down shelter"
because. your apartment is far from a hovel. If you
really believed what you put into print, why didn't
you have the gults to Jdcntify yourself over the
phone before yoUl hung up on us? And if you
practice what you preach, when are you going to put
an ad in The SpcNrum to let uthers know of your

We would hke to comment on the letter by Gail
Chermak in The Spectrum March 15th.
Fit11t of all, we spent two weeks ond many hours
looking for an apartment for ourselves. We found
our own leads through much lime and effort . We
traipsed all around the campus area lookina for a
ptacc for next year. In our search we would have
appreciated any help we could get in findina
apartments to look at. We would have seen nothing
'pi&amp;llShly bureaucratic' in buyang a list that would
help save us time and find a decent place to live.
I suppose you caU us pias because we sell the
list. What about those who offer aS 25 rewatd for an
apartment? Those they are appealing to have to be
offered money before they will Jet other11 know of a
place they no longer want. How concerned are thev
about othet11?
Our list was mennt to help people - yes, help.
They wouldn't have to go through the work we dad
and it would give lhern the good start that we dtdn"t
have in finding a home for next year. They maght
already have an apartment hy April when the
housing l.iJt comes out and the com oct11t0n fot a

apartrn~nt?

4{1rr

Stlvtrmar~

Mlchtle Tramrua
Sht'lley Th1~ll~

Housing law opposed
To the EJiwr.

Cultu ral void
fu the- JidittH .

"For What It 3 Worth. Harvy l1pm.an 's article in
the March 15th edition of The Spectrum is worth
absolutely nothing. The criticisms thrown at Buffalo
reek from Ignorance, ineptitude and radsm. Putting
down Buffalo for its weather IS as disgraceful a.&lt;t
twting • person fnr the t•olor o f his skitn. Jt rains. tl
snows, It hails . .. so what . Buffalo in the second
largest city tn Ncw York State and !residents are
thankful that it is not number one. This city is a
great deal less oppressive and more liveable than
N.Y.C. is regardless of the number of theaters,
restaurants and concerts. Every urban c:en tet has its
problems - poverty. decay and pollut 10n. Buffalo
has a great number of potholes and a poor grade or
n~wscasten . I grant you that. But, I demand th11t
you open your eyes before you open your mouth .
The PaJace Theater as far from the cultural
center of thi' city as anyone who has attended a
New Music Concert at Albright-Knox or a
performance of the Buffalo Philharmonic can attest
to. In addition to a fine park system. this city
harbors a myriad of ethnic neighborhoods wtuch are
fascinating to explore. How dare you, Mr. Lipman.
laugh at sausages and kimmelweck, whiJte longing for
a Nathans hotdog. In reference to th~: charges of
ineptitude leveled at the Buffalo Common Council, I
refer you to the antics of thr U.S . Senate. ~hat
government does not wallow an bure:aucracy and
political showbusiness? Yes. Mrs. Slominski is the
only female on the council . You pose thte questaon
female what? The answer l'&gt; that she as a female
lawyer and whether you disagree with her politics as
much as I do takes nothing away from I he power of
her position as a Polish representative and as a
WOJTlan . Ray Lewandowski may be roly .. poly with a
shinS' scalp, but so is my father. What kind of
nonsense is this form of criticism?
Your claim , Mr. Lipman. that you have spent
fow ye.trs in this city without having discovered any
value only proves that you have been living an a
self-created void. The city of Buffalo• owes you
nothing. while it could offer you a great deal .
However, I doubt if you could be happy living in the
Garden of Eden itself. It's creator left o ul
programmed entertainment
Ruthtl/en Le11enbaum

and be~use of llhe.lf increlllilllgly 111flated tuition
rates ($ 1 200 or S I 500 per year), many are forced to
live m gmups. Since Buffalo's vacancy rate is les!!
tlutn one percent , the housing that u available for
rent is ettlu:r substandard or in the luxury class. Tbe
!luburba a&amp;re closed because of an even more
restricted rent~&amp;\ pe&gt;ol. To deny graduate students the
right to share an 11partment is thus to deny them the
opportunity lo Jludy at the University.
To fuUy appl)' this code ro all who come under
it is in con~ivablc , to appJy it selectively is socially
damaging and utnconstitutionaJ. The GraduJttr
Student Association would therefore bope and
exp~ct
Ihe Cum mon Council to telllOVe tM
provis10n l'rurn the •city's housing code.

The Graduate Student Association of the StaleUniversity of Now York at Buffalo would like to
state its unqualified opposition to the ordinance of
the Common Council which prtlhibits mon: than two
unret.ted indlYiduals from living in the same
dwelling. This poaition is based in substantial part on
its unconstitutional discrimination aaa!nst a
sub-sroup of the city's citizens. The fact that it has
been unused lor some time, onJy to be disinterred
fqr application to students, is further demonstration
of the denial of equaJ protection under law .
If there Is the- feeling that some students 111
groups are a disruptive influence, then: are ample
laws lo protect the city against these isolated
GSA £xc-cufHie Committt!t:
individuals wathout resoning to an unsubstantiated
indictment of all students.
Almost 6000 graduate students are fv1cccJ by M1tor s note 111e .abu~e wa.v unginal/y 1ent to c:w
University policy to live off ~,;&amp;mpus. Sance l~ss than Frantcyk. Cllalflnan of thr Common Counc1l
25% receive any !upport at all from the UnaverNJty 1ub·comrmttn ifiiii!J'fiJlutmg tllu matur.

Library priorities
To thr Editor.

ronsctnusly affirmed thr ~..on~cpt that the librarh:s
are priority number one.
The fulJ Implications of the Faculty S.enate'5
Surprise the t:ynics are wrong, in the crunch
passage of the Library Resolutions last week will not there is su1..h a llung as a common interest .
be understood with out some background
The second re~"~on for the Senate's determined
explanation. What was at issue wa.~ the broad actaon 1S the grossl!Y dasproportaonate nature of the
questions of what our libraries mean to the budget "uts. The E:.xecutive Budget says that
University u a whole AU three resolutions pertained SUNY /Bu ffal o has to take a S 5% cut overall But
to this, but especially the one calling for a the: bnol&lt; hudxet of our Libraneb has to take a 26%
restoration of the library Budget if n~ed be or rhr
~ut. No1 111 thls m carefully calculated cut Our
~xpenu of oil other Univl'rsirv operations was an
ungmal request WillS for $943,000 for books and
expli1..1t affirmation &lt;1f pnontu~.~
periodicals (a grossly inadequate sum, in view of our
Had this dause or the resolution been documented deficie·ncies). Some clown in Albany
unchallenged. then the resolution could have been dccid~d that we sh,ould only s pend $700,000 - a
in t er preted as ·just an tither automatic paous lovely. neat. roundt figure arrived at without any
expressiOn of hopes. But . an fact. it was ;ust thu calculation &lt;)r analys:is.
Why? Because the Libraries' budget is such a
claus~ which was daaUenged 11nd (WOW!ltnumphed
tern ptmg target. B•~cause it is assumed that each
anyway .
mdlvitlual &lt;'areJ abui'Jf hiJ $pecial interest and no one
In other words the whole question t)( how care.f abuut the t·ommon intere1t: Thus anyone cun
important the Libranes are was lald out in dollars dip into the Libtraries' budget with impunity.
and cents terms, in the crassest possible way . In Everyone's involved ;, who will complain?
effect, every Faculty Senator was asked : WiiJ you
fhal was precitsely the issue put before the
take a cut in your special tnterest to protect our Senate last week . What the Seante said in response
overriding common Interest as an ac.ademk
was. "Cut us all equalJy, but leave out library
community? The preponderant majority of the
alo11e ••
Faculty Senate said · "Yes"
And that 1.~ tbe reo/ Import of the - fully
This was partly for obvious reasons, though a debated, consciOuS!)• decided - vote of our Faculty
cynic might no accept such reasoning. Our libraries Senate.
are out heritage. All that is accessible of accumulated
There are rare moments In the history of any
human wi.wom is there. Cut that off and what does corporate organization when lhe common good is
an individual departmental budget amount to? Note put above individwu interest. last week's Senate
that the Senate was offered an amendment which action was one. It should be noted and accepted u
would have excised this clause in the resolution ; they such.
could have said : "We would like a full Library
Budget, but not at our individual expense."
William S. Allen
The Senate rejected this amendment and thus
Pro{euor of History

Friday, 17 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�Ketter interview

We flnt did State of the Unlnnity about two
yean IJO, 10 perflaptft'l I aood point from Whicll
to start. Two yean aao tbe Unlnflity •• a nry
clifftrent place, namely, ita atmOipbcre. It appean
that the lludenla and faculty were more lntemted
in tbe campus coocnn.r and natio.W issues. To
what can you attribute this chanae?
I really don' t know what you're trying to say.
Are you saying that st udents and faculty at this
moment are concerned with diffe rent issues or
t hey are demonstrating against t hem m a djfferent
ful\ion, or how are they different? What are you
asxma me?
WeU, reall y, we're uklna you all of lhotC. A lot
of different theories hne been upounded on why
students are quiet and wby they reacted two yu rs
aao. And do you think their concern b heina
chaMelled in quieter ways. Is concern still there, 1
more quiet concern?
WeU I tlunk there are deep set ted lOD(trns that
~1111 exist. I tl\ink that the reason you don 't hear
about them in the same fashion you heord about
them before as that there 15 a general reahzallon
that the methods used at that tame were not tht
most productive. In fact you maght say lhty wa·rc
counter-productJve.
You can go on any ~sut tn u .ertaan level Jnd
if you go beyond that. the ,hJn•l'\ of ''"ceedang
are not the grutesl And I thank there wa~ d
general rethzauon 1hat flt"6tll!y t han,l'.\ had J!One
JIL'II a little bll too far. thJt'• one a)en~ ~
The second itrm 1\ that th~ tl~l ftnnnmJ
'illuataon 111 the country as not what 11 W4 81 that
lime, or the five year, prt~cdmy that l'~•lpk arc
JUSI a hllle hal conlern cd th~l m.ayhc grtung a Jnll
maght be an Important part t•f ~fr 1\ hflll' an on~
CODl"Cmed now than lhry werr two yrJf\ ~gn. You
find them morr career darntcd thJI'\ Jnnlhr r
potnt.
Also the type~ of ~atu.ilmn\ that lll'lUrrt•d
precedmg '61J 4nd '70 unurre;J o~lm~l e~du,1vdy
1n coUeges and unavcuallcs However an '1•'1. '711
and '7 J they started tn he al~u cxpencnccct m high
Sl.htll•ls. And there as une theory of thuu~o:ht that
!Illy\ once you gn thmugh an cxpcrac:n~r ul th~l
type you're IIlli tov hal"rY to go th ruuJ,th 11 agnan,
and mayht the pcuph: whu .Ill' wmang 111 nnw have
already cxpenenced \lllllt ul thr thlnj!&gt; th~t Jl&lt;!nple
1n colleges were tcyang tu, Jlld ddu,ally,
expenencrn&amp; m the '60\, the cacly '7()'~.

To act is a very awkward one. Because act
indicates that you will see tomcthing within a
reasonable lime, which is positive, productive and
so forth I think there are many places where you
can discuss and you can at least have some idea
tbJt they're moving graduall y toward some
resolution.
But I don't t hink that t here's any place wh1ch
now exists where you can say: 'Obviously we did
this, wt discussed tbu, and this bas foUowed." We
have ao forum for thai. That's one of the reasons
wb y Dr. Mix's com mittee on University
Governance bas a real possibility if il can somehow
be brought about. We have no le&amp;Uiative body
that's aU Universaty.

Some peoplt would Uke to involve the
Un iversit y in the problem• of the communit y; to
try and solve them. One theory is that it should be
done directl y. That in terms of, for example,
health ctre 11 Attica, we bne health cart and we
should provide Jt . Other people say: ' Well no, wt
shouldn' t do it thl.l way. we abould teach people
so th at they c1n 110 on and contin ue it.' Which
position do you take?
I have a very partacular, very firm v1cw an thiS,
and, tha t is if we are usang money that we have
Clbtaaned under the gwse of educatJon at ~hould br
used for educataon, pnmanly Thai 1f you take on
an act it is be.:ause you can demonstrate the
ampor1an ce of that particular act in an educational
fashaon. If an doang at you happen to go aboul
certai n ot her Ihang.~ that arr desarahle, ~o mu'h lhc
better
But
thank 11 would be o~hsolutely
tnappropnate to takt' educatiOnal dollars and
urtempt to solve the health care cnsas, other than
through educallnn. Now as part or the edUC&lt;illon
you may very well want to have tnternshap
program ~, you may very well want tu h~vc self-help
programs, you m~y want to have a whole host o f
ttungs. hut you ..m ltiang the educataon money
pnmanJy to asmt an educational endeavors
And all of the pro11rams that Frank Corbett ha ~
hten lry1n11 to catalog 111 the University, aU or these

You mentioned the mun~ for th1.' concern
were •omewbll counter-produch.-e. Do you think
studenll have learned anything? T il t theory hu
been proposed lbll lhere Ire cycles Of ICIIVI Iy, lnd
lh•l JludentJ, anyone for th11 miller , can't
maintain such emotional involvemrn t lur a
SU.\Iained period or limt
It 's • very reJI possththty lio n"" IJmahc\ Jnd
you can &amp;t't fhl) QUale: 1\ften. thJt fdmrlac, .:un m
fact t arry a lCrtaan kvcl 11f mthU\IU\111 or
dctalhment ur anvnlvcment Jnd al tl l(ue~ hcyun;J a
lertam pomt they hlnw Jp.ar1 Yuu •Jn nut ""taan
the emotional Slluatwn fM mon• thnn .1 pcrac•ll nf
tunc and mayhe that wa\ e '~tcdetl I don 'I hold to
that nne, hunestly and an the UnrVl'l\11~ 11 "nne
fadnr hut at cldanatel) 1\ nottht J,n tua
Just one more qu~t aon about thL\ about the
other ways that student\ can expr~ theu l'Once rn.
Dr. Baumer saald that "Ntudent~ no longer march
around Hayes Hall :.evtn times hupin11 for the walls
to CIVt an." That there arc- other ch1nnel.\ th1t they
can use. Wha t do you \et M o ther channel\ where
students and laculty both are we1rkang to g~t r!l.ilues
resolved or
I thank anvnl~cmcnt
Jlu· I 1\( '' Jchnll ely
tnvolvcd. And the levl'l ol anvolvcuH·nt 111 the ' ''Y
of the CA( 1~ at an urJcr uf tiiJ~nat u;Jl· Jt least
daffercnt th•n 11 Wd.\ an 'hi&lt; thruu~h '70 lhcac are
ptople really 1/lvolve;J an ttung, tho~t h) .my
measure , ilnyune·, mca~ure , rcgJrdlc~' ol yuua
parti(ular pfllata.:al vaew~. Jrc mtantnglul rt•kvJnl
go()d IIIli.'. tu liSe the v.ord. to ll'IOI\ ot ~ell ang
ttung..\ ;.lone 111 the UnavcrMty
I suspect Ihat part ol the pwhla•m wa' tla,·n·
wa.' a frellng un lh~ pall ul the l.llUity Jnd tht
student body that you IU\1 wui;Jn't gl:'l Jn} •me tu
listen Ill you And hnw could you l'vn get
any llung dllflnaphshcd 1f ynu ~ttui;Jn't get
someone to really Stl and hc~r what yuur .un.:ern~
arc And I don't hco~r lhdt dllynum• Jl .rll
I haven' t heart.! anyone an tht la\1 )'I'M ,and .r
half &gt;&lt;~Y ' Ji ey I can't tell you what I duu't lake'
There·~ tnough leehng thJt you L.lll tell \Otnrunc
There arc ~nme people that feel lhut at duc\n't
move as ra~t. hut . . 1 hat wa' a wry bag purl &lt;\f
wh~t hdppcned an '611, 'nll .md '70 Pr:opk wuuld
JUSI say 'I JUSt can't expre~\ mu,elf. thcr~·s
nobody to listen to m~ '
Do you thank

there ·~

a plact on tht

Unrvt~Jiy

to discuss or to act on lht pro blems thai art more
Jlobal?

State of the Un]
Editor's note: 17111 ptUt Wulnu day marked tltt
ltcond anni~trsary of 45 faculty mt mbtn who
wert tmtstt d conductlnt a Hayu Hall tlt-fn to
demand tht rtmo ~~al of 400 Buffalo pollee {rom
the C4m f11U. It 11 hard {or todayi Uniwmiry
occupants to fmalflnt tht tvtntl thar could ltad
ro such a d tUDtion.
In an attempr to undtntand how and why
money 10 play around witb, and you lmow
Ambem wu bdna built
Being tal ked about.
Belna talked about, and you know wt were
JOina 10 be OUt here in '72 and it Wa JOin&amp; to be I
areal camp~~&amp;. There wu • lot of money to attract
f1cult y. And there were a lot of proanma. It was a
lol easier, it aeemed, to ,et a proanm passed
~~evenl yellS 1110.
II was vtrtually Impossible to not gel one
paSlletl Anyone wh.o had an adea .:ould essentially
say ' Here as my adea,' and they would say 'Okay,
here's some money· From '66 through '70 I th1nk

"If wt art&gt; using monty that wt&gt; havt
obtaintd undt r tht guist of eduratinn It
sh ould bt uu d for edu cation.
primarily "
the mmamum number of new positrons, new
f&amp;l'lllty posallons, tht we had wath all o r the dollars
goang w1th. at
I thank we had 86
rnrntmum
new positron~ One year we had 270 some new
ra~;ulty posllaonM an one year. In fa ct one year we
turned hack JO pooataons that wr JUSt couldn't fill
Wr JUSI were ~trowmg so fast we u•uldn't J-.~arnabte
thn\e Ihut we had And then the JXI.' It'll.
Well, thll '~ what we want to ask Hnw much
hu thrs ue hurt? You know m term~
has rt
really cur down on acad emic innovation, or are we
JU~t lu rni n11to tconomize more! Are wt ~till doi na
the same thm11 with out a lot of waste'
WeU I stall thmk that there's snme wa\la· Wh~n
you have faculty mernhers that are tcu~hang nu
~ourscs whatsoever and they arc lasted as hcang on
Ihe n:achmg faculty . ynu wonder rc:aUy whether
we're getting wha t as reasonable to expect lhat you
would gel from educllllonal dollars I thank that
we're correcllng that I thanl lhat there are d
number of thangs that can he dune dunng thc\1:'
type~ uf penods which ~h o uld h:ave been dunt· all
alnng
L&gt;unng the '(&gt;5 through '70 we were tryang Ill
do su many thangs, all of them new, wathout any
regJrd to tryang to fin;J out wh~ lhcr they w!'re
worth whilt or not We had no dacc..ks hualt 1nto
any system th3t we set up. We had no meun~ of
evaluatmg any program Sn we don't kn ow
whether they were g()(.;J, l&gt;dd or Jncltfferl!nl II yuu
ha1f .1n aden, you dad 11
Art there any programs that h1ve since, you

feel. been found to be completely unproductive?

dre first and foremost educat aonally relevant and
lhry dTl' s.:condJnly of rJt her great souJI
tlll flllrtJn~oc
Nunc of thean were undcrta~~n
hnJuM: tl wa.' felt thJI the nvtrndang 511ualassue~
gt!ncrated thJt ynu lllU\1 do thl\ JnJ then w~:'ll
lon~ fnr an edu,,alannaJ rcJ\1111 lor 1ltltlll: 11 , m .at
lcJ\l hnpelully lhr\ WJ\ the l aM' I ,·;u1't \iiY .all ,,1
tJu:na were that WJY But thai vt&lt;'W I twld 111
JnntiJnaent.IIJ)'
We 're goang tu go back a11atn two years BRO
Thr\ atmo.~phere on ca mpu~ was
a very. very
exerting period.
It dcp•·nds nn what you call CHttttll( 11 was a
tense penod It wa' dn emollonJII y ~.har~tcd perao;J
II wa~ J pcnud whl'rc there were llft'JI htghs dod
g,reat lows. Whether at wu~ an cx"tang pe11,,1j
educationally, is ano ther quc~taon. Whether 11 wa~
an exlitang pennd an trrm~ of lnng range 1111pact un
mdavaduab IS a quc~taon that's upcn to dehJII' We
dnn 't know In lt:rms nf ats he an!( a ch.argcd pcn.,d
emntionall y charged, no qne~tron ahout 11 It wa~

M1ybe we're thinking of somethinJ more than
two years ago in which there wu a lot of state

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Friday, 17 March 1972

Well, I r Jn' t reall y Sdy lhdt. I know that th~rl"
are \lliHl' progrJtns 111~ 1 wcr~ ~tJrt ctl an the
lhllvl'l~ll\ tlaJt an tlu\ yr3r nn lhc hd\1\ tlf the
nurnl&gt;cr nl ~ludcnt' that ho~ve been JtlrJlll~d tv
thC\l' Plll&amp;rJtlh, one ruaght qucstwn whether the
best uw of t hl' money was naacJto And '"Ill'' nf
lhc\l' ~~~: 111 ldd heang .:hmanate;J nuw
f herc urc the other programs, \IICh J~ th1· 1 PIS,
wlur h r.lllll' m .t linH· when we haJ affluer"c as
writ ·•~ J )flnll~t nwr01l mmm1tlm~nt to ~~.·naan
bSUl'\ Jnd hJ\ an f~ll 'hnwn to hr very .:nod Jnd
I.JUtlc da•sarahlr Su Yt•u hava: all cxarrna~ 111
hetwc.-n
Out thl' pmnt 1\ wt v. rnl throuit,h .1 rcnud
whcrt: we h.ut 'n mudl 1111111cy that we da;J nut have
tn hJVt' J tllan put forward for antr•&gt;dUltrlg d
(lJOj(IJIII whad1 had hc;J tu tl .my evalu;atavr:
mcthnd WI' tfld nut gn thrnugh the t'ltt:l~t~~ ol
'&gt;&lt;~Ytn!l. lwu Yt:JI\ lrnm now wc wall e11anune thas
tllllj(IJIII Jl.',·ordang In th" ~ ratrno~ , tha~ cntena, tha~
•nlcra.a .1nd J\\C\\ whcthn at Wd\ gnod, bad, or
anJalkrcnt, Jn;J \:UI nul l hts, that t&gt;r the othn
What about thr problematic SCATE? Could
that have been any help to evaluate some or thtse
progra1m?
l'hl' adca llf \llltlcnl evaluation nf fJ(IIhV tllay
wl'll
0~.1)'. twu thmg. hl're When I thank Jhout
~( 1\ II I thtrtl. .about Sf'A II- rn terms of \J)'IIIIot
Wha t ''the generJI feehng of tha• ~ tud cnt body an
tcrul\ ul prnles~or' ·And thas mforaniltton n•uld to
1.1&lt;'1 hl 11\l'd Ill J\\1\lrng ID DIJ~Ing ll'DllfC dtfi\IOD~
I huvr nut thnught ahoul thr'c a:. 1111111 ary
rndllJhH\ ••I whclhlr a prngrJna " vaJuahlc or nut
VJ)uahlc
Now llrJYhl' l'w massed the boat by nnt us1ng
at an lhJI lashann Student anput as to whether a
Pfllgram as valuJhlc or anvaluable as JD ampm•ant

tlat University has changed, The Spectrum
fntt rvftwed st~tral adminiJtraton and faculty
mtmbefl on The State of the Universit y.
Appeanng m today i final frntallment art tht
rtmarkl of Pte11dent Robert Ketter. 17111
Interview was conducrtd by Co-Manaf{nf Editor
AI Be111on and Campus Edrtors Jo-Ann Armao
one. The difficulty is it's hard for a person in
'lOmet~g to say ye~. ttus IS really relevant to my
later Ufe. And that\ what you look 11 when you
look at a program
When you loo~ at a faculty member, while Y.OU
take that an to anuunt, a more immedtatc concern
IS what effect dnc1 that professor have on that
student at that part,.·ular tame Whereas a program,
what effect wtll tl ha~~e five years from now. ten
yurs from now , lh4t 's harder to get and as I wd, I
d1d not consider S&lt; 'ITI' tn give that. Maybe 11
should have
You were speakrng of presumably the 1bsence
of •ny part ic·ular kmd of actdemic plan
Th~l \nor way 111 put at
Now wr undtlliland that Dr. Gelbaum is
formula ting and l~ aoing to be presentina whll he
hopes to be an academac plan
lk ha~ ltl·cn v.nrkang wath the provosts wtlh
the vlttw an mand that they wall JOrnlly come
for ward wath v.hJ t they thanl ~huuld he dune an
the next fa~c yc~n I havr not ~en what Or
(,tJha~na ha~ pmrns,·d tu lhl·na I know they have
had da ~~U~IIID\ I've had drSl:ussaons with Gelbaum
before Ihas ~~ v.dl Jl 411 the provosts and many or
the depart natnl • ha~rmen telling them what 1
thought nur \trcn~th.l .md weaknesses were, but it
1\ really 1t1 tht pro11ntr ul the academac Vh;r
prr~adcnt dnd Ihr prc.. ust~ tn ~oomc forward wath J
rnoposed pld n "'~''h Ll then u~ n for dascussaon

In formulahn~ tha plan, Dr. Gtlbaum hL' h•d
an article an th r Rt{Hirttr ~peakana of •work' and
' play' in tht academac sellina. Presumably, this 1~
I!Oina to go m ht\ plan He. rf wt read it rill hi,
peaks of the de-rmphuas, tn the fi!ICal crisis that
wt 're m now . of wlaat ht c11ls •cademic 'pi ty,'
which it 'lt'rm~ ht ttnerally cal~ the erts; and a
re-emphasas. 111 a prt&lt;ollditaon for what he c:aJI.t
plly, re-tmphN\ ol 'work,' which is bu aeally the
o,ciencn, terhnolon and more practical socl•l
!JCitnces Wt'rr v. nnclffina ir in a major University
nf thi.• sort , wh tthtr vnu can lffotd a de-em ph~~
10 the arts.
WdJ wlll'lha·t 1&gt;1 nnt tha~ 11 what he I&gt;J\ an ha~
h!!art of hcJrl\ Jl·• r•Je.l tn put Jnrward de~~:' not !&gt;.IY
Ill~ I 11 Will Ot:II''&lt;',IIIIY hl' thJI whllh (llfiiC~ out 1ft'
wall haw In \til rl tnthosr: ploplc awund IHIIt and
I wnultJ h4Vt tu 1&gt;1 on• to whom h( wuuld have ltl
1cll at CVl'llltt.tll) I Itt a;J"~ lh.tl lhr r&lt;fu~.atcd nun
ur the lth~rJIIY l'lilh lltd auan 111 one who dOC\, an
IJtl. undei\L1nd rhr .,..,~ ,,.~~ I thank ~~ whal he
w;os tryan~ tu \.I~ lh41 the lrherally cducJtcd m;m
t.\ not JU~t a na.m v. hv ~ DIIW' t h1· .ttl\ tic mu~t Q"o
l&lt;.nnw th~ ''"'lhl'\
And he· w•• , tr)lllf' tu put fnrwdrd thr
~rr.urnent at I utn(ml•1·r t hr • 1\l', that he know'
IIWrr ~CH'nll\l\ lltotl UIIIII'I\(JIIJ lht: ath, than hl'
~IIOW~ fX'Upil' Ill tJtr Jll\ lhl' lrhl•raJ ,tfiS, thai
understand Jn~ ·I rh~ 'urnrr' An;J h1• \I)'S
\lllllt'hctv. t hl'll' lw IIIIOI(\ havr tu uune doscr
together I ht .1111\l. tlt1· Pl'"'"' 111 the hha•ral art~.
ne.·J~ tu unll•·r,larkl tlr, nwthndulngy nt thr
xaen tl't lh1·~ h.&lt;ll I" hr ''"l~l'l\ant wath at and
not totally ·'""'' I thtn~ thJt wh.at he\ tryang tu
..ay, that bulh mu'l apprct'l,&lt;lt lltt· uthcr But I
'houldn't spcJ~ lut hnll
Who dwdes what \ltunld he ••ught Should at
b&lt;' • laculty mrrnber "'h" has • )pedtic interest?
Well, w~ll'l} Jl lu~· JrJ, a n{!ht to s.ty that
those than[(\ thJI at nmh In h.r\lc performed wall he
t.wght h 11 c\Jtrtplc. ihl'\ m·•·tl tu haw people 111
hl•Jith, so thl'\1 hJ\I'U h '""" tu expect that tf the)'
put mont')' lurw.ud lnt h. Jlth an \ttrnc form. health
wall he taut:hl I h.al '·"' ••hvltHJ\ one.
11 you 1 111111' h.t.~ ltn111 lhJt \ht:htly ;wd say Wl'
nc •d tu hJvc tu 111Jh lla, ')'11'111 wurk IJwycr\ Jnll
we .art: t ht•rch&gt;ll' ~"'"~ 1.. (U\&lt;l' muney and yuu an
lad turn uul Jl''"i'h' """ ••an pa.trtan~ law ('onung
ha,k frntn tliJt t~a·n 1 •u hJVI" sucaal welfJre
fnlluwang an tht· '-''"' tlnng. )'Oll h~vc busane~
tnllnwang 1n th,tl ~"" h.l\1 •·n.:ancenng
:111 of
tht)C diC Ill \I'IW p.HIIlltf.ll funl'IIIIR~ that \lll:lt:ty
fctb they need tu ha11' J'lll •rna~d
Nnw un1r yt&gt;U rump •ttl ·•I th,at lramcwc•rk ul
t hr more rrotl''""n.alh nrtcntcd or darected
'atuat aon hl lhl' 111"11 ~~~~~·rJI unes, there's where
~ou start tn run ani th, rruhlcms Shdll we have
hhtory as oppowd ''' ''"ht1,,1l ~ucn~~. dS op posed
to so.:rology, ·•~ uJ1r"'''11 lo .anthrufXllogy Should

�f the University
the University has changed, The Spectrum
interviewed several admmutrators and faculty
m emberr on The State of the University.
Appearing in today :r final installm ent are the
remarb of l+c6fdcn t Robert Kettu. This
inurview was conducted by Co-Managing Editor
AI Benson and Campus Editors Jo-Ann Armao
one. The diffi culty is it's hard for a person in
something to say yes, this IS really relevant to my
later life. And that '~ what you look at when you
look at a program
When you look at a faculty member, while you
take t h at in t q account a more immediate con cern
is what effet."' docs that professor h ave o n tha t
student at t hat partH;ular time. Whereas a pro gra m ,
what effect will 11 ha¥e five years from n o w, ten
y~ars from now; that'~ harder to get and as I said, I
d ad not cons•dcr SC ATf to give t hat. Maybe it
s hould have
You were s~akina o f presumably the absen ce
of any particular kmd of academic plan
That's one wa}' to put 1t
Now we understand thai Or. Gelbaum is
formubtmg and 1\ aoma to be presenting w hat he
hopes to be an academic plan
He hac: been wurktn~ w1th the provosts With
the vtew m nund that they w1ll JOint ly come
forward With wh.u they t lunk should be done an
the next f1ve y~Jr. 1 havr not seen what Dr.
Gelbaum ha\ pmpo~cd tu them I know they have
had d1scuss1on' l 'vo: hall t.IISt.U:&gt;:&gt;IOn~ with Gclbau m
hefore th1s 3!1 well J~ all th e provosts and many of
the department 1 h•1rmen te lling them what I
thought our \I ren~otth.' and weak ncsses were but it
IS really m lhl" provln\:C of the academ;c v1ce
pres1dent and tlw rwvnst~ to come forward w1th a
proposed plan wt11 ~ h" then open for d1scuss1on
In formu laltng thL~ plan, Or. Gelbaum has had
an article in th e Rtportrr speaking of ' work' and
'play ' in the academiC setting. Presumably, this is
going to go in h i~ plan . He, if we read it right ,
s peaks of the de-emphasis, m the fiscal crisis that
we're in now, of what h e calls • cademic ' play ,'
which it seenH he ,enerally call~ th e arts; and a
re-emphasiS, m a p~&lt;oodiiiOn for what he calls
play, re-empha.\lS of 'w'Ork,' which is basically the
sciences, technoloJIY and more practical social
sciences We're wondenng 1f m a majo r University
of this so rt, whrther you can afford 1 de -emphasis
in th e arts.
Wdl wheth.·r ur nu t th1' " wh.ll he has 1n h1s
heart of hearl\ dc11ded I&lt;&gt; put lorward doc' not ~ay
that 11 w1ll ne~.e,,anl) he that wh1ch cornl's out He
wtll have to \ell 11 In thoM: pcvpk around h1m and
I would have tn lw one to whom he would have to
sell 11 eventu.llly I ht 1dea that the educated man
or the llhe1ally cdu.:Jtcll man 111 one who docs, tn
tad , under..t;uul tile \UenLe~
I thmk t~ what he
was trying to '·' Y that th e hhcratly edtll'atell man
a~o not JUSt a IIIJII ... hu ~now' the arts. lie mu~t abo
know the ~~-· •eu rn
And h•· w." ~ry•n~ 10 put forward thr
drgument , If I ll"lll(lllher lh•· &lt;.t\e , that he !.now~
more sc1en t 1st\ 1h.tl undel\t .arul l h~: art~, I han he
!..nnw\ peopk 111 thl art'. lhl.' hhcral arts, that
understand .my 11i th e ' &lt;1\'lll l"' And he says
,ornehuw tlll' \l' l "" u th11111 ' h.tvc to ~.orne closer
together. 1 he ..trll'l lhl P• ''on 111 th~ hht&gt;ral arts,
needs teo un•h ·r, l 1111.! 1111' llll'lhudulogy of the
'l.lenliSt rhey IJ,I\1' h• hl t ClllVl'f\Jill With II .tnd
nut totally J\lth I thlll~ that\ what hl''\ tryang to
..ay. that buth n1 u'l ·ll • r rn iJI~: th•· o ther But I
!&gt;ho uldn't speat.. 1 &lt;~1 111111
Wh o deculc~' what 'huuld bt' taught Should 11
be a faculty membtr whu ha' a spec1fic interest?
Well, sonet y Jl 1.111/&lt; ha' c1 nght to say that
those th1ngs th.Jl 11 nel'll' to hJve performed w11l be
taught For e\Jilll'k, lh &lt;' \ n,·ed to have people 111
health , so they haH" d "'· ~"•"II to expl.'d that 1f they
put money lorwJrJ !111 lh'Jllh 1n \OIIll: form, health
w1ll be taught. 1 hJt'' .111 ohvJoiU\ one
If you ..o rne hJd' lr u n1 thai ~hghtty and say we
need to have to mJ~r th•· ' Y'knt work lawyers and
we are thercfon· 1\"l"i! '" )tiVc mom:y and you in
fad turn nul pt•oplr "'""&lt;·I" pract 1ce law Coming
hack from thJl ,11(.1111 \• HI h.tvc: soc1al welfare
tollowmg m I hl' ' ·""'' lllln~,t you have bust ness
iollow1ng 1n t h.tl. Y11 11 h.l\c· t•ngineenng
all ol
these are to ..erVl"
luncttotb that S(ll'lety
feel:. they need' " 1t.1v•· r•·1 t'" "'l."d
Now one.: &lt;' you lllf iiJI " Ill &lt;lf that framework ol
the more pro k"""'·111' " 'le nted or dtrected
qtuat1on to the nu•ll ~otnw r.ll ones, there's where
you start to run 1111 1 llh· tllo hlems Shall we have
lustory as oppo\etl t o pnhllt,tl , . _ ,ence, a~ opposed
to sociology , as u ppuw.t '" .mthro pology.-Should

and Jeff Greenwald. &amp;cawe of space problem1
and the length of the interview, Dr. Ketter's
comments do not appear In total.
The Spectrum would like such faculty
opinion to be a regular feature. Any faculty
member who would like to contribute in any
way , should contact The Spectru m
Editor-in-Otief
we waste our money by tea ching somethina in
a bstract mythology as opposed to teachinl
something in religion, c urrent religion, as opposed
to teaching philosophy.
It's a very hard o ne to sa y because you can ' t
predict reall y what's going to happen ten years
from now. And really when you have a person
coming in at the freshman level you hope to give
him so mething that will be meaningful fo r th e next
20 years. You don't worry about it beyond th at. In
fact most people d on't worry if you can give them
something that will make ten years pos:.ible. That's
abo u t as far as you can think. Therefo re you can't
respond immedtately to the JOb market.
The job market ca n 't be the sole critena. It's
too fickle. And if you respond to 11 , all of a sudden
you run in tlus year wath thas Next year you've
flooded the market and you're out of 1t aga1n and
you're back and forth . Un less we have free
movement of faculty members, back and forth, o r
change ou r methc&gt;&lt;'l of gethng people 1n and out of
the system, it wouldn't work
Coming back from that then you huve to say :
'Okay, who's m a pos1t1on to somehow put
together coo rdanat ed programs.' And trad1tionaUy
II ha:; been true the fat:u lty mcmbcn. probably have
the greatest stak e . Hopefully we have the greatest
mformation, but definitely we have the greatest
stake in it. And so that by the laytng on of hand of
one to the other, thts h as tradit ionally fallen to the
faculty members to dec1de what should be.
Up until about 20 years ago, the preMdents
normally defined what 11 would be, and they co uld
.:ajole the faculty or what else they wanted to, t o
do it. Now the last 20 years, with the exception of
a couple of sout h ern schools, I know of no
preSident who attempts to tell the faculty that you
will have thas program, that program and
something else. You allow them to convan ce
themselves that thtnt;S should go an this direction.
This is not the o nJy way .
The legislature has tn part ... ular cases saad
'Look, we must start th1s because the state needs
liS archJte.:t urc • i\ nd cnv1ron men l al des1gn wa:.
designed by the leg~slature to he here We d1d not
ask for at. fhe hbrary sc1ences were defmed to be
at Bu ffalo They wcry not requested by the
Universlly of Buffalc) Sure we came along as a
willing partner, but they were defmed hy
somebody else .

"/ would h op~ that the ( cnurse) offering
that the University would hove would
have no mo" than a one year lag tim~
from what tht· students really fe~/ IIIey
want."
Students, where do the ~tudent~ hi tnt11 11 "1 I
would hope that th e des11c~ ul 'ludents '''•
particular c:ourse area\ would he
I hJve leo had.
up on that I would hnpe that the olfl'rtng that the:
Un1v~rsity would havt•, would h.ave " ' ' morl' tltJn &lt;1
one year lctg t1me from whdl the \ludcnh ll'JIIy
kcl l hey want. Okay you ~Jn ' t d&lt;l II l tm Yl",ll hut
hy nc::~.t y._.ar we wtll ~om~h o w gl'l .,.,,ncthmg 111 th ~
wurks :.o thJI you h.tv~: no more than J onr ycJr
lag I would hope that·~ the '-"'e I t' , nut alwa y'

true:
A student's role
reac tive role.
Almost always

Robert Ketter
means.
And 11 will depend o n whether you are on a
witch hun t at 1 particular t1me, a parllc.:ular
leg~slator is. Or whether you are 1n a rervent
religious revolu11on. ll's hard to ..ay. how far 11
I don't knt&gt;w. I suspect you're goang to fmd that
students at the fre:.hman level w1ll have very, very
hllle 1nput . and, as you pro..ced toward the scmor
year, you wilt find out that you hctve J hc~.k ol a
lot of mpult, and a~ you pro~.;eed through gradudh:
work . espec1ally 111 the profe~)1onal area' I thml..
you'll find out as you approa ch the graduation
pomt you will be al·tmg almmt on a par w1th the
faLUity or close to 11 on de cl\lon mak1ng
And really that's the way 11 should lw HelaUw
there ~ no• th ing that ~ay ~ from th1~ day , when I
dun'! have a lhploma. t1ll tumonuw who:n I gel a
dtrloma , that all of J )udt.lcn J'vr taken on \ome
1
know ledge. And therclnre the c:loser you get
to that stage where you hOJvt· ln .:n 11UI and really
cxt:rl' I\C ev1!rything that you 'hnuld be Jn1ng, you
'hould be gradually ri1JI..1ng dt'1.1SHHl\
How muc h are we b~nefi t ed by the Statr
Un tversity system and how much are we lundered
by 11'1
1 hat 's ,rlmu't llllP•""hlc lo .JII\Wl'l I hl· rl"a\on
h~1ng thdl 1f Wl' hJd hL' l:ll pnvJil' , .Jild \layl'd
pnvate , and h;~t.l lh\'11." lwe n ulll\liU l lt:d or
purlh.twd , 11 that\ lhl' u trrnl word .tn 111\lllUIHIIl
o l o ur type ahiiii1,Sidr "'or an y where ncar
1he
old Umverslly c•l BulfalocleiJnllcly would not hJVI."
grown It pruh:~hly would have tl1011111shed 111 \Ill'
and rt:\Oll rl e~
We wc1·e the IJri,:C\1 , 111 f.td the rnu~l \lahlc
ln\IIIUIIOn 111 the reg1on . hut , any l,ldlc IO:&gt;IIIUllllll
hcmg ueat,t:d anywhere nl'arhy would havt· totally
suhmt:rged the lJn1veNIY Ml lhJl lhl' lllCie I;J\ l
thai 11 w.c. gomg to he . we Wl' r~ e1thcr m or woulcl
go out of exlstenl t: So you ' rl' ,furling from J
po~rtll.lJiar g:roundJ"IIIIIIl thai', nut the ~:aSIC\l one 1t1
argue frum.
With re~ard In what wr u&gt;ntnhuh! to the ~tall:
~y\ll"lll , we are the only .:ompl t' henslvl' Uruver:.ity
111 the st:~te system .. We arc the vnly m~tllutu•n
both hy a~:e and by Jcvclopmo:nl tl\al will rc~~1w
nat1o11al In the next ten yelH~ That '"an uhVIUU~
nne
We ~untnl:&gt;ute more resean h I han all of l he
other InStitUtiOn .. put tugether I hat orw'~ not
gwn11. ll&gt; lhangc We hdvc J c.:apa.:•ty to run our
o wn rrogr.Jrn without any help from Alhany and
they kno w it, and we J..now 11 , yet the wstem
reqUires that we be 1n the sy~tem and that we, 10
fal l, lend our supJlOrl to make thl' system wort. .

U'.

h as

tndlllunally

been

a

And only now in certain area.\ L\ 11 ht'cornin11 an
&amp;L-tive, precipitating role We thmk you know what
we mean. Would you hope it would continue? In
that way.
I can't thcnk of any W.JY to 'tnp 1t I th1nk 11
will ~:ontlnue m that form that 'tudcnh, while.' they
reac: ted befort: anJ now thcy'1e p1ec1p1ta11ng
actions by ~:ert am d~.·~ IJC.! ' I thmk that rre c 1p1lal1on
wUJ occur I don ' t thmk y11u' ll l'Yt'l 111\tVl.' hutk
from that. On\:e you ve gultl'tl Ill lhal stage ynu
don't get out of 11

P·"'''"'·"

How far maght it go?
It wtll probably go as ta1 a' th~ I&lt;Hulty w1ll
allow it to go, and a~ far J S the puhhc w1J1 pay lo r
it. I don't think we really know I J..now the pubiJl
will stop fundmg when they don ' t fed that thl'lf
best interests are be1ng served t-or whatever that

So that - t hat's a negative one.
I've had my own view s t h at the system IS too
big, and that it doesn't really mak~ se nse We're far
enough away from Albany that we can act as 1f
we're scmj-autonomous. even though they have
more con trol over us than we at 11mes Ilk~ to trunk
they have.
The next obvious question . very topical, is
regionalization - how much we have ro benefi t
from it and how much we have to s u ffer
i\' a graduate institution I thmt.. we rrohahly
have the most to lusl' of any JnstiiUIIon of the 'ilate
heLau~e of the nalure of the th1ng.s we're g01ng
through . I n terms nl polit ical reahllt:S of late , some
type t•f reg10na1Jsm is gomg to he furthl·om1ng
l hero: have JUSt been loo many nnaSt' ' hy Inn mnny
group, _ It Will happen.
And w 1f Jt 's go111g to happen we have the
greatest opportunity to gel m and makl• 11 work 111
the: la:&gt;h1un thai will also he bl'nefi..:•al for us. II we
(;:Jn ~omehuw du 11. 1 hen we haw llw greatcsl to
loSt· 1f \omcone che really dl..'ltne' II , he~ause II
1eg10nahsm mean~ we w~h to hlolk oft une
port10n of the ;.late and sJy wo: WJnt the greatest
nu111her 111 h.Jt hclor's degree' granted , we may not
hav t· Jny graduate rrogram~ and Wl' rn.ty not have
anyone dl l he freshman and sophomore level.
Be1.Jtl\l' they will def1ne for w. who w•· take
I tlunt.. t hne are some pllL.~C!- edu t: allonally for
ICgJundhsm I tlunk that at the grdduate level for
ex.srnplc , we need to have pla ce~ lor our students
to tea .. h , and that we should not have them all
ll"JlhJng here 'o that there could be wurkcd out11
wry good arrangement when:hy 'orne of our
'ludenls could get prad1ce tr3JnJng 10 tea~hmg at
other Ulsl•tul•on:. . ..:ommumty colle~es, and so
lorth
I ttunk that there arc some good professors at
some of the four year colleges that we c.:ould really
prof1t by havtng them as adJunct profcsst)rs to our
campus. Wl' can't afford t h em, but we can set up
an aJJund situation wh ere both s1d e~ would
hcnefit. I think there are particular types of
.. ultural programs, arts program!&gt;, that one campus
~ould no I justify, but several c.l f them loge I her
could JUStify to the betterment of everyhody.
I tlunk th e 1deas of libranes ..1re such that you
cdn concede regional stronghold~ ot hbranes wath
rat her easy access to them so 1hat you have o n e
J.D. card that will allow you to get mto
everybody's llbrary w1th free e:~ot.hange. Thas as a
reg.~o nal 1dea that really makes ~ens._. when you get
down to 11.
c:ootonueo on oa9e 14

Friday, 17 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�very defensive. You are impocina, you uo ukina that there
be impoted a different value stanclard. And th.ia Ia very

!State of the Universit~
-&lt;ontlnued from page 1&gt;-

encompa.aed aomewbere within the Univeraity ahould be
tbote individuala whoae primary p urp&lt;JN il to make aure
that the machinery worka weU.

How much il the Uaiftnlty forced to . , ~~~o.,.. with
rqionalism plana - how rauch Is It jut a ~on?
That•a the way it w.. np181aed that •Afbaay auaat that
you do thia. Albany na-t tbet you do tbat. •
Well the first report that was put out with reprd to
regionalism was put out by a committee that was headed
by the
. president at ~neseo. there, we had no input to
it and that statement - in that report - it says that
Univef'Slty Centers and Univenity CoUeaes will accept
students from Community CoUeaes on a farsc preference
basis and that they will be auaranteed admission t o one of
the four year Univers.ity Centen in their region.
Tlut's one that I violently objected to ; stood up and
argued over and over. II was defeated by the presidents but
in discussions with the board of trustees, I guess I was
s ufficiently persausive, even thouab I wasn't supposed to
talk to them, so that they deleted bot h of those statements
from the resolution that finally came out of the board of
trustees. So that che c urrent psotition of state university ia
that we are tryinJ co explore ways that regionalis m miaht
help everybody .
The unfortunate part l.S simultaneously the
Department of Education said there will be reaionalaim
and we will dlfcct it, and it's not going to be just within
state university. it's going to be state university and the

We mean more apedfically probably the provoata. Tbe
area of adrainJatntion at eht bJaheut leYel of the Faculty.
It would be my hope that moet administrators would
view their role primarily as one tbat is to challen,ae the
inteUectual abilities of the little • r faculties within the
capital •F' Faculty , to act as a cor~t.Stant prod to improve
the weU beina, to look at news wa)'S of doina tbinp, to in
fact c hallenae the make·up of the vatrious departments, the
leadership in the departments, to work with the
department and in fact play the dominant role in decidin&amp;
on the allocation of funds within th:at Faculty. so that you
can in fact indicate a direction.
They should be the ones that are the closest to the
scene. and yet objective in terms of saying 'Chis is an area
which should be allowed to expand because of this - this
is che area that should be held constant for this.' They
should have the most knowledge fo1r makinatbese kind of
recommendations and defending thalt posture.
Yet there aetma to be a tremendous amount , ln
certain areas, or faculty d*ontent •tln campus, for . . rlous
rea.aons.
Could be

" . . . th~ dour you g~t to tlult stag~ wher~ you
haw: to go out and rttJUy ~x~rcb~ ~thing
I lull you should b~ doing . you should b~
grrulually milking d«UiotU."

Some has to do, we thhak. with what ia percei•ed as a
.-lfllnt of the academic innontlorn1e.. It has to do with
what they see • a threat to the qwdity of the Institution.
You ace many of the bi&amp; nama, mnny of the inteUectual
tlanta oo campus, uncertain about whether they want to
stay. lt'a ju.t a fear that perYada ,;::main comers of the
Unlnraity.
Same thins happens, not just in education, but 1n any
other institution in society when tbc~y·ve aone through an
affluent period where there were no constraints placed on
them, there was no reason to justifilf their existence, they
were there because they were there. And when Uus is true,
peopJe attempt to set up aU kinds o tf argument s, aU kinds
of procedures which in fact guan1ntee that they will
continue to enjoy those kinds of thlnp which they've bad .
Faculty members, for example, that have been aiven
the pnvUege of teachin&amp; only on Thursdays every week
and are a.n New York on Mo nday, Tuc:sday , Wednesday and
Friday will go out or their way to maJintain that that is.
H you ask that they be there f•or other days, you' ve
mvaded thear Innovative spirit , you have constrained them ,
you have d o ne everythln~ m the book . And from their
poant of vaew thls may be a perfectl!V' reasonable approac h

private a.nstituhons, and maybe It mighc even get m BOCES
dlstricts, this adea of cooper8tive primary and secondary
educational .sttuations.
If that's che case it can become a highly political
deVtce as those currently are. So we have much to lose if
we cannot an fact direct that one. So that while the
ammediate threat may n o t be real the ulcimate threat may
be very real unless we can someh ow define wich way it
goes.
You mentioned the Board of Trustees. Do you think
t he C\Hftnt atructure of the Board or Trustees , the people
who make ic up. are they best qualified to help dictate the
policy of the state unavuaUy? And this encompa.ases not
JUSt atate universities as each stru c ture but also in dealana
with the leislature .
That's a hard question and obv1ously you ;~hve a b1as
or you wouldn' t have uked thw question I thmk it's
unfortunate that the Board of Trustees does not contaan
tndividuaJs that have a:raduated from public insaituuons . f
tlunk that ttus u an unfortun .. te situation There is a
partJcular view o f education that one does come away wath
tf you have araduated from a pubh c school. That doesn't
say that the mdiVlduals could no t m fact he motavated to
work in the best a.n terest of the public.
I can't say that there is any a.ndivtdual 10 there that 1
would say definately 'I do not want that individual on the
Board of Trustees.' But I can say that I w1sh that there
were some people o n there that had some public ed ucation
back&amp;round
So that thas would a1ao aff~t their dealing with the
lqislature?
It may o r 1t may not . LegJ.Slators, by and larg~:
I ' Ll
back up. If there is one politically affluent group m the
legislature at 's those tndividual who have graduated from
Cornell Unaver.uty They U1 fact have a voting Jamority o f
the lelisla tu re And that's a private institution . So that one
could successfully argue that you need i.ndividuaJs who
have a:raduated from private i.ns tatutions because in fa c t
the legislature as made up of a.ndaviduals who have m fa c t ,
by and large, graduated from pnvate anshtataons Thf'refore
they can deal better wath them .
1 don 't hold t o that. but I can see one could advance
th.at araument New York State has been late com ang anc o
the public education busmess The State UnaversJt y wasn ' t
formed unhl 1948 . So the idea of havana large reservoirs of
people U1 the leg~slature a:raduahng from public sch ools, is
not too possable . And having only o ne law school m the
state, the one that we have, does n o t gtve you the greatest
possibility o f gettmg people into the legislature , whac h are
primarily . in large part lawyers We've g n t some: problem&lt;:
We have a long way to go yet .
We wanted to ask a question about administrators . .
Admims trators are bastards by definition . Okay, go
ahead .

It's a aood Cho uaht . Would you like to expand on that
one?
No
Any in particular? ... The question hu to do with
what the role of an admin.lstrator abould be in ideal tenna?
And perhaps what it ia ln the actual reality or thia
VnJYendty. Should the administrator be tbe one who
bandJa the day to day duties which are certainly
neeaauy. Or is the adminilltrator, or should he be, the
'inteDectual iawler ~
My view in aeneral i5 that the University has to
operate, and it has to o perate every day of the year; and ,

ICU)' .

1 ··w~'re far ~nough awe{)' from Alb11ny tlult w~
can 11ct as If w~ r~ ~mi4u rtonomous, ~n
though th~y lulv~ more controJ' owr u.' than w~
at timn lik.~ to think th~y have. "
as they were brou&amp;ht here and for

.:t certain numbeT of
yurs eruoyed these priVIleges.
You have the other situation tbJu growth, unlimited
growth , earned wath 1t a certain euph•:&gt;ria. AU is well when
you see everybody around you aJwa~V'S getting more and
more, bagger and bigger. Anyhme )fOU tend to have a
toppan&amp; off sit\Jation or a hold situation people surt
lookmg at each other a little more care:fuUy .
And rather than fight with each other they will pick a
co mmon target and frequent l)f that 's wh.at an
admin&amp;Strator as supposed to be - the common target. To
keep everybody workmg toaether. to save them somebody
to shoot at so thai they don't tear e~ch o ther apart Now
faculty members are most capable of tearing eac h o ther
apart . And they do a very very sucoess•ful job of it .

Certain Social Science theory aay1s that the status quo
ill threatened mo.t when a period of relative affluence is
followed by a period of relathe deprivution.
A retrenc hment
Riabt. Do you feel a threat to the Universaty ; (co J the
status quo which we assume you have Ito represent?
Up until n o w status quo was corntinual &amp;ro wth Now
we' re goang anto a pos1tion of not only a c hange '"
contanuow. growth but a shght contrac taon. That's m o re
than JUSt a ltght perturbation . This is a rather major
upheaval by everybody's thinking. People d o feel
threatened by the ad ea o f does a University. should a
University
The m ost obv10us one is tenure . Things that cause
people a lot of con cern . If you were brought here s ax years
aao or five years ago and you had the idea that well af 1
just meet the minimum , past experience indicates that I' m
going to automaticaUy become tenured.
During this period of time than@:s have tightened a
little more and people are saying : ' LOtok , you better have
done a dam good job of teaching, you should h.ave done
this, you should have done that ,' and then they say · ' Hey
wait a minute, I wasn't told that when I ca me here; 4 nd
then they sta rt USln&amp; new arguments.
WeU , you know a Unaversity or the type we wish to be
should really have continual movement and we can't have
continual movement Jf everybody is tenured . Boy, aJI of a
sudden the whole system is threatcmc."d. Peo ple get very

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday , 17 March 1972

Do you think .,../fell cota down on competitinae.
in a.oy way? We tllink that wu one of the reuou for
pMa/faJJ_
WeU it wu. Pass/fail was onpnally .et up to allow an
individual to take courses in a.reaa that he wanted to have
Jcnowledae, or be wanted to be excited, and not worry
about a particular pade. lt was hoped that individuals
would sample more. Our experience hu been that this has
n ot been the case. It's unfortunate. They're just looking at
these .now .
Pass/fail has not contributed to people takina a a:reater
variety of courses at all. So it's been, tbat one has not been
the areateat succ:ea. And not just here, throu&amp;hout the
country : where people have cone to pus/fall it has n o t

tluln fight with ~11ch oth~r. th~y
wUI pick 11 common tllrg~t Dnd
fnqu~ntly tlult 's wh11t 1111 llllmlnbtmtor ;.,
suppo~d to b~ - the common l'tU"ge t . "
.. . . .

mth~r

(th~ ft~culty)

encouraged people to ta.k.e other counes than they would
have. •
How can thia Uomnity perhap~ re:iniJtill che M'1lM' or
excitement that we talked about earUa- to both the faculty
and the atudent body1
The sense of excitement can not be reinstilled from
above . It ' s somethin&amp; that people will aenerate by aettina
toaether o n ideas. Just like I cannoc dertne that there will
be an academic program. You have to have fa c ulty
members and· s tudents that want to go toward it. Once
these poups do form I can do whatever I can to assut
them develop.
For instance, a propam in joumahsm, there are
enoua}l people, af we can somehow brina that into bema,
that would create a certain type of excitement that will
carry that &amp;roup for several years. That's one of the ideas
whether it's journalism, whether it's communacatJon or
something else.
The idea of bavina combined propams an medicme,
Jaw , sociaJ welfare and polWcal science. If we had a faculty
and a p-oup of students and aU of a s udden chey hit an
exdtin&amp; idea It will JO. Whether the idea or the bulletin
board courses have run their day. okay that w as an
exciting idea . I suspect they haven't. But I suspect
somettung will eventually come that will take over that
concept , and will build on it.
You don't impose them . Somehow they have to
sprina. Some people feel very exci ted ri&amp;ht now , Y&lt;lur
generaJ feeling is that there is no excitement going on I
don't know that that's necessariJy true througho ut the
campus

Thue's one other area we•d Uke to touch on , but
we're not sure what approadl to take.
If you' re like mosc people you' ll say h o w much
autho nty am I wa..JUng to g~ve up.
Okay. That 's a aood enouab question. That's not
really tbe way we wa.oted to put ir, but u lona u you
pr~nced it - ao ahead.
There has in fact been negotiations and a bnc:r
barpaning agreement with faculty and sin ce the board o f
trustees say, because there has been adopted by the faculty
thJa hard position, the pre&amp;ident will m fact not give up nor
will he agree to any diminution of his authority as vested
by the board of trustees.
The recent action this last week , no last month , co the
effect thai all actions of Faculty Senate's are adVtsory
upon the president at best. And they dad it , they said at
that c lear. That to have another poup come would be
okay, they are desirable from a sense of the communaty
~ant of view, but in terms of legal sanction the preSident
will be constrained apinst siving up the authority wluc h
s upposedly has been vested in him .
AU that says is if the fa culty, the students and the
presadent are working toaether t owards the same'end they
will work together. It would come out to probably a
consentual au thority. Everybody wiJJ gjve up a litt le bit ,
not because they legally have to but because at 's to the
~etter~ent of everybody that each person g.ave up JUSt a
litlle bat to make it work .
I thmk that's the way it will eventually happen But
thas last SPA contrac t so completely reverses what we were
trying to d o for severaJ years that a whole n~w ball game
ex&amp;sts now .
In what way? Reverse?
Beca use there was always the pronouncement that
there was recognized fa c ulty, there was recognized staff,
there were recognized students - as equal constituent
parts. But not s tudents have been taken out of it and the
fa c ulty has said aJJ conditions of employment will be on
the, ba~aainang table with final arbitration and bindmg
arbttrataon . And that no charges can be brought fac uJty
v~rsus fa c ulty, ~r anyone against faculty except for cause.
It s a .new game. They feel that they must protec t
everytha.ng that they have. And I think that's most
unfortunate.

··1 think. It's unfonuntJU that th~ Boud of
Trustees do~s not cont11in indlvidUilb thot ~
not gradUilt~d from pubUc lnstituliom. ·•

�by Michael Silverblatt
Lit. end Dntmll Editor

In a recent article printed in Twentieth Century
Fiction, ltalo Calvino, the author of Cosmicomics,
attempts to re-define the modern writer's role.
For Calvino, there is creative art, a literature
which create' a self-contained world withi n the fini te
faci lity of the page. There is also d e-creat ive art,
expressed in a literature that takes the existing world
and fragmen ts it , turns it into a topsy-turvy collage
of misappro priated ju11 taposi tion . Wr ite~ who bu ~d
stories from newspaper cli ppings and magazine
articles are examples of de-creative artists.
Re-creation and art
Ne1ther of these art forms pleases Calvmo . He
does no t see the sens1btlltees of the modern writer as
creauve (as does Nabokov) or as de-createve (as do
Donald Barthelme and Robbe·Grilletl Rather ,
Calvi no, a gefted I tal ian writer. experiments with a
third mode, a style wh1ch I here call the re-createve
mode
Calv1no t akes our world of theoretecal
technology (a world wh 1ch most modern wreters
either treat sarcastically or completely ignore) and
re-creates 1t 1n ficteon
Calveno recreates our scientific world 1n the
form o f artiStiC statement ; but his re·creation swiftly
and admirably becomes recreation - his fiction IS
fun, after all. The massive mental apparatus that
stands behtnd the stones does no t fo r a moment
upstage the fact that Calvino writes enormously
enjoyable sc1ence·fiction parables .

'Cosmicomics'
is a fun romp
through fiction
and theatrics

Dramatising fiction
As must already be obv1ous, any attempt to
theatrica11ze Calvtno must successfully grapple wtth
thiS agressively literary style. All of the stories are
self-consciously narraged by OfwfQ ; a fascina ttng
spec1men who has partiCipated on every branch of
the evolut•onary tree from pnmordial slime to
d1nosaur , from m1crobe to astronom•cal sc1enttst
Gordon Aogotf and h1s company succeed
splimd1dly 1n presentmg two of the six stories that
they have chosen from Cosmtcom1cs. Three more are
nearly well -done but not qu1te ready . One is a dismal
failure
"Games Without End" is a story in wh1ch
Calvina simultaneously accounts for the creation of
- m cN tece

~Doctor

conllnued on follow ing p age-

Faustus'

Perfect potpottrri of talent
Sp«trum ThNttlr Critic

between scenes are tenuous. more of juxtaposition
than of development

Marlowe's Tr9{Jical History of Doctor Faustuss,
is surely one of the most perplexing o f all of the
Rennaissance plays. Its tone is as uneven as a
seismograph - at times it is brilliant, at other times
banal, other tim es ludicro usly pious. The play is so
erratic that, parado xically . anyone attempting to
stage a "consistent" production is going directly
agai n st t he chaotic spirit of th is maligned
masterpiece. The catch is that productions which are
willfu lly inconsistent - either in their style or their
t hematic emphasis - are invariably just too sloppy
and d isorienting to hold an aud ience's eyes and
attention.
David Chambers and his very talented
"company " of student actor5 have achieved some
sort of a solution to the double-bind. Discarding t he
conventio ns of consistent characterization and
interpretation, they use the text of the play as a kind
of pillar about which they dance. Each scene
assumes its own peculiar " shape," while the relations

Detailed a nd exciti09
They crea te for us many strong scenes, many
powerful images. I'm not sure I would call their
performance " dramat•c" at all , although I don't
mean that to b e perjoratiVe. Chambers has made a
really courageous deciston about h1s material. What
he sac rifices in drama, he has more than made up for
in all of the dramatic adjuncts - dance, music, even
a little vaudeville. And ultimately, if we don't get a
real sense of the issues of Faustus. we do get a great
insight into the dram tic possibilities of the play .
The productio n is, finally , a detai led and
exciti ng explorations of the segments of this
dra matic text. We may not be seeing a " play ", but
we are spending an evening in the theater (it the
atrociously designed Harriman library stage can be
called a theater) . Their conception of Faustus may
not be your ideal, but it is performed with such
energy, intelligence, and imagination that we are
almost convinced that it could be performed in no
other way .

by Elliot Krieger

-Fox

�-ect"Unl.leif from prevlout .,....-

DANCE ARTS
COMM ITT EE
presents

Come to a "hoe-down" with

The Sun Dodger
Professional square-dance caUing and instruction
Saturday . March 18

8 :00p.m . in the Fillmore Room

the galaxies .-ld our modem cbnception of
existential despair. The story concersn some
pre-matter kids playing games with atoms in the way
that we play with marbles or baseball cards.
Ably narrated and acted by Martin Manlak and
his opponent Gerald Danaher, the story takes on
vibrant theatrical life. Even the atoms have distinct
characters, down to the last sluggish hydrogen
particle.

Dinosaurs and art
Equally successful is the Dinosaur section, led
by Steven Glassman taking his turn as old Qwfwq,
the narrator. The story is about the extinction of the
dinosaurs. the personal mythologies that spring from
elCtinction, and (metaphorically) our cruel rejection
of cultures other than our own.
The last surviving dinosaur comes to a town
inhabited by the New Ones, the story concerns his
own adventures. The characterization of the New
Ones is an imaginative and deftly elCecuted theatrical
conceit. The creatures move, belly-up, on hands and
feet , using the latter appendages as arms. Sharon
Pywell, as Fernflower (the New One who falls in love
wtth the dinosaur) is especially charming. She has an
agile comtc grace and a physical insightfull}ess that
marks her perfo rmance.
The o ther pieces never take o ff into dramatic
realms. Some of them remain interesting as
e lC per iments in story theater, but they are,
unf o rtunate ly . not free of the facetious
condescension to which the story theater style is
prone. We are treated to a succession of semi-visual
literary puns. A yawntng chasm is played by an actor
who yawns. Night, played by the cast, falls - as do
the actors. Running jokes, it may be added, can
become over-extended and elChausted in their last
lap.
Of the rest, Bruce Berger seves his overlong
"Without Colors" story from tedium by expertly
wielding an otherwise elCtraneous guitar. "All at One
Point," charmingly narrated by Miss PyweU is lrnle
more than exposition. One wishes, however, that
Josephine Ewing as Mrs. Ph(i)Nko had more to do in
the course of the evening.
"The Form of Space" was well narrated by
Bnan Wright (who is also excellent as Zahn in the
Dinosaur piece) . On paper the story radically
transforms the reader's spacial perception, on stage
its theatrical metaphor Is pet. contrast to the
brilliant literary feat Calvino m~~nages to pull off.
Defeated attemptt
The other piece is called "The L~t Yean" and
its a dreadful Defeated attempt the story is a
mllterpiec:e of
delusion. 'In what

have been the detln•tion of a pitiable madman,

Kare Mura (physically beautiful as Ursula Hicks In a
later piece) offws only confusion. The confusion is
rectified, but far too late, by a second actress, Susan
Evans, who is delightful.
As a whole, Cosmicomics demands a great deal
of imagination on the part of both its actors and tts
IIUdience. Its staging Is often repetitious and
impractical (a fulminating volcanoe effectively
drowns out some Important plot developments) . The
play opens with too much fuss before seitling down
to its business. The sound affects are annoying. Still,
the piece providll some remarkable performances
(most notably by Mertin Maniak who supplies the
bridges between the scenes) ; and when it comes to
ltfe it has vitality, vigor and excitement.
I recommend highly that you see this
production. Its fascinations far outwetgh its flaws. It
il playing tonight at 8:30 and will be repeated on
23, end 29.

,.....,Marion ~ran~o
AHO

~I ~~cino J~mes ~~an ~~c~ar~ ~aslellano
~o~erl ~uvall ~lerlin~ ~a1~en Jo~n Marle1
~ic~~r~ ~onte mane lealon

STARTS
WEDNESDAY
- mCNiec:e

�. - - - -Now serving the needs of U.B. students- - - - - .

Grandpa Smiths
2756 Seneca Street
(At Harl em, near Seneca Mall)
NATURALLY PROCESSED BEEF

(No chemicals,,hormones or coloring agents added)
NATURAL CHEESES

STO~E-GROUNO WHEAT

RAW SUGARS- VITAMINS
Hours : 10·6 doily ; Sunday 10.3; Closed Soc.

If you drive a·
foreign ca r ..... .
we speak its language.
with a complete line of
parts and accessories.

Delaney and Bonnie concert":·~·
bad .way to waste an evening
To descnbe the Delaney ~nd Bo.nn!e concert at
Klemhans last W~nesday as d1sappomtmg would be
grossly understattng the facts . I went 10 expecting to
see a good s~ow_. not a great one, just a good one. I
came away f10d1~g Delaney. Bramlen to be one of
the most otfens1ve. obnox1ous performers yet to
grav1tate to the center of a stage
Fi.rst off, the c.o ncert was a huge bomb
fenanc1ally I guess 10 these days of econmic
depress1on. It's h~rd for all of us to scrape up enough
money for anyt.hiOg, let alone fleeting pleasures like
concerts J . Gells was sold out, and the Kinks drew
well, wh1ch was very good to see. But three shows in
less than two weeks has proven to be a little too
mut.h for everyone's pocketbook . Let's just say that
all ol you who didn't go made a w1se decision .
81lly Preston started the show off Now I've dug
Mr Pr•-ston smce the old Shindig days, when he used
to hop around in his processed Beatie mop and play
some m1ghty f10e organ . Somehow he got into the
Apple camp and turned up on Abbey Road and Let
It Be, wh1ch got him some recognition that he
def1mtely deserved . Then he made it to the ultimate
"10 crowd" performance, the Bangia Desh concert
Everybody figures he's gonna be a big star soon, but
Judgenq f1.lm his performance that mght, I doubt
It H1s short set was highlighted by a lot of flash and
too little music. His best tunes were his own songs,
such as "The Bus," " I Wrote a S1mple Song," and h1s
almost hit, "That's the Way God Planned tt."
Unfortunately, he ran through these much too
qu1ckly and spent most of the time farting around
with flashy non -playing numbers l1ke
"Summertime," complete with Ray Charles
1m1tat1ons. He left the organ to dance around a bit
on the unopened orchestra pit, leaving the rest of his
band precariously suspended in back of h1m.
To top things off, he picked up a guitar and d1d
" Get Back," taking the solos himself. Considering
the fact that he played the neat electric piano on the
Beatie record, I failed to comprehend why he played
gUitar on 1t, since he's not too go&lt;'d on guitar to start
With
I was bored stiff by the time he was finished and
retared to the lounge for a coke. The Kleinhans
lounge is actually comfortable when 1t's not
crowded . Even got into a little chat with the Buffalo
Fest1val men, Jerry Nathan and George Greenfield
Problems, problwns
Delaney and Bonnie had JUSt started when I got
back upstairs. There seemed to be some problems
With the mikes, and the sound was pretty muddy.
Bonme started a slow blues song and repeatedly
asked that the bright spots be turned off an favor of
red hghts. They finally were, and then . when the
next song started, she complained again . I thought
she wanted the red lights for the mood of the tune (I

think it was "Nothing's Too Good for My Man"),
but 1t turned out that she just didn't hke the spots 1
though stars liked spotlights. Oh, well .
Delaney now IS the only gunanst. and wuh h 1m.
it's e1ther hit or miss. He either sounds really good or
really bad, and as they played longer it only got
worse. As PfOblems with the mikes mcreased
Delaney's attention seemed to drift completely awa~
from the music to the sound men. He first called for
the mikes to be turned up, and they both proceeded
to blow . That got h1m apprec1ably pissed off. Then
he yelled for the monitors to be turned up About
ten minutes later, nght 1n the middle of "only You
Know And I Know," he yelled for the monitors to
be turned down Of course, during all of this, his
s10g1ng was awful. Bonme tried her best as did the
rest of the band, to make things work, bu't it was too
late
The new group was preny ordinary, except for
the horn section, who provided the only life In the
mus1c. The organ player kept jumping up with a b1g
smile on h1s face, clapping along ood enJOying
himself completely He obviouslr wasn't listening to
the mus1c. The drummer was very good at J1m
Gordon drumm1ng but he fell apart during the blues
numbers. The bass player dropped his pick once. I
guess to make everybody not1ce, though few d1d
As a matter of fact, the only interestang person
on stage was Sandy Konikoff, whom Buffalo people
should know about but don't. Sandy 1s a hometown
drummer who used to play in the legendary group
run by Stan Szeleste (who plays at Granny Goodness
each Monday and Tuesday mght, and I suggest that
anybody who's interested in good old rock 'n' roll
see him) called Stan and the Raven.
Sandy went on to be a h1ghly touted sess1on
drummer and he pops up on a lot of good albums
His reputatiOn is so good that he was taken along for
the perc ussion section on the Mad Dogs and
Englishmen tour (you may have caught h1m 1n the
mov1e; he's the one who says, as the gang goes t.om
a Lear Jet to a greyhound bus, "Ah, the big timel " )
Anyway, Sandy was stat1oned 10 h1s usual
percussionist spot, behind the drummer, and about
ten minutes after tne start of the set. he ret1red to
the back of the stage and sat stanng, Without movmg
a muscle, for the remamder of the show At one
point, Bonnie sat down across from him. He just
looked at her and shook h1s head The only one up
there with any class.
There was no encore. ma1nly because everyone
just wanted to get out of there as fast as poss1ble
Like my friend Tom said on the way back, "I won't
tell anyone I saw you there 1f you won't tell anyone
you saw me there, ok 7 That about sums up the
evening

Noone •

can restst
our chicken wings.
Tlwy'n· I ht· WowJ.,hcd '., nt· wt•-..t ta-..tt· sen-.at1on
lllald, nwdium or hot. Sw1rl't'IT1 around m tang;
hluc· 1 ht'f''l' ·..c1uc 1', f1 nd fin1sh 1he t•&gt;.pt•twnce with
t· n~p y l'l'lt·rv s t11 b Non-stop IJt'llnuts are on
lh1• h11mw, urld !--JIItlfs IHt• flO!' Ftftt&gt;r :1 P M . ThC'
Wuods hed
whN&lt;· I tw kltc·hen '.,a lways opt&gt;n
and lht' musw's always un. Wt''re nght next to
The· Psu·kt•l Inn tn North Tonawanda, just over
lht• Oclawurt• AVI'nue Hndl!t' Dnve oul Dela wuu• nr takf. ltw Young-mann Tht• Woods hed 's
open from I I
A.M . evt&gt;ry day exn'J&gt;t Sunday

:w

-rt~E WCJD~SHE~

- Billy Altman

A U T 0 and C Y C L E

Is it true that the campus editor
is a kleptomaniac?

1065 Main Street. Buffalo
885 7005
A d1v1S10n ot MI CA EAST, Inc

I NSU RA NCE

1MMEDIATE FS·I
Regard!~

Low down

of age or record

nAIJm,~r

-

-

�M.G./

The Book of f1ilh1s by J .
le Cl~zio (Atheneum, $6.95)

Mostly , novels are
"dist urbing," "rare ... " or
"yearning velocipedes ... gnawing
at interior suns." Nonetheless, this
new book by J .M.G. L~ Clezio
seems to stand alone amongn the
already mountainous collectiqn of
new novel offerings.
Young Man (alternately, Y.M.,
and Young M.) Hogan is the
central character of Th• Book of
Flights - but he's got no labels to
attach him to ourselves with . He
sails throughout the ~. writing
poems, uni-dimensional memoirs,
real head-bursting attempts at
grasping hold of the world,
cigarettes or sun-bright alleyways

In ..... 01 ~ of tM

Our Weekly Reader

at least, by means of language.
This alone Is a great
experiment to wetch, sentences
end meaning and Idiom rquirming
in heat, beMath this very able
author's incisions ...but the basic
enigma remains unsolved for
Hogan, a blind vivisection by le
Clezio.
Y o u n g Ma n H o g a n ,
char a c: te r · I ess, co I our I ess,
spectrally the Slime before our
eyes, is given his chances all the
same . .. transported chapter by
chapter to all sorts of diHerent
places, from the grey steel and
window concrete prison of ctties,

the heU of starving peaunt
lrilleges, thirst-baked, brilliant in
heat, to jungle cultures, whores
and their chores, cars and
interminlble hi~1y . Sometimes
he aim~ succeeds in esc:aping
togeth• with the author, in
fteeiOQ the constricting curse of
logic, linguistics, places to be,
ideas that hold ... but it's atways
here It ttl is point that a delicate
stein is pulled away before our
eyes to reveal the gep between
thought and words, words and
things - in le Clezlo's vision a
most horrid indelicacy.
This Is not to say that The ·

Book of Flight•, with itJ
existentill veneer, telf criticisms
and veraiCII epiphanies concludiOQ
c:hapten, Is entirely MW in the
world of thought : original . I
meen ... le Clezio has Inserted a
number of lhort two or thr"
paged sections between the Hogan
narratlws, where he assumes the
voice of the first penon, himlllf,
and dropa the guise of authoriallty
to show us how he's failing at hi1
talk, how he doesn't know what
the devil he's doing writing a book
at all. Or trying to explain that
consciousness Is manifold and
streaming, therefore unenclosable

CLIP AND SAVE

13 DAYS

Diet 147
5,7.9 pm

OF FOREIGN
FILMS:

SPIIIG
FI.M
FESTIVAL

Max Opnut's
lOLA MONTES

Jean Reno~r 's
PICNIC ON THE GRASS
France, 1959

147

FREE!
Do.t 147
5,7.9 pm

Pter P&amp;Oio Pouoltn•'s
TEOAEMA
(Theorem)

T~. Metch 21
Diet 147
DOU8LE FEATURE · ~~el5,7.9
Adolfes Mek.at'

Oief 147
5,7.9 pm

COWAHEAAS Y COMPANEROS
Th11 documentery , filmed 1n Cube, 1s ebout yoong
1evolut10nerres steeling them•IV111 for further
srruggle It 11 a pr rmer for youth everywhere.
&amp; THE INNER WORLD OF JORQE lUIS BORGES

Th11 ftlm , partly natreted by BorQttS h•mself , ••
par t•culerty well-captured and mOYtng It 91Y111
v•v•d end aothanttc ·~ess1ons o f BorQttS them.n
and h11 su,ounc:tmgs.

Michelangelo Antonron• 's
RED DESERT
Italy, 1964
REO OESER T •s 81 onc;e the most bNuuful, the
most s•mple and the most danr19 ftlm yet m8de by
ltalv 's m"t" ful M iche langelo Antontonr, e
d11ector so prodtglously IJiftlld that he cen marshal
a whole new vocabutarv of c.neme to retr.rate h1s
now·fam.lta• themes. . Never has so bleak a vtston
of con~empo•e•y ltle been proJected wtth such
in tensrty , from c;roven yellow end llfo.Onmmlng
green to vrotet , P8JStOnete crimson and the grey of
total delpaor
Thu,.,ay, March 23

CONFERENCE THEATRE
6,7,9pm

Nei1U11 Pereore dos San toss
HOW TASTY WAS MY LITTLE FRENCHMAN
ltalv 1968

B•al•l. 1971

Thos eatr80rd•nartiV compleJ&lt; f•lm by one ol
Europe 's mo s t controvers•al d••ertors, ra•se•
questiOns concern.ng the natute of la•th .n d
contemporary soc•etv

Ouens•blv a l tlrn about cannrbaltsm, rt con be
descnbed as a bla~k comedy The main character , 5
8 F•enchmdn wnu lives among Btillifdn lndtans,
and the fttm rl!cons tructl the .nte•ac:t•on o f
European colontsu and na11ve Breztl•ans ltom dn
lnd•an pornt of v•ew

Here a mystertous vounq man emerget as thr q&gt;utf
of revolutton destroyrng bourgeots ~r ety

Dt .. 147
5 ,7.9 pm

froday. March 24

Fernando Arrabal 's
VIVA LA MUEATE
!Long Lrvl! Death )

Saturdey, Marc:fl 18

Diet 147
5.7.9 pm

F•&lt;uocesc:o Ro51 's
MOMENT OF TRUTH

Spa"' 1971
lnescanably a maJor workl In thl' trad rPon ol
surreal vrolenct' to whtc:h oil other wo• ks 1n thr'
tradrtton must \land com par~son
New York Tmun
A 11 audac•ous tohn A Pa•oKysm of llngullh, a
scream lor lobenv and probably one of the mosr
fe•oc1ous vtolent I rims ever made.

D11f 147
5,7.9 pm

Frederoc Aosstf's
TO DIE IN MADRID
Sporn. 1965
A haunung document of the Spanish C•v•l Wer ,
1nc•edobly photographed, beautrfully spoken and
edlled. •t traces the whole bloody busrness of the
nse of the republtcans, rhe OYerthrow of the kong,
the gathertng o f the forces o f reac:tron by the
mtlttery and the church
the •n tervent•on on both
sldlt. . tt is a thorough and unrelentong resume of
what occurred
.a truly powerful emotional
tKpenence.

1955

Thrs f1lm 11 o,.. of the mott sumptuous romanoes
ever f rimed . It con tarns the mOfl lntOK1cat1ng
1magery of the artrst 's fHhngs to be ••n on tht
screen The moving eamere o f MaK ()phuls
transletes motiOO as no cemere hes ever dona. It 11
truly one of the greatest f1lms of ell t1me.
- V1II. Voice

Glauber Aodla's
ANTONIO DAS MORT£$
8raz11, 1969
Th '' allagortcal f •lm, responalble for mak1ng
Glauber Aodle 8 prominent cult flguns, 11 geining
an ever · wtdening audience. Acttng techniqu",
nlfrattve conventions and ctnematography in !hit
hoghly or•grnal work refleeu a new "troptc:altst"
•mage and a votlltltng sense of tturd world
reconstruction

Dt9f 147
5,i,tpm

Diefendorf

Froday, Marc:fl 17

F111'Ce,

ThtS film 11 es much fun as a betrellul of monkeys
anel makes JUst about as much sensa lt 't 1 radteally
tmperfect work but the 1mperfect•ons are nearly all
enc:hant•ng. For Aenoor 11 an art•st and h11
rntantron hila, l1 ke Chaplin's m h11 eerhar
comedres Isn't 10 meke sense but to g•ve delight

•
1n

Thuf'ldev. March 16

Mondey. Mlltch 27

S(laon 1965
flu s ftlm wtll t.1ke you iiS close to • bull11ng &lt;~s you
con gcr w•thout l&gt;~t.om .ng a l&gt;ullftghll r vour~ll It
os a 11ery ••ma•kablt e~tperrence e~nd one you
should not nuss tf yov are not squeamiSh rn these
matiiHs Urouuonttonllbly a mator work of art

Saturdey, March 25
Dtaf 147
DOUB LE FEATURE - antt-neoreahsm v neoreahsm
Pasohni's
6 :30 &amp; 8 :30pm
THE HAWKS AND THE SPARROWS
Thrs ftlm IS a rare e ~&lt;ample of the long soughr ·•new
ctn ema". new rn the substance o f the umes, wh1ch
must also correspond to the essent•al need of our
r•mes , namely the search fo• beartngs •n the
turmoil of presstng progrns.
Rosselhn 1
&amp; Gouseppe De San"''
BITTER RICE
at 5 &amp; I pm
Passron totfs and tumbles throughout thrs ftlm . It 11
earthy and elemenrat as any f1lm you are ltkely to
Ute.

Dief 147
5,7.t•m

Jean Renoir's
LA MARSEillAISE
France, 1938
Hera Renoor ·s rem.rkable lb•l•tv to recrHfl me
mood of the pest - h11 unyoeldtng concern to show
lt fe • tt reelly wes - 11 never more evident. A
clautc trobute to the glory of ma French
Revolutton , the ftlm captures tha.,..rsonal flavor o f
tho struggle and the ptulosophocal background to
the revoluttonary upheaval.

- David Brt~r

Jablon
dealan

Thuf'ldiiV. Mardi 30
Di.t 147
Bunual Double Feetu~. thows at 6,7.9 pm

BFA Procrema

MEXICAN BUS RIDE
Bunual's characters are un.versal but not
s tereotyped Included are two psychopathrc sons
who sc heme tn a manner feroctous ond
dtSorganozed to get the •nherttance. Bnght and
sperklrng, th•s folm oomm.ngles lt fe and deeth ,
goodness and Vtllany. wrrhout brtterness or blame
LAND WITHOUT BREAD
Th•s cleutc docummtary short. matlu 6unuel's
tr ensrfron from surrealtiiiC ftlm-arltst to a
commercrat ftlm drrector

This UntQue film festival has been made
posstble through the extensive cooperatiOn
of the followtng organtzat1ons
Spantsh Club
ltaltan Club
French Club
Brazilian Club
Latin·Amertcan Club
Student Association
Cultural AHairs
Grad Stud Org of Span I tal &amp; P ort
UUAB Film Committee
We wish to especially thank
Committee for its technical and professional
assistance. This organization is willing to assist
any student group in presenttng films on
campus.
Thank you,
Rolando Fiorelli
Daniel Picchi
Film Festival Chairmen

*"*·

words, words ... Words like
"flight, ,, " I," "the street,"
"mllsic." John Fowl• is doing
tomething of 1he IOr1 in .,.
French Li«JIIImnt'l WCMWJ , but
not hllf • well; and th•e'• more
than • hint of Th• Sot·WM#
F«tor in le Clezio's list of
exclamation-pointed expletives,
naughty Imponderables, curse
words and HJttllanc:l flings.
Still, le Clezio carries his own
wei~t . Reading this book is
encountering the d811ices of the
modern novel, but encountered In
a faster, more llftsible, honest
way. The world of The Book of
Fllghtl is that utterly joyless,
fabricated landscape of Alphaville,
where the traHic li~1S and
afternoon shadows antw• only to
their own name, unutterable. This
prose has teeth : certain passages,
locutions , and metaphor
d y n am i ci ze faster and faster
together and equal the heartbeat
of the reader ... that is to say, a
real particular vision of isolation
.-\CI imprisonment begins to live,
energeticall'f' grasptng hold of
words, though-forms, and even
novelistic conventions, displaying
an eternal failure to spear the
actual.
To me, it is worthwhile to fling
oneself at the impossible . .. The
Book of Flights ts a book wtth
pow•ful poems in it, poems to
blighten sunshine, to plainly ruin
a day (of complacence: who
things about existentialism
nowadays?) 1n a strange, strange
way. Art begins to conspire with
dull city days, gar~ cans, your
neighbor's face, to shake out the
clay. The Book of Flj{lha, Young
Man Hogan, and that particular
slice of life; very nearly a Hymn
to Doubt .

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�'The Boy Friend' comes off
as a very confusing parody
by Julie Leplck
$ptlttl1/m Film Crltla

What does Twiggy need a
boyfriend for, anywf1Y7 She's got
Justin. And Christopher Goble he and Lynn Seymour made a
perfect ,_ rh dttux way back
then, when he danced for the
Royal Ballet. Way back then
when, or to put another n ickel in,
1t's nostalgia. Nostalgia.
That is to say : Ken Ruaell's
AII ·Talking, AII·Dancing, AII·New
Moving Picture The Boyfrittnd is
definitely old hat. A moth-eaten
but perfectly restored fedora.
Based on Sandy Wilson's
Broadway tak.off on backstage
romance (the play that made Julie
Andrews famous} ; it's the
harmless tale of a bespectacled
assistant stage manager named
Polly (Twiggy) and her adventrues
with a second-string rep company
playing in Portsmouth (one of the
less notorious theater capitols in
the wor1d) . When Rita, the
company's leading lady, catches
her heel and - oh, fateful day! breaks h8f leg, it's up io Polly
(that is, Twiggy} to save the show.
Parody that faib
Add to this : the Romantic
Interest, embodied by Christopher
Gable as Tony, the show's leading
man and matinee idol , dramatic
tens1on provided by Mr. De Thrill,
a French ·speaking , German
c~ccen ted
American theatrical
producer searching the stock
compan1es for new talent, with
the m..g•c prom~e of Hollywood
Russell takes this cast of

characters and plttys It for parody,
This gets comrplicated. $andy
Wilson wrote a pll4y about a play;
the play gives Russell a vocabulary
of theatrical conventions and
catch·phrases for the primary
object of parody. But he Is
making a movltt, in the archtttypal
sense of the word. Moreover, it is
a specific genre of movie he tries
to recreate - the over-stuffed
'thirties musical extravaganza, a Ia
Busby Berkelt3y . Now, the
Broadway venion1is a 1950's view
of the musical comedy scene of
the 'twenties,' while Ruaell
remakes the ~tV in terms of
1930's cinema. You see the
confusion already.
The problem with parody is
that you've got to be as good as or
better than the rhing that you're
parodying. So, paradoxically, if
Russell is to su~::eed at the task
he's come up with, he's got to be
better at being 3\tiful than all the
awful glitz of 1920's musical
theatre, in addition to over-doing
Busby Berkeley ·- and that ain't
easy, kid. You know he's camping
it up, but somehow he ends up
more summer camp talent n1ght
than real, honest-to-goodness,
Camp He doesn'·t over-do It, just
overplays 1t.
Cattt8"1J"Uint
T ake th e rnodern dance
number Now wn all know that
Ken Russell has a thing about
mcadern interpretive dance.
T~ere's V'at soene with Ursula,
Gudron, ~nd the c::a ttle in Women
in Lo..1t. and a1 biography of
Isadora Duncan made for BBC

r----·---------

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Tickets 50¢ before 6 p.m.
75¢ after 6 p.m.
Times &amp; Tickets at Norton Hall Ticket Office

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The trouble with Thcr
Boyfrlttnd is that it could havo
been good, but is at
disappointment. Ken Russell 11'
one of the most interesti"iJ
directos working today. but he'"
annoyingly erratic. When he in
good he is very very good and
when he is bad he is horrid , to pU1t
it briefly . He has produced filmu
of remarkable subtlety such as hin
uudy of English compose~·
Frederick Delius, or the lsadorz•
Duncan portrait . But thEI

mmr-~~·~~~~~~~~~~---.

The twig sings
Let's face it Everyone who goes
to see this flick wants to know 1f
Twiggy really can act
Surprisingly, she tsn't half bad .
She's good at being plaintive,
winsome, and pure (lnterestmg to
note she's nearly always dressed in
whitet . She sings n1cely, if
carefully, and can dance well She
also looks great 1n the costumes well. most of them .
The rest of the cast tends to c raftsmanship and sense o1
It could have been wone,
overplay It Glenda Jackson. one Pf'Oportion evidenced by his filmu though. Russell has certainly done
directors wort&lt;tng today. but he's for television is entirely absen't worse - witness The Music
annoyingly erratic When he is from the mega -melodramatl~ of Loll'tln . But he has also done
good he is appearance as Rita Thtt Music Lovers. At times, this much better work . This show is
which almost makes it, almost 9enSitivity IS revealed In nw pleasant enough, but when ttwt
avoids being merely Silly But Devils , although even here Russelll final fade-out hrts and they roll
Glenda Jackson •s an seems more mterested m scartn~ the credrts, you're left with a ffJW
incomparable actress Anto n•a out the dev•l than explortng h1s laughs, a chuckle, one tear, several
characteristiCS, metaphoncally It half-hearted sm1les, and a maJor
E lit s as Ma isie is super
Chnstopher Gable can do, and has ts this same proportion that •s d•sappo•ntment

CLUTCH ARTISTS
AUTORAl't.IA!
Mar. 17-18-19

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composer}.

television . Furthermore, Russell's
leading man is - or once was - a
superb ballet dancer. So what
does The BoyfritMd give us 7
Cow-eyes and babes in the woods.
The close·ups let us know that
Gable doesn ' t shave his
underarms, but Twiggy does.
Cinematically, The BoyfritMd
is fairly flat . We get the big 1930's
production numbers, a cast of
somewhat less than thousands,
lots of girls, lots of legs, and the
whole sequence shot from the
ceiling. Otherwise Russell's
cameraman is stuck back in the
days of procenium-arch theater.
The angles are uninteresting,
static . The big production
numbers give Russell the
opportunity to explore the
sensuality implicit in the
fleshyness of it all, but all those
female bodies in hot pants aren't
nearly as gross as they should be
Again, he falls short m his attempt
at gomg overboard; the parody
doesn't make it.

lacking in Th• Boyfrittnd.
"'- BoyfrlMJd is RUIIell's fim
full4ength attempt in the comic
mode. He has shown us glimpses
of his ability to work in this mode
IUooessfully. but on a limited
scale, in the prologues to his
television biographies, where he
also reveals his skill in recreating
the mood of a specific historical
period with minimal suggestion.
This minimized, focused attention
wort&lt;s; it is succinct, precise. This
attention Is totally diffused in Th•
BoyfritMd. Russell is like a
surgeon standing over a patient on
the operating table, scapel in
hand, uncertJiin where to make
the incision or even what the
operation's all about.

OUT-A-SIGHT!

onanys1ze

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11
Richard Chamberlain's
boyfl'iend In The MU$/c Lmw:r
Md as Defius' young disciple In
the television biography of thtt

Featuring:

HOI Rl\('I N&lt;.

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Fri.Mar.17: "FleshckBlood"!

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�RECORDS
Tracy Nelson/ Mother Earth (Reprise MS20541
Bonnie Raitt (Warner Bros. WS19531
Ever since Janis Joplin died there has been a search
for the new, white, blues, soul, country, female, singer.
Well. to tell you the truth, Janis never really did anything
for me. Maybe it was her attitude, or the image she
projected to me. She seemed to be a perfect elCa'{lple of
what so many people I saw around me were trying to be.
She seemed like a lost little girl who came on like a tiger so
she wouldn't seem so lost.
Somehow I couldn't understand. I mean I really
couldn't go where she was going. Maybe I had a feeling
where she was headed. Anyway, I was never sympathetic
toward her any more than I was to the people I saw
around me who seemed to share the same dillema. All I
ever felt was sad for whatever that's worth. In Janis's case
even sadder for it was the people who supposedly loved
her who were helping to push her over the edge.
So Janis is gone and there is nobody who's going to
take her place. Whatever her el&lt;citement was, no one is
going to have it u ntil the nel&lt;t surge.· But, if you're

The song's about how she won't play up the little providing a gospel ·flavored background for some beautiful
boy whims of some guy anymore because that's the way vocal passages. Robert Bailey's elCcellent plano work is
you lose the man. O.K. that's Tracy Nelson and she's onl y evident throughout side one.
• Side two begins with Loughty Amao's "Mouth
five feet two, lending creedence to the theory big things
come in small packages. Oh yeah a good word foF Eric Percussion" - a catchy chant that explodes into a lively,
(former Blues Magoo's) Kaz. He wrote a few songs on the prancing tune called "Survival." The song is punctuated
album and I really like them. I just want to know if ,he's throughout with whistles, cowbells and the happy sounds
quit following Happy and Artie around long enough to of seven m usicians who really d ig what they're doing.
record an album .
" Rabiatu" and 'W cyaya" are the closing cuts on side
Now on to Bonnie Raitt. She looks taller than Tracy two. Their' flowing rhythms, wild percussions and fine
Nelson, but that's o.k. because she can sing almost as good lyrics complete an album that is worth having.
and for some things even better. I mean, could you e~tpect
Whether you are into rock, Afro or jazz oriented
less when you have John Raitt for a father? John Raitt music, Osibisa, the mythical musical beast, will make you
(for all you whose consciousness is in a different time wanl to shake your ass. LJke the creature pictured on the
zone) is one of Broadway's leading musical stars. At least album jacket, Osiblsa comes at you - imposing, powerful,
he was twenty years ago.
yet smooth and flowing. Teddy Osei, Sol Amarfio on
Bonnie decided to take a ditierent road. I would drums, Mac Tontoh the trumpeter, Spartacus R, Wendell
guess judging by the back of the album that she gtew up Richardson, Robert Bailey and Loughty L8$iSI Amao all
listening to blues instead o f Broadway tunes and she really combine to produce a positive love-entlf'gy level equalled
gives it a pretty good try. She even has Juntor Wells and by a few e~tisting groups and all one has to do is listen A .C. Reed (Jimmy's brother) playing on the album . What's the message is clear.
impressive '&gt;Out that 1s that they were playing because
"Your birthright is happint!$$
they dug her. She may not be authentic but she does have
Bome from the dawn of time,
a feel for the blues, and she does the blues numbers on the
A gift to be cherished.
album quite well .
Be happy/ Be happy!
Rhythm and blues and country songs are a different
matter Whatever she lacks tn hard blues she has in these
- R. J. Hill
other styles She even wrote two of the songs ori the
album , and one of them was an r&amp;b with an appropnate
title of ''Thank You" baby for making my life worthwhile.
Appropnately tttled because I seem to have heard that
song tn a few other r&amp;b songs, but that d 1esn't matter

Os1btsa Wcyaya (Decca DC7 - 53271

• lonetome to hear the sound of a white, soulful, female
singer, and your Rita Coolidge album has worn a httle thin
lately, then I have two recommendations to make 1 don't
know if they 'll hft you off the floor or not but I 'II
guarantee that they'll get you where it counts.
The first of these lovely ladies that I have come to
praise ts Tracy Nelson. She's part of a band called "Mother
Earth " Lately the band's been relegated to the role of a
backup group. That's probably the only fault I can f1nd
with the new Tracy Nelson/Mother Earth (that's what tt's
called) album . Anyway they're her frtends , so what are
you going to do? I mean they're not terrtble, 1t's 1ust that
Tracy could be working with the best that Nashville has to
offer They have tmproved Stnce the last album however
The other th1ng that has tmproved IS the selection of
songs. It's not that there weren 't a number of gems on the
l8$t album (espectally "Tonight the Sky's About to Cry"),
but this album has only one clinker as far as I'm
concerned, and that was wntten by a former member of
the band
I admit that I'm slightly parttal to Tracy Nelson . If
she released an album of nursery rhymes I'd probably buy
it When I s1t down to listen to her s1ng I get completley
lost 1n her vo1ce. You don'J even have to know what the
song IS about. You know what 1t's about Just by the way
she stngs tt . As I sa1d before th1s album 1s full of good
songs so that makes 1t that much better Tracy even wrote
one of the songs called "I Don't Do That Ktnd of Thtng
No More," which I guess 1s an old blues hne.

One could easily write a novel about the vartous
groups that produced one commerc1ally successful album
and promptly sucumbed to overelCposure and absence of
legttlmate talent (remember Rare Earth?) . After d1ggtng
the ftrst Ostb1sa a lbum (titled Osibtsa - released in 1971)
and finding myself totally capttvated by the.tr joyous,
energetiC sound, I truly wondered if a second album could
come close to thetr ongmal effort
Heartng their new album Wcyaya (pronounced
Oh·ya ya) conv1nced this writer that Osib1sa has arnved as
a potent, powerful mustcal force More tmportant, the
"happy vibes ride" the seven members of the group take
listeners on is unique enough to tnsure long ·range success
and eventual "supergroup" status.
The winged beast featured on the album jacket
(created by artist Richard Dean) ts analogous to Osibtsa's
style and Its emergence from Afrtca . The elephant·like
creature gliding out of a soft green jungle background
represents the group's sound : awesome and heavy wtth
brass and "cnss-cross" rhythms - yet light enough to gltde
along on the flow1ng organ of Robert Bailey. Appearing as
a monstrous apparition from the Jurr8$sic pertod of earth's
past , Os1bisa is a positive creation. Their mus1c, the gift, 1s
love
'We, through the spirit of our ancesters,
Bring you love.
Our treasurtH:J gih of happiness
Forget your problems.
See beyond dark clouds
And be happy."

S1de one opens w1th " Beauttful 7 ," beautifully
introduced by Teddy Osei's haunting flute solo am1dst a
background of distant thunder Thts cut features powerful
vocals and excellent gUttar work by Wendell Rtchardson.
The group does JUStice to a Roland K1rk tune "Sptrts Up
Above.'' wjth the Osibis choir (fnends and

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Bonnie also does a great version of "Since I Fell for You "
Not to forget the country element Bonnie does " Any Day
Women" by Buffalo's own Paul Seibel. Again her vo1ce 1s
more convincing on this cut than on the hard blues cuts
Add one Steve Stills song "Bluebird," (That's when
he was still 1nto being a muscian. I don't want to
discourage anyone). One Spider John Koerner song "I
Ain 't Blue," with Willte Murphy on piano, and you got one
pretty ftne album
Proportionately (considering the number of albums 1
listen to) there are very few people who catch my ear
anymore and are able to sustain my interest through a
whole album . Bonnie Ra1tt is one o f the people that has
been able to do that. I won't give tt a blanket
recommendation, but I will say it's a good solid album and
that's a pretty good recommendation lately.
Tracy Nelson's always been able to do that and 1f
you haven't heard her by now I really thtnk you should
Anyway. It JUst m1ght be the thing you need if you been
flying for a while and want to get back down to mothet
earth.

BIG SHOWS

RICHARD HARRIS
THE BEACH BOYS
HUMBLE PIE
LILY TOMLIN
ALSO KIIG CRIMSOI &amp; SWEATHOG

STIR OF ''LIU8H·II"

AMHERST
HOO MAtH ST. llt· IUS

�Gold emerges as a
group on its way up

Foreign contributions

International Film Fekff;tiva/
For the coming two weeks.
Buffalo will witness what will be
perhaps the most interesting film
festival in several years. The
Romance Language Organizations
of the Student Association have
pooled their resources to finance a
free foreign film fest ival.
Rolando F1orelh, the festival's
cha1rman. has taken great pride In
the cooperation between groups
wh1ch has brought the festival to
ltu1t1on. There are many programs
that could be held, he noted, if
only people will work together for
thetr mutua l good
The
organizations who cooperated in
the effort to sponsor this festival
1nclude The Spanish. Italian.
Brazilian, French and
Lat1n-Amer1can Clubs
These organizations have
PO o I ed funds and effort to
sponsor a program which will
benefit the University community
- a tacit reminder that student
funds can be used profitably.
Having gathered the impetus to
!Ja c k th e festival, oth e r
organizations were approached
who provrded additional aid.
These inc lude the Student
Assocration, the Office of Cultural
AHa~rs, the Graduate Student
Organization of Spanish, I tali an
and Portugese and the UUAB
Ftlm Club.
The program began yesterday
wtth Pasolini's Teorama
Today, in Diefendorf 147 ,
Arrabal's violent surrealist
n1ghtmare. Viva La Muerte (long
L1ve Death) , will be shown at 5, 7
and 9 p.m. All of these films,
unless otherw tse noted, will take
place at these t1mes 1n Diefendorf.
Saturday brings Rosstf's To Die
m Madrid, a document of the
Spa nish Civil War bearing
mcredible contrasts to Resnats'
Les Guerre Est Flnie.

On Monday, March 20, Jean
Renoir's delightfully c razy
comedy, Picnnic on the Grass, will
be shown. The film takes off from
artificia l i nsem ination and
proceeds In outrageous
Chaplinesque anarchic abandon.
Two documentary films will be
featured on March 2 1. These are

Adolfas Mekas' film on the
revolutionary movement in Cuba,
Compsneras y Compsneros, and a
film about the Argentintan
fabu list, Jorge Luis Borges.
On March 22, Antoniont's Red
Desert will be shown . By the
maker of Blow Up and Zabriskie
Point, the film is a bleak
expression of contemporary life .
" My intention," Antonioni has
said, ·•was to express the beauty
of a world where even the
tactones can be beautiful."
On Thursday, March 23. How

Max Ophul's 1mpress111e ftnal
film, Lola Montez. is being shown
on Monday , March 27 . Its theme
IS well expressed by a line in the
film : "Life. for me, is
movement ." The film depicts
th rough flashbacks the life of a
famous courtesan. recounted as
part of a lavish circus act. Andrew
Sarris has called it the greatest
film of all time.
Tuesday, March 28 will bring
Glauber Rocha's (a member of the

Tasty W81 My Littfe Frenchman.

reflecting the "tropicalist" image.
Jean Renoi r's Lit Milrsellaise
has long been hailed as one of the
most over powering "period
evocations" of all times. The film
is R eno ir's tribute to and
exami nat iOn of the French
Revolution. The film will be
shown at 6 :30 and 9 p .m in
Diefendorf 147 on March 29.
On Thursday, March 30, the
festival will end with a double
feature of two of Bunuel's
less-known mov1es. These are
Me xican Busride and Land
Without Bread. The second of
these marks Bunuel's transition
from surrealist film artist to
commercial tilm director
Admasston to all events ts lrl:!e

will be shown . It is a terrifying
black comedy about cannibalism
directed by dos Santos, a
Brazillian director This film,
unlike the others, will be shown at
5, 7 and 9 in the Conference
Theater .
Francesco Rosi's Moment of
Truth, about the art of
bullfighting will be shown on
March 24 . It is not recommended
for the squeamish, but then again,
what in these days is7
On Sa t urday. March 25,
Pasolini's The Hawks and the
Sparro w s will be shown in
Dtefendorf at 6 :30 and 9:30p.m .,
and Guiseppe De Santis' Bitter
R1ce will be shown at 5 and 8 .

Cinema Novo Brasil) Antonio Das
Mortes. It is a Third World movie,

The end of this month marks about this affair David had with
the beginning of spring for most her through the mail. The
the country . Spring brings in a beginning sounds much like the
host of things including grass, beginning of the Beatie's "Let It
flowers, trees, good weather, love Be." T he melody is catchy and
and good music. New groups the words go like this:
emerge during this time of the
year with original music that fits
"And if you can lie swake,
Morning loves to understand.
in with the mood of the "season
of birth." Being a music fanatic I
And in the evening I can takB
tend to look for the emergence of her own hand,
a new group as the first sign o f
And fall in love again."
spring, and I'm glad to say that
I've found one. I recently had the
They then went into " I've Got
tremendous pleasure of attending Time For Falling" with David
a concert at Rosary Hill College starting out softly st rumming his
by Gold .
Martin . Bob then comes in on
piano, and throughout the rest of
Gold is a local group and the song their playing is
consists of David Nehrboss and beauti fully in conjunction with
Bob Frauenheim. Rtchard "Doc" each other. Bob's piano playing is
D'Amato has been both their able light, but always moves . David's
manager and big brother since guitar work is strong and driving,
Gold has been together. David and is at the core of their
does most of the writing and melodies. He accents certain parts
singing. He switches o tt with Bob of the song with hard up and
on the piano on some cuts, but down strumming that's very
generally plays acoustic guttar effective . Neither one ever over
while Bob plays piano. David 's
uses his instrument as their
VOICe is high and sweet, and he has
playing is technically ftne and
temendous c ntrol over it . Many efficient.
times his voice sounds very much
ltke a cross between Netl Young
Sensitivity shows
and Elton John
Near the front of the stage a
Bob's vo1ce tS also very high, few roudy youths were causing
and they both can put together trouble, and so David and Bob
some beautiful harmonies. Doc just walked off the stage. They are
tells me that Bob use to teach both sensitive performers. Doc
guitar and do organ commercials Quieted the ktds down and Gold
on radio . Bob adds a lot on piano was able to return again They
to the light country rock sould then went into their best song,
Gold has
"Long Before Love." This song
was written by David to his girl ,
and his love for her can be
Matching lyrics and me4odies
romantically depicted through the
They began their first set Wtth lyrics and melody .
a lively tune called "Let Me
Know." Dave wrote this cut and
"And tf you can be happy
sings rt we ll in his high pitched, now,
country voice. They then went
The love is in your eyes.
1nto a song ca lled " Till
Baby, and if that love i$
Tomorrow" They play this song happiness,
well, and one can tell how thetr
Then you 'If understand the rest
mustc matches the mood that of the dream you had •·
thett Iynes are trying to create
Doc tells me that Gold ts go1ng
Gold used to be a trio but one
out to Caltfornta Ap11l 1 1n order
of thetr members split. They dtd a
song called "Losing A Friend" in to trv to secure a recording
reference to thear friend quitt1ng contract. They have a fresh,
the group . On this cut Dave professtonal sound that I think
exhibits some clean ftnger picking the public has been waiting for .
which ts the essence of the song's Spring would be a nice season to
pretty melody . The lyrics to unveil their happy melodies. AftJlr
"Lostng A Fnend" are good and we left the concert I told my
the mustc always flows smoothly . fnend why I thtnk they should
make it . She paused and tl)en
They both write songs about replied, "Why shouldn't they,
thetr own expenences David, on a they're ntce people." You see,
v1stt to Boston, met a gtrl and Spring is here'
ef'lded up wrtttng to her tor a
Sheldon Kamtemecki
whtle ''Unknown Fttend" 1~

Auditions
Auditions are bemg held for a new play by
Richard Reichman, " Nocturnes," a sonata for actors
on Fnday and Saturday, March 17 and 18.
The play ts betng sponsored by the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery in cooperation with the
Center of the Creative and Performing Arts at the
Universtty of Buffalo. It will be performed in the
Albright aUditorium april 18th through the 23rd .
Rehearsals will begm Monday , March 20th. The cast
calls for four men and four women. Older
performers are required for one female and two male
roles. All the other actors should be in their
twenties.
Nocturnes is a musical-theatrical piece with no
musicians required. The actors provide the music
utilizmg widely spaced and overlapping dialogue.
Actors will not be asked to sing. The overlapping
dialogue is a theatrical technique originated by
Frank Parman and used rather heavily in his recent
production of " Rage Over the Lost Beethoven." Mr.
Reichman wrote " Nocturnes" after seeing two of
Mr. Parman's plays.
" Nocturnes" is about the eternal quest of youth
for truth in a society that demonstrates only
hosti l ity and perpetrates untruths. Interested
performers should contact Terry Moore at 883-3073.
All performers will be given a chance to audition.

N0 W

~.

IN ITS.a- '1 '
THIRD
)
MONTH

..

ddler;

~. &lt;.'J'"

(g]GJ
PANAVISION"'

on the screen
TONIGHT at 8 : 15p.m.

Plaza North
t5SI M. f . ILVD. al'-1551

COlOR

um.IArh8hl

Tickets
Available
At Box Office

-

�Basketball's Vartanian

Baseball Bulls face
tough road schedule Most valuable player named
by Dave Geringer
SpN trum Stoff Wnll'r

Attemplang to return to the
NCAA Playo ffs litis season , the
1972 edation o f the baseball Bulls
w1Jl find the road ahead t o be
tough . The Buffalo squad will face
111 excellent schedule, meetina
quite a few strong teams.
"I feel that we are playlllg as
JOOd a schedule as anyone in the
East." remarked SuUs' head
Coach Bill Mo nkarsb . The Buffalo
s quad , after o pening against
c rvsslown rival Buffalo Stat e, will
meet several competitive squads in
New York Cat y. The Bulls' top
opponent o n this road swana wtll
be powerful S t. J o hn's. The
Redmen arc rated amona the
natio n's best, as the y are among
the top ten squad s in more t han
o ne pre-season poll.
The Buffalo squad will aJso
take on Seton Hall in South
Orange, New Jerse y. The Pirates,
wh o lost ace pitcher J ack
Do nova n through graduation.
were the team that derailed tht'
Bulls' playoff hopes m last year'~
NC AA reg1onal quaiJfymg Dastnct
II tourney at Pnnceton.
New York road trip
The d 1(fat. ult ph~e of 1he ru.u.l
\t.hedule wlll nCII end wath the tnr
to New Yurk ho wever Buffalo

will be tested agaan later in the
season when they meet Kent
St ale. The Golden flashes, who
sent cat cher Thurm11n Munson
and shortstop Gene Machael t o the
New York Yankees, are always
tough
Buffa lo will also face a few
to p-no t ch sq uads at ho me . The
Bulls, playil\8 on newly-named
Peelle Field , will host West
Vir~Jnla and Piltsburgh m games
whi c h wjll hiahhgbt the
ea.g ht-game ho me schedule. The
Mountaineers, beaten o ut by the
Bulls last season for an at-la rge
berth in the NC' AA playoffs, feel
th a t the y have to prove
themselves ag&lt;unst the Bulls.
The farst phase o l Buffalo's
schedule wall be thear 12-game
florada trap. " I feel that the trip
to F londa wall gave our younger
players " chance to m.tture,"
added M unkursh . The Bulls wall
face St Leu's College of Dad e
City tn what must he c..onstdered
th elf toug h est Sout h ern
opponent St. L eo·~ complied an
ampre"ave record &lt;'f l0- 15 last
season, losmg tu tht• eventua l
NCAA Small ..:olkge t. h.Hnpwm ,
FloruJa South~::rn, hy ~ I
Th nclore, Buffalo. whn. h
return~ II n l :?4 lrtternwn from
ldSI Sl'J\on, Will have to lllll llllk
.m unpre"a~c rl'nHJ agallht t ough
oppoM tl()n an order 111 return I&lt;•
the )'I&lt;.'AA pl,ayofflo an th..: ~prang
·•r fc:cl that the key to th..: ~ea~un
I~ the lf llt'~ll&lt;ln 111 Wht:lhl'l tlUI
YOUilj.\l'(
playcl\ IIIJIUIC,"
t·onduucd Munk.,"h "We: mu't
heal IIIli Ulll''&lt;'l'lt~ utva,aun
oppuncnl' tn ordc1 \II ttJtn .111
11\·lurgc hcrth th11o 'l:&gt;l'tlll"

Bob Vartanian came to Buffalo to play
basketball, and play he did. For tu'S all-around team
play and court leadership, the 6-2 guard was recently
named the basketball Bulls' 1971 -72 most valuable
player. in a poll of his teammates.
After coming from Leicester, Mass. Junjor
College, Vartanian was needed to step into the
lineup immediately to replace the graduated Roger
Kremblas. In aiding the Bulls' in their recently
completed 12· 12 season, Vartanian proved one of
the Bulls' most consistent players !Goring in double
figures in 22 o f his 23 game appearances. Only
against Georgia S tate did the I 5.3 scorer miss double
figu res this past season.
Named I he outstanding j unior college player in
New England last year, Vartanian continued his
ampressive c redentials in setting a Buffalo record for
most assists an o ne season, lOS, breaking Ron
Gilliam's o ld mark. Vartanran also tied GiUiam's
c,amc mark of ten wi t h a pair of ten assist games
agaansl Samford and Easte rn Mic higan.

Continuing his fine all·aro und play Vartanaan
was second an sconng, first m assists and thud in
reboundtng, all from h.is backcourt quarterback spot.
Next year, Vartanian, along with guard G reg Bruce
and big men Curt Blackmore, Jim Tribble and Greg
Laker. return along with Buffalo's two new Jlllllor
college player&lt;~, who are presently being recru11cd
Record-breaking BulJs
Although the Bulls' reccml wa~ un even 12· 12.
I I Jll·tunc Buffalo records were eather taed or
hwJ..cn Bl.u:krnore, Buffalo's lcadmg ftcld goal
'houtea at S4 'X se t four records hamself. Blac kmore's
m.uks were. most fteld goab ( I X9), most lleld goals
Ill a game ( I t. agamst 1:. Malh ). most rehound\ ( 40J)
and best rebound average ( 16.X) .
Addataonally, the SelkuJ.., New Yoak na ta ve
'l.mcd 44&lt;} pomt!&gt; ( 18.7) to lead the Bull&lt;. and reach
lllth place un Bullalo's all-lime scunng h~t wath XCJJ
ptHIII!. Stall, Blackmore\ sea~un was not ,, 1\ltill
success a~ he fu1led to amprove has face thruw

shooting. After h.itting on 45% a year ago, the
Buffalo pivot hit o nly 37% o f his charity tosses.

Statisticall y , Buffalo's best showing in 1971 -12
came o n the road wh ere the Bulls' 6-7 mark was the
club's best since 1965-66. At Clark Gym , the Bulls
lost twice to Northeastern and Eastern Michigan
wh ile compiling six victo ries. At Memorial
Auditorium, the Bulls dro pped three straight
decasions. running their Aud losing streak to II
pmes. 'Buffalo's last win at the Aud came on Dec.
16 , 1968 against Penn State (66.00) in overtime.
I n o ther team business, the basketball Bulls
chose their all-opponent squad, wh.ich includes fo ur
players with college eligibility remaining after this
year. Leading the list was Syracuse Universit y's
senior guard Greg Ko hls.
Others ch osen were Ma ryland's 6- 11 forward
To m McMillen, IUinois State's 6-6 guard Doug
Collins, Eastern Michigan's 6-8 forward George
Gervin a nd Army's 6.() guard Bo b Sherwin . Next
year, S herwin will appear in Buffalo walh the Cadets
at the Aud , while the Bulls w1ll also face McMillen
and the Terps and Collans and the Redbirds on the
road.
Wa lh their regular season now completed, va rsity
coaches Ed Muto and Norb Basch nagel a re now
attempting to bnng home a top ball handhng guard
and a strong. sconng forward for next year's Buffalo
squad. This week, Buffalo's cn:~ches took an the
Nataonal Junior College tourney at li utchmsnn,
Kansas The addat1on of two more JUnanr college
~tars. could make the Bulls formadable next ycJr.
wath thcu 1mproved schedule
New opponents wall be, hrleagh Dack111son. St
rrancas ( Pa.), lafayette and Huck nell. rhe latter two
schools wall appear wath the Bulls a11d host Gannon
College 1n the Enc, Pa Gem C'1ty tourney Wath four
dates sttll to be filled, Buflalu figures to h.tve dl led''
half ol ats 1972 73 schedule agaau~t IIIIIVCI\aty
div1s1on o p posil aon

T DAY!
Creaton of the finest in

University
Bookstore

College Class Rings

Joste

''on campus''

CLASS RING WEEK
1.) 4 week delivery

2.) Rtc:tivt 1 FR E E hlcsimite signature

$3Value
J.) Rec:etve • chence on the Color T.V. $280 Vllutl

(One winner for the Willi)
4.) Wm your dass ring F R E E
(one winntf for the Wille)
5.) $10 down - btlinct on delivery

0
Page twenty·twO . The Spectrum . 17 March 1972

AN R.C.A. 14"
Spombout
Color T.V.

'

�CLAIIIIIIII
AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED AOS may be Pllced
MondaY thru Friday between 0 1.m.
and 4:30p.m. 11 355 N orton Hall.
fHE STUDENT r.tes of an ad for one
day Is $1.25 for the first 15 words and
$ .05 for each additional word. $1.00
for each 1ddlllon11 day, The dNdllne
for MondiY b Friday; for Wednesday,
11 Is Monday and for Friday, It Is
WednesdaY by 4:30p.m.
" HELP WANTED .. ads cannot
d lscl mlnate on the baSis of sex, color,
creed or n1t1ona1 origin to any e111ent
preferably Is still discriminatory) .

I'·"·•

WANTED
WAN fED : I nit ruction In beginning
v oe1namese during evening hours , Will
pay Call 1197· 3825 after 6 P. m .
operator . Part-time
C O MPUTER
nlg hl•. Mun nave knowledge of 360/ 30
005 . Car neceua r y. Good oppOrtunity
lo • advancement . Call 839-0502
ART STUDENT wno w or ks In gold
rong• . Commission on my design .
Gln •w 662 · 7598 .
A PPLICATIONS for the position of
Ea nor -1n ·Chlef of Undercurrent for
t ne aGademlc year 1972-1973 will be
taken until March 24. The application
, 0 nslsls of a letter to the edltorlll
llolfd, statlt'g reaso"s for deslrln9 the
oos111 0 n , Qullllflcatlons at•d previous
l &lt;&gt;urnall s!I G e)(perlen c;e, The position Is
" """ t o Any Qualified person . Tho
edi t o r ial bo••d will Interview all
c;.andl dales on F r iCIIY, Marcil 241, 1972.
P1 ospec 11ve app ;lclnts .sre ur!l'td to
con u c t tho E' n &gt;r, Room 343 Norton
H 41 1 as soo n . , o&gt;osslble to familiarize
tr•emselves w llto any procedural or
t ecnniCal ouesllons about the positi o n
or •bout Un O~tcurrent. Appll~ttons
woll al su be accepted for t •··• following
o Osttto ns unlll March 21 1 Man1gtng
Ea tto r ,
Publi Ci ty Director, Copy
E rl 1tn r , L ay o ut Editor, Gtapnlcs
E d llo o, Pr in ter , Asst . Aavertt•lng
M• n~9e• , AuI
D istribution Menager.
Asst
L ay ou t
Editor, Asst.
Pnotograpnv Ealtor, Boow. Editor,
Tne~tre Edit o r ,
3 News Editors L Otal , Nat i onal , 1nternatlonal, ana
AOver tostng Sales people . The above
pustllo ns • re o pen to any ouallfled
p et1onn~

WAN T EO
Peop le lnterostoa In
c over 1n9 new s ro r UUAB Video
Co,mll!ee , R &lt;lo m 261 N ort on . C all
~II ~ Speak l o EO

- - - -- -

r w o AnT H •st ory p apers p r efer ably
on Henrt Moor, 1noth., on
E:&lt; orcss•oniSon W ill pay . Reply Box 92
o n~

GUSTAV A. FRISCH , INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Un1versity Plaza)
BUFFALO, N .Y. 14226

8:U-2249, 836.(;622 .
196S FORO LTD. Good colldttlon,
new partt . Call 838 · 1011 lfter 7:00.
$2SO or best otter,

Spectrum.

838 · 3146 -

START $2 per hour salary plus bonus.
Work 4·8 p .m. W..W.diVI t 10·2 p .m.
Slturdays.. C111 835·3 803 or TF9..0402.

GIRt.S NEED rtde t o Dayton, Ohio or
nearby. Wlll Jhare expen~e. Call Susan
833·7571 .

FULL OR PlrHime Joblavallabla with
Best line Inc. Call Art 886·2094 or
Mike 835·5215 . Meetings at EKecullve
Ramada lnl'l.

N VC-LI area. 3/24 after 4 : 00 re turn,
3/26 for two. Call 662 ·7598 .

$24 A NIGHT - Plld nightly, SIK
go·go dancers needed . Rldlces, 74 W.
Cnlppewa. Apply 1Her 4 p.m.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
U .B . AREA - several excellent 3, 4
ilnd 5 · bedroom apartments within 2
blocks of U.B . campus. Call 633-8643
for recorded meu1ge on location ,
SPACIOUS J..bedroom •Partment with
guest room . Furnished, $140 • month.
Hertel - Delaware Ave . Call 871- 3740 .
MODERN furnished apartment . Three
Dedroon&gt;S, kitchen, dinette, living
room , bathroom . Stove, refrigerator,
TV,
fur n i t uro Included. Wall(lng
diStance t o campus.. Four males - S65
eA c n . Foreign students Welc ome,
Avllllble APril or May. 837.8181, g
a. m .-7 p.m .
6 ROOMS, 3 Dedrooms, $95/ montn
Includes utilities. Must buy furniture,
Kenmore,IOelaware, on bus line. Call
877 -662!:1.
FOUR · BEOROOM apartment off
Salley, 15· mlnute walk 11om campus.
Furnished, reatsonabte rent. Available
for sommor ana Seol. Call Shellv
834-0966.
BEAUTIFUL
spaci ous 2·Dedroom
apartment nAr campus for r ent
beginning M1y or June 1. C a ll
837..()907 .
T HREE-BEDROOM apartment, wall t o
wall carpeting, dlshwuhor, washer ,
dryer , 10·mln . bus , campus. Deposi t
requ lrad $100 person . Available May 1 .
832 ·0955
U . B NEW area Millerspo r t-s her i dan
E l&lt; c ellent
well lu•ntsned
three-bedroom, 11 baths, duple)( - r ec
10 0m , pr ivate entrance , near bUS line.
Students wel c ome , 838 · 1081 ,
633-8643 .

Kllren.

RIDE WANTED to NYC on or n11r
March 29. Call N i na 831 ·3294 .

FOR SA LE
CITATION 12, ll, 13. Quad 33, 303 .
Transcriptor •s "S pac o·Age" turntables .
Philips turntables. All B&amp;O produc ts.
H . K , 630 , 930 and CAD ·5 . J ,8 .L .
Super Shelf's. Used equl pments : Kl..H
26, Mavnecorc:J 1024, Tandberg 12
recorder, AMPEX AX-50 . 897 ·0297 ,
684 -4937, 897 · 3984
1966 AUTOMATI C Valiant , p owot
steering, radio, heater. Rurfs welt.
E it&lt; t ra t1 res , $ 195 . C all Cnawta
831 · 3336 .
COLORFUL, embroidered sho ulder
bags from Pal&lt; I stan at " T ne People, "
J44 Allen . 882 ·6 2 83 .
SAMOV£0
pupp l e• wn t t •
"husky-type" dogs , Sn o w quality .
E11cellent family pets , Gary F o ra
831-1043, 283·!:1640 .

DESK, 6-clrawer steel . Fine condition.
Call efter 5 . 8.3S' 2976, 836-4308 .
TOYOTA, '69 Corona, a~,~tomatlc ,
AM · F M , very goOd condition , looks
gr. .t, 5 tires plus 2 snows Included ,
$1150. 837..()7 53.
REFRIGERATORS, stoves and
w asher~. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. O&amp;G Appliances, 844
Syc11moro. TX4 ·3 18J .
WE ARE NOW open Monday - as well
Tues&lt;lay thru Saturday ( 11 : 30
a. m .-6: 00 p .m.) - also Thursday until
10 p.m. "The People," 144 Allen .
882 -6283 .

.»

PERSONAL
TO POO KIE, sill monlns IS the
Deglnnlng o f forever . L ove Always,
Poonte .
TWO ROLES available for mate
students I n a play about lonely oorm
people. 831 · 3869 .
IF YOU un•t d4c tde about a m•lor or
tf

you h•v• A mAJor but don•t k"ow

oo u

1b 1111 les for
employment and
graduate study, l o in a Life w o rkshop
Group. Call Billie at 831 ·2511 .

1965 BUICK Electra conver11o1e, gooo
body and running condition M u st r.e lt.
Best oHer C all 634 ·204 5 .

Y OU ARE paying 15 cents for an
8-cent onion roll, 15 cenu lor a 7 -cent
oanana In Food 5ervtce l Whet are you
paying fort The atmosphere7 The
service' (Sponsorocs Oy the Bt"'&lt;lrtlsan
O rganiUtlon For Free Oranges
B .O .F . F 0 . s tr ll&lt;es aga i n I)

GARRARD SL5f&gt;B turntable, 1 yea r
old , $40. Picker i ng ca r tr idge. Oust
c over . All tor $55 . Ch~tlle 834-6651

L AST CHANC E, bUY youo rlniJ today
Vou could win the cotoreo TV AI the
U niversity Bookstore .

MAN'S C ALF ·LENGTH ll amat mohatr
' oat , sll8 : medium. Hlgh ~I"Yie . W ill sell
or trade. Call He~n 876 · 1639

FO LK GUITAR tessom, POPUI41o songs,
finger ana flat plcl&lt; ing styles G ood
coffee , Jeff. 882 · 1847 , 835 · 3384 .

BEAUTIFUL wooden o ld·fash lo!'led
bed fr am e . Comft from g o oo n ome .
W il l se ll o r t rade. C all Hesh 8 76 -1639.

D O N'T mlu o ut! I Buy y o ur clan r i ng
t u aay . YO u could win tno colo red TV .
U niversity B o okr.to re,

F O LK clasSIC gulla... N ew- use d
Marlin, Gull Or., Gibsons, G urlln , et c ,
Eagle ban los, Oorovt dulcim ers . T he
Stt l ng Snoppe, 5 24 O ntario , 7 p .m . 9
p .m . 5at. 12- 5 p .m . 8741..()120 .

FOUND : Appr o ximate ly
yr
o ld
female German Shepnerd near
Wl nspear l / 14 . Please call 833·2 119.

1000 KILOS for $300 ! Oependable '65
Mustang engine. GoOd contact
Zorngy, c An 83 2·7 170.

LOST &amp; FOUND

LOST : Men's biiCI&lt; leatner gloves,
D iefendo rf 204 o n 3/1 5 /7 2 d uri ng
1- 2 : 30 p.m . clan . Call 881 ·26 5 9 .

R IDE URGENTLY neoaed 10 Aloany
o r Amnerfl, Mass. on Sunoay or
Monday. Phone I r i s 832 ·846 2

AU S TIN
HEAL E Y
3000 ' 6 2
REBUILT
engine, tlans,
c lutch,
oell·houslng, pressure plate, genollto r,
carburetor , NEW o verdr ive , ballery ,
r ear wheel c y tindetl, top $475 .
8 7 3 ·!:1328 .

RIDE NEEOEO to AIPUQUerQUe , Now
Mexic o or aoea , LUvl ng 3/ 25 w . .l&lt;ena .
Pleale contact Steven 837· 1617 .

TYPEWRITER fo• u l e New With
5 . year
r a c tory warranty Ol tvotll
portab le. C all Joel 1137·117 t7 , $45 .

FOUND : Boot• In 2nd floor East
GoOdyur Lounge. Owner probably
took mine DY mlstal&lt;e. Call 1131· 205!1

NEED A RIO~ to Florida March 20 .
Will share licpenH&gt;~ ana driving.

1965 6 · CYLINOER
automall t
Plymouth, runs well, $175 . C all Steve
873 · 7515 after 4 p .m .

LQST : Kitten six mo.. gray, black lnd
wfl lle In E"91-o0d ar11. March 10.
C • lll38·3642 .

letec:astor, early sh HIM
F ENDE R
wtc aso, $ 6 0 . Al so Harmon)! r o cket
Greg
wllll B i gsbY vi b rato, ~2 0
833 ·042 4 .

AOOMMA TES WANTED

RIDE BOARD

TERMPAPER ARSENAL. lac.
Send $1.00 tor your descriptive
cataloe of 1,300 quality ltrmpaper~
519 GLLHitOCk AVE., SUrTE 20J
LOS AHQEL.U, CAJ.IF. to02.4
(2U)
74 • 477-5493

•n....

~We need a loe.l salesman"

F OR SA L E • 35 m m f/2 A u l o·NII&lt; k o r,
with H o ya tA, lens sh ield, leather case .
S IK monthS o ld Cost new : $220 .
Yo urs
f or $12!:1 . f trm
M tcn.rol ,

FO UND: Black puppy - part •bO&gt;ter I n
Norton o n 3 : 13. C all Ntark, 837 ·2!:16!:1 .

ROOMMATE wanted t o li ve Wllh t WO
Israelis. Own ro om. 837 ·2 2 59,
lo r
l beO ooom
R O OMMA T E
apar tment , o wn r(lom f or rest o f Moren
ar&gt;d Aprtl S!J !I plus Mare t&gt; ren t ,) tr udy
Pll d . C all 836 ·S9 0 7
R O OMMA T E d" tr eO to • 2 bedr oom
apartment near Ma ln·F III m ore . A n ic e
p lac e for summer . C all 83!:1 2 9_ 1_5 _ __
J F EMALE r oon• m ates ; t w o t o share,
Qne single, Sla tting June I : n at! b lock
frnm
c amp us: $6 6/ m o n tn
C all
8 3 7 -2 84 6

I

1"WO FE MALE roomm 4tes w an ted .
o wn r oorn s. Gooa d edi lor Jdn ua rv
orao u ates 5 ept. I ' 5 ·m lnule WAI " \0
cam pus. 83 7 · 1342.

Students,
Many thanks for patroniZing our store for your book and supply
needs this semester. It has been a pleasure serving you and we hope we can

ALFA ROMFO
• FFRRARI
• MASERAll

continue to do so.

I

a
a
a
t

We are beginning to prepare for the summer and fall semesters, and
to make room, we must return many titles to the publishers. So if there
are any items you still need for courses, please stop m and pick them up.

Sales • Servic'l' • Parr~

liSLD CARS

--BOBCOR

Motor Cars, Ltd .

While you're in, check our sale tables. We still have many good titles

1974 Eggert (Near Bailey)

834-7350

available at 75% off list price.
Good luck with our exams, and we hope to see you again next

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK STORES
3610 Main St .
833 71 3 1

•
I

t

•
(Park Free at the Motel next door)

------------.- ---- --"

TY PIST AVAILABLE - ter m paper$,
dissertations, etc . , $ . 10 p1ge,
873-1938.
CYCL I STS
fl y
t o Austr ia for
two·week tour. Bicycle comes nome
wttn you . Call House of Wheats f o r
c:Jetalls. 632 ·2631.
KID KOMIC KOLLEKTOR wants
your comics Marvels and others .
837-1308 .
WHEN YOUR generator doesn't or
your a1tern11or aoes, maybe your car
won't chilrge, but you can with Master
Charve It Independent Foreign Car
s ervice . 839· 1850.
TYPING - business or personal - term
o•pers , thoses, m•ss matH"I' ·
Reasonable rates . Call 937-6050 .
WEEKLY package tours : Acapulco,
A5pen, others. AlSO flights Nlollpra,
London return , 873 ·5660, 689·9632
after 6 .
PIANO TUNING : EotperlenCAJO music
\ludent will tune tor up to hill
professional rates UB ~rea . 837 · 3679 ,
WILL TUTOR In Russian , Hebrew 1nd
German . C all Boris 838-2422 .
ANGLO AMERICAN AntiQues, 311 2
Main St. Something for every stuae"t
J-elry, tin, b ran , cnl na , glau, unuiual
butlons .
FL V BUFFA LO st u llent lllgnts t&lt;.J
Europe N .Y .C ./Londo n/ N .Y C , MtY
31 - August 2l, $199 ; luly 9 AuguJI
23, S219 . Contact Ala n Mar m utstel!'l
837..0393 , 6 · 9 p ,m
AN Tl QUES ana mooer n f u rniture ,
c eramics, ch i na , etc . See SI O • I
YesterdAY &amp; T omorrow Sh o p , 1439
Hert el A\'e.

SUB-LET APARTMENT
H O U SE : Four bedroom• lurnlsheCI
Avlllabte MIY 15th to AUQUSt 31st
817-65011 .
BEAUTIFUL , spacious sllt·b.Oroom
house for
summer only . F..,Uy
"rpeted, f urnished, waiher ...a dryer,
two.&lt;.~r QeraQ•, bltement
with dirk
room. Clol\l to c:.~~mpu1 . Rusonabte,
833·8112 .
5 -BEDROOM
A~allable May
n~leble. C a ll

houu to sublet.
J5 - A u g . 31. Price
875- 57 54 .

APT . NEEDED tor June h t tnro; Ao;Q ,
JISt tor m ale student - w o uld pret••
UB o~~rea . W l111"9 t o sh.are. C•ll
741 320g after 9 :00 o .m

APARTMENTS WANT ED
H O U S E O R apartment
needed
desperately f o r th r ee senior mates .
Should be close to umpu• C all Mll&lt;e
at 831 · 1167 or 831-1113 or F red 11
831 · 2453 or Lynne 831 · 2 897 .
WANT TO lind I n U 9 . area a lingle, or
smaller double apartment for me ana
my !looks. Not ''"'a ol money o r
Wilk i ng t o 1101 a good place . Leave
w ord f o r Cavill at 877-2109 ,
A RT STUOENT 5 need t w o ·beOIOOm
apartm ent starting May . Reasonable
•enL Close t o campu s Please call
8l4 3401 0 1 83 7 ·3984 .
HELP! • I We need a l·beor oom I pl. for
Seo l h t wllhl n walking dis tance from
c1m pu, . C all Ma r y , 8 31 ~1!:13 ; Benl ll,
8 3 1·2 06 2 o r Amy , 831 · 2 397
FO R NEX T YEAR , rtve·ml nute walt.
Tn r ee o r m ore , o r tw o apar to•ents ne•r
eac n o tner . 831 ·2 884 , 8 3 4·8 71 3 .

I · Z B E DR OO M prefer lu rn lshea In U B
atea , l fntr&gt; ed lately, b y Oan tsn couple
837 ..()201
FE MALE wa n ts own room In n ouse
near cam p u s st•rll n g Septem ber . C1 il
833 · 75 71.

j

~
~

illustration

I

BrA Programs

Certificate Ptograw
Fo1 info contact reg

~

~
t

-

REASONABLE 1uto repairs , mOdern
garage alld equipment. Good student
rates. For appointment, a ll 12- 8 p .m .
634· 2045.

I

~
~

I

MISCELLANEOUS

H O U SE or 2 · tam tty n ouse n eeded for
etgnt nam eless peo ple . Please• C all
831 -.34.54.

I
I

a

FEMALE roomm1te for 2-Dearoom
1partment on J-ett end Main,
S70/mo. 837~6 .

F O UR · 8E O RO O M apa rtment wa n ted
tor summ er and 7 2· 7 3 occupancy
Must b e walk i ng d ist ance ! rom cam pu s
Call 8ll · 2 085 .

I

semester.

FEMAL E to snare room In moes.n
ept. 15-rnln. walk from Cllmpus.
Available 4 / l . Linda 837-4692 .

___ ...J

......

... _,.. , ,,....,..~ ... - 14
.__.~ .

.r

Parsons
SChOOl 01 Design
66 We~t 12 St , New York l OO l l

17 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page twenty -thre~

�Announcemenu
F l nill c all f o r C omp11 t er Science Oepwtment
UnderJndulte l'ro aum 1ppllunts. Appllc.atioll) may be
ob t.ained .at 4226 Ridge Lu, Room 4 &lt;~nd m ust be ret u rned
b y "h rth 31.
C AC "Self He lp ProJect" needs moll~ voluntee rs.
Hilndiupped women need .asslst iln t e In and ou t of the voan.
Plu~ c.all Lind• .u 83 1·3S 79.
Bisonhe1d , the senior mtn's Honor Soclt ty, will be
revte wing undidiltts &lt;~mona 1unlors next monl'h. Students'
• udemk; records, Un~verslty "tlvfties 01nd communily
~oCrvtce wtll be u ken onto conslderiltfon. All those junior
me n who wtsh to be consid e red :are to conuct the
OH.C.ampus Houstng office tn Goodyur H.afl or ufl
831-3303. Records mu\1 be received b y thh ornce by Milrch

Hillel's " Operation G,...nll&amp;ht " will meet tom orrow ill
8 :30 p.m. for 1 puty ill the H illel House . Th is proar;am is
exclu sively for counselo rs 1nd you nasters o f G reenlfah t.

The Ukplnlan Stuchnt Club w ill h ave il aen e rill
meetf na on S unday at 6 :30 p .m . In R oom 233 N orton. A
party will fo llow.

Resumct lon Houte p resents Rev. O~vld Br;ammer o f
th e L uther;an Servi~e Society spu.k in&amp; on " M :arri.aae
Tod ily .•. ilnCI T o m orrow ," today &lt;a t 8 p . m. ilt R C1Lirre ctfon
Hou se, 2 Un ive rsity Ave.

UB R idln1 C lub will m eet today II 3 p.m. In R oom
332 Norton for il d iscu ssion of th is yu r's elec t ions. Anyo ne
wishina to be an office r next yur must atte nd .

The lndll Student Auocla tfon pre sents, " Purillc Our
l'lachh fm ," sturin&amp; M :&amp;noj Kumar tomorrow ill 7:30p.m. In
Room 146 Diefendorf. Admission for students is $ 1.2S ;and
for no n-studen ts $1.75.
H illel will spo nsor a rrlp to the Corning G l.ass Center
on Sundily . Cars will be luvlng from the H illel H ouse at 10
a.m. S tud e nts In terested 1n going should Cillf Don .u
833·3577 .

31.
The
Htllel Silb bilth Services wtll b e h e ld tonl&amp;ht il l 8 p.m. in
the Hillel House. Or . R.alph Y ill kovsky of the St.uc
Unrverslly College ill Buff.alo, will give • t.alk on: "Jewish
ltfe •nd Jewish Sights In Sp.aln."
Kund .a tini Y011 beginning cl•ues 111 e~erttse and
medit.atlon Me held "'' 196 Linwood Ave . ill 7 p.m. every
eventng. Cilll 881·0SOS for Inform .at ion
The Ice Sk1tlna Club will h.ave free IU sk.atong today
from 10·11 p.m. oJI BrtRhton Aren.1 tn Ton.awand•. A bus
wtllleilve Cl.ar k Gym ilt 9 : 30p.m.
Ar.ab Culture Club wtfl meet Sund•v •I 7 30 p .m. on
Room 3)0 Norton 10 dt\CUSS the spring progro~m
WNYPI R G wtll hilvt "mee11ng on Sundily ill 2 p.m. on
the C.antstus College Student Center 10 dt~uss • rtJtoon•l
LOnSIIIUIIOn metltnl! 1\11 ~It onvt ltd 10 4llend
If you un't decide .1bou1 "' m.110' or of you hdve •
m•1or buc tlon't l.no10r pO\\Ibtlllte\ for tmplnymrnt •ntl
jjrdduilre '&gt;tudy
1010 .1 Lift Worl.,hop &lt;..roup &lt;.JII Htllle 41
1111 ·15 11

UB

The Hillel C lus In T o rilh with Comment~rles will meet
.11 3: 30p.m. tomorrow tn Dr. Hofm&lt;~nn's home, 12 Colton
Drive.
Conflict Simulat io ns Club will meel on Sunday from
noon - 7 p.m. in Room 337 Norton Tournament will begtn.
$80 in prrzes will be ;~w;arded.
Alpha Liamb d a Oelu will hOld .. meeting on Milrch 20
7:30 p.m. in Room 330 Norton. All new .and old
members pluse iltlend.

11

Ve ts Cl u b h.as il petltoon c•mpiltgn for

equit&lt;~ble G l Bill goina on now in Room 260 Norton. Tht s IS

to exp a nd the bill .and bring It the po~t ·World W.ar II ltvtls
ind also to tl&lt;tend coverAge to vet!t regardless of ryp~ of
dtsc:harge.
The H illel Tal mud Clau wtll rurct on Sundo~y
p.m. in the Hillel House libruy .

41

l: lO

T he H illel class rn Convers:at lon.al Hebrew (adnnc:ed)
will meet on Sund.ay "' 12 JO p m. on Room 262 Norton .
The H illel Converutlonll Hebrew c:lan (elemenury)
wolt noeet on Sund.Jy .tl I HIp m on Room 2b2 Norton
The UU A8 Vtdeo Commtllee would loke ro m•l.e II\
resour1.es av.a•l.able 111 tht Umvtr\oty •ommunotv Any group
th.at hils tnform.atton 11 want\ vtdeol.tped ''"d ..nown at •
l.ater d.ue " ~Nelt.omt to umuc 1 us (.ome to Room 161
Norton .

The Buffalo Bl.ack Or:a ma Worksh op Is sponsoring a
writers workshop on Sund.ay "'' 4 p.m. at the Li ttle Bf.ac k
The.uer located ,u 1762 M ain S t . ne;&amp;r Lahyette. It will be •
program of orlgin•l poems presented by members of the
work\hop .as well •s ,my in terested community writers of
poetry. A pre-reading will be held rod•y o11 8 p.m . at the
tht~rer . Pluse b11ng m .. terial th.ar you Intend to present on
Sund•y.
The CAC b;asketbilll le~aue wtfl ho~ve tis &lt;.h..mpoon.,hlp
o1nd ;~ll·slar g&lt;~mes ~unday mornm11 oil 9 o~.m. forth o~nd w&lt;1h
gr.tde youngster\ h.ave been b&lt;illhniC 11 ou t .all se.ason lor lht\
opportunlly 125 young\ter\ have p&lt;artk•P•Ied 1n the
program o~nd are gr•teful for the help of the Athltll~
Oepo~rtmenr
Everyone Is we14Qmt to tome, ch~tr ""tl
w.uch ,cunc future •Ur\

A rudona will be held 10 benefll the &lt;.o~uH' '&gt;chool nn
Mond• v. Marth 10 •t 8 p m ilt rhe ~ ro~nl. I lcoytl Wro~thl
House , 113 Jewell P .trk wo~y fohn U.i!lh ,ond I ohn I OjiJn
woll read, Le.,lle foedltr wtll Ultrlltlu~oe. flll.toh Jrt $I on
ule tn Norton or call 8 71! 94 29 even on g.,

Sports Information
Tomorrow · Vaf\11~ 1rodtH&gt;r t•••~ at th;• N~"' Vorl.
S rar e Ch.amplon,hip\, Urllt&gt;n lullc~te
ho'&gt;l
Roller hotkey .Cltonn rr iUIIt\ S.lturOJ~, we.otheo
perrnllllnjC, 1n th~ &lt;.o~pc11 11•11 pJri..mK lut Adwn btgtn\ dl
10

o~.m

The lppon Judo &lt;.luh of Hull.tlu will ho't II\ \e,ond
4nnu•l rnen\ up(n tnvll•llun•l ruurney tomorrow ')tudenh
wolh v o~lttl .llctl otlentoft ••tomo • •"" v.oll be o~dnll lltd lrte ol
l harJtt'
All trick •nd field c•nd ld•tes shoulll tepqq tu •
oneerlng Mondo~y o~lrc•rrtofloo o~l 4 p on on Romoo • U o~.ol.. (,yon
bo1semenc

Available at the Ticket Offcce
Studto Aren• Tt\e.ater
Through Ma"h JS Romtu unrl ,,,,.,
M.lt•h 2Q
Aprrl I fhr· Prol"'"l"m

What's H;appening?
Frid;ay, Much 17
F tim ; 5ul/y uf thr Suwdul/, ~on~orcd by t.AC. Capen 141l.
theck for \howumes
Ftlm . !&gt;haft, presented by UUAB, Conferen1.e The.tleo,
thet.k for showtlmts, \hown S.a turd.ay .1nd Sunday
Open rehears.al: Clevel.and Quartet, I I : JO o~.m ., Room I 01
Batrd Hilll .
Concert: New York Br.ass Quontel, Rtnilos~an~.e . Baroque
.and Twenttelh Century Mu\K, 8 30 p .m , Bo~ord RcLOt"l
Hall, •dmt!tslon charge
Thuter Department Reptrtory Co&lt;tmcomto, dor~l!ed by
Gordon Ro11oH , 8 JO p m , H•rr•m•n Studto Theo~ter,
&lt;also presented Saturday
B•lk.an Foil. O.ante Fe.uvo~l. rejlo\lr.ttoon
d •ncml(, 7 p .m.,
Fillmore Room
All show TEAM exhobolioro
gr.aphtlS from the TEAM
workshop In Buffo~lo, 9 .a.m ~ p m ., through
tomorrow, H ~yes Lobby
Photogr~hy show R"h.ard Ko~ufm.1n, gr~duo~tt student, 9
o~.m. S p.m . Tod.ay, 9 o~.m
noon tomorrow, 4140
Rodge Leo~.
Film: Arr.tbill's Vivo Lu Murrtr (Long Ltve Outh), 5 , 7 .and
9 p.m., Diefendorf 14 7.
Workshop : "Toys and Termtndtoon, Whdl P11ce ProJ1re;s,"
led by members of the SenecA Nation 's constltullonal
righb commiuee , 2 4 p.m., Room 234 Nonon ,
sponsored by the No~tlve Amcfl co~n Cul ruroa.l Awo~reness
Orgamul10n.
Concert: floyd Westerm,ln, d rc~.ordlng ~rtist with Spee1or,
8 p. m., Diefendorf 148, sponsored by the No~llve
Ame11c~n Culluro~l Awareness Organilation.
Lecture ; Dwight Waldo, S'hweit.ter professor of hum.tniltes
.u Syr.tcu!Oe University, woll remark on the relationship;
between governments o~nd universotres at 2 p.m., Red
Room of the f o~culty Club.
Llrrguisrics on television : "A Ground Floor for M ac htnes,
L .tngu.aaes, M.uh," with Tom He.ad, 2 p .m.; "focus:
Linp~istics ;md Thought," 2:JO p.m., Fos ter Hall,
Room 10.

Satur~y. M uch 18

Film : Phantom of tht Optro, spon~red by CAC, Cotpen

140,lhel.k lor showumc.,
(..(lntert: I oeder rntldl, Chloe Ow&lt;' '"· 'opr.ono, snng, bv
llug•l Woll , Roth.trtl ""•u''· H 1!1 p rn , 8.1ord Rtlotdl
H.tll.
l:lo~lk .m Folk Oo~n(.tng f t\ltvo~l· 1n'trurru:nt worl.\hop. Q
.a.m .; do~n~e workqoops: I url.l\h
1() .. m . Bo~ll..o~n
l
p.m. ; songonR worl..shop\ lthel R••m
I p m . .all
worl.shop, on the r ollmore Rnnm , Bo~lk.m dtnnrr. (,
p.m, LOn&lt;rot, 8 I~ p m, Norton ltr\t floor ultteru ,
d•nce p•rrv
live mu"'
10 p m . lot\t llmot
••letero.t
C.on~.ert. Student rtLIIoll, l ugene 'leonberg , oboe. Phylll\
Ru \SO, vot&lt;.e, l p m , B.aucJ ltdll
f olrn ftJ V1t m MudrttJ, ~. 7 o~ncJ 9 p.m ., Utefendorl 14 7.
&lt;,qu.,re D•n&lt;tng Ptel&gt;t'nted by tht UUAB Do~me Commolln,
II p.m., Ftllmort Room , woth prole\sooono~l cJIIon)( •nd
ln\rrucuon by "The Sun O&lt;ldger "

Popul.ar Concerts
,.,hllh 1 7 Se.tl!o o~nd (. roh ( IC)
M.1r1.h 19: Shorley B.a\sey and W und~ HrrmJn (K)
MM'h 22: Rrch~rd H•rri\ (K)
M•r~h l l The Be.tthboys (K)
M•r4h 23: Chu4 k M•ngoone Quo~rtcl (N)
MJrth 1)· 0.1ve MA..on (8)
MM4h 24: Humble Pie .and Konjj ( ronl\un (M)
M.t!lh 26: COunt 8.1sle (K)
MoiiLh 28
H•ye'&gt; (M )
MM&lt;.h 31 The M oody Blues (M)
Aprol 1· Loly Toml111 (K)
Ap11l 7. The Osmond\ (M)
AprtiiS Emerwn,l•l.t o~nd r•o~imcr (M)

Is•••

Ruff4lu Pholh•rmontc Orchestril ( K)
M•rth I &lt;I &amp; } I &lt;.hll\tule Wo~leu,l.~
M4rth .2'1 . C.o1y Nmtllh Ntght
lnt~rn.liiOnill

M•"h

Auractoons
Ostpov B•l•lo~tkd Orthhtt.l (L)

n

BuH•Io C h.amber Mu~ c Socttry (K)
M.ar&lt;h 28 I he fullwd ..,loolol( C)u .. rlrt
The•ter Uep.tnment Reperwry l'uni&lt;JIIIt• l •', tloreded bv
Saul Elktn, 8 : \0 p .m , IIMrnno~n ..,rucJuo lhro~ter ,
o~dmission c h•rge .
Concert: Evenmgs l or New Mu'"• wool-s hy Xeoo•l.ls,
M~llhews, Perle and Albright, Lukds r 0\S, lOOdUltOI.
8 ; JO p.m ., Albright K'"'' All Gdlltry, adm1ss10n
1.h.1rge .
Moister c lass In voite : Chloe Owen, ..oprdno,
10 p .m .
8o~11d Reciul Hill.
Concert: Sentor rectt.al, Shdnnon ~oooiPP. Ltllo , dsstsred bv
jane Co~ry o~nd Vovian llornrk on poano, ~·JO p .m .,
Ba11d Ha ll.
Bdlkan Folk Olntc: Ft\tiv•l · O•n•e •nd \111111118 workshup~ .
see S;~turd.ay.
B.asketb.all: T he H.awk~ vs . rhe Lo~l.ers lor the CAC.
B.asketb;alf L ugue Ch.ampiOn\htp, 9 .a.m • followed by
:an E.ast· West Afi·Siilr G .. me .11 10 o1.m., (.lark Gym .
Concert: The P.as$ion of Our Lord Ac.cotding co Sr. fohn by
fohilnn Seb&lt;~stian Bilth , presented by the lutheran
Chorale ;and the Tflnoly Ortheslro~, John Becl.tr ,
director, S p.m., Holy TrrniiY Church (Milln St. nur
North) .

z.

Am~

Ahrt'lld

Bufr.alo Br•ves Bukelbilll (M)
M•r•h 1 1. B.altomore
M,.r c h JS Boston
Pro Bol&lt;fna (M)
M.orLh 27
Roller Derby (M)
Ap11l 10
Comtng Evenu (on sale March 18)
Apool 7 Smoke) Rutlon•on o~ntl l he Mll.ttle, (K)
Aprtllb 1rnYcd"AftcrandPr11«11Hdlum(M)
KEY

K
M
H
N
I

1\lrontr H"h
Mtmortdl -\utlotoroum
BuiiJIO Sute Collti(C
Nodg4r d Uno~ersoty
Lnew \ Buft,lo TheJtro

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>Erie County</text>
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                    <text>Calendar revisernent
S~dents may once apin pt a pmpee at the Buff•tlo summer (or
dependina on how the aocta feel, the ninth month of wiJ11ter) next year,
due to another impendina revisement of the academic calendar.
E~tensive cUnJCII were made this put year, as the U niversity
~enti~J_y changed to an "exams before vacation" fornrtat . In makina
this revtSton, the start of classes in the fall was moved up one week with
sprina semester ending approximately two weeks earlier than the
previous year.
Ho wever, communications from State University officials have
dictated that classes next year must not end before May IS, more than
two weeks later than originally scheduled. Charles J effre}', assistant vice
~resident for Facilities Planning and in charge o f the calt:ndar schedule,
Informed The Spectrum that the plans had been m:ade o nly w ith
conformity to guidelines set forth by the Commissioner of Education's
office in mmd . These regulations were rather broad a111d would have
permitted a schedule such as exists this year.
'

Vot 22, No. 18

'Minkemester' sugested
When the schedule was submitt ed for approval , said Dr. Jeffrey,
ChanceUor Ernest Boyer sent a memo mdicating hls desire for
adhere nce to his more stnngent gwdelines. A University letter of appeal
went unanswered, until a communique from Vice Chancellor Bruce
Derring was receiVed about a month ago re..:mphasizing the chancellor's
wishes. Why the chancellor's guidelines are so rigid is uncertain, Dr.
Jefrrey added.
It appears poSSible that along w1th the proposed changC3, a major
a..:ademic mnovJiton may be instituted. Since the re·vtsed schedule
leaves fall exams hefore Christmas break , a standard IS··week semester
would not have 10 bc&amp;~n until late J anuary if classes wt:re t o run past
M.Jy 15. llus would leave as much as five weeks between sem~ters
Dr. Jdrrey reported that his calendar comm1ttee wu suggestrng to
the appropnate o ffice:. that "senous consideratiOn be g~ven to the
mt roduct1on of a four-week 'mmi-semeste r' ." Tlus would be an entirely
voluntary program providinz students the opportun ity to do study of a
nature they may be unable to do dunng the regular semesters because
nf tame and other limrtahons.
The calendar reco mmendations an· now on Pres1dcnt Robert
Ketter's desk. with actwn expected shortly .

Students pressured after
loss of tax-exempt status
S I u dent u rga n 11a11ons are
Ice I ing the financial pressuJe
result ang fr o m re ce nt
adrrunistration action depriving
them of their taax-ilxcmpt ltatua
and their abrlny to buy materials
I a" -free from Central Stores.
Central Stores, the Umversity
&lt;;torehouse, ~otocks office s upplies
Jnd other equtpmenl whtch the
Un1verSJty, as a state agenq. buys
withou t paymg state or federal
..ales or eltclse tcue~
B e c a u s e ,, r I h I s
a II
organ 1za tiCI n~ e.-.pec1ally Sub
Board I , I t c , ~tude nt
governments a nd publications,
have been foned to cather get
thc1r offace supplies from outSJde
sources at considerable expense or
go without them. ThiS affects
the1r operations md their ability
to serve the students Tht&gt;
Spectrum . for example, ~nnol
prov1de dupls.· atlng serVJce
because 11 .:an' t h 1y the p.1pcr .
FSAaegjs
"It's a ltltle b1t complex ," satd
faculty Student Assoctation
( FSA) Treasurer Ed Doty
According to him, the student
o rganizations had tax~xempt
&amp;l atus solely from their
association with FSA , wtuch is
recognized by the Bureau o f
Internal Revenue as a tax~xempt
orpniz.ation. As the students
pu1ed autonomy from FSA, an
autonomy which Mr. Ooty claims
was asserted in a Board of
Trustees decision in 1968, they
lost the tax exemption they had
under the aeJis of FSA. The result
was, Mr. Doty explained, "we
have no ri&amp;ht or authority to
pumlt the student oraanizations
to acquire materiala from Central
Storea on whicb taxes have not
been paid."
Mr. Doty saw the delay as
unfortunate. "At that time," be
said. "we should han stopped all
acc:ea t o Central Stores by any
student orpnizatioos!' Asked
about the nearly four year delay
tM oommented: "We don't move

With the speed of hghl."
Mr. Doty sa1d that Norton Ha ll
l&gt;uector J ames Gnaber used FSA
reqUISition forms t1:&gt; make orders
for the Yarious student aroups and
that fhis practioe was not noticed
until the UniversiiJI prepared for
an audit that too•k place only
recently. As he pul 11, "you louk
under rocks" for questtouabk
prdcllces before an aud1t
'Simplest way·
How ever, he ~ uggestcd I ha I
"t he SJntplest way· nul (ut the
difficulty) IS for Suh Bnurd I to
apply for tax-eltem pi status; and,
furthermore, I thanlo. they'll get
1L. "
A ccording to Steve
Blumenkrantt , exeocut1ve director
of Sub Board I, they an~ already
m the process of doing this.
Mark Borenstem , former Sub
Board busaness manager ·sees
thtngs dafferently
Whtl e
acknowledgJng that 11 might have
been proper t o rduse to sell II'
Sub Board , he thought that the
anclusion of other student groups
was nonsense. "I thmk tt's ltme
th e administration stopped
playing games," he sa.1d "On the
one hand , they say the Student
Assoctahon is nou part of the
Uruversity so 1t c.an't use Central
Stores; and on thte other hand-,
they say that it rlr part of the
Uruversity so they c.an teU them
how to spend their money "
In addition, Lester Goldstein ,
Sub Board busirness manager,
appeared displeased : ''I'm quite
sure that the president o f SA , the
president of GSA and the
president of MFC .are still part of
FSA . . . I don't see why the
student body can't use FSA's tax
exemption."
The issue promises to grow
more intense as student
orpnizationa run lower and lower
on supplies and han to buy them.
Sub Board should have its
tax-exempt certificatelon soon,
but student aovemments will have
to resolve the issue one way or
another.

Budget cuts

Collegiate

Sy~~tem en~dangered

by Barbara MaJmet
and Howie Kurtz
The Collegiate Sy~ t em, or parts ell 11 m;~y souu
be forced to du~e . " I don't see how all the Colleges
can remain open," sa1d Konrad von Moltkc, d1r&lt;:ctur
of the Cullegtate ASM:mbl y A severe cut 111 next
yea r\ budget for the College~ 1s ~us111g tim
dtstres~ed S1 tua110n.
This year's adm1111st rat ave alloca11011 tu the
Colleges totalled $20') ,000. S I tl 7,000 of wh1ch came
lrom the SUNY budget , w1th the rcmaming cummg
from o ther source~ Next year's budget cornnutnacut
1s S I ')9 ,000, w1th uo ex 1ra sources of momey
pronused
Many lrustrated member\ ul the Cullcgc:. reel
that there 1!&gt; no adm101SI ratrve ~up port for the
Collegia te system . According to ~lliot Sm1th of
Modern Education, the adrrun1strat1011 lfl the past
acknowledged the fac t that the Collegtatc budget
was low. Steve Siegel of C.P. Snow College stated ·
" If they want a viable collegiate system, they can't
cut it below a minimum level of support •·
Enrollment increases
Mr. Smith cited enrollment figures which show a
marked increase in the number of students taking
College courses: 6000 students thts year have taken
College courses for credit. Since there are
approximately the same number of students in the
school as Jut year, and more students are ta.Jting
College c redits, then obviously less are taking credits
in traditional courses, such as economics, political
science, etc., noted Mr. Smith. Yet, despite increased
enrollment, the Colleges are being hit by a major
budget cut. His conclusion from this information ill
that the resources aren't going where the students

go.
Dr. von Moltke commented on the budget cuts:

"The financaal picture of the Colleges. the
complexities uf llhe situat ion, haven't been fully
understood I don' t see how 11 's posstble for aJI the
C'ulleges to rernwn open." Dr von Moltke attribu tes
the c urrent finranctal cns1S to overall budget
p roblems, but is n•ot discouraged.
faculty members voluntee r the1r tune tu teach
l..llllegc courM:s. rhey recetve ltttle Ill no financial
com pen sa 110 n for the u scrvu:es Dedicated
mstruc tors cannot count their College courses fur
req111red teachtnJ~ load cred1ts. cather Faculty
members feel the Colleges are beang ~.hscnmmated
a~:unst , sa1d Scott Sampson uf Modern £:.ducat10rr .
Dean of Undergraduate Stud1l'S C'hades Ebert
commented : " I dnn' t think there is a lack ufsupport
fw the Colleges " He noted that every smgle
program m the Umvers1ty )las been c ut. He
personally has nru mput about money mto the
Colleges, but remarked : "A young, striving program
feels a budget cut much more severely than an
established deparrtment. I hope the Colleges will be
given financial support in its critical growth stage."
Be rnard Gelbaum, vice president for Academic
Affai rs, who does have input into Collegiate funding,
was out of town a.nd unavailable for comment.
The CoUegiate system was originally designed u
a creative, experimental alternative to traditional
University education. The CoUeges offer a wide
ran.se of courses, formats and course material,
ranging from Weomen's liberation to pop music to
radicalism. Stude1nts may take any course in any
College for credit u well as educational experience;
and the opportwuties are vut. With the irnpend.in&amp;
budset cuts, hmwever. some courses and perhapa
some CoUeges wiJ:I face c losing.
The Collegiate Assembly will discua its
precarioua financial position this aftemooo at 4 :00
p.m. in Diefend,orf 207. The public ill wpd to
attond.

�t

Athletic Department
'over-inflated ·budget'

DeW.W reconsiders

'Undercurrent' loan delayed
Exercising his constitutional preroptive as SA
president, lan DeWuJ is delaying action o n a
$10,000 loan to Unducurrent and the formation of
the Legal Aid Clinic. Basically, Mr. DeWaal is
returning to the Student Assembly for
reconsideration their resolutions of last Monday.
The first resolution would have given
Undercurrent at 3% interest repayable in ten yean,
S 10,000 to pay past debts and to provide for its
incorporation. Representatives favorin&amp; the loan
argued that Unducurrent is a growmg publ.lcation
geared towards undergraduates. However, in
an nouncing his decision, Mr. DeWaal explained :
"Unfortunately a much more important point did
not come to light I while discussing the loan 1. This
was the concept of who should fund publications on
campus and what commitments these publiCJitions
should have to those o rganizations."
He continued : "There was no concern ex rresscd
1n regard to contract ural commitments that
Undercurrent would fulfill No one from SA was
authorized to negotiate or sign a contract w1th SA ."
Because of this, Mr DeWaal stated : " In 0 1der to
aUow the assembly to reconsider what I believe was a
hasty decision, I fm exercising the constitutional
prerogauve of the president to send hJl'k to the
assembly. once, any 1tem of legislatiOn "
Complete reconsideration
" Hopefully , the assembly will be able to debate
the much broader issue of whether or not SA should
fund publications and if so, what contractural
obligations should be made and fulfilled ," he
continued. His act1on further mandate' that no
morues may be expended by the treasurer's olfice
unttl the reconsideration I.S complete.
The other resolution proVIded for the
establubment of Exec utive Counal of the Legal Aid
Clmic. This counCLI will be chosen by a committee
oomposed of the present director o f the Office of
Student Rights. the present Student Rights
coordinator , and the newly-elected Stud ent Rights
coordmato r A comm1ttee formed along these lines
would have mcluded Tom DeMartsnu, Dave
Stemwald and Andrew Kossover .
Mr . DeWaal's reasons for ~subm11tmg this
resolutiOn were two-fold he feh that the new
executive council should have more of a say , and Mr
DeMartino should not l)e on the comm11lec, llS he IS
a prime candidate for offi1..e in the Leaal Clintc. Both
thest- resolutiOns will bt- reconsidered at the ne"t
Student Assembly a week from today, he01ded by the
newly~le cted Execut1ve Committee

-santos

Former Student Association
Acting Treasurer Dave Keiser hu
leveled some final accusations at
the Athletic Department, charging
them with misuse of SA funds.
Mr. Keiser told The Spectrum
Fr i day that the A thle tic
Department , which this year was
appropriated $240,000 by the SA,
had been saddled with an
.. over-mOated budget." "They
[the Athletic Department). JUSt
don't have the facilities," he said,
to handle that large a budget.
As a result , Mr. Keiser
continued, from the beginning of
the fall semester until the middle
of February, only $90,000 of the
budget had been spent. When, he
added, on Feb. 22 he was asked to
appropriate an additiona l
$50,000, he d o ubted the
sensibility of such a move. He
noted that since the basketball
season. wh1ch consumes the
majority of the monies, had
already elapsed, he could see no
real reason for the large additional
sum .
For all the money allocated to
them, Mr Keiser asserted, those
associated with the Athletic
Department "just don't want to
provide services for the 5tudents."
He assailed the Athleti c
Department for setting-up an
inferior intramural sports program
from which only a minority of
students would benefit.
Be added that only a small
portion of the student population
is able to make use of the athletiC
facilities because or strict
regulations and because of
intramurals. "Thcy1J tell you that
700 students per week use the
gym, Mr Keiser pointed out, " but
1t's only the same 125 coming
back every n1ght •·

besides

beina

"very unetltical,"

were an attempt to ..cover up the
lack of leadenhip" among the
student govemment.
• •we
r ecommend
encumbrances," pointed out Dr.
Fritz., "we do not spend." The
At h l et i c Department, h e
continued, docs no spending in
ihelf, but simply suggests
expenditures to Sub-Board I, Inc .
which handles all SA monies.
When the Athletic Department
agreed to work through Sub
Board I , Inc., said Or. Fritz., he
was assured that the Athlet1c
Department would receave
period1cal accounts of Sub
Board 's actual athletic spend1ng
As of now, he noted, ''we have
received one partial account" ot
the spending and , as far as he
knew, Mr. Keiser's report of the
Feb. 22 request was "not tru~ . "
Dr . Fr1tZ l oncluded lu~
react10n to Mr. Kei ser's
accusations by adding. "I
wouldn' t know Dave Keiser 1f 1
saw him."
"He knows who I am," ~:ud
Mr. Keiser when told of Or
Fritz's response : " He JUSt knows
that I'm anti-athJetic ·•
Mr. Keiser believes that U1e
Athletic Department wilJ ask for
an additional appropriation hike
of $20,000 next year as a result ul
the recent student referendum. He
also stated that the referendum,
which showed lhe ~tudent body 10
favor of the athletic budget, was
not representative of the majonty
of the students' feelings. The
Athletic Department, he &amp;aid, set
up a campaign for student votes
which affected primarily those
who frequent sports events and
persuaded them to vote in favor
of the issue.
Mr. Keiser also noted that he
made the remarks during his
u nsuccessfut campaign for
re~l cction in last week's SA
elections and not as the SA's
acting treasurer. Therefore, he
said, the remarks were h1s opin1on
as a student and not "unetJucaJ ,"
as Dr. Fntz 1tated .

Harold Oopman, comultiDG editor of Undercurrent
must walt for Student A. -nbly reconsid eration of
his peper's ..-quett fw • $ 110 ,000 loen. Action was
•so delayed concerning the formation of the Legal
Aid dinic.
and the Buffalo Folk Festa val. Additionally, the
assembly expressed 1ts sup pot t of WNYPI RG.
This resolution stated : " We the Student
Assembly of the Undergradu,ate Student Association
recoanize the succes.s of WNYPIRG in achieving an
absolute m~ority of the underifaduate student
body, m s.iJoing the WNYPIR:G petition . We endorse
the proposals that have been •;tated in the WNYPIRG
pet 1t1on and also stand resolved that the
adminLStratiOn of SUN Y at Buffalo and the Board of
Trustees of SUNY should allow the creation of these
proposals."
The meeting, tro nicaUy c:onvened and adjourned
to the tune of Michael Levinson. In prcsentlns the
treuurcr's report, Dav1d Kcwcr reported that "Lev"
was requesting S8.70 for a one~way ticket to the
New York Port Authority . However, Mr Levinson
termed I he request a "pack of lies" to wh1ch M r
KeiSer 1mmedtately agreed Address1ng the asst"mbly
Other action
ab 11 diSpersed , Mr. LeVInson requested money to
In other Ji.. tuln lha~ l ,t~t as\emhly ul the send tum to V1etnam, to pubhsh 1.t book and to buy Votes recruited
1971 -72 executive c.: ommsttec passed budgets for a page1&gt; in The Spectrum to ans wer charges agamsl
"Totally without foundation!"
CAC cultural event to Washmgt on , 0 (' , the Legal tum . All requests were Ignored as the assembly
1S
how Dr. fritz. director of
1\Jd CliniC office , the Bulfolomon. L1fe Workshups adJourned
Athlet1c ~ . responded to Mr.
Keiser ' s a cc usations
He
considered Mr Keist-r's remarks,
which he made to the press
Applications for the poiilion of Editor-in-Chief of nl r S(I4 'C'tr1Jm for the ICidemJC Without Informing 01. Fntz,
year 1972- 1973 will be taken until March ll
The 1pplication consisti of a leUer to the editorial bourd , 11t1ting reuoru for
desiring the position. qualifications and previous joumallstic exp1erienct The position f•
OPEN MEETINGS
open to any State University araduate or underaradua te student .
Will be Held By
The editorial board will interview all candidates on Thunda•y. March 23 .
Prucpective applicant-s art' urged to conttct the Editor, Room 3SS Norton Hall as
NOon IS possible to (amilitril\e chemselvt's with tny proceduul or technical que&lt;.taona.
THf:. UNIVERSITY GOVERNANCE COMMI ITEE
llbout the position or •bout Th4' Spectrum

Editorial elections

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~UOERS

·~

IS COM I ~ G
The Spectrum II publllhc tlltW
t1m111

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.....,.,

ftN «hwfillng b.NII tiOMI EduuriOitM Adtlwtial"' '
S.WC., ltw:,, 360 L._.l,.ron A~.•
Nftl Yori, N. Y. 10011.
RIIPflllllntfld

Subcrlpdon

,.r. .,..

To Discu~ The First Draft of
ARTICLES OF GOVERNANCE FOR
A UNIVERSITY ASSEMBLY

~.

Mid FrHJ.y; during thfl
~IM cadwrllc ...,- by Sub-Soa-d
' , Inc. Ofr~ .,. lot:MW/ •t 365
Nonott H1111. ~,_ Unl.,.,.lty of N~
Yori •t BuH.Io, .'U3tS ,.;, St.,
Buff•lo, N11w York, 14214
T-.,OM: A,_ COle» 1r6; Edltotilll
831-41 13; Bull,.., 83t..:Jfit0.

21. '72
Tuesday March 28, '72
Tuesday March

1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I
IU P S T A T E C Y C l E I N S I

•••••
ALL MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY
ARE INVITED TO ATTEND
I

•••••
The Committee ts a/sa willing to discuu the draft
Wtth 111111•ers1ty groups requesting such a meetfn.g.

U..IO ,_

. , . , . , 01 18.()() 1M ,...., Mn-.n. '

Sa:ond 0.. ,_..,., pMI •t Bufflllo,
'*w Ycri,

Citr:uiWIM: 1BJJ()()

Page two. The Spectrum. Wednesday, 15 March 1972

Address Requests To :

Dr. Marjorie C. Mix, Chairman
205 Foster Hall

�Sub board contributes

Housing Corp awaits passage
by Howie Kurtz
Campus Editor

ethos was ordered to move
from its present facilities to Room
340 and the proposed Student
Housing Development
Corporation was debated at lenath
at Monday evening's Sub Board
meeting.
The ethos decision was reached
after both parties, ethos and
Norton House Council, presented
their sides of the issue. Sub Board
also hel!rd a report by J. Michael
Hagpns about the feasibility and
positive plans for the Housmg
Corporation. Lengthy debate
foUowed the report about bylaws,
incorporation procedures and
under what JUnsdictlon the new
corporation will fall. The debate
was tabled until the Housing
Commtttee and a sub committee
of Sub Board meet after this
week
"Th e wh ole questton ts
whether the Hous1ng Corporation
will be an tndependent
corporation or a ~ubstdaary of Sub
Board ," satd o ne member of the
housmg 'ommtUee ''Sub Board is
ktckmg an $60,000 to the lfousing
Corporation, whtch tn the long
run, as a small portaon But the
first money as the hardest to get
and Sub Board is usang that to
gam control of it. The bad thana is
that the HouSing Corporation
would be involved an the petty
politks of Sub Board, and the
state would be able to play
politics wtth the H o using
Corporation through Sub Board "
Pby it my way
" What Sub Board tS saytng, an
effect, IS tf you don't play the
game my way I'll take: my ball
and go home." the member
continued "Sub Board says
they're afnud the Corporatio n
won't be respons1ve to student ~
They have to be responSive to
students, because students wall be
payang the rent that pays thetr
balls. The shame ll&gt; that tf at
doesn't pa~ at next M onday·~ Sub
Board meetmg, the Uoustng
C'orporallon will be dead "
Two bast!: parts of 1 he housang
propos.il were thJI the
Corporollon wo uld concentrate
on buytng houses in the
Unavcrstty area, and that other
s tudent ventur es. e ,g . , a

t

coin-operated Laundry near most
of the houses purchased , could
come o ut of the corporation.
In submitting a frnt·year
bud&amp;et of $35 ,000, a request was
made to Sub Hoard for $60,000
which it w:u hoped could
purchase 20 hoousing units. Sub
Boa rd 's funding would be
aupnented by loans, grant.s and
other sources.

Floatina ads
The basis for the venture,
according to Mr. Hauans, is that
"people who are tired of getting
ripped off band together and aet

-santo.

Amaz in;r: machine

One of the marvels of the
indurtrilll age went undllf tcrutinv
by Sub Board's resident intellect,
Fred Auwon, -' last Monday's
meeting.

group equity I funds I. wtth whach
they provtd e servtt.es fCir
t hemselves." He cited suct.cssful
student housing co-ops at the
Universaty of Michigan and the
Un1verstly of C'alalornta at
Berkeley
In the ethos controversy. etltos
tned to demonstrate that thcar
present space is JUSt bardy
adequate to publ1 sh I hetr
magazme. ·• Aclvertistng doesn' t
JUSt float tnto our office,'
explained pre~ent surcrvtstng
edttor Carl Roetter. " We compete
wath The Sperl'rum dOd have to
hire people to make calls, hustk
anti work their a&lt;&gt;ses off Thts
requares room space, desks and
telephones." lie: pointed out that
if ethos were ftorced mto smaller

Oavad Smath, prestdent l1f
House Councal, called the charts
and &amp;flphs presented by Mr.
Berger "at best, vaaue, at worst ,
purposely muleadtng" He
explaaned to Sub Board thai
Room J 4 'i (present e1hos o fftce)
ts the "keystone" rn llou..c:
C'ounctJ's plan~ to male _. vane I y
of room changes rnvolvmg many
\nldller duh'
Mr South ~tated that " House
{ uunul has put up wtth thl\
nun\cn'e for d ~cmcsler t'rlrn1
\houhl IIIUV~ or he moved "
Fnllowm~ J duwd dchJI\' , Suh
Board VO\\'cl 1h.rl r•r/w.l ~huuhl
move to R nnrn 340 at ;,
converuent lim e lor them and
tif t cr tel ephones h;tve he~·u
anstalled tn th.Jt room

~...

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THE UUAB FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE

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THt UUAB VIDEO
COMMIT7Ft.

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quarters, their advertising revenue
would suffer in which case they
would have to appeal to Sub
Board for more money.
Newly -elec ted superviSing
editor Stu Beraer presented &amp;nphs
and fact sheets to demonstrate
that ~thos needs every inch of
space it bas. Mr. Beraer explained
how ethos has been expanding,
how its staff size has been
increasins and how it has no
edito rial or business offices. He
also n oted that moving of
telephones would take time and
ca use co nfu sion wathin the
maaa zine .

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, &amp; SUNDAY
CONFERENCE THEATRE
Tickets SOc before 6 p.m.
75c after 6 p.m.
Times &amp; Tickets ot Norton Hoi/ Tichet Office
-~~
~·
-~

.....

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pre~erll~

VIC A

GRLGUR}

• t;

Vtetnum !tim\
"Banned m the U SA "

and
"We Are All Lt. Colley"
from
APB - (V

Thursday, March f 6
Haas Lounge

8 :30p.m.

LA~ubBoudl,lnc.

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Editor '$ note: Thb is the 1fetter p~Uented by Howe Coundl
President David G. Smith to Sub BOOTd at Mondlly nilht 'l m«dlf6
explaining why he felt ethos sltou/d mow {rom its present fa.cilJtin..
Mamh 13, 1912
Dear Sub Board 1 members and those to whom it matters:
Many others, besides myself, share a personal hope that
Norton's House Council ~e a vehicle for the expression of
faculty, staff and student concern in the Union that is theirs. The
only vocabulary that will meet this task is emerging as one of
dedication to constructive human interaction. It iJ not always easy.
This past semester, a mU&lt;:h needed review of room a.,.ces iD
Norton Hall was effected. The subsequent office reassignmentl
have aU been greatly affected by a confrontation between etlttn
and Univenity Union Council.
Because the ethos space, Room 345 was not being fully utilized.
and because University Union Council hoped to serve as best it
could the needs of the large r11umber of smaller c lubs by creating a
Student Activities Room, ethos was asked to move. ethos has
refused to move.
In light of the fact that etl"'os came to be in their present office
by. without consulting anyo111e, o ne day simply picking up what
they had in 302 and squattin1g with it in 345; in light of the fact
that the House Council of that day let ethos remain in 345
principally because that office~ was also to house the materiah and
meeting.&lt;~ of a now non-eXIstent Pub Board; in light of the fact that
the materials presented by Mt:ssrs. Berger and Roetter as evidence
of ethos's need for specifically Room 345 were a t best vague and at
worst , purposefully mi.sleading, that their charts and gnphs were
some without scale, and others with scaJe totally igrtored ; in light
of the fact that House Coundl has put up with this nonsense for
almost an en tare semester. I must ask, as chairman of University
Unton Council, for your tmmediale help 10 resolving a matter
which has gone too far
Also as chauman, and as a concerned and close observer to this
all, I feel compelled to vo1ce some observat1ons on this affair.
It has been sometimes difficult for me to distinguish between
what f!lhvs as a valid and valu1able campus publication was saying,
and what was berng saad by certaan and1viduals on the top of the
ethos masthead . It is clear tha1t nobody can divorce hls personality
from the job he is performang., yet it would seem we have here an
example of what happens when personal ego and pride rise to
obscure the real tssucs, nee,ds, and answers within a difficult
situation.
It is an opin 1on to which I would have preferred not to arrive at,
that in particular. Carl R01~tter and Stuart Berger have been
dedicated less to serving this,, our commuruty, than lo furthering
some vision of a manifest deshny of etho&amp;. To me, the EXTRA of
2/14/72 is a very tangible example of lheir interest io the
proceedings as a poliucaJ ape&lt;:tacle rather than as a problem shared
by human being~ who are 11ble to cooperatively fmd a human
solution. r feel r have been the victim of their narcotic addiction to
the tactics of purposeful delay, deliberate misrepresent.ltion, and
willful manipulatton of facts and procedures, and that the good
intentions upon wltich I hav«~ lned to base my actions have been
trampled upon
I apolog~a to the people who are members in the J 5
organaz.ations who hnve been waating wath varying degrees of
patacnce ror the muvang Ill Norton 10 bcg~n . Unfortunately. Mr.
La7urit1 's le tter rn ThP SpeNrum was quare right in noting that
Room 345 ts a keyswne, o f suruc to the entue arrangement.
Be 11 prupo!.cd that tomorrow. Tuesday, March 14, 1972, ethos
should rnnve o r be moved to Rl'IOm 340 If needed to insure the
sccunty of rthos matena ls and that this move be accomplished
smoothly aud without interference, a construc tion lock should be
installed nn the duo• to 345. Suggestions have already been made
about ethos's telephones and darkroom HopefuiJy. thjs should
allow ltus Norton jtg·saw puullc to he put together finaiJy .
Lastly, I hope that we each ponder carefully what has gone on
here .
David G. Smith

Acling Chairman, UUC

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Wednesday, 15 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Students urged to fight
against .tuition increase

ExJ»ensive damage

Bathroom arsonist at large
by Mike EnaeJ

A four-phased program to
reach parents, students, the media
and state legislators is presently
being implemented by the
Student Association to protest
tuition increases. The proposed
raises would set tuition at S650
for freshman and sophomores and
S800 for juniors and seniors.
SA plans mclude, as explained
by former Acting Treasurer Dave
Keiser and National Student
Affam Coordinator Ed Wolf, the
setting up o f a table in No rton
Hall fo r two weeks. At tlus table.
student s c an obtain a
SASU- pr o du c ed info rmation
pac ket .
11us packet mcludes a hs t o f all
loc.a.l boards o f elec tio n (where
student s c an procure vo ter
registratio n fo rms and absentee
ballots), an ex planatio n o f SASU's
pr o gram to tight the ra iSe,
petitto ns and pledge cards These
pledge cards state that unless J
legislato r vo tes m suppo rt o f
higher educatio n . he will no t
receive the VO l(' of I he re r;o n
sagning the cart!.

Just one and a half hours
SA IS also maaJmg to parents o f
Untvers tt y s tudl!n t ~ . sim1lar

I

information packets. Parents will
be urged to circulate petition' in
their communities and to pressure
their legislators for no tuition
raise.
The media is the target of Mr
Wolrs committee, which is trying
to publicize the tuition protests.
Already, he has obt ained air time
on local TV and radio stations.
His efforts will be in conjunction
with other SUNY schools such as
State University College at
Buffal o, Niagara Community
C o llege and Ene Community
College.
Finall y , there was established a
co mmittee under SA Vice
Presadent Tyrone Saunders to
contac t all local legislators tn a
l obbyang effo rt . Other means
inc lude last night 's picket line
against C hancello r Bo yer, leaners
and post e rs.
Commenting o n the SA pro test
plan , Mr. Keiser urged all stude nts
to take tame o ut and work against
tuitio n hikes : " Students have t o
gel invo lved , 10 ge l o ff their asses
and d o somelhing
al doesn ' t
ta ke muc h." Agreemg wath llus,
Mf Wo lf re mark ed . " If students
tJevotetJ JUSI an hour and a half,
the a"':rease could he defeated ."

ALFA ROM EO
*FERRARI
• MASERATI

81Vir&amp;DRI8DIII
GUilD

Stzl~s

• Service • Parts

USED CARS

BFA Procrams
Ct rtofoute Procrams
For onfo contact recostrar

- - BOBCOR - -

Motor Cars, Ltd .
1974 Egat (Near Bailey)
834-7350

: . TOMORROW at our 1241 MAIN ST. store
••
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••
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p~lfOIIoodlltt' llt.tl

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be Jble ro \f\' 4
d t llHlll\tr,ll ooln nf thr llt'w ~hur~ V 1~. t~nc lll~rtridgr .

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• •

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• •
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J C h•nnel Sepo~nl ron
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With your unn s

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Paqe four . The Spectrum. Wednesday, 15 March 1972

Contrfbcltlftl Editor

hrhaps it is a sign of the times.
They used to try to bum down admi.nislration butldangs,
ROTC buildinp and Department of Defense research sites. Now it
seems they are content to bum down lavatories.
One much sought after purveyor of evil has at ruck no less Uun
12 times in the lut month, putting to the torch auch dreaded
sym bols of t he power structure as toilet seats and towel racks.
Friday morning he struck in earnest, c.usina S2500 worth o f
damage in a Harriman Library bathroom. The fire required the
assistance o f the Buffalo Fire Department.
Mirac ulously , the culprit was thwarted t he previous II hmes
by the ever-alert maintenance staff and the campus police, whose
firefighting heroics prevented the blazes from causmg significant
damage.
The arsonist has thus far eluded the intensive investigative
efforts of the Buffalo Police Department, the Buffalo Fire
Department and the campus police, who, in their bewilderment,
declined to answer any questions a nd referred aU inquiries t o J am
DeSantis, the Director of Information Services.
Mr. DeSantis said the fires were started "when the buildanS\
were locked . So meone had to have access to the buildinp."
The elusive arsonist has also struck lavatories in Diefendo rf .1nd
Acheso n Halls.
Must we contanue to fiddl e tn apathy wluJ~ o ur la vat o rrc'
burn"

Children ofa11 ages have fun
at sucres~ful CAC Carnival

The show continued wrlh Mike drilling ho les in ano ther silk and turned it into a wand He removed
heads, puttrng swords through necks, every th1ng but h.is glo ves , squeezed them together and conjured up oa
pullang u rabbit out o f a hat Later Mike m oved to lrve p1geon. The ltids got a thrill as he "botched'' o ne
the Fillmore Room to make animals out o f balloons. tric k He tore up a sheet of paper and compresseu 11
I an OeWaal was one of the observers but 1t 's not As he puUed out a restored sheet , s small hall ul
clear whtether he got o ne o f the animals o r no t
paper fell from h.is hands. His assistant gave h.im a
A pho tographer from WK.BW-TV wande red pity ing glanc e and she picked it up. Mike unfolded at
around wath a camera while k ads JUmped up and and, to the shock o f the audie nce , 1t was a smgk
d o wn asking . " When will I be o n TV.? "
sheet
Seve·ral hours later a troop of happy, tired
children stumbled into buses and cars to go ho me. lan watches the magic
Mr Levy h o pes there will be ano ther carnrvaJ uex t
lie blew up a rubber glove and pulled o ne or tl rt•
year. fl's a good bet rhar the kids d o roo.
fingers above an empty container, producing a quar t
Kids come in all sizes and ages, fro m tm y of milk. The children were " udderly" amazed Of
pre-schoo lers to great , big cvllegrans, and No rton
flail was c rawling wi th them S~turduy The
l)CCas tcm'!' The CAC' C'armval. h o m II a.m . to 5 p m.
lrumlreds o l ~: larldren frurn ;all 11ve r the c.:1ty rdn
thro ugh No rton poppang hall11ons, nppang d own
st re amers, yc lla n~ :md ~ huvrn g an c.J gl'llc rall y havrng a
hall
T l' U l l'vy, ('A(' t.l i rcl: t o r , ~:ml the C:llllrv:.al was
g11111t-: ":.a1hout ten tr m t-'S hc tt l'l" tha n e '&lt; pcc.: tcd
Luo k11rg ;rl .all t he krd ~ h1· \J ic..l '1 hcy're havrng a
g&lt;&gt;&lt;Hl tun c. J nu lll1r&gt;t tll the pcupll- who'ae au r\ rung 11
J ae lrav ung .a.' 1-\lltK.I a lr mc " Mr l evy \ 111):\kd n ut
t.:oordHI.t lor~ Jud y S te rn , l u~y A n~eln lt' and Mary
Chrcs S lwc ha n ltlt the tu nc :anc..l t'nc rgy they put mt o
t he la u
Af nm• 111 lh ~ hoHll ll\, where the d nld rcn rested
thl.'rr ' "-tlb IP Will lrd. ~l\ (wrn lh ll'l'. g1• t .1 p rttc ),
krd , \ ho t wah•r P" ' "b t ry tn~ 111 l'Jdr nguaslt candles.
Snrm· 111 th1• ll\l(lre l ~hu t ~ lnl rite a ll cndanls by
Jll rUnll. !'.OJ Ill' o f tlr nM' a t lcnll Jnt\, mar ked by pink
lH' fll..' .trrllhJIHh . ll'~p•111JeJ 111 J..nul hy ' hoot rng each

or h1•r
Mil-.~t

hlows one
In lh t• (\•n k rencl' Tlu·ar er l hl' ('oyotc was
!:t'llrng his lu nt~ from the Ro;u.l R un ner. W.C. J' relds
W J.\ llrtvang a b mken d uwn lJr .ltutrnd tur tur o us
rnountam roads. l.lu~ Bunny was ou tsmartmg Ant
I ~II Ha rr y. a dlnllllllltrve mohstcr c..lrsguiscd as Baby
F mste r; a nd Lau•cl anc..l llard y we re ~penurn g the
naghl rn a haunted ho use.
One wo nders 11 thi s ·~ surta hle en tc rtammcn t for
Impressionable yo ung mmds Cluldren ran ac ross the
stage . during sho ws whale an tnsrst ent yo ungstet, a
buddmg Don RrckJes, yelled . "Get o ff the s tage,
dummy! "
In the cafe teria, kids munched on peanut butte r
and Jelly sandwic hes that they bro ught from ho rn e,
and vo lunteers read Or Seuss to the m . Then Mr
Levy gathered everyone for " the greatest magacian in
the world - Mike the Magician.''
. Mike and his assistant took the stage The
assJstant was not the usual vacuous blonde in blac k
leotards. which was . a pleasant change. Mike
produced a bouquet from a silk scarf, picked up

- F Oil

course, everyone wanted to volunteer for the next
trick. Mike picked a small boy named Sammy who
mounted the stage to cries of "Saw him in half, saw
h.im in half."
Sammy sat in a chair while Mike put a c ard over
the top of the milk container. He turned it upside
down nnd placed it on his nervous volunteer's head.
As he removed the card all the kids sat on the edges
of their seats waiting for a deluge of milk. He lifted
the container and a bouquet of paper flowers
appeared, to Sammy•s obvious relief.

�Part n

Amnesty: call for freedom
Editor'l Note: The {ol/owtn1 u
a rwo·ptlrt

arrtcl~ r~seorched

th~

ftntllse1ment of

and pN!ptJred by Alan

Rounbaum.

by Alan R 01mbaum
Reprint from Sindt mJII'IIZille

The Taft and Koch bills are inadequate because
" limited" (to Selective Service violators only) and
"conditional" (providing for a threo-year alternate
service in some non-military capacit y). The araument
given for the exclusion of deeerters iJ that desertion
is a military, no t civil, violation and therefore, it
should be handled as a purely military problem.
This argument for separa tin g civil and military
acts of war re~is t ance is objectionable on several
grounds. First. 1t is arbitrary, as regards a m nesty, in
t hat the President as both Civilian Head o f State and
Commander-in..Chief o f the Armed Fo rcel bu t h e
Constitutional authority t o intervene in both civilian
(e.g. , t h e case of Jimmy Ho ffa) and military (e.g.•
the case of Lt. Calley) affam. u Nixo n has recently
d one commutina the s ente nces of bo th Hoffa and
Calley ; whether acts o f resiStance occured in the
civilian o r military realm, they are wtited by t he
motivating refusal to participate in the war effort.
Parentheticall y, o ur culture enshrines couraee 10
the concep t of •·manhood''. and usual ly defines the
latter in terms of the awessiveness of the "fighting
man·• and "sexual prowess." For man y people,
James Bo nd is a culture-hero who alternately, u a
woman's liberationist com mented . whlps out his
pistol and his penis as a show or masculinity.
Therefore, if a man ch ooses not to fight , hls motives
ore suspect
That the mo ti ves for resis tance might be le&amp;~
than the m ost h iahmJDdcd , there IS no evidence to
suge.'lt that view (of cowardice). No1 is there
evidence to rndlcate that those who did fight were
courageo us since II is o pen to question wheth er
those who did fight would have had the singular
co uage to resist the war 1f they beheved it was
wrong. II rnight be asked, and with good reason,
whether 8 show of " loyaJty" to one's nlltionaJ
intereat come3 hest m the form of physical combat,
and in th e context of an Amenca allegedly
t h reatened by a small , underd eveloped country 8000
m1JaJ from its shores
Some people commentina o n the proposed
amnesty b.Us have referred to lhe separate treatment
of war reststers, noted above. a, "cl:~ss legislation."
thts des1gnat1on refers to the fact that most acts
wh1ch vtolate law are or were prt&gt;·anduct1on acllons
taken subsequent to ample o pportunity for
renectlon o n the nature of the war and draft
college-oriented , mJddle-class men fall mostly o n this
sade of 111duction , workang-class. low·lncome men
h.td then co nSCIOUSness raa~ed only after
post ·tnduction. first -hand expenence.
And final ly. 1f we accept lh1s VJew on the
availa ble evidence, sepJ rate treatment of war
resiste rs IS objectionable because of its mherent
"class" bias.
A forceful objeCtion to the ••aJ ternate serv1 ce'
portion of the amnesty bill Is g~ven vo1ce by man y
resast ers themselves , TI1ey were vtct1m1Zed by what
t h ey. and thi&amp; writer, consider governmental
coercion (e g , " involuntary semlude") to fight an
1mmoral, allegal racist w ar
Therefore, consc1en11o us personal restlltance
should not require a pard o n , espec1ally w1th the
furthe r punitive three-year alterna te service. They
feel they did no th1ng w rong 1n refusing to fight
particularly on 1ts face, somebody else's war. For
some resisters " pardon for offense" Itself does
punst1ve VJolencc t o their moh v11110n for th e
mdividual dec1son of personal diSengagemen t Yet,
thiS writer would suggest , 1n the spmt of d emocracy ,
that all war res1sters should have the t'hmu of
amnesty, and so would argue for an unconditional ,
universal amnesty on the democratic ground of
~h o1ce aJone. The deserters generaJiy seem t o want
repatnation or th e nghl to ret urn to the U.S .
without the tndignjty o f recnmsnatlon I n add a11o n ,
nuny resisters would 1\ave accepted alternate semce
if offered a few years ago . but at that time it was
denied .
The cue apinst amnesty
Several arguments ha ve been fired agam s
amnes ty : that amnes t y wtll lead to a fracture of th e
draft structure, presumably a bad thing; that
amnesty for resisters would be unfair to th ose who
died fight ing; and that If there IS an amnaJty
proclamation, the conVIcted war cnrrunal Lt. Calley
should be freed
as he was likewise victimized by
the war.
Calley broke certam laws of war conduct , and
was certainly victimi1.ed and scapegoated b y a
government which required physical combat as a t~t
of patriotism enforced by law . Amnesty ts
.inapplicable in his case on moral grounds, because he

committed murder and did so beyond the "caU o f
duty''-wbereu resisters refused to lcill. The refusal to
kill in all circ umstances is of a higher moral quality
than even killing fo r &amp;ood reasons.
At least two interpretations follow from
"amnesty" crlticiJm number one above. The first ,
" If sranted, amnesty for this war wiU enco urage
resistance to future wars."
Historical and present evidence: sugC3ts a
different view. No t one resister mentioned - to my
lulo wled&amp;e - that his refusal to fi&amp;ht this war
stemmed from past amnest-y proclamations. Even if
some people were aware of former amnesties , they
knew tb e exiaencies or this particular situation
require responses appropriate thereto, even if t h e
form of response is similar to t h e pas t . When t he:
disobedient ac t of resistance was taken, n o o ne based
his ac tion on the hope of amnesty
The other rendition holds : "that men wiU refuse
draft and service now if they can be amnestied ."
This view il valid. For its practical merit ,
therefore, amnesty will be granted - if at all - after
conclusion or ttw war. However. if another war

I I ~~~ I I I

I¢1~~1
.

,.• '

.·' .
,•

•

i.e'

.,,
,

.
,

0

.state Unive1rsity Survey
reveals higl1 enrollment
A survey conducted by the
National Association of State
Universities and land Grant
Colleges listed the State
University of New York first
among all state university ayatems
in the enrollment o f studenU in
the fall of 1971.
The State University o f N ew
Y o rk had
the large s t
und e rgraduate en ro ll ment
(314 ,000 students), the largest
g r aduate enrollmen t {37,000
students) and the largest total
enroll m ent (351 ,000 students).
The Cit y Univers1ty of New
York followed w ath a t o tal
enroUment o f 208,000 students
The University of Wisco nsin and
the U nive rsity of Cal1forn ia we re
nexl with respectave enrollments
of 144 ,000 and 108.500 st uden ts

I~:- I

Increased mrollment

't"

In addition to llsllng the ten
largest state university systems,
the reporl also concluded that
more than two and a h alf miJiaon
of the a pproXJmately nine millio n
students enrolled in the natio n 's
colleges and universities in the fall

•

.

t

No figures were supplied for
pnvale institUtions.

of 1971 attended atate universities
and land grant colleges, which
comprise only 99 of the 2565
colleges and uni versities in
America.
The report claimed that
enrollment in state univenitiea
and land grant colleges increased
5.7% from the fall of 1970 to a
tot al of 2,700,000 students, of
which 2,200,000 ate
undergraduates. The remalnd8··
are graduat e studenta.

Of the total amount enrolled,
75% were said to be fuJl. tuno
rtudentJ.
Freshman enrollment rose only

.32% nat1onally in 1971 from the
previous year, and a leveling o ff of
freshman en r o llm en t was
predicted for the next few yean.
The State University of New York
had 135,000 freshman enrolled,
6 2,000 more than the City
UmverSJty of New York which
had the second highest amounc
The enroUment of the State
University of Buffalo was put at
16,500 undergraduates and 5821
graduate studenu for a total o f
22,321 . Inc luded are 2605
freshmen.

I_I I I I

develo ped too soon afte.r thia o ne, amnesty o r no
amnesty, men (and possibly, women) would refuse
110 fi ght because o f the seem1n ~ fulllity of personal
!iliCrific e for very lillie, if any, benefit
a leMon
ltearned from tlus war effort
To withhold the ch o1ce of total amnesty
lbecause of 1ts unfa11ness to those who fought , 15 to
r::ontinue th e process of vichml zahon, and so would
lbe less fatr when a ti m e t o heal nallon.sl diVISIOns
r::aused by the war has oo111e. If "pat nols" were truly
!inte rest ed in ''fairness," why was there no "alternate
!4tmce'' pro VIded aU alo ng? Also , " no amnesty"
would readil y suggest the "anogance of power and
1right" when, i f fact, llll governments 11re capable of
tenor, especially Ln thts case. perceived more quu.:kly
lby some than o thers
To paraphrase o ne wnt er o n the mattu of
,imnesty. violations of the draft and mtht ary law
r~onstilutc a pollllcaJ offense sn th e sen~e that suc h
.1ct1ons o f war resistance c hallenge J po hltc!al course
of action wluch the government can Implement only
lOy depriVlng a man o f Jus freedom . Consequently,
war resisters compose o nl! of the lo~rgest se~m enb o f
pohtical pnsoners w1thm and wtlhoul lc g . ex1les)
lthe Um t ed States today
To the voter
In an imponant way , the touchstone o t how
democratic a government IS hmges upon the number
of political pnsoners tl ha.~ Incarcera ted 1n o ne form
tOr another. Another mdex is the accessibility o f
means whereby a citazen can exerCISe 1\is or her
political rights and praJerve his o r her moral
1integrit y. An amnesty to war resisters can onJy
1enhan ce our ~ putation of dem ocracy in our own
•eyes, and in thO!le of the peo ples o f o th er nations.
In a press conference o n Nov. 12 . l'i7 1, Ntxon
l&gt;tated unequivocally that he will n ot grant am nest y
1ln more recent public uttcrnaces, his earlier position
was modified : in effect he will entertain the
'·'possibility" of amnesty o nly after the end o f t he
war and a return o f aJJ prisoners of war. We must
!iu pport those c andidates tn the upcoming
Presidential election who call for amnesty in terms
more certain tban as a "possibility." Candidates will.
!bustle votes o nly from the "voting'' sect ors of the
American peo ple. Make your views on amnesty and
the war known. And register t o vote. Then vote.

"Ain10st
toopKI
to be true."
That's what Road &amp; Track said about
the BMW 2002, when they called them
11
the best sedan buy in the world.''
What makes them so good? Ask us for
the free booklet, "33 Reasons Why
BMW is Better." Or ask for the key.
You'll get the mes:sage.

CHECKPOIINT SALES
aliEIIORE IVL

w~~.

IINIII

Advantageous Eun:&gt;pean delivery plan.

Wednesday , 15 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

I

EdiTORiAl

Save the Colleges

The Colleges, threatened so often in the past by political
demagogues, are once again facint a bleak future. This time,
however. the villain is the budget.
We are all aware of the financial plight of this University.
~ograms are being cut and curtailed with . more attention
bet"'ng-gfven to fiscal considerations than educational values.
In the case of the Colleges, they are being singled out for a
cutback far greater in magnitude than any other.
In terms of their line budget, the Colleges are only being
cut by a figure slightly over 5% of their present allocation.
However. when one adds in the monies loaned by
departments and other sources to determine their actual
budget level , the cut becomes a 24% reduction . This is
unthinkable. No established unit could survive the
disappearance of one-quarter of its funds and we are certain
that a fledgling unit is even less able to bear such a cut.
Unless the Administration wishes to see the end of the
Colleges, they must either restore funds directly from the
budget o r work to gather mo nies from alternative sources.
This institution needs the Colleges. Nearly 3000 students
enroll in college courses each semester. If the Colleges ceased
to exist, we do not believe t hat the established departments
would be able to welcome all those students into their
courses. Thus, the Colleges are providing the University with
a necessary service. The Colleges also lend a glimmer of
innovation to a school seemingly bent on standing still or
regressing. With the original scope of Amherst drastically
reduced and our reputation as a forward -looking school
nearly extinct, we need programs of an innovative nature.
We think there is a strong case for fully fund ing all the
Colleges. We have also heard much about this institution's
committment to educational experimentation and growth .
Fran kly, the actions of the administration speak poorly fo r
this comminment. The house, and its furnishings, purchased
by the UB Foundation last summer for President Kener cost
more than the entire budget of the Collegiate System. This is
oor academic innovation.

I
'TMA'rl ONI . . .#

In Jfavor of kibbutz
To th t l:.dlt or
I imagine tha t I ca n be considered o ne or those
J ewiSh st udents on this campus who has been
conned lby the UB Z1onists into supporting
aggression !
Ourin1g the summer of '70 I spent two mo nths
on Nehv Halaned He 1, a kibbutz. 40 km west o r
Jerusalem . The members and workers o f th e k1bbut1
were all IIIP at 3.30 a .m . to wo rk , whether tn the
orch ards, With th e hvesto~k. in the pac lung h ouse, or
10 th e kite: h en. I hate te dwppotnt you, as I kn o w 11
must he a di.Sippo1ntment to you, but there wasn't
an y native• arab c heap day labo r As for being run by
right-wmg politicos, my kibbut z was th e most
politically apathet ic unit I have e ver seen. T he only
t hing that came close to being political we re the
meetings once a week , where reports were given and
measu res were voted o n . Incid entally, isn' t 11 t ru e
that in a truly socialist state, there is supposed to be
a gradual ,elimination of the political system. As for
at being nco-a partheid , there we re more non-JewiSh

Again and again and .. .
This year has seen more conflict between students and
the Faculty-Student Association than ever before. Much of
the blame lies squarely on FSA and its chief o fficers.
Unfortunately, they simply do not learn from the ir
mistakes. The current problem arose o ver purchases from
Centra l Stores. While we can see the FSA justification in
prohibiting Sub Board I fro m purchasing through Central
Stores, there is no justification for extending this black list to
include all student organizations.
FSA has a rather sorry and quite hostile 1mage to
overcome. A little trust and good faith o n their part, instead
of the usual manipulative scheming, would do much to
improve relations between the FSA and the rest of the
Universi ty. Therefore, we urge that until Sub Board I
achieves tax -exempt status, FSA allow the various student
governments to purchase materials from Central Stores. Such
a move would at least indicate the willingness of FSA to
serve its supposed constituencies.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol 22, No 66

Wednesday, 15 Mardi 1972
Editor- rn~ tud

Dt:rtrll\ Ar no ol d
E.ditor AI ll''"'""
Lo MAnl&amp;tn K E.duor Mt~o· l 'PI'"'•'"'
A\il. M10I IJIOI( [ditOt
'tu'-111 Moo"
Bus.ncs\ M1n1grr I"'" 11, ol.111
Advenisons M• n•gcr \u~·"' Ml'llo·ntor\t·
Lo· M•n~K"'II

8ukp1gc
CAmpu~

City
Copy

Am
FtiiU IC

Graphoc Arts

~

Ano\ Ahrcnd
• , .. "'"' A•mo~n
Jdl C.rtcn..,ald
Hu..,oe Kuru
l•no\ Cromer
Ronno Forman
Marty G•tll
Claire Kriegsman
. ' .. Lynd• Ten
.. . . rom l olh

L1yuut

M••\hiiJII

Ruri\ un

AS\1

.... h Jill

Lot &amp; Or" " "
MUSIC
Oft.C 1m pu~

Aut
Pt.oto
Aut
Sports.
Asst

M~Lhdtl ~~l~trlol,lll

I

.Bolly 1\llm•n
Vlllll' ltdt'l(&lt;'l
Vd1.411t

..

Mod.cy O'trrrctdwr
.Kr m !.ArtiU\
. BArr v Ruben
H ow orr'"'"''

Tht SptCir,un •&gt; \Cn.ed by Unoted P r~s l ntrrnatton.il, C..ullc~:c Prh\
Sen.tCr, lhc Los Angeles Times free Press, the Los Angele\ Tom~
Syndoc1te Mid Lober• toon News Servrce.

Rcpu bllcato on of mallet herein wuhout the e"press tonscrll ol tlor
EdiiOf·ln.Chocf os forbidden.
Edlrorloll polrcy

1'

~~de term ined

by the Edotor-in.Chorf.

Page llx . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 15 March 1972

I~

workers than Jewish and there weren't a n y rehg~ous
requirements for membership. Religious cerem onaes
consisting o f tw o weddinas occ urring on the same
day over a two-month period doesn't seem too
o pp ressive t o me. Even t h o u&amp;h I'm n o t sure ab ou t
o ther kibbutzin, mine was self-sufficient with t he
profits being divided among the members. The
t emporary worlcen (I was o ne) received room , wo rk
c l ot h i ng , unl i mited food , santtary supplies,
cigarettes, a nominal salary and a five-day wo rlong
week . The figure of 5% as being the percentage or
co ntnbut1 o n by the lcibbutzin to the llflCultural
o ut put of Israel is larger than that of any d em ocratic
country with an y k ind of communal system. And
t lus percentage is rising. All power to the people
(that's for the a ctivists).
AU I would like to suy 10 cloSln&amp; is that wtu lc I
w as on my kibbutz.. I was al peace and am w ith th e
land and the people I luved 1t t h ere. And I w15h I
could have stayed

Robert C. Roufllhal

For lVhat it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
I was u n rn y way up to the o ffi ce this a fl ~rnl')un,
walkmg along in a perfectly good m ood . when it hit
me . Then : I was, tn the middle o r a Bu rra lo heat
wave, b~mg :showe red w 1th fro7t:n rain . It was at lhllt
moment tlhal I dec1ded th e top1c for lh1s column It
1\ not a n•!W uJea
1ndecd every pe rson I h ave met
In thts \:lt 't' h.ss at one t101e ur .soother voi~.:ed "mtlar
l~ehngl&gt;

If I h.ad to make up a sub h ead for thas t.Oiurnn
11 wouh.l be Bufralo
1 h e Mud and Slop Capital of
the Wo rld . I 'm certam th ere must he :some reuec mm!\
values to t.h1s ca ty , 11\just lhat in the four yeari'i l'vr
heen here , I haven' t disnwercll any That IS not t t l
say tha t l ht:rt: aren't man y unt&lt;JUC aspects to lhc
Buffalo li restyle (I was gomg to say l"UII ure , h u t
~omeh ow th at word JUSt d•&gt;esn' t seem to apply) Jiad
I not come to Burfalo, I wo uld never h ave ea t e n d
roast beet on kmun elwe~.:k, hut t hen again. I would
also nl"ver have smelle\.1 Lake Ene, been governed by
fran k Sedata, 01 ndden \.~ own Maan Sl In a dogsled
A lot of people through out th l\ land have made a
\t:rtes nf ~.n1de rem arks abuut Burfalo w1thout ever
havmg VISited 11
well, I 've been here qui t e a while
and I can ..:onfarm I hat B uflo~lo de~erves eve ry one
of those snidc remark~ .
Buflalonaans lend l u make surnct lung oul or tlw
'lut:t' thai this IS th e scl·u nd largest ..:at y in New YtJrk
State Th.at, however. " o lallaly . Buffalo isn't the
'nund latge!&gt;t t: IIY tn the s t.uc:
at 's t he b1gges1 h1d.
l•lwn I rnean, where else would the mayor have
,·ume •lUI an formal dres\ lu altcnd the closang of the
niJ burle~;quc hall I reallte that the Palace 1s t h e
\:Uitura l center of th1s city, but somehow tt JUSI
d oesn't seem nght
fill tng, but not right Buffalo
as having fl e n ry Marcott e and l rv Wetnst ein doing the
news (or more accurately d o ing in the news) so you
turn on channel four mstead because tt almost
resembles a proressional news program and the
second st t:&gt;ry o n the s po rts is a high school swim
meet. Buffalo means having the largest single group
o f incompetent sportscasters and ne wme n th is s 1de
o f Chns Schinkel. Sund ay rught's news IS always th e
most fun
watchang Harry Webb (w ho would even
be boring anno un ctng the end of the Vietnamese
Wa r) tryii1g to reach o ur hearts with 50rne touching
story about the Saturday ni&amp;ht dan ce at the Sons of
Koscuisko Hall . Or t h ere's always th at exc1t1ng ep1c
the AM rad io news. In this game you have t o wade
through elleven fires, four ra pes, SJX murd ers and the

thert o r $42 fro m a filhng station to finl.l out thlll
the Russian s have invaded Czech oslovakia.
Then t he re's the weather I promise to rt:lraan
from USing any of the o ld va ud evi lle Jokes about
Wes te rn New Y ork 's weath er
the truth is funntc:r
anyway Now it is no t true 1hat Bulfa lo does nul
have a summer. In fa ct you ca n al way~ tell when that
season h as co m e beca use t hat 's when 1t's war111
e nough to walk o ut 10 the ram I he only thang I
reaJiy resent ab out B uffalo'~ damat e IS the extra
t.:Ou ple o r hundred dollars I've h ad to spend on
dot hes The re 's only ~o m u ch m ud a pa1r of pants
ca n absorb. This is aJso the only place 10 the cou ntr y
th at h as t o rebuild tls e ntire haghway system every
spnng. About t he only tlung that co uld prevent t he
poth oles in the Bu ffalo streets woull.l be movmg
lhe m to M1ami. Inst ead of building a d omed
stadium , they should just b Uild a dome over Buffal(l
Then we h ave t h at epiiOme or m eptilude, the:
Buffalo Common ('ou n ctl. An yon e who has never
atte nd ed a Counctl mee trng cannot begin to
app reciate the en t ertaanment lbat ts be1ng miSSed
Nol o nly IS it funnaer than th e Circus. tt 's cheaper
too 1 h ere are certam pre parations whi ch every
Clllten sh ould make before attendmg a sho w f1rsl,
o ne must remember that no scorecards are
dL~t nbut ed at the meettng. This e&lt;~ n be a defanatc
drawback since from m any co rners of the gallery the
members' nam eplates are not easil y readable, Thas IS,
In rea.lity. o nl y a sbght problem . There are only two
key players
Alfreda S lo m inski and Ray
Lewando wski. Once you have 1de nh fied th em you
are an good pos1tion to enJOY the show Mrs
Slomrnskt IS easily recogn izable, bemg the only
female on the Coun ciJ (femaJe wllat?). Uncle Ray ts
also eastly identified - he IS the ro ly poly one w1th
the shin y scalp. Having memoriz.ed these reatures,
you wlll be ready t o watch the sh o w .
1r you are ve ry lucky the principals may
re-create so me o r the ir award-winning performances.
Mrs. Slominski was awarded a gold sausage last faJ I
for her t hrilling half hour d ebate of a pro posal wttich
had n ot yet been bro ught up befo re the Coun cil.
When mformed o r h er error, sh e replied , "oh." Ray's
greatest performance, acted o ut during t h e 1969-70
season . won the acclaim of Council watch ers
everyw here. In response to a roU call vote, t he
Ma&amp;hty Lewandowski spun his c hair around t o face
the audience, leaned back and decla;-ed : " No! No! I
vote no on everything!"
Arter the show be sure to ao out for a cappicola
submarine and a beer. Afte r a U, this is BurfaJo .

�Inept critique

Another plug for Lev

To the Edilo,.

To

f or his effon in reviewing "Out at Sea,"
Bernard Mendura should float away. In the conte xt
of the review the recapttu.Jation of the play in the
male gender served n o thing but to further male
~bauvi_nism . After Ill, the rehashing o f the plot in
Itself t.s not the purpose of a review. What were the
co ncrete crillca5ms made by Mr. Mendwa? It was
stated that "there was somethina wro npeaded
about the effort" but he fails t o bring out any
concrete crih cl!ms in this area. Mr. Mendwa
obviously knows little about theatre. H e gives his
own idea of the content o f the play but fails to cat c h
any of th e political nuances involved , In addi tion,
the fact that each dire~:tor must have leeway in the
mdividual interpreta t ion of a play is 1gnored.
Any dtrector worth her salt doesn't st art o ut
w1th an explicit idea o f what sh e w1sbes to work out
and each viewer must be willi ng t o deal with the
mterpretation being presented. In referen ce t o the
most gauche t·ommen t of all - Ms. Flaum d1d not
turn Thin into a nymph , she played T hin as a woman
and after al l women do tak e o ff their nylons to wash
then fe e t . 0bV1oualy " there was sometbtng
thoroughly miSta ken an\1 wrongheaded about the
ctfott" to revu:w this production

Ruthrllrfl l.nenbaum

Halstead not helped
1u tht• bt111ur
On Thur.•lay mght , March 2nd I had the
pleas ure to Vlt'W A Clu&lt;' l.. M11Jfk Orungt at Ctnema I II
was a p rev1ew ~~ 1cen1ng, as 11 offiCially opens M1mh
lrd . I th()ught the m nv1e wu tremendous - th1s
however, IS no t a movte revie w Upon leaving th~
the-11ter, after the conc lus1on of Clockwork t
humped in to one llf my most favontc people
~he
hon o rable Fran!. Sed1to T'his was our conversataun
vcrhll lllll .
Me What dad you lhlllk of the uwv1r. ~~~·!
Mr M.1yor \RA/Y 1
Me Is tha t .~JI?
Mr Ma yut ll..t\1 tu bt •HI (0\&amp;l nt• I&lt;• wnlt· ttl
Me O h rully ?
Mr Mayo r l'hat 's n(lhl 1
t:. ~1t Mr Mayor
Yc,., m y fnenda, let u' all remrmhcr th~ ~truu~
uf M.t~ter S tllnky Kutm• k itS w e vu:w ht~ h1h•s1
m;~sterpaecc 1 An\1 let 11~ Jhn remembe r lht· wmdc; of
u\H hclovcd m.t Vt&gt;r
.t tll•"t formtrl.thlc t:nt K'
I. Htl A 1/lrl'llll

th~

Editor:

execrable action last week , they've brouaht Lev to
the Public Eye. If enough people aet the word, he
Reprdin&amp; Harvy Lipman's final words on Lev in , may be pven hit true post in Ufe : o n isst meye~ tur
the 8 March 1972 column: Wood u bye uh you u d
ash kole ektorr.
Consider thoe al ternative. How we ever let a
kahr fruhm this mann?
post-Yippie ripoff kitsch artist into o ur midst is
Headline : Lev ruhn in&amp; four ec those sue perv
a.mazing. There have been some dandy animals in the
eyesing edd itt or: aw ft.s moovd two sigh gone. If be
Norton Zoo, but Lev tops them all. If only we could
wins, it may solve House Council's problems.
find a decent cago~ . .
And if that fails, isn't there a petition drive to
buy rum I one-way ticket t o Resolute?
Pat Maloney
Ble&amp; the Executive Comm ittee. By their

East meets west
T(l the Editor
Th~ Spectru m . of 3/ I /72 earned a letter by
Abu·Ayyash thankma t he pape1 for its objectivi ty
"by giving both sides of the story of the
Arab-Zionist con.flict to be di!J cussed o n 1ts pages."
Yet that very dtscussJon was lacking in that very
category
•
Abu - Ay yash contends that Z1omsm and
Arab1sm could be likened to Ktpling's phrase o f
''Fast is East and West is West, and never the twaJn
shall m eet" I strongly disagree with that anaJogy.
I f Abu-Ayyash has read the papers recently ,
l:.ast and West hal'«' mt'f 1n the fo rm of the N1xon
v1s11 lo ma1nJand Chtna. Though hoth sides read1ly
admll that the gulf between thetr resped1ve
tdeolopes IS quite wtde, they tune, nevertheless.
undertaken an effurt to ameuorate those
mtsunderstand1ngs that turn friends mto dogmata ~.
enem1u
All th;~t IS aske•l as for the Arab states and Israel
to tr'Y to make o~n dfnrt l l' rl!l.o lvc then twenty-four

ro rlw 1-.drtor
I .~m awlJrt" that the wues to nternlng t he
.1ppumtmen t ,,f Or. Saxon Gra ha m t1nd the verbal
abuse s ustained by Dr. J ohn tlalstead are not samtlar ~
howeve r , rt pleased me to read ahou t the lOnfid en c.:c
members ot 1he Soctolo gy Department have fo r Dr
Graham
What IS incrcdrble to me JS that none of Or
Halst ead's colleagues, Ill my knowledge, 1n the
l ltstory Department h11ve pubhcly supported l)r
lls lstead even though they ml.l5t know tn good
l.'on science that their colleague does not d eserve th ~!
verbal 11nd wntten abuse he has been subJected to
I do not believe that Or Halstead IS .tn
lmpemsJist o r a rac1st If another member of the
lhs t ory Department l$ smgled out ro r harassment
this summer , I wonder who 1t will be Or l1vcly') Ur
tlonon? Or Pleseur or Or tf uhcka?
Jt&gt;rrv I' 1-uhn

Job well done
/'u the Ed11ur

I would l1ke to publicly thank the GSA fo r a job
weU d one. Up until a w~k ago many graduate
students who teach in MiJlard Fillm o re College were
not receiving tbe full amount of th eir contracted
salaries for this ltCademic year. This was due in part
to Nixon's wage price freer.e followed by the state
freeze o n st ale em ployee salanes. Neither freete
sh ould have affe~ted the MFC teaching salaries, for
grad uate students have been paid $840 per course by
MFC for some years now . The State 's bungljng o f
tlus affair, here and tn Albany , has ca used much
ftnanciaJ hardship o n many graduate st udents The
GSA struggled through the bureaucratic mau and
has succeeded in obtaining our salary due retroac tive
as of Nov 14 Once apin. thanks.
/krel SpiiiQ ck

Paul M K.adt

Makes for good reading·
To the £tlitor
First h:t me congratulate yt1u t&gt;n your ltnt:
:ut1de on WarTBlt ReSIStam.e(Ma.r.-ho , p .1 ) Thls1s
a unique fo rm o f non·v1o lcn t ac tion Whtl' h dc:sc:rves
~·onstderallon by all electronjc.: ruppers (sr c ).
One minor hang-up tn refusing the telepho ne
C:XClliC tax , vir .• wntmg the requued vote g~vtng
reaso ns, can be overcome by indudtng a little ~:~rd
ava1la ble m qu11flhty from War J ax R eStSIIIrll;c. '\ W

II the addrc:ss loot..s fa nulwr . at ~hould It abo
belo ngs l o WIN Mo~ta:rn e whk h ha!&gt; recently
puhbqhed the en ltre F .B.I. file\ npped-ofl rrorn toe
Mcd1a PA brunc h hy the ttflples. ThiS makes for
fasdnallnp. rea\JLnp. if one sees th e glo nous f'. S.I
laking lime aff tram fighttng th e drug pro blem, the
Mafia, th e 'PIC~ , ~~ t l , t u spy o n ~:oUege kids.

Peace
John Corcoran

A.rwc Prof o{ /'111/otophy

Lafayette St • 'N Y . N,Y I 00 12.

A list for rent
To rht hltlllf

Sedita 'rates'

year conn1ct. At the same ti me, one moat not uk
eith er party to make co ncewo ns before negotiations
ever bcpn . It ill totally absurd to expect Israel to give
back all o f the territory setzed in the '67 war in
exc hange for a mer~ promiu to talk. for, if lm1el
did do this, there would not be any further reason
for t h e Arabs to talk , thus maintaining tensions as
the y now exist with even a greater propensity for
o pen conflict.
The people of Israel do not need to be
instru cted o n the evils of genocide The J ews'
txistence ha) been a lustory wrought with acts of
tyrann~ perpetrated aga m st their people. They wish
11 ne1ther upon I h emselves nor on theu fellow man .
In condus1 o n , the attitude expre&amp;ed by
Abu-A yy;hh IS tnd1ca uve o f the very atntude that
wtll probably ~pa.rk an o ther war 1n the Middle East .
Israel stands ready to negntrate for peace. I n n cerely
ho pe that the A rah govNnntcnts haven't diScarded
thiS sane \·oursc o f oct ton

Altl·r l'Xt1n11n1n~ the d.t~\llit•t.l ad!&gt; o n Wed I w.t~
tol.tlly dl\ llli!Yl'll upon re.ad111g Jn &lt;~ll 1ndut.IL'cl un.ler
API' flH Ren t
The enemy~~ Jntong u.' Yc'
for JUst SS you
r.tn he the proud vwner o f a list ol IU land l ord~
som e n l who m have more than o ne house In BuffJin
w tl!tll It! ;tudcnt~• Well, at thts pnce you can gel
fi ne Ia ndl o rd 's nome for 'iO
Jlld if you are lucky
he' ll be one o f th e some who has more than Clnc
hnuse o r apt t u rent ! (One-te nth of a landlord fo r

s..

llnlurtunulely we nnc.t J'JY extremely htg/1 rent
.tnd h o w w ~ 111u~t ... o ntcnd wtth the llkcs nf Ahc.:
Sllvermar• o~nd ulhnrt\ MJ 1·:!'1(1.:! wh u ar e charging
people w fiuJ I hcse ex~..eocslvt" l y ~!xpc n stve b10ken
tlown 'helte~ 1
By I h~ hy he~:au~l! ul Ym.ll vt~ll to my apt.
Alt ~c. we hJve go tten calls fro m l'ounlless numbers
ul pct•fllc v. ho have ruid you SS All l&gt;f these people
t:an 't re nt m y Jpt fpr next ycar So . why th e hell 1f
you arc gum!( 111 1(11 tntu a piggt~h hureaucratic
hus1ness, why not tw tHKllllized' Wait to see if lhr
nptlo, ynu "ret•ttlllmCrHI" ar&lt;- r en t~d'

S. I 0.)
It

IS

(;ail Chermak

very unfortunate that th e p1gs arc wathan

Many ways to waste
1, th«' Ftlrtor

I have hc.~rd sevcrlll people complaunnt?, ahout
the recent Student ASSOCiation acunn to all m.a t e
$5 ,000 to Mtcho~el levm son for a trip to V1etnam
(,ran ted, SA shoul\1 not be Cllteless wath
~tudt:nl rund~. but who's WliStlng what? lfo w many
um cs havt e1e~.-t1ons and referend ums on tl\ ~
Campus heen determmed hy o nly a smaJJ pert:entage
u r st udent"? Ho w many times have important sch ool
wues been tgn o red by the student body to be
grappled w1th by only a few ? li o w m•nY t imes have
stude nts stond 1dle while worthwhile fa culty have

h~·cn \t:nl un their WAY'' ll u w rnany 11m~ has apdthy
heen th e ~ul.es.dul toul o { the Admm1strat1o n?
In short , tht: St udenl Assoc1allon ac ted just as
.. a rel~sly , Jll~t dS apathetically , and just as
unthought fully as the enhre student body acts ever}
day. thereby ma kmg S.A a trucly representative
body of the stud cnts l'he Student Assoetation may
be wa.sttng money , but o~pathy and mac tion ts by far .
mo re waste than mere money.
Sn please, h1efo rc you start b1tchtng about S A
as~ yuursdf wllo's wut1ng what , and get tnvolved.
Mark Wrgtil

Halt anti -Semitic acts
Tu tht El'dirur

The vandalism and harassment at Chabad House .
as reported recentl y in The Spectrum . co ntmues
with almost weekly incidents
We, the members o f the Council o f UB Campus
M1n1stries reprcsenti ns both JewiSh and Christian
cnns11tuenc1es on ca mpus, deplo re these obvious acts
of ant1·Sem ittsm .1nd anti-religion and seek their

dlsco nunuat1o n While th ere l.l. no reason to suspect
that Untversu y students have been involved in tbe
vandalism, we plead with aJJ UB personnel and
JUdlt:at o nes t o use thnr good influence, example and
powers o f perswtsion in the surrounding community
t o brin&amp; these a&lt;:ts o f prejud1ce and desecration to a
halt
Rev. Arlu J. Nau, Con11ener
(.'(llm cll o{ VB Compw Mrnutriu

Wednesday , 15 March 19,72 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�Cohen interVieW

The University two yean .,o wa a .err. ftfY
different place both poJjticaiJy u d academically.
Could you aort of broadly outline how tbe
University hu chaqed academJcaDyT We were
110ina to be t he "Berkeley of the Eut., and we were
up and comma, and it teema to be R&amp;patinJ now.
What l understand you to be llyin&amp; is
something that l tend to aaree with. That is that
the aspirations of the University. in terms of a place
of academic stature, too many people here seem
very dj(ferent today from what it was two or,
actually even more than that, two or four or even
ten years ago.
In the late 1950's the University here was a
smaller University but aimin&amp; to be very good ;
aiming at excellence in the kinds of thinp it was
aspiring to do. When we became part of the state
system, I think those aspirations then shifted and
we were aspiring to do s till more and were working
towards doing it . I think this went on through the
60's as a matter of fact. with people in a sense
feeling that this was no t something that was
impossible.
So, lots of people were looking to make, if not
a "Berkeley of the East" or something like that , at
least a Univemty center an which there were
exciti ng students, interesting st udent s.
heteroaeneous groups of students, exciting faculty ,
an in teresting
heterogeneous fa c ulty, and so on
place to be.
We did mo ve an tlus d1rechon . in the sense that
this is what people were looking toward until
maybe two years or so ago. Certainly over the last
two years one sees rather a marked shift 1n what
people tlunk the UnaversHy can come to be. I do
not necessarily attribute ttus to a p.~rllcular
president, lilte Ketter for example, of the
University. I think it has broader significance.
It relates partly to c hanges which have taken
place in higher educat1on throughout the country,
and the kind of support that higher education is
getting. It certainly has partly to do with the degree
to which the controlling forces an New York State,
legislators and so o n. and people of New York
State, have had experience with a major state
universJty
For example , I don't tlunk the SUNY s ystem
and the State of New York is ready. at tlus point,
to try to make - and let's not even use what I I feel

is a silly phrue like "Berkdey of the East" - but I
don't thinlc they have a conception of tbe kind of
thing of a, let's say a University of Wisconsin or
University of Michigan, University of Kansas; some
of the m~or state universities.
At places lilce that, the state umversity IS a
sipdficant and intrinsic part of the life of most of
the people in the state, most of the legislators will
have gon!l to the state university. This is their thing,
and we don't have that kind of tradition in New
York State. And while there was a significan tly
areater amount of support from resources for
higher education in this country, and in New York
State, we could move In the directio n of reaching
that point.

"/ am pessimistic about where the
Univenily is going today. I wo"y ab01#
whether thi.J UnitJenity has peaked. in a
~nse of how far Is it going to get to be a
significant Univenity. "
But . . we did not quate get far eno ugh before
that whole th1ng c hanged and we don't have
eno ugh o f the tr.o~d1tio n and the backlog. to
contiuue getting it. As a result , I think tha t if o ur
model is the kmd of thing that we we re looking a t
three or four years ago. I thmk th11t we have to fac t
11 that we' re no t gomg to make at.
Now , the question though wo uld be, is Lh11t the
appropriate model? Maybe by today's standards
those kinds of thmgs are passe. Maybe we should
not have been trying all along, to be that kind of
umversity. The question IS. when are we gmng to sat
down and try to figure o ut what kmd of place we
do want to be. I think we have a lot of mi xed
aspirations now. So that those people whose
a major university
asparation was towards
center are IJadually , not so gradually really,
quickly, becoming more and more dtSappOinted
with this place.
It seems to me that we've reached the pmnt
where we've got to decade m a signaficant sort of
way . not 1n terms of spec1fi cs or even perhap:.
tnvialaties, what 1S 11 that we want thlS University
to become. I mean , for exampte, do we want a
place to develop a place where for example there's

State of the Unl
&amp;Jitor'l not~ : 11'111 Wedn~sdlly marb the 1ec011d
annivenary of 45 Fticulty m~mb~n who w~r~
arr~st~d conductiDK 11 Hayn HaU lit-in to
demand th~ r~moval of 400 Buffalo police from
the campus. It u hard for today) Univerzlty
occupanll to lfJUigin~ th~ events that could l~od
to such a 1iiW1tion.
In •n att~mpt to undentartd how and why
th~
Univ~nity
lws chanKed, The Spectrum

an in teresting a nd bright and inteUectualJy
orie:nted , inteUectual both including arts and
sciences and a lot o f other thinp. Do we want this
kind of place, and 1f so how can we best go ·about
getting it? It's a matter, really, of trying to figure
o ut what are we going to do at this point , in the
develo pment o f thlS University .
Presently the University ~ enaaaed in I
se lf -study endeavor for Middle Sta t u
Accreditation. Do you think that will solve the
question?
No I don't thmk we're answering the nght
questaons there. I think as is o ften the case m those
kinds o f stud1es, they end up with a lot of
plalltudes, general statements. . .. J don't think
thai's the kind of overaU plan that's gmng to really
get at the kinds o f tlungs we want to do It's the
kind of tlung really that is go mg to have to mvolve
lots of fa culty and student and administration
disc u..;saon about what kind of place do we want to
get to be
Pan of tbe c hange in cllmate today cont rasted
With several years ago, of course, is the c hanae an
climate that all universities are recogniung. We're:
not that dafferent he re. There were stude nts with a
mut:h more act1ve concern an politics and the
runnmg of the Uruversity. Uruversity affatrs and
Univenuty governance, a few years ago then they
are no w. And I'm sure lots o f anaJysts and
yourselves certainly have given thought as to what
accounts for this d iffe rence.
Is 11 that they were frightened o ff finally when
people go t shot at and killed IJke at Kent State and
Jaclcson'l Is at that finally they recognize that the
community was unwilling any longer to put up
wit h what they tho\.llhl were college stud ent
" sh enamgans" or something? I don' t know what
rhe factors were. AlJ we do kn ow, thou&amp;h, IS that
at's pretty conSistent throu&amp;}lout the country ; at
was not something that happened specifically at
Buffalo, that is, the sudden dro p in the kmd o f
act1on movements I suppose what it means IS that
the students found that they were not goang to be
suc&lt;:essful 1n a meamngful way . I doubt that , by the
way·, I think there were a number of successes I
ttun1 k that there were changes an un1versittcs
throughou t the country as a result of some of that
action penod .
Could you be specific about these changes?
Some of them are perhaps too speca fi c and
tnvqaJ but I think aJI you need do l5 consader four
yens ago , to what degree was there partiCipation
for example o f students in c urnculum p lanmng?
You can find instance after instance o n th1s campus
now an wluch there are students o n curnculum
co rnmatrees o f departments You can find mstance
after Instance o f wluch students are on significant
search committees for admimstra tave offices. This
JUSt wasn 'I (yo u kn o w II doesn 't seem lllc:e much
tod.ay) t here a number of years ago.
Let 's switch the aubject a Little bat , mor~
towards administration, the idea o r administration .
Do you think the good ..tministrator ia the one
who is capable o f handUna aU the day to day wort
which maaht erose hiJ desk and therefore does do
that!, or is he the one who is involved with proarams
in the future md asserts what ia beina caUed
inteUectual leadership?
That sounds IJke a very rheto n cal question
For o ne thmg, of course, you know there are
different levels of admmistrahon . Somebody's got
to keep the place running. It may be several levels
down 1n the admimstration, but somebody had
betl!er be doing thttt. otherwise, II 's not going to
allow the rest of !lungs to happen.
Aareed. Asaumina tbe higher administrator can

deh~pte certain cuties if be wilhes to lower levela

I ra Cohen
r

Page eight. The Spectrum . Wednesday, 15 March 1972

or administration. Should this be done? If it's
posllible7
I thmk cert;unly so because there's so many
thintgs that have to be done by an administrator
that he's not going to ever get around to doing the
kind of things t hat will make a real difference in
the cUmate o f a place (in the ru~ture of the
University that you have); if he must devote aU of
his time to taking care of these day to day details.
-continued on Pa9e 1o-

intervi~wed
m~mben on

severo/ administroton ond faculty
The State of The University. These
inttrlliews will be pnnttd in this we~k '.r editions.
Appeanng todav are the remarks of the
former provo.r t of Social Sciences and
Administration, Ira Cohen. and the d~an of
Undergraduate Stutl1t.r. Charles Ebert. Both were
interviewed at fenvh by CompuJ Editon Jo ·Ann

Ebert inte

Two years •ao when we fint did Stat~ oftlte
Univtfliry, it would be safe to say that the
atmosphere of the University was very , very
different. Both students and faculty were more
concerned and more vocal about campus concerns
and about national issues. To what can you
attribute this ch•nae. if you do recoaniu that such
a chmae exists?
Well, the change exasts as you have s tated and
t he issues that ,ue J.llll wath us have no t necessanly
fallen sof t. but I th1nk thcit all people realize, both
adminastrat1on and faculty and ~t udents and the
o thers, that the means of c hangang or tackling , the
assues were nut tht' nght ones. So I feel that the
nots of the 1~70, for example, and the unrest at
Be rkeley, and the unrt:sl here on campus really
proved to us thJ! people should talk to each o ther
but not throw rods at each other. Regardless, I
mean th1s could be ta ken literally or symbo hcaJJy .
And I thank 11 IS lhas maJOr change thQI has
occurred Some nf the 1ssue~ I he heve have been
solved. Some arc prubably still w1th us. Bu t there·~
never a status 4uo, eatha an a society or an a
University . and I feel s1mply that there ·sa constan t
nux of change gomg on And I feel that some
people have g~vrn up on some of the 1ssues And
some of the assues have !leen solved. And some of
the ISSUes are ~1111 dormant. Samply a different
attitude an soi'VIItg them
Sreaking 10 ~eral other fa culty members an
respec t to the chanae in atmosphere, two people
expreued the o pinion th1t , okay, we're glad that
there ian 't 1ny more violence o r 11ny more people
beiDa hurt but there w•s an ;n•e'l· c u I ferment!
The University knew that it was aUve, and they
criticized the prHrnt day Uninnity , 1972, as
beina dull and de1d and not beina able to outrage
students or faculty anymore because students or
faculty didn 't think that the University was worth
its efforts.
Well, I don·l lhtnk you have to be outraged to
be intellectuo~lly stam ulat t:'d . The Umversaty per se
is never dull, only peopk are dull And I feel that if
you have an ext atang mstructor, tf you have an
excatmg semmaa af you have mtelllgent students
who challenge. II you have a good g~ve and take
regardless of where rt occurs, you don't have to he
o utraged
I get outrag~d when I look ill what as gomg on
m our s&lt;&gt;&lt;.:aety I ~~ outraged when I look at o ur
problems of pullutaon of water. 1 work an these
f1elds. I get outraged when studen ts fmd a ~:our~.e
boring and show ctnly up for examinatio ns. because
the very thmg. lm cxJmple , they datm that they
are grade co n~w1u~ Well tf they only show up for
the exammataon thrn why don't they show up for
the discussaons, tbr lettures. and these sort uf
thinp.
No, I th1nk you lauuot say across the board,
JUSt because the l naver\lty ts qu1et. tha t 1t 1s
boring. We havl" h0&lt;1l.\ We have people We have
mmds. You l·annol gJuge or you cannot measure
the exc1tement nf the Unaversity necessanly by the
number of peuple who march around carrymg
SJgns. Or by fa .. ulty member~ sattmg m the room or
these sort of thmgs I thank It IS the true total
mteUectuaJ growth of !he Unrvers1ty
What prevents yuu. lm example, to participate
m a seminar , an a dtSlu~ron group? Many fore1gn
umversilles, for exJmple have clubs that meet
voluntanly. Be It an the Sov1et Un1on - they have
mathematics clubs, baology clubs and God knows
what other kinds of dubs you have. And they meet
usually late 1n the Jfternoo ns on Saturdays
wathout cred1t by the way . And they solve
problems an the laboratory. they have debatmg
societies and these krnds of !hangs. No thing should
prevent you from doang t h1s
Now when you go lu Norton Un1on , you see
sometimes excited dL~cuss1ons goang o n , 1n some
comers, some days at\ ~;o mplete ly quiet and dull,
no thing happens. And I was kind o f perturbed just
1n The Spectrum, I thank two days ago, unless it
was yeste rday when at came o ut , there was a
s tudent who sJgned h1s httle letter to the editor by
" Bored Stiff "
Now to me 11 1S a terrable admission - how can
anyone be "bored stiff" an the world that we live

�r the University
d
e
o

")'
d
)'

n

In terviewed se11eral adminiJtraton and faculty
memben on The State of The University. These
lnterlltt!ws will be pnnted in this week :Seditions.

Armao and Jeff Greenwald. BeCilwe of space
problems and the length of the intervtews. their
comments do not appear in total.

Appearing tuday are the remark.r of the
for m er provoJt of Social Sciences and
Administration, Ira Cohen, and the dean of
Undergraduate Studtes. Charles Ebert. Both were
Interviewed at len~th by Campus Edflon Jo·Ann

The Spectrum would like such faculty
opinion to be a regular feature. Any faculty
member who would like to contribute m any
way, should c(ln ta rt The Spectru m,
Edltor-m-chie[.

Ebert interview

Two years ago when we first did State of the
it would be safe to say that the
atmosphere o f the University was very, very
different. Both students and faculty were more
concerned and more vocal about campus concerns
and about national issues. To what can you
attribute this chanae. if you do recoaniu that such
• c hange exists?
Well, the chang~: ex1sts as you have stated and
t he issues that are ~ti ll with us have not necessanly
fallen soft , but I thmk thlll all people realize, both
admtntStratlon and faculty dnd students and the
Others, that the meJn.\ of changJng Or tacldmg, the
1ssues were nut the nght ones So I feel that the
riots of the I ~7()\ for exam ple, and the unrest at
Berkeley , and 1111· unrest here on campus really
proved to us th.tl people should talk to each other
but not throw r•~~:ks at each other Regardless, t
mean thts could he taken literally or symbolically
And I thm~ 11 IS th1s major change thai ha!&gt;
occurred. Soml! uf the 1ssues I believe have been
solved . Some dTc probably still Wllh us. But there's
never a status fiUO , e1ther m a soc1ety or 1n a
Umvers1ty, and I feel s.~mply that there's a constant
nux. of change f\&lt;ltog on . And I feel that some
people have g1ven up on some of the tssues. And
some of the 1ssues h.tve been solved . And some of
the 1ssues are sllll dormant S1mply a different
altllude an solvang them
Univer~ity,

Sreakinll to •~eral other faculty members m
respect to the chan&amp;e in atmosphere, two people
expreaed the opm10n that , okay, we're 11lad that
then~ i.ln 't any mOfe violence or ~tny more people
beina hurt but thl'fe w•s an lnte'J · c u I ferment!
Tbe University k.ntw that it was alive, and they
criticized the pre~ent day Unlvemty , 1972, as
beina duU and dead and not beina able t o o ut raae
students o r faculty anymore becauK students or
(acuity didn 't think that the University was worth
its efforts.
Well , I don 't thank you have to be outraged t o
be mtellectually ~llmulated The Umvers1ty per se
IS never dull, nnly pt'Ople are dull And I feel th.tt .r
you have an ell~atmg anstructor, 1f you have an
exc1tang semmar, af you have Intelligent students
who challengt. af you have a good give and take
regardless of where 11 occurs, you don't have to be
outraged .
I get outraged ~hen I look Jt what 1s gomg on
an our soc1ety I get outraged when I look at our
problems of pollu tmn of water, I work 10 these
fields. I get outraged when students ftnd a coun.e
bonng and show only up for examinations, because
the very thmg, f,tr example , they cla1m that they
are grade consuous Well 1f they o nly show up for
the examtnatto n then why don 't they show up for
the d1SCUSSIUO!I, tht le,·tu res, and these sort nf
th1 ngs.
No , I thtnk yuu l annol say across the board.
JUSt because thr I mvers1ty as qu1et. that It IS
bonng. We have honk~ We have people . We have
m1nds You cannut gJuge or you c annot measure
the e.Jtcl tement o f the llnavers1ty necessanly by the
number of peorle who man:h aro und carrymg
signs Or by facultY members Sllttng m the room or
these sort of thml:!&gt; I thmk 11 IS the true total
mtellectual gro wth ot the Un1vers1ty
What prevents yuu , for example, to participate
10 a seminar, 10 a dasl U&amp;SIOll group? Many fore1gn
universities, for exumple, have clubs t hat meet
voluntarily . Be it 10 Lhr Sov1et Un1on - they have
mathematics clubs, haolugy clubs and God knows
what other kinds o f dubs you have. And they meet
usually late 10 the Jfternoons on Saturdays
Without credit by the way. And they solve
problems in the laboratory, they have debatang
societies and these kands of thmgs. Nothing should
prevent you from d01ng th1s.
Now when you go to Norton Un1on, you see
sometimes exc1ted d~LUSSJons go10g o n , in some
comers, some days II\ completely quaet and dull,
nothing happens. And I was kind of perturbed just
in The Spectrum. I thank two days ago, unless it
was yesterday when it came out, there was a
student who signed ht~ httle letter to the editor by
"Bored Stiff."
Now to me it IS a temble adm1ss1on - how can
anyone be ''bored st 1ff " tn the world that we live

in, whach IS so terribly overloaded Wi t h problems
that every smgle day you feel like screammg out
and pabbing these problems and working on
these? How can he be "bored stiff?" So m other
words, I use 11 o nly as 111 example, so I feel that
our Umvers11y - I'm teach rng fuU time and I
cannot see any difference 10 the types of quest1ons
or the ktnds of disc uss1ons which my students
generate in my particularly smaller classes, that has
JOY change .

We'd like to talk to you about your role as an
administrator There are a couple o f different
philoBOpbies about just what an administrator
should do. Some feel the aood administrator is the
o ne who handles all the day-to-day work that
comes throuafl his desk, you know , which is
admittedly a needed function for someone. Othen
feet the administrator ahould take the role more of
what I'U caU an intellectual leader, an academic
innontor, whatever. How do you feel?
Well , I can't agree more with what you JUSt
said . I think an admm1strator 1f you take it
laterally, you admtntster And , for example, you
admin1sttr a pohcy that IS set through channels,
comm1ttees. Faculties, and what have you not, but

". . . In The Spectrum . . . there wm a
who signed his lell~r 'bored
!iliff. · Now to m~ It is a terrible
admission. How can anyone be 'bored
stiff In the world that we u~ in, which
is so terribly overloaded with problems
tlult e11ery sinKie day you fe~l Uke
ureomlng out and grabbing th~se
probl~ms and working on tht&gt;Se'~ How
can he be 'bored stiff'?"
stud~nt

Charles Ebert

leadership can be exerted in many ways, by
talkmg, by makina a point, by pushang people, by
placmg a problem ~quarely on the t able and s11yang
"Now look at it, what are you gomg to do?"
Or you take a very passive role and react Now
I 'll teU you very frankly 1! I would v1ew the role of I couldn 't do th1s. I personally couldn't rc:act. I
the admm1strator only as that , d.\ a pencil -pusher have t o at least throw out suggestions and let 1t get
sort of SituatiOn, a yes and Amen person , I k1cked around and see what happens to 1t
wouldn't be 10 thiS off1ce
How has the budget curtailed your freedom as
Farsi or all, I thmk 1f you realize my dut1es
Involve , for example , scrvtng on s1x d1fferent an administrator? Several years aao there was • lo t
committees These committees deal with cconom 1c o f gro wth and there was a lot o f money ly ing
problems, w1th grading, w1th long-range planmng, around so that programs could be put under way
so that I would say JUSt by part1cipatmg 1n the, let with, some people have araued, little rejard to
us state, steermg comm1ttee, JUSt by part1opatmg their quality . But now becaus.f of the budget
cutbacks and the tightness of it, 18 there a lo t of
10 a mmamum of s1x committees, some ho~ve been
added sometimes you know ad hoc l'Omrn attees restriction in yow role?
Really not. And I'll tell you frankly, let's talk
and so on. I am in contact w1th an enormous
number of antellectual , econom1c, overall plannmg about the budget for JUSt one second I have seen
problems of the Univers1ty
th1s Un1venity so nch that you d1dn't know how
And so that the dulles o l an o~dmml\lrato r 1f 11 to spend the money . and we, un the spur of the
1s defined stnctly as admana~trat1ng , I don't thtnk moment, gave granb and h1red people, and I don't
th1s word really should apply to the admm1~tra1or w1sh to go an to great detail here but we had money
rea ll y to shovel around any plact we wanted t o
tn Lhe University . He must he more than that
shovel itanto.
T hose days are gone. New York State ts broke
Should 1 new administrator, for instance in
this Univenuty. expect to be able to u.ert th1s kind The Un1ted States, I thank, is close to bemg broke
of Jeadenhip you talkfd about , in specif1c ways? And now we have to simply work 10 a more
Should he expect his leadership to really move the restncted budtet Situa tion . Thas has not affected
academic freedom . It has no t affected o ur quality
University, at present?
Oh yes, defanitely lie should at tcJst obtam of inst ruction whatever, we have an enormous
the pos1t10n of a catalyst I don't thmk an
"It 's lilu hat~ing two frogs lhal fall intu
admmistrator should be too bold m settmg the
a big t~at fuN of butt~rmilk . On~ gi11~ up
pace, because here you'rf runntng mto th1s very
fme d1s!lnct1on between administration and policy
and says: · w~·u nev~r gel out of h~re . ·
setting.
and he just drowns. And the other g~ls
or course, I ' m not talking in ideal terms. I'm
talkina about the)Jresent situation
Yea, sure I tlttnk any admanastrator must tdke
an active ro le . For example, you may have ~rved
on a number of commattees and you may have
served o n committees where the rornm ittee
chairman does not vote But he c an exert a
considerable m nuence m keeptng the comm1 ttee
goang. I remember one comm1ttee cha trman who as
now a high-ranking offacer of the Umvers1ty , and
I've known him for about 14 years and has favorite
word was "I am pushing. I am pushing,"
In other words, the ide11 he would thro w out
chaUengin&amp; statements into the comm1t1ee He
would himself not vote on 1t, to get them n led up
so to speak. or outraged what you called a little
while ago, to get responses ouicklv . So I th1nk tht

furious, and he struggles around and all
of a sudd~n. by churning up the
buttermilk with his fut, he sits on a
lump of butter. And then the farmer
com~ by and picks him up and throws
IUm away. In uther words. you can
always gi11e up and I lhlnk we cannot
give up. "
budget still available to us. t mean our budget for
this University is far in excess of S60 million
dollars which in my book is a lot of money . And
even if you bold today, you simply have to say
how can we spend the money that we still have,
spend 11 more effectively?
It is simply we have to give certain priorities.

We dllnnot e:atpend as irrationally as we have done
in .sOme areas. Hirin1; just about anybody wbo
ted a job was lUred. Jn other words, today
re w e hare we look for quality so therefore the
st ictaons 10 the budget hu a side effect that we
are probably more quality conscious than ever
before .
But let's face it, if you want to be
mtellectually stimulating whether you sit under a
tree on a lawn or an atr-conditioned classroom,
that should not make the difference. It may be
mo re comfortable to SJI 10 an air-conditioned
dassroom I don't think so. But the thin&amp; is the
books are there, the mmds are there, the faculty
now numbt:nng 1400 faculty members, we have a
greater number of student:. than ever before at this
Umversaty . Cio what has been reduced IS the
wrec kless spendtng t hat you saw for years.
We got the writing on the wall two or three
years o~go, everybody sa1d we were going to ao
broke and we went broke. New York State is
bruke, let 's fa~;e at , and I'm not saying JUSt the
Un1ver!.aty And I find 11 deplorable that let's say
the State of New York engages in let's say
construe lion of the mall in Albany . These thini$ it
needs hke a hole in the head
And at the same time, let's say, not pumping
add11tonal money 1nto educational and health
programs that are needed from a social v1ewpoint
But th1s IS my o wn personal opanio n . It's simply
setttng pnonty at a political level. But as far as the
Umversity IS concerned we have an enormous
budget, far 10 excess of $60 million. If we use it
WISely and tfUelbgently and place the money where
It buys the most I thmk we'll be m darn good
shape.

3

Recently Vice Prelident Gelbaum dilcuaed
the notio n of work and play in an academic
setting. He equates play with the qualitiea of the
classically cultured man, well read , reapoauin to
music, and plastic arts, skilled in hia coune. He
goes on to say that in times of physical auaterity
"play" should be relegated on a list of academic
priorities behind work which be calla the physical
sciences, study of law, human relation~ and
technoloay.
This notion aeems kind of danaeroua. It
threatens to stifle the influence of the arC. upon
academia. As Dean of Underaraduate StucUea, the
whole spectrum or underaraduate studies, we were
wonderina what you thouaht. We undentud that
Dr. Gelbaum also talked of the re-empbuizinl and

.

'

15 March 1972
.Wednesday,
.
........-The Spectrum . Page nine

�I

/state of the Universit
Because, after all, the p1~ple that be's worldna
with are reuonably intellinent people, who are
concerned also abou t the viability and the succea
of the University. And if' they all think that he's
doing the wrona thi n&amp; than1 maybe he must stop
and think about whether that 's the right thing
altbou&amp;h maybe he sho uld c:ontinue to push it .. .
It is the way in whlich his leadership is
executed that I think the n we run into different
styles of administration. It seems to me that one
way to do at would be by persuasion, by discussion,
by convincing people t hat " look , this is a good
thing to do." If it isn't (a ltOod thing to do) than
sometimes he has to even be wllUna to allo w people
service.
to make mistakes, what he t~unks are mistakes. He's
Now, in addition to that he probably will be got to allow mistakes to be· made because if not,
bringina in his own Ideas about how th iS can be then you don't have anythi~•s bulldina up like this
done best. In a sense that 's what you mean perhaps kind o f ambience and climatic that we were talkina
when you taJit about leadenlup. But I think about. Really. that's what wc:'re lookina for.
perhaps one of the charac teristiC&amp; of a unaversaty is
t hat it is very difficult really for a man to come in
Is the administrator l~ho'a concerned with
and impose his notio ns on the faculty and students. academic h•novation looked! more favorable upon
In a sense what he has to do is to be persu3save. on this campus than the one who il c:onc:emed with
Persuasive in a sense that he has to be dble to aectina the papers doneT
convince them that his ideas are good ones, then let
I don't think anybody Mound here would say
them get excited about it. and take it off from that they a re not interested in academic innovation
there. A$ a matter of fact, since none of us are But I think, over the past several years, we've seen a
infallible I suppose what he should do if he finds greater and greater concern for havina to do thinp
thai be keeps fUnning Into a stone wall with these in the o ffi cial and bureaucrsatic ways. Apin this is
ideas that he h.as, be might even want to u~consader to a lurg~ u tent due to pres:sures being imposed on
as to whether those ideas :ue really the best.
- c:onllnued on N .. 12-contlnuecs from pa. . a-

He bas to be wi.llina to deJepte them to people
who be trusts to take care of them weJJ ...
When you asked me the first pert of t he
question : what is the function of an administrator,
what is his role, it seems to me that a University
administrative role is to facilit ate, to make it easier,
to facilitate the kinds of thinp that should be going
on in the university. That is, facilitate an
arrangement where there are interestina people
ptbered toacther in a way that they can act to talk
with each o ther, that is the work, the research, the
teachina, the facult y, the students, can take place
m the best posjble way. In other ·words at's a

Poor introduction

-san los

IRC disappointed with apathy
'1t's a shame, tt's such an available candidates. His party.
apathetic situation," summed up Qualifivc, represents the only
the views of the Inte r Residence candidates for three positions :
Council candidates and the seven Elissa Katowatz, the candidate for
observers present at last Sunday's treasu rer, as presently treasurer of
meeting intended to mtrodoce the Clement Hall House Council;
dorm r esidents t o their Bob Kolc, caf)didate fo r activitaes
candidates.
chairman, has been IRC
Although notably dasappomted representatavc from Goudyear
with the poor turnout, Gary Uall, member of the activittes
Cohn, unopposed candidate for committee and c hairman of the
president, hoped that dorm IRC food committee; and Mr.
students would vote on March 16 Cohn, who has been the president
so that the I RC could show the of Goodyear House Council and
administration its ''strong member of the IRC Activities
foUowing."
Committee
M r. Cohn also voiced
disappointment in the lack of Room for improvement
The contested posations arc
vice president and secretary, Carol
Stykes, independent candidate for
sec retary, has been an IRC
representatave. It is her hope that
the formerly "cut and dry"
functions of secre ta ry could be
expanded to keep dorm st udents,
BFA Proar~ms
particularly in Allenhurst,
Certiliute Protrems
Fot Info contact rt11strar
informed of IRC activities.
The Quolifive candidate, Rich
Hochman, was in agreement with
Ms. Stykes, no ti ng that
communications and publicity are

Page t.n . The ~~ . Wednesday, 15 March 1972

very amp•t&gt;rtant functions of the
secretary. He also claimed that th~
past management of IRC "just
wasn ' t dcone as well as it should
have been." Mr Hochman is a
member uf Goodyear Hall Hnu~e
Council.
Jeff Goldfarb, Oualifivc
candadate for vace president , has
been treasurer of the Allenhurst
House Counctl and chairman of
the Allenhurst bus committee. He
believes he can take more
initiative in IRC affai rs than
former vi&lt;ce presidents have. Mr
Goldfarb':1 independent opponent,
Richard Watkins, did not attend
the meeting.
The Qaualifive candidates hope
to be elected as a group because
they have ·,worked well together
in the past.'' Proposals which they
joan t l y su ppo£1 include : ( 1)
different dorm activities each
weekend ; ( 2) the possible
continuati1on of the AUenhurst
lease by the IRC Businesses, Inc.,
if the administration lets the lease
expire; and (3) the establishment
of a tn nsportation bureau to
supply bu~SeS a nd planes to donn
residents at vacation times.

Sociolot.:y elections
f; riCtJOO h&lt;IS developed Wllhtn
1 he Sociology Depa rtm en t
concerning the deci!lon of the
M:arch commit tee for a new
chaarman to keep the re!&gt;ults of
the department members'
ballo ting a secret.
Four poUs were conducted
wtthm the Socaology Department
two for faculty, two for
students
to determme thear
preferences fl&gt;r a new chatrman
In an open leiter to his colleagues,
department professor Mark van de
Vall saad he had learned that ''it is
not the commallee's intentton to
dtvulge any result~ of the four
p&lt;llls." Many students and faculty
withan sociology arc upset by
what Dr van de Vall calls "thts
deccatlul manipulataon ol
academac procedures."
Dr van de V;,ll &lt;tuc~t atmed
Mic hael Ra y, chaarman of the
search commattee. ab0u1 the
closed ballot decis10n. Alcuading
tu has open let ter, Dr. Ray's move
to a closed ballot was due to a
special request from Bernard
Ge l baum, vice president for
Acadenuc Affaars. The rationale?
''If Dr. Gelbaum wants to appoint
a candidate who ranks second,
thard or fourth upon your ballot ,
at would be embarrassing for the
appoantee to have his low ranking
known by the department," Dr.
Ray IS quoted in the letter.
Alphabetical results only
Meanwhile, Dr. Gelbaum told
The Spectrum that he "dadn't
recall havang asked that" and "the
search committee as free to 3dopt
at s 1&gt; w n procedures. It's an

anternal matter lor the
Department of Soc:aology
tt's
not really proper for the
admrnastrataon to take a
positaon •· Dr. Ray , meanwhile.
announced that ''we dad g~ve the
results in part ; the top three
candidates were released. not 1r1
any ranked or d er, but an
alphabe tacal o rdea."
Defending has dcci~ion , Or
Ray contanued "The opanaun of
the commall~e was tho~t 11 wa~ an
1 he best Intere s t of the
depar t ment , the next chaarman
and the candadates 11111 to release
the results of the vutcs talhed
We 're arymg W gel !lac bc~t
chairman for socaul o~ow and gave
lum the best chance 111 dumtl has
best an the department
evadencc suggests we 'al' wrong ( tn
clo~e the ballo ting). then tlae
~:ommattee would rc umsade r ,mll
change."
Dr. van de Vall dn'led has lrllcr
wath a suggestion "Would 11 be
lou much to demand that JOY
appointee to the department
chairmanship only accepts his
appointment on the condatann
that the results are made known
to t hose involved, a.e . faculty and
graduate students?"
Dr Ray stated that "some
people would be up~ct uo matter
what we d ad ." He added that
while everyone who approached
ham asked why he wasn't releasang
the results, no one told him why
lac should . He concluded that
"maybe they don't trust us If
that's the case, they should select
a commttlee they do have
confidence in •·

1r

Indian symposium
Thomas Banyacya, tht Hopi interpreter for the
traditionaJ reliaious leaders of the Ho pi Indian tri~
will be speakina in the Fillmore Room of Norton
hall at 8 p.m . tomorrow as part of the Indian
Sympo&amp;ium. The Black Mesa Defenae Fund describes
the Hopi u a "aroup o f' people who havt maintained
harmon y with nature and ~lien in the ucred
quality of tht Earth."
It is t he intentio n of the Defense Fund to
inf'orm the public that the "Black Mesa sicred
reli&amp;ious around of the Ho pi is beina threat~ned by
the coal·burninll power plants and strip mines." It is
reared that these " industrual developments" will have
·· disastrous poUutina effects... Mr. Banyacya,
throu11h hill kn owledae of Hopi prohphecies, will
speak of " how this impendina dest ruction of the
Hopi way of life affecta us all."
Anyone interated in aivina time or fmancial
help to the Defen~ Fund Is uraed to calJ 83S·Sl6S.

�!State ofthe ·university!
-continued from

~~~· 9-

de~mphulzina

of certain proarams. We would
assume that this is part of his academic plan, Iince
he's aoina to be presentina one very 110on.
Now first of all, you musn't forget Dr.
Gelbaum also speaks in part as an indavid ual and
also in p art as a vace president of the University . He
is pressured equally like everyone e lse from above
to come up wtth a solution of a short budget which
has set pnoriues. So it is not hiS plan , it is a plan
that he will generate With the help of an enormous
number of people As a matter of fact, we mtet
agam tomorrow , with a very large committee for
input from the various faculties and so on
Com ang back to your onginal questiOn, I fed
tha t a total person must be exposed to both play
and learning. You can learn in playing. I believe in
a totlllJY cultured person. and I happen to be born
an Europe to American parents so 1 was raised for
qoate a number of years in , a European soc1ety ,
both m Germany and also an Switzerland I went to
~boot an Switzerland for three years, so I have a
deep respect for culture, for languagts, for the fine
arts and so on
So has Dr. Gelbaum as a matter of fac t When
you vas1t has home, or you know htS love for
dassrcal mus1c, his tre m en dous personal library,
you are dealing with a cultured person. tie is
talking from a very pragmatic viewpoint wh1ch he
has to mamtain . If you have $200 to spend and
you have I 0 people asking for a certain share of
thls $200 , 11 would be sometimes true to simply
say democratically " We divtde 11 up evenly "
You have to recogmze certaan pnon11es. and
when you look at the situat1on of today, the JOb
s1tuataon, lhe c rattcal changes m fandmg
employment where more and more demand!&gt; are
~mg made on people for sltills, such as speech
sk11ls, more demands are bemg made on people for
sk1lls, such as speech sltills. mathemallcal sltills.

It seem s that historicaUy thouah whenevtr
thinas are cut back and thinas are emphas1zed
academica ll y, that the scien ces, technology.
mathematics. always aet the emphasis.
I do n ' t know what the decisions wall be But 1f
you loo k at the hiring statistics over the last couple
o•f years. the en rollment of st udents. the numher of
majo rs. you would be surprised th at the major
emphas1s has been m the areas o f the socaal
sc1ences and human111cs.

'1/ you have to curtail from a v~ry
pragmatic utilitarian viewpoint,
obviously there may be a shlj't. and that
is only o shift. not ellminati•'Jn, o shift
toward the essentials. Ont' ha.v to
distinguish between the esst.'ntitJis 011d
the non..essen/14/s. "

Th ey also how ever h ave the huaest
faculty /stude nt ratios. For Instan ce. psycholoay
Yes. lhey do And since that cntena IS gomg
to be used for allocating add1t1onal resources, I can
Without havm&amp; the figure s on my mtnd , you 4.8n
n:st assured that the very faculty /studen t rat10
.,.,hich has heen discussed is going to be one of the
lllaJOr yardsticks as t o the a llocation of new
tlesources. It IS not just tnrollment, just t o get more
money, thas 1s not suffic1ent.
Degree o utput, number o f mlijors. re..earch on
tlhe part of the faculty , teaching load. all of these
factors are plugged m. There's a very comphc.:tted
way of estabiJslung pnonties. But you can rest
aSllured that there where the demand IS greate~t
r~~ow, the resources will go. A t the same lime we
hlave to be fully aware of one thing, we have one or
two programs, and I feel reluctant to call them out
by name but I thtnk by md1callon they can he
easJiy rdentificd, we have two or three programs
that have become unbelievably popular over th e
last couple of years They're .£elattvely youna and
&lt;J•ne hall a very large undergraduate program
The only problem 1S that the~ students who
gel degrees m th1s particular program at the
undergraduate level are unemployable. Becaus.:
that parucular an:a of employment requarts .t
master's degree So here 1s a program th1t IS
tdatively easy, that attracts a gro1t number uf
students because they dnft Into it. There lire! all
s-orts or pronuses and relevant discusswns. and then
tlhcrc arc aftl'r four years many faculty member~
who have nu.:c tenure know th ey're goang to bl'
another lour yt:11rs. another foul years, but the
S'tudent leaves.
And he leaves Wllh a degree wh1~h louh
beautiful on paper .tnd he laces a reality out thrn·
Ill hfe and he .. annot he: c:mrluyed. he: fuu.ls h1mwll
out 1n the '-nld And these are fJL!Of\ wh1ch I \1
hke to Mmpty mcnllon, llC~auM" 1 thmJ, Wt' hav&lt;' '"
look also at what we do ~nd uul 111lll tht&gt; wnrl~l
\1/hJt lmd of ~tUdt'll(\
tl~c

Free ~rog.r.rm 'i

C.unpu\

Mtnhlcr~

Rmcrnarv Radford Ruether

-

qu iet and a lo t of f o~ culty membe1rs have turned
very quiet an over-txcitement. IBecause some
students feel , and I know this from discussions
w1th the students. that whatever they're doma.
whatever they do, who~t dafference dues 11 make .
The world 1S 50 fouled up that regardless what
we learn, regardless what we say in o ur classrooms,
regardless how we sh out, regardless how we cry. 11
does not make any difference. Thef1e 's a degree of
apathy po!t~ibly . A certain degree of frustrati on
that is manifestmg itself in quietness mstead of
exploding o utward and throwing lbn~,;ks because
they realize obvaously thai that doesn 'I change one
101a out there . On the contrary, 11 bungs u react1on
to 11 .
So I feel the eJtcltement 1S stiU bas1cally there
I hal 11 has channeled mto new ways thai people
are qu1et ahout thmgs as we mentioned at tht'

heginning of our antcrv1ew here. And I feel that
there is. a h1gh degree of devo11on in 11 smaller
n umher of persons. Un fortunately . I beheve there
is a greater numher of persons tha11 havr lond t'f
turned off. I think tt's true m many parts of the:
world.

I travel a great deal . I come m conta~ot With
students m other umvers1ties tn other countne~
And there IS a httle b11 of th1s frusuauon that has
turned 11110 ;spathy because what on euth IS 11
good fiJr anyw~ty? No" I feel
I 'm lUSt the
opposite
II'~ hke luiVIn~ lwo frogs that fal11n1o a btg va t
full nf hrrtterrntlk One g1ves up arid says "We'll
never get !lU I of lu:re ," and ht: JU~I drowns 1\ntl
the: other u ne get~ lunous and hl' struggle~ around
and all of ., 'uddcn by -. hurn111g up thc buttermrlk
W1lh h1s feet, he \liS nn 11 lump of hu tter And then
the f;umer ,urncs hy Jlld Pl~k\ him up .111d th1uw'
l11r11 JW.JY

In 11thc:r wurd\ ynu • Jn .Jiwo~y~ g1vc: up. o~ntl I
thml we ~JIIf'llll giVC ur We l.lll ' l Our tHoblc:m!&gt;
Jr\' ' I ) gl)o::Jrllll 1f we· II,JVe Up lh,ll they're &amp;UIIIII, Ill
~111 u~ tomorrow And thcrcl"re I let'! wt: h.1vc tu
Lrcatc: thl' exutcmcnt We have to get .tngry but
111 •• ~unstrullJVe ta,h,un

One final question . from the whule tone ot
way you speak 1nd from what you say, you

College B
~lJNY All

of eu:itemeot about

Do you think this University h111 accomplilhed
that for ita student body, in maldnu them excited
and stimulated about learnina, or would you say
that's somethina that can only be judaed on an
indiridu.a l to individual baais? I mean1 you just can't
make, you know, one broad aeneraliution?
I would be terribly reluctant to speak for the
University ; for the students, faculty , across the
board. I think a lot of students have turned very

knowledgeable . applicable skills Then , I thmk we
would be rcm1ss 1n our dutaes 1f Wt' wou ld say all
nght we are pumpmg more and more money mto
play
II you have to curtail from .t very rragma 11c.
u11h1anan v1cwpomt, obviOusly thcre may be a
~hrft ond that 1S only a shift not dmu nat wn, a
~h1fl towJrd the cssenttals. One hu:. tu dbt1ngu1~h
twtwecn the essentials and the non&lt;ssc:nllals.
fhe momen t you say that, you're runnmg mtn
tht· ~JIUJtiOO where subJeCtive JUdgment enters the
rm:ture You get a hundn:d people together .tnd get
J
hundred opamons. And what you ~.:on~1dn
t'\M-nll.tl .Jnd what I conSJder esseniiJI, whJt per~on
·,.· ~:o ns1ders c~nllal may d1ffer totally You're
mnmng mto human values and opan1on~ And
:.wnewherc Jlo ng th.e hne you have to make a
dc ~.: lsson You can debate opmmn ur c~!&gt;4·n llal
pmgrams from 11ow till doomsday Mlc.l you w1ll
never find agreeme n t.

&gt;HI(l' of Credrt

1tn1t

But you m ay find a common denominator
where people say "if you cut this we are finished ,
but 1f you cut lhat we might regret it" - this sort
Q[ thing. So I would say under the present
abnor mal si tua tion wh ere some of the
entren chment must occur n o t because we want to.
but because we have to , we've got less money, and
this money has to go to new places or to the same
JJ•Iaces and someone has to make decasions.

"/ don't think you hav~ to be outraged
to be lnt~/lectually stimulated The
University p~r se Is never dull. only
people or~ dull. · ·

t

ban nry much of a

wbat'a aoinJ OD here in the Uo.iftl:'lity. The only
t1a.1na that keepe poppina into mJ nlind ia a quote
that I read from a Columbia undt!rJrlduete two
yean aao. wben be aa.ld that "there's juat no ltnlt
of excitement, of lumina, around lllere anymore."

VARSITY TRACK
TRYOUTS

I

There will be a meeting of
all vars1ty track and field
candidates Monday. March
20 at 4 :00 p.m. 10 room 3,

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

painting 1
sculpture
BFA P•oarams
Cttiii1C1Ie Procr.ms
For .nto eont.act recsstr1r

Honest &amp;

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Clark Gvm .

834 -7350
over 12 ynn.

The Prudent .I
Prurient Syndro111
The Liberation of Women in £he Church

tiOl\J G!N~ON ~;
BUFFALO

TONAWANDA

Custom Designer MI . Mrke MlHley of Hong Kong wul
be m Tonawanda·BuffaJo for 2 days, March 19 &amp; 20.
HONG KONG AOOUSS

8:15p.m .
THURSDAY, MARCH 16
DIEFENDORF 146

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"IC H"40ND • .._.A .• a~za.a

Wednesday, 15 March 1972 . The Spectrum Page eleven

�.... '

~tateoftheUnive!rsitYJ
-conllnuecl from~

to-

tbc local admwatration.
Jn other words more and more restrictions arc
bein&amp; imposed u~n them.
. u I see it, the
University is becornina more and more concerned
about these pushina paper sort of tbinp, and in a
way 1 feel sony for them because it is somethin&amp;
tbat is beina fon:ed upon them to a certain dearee.
To what degree tbey could resist it I don't know. 1
don't know if they"ve been tryina to (resist). I'm
sure they haven't u a matter of fact.

....

You spoke of academic innontlon. A theory is
prna.lmc that to iD.nonte ac:.dernic&amp;lly, you ban
to be una:fraid of ma.tm, milta.ka and of takina
riska. Do you qre« with tb• and do you tlllnk that
chis admin.iltration Ia afraid of ta.kina riaka or
ma.kin1 milta.kea?
I think you're riaht. You have to take risks.
Everybody would rather not make mistakes. But,
no matter wh.at you do, there's a possibility you
rniaht nuke a mistake. Also. in doina nothina,
there's a pOS1ibility of makina a mistake.
I thi.nk it is indeed true that to do new things
in the Uruversity involves llkina mlu. To do almost
anything in a university the way that it is run
today . means that you bne to decide which kind
o f risks you want to take. Some people prefer to
play it by takina fewer risks - that also means that
yo u then miaht not be able to do the most with the
reso urces you do have available bec:tuse you took
lc:s.s risks.
There arc plu~ and minuses and yo u have to
be willin&amp; to say, okay, we took a risk and we lost
th.at one. We did make a mistake . J thank that 's
what the risk takin&amp; means. Obviously , I'm not
suuestin&amp; that people should take silly risks . But a
certa:in amount of nsk is almost necessary . mostly
because the thing lS so complicated and so tied in
wttb state budgetin• tbinp and so o n that ..
I think we were freer to take some of these
risks and make some of these JUesses several years
110 than the University is today. Partly because
they Celt they could be covered better tn terms o f
the mcreasina reso urces and so o n. But I thlnk you
reach a point, and we nuaht have reached at her~ .
where if we' re unwllhn&amp; to take any nslts, then
nothing new is ao an&amp; to happen aro und here , and
we can o nly 50 an the w rona direct ton
Ttut question h., to do with an artie., Or.
Cclbaum recmtJy wrote in The Repo rter In which
he d.*uased the notion of '"work and play" in the
~emk .ettina He equate~ play wifh the qualitie11
of tbe clurical cultured mao, that beina well rud.
raponaivc: to music, clllllic arts , ak.iJied in
diacou'". He aoa on to say that en limn of fascal
austerity, play mu.st be relc:aared on a list of
academic priorities behind work : which be caUs
tbat beina a study of aovcrnment and law. human
relations , education , natunl ~~elences and
techooloay . This n o tion seems 10mrwha1
dan~roua, and thrutrna to stifle the aofluen« of
tbe uti oo IOcic:ty How do you feel?
A.ssumina that your interpretJitao n IS correct ,
what that sounds like Lf I can paraphrase, as h~ 's
simply saying that in penods of austerity . we must
pt.ce ow resources in those disciplines that have
significant applications fo r the good Of SOCiet y .
Well , if it means, m o ther wo rds, that an tu nes
o f difficulty . what we have to d o 11&gt; push those
areas that society says i.s good fo r us , to a certai n
degree o f course 11 's pol.ttlcs. af yo u' re a sta te

univeraity and you're loo,Jtina for tax money, I
suppose you can make a l!)etter pitch if you say.
'look what we're doina for you.' But you end up
then v?tb not much o_r ~ u?iversity..
Virtually any d~tpUoe can m one ~ay or
another show that at bas a certain lcind of
applicability to tb~ welfare o~ peo_ple. And the
welfare of people. mclude=1 ~heu ~b~ty to make
better use of theu leisure ttme, tl ~eludes theb
ability to appredate the a:rts, to provtde tbJnp ~r\
tbe community in tbe wa1r of arts, throu&amp;h MUSIC
and art and so on .
1 fmd it a difficult du1tinction to make, but I
fmd it more than thai of areat concern because
then you're talkin&amp; about a different kind of
university. You're no Jcmaer talkina about a
sipificant university. and what you're sayina is
that, well, let's forget about anything for example
that's in the Arts and Letters faculty ri&amp;)\t now.
except perhaps, architecture. Because it really is all
pby and u's not wort Yo u know you don't have
an important university if this kind of attitude
prevatls for any penod of hme at any rate.
You han a ttchnoloakal school?
Yea.
Ooe final question anttl it is aoina to tab ua
back two yean qain. NaU•I&gt;nal Review n!portfd in
June of 1970, one facuJty membet'a aaa~meot of
the uninnity • ·•our ltul~ftltl are run of distrull ,
our facuJty in cli&amp;array, an1d our adminiltranon II
lnacce.Uble. TheM condltiona are makiq It
utremeiy difficult to atart taltuna with each other.
Do you think thia uaeatment ia appUcable to
today 'a unbcnlty?
I wo uld usc: diffeunt lldJectives, but say that it
bolds just u well today Lake, for example, our
fac uHy in disarray, I wo uld say our faculty IS
duafluud . It's not 111y less bad . Studc:.ots
diStrustful, I think now students have lost a
siiiJlificant amount of a good kind of concern they
had . I think, in general, the situation today ia not
an y better than it wu then , except that wh.al was
being referred to probably at that time was o vert
vio lence and dJsnu&gt;tion and so o n (and clearly thlt
was somettung we h.ad t o st o p . . ).
But in general, I find &lt;:o nSJderably mo re the
word I used was diaaffete tio n , disenchantment ,
aJm011t a kind of alienallorn on tbe part o f fa culty
members today th.an I dJd •even two years aao. Two
yea~ aJO, they were at leaSII aianJOcantly concerned
about what was happenina to tbe university. They
saw chi.~ k ind o f as ' this 11S o ur university ' What
some o f them were d omg , o thers didn' t like, at 's
true , o there was co nsid e~able factualizanon and
so o n But there ww concern by faculty membe rs.
I se e fac ulty me mbers no w withdrawing more
and more into tbear o ffices and into their reaearch ,
and writins. anti sort o f pullll ng o ut . And in a WilY . I
d o n' t see why thAt 's necessaril y a n impro vement
to r the Uru11ersity
When Or Baumer was asked tbJS, he ~~aid thai
all you have to do is look 111 the FaeuJty Senate to
see that this wnot true, ~cause the facuJty is much
more co herent and they 're •ble to accomplish a lot
mon!.
Oh , I thank tf you we re t o ask o ther members
of the Fac ulty Senate, the y wo uld no t agree wcth
that a t all Then~ has even recentl y been
co nsade rable concern ex pro:ssed in Fac ulty Senate
m eeun ~ about whe ther tlus arrangement o f the

Bible Truth
BELIEVE AND CO N F ESS
" WIIOJOever b•ll•v ttll t ll•t J .ws
~ tile C llrl st Is bo rn o f G Od:
wlloto.v•r sno~ll con fess 111•1
Jtius Is th e S o n o l 00&lt;1 0 0&lt;1
Ch•••ll etn In h im , • nd h. In
0 0&lt;1."
I J o lin S : l , 4 : 1S

mainly

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TONAWANDA

a T•ilpi,.
iamiiN

II,.Uficant iau~; they don't set cnouah of the rat
of the faculty involved .. .
I think you would set a lot of disa.,eement
from Senate members with Prof. Baumer's
evaluation about whether thia 1J a better way of
doina it . I know be is worltina Yet}' bard and ia very
much ir\volved. He spends hup amounts of time, I
don't know how he does it. But I don't think that
we find tbat most faculty members even know
wbat'a aoina on around the place, and except in a
ltind of voyewiatic way don't even aeem to care.
That's why I say, in a way,lt's no better today than
it was two years ago.
You touched oo atudmu and faculty , what
abou t administration? b tbe ac~Jninbtration
inacca~ible?

Inaccessible'! I would say it is no mo re o r less
accessible than the admini!tration was two or three
years ago Certainly no more so, I suppose no less

so.
h this an inherent problem In the
adminiat,..tion per .e?
It could be. It could be also, after all we have
had ir\ effect a significant restructuring of the JOb
of administrator of this University over the past
several yean with much more of the functions no w
bein&amp; taken over by the central administration (by
central administration, I mean locally. no t central
administration, Albany).
Things that used to be under the concern o f
provosts or deans o r direc to r of coUeJiate assembl y
o r whatever it is, now have Co be much more taken
care of within the office of the president here.
When you take over more and more things,
when every resianatio n and e11ery appointment and
every request for a saba tical and practically every ,
any , chanae o f any sort has to first ao throusf\ and
be approved by tbe central o ffice, the o ffi ce of th~
president , an Hayes Hall , then how d o yo u h11ve
time t o b, accessible to all'! It's impossible. It has
to do with the business o f d elegating autho nty
ouuidc: the ammediate small group
from

th~

tone of everythlna that you aaid, you

SHm very, vtry ~mistic . Thana• were bad two

yean aao, and they're still bad , Wbat about the
(utureT
Well , no w wait a second, I satd thmgs were bad
tw o yean aao only in the sense that two years a,o ,
we were haVlnll SlgmficaDt dJSruptJon.s and violence ,
and that had to stop if we were going to have a
university Only in that sense, were thinp bad .
But , in ano ther sense, I saw tlungs happen ma
two years aao that I do no t see u pessimistic. I saw
large n umbers o f faculty members concuned ab oul
the Unaversaty Concunl!d eno ugh so that I coul d
come up e verungs as I, you know I was up ever y
evening during that who le businecs, and walkang
aro und campus and so on , and I'd see lo ts of o ther
f11c ulty members d o ing the same tlung, and talktng
lo students and rapping With them and talking wcth
o ther fac ulty people and so o n . A kind o f a conce rn
ror the place that wo uld be great tf we could ha ve at
today.
In a sense. ct was not a ll pesstm i.Stac I am
pessamtStu: abo ut where the Umve rsit y is going
today. I wo rry abo ut whether this Uruversaty hus
peaked , in a sense o f how far ia it aoina to aet to be
a Slgntficant un iversity. I d o n' t kn o w what tt wo Uld
take to change whal I see as a change o f dtre&lt;.:tJo n
But I am pessarrusttc, yes, I' m pesslmiStJc abo ut the
fut u re

•••

I••

I•

.

Concert Committee
presents

874-5330

VW Mufflln

faculty Senate is really worltina. What's happenioa

Ja that the Faculty Smato Ia not dealina with

CTYP£ No. 11

2 5 95

DaveMa'8on
plus

Black Ma~riah
Thursday, March 23

- 2 shows - 7:00p.m.&amp;. J0 :30p.m.
at - Buffalo State CoUege Uruon Social Hall
Tickets -students S 1.50 -Non-6tudents $2.50
(only 1,000 tickets for ea&lt;:h show)
availitble at Norton, Buf. St. ticket office

Page twelve. The Spectrum . Wednesday, 15 March 1972

.~

WILL YO U BE IN B UFFALO
On Wt'dnesday, March 29 o r Thursda }-'. March 10 ~
Hillel is ready to provide you wUJr

A SEDER

�La Meri directs

Ethnic Dance AJrts Recital
"'Ballet is so sterile compared became Ule fifth Veda, the
to the passion in ethnic dances,'' external counterpart to their
Suzanne Sausner, dance instructor wisdom.
explained.
The Indian dances, ancient as
The Ethnic Dance Arts they are, have be~:n preserved by
Repertory Company, under the the Devidasis &gt;who has just
artistic direction of La Meri, recently been allowed to perfonn
perfonned to a full house in the in public. These Devidasis were
Fillmore Room last Thursday. AU not allowed to marry but they
those who feel ethnic dancing is did. This rebellious act helped to
incomprehensible, have missed an fonn their own caste syst em of
unforgettable evening of artists and musicia1ns. "Th ey were
educated , beautiful!, and had a lot
expression.
Highly organized, yet to offer," Ms. s:a•J.sner added .
passionate and soft, the company They became a highly sought after
portrayed the culture of East and group. The rigidness of the
West. The audience's gaze glided Victorian era, though, rapidly
frum one dance into the next. The lowered their stat01s.
smoothness of the concert left no
time for restlessness, each dance Exaggerated contr(J•I
There is no separation between
became more mystical.
Five dancers clad in gold, dance and Uleater in India. The
l)pened the performance, stunning dancers desc ribe Ut e stories of
1he audience. Exaggerated facial Krishna, Gobi and other favorite
gestures, hand gestures and sharp gods. The dance o lf the universe is
feet movement were the symboHzed by Siva, the Indian
communicating factors of the godhead. He is the creator and
dancers. Each dancer moved in his destroyer in the !Indian religion .
uwn cube of s pace , each The dance of the East IS used in
two ways. It can tell elaborate
synchronizing with the next.
Perhaps one of the most tales of the gods or it simply can
elegant dances performed was be used as an artfmm for the sole
oyescas, " a neo-classic purpose of beauty .
The Indian dancer is more
InterpretatiOn of Granados'
outward
than the Spanish dan ce .
" I n termez.zo" from his opera of
Their
dance
is a :supplicallon to
the same name. Dancer Cynthia
the
gods.
The
Spanish dancer is an
Small eased her way across the
stage donned in black lace with egotist; all of his movements are
inward. He has immense pride in a
talented grace.
Bright colors and innocent eyes fighting way with each sweeping
were the main feature of the motion crying a "me" and an ''I."
Hand language of India is as
popular Peruvian piece. The dance
expressive as any spoken language
IS a nlual of the glory of the Inca
and allows an infi1nite variety of
~mptre .
expression.
There is an obv·ious difference
OilS." ceaches techniqlK'
T·ll II uwmg the performance between occidentaJ and oriental
were twn master classes which dance. In occtdental dance, the:
;lllowed the v1ewer an opporwnity b ody moves 1n unified
In tuien tal
H• feel tht• d1fficulty of mastering harmonious form
the body has a
lnd1an technique. It concentrated dance, each part
mostly on U1e intricate hand spcc1fic line. rhythlll and
nnportance nf it~ own
~csturc~ of the Indian dance.
In th'-' mastt!·r da'&gt;~. rigid
S111.all1IC Sausner taught the
master dass . She 1ntroduccd some movclllents wert' learned Fac1al
1111portant facturs tnvolved in ~:xpre~sions were not ~pontaneous
but rather ind1t:ated exaggerated
lndtan and Spamsh danctng.
muscu
la r control One of the
The Indian dance ts based on
performer\
. Jc;nl McllichJmp.
lhr tilth Veda The ftrst lour
t:orrcc:ted
a 'tudent'~ hand
Vedas arc the lure of the Indian
movement
.. You don't have
p11esthood, the fifth Veda. called
enough
tensHlll
1r1 yours , \C:e
the Natyashastra, was wntten
they're
dyinj;."
between the fourth and second

··c

or

century b.c . The lllndu l)ance

that

COVER UP

Structure of a poenn
Approx1mately

ten

hand

gestures were taught to the
students. These gestures, plus
learned foot movements, were put
together to form a dance. The
dance followed the structure of an
oriental poem. It was explained
during the class that once Ule
b~ic hand gestures were taught,
one could remember the different
symbolized movements easier
because many are obvious.
TI1e members of the company
have been studying Indian dance
for two years. Together they
formed the Ethnic Dance
Repetory Compan y under the
direction of La Meri.
La Meri has recently won the
Capezio Award in d ance. She has
dire c ted two former dance
companies. Esoteric in the field of
Indian dance , La Meri studied in
the heart of India.
The two day experience was a
successful attempt to allow
curious outsiders to savor the
culture of the mystical Orient and
the passionate Occident

/,aurit· Yankus

Fencers try t eir best at the
North Atlantic Chan1pionships
by Mike Glantz
Sp«rrum Stoff Wrtll'r
If anything were able to sum up this season's
trend of the Buffalo fencing Bulls, nottung could
have said it more dramatically than the North
Atlantic Championships. This past Saturd ay, the
twenty-second annual North Atlantic Fencing
Championships were hosted by Pace Colleg~ in New
York City . Twelve coUeges met to battle 11 out for a
year's pos.~ession of the North Atlantic Broadsword
Trophy .
An "A " and ·•B" pool was held 111 tac h w~apon
retjUlring a tutlll 11f six fencers from each school.
Representmg Buffalo 111 A and 8 pools. rt'spt·ctlvrly
were Soh Johnson and Bob farkas Jrl full , AI
Schneider and Netl Pruitt in sabre .1nd Jlowatu
Forman and 'I om Br~mcr 111 ~pee . \ornpctttiun ran
h1gh wtth ~cvcral top fen ~.: ers making appearanu·~ .
such as last year\ North Atlantic's foil champton
Vulpc .Jnd ~ahrc:man &lt;;n:g Sonann. wh•"c hrothcr
h~t:a111c the N('AA All Amcrtl.'an SahrcnHlll 1n 1'17 1
Foil team blas ted
Buh Jollll'"" · lliPt •lln o l the Butlalu lt',tllt .
started out lhc day wtth two ~traighl vt c lollc~ . hut
thi' turned nul I tt he dcl·etvtng as Jolln"111 lnsl Ills
next mne l- a1ka~. W\ t.11n1ng J h;ully 1111111ed wn-t
also "ttueeted n ut two ol h•~ II bnuh, whtch lulally
put the loti team 1n twclllh pl:tl-C
The ep~e t~:am madt' a slightly better 'howtng
WII h Forman and Bremer putting thl.' ~quad JOIP
tenth place . l:lremer ~hould he cornphmented h~rc . 1\
freshman , fem•tng for only fou1 tuonth~ . Brcmt'r
made h1&gt; dehut at tht' "'orth Allantt..:s aut.! ra cked up
a t:ommendahle record of S 6. lftl&gt; Vlt:!Ortes wen:

over epee fencers with years of experience. It looks
as though Bremer has some frne seasons ahead.
The sabre ·squad , Buffalo's weak spot thu
season, placed ninth in t hat event which put the
Bulls in eleventh place for the tournament with a
day 's record ,of 19 - 47 . Newark CoUeae of
Engineering and Seton Hall fenced off a first·place
tie with Newark c:~oming out victorious.
So, the fencing Bulls complete a long, lla.td,
disappointing season. This year's team was the
set:ond 1n Buffa1lo fencmg history wtth a losing
record . The teaut IS not used to defeat and Coach
Schwartz realizes 11. "Let's •·halk tlus ~eason up as
one of rehuildmg. We now have the tJient and
manpowe1 for nc·xt year . Wtth some diligent work,
we'll l:le very hard In ~lop next year ," Schwartz
dJmmented

Bulls foiled
It has

re~.: enl!ly hcen rcahtet.l tlt.tt tht• fen culg
Uulls have 1aken on one nwn.- nppoln&lt;•nt this ye:u
the Athkttc Deparlrnent . lkt .JU~•· nt their rough
seu:.un. the athlctk admtnt~lt.Jtor~ h..t v" dn.ided that
11 wnuiJ he a pol)r nttlve In llclt.l .111 NCAA team to
Lom pett' in the tl:lllttllai- un M.tr• h 23 . Coach
St:hwart7 .111d th'~ teant tontend thut Buffalo had
ltd.tcd .1n NCAA team for apptoxllnJtdy .Ill years

A11 N('AA t~am can11ut Jllelluw in nne: year , hut
Hl\lcJJ mu~t t•nter the natu10ab lot ,, IIUnlhn of
yeat' ht'tnre result\ ~.:an he obtained A llnal det:J~Il&gt;ll
had 11t1t heen rl.'a~o:het.l yd but t\ ••'&lt;Jie&lt;·ted soon II
13utt..tlo doesn' t c.mlcr thts ye3r , tlw pm!&gt;ped of ever
gomg aga1n luoks poor The tcnctng Bulls took a lot
of defeats this sea1~on, but 11 lnoks as though this last
bout nllght prove tu bt: the must tmportant of all.
00 YOU NEED MONEY
FOR COLLEGE!

naked
finger
with a
handcrafted
diamond
engagement

Erii{a'
_J~W€l€RS
81 allenst.,buffalo.n.y.

--------------

- - - LEARN

S.I.~LE

TO F L Y - - -

NiaJ(ara Frontier Flying Clul~ . general meeting, Mard1 16,
8 p.m . Rovm 147 Capen Hall.
Film and presentation on aviatiotl weatlter by ground
scl10ol instructor.

off
Free parl&lt;tno

ON MA.NY TITLES

Millions available •I you 1\now where
to look. Send $1 lor complete
ln!ormatlon .
Educational Aids
tnlormatlon C enter. So&gt;&lt; 1032
M•nl&lt;ato. Mlnn 5600 I

•t

University Menor
(nekt Cloor)

BUFIFALO TEXTBOOK STORES INC .

833-7131

Learn about flying with the only complete flying club irt
western New Yorlr .. . HMtga1·ed, training and IFR aircraft,
etc.,etc., Public invited.

759-6533

Refresh.ments.

8.31 -3125

Wednesday, 15 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�Bulls blow it

Hockey Bulls feel frustration
by Blrry Rubin
SpomEdftOT

He's not the bigest hockey player that ever
existed, and sometimes people d oubt that a black
man could become a hockey coach, but Eddie
Wriaht of the boclcey Bulls has foUJ)lt all odds. Now
in hia second year as varsity coach of the hockey
Bulb, Wriabt finds yet another cballenae - in aettina
his ~quad accepted by the Buffalo media and public.
Wriabt remarked : "We've finally gotten
out-of-town respect, yet what happens when we

Ed Wright
return to Buffalo, at's a.s if we don't exiSt. " In his
short tenure as coach of the Bulls , Wnght has fel t the
stin&amp; of the Eastern hoc key establishment , which h as
hurt the growth of Buffalo hockey .
After leading the Bulls to second place an the
recently com ple ted ECAC DIVISIOn II
championships, Wnght commented . "The cards were
stacked again.s t us an the playoffs. You can only go
so far Ul that type of satuat ion , but we' ve passed the

orientation staae and have been baptized.
Conliderina the odds we've done a bell of a job."
Now, top caliber Imrision II squads along with
seven.J Division I scbooln are willin&amp; to meet the
Bulls, but Wright remarlwd : "I'm not aoina to play
anybody that won't corne back down here." For
next year Buffalo has already added Colpte,
Bowling Green and Ohio University.

Fonner BU star
Wriaht, who starred colJegiately at Boston
University, came to BuffuJo upon recommendation
of former Bull defenseman Paul Morrisey. Wriaht
commen ted : " I accepted the job with the
understanding that they wanted big-time hockey.
The administration at Hayes Hall is too content. If
Ketter wanted hockey 01r any sport, it would gel
done."
Even with the great success that Wriaht has
achieved on campus, he fc:els the frustrations of the
job. Wnght added : "The1re's so much you can d o,
but everywhere you tum, there's something holding
you back . That's what reatUy turns me off. The only
satisfaction you ge t i.~ working with the kids . This
program has come full circle, and your hands are
tied . However, I feel tha1t even the press and the
admi nistration will not be· able t o stop the program
any longer, at's going to really go.''
Wnght, who already said he would leave af a
better job came along, summed up h is feelings by
adt.lang, "you can o nl y st.and so much frustration."
With his most successful coaching season already
behind him, Wright IS already looking for better
talent to join the Bulls.
Wnght indicated : " I 'm looking for two center
acemen and o ne defenseman I also feel we'll need
left wingers more than an]llhm&amp; else." Addataonally,
Wright feels that better pn1ctlce times will enable the
Bulls to be in better skatir1g condition. However, the
key factor Wriaht feels that needs administration
help, is a possible move into Division I.
Wright remarked : "Our tal ent is of top notch
Dav1sion II caliber, but thu &amp;roup will never attain
the level of a Division I •competitor " StiU, Wright
goes about his job, w1th the hope that someday,
Buffalo hockey can reach 1ts full potential an this
city

-----~· ONL~Y

Matmen finish season
with tie for last place
by Dave GcriJl&amp;er
SP«trum St11ff klrlt~
The wrestlin&amp; Bulls returned to
Buffalo after completing thelr
season at the NCAA
Championships at Maryland .
Buffalo, despite scoring o nly one
team point and finishing in a tie
for last place among the schools
that did score, bad what was
undoubtedly its best mat season
ever.
" I was very pleased with the
performan ce of our squad
throupout the season," said BuU
mentor Ed Michael. "Everyone
was able to perform up to their
ca pabilities. I was especially
pleased by the way in wl\ic h we
were able t o overcome adversity,
both in individual bouts and in
our matc hes during the season. We
showed that we would not quH
coming from behind t o win on
several occasions."

In addition to Policare, the
Bulls are expected to return seven
stuters next season. Co&lt;aptams
Ron Brandt and Ted Lawson and
tw~year Bull veteran Bob Veres
will be the only Bulls lost throuah
gra duation. However, Buffalo
should present another strong
team next season as the Bulls will
seek to break their record of 17
dual meet victories which was set
by this year's squad.
Amo ng those who feel that
additional experience against
better compet ition would be
beneficial is 167-lb. regular Eric
Knuutila. " I would like to see our
squad wrestle better teams," saJd
Knuutila . " I( you are exposed to
better competit ion, you will be
better prepared mentally to face
toP.fliaht wrestlers."
Next season, the Bulls will seek
to upgrade their schedule. One
possibility could be Athlet es an
Action, a squad composed of
former nallonaJ place wtnners
who represent the Fellowship o(
Christian Athletes. Athletes in
Action is a perennial opponent of
several Bag Eight powers. The
Athletes in Action squad defeated
tough Oklahoma 10 a duaJ meet
this past season

Some o f the Bulls wlll
probably enter p ost -season
t ourna ments such as the one at
Brockport. That tournament is a
qual ifier fo r the Olympic trials,
which will be held several weeks
hence. Buffalo heavyweipt Tony
Policare will probably enter that
Clarion State, the only team
tourney at the Olympic weaaht
class of 220 lbs. The junio r, who that defeated Buffalo 11\ a dual
compiled a fine 1S - I - I dual meet thas season, is another
meet record and placed second in possible o pponent at Clark Gym
the Eastern
Reg1 ona l The Eaates had two nataonal
Cha mpionstups at Cincinnall to champions th1s season, includmg
qualify for the national so phomore Wade Schalles, who
tournament, wlll be one of the wa s named the nat1onal
mainstays of next year's Bull tournament' s o ulstand1ng
squad.
wrestler.

3 DAYS LEFT ..
c:--

at your

Craton of the finest in

University
Bookstore

College Clau Rin111

Jostens
'

"on campus"

CLASS RING WEEK
1.) 4 Witte detivlfy
2.) Rectivt 1 FA E E flcsimilt sjgnature

$3Value
3.) Receive 1 ct..nce on the Color T.V. $280 Valuel
(One winner for the week)
4.) Win your dast ring F R E E
(one winner for the week)
6.) $10 down - b..ance on detivery

PURCHASI: YOUR RING N 0 W!

AN R.C.A. 14"
Sporubout

lijpjgjE~~~i\1

Cofor T.V.
SOME LUCKY
BUYER
MUST WIN !

IN·~ISTER, NOW
SEVERAL DOOR PIIUZES EVERY OAY No Pun:h111 Required.
Page fourteen. The Spectrum . Wednesday, 15 ~h 1972

..

�AD

IN ~MATION

THE STUDENT • • of an ad for one
day Is 11.25 for t he first 15 words and
for eech additional word . 11.00
for eec:h addltlcSnal day. The dudllne
for Monday Is Frid ay ; for Wednesday,
It It Monday, and for Friday, It Is
Wednesday J&gt;y 4 :30p.m.

s .o5

" HELP WANTED" ads cennot
d iscri minate on the batll of ~~ex, color,
creed or national origin t o any extent
(I.e., preferably Is rtlll discriminatory) .
"POUND" ads will be run frM of
c harQ41 lor a maximum of 2 days and
l!i words.

WANTED
BA SS PLAYER and d rummer wno ~n
sing wanted by Commercia l («»It,
medium rock) group. 833·394 2 .

Furnlahad, reuonable rent. Available
tor summer and !;ept. Cell Shelly
834-01166.
AVAILABLE JUNE lit - buutlful
apacloua 3-c.droom apt, with wall to
wall carpetln!l, $135 a month
uUIIII.,, 8g6·2652.
BEAUT I F U L apaclous 2·bedroom
apa rtment n. .r c •mpua tor rent
begtnnlnt May or June 1. Call
837-0907.
THREE·BEOROOM ap.,tment , wall to
Wall carpeting , dishwasher, washer,
dryer. 10 min . bus. cempus. Deposit
required $100 perso~t. Available May 1.
832·0955 .

LAW STUDENT would like to mMt
otrl who Ia gentle and soft-spoken, yet
'69 HONDA 450; Mostly eJCoellent
con d; co-worl&lt;lnt arrang; approx .
15001 832 · 5888 Norm; 503-8
Allenhunt, Ezra.
MOB 1968, wire whMis, studded snow
tlr.,, gOOd condition. 873·1000.
FOR SALE: 35 mm 1/2 Auto -NikiCor,
With Hoya 1A, lens shield, luther cese.
Six months Old. Cost n - : $ 220 .
Voura lor $125 : llrm . Mic hael,
831 ·2249, 836-6622 .
1965 FORO I.TO. GOOd cond ition,
new parU. Call 138- 108 1 after 7 :00 .
$ 250 o r best offe r .

LOVE I. Y l arge lurnlsned room.
Kenmore. Prlvllegeji. $65 monthly.
876· 0149 alter 5 p.m . Girl preferred

OESK, 6-drawer SIMI, fine cond ition
Ca ll after 5 835 -2976, 836-4308.

MAR K GOODMAN, give m e a cal l.
Jo ltrt . 834·08:H.

RIDE 8()ARD

wAITRESS w~nted . Appear In person,
423 H o pki ns (nur Tift) . KAV'S
RES TAU RANT .

N EVER a better dHI'! B uy your class
ring tnls wMk Don't walt! I N ext wMk
IS too lite. University Bookllore.

RIOE WANTED to Nortnern N .J or
N . V.C . lor 3/2 8 01 3/29 Call Lew
83 7· 0987.

WANTED peo ple lnt erened In
cov ering news for UUAB VIdeo
c.om mlltM , Room 261 Norton - ull
!&gt; 112. S peak to Ed .

RIDE WANTE D tor two t o New Yo rk
C ity lOIS w-end . C;all J im or Paul .
855·0118.

TWO ART History papers - preferably
on Henri Moor. another on
0 .,.
E" prenlon lsm . Will pay . Reply Bo~&lt; 92
S pt•ctrum.

RIOE N E EOEO to New Haven or New
York this weekend. Ca ll D oD &lt;tt
834· 7980.

FAIRLANE, 1966, automa tic, radio,
e xcellent ru nning cond ition, new snow
tires and battery . Elargaln fof $425
C all 831· 3922.

MODELS WANTED at photographic
~tud l o. Gooo pay. C all between 10
a m &amp;. 5 p .m lll 4-4991.

ONE FREE kitten , with shots, IS
looking for a 90od ttorne . Call Shelly ,
834.()966.

R( S I:.AR C H

( term) papers bought,
Contact N orman at
8J 1 3370 11 an y time.

DOUBL E BEO, drest.er. c hairs, kitchen
table, night tables. neasonable p rices
Call 1135-4521.

ST A RT $ 2 per hour s.lar ·• plus bonus .
w ork • II p . m . wMkdays; 10· 2 p .m.
Sal urd a ys Call 835·3803 or TF~02.

AU STI N HEALE: Y 3000, '62
REBUI LT engine, ltlnl., Clutcn.
Bell·hous lng , pressurt) pla te. gener etor,
carburetors, NEW ove rdrive. battery ,
r ear wneel cylinders . Top 1475
873·5328

- -- - - - -

exchan~ed.

ruLL oR pa rt -tim e Jobs available With

Best llne Inc Call Art 886· 20114 or
Ml l&lt; t 835·5215. MMtlngl et Executive
Ramada Inn.
S24 A NIGHT - peiCS nightly . Six
90 90 dan cers needed. Rad ice s, 74 W.
Cn1 ppewo . Apply alter 4 p . m .

APARTMENT FOR RENT
SPA CIOUS 3 ·bedroom apar lme nl
fu fn llhed avail able ror sommer
$41S&gt;I On (M;ay 11 - vety reaso nable call 833·6523 .

TOVOTA, '69 Corona , automatic,
AM-FM . Very good cono ltlon, looks
greal, 5 tiles plus 2 snows In cl uded ,
$115 0 837 0753 .
REFRIGERATORS , stoves and
wasners. Reconditioned , delivered •nCS
gu•ranteed
O~ G
Applia n c es , 844
Sycamore. T)(•· 3 1113.

PERSONAL

r IC KET(S) to Elv is Presley Concert
A prt l 5 . Will pay more tnan cost of
ofl glnal tickets. C all TF8 · 1180. Ask for
a n an

~Ol d .

WILL TYPE twm ~·and edit
at tAO a pat~e. Call 136· 2433.

CLAIIIJIIII

CLASSif'IED ADS may be piKed
Monday thru Friday l&gt;etw. .n II Lm .
and 4tSO p.m. at 355 Norton Hall .

TY PEWRIT E R l or sa le . N- wll11
5 - year factory warranty . Olivett i
parlable , Call Joel 837·8 7 11, $ 45 .
19 65 6 -CVLI NOER a utomati C
Plymouth . Runs well , 1 175 . C ell Stove
873· 7585 after I p.m .
FENDER TELECAS'rER, u rly sixties
w /Case, $60 . Also H;armony rocket
wlln B l 91bY vlbrlltO, &amp;20 . Greg.
833~24 .

FOUR - BEDROOM apartment off
FUR CO.ATS (2) Jllc•rt bllc;k fiJI Jell?
lh•ley 1 S-mlnute weiiC f'rom G~mll)ia. • IEJc. ~ond. t'16 Neh. J"so 'YoJC coll• r fur

FOLK GUITAR lessons, popular so ngs
FinQ41r and flit pic king styles. G o od
c o ffee. Jeff . 88 2 - 114 7, 835· 3384
PEOPLE O&lt;en!Jft are 5. 75 cen 1~ . .e n
In s uparm~tk ets Food Service c norgu
15 c ents each . Or;ange you 11110 they're
almost out o f susont Sponsored by
the bH:Ntrtlsan Organlzatlon fOf Fr ee
Ora n ges (BOFFO) .
MICHELE my Belle, I love you Je
l'alme Je t'a dore Te enamor o V o ur
friend, Bob.
TO DAVE: when vou r la c e app.,fed
ove r my troubled life at flr$1 I
understood only the poverty ol wnat 1
h ave but then IU part icular light o n
woods
on fivers - on lh e Mot
became my beginning In the c oloured
world In wnlc n 1 h ad not yet had my
o.&lt;]lnnlng . I am lO afraid - I em )O
elrald or tne unexpected sunrise
finishing of revelati ons ana tea" a na
the eJCcltement flnlsnlng - I cso not
fight It - my love Is tniS fut
1
nouriSh II w no c a n nourlsn nothing
love's slipshod wat c hma n
tear hems
m e In - 1 am aware tha t tne m inutes
are short a nd thll the coloul\ In my
eyes w ill vaniSh wnen your face sets.
Love, Lynn.

- r..tlc and cesual . L . .ve name and
number, S~trum Box 90. Thank you,
Rob.

LOST. FOOND
FOUNO - bOOil In 2nd floor East
Goodyear Lounge. Owner probably
took m ine b Y mistake. Call 831·2055 .
FOUNO - Marc h ht. two keys corner
H..-tei ·Matn. Mesh cha in, dlatlnctlve
med al . Ca ll E rnie . 834· 1062.

~

FLY BUFFALO student ftltfltJ to
Eur()C)e N .Y .CJLondonJN.Y.C. May
31- AU9Uit 22. t1H . July 9 - Auguat
23, 1219. Contact Alan MMmulsteln
837.()393, 6-9 p.m.
J08
RESUMES
profeeslonal ,
wnfldenttal consultation. S~lal rat.,
for students. r-nt traduat• and
veterans. 835--4473.

ANTIQUES and modern furniture,
c «amlcs, china, etc. SM SICS at
Yesterday ~ Tomorrow Shop, 1439
Hertel Ave .
TVPING, e xperie nced , nur u.a., 1.40
per p-... 834·3370. Faat Mrvlce.

FOUND: Black pair o f gloves In Baird.
R oom II Cell Mark . 833-6760.

SUB-t..ET APARTMENT

ROOMMATES WANTED

5 ·8EOROOM H OUSE -to sublet .
Available May 15 - Aug. 31. Price
negotiabl e . Call 875 -5754.

3 F EM ALE roomm ates ; two to snare,
one single, starling June 1; half block
ftom c a m p us: $6 6{montn . Call
837· 2846 .

3-8EOROOM HOUSE nallable for
next year . Must sublet tor summer .
839·30 19 after 6 :00.

TWO FEMALE roommates wan ted .
O w n rooms . Good deal tor Jan u ary
graduatM . Sept I 5 -mlnut e walk to
UtnDU~. 837· 1342

APT . NEEDED lor June 1St thru Aug.
311t for male student - would prefer
UB area. Willing to shere. Cell
741·3209 after 9 p .m .

FEMALE to sn11e room In mode rn
apt
15-mln . walk trom ~m pu&gt; .
Available 4/ 1 Linda 83 7-4692.

APARTMENTS WANTED

2 F EMALE roommates wanted to
s hare t ur11lshed apartment, 5 minute
walk to c amp us . Starting May . Call
Ruth or Gayle . 8.31 -4052

FEMALE ROOM MATE fOf 2-oed room
op.trtmenl on Jewell and Main,
s 70/ mo 837·9066
ROOMMATE S wa n led
Male or
tem e le. Ultima te In c ountry living.
Br ick r;anch house t private bedrooms, 2
b~tns , sunken lamll)' and living room
wltn beautiful o ink cor.led, marble
fire p lac e
Kitchen w ltn all
c o nven l en c el
self-cleaning oven,
dlshW&lt;tlher, wall to wall carpeting In
every room F rM run o l 100 acres of
w oods, swimm ing &amp;. lll&lt;e privileges
Grounds bee utlfu ll y landscaped
lndlvldue ts wltn c leen habits need only
apply 1 115 montn1y In c ludes ulllltiM
30 minutes hom campus Av aila ble
Sept. lSI, 1972 Write Bo• 92 g iving a ll
partic ular s

16

MOS. OLD male bN~II-terrler
needs tfew liome. Coli Pet, 83 I -5505 or
897·0032 .
GAMBLING BLOOD r A c quaintan ce
desired of w om an 18· 22 wno Is ,. ,n
a n a att ra ctive wltn w•rm , m ila even
d iSposition bY man (251 wno ltkes
favored odds. Inqui re Box 70
DON'T MI SS OUTI I B uy y o ur Cllll
ring tocsay . You could win 1ne colored
TV . University Bool&lt;store.

MISCELLANEOUS
EXCELLE N T student rocllel DV
Eugen e S teinberg
oboes1 . , Sal. 18,
3 :00, Recital Hall Ba ird . FrM .

----

BRING VOUR car to the people who
have the experience BEFORE they
work on v o ur car
Independent
FOfelgn Car Setvlce. 1311· 1850 .
PIANO TUNING t Experlen&lt;:*S mullc
student will tune lor up to naif
pro fessional r• res. UB area . 837 -3679.
TV PING
83.. .()872

n ear

UB .

C.oll

HELP!I We need a 3-bedroom apt . t or
Sept . 1St w ltn ln walk ing distanc e from
campus . Call Mary, 8 3 1-4153: Benne,
11 31 · 2062 or Amy , 831· 2397 .
FOR N EXT VEAR five-minut e
walk . Three or more, or two
apa rtme nts near N CO otne f . 831· 2884 ,
1134..-713.
I - 2 BEDROOMS prefer furnished In
U B aru, Immedia tely, by Oenlsn
couple . 1137.()201.

FEMA L E wants own room In house
near campus starllniJ S eotemb8f . Ca ll
1133· 7571.
APARTMEN T wanted lor n ext yur
lor 2 or more &gt;tude nts - walking
dl&gt;tonc e - C oli Btuce 1131 2396 .
) ·BEDROOM •partmenl n eeded May
Of Sep t. Call Merl e , Batb, Marilyn ,
1131 · 2585, 831 4169 , 831·2063
HELPH
FOUR -BEDROOM apartment wanted
lor wmmet a na 7 2 · 7 3 occupancy
Mull oo walking CSIUence from cempus.
C all 131· 2085 .
HOUSE Of 2 ·1amlly nouse to r
eight norneleu people. PLEASE! Ca ll
831 · 3454.

EIIMn

Hear, 0 Israel

WILL TUTOR In Runla n, H eb rew •no
Germ on . C all Bo ris 8311 ·2 4 22

For gems from the
JEWISH BfBLE

ANGLO AMERI C A N Anllque•. Jll 2
Metn Sl Somelh lng tor every student.
Jewelry, tin, orass. c nlna , glass, unulual
b u ttons

Phone
875-4266

OUT-A-SIGHT!

CLUTCH ARTISTS

AUTORAMA!
Mar.

17-18-1~•

Featuring:
- SPECIAL HOLIDAY SERVICE --

LET US BE

YOUR .WHEEILS.

Direct trom campus to New York City PONYA
Minimum groups of 32 or more will be taken to other
N.Y.C . area locations.
Return o n any regular schedule or as a w-o up. - All
for the low low fare of 0 N l Y $22.55 -a saving of $ 14
March 29. 30 &amp; 31 st
~BUSES LEAVE DIRECT FROM SUNY/ AB CAMPUS
Ken .. 1lin, campus agent at
KEN SIRLIN
SUNI 'AB, can get you out
CAMPUS AGIENT
of town in a hurry on
116 MARION RD.
special or regular schedules
Phone 836-4~169
with connections to all

AmeG·o GREVHOUNID
~

... and leave the driving to tUB.
earl to insure a seat!

FREI:' RACING MOVU:.S

cont.nuous!

"ARCHI E BUN KER 'S Hard Hat Hauler "

LANGHORNE CHAMPIONSHIP stock. car

5 ROCK C ROUPS! Flesh &amp; Blood, Weekend Trtp.
The Charles. Barbara S1ndair &amp; The Ptn KuihiUnS,
Hard Times!

GENE SNOW'S 220 mph fuel funny car

THE " ZINGERS"

COMMANUIFR TOM JOLL.S of KB-TV

stX

California cush&gt;ms!

WIN' A SUZUKJ MINI BIKE

TWO WINN tRS1

PREVI EW M local drag &amp; stock car tracks

WIN 1A COLOR T ELEVlSlON SET!

DAILY FASHION S HOWS Models by June II Ltd.
fashions by Joanne's Boutique
PLUS : the cream of the customs, hot rods, race cars, sport cars, dragsters, bikes.

Fri. Mar.17: ''Flesh 8i Blood"!

MASTEN AVE:l-«JE
ARMORY
BRING THIS AD AND SAVE SOc ON ADULT AOMISSION.
Wednesday , 15 March 197~~ . The Spectrum . Paqe fifteen

�Announcements
The U~ate Soc:lolotY AJ5ocgtion will
meet today at 3 p.m. in Room 42, 4224 Ridge lea.
At the meeting there will be an election of officers
and a discussion on reactivating the honot
society.
,
Student Afflll&lt;1tes of ' the Amerinn
Soc:iety will have a meeting today at 7:30
p.m. in Room 5 Acheson Hall. This is the first
meeting so anyone interested in chemistry as a
major, minor Of sideline is welcome to come and
help organize the group.

Wh~t's

Happening

Wedne5dq.~dt lS

The

Chemic~

The Student Physical Therapy AssociatiOn is
meeting today at 7 p.m. in Room 248 Norton .
Democratic Youth Coalition will meet today at

8 p.m. in Room 234 Norton. Rev Richard l- ord
(president of BUILD) will be the guest speaker
Youth delegates to the Democ.ratic N,wonal
convention will also be discussed .
CAC Environmenul Action Corps w1ll
meeting today at 3 p.m. in Room 240 Norton

hc~vc

a

If you can't decide ~out a major or 1t you hJve
a major but don't know possibilities for employment
and graduate study
JOin a L1fe Work,hop Group.
Call Bill1e at 831-251 I.
Undergraduates ukin&amp; French courses, plec1~e
ptek up a copy of the newsleuer in Room 214
C.rosby today.
The Council o f UB Campus Ministrir~ will have
Or Barbara Putnam of the Department of Cnun\elor
Education as a guest speaker today at 10 c1 m. at
ResurrectiOn House All advi)Or~ to Cdmpus related
rel1gjous groups are inv1ted.

Theater Departm,ent Repertory: Pontaglelze,
directed by · Saul! Elkin, 8 :30 p.m., Harriman
Studio Theater, admissio n charge, also presented
tomorrow.
Concert: Senior recital - jane Bane, soprano,
assisted by Kathleen Pogel , plano, 8 :30 p.m.,
Baird Hall.
Art show : TEAM ex hibition
graphics from the
TEAM work,hop in Buffalo, 9 a.m . 5 p.m.,
through Saturday, Hayes Lobby .
Photography show: Richard Kaufman, 4240 Ridge
lea, 9 a.m. - 5 p .m ., also tomorrow,
Eye-con '72: Donald Richie, curator of film at the
Mu!teum of Modern Art in New York, will
lecture on ''The japanese Film : Its A\sumptions
and Aesthetic\," Nor ton Conference Theater, 8
pm
Mu~ic.c1l lnnovauun' Member$ of the SEM en~mb le
from the State University at Buffa lo are
fe,uured guest~. 9 :05p.m., WBCE-FM .
Phuw Club El&lt;hlbition · Photographic work from lhe
US Photo Club members is on displ;ay in the
~c()nd floor exhibition room of Norton.
lecture . Prof. Philip Thiel o f the Departmen t of
Architecture of the University of Wa)hington,
pre..enh, "A Pror.ress Report on a Notation of
f nvironmcn~J Expcnence," 7.30 p .m ., School
of AIChitecturc c1nd Environmental Design,
..ewnd flo()r, 29 17 Main St. (next to Bennett
H1gh School)
Worl..)hop · "Onondag., A threatened Nation Within
the St.tlt: of New Vorl..," led by Oren Lyons of
the OnondagJ N.ttion, 2 4 p.m., Room 234

Norton ; evening assembly with members of
Onondaga Nation, 8 p .m.. Fillmore Room,
sponsored by the Native American Cultural
Awareness Organization.
Thursday, March 16
Film: Destry Rides Again with j ames Stewart, and
Marlene Dietrich, 7 p.m. and 9 p.m ., Capen 140.
Musicology lecture series; lames Haar, Professor of
Music, NYU, "Some 16th Century Settings of
Ariosto's Orlando Furioso" 3 :30 p.m., Room
101 Baird Hall .
Inter-Resident Council elections : Polls will be open
11 a.m. - 7 p .m. located in Tower, Goodyear,
Clement and Allenhurst.
UUAB video comm ittee : Video-tapes " Banned rn the
USA " with Dick Gregory and " We Are All Lt.
Calley," 8 :30 p.m., Haas Lounge.
Film: P;asolinl's Teorema, 5, 7 and 9 p .m .,
Diefendorf 147.
Psychiatric guest lecture series: Charles B. Wilkinson,
M.D., assocl&lt;tte dean , School of Medicine,
University of ~issouri, '' Problems Encountered
In Black-White Groups," 8:30p.m., Room 139
Capen Hall.
Faculty collo'luia : Desmond Hamlet, " Milton'\
Concept of Justice In Paradise lost," 8 p.m.,
Faculty Club, Red Room
Workshop: " Indian Unity, a Matter of Surviv;al," led
by Beeman Logan of the Tonawanda Seneca
Nation, 2 - 4 p.m ., Room 234 Norton ,
sponsored by tho Native Ameflcan Cultur.sl
Awareness Organization
Amy Allrend

The Niapra Frontier Flying Club will hold It\
general membership meeting tomOfrow e11 8 p m tn
Room 147 Capen Hall. Film and presentc1t1on on
olVI.ltiOn weather by ground SChool 10\trUl-tOI will be
ft~atured . The publici ~ invited.
The Undergraduate Anthropology Club w1ll
h.sve an organizational meetmg c1nd tilm tomo1 rt1w
from 4 6 p.m . in Room 330 Norton Lvc1yunc
111tere\ted '' welc.omc.
UB Ourlng Club wrll sponsor d flr)l drd
demons tratron and lecture tomorrow dt 7 p m rn
Room 234 Norton. Also to be di\cus'ocd i\ piom'l'r
weekend.
The Greek Club w1ll meet tCJdc~y at b p m m
Room 232 Norton to pl.tn the I ndependem.c D.ty
event.
CAC'~ nt'W protect
ProJect Aware n~cd'
volunteer\ to work as ddvucate\ fur puhhc ·"'"'"nc.e
recipient\ All interested should .mend a mC'ctmg
tomorrow at 7:30 p.m in Room 262 Norton ur
le.tve a message in Project Aware m.ulbox 10 the t Al
office, Room 220 Norwn.

Psychomat is today from .~ 6 p,m in lht'
Norton first floor cafeteria and tomorrow from
7 10 p m m Room 232 Norton
WNYPIRG will hdve c1 meeting today at 6 p "'
1n Room 234 Norton All clfC tnvucd to attend
The Student Coordinating Committee for the
Israel Emergoency Fund will hold c1 party fm the
students working on it on Saturday dt 8 p.m. 1n the
Jewish Office.
The Sute University at Buffalo Amateur Radio
Society will meet today a.t 7:30p.m. in Room 330
Norton.
Ch~¥1 House h~ made arrangemenh for
students to spend the Seder nights at lubavitch
Headquarters in New York . All those wishing further
information should contact Rabbi Gurary or call
833-8334 or 631 -5483.

McGovern for President needs workers. The
Wlsoons.in PrimM)' is April 4. Please help us. Me~ting
to be vnnged. Call Tim van Block at 837-8474.

Backpa.ge

-santo•

Sports Information
Saturcby: Varsity indoor traek at the New York
State Championships Union College - host school.
1
ftoller hockey action resumes Saturday morning
at 10 a.m. in the p;arking lot in between upen and
Michael Hall. New players and spectators are
welcomed to this unique spom event.
The Buff.alo lppon Judo club will hold its
second &lt;annual men's open invitational judo
tournament this Saturday. Students with validated
ID cards will be admitted free.

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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
Mond8y, 13 Mardt 1872

Suu Unlvnty of New York at Buffllo

Vol. 22, No. 6S

Andersor1 exposes U.S. 'censorship'
~

by Janis Cromu

that be had no knowledge of the
plllDned ITT commitment. Mr.
Anderson flared, "Can you
imaJine a more arrogant lie than
Richard Nixon's campaign
manager in charge of every detail
of the convention saying that be
had no knowledge of it? (liT's
monetary commitment] That's
not only a lie but an arrogant lie.
What kind of fools does be think
the American people are?"

City b'd/Jor

''We have censorship in this
country. The government censor~
the news at its source," declared
columnist Jack Anderson on
Friday at Buffalo's Statler Hilton.
Mr. Anderson, noted journalist
and "sovemmental watchdog"
spoke to a Lure audience about
his most recent expos.ea: alleged
ITT -aovemmental coUaboration
and the uncovering of ~cret
India-Pakistan papera.
The theme tbrou&amp;)lout the
evenina was "The People's Riehl
to Know." t.h:. Anderson called
the security .-yatem a censorship
system, claimina that any
governmental official in an open
discU&amp;Sion will admit that "over
95% or the c.Lassified documenu
are classified to keep the
information from the American
people. They don't involve
national security at aU but
politic.l security." Mr. Andenon
said that the classification system
was being used to cover all
poI it ical "misconceptions,
blunders, and mistakes" and to
keep the pretent poUticiana In
power.

.,..

Sdec:.... pubfialti9Q
"And then aftcz the deed il
done and tbe policies baYe been
.et," he ocmtiniUid, "thea they
look over all the secret sensitin
papers and ask what do we tell
them~" The noted coiUJJI.Dist also
accused the aovemment of
~electively publishing only the
information that aupporu the
administration's policies. "And
this is not unlike the way in which
the KremLin operates," be added.
Not onJy does the 1ovemment
"tell us only what they want us to
know," but the government wants
the public to believe that ia ia
"unpatriotic to look under the
secrecy label. But who ia
unpatriotic?" demanded Mr.
Anderson. "Those who hide from
the American people what they're
supposed to lnow or those who
tell the Amencan people what
they're entitled to know?"

tlUJ -would be a -test case" to
dctcnnlne wbe:ther or not theee
areat conalomerates could
continue to absorb amallu
companis 1rithout repdal. In
add1tioo be pemuadod 0&gt;npw co
not pa1 any fu.rtheT anti-trust
lqi.alation. Wz. Ycl.aJen said that
he could work effectively with the
existin&amp; laws. He worked on the
case for two and a half years, said
M.t. Anderson.

Study dropped
Mr. Anderso·n noted that ITT
officials then approached Richard
Kleindienst (Assistant Attorney
General) and Praidential a1de
Peter Flannipn. Soon after, a
thr~y study of the anti-trust
case by Mr. Flamtip.n's office was
preaented to ltllr. McLaren. "Mr.
McLaren amazinpy chanaecl his
position," cbai'JP'Ci Mr. Anderson .
"He would hue us believe that
thi.B three-day report persuaded
tum to discard his two and a half
year study of his own economic
position .. • tb;at's what he swore
under oath."
This opinion revenal stirred
corporate monlter
Mr. Anderson then turned to some heavy criticism from
his recent Investigation of Democratic N:ational Chairman,
International Telephone and Larry O'Brien . In reply, Mr
Telerraph (ITT) sayina that the Kleindienst $erut a letter to Mr.
incident "illustrates h o w O'Brien aayina that the cue was
JOYcmment offietals, by thetr oeaotiated and handled
oature, Wte to operate in the exclusively by the Justice
Department's Anti-Trust Division.
chrk."
Step by ltep, Mr. Anderson However , pointed out Mr.
reiterated the events of the case. Anderson, .one ITT director
He pictured ITT as one of those visited with Mr. Kleindienst five
"carnivorous, corporate monsters tin)es, and another sent a l.e tter
that bas been goina around which referred to even more
devourina smaller corporations." coUaborations before the case was
However, when ITT attempted to completed.
"devow" Hartford Fire Insurance
Corporation, the Anti-Trust office ICleindieost lied
Mr. Anderson continued,
of the Justice Department warned
ITT that if it did merge with the •-ncrefore, we muat conclude
Insurance Company, the Justice that Richard Kleindienst told a lie
Department would take steps to wben he said tble case was handled
dissolve the action, aid Mr. exclusively by the Justice
Anderson . ITT &amp;pored the Department . AlDd that man is now
wamina and mcrFd with the awaitin&amp; confirmation to be tbe
top law enforcement officer with
sm.al1u company.
The Aoti-TnMt division moved the reapoOiibility of pi'OICCUtinJ
apinst 11T. Ricb.atd W. McLaren, puraery. In July," continued Mr.
bead of the Anti-Truat Anderson, "ITT gave a
they would put
Department, publicly stated that committment

rrr:

tfba\

up to $400,000 to subsidize the
Republ ican convention. Ei&amp;bt
days later tbe anti-trust case wu
ecttled " Nr. ~ndlentt conta\da
\bat Uao two .veta I.R unrelated .
Mr. Andenon IIGQ.IIOd ton:Dor
Attorney OencraJ John MJCcbcll
or ''wearinJ two bah" while ln
the Justice Department. He said,
..On one day be w• the Attorney

lndia-Pamtan conflict
The columnist also spoke of
the Uruted States' participation in
the India-Pakistan war. ConlTary
to America's tradition of
defendmg democracies, said Mr
Anderson , in this instance the
United States supported the West
Pa..ltistan dictatorship rather than
the democratic Bengala
government of East Pakistan
"President Nixon bad
subsequently said that we didn't
condone the sJaughter of these
people" related Mr. Anderson .
"That's true," he continued , "but
we didn't oppose it either."
East Pakistan consulate Archer
General and the other be wu Blood was brought back to
Presiden t Nixon's ca.mpaiaan Wubinaton and labeled an
manapr." Mr. A.nd.el'lon also aaid a1ann11t for seek.lna auppott from
t.bat employeca iD the JUIItice tlw UDit.ed State&amp; (01' the 'BcDplil,
Dcpartmo:ot bn'C told blm ~lllt said Yr . Allldeaon. Ptevio\l&amp;ly
Mr.
ao., beeo in "llr. Blood was colllidcred an
chuae of the RepublfC;In •• tabli&amp;bmcnr man, he d.idn 'r
oooventioo decision~ aa well aa tlbe m • Jc e w a Yes ," aoted Mt .
AndMton , "but wbe.o bo aw the
rest of the Nixon camp.ip.
And yet, Mr. MitcheU tesllfi•~

Mit...., ...

Program restructure

Policy Sciences: change due
by Ronald Sandbera
Spectrum Stoff Writer

To compensate for its eventual derruse as a
"budget entity," the Department of Policy Sciences
will undergo a major restructuring of its current
proaram. The department, which has been dually
confronted with "severe budgetary restrictions" and
problems of how to broaden its educational
proarams once it is discontinued , seeks to ma10tain
and increase programs Within other interested units
by meana of a " Policy Studies Consortium."
In a document outlining the need for a
"lona-term viable" continuation of the program, it is
proposed that " the vanous policy-interested un&amp;ts on
campus pool their policy-oriented resources mto a
"Policy Studies Consortium"
so that the
combined pohcy thrust will be &amp;rcattr than any one
umt could mount on its own." Through the
implementation of this mechanism, the depanment
hopes to rationally coordinate interests among uruts
without the addition of faculty.
John Thomas, actin&amp; duector of Policy Sciences,
said the proposal bas two basic objectives · one, to
capitalize on the interests of other departments and
schools, specifically in the applied policy area ; and
two, to recast the programs in a way which will
require lea funding than is presently necessary.
Lester Milbrath, associate provost of the Faculty or
Social Sciences and Administration , said that if this
could be accomplished, it wni mean "a viable
opportunity for people to specialize in policy studies
even though there won't be a separate department
devoted to it."

Several •minars
Essenually•, the consortlum proposal "will be
linked to individual policy progra.ms developed by
unilJ which become members of the consortium.
Student&amp; will be admitted into a policy major, &lt;track'
or proaram offered by • department of acbool." As a
further Innovation, it is suacsted that the faculty
invoiYed in th e consortium institute "several core
eminan m various aspects of the policy process."

Units that appear most mterested 1n part.icapaling in
the consorti11n are the Law School , School of
Mana~tement und the PoLitical Science Depanment
Accordin11 to Dr. Thomas, the restructuring
" will place less emphasis on admitting students
directly to a poucy studies program in other units,
thereby &amp;~vlna: them a poUcy science option in their
work ." He further said the consortium concept
would add :a new dimension to the ordinarily
entrenched, traditionally oriented departments.
The science of pohcy studies is a program
designed for those students wishing to focus their
attentions on "5pec1fic social problems in a way that
at ~n be o f maximum guidance to persons wbo must
make soc1al deciSions and construct socua1 realities."
Bastcally , a poLicy sc•eoliSt would plan poLicy
analySIS w1th a knowledge from several social science
dJSciplJDes for busmcss and &amp;ovemment. The
document lii:JO states that there IS an incre&amp;Sllla
demand for people trained in ttu.s field either as
policy sc1en hsts, tnstructors, or public policy
researchers and adVISOfll
Vilab~ altettUIItiYe

The poUc:y studies program at present operates
exclusively 011 a graduate level but is considerin&amp; the
possibility of an undergraduate program if there ia
su fficient demand . However, this would be
developed aflter a successful graduate program gets
underway . sta1ted the document.
The ovenall rcstructurina of the department will
ult-imately offer both students and faculty a more
extensive proaram in the policy sciences, accordina
to Dr. Tbom11S. He believes that "you can somewhat
paradoxically develop yourself as an independent,
separate depaLrtment, but if what your real intcte~t
is, is interdbciplinary applied proarams, then you
oupt to finlll a mechanism within the University
which will be able to relate to these interests and
accommodate• the various departments and schools."
Moreover, be fcd.s that the consortium concept will
sene as a viable alternative for the soon to be
defunct depa11ment.

�Follow tbe maps

Students lack knowledge of
legal campus parking areas
"They know by the maps." This new method
has been suggested by Campus Security Director
Patrick Glennon concerning student knowledge of
where it is illegal to park.
Apparently, many students don't know. This
has become obvioUJ as parking tickets have appeared
in abundance around campus. One student, Alan
Ostroff, fought this onslaught through the many
levels of bureauc racy and was aucceuful. His story
should serve as a warning and an inspiration to aU
driven o n campus.
Mr. Ostroff had left his car in Parker Lot,
adjacent to Winspear Ave. When he returned he
found a ticket on his windshield, charging him with
parking in the faculty section of the lot. He had not
noticed any signs informing him of this and decided
to contact Campus Security.

Gda map
When Mr Ostroff asked Lee Griffm, assistant
directo r of Campu5 Security, how he was to know
that his car was in the faculty parking lot, Mr.

Griffin said : "You should\·e used common sense."
Mr. Ostroff answered : " I didn't know you pve
tickets for not using commo n sense." He also didn't
know that Campus Security does not rescind tickets
for a quick wit.
Mr. Ostroff next went to Potice Chief Campbell
of the Buffalo Po bce Department. After hearing Mr.
Ostrofrs explanation of tlhe circumstances, Otiof
Campbell told him to fc•rget about the ticket.
According to Mr. Ostroff, Chief Campbell said. '1t's
absurd. I wonder what's going on up there."

Mr. Glennon seems un~1ffected by Mr. Ostroff's
plight or by the lack of ne-cessary signs. "If they're
parked illegally," he wd, " they'll get tickets. They
know by the maps where to park. I can't explain
what happened in that rMr. Ostrofrs J case."
For those st udents who don't have maps, the
following areas offer sanctuary from Campus
Secunty ticketing · the south end of Parker Lot;
BaJid lot ; Main·Bailey l&lt;•t; Quarry Lot; Michael
Lot ; the east end of S herman Lot; and Tower Lot.

Dismissal of security guard
determined by year absence
Counter claims of violated
State Civil Service regulations
s urr o und the dismissal of a
campus security guard. Richard H.
Morgan, injured during a 1970
campus disrupuon and presently
confined to a whee\ctwr. reported
that State Civil Servtce 1ul~
mandate a state employee must be
absent continuoUJJy from work
for a fuU year before he can be
terminated.
Mr. Morgan asserts t hat he has
not bee n absent for tlus length nf
time but that the last day he
worked was June 8, 1971
However, the University personnel
office maintain that he was
dismissed because he used up all
his sick and leave time.
Mr. Morgan said he was mJured
on Feb . 25 , I 970 when htl •n the

back by a "tin garbage can"
thrown by students during a
demonstration. He was "on and
off" the job because of his back
mjury , he satd, until June 8, 1971 .
Low and humanity

Pers o nnel direct o r Harry
Poppey explained that Morgan
was dismissed as of Feb. 24 when
Kenneth P. Glennon, direc to r of
secunty , sent a Jetter to him
wtuch reportedly stated · "Since
you have been absent from and
unable to perfonn the duties of
yo ur poSitiOn for over one year, 11
ts necessary that your services be
terminated . ·•
Ex plaining the dismissal, Mr
Po ppey said that the Universtly
can lernunale an employee if the

The UB .Ahmuli

~don

.. Buffalo'• Heartllltone Manor, 333 Dick Ro.d, Depew, N.Y.
Tic:keta are SS per penon for the cocktail at 6 p.m., clin.o« at 7 and
are 8ftilable at the Alumni oftke, 123 Jewett Parkway, 831-4121 ,
or at the door. The c:hancd1or wll clilcua dae influeace of the
SUNY ayatem on Western New York, how the SUNY aydem
operates, the importance of alumni propanu, boclpl impticationa,
future plans, JrOW11l ud tenke.
COLLEGE 8 , OFFICE OF CREDiT - FREE PROGRAMS
end

SUNVAB CAMPUS MINISTERS
pr••en 1

ROSEMARY RADFORD REUTHER
speaking on

THE PRUDENT/ PRURIENT SYNDROME
The Lib8t'8tion of Women in the Church
DIEFENDORF 146, MARCH 16 - 8 :15 p.m.
TUTORING AND GUIDANCE~
SINCE1938
•

Editorial elections
VARSITY TRACK
TRYOUTS

AppUcat&amp;ons for the position of Editor·in-Chlef of Th ~ Sputrum for the academic
year 1972 - 1973 will be taken until March 21.
The applJcation coosilts of 1 letter to the editorial board , atatlna reuons for
deairina the position, quallflcatioDJ and previoua joumaliltic CXJ!)erience. The poaition il
open to any State Uninnity anduate or underaraduate 11udent.
The editorial board will inteFYiew all candidatea on Thwada,y . March 23.
Proq&gt;«tive appticanta are uraed to contact the Editor, R•&gt;om lSS Norton Hall aa
10on u poaible to familiarize themldvea with any procedunJ or technical queationa
about the position or about The Sp~ctrum

There will be a meeting of
all varsity track and field
candidates Monday, March
20 at 4 :00 p.m. in room 3
Clark Gym .
'

Party

any Mo nday, Wednetday or Fnday ar
The S pu rrum office, 355 Nort o n Hall

Comt up and JOi" ru

Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggen - Nur Bliley
834-7350

admlallon
UonaliChooll

end~

• Smell IIOUP'

• votum6nous mMarill f« ,__

I NO POGIL - NO NONSENSE! I
IU PST ATE CYClE IIW sl
I
ca11694-3100
I
t_ " A* vour..-.AbolltU."·~

• L~ ll:ttedule

ngrid Brainard
will present
",tN EVENING OF 15th &amp; 16th Centu,ry Court Dance"

Monday , March 13 - Master Cbss: 4 - 5 :30 p.m .
Dance Studio, Clark Gym
Lecture demonstration : 8 :00p.m .
23 1 Norton Hal~

Pa9e two . The Spectrum . Monday, 13 March 1972

GRE
to.,.,...

• Pr"•·adon fw ._..required fw

~IMMEOIJ-TE FS.1 - ANY SIZE ~

Ph .D. Dance Historian

Sporuored by U.B. Dance Club and
Tile UUAB De.nc. Attl CommhtM

MCAT- OAT
LSAT-ATGSB
• Sl11 end twetw . - _ c:ou,_

''MiroiicvCi.'EiisuiAice•

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Rlliablt

btl .-n•.,ecl to ba.e Ernat L..

Boyu, Cbucellor of dae State Ulliwnity of New York, tisit
Weatem New Yort. Dr. Bo)'U' wll be 'P"'kina at a~ reception

employee has been c umulatively .
not n ec:euarily continuously.
absent from work for more than
o ne yea r . Mr . Morgan , he
mamtained, used up aU of his sick
time and .208 days of paid leave of
absence ance he was injured.
A~rding to Mr. Glennon, the
wh ole matter u Ill "internal
government matter." In addition
he maJnl.allled : ''In aU matters u
far as f can see, we went by
regu l a I ton s and every
conSideration that humani ty and
law a ll o w ed " Further, Mr
Glennon commented that Mr.
M o rgan ca n rea ppl y for
.lppolll tm•cn 1
Agreeing with tJus, Mr. Poppey
satd Morgan nught he able to get a
kind of poSition which he would
be qualift1~d to do

prepered by opens In Hdl field

The Spectrum ¥ publish-' til,..
rima• • waM, -v Mondlly,
*'d,_.y •ntJ Friday; durint t1ra
~- acadam;c ...,.. by Sub·Boerd
1, Inc. Offlc• .,. loc.rwl at 355
Nonon lhll, St.r. Unl~tv of NYor.t •t Bu"--o. 3436 Main Sr
Buffalo, Naw Yor.t, 142 14 :
T-'ep/tOM: A,_ Codt 116· Edltori11f
831-4113: Buli,..,, 831-31110.

C*\.,.

tellond to

mwt lndWidual ..-tL ~

can .,. llpf-.d owr a period of
~mcmtt.toev-. rxfrx

out of town studenu. • parlod
ofonew.•Opportunlty frx rwiRw of pall
1 - . via tiiPe et ttw e~ntw

Fot infonnatio!' about special
EASTER CLASSES

Call

BW Blank

837~360

Rapr•••nrwl fOT «&lt;wwnillnt
,Na ttOIIM Eduutiol'tM
~. Inc., 360 La•lntton A ...
Naw Yon, N. Y. 10011.
.,

SpecW CoM.-zt eoun. dwinl

M .60 ,_,

.TANLIY H . KA..LAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD.

SuberlPf/on ,.,. _
1

..,...,. or ltl.DO for rwo ..,...,,

~::::- ,._., l»idat BuffM,

W... . - lntw

IHII)Jf•

............ 0111

------..·u
·(212') SJt . .
15111 . . -

OAVS. tvt-. IIU~

Citeulation: 18.000

, BrAnch• In principal dt1es
Bo.......,s... ....... ~ ........

�Arts and Letters provost

SuOivan: 'unexpected' choice
"To me it's an unexpected
choice." Thus, John Sullivan,
recently recommended for the
post of Provost of the Faculty of
Arts and Letters publicly joine4
the ranks of observers somewhat
amazed at the selection of one of
the admirustration's staunchest
critics, for one of the University's
more important positions.
However, Professor Sullivan
bas given no indication that his

John Sullivan
voi ce will be s ubstantively
muffled. "There have been no
deals, no bargains, no conditions,"
he affirmed. Rather, he attributes
hu n o mmation, m part , to
administrative "realism."
This realism , he explained ,
mvolved the knowledge that an
acting provost could no longer be
VIable for the faculty . It has been
two years since Arts and Letters
has had a fuU-ti me provost.
Continuation of such a vac uum ,
Professor Sullivan feared . could
have resulted tn "man y fine
people [leavtng) " HIS pnme
reason for accepttng the offe r w as
to prevent such an exodu~
Pr o f essor Sul11van, whose
appotntment IS pendtnllo St c~te
Board of Trustee-; a pproval , ~ecs

his term u an interirn (though not
an "acting") o ne. "J see the job u
a three yeat one, until some better
and more intert."Sted penon
emerges who wants to serve." This
view, however, does not mean
that be sees his mle as passive
rather than active.

academic matters is envisioned by
Professor Sullivan. especially in
the area of curriculum planning.
" I'd like studenu to clo more
'demandins' of courses they
would lilte. It shouldn't jwt be
the department chairman and
faculty who decide, the studenu
should kn ow what they want and
let it be made known.
" I'd like student involvement
to be active. Much more elaborate
teac her evaluation systems sh o uld
be set up. What tends to happen
here is a teacher is let go and only
then do students come in and say ,
'Oh , he's a marvelous teacher.'

Office open
"Then: are two 1main things I
want to do. One involves students .
What I find lacking is student
morale. I do n't (ind students
identifying with Arts and
letters ." To alleviate this,
Prbf~or Sullivan pla,ns to prqvide
''free access to t.he provost 's
office.
"I would hope to have a
younger man as assodate provost.
We plan to show a gr·eater interest
in student affairs -· to develop
student esprit de co•rps , n ot just
facult y esprit de corps. Our very
first pnority, however, seems t o
me, as I said before, to keep the
faculty who may bt: te1 •. ..,ted t o
leave."
There has been a fear m some
quarters of the Uru.versity of a
do-emphasis of some areas of Arts
and Letters Profes:jor Sullivan,
though, is not " t oo worried . The
administration is most interested
in distinction," be believes. " The
national attention pc~ple give t o
this Uruversity are in tb~t Ins. By
living the Universiity national
prestige, even scientists will want
t o come."

Reaptivity seen
Pro fessor sullivan expresses a
tremendous intemt in what he
c alls an " interdisc iplinary
approach ," and state~ that Arts
and Letters "seerrts to need
solida rity ." In c reased
interdepartmental programs is one
of Ius majo r goals. Here , too,
Pro fessor Sullivan dot:s not see the
administration as dn
Insurmountable ob,tack
"They're (the adrniniStratwnl
r~ept tve to anythllllg you c;;.tn
o.:onVIncingl y argue for," he satd
A defimte role for studen ts tn

' Underpaid and underpromoted'
"It seems that it always takes a
cnsis to bring student reaction;
instead there should be steady
partici pat ion I certainly w ould
Wee to see good consistent teacher
evaluations laJd o n the president's
desk which wo uld be considered
a.~ h ighly as the number o f articles
published "

The Uruverslty commumty can
also expect to see the number of
m 1nonty and wo men fa cult y
members nse s ub s t a ntLaUy.
Professo r SuiJJvan tS espectally
sensttive t o the " disgra ceful"
s ituatton of the female in
academta . " Women are underpaid
and underpromoted . There is
always a tendency to hire a man
over a wo man when the two are
equally hued . This situation is
where reverse discrimination
should be used . I would have no
hesitation saymg I wtll fight for a
particular depart mental line tf it is
for a woman."
Professo r S ulli van LS presently
concludmg a term as chauman of
the Fac ulty Staff Caucus, a arou p
o f faculty and professiOnal staff
members concerned wttb the
" protec ti o n and promotton o f the
hberal spmt tn our Umverstt y .
partH.ui.Hly as thts appues to
educaltonal pohltl'S " It seems
I.Jkely that the phtl o~op h y o f hiS
o rgam za tton will fully p ervade tn
h.ts functtontn~ as prOVl&gt;l&gt;t

Housing law hearing
At 2 p .m iomorrow the Legisla ttive Committee of the Commo n Counril will hear
testimony o n a City of Buffalo h ou:sing law that proh1bil\ more than cwn unrelated
students from living together. The c:ommittee, chatred by Coun cilman -at-large Gus
Franzcyk, is responsible for evaluating proposed changes in city statutes . The hearing wiiJ
take place in the Council Chambers at City Hall.

Beef &amp; Alle House
3199 MALIN ST.
CO. Bled S_ . Of U 8 )

Quarter Nights
THREE NIGHTS ONLY:

MONDAY, TUeSDAY, WEDNESDAY

4p.m.~

nrcb 13 march 14 rnerch 15

MAXIMUS ~)UPER

TEQUI LA

soc

3 5C

ptt dlot

3 for$1

and more annoLfnced specials

'

Overcrowded libraiYmay be fire hazard
by Butch Murphy

c:ommented Mr. Hwang, stems
from "the poor construction of
the building ' ' The building was
The problem of space UJ the ere c ted in 1953, with little
HcaJth Sciences library, located foreSight int o the future. At that
in Capen Hall, has aroused the time the library handled about
fear of many students that the SiOO studen ts daily , and contained
library may be a fire hazard . Of 1!0 ,000 volumes. Today, as Mr.
parttc ular concern is the spiral fiwan&amp; pointed o ut, the library
staircase that winds d o wn fro m handles 1'200 atudenu daily, and
holds over 100,000 volumes.
the main floor to the stacks.
Myles Slatin, director of
The stairway itself i.a made of
steel, is sturdy from top to !l ibraries, aho blames the
bottom, and owns the disttnctio n .cleplorable state o f the library on
of being the only passaaeway to llhe buildina's construction. ' 'The
the staclcs. This poses not o nly a !lpiral staircase was mstaJJed to
fire haz.ard, but also, as noted by save spac e and money," he stated .
C K Hwang, duector o t the " I would Wee to Site a better
lteaJth Sciences library . "a traffic st atrwa y, and for that matter. a
better I.Jbrary ," commented Mr.
proble rn."
Mr Hwang pointed out that S latin A request has been put UJ
the sttuahon regardtng safety "ts by Mr. Slatm for more s pace
not that bad ." There are a number
of f 1 re c x t mguiShers read1ly Solution souaht
available . and there ts a hre door
J o hn Neal, d~rector o t
leadmg from the first level ur th e Factlittt•s Plannang stated that "we
sta ck s The second level of lhc arc aware of this very serious, and
sta.:ks has an allernate ~tairwa y v•e ry undesirable condition , and
asade from th e s p~ral ro ut~
w e are trymg to find a solution."
Mr Hwang &lt;ilStl p otnted oul Mr. Neal explained that the mam
that the "sta ck s an~ made nf s leet , problem was lu.:k of mo ney . " We
and the butlding L~ made o f have looked , and will con tinue to
conae te and thc1.e facts arc not look lo r the needed resources to
.:o nduc1n to fire .. Th L~ may h~ he ir thts bbrary ," he sta ted
~ou p leu
walh the fad lhal
Mr Neal mentioned that a
hard tover hooks arc not fast
httle over a year ago a revampmg
burntng Jna tatal hecau~e of t hcu
wok place tn the Health Sctences
sohdaty Thl· ventaaltton W'tem
labrary. but conceded that " this
also proved lObe adequa te
was nol enough .. He added that
they were upt1m isttc fo r the
Spiral s taircase
futurt•
··1 have never heard " bt~d
report com:erning th1s hbrary
II wa&lt;&gt; hoped by those mvolved
from the fm: and safet y people ,'" wath Hea lth Sc1ences that a new
Mr Hwang slat ed "As far a&lt;; I butldang would be erected o n the
know th1s hbrary IS safe. Jnd chat Amherst campus Stte to house the
1n ll u des the stacks .. Ro be rt lJbrary. These hopes were negated
Hunt, darector of Health and whe n II was learned that Health
Safety. could no t be reached fo( Sctences would remain on the old
com ment on the sttuat ion.
a ampus. The hope now IS for
The entire pr ob l em. ex panston
Spectrum Staff Wriur

eei··Rit
EALTH FOC)D SHOPP
1451 Hertel Ave. Near Norwalk 837-7661
N4TURAL PEA NUT BUTT ER
(Made while y·o u wait)

from fresh peanuts, no salt added.
OPEN 9 :30a. m . - 9 :00p.m.

Monday thru S•turd•y

LOW, LOW, PRICES ON ,VITAMiNS &amp; FOODS
Monday, 13 March

197~~

. The Spectrum . Page three

�Anderson • • •

slau&amp;htcr aoina on in that country
it wu more than be could
stomach. Now he's stuck in some
obscure comer of the S tate
Department."

U.S. supports Paldstan

The UUAB O.nc:. Arts Committee, MCf the UB
O.nc:. Club present an evening of 15th lnd 16th
century cS.nc:e. This event ftatures dance historien
· Ingrid Breinerd. Master d•!IMI will be held on
Mond•y M•rch 13 from 4~ :30 p .m . A
lecture-demQnltntion wiU t11ke piece from 8 - 10
p.m . in tht Clerk Gym O.nce Studio. Admission is
free.

Evening of dance

i

r:::::::~~~:'''-~?&gt;=*&gt;1

IX
~&lt;

~

~

lsndi Morie

English Oi.aJOJUe

Sturing Assi Dayon (Son of Moshe Oayon)

CLASSIFIED ADS m 111 be piKed
MonC.II IIHu Frldll! betw . .n 9 • m .
1nd 4 • 30 p . m . It 355 N orton Hell .
THE STUIDE NT rales of an ad for one
0.11 Is tl .25 for the flrll 15 word1 •nd
$ .05 for uch 1ddltlon11 word . Sl .OO
for NCh •04 1tlon•l oay . The dudllne
for M o nd1y 11 FriC.y ; for WednetOIY,
I t II M Otf!C.y , ano for FrldiY, II Is
Wednft&lt;lay by 4 : 30p. m .

=~

.~

"HELP
WANTED "
ldl c •nnot
dlscrlmlnllte on the basts of sex, color.
c reed or n • t1on11 orl9fn to •nv extent
(I .e., preftlr•biY Is still dlscrlml nltory).

Tuesday , March 14th et 7 :30p.m .

CONFERENCE THEATRE

"FOUN D" Ids will be run frM o f
ch.,9e for • mulmum of 2 OlliS ano
15 words.

~:

!:"ot •• •_,...,AA#~L&gt;~~~,._.••.,,u.•-'~"'""'"'W.'"' .,..•• • • •,• ·•• • • • •...... •• '•'•' ,_.. ..,...._,_, .,...-...••..,
~.....~~~.,..•••""&lt;~""• · ,.A ••"~··· ••••-."~'·"• •
~r__, x.r»·=-=~·

..,...v••

.......

From the East-West Pakistan
conflict flowed millions or
refugees into India . On Dec. 3
India , a lso a d e m ocracy,
anno unced its recognition of the
Bengali government a nd sent
tr oo p s in t o install the
gove r nment in p o wer. Mr.
Anderso n comme nted, "President
Nixon told his to p officials to
take a pro-Pakistan stand. Henry
IUssinger even caUed to explore
ways to ship arms to Pakistan.
And there was an ar ms embargo.
It was against the law to ship
arms."
However, Mr. Anderson cited
occasions where both Mr. Nixon
and Henry IGssinger assured
critics and the press that the U.S.
was neutral in the conflict. "When
Mr. Nixon was cau&amp;ht in th e Uo he
tried to explain it away by saying
tb.at Pakistan was threatened,"
said Mr. Anderson. Repeated
assurances that India would not
attack Pakistan were found in the
i nteltigence reports. "But the
government had to prove
otherwise so Mr. Nixon p1cked
out from the reports those
portions be wanted yo u to
know ," declared Mr. Anderson
and added, "Does be have the
right to do that? Do you have to
right to know? "
Mr . Anderson further alleged
that by presidenhal order, a " task
force" o f American war ships was
sent into the lnd1an Ocean w1th
contigency plans to "sto rm ashore
o n East Pakistan ." At the same
ti me, said Mr. Anderson , the U.S.

received reporta that China would
attack India and that the Soviet
Union wu prepared to suppress
the American fleet if it
intervened. "Didn't you have a
ri&amp;ht to know it?" he questioned.
"Now if they are in this group,
De m ocra ts wh o have taken
comfort o ver the things I' ve said
about Richard Nixon, let's talk
about Lyndon Jo hnson," said Mr.
Andenon. He compared the
Indian sit uation to the Gulf o f
Tonkin Resolution whicb enabled
the former president to greatly
esca l a t e the Vietnam War
Proponen ts of the resolution
included such anti-war legi!letors
as Senator McGovern , Senator
Fulbright and Senator Eugene
McCarthy. They voted that way ,
Mr. Anderson said, "because they
believed the President."

Truth came later
"II wasn't until seven years
later, with the publicatio n o f the
Penta&amp;on papers, that the publll
found out the truth," he said . " lf
we had known then that Mr
Joh nson intended to bomb North
Vietnam could we have saved
55,000 Americen Uves? .. queried
Mr. Anderson. " I don' t know, but
we were en titl ed to that
info rmatio n at that time.
" The real strength uf
democracy has got to be 10 the
free n o w of information to the
people," Mr. Anderson repeatedl y
noted . H e quoted T homas
Jefferson as saying, "If I had to
c h oose between government
With out newspapers and
newspapers without government, I
would not hesitate to choose 1hl'
latter."
Mr. Anderson's VISit to Buffaln
was sponsored by the Buffalo
Council o n Wo rld Affairs a nd the

Courlu ·Expre1s.

..

~ ~~~ ~~~

THE 0 R I G I 1\J A L S. A. - G. S. A.

SPEAKE:RS BUREAU

IN A FINJ~L FAREWELL

PRESENTS

DICK

Thursday, March 16

'

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, 13 March 1972
: It .. .. .. , ,;·, .... • • •.... ·.•.'... ',.,.; '. . .

GREGORY

9:30p.m. CLARK GYM

�Call for amnesty echoes from
victims of an 'uqjjustified' war
Editor's note: The following f1 the first pari of an article
researched and prepared by Alan Rosenbaum. 'The lecm•d
part will appear in Wednesday's Edition.

by AJan Roseobawn
Reprint from Stralr mapzlnee
The United States Government continues t o wage: its
war against Southeast Asia. This war in intrinsic:aJiy
cnminal and, as such, is an atrocity-producing situati.on .
Therefore the possibility 18 precluded o f viewing
well-publicized atrocities like Son My a nd My Lai as
"mistakes" or "excesses" in an otherwise sound fon:ign
policy. Tllis neo-colonialist rendition of imperialism (N .B ..
the policy of "Vietnamization") 41ecessarily spawns
1UegaHbes anct Immoralities, and is itself i!legal .and
immoral. Moreover, such a po licy has aroused. and should
arouse , a vigorous opposition. Individual and organ ized
expression of resistance to the war have increased in
number and kind as uwarenesss of soda! responsibility
t".Onfronts the individual in the form of the draft of the
realities of the front.
From the very beginmngs of U.S. Intervention tn the
Vietnamese Ctvll War, intra-governmental and pulblic
controversy opened to question the Jeg~t1macy of
conscription for an undeclared war . and whether or not. an
"'· act of aggr-ession had act ually occurred wh1ch forced an
Exe cu llve (presidential) commitment of American
manpower to V1etnarn . Hence, early individual resistance
to th e war crystaJUr.ed around moral and lclga1
considerations. late• oppoSition focused on its political
Significance as well.
My personal recollection of early support fo r the war
among conscriptible men made 1t diffic ult to discern. at
that time (ca.. 1964 7 ) , where simple feelings o f
pat r1otism yielded to Ingrained notions of what
''manhood" required. Consequently, war resisters were
usually condemned as "unpat rioltc" ur accused ot
·•unmanly" cowardice. fhe aggressive upsurge in the
government 's prosecution nf the war, countered ullll:ally
by sporadic but increaswg vocal protest from the more
educated classes and Ol.Cas1onal mdividual acb of J chance,
forced governmt'ntal spokesmen to explam anJ JUJ~tify the
escalating Arnerkan involvement in double think tcrm·s of
"malung war to achieve peace.''
As conlrad1cllons emeraed and intensilled w11.hin
o Hicial decison-making circles. a "credibility 1ap"

developed between the government and the public. The
American interest in Vietnam became even more
incomprehensible. The basic democratic value of
"self-determination" or more accurately, the actual lack,
thereof, for many sectors o f the American public, became
more influential in the proliferating opposition to the war
(e.g. the fusion of the Civil Riahts Movement with the
Anti-War mo vement).

No 'legitimacy•
This brief llistorical narrative is meant t o serve this
writcv's view that at no ti~e was "l.egit.imac~" of the
Vietnam War tess than questionable, wtth queshons bemg
drawn along legal , moral and political lines. Then and now.
in this kind o f public atmosphere of substantial
c~n troversy. it is inconceivable to view American men who
fought this war, as well as those w ho refused to fight , as
less than victtms of a foreign policy neither of their own
making nor in their real interest.
As argued here, il was never o ffi cially nor publically
dear exactly what the real Amencan stake was in Vietnam
which could JUStifiable and persuas1vt'lY forge a general
union of support for th is war among the American people.
Glaringly unattended domestic problems xuch as the
maJdistribullon of wealth and cival rights, dOd the mass1ve
allocation of national rtlsources t owa rds furtherance of the
war effort and away from problems at home . simply made
questions of the t rue national inrne1t more debatable.
frequently argued in terms of prion11rs
In this contest the 1ssue o f amnesty for w.u· resisters
must be raised in that this process of vtctlmll.allon and it ~
sodo-econmic efforts has seriously disrupted (and for
some, ended) Ule lives of most Americans. In bnd , a
goveuunent carlnot underst andably expect a people
nurtured nn the 1deas and dimensions of indiv1dual1Jberty
and freedom, to mechanically queue up o n gnvernmental
fiat 11nd place the1t lives on the line o r ho ld their datly
pursuits in abeyance , for a wa.r not of thcu o wn d es1gn o r
understanding.

Amnesty : definition, scope
Speaking now directly to lhc meaning and i~~ulls ol
amnesty, at can be an executive on Congressional parc.ln n
for a federal offense. It may take the form of a general
(limited) or universal pardon, hoth with or without
attendant conditions. In the former, there a.re persona or
classes of persons excepted from its benefits. Congressional

and cxeutiv: autborilty for amnesty is derim from the
United Statce Constlituti.on wb.icb empowera the same
" •.. to pant reprieves and pardons for . offenses apiJut
the United States exce,pt in cues of impeachment."
Over six formter U.S. Presidents exercised their
vested power for panti.na amnesty in cases involvin&amp;
crimes far more se1i&lt;IUS than violation o f draft lawa or
desertion. For instanc:e, George Wasbin,ton amnested all
people who participat·ed in an insurrection in Pennsylvania
apinst the United States~ Adama amneitied Penn.sylvania
"insurrectionists" in I 800 for another "treasonable" set o f
offenses; Madison pr·oclalmed (1815) "a free and full
pardon of all offenses; .•. t oucbina the revenue trade and
n.aviption" around Ntew Orleans; Lincoln pardoned, under
condition of oath-tukin&amp;, those who participated in
rebellion, and com.mutted the death sentence of deserters
to imprisonment for title duration o f the Civil War; Andrew
Johnson granted an amnesty for the offense o f treason, as
did Grant in J 872: "limited" amnesties were also
proclaimed by Presid,ents' T . Roosevelt, Coolidge, and
Truman.
In most of the p:a.rdons mentioned above, the offense
involved actual armed insurrection against the United
States which the Corustitution refers to as "treason." War
resisters to the Vietnam War (viz., those men awaiting trial,
in Jail or stockade, om appeal for conviction, in exile or
underground for draft evasion or desertion from the
military)lre not cha r1:ed with armed insurr"Cction against
the U.S. nuu wtth lldvocating the forcible overthrow of
the U.S. gcwernment . Their alleged offense in no way
affected the destruction of life or property .
If anything, theitr offense is t hat they valued freedom
too htghly to ~ubmat tu conscription, their consciences, the
undet.:rmined legality and obvious immorality of the war;
or the brunt of racial oppression at home did not allow
tht~m to prepare for., participate in, or even indirectly
contribute to the war. 1 'he point is that If U.S . Presidents
can amnesty " treasonable" offenses, surely the President
or Congress can pardoa' the lesser "crimes" of draft evasion
and desertiOn. Several former Presidents amnestied
idl!nllcal of lt:nses.

Pardon POW's
Prisoners ut War are u:;ually released at a war's end.
II ts likely that POW's have engaged 1r1 hostile combative
acllvftaes against their captors. Ccrt.a.mly there is a greater
moral 1ustifkation for pardoning ("freeing") those people
who refused to f1ght altoget her than those who fought
With the opposition ,
If resistance to the Vietnam War involved : 1) a
personal refusal to killl and ; 2) a violation of law- military
o r dvil, we may regard such resistance as one form or
another of dillobec1ientce. ~such, the que8tion o r a mnesty
-conllnu.o otl page 11-

STUDEl~T ASSEMBLY MEETING
( the last one for the current Executive Committee )

'fODAY- MONDAY
MARCH 13

3:00p.m.
FILLMORE ROOM
AGENDA:

Constitutional Amendment for Legal Clinic
Folk Festival
Jazz Festival
Everything else this Executive Committee has done.

Monday, 13 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

l

EdiToRiAl

Fight for your rights

Tomorrow afternoon a sub-committee of the Common
Council will meet to consider a city housing code law which
prohibits two or more unrelated students from living in the
same dwelling. The law had lain dormant for some time, until
Buffalo Housing Authority officials recently began
prosecuting landlords and threatening to evict students where
they were in excess of the statuatory limit.
The l egislative committee, chaired by
Councilman-at-large Gus Franzcyk, will hear testimony on
this law. We recommend that all students residing within the
City of Buffalo and live with more than one other unrelated
individual should go to City Hall and testify against this
unfair statute. Besides the immediate goal of protecting the
sanctity and continued occupancy of your dwelling, a
massive turnout by students could convince Council
members of the existence of a youth vote and influence them
to repeal this legislation
The legislative committee has seven members, two of
wh om are c learly anti-student. Lovejoy Councilman
Raymond Lewandowski and at-large Councilman Gerald
Whalen have never had much need for students, let alone
youm. Fortunately, the presence of William Hoyt, Delaware
Councilman, and George Arthur of the Ellicott District, more
than offsets the antipathies of Messrs. Whalen and
Lewandowski.
The swing-votes on the committee belong to Charles
Volkert, Mr. Franzcyk and Dan Higgins of the South District.
Mr. Volkert of the University District is developing a solid
reputation as a dose-minded and bigoted conservative.
However, Mr. Volkert's prejudices could be tempered by the
large number of student voters who reside in his district .
franzcvl&lt;. seems likely to oppose continuance of this
legislation and Mr . Higgins is essentially an unknown on this
matter.
To say that strict enforcement of th1s law would wreak
havoc on the lives of 12,000 students is a gross
understatement. This statute must be fought and fought
effectjvely. We are somewhat distressed by the silence of the
University on this issue. The University has a moral
obligation to protect the basic rights and interests of its
community .
There is an office here called Off-Campus Housing, a part
of the Division of Student Affai rs. Their function is to assi~
students iA obtaining off-campus housing. The mere fact that
they have said and done nothing about this law seems to
indicate that they really aren't interested in serving the
students. We suggest that the Off-Campus Housing Office
send a representative downtown tomorrow to testify agains
the housing code
A large student turnout will virtually insure the death of
this bill since votes are more important than a politician 's
prejudices. Fight for your rights and testify ; the house you
save may be your own.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22. No 65

Monday, 13 Marc;h 1972
(diiOr· tn~hief

D~:nr"'

1\fllnld

to ManilJII"II Editor
Il l Ben""'
Co Mil llilSinl Ed11or M•~•· l•I&gt;Jlm•n"
AUI Manil&amp;IO&amp; Ed1tor
l,y,.ul Mo"
Buslne" MJnilfltf
l• llo. lt ~IIM'
Advc&lt;1h•n1 M•nage r \u''"' Mt•llcnttn••
831Ct'INIC

C•mpus

Clly
Copy

A sst
Future .
Gr.11phic Aru .

Amy Ahrend
lo Ann Arm•o
left Grcenw.;ld
ll o w1c Kurlt
Jams (rom e•
lotonm 1-orm•n
Marty Gatt i
C.l.etre Krlegsm.en
Lynd• Ttrt
.. Tom Toles

M••vii•JPe Runyun
L•youl
Am
""'Jnl
L11 &amp; Or•m• • Mt,h.ecl5tlverbl.ett
Mu Sit
0•11~ Allman
Off-Campus
L ynnt I r•e~:cr
\o4l4fll
Am
, . Mn.l.cy 0\ttrrct,hrr
Phol o
.K•m !.dnl&lt;)\
Ani
Spans
ll•rrv Rubu1
AUI
Hnw •e f 41wl

Tht Sputrum ts )er~ttd by Untted Press lnttrn.;ttOn&lt;~l, College Pres&gt;
Servke, the Lo&gt; Angeles Times Free Pres&gt; , the Los Angeles Ttmt)
Syndiute ~nd Liberation News Se,..itc_
RepubtiGiltion of mauer herein WtthOul the
Edltor-ln.Chief rs forbidden .

e~&lt;press

~oonscnl

E4fltoriA! pofi'Y is determined by the Edllor-i n.Chief.

p_,.u . ThJ Spectrum . Monday, 13 March 1972

or !he

'

()

Affic;t

by The Attica Defense Committee

The murder o f 43 men by any standard IS a
cnnunal act When su~.h ac tiOn is taken by state
offictals, 1n vtolahon of federal and stall! law , 1t
becomes a c lear example of what the state IS
prepared to do to quash the mthlant demand of
basic human rights. laws will be broken by the state
when ct finds itself challenged at o ne of tL~ sore:
pornts
parhcularly when t hal pocnt is that place
where so-called "law breakers'' are puniShed fl)r
"cnmes" agamst the ~t ate .
The ••tate and its pumshment system, thert•fon:,
finds ctself Ln a contradiCtory pOSllion. In o rder to
gel ctself out of this !lltualiOn, the state wtJI
eventually bring indiclmenls , not against itself, but
apinat the "criminal elemenl " presenuy locked
away m HIPZ segregation For I he present , lhey are
using 1he tactics of evasao n.
F&lt;1r ••xample Robert F1scher IS thl• pro~.:utor
for the Grand Jury - the tndu.:tments wtJI result
from tbe fmdings of the Grand Jury The role of the
prosecutor ts to quest1on every one who testifies and
it ts important that this person•be impartial. Robert
Fisc her was appomted by Roc ~efeller ; he L~ a State
employee and Captai11 WiUia mJ, his cttief ass1s tan t,
led the assault on Attcca Therefore, Fr~c.: hcr
obviowly represents .t conn1c t of interests and thJ\ 1\
m violation of the law. There IS a 1&gt;U1l seekmg to have
Fischer removed as prosecutor However, no JUdge
wtll hear the urgument or s~oJ..nowledge that ct I!&gt; a
sound 01nc The system of profuse and pelly
procedurnl rules and regulations allows the InJUStice
to be overlooked because the courts have deemcc.l 1ts
findings l o he inconSlslent with Stale interests And
so I he su 11 cs o;huffled from o ne court to another 1n a
c.:.onstant 11tate of becng retyped 110d reVIsed wlule
FISc her l o nlln ues to nuan1pulale 1he Gntnt! Jury
proceedmgs.
Exomplr E.ighty men
the ulleged leadn!&gt; o t
the rebdlton
:tt~: hemg held 111 soltlary
co nll nernl'nl l4 hours a day They ho~v c heen hcl(t in
lhis WdY ltH the past ~even months. T hiS VIUIJtc~
mdny J1rt~on regulations becau~e the men have nol
been ChJI'l(t:d w1th any lnme Rather than rec.:ogn11C
and rrdcfy tht· snuallon lhe court asked lhJI th~

FrE~e

words defu\ln&amp; the s.ttuation be c hanged
the men
are not in segregation any more, now they're rn
" protective custody" and they may be alone 1n those
cells for another seven months.
E1Com r1 l~
An inJunction was rssued tn
September to stop the verbal and phys11:.al abuse o t
prisoners. F1ve prisoners have been beaten suH:c
January 14. The Judge doesn't want to even hear
about it
he has postponed the prelimmary hean ng.~
tw1ce so far legally , the guards who have heen
beattng the prisoners are guilty of contempt uf
court. But ct's hard for ttus to be proved when the
courts understand legality to mean the protellion of
sele~tive interests.
It becomes clear that the disc retionary power ot
the judge and the morass of procedural rules and
rcsulations aUo ws for very easy evasion or certuu1
rights, when lhesc nghls a~ an conflict with the
mterests of the State The o drninc~trat ors do not feel
that they have to remove FL'&gt;Cher lrom the Grand
Jury. Nor do the y trunk t hat they have to
adequately JUShfy holding 80 men tn sohtary
confinement. They won't stop tht beuting of
prisoners. The nellt time lhey .~re presented with the
o pportunely l o murder 43 men, they will do it again,
The courts do not a ct out of good wilL They ad
because tht' lntere~ts which they represent are
tinancJally powerful. fhe ~:uurh cannot recognize
any other cnterest
Wher, enough proplc demand that the law
represent people rather than pnvtJeged rnteresls,
then the pnsons won't be full of the poor. When
enough reople demand that the law be
~o·o mprehensibh: and understandalllt', then a l awles~
mmonly won't be able to rule A step in this
threct10n t) In Jet the courts and lhe o~dmrn1strators
'now that we arc watchrng whal hap~n~ with
Allied and that we know thai whal IJ\ happemng IS
tllegal It I!&gt; Illegal ac\:ordmg to Clli!&gt;IJng. written law,
and 11 IS rJiegal o~ccordtng to the mtercsts of th~
rn;tJnrrty nf 111.•o rk In this lOunuy .
.4 tflt'O /)rjrllfl' Commtfft't'
Room HI 0. Pwdcntltll Bldg.

'W thtUfh St
Huf/tlln N Y 14'!02

Martin Sostre

To tile Edttur
The Vdnguard Def~nse Comm11tee for Marten
S04ltre wuhes to rl!pudiate the validity of a stalcment
purportedly issued in our name last week and rnwled
to variouts movement people at the University and
throughout the city. The statement consists of four
yellow sheets bearing the htle, "Vanguard
Com!T\Jitt!e to Free Martin Sostre," and is an attack
on Youth Agamst War and Fascasm in generaJ and
two of ll!l members in particular.
Whilt~ we do not dtspudiate many of the baste
facts set forth in this pho ny statement, we want the
public tu know that we are not name-callers we are
not racialists, and we abhor this underhanded and
repuhive way of tryiJta to djvide the left of Buffalo
such as 'It is. We consider this to be a traditional

tact1~:. of the FBI and other law cnfor~oement agcnoes
who seek to destroy all progre~1ve peoples, black or
wlute , seekcng an end to thiS rat:llll, sexcst, op pres.~uve
syl;tem.
We urge all people o f .:onsc1ence to unrtc tn
support of Marten Sostre, one o f the world's most
cmportant political pnsoners, VICtim of a vicious
4 I -year frame-up in Buffalo, when he appears before
Judge Bayger tn Erie County Court on March I 6 at
2.00 p m .. seeking a hearing based on a writ of error
coram nobu. We further ask your f•nan ccal help to
delray .:ost uf legal defense.

Vanguard DefenJI' CommlfiU
for Martin Sottre
Box 839 Ellicott Station
Buffalo, New Y ork U205 '

�Can you picture this
To the Editor:
I wish to relate an event which jUit happened to
me, with the hope of savin&amp; the time, enerJ)' and
even money of some of your reader!. On March 4th,
I went to a quaint little camera store lituated on
Main St. between the Main campus and Hertel Ave. I
wu wum.ty areeted by a JOlly mustached fellow,
whote jovial friendliness prompted me to confesa my
mission. I wished to purchase a second·har.d (or
recycled, to coin a p~) camera. The salesman let w call him Honeat Jim to protect his identity proceeded to show me various photoaraphic
machines. In fact, the profusion was so areat that I
had to make a further confession - my .k.nowled&amp;e
of cameras was small, could he please give me some
usmance in choosina one. With the grace o r a
perfect gentleman he did, and I fma.Jiy decided to
spend enouah money to keep my wife and me fed
for four weeks - S 10 1 to be precise - o n a camera.
I had some misgivings about spendin&amp; such a
sum, but H .J. assured me that this self~me camera
would cort me S 149 new , and the one I was buyinc
was in almost perfect condition. lt did have a lens
covered with axle grease, but that was easily
removed, and 111 for the hairs in the view-finder, weU,

Lev is leavin.g

Money for books

To tlte Ed/10, .

Tu tht Editor

For what 1t'a worth, ain't no buddy evtr ~:dd
was a bad poet
. whc&gt;
People spit on me - the faculty is went
knows what tbe admiruatration thtnlts. I auess you
out there whoever you are reaUy don't want mt:
here, so J'U ao. Yay, Lev IS aoina. ·r was lookina for II
JOb when I aot this one'
old sayin,a.
Probably I will pve a quiet wrapping in the:
cortee bouse, or SOf!!e plllce and tell what happened
on my last sea voyaae (40 days and 40 nites) That ill
to satisfy all the people who keep ask.ina me whan
happened. Free
Lev haten can now please rtop spewina fllth on
lev. lev prom!Jea to 10 and leave you alone. 1 mean
II - all or you You don't have to pve me I one-wa)•
tJaket. IYM pwn ... p:&gt;lna . . up.
Micha~/

This Jetter ts written U\ reply to your cditonal of
Friday , February 2S, 1972 entitled, "Luxunes or
Books?"
You should be aware of the feet that vanous
6qments of the UnJversity have not l&amp;J\Ored the
fmanCJal situation of the Library
On January 2S, 1972. representatives or 1he
Alumnj Association, U/ B Foundation , University
Relations office and the Library held, a mecttng to
see wlut could be done about 1he arowin&amp; fU\ancial
problema of the Library At that meetm&amp; certain
proarama were d.ilcUS3ed that could result in a
rund-rainnl effort on behalf of the library
After tome basic research wu clone, a follow-up
meetina waa held on February 1"'- wbkb inCluded llle
repTeaentativea that 1 juat mentioned and also
rcpre•ent•tlve-s o f the newly establiahed Comrnwuty

aU cameru have ruch Httle defe&lt;:U. So, with tho
camera, aood natured auwances from H.J ., but no
receipt, I left .

Two da ya later I was Idly leafina throup a
photoarapby maauioe when I apicd an
adve.rtisement for the identicaJ camera to the ooe I
had just put'Chaaed. The price? $I 08. True, it Wll
brand new and it did have eucb aimmiclte • a better
lena, a self timer, flasbli&amp;ht ahoe, inltruction book
and two-ye&amp;Jr warranty, but surely, tbia ia a mer•
baptelle for S7 extra. And of course, it lacked the
hain in the view-finder that mine bad, or perhapt
they just didn't advertise them. Allyway,l nna RJ.
and told him how lucky I was to have ·boupt from
him and no•t from a cold impenonal advertised
wbolesale aal'nt. He passed over this point, but did
say I had saved $7, and anyway, the camera I bad
bouaht from him was new. Almoet. So, reluct&amp;ntly,l
decided to return my camera, afteraU, we have to
eat. H.J. Will more than aracioua; be returned my
check and du:ln't even chide me for my ficklenca. I
asked him whether h.is conacience bothered him and
he saJd no, but he did have a cold.
Hanno

Rel11tions Council
It was the unarumous feelln8 of the poup that a
program shou1Jd he cstabbshed tha t would auarantee
an annual mcome to the library for the purchase of
new books Or Stalin had several 1deas which arc
beUlg worked on at the present time and a meeting
to finalut tht~se plans will be held 1n the near futurt.
I can pc~rsonelly assure you that the Alumru
Assoctation uc very tnterestcd ln domg all it can to
help make th,is project a successful reality as are the
other departments previously mentioned . Our
honorable purpose is to ''Promote by orpnized
effort the bcs•t 1nterest and prestlae of the University
at Buffalo ·· ,,wstina the library and other aca.demtc
departments of our Untvenity • certainly an
unportant responstbillty of everyone concerned
Edmnrtd 1 r.tccwtcz, M.D
h~lld~nt

S trphen Lrvfnsonl

Socialist mockery

Confidence in Graham
To tht Editor

To thr Editor .
The so~led " Kibbutz Knavan " 11 the latesl
attempt by the U01versity's Zionists to con students,
especially Jewish students, into supportmg llrael anc!l
lsrael.taaression.
But more and more people have come to realizt·
the true role that Israel has played and continues t c•
play in suppressio&amp; the national liberation strugle!l
of ALL Third World people, In particular the!
PaleatiniAn and Arab peoples.
The Ziotdst movement bas bun, since it11
Ulception, a racist and colonialist movement which
has touabt to displace the Palestinian people and set
up a ne04pa.rtheid Jewish State in Palestine. The:
Kibbutzim have served toward this end - firSt , b)'
isolating the JewiSh colonists from the national!
liberation rtrug1e of the Palestinian people andl
secondly, the kibbutzim served as armed outpost!l
for the frontien or Zionist expansion . Even todJay
the kibbutz and nahal serve this role in the GolaD•
Hei&amp;bts and the Wm Bank .
Zionism and the Israeli State have tned teo
ide.illze the kibbutz to blind the Jewa of the worldl
to the 'ea/ situation inside Israel. In truth, the:
kibbutzim collltitutes less than S% of Israel'!•
population, producina less than S% or the!
aarlcultunl output. They are run by certain political!
partie., many riabt-w\na, toleratina no political!
differences. Often, they further uploit the nativt!
Arab population u cheap day labor, a.ivina them no
voice In matten that concern them. And despite alJI
of this, most IU"bbutzim could not make ends meel
without the covemment and other rubsidies they·
~ve.

The kibbutzim are a mockery of soc:iAliam, and!
part and parcel of the fascist actions . andl
repressive measures of the Israeli State. They arc:
mere extensions or the Zionist state apparatus which
IS tlle number one enemy of the Palestmian people·
and an enemy of all procres&amp;ive people throuahou1
the world .
are

Palestine Solithrlty Committe~
and Youth A~iftft ..,,, and Fas-:Um

Kopp~l

We, as members of the Faculty of tbe
Department of Sociology, WISh to dissociate
ourselvea completely from recent attacks on the
profesmorull and personal reputauon of our
coUeaaue. Saxon Graham. The auacks, we feel , arc a
discredst to tho5e m.a.ltm&amp; them.
It 11 hardly ace1dental that o ne of our 'tronaest
and most highly reputed members 14 . subject to
attack .
Or. Graham's research and tnining propam in
medical sociology is one of the best in the country.
It has succeeded api.Jut odds liraely because of the
confidence and trust othen have in him, no1 only
coUeaaues and studenu here at Buffalo, but
top-fli&amp;bl physicians and sociolo&amp;llts throUJhout the
country

Frankly, wo are proud of Jus reseucb on the
cauM:s of cancer and other Lllnesses, o f tua pro11am
of improVlnl health lUld prolonaing human life and
o f the hiah quality n:search produced by lu!l
students.
Suon G~raham I.S a warm, canna human bema
whom we tru.st as a teacher and value as a crtaftve
member of th&gt;c Uruversaty commumty.
Miltun

Albrul~t

Theodore Mills
Oul Shnngc1/d
lnhn Sirjaltlll/CJ
Mark van d~ Vall
Richard Warntekt
Corutantint Y~raC4ris
Dani~l Yutz y
Rtdwrd Zeller
Adtlfne Ltvlnt

Solomon Chu
Robe't Ford
Monil Fried
Alebandtr Cella
wolfrey Grbson
Tai Kang
Roy Kaplan
Fred Katz

Vivarium memories
To tht Editor

very cool sn Wlllter and l ~!pent many sluverina houn
meetmgs there. That summer, between subjects, 1
got the only 1suntan I've ever had in Buffalo. In the
afternoon, after the subjects and everyone wu aone,
we used to itO inside and drink beer and talk (it
wasn't calJed rapping then) and sometimes in tbe
dusky late afl emoon we'd put on old army blank.ec
on the Ooor 1.nd make love (it wasn' t called fucldq
then, or ballirt&amp; or screwina). In the cool eveninp we
would aet bee•r from the RahtakeUar and sit oubide
by the rountnin. It seemed very peaceful and quiet
and beautiful then, and It was. The campus wu
almost desert•~d . It wasn't crowded everywhere like
it is now, and people weren't always pok.ina or
shovina or heina pushed or shoved . And they
weren't always angry, then. It seems hard to believe,
now, in the pushing, shoving, angry winter but it
really happened. It was the one brief time when
some of the life and lau&amp;hter that bas been taken
from me in thlis place, was given back .
111

Oh, yea, the Vivarium. I remember it weU. I was
doina research there one summer what seems like a
lona time qo. The ivy was thrivin&amp; and everythinJ
was very p-een. In fact , the 1vy erew rlabt across the
windows of the Vivarium makina lovely livina arec:n
curtaint, until maintenance came and tore them
down. In my opinion the area around (and
indud.in&amp;) tbe Vivarium is the moet beautiful place
on a not-.o-beautifuJ campus. That Is, eltcept the
eastern face wbicb is adjacent to the u&amp;ly Hayea
annex ea.
Between subjects, we used to lit outside the
Viva.rium on the grus next to Hayes. From there,
you only see maeatic ivy&lt;avered stone walls with a
areen expanse of arass canopied by tall broadleaf
trees - Hayes to your left, Hochstetter in back and
Crosby far off in front of you. We used to throw
Friabees out there while waitina. and the Vivarium
was very cool when you went instde with wonderful
breezes when the windowa were open. It wu abo

A 1t11dent

.

Monday, 13 March 1972 'O}e ~m~ r~~ sev~~

J I

' • 'J J •

\ •

'

�St~te

of the University

Edltor'J note: Thu Wednud«y m~tr/u the ~econd
annlwnary of 45 Faculty membuJ who wen
anuted conducting a Htlyu 1/all liHn to
demand the remo'Nl of 400 /luff~o potiu from
the oampsu. It u lt.ard for t&lt;Hllly) Un/Hnity
ocCUJHinU to lmaf(ne the ewmu that could let~d
to 1uch a lituation.
In an ttttempt to undentand how and why
the Univerlity lull ci!Qnged, The Spectrum

Interviewed 1everrzl adminutrrzton and faculty
member~ on The State of The University. Thue
Jnte1'lllew1 wUI be printed In thu weeki editions.

Greenwold. Becau1e of IJHict problem• and the
J,ength of the lnterllfews, their commen t• do not
tJlppear in total.

Ap,et~rlttg today a~ tht rtmarks of
WillUrm &amp;umer, viet chairman of the Faculty
Senate and Michaef fi'rllch of the History
lHJHirlmtnt. Both were l11terviewed at length by
Campw Editon Jo-Ann Armao and Jeff

The Spectrum would llke tuch faculty
tJoplnlon to bt a regular feature. Any faculty
member who would llkt to contrlbutt in any
way, thould contact The Spectrum,
Editor-in .chief

•

•

Baumer Interview
•

When you were lint intemewed two yean
tbe UniYenity's atmOipbere w• a lot different
&amp;om what it il today. Both ltudents and faculty
were more •oeal and actin in campua coocema and
in national •ues. To wlut can you attribute this
ch.anaeT
I'm not sure I want to try t o give any simple
answers to that because I ruther suspect that it
differs from individ\W to inclividual. The national
political scene has c hanged, surely that's a (actor.
The University political scene has changed , I'm sute
that's a fac tor.
One is tempted to say, I guess, that some o(
what was raised as possible problems (even before
the upset of the Spring of '70, in particular, got
aoina) was due mainly to the fact that the University
is a frqile in.rtitution and its walls of protection
apinst society are not necessarily terribly strong and
that to try to shove the University into the midst of
tbe political battles in society, at large, is pretty
risky business because the University may become a
casuatty. This b.u become more apparent throuah
experience, and that may weU have had some
consequences.

eeo,

Frischi1

What do you ~ee as the prime purpoea of the
UninnityT
WeU, I'm tempted to gJve you very enigmatic
answers. One wo rd, scholarship That's much more
eniamatic tha n you're looking for, I know , and you
have a right t o a larger answer. The faculty ha•
scholarship responsibilities as creative artists. as
researchers, dependina on the field and whicl· lltle
they hap~ to prefer because I can find people that
would no ally be classified as researchers and
laborato
y pes that consider what they're doing to
be quite creative and I would say they're right
(schoi11Ship) is one function .
Anot her fun ction obviously and t(juaJiy
important is teaching. and I would see this as
impartillg basic knowledge and skills for, if I may say
apjn, scholarship. This scholarship Is for those who
come as students to Jearn, and its purpose is to bring
them along to the point where they can learn on
their own, giving them enough basic knowledge so
they have a foundation from wluch to proceed and
giving tbem enough aid in the development of their
skills &amp;O they can do this effectively.

Two yean aao, there wu more uf a senae of
excitement about the Uruvenlty. We were JOina to
become the ' Berkeley of the Eut' and tfle
Univenity, ju.st iu atmoaphere, wu a much more
excitina place to be. People have described it now as
beina 'duD and dead.'
I think that W8.\ tu a very large extent an
a.t1l1fiC1al ext:itement

Dr.~ WiUiam Baumer
Photos by Cohen

h9e eight . The Spectrum . Monday, 13 March 1972

w•

My view of it would be, however, that it is not
umealistic to suppose that we could achieve a good
dt!al better in many of t hese same ways. We have
sctme good undergraduate programs. We have some
good graduate programs. Some t hat are rated u
outstanding in both levels nationally, but I think
e\ten those can be improved, and the ones that aren't
rated quite that highly can be improved . . .

Thill has aotten us a UttJe toto lUper
eelucation. We have 80me questiom and doubts
about hiJher education as it exiats both on thit
Univenlty and nationally. Do you think that libenl
education is dead?
In the sense that 11 is the dommant theme of
higher education, il 's no t the healthiest beast on the
scene One of the problems I think is that we really
aren't qwte sure any more what we mean by it. The
ce&gt;ncems of the late 1960's I think were focused far
more on tbe Univers.aty as a social agency tban on
Cllt'eful examination of the Umvers1ties' own
prosrams, and tl1at didn't help.
I think there is a very serious question as to
wlnat can •ppropriately be carried out under the
general Libel 'liberal education' gjven society as we
hHe tt and as we expect it. I think, off the tops o(
their heads, a lot of people would be prepared to say
that the classical liberal education IS no longer
rellevant, and you know that is a much abused and
Ia the Univenity functionJna now as you tbin k al!to much used word. I'm not sure we've reaUy asked
Do you think it'1 a dtanae for the bettetT
it tbouJd be, aJona the UnCB you've juat apok.en of? t h~ question and looked at Jt seriously . I 'm not sure
Yes, all in all. I must say that I thlnlc the
Grossly, yes. In detail, there's a lot ofroom (or w1: have an answer.
University as an institution bas certain purpo~es, and improvement. If I put it that way with no further
I think It's a question that can be addressed
iJ the Univemty has a place in society, I'd say it's by qualification, it sounds as if I'm saying that really at's Wltb some seriousness With reference to a multitude
virtue of those purposes and its service o f them. That a pretty horrible place. I would be misrepresenting ll of courses that we offer. But if o ne could ask quite
o u&amp;hl to be wbat the priorities are, and I'm not sure if l said that. l lhinlc in many ways we achieve very seriously : 'What is the purpose of this course? Ia 1t
that they were there in '70.
well.
professional development in a discipline so that it is
oriented toward the hiahJY specialiud student, o r
does it serve the Pu.f"PO" of liberal education? If so ,
hCiw 1nd how weU?' I think we ouaht to ask that
qutestion ,more than we do and harder than we do.

Two yeaa qo, the atma.pbere of the
Uniftaity
coDiidenbly dJfrereat. Botb Rudeatt
and faculty were more yocaJ ebout campo~ eoaceroe
aad national '-ues. To what do you attribute thia
cbanaeT
It's sort of a big question these days ;
everybody's going around asking it. I sueas the tint
thing to say is that it's the wrong question. The real
questions concern what's happening to the
University and bow people are relating to it rather
than simply wondering why students are quiet;
which reall y implies that activity is a form o(
aberration and we have now gotten back some sort
of normalcy.
The whole thing has gotten to be a behavorial
problem in explaining why students act the way they
do rather than instituhonal questions about what's
aoing on in the Universi t y and , more generally, in
society . . . So, it seems like saying why have
students stopped protesting the wu Without
inquiring at au into the heluYJor of the government
and the nature of the iuue&lt;; mvolved .
Working from that premise, how has the
University. in tenns of ibl people, been affected?
Obviously. on one love), you would be n&amp;ve to
expect that there would be a continuance of that
level of emotional involvemenJ [as there was two
years ago I It's simply that nobody can sustain that
for very long and a lot of people got burt and a lot
of people were drained So on that first level, it
wasn' t tem bly surprismg last year when everybody,
an the week befo re d3S6es . started malung up pools
o n when 11 would all hlow
whether at would be
Sept. 15 or II! or would we make it until
ThankspVU\g, or what have you. In a way, that
seemed logical , but •n retrospect, it is not illogjcaJ
tlut nothing happened Obviously. people couldn't
work up to that same leYeJ of energy ...
Although I'm Kfad people aren't bombing
buJldings and xtad that class~ are going on and glad
that a lot of good worlc IS be1ng done • .. It's sort of
depressing to me, rnore than anytlung else, that there
hasn't been more loUcchve mvolv~ment than there
had been an the couple vears before .. .
I nstitutionaUy spea.k.in&amp;, Ule University hasn't
maintained itself as somrtlung which IS capable or
outraging students or faculty , that much. People
have really lost a lot of f&amp;th tn the institution as
something really worth theu- energy and time.
Beyond that, people tme taUy &amp;eneraUy reuutcd
from that wholt lrvel of collecllve involvement with
each other

You are rfernna. here, to (aculry u well as
&amp;tudeot.a?
There has been a whole, I thin k sort of,
privatiz.ation
o r an atom1ut1on certamJy among
faculty people They can retreat m the same way
students can . If the students JUSt sort of cop out mto
playing more records or JUSt sort of enjoying
themselves more
(it follows then that I faculty
people go back into theit work, t.nto their
relationships, all wlucb is t.nlportant - It's an
tmportant part of Ltfe. But that sort of learung
forward into an IJIStnutJOII wluch you, if not
necessarily have faith 1n, really believe is worth an
investment or your time and energy, has been
something that has d1nurushed very much for faculty
members, and I tlunk for students as weU .
The result has been a tremondous lesserung of
morale, a tremondous sense of futility, a tremondous
sense of alienation in almost a dassic sense of the
word. And aptn , by definttion, alienation is
something wluch doesn't make your position
healthier, it JUSt makes you feel that it's lea
benefecial for you to try to do anything about it. It
breeds a sense of futilitY otml a sort of acceptance or
reality only in the sense tlut you don't want to
connect with that rnh I)' It 's not necessarily
validating tlut reality wluch IS the ntistake that so
many commentato rs .ue ma.lung
and I tend t o
think that it's no t vahdahng all the changes It's
simply saying that 1t's acceptmg the overwhelming
reality o( it and they've dec1ded there's not too
much to be done about t1 and therefore, they best
put their energies elsewhere

Created by what?
I would guess that the prinCipal factor was 1
gr•owth rate, to my knowledge, u unmatched by any
other major University in the history of b.igber
education . From about 1967 through 1969 when we
were stiU living in the euphoria of It, we bad, the
first year that Meyerson was president for example,
IS 0 new faculty positions to fill he~ . There's never
been that kind of opportunity to bring new people
l.tl, to my knowledge, in any other major school, and
t/u2t S exClttng.
When I came here tn 1962, the Department of
Philosophy had nine people,the previous year it bad
five . By 1965 we were up to 20 plus 25 or
so met rung like that, and by '67 we were 35. We went
from five people the spring before I came, to the
bitggest Philosophy Department in the United States
in five years I not counhng sectarian universities
where philosophy-relitpon courses are required I . ..
AJso, we had pl..&amp;m going for a new campus in
the latter 60's. Every department had two or three
people involved in talking about what kind of space
we: needed, what k.ind or facilities we were going to
gel. I guess , in retrospect, this may be an
overstatement, but at the time, it looked like mecca
Do you have IDY otAltr thouahu on such
wus going to be built out at Amherst and if we could behaTior and what 11 mellU tot~ UnivenityT
junt get on with it, the architects couldn't draw the
1 see a re&lt;~l cnsts or morale and
plnns fast enough. That can p:nerate a lot of self~onfidence, all of wtuch IS not very healthy and,
excitement.
ultimately, will hurt the mslltuho n and is hurting
There was the excitement of new people the people witlun it in terms o f quality o( their
coming, many o( them senior people and so you ~lationsh.ips to each o the r and the sort of work
could lo,ok at. a department and day, 'God, Joo.lt they're doing.
what we re dOJng, we've got so and so ... Since the
spring of '70, we just haven't had it because the
On tbb UniverSity , how much o f thia
b1.11dget hasn't been there. We haven't added these alienation do you chink the administration il
kilads of people at this rate. I shouldn't say 'these reeponaible forT
killlds of people,' that suggests that the people who
1 don't know That's a tmky question which
have come on board since that time are 27 c uts in we spend 1 Jot of our time talktng about_ In a way, it
qu.ality below the people that were added and that's 10rt 0 ( helpful ... to believe tlilt 1t IS a general thins
just not true as far as I can see. But still 'we haven't because then you stop feeling quit e as sorry for
yourself ... I mean, i t re~lly would be unfortunate if
-continued on~ 1&amp;---

..

. '.

�nterview

e Robert ~etter, binuelf, had the power to ao much
• chanae everyone's 1ina.
•
lin reprd to it being a general ailment), the
a parallela between the the Ketter administration and
its seneral atyle and the general style of the Nixon
.; administration and what the country aeems to be
t aoing throu&amp;h. are 10 strikin&amp; it forces you to u.lt a
1 lot of questioru. The parallels are just that exact. On
: the other hand, that is not to say that each specific
r aituation has to be a mirror of more general thinp
because trends exist on both levels, doesn't
f necessarily mean that they are intimately connected.
I would really have to say that one of the
things that Ius depressed me 10 much is to realize
the capacity of administrators . . . to markedly affect
' the quality of the University and insitution, in all
sorts of ways. I would have to say that I think they
• are very responsible for a lot of what's going on,
certainly among the faculty.
However, you teem to make a distinction
faculty and ltudenta?
To the extent that students are concerned we
would have bad less student violence and a chan~e in
style among the student body in a lot of ways
• because of what 1970 was l.ike. But I don't thank it is
quite as necessary that the sense of faculty life
• would have chanaed quite as much as it had, and to
the extent that it did, because faculty influence and
affects are very important for what goes on in the
University. It aeema to me that the effect of this
administration has already been disastrous I think lt
really had a tremondously harmful effect on the
nature of this Univemty and Univers1ty potenhalism
of the next couple of years.
betw~n

One complaint that could be directed apina
the adminJatntion is that a lot or thinaa that ban
happened to the Uninnity ban happened throqb
nealect. The Ketter adminiatratioo il very, very
concerned with relations with the Buffalo
community. Bec:aua or all thil actirity and work in
improvinJ ~atlona, they ban nea.lected human
relationa within the Univemty and the development
of h•per education. Would )'OU aaree with this?
Yes, except I think you really have to qualify
what it is they are doina with the lar,er community.
The point tbat I would make ia that they have
caeatially rniaconoeived wbat it me.uu to improve
relation.ah.ip with the community.
They felt that the ohly thin&amp; they can do is to
adapt to what they perceive to be pressures from the presidents, teadma bua.inesamen, not anyone who used u an excuse in aJJ 10rt.t of ways. But, if I were
community rather than to really try to educate the represents anything really from the community at to ao beyond that and NY okay, Jet's not just
community a little more into what the nature of the all. So in that sense, I would say that rather than criticize in sort of a aeneraJ atmosphere of lack of
University is. I think it is the mista.lce Regan made in 'they've done one thing and the1-efore they haven't direction , but talk about specifically wbat sorts of
the crisis ... and the Ketter people have only done it done another,' that there is more of a continuity in things have been done tha! I think are harmful; I
the way they've approached the questions about the guess I would have to say that it's the massive
in a much more aradual way over time.
They've had two years now and I do n't ttunk community and questions about title Uruversity
substitution of an administrative ethos, often
there's a much healthier sense m the commuruty.
The re1gning values of the administnhon, literally accompanied by a now of power into the
There's lea of a feelina that the Universlly IS abo ut while not necessarily evil , I don't ttunk they are evil, administrative levels. For 1 faculty or student, that
to threaten them and rape their daughters and are sort of managerial in the sense they involve very sounds very cliche (that's what everybody bas been
poison the mmds of their school kids, and what have litUe imagination about what a university IS and saying) but that doesn 't 1'1\alce it less true.
you. But I don't think the Buffalo community ha.s at could possibly be. It's no mor~ enabled them to deal
A university is fac ulty and students mo re than
all really been educated in much of a sense as to
with the community constructi¥ely and creatively it's administration and what you fmd again and again
what the University really does . . . They lthe than it's enable them to deal with !Students or fa culty IS the needs of administrating it taking precedence.
communatyl don't understand why things happen, constructively and creatively.
An administration, according to any model should
be serving the Ufe of the umversity , the tendenc y
and why they're important. (The community
Would you care to elaborate on specific here has become the reverse.
doesn't understand that I ferment ( certainly not
Faculty and s tudents have had to
violence) is an important part of what it means to be UIBtancea of administntive actio•~ with which you
accommodate to the need to administer clearly
alive.
diulfeed?
I don' t know When on•e really tnes to For instance , to take a trivial example, the needs of
Are there any matanca in which Chit theory generalize, one of the thinp that is so hard and one the computer in o rganizing registration which is the
baa been prona?
of the things that I ttunk has beern so destructive of process designed to help students take coursee
I think the way the whole repona.luataon ttung faculty morale IS that ao many of the ttunp have here, students often find themselves not able to take
bas been handled has not helped Buffalo to realize been tiny little things that its reallJ( hard to keep you the course they want because of the needs or the
thai it has to give up some things if it wants a m-.jor mind on them . I mean - an appointment here ; or a computer in setting up the system . So you have sort
university whlch will have all the economic and person being eased out here ; a tlhing about tenure of a clear reversal .
In much more senous ways, this has come
social affects that they're tallcina about. It hasn't there; a ldlling off of a program here; an axing of a
helped the community at all to understand the dean there - they all tend to be lllard to make a bi&amp; through in appointment5, promotions, m-.ior
history Qf the lut few years in any perspective.
deal about .. .
administative positions ... the decline of the provost
I remember quite vividly bearing Ketter on a
Even this fall , when we: had those aix system, the undercutlin&amp; or virtually every area of
public radio discuaion respond to lbe question of resipations or so, it became hnrd for people to the faculty ... [In ad clition I lbere is the highly
why Fred SnelJ hasn't been fired . His answer was sustain a sen.~ of outrage about it because it's all political sense of the way administrative power has
' WeU, it's not really illegal, it's not really despicable.' been used, not just in the things that I bad moat
the University IuJan 't malntalned
Yet, somehow it leaves a bad taste in your mouth familiarity with. Most paricularly , there stands the
its~lf DS something which is lYlpabk of
attempt to purge the chairman of the History
and cumulatively, more and more.
In a way, it becomes harder to generalize Department and the ttunp related to that ...
outraging students or faculty . . . People
This aU adds up to the impulse, which is apin
about totality because I think as you suggested
luJve really lost a lot of faith In the
before, rather than sensing that the administration not so much political as part of a manaaerial
imtltutlon . .. "
bas clear aims and objectives, whi1ch one doesn't or response, that energy has got to be disciplined at at
' Well, these thinp are complicated ' and he does like, one sets more of a sense that they I the times and things have got to be brought under
proceeded to go through the rules of how you fue a administ ration) don't quite know what they're control. This has realJy led to the setting up of the
tenured professor rather than offer a minimumal doing most of the time, and are just trying to priority of order over experiment, not just simply ln
defense of why you should tolerate people whom manage thinp rather than really shape or lead .
the educational sense, but, in general at almost every
you mi&amp;bt not agree with or who might, in fact , be
If I had to say which is m•:&gt;re of a problem, step ...
quite offensive to various types or opiruon because poor leadership or misdirected leadersrup, or lack of
that's part of what a university is.
What you seem to be aayina ia that a priorit y
leadership, a leadership I don't lik.e ; it's pretty much
So I think they made a number of choices in of a mix but I would think it would go further of reaularity OYer flexibility exista. What ia the affec:t
'servina the community' that are very very limited in towards the first one. There's just more a lack of a or this on the Uninnity?
It's Jed to a massive decline in trust which IS
imagination and very limited in scope.
sense of where to go and what to do than anything
There is one more point I would li.lte to make. else.
really basic. I mean you have to have rules for
everything in a bureaucratic system rather than sort
The sorts of people who have been on the search
committees, now that we are supposedly having
of assuming basic good will amona people. So that
Can you be a Uttle. more ape&lt;::ific?
community people on the search committees, are all
There's been a tremendous p•assin&amp; or the buck you find when traditions are violated (say on
exactly what you would predict. Your bank with the fiscal thing with Albany which bas be..,n
-continued on 1N9e 11-

Dr. Michael Frisch

•

•

•

I I

f

Monday, 13 March 1972 . The Spectrum. Page nin•

�_

I

State of the University
..,

1. woald
~nr:!r:r~~:!;:r::E
like. On tbe other baud, we're
of tbt way

L-com--,,.,..--rrom--..,...--.----------------":"'beo_n_c_u~t:-ou~t. _______ _ _ _ __;..;..;:::......._ _ _..J

bad 8dditioJIII Oft l tbo ~ dcmt.S) ac:a.le.

Ambeut bM beeD m .IDcrealiJat problem in tcnna of
wonicll about "will it JBt built at all.' and "now will
anytblna other than tbe Law Scbool pt built at all.' Thoe
wor:dea.l don't tnnt, itt·~ 'Nf'Y often; but I think
that they ue ft1Y roeJ worde. in the miDdt of maftY
people. In '6S we wen taUUDa about beiDa In the new
campus in '70. In '67, , . were aylna everybody will be
out there in '72.
1 can remember wbeD my doputment wain Michael
Hall and the que.tion came up, do you want to move to
Ridp Lea.. .
rwe were told) 'you'll be out t.bero to give us some
ecxpenlion apace, maybe B.e yean ac the most, while we
pt the buildinJS up; md then you'D move aCTON the
expreaway and you'U bel.D tho now campus and you'll bo
one of the finlt on• to 10 in the new campus.' Well, you
know, it'a '72 and they baTOn't poured the foundations for
the building that the PbD010pby Department will ao in
yet. We're still in Ridp Lea . . .
lbe Enafiab Department mOftd into the annexes
o'fef there in '66 or '67 and they bad tho same kind of
lhinJ. (They too were told) 'just a little while, it's
temporary' - and that hwta. I aueu at the moment we're
stilJ in the pb.ue of loarnina to live with what we're doing
and not with promises of what we're P I to do. The
excitement baa to come not with the new peopl~ that
anive, the new buildinp that are built; it bas to como with
what we're doina here now. lt'a a cbanp.

the.,....,

You mentioned
rather briefly. A qa.eation
about tiM badtct 111d bow tt w affected tbe
Ua.iftnity aDd
propa.m1 and oew people.
A tremendous dut in new prOif&amp;.Dll. I mean it Just
&amp;hot them down.. Apin, in the Litter '60's ... if you bad a
MW propam you tbou,hl ,.. of decent academic quality
and tbey aid : •No, we won't ac:c:ept it'; you could aay:
'Patience, somebody cU&amp; hal to pt a c:ouple of linea but
we'll pt them. 'lbcy'll come, two yean, three years, row
YeaD at tbe molt'.
Now if you lit here and loot at the place, the plans
stlll ay .• . we tet aD 1dncll of apace out the:re ( Ambent 1.
If you extrapolate from this, the plana say tbat there's
&amp;Oinl to be another opportunity for lianificant increase In
dnelopment, throuah t.be mJd '70's • soon u we can get
lnto Amherst.
But if I were to ata.nd up in a Senate moetina and say
that lrlod of thlna lD a kind of 'Knute Rockne &amp;O &amp;et 'em
boya' speech, you know, I think they' d all sit there - they
mi&amp;bt not fall asleep; aome of them mi&amp;bt think I ouabt to
be certified for insanity ; but m01t of them would have a
'er'f ll.lll'eCOptive .U toward tbat. ITbit .1.1) because we've
teen the other lido of the state budaet and we say : 'Sure
that is what .Ia auppoled to happen, but wlult il JOinl to
happen with the mooey in '7-4 and '757 And everybody's a
little uneuy, and you can't blame them.

m..

ll..,

Let's cbaqe tb~ 10bjec:t, perbape 180 clqrea for the
time be:ini- A Uaive:ralty II often called the mic:toc.oem of
tbe '-Teal world;" It cert.mly ~eema to ~. Yoo lpOU
emt;er about the frailty of tb~ cmiY•nlty. I'm wooderiDa
what form of i.nYohCftlcat you ml&amp;bt feel appropriate for
the UniYeraity to take wbcD dallna with ca1ain IOdal and
polltk:aJ problema tbat we aee. How far can we 10 before
the Uainnity bre.UT
Also a lot of it depends on bow you do it.

"I guess, to 11n aterfl, I ~ a commitment
to ... an ed&amp;u.V~tlon tiMt fit$ JOmebody to pltzy
tile rok of a fne ,.., In a ~t 80cltty. "
Bow would you propoec that w~ do it [deal with
IIOdaliDd political probleau]?
I think to an extent it is going to be done if the
Uni•nty operJtes at aU. It's an extremely difficult
question to answer because there are a number of different
and at least potentially conllictins thinp involved. The the
extent that tbe Univenity doe. it. it does it larsely If not
entirely indirectly.
Wbat does the Unbenity hav~ to offer? Wdl I said
earlier the purpoae or what • baa to offer ao toaetber. or
presumably they ahould. Soil wba1 you're talk.ina about Ia
equal opportunity then prel\llll&amp;bly one or the tblnp it bu
to offer is tbo opportunity to anyone who baa the ability
to p:t tbe lkilll, to pt the abilitie. lmproTcd il not
perf6ctcd, so that be can ao out and, in the jUJOn, 'do bil

tbina.'
It seems to me that il we are aolna to rapect th•
rill't of t he indmdual to make bU own cboic:a there are
really 1imits on the kind of political commitment we can
tie to that. Let me tate a view not too far from my home
academic field. Politicallcience ouaht to be u receptive to
a Bury Goldw1ter conaerntive u an ADA liberal. 1bat's
really not even total extrerrust. And the political
commitment sbouJd not make any difference in bil ability
to learn and develop in that field . And I think th.ia just cuts
n,bt aaoas tho board . ..
To illustrate, I penonally sti.U relfe1 the decision to
boot ROTC off the campw. Not that I tbinlt we can't have
a U~ty without it, but I think that It was a procram
which bad an academic lealtimacy and offered an
opportunity for people who were interested in that ldnd of
tbiq ud we ue tbe poorer for that opportunity harin&amp;

Page tail . The Spectr\lm . March 13,

197~

I tJdak ddl

~ what

1011!

of . toadla

•oald bu taqht. b

OD the illae of wbo
II die ltudeaa; il tt the

faculty; lilt the oatlldu COIIUIIanity; eodety at laraeT
E..-ybody. Nobody is &amp;Oina to continue a propam
of which there is no clDTOllment, and nobody il aoina to
continuo a propam for wbich there is no purpose. (For
example). loot at the lfaduato rtude:nt trends. ln. the mid
60's they wen toa.rln!l down the doors to aet into the
departments, now thO)r're tearina down the doors to aet
into the Llw tchoob. They TOad the want ada. 1bat's

"Then IJ1'e nltJth,ely decent cluanneb tlrrouzlr
whk lr one CGn zct with tmy 'bN/6' . . . It &amp;n't
necat~t~ry to 11111.11-:h llrowul Hllye&amp; &amp;even limn
hoplnz the WGib wUI/aH down in ord~ to set
them heard. "

don

IOIDO

the trade. We'N nalcaatbia oow mOlt of our
paduate propama.
lootin&amp; at them . in terma of
quality. aoaJs, etc. We have a statement of pia wbich is
put of tbe aelf1tudy I for Middle State. Acaedation
Study J .
I'm sure that he (Preedent Ketter) will be
continulna to wort towards 1ookina at the proptml and
bow they contribute to that. There's been some effort to
Ft aoiDa on further evaluation in the planninaiD reprd to
the baccalaureate dctree ... Colleciate prospect\11 will
come back (to tho Senate) . There was a task force on
reorpniz.ation whoee effortJ were peeted with something
leu than complete affirmative response Lut spring. But we
OOVI have I proposal to transfer School of Management out
of Social Sciences on the crouncls that this will improve its
effectiveness in' ita area and permJt it to work better with
other unJts, such as law and engineering and some of the
Health Sciences professional schools, in developing jt1in t
programs. I tbin.k we're aoing. I could say some other
thinp, but they wouJd be neptively reflective upon
previous administrations and perhaps we had better not

w.·...

puttina it terribly crua~y ; but I think that's part of it and
TbJs question b• to do with who rules tbt
you find everybod)• sayina 'whoopc, 6old it, cut back
the graduate school e1uoUmenta because we can't place ; Univerajty. Ia the Univenlty a dtmoc:ncy7
No!
think twice about new propama; thlnk twice about some
of tbe prosnma you'-fe aot.'
Should It be?
Maybe aome (propams will) hne to go, because
No!
they cannot be ju.tified, In tema of thetr operation ... If
they continued to op10rate ... to aeU the egos or the
Could you elaborat~ a Uttle?
f1cuJty i.nvol•od , that'll not enoup. To 1 certain extent,
the Cac:ulty determines what's a aood procram, and to aJ\
Swe. Let me go at that the best way I can come up
extent the students cletermine it, as I say, by their with. If I serve on the thesis committee for a graduate
enrollment .
student , one of the obligations 1 talte on i! that or
suppottin1 his attempt to aet a job, which means I am
Gob\a ba.c:k two lf~an ..-Jn, in Jun~ 1970, National prepared to write a letter and sign my name which says in
Review reported o,. ra~~ewty memba'1 aacammt of thil effect - ' hire this auy.' I am not JoiiJI to do that if 1 don't
UniYe:ralty .. 'O'u stud•mtl are full of diltrust, ow- (acuity think his graduate proaram is a good one. That's not only
in dilarny IDd ooJ admJo.&amp;ttratJon &amp;e.den inaccadble. in terms of bow well the counes are taught but the course
T1leee condldona an~ mll.kina It catremdy difficult to start be took , the work he did, etc. And if the grievance
talk.I:Dt to uch o tbn'.' Do you dllnlt thll deac:ription II committee told me to write that letter, my response would
applkabk! to tod1y?
be : 'You think he's thataood you write the Jetter and you
No I
sill' il, l won't' ...
EsaentiaUy as a facuJty member that's what you're
How would you cbancterin the Untnraity and saying again and spin : 'Thi.'l course or study has been
wbat would be your M141!•ment1
completed and hu been completed well and it 's a
Well, I pea In palft I'd braa and say that the faculty worthwhile course of study.' 1u lona as tbat role is there , I
b no looser in ctisarra:y because wr've aot an operating t hi nit that the authority commensurate with the
(I'm just ao~na to braa terribly here, f probably responsibility has to be there.
Senate
abouldn't) it acems to nle that we have succeeded over the
f.low I doo 't think that means that the student bas
year that we've had the n:prctentative Senate in opention, no voice. I tb.i.nk it is imminently dcairable that students
and are really makina It worlt to deal with educational participete In the discussion, that they be able to indicate
policy . We've brouaJu more Issues to the noor and bave what tbeit preferences, deairea, etc, are. l ttunk ultimately ~
dealt with them in the lfeNCI thlt we have been able to aet tbouab, tbe raporulibUty at least for th~ educational
the Senate t~ take a polition, to adopt a ruolutlon or PfOIJ'Im lie. with the people who have to say here's your
resolutions, etc., than we were able to do from Sol)' '6S or .merit badae ..
'66 on.
I'm not sure wlult to ay about tbe students. J tlun.lt
In what waya can students participate!
that the student orpnhtabona, studenl aovemmenta that
We have students on every Senate commjttee or at
... are some waya doin&amp; better ... You've got to think least we have requested nominations from the Student
bac:k to 1968-70. Tbete wu II lot or n~. there were I lot Association and the Graduate Student Association for
of meetinp. 1 can remember bdnaln Norton - you know everyone, and in almost every case have accepted their
when you couldn't m•[)Ve throuah the firat floor baU nornin1tlona. The only pllces where the executive
bec:auae there was a mee,tinatn the Fillmore room and the committee of the Senate bogod about it was when we had
overflow was down in lius Lounae and they were both the same student on moTe than one committee and the
jammed run. But If you look at the achienme:nta of those
yean, I think they're not there. Now J may have
"To a certain extent. tht faculty deurmlne
reservations about how the Student Association budget
wltat's 11 good program; and to 11n exttnt tire
10ts spent, for example, lbut it's workin'; and I think roaUy
nudtnts determine ll, a I :JO)' , by their
that's more than II was tl~en (in I 968·70).
The Graduate Student Association Ia wortina and
mTollment. "
that's really more than it was three years ago Okay, we
aren't wildly happy witlh everythina that comes out. I'm quest1on was nu.sed about the appropriateness o r that and
sure that not all the faculty are wildly happy with the kind of load this was maldna ...
everythina that com011 01ut of the Senate. But I think that
They !students on Senate committees ) have the
they' re at least opentllna. There are relatively decent npt of the forum when the commHtee reports are up in
channels throup which one can &amp;0 with any 'beefs' ... It tbe Senate. Many of the departments have various forms
for student participation In their aovemment
10

'1 pn.1 at tit~ mo'"mt we'rt 1tlll in tile phau
of kamlng to II lie wltlr wltat we 'rr dolns and
not wllh pro miMI of whllt w~ 'rt going to do. "
illl' t nec:e.ary to march around Hayes seven times bopina
the walla wiD fall down in order to get it beard. I tbink
that's an acbieYement.
Voo mentioned faculty and .rudcota. What about
acludUitratioo? Are tbeyJDOre KC--'bie?
• I think Bob Ketter· toee more students in a month
lban Martin Meyenon t•w in his entire career at this
Univenity. In fact, I would acree witb 1 muc.b earlier
MM~~ment that Peter R!epn saw more students in his
c::a.reer u actina preaident than Meyerson saw in his career
• praidcnt of the Univenlity.
Let.. apin cbeae the aubject a Uttle. Clarlt Kerr
oocc caDed the modem uaiverlllty the multi-unlnraity
with • lot of Keompenytq problems: Bi10eas,
cwer..:entralhatioo IDd parpowleameaa. What has thb
UaiYenity. tbe admJD.Iaatntioa In particular, don~ to
comt.t the. l'fl* of problem.?
J am tempted to aa:y that he I Kerr I also defined the
Univenity as a partiDa P,J'Oblem held together by a central
heatina plant ..• I auea:s 10ne o f the things that one has to
say is I don't think tho p·reside:nt bas achieved as much u

Wbat about in tenure c:.ua? How much can studenta
putidpate? Or bow much do you feel they sbo.ald
participate?
The most valuable contribuuon students can make is
by. Jiving us an onaoina read on how weU they're 1faculty J
&amp;Oinl to leach us (students I
both in and out of class.
Do you think that praeDdy nitta tocby?
No. 1 have maintained for some time, and I hupe
thai we will achieve it shortly, that we need a procedure
here where every student rates every course be takes
immediately upon completina the course. If the c:a~
comes up, you know the Jones case wbich made the front
page of the paper. there was precious little data pro or
con ...
Do you think that tb~rc should be, u much •
pneilible, direct student input IDto tenure declsiona?
_Two Y.ea.rs ago, I would have said absolutely not. My
expenence Since then wouJd indicate that It the Graduate
Student ~ociation or undera:raduate student association
within that department is a really well operating one, . ,
representative of the s~dents in that pr0Jf8JD, tho odds
~e . pretty good that it you have a couple of students
~ttmg on su_ch a committee, they're aomc to do a aood
JOb. Th.ey wW make a docent dedaioD in the case. If you
c:an achieve that, I think it's worth talltin&amp; about.

�Call fi r amnesty.

0

•

t disobedient sisters turns, ln part, on the question of
wile .
t some form and degree of punishrneat is
reqwred (beyond that already meted out in th.e form of
disruption of personal lives and pursuits). It is a commonly
accepted view that concomjtant to any dillberate breach of
law (e.g., "civil" disobedience) is the. violator's willin&amp;
acceptance of consequence (e.J., punishment). Moreover,
refusal to accept the consequence of disobedient actions is
~o many ~~~•. redolent of irresponsibility (e.g:
Immorality, cnmmality, or cowardice).
I propose that this commonplace is utappropriute
w1th rega rd to resistance against the Vietnam War· and as
a general rule , 1t can do violence to the quallties 'of
particular situations, as in this case, when universally
.1pplied

The 'option' ohmnesty
T h e view that war resisters should willingly scce·pt
some pu nitive measure for vtolating specific laws presu 111 es
that resistance to this war 10 the form of some legal
offense constitutes a "wrong-doutg" of wtuch they urc!
supposed to be auiJty, and thus deserving of pun1shme1nt ,
and secondly, that there exists a " legitimate'' authority for
mellng o ut punishment . On these points several questin,ns
(nmt' to mind. The answers lend support to the call for a
total, unconditional amnesty
t h at is, a I"C!ltorallon of
1.1V1l rights for aJJ men who dlfectly reststed tlus war
whatever form theu resistance took.
To the po mts at issue h ere, punishment for the &lt;u; t
of diSobedient resistance on the f}tlrt o{ the indrvid~tal
pre-supposes lawful behav1or, and hence " legll macy" (In
th.is restncted sen:&gt;e) on th e part nf the authonttes who
have the power to punish. At worst our government acted
Illegally in contra vention to the Uruted Nallons Cbart1er,
International Law, the Geneva Accords (1949, 1954) atnd
th~ U .S. Constitution; at best, it pressed men mto liS
serv1ce in order to Implement its policy behmd th e mask of
patriotism when, from the war's begJnning the
"legJt1macy" of our intervenllon in Vietnamese afraiTS was
1n off icial question(N 8
opposition to hll!ity
Congressional passage of the Tonkm Resolution ( 1964) lby
Senators Morse and Gruening)

There .iJ no court of law powerful enough to
deterutine the leplity and to implement its decisoJU of
U.S. activities in Vietnam, since the Supreme Court has
hitherto ~ec1ded not to hear cases pertaining thereto. That
the "Court of History" will ultimately judge· U.S.
involvement there speaks irresponsibly to the needs and
Pliiht of war resisters now.
On the vtew of most war resisters the feeling runs
deep that no wrong on their part has been done. For that
reason, even a pardon or amnesty for wronadoing is
unacceptable because presu mtive and accusatory .
However, Lh.is writer feels they should at least have the
option of amnesty open to them because they were
vtctimized. The government (the victimiz.er) should be
Oexible and humane enough, in the more co nstructive
dimension of its democratic tradition, t o officially
recognize even the "po&amp;slblity of error" on their own parL
Po r the government to expect mindless m ass aUegian ce l o
Its dictates without the ''health commotion" necessary to
growth in a political democracy, and inexorably suppress
o pposition (even if that opposition was forced to break a
military or civ1l law), can only erode its elgitimacy as a
dt•mocratic political formation they were compeUed to
oom m11 a lesser one in their refusal to kill, espectally when
no real alternative was open to them. It is ironic that the
power of amnesty lies in the Institutions and 10 control of
the guilty. In effect , tt IS the gwJty who must pardon the
1nnoec:nt. And 1t is noteworthy that most opposition to
the war came from those who were , and are forced to f~ght
II.
Some people argue that deserters are to be treated
differently than Sdect1ve Serv1u- VIOlators due to leg.~J
JUriSdiction Namely . desertion fJIIS under mt.l1lary law .
Selective Serv1ce violations
under ' 'VII law. The
Significance of th1s differen ce
really il dtshn cllon
without differen ce
evaporates upon closer scrutiny.
Along this line of argument Senator Taft and
Representative Koch have mtroduced amnesty bills. As an
lllde, Presidential asspirllnt McGovern calls for an
unconditional amnesty, Lmdsay, calls for m •·~:o ndttional "
rendition; Jackson, declares " no amnesty."

Js tate of the University!
cunllnued from IM98 9-

..oml'thing tike tenure or promollon ... ) the answer
you get is ' WeU, we have the power to do this. I
me.tn the Prestdent makes the appomtment.' And
that '~ true, but tl always misses the real questio n .
Which is?
The question 1s what docs 11 mean You know
the Queen appomts the prime rntOISh:r, but 1f Queen
~ ll1.abeth suddenly deciced to do somethmg
drasltcally different than ha~ been done tn the last
200 years, one would think s he would have to
exrla•n why . Yet you find thJngs happemng here
where Gelbaum has, in some cases, umlaterally
V&lt;llded six or e1ght months of deiJberallon hy
~ulU:SSive levels of faculty com mittees. To JUStify
thJs, he has Wd ' The President SignS thiS and he
.u.l.~ me for my advtce. It's his deciSton.' Wluc.:h , uf
course. tech meally 1t i.~ - he has the power to do
lh3t
But, In that example (and there have been
many of them m the tenure and promotion game).
long established practices, wtu~..h are 1mportant not
so much because they are long established hut
be~..ause they embody certain values . .. have hccn
ignored These have essentially pro ved very very
frag,.le. And the faculty finds itsdf left without
wt·.tpons and in a tremendous stale of surpru:e wtuch
leave, most of them to retreat

"It seems to me that the effect of this
administration has already been
distzstrous. I thi11k il really hod a
tremondous/y harmful effect on the
nature of the University . .
Yet the University does not appear, at leu1 on
the surface, to harbor or foster this faculty
discontent?
The same kmd of thing happened in a muc iJ
more dramatic way during the literal crisis 10 1970
Well, now things are much more suhtle and so
it '( easier not to recognize what's happening. The
v. ,le fabric of assumptions which I think .1re
Important to generating a state of flexibility and
good will and harmony and mteresl and life in the
Un1versity •.. have been very severely damaged by ,
again, a sort of impulse in the administration to
correct what they perceive as massive anarchy inslde
a set of very regular procedures and orders and so on
and so forth ...
I'm part of an American Studies program, and
to take a trivial but very revealing example .. You
can see our prage out there which is painted, a class
spent about three weeks painting it. The
administration called it psychedelic which was a

tremondously pejorative term for them. We went
through a whole thing with various vtce pre.idenls
about 'You can't do thai and if you do tl everyone
will do 1t.' Sure enough, one &lt;by they sent around a
l.Jtttle man spending a lot of state money to paint it
n.ver w1lh brown paint because this thing shouldn't
happen. WeU, why shouldn 't it happen? Is Acheson
HaJJ really going to be p11.1nted in psyc hedelic colors
because we've taken J derelict garage and made 1t
sort o f a hnght spot? What difference does it make
and what 'IOrt of mentaJ1ty finch th1s a profound
t!h.reat ? Wrll , Hayes llnll found 11 a profound threat
Somehow, we were able to save half o f 11 by a
number of well placed phone calls. It's sort of ironic
I hal the haJf I bey painted over is the half that faces
tihe campus whic h they supposedly d•dn't care
aboul The half that we stopped them on was the
half that 1s su ppo~edly offend10g the IJrger
communi! y
What 's happened is that m almost every
department on almost every level, everyttung which
slhould have heen easy and informal has suddenly
become a hassle, the drain of !Ius 111 energy IS JUSt
enormous .

Any final comments on the admin.Uitration?
The general detmilion of their wo rld is 'us
or them' w1th us bemg the very na"ow arcle and
them h..:1ng a very wide cucle. You can taUt with
people who have worked more with the
aodmtmslrJIJon
. . the paranoia, the sense of
msmcenty and mferionly or inadequa ~..y or whatever
that have compelled them to defin e very narrowly
the c.:trde o f people they can work wllh
i\) much as I Wiil&gt; appaUed by the choice of
K ellt:r t wu years ago, I think they've drastically
Limited the base they can work from . I mean the tdea
that som eo ne hke Ira Cohen is someone w1lh whom
this administration cannot work C. so trag~c.
~.nybody who kno ws Ira, knows him to be about the
most easy to gel along with and generally
cc)opera llve, middle of the road, mtelhgent person .
Granted that Ketter came in with a very
n;a.rrow base o f support ... anyone who has been
around admmistration would have guessed that they
would move to broaden out thelf base of support.
Rather than try to spread out, to bridge the gap,
there hu been a very narrow enclave sort of thin&amp;

exhibitio,a
and sale
original
graphics

jJurchnes m•y be charged
University of N.Y. &lt;~I 8uff~o
Art Dept. Gallery
4240 Ridge· Le.. Rd.
Tuesd&lt;~v. March 14
- 5 p.m.
7 p.m. - 9 p.m.
St;~te

ll&lt;~. m

CHAGALL, BASKIN, ROUAULT, DIAUMIER AND MANY OTHERS
ARRANGED BYFERDINANDROTEN GALLERIES
BALm~O RE, MARYLAND

for those ot you who
missed the red living
room, remember
that elephants hide
in jelly bean jars.

There is very little sense of leadership; very
m•uch a mentality of an expanded power base not so
m1uch by extending out emissaries but by ex pandin&amp;
t he walJs of the cHadel - now you ca pture a
dteanship, now you capture a · provost , now you
aboliJh the faculty senate and so on and so forth ...
The administration views faculty and students as
enemies to be controlled . •

Monday, 13 March 1972! . The Spectrum . P9 eleven

�~--CAVAGBS-----­
DiscouNr RECORD STORES

I

BURGERS - HOT TUNA

ROCKIN - GUESS WHO

ELTON JOHN - MADMAN

OSIBISA - VOYAGE

NILSSON - SCHMILSSON

$2.99 - List 4.98

SUPER SPECIALS

ELVIS-NOW

SPECIAL :

SONNY &amp;CHER

CHER - GYPSIES

$2.99 - List $4.98
f .'!: THE UNIVERSITY PLAZA STORE
AND
MAIN EGGERT STORE

ALL RCA VICTOR, DECCA, KAPP, UNI

$5.95 SLASHED T 0

$2.95

University Plaza Store
'tain &amp; Eggert Store

&amp;·
'-91 twelv~ • The Spectrum . Monday, 13 March 1972

�VAluable experience

Wrestlers totally wiped out
by Dave Gerintu

lfint round decision to Oklahoma State's Dan Strode,

'Who was seeded fifth in that weight class.

Sp«trum Staff Writer

College Park, Maryland - In one of the most
upset-filled national tournaments in recent yean, the
wrestling Bulls saw aU seven of their entrants
knocked out by the end of the second round .
However, the experience that was gained in this,
Buffalo's first collective chance at this prestigious
tournament, will undoubtedly be extremely
benefictal next season. In previous seasons, the Bulls
had never sent more than one wrestler to the
national tournament.
There were several reasons for the Bulls' failure
to gain more than a single team point at Maryland.
Buffalo drew low-seeded wrestlers as their first
round opponents in four out of seven cases. " In a
tournament such as this one, it is best to meet one of
the very high seeds or an unseeded wrestler." said
Bulls' Coach Ed Michael. It is common knowledge
that wrestlers who meet one of the top seeds will
have a better chance to wrestle back in consolation
matches, as the top seeds are more hkely to reach
the scmJ·finals.
Policare draws Lewis
At heavyweight, Tony Policare drew Michigan
State's fifth-seeded Ben Lew in the first round.
Lew1s, a rwo time Big Ten champion, decisioned
Pohcare 7 2. However, four of the seven points
earned by the two time mid-season AU-Amenca
selccuon. were as a result of penalties on Policare for
sral hng. The Buffalo heavvweildtt could not wrestle
ba~k as Lew1s dropped an overtime decision m his
nex 1 match. At 177 pounds Fred Marcello dropped a

Several of the BuUa did not wrestle up to their
)potential and were thus eliminated in first ro und
matches. "I think that some of our wrestlers were
11&gt;5}'Chologically awed by this, their first national
1toumamenc," observed Michael. Another factor in
ilhe Bulls' failure to gain a place was the fact that
rthey had to leave one of their top wrestlers in
tBuffalo. Ron Brandt, who compiled a 17 - 1 record
llluring the regular season, was t.alcen ill shortly
!before the Bulls departed for Maryland. Barry
!Reighard, who had defeated Brandt by a single point
iln the East Stroudsburg Open, cook third place,
I osing to the second place finisher by a single point.
Eric Knuutila, the Bulls' regular at lh7
t?Ouods, was the o nly Bull to win his first round
match. He decisioned Wayne Mino r of Utah State,
8-4, before being beaten by Lehigh's Terry DeSt1to
Knuutila's VICtory gained Buffalo's lone team point.
Oarion State, the Bulls onJy conqueror this
~;eason, saw both of their entrants in tJus tournament
INin national t1tJes. Wade Schalles who wrestled for
the Eagles at 158 and 16 7 pounds during the ~ason,
INOn the title at 150 pounds with four pins in his five
matches. Schalles is expec ted to lead the Eagles into
Clark Gym as one of Bu ffalo's top home o pponents
next season Schalles was named the outstanding
wrestler of the tournament, dominated as usual by
mid-western schools.
Iowa State, which ran up 103 potnts. regatned
the title that Oklahoma State had taken from them
last season. The Cyclones were led by 6 5, 400
pound heavywe1ght Chris Taylor. who dethroned
defending champion Greg WoJciechowski of Toledo
tn the finals

Picket scheduled
In protest to the recently ann&lt;J•unced tuifion increases, the Student Association in
cooperation with the Student AS.'JOCi11lion of the State Unlvenity is sponsoring a peaceful
picketin11 of Chancellor Ernest Boyear's appearance at the Heardl.stone Manor tomorrow
The picketina is timed for the cbanceUor's arrival JN:heduled between S p.m . and 6 p.m .
Buses will be departina from Norton Hall at 4 :30 p .m . for the picket lite. Anyone
interested in 110ina should stop by tbJe SA table today or Tuesday or call the SA office

\\bmen teams shine ·
in sports ccmpetition
With playoff time here in most
men's intercollegiate teams, one
often neglects the women's teams
at this University. The notion that
the women's teama have poor
competition has been diiproved
recently by Buffalo's rtne
women's intercollegiate squads.
Tlus year's edition of the women's
swimming team led BuffaJo's
women's contingent with a fourth
place finish in the New York State
swimming meet at Fredoma State
College.
The Buffalo swimmers coached
by physical education instructor
Joanne Nelson , placed among the
top four teams 1n the swimming
and diving c hampionships of New
York Stale At the Fredoma swim
mee.t , 20 un1versities and colleges
from New York Stale were
represented
The mermwds began theu fme
day by taking a second place in
the 200-yard medley relay.
Buffalo's 200-yard medley relay
team co nsi s ted of l::1leen
Mahoney, Patti Munk. Monica
Barbasch and Ellen O"Connell.
Besides do1ng a fine jOb for
Buffalo 1n the 200 medley relay.
Ms O'Connell and Ms Barbasch
excelled 1n other events Ms
O'Connell placed SJ&gt;.th tn lhe
100-yard freestyle and e1gh1h 10
the 50-yard freestyle even! Ms.
Barbasch , who holds the state
record 10 the 50-yard breast
stroke. placed se~ond in that
event, and copped a fourth place
ftnlsh In the 100 yard
breasts! roke
ComcU wins meel
ComeU UnJVen.1ty's women's
team won the swtm meel , wtth

Oneonta placing second anj
Ithaca, the defending champion,
placing third. Buffalo's team
ended fourth in the competitioa,
a mere six points behind lthacL
The Fredonia tourney ended •
ftne season for Buffalo's wome'll..
who posted a 7 - 3 won- lOll
record on the season. AHhoup
their reguJar season schedule ~
come to an end. the women still
have a major tourney at die
easlern swimming meet at New
Hav en, Connect1cut. Ms.
Barbasch, Ms. Shulman and Ilk.
Munk represent the mermaids t.
their vario us specialties.
Another Buffalo women's teaa
recently in action was ta
gymnastics team , In a tourney •
Brockport State, the girls coacllal
by Gerry Caler sent t:haiiE
representatives. Buffalo's entrll181
were Sandy Fafer and c...
Beatt y on uneven parallel bars a. .
Denise Yablowsk.1 in free exerciac..
Cortland State swept the ti.lk
with Nassau Com munity CoU.
and Brockport State a d~
second and thtrd
In women's basketball. Burr•
was elimmated early in a tourn~~
jomtly held by Hartw1ck CoUCF
and Oneonta State tn Oneon-.
N Y _ Buffalo was elurunated d.r
to early losses to Ithaca ColleF
and Ou~:hess Cornmumly CoUeJIC..
The eventual wmner of the
16·ream c:hampJOnshtp wa
Queens College , wluch ~wept fo•
stratght victones .
The final wo men's team a
action over the weekend was the
vtctorious women's bowhng tearo.
Buffalo's first team defeated el3ht
other schools w1th a six pme
total or 5074

Next Week Only
atyo~r

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College Class Rings

University

Joste

BookstorE~
"on

campw~''

CLASS RING

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1.) 4 week defivary
2.) Receive e FR E E fecsimile signature

$3Value
PURCHASE YOUR RING N 0 WI

3.) Receive a chtnc:e on the Color T.V. $280 V.aJue!
(One winn• for the vnek)

AN R.C.A. 14"

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BUYER

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I

•
SEVERAL DOOR PRIZES EVERY DAY No P\lrdt111 Required.

Monday, 13 March 1972 . The Speetrum . Page trurte.
.

.. ,J.,

t

•

I

• •

-

�,·rrhe follo-wing clubs
haVe not returned
budget for111s for
the year 1972-1973:

Hockey Bulls fall second best _,,. . .
at the ECAC division II filnals
by Bany Rubin
Sporh Edllor
Weary from their three road playoff games in
less t han a week, Buffalo's 1ce hockey Bulls feU
second best to t he University o f Massach usetts in t he
BCAC {);vision II flnals, 8 I. Reaching t he finals
aft er besting Boston State (9-5) and Vermont
(4 - 0), the Bulls gave little opposition to the fl yi ng
Redmeo, who clinched their first Division ll honor
The Mass victory e nded a two year domination by
Bowdoin and Vermont, while esta blishi ng t he
Redmeo and the Bulls as two of the coming powers
in Eastern CoUegiate hockey.
After t be contest, a weary Buffalo Coach Ed
Wrl&amp;bt commented . "What can I say, we were JUSt
ph ysically and mentally tired. Even when you Oy to
these games, the travel takes a lo t out of you."
Something wu obviously bothering t he Bulls, who
bepn the conte$\ with a three goal first penod

deficit tbat they never made up. The first ~nod also
set the tempo of the contest as the Redmen new
with the puclc a nd dominated the game in Buffalo's
end. T wo early goaJs by Chico Shea, the Redmen's
first line righ t winger, proved to be the margin of
victory. Dunng the awards presentations after the
pme, Shea, who tallied but SIX goals pnor to t he
Buffalo game, was named the game's most valuable
player for lili fine skating and hat trick scoring
exhibition

Keenan gets th ru
In addition tu the husthng Shea, Coaclo. Ja~:k
Canniff's squad was sparked by 31 goal scorer Pat
Kennan, who also talhed a hat trick . Buffalo was
never realty 1n t he game, as the Red men's second
shot of the game eluded Buffalo goaltender M tkc
dunn , who still stopped 42 of 50 shots 111 the
contest.
UnW&lt;e the Vermont shutout, where h1s
ddense cleared rebounds and policed the area in
front of the net, Dunn was constantly left
unprotected .IS Massachusetts' first four goals were
scored from dose-in . SluggJ!&gt;h and one step belund
the play was the best way to describe the Bulls as
they suffered theu worst defeat of the season
Coach Wnght remarked "We peaked m the
Vermont game . That game took too much out of us
and we were bred against tlus real good Mass club ..

GUSTAV A. FRISC H, INC.
Jeweler - Opt ician
41 KENMO RE AVENUE
(at University Plaza )
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

AJso related to the BuUs' sluggish man ner of play
was the large number of cheap penalties the Bulls
took.
Wn gb t lamented : " We reaUy ran into a lot of
stupid penalties, wtuch were definitely related to our
physical and mental s ta te."'
Buffalo's only cltance 1to get back in the game,
came late in the second penod when Buffalo's
"TAG" line got o n the board after repeated
frust rat io n. H ustling Bob Albano sto le the puck deep
in Redmen territory and fed hlgh scoring Mike KJym
for the goal, but 46 seconds la ter Keenan coun tered
for Massachusetts to 1ce the game.
Wright comments
Later , Ed Wnght 10 a better frame of mmd,
added " Right now we're the talk of the East. People
are amazed t hat we got 111\is far, and are no w
recoiJlizing that they' re goilna to have to schedule
\U . ...

When asked whether he wouJd ret urn to coach
the BuJJJ next season, Wrigltlt commented : "As of
nght now l'U be back, but if :mmethmg better comes
alo ng, I'm liable to go. This job has many
frustra tions, and I realize that the program cannot go
much farther Without sc:holarsh1ps We have
potential but what 1t means to the administration at
Buffalo , I really doubt We get more ent hus1a~m
from out of town Our students have been fanta~t1c
and support the program, but when we go back to
Buffalo we see not hing in the papers ."
Coach Wright also lamented the loss of six
senaor skaters from th.is year's squad. Wnght
remarked ''We're reaUy going to be hurt right down
the m1ddle. We're losang two &lt;:enters m Newman and
Dolmage, and our goaJ1e, Dunn I felt Donnie played
well , hut Mass was on every rebound :~nd were reully
Oy1n.: !'hey had a real book on us . after calling
every school we played."
In add111on to Newman , Dunn and Dolmage ,
the Bulls lose Bob Goody, N1ck Beaver and probably
Bob Albano. Albano has one half year of ehg1bthty
left, but whether he ret urns t•o the l1neup is anyone's
guess.
The season IS over for Buffalo. but nl1w the
BuiJs have cla1med a nic he on the Eastern colleg1ate
hockey map. After a fine I .l 3 DIYlsiOn II record
this y~:&lt;~r , Buffalo anxiOusly awa1ls liS expected move
mto the 4000 seat Grand l slo~nd Pav1lion next year ,
where they will play ten home contests .

ROGER

A LLEN

Assistant Prof . of Near East Cente1
Uneversity of Pennsylvania

will speak

ALFA ROMEO
• FER RARJ
•MASERATJ
Stde3 • Suvlu •Pans

USED CARS

- -BOBCOR- Mo tor Cars, Ltd .
1974 Egert (Near Bailey)
834-7350

Pa~Jt

on

TH E ROLL OF

WOM .~N

.., seen in

'' MODERN ARABIC L ITERA"TUR E':

Wednetday, March 16- 3 :00p.m .
312 Townsend H811
Sponsored by : Sociology 367
"Middle East Society in Comperetive P•rspective"
Council on lnternetlonal Studin

fourteen . The Spectrum . Monday , 13 March 1972

Black Student Union
American Society Mechanical Eng.
Chess Club
Club Latino
Nuning Student Assoc.
Schussmeister
Slavic Club
Student Branch of Electrical and Electronics Eng.
Student-Faculty Film Club
Student Polish Cultural Club
SUNY AB Amateur Radio Society
U.B. Geological Society
Chinese Student Auociation
African Club
American Society of Civil Engineen
Student Meet-Tech . Assoc.
Undergraduate Management Assoc.
Ukranian Student Club
U.B. Women's liberation
Video Connection
Third World Veteran Alliance
Undergraduate Psychology Auoc.
Undergraduate Anthropology C lub
Art History Undergraduate Assoc.
Students of Engineering Science5
Dance Club
Occupational Therapy Club
U.B. Photography Club
Activist Youth for Israel
Arab Cultural Club
Debate Club
H.P.E.R. Majors Club
Iranian Club
Krishna Yoga Society
Lemar
Native Amer. Cultura l Aware ness Organization
Pakistan Student Assoc.
School of Pharmacy Student Assoc.
Student Gov't of Faculty of Eng. and Applied Sciences
Students fo r Israel
Undergraduate Biology Assoc.
U.B. Opera Club
Internatio nal Club
New Age Natural Foods Club
Photography Club
Phy~i cs Student Assoc.
Greek C lub
U.B. Gay l iberation
Azteca
Student Ed ucation Assoc.

They must be returned
to Room 205 by
~ednesday March 15,
or QO funds will be
allocated for the
•
com1ng
year.
Jeff Osinski, S.A. Treasurer

�AD INFORMAT1&lt;*

I: LAlli IIIII

CL.ASSIFIIEO ADS may be placed
Monday thru ,.rlday between !I a.m.
and 4 : 30p.m . at 355 Norton Hall,
THE STUDENT rat• of an eel for one
day II •1.25 for the nnt 15 words and
•.o5 for eec:h additional word. •t.oo
for ucl\ addition• day. The dMdllne
lor Monday 11 Frlda)l: for Wedn~y .
It Is Monday, 1nd for Friday, It 1s
Wednelday Dy • •30 p.m.

837-090 7.
FURNISHED 2~1room apartment
for 3 on Hertel, 1165 a month.
Available May 15. 1317·1232.
THREE-BEDROOM apartment - wall
to wall carpeting, dllshwashlH wasMr
dryer, 10 min. Dus campu1.' Oepoatt
~~ulred. 1100 Pef'lltln, Available May

" HJOL.P WANTED" ads cannot
discrim inate on the b.uls of seiC, color
creed or netlonal orloln to any eiCtent
(I .e., preferal)ly Is &amp;till dhcrlmlnatorv).
"FOUND" ads will De run frM of
charge for a maMimum of Z days and
15 words.

STU 0 I 0
APT.. pertly furnished
SUO/ month lncludll"11 utllltlaL N . .;
U.B. 832· 9842 after '6 ,

WANTED

LOVELY, larva furnlshecl room
Kenmore. Prlvll~l. $65 monthly '
876 ·014!1 aftet 5 p.m. Gh1 J)f'eferrea

EXOTIC DANCER for Tower party,
Good pay. L . .ve Mme, phone numDer
In P.O. 80IC T716.
TICK ETS($) to Elvis Pr..ley Concert
April 5 - will pay more than cost of
Oflglnal tlckeU. Call TF8· 1180. Ask for
Bllan.
M O OELS wanted at photooraphlc
•ludlo. GOOd pay, Call DetwMn 10
a rn and 5 p .m. 884 ...991 .
PART·TIME dancef's wantea. 14 per
nuur. Radice's, 74 W . Chippewa. Apply
afl e l 4 p .m .
!{(SEA RCH (tetm) papen Dou9f\t,
10ld, eKchanged. Contact Norman at
831 3370 at any time.
ST ART 1 2 pet nout salary plus Donut.
w ork - 8 p .m . WMkdays, 1G-2 p .m.
Saturdays. Call 835· 3803 or TF!1..0402 .

APT . Kenmor•Oelaware, 3 Dearooms
furnished, 1180 hncl ucllno utllltiM
J-e 873~174.
.
u.e. AREA . Welt htrnlshed, eKc.llent
three-Dearoom . AC4: ommodates five.
Acro11 from campus. Sept. ,. .Je
available 8100 cash down, een
Tulumel lo. 633-1643,,

2 FURNISHED apartments In same
house l peopl• MC:h - 8-mlnute
walk - summer s-.Joon. 8 31 · 2285 .

RIDE BOARD
RIDE FOR two netiCMd to N - York
City. L ..v• Frldly, March 17. C all
8arDara 6!11-8011 .
RIDE NEEDED to f4- Haven or N York thlt WMkend. Call OeD at
834-7980 ,

Bl A UT I FU L
spaciou s :!·Declroom
••a r tmenl nur campto• IM tent
De91n nlng M ay or June 1. Call

FURNITURE dask, bookcase,
couch, chairs, lamPS, ru.,, tables,
plano, 21" B&amp;.W TV. Caii873·72U.
FOR SALE: 35 mm f2 Auto.f&lt;tlkkor,
with Hoya lA, ..ns shield, l . .tner case
SIIC months old . Cost , _ , 1220.
Yours for 1125. Firm. Mlctlaet,
831 ·224!1, 836-6622 .
HONEYWELL PentaiC Spotmetlc
tens w/case, •165 and Yalhlu 0
• - reftiiC 2,. format w Jcase,
Both In ncellent condition.
838 ·3735 .

F1.4
twin
$50.
Call

1965

FORO L TO. OOOd cond ition,
n.w t»rtl. Cell 831· 1081 lifter 7 oOO,
1250, or Dell offer.
DESK, 6~rawer ateet, fine condition.
Call after 5 . 835·2076, 836 ...308 .
NEVER a Detter d . .lll Buy your ctau
ring this WMk. Don't waltll Nn t wMk
Is too late. University Bookstore.
WE ARE: now open Mondays as well as
Tuesdays thru Satur day, 11 : 30 a.m. to
6 : 00 p .m. - also Thuncsar until 10 :00
P.m. 'Tha People.'
14 4 Allen
882-6283.

FUR COATS (2) th ort Dieck fur seal l
E1&lt; . con d. S 16.00 Ncn; alSo l o1&lt; collar
fur plecas w ith tells. 854· 2021
'69 HONDA 450 ; mostly o ceuent
co nes ; co-working arrang t approx .
$500 : 832 · 5888
N or on ; 503·8
Allenhurst . £4ra .

SKI EQUIPMENT, lady's Rosemont ' s
(blue) U 10 ( r. .. $155). men's !loot\
10¥&gt;, lady's b oots 8 ¥&gt;, 837 ·9517 after
5.

f'ULL OR part time Joos available with

APARTMENT FOR RENT

'6" V.W. fOf ule. lnl4)ktecl and on the
road. wtolte with rust trim. S100.
883-2416.

FOR SALE t Thll eutomOb ll e needs
som• Iovino care. 1!168 yellow Austin
America sedan . Good c;ondltlon, only
driven 31,000 mil•: r ecently tunaa up.
Four new radial tires. Sno w ti res.
Redlo. BuCket s. .u . SIIOhtly bfuiMd
r. .r 1700. Phone 1· 548 · 7335 alter 6
p.m .

Bell lin e Inc. C all Art 886·2 094 o&lt;
Moke 835 ·5215 MMtlngs at EKecutlve
Ramada Inn

MOB 1961, wife wheels, studded snow
tlr... OOOd condition. 173- 1000.

AT K LEINHAN!' MUSIC HAI.L
1

SHIIRLEY BASSEY
AND Hll
E=~~:!:: WOODY HIE UIAII CMICH EITitA

Wed., March 22, 8 P.M.

REFRIOE:RATORS, sto"u and
washers . Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. 0&amp;.0 Appliances, 8«
Sycamore. TX4-3183.
"ANASTASIA" needs a home. She's a
1961 lovable, little Tempeet, 82,000
miles, All she coltl 11 SllO. Call AI at
831 ... 113 rM OeDble at 832-6815.
KID'S lhlru and Shepherd' s d r from Pakistan, nand-woven fiDrla at
'The People,' 1•• Allen 882-6283 .

nRSONAL
OON'T MISS OUTII Buy your clus
ring todAy. Vou could win the colorea
TV. University Bookstore.
CAL.L.INQ all lovers! Dig Brian Friel's
Irish Traglcom..sy entitled What
ElseP "L.overs." R o sary Hill Coll ...' s
Wick Center, March ~13, 8 : 30 p .m.
LAW STUDENT wou ld like t o mHt
tJirl who 11 gentle and soft ..l)()ken, yet
energetic •nd casual. L . .ve neme trod
numDer, Spec trum Bo• 90. Think you,
Rob.
I'VE BEEN neglected. NoDOdy wenU
to buy me. My name Is An.stesla and
I'm f or wle fo r only SilO. I'm a
2-door , b lue Tem pest with An
automatic trAnsmlu lon, 82,000 mil~
and a verv ""Y bodv II lnter~tea , call
AI 1131"1113

LOST 1o FOUND

FOUND
Black 1&gt;1lr of glovft In
Bair d . Room 11 Call Mark. 833o4;760 .

I

MAN'S WATCH f ound at Ridge L N
campus last wa.M . C ell 831 · 11•4.
FOUND - Scarf left by hitchhiker In
my Dlack VW . I dentify and claim In
Spectrum office .

RIC:HARD HARRIS

MALE ROOMMATE ror apartment on
LISbon , 5 -.nloute walk f rom campus.
I 70
wIth utllltle&lt;. Ava ii ADie
Immediately, o w n room Call Dan
831 3378 ,

I.ILY TOMLIN
ITA.R OF ''LAUGH-IN.,

FE MALE ROOMMAT E no w tro10ugh
May O ..,n room, $ 15 WMk lor Marcn
160 montn t o r April , May . 836-4761
FEMALE ROOMMATE tor 2·bedroom
• part ment on Jewatt and M11n,
170/mo. 837 · 9066
FEMALE lor o w n room '"house April
Ht Close to campus. Call 833.0927 .
R .. sonab le, Yeah .

TUITION WILL IGO UP AGAIN
UNLESS WE STOP IT!

help

.

IS

-v

P'IEMALE ROOMMATE wanted
Immediately, .t~arlnt one bedroelnl
apartment, ~ mlnut.. walk from
campus, •50/month. Cell 83J-3..492,
6-10 p.m.

MISCELLANEOUS
WEEKLY package tOUI'Ir Acapulco,
Aspen, others. Also fllehts Nla. .ra ,
London return. 873·5660, 689-9632
after 6.
WIL.L. TUTOR In Russian, HeDr- and
German. C ell Boris 131·2422.
WE OUAAANTEE our work for thrM
months or 3000 mil... 1ndependent
Foreign Car Sef'VIC., 839·1150.
ANGLO AMERICAN antiques, 3112
Main St. Something for every student.
J-elry, tin, bi'IIU, China , glotU , unusu• l
Dutton•.
WIL.L TVPE term papers and edit them
at SAO a page. Cilll 836 · 2433 .
TY PING
eMI)ef'lenced IBM
Sel ectric, SAO Pef' page. 131 ... 801 .
TYPI NG - experlenc:eo - term papers,
etc . 833· 1 597
FL V BUFFALO student flights to
Europa N .Y.CJLondon/N . Y.C ., May
31 August 22, $199. July 9 August 23, 1 219 . Contact Alln
M1rmulsteln 837.0393, 6-9 p .m .
TYPING - busln ... or penone l - term
papers, theses, mau mallln ...
Reasonable rates. Call 937-6050 .
WILL TUTOR In physlct, math ,
ctMnputer science. V ery reasonable .
Call 83•-6179 . Ask for Surelh.
BUQ BURNT OUT ? We'll rebuild It for
less - V .W . tuneups lhru overh aul• I
832 · 1663; 894-9359 .
JOB qesuMES
prolesslonac,
confidential consultatio n Special rat ..
for rtudentl, rec.nt gradual• ana
veterans. 835-4473
ANTIQUES end m odern turnlture,
c eremta, c:hlM, etc;. SM Sid a\
v ..t erdey &amp;. Tomotrow Shoo, 1439
Hertel Ave.
~ET

APARTMENT

AOOMMA TES WANTED

IN CONCUT

Sat., April 1, 8:30 P.M.

FOLK CIUIIC oult.rt, --..ted,
Martin, Guilds, Glblona, Ourl•n. ate .
E.e~e DanJos, Dorool dulclmen. The
Strl"11 Shoppe, 524 Ontario, 1 p .m . 9 p .m. Sat. 12·5 p.m. 874-0120.

LOST - four l&lt;eys attAChed t o plec. of
rawnlde. Pl ..sa return to Spect rum
Office, Boll 50 .

Sunday, Mor. 19, 8 P.M.

•

NEW KNIT t09s Just anllrecl •t "The
"-Dc&gt;le.' 1« Allen 882-6213.

FOUND
M~tch lst, two keys corn er
Hectei-Maln. Mesh chAin . Distinctive
meclal , C All Ernie 834 · 1062

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIV~l pret;ent THREE BIG SHOWS

Mel.. "'"' ~551 hkolly ~

TOYOTA, '6g Corona, IIUtomatlc,
AM-FM , very tood COndition, lOOks
5 llr• plus 2 snows lnc:ludad,
11150. 137.0753.

• ..t.

eriCk rancft h -1J)f'tvat• o.arooms. 2
tNths, wnken tamllll and lhrtnt rOQnl
with beautiful plntc c:oraled, mart.le
flreplac•.
Kitchen with all
convanlenc•••
self&lt;INnl"11 own,
dlshwetttef, wall to wall carpatlnt In
room. Fr.. run of 100 ec,.. of
woods, .wlmrnlnt &amp;. lake P&lt;lvl......
Oroundl &amp;eautlfully tandtc:aped .
lndlviCiuall wltt'l ciMn heDits neeo only
~y. 815 monthly lncludel utllltles.
30 mlnut• from campus. AvellaDie
Sept. l•t, 1972. Write BOIC 92 glvlnt all
pertleu tan.

--=----

ROOMMATES WANTEO
M11e or
female Ultim ate "' countrv li vi ng.

FOOD
SERVICE
SUCKS

APT . NEEOEO tor June 1Jt 11\ru Aut.
3JI1 tor mace student - would preter
UB area . Willing to lh~te . C all
7 •1 · 3209 after 9 : 00 p .m .

APARTMENTS WANTED
A PARTMENT wanrea ror n el&lt;l y ur
for 2 or more students - walkln9
distance - call Bruce 8 31 · 2396.
J-BEDROOM apa rtm en t n eeded May
or Sept . Call Marie, Blfb, MArilyn,
831 · 2585 , 831 · 41 69, 831 ·2063 .
HELPil
FOUR-BEDROOM apar t m ent wanted
for summer and 72· 73 occupancy
Mull De walking distance fr om campus .
Call 131 -2085 .
S1 5
REWARD ror lwo-bedroom
1partm ent o.glnnl"11 Sept..,.,ber (June,
II requ i red) . Call 831 -3987 or
831 ·2270 .
HOUSE o r 2 -ramlly hou se needed for
eight homeless people Pl....l C all
831 -3454 .

desperately 11eeded to man tables,

work with community groups, lobby -

COME TO TUITION INf=ORMATION TABLE
or
Contact Debbie Kapell, 20~i Nortont 831-5507, 8, 9

Monday, 13 March 197:2 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

..

�Announc:ements
UUAB Video Committee will meet tomorrow at
6 :30 p.m. In Room 264 Norton.
CAC's Independent Tutorina Projec:t needs

rutors, especially in elementary reading and math.
Please help these students get through these tough
yevs in BuffaJo's school system. Contact Amy at

3609.
If you cVl't dec:ide about a majOf' or if you have
a major but don't know possibilities for employment
and graduate study, join a life Workshop Group.
Call Billie at831 -2511.
The 1972 Buffalonian announces that those
seniors who received their senior portraits without
folders may now pick up folders in the Buffalonian
Studio, Room 356 Norton.
The Hillel class in Beginners Hebrew will meet
tomorrow at noon in Room 262 Norton. 1 he I ewish
Ethics class will meet at 1 p.m.
University Tnvel (Division of Sub Board I , Inc.)
is sponsoring summer shuttles from Niagara Falls to
London by Boeing 707 jet. Roundtrip is $ 179 and
there is a choice of 30 dates. For information
contact : University Travel, State University of
Buffalo, 3435 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y. 14214, or
come to Room 316/323 Norton Hc1ll or ~II
831 -3602/3603.
Everyone who worited durin&amp; the recent
Student Association dec:tions should pick up their
money in Room 205 Norton beginning today. See
the receptionist. You will only be given your own
money and you must have your ID card lor
identification. No exceptions.
CAC need~ volunteers to aid in the di~tribution
of the Sperm and Egg Handbook. Anyone intere~ted
should conta.ct Research and Development in the
CAC office, Room 220 Norton, or call 831 -3609.
Kuncblini Y op beginning clu~ in exercise and
meditation are being held daily at '1 p.m. at 196
Linwood Ave. They are also held on Mondays at 4
p.m. In Room 8 Diefendorf and Wednesdays a t 8
p.m. in Room 331 Hily~. Call 881.{)505 for
Information.
SOS vs. HaJstea Hearing i~ tomorrow at 7 p.m
in Room 6 Acheson Annex .
The Hillel Executive Committee will have a
meeting tomorrow at 9 p.m. in the Hillel House.
Sunshine House will hold a general meeung for
staff member!&gt; tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Room 5
Acheson Hall . It is an important meeting. Ple...se try
to attend .
The Intensive Enalish Lansu• Institute in
conjunction with the International Club is organizing
a 4-day trip to Washington, D.C. on April 3- 7,
Transportation, hotel and tip!&gt; is $30 Interested
students may sign up in the I.E.L.I. office, Room
206 Townsend Hall.
The BuffaJonW1 would hke anyone Interested in
training for the position of business manager for
next year to see Liz Schachtner in Room 356
Norton

CAC need\ a voluntcm with d ec1r to drive a
woman with mult1ple sclerosis to and from the
hospital three mornings a week for therapy.
Re1mbursemen1 for gas 1s available. Leave a message
in Bruce's mailbox , Room 220 Norton.
Hillel presents He Walked Through the Fields
with Assi Dayan tomorrow at 7:30 p.m . in the
Conference Theater. Movie has English dialogue.
Admission is free.
The GermV1 Club will present the movie, Du
Alte und der Junge Konig, tomorrow at ? ·30 p.m. in
Room 23\ Norton Film has English sub-titles.
FNSM 222: "Contrtt»versies in Science Conflict and Resolution" meets o n Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 10 a.m. in Acheson 362. The topic for
this week is : " Decision The·ory and Ethical Problems
of Human Experimentation " given by Dr. Dickey of
the Department of Statistics.
The deadline for prop.~ summer fundin&amp; by
Sub Board I must be submitted before March 16,
1972. No proposals will be accepted after the
deadline, ~ the remainder of the semester will be
devoted to the preparation of the 1972-73 budget.
The LIUAB Video Committee wants newsmakcrs
to let them know what they are doing and to set up
a time and they will vidc~tape you , Contact Ed
Mellnick in Room 261 Norton or Celli 831 ·5 11 2.
Hillel WdlllS students who w1ll no t be able to get
home for the Passover Seder to get in touch w1th
them Immediately if they would like to attend a
Seder m Buffalo. Call 836-4540.
Photography is W41nted for the 1972
Buff411oniV1. It need not pertain to campus life, but
should be good, aestheticatlly and technically . See
Liz Schachtner in Room 3515 Norton.
The Division of Physicill Eduation, Recreation
and Athletics of the State University at Buffalo
announced that Mrs. Peichi S. Peng of the National
Taiwan Normal University will offer instruction in
Tai Chi Chuan at the University this semester. Her
instruction will be held in the Women 's Clark Gym
every Wednesday starting March 15 from 7- 9 p.m.
Seven two-hour periods are scheduled. Class size will
be limited to 25. Registration will be held prior to
the first meeting. Interested parties should report at
that time.
Finill all for Computer Science Department
Undergraduate Prosram ;.pplicVlts. Applications
may be obtained at 4226 Ridge Lea, Room 4 and
must be returned by March 31.
All interested students who wish to help luflet
downtown for the Attia O•efense Committee, please
come to the office, Room 816 in the Prudential
Building, 30 Church St., 1- .5 p.m. today.

What's Happening?
Mondiiy , March 13
Art show : TEAM Exhibition - Graph ics frorn the
TEAM workshop in Buffalo, 9 a.m. 5 p.m.,
through Saturday, Hayes Lobby .
Concert : Senior reciul - Andrew Schultze, baritone,
assisted by JoAnn Kushner, harpsichord, org.tn
and plano, 8 :30p.m., Baird Reciul Hall .
Film: Boy directed by Nagisa Oshima. 3 p.m. and 8
•
p.m., Conference Theater.
Photography show: Richard Kaufman, graduate
student, through March 17. 4240 Ridge Lea, 9
a.m.-5 p.m .
Dance: An evening of t 5th and 16th century dance
presented by the UUAB Dance Arts Committee
and the UB Dance Club, master class from
4 -5: 30 p.m., lecture- demonstration from
8- 1.0 p.m., Clark Gym.
Film: Night and Fog presented by the Student
Coordinati ng Committee for the Israel
Emergency Fund, 8 p.m., Room 233 Norton, a
film about World War II .
Senes of shoH films : Up Is Down, Symmetry, Why
Man Creates and American Time Capsule,
presented by the Student Art Board, 2 p.m.,
4240 Ridge Lea Gallery.
Film : The North American Indian (three parts),
ndrrated by Marlon Brando, 7 :30 p.m., Room
243 Health Sciences, presented by the Native
American Cultural Awareness Organization of
the State University of Buffalo u part of a series
under the theme of "Spirit, Unity , Peace The
Real People."
T uesdily, March 14
Film: Treasure of Sierra Madre with Humphrey
Bogart and Walter Huston, 3 p.m and 8 p.m.,
Capen 140.
Concert: Student recital, noon, Baird Recital Hall.
Forum: Christine Berl of the New York Labor
Committee will speak on "The Counterculture
and Art : Creativity or Pseud&lt;K:reativity," 8 :30
p.m., Room 233 Norton.
Poetry reading: Charles Wattenberg and James Pall ,
9:30 p.m., One-Eyed Cat, 28 Bryant St.,
sponsored by Outriders.
Coffee hour and discussion: "Kinetic and Optic
Painting and Sculpture," with Junette Harris
and Ruth Ziegler, 10 a.m., Albril#lt-Knox Art
GaJiery, Gallery One.
Folk dancing: Sponsored by Students for Israel,
8- midnil#lt, Fillmore Room.
'Lecture: "Indian Unity through Awareness," Janet
Md:loud, the PuyaJiup Nation, 8 p.m., Fillmore
Room, presented by the Native American
Cultural Awareness Organization.
- AmyAhrend

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Vol. 22, No . 84

State Unlvnty of New Vorl( at Butt.lo

Frldey, 10 Mlftel 1e72

Students linite to fight tuition raise
by Jo-Ann Annao
Clmpu1 Editor

Students

are

to combat
the State
University system . In joint press
conferences io Buffalo and Mmeola lut
Tuesday, the Student Association of the
State University of New York (SASU) and
the Ctty University of New York
University Student Senate (USS)
announced their program to defeat the
tuition raise.
As main speaker at l.ut Tuesday's
co nference , SASU Chairman Mark
Borenstein outlined the main points of a
three-ptwed program. The flrst phase calls
for immediate action in "roUmg back "
SUNY tujtJon to current levels and
matntaint ng free tuition and open
admissions at CUNY for the 1912 73
academic year.
Additionally. it stipulated that the State
Legisla tu re should appropriate a11
additional SSO million to maintain pubhc
higher education at a level wtuch wiJJ
"ensure quahty education." Such an
appropnat1on is estunated to be an
addHional $20 million for SUNY and an
extra +35 rruUioo for CUNY

educatir:&gt;na l resources and the full
u til ization of presently under-utilized
private fa.c ilities."

organizing

propo~ed tuition increases in

8oth priVIte and public
The last part of Phase I pro poses the
c hanging of the Bundy Aid program. wh.ich
presently a1ds private schools wtth no
rest rict1ons, to allow priYate and public
schools to better white monies through
coo perat ive contra c tual agreements
Accordmg to Mr. Borenstein . "nght now,
only pnva te schools benefit from the
Bundy pro~ram " lie conunued tha i
cnnt racts can be arranged where hoth the
pnvate and pubhc g.un
Longer range plans are involved 1n Phusc
II wh1ch would be effected duung the
197 J. 74 academic year. I ncludcl.l 111 thrs
phase rs the de mand that tutllon-free
publt~
h q~ hcr
etlucat i on at the
unde rgraduatt• level be prov1dcd h i New
Yor k Sta te res1dcnt5 attendmg pubh~;
un1vers111e' In addrtiOn. Phase II proposes
"npen adnw.~wns· lm New Yurk S tal e
rcs1derrh W1th a h1gh school drplorna or r t~
equ1valent
'Bad ima~ ·
Explaining th•s proposal, Mr Bo rcnstc111
commented 1n an exclusjve mterview :
"Open adm1ssions is a bad term
people
always conJure up bad images of 1t All we
are proposing as that we guarantee a place
fClr people in college who graduated tugh
school " Alan Schwartz, another SASU
official , agreed w1th tlus: "Our rdea IS a
modrficat1on of Boyer's regJOnahzallon
program .
we 're extending it and sayang
that you are guaranteed a spot, but no t
necessarily 10 one specific region."
To support thrs •·open admission ,
no-tUition'' proposal , SASU and CUNY
r ecommend I) el iminat Jon of
undergraduate scholar mcentive awards and
Regents Schul!rships , 2) fo rmatio n of a
contingency repay ment loan program to
provide aJ&lt;J for non-tuitio n expenses at
pubhc schools and all expenses a1 pnvate
, nstitut10ns ; and 3) the furth er
development of individual resources and
economies through the "pooling of

Trustees 1revamped
M.r . Borenstein explained that Regents
and Incentive scholarships are unnecessary
in tuitio111-free institutions. He continued
that students attending private schools
could tal&lt;e advantage of repayment loans
which would operate on a sliding scale of
interest dlependent o n income. The student
borrower would pay for 12 years, with the
state picking up the tab after this time.
Phase Ill of the SASU-USS proposaJ
calls for a revamping of the Board of
Trustees. According to SASU · ·rrhe Board
of Trustees must be restruc tured to include
people with more senS1tJY1t y to the
problems of public higher education "
SASU fUirther feels that "possible conflicts
exist within the Board of Trustees." Some
trustees sat on both the SUN Y board and
the go•vernin g boards of private
institutirr&gt;ns. Also, some trustees are
directors of banks which lend money
non-competitively for the Univer5.ity
Const ruction Fund and the Higher
Education Assistance Corporation.

'Kealiatic and pnct6cal
Mr. Borenstein supported lhesc: lhte~
phases 1l.S ''realistic," "practical" and
"economically feasible." He explained thar
the estimated cost for a free tu ition
undergraduate and cornmun1ty college
program for 1973·74 is abou t $90 million
According to SASU figu res. the amount
saved b y c ancellrng the &lt;&gt;c holarshrp
program would be about S72 m1llton They
also approx1mate SII m1lhon revenue from
graduate and uther fees . Add itionally, a
mmrmum of S5 millmn w1ll be gleaned
from cooperatave organ11atiou of the
Bund y Aid program
Ttus morley would leave. Mr Bnrenstcrn
argued, &gt;1bo ut SJ million lor the s late IU
provade Such a gap, h ~: 1Cmar!..cd , "as a
p1t1ance (111 l!orn pa11svn to the es1una1cd
slate budget of SM brlhonl II at\ gonrg to
provade tree pubhc cdu"alann fnr the
student~; whu seek ll "
Mr . IBorenstean stated at the press
conference: " We leel that 11 IS a feasrble
and respo nstble p rogram tu prc~ent to the
l eg~slature . The lotal program w1ll nut c.oost
the Slaw of New York srgn.ticanl amuunt
l• f dollars ." He conrauu ed· ·~rhe
continge1ncy loan program will not cost the
state anything for 16 years and most
rmportan1tly; the o utcome uf this will he :1
free publrc education for s tudents who
seek it "
Higher education st ressed
Stressing the Stgnificance of higher
education, Mr Borenstein sa1d "We feel
that an undergraduate education LS now as
important as a h igh school educau on was
ten years ago and therefore 1l is the
res~sibility of the state to provide 1t."
Referring to graduate programs, he
continued . ''We hope that the legislature
recogni?Jes that 10 I 0 or 12 years, if a
graduate education becomes a prerequis1te
to succus; then at the point a graduate
education should be given free ." However,
he remadted: "At the moment, we are not
calling fur that ."

While there will still be tuition for
graduate and out-of-state students, Mr.
Borenstein said the possibility of having
reciprocity with other state universities
would be a possible alternative to having
undergraduate tuition for out-of-state
residents.
Answering questions about the affect
this program would have on pnvate
colleges, Mr. Borenstein emphasized "that
it IS important nor to sacrifice public
education so that private education should
continue to exist." l n addition, he

again referred to CUNY refulins my
criticism that open admiss.ion wouJcl diluw
the academic quality of the state ayatem:
"City University has managed to attract
not o nl)l some of the best faculty, but also
the mos•t well paid ."
Both Mr. Borenste111 and Mr. Schwartz
pointed to lrowing student activism at
state schools as a hopeful sign that the
program may be implemented. SASU is
organ.iziJng committees to lobby for the
three phases. ln addition, they are
conducting petition drives artd pltdge

cnticized , "Governor R oc kefeller'~ plan of
mak ing State Unavers1ty turtrou
competrttve With pnvate tUIIron IS almn~l
as 1f you're krlling Peter to save Paul "

campaag.ns tn which voters say they will not
support any leg1slat1ve candidau against
the SASU-USS program This, they
comment, as a good way to unify the youth
vole

Fear of 18-2 1

The leg~slators ' ''fear of the 18·21 vote
encourages Mr. Borenstein that the plan
has a chance for Implementation: "I wasn't
hopeful about passage of the plan until
about th ree weeks ago when I sat down
w1th vanous legislators - they just don't
kno w how to assess the 18-2 1 year old
vote."

On the uther hand . he argued, the
S ASU-USS program would benefit prrvatt!
colleges : " What we ho pe IS tha t
coo pera I ivc contractual arrangements
between public and private schools wall
help to fi ll up private school space. We also
ho pe that the contingency loan program
will make dollars available to s tudents whu
seek a pnvate educatio n ."
Answering c harges that o pen admissiOns
would "overload" umverslly fac1hties and
faculty, Mr
Bo renstein 01ted City
University as not experiencing "a real
overflow" when it opened 1ts doors. He

On the other hand. he also commented
that thilllgs will be gained even if the plan is
defeated : " If we can get a commitment
from students to vote one way, to show
that the• 18-21·year-old vote is alive ; well ,
then we will have done something."

�Collegiate Asse~~~;bly .-

1

~.

Gri£Vance debate

Another discussion over the necessary, but for somewhat
proposed rules to establisb formal .different reasoru than Mr. Cook.
grievance procedures dominated They seemed to feel that formal
last Wednesday 's Collegiate prooedwes help to keep the
Assembly meeting. The discussion ..underdog" from being treated
was precipitated when one of the unfairly. Informal procedures,
authors of the proposal, Stanley they said, also can result in some
Dayan, said : "As co-author, I'd students being "screwed to the
like to retract the whole. thing." wall."
The other author, Roger Cook,
With people starting to leave
led the forces opposing Mr. the meeting, Konrad von Moltke,
Dayan, and presented to the Director of the Colleges, call ed for
assembl y the advantages of a vote on the motion to "throw
formal, written pr ocedural out" the proposal. The vote was
guidelines. Mr. Cook emphasi zed a 3·3·2 so Dr. von Moltke broke the
need to be able to present a tte and set the rules astde until a
concrete system to keep the committee could reword them
administration from intervening m
The assemb l y also spent
intra-Collegiate affairs. "We have
to have something down," he c onstd~rable 11m~ discussmg
Undergraduate Dean Charles
asserted
Mr. Dayan disagreed He Ebert 's memorandum forbiddtng
pointed to the informal structure undergraduates to teach courses
of the assemb•~· .snd advocated for credit. Dr von Moltke had
"''"":; :ime so the group could prev10usJy sent a letter to Dr.
discuss and explore the ways Ebert o utlining h1s dtsagreement
grievances are handled. In that with Dr. Ebert's mtcqHetation.
way, he expl11ned, any member of While no specafic a&lt;.:ttou was
the assembly could tell recommended , one member
admtnistrators and faculty suggested that the Colleges t. y 10
members procedures extst and make the undergraduate!. aware of
the problem ...That memo r-om
what those procedures are
f:.bert that appeared '' ~-~e
S~t'frum was 1 slap m tl.e I ~ .A! to
'Screwed'
Representattves of Clifford undergraduates, .. he said Dr. von
Fumas College also felt that Moltke advised that the group
formal gn evance procedures were " keep its options open ."

Executive Committee
rescinds Lev's money
Reconstdenng thetr actio n o l
last wtoek to allot SSOOO fo r
Michael Levinson to vt ~ ll
Vietnam, The Student Assoctalimt
Executive Committee reversed
(04-3) that vote. SA Pre&amp;identlan
DeWald explained wh v
reconsideration was necessary
''Desptte our failures, I would not
like to leave office on the no te o f
sendll\g Lev to Vietnam."
On the other hand, National
Student Affairs Coordinator,
Keith Frankel, felt that the
committee was reversing itself
because of ''intimidation by the
press," specifically The Spectrwn .
However, Mr. DeWaaJ argued that
rather than intimidation, the press
engaged in " quite justified
c ritictsm .. .l am glad it came." Mr
DeWaaJ, who had voted for the
expendtture, then announced that
he would change his vote
Michael Levinson explained in
an impassioned speech why he
wanted to go to Vietnam.
Basically, he said, there are four
reasons for the trip: "I can get
away from aJJ of you; I can meet
with students from Vietnam ; and
I can find out how the conditions
are in Vietnam." Mr. Levinson
closed his comments with an
apology: "I don't understand why
I am being attacked. I never
meant to hurt anyone. I'm sorry if
I hurt anyone, I just wanted to do
something for everyone."
Rev. Kenneth Sherman alao
spoke of "his reservations and
feelings" about a study trip co
Vietnam. Euentially, Rev.
Sherman explained lbat a
fact·findiflA viait by a sroup of

mdtvtduals would help the Mudent
peace m&lt;Wemenr ,.,, ,..,~,cr , the
l:.xecutive Commtrtee prc~eded
lu defeat the appropriation lor
Mr Levm~un
Other .\c tion
In 11thc r ac tl()n . lhc cummtttee
approved a supplementar~ budget
of S.H90 for the Buffalo Fo lk
FesttvaJ. This fe3ttval LS planntng a
three-day workshop of outstdc
concerts and workshops fot Apnl
2 I , 22, and 23, to be held in the
field adJacent to Diefendorf Hall.
The concert lS expected tu gro!IS
between $16,000 and $22.000.
The Black Student linto n also
presented two pro pos.ab tu the
committee for appwval
.1
~: oncert
to be held o War
Memorial Aud1tonum aud an
on-campus Cultural Weekend A
BSU representative arguang for the
concert maintamed, "We are
dealing with two types ot people
black and whtlc Their
entertainment is different ."
However , Fred Aueron ,
Student Affairs Coordmator. felt
it rnappropriate for SA to conduct
concerts. He remarked that this is
UUAB,s prerogative. According to
Mr. Frankel: '"The UUAB Music
Committee is not responsive to
the needs of minority students."
The concert was defeated but the
committee unanimously approved
$12,000 for the c ultural weekend
''to enlighten white people, black
people and anyone in between."
Money wu also appropriated
to enable CAC to send two buset
of chiJdren to Washington D .C .
for a cultural trip.

Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, 10 March 1972

Saul. Davidson defends the
·utJAB movie ticket policy

peraon left no tickets for tboac ltudenta who had

by MJ(e Feely
Sp«lnlm St•lf Writ~

been waitinsln line.

Confterence Theater movies are one of the few
consistent. form.s of weekend entertainment open to
students on campus. Frequent complaints by faculty
and stud tents however, have been lodged against
such ticlwt o ffice poUciea as the refusal to seU movie
ttckets until one balf hour before t.h e show.
Saul Davidson, manqer of the University Union
Activities Board's ticket office, told The Spectrum
ht~t Tuesday that there were three distinct reasons
for this particular poUcy .
It is not possible to seU tickets far in advance, he
explained . First of all, "physically, we do not have
t he facilllrie~" to seU tickets for concerts and other
activities plus 24 or 2S sets of movie tickets; second ,
1! ts "the o nly really fair way," he said, that tickcta
can be evenly distributed among the studenl body.
When they were sold previously a full day
before tne movte, Mr. Davidaon explained , tickets
fo r the sho w would be sold out by 10 or II a.m.
Tllirdly, he pointed out that such a poUcy would be
~ pectally discnmtnatory toward law, medical, dental
:.tudents, etc. smce they would not be on campua
early eno1ugh to purchase tickets in this manner.

" We don' t Uke to hasale and aet bitchy," he
said, b11t he noted that It ts often the students
without tho validated identification who do the most
complaining... It's they who cause the hassle," said
Mr. Davidaon.
He allo pointed out that only three types of
students, law, med.ical, and dental, who don't need
valicSated ltudent iclontifkaUon. Tbe teaoo. he

Injunction' threatened
Abo, Mr. Davidson pointed out, the ticket
ufftce "would love'' to sell tickets for weekend
mo vtes without the present ha.ule surroundins the
presentation of validated identification cards. This is
•mpossibl•e, he explained , because it would put the
( o nferenc:e Theater in lllepl competition with the
~.tt y., theaters. " We hJtVe been tbreatened," be said,
" wtth 11n injunclto n tf we sell tickets to
non~tudents ."

UUA B's low ttcket pnces ($ .50 for the
aHernoon movie and S.7S for the evening shows),
wluch are responsible for ttus problem, are possible
only because of the absence of certain costa.
Conferen&lt;:e Theater, unlike downtown theaten, Mr.
Oavtdson explained, has almost no overhead, pays no
utilities .and as not obli&amp;ed to hire a union
projec tlorust
Periodically , he added , theater managers will
send someone to try to buy llclcets without student,
faculty or staff tdenhftcatton. He also noted that the
Co nferen•; e Theater had been cited as o n e of the
r~sonll fm the cla.tnJ of the Capri Art Theater on
Saucy Avenue,
Two licke:t limit
Mr IDavtdson also gave two reasons for the
llnuttng of tic ke t sales to two tickets per student
wtth ID Primanly , he said, this too cuts down on
no n~tudent sales and secondly , there had been
frequent oomplaints that large sale5 to a Stogie

Saul Davidson
explained, is because the&amp;e particular students pay
their activity fees a fuU year 1n advance.
"What we're tryina to do, 10 eaenc.e," M r
Davidson concluded, "is just protect the fil m
prolfam ." He added, however, that "the real
culprits, of course, are Rockefeller and the state "
He explained that the Confe rence Theater, which
sears o nly 250 , is hardly sufficient for the present
University population of about 20,000. He expressed
hope that a new theater with a capacity of "about
I 000" would be constructed on the Amherst
campus.

Editorial elections
AppUcalioDJ for the position of Editor-in-Chief of The Sp~ctrum for tbe academic
year 1972 - 1973 wm be taken until March 21.
The application consiats of a letter to the editorial board, atatln.a reasons for
desirin1 tbe politlon, qualification• and previous joumalialic experience. The polition is
open to any State University araduale or wtderaraduate student.
The editorial board wW interview aU candidates on TbUI'Ida!l' . March 23.
Pro~ptelin applicanta are uraed to contact the E4itor, Room 3SS No rlon Hall as
aoon u pollible to famUiariu tbem~elvu with any procedural o r l~hnical questions
about che position or about The Spectrum .

·r 0

NIT E I
LEON

If you drive a
foreign car .. ... .
we speak its language,
with a complete line of
parts and accessories.

THOMAS
in 1a 3 hour concan

The Spec:1rum 16 publlfh«&lt; rhrw
• w•lllc. _ , Mondey,
~Y MJd Fr-... during the
IYf/UW ec«&lt;wnic .,_, by Sub-8o.rd
1, Inc. Glfr~ .,. louttld •t 365
Norton Htlt, SDtr. Uni-.Jry of NYMk •t Buffrllo, 3436 "'--tt Sf.,
euff•lo, N•w York, 14214.
TIHph~r: AIW Codt 716; Edltorlel
831-41 13; Bus/,.., 83t.:JIJ70.

t im•s

TEd

R•pr•••"*
for ~ng baEdut:MioMI Adllw'tllins t

N•tlon.tl

~. Inc., .1150 LUI"f''OI A .....
NrN Yot*, N. Y. 10011.

Sublclfpt/.fltf ,.,., .,.. U.ISO pw

..,..... '" 1&amp;00 ftN ,..., . . , . _ ,
Scond a-,...._ IIMI•r euH.Jo
NrN Ycri.
'
Clif:fl. .: rti,IJO(J

··-

1065 Main Street, Buffalo

885-7005
Rec•onal O,.l,buloo

A division of MICA EAST, Inc.

�Ms. Block

'

Join the tuition fit:ht!
While SASU and USS were
busy drawing up their proposal~
to fight tuition hikes [see story'·
page l), the New York State
Coalition for Free Public
Education wu also working on his
own program. This coalition,
composed of coUege and high
school students, wu formed by
the Unity COmmunity Centers
Young Adult Group and Youth
Assembly.
Meeting In Albany on Feb. 12,
the ooalidon called for 1) no
tuition at CUNY or SUNY; 2)no
cutbacks in the state education
budget; and 3) no public funds to
private educational institutions.
At a subsequent meeting of the
coal i t ion steering committee,
plans to back these proposals were
outlined. Included in these plans
were yesterday's No Tuition Day
held at high schools and colleges
throughout the state . Thl~ actlv1ty
involv ed teach·ins, petitions,
a.saemblies, class discussions, plays
and other educauonal activities
focusmg on the trad1t10n of free
public higher education
Other plans mclude a March 20
march on Albany in support of
legislation to restore guarantees of
free tuition at CUNY and SUNY.
AddlhonaJiy, the coalition as
runmng a constant campatgn of
vis1ts to legislators, petitions and
letters urging support for two

Assembly bills.
Broad ba.wd
Ellen Block . Buffalo
coordmator. explained that these

actions are genred to "malting
people aware of wh.at the issues
are and the tremondoua amount
of work that noeds to be done."
She continued: '1'he whole idea is
to get cveryont: involved • . . to
build a really broad baaed
movement." Such a movement,
a ccording to Ms. Block, is
necessary because "tuition hikes
affect everyone - faculty , high
~~ehool students, coUege students
and parents."
Lamcntin1g over thu
Univerdty'a cwrrcnt non-action,
Ms. remarked: ..lNe seem to be the
only really maj•:&gt;r campus where
nothing ia ~1appening. " She
explained that a .,ot of work hu
to be done" in the forms of
support for bills, mformation
diuem1natlon, petition and
letterwntmg, an1d establishing a
permanent Albany lobby .
h is Ms. Block's hope t11at
some sort of co•nciliation can be
worked out bt:tween the local
co~tlition and SASU-USS ..The
chances for su•xess," she said,
"arc better if w•~ are not working
at odds against each o ther." Wh1le
SASU Chairman Mark Borenstein
feels that the coalition's plan i.~
"unreal&amp;stic" and not really
feasible in the •;urrent year,'' he
too would like to combine
strengths.
A meeting between her and
SASU 0\airman Mark Borenstein
has been arran!:ed. AddHionaJJy,
Ms. Block reported that a meeting
will be held next: week for anyone
interested m joining the campaign
against tuition increases .

Rosche on radio
"Tbey Shoot S tuden t.'' wUl I~ broadcut th11
comlna Sunday on WGR radio, SS AM between 10
p.m. and n:udniaJu. The propam will dilcUII the
birdlhot incident on the State Uninraty or Burrato
campu1 on May 7, 1970, • controv•:rty that has been
sparked aaain by attorney Dick Ro~ehe '.s
recently-releued report on the matter.

TODAY
•s ptut of lnternetton•l Moflth
11 lecture on

CHINESE THOUGHT IN AIIIIERICA
by

Or. .Wing·tait Chan
Professor of Chin. . Culture &amp; Phllotphy IEmeritua

Dartmouth College 1nc1
Profesaor of Phlto.ophy
Chactt.n Collette

March 10

1:00 p .m .
CONFERENCE THEATRE
(Norton Union)
Co-Sponsored bV:
Student Auociatoon
and
Council on lnternellorntl StudnK

Sub Boaid rules budget cut
as ethos decides not to budge
The controversy between
Etho1 and Norton Ho~ Council
Is continuing and probably will
continue until Monday's Sub
Board meeting.

Erhos, which waa instructed by
Houae Council to move out of
tbeir preeent quarters at Room
345 Norton Hall (they were
oriainally told to move to Room
337, then to lll&amp;hUy larpr Room
34011 a compromise measure) has
romained where they are. As a
result, Sub Board Treuurer Scott
Sleainaer bas refused to sian any
more money voucben for the
mapzine and bas, in effect,
frozen Ita funds. Sub Board 11 t he
body that funds an campus
publications.
"Ethos was instructed to move
from their present headquarters,

and they have not dono so, so J Board" at tho time he ..nt the
froze their funcla. I bad no other letter, but 1ttC1' learned that Mr.
choice, other than chanJing th'8 Roetter did lndeecl appeal the
loeb on their room," said Mr . .laue to Sub Board, wbicb c:aa
Slesinger.
overrule Hou.e Council'• e4kt.
ln a Jetter sent to Ethos, Mr. Mr. Roetter declined furthe r
Slesinaer noted tha t an comment o n the matter, looldna
oraanization wit h tho: forward to a pe.eeM tol ution
responsibilities of Sub Board rather than " blowtna this thing up
"cannot condone anarchy ." Carl any further."
Mr. Slecinpr stated that be • •
Roetter, Etho1 editor-in-eh.ief,
said there had been I lot Of "very leery of tlkina any action
misunderstandings between all th•~ apinJt 1 publication for fear ot
p'lrties involved in this matter and beiDa accuaed of ceMOrship." He
hopes that a solution can bn added, however, that .., don't
lroned out at Mo ndey'a Sub Board think it'a oeMOrah.ip." Btlt01 had
accused the H.o111e Council o f
meet in&amp;.
attemptin&amp; cen10nhip a few
weeks ago when the coundJ
Peaceful solution
ordered the mapzine to move to
Mr. Slesinger said "not OnJ)r smaller quarters in wtUc.h, Ethcu
has Ethos refused to move, bull claimed, it could not operate
they have yet to appeal to Sub effectively.

Independent study

Faculty Senate axes dictates
A proposal which WC)uld h3vc required
undergraduate students desinna an independen t
study proara m to "fmt submit a wntten
proposal . . which describes the nature of that
course of study, what he Intends jo ach1eve. and how
he intends to achieve it," was narro wly defeated by
the Faculty Senate last Tuesday
This was but one of three resolut1ons brought
forth by Carmelo Pnvitera, chairman of the Senate's
Educa t aonal Planning and Policy Commlltee,
concermng independent study, The second would
hne requned the independent study proposal to he
"~tpproved and signed by the faculty supervisor &lt;)f
the independent study enroUment in question
and
be ftled in the department or program
office." The third asked that "a written evaluation
by the faculty supervisor . be Included in the
student's permanent record "
Various ar11Jments were presented supportina
the adoption or the auidelines. One focused on the
"abuse" now connected w1th the present system.
Currently. a student need make no formal statement
of intent, but must merel y a1t11n 1nformal approval
from h1s faculty advisor
Athens o r bust
Dean of Undergradullte Stud1cs Charles l bert
pointed out the example of one stud~n t who had
previously rece1ved 16 hours of incomplete for
independent study, had 24 ancomplete ho urs bes1des.
and had been accepted for 16 more mdependent
study credits. The student 's prOJe\.t was to mvolve
wo rking on a lubbutz. for an undetermined amount
of time, and then b1cychng through Greece.
Or. Ebert said that usually the nature of the
student's project Ill totally unknown. He stated " If
there are 1000 students m Independent study, and
the Middle S tates Accred1tat1on gro up (which will be
evaluatmg thu school m the near futu re) asked whal
the studenLS are doing, I would have to say •t don't
know'." He added that "It IS the anlegnty of the
faculty. the integrity of the students and the
Integrity of the Un1vers1ty that we hope to protect "
George Hochfield, Dept of English, seemed lo
feel that Or. Ebert's 1..0mplaints wo uld not be
rectified by passage of the proposals. ''If we want to
stop things from happcn1ng I hke Independent study
abuses I," said Dr H o~o.hfield, "we should doll Thllt
re30lution JUSt puts 1t on record that 'so and so 1s
Jelling credit ror b1cycling around Europe· Th1s IS
just more paperwork . I don't need 1l " Many others
concurred
Help students
Robert Stern, Dept of Pohtu:al Scrence,
asserted that the " proposal5 also safeguard
students" Robert Ketter agreed "The resolutrons
comrrul a professor to say, ' I will do whatever I can
to help a student along'."
Berore the resolutions could be directly voted
on, a motion was made to delete the first two
segments of the proposal . T he first , deemed most
important was eliminated by a 23-21 vote. Part tw o
was also excluded; this by a wide margin . The thJrd
resolution was apparently passed, however, when a
roU call was taken. 1t was found that a quorum was
no longer present. A challenge to the vote voided
l!Ction.
Earlier l n the meehng, Claude Welch ,
representing the Spec1al Committee on Academic
Integrity , presented to the senate rocommendallons
for the definition of •tudent academic dishonesty.
The committee had previously drawn up proctdurts

to deal w1th the subJect, but d ishonesty wu deemed
too vague a term . The procedurea were accepted
pending clanflicahon. The definition the Welch
commtttee presented covered plepri.sm, cheatina,
falsification o f academ1c matcnal, resubmwion of
previously sublfllltted work and pro~o.urement o r use
of Illegally ubt.uned matenals
Arbitrary action feartd
Accept11n c,e of the definilto n~ was tabled,
however, OlT the request of AI Katt, Faculty of Law
and Jurisprudence, and a member of the Committee
on A ~o.adenuc Freedom and Responsibility. This
comm1ttee wa:s charged -..ith the responsibility of
recornmend1n1 procedures aovemin&amp; fac ulty
miSconduct
Mr. K.att uplained lal~r that llc feels the
"report(a) l of botb commltteesl ahould be taken up
together . The)' both involve tbe same ilaue." At the
meetina. Mr J(at ~ also expressed his distaste for any
definitions at aU . Student observera seem to feel
thou&amp;}!. that I he absence of expUcil deflnitions can'
only hurt 'fudlents, leavma the d1ffic uJt problem of
defininc "acaclemJc duhonesty" e ntirely with the
concerned fac ulty member.
Dr Welc h differed somewhat from Mr. Kat~ . He
does not see " the situation as dnectly comparable ,
but they I com mlltee reports I certainly do overlap. J
should llunk they ue complementary "
In o ther business, Dr. Ketter announced that he
has "reason to feel there will be rell\statement" or
some of the pl4"oposed cuts tn the summer sess1ons
budget. He attnbuted this bei.Jd to the great dearee
of "noise" thaot has been made on the i.ssue. The
senate unanimously passed a resolution back.ing aU
efforts to resto1re the necessary funds for the summer
sessions
State discrimintation
Recent bllldget cuts also brought the IJbrary
situat1on back before the sena te Dr Ketter ch.araed
tha t the state heas "unduly discriminated against [the
Uruversity I There has to be a remstatement to the
University by any device," Dr Ketter maintained,
"of an amount no less than one-half million dollttrs
just to bnng u~1 up to a level where we would not be
treated any worse than any other school."
Two resolutions were introduced on this subJeCt
by Lowell Schoenfeld, Dept. of Mathematics,
chairman of the senate's lnrormation and Library
Resources Comm1ttee One called for " at the very
least, a restontion of the prevtousJy u.ianed
I ubrary I bud&amp;t~t and staff." Thi.~ was passed, thouah
a section which would have urged Dr. Ketter "to
realign mternal resources" to provide the money
necessary "to preclude the rurther downarading of
library semce:s and holdinJS" was deleted. One
senator comm•!nted : "It seems 1f we are goin&amp; to
realign sources, then we should dec1de just what the
Ubrary is more important than."
The o ther resolution which al.s o passed, asked
for restoration m the capital construction budget of
funds needed to keep work on two major library
buudinp at the Amherst campus on schedule.
A related resolution W'Jed "earh department in
the University to provide in its graduate
programs ... opportunities for the Proressional Starr
of the University Library to punue part-time
advanced st udy 1n its field of. knowledge and
particularly . . . to acquire advanced dep-oes." This
resolution pass1ed over the objection of those who
felt that sinaling out library staffers discriminated
against other members of the University staff.

Friday, 10 March 1.972 The Spectrum. Page three

�'Spirit, Unity, Peac~~· goal is an
awareness of Indian problems
scheduled for 8 p.m., Roonrl 148 Diefendorf. This
is of a country-western-folksong type. The
concert
Sptctrum St•ff Writtr
coordinators of the affair, Barry White and David
Spirit, Unity , Peace - these arc the main EUiort, are hoping for a Narge turnout. Anyone
obJeCtiVes of the American Indians. the Real People. wanting more information can reach them at
Beginning Monday, and lasting throughout the week S3 1-411J duringthcday
is a five day series of events dealing with American
Indian Rig)lts in Contemporary Society . All events Rdevant culture
Educat1on on Indian aflfairs is considered very
during the week are free and are open to everyone
relevant here in Western Nt~w York where a large
on campus and in the community .
One goal of this festival is to bring Indian people part of the culture itself is derived from Indian
to the campus and make the "majority society" names and customs. There stre basically six nations
aware of Indian problems across the United States. of the Iroquois people o riginating from the Western
Another goal of the festival is to increase interaction New York area: the Senctea, Mohawk, Cayuga,
between the University and the local Indian Oneida, Onondaga and Tusca1rora. Qu1te a few Indian
community and make the student aware of the reservations are located withLin the Buffalo vicinity .
day-to-day problems an American Indian must face. Yet it seems that few Bufflalo people know much
The apathy, agnorance and indifference the about the American "Red Man ."
There are only about 30 American Indians here
average American ettizen generates towards Indian
at
I
he Universrty. They are abviously in the
issues is amazingly prevalent Therefore, ttus coming
ultra-mmonty.
Yet througlh "Spirit , Unity and
week of Indian actrvities can be cons•dered a giant
Peace
,"
a
week
of
planned and coordrnated activ1tres
step toward the education of "majonty soc•ety" on
been
developed
to educate the commun1ty
have
the problems of the orismal owners of this land
sbout the phght of the "Ongweowch," the lndtsn
word for " I ndran" mean in!! Real People. Thts IS
Conremporary problcms
A scnes of films of the ducum&lt;•ntMy .tnd photo
essay genre will be shown on Monday begmn~ng at
7 30 p.m. in the Health sc.erH;cs Burldmg. Room
243 These films will deal Wtth Ct&gt;Jllcmporary lndran
problems such liS fish•ng r~ghts, reservation land
problems and soctal probhmiN of lnd1an Society
/,oment 11[ rite Rcsrn,aflon, Ballad of Crowfuur and
You Are On lndtan I and wtll be: ~huw11 as scheduled.
However, Treotret Madt• Treaftt!S Hro/..t•n unci flow
the Well Was Won anJ /lm111r l .n.lf will be replaced
by Pit Rn•er Narunl Jlld Tltc Forth 1\ Vr" M11tlln.
Janet M~:C'Iuud. a u1cmhcr ltl the Puyllllllp
Nallun , w1ll ~pc.1k on the JhuM' '" the 1\mcm:an
lmhan. C!&gt;peclally fisluns nghl\ , 1111 I uc..day .tl 8
p.m 1n the Ftllmorc Ru11m \•a•l o l the treaty the
US. government m&lt;~de Wtlh tire lud ... m stared that
rndtans are IO havc: lishrng pnvrlegcs Huwever,
fndrans have been swpped fnlm exercrsmg th1s nght
Jnd h.Jve even been .Jbused by pulu:e 111 ccrta111 cases
qu.1c an accomplrshment for so few people and
On Wednesday. · ·ononda~a 1\ Threatened reJIIy ~how' the mtli1Vat 10n 11nd pnde of the Real
Natu111 " wrll feature a wor ksh up whrdt w•ll •nvulvl' People rn bern~ Amcncan lud 1ans
people fwm the Onondaga Natu1n who w•ll :.peak on
land r~ght!&gt; and educatron A pJrtrcular 15suc for The other ladder
d1scussron w1ll be the conO rt..:l hc:tweeu the Onondaga
The poster pubhclt rng lhc cuntul&amp; events rs m
and New York StJte Ulvulvtng Hrghway XI and the 1tself a lesson 10 an lndran culture . Destgned by three
setzurc of lnd1an land to expand the roadway by two Univers1ty students and drstributed throughout the
lanes Th•~ meet•ng w•ll take place ltum 14 p.m . campus. this fJOSter emhmlics the tdeas a.nd beliefs of
Room 234 Nvrton Hall
Amcricun lndl31115m
Also scheduled for Wednesday w1ll ~c ;111
The black circle rcprcsc:nt.s unity . The fi sh on
evenrng assembly wilh speakers from ltw Ononuaga the lcfl rcpre~c nts fishing rights, or more generally ,
Nation. The wampum controversy, Jn Indian the Northwest. The adobe village at the bottom
problem deahng Wtth the sei7ure and "safe kct-pmg" represents tht- Black Mesa and the plight of the Hopi
of lnd1an rehcs and dtlcuments by anthmpolog•st~ The long house at the rtgllt represents the Iroquois
for New York stale Museums, Will be anwug the key and I ~1e tree fepresent~ the lmguu•s tree uf peace
rssues presented Thr~ w•ll .llso tal..e place 111 the
The eagle at the top represents Indian unuy. An
Fillmore Room at Rpm
~glt rs utCd bec11tUO it 01es tllte h1ghest and takes the
lndr:tn message 16 God The four hanth represent the
Friday woric:shop
four winds. the four ~cibo nb, the four races White.
Beeman Logan. l&gt;plntuol leader a1 the Bla.:k , Yellow and Red , 11notl more l&gt;pecrficlllly the
Tonawanda-Senecu ReservaJion. wrll speak on lndJan four re€,lons of the Un1ted State' where I nd.rans are
unity and stress the tmpurtance of brothethoud aud located . the Northwest. Wes.t , ScluthWQI and East .
the need for orgam7,Attun amohg I ndran people
There are two mottus p1111tcd vn the poster
through Intra-reservation meetings. Ttus workshop One rs : "The l:arth and Myself Jrc of One Mmd "
will be held Thursday from 24 p.m., Room 234, This ll&gt; a quote from C'href J.oseph of the Ne7 Perce
Norton Hall Thomas Banyaca. a Hopr Indian. will He was a spiritual leader whu lett th1t the lnd1an
talk about the Black Mesa problem involving the people were very close to the: earth The earth is ltke
United States government selhng Indian property to a mother to the Indian peoph! .
a coal company.
The second quote IS : "let us put our minds
The Black Mesa IS located in Arizona and the together and see what life we wiU make for our
Hopi tribe must face the risk of losing valuable rain children." These arc the words of Sit ting Bull and
and coping with erosion and pollution because of the calls for unity of future generations. While the white
strip mining. This will also take place Thursday at 8 man climbs and cUmbs tho ltadder of prestige to get
p.m. in the Fillmore Room.
to the top where th~ symbol c&gt;f money can be found.
Friday's workshop will consist of the Seneca the American Indian climbJ a totally d1fferent k.ind
Constitutional IUghts Committee and discussion of ofladcler.
the pros and cons of the proposed Fisher,Price toy
The Indian people are pro ud. dignified and
facotry to be built on Indian land. This will bc held honoratm antf th,.ir flhiiOiOphy of life and culture
from 2-4 p.m. in Room 234, Norton Hall.
can offer much to those who Cllh. u... find out about
A concert by Spector Recording artist Floyd it. Come to the American lndran festival - if not to
Westerman entitled "Ctuter Died FQr Your Sins" is better younolf, then for future generations.
by Linda Trotta

Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, 10 March 1972

I

a~tion

line

I

Q : My professor iB conaaatently late for c:laa.. How lona must we
wait? Whar can we do abour ItT
A: It is oft said and heard that one must wait five minutes for an
instructor, ten minutes for an assistant professor, 15 minutes for an
associate professor and 20 minutes for a full professor. We checked

with Dr. Bernard Gelbaum . vioe president for Academic Affairs and be
noted that this was folklore ; that there is no written policy to support
this practice.
If a professor, of any rank, happens to be late, we suagest that you
pay rum the courtesy he usually extends to studenu who are late and
wait. If, however, he is habatually late, Dr. Gelbaum suagested a log be
kept oveT an extended time period, recording the time of arrival and
signed by members of the class. This is the kind of proof necessa ry to
document your case. This log should then be presented to the chairman
of the department. If the action or ~action is unsatisfactory. you
would take il to the dean or provost , and finally to the vice president
for Academic Affairs.
Q : Is there any truth to the rumor aoina around that the Student
A880ciatlon hu 1 plan to aet cliac:ounta for atudeota?
A: We ch\lcked this out and found that tbcte is no such discount
card or plan available for underaraduate studenu. However, there is a
new benefit such as you menuon available for graduate students. The
Graduate Student Association will shortly be sending out to all
graduate students a brochu~ describing the plan. The GSA became a
member o f a federation called the Consumer Groups of New York and
New Jersey . Inc. and this group has two plans whlcb help the consumer
to save money Graduate students will receive thiS in the near future
Q : What can be done to alleviate the fruslratina and potentially
danserous main entrance to the Uoiverslty? When attemptina to enter
from Main Sr. in a downtown dJrection acrou rhe oppoaing lane, the
re:suJta an heavy traffic are unmentionable. The present stop liaht has •
arec:n arrow on only one side, the one least needed. A possible solution
would be to replace the presentliaht with one bavlna two green arrow)
- one on each aide of Main St. Can anythina be done?
A . We are in the process o f go1ng through the appropriate channel\
to sec •I the srgnal rn question tan be changed . We arc not su~ yet if 11
can, but we agree with the writer that thls is a problem that needs some
solution You will know how successful we are by watching the light m
quesllon to see if there rs another green arrow added.
Q : I have been readina about the "life Workshops" that 11rr
startina. Are any of them in operation yet?
A Yes, two of them are starting next week One •s on the c ho• ~~
of an academic major and IS called, " Dc:ctsions, OectsJOns, Decrsions,
What Should My Major Be?" It be&amp;~ns on Tuesday. and will be heltl
from 3 4 p.m. The other IS entitled, "Now That I've Got My Mlijor ,
Can I Get Employment'&gt; " and bcgans on Monday and cs held from 3 - 4
p m. For more infurmat1orl on the~e please call 2511 or stop rn al
Room 225 of Norton Hall
Q : Can I 1t1U apply for money for nut semester to tbe Financral
Aida Office?
A The frnanc•ol A1ds Olfit.e tell!. us thll the deadhne for m;akmg
loan apphcallons was ~h rc h I Ho wever, you can sllll apply and 11 15
qutte posstble that you will &amp;el your loan However, late application\
zsre stamped, "Late' SuhJect to funds ava1htblc:." We suggest that you
get your appl.tcauon 10 4S soon as posstble because rt ulrc:ady is ten day'
after the de.tdhm:
Q . l'he loan apphutron ror married studenra makes a demand for a
financial statement of the parents if the students are under 2S years of
aae. Thl.s seems dlJ(;rimlnatory to me. If I am mu-ried and 14 years old ,
wby do I need to submit a Onanclal statement nf my parents?
A: Federal rules whJch regulate the loan\ made demand lhrs . II
may well be diScriminatory, but I here IS nothmg in the law that say'
tbat such dascnminat1on is illegal If you are truly independent, then
the federal government feels, eVIdently, thul husband or wife should do
the supporting, or •n heu of this, then the parents, if they are able The
rule:~ stale that tf the parents make over S20,000 a year, they should
make sure thai I herr children , even at the age of 24 , are receivlf\~ 11
good educut1n n 1n quote the munu.al "There are two categoru:s ot
self-supportrng ~ludent~ those who have to be and those who want to
be . tn ~ o~sc~ where the need for rndependence IS psychological rath&lt;'r
than ac..· rual I he student ~ho uld he made to realize that the decision w
reheve Ius parent\ of the burden of supporting him seldom leads It•
self-surllOrt , but only to a shJftrng of the fina ncial burden from h1s
parent~ loth~: 1.ollege" In other words, the government dOCI' not w:uH
to take &lt;.. Jre n f you rf your parents can This IS perhaps discri minatory.
but It IS .rb&lt;&gt; a fact o r hk Su , the only suggest iOn we Cli O give you IS to
fill out the lo rms neces.,ary .. nd 1end them 1n
Q : Why drd they carpet the libtarles when we could have used
better ventilatina systems?
A We c.. hecked th1s out with vanous departments such as the
l~branes themselves and the building and facilities people. The answer 15
Simple - the hbrancs were built some years ago and because of the
method of construction used, 11 rs almost impo6Sible to put new
ventila_t~ng_ duelS in. However, rt was feasible and very practical to put
carpeting tn . Carpeting, incidentally, is less ex~nsive than hardwood
flours ond needs less maintenance. Also, acoustically, it is a better
material absorbing much mou sound than hardwood floors . Thus, the
carpeting is nut~ luxury , rather a very practical thing.

• Q: I have a heavy case of "UB" bluet. The campw seems dead
lsn t there anythina aoina on?
A: There are lots of !lungs golna on - all you hsve to do is look
for them. We might suggest that you look at the Master Calendar •n the
entrance of Norton Hall and the back pages of Tht Spectrum and the
Rt!porter B~t we know how you feel - it mlabt more accurately be
caUed the mrd~emester blahs and it seenu to ~rfect almost everyone on
campus. The return of warm weather and sunslune seem' to be the only
cure.

�Ms. Williams

Bused integratlon opposed
"I will vote apinst any and all buain&amp; proposals,
even if Commissioner Nyquist says he would remove
me from office if I don't vote yes," decJered Ms.
Carol E. Williams, newly appointed Buffalo Board of
Education member.
In a vote of 9 - 6, the Common Council, which
denied Ms. Williams a seat with a 7- 7 vote two
weeks ago, approved Mayor Sedita's appointment dn
Tuesday. Ms. Williams is the only female member of
the board.
A surprise came in the votina when Democratic
majority leader Delmar L. Mitchell voted in favor of
Ms. Williams. Mr. Mitchell, one of three black
councilmen, opposed her appointment during the
Feb. 22 meeting primarily because she is opposed to
busing to achieve 13Cial balance to the public
schools. Mr. Mitchell said he changed his vote
because Ma. Williams had assured him that she would
uphold the htws handed to the board .

by How Kurtz

would supJ?Ort any busing proposals. At the same
time, she said that she realized that she could not
legally oppose any orders handed down from State
Commissioner Ewald Nyquist. When asked if she
thouaht these two answers were consistent, she said
she did and added: " I'm entitled to my yes or no
vote and if I'm not, why do we have Board c;&gt;f
Education to pass on such matters?''
Mayor Sedita heartily rebuked Ms. Slominski,
saying: " Mrs. Williams will prove by her actions o n
the board that Mrs. Slominski has been lying about
her. That woman (Ms. Slominski) has been Vicious
in the lies she has been spreading around to wn
during the last two weeks. She's trying to get off the
book now that abe's aot herself on it."

An 8dclitional 'yes' vote
The votes of all other councilmen remained the
same except for the additional affirmative vote cast
b)' Council President Chester Gorski, wbo missed the
last meeting due to illness.

I

I

The council's three staunchly conaervative
members continued to o ppose Ms. Williams despite
her stand against busina. Ms. Alfreda Slominski, the
minority leader of the council, led the opposition
again. She charJed Mayor Sedita with having a
record of appointing pro-busing persons to the
board. However, the board's three busing opponent$
- Joseph E. Murphy, Dr. Matt A. Gajewski and
Carmelo A. Parlato - also were appoin ted by Mayor
Sedita.
North District Councilman Anthony Masiello,
The mayor said he was not ~urpri5ed by the
who sponsored the nomination of Ms. Williams,
vote:
" I said the other day that I had the votes 1
critized Ms. Slominski and the other conservative
Williams opponents, ChJtrles A. Volkert and Gerald needed without Mrs. Slominski's, And, 1 said 1
1. Whalen, as "hypocrites." He charged that none of neither needed nor wanted her vote .''
When asked to respond to Councilman Horace
their announced reasons for votina apinst Ms.
Williams were valid. Also, he said tbat if the three C. Johnson's statement that becaWie of the
were truly o pposed to busina, they would support population o f both the caty and its schools, t he
Board of Bducatlon nominee should be black, Mayor
the nominee.
Sedita said: " We've got a black representative on the
board, but until now , we didn't have a female
a
Vowed bUIIDJ oppolitioo
After the council meetinJ, Ms. Williams said that mother of children. Havinl a qualified mother on the
she would risk beina removed from office before she board took top priority .''

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'

I don't want to believe it. 1 really do n't want to believe it, but I
know it's true. You can argue from today unW next month, but deep
down, the sad fact remains.
We're the same as our parents.
Maybe some of you knew ift all alo na. I didn't. I JWallowed the
whole myth, about how our gen,eration was different ; how we cared
about the people; how we were aoina to ch.anae tbe world. I saw the
older generation as a bunch of sel1f-serving, materialistic hypocrites who
were wrapped up in their mortg;ages and their second can and were
blind to the problems of the p.oor, the problems of minorities, the
problems of the ghetto.
WeU, I found somethlna our: we're the same way . Throuah hiJb
school and coUege we screamed and protested and demonstrated, but it
didn't mean anything. We have the same materialistic values as .our
parents.
College kids put down their ~money-oriented elders, but sit around
smoking dope and listening to !their $600 stereos instead of doing
anything as square as volunteer \!fOrk or helping the community. The
same shit flies in student government as in City Hall - the same
politics, ego trips, self-serving legislation (have they raised their stipends
lately?) and ignorance of their constituents.
And that's not aU. When o ur four-y.ear term at this iaola~d tower
of ivory ends, we conform to the very society we've denounced fo r t he
past 48 months. When the reatH:v of financial survival shows its face,
most of us conform
to hairculs and sults and ties and nine-to-five
office jobs.
I can't make a value judgmcmt about that, financial realities being
what they are. But the whole trip just seems as hypocritical as anythinc
I've seen adults do. I must be eJmerging from my naivete, because I
really thou&amp;ht our generation was tdlfferent.
Sure there are exceptions, and of course, there are good points.
When I look at the fine work tha11 CAC and Sunahine House and other
organizations are doing, I think thnt maybe there is hope. But why does
(' AC have tro uble getting volunlteers for certain projects while the
CoUege A four-credit volunteer courses have waiting lists a mile Lo na?
Obviously because people will only get off their asses to help tbe
community when there's somethin&amp; in it for them, like four credits.
What worries me - what reatlly worries me - is that if we can't
change things now, when we're in •::ollege, if we can't get away from the
pervading materialistic values now , then where the hell are we going to
be (en years from now? Reading the newspaper and sighing because
mjddle-class kids are taking some new drug? (Not our kids, of course).
Lamenting about the ghetto pr•oblem while we move further and
further out o nto Long Island to get away from it until we pass
Montauk Point and fall into the ~·ater'? Talking about how poor people
should make it the way we did, and then acreamin&amp; bloody murder
when a low-income houaina proje&lt;:t is built in our nclahborhood'!
The only way we can change' thinp is by chan&amp;ina ourselves, from
materialistic, selfish reflections of the establishment, into the type of
people who don't nud to be bribed wit h four credits to put in some
time to heJp the underprivUeaed m tbe poor or the addicts. Either we
change things or they stay the same shitty way they m now, becauae
nobody else is going to do it. And we've got to start on this campus..
Art•thy may be " in." but if doesn't get things done.
Start taking an interest in what goes down. We've got a new slate
of student government officers ·· maybe they can accomplish some
things. But they can't do a thing. ,and CAC and Sunshine House and all
the other voluntee r proJects can 't do a thing without student interest
and student support
This is o nly u ~tart . but 1n ten years our generatio n will be running
the show. and al we don't sta rt ~:hanging things no w . we'll fall into the
rut and end up perpetuating the sallie materialistic society we bale.
A fru,trated 'l ed Le vy , head of CAC. rc c.:ently S3Jd : " Look o ut ,
w&lt;&gt;rld . Here comes more shit . daStJUased in long ba1r and bell bottom~
Jnd beards t~nd workshirts." I hope he's wrong.

"RIP OFF" Some Savings!!
GRANTS GRAND REOPENING WEEK

UPDATE RECORD LJEPT.
GRANTS NOW HAS UNDERGROUND AND A MUCH LARGER SELECTION OF
FOLK - ROCK - AND - SOUL MUSIC THAN WE HAVE EVER HAD!
SINGLE ALBUMS
MFG. List up to Sfl98 now only

2 99 Less
or

DOUBLE ALBUMS
MFG LIST UP TO ·SU98. N 0 W 0 N L Y
ALONG WITH OUR BETTER SELECTION WE WILL NOT BE
UNDERSOLD ON OUR EVERYDAY PRICES, AND WE DON'T CARE
HOW MANY FEET OUR COMPETITION IS FROM OUR DOOR.

Friday, 10 March ll972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�WASHINGTON. D.C . - Selective Service
D1rector Curtis Tarr has announced that , starting in
July, men will be drafted lnto the National Guard
and the Army Reserves to bolster the thinning ranks
of those unats. Tarr satd that he expected about
30,000 men would be anducted tnto these units by
the end of thiS year.
He andacated that the effect of this decision
would be to push the lottery cethng for thJs year to
at least last year's ceiling of I 2 5 and possibly 20 or
25 numbers htgher. II had been expected that this
year's ceiling would only go as h1gh as 50.
Tan said that the first prionty would be gtven
to drafting students gntduatmg from colleges in the
!&gt;pnng. Tan also stat ed that, en hes opmaon, it is
dnuhtful that the draft can b-: ended by President
N1xon's ann ounced gaol of July , 1973 and that the
most likely dute for the draft'~ end would be J uly,

1975
WASHINGTON , 0 C.
!'he ll ou~e voted
Wtdnesday to st1frcn the SenJte-pJs,et.l prov1sions
des1gned to descourage buSJng and ende.-ated by a
lop-s1ded margtn thclt 11 would n ot b11c.k down from
the stronges t anuhuSing language yet approved an
Congress
The effed of the Hou~\' udaun was to serve
nollcc that 1ts member\ would not accept any
co mpromiSe between II~ versenn of h1gher education
bills and those of the Senate wh1 ch contaaned a
much weaker anll·hus1ng stand The House approved
amendments earlier th1s year tho1t would hold up
coun-ordtred desegregation envolveng bus1ng until all
legal appeals of the order were exhausted , ban use of
federal funds for forced bus1ng and prohibit federal

qeocies from orderina lo&lt;:a.l school distncts to use
their funds for budna.
The Senate rejected these amendments last
month but did approve leJislation whJch would
prohibit fund• for forced bUSln&amp; unless local school
officials asked for them, ban federal off1cials from
requirina busing unless mdered by a court ljnd
postpone until June 30, 1973, any court
desegregation order that re:quired transfer of school
pupils over district lines, such as that ordered at
Richmond , Vngmia.
WASHINGTON , D.C.
President N1xon may
well take a more relaxed pos1tion on marijuana th1s
year in order to woo the yc•uth vote . In that case it 1s
worth recalling the words of Robert Kliendlenst , the
deputy Attorney Gentrlll, who is to becom e
Attmncy General when John Mitchell steps down to
head N1xon 's re-election campaign . Khendienst has
modes tly declared that hi!: own views are closer 10
the President's thllll any o l her livmg person. It ere is
what he saad to a group uf Georgetown Un1vers1tY
students 10 Apnl, 1970
''Our Job IS to enforce the law. and only that.
ManJuana 1.'&gt; destrul.UVe to the fabnc of America,
and must be treated u suc h No CIVlhzed country m
the world has legalized manruana. You know , lf you
hved m RussJa and were ~:ought imokmg you wo uld
be: killed you know . shot
"If we permitted our ~.:auze ns to smoke legally,
dl)n't you thank that the R euss1ans would beg~n to see
the o pportumty and take us over? After all , we all
know the reason the Arabs. are losing the war to the
Jews is beca use they smoke so much "

Foundation president
John Latona wlll take over as president of the University of Buffalo Foundation
elfeetivt April I , 1972, it was announced Monday. The JJ.yeu-old Buffalonian has been
project director for the State Urban Development Corporati&lt;on i.n Buffalo Iince July
1970. Mr Latona has servrd u executive director of the Erie Conmty Citizen'• Committee
on lntermuni&lt;:ipaJ Affairs from 1968- 1970 . In 1967 - 68 he held the position of deputy
to the mayor of San Francisco and durina 1966 he was researd1 coordinator and counsel
to the Social Scienc~ Research and Oevdopmmt Corporation . B•erkdy, Caliromla

Muskie, Nixon are
•
•
•
wtnners 1npr1mary
Sen . Edmund Musltie was the
leading Democratic conte nder 1n
the prestdentiaJ sweepstakes as he
&amp;)elllled 48% of the vote in
Tuesday's New Hampshue
primary . Sen . George McGovern
pulled in 37%, Mayor Sam Yorty
received 6%, Sen . Vance Hartke
3j., Rep. Wilbur Mills 4% and Sen.
E&lt;lward Kennedy I% of the total
Democratic vote.
On the Republican s1de, the
result was n o big surprise.
President Nixon received 69% of
the vo te, Rep . Paul McCloskey
~0% and Rep. J ohn Ashbrook
I 0%. GOP leaders hailed Naxon's
victory as a strong endorsemen t of
the Pres1dent's policies and his
present admin1strat1on.
McGo vern was surpnsed by the
outcome of the pnmary, smce he
hadn't expected to rece1ve more
than 25% o f the DemocratiC vote.
The senator's cam plU&amp;Jl began
more than a year ago, and the
results were the kind he wanted to
see in order to spur hiS campaagn
for the upcoming Flonda and
W1sconsin pnmaril!~

Muskie 's poor showing
Muskle, who had been the
favored frontrunner until now,
fell short of the big v1c tory he had
expected to make h1m the definite
favorite to take the Democratic
nomination. Muskie commented
on his poor showi n&amp; and
MeG
share of the

vote at a news oonference on
Wednesday . "Sen . McGove1n
made a &amp;ood showint here and 1
think that would be helpful to
him. We did the best we could
with what we had and we won."
Stalin&amp; that be had never tried
for a "maximum showing" in New
Hampshire, the Maine senator
said : " We d1dn't have the time or
the resources to make a maximum
showing. ('ve aot to win in the
o ther pnmaries or at least make a
consistent showing, so of what
relevan ce is th e percentage to
me?"

Midnight baUoting
Vo ters in the sta.te braved light
s now and sub-freezing
temperatures to cast their ballots
an the nation's first primary . The
farst returns were from a small
village called Dixville Notch near
the Canadian border The 17
voters an the hamlet cast theu
votes at midni&amp;flt, with all II
Republi c an votes g o ing to
President N1xon, and five of th~:
six Democratic votes going to Sen
Musk1e. The other DemocratiC
vote went to Sen. McGovern .
Now the candidates are oft
again campaigning in florida
They will be met there by four
more Democratic hopefuls: Gov
George WaUace, Mayor J ohn
lindsay, Sen . Hubert Humphrey
and Sen. Henry J ackson. At least
be wanner there.

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Paqe six. The Spectrum . Friday, 10 March 1972

�'The Culture of Prometheus'
Editor's note: Marion Patrick is 11 mem""

of the Buffalc lAbor Committee. The
tUticJe Is written to stimulate intenst in a
forum entitled Art and th~ Counterculture:
Creativity or Pseudocreativity, to be held
Tuesday, March 14 at 8:30 p.m. iJJ Room
233 Norton Hall.

by Mutoa PaJridt

SP«VJ to T'ltt SpectTUm
We Uve at an age's end. There are aocial
tendencies and visions in existence that
take as their prentise and objeot an utterly
transformed reality, a mode
being
glimpsed evanescently as possibilities
glimmering like gas above the stagnant
marsh of the present. Only there can any
of the so-aUed "issues" seek solution. Our
thunder and Ugbtning already prefigure the
ways in which future air could crack shut
belund the inevitable streak of future
energy. Perhaps we are on the verge, not of
the end of history, bt1 1 of the first true
making of history . with its senseless
physical and ideologic3l forces transformed
into the conscious acts of men, not
delermmed but Promethean.
What the world·Widc SOCial cr1s1s and
decadence of cuhure means as that new
needs he&amp;ve been created that cannot
C()-elttst with the present underdeveloping
nrgamZ2tion of ~oc u!ty They also mean
that there IS an econom1c cnsis o n an
UllernatJOnaJ scale. amply demonstrated hy
the breakdown of the monetary sy~ t l:m
and curreney s pe ..:u lat ion, NLXon's
measures uf Aug. 15. the constant decline
in the rate of real p1oductton (as op~d
to the spending thlll serves to intlate
meaningless GN P's), and the emergence of
depress1on conditions 1n many volat1le
areas of the worhl . IUl economic cri$15
which can provide the basis for the
consciousness und 1h&lt;' ,.)ctal·reproductive
forms neceSiary fo St)(lalism

or

How collJICiousn~ can etwlg~
The pro blem of m•&gt;dem culture, by
Wh1ch 1s meant vanous ku1ds of educat1on
and socialmllton, system~ uf aesthetic
response. language, formal and general
phiJosoph1c representatum~ of the world
m short, the mtcrpenetrating, rec1procaJ
10nuences of technology and social
self-expression
is no ne other than the
problem of the creation of socialist
consciousness, a concept posscs.'iing no
objec tiv e and l e w clesc n bable
characteristics. simply because it has never
been generated whole .
Under the mass stn ke conditions that
plunged custom and mstitution into doubt
and paralysis dunng the revolutionaty
attempts in RuS3ia in 1905 and 19 I 1, Italy
in the early twenties, Germany 10 1919 and
1923, Spatn in the thJrttes. the U.S to a
certain extent m the Depression-CIO
period, Ireland 10 19 16 and other years,
france Ul 1968. and Bangladesh at th1s
moment, hundreds of mmions of people
h.ave partially grasped this world·view,
however; and it may be sa1d that sucb
figures as Marx, Leon Trotsky, and Rosa
Luxemburg were actually the new humans
being that a SOCialist society would
encourage. Under revolutionary cohditions,
a peasant with SO years of narrow,
individualistic, family·centered experience
behind ham could become , in a matter of
months, capable of thinking in terms of the
international pro leta riat ; there are
countless recorded examples of such
co nsc iousness·ex pan sion during the
Ru ssian revolutions, and indeed the
revolutions themselves would have been
1mpossi ble without transcendence of
peasant and trade·unJonist consciousness.
What I am leading to ~~ the 1mportance
uf revolutionary political and economic
change to the revitaJiuhon of culture.
Socialist culture is precisely the process of
freeing the Prometheus in man, of

reuniting him with the self that he has
prodooed through sensuout activity. I also
bope to explain to anyone who feels that
rmlaliz.ation is either of minor concern or
a false problem, wby it is both c rucial and
a real problem at this point. The Soviet
UniQll bt a fearful , repressive state that tries
to dictate cultural life, but u a ~ety it
unckrstiiJlds and is able to re1pond vitally
to artwork and ideu in a way that the US.
is incapable of. It is inconceivable that
poets should be jailed for their poetry in
this cou1ntry ; not only is modern American
poetry ttoo mindless and visionless to be
the lc!gislat o r , ac knowl edged or
unacknowledged, of !JOCiety . but most
AmericaJOS have been carefully dulled into
insensitivity to the subtle radicalism of
great a1rt The situation is decadence.
langu.istunent.
PO¥erty

Decadence is the inability of SOCiety h&gt;
repr oduce itsel(. whjch involves the
replacement of constant cap11al , moral
decisiom., and all existent1al questao ns it
must sollve to avoid en tro pic decline In
other words, a decadent culture ca1HH1t
renew the freshness and exact ne~ of Jts
VU10us languages. IS prevented from
expressJn g the full runge of eu10t1o nal
possibilities, their shad ...s and nu.JII4.:C'~. with
a consequent impoverishmenl o f 1ts quality
nf life n:s human ltfc. Culture cmb1ace:&lt; ;1
mynad uf dssiiiiCt lechnnlngie~ whrt·h
t.'Volve problems and must deal With them
if they 1are to t1ansccml form~ that I~;HI
been app•ropriatc 1o pr ev inu.~ . lower types
of suctal organi;.ation. RcfusJl II&gt; he
appropri~t te. to he trut! , ~~ 1hc w 1c nl
decadence
Abstract art
Art, 'SCience and ph1losophy ~1re Qll
modes of expressing universal truths . the
same truths, albeit by d1fferent methods
usJng dtffcrent medJ:o~ fach can arnvc at
the beau I y, fell as an emo110n. n l I WI h. ,1s
ltenn Po mcare has s.ud as J ~.-rcdttve
mathematician, as one cxpcnen~.-c:. rc.tdtng
Hegelian pruloso phy. as Shelley uh\Crvcs of
art in ' "1 11 Defence of Pelt I ry ,'' as nr1e can
feel when making a o;clefltlfic.. d1s..:overy or
hearing music so deeply it IS no longer
tie.trd, bu 1 enters une I wo uld s:sy that art.
because it does not rt'ly upon conceptual
or logical expos1t1on. but rather forces one
through m eta ph o r. suggestio n and
evocation to create one's own expcneucc
of beauty, is the most tmmediate and exact
means of expression, the most flex ible and
perceptive!.
Therefore it is from the arts espcc1ally.
of all cull uraJ languages, that consctousness
can be determined most purely and
directly. For this reason, the artastic
productions of the Russaan and German
revo lutJ ,onary periods, whach mdude
abstrac11on and the construct1ve art of
technology, the city, dynam1sm. and the
machine. are both (a) the best scn~lu)us
expreSSIOn of the new poss1baht1es that
people wt:re able to envision - namely , c1
society of guaranteed existence wuhout
labor 01 djvision of labor, and hence
classless, based on the dynam1c of an
ever-ex panding industrial technology,
where the spirit of man was given free play,
no longer dwarfed by material necess1ty,
and , (b)i evidence of the primitive,
decadent . regressive condJt ion of the
modern plast1c arts.
Plastic art
Abstra~:tion

long ago lost its meaning as

a form and passed into the destructive,

ana rc hi c ex pressionism·for-its-own·sake
and the foormal imitatio n that always spell
the end of an art movement
Found-obj1ects, luminism , kineticism. op
art, assemblagisrn, conceptual or minimal
art, cotbCrete poetry, colorism, junk
sculpture. in short , all of contemporary art,

is merely emasculated rehashing into
anti-art commodities of forms and contents
developed by Russian and German artists
SO or 60 years ago. Minimal art, which tw
many pract itioners now, effectively
theorizes that anything is art, a hole in the
desert, a banging water-pipe, etcetera, if an
"artist " says it is. Others opine that one
need intend nothing - the object speaks
for itself. Unfortunately , art does not exist
without intentio n.
Pop art. s till perhaps the most
characteristic type of . the period Stnce the
forties , represents nothing but the most
cynical parody of a parody, capitalism
glancing at Itself and then soulessly
accepting, without comment . the degraded
image that confronts it. Thus, of course, 11
is a valuable accessory to the educational
process which at last turns out individuals
able to exist without hope and to coolly,
urhanely sever theory from practice.
thought from action, ideal from real . desire
from duty Since resigning people to
dehumanization is not generaJiy considered
to be a function of art, I would venture to

immature, backward sensibility. incapable
of conceivina what love or tragedy or
humanity is.
Tbe pt"Dblem or culture
Real alienatjon OCQ&amp;rs when people are
cut off from enjoying the greatness,
whethe·r artistic, scientific or pbi.losoph.icaJ ,
that h•uman beings have achieved. They
become~ less than human in the fullest
sense. This, then , is the ..problem" of
culture, to give all equal access to both its
creatio1n and its enjoyment, just as the
problem of economic production is to
provide1 subsistence to all and to build
upon tlhat mean level a social economy of
infinite collective wealth, for which the
technology exists, unutiliz.ed, even now.
Within that material possibility lies the
seed of a new concept of man, upon which
culture is founded , the configurations of
which 1can only be indicated and not yet
construc ted, a Promethean apparition.
The most that can be done at this stage
is to aderllify and combat inteUectually,
psycbul ogica lly, organizahonaiJy and

po liti c.a lly decadent and reactionary
tendcnc 1es.
For cxampk. tchg~o n . To allack
established rehg1on as J ~Ol.lal force would
he beatmg a d~ad hnrse, 1here arc far owre
potcn1 forces at wc1rk stupefying and
Rock •n' roll
011c more example· mwuc, which is 111 ;1 dJsarmi111g pcuple . But the mystical and
similar stale. Smce Beethoven and the funciamc:ntalist rev1val in prog,ess should
pnme of opera, which came w1th Verd1 , be fuu~ht 1f 11 IS not 10 allow bourgeOIS
there has been almost no at tempi 111 1dc!ology tu get anuthcr, more vicious grip
expand music's expressive power beyond 0 11 the mmds of youn~ peuple. The
the depictton of sudden eruptions of chaos, lmtom:a l fu nc:tmn of rt'v1valssm. 10 such
a theme that has culminated in the emmcnt ebb~ and react tom as the Nap{&gt;leonic Wars,
composer John Cage's theo1y of mus1c 1he post-1~UO and J)QSt·l !)4H periods. and
as
nuise (he ts also an anarch1st the lS~J's, has always been to demo1ahzc.
politically). R ~t... m particular as the tn otTer escape . .1nd to arllfically prolong
s trun g out drone or scream ol an the life of notuHI~ at oddl&gt; wilh reaJity, [n
unbearable, inexplicable reality, jungle post World Wa1 I Germany and l taJy, w1th
muSJc:, which is equally why peo ple a mass youth base 11 preceded and
re:.pond to it 10 the way they do and why accompan1ed the nse of fasctsm. the only
solutaon 11 was capable of p10pos10g.
1t does no t stand as art
No matter how perfectly rock makes
one feel hke a jackaJ or a madman, the Announot:tment A lecture
purpose of musjc is not to refer to
Not ~1nlv the 1ehgwus rev1val. but many
conditions and ideotJ tJes as they are . mus1c t)ther featurel&gt; of modern culture and tts
alludes to status and quahties, to dreams mtr r o r· 1rna gc, c.ountcr-culture, d1splay
and possibilities of human harmony. whi..:h trredce rnahl e decadence and ideas
can be posed and resolved, of course. by potentially dangerous to the survwaJ of the
unlimited variatiOn s and harmonic human race . II 1S absolutely crucial to
associa tions. tonal or atonal. and by the beg10 nuw a crilique of bourgeois society
use of all kinds of so·called discordants. in all of Its decomposing forms if we are to
Beethoven wro te the foreboding, majestic be prepared lu1 the end of an epoch, the
music of the bo urgeois revolution and its c~&gt;ch o f ca pitalist rule as we have known
chance hero, Napoleon ; the music of this it. On Ma1 ch 14 at 8 :30 p.m., in Nortun
century's Lenins. past and future , the Hall Rc)C::lm 2.H , C'hristme Berl, a member
intentional, self-conscious heroes. has yet of the Na110na l Caucus uf Labor
to be wntten. RQCk plays to the mfantile Commll llces and a musician. will speak
ear, the Airplane and Steppenwolf posture further on The Counterculture and Afl,
militantly, but infants do not make and on a Marxist approach to culture and
revolutions, no matter what the lyrics say . 1lS decadence . especially as it relates to
And the fact is that rock reflects an music.
Friday, 10 March 19?'2 . The Spectrum . Page seven
say that what we have here is not art ,
cer tamly nul great art : it's only ideology
One could go uu and un, cf one had the
stuo)ach and the space.

�I

I

EdiTolliAl

A~ first

step.

It is ,.._.ring to see a student pup fighting the tuition raise.
While we do not agree with all of SASU's proposals, the mere fact that
they are working for the students is heartening.
We fully support their call for a roll-back of neJ&lt;t year's tuition

increases. Our main area of disagreement stems from their proposal

to

eliminate tuition and Regents scholarships at state schools. Under their
5Vstem, if a student chOM to attend a private school, no state
scholantlip funds would be available. We do not believe that a college
education has become .0 necessary that the concept of fTee public
education must be broadened from high schools to colleges. Anyone
Who disaw-eea with the proposition that the value of a college edueation
has been exaggerated, should Investigate the educational backgrounds
of the unemployed .
An alternative plan is necessary. We propose a sliding tuition scale
based on rntt •vt~il•ble i'ncom11. This figure would be determined by
subtracting any educational expensas for other siblings fTom a family 's
net ~x•bl• Income. For e~&lt;ample, any family falling below the $8000
N.A.I. level would not be required to pay tuition . At the other end, we
believe that any student coming from a family with a N.A.I. in e~&lt;cess
of $25,000 should be paying at least $1600 per annum. Tuition for
interim income levels would be figured proportionately. This, we
believe, is more equiteble than the SASU proposal which gives the rich
an unnecessary free ride.

A little trust
For the pest .,.,.1 years. Independent Study credits have
provided students with an opportunity to examine areas not included
within fonnal academic courses. Additionally, tAlking an Independent
Study expoteS a student to an alternative form of education, which in
tt.H Is no small accomplishment.
like everything efse in this institution, or the world for that
matter, tome people have abused the notion of Independent Study.
While 1his is regrettable, we cannot think highly of any plan geared
tolely to prevent such abuses. The instant that a procedure is adopted
INhich asumes that some students have malevolent intentions in
registering for a 499. then the entire concept is greatly damaged .
The rnolutions before the Faculty Senate on Tuesday did not
at ,. ., on the surface, to be
on suspicions; of student
lntentlona. HOW4IIIW, we CUJnot believe th.t the topic: would fiVer Nlve
ariMn without the belief. now •xtant in aome edminiatrative and
hlculty circles, that students are subverting the educational system
through the miause of Independent Study .

ba•

appMt,

There used to be a time when trust was a concept in vogue at this
University. Unfortunately, anyone who has recently applied for 499
credit through OUS, is aware that trust has been replaced by
skepticism. It seems that any student who chooses to tread outside the
traditional path to educational truth, is leu welcome to do so now .
We think that if the faculty spent less time worrying about
suppo.t threats to the sanctity of academia and expended more effort
tn the classroom, this would be a better place for students. Similarly, if
our ecademic administrators would exhibit as much concern about the
q uality of teaching as they have ove; the 499 issue, students might
become "all they are capable of being."

Vol. 22. No. 64

Fnday, 10 March 1972

Denni~ Arnold
Editor AI Btn,on
Co-M~Naina Edllor
Mol. t Loppm.onn
Aut. M•nllalna Editor SusJn Mu"
8uslnen M•naacr
Jao..k Hcrl.an
Adveni51na M~n•scr Sus.an Mcllenunc

Editor-in-Chief
Co·M~n~aina

BliCkpliJe

Carnpu1

•

• . Amy Ahrcnd

• . . • . . Jo·Ann Arm•o

. • •..... leff Greenwald
. . • . •• . • . .
.Howie Kurt1
City
• . • • . • . . . J~nis Cromer
Copy
• • . . . . ~onni Formiln
. • • . . .•.. Milrty G&lt;tt11
Aat.
. Cl 4o&lt;e Krleasm•n
falun ............. lynda Terl
Gr.llpnl" Am ......• ,. Tom Toles

L1you1

. M••vhupr Runyon
. . . . . . .v., •"'
, Mo,hJd Stlv~rbl•cl

,

Aut .
Llt . &amp; Onom•
Music .
Off.Cllm&amp;XH

Aut. . .

. . . . .Bill y Allmin
. Lynne To•egeo

.

..... .. ...v4~•n•

Photo ..... . . Mlchy Ostetteil her
Aut ... ... . . .. .... Kim S•ntos
Sports ............. BArry Rub on
Aut •.. , ....... . . How le fAIWI

Tnt Sptctrum Is served by United Press ln Lernatlon•l, Collegt Pre)~
Service, the Los Angeles Times Free Press, the Los Angel() Ttmes
Syndic lite 111d Liber&lt;tt1on News Service.
·
RcpublicJlion of maner herein without lhc express consent ol thr
Edlcor-in.Chlef is foft)ldden.
£dltorilll policy Is determined by the Edilor-ln.CIIIef.

hgt ~t . -'nM Spectrum . Friday, 10 March 1972

' tiNTO rill lUI, 0 " THI IUS, INTO THI IUS, 0 ,

THI lUI -

MAN, WHAT AN IDtiCAnGNt•

The need to write is fear bloc:lted . Which may be
Pailn. There is a rumpled gray postcard held to a
piece of plain shelving by a green rnap pin. Left partly lesitimate. There may be more direct ways of
behind by a troubled woman/child , it shows a getting caring and affection from people. Such
crudely drawn wide-eyed shaggy freak holdang his bloclcaae is LaraeJy crazy. Anger at being afraid and
hand cltlse above a candle flame . The lettering reads constTained is directed out at the reader and inward
at the author. This comer is/hu not been writina. It
"One thina about pain : it proves you're alive!"
0 u t of a long and powerful series of bas been a demon~tration of word sense, of
intet\:OJ1tnected and mutually reinforctna experiences sensitivity to issues and the world and people, but it
comes a major sense of internal change. Realizing has not been writina. Which hU bo direct application
•
that rcocently effective and efficient devices for to its value.
Writing involves more purpose and control than
preventi ng the perception of pain were so swiftly
reduced to uselessness ls terrifying. Pain is has been found here. Sensitivity and concern
everywbere in such a situation. There are no places produce pain, so that all three can be found here ;
for the vulnerable to hide anymore_ The sense of frequently along with the frustration and anJ&lt;iety
fanced and clawed independence from others is common when groping towards an unknown coal
aurrounded by fear. Most goals are kept unknown or
&amp;ane, s't'l•ept away by pain.
Pain comes unbidden, frequently coming in the at leut unclear. What if they •hould not be reached?
Unilateral is a potent concept both in politics
shadow of closeness. Closeness must clearly be
viewed with suspicion therefo re. But what choice and internal difficulties. To expend the energy
exists w·hen the need for people will nol be still , necessary to do something alone, to Jove someone or
except to open to those who pass by and look to be to write something, with all the attendent
safe. No,n e are safe. AU are human and the conflict uncertainties about rejectio n and acceptance is
of need• will force the pain/gain cycle into troubled fearful, on some level, for everyone. Books can be
written in coUaboration. Feelinp cannot be so
and erral!ic motion .
Wh en there ia no shared. The individual alone is forced to deal with
Internally perceived reason for the internal content of caring. If an advance goal of
another being attracted, caring about, and bein&amp; cared for by, someone can
rejection m~Ut surely be be admitted to conscious feeling tbe risk is many
ex pected to occur. Rejection times greater than if it is done covert.Jy. When
under such conditions can be neither party really makes an investment, then what
!t&gt;und anywhere. Walkins into of value can be lost?
an empty apartment is ll
The issue reduoes to the non-fatality of pain. Is
rejecllon, a cold and limiting it worth risking hurt to attempt to find places where
experience. Satting alone when the warm and intensity are deep enoup to heal
the child is in bed and the some old wounds? Or does one maneuver cautiously
mternal tli.lence is growing i!i reJection. More than was around the scar tissue since contact with 1t results in
wanted, and less than what was needed, are frighteningly strona pam. Openness in a wo rld of
rejection
defenses is either heroic or a driven neceuity . Or
The party ebbs and flows, dark currtnts licking there is Little difference between the two.
about thl: ankles. To be rejected three seruate times
There is no effort here to proselytize. Pain is an
at the same party ls misery. One cannot survive,
indi vidual and subjective phenomena, which each of
but doe.;. Defenses do n't stop pain, mstead t hey us h• to deal with alone. Some may be able to find
block bc:ing able to feel. Cut fingers which burt use for the idea that if you are hurting you may or
should b,e exammed. Fear of pain is painful. Never may not be dying, and tha t racing pain may give a
do anytb·ina. never make mistakes. Otherwise - paJn . more clear concept of what the fears and hurts stem
Pain is constant. If recognized it can be c hecked and from, and are connected to. Havina done this, it
tested . If unverified , pain decays and eats internally . might even be possible to devise procedures by
Poison.
which other people could help deal with the bad
Fear of pain around closeness u; fear of times and places.
~jection , of opening or allowing to open, parts of
The truth is that there are other such people
self potentially highly pamfuJ, only to have these left willing to reach o ut if given cues. Even for t he m it I.S
unsupported by the other's withdrawal, They seem not always true, for sometimes they need being
much too heavy to carry alone. This avoids the reac hed out to. But scattered in among tbe comer
problem of direct alt:tck. Withdrawal leaves gaps cutters and line breakers and obnoxiously
wh•ch are painful by thear presence . Deliberate offensively defensive human beinp we live with are
attack of such areas is devastating both now and people who can share. Their scarcity is not to be
later. No-w for the sense of betrayal and deep, deep denied - but such things as breeder reactions do
hurt . Lato~r for the paranoia and reluctance/inability exist. There is at least a potential for building
to trust/ approach people
something which provides for many people when
Needs become fear blocked . To be touched , reaching out occurs. Withdrawal will get no thing
held, cared for tn stra~ght uneq uivocal w11ys is unless someone else does the reacbina. Only when
something which Improves life greatly Caesar there are risks taken can sensitive areas be opened
survtved (:ould not be e&gt;~pected to take great comfort and high level sharing be attempted. You may have a
lrom men who put their arm around his shoulders. choice; my head has escaped my control in this area.
Productio'n of reasons why no one can be trusted is The resulting mixture of good and bad stuff LS
simple when there are some who cannot be trusted . currently under evaluation by a committee of the
This production is counter-productive. Safety lies whole - i.e. nobody understands what the heU is
within. Trust must be linked to "one thing about going on. It seems to put me in more intense places
paan : at proves you're alive." PAIN IS NOT FATAL! more of the time, if snyone else is loolrin&amp; for that.
When th is inte&amp;ration occurs pain becomes an Fin.
indicator of bloclted wants, and defensiveness
( Postscnpt. There JS a ungenns II'UliUluluu 11vv•H
becomes the presence of pain or its probability.
this column. It is not risbt. There is very little more
This is written because of a fear blocked need. awareness than that. There is a clear perception that
Writing is not easy. It is clearly not just a matter of effort was aimed at approachina shared experiences
talent. T:here is a demand for orpnization and of pain and fear in a way that would enable both
stability, an expectation tha t the writer will remain writer and reader to know more abo ut bow to
semi-consttant throughout the work (singular) in transcend such blaclt moments. There is a sense of
process. Fear of rejection on o ne hand cries about failure, that somehow bad it been better crafted this
feelinp if the completed work/self ls rejected . The would be more of an experience capable of beina
pain of lllolding in one place for a ION time also shared and used. than the debilitati.na one it now
(riahtcns. Stability feels death-like when chance iJ a seems to be. It this perceptiOll il reality based, I
constant way of life.
rearet 1 don't know bow to do it rlfht yet. )

�,_ ··--

Cosmic crap!

One way
ticket
,
To

th~

---------------· ---------

To the Editor:

Editor:

In my opinion, the use or $5000 to send
Mic hael ( Lev) Levinson to Vietnam is an exhorbitant
overexpenditure of studeRt funds.
However, in li&amp;ht or his obvious &amp;ood· will
towards the people of Vietnam, it seems worthwhile
to endeavour to send him there posthaste in an
attempt to end the senseless bloodshed.
Therefore, I respectfully submit that a reduction
of budget is necessary. Such a reduction could easily
be made by a sim ple adjustment in ach edulina. I
therefore suaest that the Executive Committee
reconvene, and with all bute, vote Mr. Levinson all
the m o ney he needs for a one-way ticket to
Vietnam.
Kcmn~th

Gort/it.'k

SA decadence
To the Editor:

I am pe rsonally insulted by the SA Executtve
Committee's d ecasion to send the 811 Baby hi mself
to Vietnam, as I am sure most of the people around
here are. But it proves two things that I h11ve
suspected for a Jona time (a) th at the S A leadership
IS rotten to the core, and (b) that Lev Is an idaot
degenerate.
f l,lrth'er elabo rat ion : (a) it shows t h e
ancompuable decadence and spi n eleasness of our
"lead ers," espeCJaJiy that hoodlum deWaal, that they
should st oop lo such infamy. Why, a pack of apes
might as weU he 1n charge of our finances and
llffaars 1 For betng fouled hy 11 twerp like Lev. th1s
herd of prodtgal round ers should be bounced out
Into the street nn thetr eur'
(b) Lev ~:uuld serve society and UB bettt•r by
voluntarily conw nttn ~ to some ~ott of profeS)IOOal
psychaatric help I mean. after all , 1h1s hoy u;
obvaously sufferi ng ~nme kmd of grand1o~e
d clustOns. If th ts ~.- haractcr LS given $5000, there 's no
tclhng what he mtght do 1
But I'll tell you what' Instead or WllSI tng S5000
un tht!&gt; Plltful ~ob, wh y don't we buy ham o1 pl.ut~
tt~,;ket for Callfornta or some ot h er place far awoy 'o
we can be rid ot I has JlC'I ilt:nce for o n ce and fut .Ill
(An afterthoughl perhaps we should buy smul.tr
lung distao~.-c ~~~~cis for th l! l-xecut1ve Comm•llec ol
SA.• One wuy. of ~our.c )
IJtll

/ t(/ljj

bet wee n Golda and Anwll r. I 'm ready to make the
peace, just plug me in . Nobody else can say that.
My wife is also exceptionaUy weJJ qUalifie.d fo r
the m jssion, so mu ch so that she should have n o
trouble d ealing with heads o f state. She is mlijoring
in Exceptional Educatio n fo r the Mentally Retarded
at BSUC . S he sp ent a good deal o f time at camp and
w o uld not be lout in a non-urban environment.
In ad dition , we intend to make available for
world pe3ce a program of c assette tapes and carbon
caricatu res. I noeed not tell yo u the ampo rtan ce o f
such a program.
( Moreover, Jan , I 'll bring you some th ing bac k
from Afri ca like you've never had before')
Okay , SA Execu tjve Committee, you du ty 1S
clear. Wh y should you spend more money on things
hke Day Care , M1n o ri ty Programs, the Buffalonian,
the Barth Con tro l Cltnac, WNYPJRG , S tuden ts'
Rtghls, Cullur~l Programs, Cultural Clu bs, Fee
Waive rs, and oth er cam pus affairs when you can se n d
Messiah s like "Lev" and me h alfway around the
world to engage 10 onanlSm? By the way ,Just for the
record , I need 1 wen ty th o usand to cover travelling
and ltvmg expenses and another o ne thousand to see
th ,at tht• ~at 1~ well t.lk.en t.:are of until we get bac:-lt.

This is to ad vise you of m y plans to make a
peace and educa tion trip to Europe and Africa at th e
expense o f the Student Association . My wife and I
have been looking forward to th is for mo nths. Uniil
now. finances proved to be ou r o nl y o bsta cle . I am
sure you can all und erstand how delighted we were
to learn that you are finan cing Michael Levinson 's
peace m1ssion to South Vietnam . We have every
conf1d ence that you will Cind it 1n your hea rts to
support o ur pro posed trip, during which we will
resolve the Middle East Con01ct (I was very sorry to
learn that SA was not going tnto the publishing
buSiness w it h Book of l.t&gt;v and Book nf
Deuteronomy , but If you ever ch ange your nunds,
you m1ght consider my forlhc:-ommg novel. The l.asr
Btllwn Milu .)
As a Boy Scout. I was Scntor P11tro l Leader, so
t here is no q ues tion about my ability to t.urv1ve 1n a
Mtddle East desert. Having worked a t the YMCA.
there should be no ques tto n about my capllclly for
survtval tn any ctty 10 the world My fathe r was '"
the Navy and taught me cvnythmg he knew I was
President of my High Sdwul Sentor CIJss and am
therefore ex penen~.:ed tn the fteiJ, of leJdership and
governance. I took In terpersonal C omnnJnJI. JitClu~
101. so I am prt"parcd to negoltale J !&gt;4·ttlcment

flar11 Earl R oss
Tilt Co.rm tc Crupptr

'Meddlesom,e pest'
To tilt• Eclllor ·

Ftvc 1hous~ nd d o lhu' as !.jUlie a bJt o f money
gel u nt: rtneddlesorne pest out of o u r hwr. 17u•
Htl/ja/,,11, was awarded n nly SROO of a requested
S I tlb2
1 u LU I down worthy orgamzatioru to
~Uflfl&lt;HI
tool,; " hnd l'nough tn the h'deral
guvenlllt t nl . hllll I&lt;~ Jn 11 here on campus where we
h01ve" httk llwtc n• mmutiiCdiHHl wtth . a nd t.O nlro l
ovt•r th• ,p .. ndtnt• hy lh~ elected urfiuul\ c.
lll.ll.tllllll\
JU~I In

I was greutly liSiound ed tuday when I lead lhdl
lame du t:k admtnt~lr.tlmn now ~uveuung till· Si\
had the gall to Jprroprtale $~00{) to M L l cvtn'&lt;&gt;n lu
"make ihe peace" tn Vtrtn Jm . 1 hut ~uch ,, pmpo~al
t·ould gel d~ Jar as I Ill' I "'ct uiiVI' Cnn1111111 ee •~. 1n
lt~t'JI . JudtcrOUS. f h.tl I he .CIIIIIIIIIIl'C UIUJd 11.1" \Ul If
l•,oll~hness '' lntntKctvuhlt' No1 .mly "1 1 J w..t~le .,1
OUI III OOCy Oil ;I hotlt:Jc\~ \ll'nllHI . It I~ .1 htH"I I ll
lev ·~ alr111dy t&gt;U ISifed ej.:O II 1\ al\n .1 IIIC::JII\ ot
grJnltng h1m .1 po ,tlmn of dtgml y .tnd uHhhthly lw
~t'fiJIIIIy d o&lt;'\ ""' dt•,crvc
My hal ~01:~ •11! to hnth Mo " " '"'' .m,l Mt
Auernn feu o ppo\ln~ lhl\ .J'IIIIIIl' 11111111: I 111 Mt''''"
DrWJJ J Jnd l ·rifn~ c:l I ho ld nollnn~ hut ,on lcmpl
(he Slllll&lt;' h'r Jh&lt;;l&amp;llllng members (;uhhleln ,
(iuhnmun amJ SielnWtlld . I h&lt;tl thl' y ..ould \i l h:t.:k
Jnd lei ~uc.:h l rnh b-.: a(&gt;1'roved '' W&gt; hJd '" vottn~ h11
lh~:

II t Itt· Si\ "' J wlwk vutrs tn lavot of lhts
I f,,, on•· .1nd prnhJhly man)- mure wtll
w,HVl' lht'll S-\ 1\-,., tW\1 yea! In ~\nld hJVJOjl. any
tlltHc 111om·y w:1s1 n l I hco\l' nl you wh n \ Uil' should
n&gt;n la, I v.lm he vet tl'ptc,c nt.Jitve' yo u know tu
tlekul lh h llhn• y l'ctdiJII &lt;t Mr ._ t'l\et'~ m ttz.tnal
prOpCh.tJ W&lt;IUh l lw tnlllt: Jflf'IUprt..tll.• J VOC'·WIIY
'''"''' wo ulct he mort.' I ~v·~ \peed
pr"fl&lt;'~al

,,,

Lev is all you need
IJh&lt;•ur.. 1"~1

"' ,,, /;J/1 ..,

I or OJ hnd '"""'C'nl JIC't~hdrlH'. lhl'
lftt• t)llt'l'n ( tly , ( a /I~Jt-d J\ W\' Wt:'l t ' 10
I.e• ' " '·"''' &lt;~IIJi d tnfctllllll lh•· dellt~w n thJt wr
li'Uht I 1'\ If IH lt-.IH tf Y"l "' lh\· l'IIJ ll lllll\l
hu&lt;tllt.: .IJ'I'JII'Itl tlo,tl 1\\" Jt,t\1' lt\l IIIII h.Jf'(') 1 \'V,
''"' h..tpp~ h.ti'JI\ I n' \\• '·"' onl) lh•l'• lor •• til
"·"" ' .. .., .•• 1~ 11'1111111 l) 1\llltldtt'f ,, lw I \'H"IIY I
t •tltl '"''" .... lit h•fl \~tilt lh•· l'lliJifllll'~' ••• ,J
I nh ,. hi•·
l' t•tll..tp '"""'"'' "'"' 11 tit,· IIIIJI
\r ., , . .Itt' ••lltpkh .t 11 ,. o;h.ttl lw
, Jodpt,•r, 111 I
hl'lh•t .ch k to ·"""'' 1 tht· qm'''"'" "'I"' II. ·" IH'
J'll'I'Jil'\ (II lh-f' JII hJ.tlll\ II\ .ttl
ll tl\1 do we ht't'tll to ll'lllht· ,r.ory ol h''"' jl.lt'.tl ,1
L,.\/, .tn h,··•
li~IIII&lt;"O\ t&gt;l

Value questioned
ro I ht• /:tit tor
t wc•uld ''"lply o;ay In John Al\h&lt;lp Otrt·~· tor,
L.•ncer\ ('I mil.. 1hat h" .Jl&gt;.'&gt;UIIl pllun t h&lt;~l 'ex ual
details of an m cesl rt:lstao o.s.h1p wtll he pornow-apht~
l!!ads me to quest aun th e possible v:~luc ol hue
111qutry Rese:.an:h 10 lhJ~ area ts t•enam ly legJitma t e,
.. nd 11tt1tudes such Ill. the- ahove m01y m.tlte the go 1ng
"murky •·

Clarke J.c•t•hn••t

Heiflhts of
To

th~

incompetern~e'

f 'duo,.

Wtth lt'I~Jrd 111 tho· llltlltttu•n J , h·p.ultll• c•l &lt;lUI
no1&lt;•1l h,trd .oncl lllt'lllot C'll lil t• l'Yl' ul lt1' " " ' " " " " '
JIC.ltc lu VWIIIdlll m.ty Wl he ,, l•oltl .J' ' " JH&lt;~IIt·t
v.tt h ;JII Jul.' hunllltty, .t le11. l!.t!rth &lt;•I .ttiVIll'
1\hnv~: .Ill , 0 I eY " ' lhtncnv.nwll h, '"'' In
''not Le• whi t h Jll t: t\ v.hllt 11 Jlh•tall&lt;orl
"&lt;u 1
It •~ Jn ev~·r plugged 111 M1k1· "' lh.tl lhl' l"n~ L n 111
o ur lhoughl dCllh harhout, whJk h" lt•d llt"lol
fc~tetlln \hnre' Yet, lhou~-t h L ~:v ts a tii.IIIV·'&gt;Pknd .. rcd
tlun~:, lho uglt l c·v fllJI-cs lhl' wnrltlJhl ttlund, l l t&lt;~u~lt
lc:v 1\ I ev and nut fadt• JW..ty , \ till 111 Vttln~na men
have dted and wnrm\ ho~vc .,,,l en thtlll hut nnl f11r
lev Bewnre' I he CliUI)l' of trttt I ev nc 'n dttl run
smooth Perhap~ tn Buffu ln it w.ts p&lt;h)tltlc '" L ev\•m
aruJ leavr'cm . for bl·re Lev IS hut a tluce kllt·r wnrd.
ycl we dare nut ... untcmpJatc the 'Pedade nl L •. .,,.,

I""''

Dion~

Rosen

wronaly identified 'Tom
DeMartino, Dilutor of the Offic~! of
Student Riaftts, 11 Tra.urer Dlw IU:iler.
IC wa Mr. DeMartino, aDd oot Mr. K•!ilcr,
who submitted the LepJ Aid Oink's
budtet.

t;IIJrhJI
J.. ( /l.ll't l

f'qJnlll ( . a rna

request

111 regards to tht recent allot.dfton of S'iOOO to
Mr M tchael Levmson, I w1sh to pro test tht ~ .t&lt;:t1o11
str o ngly In the cou~e of th e pa\1 lew m o nth ~
increased quest toning over who has JUrt~dll!lt) n over
wh o hiti occ urred, the arguers betng SA and
admtniSirallon. Now SA h11s the gaJI to allot S5000
10 some unbelievably bold thmg for purposes wh1 ch
have n othmg to do w1th this Un1vers11y. It lS rather
obvious tha t th e SA officials are no t respons1ble
enough to allot mon ey Since they arc g.tven that
responsibility , however, I wish to make a fmmal

ro the S lutllent ASSO l'lllltun Ol SUNY Jl Buffalo.
S ~000 l&lt;l Samuel M,
Pnnce for I he puq)ose of ob tatntng a veh1dc to allow
htm e.JSter a cces.s to the Un1vers1ty If lhas request 11.
denied, I demand t h e ~5000 allocatt u n to Mt M
Levmson be recl)nSidered and dented
fht~ '' 11 reque')l to ullol'ate

If SA reaJI~t' has to sp~nd the m tlncy, or really
has the money to spend , th~y can u~e thme funds
for mo re won hwhiJe endea vors

'Hair brain schemes'
To rh~ Ed1tor.

TM Sp«l111m

&lt;"111' 1

Unmitigated gall
To the l:.dlltJf

Once aga an the hetghts of tn~ompetence have
been reached by th e SA execullve ~.-ommitt ce In
allotting M1cbael Levtnson SSOOO to go to VJetntlm,
the Student A s.~•cta tton proved that there tS 3 l11c lo.
of balls in 205 .
We pay money t o SA in the form of activities
fees and when ou r money is spent to support pr1nte
tnterests of people who aren ' t even students (for a
q uestionable project), one feels th e need to protellt
Hence, I am pro testing and asking the assembly t o
bring reason back t o student government by turning
down Lev's trip

I

/&lt;UIIIcJ!Ih/11 .frJt

In the March 6 ISSue of 111~ Spectrum . 11 was
reported that the Exec ut1ve Committee of the
Student Assembly voted to allot S5000 to send
Michael Levinson to Viet nam. While an Vietnam, Mr.
Levinson plans to talk with the people of Salgon and
take slides. Though Mr. Levinson contends that hia
trip will contribute to world peace, I sincerely doub t
it. Firstly , It is unlikely that anyone o f importance
will wish to s peak to Mr. Levinsoo . Secondly , it is
hiJhly improbable that his slides will revea.l anything
new , We are already aware of t h e devutating effecu
the war has had on the Viet namese I)O(lulous

Thirdly, 11 1s questionable as to whether anyone w1ll
be mterested in taJk1ng to tum After all, be will be
VIewed w1lh JUSt as much suspicion ~tnd hostility u
any other American in Vietnam despite his
admtrable intentions.
It IS my opm ion that the only thang 11 t rip by
M r. Levtnson to Vielnam would accomplish IS to
tatiate his desirE: to aet a ftrst ·hand look at Victn;am.
Can't m ore producllve uses be found for stud cnt
funds? If not , they should be retumtd t o lhc
students a nd no•t squandered o n hair· bflltn !&gt;chcmcli.

IJ11hby Wmt-

Friday, 10 March ll972 . The Spectrum Page nine

�Day Care candy Sllle
The Ul Day Care Center will be boldlaa a candy ale b' Norton Hall rrom March
9-IS. The Day Care Center II pramdy In deep fiol.llctal dJfriculty and would areatty
appreciate participation iD thil ruod raiaina acti•tty.

Possible methadone center site
is condemnedby businessmen
Finding a site for a methadone maintenance
center in the city of lackawanna was the directive
issued by the Erie County Legislature on Tuesday.
The legislature by an J 8 to 2 vote adopted a
resoluti on by Rayrqond F. Gallagher (D.,
Lackawanna) wtuch requests County Mental Health
Commissioner James J. Warde to determine if space
for an expanded program is available in the building
in which it is now housed. The program of treatment
and rehabilitation for heroin addicts currently has a
capacity of 20 patients.
If additional space is not available at the present
site, 33 Wilkesbarre Ave., the legislature directed Dr.
Warde to survey other buildings in the immediate
viciruty that rrught be usable.
Prior to the vote, Ms. Elste Eestrada, chairman
of the Lackawanna Communaty Health Center
AdviSory Board, recommended that the legislature
approve a Stte at 101 Ridge Road She contended
that the present butlding as not luge enough for the
development of the drug program .
'Addicta harm busine~~ '

However, Mr. Gallagher told the legislature that
businessmen in the Ridge Road area oppose the
possible site because they fear that the influx of
addicts seeking treatment will harm their businesses.
Mr. Gallagher also opposes the development of a
center that would serve 200 addicts. He commented

on Tuesday that : "Lackawanna wants a drug center
to take care of its own, but not for all of the addicts
in Erie County and not on Ridge Road."
Jack Adams, a board member of the
Lackawanna Community Health Center, where the
drug center is now located, earlier made a press
statement that patients had experienced " planned
harassment by the police a1nd politicians." He further
asserted: "lackawanna needs its own program
because of the 75 to I ()()1 potential drug treatment
patients in the area."

Centralized program?
An earlter proposal b)' Mr. Gallagher asked that
Dr. Warde study the feasibality of centralizing the
county's methadone maintenance program at Meyer
Memorial Hospatal, while at the same tame seeking
small treatment centers throughout the county.
However, Mr Gallagher sa1d that Dr. Warde
in forme d him that t he county wanted to
decentralize its program and spoke against using the
hospitaJ as the main treatment center.
Republican Albert N. Abgott, casting one of the
two dissenting votes on the resolution, objected on
the grounds that Dr. Wardle and IUs staff have been
given adequate directives by the legislature to find a
new facility . He declared : ''This proposal only puts a
smoke screen over the issue "

A CAC Fair will tab place on Saturct.v, M.rd'l 1 1 from 1 1 a.m.-5
p.m. thr~out the end,. firtt floof of Norton Hall. Events will
include cemival boodts, prizn, movies, IMndl, downs, ~Mt~icians,
skits and exhibits for die kids of Buffalo. ~~ .,. being donAld
by Bluebird to help bring d'lild,.n to dtt Unlnnity campus
dtroughout the day. While the fair is open to 1he "kids of Buffalo,"
aU members of Uta Unlvanity community .,. invlt.d to attend.

Next Week Only
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GETS YOI1 ALL THIS!
Page ten . The Spectrum . Friday, 10 March 1972

SOME LUCKY
BUYER
MUST WIN!

�Kinks rock
the roof at
·Kleinhans

·-Pruun~v

by Robbie Lt)Wn\llfl
S,.Ctrum Mulic R w i -

Ray Davies. the mad delicate geniu1s, was here last Wednesday night
at Kleinhans along with the rest of th•e Kinks. If you were there, then
you know that you were witness to an extraordinary concert whether
you're a Ray Davies' fan or not, or whether Ray's performance pleased
you or not.
The concert, however, started out on an ordinary note - literally.
The first group, Llndisfarne, was q uite a non-descript f.olk-based
English group, though right at the moment, they're near the " top of
the pops" in the British charts. I don't know - for a country to make
Marc (T Rex) Bolan a star and them lindisfarne - Well there's no
account1ng for taste, and If Lindisfarne was yours, well that's fine. At
least the y weren't offensive. but perhaps if they were, I wouldn't have
been so bored.
I thought that the second band, Fairport Convention, might afford
me a more enjoyable time. but they proved only slightly more exciting.
I had been a fan of F .C. since before the days Sandy (who knows where
the time goes) Denny ran to record with a certain notorious English
rock group. But Fairport isn't the group I remember, having lost both
guitarist Richard Thompson and Sim'on Nicol. Since then, they have
been dominated by David Swarbrick and his fiddle. They were Quite
competent, and again, their performance was a matter of taste. I did
enjoy some of Roger Hill's guitar work . Penonal taste.
Finally after all the preliminaries, came the group that we were all
wa1ting for. There is nothing like a Kinks' fan, or more appropriately, a
Kmk Krazy (B. Altman's term - no, not the store's) . So when you put
enough of them under the same roof, you can imagine the exc1tement,
and even if you can't, pretend. The cro1wd was expecting a rock and roll
concert at its best and in the fullest s.ense of the term, but what they
got was Quite another thing.
Quite the teeM

At the beginning it seemed that the crowd was going to get what it
wanted, as Ray danced out and started ''Till The End of The Day." The
crowd Immediately jumped right in only to be tooled when Ray
stopped the band at the end of one riff leaving every one 1n the breech
Quite the tease. but everyone loved it . Then the band played another
ntt and the crowd, thinking this was tt, was only to be foiled again as
Ray agam stopped the band. The band froze waiting tor Ray's signal to
start once again, and when they did, i1t was the real thmg and the Kinks
were rocking like we all knew they could.
In between songs came the ttrst uf Ray 's caustiC comments. " If 1t
tastes good, swallow it ." Think about that . Theo they went mto,
" You're Looking Fine," off the Face· to Face album . Dave, the other
Dav1es, sang the ftrst lead and just to hear Dave open h1s mouth IS quite
a treat. He augmented his performance• with some fine guitar work .
Ray (who this entire time had bel8fl danc1ng around and doing his
Ray Dav1es 1mitat1on) now sw1tched to acoustic guitar. The first song
he d1d was, " Get Back In the Line," a tune off the Lola album. One
thing I must say for Ray is that not only is he one of the best
songwriters around. but that no one in rock and roll writes working
class songs with the amount of deli&lt;:ai;_y and feeling that Ray does. The
songs about being controlled by unio1~ bos$es and having to depend on
them fcx work . "All I want to do is make some money and bring you
-c.o ntlrM.Md on follOwing PA..-

�WKIW and IUFFALO FISTIV~ pteeent tHRU ••• SHOWS

AT KIL&amp;IN1HA1Na MUSIC NAiLL
Sunday, Mor. 19, I P.M.

-IIILIY BA:I SIY
-aa'AII O.CHIITitA
AND Hll
fJCJ'U
ADDIO --~
A"ltACTION
• .. H _ _ _ . .
Mel .. , .... $64S; lebfty

~

Wed., Morch 22, I P.M.

RICHARD

H~~RRII

Kinlcs rock•..

-.UnuM ftcwn

or..tou. ,.~

home tome wiM." When Ray sing~ •eof19llke "Get Back In the Line,"
he sings with the ume feeli 1"19 that his song displays.
His next song was " H.ve a Cup of T•," the first of his seven songs
off the MCIS'MMII H/1/billi • • bum . Thlt Wll the eource of some
disappointment for the Kink Krazles who expected to hear all the
rocking hits. MuswtJII Hillbflll• w. given by someone In my circle the
Randy Newman award of the v•r. Rendy rocks, but sometimes it's
hard to find the beet. Muswe/1 H/1/b/lli•, belf19ln the same weln, wasn't
exactly what the crowd had In m ind.

IN CONCUT

LILY

Sot., April 1, 8:30 P.M.

TOMI~III

ITAR OF "LAUGH·· IN''

Being the adventures of a youn,g man
whose principal interests are rape,
ultra-violence and Beeth&lt;M3n.

lOW ACADBIY AWARD
IOIIIIAnMS FOI:

BESTPimRE
BEST IIIECTOI
BEST SCIEEIPLAY

BESTmm11a

KU-:K'I

Low-by album
Maybe I should clarify that a litde. MUIWIIII Hlllbllll• is a low key
album (especially In light of the Kinks pllt) and Ray's writing is in a
similar weirdly penonal vein that Randy's is. Perf&lt;M'm lng the songs off
of M.H. IS quite a different matt•. ..Randy Newm., is not one of the
Kings of Pop-Rock as Ray D~ies i l - .t least not as far as widespread
audience appeel is concerned.
Ray's always been a rocker and Randy a - well, how would you
describe h im? When Randy stumbles out to perform, it's usually
slumped over a plano in some small club and he's probably drunk to
boot. Randy doesn't have to be entertaining, he just hat to be Randy,
Besides, he has already stated that he doesn't roally care because he
doesn't think anyone Is listeni1"19 anyway.
When Ray comes out to perf&lt;M'm, the only thing that he and
Randy have in common is that they're both probably drunk. Up unt1l
now, Ray has always been able to lose a lot of the personal material in
his songs because the nature of the songs were always rock and roll . But
with the event of M.H., Ray has lost that screen. Now he has to
perf&lt;M'm and I mean that in the fullest sense of the word.. The danger of
Ray D~ies perf&lt;M'ming is the danger that he's going to give too muctl ot
himself away. The danger that he Is goif'l9 too far over that fine line.
Perhaps his antics might be offensive (it's happened). CM' perhaps h1s
audience would be turned off by his strange ways.
Ray knows people are listening and knows the danger he's in with
his audience. When Ray dances out (8\len when he dances, he looks like
he might stumble or fall any second) to perform a song like "Alcohol ,"
the choreography in it is Incredible . With Ray swaying with a bottle of
beer in his hand and singing a song about a middle-class businessman's
downfall because of some floozy who took him for all that he was
worth so that now he's a poor drunkard and the Mike Cotton horn
section in the background sounding like the Salvation Army, you can
easily see he puts himself in a precarious position when performing.
lucky...,.,
All In all Ray did seven songs from M.H . includmg "Life is So
Complicated" and "Holiday" which are two songs which really need
performances to get them across, especially to an audience that
expected to rock. Ray just can't leave anything understated the way
that Randy Newman can.
But that's Ray's nature In a way. Even his little comments, such as
before he sang "lola," possess a personal note that can't be
overlooked. "My mother used to sing this song to me when she held me
on her knee once a year at Christmas - She always wanted a
heterosexual ."
Somewhere toward the end of the performance. a King Krazy tired
of all the acting shouted to Ray that there were other albums from
which they could play songs. I really don't thmk that Ray chose those
songs solely to promot M.H. because they are hardly going to insp1re
too many fans to buy the new album .' Rather, I believe that these new
songs are the ones that are important to him at the moment ,
After "Lola" the Kinks gave the aowd what all Kinks' crowds
have been waiting for at their concerts tor seven years - "You Really
Got Me" and "All Day and All of the Night." Needless to say, every
one was quite satisfied. The Kinks followed it up with "V ictoria" and
the house went out rocking.
I must mention the band, the Mike Cotton horns and the rest of
the Kinks were superb. Both John Dalton and Dave Davies sand
excellent harmonies. I suppose that the key to the concert depended on
how you reacted to Ray Davies. It's not very often that a genius or a
near genius comes into my presence, especially one that I admire so
Perhaps he wasn't what the crowd expected, or perhaps at times . he
went a little too far . Perhaps he even sensed it when he repeated , " No
matter what, have a good time." As I said before, whether you were
pleased or not, it was a most extraordinary concert .
A quick plug for the forgotten brother. When Ray introduced Dave
(Death of a Clown) Davies, and ask him to say a few words, Dave
stepped up to the microphone and said, "A few words."
Ray replied, "That was apt."

New ticket office
A Stanley Kut&gt;nck Pr0duc1100 · A CLOCKWORK ORANGE Slarnng Malcolm Mc())well • PJtnck MaRee
Adnenne Corn and M1nam Karlin • Screenplay by Stanley Kubnck • Based on the novel by
Anthony Burgess • PrOduced and Drected by Stanley Kubrck . E~ Pto~
Ml• L Raab and So Llvroll • From Warner Bros
OIV"*DI1dtred&lt;IOICXlldnQcr•Wimllr&amp;w ..-.

EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT

d~.J

Deily A 161,.y: 2-4:A0-7:2C).10
Sltt\lrdey: 2-4:50-7-9:25-Lete S ' - et 11:45

Big news here for all you Ridge L11ers who find
it 1 big pain to come all the way over to Norton Hall
just to get a ticket to a basutball game or an oboe
recital at Baird. Saul "Sharkie" Davidson has done it
again. The perferator Supreme (as he's known in
some circles). the man who brazenly snubs Mick
Jagger in favor of I.D.s, has opened up, with the help
of big Dusty from the Rec desk a ticket office at the
Ridge Lea Recreation Center. '
All events handled by the Norton Hall Ticket
Office, with the exception of campus films are
available at the new oudet. There is a handling
charge of $.10 per ticket, maximum· of $.25 per
order (that means if you get three ttckets, ft costs
you • quarter instead of thirty cents). It's a small fee
to avoid you a small inconvenience.

�I

RECDRI:)S

Harvest Neil Young (Repri..-MS 2032t
The cool breeze brushes ~ainst my face as I lie
on my Mdt with my head resting egainst the roots
of an old tree. I look up at the sky and watch the'
sun trYing to break through the soft, gray clouds.
Gazing straight up at the trunk of the tree I find a
piece of dead bark with in my reach . The old brown
pieoe of wood gently breaks and small splinters fall
between my fingers. An elderly man passes by slowly
with h is wrinkled faoe staring down at the dying
grass.
"Old man look at my life, I'm a lot like you

were.
Ol d man look at my life·twenty four and there's

so much more.
Live

a/on~

in a paradise tllat makes me til ink of

- ShtJfdon K.,Hinlecki
- Billy AltmMJ

I·..- 1-.n to Hollywood,
l'vtl l»ttn to R«&lt;wood.
I croiii«J the ~an for a he~~rt of!Ptd.
r..- b«m in my mind, Its well a fine lintt
Th•t kMJpl mfl lt8111"Chfng for 11 MMt of gold.
And I'm {/fitting old.
His harp playing is good and fits in well with the
acounic and steel guitars. The song itself is effective
in that it's both lively and moving.
Hsrvnt Is a fine album on the whole and
features fresh background harmonies by Crosby,
Stills and Nash on a few cuts. There ate only two
cuts on the album I don't like. "There's a World" is
too dull and lethargic and "Are You Ready For The
Country" has a wishy-washy melody . The latter cut
also has cheap lyrics and just doesn't belong on the
album .

twO.

Love lost, wch a coat, give me filings tll11t don 'r
get lost.
Like 11 coin tllat won't get to$118d,
Rolling home to you."

The lyrics are from "Old Man," a rong from Neil
Young's new album, Hsrvlllt . It's his founh album
and deserves listening to. whether you're into Neil
Young or npt. His music and lyrics are casual and
soft, and his songs are quite relevant. Neil's melodies
(and they are his) have always cast a hypnotic spell
over me , and have helped me regain my state of
mind that I tend to lose from the drab day m and
day out routines.
"Old Man" starts off nioely with delicate finger
picking. The sound of a banjo comes en immediately
after the first chorus and creates a calm, peaceful
atmosphere. The sound of the slide guitar In the
background helps finali ze that country feel ing Neil
Young is trying to create, and it's completed with
James Taylor and Linda Ronstadt providing a solid
background harmony.
"The Needle and the Damage Done'' exhibits

-...

Neil Young's fine mastery of Iynes and acoustic
guitar playing that work together and blend well.
The song is very relevant to what is happening today
as he tells of the world of heroin addiction . On the
bootleg lp, Young Mll/'l 's F1111cy , before doing " The
Needle and the Damage Done" Neil explains how
he's seen heroin entrap talented artists and that
"somewhere in the universe there must be a museum
o f incredible art that never got out because of
herom." The song tells of how he lost his band to
" the needle" after coming to the city. The lyric hint
strongly. too, that one of his close friends has fallen
victim to the needle .
Throughout the song he pj;lys his acoustic guitar
•n a catclly but serious tone. He maintains the same
strum and at the end of the cut he sings : "I've seen
the needle and the damage done / A little pan of it in
everyone/ But every junkie's like a setting sun," and
then ends his playing in 1 dead strum . The ending is
brilliant m conveying the idea of the Iynes.
Neil tries to expenment With a live orchestra on
H•rvest He uses the London Symphony Orchestra en
''There's A World" and " A Man Needs.a Maid ."
..There's A World" 1s dull and boring as Neil and
arranger Jack Nitzsche over use the flute$ in a
monotonous fashion . The song goes nowttere fast.
the kettle drums do not go together at all with the
rest of the arrangement and tend to disturb the
delicate atmosphere intended.
"A Man Needs a Maid" does work, and the
sound of the live orchestra is definitely conducive to
the melody of the song. He begins the sontJ with a
few bars of light piano chords by Nitzsche which set
the mood. Then soft violins sneak mto the
background, and after the first chorus of the song
there is silence. The silence is interrupted qu1etly by
a few soft notes played on chimes which sounds like
d1stant church bells on a dark, snowy night .
You've all probably neard "Heart of Gold," but
for those who haven' t 1t's a song about Nell's travels
'" search for happiness.

Stud•nt R ulh
All See ta $1 .00

with 1.0 .

L-------------·
NOMINATED FOR 8 ACADEMY AWARDSI
COLUMBIA PICTURES
Presenll
A BBS PAOOUOT10N

HELD

OV ER!

Sailin' Shoes Lltde Feat (Warner Bros., BS2600t
When the old Mothers of Invention decided to
call it quits a few years ago , most of the group
splintered off into various endeavors. Ray Collins
went back into the used car business, complete with
bongos in the back. Don Preston retired for the
seventh time (remember his wheelchair on the cover
of We 're Only In It For The Money71. Motorhead
went back to rich girls whose cars he could work on
and Jimmy Carl Black staned his own band featuring
his five year old son . And Zappa, well, it's a rough
busmess and a man's goota eat, right?
Of course, there were a few more. Lowell
George joined the Mothers in their last year of funk .
A great slide player and singer, Zappa did little to
utilize h is talents . So, when things ground to a helt.
Lowell decided to form his own group with Roy
Estrada, original Mother, bass player supreme,
Pachuco falsetto singer and cheeseburger king of
Southern California
They dragged poor Rich Haywafd, drummer,
into their circle of Insanity . but then again, he had
formerly been in the Fraternity of Man with another
Mother, Elliot Ingber, who's now the Winged Eel in
the Captain's band, so who's to say? Add a touch of
the gospel piano gone haywire in the form of Bill
Payne and you've got Little Feat, who have a new
album out called Sailin ' Shoes that I thmk is the best
record of the new year
Little Feat's mus1c1anship IS practically flawless ,
and it's a joy to hear a band of professionals tor a
change in thete days of rip-off rock . George is a
master at slide guitar and is pretty good on harp.
Payne delightfully blends classical, gospel and a little
Jerry Lee int~ his piano figures The rhythm sect10n
provides t~ jazzy elements w1th Estrada and
Hayward qften gomg mto their own off rhythms and
multibeatJ And they all sing well (George uses at
least four different vocal •ntona!lons on the record,
all at just the nght time for just the nght touch) .
But a good group needs good matenal, and here
is where Little Feat's strength lies. Lowell George 1s
a master at songwriting in many different genres. H1s
sens1bilities lie very close to my own, so I can't help
but relate to his songs very strongly The opening
CtJt, which has perhaps unw1sely been chosen for
single release, is "Easy to Shp," and it's a lovely
song. "It's so easy to slip./ It's so easy to fall / and let
your memory fade and do nothing at all . All the love
that you missed, all the people that you can 't recall/
Do they really exist at all."
"Trouble" sounds like a Band song with a b it of
emotion (save Rick Danko) . "Cause your eyes are
tired and your feet are too/ and you wish the world
was as tired as you .I Well I 'II write a letter and I'll
send It away/ and put all the trouble in it you had
today." Accordian by Payne 1s perfect.
There's a new version of "Willing," with a
spoken intro and beautiful steel work by Sneeky
Pete. George is the f~rst wnter s10ce Gram Parsons to
knock me out with country freak songs. I'm glad
they rerecorded it .
There's two boogie numbers, and they're
monsters. "Tripe F.oe Boogie" (boog1e my speakers
away) wa.s writren by Payne and Hayward and its got
great lyric: " I don't dig potato chips, I don't dig
Tons. Tripe my guacamole baby baby, t ripe my
shons ." " Teenage Nervous Breakdown" is about rip
off rock : "unscupulous operators could confuse,
could exploit and deceive the conditional reflex
theories and change the probabilities. It's crass and
racous crackass place with pavlov on the human
race."
Lowell even has an "A Apolitical Blues." in
whicll the hero refuses to talk to chairman Mao on
the telephone . Later, he says "I don't care if you're
John Wayne, I just don' t want to take no calls.'' Ron
Elliot (a p1ece of dead wax 1f you can tell me what
group he was in) plays great guest star guitar on this
one.
I could go on and on quoting and tell1ng you
how each song moves me in a lot of different ways
and directions, but try some Little Feat for yourself
and you'll know why "Tnpe Faoe Boogie" boogies
my sneakers away.

NOW
IN
TH I R 0
MONTH

TONIGHT at 8 :15p.m.

Plaza North
IHt • . f , ILYI. U..IHI

Performance.

Noone.
canres1st
our chid;en wings.
J

They're the Woodshed's newest taste sensation,
mild, medium or hot. Swirl'em around in tangy
blue cheese sauce, and finish the experience with
crispy celery stick!!. Non-stop peanuts are on
the house, and spirits are 50r after 3 P.M. The
Woodshed ... where the kitchen's always open
and the music's always on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North Tonawanda, just over
the Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann.JI'he Woodshed's
open from 11 :30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

1WE WJODH.ttE~

�::~~~~· A~- IAA~IIII ~~~~~~~Oc®~
by Julie Ltpick
SP«trum Am Cr~tlc

Onl! of his students once described New York
poet Kenneth Koch as "a very well-dressed poetry
book walking around in shiny shoes." Outwardly, he
lives up to his reputation; as to that "poetry book "
busmess, et's open to question .
Koch (pronounced as in, ''things go better
wi th ... ") was on campus Thursday afternoon to
discuss his experiences teaching children to write
poetry . He also presented a reading of his own work
that evening. A member of the so-called " New York
school" of poets, a fellowship that .includes such
wri ters as Frank O'Hara and John Ashbery . Koch
teaches at Columbia in addition to his efforts to
revitalize the teaching of poetry in the public
schools. He has published numerous volumes of
verse. a collection of theater-pieces, Bttrrha and
Orher Plays, and a book based on his teaching
expenences, Wishes, Litts, and Dre11111s.

• !

Poetry in schools
It 15 this fast book that provided the basis of
Koch's Mternoon talk . In addetion. hi! presented a
f1lm of h1s work weth a fifth grade class from PS 61
on New York's lower EMt Side. Made in
cooperation with the National Endowment for the
Arts, •t geves us 1 vetw of the poet as conquering
hero to a classroom of kids. " Poetry,'' says Koch, is
too often treated as a "lofty relig1ous subject that
even the teachers were tfraid to touch, let alone kids
that have to go to the bathroom all tht time .. this
religious devotion to poetry meant it wasn 't taught."

Teacher Koch
performs well,
speaks poorly
Koch's approach emphas•zes spontane•tv 1n a
totally free classroom atmosphere . the k1ds are
tlnco uraged 10 be "crazy, stupid and dumb, which
are ch1ldren's words for 1maginat1on " The materials
of poetry are those wh1ch are most fam ,llar 10 the
ch1ldren
not the remote subf•me, but everyday,
" When you're getteng people to create art you have
10 use what's there . You may w1sh they were more
Interested 10 Hercules than Popeve. but why should
they be ?"
The wnt•ng that has come out of
Koch's prOJect has a remarkable v•taf•ty that •s free
from
the hea rts · and - flowers ,
butterscotch -and-butterflies var•etv of poetic
expenence that we have grown to expect from most
classrooms where the gerls write about flowers and
the boys think poetry's just for siss1es. Much of the
success of th•s method derives from Koch's concern
w•th the "secret lives" the students ltve outsede of
school . They are urged to upress their inner
"wishes, lies. and dreams." As Koch says, "kids are

New innovative play
causes pandemonium
Another play about violence opened last week, this one a
Canadian offering at a J'oronto Theater dedicated to puttinq
on .Canadian plays. But Jack Cunningham's See No Evil,
Hear .. at the ·Tarragon, has an interesting twist and a
couple of extra dimensions.

L----------------------'
concerned with the same th•ngs I am, only more
intensely."
Clever coyness
More successfully, too, i1n a certain sense. Koch's
own work - or at le1st that which he choose to
present Thursdey evening - is pretty pros1ic poetry .
Facile, clever , self-consciously straining for the witty
s1de, it lacks incisive fOCU'5 or even fu lly-realized
•mage I! is heady stuff. mind·made As evidence of
this sort of Intellectual scrabble game, Koch read h1s
parody. "Variations on a Tlheme by William Carlos
Williams."
Moving from par&amp;iy to pornography, he read a
long· winded remake of Ovid's Amores, a
sado-masochesuc manual to sexual absurdities
prefaced and epilogued by ClOpious apologies to the
(especially fem1te element c•f the) audience. It was
amusing, but harmless. tf the poem had been
genuinely offenstve, or 1f he hadn't tried so hard to
smooth the untroubled waters of his audience. it
might have been more .nt•eresting. Or if he had
semply done a better job of editing. After all, even
sadomasoctust•c fantasies can get boring,
Creativity vs. control
Boredom can. under certam cercumstances,
become an art form . Ted1um rs rnexcusable. And
Koch ' s f rn a I number, a liberetto from an
as-yet uncomposed opera, '''A Change of Hearts.' '
was tedious. Comm1ss•oned and subsl!quently
re,ected by the Met. the cast of characters "'cludes a
campus radical, h1s girffnend, the college president
(sound familiar so far ?), and (here's the rub) a
worfd·famous heart surgeon patterned roughly after
Or Barnard . Very roughly .
It 1s as teacher that Kenneth Koch appears most
successful. He has an abilitY' to generate a genuine
enthusiasm for poetry . h1s !&gt;tudents are excited by
the P&lt;mibilitv of makmg thengs - poems - out of
the materials of language. The afternoon
presentation, with its emphasis on creative teaching,
had an energy and exuberanc::e that was m•ssing from
the evening performance As one of his young
students expressed it, smilin1JIY , "all you have to do
is think of something crazy tt) write a poem ."

_____________

For one thing, author action. These elements are put
Cunningham has not just written together impressively by the
another play about violence, but a director, Brian Meeson but they
play about plays about violtaoe - can be bewildering.
Perhaps this is so because these
and about the portrayal of
violence for audience mixed media dimensions are not
consumption in general, whether familiar to us on the stage (though
as fact or as fiction . One of the they are In film,). Perhaps because
banners in the tabloid program the author and director set about
(and the program is a bit to bewilder the audltnoe; that •s.
unsettling itself) reads, "They to make them lose control
Bectme What They Beheld." The (rational control, that is) over
aim of the play is to show how what they are seeing, by making 1t
this works, and in doing so, to unintelligible to them, so as to
attack the most cherished dogma enhance a certam dramat•c
of the media, the doctrine that impact. It certainly was the case
the spectator is entirely d ifferent that, although bewildered du ring
much of the performance, I was
from the Plrticipant.
stunned
at the end
Nothing seems more obvious to
a naive mind than that fans are
not players, that spectators are Dramatic innontion
The fa st hypothes•s fits w•th
not participants, that cameras
another
difficult feature of the
only record the violence and do
not cause it, and so on But no play, the tack of both plot line
idea needs more urgently to be and character development. The
scenes in the first act could be
challenged.
played in any order. with no loss
or gain in intelligibility . It is only
Mental perception
The edea is based on e Humean in the second act that a line
view of perception, as images finally emerges and the play
impressed on a passive mind - as moves to a dramat ic conclusion
1f the mind were an i nanirrn~te (The play does not end up in the
ledger unable to reject or modify air - not by any means. I
The characters lack character.
whatever data might be given to it
by outside forces . In fact the they do not develop into real
conJrary seems to be the case : people , because their
that it requires the energy of the communication and .nteraction •s
perceiver to organize a perception, always tbortive. It is not just that
and that there are not even any they do not succeed en what they
data until there is some such are attempting, but that we are
not even sure what they are
organization.
The persistence of the idea that attempting - ttley are that bad at
perception is purely pass•ve expressing themselves Th•s lack
reception of data fed the French of character of thl! characters •s
philosopher Oerride to cry out in part of the mood (a most
desperation a few years ego, unsettling mood) that is created
"There never has been any by the vignettes of the ftrst act.
perception." And 11 follows. too ,
So the difficultees of the play
if t he mind must actevely do not seem to be •nc•dental
contribute its own energy in order difficulties that could be ironed
to see anything, that watching out by extra rehearsalss. (Some·
trash is not so innocent as the may be hke that , for I realized
media people would have it - for afterwards that there are some
the direction 1n wh•ch a person good fines I d•d not get at the
expends his energy determ1nes time.) They are •nstead due to
what he is and what he becomes. expenment and Innovation en
The other thing that must be dramatic form . No one should
said about the play es that it is not pack himself otf to the Tarragon
easy theater. This is partly this month expecting to be
because the form is not pleasantly entertained, but there
conventional. It is a mixed media is an interesting eveneng for those
productton. with powerful who are concerned about violence
electronic music, closed circuit and the media and who like to put
television that sometimes gives a a bit of their own effort and
second presentation of the stage •ntellect mto the" play1J()ing.
actton and a slide show that at
times competes with the stage
- Newton GIII'Vf!r

m
_u
_d
~
r_
a_
n~i~
n~
to
~
th
~e
-r~
iv_
e_
r

______

there was nothing to trap the rain
\

there was a forest.fire

AMHERST
,,_ MAIN Sf. 11..J&amp;U

se

'-----·- -someone was careless with fire.- - -- ·

�~omeo

and Juliet'

'1'HE PLEASURE OF VONNEGUT IS YOURS!"
-~&gt;fTH atiST,

An unimaginative program

H-

Yo.-.,...,..._

-

bv Elliot krieger
Sp«trum ThNter Critic

Romeo and Juliet is not a play
that need be re-interpreted for
every age. It is perhaps the most
straight-forward of all of the
Shakes pea rian tragedies .
Certainly. it is the most widely
known of all of Shakespeare's
works - the most often referred
to (if not quoted). the most often
filmed (if not staged) .
So. he who wishes to stage
RomBO and Juliet must be aware
that his audience is familiar with
the play . In fact, they have
probably already been drained
and bedazzled by film adaptations
of the play (West Side Story and
Zeffrelli's neo·Shakespeare). The
knowledgeable audience can be 1
great advantage for the director of
one of the more complex
tragedies, but here, with so little
opportunity for interpretation,
directors usually either strive for
false effect or e lse settle down to
a fairly ordinary reading through
of th is highly poetic drama.
Rationalization
Th1s month Studio Arena
Theater is presenting a fairly
ordinary . totally unimaginative
production of Romeo snd Juliet .
The very reasons stated above.
wtuch I would hope would be
enough to discour~~ge regionel
theaters from mounting full-scale
productions of this. pley. are the
reasons t hat lead small theaters
throughout the country to
produce this pley time end again .
True, they think, we will do
nothing great with it, but we can't
go too wrong, we will offend no
one. we should include one
class1c, we can import a "star"
from New York, I prithee perdon
me . .
The best that can be said about
Stud1o Arena's production is that
1t 1s uneven. The director, Warren
Enters, shows no evidence here of
really caring about the play one
way or the other - the players
read through their partr, he who
speaks moves, the others stand
about, wooden. For a play of
gunpowder. it looks very tame,

TOHIGHT
7:10&amp; . .. . ,,..
SAT. t.IUM.
~-1·10 '""

t
t
t
t

Film Committee
presents
Friday &amp; Sunday
March 10 &amp; 12

JOE
more like Gunpowder 1rea.
Kristoffer Tabori pllays Romeo
as a gangling awkward youth , I
think intentionally . His dive to
the floor-boards with "But soft. w
what light . . . " is rather funny,
wooden in the more ltiterel sense .
When he speeks quickly, his voice
sounds uncannily Iitke Hubert
Humphrey's. Susen Sharkey plays
Juliet IS a love-c:rossed starlet. Her
performance has neither validity
nor consistency .
David ~lmey as Mercutio,
however. is quite livelv, end in his
death speech he is nearly brillient.
Birney seems to be ,a very fine
co mi c actor, with great
co-ordination and vocnl flexibility
- It is the ability to become
suddenly deathly Sltrious that
determines the quality of a comic
actor (and makes the role of
Mercutio so rewarding for a really
good one). Armand Assante, Who
looks a little like Bob !Kaufman of
the Buffalo Braves. plays Tybalt
as a stage-villain and maintains a
kind of absurb digt1ity which
nicely complements Mercutio's
bravura .

This production seems, finally.
more concerned with the comic
aspects than with the tragic.
Although some of the sight gags
do work rather well, most of the
comic scenes are slow and poorly
paced . The comedy . es done here.
seems more ridicule and auelty
than satire or wit. Certainly.
Enters did not try to conceive of
how the comic scenes relate to
and e lucidate the tragic scenes.
His is a n ineteenth century
sensibility - comedy is no more
to h im than a relief.
It would be a relief to me 1f
somewhere there would be an
intelligent production of Romeo
•nd Juliet, one that would
consider the differences between
the title characters, or the
relationships between the two
social classes shown as central
thematically . Studio Arena's
production is not aware of these
themes, of any themes. It is a
non-provocative, almost dutiful,
production. which deserves no
more attention than it pays to its
material.

protest. It .runes a bove
the rest • Ita traditio lUll
folk quality is supab"

- N.Y. Times

t

't
''
t
'

Siiturday
March 11

TRADER
HORNEE

't

"One of the finat fUms I
haft eyer seen. It knockJ

'

you riJht out of your aat.
I recommend this to 11.1

'

people who are et least

aliJhdy imbalanced ...
- Joe Fernlxu:her

CONFERENCE THIEATRE

Time """ Tid&lt;eb at Nootoo Hall Tid&lt;et om..

~

''
'

.....-~ ...-~ ..--"'" Olv. of SliD Boerd I, ,,.._... ....._._~

-m~tec:•

For the boogie

The liUAB CoffMhouse Committee pretents, in
concert, the Incompatible John L• Hooker. A
nartion1llly renowned guitarist a nd singer, Hooker will
..,.,_. in
Norton Hell First Floor Coffeehouse
on Sunday evening. Tim• and tJckets at the Norton
HMI tic:ket office.

the

�.,

tal

•

•

• ...,

'The Last Picture Show'

Movie is reconstruction tJ/
an era ofsimple intWcence

- ..

by Keith Shendalow
S,.ctrum Film Crmc

style that does not perven real emotions into ersatz
emotionality .

Rarely dows an American film critiC go on to
make a f ilm of h1s own, whether it be because of
lac k of talent (those who can, do; those who can't,
become critics). lazmess, or the hes1tat1on to submit
o neself to the brutal critical invective of one's
colleagues. Peter Bogdanovich is one critic who has
made the crossover. and his second directorial
production. ThtJ Last Pic ture Show, IS t he best
American film released 10 197 1.

Unadorned style
Th1s sw le works in Th• Lsst Picture Show , but
1t can be taken too far . There is much m new,
ex p erime ntal films that is worthwhile and
mnovat1ve: The camera e~1n and should be utilized to
express d ifferent modes e&gt;f reality and point-of-view
fo r instance . The power of the camera Is shown
madvertently in Th11 LIJI·t Pictvre Show in the one
zoom shot of the film (done because of technical
necessity rather than out of artistic expression) when
Sonny looks across the s'lreet towards the scene of a
traffic accident, and in ·the shot suddenly sees the
broom that his simple-minded friend Billy is never
without lying in the gutter. The shot is so powerful
partly because it is the cmly zoom shot in the film .
The shot shows the affeC'tiveness of at least one form
of " t11ck .. photography .

Based on the novel of the same name, wntten
by Larry Mc Mu rtry (who collaborated with
Bogdanov1ch on the screenplay), t he film focuses on
a small town m Texas in the early 1950's. The town
(Anarene, pop. 1131) is a gray. barren stretch of flat
land that 1s 10 Its death throes. The one-block
busmess sect1on cons1sts ostens1bly of a pool hall, an
all·n1ght cafe and a picture show, all owned by one
man. Sam the L1on. Sam's personage stirs up
countless vis1ons of those good , brave men of old
weste rn movies (many of which Ben Johnson, who
plays Sam , starred m)
s~ll · town

Film freak poll
Film freaks and list freaks unite! Organize to create the most
stupendous (and by the way o nly) f ilm survey this newspaper and
University has ever seen. Work off that excess libidinal energy that
fires your souls and gives uniqueness to your character. Fill in the
ballot below and list (in order of preference) your choices for the
ten best f ilms of all time, everywhere.
Think back, fr iends. What movies in your near or distant past
really worked their magic on the aesthetic side of your nature, held
you enraptured in the dim light of the movie theater or the grey
sheen of your TV screen? Wh ich f ilms met the force of you r critical
faculties and survived? Which films will live in your memory
forever ?
•
When you have asked yourself these highly pertinent questions
and answered them to your own satisfaction , fill in the ballot
below and return it (or mail it) to The Spectrum office, Room 355
Norton Hall. Deadline is Friday , March 10. The results of the poll
will be published in the March 17 issue of The SptH:trum.

,.__________________________________________________

2._______________________________________
3.___________________________________
4 .__________________________________________

6.___________________________________
6._______________________________________

7 .________________________________________
8.______________________________________
9 __________________________________________
10. _________________________________________

sexuality

The mam character 1s Sonny Crawford, a h1gh
school sen1or wuh somewhat of a rud1mentary moral
consc1ence (somethmg rare 10 Te xds). The film
follows him through h1s many sexual adventures,
begmn1ng woth Charlene Ouggs (who lets h1m have
h1s way w oth her ahove the wa•st). then Ruth Popl)(&gt; r
(the 40 year old w 1fe ol the short. fat , haory , ~weatv
cretonous football coach ) then Jacy Farrow (the
sex oest g11l 111 town. who was a master ot sexual
man1pulatoon), mt~n back to Ruth Popper . The tilm ,
1f 11 os "about" any thong. is about Sonny ·s leap from
adolescence ro manhood, seen 1n the m1fleu of h1s
homerown
The mam attract1on os the evocation o f rhe t1me
penod in the Southwest Everythmg looks and feels
(and almost ~mellsl l1ke 1950's Texas . The 1ncred1ble
drabness of the settong 1s accentuated by the use o f
black·and·white ftlm rather than color film (the f1rst
Hollywood l olm to do that since In Cold Blood) . All
cultural artofacts, commerc1al products and objects
d'art are from the perood There IS no soundtrack
mus1c, but countless country songs (too many 1n th1s
New Yorker's opmion) are played over the radio .
Port1ons of TV shows from that era are shown
(one scene shows I m09ene Coca and Sid Caesar) . The
p1cture show sho ws such t.lms as The Father of the
8flde and Red Rwer , w1th posters for The Thing and
S/Jnds of lwo Jfms (these films no doubt because of
Bogdanov1ch's au teurost1c preferences)

Golden-age film
The plotllne conce ntrate s on Sonny's
coming-of-age, w1th Sidesteps 1nto other aspects of
the town and 1ts people (Jacy Farrow as a product of
the social-sexual attitudes of her parents, the
preacher's son's attempted child molestation) . But
the story has no symbolic meanings, and the real
interest of the film and its director is the
reconstruction of the specific time period and the
place. That reconstruction is both artful and
thoroughly enjoyable.

-.

Bogdanov ich 's film style is unique and
~nificant . As do other IIU~Ur critics, Bogdanovich
worships Hollywood, and doesn't view the lack of
personal freedom inherent in a Hollywood
production a hampering the director's wtirtic
uptW~ion. This idoliution of· _,other liD' (whtt(l
fiollyW90Cf was in its heyday) te~s Bogdanovich to
reject ~r\Y reCllnt trends in filnftechnique . Thus he
..-s dMJ) focus, no n"le1c shots, no flashbacks, etc.
He presents the story in a straightforward, innocent

Most ot the I lim IS lifted nght out o f
M,c:Murtry's novel (h1s ot her novel, Horst~man , Pass
Bv. was made 1nto the film Hud in 1962) and it was
very wise for Bogdanovich to use McMurtry in
working out t he screenplay , fo r McMurt rY (besides
be1ng comfortable with h1s own material I has a fine
story tellmg sense and an ear for funny and " true"
d1alogue
The cast
The act1ng was generally superio r. with a few
outstanding performan~!s The fact that no really
b1g film star was 1n the film added much to its
cred1b1lity . Especially good were l';vbill Shepherd as
Jacy, Ellen Burstyn as Jacy's se)(y mom, and Cloris
Leachman as Ruth Popper. Timothy Bottoms
successfully made Sonny into the innooent, basically
" good" boy he was supposed to be, but somehow I
cannot get enthusiastic albout his performance.
Bogdanovich is 32 years old, and his next
p1cture will be released later this month. He is
extremely talented, and! extremely aensitive to the
former successes and failures of film technique (at
times his style is reminisoent of both Welles and
H itchcock). However, in order to make a
contribution to the ant of film that benefits his
talent, he must break away from his irrational
antegonism toward experimentation. This IS the o nly
sense in which Bogdanovlch is a "limited" film
maker.
Th• Lnt Pictu,_ Show (which has been
nominated for eight J11cademy Awards, including
Best Pi~ure, Best Oirec1tor, Best Scret~nplay) is now
showind at the Boulevard Mall Cinema I I.

- Pandor~

Just in caM you missed him,
here's a picture of Dave Van
Ront(. who en.. rtained at the
UUAB Coffaehou• last weekend.
Though one lhow was ruined by
Dave ' s unfortunate drinking
habits, it still was an enjoyable
waekend with the big folksinger.

Dme von Ronk

19th WEEKI
LAST 2 WEEKS I

~~~y
,, I
••• ~'

II

'·M.

aT~RRINa

Lla Mlnnefll
Micall•el Yerk--Joel arey

�Dr. Gibson compares health
systems of U.S. and China

Varioua ideu o f health care in
China and the United States wu
presented by Dr• .(Jeoffry Gibson,
a joint profeaor with State
University of Buffalo's Socioloay
Department and Medical School.
Hil lecture wu entitled "Chinese
M!dft:aJ Practice and the Thoughu
of Chairman Mao."
The main contrut between
health systems, accordina to Dr.
Gibson, falls on the continum,
with ideolo«Y on the far left and
professionalism o n the extreme
right. When a country's health
care system lean s toward
ideology, it iJ the values of the
people, the consumers, who
decide how to control the field.
On the right, the 1 system is
cont ro Ued by professionals who
make deciSions u to what to &amp;ive
the consumers. China is far to the
left on the scale and the U.S . is far
nghl. Dr. Gibson believes we are
moVln&amp; slowly to the left.

Peace plan denounced

reso~rtiJ\to

by Paul K.rdlbiS

said that the U.S. wu
an intensified air war, bop· to
cawe IUch muaive destruction of
Nixon's Ei&amp;Jtt Point Peace P11n lives and country, that the
was denounced by the Wo rld lndocll.inese would surrender.
As se mbly for Peace and
After the four Indochinese
Independence of the Peoples of deleptions, the U.S. deleption
I nd ochi na . M -.jor resolution• received the putest attention.
pledged fuU support to the Seven Special attention wu given when
Po int Pe ace Plan of the they mapped out the sprinJ
Pr ovisional Revolutionary anti-war activities being planned
Government for South V1etnam in the U.S. The laraest part of the
(PRG), and pledsed to oraamz.e U.S . deleption was composed of
world-wide demonstrations th1is people active in varioUJ member
sprins to demand a total U.S . organizations of the People's
withdrawal from all Indochina .
Coalitio n for Peace and Justice
Delesa tes , numbering 120(), (PCPJ).
from 84 countries around the
w or1d. gathered in Versaille11, f'tanniq protellb
France on Feb. 11 - 15, t•o
Sidney Peck, a coordinator for
den o u n c e co nt inued U S.
the PCPJ and a spokesman at the
aggression in Indochina.
assembly, presented the proposals
As the largest conference o•f
of the PCPJ which urge a link-up
wo rld-wtde opposition to U s;
o f anti-war demonstrations in the
aggression in lndochma was
U S
With the internatio nal
beginnina, U.S bombers were
m o vem e nts . The assembly
carryi ng out the1r heav~oest
adopted a proaram of
bombing ra1ds 1n the last s1x
mtemattonaJ anti-war protest for
months. Chief U S neaottator to:&gt;
a sue-week penod this sprina, with
the P ans Peace taJks, WtlJ1aoo
specific demonstrations on April I
Poner, denounced the World
(to protest the Harrisbura 8 and
Assembly as "the mtroduct1on of
Anaela DaVlS tnals), April 15
a horde of commumst-controlled (war-tax resistance day), April 22
agitators to tlw area for th•e
(NPAC's mass anti-war marches),
purpose of harassma our efforts to
and Ma y 12 or 13 (anti-war,
make peace " Porter then
pro-labor marches).
temporanUy cancelled the Pans
Another major U.S speaker
Peace talks.
wu AI Hubbard, black leader of
the V1etnam Veterans Against the
Pm.ing few peace
Four maJOr reports wer1~ War Hu bbard said that Nixon is
presented by the delegations frol\l changms the taches tn Indochina
North and South V1etnam , Lao·s from us tn g U .S. troops to
and Cambodia. T he lndochmes1! developrng the automated war .
and the assembly a..~ a whole , " Machines ltillina aooks," was an
rejected Nixon's Er&amp;ht Pomt Peac•e example he cited . ThlS is why the
Plan as a means to dece1ve the U.S bombin&amp; Nds have esulated,
world 's people into thinking and are nown with the aid of the
"electronic battlefield ."
Nixon was makmg peace
The assembly endol"'ed PRO's
The "electronic battlefield..
Seven Potnt Peace Plan as the only wu further expllllled by Fred
just peace in lndochrna It w11s Branfman, dtrector of Project Air
specified that the two mo~;t War He sa1d this 111cludes using
tmponant pomts 1n th1s pion to mlflrons of electric sensors
wh1ch the US. must atldreu ~altered over the countrySJde to
themselve~&gt; are I) for the US to
deted the presence of any uvmg
set the prec1se date when all US . th1ng (by real:tlnJ to body
troops and equipment w11l bt· temperatures and persp~rat1on),
Withdrawn from all of l ndoch1nar and by scndmg Slgnals of the
and 2) that the li .S must lo~dtlon to an c:lectronrc receptor
Withdraw aJI support from th~· tn ll S headquarters Then U.S .
Thleu d1ctatoro;hrp, and all other bombers are sent o ut to bomb the
U S
supported puppet particular area. regardless of who
governmen ts. mclud1ng the: Lon tS there As the U S. is curytng on
Not re8Jme
the "elect ronll a1r war," 10 secret,
Minister Pansth, ftllm the Nixon contmues to announce
Royal Government of Natwnal further troop withdrawals to
Union of Cambodra (llbe ratron appease the American people and
government) , stressed that his theu desrres for peace, he added .
government was recogn1.z.ed by 28
As the World Assembly for
states
The World Assembly
potSsed a resolut1on calling on all Pea ce closed. 70,000 people
cou ntnes t o recog nrze the marched Ill Pans to express their
liberation government , and cease soltdanty w1th the assembly and
all support to the CIA supported 1ts resolutions
Sp«tnlm Stllf!Repon~r

Professional ft . bumanistk
Three reasons for our tnabwty
to penetrate health care w1th
order to serve the people shole
rdeolo&amp;Y are I )interest croups heanedly.
cannot swina enou&amp;h power to
Dr. Gibson read an excerpt
chanse thinp; 2)wlde areas of
health care fall into professional from the operation of a pc:.uant
hands; and 3)we have no woman who bad a pelvic tumor.
government control in our health. C' on t inuaUy, the people read
Because of tbe absence of tbcae quotes from Mac•, which is to help
factors in China, their health care doctors overco11ne their fai1inp
hu more tocial contro l where and keep them motivated and
services are more a "riaht, rather encouraaed. The: excerpt stated,
the operatio n wllS successful even
than a priviJqe."
Naturally, Chairman Mao has a though the d&lt;&gt;octors themselves
great deal to do with the were vuy worried at times.
development of C hina's health
care system. The Chinese have Deprofasion.tW~ lnd demystify
two areu of concentration for
Dr. Gibson !laid , the United
Improveme nt
an i n creased States is moving in the left
emphasis on treatina and curina because of the increase of free
everday diSeases and foUowtnathe cliniao which am governed more
of Chairman Mao in
the neiahborboOod wo rken attd

- SPECIAL HOLIDAY SERVICE -

LET US BE

YOUR WHEE:LS.

Direct trom Qll\pus to New York City PONYA .
Minimum groups of 32 or more will be taken to other
N.Y.C. area locations.
Return on any regular sdledule or a.s a ~wup . - All
for the low low fare of 0 N L Y $22.55 .a Yving of $1
March 29, 30 &amp; 31st
•BUSES LEAVE DIRECT FROM SUNY/ABCAMPUS
Ken Slrlin, campus~~ at
KENSIRUN
SUNY/AB, can get you out
CAMPUS A,GENT
of town in a hurry on
116 MARION RD.
special or regular schedules
Phone 834)-4169
with oonnections to all

AmeriCL

GO
GREYHOUI'~D
~ ... and leave the driving to us.
to

\\brld Assembly

rea seat!

-tn&lt;:Niec.e

less by professionals. Patient
advocates help in the contro l of
t he clinica, by aidin&amp; the patient
1n his understandina of the
situat,aon, &amp;ivina advice about
personal background history
They also accompany people to
the hospitals, for work thilt may
not be completed in the clink.
The Chinese were taking two
bi&amp; steps in chanain&amp; their med1cal
services by deprofeiiSionaliting
and de-mystlfyina medicine, Dr.
Gibson. By the addition of the
readinp of Chairman Mao, new
trends and 1deu are entering into
health care.
In the discussion that followed,
cenaan views were brought fonh .
Many felt that comparing the two
systems was very difficult due to
aU our cuJturaJ differences wh.ich
mclude separate sets of priorities
and econom1cs. One student felt
that the trouble w1th our health
care was due to our cap1tahst
system as opposed to China's
commu nism Where the tme
between Onental ttunlung and
cornmun1sm was drawn was a
quest1on also brought up
It wa s belrcved, when
d1scuss1ng health ca r ~. we must
dec rde what we want and how we
are goins to so about getting 11
We must learn to prevent ill health
before it happens and take a stand
on the purposes of rnedr crne. We
must determme tf It is prrmarily
concerned w1th research and
speC ialization or w1th drrect
dealings with people.
Dr. G1bson works w1th the
Lackawanna Free C ltntc and has
1nformat1on on other areas where
students can research or volunteer
to see what lS go1ng on m our own
health care systems. I f rnterested
to help now, or rn the summer,
call Dr G1bson at 83 1-1289

Lon Not drctatorsh1p
Other lndoctunese delcsat1ons
reported that the U.S mt11tary
posrt1on was very w~ak , both
milrtarilly and polrtu.ally They

OFFICE OF STUDENT RIGHTS
Appltcotions now being accepted for

1 ) This
students)

s ummer ' s

Judiciv-y(undergraduate

2) The Lepl Aid Clinic Proposal h~ passed and
we now need "qualified'' persons applying for
positions on the suff who will be willing to help
set up the Clinic this summer:
1. Director
2. Assisunt Director-Community Relations
3. Asslsunt Director-Professional Services
4. AuisUnt Director-Public Relations
S. ~ssisunt Director-Eduation.tl Program
Contact Andy Kossover, 205 Norton, or (home
phone) 835-1725 for more Information.

Th1s spnng, many countnes
around the world will be
organ1zrng demonstrations in
coo rd1nat1on w1th anti-war
dem ons trati Ons 10 the U.S.
Though the World Assembly for
Peace was vu1ually tgnored by the
mass media 10 the US .• America
will probably hear, within the
next few months, the growins
world-w1de demand that the U.S .
totally Withdraw from Indochina.

Come and meet

JOE CRANGLE
at the
MHERST DEMOCRAT/

- CLU B
Cocktail party
Sunday, March 12

5:00 - 7 :00p.m .
Mr. Anthony's

7800 Transit Rd.
S.S .00 - laduct.. Driab ud Food

Friday, 10 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Pafle seventeen

�Monotony is stigma of bus driving
• union i.s afraid to confront lhe employers and we're made
to suffer. Meanwhile the equipment is fautty and nothing
is being done about it."' Thus, thert grows among bus
We have all felt the (ah, pain) Coney Island drivers widespread disoo:ntentment and potentiaUy strong
scooter-ride-like effects of a jostling bus ride. We are aJJ anger.
acquainted with the Ridge Lea syndrome and have
Tony, a six year veteran of the Ridge Lea route, also
woefuUy compained about the nausea it somehow
projected the same dc!eply imbedded disillusionment
invariably induces.
characteristic of most bus drivers. He said : "The union has
With each cataclysmic Jerk, heads are thrown into a not spoken up for the dtriver. All it seems to know how to
state of whirlwind confusion and psycholog.ical imbalance. do 1s to collect our dues. The job sure gets monotonous
The jarring jalopy seems to generate hyperactive digestive after moe or ten bours with no breaks. I bring a lunch bag
systems and caJJoused derrieres. Pity, then Lhe defenseless with me and only if I'm making good time can I run in for
individual whose daily routine must consist of crossing a container of coffee."
over a pot-hole laden, automobile rifed , nearly glacial road,
By contrast, Bill, another Ridge Lea regular, did not
namely, the one leading to and from Ridge Lea.
voice any strong objections except a desire to see the
Wallowmg in self pity about overturned insides has
instllutton of a few more: breaks. His major criticisms were
left us very little time to cons1der the man who cautiously
with those who frequent the. buses, whether it be to Ridge
sits behmd the wheel at a job which carries with it a lea, Allenhurst or the shush-capped trills of K1ssing Bndge.
meager saluy , long hours and a monumental
responsibility.
lnconsidtrate and unecol•~ ridus
For th1s passenger, the hus nde s1gn1fied sometlung
more than just a routine, Impersonal )aunt. Involved was
He explained that a majority of riders are largely
an element of humanness and a dnving curwsity lo explu1e unaware ol the bu~ dnvc:r's demandtng responsibility and
the man for whom monotony 1s rampant and boredom as a result d1splay motley respect and ~:uurtesy . l-Ie ~aid ,
becomes an accepted phenomenon
however, that "thl\ prt:~ent s nu real problem. I like the
k1ds
except when they were sneaktng the1r d u [tl&gt; abnatd "
Confronted hy pressured studenb who do 11111 leave
Tht~
prtlll t(t' had tu be quu. kly te rm inated It 'eemctJ tht'
belund them the hustle ami bustk ol J New Yurk Ct ty
envmmmenl and plagued by whJ t Wit h .t long \ tr Ci t h of lings were h.IVIng conside rahle dtff ttu lt y tn dlllcrcntta 1111g
the 1magmat1on ~:a n he ~:ailed 1\IJd,, the b u ~ dnve r ' 11111 " ht: tv.ec u a IHb and a tlrl! hyd rant ;~ntl hu' rtden. wt'rt'
a Ia bo 11 o u~ one , rcqutrmg nlll\1J O 1 a le11 nc"' .tilt! 'uh,l•qucntly , ulte un ~ the e ffeu ~
steel-made nerves. lie mu ~ l follow J ha rrowmgly 1rgh1
S tudent ~ crt'a te S( •rnc ha vo~ tor Tony who objectt'd
schedule wh1ch offer s few re spit e~. tn.sklng the ,,,h ~en•
to
1
hr
u , lop pi ness and I IIH.:on ~1dcra t100, c~pec rally " when
ltke- an e nd uro.~n~{' ~ on te\ 1 a ~ tht! day draw ' to 3 d u~
they r ut thetr muddy fee t ou' the \C al\ . " Ml1rc spet tfit ally .
ltc rtklt cd li&gt; those people (and 11 appcaretJ he used the
Teeming with disadvantages
Seemg h1s w 1 11~ a' lacking ' uh\ tanll.sl '-"mpcll,,ttton tctut lull\dy ) wh1&gt; are in the hab1t of depusttmg va negated
and tecm1ng with disad va ntage ~. o11c llu' dttVet ..atu " fhc rest due 1 c candy wrappers, gum , 17u! Sf&gt;(•ctrum, }ugurt
by RoD SandberJ
S!Hctrom Jt«ff Jt'rltu

containers, crumpled tissues and a host of other cast off
matter, either over, under or into the most easily acoessible
areas. "Yes, I'm willing to go to the back of the bus and
pick up the junk that's left behind," explained Tony, ''but
not to the point where It means my playing janitor."
Ironic Lhat such practice is manifest among a generatiqn so
strongly committed to ecology .
However, inasmuch as It is not the intention of this
article to leave students walking away feeling dejected and
debased (heaven forfend!) , let it be known that there were
indeed positive comments as well. Allenhurst bus driver,
Howie, for one, can fin d little reason to complain. He did
recall , though, one incident when students boarded the bus
and proceeded to ignore the "No Smoking" sign in the
bygone tradition of this University's Berkley ian radicalism .
In situations like these, Howie said he would not hesitate
to eject those responsible from Lhe bus. It is a quick trek
to Allenhurst where the busts have been few and far
between. He felt , those individuals who cannot exercise a
little self-&lt;;Ontrol deser~e to be thrown off the bus.
Hackneyed and humdrum
Indeed , human nature dictates that when things.
~uch a~ campus bus ride~ . become hackneyed and
humdrum , there will emerge a fervent desire to invent or
adopt some mean' by which the mundane becomes either
enhanced or forgotten A bus ride for a student singul:uly
denotes stmply ;~n o tha fa cet ul Untverslly entrapment,
namely , that whJCh " lethargically a~ce ph:d rather Lhan
dtltvely pur , ued
It ts not suggested that the bus ride be mterpreted as
an expcnence of immeasurable spmtual worth Rather, 11
•~ hopen that those students, hke mysell , who view the
ru.le solely a~ a stomach shaker upper , begtn to display the
due cuns1derat ion unquestionably warr an tell to the man
who, ft&gt;r the most part , remams identifiable only frurn the
bad• l'f lm head

Now that you can fly to Euarope for peanuts,

here's how little you shell o~ut to get around:
$130 for 1Wo Months of unllmltted rail travel In
Austria, Belgium, Denmark,France,Gennany,,Holland, Italy, Luxembourg,
Norway,Portugai,Spaln,Swedeln, Switzerland.

.---------...
I TOMORROW NITE!
I B I l L. Y J 0 E l
I
tickets 50¢
I
Fillmore Room
·
...

________ _,

CALLINC ALL C IRLS! ITS

HINA MATSURI

pean trains have some other advantages for you. They
take you from city center to city center, so you don't have
to hassle airports . And the stations are helpful homes
away from home, with Pictograms that give you information in the universal language of signs, and dining rooms,
bookstores and other helpful facilities.
No~. here's the catch. You can't get your
Student-Ratlpass or the regular First Class Eurailpass in
Europe-y1ou have to get them before you leave the country So see your Travel Agent soon. Meanwhile, send In
the coupon for a free folder, complete with railroad map.

--SiTjiiN-i-RiiLPASS-:.-:.~:::.-~::=~:~:~~:~:.-::~~-Eurailpass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
·
Eur•ilpass, Box 90, Lindenhurst, New York 11757.
Please send me your free Eurallpass folder with railroad map. 0 Or )lOur Student-Railpass folder order form . 0
Name_____________________________

__________________________________ 1928

(DOLL t'E!ITIVAL)

• • • ..._ Clio~ Or
G .... AN - I W Te ( ()e _
J).....
, , . . . .0
. . 11•
_
..........
..
,.._

,.rt,.
.......
A---·.._
Of
~..

You shell out $130, and get a Student-Railpass.
All you need is the bread and something to show you're
a bona fide student between 14 and 25.
Our Student-Railpass gives you all that unlimited
rail travel on the 100,000 mile railroad networks of those
13 countries . for two foot-loose months. So with low air
fares and Student-Railpass you've got Europe made.
Our Student-Railpass gets you Second Class
travel on our trains. You'll fif"'d that there's very little
second class about Second Class. Besides being comfortable, clean , fast, and absurdly punctual, the Euro-

I
I
I
I

-

,..

..... , .
-

. .,..,

. . . .n.~

'f

~

.. a.

~

All II• . .

.,.,.,_,......_ ~
c.Mioeaa4~ .oe

0&amp;11 0.

........""c-..
. "'"'
llo , a

--

TSVJIMOTO
OtDICY.U.

.U..-....cJ~I

11" Y••-·~..._
DAILY It .. I • PIU. It .. t • ll!JI. 1-t
-

...._ IL (Ill. It) K-, ..Y.

l-IEMiefTrou»CO.a.M)
Nl :1-UU

Liver and Brown Rice . . S 1.85
alifomia Swinger ....... 1.9
burger Stroganoff .... I .4
............ Small Sirloin Ste
Boneless) ... . .......... 1.45
Chicken Roquefort . . . . . 1.6
f Bourguinon .. . . . . t'.7
. . . . . . . . . 1.3
oice Omelet
round Beef (Organic)
1.45
Petite Filet Mignon . . . .. I .95
egetable Scallops

rown Rice ...... ...... . J.4 5
oast Sesame Chicken .... 1.65
gg Plant Parmesian . ..... 1.75
' and many daily specials

ONE CENT SALE
ON NOWt

BLACKSMITH
SHU
1l7S DUAWARI AVE.

•tAns caw

Pave eighteen . The Spectrum . Friday, 10 March 1972

�1950's remnant

Niagara Universitj : ..
decaying institution

~!llllll".a..'!f!i.'J

·r ·.....

by Butch Murphy

fart-like aroma that begins to
linger at twilight.
While most people consider
Tucked away from the rest of NY's position on the Niagara
the world and situated along the River Gorge as the campus
Niagara River, stands one of the highlight, this writer takes a
last remaining strongholds of the different point of view, and favors
1950 college image. Yes, folks, the little chugging railroad that
Niagara University is alive, not too crosses the campus, as being
well, but alive. For two long years Niagara's outstanding feature .
I resided at this home of Yes, folks, a railroad train, which
conservatism, and aiJ it cost me obviously makes that campus very
was $8000 and my sanity. Niagara unique. I mean a railroad train is
is not only worthlessly expensive, just not the most common thing
11 is also unique in a decaying found on a col!oege campus.
manner.
~
The Niagara campus it If is Social life slump
situated in the middle of 'two
NU is governed by a lovable
bustling metropolises. On the band of religious men known as
right we have Lewiston, which is the Vincentians. While these men
comparable to Amherst, money may be excellent religious people,
and all. On the left we have their talents as administrators are
Niagara Falls, the honeymoon seriously lacking. Never have I
capital of the world, but it should encountered any person or group
be renamed the "world's largest of persons so fearful of change .
ghetto." It seems a shame that a While the rest of the world is
natural resource as unique and moving forward, Niagara stands at
beautiful as Niagara Falls is a rather morbid halt, because of
located in such a dungeon of a the whims of a few men.
City .
Examples of this fact are many .
Surrounding the immediate
Boys and girls live in separate
campus is a number of factories, dorms, and co-ed visitation is
wh1ch have the nasty habit of prohibited at any time. Curfews
spewing out large amounts of are in order for both freshmen
pollution . Observers, who are not and sophomores. Dormitories
familiar with this fact, are have str ingent rules with
undoubtedly awed by the large ridiculous sanctions for any
douds of smoke that literally offenses. Academic requirements
block llllt the sun, and the take in 15 hours of both
Sptctrom Staff Wrlttr

Full range of undergraduate and
graduate courses. special institutes
and workshops. Residence halls
available.
2 sessions:
June 26 - July 29 and
July 31 -Sept. 2
(day and evening).
Phone (516) 299-2431 or mall coupon.
And next time you pass
C. W. Post ... don't.
Come ln.
You'll see one of America's
most beaotlful campuses.

last, and beatinp and muggings
are not uncommon. The number
of bars a Niagara student may
safely visit are about four , the
most popular of these being a
place called the Shed .
Boredom's basketball

Aside from NU's social life,
there remain~ the world of
basketball , and only basketball.
Most students live and die for
their beloved Purple Eagles, the
most famous of these being Calvin
Murphy (no relation to this
writer). Cal was the closest lhjng
to God that ever existed on the
NU campus, and believe me, they
loved him. As far as excitement
goes, Murph had no match. The upper level of the NU
student center houses the
bas ke I b a II ga rnes. They are
complete w1th cheerleaders,
drummers, streamers, signs and
arc known for their toilet paper
barrages. This is the sheet to1Jet
paper. not your st:tndard role,
two -ply, scen ted stuff, and
sometimes (dur1ng really
tmportant games), the barrages
somehow resemble :t December
snowfall. Now. that\ poet1c , and
something you really must see .
One problem brought on by
these TP barrages deals with the
availability of the stuff when it's
needed . Nothmg ~an prove to be
so frustrating as to go m, do your

Pleate send me Summer Seaalons bulletin.

Nug~--------------------------------­
Add~L--------------------------------------Clty·---------------'la••-----"'ztp__________
II vleltlng atiiCient. whlcfl colleOL-----------------------

Dead and dying
When basketball season ends
and brew and money run out , life
slows down to a sleady crawl. At
this lime a new pastime sets in,
and Utat is dorm wrecking. With
the exception of two dorms, lhe
rest should be condemned.
Basically they resemble early
Gothic, interior and exterior.
During these wrecktng periods,
windows are broken, walls are
ripped up, floors are Oooded, fires
are started. and all tl11s is not done
in a revolutionary sense (heaven
forbid), but merely out of
boredom and for k1cks.
If lime and space allowed, 11
would be poss1ble to ramble on
and on about th1s dying
mstitution, but that would be
needless . The pomt is that we here
at SUNYAB have it pretty good,
believe it or not. Every day I hear
anguished cries of " I hate: thls
place," but it could be worse . At
least we have an extent of
freedom and benefits that are not
found on other campuses where
dictatorships rule. If you doubt
this fact, take a short trip north to
Niagara University and see for
yourself. Yes, Niagara University
is alive. Not well, but alive.

1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I
Mod Styles for Guys and Gals

CP

duty and find the TP cupboard
bare. Heaven only knows how
many NU students walked around
with dirty underwear

I'MoTORCVCLEINSURANCEj
~IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE 1
TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS

-------------------------Summer Session Office
C. W. Post Center
Greenvale, L. 1., N.Y. 115-48

philosophy and theology. The
number of courses is limited and
attendance is almost mandatory .
Social life at Niagara is not
much better than the
administrative qualities. There are
two pastimes among students:
drinking and basketball, with the
major empltasis on drinking. Life
at NY is considered unbearable
without bottle in hand . You can
always tell what year a student is
by the size of his beer belly.
Most rooms are well stocked
WJth brew . Schaffers, Maximus
and Bud are the local favorites .
Boones Farm also rates high, and
every once in a while, you &lt;.:orne
across some Southern Comfort or
Black Velvet.
A typ1cal weekend consists of
dnnk1ng, dunkmg and more
dnnking, wtth a few basketball
games thrown in to relieve the
boredom . Weather pcrmtltmg,
there may also be frisbee, football
and baseball, all played wtt h
bottle in hand .
Night life proves to be an
extension of daytime warmup.
Per1odically there arc those
infamous socials with "well
known" bands and about SO kegs
of beer. When socials arc not held,
there 1s always Niagara Falls .
Here. there are three groups nf
people, the townies of N1agara
Falls, Canadians and NY people.
Niagara studen ts rate a definite

Come ulce ttM shirts right off our
becb. S.W. 20% on anything wittt
lhon • -· Hundreds of long
• - ~; 7,000 pain of Betlt,
..l!ldtets to metdt. LMttt.- }aea,
boo1l end .-tt•. Lwt. Levi,
Wnt,.., Campus, La,_ubber,
Mille, etc. Be ''In" - Save Money
- Shop Army-Nevy.

CITY

IU P S T A T E C V C L E I N S 1
1
I
call 694·3100

l-

"A• Your Brok..- About Us"·--'

ALFA ROMEO
*FERRARI
* MASERATI
Sales •Service •Parts
USED CARS

• --BOBCOR-Motor Cars, Ltd.
1974 Eaat (Near Bailey)
834-73SO

Friday, 10 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nineteen

�,

•

'IVe'll help keep you
off the streets!
It's never too late to join The Spectrum. Come to Room 355
Norton Hall anytime day or night - we'll be here.
For more info see :
Jo-Ann Armao - campus
Lynda Teri - feature
Janis Cromer - city
Lynne Traeger - off-campus
or
AI BensQn
Mike Lippmann
Susan Moss

Page twenty . The Spectrum . Friday, 10 March 1972

�A~. radio begins institution of

pseudo-progressive conformity
by Pat Maloney
Spectrum Staff Write-

Sufferers from Acute Donny Osmond Earache
will be pleased to know that their idol can now be
heard from any and all of Buffalo's AM stations. In
the past few months, many radio atations in Buffalo
have been gradually converting to a pseudo-rock
format while attempting to hang on to their old
audiences - and pick up some new, younger
listeners. These o lder stations, WGR, WREN. WEBR,
are now in competition with established rock
stations WKBW and WYSL.
Donny Osmond aired all acrpss the AM band
does not mean rock format, however. It does not
mean that Oint Buehlmann (a WREN standby) will
be Introducing a J . Geils record some morning in the
near future. Unfortunately, it does mean that rock
stations will be going all out and occasionally making
fools of themselves in order to keep their audiences
i11terested .
The increased competition doesn' t only affect
musical programming, but also includes news and
any "public service" that a station may offer. As
program directors decide what will ''entertain" the
audience, they may also be cutting down on other
aspects of their program ming.
'Entertainment'
Ttus five o r six·way competition (including
WNIA) can sometimes create conditions similar to
warfare, where listeners usually don 't win. Last
Aprrl, WYSL began grooming itself as the first
f'Sl'Udv·progressive station in Buffalo; aU through the
'Ptrng, announcers constantly told their audience
that the station would be playing top albums. WYSL
nnw l1as a ··20· 20 Music Survey." This is a top 40 list
r omposed of albums and singles, a situation which rs
llnly J superficial modification from WYSL's format

3-7 AU Cod&lt;tails

Bat
Whiskey

.

LIVE
MUSIC
Wed.-Fri..sat.
(No cover charge}

Bona

Vista

1504 HERTEL
836-8986'

imtros and the like. Sandy Beach, a K8 announcer,
claimed that the statio'! does this "to brighten up
the music." He claimed that radio is an
entertainment medium, and I hope it stays that
way."

Ohaina
One of the most entertaining things about
Buffalo radio is to hear the names station officials
cull each other. This reaches the audience in the
form of programming. Mr. Franklin has the benefit
olr justifiably accusing K..B of resorting to a
"•restricted playlist" for certain hours, while WKBW
alJl charge that WYSL is "homogenized." T he road
is long ..
Both stations are part Qf large chains. WYSL is
o•Nned by the MacLendon Corporation. Its owner,
Gordon MacLendon, was one of the pioneers in Top
40 rock; he has also made some unsuccessful
at tempts to become governor of Tex.as. His voice can
be~ heard several times weeldy in heavy-handed
editorials that have tittle or nothing to do with
WYSL's young audience. Most of the WYSL
an nouncers are hired from other stations in the chain
and Mac Len don 's rule is fairly tight.
Capitol Cities Broadcasting is the owner of KB,
Buffalo's largest staion. Unlike WYSL. KB has a
great deal of autonomy in Its local programming.
Jefferson Kaye, the station's program director. has
bc:en with the station SJncc WYSL began its rock
fo•rmat seven years ago. Some of his ideas (such as
the recently introduced singing editorials) have been
a •welcome change.
Chicken radio
For the most part. programming 1s gcatcd
toward .1 more or less pop/rock format. Even the
''al ternat ive" stations, WPhD, WUFO , WBLK·FM.
nr•e caught up in the same programming mod . About
the only thing that KB and WYSL agree upon is their
common disregard for the new " pop" format that
W•GR, WEBR and WREN have recently instituted .
lk~ch termed it ·•chicken rock ," and other rock
programmers agree. The Donny Osmond, Carrenters,
et.c. format, which may be entertaining for a young
au dience, could well serve to aJienate o lder listeners.
News and public affairs programming are
di'IWOgrad ed rn th iS kind Of homogenized
atmosphere. Mr. Franldin recently cut one rrew~
pn:sentation, Christopher and Company, to two
b madcasts per day in favor of a "more music
philosophy.'' KB, while maintaining a strong news
department, has editorials that say nothing. The
sta1tions · large publicity campaigns for ·•charity•·
(such ventures as March on Hunger) are hype
without educatron
Audience participatron is lacking in huth AM
and PM radio. Now U1at Buffalo is being !.llturated

-

-Eflet)acher

Kore an reci ta l

Sweet sert~nades
The unly olh('r snund ·s th&lt;' sweep
Of easy wind anJ downy flake.
- Robert Frost.
Not o nl y were delicate
snowflak es sounding the lltreets of
Buffalo this weekend. but in a ht
building in downtown Buffr~lo,
sweet mu~it: brightened the dingy
streets.
As a rart of Inte rnational
Month, the Korean Student
Assodation, presented a music
rental , wh.id1 featured soprano
Young Ac Krrn and r1antsl Tae J,.
Kim .
R a I her than presenting all
Korean lllUSI~. the rnaJOrrty or
p1eces on the program were
European, classrc:ul prl·c:cs, hut the
mood ended shortly as a
beautifully piercing note drowned
out the wicked wind frllm
outside. wa~ it possible that even
the eighl-ycar·old ur.:hrn-looking
c hild an front of me, wa~
en c hanted by Ms
Kim ' s
rnclod1ous vou::c?
Absorbed 111 harmOnious
sound , not only d1d the two
women express the music well,
but revealed diStinct personalities
l h rough exprr:ssron. One was
graceful and refined. whde the
other was pranceful and light
Y o u n g A e K 1111 won a
scholarship to the Opuru S\-hool at
Un1versity of Torunt &lt;~ 111 Canada
where she studH':. un&lt;kr the
reknowned hanh" ' •'· louiS
Quilico . She I ) p r nently
performing as Lucia and Adana in
E1isir D'more .
Tae Ja Kim made her first
debut w ith the Korean
Broadcasting Station Orchestra at
the age of 13. She went on to
study piano at the Julliard School
of Music in New York where she
studied with Miechz.yslaw M unz.
Mozart and Chopin dominated
the proaram, accompanied by
•ttree soft Korean songs, The
recitaJ consisted of alternate
performances of opera and piano.
When asked of the emotion felt
when singina Korean songs as
opposed to European pieces,
Young Ae IUm replied : ... feel
very, very sad. The Korean people
are quite sad people, they like sad

A bustling rect:pllon was held
aner the recital at the Lafayette
Hotel. It was here that one first
felt a true ex.change between two
c:ultures,
An excited audience viewer,
1:ompllment in&amp; Tae Ja Kim
uummed her up . "Your fi.naers
Jiust Oy ." A few curious viewers
!learned a fact or two as Ms. Kim
1111emptod to differentiate
between Korean and European
rnusrc:, pointing out the smtp!er
llflelodrc: line rn Korc:.n song.
Vrcwers were puu!cd by why
Young Ae K1m ' avorded using
rrtorc expression during the aria .
S he explained "I should express
something, but in opera rt h.as
hcen taug h t that rt IS not nice
rnov111g oneself so much "
Young Ac Kun'' Interview
dosed wllh a modest plea tha t she
was nor strong enough. "If I
st10uld be an opera singer. I
should be a strong person."
Re..:eption time allowed for a
warm exchange wuh the ~ludents
rt·prescnting the Korean Student
Association (KSA) This ranged
from an attempt on the part of
the treasurer, Chung Kwang Chu,
1&lt;1 teach the Korean alphabet, to
e :~ pl.dinmg the importance of
Korean art as opposed to music.
The ,tnam furu:tion of the
Korean S tud ent Assoc1ataon is to
p1resent a c ultural exchange
bc:tween onenta! and American
students. Kwang Lee, secretary of
the KSA. preferred the Korean
purl of the music performance. ije
sadd · " Well, for me Korean
music: .. . it makes me homesick ."
Kwang-Yil K1m, president of
th.e association, had o ne word to
sum up the performance: "I love
it. ..
I s rock muSic appreciated
a In o n g such adept music
pr:rfo rm ers? Young Ae Kim
gracefully smiled an " I d on't.''
wlhile Tae Ja Kim bubbled an "I
love it."
Snowy niahts in Buffalo need
neil be bare and boring. Take
a dl van t a_,e o f what is being
prese nted through cultural
exchanges. Live a little and learn a
little.

songs."

Friday, 10 Ma:rch 1972. The Spectrum. Page twenty-one

�Ted Lawson projected
as hopefulinntitiomils
"If everyone on our team
wnstlea up to hil potential, we
can fmilh amona the top IS teams
in the nation," predicted Bulls
190-lb. stalwart Ron Brandt. One
or the reasons for that optimiltic:
foreast .Is the succea of Ted
Law10n, the Bulls' 142-lb. 1tar,
who Is one or cfaht Bulls
qualirylna for the naUonal
championships th.iJ aeason.
Law10n, a native of Buffalo,
attended Kenmore East Hiab
School and wrestled under coach
Skip Pine. While at Kenmore East,
the Bulls' current co-captain wo n
4S co~Uecutive matches en route
to an overaJl mark of 53 - 2. Both
of his lo•es came tn ala te
tournaments. Lawton finished
third In the state to urnament in
his teruor year, losina to the
eventual champion by a &amp;inaJe
point.
FoUowlna his o utstandma hiah
school career, the BuU senior
qualified for the nationals in his
freshman year while wrestlina Cor
N.Y. Maritime Academy. He was
seeded s1xth, a rare
accomplishment for a freshman .
In his sophomore year, lawson
was victorious 1n the Metropolita n
Championships in New York City .
lawson decided he had had
enough of the rmlltary-t ypc
atmosphere at Mariti me after h1x
ftrst two seilSons. " I felt that my
interests could be :~erved belltr by
attending Buffalo," the 142-lb

ltar romuked. ''I plan to' 10 to
law achool, and I think lbat the
exceUent bUiinc. ldminiltratfon
proaram at thiJ UniYonity would
be a better prepuatory coune for
law school''

SecODCI aatiouk
At Buffalo , Lawaon 's
accomplishments apeak for
themJelves. He was the only BuU
wrtltlor to ao to the final d ual
meet match with an unblemished
record. After hll i6- l dual meet
season, Lawton qualified ror the
nationals for the aecond Umc in
his career by takina the 142-lb.
c rown at the reaional
championships at Cincinnati.
..Ted is a real student of the
ap ort," said BuD Coach Ed
M1chael. He is a polished wrestler,
and deftnitely baa the potential to
place nationalJy ." ''I pertonalJy
feel that I can give anyone in the
country 1 battle," added Lawson
With 1 top notch performance,
the f o rm e r Kenm o r e East
stando ut 11li&amp;bt be able to win 11
all.
The Bulls will take only seven
wrestlers to Ma ryland , as Ron
B rand l , who qualiried at
Cincinnati, was unable to compete
because of an illness. However.
the Bulls wW ha ve a ~hot al
placing high in the team standings
"Everyone that we are sendu\g to
Maryland has a ~han ce to becl)rne
a national pl11ce winner." o bserved
('oech Michael. Action began last
rught in the big event , as the Bull&amp;
sought to capture a title that has
always eluded them in the past

Track team suffers
loss of competitors
by Bruce Enget
Sputntm Staff Wmcor

last Sat urday the Buffalo
track team , or whlat IS left of 11,
traveled to Cortland to compete
in the Cortland Invitational The
squad's abllit y to score was
severely hampered by the fact
t!at several of the SuUs' best
competitors were stiJI not present.
As it was, Buffalo was only able
to score two pomts, both from
t he relays. The meet , feat uring 19
teams was dominated by just
three - Colgate, Rochester and
Lost Cortland.
Still absent from the team were
hi&amp;h and long Jumper Don
Tolbert . quarter nuler Detro
Valdel and pole vault er Larry
KnJewslo. This slulled tno has
had an assortment of academ1c
problems and w1ll almost
deftnttely not compete ttus spnng.
For r tus meet, sholputter Tom
Paulu cci 11nd spru1t~r Km zy
Brown , the team's b1gge~t stars,
also could not compete. Both
might have scored at Cortland but
they , t oo, are experiencing
academJc dlfflcullu:s. However,
they s hould be eligib l~ a ny day
now.

Hod'iey's impossible dream

Bulls to play Division II finals
by &amp;any Rubin
Spon• Editor

Burlington, Vermont, - The impossible dream is
two-thirds complete for the BulfakJ hockey Bulls.
Wednesday night, the Bulls earned the right to play
in the ECAC Division 1l finals , Saturday (8pm.,
WBFO) at the Uruvemty of Massachusetts. Keying
Buffalo's unbelievable 4.() win was a s-pectacular 56
save whiitewash performance by Buffalo senior Mike
Dunn. At Amherst, Massachusetts advanced to the
finals with a 4-2 decision over Merrimack.
Stumning is the only word one can use to
describe the impact of Buffalo's win . Vermont came
into the playoffs as number o ne seed, after a 13·2-I
Divisio n II slate. In fact, the Catamounts had two
streaks of I 3 broken - for consecutive wins and for
consecu1tive home ice victories. -Buffalo's win at
Gu tterson Field Ho use was Vermont's first ho me ice
loss in over two years to a Division II foe.
Aft1er Buffalo's amazing upset, Coach Ed Wright
commefltted : "We put the puck in the net when at
counted. We had a lot goang for us especially smce
the lo~tl papers practically said 'Who is Buffalo?'
Now. I Itave one th1ng to say, Who 1S Buffalo?"
"Dunn.f~rut"

In 11he terntonal sense the Bulls were totally
outclass1!d u the Cats outshot Buffalo 56-33 . Mike
Dunn k•ept Buffalo in t he game with some of the
most SJ&gt;iCCtacular goal-tending in his career. Besides
sto pptng repea ted Cat drives, Dunn was forced to sit
through seven Vermont power-plays. Dunn called
the game, ''My best game ever They all shot hard
espec1nll y the righ t defensemen . We were reaJiy
struggling so I had to really freeze the puck a lot.
What shocked me was Vermont's dying in the last
penod l always thuught that this team would go this
fat "
Bob Albano. a teammate of Dunn's srnce h1s
days as a JUnJor, called Dunn's effort, "the best of

Cortland's lusk Field House 1~
a constderably better factli4' than
the Rochester t rack that the Bulls
had run on most of the StilSOn
The track IS very hard rubber und
IS good for improving times. Most
or B uff aJo 's runners showed
co nstderably Improved limes,
parllcularly the mile relay which
now seems set w1th Ed McNaH.
Doug lake, Bill McCarthy and Ball
He1m. Saturday their tame of 3.36
was seven seconds better than a t
Roc hester. Heim's time of 52.6
was particularly impressive as was
his 600-yard dash time of 1 17.8 .
The BuU mile relay team took
fifth in the tournament as did the
two mile relay, which ran 8:34.5.

Field events weak
The squad will skip the Union
While 1t now appears that the invitational tomo rro w but wUI
tea m may have a great deal of fmish the season in the state
trouble this year in many of the champiunships, also at Union, on
field events, some of the BuUs' Marc h 18 . The Bulls will
second line runners are starting to concentrate on the relays at this
come around and may provide us meet. The mile relay team will
with tome much needed depth. stay the same but tbe two mile
~eitb Noren, a newcomer to the will go wi th McCarthy and Heirn
team, turned in a fine fo ur in addition to regulars Larry
mlnutct and 4S aeconds in the Mentkowalci and Bob Gower. Jim
milo at Cortland. This was 19 McClwk.in in the two mile will be
.ecoru!s l&gt;etter t han his time at o ur o nly individual competitor.

P191 twmty-two . The Spectrum . Friday, 10 March 1972

Ono of tho key fact on in Buffalo's win was
Wright's strategy of moving one man beyond the Cat
defense to center ice. Wright explained : '"We
couldn't get the puck out of our end. so I thought
moving the wing up would open it up. &amp;peciAUy
since their defense played inside our blue line."
Another problem Wright lamented, '"was our
inability to move the puck along the boards. They
had no o ne outstanding lineman and Dunnie jwt
frustrated them."
While DuM held the fort in goal, his
defense· men did a fine job of clearing rebo unds and
policing the comers and crucial areas in front of the
net. The pair of Les Tepljcky and Bob Goody was
the most solid, while frosh Larry Carr and Bob
Epplett really came on after nervousness in the
initial stan za.
BuffaJo got on the score-sheet 3 .30 into the first
penod following a volley of Vermont shots at Dunn
1\ hustltng Al bano out-raced Vermont's defensemen
and fed OaJe Dolmage for an easy goal. Buffalo's
second score came on a blue-line wrist sh ot by Jack
Richards that went right between Vermont goal
tender John Kiely's legs. In the second period
Dol mage scored his sixth goal in two playoff games.
on a sharp feed from right winger Mike Klym. The
goal kept up the TAG line's pace of two goaJs a
game. This line gave the Bulla their defensive auack ,
firing shot after shot on Kiely. Buffalo's final score
came as Ted Miskolczi tipped home Oolmage's
dapper on a power play Tommorrow, Bu ffalo's
game at Massachuaetts will be broadcast live by
WBFO at 9 p.m.

Create a jail cell.

Roc hester the week before. 11nd
he now appears to be a soltd
SH o nd
mller behind J1m
Mt:Clurkin
Freshman larry Mentkowsk1
came out of high school w1th
excellent creden tials but badn'I
heen impressive un h l Saturday.
lie turned in lus best time the re 10
the 600- 1 minute and 19 9
seconds, Larry h as a very good
stride and just a tittle more speed
work t.s probably aJI that IS
necessary to develop his great
potenhal.

his career." AJbl{lo, normally one of Buffalo's more
physical staten. said that Vermont was "just shying
away, they weren't physical." Coach Wright
confirmed Albano'• evaluation, commenting;
"they're wed to having thinp their way on home
ice, but when things got tough, they (Vermont)
began to elbow. ••

We've done it.
Not because we like prisons, but because people live in
them and we design for people.
We're a college called Parsons School of Design, part
of a University called The New School for Social Research.
Our students and faculty worked with the city to design
the cell blocks in the new Women' s House of Detention,
here in New York.
In fact. we have an entire program devoted to Urban
Design, part of our Department of Environmental Design.
It's taught by professionals who are truly concerned with
social. cultural, and ecological design problems.
Our students have designed drug treatment centers,
mental hospitals, zoos, parole offices, slum renovation
projects and an awful lot of private homes.
We teach communication design, environmental design,
illustration, fashion design and the fine arts. If using your
vision to make ideas work interests you, Parsons is something for you to think about.
---------------------------------------- --~
This coupon will get you a catalog and 1n appliQtion.
Trentfer stUdenu with ooe vur of liberel arts 1nd one year o r IIUd•O
credit can complete thlir BFA degree on two .ctditional von.

Parsons School of Design
M W..t 12th Street. Ntw York, Ntw Vorl! 10011
~me

___________________________________________

StrHt end Nu"'*'-'---------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ctv. State and Zip - - - - - - -- - -

�AD INFORMATIOH

30 mlnut• from campu1. Avllllble
Sept. Ut, 1172, Wrtte BOll 112 tllllnt all

CLAIIIIIIII

a.ASSIFI£0 ADS INIY be ell~
Monday ttlru Friday IMtw. .n 9 e .m.
end 4: ~ p .m . et 355 "'orton Hell .
a•utne 1nc;, Cell ~\rt 116·2094 or
Mike I 35&gt;-521!1. MM!ttn.. 11 £ . .cuttve
~mMelnn .

I

THE STUOENT ret• Of en ed for one
day Ia 11.25 for Ule flrtt 15 words ancs
• . 05 tor Nell eddltlonel word, 11 .00
for eech eddltlonll dey . The Cleldllne
f()( Monctly Is FriCliYI f o r Wednesdly,
II Is Monctey, lncl for Frldly, It Is
Wednesdly by 4:30 p.m.

APARTM£NT IFOR R£NT
LOVELY, l1r.. fumllhecl room,
I&lt;M'Imore. Prlvll..-. t65 monthly.
176-0149 elter 5 p ..on. Girt oreterred.

" HELP WANTEO" ads cennot
discriminate on tile b•l• of ..... color,
cr. .d or national origin to any extent
(I .e., preferably Is still discriminatory).

APT. Kenmore-Oeteware, 3
bedrooms, furniShed, tliO Including
utllltlll. J -• 173-6174. •

"FOU ND" ads wil l be run free of
charge for • maximum o r 2 days and
IS words.

WANTED

U.B. AREA . Well furnished, IIICellent
thr-oedroom. Accommocsat• five.
Acrou from cemc.us. S~e~t. INse
IVIIIIble 1100 oCII h down. Ben
Tulumello 633-8643 .

YOU NG Pe rlsl ln looking lor Job
n 1 vtng to do wltb Fre ncn l• n gu ege.
Tutoring. C l ll Oomlnlque 113·5451.

2 FUQNISHEO IPilrtmenU In 11me
hoiiM - 3 people each - l ·mlnute
wane - wmm.. .-Icon - 131· 2285.

MODELS wanted 11 pnotC)9flph lc
st udiO. Good PlY . Cell between 10
a, m . &amp; 5 p.m. 88-9•1.

AIDE BCIAAD
RIOERS WAN TED to N .V.C. &amp;o biCk.
Ma rch 25th to April 2nd , Call Penny
134·37 70.

WANTED bllbysltter mature
women. Reference. WM!kdly1 9 a.m. to
5 p. m . Call 834-6994.

RIDE WANTED to N.Y .C. ( Cir\fer~bly
8rooktynJ for Marett 17 1nd back tate
Sun., M1rc n 19 or Nrty Mon. Ca ll
833·3491.

PART·TIME dlncen wanted. $4 per
nour. Radice's, 74 w. Chippewa. Apply
alter 4 p.m.

Amwlu Md.tn. Good condition, onlv
dt1ven :n,ooo m11•1 rcenttv tuned up.
Four n.w rldltl tl,.., Snow ttr•.
RldlO. 8uc:ket ...b. Slightly brUIM4
,..r. 8700. Pnone 1-541-7335 after ~
p.m.
GOLDEN
Retriever, AKC.
housebroken, trelnecl, good with
c lltldren, ell shots, two YNts ot d , 1100.
136.0141.
SKI EQUIPMENT, lldy's Rosemont's
(blue) 1110 (ret. U 55J, men's boots
10lh, lady's boou IV., 837·9517 11ter
5.
TOYOTA, '69 Corona, autom at4c,
AM - FM , very good condition, looks
great. 5 tires Plus 2 snows lncluoed,
t l\50. 137-0753.
NEW KNIT tops just arrived at "The

~p(e," 14• Allen. 882..(;213.

'67 V.W. F estback. It's e good car . I
nave to sell lt. C ell mel We'll mal&lt;e a
good deal. Riehle 832·8123.

WE ARE now open Mondays as well as
Tuesdays lhru S aturctay, 11 :30 • .m. to
6•00 p .m . - also Thursday until 10 :00
p . m . " The Peoptle," 144 Allen
112..(;213.

START $2 per hour wlary plus bonus.
work 4- 1 p.m. weekdays, 1o-2 p .m.
Saturdays. Call 835-3103 or TF9.0402.

FOR SALEo Tills •.utomobtle n. .d ,
some IOVIM cere. 1968 yellow Austin

F UL L OR part -time joDs IVIIIeble with

'

FlARES • JE~AN S
CONTINUING OUR
INTRODUCTORY OlffER!

AKE

- - -- - - -

PIANO
beautiful uproght,
hand -carved mohogany - flowers, et c .
- In tune, at least 80 yeafl o ld . Mull
s.ll. $175 Call Jim 134·2762.
FOLK - cl eulc guitars. No-used
Marlin , Oull ds, Gibsons, Gurian , etc
Eagle Danlos. DO&lt;ogl dulCimers The
String Shoppe, 524 Ontario. 7 Q.m - 9
p.m. Set. 12- 5 p .m. 874..0120

FURNITURE double beds, dreuerl,
cha irs, cou ch opening Into douDie bed .
Reasonable e~rlces. After S p.m .
835· 4521
FOR SALE 26-tncn woman's bike
Coaster-brak e . Call Joan 837 ·3209
40 ACRES w ood ed (UreamJ properlY.
Ontario (U .S . bordert. $1000 Write
Levonas, 1 Llnvlew, Ouflalo, 14216 .
FOR SALE r l 971 Honda 175 cc , 1800
miles. Excellent condition . 883-4589 .
'62 CHEVV, 4 -door. 6 cvllnaer,
standard Perfect runnlnQ conditiOn ,
$ 200 and '65 Ford con¥41rtlble, $37!&gt; ,
9 -S r 30, 873 · 0986, BoD
'64
Boyertown van converted to mooll
home, equipped with stereo, lour beds ,
stove, running water, furnace, dinette ,
11&amp;00. NeW• enolnt. 8'13~986 .
REFRIGERATOR S, stove• and
wesllen. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. DI. G Appliance• . 844
svcem()(e • .;n&lt;4-3183. n

1170 NOVA 55350, 4-lpeed, heiden,
Z-28 cam, ftc tory stereo ~ player,
4:10 rur end . tll50 or belt offer.
837-9803 after 5 p.m.

I"EMALE roomnate tor lmmedl1te
occupancy (bit houw off Hertell, S40
per month. 1st month's rent onty 120.
Call 137-6159.

KID'S Shirts and sttepnwd's d r from Pakistan, hand-woven tabrtcs at
"The People," 144 Allen. 182..(;213.

PERSONAL
REDHEADS make IOUIY sex oDiects
anyway!
CALLING all IOVWSI Oli 8rlan Frlel'l
trtsh traglcomd)' entitled - Wnat Eisel
"Loven." Rourv Hill Coli• '• wtctc
Center, March 9-13, 8 :30p.m.
16 MOS OLO mate bNgl-terrler
..-d$ new nome. Call Pet, 83t-s5o5.

T 0 N 1T £

.

Leon
,'1a.

-..............

In Q

Jh

J

OUr COnCert.

LAW STUDENT would like to meet
girl who 11 gentle and 1ottspoken, yet
energetic and cesuel L uve name and
number. Spectrum Box 90. Thank you,
Rob.
DEAR SUE
Happy half-year
ann iverSAry . I love ya l&lt;ldl Love, S teve.
MY NAME 'S Gretchyn and I need a
home. I' m ., 6 mos. old mutt. I h111e
my $hOts ~nd o m u cute as anythln9.
won't -umeone t~•e and love me&gt; Call
837 ·2694
I'VE BEEN netlected N Obody wanh
to ouy me . My name 11 Anastasia and
I'm fo• wle tor onty I 110. I'm a
2-dooo
blue Tempest w ith a n
automatoc tr•n\m•sslon, 82,000 miles
and a very ""Y body II Interested , call
AI 8.)1-4113.

LOST &amp; FOUND
MAN'S wetch ro,f\0 et Rld9e LN
Ca mQUI last,.._ C all 831 · 1144.
FOU ND : Searl left DY hitchhiker In
mv biKk vw Identify and Claim In
Spectrum olllce
LOST , trill\ S ell... 6 mo. old temate,
Herhi-Colvln area , 3/4. Rew41rd.
877-4gOJ.
FOUND • SIIOe Nle In Allenhurll .
Con tact Danny 835 · 7578 .

ROOMMATES WANTED

AKEI'
•
IJ"6.oFF

MALE ROOMMATE, own room.
Lisbon St.. !&gt; minute wall&lt; lrom
c a mpus. 5 70 Including utllltlel
Agreeable roommalel~ Call D•n
831·3378.

••n•-•••

AI Ill 111•1 SIIIIPI

•• 10-ltAYl

STOCK UP ON TlHESE
FAMOUS LEVI SILACKS
WHILE SUPPLY l.JlSTS!

MISCELLANEOUS
ANQLO AmeriCAn Antiques, 3112
Main St. Sometrtll\9 tor ..,ery student.
J-elry, tin, bfiJJ, enlna, gtaa, unuwal
button•.
WILL TYPE term pepers end edit them
at 1 .40 e
C all 136·2433.

p.,..

TVPINQ
e MI)e(lenced 18M
S electric, $ .40 per ~. 838-4808.
TY PING - e~eperleneed
etc . 833· 1597.

-

term pepen,

FLY BUFFALO student fllght.l to
.~ -------""1 Europe, N .V.C./London/N.V.C . May
31 - August 22, •199. July 9 Augult 23, S2 19. Contact Alan
Marmullteln 837.0393 , 6-9 p.m.

LOST . V•llow notoboUk c unl• lrllng
mlcroDooi09Y and lpeech note• Need
desperately If round, c.all 627 1661
Rewara

LEVI'S PRICE

.M~-,-E

FEMALE roommate wenteo
lmmecllatefy, lfl•rlnt one bed-room
apertment, 5-mlnut" walk from
cempelt, tiO/month . Clll aU-3492 ,
6-lOp"""

portable

vw '65 OUG 48 ,000 miles, ~Unroof,
push-o u t windows. new brakes .
Dependable. Asking $650. 83S ·3878 .

.11$1 ARRIVEDI
ANOTHER
600 NE,tY
STA-PRE:ST

"ANASTASIA" needs a home. She's e
1961 lovable, little Tempest, 82,000
mil•. All slle 'ost' It auo. Call AI at
Ul-4113 or Olt)ble at 132-6115,

COLOR TELEVISION, living room
furniture, bedroom furniture, electric
belt mas11ger, desl&lt;s, lamps, bookcases,
mise 837..(;525
TVPEWRIT ER Underwood
W/CM.e. $10. 834·2762 .

RESEA RC H (terml papers bought,
wid, e~ecnanged. Contact No rman at
83 1 3370 at any time.

partlCA&amp;'-ra.

TVPING- experlenl*:l - done In my
home. T erm pae~ers these s ,
dluertatlons, 892·1784.
STUDENT dlgountl and guaranteed
work mNn big savings at Independent
Foreign Ca r S ervice. 83g· 1850.

-

TVPING - buslnlll or personal- tvm
p a pers, theses , mau millings.
Reuonablt rate~. Cell 937-6050.
WILL TUTOR tn physics, m1th,
com puter Klence. Very ruson.able
Call 134-6179. Ask fo r Sure5h.
OUG 8URNT OUT I We'll rebuild It for
less - v.w.. tuneups thru overh auls;
832·1663: 894·9359 .
PERSONALIZE your wedding with
"your" songs. Call Justin P. HNIY
285 · 8606 or Cynthi a Dallevla,
73 1·5717.
THREE beautiful kittens need a 90od
home, 6 week• OICI, litter trained . Call
Karen 1fler 9 p ,no 837.053 3 .
JO O RESUMES
profession a l,
confld entlel consulatlon Special rates
l or students, rec.ent gradua tes and
.. eterans. 835-4473.
UNBELtEVABLEIII Jet to EurOQe
11611. RouncStriCI N .Y .C . deperture
Conta ct Steve Qold. 835-7519 1ft.. 7
p.m.
JO&amp;S

ON

SHIPSI

Men . Wo..,_ ,
C)(
car-. N o
to~perlence
,.qulred. Excellent pay .
worldwide tra~e l, Send S2.00 lor
lnformetlon. S NfaJC, Oo&gt;&lt; 1239~F.
S Mttlll, Washln9t0n 911 I I .

.._,teet wmm.r lob

PIZZA GO-GO: Tills w-·s special large plue - 2 FREE bottles o r sOda.
sm all plzu - one free. 138-4557.
O PEN SUNDAYS, FREE DELIVER¥
to dorms.
ANTIQUES and modern fur,lture,
c eramlcs, c hina , etc
See Sid .It
Vesterday &amp; Tomorrow S hop , 1439
Hertel Ave .

APARTMENTS WANTED
HOUSE or 2·famlly house needed for
eight homeless people, please• C111
831 -3454.

FEMALE for own room In house April
1st. Close to cam pu•. Call 833·0927
Reason•Di e . Voah .

3 - 4 bedroom apartmen t needed
dllperatety , nNr cempus . Occu pancy
starting May. C1ll 831..,.052

ROOMMATES wanted . Male or
female, ultlm•te In country living
8rlck ranch house; private bedrooms, 2
bathS, wnl&lt;en lamlly and llvono room
with oeautllul pink coraled, m a ro1e
fireplace
Kltc;nen with a lt
conv enien ces, ••tl&lt;leanlnt oven,
d ishwasher , wall to wall urpet1n9 In
every room . Free run of 100 a cres ol
woods, IWimmtnv " lake pr ivileges
Groundl beautifully land5Caped .
tnolvld u•t~ with clean habits noe&lt;J OI'IIY
apply . S85 monthly Includes utilities

SENIOR needs roomv apartment near
c ampus tor one . June thru May . C a ll
837.()430.
4 · BEDROOM hou" or apart m e nt
dllperately needed lor S ept . nNr
campu1. Call 831 ·2170 or 831 ·2875.
LOST: One gold bangle bracele t
w/name Ellen Inscribed, In Lockwood
Library - March 8 . Sentimental velue
- rew~rd offered. Call 837·2846.

,..Hear, 0 Israel- -albia TruthCH RIST OUR SUBSTITUTE
"Who H is own self bNr our
sins, In His own body on the
tree, that we being Clelel to sins,
5hould ll~o~e unto righteousness;
g~,.:,~.OM 1trlpes y e were

For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone
875-4265

1 pet. . 2:24

·-

GOLDEN EDUCATOR
TRAVEL

w

w

w

a

•

What ,..Uy CJO" on in the
production room on
pem-up days?

.....

Until 11 a.m. and
Sun. thru Thurs.
AFTER 9:00p.m.
Sun. thru Thurs.

3 BUTTERMILK PANCAKES
OR TOAST PLUS 2 COUNTR
FRESH EGGS, u you like 'em.

65¢

3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE

Summ~

St':::Jng

1972 London, Round-Trip

$169 ~:nd'

Alllflijhts are jet and depart
Kenneclly International, New York

&lt;AU or write: STEVE GOLD
66 SHIRLEY AVE.
BUFFAU&gt;. N.Y:- 14215
(716) 8JS:-75l9
(After 7 p.m. weekdtly~r; 11U d4y S4t. IUfd Sun.)

-

..-.

Friday, 12 March 1972. The Spectrum . Page twenty-three

....

�Announcements
Tfte State Unlwnlty of Buffalo has announced a 5tudy
proJlram at Dlcbbury Collep of Eduutlon In Manchester,
Enllilnd for fiJI 1972. The propam, open to SUNY juniors
and seniors, enpatd In elementary IH sec:ondary t.ac:her
trainina, offers courses In history, philosophy and toelolo,y
of education, eclucatlonal and developmental psyc:holo,y
and m®h more. Further i11formatlon and applications are
;available-In the office of the Director of Overseas Academic
Proarams, Council on lntern.atlonll Studies, 107 Townsend
Hilll, phone 831-42•47. Deadline for appllc:atlons Is Aprlll.S.
The Coli• of Mathematlul Sclen"s will hold an
lnfocmll discussion with Dr. Marvin Zelen today at 1 p.m.
In 1\oom S 1, 4244 Rldae Lea.
The Student Auoc:latlon Scudent Activities
coordinator Is lookina for student$ wlshlna to work on
either the Student Activities Committee or the Speaker's
Bureau, for the 1972-73 season. Contact Diane Zwolinski
In Room 20.S Norton or ciii831 ·SS07.
Hill~ will hold a Sabbath Service at 8 p.m. ton laht In
ltle Hillel House, 40 C•n Blvd. An Onea Shabbat will

A war tax reslstance wotiksllop will be held In Room

334 Norton tomorrow from 111- 4 p.m. Speakm from the '
Philadelphia Tax Resistance Fund are IChedulecl to speak.
Plans for 111 Aprll ·lS demonstrJotlon at the Internal Revenlle
Service are on the .aaendA.
The Hillel Talmud caa. will meec on Sunday at 3 p.m.
In the Hillel House Library.
The Ethnic Dance- Arts lllepenory Company with Lil
Merl, .artistic director, will ptes4Bnt a master c:lass for people
Interested In theater and d~nc:e arts history tod.ay at 6 p.m.
In the O.ance Studio, Clark Gym. It '' sponsored by the
UUAB Dance Arts Commlttaa lind the fac:ulty of Arts and
Letters..
The lutheran Ministry t•o the University will hilve
worship Sunday ill S p.m . .at Resurrection House (corner
Main .and Unlver$lty) and will c:oncern ''Thln15 That Smack
of the Devil." A supper will foll•t&gt;w the service.
The Hillel Convlf'lltlonal lliebrew class (advanced) will
meet on SuRday at 12 :30 p.m. In Room 262 Nonon. The
Elementary Convers.atlonill He~orew class will meet .at I :30
p.m.

toll ow,

CAC's Buffalo Sute Hos.,ltal VoluntMrs: we need you
to be-.around the CAC car11lval, Saturday, between the hours
of 12:3()-4 p.m. to ulk to patients.

The Hillel Chw In Torah •tlth Commentaries will meet
tomorrow-ill 3:30p.m. In Or. liofm1nn's home , 12 Colton
Drive.

The SCUBA Club will meet tomorrow at S p.m. In
Room 3, Clark Gym. If Y,OU ;are Interested In aoln&amp; to
Floridil or golna on .an open w.cer outlna, pluse attend .

The Slavic Club will hold " Vecherenka," il Russian
party, todoay from 7 - 11 p. n~. In Room 232 No rton.
Refreshmen ts will be served .and th ere will be Russian
sln1lna and conversa tion .

UUAB Mullc Committee Is look lna for any local bilnds
that would w ish to perform. Please contiiCt Pilul Rosen In
Room 261 Norton or ca1183 1-S112.

Resurrection HouM will h1ve an open house today Jt
8:30 p.m . The films, The Mc1rr!age Mixup and Is Lov~
Enough, will be shown.

V uerans from Erie and Nl.aaar• Cou nties 1re
encourilaed to attend iln Important or.,nlulion.iil meetlna
on Su nday at I p.m. at 69S Elmwood Ave.

The State University of Ntrw York Middle Eut Studie-s
F1culty Assoc:llltlon has .tnn1ounced its sec:ond ·study
program oat th e Amerlun University of Beiru t, Lebanon for
the 1972- 73 audeml c yeoar. The proarilm, In the .arts and
scienc:es, Is open to SUNY junliors ilnd sen iors, preferoably
those Interested In Middle Ei1St stud ies. No c:ompetence in
Ar.ablc or French Is required. Further information and
.applications Me ;avail able fro~n the O ffice of Overseas
Audemic; Prognoms, 107 Townsend H.tl, 8 3 1-4247. The
deadline for Jppllcatlons Is April I .

Summer L•nau...- Abr01d Proanm: urn 6 - 11 colle1e
cred its at .1ny lillliUIJe level In : F r.ance, Germ .any, Italy,
Mex ico, Portua.t or Spain. The cost Is ilpproximAtel y $ 7SO
and Includes trilns·A tl.antlc trllnsportltio n from New York
City to ·proanm site , room .11nd bo.n d .11nd tuitinn. Perwn.1l
expenses llftd weekend muls are add itlonlll. For more
Inform lllion and applicoations, write to : Office o f
lnternulonill Programs, SS 147, SU NY at Albany . 1400
'Washington Ave., Albany, N ,Y _ 12221 .

Hillel'! Operation Greenllaht will hilve il p rogram
tomorrow 11 8 :30p.m. in the Hlilltl House. Counselors and
youn15ters ilre Invited to attend.

Available at the Ticket Offic:e
Studio Arena Theater
Throulh Much 25: Romeo and Juliet
Popular Concerts
March 10: Leon Thomas (f)
March 12 : John lee Hooker (NU)
March 12: The Barkays (B)
March 17 : Seals and Croft (K)
March 19 : Shirley B.assey and Woody Herm.an (K)
March 22: Rlch.ard Hilfrls (K)
March 23 : Chuck.Manalone Quarter (N)
Mil"h 24 : Humble Pie, Kina Crimson (M)
March 26: Count Basle (K)
March 28 : ISiiiC Hayes (M)
April 1: Lily Tomlin (Kl
Butnlo Phllhilfmonlc Orchestr• (K)
March 10: Sprln&amp; F.ashlon Show
M.arc:h 19 &amp; 21: Christine Waleuska
M.arch 24 : Gay Nineties Nlaht
April 4 : Peter and the Wolf
lntern&lt;&amp;tlonal Annctlons
Much 15 : Prque Symphony Orchestra (K)
Moarch 22: Oslpov Balal ~ l kl O rcheslra (L )
Ooance
March 10 &amp; II: NikOi iiiS D•nce Theater (8)
Buffalo Choamber Music Society (K)
Much 14 : The Guuntrl StrlngQuvtet
Muc h 2 2: The jutllilrd Stri ng Quartet
Buffalo Bnves Basketball (M)
Milrch 14 : Phll~delph la
March 18 : Detroit ilnd the Harlem Globetrotte rs
Oipson's Piau North
Fiddler on

th~

Roof

Commlna Attractions (on Alt March 11 )
March 31: The Moody Blues (M)
April 7: The Osmonds (M)
April 8 : Emers-on, Loake arod Pillmer (M)
KEY
K - Kleinhans
M - Memorial Auditorium
B - Bufhlo Stoate Colleae
L - Loew's Buff.alo Theateo
N - Niagara University
I' - Fillmore Room
NY - Norton Un ion

What's Happening?

Film : I Nevl't !&gt;unq lm M1 Fulher. 'llOn,orcd by CAC,
C.tpen '140, chet..k luo ~llowt ime\, .ti\O tomorrow .
Dance work\hop: Ld Men and the E thno ~ D.tnce - An~
Repe rtory Comp4n y, 6 - 9 p.m., Dante Studio, CIMk
Gym.
Ger.;rd Philipc: Ftlm fnl iv,cl : I ttJwns Vonqertu\e,, 4 p.m.,
Alheson S; I he Idiot, I! p.m., Acheson S. sponsored by
the Frcnlh Oepdrtmt'nt dlld Office of Culturdl Affdor~.
Conccr 1: Com.ord Str ing Qu.trtet1 8 :JO p.m .. B~rrd H.1ll.
lnt ern.uion;u week: Professor Wing Tsit Ch.tn, specialist on
Chinese philosophy and religion, 1 p.m., Fillmore
Room .
l nternation4ol week film : rhe Paint, Amcroc,on film o n
prejudlc:e, 7:30p.m ., Diefendorf 147 . .Jdmtssion dt.arge.
Dance perftDrm ilnce: The Alwin Nlkolais Dance T he.ller,
Upton Hall, S tate University College at Buffalo, 8:30
p.m., acl mission c har ge, also presented tomorro w.
CAC Communication Co11ference: CAC members will meet
with community ln d ers In afternoon workshops on
project.~. rn day care, dru~. hospitals and social services,
Norton Hall, 10 .l.m.- 4 :30 p.m.
Open discu ssion: " Niqaril Falls: PHI, Present and Future,"
the No,rtheut Sec tion of th e Geological Society will
hold th is discussion at 8 p.m ., Embassy Roo m of the
Statle r Hilton, Mr. E. Dent Lackey, mayor of Nlo~gara
Falls, will moderate the public discussion.
Philosophy of Science seminar: D. Hull will speak on
" Theorv of Acqu&lt;~intan~:e," I p.m., Room I I , 4244
Ridge Le.a.
films: And ~• Ferullo will sho w his films ;and speak, 3 p.m.,
Amerlc;~n Studies, 124 Wlnspear Ave.
Lecture: Professor Robert Hill will spuk on "C.L.R. James
and the: Philosophy of Criticism," sponsored by the
BliiCk Studies Proaram , 2 p.m., Room 312 T o wnsend
Ha_ll.
Dance perf•t~rrnllnce : T he Ethnic Dince- Arts Repertory

&lt;..ompany, an eveni ng of onent~l ~rod uuodentill d•r)le,
R p.m ., Fillmore Room .
Pl•y: Lovers by Brian Froel, Ros.~ry lltll College, Wit t..
Center, S&lt;&gt;t.tdl Room, 8:30 p.m., trc.ket~ .u e $ 1.00 for
students with I D's, and m.ty be pur~hdsed at the door,
pl•y presented tomonow, Sunday .tncJ Monday.

II 4.nt . ~ p.m. , Nortun H.tll, g.-.mcs, prizes,
movies, clowns and music, ope n tu the Lhlldren of
Buffalo, p.trenrs dfe dlso welcome.
lrodia11 movie: 5ongom, 6:30 p.m., Docfendorl 147,
,ponsored by the India Association or Buffalo,
admission: $ 1.50 for mem bers .1nd $2.00 for
non-members.
tonlert: Mustt for Voice and Clirinet, work; by Stravinsky
and Schubert, 3 p.m., C ent ral Library Auditorium.
Play : Faustus, presen ted in repertory by the Department of
Thea ter, directed by D&lt;~vid Ch&lt;~mbers, 8:30 p.m.,
Harrim an Stud io T he.uer, also Sunday.
Gerard Ph ilipe Film Festival: Belle de Null, 4 p.m., Ac.heson
S, Llosonr Dongereuses, 8 p.m., Acheson S.
Cont..ert: Stud ent composers recital, 8 :30p.m., Bilird thll.
lnterna tlonill Festival night: 7- 10:30 p.m., Clark Gym,
;admission ch arge.
CAC lai r:

Sund&lt;~y,

March 12

Graduate recital: Winifred Simpson, black soprano, worh
by Rontani, Scarliltti and Stravinsk y, 8.10 p.m. , Baird
Hall.
Swdent recito~l: PauLa Greenbaum, sop uno , John Adams,
bar itone; works by S.atie, Debussy, BrAhms and B•ch , 3
p.m., Baird Hiill.
Film : Night and Fog, presented by the Student
Coordi nating Commi ttee fo r the Israel Emergency
Fund, 8 p.m., Room 233 Norto n, tomorrow also.
- Amy Ahrend

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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 63

$Ute Univenlty of Nwr Yortc .t lk.lfblo

New SA officers interviewed

Academics is CURES main goal
by Howie Kurtz
Comput Editor

Editor's note: Following Friday's election
of a mrw slate of Student Association
olficen, The Spectrum interviewed several
of the c'&gt;/ficers~lect, who will ~ taking
office after March 15, about their
apectations for their upcoming terms.

-osterrelcher

TySaunders

•••

DouxWebb

Jeff Osinski

More attention to academ1c matters and
a realignment of the Student Assembly
according to academ1c departmenu are the
prime @
;oals of the newly-elected SA
officers.
''SA is not really representative because
of the Student Assembly," sa 1d
Treasurer-elect Jeff Osinslo . "There's not
much student input because only club
members vote. This special interest group
process shouJd be scrapped." The new first
vice plesident , Tyrone Saunders,
commen1ted : ''Student Assembly does not
have a cross-section of the student body ;
they are not representative at aU . E&lt;~ch club
is just out for themselves "
To remedy this situation, the members
of the CURE party want to change the
basic structure of the Student Assembly.
Instead of having representatives from
specw interest groups, they propose to
h2ve representatives from every academic
department. Representatives w1ll be chosen
by a counc1l of undergraduate students to
be set up w1thin each dep3rtment , such as
the History Department's Cuunc1l of
H1 story S t udents
The number uf
representatsves from each aca&lt;.lem1c Jrca
wtll be determJOe&lt;.l by the SIIC of the
partscular department
In tlu~ way,
students who arcn 't members ol any club
will b•~ represented at the Stu&lt;.lcnl
Assembly because they are psych maJor\ or
English majors, etc.
More aca1demic input
In adldition to realigning the Stu&lt;.lcut
Assembly, the new officers of SA will place
a definite emphasis on academ1cs , an area
virtually ignored th1s year by student
government. "We want w establish better
contacts w1th academic people, "ex plasned
Pres1den t-elect Oebb1c Benson "'Th1s w1ll
give us more student 111put 1ntu acadcmu:
matters. lthsnk we can find enough lacultv
members who arc snterested 10 wurl..1ng
with students...
Mr. Osinski agreed " If we have more
contact 'With academ1cs, we can 1nsurc that
more :s tudents Will be named to
committees, such as gnevance committees
and tenure committees . For snstance, 509(
of the ctriteria for tenure is supposed to be
teaching ability. but there is no student
input about tenure. Who else should decide
about th.e quality of teachers?"
The question of the general campus
apathy toward student government was
raised. "Maybe bringing academic matters
into the open could change things," said
Ms. Benson. 'U a student reads about
S20,000 being allocated to some club, he
can't relate to that . But the student may

become more interested in academic
ma tiers which affect each individual
student." Catling for greater student input
into academics, Ms. Benson said SA will
reivew aU University decisions and OUS
committees and see "if students are on
these committees, and 1f not, why not?''
Trim the fat
Mr. Saunders feels "the student body
has really been apathetiC to SA, partially
because the Student Assembly was so hard
to join, and students became disinterested
There is alot of feeling that the Student

assinine move that has ever been made"
while National Student Affairs Coordinator
Ed Wolf called it "the ultimate of
ineptnens."
Workinn toaether
Mr. Saunders agreed that "certain club
budgets are a blatant waste of money" and
that some clubs will oot be funded.
"People always ask how can Buff State do
thls, o r Fredonia do that - we'll have th.e
money to do 1t," he added. Doug Webb ,
the new second vice president, ..hopes to
encourage a bit more diversity in campus
actsVJtJes "
The new officers agreed that one reason
they wdl get tlungs accomplished is that
they wurk well together . '7he officers thls
year (1971 1972) formed a ticket that
had one• a1m
winning the election," said
Mr. Woolf ''They djdn 't care if they
couldn '11 taJk to each other civilly, which,
by the e:nd of the year , they couldn' t."
As far as personal goals, Mr . Wo lf, who
transferred here from Ohio State, would
like to see a Transfer Advisory Board set
up, smce "transfer students don't know
a.nybodly, they don't get places to live" and
often need some kind of assistance. He also
wants to get mto voter registration,
arrang1ng for our-of-town students as well
as Enc Counly ressdents lo register to vote
by absentee ballots

Debbie Benson
Assembly was worthless
and maybe 11
was. w1th all those dub members vottng for
each other's budget. But the Stu&lt;.lent
1t
Asscrnbly can be ma&lt;.lc workable
should be one of the strongest group~ 011
campu\ ." The new officer\ were not dear
on how the 1calsgnment of the assembly
could be legally effected, but mauy felt .t
referendum would be appropr1atc
In the area of muncy, all agreed thJt
clubs were rece1v111g undue cmphas1s
" Money was pomly h.~n&lt;.llcd th1s year,
espec1ally 111 the area of dub budget\,"
~ommented Mr Os1mks. " L:lrge .tllHlunts
uf money wen: spent on film~ and
conventmn!&gt; where one or two people
would attend. an&lt;.l thai was halt the dub's
budget A lot of the fat has to be tnmmed "
Mr Ostnsks sa1d that ~ome uf the money
saved could go to campus act1vit1cs such as
concerts, because "bcs1des the coffeehouse
and movres, there's nothing to do on th1s
C3mpus."
Ad rn 11 ting that club budgets will
probably be trimmed, Ms. Benson
prom1sed that they would be ''more
carefuiJy reviewed. We'll be going in
without the prejudices of other people.
Well look at all the budgets, not just
review what was allocated last year."
Commenting on Friday's SA allocation of
SSOOO for Michael "Lev" Levinson's trip to
Vietnam, Ms. Benson called it "the most

Mr Webb feels m06t of tus t1me will be
occup1cd w1th Sub Board and making that
body a wml.:able o rgan17at1on Mr. Os1nsk1
wants w sec the pos1taon of treasurer
become les.~ 1mpmtant, ssnce 1t now "holds
tuo mud1 PQWer , the power of the purse.
There should be more Josnt effort to
delcrlliiiiC where the money goes," said Mr .
Ossnsk1 These arc the promises and goals
and lwpcs of the new SA officers. A fler
Ma rch 15, they will get their chance to
make them work

•••

Ed Wolf

�Veterans feel the need for
larger, better representation
Vetc:rans from Erie and Niagara Counties will
meet on Sunday in an attempt to establish a " more
representative" veterans' organiution, said AI
Donohue• o f the State Uruversity of BufTaJo Veterans
aub. " Presently, one of the problems," he
commen1ted , ..is that veterans· clubs are seen strictly
as anothc:r left 1st group with a lot of rhetoric ."

Mr. Donohue and other organizen of the
meeting feel that with a larger representative base 1t
may be possible to facilitate. the passage of some
"accepta'ble •· veterans' legislation. The American
Legion a,nd VFW organizations designed to service
the needrs of veterans, "just aren't doing anything to
help." added Mr. Donohue.
The G l Bill is being used only to a limited
extent bc:cause the present "benefits are not enough
to go to school on," he reiated. Tuition payment is
no longc·r covered by the Gl Bill . as it was for
Korean War Veterans.

Rose11haum rei11stated
Alan Rosenbalm, 1 philosophy graduate student expelled from the
University last fall , has been reinstlted by President Robert Ketter
Mr. RosenbMim's expulsion stemmed from charges of hiS
involvement in the 1970 campus disruptions. Commenting on hts
reinstltement Into the University, Executive Vice President Albert
Somi' rem~tked : I think it's 1 generous act on the President's
pert.'~~pparentty , Mr. Rosenblum agreed, feeling that President
Ketter sfiould be credited for actions on his behalf.

Reform of grass laws in
Amsterdam advocated
Editor's note The {ollowtnl{ &gt;\Ul
trans/a ttd by CArlos Kru~rtbmdt
from an arttclt appear~ng tn tilt'
Amsterdam ntwspapu , Alaemecn
Dagblad, on Jan JO. I Y 7J

The chances are very good that
Jn 1 he near future use- of
man)uana and hash1sh w1JI nu
longer be sut&gt;Jed to cnm1n.tl
penall1es tn Amsterdam A
ma)onty of the Baan commtSSIOn ,
appo1nted to adv1se the
government on drug poh ~: y
believes that the use or these
so~aUed ' 90ft' drull$ should be
removed from cnminaJ law .
The final poSitions of the Baan
Co mm iss io n are still being
formula ted, but they will be
available for discussion by the
cabinet of mmisters W1th1n a few
weeks.
The majority of the
commiss1on favor a progressive
and practical drug policy T hey
are very close to the pos111on of

Foundation for Pubhc Mental
llealth whJch recently i»ued .1
report recommendmg the removal
of cnmmal penalties for the use o f
soft llrugs Soft drug.s were
d e f 1ned as non ·add 1 c: 11 n g .
non-harmful substances.
The B aan Comm1 ss to t1
however, favors retairung penaJitn
for drug de,&amp;hng. The commi.Miron
Jlso advolates more stnngent
controls on mtemattonaJ drug
trade.
The l Omm1 ~s aun w i ll
reco mmend means lor provtdmt;
1ntens1ve medical and socaal
counseLing and informatio n for
drug users. The report wall abo
present a cumprchensive survey of
sdentifac opanaon about the
vnriou~ k1nds of drug.s.
The report will h e: the first st~r
in an eKtenstve parliamentary
program for th e development of
drug laws. Public heanng.\ wtll he
held before parliament t.tke:..
definite action.

welfare an issue for the coming November elcchons.
According to one Marine Reserve magazine, one
candidate, President Nixon is planning to introduce
legislation to increue the Gl bill benefits to $190 a
month ..This is not enough to support a veteran
who is married and has children ," commented Mr
Donohue .
"There are five or six bills concerning veterans
already on the Congressional floor and they have
been there from six to eight mon ths without an y
action being taken ," continued Mr. Donohue. Even
Co ngressman Dulski, representative from the
Western New York areu and third ranking man on
the Veteran's Affairs Committee has been of little
assistance, said Mr. Donohue.

Veterans' welfa~ platfonn

In one effort to inform local Congressman of
the veterans' needs, the UB Vets sent copies of Sen
McGovern 's proposed Veterans' bill to all Buffalo
area legislators. The action wu met with little
response. Congressman J ack Kemp did not reply to
the correspondence at all.

Ano•her reason cJted by Mr. Donohue for
untfymg veterans m the area is "hopefull y to appeaJ
w bo th the Democrattc and Republican part1es to
nco~tc puhtu:al platforms which will 'buy the vets•
\'u tc ' Uy becommg a more structured, more
pcrvas1vc g10up. the veterans want to make veterans'

Sunday's meeting will also attempt to include
veterans who are unemployed or who are presently
employed but might want to go to school. Drug
rehabditation wUI also be a to pic for discussion. The
meetmg will be held at the Unitanan Universalist
Church , 695 Elmwood Ave . at I p.m.

Arab Club officers
By bC)Iding a new election of offkerll Sunday. the Arab Cultural Club. which had
been plagued with problems for JeVeral months, is now on a sound footing . Their budget ,
which had been frozen for several months foUowina lrrqularitia involvfn&amp; former
officers, bas been restored.

1he

The officer who bad been impeached and broupt belo~ the Student Judkiary was
deported out of this country befo~ the case w• to be heard so the court dism~ the
case. Tbe orpnization·s treasu~r went to Dave Kdler. ectina treasurer of SA, and asked
to have dte money restored. At Mr. Keix:r'• IUJIC*tion be ""ent to the Executive
Committee. The committee dilcovcted dult the club's ~ praident , who was to tAke
over for the deported president , was a graduate student. Sin!% aU offteen have to be
underanduates under SA prooedu~ for clubs, the committee called foe new elections.
The elections were held Sunday and tbe followioa people ""ere eJected : Pftsident :
Yosepb EI-Khodry ; Vice-president: Mike Hawldns; Treasurer : Habbib lssa ; Secretary :
Mufld Abu Zahra.

1\LFA ROMEO
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1451 Hertel Ave. Near Norwa lk

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Spectrum 16 publllh-.J tlttW

tim•• •

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Mond•Y.
~Y •nd Frk*y; durl, tM
~- «:«Nmlc r•r by Sub-Boerd

UUAB Music Committee/ Coffeehouse present

!

ON FRIDAY

Leon Thomas

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MARCH 12

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�Tom DitJe .speaks
The JntertlltionaJ Law Oub will feature Mr.
Tom Dine, assistant to Senator Frank Church
(Dem-ldaho) Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. in Room I 10
of the Law School. He will speak 0111 US. recognition
of Bangia Desh. A seminar on human rights will
foUow his presentation.

Buffalo Hollow mliners
speal of uritold dangers
"If these (coal) companies
keep blocking up our creeks and
stripping o·.u land, there's going to
be a revolution jn this country.
We should kick all these operators
and their political friends out of
logan Country for good." These
were the bitter words of a
~ u rviving coal miner after a
murde rous flood killed at least
100 residents of Buffalo Hollow,
West Virginia, on Saturday, Feb.
25. Seventy·nine people are still
missing.
The nood swept through
Buffalo Hollow when a slag dam
at the Pittston Coal Company
broke. Don Bryant, president of
the Logan County Black Lung
Association , said: " Blame for last
Saturday's flood on Buffalo
Hollow rests with the coal
co mpanies. These dams have
collapsed before and they will
collapse again . We have len or 11
right here in logan County."
Rev. Cox of the Disabled
Miners Association said : "S trip
mines run all the way around
those mountains up the hollo w
above Lorado. Tbey destroy the
natural wate rshed in Buffalo
Hollow. If you don't believe me,
go up and look for yourself.
Pittston Coal and those strippers
ca used those deaths la st

GUSTAV A . FRISCH , INC.
Jeweler - Opt ician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

Saturday."
As resentmenlt rises, there are
now speculatibns that logan
County may be ~quarantined , due
to the threat of SJ)reading diseases.
Nearly every h o use along the
creek has been destroyed. There
are reports that homeless dogs
have attacked pe:ople because of
their desperate; hutnge r.
The Black Lu1ng Association is
insisting that au topsies be
performed o n all miners killed in
the flood . If th•ey show that a
miner had black lung, the federal
government must pay monthly
benefits to the miner's family .
Miners work Utnder some of the
w orst co nditi ons known
anywhere. One out of every 12
miners was either seriously injured
or killed in a mime in the United
States in 1970. Over 200 miners
died from gas explosions. Nearly
every man who works in a ~e
eventually gets the crippling black
tung disease. Mi ne disasters have
occurred every year for decades.
Be fore the Jiluffalo Hollow
flood, the worst disaster was the
explosion at Hydtm, Kentucky on
Dec. 30, 1970, that claimed 38
lives. Many of these disasters
could have beer• avoided . Th.e
explosaon in Hyden may have
been averted h:ad there been
adequate ventilation and safety
escape exists. The coal companies
rarely remedy any• of these safety
hazards. Ye t il is re ported that
earnings for many of the coal
companies jum~~d by 50% in

19].0.

SALE

Cookies and pudding

WIRR returns to alrwaves
Q. Where do you find free cases of beer being
given away, alo ng with free posters, pillo ws and
buttons, in between endles.~ hours of The Beatles.
Dylan , Stones, Yes, CSN&amp;Y and Grateful Dead'!
A. You fo und it last weekend on WIRR, as the
dorm radao statio n returned to the airwaves with a
weekend marathon of music a nd promotional
freebies . After their initial ven t ure of a few weeks on
the air last semester, WIRR had remained
incommunicad o until last Friday while waiting for
ne w equipment to be butlt.
The sta tion received a grant of $2500 from IRC,
''which we used to buy parts and then built about
$6000 worth of equipment ," explained ethos editor
Carl Roetter, one of the founders of the station.
"Alternative Media," as the student radio venture
has been dubbed , now has two studios in Clement
HaU , well-stocked with turntables, tape decks and
cartridg.e machines.

Live coffeehouses and GuHn Workshop
Along with the new equ1pment, WIRR boasts a
complete schedule of varied programming rhe
music will range frnm rock to folk to jazz to
There IS air time available for new peo ple to get
classical, dependmg o n the tastes of the person
on
the
air. Thes:e new people will be alternated until
behind the mil:rophone. There wtll be occasiona l talk
they gain enou1V1 ex perience to announce regularly.
shows, such as I RC President AI Miller's sho w where
he wall tnlerview noted University persons su~:h as · t f enough new people request sho ws, the station will
expand programming. O ne of the oriiJinal goals of
Dr. Keller . There wtll also be newsc.:asts daily , air
Alternative Media was that anybody who wanted a
time fo r ca mpus groups to speak, live sports (they've
s ho w wo uld be OJible to get one .
alrt•ady brttadcast basketball away g;tmes) , and a
What the sta tion needs now IS money , and they
suuull:ast of lncerfa ct' wtth WBFO .
Ptans are also bemg formed to have snap o peras arc applymg for grunts Judging from the first
wt:e kem.l'$ tcspnnsc in the dorms, it seems WIR R IS
nn the air, women 's shows, talk sho ws w1th musk
already bulldin~: a strnng followmg. ''I announced
related to the to pic, and vario us spec1als whil.h w til
thJI I wa~ hun,gry at 4 a.m .." saJd o ne announcer
pre-empt regular progra mmmg Among these 111ay he
whn dtd an alt·nJg.ht shov. last weekend ," and people
coffeeh9uses hvc o r o n ta pe. and Wf'll D-FM d1sc
c::ame do wn to the stud1o and hwught me cookies
JOckey J1m Santella eontluct1ng h ts Gu1tar W ltrk~ h o p
and puddmg. •·
o n the an . The station has sold some commerna l ~

Free parking 31
University M~ nor
(ne .. t do or)

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK STORES IINC .
833-7131

Applications for the position of Editor·an -Chad of Th.- Spectrum for the academic
year 197 2 - 1973 will be taken until March 2 1.
The applicution consis ts of a letter to the editorial board. stating reasons for
desiring the position. qualification~ and previous jo urnalistic experience. The position is
open to any State University wraduate or undergraduute student.
The editorial board will interview all ca ndidate!; on Thursday , Much 23 .
Prospective applicants are Ufl! Cd to contact the Editor, Room JSS Norton Hall as
soon as possible to familiarize themselves with any procedural or technical questiona
Ahnut lhP ni)Sition or about Tht' Spt-ctrum

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present THRE.E BIG SHOWS

AT KLE.I NHANSt MUSIC HA.LL
Sunday, Mar. 19, 8 P.M.

SHIIRLEY BASSEY
AND HIS
EXTRA ADDED WOODY HERMAN ORCHESTRA
ATTRACTION
Main Floor $6-$.5; llal&lt;any $.S.$4

I

Wed., March 22, 8 P.M.
Main Floor $6-$.5; llalcany "-$-4

RIC'H ARD HARRIS
IN CONCERT

.

Sat., April 1, 8:30 P.M.
Main floot " ·$41 lalc.ony $4·$3

Strong respome
The dorm sltation, which is 640 AM on the radio
dial , has "a sound which has the highest fidelity and
the widest frequtency of any AM station," according
to Mr. Roetter . WJRR broadcasts !o the dorms on
dorm current, which doesn't reach outside the
dorms . They h o pe, however, to obtain an FCC
l1cense sometime in the future and simulcast AM in
the dorms and FM to the o utside .
The station is off to a good start, with listener
response durinn the marathon weekend at a 'fery
high rate. "The response in the dorms bas been
fantastic," said Mr. Roet ter. " We're a radio station
now, not just a couple of turntables opera tin&amp; out of
a closet. We' re operatin&amp; efficiently and effecth.ely ."
WI R R is presently broadcasting weekdays from 4
p.m .
2 a .m . and weekends from 2 p.m. - 2 a.m.
The last s how can run longer, and sometime does, if
t he announcer wants to kee p broadcasting.

Editorial elections

50% off
ON MANY TITLES

and is optimistic: about selling more . " We'll be sellin&amp;
a great d eal more commercials - we already have
some comm itme~nts, " informed Mr. Roetter.

I.IL Y TOMLIN
ITAR OF "LAUGH-IN"

Tldoe.. .., 1ele ••• el t11ffele •••livel Tlclel Offl... , Stefl&lt;lf· Hllte" LelMtl' (Meil ....... e«ell'f.., 'itltlo at~lf..Ur-11 e"v•'-1; U.t . Non.,. Hell, Stete Gel.... lidet OHice; r.lla llcllett, Hot..... le Pleae, Nl. . .••
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L----------------------------

Wedl\esday,·e;March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Student leaders from the State
ALBANY
Umverslty and the City Unwersity of New York, in
an unprecedented alliance, have launched a lobbying
drive to repeal the scheduled rise in tuition at the
branches of the State University system this summer.
as well as preserve the free tuition policy at the City
University .
The three-day meeting, which ended last Friday,
resulted m the adoption of a platform by the
Student Assoc•ataon of the State University and the
City Univemty Student Senate. The group plans to
mobilize support among the 500,000 students who
attend the 1wo un1versit ies to support legislators who
back their plans and oppose those who do not.
Proposals made by the group include : I )
keeping tuillon at the two universities at the current
level, and addmg another S50 million to Gov.
Rockefeller's budget for the two; 2) repealing the
SJO million Bundy program wh1ch aids private
colleges, and establish cost·shanng programs between
private and public schools : 3) open admiSsion to the
State Un!Vers•ty 111 fall I 973 to all high school
graduates, and end all undergraduate tuition : 4)
replace the current S70 malllon scholarship program
with an msured loan program

smugglers have stockpiled enough raw heroin in the
Marseilles area to supply American addicts for the
next 18 months. The unidentified official was
quoted as declaring that: "In round figures, we are
sure there are seven to eight tons of morphine base
in Marseilles." US. narcotics agents estimate that
80% of the heroin smuggled into the US. comes
from the Marseilles area.
TAIPEI - Generalissimo Chiang K.ai-shek, 84,
who had expressed a des1re to retire after a quarter
of a century of service to his, country, was quoted as
saying that he will accept a d1raft and run for his fifth
six-year term. The nationw1ide movement tb' draft
Chian g started almost 1immediately after he
announced, on Feb. 6, his intentions of stepping
down from the office. Chian1g had urged the national
assembly to "choose a ne\11 person of virtue and
ability to succeed me as president of the country."
Pres1dent Nixon will
WASHINGTON
probably ask Congress for a moratonum on new
court-ordered buSJng. and propose legislation to
ensure quality education for every school child. Thas
is tnstead of an endOrsem•enr of a constitutional
amendment to end busing.

SACRAMENTO
"Instant adulthood '' came
for abour 1.1 m•ll•on young Californians Saturday
rught, as Gov. Ronald Reagan s1gned, Wtth some

WASHINGTON
Dr W1lham McBndgc, who
discovered the damaging effects of the drug
thalidomide on unborn childlren, reported last week
"concern," a bul wtuch lowered the age at which that the anti-depressant tofranil as potentially more
C.aliformans become adults h) 18. Young people '" severe than thalidomide. The Food and Drug
the stale may now serve on Junes, become Administration said Thurs~lay the drug possibly
policemen. s1gn contracts, obtain cred•t cards and causes babies to be born without arms. Marketed
record cattle brands. among other th1ngs. However, under various names like imi1prin, irarnil, prodepress
they may not toast thetr new freedom. The stale and censlln, the drug was sold through 3.6 million
prescriptaons last year at an •estimated retail value of
constitution sets the nu01mum dtmlong age at 21 .
S12.4 million. It 1s prescribt~d for women suffering
MARSE\LU.S
A "h•gh U.S ufflc,al working from fits of crymg, fahgue, sleeplessness and
closely with the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous headaches. Affectmg the pullent's nervous system,
Drugs" was quored Saturday by the French the drug "destroys the nervt· cells that supply limbs.
Mend1onal-La Fmnce , as sayrng thai Once you destroy these. the limbs will not develop."

_e

~-----------TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS

Bible Truth

GOO LOVES YOU
" In th is "'' U manifested the lo ve
or Goo tc•wa•&lt;l us, btc41U$e lh•t
GOd sent hiS onty begotten Son
tnto tne world, that we m lvht
live throu·;h H im ."

Mod Styles for Guys and Gals

I John 4 : 9

••

Executive committee

Clinic budget passed
To nobody's surprise, ne1ther
Ian DeWaaJ nor Keath Frankel
were present at the Executive
Committee meeting held Monday
afternoon. Second Vice Pres1dent
Scott Slesinger and Academic
Affairs Coordinator Lester
Goldstein called the meeting to
discuss the proposed summer
budget for the new Legal Clime.
According to Fred Aueron,
Student Affam Coordmator . " Jan
didn't want this meellng because,
I'm quoting, he didn't want 'the
stupid Executive Committee to do
any more stupid things." Mr.
Slesinger replied : "The stupid
president was the one who voted
for the stupid proposal ."
Members of the committee,
notably Mr. Goldstein, made
references to "publicity.;·
referring to the coverage of their
decasion to g~ve Michael "Lev"
Levinson SSOOO for h•s
now-notorious proposal to take 11
trip to South Vietnam "l'llllever
forget the cover of today's The
Spectrum," moaned Mr
Goldstein, forcmg a brave smile.
Mr Slesmger hinted at the
possibility that the commtttee
might reconstder its dec1ston

The committee's business was
quite brief as Treasurer David
Keiser explained the budget for
the Legal Clinic. He noted that il
was next to impossible to find
desks, typewriters or filing
cabinets so the clinic requested
funds to purchase these things.
Mr. Slesinger and Mr. Goldstein
debated the merits of leaving the
budget to the newly-elected
admantstration. Mr. Goldstein
stated : " I don't think the purpose
of the election was to create a
dysfunctional student
government." His view prevailed
as Dave Steinwald, Student Rights
coordinator, pointed .out that the
new government would not be
able to pass the budget until
mid-April. By a vote of 5 0 I .
Mr . Sl esinger abstaining, the
budget, amended . to include
S4200, was passed .
A very quick exodus of
commjttee members was stopped
when Mr Keiser submitted a
"qutckie motion" ro move the
bail fund safe to the Legal Clime
headquarters. It was hastily passed
by a unanimous vote before the
commJilee members rushed out
the door.

Come t.tce the shtrts nght oH our

L

~

becks. Save 20" on anythi"9 wttte
lhon " - • · Hundreds of long
II-• to.-; 7,000 paira of Bella
Jtldtets to match. L•thlf ~-·
boots 8nd pet1t•. LM L..,.'
Wrangler, Campld, Lar.dlubber'
Male, etc. Be "in" - Save Mon.V
- Shop A•my-Navv .

N'f' CITY

730 Main AI Tupper 853· 1515 Otv . wun lngton Surplus Center

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable

WK&amp;W AND BUfFAlO fESTIVAl pre•enh

SEALS &amp;CROFTS
Friday, March 17 at 8 P.M.

Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

Kleinhans Music Hall
All seats resetved. $4.50 - First buyers Get BEST seats
fu~•"

on •olt t\Ow 01 lvffolo h111vol t.cket Otfic• Sto11e~ H•hon
lobby (moil 01d•n accepted weth ttomped te 'J..och:f,e~t•d •nwelo,..),
U I
No, ron Hotl ltot• CoUegt l•&lt;kt r Offict; foil• trdlen , Mo.h•tlt
"oao. N•o11o'o foil•

Etl-:u-ric IJa:tJce ..A..:r-ts
F&lt;epertory

THE UUAB VIDEO COMMITTEE
presents

"Michael Levinson gets $5,000
at Executive Comm ittee Meeting "

L~lVI~:ri
.A.:rtistic r&gt;ir-ector

* * .. * ..
"BERNADETTE"

•**•*

presents an &amp;Yening of
Oriental and Occidental dance

"Michael Levinson in the 'Gym"

8:00p.m.

... * "' * •

Millard Fillmore Room

HAAS LOUNGE
A master dass will be h ..d in the Dance Studio, Cl•k Gym,.
on Friday, March 10 at 6 :00 p.m. for university people•
interested in theater and dance arts history.
Sponsored by: Faa.lty of Arts &amp; Letters and The UUAB O.nce Arts Committee
A Oltv. of Sub-Bawd I. Inc:.

Page four. The Spectrum . Wednesday, 6 March 1972

Thursday, March 9
8 :30p.m.
"Boy, are they stupid"M. Levinson

liiiiiii_____________iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;.ii;ii;i;ii;;.iiiiia

�TAP: don't pay your telephone tax
by Janis Cromer
City Editor
War tax resJStance 1S growina an
Buffalo . "People ase not o nly
seelting ways to o ppose the war
but t o divorce themselves o f
perso nal part1 ~1pation an 1t ,"
declares the Buffalo Peace Co uncil
newsletter.
The Tax Alternative ProJeCt
(TAP), sponsored by thl! Buffalo
Peace Council, feels t hai "war ta x
refusal means that peo ple tak e
personal responsibility f o r
opposi ng the g over nment's
destructive polk1es, and for many
peo ple it is theu o nl y d1re ct vote
o n government policy."
J an Schmidt , cha irman of T AP.
no ted that tax resutance h.ts long
been a part of A me rica's his to r y
and cited the Bosto n 1 ea Part y
and the Whiskey Re bellion as
examples. The present m ovement ,
she explained , ongi nat ed With a
New York City press conlerence
on Dec. 10, 1969
At that tam e , Allan Gmsberg ,
Bradford Lyttle, Pete Seeger and
Kenneth Love announced the
formation of War Tax ResiStance
(WTR ) The y ~1d 11 w35 ~tarted
"in the belief that the nght of
conscientious ob)ecuon belonBS to
.aU peo ple, not j ust to those of
draft age." WTR was planned to
remai n decentnhzed With the
emph asi5 o n many aut o n o mous
centers across the country

Target : telephone excise tax
One of the pnncl ple taratts of
tax resisters i~&gt; the tel e pho ne
excise tax . The trle phone tax was
first enacted 1n 1941 as a
temporary lax
ThiS tax had
OnaUy been c ut to 3% dnd was
due to be discontinued entirely 10
JQ66. However , an Apnl 1966 . as

the government wu escalating the
VietMm Wu, Con&amp;Tess passed a
law raising the tax to I 0%. " It i!
cleu," said Represrentative Wilbur
Mills, chairman o f the Ho use Ways
and Means Committee, "that
Vietnam and o nl y the Vietnam
o peration mak•es thi s b ill
necessary . " (Con gressiona l
Record , Feb . 23, J&lt;l66)
Accordin&amp;ly , tht: teleph one tax
was due t o dec line to 5% tn 197 1 ,
to 3% in 1972, and to 1% in 1973
It was t o be repealed entnely tn
1974 . Ho wever, o•nce again. o n
Jan. 2, 197 1 , Congress ex tend ed
the excise tax at I 0 % for 197 1
and 1972 . Under this new law, the
ta x will dro p one pt!rcentage pomt
eac h year until it expires in 1982 .
Deduct tax from bil~
Ms Schmidt c:xpla111ed that
refusal in paying this telephone
tax IS a rela tively 1timple process.
F irs t , you must deduct t he
amou nt of the exc1se tax when
yo u pay your phone b1ll. T h e
excase tax IS clearly mdacated o n
the buJ m the colu mn wath the
headmg " Federal Exc1&lt;te T ax."
Add the figures 1111 tttis colu mn
.tnd subt rac t the amount from the
t o tal bill In add1tion. you must
attach a note to your payment
ex pla1n1ng why
you h avr
ded ucted the excise 1ax
The ph one ~:ompany wul
notify the Internal Revenue
Service o f the unpaid ta x, b ut the
pho ne co mpany will not cu t oft
your serv1ce unles:&gt; it i.~ unclear
that you are resistilng only the tax
and not the telephone bill atself.
" In fact ," Ms . Schmidt ex pla ined ,
'' the Federal Communications
Co m nussao n ( FCC) wiU have the
phone repla ced if it is removed
because o f the withheld IU C$ "
Another memns o l tax

resist10ce lS refusing to pay part
o r aU o f the Federal in co me tax.
Many resisters pay only 39% of
the tax because that is the portion
the government spends for human
resources, sa1d an other TAP
ora a nizer , Beth Garrettson.
Others, she sa1d , will simply
deduct a token five or ten d ollars
j ust to regi!t er th eJT pro test with
the IRS

No arrests for resistance
The Tax Refo rm Act o l 1969
with th e int roduction o f the W-4 E
form made refusal easie r than ever
before. added Ms. Schmidt. This
withho lding fo rm does not require
th e individual to da1m .t specific
number of ex e mpti o ns .
Previously , remters had to ue
about th e number o f depend ents
they could cla1m . Ms Schmid t
noted : " There have been no
arrest s for ta x resiStdnce. fhu!&gt;t:
who were arrested have hcen
under ch arges o f fraud " She
contmued , .. And the only ones
who were convJl ted were four
persons who had pleaded guu t y "
Most o f the proceedmgs agJanst
telepho ne tax reststers has been
takmg the amount of the Withheld
taxes o ut of th e rcs1~tl!rs has been
o r c h eck1 n1 .HlOUnt~ Ms
Schm1dt warn ed t h dt 'omellmes
the bank will also levy a service
charge and 11 IS up to the
discre ti On o f the bank whether o r
not to notify the customer in
advance of the account
Withdr awal.
The Buffa lo segment of t he
War T ax ReSISiance was begun m
March 1970. It draw s 1ts suppo rt
from cu ntnbuhons o f wtth.held
taxes. The IVu up's literature says
"many tu rdusers feel that they
must take their risistance be yo nd
resiStance. These resuters have

Also a lend ina agency

There will be a new finance committ4~ formed
to evaluate and pass budget requests. Any person
that is a member of the Student Assembl'f' can be a
voting member on the committee. Applicntions can
be picked up in 205 Norton Hall

••
•

•

••
•

Those studenu wishing to join

:DIAMOND

) Signing your name to the sheet in 205 No•rton Hun
2) Picking up 40 cards
3) Having student sign the cards
4) Returning the cards to 205 Norton

• (H6~9f~£~T

:

RtN9S

~ Eril'
•
•
•

••

•• 81 allen butlolo. n. y. ••
••••••••••••••••••••
Sl ..

UUAB Film Comrnittee presents

Thursday &amp; Saturday

&amp;

liom,llm&gt; 11om" ''P'

tlw ltd fll

11.' \

de.~lft! cmd

rrwrvl turpttude m ~ultr')'

stt•umiiiiJ Alncu.

L

RA Tt.D

~- X (Adult!. Only)

....-~~~~~ADov

t
t

t
t

Friday &amp; Sunday
March 10 &amp; 12

The Tax Alternative ProJect
now IS 10 the process of expandang
to a short term loan agen cy " We
are trymg t o buald up ;, fum.J m
that we ca n m ake no-1ntere~1
to .. ns lo groups whach have our
sym path1es," s:ud Sue Thom.u.
another fAP urg.~nm:r Th1~ fund
1s also des1gned t o he used fnr J
ball and defen~e fund for war tax
resl,l!tCrs. Bufl alo'~ rAP gut th e
1dea from th e Ph1ladclph1J W.H
1 ax (&lt; eslsiJnl.'e l·und wh1 ~h 1\
nu w operatio~ lclJM from a lund
25 ,000 .
In orde r to hc~· ome :1 vnt1ng
member of 1 A P , a co ni nhu tH&gt;n o f
five dollars IS be1ng 11sked f A P ~~
also encou ragi ng ~upp ort c rs to
mvest thetr sav mgs 1n the l\l&lt;IO
fund . I wo advantaaes were g~ven
for thiS "Alth o ugh the savings
w1ll no lungn rl!l:e,vr Interest It ts
gt~od 111 kno w tha i your m t&gt;ney
won't he used hy esl abh~hment
causl!s .~nd also. 1f you a re t1 tJx
f\!SISIC r , II Will be hJrder f tH thl'
IRS Itt wllhdraw o wed tJXl"S fro Ill

,,, s

••
•
•• Hfit(OCAAFTFD

the Assembly can do so by :

t
t
f TRA~~h~ ~ORNEE
t
t

heen donatina the equivalent of
the ir refusted tax mo ney to
groups wo rking for a mo re livable,
peac.:efu l and equal soc1e t y ·•
Buffalo's T ax Alternaltv~ Project
has I urn ed over contributed
money to buy play equip111ent for
the day ca re center at Friendship
House In Lackawanna and to
provide Christmas dinner an d
presents for 11 need y Buffalo
(amily .

the TAP fund ." Informed M s
Garrettson

March I I woritshop
TAP IS sponso nng a wo~r hill.
res1sters workshop in Room 33 4
Norton tlus Saturday , March I I
fro m II a .m . to- 4 p . m . Speakers
from the Philadelphia War Tn
Resistance will be present to share
ex penences and answer questions.
FoUowina lunch and a slide
presentahon o f the recent ail war
in Vietnam , tax resiS tance
workshops will be held Also to be
duc u.ued are plans for an April I 'i
d em onstrat io n at the Bureau o f
Internal Revenue.
" The efforts of :Jl"llvtlles such
as the work~hup .are duected
tow,uds bUilda ng J lax res1stotnce
commumty ," wd Ms Schm idt .
She c.:onduded "As long .ts w e are
pJymg fo r bombs. regardless of
t he Sid e that IS using th em , we
..-an 't say tha t thl' U .S . is not a
PJrt ••f war "
Qu~:\l luns
co n ce rning
member~ha(l 111 TAP or any legal
as pe ct~ of tux resistan ce should be
d1rected t o Ms Jan Schmi dt. 70Q
L1nwood Avenue. Buffalo 14201J
1!84 JQ I 7 The co m mitte e Jho
has JV;JIIuhl e ,·op1es of th~ buoklet
Aut 'f Gonnu I'D \' jor War "111
mmc•, hy Robert Calvert I ht~
hook diSI."USSCS Wh&gt; war La 'leS
,hould be restSted It expiJans
dearly how to res1st the telephone
l.tX , IIICOnll' tJXeS, J OO how tO
\tup tax es hom he1nf Withheld
from nne \ s..lo~ry

't

t
JOE
t
HILL t
t

ofSublBo.rdl , ln~.· .,..-~

Wednesday , 6 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

...

.'·

�------

I

I

EdiTORiAl

I

Wave of the future
Every year the newly-elected Student Association
officers begin their responsibilities replete with grandiose
plans and detailed priorities. last year was quite typical
although the degree of togetherness at the beginning was
extraordinarily high .
The current group of newcomers share many common
thoughts and beliefs about the tasks that lie ahead of them .
Frankly, we expect them to retain their mutual respect, if
not their unanimity, throughout their tenure. This isn't
because they are so intrisically different from previous
officeh.olders, but rather because they cannot afford the
luxury of failure or schism .
Student government has sunk so far during the past
twelve months that the new officers will have to expend
much effort towards simply eradicating the image of
incompetence and pompousness that Student Association
connotes. Besides regaini ng the respect of their constituency
there are several pressing problems for next year's Student
Associaiton. Their entire financial structure needs to be
thoroughly examined. All the past assumptions about
specific allocations must be disregarded and rethought in
light of the current waste and overallocations. This, however.
is not their most important task.
In order to succeed, or even continue to exist, Student
Association will have to become more than a disbursing
agent. All they did the entire year was give out money and if
this remains the sole function of student government, then
we'd be better off without it.
The Student Assembly must be revamped. Most
individuals agree that it should be reorganized along
academic lines, but the actual method has not yet been
devised. There is also a significant question as to whether
modtfication of the Assembly's membership rules would
require a constitutional change. Whatever the final mechanics
of the change, it can only benefit the students.
Students have a basic affinity to academic units. An
attitude survey last year revealed that over 3/4 o f all
students, identified themselves with an academic ent1ty.
Thus, a natural constituency exists within each department .
Unfortunately, few departments have well-developed
undergraduate councils. The Executive Committee will have
to foster their development, but the rewards should be
worthwhile.
If students become sufficiently organized w1thin each
department, they will almost automatically have more input
into cumculum development and tenure dec1sions. This
would effect a very quiet, but far reaching, change in
academic decision-making. We are convinced that the most
promising path to meaningful student participation in
academic matters is through the creation of a series of
intra-departmental councils.
The incoming officers have SA's negative reputation to
overcome. If they can change the Assembly from its present
self-i nterest politics to a deliberative body , they will have
succeeded where the1r predeccesors failed.

8Uf H£ HAO£
Ht LU'JkJDtR.
I

For what it's worth

least we can be su~ that he would either succeed o r
be shot , and in each case. we would come out ahead
As should be obvious, I am as much in favor ol
Spc-~:1al
thiS week only' You can send Mtchael
but l don't
Levtnson And the fnend or has ch o ice to Vtctnam ! getttng nd o f L~v as anybody else
And h o·w much wtll this jOUrney cosl , you ask? A thirtk h e's wo rth five grand Some of th ose
mere pallancc, my friends . The entare advent ure, responsible for this lud icrous atio n rationalized 1t by
includinl&amp; roundtnp fare and tw o weeks at the saying that they just wanted to get Lev o rr thear
luxuno us Saagon S tatler, for o nJ y SSOOO! That's backs anti the appropnation still has to be approved
right. btdaes and gentlemen, jUSt SSOOO And that by the Student Assembly and okayed by the
does n 't Include the profits t o be made from that admamstrat10n . Now all that is line, because even at
the assembly is roohsh en o ugh to pass ttus nonsense.
ex~: ellen t Vietnamese grass.
the adminiStration probably will not. It should be
It probably t!ln't fair to ~tart critica:r.ing the o ld
obVIOUS, h owever, that Lh.is lS JUSt the sort of
exewttve commattec when they'll be leaVIng us In a
~rresponStble act that plays right mto the hands o f
week (!hurrah, hurrllh) , but there are times m y
Albany . If th1s ts no t an example of student tnabthty
fnends
. One wo uld think that if they were
to handle their own fund s, I don ' t kno w what would
d etermuned to fund Lev they wo uld at least h ave had
be In any case, the probability o f t he money faaiJng
the pr~·sen ce of mtnd lo adopt Dave Kei~r·s
to pass the assembly certaJnly does not exc use the
propo~al
s nd pay for only a one-way ttcket
childiSh vo t e: of the execu ttve commtllee .
Actuall:{, tf I had known about thas fiasco m
As a sade note, I wo uJd like to mmm~nd the
advance:, I would have run d o wn to the second floor
only m ember uf lhe committee who h lld en o ugh
with lh•e suges11on lhal lev b~ sent to either Upper
sense t o vote tn the negative. For aU the t1mes that I
Volta lH Plattsburgh The tncredahle element in th is
have dmgreed wath or made fun of Fred Aueron , I
saga IS that certam members or the Stud enl
must say that h e demnnstrated a thousand fo ld
Assocaataon ho nes tly helieve tt t o be a worthwhjJe
bet ter judgment than any o f hts coiJe.agues Three
ex penditure Thts, I mtght remind you, fro m people
cheers fo r rnt1onalaty
whn didl no I feel they co uld spend students' money
Uo pefully , Levinson 's proposal w11l go over wllh
on J ~ nmmuni t y day care cenler
lhe assembly about as well as ht~o "fresh fa ced
Wh at , then , •~ the premase of thJS much needed eleven" went over wtth the student body Perharx
)IWrncy? Lev say~ he is " ready to make the peace "
then Le v wtll learn that those th ousand people
Ma yhr he's go t som ething lherc. Aflet len d ays or whom he daims signed hts petJtton did so as a goof
hsterunu to our ub n&lt;&gt;Xious court Jeste r, the Sout h ( wluch tndeed mighl be a tint: descn ption of Lrv
Vaetnamese wtll ltkely throw duwn lhear arms tn lumself) Ma1.hael LeVInson ts nothtng more.. than .1
surrend!Cr JUSt to get ham th e hell out of there Think 'htppae' hustler You get lhe tmpressaon th at had he
about tt. Lev, the secret weapon! Just tmag&amp;ne af the been born ten years ear he r. h e w ould have been the
Pentago,n could get a ho ld of h nn Rum or has inhat
numher o n e salesm an m hts fat h e r's husmess by now
tus nex l nuracle wall be to force the Egy ptians and l nslead we got stuck w e hun II doesn · t seem faar lsraehs to end hostilities hy havang lhe Vad co .tnd it certaanly ISn't worth $5000 to send a bad poet
Conexton broa1h:as1 h ts ta p es o n all televiSion to Vaetnam The only question ts Wh al'~ Lhe
networlts 111 the Matltlle East Perhaps he tould then cheapest and fastest way to get h1n1 the hell o ut of
, personall y "make lhc peace" 1n Northern Irelan d . AI
h e1e?

Nt)thing to be proud of

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22. No. 63

To tht• cdttur

Wednesday, 6 March 1972
E dttor-in.Cht~f - Denms Arnold

Co -Millmaina Editor AI Bem.on
Co- MiiiN&amp;ina Editor M i ~ e Ltppm•nn
Aut ManiiiJina Editor
Sus•n Mu~"
Business Man•r
lick Herl.an
Advertl1ln1 Mlru,cr - Sus.an Mellenttnr
. , Amy Ahrend
, joAnn Armao
Jeff Greenw.ald
.. .Howie Kuru
City
• , Janis Cromer
Copy . . . . • . . . . Ronnl forman
. . . . . . . • . . . . . M.arly Gilttl
Asst.
. . • . . CliiHe Krlessman
Featun .
. .. Lynd;, Ten
Graphic Arts
.... Tom Toles

Bukp.ase .

Campus . . • . ,

Lo~yout

Aut .

M~ryh ope

.

Runyon
VOIC.tnl

Lit. A Dnm• . Mtch4el Silve rbllll
Musi c
.Billy Altman
Off-Campul
. . Lynne T r;,eget
. .. 11.1can1
.Asst . . _. . . . .
Photo
. Mickey Osterreicher
Aut. • . • . . • . . . . Kim Silntos
Sports
. . • • . . • . . . B,m y Rubtn
Asst . . . . . . ... , . Howle f11wl

Tht Sptctrum Is served by Unlttd Press International, College Press
Servke, the Los Anaeles Times Free Press, the Los An,cles Times
Syndic.te t1nd Llbcr.ulon News Service.
R.publlciltion of mlltter herein without the ex press consen t of the
Edltor-.in-Chlef Is forbidden.
EditoriAl policy tS determined by the Edltor-in&lt;:hief.

Page six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 6 March 1972

by Hlli'V}' Lipman

reaso nably fear . that they will recetve Jess than
faar play from the Department?" Maybe he's proud
or t he Search CommJttet:'s refusal to publtctzc th r
votes for candadates because they don ' t want Ketter
to be embarrassed by ch oosing a cnadtdate with few
vo tes?

Th ere are tw,) major pOints made by Saxon
Graham '" your Marl h Jrd art1cle to wh ~~:h 1 would
like to res pond Or Graham refused to com ment on
SGSA o pposllto n to h is candidacy for Sociology
Depart ment Ch auman because "everythmg th a t IS
Or maybe Graham IS thmlung of "tus o w n"
said '" return will JUS! mean lhetr SGSA ~.ommg back
with counlcrstatements." And wouldn't that be a record. the record or tus medacal soc1ology
"prugra m." Qu1te apart from the academ1t
ternble ttung to have happen at a uruversaty
mcompetence o f much o f the work , Graham may b e
freedonn of disc ussio n and debate??
SpiectficaUy , I take up h ts assert ton " . the proud of tus finan caal grants which aUow h im to help
SocioloiY Depart ment•s record
. proudly speaks th1s government mtellectualJzc ra ctsm (studying
for llsel f." Does tl? Is Graham then proud of the fact ··underutiiJ UtJOn" of health resources m th e mner
that the Department has consist ently refused to caty), sexism ("fertility studies" an Afghanistan , hts
recogntze (Jet alone discuss or negot1ate w1th) the refusal t o aiJow Ms. to appear before the name of
State
and Umverstty - recognazed representative any wo man publishing in "his program"), ;tlld
organa z.a tion of graduate s tudentl&gt; (SGSA) for five Imperial ism (t he "objective" social scien tist and
years? lis he proud that only one assoc1ate professor ex-OSS agent who Stts atop a milJton-dollar AID
has been promoted to full professor in fifteen years'' grant to help form ulat e policy fo r th e Afghantslan
ls h e ptro ud of the fa ct th at only I 6 of 97 fuU -tjme rultng class)?
~duat e students (according to Department figures
Or maybe Graham ts proud Slmply of the power
g~ven t o GSA) are gtven any kmd of financial
capttalist money proVIdes him to harrass, innmidate,
support? Or ma ybe h e's proud of the mmimally a nd threaten the professio nal lives of his fellow
alculat ed graduate attrition rate of nearl y 50%? Or coll ea gu es, his students, a nd any other
does his c hest weU up with pnd e because most " tro ubh:makers" who cross his path .
graduate students know what the Faculty Senate Ad
Hoc Grievance Committee stated . "Students may
Junt' Licen ce

�J:ntirnidation by Graham
TlJ• tht Editor:

Bureaucrats exposed
ro '"~ f!'dltor

Thank you for the cnligh te ntn g a rt1 cle o n Or ,
Ebert in your f ebruary 23 Issu e You are performing
11 great serYI '-'e to the student body. exposing
bureaucrats where they Lie. In Dr. Ebert's case. you
ltle especially JUStified , co nsadenng Ius a cademic
record as a terribly boring lecturer; his gJVJng of
unfair tests, espectall y near vacations. his t o tal la~:k
of concern for bJs stut.f ents, h ts massive ego, hiS t otal
disregard for the Unavers1ty commuruty as a who le: .
l hope that in the future The Spectrum will ha ve
more articles o f tllis type. Expose b u reaucra t s in th •~
Un ivers1ty and embarass them o n tnvial po1nts, 1f
you canno t find major errors 10 them ways Every
nne o f them has some form of dtsho nesty and hate
for students htdden away tn hu ciO!jtt. If they an~
g~ven eno ugh of ttus embarassmg pubhcat y, eve n 1f
mnocent, th ey will fear t h e stud ent body and the
:~t udent press, a nd be more careful o f what they do .
In an effort to urge your writers bring 1n
exciting, scandalous stori es, why not run a
bureau,rattc watch hunt er's cont est wtth a pn7.e each
mo nth for the most sensational expose wntten. You
wall h ave SUNY AB's bureaucratic admmJst rat mn
quaking 10 it~ boots. And besides. more people will
read The Spectrum and more bwunesses w1ll huy
advertise rnents.
I lOVF The Sper trum I

Joan Walsh

Saxon Graham undereatimates the extent of his
own hostility toward ,raduate students by inform ina
1711t Spectmm " Maybe it (the diJtribudon of a
pe~ster
by the Sociology G ...duate Student
Association expressin¥ opposition to his candidacy
fo:r appointment u the next Chairman I re.ults from
m :r reputation of bein&amp; a bard IUY u far u students
arc: co ncerned .'' I Emphasis not in oripnal) This iJ
clc:a rl y an understatement, for just recently Prof.
Gr·a ham intimidated a graduate student, threatenina
her with expulsion from the medical pro,ram which
he beads should the student pose any further
administrative ..difficulty" for him.
It seems that the recent committee appointed
by this Univenaty to evaluate the Department's
ed ucationaJ pro gram converted en to a kmd of s py
network for Prof. Graham . For when the graduate
st udent complained, at a fonnal and confidential
hearing conduct ed by the Evaluating Committee,
Jero me K . Myers (a former tea&lt;;her o f Prof Graham
at Yale), took it upon tumself to tell Prof. Graham
about the " Lrouble-malcan&amp;" student Whereupon
Prof. Graham threatened the s tudent with expulsion
from the medical program under tus control.
Obviously, Jerome Myers, paid the University to
co ndu ct an impartial and judicious review of the
Dc:partment, beca m e a pa1d snformer
revealing,
under t he pretext of official dulles, co nfidential
m lformallon deetdedly harmful to th e career of a
,ruduate student. Moreover. wben a ,roup of
,rnduate students and a fac ulty member, dasturbcd
by Prof. Graham's hostility, attempted to discuss the
lnddent with Prof. Graha m , the latter ex ploded,
n n1ce a pin, with hostU1ty and intimidation : " It you
do,n'tl ikc it , Jac k, you can get ou t! "
Prof. Graham merely continues to 1mplement
wluat IS tndeed a general departmental polJcy
nqrneJy , to 1n tJm1date andJvad uals not ~.-nn form1ng to

the edicts of certain Faculty. For tbil iJ not the fint
time ltudentl ha'90 been intimidated; othen have ·
faced 1ctual threats by profeuors in the Department.
So serious, in f1ct, are the abuaea that just thia pat
summu an Ad Hoc Grievance Committee a-ppointed
by the Faculty Senate to bear a seri.el of formal
complaints about the araduate proanm found the
t ben4irector, Prof. Georae Huaco, auilty of
"improper" behavior: " Actordin&amp;Jy, we conclude
that Professor Huaco's behavior was improper." IP.
14 or the Report I That aame Faculty Senate
pi eva nee Commlttee stated : ' 'The Committee ap-eea
that o ne cause of the current problem (between the
Department and handlin&amp; of the araduate
pro aram I ...is the inconsistency and sdeaiYc
appi.Jcation of rules and re&amp;uJationa." I P. 19 I
Needl ess to say, alth ouJb fo und &amp;WJty of
wrong-doinp, the Sociolo iY Department h.u not
undertaken CO!'Tective measures to er.dicate the
massive injustic e so VIvidly aclcnowledaed by the
Faculty Senate's Ad Hoc Grievance Commlttce. '
Since this University iano res the ... mpant wronp in
t he Socao logy Department , then we can be certain
that Prof. G ... bam has no reason for co ntemplatina
correct ive action against his intimidations. Yet, he il
now beang presented an d touted u the most likely
person l o become Department Chairman.
~1 , a corrupt Department o f Sociology will be
gettiO&amp; o ne o f ats o wn klnd
a person h.i&amp;fily
dedicated to Improper conduct And, I m ust confess,
Prof. Graham 1s indeed an excellent choice t o carry
on such a noble trad ition o f intimidation in the
Graduate Program; overly qualified in the ut of
m tlmadation, he migh t well be m ost welcome,
parttculorly among full professo rs. in a Department
intensely loyal to co rrupt pract1 ces

S1dn ey M Willhelm
Auncwte Pro{t'IIOr

l:;'ood Service stinks
r,. thl' l:tlllor
Wonder why ynu're losmg busaneo;s? Recently 1
tud the pleasure to el!t tn the food seM~:e cafctcnlll
Bdaeve me 1t's no pleasure.
I wu one o f th ose students wh o was on hoard
OOt nlract last sc~rne$ter and dec1ded that 11 was
en o ugh to last me forever Just th e remembrance o f
wh•t they served makes my stomach turn Anyway
to get to the st ory at hand , two of my fnends came
to v1s11 me, and dectded th ey wante:d to eJt une meal
.1t food servil:el l wJrned them, but they mSJst ed

of th e rneaJ was set as1de by rny friends in dlSaust.
They dectded to try the supp osedly called &amp;rilled
chee&lt;Je sandw1ch es . One of my friends happened to
IJke tl tcongratulations Goodyear Cafeteria) but in
Ius attempt for a second portio n , he was denied
lmaae that , den1ed seconds o f arilled cheese! I tol4
him If you wait tall t o m orrow or maybe next week ,
you'll he able to get It at t he seconds co unter. The
mul was corning to an end, and as usual the
consumer was totally starved Icc cream was the
dcssnl Ah' Somethmg food serv1ce doesn't handle.
II) got to be good
Sure, bu t by lhLs tame the 1ce
~re:am melte d 1nto sou p ! I

hrst of aU. they caught one o f the helter me-&lt;~ls
I 1hmk food servu.:c called 11 chth and gr.11led che:c~e .
AI,YWay 1t was m o re hk c Gravy Tra1n and t oast Not
to menllon the yea~e all over the fond Th~ pnrt1on

Stl''''' Cllt•nnalr.
Clement //all
{lnp•t•nlfv Ca mpus

Unfair gym rules
To the eduor
I feel the studen t$ have heen cheated by thl'
at h letic department Because of lnten.:C\lleginte sports
and o th er events the gym isn't open tl\at o ften for
basketball. Sunda y I called up •nd they said the
gym was open from S
10 p m to piJY baskctb:lll I
came over to th e gym o1nd no one was check ing I 0
Cards. In t h e gym over half of the lt1ds th ere were
high school and dtdn't belong Thus :u a resul t w e
hJd to waJt to play . We finally got to play and as we
were play in&amp; the lights d1rnm ed . The lacrosse cl uh
was taking the gym t o practil:e Everyone was upset
so t hey turned the lights back on The lacrosse
players started practtctng bet ween ~ourts o n the SJde
of the gym wa th three bas kets mstead of the other
haJf w1th five baskets. They mterfered w1th the game
and someon e .:ould ha ve been senously hurt wath a
lacrosse ball Oymg arou nd Then the coach came
o ver and t old us we either had to go to t he other &amp;Ide
o f th e gym or leave because the lacrosse team was
taking half the gym to practice Tlus really ticked me
o ff. I left my studymg w1th my fnends , walked all
the way across campus to the gym because they sa1d
11 would be o pen , get there and find you had to wait
because there were high school ktds all over the
courts making the gym overcrowded, and then beang
pushed off the co urts for a lacrosse team pracllce
which was not sch eduled fo r the gym at all. I and
everyone else o n this campus pays a student
activaties fee . I feel we are entitled to a fair shake at
the gym . Also I a nd the other kids that were over
t here voted for the athJetic budget. If we d on't get a
fau shake, I and my fnends, plus others who
sym pathize with us in this gTievance will wathdraw
our student a ctivities fees plus refuse to support
antercoUegiate athletics.

Philip J

J~nd

the apathy!

7'u th•• F.dllnr
lu Tedtl I ~vy ~ lctte1 m 11rt•
on W cdncsc.Jo~y h·IHUdt}' 1 J I '17.! I
\lrongly agree wtth ht' rene,· tl&lt;&gt;n~ al&gt;uut the 'tuJents
ol t he UB community .
If any of you kno w Tedd I am w re you ~.:ould
a~;.~ee
With me that he has strong tol ti a tt vr ,
unden.tandmg, and ml,St tmportanl he " a hard
worker tn the ('AC wh1ch h:u grown tel hi" the largest
voluntee r stude nt organ1z.at1on'" the ~:uuntry 1 &lt;That
1&gt; ... omethmg to be proul.l uf )
Of c.;ourse we all have our o w n o~ppruachelo, our
o1wn sensitivities, o ur own weaknesses and above all
oliJI o wn methods of com munication lor shanng our
l ~e hngs to fellow stud ents So wh y 1lnn't some of
y()U get o ff your asses and start show1ng your
~ 1rea tlvity
wtthan yourself for rhc Um vers1l)l
c&lt;&gt;rnmunlly.
In

regard~

,\/)utrum

h ad the! ~han~t last w eek to m eet
reprewnt.wves from lhc uthcr SUNY ~enters and
State llmvcrsll y lOIIegt'~ .tl a ~onfcren.:e 1n Albany
S!l&lt;)n\&lt;'lred by the Sto~tc l:.ducallon Dept and I have
to !O.JY that U B is the most progressed and crea tive
Un1ver~1ty in reg;ud to st udent organtz.ation~ 1n the
SUNY system . Altho ugh the re are &lt;&gt;nly a lunited
amou nt of stu dent s part1c1pattng 1n t hese
orgaiiiiJIIOns com panng to t h e amount ul st ud ents
cmnllcd at lJ 8
Agam I have to agr~e w1th Tedd that a lot o f
UB \tudcnt~ are laLy , t1asfunct1onaJ and apathellc!!
&lt;.:omc nn you fu&lt;..kmg h1pp1C$ why don'l yo u start to
reahtc th at there are more Important t h1ngs en li fe
than yourself and start showmg a little m o re
1mt1u11 ve to th e stul.lent organ izations
let~ don't be called "~hit disguised in lo ng ha ir,
beard~ . bdls and worksh1rts ·•
Jo~ Bntton

nuwe waa an erroneous sentence In me Sub
Board story in Friday's The Spectrum. The
.,.,..-aph reed : "Mr. Slesingw introduced an
offer by David Oattner, owner of Poverty Hill, to
drop any charges against Sub Board for $660,
This motion wa1 unanimously passed." The
sentence lhould h.ve rad : " This motion was
unanimously defelted."

Coh~n

Wednesday, 6 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�Tuition will go to $800 for juniors There is no tuition in the City SUNY appropriations from the
and seniors which is a 100% University while the new tuition State have been cut while aid to
schedule in SUNY will make i't private colleges has been
increase in less than two years.
one of the highest priced public increased.
Universities in the country.

•

Rollback Tuition 1n SUNY

-

I

i
§

SASU and the Student Association ask the studEmts of the State University to support:

=======

An immediate rollback of tuition in StJNY to current levels
An end to unrestricted aid to private colleges
An additional appropriation from th1e state legislature to allow SUNY to maintain its §5
public university mission
§
A Free Tuition and open policy in SlJNY by the acedemic year 1973- 74, coupled with
the elimination of the Regents Scholarship, Scholar lncen tive, and State University ~~
Scholarship programs (all of these are applicable to tuition only)
The establishment of a Contingency Ftepayment Insured Loan program that would allow
students to borrow money for theiir education and repay it as a percentage of income
for only a fixed number of years
The restructuring of the SUNY B:&gt;ard of Trustees to make them more representative of
the people of New York

=

We need people to organize in the following areas :

Petition Drive to secure signitures on petitions supporting this program ; the statewide
goal is to get I million signatures

IEi
§

~

=
-=
=

~

=
-=

I

Pledge Campaign to get registered voters to sign a pledge card saying they will not vote
for legislators who do not support tlhis program
Voter Registration to get eligible voters registered
State-wide Day of 'Mourning' to plan local activites for this state-wide day of protest
(March 14, 1972)
Local Lobbying Groups to form small groups to meet with local community groups and
§
state legislators to discuss the SASU proposals
Public Information to issue press relleases, write articles for local papers, hold press 5
briefings, get on local radio and TV shows, etc.
§

Support the SASU -SA Plan
Register to Vote
Sign a Pledge Card and Petition
Volunteer to Help
Voluntee~r to Work

=
-=
=

~
=
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i~

I

CONTACT:
Debbie Benson
lan DeWaal

Tutition Informatfon Table- First FJoor, Norton Hall
Stude111t Association Office- 205 Norton Hall
(716) 831-5507,8,9

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIUIIIIIUIIIUIUUIII--·· ,• •MIIIIMfltUIUUIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOO

Page ei9bt • The ~pectrum . Wednesday , 6 March 1972

�Matman Rutter excites crowd
with tenacious wrestling style
Several of the wrestling Bulls'
re pr esentatives at the NCAA
Championshi ps this weekend at
the University of Maryland have
had previous tournament
experience. One of those entrants
is I 18-lb. Doug Rutter.

wei&amp;Jlt at Buffalo, to 118 lbs. for
the same reason.
How has Rutter achieved such
notable success on the mat? "I try
Io
keep the pressure o n
consta ntly ," h;e said. ''By
co n sta n tly pressuring any
Rutter, a native of Vestal , opponent, one will be able to take
N.Y., gained his tournament advantage of any mistake that
experience in last year's Junior they make, no mattter how large
CoUege Championships. The 5- 6 or small that the mistake may be.
wrestler b ad co mpleted an In addition , there· is usually a
1llustrious career at Vestal Central po1nt in e.ch bout where one of
Jligh School, dropping but one the wrestlers will stop trying. Th1s
match in his senior year. Rutter will occur because he 1s frustrAted .
U1en wrestled for two seasons at My goaJ i.~ to wre:stle a Oawless
match and take advantage of any
Comin&amp;, wrestlina at 134 lbs
of my opponent's lapses."
Rutter dropped from 134 lbs.
Rutter also has the knack of
to 126 for the Junior CoUege exciting the ~:rowd "Rutter is o ne
roumameot. "I thought that I of the most exc1tmg wrestlers
would have a better chance at the whom I have ever seen," praised
title if I went at 126 lbs ," he hJs current coach , Ed Michael.
eKplained . T11e ex-Coming star has " lie has the ability to bring a
t.lropped from 126. his wrestling crowd to the peak of rxcitement

with his tenacious wrestling
style."
Rutter has defeated some
outstanding opponents this
season, a point to which his 13 - 3
record will attest. Rutter rates Jim
McArdle of Army as his toughest
opponent. ..McArdle was an
excellent wrestler." he reasoned .
"However, o pponents like
McArdle are the type that one
must defeat to succeed Ln a
tournament such as lhLS one."
Rutter was. of course, refemng to
t h e nations . " I tru nk that
everyone at that lournomtlnt
thmks that he has a chance to
place. I really think that I ~,;ouJd
finish among the top SIX, 1f I drztw
a good position in the Oeld ." W11h
h1s c rowd -pleasing. tenacious
brand of wrestling, the ex-Vestal
Central star Just might be abk to
earn a place this week end at
Maryland.

JUsT Fo1R. F"tJ~
by Egman
Getttng up in the mvrning (yawn) sucks There's
111• dtplomat1c way o f putting it
11 JUSt suck~ It 's
&lt;llle of those un1versal truths among mankind . Abdul
(,amir in Biafra hates when those viiJage bongos
wake h1m up at 7 a.m. as much as Harry K.repntk 10
Cleveland hates the ring of his General Electr 1C
Snmn-Aiarrn.
For some reason, though, getting up ln the
murrung IS glamorized in hterature It usually goes
'omerhtng like this : "The sunlight crept in through
lh~ white venet1an blinds Fresh air seeped through
the w111d1)W as if to signal the dawning of a new day
1 he alarm rang and gently nudged me from my

Back 1ll lugh schuol, gellrng out of hed was an
(!Xperience ("Five more mtnutes, Ma') , but getting to
dass on time was an art In New York City they had
~hrs wonderful system called )pht -sessaon . whrch
tmeans il you're early session the sun gets up after
&gt;you. and if you 'rc late session the moon 1s out
before you are Innovative, eh'
WeU , my first class was Amencan History at
7·1 0 a.m., and that is a bummer Ltvmg o nly a block
!from my school, I used to leave my house at ?·OM,
and would just about 3Jways land ass~own m my
t&gt;ea t spht·Se\.:Onds before the bell. That's what made
tit an art : You had to beat the bell. Otherw1se. all
'k.inds of nasty things happened to you ( "Gu down to
·the dean and get a late pw, son")

rcvcne."
What bullshit' When was the last time you were
nudge!.l lltam your reverie? Let's face tl - nobody
get' up that way . It 's not l1ke in the movies where
the ~tatlet lazily stretches her hthe body, purrs "Oh,
.111othcr day" and looks glamorous

Can you picture a professo1 telling u cullege
•;ophomore ro gel a late pass? Or to stop chewing
gum? Or to wear a tte on Assembly Day' I never
trealized what 3 factory high sehoul 1s. Homt&gt;wurk.
Late passes When the hell tlllg.\, go to h1story
Open-mnHJed educatiOn 11 's tltll

'Armpit of the East'
lOiefendorf sprinl
People look l1ke sh1t in the morn mg. That's
I sull play games gc."ttlflg II• ciao;~. thuugh 11\ not
I 111ver~3l Truth No 2 Let me tell you how I get up
,
IS
compet1ttve
hcc:JUse lh~·rc\ no buller\ tu heal
111 the morntng (besides loo!Ong like shtl ).
lind
the
prof
tloesn't
~h ow half the tame anyway
The alarm rings at 9 . 15 I don't have to get out
Nonetheless. I have pcrfcch:d the Dtclen!.lorl Spnnt
11t hed U1Hal I 0, but it takes me 45 mmutes to move
I l.'urse the alarm With some pet adjcCitves. pull the Cut 11 down tu a sc1ence I can stand around the
IUnton talking to peuple a.nd rcudn1~ c:Htuon~ 1n
~ overs around me , trying 111 eke out the last few
Undert't'"enr un11l SO \econus hcfore my dol\\
\!.'lUll~ of wamllh
I \tumble 10 the hathwom. look 111 the m1rrur,
I then cut out tor D1elendort I!JII and my IUTH'
.111d throw up . Then I s..:arl !.lown some toast and Is 1.1~ually a ncar 77 ur 7X seconds H•glll llllW I'm
llu1en mange ju1cc , whach never ever ta~tes like the
workmg 1111 the Acheson 1 rot, whu:h 1equ1res a b11
H'al lhmg After 511mt' routine o~ct1VII1es, such as nmrl' .!&gt;tammJ I haven't be~n ahle to hrcaJ.. three
RCtlmg dressed , I '~(;rape the 1cc ulf my smdsh1eld
mmutes frum the Booksrorc HI my p:.yd1 da~~ . but
.111tl get in my car
I'm working un 1t
Philosophical Question No 2 How can it be
Well, I see I've managed 111 hll tim spat~
c.: ulder IOS1de the car than 11 IS uuts1de' On the way
l\1 school. I wonder why the hell I'm living m the without sayrng too much once agam What the hell
sub-zero Armpit of the East. All these questions ami if you want the depressmg realit1es of th&lt;• world,
1humb thro ugh The New York Tunes
nu answers. ( Ptulosophical Sigh)

University f=ree Time
starting
COFFEE -

WE~d.

RAPPI N G -

March 8

EXCHA N GE OF IDEAS

UNIVERSI TY FREE TIM E IS A CHANCf: FOR PEOPLE TO VOICE THEIR IDEAS
AND OPIN IONS ABOUT TH IS UNIVERSITY.
WEDN ESDAY,

MARCH 8th

7:30p.m. Norton 232

I
Basketball win

Bulls end Sfeason with
victory ove1· Bengals
T he Bulls were going to 500_.
four seniors were closing out their
CMeers, and the Bulls sought to
avenge a six-game losing streak.
These were the ingredients in
Buffalo's surpnsmgly easy, 93 - 75
win over Buffalo State Sunday
afternoon at Erie Community
CoUege. The win, which capped a
five-game Buffalo win streak,
ended BulTalo 's season at 12 12,
up from last year's disappointing
9 - 13 mark.
After the fast paced contest,
Bengal head Coach Don O'Brien
congratulated Coach Ed Muto and
remarked: "Boy, what shooting.
That 's what really lolled us."
O'Brien, whose BengaJs sttU
advance to the NCAA CoiJege
divisivn tournament at
Southampton. L.J CoUegc, saw
the Bulls h1t an even 50% on 38 of
76 field goal attempts. Buffalo
broke open a tiglll contest
( 41 -39, Buffalo al halftime) and
CI)USteiJ (II VICtOry Wtth COnSIStent
scort ng from the.r halanccd
attack
The ma11 who bwke BuOaJo
State's back was scn1o1 guard Eric
Rasmussen. who h1t a career high
15 pomts on seven of e1gh 1 field
goa I a llempts . I ron1cally,
Rasmussen, hit his career high in
his last coUege game. During
Buffalo's recent five-game win
streztk, Rasmussen started at guard
alongs1de Bob Vartan1an ,
replacing Greg Bruce
Also playmg tl1e1r last game for
Buffalo were ~:ap ta1n Ned
Langel1er and Orv Coli .
Addllum,1Jiy , the fuurlh Buffalo
~entor
was manager Abc
&lt;.irue11wald
Al'\.Otding lo
c;, uenwaltl . Bulf&lt;~lu basketball
wt'nt ·H 44 dunng lu~ tour -year
Slo! Y

Near br~wl
The contest pruved cxc111ng lor

the fans that attended, including a

near brawl, much to the joy of
Bengal reserve Dick Clark. Clark, a
late reserve, caught Buffalo's Bob
Vartanian with a right. however,
Vartanian refused to
accommodate the pugiListic Clark.
Soon Clark sounded out Jim
Tribble and Curt Blackmore as to
their availability for fisticuffs, but
could find few eager comers.
Vartanian , continuing his
consisten 1 BulTalo play. led the
Bulls' frve men in double figures
wtth 20 points, while Tribble was
second with 18.
Blac kmore closed out hjs
second varsity season with 449
points and 403 rebounds. Thus,
Blackmore becomes Buffalo's first
400 rebo under ever. a.~ well as
hitting fifth on the BuUs' all-time
scoring list in just two years. After
the contest, Blackmore mdicated :
"Next week, I'm going to start my
workouts to Jose 40 pounds and
help my play."
Ask any Bull anti he 'II tell you
what an tn-shape Blackmore could
mean to the Bulls. Although Dune
Burns, the Bengals' 6 6 center hJt
for 32 points, Blackmore and the
Bulls beat Burns where the game
IS often decided, on the boardJ.
Buffalo out rebounded the Bengali
51 - 34, w1th Blackmore grabbmg
I S.

Now. all that remains for the
coaching staff is retruitment of
fine junior colJege talent to join
the Bulls next season. The
schedule will be tougher with
most of ttus season's top name
teams being JOtnetl by maJOr$,
fa1rfield and St ffanc1s (Pa)
The Baby Bulls ended their season
falling 83-tl4 to Buflalo State
liuffaJo's poor ( 25 4) shootmg
wultl nut utfscl State's Dave
Hod1 wlw scored ~X painh
Darnell Montgomery lctl the Uaby
Bulls w1th 17 pomt~

at yewr

1111\'HI~SI'I~\~
llttttl~~~1rttltl~
WIN A

•

t4"

RCA
Sportabout

COLOR

T. V.

If you have somnhing to AY - say it where

PEOPLE

WI LL

LISTEN

Everyone is invited. CALL83:1-5502 for more informatiion.

STeP II
-IE A W'll1li8R I Wednesday, 6 March 19•72 . The Spectrum Page rune

�OVERTIME
by Bany R ubin
SpomEditOI'

The scene was Boston. The team, Bosto n Stale, but the usual
playoff jitters were missing. Buffalo's ice hockey Bulls seized the time,
and immediately went to work on the pitiful warriors. As State public
relations man Jack RutJedge had told The Spectrum prior to game
time, the Warriors were just playing the season out, and were surprised
to be seeded fourth . In fact , the only people not surprised at Buffalo's
fifth seedmg were the members of the ECAC hockey committee who
forced the Bulls to travel.
For many of the Bulls. their Mohawk fan-jet flight to Bosto n was
their first air venture. One of the air novices was senior goalie Mike
Dunn, wl\,0 held the fort when tus forwards did not backcheck, and
who aided the offense with a big assist on Dale Dolmage's shorthanded
goal in the second period . Dunn raised his st1ck in the air after the
score. and proceeded to stymie ten straight Boston Stale power plays.
The second period alone featured five Wamor·man advantages and 22
shots on goal. The man on the spot. Dunn, saved the Bulls from
embarrassment as Buffalo's defense hardly resembled playo ff hockey.
True to form the TAG line (two a game) went to work early with
Dolmage and Freshman Mike KJym supplying the punch . Bob Albano,
the third member of the line failed to score, but as one teammate
pointed out, "nobody passed the puck to him." Dol mage, who hopes
to go 1nto graduate school or teach1ng next year, played only this year
m the Buffalo blue, thanks to last year's backward ECAC decision,
which forced Canadian junior college transfers to sit out one yeat after
t ra nsfer. Dolmage, with bis eye glasses and lack of size, doesn't look
Wee the typical hockey player . . that is. untd he gets the puck and
free lances to the net Eager Mtke KJym backs Dolmage on the right
wing, with his booming slap shots normally whizzi ng o n net.
Today as the Bulls travel to Vermont for their second round
playoff game in Burlington, defense figures tu be the po1n1 stressed by
Coach Edd1e Wright Les Teplicky and Bob Goody, each saw m the area
o f 40 m1nutes of act1on against Boston State, and appeared the most
solid.
Tephcky , whu was hurt by the same lfansfcr dec1~1on as Dolmage,
has seen hts career at Buffalo mortened by IOJUry and admmtstrat1on
After recovering from a clot , the engmeenng major Teplicky was
injured in a snowmobile acctdent Teplicky complained o f trouble in
pushing off his mjured leg from hts nghl defense pos111on. but even
mjured, he can outskate most of hts teammates
Goody. also bothered by tus second broken nose of the year, will
probably shed the plastic face mask he has worn in recent games. The
two h11 as fiercely as anyone on the Bulls and as Goody remarked ,
"communicate." I n fact Tepl1cky, who knocked at least two warriors
woozy, plays wtthuul the aid of shoulder pads. One look at Tephcky
could send the opposr tmn tntu lud1ng.
Thm~ like Vermo nt 's 11-garne home w1nnmg streak ~huuldn't
bother the Bulls, who were adm1ttcdly sky h1gh for Boston S tate Fuel
for the Buffalo psych may come from the fact that Ve11nont employ~
several former skaters uf the Buffalo area, mclud1ng Division II all-star
forward Fred Hunt. Everyone knows that the Hulls can score. but
Vermont g~ves the Bulls a test of defense
Mike Dunn can mmd the nets, but the probable key to a Buffalu
semi-final wm should be overall team defense and checkmg. Too often
the Bulls let up aga1nst Bost o n State after sconng goals , and twice the
warriors responded w1th gQals Wllhlll ten seconds uf Bull goals The
Bulls arc too much of a s pltlted and talented bunch to let the
Burlington fans get to them. The intangible spml of the Bulls can carry
the icers so far . but they'll have to skate at Vem1ont to win.

ECAC: semifinals

Icemen face Verm9nt 'Cats'
b)r H owie Faiwl
Asst. Spons l!'ditOI'

Torught the Bufralo hockey
Bulls will rnake an encore attempt
at upset against first-seeded
University of Vermont in the
semt-finals of the ECAC Dimion
II Playoff t:hampionships. Buffalo
won the right to meet the
Catamounts after Saturday night 's
thrilling 9 S upset victory over
fourt h ·seeded Boston State.
However, to duplicate that feat in
Bwbngton., Vermont will be no
easy task whatsoever, for t he BuJis
are coming across one of the
classiest teurns in the East.
Vermont is no stranger to
playoff cct mpetition. Ever since
their ho ckey program got
underway m 1964, the "Cats"
have puticipated in ECAC
championships year after year,
last winnu1g the crown in 1969
while runnerup to Bo wdoin 1ast
year. This season, in their finest
schedule e11er, they went 13- 2 - 1
in conferernce play and 17- 6 2
overall.
Currentlly they are the hottest
club in Dhision II with a 13-pme
unbeaten sttreak at home mcludmg
spectacular wins over such
Division I teams as Colgate, New

Hampsh i re, Dartmou~
Northeastern. One has to go
mon ths back to find their
Division II loss, tha t coming
S - 4 overtime decision
Bowdoin on Jan. 7.

and
two
last
in a
to

Vermont combines a hishJy
potent offense with perhaps the
tightest defense in the division.
Their leading scorer is Fred Hunt,
a n a live Buffalonian out of
Nicbols School, who this year set
a team scoring record of 49
points. Not far behind, thou&amp;h, is
Ted Castle from Rochester, w1t h
47 points and a Vermont record
setting 24 goals. Hunt and Castle
combined for three goals m
Vermont 's first round playoff
victory Saturday evening over
Lowell Tech .

8es1 defenseman in East

last eiaht ~rlods o r hockey. AJso
instrumenbl in that scoreless
streak is ,oalie Jim Kiely, who
three pmes ago took over the
net·mindini job from regular
St eve Eckerson and bas since
compiled a stingy 2 .75
goals..pinst avenge.
The Cats avenge seven goals a
pme and have really shocked
several colleges with t heir
devastatina attack. Apinst tbe
University of Connecticut, they
sent I 06 shots on aoal enroute to
a 16- 2 romp, and early this
season, they shutout Boston State
(yes, the same Boston State)
16- 0 .
It certainly looks like rouab
goina for Buffalo toni.Aht,
particularly before an expected
capacity CTowd of 4209 at
Gutterson Fiel d House. The BulLs
will have to tipten up defensively
for any hope of victory and much
will be expected out or Buffalo's
high scoring forwards. One thin&amp;
is sure. The Bulls, particularly the
seniors, want this one badly badly enou&amp;h to create some
havoc tonight in Burlington.

On defense is none other t han
senior AU-American Ted Yates
who is touted by many to be the
best defenaeman in Eastern
college hockey. He'a also a high
scoring one, a la Bobby Orr, with
39 points for the year. Ya tes
accounted for four points in that
The pme will be broadcast I.Jve
lowell Tech conquest and is the
key member of a defensive unit over WBFO radio, 88 .7 on your
that hasn't Jiven up a goal in their FM dial.

Directorial Positions AvailabJe
Two students are needed to fill d irectoral positions in Sub
Board 1 's Publications and University Union Divisions. Both
positions will involve management of entire openrtiom and
oHer standard benefits. Submit resum• 10 Room 214
Norton.
For more information call 831-&lt;5502.

THE

TI

Guys &amp;

Chicks
can
DRESS TOGETHER

Eastern Hills Mall
~.... ~~ 4 545

Transit Rd. ~~~

�AD IN~MAT1C*

CLAIIIFIII

CLASSIFIED ADS m•11 be pi~
Mondlly tttru Frleltly IMtWMn 9 a .m.
•nd 4 :30p.m. •t 35~ NoJton Hall .
THE STUDENT r•t• of an lid lor one
d•ll Is 81.25 for tile first 15 wordl•nd
.05 for uc:h addltlon•l word . $ 1.00
for uch •ddltlon•l dlly. The deadline
for Mond•ll Is Frld•v : for Wlldnesdlly,
It It Mondlly, and for Friday, It 11
Wlldnescley by 4 •30 p.m .

a

"HEL.P WANTED "
ads cannot
discriminate on the buls of WK , color,
a..CS or national orltln co anv extent
(I.e., preferabl y Is still dlscrlmlnatorvl .
"FOUND" ads Will be run free o f
c haree for a maKimum or 2 dav s and
15 WOfdl.

WANTED
W A NTED : F lute, any conditio n,
lnu oens.IYe. C all 837·36 7 9.
PART-TI M E Claneen want ed . $4 oar
h our. Rlldlee' s, 74 W . Chlpp-a . Apply

osome
girls have
more fun.

after 4 p.m.
RESEARCH (term) P•oers bough t,
••changed. Contact Marc al
831-3370 at anv time.

104•,

START $2 per hour Jalarv plus bonus.
Work 4 - 8 p .m. IIIIMI&lt;days, 1o-2 p .m.
Saturda)ll. C all 83!;·3803 Of TF9~40 2 .
FULL OR part· hnle Jobs IVIIIable wit h
Bestllne Inc. Calli Art 886·2 0!14 o r
Mike 835 · 5215. MIMtlngs at E•oeutlve
Ramada Inn.

APARTMENIT FOR RENT

Rl OERS WANTED to Westchester
(NVC), l. .vlng Thursdey afWnoon,
Marc h e, return Sunday . Call Dave
(wenlngs) 831·2681 .
RIDE WANTED to Albany March 9 or
10. Call Kathy 835 · 3584 .
RIDE WANTED t o N .Y.C . lpreferably
Brookly n) ror March 17 a nd back late
Sun. March 19 or early Mon . C a ll
833· 3491.
RIDE WANTED to Colorado In March .
W ill share driving and ••penses. C all
Fred early mornings, 837·2 319.

NEED AN APA RTMENTf We can
help. 1 5 buys list o f ten lanoloro
(m•nv own severa l apartments ) ana
phone numbers. C nll 831·2 992 .

TO N .Y.C. Marcn 9 or 10. Call Jeff
832 · 108!1.

M ODERN APARTMENT for three
available June 1st Five minutes from
c.ampus. Olshwastier, a lr-eonCIItlortlng
and c arpeting Inclu ded. Call 8 37· 1630

GUILD folk guitar, Model F 20 .
E•cellent conditiOn, $111 !'&gt; w ith ease
Call Mary 834 ·01146 .

---

U .B . AREA . Well lurnllheel, e11c e11ent
three-bedroom . P.ccommoelates five.
Across from camP&lt;JS. Sa pl lease
available $10(1 cash Clown Ben
Tulumello 633 ·8 6413 .

2 FURNISHED •IPa rtm ents In sam e
houM - 3 people . .ch - 8 minute
walk - summer HS.slon . 831 · 228!'&gt; .

RIDE BOARD

FURNITURE : d o uble beds, Oreuers,
c hairs, coucn o pen ing Into double bed.
Reasonable prices. Alter 5 p.m .
835-4521 .
TWO FREE Kittens, w lln shoh, are
looking ror a 9 000 nome C all Shelly
834-0966
1962 CHEVROLET Supersport
conv er tible. E•eell ent body and
r unnlng eon oruon
C 4ill 634· 204!1 .
Must sell Best o ffe r.

1965 CHEV S .S. autom.atlc 283 V · ll
Ins pected In J .a nu.ary AsKing $450
C .all 837· 95 17 OYenings
NIKO N FTN w ith rnlcro·Nikkor , 3!'&gt;
mm, F2 .8, nine months Old. Dennis
894 · 2691
FOR SALE : 26· tnch w oman's b ike .
Coaste r-brake . C a ll Jo.an 83 7· 3209

--------M G, Trlumpfl, Vw, owners - cheek

our huge Inventory of used parts fir st
.and ~ ve' I noepenoent Foreign C ar
S e rv•ce 839 1850
40 ACR ES w ood ed (stream) properly
IOntar lo
U .S. border I, $ 1000 Write
L evona s, I Li!'IVi ew Terr.a c e , Bullalo ,
N .V . 14216
'57 M ETRO lnternellon.a l v.an, clun
C a ll David 83 7· 9294 a ny time.
FOR SALE . 1971 Honda 17!'&gt; cc, 1800
miles. Excellent condition . 1183-4!'&gt;89
BACKPACKING TENT , two-man blue
nylon Oeny "Vea r Round" mode l
w it h rain- fly , su,.es, pOles
$85
834·5384 .
1960 VOLKSWAGE N
sound body,
rebuilt engine , O&gt;&lt;Cellenl !Ires, r.adlo,
but not much neat C.all Fred mornings
837 ·2 31 !1. 1 125.
B&amp; W RCA Tv - eACellent ~onOit l un,
2 1 · ·, West ll'ghouse room -Size l.an
) ·SPeed . BOih $6!'&gt; . Call 874 · 5352.

rig;ht .
contta,:epttve
for yo11
you probably use Tampax
tampons. The internal
sanitary protection that
solves your monthly problems. Lets you be as active
as you please. The silkensmooth container-applicator makes Tam pax
tampons comfortable and
easy to insert. Go ahead,
be the girl that has more
fun. There are millions of
girls just like you. All
Tampax tampon users.

Right. ~u11e lt'a effec:tive!
Ri9ht. because it'a gentle, .o you
cen uM It with confidence. And
these era the big reasons why
Emko Foam ehould be your
contraceptive. Clver ten years
of testing and ~nec:llcal studies
prove Emko one of the most
affective contrnceptives available. y_. it con tail,. no hormone•
and th.,-efore ca1nnot harm your
general hoalth a,nd well -being.

Tbe inside ~ of how the
Nixon administnlion used
the HEW Oftice of Students
and Youth co eo-ope dissc:nt
and save face for political
appolnteet--by cnaCinJt an
illu~lon of action.

Emko Foam Tw() Wars ...
• ~guiM with dWic•t•. clear

applltator
• Pn · FI/, th•t cjrn H filled up

to one wHk in •dvance

TANDBERG 12, Dual 1219, Bose 901 ,
Mae C · 26, MR-G S, Ml -3, Seotc 299-F,
Dyne PAT - 4 , 120, A25, Braun
speakers, Allee A · 7 500 II, AMPG&gt;C
AX-50, B ogen tuner, 897 ·0297 after li
P.m .
HARMAN KAROON 030, 630 - d ua l
p o we r su pp ly receiver$, Hegeman
speaKers, Phili ps turntab les : cu e ing ,
a nt-sK•te, a u to·Stlutoff, tor the price o r
a n A . ~ . Sinclair 3000, 50 REAL watll ,
$ 150, fine selection o f Imported
Engllsn equipment, Queo, Radford.
Oecca , B&amp;W , 89 7 ·0297 or 6 114-4937

L.OST : Black briefcase with Oo&lt;*s and
papers . Contents -~~ Important .
R-MO for return . C all 837~848 or,
return to Ene!llh ~1 . API for Julie.

ROOMMATES WANTED
FEMAL£ WANTED , furnl1hed
apartment, 5 min. walk from campus.
own room. Call Jane I ll~ 123.
COUPLE or two roommates wantlld
Immediately. C heap . Not far from
eampu1. Hue- house. Call 839· 3019.
ROOM IN a private home for rent.
$12 / week Inc luding utilities, 15
minutes walk . 832 ·2154 .
FEMAL.£ ROOMMATE for Immediate
occupancy (Dig house o ff of Hartell ,
140 per month . HI mont1'1's rerlt only
120. C a ll 837~ 159.
TO S HARE two~room apt , with
two males . Swimming pool, mOdern .
$ 6 7 /mo. Including all utilities. C all
~lett or D o ug, 688~295 .

MISCELLANEOUS

1970 JAGUAR XKE
Exeellen ij
condition Brand n - AM/FM stareco
radio Included . Call 688 7327 evenln(ll .

WILL TUTOR In p'hysles, math,
com puter science. Very reasoneble .
Call 1134~ 179. ASk for S u resh.

REFRIGERA TOR S, stoves .anal
w.shers. Recond itioned, dellverlld anal
guaran teed
O&amp;G Al)pllances, 1144
Sycamore. TX4- l183 .

BUG 8URNT OUTf We 'll rebu ild It for
leu - V .w. tuneups thru overha uls,
832 -166lt 894 ·!1359.

"A NASTASIA" nMCIS a home. She's 4
1961 lovable, li ttle Temptesc, 8 2,000
rnil e$. All sne cos ts Is S 110. C a ll AI at
831 ·4113 or D ebb ie •t 832 6 815 .

PERSONAL
DEAR RI C HV Happy Olrthelay
Co n11ral ulallons, you've fina lly reachecl
p u berty 1 love VOlA. Me .
DINKY, u each Clay passes . I love you
more ana more. HaPPY ann lverstr)•
(one monlh) !&gt;tonky
STI NK V t H appy 1 mont h - the besl
of rny life
I 'II love you alway•
Dinky
l..AOY, you loved me e ll up lut wMk
So all I c a n do IS ~MI) 1 w ill taKe somtl
super enerQilerJ and sM il 1 can Sla\1'
awake Curl.
GAMBLING BLOOD• A CQu 4inl an~to
deSired or woman 18 22 who 11 lea••
4!nO atcrac\lve wttn warm, milO aver.
CIIIPOiitlon by m a n (251 who IIK e iO
lavorlld odds I nQulre B o x 70.
PAlO SUBJECTS nMCied tor medical
eJCpedmenu. Must be wlllln9 to accep t
trace am ount• of radioac tivity a n1J
other m ed ications. At l. .n 21 a nCI 11~
good health Call 1134 9200, ut . 202',
Mrs
W1 111tll t r Of eKt. 380 M IU
Latch foro
LOST 8r FOUND
FOUND
slide •uie on A ll enn u •ll
Contacl Danny 83!'&gt; 75 78
LOST
Yellow notebOOk containing
Mlcrob iOI09ll •nd Soeecn notes. Need
Oesperalely , I I found , &lt;.ail 627 ·2661
Reward
WA lCH FOUND
C a ll831 1144

RiOQe Lea campu\

FOUND

al A c he\011 lo ad•n9 OOck
no&lt;jhl, .a WalCh
come to
Acneson 308 IU iele•HIIy

1 hursd.ay

~~HAIRSTYLING

Joe '.s

Th~atre Barb~r

EXPERT auto repairs, modern 91rtg&lt;t
and eQuipment , frM pickup, very
r. .sonable student races. 634 -2 045,
12-6 p . m .
ANYONE wltnltfllng a n accident on
Kenmore Av•. near M ontro se Ave .
Frldl)', M.areh J, 1972 at 11 : 40 a .m .,
call 876 7076 1mport1nt
T'r'PINO. eKperlenc ed , n ear u .a .. $ .40
per pajle . 134· 3370. Fact service
GUITAR Instructi on be91nnlng ,
rock, b lues . c a ll David 886·3204
LEAR N TO WEAVE . Classes start
Mondl)l l/13. 1 :30 3 : 30. Earth n '
Wear, 3368 Ball•y, 838·3574 or
1134 ·7!184 .
PERSONALIZE your wlldd lng w ith
"your·• 1ongs. C a ll Justin P . H eal)'
2 8 !1 86011 or Cynthia O.allavla
731 ·5787.
THREE beautiful kittens nMCI • vood
nome, 6 weeks olo, litter trained C a ll
K•ren alter 9 o .m. 837.0!&gt;33
JOB
AESUME~
professional,
confidential consulletlon . Soe&lt;:l t l rates
for n u oent1 , rece nt graduates and
vetera ns. 835-4473 .
U NBELIEVABLEIII J e t co Europe
$169 roundtrip, N . 'r' C . departure.
Cont act S tave Gold 113!'&gt;· 75 19 arr .. 7
p. m
F EMAL E senior In ...reh of lob Can
oo m a ny types of worK , prefer• bly In
UB area C a ll Mary 8311-4892.

----

JOBS ON SHIPS' Men . w om en
Perfect summe&lt; job or career N o
eMperlenee reQUired . Excellent PlY
worldwide tr1vei
S e nd 52 lor
inform aCi on . S ea faK, Bol&lt; 1239 ·NF ,
S uttle , wasnlngt on, 98111

---

PIZZA G0-00. Thll wMk 's •oeclal
large p lzu , 2 FREE bottles o l s oda,
small pltu o ne f ree 838-4557 .
OPEN SU NDAYS , FREE DE LIVERV
to dorm•
ANTIQUES a I'd mOdern furniture .
c ar.amle~,
China, et(
See SIO at
Yeste rda y &amp; Tomorrow Shop, 1439
Herte l Ave .

(A t Colvtn Tlteotrr)

APARTMENTS WANTED

•WIGS •HAIR CO LORING

J - -4 BEDR OOM apar tm ent nMOe O
desperately, n ea r campus. Occupa ncy
starting May . Call 831-40!'&gt; 2.

~~~871 -2989~

----

REWAR D for l or 4 ·b edr oom
w ithin walk ing OIUance
C.all She rl llll · l759

$20

~partmenl

Study in
Guadalajara, Mexico

" Fascmaung 'i n~1dc '
rcadtng . . Pcorle who
think their govcrnm.:nt can
and should do ..omethi ng for
the poor and the ou1ca~t
oughl to read t hi' hnnlo.
·

THE PARTICIPATION PUT-ON
ReftectioMof a Dbenehanted
Wuhlncton Youth Exper1
Tohy M offett
•l'uh/hltrn ' Wul./y
• • Tht Wa,hilftllln l'uH

A Delta Paperback $1.45
At your boohtore
rHil 1! ... 1(0 CO .• liT. LOUt• MO .

WHARFOALE 400 , 3-way speak.,li.
VIrtu ally n - . Li lt ; $111 e4!Ch , $15 10
fo r two, Also Ovna SCA-35 amplifier·,
895 ·0653 .

lOSS Kenmore Avenue

Of oourae, Ernko Foam has

other importar1t advantages .
too. ~,. are ruo complicated
~~ehedul.. to follc.w; no prescrip;
tiona or fittings. and you use It
only when you n4Md protection.
Besidea. you hardly know it's
there. With all G•f these advantage a. you owe' It to yourMif
to try Emko.

'6 2
C HEVV , 4 -0oot, 6-eyllndeir,
rundard . Perfect running cond ition,
1200 and '65 Ford eonver11ble, Ill!•,
~:JO . 873~986, Boo. '64 aove•r
Town van converted to mobil home
equipped with stereo, four beds, st ovo,
running water, furnac e, dinette, 1150(1.
Neecss envlne . 873~716 .

FOR SALE

S K I EQUIPMEN T l...tely Rosemont
b o ou lbluel, $11 0 (rev 11551. men's
to ~•. lady'' 11. C 41 11 837 9517 •Iter :;

Some girls do have more
fun than others. They're
always on the go. Love
hiking, camping, all active
sports. U you're that girl,

FOUND - w.tetl with striped band,
Lockwood L.-p. l"eb. l1th . C all
831-4924 .

Al.o eve ilabk
cover $6.95

on ()elacont hard

The Guadalajara Summer School, a
fully accred1ted University of Arizona
program, will offer, July 3 to August
12. anthropology, art. folklore, geog·
raphy, history, government. language
and literature. Tuition. $160; board
and room. $190. Write Office of the
Summer Session. University of Ari·
zona, Tucson, Arizona 85721.
•

'15
REWARO for two-beoroom
•P•rtmenl b89lnn ln9 SeptemlH!r !June,
11
re q uired)
Coli 831·3987 or
831 · 2270 .
SENIOR n Md\ roomy .ap.a•tment ne•r
campus for one . June thru May . Call
837~430 .

4·BEOROOM house or apartment
desperately n eeded l o r S ept. near
campus C a ll 8 31·2870 or 1131 -287!'&gt; .
APARTMENT wanted for four m ala
students ror nel&lt;t year Cont a ct M ike ,
How le o r Dave 11 8 38· 1167, 83 1·2897
or 831-4113 R-ard .

• FREE CUP OF COFFEE: WITH THIS COUPON---·

i~~~!t~~N~RAIT

(no pun:t-. . - r vl

•

:

I
:

lllr Spaalls-J ~
Pl1old
1.00

IHIIFISI·liiCI·IIIll

MoncMy """ s.turca.y 5 a.m. to 1 D p.m.
f•uwl"' ....•Fridey Filh Fry
.J
•Comtlfet• T•lce-Ovt Senriw • 31-tcrt Dote - lt4r
•
•••421 HOPKINS Slf. I " - Tlfftl _ _ _ _ __

L

�Announcements
EnJiish Mijors Ciucus will be held todily ilt 4
p.m. in Room 10, Annex B. Any English miljor
wishing to work on pre-registration for the fall
1972 semester should attend.
The U nderanduate Mana,ement Student
Association will hold an A~unting Club meeting
tomorrow at 3 p.m. in Room 234 Norton. It will
be a reorganizational meeting and elections will
take place.
The Stu dent Council is sponsoring an
information fair : " Earn and Learn" tomorrow at
3:30 p.m. in Room 231 Health Sciences. Senior
nursing students will speak o n job opportunities
and summer expenences to all sophomore and
junior nursing students.
The Bridge Club will hold a duplicate \eS\io n
to mon ow at 7 p m. in Room 233 Norton. All are
in\lited.

A tenlor llfCAVirll class is being organized. It
will m1e et oo Mondiy niJt'lts and an OCQsionil
Sundi}f afternoon. R~ Cross certification will be
given to those who ~s . Class size limited to 15.
For information Mld registration call janis at
831-2395.

Kundalini Yop beginning classes in exercise
and meditation are held at 196 Linwood Ave. For
information call 881.0505 . Classes are held on
campus on Monday at 4 p.m. in Room 8
Diefendorf and Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Room 331
Hayes Hall.

Bi!;onhead, the senior men's Honor Society,
will be· reviewing candidates among juniors next
month. Students' academic records, University
activiti1es and community service will be taken into
consid«:ration. All those junior men who wish to be
considE:red are to contact the Off-Campus Housing
office In Goodyear Hall or call 831 -3303 . Record s
must b•~ received by this office by Marett 31.

The Student The3ter Guild is holding auditions
today from 4- 7 p.m. and tomorrow from 6- 10
p.m . in Room 242 Norton. No experience is
necessary.

UBI Opera Club w•ll hold a meeting today at 7
p m. in Room 106 Baird. New members are
welcorne

The Undergraduate Anthropology Club will
ho ld an election of officers at their meeting
to morrow at 4 p.m. in Room 266 Norton.

The Outina Club w1ll have an important
meeting tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Room 234 Norton .

The Pre-Med/ Pre-Dent Peer Group Ad\lisement
Committee reminds juniors to pick up the MCAT
or DAT application in Room 105 Diefendorf and
mail them as soon as po!&gt;sible. Ad\lisement hours
dl'e ' Monday 12 2 p.m., Tuesday 1 2 :30 p.m.;
Wednesday 12 4 p.m.; Thursday 12 4 p.m .; and
Friday 3 5 p.m. on the first floor of Clement Hall
(west wing) .

Sub Board I will hold a meeting to di)cUss
student government toddy at 7 · 30 p.m. in Room
232 Norto n.

AYl will meet tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Room
346 Nc•rton . Patrols are being organized to protect
the Chabad House against Vdndalism. Many people
dfe needed, All interested please attend.

Video Connection will show a tape o f O.we
van Ronk tomorrow at 1 p m. 1n Haas Lounge

UlJAB Video Committee will meet to morrow
at 8 ·30 p.m. in Haas Lounge.

Ch~bad House hol d ~ a daily mmyan Jt 7 a .m.
following wtth breakfdst A mincha IS held tn
Room 346 Norton J t 2 .30 J'l .m.

CAC wants people 1nterested in workmg on
organizing students for a "Children\ March for
Survi\lal" to Washington, D.C. on March 25, to end
~uffering from po\lerty , hunger, malnutritio n, poor
schools , to contact Tedd 0 1 Paula in the CAC
o ffice, :83 103609.

The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowshipp will
ha\le Wilbur Sutherland , a Canadian film producer,
as a guest \pealo.er to morrow at I p m 1n Ruom
233 Norto n
The Student NYSTA of Bufblo S ~te College
w1ll have Tom Ho bart, pres1dent o f NYSTA
\peaking on tenure and teac her '~ n ghh, tod ay from
4·30-6.30 p.m in Communicat ion
Room N,
Buffalo State College

CAC Environmental Action Corps will meet
today at 3 p.m. in Room 266 Norton.

UB Ice Skating Club will have skating at
Lincoln Arena today from I 0 11 p.m. A bus Will
leave fro m Cldrk Gym at 9 30 p m. You must have
your o wn skates.
The Physics Student Association w1ll hold
electio ns today at 3 p.m . in Room 203 Hochstetler
I tall. These election~ are necessary for the
continuation of P 5 A. Plt•asc come.

The IEEE will have Or . Ho lhs Ryan speaking
o n the "T ransitio n from Student to Engineer "
today a1t 4 p.m. in Room 104 Parker. All electr~cal
engmeers are inv1ted
Th'e french Club w1ll meet today at 2 p.m . in
Room 234 Norton to fin.tl1ze the menu for the
dmncr

What 's Happening?
Wedne\day, M.trch 8
( unu·1 t Lrco~t1vc· A''uliJit' Kt•ut.JI V, &lt;..111 y
K\11\tJcJ, pcrcu\~ion, ~ . \0 p.m, B,wcJ 11.111 .
[ Y&lt;'·1..un 72 [&lt;.I Em,hw1fln ~rccn\ ,,nJ lll\lll''l ' '
h1' Janet' films, !l p.m ., 1\lbnght Knn~ Art
C...tiiJiy
lntcrn.ttlorl.ll week Ong.tmt o.•momtr.ltron, X
l'l m , Room 214 Norton
PIJy ( O\n/Jt umJt), pre~ntt:&lt;.l "' ll ~crt"'" hv tile
Dep.lftmcnl ol Tht:.tlcr, d11 ellell h, (,m Linn
R.tgoll, 8 30 p m., ll ..r11mdn "&gt;tud1o I h~·,,t,•r,
oldmi\~ IOn c.h&lt;~rgc

MU\IC.tl I nnO\IdltOO) Dr R.tm nn ( r ullcr' dtrCI..I\11
,,f the Mu'" Ocp.trtmcnt\ fleuwn~t Mu'"
.., tudiu, l11 ~&lt;.u~~t: ~ tht' M1101: \ynthl'\1/t•r .tru..l tl\
wmponenl\, 9 :05pm, WBt. l fM
Thursday , March 9
f1lm lhe Informer &lt;.lllectcd h' John l md, 7 l'l m
.1nd C) p m., Capen 1·Hl.
c.cr.Hd Ph1l1pe r ilm hst1v.tl llw ldmr , 'I'H'"'"'t'd
hy the rrem.h Dep.trtmt'nt ..tn,J tht 0111~1· uf
lullur.tl AfrJtrs, 7 p.m. 1\~ht:")n 'i Ht•lft Jt
Ntur, 8 10 p m , Achc~un S
DM1cr LJ Mer~ dnd thl' 1: thnlt D.tnH' 1\rh
Rcpcrtw y lom pdny, .m C\1Cn111g of ollclltJI
.tnd OlCt&lt;.lcntdl ddnCc, X p m ' r tllrnon• Roorn
l c&lt;;IUrc/demun .. tration l he Alwin N1kul,li, D.tnu·
I h co~ t er, 3 30 p m , Albnght K11t" (,,,llcry
Aud1tor1um
'&gt;emtriJr "OptlmlldtiUn uf Reall"r' w11h Dcc.!ymg
Cdldly~t"
by Prof L.M t.ruwc of the
Oep.trtment IJ( Chem1wl [ng~necnng of
M cMa~ter UniverSitY, Z p m , Room U2
Acheson Hall
Sympo!&gt;tUm: " The Briefer P,ychother .tp1es," with
guest ~peaker Dr Leondrd &lt;imdll , PhD,
Consulting Psychologist, Altro Hedlth dnd
Rehab1lit.1t10n Services, New York City, 10
a.m., Room C-34 , 4230 Ridge Lea , I :30 p.m.,
Room C-18, 42 30 Ridge Lea .
Workshop in water resources: Leonard Dworsky of
Cornell University's Department of Water
Resources and Marine Sciences will t.llk on
' 'Institutional Arrangement s for the
~ment of Lake Ontario," 3 p.m., Parker
Enajneering, Room 104.

- AmyAhrend

Sport) lnformatron
Tuday · V,lr\lty hoclo.cy, [C.Al 01\ll~lon II
'cm1 flndl pldyuff game, BuffJiu Jt the Um\le r~lty 11f
Vcrmnnt, Burlington , Vermont, WBFO FM 1o~&lt;.l to,
8H.7, 11\IC ott 8 p.m. Wtth )1m Dru(.lo.er dt the milo.e.
Tom01row : Var)ity wre'&gt;tling dt the NCAA
University Di\li~ion Ch.impionships, Unrversll y of
MJryland Cole Field House. Action con tinue~ with
the f~na l round to be held Saturday.
Saturday: Vdrsity indoor track at the Union
I nvnatmnal ; vars1ty fencing at the North Atlantic
Championships, Pace College
h ost, New York
City.

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                    <text>litE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 62

State University at New York at Buffalo

Monday, 6 March 1972

See story on page 3

�Rockt~feller's

Editorial elections

power

LaFalce proposes limitations

A pplic:ationa for the politJoa of Editor·ln.Chlef
of The Spectrum for the academic year 1972- 1973
will be taken until March 21.
The appUcatlon consista of a letter to the
by Jim Mcfenon
editorial board, statlna reasons for desirlna the
Sp«trom Sttif/ Wrlrer
position, qualiftcatlons and previous journalistic
experience. The pcnition is open to any St1te
If there is such a thin&amp; as the " youth vote" tn
University encJuace or undergraduate student.
The editorial board will interview all candidates Buffalo, 1here's a state ~nator co min&amp; up for
re~Jectio n this fall who should have little tro uble
on Thwsd•y, Much 23 .
Prospe-ctive applic1nts are uraed to contec t the garnering 11 lasge share of that electoral comm odity .
Editor, Room JSS Norton Hall u soon IS possible to The man 'is John Lafalce, a 32-yeas-old Democrat
flmiliarize themselves with any procedural or who's spent a year and a half making his presence
technical qut$tions about the position or abouut The kno wn in Albany.
"'It's very easy to become disillusioned and
Spectrum.
c:yntcal,'' lite remarked last Thursday , " but if you
become cynical , you just add to the decadence of
our go v e mmentaJ system ." Continuing in a
d1sc uss1on sponsored by the Democratic Youth
Coalitio n, Lafalce admitted that much of the time,
he feels he: has been hittin&amp; his head against a brick
wall (at l!east nine times a day , he con fessed).
by Butch Murphy
Standud methods for bnngmg h1g However, lhe expressed an eagerness to return to the
SMt:trom Staff Wrrtc-r
busmess and government to the legislature and reform what he termed a government,
courts are not always adequate. by tn large, conducted rn secrecy "
and exiSting envuonmcntal laws
··nrl! courtruom rs the laJt arena
contam
too many loopholes. 'Brick wall'
whtre th e rndr11rdua/ crt/ten can
Thus tar. the former law yer has introduced a bill
Connected
wi th t ht), M r
meet mighty govern ment or big
for reapportionment of New Yo rk by a
prtlVIding
Ya n n 3 co nc noted 1hat must
busrness and /rl)flf It&gt; survil•r .
non·partll&gt;&lt;!ln committee, ftled a lawsuit which he
enVIronmental
lawyen.
do
not
Victnr Jnhn Yannt&gt;ctlnl! Jr.
take the time to learn thctr feels has lessened Gov. Rockefeller's contro l over the
buSiness. and thus theu court legJslature, fought to augment the poiHical power o r
The ecology movement of cases suffer, as do we
upsta te Do!mocrats, and generally battered agaJnst
today IS m desperate need of
ProVJng that tus mdhod does the Albany "bnck wall."
o~clton, and not words. VICtones
''Thew 1s a tremendous concentration of po wer
work, and that 11 can he
Jnd not defeats, hope and not succes.~fu l , Mr. Yannaconc related (in Alban1d, charged LaFalce; Gov. Rockefeller,
depress1on . Las t Wednes.lay to his audience various case~ he Assembly S peaJcer Perry Duryea a nd Senate Majori ty
evenmg a smilll group of people has been involved wllh . He also Leader Barry Bridge:. "form 3 triumvirate - what
met to tal.k w1th attorney V1ctor gave a general outlJne ~~~ to ho w to they ~y goes " As a speci ft c example of thai power,
J Yannacone J r about 1he hope go about suetnl! ~;o rre ctly
LaFalce eJ~:pl.uned a constitutional device used by
and future of ecology
Mr.
Dunng the c:our..e of the Gov. Rock efeller to speed particular bills through
Yanna co ne's appearance was le c ture, Mr . Yanna co ne the legJ.Slature
sponso red hy the A I ESEC com men ted o n vanous other
Called 3 ''message of necessi ty ," ttus device
( A SSOC13110n I nterna tiOnal des environmenta: problems. When allows the governor to declare "an emergency
E t ud1ants e n Scten ces a.'lked his vie ws of the phosphate sit uallon," makmg it necessary to cons1der a bill
Econom1ques et Co mrnerl'lales ). ban he s tated, "it wo uld be mo re 1mmed•ately . Ofte n. said Lafalce, t he legislators
Wtule Mr Y~nn01co nr doe~ not benefictal to pass a law wtuch have as htt le as five or ten minutes to read for the
fi rst lime a b11J tha t ca n be anyw here from ten to
possess e1ther the populanty or would rcquuc all compantes to
200 pages long After readmg the btU, the legulators
t he press coverage affor&lt;led other prove lhlll thetr products are not
must vote
cnvuonmentahsts, hLS credenttals pollutants "
and p1oneer work 1n the field of
Unneassar:y and contrary
ecology has mented great praJSe. Vast possibilities
To cornbat !h as sort o f ac t1on, Lafalce bro ught
Com menltng on th,. Bethle hem
" A poor counrry la wyer from
~u ~~ agai nsll Rockefeller and the state legislature,
S
teel
plant
in
Lackawanna
and
I he Ea~t , " lS how he describes
askmg t hat use of the ''message of necessity" be
lumsc:Jf. Mr. Yannacone lS nor p o ll ulton an Buffalo , M r
declared u1nnecessary and cont rary to the Stale
Yannacone
stated
,
"there
~~
no
m:h. rather the oppoSite, hut hts
Constatut•on (which declares t hat btlls must be on
financtal starus •~ no 1nd1.,;81wn of reason for a city the sue of
legislators' desks at least th ree da ys before any vote
8
uffal
o
to
tolerate
pollutio
n
,
Ius successrs The~e c::.n only be
1S taken)
there
IS
JU~I
no
ex
cuse
for
11."
He
me.tsured by t1me and fu tun:
A Ne•w York count y Judge has reserved
went o n to po int o ur that the
general tons.
solut1on was in t he courts, and Judgment on t he ~u1 1, and according to LaFalce, this
Thc starting POIOI rot Mr. with a htlle dedicated work it is
YannJlOne and his env•ronmental posstblc to wm .
!Jw was m 1966, before ecology
It seemed ra ther shameful,
became the m ttung The c:ase
o bservers lamented, that our
mvolved a su1t tn Suffolk County.
New York . for the dump1ng of relevant yout h culture 1.:0uld not
at least show up and hscen to a
DD"I S1nce then Mr Yannacone
very Important man speak on a
has won case after case. each
v.:ry •mportant subJect fits name
victory VIla! to t he cau~e. and not
is
not Nader, but he hds done as
jltsl mere concess1o ns
much , tl not more, than Ralph
Nader
Speaking on student
EnvironmentaJ ·equity'
partt&lt;.. tpatto n Mr. Yanna..:onr
The bHis for legal swls stated "•f you LOIIectcd S I j'lcr
brought by Mr. Yannaconc comes head from every student lln any
from the pnnople of "equity" mlijor r.:oUege campus, you could
l1us pnnc1ple 1s embodied m the sue any pollutor w1thm smcll1ng
followmg words "So usc you r dtstan ce
o wn property not to InJUre that of
other~
. tn part1cular that whkh "n'lw shall nut fuul up thr ~a rtll ,
/or
wr/1 c-ome hark and lru
1S the common property of all
mankrnd, the atr we hrea t h, and you
VrCior John Yannacum• Jr
the water we dnnk " In short 11 ts
the subshtullng of "the law ol
Go&lt;! for the law of man ."

Yannacone: success in
environmental law cases

John LaFalce
is a sign of encouragement. He furthe r po inted out
that Rockefeller hu not used the message once tn
1972, compared to over 70 times in the '71
legislative session
State Senator LaFalce has comm1tted himself to
r3pid and t horo ugh reform of state governmen t and
paraphrased J ohn Gardner's indic tment of state
governments as 3 mo tivating fa cto r 1n his decision to
run for office. " Most state governments." saJd
Gardner, "are corrupt at worst and med1ocre at best
and the leglSiallve branch is the worst of all. "
'
In tus months as a slate senato r , LaFalce appear)
to be o ne legislator who is lry1ng to render that
indictment false .

SCHUSSMEISTERS
SKICLUB

Spring Skiing Special

..,t

"ElJUity permits no wrong to
be Without a remedy," st ate.~ Mr.
Yannar.:one This remedy, he
beueves, ~ m the law which
proVldes "for appeal to the
ultam1te power of society," be it
kmg, parliament, state or people.
Ba&amp;cally. the law states people
have the nght to appeal, no
matter how powerful the
oppositio n may be, and tt lS with
this in mind that Mr Yannacone
proceeds.

Sue to win
Ex plaming the concept of
equity further , Mr. Y anna cone
commented that there are ri&amp;ht
ways to sue, and wrong ways.

ARICES

Th• S~rutn II publi•h«&lt; drfW
tim••

•

w•Mc,

-v

GO

Mond•y,

DOWNHILL

~Y •nd Frld.y: during U..

re,pJ.r Clldflmlc .,_. by Sub-Bowd
1, Inc. OMc. .,. lt&gt;t»twl •t 355
Norton H./I, Sc.tw Uni-.Jty of NYork •t Bu"-lo, :J.U5 .,.In St
Buff• lo. N•w York , t42t4:
TM~: AfW Cod. 116; Edl ro/UI
831-41 13; Bud-. 831--3610.
R•pr•••ntwl for lld11Wtilin11 by
N•tionlll Educ.tioMI Adttwtillltfl
s.rviu, Inc., 360 bxlngron A...._,
N- Yort. N. Y. 10017.
Subcrlpdon ,.tw .,. $4.50 ,_
_,.,...or $8.00 for n.v _,.twa.

S«:ond 0.. ~ pMI •t lluff.lo,
, . , y Oft.
ClrNIIItlon: 16,000

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday , 6 March, 1972

TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED AT THIS PRI~E TIL

MAR.12
(BUT ARE GOOD FOR THE REST OF THE SKIING SEASON)
BLUEMONT and SKI WING

Originally$2.50

TICKETS

Now only $2oo

�Five thousand doUars

SA allots money for
Lev's trip to Vietnam

1&gt;-borah Benton cavorts with her predecessor
following her •action as president of the Student
J~ation. Debbie, the first woman president of
t he SA, garnered over 50% of the votes cast.

M r. &amp; M s.

CURE conquers

SA election won by Benson
Garnering over SO% o f stude nt votes, Deborah
Benson was elec ted Student Association ~res1dent
for the 1972-73 school year. Elected with Ms.
Beruon was the majonty of her ticket, the C .U R.E.
party. As announced by Harold Guberman SA fmt
vice president, last Friday night , 2014 'students
participated in the electio ns. Addittonally . he
reported that newly-elected officers will take o ffi ce
March I 5 . The foU o wing are the total vo t es cast for
each candidate (names o f those candidates elected
appear 10 Italics) ·
President: Deborah Benso n (947); Ketth Frankel
{JQ7) , Steven Glassman (149); Deruus Ward (466).
First Vice Presidenc : Bob Bell ( 5 3 1) , Tvrone
Sounders (863); J effrey Stetnberg (238 ).
Second Vice President : Eugene Fahey ( 46 7),
Charles Ireland (I 15), lee Schwarl7berg (4B),
Douglas Webb ( 6 IS)

Treasurer . Wtlham C'urrao (4481 , Davtd 1\ etsl·r
(346),Jtffrey Osmsk1 (771)
Academic Affairs Coordinato r Earl Cull' (4610.
Jamn e Janas (804), Tma Kuus (287)
International Affairs Coordinator Sher Akhtar
(50 3), Har tm £1 -Gabn (tl '4), Dav1d Sancho ( lS:!),
Nasser Zia1an (59).
Boh Pnmbo
Minority Affail'll Coordinator
(462) ; Brenda Joyce Smith C751.S)
National Student Affairs Coordinator James
Rowe (480), Jacqueline Weir (25~). Edward Wolf
(679)
Student Activities Coordinator J am~ Beall
(2 19), Daniel K riegman (595), Diane Lwnlm.r lu
(726)
Student Affairs Coordinator : Gerald Duct ( 203),
Edward Gamble (561); Vtvtan Wiesner (516).
Student Riahts Coordinator · Deborah Auerhat:h
(290) , Bonnie Levy (578) , Andrew Koss o~er (694)

Rap session scheduled
Beginnina Wednesday . March :8, Sub Board I has arranaed a rap sessio n which will
be open to anyone connected witbi this University in any way The purpose of th~
seuiona will be to provide a medlium by which people can discuss their ideas and
o pinions. Each meetina may be CI.."Dtered around o ne topic ahhouah nothing wUI be
strictly formalized and the topics wilU be subject to chanae. Our first session will probably
deal with student aovernmmt . •~nyone interested can call 83 1- 5502 for more
informacion.

B~ckpage
on back page.

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
Mod Styles for Guys and Gals
Come uke the lhiru right off our
bKks. S.Ve ~ Oort enythlng with
lhort ~. Hu.ltdreda of long
.. _ . tope; 7,000 pel~ of Betts,
.Jadcetl to '"-'eft· !Leeth• J-cketl
boota ~tnd ...,ta•. L•t. Levi:

Wr.nel•.

c.,._,,

.w•. etc. Be "In" - Shop Army~,.

Lana~ubb«

Saw Mootrf

CIT)r

In one of thetr last meetmgs o f
the year , the Student Assoctation
Executive Committee voted to
allot $5000 to send Michael
" Lev.. Levinson to Vietnam .
Acting treasurer Dave KeiSer
presented Mr . l evtnson's
proposals t o the committee and
then proceeded t o burn hts co py
of the report as hi s
recom rnendation .
Additt o nally , Mr . K eiser
submitted an amendment to buy a
o ne-way ticket for Mr. Levinson 's
trip. However, ttus failed and
money was recommended to fund
Mr. Levinson's anginal request
Executtve C'ommtttee action is
still not final With their resoluuon
going to the Student Assembly for
approval.
Mr. Levinson's ong~nal request
w ntatned three pro posals. The
f1rst Involved o btatnmg SA
support fo r the publicatio n o f the
Boo k Of /111 co mplete With a
page of Jtlvertt!&gt;lng both m the
N&lt;'w YurJ.. 'Time,, and Rolllflf(
Sttme Sel·onl.lly, Mr Levinson
a&lt;;ked fur Jn appropriatio n to
cover traveling anti &lt;;ecretanal
expense&lt;; to support Mr Lev1nson
while he wrote the much awalletl
l:loo J.. ol Deutnonom I '.

Publish or perish
The final request called lor
traveling expen ses for Mr
l evinson's proposed tnp to
V letnam where Mr. Levtnson
plans to talk t o the people so that
he can make peace
Keith Fra nkel , National A ffa1rs
coordinotor , moved to table the
first two proposals. His motio n
resulted in an angry exchange
between Mr Levinson and Mr.
Frankel. R efe rring t o hts
" movement ,'' Mr . Levmson
threatened t o mobtllze the
thousand people who stgned his
petit1on to make tum Sub Board I ,
Inc . Execut1ve D1rector
" And I can walk 111 here W1lh
2000 people saymg l ev is an
assho le," counterel.l Mr. Frankel
He contmuetl I hat SA was nut tn
the publishmg bustness.
Mr. Levmson then mddC' o1n
1mpass1oned ~peec.:h denou nctng
the comnuttee for 1ts mactto n
" You do n' t even have t he hall~ to
'ay ' no' " I h1~ appeared to h1t
sensitive spots as Dave Ste1nwa hl,
Student R1ghts c.:ooul1nator. urgeJ
tha t the prupmaiY whllh he
himself &lt;l ppmcd , he vuted upon
"yes ur.no "
Before the vote wa~ taken. M r

Frankel ex plained that he had
tab led the first two proposals
be c ause he was genui n ely
i nt erested in the third. The
proposals were voted on and the
ftrst two were defeated with no
affirmative votes.

Just a [pipeJ dream?
De fending h is proposed
V 1etnam trip, Mr. Levinson
recaUed his experiences in the
Merchant Marine. According to
him , this demonstrated his ability
to handle the proJeCt. In addition,
he explained t hat he would ao to
Vaetnam fo r ten days to talk with
the people of S&amp;JJon and take
slides. The resulting audio-visual
presentation would be distributed
as a contributton to world peace.
''I'm ready to make the peace,"
Mr. Levinson commented, "just
plug me 10. Nobody else can say
that ..
After dtsc ussaons, Pres1dent lan
DeWul called for a vote. It wu
2 I - 3 (Yes · Jan DeWaaJ , Keith
Frank el, No
Fred Aueron ;
Absentton . Lester Goldstein;
Ha rold 'Spot' Guberman ; Dave
Ste tnwald ) to pve lev the
g o- ahead o n Vaetnam . Steve
Blumenlcrant1 , Sub B o ard
executive direct or present at the
meeting, attributed Mr. DeWaal's
c ru c l81 a ffir mative to Mr.
levif\son's offer to send him an
opium pipe. Mr Levinson was
obviously pleased and be left,
lakin&amp; the video tape crew with
h1m th at
filmed tbe
meetin&amp; . The business that
foUowed was anti-climactic. The
committee voted unanimously to
approve the bud&amp;el for the We
Wo rkshops which are in the
process of being set up and voted
3 I - J t o appro pnate $800 of an
ongtnal request of S 1662 to the
lJIJffalonian . It also voted 4 - 2 - 0
to lend Undercurrent S I 0,000
over a five-year penod at 3%
1nterest to be repatd by the
corporation whk h Undercurrent
IS In the process Of forming.
The co mmtttee also
unantmously approved proposed
changes in the SchussmeJSter's Sk1
Cl ub co nsttlutton , an
endorsement of WNYPIRG, and
the allocation of funds for the
ca mpaign t o have tutllon roUed
back and more money given to
tugher educallon.
Co mmenltng o n the
c.:om m1tte e's a c tto ns, "lev"
reportedly remarked " Boy, are
tbey stupid."

GUSTAV : THE CHEAPEST C:OPY CAT IN TOWN
o nly 8 cents a copy, 7 cents if you're making
more than 3 copies from the same original 1

Directorial Positions Available
Two students are needed to fill directoral p10sitions in Sub
Board l ' s Publications and University Union Divisions. Both
positions will involve management of entire operations and
offer standard benefits. Submit resumes to Room 214
Norton.
For more information call831-5502.

'

Monday, 6 March, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Epic House treats veterans on drugs ·
by Mike Fedy
Sp«tn1m Stoff Writt'r
''The best kept secret tn the clly" was r~vealed to
members of Buffa lo's press und m edta at a press
con ference m th e Veteran Administration Hospit al las t
Thursday
The conference was called t o pubi.Jcize the existence
of t he hospttal's Drug De pendence Treatment Center
(DOTC) for vetera ns : Epic House .
Joh n Rowan. dtrector of VA hospttal, outi.Jned t he
purpose o f the program ··1 hope you'll be able to help
relca~e tnformat1on on the best k~pt secret in the ctly
t he resourl·es we have here to treat people who arc
dffltctcd wtth a drug problem ..
Eptc House (Encountenng Peupk In Cns1s) 1S headed
hy Peter Russell, who, along w1th mcml:lers o f h•s stafl and
re~tdents at
1:- p1c House, Jtlcnded and dnected the
tneellng Dr Ru~ell de~cnbed till' drug protcram .. t Epu:
ll ou~ J\ a "therapeutll. lOillllllliiiiY · [hiS mcto~n' that the
progrilm depend~ more nn th1• b.l\1'- ol JWf\llO·to·pcrSl)n
relatiOnships among resident&lt; .111d ~tJfl than un 111ethadnnl'
ma1ntenan.:e. "A therapeutll •ommunuy," c,.plalllcd onr
c&gt;f the re~1dent JddJcb , "dm·, v.urlo.. 1n lmdtng c&gt;lll what th&lt;·
proble m 1s." Once tlus " dorH· lw ,.ud, " he h,t\ no ne1·d
for drugs "

Original program abused
DDT&lt;., ~a1d Dr Hussdl. c)pcncd 111 July ol IllS I ye.u
The progr~m·~ ongm.11 prc!l:cdutc. hl' tuiJ the gattwnng,
was une of e"trctmely loo,e d1~c1phne Jltt"r an md1V11lual
h.ad heen dcll&gt;'.t&lt;.Jted When Dr Ru'"·'ll diSt:&lt;)Vrred th.tt
dunng thetr free t1ml.' hl\ pJIIenh we1ct .lg.Jtn u~mg dru~~
he proct'eded In t1ghten up" the dl'l'lplltlc r h1s meant
tak1ng only tho~(' people whcl had .llreJdy 1.'0/llt: through
some other part of the hu)pltal ll nwever he (Ontmued
"llus wa!&gt; c..reallng ~omt prot&gt;k111' nn thc ot her wa1ds ( )n
Jan 4 , 147:!. Dr l&lt;ussc:ll begnn h1~ ntrrc nt progro111t
There are , explatned Dr Russl'll , lllrect ~t'parJte ph~!&gt;&lt;''
tn the long term program
1 he ltr~t ph.Jsct IS the
0etOXIfiC3110n and fvaluJIIc)n L' mt 1Dll I ( e~ntdlntng ~0
beds, DE:.U IS the 1n1ttal ;ldrlllltJnc..c W.tld •&gt;I Jlttho'r .tsk1ng
entrance to Erne.. llnu\c:
A veteran whn c..nmc' 1t1 tlh' 1\"'Jlll.ll w1th a drug
problem 1~ 1mmtd1Jlely g1wn J hcd Dr I{ u\\ell pomtctd
out, "as long a~ he's dl[l.lble" l.t d1~hono1.Jblc d1:.t:hdlg~
prevents th1sl He IS mtervtcwed ftr,t. ,,11d Dr Ru~c\1 , then
"shaken down We wo~nt to make Jh~nlut~\y !&gt;Ure h,.·,
clean "
Methadone: 1\ uwd 1n Jeh&gt;:\III~JIIon J)r Russell
reporred, but ..:ontrulkd •·very, very c;~rdully . " The
complete pro t:c:s.~. he contmucd. takes genero~lly trout J
week to ten day~. perhaps longer " dctpend1ng c&gt;n the s11ct o(
his hatur " Wluk the program handlct'&gt; matnly hern1n
addio.:ts, users of &lt;&gt;I her addtliiVI.' drug.~ .11~ also treated

he commented, 115 veterans have taken part in the
program , including the 12 reeidenta in the hospital no w
an d the 12 in the outpatient proaram.
The greatest co ncern, explained Mr. Ko waJews.k 1, 15
for those veterans wbo have been misinformed b y those
who have left t he progra m . To counteract th e bad ru mors
being spread by these individuals what is need ed , he
concluded is " the use o f s pot commercials, featu re arttcles
feature progra ms and the like o n a continuina on-aom~
basis.''

such aaen cies, h o wever , added Or. Russel, are us.ually ver y
lona . Th e t h ird ty pe o f co ntract is to request adm ittance
to E pic House. ' 'This,''' he pointed o ut, "is where our
commitment is. All t h e rest is very im por tan t , but it 's just
a stepping st one."

Six levels
Pnor to entering Eptc House , Dr. Russell stat ed , one
must first , tf reco m m1~nded b y t he OEU staff, a ppe ar
before a screening com m ittee. Here. said Or. R usse ll , th e
individual IS questio ned "very thorough ly" on h.is motive
for want1ng tu JOin E.pic House's long term treat ment
program
Upon gammg th e sc:reening comm ittee's approval, o ne
then become~ a "resident" and is placed on level one. He
would then, 'u1d Dr. R ussell, partlctpate in certain house
actiVIties and simply observe others. Le-vel one, he
expl:uned. gtvl"' an md i•v1dual the opportunrt y to see Epic
House and how tt operatles
Alter sul:CC~sfully 1 o mpletmg level one, the person IS
o~gam :..:reencd At thiS ~~rcemng, ~1d Or R ussell, the
mdiVIdual tells the comllllttcc what he llunks of th e house
'&gt;0 filr and the cnmmltlc!c tclb the 1nd1vidual the1r op1nion
o t htm
P1 omo t10n to levt'l!&gt; ~ h entails mcreased
respons1bll1tte' Jnd puv1le(!.t:S for the res1den1. For the f1rst
lew levels the re~1dcnt 1~ rcspon,lble only for himself an d
lu~ ..tdlon:. but ds he progresses n pla10ed Dr Russt'll , he
1s cxpc:llcd to realize respon,1b1htu:s for other newer
res1denr'
An o lder reMdenl ~a1d that II wa~ h1s
rl.'spon\lbtltty In 'pull the sheeh utf" \OIIIC&lt;Ine breakmg
the lule~. Oll( 1\e C)(p(atned h~ dc1~·~n't 'it"C II 3S
ll"!JlOn\lbtltl y, OUt , ' more It i.e ~anng "

'To save lives'
Mr. Ko walewski e mphasized three points he w tshed
kno wn : f'rnt, the program is ope n t o all elibible vete rans,
second, "the program isn' t the free and easy ride to

Visiting p riveleges
1'111: ~oumplel&lt;' prog~.un ~a1d Or R th~ell. tal.ct~ u n the
Jverdgt Jhout t1ve months Although the lime vanes for
ct~dl level , he sa1d, ead1 of the ftr~t f1vc levels takes
generally three weeks wlilllt' level SIX takes .thout siX weeks
Ounng re1.1denc:y. a person seldom n.oves out of the
hosp1tJI Whtle 1n level \IX. ho wever , Dr Russell ~aJd that
one &lt;.:an ohta1n weekend passes, day care rights (where the
re~tdent l.a n be With lhis family) and work passes to
prt!pan· 111111 fnr the.' outs1de wo rld
Mo~ 1l '.ltd ()r Russdl , ''1s the only legal .:&lt;&gt;ntatt " with
anyont: on the oub1de ,Jnd thiS IS opened tn the presem:e
of il st aff lOunselor and searc.:hed for co ntraband .
Add1t1on.Jlly he: \lated that the re1.1dent 1s encouraged to
lillk over maJl reLclved or sent with the counselor. "The
mnrc we J' a st..trt," cxplatned Dr Rus:.ell, "c.tn learn and
get m~idc th e fellow's l1eud, the more we can h elp h1m tc&gt;
rc:or~ent to the oub1de world "

Publicity

problem~

The final phase ot the ODTC: program IS the
Outpat1ent Treatment F'rogr.tm . Th1s. sa1d Or Russell , 1s
T herapy varied
y pnmanly for the graduated res1dents o f Ep1c Hou\c
"Our mam Idea," Dr Rus:.ell sta ted . "1s 111 get thb"-.although 111 certa1n Isolated mstances may be available to
fellow away fro111 the street, g1ve hun 11 chan ~:e to gel Jus pat1enh who have partktpatcd only in OEU "Th e purpose
head to gether and make an o~ppropnate dectston ' What Ju of th1s phase ot treatmt·nt," Or Russell stated, ·•1s to help
I want t o do w1th my ltfc'l''
l he: •nd1v1dual complete h1s rcJdjustment to the
The Uld1v1dual t h en parti Cipate~ 10 vanou~ types ol lOmmuntly·at·largc and m:untam a ~table, drug·free hfe ·
therapy includ111g group, tndiVIdual oct:upallonal and
Davtd Kowalcwslo , a social worker on Or Russell's
recrealtonal therapy " It'll really a rather full ~c.:hedule," stJff. bnet~d listeners on the progro~m 's current problem
added Dr Russell, "and always onenlated toward the 1dea , and the nature of med1a support needed The matn
' What are you gomg to do? What's your contract With us?" prnblt:m, sa1d Mr Kowalewski, 1s " too ltltle accurate
The co ntrac t, explained Dr. Russell, is onl' of three.&gt; c;xposure and too mud1 Inaccurate exposure" and the
lunds SJmple detoXJficallon
the person Is g 1ven J regular result IS ' w1desprcad lack o l knowledge of what we're all
discharge at the end of "detox", secondly, referral to nther about "
DOTC often refers people
The DOTC' , he su1d, servl.-s almost the enttre western
l'Ommun1ty drug perograms
who consider the program too hard to tither agencies. such part of t h e st ale, t.e., Ene and N1agara Counties, t h e
as methadone maJntenance programs Watling bnes for southern c:ount1es and pan of Monroe County Smce July,

Peter RUS5e0
rehabllttation , rat her, a tough, tota l comm1t111ent
no· nonsense approach ;" third, "we feel the program work'
fo r so m ebo d y wh o rea ll y wan t s to get stra1ght and tiny
straight."
Mr Robert Faller, partner in StahJka , Faller, &amp; Klenk
who 1n1t1ated t he press c.:onference, told new~men that h1;
advert ising age ncy was t otall y cornm1ttcd to helping bp1.:
House . " We're not push in&amp; a prod u ct," he tltplatned.
"we're really lrymg to save lives and people" Mr. Faller
estabiJshed rad1o an d newspltper comm un u..at1ons tn th e
city and th e suburbs an d also mentiOned Marty Mercut10's
( WUFO-FM) offe r to ha ve mem bers o f th e program
partiCipate in an "open rap session" on the radio. Thct
radio program would be "Rap '72", des1gned to inform the
black communit y of its problems Or. R usseiJ expressed
interest in the proposition.
Or R ussell summed up the obJect of th e press
conferen ce saying, " We want you (the press and med1a) to
help us get t he wo rd out. not that it's the greatest thJng 1n
t he world , b u t it's som etlu ng that's available and to at least
come and talk to us about it."
One of the resrdents replied to t has : " I t lunl. this IS the
greatest thing '" the world . . Uw IS tlle first ttme in my
life t h at I feel that , when I leave here. druas will no longer
be a problem For me that's areat."

*****************
*~
*~

PRESENTING ANOTH ER CINEMATIC HAPPENING :

STUDENT FILM CILUB
MEETING
In
Glori ous Color &amp; 4-track stereo
DATE : Tuesday , March 7 , '72
TIME : 7 :30p.m.
PLACE : Room 337 Norton Union SUNY/AB
ADMISSION : F R E E !

All camera &amp; film will be available at the meeting.
OLD &amp; NEW MEMBE
RE URGED TO

Page four The Spectrum

Monday, 6 March, 1972

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�Anti-war groups

Children's Marc.1l endorsed
by Dave Saleh
Spectrum Staff Writer

Sixteen local civil righta and anti-war groups
requested Monday that President Nixon make a
'1oumey for peace" to Paris and put an end to the
Vietnam war.
In a meuage released as a direct response to Mr.
Nixon's return from China. the participating groups
also calJed for the coordinated efforts of local
organizations to "aid in the struggle against war and
other related problems such as poverty, racism and
sellism." They uked for support of a nationally
sponsored Children's March on Washington to be
held later this month.
Rosemary Stahlka, representing Clergy and
Laymen Concerned, delivered the primary statement
calling the President's China trip a ''hoax'' and
auacking the so-called hypocracies of th.is venture.
" While Nixon visits China on his journey of
peace, American rur .attacks on the people of
Indochina have reac.:hed a new peak and government
~pending on a new arms budget is also on the rise.
While he talks with Chajrman Mao about the
greatness of the American people, he freezes wages
while allowmg prices to rise, thus increasing the
pressure on the worker ; he condones the deaths of
43 people at Attica and orders the supression of
workers' rights in the society," declared Ms. Stahlka.
Rekindle the movement
" We urge the President to follow his journey to
Peking with a journey to Paris to first bring about
the complete removal of our troops from Indochina
in concurrence with the immediate release of aU

American prisoners of war, and secondly to
withdraw all military and economic lupport from
the Thieu Regime in South Vietnam," she
continued.
The statement also called for increased efforts
to rekindle the anti-war movement and closer ties
between anti-war group~ to help increue their
effectiveness.
In a second address, delivered by Mildred Prim
of the BuffaJo Rights Action Group (BRAG), plans
concerning the 0\ildren's March on Washington were
announced.
''Children across the country should not be
denied the basic needs of food , a decent educataon
and good shelter. In a country which has a Gross
National Product of over one trillion dollars, t.he fact
that there are hungry children is terrible! A country
that spends one million dollars dally on the
'freedom' of the Vaetnamese people. should spend
that money o n the freedom of its own . There will
be a chil dren's survival march on the nat tOn's capatal
to show our dissatisfaction with this," SaJd Ms. Prim
Other groups who demonstrated support for
these statements included: Vietnam Vets Against the
War, UB Vets Club, Youth Agamst War and racasm ,
Peoples' Coalation for Peace and Justace , Western
New York Steel Workers Rank and File Cau~:us.
Buffalo Peace Council, Tturd World Veterans
Alliance, Society of tJte Concerned, Angela Davts
Defense Comrruttee, Riverside Salem Umtcd Church
of Christ, Buffalo Defense Committee, Women 's
Internatio nal League for Peace and freedom, Tltird
World Veterans Committee and the Fruit Belt
Homeowners and Tenants Council.

University IF ree Time
starting Wed. March B
COFFEE -

UN IV ERSITY FREE TIME IS A CHANC:E FOR PEOPLE TO VOICE THEIR IDEAS
AND OPINIONS ABOUT THIS UNIVERSITY.

PEOPLE

WILL

LISTEN

Everyone is invited. CALL 831 -5502 for more informatiion.

Women were the subject of discussion in the Senate this week, as
that legislative body voted to cu1t aU federal aid to most colleges and
universities that discriminated _agalinst women. The proposal, added as
an amendment to the $24 billion higher education bill, was approved
on a voice vote . It will impose th•~ anti~iscrimina.ry ban of admissions
and scholarships and the promotion of women professors. Its
enforcement would come under lhe 1964 Civil Rights Act that bars
racial, ethnic and religious discrimination.
Those schools wltich would be affected one year after enactment
are all graduate and public co-educational colleges. Those traditionally
one-sex undergraduate schools in the process of going co-ed would have
seven years to accomplish the transition before coming under the law.
However, admis.~ions to private eo-ed undergraduate schools are not
covered .
Bayb's amendment
Those public and pnvate colleges now of one sex could remain that
way . pendmg further study Howe'Ver, military and maritime academiC$,
as well as church coiJeges are not covered The amendment wu
proposed hy Sen . 8trch Bayh (D .• lind.).

The Senate Judicaary Committee approved Tuesday a
constitutional amendment designed tll guarantee equal right&amp; foa
women. Sen. Birch Bayh, sponsoar of the amendment, said he expects
tough oppositiOn when it reaches the noor of the Senate . An identical
amendment has already been pas:~d by the House, and if the Senate
approves thas measure, at wall go to the states for ratification
The amendment reads · "Equality of nghts under the Jaw shall not
be denied or abndged by the UPtled States or by any state on account
of sex ."
Before takmg a final vote. a numher of mvc:llfica taons were beaten
back by the committee . Among them were alterattons which would
have exempted women from the military draft, or from combat duty,
exempted state supported colleges of higher learning that admit only
members of o ne sex. permitted legal distinctions between the sexes
based on functional or physaologiocal differences o nly . and would have
preserve~ the specutl protections now g1ven widows, mothers. waves and
working women
EarliCT decision reversed

RAPP I NG-- EXCHANGE OF IDEAS

If you have something to say - say it where

******
******
******

By a vote of 50-4 7. the Senate reversed an earl•er dec•s•&lt;nl wtuch
would have banned courts from l)rdcring busing to achteve school
desegregation . The reversal was due to the presence of a number of
DemocratiC presidential hopefuls whu had mis.~ed the vormg (jjjt week
due to carnpa.Jgnmg
1'he vote 0 11 the Sl'&lt;alled G raffin amendment stro ngly 1ndacated
thJt the Senate would later appr•:&gt;ve a maider bus•ng ball proposed by
M•ke Man!lfield Jnd Hugh Scott 1fhe Mansfield Scott propo~al would
deny rederal fuud ~ fo r racaJI balance busang unless local school officaals
voluntanly askeJ loa such :ud Th1s pruveu ru he the l3Se Tuesday
when the Senate 11 pprovcJ the autlder meJ~ure by J vote 11f bJ 34 •
TUTORING AND GUIOAN;IE
StNCE 1938

-MCAT- OAT
LSAT-ATGSB
GRE

IIVCHO:WIUC~~

W I liD IIY a.IID ~

MARCH11, 12,18
21,22

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edfTu•ion to greduett and professionel a::hools

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• Small oroullS
"Voluminous matwial for~ study
prtJ&gt;ared by ex,.rts "' each field
• Leson schedul@ can be liJIIO&lt;ed to
meet 1ndwtdu el needs Let5ons
can be sprelld oYer a pertod of
sev~ral months to • vear . or for
out of town students . a pe&lt;lod
o f one week

•Opportunity for

rtvl-

of

pat

l - S , ... tape a t I he Cllnllt&lt;

For 111 fornJJIIOn o1hou1 JpcciaJ

CaU

f ASfl R t'LASSfS
IIIII Rtank
837..0.!60

Specill Compect Counes dwing
Weekends - l~lonl
Sum~ Seaiona

. --.. . ·u

STANLEY H . KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD.

A F.4lCl TO l'\1lf 'IOJ W tt rlMt DE GaOOO&gt;f

N\.4RCH 151619 Q5 Q6 Q8

··" 12121
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,8 r~ncnu In pr lnclp•l cltlM
n~ r~~'""""'

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Monday, 6 March, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

IIdiocy

Fiscal irresponsibility is ·a phrase long associated with the
Student A~iation's financia l endeavors. Funds are often
given or withheld without any prior evaluation of the
organization o r projects seeking funds . Since this is so
commonplace, it is not often that an SA allocation can cause
universal consternation and condemnation.
Last Friday, the Executive Comm ittee voted to give
"Cosmic Wrapper" and itinerant nuisance Michael Levinson
five thousand dollars for a journey to South Viet Nam. This
is a new low in the Student Association's lengthy list of

'YOU COUlD lAY " If lliCTI D I Will 00 TO fAIWAM" •.• •

negative accomplishments.
Perhaps the Executive Committee was bored, since this
was one of their last meetings. Perhaps they were simply
harassed by Levinson to the point where they would do
anything to be rid of him. Whatever the reason, their actions
were a horrendous abdication of responsibility.
The entire proposal is foolish. Dave Keiser, acting SA
treasurer, did the correct thing by burning Levinson's request
in lieu of a formal recommendation. So did Fred Aueron by
opposing the measure. \YhY lan DeWaal and Keith Frankel
supported this proposal is beyond the fringe of human
understandinjl. The actions of Harold "Spot" Guberman.
Dave Steinwald and Lester Goldstein in abstaining a re a lso
incomprehensible.
What it all adds up to is a waste of $5000. No member of
the Executive Committee even bothered to examine that
figure. Our own independent investigation revealed that a
round-trip ticket to South Viet Nam costs only $1384. That
would leave only $3600 unaccounted for . This is gross fiscal
mismanagement and stupidity.
There are two bright sides to this issue however. First,
the group of "student leaders" responsible for this mess will
be retiring within the next two weeks. The student body

should be especially thankful for this fact; it will save them
the t~ouble of recalling Mr. DeWaal and Company. After
actions like these. we are convinced that the voter's rejection
of all three incumbents running in last week's elections is no
mere coincidence.
The second and final hope is that the Student Assembly
will voice their constitutional prerogative and defeat the
proposal. Their record. too. has been something less than
outstanding, but rejecting this childish waste of money
would more than suffice to redeem them in the eyes of their
constituencies.

T HE SpECTf\UM
Vot 22, No.62

Monday. 6 Marett 1972
Editor-in.{:hief - Dennis Arnold
Co·M~n~aina

Editor - AI Benson
Editor Mike Uppm.tnn
Asst. ManaJina Editor - Sus~n Mo»
Dullness M.tn.taer - Jack Herl.tn
Advertlslna M.tn&lt;~aer Su~n Mellentlne
Co-M~nqlna

B.tckP&lt;~se
.. ~ . ~ Amy Ahrend
C.tmpus . . . •
Jo·Ann Armao
. . . . . .•• . . . f eff Greenw~d
. . . . . . . . . .Howle Kuru
City _. . . . _ . j~nis Cromer
Copy ___ •• _ _ ROhni Forman
. .••... ... ...
M.trty Galli
Asst. . . . . . Llalrc Krlegsman
Future.
. . Lynda Teri
Gnaphic Aru
Tom Toles

•. M.;ryh ope Runyon
Aut ... • . . . . . . . . . . . .v&lt;~cant
lll. &amp; Dnama •. Mlch•el Sllverbl&lt;~tl
Music . . . . • . . • ..•Billy Altman
Off-C;1mpus ....•. Lynne T r&lt;~Cger

Aul. • . . . . . • .........v;1&lt;:ant
Plloto . . _. • Mickey Osterrelcher
Aut- . • . ....... Kim Santos
Sports . . . . • • . . • . . . Barry Rubin
Aut. . . . . . . . . . .. Howie F~iwl

The Spectrum is served by United Press lntem.&amp;tlonal, College Press
Service , the Los Angeles Times F r~ Press, the Los Angel es Times
Syndicate and Liberulon News Service.
Republic ation of matter herein without the express consenl of the
Editor-in.Chief is forbidden .
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-ln.Chief.

Page six . The Spectrum . Monday, 6 March , 1972

Aut-obiographies needed
To the Ediwr
In our psy,hiatric practice we have treated ll
number of persons who have been the victims of
incest. Often by the time they arrive at our office,
their home: has been disrupted by divorce, by the
imprisonmoent of a parent , or by the placement of a
child in a foster home. In many of these cases,
emotional difficulties did not develop until after the
illicit sexual.l activity was exposed . This fact has led
us to consider the possibility that the psychic trauma
resulted from a combination of the stress of incest
and pressures which appeared foUowing discovery.
We feel thut the impact o f incest is enough in itself
to precipitate a neurotic or possibly even a psychotic
reac tion in a child or adolescent without subjecting
lhem to tlhe addit ional strain of well meant but
inJurious hMdling.
We arc convinced that in so me ~es of incest ,
th e c t11ld has been treated so badly that
smpnsonmc:nt of the offending party is too !Jghl a
puni~hmcmll. llowever. tl\ere are instances in whic.: h

all parties involved wo uld benefit from much more
benign management. This letter concerns o ur search
fo r more effective methods of preventing incest and
less traumatic ways of dealing with it once it
becomes known. Will you and your readers help us?
Part of our program to establish more adequate
guidelines is the exploration o f the pasts of
emotionally stable persons. We need anonymo us
autobiographies from men and women who have
managed to survive incest without psychiatnc:
difficulties. We will analyze these in an attempt to
determine how the often tragic outcome of incest
was avoided.
The more detail we have to worl.. with , the more
accurate will be o ur analysis; however, unless the
writer feels there is value in describing sexual details
fully . this aspect of the stories may be gone over
briefly . We are more interested ln prevention and
treatment than we are in pornography .
John Buh op

Directur, Lanrers Clime

Mis;r epresentations
To the Edit.or.
This is in reference to Mike Green's letter. Him
and his adolescent Marxist Tarzan-talk. So America
ISn' t free'! The capitalist ethic is evil? He can say
dumn near a nything he wants in this country . The
Iucker is, people don't h.ave to listen He doesn't
have a govc~rnment that sticks its collecti ve nose in
everything. Not yet.
No one: forced him to read Monroe's letter , you
bastard . And Angela Davis is free to spew her
Communist crap about liberating peo ple by setting
up a state' to control all phases of life. What
"inJustices''' ell.ist in this country. aside from the
o nes cooked up by what passes for his brain? No o ne
tells drug :!ddicts to pump hoople juice into their
veins. The people who live in slums created them who thre w the garbage in the street'! Who burned
out their b'omes and left the roof leaking? I live in a
slum ne1ghlborhood, but I have self-respect . I don't
stl on my ass and watt for a handout from the
welfare. When I see a rat , I kill it. I don't waste my
time by moaning over what some political
butt-kissers did or did not do.
Greene:'s letter was so much horseshlt, hes and
misreprese111tatio ns. He has a beef about Capitalism condemns tt with examples of human brutalHy,
political wc:trare state mistakes, ignorance and other
things, nome of which have any relation to an
economic system based on private property and the
totaJ separation of the State from economsc
interference: ( like Phase II . voted by ass-hole liberal
Democrats and used by Ntll.on. who has as much
principles as an amoeba).
Minew,orkers can always qu1t. There are other
jobs, and besides, we're running out of coal. There
won't be any mines left , but jerk s like him will find
some o ther group that will suit his kind in then dnve
for totaJ po.wer.
. god kno ws
He's nuts. According to him, "
how many more (workers) are buried (ln
California) - . and elsewhere. A goofy clown that
had a taste! {or murder is his excuse to advocate
socializ.ation of the means of production . What the
hell , according to old Mike, straw bosses hunger to
kill peopl~: they hire . . . Thousands of migrant
workers fall prey to ruthless .. . growers.!! " FaU
" prey???" He's cracked . I'IJ bet his eyes roU when he

chews the rug.
And as for o ppression, who the hell runs off at
the mouth about killing people, and offing cops, and
runs around planting bombs? Agnew. MitcheU, or
those nuts Rubin , Dohm, Davis. Rudd. et al? Those
babies on the politicaJ Left don't give a fu ck who
gets killed in theu "socialist" revolutio n .
Greene is a loud-mouthed bastard hanging on
the edge of the crowd that yells anti-Fascism. whth:
they use o ld Ad,otrs bullyboy tactics. There's no
difference between "Do It" and "Mein Kampf " He's
just a goddamned coward with resentment in his
messy mind, and a jackal's fa ce filled with
discontent , a hungry look that says he'U kill and I'll
loot, then all will be weU with the world .
l'U probably get a few obscene phone calls
(854-22 14, Ed .) or a fun package that makes a b1g
boom. Like I said last May, I wouldn't put it past the
lovers of free speech to do that. I'm realistic, see'!
I kind of look for that to happen, so l can get
mad and then drunk, like I used to do in the old
days before 1 sobered up and came here. Police State
Oppression? Hell, Greene o ld buddy, you don't
know what real fear is. You will if I catch you .
I' m not the cops and I'm not o ne of J. Edgar's
boys. They can't shove somebody's teeth in with the
muzzle of a shotgun to remind him or her thai they
aren't fooling. But 1 can .. . and more. I can unlock
locked doors and slap him in the face and there
won't be a damn thing he can do to st op me.
Crimina)? Insane? Sure. I come across as an
easy-going type, because I can afford to. I h.ave these
skills I haven't displayed, but ue public knowledge.
Get me, Greene?
I'm not afraid of the fascists on the left here at
UB, because I can get to them and give them a taste
of thetr " revolutionary People's Justice."
I' m not one of these "Love America" types.
J ust a guy with a funny sense of fairness and a taste
for pleasura.b le sadism . So thi.s Monroe character saw
something he liked that made him feel good about
this land. This son-of·a·bitch Mike Greene jumps on
him. dripping his Marxist prejudjces like pus from a
gonorrhea) infection.
GOD-DAMN, it's been six years since I kicked
somebody in the face.

Walter Andrust

�Affl~a

A true friend
To the Editor.
Three chccB t o Undercu"ent for sponsorina the
most expensive movie on campiJJ. "Yellow
Submarine" ticket S 1.50 donation. Th•~Y refused to
accept a .75 donation. lt was either SI .50 or o u t! Is
donation a mu111, or is it up to the lndividt4al! Is
Undercu"ent the true friend of the student? 1 doubt
It

Mo•ilhe Pupeck

Understand words
To rite Editor:
In reference to the ethos charac of
"Censorship," I he.arhly endorse your stand that
anyone who has taken it upon himself to call tumself
an "Editor" , should at least make an attem pt to
understand words and what they mean; wo rds arr
expected to be the tools of his trade.

Henry Bennett
f'X·managmg ed1tor,
ethot, SUNYAB

Spectrum prejucJ~ice
To rile Editor ·
I have been followmg the Student Assoc1&amp;l10n
tlection campugn and have noteoj that 11rt&gt;
Spectrum IS very preJUdiced ag.a.mst freshman
eindtdates. It IS ev1dent that Tht Spectrum does not
luve very lush regard for the ability of freshman to
run student government . Maybe what the Student
Association needs IS people who don't kn ow how the
present organtzataooal structure fun\:ttons
I{
everyon e elected to SA was Wee that, they could
UbJecllvely create a more •,equ1table bureaucracy"
that would cater with greater effectl•veness tn the
needs of the 16,000 un dergraduates on thiS campus.
A new, freshly onented government could properly
mold 1tself to meet the responsabwtu:s of handhng
three-quarters or a million dollars Ul student fees
more fairly and maturely. I admat that it IS true that
experience IS necessary tu carry on 'where others
have left off But this is not the case here. What IS
needed is not the continuation of the way !lungs
have been tn the past few years, but the betpnntng of
a new trend an dependable student government I f
the edators of The Spectrum had opened thear dosed
mmds long enough to see these thtntgs 1nstead of
auto matically condemning th e frcshmnn candtdates
for not knowin&amp; everythmg about t h e SA, then they
m1ght even have considered voting for tlhemttl

Voting reform
In tilt' Jo.'dltur
Students have been pushed around too lon~"
Wt , "The Bi Parttsan Comm11tee for a Meantngful
Student Vote," ue haVUlg submalted a bill, 1n
Albany, whtch would tnable students to vote In the
clel:lton ~~~tillS encompass1ng theu ..:oUegc
res1dences. rather than 10 those areas where their
parents cast the1r ballots. We believe thiS to be a
necessary and constitutional step toward student
parlletpatlon tn those local governments affectmg us
most Presently students have no such vo1ce an local
affaars and. u a consequence, maJOr actions are
taken. and offic1a ls elected , allen to the interests of
the student population
Together, through an 11\..ti Ve, coord1anted
campaign, all students will rece1ve the vote whtch IS
nghtfully and constttuhonally ours Students' nghts
means student pol..ttttal power , for al l students
throughout the state"
Join our effort!' Anyone wishmg to asg1st
should contact the "Comn1111ee" as soon a~
posstble!! Please call, as lime IS cruc1al, or tf you
~:anno t , write and you will be contacted by our New
Paltz College representatives
Michael J . Berey 18 S. Oakwood Temsce
New Paltz, New York 12561 9 14 -255-8983
or.
Kathy Neubart 26 S. Oakwood Terracl'
New Paltz, New York 12561 914·255-ll!S38
"17u 8J-Part1san Committee /iJr oJ

Meaningful Student Vot,

by The Attica Defeme Committee

" I was lyin&amp; on the &amp;round in D Yard after the
attack . I had four bullets in my stomach . Two piJS
came over and said, " Hey, ruuer, you dead o r
alive?" I said I was alive and they told m e to strip. I
started to strip, but I &amp;uess l wasn't strippina fast
enough. They laid into me with their rifle butts.
Then they made me crawl across into A Yard beatina
rne with their rifle butts ... "
" In A Yard we had to run naked through a
puntlet A puntJet is two lines of pi&amp;$ and you have
to run between them and they beat you with clubs
and belts. They beat me in the genatals and some of
the doom squad from Auburn marked me with an
"X" on my back b ecause I was a known militant and
a member of the Black Panther Party and they
marked me for a leader " (Ttus prinsoner was
shipped up t o Attica from Auburn after the uprisin&amp;
an October 1970. Guards from Auburn were brought
to Attica to tuke part in the attack of September 13
and pick off t h e Auburn leaders. They killed four
out of twelve.)
"Next t h ey dragged us into A Block. There was
broken glass aU up the sta1rs and they made us run
up an our bare feet. They made sorne brothers eo
down and do it agatn .. (Com missio ner Oswald and
Supenntendent Mancusa were present ot this gauntlet
and made no atte m pt to stop It .) " Then they took
me to the hospital. Doc Sternberg refused to treat
me because of the "X" on my back They gave me a
paar of shorts and two guard9 marched m e to my
cell. One told me t o walk fast and the other saad to
walk slo w , so when I walked slow I got beaten and
the same when I walked faster T h ey threw me 1n a
~:ell 1n just my s horts fh e water and electric power
and the healing were turned off and the wandow~
smashed There was no mlllfrcss I got no food or
treatment until the next day "
As a result of the lack of treatment th1s man·s
stomach wounds became infected T oday h e st1ll
wears a body bandage and walks with dafficulty All
of hi!&gt; personal possessaons wert smashed or st o len
and ht was beaten repeatedly tn the days. after the
massacre His story IS typ1al of the pain and
degradalto n anflacted 1n the name ol the law and
order in the aftermat h of the Atttca uprutn&amp;,

Wby did it take the deaths of 40 men and tbe
wounding of hundro~da to end the Attica uprisiJla? It
was a purely politi•::&amp;l decision . RockefeUer and b1s
seniro Corrections OfficeB chose not to neaotiate
with t he inmates c1ver their demanda for humane
prison conditions, dlemanda that Oswald admitted to
be justified . They cbose to use Attica as an eumple
to aU freedom flghten of the price of rebellion in
our proto-fascist soc:iety.
While Oswald stalled the neaotiatloru, plans
were goina ah ead for a take-ove.r of the prison
involving a massive use o f force that they knew had
to result an the k~Uma and wound.i.n,a of scores of
1.11mates: 1000 fully armed men, hebcopten, .4S
submachine suns, .35 7 maanum revolvers, .385
s p ecta l revolvers, M-14s, AR-16s, co ncussio n
penades, cs aas. bazookas, and .270 rifles equipped
with dum-dum bullets (desig~~ed to rip a foot -wide
hole 1n a human body, outlawed by the ~neva
Convention). This nrray of lethal weapons was used
against men withotut firearms, trapped in a pruon
yard, with now hef1e to run o r tak e cover. Inmat es
were given no chance to surrender. At least ci&amp;ht
were killed after the initiAl b.a.rra&amp;e. executed with
t be1r hands above theu h eads after !hey had been
made to be&amp; for tb,eir lives The deliberate intention
of the oper11tton was to kill and maim.
Now t he Sta'te o f New York IS prepari.na
Indictments against the massacred of Attica, to cover
up Hs own crimes. We must demand that the Stat e
be held accountable for its act1ons We must not
allow the brothers t o be railroaded and put away for
life. They st ood up for their humanity and for oun.
We must Jearn from them and support theu struJile.
In tl1t words of the pnsoners preamble of Sept 9 ·
W~ art men I We ore nor beasts and do not
rnUnd t() be btJZte/1 or drrven tU beasts The ennre
pnsnn populace ha.r stt forth to change forever the
nuhfe11 brutallzotron and disregard for the lilies of
the prisont'rt hue afld throughout the Umted States.
What has happened hue 11 but tht 1ound before the
fury of th ou who are opprtued

We ''all upon all rite corucienttnus rltiuns of
Amarca to a.sJi.ll us in purttng an end tn thu
.r1tuatlon thai threaten.• the lr11e1 not only of w, but
each and tvtr)lone .of you a1 well.

Local library resource
To

th~

f.dttor

I wonder whether a ....ampaagn for a lucal library
resource mighl be somethtng t o env1s1on I for one
ten~ Ol)t to respond to sohl"ltatton~ from other
umvers1t1CS when I &lt;lnl assoc1ated w1th one whose
present and tuture concern me mmt d1rtctly 4nd
perhaps the1e are others hkc me both on the ~taft
and in the communlly
I reahLe that 1t IS Im portant to establish the
Importance Of the State taktng the fmam.taJ
respons1btl1ty for contmumg adequate support 1n the
m&amp;ntenance or library fa cibt1es and co llecttOn~
However, no harm can come hom a camp&amp;gn of th1~
son. perhaps d1rected by the f· riends of Lockwood
organ11.atton On the contrary, tt nughl. (I) actually
bnng 10 some books of Interest for the collec..t1on
and SOOl&lt;' oth ers that co uld br ~old w1th the prcof1ts
useLI tor necessary acqu1S11tons (Ill J daversJty of
fields)
1nC1dcntaUy , a secondhand book sale as o ne

which many readers tn the Uruvers1ty and Ute
.:ommunat y enjoy and could be made into an
mterestins cornm er'Cial and social event in itself; and
(2) nicely dn~matize the plight of the IJb rary •nd
create a son of gr•oundswell s upport for Jl tn both
the Umverstty and the commurury, wtuch would
have ors d1rect and tndtrett C'ffecl upon more offictaJ
a1t1tudes toward ~u1pport .
I would he h appy to help m suc..h u proJect und
look lorw11rd lo your response

John Simon
('harrmon. Drp1 of Frenth
Editor's nolt Tht ,abo vi! letter was sent tn Dr Myle1
Slatrn, n1rrcror of the Lr/lrnry, last No,·rmber Dr
Srmon Jmwarded thu letter 111 reference to our
edwmol suggestron that the UB Foundurwn ht'/p the
f.rbrary dtmng the Unr~asrty 's financral ,·rrsrs .

The silent community
Ta rhr hdrtm
Once agatn th1s academil c..u mmun1ty has sho"' n
thttt 1t allows 1tself to be rnantpulated by the poli11L5
of "the silent maJOuty " I am re rernr~&amp; to the
myop1c manner an which the 1&gt;eoplc of ttu.s
Un1vers11y have responded to the threat of expulSion
placed agaanst SDS member Joh.n Spntz.ler. It seems
Jess than crt'ldable that the whole admirustrallon
should he swung 1nto servace agwnst a student
because he raised "controversial issues" 111 a
classroom and an the presence of has fellow students.
It as hc~rd to beheve that Prof. Halstead expects h1s
course on (of all thang.s) tmperiahsm to be taught
without politiul discussiOn or even diSsent by
studen ts After all , these are not dead llssues. Yet all
the ev1dence seems to point to the fact that he (Prof
Halstead) does tn fact e"pect su..:h pnvlleged
treatment.
A ftrr Ch:urmJ n Lavely of the H1story
Department rev1ewtd S pntzler's case , he saw no
reason why this studen t should not be admitted to
the clasr.. The administration h11s, thererore, given 1.11
to the arbitrary wh1m of a reactionary,
"red·balttng," professor by makmg thiS student
appear and show cause why he should not be
expelled as a "clear and present danger•· to the
academ1c communaty

After reviewmg the alleged inc1dents of
"diSruptiOn" myself, I am amned that thll&gt; has been
allowed to go as far as It has If Prot llalstead
refuse~&gt; to teach at th1s Un1versaty because he cannot
d1ct at c the kind c•f students who should take his
course, and af he cont1.11ues to place hamself against
tbe authonty Md better JUdgement of his
departmental cb wman tn the course of this
IJTational demand . then 11 seems only fatr that he
:.hould be held Uiable by the admanastrallon for
disrupting the cour.se of academiC affaus.
Even more d1Stress1ng, however, than the
c ap r ictous au tho rit y wh1ch Prot
Halstead is
demanding for tumself. IS the stereo-typed
descnpt1on of Uu~s affau wluch Dr. Ketter seems
willing to accept as evtdence (clea}ly withou t
grounds to anyone who takes the time to look at the
case) sufficient to damage the career of a serious
student
In condusaon, let me remllld t.lus ·'t:omm unity,"
that Mr Spntzler IS not the only outspoken student
(or faculty membe:r) on lhu campus, nor IS he the
only o ne who sh&lt;1uld be taking issues like racism,
imperialism , due p rocess and academic freedom as
serious and certainly respectable top1cs to be dealt
w1th here

Srevt So/4mone

Monday, 6 March, 1972 . The" Spectrum . Page seven

-

�TODAY
In Conjunction with International Month
A Lecture On
WASHINGTON, PA. - Paul E. Gilly was
sentenced to death Thwsday in the mwder of
United Mine Worker official Joseph Yablonski. The
same jury had, one day earlier, found the 38-year-old
man guilty of three counts of murder in the Dec. 3,
1969 deaths of Yablonaki and his wife and daughter.
Under Pennsylvania law a jury returning a first
degree murder verdict has a choice of two penalties:
death or life imprisonment.
PARIS - Over 935 pounds of pure heroin were
seized in a raid Wednesday on a fishing vessel at
Marseilles by French customs officials. It is the
largest single seizure anywhere of dangerous drugs
and is valued on the street at about $222.5 million.
The heroin was hidden in a block of cement found in
the hold of the trawler Le Caprice de:~ Temps.
TRENTON - New Jersey has been left without
any prohibitions against abortiom in the wake of a
decision by a federal tribunal . The 2- 1 decision
struck down the state's 111-year-old abortion law
Wednesday when it said that a ban against the early
termination of pregnancies amounted to
"unreasonable interference from the state."
The judges said that the abortion laws were so
vague, that the entire statute was declared
unconstitutional. The dissenting judge said: '"The
state's interest in preserving fetal life outweighs the
interest of the mother and the family unit."
However, the comeoting judges said : "A woman has
the constitutional right of privacy under the Ninth
and Fourteenlh Amendments to determine for
herself whet.Mr to bear a child or to temtinate
pregnancy in its early stages, free from unreasonable
interference from the stste."

been extended by Premier Chou En-lai through her
parents. No date has been set for the proposed trip.
WASHINGTON - The Senate, by a vote of
88-6 Wednesday, approved a $24 billion higher
education bill which would provide a basic annual
government grant of $1400 t,o any student in coUege
who needed it. The bill, which also contains funds to
help elementary and secoot1lary schools meet the
costs of desegregation, included provisions which
would give S150 million tto coUeges in financial
trouble, $390 million for lnclian education and a S4
billion authorization to help build new facilities over
fou r years.
ALBANY
a ..deferred tuition" plan was
proposed Friday by Senate Majority Leader Earl
Brydges, which will expand the state's student loan
program for college students . The plan provides for
the obtaining of loans for the difference between
board and tuition costs amd any scholarship or
scholar incentive award a student receives_
Major provisions of the bill include: I) loans will
be available to students whose family 's net taxable
income exceeds SJ 5,000; 2) all loans will be
available at an interest rate m&gt;t to excet:d 7% ; 3) rate
of repayment will depend on the income of the
borrower after he fmished college; 4) no tax money
is involved since the necessary costs are absorbed by
the sale of bonds and a buill-in profit in the
program; 5) present limits in the bill allow for a
yearly loan of $I 500 with 21 total of $7500 during
college, but this could be rruised to $2500 annually
and $10,000 totally_

SANTIAGO, CHJLE - FaJmers and their wives
in the southern town of Quirihue are abstaining from
WASHINGTON - Invitations to visit China have sexual relations to protest the lack of a doctor in the
been extended to President Nixon's two daughters local hospital. One farmer was quoted as saying; "We
and their husbands, Tricia Cox announced have stopped having sexual relations in order to
Wednesday nighL TriciB, who acted as hostess at the demonstrate our problem to the whole world ." A
official White House "welcome home" gathering in pro-government newspaper S21ys the farmers plan to
her 1972 political debut, said that the invite had seize the hospital unless a doctor is appointed soon.

Cold Steeler'sfined
Maximum fines of S 250 were levied Jut Tuesday on three 1members of the former
"underaround" publication Cold Steel : Stephen Weiss, Robin Le~vine and Nancy Clark.
The three received the penalty as a result of guilty pleu to a chara,e of violating a General
Business Law requirina a masthead containing the name and addr1~ of the owner of any
publication.
That charge was but one of six in the oriainal November 1970 indictment . Others
included criminal anarchy, inciting to riot , third and fourth dearee conspiracy and 10econd
dearee criminal solicitation. These five charges were all dismissed .
The charaes stemmed from D September 1970 issue of Cold Stu/ which allegedly
"advocated violence likely to c•use public harm." The issue was distributt'd 111 Grover
Cleveland High School , then , one of Buffalo's disturbance-pla11ued institution~!.
STUDENT DISCOUNT

on all
redecorating needs·
art supplies, picture framing·
O.M. RECH PAINT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.

GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
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Pre-Meds &amp; Pre-Dents

Admissions Policy
U.B. Med School
SPEAKERS .

Or. John Richert •
(Registrar, U.B. Med. School)
Dr. luther Musselman

TUESDAY, March '7

"ReCENT EVENTS IN PEKINGS' DOMESTIC
AND FOREIGN POLICY"
Dr. Franz Michael
Director of Institute for Sino- Soviet Studies

George Washington University
MARCH 6
1:00 p .m.
CONFERENCE ROOM
NORTON UNION
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Co·sponsored by:
Student Association and
Counci l on International Studies

*** ***********
The following Clubs or organizations will
not be funded by the Undergraduate Student
Association for the 1972 - 1973 year if all
budget requests are not returned by MARCH
16, 1972. Budget requests can be picked up
in 205 Norton Hall.

Arab Cultural Club
Circolo Italiano
Club Latino
Moster Cla$$8$
Debate Club
Iranian Student Club
H.P.E.R . Majors Club
Krishna Yoga Soc1ety
Lemar
Native American Cultural Awareness Organization
Nursing Student Association
Occupational Therapy Club
Pakistan Student Association
School of Pharmacy Student Assoc iation
Student Branch of Electrical Engineers
Student Gov't of Faculty of Engineering
and Applied Sciences
Student Theatre Guild
Students for Israel
Undergraduate Biology Association
UB Geological Society
UB Opera Club
New Age Natural Foods
Chinese Student Association
Accounting Club
Women's liberation
Greek Club
International Club
lJB Photography Club
Physics Association
UB Gay l iberat10n
Azteca
Student Historical Association
Society of Engineering Science
Record Co-op
- DtJI'ici KelH'r. Treasurer

**************
Page eight . The Spectrum . Monday, 6 March, 1972

�Money

Wise spending is necessary
by Lynda Teri
Ft:~~turP

355Norton
COME UP AND SEE US, WE LIKE VISITORS.

An astonlshmg leap into the past, and into the
present. The program includes tame on actu.d d1g
site, SIX credits from Tel Aviv University,
a traveling sem inar on the people of Israel, and
free time Dates Mid-June to mid-August; cost $8414

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Money. Never hn one five-letter word caused so
much turmoil. Little green bills with pictures of
presidents on them have the ability to reek more
havoc and create more anguish than ole' Henry Knox
ever imagined.
" It is money that sacks cities and drives men
forth from hearth and home ; warps and seduces
native annocence and breeds a habit of dishonesty."
It is money that has been called ''the roote of all
evil."
Needin&amp; and wanting thin~ that must be
purchased, never having money enough and
searching for ways to obtain it , seem to be a national
pastrrne. Some people Sit up nights trying to figure
out how to get money , wtule others devote their
time to figunng out how to spend it when they do
get it.
People have been known to do some strange and
fnghtenmg !lungs for money . Barg;~ ins have been
made and broken fvr the "Cod-g.ven dollar" wh1le
people and countnes have been destroyed 111 war~
wluch. "after all, dn.l bcnel1t the economy."
Ouwn through the age~. money has \.Orruptcd
people and been wrrupted by them. People hav1•
robb ed, raped and murdered to 6CCure H
Governments have plotted and connaved tu oht:un
funds wh1ch hJve been used to beucfit thcrr people
or themselve~.
Corrupttnn docsn 't sel'lll confined to nat1onal
governmcnll.. nor is money confined to being
important and valuable to all
Betonging to someone else
Money rsn 't everytlung to everyone. The
priorities of this culture could stand some redefinang
and re~valuating, but to go so far as to label money
worthless, IS gomg a bit too far. If you want to sec
your own money as unimportant, that is your
business, but takrng that of other's and treating 11 as
if it were inconsequenltal . .
Do what you will with your money. but when
handling other people's. .
"Value me as you please" was engraved on the
first copper coin ever pn nted in the Uruted States
Its senttment reflected a noble message, intended for
1ts owners Perhaps, we might do well to paraphrase
it : "Value me as you deem my owner would value
me;" a type of "spend me as they would " altitude

Sixty Americans will try to create a new world
in their minds' eye image by 1974. We offer a
chance to spend a summer working with some of
them on an existing Israeli kibbutz. Discover if
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Spring is beautiful in Jerusalem. We offer a two
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Consumer right\?
"Mnne} 1!. oru: of those ~:oncepts whach ltke a
tca~J&gt;&lt;IIlll t)l .111 Llmbrcll.r, but unlike an earthqual..e
\)t a bullercup. arc definable pmnaraly h} the use or
purpose whrch th·cy serve "
When th.tt rwrJ&gt;&lt;l!&gt;C I\ worthwlulc, when money
ts spent 1111 \llrt1eth111g ol .tctuJI value, then few
compla111 about pay111g t.H 11 One can even smile
knl&gt;wtng sometlung f!""d " hc111g done, but when
fee) are nusha11dlcl.l .111.1 "'"appropriated, then
~:mnplamts Jrc justified, vcrv loud. very vehement
complamts arc JWtllficd
Money rsn't the answer to the wmld's ill\, hut at
is not to be take11 lightly by thoNc to whom 11 dues
not belong. If I choose to throw away my own
money. that 11 my business. when someone or
somethmg else deeems 11 right to do that for me , then
I have a nght to btlch. lf they are using my money,
they then have a responstbility to me and\ have the
right Lo know whal I am buying and to have a say in
purchasing it
" Man 's first feeble attempt :.1 trading" resulted
in money, and student fees have resulted in IJUrte a
treasury for Student Assocratton to 'work" with
News flafh Studenl Assocumon Exccunve

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Sixty-seven dollars may not be a hell of a lot of
money to many people, but I am sure there are quite
a few students Cln th.is campus who could think of
some very good and valid uses for it, if it were given
to them. Many of the ""'ittle things of life" and "bare
necessities" can be purchased for that amount of
money .
People in hrigh places too often forget that the
money ro their treasury is not a piece of a monopoly
game to do with as they please . They fo rget that it is
the old-fashioned, "'I worked hard for it,'' type.
Stipends must be easy to come by lately if money
can be thrown away so easily by those in "power."
The word power rs used loose I y. I t arnpljes a certain
control wl1ich 1s obtarned by exercising little, if any,
skill.
Th1s assocaJl1nn funds that dub whrch sponsors
thrs actavaty tu thut student . The story goes around
and around w11h muncy commg out of student
pockets. Ovcrspendmg, under~pcndtng, padd rng th1s
budget and lund1ng that pruposal are all pan of the
Jargon uf fees anl.l fundang

lS

proud 111 pr,•..cnt, 3 h1&gt;urs in eonc~:rt w1th

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t Leon Thomas f
t
9-12p.m.
f
t Friday, March 10 I
t
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FILLMORE ROOM

NORTON UNION

- BEER WILL BE SERVED -

Freadl Fries

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Students S3.00
Non-Studenll. $3.50
Tickets on sale ot Nor110n Ticket Offict&gt;

....

•A Di•. ol Sub. lloonl l , lnc.

...

-~ -~~

Monday, 6 March, 1972

l
'

~
~

The Spectrum . Page nine

�Wrestling star

Hockey :Sulls upset
fourth seeded Boston

l~arcello:an exceOent ride
by One Geringer

tired and many of the players
were down." Bost o n did make a
Asst. SfJO'II Editor
suprisi n g move as goalie Doug
BOSTON . MASS . - Klym , Brooks, in only his second start of
Dolemagc ... Dolemage, Klym . t he year, took over for regular
Whet her you call them the Mike Sullivan . However, Buffalo's
" dynamtc duo," the "gruesome ftrst two shots on goal got by
twosome " o r the " tag line Brooks. as the inexperienced
phenoms." you must admit that so phom o re barely made 11
they are the bread and butter through the flfSt period.
On the other end of the ice,
players of the Buffalo hockey
Su Us. The outstanding play of Mike Dunn played his usual fine
these two standouts helped loft game. He turned away 39 Warnnr
Buffalo 10to t he semi-finals of t he shots, 18 coming in the second
ECAC Division II Playoffs, as the period as five consecutive Buffalo
fifth seeded BuUs upset fourth penaltie s l eft the Bull s
seeded Boston State, 9-5, here in shorthanded for half that stanU\
Beantown, U.S.A.
The defense, although they dtd
Senior Dale Dolemage , m manage to kill no ne o ut of ten
perhaps his finest varstty penalties , did appear shoddy at
performance ever, shocked the ltmes and still proved to be
Warriors with four goals and two Buffal o's m os t vulnerable
assists. H.1s six poin t effort , weakness. Coach Wright expressed
however , was equalled by some concern over th is problem .
fresh man winger Mike KJym , as "Ttus is playoff hoc key and
the rookie sensation tallied two you've got to tighten up the
toals and four assists. The two defense in o rder to win .·•
"taa line'' superstars have led the
They'll certainly have to do
Bulls aU season long, duelin g each
something
soon as the Bulls
other for team scoring honors and
pr
oceed
to
the sem tfi nab
finishing the year sharing that
Wednesday afternoon aga10st
coveted diStinction.
*
It was truly a tintillatina first -place Vermont. Vermont, by
Victory for coach Ed Wright and far the toughest team ut the
his boys. It was the Bulls flfSt play offs, whitewashed l o well
showing in playoff competition Tech 7.{) 1n its first round game
and they certainly impressed t he Second seeded Massachusetts also
sparse Boston crowd at plush advanced as they knocked off S t
Ansel m's, 5-3, while lh11d ~eeded
Walter Bro wn Rink.
Merrimac k got by SIXth-(;eeded
SaJem State , 4-2.

by Ho wie Falwl

Quick Start

Buffalo got things started
So Buffalo , the only road team
quickly as capta.m Bill Newman to upset a higher seed , w 111 travel
took passes from Klym and to Vermont 1n quest o f yet
Oolemqe and put the puck put another upset a nd a chance to
Warrior goalie Doug Brooks wtth meet the wtnner of the
o nly 54 seconds gone in the game. Massac huset ts-Merrimack game 10
Boston JUSt as quickly tied trungs the finals. A lot will rest on the
up o n a eoaJ by their leading conllnued s uccess of Buffalo's
scorer, freshman Frank legro, I'• nl0~ivt "t11g line "
who later scored two more goals
in leadmg the Warrior attack.
ON YOUR N EW M/CYClf AND
From that point on, it was all
TOUR EUROPE!
Klym and Dolemage with Ted
Misko lcZJ also chipping in a pa1r. Buy new BSA. TRIUMPH, NOR TO N.
Uttle was known about t his TAX FREE from one of England"s
Bosto n State team except that o ldest dealers - £:st 50 years Huge
too of guaranteed used models
they had played an exceptionally
I England's lowest puces Fulllnsu•tough schedule and had come up
nce fot Europe &amp; Shtpment back to
with several upsets. They brought
a four game losing streak into the
playoffs and, according to Boston
State sports tnformation direct o r
Jack Rutledge, " the team was

Spectrum Stoff Writtrr

On ev1ery team, there a re usually members who
do tt1eir job but go u nnoticed. T hey do not get all o f
the recognition that t hey may deserve, b ut their
teams would be hard pressed to succeed without
them. One example is the wrestling Bulls' Fred
Marcello, who has quietly made the 177 -pound
position one of the strong points of the team.
Marcello, who was born in Italy. was recruited
o ut o f high school t o attend Broome Tech, a
two-year institution. While wrestling for Binghamton
North High School, Marcello went und efeat ed
through hi:&gt; ent ire senjor year and earned the team's
MVPaward.
The rnan who was destined to become pan of
the Bulls' greatest wres t hng team ever then moved
on to Broome. where he tw1cc placed fifth in the
Jun10r College National Otam p10nships. Marcello
had the misfortune to meet the champio n both
years.
Excellent ride
Marcello, after w1estling at 190 pounds at
Broo me Tech, had to drop to 177 pounds. " I would
rather wres.tle at 190 lbs .. because it is easier to make
that weight than to make 177," the restdent of
Bmghamton. N.Y ex plained . " However, I think that
I am really too small to go at 190 on the Universlly
level. In o ther wo rds, I have a better chance to
succeed at 177."
Marcello's s ty le on the mat features hts
trademark - an excellent nde. " Marcello is one of
the stro ngest athletes that I have ever coached ," sa1d
Bull mentor Ed Michael. " As a consequence, he IS
very tough o n t o p. He uses the tight waist ride abo ut
as e ffectivel y as it can be used ·•
Ma rcello, however, 1s not one who does not
know his Qwn weakness " I ttunk that J depend on
m y nde too much," he satd. " 1 am work.ing on my
talce down tec hnjque, in order to become a mo re
wcll -ro undc~d wrestler "

Fred Marcello
The national c hampionships at Maryland will
take place next week, and it was inevitable that
Marcello should have thoughts about that event. " I
have to assume t hat I have a good shot," Marcello
observed. "Once one makes it to Maryland, anything
can happen . As a matter of fact, with a good spot in
the draw at Maryland, 1 could place in the
nat1onals."
With Marcello's success on the mat , and his
quiet way of getting the job done, don't bet he
won't quietly do just thai.
SUNY/ A D
lNTRAMURAL DEPT.
announces
a

ALFA ROMEO
•!FERRARI
* MASERATI

CO - ED
Badminton Tournament
Tuesday, March 7th
- No pre registration
"Just show up &amp; have fu n "
Trobpys will be awarded.

Sales • Service • Parts
USED CARS

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1974 Egert (Near Bailey)
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GRANTS GRAND REOPENING WEEK

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GRANTS NOW HAS UNDERGROUND AND A MUCH LARGER SELECTION OF
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HOW MANY FEET OUR COMPETITION IS FROM OUR DOOR.

Paqe ten . The Spectrum . Monday, 6 March, 1972

�CLAIIIIIIII
WANTED
WANTED : flut•, any condition,
Inexpensive. C•ll 137-3679.
"OCC ASIONAL BABYSITTER ;"
W4Mk•nd evenlnp. Pr•flfably In Short
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aru. Calll35~1110.
PART·TIM£ daneet'l Want.O, .4 per
nour. Radice's, 74 w. Cnlpp-a. Apply
after 4 p.m.
RARMAIOS - part time, tii~M and
four days. Qood pay, nice lounge, nltea
1 p.m.-3 a.m. 21 AbbOtt Rd., nur
Bailey. Call 825·9487.
RESEARCH (term) papers bouont,
sold, exchanged. Contact Marc at
831 · 3370 at any time.
START S2 per hour aalary plus bonus.
work 4- 8 p.m. WMkdaYI: 10- 2 p.m.
saturdayL Call 835·3803 or TF94402 .
FULL OR pert·tlm• Jo6s 1111llable with
Bestllne Inc. Call Art 886·2094 or
Mike 835·5215 . MMtlngs at Executive
Ramada Inn.
APARTMENT FOR RENT
AVOID the rush
beautiful
2 bedroom apartment available In
June Walking dlstanc•. C all 837 -2826 .
ATTRACTIV E room available In
provate nome, Eggerts.. llle, for Qltl
stu Gent or gratl. PoHIDIIIty of part -time
wOfk. Calll32·9017.
2 FURNISHED apartments In aame
nou~ 3 people u cll - 1-mlnull
w•lk - summer session . 131 · 2215

RICE WANTEO to Colorado In Marcil .
Will 111.,.1 Clrlvlng and axpen-. Call
FrecJ urly mornings, 837·2319.
TO N ,Y.C. Marcil 9 or 10. Call Jeff
132·1089.
FORSAIL.E
'57 METRO tnte,.,atlonal van, clun.
Call G reg 631 ·5619 an •l(llme.
FOR SALE 1971 HonGa 175 cc, 1800
miles. Excellent conGIIIon.. 183-4589.
BACKPACKING 1'"'1: two-man Olua,
nyton Gerry "Yur Round" mOdel
wltll raln· fly , stakes, potea. $85.
834·5384.
NEVER a better dealt t Buy your clau
ring IIIII WMk . Don't Wllllll Ne•t wMk
II too late. Untvenlty Oookstore.
1960 VOLKSWAGEN - sound body,
rebuilt anotne, excellltnt tires, raGio,
but not much liNt. Cllll Freo morntn9s
837·2319. $125.
B&amp;.W RCA TV - excellent conc:lltton,
2 1 ''. Wastln91louse room~lze Ian ,
:kpMd. Both 1 65 . Calll74·5352 .
'62 CHEVY 4-&lt;3oor, 6-cyllnder,
ltanOllrd. Perfect ruronlng conGitlon,
&amp;200 anG '65 Ford con ..ertlble, $375.
9-5:30, 873-0916. Oob. '64 Boyer
Town van convert"' to mooll home,
aqulppecJ wltll stereo, lour beGs, stove,
running water, furnace, dinette, $1500.
Needs an9lne. 173-0786

Frencll

racing bike. Call

WHARFOALE 400 3 · wly ~kau.
VIrtually n-. 11118111 M cll. tl50 for
two Also Oyna SCA·J5 ampllner.
895·0653.
TANDBERG 12, Duel 1219, BOM 901,
Mac C·26, MR.Q5, Ml ·l, Scott 299·F,
Oyna PAT · 4 . 120. A25, Braun
~kers. Allee A ·7 SOO II, AMPQX
AX ·50. Bogen Tuner, 897.0297 after 6
p.m.
HARMAN KAROON G30, 630 - dulll
power supply receivers, Hegeman
speakers, Philips turntables; cueing,
ant-skate. auto-shutoff for the price of
an A . R. Sinclair 3000, 50 REAL watts,
1 150, li n e 6electlon of Imported
En911111 equipment, Quad, Radford,
Decca , B&amp;.W, 897·0297 or 684-4937 .

TO SHARE twcHiedroom liPI . wltll
two mllles. Swimming pool, modern .
167/mo. Including lilt utilities. Cllll
Rick or Qovg. 688.(;295.

PAlO SUBJECTS nMdad for medical
experiments. Must be wllllniJ to accept
trace amounts or rldiOKtlvlty end
other m.Oicallons. At least 21 a nd In
gooo health . Ca ll 834·9200, ut. 202
Mrs. Wltheller or ext. 380 MIJJ
Latchford .

WE ARE now open MonGay es well as
TuasGay througll SllturdaY. also
TnursGa!l evenln9 Ill 10 p .m. ''Tile
People," 144 Allen 812.(;283.

1964 VW ¥In, new engine, raGio, 91s
neater, very gooG conGitlon, 1600 or
Dell offer . 832.(;564 .

LAST CHANCE. buy your ring today
You could wtn tile colored TV at tile
University Bookstore.

1970 JAGUAR
&gt;&lt;KE EKcellent
condition BranG new AM/ FM nereo
radiO tnctud.O Call 688 7327 evenings

LOST Sr FOUND

"ANAS'tASIA" nMGS a noma. She's 1
1961 lo¥e bla, Illite T ampeat , 82,000

FEMALE roommllt• for Immediate
occupancy (big house oH Hertel). 840
per montll . l&amp;t montll's rent only •20.
Call 837-4159.

MY NAME'S Qretcllyn anG I need a
home. I'm a 6 mot. old mutt. I have
my Shots and I'm as cute as anytlllng.
Won't someone t al&lt;e lind love me? Cllll
837· 2694 .

VW '65 bu9 48 ,000 miles, sunroof,
push out wlnCiows, new Drakes.
QepenGable
Make lair offer .
835·3871.

REFRIGERATORS, stoves ano
washers . ReconGIItonao , Gellvereo anG
9uaraniMd
O&amp;.G Appliances, 844
Syca more . T&gt;&lt; .. ·3183

ROOMMATIE wanted - own room .
Hert•-eotvln atN . 850/montll plus
utilities. Call Ron or Bruce, 17 3-8132 .

DON'T miss outll Buy your class ring
today. You could win tile colored TV .
University Boot&lt;stora.

NIKON F (black body) 50 mm 12,0
:ens, hOOd and case, 1130. AlSo 2 t mm
f4.0 Nlkkor wttll viewfinder. hood ,
$105 . Calll83-4310.

MlSCELLANEOUS
GUITAR Instruction
b'91nnlng .
rock, Dlues . C all David 886·3204.
LE~R N
to WNve. Clas,._s ttart
Monday 3/13, 1 :3G-3:30. Ellrtll n'
'Wear, 3361 Baii•Y. 138·3574 or
·834· 7984.

!PERSONALIZE your wadding wltll
"your" songs. Call Justin P . HNIY
285·8608 or Cynthia Oetta .. ll
731·5717.
TYPING - buslnts~ or personal - term
papers, tnu•s. mus m•lltngs.
Reasonattl• rates. Cell ~37.(;050 .
TYPING
experienced
IBM
•Selectric, &amp;.40 per page. IJI-4808 .
TYPING - expert en ceo - term papen,
133· 1597 .

let C.

WATCH FOUND - RIGgi Lh c ampus
Ca ll 8J 1-1144 .

THREE DUutlful kittens nMd • gooG
llloma , 6 WeeMS OIG , litter IIAined . CAll
Karen after 9 p , m 137-0533

FOUNO a t Acneson to•G inll dock
TnursGay n tgnt - ll watch
come to
Acheson JOB to IGentlfy.
FOUND LockwOO&lt;I
837-4924

10 1 .m .

n...

PICKLE: SMtng you my 10n made my
hUrt 10ar like e lllwkl (R.S.V.P.)
THANKS -SUSAN .

I'VE BEEN neglecteO . NoDoGy wants
to ouv me. My name Is AnaUasla anG
I'm lor wte lor only 1110 I'm a
2 · Goor, Dlua Tempest with a n
automatic transml"ton, 1!,000 miles
and a very S41l&lt;Y body . t f Interested, call
AI 831-4113.

~rouno

ROOMMATE ~~tant•d to snare
2-oedroom aPArtment
minutes
from campus. Own room, 860/mo.
plus utlllll•. Call Ktlt132·2047.

PERSOHAL

lO..SPEEO
652 ·2821.
RIDE WANTEO to N.Y .C. (preferably
a~oot~lyn) for Marcil 117 and back late
Sun. Marcil 19 or tNrly Mon. Call
833·3491.

835 +. 875-8260. Clll

miNI. All tile eosts Is 8110. Call AI at
831-4113 or o.oble at 132.(;815.

FREE 6·WMk old kittens, mala •nd
female . Call 836· 7076 .

watcll w ith Jtrlp.O banG ,
Loop, FeD
17th Call

JOB RESUMES
professional,
confidential consultation. Special rates
lor students, rec;ent graduates and
111terans. 835-4473.

LOST. BIIICk Drlef~ase with oooks and
papers. Contents very 1m portent
Rewllrd tor return . Call 837-6848 or
return 10 English Dept. Ask fur Julia

UNBELIEVABLE111 Jet to Europe
., 169 roundtrip N .Y .C
Gaparture.
•Co ntact St... e QoiG 835· 7519 1fter 7
p.m .

APARTMENTS WANTED

FEMALE .anlor In SNrtll of job . Clln
•do manv types of work, preferablY In
UB area . Call Mary 838-4892

SENIOR needs roomy •P•rtment nur
campus tor one. Jun• ttuu May Call
837.0430.

JOBS ON SHIPS! Men . women .
Per tact summer lOb or car. .r . No
el&lt;perl•n~e required
Excellent PlY .
World-wide travel . SanG 12 .00 for
Information. Seafa&gt;t, Bo&gt;&lt; 1239-NF ,
Suttle, WaShington, 9111\ .

4 · BEOROOM house or apartment
desperately noedeo lor Sept. near
campus. C•ll 831 ·2870 or 131 · 287!&gt;
COUPl..E DESIRES 2-Dedroom flet If\
North Buflato area . April, Mav Ot June
I RNsonable. 837-9074

PIZZA GO-GO • This w-·· ~111 large ptu.a, 2 F RE.£ tlolllll of $00a,
sma ll pt&amp;u one rr.. . 138-4557.
OPEN SUNOAYS, FREE OELIVERV
toGorms .

120 REWARD If you leCUII t or
5-t&gt;e&lt;Jroom apt. close to campu1. Call
831·2170 01 831 ·2010 .

CHECK the 50,. OFF TABLE at
Buftato T extbook Store~. 3610 Main

APARTMENT want.O for rour mall
students ror neKt YN&lt; . ContAc t M ike
Howle or O•v• at 838· 11 67, 831 ·2897
o• 831-4113. RewarG

51

ANTIQUES lind moGarn furniture,
c et~m lu,
china. ate . SH Sid .at
Yesterda y ., Tomorrow Snoo. lo'l39
Hertel Ave.

ROOMMATES WANTED
O NE O R TWO tamale roommates
w1n teo Apt on Hartel , o wn rooms

,----------F R IE E
Roller

-~-------~

~)kating

Wl:'D NFSDA ) . Murl' h 8th
7

I O pm .
(J/

Ro/lerArena Corner

Main&amp;Amh er.H

Call 2924 fur mor.e lnfarmatio n
Sponsored by Recrea1tion Dept. &amp; S .A .

L----------------------------

-Compliiments of a friend

T'H(

m

\

~

STIIO« llt[W(IIY COW'A"Y DUIIO!T, ouCt41QAN . .

Monday r 6 March, 1972 The Spectrum . Page eleven

�CAC'1 Buffalo Stlte Hostlftal ~ needs a volunteer
llfep.tard to wort at llle Day Care Treatment Center,
Monday, Wednesday and Fricby fi'o m 1:30-3:30 p .m . If
Interested ull Immediately, Nkk at 8 73-6632 or c:ontxt
llle CAC office.

The

ce- Club

Is hold ing a tournam ent, being played

one round pe r week. Pl ayers may join a t the meeting

tomorrow at 4 p .m. In Room 248 Norton. There is a $I
entry fee.
The Student Theater G uild Is having ;a workshop today
at 8 p.m. In Room 34 4 Norton. All new xtors ;are Invi ted ;
no experience necessuy .

Appllntlons for t he M enta l Health Service
Administratio n Tnl nlna Proarilm operated by the Division
of Communi t y Psychiatry must be received by April 15 in
order to be considered for the tulnlng cycle beginning in
July 1972. A pplications should be submitted to : Raymond
Bissonette, PhD, Division of Community Psych iatry ,
K·Annex , E.J. Meyer M emodo~l Hospito~l , 46 2 Grider St.,
Buffalo, N.Y. 1421 5.
Synchronized swimmlna (water ballet) . There is still
time to join the club. I t is held every Tuesday night u 6 :30
p.m. In Ciarlo. Pool. No exp erience Is necesso~ry but you must
be an .ildequo~te swimmer
The Medical Tedlnoloay Sotlety wtll hold a meeung
at 7 p.m. In Room 246 Norton. Miss Cicarelli will
spuk on the Ame rican Soctety of Med iCal Technologish.
todo~y

The Underaraduate Biol ogy Auociat lon wtll h.ilve a
meet ing tod.ay 11 7 30 p.m. in Room 21 I Norton. Electoom.
for next yur's officers wtll be held 1nd 411 btology mator\
are urged to .urend.
The Student Film Club will h1ve • meettng tomorrow
7.30 p.m. tn Room 337 Norton. All members dre urged
to attend 1nd sign up for 1 dellntte ume lor a workshop .
Cam eras and equipment wtll be at the meettng ready to be
t.llten out.
11

The Slavic Club b presenttng the film version of
Dostoevslo.•(s The I diot, tod ay o~t 7:30p.m. 1n Room 139
Cape n Hall.

Sports I nform~tron
Thursdo~y V ~rstty wresrltnJC •t lh~ N&lt;.AA untverstty
divosoon (.hamptOn\hlp,, Unlv!!rsiiY of M.~tylo~nd Cole Ftel d
Hou\e , etght BuH.. Io w re~tle" take p.u t tn the lompellllon
unttl Sillurd~y·~ ftn~l round
So~turdo~y · Voir\IIV rndoor tr•lk 4lthe Unton Un1ver~1ty
I nvitattonal; vo~r.ity fenetnK 11 the North Atlantic
cho~mpionshtps, Po~&lt;.e (.ollel(e
host, New York Uty.
Tod~y·s mee1in11 of the intercollegiate nhletl cs budget
committee l.ilkes pl ~(.e .11 l p.m. tn Room JJO Norton Hall.
A ftno~l meettnll will be h~·ld this dfternoon for all those
intere,ted In lryinK ou t for tunior vdr~lty basebo~ll . The
mretinK wtll to~kt· pldt f' .11 4 p.m In Room II 'i Cldrk Gym.

CP Snow 23S, Psychophysh:al Systems wtll meet todJy
only in Clark Gym ba~ement .
COE 301 Section 6, Social An•ly\is of Rock muste "
cancelled tod~y.
An Und•r•ndu.ore Enrflsh M ..lo" C•uc u s woll b~ hdd
today II 4 p .m. in Cooke Holll basement. Anyone tnt~resred
in working to put togethe r an English D~p~rrment 1~4Lh~ r
eva.lu~tion pybltcatlon IS Invited to •ttend

Vtdeo Connection wtll h .. v~ 4 meeting tomorrow .11 8
p.m. tn Roum 60 Norton. If you h•ve not LOme to the l.m
few me~ttng~. pl~~~e com e no m .. tter who~t RtOup you're tn.
We ~re tr~intng .111 people now
The G ermo~n Cl ub will be shnw1ng Tho frwmpll ultlllt
Will wtth English wbttllh, tomorrow dt 7 !0 p.m. tn Room
231 Norton. A proposed trip to the Mun1Lh Olvmpll' will
~lso be dt~'ussed.
The YWCA Halfway House (CAC p•ote&lt;.t) " bddlv '"
need of dec..oriltlon. Pl e11'e bong don J tton\ of po\ters,
mobile~ and cand le\ to Room 20 I or 2U8 '&gt;d10elllo.opl
anyt ime.
Phi Eta Slama h opening ots door\ ror mcmber\hip
Th 1s ts • Na tional Honor Soettty for those ..Lhleving ..
3.5 c:umululve gro~de po1nt o~vcrdge or bette• durrng thei r
heshm an yur . If you 4r e 1ntere\ted, send .1 &lt;.opy of your
offtcio~l tran~ript to Dr Je rome Ftnk. 4.BO Ridge Le ...
Room IC, Amherst , NY If M.(.epted, you wtll b"
contacted. There ts .1 $9 member)hlp ch.arge
o~go~in.

The lnrenstve EnJii sh Lanau~e lnsttlute wilh the
International Club is sponsortna a field trip to Washinaton ,
D.C. on April 3 7 . Tunsportatlon, hotel and tips is $30.
Interested students may sian up in the J.E.L.I office, Room
206 Townsend Ho~U .
The Office for Credit-Free Provams and th• Dtvision
of Continuing Education of Millard Fillmore College are
offering il six-week course o n vulous aspects of the drug
problem. Classes will meet at 8 p .m. on Tuesdays In Anne'&lt;
15 , Diefendorf Hall , with .1 new speaker eac h week
dl~usslng dru15 from a different perspective. Tomorrow
Miss Marlene R. Slawson, o1 registered nurse from the
Division of Community Psychio~t ry , will speak on
"Psychosocial Aspec ts of Orua Dependency." Registrarion
for the course is $30.
The Gn duate SIUdent Association Senate will meet
today at ·7:30 p.m. In Room 23 1 Norton. ThornllS Schillo,
Housing, will be spuklna. Copies of the .a&amp;enda and minutes
Ot t he Feb. 28 meeting will be available at this meeting.. All
GSA seno~tors and al ternates are urpd to illtend.

What 's

Ho~ppenrng !

Mn nd.ily Much b
Art \how T[ AM ~'hobotwn (otJphiL' llnm the I [1\M
Work,h up tn Bull diu, IIJ Y~' lobby 'I .o.m. 'i p.m.,
rhrou~:h ~dturtldV

P.unltn~, bY loutth ~&lt;JI \ludt·nt' ot ~eymoo r
DrumlevotLh, 4240 RldJotc ll'.t, 'I .t.lll. ' p.m., through
I rrddy .
Ftl m. I i&gt;l' ltlthlo , (),.· /mnur""' · Lromc dt.lmd ,et in
modeon d•Y ).tpJn , l r m .md 8 p.m., Conlerence
Theater.
Demon,trJtton. hr.tell Jcwt'hV MdltlnK, spon&gt;ored by
Student\ lot 1\ro~el Jnd l ntcrnJtton,tl Month, II· ~0 p.m.,
Ha.t.\ Loun,;e

Art ,how .

- meN Iee e

Tuesd.ity, Much 7
Film: A Wulk in thi' \un with Oo~n4 Andrew\, Rteho~td
[.onte o~nd '&gt;tcrltngllollow J'r, 1 p.m. dnd 8 p.m., Capen
140.
Must(.ology lcdurt' \trle,: Bruno Nelli. 'lmpruvl\dttOn 1n
Per""" Mu\tl ," .I 10 p m, Room 101 Bdtrd.
Concert Student reetto~l, noon, Bo~rrtl Rt(.lto~l Hall.
Pl•y · Co5mi&lt;Omlo pre&gt;ented 1n repertory bv the
Department of Thuter, dtretted by Gordon Rogofl ,
8 :30p.m., Harnmo~n S tud10 Thuter , ddm tsston S 1.00,
~tu dents $ .50, tu;kets ~v.itildble o1t Norton T llket Offile.
Slide ledure. Evelyn MtlLhell, drreLtor of the
Atro-Ameru. .an Cul tural Center o~t Clevelo~nd S ur e
University, 1·30 p.m., Room 135 Ho~yes Hdll.
Israeli Fo lk dancmg; Spons01•ed by Students for Israel,
8:30 midnight.
F acuity colloquia : Presented b v the Oep.trtment of Engli sh,
Murray Schwartz, "Symb1iosis o~nd Transformation in
'The Winter's Tale'," 8 p.nn., Fdculty Cl ub , Red Room.
One·Gallery exh ibition : John Singer So~rgent : A Selection of
Dr1wlng.s and WiltercoiO·r&gt; from the Metropolitan
Museum of Arr, Albrlght ·Knox Art Goi.llery, through
April 2.
Linguistics on Television : 4 p.m., F .R. Poi.lmer, British
lln~J.~Istlcs, the Flrthliln ~ hool ilnd P;Jimer's views on
contemporary theory ; 4 :30 p.m., "llngulsric Concerns
on the Rim of Aslo~," Marttelle Nudln dl!iCusses cu rrent
llnplistlc xtlvltles In Asliln countries, open to students
ar~d fxulty, Room 10, Foster Hall basement.

- AmYAhrend

Backpage

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                    <text>Stlllle•t COIUISeUillg

Legal Clinic concept
finally taking shap1J
hy Howie Klll'tt
Campus Editor
The Student Legal Clinic is on its way.
The proposal fo r the Legal Clinic, whlch was pa&amp;a&amp;d
by the Student Assembly last w eek , was initiated by T •om
DeMartino, director of the Office o f Student Rights. " We
feel it's n ecessary to provide legal assistance and counsel to
students in an ar ea we don't have now ," explained Mr.
DeMartino. The clin ic has request ed a room in Norton
Hall, and th e target date for its opening is this Septe mber.
Approximately 80 students a week seek legal advice
from the Office of Student Rights o r from Norm Effman ,
the attorney reta ined by Student Association. Th is h:igh
demand for legal advice led t o the creation o f th e l e gal
C linic, which Mr. DeMartino feels " will be able to
accomplish mor e" than the present system .
One of the prime goals of t h e clinic will be to w&lt;&gt;rk
with law st udents in trying to seek t he release of arrested
students on their own recognizance. This means t h e
arrested person is released without bail o n his ow n good
name, und er the assumption he will return to the
courtroom due to his community lies.
The State Universi ty of Buffalo Law Sch&lt;&gt;ol
part1c1 pates in this Prisoner Release Program , but stud elllts
have never been included . "University students have
Buffalo ties; after all . they're here eight mon ths a yea.r,"
said Mr. DeMartino. "No stud ent would jeopardize h is
academic fu t ure by not returning to th e co urtroom and
having a warrant o ut for h im ."

Additional goals
In addition lo r arrangmg for the rt:lease or arresled
stud ents, the clinic will refer stud ents seeking legal adVTice
lo Mr. Effman o r oth e ,.law stud ents . T hey will also link u p
With t he other councelling cent ers on campus in hopes of
proVIding legal and social direction for the student.
The clinic will also attempt to renew old co nta·cls
such as w1th Buffalo lawyers and to foster some ties w ith
the political structure o f Erie County . Additio naJiy , it
hopes to educate students with regard to legal procedure
stn ce "most st udents know very little about the law unltess
they've been arrested ."

The Legal Clinic, wh ich has request ed D budj~:t of
S 14.800, will be a subcommittee of SA, lik• CAC . and
thus "avoid the hassles of being a club ," according to Mr.
De Martino.
He also mdicated that a · le~al a1d office canntol
operate out o f SA because th ere are "too many politi•::al
and personal problems 10 SA and the office would net
sidetracked from its original purpose. wh tch IS protecting
student rights," Mr. DeMarttno added . The duector noted
that the Office of Student Rtghls "hasn't gotten very far 10
covering new ground since we' re always on th e defensi•ve.
The clinic should open up new areas for student nghts
through research ."

lnfonnational and preve ntative
To do that research , the chou: will re tam a law
student from the Pnsoner Release Program for a graduate
fee of SJOOO. For th at fee, the law student wiJI put tn 20
hours o f work a week, with an emphasis on doing all t h~
undone legal resear ch .
The director of the Offu.:e of Student Rights will
d1rect the clink for the first year, and along with the
Student Rights Coordinator and four appomted assisllln t
directors will comprise the execu tive co uncil o r the clintc.
After the first year t h e director will be voted upon . The
four assistant directors will be responsible for the areas of
community relations, professional services, public relattc•ns
and educational programs.
For budgetary reaso ns, one assistant d1rector will
double as treasurer while anothe r will perform the duties
of office manager. T h e clinic will also h ire two work study
persons. They will also pick up the remainder of Mr.
Effman's retainer fee (now paid by SA). "I'd like to see
the clinic become an o ngoing organization . staffed with
freshmen and sophomores as well as upperclassmen so It
would have a solid foundatio n." commented Mr.
DeMartino.
The p roposa l for the clinic cites "an era in which the
largest category of arrests and prosecutions invo lve
individuals and students who have had no previous
experien ce wit h any aspect of the legal system or law
enforcement. Because these st udents have inadequate or
in correct knowledge con cerning the laws and procedures,
they are helpless from lack of sound professiOnal advice;
these students may never discover what t h eir legal riglhts
are , .. . (and) may be cheated by a more knowing adult ."
The proposal continues · "The purpose of lthe
Student Legal Clinic is informational and preventative;
informational in that it shall help stud ents underst and a,nd
clarify many aspects of the legal system ... preventative' in
that it shall be giving studen ts an alternative sowce of
in fo rmat ion free."

Vol. 22, No. 81

Sute UniYenlty of New York at Buffalo

Friday, 3

~

1972

Summer session may suffer
large amount of course cuts
More than 400 of t he II 00 courses will probably be
eliminat ed from the 1972 summer sessions program of the
State University of Buffalo. These c uts, annou n ced by
Summer Sessions Director James Blackhurst , are the result
of proposed state budget reductions.
According t o figures report ed to th e Association o f
University Summer Sessions, this Universi ty boast ed t h e
nation 's largest summer program in 1972 . This year
courses in four of the University's seven fa culties h ave
been eliminated . l n the remaining three faculties, th e
second of three sessio ns has been virtually dropped an d the
remaining two sessions have each been cut by 25%.
Mr. Black hurst said : "One of the terribly distr essm g
aspects of these reduc ti o ns is that t he dollars saved by the
budget cuts is exceeded by the dollars lost tn tuition
revenue." Summer sessions generate more money than IS
actually spent for instru ctional costs.
Commenting on this loss, Mr. Blackhurst explained
" The real tragedy is that there will be li terally thousands
of stud en ts who would be willing to pay adequate tuition
who canno t go t o school, while our classrooms are empty,
our fa culty is unemployed and o ur sta te is los1ng money "

runs from June 26 to Aug. I 1 .
Unless some funds are restored. all courses in the
fo Uowing units of the1 University have been eliminated
from the 1972 summe•r session : Physical E ducation ; the
Collegiate System ; the !Faculty of Engineering and Applied
Sciences (except for a few graduate courses in Information
and library Studies) ; t h e Faculty of Health Sciences,
including the School of Nu~ing and the Departmen ts o f
Occupational Therapy an d Physical Therapy ; the Faculty
of Law and JurisprudE·nce (except the ten courses most
critical to professional d egree programs) and the Faculty
o f Educational St u dies.

Unproportional growth
The second sum1mer sess1on has been virtuall y
ebrnin ated . Exce ptio ns are the federally -funded National
Science Foundatio n Summer Mat hematics Institute and
the Modern l iterature l nslltute, which has been in
preparation ror two years Commitments to viSiting faculty
have al ready been made
Mr Bla ~ khurst sa1d that 1f supplementary funds are
approved , " the number one prionty LS the restoratiOn of
the program in Educational Studies, which is serving more
Reductiollli immediate
than 1000 school tea c h ers in West ern New York ." Smce
Presid ent Robert L. Ketter has rcque:~ted the State these programs do not begin until late June, he co ntinued ,
University to restore $260,000 o f the cut fu nds 1n the there IS Lime to •·restore t he courses, hire the fa c ulty , order
supplementary budget of the State. Th1s ma y result 10 textbooks and rcg1ster the students."
reinstatement of some o f the courses . But accordang to Mr.
Over the pa~ five years, Mr Blackhurst reported , t he
Blackhurst , th e planned course reduction had to br made number of students and cred it hours 10 the summer
sessions have increased by over I 00%, while the number of
immediately .
He e mphasized : " We are simply out of bme. full-time equivalent faculty has grown by only about 5%.
Registration for the first session h:as been scheduled to Last year, over I 14 ,000 &lt;;red it h ours of cou rse work were
begin by Marc h 20. T extbook orders must be made by earned by students in the three sessions. The amount of
March 15 and appoin tment and pay ro U arrangements must sum mer instruction in t h ose sessions was more than double
be completed by April l ." If courses are rest~red, t~ey that of UCLA and the University of California at Bttkeley
wouJd likely be placed in the aecond summeJ seu1on w\och comb ined .

Court of Appeals

'U' grades hurt Bar students
Notice from Adrian P. Burke, senior associate jUdge of
the State Court of Appeals, that gradtng proced ures at the
St at e University of Buffalo Law School may prevent a
number of senior law students fro m taking their bar exam ,
has produced mounting tension among all involved .
The law school is presently graded on an Ho nors ( II )
Qualified (Q) - Unqualified (U) basis. To graduate, th1s
years sen iors were thought t o need 80 hours of cn:d1t
completed . Of this., a grade of at least "Q" was t o he
necessary for at least 72 credit h ours.
Ho w eve r, Judge Burke, speaking for the Court of
Appeals, whtch Is charged with the respons1b1lit y of settmg
standards for admiSSIOn to the bar, has direc ted t hat only
st udents w ho have completed all 80 hours successfully will
be allowed to take the exam.
As yet it IS un certain whet her th e ruling would
eliminate from eligibility students who had received :~ny
''U's", even th ough that student may have had 80 hours
without tha t credit , o r just those whose "U" grades left
them with fewer t han 80 cred1ts.

AI th1s time. the only otllctal reco..trse for t hose
affected students I S to fo ll ow Judge Burke's
recommendation of tak.tng make-up exams. "They would
be allowed t o take the bar exam 1f they can pass make-up
tests on t he subjects 10 which they were graded " U" or if
they take the co urse ovc:r," the judge stated .
Meetmgs have been held daily at the law school since
the de.:1S10n was made public last Wednesday . The Student
Bar Assocation (S BA ) met that day in closed session.
Yesterday , the law sch (ml faculty met. After the meet1ng ,
Ric hard Schwartz, deant ut the school told The Spectrum ;
Then: are negotJatJons gosng on At (today's meeting of
the S BA I we will rt!lease informatiOn that promises
clarif1 cat 10n of the sit uat1o n and may well reheve the
students' poSitiOn •·
SBA pres1dcnt Malcolm Morns wa.~ optimistic t h at
things would work out " Officially ," he said, " the faculty
is handling the s1tuat10n and we are working with the
faculty . I'm confident they'll handle 11 well .

Polllet holes wore discovered
earlly Wednesday morning in
the windows of the Chabad
Hotuse at 3292 Main St.
Police investigating the affair
estiimated that about $1600
worth of damage was done to
11 windows. Representatives
of tChabad House report that
thet recent ~hooting was one
mo,re incident in a series of
att:acks against Chabad
House. For more information
and picture, turn to page
four.

�GSA meeting sparks
heated budget debate
for the various clubs that GSA
funds. A representative from the
UB Day Care Center objected to
the S425 loss and asked that the
money be restored . Mr. Cazer
~~r~ued that a very large share of
the treasury's money was already
involved in the day care center
and that it wasn't feas1ble to
con hnue funding at the present
level
After several minutes of
argument , a motaon was made to
restore the money The motaon
was amended and the amendment
wa s amended . After more
John Spritzler has not been suspended
at
discuss1on the members passed the
least , not for the moment.
amendment to the amendment
In an informal meeting held last Tuesday tn
and the original amendment Then
Hayes Hall , President Robert Ketter decided that Mr.
11 became apparent that many
Spntz.ler would not be suspended on charges of class
members no longer remembered
what they were votang for so disruptiOn! This decision IS temporary pending a
everyt hmg was expl:uned agaan heanng before the Heanng Committee on Campus
Disruption. In addition , Mr. Spritzler was informed
and the voting started over
that if he attended John Halstead's Modern
The GSA Senate finally. after
more parltamentary llclllys, lmpenallsm (the class he as charged with disrupting) ,
he would be 1mmed1ately suspended .
appro ved .1 restoration of S 125
Commenting on the Presadent's d ecisiOn, Mt
wath the remaamng SlOO 10 be
Withheld until next wc:ck when Spntzler remarked that h1s .. nghts &amp;'&gt; a student to
the treasurer Will report on all end cla:ss" are bemg abndged
Mr SpritzJer's belief as based on the report of
passable sources for th1.• money
Ftnally Thomas Sc: hlll o, the H ISIO•ry Grievance Commtttec which stated .
" While lh&lt;e committee agreed that Professo r Halstead
a.~s1~tant director of Housang, gol
w11s wathi1n his rights in temporarily suspending Mr.
a chance to address the GSA
Senate " Obvaously anythang I say Spnt1lcr from the classroom, at felt that a permanent
here would be :tntadamallt ," expulsaon wathout formal charges and a heanng
quapped Mr Schillo 1 he meetmg would be a VIOlation of Mr Spntzler's nght to due
Amend the amendment
process."
was adJOurned after Mr Schallo
Fred Cazer, GSA treasurer, gracaously agreed to speak to the
In addition , Mr. Spnt71er CJtes Robert Ltvely ,
reported the propose\.~ lludget cuts Senate some other time.
chairman of the Hastory Department, as re1nstallng
h1m m t he~ class until formal charges are dec1ded by
lhe He:tring Committee. Afl er his reinstatement by
Dr. Liveh•, ~r. Spritzler attended class last f· raday
but Dr. lill.lstcad .n:fused to ttat:h
Contradiclory evidence
The Unified Campus Re~arch project. wlllch
In a memorandum to Dean of Undergraduate
met on Monday. is beina developed to contact other
colleae campuses to compare this Unlvcnity's Stud1es Charles Ebert, Dr L1vely explained : ..(Feb
Student A.Aociation to its counterparts elsewhere. It
25). Profenor Halstead I has mornang notified me,
w hoped that thib commun.icatiun miaht lead tu an before I) is class, that should Mr. Spritzler appear, he
improvement of structural and financial dJfficullie~t
wo~d ~9aider such presence further disruption and
would cancel the class. Mr. Spritzler appeared at
which the Student A~ciatlon hu encountered. By
about 9 .OS and the class was dasmiSSed " As
use of telephone calls and questionnaires unt to
cxplaaned by the Hastory Grievance commattee ·
other schools, it is hoped that a file can be
maintained listing various student organizations of
the evidence presented was contrad1..:tory and
"
(the comrmttee) was therefore unable to de term me
other campuses. Although other universities may
whether Mr Spritzler's actaons were andeed
place areater emphasis on dorm or class association~.
dtsruptavc. •··
any ideas which can be exchanged and successfully
In additaon , the History Gnevance Commattec
implemented here are the concern of the Unified
Campus Research group.
reported : "f'he c.:! ass was diYided as lo whe ther or
not Mr Spntz.ler's behavtor constttuted dasrupt1on nr
At the Monday afternoon meeting, Steven
v1goruu) d assent Some felt the exchanges an the:
Blumencrantz, executive darector of Sub Board I.
classroom had educallonal value, some felt Mr
Inc • noted that the growth of the project would
Spntzler's comments were trrelevant, rcpetattve and .
perrrut ifeater contacts with schools, buth American
Indeed. dasruptave."
and Canadian.
One member of the class, who washed to rernatn
anonymous . feels that Mr Spntzler was a " defmrtc
annnv:.no•l"" hut •lr"'f'&lt;:n't knnw •f lw w:o~
The Spectrum •• fHJblt~hlld tflrw
Heated argument over
proposed uruonization plans and
budget cuts marked the Graduate
Student Association Senate
meetmg Monday night
James McCabe, GSA senator,
presented a progress report on his
committee's research into the
possibility of unionizing graduate
students. He urged 1he Senate to
beJJn work towards unionization
to provide JOb security for
research and teadung ass1stants,
sick leave, limits to class size,
better work surroundmgs, larger
stipends and many o ther reforms.
The proposal met wtth strong
opposition from several members
Among the cnllciSms were that
the proposed unaonll.atlon
ducraminated ag.aanst ~tudents
who were neil her RA 's nor 1 A ·s.
that the tax-free status o f sllpends
would be endangered and that
neither SUFT , SPA. nor NEA
(vanous teachers' unaons) woulll
support at because 11 mfnnged on
faculty prerogataves
After several mtnutes of
parl1mentary dn.putes the
assembly passed a mOtiOn by Earl
Sidler to " recetve the repo rt:·
that as. neather ac:~:ept nor reject
II , but fate at away unhl the ne~tt
meetmg

Temp()rary decision

~)pritzler

is not suspended

Campus research

tim•• e

weMi.

Mohdey,

8\IIPfl'

"disruptive." On the o ther hand, two students signed
affadavits charging disruption.
Subsequently, Mr. Spritzler was requested to
appear at the informal hearing to present argumenh
why he should not be temporanly suspended '' In
effect ," Mr Spritzler commented. " what Pres1dent
Ketter IS domg by forbidding me to attend class I \
saying that if Halstead wants a kid kicked out of ha ~
class, Ketter will do it for h im ." H o wever M r
Spritzler also reported thai he would not go to cl""
until the Heanng Committee has met
Disruptor dissent?
The Hearing Commsttee will decade the charge,
brought hy Presadent Ketter that "John G . Spntzler
on Ja nuary 17 . 19 , 2 1, 24, 1972. an History Course
J39 in Room 306 Diefendorf !lull , SUNYAB , w.a,
guilty of prohabited conduct m that he deliberately
dasrupte.J o r prevented the peaceful and o rllerly
conduct of classes "
Whether Mr. Spntzler dad actuo~lly d1srupt the
class as one of the maJor problems anvolved til thl·
affair.
One such student, Constance Ann Gessner
charged that Mr Spritzler "asked questaons not
related to the subject matter of the course," " would
elaborate at areal length his own vtews on how 1hr
course should be taught ,
called our Proft~or
names such as 'amperiahst • and 'ractst ;' ami
" distributed , 1n the classroom, pranted mateml
against Dr. Halstead and his book "
Mr SprttzJer claims that he dad not d1srupt thl·
class and c ates a letter that Dr. Halstead reportedl y
wrote to Dr Lively in which he remarked : " I should
like to make it clear that Mr. Spritzler has never
ranted or raved in class nor has he actunll'r
mterrupted save on one occas1on But his mode nf
behavior when called upon was to ask a questaon ami
then answc:r wath propaganda add ressed to the
class."
An assue anvolved in the c lass that appears t o
further ~om pli cate matters is Mr Spntzler's avow~:d
reason of taking the l'O urse to "oppose anu cornhal
rat:t'm "

li e Jdmlt~ thJt "the reason I lt,ok this courw ''
I am an a bc:t lcr positiOn to faght agamst raca~m ..

Further. Mr Spntzlcr sees the whole 1ssuc ot
th(eatt:ned su!&gt;pensaon as set:ondary "The quc: ~taon
at t has Ia me." he nt&lt;llntains. "is whet her Ketter will
allow an &lt;Jnli· rac1st movement to cxast - 1 \lon 'l
th1nk hr wtll "

Wanted: Editor-in-Chief

Wedn!IUUy end Ffldey, dur~ng rile
'•'•r «::«&lt;flfl'lic y•r by Sub-Board
l, Inc. Offic• ere lout«/ et 355
Norton Hell, Sure Uni11~ity of New
York et Buffelo, 3435 M.in Sr .

Applications for the position of Editor-m-Chid of Th~ Spulrum fur the acadrmac
year 1972-1973 wiJJ be taken until March 21.
The application consists of a letter to the editorial board, statlna reasons for
desirina the position, qualifications and previous journalistic experience. The position as
open to any State University graduate or underaraduate student.
The editorial board will interview all candidaces on Thursday, March 23.
Prospective applicantl are urged to contact che Editor, Room JSS Norton Hall as
soon as possible to familiarize Chemselves with any procedural or technical questions
about tbe polilion or about Th~ S!Hclrum . .

Buffelo . New York, 14214
Telephone: .A,_ QJde 716; Ed1ronul
83t..fft3; BuJin.u, 831-3610.
Repre1ented lor «1~11/ng byj'
Net tonel Eduuuo/JM Advert11ing
S.,/Ce, Inc., 360 LeAtl'lgton A..-.•
N- York. N. Y. 10017

1

Sul»cr1ptJon llltiiS 11r11 $4.50 PM I
IUHT!•t~~r or $8.00 for rwo Hmenert.,

V ote

S.COnd Cl- Po.t_,. P/lld at BuHelo.
New York.

Brenda

ALLIANCE

Clrcukltion: 16,000

RowJ

un!versity
un1on
activities
board

Sponsors all•entertainment events on U.B. Campus.

Coordinators are stipened-required are time and desire
\

Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, 3 March 1972
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Kifsy Bvrlffi£lit explafuS:v wbat

WQlpen In prison go throUgh
by Buban M.Mmet
Sp«trum St111f Wriur
IUtJy Burkhart. free lance writer, spoke to a
largely female gathering Monday night oo the topic
of "Women in Prison." Well versed on the subject,
she has been researching the area throughout the
country in preparation for a book.
Explaining that there are usually more
alternatives for men than .for women in prison, due
to women having children and the bias of judges, M.s.
Burkhart stated: ''There are thousands and
thousand~t of women who are in prisons and jails
throughout the country. And for those of you who
aren't real familiar with the labels, jails are run by
the caty or county and are most often considered
holding faciUties, like little warehouses where people
are processed in and out. They are run by the police
or the deputy merifT departments. In the larger cities
they are staffed by guards that would be called
correctional officers.''
The hastory of womens' prisons wu discussed
arutially, m order to view the present aystem. Ms.
Burkhart elaborated : "On the state level, w.omen's
prisons were built around tho 1920's. People who
were reformers at that time operated under the
theory that women who were in trouble with the law
that were gomg to jail, were going there basica.lly not
only fo r committing legal c rimes , but moral crimes,
and they were failing m their roles as women ."
Sexist myths
Therefore, the system was established around
the idea of small living units or cottages which
housed about 30 women who would have to perform
chores. Kitchen and housework duties were stressed
in the hopes that the women would learn to become
good homemakers, fulfilling theu social roles. There
are buflt·in contradac ttons to this, said Ms. Burkhart,
for women were denied their children and it wasn't a
true home setting.
Various myths have arisen about womens'

for five daya or are forced to kick their habits
through cold turkey. Sister inmates are the only help
an addict bas to cope with withdrawal.
A serious cycle is perpetuated by the prison
system, Ms. Burkhart believes. She h.as seen through
her experiences that it is usually the poor people
who are sent to pri!on , leaving their families no
other alternative than to go on welfare, which
creates the same problems. Ms. Burkhart said that
police have more access to a poor urea and look
there first for offenders of the law. More people are
likely to be arrested for a $7 theft than for
embezzlement in a lar* bank.

No detenent
Ms. Burkhart strongly feels that the ideas of
prisons and rehabilitation must eventuaUy be
abandoned, but in the meantime, reforms have to be
made. Studying the statasllcs provided by various
official reports , Ms. Burkhart found that less than
two per cent of aJI reported criminals were jailed. In
her o pmion, the idea of going to prison does not act
as a deterrent for c rime
One of the major concerns of prason reformers is
the conditions wathtn the jails, according to Ms.
Burkhart. Rats and rodents abound, despite daily
dlSinfectang Health care as poor where ll extsts at
all. Doctors are loathe to treat women , feelang they
aren ' t really ill , but tryang to avoid working Phys1cal
examinataons :ue rare and should medacat1on be
requued , 11 often IS the wrong prescnption. Pressure
from ot11er women IS the best course of actaon to
take when someone as sac k
Cycle
There are very few narcoucs programs in
prisons, while the percentage o f women adtlicts is
increasingly high . Women are eath er given methadone

•:mew•

Sociology

~head dispute

In bold letters atop .s
photograph of medical sociolo&amp;Jf
professor Saxon Graham, a
message reads : "Unwanted : Saxon
Graham for SociologJ(
Department Chairman," courtes)t
of the Socaol ogy Graduat1:
Student Assocation (SGSA).
The poster, recently displayed
thro ughout the campus, blatantllt
indi cate s the SGSA's " to tal
opposition" to Dr. Graham'1s
ca ndida cy for Sociolog)r
Department head, a post present!)!
occupied by Theodo re Mills.
Responding to what he termed
a " rather unfair" poster, Dr
Graham said : " It's a low blow 1r1
view of the Socaolog)l
Department 's record , whach
pro udly speaks for atself Maybe at
results from my reputataon of
being a hard guy as far as stud en hi
an concerned.··
The impetus for the poster ,
according to socaology grad uat t!
student Roger Cook , was ••
meeting between Or Graham and
mem bers of the SGSA
Or
Graham at that tame told o nt•
dissenting student " I r you don'•t
lilce it Jack , you can get nul "
H c nt: ~, l he reason f&lt;1r lhah
s tatem ent a ppeann(l. on th•·
poster .
Still walking
Mr. Cook, while emphasiz.inn
that he cannot act as spokesman
for the SGSA. said that he ha:s
many personal biases toward Dr .
Graham, the princaple one bean11
that Dr. Graham iJ "anti-student
aAd totally oppoaed to the
cppcc:pt of student ri&amp;hts."

•

prisons whach are based on superficial appearances
and sexist attitudes. Women are thought of as less
VIolent and dangerous than men and thus, people
believe "pampered in pnson."
Ms. Burkhart destroyed these legends declaring:
"In 100% of the pnsons there are no inherent rights
for any women The pnson authorities grant
privileges whach are mall, showers. walkmg from one
place to another, maybe the ability to go to a dance
or a class." The pnvileges may be withdrawn at any
tame for any slight tnfract1on of " ruh:, mcludang
"recklessly eyeballing a guard "

Graham opposed

Kitsy Burkhart
"Jails are reaJiy poorhouses," commented Ms.
Burkhart. Wo men are often overwhelmingly
members of minority groups, which causes deep
racism an many pnsons. Any prisoner who is known
to be militant or political receives doses of
tranquilizers o r 1s put in solitary confinement.

Time for action

I

'Seaetive' committee
Further SGSA dissatisfaction,
Mr. Cook said, stems fro m the

Sociology Department 's refusal to
mst1tute programs of a more
" rada cal" vein ; "progra ms
addressing themselves to problems
of politacaJ economic structures"
as well as those which operate
from a cntacal base . In addition,
there has been widespread
o p pos1t1on to the ''secretive
search commattee" wtuch selects
the candadates
To matiate a divergence from
the trad1taonal conservatism , Mr.
Cook added. the SGSA has
pledged 1ts support to S1dney
Willhelm, who, it IS e'&lt;pected, waJJ
be more receptave to student
needs
Dr
Graham refu~ed to
c omme nt on any spec ific
"charges." He did say, however,
that " if something is printnted, ·''
the;, (the SOSA I are going to get ·:. ~
anary and it then becomes more
of an unpleasant situation for me.
It's no fun cettin&amp; castigated like
this." He further maintained that
the SGSA 's hostility asaumaa a
circular direction in that
"everythina that is said in return
wall just mean their commg bad '
I with counterstatements J . "

Mr Cook further maintained
that Dr. Graham's "insenSJtavaty
towards studenls "
was
demonstrated dunn&amp; the 1970
Dr Lewas referred to the
student stnke when he reportedl)l anc1dent as another example o f
exclaamed, " Why IS there so much the Unaversaty becoming a
fuss about the polace? I don't seE· "poiJtacal arena" and said that he
any dead bodies around "
"would feel very comfortable
The poster, sa ad M r Cook . was wath Dr Saxon as chauman "

Bible Truth

BLINDNESS OF UNBELIEF

Prisons are big busanesscs, producmg all kinds of
goods and products, from food to stop signs. labor
is provided by the inmates at slave wages. Some
women work fo r two cents a day o r $6 a month
Unions are trying to be formed, so that pnsoner~ will
receive at least minimum wages.
Ms. Burkhart wants to see people stop talking
about the problems and start acting upon them. S he
feels that pressure brought upon prison officials
from the o utside 11 a posit1ve step. Constant probing
into such thin~ as health service and proper living
conditions IS necessary to promote change. ·
Community volunteers who go into the prisons with
volunteer programs are also advocated by Ms
Burkhart.
Any k.ind of skill can be utilazed 1ns1de to reach
out to the women, who have little contact with the
wortd Writing workshops, dancing classes, painting
lessons, are all fine releases for prisoners who have
no c hance to express thear cmotaoau.
Concludmg her talk , Ms. Burkhart added ··1
don't think there is any such thing as a good prison.
Prisons are everywhere. Prisons are within each one
of us. We have to start dealing with them, whether
they are psychological or physical walls.
N

the result of frustration over tbe
entire sel ection proctss. He
expl.a.ined: ''There seems to be no
other way for students to express
their opposition to the other
candidates." These candidates are
Drs. John SiJjamaki, Uonel Lewis
and Adeline Levine. Or. Graham,
however, stands tbe best chance
of receiving the position, Mr.
Cook speculated, "as he is most
likely to be Or. Ketter's choice."

lit-2181 caat?IM1 h"4

"But thouQh He (J.,us) had
gone so many mlr•cle5 before
thern yet they believed oot on
Hlm .1'
John 12:37
"For he thai c ometh t o God
mun believe that He ·~·~D . 11 6

Vote

to vote

C. U.R.E.

Brenda

ALLIANCE

ROW4

RowJ
- - - PalO Po l Aa ~,..

s
A

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E

SPE~'::IAL

A
l

ACADEMIC APPARH

E

·-··

Apply in Room 261 Norton- UUAB Office.

s

-

Positions of coordinators in the following areas are availalble
to work .

LAST DAY

ARTS
DANCE ARTS
DRAMA:riC ARTS
LITERARY ARTS
MUSIC
FILM
COFFEEHOUSE
PUBLICITY

Friday, 3 March 1972 The Spectrum . Page three

�Shooting ocCurs at Chabad Ho&amp;se
In the ho urs between 7:30
p.m. and 7:30 a.m. last Tuesday
night, persons unknown sho t 88
pellets into the Chabad House on
3292 Main Street. While no o ne
was injured, I I windows worth
a pproximately
SI600
were
des troyed.
"T his latest event is the
culmination of five months of
harassment," rema rked Saline
Mischel, a Chabad House member.
He explained tha t since the
Chabad
House·s opening 10
September, escalattng incidents of
torment
have
raken
place.
According
to
Mr
M1schel,
harassment began wi t h such verbal
harangues and insults as ''Hey,
Jew."
He continued that these vocal
assaults developed into "banging
on windows and doors." Lately,
he said, "physical vandalism has
occurred." Regarding this, Mr
M1schel cited the recent theft of
the Chabad House's drain pipe.
The pellets were shot ar close
range into the building shattering
glass on the inside. "There 1s a
defini te phys1cal danger for the
people mvolved," commented Mr
MischeL Add1t1onally, Mr. M1schel
feels that the situat1on rather than
improve. will worsen : "With the

warm weather coming, I expect an
increase in harassment."

Litde police action
Ma ny members of the Chabad
House believe that junior high
school and high school stude nts
are responsible for the incidents.
Some have observed "kids from
eight o r nine years old to high
school age'' loitering on Chabad
House premises.
The Buffalo Police Department
has been notified periodically
abou t the even ts. However, as
explained by Chabad House
representatives, "little has been
done."
Late
Wednesday
afternoon. a 8 tJffalo police officer
investiga ted the vandalism and
again, it appears that little was
done. Aside for cataloging the
damage
and
notifying
the
insurance company, he explained:
"In a Situation like this when the
persons a re unknown, there 1S no
other action we can take."
He did mamtatn though that he
would file a repor t and request
that extra surveillance be given to
the Chabad House. However, the
actions of the Buffalo Pollee
Department were termed "highly
unsallsfactory" by Chabad House
mem bers. It is thei r belief that

conditiCins will continue until
someon•e is seriously hurt . "It is
quite ol~vious that those involved
in the Hh ooting do n 't care about
the saf•~ ty of people in Otabad
House,"' remarked Phil Bro nstein,
ano ther Otabad Ho use membtt.
Whe n asked why such inciden ts
occur, o nly o ne answer was given
- "anti-sem itism." Ira S heskin , a
member of Activist Yo uth for
Israel , explained : " Because of the
tragic e:vents of Wo rld War ll ,
anti-se mi tism fo r the last 30 years_
has been swept WJder the rug. But
11 is Uhere; it exists and wiiJ
manifestt itself.. . This ( the
shootin~:) is just o ne manifestation
of a sit uation that can develop."
I n addition , he maintained that ,
this is not the first series of
anti-sem itic inciden ts. "Several
years ago, my friend who was
involved in a Soviet Jewry march
received a phone caJI - 'They
didn 't kill eno ugh of yo u' ."
"Anti-semit ism ," h e continued is
''always presen t."
Karen Rosenbla tt, also a
m ember in Activist Youth fo r
Israel, a1~reed: "So many people
live o n campus in their isolated
little w·orlds, th ey d on 't even ·
know an ti-semjtism exists. It is
about tinne they wo ke up."

GSA gathering
There w ill be a Grad u11e Student Association
Senate meet ing next Monday, March 6. at 7: 30 p .m .
in Room 23 t No rton H alL Thomas Schillo. director
of H ousing , will ad d rfil$ the Sena t e. A ll GSA
senators and alternatives are urged to attend

Planned Parenthood

Children by choice. Not chance.
For furthe r information, write Planned Parenthood,
Box 431, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.

WASHI NGTON
The White
House announced Tuesday that
Senate leaders Mike Mansfield and
llugh Scott would VISit China at
the invitation of Premter Chou
En-lai . Arrangements for the VISit
will take· place wtthin the next
two weeiKs via contacts in a thjrd
country, possibly Canada.
Wh ite Ho use Press Secretary

f- . .
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'".
t~"!" ti!4 i~i~: tli!•• ~~~:ess•l&amp;••
-.~~

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tWATERMATIRESS IPREFITIED VINYL I COMPlETE BE 0
ISafety
1Frame

11

'Oo~ble

1
I

JTWin

t
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1Heater
I

AN UNUSUAL LINE OF FOAM FURNITURE
INCLUD ING:

•••••••
THE AMOEBA CHAIR
three positions as lounge or
straight-backed chair.
THE FOAM - BAG
(Kin to the bean- Bag)

•aa••

•sa••

THE MOO ROCK
three foot fabric-covered hassock $

4111

- Al [ WITH INNER LINER &amp; ZIPPERED,
WASHABLE FABRIC COVERS AND A TWO YEAR GUARANTE "'·

t

Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, 3 March 1972

lARGiE MOROCCAN
TAPESTRY
PillOWS

t

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f

Rona ld Ziegler said : "Premier
Chou brought it up at the last
meeting and noted that Sen . Scott
and Sen. Mansfield had expressed
an interest in visi ting t he Peoples
Republic of China." Th e tri p will
most likely occur sometime this
summer. most probably between
the Democratic and Republican
conventions.
WAS HI NGTON
The
Pentagon announced Tuesday that
the number SPN384 stamped on
the records of servicemen
permanently identifies them to
their prospective employers as
having been d1scharged from the
service because of drug use. In
defendtng the practice, Assistant
Defense Secretary Richard Wilbur
told a Senate subcommittee that
employers need to know whether
or not a man has a drug problem .
The followmg interct.ange went
on between Wilbur and Sen .
Harold Hughes (D., Iowa) who
sa1d that this sort of thing "brands
men for hfe"
Wilbur : "Apparently this
hot hers you a great deal."
Hughes : "it bothers me a great
deal." Wilbur : "Well. that's too
bad . Because 11 IS valuable for an
employer to know about a man's
problems. Hughes : .. Have you no

t
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t ~ lliancet
f
BRENDA

M.AOE FROM
4. ft. X 6ft.
Tl"ESTRIES
IN
5 1PATTERNS

L C0l 0'1~

-

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Paid Pol. Ao •

ROW 3

...,.._.

••••••••
I'VE beert ne9lected. No body wants to
buy me. My name Is Anast asia and I'm
for uie for only SilO I'm a 2-d oor
blue Temptest wun an automall~
transmission, a2.000 miles ana a very
sexy bod y. If interesteo call AI

a31-4113.

'

kn o wledge of what tltis does to .1
man for the rest of hb day,·'
When does a man ever get t1d ol
t his number SPN384?"
ANN AR BO R - Ano ther 10 .1
string of 58 fires on the campus tot
the University of Michigan ha ~
baffled au t horities. The fire ,
which broke out Tuesday 1n th1·
Alpha Xi Delta sorority hous~
forced 30 co-eds to flee and
caused $5000 damage. Fires h~J
been started 1n dozens ol
buildings all over the campu~ .
causing only mild damage, anti
until Saturday when t wo men
were burned, no injuries. Reward
offers and a special "arson tip "
phone number have done no good
in the search for the arsonists
STONY BROOK - Nineteen
students were arrested Monday a t
the State University of New York
at Stony Brook on charges
~lemming fro m a sit-in where two
university officials were hell.!
captive in t heir offices for over
five ho urs. The t wo officiaJs were ,
at the time of the sit-in, discuss10g
a scheduled conference for th1s
weekend with the students .
The u n iversity den1 ed
permiSSIOn for the conference In
be held at t he school since the
students, some of th em members
of t he Red Balloon Collect ive , had
made no provlsion for housing,
health o r llabiUt y i nsurance. The
university obtained an injunction
against the sit-in, and security
personnel broke through the
barricade , releasing the two
hostages.
On T uesday, students
numberi ng 300 demonstrat.:d
peacefully in support of plans to
hold the national confere nce on
rad icals on th e Stony Brook
cam pus this weekend . Leaders of
the collective said they intend to
go through with their weekend
plans.

�-

Sub Board meeting

New publication is funded
Publication troubles took up
the greatest share of last Monday 's
Sub B oa rd I , Inc. meeting.
Representatives of An, a new
paper for Jewish students, argued
for Sub Board support of their
publlcation.
Paul Cumming, Sub Board
chairman, and Lester Goldstein,
business manager, were opposed
to any funding maintaamng that
A" · 1s a special interest
publication . They explained that
Sub Board has decaded not to
fund an y new special interest
publications.
However, an Ari representative
claimed tha t since he had a list o f
3500 JewiSh students, Arl was not
a s pec 1al mlerest paper. Despa te
some oppositao n , Scott Slesinger's
(Sub Board treasurer) resolutiOn
that $500 he appropnated fo r tw o
ISsues of the paper was passed

line

Have a problem ' Need help ' Do you find ir impouible to. untangle
the Umvertity bureaucracy .? In cooperation with the Office of Student
Affairs and SerV1ce1, The Spectrum sponsors Achon Line, a weekly
reader service column. Through Action Line, mdiv1dual students can
get answen to puzzling queltiOfl'l, find out where and why Univenity
decisiofll are made and get action where change il needed.
Jwt dial 831 ·5000 or mit the Acrion Lme booth in the Center
Lounge in Norton Hall for md1v.fdual attention. The Office of Student
Affairs and Serv1ces w1ll rn lltttigate all q~Je.rrions and complain II, and
will answer them individually. lfht name of the individual originating
tht' inqurry IS kept confidentia•l under all circumstances. The mou
common quelliuns w1ll be amwert'd in this column each week.
Q · I keep hearin¥ every now and then about somethina called th.r
"Brody Sire." Whal is It?
A . The so-&lt;:alled "Brody Site" IS the location of the new buildinp
which will ho use Colleges A to F . It as so-called beca use the site is being
developed by t he Dav1d Brody ar•Chllcc ture firm .

Q : My puents are comana for 1 weekend to visit me. They want to
know if there i.• any place where· they can park their car overniaht on
campus. Do they need any ~cial permit for this?
A Campus secunty tells tUS that vasitors ore allo wed &amp;o park
overn ight o n the Mam · Baalcy parkang lot No permat IS needed for thi&amp;.

SubBor~?d snoozer

Lcp1 arrangements
0 I her publacatao n

problems
mcluded Mr Slesinger's report on
the finan\.181 )'t.ttus o f vanou~
st ud en t papers
fhiS report
showe d many publica! IOnl.
runmng hcaval y m deb t
Th e bo.Hd was es pecaall y
con\.emcd wath Underc11rrent,
wha ch ha~ been 111 the red more
than o th er concerns Hn wo:"vcr.
Underntrrent cn nvan ccd the hoard
that at IS begann1ng It' hnng ab
ex p enses mt o hnc and re ceaved
board approval fo r 1noorpora11on
Steve Blumenkrant l, cx.ecuta vl."
darec tor, wall hegm nl."cessary lega l
arrangements
In o th er hll~llle.,s, Mr
Goldstein ~ubm ath:d a semest e r
budge t n f Sfll2 SO wh1d1 was
passed alter J comma tmcnt to
spe nd S:!2 SO per l'A!mcst er to
f"!310 1 Rou m 2 1q Norton was
d~leted.
A~ co rd1n~
t o Mr

I

aetio~n

Cum m ing, thas kand of
commatm ent ~.A&gt;uld have: '" long
t e rm ramaficataon~ " Mr
Goldstein also reported on the
l"'rogress of efforts to purl." h ase
various computl!'rs fo r Sub BoMd
A LOm m11 tee IS rre!&gt;cntly
1nvestagatang t·omputel"'l whach
Sub Board could U&lt;\c for
bookkeeping .1nd lll&lt;l nlhly
finanL·aal report '

Q : Is it legaJ for the Univen:ity to use your sociaJ security number
for Identifica tion purposes? I not aced on the card thai It states that it ill
not to ~ used for identification purpose.~.
A . We asked thr Sonal Secu nty o ff ate and th ey tell us that there as
nc) h:dnal stat utc prohabat ang the use of your socaal security number
lur tdcntaht:allun purposes Th e~ )ta le that 11 IS up to each mstitution
IO deude •f they WJnl tu u~ It ror that purpose But as we look at the
nnhlt1011 011 1111." ca rd, at say~ that the card as not tu be used for
ttkn taf u:aliOn purpo~t·s fh l' would mean to us that you cannot m ake
usc nf 11 In prow,· your nwn aa.kntaty In o ther word ,. 11 IS no t to be
u&lt;ll'd , Ilk\." yt~ur c.lnvcr\ llnnw , ll.l prov~ who you are.

Sub Board suit

Q . II ow m tmy c rcd ats can I toke if 1 go to summer school?
A "I h1.· unaount 1\ expn·,,l·y sl."t down an th e regulations of the
Com nussaon lor lltgher and Pro l[cssaonal f:.ducat ion . These regulations
apply to huth puhlu.: .and pnvate st h ools an the ~tate . The pertinen t rule
,l.atcs 1hat " In &lt;;umm er curru.: ula , 'II ud ents may earn no more credits U\
.1 ~•x week ur longer sessaon than the number of weeks of the session
plus two; an a rave week or 'lh o rlter sessaon , students may earn no moro
cred ats than the numher of week s o f the se ss1o n plus o ne." Specifically,
to the potnt of our Univuslly, Or E:.ben notes that these guidelines will
be lollc&gt;wl."d walhoul t·x~l."plwn
I A student m..ry &lt;"o~rr y o~ rnaxrmum 1l f lh semester hour... of work
of lle alfctHh the far&lt;it o~nd thml " '\~ Inn for 111 o lal of 14 weeh
2 A ,ruJ~nt m:~y &lt;.Jrry J anal&lt;anaumuf nane semester hours of wo rk
al he ,rllerHh .1n~ nn•· ul 1111: , .. heduled IJar,·e \t'\~to ns fnr a penod of
'&gt;l"Yt"ll week'
l A ,luclt-111 "'·' " •.arry J llld\HIIUIII uf I 4 \Cmt~lc:r hours af he
Jltcncl\ th1.· lar't .11Hl ....,,,nJ
lur ..r pcraPclnf I:! wcel.s
4 A ,tuu.:nt
'""Y ,, tii.JXIIIIUIII " ' I I ,t•mcstcr ho ur.. af he
.clltiiCI\ lht• \l&lt;llllcl .ana.Jihlld '\"\~IIIII lnt ,11 111.11 nt Oint' Wt:t'k~
'i In ..rny '"'ltk W'""" a 'tudnal uaJY tJrrY on~: \Cme\ter ho ur
,I(J dala n11ala11 plry'I•JI \"c lu,.ollnr1
fir 1 ht rt ' " t " ' "' t hJ I "" "'''""""" plciVI\Inn h.l\ hn:n maJc In the
SA I&lt;A aq'·"''·l'"'" prch"' 1111 1h1· 'lllllllll"r ''""lolfl hc~~,annang May ,.,
.and 1·nd11a~· •\u,: .: ~ llioh nco 1 ~~ qllhlll\ In I Ill' aiH&gt;Vc· rul e•, wall lw

M 1 Slesange r in I ro Ju cNI Jn
o Her hy [)avid Daltn er. o wne r tJf
Ptwt·rty IIIII , It• drop any charge'
ag.aanst Sub 8 0&lt;11rd for $t.SO f111s
motaon was ununamously passed
ll o wev er, M r
Blumenkrant1
teported that tht· hoard was f1hng
at' ow ll &lt;;Uil aga111~t M r 0:~ II n er
fh e

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vt•lcd

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lo

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we speak its language ,
with a cotnp lete line of
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'&lt;"'''""'

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~poRTEd

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1\ No""""'' you w.tlll to wan t111· I rtt e rhug n l lht' We ek '" Award!
Mt •H" WIIIHI\1\ rl you do Jh.tndcHI vnur 1ar on tht&gt; 'trn·h 11 will v nly
, "'"'" h.a. 1o. to haunt you 111 tlh• lnr111 ol o1 low mg t. har~e from t he
Uull .ol n l' nlt11· Jkpartont•nl Hut you ~oan k~,:.all} .th.andon your tar on
th~ ,lrcl'l II you K" to th1· m•.ort'··t rm:unll stataon and tall out a for m
prov1Jccl hy tit~ "'"'" hcutnwnt I h~ BuiLalo Poh~:r Dl."pa rtrnent will
at..n m·nl tin olhca hull ol )-Cllll t.tr rq\1\tratlnn They wall then low
vuur ,,11 away J' ,, l lltlllc,y But II you linn I !;tl through the
pro ..·durt• . lht'Y wall o:vt•ntuJIIY '""' .ow;.~y lht• car und then hall you fo r
ol So 111 lit" cJ\t ll " .._, mthwhak to Jtl l out J lurrn o~nd dual t he nght

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Friday , 3 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five
'

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EdiToRiAl
question of timing

Part

President

fi rst Vice
President

Fresh Faced
Eleven

Stephen
Glassman

Jeffrey
Steinberg

Va ntage

Keith
Fra nkel

Bre nda
Alliance

Dennis
Ward

Bob
Bell

CUR E

Debb ie
Be nson**

T yro ne
Saunders•

Some people never conquer their inbred hostil ity towards
change. Adrian Burke, senior associate justice of the State
Court of Appeals, has recently decreed that a large number
of University of Buffalo Law School sen iors are ineligible to
take the bar exam this summer. This decision is based on
obvious antipathies towards the Law School's novel, but not
unique, syste m of grading.

lnd e~endenr

Two years ago, the Law School switched from the
trad it ional "A, B, C, 0, F" grad ing method to a system of

S" ond Vice
President

Treasurer

c

Eugene
Fahey•

William
Currao

~ ··
Col

Douglas
Webb*

Jeffrey
Osinski**

Jm
Jan

Lee
Schwartzberg•

Charles
Ireland

Independent

Honors (H). Qualified (0) or Unqualified (U). The proposal
was submitted to both the Court of Appeals and the

A
A

David
Keiser

Independen t

American Bar Association . The ABA, a body not known for
a li beral o utlook, found the plan acceptable a nd said that it

l nde~enden t

far exceeded their minimum accreditation requirements. The
Court of Appeals simply acquiesced.

Independent

Suddenly, four months before the State University of
Buffalo law seniors are slated to take the bar exam. the Court

Independent

has spoken. Why the delay? No one seems to know. In fact,
the decision was so cluttered w1th dogmatic and irrelevant

•• ind icates a The S pectrum endorsed cand id ate

dicta that Law School officials are not certain of the ruling's

• indicates a recommendation

actual effect or scope . Among the brilliant analyses of
educational innovation was Judge Burke's observation · " How
would you like to have an appendectomy performed by a
doctor with an 'unqualified' grade in surgery?" It would
appear that the JUdge subscribes to the Bernard Gelbaum
school of academic stagnation and linear mentality
Several of the leading law schools 1n the nation have been
moving away from traditional gradtng forms. None of these
schools has reported any red uction in the quality of their
graduates. Since this system has demonstrable merit, we can
see no reason to prevent the State University of Buffalo 's
seniors from taking the bar exam . After all , 1f they are
1mproperly qualified, they won't pass the test .
Our judicial system claims the concept of equity as one
of its basic tenets. We ask - is it equitable when 2Y1 years
pass before this state's h1ghest tribunal votces its objecttons?

We think not. Thetr object1ons should have been raised lo ng
ago, not now when they have the greatest likelihood of
harming students. While valid questions may have been raised
by the Court's treatment, we believe that they are on
procedurally unsound ground .

THE SpECTf\UM
Vol. 22, No. 61

Frtday, 3 March 1972
Ed1tor -m~hief

Denn1'&gt; Arnold
Co M~n~1in1 Eduor AI Bt'n~un
Co M•n~ama Edtlor Mtl..c I tppm4nn
Assl M.1n.111n1 Edttor Sus•n M ll~~
Buslness Man~acr l••lo. lterl~n
Advcnisl n&amp; M1nager Su)•n Mcllfnttne
Am~ Ahrcnd
lo Ann Armao
lelf Greenw,&amp;ld
Howie Kurtz
l ~n·~ Cromer
Ronnt Forman
. . . . M1rty G11l1
tl•lre Krtegsman
I ynd~ Tcrl

Cllv
Co py
Aut
F~ture
Gr~phtc

Arts

T 11m Tole)

L•voul
A sst
Lir &amp; Or•m•
MuSic
Off-C1mpus
ASSt.

Ph oro
Asst .
Sports
A sst

~·l o~nl

M •~h~el &lt;, tlllcrbl•tt
Btlly Altm~n
l ynne 1 ro~c&amp;e•
. .\'.lMtl
. . Mickey O~lc:rret•hfr
. . .. K•m ~o1n1os
. . Barry Rubtn
.. HOWIC f ~1wl

Th t 5ptcrrum 1\ servetl by United Press lntern;atiOnaf, College: Press
Servtle, the Lo~ Angele) Ttmes Free Pres~. the Los Angeles l•mes
SyndiUtt' md Ltber~tton News Service.

Republlcltlon of m1tter herein withour the: express consent of rhe
Edltor-ln-Chiel h forbidden .

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, 3 March 1972

The

grump

"""\4

MA ryhop,. Runyt&gt;tl

Editoriill policy is determined by the Editor·in.Chle f

What I&amp; tn my head w ould mnke such si tua11ons, nobody h as mu ch clear 1dt'J nl ~~oh .. t 1s
a fine l:Olumn , or at least 11 would happcntng. So what happens tS that whal you wnrk
be easy to writ e . Press the right through ts d o ne bit by btl , w1th there be1111" nu real
buttons and stuff would JUSt come certaint y o f wh o IS o ffe ring what kind o f l:atc Jllll \Uflporl
tumbling up fro m all sort s o f levels. to wh om.
So. you see th e pallern develo pmg "( nii\1\ICn vy ..
Therr IS JUSt one difficulty I have
already wnllen it Perhaps ~veral "rehab LittY ," "secunty ;· e tc We are lalkm!: o~ht•ul kaa ,
yes' We are talk 1ng about the sense of gett mg .til I he 11. d Y
tlmtl.
11 has t o do wtth a wo man , and mto so methtng with somebody , and suddenly hav1n&amp; that
by S~
this IS apparently sy nony tnOW. Wit h pulled o ut fro m under you. Altermlttvely , wr dl&lt;' lalktn~
a problem m closeness. At lea:.t for about Je tttna yourself beheve 10ch bY, slow p .• cnlul tndt
me You can 'piiSi 1f you wiSh, o r reverse sex The d 1ff1 cu1ty that maybe you are not really that lonely alt er o~ll rrll l} tn
spco.:t fi cally mvolves how one settles a SJtuation 111 wh1 o.:h have 1t become unavo1dllhly and painfull y lll'.tl that thl·
tht'rc arc strong attra ction~ and deep dtfferen ces I d on' t times wh en you feel Onl o nely are the excep11nn otot the
kn o w . and have not known what t o do tn such a c.ase So rule
II 01.curs to me lo wonder ho w rttlh h gen~r.tl
have allempted to hold tl toget h er m my heat! by t:ertam
mysti cal prOl.esses that arc not at all clear to me, dnd .tre apphcallo n aJJ thi5. ha6. If ll tS unders landa bll- I \U)f'Cd
therefore !Jable to be even less so t o you
most of us have been so burned
but ho w 11tJil~ hlc to
Mixed 1n wtth a great many hassles have been great&lt;'r dwell on 1t?
warmth and equality than I have usually found When the
The ts~ u e can perhaps be looked at yet another way
ftt was good . 11 was very , very good , and when 11 was hat!, So me very kmd peo ple are very stubb ornly lryw~: lu lrd• h
1t was h orrad Su the two of us hung t11 and fussed and
me that 1t IS possible to tak e tlungs from people 111 ~o:&lt;ncrJI
b1t ched ou r way along. A-.. was argued last week , we wen: and them tn particular. ThiS proc~ scares the hell nul "'
eit her 111 lo ve o r had a very deep neurotiC attraction (And
me I t seems qu11e apparent that such a pro~:~:" , ,uld l'ot"
how does o ne tell what fro m whtl:h 'l )
add1 ctave , that I co uld grow 10 at farst hkc anJ lhl'n
What se.:ms to have ltnally torn thai uneasy tru ... e w~ depend o n, gettmg !hangs fr om o ther people ll a\lntliJr~t'
an ove rdose of good stuff, 11 blast of pos1tive feeling whu.:h doses of paranoaa and pesstrntsm 1t occurs to ntl' In ""fll'd
lughhghted ce rtam basu.: anx1t ieo,. wtlh wh1c lt I fa ce tl.e greatly that the supply o f generous and &lt;&gt;pen hNrtc.:d
wo rld There are apparently very c:le.u lunils o n ho w well people is no t partic ularly great in this cullurr ~~ tim ltiiH'
my relatiOns walh the wo rld ~·an go, espec1ally o n a
To ope n up IS a most d1fficull thing for ntl', lh~rl'lnrc
dosen~ dtm ensaun. Strangers. cspe1. tally 111 herds dnve
II 1s d o ne only m p laces whe re reJect wn Wl'"" mcl\1
me verllcally up the nearest wall to h1de g~ bbenng an the dou btful and acceptance mos t probable In J rt·l.tlt" n'hlp
nearest 1.hand eher or dark set.luded spo l
where rt)CCIIon o n both stdes has been comnwrt hn .1u"· "'
New peo ple who seem at least relatively like humau stmLlar fears, th e anx1ety mvo lved an d wpp u1,~: ,lt'l t' IIM''
he1ng!&gt; o f so me co mpletenes-; and Interest are mt egra ted thu s ~;a n b eco me cwerwhelmang, particularly \1-lll'n rh•·rl.'"
1ntu the system fa1rly rapidly , u r su 1t feels from the an~ade
a state such thtt l the temptatiOn to get even'""'"''" illl'r•
On~;e 111S1de the initial defensavc layer . rel:slmnslu p~ \cem
To lk1cn's d e~l npt1on o f Saruman 's feehn~ al11•1•' l.-.1111111
to d o whatever they are gmng tn dn Depending mt hnw
IM~ngard IS perhaps applicable
'thl· JII~UI II .t ·•
hard I am wLlhng to worl , .tnd how tnlen·,ted lh~ o 1hc1
mmd 111 doubt loathtng to ~l ay ,1ntl drcad1n11. ' " I•'·'"' 1"
party '' an do1ng the same, an .tgrcerne nl ahout how wear.: refuttc "
gomg t o rt:latc tu ea\:h o th er 1~ wor ked out
fre•tuc.·ntly
On th e nne hand IS th e anger al bemg alrJhl .u11l lhl
11
oo vertly , sant.:e talkmg abo ut SU\.h c.hre~;tly seems tu lrcak deep nloted a!traction towards a place ot rardy
many reople out. In tim m1ddle range o f c:a~ual warmth On t he o ther are the real dtfferen ci!S ~o~o111dc ' ' " 1
acquaintances. l.'arefully se parated poss1btl111es fo r more and a fe cllnt uf n u t bemg stabl e or organ1zrd ''"""~" Y~"t
than thai , and a few people who get quuc dme, I ~ce m to t o work through my cra:Uness sufftc1cnti Y Ill ' ' ~v en lhc·
be all nght Oral least hav e been al'ole to fum:l aon 1h1s wa y f1eld What I want ts dearly crazy. to be l.'arcd t w r~tcocr~:h
for S(tme t1me now
lu be uaz.y and not ha ve that effed the relallnn,lup 1\1
The key wMd seem~ to be salety Pen ple 10 gtneral least I kn o w that muc h So 11 reduces agam 111 J " ·'~ '
scare me, as earlier noted TI1e refore thert' seem~ to be an delensave posture withdrawal
m c reasmg need fo r sc=eunt~ ds I get deepe r anl o "
Wluc h lt.·.aves me where we have been bet on· It ) pn
relationship Secunty as qu11c smtply ddmed h ert&gt;. the abou t movement o n the sta u-s, and JUm ping wh•·n th••
greater the c hance of my ge1t1ng hurt , the les..' se curt• the.· telephone nngs. Hoping 1 can be ta lked o ut of J )llu.tll"''
situataon IS . Beyond th1s general rule, th ere are a numhcr wluch has no ex u s, that there is so me magil.'al :.wtl dt I hal
of spectfa c satuat1 o ns whi ch mtnlnll7t: risk and tn \.'rcasc my o ne o f us can turn so that we can llve happily evtl .alll'l It
ability to relax Cons.astency L\ a goodness. Peo ple wh o IS probably no t insigruficant that while search1ng lnr llh·
seem to have found thetr o w n level and are happy 1n the above hne from Tolloen I found II necessary ' " 1''a•l
way thetr beads wo rk . They arr probably not gomg tu tllrough th e whole section. Fairy tales. Symptoma tl &lt; ·•I Jll
change the ground rules muc.h, and you can bo th dectde tnabt!Jt y lo deal with what is referred to - d ublUt~'ly • I
what is there o r not, and set about enJoymg what IS and suspe~;t - as the real world .
skipping what isn't .
Also o f a stubborn refu sal to play by the rul es''' t hat
People I see as being like myself are nerve-wrac kmg world , however. If you don't sell your soul, it is poss11'tle It•
from the beginning. If they don' t kno w what they want , get your head together enough to find a wJrm
and l don ' t kno w what r want , which is usually the case 10 co mfo rtable , exciting and produc tive niche. Hopefull y

• It

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'r

Rockin' tbe roof

J. Geils shakes up the crowd
by Billy Altman
and Tom BoQucki
Letten' go an Buffalo is not the eas1est thing for

a Kleinhans audience to do. Groups come and go,
and even the likes of Eric Clapton have fa1led to
induce, seduce or reduce the crowd to even a m1ld
frenzy in the sterile atmosphere of the big K. And
so, when it does happen, as it did last night with the
boys from Beantown, you take notice . Not only did
J. Geils and his band of desperados shake things up,
they shook things sideways, over, under and down.
It comes as no surprise to any rock 'n' roll
lunatic (and you better believe we're crazy). that
such thengs should happen when a group like J Geils
steams 1nto town . These guys do it, plam and S4mple.
No bullshlt , no long , boring solos, no
lntellectuallling, no sense. Just a super heavy dosage
of good, dirty rock 'n' roll.
They know where the magic of the music lies,
and they know how to do it, because it doesn 't
matter what you ,Po, if you know how to do it.
They're out front , all the time, playing music that
dnves • you nuts. And they're the most energizing,
inspired I.Jand I've heard since the Stones, whom
they undoubtedly must be compared to, both hve
and on record.
A J Gells set always begins w1th "Sno-Cone," a
crazy little th1ng that features knockout solos by
everyone, each no longer than two minutes. And
such class - a drum solo on the ftrst tune. And, god,
do they dress up for the folks . I mean, they care
about you and me. Like the Wolf said before the
double encore number: "We don't take the money
and run. We stick around and have some fun ."
Mag1c Dick 1s gonna disappear soon, hes lost so
much weight. How his body holds up that head of
fnzz I'll never know. J. wears his black silk "gangster
of love" sh1rt and he's quite a good looking Q\JY
w1thout h1s ha1r greased back The silent one, Danny
Klein. has h1s red jump suit on and the customilfy
bass player's hat. Stephen Bladd was simply
outrageous 1n hot pants, jeans and red t1ghts. And
considermg how often the drummer stands up so
you can see h1m
Class.
' I said wait!'
So after the instrumental, the Wolf enters Long
black outfit, buttonned down the front, the shades,
s1lver boots made for sliding, the works. The band
wa1ls mto 'Wait," one of the best bar son95 ever
written . They yell, 'Wa1tl" and they stop the mus1c
for the beat or two. Tongues, as Meltzer would say.
The beautify of successful rock , anticipation and
expectation rewarded by deliverance and climax. As
a matter of fact, the new live rendition of "Cry One
More T1me," with the whole band freezing for
agonizmg seconds before release, was just incredible .
They did all their usual killers, and then some.
The little raps by the Wolf were a joy. Oobs Looba,
etc. " Right about here, we usually do a few
selections from West Side Story, but lately, we've
been getting thousands of tehqams asking for some
tunes from Jesus Christ Su~rstar. " J . p4ays the JC
theme in the background. Later, a recreation of the
Last Supper "Judas says, 'I want some,' Peter says,
'Take me wnh you when you go , baby'." The band
takes off, lookln' for a love: Later, a testimony is in
order'
"Three years ago, this man couldn't walk, he

couldn't talk. he couldn't see. He was stup1d And
now three years later, he still can't walk , st1 ll can't
talk, he Still can't see and he 's st1ll stupid But !Joy,
can he blow h1s face out Magic Dick on the llckm'
stick!''
And what else but " Whammer Jammer " w1th
old Dick bopptn' around blowmg his brams ~ut and
the rest of the band banging away on all s1des of the
stage with tambourines. Th1s is the one that gets
everybody out of the1r seats, and with good reason .
Dick is just about the best white harp player ever to
walk the earth .
J . Geils might strike some people as a rather
mediocre guitanst. But his guitar notes stay w1th you
for days after you hear them . He 1s vic1ous
deliberate. His guitar k1lls. You can see 11 in h15 ev~
8$ he works through "Serves You Right to Sufftlf "
I' ve never heard ~tnyone play just that way wer. He
could probably destroy mountains With his
screa·ming notes. And that downward sl1de on
"Suffer." Too much.
Splits and jumps
Through all of this the Wolf dances away, doing
jumps and splits and wavmg his arms and falling to
his knees and knocking mike stands out of
commission With h1s ~llppers , he does h1s ''Grease
Slop," slipptn' and slidin' around the stage, bobll1ng
and weavmg dround the rest of the band and the
music. Too bad he's got h1s moustache back, though
He looks better clean shaven. But he neve1 took uff
his shades th1s time around and that's neat
Almost all the son95 were done faster than the
records, and that just made everything crazier "Pack
Fair and Square" went at such a frantic pace that I
couldn't believe Dick could match that solo on the
album, but he d1d
Smokey's "First I Look at the Pu~e ,'' f1ntshed
the set off, and the people were really gomg msane
J . looked hke he was rtppmg h1s strmgs off on those
chords. They tned to leave, but no way There was
genu me hunger 10 the a~r , there had to be more L1ke
the director of the Institute for Rock 'n' Roll
Studies says, " the marvelous thing ai.Jout a rock 'n'
roll concert 1s the thought that 1t could go on
forever, and that's what keeps it gomg" So. the
place we should all try and get to, "Floyd's Hotel,''
is nelCt, showing off Tarzan Justman's chops (a Ia
Little R1chard) . The joint IS swinging'! And to top it
all off. "Hard Drivin' Man," with J and the Wolf
trading licks and the whole band defying all laws of
anything.
The only thmg I was ready for after that was the
opening nffs of " Ro ute 66," with Mick commg out
and yelleng : "Let me hear you say, Yeah" That
wasn't gonna happen th1s time around though, so I
went downstairs for a beer. It wouldn't be fair to
. anyone who sat through all of Yes to have me talk
about them, so I'll shuffle off hummin ' "Sooki~
Sookie'' and let Tom tell you about Yes.
("

•

•

•

•

Oiff•ent energies
Well, I'll adm1t that the J . Ge1ls Band blew my
head off, and that Yes wasn't the nght band to
follow them . And I'll admit that it took me more
than a little while to get into their music, but it was
more than worth it. Yes is an English Band and their
-continued on following

1»~

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Del•ney end Bonnie will be performing It Kleinhens Music Hell
next Wednesdey night. The two have pleyed with • lot of ~"eat
musici11ns who have wanted to sfuare gospel and rock music:. Also on
the bill ere bluesm•n John Hammond and Apple organist Billy
Preston.

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intrlcate•y constructed music was in sharp oontrast
to the 1pure energy of the Geils band. But if you
stayed to listen to them, you found that the energy
was st ill there, but in different places.
Yes's music has nothing to do with blues or
rock, Y~et it's not program music or psychedelic
insanity . It's extremely lyrical music that seems to
float through the band as some force outside of
them . Probably their most recognizable
characteristic is John Anderson's high, high singing
and the intricate harmonies that flow with it. The
band n·ever pushes the music, but flows in and
around 1it. But Geils had already tore the place down
before trhey took the stage, and Yes never had a
chance to catch us.
Aftter a rather ominous introduction of some
p1ece of class1cal music, they took the stage and
went mto "Roundabout." But as the crescendoes
built up, the music seemed a ltttle too composed and
nothmg happened musically . So they did "Your
Move." which starts off very slowly w1th Steve Howe
playmg the mandolm. Then Howe SWitched to gu1tar
and thev went 1nto the long endrng whtch gave them
a chancEr to work out a little.
Howe started to get a little funky and ran circles
around 'the melody To show off a little more, he dtd
'lhe Clap," an rnstrumental on acoustrc guitar,
which (:aught • everyone as he made the melody
dance, atnd then seemed to go nght through it and
somehow come back
It was here that you can see how Yes's music
takes ttren form . They explore thetr mus1c m a
classrcal sense rather than JuSt explodrng. Their
music is very deliberate, although sometimes a little
too much for my taste. Howe never comes out with
screaming licks, but riffs in circles around the
melody Rick Wakeman creates orchestras on the
Moog, Hammond and p1ano, and somehow blends
into the singing like a fourth voice. But 1t's not a
pure head trip, though, as Chns Squire pushed on
the bass like a lead guitar
Cerebral frenzy
"Lo1ng Distance Run Around" started off w1th a
beautiful introduction on the Moog, and as the
crescendt:&gt;es rose, I thought the band was starting to

.

on

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The UUAB • Fme Arts Film Committee

Presents

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FRIOAY&amp;SUNDAY

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march5th

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$1 .25 at door

Fnday and Saturday, March 3 and 4
1st Floor Cafeteria 7:30 and 10:30 p.m.

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SATURDAY march 4th

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Tickets :
Students 50c before 6 p.m.
J5c ft
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CONFERENCE THEATRE

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flnd themselves. The Moog and guitar danced around
the ~tiding harmonies and they went into a long, long
endmg and the music seemed to float . Rick
Wakeman did a beautiful piano solo and then
switched to the Moog and Hammond, playing both
together.
•
For my tastes, it was worth all of Emerson
lake and Palmer . He wasn't just creating sound
effects, but there was a definite form to it as he built
up from moody introspective music to a cerebral
frenzy. It sounded frightening. He wasn't just
psychedelisizing classical music, but was using the
forms to create something new. After working it up
to a cl1max, they went into "Perpetual Motion."
The music seemed much freer than on the
record as Howe was finally extending himself farther
and farther and the music was finally a live force
rather than something composed
And then Squire went into some amazing bass
work. Playing it like a lead guitar, with the treble up
all the way and using a wah -wah and Hammond bass
pedals, he started playing chords and then harmon1es
w1th himself, until he sounded like a one-man band .
He would build it up, and then go back to a simple
pattern, which was always changing. The audience
was appreciative enough to ask for an encore wh1ch
was "Yours 1s no Disgrace."
I hate to use the line about voices like
mstruments, but it's the only way to describe the~r
s1nging. And conversely the instruments were like
vo1ces, but not human ones. Squire and Wakeman
finally seemed to be enjoying themselves as they
pushed the music in ever widening circles, ~opp1ng
only long enough to play wim it. It was a happy
song. and it left me happy, wh1ch certainly wasn't
any disgrace.
their own terms and not
When taken
confused w1th J . Geils, Yes makes beautiful and
interesting music. Their musicianship and tightness
have to be heard to be believed, and I can only
describe it as happy music. T.he intricate harmonies
came off perfectly, even better than the record, and
the music seemed limitless, as if they had captured
some unknown force and mc:de it come alive rather
than working for a climax. Everyone left happy and
you can't argue with that.

In Concert

UniOn

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Presents

un!vers1ty

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The UUAB Coffeehouse Committee
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�RECDIRDS.
Hendrix in the West (RepriM MS 2040)
It's so strange, I know he's d•~ yet ~erv time I tum around
there's a new Hendrix album on the •tands. And what's ~en stranger is
that the albums g« progressively beltter. His aliveness has not ceased,
his ghost will not rest, h is art forever precedes him.
This latest release, Hendrix In t/1,, Werst, is a masterlul compilation
of live recordings taken from performances given at the Berkeley
Community Center, San Diego Spot'1S Arena and the Isle of Wight
festival ,
Overall it's the best "official " rec;ording of Jimi's live material. It's
certainly the most representative of his soul, his expression of love, of
music, of humanity. One of the most :;triking things about this man and
his music is the incredible homage he pays to a struggling sense of
planetary , better yet universal , love.
He was an anem'pt at reaching 1a totality of humanity, a human
bemg with a sensual mentality and !&gt;exual physicality driving himself
with his music towards a vio lent freedom necessitated by a
compassionate desire to create. And tfor me, this " emotion" known as
Hendrix is best seen in one of his most beautiful songs, one of the most
tender love songs to be wrinen in n:&gt;ck music, "little Wing." It has
been done by other artists in search of that intangible essential known
to this planet as love.
Derek and the Dominoes did a highly successful version on Lay/a
and the emotive force of Jim1's lyric: even when done by others is as
compelling as he was ·

.~cLean's

'W ell, she's walking through the clouds,
With a ctrcus mind that's running wild,
Butterflies and Zebras,
And Moonbeams and fatry tales
That's •II she Bll'6r thinks about
Riding with the wind."

claim to fame

Immortal 1\.merican Pie'
Too bad he had to go and wnte, "American
Pie." Too bad that smash single has snatched him
from the coffeehouse and Hudson riverboats and
plunked him down on big, empty auditorium
stages. Too bad I have to write a review abou t a
musician who, though pleasant and mildly
entertaining, remains a highly denvattve and
unexciting performer.
Anyway, last Sunday ntght Don Mclean
played a two hour introduction to "American
Pte ·• "I'll keep playing 'til I can't think of
anythmg else to play." he grmned, "then I'll get
mto that - but that's a foregone conclusion "
Indeed It was, Don.
Bastcally , Mclean JUSt can't hold a stage for a
concert with thm matenal and a grandiose 4 5 He
knows h•s way around a gUitar and banto. but h•s
ongmal stuff was really tnnocuous a1d his
unongmals were just cop1es. The audtence (a
tacstmtle of any htgh school pep assembly) didn't
ever relax, seem tngly content to let Mclean plonk
around on hts guttar between songs and tndulge m
erudite paner His performance begged for a
smaller house. just a few tables and chairs and
enough beer to get that rapport so obvtously
lacking at Kleinhans.
Get it while you can
McClean realizes this; when mterviewed, he
qui te expectedly replies that as long as there's an
audi torium, and the big performtng fee, he'll buzz
through 19 million choruses of "American Pie."
Get It while you can . He's been a low·paid
coffeehouse musician for some time, and his
performance contains all the ingredients of that
genre: old blues, original ballads, witty comments,
a bit of flashy instrumental and some audience
participation stuff. Well, it's all been done, and
done better Particularly appropos is a comparison
o f Mclean with hts obvious model - Josh Wh1te.
Josh Wh tte was a black folk ·blues singet" who
practtcally patented the small club, bass and guitar

to1pical cum updated blues style. Wh•te could
perform equally well in basement d1ves or concert
halls. do•ng oldies like ''Midntght Special," and
"The Ballad of John Henry" while mncing in
sor:ial thtngs ltke "Si licosis Blues" and civil rights
numbers .
Appaling gulfs
While using the same format, McLean doesn't
come off with any o f White's power, or
deep·laughmg gusto. When Mclean tried "Where
Wr!re You, Baby," a White classic, the gulf
between o riginal sod imitation was appallingly
apparent. Similarly, the rest of Mcl ean's show
was a low·kev reproduct ion of his beners
The first few lines of Don's originals would
automatically d raw a zombte·llke applause from
the audience, who would subsequently lapse .nto
yawning repose while the lyrics breezed from
obscure to awful. An obscene ditty called " Jord•e
LCist His Ptnker" raised a loud guffaw, wh1le a
couple of banjo numbers h1ghltghted the ltrsl half
of the show .
Returnmg after tntermtssion, Mclean told of
his "deep love for bluegrass mus1c," picked Lester
Hans famous ru n, then switched mto another
I31;1Q8rdly original piece. When he did get to some
strict Instrumental thmgs, Mclean was very good,
though a little ragged . A round taken from the
on1e hundred·thtrteenth Psalm and a foot-tapping
banjo audience sing-a-long preceded the b1g one
Finally, the hundreds who had watted since
8 :30 could sing ttl ''Bye, bye Mtss Amencan
Pire/Drove my Chevie to the levee. but the levee
Wits dry . .
etc " A stand•ng u'lat1on and an
eocore and Don Mclean was off to another c•tY
a1d another audttonum .
Deubtless he'll lace the same audtence, croon
the same tunes and draw a n1ce fee , smgmg that
song all the way to the bank .

vot:e

- Jun McFerson

- and the most beauteous of Iynes
'1'\lhen I'm sad, she comes to me,
With a thousand smiles she gtves to me free
It's alright, she says it's alright,
Take anything you want from me.
Anything.
Fly on little wing."

You see what I moonl i t's all conr;erned wtth freedom and totalitv
it's an essential extreme that has t:o be taken by everyone whose
concerned about life.
And yet. If "Linle Wmg" done by Eric and Duane is
understanding, then "Linle Wing" done by Jimt on Axis •s fluid, firm .
Yet the art never ceases, it's alwai/S transcended even after death .
"Little Wing," done on thts album live, is the sublime bordering on
universal engulfment.
Taking "Linle Wing" as the oLtv1ous best cut on the album and
going on trom there is easy You know, the more ~ think about it, the
more it's begrnning to make Itself ~mown that mis just might be the
second best Hendrrx album ever cre·a ted . Axis wins the first pos1t1on
without any arguments
But gomg back to Hendr~x tn th.~ West Unl1ke the long hve cut on
Rambow Bridge ("Hear my Tram a Comm"') which starts out mcely
but never really ends up any place, titus album possesses two long cuts
and both of them are successful.
The first one ts a long, extended verston of "Red House," Jimi's
tnbute to hts own deeply engramedl blues roots Though the studio
recordi ng of this on the Hendrix Sm.ash Htrs album IS far more treble
conscious and extremely modern m 1ts blues tntent , the live version lets
J•mi tell us exactly where his roots lie. It's a stunmng cut that's jam
packed with guitar licks very rem1n154:ent of Buddy Guy and not only
does he take his black blues root:;, but he also extrapolates into
something that has to be technological blues, future blues, future love,
transformi ng the mac htne, meat love.
Tl1e other long cut is a raucous ven•on of "Voodoo Chile" which is
very close to the Elecrrtc Ladylar1d "Voodoo Chile" but comes
nowhere near the speeded up version r:&gt;n the Hendrix Live at the Forum
hoot leg.
R ou nding out the
record, Jimi gives us a
httle btt o f rock 'n' roll,
his own personal verstons
o f " Johnny B. Goode"
and " Blue Suede Shoes"
are rockers from begmning
to end w1th J1m1 playing
some of h•s fmest guttar.
And to conunue to praise
h1s guitar genius IS overly
stating and understate·
ment, so I won't
And can anyone really
explam why Jtmt's dead?
" Hendrix, that most
supple of guitarists, the
true electronic extension,
depended on h is audience
to take him anywhere but
where he was. But, as he
insisted on taking their trip rather than taking them on his, he was
ultimately forced to face a vision o f himself which screamed clown .
One cannot get to the top and switch masks. The lover demands
consistency, and unless you've established variance as your norm a
priori, you will be called an adulteref. You can accept illogic as logic if
it's presented all the time, but not when sprung as a ripe pomegranate
in a grove of erstwhile peaches."
And that's What Lou Reed has to say about Jimi and believe me,
that's important.

�- Photos by McNiece

The three piCtures o n the 01pper left are
from the production of Cosffucomics. The
four on the bottom are frorn Pantagletze
and those on the right are from Dr.
Faustus .

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All the world's a stage and the people

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�'e only players
If there has been any complaint of
a dearth of theater on campus, this
month should see the way to a more
than pleasant solut i on. The
Department of Theater is presenting
thre e plays in repertory . This
experiment in repertory theater is
being attempted this year for the
first time and from al l reports, the
productions will be exciting.
The first producti on is
Cosmicomics . Based on the
experimental science fiction stories
by ltal o Calvina, the piece has
become an improvisational
gr o up · theater production .
Cosmicomics will be performed on
March 7, 8, 17, 23, 24, 29.
The second play is a wild response
to Marlowe's Dr. Faustus by way of
the Keystone Kops, the Marx
Brothers and R. Crumb. It will be
performed on March 11 , 12, 18, 21 ,
22 , 30.
The last production i s
Ghelderode's Pantagleize. It is an
apoca lyptic farce which wi ll make
you sad . It will be performed on
March 15, 16, 19, 25 , 26, 28 .

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Cosmicomics, Dr. Faustus and
Pantagleize are being directed by
Gordon Rogoff, David Chambers and
Saul Elkin (respectively) .
Performances will take place at
8 :30 p .m. in the Harriman library
Theater Studio. Student admission is
$.50. Tickets at the Norton Hall Box
Office.

�WICIW AND IVfFALO fESTIVAl

.-w""

DELANEY &amp; BONNIE
Bill0eston &amp;John H•mond
Wednesday, March 8 at 8 P. M.
Kleinhans Music Hall

""

All S.olt lteeerv.,/ Mol" Floor $-S•.S0-$4,50
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lelc.fOy $4 ..50-$4 00

hllole ,.,tlvel Tlcht Office. Stetler Hllto" Lobby
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Holl, StoN Coll09o fi ..et Oflld; folio Totlo•"• H-bo•lo "•••.
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"The best American
movHt cf 19711"
JICIINOft~

I!M.-cc»r

"Joyous! One of
the year's top tent"

Eveninvs at:

EXCLUSIVE
ENGAGEMENT
,.--NOW
S HOWING !

7 ;10 &amp; 9 :20p.m .

&amp; Sun.

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•Round things are ... boring'
byG.yCi~on
N~~ Yw's Eve In New York City bf1ngs with tt
the cold winds from the north. The last New Y..-'s
Eve w• specilf, for the north winds brought w.mth
this tim•! In the form of five mt~~iciar\S wh011 work is
so t ight and flawless that some say it is eatually a
hindranc:e. In thls era of letting go, The Band have
been going at a steady pace putting out beautiful
musi c. They have been painting their own
masterpiece with scenes of pastoral drama. The
unfaithflul servant, the old man in the rocking chair,
the man in prison, the blacksmith - they are all real
people tor me.
But if Robbie Robertson's images are real, he,
Danko, Manuel, Hudson and Helm are almost
shadow!;. I remember seeing them in one of their
first appearances, when Big Pink suddenly became a
new force in music. There was electricity in the air
ffor a while I thought sweet Allen Ginsberg, who
inconceivably was on before them, pulled the plug
w1th his unfortunately repetitious karma)
These were the men who played for Dylan. And
they w,rote music wi th him, too . But the five
music1ans were merely historic musical shadows.
That ni!Jht they parually emerged from the shadows,
no lon,ger back ·up machines but ftre·breathing
creators.
Sin1::e that night I have seen them go through
four albums and countless appearances. And to thts
day I wonder if they are rhe same people who
I it erall'1' lev1 tated Albert Hall in 1966 with
Zimmerman up front levon Helm was not the
drummE!I' that night, and I must adm1t aher listening
to the Zimmerman bootleg that the man drummmg
that n1uht was superior to Levon. Together with
Dylan's finest form they sp1t back into the faces of
that ang1ry crowd wnh some of the greatest music of
the decade.
Robbie Robertson was pulling teeth w1th that
guitar on "Just like Tom Thumb's Blues." Garth
Hudson was sweetly flowing o n "One Too Many
Mornings" but tough as all hell on "Like a Rolltng
Stone." Richard Manuel was not Willy Boy but a
demon 1:&gt;n "Baby Let Me Follow You Down " All
this while Danko and that drummer Mickey Johns
pounded out a gargantuan beat that pushed Dylan to
the he1ghts of a musical Olympus

Big Pink
Ah , that was that ntght It was two years befo re
the tone was set for a "different" group of
music ta11s. Big Pinks first song bro ught forth a
tearful father yearning for the good old days
We carried you in our arms
On independence day
Af"'(f now you throw us all 1/Side.
Ancl put us on our way

Soec111 Set. Bergefn Matinee
All -~~ 1.00 'til 2

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And so the scene sh1fted from the urban steamroom
to the front of the general store where the folks
would clhew tobacco and exchange tall tales :

:oo p.m

2nd Weeki! I

We can calk about i t now
It 's that same old riddle only start from rhe
middle.
I 'd fix it bu t I don 't know how,
Well we could try to reason. but you might
thmlc 11 's treason.

ThH h1ghl1ght from Big Pink was found tn the
last tta·ck , " I Shall Be Released ." Here. R1chard
Manuel' s vo1ce and ptano and Garth Hudson's organ
1ell to fo rm a plea from a prisoner to the heavens.
The fac·t that Dylan wrote the tune added to the
myst1cal haunt.ng of the song, for at the t1nte of the
album's release there were rumors that Bob was a
vegetabUe living on Pitca1rn's Island ''Any day now,
any day now. I shall be released "

Noone •
canrestst
our chicken wings.
They're the Woodshed's newest ta:stc scnMatiun,
mild, medium or hot. Swirl 'em around in ta ngy
blue cheese sauce, and finish the uperience with
crispy celery sticks. Non-stop pt'anuts are on
the house, and spirits are 50r after :l P. M. The
Woodshed .. . where the kitchen's alway~ open
and the music's always on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North Tonawanda, just over
the Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann. The Woodshed's
open from 11:30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

.

1WE WllD~HE~

Good t1me airs
The? Band, the second album, re.nforced the
mus1cal greatness of first . It was a brilliant coup, by
both The Band and their producer, John Simon. It
was amazmg that a group so t1ght could make their
mus1c send off such loose, good t1me airs Each song
sends the hstener back to a bygone era. Robeftson,
from the second album on, is the major songwriter,
thus potnttng The Band to his own musical direction
The he.avy religious tones of "The Wetgh(' come
down to earth in songs like "Ran, Mama, Rag" , "Up
on Criptple Creek", and then they are shot back up
to the sky with "Unfaithful Servant," Whispenng
Pines, atnd King Harvest. All the time, everything 1s
carefully controlled and sublime. Some of the most
memowble lines in music are the following ·
Vir.gil Cain is my name and I drove on the
Danvilllr train,
Till' someona's Cllvslry came, and tore up rhe
tracks 11.(18in.
In the winter of slxty· flve, we were hungry, just
barely allilltl...

ThtB second album IS just a wonderland of

l*tOflll lmlgi!S. of rolling countryside and hearty
country folk. To their aodience, The Band seemed to
be the t&gt;.st of many worlds. Fine lyrics, fine music,
tnd a blesalng from a living legend.

A dim ltOind
But the blessing as well as the legend became
dim In the third album S~ Fright. The music was
still razor sharp, but something was missing. There
was a demand for some direction, but Robertson
could not provide one. Jon landau called Stage
Fright a transition, a pause. The same images that
were fresh on the first two albums became e little
stagnant In St.ge Fright. Robertson seemed to be
scratching his head looking for an opening. There
were but ten tunes on the album, and it took just
about a half hour to listen to them all and emerge
unfulfilled.
It is true that sometimes we come to expect too
much from musicians.
It is true that sometimes we come to expect too
much from musicians the cuff. Even the group's live
performances were frightenmgly mechanical - an
hour and a half and good-bye-it's-been nice·but we
gotta-catch·the-plane· for·our-next-pig. Spontaneity
was never their tone, but it was the for-our-next-gig
Spontaneity was never their forte, but it was the
Lost in all of this was the Isle of Wight
appearance with Dylan. It was a sloppy job, hastily
done and the quarter of a million people who were
there saw hollow figures on the stage. It all seemed
to be going downhill .
Then, m the fall of 1971 , came that fresh wind
once agam :
Hev, Buddy, would you like ro buy a watch real
cheap
Here on the street.
I gor SIX on each arm and twO more round my
feet
Life is a carnival - belitwe it or not
Life is a carnival- two bits a shot.
A sense of urgency

The past was still a concern for Robertson , but
there was a sense of urgency that d1d no t appear 1n
the other Band albums. The horn sect1on signalled a
release of energy . and the keystone of this album
Cahoots , 1f the energy released by the mus1c1ans The
funkmess of the mus1c contrasts the personal
statements tn the Iynes. WhBf'eas the previous albums
p;untad a picture of history, here the Band reeches
out and tries to throw away the fTSme and become
ntstory. From ''l1fe IS a Carn1val" we encounter a
version of Dylan's ''When I Paint My Masterpiece "
It IS a different song
when put down by The Band. Dylan makes 11 a
satire, but The Band, led by the classic vocal o f
levon singing in the best trad111on o l " The We1ght,"
The N1ght They Drove Old Dooe Do wn" and
"Jemima Surrender ," captures the essence o f a swmg
through the Old World :
Oh the streets of Rome are filled With rubble,
Ancient footprints are everywhere
You can almost think that you 're seein ' double
On a cold, t:hrk night on the Spanish stairs

It IS not just ordmary nostalgia that they are
trymg to capture, but something deeper. A ground
of being. perhaps, or just a dire need to look back tn
order to go forward. The Band present 1n thetr mus1c
numerous dichotomies: loose-tight, past present,
heavy-light, and manage to keep them all under one
roof Although they are part of the musical elite
the1r mus1c 1s for the common man. When they join
with Van Morrison tn praising the name of Johnny
Walker Red in " 4% Pantomine," the results are
excellent and heartwarming .
rhe dealer's been dealing me bad hands
From the bottom of the deck without thtl
sl1ghtest blush
And I don 't know whether to call or check
Bur right now I fee/like I've gor a royal flush

And so it was, on New Year's Eve in New York
City, that Robbie Robertson and his group of
m1nstrels were reunited with Bob Dylan again. They
were reu nited with their past. with all that history.
"The Band IS back, Dylan is back, Van Morrison is
back, the Kinks are back!" shout the gleeful masses
Well, goddamnit, they never left! You gotta look
back to go forward . Maybe the shell of The Band has
been broken, maybe it is only temporary. I don't
really care, as long as their heart stays in the same
place. The Band in Albert Hall and The Band in
Cahoots are, and always will be, inseparable. And the
n~xt time I' m sitting in the easy chair, the shadows
Will be gone. Music would be a lot poorer without
The Band.

�WKIW AN D IU FF.-•LO f ESTIVAl pteMnh

SEALS &amp; CROFTS
Friday, March 17 at 8 P.M.
Kleinhans Music Hall .
All seals reserved: $4.50 -- First buye rs Get BEST seats

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(gjCJJ!

.............
PANAVISION"

COlOR

on the screen

Theater production

'Out at Sea' floats away
by Bernard Madura
SP«trum Thtlftrflf Crmc

The Student Theater Guild production of Out at
Sea by Slawomir Mrozek, performed last Thursday,
Fr1day and Saturday, was pleasant, banal and
somewhat entertaining. Noth1ng to get excited
about, except for the fact that they turned the play
ups1de down and inside out.
I really do not mean to sound bitchy ; I am
dwa•e of the fact that the d~rector , Elyse Greenhut.
probably saw herself g1ving the play a "fresh and
cl•fferent mterpretation," and that the actresses pot
•n a lot of t1me and work But there was something
thoroughly miStaken and wrongheaded about the
t•llo rt
·
Pohtlcal absurd1sm
Slawom1r Mrozek IS generally considered to be
the leadmg playwnght m Poland He is a political
parod1st and a master of the grotesque - an Eastern
European Beckett with a dash of Mack Sennett . The
text of Out at Sea 1s sparse and turgid ; everyone
speaks in that disjomted, burned out, oddly formal
manner that has been standard for this type of play
smce Waiting for Godot..
Three men, Fat, Medium and Th1n, are stranded
on a raft with no food; the action of the play centers
around their attempts to select one of their number
to sacrif1ce h1mself and nourish the others. In a
s1mple and effective parody of both authoritarian
stup1d1ty and democratic pretentiousness, Mrozek
has them campaign and then vote on the "burning
I '&gt;SUe of food ." Of course there are four ballots in the
hat and the election is annulled.
Using a perversely illog1cal argument about
[lrlvilege and orphanhood, Fat and Medium (who are
1n obvious cahoots throughout the play) browbeat
Thm mto a corner Just m the mck of time a
postman climbs on board, delivers a telegram
announc1ng the death of Thm's w1dowed mother.
and rumps back tnto the sea Now they are all
orphans and Thin 1s temporanly off the cutting
board
In the m1ddle of one of Fat's pompous orations.
hu; old fam1ly butler climbs onto the raft , g1ves the
he to his story of bemg an Ofphan, and then
obediently drowns. Thin IS overjoyed; however. his
triumph 1s only momen tary, for Fat and Medium
oonvince h1m he has hallucma ted the butler and get
him to accept the role of sacrif1c1al lamb.
Guess who's coming fo r ...
Thin gives a perfectly absu rd speech on the
nature o f freedom a nd duty, his eyes gleaming.
Medium finds a tin of baked beans and sausages, but
Fat insists on keeping it a secret because, as is dear
by now, Thin is " happy as he is."
Out at Sea is a funny, bizarre, offbeat piece, too
dark to be a farce, too funny to be considered a
serious drama, full of slapstick, ancient vaudeville
business and political and social sat ire. The men are

TickPt&lt;:

TO N IG HT at 8 : 15p.m .

d ressed 1n formal evemng wear, Fat 1S always
demanding th 1ngs be done in a civi lized way ,
Medium is a nutty and willing stooge, and Th1n IS the
archetypal loser.
Mrozek meets Neil Simon
Probably the most radical change made by the
Student Theater Guild and t he one that bothered me
least was t heir substitutmg women for men ; the
postman simply became a postwoman and the butler
became a maid Fat and Med1um were both a httle
older t han Thin, but 1t d1d not really hurt anything,
and as there were no lines rn the text that demanded
the characters be men, nothmg s1gn1f1cant was lost m
the substitution of women
However, m thiS producuon, dil the subtlety and
darkness disappeared completely. the play as
performed seemed almost a Broadway comedy The
expef'ience was someth1ng like llstenmg to a good
record played through bad speakers all the h1ghs
and lows get lost, leavmg only the m1ddle ranges .
Again and agam Mrozek's qu1etly deh satlnc
speeches and wry one hners were rumed by
overacting and bad enunc1at1on Though Ellen Butler
gave Fat a propef'ly overblown d1gn1ty and t11ed to
generally slow things down , Mefl1um (Marla Corsaro)
and Thin (Peggy Flauml spoke too qu1ckly and too
loud and earned on w1th such exaggerated gesture
and movement that they seemed rP.fugees from some
obscure opera.

Available
At Box Office

Plaza North
USI II.

r. ILVD. U4-ISU

Perf ormance.

NOMINATED FOR 8 ACADEM Y AWAROSI
COLUMBIA PICTURES
Presents
A BBS PRODUCTION

H E LD

OVER!

Af-By

PETER BOGDANOVlCH

.........,

I

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TIMOTHY BOnOMS/JtfF BRIOG€S/ELL£N BURSTYN/ BEN JOHNSON
o..oc-o ..

CLORlS LEACHMAN/ ........-;: CY&amp;L SHEPHERD•••• I PETER EIOGOAN()VICH
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LAARY Mct.lUATRY .... PE TEA BOGOANOVlCH l#IIIY "".v""" B€RT 5CK'lEDEJI
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rn1
STEPtENJ FRIEDMAN fO.~· - -·~ ~ Late Show
Times:
~ LlVAIIDMAH
. 1'110
24-6-8· &amp; 10 ~ " 4 •A•.A t #l.
Every Sat.

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D

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Blunted intentions

Whether or not all of this was theu own do1ng
or that of the d.rector 1S unimportant, the result was
an excruciatingly gauche and amateunsh treatment
of a h1ghly resourceful and resonant play . From the
text one gets the 1mpress1on that Med1um 1s a blunt
and slightly slow w1tted heavy (he continuously
refers to Fat as "Boss") and that Thm 1s an
Introverted, confused nobody, Kafka's K Without
any trappings Yet M1ss Corsaro made Med1um a
shnll, hyperactive hausfrau and M1ss Flaum turned
Th1n mto a plamtive and beautiful nymph (I forg1ve
her everything for the way she took off her nylons)
Amta Colle was hilanous as the ppstwoman, she
dove off the raft and onto the floor w1th such
enthusiasm that the aud1ence wmced as one. Joanna
Oergosits was JUSt as good m her brief appearance as
the ma id . All in all the performance was
disappointing; it is permissible to mess around with
t he shell of a play. to modernize 1t or translate it or
refurbish it
Hamlet can be dressed in slacks and a
sweater, Major Barbara can be a Hare Krishna freak
instead of a Salvation Army leader - as long as one
does not in any way tamper With the core, as long as
what has to be there is there
Out at Sea needs to be done with a mordant,
understated slowness; at its center 1s a bitterly funny
vision of human grossness and t he absurdity of
leadership and martyrdom . The Student Theater
Guild made 1t a crazy play about canmbalism

•'•"'"•
RINGO

S H OW I NG!

STARR

MOTHERS OF IMYEIITIOII
THEODORE IllER

North Park

GUSTAV: THE CHEAPEST COPY CAT IN TOWN
o nly 8 cents a copy, 7 conts if yo u're making
more than 3 copies from the same o riginal!

�..

'Cabaret':· shining star
among movie musicals
by Elliot Krieger
SP«trum F ilm Cnric

U 1 knew more about musicals,
l could say that Cabsret is sure to
-.ke movie history . As it is, I can
.nly say that Cabsret is easily the
liar American movie of the y.-· . .
It's a movie that does nr . call
..-lV comparisons to ,.,.· od - a
.Cute both to its ori •. nality and
• the paucity o.! lfOOd modern
.ovie musicals - and those it
~ call to mind seem to bear
••l y th e most oblique
~mblances to Cllbaret. In some
ways Ol~ret resembles Lo/11
•nttts
both films used
lkiffiantly fluid photography, and
lath used the sleazy side of
~ainment as a theme. But
C•lJttrtH is a much more
-...resting film .
In other ways it resembles
,.,;mate Lighting, I think,
I!Eause although bottl films are
~ut " music, both manage to
.refully subdue their musical
a:ares. But it would seem to be a
•inor m iracle that a mov1e
-.ical could subvert its mus1c
-.1 still work.
. _ musical rtvle
C8b8ret works so well because
it is working against what Pauline
Kael calls the tradition of the
-organ ic" musical. In most
lltUSicats - films and plays - the
mngs are given the appearance of
.-owing "organically'' out of the
*&lt;tmatic matenal We remembet"
lioods bursting into song in a
West-Side garage ; Anna singing to
Iller daughter before they embark
IDf Siam ; Merry Andrew singing
.,ametry lessons to his students.
This tradition really originated
.with the Italian opera's ana which
te1ghtens and intensifies, rather
ltlan advances. the text or plot .
In American cinema this
musical intensification was
..-obably camed to its extreme 1n
~30 's films of Busby Berkely the plots were flimsy and the
mu sical numbers fanta s t ic,
• y lized and long. There was
a o thing to do after the
extravaganzas of these films but
_, return gradually to e form of
t:Ja turalism , via Astaire/Rogers,
Gene Kelly and finally , the
Broadway adaptations of the 50's

.,d 60's.
Of course; the organ1c mus1cal ,
an Broadway and in Hollywood,
was also a convention . We never
believed in singing sailors, sooners
w settlers, but we could accept
~em as part of the convent1on u n t i I the convention became
rigidified and the directors
.,istook a convention for the
Tradition . The big studios sank
.,illions into these leaden musical
llms, and then the b1g studios
sank

Decadence and wt
Cabaret abandons conventions
in the desperate attempt to
transcend the "tradition" - an
.ttempt that can very seldom
tUcceed, but does so here. All of
1he musical numben in Cabllret
occur in their natural context,
usually as numbers performed in
the cabaret . The effect is, oddly,
both strongly realistic - there are
no . conventions to accept
.whatever, as the cabaret numbers
•e re-created accurately in all of
their tawdry excellence - and
.,tirely artificial, for the cabaret
itself is only indirectly linked to
the plot.
This is a post -Brechtian
musical . The music neither

to mind between Fonda tnd
Minelli - both of course from
acting ·families, both r~~ntly
having given great film
performiiRCel •
30's tnd as
contemporary heroin• (Fonda In

Thrt Shoot

Hom~$,

Don't Thrt7

and Klut•; Mlnetli here and In nt.
Sterilt1 Cuckoo).
intensifies nor advances the plot,
Fond.!• seems to be the 70's
but comments upon it, interrupts version c)f the hardened, bressy
it . The plot, it must be said, is not American actress - Lauren Baalll,
much. A young American (Liza even Joan Crawford. Minelli seems
Minelli) and a young Englishman P.rt of another tradition - the
(Michael York), living in the same zany and explosive actress, such as
ooarding house in Berlin In 1931 , the young Katherine Hepburn (in
fall in love, meet a rich German , Brinfjng up Blby, later almost
carouse with him, split up, go self-parodied in Th11 MlldwomiJIJ
their separate ways - he back to of Ctt.illotl.
Cambridge, she staying on at the
cabaret (where she works) In A new ., penbr
hopes of being "discovered" by a
Liza Minelli seems to e)(plore
film director.
With a plot like this, we don't
mind mterruptions Yet we don't
seem to notice the superficialities
of the plot , for , in the same way
that in most musicals the music
comments upon the text. here the
music and text unite to forfl1 a
sort of lyrical statement about
pre-war Germany.

whUe she -*· She IUddenty L.nny (a failure, too, but for
creates hysterics, and just as other reasons) . Oddly, in the
suddenly stifles them, always non-live cinema, there is a much
keeping within th&amp; boundaries of weater sense of being in a live
her c:t..lcter, for she a1t1 create cabaret. and I several times alm01t
c:hatKters wltb plentY of leeway, burst into spontaneous applause.
c:epeble of doing aJmoct anything On Broadway the applause was
end still maintaining wenJmlltude. always methodical.
I still have some doubts lbout her
The movie does have atrtaln
nanga • an actres~, but there is flaws - the musical score (by
nothing to mar her performance · John Kander and Fred Ebb) is not
in c.bllrrr.
one of Broadway's best; three of
A note on the transformation the ontage sequences are not
from the stage to the screen: on particularly brilliant, but not bad
Broadway there was always the either. These flaws keep Ctll»m
feeling of watching equity actors fr o·m beIng perfect . The
on a stage, trying to "slum lt." We director/choreographer, Bob
applauded as we applaud after any Fosse, has apparently not done
number in a musical. It is really much work so far in films. He has,
however, made the moct nearly
im~ible to transfer a night dub
to the stage, except perhaps perfect movie musical I have ever
purely expressionistically, as in seen.

Being the adventures of a young man
whose principal interests are rape.
ultra-violence and Beethoven.

Blurred identities
Berlin in the 30's ls usually
described as decadent . There
seems to be plenty of money, but
no one seems to have it. In
Cab•ret 's concept1on of the
period, decadence is a sort of
franti c vacuum in which
distinctions and differences are
lost and submerged as money, the
primary distinguisher, vanishes
Consequently, people behave
frenetically in attempts to restore
differences arld order.
The vacuum of decadence is a
social phenomenon which attracts
political groups that attempt to
restore or to create order. In
Germany of course, t he groups
were the Communists and the
Nazis. Their struggle for power "
alway• in the background, but the
background is prominent, for the
decaying Germany of the
foreground is transparent ,
ephemeral. Social decay is not
demeanlngly portrayed as
symptomatic of political decay ,
but is shown as the tableau upon
wtuch decadent political groups
begin to work .
The c abaret becomes the
perfect objective for this brief
period o f Germany's h1story, for
it is in the cabaret that all of the
cont radi ctions be co me
immediately present. There 1s a
great deal of money, but
everything appears cheap and
dingy. Everything is sexual, but
sex is basened and mocked . The
entertainment is artificial and
d "ty . but we are a ware
(particularly as we watch a great
mov1e brilliantly photographed)
that It is al so lively and
1maginat111e.

Maner of ceremonies
If the cabaret can be seen as
the figurative center of Berlin, 1ts
master of ceremonies (Joel Grey)
is the figurative center of the
cabaret - the embodiment of the
movie's themes. He is a melange
of Mick Jagger and Harpo Marx .
he is innocent evil. He laughs
meanly when disguished as a
woman ; welcomes us to the
cabaret with a menacing tri-lingual
song. We are never sure whether
he is a push-over or ultimately
dangerous. Structurally , the whole
movie focuses on him .
In almost any other movie,
Joel Grey's performanc;e would
compleUtly steal the show (as it
did on Broadway) , but here we
also have liza Minelli as Sally
. BQwles, young American working
in the cabaret and hoping to
someday be a star. Liza Minelli is,
certainly, a star - she has the
strength of Barbra Streisand and
the depth of Jane Fonda.
A Mries of comparisons come

NOW ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINAniiiS FOR:
BEST PICTURE
BElT IIIECTOI
BEST SCREENPLAY
BESTEDmll

A SIJnle~ Kvh11ck f&gt;rOtlu• t•-.1 A Cl OCKWORK ORANGE SIJIItng Mal&lt;"olm McDowel • Pi!trl\io. Magee
Ad11enne ('.om Jod Mllodm Kc~rhn · St:'reenplay by Slt~nlt&gt;y Kubnck • Based on the novel by
Antho.tnv Burge-ss · Produced t~nd !)reeled by $tdnley Kubnck • E.ecw.e PIOIM,...
M3• L Rol.lll ana '•l'WY&gt;II • From Warner Bios
crveiiQI"dtrado~aoWvner&amp;o&amp;~
EngagerMnt Start1 W.CS.. ~h 8
BouleV.rd Mllll CINEMA J
Maple &amp; Niagara Falls Blvd 1 837-8300

Excluel~~e

'

�Student
Activities
Coordinator

Academic
Affairs
Coordinator

International
Affairs
Coordinator

Minority
Affairs
Co ord inato r

Tina
Kuus

Natio nal
Affairs
Coordinator
Jacqueline
Weir

Earl
Cole

Daniel
Krie2man *

Sher
Akhtar

Janine
Janas••

Diane
Zwo linski *

Hatem
El-Gab ri**

Brenda
Sm ith

James
Rowe
Edward
Wo lf

Student
Affairs
Co ordinator

Student
Rights
Coordinator

. Gerald
Duci
Vivian
Wiesner •

Deborah
Auerbach

Edward
Gamble

Andrew
Kossover••
Bo nnie
L ev~

James
8~11

Nasser
Zialan

..

David
Sancho
Bob
Pombo••

.

~ght

for space

To the Editor
While it is generally kn own that ethos IS act10g
the part of primadonna and refusing to va,cate its
office in room 345 Norton, few people have •:orne to ,.
understand the chain of events wruch hh•e been
triggered by the m agazine's stub bornness.
As is usi.Wly the case 1n such petty u&gt;OI.IticaJ
battles for greater amounts of temtory, the weak er
organizations, th e proverbial iiU)ocent bystanders,
are those who stand to lose the m ost. Suclh 1s the
case in tbe NortQn Hall Lan~,
....... S~ltt ~eek.s ago, wh·etf' 1tte Norfoni Ffouse
Council undertook its annual "Spri ng cleanin@;, one of
the minor changes was fo r the Undergraduate
Medical Soc1ety to move down the hall from 346 to
343, a c hange which was fuUy accepted by the
Society . Into 346 was moved the A .Y.I and other
related groups who se1zed the t1me and qu1ck ly filled
the room w1th aU of their possess1ons, appmpriattng
the desks, chairs, and bookcase of the U.M.S . in the
process. As stated before, the U .M.S. would have
gladly moved to their new quarters, excc: pt that
Undercurrent hadn' t as yet moved And why hadn't
Undercurrent moved? Because Unsversit·y Press
hadn't moved! And why hadn't UmversJt y Press
moved ? Bec ause the Councal of Rehg.aow.
Organizations hadn't moved! And why h .ad 't the
C.R.O. moved? This is the $50,000 queslton'
BeCtJuse eth01 hadn't moved '
Though the U.M.S. is only a small co~: tn thiS
bureaucratic mill, it must be remembered that 11
does have an Important func tion . the enLightenment
and advisement of our future health pro feSStonals
Because of the 1mportance which we place o n our
function , the Under&amp;raduate Mechcal Society can not
be hindered by the petty dogma of the tllird floor o f
Norton Hall . Therefore, we would hk.e to make 11
known th~t the UMS will again offer it s advisement
services to all members of the Unive~aty Conr1mun•t Y
who are mterested in the Health fields These
services w1ll be available da1ly an our temporary
quarters wh1 ch are located on the first floor of
Cement Hall, west wmg. These quarters have been
made available through the efforts of the
Goodyear-Clement House Councils, to whom we arC'
indebted .
We hope that we will be able t o r•~turn to
Norton Hall an the near future

Positive contributions
To rile f.'ditor
Wath the pr~ent demlloe ut stud ent government .
many of us are not too motavated to take an mterest
m the present electi o n . We hear the same pro miSes
and the last rrunute campaicning uaing such taches u
bands to promote the elecuon o f several candidates.
We can .all wo nder why all of a sudden, so many
1ndJvaduats become so committed to student
government and the welfare o f ~tudents
My re cent res1gnataon o f Student AcllvaiJ~
Loordmator wa~ not uused by my lacl- o f
co mmllm~nl but my d1smay an the lack of co n cern
and motaves of many fellow members ot the
Executive Comm1ttee.
Amo ng t h e many candidates, several distanctly
stand out with the potentaal and desare to be more
representaltves of the v1ews and needs of ~tudents II
such people a~ Debb1e Benson , Davad Keaser Jdf
Osansk1, Haten El~abn and Bob Pombo had been an
office tha~ pa!&gt;t year, student go ve rnment would hc
tn
much mort: stable posat1on and my re~enl
res1gnatwn would never have ~o rne about.
In my tenure an o fface, I hilve 'oeen a t&gt;O~at•vc
anvolvemenl from these ~event! llldtvaduals Bno
Pombo was a very ac ttvc member ot the Speaker ·~

Bureau tlus past year promoting the interest ~
nunonty studen ts Dave Ketser h.as a very keea
mterest and knowledge o f the malonp of the office
of Treasury Jeff Osmski has been the motivatiJI&amp;
force behmd the voter regutratlon dnve on tllia
campus and h.as been very helpful tn brinaina
nationaJ known speakers. Jeff, along with Debbie
Benson have a vtery keen insight into the priorilies al
Student AssoCJalton and would certainly bring about
a realisttc approach Jn maktllg student government a
vaa ble mechamsm
Haten El~.rbra has certamly been one of t ile
most intelligent co ncerned 1nd1vtduals I have mel
wath my past anvolvl'ment. He not only will be aa
asset to prote~t the anterests of fore1gn student.
benef1ts and- bnng foreicn and American students t o
a closer understandang, but will be of great benefit to
the general student body, due t o has past pos1tave
anvo lvemenl 1n 1)peaker's Bureau, Fall Onentataon
Mld lnt ernataonal Activities
If .. tudent g•:&gt;vernment should have any future,
andav1duab SUl h as these must be put 10 offi~
l ndavaduals who can make an honest , positiYe
l·n ntnbutao n , not canduia tcs full o l false promises
and ljUt:\IIOtlahJe nanll\llltiOnS
Mark Wernu

Steve A Lazortt'l
Undugraduare MedrcaJ Sncrety

U.B. boredom
To the Editor
A plague of boredom has struck UB ·&gt;tudents
We sit around every Friday and Saturday rugllt wath
tbe UB b lues. Our beloved Union IS dead Cl&lt;cept for
Our Weekly Movies. But we know that life ex1sts
outside this campus. Why not let life on campus
before t h e plague totally enaulfs us. S .A . tal•e action
now .

\

' STIANGII I' M IHOWINO liONS OF OROWINIJ UP •. • '

Friday, 3 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page sena

�STUDENT ASSOCIATION

STUDENT ASSOCIATION

BALLOT FACSIMILE

BALLOT FACSIMILE

--------·
PARTY

__________________________________________________________ _. _____________
ACADEMIC
PRESIDENT

FRESH FACED
ELEVEN

STEVEN
GLASSMAN

Vantage

KEITH
FRAN K EL

BRENDA
ALLIANCE

DENNIS
WAR D

1st VICE PRES. 2nd VICE PRES.

TREASURER

.

JEFFRE Y
STE INBE RG

AFFAIRS

STUDENT
INTERNATIONAl
ACTIVITIES
AFFAIRS
COORDINATOR

MINORITY
AFFA IRS

TINA
KUUS

NAT IONAL
A FFAIRS

STUDENT

STUDENT

A FFA IRS

RIGHTS

JACQUELINE
WEIR

GERALD
DUCt

LE E
SCHWARTZ BE RG

BOB
BE L L

EUGENE
FAHEY

WILLIAM
CURRAO

EARL
COLE

DOUGLAS
WEBB

JE FFREY
OSINSKI

JANINE
JANAS

DANIEL
KRIEGMAN

SHEA
AKHTAR

BRENDA
SMITH

JAMES
ROWE

VIVIAN
WIESNER

DEBORAH
AUERBACH

EDWARD
GAMBLE

ANDREW
KOSSOVER

~

C.U.R.E.

DEBB I E
BE NSON

T YRON E
SAUN DE RS

DIANE
ZWOLINSK I

.

HATEM
EL-GABRI

EDWARD
WOLF

.
INDEPENDENT

INDEPENDENT

INDEPENDENT

INDEPENDENT

. INDEPENDENT

INDEPENDENT

CHARLES
IRELAND

DAVID
KEISER

JAMES
BEALL

NASSER
ZIAIAN

DAVID
SANCHO
BOB
POMBO

BONNIE
LEVY

�Chesler lectures

Public school conflict discussed
by Amy Weiss

systematic grievance pattern, Dr. Chesler commented that

Spectn1m Staff Writer

It is "vital for students to protect themselvd from t ho
authority of hiera rchical professionals."

Surfacing school conflicts and necessary changes: in
public sch ool education we.re topics of a lecture given by
Mark Chesler Tuesday at Buffalo State College. Dr.
C hesler's remarks were part of a workshop on sch,ool
v10lence sponsored by the college's Faculty Stud•ent
Assocation.
Dr. Chesler , associate professor of sociology at the
University of Michigan , emphasized that conflicts are
normal occurrences stemming from sociaJ contacts. roo
oft en, however, they escalate to violence in Sl.:ho·ols
because adnililist.rators either deliberately or accidenta1lly
fail to d~ver and tteat sources of problems but instc!ad
treat t be.lt symptoms, noted Dr. Chesler.
Our society is fu.U of conflicts arising fmm
differences among the populace; and these same
differences manifest themselves in the school communit y,
he said. Dr. Chesler listed raciaJ injustices, affluence a1nd
poverty, youth without rights, and communities with tilth!
(()ntrol of their schools as sources of conOict
System adds to confficts
Moreover, the nature o f school systems today
pro vides added fuel for conflicts, continued the professor
( ompulsory attendance of students who do not wish to
attend school, Dr. Chesler noted, and adoption of a
professio nal character by the teacher which promotes an
tmpersonal dista n ce between teacher and student also
~ rark
dissatisfaction. He further mentioned tlhat
hureaucratic structure of school systems wherein 11he
Lunsumer has little voice determining poJjcies and finallly ,
1h.- baste inability of public elfucationaJ systems to state
d ear goals or purposes for the education they prov1de,
.:untnbute to these conflicts.
Or. Chesler, also director of the Umvers1ty uf
Mtdugan's Educational Change T eam , charged tlhat
auth~Htl ies have moved to use coercive power When
-. hools adopt rules and regulattons over private areas of
\lutlenl hfe such as controlling grooming, extra-curricu1lar
.Jd tVtl Jes and social fun ctions , they are exercising coercive
po wer, he sa1d . Charging that students are left without a1ny

Racism reinforced
Patterns of white dominance, racism aoo cultural
styles of behavior are reinforced in school systems
nationally, Dr. Chesler declared . He further accused that
cou nselors are often guilty of channeling students into
certain colleges or professions not by talent they may
demonstrate. but by their ethnic backgro und .
Citing that the primary response to a school crisis is
the suspension of th e troublemakers, Dr. Chesler argued
that this assumes there are a limited number of
troublemakers and that the trouble is merely a superficial
problem. "Courses are needed in agitation and
t roub le making." h e said, also noting that 11 is unfortunate
that stud ents aren't utilized as iJtstru~:tors .
There are two basic ways in which school racism bas
been treated, said Dr Chesler : " II is ignored or denied ."
He explained that occurrences are often distort ed so that
no racism was apparent in the ac.:t and furthermore, Dr.
C hesler mentioned that if an issue IS unmistakably racial in
nature , a school administrator may absolve himself from
any responsibility because this situation stem s from
problems in the community
A n."'rgan11.ation of the public school system's
governance is clearly necessary. sa1d Dr. Chesler. "S~:hools
will not exist without more power beang given to
students," he announced . He believes that students should
possess complete autonomy over social fun c tions and
nlra -c urm:ular activities. and be present an adv1sory
grllups whi ch plan the orgamza11on of the educatiOnal
body llinng, rev1ew and ftring of instructors are other
areas where students should be consulted, added Or.
Chesler. Ho wever. he warned that the 1ncorporat1on of I he
student an th e running of school systems should not be
m1staken for substituting a group of younger bureaucrats.
' 'Student elitism must be avoided ," he sa1d
Student-teacher meetings
Dr Chesler suggests that perhaps l o r one half day
per week students and teachers meet to d1scuss the

...

Mark Chesler
organizatiOn of the o~~chiool day. He further suggested that
antt-ractst programs ne•ed implementation along with new
forms of minority con1trol , and the roles of teachers and
student5 need redefining within the context of new
educational structures which these reforms would bring.
Tu conclude, Dr . C hesler admitted that education
will always be in the process o f solving its problems.
Responding to a question c.:on cerning where edue&lt;~ tors
should begin th1s chamge, he said that the educational ,
cull ural, social and political arenas must all be entered by
quahfied reformers to elffect change.
Most recently , l)r. Chesler served in an adv1sory
capac II y for the Fletschmann CommissiOn stud yang New
York State et.lucation . 'fhe findings of the comnussion.
disclosed w1tlun the past month, advised a ma.s sive
revamping of the stau:'s educational sys tem specifically
with respect to in tegration and district financing . Chesler
also served on the K•erner Commission, the President's
cornm1ssion on civil disorder.

THIS IS THE END
of votina

for the
Student Association Elections

Vote Today
or never

Machines open until 5:00 p.m. in most
locatilons. But for you last minute people
they will be open until 9:00 p.m. in Norton .

results announced tonight at ll:OOp.m.
Friday, 3 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�c-_

-

Look out Benga/s
by Barry Rubin

Bl ackmore needs 29 agai nst .
by Howie F aiwl
A 11t. Sport1 Edlror
Buffalo Stat e to catch Ed Eberle
'
for fourth place.
In
24
ho
urs
the
Buffalo
hockey Bulls will be
However, the probably keys t o
jetttng o ut to Bost on to compete in the ECAC
Buffalo's victory were transfers,
Division II fi rst round playoffs against a highly rated
Bob Vartanian and J1m Tribble .
Boston S tate team . This is the fli'St such competitio n
for the Bulls in thei r short varsity history and
Vartanian did not have a great
promises. to be a hotly contested affair.
shooting. night but sparked the
If tlhe fifth-seeded Bulls d o manage to get by
BuJJs in a near flawless second half
fourth -sc:eded Bost o n Stat e, the y will then proceed
with seven assists. Tribble, pl:~ying t o the s-emi-finals o n March 8 against the v1ctor of
his fifth super game in a row, the Verm o nt-New England con test.
added 20 points and 12 rebou nds
The fifth seed given to Buffalo, was of cou rse ,
t o aid the Buffalo a ttac k . disappoi1nting to several individuals here, in that t he
all important ho me court advantage was sacrificed
Alth o ugh needing t reatmen t
and the BuJls wtll no w be faced playing before 4500
duung every luU in the ac.: uon. hostile funs at Walter Brown n nk .
[ribble continues to put out all he
Yet 11 was somewhat predu.:table, due to the
has as Buffalo sets dead a1m on Bulls' t:omparably weaker schedule and to a
pre-season poll of ECAC coaches who had ra nked
the .500 mark.
Buffalo lfifth among the 22 d1v1s10n teams.

Sports Editor

•

"We were sharp, and I ttunk
we're ready for Buffalo State,"
proclaimed an elated Buffalo
basketball Coach Ed Muto. Muto
was happy because his BuUs had
just won their fourth straight
jl;lrne. I 03-76 over MerrimC3k
( 15 8) to go I 1 - 12 this season .
Coming up Sunday is the always
compet itive rivalry with the
Buffalo State Bengals. Buffalo's
motive 1s to avenge a string of six
straight Bengal vic tories.
After a t ough first half against
stubborn Merrimac k, the Bulls
broke open Tuesday evenmg's
contest with a big assist from the
bench . Soph John Forys and
senior captain Neil Langelier came
mto the contest late in the half
and sparked a string of I 4 straight
Buffalo points, to help pull away.
M err~mack's
strong
performance was led by speedy
guard Gary Monahan and sharp
shooting Phil Mc Donald who led
the Warr1ors' fast breaking
offense After facing Albany's ball
control offense Monday, the BullS
adjusted weU to the Warriors'
running style. Muto 'ommented.
"ThiS IS the mark of a real good
club, be1ng able to adJUSt on such
short nottce. A lot of people lake
us for granted , but looK to see
who we lost 10 ..

Despite the1r II I I \cason's
record the Bengals will appear 10
their third straight NCAA college
d 1vis10n basketball tournament.
Thll&gt; year the Bcngals earned the
b1d through defauh . but the series
(Buffal o leads 31 - 10) always
features exciting basketball

8Jackmore explodes late
Curt Bl ackmore, Buffalo's
record breakin g junior p1votman .
had one of his poorest halves ol
the season agamst Merrimack 111
the first stanza. Bothered by a
s t omac h problem, Blackmore
scored but four 1n the first half.
the n exploded with 21 1n the
second half fo r a game high of 25
points. In domg so. Blackmore set
new Buffalo records for rebounds
in a seaso n (378) and edged up to
fifth on the all-time scoring lls1.

Buffa lo students a.n gam
admittance to this Bengal home
contes t at Erie Communit y
College, lo r $I and presenta llo n
of an identification card . All
" ' ket) must be purchased at the
gate WB FO will broadcast live at
:! .50 p.m. The Baby Bulls also
dose out theu season with a I
p.m sta rt preceeding the 3 p.m .
vars1ty game. Buffalo won liS last
outmg 80 75 w1th h1ghly touted
Gannon College as Chuck Axe
(26) and Bob Dkk1nson (22)
sparked the BuUs.

Bengals led by Bums
In Buffalo State, the Bulls f:~ce
a squad wtth two sure ~larl\, heavy
wrth ex penence. Durie Burns, a
6 6 p1votman, gave Blackmore a
tough battle Jn last ye&lt;Jr ·~ 87 85
Bengal victory . won on il Randy
Smith ,ump sho t 111 the last
~lond . Ken Zak, a 5 II semor
guard , runs the club and b1l8St\
three years of solid experier"c

First meeting tbis season
Although it IS the first playoff compc lltio n ever
uwolvi nMt Buffalo , it wtU not be the finit tt me the
Bulls have faced Boston State. The two teams did
no t meet thiS season; but in prt:vious yea rs Buffalo
has kn oc:ked off the Wam ors two out of th ree t1mes,
tncluding a 3·2 v1c tory last season at the Boston
Arena . Apparently tho ugh , Boston Stale has co me a
long wa~· in one year In an unusually heavy 23-game
con feren ce schedule, they have compiled a 13- 10
record with some very stunnmg upsets. Earher th1s
season th ey defeated th1rd-seeded Mernmack tw1ce,
they were winners of the Codf1sh Bo wl at the Bost on
Arena dunng C hnstmas, and they shocked Yale, a
Divisi o n I team , 7·5 o n the road .
The Warri ors have played a ntt her rough
schedule. A good many of the1r ten losses have come
agamst !Ihe reputed powerhouses of Div1sion II ,
mclud1ng, Vermont ( tw1ce), University of Mass.
(twice), and Bowdotn. Yet, and this may prove to be
a big factor, - they appear mconsistent and are
currently• taking a four-pme losing streak tnto the
playoffs.
Th ~:r hiiiVe 10111 to hoth New England and SaJem
State, lc hools wh ich the Bulls have beaten rather
handily this year. H owever t he Warriors are qu1te
ex perienced , poised a nd well-balanced and boast two
hJgh scoring centers in Captain Craig Cu llen (35
points) a.nd sopho more sensation Dun~n Campbell
(38 points). They are also sohd tn the nets With both
Mtke Sullivan and Do ua Brooks aUowing a bttle over
three goals a game. This skimp y netmindtng wtll bt' a
key test lfor Buffalo's h1gh scoring forward s.
The aame wiJJ definitely be the toughest for the

THE
AFRICIAN CLUB

Honest &amp; Reliable

w p port:J

1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

fi&amp;MOIII
-.~

\1

Brenda
AlliA NCE

3637 UNION ROAD

- -··•...- ... open 24 hrs. aauv

not

1- •

OP,EN 9:30a.m . - 9 :00p.m.

C.U.R.E

Professor of Hist ory and
Associate Director of
the Latin-America Center
University of ca lifornia, Los Angeles

=

MARCH 3
1:00 p.m.
CONFER ENCE ROOM
Norton Union
_DPEN TO THE PUBLIC

Co-sponsored by.
Student Association
and

Monda y thru Saturday

LOW, LOW, PRICES ON VITAMINS &amp; FOODS

Sun. t hru Thurs.

3300 SHERIDAN DRI VE

Dr. James W. Wilkee

NATURAL PEANUT BUTTER
(Made while you wait)
from fresh peanuts, no sallt added .

AFTE R 9:00p.m.

65¢

by

EALTH.FOOD
S
1451 Hertel Ave. Near Norwallk 837-7661

Served Mo n. thru Fri.
Until 11 a.m. and
Sun. thru Thurs.

OR TOAST PLUS 2 COUNTR
FRESH EGGS, as you like 'em.

" REVOLUTION IN 20TH CENTU RY LATIN AMERICA :
The Reordering of N ational Priorities"

==r=::e~e~, ~R~.,~1·····.A:;;

P&amp;RClllud
BIISPICIIL

3 BUTTERMILK PANCAKES

In Conjunction with International Month

the

- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER

Council on International Stud1es

LITICAL AO--··---···---···---···---·:

~-~~~~-~-~~~~~-~-~~~~~-~-~~~~-~~-~-~~~~-~P
~A~I~O~PO~
VOTE C.U.R.E. TODAY !

•

Milu!Dunn
will be heavily counted on to keep the Bulls •n t he
game.
There's a funny ltung about playoffs.
~rt ic ularly for a team that has never competed m
them before.
Competition tends fo be h1ghJy emotional and
the auccess o f a t eam depends laraely upon the stal e:
o f mind of the participants. Any observer of last
apnng's Eastern R egio nal Baseball Playoff in which
Buffalo was involved , will recall how a green Buffalo
s quad was lit erally " psyched" o ut of the
to urnament .
Hopefully , th r hockey Bulls, who have in the
past been known to let down at times, will be
mentaUy prepared for the ensumg battle tomorrow
It will take more than Johnny Stran&amp;es' fancy
footwo rk to win this o ne.

a lectu re on

AUT O SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

I

Bulls to date. Hopefully the Bulls will be able to
allay aU crit icism t hat had been expressed over t he
weakness of their reaular aeuon schedule and finally
prove that they can compete with the best.
The team is healthy, althou&amp;h backup goalie
Russ F rench is still a q uestion ·m ark thus Mike Dunn
miaht bave to go aU the way. Dale Dolmage and
Mike Klym, who ftnisbed t he year tied for the team
scoring title, wit h 30 points each, were both selected
honorable mention to the ECAC All-East team o f
the week , and sh ould provide needed scoring punch .
The d efo.MC il just now
t o com~ around and

TODAY
Brenda
All. lA NCE

Imported &amp; Domestic

~Binlccm

"

Hockey Bulls go on·the road ·
to Boston for ECAC playoff

Hoopsters look good

ROW 4

El.~BRI - INTBRNATIONAL

I...........................__....................................................
•

DEBBIE BENSON - PRES.
TYRONE SAUNDERS - 1st V .P
DOUG WEBB - 2nd V.P.

~

Page ten . The Spectrum . Friday, 3 March 1972

JEFF OSINSKJ - TREAS.
JANIE JANAS - ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
BONNIE LEVY - STUDENT RIGHTS

1
•

HATEM
AFFAIRS
EO WOLF - NATIONAL AFFAIRS
OlANE ZWOLINSKJ - STUDENT ACTIVITES
•

~

�CLAIIIIFIEI

AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED ADS m1y be pl1c;~
MoncDy thru Frld1y betw•n 9 1.m .
and 4 :30p.m . 11 355 Norton Hall .
''HELP
WANTED"
Ida
c:~nnot
discriminate on the bllll of sex , color,
creed or nellon11 orl9lf\ to 1ny e ktent
p.e ., preferlbly 11 11111 d lsc:rlmlnatorv) .
"FOU ND" lck Will De run f ree of
cna rve fo r 1 malCimum of 2 day s ana
IS w ords.

WANTED
ALLENTO WN L akeview Community
Health C enter, 273 Mary land (West
Soda) needs eq uiPment like coucnes,
ehaors Mld medlc:~l equipment . C a ll
856-5060 .
"OCCASIONAL Dabysltter , .. W eekend
evenings. Preferably In snort Wilking
distance to Ma in. Highgate area . C all
835-6180.
PART·TI M E d1n cers wanted . $4 p er
hour . Radice's, 74 w . Chippewa. Apply
atter 4 p .m .
DON'T forvet - ac:~demlc: apparel sale
IO&lt;UY In Room 266 Norton Hall - 5%
u lf all ourenases.
BAR MAIDS - part · tlme, thr. . a nd
lour days. Good pay, nice lounge.
N ot es, 7 p .m .-3 a .m . 21 Abbo tt Ra ,
near Bailey C a ll 1 25 · 9497 .
ReLI ABLE person w ltn photograpn tc
knowledge af\d equipment to take
wedding p ictures Pnone 694 3061.
BA BYSITTER want~ M onday thru
f nday from 3 p .m . -6 p m . Also
S • turd a y from 9 a .m 2 p .m
If
p&lt;&gt;Hible 836 1974.

ATTRACTIVE room av1ll1ble In
private home, Eteetrtsvllle, for girl
student or urld . Possibility o f p.,t ·tlm e
work . C all 832-9011 .

TWO AFGHANISTAN coats r-vularty
$75, now $30. one turkish IKke t with
c:oll•r, regularly tiiO, now t30 . "The
~ople," 144 Allen . 882~283 .

WANN A WRI TE? C lll 4114 - Ilk for
Lynda 01 IMve • meuage. Spectrum
FNture Staff ..-cts more talent~
people! Come Join us,

2 FURNISHED IPI•rtments In same
house - 3 people u c n - 8-m lnute
Wllk - summw MIIIGn. 831 · 2215 .

NIKON F ( black body) 50 mm 12 .0
141nS, hOOd 1nd c:~se, $130 . Also 21 mm
14 0 N lkkor w lln viewfinder , hood,
$105 . C a ll 883-4310 .

FOLK GUITAR lessons popular
songs - f109er and flat plc k lnv 11 ytes.
Jeff. 835 · 3384, 135-'J229 . Good-«&lt;ye
Maril la ,

RIDE BO!ARD

FEN DER Vllta~r 12"1trl ng ~oustlc
1Yt YNrl Old, $ 100. 186· 1967 eft e r 6
p .m.

~ IDE WANTED to Colorado In Marcn.

Will Share driving and ex penHS . C1 11
Frea urly mornin gs. ·83 7·2319 .
~IDE WANTED to C:hlcago and bac k .
Weekend of Marcn 3. snue driving,
expenses. Call Clauellil 886 -5052.

BLACK &amp; WHITE TV, $ 25 . Floor
modet, rec:o ndlllonea . Also repa ir TVs
ana
stereos.
Call
Ed
896-4•09
IIYen tngs.

TWO GIRLS need ride to Miami
Fl orida .
W ill
share
driving
and
ex pen ses. Ciln teav•o anytime . Call
Linda 837 13~8

1963 CHEVROLET Impala coupe, V-8
au tomallc.
runs
e kcellent ,
Ideal
lransportallon , 11 75 . 7• 1 ·3921 alte r
5 30 p , m

TO N .Y .C. March 9 o r 10 . Call Jell
821 · 1089.

GUILD 12·\lrlng guitar , F l1 2, $ 225 .
'63 Econollne van , Ruf\s . 1nspected,
1100. 88 3-0880 a lter 6 :00 .

NEED RIDE to Potsdam, weekend o f
Mar 10. C all Renee, E133 ·7162 .

vw '65 bu9, 4 8,000 miles , sunroof,
push -out
windows ,
new
bra kes
Dependable
Make
fair
o ffer
835 3878

~OO M FOR 2 peo~•le 10 M iam i one

way b y car and autotraln , $45 each
tot a l.
Depart
Mar . 5 . 688 · 7375
evenings

1968 VB bug 50,000 miles Excellent
condition , 11 200 or best otter, T om
881 3639

RIDE WANTED Tu.esaay , Tnursday
mornings between 1(1 and 11 to Main
Clmpus from Sh errclln-colvln a rea .
C a ll Andrea. 874_.5").

1964 VW VAN, new engon e , rad iO, gas
htl41er, vtry g ood conditio n, $600 or
best o tter 832 6!'164

R IDE
WANTED
to Boston
lor
w ..kend of Marcn 3-6. C a ll Ira at
1132 ·9689 .

1970
JAGUAR
XKE
E .. t ellent
cond ition Brand new AM/F M st ereo
rad iO tnctuaea Call 688 7327 even ings

FOR SALE

REFRIGERATORS.
stoves
• no
wash ers Recondl\ooneo. aellvered a na
gua• an teed
O&amp;.G Appliances, 844
Sycamore TX4 ·3 18 3 .

TWO SMALL oeqs, one la rge D~ .
kitchen table, c hairs, other turnlture,
ChNp Your offer . 884· 344!'1 .

RtSE AR C H {term) papers bought,
sord
tll thanged . Contac t Mar c at
8JI·3370 at any lime

BRAN D
NEW
man's
ten -speed
Columo la bicycle, $Et5 o r best offer
C all Susan 837 8276 .

"ANASTASIA" n eeos a home She 's a
1961 toval)le , lillie T e m pest , 82,000
mites All she ~,;osh IS S 110 C a ll At at
831-4113 Or OtOOle at 83:!-6815

'ilART $ 2.00 per hour salary plus
uurrus work 4 8 p .m w...,days;
I() 2 p .m. Saturdays. C all 835 ·3803 or
Tr 'I 0402

TA NDBER G 12, Dual 1219 , Bose 901,
Ma c C-26, MR-GS, M 1·3, S co tt 299 F,
Oyna
PAT-4,
120•. A25 , Braun
Speakers, Allee A -7 SOO II, AMPOX
AX -50 , Bo~n tuner , 897..()297 after 6
p .m.

PRICES
REDUCED
a 9a11o
un
rema1nong ~;l earan c e !Ienos w e need
room
"Th e People," I 44 A lien
88 2 6283

• UL L O R parl ·llrne lobs available with

Se\tllne Inc . C all Art 886 ·209• or
Moio.e 835 5215 . Meetings •• Executive
RMu ad» Inn

PERSONAL

AVOID
THE.
rush
DNUtlful
2 hedroom aparlment ava ilable 1n
Jlone Wall&lt;lng distan ce . C all 831 ·2826

HARMAN KARDON G30, 630 - Oull
power
supply recnlvers, Hegeman
speakers, Philips turntab les, cueing,
•nt ·Skat e, auto-shutoff lor the pric e o f
an A .R Sincla ir 301)0, 50 R &amp; AL
watt s $150, fine selec ti on o f Im p orted
English equ ipment, Quad, Radford,
Oecu , B&amp;W, 1197.0297 or 684-4937

ANASTAS IA WANTS C U R.E

APAR TMENT to re nt or sublet , 3
be&lt;1room, t~erte l nNr COlvin . 1 110
"''"ntn • 87!'1-8260 Keep trying .

1970 TRIUMPH Spitfire. W hile booy ,
black c onvertible tOI), 16,000 miles
M ust sell! C a ll John 6 :l2-017 6.

MR an&lt;l M~ S S . : C an Michele go to
tne prnm with me. Thanks In advanc.e .
Boo

APARTMENT FOR RENT

ROOMMATE WANTED . Own room .
Hertel~olvln arN, tSO/ month plus
utilities. C all Ron or Bruee , 8 73-1132.

CA P t.• OOWN sate, 5% off ell
purchall$ today, Room 266 N o non
Hall .

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Cla u o la 99 Merrlm ' '· Jo ·Ann and C arla

SUE' Plea.. c;all Burl/ Marty a Dout
your nou .. on E09tew 00dt Don't 111
me downt 832-6666 .

...----PAt 0 POL .

1 •~

-:::

·••-•t.8.
TODAY!

.;:':&lt;..___ _ _ PAID POL . A D - - - - '""
MALE 35, co llege pro fetsor, two
c n lld re n, t.6el(s le mate compa nions hip.
Marriage possible P 0. Box 1031.
Atlanta, Ga . 30302 .

oN£ ARE. now open Monday a s well

TuMda y
through
SaturdaY.
f hursday even rnv Itt 10 o .m
:&gt;eople," 144 Allen 882-6211 3

as

a lso
"The

LOST &amp; FOUND

JOB
RESUMES
professional,
eonfl &lt;lentlal consultation . S pecial rates
for stu &lt;lent$, recent graduates and
vetera ns. 8 3 5_.4 7 3
PUT TH E fun back Into drtvlng - nave
your
care
expertedly
tun~
at
Independent
Foreign Car S erv ice ,
8 39- 1850.
U NSELl EV ABL EII I Jet to Europe,
8169 , roundt rip N Y .C. departure,
C ontact S teve Oold . 8 35· 7519 •fter 1
p.m .
WRITERS : Talent needed fo r Feature
S t aff. C all 4114 If Interested . Ask for
Lyn&lt;U 1 nd INve .a meuave.

FOU ND - wallel 2127
I neater
IOenll tv
ano
&gt;oectr"m o ff ice

O N SHIPS! Men . Wom en.
summer Job Of c;areer. No
ekPirlence reQuired . Excellent pay .
Wortdwlae
tra ve l.
Send
12
ror
Informa tion S eafax, Box 1239-NF.
S NI tie, Wuh lngton, 98111 .
~rrect

SU MMER OLY MPI CS In Munich Aug .
26
to
S ept
10,
1972 .
Accornmodat lons In youth hostel P•u• c nolce o f approxim ately 7 tickets
to
d ifferent
events,
1120
For
Information, phone 833-4638

Conferen•e
c.l.a rm
••

FOU ND - one llgtll brown tern a le
ouppy with while chest , •bout lhree
nonths ota, In viCin ity o r Wlnspeat
'ear Angle St., wea ring biU'- tull a o
128 Tyler St. 8 31 ·0430

ROOMMATES WANTED
CO UPL.E o• two roomm•to&gt; wanteo
ommedlately
L a rge room In nuge
house. Call839 · 3019
ONE. OR TWO fema le room m etes
wanted . Apt . on Hertel, o w n rooms.
.35 •. 875 ·8260 . C all AIOUf\d 10 am
ROOMMATE WANT£0 to st1e re
2·b*droom apartment, f ive minut es
t rom campus . Own room, • 60tmoolh
plus utlllttet. C all Krls, 832·20 4 7

STUDEN TS
younv m a rried
worr ied abou t your fln•ncl a l luture 7
End your speculation . C a ll H e rb
63 4 61170
C H EC K THE 50% O FF TABLE a t
Buflal o Textbook Stores , 3610 Main
5 1.

FL V BUFFALO 5\udent flights to
sunny Acapulco • I• Universal Airlines
0C 8 111. L eave N .Y .C. March 31.
R etur n April 1 From s 179 Contact
Alan Mar mutsteln eventnos, 6-9 p .m
837 · 0393 .
ANTIQUES and moo er n furniture,
teramlcs, ctllna, e tc. See Sid et
Y esterday 1o Tomorrow Sho P . 1•39
Hertel Ave .

APARTMENTS WANTED
COU P\..E oeslres 2·bedroom 11• 1 In
N ort h Bulfalo are• April, May or June
J Reasonable 837 -9074 .

INSURANCE

S ZO REWARD If you secure 4 or
5 beoroom apt ctose 10 c.ompus. C all
831 2170 or 831 2080

----- ------

11 5 OF FERE D of you secure us a 4 -6
oedroom nouse near c a m pus lor
Septem be r or u• lle• tf tease re ou1reo
C lll 833 7849
APARTMENT w.anted tor lou• m ale
sludenu tor n e xt year Con tact M ike ,
Howle or Oave at 8311 · 11 67, 831 ·2 897
or 831 4lll Reward

IN~URAN~t

CENTER

3800 HARLEM RD ....................................837-2278
NIGHT 839.0566

S25 IS YOURS ol you secure lor u• a 4
or S beoro om hOuse near c a mpus l or
Septe m ber
C all
831 ·3 761
or
831 3993.
SENIORS S EEK apt . for 3 Of 4,
'72 13, OWl' rooms, near campus.
Renee or Mar y, 833 · 7162. between
5 8 p m

INTERNATIONAL MONTH
sponsors
tht movie

1 NEED A room n N r cam pu s. A tso,
my room h available sta nlng Mar ch 19
or soon et. (On Hertel). Montn o l May
tree &amp;32 9760 .

'IIRGR'

lr ---------,
Vote

Fridey, March 3, 72
Diefendorf 147 at 7:30p.m. and 9:30p.m.
Tickets available - Norton Ticket Office
Price - only 25¢

II
II
II

COFFEE -

RAPPING -

ALLIANCE
Row3

'L • •

Palo Po l Ad •

•

•

J

SELLS, TOPS, BOTTOMS

March 8

Here they come ! Hundredl o f
Ouys and Gals know tnls Is
tne
p la c e .
Army ·Navy
bargoolns w ltl'l to &lt;Uy' a lool&lt; .
Oood goock ; 900d prices ;
good people! T ne re11 Levi's:
F lare •nd Stralgnt, Denim or
Cor duroy . Air Force parku,
Government
Oreal Coats.
Heavy stufll Come tne
r ea l
M cCoy' s
and
SAVEl

EXCHANGE OF IDEAS

If you have something tor say - say it where

WIL L

•

•nd THINGS

UNIVERSITY FREE TIME IS A CHANCE FOR PEOPLE TO VOICE THEIR IDEAS
AND OPINIONS ABOUT THIS UNIVERSIITY .

P EOPLE

I
I
I

Brenda

University F:ree Time
WE~d.

J

PIZZA GO·GO : ThiS w"k's special la rve p llu, 2 FREE bOttles of soda ,
small ptua - one trM 838-4557 .
OPE N SUNDAYS, FREE DELIVERY
to dorms.

DE BBY I have your piastre 90991es
:all me S JS-439!'1 K a thy

REGARDLESS OF AGE OR RECORD
LOW DOWN PAYMENT- EASY TERMS

starting

~na

JOBS

t'VE BEEN neglect ed Nob ody wants
to buy me M y name ts Anastul a a nd
t'm lor s.ale lor only $110 t'm a
2-&lt;loor,
blue
Tempest
with
an
autom at 4c transm ission, 8 2,000 miles,
and a very se• Y bOdY . II lntereneo , UH
~1831 .. 11 3.

IMMEDIATE FS·I

,__ _ _ NEAR KENSINGTON

FREE 6 ·w•k old kittens, m ale
femlle. e.ll 836 · 7 076.

AD----~

~YeTIIItew 4

A U T 0 and C Y C l E

GUIDANCE

MISCELLANEOUS
THREE DNutlfut kittens n.eed a good
home , 6 weeks- old, litter trained. Call
!Uren after 9 p.m . 837..0533 .

GAMBLING BLOOD? ACQUIIntance
desired or woman 18·22 wno Is INn
and attractive with warm, mild even
d lsp0$ltlon bY man (251 who likes
favored odds. InQuire B o" 70 .

Luv,

DEAR M OT H , the past 4 months have
bten something special Love J .J

ROOMMATE WANTED to share apt.
In Allentown, $40, utilities Included .
O wn room. Come to 20 Collave St.,
uPJtllrs, after she.

LISTEN

Everyone is invited. CALL 83'1·5502 for more informatiion.

Dlv. Wlshlnvton Sur p lus C e nter
-

l/2 Hr. Fr. . Parl&lt;!ng

Friday r 3 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven
•

I

,1 ,1, 1,1 I '

: • t ...

'o

I

··' I

' '· ' .

..

�What's Happening?

Announcements
The Arab Cultu~l Club will meet Sunday at 3
p.m. in the Rathskellar of Norton . Elections will be
held.

UB Kuate Club holds workoots every Tuesday
and Friday from 7- 9 p.m. In the Women's Gym. All
are encou~ged to attend.

WBFO (88.7) presents poet Charles Bachman
with an evening of poetry and song. The evening will
be taped for later broadcast and everyone is weJcome
to attend the live performance Sunday at 7:45 p.m.
in Room 327 Norton . Admission is free.

The Hillel Class in T or.ah with Commentvies
will meet tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. in Or. Hofmann's
home, 12 Colton Drive.

The Inter Residence Council has petitions
available for the IRC election in the IRC office, main
floor of Tower Hall.
Bisonhcad, the senior men's Honor Society, will
be reviewing andidates among juniors in April.

Students' academic records, University activities and
community service will be taken into consideration.
All those junior men who wish to be considered are
to contact the Off-Campus Housing Office in
Goodyear Hall or call 831·3303. Records must be
received by this office by March 31 .
The Eastern Orthodox Student Organiution
(EOSO) presents "Expo '72: Man and h1s God," a
discussion on the Orthodox conception of the
relationship between God and man, Sunday at 7.30
p.m. in Room 232 Norton.
Hillel will hold a Sabbath Service e~t 8 p.m. this
evening in the Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd Dr.
Justin Hofmann will spee~k on: "The jew1sh Altitude
Toward Jesus."
The SCUBA Club w1ll meet Sundt~y e~t 4 p.m. in
Room 3 Clark Gym. If you plan to go to rlorida
over spnng recess, please attend.
The Record Co-op will hold a meeting today at
4 p.m. in Room 5 Norton Basement . Anyone
1nterested tn worktng 1n the co-op IS urged to allend .
Students for Israel wHI have folkdancing
tomorrow from 2 6 p.m . in the fillmore Room.
In)tructton is from 2-4 p.m. and request) from 4- 6
pm

The Women's Prison Committee is holding a
bake sale today from 10-4 p.m. Money will be used
to buy supplies for the women in the County Jail
and Penitentiary and to stan a halfway house for
women getting o ut of prisons
UB Vets Club and the Utniversity Chapter of the
Vietnam Veterans Against the War will meet today
at 5 p.m. at the Gabler Bar and Restaurant, 1285
Hertel. An important discuss•ion on the formation of
the Western New York Veuerans Union w1ll take
place.
The HilleJ Tiilmud Class will meet on Sunday at
3 p.m., in the library of the U1llel House.
The Unitarian Church o f Amherst, 6320 Main
Street, Williamsville, is having a Children's Sing
Along with singer Ro) Magc•rian Sunday at 3 p.m.
Donation · $1.00 adults, $.510 children. PrQ&lt;;eeds go
to Save the Children Federation
lesbiilns Uniting, UB Women's Liberation and
Women's Studies College will sponsor a discuss1on
for women on Le~ian r ernm1sm tomorrow at 4
p.m . at I 08 Winspear Avenue. Charlotte Bunch and
Rita Mae Brown from a lesbian femm1st collective in
Washington, D.C.. will g1ve a t.e~lk and lead discussion.
The Hillel Clns in Conversational Hebrew
(ildnnc:cd) wtll meet on Sunday at 12:30 p.m. in
Room 262 Norton. The Conversational Hebrew Cla)s
(eJementary) w1ll meet in Room 262 Norton dt I :30
p.m.
WfRR w1ll have &lt;1 marathon of 36 hour\ of
continued mus1c conte~ts and pnzes beginning today
at 4 p.m.

Friday, M.vch 3
Film: Eyes of H~/1, directed by Julian Roffman,
sponsored by CAC, Capen 140, check for
show times, also shown tomorrow.
Israeli film : The Siege, 7:30 p.m., Diefendorf 147,
tickets $.25, sponsored by Students for Israel.
Concert: "Daisy: A concert sculpture," Joel
Chadabe, director of Electronic Music Studio,
SUNY at Albany, one-half hour runs, between 8
p.m. and 10:30 p.m., Room 100 Baird Hall .
Lecture/demonstration : Joel Chadabe discusses
electronic music, 2 p.m., Room 101 Baird Hall.
Film: Sou/ to Soul with Wilson Pickett, Ike and Tina
1 urner, sponsored by UUAB, Conf~rence
Theater, check for showtimes, also presented
Sunday.
Seminar : " Philosophy of Science" by W. Coleman, I
p.m., Room 11, 4244 Ridge Lea.
UUAB Coffeehouse : Dave van Ronk, 7:30 p.m . and
10:30 p.m., first floor cafeteria, Norton, ticket) :
~ 1.00 before 5 p.m., $ 1.25 after 5 p.m., also
presented Saturday.
Afnca Week: Drums and song will pervade Norton
Hall when the African students join in hours of
their native dances, Room 240, 8 p.m.
Saturday, Much 4
Film . Mad Dogs and Englishmen w1th Joe Cod.er
.tnd Leon Russel, presented by UUAB,
&lt;..onference Theater, check for showt1mes.
Art Show . Fourth year student paintmg show, 9
a.m.- noon, 4240 Ridge lea.
International Week : Dr Andzeas Papandzeou,
speaker on Greece, information at Norton de\k.
Play · Guess What's Cooking for Dinner? , sponsored
by the BAWA (B i c~ck and White AC!ton). 8 30
p.m., Gleasner Hall Theater, Erie Communtty
College, Main Street e~nd Youngs Road, tickc.-1\
$2.50 for adults, $ 1.50 for student~ and scmor
cit1zem.
lnternationdl Week · Music recital (Korean), 8 p.m.
Sunday, March 5
Cont.ert · UB Symphony Band , Frank I Cipolla,
dtrector, 8 :30 p.m., Ville~ Mana College
Auditorium.
Cuncert: [venmgs for Muste Theater, Ridlard
Trythdll,
composer/pianist,
8.30
pm,
Albright-Knox Gallery .
Concert: Student recital, Christopher Coover, lute, 5
p m , B.t~rd Rec1ul Hall
Exh1b1tion: "Movement, Optical Phenomena and
Light
Kinetic and Opm Painting t~nd
Sculpture," Albnght Knox Art (.,allery, through
April9

Available at the Ticket Office

Studio Arena Theater
Through March 25 · Romeo and Juliet
April 6 23 Ploy Strindberg
Popular Concerts
March 8 · Delc~ney and Bonn1e, Billy t'rc\Wn (K)
March 17 . Seal\ and Croft (K)
Mc~rc h 19· Sh1rley Bas){'y .md Woody llcrm,m
(K)

March 22 Rtchard Hm1s (K)
April 1· Lily Tomli n (K)
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra (K)
Mc~rch 3· Gershwin Night
M.trch 10 Pop' Spring Fash1on Shnw
March 19 &amp; 2 I Christine Waleu\kl
M&lt;~rc h 24 Pop&lt;.
Gay Ninctie\ Night
Internationaf A ttract1ons
March 15· Pre~gue Symphony Orchestrcl (K)
March 22 0~1pov Balalaik.J Orchestra (L)
UPI

Oant..l"

March I0 &amp; II NikniJI\ O,tnl£ r heatrc (B)

Sports Information

with an identification card.
Due to complications in scheduling, the to-ed
Today:
Vars1ty swtmmlng upper NYS volleyball mixer will be held Monday dl li p.m All
championships, Hobart College.
students are invited to attend w11h tee~m s or
TomorTow : Varsity hockey vs. Boston State at individually. Refreshments will be served durmg the
Boston University\ Walter Brown rink, 8 p.m.; competition and dwards will be presented .
ECAC Division II playoffs round one; varsity fencing
The date for the doubles handball tournament
~Clark Gym with Syracuse and Notre Dame, 1 p.m; has been set for Monday, March 22, and will run
varsity indoor track at the Cortland Invitational .
until Easter recess. Major activitie) ~&lt;et for April
Sunday: Varsity basketball vs. Buffalo State at include, Bicycle grand-prix, Saturday, April 22; track
Erie C.C., WBFO·FM radio, 2 :50 p.m .; freshman dlld field day, Saturday, Ap~ril 15; and tug-o-war set
basketball vs. Buffalo State at Erie C.C., 1 p.m.; for Saturday, April 15. K•eep in touch with The
Buffalo students can purchase tickets for this Spectrum sports page and sports information column
Buffalo Sute home contest for one dollar at the gate for future intramural and recreation information .

Courtyard Theatre
I he Truil of the Cutonwlllr Nint'

Dipson's Plaza North
F1ddler on the Roof

Coming Events - on Selle March 4
March 21· The Bcachboy~ (K)
Mdrch 24 Humble Pic (M)
KEY
K Kleinhans
M - Memorial Auditonum
B - Buffalo State
l
Loew's Buffalo Theater
- AmyAhrtnd

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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22. No. 60

State University of New York at Buffalo

Wednftday. 1 March 1972

I

Sostre's release may be imminent
by Paul Knhbiel
\pn rmm Srolf Wrtrt'r

Blad. 1111hl&lt;~lll Malllf\ S1&gt;Strc •~ back m Bullalo '~ l:nc C'uunty jatl
uwatltng J Mard1 ~ hcanng that could lead tu the uverturn mg of
Ius 3 I 41 yca1 sent ~nee 1ln drug (;harge~
Arlo Wilham~. the guVl'rnmcnt\ ~o.hu:f Wttness. has rcver~ed h1s
I &lt;)('I&gt;! te,llmnny and .1tl111111 ed he Ir;1 mcd Sust rc Wtlltams was
111 1a1l on a lcltlll)' ~..hargc htr allegedly ~tc&lt;~hng an :ur
comJIIIUIICI 111 June 1&lt;1117 and .tdmitted . in a five-page
allld.ivtt. th,tt tht• Buffal ~ Narcolll.!&gt; St1uad ptl'\Surcd hm1
ullo frJilllllg So't rc Bullalo pol1l"t' allegedly drove
WriiiJill~ I&gt;Vl'r 111 Sn\tll' \ A fru-A,t.lfl hllni,~IIHI' 111 play out
till' phony 'drug \:tk tlll'll ~t•k.N.'d Wtllram' 1111 h" uwu
1Cl"ll!lf11/0IIICC

Sli~IH' Wa\ h1uught to

trwl 111

t&lt;: har!!.C' of ,CJIIIlg
Wtlham' tc\tiii\\11\Y

111(11{ 011

111'111111 lu W1II1Jfll\, WJ\ lllflVI\ICU on

and wa, 'cutcm:cd hum 11 41 year\ 111 pr1~un h11 Su~trc.
then 4 7 year.; uld. the xcutcncc meant hfe 111 pnsun He was
llr~l to Greenhavcn. then tn Wallktll Prtson . He spent
over a year 10 solitary confinement.
WJ\Ljflms reversed his testimony almost a year agt) after
readm~ an arllclc about the pl1ght of Smtrl.' m Fbonv
magat.ulc 1-IJ ~ affidavll wa.&lt;o filed 111 l::nc County Court last
Apnl 19 The govcrnmen 1 has ''n~:c post ~10cu nl'w
hcanngs fi1r Soslrc The rl'ason tor l::tnl"clllllg the new
hcJrlllg5 was Wtll1am s had ""' ' hown up lo1 them
Wilham,, who " behcvcu to hl· 111 &lt;'JhfnJIIIJ "ahauJ lu
~:omc had, to Bultato t•' tc,ttly 1111 \o,tre' hchall hl·..:au~
\ alrJIIl ol hetng .mc,tcd un pcqury charge' 1 hl' Vangua1d
Delt~H\l' ('ommlltl'l' fur Mart111 ~11\lll' " lf)'lllg 1111\l'l W1lhaHl\
had. 111 Hullaln lor tht· M:ud1 .' lwa11111:!

The dl•lcn\e Lllllllllfllce J\ well ·" othc1 obwl \'l'l' of IIH Smtrc
case, repeated theu dt.tl!(l'\ that So\tle W.i~ ftJtncd 1111 "" pnhltt.·al
h..:ltef, /\~ 1•Wt1l'f 111 :111 1\fw·/\\IJII hlllll.. ~ tl•rc •Ill lclll'r"'" /\vc .
Sustre ,old h1o11k\ Jnd pJntphkh .1h•1u1 \lll'l:th\111 .111c.l hhtd.
hberatu111 I ht l"IIJIIII\IIICC\ lllllleud that alter the hlad" 11:hclhon 111
Buflalo 111 the 'ummcr 1•l 1Yh7 , the I:Jull&lt;~lu [li•IIC:l' w;.mtcd ·'
:.capcgoat a11d went alter Smite I hey da1111 pol1~o.e hJd haras~cd
a number Ill ttllll.'\ by teanng c.l(twn new' d1pp1ngs frnlll
~ostrc\ CIHllll\UIItty bullet111 hoard The 11cw~ dtpputg\
were of hlal.l.. hbera11on \lru!*lc~ and vu.:tllm'' of the
l.Jbcrallufl I ron I 111 Soul h Vtl'tll.tlll l hl')'
j/ National
were turn down pnor to So\t rc ·~ all C\1
?
Wh1lc i11 h1e (\lunty Ja1l, Sostrc lflltl.tll'd tW•I l.tw
Shenff
M1kc Am11:0 and J,plot l-1anJ.. I C\la . e:~d1
""" agatml
,eel..111g $~'\.()()() 111 darnag~~ The law \lllh ch.1llengc tiH' dcnml ul
till' tnmall'\ nghl to rt:CCIVe llt"W\p.!pCr~ i!lld UrtlCII\IHCd lt•g_JI
currcsponden.:e "' I n~ Ct•unty Ja1l S1"trc 1~ prc·pa1111g J dass s111t
on hehall ol thc wornc11 pnson cr~ dlallc11gnlj!, the tliSCIIrliiii:Jtttlll ul
wumen at th~ )JII.
The Vanguard Defense Committee ~~ urg1ng. support tm Mart 111
Sostre when he appear~ helnre Judge Baygcr m Buffalo County
Court un Thunday. March 2

•

�Rap session scheduled

Bqlnnlna Wedn•ay, March 8, Sub Board I has arranaecll • rap setSion which wW
be open to anyone connected with this UnivenUy In any way. The purpose or these
sesaiona will be to provide 1 medium by which people can discuu their ideas and
opinions. Each meetina may be centered aroond one topic 1llthoua.h nothillJ will be
strictly ronnaliud and the topics will be subject to chanae. Our llint IICSSion will probably
deal with student aovernment. Anyone Interested can catll 831 -SSOl for more
infonnation .

Grievance Committee 11nsure
about Halstead-Spritzler case
An informal hearing scheduled yesterday in
President Robert Ketter's offices was the latest in a
series of developments involving the grievance of
John Spritzler against John Halstead (Department of
History). At tltit time, Mr. Spritzler was allowed to
present arguments why he should not be temporarily
suspended from the University, pending a hearing
before the Hearing Comrrultee on Campus
Disruption.
The meeting in President Ketter 's office was
scheduled after the History Departmcn I ( , nevant;e
Commmee
submitted
theH
repmt
and
recommendations. Tlus committee adjudged the
grievance of John Spntzler, a student in Dr.
Halstead's Modern Imperialism II class. Mr. Spntzler
charged that on Jan . 26, 197:2, Dr. Halstead had
without justification expelled him from class.
Further, Mr Sprit zler wished to be readmatted to the
course.
This comm illee. chaared by Orville T Murphy,
reported : "The comrruttee sancerely regrets that rt
was unable to find any viable avenue-s of
reconciliation between Professor Halstead and Mr.
Spntzler" However, it did recommend : "While the
committee agreed that Professor Halstead was withan
Ius rights an lemporaraly suspending Mr Sprattlcr
from the classroom. at felt that a permanent
cxpulsaon Wttlaout formal charges and a ltca nng
would be a vrol:llwn ut Mr Sprrtzler'&lt;; rtght to due
process."
Theu repmt contmucd
II Prulcssor
Halstead and /or member~ of the clas~ leel that
disciplinary actron beyond a temporary suspcnsron as
II\ order that the guidelines m 'Rules of the \k arin~
Committee on Campus Dasruptmn St:ra c llnl\lemry
ol New YorJ.. Jl Buffalo ' and the 'Student Ru ks and
Rcgufatmn~. J'} 7 1 · 1&lt;&gt; 1~' ,,, the StJie Untvcr~tly 11f
New Yotl-. .tt Buffalo bt• fullowl•J 111 -.aft•p•.ard tht'
'taHJcut\ 11ght to Jue pn•&lt;.:css"

required the action of a hjg:her authority to protect
the legal rights of the studeot.
Mr. Spritzler rs presently beang charged with
class disruption . According to State University of
New York Student Rules and Regulations, a person
is guilty of $lisruptio n whl!n he I) interferes with
Unaversat y activataes, ur 2) obstructs University
acllvitaes.
Such Universrty activities anclude but are not
lima ted to teaching. research , etc. Mr. Spritzler is also
charged with violation of a Board of Trustees rule
whach maintains: "No per'son, either singly or 111
concert with others, shall I) deliberately disrupt or
prevent the peaceful and o rderl y conduct of classes.
lectures and meetangs
"

Sullivan awaits. approval
to become new provost
Oxford . He subsequently taught
both institutions.
From
at
1960- 61, he was dean of
Oxford's Lincoln College.
Rea ct ion
to
Professor
Sullivan's
nomination
was
generally favorable in the Faculty.
Bryon
Koekkoek,
chairman
Germanic and Slavic languages:
commented that he was "very
happy for the Faculty to hear of
the appointment of J .P. Sullivan
as provost . I look forward to a
close and fruitful r~lationshrp
with him ."
Music Chairman Albert Cohen
saad simply . " I'm very happy that
Professor Sullivan has agreed to
serve." Joseph Fradin, chairman .
Department of En&amp;]ish, staled· " I
thlnk the administration did the
necessary thing in appointing harn
The Search Committee did it~ JOh
very well and the President dtd
the
appropnatc
thing
an
appoanting him .''
The most glowing endorsement
came from Classics Chairman Leo
Curran. Dr. Curran saad · "'I thml.
he's an excellent ~:h oa ce. I can '1
thrnk of a better man for the )Oh
I think he will be extremel y
sym pathetic to the problems and
needs of the Faculty "
John Eberhard, dean of th•
School of Archatecture .tnu
E nvtronmental
DeSign,
wa'
somewhat
less
enthusiast••
"Professor Sullavan was not my
allows htm to teach courses 10 any firs t choice," he saad, "'but th1·
department of his Faculty His candidates who I had htgh.:t
field of specialization IS Classtci, regard for, not thut I havt.&gt; lu'ol.
m which he IS a world renowned regard fo r tum , turned rt down ..
scholar He has authored some 15 Professor SuU1van tum~lf wa'
books and monographs and about unavaalable for comment.
The new prov0\1 wrll assunn·
I 50 articles, revaews and lectures.
Professor Sullivan, a nat1ve of his functions upon the approval ol

Considered a surprise choice by
many, Joh n P. Sullivan was
officiaUy
recommended
last
Monday for appointment as
provost of the Faculty of Arts and
letters.
Professor
Sullivan,
chairman of the Faculty and Staff
Caucus, has been one of the
Ketter administration's most vocal
en tics.
Professor Sullivan has held the
rank of faculty professor since
coming to Buffalo in 1969 . This

Controversial area
Where Mr. SpritLier acLUally dasrupted the class
ill the major area of contro•versy. As Robert Ltvely .
chaarman of the Hastory Department , remarked
''Spntzler is on a than edge between dissent and
dasruptaon." Addrtaonally , the History Grievance
Committee was unable to determine if disruption
occurred
Accordmg to thear report : "'J'he
commrttee concluded that the evidence presented
was con tradictory and was therefo re unable to
deternune whethe r Mr S1prat11er's actrons were
andeed dasrupttve."
Must observers to the a ffair conclude that the
whole case as bcang unnec-essanly blown uut of
proportaons. It •~ thear feelrngs that wath a little
cuopcrataon. l'onctlaattun
could be reached
Howcvea, rl appc.ar:. th:rt both Dr. Halstead and Mr.
Sprattlcr arc unw•llan~ to C(;&gt;operate in any kind of
settlement.
Rcgan.lmg
thl\,
the
H1s1ur y
Gncvancc England , rcce1ved h1s advanced
degrees from Cambridae and
Comnuttcc stJteJ " Whale tl w:.~~ rcadrly apparent
thllt th~ natcllectual and hrstoracal positaons of both
partrc\ wctc rrrccoru.:rlrahle. I he tummattec bcgart 11~
hcarrng wtth the hope that some format could be
found whereby their mtcllcctual and lustorical
Commirtec &lt;'Ontcnc:h
drlferer.ce' cuuld be defined, debated and drscussed
Aftl'r tltr~ rl'port ~;~, '"u,·J. 111 wha ~h Mt
111 ~uch J way a~ 111 t.untnhute tn the educataonal
&lt;ipntzler wa~ retO\IJirtl. Or HJht cJJ ~ JrttclleJ das' Jrm' 1.11 the Unaversrly The commauce's hopes pe.ver
last Fnday rcfu~trag to teach rt Mr Sprrt7ler wa~ rnatcnal11cd.. hu1h~.·r they report ed ~ '1ntleed,
present . Subsequen tly. the hearrng in l'rc"rdcall
Profe!.Sur llalstcad expressed to the committee lu:&gt;
Ketter's uflu.:e was arranged
upposatiun to any 111anner of reconciliation."
It Wa!&gt; the commrllee\ Clllltentroal that an
In addatron. others ha\'e commented on Mr.
mstructor can expel students unly on a shmt·term Spn11lcr's unrelenting position. Dr Ltvely rem3rkcd
temporary basts F-urthe r pcrmanL&gt;nt L&gt;x pulsaon about the whole affaar "It's u lot of nonsense."
.,~.rm .. *''~ *'~ r•~~•«W• • .v . .,
.... '!'j •
~------····------------------·

John Sullivan

lhc Board-of 1

ru~t.:c'

-&gt;1 th e SI.JI&lt;

Unaversity .

SPECIAL
ACADEMIC

:APPAREL
Sale~y

,-

The Spectrum '' wblished thrH

BELLS, TOPS , BOTTOMS

t1m11s •
w•tll. .wry MotldiiY.
W«JnftdiJy •tid FocUy; duri ng tiN
ngul•r IICedllmiC y•r by Sub·Boerd
1. I oc. Off1c• lfrt loutttd Itt 355
Norton H111/, St11r11 UnivrJttlty of N11w
York Ill 8uff11/o, 3435 MIJm St ..
Buff•lo . N11w Yor/c , 14214
Tlll11phone ArtNI Code 716; Edrtofldl
831-4113; Busmm 831 ·3610

end

Here they r.ome• Hundred~ ol
Guys and Gal~ know this Is
tt&gt;e
p &gt;ace
Army ·Navy
0.r9o111ns witt&gt; today's took
Gooel 9C•OCis. gooel or"es;
QOOCI people' The real Lev i' s
Flare and Stra19hl, Oentm or
Corduroy Air f"orce p~rk•),
Governnlltnt
Grut
Coau
H . .vy &lt;ttufl' Come SO&gt;e the
reat
!M cCo y's
and

R11prtts11ntlld fo r iKJvertillng by
NatiOnal Educational Advtlrtlllnf,
S11~1Ce, Inc .. 360 LBI&lt;mgton AvB.,
IIIIIW Yor/c, Ill Y 10017

SAVE•

Subscflpr1on "''"' 11rB $4.50 ,_,
st1m111ter Or SB 00 for two sem•r..-.

S.Cond CIIJU Post"'}tJ p111d at Buff•to,

Fri·. ·M arch 3

THINGS

ROOM 2M&gt; - NORTOS HALl
tH'II' &amp; liH:tl

c J'l p s .. G 0 wN s.

IJI Col/c'glcJf&lt;' Cap

TillS

ll (} () /)

&amp; (row// (

5%

s

11

OF!

IJA )'
at
{)'\ ILL
0\L)
PURCIIISI S
your
UNIVERSITY "on . ~

BOOKSTORE campus

lllf!w York.

II I

university
un1on
activities

~

Sponsors all E~ntertainment events on U.B. Campus.

board

Coordinators are stipened-required are time ano desire
! I

Page two .,The Spectrum. Wednesday, 1 March 1972

I

Il l

KLJ8i!il 1•

-

•a:

It F

�Living crisis

HoUsing corporation forming
by Jeff Greenwald
Compu$ Ediror
The situati ons are familiar. Every year "X"
amou nt of students are forced t o pitch a tent out in
back of Baird Hall, o r are cramped into a lounge in
Allenhurst, or have to crash fo r how ever long it may
take to find adequate living quarters. The questions,
too, are familiar. " Why d oesn 't the University do
somet hing about houstng'!'' and "Why are th e ren ts
so damned high?" and " What the hell ts going to
happen in five ye.ars when there are 10 ,000 or
15 ,000 more students here and only a cou ple
thousand more dorm spaces?"
Though the situations are likely to con tinu e for a
wluJe, and the questions wiJJ still valid ly be asked , it
does seem that st e ps are being taken to avert what
appears to be an ineVltablc crisis. Such steps involve
the formation of a Housing Corporation , the
tnception of which is not far off.
Th ts corporation, explaJned Sub Board I, Inc
Exe~utive Director Steve Blumenkrantz, wouJd be a
student run cooperat ive venture. At thtS time, plans
call for the purchase of as many residences as
posstble. Initially, $50,000 to S I 00 ,000 •s ex pected
to be made available t o the as yet unnamed Housing
Corporation, in the form of a loan The loan will
likely he made out of restdual Undergraduate
Student Assoctalton funds

tlousing for I 00
Last year about ~HO,OOO went unspent while thtS
year only ahQut one·thtrd of the allocated S 110,000
dub funds h ave been s pent. In additiOn , $15,000 i~
'ct ;mde for the aborted Steve Slllls comt·rt now
free for realloc.allon
Any av;ulabh: fund:. lodned tn the ltoustng
&lt;'orporullon would be used for down payment~ on
Jc~tdences . Butldtng.&lt;. moo;t de~ardble for purch.tse are
lO mnton double nats , three 1H four bedroom types
I hose mvolved with the rnfant operatton hope tnr
enough space to house ab o ut 100 st udent ~ by tlw.
Sept I
Formal ml·oqmratmn of the planned coopcr.rltVl'
,, tn tt\ tntttal Sldge' It •~ expected that lis bn.tul nf
dtredors wtll const)l ol I 'i people Ten wtll he
students, three ol whKh dfl: to be appotnted from
the l'XI\ttng Houstng Con11mttee, now tn charge of
the planmng. The other seven w1ll come from
tntctested students from the polity a t large. They
wil l be required to take out petitions calltng for their
placement on the hoard and tn ohtatn I 00
SlltJ1 at u res

student se ntiment on the Housing con cept. Of the
five remaining directors, two will come from the
University community other than stud ents, and
three will be member; o f the Buffalo and Amherst
commumttes.
Con ttnuity of the board will be butlt·in, thus
eli m inating one of the basic criticisms for such
student ventures. Student membership will be for
two years and staggered , w1th the ot her members
appointed for t hree year terms.
The type corporation planned ts a "corporation
organ111ng for the exclusive purpose of holding
property
collecllng 1111;ome th erefrom and tummg
the en ttre amount . .
less expenses to Jn
o rgan JZa tton which Itself ts exempt Iunder state
law )" The other corporation would be Sub Board .
'Rip~ff

market'
The reasons for tncorporahon arc several AU
earnings are tax exempt, s1m:e they go dtrectly back
into the operation. There t' also a possthtltty that tax
exempt status can be gatned for the property to be
purc hased . lncorporatton also removes residents
from any risk of acculcnt liabthty I n add1ttnn, a
corpor3tton IS much more nedtble tn J borrowing
situation, in which IIH' ll ou~mg Corporattl)fl would
be const antly involved
Mr BlunH:n krant 7 we~ the uupm.tlll•n ·npctung
a compet&amp;trv•' market where J np-uff rnarl.d now
eust~
We hope tu open up a nlJrkl·t whcrt'hy
landlord~ wt.ll have tn l.ecpthctr .tpartment~ m order.
merely to cornrete " ( nn\ldertng th:tt he stJtl·d
further a $100 a month rent lnr J thrcc·bcdrn.. m
apartment wa~ not unhkdy unucr the ullpllr,dt•ll1 , 11
certatnly appear' that a w11le\preall l'Prf'•HJIIcon
dcvclnpment
wnul.t
v."tly
lll~rl'.l,l'
J.urdlorll
rcspon~tvcne.,,

SHO~TBOAT

Every Wednesday is
: 'SUNYAB NlGHT'

I
I
I
I
I

aoion is m lhr
ENGINE ROOM BAR
Th~

Draft Beer $.35
Free f'resh Popcorn
Dress as You Please

. - - - - - - - - - - - - P A l O POL . A u . - - - - - - - - - - - -- ,

Mtxed 011nks $ .75
Live Mustc to Stng or Cry Wtth
But Don't Let Your Feet liang Out

DRAG YOUR BA&lt;; OR MAKI- Till- SCI-Nf SUI 0 ON

'SUN Y AB NIGHT'
WEDNESDAYS
LIVIE ENTERTAINMENT EVERY NIGHT!!!
FEB . 2:3 - 26 GROOVE TO "'THINGS TO COME"
IT'S ALWAYS A GAS ATTHFSHOWBOAT
I HERTEL AYE.

de rartmcn t Ill what he
an "unholy alJtan~:c "
Although adm1111ng that there wa'
wmc .. very good coverage m
ce rt am specthl \41ses," he satd
reporting of the tnltdent was, on
the wh ole, "below average."
Regarding th~ . he cned a
parllcular m ctdent tn whtch The
BuffalfJ £11enwg Nrws printed a
"complet ely false statemen t ." 1n
J une I 97 1 , sa\d Mr . Rosche,
"they reported that th e FBI had
deared the Buffalo police 111 thts
matter" That , he m;untatned "is
totdlly untrue and tS untrue lo
t hts day "
M r Ros&lt;.he summed up hts
accusa twns
"11 IS our bask
~on tention
that the so called
·watchd ogs of freedom' (the press
and
medta)
are
afraid
to
1nvesttgate rndllers of pohce
nusconduct and really report what
t:. happentng
that the pubhc
will never know that the police do
w ndu ct themselves 1n 1llegal .tnd
v1 olent manner at limes "

BUFFALO,N .Y.

~ailed

..A '1.11&lt;' nt cofft.1al .Ul&lt;~11.h~
CliiSI\ 111 tltc ul y ol Bull.1h•."
, hJrgcd
.tltmney
Rtchard J
Rcl\\ he tn J pre" ~.on leren n: held
I,J't Mund.ty tn Norton ll.tll
Mr. Ro,~h~ . .t lormer St.tte
Umverstty of Buffalo law student ,
has pubhshed a report alle(l,lng
that Buffalo p o hce sh ot stud ents
on campus dunng the May Jt/70
riots. The report, entitled "fhcy
Shnot .Studenb." als o an u~e~
lederal,
'talc
and
local
governmental
.tgcnc:te~
w11 h
tn.tdequ;Jic tnvesltg.Jtton o1f the•
1nudent
Mr RlhChl' told newsmen lh.tt
tlus report, unci others hkl· 1!,
uuhcate thai tlw local press,
po)lcc and nty o lfluals "ctlher
wtll ~nver up w1ll d1~1ort ur
l[l.nllle
allegations e1f pnh~..­
hrutallty " As a result of th1~ we
(those tnYolved tn the rele.t\c ol
the report) bcltcve that a state nl
offtciaJ anar~.:hy eXIStS 111 th~ C:I IY
of Buffalo "
Repo rted gunfire
The actual report ts the result
'Below average'
nf
almost
two
years
of
Add II tonally ,
Mr
Rmchl· tnvesttgallon by M r Rosche and
i.ISSatled the local press ,md med1a
hts colleagues mto the shoollng
ac:~:ustng them of Jommg wtth the
-.:ontl nued on page four-

HANG IT ON AT THE

1

pnhu~

by Mike Feely
.\'JWI 1~1111 .\tt1fl k'TIIt f

Ce ntinujty b uil l in
In thts way , at le.tst 700 students wtll he made
,tware of the cor poratiOn If more than seven destre
membership, an elect1on wtll be h eld at the same
ttmc as a proposed referendum planned t o survey

I
I
I
I
I
I

Rosche clainns officials~m
ignore pertintent evidence

877-7970 ·

EDWOL
c
v
u
t
FOR

NATIONAL
STUDENT
AFFAIRS
COORDINATOR

0

e

Row4

···--

PAlO POL AO

o-IHml 11•n•~JIIIl

Positions of coordinatc)rs in the following areas are availat,le
to work.

Apply ir1 Room 261 Norton-UUAB Office.

R

E

ARTS
DANCE ARTS
DRAMATIC ARTS
LITERARY ARTS
MUSIC
FILM
COFFEEHOUSE
PUBLICITY

--------------~-----~·~~--------------a.--------------~------------~
Wednesday, 1 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Rosche claims.

• •

incidents of Ole nlaht of May 7 .
1970. O n that night, while
University students protested the
then recent invasion o f Cambodia
by
American
troo ps,
seven
separate
inctdents of pollee
gu.nftre were reported to have

or an investigation outside a court
or law . However, Mr. Rosche
reported that, against this polity,
Justice Department reports on the
Buffalo police use o f shotguns on
cam pus were released to the
Buffalo Police Department.

OCCUlTed .

Mr. Rosch e continued that the
state's investigation, because of a
lack or manpower, never really
got off the ground . Although the
bead
of
the
investigation ,
Detective Sergeant Steinmetz, was
" very an XJous" to look into all
aspects of the matter, Mr Rosc he
said that "his superio~ said he
couldn't go ahead with it."

To substamate these charges,
Mr. Rosche has compiled evidence
in the form of signed statements
by witnesses, photographs o f the
po lice cars from whic h the gunfire
is said to have come and health
reports signed by doct ors who
treated th e wounded . L1sting four
governmen t agenc 1es (the United
S t ates Justice Department and the
FBI, the Governor and the: New
York Stat e Police, The Distri ct
Attorney and the Buffalo Pohce
Department) Mr Rosche reported
that each agen cy had pro miSed a
thorough mvestigallon mt o th l.'
Ma y 7, I 970 tnc1dents
Rductance
Only the Justt.e Departnunt\
tnvesttgatton, said Mr Rosc h e,
even bothered t o mteMew any o f
the eyewll nesse!&gt;. A(cordt ll!l tc•
him , they 1nterv1ewed ten of th e
80 o nlookers and VICtims gat he red
by the Concerned Law S tudent \
for Peace and the Amem:an C1V1l
Uberties Un1on
The J usttce Depa rt men I, a~ Mr
Rosche pointed out. "was very
reluctant to make any type o f
public statement to me." It Wlb
apparently o1grunst department
policy to divulge any 1nfo rmati o n

University students
discover censorship

-eont111ued f rom CMGe thr~

report and, because Mr. Rosche
pressed him on certain matters, he
was asked to leave.
Wh e n
asked
for
recommendauons as to how
cltit.ens might handle or prevent
future
police
problems,
Mr.
Ros~he
suggested a "civilian
revtew agency." " I think it would
be very good," explained Mr.
Rosche, " if the ci ty government
would establish so me sort o f
independent agency that would
tnvesttgat e matters o f misconduct
tn JOY part u f the city government
or the police department." He
~o nfess ed, however, that he did
not VISuah z.e any such agen cy in
the nc11r future .

'Cover-up'

Mr. Rosc he also indtcated that
perso nnel changes, perhaps in the
o fft ce of Com mtss1oners Feltcetta
and /o r Bla1r, and pressure o n
these pe rsonnel IS d.lso very
1mportant

Wht•n asked abo ut Distnct
Att urncy
M11.hael
Dillon's
11\HSIIgataon ,
Mr
Rosche
remarked ··1 d on't think he really
d1d an yt hmg "
The
P oll~e
De partment
1nvesttgat1on, accordJng to Mr
Ro~~.. he,
w.ts
"a
deliberate
cover-u p " lie knew o f only o ne
tndiVIdual 1n terv1ewed by th e
pollee and th.J t. satd Mr Rosche,
·was more hke Jn interrogatiOn 1n
Jn att e mpt to &lt;hscret11t thr
witness than olnyt lllng ~lse ..
Arter falling twice tn a!lempts
to tdlk to Po llee co mmissiOner
Feltcetta, Mr Rosch e reported
that
he
finally
spoke
to
Co mm JS.~wl'lcr Bla.tr. Reportedly
('om miSSIOner Blai r refused t o add
any anfo rmat1on 1&lt;1 Me Rosche's

Curt Miller and Sreve Lipman ,
two State University of Buffalo
seniors majoring in journalism,
have
discovered
com mumty
censorship.
The pair was hued Ill January
to do a weekly news show for
Am h erst
Cable
Televis;on,
Channel 5. They did four news
shows covering "harmless news

Add11wn.JJIY. Mr Rosche sa•d
that he d1dn 't expect any agency
to renpen the1r mves llgatton as a
result of h ts report The report, he
sa1d , was 1ssued to the pubhc
purely as "an 1nflHmed statement
and analySIS o f what happened
conce rnmg a ll t h e fa cts."

Curt Miller
i~ms,'' and in February dec 1ded
to cover the issue of integrat1on
and cross-busing. That was when
the ax fell. Christme Joyce,
program d1rector o f Amherst
Cahle, refused to let them telecast
a
taped
interv1ew
with an
educator on the s~..hooll ntegration
and
busing aspects
of
the
Fleischmann report
The incident began when Mr
Miller and Mr . Lipman tned to
Interview
the
Amherst
ch11~ f
~chool
administrator,
Vu:
Vertucci , who was unavailable.
Instead, they mterv1ewed Amh erst
Central lltgh School pnncipal Btll
Munson, who vo1ced a mild
disapproval
of
bus1ng
Also
mterv1ewed were two stud ents
wh o toot.. a st ro ng sta nd agatnst
bustng
Ms.
Joyce
deleted
th e
c1ghHmnute mt erv1e w from b e1ng

In

condus1on, Mr
Ros1.he
hoped that thiS report would
make " future leaders more aware
o f the problem that ex1sts wtthin
o ur po llee de partment and be
m o re w1llmg to tak e act1on o n th1s
~ uhjec t "

The Psychological A~ociation of Western New Yurk and the Western Oilltrict
Branch of the American Psychiatric A880ciatiun will present a "Conferen ce o n
t'ornoaraphy " today at 8 p .m . in Room l47 Diefendorf.
The conferen ce wUI be keynoted by Eugt&gt;nt" Lev111 , professor of Clinical
Psychology. Dt&gt;partmenl of Psychiatry al Indiana Untversiry Or Levitt is a consul I ant 10
th t" Kinsey l nslilule and a member of the Presidential Commisston on Pornography.
H11 speech wtll be followed by a panel discussion. Me m~rs of the panel will be
Mertm Peckerd , a clin1cal psychologist. Bruno Schulkecker , a psych1atnst, Theodore
Kaslu , C tty Court JUdgt&gt; and a staunch foe of "smut." and Haro ld Fahringer. a prominent
defen~ altorney tnvolved in many "obscenit y" trials Dorothy Rosenbaum, a child
p:.ychologJSt will b e the moderator.

tlonest &amp;

Reliabl e

Imported &amp; Domesttc
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert

Near

Batley

834·7350
J.4i Aliff GfTTIN9 MlfliFliE'D
s 1 c ~*"' Gr r -+t Y

{JNL£S

HAAif&gt; C R.ttr:TE 0

OtAhtOA/0

EA/0,4fiE?tf£# 7
/?I AJ(i AT ERIK 'S

[;/\

Ms Joyce deleted the intervww
and suppo rted her action hy
cla1mlllg the st ory would be
harmful
to
Amherst Cahle\
relatiO n ~ with muruCJpal father~
" We're JUSt getting started ." !&gt;:J1d
Ms J oyce. and at th1s po101 I
do n't thmk we can afford to hu n
our pubhc relations that way "
Mr. L1pman c'harged that th ey
were being ce n!JOred at th1•
expense of an Important nrw\
story . " We tho ught they want ed
news,'' he sa1d at the tim e of h 1~
resignatio n .
"Apparently they
wanted u co mmun ity bulkt1n
board ."
" We realized that lhe sta t1oo
was not at all mterested 111
covenng th e news," said Mr
Miller . "They chose inst ead '"
co v e r
s uc h
s t o r1e s
.~,
grou ndbreakmgs for new h osp1t ah
and o ther non-&lt;:&lt;&gt; ntro verstal assu e'
whtch would make the town
fathers appear to he all-out good
guys As such , the st atiOn was
nothi ng mo re thar1 a propagand .1
vehacle for local government"
Mr Mlller and Mr Llpmdn
res1gned, sta t1ng 1h ey could 11111
wo rt.. under s uth condthon~ 111
good JOurnahsttc co nsctence

The UUAB • Fine Arts Film Committee
~-------------------------------------------~
I
Presents
I

:
1
11

\_RIIllementl of 1MTruth Ca~tu# on ftl~~
I Sllli I IACPii s I EAIO SOUND )

THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY

mar ch 2nd

march 4th

I
I
I

I
I
I

:

: AMERICA to
I
AFRICA
I

I
I
I

FRIDAY &amp; SUNDAY

1

I

march 3rd

march 5rh

:

:I
I
I

I

I

aecnwtta

:
I
I
I1

I

Wilson Pitllelt

I
1

1
1

Ike &amp; Tina Turner

i

: SDU~mSDUL i

:
1

81 allen st .. buffalo. n.y.

Vital news quashed
The immediate result was that
"we did a 15-minute news show
with seven minutes of, new~ "
noted Mr Miller. The next d~y
the pair resigned . " We thought
Coble TV would al low more
commun1ty access to television
we
were
obviously
wrnng,"
commented
Mr.
Miller
Ill'
charged the stalion wuh "outright
censorship
if
a
smglc
highly-placed indiVIdual can quash
a VItal news st ory with o ne ph um·

1

I
I

_J€W€L€RS

decided not to use the interview
since Mr. Vertucci informed her
that he' d rather not see it on the
air.

call .''

Pornography lecture

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

telecast after receiving a call from

Mr. Vertucci asking her t o scrap
the tape!. Ms. J oyce told Mr. Miller
and Mr. Lipman that she had

I
I
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1

Sanrana

I
I

~~-=::v~=-~~~::..

f'toducedbvPlfltllEAOIOGE HAIIYMAJICSondt08ftTA8ft·O.M:IedbvPlfltlllAO()G(
""'A.f.Mf..... lnAuoc-WtlitC_f... A..oc:- ln Coiol

Tickets:
Students SOc before 6 p.m.
75c after 6 p.m.

.

:I

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1
I
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~~~.~~:.~:7:;-;3 :
I

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CONFERENCE THEATRE
•
A Di..,llion of Sub Board 1

Faculty, Staff, Alumni
$1 .25

I
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~-----------~---------- --------------------~
• .

Page four . The Spectrum Wednesday, 1 March 1972

�Racial·imbalance

School busing han underway
Heari ngs beg:~ n Monday in t he
Jud iciary Commtll ee fo r the
House of Represen tauves on
pro pos e d
con s tllu tional
am endments to ban the forced
busi ng of school child re n to
achieve
ractal
balance
m
c l assrooms
th roughout
th e
count ry.
Scores of congr~~smcn were
willing to tesufy d unng what may
be three weeks of tesllmony on
l he subjel.'l. The Ho use panel,
ch aired by Rep. ~ manuel Celler,
( R ., NY.) h a~ re cetvcd man y
propo~al s in t he p aJ;t several years
d eaJing w ith the ISSue. but
Mo nday's h ea ring marked th e first
pu b lic exs m inal1nn of htt~t ng

The to ne of th e h eari ng was set
by t wo Southe rn . foes o f b usin g.
Rep. J ack Brink ley ( D., Ga.) said
t hat: " T o co ns u me resou rces of
li m e and money fot b using for the
pu rpose
of
achievin &amp; racial
balan ce, IS so ob viously w rong,
meani ngless and unproductive. it
is a vo id, d e m eaning. It is
merchu roch rom e when the need is
pcntdllin"
Rep. Wilmer MizeiJ ( R ., N .C.)
had t h is to say on th e subJect :
" Let us b egin today to c:hart a
clear co u rse tha t will p reseve
public educ:att on i11 Amcnca and
provid e
new
and
im proved
cd uca t ional opportunities for all
our childre n w ithm •t th e marl ne~s

- .. ~·· ·-- ...... ..,....,a..., ........

•·•rl&gt;l W'IUIW ·TV, C...M I '

SI#...J4, N/11&lt;1• ...._. " ' ...1 s...~.,. "'"'''

It"

o f cross-b usi ng ."
I n tile Senate, mean whtlc, a
vole •~ expect ed thts week on a
posstble rev•!rsal of a measure that
had been approved last week
forbtdding federal courts to order
busing as a means nl integrattng
pubhc schools
I he measure
passed last week by a vote of
43 40, was mtrod ucetl by Sen
Rober t Gnffin ( D • M tch )
Gnfftn , prtor to the vote,
not ed that all five Dcrno.:rJIIt
prcsrdcn tt al cantltdutc' 111 lite
Senate wen~ absenl lwm the vuh: .
In a sptech , he s:ud. ··1 wond~:r tl
th ose prcsrdcntlal .:andtc.l att~ whn
arc go tng around tht• t'ou nlty
lellt ng people tlwy Jre agatnsl
hus111g
but
d on"!
w .tnl
J
const tlultonal amendment ami
would ratlwr dn II hy 'talue . 1
w&lt;t nder rf tl1cy'rc gomg to ht• h..-rc
to g\"1 Jn Jlltentlmcnl Jdt&gt;ptetl
that w o uld tco~lly tlo '''llll"lhm~
ahnul hu•\Jn~~ '
Senate
nl'ltlUUJIIl
lt'Jlkr
Mtlo.c: MJn,frdd . tdq!rJphetl the
mc.srng ftvc SaturtlJy. urgtnr th.Jt
I hey he pre~cnl 1 uc\tlJ\ '" "''"'
nn ,1 Ollldt'l ,JIJH"tHIII Il"lll l•v
Man,ftdd .mtl ( ,())&gt; St•n.tlt' k;ult•r
II ugh S.:ul I

Thc

M J n ' I 1 ,. I d S , '' 1 t

Jllu:ndmt·nl would pt'rllttl hn111nl
hustn.: of ·~htldn·n but nl'l lo
sdtool~ or tnh•rtnr qu~ltty anti""'
Jtru:.~ o;chonl Ji~t11t1 ltlll'' unit·"
"' orJcrctl hy the. llntlnl Stall'\
Suptl"nll' (Purl Bolh nH·asurc'
wlll appear hdoll tl11• ScnJil'
.JP,Jitl IIIC\day ' and ,, \ ltntu• Will
h.JVI' lu lw trlat.ll- l•t't"'t"\' 11 lht' tw co
a tnt· ntl men t '·.
The ftvc 1111~'"'~ UliiUIU.Jie'
fo)\lt uf whc,•m att" 11ppo,ctl tn the
Cnfftn ramendn~&lt;·n t , o1rc ~ ... ""
I dmuncJ Mu'l."· col MoJIItl.". llul•.:rt
lluntpiHt"Y nt MHIIII.'\IIIJ , (•I."&lt;HjtC
Md.u vet n o l South Do~koi J
llenry J ad,\o tt ul W.l\htngloll .llld
V.onn• 11.111 k1• nl lndt..tll.J 1 ht"Y
ho~d "I'" h~···n o~h-.nl for lit• H•te
I.J\1 I hur~tlay v.lltdt lorht~h ""' oll
kckral lutHh for hu'"'lt u11h-"
lw .11 '' hool d"t rh '' Vlllllltt.Jt ~~~
req Ul"'t etl 'll d1 .tH.I

SCHUSSMEIST'ERS
SKICLUB
in cooperatto n w1th

MR. MOOSE OUTFITTERS
present$

MOONLIGHT SKI TOUR
SATURDAY MARCH 11, 8:00pm
$10.00
An introduction to SKI TOURING (cross country ) price includes:
transportation (round trip to Glenwood, N.Y.)
Rental (cross country skis, boou poles) .

Lesson
Food &amp; Drink

Limited space only.
Applications in Ski Club Office, Norton.

' rds were rescued S unday
NEW YORK - Five gua
being h e ld
hostage for three hou rs in a barncaded cell b lock at R ikers Island
J u venile Prison .
A force o f 150 conectro n al guard s st o r med the ba rricad e using lear
gas and night sttcks. lland -to-h and ftgh tt ng resulted in injury t o 78
inmates a nd 27 guards. About 350 you t hs rangmg mage fro m 16 to 20
were involved in thiS second uprisin g rn a mon th at the facilit y. wb1ch
occu pies an ISland in t he East R1 ver.
An array of maJcesh.i ft weapons were taken from t he inmates,
including pi pes, clay kmves a nd a ngJe 1rons. Correction ('omm rssione r
Benjamin Makolm said "One thtng th e public doesn ' t realize is t h at
we're not d eaJing w1th a bu n ch of choir boys." Wiltiam Va nd en Heuval ,
correction~ ch airman, blamed th e in c1dent on overcro wd ing at the
'lheltt:r, w here males up to l he age of 25 awai t se n tencing or t rials .
MAN, W. VA .
Almost 100 pe rson s d ied Saturd ay when a
ram-swollen coal slag d:lm hurst and se nt a th ree-foot wall o f water
tras h ing m to a vall{'y loaded wi th over a dozen small mini ng to wns.
l he Appaladtian mmang communit y o f Laredo w as "completely
wtped out" in o ne of t he worst flood d1sasters in West Virginia 's
hi~tory ·1 he vrctrms. trapped Jn their homes, o n st reets, in stores, and
on moun tain road~ wen! erther drowno:d or buried by landslid es. It was
cstunaled that another 50- 100 l:lotlte~ m~ght be found before the se11rch
·~ •·ntlcd
Cov..-rnnr Arch Mnme dedarcd two .:ounlies dtsaster areas, an d
had ''' turn hack from a full tn,ped1on tour of lht' areJ due to fog and
r.ttn A rt·pmt ltottt I be \\t'ne de,~nhed 11 as "total destru ction . All that
'' ldl ",, I'Jl~l nflt.:t• .:ompuny \ICHe and a grade school."

RA ISIN ( ITY (ALII·
llw man wh o posted bond for Angela
I&gt;.Jvl\ ""~ gune tnlll hu.hn11 wtt h "" wtft· and five sons on the grounds he
h." rc.:ctvo:tl dc.tth Jhrcab. hnau'e nl lm actton~ Rodger McAfee, t he
wlf-~tylctl &lt;.'nrnttHIIIt't I.Jrml'r who put up the S 100 ,000 bail for Miss
l&gt;avts, ';ml h" d11ltlrcn had bn·n bcatcn up Jt '.:hottl and expelled
hc. ·""" ht• po,tt• tl llw hnnd M d \ h•e ~tgned ove r 1he deed to a
$ll0.11011 l..trm Wctln•·,,l,t:y t11 pro1v1dc thc colluter ..tl fnr M1ss Davis a$ a
" mallct ul lll~ltn: .111d tt:'l''"l~tt&gt;t hly lu a lellt1W Communist ··

N l W YO IH.
1\ t h.tll~n~t· 111 Nt•w Ynrk StJtc'~ ltbt• rJI abortion
l.tw w.t, 1..lol dnwu l·t1ol.1y hy :til Appdlulc Dlvt~l\Jtl .:Outl tn Bwok lyn,
anti .JIIll ·:ti.&gt;PtiiiHt h •He' \.Jttl they would appeal the det:tston
lllttlletltatcly
I he .:nurl '\ dt·u~ tnn rrver~ccl a Jan 5 det•tsion by t he St ate
~ttprcmc t'ourt whtth gr.tnted ,, temporary mju nction against abortions
tn .til nf 1he 1..11 y', Ill mun~ttpal ho\ p1tals. Both the ctty and t h e slate
hud appealed t he ban thull blnckmg ttll enforcement. l n lh e F rida y
dccis•on , the rullni •t .. tco th.ll althouah an unborn chilli wu atil\ a
hum.1n bctng, tl wa~ not lu IH' t•onst tleretl J "){'gal" per:.o n .
fhc nnglnal 'UII hJI.l ht·l."rt hruughl by a FordhJm lJntverstly law
prolt''"'' . Rnht'll Bryn who Jnn•tuntl'd th.11 he would appeal. since ·
·· I he rnuuple that hold\ htomJn ht•tntt' 'IO&lt;l young' In hvc c:an readtly
be o~pphetl II&gt; h11ltl nthc:r hunt.trt ht'tllfL' 'tO&lt;&gt; 11ltl' Ill hvl' The decision
thr~·.Jil"l" th1· ll)!hl ro ltv•· ul t·v,·ry uu·uth,·r "' rlw hurn.rn fHnttly "

I I (()IN ( I I)

()1{ 1

&lt;..wetrlnt Tom Md".lll

,t;~rtlcd

an

o~utlr•·r11 ,. "' 400 l&lt; •·puhii&lt;.J II' h•·tt• ~.tlur day whtn Itt· dt:t IJ11·J rhc stale
'houltl '""~&gt;. 111t11 lq~r,l.ttllon .lllm~otrt)! lllt:llY ktlltng' li e \.Jttl rhat rn too

111.11ty '·''''' l:ld&lt;IIY "''"""' v.tlh 1111 h111ll' n f ••·u•\crtng from lhetr
ill Ill'"· .tr~ lo.q!l .tltVI Ill p.llll Ill IIIIo IIn\\ IOU,, for long r ermd:, Of It me
lullll· wrth dtt!tlllY . Mt( ,all ,,,Ill.'' ··.1 m•cd thai''"' Jg•lntltngly
oiVt' rwh••ltnttl~ 111 lhl.' 111111d, ••I llll' l'lti•·IIY " II•• ~.11d hc wo•ultl .:all a
Wrtl'\ nf "'IIIIIIJI\ 11 1."~1 llllllllh 1&lt;1 dt~ l ll ~\ CUthall,l\1,1 , \l' t•lo.tlll! adVJCC
lt11tll pitY'" 'J"' "'""I" ~~" " .uod phllo"ophl'l\ M,Ca ll htlS oJisn .tsked
ftu J t opy of I h1 ,·ut h.ln.t~l.t I&gt; ill pend lrt~ h,•lnn• I It•• legl\laturc in
IJ JWJII
1\N:-.l 1\R IHIR Mll ' ll

l •·t~wp.lf,tto·

ftro•, 1ndut.lrng1lne tn wh.J ch

tw11 ~''""•"" w•·tt• "'""''" ·" .1 tnull nl .111 exrl"'"'n ot a Xer&lt;•x
ntJdlltll" , lt.tvt· hJIIh'd 11111\ltl,ll ... tnol l•h.ll ('\llhtl' o flt1tJI\ :tl the
l ln twr"IY ul Mtdll!!.·"'
1111" flit"' ,til wl -v.llhtn .1 lolllt ho•ut .pan 1111 SatliiUJY hJvt· hroughl
the lot.tl "'"""'"' nl tt ... , '" \ II "n'' l,tle tn J .HIU.Jry 1 hc f11es heglln
J.Jtt 1 7 ..111.-r .1 ,,,)Ito lh t \d11111l tii"W'fl.tl'l'l the H rtlllgan {)alii', satd
they "'"ultl •""'"""' rtrllll hl.11 1.. ttnltl.tnl Anl\ela J)."" wo~' !teed
l&lt;ew.ud' tolahlll! uwr \ I 0 111111 h.•w h~:en nfkrt•tl lor tntonnutton .
o.. rutttune' .oh nuv. "" 1-,,·d .'4 llllUI\ 1 tlJy , \IIII.C tttn't "' rhe ftres have
o~•urretl 111 thcn1

ANN 1\ HBO){ , Mit II
'Co~ndatlJ ll nu~e. a untVt'r~rty-approved,
hul not u11J•·r the IUII\UillHIII "' lite untvcr..IIY. hnu~mg co mplex IS
gotng .:u-t·tl llt:n· al llw lln rv t'r\11) n l M1dllgall In an off .;;.llnpu~
c.llpenrncnl that 'tarred tht~ past wed.cnd . men anJ "'"men students
wtll sh.He lbl' san1c tllVIIl\ SLltlll.' ol the tOllllll&gt; wtll hou)e nne man and
one w o man and some wrll hu\1\C tw o mcn anti ntH' woman One of the
partlctpanls ' declare~ thai the cxpertment "not tl "bunLh t&gt;l h 1ppie
freaks trytng to brec1k down murahly ~landards We're JUSt normal
people t rytng to bve with rncmhcrs of the o pposttc st:x ," T h is is
believed to be the first trme any gJnup Ita~ annnun..:ed publicly tl wall
establish co-ed room s.

MADRID
"~I Conlohes," the world 's htghest pa1d athJete, rs
retinng at the age of 35 Manuel Bemlel Cordobes' career as a
bullfighter has spanned 12 years, and h.ts estimated annuaJ lllcome is S3
millio n . Cordobes gave the reaso n for Ius rettrement as " I used to be an
illiterate and have suddenly dtscovered there are many things in th.Js
world I would like to know ahou l "
\

Wednesday, 1 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�~
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~-

~
a&gt;
Cll

A ELE'r
. . ,l. f. t
~
~ ..

STUDENT ASSOCIATION

~.-~ .,.
C7

BALLOT FACSIMILE

'0

~

~

1

s::

.» ···.;~
~ l ..
·N·-.

t.

STUDENT ASSOCIATION
BALLOT FACSIMILE

.....

3

~

a&gt;

§"

~
'&lt;

-~
-

A~~~~~~~~S
-------------~----------------------------------------------------~------------PARTY

PRESIDENT

1st VICE PRES. 2nd VIC E PRES.

.
FRESH FACED
ELEVEN

STEVEN
GLASSMAN

Vantage

KEITH
FRANKEL

TREASURER

ACADEMIC
AFFAIRS

COORDINATOR

INTERNATIONAl
AFFAIRS ·

MINORITY
AFFAIRS

TINA
KUUS

JEFFREY
STE INBERG

NATIONAL
AFFAIRS

STUDENT
AFFAIRS

JACQUELINE
WEIR

GERALD
DUCI

STUDENT
RIGHTS

\ ()

.....:!

t-)

ALLIANCE

DENNIS
WARD

C.U.R.E .

DEBBIE
BENSON

BRENDA

LEE
SCHWARTZBERG

BOB
BELL

TYRONE
SAUNDERS

EUGENE
FAHEY

WILLIAM
CURRAO

EARL
COLE

DOUGLAS
WEBB

JEFFREY
OSI NSKI

JANINE
JANAS

DANIEL
KRIEGMAN

DIANE
ZWOLINSKI

SHEA
AKHTAR

VIVIAN
WIESNER

DEBORAH
AUERBACH

BRENDA

JAMES

EDWARD

ANDREW

SM!TH

R()W~
r-.

GAMBU!

KO~~OVER

HATEM
EL-GABRI

• 1"""" ...

EDWARD
WOLF

BONNIE
LEVY

CHARLES
IRELAND

INDEPENDENT

DAV I D
KEISER

INDEPENDENT

JAMES
BEALL

INDEPENDENT

~

INDEPENDENT

INDEPENDENT

INDEPENDENT

NASSER
ZIAIAN

DAVID
SANCHO

BOB
POMBO

.

�Life workshops give
existence a purpose
the University community . The
prevailing theme follows the
e-xample set by the University for
Man , a free university in
Millions of unseeing eyes
Manhattan · "This is something I
And unhearing ears
am Interested in. If you are
I move.
Trying to be make myself seen 110terested , too, come along and
)•Dan me."
And scream.
The goal of Life Workshops is
Trymg to be heard.
to
provade
the
necessary
Then.
administrative and interpersonal
Givmg up
aid needed to help people
I blend 1n
establish and join various interest
All too oflcn, the University IS g.roups. The gtoups are viewed as
1mmersed in ambivalence; few an "opportunity to share in terests
carmg, fewer rcspons1vc to that and concem s and work together."
C&lt;Jnng Nameless. numbered and A number of attempts have been
benumbed people roam the rnade on campus to give people a
w1th
fechngs
of place to sit and rap about things
campus
1111111Jienallt) . The vasr aluofness an wh1ch they have an interest.
nf till' lmvcrslly has engulfed U\ l .tfe Wurksllops as an attempt to
Jll .11 unc rune or .mothl'r Some vary the groups to represent any
and .til tastes
hJ\C 'teppcd out Jnd fuund w,1y~
Croups can be originated by
Of ~.11111ng \Onll' \lilt 11f C&gt;.ISICIICe
for them'&gt;Cives Others lust JJH.I Jn)'one Jnd parllctpatton is open
Jlunc. blend 1n1n lhl· pace1VCU tv ..all The sentiment says: ''Got
an mterest'' Get a group! ··
JIIU real call11usnes'
"Gettmg'' can entail anything,
Tin~ LIIHVersll\ 'hould he more
than an arcJ where unc purchase\ actually organmng a new gtoup,
J tcxtlhHI" cduca110n It ~hould
ptartiCipatmg m a pre-formed
bl' .t pi:!Cl' Ill cxpe11Cilce IICW
gwup or suggesttng an Idea for a
pen pic and new 1h111g.5. J place Ill new group and letting _someone
lrv&lt;·
life
and ' h ~111: one's else establish it . Life Workshops as
pcrceplnHis. It ~hnuld be a place .1 m~:eting place where ideas for
that fosters some sense ol groups can be turned into
understanding and cnmmu1U ty
actuality The groups are seen as a
Ufe Workshopl hav~: ong1na11:d place whete people can discuss
m an attempt to answer "the ;mythmg from their favorite
perceaved needs and desues" of
by lynda Teri
1-'eoture Editor

mcNo.ce

'W'.zz-af?

Cannabis sativa? No! Assistant Un1ion Coordinator Bob (Sherlock) Henderson last
week snuck up on this poor cactus plant in The Spectrum office and accused it of betng marijuana, the
killer weed. Further investigation showed he was w1rong, disappointing not only himself, but The
Spectrum staff, who had begun to cast hungry looks at the plant. Better luck next time, Mr. Henderson.

~

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STU ID ENT ASSOCIATION ELECTIONS
WEDNESDAY , THURSDAY, FRIDAY

MARCH 1, 2, 3

VOTE TODAY

at

NORTON -Center Lounge
TOWER - Main Floor
GOODYEAR - Main Floor
ALLENHURST- Bus Lounge ; Apt. 471 A
Dl EFENDORF - First Floor

ACHESON - near A-5
LOCKWOOD - Library First Floor
RIDGE LEA - Bus Lounge
and for:

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President, 1st Vice President, 2nd Vice President, Treasurer,
Academic Affairs, Student Affairs, National Affairs, Activities
Coordinator, Student Rights, Minority Affairs, International Affairs. '

.....~.....-~ . . -~'

W~dnes~, ~ Mar~h 197~~
I

. The Spectrum . Page seven

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EdiTORiAl

Endorsements

The various coordinator postttons have always been so
loosely defined as to cause many coordinators to accomplish
very little. This, plus the lack of accountability. makes it
necessary for the individuals who hold the positions to have
more than a small amount of self -discipline. Needless to say ,
we have seen very little of t hat this past year.

I~

1HAi ~l6HT I WOUUJ fJlFC
!HAT AlM:JJ6 SCEKUJ6 1116

Academic Affairs is an area that has been ignored far too
long. Tina Kuus, of the Fresh-Faced Eleven , is the best
candidate of her entire party and could probably do an
adequate job if elected . However, we support and endorse
Janine Janas because of her broad knowledge of and previous
involvement in this field.

~DeOCY /,U)JW txAHtU£.
ft{S ST,lJoHWTS CftRefuU.l{ \

Student Rights, t hough not always glam orous, ts
undoubtedly the single most important coordinator position.
Andrew Kossover's electio n would bri ng a depth of
experience rarely, iJ ever, equalled, to this post. His grasp of
the necessities and responsibilities of this ro le is thoro ugh
and we unreservedly give him our full endorsement.
We still believe the post o f National A ffairs Coordinat or
should be abolished and none of the current candidates has
proposed anything which w ould cause a reconsideratton of
that principle. Neither has any candidat e t or this o ffice been
the least bit impressive
The Student Affairs hopefuls that were interviewed are
also not very exciting. Gerald Duci is at best a poor
candidate, so by process of eliminatio n w e must recommend
the el ectio n of Vivian Weisner as Student Affairs
Coordinator.
The Student A ctivi t ies cand idates at least present a
choice. While· none of them is outstandi ng, etther Daniel
Kriegman or Diane Zw olinski can probably hand le th is
positio n credibly . Further. both of them seem able to
combine their programs and ideas effectively with other
candidates - and this 1s Important for the success of this
position.
Bob Pombo appears to be the best Mtnority Affatrs
candtdate. He has a complete understandmg of t he problems
mvolved tn this sensitive role and he should be able to avotd
the divisiveness and personal ity conflicts that plagued
Minorit y Af fatrs thts year We therefore endorse Mr Pombo.
Lastl y, there IS the much misunderstood post of
Int ernational A ffatrs Coordinator The most troubling fac tor
of th is posi tion has been the inabiltt y of most International
Affairs Coord inat ors .to become involved in t he mainst ream
of Student A ssociation activi t ies Hat en El Gabri not on ly
seems dest ined t o avo td thts pttfall, but possesses t ruly
outstanding pot ential. He is aware o f the problems
confro nting hts const ituency and has proposed several
programs designed to cure t hese ills. Wh ile David Sancho ts
also somewhat promisi ng, we strongly endorse Mr El Gabr i

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol 22. No 60

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
I h.JII Jll unuetl lo liM' Juday's u•lu n•n tu prov1tl c
"1111c lll'C pullhuly for the .:a nthtlatc~ I am
'uppo rl•nt: m !he Stuc.h'nt As.,o.:lalmn .:tec t1ons
Alter all , I tlttl Ml t h rough hat( ol tho~c 1nterv1ews 10
Dcnn•s' o ft1 ce und I h ave (a~ usual) lurllll'U ~orne
prclly )lrong or11n1un~ Oul then . I rcal11.c d l hdl my
prderl'OI.l'~ tlon'l reutty vury very muc..:h frum t h ose
,. ,r&gt;rcs\cd In Mond a y's cdJtonal so why bot h er
wa~11n~ ~pan· lnsll'.Jd I ltml mysc:lf d•rc.:tmg sornc
th&lt;~ughh tow.ud oh~l'IVIII!! t h e hulb h ll t h a t \Ccms
111\'VIIJhly '" 'llllllUnd lhc~e allaH'
What 'l'l' lll\ nHI\1 ni'IVIIIU\ h• llll' " lh·•l UOle
Jl!-,1111 I Jill IJ•t•d Wllh thl' p!O\ fll'Cl ot vol1ng for
,1h11111 whom I r.•.11ty know nexl lo rwth1ng
'llll(ll) bn.ww I don 'I Ill•.&lt;' whJI I ~nnw .1hnut 11111\(
n l llic l Jndu.I J t n. I Vl'll mnr1· tll'hcartcntng " lhl·
l&lt;'.lllt.oiHI\1 lh.rl '""ply hn.tli\C I work 111 this
lll'W\rl.lpl'r nlllot' JnJ hang Jrnund Norto n most o f
tht· .JJ~ I pr.1h.1hly h.111c len 11111&lt;'' lll&lt;lfl' •nlnrm,H•nn
.1hu111 lh••" r••upl1• lhan Jn lllO\t \lllcknh A)IUe
1111111 p.ml l"'llllt.d J l" a11d po\ll'l' Jlld whJI hlllc
' ~"'
h,
kJIIll'J
hum th•· •Jnd uiJi c~· wnllen
\1,11&lt;'111&lt; nh 1111"1 nl lht huth 1&gt;&lt;•hlllk ••I 1111' calllPII '
olfl' i.lllll f'kll'l~ Ullllll\lllllt'd 1\.Jd I loiiii i'Jiltlllllg
Jll' r Hhl oil '''" th.111 lllll' Wt't'l.. Jll\1 I hr ll'l'hlt'
tJ111pJ I!!11' th.tl .Ill' ".Jj!nl tlurlll!( 11\JI J'l'lltl\1 ,11111
~o~.lt ,11 111 dint hJI'J' l' ll\ '' lh.11 p~·ork .trt' l.,r,cd to
VOlt' ,lh\l lllllcly hhndl}

PI'"''"'

I .1111 l l )lll ~ to ,,1~ lh.11 lhl' " .1 ltdl ol .1 \(U pul
'~'11'111 h\

"'"'"teo

dlll\"l' J'I'IIJ!k \\lto Jll'):lllllf!IO
'011 1It •I t hrt·•· lJ ll.llll' ' ' nl a null 1nn dnlt,1" o l yn111
""''" y i\ lnl " ' II, , tllY'l'll ltldlhkd l1'11tl lo
ll &gt;ltlpl.lfll .ll .. •ul 'lut.h'lll Jfl,llhy, ami )t'l, ''" ' l h t•
an·l"f!'' \ IUd l'lll r,·.ll l y h e.: hl.un,·c.J I• H tu~ h ~.,,I,IO&lt; y lo)
V&gt;lll' lrt .111 l'lt•t 111111 JhtHII w iHdl II h VIIIUJily
llllfltl\\lhlt' '" ht• l..nowlt'd)!t'.thll-'1 Wh n ",ldlll~ 111ore
lllft•ltlt.tl'nlly lhl' \ lu tll-nl who \lOll'' 111 .111 ,·lt&gt;l'lmn
.1hout \\ l11 d1 ,h, P I h,• " ll&lt;'.trly l•l l.lll )o lgnolt.Jrtt olf
I h,· Oil&lt;' "hto ,111\t Jill' hl'LIU\l' ul I h.11 ll!llorJncc'' I
d• '"'I 1.1..1111 I'' h .l\11' I ltl\ ht'&lt;Oilll' .1 , •.II lilt .1 hoy~'lll I
'''II~&lt;· ti&lt;'dllln hul I'm 11111 Jh1ottl In Ul):t.' Jll'np lt' lo

"···~
I ,..,h I

Wednesday. 1 Ma rch 1972

B•d. p•~e

1\m~ l\l11rnol
1•1 Ann A•mJII
I ell t.r~enw diJ
llw1.1c 1\.unt
I dill\ I IIHTICI
R•111111 f c&gt; om,on

Campo'

City
Cupv

MJrl\ l&gt;JIIt

L.rvout
Assl
Lot &amp; Dram4
MuSil
OffCo~mpus
As~•

Pf11JIO

I '"' Voc~
•~&lt;·d

litH'II

(d•tor-m .Ciuef
Dl·nnh AI nooiJ
C u M~n•x•ng Edolm
A Uo'"""'
( u Man~gmg l:duor
M1~c l•lllllf',lll"
A~st MaruK'"Il Etlolur
'"'·'" M&lt;l"
j.u ~ tlcrldll
Busonen M~nager
AtJ~crtmng Mdn•ger
')u\.111 \o\cllo·n111u·

"''"''g':'
tlll•fld•

All ... •«

Mdl\ hlllh' kun~•111

I

UKI

\'ol\ ,Ult

A s~t

1\om~MIIU\

IJJrrv Rut'1111
ll nwiC r ~lwl

lnd-:pendcnt

Tllr Spt•c trufll h \ ctvc:d by Unuc:d Pres.~ I nlernaltOIIdl, Lollegc Prcs.s
Setvllt, the Lu\ Ant~elc\ f1mc~ rrec Pres~. the Lo• Angcle. f 1mes
SyndKate antll lhcr•l•on New~ Scrvo&lt;.t

l ncJsx-ndrnt

Republ1&lt;.~l1c&gt;n o l mallei herein wothoul the
Ed1tnr-rn&lt;.hu:f '' forbuJJen

')lrphrn

l&lt;'llrr\
\l t'ulht'tJS

C..,l.t\.. IUdU

e~prcss

Page eight . The Spectrum Wednesday, 1 March 1972

A ttiV'it•~'

I ' l'"A\Ut t't

toordrn4111r

Cuurdon•lut

lttht i1.41Utll

\If I l l \
f ..

.,,,,,fl .. l••

''""'••llb.-rg•

u~"" ''
" •"I

l UJI&lt;'no·

Wlllt4nl

\hr•

I Jh~'y·

turrAu

\~hlh

I \run ..·

f t' ll l~y

, ,.uuu.Jt:r\ •

o,.,,~._,.'

lndepcntlrn\

lOns.cn t ol tho:

Edi torial poiiC y 1s del ermined by tht Ed1tor·1n~h•ef

SIUdCtll

l····

l&lt;.rolh
l tJnt.rl

Uo·hh..l:h .•u,un•'

'''"'"II
Vo"
t'n·\nJt·nt

,..,...... •
:

J.u\d~ ·

O••ne
lwoliml.. l

''·'''""'
I I ,hn ••
t ••

lt&lt;·l~nd

Sports
A sst

ldiiC

f'ft.'"'\ld~nt

Llutl~\

1\.IIC~\mJfl

I

Pr.-\ltlrnr

M odo,u·l '&gt; olvto hl •ll
Uolly AltmJt•
I ~nne I t~egct
Vdl dl11
Mo o ~ I'\ 1)\teo teoch~r

l Ylld,o f crl
I om 1 ole'

Aut

FeaiUre
Graphoc Arts

vote e1t her Nor am I a ll cmph n g to excuse s tuden t
Jpathy 1 here IS no exc.:u~e ro r not hc•ng represe nll'll
111 the Student Assembly . or for ~•ttiog o n ou1
t.ntlet.:IIVC J'&gt;~ while the co mmunity ill o u r do orstqt
roh 1n ..:n rrupt10n anti JHCJU dlce I t's tust thai in 1h1~
unHJUt' ~a~e. there mtghl hl' 'omt:t h 1ng lo he Sllld lo1
nul ~elllng Involved , unit:\\ yuu know what 's gout~·
on
(;p,tt:o these t:nndt tions o ne might at tca~t hop ,·
lhal the t.:and•tlotc~ mvolv e tl would con.:enlrat~· on
gelltng I heir v1~ w ' d1s~cmina l etl lo t h e student h od ~
rather I h an h ct.: o llllllg 1nvolvt:t11n per~unal &lt;~!lad: .. 1111
t h e fliC\Ctl l governme n t (Whl t.: h deserves them) tth
other candidate' (who may 01 may not d c,elv,·
thcml and th 1~ pubh CJII OII tnt' l nmmcnt) Ala, , tJu,
IS nol to be /\s I wnle th1\ , I am ahcac.ly awan· 111.11
nne part y up't'l tlvt:r Th e ,\pt•cttl1111 ~· n cl or,,·n~o..•nl\
has ..:on 111hu11:d a hale lellct to tlH: edlttJti.JI I'J!'"
l'ell1ap' ul hcrs have or an· bt:•ng wnllen I will no1
atlempt 10 an swer o r altum lhe c harges made '"
s u t h SIJtements
I am quill' eertatn Oennts Arnold
1s ca pahlc ol dcfend1ng h•m,df I tl u h o wever. lll''"
the Ial ii' o f mnuendn lh.tt ha\ ht'u1rne all I 1•
l'O mmon \pt:ult~alty lhl' t;.JIIIl' co l lit,· w..-et.. 't:l'lll\
tu h e gulll h&gt; J\\llt.:IJiwn I tlo not \ ay that 11 " ·•
mel h od hemg l'n lplu y,•cl hy thl' ~..tndJdJi e~. hul 11 1'
Lt:rt atnly IIIW ol the lavunt..- pastimes ul tlll'll
\l1J1J1nrll'r:. Stwdrum hal e r~ haVI.' hcen tnformcc.J th.11
lkbt:ue Ucn\1111 " thl' ''~ter o l the managing n ltl or
Dc nnl\ Wan.l \ ,IS\OlHl lt n n w11h ll arv..-y Wem ste1n Jnc.l
( orky Bur~tcl ho~s bel·n usl'd 111 diStrt:dll Jus p:HI~
wttll cnt:llltl'S ol lh c tr\ , lt'v \ !&gt; Uppnrl nf Sll'phcu
(;ta,~man IS piJycd o n to make thai la mp;ugn sct'll•
k~s scnou'
llndouhtl·dly s u c h ta c l•cs may hr
l'lledtVl' hul tht· s•mpll' fa .: l nl tht: matter 1s thai
they s11nk l'hcy ar~ lh..- t ype ol action one wnuld
cxpnl lr11m RtLhartl l&gt;aley , noT rrom s uppo snll y
Jlrll~fl'~~lv ~·. ll'vol\lt:t.l ~~ udcn t ~ r ht• rtdl l' UIIIIIS tt11ng I~
llut Jtl th e Lantlld ,ll t!S n~ed ''' do I' read theu
u rron e nto, ' ~l.JICmt'llh and t.:u mc up w1th some.' re,ll
1\Stll'\ on whtc. h 111 ~J'e 1casu nablc argurncn ls
I hat , however '' t oo nnKh t o J~k for t gul!"
the o nl y ha"' tllll t•rcnLc " e lw et&gt; n 'lluc.lenl pallllll.ltl\
and 11!her poh11uan' ·~about tl'n years

• • lndiUin ~ Thr S~nrum endur~ undid~ lr
• on&lt;hUit". ~ rrcummrnd.ltiun

N.;\'tCI

l i.. IJII

�Subtle dishonesty
To the Editor:

I

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Monday 's
e d1t o nal
s h o wed
ho w
s ubtl e
disho nesty can b e. Where did you get the
information that t h e Brenda Alliance Party "is s plit
and may n o t s urvive a w eek o f ca mpaigning?" The
Brenda Alliance Party Is not and ha s not been split
Do you make up fads to suit yourself?
And just what are yo u getting at by " The
Brenda A llian ce, is a s haky and highJy quesllonable
coalition of four Blacks a nd th ree whites ... " Arc
you trying to sca re the student body int o thinkmg
that a vote for Brenda Allian ce IS a vote for a Black
tak~ov~r
Is 11 really JUS t a n accident that you
mJscoun tcJ the number of wh1tes on the h c kct?
There aJe fit•e wh1le members on the Brenda Alliam;e
Party As a matter of fal'l, you pnnted all live of
their st at ements. What are th e possib le motive~ of
~uch irrespon sibility'! Why must Thr Spr1·rrum stoop
tu using ra cist scare tactics?
M ight 11 be poss1ble that thl'Sc su htlc example~
1lf misinformation arc not a•·ctden t s'l
Yes. 1t's true that Btlbby Bell J1Jn't 'uhuut a
platform . H e didn't hke the 1dca of groveling Jl the
f~et Of lhe kingmaker.. fi e thought you wouiJ tWI\1
.tlld dtslort the fads li e hasn't been dlsappt&gt;JllletJ
And tust what " th1~ precious pl.tlfnrm''
Prom1'e' We will do 1111, we will do thai l'rum l"''

are the easiest o f aiJ po!Jt ical activities. All pas t
office holders o f th e S.A have had infantile h.igh
sch oo l platforms, and whe n they took office th ey
d1d n ex t to n othi ng.
We will no longer ins ult the s tudents with
meaningl ess prornJSes What the n is o ur stand? If the
students see thr o ugh the om nipotent position of The
Spectrum as a Jpve r of truth then t h ey wiJJ see that
o ur promiSes am o ur candrdates. Talk to them!

Brenda A 1/ion t;e Party
f.'dttrJr's note f.'tnt, tht• lllformotion regordrng the
tickets precortous pomwn come from Dennis Word,
the prestdenttol candtdate. wh o expressed con cern
over rnternul dtJ;senttons wtlhrn the party. Secondly,
we d u nut feel .rile coallflnn u q u enio noble b ecause
of trs bt·ractal compmitwn Rather. we oppwud that
fact O ur objec.rions are based on th e fact that th e
A Ilia nee Party d'id nut reach 1ts preunt form until a
jew hours before rhl• ballots became final . That plus
tire ohrenre of ,uny eummon programs on th o ughu,
muf...es the ttckel questionable
If your party feelr rhor mentioning tire
t'Omprwtwn of You/ rrdcct t.t a racrst score tac•tic.
1/tt'/1 If IS ynu orrd ltut ur who urt' rat'lf t Wh I' rhould
111111 u /Ill t st·are un I'OIIt' '
ltnully, tl~t· IIIIH'IIIUiftng uf nmdfdotes woJ a
\1111(111', t•et l't'TI' IOHII·. m•ersrgll/ort our part

tNever the twain shall m,eet'
/'II " " '

Unfair judgment
In rlw ftltl••r
II '''''"''In llll' thai 1'/11• Sp,·ttnun wlll'll wnlrllg
llf' lh1: ~:lltloiiJIIIn '!./ ~K I'Ollltl not l'l'~)lhly llld~e thc
und1tlulc\ l.11rly Jnd tnJn•tduul/1• Th e1r rl'm,rrl,,
.1 hnlll 111 y f'J rt y "1 h~: fo rcsh I au:J I h'H'II" Wl'r l'
l'llltrcl)' hawll un lhctr past expenent:e w1th l l·v I h,
\pn lrtlm h.1J llbYtOU)I}' made a prl' IUllgrncnt hclore
lht: 1ntt:rv1ew, to the ca ndtdates so 1nsh:ad of ratmg
lt~ IOdiVIdually, wh1ch would ha ve proved more
lru1tlul, tlll'Y s1mply 1gnored our po~111nns and
pmu:edl'd In krlnlk thl' entlrl' p.Jrly wh11.h 1~
ndtl'Uiou\ (\Ill ll nw can t:lne rnal.e .1 group
lllllgrnent ha,cd un 5 to 10 01111Uit: IOil'rvrew~
Without be1111: hla,ed . I !..now that T/11' Spl'l'trum
Jl\lllo.n Lev hut all I ask IS tiHtl they ralt" llw
..:andulale on what they wrote ,lfld what they 'hltJ ul
lhe mtervtcw A fair elect1on llllC.t hav~: J 1.111
prc\l·ntatH&gt;n nl the 1.and1dates wlmh Th1· 'ipntrum
unlurlunatcly .hose not to t.lo
Jl'ffl lJuu
fd1t11t '1 llf/ft Our cft•Jt TlfiiWII 11/1'&lt;1/lf fiiJrll' II'Ul rtot
ba:..·J 1m a111 ~lltlf'•ltlrwr tow(lrdr I r1• Ratllrr. fhrr•

uemmed from tht• {01 t rllot only anc memh1•t oj
I'IIU' t'lltlrt·
irati tire ja1111est tdt•u of ltuw ti11111(J.
wnr/.. irr 1/11.1 rt'hoof 1-'urther, your flri!SIIfi-IJ/Ial
I'UIIdtdo tt•. wlrom Wt' lniHI teKuru os tlr~· h•·ad of vour
/It /..ct. (}t/SIII&lt;'It'd IllS quc•stw11.r wlfli qllf)ttJttOrts jrum
In f111s 11 11111 tht' .1/u{j guod candtdates Ufl' mudl'
fro 111

''""I'

II tA l

,..,

M111mtly
Aff ""~
Coordlnolor

N~110rul

S1ullt11l

Aff.trs

Aff~11~

Coordin~tor

Coo1d1nllor

l uqu..tin&lt;'
Weir

Dud

Brrrn:b

J•mt'S

~m11h

Ro~
Edw~rd

Wolf

Sluch-111
R1gh1&gt;
Coord or•~""

......

hh/111

I wuuh.l like ru lh.Jnl. /Itt· .\fJI'IIrllm nlllccrmn~t
rh •IOJCliiVtty hy tuVInl! hulh \llln ol I he \lory ol lh~
Ar.Jh-/.tnnl\1 ~,tlnfltd '" IH d1" U\\l't.l on lh pJg.c'
llnwever. .JI Ill\' t•nd ol what \Cl'lll' 111 hl' I h1:
llllldUStlln ol IIH· whuk 1.11\CII\\ron . on,· &lt;'lllll.li
tjUC,IIIIn, 'WIIIdl h;l\ IWl'll r.rheJ oil 1111' hl't!,IOIIIIIl( ul
tlw dl\lii'•SIIIIl, h," yd tn tw JII\Wl·rcJ Wh y do till·
Arah' rl'luw to III:):Oit J II:
w11h the /.111111\l
l'\la hil~hlll l'lll Ill I l l ' IIJlll'd J'.tl l·~lllll'/
II ""'' 1.1n \IIIIVIIhC lh•• Arah' thJt thl·
A llll'fll.Jil' \hllldd h.1v1: nq:uii.JII:!I wtl h llr1' J.tpJne'l'
Jlll'l Pearl ll.ub t•r lll lht• I rem h should have
\ltrremle1cJ Ill lh&lt; 1\,111 111\'.1\lllll h&lt;· wuulll lw Jhll·
In hl.tnw lh1· i\1,11\\ 'tuhb11111 flll\1111&gt;11 ol Ill'

nejtoiiJilnn ur 'urrcnller111g lnlhl· 71ontsl aggression
Anll althuuto:h the Arahs an: the rctreallst:., Professor
ll agen t!,IVt:~ the rea\on for ~udt " pos111on . Hagen
\lre,~c' that I he r(lre.tltl&gt;l per\on "not free of rage,
&lt;~n lhl' t:n nlrMy h1:. rage 1~ lnltn\c The retrc:atist
g.ve' lhl' nw 111 a ll~t~rmmant )!enera11on And the
Arah' poty lhctr l1J1Iy lh.tnk, tu H emmjtWay who
t,tu~hl them m ·• The 011.1 MJn .mt.lthc Sea" thai man
t.Jn he tkf•·all-d hut 11111 lleslroycd
What Sl'l'lll~ to lw lhc real Jn,wer to the whol e
1"ue •~ Ktphng'•, tamn1" phraw ' I·.J ~l 1s East and
1' We~l , anti rH'Vl'l till' I warn 'hall meet," whJ~:h
III.IY ht· rcphrast·tl , ''Arahl\111 '' 1\rahl\111 anll Z1omsm
1\/IOIII\Ill ,;tnd n~v~r lh,•tw,lln,hJII meet ..

w,.,,

thuA~yaslr
ldtllllllllt'

Stw.lertl

Communication failure
I" !Itt ftlll•"

I n -.ludt·ul ' '"'t t,llll•r• l'lnlt••n' "' fH&lt;'•ult n~
Yl';H', k" than om· lh11tl oil fht· \ludt• nl hody hJ'
'"''"'" 1o1 Vol•
I 11, &lt;'\fll.tn.ollllrl" 1lt1l lltllrurll IP
••lttlprl'!~t·nd
'i •\
11.1\ 1.1dnl '" lllllllllltiUI:alt 11\
llllf'OIIJih&lt;' In lh1 'llllll'lll hlld~ In \Jlllt ul rho
move (rPITI fh&lt; pulil~ In ltw \llHI&lt;'III .l,wrnhly l111111
Ill jtll"elflllll'lll 1.1 IIIII \I' I h ,tl "'.!' Ill Jill- Ill lll'lll'I.Jil'
1111\'ll''lllhc 111111111l\ nl llw \IIHh-11 1 hoHiy" lol.ill}
JpJihlll• lo&gt;V..JTd' lh&lt;'-., \
1111' I' undt•r,IJIId.thlt l"II'Hkllll~ lhc ll',nrd "'
lh1 SA
I hl· uHI\II hiJhh' l.t,lo. ol .lthlt'Vt'nll·nl
IIH'I\hJ\Iow' .HI\ ~:o.rb Jll.JIIInl I II" )'l'·ll .rgalu

.:ontt·mk" lnr ~A ofll&lt;&lt;' pledg&lt;' a numher ol
rl'lo1111' .uHI lllln&lt;&gt;votlhrn:. Mtt~l nl lhc~e promc.e~
wo11ld rl.'lfiHr&lt;' 1hi&lt;' llpllh" ' Jll·r~crver .. nu· of the mo~t
ouhlundmg mdtvldu.tl,, Jl IIH'Y ..,,. In lh· rcah7Cd I
1 ,1n nnl)' t.IP I•h l lfll' 1"'~\thrllly ol I he pr~scnl
l .JIIlltd.tll'' \lllll'l,\
I h&lt;' "'"e' ll;I\IH·d hdorc u' .til' , Jl t:lectton
IIIII• tkwrvrn(! ol lht: nuhl ur~tt•nt Jllt&gt;nllnn and an~
1111"1 dtn tn ucnl nl rnltll l J1oon But . rl'gardle~ ol
whom " cll'&lt;lt'd thl· 'Jille rrnhll'm' .:nnt1nut' on,
llllll'\IIIVt•d 1111ly Ill h1• ll'fl l.ll~J Wllh drtlt'l~lll ISSlll'\
.JI 11!1 Ill \I dt'dlllll , v.h1d1 lnlfuy,. I)W 'dllll' pJIIt'rn
( :,., 1

J&gt;antJirl'•

I want to be me
I o th• I .lllur
I Wl\h In d.JIIIY Ill) l'"'lllnrl Ill ll'~Mtl\ I" Ill)'
.tflth.ltlun v.llh Mr M 11 h.11·1 lt'VIn'"n
l p 111 ru•v. 111y '.llllfl.ll~/1 h.l\ Ol't'll tndchhly
m.ul.ed wllh lhl· l'lll~lll.t ul
11·• ' Mr lt'"ll'""'
\1'1\l'd ·" I llll!d lll.lllll Il l lh•· I ll'\h ..... ,,.d I 11·1·1'11
ltd, ,.,
I' " ht'l\ Ill)' .IIIIILIIIIIIll'lllh
I .1111 Ill~ IIWII Jll'l\011 1

I"·''

II •·It·• tt·d . Ill) unl~ nhll~.tllnll\ would be lo th e
.ll.tth ""' '""'111111111\ 111 v.h•dl I 'hJrc a part No
ol h,•r .ttllh.tllllll' w uuiJ dl\•~:rt lilY .JIIenllons from
lhn\1 v.hn w .. ut.l ~tr.tnl Ill&lt;' lilt• op pmtumty to serve
I h1: 111

f'uta I\ uul
I 'und1date fur

r, aJ,.,,,

1/{lllrr Coordtnotor

~

Vtvl•n

OtbUioh

Wi"ncr •

Aut'1'b~ch

EdwArd
G•mblt

Andrrw
1\.os)U'jf'f • •

Bonntt

lrVJ

Bob
Pombo••

'WHO WAI THAT ILDII LY, IALDING CHINISI GINTLIMAN WITH LICHAlD NIXON?'

Wednesda¥, l March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�'

Life workshops.
hobby to their strongest gripe. a
place which has "something to
offer everybody."

Here and now g.-oups

...

One group IS actually started .
three are scheduled to be~un soon
and
four more arc being
established. Each group needs
participants . The number of
gro ups that can be estJblished 1S
limitless and depends \Oiely on
the response received .
The Facilitator's Wurkshop.
curren tly meet1ng on Fndays J 5
p m 10 Room 132 Norton. ~~
des1gned for those who .ue
mterested m takmg a more active
role 111 ~ychornat Psychomat IS a
rap grvup \fhu:h :ttternpts 111
establish cornmun1catnm on :..
deeper level than most people arc
famil1ar with 1n dally ~11uatmns
The work\hop "concentrate\
on process111g rhr personal feelings
and rl.'~pnnses ·· of those 111volved
''The rmphas1~ 1S un c\pandmg
u n e ·~
self-understant!Jng.
1ncreasing
awarene~s
and
acceptance
of
others
and
developmg new cummun1cat1\lO
skills "
T he
I ntercultural
Commun1C:1t1on Workshop un
F riend~hip w1ll be held llll Mardi
18. 10 a.m. b p.m All lore1gn
and
Amencan studen t\ are
encourJged to partiCi pate 111 order
to develop an awareneS\ nt each
nther ·~ culture and per~onal1 t scs .
An Jllempt to determ1ne the
effect of culture on enhancmg ot
restrictmg tse!&gt; 11f fneml\lup W1tl
be made w11h hnpcs fo1 all;uning
some answers Anyone 111terested
sn tlus 1s urged 111 call XJ I·JR28 .
The thsrd and fourrh grvups
relate to more ~unnete. rnatenal
quest10ns we lace toJay They
deal w11h two a~pects of academ1c
life and will be run b) members of
Un1vers11y Placemen t &amp; Career
Gusdance .
· · 0 e c ss 1on' .
D 1.' l' 1s nHI s .
Oecistuns What Should My Ma1or
Be?" The til le IS &lt;&gt;el f-explanator y
The group w1l l anempt 10 deal
With varmus C:HCI.'r pu)\lbrhlle'
and locus tlll the "valuable
proccs~ of deciSilln-makulg .. It
begms March 14 and w1ll he held
fuesda} &gt; 3 4 pIll All IIIICIC:\tCd

-&lt;ontlnue&lt;J t.rooa .,... -

• •

call 251 1 and ask to speak to
Billie.
''Now That I 've Got My Major.
Can I Get Employment?" Meeting
Mondays 3-4 p.m., this group
will begin March 13. It will
"probe
and
explore
the
possibiht1es fo r employment and
graduate study.'' Th1s is directed
for upper d1vision students but. rs
open to all concerned . Once aga10,
all interested should C\lntact
Bllhe .
These four repre~e nt what are
believed ro be the maJor need' of
the Unrverss ty Many more are
bemg C11ns1dcred and students.
faculty and $tart arc needed JS
partrcrpatnrs
and
101t1a tors.
Workshops rn recorder play1ng.
alternatiVl' ldr 't:rlc'. alternatrvc
vucatiLlm and urga111c 1tv1ng.
heallh :.nd nutrltHHI arc currently
m the prolCS) uf be111g organ11cd
People have mdrcatcd an 1ntrrest
111 the~e. ami the mechani~ms lm
begmnmg them au~ undi.'IWJY
P.artscspant~ are &lt;1l"' needed lor
these.
Many JrffCil'lll group~ WI.'IC
suggested hy !tjr Worlohops
commit tee . Once arr mterc\1 1s
1ndrcllted m any or all of these
groups. thry will be \tarted Some
1deas were eu1logy. urternatro nal
l'Ooking. marnagc counsel111g,
urgan1/Jtrunal
tll·vclopment,
CllnfJIC I re\OIUtlllll:
creatiVe
problem ·\olvmg, arllst IC aud /o1
I 1tcrary
'kills
rmp rovemcnt
thmugh gmup tc~hmques . rJ~rJI
relatson\ and vanou~ marathon
rap SCS~ICIIlS for ~pCCI tic IS~ lie\ of
111teres1 II these appeal to you,
wntact Bslllr. 22'i Norton. 2'i I I
'Pi a.~tic'

and amendahle
''Thruugh group\ J dmcne~~
a nJ
undrr~tandlll);!
Jcvl'lop
hrtwccn !X'" plc who othl.'rWI\1.' do
not have an opp&lt;Hlllllll'l- to k11ow
ca'h uthc1 ," JClllrdlllg Ill the
commrttec The workshnp~ Jre
\CI.'II as the answer 111 the "need
lor mu1c J1.1lugue .. l he !!encr.1l
llb)eCIIVI.'~ 11! /1}&lt; ll'ur/..\/rufl\ .Ill.'
"pla~lrl·" .111LI .Jllii' IHIJhk IP tlhl\l'
ol the v;u"''" );!ll'lllh
Unhl..e
P~"l"'lll.tl
wher,•
111d IVIdu.JI, dc.1l w11 h "wh.•mn
kl•lr ng~ ." I 1}c h'orA lhtifl\ w d I
de.sl \\llh lllpl~\ 11t III(Cil'\1 Ill
111d 1V1dual );!I nup' II 1he 111\'111 hl.'r'

un!versity
u nton
activ ities
b oard

.,

wish to deal wilh "deeper
communica1tlon," they may, if
not, they can relaco lo o ne
another in whatever fashion most
co m f or t ab l e
to
them .
Communicoation is the key word ;
and as lung as that goal is
accomplished, Life Workshops
w11l be con:sidered a success.
Sharing the hopes o f creating
an "intimate campus for all,"
various slndivld!Jals from the
DiVISIOn off Studen ts Affairs. and
Continuing Education have joined
w1th students .tnd uther members
of the Unrvcrs1ty community to
establish these groups. They see
th e rnselve~ as a veh1cle for those
who w1sh Ito partsc1patc m a group
and do not know what IS available
•.111d for those who wtsh Ill
estahlish a grou p but do not know
how to tic• ~~~ fhc:,. beheveJ the1r
three mator
fun~tmn~
were
tlctcrmrnmg the need~ of the
acal.lcmll' cummu111ty . 1nrtiat mg
wnrkshu p•. II• mert those needs
anJ pnlVrdllllt the mean~ fnr
nthe1s to d o the same.
ltfc War/.. flwps proposed "Ill
ClllUUrage people 111 learn from
each other. no o ther reward than
&amp;'Towing 1h rough lear rung . . . to
brrng togc thcr people With simtlar
u1tercsts ur goals . . (and) to help
people apprcctate how much we
h&lt;~vc to offer each tltlu!l "
Enthusiastic and eneTgelic
1 he workshops will all be
"voluntar) cnterpmes" lind "free
to all ." The onty pussrb11ity of
cmt may .lr iSI.' whcu certain
cqUJpmentl or partrculars are
tlrllught needed
Wary of l!ruU p~ ru11 by
unsksllcd leaders . the commi ttre
111 t ruds
111
111 terv1ew
all
pl•rspc" 1v1: leaders and establish
1111
each . Other
rcfrrcnccs
l.Jicguard~ Jfl.' bc1ng taken to
J.t.~Url' the 'uc..:css 111 thrs venture.
r,. lfl)ll llllt any humps Ill the new
p10fl11!.JI . leaders and group
pJriiCip.J 111\
Will
evaluate
tlwrml'lvc·&gt; Jud each lither. In
111dl.'l It• ga111 ,1 cleart•r p1cture of
what ~~ hcllll! Jone nght or wrong •
thl.' ~·umnHttcr w1ll rcv1r w these
.111d Ol\\ l'" .mv po~\rhlc ~hangcs.
hrtlru ".s~111 run' hr)!.h and all
llll'lllhu, arl· eagl'r j,, suc~css .
( tllll Hurnham . draiiWtllll.lll. srg.ns

The UUAB Musi-c Commrttee
And Buffalo Festival

In Conc:ert

Prestmt

THE KINKS
FAIRPORT CONVE1'lTION
LINDISFARNE
March 1 at Kleinhans
Tickets $5.50, $4.50, $4.(]K&gt;
GOOD SEATS ST ILL AVAILABL E
T ICK ETS AVAILABL E AT NORTON TICKET OFFIICE

Page ten . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 1 March 1972

'

her
~orrcspond ence,
" Your
co·member.
Coni.''
exc1ted
Response to various research,
reactio ns to Psychomat and
mqumes to vanous offices have
convinced members that the need
for !.Jfe Workshops IS strong.
'1'he pro gram is based on lhe
behef
that
pos1t1ve
group
interaction provides a means of
e nco u r a gmg
person-to-person
communrcation whjch contributes
to understanding and a feehng of
closeness among people.'' It is
hoped. by commillee members,
that Life Workshop will be able to
fos ter these feelings to many.

Anyone 10terested 10 JOining or
organizmg a group IS invited to
contact BiUie in Room 225
Norton or caJI 251 I Participants
and ideas are greatly needed and
welcomed. Anyone requesting
more info rmation may contact
those at A ction Line in Norton
10
lobby,
Monday Fnday,
a.m .-2 p.m.
Friday, March 3. an open
house wtll be sponsored by Ufe
Ww klltoJ" .froql

,2,

~~

Room 232 Norton . It is intended
to be a chance to s.ign up for
groups and gain more in formatioo
about Life Worksh ops.

�Capri Art h~ts plans to
expose Osee~ skin flicks
Bill Osco IS spring finally
coming to Buffal o.
Now who 1n the h ell IS Bill
Osco you might ask , then again
you might n o t ask. Anyway, Bill
Osco
(Ahas
Harry
Hopper,
absolutely n o relation to Dennis)
is a crotch auteur.
He mak es meat movies. They
arc by no means pomograptuc,
because there IS absolut ely no
tease anvolved and none of the
attendant l'Uitural atllludmmng
and
moral
postunng
that
mvariahly accom panres shots o f
bleak people grinding for a ca mera
in black lace underwear, whJc h IS
no t meant to be a put do wn of
black 13cc underwear It can be
quate exc1t1ng 1f you're an the
nght mood, .1nd besad es t o
de mean hla ck lace und erwear
would be J restnct10n Jnd w.:
certaanl y have no m o re need fur
rest ncllons 1n th1s day and age
As stat ed before, BaU Osco
makes m co~t mov1es. he's yo ung
(about 24 years old), h e ha1ls
lrnm
the
go lden
s tale
of
Cahfo rn iJ , and tus sexual a111tudcs
.rre hardly J bove reproac h , but
wmpared 111 the usual Holly wood
exploiiJIInn
tEa.rv
Rldl'r,
Clenputru, n~rt1• 1/arrv, Srraw

enlightenment in a 30-second clip
of people giving each other bead
(a New York term - Joe) in a full
color 35m m Osco film than in t h e
life work of Daryl F. Zanuck."
Wluch Just goes to s how you
where ltis head's at .

Sashaying down Main
Bill Osco is curren tly nstng

fro m the underground to attract
an audience o f young people
whose sexual attitudes have been
spawned from parents who dress
111 lo ng trench coats and sneak orr
to I hear neighborhood skin palace
to catch a glimpse of enraged,
oenlarged nipple, and maybe if
theu ex tremely lucky so me pubic
lhatr Well , they ' ve co me a long
way , now 1ts a matter of sashaying
d o wn the street tn brightly
c:olorcd garb, laymg down five
!bucks and taking !hear dates to see
ch e hkes of M o na
l!'he incomparable Dave Van Ronk will perform in
Meat
mo VIes
are
even
the UUAB Coffeehouse on Friday and Saturday
saturattng mto grassroots theaters
March 3 and 4 . He's completely recovered from hi~
all o ver the country. Meat movies
"ecent illnen. And thit bme, the concert is for real.
and neighborhood theaters are
l reckett are on sale now at the Norton Hall Ticket
loe\.ommg qu1te friendly . As
Office.
Vannv stat es · "Though local
a uthont1es wo uJd probably not
·-------------~.
JOB HUNTING'
I
11d mat 11. a number o f exhibttors
II S•v• hours or T tme• Seno us lOb 1
report that polJce on the local
d4Kcrlplfon •no we wil l send y ou
computer •odoessed N o JO envelopes f nufl..r, ('/od. worl. Oranfl.t'. tl1. 1.
jpreCIII.:I level actually welco me
I ($ 20) or pressure l;obeh (S J 5) or 250 1 ()\l.o " h l.. t• l&gt;nuhkm•nl 'hewmg the
pol.tLy
shaft
m
the
l "'•lor comp•n les w ith nMds In your
rteld
(Also
roelgn
and
schoo1 l
gum
lluublc your pleasun:
t1t:1ghborh oods. In il number of
I dlscrlcts). Nat I. Resume Sendee f duublt•
your fun " and all that
P.O.e
1445, Peoria, 111
6160J
1!th011. nabes, houses classed as
I Guaranteeo.
I
An.l ev&lt;'n Jeff ~tales " lhcre IS tmJr~t~nal grossers w1th standard
mnre whnlc,nrno· e nt ert.11nment 11&lt;1•on 'howcase fare wer e o ften
value ~l'l l l..nnwlcdl(C anti gt•ncr~ l il~·~~·etl
to
request
pohce
Free parking"
protcdaon o r ture guards to hold
ON MANY TITLES
Unlver~lly M;onur
r~:.:..:·:·:·:-:..:·:·:·:·:-:-~·:-:..:;.,:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:":·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~~:·:,.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.;:-;:-x-~:: down " hool.tg.an1sm," ftghts and
(ne"t door)
vanuahsm dunng performances
BUFFALO TEXTBOOK STORES INIC .
~
~
~~
STUDENTS CAN JOIN
:~
Audtence!&gt; for porno attractions tn
3610 Main St.
1833-7131
the vl!ry «arne houses are reported
as much m ore attentive t o the
o n ·s..reen achon and much less
lrkdy In creak upruars o ut uf
~
~ sheer
boredom
fhu ~.
;::
for
§: pa radllXI~·all y. 1hey pre.sen 1 less of
~
~
a pruh!t:m nf local pollee "
I ht:ro: I\ even a movement
.1loot 111 New Yml.. fo t~~lah hs h a
"Ht of Jelen~«.- fund wherehy a
numh&lt;r nl theJtcr. would pool
and
lfC\IIU rlC\ ,JIId who:n UIIC Ol them IS
allE.'nd the Rotk Open1ng uf
hu,tetl hy the poiJC&lt;' they would
TH[ KINETIC &lt;Jnd OBJECT EXIfiBITION
hav~: ha1l money and le~d '~:rv1u~'
.IVJti J hll' IO I ht'm

Weekend performance

SALE

50% off

L--------------

~

~

~

The Albright-Knox Art GaUery

~=

$10.00

=~

~

Sat., March 4th

~

%

9:00p.m.- 2:00a.m.
featuring the musit ul

PARK SIDE
An astonish ing leap into the pa~t. and into tile
present. The program includes time on ac tu allllg
site, six credit!. from T el Aviv U ni versi ty,
a traveling seminar on the people of Israel. and
free time. Dates Mid-June to mid-Augus t; cost $844

~

~·~
I

*
X

Sixty Americans will try to create a new world
in their minds' eye image by 1974. We offer a
chance to spend a summer working with some of
them on a n existing Israeli k1bbut z. D iscover tf
kibbutz life is for you. Travel time. seminars. free
time, air transportation included. Oates. M1d-June
to m id-August; cost: $660.

......,

Spring is beautiful in Jerusalem. We offer a two
trimester program, J a nuary through June, at the
renow~ Hebrew University; academic credits
plus our very personalized program.

plu~ &lt;1

LI GHT ~HOW
for

mlormultCJII

'"

~~

coil

tt.'WII'fllwrl\

8828700

continued on paqe twelv-

v

~;

I tc keh $ 7 'lO lor mc•mht•t'
M embN\htp tor \(uc/t&gt;rlf, /0 (){)

~

y

~~

(}..co 3t midnight'''
l c&gt;~.JIIy there 1\ .1 !heater wludt
" \hnw1ng the rtl.JJur wurl.s of Btll
c h 111 1 he Capn Arc I heater on
B111ky Ave IS .:urrt:ntly f1n1shang
liP .1 run 11f !t opper's Tltuanu 8/ut•
.tnd h1111ght 1hey arc opcntng d
douhlc·htll ol Os..:o \ Tht• Dellcott·
l'·r··,,lt Touch .1ntl &lt;.'til u[ S1n
ri ll'
l1r't one as d graph1c
&lt;:xplan.llwn o f a ' •rren t cultural

~~

y

Is 11 true that The Spectrum IS
publtshed by little red elves?

~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:·:•:.-.-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·x·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-;.;.:.....:.:.:-~/X'J".I(-¥..«--~

University Free ·rime
starting Wed.MarchB
COFFEE -

RAPPING -

EXCHANGE OF IDEAS

(Available for memben only)

Hamxr••••
..
...._
Zlonllt-11

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACI':

817 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10003
(212) 260-4702

UNIVERSITY FREE T IME IS A CHANCE FOR PEOPLE TO VOICE THEIR IDEAS
AND OPINIONS ABOUT THIS UNIVERSITY.
If you have something to say - say it where

PEOPlE

WILL

LISTENI

Everyone is invited. CALL831 -5502 for mom informatiion.

Wednesday , 1 March 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�Capri Art.

•

•

phcnomenu, group1 e~ and plaster quite campy story lines. His big
hit , (and h is first movie) M ona,
casters.
The manager of the theater, the "grande dame of porno
conv1nced that there IS a young, queens" as Vor1ety caJJs h er, wns
mterested heterosexual audience a n instant hit. It ran an New York
tn
tlus
area,
is
currently for years.
cons1denng the idea of 3 811l Osco
film festival It mtght be an "Osco Refreshing concepts
.tt M1dn1ght" series sort of ltke th e
l:.lgtn Ill New York. admission
1\s j()r h1s movie l: raft ·tn
wo uld only be a dollar and there
1\Jlllmo Blue . hiS use nf ca mera
wnuld be double features nightly .
anglt (a stock shot ot a \:C'IU plc
Anyway, the last Osco movie
balling taken from the rt:nection
to play at the theater was TrJUUila
tn .1 mtrrorl editing and ~c nsc of
8/ut' and 11 's o1 btu.are t.tle about a
color (heaultfully exempltf1ed 111
man whose gulfnend IS pregnant
the nymphomaniac scene done 111
~ he must bow t o the wtshcs of
rypr.::al (ahforntd finery , soft
Ius dope dealer to be.::ome a dope
pnnted
blues ,
and
bnghtly
smuggler in order that he mtght
.:olorcd (IT:lnges and yello ws , all
raise ~ufftcient montes to get the d1Huscd through a hazy su nlight)
needed abortion. Through the
IS qutte heauttful to wat c h
.::ourse of the movu.• he has to
abstain from any hJnky -pank y
Be\tdc\ bt:tng rt•vnlutton.try tn
utus berng a stm:tly t'tUSines~ trrp) that h e make~ movu.'' w1th htghly
so as they enter a bar 1n TIJUana exphtll '~xual adtVIItt'\, h.:\
(the 77 Club , whrch cxrsb and ts refreshing
tn
\:t•nt:cpts
f'&lt;H
wtlder than IS dept.:tcd 111 thrs l'Xdntplc, Ill thl' two O~ro ltlm ~
film) and proceed In try and fintl
we 've \eel\ the first pcr~on II• he
their cntll"d. whmc n.tnte ts 'ecn naked tS a man
he 's nul
OJJI'Iall
l'Xplut ttng lhe fem.tlt: l'eoplt:'\
So whrle ~rt ttng there he has to lmd1e~ arc hurnao11 ed and e:hy to
wat~h hts fnend get J hl11w Jtth
relate 111 from pa~unJI expenentt
and .mot her patron getttng fud..eJ
c~s oppo,l.'d to wet drea111 lanta,y
un the bar After findtng yet
men wtth l.:! ·1nch harc.lon~ ant.!
an o th er lead they come to ,
W{llllCn Wllh nawlc% t'Cntcrfuld
wlwre h o use where they art' l•ut.ltc' rhc~c people &lt;ITt' M(JI nld
wttness to J plastu:rne tlddt' lc5ho
mao\ l.lntas tcs
th ey're lwdll''
)('ene. then they find nu t yet
r h.tt look hke I hey 've hl'l'll ltVI.'ll
..ttlllther lec1d c1nd go ltl another on /\' J m.tltcr nl f.1et om· u f thl.'
house "here thert• Jll three Wo111cn 1n I 1/Utl/111 ll/ur hac.l
nymphomantacs and 111 o rder '" OhVIIIU\Iy h,td d l h1Jd
d \Jcflnltc
get wh.Jt th~y want they have t o l.tnd mJrk for .JOy ltlm thdt
l'lall each nf them
llldUJt!\ th&lt;' human holly
Ftnall y they find the pi&lt;H c
where OdJhall IS t.1 hi.' lnu ntl , and
Wll\'11 ll tWolll~ ttiH' uf ht\
toun\1 'llC: 1\ OdJhJII .1 tough
IIHIVIl'' 111 Lo' 1\ngdcs (htn h,tt.l
httk blonJ( \\ho\e pl.'nth.ull lot
II
.Ill
dttlll'
lip In
propn
uddtty
''
qullc
hy~ICIIl:Jlly
ll ollv"' tHI\1 l.l'hlttll w11h ltllhl\
11lusuated "'llh hk,,l\l.'r' ami 'Jl"lhl'hh red t.JII'I.'" ..tud the
thdt~ dll I 01 ~li iO ~ tu tcll Y•Ht
\\111~\
.til th" lot .t h.Jid •Oil'
/\nyway tht "'"" ~,.,, the ... eorol\ mc.11 nwvw
1\nJ h\'~1J~' · he
hom h1~ J.,tw llealt•r wlh• thtnk" Jt~ll.!ll'tl •Ill th e !Htttl'CII ~ Itt lh~·
he \ J pervert for nor looltn!! l m 1\ ngcl••, 1-t l'&lt;' ( 'l1 "'' wlndt "
arnund "•th JIIY nl hr' wrl\ ~"Itt· llllitlllt' tl you rlnn~ Jhnlll 11
make\ hun ro\\ h:Hk 111 the Sial~'
I I tlunl. I m not qlltt&lt;· 'urt nl th&lt;
I k ' , 1111cntl} "'"rl. 111~ "" hh
l'nJtll~ Ill I hi\ OtiC)
h11! hudl(t'l 11\ll~tc It ·, to,ltng
0\\o\ trnport.lfltl " 111 tilt' lad
111111
'"''
.1
n11lltou dull..rr,,
thJI he make\ movtt'' th.tt .tre .H tuatl~ 11' ul\ttng Warrwr Brn' .
JIIU
II '
l,tlkll F/t•j /t C:t~rtloll ,
\Orrt~WhJI \Opht~lllJil'd Jllll lt;tVl'

,~a~c d o n th c lamed Bus ter Crahhc
~t·rta l
It \ hould prove lu be J
landmark for the genre.
O;u1\ t,dent wtll be emerg111g
ahove ground real MJun, opent ng
the wJy fur more hum;nl movte~
wh.:re when the boy and gtrl k1s~
passton:ttdy , thc camera. tn\lcad
uf pJnnHl[l. down tnto a dtssulvc or
fo.::u,mg nn Oymg seagull~ . or
'&gt;tJUirreb pl;~y1ng 1n the trees. pan
down tu lhl' 11.1rl g~vmg I he gu y
head c~nd he has h1~ f1nger firmly
lncated Ln her cu nt T oo bad
l rvtng lhalbcrg wasn't born d
me..tl llHlVIC maker.
hH those ~.:un~:er nl'd here •~ a
parttal 0\lu
ftlmngraphy (he
~,,

B
B

''"I

GUSTAV A . FRISCH , INC .
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO. N.Y. 14226

~

Guadalajara Summer School a

I fully accredited University of Arizona

program. w1ll offer, July 3 to August
12, anthropology, art, folklore, geog·
raphy, history. government, language
and literature. Tuition. $160; board
I and room. $190. Write Of11ce of the
' Summer Session, University of Ari·
zona. Tucson. Arizona 85721

- X
f1lmed a scene wtth naked people
running
thro ugh
a c rowded
~hopping
center Without the
c ro wds knowledge of what '
happenrng
Or the
ttme he
.::onvtnl:ed a bo~nk tn LA . (the
tallest one) that he was d01ng .J
promotional film on tlanks and
how he want •·d to go to the roof
ol the bank t o tak e some luo tage
Well , when he got In the roof ht~
helpl.'r and h1s secretary pltlmplly
'lr1pped and ~ 1.1rted It' ball as he
film l'(l
11
lrom a helicopter
hovenng ovrr the ~cene . .

Jclf N•·srll

Joe Prmbudu r

Jj~::::::::::::::::ePA~to9FP~O~L~tQr~l£c!A~L~A~o~::::::::::::::::::~

1\Lf-1\ ROMEO

• r·I· RRARI

• MAS~RATl
Sa/ex • ,\ '&lt;'rVIl't' • Part!I
USI-0 C/\RS

UOBCOH
Molor Cars. Lid .
I ?74 Eggert (Near Bailey)

834-7350

VOTE!

Row3

Brenda

Alliance Party
OU R PROMISES ARE OUR CAND IDATES :

UNI FlED CAMPUS RESEARCH

Study in
Guadalajara, Mexico
I The

..

makes on an JVcraRc of two film s
.1 month arul hcltl'Vc tl m
nul
M ona was hi\ fir' I movte)
Mona
II a riot
Ms. l:.roti\CJ US/\ ( /In lutnt
JlHI rl.'it'lllt'd 111 Nt•w YmA )
Confiscall"d
Tijuana Blut·
Body Snatdll.'r
Sex W1sh
~a,kstreet G1rls
Naked Jlunt c r (Jm /11'11' /1111.\
on/vJ
C'1 ty of S1n
Oaring Frenc h f Oul'h
And to further show whnc
Harry ll o pper IS at , he on-.c

Are you tired of the same bullshtt. student
government that wdstes your money 1 Do sornethtng
about ttl A research comm•ttee has been formed by
Sub Boatd I, Inc e:u1d the Undergradudte Student
Assoctat10n to loo k 11110 other campuSt!S to evaluate
thetr acttv1tr~ and serv1ces Hopefully . the committee
wtll come back wtth recommendatrons lor c~llocattons
o f Student Acllv•t y Fees later this semestet
I I you desrre chdnge, get tnvolved .
Committee meeung Wednesday . Mar&lt;: h 1, '7 2
5 ·OO p. m 205 Norton
For informatiOn contact
Dave Keiser. Asststant TreasurerS A . 205 N orton
Steve Blumenkrantz, Executtve Director Sub Board I, 216 N

Dennis Ward
Bob Bell
Gene Fahey
Bill Currao
Earl Cole
Ed Cambol
Danny Kriegman
Brenda Smith
Andy Kossover
Siler Aklltar
James Rowe

President
1st Vice President
2nd Vice President
Treasurer
Academic Affairs
Student Affairs
Student Activities
Minority Affairs
Student Rights
International Studen ts
National Affairs

************************~+1~~r~~~T•

FA_NSHBN
A / 1/al' 1&gt;1• William flinton

Talk to tllem They'll ltsten .

ON

THE LAND REVOLUTION IN CHINA

S nt. Marcl-...4th
by
TORONTO WORKSHOP PRODUCTIONS

TICKETS $!.00

12 Alexander Street. Toronto

2

J-=&gt;-·~~-

Remember - An ounce of Prevention is worth a
pound of "C.U .R.E."
RowJ

BUS TICKPT $J50

LEA VTNG I J a.m. from Norton Union.
Tickets available at Norton Union Ticket Office
Co-Sponsored by :

SOCIA L SCIENCES COLLEGE, OFFICE OF STUDENT RIGHTS.

Brenda

Alliance Party
t.:=========Ji:Ai\to

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 1 March 1972

POLITICA~L.!,A~O~=========~

�Apathetic students
hinder 'Buffalonian'

The Buffalonian is dying. It is
being sufficated by an apathetic
student body. In a University with
so many varied interests present,
the yearbook is findmg itself
ignored and forgotten . Elizabeth
Schatner,
editor
of
the
Buffaloniop, had hoped that
~tudents would contnbute their
1dcas and their talent to the book .
"A lter all, it IS their book,"' she
rcrnarl.ed .
By dividing the book into the
~t:vcn facult ies, Ms. Schatncr had
hoped students would be able to
1ciJte to the book, become
lltterested and get mvnlved m 11
RJthcr than one large book which
h.1d to be general enough to
represent the entire Universtty,
thl' smaller books would be able
111 ~pecta lt ze with eadt dtvas.on.
I hey would be able to focus on
1111 parti\.Uiar mtcre~ts m each. ll
V.J\ hoped Lhat m addallon to
hl·ttel teprescnllng the facu lties
•IIIli ~~ udcnts. the yearbook wuuld
notw also be ahle to gaan Rteatcr
''uJcnt input_
Weak mp(lnse
M\ Schatner s~ud she wanted
1h1•

yearbook to emerge rnto "a
pltotll~r:.aphic antholo~y wrlh a
~lll'l:tfic theme." Vanuus cuntcsts
lt.t~c been held throughout the
\car to encourage people to
\trhmtt thc1r work for publicatiOn .
I lw~ wutests are sull gomg on.
J\ Vl'.trhollk 1s primarily photos. It
wa~ hoped thai tltfferent people
woulcl I'Oil' l their work. enabling
l'Jdt f.l\.1111 y to have an exc111ng
.ur.J H'k''-Jnt book for tb ttreas of
1 11lcl~'t
Response from these
, onl~,t~ has not been very strong
.wd much material IS still wanted.

The yearbook is not limited to
photography and is attempting to
ex.h1b1t literary talent. as well .
Each book is to ha•ve a theme and
contam material wntten by
students in the field . Poetry.
essays and the like arc also
wanted.
Response, or rat her the la(k of
tt, as not ltmrled Ill the
contributrng asp('Ct of the
Buffalonian . Sales :arc nut gumg
very well and Ms. Schatner is very
cnncerned (lver tlt11s addrtwnal
lack of support She sard the
Unive~r r y rs becoming ~u large
that 11 th'Csn't seem to have Joy
school spm t. Stude·n ts JUS I dun 't
seem to be taking an tntcrest 111
th1ngs, she continue·d. x lnslt'ad
of beeng welcomed ror the new
innovations it ~~ trytrtg, th~
Buffalonran l~ be111g met wrth
'&gt;lienee "It IS very drsappomttnt,...
one staff member wmmentcd
"We arc trytng to gtvc the
Uruversrty a book it ca11 h&lt;' proud
of and 1nstead of supporttng us, 11
IS turnmg i t ~ bad,."
There IS st1ll tulle In suhmit
maten,tl for publtcatron The
deadline rs MJrCh J; I Orders are
bemg taken for thiS year's hl)Ok
and purchJSes can be made lor
1115t year's. Ms S·~hat m·r ur~~~
everyone
lntcre\ted
1n
cont11but111g thcrr work 111 1n
malung a purchase tu come tu
office JStt. Norton, or call 2'iOS
for further rnform&lt;&amp;tiiCHl

Basketball Bulls

Tribble sparks team to victory
Jim Tribble came to Buffalo as a junior coUege injuries Tribble nr1anaged to spark the BuUs in the
transfer from Missouri Baptist College. Monday second half when it looked as if the stubborn Danes
evening at Clark Gym one could see Tribble play might steal the contest. Buffalo's 24% second half
with obvious pain. and yet lead the Bulls to a hard shooting djd not help much either, and a fi red up
fough t 76-67 decision over Albany State. The win Albany quintet came within one point, 65 - 64 with
put the Bulls at 10- 12 on the season and stretched S: 29 remaining in the contest.
Buffalo's all-time mastery over Albany and Coach
The Danes, who were recently declared
Dick Sauers to 13 - I .
meligible for NC'A.A tournamen t play , were not able
After the hard won victory, an aching Jrm to play their tine soph, 6 - 2 forward Byro n Miller.
Tribble sat down on the bench m the Buffalo Miller allegedly d1d not conform to the NCAA's 1.6
lockerroom and admtlled ''Thrs was my best game elrgibility rule and thus may not see any action in
ever at Buffalo. but I've had better games tn 1u 11 mr Albany's remaimng games. S till forwards Bob
college." Tnbhle, who ha.~ played '" C'urt Curtiss, Reggie Smith and Harry Johnson gave the
Blackmore's shadow much of this season burned the Bulls fits with devastating shooting. The game's
Oanes with 23 points and IJ rebounds. Playing h1~ telleng points carne in the last five minutes as the
best ~tretch of the season. Tnbble lut ten ut ten wm-hungry Bulb outscored the Danes, 11 - 3, wrth
second hall free thorw~. but hJd one nullified wht'n Tr1bble notctung SIX of the late Buffalo markers.
teammate Greg uker crossed tlr~ loul hne tllu S~1illl
After factng Mernmack Collegt' last night at
Clark Gym. the !lull ~ seek to prepare for Sunday's
Tribble keep!' playing
key encounter wrth NCAA bound Buffalo State.
Na~ed by a knee inJIIIY all year, "I ribblc
Buffalo students can gain admittance to the Ene
w mmcntcd " It really hurt~ a lot and l11ey want me (' C contest up()n presentation of an rdentification
to take CIHitl&gt;one sh1ll~. but I wont do11 1 guess 1'II (arJ and 11ne d11Liar Sunday's game 11me ~~ J p.m.
need a knee uperatwu alter the ~J~un ends." Then l111 the vars1 1y. w1th WBFO·FM bmadca~lmg live at
putnt1ng tn hr!l sore shoulder , 1 rrhblc addeJ " I JU~t
2 SO p m Bu ffalto ~cck!l to hreak a stnng of srlt
prcl.ed up annther tnjury 111 thl\ ~a111e " De-.ptiC tht• \lr.Hght Bc11g,rl vtclnllt:\ &lt;Jg:unst tht' Bulb.

- -- --,

TODAY
THURSDAY

FRIDAY
(lt 1s your money!)

Bible T'r uth
THE TRI NIT Y EXPLAINED
"For Lnero •re thrcte that b . .r
tocoro 1n He•ven: the Father
lhe Word «Jesus) ano the Holy
Ghost
ano theie three are

one."

I Jolin 5 7
One God "' lhree persons

r~sss~~~s~

8

Attention to Undergraduate

~."

students who are interested

~

in becoming teachers:
the 7 ,.,u/11 r l dtll tJI/011 Prnl{lcllll
Ullf/1/Jl 1011r \Ofllltllllllrt' 11 ar I 11 lmnt fltlllt ' llhuut tlt c
tutu/ flrllgrum UIIU rite·(('()( lonx ( 1'11/l'r.\ /1/1'(1/1 t'cl. (Ill /c•
) 1111

I

,Jtoultl

Mu11·h

l

&lt;Ill

/nl

I'OIIr mlendar for

l'l'n

'"·lf/llrlclfll

Nuum '.:I
·I
flrc ll 'llfllfltJII uf the ojjaiiiK' and /1'111111(' u/ thc· tl11ec·
/''Ill'''' 11j tiJt' I t'Ut Jwr J; Jucatum l'roKrum wt/1 l&gt;c•
maclc clnring th e· jnllmvmx 1/lll('S
urten/alwn

~

Uf1(1h

lfl&lt;' t' //111!'

9 00
I 00

4 00
7 00

111

\'or/fill

I I 00 a

111

1.uo r '"

() oo r 111
q ~ oo

p

111

l'ou'/1 have opportumtr to wJtm·ss tJ( tuul \c t'llt' ' frum
tht• Teacher l :duca//IJII Cent er Programs as well u., a.\A
pertinent questwm from \Ia[[ represc:ntalll'l.''

NORTON UNION, ROOM 23 1- THURSDAY . MARCH 2

Wednesday, 1 March 1972 . 1rhe Spectrum . Page thirteen

�Top performances

Matmen return as
conquering heroes
" Po lic are
shufne,"
which
confused the Fighting I nsh star
through most of the bout
Poltcare, who was beaten 10 the
la~t ten seconds. lost a takedown
that could have given h1m the
match He had taken Fanmng off
h1s feet clnse to the edge of the
the 1cfcrce
mat. a move
dballowed as being out uf bounds.
The two mat judges stood up us •f
to uvcrrule the ref: but aftc1 a
conference. the ruling stood
PohLare had another 'h111 ;J I
wmmng. ..~~ he attempted a
takedown w1th only ten 'ec&lt;uld\
remammg 1r1 the match llowcvcr
F annmg, who l&lt;)gged u .:!0 0 I
record dunug the regular M'aSml,
~teppcJ
Jround Policurc .md
rwtcht.•d tl1c Wllllling t.lkl'dllWil
"Fauning was the tuughnt
Wlt.'\llt.•r th,11 I faced 1h1s year,''
u•nduJed Pohcatr after the
lllollc;h " llowt'Vt'l II I had ht'cn
crrllllt.'d w11 h thttl IJ~t·down. I
thu1J.. th.1t I c:uuld havt• won tht.•
match"

by Dave Geringer
Spt'C.'I11Jm

Staff Writer

The wrestltng Bulls returned
home
th•s
weekend
after
qualt fymg etgh t of theu ten
regulars at the Eastern D•strict
Qualrfymg Tournament
The
Buffalo squad 's success was
marked by some top md1vidunl
performances.
Buffalo 16 7-lb. starter Enc
Knuuhla , 14 2 I during the
regular se~on. wrestled rus way tu
the champ10nsh1p at l11s werght
class Knuutlla d•sposed of Jll four
nf h1s uppunents tn copp1ng the
title " All fo ur of my opponents
were
n&lt;:ellent
wrestler\, ..
1crnarked Knuuttla after the
ruurnamcut
" In aullitwn 111 wrestl111g top
men. we Jl ~o hJll to l'llP&lt;' with
other \lyle' Mu\t uf tl1e othl'r
wrc,tlcrs u~.·d a morc aggrt·~'•vc
~t}'k.
Jnd I th111k th.rt the
CXpl.'rJeOo'C go.~tnetl hl'll' Will ht•
vt.'r} bem•llc•al II• u' 111 the
nJIIIlrtJh ..
" I tlnttl-. th..tt Knu11t!IJ Wtl'\tku
iiS well d\ he has all yl'ar, ' added
Coi.11.h
l-d
Mu.:hJt.•l.
whmt•
cx~dlcut n:1.JIIIIItlj!. 1nh tltadt.• till\
\lllCC\'1 ('111\\lhlc " lie d1t.l a lull' ,11\
.u ound Jllb
Policare surprise. Irish

R11y GuJrlllCI, WH'\Ihng Jt 114
lh' plall'U \CltHJu 111 Jw, UIVI~mn
hy wm•••••g two nl h1s 1hrcr houl~
(,uallllt' tnpfX'tl Cary 1'1111//tlla 1111
a
rdt.•rn•\ t.h~~-.•~•on 111 Ill'
\1'1111 l111al
111atch (,u;1111111 hall
lli'.Jil'll P trn//tlb thlllll!( lht.•
rqtu\.u ,l',l\1111 am1d n ll'' o t
tuul' hy St 1-ranc•s l'u&gt;~dt l ••m
Vall\

Bull
hl·avywl'tgl••
l ""Y
J)ohc:ur. who pmtrd a I c; l I
"I thmk that CttiJIIIIII h."
recurd dunng tile ..ca~ou llfJpl.'u
JIIIIVt.
' d he 1\ J hrllet Wtt:\lll'r th.111
lm llr\1 IWI) llflflOlll~lltS oc tme
f&gt;uo//ola UIICl' :JIIU fo1 all .''
howwg tu Notre Damt•\ M1kc
rem.~rkt.•d Mu: hacl after tiH' hout
Fann1ng. ~ \ Thr lltmmutiVI.'
Ont.•
11f Vaux\ complaull\ wa~
Buffalo wrestler unvedt!t.l the
that the referee lacked ueutraltty
'iaturdJy·~ hnut wa~ Ill front nr
VOTE
three NCAA aSl.Jgllt!ll offl~o•al\
I
1111111' uf whom had seen the earlier
C. U. R. E.
I
10 Buffalo , thus allestlllg 111
I bt,ut
March 1, 2, 3
the
fact
that both wrestlers got a
I
AID POL. AD
fa•r )hut

- - - - -- - - ...,

I

-

GRADUATING?

Hockey Bulls cap season with
fifth berth in ECAC playoff
by Bany Rubin
Sports F.d11or

Capping a three-year search, the Buffalo hockey
Bulls hav'e finally claimed an ECAC Division II
hockey playoff berth. Under second year Coach Ed
Wright. the Bulls posted a I 0 - 2 conference record
enroute to fifth seeding by the ECAC hockey
committe(•. In their first playoff game, the Bulls will
tr:JVel to !Boston, Saturday (~ p.m .) to meet fourth
seeded Boston State ( 13 8) at Boston University's
Walter Bmwn ri nk.
The n~ mainder of the ECAC Division II playoff
seeds have seve ral conditio ns placed upon them . For
first seed. the l:.CAC has tentatively seeded Vermont
{I I 2 I) as first, pending their game tonight at
home w111 h Norw1ch. Should Norwich wm,
MJS\achu.,etts (I&lt;; 3) W1ll earn first seed. Mernmack
( I I S) wus seeded tlurd . loll owed m 1he playoffs by
lle~\tou State and Buffalo In three previoul&gt; meetings
W1th Boston State. the Bulls have swept two of three
JeC: ISI\111~

Remain in~: playoff seeds
1 ht· ~11 XIh seeded \dwol ts Salem State, wlulc St
Amelm's •College (7 ll). wh•ch Uf&gt;!&gt;CI Ma\sJdlu\ell\

last week, earned seventh seed and New England
(6 -4), eighth. The Bulls finished off their regular
season at Kent State Friday evening with a 5 - I
victory. After facing Boston State Saturday, winners
will advance to Wednesday 's second round with
higher seeds claiming home ice. Buffalo's only hope
for a home game hinges on an upset by a lower
bracket club over one o f the top three see~ed teams.
Buffalo mentor Ed Wright was happy over
gainmg a playoff berth, but was slightly
disappointed . Wright added: " It 's always nice to get
the offic1al word , but I'm not particularly happy
with our fifth place seeding." Advance speculation
had the Bulls meeting either Boston State or
Merrimack. Now that it's Boston State, Coach
Wright indicated : "It would have been easier to get
up for Mernmack. because we have a score to settle
w1th them. However. we're just as fortunate to play
Boston State."
Unfortunately for Buffalo fans, WBFO-FM rad1o
will not be able to broadcast Saturday's Boston State
game, but the campus station mdicates that it will air
future playoff games should the Bulls advance into
the second round on March 8. Now all that awa1ts
the Bulls •s pract•ce. unhl they depart for theu h1g
game tn Bcantown

Baby
.Bulls go under
---- ----

Alumni athletes play to win
b y Druce Engel

Wt:lls IS certautly not fa t, hut just
When asked 1f anything had
i:.hanged
here smce Ius graduation
&lt;•~
husky
as
whcu
he
was
&lt;•
Dull
.\flo't trum Staff Wrrlu
toothall star
ul IIJ6 7, Alumn1 cen ter B11l Barth ,
with
the
Alumni nn w :1 salesman lor Atlantk
Nnw
I ht• 11llca o f ~ow l 1l1111g~
A'st~e•atJon as d•rcdtlt ol the
Rtchfirld , commented, 'Just look
mcii&lt;•WIIIJ? wtth age wa' g•ven a
Cooltlen Bull fund , R•~k mgamted around Nobody IS here.' Indeed
large tt•lt MondJy 111ght when the
thl\ gJmr 111 add•IHlll to 1h1~ vital the crowd was sparse Some nt the
1\ull ah, ah1111111 Llubbctcd the
10lc 1n many nthe• aJuowi alumnt had seen the start nl 1h1:.
n•• hy Bulls 1111 the \Cl:lllll.l Vl';ll Ill a~otJVlln:~ RICk repurts that the
declme 10 theu days aud adn1111ed
a row Auy thou~ht:. ol 1111:
iJ)S\ICI..ItiOII, WhiCh was IOJCtivC th.st 1t was even worse tuday
.tlurnn• piJy•ng " slnw gJilll' Jlld
two years ago, IS now into qu rte a " Wit en I was a freshm;sn , the place
fU\1 taJ..ulg. If ea~y wr1c qu1ckly
few lund-raisulg project~ and was packed even for the freshmen
tlcrnohshcd Sce1ng two alumrll
utht·r programs designed to serve games. Dy the tunc I was a JUn•or
pla yer~ div·c for tiH.' ~arne louse
both alumn• and studen ts
the c rowds were much less,''
hall would have been enough 10
added Art Walker, class of I 970,
t·ouVHil"t' anyone th:.rt these men
Alumni con...ensus
now workrng at
the JFK
wert.' uut there for keeps "You
All uf the seven team memhers (.'ommunrty Center
have to ~how'em" com mented
(several o thers were expected, hut
Three of the alumnr star~ .ue
guard RJ y Rosm~kr . da!&gt;~ol 19lll
had to cancel when the game was now in coaching and teactung at
and the o ldest lltembel nf the
sw1tched
from Saturday to local h•gh schools. These are
,1lumn• MJUad
Monday) sttll rest de 10 the Buffalo Rosinsk1, Jack Scherrer (69) and
As for the imagc ol Jn alumn• area, and all follow the actiVIlles "Easy" Ed Eberle who was the
game as havmg o ld men wht) :.rrc of Bull athletic squads The Bull MVP 10 each of his three
h• t and ,,ut nl shape , noth111g general consensus was that the varsity &amp;easons. Eberle has not lost
could have been fart her from the athletic program was perhaps his fane shooting touch and Jed all
truth. or thr seven member slightl y improved, but all were scorers w1th 26 po10ts. Barth had
alumn1 team, only one player , thoroughly cunvmced that the 22 and Scherer 18, whrle Darrell
Coach R•ck Wells, .Jwwed any spmt of the student body was Montgomery WJS high for the
bulge m lh•~ m1d seclion t·vcn so. gone
freshmen wrth 26

CAP &amp; C1UWN OR!&gt;I~RS
rw1 ht• J?lan.• J with till'

C 0 L L 1:.' c; I A T I·
C'Af' &amp; GOWN

Graduating Students
&lt;u/J \ ,'/

')(}'I

rHURS MARCH 2nd
4 :30pm

our
UNIVERSITY "on
BOOKSTORE campus .
Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 1 March 1972

11111111
0\Qit

TODAY IS THE LASt DA }
TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT
FOR YOUR PORTRAIT SITTING

C.U.R.E.

ur

r IJI/It.' lu f ~fl Nul/Of/

WED MARCH hi

9 OOu m

endorses

c0

R&lt;'prc.H'Illa Ju•t

ul

AFRICA CLUB

r,:;;;t_-;;.~;A-;; ~A-;

;l-;;-1

I A student publication with the I
: student in mind. 64 pages of I
I short stories, poems and essays, I
1written by students throughout :
1the United States.
1
I
Sample issue 50¢
I

f

N.tioNII Collegilte

:

1

Publications Unlimited
1
t Box 14 FLOURTOWN, Pa. 190311

I And ~r abou t looking tw:k 1
I____ ~&lt;!._Ch.!~~,.L---- .1

�Love, FriU, NIIIJIII 1nd the 11 a .m.
Cling.

I:LAIIIIPIII
AD INFORMATION

APARTMENT f&lt;ltA RENT

CLASS I FIE:D ADS may be placid
Monday tllru Friday Oetw"n 9 a.m.
and •:30 p.m. at 3!15 Norton Hall.

ATTRACTIVE room
available In
private home, Eggert11vllte, for gl•l
student or grad. Poulbtllty of part-time
work. C all 832-9017 .

THE STUDENT rates Of In ad for one
day Is S1.25 for the first 15 words a nd
s .05 for ..ell additional word. $1.00
lor . .ell additional day. The Clel&lt;lllne
lor Monday 11 Friday; lor We&lt;lneaday ,
It u Monday, and lor Friday, It Is
Wednesday by •:30 p.m .
"EHLP

WANTED"
ads
cannot
dl~e rlmlnate on t he basis of seiC,
creed or national ori gin to any
(I.e., preferab ly Is still Cll~erlmlna

"FOUND" ads will be ru n free o
char98 lor 1 m a ximum ol 2 &lt;IIYI and
I!&gt; words.

WANTED
BARMAIDS put -tim e, three end lour
Clays. Good pay, nice lounge. Nlte5 7
p.m 3 a .m., 21 AbOott Rd. near
Bailey. C all 825·9487.
REALIA BLE
penon
with
pnotog•aphlc
knowledge
and
equipment to take we&lt;ICI Ing pictures.
Phone 69•·3061.
BABYSITTER wanted Monday thfu
Frtday from 3 p.m. - 6 p.m. Also
Saturday from 9 a.m.- 2 p .m., II
poutbte. 836-1974.
NEED MONEY - we want unusual
undtehol ders - ceramic, wood, metal
'consignm ent. Bent WICk , 182 Allen .
T uTO R with thorouvh knowledge of
speeo writing wanteo
c a ll Mrs.
Oopktn 632·2362 .
RES EARCH (term) pepers bought,
so ld, el&lt;changed. Contact M1rc "
831 3370 at any ttme.
:, T U OENTS with time and desire to
w O•O.. lor UUAB. Applic ations lor
, omr••lttee chairm ansh iP In Room 261
N oft ,n

'&gt;T ART S 2 . 00 per nour salary plus
bonus Work 4 - 8 p ,m
WeetldiYS,
10 ,• p .m Saturdays. Call 835 -3803 or
TF90402 .

----OR part -time lODllv•llable wlln

r uu.
sestt tne tnc . Call Art 886 -2094 or
M ike 83!&gt; ·!&gt;21 5 MMIIngs dt Exec:utl•e
Ra rnadl Inn

Graduating

2 FURNISHED apartments In same
hous. - 3 people uch - 8 minute
walk - summer session - 831 -2285 .

GUILD 12 strlrlg gult•r F 112, $225,
'63 Econollne van, runs. Inspected.
UOO. 883-()880 after 6 :00 .

YOIIZ CURE

WHARFDAL.E 40D 3-wey SC)Ukers.
VIrtually new. List : $110 each . S150
for two. AIIO Oyna SCA·35 amplifier .
895 -0653 .
SKIERS! Tlre&lt;t of renting skis? Selling
Heads 200 em, Cuoco blndln91. Great
lor novice/In termediates. 839-4036 .

NE BEDROOM apartment near
Wlet
on
Delaware.
Available
Immediately. SUO Including ulllltles.
Call 87&amp;·2922 .

BACKPACK IN G
tent, blue nylon
"Geny Year- Round" model, with rain
fly, POles, stakes; 5 IDS. S8 5. 834 -5384

ROOM 26 1 Norton - tUUAB office rent f ree - stipends available - for any
student with lime a nd desire to work.

1968 VB Bug 50,000 miles. Excellent
condition, s 1200 or best offer. Tom
881 -3639 .

ROOM FOR rent, In Kosher nome.
Near camous. Ideal lor student. Pnone
TF3-2637 .
With
week

BREAD,
ROOM and
board
tor
r•ponslble, lntelll91nt cnk:k to care
lor fou r l&lt;lds. Airport Piau Mel .
Flexible hours . 632-6478; 884-8827.

'65 bug, 48,000 miles, sunroof.
push-out
windows,
new
brakes.
Qependlble.
Make
fair
o lfer.
835 -3818.

FANTASTIC apartment! 7 minute wal l&lt;
from
campus
available
June
1.
Reasonable rent. Ga&lt;!lll98, porch, etc.
C all 834-3770 .

ROOM
FOR
rent
privileges,
$18
a
838-22 41

voten CU R E
1963 CHEVROLET Impala coupe,
V-8, autom1tlc, runs excellent, Ideal
transportation, $175 . 741 -3921 after
5:30p.m.

vw

SPACIOUS two-bedroo)m 1p1rtment,
furnished, Sl50 Including utilities.
Available lmmedlltety. C1ll 886~953
anytime.

PAIR KLH M o del Sl• \PUI&lt;ers, $170
EKcellent
condition.
Info
Tony
837-2814 .

kitchen
Phot1e

1964 VW Yin, new engine. rc1Cito, Ql\
heater, very good condition, $ 600 llf
bflt olfe•. 832 -6564

RIDE BOARD

1970
JAGUAR
XKE.
Excellent
cond ltlot1. Brand new AM/FM •tereo
radio Included . Call 688 · 7327 evenings .

A RIDE Is neected to l'thaca or Cornell
on 3/5/72. C all Barbara 8;J7 -2889
RIDE TO NY C wantle&lt;l tor 2 ?n
3/2/72, •etu•nlng 3/6172. Wilt sn1re
••oenses. Howle 831 -2498

REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
and
washen Rec:ondltlone&lt;l, &lt;lellvered and
guaranteed
O&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore, TX 4 -3l8J

----

TO N V ,C , Marth 9 or 10. Call Jell
832-1089 .

"ANASTASIA" needs a nome . She's a
1961 lovable, lillie Temp test , 82,000
miles. All stte cosh Is $110 . Clll AI AI
831-41 13 or Dabble at 832-6815

NEED RIDE to Pot~CI.Im, weekend of
Mar . 10. C all Renee, 833-7162 .

PERSONAL

ROOM FOR 2 people to Miami
one-way bv car and aul otraln S4 !&gt;
eacn total. Oepar1 Mar . 5 688 7375
evenings

WANNA WRITE ? Call 4114 , •sk fOt
Lynoa or leave 1 mesuge Spectrum
Feature Stalf needs m o re tatenled
people• C ome 101n us .

Rl DE WANTED T u«;CiiiY, T tturs&lt;ll'l'
mO&lt;n ln9' betw. .n 10 and 11 10 Main
campus f rom Sherldan-&lt;:otvln area .
c.a11 Anoru, 874-4590.

FOLK GUtTA R tenons, popu lar songs,
flnge• ana lie\ picking styles Jeff
835·3384,
835 ·9229.
Good bve
Marilla

RIDE
WANTED
leo Boston
IO•
wee1&lt;et1&lt;1 of Ma rch 3·-6. Call ''" at
832 ·9689 .

FOR SALE
8LACK·WHITE TV S2,5 . Ftoo• mO&lt;Iet,
recondllloned . Also •• pa ir TVs and
stereos. Call Ed 896 ·4409 ...,enlngs

I'VE BEEN neglected . NobO&lt;Iy wants
to buv me . My name Is Anastasia and

I'm for sate for only SllO , 1'm

2-door,
blue
Temptest wllh an
automatic transmission, 82,000, and 1
very sexy bo&lt;ly II lntereste&lt;l, call AI
831-4113.

LOST 8r FOUND

- -- - - -- - -

FOUND - w111et
Theater .
loenttty
Spectrum o ffi ce.

----------2/27, conference
and

c laim

at

FOU ND - on e IIQht b•own. female
puppy w ltn wh ile chest, about three
months ota tn •lctnlty of Wlnspea• near
Angle St wearing DIICk collar . 128
Tyler St. 837..0430
VOU tu\t your Jewtsn 1Cienllty7
FinO 111 S ee ''L et My People Go,"
Tues. , Wed., 8 p ,m N orton 233 .
HAV~

FOUND - In OccupatiOt111 Ttterapy
o ftlce : "KNOW YOUR OWN MIN D "
Call 837..0285 or 831-4406 .

- -- - -

FOUND
pau
or
prescription
•unQiasses 2/18 Clarm at Spectrum
OffiCe

ROOMMATES WANTEO
ONE ROOMMATE wanted Own ro om
In four-bedroon' a pl
10 min from
campus . 837 0089
ROOMMATE wanted
Own ro om
Hertel · -&lt;:ot••n area S!&gt;Of montn ptu~
utilities Call Ron or Bruce , 87l ·8ll:!'
ROOMMATE. w• n ted to sha•• apt tn
Allentown , S40 , u1 11111as .no uoeo
Own room C o me to 2 0 C ollage S\
upstairs alter six

ROOMMA T£
or
couple
wanted ,
S60/ month plus utilities Come 10 192
Norwalk (off Hettel) anytrme

vote CURE

MAL~

~Q::JI

HAIRSTYLING
Joe 's Theatre Barber
lOSS Kenmore Avenue

'" u.. u...oen~t" ..,...

lA r Col.-m

3102 Main St.

Th{'(ffr~J

WIGS •HAIR COLORIN ...

(llet.H. C'luUr •• l.l.,boll)

~~~R 77-2989 ~~~

"'"'.

ROOMMATE
lo
furrusP\ed aparttnent. Own bedtonm.
S48 montn 1nctu01n9 ulll\tle~ . C•ll
877 -7254

EXPERIENCED tutoring Elementary
ITtath,
Otology,
chemistry
and
IHYChOIOIJY· John IYib. 886.,)204 .
BUFFALO'S Oa&lt;l DVWIY5 busting your
tull Joints? 1 ncsepenoent Foreign C1r
S·arvlce, 8 39-18!10 (•tudent discounts) .
TYPING, e~eperlenced, nur U.B .. $ .40
per page. 834·3 370. Fut Mrvlce.
PIZZA GO-GO: Th iS weetl'5 SQec:lal lltrge pizza- 2 FREE bottte5 o f 5001,
small pttz• - one fr... 838-455 7 .
OtPEN SUNDAYS, FAEt: DELIVERY
'"dorms.
STU DENTS , young m1rrled - worried
albout your financial luture1 End your
51:HICu ta tlon. Call H.,b 634~870.
SU MMER lob farm In Mohawk Valley.
Must have carpentry skltt1. Be&lt;l, meall,
s.atary . 838-4612 after 5 :00 .
CHECK the 50'- OFF TABLE at
Bluflalo Textbook Store\, 3610 Meln
St.
F LV BUFFALO student !lights to
s.unny Acapulco via Un iversal Airlines
C&gt;C · 8 je t , Leave N Y .C. March 31.
Ftetum API II 1 From U 79. Contact
Pllat1 Marmulsleln evening• 6 - 9 p .m.
837 -0393 .
PINTIQUES a nd m o dern lurnllu•e,
c eramics , china, etc
s.. SIO a t
"'' eslerOay &amp; Tomo,o w Shop , 1439
Hertel Ave .

APARTMENTS WANTED
$)500 OFFERED II y o u secure us 1
4 - 6 bedroom house near campus lor
Septemoe• o; earlle• 1f leue •eQuireO
C all 1133 711~9
t1PARTMENT wenteo lor tou r male
Uuell!nts fo r ne•l vur Contac t Mike
~lowre o r Dave 11 838 11 6 7, 831 ·2897
c•• 831 -4113 . Rew•rO
$.25 IS YOUPS II you sec ure !or us a 4
\ H 5 -bedroum

hOu\e neAr f#a m pui t O t

~.eptember .

C•ll

831 3/Gl

•- AS T LE orelerrea Out
fu rnl•hed
lou• be&lt;lroom nou .. 0&lt; aoaflment will
Oo Within watl&lt;l nQ &lt;1 1\tance ol UB . C all
Sneot O• Ellen . 1131 ·3759.
SENIORS seel&lt; apt fo r J or
Marv, 833 -7162 , oetw.,en

UN8ELIEVA8L( '" .J~I lo Eur o pe ,
$169
R o unOirrO NV C Oepattu re
Conta c t Sieve G uta , 8 3~ 75 19 alter 7
p m
WRITER!. T•te n t neeaeo to• Fe~'" ' "
S tall C all 4114 r tnterM\8CI As• In •
LynO~ ano l&amp;ave • meHage
Men
Wom en .
fH
career N u
E •cetlent P•Y

oo

(131 3993

own room,, near umP!Jl

MISCELLANEOUS

JOBS ON S triPS '
Pettec t ~utnn'"' !tHl
e•oenen&lt;..e n:'Qu~teO

SIUMMER OLYMPICS In Munich. Aug.
26
to
Sept .
10 .
19?2 .
AccommO&lt;Ietlons In youtn noster plus c h ok:e of 119Proxlmately 7 tickets
to
different
events.
$1 20.
For
•~•formation pnone 833-4638.

1

UB HOCKEY team
a lrten&lt;l lu need
" 1 lnend tnOeeo . Manv lnanl&lt;s
M .US H H

VIRGIN MARV
llappy brrlnm4rk '
Well, you finally lOst the &lt;llstlnctl o n Ol
belnQ a t11enagor H ope you IO ~ ( P r
gain) someth ing etse some&lt;lay (IJo &lt;l
tor biOI!) F1gvre I nat o ne out YO•Hself
Keeo the c n1n uo otnO oon'l snlflle

b•~oks
everyaaaa•s bcdl stoN

sutfraglum lnlte CURE

MALE ROOMMA l E. need eO lor IAr~H
apartment o n Mll\nesota, $40 a mnnth
Pluse call tanyllmel 837 2658

volale C UR E

mainly

MALE 35, college professor, two
Children, seeks female companionship.
Marriage possible. P.O. Box 1031.
Atlanta , Ga . 30302.

wahll CURE

GAMBLING BLOOD? ACQuetnlance
des lted o t won1an '18-22 who IS lean
ano attroctl•• with worm milO e•en
olsposltton by man (251 wno likes
f1vore&lt;1 O&lt;lds . InQuire So• 70

Students

Worldwide travel , Send $2.00 lor
lrtlormetlon. Seafe.c, Box 1239-flfF,
S•utlle , Wash ington , 98111.

I NEEO

6

~

4,

'72- 73,

Renee or
8 P m

r o o tn ne• • c • n' OU) AHo . my

ll. r1H19 M•t (t1 19 Of
.o u n •• ~o n Her tal' M on t h ..,, Mav tree.
lll 2 9160
~(lO f\1 I S AV. IfaOfe

I:&gt;.R T S fUDENT S n eft&lt;l \WO· bOIIr OOnl
ttPartrnen l stan•nQ M~y Raas o nao•~
1ent Close to u m ou s Piaa&gt;e call
1134 340 I o• 8J 1 398•1

..

"h&gt;Y...Wh'J"'.I'/..-:.&gt;&gt;:·:-:-:·:·!-:-:-:·:·•·:.:-:,.:.:~ .,.:.:-:-:-:·~·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:-;..:-:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:-:-:·:·~

~

Democratic Yo~uth Coal it ion ~

,.

preserr f r

:;:

§
~
~·

~~~

J

~:

~

~

0 HN l a F A l C E
STATESENATOR

59th Oistnct (Kenmore)
Thursday , March 2 nd
s·oo p m
242 Norton Un1on

~
~

:~

:~
~

~j
~:

:;:

~j

?i.-:·:·:·X/..&lt;•W."~:Yr.'MW/.~«.-:-'h:.-:·:·:-:•:•:·~X·:·X·:·:·:,:~·:.~:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·!·:·:·:~~·:·:•:&lt;":. :·:·:·:·:·:·~~

~Time

is
r-unnin; out!
CALL 831 ·2505 or
COM [ to 356 Norton

" A OYNAMITE HARD AOCt.. 8ANO
WITH ONE Of THE MOS1
PROHSSIONAL, TOGETHER SOUNOS
IN WESTERN NEW TORI\
f'HAift l( ..VGOtU UNOIIfC'&amp;J ff~fNf ,_......

~·

7~1~~

11:00 - COSMIC MICHAH

t .46 30 -

TODAY!
to make an 8ppotntment
for your portrait sitting.

for the making I
Sel/6ds fo.r The Spectrum

W~dn~~~y,

l March 1972 The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�Sports Information

Announcements
Democratic Youth Coalition i~ holding a
meeting to morrow .al 8 p.m. in Room 242 Norto n.
State Senator Jo hn Lafalce will be the guest
s~k er. All are invited to attend.
UB Outing Club will hold a general meeting
tomorrow at 7 p.m. in ~oom 248 Norton. Anybody
interested in cro~s-count ry skiing, snowshoeing,
climbing and o ther things related to the outdoor~ is
welco.me.
The State Un iversiiy o f Buffalo Amateur Radio
Society will meet today at 7·30 p.m. in Room 330
Norton. Any student interested in ham radio is
welcome to join .
UUAB Video Committee will meet tomorrow at
6:30 p.m. in Room 266 Norto n. On the agenda will
be the future of video counci l and the pos~ibilities of
a video festival.
UB Photo Club will hold c1 rnectmg tomorrow .st
8 p.m. in Room 332 Norton. It i~ the lc1st mcetmg
before the exhibit brin&amp; photos for evaluation.
New Age Natural Foods Club ts .ssking for
contributions of tables, chc1trs and anything thilt c.m
be used for the new restaurant on Greenfield Street.
Call CJth y, R86-7023 or Flo, 886-2604.
The
Undergraduat~
Medical Society 1~
sponsori ng a basic Ftrst Atd ct&gt;urse whtch &gt;l.H I\
today dt 7 p.m. in Room 233 HeJith Setences. It wrll
continue every Wedneway night through March 2q.
Open !0 all students. If Interested ~..Ill Steve before n
p,m . a t 831 -2487
UUAB Video Committre w"l h.tve John L~e
Hooker, Ben, Chmtmo~~ Pudding hy R11indance 11nd
Banned m the USA Wtth Did. GrcKory tumnWlW dl
8 p.m. in H a.:~s I ounge

Southtowns La Leche league will show a film
on breastfeeding to morrow at 8 p.m. in the
Fellowsh ip Hall o f the United Presbyterian Church
of Orchard Park, South Buffalo and Clark Streets. It
will be fo llowed by a panel of league leaders to
answer questions. All interested persons are
welcome, Donation: $1 .00 per person, $1 ,50 per
couple. For further information or transportation
call 992-4517 or 652-8595 .
T he Commodore Perry Tutorial project will
meet tonight at 8 :30 p.m . in Room 266 Norton .
Anyone interested in elementary school tutoring
(reading and math) is urged to attend or stop in dt
the CAC o ffice , Room 220 Norton.
The Computing Center User Services announces
a seminar in " Job Control Language for the CDC
6400." Seminar will be held on Tuesday and
1 hur~day , through March 7, i 9 p.m. in Room 10,
4218 Ridge Lea .

The Undergraduate Student Association of
Spanish, I tallan and Portuguese will h,we &lt;1n elect ton
of re pre&lt;.en tatives today at 7 p.m. in Room 332
Hayes Hall .
BAWA (Black and White Action) presents the
Blc1'- k 11nd White Art Festival production of Gues~
What 's Cooking for Dinner?, a &gt;a ttre hasc&lt;J on the
tclevi,ion show, All in the Family . It will be
performed by Jn .111 black cast at 8:30p .m., March
4, in Glea,ner l lall Thec~ter at Erie Community
College, Mc~in St. dnd Youngs Rd ., Willi,tmwille .
Ticket' c1re S2 50 for Jdults, 1 1.50 for students dnd
~oen ior citi1em, and tnclude refreshment~ ,lt 6320
MJtn St. c~ fter the program.

•

CAC needs someone who can play the bugle rlnd
tnlcre,ted in helping with a drum .Jnd bugle ~.:orps.
Also needed is someo ne to te.tdl art) -.~ nd ~or afts to
clcmcrnc~rv \Chool "hildren. Contact l:vc, CAC
office. Room 220 Norton or lec~ve ,1 note tn the
Rc\ear&lt;.h .md Development boK.
i~

University Travel (Dtvt,ton n f &lt;;ub Bn.Hlll, lnr.)
Chabad House i\ "h,utcri ng ,, bu) to N&lt;·w York
is sponsoring summe1 shuul~' from Nt.s!(.tl .s I c1ll\ tCJ
London by Boeing 707 JC l Roundtrip 1\ ~ I 7CJ dntl tomorrow ntghl, lc.tving dt I I :10 p m. JnJ rcturntng
there i~ o1 ch oi~..e ('If 30 ddtC). I 01 tnformo~ttun, Sund.ty ''t 1 I d. nl . Those interc,ted tn p.lrttclpo~ting
&lt;.ontact Univer~ity 1 ravel, ~\dtC \Jnivcr,ity nt m thl• encounter with Chabad, ~oon tact MM( or Phtl
Buffalo, 3415 M.un St., Bu ffal o, NY. 14214 111 .Jt ~J5-2•t09 . The co\t is $16.00.
come to Room 3 1b/32 3 Norwn 1-1.:~11 or c.~ II
fhe Computing Center User Services .mnourH.C\
~3 1-3602/3603 .
,, \emin.Jr 111 "Cobol," J b usi nr~~ or ten ted computer
CAC Project 5 18 (Sy"arnore Tutorial) will h.tVl' l.tn~uagc , to be heiJ Mnnd.ty .md Wcdnc,d.ty, now
.1 meeting tonigh1 Jl 7 ·10 p.m. in Room 266 Nor tnn . through MJn.h 29, 7 ~ p.m. tn Room 12, 4238
Anyone tntercsted 1n high '&gt;(hool tuh&gt;ring (reJding, Ridge l e.1.
mc~th &lt;tnd o,cicnce) j, urged to .t!lcntl , or 'lop m o~t
The Stale University of Buffalo Krishn.t Yoga
the CAC office, Room 220 Norton .
Society prc,cnh " I ht• 8&lt;1IIJd of LCird Chait.Jnya'' .1
Anyone interested in becom~ng an officer of tr JIN. endl' ntal fe,ttVd l of mu\it , Jr.tmJ .Jnd fc.t,!fng,
Schussmeisters Sk.i Club for next ycdf mu\1 wbmit J W&lt;J.ty .lt 6 p.m . .tt the R.~ cth .•-Kmhn.t Temple, I 32
resume by M.11 &lt;..h H tu the ..cc.retat y in the S kt Uub Bidwell Pt..wy, (uti [lmwo&lt;.ld 1\w.) Abu' wtllle.Jvc
office, Room 1 Ul Norton. Resume ~hould include f1&gt;r the A'&gt;hr.un fr om N11rton I l.1ll .It ~ 10 p.m
your qu&lt;~lific.dtiom, Jge, what you helteve the go.tl'
Anyone interested tn working on rhe feature
of the club should be .md •.my other infmmJt tnn ynu
staff of The Spellrum, c.all Lvodd .1t 4 11 4. Lc.tve a
feel is pertinent .
ll1l',\dge i I not in .
The Undergraduatt' Medical Society, whtlc 111
the process of moving from Room 346 to Room 343
of lt'teat ~r
ptc~ents
The
Department
Norton,
dnnounce.,
temporMy
nccr
group produc..ti•Jn\ •Jf Cosnucomlcs on March 7,8, 17,23,24
.tdvi~cment o ff ice hour'. fhis t)ffice is loc.ttcd on the
dlld 29 ; Dr. fau~tu) on M.t1 t h 11 ,12 ,1H,21,22 and
firs t floor o f Clemen t llall (wc~t wing) and i~ 30 Jnd Pantaqleue on March 15,16,19,25,26, .md
equr pped wtlh the metltc.tl .tnd dl'ntal '&gt;Chool lB. All ~h nws Mt' .1t 8 · 30 p.m. in the Harr iman
catalog., Jnd 'upplenwnt.tl tnform.tlton lor the r hl'.ttcr StudiO. /\dmis~llln i\ $ 1 00, studen ts s 50
pre-profe'&gt;~ ion.tl .md profeswm.JI yeMs. Advisemen t
.tnd ti c k et ~ 11re .:tt Norton T icket Office .
tc&gt;day will be from noon 4 p.m
CAC's Night People, a proteU de..tling with
alcoholics, is having ,m organin tionc1l meeting
tonight at 8 p.m Anyone intere!&gt;tcd who cannot
make the meeting c.m call Dennis
at 83 1~3609
I

Friday : Varsity swimming at the Upper New
York State Champ ionships, Hobart College.
Satur&lt;by : Varsity hockey at the ECAC Division
II playo ffs vs. Boston State Co llege at Boston
University's Walter Brown rink, 8 p.m.; varsity
indoor track at the Cortland Invitational; varsity
fencing at Clark Gym with Syracuse and Notre
Dame.
Sunday : Varsi ty basketball vs. Buffalo State at
Erie C.C., 3 p.m., WBFO-FM radio ; freshman
basketball vs. Buffalo State at Erie C.C., WBFO-FM
airtime is 2 :50p.m. for Bulls basketball .

Backpage

What 's Happening?
Wednesday, March 1

-

Concert: "The Etghteenth Century Ob oi~t ,'' Ronald
Richards, oboe, wo rk \ by Vanhal, Rosett i Mid
Rauzzini, 8 :30p.m., Baird Recital Hall.
Eye-con '72: Arthur Barron screens and discu,se' hts
fi lms, 8 p.m., Albright-Knox Art Gallery.
film : Le Gal Savoir with Je,m-Pierre l caud, 6 p.rn ,
Diefendorf 146.
Internatio nal week : Tee~ Ceremony ( J apanc~c
Demonstration), 8- 9 p.m., Room 232 Norton.
Concert : UUAB and College B Music Comm ittee
present Les Herbft and AI Lebvinowitz, 3 p.m.,
Haas Lounge.
Musical Innovatio ns: Or . R.tmon C Fuller, dss•stant
professo r of music at the State University nf
Buffalo. '~ the feawred guest, 9:05 p.m .,
WBCE-FM .
Seminar: " Numerical Simulation of Urban Air
Pollutio n" by Professor John H. Seinfeld of the
Departmen t of Chemicdl Engineering, Californta
Institute of Technology, 11 &lt;t.m., Room 322
Achc~on H.tll .
Lecture : Vic tor John Yannacone, Jr speakmg on
"Management and the Environment· Is the Law
the Answerr," sponsored by the A.I .E5.E.C.,
7:30pm., Room 231 Norton
Thursday, March 2
Poetry reJding : Kenneth Koch , presented by the
UUAB L iter&lt;~ry Arts Committee, IS p.m.,
Fillmore Room.
Poetry reading : Kenneth Koch , presented by the
Office o f Cultural Affair\, 3:30p.m., Room 245
Health Sciences.
Seminar: "Continuous Emubion Polymerizat ion" by
Professor Gary W. Poehlein , Department of
Chemical Engineering, Lehigh University, 2
p.m., Room 322 Acheson Hall
Colloquium : "The Art and Craft of Fiction"
presented by the Department of Germanic and
Sl.tvic, first lecture given by Joerg Schafer, 8 : 15
p.m., Crosby 119.
Lec ture: Or. N. Dickson Reppucci of the
Psycho-Educational Clinic of Yale University
spe&lt;~king or " Psychological Consultation in a
StJte School," I p m., Room A·9, 4230 Ridge
Lea.

- AmyAhrend

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Vol. 22, No. 59

State University of New York at Buffalo

Monday, 28 February 1972

Sunshine Hottflte drt(!( ana/..vsis snt~ffed

by Howie Kurtz
Campus l:d/t()l'

Sunshme House's drug analySJs program, thro•ugh
wh1ch students could have any drug chemlCally analyzed
and thus avoad talung drug5 containing dangerous
substances, has been terminated through the courtesy• o f
I he Ene County Sheriff Department
Under the program, students would give a drug sample
to Sunshine House, who would then have it analyzed by a
licen!ed chemast from the Chemistry Department. A
couple of days later, the student could call up for the
results of the analysis. Many of the dru~ were found! to
contaan no narcotics. whale many of lhem were largely
dangerous substances ltke PCP (most mescaline), spE:cd,
horse tranquaJizer, etc. The drug samples were always
destroyed by the chemast after the analys1s Obvaously, tthas
knowledge was beneficial to a lot of students.
However, news of the program was leaked to the
Sheriff Department, who informed Sunshme tlou...e that
since it was technically illegal and they could be busted for
h;mdhng the dru~. they had to end the programs. Tlhey
tned to secure some kind of "amnesty •• to run the sen1ice
from the Dastrict Attorney's office, but " the DA told us in
no uncertain terms that it was allegal and out of the
questaon," explaJned Merte (Shades) Lento, project
coordanator
Pofiee attitude unconcerned
ll was suggested that Sunshane House use the Bun·alo
Police Department's drug analysis system, which consjsts
o f securing forms and an envelope, bringing the sample
into a police station , and calling up five days later for the
results The service is basjcaJJy provided fo r parents who
find unknown substances in their children's rooms .and
want to know if their offspring are using narcotics. '1t
worked for a little while, but when they found out why we
were dotng it, they wouldn't give us any mo re forms,"
explained Mr. Lento. "Their attitude was 'any kid who's
foolish enough to take a drug he knows is illegal desea:ves
to get fucked up'."
Michael D'Amico, admini.~trative assistant :and
spokesman for the SherifPs Department , felt while the

service may have had beneficial aspects, allowing it to
remwn would be "accepting the problem (of drugs),
almost endorsing it. " He indJc&lt;ued that one could not
reasonably expect a Jaw enforcement agency to run a
service "to help ktds deternlnle tf they have J sale
narcotic."
The only method of analy11ng drugs now J!&gt; to hnng
the sample an to a police ~tat1un personally Mr D'Amu.:c&gt;
admitted the weakness of llus tdea "Sure . you ~ou ld be
arrested for possession as soon as you walk rn T he only
trung you have 1s the pultcc':. wnrd that yuu won't he"
When asked why the Buflalo Puhce relused to gwe
Sunshine !louse any more forms for analysi~. so they could
act as liason bet ween students and poltcc, Mr D'Amrl'O
saad he didn't understand why and suggested they try
another prec1nct
Room to moYe

Meanwhile. Sunshine House IS w:utang to rrlllvc out tof
1ls shared facilities m the CAC nfft~c ami ~ct up house at
106 Winspear Ave. They have a $1000 down payment on
the house, wruch will cost 14.000 SA dollars. T hey ;ue
On)y WWting tO OffiCially dose the deal, f01 the JamiJy IIOW
livang there to actually move out, ami for Surashine House
to become mcorporated for ansurance purposes. Thas
should take a few weeks. "We arc lookang forward to the
move SJnce we feel at will arn prove the general atmosphere
of the workers wh1ch will be related to lhc client,"
commented Mr. Lento. " It will abo be a more conducave
atmosphere for counselling and cras1S anterventaon
services."
Sunshine House deals with many problems and, be1ng
a 24-hour telepho ne agency. rece1ves many kffids of calls.
Their st rongest area is drug-related problems, which was
their original goal " I f someone 's hav1ng a bad tn p or a bad
time on drugs, we try to gam rus confidence, gjve rum
some basis to relate to, some form of reahty," Mr. Lento
explwned. Sunshine House does not deal w1th hard drug
problems, such as heroin, opiates, or morphine . They
instead refer callers to agencies better equapped to handle
such problems, such as Dhanna Drug Agency, Narcotics
Addjction Control. hospitals, etc.
Many runaways also call Sunshine House. They talk to

them and turn their c.ase over to a qualified soctal worker
who works wrth them. They also recerve many pregnancy
calls. from g~rls who aren't sure tf they're pregnant or
know they arc and don't know what lCI do. To these
people Sumhtne Htm~e pmvtdes 111furm:U•on on b1rth
control, .Jborltons. and pregnancy t~ts 111 Ule Rath
Bulldmg
People with pers·unal emotaonal problems also dJal
XJ I 404n "We try to gatn these people's trust , get them w
talk. and ba~acally mo1t1vate the pcr\ufl lu solve their own

problem,," sa1d Mt Lcntl)
Sunsh1ne ~louse also receives su1C1de calls. In these
tmtancc, , they try t&lt; 1 talk the person 11111 of this tdea
through common o;cnse .tnd knowledge of mterv1ewmg
teLhnu.jliC\ flt cy refer such cases to Sutude PreventiOn
um:c the caller has calmed down .1nd seems to be
emotionally stable. Lonely people who want someone to
tal~ to. people wtw want mformat10n, obscene callers and
prank ~o;aller~ also d1al Sunshanc House\ number
Extensive training
.. urty·two new member~ are undergoing a mmamum
uf foua weeks of fraiJ11ing to enable them to answer the
phones The trammg consast!o of indJVJdual m1entation and
the takmg of a cou11.e The onentataon consasts of two
traanec~ learnmg frorn an expenenced House member
abllut how to use tht! referral files , the Sunslune House
ubrary. the POR (Physac1ans Desk Reference), and other
reference functions olf Sunshine House The mandatory
course JS a College A offering, Drugs and the Community.
The course encompaSlles dealing with drug-related crises,
first 3Jd techniques as taught by the Buffalo Red Cross,
interview techniques a:&gt; taught by professors, and physical
aspects of drug use as taught by doctors.
"The m terview te&lt;:hniques further a person's ability to
be a meamngful and productive voice on the phone, and to
pick Uun~ up from what little information the cal.ler
gives," explamed Mr. Lento. "Knowledg~ o f things like
physical symptorras help members to decide upon
hospitalization when necessary." A tramee can go on tho
phones after fo ur weelks of traming if his supervisor thinks
he is ready.

�Fficalpnch

Food Service losing molll:')J
Food Service, like many o ther campus
institutions, is feeling the effects of the fiscal pinch.
Food Service workers have been laid off, others have
had their hours cut. and the hours of service have
been curtailed.
The Rath.slceUer will henceforth be open from
10 a.m . to 10 p .m., while the first Door Norton
cafeteria will o pen at 7:30 a.m. but close its doors at
2 p.m. The reason? '"We've been directed by FSA
that Norton Food Service can't lose money this
semester," disclosed Donald Bozek, assistan t llirector
of Norton Food Service. Because o f this, explained
Mr. Bozek, services had to be curtailed, especially
where services were being duplicated, so Food
SeiVice can finish Ute semester in the black.
This is not the first instance of money problems
within Food Service. At the beginning of this
semester, man y workers were laid off in the
dormitory cafeterias due to the drop in student
board oontracts from the first semester. Many
students who work part-time for Food Service have

lost those part-time jobs due to the fJ.SC&amp;l situation of
the semester.
Preferential treatmenr?
Vinny Curren. a senior who eats in Goodyear
cafeteria. thinks the situation in Food Service is
quite deplorable. "There are three supervisors in
Goodyear cafeteria and fc•ur in Tower cafeteria,"
said Mr. Curren. "One Goodyear supervisor quit in
the beginning of the year, and there are still three
supervisors. The lowest paid supervisor gets around
$9000 a year. You don 't see them being laid off,
onl y the students and caf,eteria wo rkers who have
been there for years," continued Mr. Curren . He said
that employees who have been with Food Service a
long time were offered o,ther jobs, but not very
worthwhile ones and "most of them just left "
Mr. Bozek maintained that there was o nly one
fuU-time supervisor in Tower cafeteria and two
supervisors and one managetr tn Goodyear.

Hope for rental of Poverty
Hill fizz1es for the moment
Preliminary plans for long term
The plans have been products
Student Association renting of o( talks between SA President I an
Poverty Hill have apparently been OeWaal and David Oattner, owner
scrubbed for the time being.
o f the Poverty Hill property
Accorlling to Mr. OeWaal, these
The renting concept would
talks have been very vague. He
have allowed undergraduate use of
informed The SpectnJm that he
the 1150 acre tract of land in
may speak with Mr. Dattner again
Ellicottville and the facilities o n it
sometime
this
week,
but
for seven months a year as long as
commented that ''[I ami not as
the \ease ran .
excited about [renting Poverty
The idea had tentatively called Hill} as l was previously ."
for a ten-year \ease of the land lo
One reason for this sudden
SA for $ 15,000 per year with fuU change of mood apparently
use of the premises from April to uwolves the fact that Mr Oattner
October. Theoretically, this would has drawn up a two-year lease
h.ave included use of a slo area af with Mulligan 's Bar for use of the
developed, however, 11 asn '1 clear cottages at Poveny Hill Mr
just what use students could have OeWaal asserted that this was not
of a ski area between the months made clear to him in his previOus
of April and October
meetmgs with Mr Dattner

.-iUuf~n

Snell's course focuses
on cooperative efforts
Cooperative effon is the key to
an experimental class taught by
Dr. F red SneU. The course is
Medicine and Health and is
oHered in the CoUege of Social
Sciences. Or. Snell's objeclive is to
students
a
working
give
knowledge of human physiology .
He feels that everyone is capable
of understanding the functioning
of the human body and thus, the
course is not restricted to sctence
majors.
Students do not need any
special background fo r t he course ,
ot her than Wah school btology
and c hemistry. A strong desire to
team is important , as Or. SneiJ
says, " I can't teach this stuff
without hard work on the part of
the st ude nts."
The unique qualtty o f the class
IS shown in several ways. The
sense of cooperation comes in the
discussion gro ups which are set up
in the class. Students are
sectioned into grou ps where they
disruss
t he
previous week 's
readings. They answer each
other's questions, trying to
equalaze
everyo n e's
understa nding. Or. S nell circulates
around the groups, clarifying
points when necessary. and
insurin&amp; an equal footing for most
partici pan IS.

Mr. O'eWaal satd that he was
skepucal about the development
of the land into a ski resort for
students. " Many pieces will have
to fall into place in order for this
plan in it:s entirety to work ou t."
he stated.
Additio nally,
Mr.
OeWaal
emphas11e:d that his talks with Mr.
Dattner were aimed at merely
working
o ut
an
informal
agreemenll for him to present to
the SA Executive Committee.
Any eventual a pproval of a lease
could come only with a formal
appointment of an "agent" to sign
a
leasmg
contract.
The lnterestin&amp; insights
appotntme nt would be rattfied by
Course content tS dtvtded tnto
the S tudcmt Assembly , however, 70 per cent physiology and 30 per
the probabtltt y of any agreement cent politics. The physiology IS
technical, but within tbe
of
wtth Mr. Dattner ts now unlikely .

Paid volunteers wanted

~~I' and Frid.y; during

Beef &amp; Ale Holllse
3199 MAIN ST.
Ill-* s.G Of UB)

Quarter Nigh1ts
MONDAY. TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY 4 1p.m.-dcJIInt.

t.,..GIBJ . . .,
Wille • die Rosa
llalll._.en
Prada Vriea

Page two . The Spectrurr. Monday, 28 February 1972
• C I

~ "

f
•

•

I

•
•

•

•

"'
•

•

,..

J "' -

Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

Yo1/c 11t Buffalo, 3435 Mllin St.,
Buffalo. N t1w York, 1-f214
Teltlphontt: Area Codtt J 16; EdJtomtl
831-41 13; Bu&amp;lntl#, 831-3610.
Rt1pr111t1n tlld lor «JIItlrti&amp;lng by
Nario11111 Eduarional Adwlltismg

Stlnllce, Inc., 36() Laxi"ffttn A01!.,
N~~t~~t Yorlc, N. Y. 100tl.

•r•

Sublcrlption 111tw
$4.50 pM
rwnanar or $8.00 lor two st~menan.
S.Cond CJ- Polr.gt~p.ld 11t Buffalo.
Nttw Yorlc.
Cin:ut.tion: 16,(J(J()

BELLS, TOfS, BOTT~

llftd ntt NOS

'"ev

}

the

, . , ., «lldamlc v•r bv Sub-Board
I, Inc. Offic• llrtl loCIIrfld lit 355
Norton H11/l, Sr.tll Uni1111nltv of Nflw

Honest &amp; Aeltable

......
0...)
ReiiJa&amp;
Reel
SpUta
Pep,enat.t Se•w•

Spectrum 11 publirh«f rhr~
a walllf, ~ Mond11y,

tlma1

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

ntfiEE NIOHTI ONLY:

Or.
Snell
is
espectally
concerned wit h t he Werarchy nr
the social st ructures with respcd
to medtcine. In a talk abo ut
professionalism he stated : "They
(members
of
the
medi..:al
profession) are more involved
with promo ting medicine and arc
not interested rn health ." Or
Snell hopes to incite concern
about health and its im plication&amp;
Both Or. Snell and the students
are reacting favorably to the
course. Students helping ea~h
other learn is a rare thing tn thl'
classroom, but it seems to he
successful here. It is enoouragtng
to see people dedicated t o
learning and these people are
evident m Or. Snell's class. Hall
the class IS auditing, rather than
talon&amp; the course for credit . Dr
SneiJ qutpped. "The ones wh n
combat their way through th ~
snow and tee every Wednesda y
night are truly dedicated!"

4~

Any undergradtate wishing to work at the S t uden t Assuclallon eltction booths on
this Wednesday . Thursday or Friday for S I an hour should sian up in Room 20S o r call
831 -5507

(0.

the layman. Material is obtained
from the text, The Machinery of
the Body, and is expticated
further in Or. Snell's lectures.
Comparing the systems or
health and medicine in tht&gt;
People's Republic of China and
the United States comprises the
political aspect of the course. Dr
SneU offers personal observatio n
in this area as a member of the
medical profession. His insights
are given in the form ol
"rap-downs," wh1cb are clearly
subjective.

Here
comet Hundreds ol
Ol.lltS ancl Qela know this Ia
tile
piece.
Army-Nevy
ber..lns with todly's look.
Qooct g00&lt;111 oood prlceu
good pec191e1 Tile real l..evl's:
fllere end Strattnt, Denim or
Corduroy. Air FQI"Ce parkes,
Government
Qr•t Coets.
stuffl Come th•
r•at
M eco v • s
anu
SAVEl

..._'IY

�They shoot students About The Author
Richard J . Rosche is an anomey with the C#lfltK of J1J$tk:e Through L•w and is an active member of
the Niagara Frontlet Chapter of the New York Civil liberties Union. He is a graduate of SUNYAB Law
School and was active in the Conct~mtJd Lsw Students, the group that organized the investigation which is
the subject maner of this report.

I. Introduction :
printed and broadcast. Even with masses of
On the evening of May 7, 1970, several
evidence, most of the media did little more than
hundred riot equipped and experienced officers of
report the story from both sides of the issue.
the Buffalo Police Department confronted
Although this is commendable, the media has a
students on the State University of New York at
greater obligation when presented with strong
Buffalo campus in what was to be the most
evidence of police misconduct. As with other
frightening and violent of all the disorders on that
official misconduct, the media should investigate
campus. The students were thrown into these
and press for full investigations and revelations of
intense confrontations by American military
findings . Only one newspaper, the Buffalo
Evening
News, had the courage to partially do this
incursions Into Cambodia and the gruesome
slayings at Kent and Jackson State.
and their efforts were marred by very poor
reporting and distortions of the reports on the
Policemen, without authority or right , fired
affair .
shotguns haphazardly into dazed crowds of
Even this minimal effort was ineffecttve for
students wounding several parties. The police
as
soon
as the newness of the story died down,
struck in fast moving vehicles reminiscent of the
the press ignored the matter leavmg the public tn
guerilla strikes used in the very war the students
ignorance. The media in effect was condoning by
were protesting. Then, as if these terror tactics
acquiescence the police misconduct .
were o nly the preliminaries, a massive police force
The effects of this indifference in the public
swept the campus clearing buildings and injuring
and on all levels of government give the police a
countless students in its path .
blank check in dealing with unpopular causes
In the wake of this police violence a grass
Political and social movements, varying from the
roots investigation was launched to discover the
norm , face repression and extinction . This is why
facts and gain justice. Several professors, the
this story is tmportant ; it is a microcosm of the
Niagara Frontier Chapter of the New York Civil
conflict between forces of change and those of
Liberties Un1on, the Student Association, and the
government on all levels.
Concerned Law Students for Peace began taking
Above all, this report 1s aimed at offering
eyewitness statements immediately after the
both a critical view of the problem and some
event. These statements, from over 70 unrelated
suggesti on on ways to start alleviating the
individuals, formed the nucleus of what was
underlying causes of oHicittl misconduct It was
turned into an investigation of extenstve
written
under the belief that it would contribute
proportions involving agencies from the local to
to
the
ultimate
solution - Equa l Justice for All
the federal level .
This event, the shooting of unarmed citizens,
by police and the fruitless efforts to bring them to
11 . Organization:
The facts speak for themselves Th1s is the
justice are the topic of this report. It is presented
basic
prem1se of this report . Therefore extensive
because 1t has brought forth several significant
efforts have been made to present as many
conclusio ns about the relationship between
supporting documents and pictures as possible.
unpopular causes and the "Establishment " of
These documents and pictures were obtained
local government .
from a variety of sources, and origmals were not
The most obvious fact is that when local
always
received . Therefore if the reader wishes to
police are accused of misconduct all htgher
discover the original he must proceed to the
CIVilia n offi cials, police a nd prosecutorial agencies
source of the document. These documents,
are most reluctant to investigate or prosecute.
pictures and copies of statements of the
Coupled with the fact that fellow police officers
will conceal most police misconduct, it is very • eyewitnesses are on f1le with the Erie County ,
Public Library ma1n branch
difficult for a victim of police misconduct to
The body of the report proceeds in logical
obtam justice.
Perhaps the gravest revelation of this
order. The first section deals with the informal
parties in order that the reader be fam1liar wtth
investigation is that the public is most reluctant to
the parties who inttiated the investigatiOn Next
believe, let alone urge prosecution, on matters of
the ev1dence collected , which is the basis of the
police misconduct . Thus, in order to obtain publtc
report is discussed. The most crucial part of the
support, concerned parties must turn to the mass
report, the description of the events of May 7 1s
media to develop in the public, an awareness of
developed after the secuon on the evidence.
the reality of police misconduct and the dangers 1t
The second part of the report deals with the
presents to a free democracy.
official parties infolved in the investigation . Th1s
The press, however, 1s equally reluctant to
part is essential to an understanding of the official
expose police misconduct. It took masses of
and public response to the shootings.
evidence and publicity stunts to get this incident

Ill . The beginning:
Severa l parties connected with the University
community became interested in charges that
were circulating on May 8 , 1970 about police
shooting students. These parties without any
central o rganization began to collect eyewitness
accounts almost immediately . The purposes
behind these collections varied but most parties
collected statements to document the event for
some future use or to aid in presenting what they
considered to be an accurate picture of what had
happened . From these meager beginnings an
investigation grew through the summer of 1970
and involved even the U.S. Department ot Justice.
Initially , the Student Association , Niagara
Frontier Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties
Union, the University Advocates Office (now
defunct). several professors and the Concerned
Law Students for Peace all accepted statements
but no central purpose or goal was established ..
The scenario for the conduct of the
lnvestigatton did not coalesce unt1l mid May 1970
when the law students, including this writer,
began to bring together all the statements and
evidence A two pronged approach was decided
on, involving a continuing effort to accumulate
evidence while attempting to bring prosecutor and
police agencies into the investigation .
The Civil Liberties Un ion initiated official
involvement when on May 13, 1970, it presented
18 signed statements attesting to the shootings to
the Buffalo branch of the F.B.I. 1 The New York
Civt l Liberties Union participation continued until
May 10, 1971 , when it co-sponsored with the
Concerned Law Students for Peace a press
conference on the inctdent . 1 The New York Civil
Uberties Un1on during the summer of 1970 aided
tn contaCting the President's Comm1ssion on
Campus Unrest, and Senator Javits ( A N Y ). Its
offtces and staff were always available to the
mvestigation.
The State University of New York at Buffalo
became mvolved in various manners. Principally ,
Acting Pres1dent Peter Regan and later President
Robert Ketter made requests for police
investigations and reports. 1 Additionally , through
the good graces of the Advocate, Professor Robert
Flemmg, and his asststants, Norman Effman a nd
Ro nald Ste1n, the law students were supplied with
a photocopy machine, an office and photographs.
Their personal assistance was mstrumental in any
accomplishments The medical department
I Buff•lo COCJrrer E~tprttss May 16. 1970
F a I Gtven U a
f: vtdenc:e Aegtn Urges Sho lgun Probe
2 Bufflllo Cou,er EA~D May 11 1971 ' Fallc etta Ooesn •t
Have F B I ABf)Ort , He Says.'· 1&gt; 24
J Buffalo Etl{tntng News , May IS , 1970 . " Aeva•• Asks Full Probe
on ReporH Po loce F tred S hotgu ns at S t udents ..

Copies of rhe 78 eyewitness accounts of the Mav 7 shootings are available at the Ene County Publtc
Librt~ry, Downtown Branch in the rare book S8Ction.

Additional cop•es of this report are available for$ .25 each by mat ling your request to
They Shoot Students
Room 214
Norton Hall
3435 Main Street
Buffalo , New York 14214
Make checks payable to Sub Bosrd I. rnc
COmment~,

in writing, would be w.loome •t the .&amp;&gt;&lt;we addren.

Page one

�provided reports on May 7, 4 and t he Student
Association provided other support.
The Concerned Law Students for Peace of
SUNY AB Law School was formed after the
United States invasion of Cambodia 1970. A
committee of the Concerned Law Students for
Peace headed by this writer participated in the
investigation eventually becoming the spearhead
of the effort which ended in a press conference of
May 10,1971.
Several groups tncluding College A, the
Advocate, the Student Association, the New York
Civil Liberties Union, gathered statements and
evidence in the two weeks after May 7. The
Concerned Law Students for Peace aided in this
effort and after May assumed the bulk o f the
burden. All the contacts made with the press and
any police or prose~uting agency were made by
the Concerned Law Students for Peace and the
New York Civil L1berties Unio n. All information
and ev1dence concerning the incident itself,
gathered after May was done by the Concerned
Law Students for Peace .
The result of this was that the only
organized effort behmd the mformal investigation
was that of the Concerned Law Students.
At t h1s juncture the Concerned Law
Students for Peace must be discussed to fully
reveal the makeup of the people behind this
investigation . The Concerned Law Students for
Peace established a committee of five students to
investig~te the matter.
Two of these f1ve had no connections to any
of the student disorders. The remaining three
were Involved in student protest and were
sympathetic to student pomts of v1ew . However,
none of these people were present the night of
May 7. 1970, on the SUNYAB campus which
enabled them to be detached in their treatment of
the matter Additionally. all of these students had
been tramed as observers for police-public
confrontations The1r training emphasized the
need to be objective in any observation or analysis
of police or citizen activities
Based on these standards the students made
every effort to ob1ectively mvesttgate and piece
together the story of May 7, 1970. Their basic
motive was to see just1ce done and future
inctdents of th1s nature avo1ded.
IV . The evtdence
It is Incumbent upon a wnter before the
description of the events is presented . to present a
detailed accounung not only of the evidence upon
which the story and conclusions are based, but
also a descript1on and ana lysis of the methods of
collect1on and identification of the key
participants. The analysis of the evidence is
important since the 78 eyewitness statements are
of varying degrees of accuracy and reliability .
The evidence was accumulated from May to
mtd -July The 78 statements were gathered by an
mtensive campa1gn by students, the Advocates
Office, the New York Civil Liberties Union and
Concerned Law Students for Peace urging
witnesses to co me forward . This was
accomplished by personal persuasion , and
publicity in the campus media . The medical
reports were gathered via the Advocates Office.
The physical evidence such as shells, pellets
wadding and photos was aecumulated as a result
of the publicity campaign mentioned above or the
initiative of individual witnesses.
A packet which contained a ll of the
a forementioned evidence that could be
photostated, the photos, 5 all correspondence of
the investigation, and news accounts was prepared
early in May . Eventually 25 of these packets were
prepared and delivered to all possible
investtgatory agencies, the press, several
congressmen and senators and other interested
4 . See H•llh Rei)On
5. See photos

Page two

parties. Since the packets were not completed
until mid-July, tupdating supplementary packets
were periodically• sent out. The result was that all
parties were kept updated on the progress of the
investigatio n.
.
The participation of various official part•es
was accomplished by presenting them W:ith .the
information and requesting an investtgat1on.

the reports. Crttlcs believed the whole event was
fabricated.
There are several factors that indicate
that while some people could have concocted a
story, most of the deponents gave independent
reports. It is imposible for 78 unrelated
individuals to come together to fabricate such a
plot. Also each person who took the statements

Needless to say, law students do not carry great
political weight ~K&gt; whenever possible the media
was used to apply additional pressure to those
agencies.
The collected statements are, of an
unprofessional n.ature and at times leave out
important details s&amp;~ch as time, and what preceded
the described event. However, there are a number
of high quality statements. These statements and
the essential facts provided in most other
statements formed a solid basis on which the
events of May 7 could be accurately
reconst ructed .
Suprtsingly , the essential facts were
accurately describted by most witnesses- It was felt
essential that tlhe time, place, identity of
participants and the use of "bi rdshot" be
established by masonable methods. Time was
generally approxi.mated by the witnesses with
some individuals being most accurate due to
c heck 1ng clock·s the moment an incident
happened. Thus in most cases, the statements
were spec1fic eno1Jgh to establish the time of the
described event .
The identity of the participants, particularly
those who used shotguns, was accurate to the
point at which witnesses agreed that men in police
uniforms and riot gear did the shooting.
ldent1f1cation of \/ehicles used by the gunners was
also accurate to identification o f type of vehicle white station wagon. and special markings, traff1c
division sh1eld, " Buffalo Police, " "911 " and the
red bubble t10p . However, no personal
Identification of the individuals or the license
plate numbers was had . It is easy to believe that
individuals would be almost impossible to identify
since they wore !}as masks and riot gear but it is
difficult to undterstand why no license plate
numbers were taken . The only explanation 1s that
people did not think of it and were too afraid for
their lives to worr·y about it.
Accuracy is almost secondary to the
credibility of the deponents. Throughout the
investigation cri'tics have asserted that the
statements, since they were made essentially by
University related personnel, could not be relied
on. Implicit in this assertion is an attack on the
credibility of the students and faculty who made

cross e}f,ined the deponent to assure . his
accuracy, and reliability_ No reports were rece1ved
th~t even hinted at fabrication.
Some time and facts vary , for example, one
student asserted a black police car did the
shootings while all other statements describe a
white police vehicle . These and Cfttler v~riances
would not have been present if an attempt was
made to fabricate. The most apparent proof of
reliability is the medical evidence of wounds
inf licted by pellets.6 It is stretching the
imagination to asser students would inflict these
wounds on themselves to discredit the police.
The use of "birdshot" by the police was
established by various methods. Initially the
investigators were faced with explicit denials by
Commissioner Fellicetta who said :
"Subsequent reports on activities of all commandrng
office" at thtt scentt were thoroughly studied and no poltee
activity on the campus t~W~n suggests that such a thing had
occurred. Shotgun p~~llttt:s ammunition was not used or
possessed by any Buffalo Poli~ Officer as:signed there. .,.

and by Commisstoner Blatr who added :
' 'Absolurely no Buffalo Policemen were carrying shotguns
I saw no law enforcement officer carrying anything bur gas
grenade launchBr$. ·~

It was discovered by UPI correspondent Pat
Slauthery and this writer that the weapons used
to launch gas on the campus were 12 gauge
shotguns with easily detachable adapters.11 This
was confirmed by employees of The Buffalo Gun
Shop who sold the weapons to the Buffalo Police.
Despite these denials of the use of shotgun
ammo, two associate University Advocates,
Ronald Stein and Norman Effman signed
statements that said:
"On the evening of May l , 1970, between 9 ·45 and 10 ·30
while listening fO the Buffalo Police over a police radio rn
our possession, we heard a requtfSt from a policeman on
dury in the University area for buckshot. This requBSt was
6 See pege 3. columns 1 and 2 .
7 Buffslo EwHung Ns-. May 15, 1970, " Regan Asks Full Probe
on Repons Poloca Ftred Shotguns at Students."
8 UP/ , June 4, 1970, " Evidence on Surv-v Ties Pollee to U 8
CamPOs Gunfore."

9 Ibid

'

�mM!e from ,~ pof/cemsn to ,t! dispatcht!r. Further, tile
fMIUtl$t asked that the cartrid(JfiS be deliveted to the
intersection
Boulevard. " 1 0

of

Msin

Street

and

Niagara

Fall&amp;

That same night, Mr. Louis Starr heard the p&lt;&gt;lice
dispatcher order all units to cease fire by order of
the deputy commissioner. That part of the
response that was heard conta ined the word
"birdshot" 1 '
It must be noted that even if birdshot ammo
o r shotguns were not issued offi cially it would not
preclude indiv1dual officers from using t:he1r
personal supply and weapons. J
Witnesses describing the events were able to
1dentify the use of live ammun ition as opposed to
blanks or gas canisters by num erous methJods.
Most individuals stated they had become
accustomed to the dull thump of a gas grenade
being launched This they contrasted with a much
louder bang that came from the guns during the
sh oot1ngs. 1 J
Reinforcing this audible
identification was visual evidence, barrels that had
no can1ster or attachment on the end of the
barrel. Most individuals also heard a whiz:~mg
noise go over their heads,' 3 were hit w1th metal
pellets, recovered metal pellets, saw glass or stone
splatter' • or saw indtviduals hit and bleedin~1' ~
The most reliable ident1ficat1on came from
hunters or veterans all o f whom explicitly
Identified the use of b~rdshot and the direct1on of
the shot '•·
Spent 12 guage shells Remm1ngton and
Webster super Mark S ·b~rd sho t were d1scovNed
around Norton and Foster Halls on May 8 by
Messrs. A. Sllverstetn and S. Lazoritz 1 1 who

writer and then transferred to the F.B .I., having
been recovered immediately after the shootings
from Norton Hall by several witnesses.10 The
windows above the Tower entrance to Norton
Union1 1 were ·perforated with pellets which were
removed and sent to the F.B. I.
The most disturbing evidence of a shotgun
assault were the people wounded. 1 2 Several
individuals who signed statements reported they
were hit with pellets.2 3 Nine individuals of the
group received wounds that drew blood .
Additionally, medical reports from E. J
Meyer Memorial Hospital, Buffalo General
Hospital , University Health Services and Dr. Jacob
Lampert indicate students were treated for
birdshot wounds. Dr. Robert Wilbee of Meyer
Memorial Hospital reported that three individuals
were treated for wounds which were positively
identified as the resu lt of birdshot, two of the
people still having pellets 10 the~r body . He. stated
"In my opm1on, ti11s information would clearly
corroboratt! the contention that shotguns were fired at
4
students dormg the diswrbances ·~

Dr . Paul Hoffman of the University Health
Services stated that about 11 students were
treated for wounds that had "substantious
nodules " in them and numerous others were
treated for wounds that may have been caused hy
shotgun pellets.~ ~
Dav1d Smith . a student, who assPrted he was
one of the wounded 2 t- suppl1ecl the mvesttgat1on
with the most substantial proof of bemg
wounded. David's doctor, Dr
Lampert,
discovered a metallic object 1n Dav1d 's forehead
by probmg and xray (v 1ewed by th1s writer) 1
The object was removed by su rgery at Buffalu
General Hospital and the hospttal record states
buckshot was removed from his head . 1 ~ Th1s
evidence was turned over to the police who
tnterrogated Dav1d Smith at great length
Thus, the evrdence clearly established th&lt;Jt
shotguns, loaded with birdShot were fired ,Jt
students on the night of May 7. 1970
Eyewitnesses further estab lished that the
shootings were done by un1formed Buffalo
policemen on foot or 1n clearly marked pol 1ce
veh1cles. These eyewitnesses by the1r statement
enabled the Concerned Law Students for Peace to
develop the followmg descnpt1ons of events o f
the n1ght of May 7, 1970
The facts of May 7. 1970
The events of May 7, 1970 must be pi deed HI
the proper perspective The sal 1en t c&lt;.~uses of the
d1sr upt1ons o f May were the Ameri&lt;..an mcurs1on
mto Cambodia wh1ch happened 111 early May ,met
the slay1ng of students dunng ant1 w&lt;.~r
demonstrations at Kent and Jackson State
The diSruptions at SUNYAB additiOIIdlly
were based on disruptions m February March
centering on local as well as national 1ssues These
earlier d1srupt1ons 1nvolved thOliSdnds of students
with almost 400 Buffalo pol1cemen 1n sometimes
bloody con fro ntation The pollee were, therefore,
prepared tor the activities 1n May both tact1cally
and psychologically
Students had also learned from the earlier
expenences. The excess1ve v1olence o f the May
confrontations may be attributed m part to the
earlier test and conflict The geographical
references in the following pages can be put in
proper perspective by consulting the SUNY AB
map.
The May activites had commenced several
V

PIC A: This photo was uken about midnight May 7, Hl70,
of an tndividual who claimed to heve been wounded by
police tire (birdshot) . The individual was treated m Nor1on
Uulon at a temporary medical aid station but could not be
identified.
presented them to the F .B I These shells were
tested in March of 1971 by the F B.l . aga1nst the
108 shotguns in the Buffalo Pollee Arsenal It was
determmed that those shells were not fired by
those official shotguns.' 11 It remains open,
however, that private weapons were used or t111at
other shells were used in the pollee weapons.
Shotgun wadding with pellet 1mprints on 1t
9
was found by two students near Norton Union '
Numerous metal pellets were presented to this
10. Statements by Norman Elfman and Ronald S1111n, numbe• 69
I I Sta temenl b'l' Lou1s Starr, number 50
12 Statement numbers 8. 21 and 37
1:1 Statement numbers 9, 11 end 32
14 Stlllement number 48
15 Statement numbers 16 and 26A
16 Statement numbers 25. 74 and 78
17 Statement numbl!f 43
18 Buffalo Etlflntng News . May I 1, 1971 . "Justice Depanm11nt
A1de SIVS F 8 .1 T ested Poltce Guns ." P I
19. Statement number 5 .

20 S tetemenl numbers 12 and 48
21 See P, c (
22 Sell PIC A

23
24
25
26
27
28

Stalemenl numbers 11 12 , II 18 26 35 45 49 53 and 62
See Heallh Repon
lb1d
Statement nunttle&lt; 14 ,
See Health Report
lbtd

~ays ear1ier in Buffalo with a massive and
spontaneous man=h from SUNYAB to downtown
Buffalo of 5,000 students. later thousands
gathered on Main1 Street in front of SUNYAB and
marched to Be!nnett High School where a
blockade of railroad ties was built on Main Street
and burned. The intensity of the confrontations
grew with each day . The students attempted to
occupy and cut traffic off on Main Street. The
police responded with several gas barrages and
assaults. On May 6 the students were using stones
to bombard the police and on one occasion a
policeman in a gas launching car was hit in the
chest and severe! y injured by the assault. Police
inflicted numerou1s casualties of their own
May 7 dawned quietly with little activity all
day .
The events started in the evening. A meeting
was held in Haas Lounge of Norton Union from
7 ·30 p m until about 10 p.m . The meeting
centered on a discussion with the high school
vigilante leaders about war and reasons for
student opposition and fear of police. It must be
noted that these vigilantes had been attacking
Un1versity students on prev1ous nights The result
of the discussion was that the v1gilantes (40
people at the Fled Barn) and the University
students allied themselves to each other
The meeting ended at 10 p.m . The crowd,
now numbenng about 2,000, w1thout leadership,
spontaneously sta rted to file out of the Union on
the Foun tam sidt~. They moved between Foster
dnd ItS annex toward the Red Barn restaurant on
Mam Street When they reached Mam Street, the
entire crowd occup1ed the street from curb to
cu rb facmg the University Plaza . The high school
vigi lantes joined the front of the crowd wh1ch was
made up of many h1gh school students. The
crowd slowly began to mdrCh toward the
Umversity Plaza Unttl this t1me, there was no
ddmage or assaults or an y acts of v1olence by the
crowd

A black and wh1te Buffalo police sedan
drove down Mdm trom the Univensty Plaza
toward the front of the crowd, made a U·turn and
rl"trea ted . The crowd, particularly h1gh school age
md1v1duab out front , chased and chanted after
the car The crowd stretched from curb to curb
from the Red Bard to t he Ford Dealer on Mam
StltH'I
Sht'rdf 's deput1es m not gear were form1ng
on the western s1de of tlw Un1vers1ty Pldza They
lwyc~n to mow back towt~rd the Bailey side of the
Pld/ol Tedr gas was ldunched tntu th e crowd at
thiS moment Simultaneo usly the Buffalo Police
(who were h1dden behmd the arches on Un1versity
Avenue and Mam Street) launched tear gas and
moved after the crowd , commg through the Main
Street l)arku1y lot and movmg 1n the direction of
Ba1rd Hall The crowd was caught in a pincers.
The Shenff's deputies stopped at the Mam Street
parkmg lot but the Buffalo pollee kept runn ing
after the crowd They halted by the service road
runn1ng between Baird Hall and the nearest
dorm1tory
Sev,e ral students were brutally
apprehended. beaten and arrested in this charge.
Gas f1lled the area for alrnost a half hour The
student~ took refuge m the dorms (Tower and
o thers) The shootmg mcidents occurred after
thiS.
The pollee had re·assembled at about 1 1
p.m . 1n a line that stretched from Diefendorf Hall
to in front of Hayes. Students re·assembled
outs1de o f Cooke Hall and a small group of about
100 moved toward the ~lice line taunting and
throwing projectilles. The poHce line moved
forward again and fired tear gas, beating and
arrestmg as they came. The extent of this
penetration is uncl£!ar.
The actual shooting incidents numbered
about seven distinct occurrences. The following
commentary was rE!COnstructed out of the over 70
eyewitness statements gathered by the

Page three

�Other witnesses substantially agreed
this description of the event adding only
oth~ were wounded and a second or third
may have been ffired .'14 That same vehicle
proceeded to the Tower side of Norton
where the second major incident occurred .

PIC 8: This is a photo of the vehicle that did the shooting on the fou.naln side of rNorton Union. The photograPher stJted
that he saw the vehicle circle the fountain and on one pass he heerd 1 report from the direction of the vehicte without any
teargas resulting. He saw the vehicle then leave the area by riding out on the sidt!Walk between Norton and Foster Halls.
Other 11:ports confirm this observation because several of these witnesses saw the shrotgun and/or were hit with peJiets.
This same vehicle proceeded to the Tower side of Norton and fired the shotnuns thl1 wounded several people and
punctured the wmdows in the Norton doorway.
mvest1ga tion. Each section reflects. as accurately
as poss1ble, the description of the even t given by
all the eyewit nesses . The most accurate
description is the Norton Hall 1ncidents numbers
1 and 2 because the largest number of people
witnessed those act10ns. Where possible the actual
statement of a witness IS presented for full rev1ew
Moreover. all the eyewitness statements are on file
w1th the Ene County Public L1brary Downtown
Branch The shootings started at about 10:45
p m and cont1nued until about midn1ght They
occur red in rhe following chronological order . ·•
11} Nonon Hall Fountain
10 ·45 11 . 15 p.m . (3 incidenrs)
(2) Norton Hall Tower Side
11 p.m.
(3) Matn Street Front Lawn 11 15 p m.
(4) Foster Ha:l 11 30 p m
(5) Lockwood " Library " Loop - II 30 p.m
I.

Norton Hall - fountam side mcidents (3
incidents)
The earliest 1nc1dent occurred as a group of
students gathered on the steps on the founta r11
s1de of Norton Hall One rnd1v1dual described the
event as follows
'I started to ""' up thP stalfs "' front of Lockwood
L 1brary Upon lllrnmg left and headmg toward Norton
Umon I sropped because rhe pol1ce had srupped up m rhe
Hayes Hall Area. Then suddenly rwo pollee cars
approdchecllrom the back of Loc:Awood L1brary with the"
lights turned on h1gh beams. The second car rurned off his
lights Upon turntng to see what the pol1ce were domg I
{!fst not1ced for sure that they were both police squad cars
because of the "911" stenciled on the doors on both cars
Then I saw the fron t windows roll down {in the first car/
and a shotgun started firmg. Then I htt the ground and
when I looked up rhe poltce were gone Moments later m
the back of Norton Un~on I felt a slight pam in my righr
shm Upon lookmg at my leg there was blood coming from
a small cut wh1ch hadn't been there before. 1 therefore
concluded that I must have been h1t by one of the pellets
from the sho tgun blasts " 3 0

Comb in 1ng this statement with other
commentaries it can be concluded that two white
police station wagons, with bright lights on, sped
from between Harriman and lockwood Library
and the Norton Hall steps around the fountain
and back from where they had come.
29. S..M1p
30. Stltement number 18.

Page four

The cars wHre identified as Buffalo Police
with at least two men in blue coats in each The
shots were fired when the vehicles were directly in
front of Norton steps. The statements did not
indicate in what direction the shots were fired ,
but they did indicate the shots were fired , at least
one from each vehicle. from the right side of the
car through the windows. Several students were
InJured 1 '
One individual. David Smith, who was
wounded gave a s&amp;tement that indicated that a
short time later, but before 11, another police
vehicle, black and with four police in it, came
from between Foster and Lockwood Library and
shot at students from the driver 's side hitting
severa l on the st•~ps of Norton. Since th1s is the
only statement of this event it is possible Ddvid
described an event that will be discussed later ' 1

w1th
that
shot
then
Hall

2. Norton Hall - Tower side incident (1
incident)
The white station wagon that did the
shootings on the Fountain side of Norton Hall
proceeded back between Norton and Foster Hall
and Foster Annex toward the Tower side of
Norton Hall. The evenf that was witneSsed by the
most people then occurred. This station wagon.
driving on the sidewalk between Norton and
Foster Annex, came out onto the road on the
Tower side of Norton, turned southeast slowing in
front of the Norton steps and fired a shotgun into
Norton Hall shattering several panes of glass above
the entrance and wounding students.
Numerous witnesses saw that the vehicle was
a white station wagon marked with the letters
"Traffic Division"; "911 ";"Buffalo Police" and a
green sh1eld and topped with a red bubble light
Most witnesses indicated seeing three uniformed
men In the front and rear seats and several saw the
driver with a blue helmet face shield and gas
mask .
The shooting itself happened in this manner
The vehicle came onto ~he mam road from the
Sidewalk, turned in front of Norton Hall and
stopped. A few witnesses saw stones thrown at
the vehicle but there was no substantial or
damaging barrage. One w1tness described the
event as follows:
"I chert went out mto the porch and started to waiA
to Norton. I doub ted that a shootmg hsd taken place anu
was trymg to find out what was happenlflg
As I stood there on the sidewalk I saw a man wtth J
blue helmet and a dark jacket where the white starwn
wagon had been. I can't recall tf the man was standmy
outs/dB of or in the white vehiciB I saw Chfl upper part of
llis body. He was holding a shotgun (I have had eJ(perience
w1th shotguns and feel I can identify one) wh1ch he hekl
sltghtly above the horizontal position 1 thtm heard ,f
shotgun blast and saw a flash from the end of the mu.ule
There was no gas attachment on the weapon and no gas
resulted. As I turned to run I recall that he cocked rh~
weaf)On w1th a pumping act1on I then noticed the front
fender of the white vehicle. I ran mto the Tower dorm ·•

Immediately most witnesses heard and saw
the
windows
above the Norton Hall entrance
Later, o ther cars passed the fountain side of
3
Norton Hall Students. in respo nse, at about 11 shattered while no gas resulted . " The policeman
p m ~mcaded a ll the entrances to the fountam then entered the vehicle, and it sped off in tht'
area except the sidewa lk between Foster and direction of the Hamman Library area Several
Norton Halls. Th,en ensued an incident witnessed students were hit or wounded . Also pellets were
1
by many people which was described by one recovered from under the perforated window.
The F .B.I. rece1ved several of these pellets and
w1tness as fo llows :
every one o f the shattered or perforated
18
·I
a scuden r at SUNYAB at approxtmarely T 1 wutdows.
saw a Buffalo Pollee car enter the rear area of Norton
The students, as a result of these assaults.
Umon Thts car was whtte and on the stde doors was an
became fnghtened and apparently in a slight state
1
tns1gn1a w1tf1 wings ;,1nd rile words. 'Buffalo Poltce.' Below
of shock " The last reported act of student
the tns1gn1a were the words 'Tr&lt;Jiflc DIVISIOn. · Th1s car
vrulence hdppened prior to the above incidents
entered the area between Foster Hall and Foster AnoeJ(
when a Buffalo Tactical Patrol car entered the
ami proceeded tnto the quadrangle fountain area. From
road
my positiOn. on the steps of N orton Hall facmg the
on the Tower side of No rton Hall . The
quadrangle and fountam, I saw rh1s poltce car w ith three vehtcle was caught in the! barricades e rected there
men ms1de, one I am positive was wcarmg a 1.mdorm The and severly stoned with heavy damage. The
car proc:eeded mto the quadrangle area and fmding the exu
occupants escaped witho ut apparent injury.
between Lockw ood Library ancJ Foster Hall blocked,
Several other mcidents occurred after thiS
turned around and made a pass by the fountain, turned
agam and went back. turned and made another pass by the assault and the aforementioned shootings.
fountam. On the second pass bv the fountam the man tn
the back seat put a !'lun out of rile rear wmdow and flfed
mto the crowd of a•bout 40 people on the rear steps of
Norton Union I put my gloved hands over my face and
felr pellets strike them . The car then exited the area
between Foster Hall and Foster Annex I saw two (2)
people who were s.IJot by the pellets and found many
pellets on the grour.td These pellets were flattened from
striking the wall anrJ the ones that were still in tact were
smsll round objectJ.;. These pellets were picked up by
srudena. " 3 '

31 Stltement numbers 2. 9. 18 and 45
32. SUitement number 114
33. Statement number 112.

3. Main Street - front lawn incidents :
Between 11 :15 and 11 :45 p.m.. students
ventured out onto the lawn in front of Foster and
Crosby Halls. About 90 yards from Main Street
several sharp shotgun blasts were heard coming
from Main street and a line of policemen. One
person describe&lt;i it as follows:
34
35
36
37

Statement numbers 4. 9. 11, 2 1. 27. 34. 65, 68, 73, 74 and 71
S tatement numbeo 78 .
See Pte E
Statement t'lurrbers 1, 3, 10, 15, 19, 33, 42, 47 , 49 and 67
38 See page 8, columo 2.
39 Statement number 72.

�"Pttople were walk ing down toward Main Stmet .in
front of Hayes Hall. The police wen~ aerO# the strt~t In
force, spread down Main Street massed in front c.•f the
church at the comer of Main and Niagara Falls Blvd.
Taunts yvere coming from the crowds toward the police.
The advancement of kids stopped about halfway bet':ween
Hayes and Main Street. The taunts went on for 11 while.
Suddenly canisters of te~~r gas, only a few at fif$t. then
some sort of explosive devfces exploded down the
straightaway. Flares of high mtensity were shot into the
air. The police then started across the street advancirJjg in a
solid line parallel to Crosby and Hayes Halls. T11e flares
~e about three quarters of the way up the lawn from
Main Street. Kids started to turn and run. When .1' was
almost to the street in front of Hayes, I turned and looked
back co see what was happening. A kid was runnfni{J up
from Main Street toward me. He was about 5-8 Jvards
away Suddenly a blast. not that of gas, but th.lt of
gunshot The kid faltered and then fell. He then got up and
started limp1ng. I ran to his assistance and WBS' go1i't{/ to
attempt to carry him on my shoulders. I leaned over
toward him and another shot (gun bfm) rang 011t. Both of
us were hit and fell to the ground got up and limped
away ... We went to Meyttr MtHnorial Hospitlll and I' was
x-rayed and found to have three Pf'lln:l in my
body .. ,40

spproximlltely 150 people in back of Foster Hall. We were
facing Hayes Hall, because approximately a doren pollee
officers could be SHfl in rhe vicinity of that building. I
heard 11 shot fired from the dir«tion of Hsyes Hall, and
birds/lot go through the trees thllt I ~ standing under.
About five yards from me one youth was hit in the hand
with a pllllet and the hand was bleeding. Since I have been
an avid hunter over the past five years, I cons1der myself
correct 11bout wlttJre the shot was fired from, and that it
was birdshot that was fired.,.. 4

5. Lockwood Library "loop" incident

4. Foster Hall incident

Thr.; incident may have involved two
different type vehicles at about 11 :30. Students
had been on the front lawn by Main Street and
the police had used gas to disperse the crowd. At
least one student threw a canister back at police
lines. While the crowd was retreating toward
Foster Hall a white station wagon and a black
police car both identified as having markings and
red buble lights on top at different times fired
shotguns, without gas, wounding with pellets
several in the crowd. The white station wagon
fired several shots while dnving toward Main
Street on the campus road running from behind
Foster and Crosby Halls to Main Street. The black
car fired while in the library loop. The witnesses
did not state the direction from which these
vehicles approached. Additionally, those who
witnessed the white station wagon 4 ~ did not see
the black car4 " and vice versa . Thus the two
incidents occurred a short time apart

The police had formed a line running
perpendicular to Main Street on the Lockw•JOd
Annex slde of Hayes Hall. Apparently that
detachment stayed in that area from about 10:30
- midnight. At 11 :30 p.m. at least three separate
shots were fired by those police at students. One
student was hit while standing by the eas1ern
corner of Foster Hall. The witnesses ~ed that

The remainder of the day
The Buffalo Police at about midnight
converged in large numbers on Norton Hall and
then on Tower and Cooke dormitories. Norton
Hall was gassed and windows broken by police in
the process. Eventually the entire Norton Union
was filled with gas. Most student occupants fled

One ex · GI identified from mili1tary
experience the direction of the shots - the po1lice
on Main Street and another was close enough to
observe the individual who fired the shots He was
a policeman.• 1

PIC C: This photo was taken on the SUNYAB Main St. campus on May 7, 1970. It is a picture of • Buffalo Police
station wagon which at the time of this p1t1urt was chasing students in the direction of Foster Hall . It is not certain
that this did any shooting.
to Tower and Cooke dormitories. The police
the shots came from the police line and tlhat
4 1
followed and formed on the road between Norton
pellets were embedded in his coat .
Anotlher
and
Tower. Gas was used on the dormitories and
student standing by the Lockwood Loop was hit
spotlights
continually raked the windows of the
by pellets from weapons fired by two un1forrned
dormitones.
The situation was so tense that the
police with riot helmets from behind Ha•~es
students
in
the
buildings felt that the police were
Hall. 4 3 The main group of 150 students was
about to assault the dormitories. After awhile the
standing right by the foot of the LockwoiOd
police left and no other incidents of significance
Library steps. A hunter witnessed the incid•~t
occurred
that evening.
and gave this description:
..At approximately 11 .30 p.m ., Thursday night May
7, 1970, 1 was standing in the midst of a crowGf of

Summary
May 7 was a violent day filled with many

40. Statement
41. Statement
42 Ststement
43. Statement

44. Statement number 26.
45 SuoteMent nutmen 13 end 20.
46. Statement I'I&amp;Jmbef's 21 end 35.

number 26.
numbers 24 end 26
numbers 32 and 66
number 30

beatings, gassings and shootings by the Buffalo
Police. There -was very little provocation on the
part of the stude1nts. The initial confrontation on
Main Street happ.ened and ended so quickly that
there was no time for students who were fleeing
to react.
A similar patter followed during the evening
with students being anacked and being incapable
of any response clue to the ferocity and speed of
the police actions:. Students did set up barricades
in one incident, stoned a police car and used force
in ind ividual and group confrontations .and
arrests. Gener&lt;lll y, police action could be
characterized
a:; brutal,
unnecessary
and
unprovoked .
VI . The official tresponse :
The violent May days of 1970 served as
fertile ground from which sprang a grass roots
investigation into the tu rbulent events of May 7 .
Armed with a mass of eyewitness accounts and
evidence, the Concerned Law Students for Peace
and New York Ci~Jil Liberties Unton spurred local .
state a nd federal agencies into what was popularly
called the "Birds;hot Investigation ." Eventually ,
the following agencies and individuals became
directly involved the C1ty of Buffalo. the D1strict
Attorney of Ene County. the governor and State
Police of New York. two Un1ted States senators
and congressmen. the President's Comm1ssion on
Campus Unrest, the F .B.I and the United States
Justice Department.
Despite the massive involvement of the
aforementioned agenc1es and individuals. little
effort was exerted! toward finding and prosecuting
those responsible for the shootings. At the very
best, cursory investigations were conducted, while
at the worst several agencies attempted to
whitewash the evtmt.
Perhaps tt is; th1s part of the report that is
most s1gnif1cant
It IS dangerou!&gt; to have
policemen takmg rhe law into their own hands
but it is 1ntolerdble to have every agency from the
Justice Departrmmt on down deliberately o r
negligently cove!ring the matter over . A
democracy that chenshes indivldiJal liberty so
highly will not last 1f the very defenders of this
liberty a re allowed to go unpunished for crtmes
against 1ts citizens.
Before the s•~pdrate actions o f each agency
are cons1dered. 11 is lmportdnt to know why each
agency was 111vulvt~d The reader will then be able
to follow the act10ns of the agenc.t~ 10 tl more
informed mann~r
The prtmcJry ob 1ect1v~ of the Concerned Law
Students ond tlw Civil Ltberties Union was to
bnng those respo ns1ble for the shoutmgs to
just1ce Therefore . some Jgency that would
prosecute th~ mauer to 1ts fullest hau to be
contacted The Concerned Law Studer1ts and Ctv li
Liberttes Un1on f1~ lt that ds many publtc off1ce
hold el"!&gt; dnd age1nctes dS possible should be
involved to gucJrantt'e the best uf efforts.
However. beccJu~ the lo&lt;.&lt;~l authorttles, the C1ty
of Buffalo and the- Ene County D A have always
been lax in these matters, powers above the
4 7
county level were the pnme targets
Additionally, the evrdence complied by the
Concerned Law Students and Ctvil Liberties
Union was defic1ent in one Important respect the evidence did not Identify the specific
individuals who did the shootings. It was critical,
then. that the ag1mcies with the capabilities of
discovering the responsible policemen, be
involved . The F .B.I. and Justic Department had
resources within &amp;nd out of the Buffalo Police
Department and the power to summon a Federal
Grand Jury, all olf which could have discovered
the responsible policemen . Similarly the state and
Erie County District Attorney had like resources
available. All of these parties could have
47. Frunnr•on, f&gt;ollfics and th11
Chambtfle~n rt el • 1971 , p 71

All~tnrown

lnc1d11nt , Stephen R

Page five

�...

-

t

I

..,,.

.,.~_ ,..

discovered more eyewitnesses to the event with a
minimal amount o f effort.
The various agencies becam e involved under
either a law or a regulation they were supposed to
enforce. These laws and regu lations, w h ich were
violated by the police, also give an accurate
picture of the seriousness of the shootings of May
7, 1970.
The basic law vio lated on the state level, and
enforceable by an agency of the City of Buffalo,
County of Erie and the State of New Yor k, was
the New York State Penal law Sections 120.00
Assault in the Third Degree, 120.05 Assault in the
Second Degree and 120.10 Assau lt in the First
Degree The basic elements of these crimes are
intent or criminally negligent acts that are
intended to and do cause physical inju ry to
another. The most serious is Assault 1, since it
Involves assault with a deadly weapon . The facts
of May 7 clearly indicat ed an assault of this
nature occurred
There are defenses to an assault charge
which, if present, would legitimize the pol1ce
assaults. The Penal law allows a person to defend
h1s property, Sect1on 35.20. his person, 35.15 and
if he is a police officer to use reasonable force to
make an arrest None of these defenses were
available to the police s1nce they were attacking
students without proper cause There were no
arrests be1ng made, no property threatened, and
no lives or persons being threatened by the
students Additionally, deadly force, such as
shotguns, couldn't be used unless the student~
were using deadly physical force.4 • There were
no reports of student force of th1s nature
Disc1pl1ne tn &lt;l para military force such as a
pollee department 1s most eff 1cient 1f 1t IS
ma1ntamed from w1thtn The Buffalo Pollee
Department has this procedure ava ilable to it but
did not utilize it Art1cle 3, Sect1on 30 of the New
Ynrk Publw Off1rer~ Law automatically creates a
vacancy tn an officer's position 1f he is convicted
of a felony ThiS procedure could only be
effect1ve tf the ofttcer were convtcted of assault
Article XII of the Police Contract with the City of
Buffalo enrtled D1sctplme and Otscharge allows
the Department of Pollee to disc1pline a man for
misconduct by dismissing or fining him At the
very least orders o f the commissioner were
disobeyed, thus the o ffending police could have
been dealt with by the Pol ice Department.
Federal authortties operated under Chapter
18, Section 241 of the U.S. Code which outlaws
conspiracies by persons to inJure, oppress,
threaten, or intimidate another in the exercise of
a right given by the ConstitutiOn or laws of the
Un1ted States Th1s could be a valuable tool. for
consp1racy involves provtng only an agreement
and an act toward its fulfillment There was
obviously an agreement and act by a few
policement to intimidate and injure students as
they attempted to exercise their right to assemble
and live their lives. It must be noted that many
students were not engaged in violent acts but were
merely expressing their discontent with American
War policy .
These are the tools available to the agencies.
Now ex1mine what was done with this vast array

' ·l) The Cit y of Butfalo:
little effort was expended on Mayor Sedfta
or the Po I ice D.epartment si nee prev1ous
experience had shown that they ignored efforts to
e~PQSe police mi~conduct . These expectations
. ~re confirmec:Hn an interview with Mayor Sedita
by W!t!N,TV in July ot 1:9-7.0. When asked why
' t heI ~ity was not cond~ing an investigation into
·' t He-matter he repfied:
'Well, we feel that the Justice Department ts
involvtld, the District Attorney and the state - we would
only 1J6f in the way. "
48. Nttw Yor*' Stllt11 Pttmal Codt1, Sect1on 35 15 121 a

Page six

l ater, in the interview he revealed a
disturbing attitudle t hat the civilian branch of the
government s ho uld n ot be in volved. When asked if
he o r t h e police had seen any of the eyewitn ess
accounts o f t he irncident he responded :
"I don't now. I can tell you that there was a time
when I would get mrvself involved i n police work and there
were some «cus.Jtions of politics in the Police
Department, and wMie under the charter, I am responsible
for law and order in this city, I have left it to the
professtonals - the commissioner and his mspectors and
the deputies around him to run the Police Department and
thus farm my opinicm they are doing a fine job."

Anoth er example of Mayor Sedita's tota l
lack of concern wit h police matters he has a legal
duty to supervise, was the shake-up of the Buffalo
Narcotics Squad due to misconduct of its
members. The mayor was unaware that any
shake-up was happening and stated :

Co mmissioner Felicetta w as out of t own. 53 That
official told t his t o the Buffalo £ vsning N ews
reporter Mi ke Benevento. The N ews distorted the
re port out o f prop o rtion to the truth . 5 4 The
resu lt was that a news story was printed and
broadcast claiming the F .B. I. had cleared t h e
police in the matt~r . 5 5 T h is was unt rue.s b
Apparently, what that official was tr'; . J
was to sh ow t hat a very ambiguous report cleareu
h1s department.
Comm issioner Felicetta returned to Buffalo
and said t o t he Courier Express on the m o rn ing of
May 11 , 197 1, that he knew of no report that
cleared h is department. 5 1 The Commissioner,
however, ad m it ted to the Buffalo Evening News

"The police cornmts:sJoner IS runnmg the department.
I always had department heads run their departments. '"' '•

The police department and Commissioner
Felicetta upon whom the mayor placed all power,
denied any police involvement immediately
afterwards on Ma~· 8 and later on May 15, 1970 in
the Buffalo Evening N ews . A similar denial was
made by Deputy Commissioner Blair who stated
in a UPI story of June 5, 1970 that :
"Ailsolurely no Buffalo pol!cemen were CCJrrymg
shotguns. I saw no law enforcement officer carrymg
anything hut gas gren,ade la11nchers." &lt; ' '

As was noted by UPI , however, the gas
launchers were shotguns.
Although there was an obvious reluctance on
the command structures part to admit even a
poss•bility of mi:sconduct, an investigation of
unknown depth and duration was conducted by
some members of the Police Department. David
Smith 5 1 stated w this writer, and this was
confirmed by his parents, that a lieutenant and
other uniformed p1olice had interviewed David on
the matter in early June. They came in response
to his reporting his wound to the local precinct
no. 16. Their efforts lasted over two hours and
they tried every means to discredit his story. On
June 19 a police liieutenant· received from Buffalo
General Hospital a metal pellet extracted from
David's
head. 5 '
This
writer
interv1ewd
Commissioner Blai1r on December 28, 197 1, about
this investigation.
Blair would not open his files for mspect1on
but d id answer sonne questions. He confirmed that
the department
had conducted its own
investigation inter'Viewing both police and citizens
and looking for p1hysical evidence. He concluded
that none of his men were involved . When asked if
he believed if policemen would bear witness
~inst fellow policemen if they did shoot, he said
yes. He would not or could not think of a time
that this had be1en done before. Additionally,
despite the avaiJability of over 70 eyewitnesses,
onfy Dav.id Smith was interviewed . It was obv1ous
the Buffalo police were not after the truth, but a
COYerup.
Officia~
de!sires to clear the pol1ce
department of thf! charges by any means became
obvious ill May 1971, nine months after the
previous public discussion on the matter. The
F.B.I . had canduc::ted tests on the Buffalo Police
shot.guns and the 9hells found on the SUNY AB
.campus In- Ma~Ch 1971. It was determK'Ied that
those snells w-.e. not fJ!ed from official weap.on~.
Tbis infonnatton was COllveyed ro a high police
official, I'O~Iy Commissioner Blair, since
49. Buffalo Ewnmg NBtfl/fi , December 1. 1971 . 'Sedna Unewa 1 e ol
Shakeup," p 1

50 UP/, June 4, t970, " Eondttnce m Survtly Ttes Poltce ro
Cllmpus Gunfire. "
51 Slltement number 14
52 See Health Report

.

u8

that evening that the tests were run and showed
only that official weapons were not fired on the
campus. 5 8
There
was confusion
in
the
department but an obvious attempt had been
made to take some public pressure off the Police
Department . 5 &lt;~
The civilian officials of the city government ,
although responsible for law and order in the city,
washed th eir hands of the matter . The police
officials not only denied that the incident
happened but aided in misleading the public . An
investigation was conducted but its objective was
more to discredit eyewitnesses than to make an
objective report .
The authors of Frustration, Politics and the
Allentown Incident, the story of the Allentown
Rtot, drew similar conclusions about that
inctdent. A wall of silence by city officials helped
defeat efforts toward resolution of the matter .11 "
The City of Buffalo could not be counted on to
bring its own to justice.

2) T h e Erie Cou nty District Atto rney:
The law students, based on the opinions of
several New York Civil Liberties Union attorneys,
bel1eved that like the City of Buffa lo , any efforts
made to involve the District Attorney would be
fruitless . Nevertheless, Mr. Joseph Lentini ef
WGR -TV suggested that we should approach the
D.A. befure h.is station
wou ld
consider
bradcasting any p rogram on the investigation. The
Concerned Law Students for Peace reconsidered
approaching Mr. Dillon and decided to caplt afiZe
on the mQetiog by calling a press conferen ce to
further expose the affa.,.
5J Buffalo Evening N!'w., Mel( 1t . 1971 " Justoee Del)¥tmtnt
A1d Sllvs F 8 I. Tested Pollee GuM," p. 1
54, See page 8 , c:Okl;.nrT 3:
55 Buffalo E11Ming' Nt!ws , Mev 4 , 1971 , "Polle e Cleerecl'by f 8 I.
or f~r1ng 81 u B. Students," p 1
56 See page a, colum n 3 .
57 Buffalo Courier EKpress , Mev 11 , 1971 , "Fehcelta Doesn't
Have F B I Aepon, He Seys." p 25
58 Buffalo E11t1nmg News, Mey II , 1971 . " Just iCe Depanmenl
A1d Savs F B I Tested Pollee Guns," p. 1.
59 See page 10. columns 2 end 3 .
60 Ftustrat•on. Polittcs end tht! AIIBntownlncidBnt. p 32-37

�This writer and Mr. Effman of the
Advocate's Office, SUNYAB ,... along with two
other studentJ met with Mr. Dillon on June S~,
1970. The group presented him with 30
eyewitness statements and additional information.
He was urged to examine the information
contained in the aforementioned packet. 6 '
The results of this meeting were limited. The
press conference gained wide publicity that
greatly increased the investigation's contact with
the public. However. when the Concerned la1w
Students for Peace and Civil Liberties Union madle
their report to the public in September 1970, Mr.
Dillon in response to a request for a full repotrt
wrote:
"I havB fully reviBwed all of thtt documBnts fumilh1'Hi
mtt at the time of our m•tlng on J(lnll 9, 1970 . .. In
lddition, th;eto, I havtt rttvill'itted ·f'BPDrtl of th11 Buffalo
Police ~ent relating to twtlntl on thll SBme dllte and
I have spoken with rept6$entatlvtn of the N11w York State
Police and the Ft!JdM~I Bure.u of lnllt!!StiiJIItion .
It is my judgment th11t /»sed upon t~~~t~ryrhlng which
hils been m«Je •vailabltl to me up to this time, I h/11ve
insufflcient !»sis for th11 presentation of this rMtter to 11
G,.nd Jury. HowevtJr, if thtt law ttnforcemtlflt ~cies
inquiring into the B~na of May 7, 1970, dt~~~t~lop any
MkJitional Information not httl'tltofortt m«Je available ro
ma, I will be pleased to review the SBme. •At 2

It is apparent that although some police
agencies were contacted by the D.A., no witnessErs
to the event were sought out or •nterviewed. The
burden was placed on the Concerned Law
Students for Peace to develop a case strong
enough to go the the Grand Jury . This situation lis
highly unusual since it is not incumbent upon a
citizens group to investigate crimenal matters tiD
this degree. The information and names provided
by the Concerned Law Students for Peace were
more than sufficient to start a full investigation.
Additionally, the police themselves could have
been dealt with either by the D.A. or an
investigating Grand Jury which could have
questioned police and discovered mdiv1dual
participants in the shooting.
In contrast to this, the hold over 1970 Marclh
Grand Jury of Ene County investigating campus
disturbances without any aid from a cit1zens
group investigated and questioned numerous
students and fa cu lty. The Jury searched mto ever·.,
possible area o f student activity whether 1t had a
connection to cnme o r not. The intensive
mvestigatory effort that went into this probe was
conducted by Mr . Dillon 's staff .
It is difficult to determine what forces
motivated Mr. Dillon but it is obvious that the
prosecution of students and the University were
much more important than the investigation 01f
police abuses agamst students. Politically, the
populace of Erie County adamantly supported the
hold over Grand Jury and had a bearing on Mr .
Dillon An unpopular cause was given little
attent1on though more information and witnesse-s
were avai lable to that investigati on, than to the
hold over Grand Jury. In short, the D.A .. being
politically motivated, set different standards for
two s1m1lar investigations. The enforcement of
justice in Erie county was on a partisan basis
during the summer of 1970.
3) New York - the governor and the State Policet:
The Concerned Law Students for Peace and
New York Civil Liberties Union believed from the
beginning that any effective action , if it carrw,
would come from the federal or state
governments. Consequently , on May 14, the
Concerned Law Students for Peace while
picketing a visit to Buffalo by Governo'r
Rockefeller were invited to meet with the
governor to discuss the war. It was decided by the
group of six students who met with the governor
61 BuH.to Couflflf Expf'flrs. June 10, 1970. "Ootlon to

Shooting Claoms "
62 See Letter 1
1\

Revte\N

to also present me governor with the packet of
information concerning May 7 and request a state
Investigation. The governor consented to the state
involvement promising an investigation. Mr. Jerry
Wolfgang, assistant to the governor was to be the
liaison man."
Detective J .D. Steinmetz of the New York
State Police Troop A was sent to this writer's
home by the governor to investigate the matter in
late May. He was supplied with all the
informatJon available but he warned the
Concerned Law Students for Peace not to expect
too much since the F.B.I. had all the physical
evidence. Detective Steinmetz submitted his
report and information to Albany where it was
given to Howard Shapero of the governor's staff.
Detective Steinmetz was ordered to try and
obtain additional Information and on June 4
called on this writer. He was given new
information including new medical reports. This
was forwarded to Albany . This writer visited Mr .
Steinmetz in late June to give him a final packet
of information. The detective told this writer that
it was all in Albany's hands. He also expressed a
to
personally continue his own
desire
investigation but said he could not without orders
from Albany . Those orders never came.
The press conference of September was held
to allow all agencies to report their findings. A
letter was sent to the governor care of Mr.
Wolfgang asking their participation. The substance
of their response reads:
" The unavatlabiliry of the phystcal evtdence necessary
to a comp/ttte invt1$tigation combined with the lapse of
time betwet~n the events m quest ton and the request for a
state inquiry severely hampered the mvestigative efforts of
the State Police 11nd perforce rendered them highly
inconclusivB.
All lnform11tion develoP«/ durmg the covrse of the
Stattt Police lnvesti{llltton i1 also In the po~ession of the
Eri• County Di&amp;trict Artorn11y, who together with the
Gr11nd Jury bear~ prlmery respom/billty for asetJrtaining
the eJCtstence of wrongdoing in Eritt County.
All lurth., «tiM In tltil fdtrlf must come from
IOC41 or ft!Jd11,..1 11u thomies. ·-6 •

appeared about a W'eek later. There was sufficient
time for the State F•olice to pick up the case s;nce
most of the witne;;ses were available into early
June. Additionally, to this writer's knowledge, no
witn~ were evt:r interviewed by the State
Police and Mr. Steinmetz, as late as the end of
June, said he wantt!d to continue but no orders
were received . This indicates that the state
believed it was a local matter and that there was
never any intention to pursue this effort to the
end. The state, at most, became involved just to
the point at which it could say it took some
action but did nothing to see the matter to its
logical end - the discovery and prosecution of
those responsible for the shootings. The state
failed in its duty to protect Its citizens when local
government fails.
4)Congress
The law students felt that it would aid the
investigation if certa1in Congressmen and Senators
were informed of the events of May 7 . These men
if they could be convinced of the substance of the
charges, would be valuable not only for publicity
reasons but because they could lend credence to
the investigation itnd apply the pressures of their
offices to public age:ncies to pursue the charges of
pollee misconduct .
Senators Javits (R ·N.Y.) and Goodell
(R· N Y.) and Cong1ressmen McCarthy (D·N.Y.)
and Dulski (D N.Y.) were all contacted by the
Concerned Law Students for Peace. Despite some
noticeable failures. these men responded as best
they cou ld in the sittuation .
Senator Good1ell was contacted by three
members of the Concerned law Students for
Peace in Washmgto1n, D.C. on May 8, 1970. The
law students, who were in the capital for the
peace rallies of May became aware of the
allegations of police misconduct in Buffalo
through the Washington Post . Telephone calls to
friends in Buffalo confirmed the report that
shotguns were usedl on the SUNYAB campus on
May 7 , 1970. These students then proceeded to

PIC 0 : This is a photo of me amenflicl• pictured in PIC Conly • ftw seconds after the fint photo wts liken.
It is most difficult to analyze the state role
in this matter. The primary jurisdiction rests not
with the state but with local authorities. However,
it is peculiar that in the aforementioned letter the
governor's office complains of a time gap. The
governor was contacted on May 14, only seven
days after the incident and Mr. Steinmetz
63

N- Yodt Tunes . Mev 15 , 1970, "Rockefeller Auures

Students on State Guard Camput Role ..

64. See Letter 2

contact the senato'rs and congressmen whose
jurisdictions included the Buffalo campus.
Senator Goodell was not personally
contacted but his staff was most receptive. The
students were introduced to Goodell's legislative
aid, Miss Nan Nixon, who heard their story and
promised to assist them as information became
available.
The students, upon their return to Buffalo,
started compiling the first of the packets of
information on the shooting and forwarded one

Page seven

�each tO'lhttut1atnMtor::ldildoattv~hitff1 ~8t'fM1.
Senator Goodell via Miss Nixon kept informed of
all developments and eventually sent a letter to
the
Justice
Department
requesting
an
investigatio n.6 5 The letter when it was made
public d id lend support and credence ,o the
investigation. Senato r Goodell was th first
congressman to take a firm position on the
shooting and his efforts stimulated further
progress in the venture.
Senator Javits did not respond as rapidly
when contacted in Washington but on June 30,
1970, in a response to an inquiry sent to all
involved congressmen, the Senator confirmed his
own investigation into the matter a nd pledged to
contact the Scranton Commission and New York
State officia ls on the matter. Ad d iti o nally, he
re~ealed he had contacted the Department of
Justice Criminal Section and they had requested
that the names of witnesses be forwarded to
them.!\" The names of the witnesses, numbering
70 were forwarded to th e Department of Justice
by
Norman Effman, Assistant University
Advocate, SUNYAB . The addition of Senato r
Javits to the list of investigation supporters
boosted the credibility of the investigation and
certainly affected public attitudes toward the
effort.
Representatives McCarthy and Dulski, whose
districts encompassed the University of Buffalo,
received all the correspondence and information
the senators received but did not respond to the
Concerned Law Students requests for assistance.
These men were engaged in re-election bids and
did not have time to ·tet such a controversial
matter interfere .
5) T he President's Commission on Campus Unrest
This commission was established by
President Nixon after the May 1970 disorders on
campuses through ou t the nation to discover the
causes of the unr~t . Since police misconduct on
the campus was a part of the commiss1on's study ,
the investigation decided to send packets of
information to the commission care of Governor
George Scranton .
The Civil Liberties Union and Concerned
Law Students sent a letter to Mr. Joseph Rhodes,
the only student member of the commission,
bringing his attention to the matter on June 15,
1970. 6 7 Mr. Rhodes responded on June 18, 1970,
with a firm commitment to follow up on the
matter. The Concerned Law Students responded
on June 26, 1970, with a description of F .B.l.
efforts and a p ledge to send an updated packet to
Mr. Rhodes. Unfortunately, this was the last word
heard from the commission proper .
\.

Mr . Steve Woodside, an investigator for the
commission, visited the SUNYAB campus on Ju ly
29- 30 to discover student responses to th e May
disturbances. He was not sent to investigate the
shotgun incident but the Concerned Law Students
met with him and presented the evidence
concern ing the shooting. He was impressed and
said he would do his best to present the matter to
the main commission. However, nothing was
heard from the commission after this interview .
The commission was burdened with
investigating a large volume o f material.
T herefore, priorities were set as to what matters
should receive the attention of the commission.
Since many other incidents similar to the
"shotgun incident" occurred throughout the
nation priorities had to be set. Presumably, the
event in Buffalo fell below O(her events meriting
greater consideration by the comm1ss1on .
Therefore, no reports on the Buffalo maner were
forthcoming .

PIC E: This is a picturtt of the windows above the T OW8f entrance to Norton Union taken between 11 and 11 :30 p.m. on
May 7, 1970, moment; after the vehicle pictured in .PIC B punctured them with 1 shotgun. These windows were tur~e~
over to the F.8.1. by the University at the request of the Concerned Law Students for Peace and the New York C1v1l
liberties Union.

Several months later, February 1971 , President
Ketter received, in a response to a letter he sent to
the Justice Department, a letter from Jerris
Leonard indicating that t he F.B.I. investigation
was over but the Department was stilt analyzing
the resu Its. 7 3
The public discussion of the matter lay
dormant for nine months unti l May 4, 1971 . The
F.B .I. released to the Buffalo Police Department
results of tests conducted on Buffalo Police
Department shotguns comparing them to shells
discovered on the SUNY AB campus. The tests
showed those shells were not fired from those
weapons. An erroneous press release claimed this
cleared the police of misconduct. 7 4 This triggered
new public action on th e matter.
The Concerned Law Students, who had been
told that the federal agencies never released such
reports, phoned the Justice Department and
F.B.I. Crime Lab in Washington, D.C. on May 6 ,
197_1f to clarify the situation .
Mr. Lester Scali, the attorney in the Civil
Rights Division who was in charge of this
investigation, spoke with this writer. Mr. Scali said
he had heard of no such report and that the F.B.I.
could not clear anyone in this matter that being

68. Buffalo Couritlr Exprtt.ss. May 14 . 1970, .. F .S I G111en U.S
Evidence: Regan Urges S hotgun Probe "

72. See Letter 5 .

66. Buffalo Courier Ex prttss. June 5. 1970. " Goodell Asks Pellet
Probe."

69. See Healt h Aepon.

66. See Le«er 3.
67.,See Le«er 4 .

70 Buffelo Courier Expffl:f:l , June 5. 1970, "Goodell Asks Pellet
Probe.··

Page eight

Civil Liberties Union sponsored a press conference
in September 1970 , inviting all the agencies to
make final reports. Jerris Leonard , Assistant
Attorney General in charge responded on Sept .
16, 1970:

6) The federal government :
The Concerned Law Students and the New
York Civil Li berties Un ion felt that the only real
hope for sign ificatnt action was the federal
government. This belief stemmed from the fact
that local agencies had never responded
adequately to charges of police abuse. The F.B.I.
and
Justice
Department ,
h owever,
were
sufficiently above local politics to make them the
only agencies that offered a possibility of action .
The first contact was made with the F.B.I.
by Edward I. Koritn, staff counsel for the Civil
Liberties Union . ICk Koren met with Special
Agent Cambell of t.he Buffalo F .B.I. on May 14.
1970. Mr. Koren p resented 18 signed statements,
five expended shotg1un cartridges and 13 pictures
of the events o f May 7 and requested a fu ll
investigation." 8 Later, the F.B.I. requested that
ind ividuals who we1re wounded make complaints
out to the F .B.I. claiming violation of civil rights.
Severa l individuals were contacted and the
requi red complaints were made out.
Additional information was given to the
F.B.I. in earl y June and on June 18 the
Maintenance Department at SUNY AB dismantled
the Norton Hall windows that were punctured by
birdshot and deli'Vered them to the F. B. l.
Additionally, the Concerned Law Students,
delivered 20 new st:atements, medical reportts() ''
and seven pellets rec:overed from the fountain side
of Norton Hall .
All the information accumulated by the
Buffalo F.B.I. wetS studied and sent w ith
preliminary reports to the Civil Rights division of
the Justice Departrnent, where the information
was studied for possible use in a criminal action .
The Justice Department apparently makes the
final determination as to whether a matter should
be investigated and c riminally prosecuted .
While this material was being forwarded to
Washington, Senators Goodell and Javits were
pressu ring the JuS1tice Department for action .
Senator Goodell on May 25, 1970, requested a
full investigation. n
Senator Javits not onIy
requested an inves;tigation but forwarded the
names of 70 witnesses to the Criminal Division of
the Justice Departm1ent in late June. 7 1
The Concerned Law Students and New York

"I cannot accede to your request. It has always been the
policy of the Dep8rtment of Just ice not to release to any
person or organization the results of any investigation
conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the
conclusion reached by our attorneys after a study of the
investigation reports ...
I am sure that the New York Civil Liberties Union
will appreciate the fact that the Justice Department does
not and will not accuse any person or organization of a
criminal act or produce any evidence to that effect unless
it be in a court of law. We do not in short try our cases m
the press ...
These attorneys (of the Justice Department) are
currently studying the reports of the alleged shootings on
May 7, 1970. at the Buffalo campus. If i t is our conclus1on
that a violation of a criminal civil righ ts statute has
occurred and if persons responsible are identified, we w11/
prosecute.,, 2

71 . See Letter 3 .
73. See Letter 6 .
74. Buffalo E11ening News, Mev 4, 1971 . ··Pollee Cleared by F B.l
of Fonng at U.S . STudents:· p . 1.

�the Justice Department's jurisdiction. He
explained that the Justice Department receives all
test data and information and draws the final
conclusion on the case. He emphasized that ithe
case was still open.
The Buffalo Evening News on May 11, 19i71 ,
stated it had talked with an official of the Justlice
Department who confirmed that the tests wt!re
run with inconclusive results. That official was
probably Mr Scali who, because of the May 6
call, had diS(. .:&gt;Vered that such a test was run.
Mr. Griffin, a supervisor in the F.B.I. Crime
Lab was also contacted o n May 6 by this writer.
Mr. Griffin ~'ta ted that the F.B.I. could not clf~ar
anyone in this mattr..-; that all F.B.I. reports wHre
written and that it was not proper procedure to
give such a r~port to a local police department.
This writer and his wife visited Mr. Scali in
his Washington office on June 1. 1971 . Mr. Scali
revealed that they had just decided t o close the
case o n this matter because they were unable to
indentify the individual police involved and they
had too few men to work on this matter. He said
he personall t belie·.,:xj that Buffalo Police had
shot students on May 7, 1970. but that the
Investigation must end. He was asked if the
Department could publicly say just that a nd he
said no but they might say something.
Consequent! y, a letter was sent to Mr. Scali 10n
J une 23, 1971 , asking if he cou ld say something
to the publicc.
Two responses were received from the
Assistant Attorney in charge of m e Civil Rights
Division, David Norman. on Oct . 12, 1971 , a1nd
o n Nov. 18, 1971 . They contained the following
responses:

review of all evidence antt witnesses. It seeks out
evidence by sen~ing men into the field to discover
witnesses and criminals. This was done at Kent
State after the shootings at that campus. Here,
there were no agents interviewing witnesses and
no reported F.B.I. activity on the campus.
Additionally, it is doubtful that the F.B.I. made
any attempts at identifying the police responsible
for the shooting by investigations within the
Buffalo Police Department. The investigative
effort by the F.B.I. was ineffective.
Jerris Leonard, as has been indicated , refused
to publicly reveal any facts on the case stating
that this was not their policy. Yet, at Kent State,
F.B.I. reports were leaked to the public indicating
that the National Guard made serious errors in
needlessly killing four students. Presumably, the
reports were made public because the publ ic
interest in the matter outweighed the need to
keep the information secret even in the face of a
pending Grand Jury investigation.
If the policy of the F.B.I. and Justice
Department is to " not reveal any facts to any
person or agency" then how did the F .B.I.
shotgun test get into the hands of the Buffalo
Police? It wo uld suggest a one-sided policy
favoring the police. The right to know should
exist in police misconduct cases just as was done
at Kent State. This right far outweighs any need
to remain silent.

Oct. 12, 1971
"We have exammed the P.vidence alrtNJdy m our possesstion
and we have weighed rhe /JI&lt;elihood ol our obtainmg
additional evtdeoce that would lead to a prosecution, or
prosecutions, under the federal CIVIl rights criminal
stat11tes. Based on these considerations we h.3ve
determined thJt nor funher action on 011r parr would tJ6
producttlfiJ Bnd we are closing ovr filtJ, ' " s
Nov 18, 1971
' 'Based on tht• mvestl9drton conducted by the F .B .I. as
well as intervrews of .;v;messm; rransm1rred to LIS fr,om
other sources, we concluded that, even 1f an unlawful
f1ring by a pu/Jce off1cer, or officers. into a crowd may
have occu"ed. we would be unable to 1dtmtify tile officer,
01 officers, wh11 c. ommi t(cd this violation
I do not rhmk I t would be a(lpropnate for me to commoflflt
any ftJrther 011 the details of the mvestlgation " 1 "

Severa l salient tacts stand out when an
analysis of the federal role is undertaken . It is
apparent that although the F.B. I. had over 70
names of eyewit nesses it did not attempt to
contact these people or additional witnesses. They
simply accepted the statements given to them a11d
tnterv iewed less than ten eyewitnesses, all of
whom went down to the F.B.I. on their own
accord. These facts are crucial since m his letter of
Nov 18 Mr. Norman states
we concluded that even d an unlawful firing b11 a
police officer or officers, mto iJ crowd may have occurned.
we would be unable to identify the officer or officers who
17
committed tllis v1olation. ''

The only deficiency in the evidence was specif1c
identi fi cation of the police. Surely a m01re
intensive investigation by the F.B .I. could have
discovered new witnesses who could identi lfy
tndividuals. Mr. Scali was asked apout the
deficiency in eyewitness interviews. He said th1at
the in itial statements were sufficient. If they we~re
sufficient why were there no prosecutions? This
procedure indicates that there was little effort 1to
discover the factS and defendants in the case. The
F.B.I. in other cases investigated by an intensi11e
75. See Letter 7
76. See Letter 8 .

n . lbid

The reasons behind the reluctance to
investigate and publictze the findings are difficult
to determine. However, it is clear that the
shooti'1gs of students received low priority within
the Depart ment of Justice. This may indicate that
priorities are set by determining the sta tus of the
complaints and the public pressure for an answer.
Here since the complaints were on ly students and
there was little public pressure, the prionty was
low.
Additionally, the F.B.I. depends on local
police for information and co operation . If the
F.B.I. conducted a hard hitting investigation of
the Buffalo Police. this mutually beneficial
relationship would be threatened . If this IS
coupled with skepticism within the F .B.I. and
J ustice
Department,
that
students
were
fab ricating the charges, then little would be
accomplished. Whatever the reason, the federal
agencies responded with a less than adequate
investigatio n .
VII. The media
The Concerned Law Students fe lt that it was
of paramount importance to make a strong case
against the Police Department in the newspapers.
on television and on radio. This publicity would
serve two functions. It would place pressure on
the various agencies involved to conduct fuller
investigati o ns and it would present to the public a

.lf)§lf~~rctl§rl ,..fe·~ ,,obrt§e,~oet:$)~;de of

the

story.
The followinu section discusses the role of •
the media in this in1vestigation :
The Concerned law Students actively sought
media coverage of their efforts; students visited
television stations - WKBW, WGR and WBEN
taped three half-hour radio programs, held three
major press confemnces and wor'ked with reporter
Pat Slattery of UF•I in an attempt to expose the
police actio ns to the public.
The first media coverage of May 7, 1970,
however, had nothing to do with the law students.
Several papers on May 8, 1970 ran stories of
students shooting students on the Buffalo
campus. 7 8 The Civil Liberties Union caused the
next publicity by presenting on May 13 to the
F.B.I. evidence of police misco nduct. 7 Q The press
described the allegations that police had shot
students without c.i1use.
The Concernt~ Law Students began their
publici ty campaigr1 on May 14. A delegation of
law students met with Governor Rockefeller to
request a full state investigat ion. The New York
Times carried the story while the Bu ffa lo press
ignored it.~ 11
University Acting President Regan was
informed of the i1nvest igation by the University
Advocates Office which was workir"lg with the
Concerned Law Students and Civi l Liberties
Union . He, on May 15, requested a full
investigation of the al leged "shotgun incident ."
The Courier Expmss and Buffalo Evening News
carried this story on May 15.81
The Concerned Law Students con tacted
Patrick Slattery of the Buffalo UPI office in May .
Mr. Slattery wanted to investigate the matter and
write a story atter he cleared the matter with
superiors. He spent three weeks delving into the
matter with assistance of the Concerned Law
St udents The result of his work was a lengthy
article that was SE:nt over UP I wires on June 4 ,
1970. It was ent itled "Evidence in Survey T ies
Police to UB Campus Gunfire" and was the most
comprehensive document produced to that
t ime.~ 2 This stor-y, was printed throughout the
eastern Un1ted States by the Buffalo Evening
News and Couner Express the Tonawanda News.
the New York T11nes and Daily News and several
other newspapers.
The SUNYAB campus press also lent 1ts
support to the efforts. The Spectrum on June 12
and 19, the ethos on June 17, 1970. ran lengthy
articles on the m11estigation. These newspapers
foll owed the inv~~tigation to its conclusion
presenting the most extensive and accurate
accounts of investigation.
The final storv was printed in The Spectrum
of Oct. 27, 197'1 . In two stories "Birdshot
Investigation Closedl" and "Despite Facts Birdshot
Investigation Abandoned" The Spectrum summed
up the enme affair, round ly cri ticizing those
involved ~ 1 The Spectrum staff also sent the
stories over the College Press Service thus
spreading the stories to all Eastern College
Campuses.s. WBFO , the SUNYAB radio station.
also broadcast all of the press con ferences and
several special news. reports on the progress of the
investigation .
Additionally,
Ur,iversity
Information
Services, helped organize the press conferences.

--------78 The Wash.ngcon Post . May 7 19?0, "Students Shoot Students
on U B Campus "
79 BvffaiQ Coufler E11pr.eu , May 15. 1970, " F .B t Govan U.S
E.vodence Regan Urges Shootgun Probe. " p I
80. New York r•mflf. May 14 . 1970, ' 'Rockefeller Assur~
Students on State Guttrd C:ampus Role.'' p 1
81 Bvfhlo Cou11er E11pness. May 15. 1970. " F B I Govan U .S .
E.vodence Regan Urges Shotgun Probe," p 1
Buffalo ElffHitnfl Nt1ws, Muy 15 , 1970, "Regan Asl&lt;.s Full Probe on
Repons Police Fired Shotuuns at S tudents," p 1.
82 UPI , June 4 , 1970. ' "Evidence 1n Survey T ies Poltce to U. B.
Campus Gunfire.··
83. The Spectrum , Octoober 27, 197 I . " Bordshot Investigatio n
Closed," p . 2 . and "IJ~~S~Ji te Facts Birdshot lnves11get lo n
Abandoned, " p . 3

Page nino

�They also were responsible for three radio
programs o n the investigation by the Concerned
La w Students in May and September 1970. These
programs were bro adcast over the city's majo r
radio statio ns.
A fter the UPI sto ry was published Interest in
the investigatio n grew ; the Concerned Law
Stud ents visited the t hree majo r television studios
in th e area presenting their news d epartments
with updated packets o n the Investigatio n . O nly
WB EN headed b y Mr. Ro ttman responded by
interviewing t h e mayor of Buffalo on t h e matter
in J uly . Mr. Joseph Lentini of WG R-T V d id
suggest t hat the District Attorney o f Erie County
be approach ed.
T herefore, on J une 9, 1970, representatives
of th e Concerned Law Students office met with
Mr . Dill o n . Advanced notice to local television
radio and newspaper sources by the Advocates
Office produced the first p ress conference. All
ma jor television and radio stations interviewed the
Concerned Law Students broadcast ing th e
interviews on their news casts that evenmg. T h e
Courier Express reported the matter on June 10,
1970 ." 4
The second press conference was held on
Sept. 16, 1970. Substantial effort was put into
this event by the Concerned Law Students, the
Civil
Liberties Un ion and the University
Information Services to convince the public of the
truth of the charges. Letters were sent to the
governor; Michael Dillon , Erie County District
Attorney and Jerris Leonard of the Justice
Department on Aug. 31 , 1970, inviting them to
make a final report on their investigation . Thetr
responses were discussed in the previous sect1on
on Formal Investigations.' '
Additionally. the Concerned Law Students
and Ctvil Liberties Union released a memorandum
on Sept. 8, 1970, to the media announcmg the
press conference University Information Services
helped the Concerned Law Students develop a
packet contaimng a history of the investigation,

the actions of police agencies in response, and a
description of the events of May 7, 1970.
The press conference was held on Sept 16,
1970, '" the Umversity Law School Most of the
media were present. The conclusions reached by
the Concerned Law Students and C1vil Liberties
Un1on were presented by Attorney Edward I.
Koren and this writ~r . They concluded that police
shot students that night, and despite ample
evidence, no full mvestigat1on was conducted by
any agency ." •· The official 1nvest1gat1on was
descnbed tn the following manner
''Wh1le
mdiv1d11als promised
full and adt'quate
mvestl!}atiOns we got at best a cun.ory mvest1gat1on and at
worst il wh1tewash '"' 7

It was emphasized at th1s conference that the
Concerned Law Students and C1vil Liberties
Union did not believe that thetr evidence was
sufficient for an tndictment but that they
expected it would be enough to spur some agency
mto a more detailed and adequate mvest1gation
This was not the case!
The television and rad1o stations earned the
press conference all day . The press coverage was
extens1ve. The Courier Express. Ntagara Falls
Gazette, Utica Daily Press, the Evenmg News
Press, Binghamton and the Albany Times Union
were a few of those who carried the story
SUNYAB student newspapers such as The
Spectrum, ethos, The Reporter and the Opinion
all carried the story . Additionall y, the stor·t' was
carried by the College Press Service reaching
numerous schools such as Syracuse University.
84 Buff•lo Coumu EJfpreu , June 10, 1970, " Dollon to Review
Shooting Cleoms ·
85. See ~ 6-9.

~- Buffalo Coun·er Exprqss . Se~tember t7 , t970, ''Pollee Uted
Birdlhot May 7, Students Ctaom "
87" Ibid

Page ten

Media coverage until May 1971 w• adequate Buffalo Police contrary to their stated policies.9 8
in that the Concerned Law Studen11 were given A high official In the Police Department
equal coverage with the Bufhlto Police. The contacted Mike Benevento, the longtime Buffalo
Buffalo Evening NtJWS commendably went so far Evening N8WS Pollee reporter. Apparently, he was
as to print editorials on the affair expressing their told only of the test and the negative results
desire to know what had been discovered in the which al&lt;;me were meaningless. Mr. Benevento,
vario us investigatio ns." However, no part of t he with at least the tac it approvalof the editors,
media ever conducted a detailed stud y of the created the story that the F.B. I. had cleared th e
matter despite the availability of evidence and Po lice. That headl ine pro babl y misled many
witnesses.
citizens into believing tbat the po''ce didn 't d o
They a lso printed what was said b y the ·t he shooting. Th is a ffair was a bl at&lt;~nt breach of
Concerned Law Students a nd t he Po lice wit h ou t public trust whic h demo nstrated the futility of
checking th e v1eracit y of the statements. T he honest attempts to reach the pub lic with cases of
Police t hus rnade several unfou nded and offi cia l m isconduct .
contrad ictory st-atements t hat th e m edia took at
The News printed an 3ditorial a few d ays
full faith . Co mm issioner Blair denied that later which, in fact retracted, in an obscure way,
s hotguns were utsed on t he campus th e n igh t of th etr May 4 article. It read .
May 7 and t h e m edia, except UPI , failed to point
'The F B. I has now ttStabfish«i th•t shotgun
out t h at t h e te.ar gas launchers used that n ight
cartridges found on the C4mpvs wert~ not firtJd from
8
9
were shotgu ns. ' Com missioner Felicetta, whose shotguns m the Police arstmal. Tflat 1s a gratifying finding
pu blic posit io ns regularly changed, stated in J u ne •nd we are giBd the F.B.I . m8cle the investigation, but
1970 t hat t h e pl)lice had received complaints t hat obviously it does not dispose fully of the allfJf}lltions Iince
a citizen of the area had fi red the shots.9 0 The the possibtliry IS presumsbfy left opfln that tome
press blindly printed these excuses without any oolicemen m1ght have tJS«J WO;Jpons other than those
owned by the de~rtment. ·A&lt;~
investigation.
Yet there was absolutely no evidence
The Concerned Law Students and Civil
gathered or presented by anyone to substantiate
this claim Also if the claim were true, one Liberties Union sponsored a press conference on
wonders w hy th•! police d id n't arrest t hat cit izen. May 10, 1971, to refu te t he false reporting of
Comm issioner Fc!licena consisten t ly states t hat he May 4 . Item by item th e Concerned Law Students
was investigating the matter 9 1 but t here is little exposed the nature of the May 4 report They
evidence of thatt effort . Th e Concerned Law told of their conversations with Just1ce
Studen ts and rellated parties interviewed almost Department and F . B.I. offic1als, of the
80 witnesses and only one reported b eing meaningless natu re of th e F.B.I. tests, and t hey
contacted by t hH police and that was at his own reiterated their charges of Police mtsconduct and
0 0
The release was reported extensively
initiative. 9 1 Tho media fa iled to reveal that :over up. '
Felicena's relianc;e on official police reports might on ly by WKBW and WYSL radio stations and The
)pectrum. The Reporter, Couner Express and
lead to one-sid ed reports.
'3uffalo
Evening News' 0 1 reports were obscure
One report In t he New York Times stated
that descriptiOfl!IO of t he vehicle that did the and less than complete. The News which was
shooting were di fferen t. 0 :1 This is h ighl y expected to clari fy its May 4 report , made an
deceptive since c•nly one person actually said that ambtguous report that was headlmed "Just1ce
the val·dcte wa5n' t.jf whl~ poUce st~tion w.gon.Y" Department Aide Says F B I. Tested Guns " This
refnforced their May 4 report 5ince it con fi rmed
There were
:T(f statements.
the
test . Hidden in the middle of H1e report t hee
Th~ r.redib illity of the press and the media
News
pnnted a defacto retraction ·
was greatly stained 111 May 1971 The Buffalo
Evening News printed a story headltned on page
" The A ttornev (JustiCe Dt&gt;pat tm em a1de) a member
one "Police Cleared by F.B.I of Finng at UB of the Department 's C1v1l R1ghts DiviSIOn s.11d reports of
Students." It sa1d ·
tf1e test were " inconcltJSive " and ··nenner ciMred nor

over

condemned'' pol1ce of the chargl!:. '1 "

•

" The Federal Bureau of Investigation has cleared Buffalo
Police on charges that they fired shotguns durmg a
disturbance last May on t/)e State Umversitv of Buffalo
campus '"' ~

WBFO and WEBR radto stat tOns conducted
halt hour interviews on the maner during that
week The final news coverage concerned the
A simtlar story was sent over AP wires and letter of Oct. 12, 1971 from Mr Norman . The
broadcast over th1e local radio stations
Buffalo Evenmg News printed a story entitled
The report was false s1nce the only thing the " U.S . Drops Probe of Buffalo Pollee in UB
F B.l had done was test shotguns shells agamst Shoottng " The story reitera ted the decision to
o ff1 C1a l weapons with a negat1ve result . The end the investigation and contained Law Student
Ju!.11ce OepartmEmt on May 6 knew nothing of crittc ism of the federal involvement. 1 " '
the report and it is the1r responsibility to draw
The overall eHect of this senes of incidents,
these ultimate co nclusions .., 11 These tests left the coupled w1th the Just1ce Department's silence.
poss1btltty open that pnvate weapons or different left the community uninformed as to the status of
shells were used.
the tnvestigation. The evidence clearly estab lished,
The Concerned Law Students, by co mact1ng even to Les ter Sc a li of the Justic e
the F Bl and Just1ce Departments. discovered Department, 1 11 ~ that the Buffalo Po llee fired at
these assertions were erroneous.'' ~ Addltiondlly , and tnjured students on May 7, 1970, but this fact
they talked with a Buffalo Evening News and the failure of any agency to expose it were
employee who re~lated the full sto ry to them . 1t n o t conveyed to the public.
seemed that the F.B I. leaked a report to the
The med1a participation in the affair was the
most crucial part of the investlgatton, despite its
88 Buflglo Evenmg N11ws . June )., 1970, "Poli~ e !'ace Lone Up,'
defic iencies, because it did convey to the public
May 5 , 1971 , " Probonn Po ll ee Bru taloty Charges " Septembeo 30
1970, "Facts Needed o:&gt;n U B Shootongs." Mav 18 1971 · u B
Probe Results Needed "
89 . UP/ . June 4. 1970. ''l:vodence 1n Survev Toes Polire 10 u B
Campus G unfire."
90 N#lw Vorl&lt; Tmlttl , June 5 . 1970. "Offlcoels Study Cam pus
Gun fore. " p 12.
9f. Buff•lo Ettftrung Nc•w.. May 15, 1970, " Regan Alilt Full Probe
on Reports Police F triNll Shotguns at Students. " p 1
92. Suuement numb~ 14
93. N11w York TinHtl , J ·u ne 5, 1970
94. Sterement numb« 1&lt;4.
95. Bvffelo E~ning Ncrwr. Mev 4 , 1971 , " Poloce Cteered by F 8 1
of Firing e1 U.B. S t u&lt;Mntt." p . t
96. SM pega 8. column 3
97. l bod

98 See Le eter 5
99. Buffalo E~enmg N11ws , May 5 , 1971 . " Probo ng Pol1ce Bru tality
Charges "

tOO The SI&gt;I!Ctrvm May 10, 1971 , " Bordshot," p 1
R•porttu, Mev 13, 197t , "F 8 I Hili Not Cleated Cops
Students Sav ... p _ '2
lOt

Buff1to Courier E/llprMs . May 11 , 197 t
f 8 .1 Repon , He Sev,... p 24

"Fetoretta

Ooesn't Hava

Buffalo Evtmmg News, Mev 11 , 1971 "Justoce Oepaotmem Aode
Says F 8 I Tested Pollee GuM, " p . 1
102 I bod . Buffalo E11tlt1mg News
103 Buffalo EvtJning Nt1ws , October 18, 1971 , " US Drops Probe
of Buffalo Pollee on U.B. Shooting," p 1
I().&lt;I See page 9, column 1

�",..· · fa
"'i lnq nldloo:l:l
t h e bas1c
cts of the case. Significantly, the
coverage was also responsible for assisting The
Concerned Law Students and the Civil Libertit!S
~nion in sp_urring agencies to do the little the!y
d1d. The s uccess of the publicity campaign can
best be measured by an editorial in the BuffaJ'o
Evening News, Sept. 30, 1970, repeated in
substance on May 5 and 18, 1971 :
. "The New~ has no way of JUdging the conflictll?g
cla1ms and demals, however, it is obviously difficult to
respond to the law students' charge of an official
'~itewash ' of the incident in the absence of complete
wrmen statements by the agencies involved explaining jU'st
what ground their probes covered and what light th
shed on the disputed events of May l . E.spec' elise
J'
b'
'f
Ia y
u1stur .mg,
. 1 COI'reet, is the students' contention ,,•h at
au.t h ~fltlll$ condu~ted only cursory inqUiries and that the
Olstrl~t A~omey s office, for example, had failed ro
mterVIeW Witnesses to the shooting.
. ~t is ~ot simply a mat ter of prosecuting culpable
md1v1duals d any. What is required at the very least ·
'/
.
, IS 8
deta1 ed publ1c accountmg of official findinfP by Governor
Rock~feller_'s office, the Justice Department and the ocher
agencies sa1d to have investigated th1s incident. Neither the
CJJmf!~S nor the community 1$ benefitted by leavmg :ro
senSJtlve and controversial an incident dangling indefimtel
m a shadowv and damaging limbo. " 1 0 ~
Y

Obviously the editors were convinced of the
same things the Concerned Law Students and
Civil liberties Union knew were true, that the
agenices involved had not done their job and that
the community had a right to know Perhaps the
skepticism developed in the media by the
Investigation, will someday lead to more c hanges
ir) the poltce system .
Although the media deserves much cred 1t for
the limited success of the investigation , as had
been pointed out, the media covered the affair
on ly reluctantly and generally in a very limited
manner. This reluctance reflects an unhoh(
alliance between the police and the media. Th•e
media rely heavily on the police for most stories
in that area and generally seem to be undul11
sympathetic with the pollee agencies. Media
relationships to nonestablished groups such as
students, are less than intimate, slanting stories of
police misconduct even further.
The existttnce of this unholy afliance was
co nfi~med and discussed · at great length rn tht:!
repo" of the Allentown Riot - Frustration,
Politics and the Allentown Incident. The authors
suggest that the media , bo-th ~ndividual reporters
and the ·news hierarchy, .are biased toward th•a
POiice.+ 0 6 Also, that the media
most ret.uctctnt
0
to ~~.l~ize 'ttle police.' ·" The book sommed ~~"
medl&amp; coverage of. th e Al,lentown incident in .ttiis
manner:

is

105 Buffalo Evenmg News. September 30, 1971 . " Facts Needed
on U B Shootongs."
106 Frustrlllton, Poltrlcl 1nd the Allentown lnc1thnt , p 27
107 Ibid, p . 41

"T'h
~~
.
', e neM coverage of the Allentown incident was
madequate, stereotyped, routinized, sensationalized and
grossly biased to favor the police. " 1 Oil

Another report, The Anatomy of a Riot ·
Buff_alo, 1967, expresses simi lar views concerning
med1a coverage of the 1967 riot. The media was
critized for not adequately reporting the full
scope of events and the many points of view
available on the tense situation. 1 0 'i
The possibility of change by informing the
public via the media of official misconduct
becomes extremely difficult in the face of this
unholy alliance . The police have been given a
blank check in dealing with problems of a social
and political nature resulting in official repress1on
of legitimate groups and movements.
V Ill . General conclusion
Substantial time and effort was put mto an
informal investigation aimed at exposing and
perhaps punishing certain police officers guilty of
gross misconduct The Concerned Law Students
and Civil Libert1es Union were representing a
cause which was distinctly unpopular to the
populace and police agenc1es. Although there was

substantial evidence that the police had vtolated
several local and federal laws, these factors of an
unpopula r cause, little public concern and
priorities within the police system helped to
defeat this effort before it was started Why 1s
such an effort doomed to failure 7
The answer to this Question seems to rest on
the aforement ioned factors, primartly public
concern . The public has formed attitudes that
determine their response to problems such as this.
Today, fears have developed, some unfounded,
resulting from the breakdown of the older
standards. They have been led to believe the
fundamentals of order and property are being
undermmed Publicity concerntng tncreased crime
rate, inaccurate and mismterpreted , the rise of
ethnic minorities, apparently threatening job
security and ownership , and the liberality of the
young concerning religious and patriotic feelings
have inc~eased public fealS . Faced W'ith these
threats and what at times appears to be open
insurrection in the ghettos and on the campuses,
the public turns to t he simple answer - forC'B .
The use of force via the criminal JUstice
system appears to be the easy solution since it not
only will take the " trouble-makers" off the street
but it will discourage fu"her assaults on the old
val\l'e stru~rf: . This approcteh, on the surf~~.
appears to have had rest,Jits since there have been
few substantial race or campus insurrections since
harsh measures o f force were brought to bear
against t h e ghettos and offending students. This
108 Ibid , p 46

109. AMtomy of • R1ot: Buff11lo, f967. Bes119 and cook. 1967
Revised Ed ouon, p. 50.

ih,....

n ,.. ..

t

.... '

... ",....,.,...

..

a pproach ignores thte effect force has on political
and racial movements - it so lidifies a nd spreads
t h e views of these minorities. It also ignores the
underlying social and political problems faced by
these minority communities, merely covering over
festering wounds.
The media is responsible for the lack of
public understandln•g in these major areas. There
seems to extst, as was discovered in this and other
.
.
I I I)
tnvest1gattons,
a reluctance to challenge the
status QUO and the p,ublic confidence in thP Police
De~rtment. Despite:! extensive facts that clearly
d~f1ned a case of ~·olice misconduct, the media
d1d not forceful ly convey this to the public
choosing instead to print or broadcast sotnebody
else's thoughts on the matter or blatant
falsehoods. This demonstrated a serious b ·each of
public trust, for if the press can't protect citizens
from official misconduct, there will be no
protections.
Whatever the wason , the public, particularly
that of Western New York, has turned to the
force of the criminal system, the pollee, as an
answer to their pro blems Therefore, Police
Departments have bt~en updated and improved to
be more capable c1f controlling the offending
element. Public pressure in an area, such as police
brutality , determinE~ what response the pol1ce
agenc1es w1ll give t•o reQuests for investigations
and Indictments . During a t1mc when the public
feels a greater need for police protection agatnst
certatn groups the sc1me publ1c w1ll be hes1tant to
force the pol1ce to p urcJt! the1r own ranks because
o f charges o f pol1ce m1sconduct by those same
o ttendtng groups
Public pressure IS not the on ly fa cto r that
militates aga1nst a s1uccessful investigation of this
nature. Reluctance, on the part ot the mayor and
the police commissioners to investigate and charge
the it own men , pol ice resentment, and
obstru c t1one s m o f the Police Benevolent
Assoc1a t1o n a ll contribute to the atmosphere that
has placed the PolicH above the law
The commtssic•ner IS most reluctant to take
any acteon against hts own men. There seemed to
exist w1thin the higher levels o f the department an
over inflated sense •Of loyalty at a ll costs to the
police. Thus both Commissioners Blair and
Felicetta issued der11als of m tsconduct the day
after the " b1rdshot" incident without any
Investigation of the matter. Additionally , they are
faced w1th obstruct1on1sm by the Police
Benevo lent Association

The Po llee Benevolent Assoc1at1on has
ga1ned substantial power in the last few years. It
hos successfully worked for and gamed better
wo rking cond1t1ons and pay fo r its members
However, 1t also seeks to 1mpose 1tself between
the commiss1oner and any officer against whom
charges are bro ught. Th1s process can work for the
benefit of all part1es but has been abused . Today
the PBA, by o bstruction the commissioner
wherever possibl e, has contributed to the break
down o f au tho nty w1thtn the Po lice Department
thus contributing to the lack of JUstice in
brutality cases
·
Many recent mc1dents substantia.te these
assessments of the Police Department : One
incident that demonstrates the exten t to which
the comm1ss1oner has lost control of his
department is the Police Line-Up Case. This
incident stemmed from charges that on April 6,
1970, several policemen invaded an apar.tment,
beat the occupants and accidentally maced two
small children . Sine·~ 62 policemen were at the
scene, the commissioner, after complaiflts wererec~lved , ordered all those present into. .a line-up ·
to identity the culprits. The Union filed StJit ia.
federal court to enjoin the line-up. This litigation
lasted one year going to the Supreme Court which
upheld a lower court up · holding the
commissioner's power to hold the line·up. The
110. See pege 11 , columns 1 and 2

Page eleven

�police, after this,;eluctantly entered into the
line up.' 1 '
Th1s incident was significant not only for the
fact that the PBA was obstructing action on the
case but because of the commissioner's actions.
Policemen, numbering 275, refused orders to
participate in the line-up. This was done under
advice of counsel but was nonetheless a serious
breach of departmental regulations. Instead of
asserting h1s authonty over the offending officers
and disciplining them, he dropped all charges
against the officers. 1 1 2 This is one more example
of how the commissioner has lost control of his
men, but It is not the only example.
The Allentown disturbances of June 13,
1971, provide another example of both mindless
police brutality, and the comm issioner's refusal to
take action against offend~ng policemen .
Numerous cit1zens complained of wanton acts of
physical abuse by numerous police officers. 1 1 '
These same citizens brought their complaints to
the mayor and commissioner.' ' ·~ In the tradition
of the city government, the incident was 1gnored,
the issues cloclouded' ' and no act ton· taken to
discipline the police .
The campus disturbances of the spnng of
1970 produced another case of abuse and
cover-up. Robert Chou, an exchange student, was
severely beaten by two members of the Buffalo
Pol1ce Department. He filed charges with the
police and federal government. The results were
the same The Police paid lip service to the case
and the local federal attorney had to drop the
case. 1 1 " A person was senously in1ured by police
and yet no one was brought to just1ce

Another case that exemplifies this lack of
control tnvolves several off-duty patrolmen wh o
were alleged to have beaten several citizens after a
football game. These ci ti zens were arrested but
even tually charges were filed aga~nst the
pollee ' 1 7 As of th1s printing, no affirmative
act1on has been taken by the commissioner to
resolve this matter.
Brutality cases are not the only examples of
lack of control within the Police Department .
Charges were leveled against two policemen for
thetr refusal to answer departmental questions
111 Buffalo Evenmg New:; , Jutv 16 1911
Complainants
ldent1fy 10 OffiCers 1n Loneup,' p 23
112. Ibid .. Noveonher 9 1971 . " f elltetta Orops Charges Aga•nst
Pollee in Lmeup," p 1
113. Frust,.rton, Polr/lc~ and rhe Allenrown lnc•denl , pp. 57
114. Ibid., pp.47-49
115. Ibid., pp. 49-59
116. 8uH11Io E~ing New:;, Mev 13, 1971 , "Probe Fails ro
Confirm IX Deny Beeting Case," p 36.
117 Ibid., December 7, 1971 , " Pollee Charge Patrolmen on
Stadium Incident," p . 41 .

Page twelve

-

concerning extortion . Once these patrol men filed
suit in Federal C1ourt, the commissioner dropped
the charges with()Ut even a court fight. 1 1 8 The
charges may havt? been dropped because of the
commissioner's negligence in safeguarding the
rights of the suspects but the fact still remains
that his authority was eroded by this blunder.
The latest episode involves the disappearance
of $10,000 worth of confiscated heroin from
police custody . The commissioner, acting with
unaccustomed force, suspended one person and
disbanded the entire Narcotics Squad when it
appeared that the· disappearance was the fault of
that squad. 1 1 " Tlhe commissioner's zeal must be
commended, but since he could not avoid harsh
action. the District Attorney and federal
government also were involved in the case. This
action can be seen as an exception to the rule that
the department protects its own.
The tnple threat of PBA obstructioniSm ,
police resentment , and official reluctance in the
command structUire to investigate has effectively
deterred substantial actions by the Buffalo Police
Department to purge its own ranks.
Similar factors worked on the District
Attorney, State P'ollce and F.B .I. These agencies
also had a working relationship with the Buffalo
Police that might have been endangered by any
act1on against the offending officers. Each one
also has a limited staff which means limited time
for each problem . Priorities have to be established
for prosecution. The public apathy or opposition
to the "birdshot" investigation and other factors
made this a low priority item, resulting in only
cursory investigations without results.

What results from this consideration of the
Crimtnal Justi ce System IS a finding that there 1s
substantial disparrity in the manner of law
enforcement depending on who is the offender
and who is the complainant. If the pollee accused
students o f shooting at police the result would be
Indictments The 1970 Erie County hold over
March Grand Jutry went out of its way to
investigate every detail of campus life whether 1t
bore on crime or not Thus, the crim1nal will be
found or mvestiqated if the problem involves
stud,ent miscondUJct, and ignored if 1t involves
police misconduct.
Solutions to the problems must come from a
variety of areas. The city of Buffalo's government
must exert civilian control over police activities in
order to control misconduct. This control could

take the form of a civilian review board or at least
the establishment of a separate and independent
city agency to investigate and prosecute official
misconduct.
The state government is 1n an excellent
pos1t1on to force needed changes on local
government by law. The state has the manpower
to investigate, study and recommend solutions on
a state-wide basis. Additionally, the state police
have the facilities to act as overseer of city Police
forces.
The federal government is more remote from
city and cannot be expected to oversee all
misconduct . It is responsible, however, for the
protection of federal rights. Therefore. by
investigation of legitimate complaints and
attaching conditions to federal funds, the federal
government could secure certain rights.
All of the above depends on the public for
implementation
There will be no equal
protection under the laws as long as the publ1c
remains un~nformed and in fear Since there IS
little hope for a massive educatiOnal effort to
bring justice back to all, attempts to substantially
alter the discriminate enforcement of laws wtll
meet wtth fa1lure. Po llee can be expected to ma11n
many more people Without the establishment o f
adequate deterrence.

1 hr· .1uthU1 recommends the tollow1ng renons
wt1rch fllllflt•r document IJOhce m1~condurt 111 the
Buffalo cited
11 Fm~trdrJOn Pol1tlt s and the Allentown
/ncnlent
1 h1s report produ r ed hy me flll'mbers ot tlw
community, rloc:umen ts the pol1r.e con lr ontatron that
marred the lhnteenth annual Allentown Art Fest1val
Co p1es (at $1 75 an ISSue) may be o rd ered fr om PO
Box 909. Efl1c ott Stat1on , Buffalo, NY 14205 or by
IJhOnmg Rev Stephen Chamberlam at 896 3596
2) The Anatomy of a R1ot Buffalo , 1967 hy
Cook •.Hid Be~g which discusses th e cause~ o f the 1967
race r1ot~

The .luthor would like to extend hiS thanks to
the numerous partt~s who have made this report
possible. Sp~1al thanks go out to the law students,
attorneys and the New York C1vil L1berttes Unton
N1agara Front1er Chapter who spent t1me and effort o~
m ak mg th1s report posstble

Photographs by J. Neal Fox and Ron Silverstein.
118 Ibid . May 20 . 1!H1 " Two Poht:emen End Suspensoons
Charges Dropped," p 45
119. Ibid. December 1. 1911 , "Un1t Commander os Reas.s1gned
Patrolman 's Rank ,'' p 1 .

�LEITER 4A

N1agara Front1er Ch&lt;•Pt Pr
New York C•vrl Lobet"tleS Un.on
1370 Mam Stree t
Buffalo New Yorlc. 14209

Mr Jo•,eph

l~hodr·~ .

Jt

, .. &lt;l H.trV.Jt d Urt '"~''sri y

Dedi Mr

Rlrndr&gt;~.

W{• h,IVt' jll\1 ll'tid oil I

olf

ltdt' Ill lilt'

.J1111t 0

I !J, I!}/(} Tillie$ I Ullt;t'lf1111!J

~(l 11

tpjl&lt;lttllllll'lll ltJ tilt• flff'\ldo•rtlr /1 11.111111111\"Llll 1111 t'oiiiiiJU\ ""'~"&gt;I
Dn M"v l l&lt;liU thiiHltf • .ltlllh&gt;S lllltllllll .11 lloe St,tlt' IJrllvr·r\lly ut

LETTER 2

Nt•w

Yor~

{'1 • r I'
~I'VI'Iotl

SY I:JUA515 !SY A~A346l r J PO 1\lh.wy NY 15 ~IJJP H&gt;l
Mr Arth..trd J RoS&lt;..hP CCHlU'Ifh:!d I dW Stllllt&gt;nts for Pe&lt;Jt t• /5 Dl Y I'll
rl wrthru frpe dehvery tone
563 I Bro&lt;~~lw,ry I ..tile iiSter NY IOWXJ
Ot'ar

Srr~

" ' Bu l f.rlll , .... '"' "'""' C&gt;&lt; t llllt!'d whl&lt;" Wt llltrt~
111 '-lluuhl t om''"' rtwll Wllh 011 rhr• t'Vt'lllllrf ul rlt,,l

Buff.rln poltt •.

c;,ll\ I " " " ' " "

(Jill olll&gt;pu~ .rncl

tlh· lllt'll IIISIIfP

''"'

d.,y
lrrt•d

ndy "'"""~ nl lrtrchhul nr h111 k~h111 lflln thr• '·"'"" ul unartnt'tl
~ 11uiPfll~ orlld hvsl.lltrlr•t\ lllfllllll•l 1 JIIY .u•d pruvuk111q lul!llt•l twrnorf
lrrl•rrrn.rtHHI qo~tht•rc•d loy the Comt•rnt'\1 L.tw SII11Jr·rrh the No rqara
II'""'''' If 1\rj.., ·&lt; tit •. l)ll•ot' ol lhP St.tlt' Un•vt•l\oty o&gt;l No•w Y•Ht.. tl
!lll l f.olo fld\ llt'l'll 1!11111~1 I)VI'I II&gt; §eV(:'ttll l,tW l'rtlllll t'fTit•nl .I(Jt'rlt It'~ tllllt
r't" tlnr\ lltt f-BI St.tll· Pulllt' tlw OrM111 t Altntllt·y " ' Er~o •
wtly St'lldtlll~ G(lodt II lllll J.tVIl\ .!lid Conqtt''•""''" MrC.Jtthy ·"'"
o) tl

c..

{loll~!. 1

I drn 111 r ecerpt of your letltr )! Ar .•gu~t 31. 970 relcllllltl 1\t thr•
c&gt;f M.ry ~evt:!nlh un tlhe St..ttr• llruvr•r \rl v
t~llt&gt;gt!d "llrrdshot rnrrdent
rn pus dl Buffalo
As yuu are aware ..tn rnqurrv Hlfo the ultrg.rtrOII\ ITldCfe un M.rv 14 ,
1910 t)y the Contf'rrii'Cf Li.lw Stllclt!nt~ lur Pedce 111 thr• lJOVt'rncu W•t$
rond•rt..ted bv tht- tatP poll • .rt ht\ rt:Qu~l
Unfur tlrnatetv the day thdt vou met wrth the •tiiVt't nor , mn't ot
thr:: uhysrt r~l evrdenr t! was tlehvered hy yuu to the 8111f,rlu utfrcr· ol th1 •
Fl'deral Bweau of tnvP~ttl)cll•un dllci suhSefluer.tlv wnt tn Wu\hlllqtull
The rer11amrng avarlahll' physrcdl evrrlt!ncr&gt; wet\ dlso rlt'lrvert&gt;tl thPrt:ultt·•
Itt tht! fecier&lt;JI authorrt es Mwt"Ovt!r stat e l)ulrc.P oflr('er!&gt; wert' 11111
present on the t..ampu~ uwrng the May seventh drsturlldllct's
The unavartah1hty of the phySrt"al evrder1ce nt't..ess.ar v I&lt;&gt; .r corn pi~! It'
·nvestrgatron c~ombrned wrth the lapse ot trme betw~n tile Pvt'nl~ '"
. 1 •estron and the request tor a stat~ rnqurry severl'ly trarn~Jt•r t..'fl the
mvestrga!lve eftorts ul the Sldte nolrte .mrt perfurte teniiPII'II tht&gt;ll&gt;

Wt• " ''"' th1rl llot• Prt!\tllt•nlrJI Cvntllto\"tlll rr&gt;vr!\tltf&lt;Jit• .u&gt;tl tr•purt on
lht\ Olt'ltlll'flll' Ill !111• 11111'(1'\1 ttl llt'•HI' II&gt; Olrt ltlrttnHIIIIIy allf1 lht•
lllltUlft \"Jt • Clllt•t (llll f10!1 C: llllltt'I.Jitllll ,HUt ~l.rl&gt;lllt'otcly It! .Jl&gt;IJt'dl OJI ,uly
111 111 ' cttlll Ill ,tJII/ jlf oll I' IO l u •ll 0\lt•f ll l ltlflllotlt {lll ollttJ 1\IIIVItft• lt!SIIITIIIIIy'
Yvtll\

vt•ry /rilly

l tlw"'tl

1 II. m""· Stdfl C01msel
NI.IIJ.tr.l Fwnttt!t Ch.lpter NYCL U
HtChdrtl ROS(ht!

C:w••

t'lllt'Cil .lw5turlPtttl fur

Peate

t1rqhly rncom lusrve
All rnforr ldtron llevelol)t'(l C1urrnq tht! t..ourse ol the Stdte poll t'
•nve~t•gatron ~~ also 111 the possessron of the Etre County drslllt I
dtiOt ney. who toget het wtth the Grand Jury bears prrrnar Y
responsrbrltty fur as;e• tarn1ng the el&lt;rStf'nce of wrong dorng rn E11e
Coun ty .
All lunher at..t1or rn thrs matte• must comP from locdl n• l(!derdl
&lt;luthorr tres . Srncerely
Howard Shaprro Assrstance Counsel to the governor

Page thrrteen

�LETTER 4C

June 26, 1970
Mr. Joseph Rhodes, Jr
Harvard Untverst ty
Soctety o f Fellows
1737 Cambndge Street
Cambndge Mass. 02138
Dear Mr Rhodes .

Stncerel'f •

Thanks fot your mterest m th1s matter
T h e FBI has clammed up on the progress ot theu trwesttgatton {not
that they have ever been open about what they dol I rhrnk we can sav
that the C1v11 Rights DiviSIOn has ordered the local off•ce of the FBI to
proceed beyond t hetr init1al mvestrgat1on, but the extent of that futurt'
tnvest1gat1on ts not clear
The only tndtcatron that we have received that they te actually
seeking evrdence IS a conversatron I had wtth an agent a f~w weeks ago
who was concerned wtth "the cha1n of evtdence ' (We turned over
many expended shot gun castngs and the agent was Interested •n who
has handled those castngs alter they were prcked up on th e campus
We have turned ove1 to them many more statements and they have
tn thetr possess1on glass panels It om the student un1on pocked wtth and
penetrated by pellets

. Leonard
JerriS
Gene ral
nt ,AttorneY Division
ASS's' a
·r Rtghts

C•"'

Yours truly
Edward I Koren
Staff Counsel
P S I hoiVe JUSt rPCt!tved wo11f that the Un•vers1ty ~ Aclvocate's
Ofttce and Otcl. Rosche have St!nt off .J IJcteket of matertats and
Statements to Wtlltam Scranton I hav~ •nSit uc.terl them to send one off
to you care of your Harvard adr1ress
A good person to contact on tht!&gt; mattt•r tn Washtnyton •s N.m
Nt&gt;tntt an as-;ts tant tn Sen GoodeWs of ftc~

LETTER 8

Unrted States Department of Justice
Washrngton, 0 c 205JO
It! Nov 1971
Mr Rtdl,trd J RosLhe
563 I Bro adway
lancaster , Ntw York 14086

Tht\ ·~ '" re~POnse to vour letter 1.1'
lwther as ro our lnvestrgatton I
• 'VrtOb~r 25, 1971 •nquirtng
Untverslly of Buffalo on Th
h o ttll.tden ts on the carnous of the
e rug t of May 7 1970 . an d tne
'we 1each8f11n that te!}ard
conclusions
BJ~d on the •nvestrga 1,00
•ntervlews of wrtnesses
conducted by the FBI as well as
concluded rhat even f tt ansmltted to us from other ~ources we
' an unlawful t 1
b
.
'
olf1ters. 1nto a crowd rtla h
nng V a POitce offrcer or
..
r
Y ave occurred
ld
,
· we wou
be unable to
"'ent1 v the otf1cer 01 off .
tCetS who committed th. .
do not thtn" 11 wo 111 b
1s v1olatron
further
' on the detarls o f th~'. e approprtate for me to comment any

e

lnv~ltgat 1 on

Smcerely
David L Norman
ASSistant Attomey General
Civil R1ghts Division
By Monica Gallagher
Deputy Ch1ef
Crimmal Section

�HEALTH REPORT

Memorandum

or. Peter

To;

Regan

Or . LeRov Pesch

.
from the E . ..J.
h
. . nal information
herewith the ad d ltiO
treatment on t e
·
I am enclosln? Hospital in regard to emergenc~d/or Or . Wllbee will
Meyer Memor;al, 970 I \I. now that Or . ~~tfm~~:tormation which vou
night of May . .
ou with anv addltlona
be hapPY tO prOVIde V
maY request.

from :

State University of New York at Buffalo
Univenity Health Service
Memorandum
Date: May 15, 1970
To:
LeRoy Pesch, M.D .• Dean
From · Paul F. Ho ffman . M.O /Or . Musselman
SubJect :
Incidents on May 7- 8 . 1970

._,,,,.._\

.

. ..
-

The University Health Service provided first aid services
throughout the evening and night of Thursday, May 7 especially from
9 :30 P. M. through 2 :00 A . M. During that time, an undetermined
number of students who were either suffenng from chemical irritants
or injuries were treated both a (sic] the Michael Hall facility and at
first aid stations manned by studertts rn Norton Union and Tower
Dorm. Many dressings were done on the spot and it is estimated that
about twenty-one students were sent to Meyer Memorial Hospital by
private cars or LaSalle Ambulance . Durlng the evenrng, the Health
Service physician at Norton and Tower saw three students wtth small
penetrating wounds 1/8 - 1/4 inch in diameter that were said to have
been caused by bird shot. No forergn bodies were found rn two. but the
third had a small palpable nodule adjacent to the wound in the left
eyebrow area. Medical students and other first aid personnel reported
seeing at least four or five sim1lar cases. Two add1t1onal cases were
examined by the physician at the Health Service in Michael Hall . Again ,
no fore1gn bodies were noted, but one wound had a subcutaneous
nodule . The total number appears to be ten or eleven but because some
of the casualities may have been seen by more tha n one person , the
total number may be smaller than indicated .
Attached rs a list of the more serious rn juries whrch were referred
to the E. J . Meyer Memorial Hospital .

~;, -

L I ..&gt;L-= hh ((J}/V/V r.. L •fV
~-:

PFH/cl

Re·' o iJVid S
;

rnlth
260
A Hecistro
rnherst N rn Drive
. . Y. /4226

he abov
side
e narnec.t
.
of his "
Patient
shotgun .
orehead H carne in c
revealed . Incurred Ma . e believed ornp/aining of

r~

~~·

oONOT

SOI.H'\CE
IWatd sullon

~at

rellealed
rneta/lic
1970 on the
It was d: swelling on th
Where it wa: Presence of ~t and he w!:te Universitye to shot froern/eft
rerno 11.......
e Shot
... then
carnp
a
~v by 0
· Hew
sent ,
us. Prob ·
Octor L.
as sent
•or X
lflg
eonard 8
to the Gen ray, Whic'errnan
era/ H 0 . ''
SPita/,

FfALO GENE
THE SU

100

Hl9~'

au Ha lO ,
-

RA\. HOSPI'T AL
N V.

;~~~~ ~I

oepartmenl)

Street

~.::;:::.~=-

A~
~\nl c:al
. __

01

WRI'TE HERE

-

AGE
E
-

-

5-79-70
_QA!... - -

-

·lch one foretgn
Robert M 1 •
Received of Dr
&amp;
ehead of
from rhe ,or
bOdY removed
'd Smith on this date.

oav1

..

Page fifteen

�MAIN STREET CAMPUS
BUilDING INDEX
1 - Haves Hall
2 - VIvarium
3 - Hay•B
4 - Haves A
5 - Havesc
6 - Ph~ICII Sciences Llbrtry
7 - H ochstetter Hell
8 - TownMnd Hell
9 - Old F.culty Club
10 - Plrker Engineering Building
11 - ChlmiCII Engln"rlng Building
12 - Acheson A
14 - Nuclur Resurch Center
15- Central Hutlng Plant
16 - Service Building
17 - SINice Center Building
18 - Carbon Resurch Laboratory
19 - Clerk Gym
20 - Rotary Field
21 - Sharman Hall
22 - Capen A
23 - Health SclencH Bulldlnll
2 4 - Capen Hell
25 - MacDonald Hall
26 - M ichael Hall
27 - Trailer Complex
28 - Annex 8

29 - Anne~&lt; A
30 -C lement Hell
31 - Good~r Hell
32 - Schoallkopf Hell
33- University Tower
34 - Cooke Hell
35 - Baird Hell
36 - Foster A
37 - Norton Hell
38 - Foster Hell
39 - Lockwood Library
40 - Crosby Hell
41 - Lockwood Library A
42 - Diefendorf Hall
4 3 - Diefendorf A
44 - Herriman Li brary

Ford Oe,altr

'

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-I

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CD

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(/)

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�Comtitution change

'Student fililbuster' leaves
FSA agend&lt;l unfinished

SA votes for an1endments
by Mike Feely
Sp«:trum Staff Wrtur
The Student Assembly voted
last Friday to pass four of seven
proposed amendment.s to the
Student Assoctatlon constitution.
It was t he third meeting at which
t he amendments were slated for
action, t he first 1wo failing to
produce the necessary quorum .
SA President Jan DeWaal, who
drew
up
the amendments
expressed concern over the defeai
of one of the amendments in
particular.
That
amend ment
proposed t hat SA officers and
coordinators "lose their voting
an
the Student
prprivileges
Assembly excepting one vice
president who would become
chatrman of the Assembly in t he
case of making or breakmg a tie."
Introducing the amendment ,
Mr. DeWaal said that the proposal
was "something the Assembly
needs to survive." The proposal, if
passed , he explamed . would
further enhan~e the autonomy of
the Assembly The mot1on was
defeated by an I R-2 vote, thereby
failing to achieve the ne~cssary
3/5 majo nty of the 34-member
Assembly. Twenty votes were
needed for passage o f any
amendment.
Duties changed
The first proposed amendment
asked t hat the dulles of the
second v1ce president be assumed
by the first vice president.
Changing h1s title to "Executive
Vice President ," the holder of this
office would replace the Prt8Jdent
as chairman of the Assembly . II
also provided that the second Vtce
be renamed "vice
President
prc:aident for Sub Board I, Inc."
He would be an undergraduate
representative on Sub Board Inc.,
but remain a voHng member of
the Executive Comnuttee. HlS
dulles would be to mfo rm the
Student Assembly and Executive
Board on all matters relating to
Sub Board I, Inc. The amendment
was unanimously passed .
The Assembly also defeated an
amendment proposing that the
pres1dent assume the duties of the
National
Affairs Coordinator.
" The President," said Mr. DeWaal,
"should represent the Universtt y
in
com munit y and national

affairs!' Those opposed to the
amendment feU t hat t he President
would not be &amp;Jble to successfully
carry out bot h his proposed new
and present duties.

A proposal dealing with the
Executive Committee was divided
into and voted on it two separate
parts T he first part, which was
passed, called for a q uorum of the
Commtttee to be desi&amp;nated with
BudFt rnVW npproved
"an absolute fifty per cent plus
One amendment called for ' o ne of the cun-ent membership."
alterations in the SA's procedure The second part, calling for an
for allocating monies. The new increase of Assembly members on
procedure, approved by a 20-1
t he Committee from two to six,
vote, will bnve t he Student was defeated .
Assembly Finance Committee
originally revi.ew all financial
The final proposed amendment
requests. The re:quests will t hen be asked that the President be given

- Hus

Amending the SA const itution,
last Friday's Studen1 Assembly
revamped the responsibilities for
seven~l offk:es.

Assembly votes
passed on to the Student
Assembly for an1y needed changes.
" Budget line chanaea," stated
the amendment&lt;, "shall be mlde
after an ofi&amp;inaJ approval by the
Student AssembJy, by the Finance
Committee, appealable to the
Student Assembly." Additionally ,
all Executive Committee members
desuing budgets will be required
to present these budgets to the
Fanance CommJtttee for Student
Assembly recommendatton.
Anot her apptroved amendment
asked that stipends for SA officers
and coordinatous be determined
by the Assembl)f previous to each
election. The arnount and period
of time for whtch the st1pend
applies would be clearly stated
previous to eac:h year's election

the right to call a referendum on
any
issue
(except
financial
allocations) at any li"'e. It was
voted down, 7 · 13 .
In
other
busmes.s,
the
Assembly once again voted on the
allocation of fund s for the Steve
Stl.lls concert Acllng treasurl'r
Dave KeJSer stated that Stills"
bookmg agency ho~cJ agreed to a
Sl 5,000 pnce plu' 15% ul the
profit He al~o !t&lt;ud that the
agency had threatened to shut off
the Uruverstty to any of tb ot her
cbents' future lours
Student
nghts coordtnator
Dave Steinwahl ~ailed the threat
"black mail" and the ni&amp;JOrit y of
the Assembly agreed, defeating
the issue for the second tame.

1KINKS

F,~mPOBT

(;ONVEN'I'ION

LINDIS FARNE
~/ednesdoy,

Mo rch 1, at 8 P.M. ·

KLEINHANS MUSIC HAll

resolution for consideration that
would suggest th e possibility of a
student discount irt the booksto re
if excessive profits were realized .
His resolution will be voted upon
at th e next FSA meeting.
Involved in the discussion
surro unding the passage of the
revised budgets were the reports
of the auxiliary opera tions. Sam
Davison of vending reported that
although
there
were
two
vacancies,
vend i ng
w as
fu nctioning with little difficulty.
However, Ray Becker, manager of
food service, reported th.at his
operation
was
experiencing
problems.

Due to what many members
termed a "student filibuster," last
Thursday's
Faculty
Student
Association ( FS A) Board of
Directors meeting failed I o
consider major portions of ats
agenda. Included in their agenda
was action concerning the transfc~r
of Amherst L md from FS A
control to Sub Board I, l n•c.
Informed sources report that
stude nt representatives to t he
board were not prepared to
discuss this transfer and tied tlue
meeting up with discussaon of
auxiliary operations.
This discussion included both
the passage of revised budgets for
the bookstore, food servic.!,
vending and the service center.
Revisions irt these budgets were
necessary because of wage and
federal price increases. All of the
budgets were passed although
strong object1ons were ratsed by
Graduate School Representat1veo;
Mtke
N1colau
and
Jol\n
Greenwood
Their obje&lt;.:t.ons were based on
the fear that the recommend~,.
hons of study groups formed last
summer were not being followed! .
However, President Robert Ketter
maintained that all of the budgets
"were
not
predicated
om
deviations
from
the
study
groups."
Nut feasible
Study group recommendatlonts
were submitted to the Board, who
in turn tranamltt.ed them to the
respective managen of each FSA
operation. As explained by FSA
treasurer Edward Doty, th~se
recommendations
were
implemented where possible. II f
the recommendations were nCit
feasible, Mr. Doty contJnued llutt
managers explained tn detalle.d
responses why such act.Jon was
unreasonable.
Apparently these responses
were unsatisfac tory for student
members of the board as a lengthy
discussion on the merits of
bookstore
recommc:ndalcons
transpued . After two hours of
deba te. Mr. Dot
offered :a

Curtailed bows
Specifically. he announced that
Norton Hall sales were not
meeting expectations and that
food service suffered f10m 200
unexpected food contract losses.
To offset these problems, Mr.
Becker explained that effective
today, the hours of food service irt
Norton Hall would be curtailed .
Specifically,
the
Rathskeller
wo uld be open from 10 a.m. to 10
p.m .. while the cafeteria line
would serve from 7:30 a.m. to 2
p.m . In addition, he said that both
coffee and soda would be raised
two cents on March 1.
James Gruber, director of
Norton Hall, reported lo the
Board th.at he would not need
monica
from
FSA
reserve
aocounta to continue operation&amp;
of tome union activitiel. This
announcement withdrew a p riot

request for funds to maintain the
check room and counter room.
According to Dr. Gruber, Norton
Hall was receiving additional state
monies ,and at trus time, no more
fwl&lt;ling was required.
The meeting adjourned after
three hours with the bulk of its
work undone. Commenting on the
meeting, Dr. Ketter said that It
was his belief that some student
representatives were stalling for
hme. Additionally, he objected to
such tactics as "a total waste of

SAL I~
50% O~ff
Free puking a t

ON MANY TITLES

UnlvertltY Man or
(ne•l door)

BU FFALO TEX1"BOOK STORES INC.

s-. l t - ..4 . .,,. ,,_, $5.50- $4.50 I&lt;NtOII)' $4.»--54.00
$1.00 discount tickets fot U.B. students - Nonon Tickec omce

833-71 3 1

All

...w ..

Tlchtt - .....
a..H... mtlvel '"~" ou..... .,.,.., Kilt- l.a..,
(.,.;I .. ~ o~ wi!to. ,._..., ootf ......., .... ..,vel-); U.l . NAell; St- Cel lette fldoot OHio; r.llo Yld:ot., Hoelo.... ,..... Nl•- • Jwllo.

A.I.E:.S.E.C.

and Student Associ.ation Speakers Bureau
Sponsor

Victor John Yannar .e, Jr.
(Noted EnvirCJ•nmental Lawv•)

Planned Parenthood

Children by choice. Not chance.
Jo'or fur t;her inlonnaUon, write Planned Parenthood,
Box 431., Radio City Station, New York, N .Y. 10019

Speaking on

Management and Environment:
Is the Law the Answer?
Wednesday, March 1, 1972
Originally scheduled for 2/21
due to travel d ifficulties.

Norton 231

Time: 7 :30p.m.

nz. thi5 speech had to be del• yed

A COFFEE HOUR WILL PRECEED in NORTON 232 • t 7 p.m.

Monday, 28 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Paqe three

�Moot Court corqJetitioo

HypiJtheticol case presented
Tbe Moot Court Board of the State University University of Toronto, 'Wayne State University of
of Buffalo Law School will host the Niapra Detroit, Mich. and the Umiversity of Detroit .
International Moot Court Competition next Friday
and SatUJ"day, March 3-4, in Erie County Court.
BombinJ problem
Moot CoUJ"t is the argument o f a hypothetical
The problem to be argued on appeal to the
cue in a lawyer-like fashion patterned after the brief United States Supreme Court is an extradition
writing and oral argument found in real legal practice proceeding brought by the Canadian government
before an appellate court.
against Connie Catalyst.
On! arJUffients by moot court teams from the
Ms. Catalyst, the respondent tn the case, IS a
United States and Canada are scheduled Friday ni&amp;ht graduate student at Mc DUJ University , who is active
at 7:30p.m. and Saturday at 9 a.m., II :30 a.m. and in Canadian politics and 11\as published many articles
2:30 p.m. on the second floor of the County Court on chemistry. The Canadian government seeks her
Bldt.• across the street from the Law School.
return to face charges concerning a conspiracy to
blow up a statue or the Qiueen.
Questions of law
She has instructed a nroup of students belonging
Each team has submitted a written Factum, to the Organizatio n to Liberate Quebed (O.L.Q.) on
which is a typed argument similar to a memorandum explosives. Shortly befo,.,e they are to detonate the
of Law concerning the issues to be p1esented in court. bomb at the Queen's stattUe, the students are caught.
These Facta will be graded by the judges, who will They are convic ted of conspiracy to attempt to
hear the appeal and count the points toward the violate section 79 of the: Canadian Criminal Code,
fmaJ o utcome of the competition.
which deals with explosive!$.
Hearing each teams' argument and rebu ttal are a
Ms. Catalyst's role in the bombing conspiracy IS
panel of noted Canadian and American JUdges and discovered and the Canadian authorities move for
barristers. They will arude the participants on the her extradition fro m the U.S. and it is at the appeals
orpnization o f their presentatio n, speaking ability, staae of this proceeding that the moot court teams
responsiveness to questions of law and l r 'lwledge of must begin their arguments.
the facts of the case.
A banquet will follow the competition. Trophies
Participating in the event are teams from will be presented to the best tndividual speaker and
Osgoode Hall Law School of York University. best team.

North ·Buffalo Co-op
readied for business
The North Buffalo Food C&lt;H&gt;p
o n Main and Winspea.r is open and
ready to serve the UniversJ ty.
Offering a cooperative alternative
to supermarkets, the storefront
features organic health foods such
as buckwheat and wholewheat
flour
clover honey, natural
pean~t butter and assorted fruits.
Carl Goodman, co-op member,
stated : " We're trying to provide
good healthy food at the lowest
possible pnce. Going to your own
store is great because you feel a
part of it . Supermarkets are
alienating experience but at the
co-op you are your own manager.
In the future, we hope to add day
care cen ters, art centers and a
co mmunity
information
exchange. We wouJd also like to
work with o ther Western New
York co-ops and incorporate a
regional trucking of produce."

Autonomy soupt
Jim Strumm, another member,
said . "The only membership
requ~.rement IS that each member
pay five dollars and devote a
minU1lum of four hours a month
working at the shop. There are
presently I 12 members doing
ttus "
Mr.
Strumm
said .

SAVE UP TO $400
01\1 YOUR NEW M/CYClf AND
TOUR EUROPf l

Buy new BSA. TRIU MPH. NORTON,
TAX FREE from one of England's
oldest dealers - Es1 50 years. Huge
stock too of guaranteed u5ed models
at England' s lowest pnces Full InsUla nee lor Europe &amp; Shipment back to
US A arranged - or we guarantee repurchase Wrrte now fo1 full detarls
George Clarlle t Motors) Lrmrted, 136
156 8rt.~&lt;ton Htll, London. S.W .2 Eng.
Tel Ot -674 321 t

"Financially, we plan to be
autonomous from the Student
Association. We do not want to be
open solely to the University.
"The store IS viewed as a
community venture with an
orientation
toward
being
self-sufficient." Mr. Goodman
added : '' Food selection is taken
up at membership meetings and
people can suaest whatever they
want. As you can see, this proce~s
is educational in the sense that rl
teaches people to buy good food
and get away fro m things like TV
dinners."
SA treasurer Dave Kaiser
commented
on
the
co-op's
autono my :
" We
have been
supporting them for over a year
now, and I will comply With I herr
desire to be self-sufficu~nt by
recommending that they b~
omitted from next year's budget. "
Regard ing the co-op's communit y
o rientat1o n , Mr. KaJSer stated . " I
do
brheve
that
Un1versrty
s tudent s
s h ould
receivt•
preferenttal treatment. It wouJI.l
be mce if they l&gt;howed a llttlt'
more appreciation toward therr
original sponsors" When asket.l 11
he planned to stop a t the co~p .
Mr. KaiSer "id : 'Til be glad to ·
The co-op's hours a.re from I I
a.m . 8 p.m . on Monda y and
Thursday and II a.m .-4 p m o n
Saturday Produce IS offered l (l
members at a M:ven per cent
discount and to non-members nt
regular non-profit prices.

EXPERIENCED PRIVATE
TUTOR
Elementary math, Bio.
Chern . &amp; Psych .

JOHN KALB

.__ _ 886-3204----J

un!versity
unron
activities
board
ARTS
DANCE ARTS
DRAMATIC ARTS
LITERARY ARTS
MUSIC
FILM
COFFEEHOUSE
.
PUBLICITY
J
In order to continue programming, \,ve need
people to work in these areas. Positions of
Chairman in each of these committees are
available. What is needed Is time end desire to
work . Stipends are give" to all UUAB Chairmen.
If you would like to wotl&lt; any of these areas,
applications are found in Room 261, Norton.

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, 28 February 1972

�Bircher: militar.v drttg abuse
by Sari Menes
Spectrom Staff Writer
The detection difficulties and
statistics of hard drug users in the
military were presented by John
Jacob Bircher, a h ealth officer for
t he Office of Air Force Surgeon
General, during his lecture last
Friday.
During the press conference
preceding his presentahon, Dr.
Bircher,
who
received
his
doctorate in statistics here in
J969. explained that there is "so
much inertia" within t he military
that statistics on drug abuse are
inaccurate. Although the present
published figures indicate that the
Atmy has a five per (.'1:nt illegal
use o f drugs and the Air Force
' 'ha.~ neve r exceeded" a one per
cent illegal use , these statistics
include t hose individuals who
were caught by Army personnel
those
who
voluntarily
and
1
submitted to treatment.
So Dr. B1rcher helped develop
a set of statistical methods for
random samphng of military
personnel. During the course of a
year,
servicemen
would
be
selected foJ unannounced drug
testing, as many timl.'S per year as
they were selected at thetr
military base. This testing would
occur more often yearly in South
East Asia and the coastal Unttlll.l
States, say, "than Kansas," where
drugs are less easily accessible.
Presently the maJOr drug
testing is in South East Asta , but a
directive from the Department of
Defense has set July I of this year
as a target date for testing military
personnel world-wide. This is in
accordance with President Nixon's
stateml.'nt last June to test all
returmng servicemen. Dr_ Bircher
uplained that these two o rders
presented the technical problem
of
Such a

problem was t he reason fo r
developmental reserurch led by Dr.
Bircher.

High rate for inducteu
Actual testing w ould involve
usc of the urinalysis (testi ng urine
samples) which is p·resent!y used .
Amphetamines, bar·bituates and
opiate
such

highest rates of drug use tested.
When questioned what would be
done to an inductee if he used
drugs t he night before his
physi cal, Dr. Bircher said he could
not answer for legal and other
implications.
Money for the testing would be
"diverted" from other military
sowces. Expenses
have to

TheVivarium: mystical
house of many uses
by Clem Colucci
Spectrum Staff Writer

attempting to break m. T hey
fa.ced reluc tant sources, missing
documents,
faulty
memories,
a dministra tiv e
buck-passing,
d eceased faculty members who .
had been involved with the ·
Vivarium and suspiciously absent
administrators.
But in spite of it all, The
Spectrum's award-win reporting
t4~ came through. They got the
stlory, they tracked down all the
l€~ds and got the scoop. Now
everyone will know about the
Vivarium.

Just off Hayes Hall lies a small,
squat, grey building. It is the
Vivarium . Ugly, inconspicuous
and of undetermined function, it
stands ominously with locked
doors, shaded windows and
half-dead ivy creeping through
every crack as if to seal off its
dreadful secrets from an all too
curious world .
For
years,
thousands
of
students and faculty have passed
this mauso leum erected to a past
perhaps better left forgotten.
They walk by, unaware of the
sordid lusrory lhal haunts it
Rumor replaces ignorance with
ignorance and confidently held
errors soon flourish where an
honest lack of knowledge once
stood. So the Vivarium stands
inscrutable while people bask m
the comforts of falsehood or
apathy, its secrets safe.
The Viva rium. What 1s it? Do
"they" really torture animals and
oover
personnel
who
could hapless human subjects in bizaare
eva lu ate
the
specimens, experiments
resembling
devil
laboratories
and worship more than science? Is 11 a
commercial
materials wh1ch would cost the
birdhouse? Do the maintenance
military approximately one dollar
per 2.5 miltioq people in tho: people store the trash there? I ~; tt
military. Rehabilttat tun prugram~ the Executive Vice President 's
are also a concern or the military, private dining room?
In the tradition of fearless
noted Dr. Btrcher.
jnumatism,
111e
At present, the program is Jn a mvestigative
"field test" stage, but 1ts usc, or Spectrum set out to S4tlve Ute
use of a variation is imminent ()r. mystery once and fur all. At
Bircher explained tha t civilian considerable risk, the courageous
drug testing of thi.~ nature 1n the feature editor of The Spectrum
future would be difficult because (after raiding the campus desk for
a compulsive test for cilrilians penonnel) sent out a crack news
would be asking individuals to team to do the legwork. They had
possibly give ev1dcnce against
one mission, "Find out about the
themseJves.
-Vivarium ; get all the dirt and
don't let anyone stop you. We're
blowing this thing wide open."
For days on end the crew
worked around the clock, making
countless phone calls. chasing
leads up innumerable blind alleys,
talking to dozens of people,
checking the Archives, even

Fllectic and hair-raising history
Nobody knows when the
Vivarium was built. It was
o&gt;riginally part of the Erie Count y
Almshouse_ Yes, the present
campus W &lt;'S once the site of the
county poor fann. The aged and
mfirm, o rphans and the insane
were crowded together he re. The
Vivarium served as the healing
p.Jant and, possibly, laundry.
When
the great influenza
epidemic nf 1918 struck the
Almshouse. t he Vivarium was
c·onverted tnto a temporary
mortuary to house a11 the patie nts
who were dying too fast for the
regula r facilit ies to handle.
Later,
the
University
of
B.uffalu took over the site. For a
while it served as a telephone
eltchange. Then, in the late
thirties and early forties, lhe
Vivarium
entered
the
most
c:olorful part of its long history .
lames
Mohn
of
the
Department of Microbiology, to\d
tabout his days at work in the
Vivarium as an undergraduate. Dr.
JMohn reminisced: '"The Vivarium
was the pet lab of Dr. Albert
Schadle, chairman of the Biology
Department, when I was a
freshman here in 1939. He
became one of the world's
foremost authorities on the
porcupine." Here was a reaJ find
He continued his story.

John Bircher
morphine and heroine, can be
detected in the testing. Dr.
Bircher stated, however, that a
po5itive test did not signify illegal
use of drugs, and that a negative
test might only sigmfy that the
effects of a drug on an mfrcquent
user were unapparenl. that day
The problem of a r-c~ndnm
sample was that men might not he
tested al all one year, but Dr .
Bircher noted that his system
would be aided by tests of
rndu c.: tecs and those:~ leaving the
military. Therefore, possibilities
of not being tested 110 tlaee years
was extreme. Dr. lllircher added
that inductees have o ne of the

.- ,..,.,.,.

f•orcupine heaven
Or. Schadle, unltkc most
biologists today, was a field
nt:lluralist who took his students
etut and showed them the plant
and animal life around them. He
l•oved animals and had an intense
110terest in both the porcupine and
the beaver.
"We didn't call it the Vivarium
then," explained Dr. Mohn . "We
just called it the animal house."
Dr.
Schadle
kept
several
porcupines, many of whom Or.
Mohn remembered by narne.
The porcupine leader was a big,
nasty fellow named ''Dad." There
was a female named "Maude" and
"Chuffy ." Or. Mohn remembered
Chuffy very well . " He was a
moron, literally. You could do
atnythlng with him. He'd grab on
ro your little finger with o ne of
Ius paws and walk on his hind
l'egs. 1 think he thought he was a
human."
As a freshman, Or. Mohn
helped Or. Scbadle make many
tmportant discoveries about the
porcupine. In that foolish looking
little building, Dr. Schadle first
~:stablished
the nonnal body
temperature of the porcupine,
which, unfortunately, Dr. Mohn
,;ould not remember.
The Vivarium also housed

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-continued on ~941 7-

1\

Monday, 28 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five
'.

.

•

l

...

,.

•

f

• ........

�I

Affi~JI

EdiToRiAl

Endorsements

by The Attica Defense Committee
Atl ica mmates are suffering as much or more

The outstanding characteristic of this year's election is today at the hands of racist prison aut honlles.
the paucity o f many candidates as several Coordinator Eiahty-lfi ve percent of the inmates are black or
positions are being contested by total incompetents. While Puerto Rican. All but o ne of th e guards and offtctals
we usually pay little or no attention to the various parties, are white. T h e followin&amp; examples o f conda t1ons in
the pni.son to day are t aken from lett ers and
some commentary is useful. One party, the Fresh-Faced inten-aews wuh the Inmates
• o·ver 300 inmates are still being held tn
Eleven, is too ludicrous to merit any consideration by the
segregat
ed lSOlalion 24 hours a day, with no V\Stts to
voters. Pertlaps, the fact that someon~ would try to replace
the yard or mess hall, and no com muna ~atlon wtth
the current knaves with this bunch of jesters is a significant their fellow mmates. They arc allowed one shower
commentary on SA's performance. Another ticket. the every ten d ays.
•Intimidation an d abuse by guards as 3b bad as
Brenda Alliance, is a shaky and highly questionable coalition
ever. Some guards enjoy suck tng t hear fingers an thear
of four Blacks and three whites, which rather than stemming pants an d rubbing them in the prisoners' food before
from a commonality of thought, appears to owe its creation handing it o ve r. Some get their kicks by wa.long a
to base political motivations. This party is already split and man up in the middle of t he n1ght, stnp-5earclung
him and thro wing everything an the ~e ll onto the
may not survive a week of campaigning.
floor, unrolhng toilet paper, and generally destroymg
The best qualified Presidential hopeful is Debbie Benson . other personal items. Recently guards an Jl ou.~1ng
She displays a thoughtful and intelligent approach and would Block 2:. an isolation unll , broke wm.Jnws an the
undoubtedly change SA priorities considerably . We cells, le1aving priso ners to freeze at nigh t in then one
blanke t. Frequen tly the h eating system js shu t off.
recommend her highly because her election would end the panl' Uiarly wh en mmales have to file up to the
long student government silence on academic matters. Keith bath-house tn then short s Constant verbal abuse dnd
Frankel, we believe, has not demonstrated enough during h1s threats of death all add to the atmosphere of
and hatred Ul the pnson
two years as National Affairs Coordinator t o merit returning VIolence
•Mc•dJcaJ attentaon for stck and wounded
him to any office. Dennis Ward, while having some potential, pn~oner·~ ., dehherutely t!Jadequate Men are walktng
has already demonstrated poor judgment by entering into the aruund With bulkls tn lhcm, some of lhem have
ope n wuunds. Many have untreated slon das~a!iCS,
aforementioned unholy alliance.
mcludan11' staph whach ~~ lughl y infel'ttous and
The candidates for First Vice President by contrast, are pamful r ranquJhzers and ~ (Hnn are presc.nhed lor
tar less Impressive. Bob Bell's reco rd of inaction and most 3.1lments. One man wtth a lhronll bone
incompetence as Minority Affairs Coordinator this year 1s mfecttort of 'he leg (osteomyehtts) w:IS rclu!&gt;ed
anttbaotacs. He h:ts been trellted wath IR asptnn' a
damning. On one occasion, he spent $2700 on a program day for two years, and may now lose hJS leg n a
which attracted 35 people; and he therefore deserves to be result. An tnmalt! wlfh a terrnmal kadney dt~ease has
retired. If further proof of his irresponsibility were necessary had tus medica t ion s h ut off for long periods An
he provided it by his failure to issue any position statements. epileptac is treated with mild lranqullizers. There is
no spect&lt;ll diet for diabetics an the prison The h~t of
Jeffrey Steinberg is simply one of the Eleven-clowns and the abus·~:. ts endless The faLl lS t h at the pnson h.ts
deserves to be ignored. Tyrone Saunders is by far the best of only two doctors, both of them wltite These mt"n
the three, but we cannot in good conscience endorse him. see 11 3.'i !hear duty lo punash anmates by \.lenyang
However, we do recommend him .
The Second Vice President candidates presen\ an
interesting dilemma. Of the four candidates, three - Lee
Schwartzberg, Eugene Fahey and Doug Webb - are
excellent. ~ach has cogent and constructive programs and
would serve admirably if elected . We would hope that the
two who fail to win remain active in studen t affairs, because
truly involved students of their caliber are rare.
The race for Treasurer presented a similar problem. David Tn tltc /:'dum
Keiser. currently the SA's assistant treasurer. has a deep
insight into student government's financial Ills. Jeff Osinski
How &lt;.:an Suh Bnard I be abohshed'l (' an thr
too has committed hirr.self to a program designed to end the students vote at out ot 1~ tl ltl..e !&gt;O m.tny •ll her
monetary waste and graft that fl ourish es on Norton's second tnsttluttons, an that at l.tn pcrpcluatc tt~cll ,•v••n
floor . The Treasurer post is highly sensitive and requires a
firm style of administration and fo r this reason we e ndorse
Mr. Osinski. Both he and Mr. Keiser could fill th e role, but
we believe that Jeff Osinski has a better chance of
To the 1- tlrfur
implementi ng his reforms successfully

them p rope r and humane t reat m ent . j ust as they left
men to die o n September 14th, while volunteer
doctors were turned away at the prison gate.
•Malnutntion is a comm o n cause of illness an
the pnson , but the men still get bologna five days 8
week. O ne inm ate we spoke with has lost 4 7 lbs
s~nce September 9, 1971 Others in sotituy are 10
worse shape.
•
•The priso n co ntinues t o operate as a slave labor
cam p . Fave h undred inmat es, nearly all of th em
black or brown, work in the metal sho p turning out
office furniture fo r the politicians in Albany They
work etghl hours a day for an average daily wage ut
S 40. They are allowed half an hour exercise tame an
the yard per day. and o ne shower per week. even an
the summer months when the heat in t he metal shop
rises around I 00 degrees. The State makes va\t
profits from their labor Pnsoners who refuse to do
ttus work are harrassed and confined to solit ary
• Other anmates are more fortunate Seventet:n
men were employed rn Supenntendent Mancust\
personal grnunds and garden , tend~ng the lawns and
greenhou\C6. and washing cars. Mancust also had two
inmat e house men who cleaned the six bathroom
house an which he lived w1th h 1s wife and
mother-in-law H e also had a maid. a cook and J
c.hauffe ur.
As these eumples show, tt would be a IOL~takc­
to believe that the appalling dtsregard for human ltfe
exhtbtted by Governor Rockefeller on the I 't h \II
September was an asolated phenomenon tnvolvtng
only a sanglc unresponsave poht1cal figure . T o 1hr
pnsuncr!l at Attica. the bullets tired by Rockefeller\
tmops were samply langtble evidence of the le~\
blatant homa~td.al polities governmg theu live!&gt; l.l:ul~
The mt:n who are the kccptt") of the keys wtthan .1n
1nstatul1t1n ul Loncrete and steel lllU!&gt;I themseiVl''
lose any feelings of humJ.n emotion they m~Jht h~~··
had before be~.:omrng part ul the IHIOI\Ive t·ulturc nt
the prison system.
It IS nn rnme to h•• 111 IJ prison, for AmtonJ.u
Itself u a pruon wuh a flag . Ycm art! JUSt IJS much 111
pnton a.r I am The only dljjerence u till! p1g gll' t' l
Yull a llftlt' mor~ wulkrng rvvm rhon us But ""'
sfrugglt /tJr /rt•t•dom t.s ynur strugfCII!
A Brother 111 1\lli\ J

For· services rendered

Ni;~on's

THE SpECTI\UM
Vul.

n, No. 59

Munday, 28 February 1972

Editor-in-Chief Denm~ Arnold
Co-M~ n.~ain&amp; Editor
AI B~nson
Co M~n.~aing Editor Mtk~ Lippm.mn
Aut Manaatnll Editor Sus4n Ml&gt;n
Business Man:agt!r
lack H~rl.tn
Advenlslna Manager Sus.~n Mellenlinc
lbckpaae
(...am pus

. Amy Ahrend
lo·Ann A rmao
jeff Greenwald
. . . ... . • . . . . .Hd'Wie Kuru
City . .. • . • • .. . . Janis Cromer
Copy . .. . . . . . . . Ronnl Forman
. . . . • . • • . . .. MArty Gatti
As.u. . . . . . Claire Krlegsman
Feature .. . . . ... Lynda Teri
Gnphlc: Aru . . . . . . Tom Toles

Layout
Maryhop~ Runvo11
Asst
. . . . . . . . vannt
lit &amp; Or.tn14
MIChael Sllverblatt
Music .
. . . . . .Billy AltmMJ
Off-C.tmpu~ . . . . Lynne Tr.a,eget
Asst. . . . ... . .......vudnt
Photo . . • . Micl.cy Osterrelcher
Asst . . ~ . . ~ . , .. Kim Santo'
Sporn.
. B4rry Rubtn
Asst
. . . . . . Howte fatwl

Th~

Sp«trum IS served by United Press lnternuional, College Pr~\
Service, llle Los Angeles Ttmes Free Press, the Los Angeles rime&lt;.
Syndicate v.d Ltberation News Service.
Republication of m~tter herein without the tll press consent of the
Edltor-ln..Chlef Is forbidden.
Edllorlal policy Is det ermined by rhe Editor-In-Chid.

Page si.x . The Spectrum . Monday,

28 February 1972

though at no long~r ~ervcs the purrose at was ~ct 11111
to serve
Jt M!ems, does at nnt , thai we have aeslcJ a
mnn~ter who ~ annot he ~topped

Jack I ,u,,rr

lip service

Whah Nt:tun vast!\ lh ~· Pc·upk "' k•'lllthlt l ttl
('luna 01n ~ wmld "pe.t~.c " tnp he •~ nrch·11nt:
massive Uttr attacks in I ndocluna
As Ntxon moul hs " pea..:e" an Cluna he ha~
asked tit.- 1\rnt:ncan [)eopk lc11 thl· lar~cst mu~.tSctl
arms budget ever. As he talb lo Chou [·n lat ahuut
the greatnt.\s of th ~ 1\mcn... an people, ht~ pJy lluanh
lree1e wages and aJinw llnLt!&gt; tu ~kyro.:lr.cl Wh 1J,
oondll10m worsen for m~ny A mencans. and th ry
demand 1u~t reforms Naxon condon&lt;!~! the murilca c•l
43 Am•encans at Altu;a, unll he orders th.•
suppression of s truggles at wurk places, school~ .tnu
at military bases across the country
H Nlixon c:w make a "Journey for pe:~l·e " t 11
PekUlg, we call upon ham In make a JUurncy fur

IICJ~c t.1 l'.tTI\ , anll ll&gt; l."lld lJ S
aggrc\sH•n trt
I ndot htn.l hy
II Sl·lltng the cJ,ltt· 11\hl·n Jll US " ' "'I" tnli
c:qutpment wall h1• wathJ1~wn from :lll ol lndu, h111.1
to take plotu· '&gt;ltnult ane&lt;Ht~ly wtth the release nl !J S
!'OW's; and
2) Wtlhdrdwtn~ all lf S rnihtary ,tnd ecunntt1l1
&gt;Uj')J1&lt;trl hom I he 1 hat•u dtctJtur&lt;.htp lll S&lt;~ullt
Vtctnaart

( ler1r uml I u vmt n Cone 1 tn• J
I ll!fnum llt•tcrOII.f A xmn.ff rite I~ ,/T
Wt'Ht'fft N )' I- efl!fOIIl l!n1t111

U IJ Vets C/11/1
) ',,,,, ll(uu1.1f

War und

f·n.r~•t.lf/1

ku/Ju/u l&lt;tghl.f A rt1011 Cimup (IJR I 1,'/

Bu{/ultl P,•ua Cm111c II
J·,·of l /t- ·r l nulltmn for l'i!ut e and JuJfl&lt; c

Sujpport the masses
To the E'd1tvr .
Last m onth , the Sub Board agam refused tu
fund Th.e_ Activut, the paper of Youth Aga 1nst War
and Fas,:~sm . As they dtd last faU , the students llll
the Sub Board are repealing the big-wigs 10 Albany
who say politkaJ newspapeo. ~annot be supported
by studo~nt fu nd s. Yet , the news papers that arc
student -1unded repres~n t the1r own political VIews
they support the rich businessmen and politictan
but not POor and worlcrng peuple Funds are betnb~

clt'nted NOT hecause The A ct1Vi.fl Ctlntains pohtn:al
vtew~&gt; . but be"ause The Ac11vut publishes artrd~~
wtuch oppose I he nch. raci.St buSinessmen in Alb311Y
and their cam pw, lackeys.
They'r~ cutt10g out Left newspapers now , at
won 'I be long befor~ t hey also cui ou t the liberal
papers.

Michael Wolff
for The AchvJSt staff

�The fo llowing supplem ent to The Spectrum
contains the responses o f can~datea fo r Student
Association to questions formulated b y The
Sj'iJectrum. Cer tain candidates failed t o submit their
statements and are no t included in thi5 sectio n. Their
ruunes appear on page 8.
•

Photos by Ost erreicher

Ed1tor's note The! du11es and responsibilities of
certam student government pos1t10ns were changed
last hu.Jay by passage of amendments to the Student
Assoc1at1on constitution . The rev1sed dut1es of these
~sttio ns d o II&lt;Jf appear 111 th1s supplement's
descnpt1ons o f each office These offices mclude
Pres1dent, F1rst V1ce President and So;~ond Vtce
Pres1den1. F or more mformataon on these chan ges.
see story on Student Assembly on page 1 uf th1s
ISSUe

--The officers- • •
- • President
The President
I) Shall pres1de over all meetings of the Execut1ve

Studies. The number o l representatives from each
department would be based on the enrollment of the
department . Some advantages of thas proposals include .
(I) closer relations between the faculty and students (1)
more student mput withm each department if the councils
work effectively (3) representataon in the assembly of all
students, and (4) an attempt to mcrease student mterest m
meeting student needs. One goal of the Unjverstty should
be to unite students and facu lty as one governing body

Student AssuL'Iatu&gt;n ·s powl'f sff!mJ from 1ts financial
rf'sources Agreee or duagrl't'
0LSJI(ll'ee One of I he mtst:onccptlons about SA is that
tl can only speat.. w1th money Although 11 b true that SA
handles d large amount of money, that should not be its
only pnonly In the piist. SA has drawn 1ts power from its
finan&lt;..1.1l resource). The sum IS such that tl cannot be
1gnored, 11 IS 1m port an 1 II ow ever, there are many other
dspects perta1ntng to ~t udents' hves whtch should be given
top pnonty These tnclude ISSUes concern mg. {I) academic
mailers ( 2) st udenl np.ht~ ( 3) FSA ( 1 c bookstore, food
servtlC) {4) regmnalsum (5) the Amherst campus. An
dfcc.:t1ve student government shou ld be able to draw its
power frum 11s tleCISIUO) and act1ons pcrlauung to the
tssues prevwu~ly mcnlwned SA h.1~ always been partial to
the f&gt;tlWI!r llf the pur~e. yet what power ex1sts o nce much
money has hccn c11h~:r nmu~cd or wasted? SA has a
rc~pon~tblrty In the 'rtudenl\
An cqullibrrum must be
obt.11ncJ twl ween 1hl' flnJnd&lt;tl .~,peds and the students
need'

Committee and the Student Assembly
2) ShaJI be a voting member of the Executive
Committee, and a non-voting member of the Assemhly
except to make or break a tie.
3) ShaU appoant a parhamentanan who shall be
present at all meetang.s of the Student Assembly
4) Shall be the representative of the Execut1ve
Committee and the Student Assembly to the University
the Community .
S) ShaU make all commillee appomtments, subject to
the approval of the Executive Committee. and reviewalblc
by the Assembly.
6) Shall appoin t the Directors o f the Statutory
Offices, wtth the approval of the Student Assembly , and
revtewable by the Assembly
7) Shall have the power to call general referendums.
8) Shall have the power to send back to the Stud(:nt
Assembly , any piece of legislation passed by that body. for
re-passage .
9) S hall have the power to postpone, for one assembly
meellng all origmal items of legislat1on not placed on the
agenda by the Exe~ut1ve C'omrruttee .

***

Debbie Benson
CUR F
II'hut J o

11111

oJ the .\tudt•nt

legiSiatlt&gt;ll , lut k

tlunJ.. acTUIInts for the pvor performat.lu
(til&lt;' aflendance. lfl·cutlsldcrt•d

aggravahon, and d1sgust that are asso c1ated w1th t he
umverstty's hard edged bureaucracy . Tenure is one o f the
problems factng not only faculty, but also the students. SA
should talte a more active role in guaranteeing studen t
input in tenure decis1ons, even 1f this means formulatina lts
own tenure comnuttees. An assembly bued on
departmental IJnes may prov1dc the substance for these
comtttees.

'* **
I he backbone o f such a umcameral legislature can be
&lt;:onstructed throu&amp;h the Intense orgam1..111onal ~trengths of
~tud ent off1cer$ In reahty, for students to obta1n equal
power with the la~ulty, tl c. the ~l udcnts who must 'how
I hernselve~ able to as~l!mblc and ma1n1a1n a umhcu
~ompelcnt government

, t fSt'lllhl1• 1 t'

••I lt'adnslllfl and drrectwn '

ll IS tru&lt;' that th~ pvur pcrforman.:e of the Stude:nt
Assembly l3n b~ attnhutcd to low attendance, lack of
dire~t10n and lt:ad~rshtp, tll· considered legislation, etc.,
however mOrt' tmportant factors contributing to its failure
indu4e : ( l) the u\lcrc~t groups represented on the
Assembly wr:n· mudl more self-interest groups rather than
groups concerned w1th meeting the needs of the general
undergraduate stutknt population, and (2) the Assembly
could not be cons1d~rcd a fatr representation of the
student body One h:a\lbk remedy for the til-fated
Assembly would 111dude the abolJtion o f the pres~:nt
in tere st group sy~tcm and the formation of a
representative bod:,. bawd on depart mental lines. The plan
.:ails for the estabhshmenl of an undergraduate council
witlun each d epartment ~ompnsed of declared majors
Students who are undeCII.II!d and those with ad hoc majors
could part1c1pate through the 01vision of Undergraduate

The Studt 111 AJsocttJI/011 haJ hee11 Hngulurlr llll!nt 1111
all matters of acudelfiiC denswn mak111g Were thae , , 1
usues 1&lt;'/llch you felt dacrveJ cumment .,

Ounng the ye.tr , provost~ and deans have left . fa.:ulty
and students have dcspatred uver tenure dcnston, and
pohc1es dtrcctly afft't'ting stude nts m academtc matter~
have ansen. SA has failed to consider any of these tSsues
Perhaps through a rcvtew of all umvcrsll y wtde and DUS
commJttces, answers could he found to such questiOns as
( l) are students represented on all committees (2) who an:
the people sitting on the ~ommtltees (3) what poli.:~es or
decision" have been made and wtuch are in the process of
being determmed ( 4) how do the comm1ttees reach
d~CIStOns on the policte~ and 1ssues In the past , SA has
viewed students as d ollar s1gns rather than as people hvang
and workmg on campus Mdn y, 1f not the maJOrity, o f the
students have been ~ubJeCted to the confusiOn ,

Keith Frankel
Vantagt

AI fil"&gt;t

I dttempted to simply answer the three

Page 1

�queltions that Tit• S~ctrum wu u.alna. I found m)'Jelf
bowov« qu.l.ck.ly Jivina pat answers witho ut really aettina
my position aero•. so therefore I will attempt to state a
FDenl pro~Rm 10 that you the readen and voters will
know what I' m about and not read what I thought you
would want to hear.
The Student Association for too long has been quiet
on almost all academic and university related issues. We
!lave allowed ourselves to yearly become Jess of a
.,vemment and more o f a bank. I feel that it is essential
that we ro-evaluate S.A. I am more interested in aettina
our rlahts back u 'students than I am in sianing checks.
The S ..A . hu failed time and aaain to adequately
support tb&lt;* aroups that are worJdna in behalf o f
academic chanp. The top executives have waited for the
masses instead of helpina the arus root orpnizers who
were wortina on projects that try to expose what is ao ina
on and aet it chanaed. I feel that it is essential that I as the
president ri&amp;ht from the o u tset take a strong, vocal stand
on all academic issues, i.e., tenure decisions, curriculum
development, search committee recommendations, etc. We
must develop and implement a program that not o nly
protects but insures that students have a meaninaful say ln
all upects of University life. We've allowed too many of
our rights as students to be tak en away or never granted
It's aone on for too long and we dare not allow 1t to go o n
anymore.
It is essenllal t o all of us th at S .A . develop mote
rea.IJ.shc financtal policies. It must be a policy that is based
on student semces and st u dent educatio nal lSSues as
~ed lo Just providing fun and games fo r the few wh o
~ make noise. J feel that it is esse ntial that we cont inue the
struuJe for student co ntrol of st udent monies bu t must
also begin looking for realis tic alternatives. At ttus po ant I
favor a half-mandatory, half-voluntary fee with the
uJtJmate goaJ o f making 1t completely voluntary I realize
Uat this would pro bably bring about a fairly large
rcdution in our m come but this may be just what we need
I'm sure that thls red uct ion wouJd brina to Light a fa ct that
has been hidden for three years, namely the failure of the
University admtnlStration to provide ex t ra or even
co-curricular activities for the student body. I t has com e t o
the point where they want us to provide all t he serv1ces
except teaching and gradina the students and then they l1e
our hands w1th to tally unw o rkable guidelines "'hen we
auempt t o p rovide t hese services, that they, 1 he
adminiStrators, should and must start to prov1de.
The final wue 1 want to try and deal w11h IS the
toughest ; namely, t he Student Assep1bly An Assembly
implies that its membership IS representallve The membcrs
o f tlus year's assembly reall y weren 't representing anyone
It qwckl y broke d o wn into a ludicrous st ruggle as to who
was go mg t o have the last say tn s pe nd1ng of the money
The Executive Committee Called to present the AS!.embly
wub programs that dealt With the aci1dem1c and ~ervl\.e
upects of Uruvers1ty life and the assembly members l.ule\1
to teU the Executive Comm 1ttee what programs they
wanted to ser them uetute Th \' Unl.lcrgraduate
popuJa t1 on. as well as many member~ uf the Assembly,
became apathetlt. dnd bored w1th th e whole tlung Jnd 11
du:d as a paper llre.1m mstead of J r ec~hstll h•&gt;lly II would
be Important fo1 me tu work w1th my e\Cllltlv~
c~ mmlll re on
devdoping programs th..tt dealt wllh
1mport.1nt issues, and then present these programs tu the
Assembly Hopefully they would ~upporl u~ • .1nd get thl'H
mterest groups mterested 1n ~tudenl government Then we
would have the constituem:y th at we needed wh1le
speakmg out and work111g t owards the Issue~ thai dfe
important t o .t!J of us JS consumers uf edu~at 10n and
memben. o f J uruvers1t)' co mmittee
We must make the Adrnm•str;HJon JWJre ot th~ fact
t hat we are an autonomous government We rnust be dbh:
t o freely appoint people to all umvcrslty Wide.
adnumstra t ive a nd departmental ~.:ornnllttee~ w1tho ut
anyone·s pnor ap proval We mw.t organllt' lo get ba~k uur
nghts as students

''The Lev lfO'UP is a false frunt orpniz.ation desiJned
to bustle everyon•e in the world into their Uvina room t o
aet set (get yow· television set) for Deuteronomy - a
twelve o w video tnnscrypt that is the layina down ov the

laws
yoo lay d•:&gt;wn rela x sit back
Lev stands o n tap
Lev's lovers want Lev t o make the peal.e post haste and
reform t he corporate st ru cture ov gov' t (wherever it
ex1sb) frum th e to p on down "
Anyone wh o has e ver been given a cosm1c wrappmg
by Lev recogn11e:s hun and LS automa t ically a member .
Th c1t'~ ho w we became mvolved and we' re proud o f 1t 1

The Student A ssuetatJOn has been smgularly s1h•nt on
all muliers nf aca.demic clt&gt;eiswn·mlJking Were rh ae tJII)'
1ssues which you f•~lt deurved comment 7
Yes EverythJng that happe ned tim year beg1nnmg
with the fa culty res1gnat•ons all the w.;.y down to the
rel.ent and subtle attack o n the colleges whe n D1 Charles
Ebert said that und e rgrad uate student s are no t all•lWed to
t each credit classe·s Cred1t should be g1ven whe re l'rcdlt lS
due'
The students •:houJd realued that the c~dmrn1strotwn IS
slllwly but surllly '&gt;quelchmg the humamt1es. We ~ce mo re
and mon· mont:y b eing po ured int~' the Sciences , whllt•
o ther department's appropnatmns are becoming mil J'he
S A ~huuld get mvolved 1 We o~re mvolved JlreJdy
Student ll ss"'
rt'$1/llrCt:S A grt'e

!If

IUT•Ifl

s powt'r stem.r

from us

/lfltJIHUJI

rhrugrt't'

S780,000 rcp1resenls a ¥teat puw wo w
the .:hanu:
of u~ to do good lhmgs m the community , fm
uur~elvc::., .sn\1 \U have a &amp;oud ltmo: an the proce~
l n J.:tuahty we drl' llw \late We oHc the mhcntors n t
th e stJt e. We must karn while we are here to adm111ister In
ou1 own affaw. We must lorget t ht ~ notmn of "power"
het.JUW the leg1slat o rs can w1pe out our mandatory lt'e!&gt; Jl
J ny g1\&lt;en tune WhJ t t) unpurtanl 1S the ..:onsohl1.1tmn uf
vu1 cnerg~es ht·re w1th n ther ~c h oob 1n the st ate .•1nd ,,1
lht• Ulrfl\ &gt;ratt" kvd WJih o ther stud ent l'OrporaltCIII~ th at
t'\1\l JtiiiS.\ the uat1un
Uuildmg~ uurnble nul pcopk Money dnc~n 1 Lllk
"""'' Onu ~a}' Wt~ ~annul h.1ve peace unt1l we hJ\c: I•IIJI
u llllniUIIIC:ItiOn
So our fund~ are a gre,1t r~\nurct', but real SA JIIIWt'l
lUll only Slem from I I ~ .tblfl(y 1\1 l.O mC togt:tiH•r IIIlO
Stllll\'t h10g meanmgful for .til of us The llr\l \tep w 111 tw to
deJn h uUS\' lvcrbndy J..nnw' that " C~ cl ttly v.h.tl w•·
~t.md In•'
tor

c~ll

***

Dennis Ward

Whur do yvu tlunk aet'otm/J

pt•r jclfllltlll&lt;'l'
low uttt'ndullu.
11/·rons•dered legrslatwn. la&lt;·k of leadt'nh1p c1nd dlft't """ '
To begin w1th , J shp-shud constitution thJI ~&lt;'ru•u'l~
needs rewntmg T he way th1n gs ure now the a\~t·mhly
membership co nsists of rna1n ly spec1al Interests grours
The present executive , accordmg to Ja n UcWaU, has dlway'
been divlSive and never offered the J!&gt;Sembly anything
There lS n o m otlvatmg force to move the S.A 1n .wy
direc tiOn, partly because the people ele&lt;..ted las t year really
didn 't care enough. They could not get beyond themselve\
Tlus lack of motivation IS evidenu.~d 10 all aspec ts of
student life. When the pow wuw structure lie the gov'l 1
runs smooth , open, and above boatd, then the rest w1llget
better
The Fresh-Faced E·Lev1n wam 10 beg1n aga1n . We
canno t assume a m1ddle o f the road attitude When tssues
anse, we must and will take a s tand. Our c ure is to ~tart
fresh We have no alliances.

the

Student

jvr Tilt· pow

A sst~mbly

st uden t voice in the granting of t e nure . Certa•nly the
argumen t s for a balance between anginal research and
1t:ac h10g abili ty are necessary guidelines. But there must
Jlways be room m the Un1versity , as 10 any IOSlltut•on
dealing with people, for flexibility 10 g•ven circum~tan~.es .
II facu lt y and/or adm inistrati on b.: unwilling to cx tub1 t
th1s, then repn:sen tat ion of student 1deas is ne cessary
most specifica ll y . on th e committees recomrnend mg
tenure Not o nly a publlc pos1t10n sta t ed by the Student
Association but a so unding o ut and d lScuss1ons w11 h
vanous departments in the umversity i~ also a Vltal pa11
Grandiose statements c.: an be tllusory
progr ess is only
ach1r.: ved through work .

Student A.tsnc1atiun s power

Hrm~

(rom

Iff {uw11nul

n•so1Jr ces. Agree or diSagree

There are two areas where the Student AS\O~I&lt;~IInn
l.Jn hJ ve 10tluence and effective power the poflllwl
whert: the SA speaks as a representative o f ~tudt:nl
Interests, be 11 before the fa cult1es. admimstrat1nn , tht&lt;
Trustees ~ Albany o r the community , and t he financwl.
clenvcd frum t h e st udent ac tlvltJes fees t:ollec t ed whcrchy
the Student Assoc1allon promotes th e vanous actiVIt It''
1equ~r• ng
funt.l1ng. The se c ond
though 11\ vel\
1.ll~appmnting shape, lS still p resent. The first can p1 ohabl~
ht• ~·o nsidered 11lusory a t best. The reosuns (o r th e lack ttl
·dfeltlve poiJtical po wer again stem lrom t h e IJlk "''
111terc~t un the pc1rt of the ~t uden t hody JS a whole 1w1th
on ly IOo/r&gt; - 40~· partJCipatl ng m vot10g, and where th l'
A&gt;-.;cmbly t:an n ot even must er a 4uorum) These arc 11111
new. as they we1c among reasons g1ven by members u l tim
ycJr ·~ Assoc.:•at1on m res1gmng llo pt:fully, we can hcg1n
w11h Jn 10crease 1n the mlerest o f the o fl -a~mpus rcs1d cnh
m the o~.:tiv1 t y on t he U .B. t:ampus. whllh lS o nly renet.:ted
nnt t.rl'ated by a VIable S tud en t ASSOl.la tJo n II t here I' ntH'
thm11 I h ope l o ~ee S tu dent Association a~co mph sh tim
yt•&lt;n h ill least to heg1n to dcvelup a "t:Jm pu~ spirit "Only
then l.tn SA ho rw to proJect 1tself JS the poht1cal VI'J ll: ot
lht· 'tudents of th1s university

First Vice President
First Vice-President

I) lie shall he a vot mg member u l the .. xculll\r

&lt;OflliOittre and the St udent Assembl y

Stephen Gla.~ma.n
l'h~ Fr~sh Fa red 1:.' L~''"'

of

The Student A.nociation has been stntu14rly silent on
all matters of academic decision-making. Were there any
iuues which you felt deserved comment?
Certainly the largest issue o f late is the quest ion o f the
determination of tenure. I feel that the Studen t
Association need express itself publicly in advocating a

A ll1anrt~ fu rh·

***

entirely.

1 t'

lvlwr Ju you thmJ. UCI'tlllf/11 fot !Itt ' ''"" pct/rlflllt/1/c';
"' lht Student A uun/tlt
1 ,.
/rll•' lllft'tldullet.
111 t t•muh•red fegularwn. ltJr S. ,,f (t'tJdt•rslllfl und d1rr c'lltm '
I hehcv~: I he rt:ason fur the pour pcrtnrm.tnu• nl 1ht•

the gcnt:ral l a~k of mtl·re't m Student
SIClllll\tng as well from tht• Vt'JY ~trutiUrt' nl
the A~embly A ny o nc J..nuw' J IIIJJIII Wt:Jk nt'" 111 .1
plunah~lll' (mlert•M-group) government " that lt'ltJI II
gro ups JUSt aren't represent ~!d Tlus type nl A'~emhty .tbo
temh to fost er co ncern hy li S men1her~ o nly 1n lht•
pa 1t1 ~u lar gJoup's mtere~t
''nu? thn~\' '''ues c~rc re .. nlvcd ,
the repre~ent .111 ve o ften cond ude~ Jll mvolvement I I " lt11
th1&lt;&gt; reJ~On th.!l I propose J rest rud ure ul the As:.embly hy
.tt:allenuc dcpartm•~ nt, re~1den le nr Jnythtng nther ttun the
present syste m . t::.xpuls10n fllr exces,1ve ab~en ~;c, w11 h J
mec hanism for re plaremeu t ~~ necessary fhiS would 111
tum make the co rnnuttee~ 111ore d fectiVt' Jnd Improve the
assot:1at1on throuj!,hout The leadt'rShlp of the As~cmbly
should come from Wlthm. and thus the vot1ng presen ce ol
hxecutive Comm1t lee members shou ld be eliminated Ll'l \
e1t her rnake the Slludent Assembly a v1abk 1mportant part
of the decision rnakmg or be ho nest and ehmlllate 11
altogether and rely upon l:xet.ut1ve Commlltee deus10ns
A\,CIIIbly

IS

A~Sll l'IUII O n ,

l ) I n absence of 1he Pres1dent , th e fi r~ t via - rrc~idenl

\hall Jssu mc full respo nsibiht1 rs,

111 alldltlllll to Ius uwn
l) He shall represent the P1C~11.lt!nt on occasu111'
dc~1gnateJ by the Preside nt
4) lie shal l coordinatr the a..: tivtl it•s ol IIH'
CooH.ItiiJtn", Jnd vanous cunumttec dlJIIliiCil

***

Tyron e Saunders
( "(JJ&lt;f

In· hrll'l w ]I'll \'tudt•tlf I f.ltlnu/I0/1 I'"
cvo ctt 1 t~mplrsht•d unythmg lllt'tJfJ/IIgjul'
Ill \' l'flet ii VC II eSs of &lt;1 VI Ce! presu.Jent IS hard 1&lt;1
~:valuate m tern!\ of J Ct.umphsh ments stmply hecause tlw
111h :1.) definl'd 111 the SA t:o ns titut10n .Uiow~ little
opportun1ty for ueat1ve endeavors on th e part o f the V P
So that 1f the V .P . lS o nly r hairing student assembly
meetings , a 1d111g th e c0ord inators and representing the
pre~1dcnt. he t!&gt; in fact d oing hi~ job
w1tho u1
"accomplishing .mythmg meamngful." So that Ih e solutwn
llo w1th1n a red1stnbution of duties between the pres1den1
II

l'rt'.fltlr

1111

Th.c Spectrum interviewed 28 of the 35 candidates j(Jr Student Association uj]lces last
Fnday. Th.t! S?ectrum en~orsement~; of ~'andidutt•s stnnming [rom Jltcsc illfen•w ws uppear
on th e eduonal pages. Endorsemen/3 jor the u[[hes u[ Presui£'111, Firsr Vu·e Pres·d 1
Second Vice President and Treasun:r appear m ruday 's ts.we. rhvse j (Jr t.oordinaru:s ~:.'iii
appear in th e Wednesday edition.

�and V .P.

vice-president

- Dou t1 Vice helident have a role to play ,u a
prelident pro tem of !he Anembly? On Sub Bot1rd 1,/irJc.?
How can someone have a role u president pro tern
of something that is virtually non-ex.Dtent7 M is the
student assembly is one of th.e most inefficient
orpniz.ations on campos. The reasons for thls ao beyond

ahall auume the duties of the first

vice-president in addition to his o wn.
3) He lhaU be chairman of the Personnel and
Appoifttmenb

Commitiee.

***

***

Lee Schwatzberg
Vantage
Eueene Fahey
Allicnu Ptlrty
poor attendance, etc. The fact that it has been aJmost
impossible to join is a major factor. Others include the
facts that it is comprised maJnly of interest groups that ar~
there only for the advantage of theiJ individual groups and
a result the student assembly does not h ave a true
cross-section of the student body or its interests and needs.
As far as Sub Board is concerned this should be the
V .P .'s (fliSt or ~~cond) primary interest. Sub Board 1get s
:slmost a third n l SA money and SA should have a large
voice m the d e.:1s1on making concerning the spending o f
that money.

***

Probably because Student Assoc1atson hJsn 't
accomplished anything meaningful. The role of Sel·tlnd
V1ce President is o nly meaningful in relatJOn to the
Executive Committee. In o ther words . the only important
role that he has had as defined by the conststut10n 1~ hiS
votsng po wer on th e Executive Committee
The Second Vace Pres1dent , as w1th all SA
executives, has to redefine Ius role from o ne of an elttc'l
gro up to shift the power to the st ud en ts . Tite only way
this qn be done is to change Student Assembly there h y
making Commsttees (such as Fsnance and AthJellc Revt t:'W
Board ) m eansngful. Thts wo uld glVe studen ts more dtred
LO ntrol o ve r their money.
I f elected , I inte nd to w ork towards shsftsng the
dire ction of SA from a purely locali zed hody that deals
with problems that affect stud ents on a loc:sl level to a
government that deals w1th o ur problems on bo th a
statewide and a local level
To deal w1th issues an a State Unsverslly sy~t~m we
must deal with them on n state wsde level. Th1s 1s what I
will work for if ele cted .

***

Wh)' have sn few Student Asso ciation
Prestderlls ever accomplis/sed anything meaningful'

Vice

The ro le of Student Association Vice President has
truditionally been a.ssocsated with the pinnacle of
uselessness The powc~rs of the o ff1ces have always been
very limited in scope amd direc tion. With the advent of the
new Constitution this year the Vice Presidents' powers
bdve become even Dess defined. Moreover, few Vice
Pressden ts have taken the Ulitsative to extend their roles
and comm1t themselves. The Constitution states that the
o nly responsibilities of the First Vice Pressdent is to
substitute fo r the !President and to coordinate the
Executive Committee members. while the Second Vice
Pres1dent subststutes for the first and is Chairman of tbe
Appomtments Committee. It 's sort of obvious that these
duties a re n ot partscularly th o ught provoking or
l hallenging, and 11 's a very human thing th.at people who
have assumed these poosts in the past were not willing to
sruttate n ew co ncepts for the Vice Presidential o ffices.
li o wever, the deficiencies o f the Vice
Presidents' responsibilitses are beginning to be corrected.
They have a defirute ro le t o play as President-Pto-Tern of
the Assembly and Chairman of Sub Board I. The
Assembly , plaaued with problems from its inception, needa
a person who is c.ha.racld with seein&amp; tbat meetinp are more
efficient , better infonned , and more reaponsive to the
needs of the student body as a whole. While lhe President
h.as been handlmg the Assembly this year, he does n ot have
the tim e to devote t o necessary changes which must be
m nd e. The F1rst Vice PresJdent wo uJd be able to create a
u •. ·rt: viahh: Assembly wslh a greate r cunststuen cy and
re:.pec tih1lil y than it now has

DocJ u Vtt e 1'-rntdent ha11e o mlr tn pia)' tz.1 a
prestdcnt pro it'm of the Assl!mblv ~ On S ub Buurd I. Inc· 1

Jeffrey Steinberg

fhe Fresh Faced £-Levin
Wh y lltll't! 10 few Studenr
l'rtttdtnts ever uaom pluhed anythmg

Assoctatwn

tv,.,.

meamngful ~

Being a fre,hman, I can't honestly say that I know .J
good deal ab out the people who have prevtously held the
office that I am presently running for . ft owever, poor
performance " qtdte evident , and I will say this, poor
performance l annot be assocsated with an o ff1 ce, it can
however, be aS) ·d .Jted w1t h the man that holds th e ofliLt'
Ill question

Does u 11 t t' Presil'ent huve a role to pluy as u
president pw t••m of the 4.uemb/y ? On Sub Board I, fm· .&gt;
In the wurld o f busmess the "holding company " ss d
very special c rssn~ sndeed In the world of government, the
"'holdmg comp.sny" ts far more devastatsng than m the
bus1ness world I he effects o f a ''monopolizing" co ntwl o f
~ovemmental JCttvtltcs reach very much farther . I t is
therefore my lu•hcf that the Vic.:e Presiden t sh o uld attend
as many meet1 n11-' of Sub Bo ard I as possible, however . he
should defimt ~lv not h.tve a vo te in his ca pac 1ty! He
sh o uld attend &lt;:;ub Board meetings solely for hJS o wn
education. After .~11. he does vote on proposals submitted
by Sub Board . •111d h e sho uld know more o f the proposal
th.an the Sub Bo ard repre~e ntatives tend to submit. Gi·ving
the Vice Pressdenl the voting power in both the SA and
the Sub Board vou d o, sn fact , set up the aforementiooned
''holding comp.•.IY." Thb IS a dangerous situation and I
don't want to sc&lt; at continuing!

-•Second Vice President
Second Vice~t
1) He shall be a voting member of the Executive
Committee and the Student Assembly.
2) In absence of Jhe first vice-president, the aec;ood

Charles Ireland

lndtp#ndent
Why lluv.· so jew St udent II.IWt'lllltll/1 I HI'
Prestdents ever accomplished unythtng meunmgjuP
It is true that as Vice President of the Stt.U.Icnt
Assocsation o ne has o nly a s mall amount more pvwer than
Jny Student Assemblyman . Tlus IS not to say that .LS VtLe
Pressdent you com accomp!Jsh anythsng mennsngful.
In th e past there seems to have been .J lack of
Interest and drive. not only 1n former VP's but more so 1n
the SA as a whole . Today's SA is stagnated , more satisfieJ
with the status quo th.an willsng to work for Impro vement
Wh.at the SA needs ss people not afraid to work. If people
work on th ear pro blems rather than work to avotd them,
the 1972-3 SA will be vastly improved over earher years.

I fe~l e~pccta lly ~tro ng.l y that the Second V•ce
Pres1dent can play an Important role sn Sub Board I SA
presently prov1dcs about 70% of Sub Board 's mo nies and
hd~ four members out of eleven Board representatives
Whsle Sub Board bas·es 1ts budgeting on U!&gt;er surveys st
\eems clear that we are not getting o ur fasr share 1n
dcc1s1on mak 1ng o f Sub Board . As Chau-man , I wo uld
n!~:omment ex panding the Board' s membershsp w1th more
1npul from the under,graduat es. A stro ng atte mpt sho uld
he made t o get stude: nts wh o have not prevsously been
snvolved wllh SA to become Board members, wsth th e
unly SA represc:ntatsve besng the Second Vsce President
Alsu, tht&gt; emphas1s o f Sub Board should be moved 3way
lrorn governmental de~c 1S1on rnaksng. Sub Board 's greates t
potcnllal be' 1n be1ing an effective d1sperssng agent,
u1anagsng il port 1on o f 'ou r money in order to provide
wdl-run 'ervtLes on a student w1de scale I'd ltke l o see
Sub Board devote Its o.orporate resources snto setting up
LOOpcrat•ve~ . some of wlu ch , Ltk e the Co m1c Coop and the
l'lothmg Coop, I have been wo rksng on th1s year.
Sub Board IS n:gardcd by most undergraduates as
~ome
Btg Br o th e r co mplex of burea u crats taksng
undergraduate~ money dnd snvesting 11 for their ends
Wh t..le un true, 1t~ tune that the Board got 1n touch wsth the
people it'\ ~uprosedly workmg for and started d osng what
the students want 11 l·O do , rat he r than II people decidsng
1ls future

***

Douglas Webb
CURE

Dues o Vtce President have a role to play as a
pres1dent pro rem of the A11trnbly ' On Sub Boord I, In c. '

Why huve so few Student Association
Prestdents e11er accomplished anything meaningful?

Vice

By tradition the Second VP is appointed to Sub
Board 1, Inc . Tradstion aJso di ctates the Second VP is an
officer on Sub Board, and every other year be changes
with a grad student as chairman. This is the year for an
underprduate chairman of probably the imost important
student orp.nization in ex.Dtence. This makes this years
Second VP election very important. What normally would
be unimportant job is actually a moat difficult job, and
one of the most important student positions possible.

The problems that have plagued Student Association
V1ce Pres1dents an i.r1dicatave of the problems that bave
paralyzed Student Government as a whole. The Vice
Presidents, like the other officers, bad an inflated
co nception of their powers; they tried to cover too many
issues, and tboua,ht that those issues could be re80ived
solely by the Executive Council. Not until later on would
they realize the neces:sity to focus on a few maio issue~ if
they were to accomplish anythinJ, and that 101vina these

Page3

�-.ue. would require inYOlYina a

many ltWlents u possible
in wortdna towudl their 10lutioDJ. By this time however,.
Student Gowmmea.t baa 1o1t the confidence of the
ltudenb that the students cannot toe it u beinl worthy of
their support. To avoid tlda situation, we will concentrate
on a few illuea •hic:h will lay a strona foundation for
ltudent power. Spodfic:ally, thia wW lnvo.l'ft reorp.niutio n .
of the auembly a.lona departmental lines, and

cu"ently recei•e'l
.
There are many 'cues of stud ent cluba padclina thell
bills. We' ve discovered them and will make it known to the
public that this type of dishonesty bas been employed.
If a club proves ~ no lona~r needJ f~ndin~, it is the
choiC:C o f the executive comnuttee to d11contmue such
fundina.
How would you ,;ultify the huge sum1 stnnt by the
Athletic Department?
The Athletic Department has erijoyed virtual
autonomy on 1pending. If elected. that will end. Every
expense should be a1;counted for in minute detail and
made pubUcly known.
If elected, I am noing t o serve the student body '" a
human sense and not liS a machine poUIIcian. Our platform
IS honesty and humanit y rather than bureaucracy.

***

up the prolf&amp;JD, 4) It could make aure the event is held
where students could see it more euily by wDrkina with
Norton Hall reservationt. There should be chance.

How would you /tUtify the huge IUntl IJHnt by the
A rhletlc Dept1rtment?
1 can't justify spendJ.na ·$240,000 on athletics and
wouldn't want to. The problem 1.&amp; that we hne $770,000
in fees and when anybody comes for money theif budget is
going t o be m;h more than they actually need or expect
to get. The
ce committee never aot the chance to
last year because II was liven to them at
look at the bud
the same time people from the Athletic Department were
there t o defend it. They just rubber-etamped it and now
we have to Uve with the Cact that they aot it once and it IS
gomg to be bard to cut next year's. It could , and should,
be cut by a minimum of $40,000. It's not hard to pick out
feat herbedding in it. The fact that they can afford to
transfer money around in order to rent War Memorial Aud
and pay other schools S I 500 o r $2000 to let our students
m free shows, there is plenty of flexability In their budget.
Also the fact that they've only spent $90,000 t o date
shows that they don't need $240,000 J o operate the
program . Referendum or no refeJendurn their budget will
be c ut next year. I want CHANGE.

***
st r ena th eni na stude nt organtzahons withm th~
departments. In addition, we will a ttempt to revive the
studen ts' confidence in the financial mauers of Student
Government.

Does a Vice President have a rule tu play as a
president pro tem of the Assembly' On Sub Board I, fnc.'
Having the Second V1ce Prestdent of Student
AssoCiation on Sub Board I would have a number of
benefits Ftrst of all, he would be 1n an advantageous
positJon to improve oommumcat1ons between Sub Board
and the students, and to aain greater student input on Sub
Board decisions. By formaJiy destanating the Second V1ce
President as a Sub Board member, the link between Sub
Board and the st udents, as represented by the Student
AssoCiation would be e mphasized. Secondly, because of
the importance of a seat on Sub Board, it L~ necessary that
the post be filled by election. Sub Board has tremendous
finaneta.l responsibilities, $240,000 of Student Association
money went into Sub Board dus year, not to mention the
monies COIJ\11\I from the other five student governments
Sub Board is also the only means students have for lon&amp;
ranp p\&amp;1\J\ina, becaUM of \U financial capab ilities and

because it IS mcorporated, Sub Board will be able to rulftU
lona ranae aoals in sucb areas o f student needs as houung
Because of the tremendous responsibilities of a position on
Sub Board, and the need to keep students informed aod
partic1patina in Sub Board decisions,
elected, I plltn to
focus my efforts entirely on fuJfilling these dut1es well

.r

- • Treasurer
Treasurer
J) He shall be a votmg member ut the l:.xecuuvc
Committee and the Student Assembly
2) He shall be responsible for Student AssociatiOn
mon1es.
3) He shall be responsible for d1sbursmg student
activities fees with the approval of the Student Assembly
4) He shall be chairtlWI o f the Finance Committee
5) He shall be prepared to audit student o rgan1zauon
accounts.

***

WWiamCumo
A 1/ionu Porty
What powert and lintitationz do you believe the
AdmmiJtration should ha11e in regard to student fees?
The Administration should have no oontrol with
reprd to student fees. Our present system of
Administration control of collection (Bursar's Office) and
bankina (Marine Midland) has got to be revamped . Student
monies can be frozen anytime the Administration wants to
freeze them . This has happened in the past and unless we
chanae the basic collection and banking of funds, forget 11,
tbey1J do it aglin
In light of im~nding tuition raun, how Wl)uld yuu
consider a propoUtl to lower feu to $30.00?
Our proposal is to initially set up our own banking
system, in the bank of our choice. And, when we say
"our," we mean students voting m a referendum to
determine the leaitimacy of our aims.
If the student! fe.el the fee should be lowered by
aeneral referendum, then we'U d o it. We are running a
campaia:n for students. My personal opmions are varied on
many subjects, but the o ne that students should be
interested in is this: My actions reflect what our
constituency uks for. The job of treasurer is to serve the
people.
In quest o f that goal, we will employ every method
poaible to reach students.
Would you reduce the amount of funding that clubs

David Keiser
Independent
Whar powers and l/mftation3 do ynu belreve the
Admmutration shl)uld huve In regard tu uudent fees?
Personally , I do:n 't thmk the admnlislratJOn should
have .1ny powers 1;oncermng student activity fees .
ObJCdlvely. I tlunk the power of the admtmstration bas
been def1ned 1nternarly in the past month. Most of the
problems have been solved except the dtfference between
vnluntRry and mandatory and who ~nuld collect them
fhc admmistration really refuses to senously discuss this
and IS hop1ng the new officers, when elected, wilJ forget
about the issue. They have the power to let students
impose voluntary fees and can collect ditm , by stale law '
but Ketter 1S afraid of letting students dec1de what they
want to do without him bemg able to say no After
Stnnger vs. Gould we had to adapt to the administrauon
overlooking everythinu we d1d We've done th1s and also
rrv•~ed the procedure which the adm1mstration can say no.
It wuld perhaps be improved more but it ISn't hard to
work out the problems The only expenditure that wa.'
turned down , thlS yt:ar. was the North Buffalo Food
Co-op ThiS wo uldn't have happened 1f we had g~ven It tu
Sub Board I to work out the legal problems and selling up
the way 11 wo uld operate before ~ummllung It to the

Jeff~y OsiMd

CURE
What pOwers and limrtaliOttl do ynu believe the
Admmutrahon 1hould ha11e in rr'ard to studtml {ees 1
I believe that the people in Hayes Hall have
ove rste pped their authority with their continued
h.arassment of student adm1mstration of uudMI funds . It
hus been convenient for them to Cite Albany and New
York State guidelines as the reason why many worthwhile
proJec ts were denied funds. In reality these decisions were
made m the office of tbe prCSident tn Hayes Hall, often
followmg a hasty legal optruon. Studc:nt Assoc1a11on
shouJd take an aggressive pohcy against administratiOn
lim1tilt1ons, taking legal action when it deems necessary If
all else fails tt may be necessary to find another wa y to
~oUec t student fees o ther than through the office of the
burser therehy takmg collec tion out of admmtstralum
h&lt;~nl.l s .

adrnm~tnH10n.

In l1ght vf rmpe11ding ltllflfln raiSes. hvw would yuu

11111S1dn a prupo1al to lower fees lu $]0 00'
I wo uldn't consider lowenng the st udent activitY fee
JUSt be.:ause the tuition was ra1sed Any hardship plllt:ed
upon 1ndmdual students by the tu111on 1ncrease can be
Oft-&lt;;et by the activity fee wa.Jver wtuch we now have The
student activity fee ,;ould only be lowered by cutung
budgets dwunatmg p1rograms, serv1ces, or acllvtties, or by
the Umversuy spending more o n co-curriculum activit• ~
Would yuu reduce the umount of fundmg thor l'lubs
c uner~tly receive?
The problem witlh some clubs IS that they are pickmg
up the responsibilit y c•f the departments m the school by
providing co-cumculum activities wh1ch the departments
~an 't because of budgf:t cut-backs. There are, for instance,
fourteen enaineering clubs all with budgets. The activi t ies
they sponsor aren't of interest to most students but they
can't be entirely eliminated Without a vo1d in some
students uruversity exu&gt;enence. Cutbacks in some spCCJfic
expendttu res and cent'f'aliz.ing club special activities could
help solve the problem of them was ling S II 5,00 a year.
Currently clubs are spending S I 5,000 on conven tions.
They are also spending S 12,000 on magazines and
newsletters. Allocations of this type, whJch don't benefit
the student body, is just throwing our money away.
Speetal activtties put o.n by clubs, $37 ,000 could be madt
more effic1ent and eco·nomkal by centrahring the funding
of them. The Student Acitivity Committee is already set
up to do ttus but every club would be shouting that we are
takmg away their autonomy. The advantages of having the
Act1vity Committee plan club spectal events arc: I) It
could pick the activities that would most benefit the enllre
student body, 2) It could publicize the events better, than
now, through the Offic.e of Public Information, 3) It could
coordinate and co-sponsor the events with UUAB thereby
cutting d own the cost 'by having persons with expertise set

In ltght of impendmg tuoum raues. huw would you
c'tHWdt•r u proposal ro ll)wer fees to $JO.OnO?
It has always been my contention that the St udcnt
Assoc1uhon collects more money each year than Jt needs
to o perate efficiently. I think it IS lud1crous when "
student government has to Stt d o wn and find ways to
spend 1ts money at the end of the yea r so that a large
surplus ISn't left over. The present student fee must be
lowered especially in Ugbt of the recent I "~ Jtion increases.
Now student fees may become a hurden t o many students
If fees were t o be cut to $30, however, I believe an undue
cutback in student activtties would simulfllneously result
It 1s my contention that student fees co\Jid be lowered to
$50 a year with no serious curtailment of studen t activities
resu lting from this.
Would you reduce the amuunt of fundmg that clubs
currently rece1ve?
Undoubtedly some clubs' budgets wlll have to be c.ut
espec1ally 1f studen t fees are lo wered. I don't beiJeve ,
ho wever, that it would be fair to go into funding with a
preconce1ved notion of cutting budaets ac.ross the board
In the past many worthwhile projects suffered because o r
prior prejudice and personal antagonisms within the
Executive Committee o f Student AssoCiation . lf ele(\ted I
mtend to carefully examine each request for funding with
the interests o f the student body liS a whole tn mind . Clu bs
that provtde a definite student s~'rvice wili ~ontinue to be
funded so that they can continue to sup ply this service
Those that are unable to demonstrate student service or
those that service a smaU number of students may find
th.at their budgets have to be cut back Jl •s important '"
my eyes that the most money goes to dr the most good
fo r the most number of studen ts.
/low would you justify the hute suntl $pent by the
Athletic Department?
ll's hard to JUStify the huge sums spent by the

�Athletic Ocpe.rtment when the Athletic Director blmsdf
qreet that part. of t he budget are peatly padded. On the

other band , I think it would be unfair to cut the entire
budget because of this. It is time for Student Association
and the Athletic Department to seriously look: at the
budget a nd decide if a small university like ours can
continue to support an athletic protp"'m at the scale tb.at
we do now. That athletics bold many benefit§ for tho:se
who participate as players and those who participate on!ly
as spectators catl not be denied, but the realities of the
rising costs of supporting hip caliber programs in ••II
sports must be carefully considered. Undoubtedly budg,et
cutbacks in some areas will be the ultimate result. I believe
that the Intramural program should have more mone:y
devoted to t he pro gram itself and less should go into
paying studMt officials . I also believe that more of thas
money should go into promoting a better women's
program with a greater diversification of a(;tivities 1n wh.ic:h
to participate.

-The coordinators-•
Duties of the Coordinators
1) Each coordinator shall be a voting member ot the

worldna closely wit h the Council of History Students on
various projects and com mittees. The Council is only three
yean old, but students have a powerful voice in the
History Department. Presently, one-fourth of the voting
memben of the Faculty Department meetings are
students. Students sit on every committee, even the sea.r ch
committees. Most important of all, students are listened
to ; their ideas form a areat part of the new projects
undertaken by the departmen t.
Thus, tne ideal source of student po wer is the
departmental structure. Since the department is where
tenure decisions and grievance procedures originate,
students must have influence here.
As Academic Affairs Coordinator, I would help
orgamz.e the students withm the departments to form.
first , a viable student o rganization and then , to work with
the faculty on decisiOns affecting both groups These
student organizations would eventually be Linked into
Facult1es (Soc1al Sc1ences, Arts and Letters , etc ) and the
departmental orgamzations would be the basas fo r the
Student Assembly . It must be noted that this approach
involves student power with responsibality . II means much
hard work and a good knowledgt' of departmental polatk~
But I believe that this is the only WilY we can realistically
influen(;e Un1versaty life.

Executive Committee and the Student Assembly.
2) each coordinat o r shall be responsable for
safeguardtng the interests of the student body in his
respecuve area.
3) He shall present programs and leg~slallon to the
Student Assembly and Executive Comrruttee for approval
and enactment.
4) He shall prepare and defend budget pro posals, th;at
tall within his respective urea , before the Financ;cCommittee, the Executive Committee. and the Student
Assembly.

S.her Akhtar
Party

1U/wnr~

would you ovcrcoml! tilt' pamcluali.vm (lnd
and .tl!nrJj~hubla that penades mmt fnre1gn
}/tHJt•nt urganizatwn.r ·•
!'here iJ. an ac:utc• need for a rapport between the
l\rnenc11n and fore1gn student communaly here at UB
In my opm10n the lack o f commumcatlon between
tht lore1gn and Amencan students IS due to two basu:
factors culture and language II wo uJd be chao tic to
~:xpose d1ffcrent cultures man anstantaneous mannt:r, but
the. ~.1n go o n gradually, that IS, the expOSitiOn of the
1\mcn ~an ~u llure to the incomUlg fore1gn students and visa
VC"Il
I he 1namedaat1: Loncern seems thdl the 1ncomang
fureagn 'luu~nt~ should be given the npportumty 10
ac:quuc the colloqutaJ aspects 1)f the Anaencan language
1\men(;cln \ense of humor. etc. The best way to go about it
~~ to have wo rkshops fo r the new £ore1gn students to m1x
w1th the Amencan freshman.
I would try to arrange very anformal workshops m
wtuch a max1mum number of forellfl students could get
together to meet with a substantial number of lnterested
Amencan students. These workshops would be pnmarily
geared towards the 1ncoming fore1gn and American
~tudent s, ~ance 11 ii these studtnls who arC' 10 need o f
rncnds.
Thas ~ee ms I n be a better pm)t:t: l tu spend the SA
funds rnlhcr than 10 have formal t'Xhlhllluns and talks,
wluch seern to be: a repeated phenomenon tn which less
and le'IS number o f forc•agn as well as ArnenLan students
t.tke part ThJ~ does not mean thai I Jill not an favor of
lnterrl.ltmnal Month A..:taVllles
The gradual expos alion of d1ffercn1 &lt; ultures could he
.ttt.Hncd throu~h mass mt!daa anstrument~ hke publlslung uf
a nt:w\paper or d magazanc:
I w1ll try to bn ng l&gt;UI J weekly or d baweekly
ruhh~atwn 111 whach fore1gn 'ltUdl'nl' would he gJ.Ven an
uppurtu ntiY to express !hear thnughts aloug With the
Anacran1n ~tud\·nts
flow

pmVIII!"IIJIISm

***

Th~

TINA KUUS
Frt!sh Faad E L.tvm

Whu t IS Your opu111111 of Prt•Hd&lt;'llt At'fft'T 'c rt'f'l'nlil
possed Admuswns Progrum 1
Pres1den1 Ketter's admissaons program would only
\c.'rve as a detnment to our acadertllc com munity
L1mlt111g the number of .1pplu.:at1on~ out\lllc the
hghth Judicaal Dastrlc t and therehy ~ hrankang t111: pool o l
~tudents to he considered for adllliS\IIHI wuuld unty ~crve
to slafll' the a\.'allemll' ex..:ellenLt: o l lilt~ ll rliVl'f~ll Y w1~h~
to mumlaan To ensure a top-notch 'lluden t bmiY ." IJTgc
pool ,( t~pplu.Jnl~ from whach tv (hou'~" e\\enllal
lurtherOhlre. !Ius IS a Slate Umvcrsaly wrpmted hy
fund:. collnted throughout the slate .JOd nut a lm·,allled
t ummun1ty (. ollege funded by the l'lly of Bull.tlo I ht·
Umversary of BuffJIO wa~ abolished 20 yc.lf\ olgo
There as no reJ~Oil why a qu.JIIIat·d ~tudcnl horn
uU ISHle the faghth Jud1c:aal Dl'&gt;lnd ~huuld nul rcle1ve the
sanae l'omaderallon J ~ one lrom wtthan 1\ny olhca pralltll'
would he purely l.lls..:rpnanalory atu.llr"l lhn~c: '\tudcnl~
!roan 1he other uasl fll' ls.
/ltm

W1111hl .)1111

Jorn tht' 1tfmlfllllrulloJII to

l'flll&lt;'l'dt•

I tudenr
put //( "IPIIIIII/1 Ill UIUJt•mlt
making 1
In my ex peraence, at appears thc1l t h~ Act m amsl ralll &gt;ll
l'unnol be "forced'' to do anyttung
St udent-Admimstrauon rapport IS mdecd ldlkln~ an
,my real coaht1on.
It IS my contenhon that the Fresh Faced E-Levan.
together, as an executive council could deal dnectly and
regularly with the Administrati o n in order to create a
wo rkable union . We as freshmen, have no need fo1
recommendations for law school, med school , etc., as dn
many of our upper classmates . We have obhgataons to nu
o ne but ourselves, and the academiC communaty we wash
to serve
As "fresb faces," w1th no prev1ously wrought
pre1ud1c:es, we feel the AdmuustratJon would more
amu:ably lend an ear to our wishes.
We can hardly say there will be no diScrepancies, hut
along w1th the creation o f a strong and respected student
government, our bargaining powers would be greatly
ancreased
The broadcast of our proposed meetings on ACTV
(all campus t elevisio n) would provide a means for all
students to v1ew student-administration Interactions where
upo n they could formulate their own Judgements.
By movmg these meetings from behand closed door..,
the Adm1mstration IS left wide open for all the scrutiny
the Unaversity can command

ttlt'UIIIIIgjU/

Ho w would you force the AdmmiStratiOn ro cnnced.e
mean 1ngful student partiCipation tn acodemrc
dedswn·makmg7
.
An Academic ' Affairs Coordinator must 1\ave a
reaLIStic view of the influence that the office gives he:r ,
therefore t believe strongly that the key to student power
lies in the department. For the past year, I have becm

~***

-

Academic A tt'airs Coordinator
1) He shall serve as a channel of commun1ca11on
hetween the Student Assembl y and the vanous FacuJta,es
and University administration for academic matters
2) He shall chair the Academic Affai rs Commattee uf
the Assembly.
3) He shaJI study and report to the Assembly on any
academ1c matters.

What rs your opmion of Pres1dent Ketter's ruench•
passed AdmiSSIOns Program'
In order to have a great university academ1cally o ne
of the prerequisites is a divers1ficat1on of both ideas and
students. President Ketter's new admissions po!Jcy makes
1t mandatory that at lease 50% of the students in the
ancoming freshman dass must come from the Eightl h
Jud1cial District . I believe that this pohcy may endanger
Buffalo's standmg as a nationaJ university. To say, as some
people have, that (here is little difference between an 89~
average for the Eighth Judicud Distnct st udents and a 92%
average for the students outside will not be much of an
argument to those students excluded fro":' the Umvers.ity.
Sance such a policy may lo wer the academac standards, It IS
not good for the University. And if academic standards for
students are lowered, wha t "diStinguiShed" professors
would want to teach here?
Coupled with some o f President ~et.ter's ot~·er
deciSions on· academic life, the new admassaons policy
could str1ke a dangerous blow at student diversification in
Buffalo

community lives.

***

- • Academic Af fairs

Janine Janas
CURE

Committee of the Aae1111bly.
2) He shall establish and carry out programs designed
to integrate the fore~gn student with univenity and

d&lt;!t'IS/IJn

International Affairs
International Affairs Coordinator
I) He shall chair the International Student Affairs

Ot'}lnt:' y11ur nm.fli tuency

1 huve endorsement o f Pak1stan student dSSOCiallon
and 1\lham·e Party My •;upporters are also the people wath
whom 1 have wurked an vanou~ campus acllVlties, hke
l-ore1gn Student Onen tallon Committee. lnternallonal
('luh . etc

·• * *

Hlltten El~abri
CURE
1/o w would yuu overcome the parochialiSm and
provincralism and xenopltobw that per11ades most foreign
student nrtamzucwn '
Muc h of the failure of foreign students to
1ncorporate an to .the U nivers1ty commumty stems from
madequate apprectation of the11 needs, and !Jus, m tum,
deters them from feeh ng as ail integraJ part of the
Umversity As far as this is concerned, I would hope to
d11ectly anvolve fore1gn students 1n the makmg of decisions
that affect them, and wo•rk through Student Association to
duectly confront the problems and concerns foreign
students have.
1 foresee rny ro le in Student Assocaation as directly
tackhng fore1gn students' concerns by mitiating legal
action in dealing with thte racast polic1es of some landlords.
1 also w1U press for the establishment of a defmite
Umversity policy regarding the o pening of a dorm for
students dunng vacations. Through Student Association I
would l ke to see Sub Board develop plans for off-campus
student housing.
1 would like to establish a foreiiJl students'
loan~ch olarship fund , from income generated by various
mternational activities, to desl with students' fmanciaJ
problems, especiaUy aft.er recent cuts m tuition·waivers.

Pag_e 5

�lead to improved, quality proanms in the areas of interest

aDd recent increase in tuition.
To involve forciln student.l directly in campus Ufc, I
would o raanize foreip students' participation in
departmental cou.ud.la and committees, and I will be swe
contact is made with tlac dcpartment.l in•olvinl studenl:l
and faculty in an attempt to deal with students' lntereats
and concerns.
I also foresee sponsorin&amp; &amp;eneral aet-togcthers
between American and forei&amp;n students in the form o f
meetinp, picnics, trips abd coffee hours. I will press for
Jreater parti ci pation by students, and greater
ruponsiveness t o students' needs by U~iversity-w_idc
committees (i.e., UUAB, SA Atllembly, HoUSUlg, Athletics,
Health Insurance and Judici.aJy).
1 see my role as an lntemational Affairs Coordinator
servina tw o m~or objectives : fs.rst , t o act u the voice of
the foreian students in the University community, and .
secondly, to help, throuab the uchana.e ?f idea~. to
nairow the pp between American and mternatJOnal
stud en~.

2) He shall eatalbtiah and carry out programs designed
in national affairs.
to intepte the minority student with University and
The excbanac of educational ideas illnterestina and
Community Hfe.
helpful and needa national promotion. Academic affairs o f
all educational systems are inter-related in moet aspects,

***

and ahould be emphasized and made functional wherever
appro priate.
The student riahts llnd welfare programs of other
schools are of impo rtance as guidelines to establishing new
policies, as well as for re-examining those ~hlch need
amend ing. The student has a riJilt to know w!"ch systems
sup po rt and p~ctice his buic beliefs on these ISSues.
The student needs to have thia information on hand
for his use. Without this position. much of this nat to nal
educatio nal knowledge would be o ut of his immed1a te
reach. The student needs som e place to go to pthe• th iS
information quickly, knowing that it is accurate, knO\\ 1ng
that someo ne can explain the details be is unfamiliar w1th .

Should this Uni~ersity ceatt to be a member nf
National Student Association?
SUNY AD's relationship w1th NSA ISn't a necessary
factor for the adequate functioning of our national affaars.
With student support and stud ent corpo rati o ns, w e can
galll most o f the benefits asso~iated with ~SA ~ithout
bemg a member, and still retaan &amp;ood relat aonsha ps Jnd
communications wath the other partici pating scho~ls

***

·***
I

Bob Pombo
lnde~ndent

Do you appi'OIIt of the financial uuttmomy
agrument negotiated by the Black Student Unton7
The fmancial autonomous agree.hent negotiated by
the Black Student Union was b rought about by a d isregard
of t h e Student As!OcJiation to recognize minorities on this
campus. Even the oflrice I am running for is but a token
erfort to appease the minorities. To me, minority members
mean . all my bro the l'S and sisters that have been brought
to this camp us by Vllrious federal and stat e funded
pro grams to flo under for themselves, We are given
permission to use th1e pool, but are not shown how hl
swim. nus leads to but frustrataons and eventually hatred

Jlu'W would you ovucome the parurhwllsm and
provmctalism and xenophobia that pervades miJst foreign
student organiz:aHoru?
l realize a need eJUSls lD helping forei&amp;n students to
become lntepated into t h e University community. The
foni.sn student thus reqwes some mechum in wtuch
culture takes a tangible form, to adapt to the Univemty
campus associations wtth American students and others
from abroad .
Wittun this ObJecttve framework. inita.al coordinataon
will be darected towards orientation of the new foreign
student to a new cult ure and educational settang by aroup
discussio ns on present-day American cu lt ure. movies.
coffee hours and s.iahtseeing trips. It 1s then necessary to
continue this initial rnterest in andividual self-adjustment
and mterculturaJ exchange by amplementing workshops
anclined towards stamulahng activity and des1gned
essentially to assist foreign st udents U1 reahzing their
existing potentialities or t h eir eJUSting needs. Insofar as I
believe at is absolutely necessary to any uutllll interest in
students, I propose to extend the existing International
tnvolvement on campus to include a greater part of the
academic year.
The foreign student would then be prepared to
participate in campus organiutJons with an activated
potenhal to inte~ct and communicate. In turn. su~o.h
individual inputs w ould hopefully stimulate and expand
the sph ere of activity in a specific foreign organiz.ation
with oth er American and foreign~tudent o rganiz.ations or
individuals.
Therefore, lD order to IISSlSt these organizatiOns &amp;n
combining club goals and objectives, in the midst of
increasina bureaucratic red-tape, I am determined to work
with the clubs themselves by attending all club meetings to
attain first-hand information, by assisting m preparing and
defendlllg their budget p roposals before the SA fman~o.e
commlltee and by providing a p:neraJ framework in the
sphere o f publicity and resource personnel where any
deftned club activity can take place.
This proposition will serve to act as a awdeline and
offer some basic structure to any program of activity
designed to assist , o rient and adapt to extenuallng
circumstances. Without' a do ubt , there will always be
unforesee n situations pr evelant to cultural diversity. but I
hope with mutual assistance and cooperation and a great
deal of hard work , some plausible solution can be reached.

)

Define your constituency
.
Co nsid era lion will be directed primarily to
tndividuals and foreian student ifOups. However,
·rorei&amp;n·American cultural orpnizations slall not suffer for
the lack of mutualtupport.

- • Minority Affairs
a&amp;llority Student Atfain Coordinator
J) He lball chair the Minority Student Affairs
C'.ommittee of the Aaembly.

Do you believe that rac•al tensions eXI81 Within thr
dorms ?
Raoal tensions exist everywhere on campus. Some
believe "they're gettmg everyth1ng for nothing," I believe
too l.attle has been pvt~n too late There exasl , some would
believe, a phiJosophica1l gap between the mmority st udents
and the rest o f the cam pus, anstead there ex1s1 a muddled
philosophy based on bigotry amona all students.

Edward Wolf
CURE

your ron.srirucncy
J would hope my consllluency would be all students
who really want to "JI:et it together." We ha ve to become
as one here or what h~ope is there for our 1deas out there
D~fin~

- • National Student Affairs
Natio!W Affain Coordinator
I) He shall chaar the National Affairs Committee of
the Assembly .
2) He shall ma.i1nta.in communications with oth er
univen;ities in the nation. especially with regards to
matters of academic freedom, education, civil rights and
student welfare.
3) He shall establish and carry out programs destgncd
to invo lve students in nJational affairs.

***

JtJCqueline Weir
The Fnuh Faced

E - L~11in

Why would you oppose the abolition of thi:s post '
The National Affairs Coordinator IS the student
body'a main connecticm with other campuses across the
nation. SUNY AB's decilsions and programs can and should
be compared with those of o ther schools. Com parison can

Wh.v would you oppose the abolitton of tills post 1
1 oppose the abo htio n of this offi ce on the grounds
that 11 has not bten pven a fan tnal The sorry s1tuatwn
w1th the Transfer Advisory Board proves that ehmano~t1on
1S n o t the answer to administrative problems. The Transfer
Adv1sory Board dad no t function properly, so instead of
working to improve it, Student Association disbanded It,
ignonng the needs of Transfer Students.
There 1S no question that the office of NatiOnal
Student Affairs Coordmator has not worked o ut weU In
the past, bu t it ha.~ great po tential. 1972 is a Presadent1al
election year, and the defeat of Richard Nixon as
imperative if Civil Liberties are to survive in Amenca
There IS no other office equipped to deal with the
Presidential electaon and the voter registration and
Absen tee Ballot requests connect ed with it. Certainly the
Stud~nt Association President is too busy.
Loolc.ing backwards, past coordinato rs sh ould have
led scch efforts as the Kent State Petition drive and th~:
Voter RegiStration campaign. Both o f these efforts were
carried on outside Student Association , despite the
presem:e of a National Student Affairs Coordlllalor.
elected by the students
Any madequa cie~ of 1be past have been caused by
the people involved, not the struct ur~ ot the office Itself
Should thll Umverstfy ceau to be u memhrr of
Nutwnal Student Assonolwn'
I o 11 s ent1re history. th~: Nauonal Student
Assm:1at10n proved useful only once, an coordinatang the
1970 ~tnke effort The tames changed , but unfortunately
the Nataonal Student Association ch ose to rest o n its laurel
and luis become outmoded .
The needs of students attending dafferent universities
are not .11 all the same. One need o nly look toward Olean
to see S t Bonaventure t o know that. Indiana Univers1ty at
Bloorn1ngton is a far better comparison. A slat e supported
unaverslly slightly larger than SUNY AD, its students share
few of o ur problems. Students are permllted to vote from
thear unaversity ad dresses, but still labor under the onus of
harsh academic reqwrements for graduation . Indiana's
residence halls do not allow 24-b our visitation o r liquor.
How can anyone say their rnterests are t he same as ours?
The main reason I would urge Student Assembly to
curtail our membership in NSA is strictly financial. We
have received no thing from NS A to justify our dues, let
alone th e expense of flying the National Student Affairs
Coordinator to their conventions. The money can most
certainly be spent more wisely than that.
The function NSA supposedly served is bema
capably ba.n dled by SASU, whose members share ~he same
problems and goals.

�to knowledge not available in classes. Most of th~ studen ts
at UB manage to finish school , and still not have any
direction in life. They have learned useless information.
Student Acti'f'itia Coordiruitor
The sch ool doesn't teach one how to be an active,
I) He shall chair the Student Activities Committee' of self-fulfilling .individual. There are o rganizations
the Assembly.
(Scientology, Kundalini Yoga, The Jesus People, Glen
Turner's Dare-To-Be-Great , Lama Foundation, etc.) and
speakers who attempt to teach people the fundamentals of
leading a full life. The Speakers Bureau is an opportunity
to bring this knowledge, or at least a view of it, to the
students. Without a healthy attitude on life itself, what
sood is Biology, Political Science, Anthropology, etc.?
In keeping with the gene.r al direction of the Alliance
Party, I would like to bring in speakers that represent the
feelin~ of, and can talk to the minority students,
(Minority meaning Black , Puerto Rican , Oriental ,
Conservative, Ho mosexual, etc.)
I think the office of Activit ies Coordinator should be
more responsive t o referendums. The students will have
the o pportunity to decide whic h speakers th ey want to
hear. In addllion to the topics already mentioned , I'd like
to o rganize debates s uch as William F . Buckl ey vs. Bobby
Seale , Jane Fonda vs. John Wayne. Some interesting things
can be done With your support I'll try to do th em.

- • Student Activities

***

stat e my particu/Qr functions in this position. However,
much better will be nny role as part of the council (as
distinguished from conun.ittee) of SA executives. We (the
Fresh Faced E-Levin) were organized by virtue of our
sim.ilarity in beliefs and our «togetherness." This
"togetherness" will ca1rry over into the SA eJtecutive
should we be elected. We stand for cooperative
government and it is our intention to transform the
executive committee into a vast and meanin&amp;ful executive
council that cooperate" with everybody. Each one of us
will have a small 11ole in tber other ooordinaton'

***
James Beall
Independent
I know politics is bullshit That's why I'm runnmg
Independently. And I want to make sure activities remain
apol.ltical. Activities are a major facet of a stud en ts
developmental college IHe. I'm not interested in talking to
Robert Ketter. I 've got nothing to say to him I want to
progra m and coordin ate the ac hvit1es for the camp11.1.5
~u mmun1ty The $30,000 budget of the Speakers Bureau
waJI aUow thiS objective to happen , relative to stud el'll
1nput.
But I feel thiS "mlellectual" ca mpu~ IS stall la ~: kang 111
~ulture. T o resolve th1s satuation, I want to 1mplement a
new co ncept. S.P.A .C.E .
Spectal Programmt ng lo r the
i\rl'i , Culture and Entertainment It would involve a1n
o~lluc.tted budget of, say, o ver S:!O,OOO, avatlable fo1
,rudent use, under the ausp1ces of any tH'trvt' stud ent cluh
ur urgan1zat1on I th1nk 1t w ould ehnunate some of thie
burea ucracy anvolved 1n usmg student montes. but more
tmportant it would be a first step an rem ovtng A.:t1vit y
h:e~ from the hands of student poltt1c1ans
It •._ t,ur money , let 's use 1t!

***

departments so that tnstead ol us beang a group o f disj oint
polillc1ans vyang for power and Olllney, we w ould rather
have the meanmgful lcatrning exper1cnc.:e we wtll all gel an
the adnnnastrat10n of t h..: student a I faiTS of the cam pus
•nmmumty
I n my de\lgndted role rny part~~.:.ula r functmn would
he t•l rec~IVt: the mpul o f stud ent pr\thlcrns dnd relate 1t to
the eXCl'II IIVC l'O Un llf llll diSCUSSIUII and de CISIOn
1\bu tn th•~ pu"t1nn I pe~onally would like to deal
w1th the pml&gt;lems ol 1n•.nmmg fre~hrnen nl''\t semester I
Wtluld .tho t.tJ...t' steps to 1nuc.ll.e the1r mterest and
.tw are n c~' of the studt'lnl !(nvernn~t·nt lw pefu lly at the
'11111 1111.'1 on~nt.JIInlh

CURE

In

A Ilia nee Pany
Define ••t1ur role
The JOh IS t o seeJ.. out stu dent organ11.atmm tduh' I
"' o the r ~tu d e nt adiVIli\!S that need financial .JSSISt.HH.. •:
llorn SA Along with th1s, I feel 11 IS my roh: l.u he lp
\IUdt•n t org.anlla ta ons run mMe effel11vely
My JOh L~ no t to g~ve out money I h.1t \ the
tn:.1~u rer's JOh My JOb 1S to ac trvo:ly worJ... \l-Ith tht•
nrga nt7~twns and attempt to insure the su cce.'l:&gt; 111 eat..lt
IndiVIdual program .
In what fashion llall&lt;' past performamt•J of A c r rvllll'l
oordmutors deviated from your concl'pllo n of tire rdeuf'•'
In the past the role o f Student Activities coord1nalor
h:Js been a joke Sithng up in his office, haYing v1rtually no•
contact w1th the students and their needs and wants, h e
ha~ doled out money, w1thout knowmg where the money
IS going.
The Activities Coordinator sh ould work w1lh th e
clubs, and make all resources. available to him , available to
the clutJs.
Last semester the Speakers Bureau fell apart
completely . My personal project will be the Speakers
Bureau . This is an opportunity to o ffer the students access

1

AJftlln ( 'oordiiWtllrl tft'VIuted fro m
llll'u l '

Dt•[im• l'lltJr role
The Student Ac llvllles Coordmalor IS resp o nsible fot
the recogrut1011 of all stud ent adtVIIIe!&gt; and organi7.Jtlllll'
ht: sponsors, re cornmenJs and en co urages development o f
new uc ttvllll'S and he ch a t~ the Stud ent Al'ltvtlll''
Com nutl ct: o l 1he: Assembly
whut f•Jifllllll lrul't flll.lttltrformunu 1 of t • /ll'lllt'l

( .llllft/IIIUfllr\ tlt'Jia/t'.f frll/11 I IIIJT ('till( t'fll/1111 llj lftt' lt/t'a/

Daniel Kriegmnn

In '' lwl fusluon lr.a•·e pall fi&lt;"'JIIrman tt'l of 'it ud&lt;'nt
1 1111r c·ora·r rllton of tile

Diane Zwolinski

In till' p.1~1. way' nf nht.11n1rt~ reult!nltl"" lo1 .t
p.trtlcular nrjlJOII.JIH&gt;/1 have hc..:n lnc'&lt;tU,.thly uudcar
..rcaltng a g1cJt deal o l Ulllll'Ll'S\MY rt•d 1.1pc hctw.:cn th•
Student As\OUJIIUn .111.! the Student A"~mhly MJIIY
p&lt;hiiiVt: 'il l' fl\ h.tvt: ht:t'll IJJ...cn I h" p.1~1 Yt'.u tu ,JJlt'VJ,tll'
th1 ~
problem and I would cntleavlll lu I.OIIIIum·
Jlllplt:mc:nllnl( tht: tde,,, wh1t:h arc \ttl l 111 lht:H t'llthryonl•
\l.lge ..... A' Studt:nl AliiVIII~' ( nurdm.ttur I would
pu\h tor tempurary H'nogn111on trnm t hl" StullL'III
A\\t:lllbly lm w,l\nnJI .Hid 'fll't:I.JI onlcrt:SI o rganii.Jittlll\
do v1dt: n rganii.Jito n' 111111 l'las-t:' d t:pt' rllltn g 0 11
thclf .llHI!ty 111 tPnt nbutt· tn the Un1vcr,IIY t&lt;~lll llllllllt~
d.t\'&gt; would tknote the lund1ng ul lht• ur~ml.tiiPII
cnJur't: rcpre...,t:nl.tlhln lu I he St u.Jt•nt 1\"emhly
ltn nugh .tt ,lllcll lll' tfcp.Htllll'nl~
111 a J.. c 11 ncu:s:..try thai lht· t Ptlfdtn.ttJO)(
•••lnmlltt•eo; ht: mcmhcrnl hy As\.-ruhly rt•pr ..,eui.IIIVC\
I.'II&lt;"Ur&lt;~ltl' mnrt· spc.:~al 1ntcrt..,l ~'""I" hi..•·
l t•~clhu .111d th~: l&gt;dy ( Jrc (enter to t&lt;~:ulllll' .1 lumtHut.JI
p.trl lll lh•· \Jni Vt'r~tly llllll lllUilll y
u utt111uc tht' Spl"al..cr\ Uu H·au
g~vt' temporary rctngntlliHl to tlul" Wllhnul
turhJing. until ,u .. h .t tun~.· that lht•y ,an ,how \11&gt;(11' &lt;~I
J'liiSIII~ C lllliVl'ISIIy llllllllhUII•lll

Wh en tan OeWaal, the Prestdent of the SA addressed
the I!JOUJl of candidates runrunr~ m thi'\ elecllon he said
wt~rd,; to th e effect thai although when he ran. he ran on J
p;1r1 y, hi' d1dn ' t find o ut until latt'f that they really d idn't
J...now l'Ot: h o ther and that tht'y were n ot together BuilL\ I
,IJted pr ev rous l y my p &lt;HI)' was furrnt'd with
ltlgetherncl&gt;S" as a hilS!'· If the prt·,ldent ~to he believed
t ht•n the entire structure t rum lis hl'wnnings d.:v1ates from
uly ..:oncc ption of Ihe 1d.:al

Al.\o I d1d not IIJ...t• t h.: way
l.ll"ng w1th nty p.•rl yl w.mt 111
h.lll

~f

~l1pc nd s

~ul

were r&lt;~l\ed anJ I
our own 'llpends 111

**

- • Student Affairs
Studc!nt Affa1rs Coordinutor
11 He \hall charr the ~tudcnt Alt..r11s Comnuttce o l th~
Assem bly
2) He shalllllvest1g,atc . report and recommend in area~
ot student concern 10 th&lt;l\C areas n ot Within the areas ol
rcsponsib1ht y of other ( nmdinator or C'ommttlees of the
Student A ~sembly Of part1cular lrn(X&gt;rlancc to th~:
S tudent Affa1rs Coordinator should be these matters of
new s t udcnts, financ1al a1d and housing.

***

Gerald Ouci
Thr Fresh Faced E·Levtn
Define yuur role
I am running o n the Fresh Faced E-Levin party for
the o ffice of Student Affairs Coordinator I Wlll shortly

Vivian Wiesner
r~antagt

Dejlnt your mit·
The ConstiiUttun ddtncs Student Affairs
toordmo~tor J ' th.: person mvnlved with new st udents,
linancial a1 d housmg, and .1nyth1ng that does n ot faU into
the realm of o ther coordun at o ~. In recent years , the office
has com.emed 1tself w1th th e Boo k Exchange, Summer
Planning Conference, and the publishing of the Directory
In what fashion ha ve past performances of S tudent
A ffa1rs Coordinators d ewa red fro m your conceptiOn of the
1deal'
These acco mplishments have been IJl the right
1\

Page 7

�.,

direc:tion, but limited in success. U 1 w~ to become
Student Affain Coordinator, I would keep tluM PJ'OIDDU
up, and try to improve them. The aoal for my ?ffice, Dd
for SA u a whoJe, is to act, not react! Jn tJUs, SA baa
failed to even react this year. SA should publicly talce
atancls on such issues u tenure, tuition, and undergraduate
instructors. Not only should SA have said somethina, but
\l should have at least tried to do something. Before we
can attempt to gain greater control of situations, to be able
to act on thinp before they happen, we must be able t o
effectively respond to things which have already happened .
As far as specific improvements, I can onJy think of
what's wrong now, and try t o start from there. I think that
SA has failed to introduce itself to new students at the
summer conferences. A more varied program of SA
sponsored activities mi&amp;bt do the trick.
The Book Exchange is really a great idea, and might
even work successfulJy o n a year-round basis. There are
always PeOple who want to buy and/or sell books. If I get
in office, l'd like to try it o u t on a temporary basis.
I've had a few ideas on new projects for next year .
One is to coordinate 11 "Career Conference" with the
Placement Office. Too many of us have no idea of wha t to
do when we get out of school. A career conference, which
provided counselors from Placement , and information on
jobs, graduate sch ools, fellowships, etc., held in a place
such as the Fillmore Room , might help a lot of people.
Another idea is the establishment of a Student Aide
Office, which would provide peer counseling in academic
and personal matters. This could be a joint project with
Academic Affairs. last year a survey was taken wruch
proved that the use of existing offices on campus is
comparatively small, and that people might be interested
in a service run only by students. I think it's 11 worthwhile
thing 10 try.
More than anything else, my function as a member
of the Executive Committee is important. If tbe people on
this Committee do not try to work together, SA can never
function effectively. The only WilY to get st ud~nts more
respect from the administration , and more say on thin~
that happen here, is through UNITY!

impro~e upo~ thil year 'I effortl In

How would you
the ana of1ttulutf l'flltll!

To impro"e t~gon the protection of students' rights
on this campus I would begin with what already exists.
The Student Judiciary, our only student-run court, never
even got off the ground this year. Draft counselina was set
up with the Buffalo center - I tbinlc it is time we, who this
so directly concerns, bad their own center, run, funded ,
and staffed by our ·own community. Since the Advocate's
Office closed dowm there has been an attempt made by
rtltaining a lawyer O•nce weekl y. I would like to see a new
fully staffed Advocate's O(fjce working with the Director
of Student Rights, including his past chief responsibility ,
t he Bail Fund.
For these facilities to be effective, a student must be
aware of his rights. I advocate a Student Grievance Center
dealing with studc:n t, faculty, administrative problems,
hoUSing and dormitory problems, minority students' and
women's rights, a111d consumers' rights. There must be
increased information concerning these problems and
increased communi,cation about problems existing on th e
uni~ersit y cam pus.

***
Bonnie~

CUR E

Student R.i,gbta
1) He shall chair the Student Rjghts Committee of the

As.wmbly.
2) He shall establish and carry out programs desjgned
to safeguard the rights of students.

***
Andrew Kossover
Alliance Part.''

/1 there a need for b•Jth on electt!d S tutit!lll R tgh 1.1
Coordinator and an appoiflted Director of Student Rtghts •
If not, which WOI41d yuu eliminate?
There is a need for buth an elected Student Rights
Coordinator and an appointed Director of Student Rights,
however the difference between the two must be ddinit~ .
The Coordinat or functions as an official elected by the
students; his responsibility lies in the setting up and
directing of specific commi,t tees and agencies to protet·t
the rights of the st udent in the university community iiS
well as surrounding areas. A Director of Student Rights
must have affective knowledge of the law and appropriate
means of solving problems. An appointed Director would
ideally be a l.lw student. Since the Advocate's Office ts no
longer in operaHon and only one part-lime lawyer has
presently been retained , tlte necessity of having someone
with professional knowledge working with the Coordinator
is imperative
Both the Coordinator and the Director of Student
Rights are necessary positions. The Coordinator must be
ret ained and elected because he is a student responsible to
his peers. He must take ideas and form them into working
plans, responsive to the needs of the student community.
A Director, with a legal background must also be retained,
to assist in the direct settlement of students' legal
problems. Only together can they form an affective means
of protecting students' rights, for t ogether they can both
channel the problem and solve it.

Page8

***

Most important , I believe it is lime for the student to
realiLe he does have rights, and he has the right to protect
them. AcademicallJr as well as sociaUy, there is little
intermingling of ideas, few times to be heard. Students are
the majority on this: campus and rarely have we shared m
the decision-makinu processes. It is our universjty, and
only by knowing IUld protecting our rights can thu;
university, as well as the Studen t Association, begin t o
serve u~ .

- • Student Rights

Deborah Auerbach
Vontagt

politicians from the d.iatricts to be aware of our vote power
ancl to Hsteo to , our wiahea. An up-elated emeqency
telephone number sheet will be mailed to every student
plua information on Bail Fund. The "Law Co-o p," briefly
explained before, will deal with everything from a landlord
hassle to getting busted and draft cases. I wa'nt to heighten
the Buffalo Draft Counsel's and UB Vets Club's on campus
attempts to aid students with draft problems because of
the exceptionally complete job they an doing (they got
you o ut too?!). Lastly I want the Student Rights Office t o
be the center of student pievences concerning academic
problems (i.e., financial aid, Advo~te's office case,
teac hers, strengthening the campus courts, etc .) Perhaps
thin~ will change!

Is there u ne'C'U' Jor both an l!ltcted Student Rtght.r
Coordmatnr and an appmntcd Diraior vf Student Riglatsl
If not, which wuuld y-011 e/imlnutl!?
Yes! ThJS is true stmply because one would expect ul
least bipartite management t o ex.ist when you're tallong
about the big JOb of representing and prot ecting 23,000
stu\Jents' righ ts! Tiaere are two specific reasons for
continuing both positions: I) 1t is a good policy to have
one offi cer, the elec:ted, as a member of t h e Executive
Committee and perhiaps Student Assembly givtng bim a
vote on proposals of ideas and legislation, while the
appointed officer has the job of reporting all information ,
2) un idea of a "Legal Clinic" WU5 mitiated wruch I suppnrt
and want to huild up•on with my own il1eas and make reaP
h would contam a small number of lawyers and student~
mterested m a Law Co-Op, servicing us w1th all forms o f
counseling, advke , research, and actual representatiOn
downtown in or out e&gt;f the courts. The Director of Student
RJghts has to be responsible for this prOJeCt once
underway. There are still the normal responsibilities of the
Student Rights Offict: (Bail Fund , \lass Case:;, lnformatton
Serv1c~. and
Sp ecial Projects, etc.) with which the
Coordinator could b'e mvolved Nevertheless , butlt po::o pl~
must work together and in turn produce great results
Indeed I will be looking rorward to working With ;j sln u.-re
and devoted individual next sem~tef

flow would you tfllfJ'tiVt' 11pun tilts year
flu• area ufstudent nghr.r ?

:r i'JiortJ tn

As a s tudent. ~ft&gt;U have rights! I w:ulled to work 111
ttus year's efforts so I applied for the Judic1ary (yuu
remember the Judiciary, don't you'!). After six w~ks o f
having interviews po•stponed and observing the Stud enr
Righ ts Office and SA frustration in general, I decided Ill gt&gt;
downtown and work with professionals as an allernativc
I've discovered the local branch of the American Ctvil
Liberties Union . Thro,ugh them and o ther lines I 've had the
chance to med many important persons diredly or
indirectly involved in the measures taken when a person\
rights have been VIOI:ated . Next year I hope to wo rk w1th
the A.C.L.U. in any area that could help student nghts.
The new Office o f Student Rights has to become .JW.lft: ot
the empbasis on "real'' law as opposed to philoso phtcal
written laws (don't wt: ail). Your right~ as students are
conlinualfy being pmstituted and shrewdly attacked .
There are 100,000 atge 18 to 25 registrants i11 this area
alone, where the majority of UB students come. I want the

Is there a need for both an elected Student Rights
Coordinator and an appointed Dtrector of Student Rights ''
If not, which would you eliminate '
There is a definite need for both an eJected Student
Rights Coordinator and an appointed Director of Students
Rights . An active Student Rights Coordinator has a time
consuming job in his dealings with the administration, th e
SA , and th e ISsues concerning the rights of students on the
C3mpus. The position, Director of Student Rights , was
nriginally created to administer the bail fund efficienlly, "
tuk which tho Coordinator dld ~Dot hav~su{,fi.c:ie,Dt time.~
do In the past year the area of student rights has been
extended to deal with problems of students in the Buffalo
,·ommunity as well as campus problems. If these prOJCCt~t.
are to be continued successfully the work load must be
dtstnbuted between at lease tw o people . It is my hope that
committees of students will also become ac ttve m working
for student rights.
How would you 1m prove upun tim year's ejfortr 1n
rile area of Jtudenr nghts?
nacre are four rmportant u;sues wh1ch, if elected , I
plan Lo work on extensively next year. These concern
increasing the power of the Student Judicia ry, adding a
student bill of rights l o the SA constitution, getting more
reasonable prices at the Bookstore, and trying to find
remed ies to student housing problems.
One of the most valuable services for a college
t:o mmunity to nave is a co urt where questions concerning
lhe laws specifically designed for it can be reviewed . My
fin.t goal for next year would be setting up a more viable
student court which would rule on both graduate and
undergraduate students. This would increase the power of
l'tudent made laws.
A hill of rights wnu1d clarify th~ position of studl·nts
undllr the SA government. The attachment of Uus bill to
the SA constitution would provade a legal basis fur
stud rn ts to bring gnevances to the Judiciary
Fm the past few years students huve mainta~ncd that
thl' Bookst ore should he a servtce to students, provtd1ng
them with a reductton 1n prico::s ou hooks as well as school
s upplies. Th1s is a goal that I think t:an he a~.:complished
next year.
The pruhlems ot hnth o n,•ampus and o fl -campus
ho11~1ng have l'Onfused both transfer and returning
~tudc nt s at UB . In the area of on&lt;ampus hous1 ng more
pwvis•o ns should be made for transfer students to obtain
dorm s pal'c if they so destre. The problems of off-camplJS
hou.~1ng, for instance, t he Buffalo ordinan ce which declares
that n o more than two unrelated persons my share a
dwelling. is another probhmt with which lhe area of
student nghts \lllluld t:oncern Itself.

I he following candidates failed to submit statements
and hdve !leen om111ed from The Spectmm 's elec tion
coverage
Bob BeiJ.
Earl Cole
Edwar~ Gamble
James Row
Brenda Smit~
Nasser Ziaian

�The Vivarium ..
-continued from page 5-

"pinky ,LL one of lhe few albino
porcupines in existence. Dr.
Schadle found this rare beast
himself. Also, the first porcupine
ever born in captivity was born
right here in the Vivarium.
Dr. Mohn
recalled some
humorous
stories
frlJm
his
undergraduate days. Dr. Schad.le
did much work with beavers and
attempted to find their body
temperature.
He
put
the
thermometer in the beaver's
mouth and the beaver ate it. Dr.
Mohn had to rush over to Foster,
which was the chemistry building
at the time, to get an antidote for
mercury poisoning, only to find
out that mercury, in its elemental
state, wasn't poisonous to beavers.
But from then on, they took
rectal temperatures.
There was a graduate student
who worked the X·ray machine,
an old, discarded clunker from
Roswell Park run by a static
generator that made a tremendous
amount of noice. The X-ray
machine was a clunker, not the

•

grad student. The student fed
ea rthwonns
barium-irradiated
food and X-rayed the1:n. Dr. Mohn
hated to speculate on how much
excess radiation that student
received.
The Vivarium had iits inevitable
practical joke . The biology
department kept two beavers in a
tank of water and the~&gt;e fun-loving
creatures would splash every
stranger who got too::&gt; close. Dr.
Mohn and !tis friends invited
dozens of unwary victims to
"come and see the beavers" who
never failed to receive an
unexpected bath.

Rumors and reality
Between 1941 and 196 1 the
Vivarium was used for a number
of odd purposes until the
Psychology Departmoent took it
over. Joseph Maslin~;. chairman,
and James Smith, professor of
psychology, said it was used for
various experiments in animal and
physiologjcal psychology. In 1969
the Biology Department again
took it over and left a few rooms

for the pSY,Chology department to
use . The psychology department
uses the Vivarium to test students
without having them travel out to
Ridge Lea.
So
there
you have
it;

everything you've always wanted
to know about the Vivarium. The
Specrrum would like to thank Dr.
Mohn, Dr. Masling, Dr. Smith, Dr.
Osborne and Shannie Finnegan,
University Archivist who gave us

so much helpful information. If
you know anything else about the
Vi•varium or have any stories that
might interest the readers, let us
know. Time marches on and the
Vivarium is always of interest.

NEW E)ERVING HOURS
RathskE~ller
Mon.-Fri.
Saturday
Sunday

10 :00 a.m. to 10 :00 p.m.
11:00 a.m. to 11 :00 p.m.
1:00 p.m . to 7 :30p.m .

Caf~teria
(First Floor)

Monday-Friday
7:30a.m. to 2:00p.m.
Saturday and Sunday

RATHSKELLEH
NOW SERVING

Closed

Boones Farm -Apple
-Strawberry
Cold Bear
Spanada
Sangria

$.40
.40
.40
.45

.45
(Plus tax)

Monday, 28 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�~--CAVAGBS-------­
DiscouNT RECORD STORES
•

HARVEST
NEIL YOUNG

:
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---------------------~I

33
LIST $5.95

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E V E R Y $5.95 List

IN S T 0 R E -

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$3 33

~--------~------------

GARCIA

YOUNG, GIFTED and BLACK
ARETHA FRANKLIN

FRAGILE
YES

SPECIAL N 0 T E:

,

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HORSE
AMERICA

MALO

PICTURES
EMERSON LAKE &amp; PALMER

ALL $5.95 List Long plays on

SPECIAL SALE AT $3.33 including
WARNER BROS., REPRISE, ATLANTIC , ALTO and ELECTRA.

University Plaza Store
&amp;
Page eight. The Spectrum . Monday, 28 February 1972
•

I

-

... t

t

• •

'\ •

Main &amp; Eggert Store

�NCAA championships

'Matterman' :dancing trip for
Eight wrestlers pkrced
actors a disjointed production
by Dave Geringer
Spt!ctrum Staff Writer

Cmcinnati, Ohio - Continwng
their best season ever, the
wrestling S uUs advanced e1ght of
the1r regulars to the NCAA
champtonships, last weekend at
the Umversity of Cincinnati. The
feat IS unheard of for an East ern
school
Four of the e1ght Bulls who
qualtf1ed did so by taking first
pial'~ in their respective w eight
dasses Senior co-captain Ted
Ltwson, wrestling at 142 pounds,
~lcfea ted
fou r o pponenets en
ruutc to h i.~ victory. After pi.nning
two of his first three o pponents.
tiH ex-New York Maritime star
topped Eastern M ichigan's Doug
W11lcr 1n overtime. 1~ . and thus
.opped the crown.
One hundred and fifty pound
tt'f•Ular Gary Kumm foUowed up
L.tw'&lt;•n'~ performac~ by grabbtng
thl· tt•r srot tn tus diVIsion
Kumm nppcd three opponents as
lu: hcLante the second Bull to take
,, ltr\t Kumm 's tnumph assur~d
thl' Bulls o f advancing more than
om· wrc~tler for the ftrst time tn :s
qu.tltly1ng toUUl.lment
Knuutila rips Huron
I m Knuutila, the 167 pound
, ,~ nrnmg Cornmuntty College
,tJr Jefcated all four o f Ius
nppnnrn rs 10 cappmg a season
dunn[! wluc.h he notched 14
v1, to111e~ for Buffalo . Knuutu a.
who wrestled conststently well
the
tounament ,
throughout
lull•twt•d up his overtime wtn tn
tht.· wtnl-ftnals by trounc1ng
t;;~ ,t.:rn Mr1.htgan's Dave Thomas ,
7 I lo.nuullla turned o ver th e
lh11un 'tar for a three poi.nt near
fall •n drn$stnR 11n f!IVin cible 6~
lt-.ul .tllr·t two periods.

The finaJ Bulls' first place
finisher was former Broome Tech
sta ndout Fred MnrceUo. MarceUo,
who wrestled as weU as be has aU
season bombed his last two
opponents after •winning h.is first
match .
Marcello
ripped
Marquette's Keith Koztczkoski by
8-2 to earn top h onors in hJS
we1ght div1ston. Marcello, one of
four Bulls who were seed ed first
tn
thctr
respe·ctive diVISIOns
notch ed six fin al period points to
turn his close m111lch in to a ro ut.
"This was trul y an outstanding
performance,'' observed Bulls'
Coach Ed MichaeL "Qua h fym~ as
many wrestlers as we d1d 1s qmte
an
accomplishrnent.
I
was
espe~.tally rmpres:;ed by the fact
that we won aU four of our
overt1me bouts . Comi.ng up wrth a
wm after II rnmutes of wrestling
shows trernondous d&lt;'lermmat1on
and I am especiall!y proud of thai
a~.~:ompbshment "
The
Bulls
al~o
qualified
wrestlers at four other weight
classes.
Heavy
weight Tnny
Pollcare, who taore throu~th tus
f1rst two opPQnents, was beat rn
nn a la~&gt;l ~cond tak edt.lWil by
Mtkc.: Fann1ng nf Notn: l&gt;.tntr 1n
the ~:hamp1on~&gt;h1p match
1 he 6-0 F.1nn1ng, whu v.c1gh'
1n at ::!bO pound~ st.trt&lt;'d Jl
dclenMve end for tho: ln~h
freshman
footba,ll tcau1 th iS
season
l he
No tre
UJrm·
heavywetght rs t.·onsrdcred J Jvp
\:Ontendcr to repla•cl! Bills' lllllllher
one dr11tt ptck Walt Patul,kl Jl
defen slv~ end next sea\1'0 1 he
Bulls' other l.L&gt;~aptatn
Ron
Brandt w.L\ victonou!. 1n h1s f1rfil
two bouts before he ww. upset by
Marquette's Dan Jont:S m the
semt-frnal round . [)oug Rutter and
R oy Guanno will also repre!&gt;ent
Bu ffalo at Marylan d

UNIFIED CAMPUS RESEARCH
Are you tired of the same bullshtt; student
government that wastes your monev7 Do 50methin!J
about itl A research committee has been formed by
Sub-Board 1, Inc. and the Undergraduate Student!
Association to look into other campuses to evaluaw
their activities and services. Hopefully, the committet:
will come back with recommendations for allocation~;
of Student Activity Fees later this semester.
If you desire change, get involved .
Committee meeting Wednesday, March 1, '72
6 :00p.m. 205 Norton
For information contact .
Dave Keiser Assistant Treasurer-S.A . 205 Norton
Steve Blumen~rantz, Executive Director Sub-Board I, 216

by Jay Boyar
Spectrum Thet~tn Crwc

production, t b e plot, su ch as it is, disjunctiOn is not bad, though,
merits dissection . The story o pens because 11 is largely due to this
with an uninsptred , inoffensive disunity that the viewer's interest
There are dreams, and there are display of slow, drea my gyrati.ng is retained and suspense is
dreams Maller man , "a dancing which is suggesttve o f tribal generated . Certainly, it is not the
trip for •.:tors" wJuch was dancing. Now , mi.nd you, I have plot, for no one knows exactly
recently presented tty the State nothing against tnbal dancing, but what everything IS about
. but
University
of
Buffalo 's I have seen 11 done by real tribes stay tuned Anyway. they pa.mt
Depart ment of Theater and the and let me tell you that the each o ther and dnnk t he paint a
Center for Theater Rest~arch, is imitation leaves somettung t o be little and then they tum toward
touted as bein g a drea m molded desired; like the s pmt and life .
the musicians. No 1 No! Leave the
into the mixed genre of theater
Left in verbal silence until we poor musicians alone! Don't paint
and dance. But . as I said, 1h ere are are well i.nto the play, the first them too! Too late! At least they
dreams and dreams.
sounds are, predtctably (o h, so do n 't start in with th e audience.
At any rate, tlus o ne was
predictably . . . I wish there'd and one may very well guess, h11d
carted
out
Tuesday
and
been someone there to offer me a his h and 10 ever y stage ot
Wednesday night, feb . IS .tnd 16
wager) animalistic notses. Oh boy, production . t hat ca n only be
at the H•niman Stud1o l'heater
just what I wanted · an everung at described a5 • "belled frisbee .'
The man of the hour (excuse the
the zoo. Didn't the Marx Brothers They bepn to act mort' l.Jke happy
cliche, but the play IS abOIJI an
make that m ovie already? At last . people as opposed to et hensed
how long) •s Morton L~~:hter who
real words come or course they 1mpress1onrsrs Is tlus the ~o ntra5t
ass1sted by Gary Ftlstnger. not
are i.ncongruous and chanungly we've been holdtng our breaths
only wrote the
p1ecc.-, but
uttered; and of course they refer for?
performed 1n 11, dtrec ted 11 &lt;!nd. to nature for the record, they are
AI about th1~ 11me there i.q J
o ne rnay ver well guesl', had his
" Rain falling "
dramatic mood ~o.hange as the
hand in every stage of pruductt on
Th e &amp;c i ON pr:~n ~e and arnbly ac t ors rearran~e themselves on th e
Lichter su~o.t:eeds 1n presenting around m a doped -up manner 111 perfectly ugly set, destgned (or.
a play whi.:h tmtially st nps th e
one of the most unahttshedly Jtty rather, thrown l\lgether) by Torn
audience of any trad1ttonal frames
d tSpl.tys that I h01vt: ~t:en tn a lung Slattery. and tht:re beg~ns a folk
of reference The acuon, dudoguc , time. Evl'rythln~ to~J..es on a tale about .t gro up of prubsts.
and SituatiOns c.-voiVl' from e1ther
samenes~.
J
drc:~nn c,~. pten:ed
What ~ .1 prubst " Well, tt sa kind
the structure of thl" pllly 1tscll . err
from tuue tu tun!! hy .t n of sort ul a
The tale, narrated
l11.: hter \ 1mag~nat~o•n or fwrn
unmottvated s..:roeam lrvm tlllC .. 1 by L1d1ter •~ hy f.tr the lunruest
'orne: obs&lt;:llfl' po1n1 tnre1gn to
the cast ol seven .tllor~ .tnd t wu sequt-111 ,. o t the .:ven1ng
mustctans Where ll&gt; 1he nm t ro~~t"
buth .tudten~:e and playwn~ht
In 1 1 111111.k1ng tones he uses
I hm~ JUSt kmd of h.Jppen (what
Where 15 the p111nt'1 "SI.ty tuned," 111 )pew ou t 1he nnnsl'n~e story
a way to begtn a sent ence) and
we.: ~eem ht be told . " Jll wtll be we lind real humut .tS wt:ll as tn
resolved su\ln" &lt;;.,we 'lay tuned . th e stury tt selt I was laughmg,
there IS nothrng to rely upon to
SOrt II .til OUI
Next th e actnn. beg~n painting but th-: 1nt uf the audience
ead1 other Please forg~ve 111e 1f appeared transf1Ked 01dn't they
Neo-primitivism
litis tCVtCII{ \eentS diSJOinted, but
realise thJl tim 1s funny stuff!
In an attcu1pt tu unravel tht! that\ how the pl11y L~. The But then what do they know?
Nl)w. now! ll ·, not polite for a
reviewer to tnsult an audience's
intelli&amp;enc.e
That u left to
••• IMPORTANT NOTICE •••
playwna,bU.
STUDENT MEDICAL INSURANCE
Red Ushts and m or• dancing
• • • F I N A l enrollment date MARCH 1st • • •
wtlh
so m e
non-o1ym prd
bat ton -I wirltng round out the
Enroll now for 2nd semestt'r!
preparJiory s.: enes L•chtt:r does
for enro llment details pho ne
the tw1rltng, and l&gt;aryl Glowa ,
NIAGARA NATIONAL INSU RANCE
Manlyn Consldtnc , Kern Lubell,
J oanne
Slawtn~kl
and
Jan
853-0931
853-0931
or
Heu11nger round our rhe cast w1th
T1111 L ubfll .wJ Dav1t.l Lo uck a
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
h~wdl11111 the mu~ll
But , get ~et ,
ruiJ..~
Jl l!rt \lllllrs wh.tl W!!'Ve
hecn wat11n11 '' •I
The .tt lllr\ pro~n.:e Jnd Jml:tle
ar~• und tn .1 du p... d up Jtl.tnn~t m
&lt;1111' nl 1he.: party , 1hen of
Bt oad wJ y p11.1ducllon~ I m1ght
have Ihe M"quenLe mil&lt;cd 11p , here ,
but hone~tly the only wa~ to tell
what ~0111~ first Jt th1s pounl IS to
ex:rmm~
the .tllor~· It:•
The
drrt1cr they .u.: the fu11 l't the
play h~ ptu~tt::&gt;)t:d Rc~:~ rdlcss
tht: JIIU~Hul tu these IJm11lar
in~t1tllt1om
g~ves us "
part1al
frame ol rder.:n••
Lest Wl' be. c•me ~•dc:-traL-ked
for too Inn~. kt U\ 1101 sk1m over
thest: IJ~t ~ll'lle' too QUickly
Tht:y provut.: J reason f&lt;lt tbe
sill1ness of tit.· o pemng. By
companns the ritual opemng t o
the act1ons 1n whtch pt!ople
engage tn "life, · a:. w~ done in
the last scenes, the playwright
points out the ba.stc caprice in
people's
behavtor
and
the
underlytng pnmtttveness m our
irtStttuttons
The
str .1nge - sounding
compluncnts at the cocktall party
like " You're too kind ,'' and "How
lovely you look," hearken us back
to the an1mal sounds earlier in the
action. The modem danctng i5
reminiscent of the precedmg tribaJ
movements Parnted faces on the
actors m the "Broadway-esq u.e
pla y wtthm a play" are similar i.n
concept to the previous people
patnlln~ pageant 11 is unfortunate
that thiS theme was amply
explu1ed m Tartan '1 New York
Adttllture (ctn:a 194S), but a new
band on an old hat and aU that

Monday , 28 February 1972 The Spectrum . Page nine

�•

Basketball postponement

Albany meets Bulls tonight
That old winter problem in upstate New York,
snow, struck aa,a.in and Saturday night's
Buffalo-Albany
State
basketbaJI game
was
postponed . Toni&amp;ht at 8 :30 p .m. the Bulls and Oanes
will make up the contest, while the Baby Bulls and
the alumni meet in the 6:30 p.m. preliminary at
Clark Gym.
Monday evening's scheduled intramural playoff
games have been switched to Wednesday niJht, while
the championship finale has been moved to
Thursday night at 8:30p.m.
The Buffalo-Albany State postponement was
tha basketbaJI Bulls' fi.TSt of the season, although
Buffalo's hockey and wrestling Bulls have had several
cancellations each this year. With Saturday's
postponement, the Bulls (9-12) are forced to play
two nights in a row in their quest for a 12·12 record.
After tonight's pme with Albany , the Bulls are
home ag,a.in to morrow !Uaht with Merrimack College.
Merrimack, a familiar Division II hockey opponent
meets the baslcetball Bulls in a first ever contest after
the freshman preliminary between the Baby Bulls
and the Gannon freshman.

Fine program
The Merrimack Warriors (15·7) have developed a
fine baslcetball proaram under the tutelage of second
year Coact\ Prank Monahan . A member of th.e
Northeast League the Warriors' 5-2 conference
record places them third behind Bridgeport and
Sacred Heart. There is little do ubt about what the
Warriors lilce to do offensively .
Merrimack has attempted to beef up their cage
schedule this year, and teams such as Army,
Villanova, Assumption and C.W. Post have appeared
on the schedule. In fact , earlier this year, Merrimack
shoclted many of the experts by upsetting Army,
62-61 at West Point. The same Cadets edged the
Bulls 70-64 last Feb. 2.
Besides tonight's vanity contest with Albany
State, a 6 :30 p.m . preliminary pits the Baby Bulls
apinst the Buffalo Alumni. The 4-12 freshman are
led by to p varsity backcourt prospect Bob
Dickinson. Dickinson, fro m John F . Kenne~y.
Plainview (L.l.) leads Coach Jim Hom e's qumtet
with a '20.5 aveTMJe.
For the alumni, Rick Wells {former lhrec: sport
star), Phil Knapp, Ed Eberle and Jack Scherrer
return. Knapp was a starting forward for Coach Ed
Muto last year and received the John N. Bennett

basketball awllrd.
Toni&amp;}lt in facing the 15·5 Great Oanes from
Albany, the Bulls face a club coming off the shock
of NCAA tournament di.nqualification. Last Friday

the Danes were declared i neligib le for tourney play
because of alleged violatio ns of the NCAA's 1 6
etigibilit y nile.
Additionally, the Brockport State Golden Eagles
were disqualified (rom the NCAA's ejvi ng the
automatic State Univentity Athletic Conference
(SUNY AC) bid. to Buffalo State. As R on Gilliam t.ad
earlier told The Specrrum, the Golden Eagles of
Brockport will seek an NA IA tournament brd .

Intramural basketball tourr1ey
nears close with semi-fina~s
The season started long ago Tonight's games will start at 8
with 85 teams, and now it's time p.m . and 9 .30 p .m . Following
for the big games as Buffalo' s tonight 's action, the two finalists
intramural basketball tournament will m eet Wednesday evening at 8
nears its end . Tonight on the p.m . in Clark Gym.
Clark Gym main court, the
semi-finals will be held featuring Hansen cops handball
the last
four
teams alive.
The basketball competition
Twenty-eight teams began the wasn't the only recent event to
playoffs with single elimination · take place at Clark Gym. Last
knocking off 24 of these squads week, the handball tournament
prior to tonight's action
was won by Jim Hansen with Jim
'The basketball tournament was Ryan finishing second . Ironically ,
one
of
the
intramurals the two copped campus honors
department's gala affairs with an earlier in the year as doubles
increased enrollment of 40% over partners in a similar handball
last year's turnout. This year's competition . Besides the handball
tournament produced only four action. a squash tourney was won
undefeated teams, while three by physical ed\Jcation maJOr,
teams came in w ith one loss, in Lance Harrison
improved
competition.
The
Under the direction of the
"Sycamore" tearn of Allenhurst, women's recreation department , a
which copped last year's title, is co-ed badminton tourney will be
considered the team to beat . held March 7 Tilis is in addition

I

I

Need Money?

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KIENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

t

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ALFA ROMEO
•FERRARI
•MASERATI
&amp;rJes •Service •Parts
USED CARS

---BOBCOR- Motor Cars, Ltd.
197'4 Ep1 (Near Bailey)
834-7350

Pa9e ten. The Spectrum . Monday, 28 February 1972

by Barry Ruban
Sportt Editor
With their long regular hockey
season behind them, the Buffalo
hockey Bulls await news from
New York City today where the
ECAC will announce the eight
teams that will compete in the
Division
Jl
championships.
Advance speculation has it that
Buffalo will acllieve fifth seeding,
following Bowdoin's pullout from
the eight-team tourney. Bowdoin,
located in Brunswick, Maine, and
l\ member of the newly formed
New England Small College
Conference (NESCAC) will not
compete due to conference
disapproval of extra travel and
play entailed in the expanded
tourney. Along with defending
Division II Champion Bowdoin,
NESCAC members, Amherst ,
Colby, Hamilton, Middlebury and
Williams are also out of playoff
contention.
Buffalo's I 0-2 Division II
record is certain to put the Bulls
in the eight-team bracket, but a
top four seeding appears dim . As
Bull mentor Ed Wright admitted·
''Our ECAC record is good , but
our overall record is not as good ."
According to ECAC standings,
Buffalo's overall record sta nds at
10- 6. Not rncludttd in the
stand~ were the Bulls' two
gam~ wtth -tE-em State (Kent is
considered a -41lb) and Canton
Tech (a JUnior co.llege).
With Bowdoin seemingly gone,
Vermont (I I - 2 ). last year's
runnerup,
and
Massachusetts
( 13- 3) are battling for number
one seed. The high seeds are
coveted bc:\;ause the team with the
higher seed receives home ice.
Thus, a number one seed is
assured of home ice for the entire

scramble among the Bulls ( I 0 - 2),
Merrimack ( 11 - 4) and Boston
State (13- 7). Factors looming
against the Bulls is that Buffalo
played but one game apinst any
of the top five teams in the
division. Moreover, that contest
was a 4 - 1 loss to Merrimack in
the finals of their Christmas
Tournament.
Teams in the running for the
remaining playoff berths figure tu
be New England (6- 3). American
International (8 - 8), St. Anselm's
(6- 6) and Salem State (7-9- 1).
Of interest is the fact that the
Bulls defeated three of the above
clubs although not playing St.
Anseim•s this year. Apparently, if
Buffalo should earn fifth seeding,
it will play Saturday (March 4) on
the home ice of the fourth seeded
team, either Merrimack or Boston
State. The playoff format has seeJ
eight at one, seven at two, six at
three alona with five at four
Following Saturday's
playoff
contest , additional games are
slated for Wednesday, March 8
and Saturday. March I I .
Buffalo fans will remember
U1at last year in the four-team
DIVlsion II tourney, the Bulls were
not selected because they did nol
compete in the necessary ten
Divisio n If games. However, thi.~
year the Bulls presented-a stronger
Division 11-type program, and had
four outside games with Ollio
State.
In
their
potential
opponents Merrimack and Boston
State, Buffalo will face teams 11
has beaten in the past. Buffalo
leads the Boston State series 2 - 1,
while Merrimack holds a similar
adva.n tage over the Bulls. Despite
their fine record, it appears that
the Bulls may have to prove
themselves aU over again, this timll
on the road.

Celebrate Purim tonight
Reading of Megil/ah Graggas
Hamantashen Supper

HILLEL HOUSE - 6:15p.m.
(40 Capen Blvd. - across from Baird Halt)
~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,, ,

,,

Attention to Undergraduate
students who are interested
in becORling teachera:
You should apply for the Teacher Education Program
during your sophomore year. To learn more about the
total program and the teaching cen ters involved. circle
March 2 on your calendar for very important
orienration meetings in Norton .Room 231 . A
presentation of Ihe offerings and [eat11res of the three
phases of the Teacher Education Program will be
made d11ring the following limes ·

t

~.
Make $1.00 an hourworkingat the S.A. election
tables on March I, 2 and 3 . Hours will be given in the
Student Association Office, 205 Norton . There will
be a mandatory meeting of all workers at 8:00p.m.
Tuesday night in the 1st floor Center
Lounge·Norton.

to the •ongoing co-ed badminton
which i:s held in the ntaln Clark
Gym Mery Tuesday evening.
Recreatilona1 badminton will be
contlnu•:d for the remainder of
the semester on Tuesday nights at
7 :30 p .m.
Continuing with it~ success of
last semester, when tl atlracted
more ~han 100 participants, a
co-ed volleyball mixer is planned
for Thursday at 8 p.m. Following
the votl.eyball game, refreshments
will be served to all participants.
Additioma11y, a co-ed volleyball
league is slated to beg.in on
Thursday. March 9 at 8 p.m.
Teams will be matched in a round
robin tournament leading to
playoffs for the top teams.

ECAC to announce
·playoff teaQ1S.•ta;!:;!~wo ~.

9:00 - ·II :00 a.m.

4:00 -

3:00p .m .
6:00p.m.

7: 00 -

9 : 00p .m .

1:00 -

Yuu 'II have opportunity to witness acwal scenes [rom
the Teacher Education Center Programs as well as ask
pertinent questions [rom staff represen tatives.
NORTON UNION, ROOM 23 1-THURSDAY, MARCH 2

�WANTED
ART MAJORS, tculptors, painters studio with overhud crane plus
Mparate llotlng soace 110/mo. reduced r.nt for part-time Janitor.
886·3616 . a.m.
WOMAN ART m.lor - room lor rent
- $35/mo. Call 886-3616 a.m.
RESFARCH (term) papers bought,
sold, e&gt;Cctlanged. Contact Marc at
831 · 3370 at any time.
STUDENTS with time and desire to
work for UUAB. Applications lor
co mmlttM c tllllrmanshlp In Room 261
Norton.
FACULTYII Grad•Uudent does library
reseuch, et c. lor your next
publication . Fluent SpaniSh, French
0 K . Albert 834-0695.
WANTED: PSYCHOLOGY TODAY
An Introduction by CRM Publishers .
Call 881 · 3763 arter 5 .
START s2 par hOUr wla ry plus bonus.
work 1 ·8 p.m . weal&lt;days, 10·2 p .m.
Saturdays. Cell 83~ ·3803 or TF9.0402 .
FULL OR part time Jobs available with
Bestlln• Inc. C llll Art 886· 2091 or
Mike 835 ·5 215. MMtlnlll at E•ecutlve
Ramada Inn.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
BAILEY - mile from iChOOI. Lllrge
two·bedroom, $90, with !lllriOJO. Will
sell appliances chUP. Call 836· 3338
FANTAS TIC apartment, 7·mtnute
w 1tk f rom campus. Available June I
Reasonable rent. Oara90, pOrc h, etc .
3 _7_7o
_ .- - - - - - - - Call 834 ·_
O NE·BEDROOM' apartment, new
Hert el on
n"taw a re . Available

ROOMMATE or couple wanteCI,
160/mof\th, plu• utilities. Come to 192
NMWIIIC (Off Hertat) anytime.

CLAIIIFI.I I
Immediately. a110 Including utilities.
Call 876-2922.
ROOM 261 N orton - UUAB Ofnc:e ,...,t lrM - nlpends avellable - for ..,Y
student wlttl time and desire t o w ork.
ROOM FOR rent, In KO$hlr nome.
NNr umpUs. ldul lor student. Phone
TF3·2637.
MARCH 1 -Central F••rk Piau area, 2
1partments - upper a. lower N ch, 2
bedrooms, llvln9 roorn, dlnln9 room,
sun porch, kltctlen, bathroom, • 150.
No utilities, 6g2·0920, 836 · 3136 after
3 p.m .
FURNISHED thr..•be&lt;lroom apt ,,
parl o r . living room, lcltchan, nova,
rafrlg. Ten mtnutes from campus,
S65 /parson
tnree people t o
apartment. Two •o·ts. available Includes utilities. 832.()955 .
ROOM FOR rent
privileges, S 18 a
838-2241.

with
wee!-

kitchen
Phone

FOR SAlLE
SKIERS! Tired of renttl ng Skis? Selllnv
HNdS 200 em, CubcCI• blndlnvs Great
tor novlcetlntermedtat•u. 839-1036 .

PANASONIC 1tareo tapa recorder,
RS · 761S. Excellent condition - p1u1
a ccessories, tapes,
e &gt;Ccellent
h . . dphon• ntllllble. Call Howle
832 ·5381 .
1966 vw n - b rakes, tires, "'ocks,
engine perfect . Call Barb or Hap
652-6110.
SALESMEN wanted - buy VX6, wve
your pats and IIlilS 6 anc:t 12-volt ur
blltterles . Make good pocket money.
Tom 894·2150. 8:30 to 12 mornings.

831·3546

SHARE APARTMENT, Mllreh t . Own
roorn. Celt W•lt Aooers. 897·2900, ••t.
58, days , 826 · 9261, nJOhU.

MALE 35, college professor, two
children , SMI&lt;s female companlonflllp.
Marriage pautt:&gt;la. P.O . BoK 1031,
Atlant•. Ga. 30302.

MALE
ROOMMATE to lhare
furnt•heCI apartment . Own t&gt;e&lt;Sroom,
148 month Including utllltiM. Call
877-7254 .

TUNE-UP $15 to 1 22, perU lnctu~ .
Will tlllce on any Job at amulng
dltcounU. QMC Speed H•uleu, 718
8roldwlly. Dally l -6.

NEEO RIOE to Potldam, w•k•nd of
March 10 . Call Ren. ., 833· 7162 .

LOST lo FOUND
LOST: Silver 10 bracelet envr.ved
"Eddie." Call Cottle 831 ·2383 or Ed
831·2384 . Reward. Sentimental value.

1964 COMET en9lne In perfect
condition- b•t offer. 694 ·7 279 .

FO UNO In Occupational Ther•py
office: "KN OW YOUR OWN MIND. "
C all 137-0285 or 831-1406 .

VW '63 SUNROOF, $ 265 or bast
offer, leaving cou ntry , must ~ell old
flllthfu l. 831 · 357!) .

FOUND
pa i r of preiCrlptlon
sungt aues 2/ 18. Claim at Spectrum
office .

MEMBERSHIP In IPUI flying Club .
Club flies out of Buffalo I nternatlonat.
Call Jim •t 836- 1482 .

REWARD lor pearl ring lost zn ladles
r oom, 1224 Ridge L u , Feb. 21 . Call
131- 1501.

REFRIGERATORS , stovu and
washers. Recond itioned , delivered •nd
guar•nteed. 0&amp;0 Appllllnc es , 811
Sycamore TX4· 31 8 3

FOUN O
ll pair of sk i 91oves between
Tower and Norton, M onday night.
lc:tentlfy ana ptck UP at Spectrum
o ffice.

PERSONAL

BACKPACKING TENT, blue nylon
"Ge rty Ye•r·Round" !Modal , with rllln
fty, 41 01es, sl akes, 5 lbs., $8 !) .
834 · 5384

BREAD . r oo m
•nd
b oa rd tor
responsible, lntalllvent chick to ur e
for tour kids . Airport Piau .,.,,
Flexible hours 632-64 78 : 884-8827.

1968 VB BUG 50,000 miles. Excellent
condition , S 1200 or I) est o ffer . Tom
881 · 3639 .

T O SWAMPY 1 365 down and •II II not
today Happy first yur 8enllev .

PAIR KLH Model Six SOillkers . $1 70
E~t c ellent
connllton
Info Tony

SHAPELY mod els for f19ure \ludv
Must be "trim " F ive d ollars hour C all
Oan ana INva name and numoer

ROOMMATES WANTED

---

FIOOMMATE wanted t o share apt. In
Allentow n, 140, utiiiiiM Included
O wn room Come to 20 Cottave St .,
up sta i r~ eller llx.
MALE ROOMMAT E. n eeded f or large
apartment on Minnesota , $10 • month
Pt..s. utt ( anytlmat 837 ·2658

----

RIDE BOARD

ROOM FOR 2 people to Mleml, one
•way by ur and autotrllln . $t15 uch
total . Depart March 5 . 688 · 7375
+evenings.

MISCELLANEOUS
UN8ELIEVABLE1tl Jet to Europe,
U69 round triP N .V .c. departure.
•Con tac t Steve Gold 835-7519 alter 7
p .m .
Interested In w o rking In
•television
production
and
1orogr•mm1no. All Interested com e to
+Room 261 Nort on and Inquire 1bout
11ld.a council.

~STUDENTS

rYPINQ - e~tperlenced - term papers,
833 ·15 97.

lltC .

l:&gt;tZZA 00.00 : This w . .lc's s.,.clel l arva plzu, 2 FREE bottles o f soda,
tUT\111 pizza one free . 138-1557.
t:&gt; pen Sundays. Free oellvary to a o rms..
STUDENTS
y oung, marrleo
lotorrled about your f inancial futura1
~:: n d
y our speculation . C•ll HerO
!;34-6870.
ll&lt;parlencld
18M
Y VPINO
!&gt;electric, S.40 pe&lt; o•ve 838-1808 .
WHEN vou hear so mething other
than opportunity knocktnv. stop at
Independent Foralvn C ar Service
1!139· 18!10
PAPERS , dluarutlons
l ' ERM
~·rofesstonal
typln, IBM Selectric,
1 .40/ pave 8 7 3 ·1938
SU MMER JOB farm In Mohaww
Vallev . M ust nave GarpenlrV Skills . BOO ,
"'lllls, Slllaoy 838-1612 4ft•• !; :00.
CHECK the !)0'- OFF TABLE at
Elu lfelo f ext book Stor e• , 3610 M•l n
S•t

1 UTOR w llh thorough knowtldga o f
\p eed w r lttng, &lt;.I ll Mn
OoOkln
to32·2362
I 9 72
STUDEN T lob o pportunity
t&gt;ooklat for C1pe Cod a nd the Ulan4U,
c.ompllta ttu of bu~lnes.a. r~ulrlnt
toummer employ- S•nd •2 .00 to o
t&gt;tuoent Job Ooponuntty a..-t~.
R . R .l, 80&gt;&lt;
11.C, Ort.. n•. M•M ..
02653

Edlt.ct by Don•ld L Rice
Edztor , Schlam Meglltlno
ContrtbUIOrt

TV PIN O
buslneu or person••
l . .m
l&gt;aPers ,
theses ,
m•u m11t1nqs
l~ eas oniDII , ,.. C.. ll 937-{;050.

ANGELA DAVIS
Peoplo s World

BERNARDINE DOHRN

I~LV
BUFFAL O student 11191\IS 10
sunny Acapulco viA Unlve,.tl Atrllnes
C&gt;C-8 Jet L eave N Y C , Ma rcn 31
Flelurn April 7 l rom I I 79 Contact
ll\l.t n M~rmulllaln e ven lnVS. 6 9 P m
837·0393

The Spoken Ntlllulfl

DAVE DELLINGER
L•Oenwon

• AI a Col

lection of writing• which

.A,NTfQUES •no mooeon lurntlure .
c eramlu, chln.t, el L SH Sod at
v·eneod ay &amp; Tomorrow Sht•P 1439
t11ertat A• ~

ag •tat e l ot social change, lh1r; book

glva

I 10 the mind

you an lnaioht n

APARTMENTS WANTED

' 2!&gt; IS VOURS tl you

ol tndlvtduals who are wh11e racists.

011

black nationalists. a r c h con•ervalives.

"~~ol1'e~' s

o

\ltle'·''lo

~ecure

lor u~ • 4

5 bedr oorn ttou1e ne•• '"'mpus f nt

se plelflt:l llo
83) -)Q91

C•ll

831 37lJ1

&lt;Jr

C AST Lf PREFERRED but furn11nen
f(,ur oedr oon1 h OU\e or aoar1ment wUI

d•::&gt;. Wo ll&gt;~ n walk ing distance o t UB C~ll
Slner l or Etlen 83 I )7!)9

• All

e11pect to change your oprnions

~I~ Nt OR!&gt;
']2

ann

h o•l 1e1s rn

nno•

~~~&lt;

;ty

()I

dltOihPr

and some Ilia

Y succeec~l
• P 1c" 1'P a copy ol lh1s Pxtrcmely pro~tocau"e COli

,...,

Ions

at yo~~r

conllcler

ectton or d

local book&lt;;lore

•verse Opm.

and

al

the idea

thp ""'''tnqs

s

conramed

O
I~·

II '

PARK CHAMBERLAIN

llJl 1167

3

'"

4,

Utnpui

between

1 INEED a 'oom n e11 t..arrtous Al'ot "'Y

room " availabl e stdltlng Marrh 19 nr
sooner (on Hertel ) M ontrl or Mav tree
8:S2 · 9 760
ART STUDENTS need tw o-bedroom
"'artment stao tlng May Reasonable ren
C to'e t o campus . P1use call 834 -340 1
or 837 ·3984 .

8 :11 ·30~ 2.

---

Hurmtn Events

C() UP\..E NEEDS room or ap.tttment
tor rem1lnder o r t erm C all 886 · 153!)

DEAN CLARENCE MANION
N ,.w~1,.,,.,

WILLIAM W. BAYES
FrP,..miJf1

and many more

~

-.....:

""

$3 95

American Library Association
50 [ .ls t H u•un S 1 , .. "

M.,y,

l or
f1fJaf

2 3 BEDROOM •P.tllm ent wl\hln
cum pus walk in g dista nce
For
(l(;cu p 1 ncy early M• y. Ca ll831 30!&gt;1 01

Ne"" World Revtcw

Th~·

Renee or
~
8 p m

.tpl

tOOifH,

------

GUS HALL

M. ,..Hfn Forum

SEEK
0Wt1

" '0 IS YOURS If you secure • n
eg•artment for me with 3 Or more
~drooms lor Sa otembeo
Pretar•bly
o" w tn •oeat. but will con&gt;lder
an•ylhln9 very close tu Gampus. C All
8 "11·2360 (keep t rying) .

In

Gooo OR BA
DANIEL BELL

7 J.

t

Ch•t. .,qn

llltttOt'\ 60611

STUOENT DISCOUNT
on all
redecorating needs·
art supplies, picture framing·
O.M. RECH PAINT CO. '
3209 Bailey Ave.

Monday, 28 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven
-I :

~

..
1

-

�AnnoU~~C~e~Dents

'I1Ie 8luiBin Cub will have a meeting to cleot
officers tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 234 Norton.
Collep A 216, Blues and Society, will meet at 6
p.m. instead of the usual 7 p.m. today at the usual
place.

Tbe Graduate Student ~tion will hold a
meeting today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 231 Norton.
Mr. Thomas Schillo of housing and Dr. George
Goldfarb of the Dental Clinic will be speakers.
Common Cause will be holding a meeting today
at 8 p.m. in Room 234 Norton. Rev. Hugh
C¥michael, Western New York Common Cause
coordinator. will speak. All are welcome.
Tutors are urgently needed at the Senior Citizen
Center. Calvary CME Church at Dodge and Best 10
the basement. High school freslunen through seniors,
college students, mothers and fathers in the
community who have time to spare. are needed
Please contact lillian Lee at 8844146 or Gloria
Moses at 831 -37 17 .
Summer Language Abroad Prognm Earn 6 l I
college credits at any language level in. F ranee,
Germany, Italy, Mexico, Portugal or Spam
Approx.imlltely $750 including transportation from
New York City to program si te, room and bonrd aud
tuition . Personal expenses and weekend meals arc
additional . For more information and applications
write to: Office of International Programs. SS 147.
SUNY at Albany. 1400 Washington Ave .• Albany .
New York 12222

The Buffalo Womm•s Pri~on CommiUee :wd rhc
Women'!! Studies College present Kitsy Burktmrt
speaking 011 "Women in Prison" today at 7 .30 p m.
in Room 337 Norton .
The International Club with the IELI is
sponsoring a fieldtrip to Washington. D.C. on April
3 - 7 Transportation, hotel and tips 1S $30.
Interested students may sign up sn Lhe lEU office.
Room 202 Townsend Hall.
The

Cha;a Club

wiJJ have a tournament

tomorrow Startinjg at 4 p.m. in Room 248 Norton. It
will be a five-routnd tournament, to be played one
round per week. Open to aD. On~: dollar entry fee
and trophies willlbe awarded.
The Hillel Purim c::eJebntion will begin at 6: 15
p.m. tofli8ht in the Hillel House with the reading of
the Megillah. A Purim Service will be held tomorrow
morning at 7 a.m. followed by breakfast.
FNSM 222 : "Controversies in Science - '
Conflict and Resolution" will meet on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 10 11m. in Acheson 362. The topic for
this week will be : "Climatic Change and the Causes
of Pleistocene !:;taciation." Dr. Calldn of l11e
Geology Department will be the lecturer. Visitors are
welcome.

Environmentlll Action Corps needs volunteers to
monitor the glass recycling project in the dorms. Call
Bruce Hymanson at 831-2396.
Vidio Connedion will hold a meeting tomorrow
at 8 p.m. in Room 60 Norton . lfyou have not come
to the last few m•:etings, please come now no matter
what group you'w ln. We are training all people now.
The Christian Science Organization of the State
University of Butrfalo will meet tomorrow :tt 2:30
p.rn. in Room 266· Nort on.
The Alcoholism Unit of Meyer Memorial
Hospital has expsre~~cd an unmedsa tc artd gcnuutc
need for CAC voluntet:rs Cnrli;Jc,:t Marilyn Dtanckcl
at 83 J-285H fur more mfnrmatwn
Economic Majors: suggestious arc he111g tahn
for next fall and spring courses. Please submit ideas
to the E~.:onornics Department , Ridge Lea. Buildtng
4224. Room JO.
University Tnavel (DivJsion of Sub Board I, Inc.)
1s sponsori11g Summer Shuttles from Nragara FaiJs to
London, England by Boeang 707 jet. Roundtrip is
$ 179 and there is a cho1ce of 30 dates. For
inf?rm~tion conttact. University Travel. State
Un1verSJty of Buff.alo. 3435 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y .
142 14 or come to Room 316/323 Norton Hall or
call 83 J-3602/360].

Sportl&gt; Information

What's Happening'!

Tomorrow; Vars1ty basketball rmal home game
vs Merrimack College, Clark Gym, 8 .30 p.m .
freshman basketball vs. Gannon, 6 .30 p.m.
Friday: Varsity swimming at the Upper New
York State champio~sh.ips, Hobart College hCJst
Saturday : V3.J'Slty fen cmg at Clark Gym wtth
Syracuse and Notre Dame, 1 p.m.; varsity mdoor
track at the Cortland Invitational
Sunday: Varsity basketball vs. Buffalo State at
Erie Commwtity College, 3 p.m.. freshman
basketball vs. Buffalo State, I p.m.
Buffalo's varsity basketbaU game scheduled for
Memorial Auditonum with Buffalo State has been
sw1tched to Erie Community College.
Another double$ handball tourney will be
scheduled shortly. Entry fo~s may be picked up at
Ro~m II~ Clark Gym. The mtramural department is
hopmg to mcrease the enroUment this semester.
Tonight at 8 p.m . and 9:30p.m. the semi-final
round games of the Buffalo intramural basketball
t~umarnent will be held at Clark Gym. Wednesday
rught at 8.30 p.m., the fmals will take place at Clark
Gym.
Tryouts for ttus season's junior vsrs.ity baseball
team should attend a meeting Thursday, March 2 at
4 p.m. m Room 3 15 Clark .

Monday , feb . 28

The Hillel a.. ill Bqlnoen Hebrew will meet
tomonow at noon in Room 262 Norton. The class in
Jewish Ethics will meet at J p.m.
Environmental Action Corps will have a meeting
today at 3 p.m. in Room 262 Norton.
Newman Rill will hold two penjtential services:
tomorrow at 4 p.m. and March 6 at 7 p.m.• both at
the Can talician Chapel.
The Western New York Public Interest Research
Group will meet tomorrow at 4 p.m. in Room 231
Norton. WNYPJRG's future plans and the formation
of a constitutional committee will be discussed . All
interested persons are welcome to attend.
The Student Theater Guild will hold 11 meetmg
today at 8 p.m. in Room 344 Norton . The large
spring production has to be discussed and all people
interested in directing a play for Nickel Theater must
attend.
The Nursing Student Organization presents a
film Hospitals . a documentary by Frederick
Wiseman, tomorrow at 7 :30 p.m. in Capen G·22 .
Coffee hour and discussron to follow . Open to the
en tate University .
Chabad House presents a chassidic l\Jnm
restaval tomorruw at H.JO p rrl , 111 the Mallaad
FiJJmore Room .
Africa Club wall ptC'~cn t Prul. Dei-Ana11g
speakwg about l11s poem~ and Alrs~a tmluy at 2 p m
rn Roorn 23J Norton
W8FO·fM ( 8X 7) w1ll hruaJcast the Scn:t!t:
Amnesty hearings chaucd by Sen Fdward Kennedy
on Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday from 2 S p m
Witnesses w111 rncludc groups ranging frum !lac
ACLU Ill the Amerrcan Leg~on and could ~trongly
innucncc lcgJslatJon nn amnesty fur draf'Hcsrslcr
exiles and deserters.
lev will give cosmrc wrapping Nu 7!U
dense: rent tomorrow rn Haas umngc at l p.m

Film : Bak.o.matsu, actaon film of a samuraa class
ver.ms a new bourgeois in Nineteeth Century
Japan, 3 p.m and 8 p.m , Capen 140.
Art show : Fourth year student painting show 4240
Rid.ge Lea , Q a.m.-5 p.m .
'
International Week Coffee house, 3 p.m. Haas
Lounge.
Oocunumtary · '1 'he Restless Earth,''!i doc;urnentary
on the redtscovery of the Earlh, 8 p.m .• Channel
17

Tuesday, Feb. 29
Film . Shadow of a Douht wath Joseph Cotten,
duected by Alfred Hitchcock. 3 p.m and 8
p.m., Capen 140.
t ye.con ·n · R ltual. directed by Ingmar Bergman.
foll•oWed by a panel discussion, !! p.m.,
Diefendorf 147 i,
Comcert : Student recital , noon, Baird Hall .
f'oetry reading : Carl Dennis wUJ read his poetry at
tlle One-Eyed Cat, 28 Bryant St.. 9 p .m.
Amy A hrend

Backpage

stew

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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>State University Trustees get
out proposed tuition increases
The Trustees of the State University of New

Y?rk announced Wednesday afternoon that starting
w1th this year's summer session, tuition at the State
University will be increased-. Presently, tuition is
SSSO for un'tlergraduates, $800 for graduate students
and S 1200 for professional school students
(medicine, dentristry, law, optometry and pharmacy
graduates). Unde.r the new plan, tuition will be $650
a year for freshmen and sophomores $800 for
JUniors and seniors, S 1200 for graduate students and
S 1600 for professional school students.
Twtion for out-of-state res1dents will jump from
S900 for underwaduates to S I 075 for freshman and

sopho mores and S 1300 for juniors and seniors, The
increases were accompan ied by boosts in scholar
incentive and student loan programs, both of which
are desi&amp;ned to provide th4.1 studenta whose familiet
have a net taxable income ~f under SJOOO annually
will not have to pay more than S I 00 a year. At very
low income levels, the tuition increase will be
entirely offset by sc holar incentive awards.
The trustees said the hike was required "to
pro tect the quality or programs and services tn
cnticaJ areas and to enable the University t o enroU
additional freshmen students."

THE SpECTI\UM
Vof. 22, No . 58

State Univenity of New Yoric at Buffalo

Friday, 25 febru1ry 1972

State Universities

Ref(ionalizatinn planned in an
effOrt to improve education
by Ronald Sandberg
Sp!'ctrum Staff Wntrr

In an C'lfnrt to curtail econom1c exprndlture and
to prov1de greater educational opportunJtJes for its
students, the State University of New York will
undergo a major operational reorganizatiOn of its 72
institutions under a program which Chancellor
Ernest L. Boyer has termed reg~onal1Zat1on .
The new policy Whil.h the University's Board or
Tru ste~ approved last September div•des the state
geograph1cally into eight reg~ons grouped toaether
mto four larger coordinatJng areas. " We are no t
breaJung up the University admintstrat1vely or
1mposina another organization level," Chancellor
Boyer asserted.
lie c.onllnued
" Rather, we are moving to
develop closer functtonaJ relallonshtps between
oth er colleges that are in prox1mity to each other in
order to achteve greater educational effect iveness
and operatiOnal ernc.ency ..
Spectfu:a lly , the Boa rd of Tru stees
recommended that in addition to divuimg the state
mto four coordmattng areas, regJOnalizallon would
I) 11ssure students enrolling m a two·year 1\ .1\
0t A.S d egree program 1n the faJI of 1972 admtc;sion
to a senior college m the11 coonhnat1ng area upon
graduatiOn, and
2) provtde for a more effccuve shanng of
resources , such as llbraries and computers , greJter
unplementation of ~emces and facilities and more
organized programs to meet reg10naJ and local needs
111 suc h matters as poverty, pollution and h ealth .
ThiS will be ac&lt;.ompltShed through the establtshtng of
1nter-1nstttuttonal pres1dent1.tl forums m each
~:oord1naung are.t

rhree goals
Th e sta t e · wlde regliln&lt;llJlatJon program,
Chancellor Boyer matntaaned. " will permit the
Un1vel'llity to ach1evc three bas•c obJectives" wtuch
he cited as hetng
I) the shanng of educ;atloOJl re~ources and
administralave services,
2) improving the student admssstons and
1r11ns fer programs in t be Univers1t y. and
J) coordmahng the Umvers1ty's community
servtce propams and fo~.;usln&amp; more sharply on
reponotl needs.
AJtho ugh the Chancellor's basic ObJe~:.t lves are
understood, th e many possible means of the ir
exec ution are still quite nebulous accordin&amp; to
members o f the State University of Buffalo's Faculty
Senate committee on regionalization.
"The Chancellor's instructions specificaUy state
that we (the committee) should not take any move
toward the reponalization of operations and control
but rather towards planning and coordination,"
explained Mc Allister HuU, acting dean of the
Graduate School. "This will enable us to optimize
the use of available educational resources which will
in tum increase the quality of the education a
student receives.''
·
One of the more sweeping reforms in the area of
" educational improvement" IS Chancellor Boyer's
"rqional guarantee" that all community college
pduates would be pven "absolute assurance" of a
place in a senior college. Chancellor Boyer furtber
maintained that the " regional auanntee" wou!d not
mean the exclusion of transfer students from other

reg~oos

although regional transfers would he &amp;JVl'n
preference.
Transfer hassds
The new tran~fer policy wht ch Wtlham 8dUtner ,
VICe c hairman or the Falully Senate , ,·ails
" prnh lemat1c ," does tn fact raiSe a host of
una nswered questions. Of major concern is tht•
degree to wtuch th e types of programs offe red at
state umts correlate w1th transfer programs Jt
co mmunity colleges, sp ecifically tn .treas relatmg to
he a ltb . enameenna and bus mess technolog1e5
According to Dr. Baumer, the state units are to 11
great extent unequipped to handle transfer !lludents
and must consequently d evelop progr11ms which will
~~ accommodttc tlwlm.
"The commtttees hJive been cre11 ted t o work out
the problems a tr11nsfer student us\utlly encounters
when co ming to a state un1t ," explatn~d Or. Baum er
A transfer student , he ~id, usually finds h1mselr at a
considerable d1sadv11ntage when h e begms his jumor
year Often ht: must repe.at courses, luse credit and
hassle wttb transcnpt~ .
" Anot her problem we've found ," satd Dr Jlull,
"1s that many trJnsfer students come mto .1
unsvemty w ith out hav111g the prupcr background tn
the maJors they would like to rake hcttucntly they
Jn.• admitted and .1re not able to get mtn the maJOr'
they have: planned for ·• In order to remedy tim
"unfa1r s1t uat10n ," Dr ll ull has ren1n11nended th.tt
community ~:.-ollege5 thoroughly explasn to every
lransfer stud ent what ts nc:cessa ry " to ,.rep tn to the
matnstream o f a SUNY un1t ," &lt;~nd thUl. prevent l11m
from " gett1ng II 111 the ne~· k "
Problems arise
1 he committee un reg~unJlll&gt;lll wh11.h tndude)
Drs . Baumer, Cohen, !lull , Pnvtt e ra , Rekatc Jnd
St ern , IS presently 111 th e "exploratt(IO ,tagc~ " .snd tl&gt;,
according to Dr. Cohen . "trymg to wnr._ out
problems wh1ch wtll benefit both sr udl· u 1\ ;and
facully . Problems suth dS ddmiSSwn pro&lt;.edure' hJve
ansen but we .ue confident they ~iln be tesolvl'd " I 11
addtuon, Dr. Cohen guarunteed tha t all attempts at
matntaining the quality of th1s InStitution would be
made by not nc:cessanly granllng adnussion to all
transfers.
The policy of guaranteed admiSSions has been
the target of much s peculauon from SUNY .affiliates
Robert MacVttlie, pres1dent of the Stale UniverstlY
at Geneseo, claimed " guaranteed admisston for the
community coUege transfers at the jUnior and senior
level could mean fewer o penin~ at the state colleges
and umversit1es for freshman a nd soph omores, as
class seats are reserved .tnd filled by uppc:rclass
transfers. II may mean a need for new cornmuntty
colleaes. ''
The major mcenllves for "a regt onaJ approach to
plannin&amp; for the future.. were c ted as betng
"ftnanci.al cutbacks and streamlining." There are
many , bowever, wbo foresee the econ o m1c
implications interfenng with the effectiveness of
educational planning. "There may have to be,"
commented Dr. Baumer, "an adding of certain
proarams at the unfair expense of lopping off
others." In addition, Dr. Baumer feels that the
expectation that regionalization will save "scads o f
money" will not be realized.
Other neptive speculation has included that
--continued on P•9e 3-

Common Council to hear
housing orclinance pleas
by Howie Kurtz
Campus £d11or

Councilman Arthur urges all
students and interested persons to
come down to C1ty Hall Tuesday
at 2 p .m. and lend their support
to defeating this ordinance.
mdu:ated a lac k of overwhelmin&amp;
sympathy fo r State University of
Buffalo students srekm&amp; a place
to hve.
The seven · member Common
Cu un cJJ committee will hear the
VIews and o pinions of all students ,
hospital supporters and anyone
else who is mterested in testifying.
They will then , o n the busis of
those testi m o nies, decide whether
or not to recommend to the
Curpotal1on Council that 1he
ordtnunce be e1thcr altered or
d ·~~a rcled .
Mr Arthur , who opposed the
pJs\agc of I he orllmunce last year,
~did
there Ill d "d tfferent
ill mosphere lh1s year than last
yc;ar The ordinance was passed
last year due to problems
\.Ommumty people were havtng
With \tudents." Mr Arthur feels
th11t whtle certain problems still
exist , that shll does not justify
sudt an arbttrary ordlflancc.

UntversJiy students , Buffal•:&gt;
ltospttal patients an d any
other 1n 1 eresttd parties wi:Jl
address a seven-member legl!'.lat1ve
co mmtltee of the Common
Counctl th1s Tuesday, Feb 29 . 110
ho pes o f persuading them to
recommend a change 1n th•~
ro ntro verstal c 1t y h ous •ntJ
ordinan ce
The ouJmance ~tales that nu
more than twu unrelated peopk
may hve together tn any h ouse OJ'
apartment The hearinl( wsJI takt·
place Tuesday at 2 p m in tlu:
Common Council chambers,
thtrteenth noor of City llall
Ihe heanng ha~ been set up by
Elltcott 01!&gt;tr1ct Councilman
George K Arthur, whu &lt;WY~ he
has ennugh su ppmt lor such a
ptupo~al
" The ordmann 1:.
clearly an dOll ~tudent!
rc~nlut1e1n .'
~.: ommentell
Mr
Arthur
He leds the: o rd1nan~e . whtdt
was passed last year, WJ' ln
rcacllvn to "tnstan ces where stx ,
seven, e1ght ksds would crowd
11110 o~n 11prtment and tedr 11 up" Thousands affected
Mt Art h ur prev1ously termed the:
The Department o f AdmisSIOns
nrdtnante "unju !.t und and K e.:ords esttmated that
unreasl)nahle "
4000 5000 CIU t of l 2,000
undergraduates ltve in off~am pus
Lack of sy mpathy
apartments. This would seem a
The housmg ordw.1ncc ha:&gt; conservatiVe est1 mat e, one which
affe~o:ted ~tudents tn the l lntverstty
doesn't Lnclude graduate students
;,: om m u n • t y are a . where and night sc h ool students .
uver&lt;.rowded condsl1on 1S Off-campus housing alone places
necess1tJte the ~haring of "betwee n 3000-4000 students a
apartments for physs;.:al as well as year " in houses and apartments
financ1al reasons
It has also off campus. The shortage of
hindered a Buffalo State Hospi tal ad equate housing becomes evident
rehabiHl1111on program, when: due to the fact that there are only
mental pat1en ts are released and 25 S 0 dormitory spaces for
placed in houses in groups of tour . o ut -of·town students.
ThiS is unlawful under the presen1t
The University also leases the
ordinance. Mr. Arthur co mmented Allenhurst Apartments to provide
that there is "a lot o f sy mpath)l housing for students. However,
for the hospital patients ," bu1 the Allenhurst setup, which
from the books. Should thl; assigns five students to every
attempt fail to persuade th•: two-bedroom house, ia also illepl
Common Council committee to under the housing ordinance.
act, the law will remain on th•~
The Common Council be.arina
books and no doubt creat•: tbU Tuesday represents the first
complications for students Uvin" and probably only chance that
ofr-ampus for many aemetters to University students will have to
come.
alter this ordinance or remove it
St:~te

�Scholarship hearing

Alien students sue
.forRef(ents award

they are eligible to apply for
citizenship and have not yet done
so.

by Amy Weiss
Spectrum Staff Writtt

Guara nteed
Regents
scholarships a.nd incentive award
benefits for New York State
residents who are not U.S. citizens
was the topic of a State Supreme
Court hearing on Thursday.
The State Education
Department requires that
administration of the scholarship
wd incentive monies be extended
exclus•vely to citizens of the
United States. How.:ver, the
counsel for the Niagara Chapter of
the American Civil Liberties
Union , Stephen J. PerreUo, Jr.,
contends that this regulations is at
issue with the Fourteenth
Amendment which insures equaJ
protection under the law for all
persons.
More specifically, the 1969
statute governing the issuance of
these scholarships states the
applicant must be a U.S. citizen or
have applied for citizenship. If the
a pplicant is ineligible for
citizenship (that is, he is under
18), he must submit a statement
s tating he will apply for
citizenship as soon as he is of age.
Mr. PerreUo is representing three
students wbo have been denied
the scholarship benefits because

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

Exe-rcise of control

Honest &amp; Reliable
Imported &amp;

Buffalo students invol~
Hannah Friedler, a junior at
the State University of Buffalo, is
an English citizen who has resided
in the U.S . since 1958. She was
awarded a Regents scholarship for
her first two years of school, but
th.is year she received word from
the State Education Department
that her scholuship had been
denied . Review of Ms . Friedler's
scholarship status indicated that
she was eligible to apply for
citizenship in the United States
but had not
She was further notified that
she would be requued to refund
the amount of her previous
awards unJess she took action to
become a citizen by this summer.
Ms. Friedler remains uncertain
whether or not she will apply for
citizenship. Her plan now is to
wait until she graduates colleges
before she makes any decisions
regarding her U.S. citizenship.
Of the two remaining students
who have also brought suit against
the State Ed ucation Department,
one is a German c itizen who has
Lived in the U.S. since 1951, and
the other, 11 Camtdian residing in
the States for IY years.

Oomostic

- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

I~.

Assis tant State A lltlrney
General Do uglas S. Dales was the
representattve fo r the State
Umverstty . His defense argued
that the regulatio n 1n question IS a
reasonable exercise of the stat.:'s
control of education.
Supreme Court Justice Gilbert
ff King has reserved deciSIOn o n
th1s case while the law 1s
thoroughly revtt:wed and unt1l 11 rs
detenmned wheth~:r the case ha~
merit Accordtng to Mr l'errello,
the de~1sion can he expec ted .11
any tune from several days t o
several months.

eei-Rit

EAL
TH FOOD SHOPP
1451 Hertel Ave. Near Norwalk 837·7661
DISCOUNT
PRICES

DISCOUNT
PRICES

feotunng

DANNON YOGURT

Africa: continent Of 'treasure'
Tanant doesn 't roam the jungles of Africa. True, Thursday Rhodesia Countdown will be screened .
the jungles exist, as do countless herds of wild Both will be shown at 3 p .m . in Room 148
Diefendorf Hall.
animals, bu1t Africa la much more.
Africa is ric.h wlth a very distinctive culture.
Africa is a continent with clti~s in which even a New
Yorker cou~d fmd things to do. Africa is a continent
of emerging nations, whose politics are often bitter
and violen1r, and always fascinating. And Africa is a
continent whose recent evolution has brought it all
the problems o f the twentieth century.
Next week , the Buffalo community is being
invited to engage in numerous activities aimed at
broadening: knowledge of Africa from many differing
perspeclive:s. Sponsored by the Africa Club, of the
State University of Buffalo, Africa Week will begin
Feb. 28 and extend through March 4.
The program's first day will be highlighted by a
lec ture on " My Poems and Africa ," presented by
Michael O.ei Anang Dr. Del Anang is a native of
Ghana, now teaching in African Studies at the State
University College at Brockport. This event will take
place at 2 p.m thai day in R oom 233 Norton Hall.
Two films exploring the African poli11cal
situation a1nd the realities of Africa's social, political
and economic development will be shown later in
the week On Tuesday, Non-Aligned Nations, and on

New pol~cies for the collection
required readmgs tn the
University '!~ reserve libraries have
been "90 per cent effective" this
semester, accordtng to library
officials.
Harnman Reserve librarian
Carol Goodson told The Spectmm
earlier this •week that strict faculty
adherence to revised guidelines
has produced favorable results.
These new guidelines were
mailed Ja~:f Oct. 29 by the
Un1versit)f Libraries to all
fu ll·t1me faculty users of the
Harriman atnd Ridge Lea reserve
collec tiOns.
The guidelines cnnta.m three
maJor now p omts· (I) the
establishment of deadlines for the
submissio n of reserve lists ; (2)
refusal tu accept any lists not
submitted o n the ufficHI.i forms :
(3) the automatic removal of all
reserved materials at the end of
each semester
of

Repre111nt.1td

National

for

6dvertlsing

.Edua~tion.J

by

Adverrisinfi

StlfVJctl, In(:., 360 L11xington AVIJ.,
New York, IV. Y. 10017.

ClOOS LEACHMAN/-~ CY8U. St£Pt£AO •Joey I PETER BOGONCIICH
5c•-rtlr
£&amp;-"'I.AAAY McMURTRY""" PETER 80GOANOVICH =:-~BERT SCtt£lOER

Subscrlptlou ,.,.., art1 $4.50
,.,_,.,or $8.00 for

-Dr

S.Cond Cl•• Fbstllgll 1»id et Buff•lo

Times:
2-4-&amp;-8- &amp; 10

......,

... -

.. -

-1

I!OV l! VA il O M All

· ~ ····~

~

D

........... ¥-;,· . :-:;:-;-- -;;.-: ;-;: .~. -;:.. ,

Late Show
Every Sat.

'1'he establishment of deadline
dates, " stated Ms. Goodson, ··are
designed to provide ample time
for ordering and prOCtlSSing."
library statisttcs show that, for
those hsts rece1ved by the
deadline, only eight per cent of
the requ~sted materials were
unavailable at the start of the
spring semester
Fullest we
Automatic removal ol reserve
materials, Ms. Goodson explained,
provides "for the fullest usc
possible" hy placing previously
reserved books un open shelve~
immediately after the semester
"The library staff reasoned ," !UUd
M:s . Goodson, "that students
should not have to submit to a
greatly reduced ci rculation perrud
of two hours or three days :ll a
time. If the materials we re not
bemg used that semester. they

were nol in the great demand that
makes Reserve necessary."
Another innovation at
Harriman Reserve, added Ms.
Goodson. is the duplicate set of
reserve lists arranged
alphabetically by department and
course. "This helps the students ··
explained Ms. Goodson, " wh u
either can't remember or dou't
know their professor's name . lH
who ate looking for reserve bm1h
on a certain subject."
Future plans, contmued M~
Goodson, include the filing nl
gu1de cards in the main card
Clltalogue in Lockwood library
This modification wiiJ be able tl\
tell palrons immediately whether
a book ts m the stacks or on
reserve . Also. Ms. Goodson
concluded, the library is addmg
24· hour reserve to the previously
existing two-hour and three-day
ophons.

Attorney Richard J . Rosche will release an investiaativc: rc:port dealina with the May
7, 1970, "blrdshop incident" at the State University of Buffalo at a press conference
Monday morning. The conference will be held at II a .m . in Room 232 Norton Hall The
premise of Mr. Ro!iChe's report is that neither law enforcement nor ldministutiveo
aaencies adequately investigated the alleged shooting and, in the face of documented
evidence, failed to issue any substantive report regarding the claim that City of Buffalo
police fired upon students. Mr. Rosche hopes his report will prompt a re-investigation of
the matter.

The Spectrum ;, pub/lshBd thrH
times a weHr, ewrry Monday,
w.ctMSdey end Frid6'tl: during thtl
,..,.r ec.clttmic yNr by Sub·Boerd
1, Inc. Ofl'ic• art~ loCllted 11t 355
Norton Ha/11, Stattl Univt~rsiry of New
York •t Blufflllo, 3435 M.ln St.,
Buffalo, N ew York, 14214.
Telephone: ArN Code 716; Editori61
831-41 13; 6tulinea, 831 ·3610.

STEPtENJ. FRIEDMAN lo.,.., -

Friday, March 3, at 2 p.m. in Room 233
Norton, Alfred Moleah of South Africa, an associate
professor of Political Science at Temple University.
wilJ present a lecture on ..The Crisis of Southern
Africa."
That evenings, an ''African Dance" talent
contest featuring ten groups in native dress
competing with one another for color and techrllquc
This will be in Room 240 Norton at 8 p.m .
The week of activity will conclude ~aturday
with an African "Dance and Fashion S how.'' The
A {rican Combo from Pittsburgh wiiJ provide
enterta1nment beginning at 8 p.m. at the Afncan
Cultural Center, 350 Masten Ave. There will he a
donation of $1 for this event. All other events will
be free and the public is urged to come.

Birdshot report

COLUMBIA PICTURES
Presents
A BBS PRODUCTION

o.-o,

Countdown.

New guidelines for library

NOMINATED FOR 8 ACADEMY AWARDS!

Mlt'l.nQ

After the viewing', a " response panel" discuss1on
will take place. Panelists for Non-Aligned Nartons
will be Wal Duany, Joan Stamper and Buba Bajoga
Norman Baker and Francis Getao are scheduled to
participate in the discussion following Rhodesia

Harriman Reserve

LOW, LOW , PRICES ON VITAMINS &amp; FOODS

TIMOTHY BOTTOMS/JEFF BRIDGES/EllEN BURSTYN/BEN JOHNSON

Oiscussiom on ruins.

ptlll

two,.,.,.,,

Nflw York,

CJrc:uiiJtion: 16,000

•

BELLS, TOPS, BOTTOMS

end THINGS

H...-e they comet Huncsreds of
Guys 1nCS Gats know thiS I•
the
ptue.
Army-Navy
bargains with tod•V'S took .
Good !l()odst goo&lt;l prlc.es:
good people! The real Lhl's:
Flare anel Straight, Denim or
Corduroy. Air Fore:• perkes,
Government
Great Coat5.
Heavy atuffl Come tn•
reel
M cCoy••
end
SAVEl

�Budget cuts

Library director
lists inadequacies
by Clem Colucci
Spectrum Stllff Writer

Regionalization.
regionatization will result in the development of an
mtermediary admmistrative body allowing for a loss
of autonomy at the 1nd1Vldual institutional leveJ .
H owever, 11 must be remembered that
reg10na!Jzat1on, as described by Dr. HuU, is a
mantfold program w1th extensive ramifications:
As Dr. Hull com mented : "If we are the
knowledgeable people, if we know what 's possible, 1f
we know how to approach the problems in a way
that will offer st ud ents the best possible
opportunities, then it is far less likely that someone
with less knowledge wiU push something do wn our
throats. That's the premise on which I'm o perating,"
Move to cooperation
As well as the institution of the transfer policy,
regionalization will, according to proponents,
provide for a closer interaction between units of the
State University system Tlus, II 1s hoped , will
furn ish stud ents with a broader spectrum of
educahonal o ppo rtunities as well as enabling them to
further their personal educational goals
·•one of the most dramatiC deveJopm~ts io
tugher education today," Chancellor Boyer noted,
"is the move a way from mstttutJOnal ISolation
toward cooperatiOn and shanng a mong all sorts of
educational enterpnses. The Umversity wul be able
to extend 11s educattonal and research services and
continue to mnovate
as 11 must - while h elping to
bring further econom1es in thts new penod of severe
financial constraints."
As prev1ously ment1oned, the state has heen
diVlded 1nto coordinalang areas w1th Coordinat ing
Area No. 1 comprising the 17 western-most counties
of the state. This area tn turn has been divided into a
Western Region and the Genesee Valley Rep on at

ass~ HAIRSTYLING

• •

tbe request of the State Education Department to
reflect the way the state wtshes t o orgint2e health
planning. For most purposes, the two re&amp;Jons will be
joined. This area will be the first to undertake an y
measures toward regionaluat1on.

Optimism
Coordtnattng Area No. 2 cons1sts of II coon lies
in Central New York State and the Southern T1er
East. Comprising a large area ranging from the
Capital District to the Canadian border is
Coordinating Area No. 3. Coordinating Area No. 4,
in tum , is comprised of counties from the
Mid-Hudson area to Long Island. It has been
subdivided tnto a Southeast (Mid Hudson) Repon,
the New Yo rk City Region and a Lo ng Island
(Nassau-Suffolk Counties) Region.
The Board of Trustees has divided the
coordinating area geographically in order to expedite
programs and facilitate cooperati o n among units .
Each region will be governed by a council consuting
of presidents fro m all colleges and universities within
the region.
This restructunng of the State Umversity system
has brought about mixed react1ons from aU mvolved
parties. Somewhat more confident 15 Dr Hull who
has observed . "There are always those who take a
dim VJew o f change. Others take 8 more optunJStic
view of change. And then there are some who say
that if there lS gomg to be change, Jet's try to make
it wo rk to our advantage . We'll try to make
regJOnalizatton work 10 our advantage ..
The committee at present has not made any
definite progress but lS contmuang to explore the
many diverse poss1b1h1tes of the regJonal plan .

r, 0 Israel

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"We're just not providing the
range and quality of library
services that we could two years
ago," stated University Ubrarian
Director Myles Slatin earlier this
week. Dr. Slatin commented at
length on Ute recent library
budget cuts which have made life
somewhat more difficult for all
members of the academic
community .
According to information
provided by Or Slatin, book
prices have nscn 40% from
1967- 1970 and periodicals 38.3%
from 1967- 1971 . In Ute same
time period, however. the library
budget for book acquasillons has
dropped 4().2% from S 1,300,000
to S700,000.
In the past year alone, the
book acq uisition line has dropped
S243,000. a substantial
percentage of the total hbrary cut
of SS44,000. As a resu lt , Or.
Slatin pointed out, mar.y vi tal
programs arc being curtailed o r
e liminated .
Nyet!!
The supply of o ut -of-print
books, already an acknowledged
library deficiency, is likely to get
worse, h e noted . There will be
"no out-of-print buying" due
simply to the lack of funds,
explained Or. Stalin . He added
that the historical disciplines
would be particularly hard hit .
languages will suffer too. The
library will not be able to buy
books m any languages other than
English and the maJOr western
European tongues. Included tn
thas language freeze are Asaan and
Afncan languages and Russ1an
Dr. Slatan tenned tlus "just nut
adequate" for an ex p and1ng
program uf internatiOnal stud1e)
Additionally. the requ 1sation nf
peraudacals •s bcang severely
limited. ''One of the things that a
research ltbrary h as to have tn all
fields is a large numher of
journals," remarked Or Slat an .
The library's goal was to have
20,000 different tat lcs by thas
year. Because of budget 1:11t~ .
however. there has been a drop
from IS ,000 16,000 peraudacals
to I I ,000 12.000 (J figure,
accurdmg 111 Or Slatan, whach Will
get even smaller unless the labrdly
gets more money) The ~1:1ences
wlll be hurt most, Dr Slat1n sa1d ,
because "Journals arc the lafe
blood of the SCICnCC\ "
In catalogmg the present til~ of
the library, Dr Slatin reported
that no new programs will be
started. Additionally, most of the
current programs under
development are being slowed
down. Affected in this halt are the
law library, coUege libraries and
the undergraduate library, among

others. Planning for the Amherst
library is also seriously hindered.
Regarding expressed faculty
dissatisfaction with the library,
Or. Slatin doesn't foresee a mass
exodus of faculty members or any
great difficulty in attracting new
fa c ulty beca use of library
conditions. Or. Slatin attributed
this to the condition of libraries
nationally : "Wh at's happening to
this library is happening to
libraries aU over the country." To
the best of his knowledge, only
the University of Pennsylvania has
increased its library budget. One
unnamed SUNY center, Or. Slatin
remarked, has had its library
acquisition budget cut 50%,
leaving it but one-third the money
it had two years ago.
A further difficulty is the
library's insufficient staffmg.
Several positions were eliminated

bv

Myles Slatill
111
the last two fiscal years
result1ng an shorter operatin g
hours. Currently Loc kwood IS
open on weekends o nl y lhrough
the efforts of student assistants .
However. the library Jack s the
muney tu hire more students or to
pay fllr the professional libranans
needed for supervis1on. "Even 1f
we have the money to hire more
k1d!&gt;, we ~:an 't use t hem properly."
saall Or Slat1n.

Filing system ~vised
Or. Slattn cred1ted the local
admtntStra t ion for "doing the best
they can ," in helping to obtaw
more space and attempting to
restore the cuts. He also noted a
lac~ of moaale in library
employees who, having been g.tven
faculty status m 1970, have not
received promotions, raises or any
other faculty privileges.
On the more positive side, Or.
Slatin reported that the backlog
of unftled books, which had
exceeded I 00,000 in 1971 • has
been nearly eliminated by listing

~·:««»X&lt;-Y"*»»"~~~vm-»:.W."..*~ 00 c~~..-~&lt;-:-:.m-..-~ ~no~~fi~~~!o~;~ le~:g ~~~~;;

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TING ~
STUDENT ASSEMBI1 MEE
i ~,~~~~~~.:.[hod::~,:·:
A

books

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AGENDA :

and

e lim inate

the

o nJ y see a blighted future for the

Constit:::~: :;:~:::v,., :·m~~::~m~f of~~: :.:~:P~~=:~~~:.~n attendance. ~I ~~~~dw~~:~~7:;ili~;~ .nd
315

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�Carter helps·students develop
philosophy of higher eductrtion
Developing ideas and a educating atudents specificaUy for
philosophy about h igher management and administrative
education is the goal of the positions.
Terming this preparation ''a
Department of Higher Education.
thing
of the fut ure," Mr. Carter
That department as explained by
explained
that presently m ost
Wes Carter ( interim president for
University
a dministrators are
High er Educa t ion Stu dent
acu
lty
members
"who were
f
Association) offers courses to its
moved
up"
with no
essentially
77 doctoral candidates "to train
specifiC
preparation.
To
correct
st udents or to help students
develop their philosophy about t his, the Higher Education
Department is striving to involve
the world of higher education."
Such training, as Mr. Carter its students in the pro blems of
pointed out, is not actual job today's unaversities.
pr eparatio n , but rather
"philosophical and theoretical ." Building awareness
Included in this training, four
He continued thai t he department
works from the concept of basic courses are given to "make
students fuUy aware of what
college campuses have to face ."
These courses are Histo ry of
Hi g her Education, Learning
Environment, Organization and
Admin is tration of Higher
Education and the Ecology of
Higher Education.
In addition to these offerings,
the Higher Education Studen t
Assoc aa tion is trying to actively
involve students in the workings
of this University. Mr. Carter
explaaned that plans are prese ntly
be 1 ng formulated that would
allow studen ts to be observers or
participants in such operations as
the Faculty Senate an d
departmental meetings.
I n this w~y. Mr Carter
imhcatcd, " the administrators ol
tomorrow won't be gomg in to :1
blind situation." He continued
that they will be "on top of, and
aware M campus problems ...
they will he an the forefront of
tho se things affecting
universaties
An exciting, Whole-Earth·
Catalog-type compendium
Not neutral
.ot resources for educati ng
oneself and o thers.
According to Mr . Carter, most
Gi11111. I!COIIomy siz.e
of these problems grow out of
paperback: 10'11" x 14 '12"
social situations : " the university is
being drawn by many forces into
A Delta Special/
Seymour Lawrence Book
society. . . the unive rsity isn't
$4.00 At your bookstore

insulated from 100iety anymore; it

Jin't neutral anymore." To tackle
thes e pro1ilems, Mr. Carter
believes it important to ..provide
philosophjical preparation" for
future administ rators.
Essentially, Mr. Carter is
optimistic that this preparation
can be provided . Part of his
optimism iis based on his trust in

.

'\\

I

~\

a

- 0 storrolch •r

Wc~~s Carter
the faculty o f Highe r Education.
According to Mr. Carter, "111J
of the faculty are interested in the
to tal development of the student
- such a,n interest is rare."
However, Mr. Carter stressed the
importance of involving mo re
students in1to actual University
worKings. One of his goals as
interim president is to build an
interest and awareness of the
departme n t a nd its student
association.

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Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, 26 February 1972

Q : Since the last day .for adding courses if April 14 , how do I find
out if my instructor did submit my registration through Admissions
and Records? He said that he would submit my name on a special
registration slip because the course was closed officially.
A; The way to be sure is to pick up your final schedule card at
Admissions and Records. The onl y way you'll know whether or not
you are in (or out of) a class is by that schet.lule card. If the class is not
listed on that card, you are not registered for it and you had better
check to see why not. If a course is listed on that schedule card . you
are re$ilitered for that course. Thus it is very important tu pic!&lt; up vuur
schedule cards!

Q : It was very icy Chis morning a nd ther~ were no signs that
anyone
spreading any salt or sand around to help alleviate this
condition. Wh y can't maintenance take cue of this early in the
morning? This is a dangerous condition and could result in injuries.
A: We checked with maintenance and they tell us that they try to
get o ut early to do what they can . Ho wever, you must remember that
the austerity budget has also hit them and they cannot employ all I he
people necessary to do the job in one or two hours. They try to do the
best they can , but it takes time with the limited number of personnel
available.

was

Q : I am a faculty member and I notice thai many students are
parkin&amp; in faculty lo13. Why can 't our campus police do something
abou t this?
A : They do, when they have time. At the present mo ment, we
have a security force numbering 39 and these must handle the safety
and ~ec urity of the entire campus 24 ho urs a day. There are just not
enough men to go around to do all the jobs that one would like.
Campus security also told us that when they do go through a lot and
ticket cars that have no faculty permits, they find out that most of
theJC cars belong to faculty who did not get around to put ting the
permit on their cars. These faculty then become irate when they have
to pay a fine for illegal parking. But, more to the point, this is done
when time permits.

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834-73SO

CHANGING
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In retponse to many qu.UOat about the Small Oaim1 Court of the
City of Buffalo, we arc printina the foUoWinl information: The Small
Claims Court il ~ted i.ft t he Cit y Courtt Bullclln~at 42 Delaware Ave.
The telephone number it 8$2-2390 . It can be Uled by anyone living
within ErieCounty.
To file a small clabn, tho defendant (person yo u are suinc) must
either rcsJdo, work or have a place of business within Brie County. You
(plaintiff) must aupply th.e name and exact address of the defendant.
There are phone books and city directories for your con'Yenience in this
office. Please look up any lnfo~mation you need while waltina.
If your claim is because of an automobile accident, you neod the
name o f the registered owner of the other vehicle and t he address of
tbe owner.
If your claim is against a business, you must know if it is
incorporated. If it i9; you will sue in the na me of the corporation. (f t he
business is not incorporated, then you will need the owner or the
manager's nam,e and businesa addresa. If unaure of the above, you may
fmd out at the Assumed NamC'3 Department in Erie County Hall
directly across the street at 2~ Delaware Jive.
The fee for filina is $3 .lit for each claim and the amount of the
claim may not exceed 5500. Court bearings are held on Wedtaesdays
either at 7 p.m. or 2 p.m., whichever you prefer. Hearing dates are
liven at the time of filing and are held about four to six weeks later.
The defendant as sent a summons by registered mail directing him to
appear at t he hearing.
All s mall claims must be filed i n the morning - Monday through
Friday - between 9 a.m . and noon . No more than three claims will be
taken by the cleric for each plaintiff.
Corporations, assignees or partnerships may not insligate claims.

Q : When iB the last date for adding courses with tbe permission of
the Instructor?
A : The final date is April 14 . According to Dr. Ebert, this~~ the
final date and no exceptio ns will be allowed to this rule. It seems thai
last semester there were over 600 requests to add courses retroactavely
and that most of these were even after the examinations. There is, of
course, little reason for this except t he lethargy o f student and/or
instructor in getting the regJstration taken care of. Make sure that you
are officiaUy regJstered, as the following question no tes.

'

I

I

Q : I beard a rumor that the required physical education courses
have been dropped, Is this true?
A : No, it is not. This matter is now being studied by a Faculty
Senate committee, but no recommendation or decision has been made
at this point.
Q : I tried to get a student loan, but I found out that you have to
Jive in this state for one year before you are eligible and I moved here
about nine months ago. Is there any way I can get around this?
A : It is true that New York State banks require a one-year's
residency. However, you can have your parents pick up an application
in the state you moved from . We suggest that they get an application
from the bank where they usually do business or from any large bank ,
if they do not have a regular one. They then send it to you and you fill
out your part and take it to June Rogers in Admissions and Records.
She will flll out another part and send it to the Financial Aids office,
which will forward it to the bank . The entire process after this point
will take six or seven weeks . But you can get a loan from the state in
which you did reside.
Q : I have been try ing to a et a hold of o ne of my m.s'tructors. I can 't
find o ut his telephone number or address. Can you help me?
A : The best advice we can offer is to call the department with
which he is associated. They should have his address and telephone
number. Or, if they do not have it, then call the Personnel Office on
Elmwood Ave. (831 -362 l) and they wilJ be able to help you.

�Integratiooplan

Nyquist maiiltains.firm stand
Sta t e E ducation Commissioner Ewald B.
Nyquist w d Monday that his April 1 deadline for
submission of a desegration plan by the Buffalo
Board of Education has "rema.irled firm." He also
said that failure by the board .to comply to such a
state mandate could lead to the board's removal and
a cancellation of state education funds to the city.
These statement!~ were made following a private
meeting between Mr. Nyquist and board members
and memben of the Common Council in ~hJch local
integration policies were discussed.
Referring to a J an. 20 letter to board president,
Arnold B. Gardner, which set the deadline and
outlined state policy on the issue, Mr. Nyquist
refused to alter his position. On other aspects of the
desegregation plan though. he claimed that his
Oexibility hinges on the board "showing that II
wants to do something" on integration.
" I am not willing to accept the status quo where
you have 20 all black schools and an equal number
all white ... but depending on the kind of plan they
come up with and the sincerity of tl1e board, I can
accept something that will take a litlle time - say
three years - to Implement," commented Mr.
Nyqu1st.
Alternatives never enacted
Confirming that the city's previous desegration
proposals had been abandoned. Mr. Nyquist said:
"They never followed through on the plan. One
middle school was built and another building turned
1010 a middle school. That was the end of it." The
commissioner blamed much of the plan's fa1lure on
the strong opposition and noted long controversies
10 the Common Council over portable classrooms
and middle ~hool financing.

When asked about his reaction to a possible lack
of irtitiative by the board, the com missioner
commented : "There is no precedent in this state
where any board has refused to go along with a
mandate by the state. But legally. state action could
include proceeding1 to remove the board or
wit hdrawal of state educational aid." I t is estimated
that this action could cut local school funds by over

SO%.
Won't lower standards
Mr. Nyquist tried to reduce the threat of such
action being taken by saying: "I know that it is not
going lo happen with this board. 1 prefer to work by
persuasion as much as I can."
Mr. Nyquist also attempted to dispel the fears
that integration will lower the educational system 's
standards He said it has been shown that
desegregation raises the achievement levels of Blacks
"while whites don't suffer at all."
Prior to the meeting, nearly 100 antr·busing
protesters tried to prevent the commissioner from
entering C1ty Hall Mr. NyquiSt commented on the
demonstration : "People W11l understand these thing1
mor e readily if they are rnvolved 10 the
decision-makulg process ...
He defended his desegregation ruling as a
combination of his own personal conviction, board
of regents policy and Federal Court rulings " It's not
j ust a commiss1oner of education Sltllng m an 1vory
tower m Albany," said Mr. Nyqutst.
The commissioner added · " If we don't learn to
live together, we're gomg to operate m separate
armed camps and we've got to st art that learning in
the &lt;:eh ool~ "

Purim f estivals
Thls Monday will see two Purrim Festivals. one sponsored by Chabad House and the
other by HiUel. Featurina sinaina. dancina. a New York City band and " lots of sp.,it,"
Chabad House will staae their celebrratlon in the Fillmore Room at 8:30p.m.
Equally enjoyable, HIUel is planning their celebraeion at 6 p .m in tht Hillel House
at 40 Capm Blvd.
Both oraanizations encouraae students and faculty to attend .

The UUAB • Fine Arts Ftlm Comm1nee
Presents

An

INGMAR

BEF~MAN Festival

ma n is the king
of beasts ...

INGMAR
BEROMAN'S

- E rtebe cn er

They•,. off and running. All 37 candidat• for S1udent Auociation
positio ns met last Wednesdav to hear campeign rules and
regulations. This briefing officially started the campaign period for
SA elections tentatively schedutud March 1, 2 and 3. Postponement
of the elections will occur if constitu tional amendments •• passed
at today's Stud ent Assembly .

Testimony i1r1 Berrigan
conspiracy trial delayed
HARRISBURG , Pa . (UPI)
Testimony in the conspiracy trial
of the Rev. PhiLip Berrigan and six
others was delayed Wednesday
when four women challenged the
government's nght to force them
to answer quest1ons.
The women took the witness
stand . but refused to answer
questions
pleading the Frfth
on grounds their
Amendment
testimony would tend to
mniminale them .
Chref prosecutor William S
Lynch asked Judge R D1xon
Herman to grant the women
1mmumty from prosecutiOn. but
defense attorneys challenged the
1rnmunlty request .
The women , all former friend s
of government 1nformer Boyd F.
Douglas, were called to testiy
about the alleged plot to kidnap
presidential adv1sor Henry A .
KJssinger, blow up the heahng
ducts 1n Washington federal
buildings and mid draft board
offices in n1ne states .
IIerman gave their attorney,
Allen Black of Philadelphia, unlll
Fnday to prepare legal argument\
on why the lllllllUOJiy offered hy
the government would not he
adequate
Two of the Wllnesst'., , Mary
l:.h1Jbelh Sa nd~:l , :!J. JIHI Jane
Jl ul)ver . 2:!, holh now hv1ng 1n
Boston , '&gt;hilled Jll .ap:.rtment til
Bucknell tln1vcr~1t y Junng I ~70
Douglas hved rn the Jparl ment
below thc1ro; 1n tht· same bu1ld1ng
IJougla .. . who dated !loth gnls

had them transcribe letters for
him which discussed the alleged
Kissinger k..id nap plot. The letters
allegedly were written by Sister
Elizabeth McAlister, a defendant.
Douglas smua,gled the letters
into the Lewisburg Federal Prison
to Berrigan , who was serving time
there for two Maryland draft
board raids. Dou&amp;Jas also was
serving time at Lewisburg for
forgery, but was permitted to
attend classes at Bucknell.
The government contended
Douglas carried letters between
Berrigan , Sister McAlister and
other defendants rnvolved in the
alleged plot .
The third witness, Patncia
Rom, 29, a Bucknell librarian, was
named by the government u the
" "\ail drop" for the !etten. The
government said Sister McAlister
mailed the letters to Miss Rom
who gave them to Doupas, who
passed them alona to Berrigan .
Zoia Horn , the last witness
called , formerly directed the
Lrbrary at Bucknell, but now
works in Turlock. CaJH.
The government said several
people. rncluding SISter McAlister,
discussed the alleged plot wlule
hvtng in Mrs Horn's home in
LewiSburg.
Douglas Ita) not been seen 10
puhl1c smcc he testified 14
mt•nths ago before 1he grand JUry
wh1•h and1ctcd Bemgan and the
"' nlhers Douglas was expectc(i
to 1c,t1fy next week

.f)( ·hiflo to ,.,,ea/,·
The Graduate Student Association Scnate will
meet Monday , ll·eb. 28. 1972. at 7 .30 p.m. in Room
23t Norton.
Mr. Thoma!.\ Schillo, Housing, and Or. Georae
Goldfarb, Den tistry . will address the Senate.

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Friday, February 25

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Saturday, February 26

Sunday, February 27

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75c after 6 p.m.

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Friday , 25 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five
' .) •

I

'· ,• • • •

•

• \I

�/

EdiToRiAl

Luxuries or bOoks?

l

The Libraries, like many other portions of this campus,
"re in dire financial straits. The importance of an adequate, if
n'Qt excellent, library cannot be overstated. The excellenc:e
and scholarship we are theoretically striving towards IS
dire;ctly related to the quality of o ur library facilities.
.
The saddening part of• the library's financial crunch 1s
that most of the University has simply ignored it. Has the
Alumni Association ever offered to start a fund -raising drive
for the Library ? Has the UB Foundation ever raised a single
cent for the Library?
Not only is it a shame that these organizations have not
helped the library o r any other hard -pressed academic unit,
but it is dishonorable. Both groups are provided with
fac ilities and utilities by the Un iversity. Both claim to serve
the University community . Both are invisible when academic
funds are needed.
We ca nnot accept the proposttton that athletic
scholarshi ps and presidential houses are worth mo re to this
instituti on than books. This entire University is experiencing
a severe budgetary crisis and unless these groups are willing
to lend their efforts and monies to valid educational
endeavors, then they should cease to be a part of this
communi ty.
Finally, the Administration. always willing and able to
seek out communtty funds for sports, has apparently done
little examination of alternative funding sources for the
Library. We certainly hope that this behavior is not indicative
of their educational priorities.

Think first
Regionalization IS a fasc~nat ing concept for the SUNY
system . It is also a vague concept with many unclear areas.
The guarantee of places to all community college graduates
within a region is an admirable and egalitarian goal, but it
may wreak great changes in SUNY .
If the guarantee is actualized, it will likely decrease the
number of openings at the freshman and sophomores levels
within a region . This, in turn, may lead to increased
enrollment at the community colleges. Should this occur.
and the community colleges become prep schools for the
4 year institutions, we will have succeeded in destroying the
original concept behind the 2-year schools.
An information gap already exists between transfer
students and departments. Many students have.come here to
join a department, only to discover that they are lacking
prerequisites or are seeking admission to a program that will
not accept transfer students. If a guaranteed transfer
admission program is to be seriously countenanced, these
problems must be overcome.
If these matters are to be resolved , it has to be done
locally . Albany's expertise is simply devising general schemes,
not concrete plans. Thus the faculty and Administration
must jointly at1ack the question of regionalization . We
cannot think of a better starting point than contactiny a
random sample of ou r transfers to exam ine their experiences
here. Otherwise our mino r confu sions will become major
obstacles to the successful adoption of this plan .

THE SpECTI\UM
Friday. 25 February 1972

Vol 22, No. 58

Edetor-tn..Chief - Dennes Arnold
Co~n-.ng

Edttor AI Benson
Edttor Mtlte Lippmann
All1 . M.n...,ng Edttor Susan Moss
Busi- M.nager - Jack Herlan
Advertn•no M......, Susan Mellent'"e
Co~n...,ng

Campu1

City
Copy
A.sl .

fMture
Greptue ArU
Becks»Qe

Jo -Ann Armeo
Jeff Greenwald
How•• Kuru
Janis Cromer
Ronnt Forman
Man1 Gart•
C Ieire Krtegsrnllt1
Lynda Tart
Tom Toles
Amy Ahrend

Lavoue
Asst
L•t. &amp; Drama
MUSIC

OH.Cam~

Aast .

Photo
Alit.

Sporu
AS5t .

Maryhope Runyon
11ac;an1
Michael Stlvefblan
Billy Allman
Lynne Traeger
.11ocent
Mickey OsteHetcher
.K•mSantos
. Barry Rubin
Howte Fatw l

The SP«rrum •s servlld by United Press International, College Press

Service, the Los Angeles Ttmes Free Press, lhe Los Angeles Times
Syndicate ant.l Liberation News Service.
Republtcalton of matter here'" wtthout the express consent of the
Editor-in.Chtef Is lorntdden

Editorial Polley ts determtned by the Edttor

tn.Ch ief

- - ' .'" . "

Page six. The Spectrum. Friday, 25 February 1972
.

\.

.

n
Beset by demands, real or 1magined, I withdrew
last weelo&lt;end , all the way to New York City .
Somewhere at the bottom of the great retreat was
1he ueed I n remend myself that feeling unable to
move wa\ an enternal phenomena, not necessanly
cunnected tu the outs1de world As an exercise in
movement el was a qualified success. When you find
yourself , a11onal111ng that $.35 is too expensive to
pay for a subway nde of 1wo stops, even if the
aJternaiJVt! es walking I6 blocks through a gray.
slushy. and sloppy New Vorl-.. City, there seems to be
some pressure to be nonpass1ve Even at the expense
of a pair c•f shoes.
Walk1ng. or dnveng, es by necessity an acttve and
p:trticrpatory event, or serees of events If you don't
pay al lc;asl some attention it is liable to get you
killed . Ttu: more attenlion you have to pay the more
parteCiJ&gt;atory 1l is, for me. Walking in New York City
isn't had a~ together, JUSt thai crossing streets is liable
to be fat.al. Especially when the weather is foul
enough tu reduce your glasses to oblong prisms
perched u:selessly halfway down your nose and you
can't see v•ery damned much at all.

suggested to me that the more words l start to use to
say something simple, the more hyper I probably
am. What, me anxeous?
It is a matter of priorities. And a certain large
amount of confuseon concem10g such. If, in fact. I
am in graduate school to enable, and equip myself to
do certain things, but that the things I wish to do are
not , in facl, directly assumed to be part of the
program I am 10, how does one get oneself out of the
tree with a mmtmum of thorns 10 one's hide?
On the positive sJde, how does OJle max1m11.e
the opportunities to reach out and to come 111
contact with people if one is supposed to be work1ng
hard and mdustriously o n academic matters? A
defficulty which is not helped a great deal by .t
certain notable tendency towards overscheduling
myself to the poant where free time is eaten alive by
the things which cannot be done in the hapless and
holeless other periods. Which could, in all honesty,
also be further complicated by the fact that it es hard
to distinguish reluctance to do things for at least
partially valid reasons from pure laziness.

Depressions are clearly difficult things to handle
Movement . by whatever means. was apparently theoretically as well as practically. Or is one of those
my respomse to the feelings of ineffectiVeness whech somehow related to the other? Were 11 possible to at
have recently been so prevalent. If I could not get least theorettcally understand the bmds I get mtn.
my ass Ln gear for any of the rest of thmgs would it then be easter to deal w1th it practically''
unnumerable which I was supposed to do. at least a Since neether seems very readely available at tlu~
retreat could be heateu But it was in many senses poent let us forget it and move on
more pos1t1ve than that I went to see people nol
Once I get ento a bad place 11 requtres a
seen 1n a lung temc, and but d1mly remembered
There es a 1cndency fur me to have trouble combinateon of other people's positive enput and my
remembe meg people very precisely, whal es find.mg a place to stand inside my head to get me
remembered tends to be the feelings I have about out. TillS has been an issue in several recent
them. So thai 11 hecumes wise lo ou.:aseonally conversations. The need for people en tlus process
contacl lt1•e party ol the sc~:und part and see what that is. There seems to he an inherent capacity for
maneuvenng around any given person by repress1on
lund of feehngs aresc
and other evasive techniques, as a class however
Good feelings were numerous on this people are a bas1c need en my world. Whatever that
cxpcd1tmn,. whech made et a good one. Or tJus could may say about ch1ldhond deprivation and other
also be asc·ertained by the fact that I came back 111 assorted lopics to the psyche freaks among us, 11 is
much bc1ter place~ than when I left. The difficully . largely real.
leowever , e:s to transfer those feelings of not bl·ing
It bemg teal for me, I naturally assume it is teal
lulally uscles.~ and 1nefTecteve frorn msidc my head
lu ~,,,\! lkwd of changed relatllmslup with the for most other people. People look very much hke
out~ede world Mme prec1scly, to get some damn soceal animals to me, largely dependent on the1r
wmk dout&gt; without cuustructmg overly gro~s contacts with other people for awareness of
defense'S Jgaen~l pcuplc
themselves One does not learn great amounts about
oneself, generally. from a rock. In relating to other
Balan~:c II Frett Perls es eight , and elts very hard
people, partecularly those who apparently run on
In sep.trJll' the phys1cal and the psycholog,caJ, et
some strange and mystical and completely
would he scnMble that 11 would be hard for me to unreasonable psychological system .. 1.e., anything
keep thmg.s m balance. 11 havmg taken qulle long substanltally deffcrent from mme . a great deal of
enough l~lf me ll\ learn how to simply stand up knowledge can be garnered. If not particularly
Wllhoul fall1ug down with remarkable consistency mtegrated.
fit)W due~ one reasonably separate a world w1th a
relat1vely unreasonable dichotomy'' If, to be able to
Speaking on mtcgration. I have a feeling that
do what one wants to. one must du what one does ttus column esn't very. Wh.ich was probably
not partrcudarly wish to, obv10us problerns develop. somethmg wttich should have occurred to me when I
II feels ~l at1vely schizy to find yuurself trying to missed several rather serious curve signs while dnving
bribe yourself lo do things.
home lonight. I'm spacing again. But I am obviously
in better places, my response to this situation being
Most aof us have been very. very carefuU y trained ehhh! you win some, you lose
to be· extra competent at defering a number of kinds some. (Yes, but three tn a
of gratification into the far and foggy future. Which row?)
is of great benefit to the present commercial and
I ncflectiveness I S
politically system, or it at least seems so. The c ritica lly an interpersonal
difficulty which can arise in such a situa tion however variable. When you can't do
is related tel the more personal question of what I get things with other people, then
from such :a situation now. And the related question you feel worst. Depressions
of whether I will be able to do anything at all with come from lack of meaningful
the situaho•ns from whieh gratification is expected, interpersonal relationships,
unless I get some practice before they get here
hard as those are to bear. Fin.
Which is suspeciously wordy . It having been Pax.

The

grump

�Misunderstanding str•i,ightened

Everyone invited

To

th~

Editor:

pure~

their rc:tum tic kets.
_ Another " Ftussian typed - t wist ed'' fact I 'knew
was that t h e " H agans," the " Lrgun " and the "St em"
were mili tary agencies who terrified the Arab
population , co nrunitted m ass murd er against the m
( remember Oeir Yassi n ?) and o bliged them to flee
th e coun t ry. Tbe u ntwisted tru t h is that those
agencies were n o thing but Travel Agencies who wer e
t ry ing to "convince" the Arab population (in a
ra th er strange •way , yes, bu t a fte r all, busi n ess is
business) to join their special lo w-ra te program, " The
Longest Pic-nic of AU T imes" (in progress swce

To th e Editor.

This le tter will certainly go into the a nnates of
history (no kiddina) u the first letter in which an
Egyptia n pubUcly admits to an Israeli, that the
Middle East pro ble m is no thi ng b ut the result o f a
m is understanding o n the pa rt of the Arabs. I ' m
rderrina t o Mr. Frieder's last letter , and I hope th at
my lerter will pve the coup d e grace to t hat dragging
corresponden ce whi ch has recently been goi ng
between him and myself o n the pages of The

It has come t o my attention that it was rep orted
that o nly Chinese students were invited to o ur New
Year Celebra tio n . This is no t true.
One of the m aJor aims of t he Chinese Stud ent
Asso. is to pro m ot e friends hip a nd und erst an ding in
the hope o f impro ving relatio ns a mong peoples ' o f
the. wb dd . The view that w e would exclude any
nationals fro m ou r ac tivities is very d amaging to us.
It hinders our contin uous d evelop men t.
It is true that we usually ha ve more Ctunese
st uden ts, by far, in an y of our ac tivit ies. But t his is
only nat u ral. Many of the students who have come
t o our coffee hours, part ies. movies and, o ur
discussion m eetings that often carried m milled
English a nd C hinese wo uld test 1fy to the fact that
the y have been w elcome and weiJ trea t ed just as our
memb ers wo uld be ex pec ted. We also have
non-Chin ese m embers 10 our club.
Ho wever t he New Year Party sch eduled for Feb
19 requi res some co m men ts. We are going to have
our di nner party in th e Rjdge Lea ca feteria wh1ch
has a maximum o f 288 seats. 155 seats out of the
288 seats have been allocat ed t o the 200 Chinese
families in the Buffalo area. Half of the remam1ng
133 are reserved for the nearly 400 Chinese students
o n ca mp us. The o ther hal f is allocat ed for the
general student body Keeping in mind th at many of
our students are goma to 1nvite their roommates and
host-families. We expect that m ore than V.. of the
Jtlendants would be non.('hmese We find the: J.J
1ation very reasonable
I am sorry t h at th e physic:al hm1tat10n does nor
.dlow us to welcomt: everyone who want\ to ~ome
f c'11 r I. t't'
Vtl't' fre.11dent
Clunest·

Spectrum ,
In hiS tetter Mr. Frieder says, " I realize t hat Mr.

Also, anotlller d istorted truth I knew fro m
his tory rs that th ere was a slight (just stight) injus ti ce
committed against the Pales tinian People. Ca melshi t.
The true injustic e is committed against the Israelis,
who are carr)ing the burden of running a coun try
(Palestane), while th e Palestinia ns th emselves are
enjoying th e ma1ny pleasures of living rn a year -rou nd
~mp&amp;ng si t e.
And now that we've straightened ttungs up. Mr .
Fneder, o~nd cleMed the mlSunderstanding, let's start
fro m here
Hauan Forghal,v

Freedom of what?
To the Edi tor·

Swdrnt A.uonatton

Return Star Trek
Tu lht• f.'illror·
Tha n k Y&lt;&gt;U for your artiCle about the Star Trek
convention It is my opanaon that Star Trek was the
best teleVISIOn program ever aned dnd NBC made Jn
enormous mastJke 10 11 's decas1on to cancel the show.
I hope to see at return soon With the onginal co$1

1\ t'ntiNII B c:ooclwut

-----·
~

r' '

~
~

Be kind to riders

1948).

Fa rgha ly's kn owledge of tustory is of the well
kno wn, R ussian t y pe - it is t wist ed and interp re ted
according to his leaders' needs." Well, he lieve rt or
not Mr. Frieder, I reahze th at too, now I did that
JUSt by list ening to the other versron of the story
F or exa m ple
my p rc:vious " R ussian
t y ped - tw ast ed" kn o wledge of history was t ha t
Euro pean Je ws t ook over Palestine and kicked out
the Palestutians. The untwiSted truth, however {the
o ne t hat I was not aware of untrl very recenlly), is
thot those European J ews were nothi ng hut some
inn ocent to uris ts wh o , while vasit1ng th e Holy L a.nd,
run out of money unci cuuld not con.~equ~&gt;ntly

,.

I Jm appalled h}' Jcnn) MurH•lC' "01&gt;1nron
l n:edom' Feh . IH ~~ue, nut ,o 111111h lur h1~
assertaon t)f freednm nf ~pl.'l'&lt;..h. hut tor h1' lurther
d:unr that Anrenla 1~ tha.' holy h.r~tll'll ot l11:tdom
fo ..orne: out wrth ~ud1 .m anotnurJI&lt;' JnJ
JbommJhle statement by u~1ng \Ul h .r petty e xJ mple
of "freedom," as lu ucgJte the e!\1\tt•n•e 111 .~11 ttl the
InJUStiCeS thai run rampant Ill 1111~ I:UUOIIy l hs
n.:marks ure an m~ult and d .,111p Ill the f;u;e tn all
those who Jre ~uffenng .tt the ht~nd' of Jn unJU~t Jnd
rnhumanc socaety Surody be ldDDl•l lJII free the uly
ghetto dwellers, both hlo~lk and whrte, who every
d.ay fa..:e t he hard~hips uf unemployment ,
d 1s c nm1na11on indecent hou~mg . poor health
fJcahtres, llrug addrct10n, etc What gvod 1s hts "o p~:n
exchange of rdeas" when rat'l •rc ~hew1ng on your
baby's arm, at the same lime that S40 mallwn rate
exterrnin atron bills Hre bcanj;! defeated? And wh en
someone finally does scream. an the full ra&amp;e and
angea alter so long .tnd ~o unbearJhle an oppress1on,
the preservers of l;~w and order the nataonal guanl
- ~:orne rn to I\!~ tore ..:aim When they leave ,
"(r~:~edom'1 " has ht."t:n restored. and dead ho dlt:ll Jrc
~trewn o n the ground When l.alk " lnotfenstve, 11 Jq
lrce
when II hentmes.rn expre~srun of dr~~ontc:nt ,
11 ~ ~UJ)Jlfc~cd Freedom lo l;llk Jhnur oppre\Sion ,
and frcl·llum lo dte when you r.:11111e the futrlrty 111
talk And so pt:al:l' and frecdo111 n: rgrl &lt;1111.-e •ISJih .,~
the oppn·~s1on &lt;:ttnhnucl&gt;.
l:.id1 year thnUl&gt;&lt;Jnd' .. r magrant w••rkel\ f.JII
prey !11 rut hies' fo~rm grower) I ell your treccJom tu
the ~5 hamcd unJcr ( Jhlu1111.1 \Unshme '"II .tnd
God know~ how mtHIY more .He hu11ed
tlh'H' ..rnJ
dsewhc:rc Wbtk pt:toplc go hungry , the guvernnlent
pays f.~rmers nut to gruw cru 1)~ l o wh.tt purpu~c"
frl'cllnm Ill \Pt:JI. when you .11r tuu hung~) lo t.tH.''
R;use the banner of lrt:ednm .. , hurn11rt; ,rm.,t..")
o~dd une lllnre Chn~t In the ft&gt;ld I

The rnanework~:rs, wh ose lungs o~r~: liS black o~s
tht!u ~nat arc r·a1d a pattance for therr labor. When
the ~·oal •~ gone, the lactunes leave despan. hunger
poverty hopelessness.
Tha: aged 111 th.ts country are merely wallang to
dtc: hecause Wt' don't know whal to do w11h them
I hear umr&lt;.es Jre run. hut I here are no piiSiures to
turn them out 111 In thtar ttiOMn~s. they o~wa.t therr
C:XII lrnlll ltlr
1\men..:a rs frt:e .1nd hc..:ause of o ur cap1tallst
ethll, 1.1.e want everyone to have " share And we
l'.J"e 11 lu 'em
w1thout tht:lf ttSklng
the Bay of
P1g s, Santo Dom1ngo, South Amen ca n
expllllttlllllll
Jd nauseum. The folluwmg has been
brought to Y•Ju by America n Oil, Shell Oil ,
Bethlehem Ste1•l, Duw Corporauon
"And t he
r&lt;X.:kets red [!.Inn: , the bomhs bursting m air" over
small Vtetnamese villages The fields are httered wath
nJpalmed proof of our Stars and Stnpes Our
freedom IS so d:ulling that people are charred by the
b11ghtncss
Wnh rell\&lt;ud to the unavers111cs
Columb1o~ 's
ruthle,sn~~ rn liS uUatr •Wer Mo mmgsade Heaghts,
~ mt~shed heaJ~ 11 1 ll B, mllrtary rese3rd1, the case of
Dr Jont·~ . the trghtenmg up of reqUirements for
humanJtlc' ITill)ors, the IIJyes 45 , all atrest to the
nt)nfreednm M the un1versaty Is the lesson taught at
JJdr.\lln Jfad Kent St.tlc su easrly forgotten? The
Yh.. l11ns wa:rc unlv hcal.lt:d for theu next class. Can
you tall. ,thmll lrt!t:d&lt;llll 'o rl·adily wh.tle livrng 10
1111IV .r few 111nnth' ,h;1dow ul 1\lta ~e.r Pruon
MJ \\Jl rc 1
ll u\lo l.JII ltn· eJ(dl.rngt' ul rdeJ' he effntrvc:
wh1'11 lhl• Vtdllll~ an· huldmg a paar uf twos, the
•• f'Pil'~",r' .111 .trllll~:ry ut aLes? Yes. Wl' d o hdve
hl·edtllll ut ~Pc• 'l h hut thl\ freedom ~~ little mure
1h.1n the o~balaty •I \hl'tJ) In ay "hdJ"
Mt chu.-1 c;rt!t'nt·

Unfair criticism
To th1• l:t.11111r

pclltronl'a wuulld c\'plam the stru~· t•Hc: to anyone
who had lht• lillie
L..rstly w~ ft:c:l that the structural detaul!! 11nd
mJny of the: IOtnc.~~:tes Llf o rganu.atwn .tre slightly
ICM nnport.rnl ~ m lUIIe) &lt;..tlmpared to o ur effortb an
ohtaanu1g J dt'ftn1le funcJrng l.Ommltmenl from t h e
Un1vers1ty , wrtlill&gt;llt whil'h JIIRG will ntll tunction to
serv11.. c .tnyone

hcl1ev~:

I h e cJIIc&gt;ra.tl .rhoul Pll{(, In
J•eh I ot h Tile Spc·1 trum ~~ .111 uul.111
cr1lic1sm The sllU.Jtlon at tills pc•lnl , as fJr d\ I ..:;an
aee it. IS a two-wl!cl. relltJon dnve resultrng 10 th('
ac:cummulat10n of more srgnatura::s than I can ever
remernb~:r compiled in the last co uple nf years al
UB. run by many .Jc trve and h.Jrdworl.lllg people
who have had tables 10 almO'&gt;t a.ll hualdlngl&gt; on
Cllmpus an d have o..rrculatc:d the pc:tattons 10 alrn~t
every othtr way . Becausr, when we are speaking to
classes. the mstrudor usually allows only five
ma nute~ to speak, and when we s tup pe&lt;l ple Ill the
hall!&gt;, they o~r~ usually rn a hurry, we are not alway~
ahle to explam ~ fully a~ we woul d lake the
structure you referred to us vague. But we have had
plenty of mformation an t he Center Lounge and Jny
Wednc:~day ,

To th e Editor
For the past two weekends, I've heen tryang tu
get a nde to Boston and naturally have resorted to
Norton's Rrde Board Before finally gettang a decent
ndc, I've bad :.orne rnuedible hJ\Sie' wath pt:opk
advertisrng ' Rtders W.anted' and I've met fellow nde
hunters who have h ad s1milar expenences. II seems
that the R1de Board has an u nwntten o..ode o f et hiCS
wh1ch some people aren't aware of, though at's
Mmply a matter of t:11Urtesy I'm drrecting thts to
those people th:~t make 'definite' promiSes to others
about ndes asnd then for non-urgent personal
complicated excu ses (hke my friend said 'maybe'
and now Jt the last manute said 'yes') screw the nder
at the last minute. leaving hun no prospect of
.mother nde. Then, there are thost: 'mle offers' that
try to ri p off the rider with over pnced set rates,
making a profit on what should be an equal deal.
shanng dnving and expenses. There are even those
' nde offers' who simply don't sh ow up. I'm also sure
those fortunate people who do have the wheels have
had sim ila r bad e xperiences w ith riders .
So - Ride Hunters and R ider Seekers alike may I remind you not to make definite promises if
you know you can't keep them, not to stand up
your ndefnder, even though h e's 'only' a stranger
an oth er word s, simply be kind to the other party .
Marlene Kushner

'""') 1'//H; m~mbu
Dan Clark
/·'tJifor

:r "'''t' (Jw

(/Ut'.!f/t/1/S r~•gardiTII(

.f lrucrure an d

•·•mtrol wt're nnll• r'UiseJ ajtt•r .ft!Vt&gt;ral WNYf/RG
:.poAt•Jmcn Wt'lt' unahle 111 pnH•tde tuth an1wer1.
I /m. a memtwr 11j Ralph Nader's staff mad~
lf(J(t'lllt'I/IJ fl!~tlflllllg lht• fJIJWI!fJ (lj /ocof UlliQn.f
W/ll(·h Cllfl/f!Jclllf lht• darm.f IJj many WN YPIR G
lllt'lllht•fj

Pass-fail remarks
To th e Edit o r :
In regard to your .Jrt1cle on the reform of the
pass - fall system, I must ObJect to the remark of
Vice President for Acadeum Affairs Bernard
Gelbaum ("Would you like to go t o a doct or who
took only pa~ - faiJ?")
As a matter of fact, increasmg numbers of
medical schools are turning t o the pass- fat! system
(lncludin&amp; t h e excellent Ups tate Medical Center in
Syracuse) without a n y sacrifice of quality in the

doc:tor:. they produce Mr Gelbaum ~eems to rmply
thJt Jny pass fatl system must be abused ThiS as
not the ca~.: The: requrrements of the course and t h e
motavation nf the student!&gt; are far more Slgnifrcant
than the grad rng procedure. After all, there are any
number of letter-graded co u1ns in th e Umversity in
wtuch a stud~:&gt;nt can rece1ve an A or B wit h
amaungly litth~ effort Not all snap courses are
pass - fail, and not all pass fall courses are a snap.
Ask a med stud1:nt I
Melanre Cuzek.

Friday, 25 February 1'9 72 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�KINKS
ALBA NY - State Educahon Commissioner E wald N yq uist ruled
Wednesday t hat h.i&amp;h school students are free to print their own
"under&amp;round" newspapers, as long as sucb a publication does not
interfere with school operations. By h.is decision, Nyquist lifted the
five-day suspensions of four Troy High School students, who were
disciplined last September for distributing their paper, SNAFU . T h e
paper told students how to avo1d attenda n ce rules by stealing passes
•nd forgi ng teach ers' signatures. Nyquist called the paper "an 1nept and
immature attempt at satire," which apparently did not mfluence
anyone.
W ASH INGTON
The Supreme Court declared W&lt;!dnesd ay that
the 1970 re-election of Indiana Senator Vance Hartke is subject to a
state reco unt , th us overruling a lower co urt's decision . The co urt
o pinion, written by Jus ti ce Potter Stewart, upheld th e constitutiOnality
of state re co unts of co ngressiOna l elections
WAS HI NGTON
The Supreme Court agreed Tuesday to hear
arguments concerning the legality of a New Y o rk State law whu;h
prov1des free school textbooks 1n grades 7- 12, but imposes a fee in the
lower grades. The action wa s brought by th e parents of three Long
Island c h1ldren who attend dementary school in Un10n Free S~..huol
D1stnct No. '!.7 m Hemps tead The law requJres a S7 .50 textb ook fcc in
grades 1 ~. regardless o f the faml11es' economic s tatus. but provide:. free
texts m the upper grades The p ..m:nts say that th1s v1olates the
constitutiOnal guarantee o f "equal protection of the IJws " The court
will hand down d wntten opm10n later on m t he term

Kink,·retur11

ALBANY
A SUit was hied m StJte Suprem e Court Tue:.day hy
State Com ptroller Arthur Lev111 to have Governor R ockeft:,llt'r's
proposed S7 9 billion state budget dedared unconslltullonal Lev1tt
says the budget d oes not &amp;JVt' enough detail on how s tate funds are
spent, thus VlOiaung the Const1tUt1on . The allegat ions were demcd hy
Rockefelltr's off1ce, and a ~pokesrnan lor the governor sa1d " We arc
confident the new budget IS well w1thm mnst1tutwnal hmll l&gt;. We are
diSappomted that Com ptroller Levitt felt he had to bnng suit,
espeCially Since we had made a number of changes 1n the new budget
format to meet complamts of last year"

R•v 011Vi• lind the r-.t of the Kinks will ~ug into
Buffllo next Wednesd•v. March 1 for an 8 p .m .
p e rformance. Also o n the bill are Fairport
Conventio n and Lindisfaire.

What is life without love?

NEW YORK
"Operation M1dt own'' went mto eftect here 1111
Tuesday The new po llee department program IS des1gned to clear the
Times Square area o f "unde~~reah lel." through a large polu.:e
crackdown A polke department spokesman satd that by Ma y I
" hundreds" of extra pollee Wlll be brought mto the area to d.:an 11 up
through "saturation by un1lormed patrolman " A department source
SaJd " By thiS summe1, out~f-t owners and c1 ty restdents w1ll be able to
srroU rhetr fanuJJe) ulong Br o.u}wdy or any of lhc adJacent streeh dnd
avenues 1n the Times Square area and the rest of midtown Manhattan
w11hout fear o f be1ng accosted by pro~t1tutes, p1mps. dev1ates or JUSt
plam thugs " Although the pou\:e are enthUSIJSt lc about the operation.
there IS one problem J newspaper ched. ha!&gt; found thdl I H s1m1ldf
~-ampJJgn!&gt; have been !&gt; t.ut ed Mnte 1934
TORONTO
Wednesday m.HJ...ed the stall ot d federal
•mm1grat1on h ear~ng tnto the stat us of Karlet on LewLS Armstrong.
1..3ptured by the R oyal ( anad1an Mounted Pollee nn Feb 2h
Armstrong, along With h1s broth er Dw1ght. and Leo Burt and Dav1d
Fme, are wanted by the FBI 1n connectiOn w1th the IIJ70 fJtJI
bombing 3t the Umverslty o l WlloCOriSIIl Th e purpo~c or the heanng I~
to deternune II Arm st rong can he c.:xtrad1teJ to tlw llmted State~
Pl:.KING
Prc,ldent N1,.on ha ~ agreed wllh l'rcn11cr Chnu-cn -1,11
on one maJOI 1tem . N1xon w1ll ~end ('tuna twu musk o"'cn m return for
two g~ant Pand a heaf\ 1 hrec Urutcd StJ(l' fill" have offe n::d to take
the bear~ R1ght nuw there .He only twn other g1ant PandJs hv1ng
out\lde of Ch1nc1. ('h1·&lt;'h1 and An·An, who resu.k '" Lond on and
Mo~cow

**

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i+
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:

Meet your King or Queen
at the

"MEDIEVAL Ml X "
Sat, Feb. 26
8 :30 to 12 .30
Castle Inn
2066 Eggert Rd.
(In back of Northtown Plaza)

Live B~nd "The Silver Dollar"

i+ Guys-$1.50 - - -Gtrls $1.00

it

Sponsored by H•llel

Free Refreshments

SHOWS TOAY
2:00-4:00- 6 :00
8 :00-10:00 P. M.

From one beer lover to another.
THI S'nOH IIUWEJ.Y COW711NY, DB1'10l1', WIOUGAN 4NH

Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, 25 February 1972

II

�by Tom Bogucki
Spectrum Mus1c RBVIBwBr

The prospect of John Lee Hooker and
Canned Heat playing together brought a
few thousand people to BuHalo State's
gym Sunday ntght . John Lee was playing
boogie music twenty years ago and is just
coming out of some lean years. Canned
Heat has borrowed a lot from John Lee's
straightforward country blues style, and it
was obvious that they would end up
playing together before the night was over.
I went to the late show, which didn't
start till about midnight, and the audience
was more than restless by th is time; they
were expecting blood. There was large
applause as John Lee appeared on stage,
surrounded by a small band, consisting of
guitar. bass, and drums. He started with
" Maudie," a song dedtcated to h is wife, a
good fast shuffle, which picked everyone
up. His band, although qui te young, stayed
out of hts way, and concentrated on
pushing that relentless backbeat which ts
the trademark of his music.
John Lee seemed to be holding back,
though, and the singmg was hard to hear,
as tf he wasn't quite into it yet. He went

into " I'm Bad," with which he made
valiant effort, but cut short as It seemed to
be lost in tht~ gymnasium. It was then I
realized that a college auditorium with a
pschedelic light show and a lot of stoned
people playing wtth balloons just wasn't
the right place to hear John Lee Hooker
tell a very hea'Vy story about his revenge on
a man he cauglht fooling with his wife.
Spellbound
He tried ~tgam with "Country Boy,"
more his own style, and he did most of his
own gut tar plllytng here. He hammered the
chords and mtxed 1n those short fast little
riffs, while lhe sang "I'm just a poor
country boy drifting from town to town."
He seemed to be holding the audience
spellbound here. This was the kind of
music I was expecting from Hooker. and it
was more than appreciated.
Then he amnounced he'd do one more
song, and 8V(trybody clapped along as he
started the famthar chords of " Boom ,
Boom ." The band pushed it to a boogie
frenzy, but John Lee put down hts guitar
and left, wtuiE! the band played on . Hooker
warmed up the crowd mcely, but 1t was a
short set and Just a little disappointing
because I know what he ts capable of . I'm
sure that m &lt;mother half hour he would
have been reallly mto 1t, but Canned Heat
stttl had to play
There was a wave of e)(Citement as
Canned Heat took the stage and you could
feel the energy seepmg through They
started wtth ,A.I Wilson's "On the Road
Again," but PliShed to a boogte frenzy , and
you knew thall th1s tS what the crowd was
watting for Bob, " the Bear" Hite played a
fine harp and sang whtle the rest of the
band fUSt pushed ctnd pushed. There's
nothtng espectally subtle about Canned
Heat's mus1c, JUSt good hard fast music
played w1th a \lengance
Changes galore
The band hc1~ gone through a lot of
changes smce the death of AI W1lson, but
F1t0 was sttll C)n drums push1ng as hard as
he could w1th the new bass player . Henry
Veast1ne was a welcome Stght on gu1tar ,
and along With Joel Scott Htll they were as
vers1111e as a hoorn sect1on and traded some
amaz1ng riffs. Bob Htte's harp playmg has
improved greatly, c~nd they were cooking
right from the start, at an energy level that
most bands wc:&gt;ulcl be happy to end w1th .
Bob announced that this was the1r last
concert of a fo ur week tour and they were
ready to burn it up, and you knew they
weren't fool1nH The next song, a hard fast
shuffle, features some fine riff tradmg
between Joel Scott H1ll and Vestine. Hill's
c ontinued on page 13 -

Photos by McNiece

�R~edpath featured
Jean Redpath will be performing at the
U UAB Coffeehoose this Friday .ct
Saiturday night. Miss Redpath c::ame to the
U.S . from Sco1tand in 1961 tnd h•
deUghted audiences all across the country
wi,t h h• stunning voice and b road range of
songa.

Don Mel...,, composer of 1he

'Pie' composer

number one hit " Am•lcan Pie,"
will ..,.,.... .t Kleinhans Music
twl thlt Sundey ni_,t for .., 8
. lhow.

Film 70/71; edited by David Denby; Simon and
Schuster; $2.95
I suspoct that many of us read book reviews in
lieu of read1ng the book and read film reviews only
to find ou1: whethet' or not we should go to the film .
Fair enough - many book reviews are bener (or as
good) as the books reviewed, and many film reviews
don 't offer us much more than subjective qualitative
judgements

~Bini~
fiiMOWI

Our Weekly Reader

\J

Fortunately . there are qu1te a few excellent film
reviews wntten every year 1n Amet'ica, and many of
them are collected annually in the Film series,

PliC&amp;IBud
BHSPBCW.

Served Mon. thru Fri .
Until 11 a.m. and
Sun. thru Thurs.
AFTER 9:00p.m.
Sun. thru Thurs.
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FRESH EGGS, as you like 'em.

65¢

3300 S HERIDAN DRIVE
ION ROA

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MONTH

ddler
~on screen
the

TONIGHT at 8 :15 p.m.
Pf aza North
1111 .. r, .... 1Mo1UI

Availat:lle
At Box Office
Before Each
Performance.

anthologies. of reviews written by members of the
National S·ociety of Film Critics. Film 70/71 is,
according to its editor David Denby's note, the
"fourth volume of Society criticism."
In some ways it is pretentious to call the articles
collected here "criticism." In reading the book 1
became vfNy much aware of the extent to which
these are "reviews" - written under pressures of
space and deadline, dealing with one film at a time,
making rapid and relative judgements.
Thus, the book's strength and its weakness. We
do get a 54m5e from Film 70/71 of people involved
immediately, rathet' than reflectively, with cinema.

We learn not just about the films of the year, but
also about the way they were received in that year .
Future film historians will be able to turn to the
Film series to learn about the evolving social and
aesthetic standards of the public. It would be useful,
now, to have anthologies such as these for years in
the 30's and 40's, to know how the "ciHSic" and
"camp·classic" films of those years were
immediately received.
The weakness of Film 70171 ts, of course, also a
function of its Immediacy. It could use a nttle more
reflection - for it becomes clear that, interesting as
man'!( of these articles may be, they are the best
articles written on their part1cular subjects, and, as
long as we are certainly reading them from a
temporal pos1t1on beyond the question of
attendance, we may as well be also afforded the
advantages of reflection.
This is all to say that Film 70171 is of primary
1nterest to those concerned with comparative film
criticism, and it is of no great value as a source-book
on the cinema of the past y~ar .
Nevertheless, I think it is important to read
John Simon's critique of Diary of a Mad Housewife
(a movie. incomprehensibly , well·received in Europe)
and Penelope Gilliat's article on Joe - perhaps the
best review she has evet' written . Harold Clurman's
terse review of Five Easy Pieces sees right through
that hokey film . Andrew Sarris gives the already
o~ure Zabriskie Point what probably is the most
intelligent analysis it will ever receive. Richard
Schickel's article on Russ Meyer 1s, clearly, more
important than its subject.
If there is something to be learned as well from
bad reviews, Jacob Brackman's of Five Easy Pieces
and Joseph Morgenstern's of The Ballad of Cable
HotJU.e, M •A •s •H, and Woodstock can certainly
serve as examples of shallow thinking, misjudgement ,
and poor style.
The most important article in the book IS
Pauline Kael's essay "Numbing the Audience." She is
one of the few critics who is aware that the movie's
production is as much a part of it's social
phenomenon as is its contents. Her reviews could
serve as models for many of the less clear-headed
would-be social critics whose articles are included in
this anthology.
I am glad that this series continues to be
published; and I do admit that Film 70/71 is an
interesting book to browse through. But it is a book
of only secondary importance to all but the most
professional of tilm-goers.

- Elliot Krieger

�Koz MiCk wrapper

Levinson talks big business
by Marcel Paille
and Don Johns

Rapper with each new account. It m·ight be
tnecessary to create a Hanukah Club account instead
•of a Christmas Club, but such details can be worked

To say that it is difficult to take Michael
Levinson seriously · is almost as much of an
understatement as saying that Dick Nixon doesn't
have an honest face. But when I agreed to take this
story, I was told : "Write anything you want, but be
nice to Lev." Okay, I'm a nice guy.
The three hundred and forty ·third episode of
the Koz Mick Wrapper (see, anybody can do it) was
staged Thursday afternoon in Haas Lounge.
Actually, except for his ego, Lev is a pretty
intt~resting person . I mean, how many people do you
know who go around rearranging syllables for a
hobby? Anyway. there was a capacity crowd on
hand for the performance. Of course, I can't
remember the last time I passed Haas Lounge at
three on a weekday afternoon that there wasn't a
capacity crowd.

1011 .

Among other things Lev proposed setting up a
titudent supermarket (with Lev reciting his poetry
•over the PA system instead of Muzak?) and charged
Sub Board I with corruption . Never let it be said that
1myone in this office would turn down an
ti&gt;pportunity to publicize charges of corruption,
!oubstantiated or not, on the part of our friends on
1the second floor .
Lev did cite the case of one illustrious student
lleader who ran around the student government
t:&gt;ffices earlier this year with a copy of Sub Board
minutes making all kinds of charges and threatening
Ito expose them all. He was subsequently given a
position on the board . lev didn't use any name,
1~ssibly because he didn't know it, so neither will I.
But do tl)e initials L.G. strike a fam iliar note?

Dilapidated furniture
By the way, I'd like to take this opportunity to
comment on the disgraceful condition of the
furniture in that rest area. There was a time, back
du ring the revolution (remember the revolution?).
when the chairs actually had springs and padding.
This was my first visit in a while, and I was outraged .
Bottoms falling out, padding torn up - I'll bet you
Dorothy Haas would never stand for that in her
home! Fucking hippies.
Oh yeah, Lev. I almost forgot about him . Yet
Lev has a kind of staying power - I think
overbearing is the word. Oh well, anybody who
could seriously envisage starting a student·run bank
on the lawn between Tower and Norton must have
something. I really do believe that would be a
tremendous idea. It's just not your everyday,
run·of·the·mill concept . As a matter of fact , if Lev
can get the FDIC to handle such an operation and
the federal government to license it, he deserves to
have every student within a 200-mile radius deposit
their money in his bank. He says it's been done at
the University of Michigan, so why not here?

IRapt attention
Actually, I would hesitate to say that Sub Board
II or any of its members are corrupt. I would hesitate
lfor two basic reasons. The first is that I have no
proof. The second is that despite my suspicions, I
really don't feel like getting sued for libel. Ah, the
1trials of the yellow journalist.
What holds me in awe of Lev is his ability to
hypnoti ze a crowd . I mean, they were spellbound .
There were a few exceptions, however. For example,
lthere was Stanley Dayan standing just outside the
!Lounge giving a flute recital . Over by the fireplace,
one member of the Video Conexion (dragged out by
ILev to film this episode) sat seducing a female
member of the audience with whom he hSd
obviously shared earlier relations (in publici What
would mommy think!) . The middle section of the
lounge was occupied with a very entertaining black
puppy being played with by an amply endowed
voung woman (forgive me, women's lib, but my
eyeballs got stuck) .
Be that as it may (and it was), lev insists that he
has collected a thousand signatures on his petitions
t:o have himself made director of Sub Board
(renamed Jello Submarine Ink) . You know what? I
believe him. You know what else? If there is
anything this University deserves, it's a good case of
Michael Levinson.

Hanukah Club?
If Lev really has his facts straight and the bank
can be set up, the possibilities are endless. To attract
customers he could give away copies of The Cosmic

tDue fuibe I;;~taff parly, I

I there are

t
t·

t several
t positions

I

on

•

THE SpECTI\UM

:

t We also
t perfected ?

;
t

t
t

for more information:

Susan Moss
Mike Lippmann
Jo··Ann Armao

~

.....-~ ...-~ ~ ....-~ ~~-. ....-~ ...-~

831-4113

....

-~~

....

-~

�I

RECORDS

Tent111mount to Tree10n. Volume 1 Mld...t Nwnith
lnd 111ie Second NatiOftll a.nct (Victor LSI'-&lt;4663)
Rudy the Fifth Rick Nelson &amp; the Stone CMyon
Bend l!Decca DL 76297)

A U T 0 and C Y C L E

I N SU R A N C E

-Jim McFMW1n

sophisticated idiocy, mOff of It Is so characterless
that anyone who listened to both sides in a row
would die~of the blahhhs. Check out these lines:
"When I was a young boy, my mama told me,
son/ You've got to keep it together, you're the only
one/ So I got myself a guitar, when I was just a kid/
And I played rock and roll music and I'm so glad I
did."
If you can stay awake through lyrics like that
(they're all over the place) then watch out for Rick 's
puerile Mick Jaffer imitation on "Honky Tonk
Woman." Even two Dylan n umbers, which Rick 's
handled very well before, send the listener nodding
off to Z-land.
Yet, amid all the maudlin anesthesia, Rick
sneaks a good one in. It's called "Sing Me A Song"

Tl~ese guys have got a big problem - somehow,
they'v,e got to convince America that they are real.
Ricky spent a prolonged, unnatural adolescence o n
one o1f television 's most successful comedy series,
REGARDLESS OF AGE OR RECORD
while Mi ke was seen every week posing as the lead
LOW DOWN PA
TERMS
guitari:st of a top bubble gum group .
Ali a result, both are rich , we ll-known and
frustrated . After all, how can anyone who marvelled
at t he grotesque middle-class family Nelson take the
"irrepresible Rick y" seriously? Or, similarly, does
3800 HARLEM RD ....................................837·2278
Mike really expect us to believe that he can d o more
.......,.....,.....,.NEAR KENSINGTON
NIGHT 839.()566 ~--,. than lip synch, wear a stocking cap and make funny
faces? These boys are marooned in the vast
wastelund.
That's too bad, because Rick Nelson and
M ichaEtl Nesmith are two extremely talented
mus ic ians desperately trying to disassociate
themse·lves from their TV alter egos. T hough not
very su,ccessful on t hat score, they have managed to
put ou1t seven albums between them, and some of
the fin,est music yet engendered in the country-rock
Free p.,klnll et
category.
Unlvers ttv M enor
ON MANY TITLES
While the Byrds, Buffalo Springfield , Neil
(nex t o oo r)
Young and CSN&amp;Y have at one time or the other
BUFFALO TEXTBOOK STORES INC.
domine1ted this area, a number of groups existing just
833·7131
under the surface of popularity have produced an
astounding lot of good music (among them The
Flying Burrito Brothers, Dillard &amp; Clark , early Poco,
UUA8 MUSIC COMMinEE a BUFFALO FESTIVAL ..,_,
SouthW'ind, Sh ilo h and the International S ubmarine
Band) . To that distinguished list add Rick Nelson
and Mic:hael Nesmith , with their respective bands.
and catches the easygoing, reflective Style of his two
However. judging by their reeent releases, the
earlier albums - Rick Sings Nelson and Rick Nelson
two may have gone under since Tantamount to
In Concert. "Sing me a song, you can't go wrong/ It
Treason and Rudy the Fi fth are easily the worst
doesn't have to rhyme/ Sing me a song, it won't take
~ONVElVI'ION
things e~ither has done. The albums contain a ragged
long/ You o ughta take the time." Backed by
LINUIS •'AII~N•;
variety - some good, some nondescript , most of it
Brumley's crystalline steel guitar, Rick reminds us
very, very bad. This is especially disappointing since
Wednesday, March 1, at 8 P.M.
that he can write, and sing, some beautiful things.
both men were coming off their best a lbums,
His first two a lbums with the Stone Canyon
apparently having found a congenial style to cradle
Band contained a lo t of good original materia l, as
their redirected music .
All S.ort lteoerv•cl Moilt ,._, $S.50-$4.SO a./con y $4.50-$4.00
well as excellent interpretations of rock standards. In
Ne!mith first - though he was the only Monkee
Tichlt Oft •ole ..ow ot lvHolo foatlvol Ticket Office, Stotler HlhOfl loblt,
Concert. recorded live at t he Troubadour, featured a
(ma ll Ofd• r • CIC'C . . . . . _ wt-h . • •• ._.. ed ••lf·o:Ciclreaaed .,. • • ~ope),. u.t Hof'fO"
w1th
an1y
real
talent
(he'd
played
count
ry
music
for
Holt; 'toto Coll-t~o Tich' Office: Folh Ticltoh, Hoob or!. "•••· N ioeoro foil•.
years in his native Texas and penned the Stone very nervous Rick doing old hits, three Dylan
Poneys hit "Different Drum"l guilt by association numbers and his own recent compositions. The
sent hinn into hibernation. In 1970 he emerged with Stone Canyon Band, with Randy Meisner on bass.
the Firs:t National Band, comprising d rummer John Allen Kemp on lead gu itar, Pat Shanahan on drums
Ware. bassist John London and super steel guitarist and old buckaroo Brumley rocks with unstoppable
Red Rhodes and within a single year he'd produced a gusto , instrumentally and vocally. It's the
trilogy : Magnetic South, Loose Salute and Nevada
Fighter .
The· first two had some high points. especially
the incr,edibly beautiful "Joanne," a superb remake
of "Beyond the Blue Horizon, and "Silver Moon,''
the grooup's quasi-hit on AM radio; but both
~nerallv served as preparation tor Nevada Fighter an intereonnected collection of love songs as fine as
l.JJyla or The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard &amp;
Clark. Nevertheless, it was universally ignored .
So now Nesmith is starting again, with a new
album and a new band. Rhodes stuck, but Ware and
London have been replaced by Jack Panelli and
Johnny Meeks, wi t h Michael Cohen added on
keyboards and Moog synthesizer. The Second
National Band, like the First. provides adequate
support, except for Rhodes, who is as scinti llatingly
inventivE! as he is technically overpowering. Once in
the stud1o, Nesmith, who has produced a ll his
albums ~;ave the first, masterminds everything the triumphant re·mcarnation of a great American artist.
group do•es.
Unfortunately. on Rudy the Fifth. Rick left his
However. it appears that his overwhelming band and all his good taste in the hotel room; once
non-recognition has driven Michael insane. Instead of in a whi le Brumley slips a few notes in, but Rick
liner not•es, he's festooned the back of the cover with relies more on Jimmie Haskell's orchestration and
a recipe tor home-brewed beer; on the front is a
Andy Belling's piano to accompany his dewy-eyed
ARTS
stomach-turning cesspool of dead carp, old tires, a
ballads.
DANCE ARTS
rusted p•ickup and a nearly-submerged Statue of
Basically, what these two guys have done is
DRAMATIC ARTS
Liberty .
retreat into self-gratifying musical cacoons; both
LITERARY ARTS
In fact, the cover matches most of the music have done better, much better - Nevada Fighter and
Ml.. 'IC
ins1de - it's nauseating. Six of the n ine songs are Rick Nelson in. Concert are great albums. And, if
FILM
unrefin ed sewage, overproduced tomfoolery where you're lucky, t he next time you paw through the
Nesm1th indulges himself in cast rati vocals, cretin sale bins at Grant's you may find Rick's magnus
COFFEEHOUSE
rock and roll and stupid studio gimmickry.
PUBLICITY
opus - Bright Lights and Country Music (Decca
The remaining three pass with a B. Once he gets DL4779) a copesetic collection of 12
In order to continue programming, we need
past the nebulous fade-in, Nesmith does a fine job on bottled -in-bond country numbers, with James
people to work in these areas. Positions of
the old Kay Starr biggie ''Bonaparte's Retreat." Burton at his nimble best.
Chairman in each of t hese comm ittees are
Likewise. he clicks on country classics " Talking to
available. What is needed is t ime and desire to
The ultimate purpose of this review, then , is not
the Wall" and "She Thinks I Still Care." That last just to lambast two crummy albums, it is to let you
work . Stipends are given to all UUAB Chairmen.
song is especially well-suited to Nesmith's tenor know what Rick Nelson and Michael Nesmith have
If you would ljke t o work any of these areas,
drawl, and George Jones could never break his voice been doing these days. They're more than flickering
applicat ions are found in Room 261 , Norton.
as nice as Michael.
entities from our TV-winch ing days, they're really
Wh il t~ Nelson's Rudy the Fifth lacks Treason's
fine musicians begging for an audience.

IMMEDIATE FS·I

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• •

-&lt;.Ontlnuecl from .,.._ 9--

extended note$ seemed to soar over the
music and WerJ a sharp contrast to
Vestines speed-freak riffs.
Everyone started screaming for the
boogie, and Hill explained that he wanted
to work up to it and went into Albert
King's "Lowdown Blues." It's hard to do
Albert's music, without doing a parody of
"da blooze," but Hill sang in a fine voice,
never affected, and he never ovefextended
his guitar playing, but built it up slowly.
The rest of the band lay back and
controlled the dynamics perfectly .
They then went into their new single
" K1ng of Rock and Roll," a song about
little Richard, at a rock and roll frenzy,
and although it borrowed more than a little
from Richard's music it was good fun .
Canned Heat has never been ashamed to
adm1t their roots, which was the reason for
the tour w1th Hooker. Hill sang another
slow blues, about how people have got to
get together, and it was here that Hooker
came on stage and finished the song, a nice
touch.
EIBoogie
F mall y they went 1nto what everyone
was wa1t1ng for. The Boogie . John Lee
Started 1t oH with the familiar chords and
by the time the rest of the band came In,
the whole audience was danc1ng. Hooker
gave h1s gu1tar to the Bear and sang while
the band pushed . They lay back wh1le
Hooker sang, forming a g1ant rhythm
sect1on, and kept 1t simple and mean .
Hooker was clearly enjoying himself but
he left the stage after about twenty
menutes to great applause, and by this time
the band had worked themselves to a
frenzy . As soon as Hooker left, the band
exploded, pushing the boogie to double
t1me. Hill took a fine lead, and the Bear
was even do1ng his Boogie on the guitar.
When he couldn't go any farther Vesune
broke in with the most insane guitar
play1ng I've ever heard, turning the boogie
ens1de out. The rest of the band let him
have the stage to himself, for about 15
minutes, while he worked it out, slowing it
down, and then pushing it faster .
Even two encores
When the band came back they pushed
It even faster and no one could stand still.
You knew they'd keep playing until they
Wefe ready to drop. Then it was Fito's turn

B /a('k h·o1:r
Linda Swiniuch rehearses a new
role w•ring a black mask of her
own face. The production is Black
Ivory - Inspired by Genet's The
Blacks - and choreographed by
Cristyne Lawson for the Company
of Man. Performances will be in
the Sculpture Court of 1he
AlbriFt· Knox Art Gallery on
Feb. 26 and 27 at 8 :30 p.m.
Music for the production has been
commissioned from Creative
Associate, Roberto Laneri and its
songs ..ut litany are written by
Mindy Aloff.
Tickets available at Norton
Hall ticket office.

to boogie and he did a fine solo. He never
lost sight of the original beat but turned it
around, and played through it, until you
were sure he'd never stop. The bass player
did a tim~ solo and by this time I thought
they wer•e going to go right through the
stage.
They finally ended it while Hill sang
"Fell so good, I knew I would.." And I
thought that they couldn 't possibly do an
encore after that. But they came back to
do "Work Together" with everyone
clapping along and they were still pushing.
They triE~ to leave again, but no one
wanted them to, so the band did a simple
progression, while the Bear explained that
they wert3 glad to see evl!fyone enjoying
themselves, but it was three in the morning
and they 'couldn't play anymore. The slow
blues mellowed everyone out nicely, and
when the)r left the audience was exhausted.
There's nothing pretentious or
mystenous about Canned Heat. They're
one of those bands that would play for
nothing just to see people forget about
themselve:&gt; and enjoy themselves, which is
what the boogie is about. Just a simple
three cho~rds repeated over and over until
you can't ignore the beat, and everyone has
to boogie sooner or later. They play blues
in a relaxed style that never just imitates
it's roots but never tries to hide them
either. It was good to see Hooker and Heat
together, and he was obviously an
inspiration for them to push harder and
show hirn what they've done with his
music. It was too bad that Hooker's set was
so short a.nd he didn't get into his blues,
but the bcJoogie made up for everything.

�Icemen defeat Ithaca .as
season comes to an end

Hoopster Finale

l~ketba/1 Bulls face Danes
i1~ homestretch at Clark Gym

salvo of five goals in the fint
seven minutes, which put both the
game and Biedron away.

byDIIVeGeringer
Sp«trum Staff Jtlrfttr

WII h the playoffs rapidly
The home stretch is here for the basketball
approaching, the hockey Bulls Wn,ht Ukes comebKk
Bulls. With only three games to go in the seuoo
"Overall, I was happy that we
added another Division II victory
which began last Dec. I, the Bulls face the State
to the1r record Tuesday night. The were able to come back from the U,niversity of Albany tomorrow night at Oark Gym
Bulls trounced Ithaca, 11 - 5, to early deficit ," remarked Buffalo (8:30p.m.).
up the11 mark in the ECAC Coach Ed Wright, "but we seem
In the 14-5 Great Danes, Buffalo faces a squad
Division to 10- 2. Buffalo is now to have a problem gelling up for well in the running for an NCAA college division
some of the weaker teams. Our
I I 7 overall.
toumame:nt bid. A member of the State University
forwards were not backcheck.ing,
The Bulls had to come back to
Athletic Conference (SUNYAC), the Danes held
and consequently we fell behind
win th.is contest after falling
second pll!tce with a 6-2 record, and are hoping that
early. If we are to succeed In the
behind early in the game. A
the ECAtC will come up with a final ruling on the
playoffs, our forwards will have to
breakaway goal by Ithaca's Bob
controversial Norman Bounds of Brockport.
play good two-way hockey . When
Dnscoll. h.is thlrd of the night .
Should the ECAC declare Bounds and the
you play a team that has a good
gave the Bombers a 4-2 lead With
Golden Eagles inellgible for the NCAA's, the Danes
goaltender, such as Ithaca, you
the second penod just under three
should gt1in the automatic SUNYAC bid, as long as
have to be concerned ."
minutes old . However, the Buffalo
Brockport can beat Buffalo State on March 29.
The playoff teams for the
squad came back, going ahead to
The Danes have never beaten the Bulls o n the
stay With a ·four-goal outburst in a Divisio n ll playoff tournament are Oark Gym boards, and trail the all-time series, 12·1 .
expected to be announced
span of 4 :3 I.
last yea r, Albany upset the Bulls, 76-61 after a
shortly. The Bulls, who hope to
After the Bulls tied the score at
snowstonm delayed Buffalo's arrival to the state
make the eight--team playoff, are
4-4, freshman Mike JUym, the
capitol. Albany Coach Dick Sauers in his seventeenth
bucking for a spot among the first
second leading goal producer on
year at the Dane helm has been coach during the
four teams. Teams that are seeded
the squad took Dale Dol mage's •
entire length of the Buffalo Albany senes.
among the first four will play
pass off a faceoff in the Ithaca
then first round playoff games at
zone and rocketed a hard shot
Blackmote threatens records
home.
past Bomber goalie Joe 81edron.
Several Buffalo all-t1me records are m the
' 'Our ECAC record IS good,"
Btedron , who kept the Ithaca observed Wnght, "but our overall process o f being broken by 6-6 JUruor center Curt
squad ahead 111 the first period by record tS no t as good . In addition, Blackmore. Blackmore's 832 career points place him
making 22 saves, was beaten two we did not play as strong a sixth on the all-time Buffalo list. A 20-pomt
minutes and four seconds later for schedule as some o f the other performamce by the Selkirk , N.Y. native will tie h.im
the goal that proved the eventual teams did. Whether we are seeded with Chuck Dan1els fnr fifth place. Blackmore also
needs 25 field goals in the nex t three games to t1e tus
winrung tally.
10 the first four will depend on
So ph omore center J ohn wtuch of the factors the seeding record o f 188 field goals set last year
Additio nally. 20 rebounds will tje freshman
Stranges. who leads the team m committee constders the most
Jim Home's season record of 366 ret ncves
Coach
goals wtth 18, broke in to the left 1mportan t."
Blackmore,
who normally shoots from close range.
of 81edron and fired home the
The Bulls will travel to Kent
suth Bull marker. He later added State to111ght to face the CltpJ1\:1S also has a shot at B1ll Barth's 56 R field goal
percentage standard Blackmore leads Buffalo 's
another m the Bulls' th.ird period in their last scheduled game
marksma~n with an accuracy percentage of 54 .
Two of the Bulls· fine junJOt college 1 ransfers
Jim Tribble and Bob Vartanian also rate pra1se
Vartaniam has hit double figures tn 12 straight games
and in 19 of Ius 20 games ttus season . Only in the
After compiling their best good shot. Besides ty1ng Brandt Georgia StaLe romp d•d the Le1cester, Mass. transfer
record ever, Coach Ed M1chael's for the most pins, Lawson went miss. Blackmore has missed double figures three
wrestling team wtU be 10 undefeated until last Saturday's times - against Samford, Maryland and N1agara
Cincmnat1 today and tomorrow match at Cortland. He is one of Tribble, who h.its the boards relentlessly. has come
for the Eastern Regional three BuUs who lost but once alive offensively w1th sohd 24-42 shooting 10 h1s last
four appe:arances.
Qualifying Tournament. The during the season.
Junior capta1n ( 5 I I ) J ohn Quattwcchi leads
Heavyweight To ny Pohcare,
wrestlers who qualify at this
the
Oanes
with a 16 -point average. while tt 2 sophs,
tournament will go on to the whose two last bout v1ctories in

Qualifying match

Matmen enter tourny

NCAA Championsh ips
month at Maryland.

next

A total of 42 teams will be
entered 111 the townament, wtth
the first three wrestlers 1n each
weight da ss advancing to
Maryland T he finalists tn each
we1gl11 das:. will go, as well as the
th.ird place finisher This w1ll be
de t erm1ncd by a sc11e~ of
wrestleba&lt;;ks, as each wrestler who
was beaten by one of the finalists
wrestles ofl against another. until
there are two finalists. one from
each group, that have wrestled
each finalist. The winner is then
sent to the NCAA Champjons.h.ips.

The BuUs, with their strongest
team in years, have a chance to
send some of their regulars to
Maryland. Senior co-captain Ron
Brandt , who compiled the best
record a m o ng the Buffalo
regulars, rates an excellent shot.
Brandt was 17-1 during the
season, compiling a high of 82
team pomts. He also was tied for
the team lead with seven pins.
The other Bull co-&lt;:a~tain,
$Cnior Ted Lawson, also rates a

the Army quad produced what
were probably the biggest dual
meet v1s:tories ever for a Bull
wrestling squad , also was defeated
o uly once during the regular
sca~u11 Pollcare comp1led a record
o f 15· 1-1. pinnmg three ol h1s
uppoueuts. Pulicare 's only lllSS
was a 4· ~ dec1sion tu AI Arnauld
of W11J..cs. If Policare quali fies fur
the NCAA ChampioJis)ups. he will
probably get another shot at
Arnauld , since the Willes
heavywe1ght will probably be
among the select few to qualify
from t h e co llege d1vis1on
championships at Oswego S tate.
Although the top rated Eastern
teams will not be at Cinc1nnati.
the toumameot will not be
without its share of name teams.
Notre Dame, wh.ich always has at
least a few excellent individuals,
will be at the Eastern Regional
Tournament. Other widely-known
universities to send teams to this
t ourney are Georgia Tech.
Dartmouth and Brown. It will be
a tough tournament, and those
who qaulify will deserve to be
rated among the best in the East.

v

maii nly

•I

-

Ov

Buffalo's Bob Vartanian
(41). shown in action at

Leadi11g p/t1yer

Memorial Auditorium, h•
been one of the Bulls'
mott consistent
performet~. The Leicester
(Man .) Junior College
transfer is second in
Buffalo scoring with a
15.0 average.

Reggie Smith and Byron MiUer provide adequate
su pport . Albany State losses have come at
Brockport, Williams. Ithaca, Potsdam and at Ut1ca
On the player personnel front, BuU soph guard
Greg Bruce will not see any l1Ct1on the remainder of
this season. A doctor has prescnbed rest for Bruce,
who has been bo thered by a hip pointer and chest
pains. However, Bruce will join hJs teammates on the
bench fo r tomorrow's Albany State game.

books \

1\'. .,...l\ OOdlstoN
nt eM

V ...Nf'rill! ltTee

3102 Main St.
( k i t - C1lftn. ""bolo)

GOO

~' N O

CH RI ST ARE ONE

Jesus uys : "He that hatn - n
me h 1t:h seen tne Fatner; and
how wyest thou then, tho w Ul
tne Father? 8eii11Ve me thtt 1
am In the
Father •nd the Fllher
1n m•.' 1'
John 1&lt;4 :9 · 11

Noone •
canrestst
our chicken wings.
They're the Woodshed's newest taste sensation
mild, medium or hot. S wirl'em around in tan~
blue cheese sauct!, and finish the experience with
t·rispy celery sticks. Non -stop peanuts are on
the house, and spirits are 50(' after 3 P. M. The
Woodshed ... where the kitchen's alway!'! open
and the music's always on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North Tonawanda, just over
t he Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann. The Woodshed's
open from 11 :30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

.....

,....,..,~ " " ""'

~._

.... , t " ' .. ,'

....

-rttE WlJD~HE~

�Syracuse ends· varsity
baseball and track team
Continuing with the recen t
trend in college s ports, Syracuse
U niveTSity announced Tuesday
tha t it had dro pped varsity
baseball and spring track at the
end of the academic year. James
H. Decker, Syracuse director of
at hletics anno unced the decision
at the ECAC convention presently
being conducted in New York
City
The Syracuse move had been
r um o red f or som e time ,
co n s ide r ing the O r a n ge ' s
expensive commitments to the
sports of intercollegiate football
and basketball. The move will
have some effect on Buffalo since
the baseball Bulls annually met
the Orange. On April 29, the Bulls
and Orange will meet for the last
li me 1n baseball .
The Syracuse an no uncement
was not as dramatic as previous
deCISIOns which have seen New
Ynrk
Univ e rs ity a nd the
Universi ty o f Miam i dr op
ha,kc t ba ll a nd t h e S tat e
lllliVC rsi t y of Buffalo dro p
football Just recently, Loyo la
Unt~ers 1 ty
o f New Orleans,
cons1dered a major ln coiJege
~ports, announced that it would
dro p aJJ intercoiJegiate sports at
the end of the current academic

I LAlli Pill

conc~rns fut ure r.h.anges in the
academic calen&lt;tar. This year the
academic year end11 on June 4 ,
while next year it wlill conclude in
early May. A similar problem
affec ts t h e Buffalo baseball
program, which will plliy as many
as half of its game1 after school
closes. Syracuse also competes in
four other spring sports . crew,
tenni'&gt; , golf and lacrctSSe.
A further develoipment o n the
college sports scene has come up
at Michigan State University 111
East Lansing, Mich igan. At that
Big Ten Conference school, black
athletej gave school officials a list
of seven proposals designed to
insure black athletes an educu tJOn
wh en they attend school.
One member of the S partan
soccer team comm1ented : "They
say they 'll give us an educallon tf
we will come here and compete 10
athletics for them. But if we do n ' t
have a diplo ma when we leave, 11
hasn 't done us an y nood to come
We want that ed ucation they
pro mised us.''
In effect the tathletes have
demanded financial aid after their
eligibility has expitred They're
also asking for a gri,evance hoard
and some representll tion o n the
screening committee: now looktng
at candidates for the Sparta n
athletic directorshi p.

ye:~r.

Part of the S yracuse problem

JMOrORCYCLEI~iSURANcel
:IMMEDIATE FS-1 - AN YSIZE
l NO POOL - NO N'ONSENS£! I
fU P S T A T E C Y C l E I P4 S I
I
call 694-31100
I

l

t-

" Ask Your B r oker About Us" •

AD INFORMAnDN

Tom 8 94,2150, 8 : 30 t o 12 morn i n gs.

CLASSI F I ED A DS may be p lllced
M o ndlly thru Frtd•y b etwM n 9 ll. m .
and 4: 30 p , m , at 3 5 5 N o r t o n Hell .

M A N DOLI N , excellent c o ndition, w ltll
box , p itch pi pe, book m ade by Suzuki
•fte r 9 . 674 ·1558. P1ul ,

THE STUDEN T r•tes o f an ad for one
CS.y Is $1.25 for t he first 15 wordl an el
$ .05 for u c h additional word. $1.00
fo r each additi o nal Clay . The deadline
for Monday ll Friday ; for Wednesda y,
It Is MondAy: and for Friday , It ll
Wedn esday by 4 : 30p .m .

4x5 OMEGA en lar98r : ax 10 V Iew
camera ; 4 x5 VIew camera , 2fl&lt;x3 11&lt;
Press amer-a; all with lenS8$ ana
KCe$$Orl8S 893, 0744 ,

" HELP WA N TED" a d s cann o t
diSCrim inate o n the basis o l sex , c o lo r,
creed o r nAtional origin to any extent
(I.e., preferably Is Still d isc r iminator y) ,
" F O U N D" ad s w ill be r u n free o f
c h ar9e lor a ma xi mum o f 2 d ays ond
15 words.

WANT ED

FOLK clanl c gu ltu s. New-&lt;~sed
ll,rtln, Guilds, Gi b sons, Gurian, etc .
Eagle Banjos, Doro al dulclmen. Ttle
String St\o p pe, ~24 Ontario . 7 p .m .-9
p .m . Sat . 12 ·~ p.m . 874 ·0120.
19 6 4
CO MET engine In perfect
conditi o n - best offer . 694 ·72 79.
WE AR E n o w o pen Monoay , as w ell as
T u e s da y
t iHou g h
Fr i day. " The
Peo ple ," a folk arts b o u ti que, 144
A llen . 88 2·6 2 8 3.

A R ESPO N SIBLE aest het&gt;c to care fill'
7- m o nlh -o ld girl . T u esdays 7:30
a. m .-5 :00 p .m. 834· 9 2 65.

v w '6 3 sunroof , S265 or blKt o ffe r ,
leaving coun t ry , must sel l o ld faithful .
831· 3 5 75 .

WANT ED r PS YC H OLOGY TODAY
A n I n tro d uction b y C RM Pu b lishers:
C all 8 8 1- 3 763 afte r 5 .

L AR GE GUITA R cue, fi b erglass, $25 .
Nyl on ba c kpacking t en t : " Getty
Y ear• R ouno ," w it h fly, $ 85 . 834 ·53114 .

THE VILLAGE SH OP,' 2797 D elaware
A ve . , K e nmor e , N . Y ,
14 2 1 7.
Su n flo wer seeds $ .55 lb . , p um p kin
SMds $ 1.29 lb ., ferti le eggs s .65 d oz • •
who le Wheat b read S.35 Da nnon
yo g urt a n t. $ .27, mill&lt; non- la t,
pOwdered , $ .75 lb. M any Oth er llems
In heal t h food s. 8 73·32 4 6.

B L A C K &amp; WH I TE T V 2 1", stanCI
I n c lud ed . R ec e ives al l chan n els.
E xc ell ent condition . RCA M o del . S70
874 · 53 52 .

S T ART $ 2 p er hour sal ary olus bonus
Worl&lt; 4 · 8 p.m. w"l&lt;days, 10·2 p.m
S~tu rdaYl C all 835·3803 or TF9 ·0402 .
FULL OR p ar t -tome lobs av~llable wnn
B est llne Inc. C all Art 886-2094 or
M ike 835·52 1 ~ - M eetings a t Execut1ve
R amada I nn.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
ROOM FOR ren t , In Kosher nome
Neat lampus ICieal for student. Phone
TF3 2637
M ARCH I
Central Park Plaza area
2 I Part m ent s, uppeo &amp; low er ea ch 2
bedrooms, living room, dining room,
sun p orch, kltcl&gt; en, bathroom, s 150
N o u tilities 692.()920, 836 3136 ol ter
3 p .m .
FU RNISHED throe o eoroom apt .
pa rlor, llvlnQ room, kltchon, stovo,
refrl g. Ten minutes from campus,
S 65tperson
t hr ee people to
apart ment. Two APis . ova llable
In cludes utllltle~. 832·09 55 .
R OOM FOR re nt . 517 L ~S a lle Ave ,
Buffa lo . N o smoking or coo1&lt;1r19. $ 15
per w eek 835 , 8 2 19
ROOM
FOR
r e nt
privil e g e s, $18 a
8 38·2241 .

w1111
week

kitchen
Phone

RIDE BOARD
Rl DE NEEOEO to Cortland "'
Cornell, Feb . 25 ·2 7 Call Glorra Jl
83 1 4193
GO I NG TO wasu 0 c &gt; 1 need a noe
or w ill drive II 1 can get riders lo •haoe
e .. oenses. 837 ·1202 Leave Feb. 25th.

FOR SAL E
WATERBEO : douole Slltt, maltress,
liner, heater ana reo lui covor eo rr~n1e.
Please call Ira 832 ·9:.:.4 .
BSR - McDonald turntable, AM FM
stereo rece•ve• . Gnno cond lllon.
Rea son able. Must sell 8.)8 1950.

CLEARAN CE ~le cont inues at "Th e
People," 14 4 Alle n. 882 -62 8 3.
M EMBE R SH I P I n local fly i ng club .
Club flies out o f B u ffalo Inte r nat io na l.
Call Jln'l at a36 ·1483.
FIS HER
180.watt r ec eive r, Model
505T w it h lw o X P -7 B spNk er syst ems,
$ 550 . All With F isher guarantees. C a ll
Pau l 835 ,5535 .
'66 CHEVY van . Rea l good shape .
Solid S600 f irm . C all 836·909 1 deys.
Ask lor Michael.

•

1rU N E-uP Sl5 to $ 22 . PArU lnchJcSed ,
Will take on An Y Job at amulng
cllsc:o u n ts. G~C S peed Hau lers, 718
U road way . Dally 1~.
} \ C Q U A INTA N C E CI ~Kired of r a re
~v om an ,
18 - 22,
5'0" - 5'6",
t1motl o rut lly sUble, hN it h v, INn.
a1ttract1ve wllll wArm , m ild , even
cllsp osltlon . T h is w oman wou ld ll•ve
flO difficul ty meeting m en , but this
~n •n (251 with si milar traits has trouble
r nMIIng h e r. I nq u lre Box 70 .
~'TTE N TIO N
~II ~C on's
lottery

re c ent winners of
extravaganu. Our
" 'atlonal gu • r d unit h•s app r oximate ly
J:O openi n gs • n d Is prtKe ntl y accepting
appllcatlonJ. Anyone Inte rested mould
c ontac t Bill At 823 , 321 7 o r G e ne al
8: 25 ·~ 040 .

I'VE BEEN t1t19lected . N obooy wanu
t•o buy me. M y n ame Is A n astasia and
I'm for sail for o nly $ 110. I ' m a
2s d o o r , blue Tempest w ith •n
• utomat l c tra nsmiss ion , 8 2 ,000 miles
and • very sexy b ody . II Interested, call
Pl l 8 3 1-41 13 .

LOST &amp; fOU ND
F'O UND - a pa ir o f sk i gloves between
l'ower and N orton M on day n igh t.
l 'denll f y and p iCk u p at Spect r u m
o:!flc e.
f'OUND - one black righ t ski gl o ve In
f" o n t o f Cooke H all . C all E layne at Sk i
C:l ub o ffice and I den tify .
3-4 M O NTH b facl&lt; mi ni ature p o oa1e
"''ll h y ell o w co lla r f ou nd In vicinity o f
c:omstock - W tnspea r. 838-4896 .
I\I OT EB OO K
on
R ehaD II Ita llon
lost 2/JS or 2/16 '?.&amp;
c ampu s. V er y Importa n t r eward
o ffe red . 88 l -265 9 .

C o u n se ll ng

ROOMMA TES WANTED

1964 V w V AN , n ew engine, r adio, gas
heater, very good condition, $ 600 or
b&lt;lst o ller . 832·656 4 .

I&lt;!OOM M ATE
or coupl e w an ted ,
S60tmonth pl u s utiliti es. Com e t o l 92
Nlorwall&lt; (Off Her tel) anyti me.

R M I elec tric plano. M u st S&lt;tll plano and
amp, $ 350
Per fect. Call M ark
837 ·0982.

TWO N EE DED, o w n room, $!&gt;0 • , Petl
ok ay
Ma lt1 n qr Fillmore Availab le
now . Call 837 · 34 83 .

Kl D'S cloth&lt;K I rom Pal&lt;lstan, Me xico
and lnd lll at "Tn e P eopl e," 144 All en,
8 8 2-62a3.

PIOOMMAT E w an ted . S50tmonth p lus
utilities. O w n room . H ertel-&lt;:olvln
ar ea . C all R on at 873·81 32 .

H ARLY OAVEDSO N chopped 1966 .
Best offer 852-637 8 alter 5 .

s .HARE APAR T M EN T , Marc;h 1 O ""n
room. C all Walt R ooaers . 897 2900, e&gt;&lt;t.
5·8, daY\1826·9 2 61 nigh t s.

1 970 JAGUAR
X K E . Excelle n t
con d ition. Brand n ew A M /FM ster eo
radio Inclu ded . C all 6 88 ·7327 evetllngs.
REFAIGEAAtoAS, s t o ves ano
w ashers. R econ d itioned , delivered 11n a
g u ~r •n l oed .
O&amp;G
Applia nces, 8 4 4
Syc amore . TX 4 ·3 183
"A N ASTASIA" n eed s a home . She'&gt; a
1961 10\'a ble, little Tempesl . 82 .000
mil es. All sne ~osts Is s 11 0 Call AI at
831-4 1 JJ r1r Deb bi e at 832·6815
1966 vw Uu&gt; will sell cheap. Will sell
parts C~ll Mike 833 ·92 4 1 . New snow
tire'

M A L E
R O OMM A T E
to sh are
f u rnish ed apar tm ent. O wn bedr oom,
t&gt;48/ m o n th lnclu ellnQ u U IItltK. C1 ll
11 77 · 7254.
L A R GE H O U SE - 4 ac res, g ree nhou se
a n d p ond . Gary 6 88 -7126.

MISCELLA NEOUS
IF YOU R CA R Is f o r eign to you, It's
tamlllar to u s at Ind ependen t Foreign
Car Service 839· I 850 .
sU MMER JOB Ia ron
In M o h aw k
V alley . M ust h av e carpenlry skills , Bed ,
muiS, salary. a38-4612 a tt•r 5 ; 00.

PERSONAL
SI IAPEL Y model~ lor figure study
Must be .,,,.,,. " $5 per hour C4111 D•n
ana reavt! name •na numoer 83 I 3546

EXPERIE N CED
tutoring
Elementary math , biology, chemiS1ry
a:no psy ehology John Ka lb 886 ·3204 .

"119 All my

CHECK the SO% o ff t able at Buffalo
Textbook S t o rel, 36 10 M ain St.

TROTTER5 Unntod w •nt~ Itt WISh a
llappy day 10 one of our o w n!

TUTOR wltn th orough know ledge 01
,,peed wr ltlnoa, ca ll M rs. O opk ln
632 -2362 . .

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
love Nona

IIIII~

o~ery

1966 V W
now Dr a ke~. lire•. shoclls .
Eng in e perfect. C all Barb nr H ap
652 ·6 1 10.

VOU MUST say
tl'le snow remov al In
Syr ao:use 1~ fanlullc . Aly nne. M onday,
Feb. 21

SALES M CN wanlod
buy VX6, save
your pals arid gals 6 and 12-voll &lt;;ar
batlerle,. Make good pocket money .

MALE J!&gt;, ~allege professor, two
chiiOr en, "'""' fe1nal e companionship.
Marriage POSSible
P0
6 0&gt;&lt; 1031 ,

1972 STUD EN T
JOB o pp o rt unity
b·oo k let tor Cap e Cod a n d the Islands,
co)mple te list o r b u sln eues req ui r ing
\ummer employeel . Send S2 t o :
S•tudent JOb Opportunity B ookl et ,
R .R I , B ox ll:C, Orleans, M au.
02653.
TY PING - b usl nesl or personal - t erm
papers,
the s es , mass mailin g s,
R easonab le rat es. Call 937-6050.
BABYSITTI N G - reglst erea nu r r.e will
d:o babysit ting In h er home . 83 3-4190

ue IMPORT ANT NOTICE •u
STUDENT MEDICAL INSURANCE

*••FI

N A L enrollment date MARCH 1!st • • •

AUTO radios and ta p es. Sales o~nd
S&lt;!rVIc e. J O'Ib d lscoun l w ith t h l\ ad .
Grupp Bros. 877,2250 .

Enroll now for 2nd semester!
for enrollment details phone
NI AGARA NA TIONALINSURANCE
853-0931
or
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES

f'L Y BUFFA L O stud ent IIIQnts to
sunny AcapulCO vi a lJnl ver ~ l A irli n e&gt;
OC ·8 tel. Leave N .Y .C Marc h 3 1 ,
,.,t urn A pr il 7 frorn $ 179. Conlact
Alai' M arrnulsteln, evenings 6-9 p,m
8 .31 ·0393

853-0931

A N TIQUES and mooern furniture,
coramlcs, chi na, etc . See Si d at
Yester day &amp; To m o rro w Sl1 o p , 14 3 9
Hert el A v e.

APARTMENTS WANTED
s 10
REW A RD lor 2-3 bedr oom
•panment, p ref furnished, walk ing
d ilta nce UB. 8 3 1-4050 : 8 3 1-40 5 3 .
$ '10

I S YO URS If y o u secu r e an
ap artm ent for m e with 3 o r more
b tKi r ooms fo r Septemb&amp;f Prel ero~b i Y
01n
Wl n spear , b ut will con sider
anyt h i n g v ery close t o ca m p us. Call
8 :11- 2360 ( k eep tryln QJ .

. . . . tl~'tll ' 0

.,Mit/ WUW·TV,

M•

_....__, .... Y....,~ el ....... loc.

a - 1 7 . .. s..~, Nit'-· ,.,_. fill ,.I ~,, /lhull 1tj

2 .. 3
BEDROOM
apart ment within
c.t m pu s walk in g dl.s t a n c e
t or
Ot:cupancy urly May. Ca ll 8 31·30 51 or
8 :11 -3052 .
C10UPLE needs ro o m or • P• r tmen l for
re,m•lnder o f term . C•ll 886 ·1 5 35 .

�Announcements
Club l'tino meeting tod1y c1t 7:30 p.m. in
Room 232 Norton.

Back

)

Students for Mc&lt;iov~n urgently need canvassers
to work for George McGovern irl the New Hampshire
Primary. If interested contact Jeff Osinski at
836-8437 .
CAC Environmental Action wants to announce
that the Glass Rec:ycling Center between Norton and
Tower is not accepting steel or ;~luminum cans; only
clean gl;m bottles.
Hillel will hold a Sabbath Dinner at 6 p .m. this
evening in the Hillel House. It will be followed at 8
p.m . with a Sabbath Service and a panel discussion
on . "How Should the Sabbath Be Observed?"

Sports Inform ation

The Conflict Simul1tions Club will meet o n
Sunday from 12- 7 p.m. in Room 337 Norton .
A Consumer Wo rbho p for Foreign Students
with information about buymg and keeptng a car,
Income Tu, job seeking and money budgeting will
be held tomorrow from 10 a.m. 6 p .m tn Roort1
234 Norton.
The UB Tlhle Tennis Club and the Intramural
Proaum w Ill sponsor a double ehminatton
tournament for men and one for women to be held
tonight fro m 7- 11 p.m . in the t.able tennis area of
Norton . Competition is restricted to students who,
are not members of the table tennis club .
The Hillel class in Torah with Commentaries will
meet tomorrow at 3:30 p m rn Dr. Hofmann 's
ho me, I 2 Colton Drive.

A vailable at the Ti 'k ~1t Office
Studio Arena Theater
Mc1rch 2- 25 : Romeo and juliet
April 6 23 · Play Strinberg
Rock and Folk Concerts
Feb 27: Don Mclean (K)
Feb 28 Yr,andj . G.eils( K)
March 1 The K1nk~ and Fc1trpor1 Convention

Today : Varsity wrestling at the NCAA Eastern
r-egionals, University o f Cincinnati ; varsity hockey at
Ken t State, 8 p.m.
Tommorrow : Varsity wrestling at the NCAA
Eastern regionals; varsity basketball vs. SUNY
Albany, Clark Gym, 8 :30 p.m.; freshman basketball
vs. Alumni, 6 :30p.m .; CAC basketball league all-star
game at halftime of varsity contest with Alb.tny
State; varsity fencing vs. Rochester Te&lt;:h at Clark
Gym, 1 p.m .; varsity indoor track at the University
of Rochester I nvitat1onal.
Tuesday: Varsity bask~tball vs. Mernmack
College at Clark Gym, 8 :30 p.m.; freshman
basketball vs. Gannon College, 6 :30p.m .
All Buffalo students will be admitted free o f
charge to this weekend's Clark Gym basketball
games upon pro~ntation of a validated ldentificatron
card .

(K)
The Foreign Student Office co-sponsors the
lnternationill Coffee Hours with campus groups
every Friday, from 4 - 6 p m. tn Room 204
Townsend Hall. It is open to Amen can and foret&amp;fl
students, faculty and staff
CAC IS looking for an ac tJvttle~ coordinator for
the academic year 1972·73. Required are time, a
knowledge of films and a desire to work . Anyone
Interested, s~k to Jeff '" the CAC office , Room
220 Norton.
Hillel Will hold a Mediev.tl Mix tomorrow
evemng from 8 30 p.m - 12:30 a m. at the Castle
Inn, 2066 Eggert Roctd (in bctt.l.. of North Town
Plaza) There will be a live band and refreshments
Admission is S I.SO for guys and $ 1.00 lor girls. All
are welcome.
The Jewish Center of Greater Buffalo, 787
Delaware Ave . , w ill prese nt Dr . 1 rude
Weiss-Rosmarin, editor of the jewish Spectator,
tomorrow. She will speak on the ~ubtect "G-&lt;l He or
She."
Newman Hilll holds a Spc1n1sh ma\s every
Sunday at 7 p.m . at I S Umver'itty Avenue
The Hillel Talmud Cl~s will meet on Sunday at
3·30 p m. m the Hillellibrctry .
The UB Table Tennis Club ts spo nsoring a
tournament tomorrow at I 0 c1.m. in the Norton Hall
Table Tennts area. The co mpetition will be held in
\iX classes and all interested players are welwme.

Mc1rch 8 · Delancy and Bonnte, Billy Preston (K)
March 17 Seals and Croft (K)
BuffiiiO Philhc11monic Orch estra (K)
Feb. 27 &amp; 29 Leonard Pennario
Marc h 3. Ger~hwin Night
M&lt;~rc h 10 Spring Fashion Show
March 14 &amp; 21 : Chrisuine Waleuslo.a
March 24 . Gay N ineti,es Night
Dill nee
feb 26 &amp; 27 The Company of Mc1n (A)
March 10 &amp; 11 · Nikolais Oan~:e Tht&gt;c~llc (B)
SP«ill Anr1ctions
March 15 : Prague Symphony Orchestra (K)
March 22 : Osipov Ballalaika OrchcWc1 w1th stars
of the Bo lshoi Opera and Ballet (l )

Buff1lo Braves B~sketball ('M)
Feb. 25 : Bo~ton
Feb. 29: Atlanta
March 3: New York
Courtyard Theatre
The Tnol of rhr Conto nswl/c N/n(
Dipwn'' Piau North
Fiddler on the Roof
Coming Events (on ~ale 2j:2S)
Marc h 19 · Shirley B,hsey and Woody Herm.1n
(K)
MMc h l2 Rtehard H.m is (K)
KEY

The Hillel Glass in Conversational Hebrew
(adv.mced) will meet on Sunday at 12 30 p.m in
Room 262 Norton

"

M
B

A

The Hillel class in Conversational Hebrew
(dementtry) will meet on Sunday ill I :30 p.m. m
Room 262 Norto n.
Chmad House, 3292 Main Street, will hold
Chassidic shabbos services to night c1 t 6·30 p .m. and
tomorrow at 9 .30 a.m. Rabbi Gur.try will ~pedl.. on
" What's Purim All About?"
Hillel's Operation Greenlight will have a brunch
o n Sunday at 11 a.m in the Hillel House.
The Sute University of New York Middle hst
Studies hculty Association has announced its
second study program at the American University o f
Beirut, Lebano n for the 1972-73 academic year. The
program, in the arts and sciences, is open to SUNY
juniors and seniors, preferably those interested in
Middle East studies, and no competence in Arabic or
French is required, Further information and
applications are available from the Office of Overseas
Academic Programs, 107 Townsend Hall , 83 14247 .
The deadline for applications Is April I.

L

Klctrt han~

Mcmonal Audttorrum
Buffalo State
Albr tght -Knolt Arl GJIIcry
l O('w\ Buffalo Thrilll't

What 's Happening?
Fnday, Feb . 2S
Conalrt Dorian Woodwind Quintet, worl..s by
Beethoven, Perle and Berio, 8 :30 p .m., B.md
Recital Hall.
E.ye-con '72 series: Stan Brakhage, promment
experimentalist and pioneer in the diary-style
film, w ill screen and dtscuss his work , 8 p.m ,
Diefendorf 14 7
Film · Dovy Crockett, Kln9 of the Wild Frontier,
sponsored by CAC, Capen 140, check for
)howtimes.
him · Windfo/1 in A them, .tn I nternat10nal Month
event , a Greek movie, 8 :30 p.m., Diefendorf
147, $ .25 tickets available at Norton T1ckct
Office.
Coffeehouse · )c.tn Redpath and jeff Green, 9 p.m,
Norton Hall , and to mo rro w.
Film · The Hour of the Wolf with Malt Von Sydow
and l 1v Ullman, by lngmat Bergman, Norton
Conference Theater, check for showtimes.
Play · Out Ill Sea, presented by the Student Tht.ttre
Guild, 8 :30 p .m., rillmore Room, students
~ .50, non-students $1 .00, .tlso g1v'en tomorrow
Open Rehearsal: Cleveland Quartet, 11 :30 a.m I
p.m ., Baird Hall, Room 101 .
S.uurday, Feb. 26
I 1Im The Zlgn of Zorro, spon"&gt;Ored by CAC, Capen

140, check for showtime~
Film: Persona With Liv Ullman and Bibi Andersson,
by lngmar Bergman, Conference Thrarer, check
for showtimes.
Concert · Evening of the Works of Czechoslavak1an
and Ukrainian composers, 8 :30 p.m ., Campus
School Auditorium, 1300 Elmwood Avenue
Film · Toke Tiger Mountain By Strategy, 1 p.m .tnd
3 :30p.m., Room 5, Acheson Hall.
Indian movie : Hoi/ Ayee Re, with English subtitles,
5:30p.m., Diefendorf 147, contribution $1.00.
Le&lt;:ture : "The Future of Democracy In Pakistan," 3
p.m., Room 231, Norton Hall.
Concert: Graduate recital, Marsha Hassett, cello
works by Mozart and Shubert, 8 :30p.m ., Batrd
Recital Hc~ll .
Suncby, Feb. 27
Film : The POJS!on of Anno with Max Von Sydow
a nd liv Ullman, by lngmar Bergman ,
Conference Theater, check for showtimes.
1\

- Anv' Ahrend

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Editor's note: The following Is a Feb. 15 memo
sen t to all program directors, departmental
chairmen and provosts by Charles H. Jl. Ebert
which forbids the teaching of credit-b•earlng
courses by tmtlergraduate students. This policy
will be effected at the end of the current
semester.
One goal of our University is to offer o1uality
education at all levels and to continuousJy strive
toward improving our academ ic efforts. The
following anno uncement primarily serveH that
purpose ; however, it also confirms a policy wh.ich
is clearly set forth under Section 52 .2, C
(Faculty), of Chapter I of Title 8 of the Rules of
the Board of Regents (Standards for the
Registration of Undergraduate and Graduate
Curricula) wh.ich states that " members of the
instructional staff shall have demonstratted by
their training, earned degrees, scholarship, and
experience their competence to offer instruction
in a given field ." (Please note that the word i ~
and, not o r.)*
To guarantee quality and competent
instruction in our credit-beanng courses, and in
accordance with the existing rules of the 8 01ard of
Regents outlined abovt:, the following policy will
take effect at the conclusion of the current
semester:
1. Undergraduate students are not permitted
to teach credi t-bcanng courses at thi ~ University
2. Undergraduate students may be used as
resource persons in courses headed by faculty
members of this University if the student ha-.
demonstrated experience and competence m a
particular area, such as foreign languages or
~pec1al skill~ that are essential to a given course.
(For example, 11 1s pos:.ible that studen ts. tlucnl
in a foreign language. could he ll"•ed tt:o.
undergratl ua Il' as~i.;ta nts in Ia nguagc Ill hor:~ torit·s
However. '' !acuity mt•mbt·r must take lH1 tlw
responsibility fo1 ~upervismg lht• aGtdl'llll~
structure o l sw:h an offering.)
3 It IS the responsib1l1t y of the Jepa1'1nH'nt
cha~rm en, o r program dirc~.:tors, that the abnvc
polky be adhered to.
Note : While 1t is true that som e members of the
faculty, notahly in the arts, do not hold earned
degrees, it must be rccogn11cd that these person..
have acknowledged professional preparation and
Jtt:unments wh•ch have heen JUJgt•d sufficltetll to
r11t:rit their appoin tments as faculty . Thus, thl'
policy ou tlined above pertains to undergr:u.Jualt·
.Hudenrs only, not to appoin ted jmulr•· m1:mhl'rs
of th1s Umversity .

Reform of pass-fail
grading being discussed
Reform of the pass fa1l grading
system IS pre&lt;&gt;enlly being
tnns1dered with di\~USSIOn
onurnng both Wltllln :1 Faculty
Senate stand ing comnllltt:e and
lh e Univers1ty admmJStratiOn
M1xed opin•on on the pass 1a1l
o;ystem has heen cvidenl smce tts
1111.ept 10n approximately four
years ago
Controversy
surroundmg the system's ments
h.ts abo occurr!!d on various
campuses thwughout th e co untry
As one of the academic
rt: forms begun dunng Martin
Mr-ycrson"s administration , pass
fall allows the student to lake up
to one fourth of hts to tnl credits
on a pa.s s fail bas1s. Presently, in
order to receive such a grace, the
st ul)ent must register hts request
w11h hts Instructor dunng the first
four weeks of the semester.
H owever, thi s "four week
requtrement" is not always
stnctl y followed , and cxtens1ons
of the deadline are common
Po~ible

refonn

Because of this alleged laxness ,
possible reforms of the system are
be1ng considered . Vice President
for Academic Affairs Bernard
Gelbaum claimed to know

nothmg spec1lic of any pass 1.111
diSCUSSions llo wever. when asked
his personal opmlt)n o~buut the
ISSUe, he remarked : "'II yuu, or a
mem ber of your fa mlly wo~s Silk ,
would you ltke lo 1go to a doctor
who took only pass fa1l?"
Dean of the DIVIMOII ol
Undergr.tduate: Stud1es Charles II
V Ebert \eemed 1o behev.: that
the system as presently com.:e1vcd
was be1 ng abused In fad, he
noted th11t both students .1nd
faculty use the pass fall 10
"cafe ler•a line fash1011 ..
Accordmg to Dr
Ebert, the
disc uss1on of pass fail IS rno,tly
conce rned With where the reque~t
ts reg~stered
Possible reforrn
cm~ld change tlus locatiOn from
the ind1v1dual profes~or to
Adm1ssions and R e•:ords .
IJowever, h e stressed that this
was merely diScussion Jnd no
defmtte pohcy changes were bemg
piJnned . Additionally , he
reported that •f any change d1d
oc..:ur (wi th the n:quest for pass
fail be1ng lodged at AdmissiOns
and Re co rds) . he would
personally press for a formal
extension of the fcour week period
to six weeks.

Vol. 22, No. 57

State University of New YOfk-' Buffalo

\IVednad.y, 23 February 1972

Ebert Stl}S undergraduatE~ not
allowed to teach credit classes
Tea c hing o f credit-bea rtng courses by
undergraduate st udents will n ot be permitted
according to a recent memorandum issued by Dean
o f the Divisio n o f Undergraduate Studies Charles
H .V. Ebert.
In both a Peb. 15 mem o to all program
directors, departmental chatrmen and provosts. and a
report to th e Faculty Senate Executive Comm1ttee
(Feb. 9), Dr. Ebert ci ted Rules of the Board of
Regents as forbidding o;u~;h undergraduale
instruction
This sect ion states that "members of the
instru ctio nal st aff shall have dem o nstrated by theu
training. earned degrees, scholarship all(} experu:ncc
th eir co mpetence to offer inst r uction m a g~ven
field ." Because of these existing rules and "In
guarantee quaht y and competent mstruction 10 oliJ
credtt·bearing courses," Dr Eberl reported that
undergraduates wiiJ not be allowed to teach
credit -beanng courses at thts Un1vcrq11 y. dfec t1ve thl'
end of this curren t semester.

preferred th at 01 . Ebert say that undergraduate
tea ching is an unusual situation and sh o uld be
approached as such rather lttan 'undergraduates will
not be allowed to teach '."
In addition, h1: remarkec;J : "In a sense, I feel this
kind of use of Rel!:ents rule is unnecessary:· Because
Regents rules are by nature "broad generalizations,"
Or. Von Moltlte feels that the conclusion reached by
Dr. Ebert is " not as clear as it is made out to be."
In light of thi,, Dr. Von Moltlte feels that the
whole issue warranted a discuSSion based on the
merits '!nd disadvantages of undergrad uate teaching :
" We should be a1ble to approach issuc:a o n their

Resource person
However, as the memo ~tJir~. undergTJdudle
sludents may still he used as rcsoUrle person~ 10
courses headed hy f.tculty members 1f the ~ludent
has demun~truted expenelllt and u1mpetencc 1n ,,
parl1cu1Jr area Thesl' anstam:es as pmnted uul hy
Ur Hlert. would 1ndudc te.ll h1ng .1 ...s1~ta nh "' sud\
areas as flm: tKn langua!;!.t'
I t rmmg th e meulu ··a ..tanlll"alHlil of \OIIIcthlng
alrl"ady I.'XI~Ilng tin the hook:. ," n. Fhcll cxpl:llned
thai 1t "pn•sents nu lllJJOI dl&lt;~nge wh:1tsocvcr ·· lh:
c-ontmuetl th.tl thc1c aJe V&lt;'l)&lt; few dre.ts affc.ted hy
the- pohly ·· I he whole thlllK 1'! very theorehl".ll
I
can see 11 llJVInS nn1111pJ...t on the t1n1versity
11's
JUSt a danf•callon ..
A c~.oordtng h1 Dr. Fb~11, there t\ a Vl'r)' srr.:111

percentage C&gt;f cases where aJI tcadllllll rc~ponqhtlll it·~
h11ve heen os~umed by umJcrgrJdUJ(e~ . lfowevcr. he
d•d m.unta111, that where fh1~ has tl&lt;CU ited , 11 h.t!&gt;
nnurred •llq:all y Vlu~ flre&lt;.ld cnl for Acadcull~
Aflall"\ Bern.trd Gdh;wrn .•greed th.tl
ul
undergraduate mstrudu111 lite 'hghl
lie d1d
t-ommen l that the nurnlwr wh1k "~rnJJI'" wa' 11111
··neghg~hle ." Adllll•onally, Or (;l'lht•unt rclcrn·d Itt
nn•• depart tll~nt Ill Wllll h WVCII Ill t1·n 'ilh h l.IM'\
o&lt;.·curred

'"""II'-'''

Unu.'iual situalinn
1)1 (il'lh.tUIII hnwcv~:r tl1d nnl h.1W 111111plcle
St.tll~IIL' 11r figure\ JIIJtlJhh• B••lh 1)1"\ (,I'JhJUIII .111cl
l·hl'rt tl'floHtt•J 1h.tt lJ\l"\ ul llnllt•r1:r,HIU.IIC l~".lllllllj!
Me not pc(III!Jr lu .1ny ollie dcpaltlnL'nl or w~IIWIII
of tlw l111ivcrMIY
'ipe... ,r,,.~lly , they lH•th •n.1 111t:un~:tJ th,11 lh••
( •llltglJIC A~wmbly would 11111 tw unduly ;1lln.r•·J
"From talt..o; with Kunra1l Vtlll M1 •ltk~:. ldtrnlm ol
th.: ( ollegiJil' 1\ssemhly l
llr l:.hcrl s;mJ. ""It
.1ppear~ lhJI thctc .ttl:' very lew l J\Cs thJI ~uuhl Ill"
affccl ed ·
A llLHdltl~ 1t1 01 Vun Mnltl..e "'Wl' haVl·. un
nL... aSwll , h.td undcrgrdd uate' lcJdung, us huvc utlwr
d e par 1 m I' n t'
Q u11 c Lh ,1 r .tl I cr 1s It c J II y • 1f
umJcrgr..IJu .. tc' Jlt' tcad11n~,: u•ulergr:uluatc,, till' ''
.Jn unusuJI \llliJIIIIll
or11 10 whrLh very L.ucful
!&gt;&lt;.fultny .Jnd prep.~rat1110 Me m11olvcd .'"
tit.: CtlllliOUI!U that 10 lhC\1." Unll~ll.tl SIIU,tt lOll\
"we .-an formally 1dent•ly d l.llulty membc:r 1t1 t.1t..e
tL.... pun~lhlllt y fnr d t:Oll t '&gt;t •• r here! me. Ur Vnn
Moltltt: doe.,n'l "ant•opate " any proble111s In
addition , he termed th1• mcrnu "a fo11nal
•equiremcnt
mud1 lo u 1111n•ll u !lung to affec:t
the colleges "
However Dr Von Moltko: 11111 oh)ect to the
memo\ phrd\lng a' tno wvcr~: "I would have

(~rarle.4t

Ehert

- Fox

menb rather 1hun• out (If dc:fer~lll' lo some' assume-d
outside authCtnty "
ThiS tll-slfc hH more d•scussiun w~ e~tpressed by
~orne ..-:u.:ulty Senatr J-xecut1vt C'llmrnittee rnemhns
who rcqut:~ted that l&gt;r Vun M1l ltke he tnvited tu a
uplullling. lornrnillee mect1ng Acco rdulg to Wilham
R.tumer, Vll·c lh.urlllan of 1he h• t·ulty Senate, he ''
J)f\"\\"ntly trymf tu Jrrange \tllh ,1 mcet•n~·

l 111le affect
( 11111mcnlln~ 1111 lhl· memn. l)r 8J umcr agrcnl
w11h th plulmuplly lo:'t'hnl! that the \lnlvcrslty can
tlo:mJild lu~h -ljua llty \IIIUCill perfOtnlJIIl' C unly il II
JHtiYHI~.., .tnd dema,ntls quality leadun~
Ore thl' oth .. r hand . Sllll1l" h..1ve •lh)erted to tho:'
llll' IIHl ton the h.t\1'• that lht're IS J n.~w Ill the Regents
rultng Anord1n~: II• lhornd.S Connolly, of the
Lng!J~h Dep.trtnll'nt, tluo; 11o~w lie~ 1n the reqUirement
fu1 holh e.trued Jc·tuee~ and e.~tpenenle He feeJs that
the law should rc.td " or" rather than "and ' Or. Vun
Moltkt: agreed w11th th1s commcnllng that aLad('ml&lt;
degrees aren't lh~: n 11ly llldiC;~ .ol"\ ,,f ClH npetenle In a
f1cld
Or ~hcrt argue~. however . th.tl .:h.lnnels ~1111
l"Xl~t wherehy anyone Wlllwut a degree &lt;.:dn teado J
LO Ur.&gt;l:' •f lc~,t11111ldl dy h1red by rhe lln1ver~1ty Sudl d
hmng, he expl.tlflcd, docs not nne~.tt1ly h.tve ll•
entatl a salary Thcrelurc , he tndll".ttetl that hulll'llll
board courses .:nuld still br taught hy persons
Without degrees hut Wllh the necessary e~tpenenn·
and competen ce
Despite ob)Cl"IJons to the phras•ng o l the mellltt
.til seem agreed tluat the pol.Jcy w1ll IMvc: lillie o~ffed
on ex.1stmg llruvers•IY programs

Campus Securi(JJ hearifl/.:
An undisclosed number of Campus Secu rity o Hicers have been ch1rged w1th
ransacking the Undtrcurnn l office during tbe euly morning hours o f Jan 27 and will
face a civil service bearing to d ttermme the validity of ~he cha111e.

Due to the com plicated c ivil service procedure , the hearing will ~ closed to the

press and public , and details such as the number of ofticers cha111ed and the exact date of
the h earing remain undisclosed at this time. A b eariing officer will be named by civil
service to condu ct the bearina.
A fuJJ report will be IIUide public foUowina the C•oncluaion of th e hearing.

�Memorandum

~

Tllitii)il increases outlinedr

In a memorandum addressed to
the
s tudent
government
presidents, newspape r editors and
coordinators of the Student
Assocntllon
of
th e
State
University of New York, Mark
Borenstein , chairman of the
Student Association of the State
UniversitY of New York (SASU),
outlin ed the proposed an creases in
tuiti on, as presented to him and
oth er st udent government leaders
at a meet1ng with the Trustees Ad
Hoc Comn uttee on Tu111on, held
Sunday
Feb
13.
The
m emorllndu m
tncluded
the
committee's
reasons
for the
proposed increase, alternatives to
such an m crease and arguments
against the 1ncrease
The
co mmittee
told
the
st ud en t leaders that they Will
proh11bly suggest the follow1ng
tuittnn mcrease to the full Board
of Trustees of the State Umvers11 y
of Ncw York
undergraduate
fresh men and sop horn orcs (lower
dtv•~•on)
S650, undcrgraduale
JUnior~
and ~en1ors tupper
diVISIOn I
S850 , graduate
students
S 1200, med1cal, dent;ll
and law \ludents S 1600.
lnr~aJ

sources cired

A'-cord10g to the comm•llee
members, thr State UniVI:rl&gt;IIY
needs addHional revenue, 10 the
tune of SI0-20 million, in order
t o have "an acceptable fiscal
~;hmate " In order to do so , the
money m~t be ra tsed an one of
two ways from th e state , or from
ans1dc the State Umvemty system
I t •~ the feehnK of the
~.:ommJttee
membcn thai the
leg•slature wtll not o~ppropno.~tc:
more money, and therefore 11
must he gutten lrom mternal
source!&gt; rhe money on~e ratscd
IS sl Ill subJC&lt;:t to leglSLlllve
.!pprovul Ch.mt·ellor t-rnt.&gt;~t Boyer
would hl..t.&gt; S 17 mdl10n lobe used
to mamtJin buildan~ . IIPI:tne,,
!&gt;Om~ fa '- ull y
.wtl
\ludell! \CIVH:es Tht" h'lnJIIIIn!_! S l
m • I I 1 o n w o u I tl I! "
1"
UnJver~lly - wrdc scrvrl n
.1nd
prt&gt;jtCIS

P""''"ll'

Assumptio ns made
Ma ny Jssumptwns wen: III.Jdc
concermng a decllollln on 1Ullmn
rncrease&lt;. Among them were II
an IOCieJ\C In tUiltclll ' huulcJ 1101
tal..e piJl e onl~ to lliJt..c ' puhl!,
~chool
more \.UIIIpeiiiiVI! Willi
pr1va1~ ~ c hooh" ~ ) Any tv•tlun
tnoea'e •,lwulcJ [JI\C Ulll~ the:
o~mount needed, nut mmc
3) Any uH.: re.Jsc 10 lund, r.n~t:J

Bible Truth
CHRIST THE GOO ·MAN

"Jesus Cllrtn ou• Lo•o, wllo
was m•oe by tl'le seed o t David
.tecorotng to tne llesl'l, •no
oectared to be the Son or Goo
wotn Power, by tne resurreclfon
from tl'le dead "
Rom I 3,4

rhe Spectrum

II publllh«J tllrllt1
week, every M ond11y,
w.dn•cUy and FocUy, durtng the
rllfiiJIIIr IICademiC yiMr by Sub-Board
1, Inc. OfflctH •re loclltfld at 355
Norton Hall, State University of New
York 111 Bufflllo, 3 435 Milm St ..
Buff11 /o, Nt1w York, 14214
Ttllephone. A,., C&lt;&gt;de 716. EdrtOrtiJI
B31-4113; Busines:s, 8313610.

times

a

Rt!preStln red for Bdverrising by
Nation~~/ EdVC4cion•l Adverti1ing

s.,y;ctl, Inc., 360 Lt1111ngton Ave..
Nt1w Yorlc, N.Y. 10017.
Subscription l'lltes llftl $4.60 Pfl'
ltlmt/6tflr or $8.00 for two st1m111ten.
S«::ftd

are imposed for those students in finallud by tau 1972. 7) ·ot.h er
the lower and upper divisions.
University costs should be held at
8) In crease~ in board charges, current levels . 8) Specia l
food, school suppllea, procedurt41 must be developed for
transportation and other increased tb~ students who are presently
costs will make an increase in not ellaible for financial aid, but
respectlv1:ly . This was accepted tuition hard for many students to who will be denied an education
tentatively, since it would raise meet. 9) Does the State University next year because of financia.J
approximately $30 million, thus really need $20 million?
difficulties.
making the S I 0 miJUon available
Many suggestions were made
9) State Univenily students
to schol.arship aid . This would by the student leaders at the should be contracted out to
become c·ffective as of September meeting. One of these included private colleges, thus eliminating
II, 1972.
h olding the tuition levels at their the need for Bundy aid to pnva t e
The ir1crease in scholanhip aid present state, thus sh owina the coUeaes. This would decrease the
w o uld be as foUows : $100 ineffe c tiveness of the State load on present public facilities
increase for families with a net University system's ability to and . also decrease the financ1ai
taxable 11ncome between $2000 properly educate the students of cns1s which exists in pnvate
and $700 ; SJOO increase for those New York. It was argued that the colleges and universHies.
in t he lo wer division in the range University presents a very large
of $8000 to S 19 ,999 net taxable voter base, whic h co uld influence Student voices needed
income, .and a $300 increase for the legislature. 1f 11 d1d not have
It ts hoped that the Board of
those 1n 1the upper divisi on in the to waste its ume campaJgning Trustees will delay their final
same ran1~e . Thus, the problem o f against the trustees for raising the decision for a month, so that
the lU1t1on burden is enhanced fo r tuition.
students throughout the State
University system can evaluate the
m1ddle mcome families.
If an increase, then ...
proposed ideas. T o do so wiU take
Another s uggestion which was student voices in the guise o f
Student lteaders speak
Nine arguments were advan~.:ed made was based on th e proposed telegrams to the chamnan of U1c
Among the po ints Board of Trustees Maurice Moore
by the student leaders aga1nst the increase
proposed plan I) There 1s no hrought out we re I) It was sta ted and the C hiarman o f the Ad H&lt;&gt;l:
guara ntcc that the 1ncreased that the trustees should beg~n Committee on Tuition, H1gh
money would be •used by th e long-term planning for an eventual Jo nes, as well as the C hancellor of
State Un1versJ1y ~Y'&gt;tcm, even if it no- tuillon univers1ty. 2) If this the Stale Univers1ty of New York
increase IS based on a cu rrent
Dr. Ernest Boyer
IS raJscd mternally 2) The plun
wtll ~ct a precedent wh1ch m1ght fis~.:al t ns•s. th e trustees should
The1r addresses are
Mr
end wllh students pay1ng the total senously consider reverttng the M ll u nu~ Moore. 1000 Pari..
twtion levels Ill I 9 71 to the Avenue, New York, N.Y . 1002X,
cost ul putblic edu catiOn .
present levels.
3) l'IH~ University com munitY
Mr H1gh Jones, Eva ns, Burd11.k,
! ) It should be ascertained as Sever n , and J ones, Maym
wlll be destroyed hy usmg tu1t1 on
1m: reases to offset ope raltng to whet her S20 rrulhon is the real Buildmg, Utica , N Y 1350 I , o~nd
expenses 4) '' pledge by thl' figure needed, or 1f less would do Dr. Ernest Boyer, C han t.ellor
the tnck 4) An y reallocation of State UnJverstty of N~w York, t.O
l rust c~ t o nol ra1sc IUJtlon until
Se ptember, 19 73, will th erefore the money s h o uld Involve
East 42nd Street, New York , NY
be broken 5) Sin~oe &lt;)7% of th e stud ents S) The S 10 milhon 1n
1001 7
pJrents of ~tudents make less than sc:l\olarsh1p funds shouJd not be
If arly st udent has a qu~twn
$25,000 u year, there wtll be an 11ed to the legJslat1ve formula about t he pro posaJs. please
tm:reased burden on the m1dd le which ehnunates those families 1n con tJ ct the Student Associa11nn
the middle income bracket
1n~omc fa•mily
Office of the State University nf
6) New, liberalized finan c1al
6) Wlllt SUl' h a tuitiOn tnuea!&gt;l',
New York at
Bufral o , a1
those studlents who ~eek financtal emanc1pat•on procedures must be 831-5517
emanc.:IJlatwn . and those students
who an: financutlly Independent
many not he able t o t~fford going
tu \.OIIege'&gt; w1thm the Slate
LlniYCil&gt;ll)' '&gt;YSieOl
7)
1\ n
u11ne._e~a•ry
thslln\.lton 1s made
when two dtfferent tu1t1on Jevd!l

Cl- I'Wt11(111 paid ar Bu!f.lo,

IHw York.

Citru,.tion: 16,000

mtemally should be protected for
the benefit o f the State Univenity
of New York. 4) No matter what
the in~rease , no student should be
excluded for financial reasons.
This would ne c essitate a
correspondina increase in Resents
S c h olar In centive o~nd State
Univers1t y Scholarship fvnds
5) The trustees feel that there
1s :1 difference in th e last two
years o f college as o pposed to the
first tw o yean. They believe that
t he t.'Ost of publtc education in the
last two years ts greater than the
first two years. wtd therefore th e
upper divisi on st udents should
bear a greater propurt1on of the
finan .. tal burden. 6) Along w1th
thi~ tdea goes the assumpt1on that
access to the firs t two years of a
l'OIIeg~ cducallon should be eas1er,
het.au~c 11 IS now expected that a
~rsun gch 14 ye.Jr~ of cducatmn
a~ uppo\ed II&gt; the tradllivnul 12
ye&lt;~r~

M r llugh lont•s. tll!ltrrno~n of
lhc /\d llt~t C'Cilllllllllcc, .&gt;a1d that
.1mong all the ~;onsuJeratJons , om:
.JbO had l&lt;l tJio.c IIIlO JI.:C.:OUnl two
V:lflahfc:\ Whllh WCrt: UUtSitJC the
legal aurhorlly uf the truslccs
I ht"'~ lwu •~sues were the 1dto1 ut
IUIIHin .11 the C1ty Un•verslly nf
N c"
York a ncJ (,overnvr
Rulktfcller 's propm:tl lu merge
lhl' Stale Un•verSJiy and the ( ' 1ty
Universit y system~

Alternative plans
Several dltc:rnaiJVt' IUIIIOn pl,lll\
were projlosed at th1· meet111g, all
of th em 1n line With the pre~.:ecJ1n~
dssum pllons A m11ng 1hose roused
were . I ) R.11se tu111on to Ihe
"rt ual 'O\t nf 10~1 ru~ot 10n
S 1700 I h1!o wa~ fCJCl'ICd lor
plulosuphu.. al rea~on\ 1 ) I cave
IUtlmn Jt the S5'ill level 1&lt;11 the:
tlf\1 IWII yc.trS 1.11\C II Ill \'100 tm
the l~sl twcl ye;tr~. ru1~t" gradu11tc
IUIIIOn lol $1200. Jnd Till\~
profc~;,wnal ~dWell
tuition to
S1600 Thl\ "".U rc:Jelled Sltltt' 11
would 0111
enou~h rncln&lt;'Y
R,u~~· th~ fir~t lwo year~ !(t
S70U , Ih~ la\tlwo year~ to SIOOO,
gr.tdualc tUition to S1300 , Jnd
proft'l&gt;SIIln,l( \Chuol IUitiOO In
\IXOO Th1s wa.' ICJClted un the
ground s thai 11 would ra1se tuu
rnuc.:h lnlliiCY 4) I cuve the tu•tmn
Jl th~ l llrtent feveh
rhl ~ ~.IS
r~ICI:ted hC\.dUSt" It Wvuld liCJIC
.111 "unhealthy f1sc.JI ~undlltOrl '
'i) R:use the first t wu years tu
~b50 , the last twn years In SKSO,
dnd gral1uate and pwfcsstun.J
levd.-. tu SI:!OO 11nd SlbOO

'""c

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•••

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EXPIRES APRIL I, 1072

••

••

Page two. The Spectrum. Wednesday,.23 February 1972

HAPPY
~,t~~~
1{b BE

Study in
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The Guadallajara Summer School, a
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program, will offer, July 3 to August
12, anthropology, art. folklore. geography, h1stC1ry, government, language
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and room. $190. Write Office of the
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zona, Tucson. Arizona 85721.

BIRTHDAY NJJ

ATTENTION, SENIORS!
ARE YOU CONCERNED ABOUT PROBLEMS
IN ANY OF THESE AREAS?
Classroom learning
Ch1ld development
Instructional techniques

Testing
Research techniques
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Educattonal Psychology .

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7 Foster Annex
State Univ. of New York
Buffalo, N .Y. 14214

Please

send me free literature
your graduate programs in
Educational Psychology.

1 describing
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�.Committee report

Navy blacklists schools
In an apparent "blacklisting"
move, the United States Navy has
ruled that Naval officers will no
longer be allowed to take graduate
courses at a total of I 5
universities throughout the
nation.
The State University of Buffalo
is one of five New York
uruversities included in the list of
sch ools that have phased out
Reserve Officers Training Corps
(ROTC) programs . Other
universities in New Y o rk State
affected are Co lgate, Pratt
Institute , Columbia and New
York University.
The Naval policy will also
affect Boston College, Boston
University Brown, Dartmo uth,
Harvard, Hobart and William and
Smith , Princeton, Stanford , Tufts
a nd Yale. In Washington the Navy
defended its position indicating its
decision was not forced by the
Nixon administration. Rather, the
Naval action is being credited t o
t he "vehement insisten ce" of
House Armed Services Committee
Chairman Rep. Edward Hebert
(D., La .).
Secretary of the Navy John H.
Chafee claims that the Naval
prohibition of officers fro m
graduate courses in certain sch ools
was first stated last July 13 in a
House Armed Services Committee
repo rt. The report, discussed the
decision of some of the nation's
universities to phase out ROTC. It
asserted: "It is morally wrong for
the military to spend dollars
sending students to a particular
college or university which has

chosen not to cooperate with th e
military servic:es."
Despite thle report, there was
never an y Congressional sanction
of the Committee's p osition .
However, the Navy apparently felt
bound by tllle criticism of the
repo r t a n dl so ught further
clarification from Rep. Hebert
four months later. In his clarifying
letter of Dec. 7, 1971 , Hebert
reaffirmed his disapproval of
"uncoopera,tive universities.''
Hebert wam~!d : "It is our hope
that it will not be necessary to
place a flat prohibition against
sending stiUdents l o these
universities which have withdrawn
from the R01rC program when we
co n sider the , (Military)
Pro~;urement Bill next year. But ,
if it is nec~:sary to legislat e on
this subject , lt~gislate we will."
In New York City , Rep.
William Ryan (D., N.Y.), whose
district encompasses Columbia,
called the Navy decision, "nothing
less than a bllacklist ." Rep. Ryan
added : "The Navy is obviously
responding, 1not to the act of
Congress, bult to the whim and
pique of th-e chairman of th e
Armed Servictes Committee."
Ryan further concluded : "The
only people 1getting hurt by this
aren't the universities, but the
Naval office1rs who are being
denied educa tiona! opportunities
because of tht~ brow-beating from
the chai rman ." Ryan also
intimated thalt he would press the
issue in the House next week, and
is considerina: the request for a
full clarification on the committee
policy decisio111.

Election petitions
Petition4 fot Student

Culminating many we e ks of c harges,
counterc harges, threats and insinuations, Norto n
House Council unanimously passed a resolutio n last
Friday authonzmg the move of ethos from its
present location in Room 345 Nort nn to quarters o f
Room 340 Norton.
Room 340 Nort o n IS a good deal larger than
Room 337 Norton , which House Coun cil was last
considering. It is, however, a bit smaller (about I 00
square feet) than its present office.
The reso lution reads as follows :: "ethos shaJI be
assigned to Room 340 and retain use of its 345
darkroom in lieu o f other arrangements. 337 will
becom e a reservations room and 345 will remain, as
planned. a student activities room . The retainment
of 340 by ethos L~ contingent upon Sub Board's
affirmat ion of ethos neeu for sa1d space...
~gnan8nousaction

I

A-.c;eilltiotu~l\l must

be returned to Room 20~orton· .,Y1s p.iri. today

with at least 100 va.lld uodergrailuate lianatwes. At
that time a mandatory meeting •l)f aU candidates will
be beld to determine party lines .and positions on the

ballot.

'etlios' room c/umge authori~d
by Norton Hall House &lt;~unci/

Sub Board's "affirmation," seems in turn,
contingent upon the expansion of ethm . Such
expansion would likely be the return lo weekly
publicati o n by perhaps this summer.

- Erlebaoher

If ethos fails to meet these terms, or if Sub
Board were Ito disapprove of elhos' expansion, ethos
wo uld apparently be m oved once more. According
to House Co1uncil member John Greenwood: "Unless
Sub Board approves expansion, they won 't need the
space."
Mr. Greenwood, direc ting his remarks to ethos
editor Carl Hoetter, added : " The only reaso n you're
getting that sp11ce ( Room 340) is the impression you
may be able to rea ch your goal o f expansion. If we
went entirely on the basis of what you co uld use
no w. we would move you t o 337."
Mr. Ro•elter h as, however, indicated that his
position co nceming this or any move has not
changed . The problems he feels will be created by
the mandated immediac y of the move are especially
crucial. lncl1uded in this area are the organization's
telephone s•ervice. The telephones will remain in
their presenlt location until phone company workers
are able to switc h them. At present , it is planned
that ethos will move as early as possible, possibly
to day

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SET UP STUDENT REFERENDUM IN APRIL

HELPCome to the Housing Committee meeting tonight, Wednesday, 2/23 at
5:30p.m., Room 205, Norton.

"

Wednesday. 23 Februa11r 1972 . The Spectrum . PaCJ8 three

�Hil~er's

'Hospital': a question
of where does the buck stop

Self- study·report
Student and facuJty members we presendy
being asked for their comments and input on initial
drafts of the University•$ sdf~tudy report. The
University is requJred to prepare such reports in
preparation for a n accreditation visit b y
representatives of the Middle States Accreditation
Association.

Geo rge C. Scot! has a pro ble m . Sh o uld he stay
in New Y ork as a top d octor at a big New Yo rk
hos pit al, a ft er break ing up w it h h.is wife an d t rying
to comm it suicid e, o r should h e go bouncing off to
Mexico t•:&gt; live a quasi -savage ( but h a ppy) existen ce
in the mo u n tai ns with luscious Diana Rigg?

The first draft has been c ompleted with copies
sent to the Faculty Senate Executive Committ«,
student associations and administrative officials. In
addition, three copies have been put o n reserve in
the Lockwood Library and Ridge Lea libraries. A{.ly
recommendations or opinions concerning the report
should be sent to Claude E. Puffer, director of
Self.Study. at 21 Diefendorf Annex before March

I d ont't ltno w ab o ut you, but to me th is q uestion
falls into th e " Is the Pope Cath olic" or " Does a b ear
sh.it in t:h e wood s'' category . But in th e Pad d y
Chayevsk y·Arthur Hiller movte ''Hospital" the
charact e r played by Scott is a dyed ·in· the·wool
1960 's Liberal, who finds h.is life is ulti m ately
govern ed by respo nsibility rather than a desi re for
personal lta ppiness.
Well , I could n't get into Hospttal . T he plo t ,
briefly, r'evolves arou nd bot h the de teriorati on of
Scott's own life - smas hed by an un h appy marriage
an d a coau ple o f miserable fail ures as children , a nd
the deteriorallon of th e h ospital, beset from wit h out
by all the problems of a city so large. tha t it is
collapsin l!. in on itself, and from withi n by a
mysterious doctor·!tnd·n un;e
killer. Into thjs
maelst rom ~teps lovely Diana Rtgg. dad in buckskin
tntnt dnd skJn·tight work shirt. A true child of
rwlurc Anyway. it 'eems her father , a somewhat
cn t'ntrh.: tlli\:.wn:uy tn the wtld:. uf Mcx11:o. entered
lh \" il .. , rt~tJ t lnr ~ontl' stmpk te,b, amJ 111 a
c h .1111 T1' J•· 11on nt I'V&lt;'nls po'l,thlt• ouly 111 I ;JC~c"'l" Jic

IS.
To be helpfuJ, the state men ts should ans wer the
fo Uowing questions: l ) what do you recommend be
de leted ; 2) what do you recommend be added ; and
3) what do you recommend be modified in what
way.

r..............................t
Hllill(Pl Sa~bj)Vl :tl 1 Dill n u~t ~r

l

lll~ tiiUIII&gt;Ih . WI!Jih llfl lfl ,1 &lt;ll!ll.l

j

Friday, February 25
6 :00p.m.
Hillel House

:

Also· Sabbath Serv1ce and Panel . Make yo ur
reservatio n now at Hillel Table or Hillel Ho use.

•

M, Htgg l'll• llUOtt:r~ '&gt;.: •Ill ·" ill' '' Ill till' lllllhl
&lt;ll ,J ,u,,td,tl dt:!Ht"~~ ~~~n . .JhtHtl 111 turn l11m ~dl ott lilt
,.:ut•J A~ lll 1II (Jild th&lt;' plol! tnr the rest ot th.JII.: t urt:) would hJ VI' tl. IJtana has a thmg for
mich.lle.Jged men and lltps over Scutt He is not
Jllngcthcr tndtfferent toward her etther. So - here
we huv.: the B1g Dramatu: Conn ict . Diana dernands
that Sl'OII acnompany her and her father back t&lt;•
Mcxt.:o ( ' an he do
Will he du tt? Well, of course
he w11n't, and thts is pretty obvious from the start.
A~ tilt: hosp1tal 1~ hetng tc•rn u(')art by welfare
mother~. sq uallt:rs 111 hospttal-ownec.l tenements,
people demt~ntltng thiS, dema.ndtng that
Scott rises
abcwt: 11 all and says "Someone must be
responsihJ,c . '
.

•I"

LECTURE ON

Transcendental
Meditation
A s taught by

Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
Thursday, February 24
7 :30p.m.
Room 233 Norton Hall

'(,

II ha~

nowhere js it mo re noticea ble than in New York.
Ma yor Lindsa y has the sam e pro ble m but on a much
larger scale. Inst ead o f going t o Mex.ico fo r good he
gives himself a b rief resp ite by run n ing for president ,
but ft is gen erall y the sam e sit u ati on. The poin t is
t hat such people are basicall y th e same peo ple wh o
caused t h e p rob le ms in the fin; t place and a re tr ying
to solve t h em in ways that h ave alread y p roved
fru itl ess. This is wh y Scott, at t he end of the m ovie
seems suddenl y t o lose all credib ility as a charact er ~
it aU d rains o ut in th e span of t w o or t h ree minut es
leavin g a car d-b oard cut-out sp o uting w orn liberal
ph rases of comm it m ent and pu r pose. As t h e movte
end s we know a lready t hat Scott w ill fall.

A writer 's film
Hospital as a film is a co mparative rari t y these
days - a writer's fi lm . Most m ovies are ra ther glibly
classified as the " d irector 's," but A rthur Hiller's
direc ti on inHospi tal is clearly su bservient at all
points t o t he dem ands of t h e screen play. I t is here
that a major problem arises, because Pad dy
Chayevsk y is b asically a playw right. H ospital is a
stage play written to be filmed. The reason for this
discrep~n c y in medtum roles is tha t film , t"ven wh1·n
II IS J ~tJge j')lay that I~ hcufg film«! , lllVl&gt;IVl' ' lhl'
&lt;~Udlcn~.: mud1 m~Ht' d1rc.t:tly th,ln lhc Nlagc Wtth
(')lays then: ts alway~ .m tntdkc tuul d.:tad\Jlll'J\1 on
thl' part nf th1 JlldlerH.:t' .tnd we l':tn ~l &lt; l'PI ltludt
more rt:ad1ly rnclll nr dramatt &lt;' c xagger:ttHlll or .anv
olhcr 1ltstortlo11 v1 what Wl' J..nnw J' reality . I n tlw
rnnvtc the.ltcr, hllwevn, the .Hidtc nce _,. tp,t.tntl&gt;
Ul l l'j')I S the ftlm J S ,J de pad t(lll o l rcalti'Y &lt;iod 111111«''
;and rcted~ s udt drstortlol1\ numedtt~tdy

In Hor(lrrnl Ch.tyev~ky ~el\ up a dilernlllJ lur ""
matn ..:lura~..tcr that 1~ su pat , ~t• dear~· u1 , th1·
problem ts there and sh arply dcfinecl , the resull s 11rc
there and likewtse defined . We know that ltfl' ts not
hke thts. We know that the film , whtch ts
photographed 10 a crisp, "naturalistic ," almosl
journalistic style , is not showing us a story 'hat
could conceivably h appen to real pt:opte 111 rc •. l
situations 10 the absence of a camera. but t~o n
dramalUrg~cally correct construction. with imaginary
characters following pre~eftned courses Too little
W8JTl&amp; lOll mUI.'h turgy .

taken .\ht mt.w1c .Jn hour~ a ~ (~·~ _ ' ,
to t hts poant , wh k h ts really the ~;ul
t ion otwhal~..&lt;11 m all, though, 1/o.fpltul 1~ an interesttng
C'haycvsk)' has been t rying to say ht h ~screenplay . movte to watch. George C. Scott ts good , as usual
You can't h.mg it up and hug out to the hills, he (Cod, I wish I could pan him for once) and Bc:rnard
says, bc~:aust: .wml•hody has to be resj')onsible. rs thts Hughes IS really fascmating as Diana Rtgg's falher. As
really true'' Is tt really true even within the reality of for Dtana bally, herself, her Bntishness shmes
the ttlm'! I suppo~ed t he cructal question in these thr ough like a sil ver dollar in a stream. and makes us
t11no; as nesponstlulity for what'! In Scott's case at wond er exactly wha t she's d oing in the p icture . As
wnuJJ ~ct·m that he rs ret urn1ng to an utterly for th e pho togra p y, the h os pital looks lik e, a
hopeless Slltuatwn tits unly "rcsponsibtlity" would hospttal Check your Blue Cross before you enter the
he to preside over the final coUapse of the th eater.
instal uttOn
Tlus

IS

happemng all

David 1\arp"ff

over. but of coun;e,

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Grad1llating Students
LAST CHANCE FOR PORTRAITS

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Call 83 1-2505 or 83 1-5570 or come

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to 356 Norton
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to

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L - -------------------·----------------------------_j

Page four. The Spectrum . Wednesday, 23 February 1972

�Housing hearing
Ellicott District Councilman Geo~ K. Arthur has filed a resolution with the
Common CoWlcil asking that II beauing take pla4:e to review the controvenial City of
Buffalo ordinencc which prohibits· more than two wuelated people from liwing in

the

same house 01' apartment.

California COllrt rules
death penalty·is illegal

Mr. Arthur claims he has eno111gh support for a proposal to change what he termed

an " unjust and unreasonable" ol'dina.nce. The hearing will take plaor on Tuesday, Feb. 29
at 2 p.m . in Common Council Clwinbers, City Hall. Mr. Arthur has asked aU students or
other interated persons to attend this bearing and lend their support for the removal of
this holL, ing ordinanor.

The California Supreme Court
ruled Friday that the death
pe nalty is uncons t itutional,
stating that by con temporary
standards, execution is cruel and
unusual punishment. The ruling
means that the 107 men and
women currently on Californra ·s
death row, will never see the
insrde of San Quen I in Prison's
apple green gas chamber.
Along with the declaration
came an order to change all the
existing death sentences to life
impnsonment The court n1ling
wa s bu~cd 011 the state
constituti\)11 , rather than the
United S tall~S Cunst itution .
Califomia 's state co11st1tut ion uses
the word~ ··cruel ur unusual
punishment " and the US .
Ct1 n s 11 t utiOn uses the words
"cruel and UllUSUlll puntshment "
The 6·1 l&gt;pulaon Sllld tha t
caprtal pun1shmen 1 "degrades and
dehumanizes all who participate
in tis process" and is "unnecessary
to any legitimate goal uf the state
and is incompatible with the
digntty of man and the JUdrct:ll
process.'' Among those affec ted
by the · deCISIOn are Sirhan B.
Sirhan , convicted assassm of
Robert t= . Kennedy, and cult
leader Charles Maus,,n.

New!

Puts yotllf lashes

~ethickofthings

Reagan critical

\

The dc:cision was promptly
criltCI/cJ by Gnvl't fllH Rolnald
Reagan . He sarc.l he was ..deeply
drsappolinteJ , ~nme wh at
shocked . . rt 's a cuse of the

courts setting themselves up above
the people and the legislature.''
Reaga n pr e di c t e d that the
decision would decrease the safety
of the average citizen. He said that
if t h e dec i sion .. goes
unchallenged , t h e j ud ic ia l
philosophy inherent in this ruling
could be an almost lethal blow to
society's right to protect
I aw-abidang citizens and their
fa m iI ies against violence and
crfmes."
Reagan 's predecessor, Edmund
Brown was not SO pessimistic.
Brown . a one-time prosecutor
who strungly upposed the death
penalty, s:ttd it was ''the best
thing that's happened in the field
of criminal jurisidction in tht last
100 years."
'Good anxiety'

At San Quentin , where 10 1 of
the 107 condemned prisoners are
housed, Associate Warden Joseph
O'Brien said : ' 'The Death Row
prisoners have, of course. heard
radio and television reports. They
are anxious to hear the actual
Supreme Court ruling. The air is
anxious on Death Row, but 11 is a
good anxiety "
The issue o t cap t ta l
punishment is also before the U.S .
Supreme Court. That court heard
argume11ts against capital
pw1ishment last month, and is
expected to rule on the question
of whether or not 11 violates the
U.S Constitutton within the next
two months.

The Student Association

~

~

GREAT-lAsH
The Protein lVlascara

has announced that Buffalo Draft Counseling
Center personnel will be holding on -campus office
. hours every Tuesd ay and Thursday starting
immediately . Paul Post a nd Bob Musek from the
Center will be avai lable• on those days from 9
a.m. ·1 p.m. in the UB Vets office, in Room 260
Norton Hall . Students should also note that
24 ·hour emergency service is available by phoning
897 -2871.

Golden l:ducator

Tra1vel
Summer 1972
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the diameter of every la~ h . And the Great-Lash Pho•o •"'""''' ·'&lt;'"·'' '"'
method is so easy! Builder-Bmsh applicator delivers thicker cov·
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No waiting to dry. Just keep brushing on formula until lashes are
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All flights are jet and depart from
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May 14 -June 28

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66 Shirley Ave.
Buffalo,. N. Y. 14215
(after 7p.m.-weekdays)
(all day-Sat. and Sun.)

Wednesday, 23 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

EdiToRiAl

I

Housing hassles
Housing is the single most important issue c~nfronti.ng
students. Although it's not a glamorous or even 1mpress1ve
problem, it is a crucial one. Presently , students are be~ng
harassed by dint of a likely-unconstitutional city housmg
ordinance. The ru le, which states that no more than two
unrelated people may live together, threatens to uproot over
a third of the student body.
The law itself is foolish . There is no reasoning behind it
and there certainly is no compell ing governmental interest
that the law satisfies. It s i mply is a device for the legal
persecution of University of Buff~lo students. A lso, many
local politicos can gain favor with their hatred ·inflamed
constituents by pressing for strict enforcement of this law.

50 I W6UT
10566 Hll
~Re~TS

These civic minded bigots cite examples of shoddy
living conditions within student housing. What they usually
fail to point out is that the unhealthy si tuation almost always
predates the dwellings' occu pancy by students. Further,
those hostile to out of-town students claim that the landlords
need this law for protec tion . Such a statement becomes
laughable upon examination because most of the landlords
renting to students are opposed to this law Undoubtedly,
money comes before prejudice.
George Arthur, Ellicott District Councilman, has
perceptively described this law as "unjust and unreasonable."
He has scheduled hearings on the matter for next Tuesday
afternoon in the Common Council chambers. We urge all
students effected by this law to attend the hearing and
register strong objections to its enforcement.

It is indeed unfortunate that the Mayor, several of his
t o p -level appointees and some councilmen appear to be
supporting this discriminatory law. Many of these individuals
had student help in last November's election and this is an
odd way of returning the favor.
Attend the hearing and speak out against this scurrilous
attack upon students. The house you save may be your own

Elec~toral

reform

Tu the EdltQ,r

As a 1~oup of young vote~. we feel it
101:umbent to comment upon two necessary reforms
ol lhe electoral process. First, a bilJ is currently
pendong before the State Leg.~slature to reopen
pn111ary reg~str:lloon for three w~ks in March. We
~uppor1 tim measure and urge ots support by area
legtslators Further . we hdoeve that this measure
~hmtlll be bruath'olcd to mcludc provtsions f11r
dh\t-ntee b~tlluton~ 1n pnmanes A primary 1s

considered by the law a~ the equal uf .1 general
election and therefore a double standard, as reganls
to absentee balloting, has no justification
Of 23 states wtuch held elective Presidential
primaries, o nl y one, New York, does not list the
deleg;~te's preferences on lhe primary ballot Th1s
relorm os long overdue and th.is reform should be
rmmechately onstotulcd A demm:racy ~n only
benefit from .t better onl ormed electorate
lJt•mur·ro trr \ ' outlr ( 'r1ulrt11111

Government censorship?
Although seemmgly ludicrous on its surface, the Navy
blacklist of this campus, along with 14 other univers1t1es, is
an unfortunate move. Wh1le one would never expect the
Navy to be a bastion of academic freedom, this form of
b latant reprisal for the cancellation o f academically unsound
ROTC programs is an example of government at 1ts worst .
The Navy prohibition IS not likely to have any profound
effects upon the 15 institutions. but the Implications are
potentially quite threatening. It is not an unforseeable
progression from preventing study by Navy personnel at
certain schools to banning any and all government-funded
research projects or programs In fact. our only surpnse is
that such a notonous scheme is not cu rrently flourishing

Wednesday. 23 February 1912

Vol 22. No. 57

Editor·in·Chief - Dennos Arnold
Co-Managlng Edito'
AI Benson
Co M•nag•ng Ednor - Mtke Ltppmann
Ar.st Mln~~g~ng Edotor SuWin Moss
Buso,.. Manage•
Jack Hetlen
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The Spectrum Is served by Unoted Press lnternatoonal. College Press
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Page six. The Spectrum . Wednesday, 23 February 1972

For what it's worth
hy Harvy Lipman
I hcte rco~lly osn'l anything Did. Noxon wuld ll1•
I hal would \Uiflri'&gt;C most of u.~ l ie 11uolt hos l-Jrcer by
Jdtng ·" ont' ol Jc&gt;c M'-( Jrthy's hatt.helmen. ~pent
I he hdlcr pdrl of lhe so"t'e' argumg for an onlreJ~t·d
ullii!JIY tnvollvcmcnl 10 Southeast A&lt;oiJ, ca mpdogned
lor 1111: pn:~uJcn1.y on the promosc ol a se1..ret plan to
en(l lhc war ~so sencl in t;~et tha t he hasn'l 1uld
anyht1UY &lt;1ht1oul it yel) and now •~ 10 Peking I rying to
persuade the Chmesc thai he's JU~I a l'ea~.eful Qual..cr
mlereslctl on co-ex1sten~.c In \horl, Ntxon h.ts been
Hl"'"lenlly .:onservallve e)o.Cept when polltu.al
n.pl.'dii'OlY prcdudell ho~ heong ~(&gt; 1 hereftore wh~:n
lhc 11ppor1uno1y an~t~ for Mtiii\HI~ lo do snllll.'lhong
hoth 11ghl wong and pohlol'ally e'l(t1edll·nl he mu~t he
expt•ded to lcJp HI up !11 t11s armpol:..
1 hu~ l\ 11 th.1l U!le 1.0Uid rmd un I he frunl pag~:
or MolndJy·, Nt·w lor/.. flmt·s •• hcatlllne rt'lt:rnng I()
M1
S1n~.cnty'
supporl ul the pro(H)\td
COIISIIIUIIUM&lt;II ;)1\lel)d!llent outlawollg bUSinjl tot
lidlllnl chtld ren w ach1evc rac1al balance. II •s JUSt
on~· mmc 111 .1 senes of at'ltons t he Ntxun
AdnllniStrati on hJS tal..~n to slow tnh:gratton I hal IS
nul 1u :.ay thai bus1ng IS the besl vr even a gooJ WoJY
lu oJ~hoeve cquotl educo~llon opportunotot:S Ther~: I!&gt; J
lol to be 'atd for the odcJ of ncoghhurhood schools
provoded . of •·o ursc, that there tl&gt; uiM&gt; IICtghhmhood
~·nntrul fhis os J sotual ion which Joe~ not exist. The
~huub 111 hldck Jre.J~ .Jrc run by whot~ bureau~rals
who not o nly don'l Lvc there hut wouldn 1 even
wall.. through them after 4 p.m Be1ng a middle do~'~
whole make:, lhe conct: pl or neoghhorhood Slhools
look :1 whol~· ltll more pleasll nl .
At any rate wh~:n lhl' admmistraiiiHI's
sugges110n IS \'OUpled WII h liS preVIOUS a\'IIVIIIeS
Iowan! eastng pressure on mlcgrJting !&gt;OUlhern
school systems une 1.'&lt;111 only ~urnuse thJt there os J
conscious efforl lo slow down the Jlready faJtcnng
creep towards equalit y. Nixon's motives probably go
deeper than his inherent racism , he undoubtedly
feels that this would b~ a popular move to make
during an electiOn year Unfortunately , he IS
probably correct. Democratic 1.'and1date Henry
Jackson has made a similar proposal and bustng plans

hav~:

lfl d!m11sl every mstant.:e mel w!lh puhlt•
protes l. Why , one m1ght even go solar a' In say lhal
therl' moghl be some d1.·Qtee of 1,\CncrJI ra~.:osnt
running lhrnughout whole Amt:nca But whtlc the•
prcvouu\ two .tdrntnt~lratuln' tlocl nol dn very 111ud1
to allevoale lhe hasil dto;panlles between hl.1cks Jnd
whole\ they dod dl leasl mJI..e some feebk altcnopl In
uphold the JQS4 Brown de ~·osoon . Now, 11 seems, the
olltl'l' of lhe Prestdency IS finally returntng to the
good ohJ-Iashwned d1scnmmatoo n uf yes teryear
On~: olltcr ~pe.:l of the Noxon amendment
~hnuld he lOnsJdered Among h1s st.rted reasons luo
supporllng lhe idea wa~ thai tt would re,traon lht
l.OUrls lrnm unhzing hu~mg .~~a me;on\ of upholdlll&amp;
1he1r 11Hcrpre111tion of the Cl;nstiUttnn Cons;der tlw
onopltLaloon~ o f thos statemenl. Four of the nine
Supreme Court JUstices are Nixon appoonlces l'wto
olher:. hJvc hJsically mnserva11ve rt:l(lrd~ Yt'l
despoil: tho\, the Presodcnl does nol feel ,e.-ure on
.Jh1d111g hy Ihe del.IStnn' nf the courl In rffel'l , then
h~:
" saytng that even his own ~..onscrvatove
appoontees wnuld find busmg a legitimate means of
cnforcong the law Evtdently it is not the euutl
,ystem lh:ll Mr Ntxon fmds to hts d1si.Jke. bul H1e
\onSIIIUIHln
Perhillh J ~ohH1on c:an be found to lh•~ prohlem
The Presodcnl t.:ould suhmot a bill calhng for a new
cunst ituloon.JI o.:onverotton Representahves t:ould
include ~uc h civ1l hbutanans as Ronald Reagan artd
Maynr Daley (after all, we have to be btparhsan)
The conven 11on would of course be presoded over by
former (Thank God I) Allomey General John
MttLhcll. The new document would ol c:ourse be
written ;JJong lines far more palatahle 1o his
excellency Orck that !he current form IS. Such
outmoded ~..o ncepts as the Bill of Rtght~ would be
eliminated and rep laced wtth a model along the lines
of the Greek or Spant~h constitutions.
Don't despatr, however. Even Noxon wouldn'l
go !hal far . Anyway , he couldn't poss1bly set the
whole !htng up before November, and by then we'll
all have the opportunit y to rep lace him with Ed
Muskie
on second thought - how much would it
cost to charter a couple of ftundred planes to
Denmark?

�(;overnmental dishonesty
To the Editor:
Prof. Segal, 1n a recent letter to th1s column, has
said: "What we know almost nothing about is
long-term effect of inadequacies, imbalance and
art1ficial addtttves in our dje t . . Whoever asserts
the contrary is a quack."
Sepl is typical in his attitude toward nutrition
above the level of sure thing die tary d eficiencies. A s
I read more and more about nutrition and 1ts
appticalions, I bt:come more and more co nvinced
that our governmental agen cies who arc supposed to
insure our health to the best of their abilit1es .Jre
etth er blind or plain dishonest.
Please don't argue with this until you rcod some
of these books which l most heurttly recommend as
a cornucopia of shocking stones of food tampering
.md 1ts harm :
Food Pollution hy Gene Manne and Jud11h Van
Allen (Nl$w York : Holt. Rmehart and WHISton,
1972). This book Is a must !
Con.Jumcr Beware' bY Beatri( C Trum llunter
(N('w York: S1mon and Schust er, 1971)
Beware of lht' F1&gt;ud You fat hy Rulli W1nter
(Nrw York : Crown Publishers. l nL. 1971)
These books are crammed w1th eviden\:~t (yes,
ev1dence) and then ROurces for doubting m1nds I' d
hke IO point OUt jUSt a few o( lhl' rnuny fa SCIII3 llng
things I've learned from them
Cyclamates were known 111 IY!il! to be &lt;.Jncer
CioiUSJng by the F·ood and Drug AdmiOISirallon·, own
testtng experts 1n rats (the argument where you hear
that rats are fed such high dosage~ of a chem1cal
before 1t causes cancer, that th1s 1s therefore not
dangerous to huma ns
it IS qwte n JOb of d•storhng
certain facts, as these hooks p01nt o ut) Eleven yeus
later they were taken off the market. but 111 the
mellnt•me, you are gu~zltng 1t down 10 many tll!.!t
foods.
Sacchann has been shown lo he cancer cau sing
(way ba\:k 1n 11!97!) and is now 10 th e proce~ of
being tested for thts fa\:t (finally') But as lhC' testtng
uf thL-; potentially dangerous chemtcal goes on,
whu.h l'O Uid take years, you arc betng gsven every
oppmtumty to mgest 11 1n lh e meanhmc without a
tra1..C' of a warnmg.
The rood mdustry run~ over S 125 billion
annually, and 1s almost completely mdustry uwn('d
If J fund atJdJtiVt' Will giYl' \CHlle \:llll1pany J
rc:asonablc prof1t, 11 w1ll most hlo.cly he U\l'd 1111 the·
gu1n~a p1g con~umrr\, wl11d1 1s Wl' pcopk (l'Vl'tl tf 11
1\ nut sare) A tlyl', H)&amp;(' Rcll No •1, wa~ l.lhll 11ft
lhl: IIHtrkcl IJUI' lo UllCQUIVh,(IJ Jlf()of lila! II"

-••
--u

~

~
~

'-

ingestion could c:ause bladder cancer. However, it
can still be used on maraschino cherries to give them
a pretty (?). ruce (!),wholesome(?!) look . Someone
should remind them that there is a law wruch
prohibits the masking or concealing of the true state
of our food.
One of the government's ch1ef advisors on
matters o f national nutrition is the Nutrition
Foundation Inc. But a list of its founder m embers
include General Mills, Coca Cola and American Sugar
Refining Co., annong many o thers. If a scientist
comes w ith proof that sugar is dangerous to th e
teeth and heart, or that soda pop can cause eye
damage, this "tmthful" Foundation wtiJ find some
way to shut hirn up or discredit his findings A
fascinatin&amp; story sh ows that those "freshness
preservers" 1n cereals, BHA and BHT, were added to
our food by the resuHs o f one mconclusive (read
Consumer Brwal"e ' for the story) test, desp1te
warnings by othe1r experts that these chemtcals could
cause hver damaae and baldness, among o ther things.
BHA and BHT am very profitable commodities!
Notice how fast they are to find "convinctng"
evidence for items wluch are J1blentiaUy dangerous
but profitable, bu.t yet argue that there 1S msufficient
evtdence, even 1n the case of almost complete proof,
when a ch eap fmm of therapy such as the use of
vitam1ns and minerals is sh own. Why7 fhc more I
read , the more I become convinced that the profit
shove .;oncl'rn mot1ve IS behtnd 1t all
I ddvocate healtnk yourself wtth nutntional and
orgamc elements. But don't do tl blindly'! Read as
much as you cun. we•gh the evidence (for even
nut rttion IS littered with controversies and
disagreement) S•;&gt;me of the best hooks you can get
on nutnllon are I) any published by the Rodale
Press. 2) those h·Y Adelle DaVIs, 3) those by Linda
Clark
Finall y, we liS tnterested stud ents tn the field o f
nutnllon, must unite: together. There are many
dtfferen~:-e~ 1n treatment and prevention 1n thts field
Together we can evaluate ttus and make sense out of
dtversJty tn optn lllln 1\ dlltLUSSJOn group woulll go a
long way to th1s end. Let's get one lormoo wun, for
there IS nn tune 110 waste: when our h ealth ts at stake.
St.trl teading these hooks' learn the tric~ o f
the trade wherehy we 11re shown biased proof of
nut nt 1011.11 I heuncs Jnd are led tu helieve 1ts
.om plete trulll Pruf Segal, 11 has happened to you
.tnd 11\ downnghl \IJOtng dntl dangerous'
l'oul k "fWH·ns/..1

'Good riddance'
/'11

tft1· fo"tfllor

I wa\ rcnedtnp, On tour yco~l\ ol ~ttllegl'
RementbcJ, we U&gt;e\J to he so pr11ud u l liB Why. Wl'
even had ~:o~d dorm~. h~er on c.ampu,, Jnd wuw
d1tl wo: have great nnts What nuw"l
11ellow student:. ltave you tned to p11:k up a
t·mu·se lately'! II nuw has to h~ d11 0c through thr
dcpatlment head Nnw, or at lea't planned m•w tur
the tall, pass/fall \:OUr~es must be de~o:J(Jed .11 th~:
begsnmng of eaLh o;emestcr and regc.lcred .11 that
11me at Admission~ Jnd Records Nuw WC' an: JaLed
With lulllon mcrease~. Nuw we dun't have a lootball
team. Now we have st udent governmenl whtd't mnsl
&gt;~tuden ts don't even know exists, kt alone ~uppnrt
Now we hdve a Unrvers•IY whH.h 1\ •UIIJng hJlk
\eTVIlCS o~U over the piau: Now we h.avc th-e cvc:r
:~tagnant ~:olleg~!&gt;. Nnw we have ltayes lt.tll l&gt;Ontrol
ewer student mun1~ Now we havl' a planned new
lam pu ~. wtlh no.student mput, decrea~•ng tn ~11x
every day Now we have a Umvers1ty whJLh &lt;&gt;hut'
down earher and earlier every day Now we hnve n1•
~y 1n tenure Nnw we have cdmpus race relalllllh
nul mut.h better than uub1tlt- thl\ 'utnpta • fW~:
clun'l ve1 halrze uur d ISt.lste~ ''r lrve nur
understandings, we 1gt1ore. ) Now we have bullsh1 1
Sure, wt· can talk about all the shit all around th1s
\:ountry We can remove ourselves and blame all
other; But we're no brtter UB •s nut as 1mportan1
a~ endmg the war
but It's our own backyard UB
s tudents have been dy~fu~cllonul, la1y and o~palhctJl
111 lea!.l. Blame SA and hhame Hayes llall , l:lul blame
yourself utmost Fnr 1f you had tried, •f yuu ho~d
cared , if you had workw to get 11, thtngs would he
dJfferent.
I'm gr.tduattng
and good nddan•e tu y11u all
Our own fantasy youth ghe tto and we couldn't malo.c
It nght. Good-bye fellow students. You havt: ncJttung
to be proud of. Look out world
here comes. mCire
shit dtSguJSed to lun, hau, beard~. bdh; and
worksh1rts
f'I!OI

J e11y

Problems in prisons
ro ,,,. 1-tl/lor
I wa~ '"kc.:1l ICI.I:IIIly hy a v.t:l1 known cdm·atw
wlh thn lolkgc \t udcnts Wl"rc lc" JatlJlo~l lhl''l' dJY\
thdn several \Cm~te" ag&lt;• wh•·n L.liiiJIU' .titer
c.:JIIIPU' erupted tnlo drmon..,tratton' My reply w.ls
' 'No, they've (U\I 'topped muutiiiiiK&lt;•II 11nd ,,..,led
WcHI.1ng t owa11h till'II gouh ' t I nndt:lllally , I tlunt..
ti\J~ l'lllrcnt lh"IIVJty IS more r,ldtl.althan the IOIIIIC.:I ,
all hough I'm not much •nl~:rc)lcd 1n hl•Jnt:
lOrnpartmcntalltcd "' &lt;1 radtlal I
My extr .It urrtl. ul.tr wvrk rcvulvel&gt; "' uund 1he
dllcrnm.t or our .;ountry\ pn"'"' lind )JJIS For
almost two ye;tr'&gt; I ho~ve hccn .t \tudcot L&lt;.&gt;Un,~lor 111
1 h e 1-. TJe ( oun t y Jatl ('ounst:hnl( St:rv11.C'. .J
dtrcct-scrvile program for mmate~ m that pre trtJI
detentiOn lac1IIIY Althnugh the l-rle County J:sal IS
1n hetter cond1110n that mc~t Jdlls 1n 1\men...a. the
..:rushmg problems th111 plague thr penal syl&gt;tl'lll 1n
general are present 111 nne fmm ur .another 10 uur
&lt;1Wn bad..yard Of c:uurse, the prohlcml&gt; that I WIU
~kc t \: h below are the same thai IJY dl thl· mtlf uf the
upmtngs at San Quentin , Alltla, kahw.1y o~nd
c.:ountless ones earlu:r m AmenL.lll hl\lttry
Fundamento~l LOntradJI:IJuns Jnd arnttmnJIJtlt:S
pervade our penal l&gt;YStem It " .,;C)ntrad JLlOJy, for
exa rnpk, to usc the rhetooc of rehahllitat1nn while
administering a bYStern that manuf:H:turcs en me Our
"torrc..:tJonal" Institutions attempt trrat10nally lo
hulld tndependence and self-control m p~noners hy
totally reg~menttng their lives. From the first to the
la~l day of incarceration, an 1nmatc IS told when to
get up, when to go to sleep, when t o eat, what to
eat, what to read, when to talk , when to shut up.
tndeed, what to think .
Physical and emottonal brutality and cnm mal
know -how exist 10 concentrated form tn thiS
spuitufly-deadening enVIronment, w1th the result

thai peopl.• ••lien leave lnCJrl..ciU!IIln w•th .1 tu•··•lcr
rc:pcrt•llfl' ccf rnt mtn;tl sk11ls and more Jntcre\1 tn
ustng •I lolly than tht•y had when lhl.'y entcrl.'d
pnson Till\ pmgrC'&gt;\Hcn ·~ virtually guaranteed hy
the fact that ., person •~. 1n dfel.l, deemed ready for
parole a!&gt; wun d5 he ur she hds learned Ill Ltve under
&lt; ond1t1C1m thu! ,uc thoroughly sad1SIIl o~nd allen tu
the "''-1&lt;'1 Y he Ill USI rl.'-t"nlel
l·v~:n thvse who rc-c:ntcr th e "free world" w11h
the hc~l uf Intention&lt;. lhsrovcr that llw pn.sun d c111r
revolve' llnr ca,onJhk parule rc~t nct1on~ ( Y1olutwn
uJ wht•h nturns the parolee to pn"ln), &gt;&lt;·hoo/1 ,
uruons, l'llljlloyer; and pmfCSSIOOJI .tSl&gt;OliJIIOI\S th::tt
c:xdudr ttHJI/Jltc·d felon~&lt;, o~ll .:ornbme tu keep the
hinge~ wdl otkdl Tlu: most nimble afn!ll tlften get
caught 111 lhl' rc~'·olv~ng door and camcd through 1ts
revolution ba\:k tee the "Joint." Our pcnuJ system~.
far lrum tnrrcctlllg abhorrent, aberro~nt hehav1or,
exacerbate 11 And t~f ~,;ourse, they create 1t m people
who, fur a variety ol rca:.unl&gt;, ~hould never have been
sucked •nto the cnmmal JUSitce system 1n th.: fir"&gt;t
plat· e.
1\~ 1rnphed at th~: beginning of tins letter, my
dppmach t o the pluhkrnalll: penal wstern~ (by the
way, not aiJ pnsons 1n aU area~ have Ih e same
l!tfflculrles) IS In pwv1de d~rect !.Crvt\:e to 10matcs
wh.ile atto~cktng long-range goals. In effect , th1s
two-level fight attempts to ensure day -tu-day survival
of prison and jail mmates and to radically alter these
monuments to our colossal ignorance. I lnVlle people
on thiS campus and 10 the Buffalo com munity t o
JOin the effort. The problem is ours, the work must
be ours, and, hopefully , the rew:trd of a healthier
soc1ety may be ours. For a description o f local
proJects you may become tnvolved tn, please contact
me by letter, can~ of The Spectrum
Btl/ c:el/er

Wednesday , 23 February 1972 . The Spectrum , Page seven

�S.A.NEWS
URGENT

TH ER E WILL BE A

STUDENT ASSEMBLY
MEETING
.
FR IDAY , FEBRUARY 25,2 P.M.
DIEFENDORF ANNEX, ROOM 2
AGENDA: Constitutional Amendments, so a minimum of 3/5 of the membership is required to be in attendance.

SASU COORDINATOR NEEDED
In order to best disseminate and implement upcoming SASU programs, the Executive Committee o f SASU
is requesting that all student government presidents throughout thw SUNY system select a student to act as
SASU Coordinator at that school.
Functions include:
1) Dissemination of SASU newsletter

2) Local airection of programs (University travel)

3) Initiation of services such as birth contro l and community action
4) Resource person between U.B. and SASU
IN T EREST ED?
Apply

110

room 205 Norton

Att'n . tan OeWaal

Ar1ybody wanting a piece of the pie
can pick up a request form in 205 Norton. Slices will be giv~n out this spnng for next
year, mandated by state law, so hurry or you'll be shut out

S.A . ELECTION PETITIONS ARE DUE

Sub Board I. Inc. - $240,000
at 5:00P.M .
There 1s a mandatory meeting of all candidates today
at 5 :00P.M . 1n

Room 205 Norton.

Athietics - $240,000

BU DGETS MUST B E TURN ED IN BY MARCH 15.

Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday , 23 February 1972

�L----OVER_
. _T_IME_~

Final meet

Fredonia drowns Me1·men

by Barry Rubin
Sponr Editor

Earlier this season, freshman swimmer Dave
Sexton earned himself a-·' Buffalo Record breaker
towel; Sext on took t.he 1000-yard freestyle in the
recent m eet against Syracuse. with a time of 12
minutes and 3.5 second s. Th1s sh aved half a second
off the record set earlier t his season b y anot h er
frosh. Ja y Rawley
Last Wedn esday's match at Fredonia would
seem ed to have b een U1e perfect time to square off
these two su per freshmen . But ironicall y enough .
Buffalo knew that Fredonia's Brian Boyle would
outclass both buUs in th is even t.
The re fore, only Rawley swam th e 1000 in an
effort to spread o ut Buffalo's b est swirnmers to get
more points and avoid Boyle as much as possible.
But Boyle was not t o be avoided. Ag31nst Rawley,
Boyle won the I 000 going aw:ty . Later he also wuu
the 200·yard butterfly be fore nipping Sexton 111 the
500·yard freest yle. Boyle's t ri ple win was a key part
uf thr Fredon1a victory

Two weekends a&amp;o, Bu ffalo varsit y wrestling Coach Ed t.( ichael,
was called " win hungry " by an angry St. Francis, Pa . Coach T om Vaux .
Vau x complained tha t Mich ael made the Frankies ~.:ome t:o Bufralo for
a quad , although they had but six heaJt h y wrestlers, But the complete
story did not com e out.
In fact, Mich ael agreed t o let St. Francis skip the tourney, but then
California Stat e . another of the quad members, declared that it would
pull out if St. F ra ncis di d not appear. All of this seem s so foggy and
confused , but rt glaringly illustrates what has happened otn the college
sports scene in recent years.
The game that is being played now by many colle:ge people is ,
"forget the written contrac t ." Teams tills season havt~ used many
different ways to get out of matc hes with Buffalo teams.. In wrestling,
Lo ck Haven claimed bad weather and bowed out of a Oc:~.:ember meet
10 Buffalo. The n California State attempted to use th e St. Francis
pullout to get themselves exempted from t he tri p t o Buffalo.
But what can anyone el(pect'! Student athlet es St!e their own
coaches jumping from university to university a nd from university to
professional with amazing precisi on. If aU college athletes are amateurs ,
why did Howard Po rter and Jim Mc Daniels sign secret pro conlcacts
before their college careers end ed . One must admit tha t M:uquett&lt;''s
huge cen ter J1m Cl1ones sh owe(l some integrity whcr1 he e nded hb
colkgc ca reer the day he signed With the: ABA 's New York Nets la~ t
week .
In huckt·y. th~ Bulls' schedul e has bec::n torn ap.rrt by ca n ~.:c llaf ttln
and pn~tpnn~lltt:Oh. Tt:ams have used late starting umc'\ a~ an l"X.-u~&lt;·
ntll In fJ&lt;:l' the pt)Werful Buffalo r~,;e much1ne. E:ven tn basketb._.ll ,1
pro po~ed Snulhcrn tnp which had the Univl.'rsity ot Ge,urgla JnJ th&lt;·
l n1vcrsrt)' nf Al.rham.J sdu!duh!d hctll to he ..:lranscu when tho~l· tw &lt;&gt;
'CJU.I(h de,u.kd thJt losSC\ the pre vr OUi&gt; yc:u w the lrn,Hrll.rl arena"'·"''
1t tfllfl&lt;l\Sihlc tu piJY Bultulo . Buflalt&gt; hJs 1~1 tfw,c lt'JIIl' t&gt;ll thl.' h11ol. .
a~a111 ,howrng th~ ~1gne d .:on tra ct nwan~ nothr n~ Jt"l lnlll. .11 " ""
IIIJII~ 1&gt;,1\l..~•thJIJ pld)'l!r~ there Jl t' Jl thl' 11111Vel\lly ll ll !;!l,lll l·ttt·,IJJ wlr11
tl 1111 'I t'VI.:Il plJy
I 11 l•e surc. there are no mur,· JlliJicur' .tn&gt; wh l'l'' u n th~ &gt;P•lfh
~''l'lll' l·vl.'n a purist Irk.: Avery Brundo~ge o f Oly1np1l l:rm c IIIU•;t .lt.lll\11
1h.11 Ru . . Mall Jthh:tr~ arc professional 111 every sens•• C1l the wo rd Yet ,
1\.rrl S~l\ranl., a sk1et , IS suspended rrorn the Olymp"' · Ath lete' drt: not
a' 'tuprJ a:. mnny people m&lt;~ke them 0Ut to Ia:.
The recent JUmp of Jim McOanrels trnrn the J\li,A 's Carolina
&lt;·,lUg.IIS ltl the NBA 's Seattle Supersom.:' rnJy h.: the start of yet
;~lloth~r ABA N BA ski rmish . Thts new batik 1s sure to hit the colleges
.uu1 s~: nd even greater numbers to the pro rank~ hdorl.' their das~
~ruduates After ull , the college athkte rcali1es th at th~: IJ1g money wtll
he g"nc on..:e the kagues push their merger through Congrc="s

Firml dual m eet

The Bulls finished thc11 dual meet sc:tSllll hy
l i 1S rn ~t to hedo oiu State 68-15. in what was expected

Ill h~· a much doscr llll'l.'l

Jill' d1vint~ .:om~tltltll1\

hurt Buffalo, as usual, but Buffalo 's real fai lure was
in not getting a 1·2 finish in several. key races.
Despite eight tirrst places, Fredonia really broke
it o pen with second place finishes from Dick J aeger
in the I 00-yard ftreest yle and Jack Be ttin in the
200-yard backstrok,e. The Bulls had stacked both of
these events and ~!X pected to sweep them . Later
Buffalo's breastrokr~r Mart y Barro n was also upset.
but by then, the meet was out of reach .
After the meet, junior backstro ker George Stllm
was elected captaJin fo r next year's squad . Blg
George's performance this season has more tha n
warranted the honor. Slam consistentl y turned in
great times in the 200-yard backstroke, including
back to back clock.i:ngs of two minutes, IJ.J .seconds
against Peon State nnd ,Syracuse. At Fredonia, Stam
won th is event in 2 ·I 3.4 as well as t aking second to
S teve Schulman ( 23·.8) in t he 50·yard freestyle with
a 24. 1.
Other winners against fredonia were George
Thompson in the 100-yard freestyle and Dave
Sext~&gt;n rn thr 200-yard freestyle . For sen1ur sprinters
Thumpson and Sd1ulmau . Fredon 1a was their last
matd1 ~~~ var~11y Bulls. ScxhHl\ 11111~ of one mmutc
anJ 59.3 ~t:~ unds w~ts lu, lrc~f of 1he scaSlln.

·Hear, 0 Israel
For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone
875-4265
GUSTAV A. FRISCH , IN C.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y . 14226

•

l 'UTORING AND GUIDANCE ~
SINCE 1938
•

llu~ wed, th~ hm:kcy Bulls w11l l~urn thw piJyoll fat e. and ll the

MCAT-DAT
LSAT-ATGSB

r&lt; /\( hod.L'Y .:omrn1tt ee runs tru.: ltl form , Buffalo will lw lt•rced to
tr.Jvd '"the New E:.ngland area . Getting the :.hufltrurn till' tournament
' "llllllltlcc ~s just o ne o f th.: ncl·essary evils ul helongmg to a
t:n lll l' h~ n ce 1non-playi ngJ Bl&gt; ge&lt;&gt;graphl~.:ally p(lhtrcal as the £(' AC. With
Howtl&lt;lln sl.'emtngly o ut of playoff I.'Ontenlwn, the pace setters f1gurc tu
he ~ hus~ n !rom among Massachusetts, Vermont , Mernmack. Boston
Stat&lt; Jnd th&lt;' Bulls . Notice h ow many New England schools are
rnvt, lvct.l and don't be surprised when th e Bulls are forced to travel.

GRE

• Preparation for tnts required f&lt;K
admi•ion to graduate end prof -

UNIVERSITY UNION ACTIVITIES BOARD
Sponsors all events m the following areas:
ARTS
DANCE ARTS
DRAMATIC ARTS
LITERARY ARTS
MUSIC
FILM
COFFEEHOUSE
PUBLICITY
In order t o continue programming, we need
people to work in these areas. Positions of
Chairman in each o f these committees are
ava ilable. What is needed is time and desire to
work . Stipends are given to all UUAB Chairmen.
If you would like to work any of these areas,
applications are found in Room 261, Norton.

WICBW ANO BUFFALO fESliVAL pre,.nh

DELANEY &amp; BONNIE
Billy Preston &amp;John Hammtond
Wednesday, March 8 at 8 P'. M .
Kleinhans Music Hall
All Seah Reserved Mo ;n lloor $5.50-$4 .50
IJolc-ony $4 50-$4 00
ftcltett on tole now at 8vffo lo F•~'"'ol Tid• •t OH•c• . Stott•, Hilton lobby

(moil oufe rt occ• P• • •J w Hh '''"'"'P•d aefl ..od -'t•n•d •~"ve'o5N l, U t . Norton Hotl,
Holl. Stat• Coll•v• f irlcet Office: Fo1lt. Tt:ll•ts, Haeberle Ptoaal Niat~oro Fath

WK8W AND IIUFfALO fESTIV4l prtto"t

DON McLEAN

sionef schools
• Silt and twelw sess•on courws
• Small groups
• Voluminous ~teriet t or home stud

prepared by

ex~•ts tn

each field

• Le.on schedule can~ tel lored to

meet indlvidual nnds. L-om
•tan b4l spntad over • ~tod ol
several months to • year , or lor
out of tovor. studen._, a P8f •od

,of onewMk

•IOpportuntry for revi- of p.-c
l..ons vie tape et the center

S:p.c'-1

Compt~et Coun.

Summer Sllllons
STANLEY H . KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD.

..,. ........ --,. . ·v u._

~

(212) 338-6300
(61111 638--4666

OJ~V$

f.Vf '-IHOS. Wfllt£NO.

All Seats Resen~ed: $4.50 - First buyers get BEST S&lt;eats
fic.ll•h on 50ie now o f '"ffolo f e•ti'\lol Uc.ket Office, Stotl• t Hi lto., lobby
(m..ttl---ordet occept•d witt. damped ••lf .. a ddr•ued envelop • )( U I . ~Ofton
Coll. .t Ticltol Olfict; folic Ticket, Hotbotlo Plaaa, Nrovo•o

-

Hall , Stolt

folio.

WKBW ANO BUfFALO FESTIVAL pra.entt

SEALS &amp; CROFIS
Friday, March 17 at 8 P.M.
Kleinhans Music Hall
All seats reserved: $4.50 - First buyers Get BEST seats
Ticblt en tole now ol luffalo httivol Tkltel Offiu. Stotler Hilton
lobby (moll o"lt,. accepted will\ stamptd ,.:1-oddros"d ..,vol-);
U. 1. N..,ton Hall ; Stotw Collouo Ti&lt;ht Office; fa llt Tickoll, tloeborlo
Ploao , NiotCH'O folic.

I
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n10 r•...,...s.•oo~•,. r~W Neo......

HANG IT ON AT THE

SHOWBOAT

Every Wednesday is
: 'SUNYAB NIGHT'
I
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lt.,.....

Bn•nches In principal cities

IN CONCERT

Sundny. ~eo 27 of 8 30 PM
Kl EIN HANS MUSIC HALL

dwing

WMikends-1~

Draft Beer $ .35
Free F resh Popcorn
Dress as You Please -

Mixed D rinks S.7S
Live Music to Sing o r Cry With
But Don't Let Your Feet Hang Out

DRAG YOUR BAG OR MAKE' THESCENESOLOON
'SUNY AB NIIGHT'

WEDNESDIA YS
The a~rion is in the
ENGINE ROOM BA R

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT EVERY'NIGHT!ll
FEB. 23 - 26 G ROOVE TO ''THINGS TO COME"

IT'S AL WA YS A GAS A 1' THE SHOWBOAT
l HERTEL AVE.

BUFFALO, N .Y.

877-7970

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Wednesday, 23 February 1972: . The Spectrum . Page nine

I

~I

�Another victory

'"
'"

-

~·p ... .

. ~--

Matmen finish fine
seaSon WithvictC&gt;zy·-

..q- ~··

Hockey team blasts Clippers
by Howie Faiwl
A $.ft. SfXNII b.diwr

Kent State came to Buffalo Saturday night
despite the huge snowstorm that swept the entire
Northeast. So did six hundred courageous, but frigid
hockey fans, many of whom spent more time than
they had bargained for at the Amherst Recreation
Center. The Clippers from Ohio, however . might
have wi.~hed they had never come. They would have
had an easier task battling the blizzard outstde than
tackling wtth Buffalo's explosive hockey machme.
Explostve 11 was. The BuUs ticked off ten quid..
goals 10 demolishing the Chppers 10· 1 It wasn•t
much of a contest as Kent State, despite the1r
impressive nine game winning streak, proved to be
no compeltllon at all In fa ct a suggestion was raised
to send a campus Intramural team in place of the
hockey Bulls to meet Kent State 1n th1s Fnday's
scheduled affau
That bad they certainly were. When they
weren't tripping over thetr ska tes, or fa nnmg on
shots, or overskating the puck, the Clippers did
manage to mount some semblance of an attack . But
by the third period, with the contest al ready clearly
decided. even the Bulls became bored , lparttcularly
goalie Mike Dunn who saved a shot here and there
between winks.

Will is worltina quit~ well now with sophomore
center John Stranges. Stranaes put on quite a show
too, with a dazzlin&amp; display of puckhandUna antl
maneuverability. The BluJls' leading goal-getter
picked up his sixteenth of the seasol\_and impressed
many a fan w1th his uniqut! skating abilh.y.
The Ncwman-Beaver-MiskolclJ line has come
alive as of late, giving Buffalo three well-balanced
lines. This trio accounted for nine points in
Saturday's game and has been greatly aided by Ted
M1skolczi's return to forrn . The JUnior wingman has
added much scoring punch now that a cast, which

Bea.er ttts tutc trick
After the first three mtnutes of the g.~me. the
realized the mght wouJd be a grand
opportumty to boost their Individual records. Senior
Nick Beaver got into the scoring act for a change and
more than doubled his season's total with a three
goaJ hat trick
HlS first two goals, w1tlun 30 seconds of eac:h
other, started Buffalo's first pcnod barrage Beaver
was foUowed by Dale Dolmage's eleventh goal of the
season. as the senior center continues h1s sconng
duel with h1s nght wmger M1ke Klym . The tw o are
once agam lied for team honors, as Klym has fallen
into a mtld slump Yet the cxc:lllng freshman st.u has
clearly proven he has the ht~rdest shot on the team
and Clipper goalte Ray Metz IS still shili..Jng after
glovmg many of Mlke's sl:1ppen..
Dick WiU, on a tornd sconng streak , p1c:kcd ur
another two goals and an assiSt for h1s mght's work
A left wmger on the Strangcs line, W1ll h.L\ now
scored SIX goals tn three gam~ and has p1cked up
ntne points tn that span. Dsck IS only a freshman.
and accord1ng to Coach Fd Wnght h :•~ rhc potential
to be the finest player on tht' dub. In fat:~ Wsll . prior
to commg to Buffalo, had been drafted lly the h1ghly
touted Hamilton MaJOr J umor A httl key teo:t rn of
Ontario.
B u Us

~~HAIRSTYLING

Joe ·s Tllrotre Barber
lOSS Kenmore Avenue
(At Colvm fhNtr~)

WIGS •HAIR COLORING
b:s:~:!£'8 77-2989 """"~~

·-

.

-5etoelnlk

Joll11 St rtlll"e'·
....
had bothered him all season long, h1t~ been removed
from his shoottng hand. Also returnJOg to form was
Les Teplicky who made h11s debut after a long layoff
fro m a snowmobile accident earlter this season
Dulls at Ithaca yeKCerday
Unfortunately the Bulls could not keep theu
ma~hme gomg for Sunday, as A I.C fa1led to make 11
lu Buflalo because of the· storm. Thll game, a vital
lhv1coton II match for the Bulls, has lleen postponed
sndefin1tely and chances ar·e 11 won 'I be played at •II.
Ho pefully a wm yesterday at Ithaca, not too
Improbable, would gJVe the: Bulls their tenth Dtvwon
II v1ctory agamst only two Jo~es and an even better
shot for a playoff selection . Unless the A.I .C game 1s
r~cheduled, thll Bulls will travel to Kent State
Fnday for thetr final regular season game.

by Dave Gerin,er

Policare then iced the match
by defeating previously unbeaten
heavyweight Len SchJacter, 64.
Cortland, N.Y. - The wrestling According to Policare, Schlacter
Bulls, the best team ever coached was "probably the strongest
by Ed Mjchael, wrapped up their wrestler" he faced all year, in a
finest season ever, by defeating physical sense. The 6-3. 250
Cortland Saturday, 22- 17 . The pound ex..SUNYAC champion had
Buffalo squad thus finished the not been defeated in his last two
regular season with 17 wins, the years of varsity competition . "l
best mark ever for the winningest was a one point loser to the best
team on campus
heavyweight in the East," said
Doug Rutter. who moved Policare, referring to Wilkes' AI
down to I 18 pounds, in Arnould. " I should be able tu
preparation for the NCAA place in the national tournament
tournament, started off the Bulls despite one of the strongest
by defeating Cortland's M1ke heavyweight classes in years."
Camptst, 10-0. The ex-Coming
'7his was a good team to
Community College star moved coach," observed Buffalo Coach
down from 134 to I 26 last season Ed Michael. " Many times one
and placed fourth in the National could stand in awe at the way
Junior CoUege Tournament.
they performed agatnst
The Bulls, who took an early form1dable competstion.
lead of 10-0 after the first two
"l think that our wrestlers have
bouts, fell behind at 17-15 as they
excellent chance of qualifying
an
captured but one of the next six
for the NCAA's," added Mschael.
matches. Buffalo's 142 pound
sen10r co-captain , Ted lawson, "This ~ definitely one of the
was defeated for the first lime th1s strongest teams tn the East." "I
season . lawson dropped a 7~ think that sf we all wrestle as we
decis1on to Dom Scolaro of have this season, we can place in
the top 15 teams in the national
Cortland
tournament ," added co-captaus
I t was up to the Bulls'
Brandt.
heavywetghts to pull this key
match out. Ron Brandt , the
The Bulls JOurney to the
ex-Massapequa high school star, University of Cincinnati, Friday
saved the Bulls this time by for the NCAA Eastern regional
defealtng the Red Dragons' Scott qualifying tournament. Following
C uild 144. Brandt hau six the regJOnals, the BuJis hope tn
takedowns m the bout, enablmg send several wrestlers to the
tum to edge heavywetght Tony NCAA finals at College Park,
Pohcare for the team lead 24-23. Maryland a few weeks hence .
Sp«trum Staff lt'rlt~r

COLLEGE TEXTS • PROFESSIONAL BOOKOI'W'YYI"""'
MEDICAL • NURSING • DENTAL
• PAPER~ACKS •

IIIIFFALtt

TEST

STe ES, Ill~.

351tt

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Free

p.trktng al

University Manor

Full range of undergraduate and
graduate courses, special Institutes
and workshops. Residence halls
available.
2 sessions:
June 26 - July 29 and
July 31 - Sept. 2
(day and evening).
Phone (516) 299-2431 or mail coupon.
And next time you pass

C. W. Post ... don't.
Come ln.
You'll see one of America's
most beautiful campuses.

-------------------------Summer Se5$lon Office
C. W. Post Center
Greenvale, l.l., N.Y. 115.48

CP

Please send me Summer Sessions bulletin.

Name'------------------------------------------

Addr. ....________________________________________

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11 vtalt111g etudellt. wfllcll colleve..-------------------------,-

�Hoopsters beat Ston:y
Brook and Rochester
by Bany Rubin
Spons Editor
R ochester , N .Y .
The
soon ·to-end varsity basketball
seaso n looks more and mo re like a
season of streaks. Earlier this year
the Bulls had several streaks, and
fell into a recent rut with seven
straight losses. Now, with victories
over Sto ny Brook (81-69 ) and
Rochester (85·74 ), Buffalo (9· 12)
is poised for its final three
contests in an attempt to go to
the .SOO mark.
At Stony Brook C u rt
Blackmore (24) led the Bulls
while a rejeuve nated Jim Tribble
(16) and Greg Laker ( 13) were
also o n target . The Rochester win
was Buffalo's fifth against seven
losses o n th e road, the Bulls' best
road sho w tng since the 1965-66
season .
One o f the unsung heroes in
both w111S for Buffalo was senior
guard Eric R as mu ssen .
RasmUBsen, a forward during his
first t wo varsity seasons, started
both recent games in bac kcourt
and did a solid job, with six points
in t:ach game. Against Rochester.
a steady Rasmussen committed
t&gt;ut one turnover. Teammg WJth
Bob Vartunian , R asmussen
r~placed Greg Bruce who di d not
a~:Lom pany
t h e Bull s to
Rochester. Re po rtedl y , Bruce is at
home in New Yo rk City.
Coach Ed Muto commented :
" Btuce compalined of a hip
pcunter and stomach cramps o n
the r lane corning from New York .
lk told me he want ed to go to
New York to have his family
phys1cmn look at it." Several
Uuffalo pia yers ad mil t ed t hat
llrucl' W3s disappointed at not
stc~rtmg m the Ston y Brook game
ancJ Jc.ldl'd that Bruce wanted to
'tay an extra d ay in New York
whtlc the Bulls left for Buffalo .
ll owt&gt;v~:1.
players must return
W1th t he o;quad , and right now it
,Jppem s up to Bruce whether or
nu t he returns t o the squad
Bull~

break tie
At Rochester, the Bulls broke

CLAIIIPIEI
AO INFORMATI ON
C LASSIF I ED AOS may be PIKed
Moncsey tnru FriCSay betwMO 9 a.m.
encs 4 : 30 p ,m. at 355 Norton H;all .

open a 33-33 halft1ime deadlock
with hot shooting from Vartanian
(8·14) and accurate foul shooting
by Tribble and Lake1r. Tribble also
gave the Bulls punch with baseline
drives aod short ju,mpers, while
playing his usual fiin e brand of
defe nsive ball.
The big matchup in the early
go ing was Blacklrnore against
physical look·a-Uk,e, 6·7, 24 5
pound freshman Damian Upson.
Upson was awed bty Blackmore
and aided the Bulls with six
personal turnovers,. Blackmore
and Vartanian led the Bulls with
19 points each , whlile Blackmore
l e d all reboundE:rs with 13
retrieves
Now the SuUs, who sent a
nine-man contingent to Rochester
return home t o th•eir next two
con tests . Just last week, Don Van
Deuson joined Rldt Ms ta nle un
the sidelines. Sho utd Bruce not
return , the Bulls can only sutt up
a nine-man squad /H o wever, th is
shC)rthanded S1t uat1cm has meant
greater playmg tim e for several
Bulls, especiall y , so ph Joe Evans
who h it three long j um pers to aid
t he Buffa lo a ttack .

•

Sa turd ay mght (6t JO p m.) the
Bulls re turn to C'la rll Gym to face
SUNY Albany { 15 ·5 ). Then o n
Tuesday ( Feb. 29 ) the Blue face
Me rrim ack at Clark Gy m before
finishing up agai ns t Buffalo State.
The Buffalo St all! contest , a
Bengal home gam e, has been
mo ved t o Sunday, Mlarc h S at Erie
Community College (3 p.m .). A
three game swee p will give Buffalo
a 12·12 season's record.
The Baby Bulls made it a
Buffa l o sweep at Rochester,
do wning the Roclhester junior
varsity 80·75. Buffal'o overcame a
rather partial o fficial timer and
scorer and mad e their record 4-11 .
Bob Dickinson led the way at
guard with 20 points while
receiving help from C huck Axe
(18) and Darnell Mo ntgomery
( 16) . Addition a lly , Buffalo
received fine reserve performances
from 6 4 Greg Witherspoon and
5·9 Wes No wak.

LIFE ISA

TI-lE STUDENT ra~s of an ad for one
dey Is •1.2 5 for the first 15 words and
• . 05 for uch additional w ord. $1.00
lor each additional day . The 11aadllne
for Monda'l' IS Friday ; for Wednesday ,
It Is M o nday ; and for Friday, It Is
Wednesday by 4 , 30 p .m .

MEMBERSHIP In local tlylng club.
C lub Illes out of Buffalo International.
Call Jim at 836· 1482.
HONEYWELL Penta~&lt; Spotmetlc fl .4
50 mm lens, wt~se, $175 and
vashlcld 214 twin lens refle&gt;C W/ctse,
$60 . Both In excel lent condltlort . C all
Phil at 838 ·3735 .
FISHER
180-watt receiver, Model
505T With tWO XP·7B SPNker systems,
$550 . All With FISher guarantees. Call
Paul 835 · 553 5.

"HELP
WANT ED"
aCSs
ca nnot
CSisc r lmlnate on the basis of se x, color .
c reecs o r national origin t o any e&gt;Ctent
(I .e ., p r ofer4bly Is still d iscriminatory) .

'66 C HEVY van, real good shape. Solid
$600 firm . C all 836-9091 days . Aslc for
Michael.

" FOUND" ads wlll be run free o f
charge f or a maximum o f 2 days ana
1 5 words.

1964 VW v.in, new engine, rad io, gas
heater, very good cond ition, $600 o r
belli o ffer _ 83 2~56 4 .

WANT EO

RMI electr ic. p lano. MuS! sell plano ana
amp,
$ 350,
perfect.
C all
Mark
837.0982.

D ELIVER circulars house to house.
S teady part ttme. Apply Wed. &amp;
Thurs.,
8 :30
a.m .
shup.
AO
SE RV ICES, 425 Broadway .

KID'S c l otnes from Pakistan, Me &gt;&lt;tco
and India at "T h e People," 144 Allen .
882~283 .

INFORMATION that might help us
find a farm to stay at o r ren t ll'!ls
summer . B u ffal o area. Call Ma r~o n
8 3 4- 5136 .
RESEARCH (term) papers bought,
sold,
exchanged.
All
file
copies .
Contact Marc at 831 ·3370 at any lime.
BABYSITTER one year old
L lnwooo-Ox ford
Area .
Occasional
Gayllme nours . Pnone 882 -3182 .
STA R T $2' per n our salary pous oonus.
w ork 4 · 8 p.m . weekdays, 10·2' p .m .
Satur d ays. Call 835 -3803 or TF9 ·0402
FULL OR part -lime lobs available with
Bestllne Inc Call Art 886 ·2 094 or
Mike 835-5 215, Meetings at E &gt;Cecut•ve
Ramada Inn,

----

FOR S ALE
1964
COMET
engine In
perfect
condition
bes1 offer 694 72 7g ,

HARL V OAVEOSON chopped 1966
Best o ffer . 852~378 after 5 .
1964

CHE V Y

Impala.
E11cell ent
~ransportatlon, mecl"lan lc's oar, $2 00
ltrm. Gas sta tiOn Eggert -Delevan .
1970
JAGUAR
XKE .
E~cellent
con dition . Brand n ew A M JFM uereo
rad io Included . Call 688 · 7327 evenings .
REFRIGERAT ORS,
stoves
ano
washers. Reconol tlon&amp;d, delivered ano
9uaranteed .
O&amp; G
Appliances, 844
Syca more, TX4 -3183 .
"A NASTASIA " 11eeds a home . She's a
196 1 oo\lable, little Tempesl , 82,000
mllos All she costs Is $ 110. Call AI .tl
83 1-4113 or Debbie at 832·6815
NEW DUAL 1219 turntable;Sherwooo
receiver ; pain Sony &amp; Purao speakers ;
Pion'"" reverb ; Karman Gnla cnassls,
Ort ve train , stove. a33·7270
1966 vw bu~. Will se ll cheap. Will sel l
oaru Call M lk~ 833 ·9241 New snow
LileS

PERSONAL

W E ARE now Operl M onday, as well es
Tues«Uy
th rougn
Friday .
" The
People," I fOlk arts OOUliQUe, }44
Allen. 882 ·62 83 .

HAPPY BIRTHDAY Bill and love from
Mane, Lenin ana Little Glory Su, too

M EN 'S SKIS 195 em , booU stu lO.
b i nd ings $25 women's Skis 180 em,
boou sin 7, bln d ln9s $ 25 . 655 ·06 14

TUNE-UP $ 15 lo $ 22 Parts lncluOed .
Will take on any job at amazing
discount ~.
G M C Spoeo Haulerl, 718
Bro adway Dally 1-£ .

VW '63 sunroof, •265 or b est o ffer .
IUvl ng count (,)!. must sell old laltn l ul
831 ·3575.
LARGE GUITAR case, llberglau $25,
nylon
backpacking
tent :
"Gerry
vear - R oun d" w llh fly, •as. 834 · 5384
BLACK &amp; WHITE TV 2 1" - sl•nd
lrtcluded.
Receives
all
c hannels
E.Kcell en t cond ition. RCA Model $ 70
874 ·5 3 52
CL EARANCE tale conllnues at "l ne
People," 144 Allen, 882~283 .

ACQUAIN TANLE
deslreo of rare
woman :
18 -22 .
s•o·· 5'6",
emotionally
itatlle,
nealthY.
lean,
Attfa t tlve wlln warm. milo. even
dlsposlllon This wOmM1 woulo Have
no difficulty r,""''9 men, out th is
mart (251 w ith slmlla• lr41b has lrouoto
mooting net . I nqutre 80)1. 70
AT TE NTI O N

toceoH
will t1etl
of
e xH.Iv•gan.ta
Out
nattonal guard u nit has anpro•lmafely
30 openl,.gs ana IS presently aLceptlng
dPPIICatlons Anyone •ntere"eo should
con tau Bill al 82 3·321 7 o• G ene at
825 -5040 .
N lxon•s

tottery

The UUAB • Fine Arts Film Committee

Presents

Festival

Thursday, February 24
THE SHAME
With
Max Von Sydow
Liv Ullmann
Thursday, February 25
THE HOUR OF THE WOLF
With
Max Von Sydow
Liv Ullman
Satu rday , February 26
PERSONA
With
Liv Ullmann
Bibi Andersson
Su nday , February 27
THE PASSION OF ANNA
With
Max Von Sydow
Liv Ullmann
Bibi Andersson
CONFERENCE THEATRE
Tickets :
Students 50c before 6 p.m. Faculty , Staff, Alumni
75c after 6 p.m.
$1 .25
T 0 0 A Y at 2 :00p.m.

L.ONELv
guy
$Mks
meaningfu l
relatlonsnlp with warm understanding
~oltl. Contect Box 22, Spectrum o ffice.
f ' IGHT lor Ridge L . . Brownlesl!ll

LOST&amp; FOUND
FOUND : One blac k right ski glove In
front of Cooke Hall . Call Elayne at Sk i
Club office and Identify.

"-4

MON T H blac l( m i niature pooc:lle
with yello w c ollar f ound In vicinity o f
C:om5tock -Winspur . 838-4896 .
~~ OTE BOO K
on
Rehlbllltatlon
Counseling lost 2115 or .2/ 16 on
c.10m pus . Very Important rewar d
( &gt;lfered . 881 ·2659 .

ROOMMATES WANTED
C&gt;NE GUY - modern apar tment - 10
minute wal k from campus. C all B o b
StJ7-2565 . Peace on E arth .
l.ARGE HOUSE, 4 ac res, g reeh houM
a1nd pond . Gary 688 -7126 .
MALE ROOMMATE lor 4 ·bedroom
a,partment, own room, 111 mile fr o rtl
c.a mpus, $50 + utilities. C all Arl
!137-2171.
TWO PEOPL.E (any combi nation) t o
sh are f urnished nouse w t va rage , 8 min .
walking distanc e - 50 • 837 -5938 .
WANTED : One female roomm ate tor
"·06dooom nouse oil Ma in Wlnspoa r.
O w n •oom, rurnisheO, $ 60 Sl artlng
F'eb 1 Call Mary 838-4892

MISCE LLANEOUS
1rY PING, experlenceo, near U.B.,
l)er page. 834 -3370 . Fast ,.,,vice.

s 40

UABVSITT l NG - registered nurse wi ll
cto baoysiitlng In her home. 8 334 190.
I'L Y BUFFALO stuoent fllgl"lls to
1unny Acapulco vla Universal Alrllnas
DC 8 Jet Leave N v .c. M a rch 31
f~etu1n April 7 from $179 Con tac t
J~oan Mar muoste ln ever11ngs , b 9 p .m
037-0393 .
I&gt;.UTO RADIOS and tapes. S ales a na
toer vlce. 10% discount with tnls ao
13r upp Br os. 8 77 · 2250 .
'FREE - affectionate, playful. t&gt;lack
and w hite female kitten needs a good
home. Call M eryl 837 -045&amp;
ANTIQUES and modern tu~nlture ,
ceram ics. Ghlna. etc . See Sid at
Yest e rday &amp;. Tomorrow Snop, 1439
Hertel Ave

-----------------

APARTMENTS WANTEO
'' 10

IS

YOURS tf you secure •n
for rne with J o r mor4!
ID&amp;drooms for S epte mber PreferaOiy
on
Wlnspe•r ,
out
Wil l
conildet
olnylhong v e ry c lose to campu s. Call
1131 2 360 (keep tryln91
~•par t ment

i! J
BEDROOM apartment
Wl l l\ln
c: ampus
walk1n9
dist a nce
for
occup ancy Nrly May. C all 63 l ·305 I or
UJ 1·3052
)4 BEDROOM apartment to rent,
Within campus walking Cllll ance, lor
l•Ummer and tall 1972 C al l 831·2085

An

INGMAR BERGMAN

WANT EO : Physlol 201 textbook ,
Human
Physiology
by
Dander ,
~&gt; herman . Will pay original price If In
90oel condition. Call Jim 83.2-7882.

,1 or 2 SE:OROOM apartment starting
May Distance no proolem. out money
IS C all 834 1062 .

FEMALE GRAD HuCienl w ith ( wo ll
t&gt;enaveOI oog desired I or 2 bedrooms,
l'urnlsheO or part 1y lurntsheO preferred
I&gt;Y Marcil I Und er SlOO . Cill Llr\d a
1183·8037

APARTMENT FOA RENT
MARCH 1 C e ntr~l Park Piau a1ea, 2
Apartments, upper &amp; lower, each 2
b·eCirooms, living tOOm, dining room,
s1un porch, kitchen, bathroom, S 150
No Utilities. 692 0920, 836· 31 J6 aftet
3· p .m
FURNISHED

three oeoruom

~·•rlor.

roorn.

11v1n9

kl t cfHtn ,

•Pt.
stov e ,

rofrlg.
ren minutes tro m cam pu s.
1 hree
people
to
$.6)/ person.
aparlmenl
Two apts
avallaOie
!Includes utilities.
FURNISHED
apartment.
$110
~
nnonth, 281 Potomac Ave.. Buffal o
s.tale area 881 2537 Ask lor Ale&gt;&lt; .
FIOOM FOR tenl. 517 L aSalle Avo_,
Elulfalo. No smoking or cook ln9. $15
ll'4}r week . 835· 8279 .
~lOOM

P•tlvlleges.
838 ·2241

FOR
rent
$18
a

with
week .

kitchen
Pn one

RIDE BOARO
FtiDE NEEOEO IO NeW Paltz around
F'eb. 25 and returning nound Feb . 27 .
Will share ever y thin g. 831· 3454 .
(j;OIN G TO Wash . O .C ? I need a ride
or will drive, 11 1 can get riders to share
O&gt;&lt;P enses. 837 -1202 . L eave Feb . 25\h.
• NEED RICE to c ampu s Tuesday
eyenlngs. Lov e Kenmor e-Colvln •rea .
C:all Sue 876- 3 717 •Iter 5 p .m.

Wednesday , 23 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�AnnouncementS · · · ·
IEEE will have a meeting today at 2:30p.m. for
seniors and at 3 p.m . for underclassmen in Room
127 Parker. A movie will be shown.

Hall. For more information, contact France Pruitt or
Maly loinaz, Office of Foreign Student Affairs,
831-3828.

Environmental Action Corps needs volunteers to
monitor the glass recycling projec t in the dorms. Call
Bruce Hymanson at 831 -2396.

A unit of the New York State -National Guard
has approximately 30 01penings aod is presently
accepting applications for them. Anyone interested
should contad Bill at 823-3217 o r Gene at
825-5040.

The College of Mathematical Sciences will hold
an informal discussion with Dr. Dov Tamari today at
7:30 p.m . in Room 234 Norton . Students will have
an opportunity to talk with Dr. Tamari abou t any
topic of mutual interest .
The Undergraduate Medical Society will have a
meeting today at 7:30 p.m . in Room 231 Norton.
Dr. Michael A. Sullivan, an internist at Deaconess
Ho~ital , will be a guest speaker and will d iscuss
current trends in medicine. The Society also
announces that any member wishing to enroll in a
First Aid course to be given on Wednesday nights
from 7 - 9 p.m. should send his name and phone
number to the Undergraduate Medical Society, Box
B, Norton Hall by March 3.
CAC needs tutors. The opening of seven new
tutorial projects had to be delayed because of lack of
tutors for elementary school age youngsters. Please
tutor. If interested , leave a note in Bob G.'!. mailbo x
in Room 220 Norton.
The State University at Buffalo Amateur Radio
Society will give free instruction in Internat ional
Morse Code on Monday, Wednesday and Friday
from 12- 2 p.m . in Room 324 Norton .
Conversation classes for foreign students are
now being organized. One group i~ about to start o n
Thursday~ from 4 -5 p.m. in Room 204 To wnsend

.

For all Be-A-Friend v'olunteen, there will be a
very important meeting tomorrow at 8 p.m. in
Room 246 Norton. It is urgent that you attend.
New College of Modern Education "Childhood
and Society," 402 section 7 will meet at4 p.m . next
Thursday in Trailer 9.
The Office for Credit-Free Programs of the
Division of Continuing Education of the State
University of Buffalo will offer the course, " After
Sixty
What?" from Feb. 23 - March 22. The class
will be held on Wednesda'YS from 4-6 p.m. at the
Senior Center, 72 Soutlh Cayuga, Williamsville.
Registration fee is $25. For further information, visit
the office for Credit-Free Programs, Room 3, Hayes
Annex A or call 83 1-4301.
CAC needs high school math and chem istry
tutors. CAC will reimburse for transportation
expenses. Please leave a note in Bob Gilbert's
mailbox in Room 220 Norton or call 831-3609 to
specify which subjects you can tutor.
Chabad House, 3292 Main St., holds daily
Shachres o,ervice every day at 7 a.m. following with
breakfast. A 2:30p.m. mincha is held at Room 346
Norton.

Sociology 367 will have Dr . Barbara larson,
assistant professo r of Anthropology at lehman
C.ollege of the City University of New York, guest
le.cture- .on "V illage Politics and National
PerSlJectives: A Study of a Tunisian Village." It will
be given today at 3 p.m. in Room 312 Townsend
Hall. Anyone interested is welcome to attend .
Join CAC South Buffalo Drug Counseling
Project. The adolescents in South Buffalo need you.
Inquire at the CAC office, Room 220 Norton or call
Mike or Randy at 831-3609.
The Man;agerial Assistance Program of ttte
Graduate School of Business will have a
Philharmonic Interview over WBFO radio today
from 2- 3 p.m. The topic is the Philharmonic
Maintenance Drive - The Orchestra and Society.
The Student Theater Guild will present Out at
Sea on Feb. 24-26. Tomorrow's performance is at 9
p.m. in the Fillmore Room, Norton Hall and tickets
are $.50 for students and $1 .00 for non-students.
Chabad House is sponsoring an "Encounter with
Chabad" at lubavitch Center in New York, March
2 - 5. The cost is $16 per person and a charter bus
will be provided . For information call 631-5483 or
833-8334.
UB Day Care Center is hiring staff workers
Monday- Friday. Must be 21 years old and
experienced with group activity. Call 831-3009.
The Housing Committee will have an important
meeting today at 5:30 p.m . in Room 205 Norton.
The UUAB Video Committee will hold a
meeting on Wed., Feb. 23 at 7 p.m. in Room 261
Norton. All are invited.

Sports In formation
Friday : V.tr\lly h nt. l..cy .tl 1\.l'nl \l.ttc
Untver\tl y, Kent, Oh10, 1:1 p .rn , v.tr" I y lt•nunK v'.
Hob,ut College, Clark Gym, 7 p.m
Saturday : Vdr~ity bdsl..ctb,tll v, .1\IIMnv ~tdtc ,tt
(.lark Gym; fre,hman ba,lo..ctb.tll v\. Utl .1\lumnt ,
6.30 p .m.; dt hdlhtme ut Alb,tny )&lt;\otme, C.AC dll \t.tr
ba~l..ctbalf

game;

vdr~tly

fcncmg

v~.

Roche:''"' Tech,

Ciarlo. Gym, I p .m.; var!&gt;tty rndoor tr.Jd. .rt the
University of Rochester lnvitdltonal.
Buffalo students will be ..tdmllted free ,r c. hJr gc
to thi\ weekend\ home ~porh even!\ upon
presentation of d v.Jirddted rdcntrlt&lt;.Jtion card
This coming weekend , the Buffdln Vdf~tty
wrc'&gt;tling ~quad will wmpt'tr rn the NCAA rc)\ton.rl
qualifying to urndment at the Univer~rty ot
Cincinnati. Bulls quJitfying at Cincinn,lll will
advance to the ftn,ils at lh&lt;.' Unsver '&gt;it y of MJryl.tntl .

What's Happening ?
Wednesday, Feb . 23

m""'

Musical Innovations: Leo·Smrt, proleswr ol
.tt
the State University of Buffalo, wtll tw the
fec~tured guest, 9:05p.m., WBCE-fM
Ar t exhibit : "Point of Departure" t•xhthtt ol
photo-photo ~i lkscreen, through F ndc~y, lJ ·l
p.m., Art Department Gallery, 4240 Ridge Led .
Concert : Creative Associate Recital IV, Hen ry
Rubin, violin; Stephen Manes, piano ; worlo.~ by
Beethove n , Brahms dnd Schumdnn, H:JO run.
Baird Recital Hall .
Thursday, Feb. 24
Frlm : Twentieth Century with John BMrymore Jntl
Cdfole Lombard, Capen 140, checl.. tor
show times.
International Month Events : Taekwondo (lo.d rdtC
demonstra t ion sponsored by the Korean Club).
Conference Theater, 2 p.m.

-R~dzewlcz

1\

- AmyAhrend

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                    <text>Legal aid answers

THE SpECTf\UM
Vol. 22, No. 56

Stfte University of New Y oric at Buffalo

athletic fee question

Friday, 18 Ftlbruary 1972

Unsure future

Jones denied tenure again
J .P. Jones of the Pohtical St:~enre Dept has
agaan been demed tenure. Meet10g last Fnd.t)' , the
department's tenured fa c ulty faded to pass a motion
that wou ld rescind lust year's decision and thereby.
grant tenure for Dr Jones
The move for recons1derataon of the case was
one step 10 a cont10u10g process to obtain tenure.
Initial action began last sprang when Dr. Jones'
credentials were rev1ewed by a departmental
personnel committee whJch presented ats find10gs to
the department 's tenured faculty . Their dects1on to
deny tenure by 7-6-1 was then, m turn , revtewed by
a committee o f the Fal·ully of Sodal Sc1ences and
Administration.
An o ther rev1ew was conducted by Vice
President for Academac AffaJrs Bernard Gelba um
who reported that he found Dr. Jones to be "an
extremely o utstanding teacher, but Ius research and
publishmg record to not meet the standards under
which the Univer:onty lelt it could properly grant
tenure."
Overwhelmina responsr
Ho wever, political science students appealed
these deruals with letters to their department
chairman Vaughn Blanlenship, Reportedly, such
response was overwhelmmg and prompted another
review of the suuatwn .
At this time, political science faculty remain
noncom1ttal about the most ruent demal.
Additionally, they refer aU inqwries to Dr.
Blankenship who was unavailable for comment.
Ito wever, mformed sources in the Political Science
Department report that many members were "quite
surprised" wath the decisaon.
Dr. Jones commented that he would Wto to
~main here but is "unsure" of any future actiona.
Accordmg to Executive Vice President Albert Somal,
there are several options o pen to 11 professor who has
been denied tenure
Included m these are
opportunities t o present pievances etther before the
Faculty Senate o r under the recent Senate
Pro resstonal Association (S PA ) contract. Dr Jones'
contract expires at ~he end of this spring semester

aenerated by student fees to be
put In outside accounts."

MiWndUna dwJed
Additionally . vanous student
government leaders charged ll
mishandling of student fees an
violation of state auidelines
However, Mr. Doty ar1ued that no
megulanty occurred because the
athletic 10come docs not fall
within fee guideline.' because
~tudent mo nies fund only part nf
the athlrt1c proyam
After neg otaatan g With
'tud en t, , admina ~ trativc responseto I he .tffa~r was to request a legal
o pi n1on frorn M r
Lea r h
Add1taonally , unoffi o.:tal legal
opinion was received from J t&gt;~eph
Bress. Sidle Univer~ity o f New
York counsel Reportedly, Mr
Bress beheved that the mont'y
should be depo~1h:d 111 stu!lcnt
li\XOU OIS
Accordmg to Mr Sles1nger the
money is presently an th e prm.ess
of be1ng transferred from FSA to
Sub B oard . In add1tion, he
re ported that the athletic budget
would be 1mmed1ately unfrozen

Drastic measures

Tuition proposals
by lynne Traeger
VJlCampus l:ditor

J.P. Jmes
Students m the PoUllcal Sctence Department
al)pear critical of both the decision and of tenure
procedures. One stud4nt

commented

that

"the

outdated 'publl$h or perish' dectJion still survives."
Such remarks refer to a beUef th.at the University
values research over teachin&amp;. In 3dd1t1on, one
student appeared "disheartened" mamtatmng that
widespread student anterest and mterventton in the
case dtd no good . "llus reveals " he ~.·oncluded,
"how much student optnion and an put ts valued ."

Future of Amherst land will
agaii1 go under FSA scrutiny
The future and control of the
Amherst land will soon agaan be at
stake J~ student and
ad rna n1s 1 rata on representatives
begin "nC'gohations" concerning
that matter. With both sides,
however , taking firm Initial
stands, chances ro r a quick
resolutJOn appear unl•kely
At the last Faculty Student
Association (FSA) meetmg,
Charles Balkan , secretary of FSA ,
Introduced three resolutions
concerrung t he 505-acre tract of
land in Amherst
The first
resolution rescinded a previous
FSA Board of Directors resolution
duectmg the board to IOJllate the
transfer of the land to Sub Board
I, Inc.
This resolution was pnmarily
based on a "fo rm al legal
opinion
from the General
Counsel for State University of
New York ... indicatina that the
proposed transfer would be or
questionable legalaty and
advisability ... "
"Questionable lepl" points
cited were the authority of FSA
under laws governing
''Not-For-Profit Corporation
law" to seU the land without
consideration. This is interpreted
tbat tbe land must be sold for its
real monetary value . The
proposed transfer of the land

Endlna the controversy which
surrounded the deposit of athletic
income into a Faculty Student
A ssa&lt;:iahon account , President
Robert Ketter has directed its
transfer to Sub Board I , Inc. His
decision followed the lepl
opimon of Uruverslty Counsel
Jo hn Leach whtch deemed it
appropri.atc: that
tiH·
approximately $5000 be put in
student accoun ts.
Sub Board T reasurer Scoll
S I es mgcr d ISt:ovt'rt-d that 1he
Athletu.. Departm ent Jailed tu
depos11 ~ny 1111.:uuh: 1ntu 1ts Sub
Board J l.:o unl dunng .1 rnlltlnl'
budget JCV1ew LJtt'r IOVtstlg.at1un
revealed thJ t Jthletll proceedb
from su ~o· h th1ng~ a\ basketball
gami!S had been ~ent to Vtce
Pres 1d ent of Opcrattons ..~nd
Sy~tem&lt;, Edward Outy dnd pl.tl t:d
in an FSA Jlt:o unt
Student re,ponse to thts
dtscovrory included freezmg the
Athletic Department mcome .1nd
demanding an tmmedtate
mvest•gat1on mto the maller AI
that ttme , Mr
Sles1ngcr
maintaaned " It ts agaanst state
guidehnell for .1ny ~tudent ancome

wouJd have mvolnd little or no
money exchange.

Refuses comment
Concerni ng t h e advtsability o f
th e transfer, Mr. Balkin noted
numeral!! "factual" po1nt!i. One
states ''Sub Board I IS in n o
better pos1hon to develop the
property than the FSA . Each has
ava1lable to it student activity
fees ."
There have bten many raased
eyebrows concernmg the prec1se
meaning of this last statement
Unfortunately, when asked to
clarify the meaning, Mr. Balkin
refused, sa yang: "After the
edJtorial II an The Spectrum I
called me a liar, a c heat and a
fraud , I don't think so." He then
hung up. (These aUegations could
not be verified rrpm an
iovestlptaon of recent ISSUes of
The Spectrum.
The second of Mr. Balktn 's
resolutions authonzed the
association to sdl the land and
"use the proceeds . . for the
purpose of usin&amp; the principal and
income therefrom. . . for the
benefit o f the students." The final
resolution would direct that the
proceeds of such a sale be held "as
a quasi endowment fund ."
These resolutions are
considered WJacceptable by the

representahvt!ll of ~uh l:h•art.l . Jlotul
Cummmg, c haarman ot Sub Bodrd
charged "Thrs as Inherently unlau
to student\ It wa\ pramanly
student m o ney that p.ud tor the
land , and at has been \late poh~. y
to let students contro l tlle1r u wn
funds w1thm the hrnats of the
state gwdehnes . Yet . the sum and
!!Ubstance of these TC!&gt;OIUtJOn\ IS
an FSA set-up trust to be enllrely
run by FSA •·
Sub Board's rnam concern nuw
IS m worlo..ing out an equitable
agreement w1th the FSA Su~:h an
agreement , according to Mr
Cumming, m1aJ1t be a ''trust lund
JOintly admmiStered by students
and FSA , wath the m come to be
used for fund10g such ventures as
housing and medical a nd dental
care programs.
However , 1f such an "equitable
solution" IS not produced , Mr
Cumming added, Sub Board m1ght
be forced to go into court an an
adversary role to prevent FSA
from selling the land.
I ni llall y, Sub Board will
counter the Balkin resolution with
resolutions drawn up by their own
lawyers. These resolutions will
suuest that the land be sold with
aiJ proceeds and control going
completely to the students. This
presentation will be made at next
Thursday's FSA meeting.

In a news conference Tuesday ,
Clov . Ro c ke ft&gt;l ler sa1d that
1nc: reased s I ate scholarships,
scholar m centive awards and more
ltate 11d to pnvate colle&amp;es are
euentlal for the survtval or hll~ber
educaiJon throushoul tbe state
H oweve1 , the aovernor
maintained , the st att''s currenl
fi1lan caal c nSJ.S will hold up the
fund s that are necessary until at
least ne111 year.
The governor's rernark.s were
prompted by the release of the
r In din~S o f the Hurd Panel
Rorkeleller '' spec1al task forte un
hagher rducataon ·rhe report
t:llphuncd that the \late's pubh~
11nd pravat~ c..ollrge~ .1nd
umvers1t1cs Jrc fac111g o1 fllldll t:loil
c ns1~
An:urdt ng to 1he rt:port,
" Pnvatc an~tttution~ an New YurJ...
anl• ~:a pate combmed defints 111
Cllt:CS\ of S ~0 malh~&gt;n tlus yt:.u ··
whale
II i' dt:Jr II 1\
hec..ommg anneo~sangly dtfhdtlt lu
lund contanue!l ellpan\lon of til&lt;'
statt·'s ~ystcm of hagh er edul.JIIttll
from large annual llllred~t:~ 111 tax
revenue \Upporl "
Tuition increase proposed
In order to help ea~c: some u f
the probll'rns uncovered by the
report ~ov Rockefeller e~pouseJ
several plans mclud1ng 1ncreascd
tuat10n at the State Umversaty
t o be balanced in case of need by
•n~reased
scholar 1ncent1ve
.twards, ImpOSitiOn of tUition dl
the Clly Umvers1ty o f New Yorl
aga1n balanced by m creased
scholar mcenttve awards in case of
need ; an an crease an "Bundy Aid"
to pnvate schools. "to keep
pnvate education 10 colleges and
umversaues tn thl'l state alJve ;"
and a liberalized student aad
program w1th more loans, larger
scholar mcentJve awards and, 1f
needed, more scholarships.
The proposed rwe in tuition
would be to $850 for JUruors and
seniors and to $650 for freshmen
and sophomores, effective thiS
comin&amp; September. Rockefeller
termed the new figures "baiJpack
fi&amp;ures," thus setting them as the
maximum possible tuitions. The

purpose of the m creases •s to put
the state system in more o f a
compehtave place wath the pnvate
mstnutaons
The task force , headed by Dr.
T . Norman Hwd, director of State
Operattona, failed to agree watb
any of the aovemor's proposals,
and RockefeUer admitted that the
chan ces of any of them ~
approved by the le,Ulature tbu
year wert~ very slim. However, the
wk force made one proposal for
the le&amp;~slature to con.s~der : "It 15
the recommendatiOn o f the tusk
force that there be establisht'd a
temporary stale commission o n
the f1nancmg of htgher education
lo deal With th e st-nous and
unme!laate problem' thJt fact' tht
people of the stale an th1s area"
Financial findings
Accordmg to the tJ~k force's
ftndmgs, there are J total of 114
degree-gran ling tnst1t IIIJC ms 10 the
\tate. employ1ng HO,OOO fac..ulty
otnd staff These mstatullons have
J
.:u mhaned enrollment uf
500,000 full -lime \tudents and
760,000 "head co unt " studenh
Th•s costs a total of S2 3 billion a
year
Tuiltun ~~ cons1dered a snull
factor an the overall cost nf
runnanK a co llege
Pr~VJte
lOSt II UIIUI\.\ , WhiCh ~:ollt:ct a l&lt;&gt;lal
of ~49H rntlhon annually 10
tullwn, s.~y that th1s only pays tor
35 per c..ent l)f thetr (OSts. Public
colleges and univtrsalles collect
only S lOR mtlhon .1nnually Th1s
pays o nly sLightly over ten per
c..ent of the costs for the state &lt;~nd
c1ty systems as well as the
co mmunaty co llege s
Public
support is a larger factor, paying
one-quarter of the private schools'
budgets and 80 per cent of the
public costs.
As a resuJt of the tuition
differences tn the two systems,
enroUment at pnvate mstitut10ns
has declined steadily, while
emoUment at public coUeges and
universtlles has increased
tremendously. lt costs an average
o f $550 a year in tuition in the
state system, $2085 at private
institutions and nothing at the
City Univers1ty of New York .
- continued on P..- fQUr-

�Commentary

Master plan conference
helped shape up students
The Spectrum (1-cb 1/J
reported tile reactions oj one portinpunr 111
the A Ibony studt•llt co11[erence for !Itt'
19 72 Moster Plo11 {or the SUNY system
That report crir1ctzed the conferen ce for lfS
latk of cuhesil'e!less ami effectlvenesJ Tltt&gt;
following IS the op1 nt1&gt;n of another
parrictpant. John Greenwood from tilt'
r;rodua/1! St lldt'nl .t CSf)I'IQf/1111
l:drwr's nore:

unns are about. Or even more basically,
there was ignorance o f how governance
works. There is, for better o r worse, greater
penctrallon o f students into various aspects
of the University here than at any oth er
unit tn the system It is not by accident
that there were at leas t eight students from
Buffalt1 at th e confe rence, twice the
number from any other ~&gt;Ingle uOII

History of participation
Students here have a grea ter h1s tory of
partiCipatio n and understandably h1gher
ex pe&lt;.' Uitions o f what should h appen .
7hr Spt!&lt;'tnJm 11~ws anJiySI.~ of the
llo wcve r, you should n o t expect s tud ents
Alh:uw student wnference on tht 197 ~
tro m Jll un1ts to have such a background
Mas ter Plan fm th e S UNY system was
nor ~ho uld yuu cxpect the SUNY staff tv
untformly negative and o..lepressmg
have cxpenc:n&lt;.'e in responding to the
Ho wtver no t nil partlc'l[l:tnls shared th e
enthu~l.tslu: . hut
not always mfo rmed ,
feelings flf th&lt;lt reporter
questions of th ese stud e nts.
The first, .1nd most generalo,.ommc:nt. ~~
This leads lo whilt I lccl was the greatest
thJI w1thou1 a ny question 1n M1k ~
value o f tlus meeting Th1~ conference was
NI ... Oidu's or my mind , lhe me.-ttng wa:; not
J tra int ng ground lor tht: ruture. Not aJI the
a failure , Jno..l Ill fad . w;~, an extn· mel y 11\1\lake~ fll.Jde m pt.Jnnlng wlll be re peated
tm porldnl nulestnne 111 hutld 1ng the pown
un ctther t he ' tull ent o r SUNY Sides The
or StiHII'nt~ fO Jnflut'n~·~· tht· SUNY ~y~ll·m
prcp.trafl!ln i01 fut Ufl' llledtng.~ Will he
On the 11th~r hJ1h.l I •.tn un d. o,.·r,tJtnl thl"
hettct lWtJ UW th e ~ tud t&gt; nt ~ w1ll know
reportc1 ~ tcactmn~ hccau~~: 111 p.ut they
better /IIIII ' I 0 Jlll' PJI C
werl.' .1t:.:urc~tc I ht·r.· "'I' ,, I:I&lt;',JI ul'al ot
Mme 1111port.111ll)', the stud en ts c.:a rnec.J
fragment.Jllllll ami p11ur &lt;&gt;l)(.lnll.t lllln,tl
had. wtth th~:m ,, much greater aware ness
pl.1nn1ng
11f the d.1vcr~•tY 111 tlw )(Hie. Whtl e naturally
t h~:y w1ll tot'll' 11 11 the1r o wn cam pus, the
Generuted rCl;uJts
awaren~ss
ol the pruhlo:ms on o th er
It IS I!YO: that III.JflY ~ludl.'rtt~ h I'll' ~a111pus\.'~ w11l ~n· o1 lll~lller pers pe&lt;:live.
poorly prepared 10 tJiscul&gt;l&gt; toe J.s:wes I here
Ptal' ltCII/Iy Sf'C:ll k lllg, the knowledge llbOUI
Hl(ll "' st,..ons tendency lo
/'o)&lt;:Us on th e
l.'&lt;m dt(tc&gt;n~ and stud en t " '' tr o ns on th e
problems ofytw r o wn untt Tht• St!NY and
fli,IO} IJIIIlflll\l'\ (1'\Pl'lWify fh~ J)lh..C IIIUkcr
mdrvrdua l un tr 's ll&lt; lmm1st r.Jtlllll Jnd l,~c· ull y
tltiii.J iu o...llll fl tt~J wtll kall to mudt m o re
groups dtd IIIII llllll:t• J '~rtiHI~ ~ftort Ill
lll ll ct' lll'of .111\l tnfo11nwo.J Ul"lllln\ hy
mform st udents (or ta ~ ulty 1 ,, , the M,,,,,.r sf Udl•nl~ I••• I h1·y k ll liW 111toro: a bou t wh:tt ~~
Pla n pnor lO the c~Jn f crclh ~· lf uwo,.·vc·r
pn"1hk
these asp~d~ SCIVI.' only to l'n hartcl' 11t1•
result' tha c were.- geiH'ratcc.J a~ w,•ll ·" 111
False ideas
provtde a henLhrriJ.rt.. a)(atll\l v.t11d1 lllllll\'
M,,,,.,,vt•r tln·y h.tvt lo~t m.tuy nf l h 1•
con ferem.. cs •nay he cnn t pJ rc oJ
tal" ,(!,•," .thou! what th~ rl.'ahty ts ,
The l' nlto,.al rac(tll WJ\ t hat ot stutl cnl
whc·llt&lt;'l llw I"U I.' hc I·S /\ hylaw~. the use
rgnorant:e. th c lat..k ''' knowledgt• 111 hnw
t•l 1~~~ mllqr,l' lo!e I YIH'S vf tinan..:ial
SUNY tunLiton~ or what tltc- van uu~ SUNY
JSS ISianre nr thi• SlU I C lOIIIIIIItiiiCIIl fn
by John Greenw ood

Spl't 101 / 0 Ill&lt;' S{ll'&lt; tr/J/11

RepresentfKI for advertising by
National Educational AdW~rrismg
Service, Inc., 360 Lexington Ave
New York. N . Y. 10011.
··

S«:ond CINS Posrege paid IU Buff11lo
N•w York.
•

Extensive note!!
One way the d1scusston can be m eas ured
tS by the fao,.' t I hat the resources group
pulkd the greatest number o f central staff
to 11nswer ques tions . It helped that certam
members had prepared by reading not only
the ~y mposio papern, but also by attending
brrcfing sessions Wtth the Exccuttve
( 'umm itt ee of th~ h cull y Senate and by
&lt;!I uc.J yi ng proposals tlf the Rege nts fur
-. h.t nges 10 th e S tat e system . Mark
Bore nst ein , executive chairman o f SA SU,
walo parti cu larly effeLttV~ rll drd Wtttg forth
the (•nttrc funding structure uf SUNY,
uutlululg where the: fl e xibility lica in
resnutc't! ;lllocallon a nd where t h e pressure
J&gt;O iflh fnt J cttu n are
Mr Bore nstein to)Ok ex t ensive notes as
dul (he 'recorder" asstgned to o ur gro up
Not Jll gfOJ Uf)) had suc h recttrders Our

recorder ran off minutes of th e first session
to serve as a focus for later sessions. Also
several campus groups prepared positio n
papers of their own, as r did.

Shape and prepare
Finally, w e were able to draft
statements which were the consensus of all
the members o f the resources group,
perha ps t h e largest of the separate groups.
The report of t h e conferen ce will inclll4le
the collective statements as weU as the
verbatim position papers prepared hy
tndividuals. These will be distributed to all
campuses as well as to the SUNY staff
It is clear to me that the conference . roll
rnany students (and staff), served to shap ..
and prepare for the future aL1 1ve
parti ci pa t ion of students in SUN Y
governan ce as well as more effe ... ttve a ~twn
o n local campuses.
I n terms of effecttveoess diredl y
shaping SUNY policy, there IS nn doul\1
tha t th e chancellor and his staff kn ow t lw
students' feelings (and their inten\11 y )
They also realize that no longer can tltl.'y
assume studen ts will be incapahk ul
co herently approaching SUNY issue'
Associate C han cellor C harl es lnglt:r tultl
me personally that t.he first sesswn h,nl
provided tum with at least five dr~tlll&lt; I
ideas or changes that he w o uld tollow u1•
He also deplored the form11t anti ";lwofllll
of this year 's Master Plan (he was h11nf
aft er it was pre pared) and sai&lt;i tuluro
formats would be much diffe rent
H IS, therefore, clear to me that lhe
conference, for many students 1nnd o;t,tlf I
st:rved to shape and prepare ror tit~ lutu1c
active participation of students, tn SLIN'
governance as weU as more dfectlvc act1nn
on local campuses. Ho wever, as lito·
Spectrum pointed o ut, this will depend
prin.:1pally on the s tud ents' interest tn anti
preparatio n for this participatio n Shaptntt
up 1' t o ugh , but sh o wing up is not enough

Faculty Senate: short 'n' sweet

Ttte Spectrum 11 pubfish«J rhree
t imes a wetlk, every Mondey,
WtldntiSdtly end Fnday; duri ng th11
l't1f/Uisr IICfldemic veer by Sub-Board
l, Inc. OffiCtl$ are IOCIIted tit 35!1
Norron Hall. Stt1tt1 Umversity of New
York at Buffalo, 3435 M8in St
Buffe lo, New York , 14214
Telephone: ArM Coch 716; Ed1tonut
831 41 13; Busintns, 831-3610.

Subscription nues lfre $4.50 ptu
SBmi/IStar or $8.00 fo r two Stlmlfltors

co mmunity colleges, The presence of
numerous Student Association or the S tate
University (SASU) revresentatives also
helped to prepare for the futu re, for in
severdl cases, individual caml'uses became
aware of the state-wide organization for
the first time and appealed to SASU for
help in dealin&amp; with problems.
To the extent that the re will ever be a
state-wide coh esive network of st udents, it
will require an organization with the
continuity of SASU and with periodic
conferen ces to spread information and
collec tively draft solutions.
This brings up the final impressio l'l
whic h differed from The Spectrum report.
That is, th ere. were concrete resolutions
drawn up ; lhere was a high level o f
co hesiveness shown but not in all groups. It
is true that there was no coiJective pos1tion
sta t ement for all students in all aspects of
the Mast er Plan. H uwever, individual
groups suc h as th e governance group and
th~ nlsources group, were able to reach a
htsJI l~vd of diSl'USSion and agreement.

Gus. Sr. will reproduce
almost anything
355 Nortun Hall

Circuletlon: 16.000

The Student Association
has announced that Buffalo Draft Counseling
Center personnel will be holding on-campus office
hours every Tuesday and Thursday starting
i mmediately . Paul Post and Bob Musek from the
Center will be available on those days from 9
a.m.-1 p.m. in the UB Vets office, in Room 260
Norton Hall . Students should also note that
24-hour emergency service is available by phoning
897-2871 .

Page two . Th4! Spectrum . Friday, 18 February 1972

lmkpenc.ll'nl Study antl m1nonty hinn g w ere th ~
matn topt cs nf dt~t· usswn at last Tuesd ay's btiefhut
w cll·a tt~nd ed meeting o f th e Fa...: ulty Senate.
A representative o f the Ex.ecutive Commtltce of
that body pro posed new guidel1nes t o govern the
pwccdllres of th e Independent Study prortram
Tht"Sl' requtremcnt~ wo uld mvo lve a wntten repotl
hy the stud ~nt stating what Ills plans fo r th e co u r~&gt;r
dtC. what h~ hopes t o achieve and h o w h e propnsl'~
to so Jbout 11
This stJt c ment wtll then b1· approv~d anti s1gncd
hy llH' f:H' Uity superv1sm, ami filed in 1hi.'
department or program o ffic e. T he instructor wo uld
PrtWttk a wntten evaluation o f th e ~tud.cnt .do ng
w1th a letter grade, hoth o f whk h would be utclud cd
in thc stud ent's permane nt record.
This plan met with some :~trong debate The
proponents of th e idea fell that formalization of
proced ures would protect both the faLul!y member
llfld the student, and force them tn con~idcr
Ind ependent ~ludy more seriously . Act:ort.lmg to o ne
~nator, tl will '" keep us on o ur t oe)," Jnc.J h elp fight
the " temptatH&gt;n to drift. "
Creativity stiOed?
Those o pposed to th e co mnuttec:-'s suggestion
maintained that it was an "incidence o f co nstantly
lncreasing paperwork" and "bureaucratic nonsense ,"
Nicholas Goodman ot' the Mathematics Department
said that it was "ex&lt;:iting not to predict what the
studen t will learn ," and that th ere should be more
fa1t11 Ill the faculty's sense of responsibility . An o ther

Sl.'nator believed that these restric tions woulol
discourage many students from s tarting lnd ependt•n t
Study projects, thereby st ifling many creat1v e 1dt-a'
Further ac tion on this question was postpom·,f
until the next meeting due t o the ahscn ce of thl'
l- xc~:ulive Committ ee chairman.
Lee Preston , School of Management , gave "
resume of recent activities of the Budget Advisory
C'omrnitlee. Their main areas of concern have been
der ithng which programs deserve high prion t &gt;'.
fulftllment of past pro m1ses, and minon ty Jnd
female h1ring.
The w mmittee had strongly recommended to
Bernard Gelbaum, vice president of Academi~
Affairs, that minority and female applicants fo1
teaching positions be given top priority. Dean Prutt t.
Dept. o f Psychology, agreed that they should receive
some prio rity , but not necessarily top: " In some
cases we require a se nior person _ .. and we rcqutre &lt;~
la rger pool o f applicants than is available.''
J o hn Greenwood
a Graduate Studen t
Association representative: pointed out th at there is
virtually no recruitment o f minority graduaH·
students, and that the Facult y Senate should tak e
some position on this question . "There is no
minority facult y because there are no minorit y
graduate st udents," commented Mr. Green wood .
Dr. Preston reported that D r . Gelbaum and the
faculty provosts agreed that a substantial part of the
new appointments should be reserved for mi.tlonty
a nd women applicants, if possible.

�Judge rules state won't have
tn pay overtime police salaries
New York state will not have
pay the City of Buffalo
$389,430 in overtime police
salaries connected with the March
1970 disturbances at the State
Univel"$ity of Buffalo, State Court
of Claims Judge John Cooke ruled
Wednesday.
The city filed its claims too
late. said Judge Cooke Court of
Clatms law requtres that a
clatmant me nottce of negligence
actions withtn 90 days and
breach-of&lt;ontract cases within six
months. Peter J . Gerard. assistant
corporation counsel had "no
comment" about the dec1s1on and
satd that the city planned 1u
appeal the cuit's dismissal to the
Appellate Division of the State
Supreme Court.
It was the city's contention
that II had no reason to ftle a suit
unttl tl rece1ved ofrkial notice
that the state would not pay the
bill This noltce 3rrtved on Sept.
2R, 1970, and the t tl y ftled tts
SUit 43 daylr Later on Nov I 0

Cizy ol'tlinllM!

Future of off-campus
housing is threatened

to

had received a letter from the
governor's offi~.--e on Apnl 23,
I 9 70, makin&amp; clear that "It
cannot be considered a state
r~ponstbttity to retmbu rse a local
government for a specific poltce
actton ··
Not state responsibility
Ounng the 1970 dtsrupttons,
On April 2R, nuted Judge th e s trikers demanded
Cooke, the city told then-ucttng self-dder minatt on for th e
Untversity President Peter Regan Colleges, the end of the THBMIS
that the amount of thl' overtime proJec..t and ROTC, the res.IIJlation
salanes totaled $360,000 Judge of then President Regan, an open
Cooke's rultng stated that the ctty admiSStons policy for Third World
had reason to file thetr sutt as students, removal of the police
soon as they had determtned the who had been on campus stnce
amount of damages Mnreover , February , suppor1 for the black
satd Judge Cooke, the ctty clerk athlet es' boycott and

participati on by eng~neenng
students tn curnculum htrtng and
firing decisions.
The ctty police ra1ded Norton
Hall on Feb 25, 1970 , supposedly
jn pursutt of an alleged vandal
whom they &lt;:l&amp;tmed had n ed IntO
Norton . A co nfrontatton
deweloped and there were arr"t:.
and some damage done both to
Norton Hall and to studenu whu
were there attendtng a meeting tn
support of the hlar k athlete5'
demands
As the Slluallun grew more
tense Dr Regan called the pnltce.onto the campus where they
rematned fo r several weeks

News analysis

A~~tWnd: student conUol
by Jeff Greenwald
Cam(?fJS 1-dlfor

llnttl recently , tt has been the slated mtenuon
ol the hculty Student Associatio n to transrer the
Amher~t land to Sub Board I , Inc. In ltght of iJ state
teg.~l p!IStlton advtstng I SA that the transfer would
"be ,,f questtonablc legaltty and advtsabtltty," the
bo.ml nl dtrector~ nl F&lt;;A have recently abandoned
Jhat tntention
The latest propo:.als tnvolve thl' '&gt;dlr ol till' lad
and c\labltshment of i.l "quast endowtncnt" lund . th•·
prm;eed~ ol wh t~;h would ht.&gt; U\t·d II 11 "\llliJI,
l'ducattun&lt;tl tcueatttltt.&amp;l and ~; ult ur;tl put fl'"c' lor
tltc bt'ncfit lll tltr 'tuJcnh 111 lthr 'iiJIC l lttiVl'f\tl)of lluft;tlul "
Some o f the ahuvc piJn' were set l1•rtlt 111 three
rc~olultl111 prt• pttrt•d .utd u\ltoJuccd lly (ltarlcs
Balkm , FSA ~ecrctJry . at the hn . J I meettng In
resuluttun ortc, Mr Balkm crturn c~;tt r' the 'Pl't.:tlic
potnh ttl qut~tton rcgat dtng the trJtl\ler\ 'll')!.JI1ty
and advtsabtlity · fh e laller Jt C ol parlt~ul.u
tnlerel&gt;l. and Me ~tated ~ "fa..:tual llutnb ..

Fees available
''Factual poult " I ; ·sub 13otud I 1s111 1111 better
financ1al po~itton tu develop the property than the
I;SA l·ocll has OI'OIIa/Jic fo If ~twlcnt orfil'lfl' fees ..
(emphasts added)
"Factual potnt" 2 "Sub Board I ·s govcrnJOg
body IS transient "
"Factual point " 3. "Since Sub Board I tS an
autonomous legal entity , SUNY has no control over
expenses to be incurred in development of the
property However, the ~ource of Sub Board l's
funds IS through SUNY's action in mandating and
collecting fees and ats support of activities at the site
would be vital to the success of the developments."
"Factual point" 4 : "Use of the property and
plans for its development are vague."
"factual point'' 5 : ''There is an ex istmg
structure fot student involvement in f'SA affairs."
These "factual points" which have apparently
convmced Mr. Balkin that the land transfer must be
Vtewed in a questionable light seem themselves to be
only questionable at best. Wlule some of these points
admittedly are not unrrue, to term them as ..factual
points" can only be a deliberate attempt by Mr.
Balkin to misrepresent the present situation . At least
one is (hopefully) a simple and complete mistruth hopefully because the tdea that FSA has access to

The outdated City of Buffalo
ordinance which threatened the
system uf students living 1n
off-campus apartments last
September has again arisen from
thr dead .
The otdmance. which state~
that no restdence may be
uccupied by rnure than two
unrelated persons. was 1gnorec.J hy
the City of Buflalo prior to last
September due lu ovcr1.rowded
co ndttt on' tn the Umverstly
community area When the
semester began, however
tnspcctors of the Ene County
Departmrnt ol llealth allemptcd
tu servl' ev1c.:t ton no11..:es where
more lhdrl 1w11 ~tudents were
ltvtng 10 an apartment A ltet-c~
O:lln([OVl'r\y Cn~UI'd. whtdl dted
down when Buflalu Maynr h.tnlo..
Sedita ,1\\llll'd \ludenl\ th.ll rill\
wdtrlance would no longer In·
enforced
Thousands affect~
Now, however. thl'
CorporatiOn Counsel. wh1ch tS the
legal atm nlthc Ctty ul Buffalo. ts
prose..:uting ~uch a case Buffalo
landlord James Rados IS bcmg
brought to cuurt fur VtOlat111g that
or dtnan 1.e and renttng a
lour-bedroom apartment to lour
students When offictals of the
Cnrporatton Counsel wetc
questioned about the proseculton
uf this case. they were elusive and
datmed no kllllwledge of tlte
~JXCtfic case \lttce ·•we prosecute
lO to 40 cases a Jay ·· Anthony
Mangustl, Curporatton ( 111111~1.
tclu~cd .:omment Mayw c.;;•dtt.J
w1t11 guarantc~.·c.J ~lttd1•ttt~ 111
Cktohet that tltl\ urdul.tlln' would
IHII ill' l'llltlll.:l'd W.l~ UttaY;ul.thll•
l111 ltlllHllettl
( ) II ( II II Jill
I ht• I ttth "",
11•111\1 11~ h,l\ '·"" llh'lt' Jl\.' .tl k.l\1

150 apartments occupied by
students in the University area.
and, for obvious,financial reasons,
most of them are occupied by
more than two students.

This ts st til a conservatJve
esttnute, stnce there are J 1,000
undergraduate and 5000 graduate
students enrolled at the State
Untversity of Buffalo and the
residence halls contain only 2550
spaces. Even af half those students
are commu ter :., complete
enforcement of tlus ordtnance by
the C'tty of Buffalo would sttll
leave lh ou\artd~ ol students
homele~ .

Community

p~u~

The c.:unstltuttonahty of a law
sets an arbitrary hmit for
resident~ regardless of the size of
the house or the number of
bedroom~ . and
stnglcs out
student\ 111 dotng \O. has tu be
wh~t:h

\U~pect

.. [[ Wttnds Ulll:Un)ltlUIIOnal lu
me," was the legal nptn1on ul
Norm Effman the lawyer retamed
by tht• Student Assoctation . "The
main problem tS that people
around the Untverstty are down
on student culture." commented
one 8uffal n landlord "The
offictal ctty pohcy used to be to
leave the students alone, hut
because of ~.-om platnts by
residents. they are g0mg alter
rhem ."

studeot activities fees is as serrous et notion a~ h.b
ever plagued the confused tssue .
Perhaps Mr. Balkin refers to the pot;Sibility that
students at some later date could see fit to d1vulge
their funds to FSA . If this tS so, the rest ol Ius
do c ument~ must
be cons1dered 1nvalid The
Th1~ tcq 1. Jse. 1f 11 does tndeed
resoluttons state reason~ why the land tramlcr •~
~'~-' to ~')tlfl. \llttld \el a legal
madvtsable now , 11 01 wh y tl rrtt!1,ht he ttiJliVI~Jhk Jl
prc~.et.lenr d\ far J\ qudrnts ltvtnll
sume later date
111
11 II 1: a 111 p u'
J p .J rt men b
Pre:.umahly , then , the re\o luttt ltt~ tcler II• tin·
Wh ;•lhl'l tltl' uttlltuV&lt;.'f\I JI
situatton as 11 now extsts A 1 11 IIIIW t''(l\11 . I·SA ha'
ur~lln.lll~l· ~.111 \ f,lttd up 111 a, CHill
1111 J\.\.eS\ tu ~tude nt lee\ Jl le,l\1 ,., Jar J' .111\nl
1.1~ h." H't tu lw 'l'&lt;'ll 11 1hr
student tCaltJcs
t.:ll\ P•'""" 111 Jl''"''~llllttg thr
Poml\ two, three o~nd lour Jrt• .11 '''·"' ·"
• I l
I Ill' ltl\1 111'.111111! ' ' \l!l ln1
appltcahk to I SA as tltl'~ .m· 1t1 Sub BuJt&lt;l l{ulwtt
~1. ... h 7
Kette1 hJ\ been a member ot 1lw I \A Bn.uJ lot hu1
a ltttle over a year. He \.IIUic.l IC.t\ll' Jll~ I trill' lktu.ud
Cdbaum only thts su mme• 1111ttnl tltl' B• •.ud
Antltuuy I OtCiltctlt ha) bc'1'1l a re!(ul.u vllltng
menthct lor on lv lite p:.'t nwnth Of ~.uurw tit•·
T h&lt;' Hutluln ( nmmtlln: tu 1- ree Alllltl.t Oav1~
\tudettt represcntalivt'~ dt.ttt~t· l'Vl't\ Vl'.tr
Jt,t, ,lO IIIIUII U'd lhl \tJrl ot .Ill t'Xtt'II\IVt' pt'IIIIOII
'\ub Buard . on the othl'f hJrHI ," 111 1h1· lll "&lt;l'"
tlnve d1·mandtn11 thar ~h Oavl\ he lrred on batrl 111
ol trl\ltt1111ng a pl:111 by wludt tttl'tllhl•r,htp "' ""ltl h,·
olrtlt'r Ill prt'!)Jfl' her defen~e The l'Ommttlet' l'lllb
fnr vulunrecr&lt;&gt; tu help petirion on Saturday. Ftb 19
llH mure tlun lHH' year wtth ''·'~1'11111'
I rum II a .m
2 p m Forms will hi' available
apputntmcnts. thus assurtttK liHll llllltty In ,Hhlltllltt
uutside.- lhl' Mutn Place Mall and at the Alrtclln
Sub Board has a full 111nC cXl'cuttvc Uttl'lllll
Cultu ral Center bv 10 lOll m on that day
somcthtng proh1bited tn the FSA hy l&lt;•w' ( 'l'rt.uttl\the sttgma of "transience" 1111 unly Suh lloard "
dUb IOU~
fMOTORCYCLEINSURANCEl ~- --------------------,
As Sub Board is ··an autonomous legal en lily.
I
so too IS FSA. Moreover . the avatlabiltt y o f funt..l\ lu1 :IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE I :
the support of act1vit ies at the land Stte seems more 1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I :
FlOOR:
of a problem for FSA. Sub Board has a hkely source
IU PST ATE CYCLE
NORTON:
of income with mandatory or volun tary fees, though I
call 694·3100
I1
1
certainly voluntary fees would greatly rcdu t:e '''
"Atk Your Broke!' AboU1 U1" · fEB.
lNON:
funct1onmg. However, FSA is often •n the posttmn
1
I
of losing great sums of money It seems thetr matn
: 15·2Q
"""' ,, :
concern should be with having enough money to
•
"
.. (J'"
t
keep operatmg on the present level.
AUTO SERVICE
I
t
, t ," I
Student involvement in FSA affatrs tS also an
I
I
COMPLETE
interesting notion . If FSA· were truly a
I
I
I
I
AUTO REPAIR
faculty·student associatton, it ts doubtful
I
I
Honest &amp; Reliable
representation would be five administrators. three
EXHBITION
I
students and one faculty member. To state that
I
(..,.,po~•oeul by.
I
students will get as fair a deal with those three votes
Imported &amp; Domestic
I
I
as they would with total control is outrageous
1"'""""'""'..! S•..dl•1 All""'
I
- BOBCOR It must be remembered that the Amherst land
: C. • .,,lo.Atu• ~ .A ....d
:
AUTOMOTIVE
CENTER
was boug)lt almost entirely with student monie~ .
: _ ~I~~~~~·~"'~~~ ~"'~~~~~~' - ~_!~_:
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
Granting of no more than partial control is, as Sub
834·7350
Board chairman Paul Cumming says. "at least a
moral wrong."

DllJ'is petition

2""

t_

INs: :
!

'72

. , .,., ,
'

Friday, 18 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�I

Sutntntl' sessions

aetion line
Hav~ a problem' Need help' Do you find it impossible to untantle

the Umversity bureaucracy' In cooperation with the Office of Student
A ffairs and Services, The Spectrum sponsors Action Line a weekly
reader serv1ce column. Through Action Line, individual students con
get answers to puzzling questions, find out where and why University
decisions are mad~ and get act1011 where change is needed.
Just d1al 8 3 J -.5000 or 11isit the A ct1on Line booth in the Ce,ller
l.ounge tn Norton Hall for mdi111dual attention. The Office of Stud tnt
AffaiTS and Strvices will investigate all questiotu and complamts. a.n d
wt/1 answer them mdi111dually The name of the indi1•1dual orlg111atmg
the inqulf,l' u kept conjldent1al under all circumstances The more
common questions will he answert!d m thiS column each week

Course scheduling reduced
Afilicted with a severe budaet cutback, summer
sessions at the State UniversitY of Buffalo wiJl have
to contend with a 40% reduction in course
scheduling. In monetary terms the budget calls for a
reduction in the proaram of S4 S3 ,000 with a budget
level of $940,000. Last year S1,000,100 was spent.
but because of the increase in salaries an estimated

CorTKtion:
10 Cards are validated 1n the basement of Foster Hall (Room 16)
on Tuesdays from 8.30 - II :30 a .m. and o n Fridays from noon 3 p .m .

Q: f lm

I

transfer studenl. Do I ha ve to take th e required arm

co u~s?

A It you ho~ve transferred two or more semesters nf work , you do
not have to take phy~•~al edUlJtton If you transferred only o ne
scm~ter·~ work , then you are requuecJ to ta~e one co urse

Q Is there any place on campus where one can aet a preanancy
te~t"

A Ye\, the Health Servu:e~ tn M11.hael Hall offer tlu~ serv1ce for a
nom1nal fee .

Q: I am hopina to araduale an May and am lookina for a job. They
tell me tha t f shouJd have a resume. Is there any place on campus where
I can aet help with this?
A . Yes, there is! It tS the Pla ~:ement and Career Guidance Center in
Room 6 of Hayes Annex C. They arc anx1ous and wtlhng to help you In
a number of ways. One of them tS help w11h your resume But they will
Jl~o help you co e:.htbll!&gt;h d rile With the1r office This file w1ll contam
.ln111ng ot her thmgs letters of rec.:ommendat1on , your resume. a hiStory
of your a ~: adem1c and extra-..urncular ach1evement~ etc. They will then
\t:nd these Hems or any pari\ o f them to any prospective employers
that you designate o r request In ddd1t1on to these serv1ces, they can
help you w1th professwnal career gu1d.Jn1.e dnd they have h!&gt;t1ngs of
employment opcnmgs. Thl!&gt; offl;.e aho ....:hedules mterview~ for
1nt ere~ 1 ed empl oyer~ anJ student~ . Sn our adv1c~ 1s tu Sl.'e the
Placement Office .ts soon .~~ y()u ~·an fhl\ ' hould huve hecn done at tht:
bepnnmg of your JUnior yca1
Q Does the Univers•ty run any oraaniLed tour!&gt; of the campus?
A As far JS we can detcrnune , 11 doe~ not- ll()wever. 1f you have d
gro up that wants In tour the .:ampu-; we 'uggest y()u &lt;:dll A;.llnn Line
5000 .1nd we may he o~hl~ tu f101J 'umeonc 111 lead d tnur uf lhc ~.~mpus
for you.

Q· How can f iel my poefry
Wr m1ght

~ugge~t

publi.~ht&gt;d ?

~e-nd II to c.:amp11~ puhlt ~,;a iiOilS hlo.c
the Spc•ctnlffl, t•thus, Untlncuf'rl'rtl, the Ruffa/onwn. etc But you
md1c:Jtc that you are th111k111g of publ1~hcrs whn will pay fnr ynur
work llus ll&gt; ITI&lt;lre dtffu: ul! l· v... n .. u~.·~e~s ful po~h llkl' I awr~lll'~
rerl•nghettl hav~ had to ha Vl' theu p&lt;H~try pnvately puhhshw Bul Wf'
m1ght suggest that you send ynur wnrl-. tu magazuH•s that Interest you
The only thtng you have to fear I) re)elllun sh~ and th~c are normal
for any author Keep sendmg uut t:nough uf your worl-. Jnd lta me 11f 11
may be puttllshed. The 1dea •~ to ~eep try•ng

A

Chal you

Q In one or your an~wers last week, you \lid that the cumulative
average o f a transfer student from h1s fnrmer school i~ kept separate
from hiS cumulative here Does that mean that the marks I had at my
previous school will not count here?
A . Nu , 11 does not 1 If. for exam ph: , yuu 1.hd not hdvc a 2.0
cumulut1ve at your previous school, you must managt: tu ra1sc your
j01nt average from that school and th1s one to above 2.0 '" on.kr to get
a degree If you had lugh markt. there , then that too wuuld hdp lvw
marks here The two cumul&lt;illve average!&gt; arc mcnt10ned on yuur
lfanscnpl, but In praClllt' they Jre .!Yerag~d OUI together for purp&lt;l~ ... \
of graduation, graduate 'dlll(ol ~eled10n, ell.

Q . I am graduating ttl May and have applied lo various graduate
schools. I requested that transcripts be sent o ut and I now find that thC'
Bursar's Office will not allow any offic1al transcripts to be sent beca use
I did not pay my entire bill . I o nl y owe them S250 1nd I think that this
is unjust. Can anything be done about this?
A . The offictal policy of the scho1.' ' IS that transcnpts Will no I be
sent uul if the student has not ptud delinquent h1lls It should he noteJ
that these are delinquenl hills and not current onelt. Th1s 1:. abuut the
only way th e Umversity can get you to pay what you owe and so 11 is
adamant about maktng any except1ons Wl' can only suggest ch.ll you
pay your delinquent bilb
Q · J paid my tuition a.nd fees and subsequent to th1s I was
informed that I had received a Reaents Scholarship. Is there any way
that I can aet a refund for the money that I paid?
A Yes, you wLII receive the scholarship check. When II comes 1n,
the Bursllr's Office will notify you and you will be able to p1ck 11 up at
the Bursar's Office in Room I, Hayes Annex r\.

Q : Does an "incomplete" arade hurt you on your transcript?
A We are not sure JUSt what you mean by this. If you mean , can
you graduate with an mcomplete o n your record, the answer is yes.
However, you must have the necessary number of credit hours and you
also must fulfill the other requirements for a de&amp;ree. However, if you
m~n will it hurt you 1f you want to get into &amp;raduate school, then we
cannot answer this. Other schools and some departments may not look
favorably upon incomplete grades. T o be safe, it would be best to
remove all incom plete grades from your record .

Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, 18 February 1972

-sentos

Jim Blackhurst
S I .3~3.000 w11l be necessary to maintain serv1ctS at
la&lt;&gt;t year's level.
Accordmg t o Jtm Blackhurst , dlfector of
summer session:. the reductton is an "absurd"
propos1hon since tUII1on revenue exceeds the
amount necessary to provide funds for saJanes
Regard1ng the reasonmg behind tho cutback, Mr.
Blackhurst commented o n its irrationality. When
tak1ng th e total number of students who attended
la~t year, the tu1t1on pa1d should average $23.12 per
semester hour. The hudget reduction this year would

yield a decline in tuition revenue, due to reduced
course offerinp, of $740,000. In the event that the
budaet is restored to last year's level , there would be
a savinas of $190,000 and the revenue loss would
then total an estimated $347 ,000.

Summa- tragedy
Reprding the handlina of this situation , M1.
Blackhwst commented that it would be tricky since
serious modifications are involved, and if the money
is not reappropriated "there will be senou~
modifications in course offerinr:;." At the moment
summer sessions is requesting more money for 1ts
financing; and in the interim, they are treating the
scheduling as though it were intact.
Last year 82% of summer session's enrollmenl
consisted of full-time dearee candjdat es, and 60% of
the students were in their fif\al year.
Mr. Blackhurst added that a disconcerting aspect
of the cutback is that tuition revenue exceed\
salaries and that there are an estimated 200-300 JObs
at slake. The tragedy is that there are people willing
to pay for summer school who w1Jl be excluded from
courses while classrooms remaJn empty and qualified
instructors unemployed, he continued.
Registration for summer sessions begins March
20 and so far is still maintainmg its open admissiOO\
policy. The general philosophy behind sum mer
sessions, according to Mr. Black hurst , IS that
"everyone s h ould have access to h•gh~r
education .. . and in the summer it 's accessib1l11 y
that pays its o wn we1ght." If admission was forc\'d
to become selective because of the cutback M r
Blackhurst sa•d that he could find "no blls•s f,H
discrimmat1on agamst any student in any part1.:ular
course"
lmtional
During the fall months summer St'l&gt;~1un
coordmators conduc t ed o ver 80 planning meetm g.o.
t o set up the program , and in th e event that the
budget is not restored ''it wiJI be impossible to tak e
11 apart rationally," noted Mr. Blackhurst . The State
University of Buffalo was affected more than any
other state university by cutbacks, and "this cut IS sc1
mammoth that there ISn't a person on the campu'
who won' t point out 1ts irrationality ," Mr
Blackhurst commented Meanwhile, summer sess1on
1s waiting hopefully for a supplementdl)'
appropriation to restore two-thirds of the cu t Or
William Baumer, c hauman of the Faculty SenJtt:
stud of the cut that "efforts will be made Ill
re-a ppropriate the budget and there is no way o l
knowing at this pomt whether these efforts will ht'
~u ccessf ul or not "

Tuition proposals.

• •

cOnllnued from P•9'1 one

In IQ60 , more thJn 60 per cent
now harely survtv1ng o n a SJ I nd epende n I CommissiOn ,1n
of the college students m New mLlhon-a -year spec1al grant from Colleges and Umversit1es , Gust;~vc
York State were enrolled m the state New York Umvers1ty Rosenberg, former chancellor nt
pnvate Sl'hools Th1s numher h&lt;~l&gt; was also sa•d to be on the verge of the City Umversity. Sen Ron.thl
dedmed to 4q .3 per n~nt lod:ly bankruptcy with a $10 m11lion Stafford (R ., Peru), chairman uf
and IS expelled to drop to 3o.6 deficit for the t.•urrenl year
the Joint Legislative Committee
per cent hy I ~XO Costs of State sorrows
on Higher Education . and
11ltend1ng both so.:hool~ have
Privatl' college~ Mo: not the As sembly Way s and Means
Significantly 111creased 1n the pusl
only ones h11.ed w1t h a financial Committee C hairman , Will i\
decade.
cris•s. say~ the report "AgaJnst Stepberu (R., Brewster).
The Hurd report listed fJLulty
the ba c.: kground of the
I
lumpensation as hJvmg gone up mflall()nary decade of the 1960's . , . . .
an Jverage of I 00 per cent '" the Jnd the lurrent state fiscal crtSis:
pa1o1 ten years. overall opera t•ng II IS i.l ear I I IS becoming
~u'h have mcrcased Jt o~n average
•ncreas1ngly d1ff~eult to fund
of 7 I 0 p~:r cent a yeJT. and
contmued e.xpans1on olthe state's
tu1110n n1tcs al pnvate ~t.houls has system of h1gher education from
ns~.·n 4.! per cent s1nce 1&lt;&gt;66-67 .
large annual Increases in tax
This Cutt ton d1sp.m1y between revenue support. New York State
pubh~ and pnvate colleges IS the
residents sJ10uld be assured of the
cause of the severe f1scal problems opportunit y for post secondary
at the private colleges. These educatiOn regardless of IJmited
in$ti1Utions are expected to have a fin an c 1 a I res o u a es " To
state-wtde defi ..:it of $50 mllllun ac.:com pl•sh 1h1s goal , "any
tlus year.
de~..ision!&gt; Jffell•ng tu•uon should
Accordtng to the report "The be ace om pan1ed by changes in the
pr1vate tnStltUllons cou ld pre:.ent programs of student
accommodate Jpprox•mately assistance and loans t o continue
14,000 more freshmen thun they the policy of no net tuition for
have today w1th no maJOr mcrease students from very low income
'" costs. Representatives of some families ."
private institutions have
Members of the task force in • Bottle of Henri Marchant
maintained that few Institutions addition to llurd were: Se~ate
w ou ld have serious financial Finan ce Committee Chairman • (or Winston) Cold Duck •
When you order dinner
•
problems 1f all were operating W.arren
Anderson (R,
(or Entree) for two
with capacttY student Bmghamton); Richard Couper
end pntMftt thi1 coupon
enroUment"
director of the New York Publi~
Among the pnvate •nstituttons Lrbrary, Charle) Diebold a
that tbe report claimed were in Buffalo banker, Assembly:nan :
IUCiiiilfl SliP I
'~
..senous financial condition and Mil~on Jonas ( R , North Merrick),
are in need of some forms o f charrman of the Assembly Hjgher
FAEE ,.AAICINO
emergency aid," was Brooklyn Education Comm ittee · J o hn
ATLANTIC STATION
EX .. IAES A,.AIL 1,1072
Polytechnic Institute, wh1 ch IS Kirkpatrick, president ~f the

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�!!otJsing problem

Allenhurst renewal unsure ·
Whether the University will renew its lease for
the Allenhurst apartments Is at this time uncertain.
Decision to renew the lease which expires Aug. 3 1,
1973 lies with President Robert Ketter.
His decision, Dr. Ketter· indicated, will be
affected by recommendations of the President's
Council on Residential Facilities. This council is
responsible for decisions on the Allenhurst
apartments, the Main Street dormitories and the
Amhers! facilities. An interim report with
recommendations for next year has been made,
while long range plans are being worked on.
Thomas Craine, chairman of the council and
presidential advisor, feels that a..major factor in the
decision on the Allenhurst facilities will be the
development of the Amherst campw. The issue wiJJ
be debated within the council, and the outcome will
then be sent to the President.
Dispemng rumors that Allenhurst apartments
will soon be unavailable, John T elfer, vice president
for facilities and planning maintained : "There is
nothing afoot here to do any cancellatio n or
anything like that." He hasn't seen the Allenhurst
apartments yet, but is planning a tour with Thomas
Schillo, directo r of Housing, in the near future . Dr.
Telfer has " no preconceptions at all'' about
Allenhurst but remarked that " the facilities there are
very popular with the students."
Allenbunt WJe
Concerning the use o f the Allenhurst section for
married students, Mr. Schillo remarked : 'The
Allenhurst apa rtments are better suited for other
kinds o f student living. We desperately need some
married student housing and it would be my own
hope, and I've made the proposal as lo ng as fo ur
years ago, t hat we acquire tht" Allenhurst ~tpartment ~

to be used in that fashion, because l don 't think that
we will be able to find suitable accommodations for
married students at any figure less than that. "
Additionally, Mr. Schillo feels : "J'he University
is doing a fair job of building new housing for single
students, and there should be plentiful supply of it
over the next five years. What is desperately needed
Is some lcind of University housing for married
students.,.
With regard to the economics of University
Housing, Mr. Schillo explained : "General university
housing for the entire State University has always
been a loaer. It has been heavily subsidized . This
University happens to be the highest cost in the state
system . We are currently being criticized fo r our very
high cost. "

Basic costs
There are two basic costs with University
housing, according to Mr. Schillo. The fust is the
operating cost, which includes maintenance, u t ilities,
supplies, security and the professional staff of people
who do counseling. The second cost Is debt service,
mainly mortgage payments. This second cost would
not apply to Allenhurst because it is a rented
f,cility. Operating costs for Allenhurst includes re nt
( whic h is $115 month), u tilities, mainte nance, bus
service and staff.
Oifford Wilson, residence hall director and head
resident, thinks that the University will not be
willing to subsidize Allenhurst o nce they have t he
new campw buildin ~. which o ffe rs students a place
to Jive: " Why should the state subsidize another
place that is owned by a p rivate individual when its
own buildings are sitting empty?" He feels this
situation will arise with trouble filling the new d orms
on the Amh.-~ t ca mpu~

Resident Advisor petitions
T·he Unive~aity Howina Offtce will beam the eelection process for resident advisors
for the •972~73 year on Wedneaday, Feb. 16, 1972. Tbe position offen the opportunity
ro live and work widl aroups of uncleraraduate students u they devetop the communal
and educational upeea of uatvenity 1-'dence We.
The position is open to anyone who will be at leut • junior durina the 1972-73
academic year. Appointments ere for the entire year end remuneration is fuJI room.
Applic ations will M avalleble from Feb. 16 , throuah Feb. 2S, 1972. Applications
must be returned in peraon to the University Housina Office by S p.m . on Friday . Feb.
lS, 1971.

Chinese fiesta
In

celebration of the c:omina Cb1nese New Year.
the UB Chinese Student Aaeodation il praen fina •
New Year dinner end fiesta at RidJe Lea dinina hall
tomorrow at 6 p.m.
Traditional celebntion.a tucb u Uon dance, fen
dance, butterOy rwina and Chinese music wiU M
presented. .Additionally, authentic: Chinese culaine
will be served.
The fiesta is open to the public end everyone is
Invited to attend. For further information, contact
the Chinese Studeat Auocietion at 837-6131.

t~At~ fll~lts

March 3- 4 (Fri ..Sat.) Eye1 of Hell
The audience will wear special 3- D glasses during the dark and
magical fantasies which are inflicted upon a young arch eologist and a
psychiatrist by an ancien t ritual mask. This is a 3-D st ereoscopic picture
and is "as gruesome as .anything ever seen on the screen ." A
Taylor-Ro f(man productio n with Paul Stevens, Claudette Nevins, J eff
Moron and Bill Walker. There will be special almost midnight showines
of th is in the Fillmore Room .
March I 0 - 11 ( Fri ..Sat.) I Never Sang For My Father
T his film is a brilliantly po rtrayed story of a grown son tom
between responsibility t o his parents and his d esire to be true to
himse lf. Melvyn Do uglas received an academy award for his portrayal
of the father o f Gene Hackman and Estelle Parsons who are re united
from their supporting ro les in the great Bonnie and Clyde . Directed by
Gilbert Cates.
March 17 18 (Fn.-Sat.) Silen t Muvies - Both o f these flicks will have
live piano accompanimenl.
Friday
Sally of the Sawduu
This 1925 W.C. Fields classic
combines comedy , melodrama, rurnl-romance and race-to-the-rescue
finish . It is the first silent feature to star Fields . Long thought lost . this
recen tl y diScussed dasstc is invaluable . Also as D.W. Gnffith 's only
comedy
Saturd ay
Phantom of the Opera - Lon Chaney , the screen's greatest
horror film star. portrays a twisted and d eformed monster in this
frightening d rama , The unmasking scene is a classic in cinematic horror.
Directed by Rupert JuHan .

..

March 24 - 25 (Fri.-Sat.) Marx Brothers
Friday - A Ntght in Casabla nca - Tlus classic finds the Marx Bro thers
rigllt in the middle of a ganz of thieves plo tbnz to talce over Ronald
Komblow's ( Broucho) hotel so t hat they can remove a cache of jewels
and art treasures hidden in the hotel. Chico joins Harpo and Groucho
to foil the evil plan . With Groucho, Chlco and Harpo Marx , Sig R o man,
Lisette Verea, Lois Collier, Dan Seymour and Charles Drake. Directed
by Archie Muyo.
Saturday - Copacabonu
Groucho Marx IS a theatrical aaent for
Carmen Mirand a ( sh~ does t he great Tico-Tico number) whom he books
as tw o acts m the same nightclub . Hilarity and complication set in
when Carmen t ries to kec!p up wtth her dual role. Cast : Groucho Ma rx,
Carmen Miranda, Andy Russell. Glona J ean Steve Cochran and Earl
Wilson Directed hy Alfred E Gr~:en .
April 14 I~ I Fn ·Sal.) If
Thts film deptd~ t ht: dommun.:e of the strong tn a seethtng
indictment o f private educataon 1n Fngland Et&amp;}lt sharply etched
e pisodes depict 1he off-hand a~·ceptance of mmonty o ppression,
homosexuality and beattng:&gt;. the tnOuence of the m1litary and the
h y pocnsy of the adnuntsl ratiOn and dergy . Cast. Malcom Mr Donald.
Richard Warwtck . Davad Wood . Directed hy Ltnsay Anderson .
Apnl 21-11 (fn ·Sat )2UOI
Sapa Udy.rn·r
1 hLS IS more than a m&lt;wae. It IS an I'Xploratwn uf tedwology and
of man's con~t&lt;~nt 1.1uesttonang anto life and death " Wtth some of the
most dazzling visual happening!&gt; and techmcal achaevements 1n the
history of the motion pictures." Cast Ketr Dullea . Gary Lockwood .
William Sylvester, Don R ichter. Directed by Stanley Kubri ck
~-.~couPoN~. .~

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Friday, 18 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�IRetain J.P.EdiTORiAl

I

The powerlessness of students to effect anything within
this institution has once again been driven home. The
re-denial of tenure to Or. J.P. Jones of the Political Science
Department, despite massive and overwhelming support by
the students, documents the failure of student input.
Or. Jones has been described by his students as ranging
from great to outstanding as a teacher. Significant also, is the
fact that most of his students speak highly of him as a man.
His presence adds much to the bleakness and occasional
indifference of this campus. Despite all of these attributes,
the Political Science Department, acting in concert with Or.
Bernard Gf!lbaum, has decreed that Or. Jones' sojourn at the
State University of Buffalo is over.
It seems that popularity among students is becoming a
kiss of death . Thomas Rainey of the History Department and
Marvin Resnikoff of the Physics Department are both
extremely well-liked by their students. Like Or. Jones. both
were also denied tenure.
Every year many professors who either have no contact
with students or are bitterly detested by them are granted
tenure. Since this institution has found it within its province
to appoint de facto research professors, we can see no
objection to retaining faculty members who are noted for
their teaching ability. Unless, of course, the education that
students receive is secondary in University priorities to the
research that is carried on by many invisible faculty
members.
The administrat ion claims to be influenced by students.
We find this hard to believe. J .P. Jones must also.

Balance the rise
While a tuition raise may be both necessary and
defensible, there is something drastically lacking in the
governor's tuition proposals. No tuition• raise should occur
without a commensurate increase in Regents Scholarship and
Incentive funds.
There is much irony in Rockefeller's proposals. Basing a
tuition raise upon the plight of private schools is essentially a
socialistic argument because such a raise is in effect, simply a
subsidy of priv.ate colleges. It is therefore intriguing that
someone named Rockefeller is busily working to subvert that
basic tenet of capitalism competition.
There are many students at this University who can
readily afford a tuition raise. However, there are many who
cannot and unless these people are provided for, this tuition
hike will wreak havoc on their educational plans.
Accordingly we propose a change in the scholarship
program whereby the awards made to students would be
based on net, not gross family income. This net figure should
also include deductions for the educational expenses of all
the children within a fami ly. Further, these funds should be
awarded in a manner and amount that will totally
compensate for the tuition increase.
What may inevitably be necessary is a sliding tuition scale
based on available family income. Unfortunately, we cannot
expect the current government of this state to support such a
proposal. After all. private colleges donate far more to
campaign coffers than do individual families.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 56

Fridlly, 18 February 1912
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold

Co-Maneging Editor AI Benson
Co-Man.ging Editor - Mike Llppmann
Awt. MaNIIJino Editor - Susan MoS$
Buli,_ Man~~ger - Jack Harlan
Advertising Ma~ - Susan Mellentme
Campus
City
Copy
Aan . ..

..

F ..tutt
Graphic! Arts .
BIICkr»g~~

Jo-Ann Armao
Jeff Greenwald
Howie Kurtz
Jltnil Cromer
. Ronni Forman
.. Marti Gani
. Cla1re Kriegsman
. lynda Ten
.. Tom Toles
.. Amy Ahrend

..

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Layout .
Asst . . ...
Lit. &amp; Dr"'"l

Millie

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Off-Campus
A..t .
Photo
A at.
Sporu
Alii.

Maryhope Runyon
vacant
M1cheel Silverbtatt
, .Billy Altman
.. lynne Traeger
.vacant
Mi~ey Osterreicher
.Kim Santos
, Berry Rubin
. .Howie Feiwt

Th• Spt~etrum is S8f\led by United Press lntllfnetion!l , College Press
Service, the Los Angeles ' T imes Free Press, the Los Angeles Times
Svndlata end Liberatio n Newt S8Nice.
RIIPublicetion of metter herein without the express consent of the
Editor-in-Chief 11 forbidden

Editorial Polic y i1 dettlfmlned by the Editor-in-Ch ief.

Page&amp;i.x . The Spectrum . Friday, 18 February 1972

•

•J!lllf~---II.J•
f
rT DOWN A lll-MAKI lHAl 'ttl.lliii1An10NAI\'

'OM, COMI .NOW, lOiU

'Ozone' level
"masculine-identity neuroses" as obviously dated as
yours'/
1 am disappointed that The Spectrum b.as given
a haJf page column t o a writer that has so little to
say and says it so pOorly. Cliche-ridden, tri te
columns are uninteresting, especially when they are
as narrow-minded as Mr. Lovine's. Please understand ,
Mr. Levine's opinion is fine for him , but must we
readers be subject ed to this view aLso?
Mr. Levme could ·•go on and on . . " Thank you
for ending, and may you ret urn to your "ozone"
lnst , as you have so aptly noted.
l. i:ra Albrecht

To the l!'ditor.
This letter is directed to Mr. levine's article of
February II , 1972 .
Mr. Levine, why must we stoop to your level of
immature sentimentality? Why don't you gro w up?
The Spectrum newspaper represents. as it 1S named . a
broad "spectrum" of people. Mr. Levine's article
assumes that the world is based in Queens, New
York . Am I wrong to assume that kids grow up in
quite a few other places both urban and rural. And
they also read The Spectrum . Are these "grown-up"
duldrcn as "hir" as you. Mr Levine? Are their
It occurs to me that anyone who knows the
author of thas crabby pile ol odurt only by what is
written herein must really have dire pil:tures of what
really goes on in my head h doc&amp;n't feel as bad most
of the time as it seems to have hcen coming out on
grump wnting n1ght of ltlle. Because here we are
agatn . My nose is runn ing, my head aches . and every
t ime I look at a brigh t light I wince. Wheeeee.
Mcanwhlle, the large german shepherd that hves
o il the lower floor is barking his mangy damned head
olf, the ca ts are trying to c rawl an my lap tor a little
lnng overd ue &lt;~ffec ti on .
the same cat who
(which'!) IS under strong. susp1t:1on of doing in my
o nly tcaput, of course
and . . phooo. delayed
sympathy as bettea than no sympathy at all hut thas
1~ at-~urd

It

ha~ hc:~n on~:

o f those periods when I am even
more certain than usual that I
arn really screwed up. On the
way ho me from work tonigh1
I was contemplating how
totally useless I have been for
the last month or so, It does
no t seem as though I have
been rea lly e ff ective at
nnything for at least a month ,
and perhaps thi rty years odd
by Stear
lo nger than that. Reading,
wntang, und Lhinkang . . contra ry to popular belief
the last two arc usually connected in my head ...
have needed d oing in perilously (spelling is you r
problem on a night like thls) large quantities for
several months now , and my determined effort to
finish at least one m~or part of my hassles by the
end of February passeth beyond human lc.en .
Do you suppose I could come out of this hlue
fu nk long e n o ugh to cat ch spring fever?
Optamistically assuming that spring will ever arrive,
of course .
The major lady in my life and I are about as
together as usual, I am sit ting 10 my apartment
tonight because she has decided, by damn, to give
me a free, unsmothering relationship if it kills me.
Chauvinist ! Why in hell do I have to be consistant in
what I want when nobody else in this relationship 1s?
In thls relationshi p? Bah ! Confounded peo ple keep
changing !heat wan ts around so fast that it gets hard
to keep up which people a re mad at you for not
taking care of what wants . tOne, two, three,
EVERY BODY ptoJed!)
Ahhh, one of those glorious evenings when 11
seems as t hough the hest answer to the whole
problem as to crawl int o a corner and think primary
process thoughts for I he rest of whatever. (Go ahead
stee.se, tell lhe folks about how the typewriter really
works fine. its just that some idiot had the ribbon
~lector switch set so that there wasn't enough
nbbon for t he p to hit .) lAnd how nobody uses it
but you, don't forget that part. ) (Well, it does lower
the n umber of tdiots one has to sort through . .. )
II occurs to me in passing that it is hard to
figure out whether those o f you who read t h.is . .. Jet
us be ras h , and assu me that someone does . . are
craz.ier than the guy who writes it, or vice versa.
Somewhere in t he fuzzier outlands of my head is no
d~ubt t~e answer .to the question of why 1 write this
tlung w1th such diSgusting regula rit y. It is a thought
which does not usually enter my1head. The grump is
a weekly event ... sort of lik~ putting out the

The

grump

garbage as the unfortunate simile which springs t o
mind . You don' t reall y have any way to avoid it, Ill&gt;
simply a fat:t of life.
Sto pp ~:d
by the depart ment lomght, an
somethmg resembling my present state, and som\'
people I knew passed by, apparentl y on lheir way
out for a dri nk. Knowing t hat tonight wa.~ "Fret,"
and that I did not partic ularly want to be, it occ.:ured
to me to inv1te myself along. T his did not happen ,
more because it was grump night t han because it ~~
diffic ult for me to impose, although t hat is no doubt
present too.
It seems most probable that ... bothe r. All sorts
of disorgani zed stuff about why I have been huckmg
along at this stand for a lung lime now float up .IS
soon as any effort is made to 1solate a cause There ·~
need for contact with people. on at least 11 vicariou~
level, in volved. Something abou t reaching o ut. bul
doing so m a nice safe sema·anonymous way . My
head teUs ml! that what is wntten here 1s somethmg
that parts of me would like to read 1f I were walk1ng
around being sure that I was t he only crazy persl)O
le ft in the world who had not gone int o politics 01
Univemty admtniSlration. So the whole th.mg 1s
really and insanity loves company trip, yes? No
Because a t the bottom of aJI the confusio n and
prbag.e is a stubborn, if freq uently hard to justify.
belief that I am really saner than lots of people
adjudged fine upstanding citizens.
(Careful , stupid. Fools caught out without their
costumes a tt ra ct e nti rely too muc h attention.}
I m ean, you can preach a t folks , but do most ol
the people really listen? I could . . well, could
atte mpt t o ..• come o n like Billy Graham. Bul
witho ut atte mpting t o offend anyone •.. something
about which endless h o urs are spent worrying , .
he's been working h is side of the street for a J on~
tame and it just d oesn't look like its wo rking very
well.
Never had any kids ... fathered , thank you .
but do ha ppen to know some that have aU the ear
ma rks of being halfway decent people one of these
days. It seems to me that it wo uld be nice t o JeaNe a
few t hin J!$ behind for the poor souls who are gOtnt:
to have to follow along and clean up the mess
11
they get a chance to try.
The wo rld position is summed up to me by
Rhodesia and South Africa. They sit there ramnung
apartheid down t he throats of 90% or so o f their
populations, who happen t o be members of the
dominant ra cial gro up o f the continent . That just
does not seem aJto gether bright to me. Jus tice is one
thing, but survival is something else again . England is
all fo uled up this week because the coal miners are
out o n strike, right? What if there were n't any more
coal to dig? 1 guess that my feeling is that aggression
ls a pretty basic thing in people, and there is nothing
like starving, or beiog dumped on enough, t o stir il
up. If the rich get rich and the poor get poorer,
eventually the poor are going to try to take it back,
a lo ng with their pound of flesh.

lu a lo ner, and a middle c hild, c hoosing up sides
something which comes hard to m e. It would be a
great favor to me, personally, if everyone would get
to gether and end war, poverty, injustice, inequality
and hatred. Please, just so I won't set caught in the
middle? I jwt do n't duck as fast anymore. Pax
(hopefully).
.

lS

�...

, Open Theater: some great moments
by Keith Shandalow
S(J«:trum ThNNir Critic

The Open Theatre descended upon the Theatre Studio
in Harriman Library on Tuesday and Wednesday nights last
and proceeded to perform two of their own creations,
Terminal and The Mutation Show (described as a
work -in-progress) .
On one level, that of portraying their own and
touching the audience's store of emotional and psychic
experience through \he utilization of their great acting
ability, they succeeded bri lliantly. On another level , that
of presenting works containing ideas that coalesce with
themselves and with the theatrics of the piece into a
meamingful , total , integrated and with the theatrics of the
piece into a meaningful, total, integrated whole, they
eventually failed .
Flashes of brillance
The result was two nights filled with brilliant
"moments'' (an important concept in this review so keep it
in mind) when acting, gestures, movements, and music
"cl icked " and the audience was left in a state of
stupefaction that lasted only as long as that " moment."
Let not the reader assume that Terminal and The
Mutation Show contain no ideas. They do have ideas,
important ideas, ideas that seem to take their origin in the
troupe's own experience and the scholarly and verbalized
perception of that experience found in the works of f\ .0 .
Laing (perhaps the most important thinker of the 60's and
70's) .
However, in the context of the pieces as a whole, the
ideas seem somehow .extraneous, something tacked on at
the end as an afterthought. Because of this, one doesn 't
feel the force ot the thoughts. They can only be related to
on an abstract, intellectual level. The great intestity of the
acting overshadows everything else.
'
The Open Theatre was created in 1963 by two
'members of the Living Theatre, Joseph Chaikin (the
present director), and Peter Feldman . Experimental from
its conception, the group has gone through many
metamorphoses in its nine-year history , changing actors
and writers often. Their greates successes have been The
Serpent and America Hurrah, both performed
off-Broadway. The group has at times been very politically
active, performing guerilla theater in the streets with the
SDS (remember them?). Director Chaikin is also a draft
counselor.
Making the play
Their technique in creating a p1ece is certainly un1que.
Actors, writers, and directors get together and talk about
the topic and relate their own experiences. Ideas for the
piece are then introduced and worked out. Then the writer
and director put the various segments together and the
finished product results.
In reference to this creative technique director
Chaik in has said, " There are two main values in working
on a pieoe in this collaborative way. One is the discovery
of finding deep common references. It takes time to reach
these; the cliche references all need to come out first . And
the second value is ' the astonishing power there is in the
performance of an actor who is actually playing out an
image which he himself introduced." The power Chaikin
speaks of was well-evident in the performances.
Terminal is basically concerned with various aspects of
death. Interspersed between cells upon the dead to make
their appearance are 5hort scenes concemed with dying
and what comes after. The audience is given a lecture on
the art of embalming and is given a guided tour. of a
death-preparation establishment. Rituals involved with
graves and death and last biological rites are performed .
And in the last segment, entitled "The Dying Imagine
Their Judgment" a scathing attack is made on the
death-in-life type existence of modern man .
The dead come thru
Occasionally the dead come through and speak
through one of the actors. These scenes are the most
-continued on back page of Prodl~l Sun-

�UUAit MUSIC: ~nEe. MJFPALO f'BnVAL

...

..-t

KINKS

~ONVENI'ION
LINDIS FAIINE

F ·A IBPORT

'The Conformist'

Focus on fascist conformity
Spectrum Film Critk:

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
All Sura ....,..,.., Moi" " " ' $5 ..50-$4.$0 aolco"y $4•.50-$4.00
fi&lt;bla .,. tole .,.., • hffcrle F.ufvol Tlcbt OHice, Stoll. HI'- l.tolt~
(.,.eil 0&lt;ftr1 occep.... witt. ,._... wH......,.... • •vel-); U.l . Hell: Sto,. Colleee Tlck.r Offko; folia Ticbtt, Ho...,le ,..... Nlo..,. fe41t.

.~~~=··

7:20&amp; 9 :30

COLOR

LASTS DAY S

(almost traditional) chase soett•. Her blOOdied face is
a mask of repulsion and a shock of
(IUrprise

byJrt Boyar

Wednesday, March 1, at 8 P.M.

Sar. 'tiJ 2 pm .

AU seats SI .00

Fascism is conformity taken to extremes. In a
fascist state, everyone thinks and acts alike - that's
what makes a fascist a totalitarian. The Conformist is
startling in its use of irony. This irony plays upon
the meaning of fascism and the conformity which is
built into it . Do not get the Idea that this picture Is
an Orwellian drama whose conflict is, essentially
individual vs. system as in the Bradbury·inspired
film, Farttnheit 451 . This concept Is Implicit and
subtle. But the notion permeates the fabric of the
film in an impressive manner.
Madman or fascitt7
To shed some light upon the irony to which we
alluded, it is important first to establish a general
notion of the central character. He works for the
government. He is a fascist . So fascism has got to
make him rigid and uniform in spite of his inbred
love of individual freedom , right?
Wrong. Remember that irony. In trhuth, the
fellow IS a perverted pitiable character who has
enough respect for normality and decency to cause
him unhappiness as a fascist . The government for
which he works pushes him further In his perversion
by giving him the task of slaying an old professor of
his.
His deviancy seems to have begun when he was
about 13·years old. At that time, he stepped from
what could be called the path of a normal life when
he was forced to kill a homosexual.
But was he forced ? And did he hill him 7
Whatever the answer, his obession with normality,
and his flagrant flaunting of its opposite Is the core
of this production. He has thrown caution to the
winds, because of his early boyhood experience.
The climax
If that were all there was to it, we would have
seen a fair movie. But the ending! This film did not
JUSt end. it had an ending. We find that the
homosexual which our "hero" has presumed to be
dead is not dead at all and i!l this case, all of the
hero's past perversions are nolonger justified by this
man's death, or by fascism, or by anything else. His
respect for normality leaves him deserted and sullen
as the movie closes - no longer a fascist , but, then
again, not anything else either.

This is the type of film to be watched with both
eyes (and maybe even the mouth) open. Perhaps it's
most interesting feature is its plot twists . Actually ,
"plot twists" is the wrong phrase - "scene twists" is
better. What we are gettmg at, 1n a rather
round-about way, is that the individual scenes have
surprises within them so that taken as seperate unt ts,
they are worthwhile and interesting.
The death scene in the soft snow near the
conclusion is a case in point . A man we believe will
be shot, seems then to be headed toward death in an
auto accident. but finally (surpr1se) he is stabbed to
death by several toughs a Ia Julius Caesar. In
addition to that, his wife is then killed after the

WBEr~rR~dio/930

Hooker W Heat

again) .

~·

ge""'

"'

Reel and surr•l
A wonderful aspect of this production is its
technical ingenuity. To say this movie was well
photographed would be a shameful understatement.
There are elements which transcend photography shadows falling disconcertingly on people's faces ,
light streaming through trees, inspired cam.-a angles,
and eerie colors that maintain realism through an
exercise in craft. That is, although there are
variegated and imaginative effects, the prime rule 1s
that the events sould seem real and not "film- y ".
Casting was also well done and deserves
mention. Professors look like professors. Mother
look like mother. Stupid people in crowds look l1ke
crowded, stupid people. Even secret agents that
aren't su~sed to look like secret agents look the
parts (if that is possible). This could do nothing but
add to the atmosphere of realism established by the
camera work .
This atmosphere is more than just realism. A
perfect example of the surreal ism of the general
mood is the "dance scene". In this, two women
(principles in the moviel dance with each other . This
sight is, because of its incongruity, quite funny and
when you add to it some very humorous musrc.
laughter of the girls and the strange, old·fashioned
dresses it is easy to imagine a very laughable scene.
But, due to the atmosphere established in the
actors' faces, the scenes directly before this one, the
camera work, and some intangible quality the fil m
seemed to have, I found myself thinking that 1
would not and could not laugh even if Heonv
Youngman himself pranced into the scene and began
telling abou t his wife's cooking.
.
The brillant meo in charge of this picture did me
one better. Instead of dear Henny, they brought the
cameras to focus upon a picture of Stan Laurel and
Oliver Hardy . Right 011 the nose, {J8fltlemen
Laughter tPat chokes.

Aeterv.tions
The two things that kept this film, which just
ended a short run at the North Park Theater fro m
being a great film could have been avoided, I 'th1nk
The first is a sort of jig·saw effect which the movre
has. I hate to harp on this, but it seems to me that a
movie, even if it is going to be mede intentionally
"choppy " should start fitting together a little earlier
It is fine if the viewer has a plot to unravel , but there
should be some way of knowing if one is unraveling
properly. A few clues here and there would no t have
hurt .
The second thmg that makes the film only " very
good" Is tha! it is neither intensely introspective
enough to fall into the class of Straw Dogs nor "b1g"
enough to be grouped w ith Ben Hur. It exrsts rn the
vast limbo somewhere between them and due to thrs
lack of direction ("direction" is the wrong word. but
so is " focus ; I guess "d trection" is better than
"focus", though) it is not great. But, as I say, 1t rs
really very good and well worth seeino if reissuP.Ci

Canned Heet and John Lee Hooker will perform in
the new gym at Buffalo St.te this coming Monday
night at 7 and 10:30. Canned Heat is one of the
reverent blues bltnds around and John Lee Hooker is
and old blues giant.

�CANJSIUS COllEGE and BUFFALO FESTIVAL pretentt

"YES~' ...

J. GElS

Sunday, February 20th at 8 P.M.
KLEINHANS MUSIC HAlL
AJf Seef• ••..,...cl . .._. ,._, $S.JO- J4.JO ....., ...JO - . . . .
ndteto .,. a.M at a.M..a. ,...... 1'1dl.t OMce, ,._..., Hlltft
LM.y (..... ....Mtw ~e4 wlttt .......... ..-..~.... _..,..);
c...~.. ~· u....., u. a. Nefta. Mal; ..... Celleee ndlet OMc.;

...._ TWI•"- H..._.. .......

~

...._

EVElY 1M SHOULD ET

AFREE·RYIC ST£WARDESS

once illis ifelile.

..

!Ill"¥:e:t-.c=:+
-.. ,..AUt,..,.,....
,.,..~

Pr0due4CI- D i - b)' J4CII( O'CONNELL
Roclt Score P , _ b)' MAIIfMO liiAHH

GRANADA
SUCB Concert Committee

Presents

Canned Heat
John Lee Hooker
and

-men Ieee

Carly Simon out of her
league at Kleinhans Hall
I wound up at Kleinhans Saturday night
purely by acc1dent. I was all set to see
Bananas. when a friend, who was supposed to
review the Carty Simon - Mickey Newbury
concert, called and said he was sick I said I'd
do it for him so here it is.
The only thing that Carty Simon and
Mickey Newbury have in common is the fact
that they both d1dn 't belong in Kleinhans at
all . But the d ifference between the places
where each of them do belong is quite vast.
Let me explain
M1ckey, whose biggest claim to fame 1s the
fact that he authored the First Ed1tion hit, "I
Just Dropped In To See What Condition My
Condition Was In," definitely deserves
somethmg nice said about him, because he is
an extremely pleasant per former . There was
really nothmg special about h1s songs,
although he did do the ftrst earthquake song
I've ever heard .
The biggest th1ng he has going for him is
his congen1allty. but that attribute alone 1s
not going to carry a performer m a place the
size of Kle1nhans I think Mickey's best bet
would be to play bars and small clubs,
especially m places where the people are the
type who could relate and react to his easy
going, down home style The success of h1s
set depends upon establishmg a personal
rapport w1th h1s aud1ence. a much easier task
to accomplish w1thin the close confmes of a
coffeehouse . Good luck Mickey .
Pompous and obnoxious
After a brief intermission. Carly waked on
1n a long, flowmg black dress. I've never really
given her too much of my musical t1me, but I
was all set for an enjoyable show and a
possible new name to fill my already filled
record columns. What I got instead was
probably one of the most obnoxious,
pompous, blatantly pretentious performances
I have ever witnessed in my life. C,rly Simon
belongs in one of two places ; either on the
Johnny Carson Show, or in the cocktail
lounge of the Concord Hotel.
Carty's set was more filled with her
oratory and playful egolsms, then the music
she seems to claim i~ so superb. Sure, n~ one

is denying she has a powerful voice, but her
stage antics destroy any poss1ble en,oyment
one might receive from her . For example,
after breaking a string on her guitar. early
offered, in jest, to auction it otf as a rock and
roll souvenir . After receiving the laughter she
wanted, she said, "But seriously, who wants
my guitar string." What gall'
Later on 1n me show. when someone
requested that the volume be turned up,
Carty asked the rest of the aud1ence if she was
loud enough . Upon receiving a pos1t1ve
response, Carty rephed, " Lady, you must be a
freak . Why don't you come up here so I can
see you."
Mus1cally . 1t was standard Carly S1mon
matenal (she sa1d that). w1th "Angel from
Montgomery" by John Prine and a Kns
Knstofferson tune (thank God 1t wasn 't
"Bobby McGee") thrown m also . The only
musical worth in her show was provided by
James Ryan , her gu1tiH1st . He did some nite
work, espec1ally on " Love IS Growmg "
She fin1 shed her set with her latest h1t
"Anticipation," and then walked oH to the
thunderous applause of the predommantly
female, h igh school aud1ence. Upon returnmg,
Carty made more trrelevant small talk, th1s
time thank1ng the ushers m the balcony for
dotng such an outstandmg JOb. Her vo1~:.e was
dnpprng w1th condescension, as 1t was the
enttre evenmg. For her encore, she d1d her
first b1g h1t, "That's the Way I've Always
Heard It Should Be." and the Beatie's
"Ob La·Di, Ob·La·Da."
I'm sorry Carty, you just d1dn 't deserve to
perform on the same stage that wrthtn the
next two weeks will be graced by such rock
and roll luminaries as J . Geils and Raymond
Douglas Dav1es. Before you ever peform
again, you should be requtred to attend at
least ten Pete Seeger concerts. Then maybe
you'll have some idea about what humrlity
and d1gnity are, and after that, maybe you'll
come to realize what it means to be a
performer.

-Terry Bromberg
Jesse E. Levine

Lighting by Greased Lightning Lite Show

February 21 , 7:00 and 10:30
At the New Gym, Buffalo State Campus
Tickets for

Students $1 .76

Non..-tudents $2.50

!&gt;turt1 Wedru!IUilY Ul &gt;f' m .

NOW
~
:-..
IN ITS
THIRD
M0 N T H

}.

'\·· \
' "\ •&lt;~\

,+ '
• I

~~
PANAYI~

COLOR

u....~

TONIGHT at 8 :15p.m.

Plaza North
IISI II. r. ILWI. 1M-1Ut

......

Tickets
Available
At Box Office
Performance.

�Regal Rockers
It's not what you do, it's
how you do it, and Sunct.y night, 8 p.m. at
Kleinhans Music Hall the
J. Geils Band will once
more derange Buffalo.
The last time they were
here, in October, they
provided the only exciting moment that War
Memorial Stadium was
good for.
The boys in the band are
Peter

Wolf, boogalooer

supreme and Universal
perverser, the man - J.
Geils, the gangner of
love ; Seth "Tarzan"
Justman, the keyboard
puncher ; Magic Dick,
player of the magic: harp
(or Mississippi saxophone,
if you know what I
mean) ; bassist Danny
Klein and rubber footed
drummer Stephen Bladd.
Their latest Atlantic lp,
The Morning After, has
been zooming steadily up
the charts since its releese. They play blues, r
'n' b, rock. You name it
they do it. They got roots
that reach about as deep
es you can go, and they
know what to do and
how to do it.
Also on the bill is Yes,
that English band that has
a lot of people excited .
They're headed towards
stardom , and they're
more than efficient in
their playing and singing.
So go out and take it with
you baby, cause we're
gonna make this one
craaazzy.

Pete Seeger can
charm a lot of
people with his
variety of songs
by Terry Bromberg

WICIW AND IUffAlO fiSTIVAl Pf'. . ."t

DON McLEAN
IN CONCERT

Su nday, Feb

27 at 8:30 PM
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

All Seats Reserved: $4.50 - First buyers get BEST seats
Tickeh on •ole now 0.1 tvHolo felti"ol l lck et Office, Stott•, Hihon lobby
('".Jit-otd•, ouepted wtt'tt ttomf"cl t-•lf·odckeued .-.velope); U.l No,ton
Hall ; State Coli. .• Ticket Offi«. 'oltt licit•• . Ha•bede Ploa.o, Niogoro

foil•

Noone •
can restst
our chicken wings.
They're the Woodshed's newest taste sensation,
mild, medium or hot. Swirl'em around in tangy
blue chet!se sauce, and finish the experience with
c ri ~py celery sticks. Non-stop peanuts are on
the house, and spirits art !lOc- after 3 P. M. The
Woodshed ... where t he kiU:hen's a lways open
and the music's a lways on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North Tonawanda, just over
the Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann. The Woodshed's
open from 11:30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

-rttE WllD~SH&amp;~

everyone singing along (a quite normal occurrence at
a Pete Seeger concert). and my all time favo rit11
children's song, "Abeyoyo."
You see, when I was younger, my mother would
always take me to Pete's children's concerts at Town
Hall in New York City. And when whenever I went.
he would always sing "Abeyoyo", a story of mag1c
and monsters and ukuleles. So on Sunday, I was
secretly hoping he would do it, and when he did , 1t
was every bit as good as it was twelve years ago .
For those people who came to hear some good
old folk music, Pete treated them to "Th is Land IS
Your Land," "Guantanamera" and "Rainbow
Race." And if you came to hear some countt y
pickin', Pete did "Old Joe Clark" and "The Goofing
Off Theme." On these tunes, Pete exhibited some of
the best pick in' this side of Doc Watson .

This is, by far, the most difficult review I've had
to write in my short. but sweet, career as a music
critic. I think the reason behind my difficulties is the
axiom that its easy to know what you dislike, and
it's much more difficult to express why you like
something. And carrying this one step further, its
even harder to write about someone you not only
like, but absolutely love, admire and respect. That
just about sums up my feelings toward Pete Seeger,
and if you failed to see him on Sunday, which I
know most of you did, you have no one to blame
but yourselves. But don't fret, because Pete will be
around for a good while longer , He is "as constant as
the North Star."
But even though there were few State University
of Buffalo students at Bennett High School, the
auditorium was still packed. It was filled with people American Pie
from the ages of five to 60, and I don 't think that
Pete even did "American Pie," and I know of no
any of them left unsatisfied. You see, it really one else who could turn it into an enjoyable number
doesn't matter who Pete is playing for , because he For as Pete said : "you can spend all day figuring out
knows enough songs about enough topics to delight who's who in this song, but I like it simply for the
everyone. Which is exactly what he did. He is about chorus. It makes a great sing along." That it does,
the most universal performer I have ever seen.
and that is exactly how he used it.
He began his performance by doing " I Ain't Got
An afternoon, or evening, with Pete Seeger is an
No Home In This World Anymore," in tribute to his experience almost spiritual in nature. Pete is now 52
most important influence, the late Woody Guthrie. and it's hard to believe that one man could continue
Throughout the show, Pete made references to the to be so joyous after all those yeacs of performing.
fact that Woody was a completely do·it·yourself, But he is no different now than he was twelve years
self-taught musician. The same. obviously, 90es for ago, except, maybe, for his beard and the grayness of
Pete.
his hair. He really makes you stop and realize the
beauty of being alive. I think we would all be better
Politics and children's songs
ott if it was compulsory to experience Pete Seeger
For those who wanted to hear political songs once every three months. He's that n;vitali zing.
(although Pete does not have to sing politics to be ·
I witnessed a scene as I was leaving Bennen that
political ; he, like very few others, lives his politics). put the whole thing into proper perspective for me.
he did "Last Train to Nuremburg" (written about A father, about 35, was walking with his son, who
the November 1969 March on Washington). Country must have been eight or nine. The father was
Joe's "I Feel Like I'm Fixing To Die Rag" and a whistling "Old Joe Clark" and his son was singing
really incisive tune about the harsh realities of ''Abeyoyo." Anytime a performer can reach people
revolution. And since the concert was sponsored by who are separated by 25 years, he must be on the
the Women's Club of the State University of Buffalo, right track. Pete Seeger is as right as you can get.
Pete sang a Women's Lib version of the childrens
"Old Devil Hate,
song, "There Was An Old Lady Who Swallowed A
I knew you long ago,
Fly." Pete sang it as "There Was An Old Lady Who
Then I found out,
Swallowed A Lie.·•
The poison in your breath,
Since there were many children in attendance,
Now when we hear your lies,
Pete also did a number of the children's songs that
My lovers gather round,
the kids really liked (I did also). Included were "The
Andflelp to fight you.
Green Grass Grows All Around, " on which he had
Orie more time."

�French films go
down with dubbing
by Elliot Krieger
Spctrum Film Critic

The North P.tt Theeter on
Hertel Avenue is becoming the
world's art theater for illiterates.
last week 1 dubbed version of
Th• Conformist e~me in and out
of town faster than an extra in a
French comedy; this week they
are showil1g dubbed versions of
Francois Truffaut's Bed and
BOIJI'd and Eric Rohmer's Claire's
KnM. We're not likely to find a
more interesting double·feature in
any Buffalo theater for some
time, so I hate to discourage
attendance. I just wish that there
were some (economic) way to tell
theater managers who exercise
options and snat ch films from
non-commericial groups (UUAB,
tor example) that those of us
intef'eSted in foreign films ill'"e
perfectly capable of readjng
English subtitles.
B«J snd BOMd suffers ttlrough
its dubbing - it is Chaeaubriand
with catsup, Mouton Rotsch ild
on·the· rocks. We are watching a
comedy of m1nners 1n a
petit-bourgeoi~ quaner of Paris,
but we are hearing the voices of
the Bronx . This is cultural
schizophrenia - I kept stra ining
my ears to hear what the
Frenchmen were say 1ng above the
clatter of those Americans. This is
not dubbing - it's drubbing!
Bed and Board must be a very
good movie indeed, because it still
seems
despite this change. It
1s a pity to see the scenes Truffaut
c an handle so well - the
overlapping dialoguea, the pouty
argumenq. the whil~ secrets
- fall1ng completely flet. And we
ltjjl bow "'-' this it .. VC)Od
movie.
People have said that this film
remmds them of televiSIOn. Yes, I
can understand thts, but tt would
be a supra - television, purged of
all dross and ftne as French
crystal. BBd and Bosrd 1s probably
··nothmg more" than • comic
drama, but a.s such 11 ts nearly
perfect

siood.

Film BiOGraphy
A sequel to Stolen Kisses , Bed
and Board do cu ments the
marriage of the Doinel's
(Jean-Pierre leaud and C laude
Jade) . Antione Doinel, who has
grown from the buffetted hero of
400 Blows to the buftetting hero
of Bed and Bo11rd has become, by
now, Truffaut's urban savage, the
perfect melange of the noble and
the tgnoble, perhaps the most
fully developed character 10 the
htstory of film
Truffaut has been the most
gentle of directors, and he remams
so. His satires of the French
bour geoise and aspering
bourgeoiStJ, if done by, say
Chabrol, or by any number of
English dtrectors, could be sour,
heavy and awful. But Truffaut's
sattre is delicate and poignant, and
takes care always to posit an
acceptable world beside the world
being satirized as well as to endow
the sa t irized world with
c haracteristically accPptatlle

aspects. Perhaps B«&lt; ~ BONd i:.
not flrst ·rate Truffaut, but it is
Truffaut, and, as such, is first-rate
cinema.

Second Feature
Clsire's Kn#le makes • very
interesting contrast to Bed 11nd
Bosrd . They are tru l y
complementary films, exempla of
the two opposite aspects of
French cinema's dialectic . Where
Truffaut is curious and cinematic,
Eric Rohmer is ponderous and
literate . I often feel that
Truffaut ' s films would be
interesting and informative even
in silence. Rohmer seems to
depend entirely on attractive
scenery to keep us visually alert .
But where Rohmer's films lack
vtsual imagination, their literary
imaginati on more th•n
com pensates . In his films
1.ntelligent people speak
tntelligently, and (sad comment
on contemporary cinema) this
makes htS work exceptional. His
f1lms do not just make points,
they have themes. Hence, ' his
accu rate but somewhat whimsical
characterization of several of his
films as "moral tales."
Cl11ire's Knee , the fifth of these
fllles , •s about possesston and
desire. A young French diplomat
(Jean·Ciaude Brialy) toys with the
infatuation a young girl (Marie
Christine Barrault) feels for htm ,
while he slyly persues her elusive
older sister. He seems to believe
that possession must follow his
desire, simply because of the
strength of his desire. He is subtly
exposed (to ell but himself) as
hypocr iti~l and ineffectual. And
yet , precisely because the
protaganist can not consummate
h1s egoistiC and chauvmist des1re,
the film ends on an opttmtsttc, tf
you will a "moral," note.

Literate Satire
Claire's KnetJ , hke Bed and
Bosrd, is also a movie w1th a
certain satirical intent - this time
of the French aristocracy and tdle
class. It is Rohmer 's unrelenting
1ntellignece that keeps his film
from back·firing while shooting at
the sitting duck . perceive hts
characters as people wtth great
problems, but they are people,
and people who jive through their
problems - not caricatures who
hover and flutter between crises as
tn the much over rated
pseudo·literate Sunday Bloody
Sunday. Claire's Knee is a movie
that could easily have been
terrible. and yet is, mtraculously ,
nearly great
Because of tt)e nature of the
characters tn Claire's Knee - they
are diplomats and ex-patriot
writers - we don't find 1t
awkward to hear them speak1ng
English. There IS not much
specifically "French" about the
!tim . All that we lose by its being
dubbed Is s everal acting
performances. And surely, none
of us go to the theater because of
the acting. Or do we?

'Hamlet' is coming
CAC presents tfle Nicol Williamsqn version of
the movie Hamlet on Friday, Saturday and Monday,
Feb. 18, 19 and 21. Directed by Tony Richardson (
The Lonliness of a Long Distance Runner), this
version is considered by many to be finet than the
Olivier version.
Nicol Williamson has been acclaimed as one of
tfle most brilliant acton of his generation. The film
will be shown in Capen 140 at 7 :30 and 9 :30p.m .
Tickets are $.75 and can be purchased at the Norton
Hall ticket Office.

Polish absiU'dities
Out at

See • bizarre play b y Potish

lblurditt St.womtr Mrozek, will
be perlonn.. In the FiUmon
Room on Fib. 24 at t p .m . .net
Fib. 26 .net 2e at 8 :30p.m . The
play h• bMn d lrcted by EIYM
G~hut • a play fof women. It
II ebout Ute ai)C)Qfypse and
cannab 1tltm . Adml•ion for
students Is $.50.

'Minnie and Moskowitz': film
that questions, doesn't answer
by Jeffrey Linder
SptJCtrum F1/m CritiC

Minnie snd Moskowitz struck me as being a
rather small film . Small in the sense that it has little
to offer and thus is a f1lm that will most likely sift
through one or two Queen City thea\ers and
apathetically retire behmd the sparkle of films like A
Clockwork Orenge
John Cassevetes who wrote the script and
directed Minnie and Moskowitz ts well remembered
for Fttcn an Important ftlm of the late si)(ties. This
new film mtght have succeeded as a h•lanous spoof
on spontaneity but somehow It JUSt never tllkes root .

portrayed on the screen and at home. These people
were made out to be larger than life , made out to be
nothing less than Supermen who could act in a
pre-meditated way or spontaneously and always find
themselves doing the respectable thing, because it
was expected of them .
In order for our movie to be called Minnie and
Moskowitz Minnie and Moskowitz have got to meet.
They do the very next day after Minnie has seen
C.SIIblsnca

Just as Minn1e is betng male-chauvanized by a
terribly boisterous California nch·man in Seymour's
restaurant parktng lot he comes to the rescue in a
Humphrey Bogart style "hop into my car, Honey"
rout tne. For a moment Seymour fits in and the scene
Spontaneity and fife
goes well . It almost feels ltke any one of a thousand
Throughout the film Cassevetes asks the viewer
scenes from any Bogart film . For that one moment
to· judge various sttuattons and decide II they are the movie is as large, as Seymour appears.
"right" sttuations. Unfortunately we are never able
But the film settles down into its portrayal of
to dtscover through the content of the film how ' real life, as Minnie asks to be let out. Seymour
Cassevetes feels about these kinds of situations. He Mosko witz doesn 't change - he remains that
just poses awkward lines and silences that come obnoxious and over·zealous dizzard because he
attempts to come across as a character that is larger
than the life he leads. For thts reason Seymour
Moskowitz ts Singularly detestable.

across as being funny at first but get decidedly more
SillY as the film skips along.
Spontaneity seems to be at the center of
whatever Cassevetes ts asking us to discover. Can we
ltve our tnsptrattons out in everyday modern soctety?
Seymour Moskowitz , played in the film by Semour
Cassel, surely th1nks so He is, by profession, a
car-parker He IS, tn mOf'e descriptive terms, an
obnoxtous and over zealous dtzzard.
He goes to Califorma to park cars rather than
park cars in New York City. But Seymour barely
seems to think about tt at all His reason •s
that
well it's never made t oo clar why, but by
guess tS that he simply feels like tt. Don't think
Seymour, just go. Or in a more colloquaal phrase
Don' t look before you leap.
Enter Minnie
While Seymour sets h imself up in Califorma we
meet Minnie Moore, played by Gena Rowlands, and
ftnd her enjoying the last moments of an old
Humphrey Bogard flick called CasablsncsCssablanC8
was f1r1t released in 1943, Hollywood was in the
midst of tts "Golden Era" and a star, like Bogart,
could be thought of as a Mr. Perfect Scenes 'of
glamour were built not only into thei r scripts but
right tnto their personal lives by the "Silver Screen"
type magazines.
The life they lived was as large as they were

Do it!
Now Seymour's philosophy, as menttoned
before, is that ot spontaneity That 1s "do ttl " If one
feels hke runnmg away from a problem, for example,
one should naturelly do it. And t1e dernonnr•tes this
wonderfully as he !nerally runs away from Minnie.
We as vtewers ask ourselves tf Seymour is correct in
hts phtlosophy. We watt Posstbly Cassevetes will clue
us in on 8 more baste questton that can arise from
this one.
John Cassevetes, I dtscovered , has a fam1ly w•th
cyeat talent 1n the fteld of dramatics He casts
htmself (as Mtnnte's secret lover). his wtfe (h•s wtfe
in the ftlm) , hu three children (has three chtldren in
the film) , and hts mother as Seymour 's mother.
Cassevetes h1mself is venly a fme actor and through
vartous plot changes he must tell Minnie their affair
must come to an end . When he does this he b rings
his son along to meet Minnte, then , as his son
dissappears for a moment, they have tt out and the
affatr ts closed .
But why bring the son? I suppose to ask us the
same questton Cassevetes wants to ask us about
Seymour's spontaneity Is tt respectful or even just
to bnng hts son? Is Seymour Moskowitz' philosophy
of spontaneity applicable 1n every Situation? I
wanted to see Cassevetes gtve me an answer but some
how he never gets around to It

Atn 't it cute
Probably the best th1ng the film has to offer •s
Cassevetes's o.....n mother who IS cast as Seymour's
mother She doesn 't play that stereo-typed Jew•sh
mother but rather a neat m•xture of that and
lame·bramed honesty
When whe meets Mtnnte she says, 10 front of
Mtnnte, her mother and Seymour, "Ooo Seymour ,
she has a good body ." She then proceeds to descrabe
Seymour as a "bum" and attempts to discourage
M1nnte's mother from liking Seymour or herself in
any way . To th is Seymour adds · " Aw shit Mal " I
found it the cutest scene of the picture ("cute" is
the best I could muster here) but It still asks the
same questions wtthout giving any kind of answer.
The fil'1" drivels on l1ke that and Seymour gets more
spontaneous than ever .
Is spontaneity "nght?" Can you do something anything - just because you feel like doing it i' It's a
prety basic question about government, soctety and
freedom and the next question should be, "Can you yell 'fire' tn ·a crowded theater because you feel like
tt?" But Cassevetes's script doesn't really get down
to rooty questions about the nature of spontaneity
and if it is 8 good thtng The f1lm remains a zany and
almost pointless toozle that just doesn't seem quite
n!tft.

�Undll Ronttlldt (c.pitof SM~)
If yo(J don't lll&lt;e country music, you're
not going to like the album or the review.
so stop right here. However, If you do like
it, then you're going to love Lln&lt;M
Ronn.dt and the review won't maner, but
read It anyway - it'll prepare you for a
superb album. She's been trylng for some
lime {four previous albums. two of them
solo) but Ronstadt has at last put out a
really good record, one of the finest yet
from the country·rock area. She rocks and
wails on modern stuff like Jackson
Browne's "Rock Me On the Water," Neil
Young's " Birds." and Livingston Taylor's
" In My Reply,'' then slows it down and
sails on country classics like " I Fall to
Pieces," "Crazy Arms" and " I Still Miss
Someone"
She has always been capable of singing a
great song, "Different Drum, Break My
Mind, Long, Long Time, The Only Mama
That'll Walk the Line" and "Louise," but
they were gems en a tarnished setting.
Producers consistently ruened her best
effons w1th atrocious arrangements and
godawtul backmg - from orchestrated
uptown to gospel quanets to laggardly
' rock bands.
This and terribly uneven matenal made
her two solo lp's ragged and
inconsequential. When she did let go, on
" Long, Long Time," for example, she set
the woods afire, but the two albums Hand Sown ... Home Grown and Silk
Purse - ended up as third-rate saloon
music.
Now, finally, Linda has got hold of
three essentials : a good band, ten excellent
songs and a decent producer. The result 1s
an album which sets Linda Ronstadt down
as one of the few young talents in country
music, and popular music too for that
matter.
Supported for the first time by a band
that complements instead of h1nders, L1nda
exhibits an increasing vocal maturity and
feeling . She obviously found a backeng
that's comfonable Don Henley, drums and
M1ke Bowden, bass (both former members
of the defunct Texas country·rock group
Sh1loh) make up the ry th m sect1on . Glenn
Frey and John Boylan (who produced the
album) play gu1tars and along with Henley
add background vocals.
A1ded on var~ous cuts by the likes of
Sneeky Pet• (steel guitar) . Randy Meisner
(bass and backing vocals), Bernie Leadon
lgu1tar and backing vocals) . Herb Pedersen
(guitar and backing vocals) and Buddy
Emmons (steel guitar) the band provides
the easy but well-stated accompaniment
that Ronstadt has needed. Not a lot of
instrumental electricity, JUSt a versat1le

I

RECORDS

underpinning for Linda's make-'em-weep
vocals.
Well, she's got the band , how about the
songs? There are ten of them, five to each
16 minute side, three of them recorded live
at the Troubadour - a half hour of artfully
balanced music that Is always pleasant, but
never tedious. Boylan has done an
excellent job of putting the songs into a
whole.
·
Take "Crazy Arm5," for mstance. Talk
about chestnuts, everyone from Ma Kettle
to Melba Montgomery has taken a crack at
it. Lenda tries too, and it comes o ff ; you
know she mNns 1t when she moans : Blue
ain't the word for the way that I feel / And
a storm is brewing in this heart o f mine/
This ain't no crazy dream, I know it's for
real / Cause you're someone else's love now,
you're not mine.
This packs more feeling than any of
Tammy Wynette's triple forte hits. With
Sneaky Pete pulling long, mournfull
gllssnados and G1b Guilbeau makmg his
fiddle ay , this IS rsal country mus1c, white
soul.
Now take another hunk of country
gold, "I Fall to Pieces," done live. Patsy
Cline owns that one, yet Linda comes close
to topping the departed queen with a nice,
quiet rendition. once again replacing the
usual bellowing w1th tearful restraint.
Likewise, two other old1es, "I Still Miss
Someone" and "Ramblin ' Round" are
treated gently by the band and Linda. Both
ooze with a Sltlln'·on the·porch-&amp; ·pickin'
1ntimacy. while Leadon and Pedersen make
some of the prettiest music of the lives
Sweet and low. they pick a late evening
backdrop for Linda's sorrowful vocals.
That takes CAire of the pure country
stuff and leaves five songs of modern,
folkish origin . Each lends itself very well to
the band's arrangements and comes off
with all the power of the original
performer Right there 1s the real success of
the album , I thmk, that Linda and the
music1ans can so skillfully blend good
country and good pop, yet retain a style
wtuch 1s 1tself commendable.
Perhaps the best smgle example is "In
My Reply," a number that couldn't have
been done better. Linda's voice is so
soothing it's soporif1c and Sneaky Pete's
bell tones exquisite. S1m1larly, "Birds" and
"Faithful" by Eric Anderson are treated
r.arefully, neither particularly outstanding,
just very easy and beautiful listening .
Sw1tching energy levels, Linda really
roc ks through the last three songs. Her
vers1n n nf "Rock Me On the Water" gets

un!versity
unton
activities
board

e
e

e
B

e
n
-, t

s

the album off to a good start. but seems to
head In the wrong direction. Still , it's not
eesy to equal, let alone improve, Browne's
own version. Neither Is it easy to cut a song
at Muscle Shoals and be heard above the
studio musicians and the backing vocals of
Merry Clayton, Dianne Davidson, and Miss
Ona, but Linda wails with reli$h and shouts
the sisters down. doing Eric Kaz' " I Won't
Be Hangin' Round."
" Resc ue Me," the last cut on the album.
a numb« by W.C. Sm ith and R. Minef,
throbs with heat from the high-stepping
gu1tar intro straight through to the climax,
featuring a shouting match between Linda
and Glenn Frey. With the audience o n their
feet and cheering for more Linda goes to
it : Love me. baby/ Ohhh , baby/ owww.
baby/ ahhh , BABY!
That's 1t - Linda Ronstadt. Find out
what country music can be. Ohh, baby!

Into the Purple Valley Ry Cooder (RIIpt'ls•
MS2052)
Ry Cooder is one of those strange breed
of studio musicians who finally got a
chance to step into the foreground . About
the best description of the world of studio
musiciandom IS expressed by Ray Davies'
song "Session Man," in which the session
man is not paid to think, just play .
Ry Cooder's sessionr; have been with the
Doors, the Stones and with Paul Revere
and the Raiders, among others. All of th is
work, though, has absolu tely nothing to do
with Ry's own music, the music he wants
to play and enjoys playing. That's why
there are R y Cooder albums.
Into the Purple Valley is Cooder's
second solo release. H1s first one was a
strange mixture of genres that resulted in a
lot o f hit and miss. He butchered Woody

SATURDAY

A POETRY READING

A

k
E
D

d

FRIDAY, FEB. 18th

JAMES WRIGHT

n .......................................................
t
e
FILLMORE ROOM

w

- Billy Altm.n

THE UUAB LITERARY ARTS COMM ITTEE PRESENTS

- -E
p
r

I

-Jim McF11n0n

Guthrie's " Do Re Ml" and another oldie
vemon of Sleepy
John Estes' "Goin' to Brownsville" was a
gem, as W8S "Alimony," The distinct
imbalance made for interesting conjecture
as to how this one would tvrn out .
Fortunatefy for us, Ry has taken the best
of his first album and added a touch of
class. The result Is one fine record .
As usual, there are alot of traditional
folk and blues. but the arrangements here
are perfect. Ry seems to have settled in his
niche and It's a good one to be in. His blues
tunes sound like 30's records w ithout the
surface noise. He is a great, if sometimes
predictable musician. equally at home on
slide guitar and mandolin. He is possibly
the only white mandolin player to use the
old blues style and it's fascinating. "Billy
the Kid," a simple ballad abou t the death
of the outlaw, is compelling mainly
because of the tension that's set up
between the vocal and the instrument.
Much of the self·assurance that Cooder
lacked in his vocals before is now evident .
And so he tackles Clyde McPhatter's
" Money Honey " and supported by great
back·up vocals by Claudis Llnnear, Gloria
Jones, Donna Washburn and Donna Weiss,
he pulls off a rollicking, funky rendition .
The same with Dicky Doo's (remember
Dicky Doo and the Don'ts?) "Teardrops
Will Fall ." Staning with the great fifties
guitar, Cooder comes up with an aching
vocal that perfectly suits the classic lyrics :
"When I dim the lights in my room
toni~t . teardrops will fall. "
" F .D.R in Tnnidad .'' about just that, is
a great bit of tongue-in-cheek with Fritz
Richmond on washtub bass and Milt
Hooland on percussion . The musicians
helping out, J1m Keltner, Chris Ethridge,
Jim Dickinson (who co·produced the
album) and Van Dyke Parks, do a superb
job th roughout.
Any mistakes in the aforementioned
" Do Re Mi" from the first album are more
than made up for on Guth rie's "Vigilante
Man," a haunting lament to those secret
eyes and guns that shoot our bt-others and
SISters down Ry'5 bottleneck work has
never been better. And one instrumental.
"Great Dram from Heaven," shows that
Mr Cooder isn't too bad without that little
tube on his pinky .
·
Once you get used to his low, drunken
voice, you should have no trouble
thoroughly enjoying this album . Now that
Jamming with Edward is out, Ry can't
bitch anymore about the fact that the
Stones decided he wasn't th e man to
replace Brian Jones. Instead he can
concentrate on his own music and his own
talent, both of which are much needed
and, hopefully, much enJOyed.

''OM Meatball.'' But his

ADMISSION F R E E

FtNE AR1S FILM CO\M TTEE
presents

Feb. 19

r
t

8:00p.m.

FRIDAY &amp; SUNDAY
Feb 18 &amp; 20

AMOVIE
IN THE
TRADIT10N

i

George Segal
Ruth Gordon

OFTHf

MARX

in

BROS.
EMILE d'e ANTONIO'S

:!IILLHOUSE e

W·HERE'S POPPA
CONFERENCE THEATRE

'ti CKETS: STUDENTS 50¢ before 6 p.m. - 75¢ after - Faculty, Staff, Alumni - $1.25

�Reviews of concerts are documents tormented,
formidable (meaning structured) and fashioned after
something whictl as already come to pass. They are
documents of history. and a· review of a Captain
Beefheart concert is a contradiction to a mood of
the Captain 's which blames most of the stagnation
and uncreative responsiveness of humankind on
history. on museums which preserve history and
facts .
" I once went to an art gallery to see some Van
Gogh paintings, some of them made me want to
scream , 10 I did and was asked to Ieaiie, so you see
how long it took Van Gogh to get into the museum
and how long it took me to get out." Therefore it's
only suitable to review a Capt. concert, for
contradiction (the basis of most of the Captain's art
and most r ea l a r t ) breeds a spontaneous
consciousneu which in turn breeds a flashing
momentary truth/freedo m awareness.
Freaky gfease band
little Feat had just fi nished an amazingly
soothing, yet raunchy. set which included sublime
versions of " Truck Stop Girl," " Hamburger
Midn1ght" and "Willing," all from their first album .
Coupled with some new material which mcluded
"A Political Blues" and " EI Dorado Slim," this
grease encrusted trucker freak band (which mcl udes
Lowell George, Bill Payne, Rich Hayward, and Roy
Estrada) were a constant joy with their ever changing
rhythm patterns (provided by B1ll Payne's piano)
and the very American (almost as American as The
Band or even Don McClean, if you know what I
mean) Iynes. Rich Hayward was a joy to watch with
h1s exactitude and facial dexterity which reminded
thiS revtewer of the o ld Jun1or Wells tune "Stomach
Ache " Bes1des anytime you get to see Roy Estrada
1t's an occass1on.
Some s1lence and alot of t1me go by un til the
~::qutpment on the stage is set up for the next act
whtch JUst happens to be Capta•n Beefheart and his
Mag1c Band.
After some fiddlin ' around by the be-shadowed
members of the Magic Band which created the
proper amount of atmosphereic tension the spotlight
blasts on and engulfs the jaw-droppin' stght of
Rockette Morton dressed in a white and red bird
pnnt su1t , red leather shoes with stacked heels
(wooden, of course) seven inches of moustache,
eventng hat, and strapped around h is $houlder a
brdmJ new Ftmder Bass. At first there were a few
dtsappoln ted sighs from the Rockette Morton
afftctenados who were hoping he still played his o ld
beat up double-necked bass, but after all , that's rock
n'roll 1sn't lt .
The Spotlight Kid
Brilliant flash of white and the Spotlight K1d for
the ntght launchs into a bass lead solo which
accomplishes thmg:s o n the bass guitar that ain 't been
thought of yet. Coupled w ith the incredible sounds

are 1tle Incredible body movements of Rockette as
he bobs and weaves around the stage dippifl11 and

twirling es he's playing:
Capt. Poem Interlude One: And What of
Rockene Morton? :
" The htMd catonic from the
roller rink
nmk n' rambunctions are employed
in this plt18unt pussy
his crabby whisktNS above his
ftJtJt-ln glass houu sleepers
drinkl yellow milk from cocker·
spllniel nil/li fe number pllintings
just another nose in this f ine
leather co•t cat howling on
griNN) gravel tllr fNIPflr
the whole world Is his Wlllk. "
- Don Van Vliet

After a few minutes he stops, walks to the
microphone and says, "Turn Me l oose" as he dips
and launchs into the bass line from "Blabber n'
Smoke" a tune wnnen by the Capt's w ife Jan who's
a very quiet and nice person.
The Cosmic Trucker
As the bass continues. drummer Ed Manmba
(the Cosm1c Trucker) walks on stage, dressed m
green suit, green cap, monocle, and green moustache
He walks to center stage eyes fixed on Rockette who
plays a few more notes stops suddenly and jumps in
the air in ta ndem with Marimba, they beat out a few
cosmic foo t stomps, the bass begins anew, stops, the
same scene, Manmba s1ts down to his drums and
begins to play
Sneakmg onto stage on the nght 1s Zoot Horn
Rollo the lead guitartst for the band. He stands s1x
foot seven m boots, s•x five Without, and was dressed
in a brown and green checkered sun and small
goatee. Talkmg With him later we find out that he's
only been playmg guitar for four years (smce he was
fourteen). and he knew all along that he would end
up playing in the Magic Band.
Coming up on the other end of the stage was
Winged Eel Fingerling an acid burnout if ever there
was one ·
Capt. Poem Interlude Two · The W1nged Eel
" No 8 .0 . for thts boy
i t 'Jiike • w inged eel fingerling

crawling thru lime jtlllo
it ~ a chromtl biiiCk tJYebrow
rolled out rt111l long
a paptN' brow magnifying glass
fried brown, edge scorched, yoked
like a squBBk from a speaker
behind forehead of the time,
Ucorlct1 schtick open tube of
valuable JuJu BIHIS."
- Don van Vltet

The band plays, 1tlen out of the ih.tows dresNd
in a long cape with white satin desi!Jls all over and a
typical mid·forty·ish hat comes the Capt. He walks
to the mike and begins singing, "All you ever do is
blabber n' smoke/ There's ah' big pain in your
window ... "
From here we go to "I 'm Gonna Booglarize you
Baby :"

II

"The moon was ah drip on ah
dark hood
N ' they w.tre drivln ' •round
n ' around
Vi r./ Willy tot' Weepin Milly
I'm (lOnna bOO{Jiari ze you baby:"

and the flip side of the new Beefheart single "Click
Clack"
"Two trams
Two f71ilro8d tf71cks
One goin n '·the o ther one
comin'back
There goes my baby on that
ole train
I say come back come back
baby come back
Click clack click clack . "

to "Grow F1ns" also on The Spotlight Kid lp
The Mag1c Band dtd its licks as well. They
played three Instrumental numbers: "Peon" from
the Decals lp, a bass and guitar duet simmering With
mutated class1cal forms and played with a oneness
wh1ch could only be exhibited by Rockette and
Zoot Horn , "Allee tn Blunderland :" this was the
Wmged Eel's b1g solo spot and surprisingly (though
not really) a rock n' roll foot stamper, and ftnally a
duet featunng the 1azz 1mprovts1ons of Ed Marimba
on drums and the Capt on musette called, "Sp1tball
Scalped a Baby" a number which tested the
Intestinal fortitude ot both performers.
Also played were "Abba Zabba" one of the
Capt.'s favorites from the Safe as Milk lp and
"Wo-ls-A-Me·Bob" from the Decals album . Showing
h1s roots, the Capt did an acapella version of John
lee Hooker's "Ole Black Snake" holding two
mtcrophones and belting out octaves like they were
going out of style .
After the usual shouts for more. the Capt.
slowly put away his m usette walked to the
microphone and whistled " More."
. And the thing about the whole affatr IS that
people actually took it senously and that 's certainly
nowhere near where the Capt's. at After All he's not
even a musician (so he tells us). tf you kno1111 what I
mean.
-Joe FKnbacher

•Ill
Ill
•
•Ill

�Open Theater ...
electrlfyinq in the play. The actors truly seem to be
overcome with a presence other than their own, a
prese n cl that brings tortu red thoughts to
verbalizat " nS concerning modern life.
Espe(;tdlly brilliant was the scene In which Marie
laveau a1111 the Soldier break through . Paul Zimet as
Marie Laveau gives an asto nish ing performance as the
dead spirit speaks of her ravaged homeland and her
dead fam1ly. Simultaneously the Soldeir, portrayed
by Jo Ann S&lt;:hmidman, repeats that he was doomed
because he said "Yes" and didn't know what he
wasy saying yes to . The fantastic effect of the scene
was heightened by low frontal lighting strange
sounds and music produced by the other members of
the ensemble.
Nearly all the segments of the piece are good.
some work brilliantly, and a few just don't work at
dll . The acti ng was flawless a11q was tt}.e major
Jttri bute of the piece. The troupe seemed m possess
the uncanny ability to do whatever they wanted to
do with rhetr bodies . Th1s control helped them to
produce perfectly both movements and sounds. The
troupe's timing was extraordinary
If one 1s particularly sensitive, one can p1ck up
..)the ideas of the p1ece, such as they are. They fall like
a thin drizzle of ratn in the f11st segments of the
work, and suddenly turn mto a veritable hurncane in
the final scene.
By applying Freud 's theory of the reversal of
manifest content, one can conclude that by repeated
references to the dead, the troupe 1s actually
concerned with the livmg and at the same ume
making a connection between the livmg and the
dead. Even a non Freudian could realize that.
perhaps by divination We. the liv1ng, are the dead
and/or dymg

Life-in-death
This metaphor IS espec1ally apparent '" the
aprodies of preparat1on for embalm1ng. Thus. when
1n "Cosmetics" one sees people makmg themselves
up to look beautiful as corpses, one knows that the
comment •s d1rected not toward corpses. but
towards we Plastic People
The p1cture ot modern soc1etv e~pressed 1s one
that instills terror and d1sgust 1n the aud1ence The
speech of the dead Executed Man (played by
Raymond Barry) repeats the line. " My prtson 1s
made o f steel, yours IS in your head ." And f1nally tn
the last segment, with a refrain of "The Judgment of
your life is your l1te." a total p1cture of our lives is
y1ven - images o f dead people surrounded by other
dead people, being unable to reach out, bemg unable
to relate, hvtng from day to day to day and never
seemg or feeling
The reader IS no doubt fdm1har w1th th1s
conception of the state of modern man . Th1s
concept1on dates ftrstly from the existentalist
" revolt ," and most recently, from the mdnlc
exci tem en t produced around 1966-67 . an
t!XCitement spurred by the nse of the counter-&lt;:ultute
(remember that?) and the philosophies therof ·
1n 1967 A .0 . Laing publisHed his brillant work
The Politics of Experience. a book that attacked t he
tn sanity o t modern existence. The
love-tnbal rock musical Half spoke of America as "a
uy 1ng nation " Dreams were being dreamed of
hberat1on through a nse in consciousness.
The ideas in Terminal come from this milieu.
Besides llemg rather archaic, they are not presented
truly forcefully w1tt11n the context of the play The
literal analogy of people with corpses is a linle too
easy. The final condemnation of modern day
existence is merely verbal and does not utilize the
1mpact t hat only the lheater can give. The most
forceful illustration of the putrid ness of modern life
1S g1ven through the voices o f the dead. But these are
not enough . The piece ends uo as a orimary work of

Prod10111 Su!l-

--continued from first p~ o f

acting and a secondary work of ideas.
TM Mutstlon Show is only slightly a circus-like
freak show starring such oddities as the Bird lady
(created wtlen a farm boy screwed an ostrich). the
Man-Who-Smiles (if he didn't smile he wouldn't have
a face), the Man-Who-Hits-Himself (he's had the
same nightmare fo r 20 years) , the Thinker (she
thinks she thinks but she doesn't know what she
thinks) and the Petrified Man (each day he walks less
and less)
At other times it is a hilarious parody of
weddings and marnages, and a kind o f show-and -tell
segment where the players show enlarged
photo!J'aphs of themselves and an announcer tells
something about each of the playen (a lits of all of
the relatives of one member of the troupe IS given).
Tha Mutation Show is more obscure than
Terminal amJ despite the contmued brilliant acting
on the part of the troupe the material just doesn't
work Thus it seems as 1f most of the piece lacks a
fullness, a certain depth, that Termmal had most of
the t1me What one usually gets 1n The Mutat1on
Show is actors performmg clever gestures,
well coordinated gestures, and nothing more. The
emotionality rampdnt m Terminal just never appears
m The Mutation Show
The weddmg scene is the he1ght of the p1ece
The actors portray couples coming through an
archway and facmg the altar (the audience) Some
are shy, some aggressive, some we1rd, some confused
and some downright terrified . Then the Anniversay
Waltz begins to play nd the group begins dancmg
Those inevitable announcements of who is dancing
With whom are made (the bride is dancing with the
groom, the bride is now dancing with the groom's
fathed but soon take a wild turn (the president IS
dancing with the assassm. the cow is dancing with
the butcher, the trees are dancing with the wmd).
Th1s segment is filled with humor and a certam
sensitivity to the quality of humanness that shows
what the troupe can do when it 1s dealing with good
mater1al
Non~ommunicauon

It 1s d1ff1cult to get at the 1deas 1n the piece, but
they cHe there Va11ous aspects of the play deal with
language and other fo rms of communicat ion and the
1nab1hty to relate one's expenence to another person
and one's own mab1lity to comprehend that
eKperlence Repeated references are made to people
in one form of isolat1on or another.
In the segment entitled "The Mutants Give
Testimony" the only forms ot communication that
the mutants can ach1eve are grunts, squels, screams.
and speeches laden w1th hnes that confirm the
mutants confu&lt;;10n of experience and
noncommunicat1on
The play ends as the mutants stare mtensely at
the aud1ence, trymg to relate to ll, but apparently
failing to do so These ideas, however, Sllffer the
same fate as those in Termin~l They seem almost
extraneous to the acting, overshadowed by it, and
thus they have no terce at all.
The acting, as was already stated, was again
astoundmg. Especially good were the three members
of the ensemble I have not ment1oned yet, Shami
Chaikin (she makes sounds you have to hear to
believe). Tom Lillard (as the Man-Who -Smiles) and
Tina S hepard (as a terrified bride and as an animal
lady).
The dtrect1on in both pieces (by Joseph Chaikm
and Roberta Sklar) was near-to-perfect. In the end,
Terminal outshone The Mutstitm Show, but even ttt.
large dull spots of the Isner couldn't overcome its
jTeat "moments" and ruin the play. The Open
Theatre proved itself to be an excellent group that
could reallv come on strong with the right material.

~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~--~~

Godd : a novel by Ion•. Macmillan, $6.95.
let it now be known that the author of those naughty testamen~.
the Old and New, has engineered a most surprising comeback. in a
novel entitled , aptly enough, Godd. luckily , Godd makes no
unreasonable demands upon the imagination of the reader; our
credibility is soothed by the fact that the actual writing is ghosted by
one rampant modern sensitive Israeli, lonel by name.
lonet 's sensitivity extends to other domains, too. He feels , and
shares with us, the priapus-rousing presence of women, women who
boil hi' b lood and provoke his lyricism..)Vhile tending to their own
private transcendence .
The premise of lonel, and Godd, his mentor, Is that the snake of
history has too long writhed to the tune of masculine domination . It is
men who are responsible for the identity-less female half of the planet ;
it is men who have erected all canons, taught the malodorous
dichotomy of pity-fear, and in general prepared the way for the future
annihilation of the race.
The book's act1on is grounded on several simultaneous levels. First,
we are presented w1th the tableau of the newly emergent Israeli state,
born 1n a world bound to change o r fall . Next is lonel. our
simultaneous hero and recording angel , and his traumatic series of
loves. H1s relationships mirror his Lorrd's views; they occur strictly 1n
the context of seemingly _'"""""'""""""'"""'---~:--IITI'ITnrmm!l'l'r,iT!ii!TIITI"'
guiltless adulteries, intel ·
lectualized passion, and
strivings for freedom that
move from the bed to the
typewflter (tonal's experi
ence is concurrent with
his writing; this is one of
the pomts of the book),
and back agam.
There are sympos1
ums 1n Godd, dialogues
that m1ght well have been
lifted from the pages of
cCommentary magazine
for all their verbosity and
tiny-print analytic malin·
gering These are the "fac
tual" interludes in the
book. to be contrasted
with the somet imes dra·
matic, somet1mes corny,
sometimes plain boring
ones between lonel and
husbands, lonel and his
god, lonel and women .
The crux of the mat·
ter lies m the new , special
t rt nt t y ( fa1th-lust -love: J!J[I~.JIUL~~~~~~~~·~~fl
read God -man-woman)
sought after by our anonymous author. To correct matters womill1 w1ll
have to step into the spot formerly held by her oppressors; and so lonel
expenences the bitterness of jealousy. and all the questions attendant
upon the doubting of monogamv and related institutions, m the course
of the f1ct1on
Now, In critiCIZing such a work , two alternative stances must be
taken The novel 1s p lainly political , and so an exam1nation of content ,
over and against that of form , becomes nec~ry The content is
enthusiaStiC , na1ve, at times wearing : Godd , proposing a new set of
Commandments, includes 1n the dictum " 10. You may thus realize that
you couldn't possibly covet either your neighbor's house or her men,
her friends or her hairdo, or anything that 1S theirs." Her hairdo? Is this
merely parody, or has Godd fudged his conception , see1ng cosmetiCS as
the true center of the femal e world?

.

These two, Godd an lonel, include a major overhaul of language in
their program for change. Writing is to become cont1nuous w1th
fucking . . the divine sense of rhythm IS to become ommpotent - but
where in the book is any ev•dence of th1s new, startling breed of proseJ
This 1s like same son ot take-off on Norman 0. Brown, married
perhaps to a few of the racier segments of a book like The Hsrrad
ExfHI'Imflflt. The politics included herein are juvenile, insofar as the
prime enemy is seen to lie in men rather than in the forces that have
moved and swallowed them up.
The writing becomes tedious at times, espec1ally when lonel 1s
mirror his lord's views; they occur stnctly in the contelCt of
Unfortunately, the view trying so desperately to emerge here has neve1
before been sufficiently dealt with by the novelist, it is in praise of
Godd to recogn1ze it as one of the first modem books to make the
attempt.
F1ct•on all too often becomes tact . If the enthusiasm that earmarks
lonel's first book In collaboration with Godd (and they have promised
us two, three, maybe four forthcoming volumes) was attached to a
really blazing prose vehicle, we would have a book, indeed ;
unfortunately . the avidity is basically unclear. and the writing too of
tne sludgy, even Brooklynese. A pun, lonel to Godd . "I am an unholy
ghost writer." And this msipid, if unholy. writer, actually befievllf the
non-violent emergfnce of "disaffected students" and "unrecongized
minorities'' in the good old U.S.A. to be fixed signs of good . A passive,
glossy liberalism here, uttered with a voice slightly weaker than, say,
Bernard Malamud's.

.

This is a fine attempt . Perhaps we'd be handling a minor
masterp1ece now if the· Holy Spirit had dei1J1ed to visit Thomas
Pynchon, John Barth, or even one of The Sp~~etrum staff; instead,
however, he has lighted upon the brow of lonel, whoever he may be,
and Godd the novel will, I tear, ali!tlt upon even tess nobler vistas namely. upon the ignominy of the neighborhood supermarket's book
bargain shelf. Let it now be known .

, ..,_,\
•t•t

.~

I

a

...........

\ IIIH '

~

...

- David Brizer

�To the Editor
Insult and 111 · 'tlve have sca rce ever been
known to substit
satisfactorily for intelligence
and reaso n . The n • 1ess o f. Dr Siegel of the Biology
Department to Ad elle DavlS Monday evening at her
lecture was inexcusable. Regardless of what
disagreements he had with her position on nutrition
his . response . was _boorish. Not only did he inveiah
aga tnst her mtelligence, suggestina t hat her many
years of thoughtful study were haphazard and
resulted in con clu:uons with nor m ore validity "th at
J monkey's guesses," but also against the intelligence
of her audten ce, whom t h e Doctor apparently thanks
wtU , qwte IJteraUy, swallow anyttung.
Students ~o read wadely, hopefully discemangly,
gather v1ewpomts, seek alternative o pamons. "Settmg
us straight" insulted both audience and speaker. 1 am
also curious about a person who condemns another's
entire VJewpomt (Dr. Stege! told us Miss Davas·
o panio ns were 3bout SO% correct and SO% wildl y in
error
potluck), while the very ac t of makang 3
JU dgment like that implies that he alone is true judge
o l all the fac ts or non -fac ts that are g~ven .
Wht'n a student rad1cal asks fo r tht' mtc roph o ne
tu answer a speake r, anything less than faultles.~ l o g~ c
o~n d respect ful demeanour usually as loo ked upon JS
" childish ego trip Such behaviour is apparently
..onstdered QUite rt'~pectable tn "expert" J cad e mtc
\ trde&lt;i
loon (, fl/1/11t&gt;rg

WiUincg to pay
/o• til•• Ftilfor
Rr.enll} ti n·•
heen o1 ~.:on\tderJbk Jntount
11f OIIIIIH:II I&lt;I I Y
I he IRC' fee' I he prO\ "ud
\1111\ hJVe hn II
•tewed and a dt\Jppmntangly
llu II{( dnU Is ..;lli'J'' 1..:rs) large numh&lt;'r o f ~ tud cnl~
hJH" WJIVI!d fh~ flol.'\
I per~onally Jon't ft•l·l th e fee~ &lt;~re
~ ~~t·rhurd cna ng co mpo~rt·d to lhl' hcndtb A good
ln(n\1 e~f mi ne agn:e' wllh me S ht• lcel' th.H sh.: cJn
hc11l'ltt lro m IRC at iJVIttes dnd ' ' wallang Ill P&lt;~Y the
~X "0 She il\o sa1
m an y ol hn lr1ends would he
wolhng Sh(' ''on
II ~ many lHiltrnut&lt;:r )tUdl'n t ~
I dtcl 1.. l'J '' 11 h I RC t o ..cc tl she ~..ould
p3tlt11 fiJI r 111 I ({( 1U&lt; I tons h y p.t Yilt~ the fcl'~. even
1h1111J.th ~ hl" 1\n'l a dtll I ~lud t•n t r IH· IIH nltll'e \UJd
lhl"l wert: WllllllF. h
It I\ llllpc"'lhil" lll"l.IU\C o l
bollw)! pruhll"llh
I \Ugj(l'\1 thdl 1 JIH w.anl\ lll&lt;•re ke· p,Jyrng
, IU,I • nl\, they oven.• ,, ,,. the l..tHnputcr lu lo~p the
l.HJ!l' Jrnuunt of .... ,nmutcr \lttdl•nl~ ready JnJ
walh11c
( 11/tl'/.. /td1.111J

IRe fn· t•a~e•r

CIMPIS UIIEIT
by Jo-Ann Annao
Studen t governments !lave a way of d ying on
this campus. Withi n a &amp;bort time span, three
different forms of student governing bodies have
emerged and declined. The Student Senate was the
first ; but that failed giving way to S tud ent Polity.
Polity , in tum, struagled for survival only to be
replaced by the Student Assembly.
Established by Jut year's Student Assoctation in
a semester-end fit of conscience, the assembly was
mtended lo give students a grea t er voice in
dt'cisaon-making and lt'nd more credence to stud ent
government. It has, in aJl respects, farled .
Typrcal reactions to the assembly range from
" It's a trag~ c jokt'" to " It was a failure from the
beginning." Bo th the University administratio n and
Student Assoc1ation officials d eny its l eg~ttmacy
Yet. wh o as to blame them , for tht' past assembly
dllions revea l a total lo~ck o f d1rec tr o n , cohe~r vencss
and responstbthty . For example, lhl" .tssembly vetoed
the athletic budget , reconsidered it and finally
passed II by ont' vo lt' The a~embl y also appmved a
S teven Su.lls con cen o nly to neg.~te 11 at .t
~ubsequent meeting
Parochial i.n t erests
Compmed of 3'1 r~pre~cnt.ttiVc~. the J~~l"lllhly
~.oonc.:ms ll ~cll stm pl y wllh dl\pcnsrng mum~' to
varauu' orgamz:.t ltOn!&gt; In fad , lltJny repr~:~eniJlt\L'S
JOtned the: .tssembly t o ansurc that thc:tr rMrlllul.tr
interest~ he funded Nnw that hudgcts h,1v•· llc~n
approved, many asscmhly llck!I.Jh.·' don 1 l"vt·n
hother t u All end mectmgs (11 pnmt.' e11ample W.t\ l.ht
M unday·~ 11s~embly 1n wlulh I J memh~:rs .tltendl"li 1
llus lOnu!m wtlh m..rt ll'f~ ttnly fin am t.tl '' d
naw that mars th e: enlrre Student A~~OCIJt lOll 'I hl"
only real power of student gLlVanment "''' 111 tis
Jhtltty lu lund urgan11..at1ons and wrv11:e' llw tl".tl
problems .111d ..:onlctn\ nl tndrvadu.tl \IUdl"lll\ .ti l" kit
vartually agnnrcd Not lung h.~~ ht:l"n done lh11. y ....u tu
deal with tenure, admissitlll'i pnhcy or ~ul'll acadenlll
L...sue' J~ pa:.s/fall, the ( ollcl.(e' ur hul1e1111 hoaau
couf\eo, A~o ont' stud~:nt offiual nlh,•rved "" I hc nnly
d ~:partm enl that lS Llperalln~t " th.11 of lhl" SA
treasurer ··
Studt&gt;nts re-.pon.sihl~
MdiiY Wllhtn ~tu•lcnt guVl"lllllll"lll h,t\11" l.lulf,•tl
tiH: m~clv~~ 1m "~ill Ill~ Jllllln.t hcrl lot .J whoh' )'\".11
dntng not h1ng · AddtltunJII)' . miL SA ''"lli.JI
tc ntarkeJ "You can 't hiJtnc &lt;~P•IIhy at .1 gr.l\\11101!.
level tl )'1 !U hJve nu ll•,uh-r.,hlp ·· ltuw••vt•r ..oil hl.arltl"
loiO 'f hl pl.tLeu tilt th1 I \l"lUIIH ( •11111111111'1' lnr
laalurc ot \IUJenl I(OVl"llllllcnt ur nl thl" J"l"mhl~
Sudt fl"'ponsththly 111~1 "'"' lw sharnt hy hoth

assem bly re presentatives and the general student
p o pulace. As mentioned previously, assembly
deleptes fail to atte nd meetings. Additionally, they
don't participate in other SA ventures such as
Executive CommJttee •11eellnp or in any o ( the
standing committees. ••Jve Rei~ure, head of the
finance co mmtttee, rep. ' that only one of the six
members on his commattee (fro m the assem bly)
regularly particapates or LOntributes in its workings.

Tragic government
In additt tt t as Mr. Gol dst ein 1llU.~tra t eJ, people
get excited abll1ll certarn tssues, de mand a( tion, yet
are unwillJng to help. ·so many peopll come up
hert' an d dema1 I ~ome' 1 u ng be done .
no o ne has
been willing t o help
It has to be made clear that
It's not o ur Execu tive C'"tnm1ttee's responsibility but
y ours." This at11t ude •f let " them" do it was
revealed most notably .tl tht' lit\t student Jssembly .
At lht \ lime. all Sl\ coor~hnaturs wanted t " report to
th~: holly lnhotn""!! them ••
thetr .tctivities.
ehng that such
However, tl " .,, th·· general
mformallon w.o ' u nw&lt;~nl l"J. unnl ssary aut.! boring
O t hl·r prohll"ms ex1~1 that C(llll ribute • tragedy
ul \IIIII 111 !(O" llllllenl 01vested ,f any r, 1 power,
tile J " 111hh
.1011111 Jd wuh any
gtlimate
authu11ty Al l power, ,tccordong lo Mr (,uldstem ,
stall resu.Jr' 111 the: I xnultVl" Co rnmtllee. The
J"L'mhly h,· ' • IIIIUC'd 1 the lo~~.:ade of J g~Stauvc
hr.anLh
"'lard nu one JOined h1·
se the)'
I. new notlu11g """11.1 hl
, nm plt ,h~ct '
Stillbc1m
1\ n ong~u
•-tl nl the JS\1!111 ly Wd\ I IJke th e
"nl:lenl·" out
.fudl·nt government , tu dt~tnb ut e
.tuthmuy II
1 the .t ~\tmbl} ho~s n11 te.JI power
ul u,, hu.tl'
t n II m.al.c •lf' fiOJnlml"' ' ' \ unJe,~
,1\l.l"J Ill
\dl11t1llt
hl" power that the .t~semhly doe'
h.1vc tl .Inn 1
··r~t~c l ur C:li.JIIIple, th• J\~embl}
w." r.:t1ue~tc.J ' 1pp umt tWcJ \ lu J~ll t'&gt; Ill Suh Board
I , ln 1·
Th 1
tt lallcll lo do I C' tlt ng 1n
undrr tt•pn•
lull\ fo t umln~:r.tt..lu 1 ., The
.1'-\l"lllhly hJ\ I
I Ill ..tsl.. reJI lJ ,•~1Jnn 1h0ut the
l'Xpendtlun
,atu.Jent tel"~ and tl h ~~ be~n
Jastndtn l'd '" 1!1 tflplc wllh \Ulh ampori J ll t 1ssues d \
l&lt;•nur•·
All ;~re U!(fl"•·•/ th.11 thr Stucknl A~\&lt;!tnhly i~ 11
\.HI J" l..•• )' &lt;'I . lhl· p rnh lem u l huw tn ll•rrel"l 11
'" ' " " I v.:n llll['rovenH"III u l '' ullent ~ovemment
Jf'Pl"JI\ ltllf""'thlt· ' " nut erwur.:h "'emhl&gt; member'
,ltf l" Jid llt pi11V IIh I ht• 11l"ll''~ary •I • •runt Ill offu."LaiJy
ll-gt,lo~t e rdlllllt &lt;\I"'· mJny ha v.
ho\l"IJ In ignnrr
tht• "~'~:mhl~ t••·tltJP' 1Jop1ng lh 11 ltl..t• tl · ~enate
Jll u hl.l· pnht) 11 '"" wtll d1e Hol\1"\orr , .. I J d.:alh
L\ llnlll"ll"\"'ry tnr lh•• ,1\\t'lllbly W.l\ 111"\'t·f boorn

Opinion freedom
,,, tilt"

I·Jrtor.

Tod.ty Ill Norton Unaun I WltnesSt'd 0111 event
w htlh made m e stop and trunk Mem ber~ ol the
llo~rc KriS hna sect and group o t "" J ~us 1-reJI..s"
we re JSSe mbled m the cen ter lounge, dcbaung
th\'tt respect tve behd~ I nearly pJSsed them by.
hut lhc:on ~o mething monumental on:urred 1&lt;1 m~:
I ht, " wh,ll AmenLJ ts JJI about 1 Thts as wh.tt
"Ut lnrctathers fought for
th~: ng.hl to one\
"wn opmaon and an open exdunge o f tdca' I he
.-..wnLe of o ur umverstty co uld be ~een th l"rc
Here were two groups ot Mncere you ng people
ll1~ L USS1ng t h e m ost basaL questaons o f e"-1\tolnLe,
lrl"~ !rom tear or antanudal1 o n
So mudl tor
u tt11.:s wh o say Amen.:a's no t free'
Jar l

.,,"""'~'

Smile!
1,1 tlte l:.tlttor

Hassan
nght on• But may I contin ue yo ur
lellc:r by suggesting that a good place to "~nult'"
•~ at C'offee Hour wtth the fore1gn stuJents.
haday afternoons 4-6, 2nd fl oo r of T o wnsend
llall. Second, get involved tn the actiVIties ol
" International Week " and when th e festtvahe~ are
Ovt'r, don ' t crawl back Uli O you ISolated noo k .
bu t con tmue to smile
you'd be ~urpnsed
tl
goes a long way and transcends the verbal
co mmunication block.

Cynthia B. Skmm•r

Clarification
I 11 t/11 l.dtltlf

S1•vrr;1l p u1nh lliCnltourd 111 thl" .ort1dc 111 fil l·
l· ehrud r y I I a~sue ""C nntml over who wtll tl'.ldl ··
nt'ed clartlt~o: ata nn
The group you rel\'r Ill ol\ lit\" . l 111\l'r\ll)' II:Yll"\\'
huard"' t\ J group ol \IX fJlully ltl\"lttl~cr' . .tppnanteu
hy lht" Presadent upon reLommcndatton' I rom th e
f-aLulty Senat e Exccultvt" (.'ommtlle•• . known .1:. the
P residen t 's Board on fa lul ty Appmntment~.
Promottons and T e nure Ttus Board ' only fum 111111
rs to ad••rsc t he Presadent on pmm u ta o11 tu any o l the
rank s o f full Professor, or grant11l!l nf tenur e at any
rank
The procedure an tenure mJtte~ rs a btl more
.:omphcated than sl.tled an your drt1dc l he ftr''
,tep is tak en at the departmental level a!&gt; ~t..tted
Ho wever , there is a ~eco nd rev1ew at th e 1-a ~:u lty
lt'vel , and an cases wh ere a School o rgan1zat1 on ts also
1nvolvcd there could alsu be revu.•w at thAI level If
the vote as neptavt' at those levels , thert' is no fur~her
rt'vtew unless the fa culty member ~:hallcnges the
a~:tion . He has several routes for such challenge
If the vote ts posi uve at both levels, or posauve
at o ne and negattve at the o ther , the case as pa~sed
on to the President's offa ce At that potnl,
tndependt'nt evaluations o f the d ossaer are made by
th e Academi c Vtce President, and by the Board The
Pr es1 dent then rt'VIews the dossier and tht'
rt'commendations, and makes the final dec aston.
Appeal of t h at decis10n IS also poss1ble
(n considering pubhsht'd work , the revrew
committees at each level must look at the quality of
the work - not merely the quantity . Four arhcles in
II

lout lup JUUIII,th IJt tllll"'Cij!hl f(n .orllde' 111 IC'Il
m~dtlllre JuUrnJ" . d' tuiJI lre'&gt;h and nng~nal arttllc~
outwc1gh ten arlldc,, nme ol whtch Jre re -wnt~:s tt l
the hr\t St&gt;m.: rcv1ew.:rs .hludlly \:ounl t h~: number
ul tlml~ J pu hh&lt;alton '' ctlrd "' puhii~Jtton~ hy
ol her'
II ·~ tntcre\llng Jl~o to nolt' thJt uf the laLully
nH•mh.:~ mcnt1oncd tn your drltde as bca ng dented
lt:JHIII! only o ne nwvet.l hcyond h ts I'Jculty for
dntston l n.:tdentally , at the li m e lht' arttdt: wa\
publt~hed . thJt deLr~ron had not yet bec:n mad~:
llcre .are ~01scs where tht: voll" Jenymg tenure WJS "
depart m~:ntal vote. baL·keJ liP by a b ~ulty volt'.
with no a~lu•n JSI..~d lor ltllllt 1111' Pre,tdenl or the
Bu..trcJ
In .Hldttwn 11 shoul.t ht' '"'led thJt thesr
ra.:ully member\ were voto:u down "' th~: level at
wht t: h stud ents have th ~ greatc~t anpul Man y
departments .tnd ~everJI ol the 1-a LUllte~ anvolvc
duect studt'nt vote an tht'tr Jet:tSIOn·rnal..ang proces~
The mo~t lrnportdnl pornt mad t' 1n your anaclt
rs the cryong need for some fa1r eval uati o n o f
t eachmg. SCATt may not have been a perfe1..t
mstrument. but at was good, and II was used an
Boa rd deltberata o ns In the absence o f suLh a
regularly-admrnastered evaludlton (opmto n , tf you
lake) anstrument, the eval uat o ~ at .tny level are lelt
with letters wntten tn response to " lley, Dr ·· x'" ~~
beang fired, wnte a leller '"
uwrence A &lt;.'apptellu
Secretary to the President 's
Board o n Faculty Appointments,
PromotiOns and Tenure

Friday, 18 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

·-

�,. ~ ·

lntepation battle

Georgian school boycott

_,

WASHINGTON
Attorney
General John N Mitchell resigned
Tuesday from President Nixon's
cabmet. in o rder to become
Ntxnn 's re-election manager. This
Is the same post Mitchell held in
the last election. The White House
announced that Nixon had
acceptell the reslgnetion with
"utmost regret.. effective March
I . and had nominated Richard G .
Kletndtenst. now deputy attorney
general , to the post
The President also announced
the nomination of Louis Patrick
Gray Ill to succeed Kleindienst.
Martha Mitchell , wife of the
attorney general , expressed her
dtsmay at his dects1on. and said .
" I tlunk it is a very bad move.''
Ms. Mitchell , in between tears.
said, '' I feel comme ct, comme ca
- which means I feel he was
better in the Jusuce Department
than he would be in the 'Citizens
for Nixon'. I feel Mr. Nixon
doesn't need anyQne He will be
re-elected on his own."
When asked about Kleindienst ,
ske commented : " I d on't have
any views on Kl emdienst."
H owever, she thought her
husband was , .. the greatest
attorney general the country ever
had "

lALLAI-IA SSE I . ILA
afte1 the State
Supreme Court lledated Fhmda's
I 0.1 ycJr -old abottlon law
unconstitutional M ond&lt;~y. a
Flonda Senate ctmunutee made
plans Ill dralt a new t)ne One
alternauve to the old bill w11l be
an "abortion dcmo~nd" b 1IL Th is
bill would ptovtde abortion al the
mother's request dunng the first
rhree months of pregnancy. and
unly when maJOr medkal reasons
JUStify 11 afler th:ll rrme penod
The court rules that the I XhR
~tatute
was not legally dea1
bccall\e 11 aJiowcll ahortwn ouly
when the mother would dtt&gt;
wllhuut one
l mmedl.tt~ly

MANCIII::.STER N II
l hrcc
homemade bombs ~l'.plud .: d anll
a fourth was found hctore 11 went
off uut~1de thts t.lly'~ poltt.e anti
f11e department he.rJquartcrs
Wedn e\day morn1ng
Two
'&gt;U'&gt;pec IS were arrest eo Katherrne

GUSTAV A . FRISCH , INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Univers1ty Plaza)
BUFFALO, N .Y . 14226

Hoh, 21, of Boston, and Katl
Llama.n. 23, of Buffalo. AJthou,h
the two were not labeled
revoluttonaries, il was mdicated
that they were in sympathy with
the Saturday night demonstration
here outside local headquarters
for the re-election of Nixon.
Twelve persons were arrested
during the demonstration , which
took place as Housing and Urban
Development Sec retary George
Romney opened the headquarters.
QUITO . ECUADOR
President Jose Ma~a Velasco
Ibarra was put under house arrest
Tuesday, by the Ecuadorian army.
Ibarra . 77. now serving his fifth
term in office, had been elected in
1968 . and took dictatorial power
in I 970. He has been o ust ed three
times before the end of Iris term .
in the five times he has been
president . His present term was
due to end Aug. 3 I
ALBANY - Under a b11J
approved unanimously by the
assembly Monday . offsh ore
drilling fnr cui and g;tS wlll be
prohtbited in Long Island waters.
The btll , sponsored by
Assemblyman J oseph Retlly (R ..
Glen Cove) bans oil anll gas
d11lltng witlun three miles of the
Long Island sh ore in the Atlantic
Ocean and Long Island Sound .
Re1lly sa1d the brll was
"trn pcrauve to help preserve the
natural rC'sources. beauty and
w11111rfe of the waters off Long
Island .. He said he hopes the btll
present&lt;. "what nas happened lo
Santa Barbara where the beaches
have been bla~..kcned with oil and
strewn wrth the bodies of dead or
dyrng fowl caught rn the: orl "
ALijANY
In an allrmpt lo
urge the ~talc leg1slaturc lo
lcgaltle manjuana , a nat10na l
lohhy group. ~uppor tcJ by a
for 111cr hlp tl rug mvcsttgutm and a
Ha rva rll p~yt.h IJ
VISit ell
A I h ·• n y T u c ' t.l .. y
T he
WJ ' h 1ngtun h~\ed N.111onal
Org.~n11.at hln for the Reform (lf
Mantuana Law ~
NORMl
cndtu,ell t h e prupu~als of
Ah~cmhlyman Frant Lerchter ( 0 ,
Manhattan) to JCmove allt.nmtnal
penah1cs fm the Jrug and o~lluw 11
tn he taxed and sold hy lrquor

I"''·

~tlti C~

l:.YSINS , SWITZERLAND
liUi h or Edgar S11ow . a
China expert whu rt 1s bchcved
help pave the way 1\~r Plc\ldcnt
Nixon's Chula tnp, J1ed .11 hts
ho111e TuesdJy near Lal..e Geneva
He was 66
Ameri ~o:a 11

BARBARA LARSON
Assistant Professor of Anthropology
Lehman College of
The City University of New York

Will Speak On

A widespread boycott by w h ites was the result
of a new sch ool inteantion plan put into effect
Monday m Richmond County, Auausta , Ga. Officials
of the city said that more than half of the county's
studen ts stayed away from clas.srooms Monday. This
total included two-thirds of the 3500 students in the
seven schools directly involved in "Phase I'' of the
int egration plan.
There was no violence during the boycott , but
three schools were temporarily evacuated because of
bomb threats. federal marshals were on hand to
observe the plan in operation.
Richard Anderson, a leader 10 the "Citizens for
Neighborhood Schools" croup, said he felt the
boycott was going to help President Nixon "make up
his mind on the antl-busina amendment; th e
President knows this kind of thing is not right." He
said parents were going to take their children to their
old schools each day and attempt to enroll them.
" We're going to bold a cerem o ny , caJI the roll, have a
sh ort prayer , but we' re not going t o let o ur ctuldren
get on the buses."

'Righi effect ive'
School Superintendant Roy Rollins said the
boycott appeared to be "nght effective." Two
citizen groups are leadmg the boycott The
"C'itnens" group called for a o ne-day boycott . and
the ''Save Our Children" group called for a one week
boycott.
On Tuesday, school children burned Lheu
identifica llon cards. The cards, which show the
school and bus the children are assigned to, were
burned in barrels labeled . "I 0 . cards. We don ' t need
them Our parents know who we are ." In this second

day of the boycott, attendance was back to normal
at all the schools except those directly ihvolved in
the busina p roaram.
Rep. fletcher Thompson (R .. Ga.), a foe of
busing, addressed a crowd of 200 white parents from
the back of a red pick-up truck . He called on all
Georlia parents to keep their children out or school
next Mond ay, in a state-wide boycott . He said that
he was "goina to ask all the people in my district t o
keep their children out of school.'' Thompson said
that it takes demonstrations Ulce these to move
1
Congress into action.
He told the participants In the demonstration:
"I want to thank you for the part you're playing for
better educatio n . I'm soing to report to every
member of Congress what your actions have been
today." Thompson believes busina foes in Conaress
have the two-Htirds majority necessary to pass an
anti-busing constitutional amendment.

Washin,con attitudes
In Washington on Monday, Preatdent N1xon gave
anti-busing proponents new hope when he met with
leaders seekma such an amendment for almost two
hours. FoUow1na the meeting, Nixon said he would
end busing "as we know it today," but be did not
endorse any of the amendments which had been
proposed .
Mea.nwtule, Vrce Pres1dent Agnew and Senate
leaders Hugh Scott and Mike Mansfield said Tuesday
that a constitutional amendment IS the wrong
approach to deal with forced busing to desegregate
schools. The three expressed a preference for
handlin&amp; the situation through normal legislation

British brave cold as miners
persevere, storm Parliament
W1th only two weeks left of
coal as of last Monday, the
government has appealed to coal
mtncrs to end their st rrke wh1ch
has blockllded Britain's power
supply , thus leaving millio ns cold .
Th e s trike, now in its sixth week,
has forced industry to begrn a
half-week work schedule, thereby
laying off tens o f thousands of
employees. If the strike contmues,
Bntas h homes and mdustry wall be
completely without power.
Emergen cy orders were
announced by the government
Friday, and workers wen 1 on a
three -day wo rk week
Food
!ohortag~
of prudu ~:. t&lt;. sut.h a~
milk , bread and egg:. were
reponed. bet.tuse hotthng .tnd
pro~oes!otng piJnts, "' well o~s
hakcrres were w ithuut P\'lWCr
Bu.:k1ngharn Pa lace was cold and
(hilly during the penodtc
t&gt;latkout~
H o wever , Queen
Llrl;th&lt;th II llo away o n J ~ta t e
Vlstl to Thailand With her
husbJmL Pnnce Phrhp, and her
daught~r . Pnn.:ess Anne

H o m e Secretary Reginald services." The House finally
Mauldmg caJied o n the House of approved the resolution , by a vote
Commons to approve a state of o f J I S-276
emergency proclaJmed by the
government last Wednesday
Appealing to the striking miners , Not 'a cat in ht:U's chance . .. '
Maulding said " I believe there IS
Despite an 11ppeul by Prime
very widespread public opinion Minister Edward Heath, Joe
Lhat the miners should return to Gormley, chtef of the stn1t1ng
work and cease their piclcetina " mmers said there would not be "a
Ho wever, Labor Party opposition cat 111 hell's chance of gettrng men
shouted "shame" and "res1gn," off the picket lines now " The
and charged the Conservative) nuners want o1n mcrease of 2Sc;f,
wrth the responsibili ty for "the and this was a sc.1Jed down claim
most senous 1ndustnal crisis S1111.: e The National Coal Board , whic h
thl' war "
had originally o ffered the men
7 .IJ%, upped thear offer t o I 2%
1n h1~ speel h to the Ho use Mednwbtle over 1.5 m1llton
John 0Jvtes, St"Cretary lo r trade wo rkers have been ldrd o ff. liue to
aud rndustry . to ld the lcgrslattve lack of elect neal power
body that 1f th e strike contmued,
F our per-;nn\ were hurt rn a
even more drastt~o curbs w o uld
have to be used. " If there rs no demonstratiOn Tuesday, when
further sh1ft from the present th o usands of mmers, th eir w1ves,
position , H IS inescapable thai and sympathizers tned to storm
Parliament Shouting " Heath out
further restnct1ons o f a mu~.~
more determmed krnd will have to Heath out,' the stnken. we re
be applied
and olpplied rn areas repulsed by poiJce llowcver, n o
not concerned wrth essentral arrests were made, and the .:rowd
dispersed peacefully , a few ho urs
later.
Emergency power cuts have
blacked out I 0-1 5% of Brita to's
homes and mdustnes at a trme.
People wete Without heat and
li&amp;hllS for hours at a time. Tra.tn
serv1ce was stashed to save power,
and when the trams did run, they
drd so without heat. The National
Coal Board has est1mated that the
s tnke has thus f11 r cost the:
co untry SIQS million tn
productio n

"VILLAGE POUTICS AND NATIONAL
PERSPECTIVES: A STUDY
OF A TUNISIAN VILLAGE"
Wednesday, February 23, 3:00p.m.
Room 312 Townsend Hall
Sponsored by:
Sociology 367
"Middle East Society in Comparative Perspective"
Council on International Studies

Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, 18 February 1972

ALFA ROMEO
*FERRARI
• MASERATI
Sales • Service •Parts
USED CARS

- -BOBCOR- -

Motor Cars, Ltd.
1974 Egert (Near Bailey)
834-7JSO

�Lest 111 tile ttzttlle
by Je~~e E . Levine
Yes, it's number one; it 's " To p
of the Pop s." An d we just keep o n
popping, plott ing in o u r pop pin g
way to keep o ur current mainstay
staying. It's num ber one on this
week's mailing list l n fact , wtule
we've been no d dmg aroun d, this
little ~nd y commodity was th e
haggest seller last week, and the
week before and t he week before
that Yes , it jwt m1ght have been
number one, right under our
thumbs, for th e longest tjme
Anyway, h er e it is, the n umber
one show stopp ed, tongue twister,
lvvemaker o n the h ot town
tl•naght, and the town is gethng
hotter boys and garls . Formerly of
whale high school urban America ,
and now re-estab lished for reasons
h&lt;.'yona o u r control, on borrowed
time. in the basuons of America's
tughest institutions of leamang
Uoys and girts, lad1es and gents
let's welcome into our lives once
Jg&lt;ttn (if our h and s can mobili7.e
themselves acc ura t ely en ough),
wath a long, loud round of
.applause. the suuper
Duwns and alcoh o l
fhe aura that L&lt;; surroundang
thl~ chemical addition to our bves
·~growing stronger every day, and
at ~~ l:Urrently becoming the most
tJlked .tbout. 1f not already the
mn~t popular, sy nthetic allev1an 1
on the scene. Hardly a party goes
by. or any o p portunit y for that
rnatter, where ther e are hot
~uple mdulging m soapers, and
mure often than not, more than
nnr It's better by q uanttty , and
,tr,,nger tn numbers In fac t , 1f
you \lrop too many, be careful
ynu JU\1 could k1ll yourself.
W•lh the new ariw of the
~H A IRSTYLIN G

Joe's Theatre Barbet
JOSS Kenmo re Avenue
(At Col vin Thtatrt)

alcohol craze and the gradual
depletion t hat is ta ki ng place in
the marijua na phenom enon. m any
peo ple find th emsel ves drin king
while doin&amp; downs. Which, if you
haven't alread y heard when you
were in h1gh school, is not
recom mended by th e Food and
Drug Admin ist ration.
Wh y downs have floated so
heavily back into the mamstream
of drug-ndden Amenca as hard to
say Maybe they are t he pro duct
of the miSplaced and fading
activism of the 70's; maybe it's
the thjrd generatiOn disparity
rubb1ng off on the second
general 1o n . maybe u's that
continu o us sea rch for liberatio n .
or jwt a mce sexual umnh1bator. a
free -f l owang mind pass1vant
guaranteed to make everyth1ng all
right. lt co uld be it's just fun, and
a really mce tugh. I've heard some
descnbe 1t, especially when m1xed
with alcohol, as being s1mtlar to a
junk head .
The America n penonal ity
The why~ and whatfors ot thas
already su pplanted and grow111g
pheno menon still remaJn to be
seen But one thing is for sure . the
effects of chemicals co ntanue to
inu ndate the mainstream of the
American personaUty, and the
casualty hsts are already too hagh
to wtusper away New York State
alone has over half the drug
addicts in America, and probably
t he most advanced drug Situation
in t h e world
The st ones assoCiated w1th
so a pers are already reaclung
fantasti C proportions. Slippmg
through that famous Buffalo
ava pevine (which to a certain
d egree does fllter some very
accurate m forrnation), are tell-tale

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st ories of sexual pro miscuHy,
falacious people sloshing and just
plain scandal. T hings all att ributed
t o t h e droppin&amp; o f just o n e tittl e
white pill.
There ar e stories of women
sleeping with their best friend's
boyfnend an d vice versa. Hatred ,
res u It i ng f r o m m isp l aced
affectio n , t h e Spanish Fly
mght m are, ahhhh . There even
nught possibly creep mto our
vocabu l ary , a new clic he :
'' Everything goes better with
soapers." T hat momin&amp; maniac
music that G racie used to talk
about has lost its flavor to
hung-over pleas of " t reat me Uke
you d1d the mght before " But
alas, ttunp are never the same
when you wake up , just ltke yo u
we ren't the same t h t night befo re .
stop ped doin a drugs because they
The th ird generation
were fuckjna up her head . WeU ,
There's no doubt already about
when a 16 -year-old g~rl, so fresh
the schu.o phren1o1 of Amencan and so young and full of hfe , has
socaety, and drugs are JUSt part o f been 1n and out of d rugs Since sbe
parcel to the alrea d y neurotu: was I 2. t h en there IS JliSt
parable of twentieth ce ntury life
somethin g wrong. Who the hell
We grew up th1nkmg that are they 1m1tallng anyway''
:.~nything deVIant from Amencan
Establishment mores was bo th
Oru ~ and revolution
admnable and wo rth domg
Maybe 1t 's about time we
Okay. at's about lime thd l
re-evaluated thmgs that for the so mebody put it on th e hne .
longest lime we've taken for
Drugo; are about as reY«&gt;lutwnary
granted We grew up on dru~. or as apple pae, and apple rne can't
at least around them No one ha~ k1ll you And I don't w.ant our
next generataon of k1ds , our lods
to tell us where that's at.
I ' m ce rtainly not here t o gave a tf you hke, dropping downs to
paternal lecture on how someon e keep happy at 12 years old And
governs his or her 1ndiv1dual 1f you think that's facetious ,
dest my I can tell you that I check out your local JUmor lugh
talked to a 16-year-old garl school so m etime, espec1ally New
yesterday . She told me that she York City sch ools . And for Ch.nst
and most of her fnends had been sakes, let's stop equatmg thmgo; as
in and out o f drup already . That ad mirable t hat are tn reality,
mcludes everyttung from downs poten tial agents of death Man,
to psyched elics. S he told me she doi ng d r\Jp IS yo\Jr o wn choice,

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bu t let's stop preten ding that
they' re something that they're
not. Because those bttle kids wb o
look up to w b1g kJds, may be
growmg up in an a lterna tive
Amenca, that just co uld kiJJ t h em
before they even &amp;~t started.
Wh y don ' t we wake up some of
our do rmant energy . anstead of
.mesthet1ting 1t consistently. The
smoke hovenng over from the
t raged aes of the '60's sh ould cause
a little mtrospecuve redirection.
It's lime we started domg a little
more thmkmg before we set foot
mto d o mams that .tre as complex
and dangerous o~s th e reasons for
ou r ventu ri ng th ere an th e first
place. I knew it was that time
when my fnend Paul d1ed from 36
secono\s, and anoth er fnend &amp;Ot
strun&amp; out on herom. Is that what
it takes to mak e us see? I hope
Uus makes sense to somebody ou t
t here, because all l can do is wnt e
it down and hope somebody IS
l.ls teru na .

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Friday, 18 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Matmen in finale at Cortland
by Dave Gerinaer
Sp«lrum Staff Writtr

_,

Hoopsters hit the mad

to battle Yellowjackets

in their lineup. Jim Tortorici, considered by many a
formidable wrestler, wiiJ most likely be the Cortland
no m inee a t 134 lbs. Tortorici, who was th e 1971
When a basketball team is
The wrestling Bulls, assu red of ending up with Cortland starter at 126 lbs. is not in the h abit of going bad, the place it hates is
their best record ever, travel to Cortland tomorrow losing. Thouab he did not wrestle last term due to a
often the cold, distant road .
to e nd their dual meet competition for this season. student teaching commitment, the last year's
The Bulls wilJ take on the Cortland Red Dragons ·suNYAC champion went through last season Tomorro w night is another rdad
pnor to competing m the regJonal qualifying undefeated .
date fo r the basketball Bulls. their
How.ever, wrestling an undefeated grappler is third straight , at the University of
tournament at Cincinnati a few weeks hence.
The Red Dragons. under head Coach Jerry nothing new, fo r B uffal o'~ reguJar at 134 lbs. Roy
Rochester. A victory by either
Cuscianl , had wo n four of seven mat c.:hes prior to Guanno. Guarino stopped the winning streak of St.
squad
will break an unusual 34-34
meetmg Po lsdam, Oneo nta and Colgatl!. The Fra n c is' Gary Par1t1.0 la in last Saturday's
tie in the all-time series between
DragoM .md Bulls have wrestled one common quadrangular meet . The match at 13 4 will be a key
one tomorrow.
opponent~ the m en from Cortland dro pped a 24·15
the two schools. Last year the
Heavywe1ght Tony Pohcare will also be test ed
d~c:1ston to the Bro;;k port Golden Eagles, a squ1d
Bulls wo n 86-72 at Rochester to
that the Bulls measured . 27·11 . earher m the season. tomorrow as he takes on Cortland's 6·3 Len even the rivalry which began lo ng
llowever, the Red Dragons s hould not be taken Schlac ter. SchJacter pan ned the Bull heavywe1gh I ,
ltghtly . They nearly upset Buffalo at C lark Gym last Bill Win nett, in last year\ Buffalo victory . Ho wever , ago in 191 7.
Thts season 's edition of the
Wmnelt was pinned in :Ill but o ne of his matc hes,
sell~iO n , losmg by a scant three p oints, 19·1b, while
finis hang second to Oswego's Lakers (a team that wh1le the c urrent heavyweight , T o ny Po licare , has Y ellowjackets is a rebuilding
topped the Bulls last season) tn the State Umversity com p1led o ne of the squad's best marks (14 · 1· 1)
squad after several fine seasons
Athletic Conference CortJand wa~ the SUN YAC Schlacter, last ye3r\ c hampiOn in the SUN YAC
WII h
Eric Fass and J ackson
group, IS one of the Dragons' top wre~tlers and
('hampton tn 1&lt;&gt;70
Poh care wlll ho~ve In he 10 h1s usual good form to Coil ins . La st year's 9-15
Guarino 1o f~ SUNY AC champ
pull out a Buffalu v1llnry sh ould the matc:h go down Rochester season was Coach Lyle
The Drdgons boast a few outstanding ttldtvtdual~ to the last be&gt;ut
Brown 's third losing campaign in
14 years at the helm. However.
(his year Coach Brown's qui ntet ,
faced wtth Inexperience and a lack
of he1gh I , had an 8-9 record prio r
to games at Navy . Wednesda y and
at George Washingto n . last ntght.
current hockey season hegan
have ever rnet. H ockey Jl Kent
by Howie fajwf
Bo wdotn. last year's r&gt;tvlston II
S tate 1~ a growmg l&gt;port and tht'
.4sst S/}O'ts l.d11ur
cham p~ and runnerup 10 l\170.
te:t m tN wrrently play1ng on .t Major Kodak tourney
Big news o n the Rochester
duh ra th er than varsity bas is. Yet
~ or
hundreds ol Buffalo wall be una hle to defend tis t1tlc m
th e Golden Flash es still 1&gt;por1 ttn cam pus was made in the
hoc.:ke)' fans , thJ ~ weekend may lhts year ·~ t ourney, "hecause tl
1mpress1ve 11 -8 record , pnmanly nalionally prominent Kodak
very "~II "t' the f111JI .:ham.e to m1ght uwolvt' ton mulh trJvel and
t on mu .. h time away lrnnt
ag.tln\1 weaker M t d · Western
'ee 1he Bulls 1n Jllton at h ome
Classic Tournament, wh1ch the
teams Kent Stale IS presently
Buffalo 11.lll fac.:e Kent St.tle da\\e'&gt;"
Uowdu111 tS d mernher nl the
n dtng on a nine-game wmn1ng Yello wJack e ts hosted . In the first
Saturdd} mght and A I ( Sunday
ro und of the classic , Roc hester
~treaJ.. but d espite thetr prox1m1ty
mormng m the: ftnJI lWl' r~gul,.r Nl'w I ugland Small Ct&gt;llege
Athl,•lt&lt;' ( onlciCIIC:I: who~c o the r
ltl the powerful Ohio State team fell to St Bonaventure (84-60)
WJson home game-. of the year
thai 1onked th e Bulls tour times, and followed up with a
After tl\dt, til\' Bulb" 11l hl' on the 11\Cittbl.'r\ tnclu(Je o;ueh Dlvtston II
lh mllton.
the Golden Flashes don ' t appear
road lo ,omplete thetr 'L'hedule 1c.111" a' Amherst
c:onsolatco n loss to Southern
to he qu1te so formidable
Jg.lln\1 llhaca (. olk~l' l ucsdJy ( olhy Mtddlebury .tnd Wtlltams
llh''&gt;l' tt'Jnt'. most o f who~e
Sunday morning's g.tme bnngs C'aliforma (88-55). Earlier in a
dOd ._ ent St.atc J "~d. from
leLIHd\ Wt&gt;Uid Jt,IV~ eJillltndlt'U
A I('
lo Buff alo 1n a postponed cont est. R oches ter fell
lvntj!ht
T h e r e 1 '&gt; ,, n 1 n ~ r c a~ 1 n g them lmm playoff htd~ anyway.
c:nn l m uat aon of the long nva lry
to b oycottang Cornell I 05..1}8 .
.Jnnnunl·cd they t oo would be hetwecn these two schools Earlier
pm~tbtltl y I hal 1he Bull~ wtll be
un,thlc to ..:ompclc tn lhl'\ year·~ I h 1 ~ year the Bulls soundl y
~eeded 111 the tup lour of th t•
H ' AC' Oiv1ston II , 1lh:an1ng that dlJfliJ)Inll'&gt; hlpo, Willi.tms. with an
thra~hed the YellOWJac kcts 1 2 ~
For gems from the
the first round of the playoffs w11l H·5 · 1 reco rd dnd Colby at 8-8 · 1 , tn A . f C.'s h o metown of
JEWISH BIBLE
It was o ne of
be played h ere at home Whatever had ~ltghr .:h:.tnccs for mak 1n~ tht' S prtngf1el d
Phone
l'tg/tlh
.md
ftna
l
slot
Bulfaln's best 'played games, whh
the CJse Bu ff..tlt• wtll po~rllc.:l pat e
Wh.tl .111 thts mean~ lnr Buflalo the Buill&gt; ~lonng seven goals tn the
m tht· H 'A\ plo~ytllfs "t'iJnn1ng
875-4265
MJILh 4. Jlthuu~l 11 "nul off11.t:ll " thJl "llh the elllntnJiton o f
ftnJI pcnNI ln n 1n away With the
flowclotll
the third pl.llt' liull.,
yet
tn.ltL.h
Yet t•·R A I C. hke
nlltltl po"thly ht• lolled 1111o J
(hwl.'ll.\1 Stulc. ts ca pable o f
Bowdoin pull:. uu t
'''l'th'd t)&lt;hllton dl'~Jllh' lh•· rt'"'"'
\lllftn~
s funntng upsets. as
riH' 1.111 tw~am~· 'll.tr ~·h,·n tn up'l.'l In (),wcgo St.lll'. w llldl h.JJ
II lust 1,11 t•d hy I herr surpr1s1ng
a
r ~: ' 1: n 1 d 1: v c I" I' 111 ~· n I
J'Ht'Vtnt"IY nulltlted .til 'udl
ctllll)ue'l\ 11f Sl An~clms and
q:, ontl·pl.tL&lt;: Uowt.:oan ( ullt&gt;gl· Pl"'thtltltl'' 01 u)urw lh1• Rulh
Colhy Opc111ng IJt.:eolf lltnl'S for
annuunu:d th \lotlhdro~wal lrnm would h.J\Il' lu w1n Jhe11 rem.tllllng.
lltl· ~.11nc~ .arc 11 4 'i p rn SJturday
1 he ttHirllJllll'lll
Apparently
lwu gJIII&lt;''· wluch hrtrt).:' u' h.t~l.
mghl .utd I I lO ,, m Sunday
alulltltn:,: lu .J tde..tw hy Uowtl11111 l11 lht' ~Aeei.L'tHI
lllttfllllll! )jnth l(Jtlll'\ Will bt:
f'rl'\tdenl R ug.:r lll•wdl Jt . tlw
pl.tyl'J ,,, lh L· \mher~l Renealton
M.une tea tn ~J ' ftrntly oppowd In Hr..t llll'eting with Ke nt SinH·
(\•nf\'r Jllll ltLkL·t~ .lit' ).:oing very
the e-cpanded caghl·tcam Davt,.ron
S:~turdJy
llt~ht'~
~.:llnlc' l
l.t'l l{~:memher tl t·ou ld ht: you r
II tournament lornt.JI wtu~h .l!,!..lllhl II. ~~~ I S l.tle '' ,1 nnn-teJgu.:r
I"'' dt.tn«' 111 "'&lt;' the L'~(lllng
\loJ)u't ann&lt;•Un~eu llltlll titer till
tnd th1· ''"' lt•ll&lt;' th&lt;''L' '"'" IL.trn' h,,, l,,•v [IIIII' th" \1&lt;',11

Final home stand for hockey
Bulls promises to be exciting

Hear, 0 Israel

Recreation tourney

Btdfil1o grabs top honors
In J ltme ol rhe ~o~.mter Olympll\ grahbtng fmnt
page 'Polls healihne'&gt; Buffc~lo hoa~h several Wlrtnel"&gt;
tn an lnll~rndttOndl Recreat1on tourney In the
recerHiy completed Assoctated ( olh:ge l ltunn
Intern at tonal Reueatlon tournament {ACll·l ). 1he
State Uruversity of BuffaJo swept a total of 13
ho nors The tourney held at Oswego S tate featured a
record 347 student partiCipants from 25 colleges and
umvers111es, w1th dn o bvtous State Untverstly of New
York flavor Events under competition mc:luded
table tenniS. bowlmg, pocket ll1lha rds, chess and
bndge D1vts1ons under compeltlton tncluded both
men's and women's events.
The biggest Will for the Norton Hall Recreation
squad was sentor Jtm Dixon, who captured first
place 10 the men's table tenniS singles . D1xon. rated
among the top 15 table tennis players in the nation,
moves on to the Natto nal ACU·I wluch wtJl be
contested at I he University of Wtsconsm at
Whitewater, W1sc D1xon ts JUSt one of three Buffalo
entries in national cornpetition .

Women's bowling winner
Sandi Gajewski, also a Buffalo senior co pped
first pbce honors in Women's aU~vents for bowling.

Aftet tJI.IIIi: '1:\ctlld pl.11 ,. 111 !Ill' W&lt;llliL'rl\ doubles,
-;he .uhlnl " Wulltd piJ&lt; 1· 111 l•nwlln~ ~tngle~ to g.tin
her a~AJrd Jc.tn lta1r" anuther Butfaln ~cntor.took
~eL u n d
plat:e 111 Women.. .tll-eveuts bi.)W IJng.
FIIHShJng the howltng aw;ard~ fur Buff:~lo was club
siJr Gary Patton. whcl C(l pped first p hu:e I,IUrels in
rnen 's sangle bowling
In oth er result), Bulfalo sen1or SJm llanania
won the men's pocket b1lhards compellllon Last
year HanJniJ had finiShed second among ~m iJar
compctllton . Two Buffalo graduate students aJso
were v1c tonous m open-pa1rs bridge com petition .
The Buffalo bndge stars were Ken Bt'rman and
Vasantna Kola Tha ya. ThiS bndge team wtll be one
of lhree Buffalo entrants 10 th e national competition
alo ng w1th Dixon in t.~bl.: tenms and Ms. Gajewski in
bowling.
Mr Francis Mannang, d1rector of recreallon for
Norton Hall , directed the competition w1th
speclacular results for the Buffalo squad Soon,
Buffalo's club bowling Bulls under the dtrect1on of
Coach Norb Baschnagel will host the ir fust
intercoUegiate bowling invitational at Nort on Koll .
The often taxed facilities at Norton Union have
produced three champs, with future prospec ts bright
for national contenders.

Page ten . The Spectrum . Friday, 18 February 1972

Rochest er has also lost to other
big name opponents including
Army (91 -7 3) and Colgate
(103-72).
The big name In Roch ester
basketball thls season has been 6·2
Long Island City, N.Y. forward
Ken Ga rnes. Garnes, leading
scorer on las t year's frosh averages

20 points and nine rebounds per
game. Games needs to average
o rlly 17 per game the rest of the
way to better the graduated Eric
Fass' all-t ime record. Aiding
Garnes up front is 6-5 senior
captain John Hewitt (6.4). At
center, Coach Brown has recent
added freshman standout Damaan
Upson. wtth Curt Blackmore-like
physical at I ributes of 6-6, 24 5
pounds . In six games, Upson
averaged 10 .5 rebounds.
At guard 6- 1 junior h o ldover
J oe Winters leads with 15.3 points
p e r game . Wint ers, f rom
Wastungton. D.C teams wllh local
Kenmo re product Fran Mo ulin , a
soph at guard . Moulin , up fro m
the frosh. has been scoring 11 .6
per contest.
Las t year's 86·72 Buffalo
vic tory featured a Blackmore
show with 28 pocnts and 26
rebounds spurnng the effort . This
year's second
a row contest at
Rochester was necessitated by a
cancellation two years ago dunng
ca mpu s dem o nstrations. Next
year the Buffalo-Rochester nvalry
resumes at Clark Gym.

.tn

Bible Truth
JESUS IN VITES YOU NOW

"C ome unto Me , all ye that
labor and are nuvy laden and I
wlllvlve you retl." Math. 11:28
"Him that com eth to me 1 will

In no wise &lt;:411 ou t."

John 6t37

�AD INFORMATION

THE COST of an ad for one dill Is
u .25 for the fln;t 1S words and 1.05
fo r uch additional word. 11 fOr uch
eddltlonal dav. The d . .dllne for
Mondlll Is Friday; for Wec:tnesoey , It Is
Monday, and for Frldly, It Is
wednesday bY 4:30p.m .
•• HELP WANTED" ads cannot
discriminate on the batls of sex, color,
""d or national origin to any ••tent
11 .e., preferably Is still discriminatory).
" FOUND" ads will be run free of
char~ for 1 maJCimum of 2 days and
15 words.

WANTED
FOLK SINGE R wanted, preferably
female, that plays guitar . Monday thru
Thursday , ~1. Catper's Lounge, 2 410
Genesee St., ChMktowag.~ (o ne block
west of Htrlem) 896·9827.
RESEARCH (term) papers bought,
sold, ••changed, All file copies.
contact Mere at 131 ·33 70 at any time.
BABYSITTER
on e ·year ·Oid.
Llnwood·Ox ford area . Occasional
oaytlme hours. Ph one 882·3182.
THE VILLAG E SHOP, 27 97 Delaware
Ave . Kenmore, N . Y . 1"217 .
sunftowlf seeds 1 .55 lb., pumpl(ln
~eos u . 29 lb., fertile evgs S .65 doz.,
wt1o1e whut br. .d 1.35, cannon
yogurt $ .2 7, .sst. mltk non· fat,
powdered, 1 . 75 lb . Many other Items
Ill hUilh fOOdS. 873·32 46.
"' BED wanted . Ctll
834·0827 .

John or Gall

WAITERS and busboys needed.
ln exoertence no problem. We'll train .
Neat and able to get along well With
peopte a necessity. Approximately 25
hours • week . Call for IPPOintment
between lhe hours l l a.m.-3 p.m .
826·8900
NEED USED copy Of PLAYS FOR
THE THEATRE bY Brockett for
Tneater 105 Call Roberta 833·7571.

sl

ART 12 per hour utary plus bonus .
w nrk 4 8 p m weekdays 10·2 p .m .
S•turoays Call 835·.3803 or TF9..0402 .
FULL OR PART·tlme lobs available
wlt n Beslllne Inc. Call Art 886·2094 or
Mtlle 835 5215 . Meetings at Executive

APARTMENT FOR RENT
QUITE puc efut room, private nome,
UB ..... private ent rance , bath,
&gt;nowe•. o wn kltcnen 833·0843
R OO M

f-OR

Pfl \litf'I Qf' \.

rent

Sl8

•

wttn

w~k.

kltc.nen
Pnone

838·2241

RICE BOARO
G01 NC. 1 o Wasn D C.' I need 1 rtde
o&gt;r wott 011ve 11 1 c an Qtll riders to snare
d&gt;ponses 837· 1202 Leave Feb. 25tn .
RIDE NEEDED for two to Boston
too ay Return MondiY or Tuesday .
Call Do nna 831 · 2455 O\ Scoll
~31 24841
NlED

RIDE

to

c.1mpus Tuesday

even10QS Ltve Kenmore..Cotvln
Ca ll Sue 8 76· 3 7 I 7 aft or 5 o . m

area

Rtl:IE NEEDED to N .V ., Feb. 19·21.
Call 88&amp; 5052.

RIDE NEEDED to New Haven, Conn..
F" 2/18 Of Frl 2/25 Ptuse c all
8J6 0360

"phenomenlll "
SthWirtl.

CLAIIIIIIII

CL-ASSIFIED ADS ml)' De p11ced
Mondlll thru Frldlll Detw. .n 9 a.m .
and 4 :30p.m. It 355 Norton Hall .
GIRL NEEDS ride to NYC Feb. 17th
or 18th. Will share expense. Call Jantc e
833·7571.

transfer report from Oberlin Coli ... at
the oun's Office In 278 Hayft Hall on
Friday, ~.0. 11th, plus• returr1 there
lmmec:tlatetv.

MOVING
must s e ll 1963
VolkiWaQen, sedan, sunroof . Excellent
condition. 886·5052.
COVCH - converts to bed. GrMn . One
yur 04d . You move tt . $50. C111
692..09811 .
1964 VW van, new engine, radio, g.tS
heater, very good condition, $600 or
best offer. 832-6564 .
MUST SELL 1962 Buick. Auns.
Automttlc, radio, hllltlr . Needs repair .
"Snows". Cheap transportation . $50 .
886-6032.
AMI ELECTRIC p11no . Mull sell pla no
•no amp, 1350. Perfect Call Mark
837..0982.
HARLY DAVEDSON chopped 1966.
Best offer. 852-6378 after 5.
FOLK classic 9u1tars, new-used
M1rtln, Guilds, Gibsons, Gurian, etc.
Eagle bllnJos, Dorogl dulcimers. The
String Shoppe, 524 Ontario, 1 p.m .-9
p.m Sat. 12 5 p . m. 174..0120
4x5 OMEGA enlarger: 8&gt;1IO view
camlfa: 4x5 view ttmera; 2Y.M3V. preu
camera: all w ltn tenses and accessories
893·0744 .
1964 CHEvY Impala
Excellent
trl nsportlltlon, mecn•ntc's ear. $200
firm. gas station Eggert·Detevan .

----

FISHER IBO ·WIIt receiver 50ST with
tw o XP· 7B spe1ker system . All w tth
Flsner guaranlHs C.tll Paul 835·5535

PHYSICS PnD sneepskln from top
'"tern un1vcrstty
Use as pop.. rt
decorlltton, attractive co nversation
piece Best o ffer Wnte 234 Oakmont
Ave
1969 vw van, 34,000 miles. Only
$1600 can take you 1nywhere,
anytime. Ell 8 35 2561
1970 Jagulr XKE. Excellent c ono ttton
Brano new AM/ FM stereo rad io
Included Call 688·7327 eventngs.
AEFRIGERATORS , stov es and
wuner. Reconorttoned, oettvered 1nd
9U~ranteed
D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore TX4 3183
"A NASTASIA" need~ ll nome She's I
1961 tov~bte, little Tempest, 82 ,000
miles All sne costs 1s $1 l 0. C all At at
831-4113 or Debbie al 832 ·6815 .

PERSONAL
DEAR MOM and clad: Thanks for
gtv1n11 me a new b;oby Sister I needed
an auhlafll moral ed l tnr l(lr
Underc urrent . Love, Melissa
ATTENTION rer.enl winners of
N 1)(On's totterv eMtravaganza . Our
nat ronat guard unit n.s •poroxtmatety
30 open tngi ana IS presently acceptln9
applications . Any o ne Interested should
contact Bill at 923 -.32 11 or Gene at
82!&gt; S040
wANTED
Pnyslot 2 0t textoook,
Hu m an Pnys loi0 9ll bY Vllndlr,
5h8r man . Wilt pay OtiOinat prrce If In
yooo condition C all J m 832· 7882 .

-----Happy blrthdayl Don't

MI CHAEL J
worrv - 1'II 11111 rove you even 11 you
are past your prtme. B"'.

-------

MALE 3$, coli... professor , two
c;tllldren, -ks female com panionshi p.
Marriage possible. P.O. Bo• 1031 ,
Atlantl, Ga. 30302.

DEAR SPECTRUM PHANTOM - we
haven't hurd from you In a 1on9 time
- don't you love us anym ore?

WANTED : one eunlch roommate, to
sha re Kitchen . Contact the g.~rbage
collectors.

---

-------

ANN IECOON : Since I can't come to
the wedding, can I throw thlnll$ at you
when you get back&gt;

PROMISE to write Marla . 1 promise
to write Marla. I promise to write
Marla . Okay?
I~

musnroom dly Kiss

HAPPV ANNIVERSARY , Sunoav,
Mit
----TODAY
Is "•PPY Insertion
Anntversarv D•y
to M\. with love

I

HVRRA YI
HEDGES - If popcorn constipates
What ao out oeer11 ABB 111

ANNE . we knew what we were do ing•
Say hi to Bill lor us.

SM dl9i Easter eqgs•
IS IT TRUE lhlt Ms ArmadillO
kteptoman•.ac 1

IS

MV GOODNESS, Sir, o ne 's con vtcllons
melt w1th tne sllghte\1 n•ssllno Don't
try to oau thiS one o rt

a

JO·ANN : we'ro wa iting for you to turn
Into Jane Fonda The Group,

SUMOS Seven months 11 •
Wise woma n once Uid that to get
sometnlng, you nave to be
lnoepenoent . Ms
SUSAN
how far In advance do I nave
to Place my room rl$4l&lt;vattonl Mld&lt;;141
wno

oi•Y

ROOMMATES wanted. Male or
female . ~vllllble Immediately . O ff
Fillmore. Own room. Furnished. C t ll
832·3708.
ONE GUV, modern apartm ent , 10
minute walk from c.1mpu\ . Available
Feb I Call Bob, 837 ·2565
2 FEMALES on EnglewoOd . 150 •
u tillites . Own room
C all Dianna
1137 ·0403 .
WANTED · One female roommate ror
3·oeoroom house o il Maln· Winsp. .,
Own room, rurntshed, St&gt;O S M ttng
Feb I Call Ma ry 838-489 2

MISCELLANEOUS
BABYSITTING
regtstereCI nurse will
clo babysttttnv tn ner nome 833-4190.
FLY BUFFALO student flights to
sunny Ac•outco vii Unlverwl Airlines
DC 8 let
Leave NYC MlrCh 31 .
Return Apr il 7 From '1 79 Contact
A tan Marmutsteln even•n9S 6 9 p m
837 ·039J

DEAR MO MMY &amp; 111 : By the lime
you read lh ls, I w ill be far away , so
oon't try t o f1n0 me. Maybe I'll come
oack wnen you learn to acceot my
fMIIng, lowaro Gretchen I love you
Ben

--tono time

PEOPLE

but my

ANASTASIA needs ' new mommy and
diOOy - ._ For Sale.

1

ROOMMATES WANTED

TWO PEOPLE iany combination) to
share furnished house W/f)lrage - I
min. walking dlsttnc.e. 50 • 837·5938.

DO NOT sell magutnes OTHER sister .

please

FOUND • D09 male. Looks llko
belgle. Maln ·B alllll Plfklngtot, 2/13 at
3 a.m. Call 838· 1930.

AC : Hemingway once wrote that Paris
Is a movuble feast. Eat and enjoy!

1

-------

PURPLE and pink purse - lost w11111
hitching up Main to Llflyette lnd
OICford, S at. nl9nt In VW. C all Mettlyn
1 77..0137 .

ROOMMATE wanted Hertel ..
Colv in area . Own room, S50 month.
C11t 8 7 3·8132.

HEY SAILOR - I'll tell my mommy II
you tell yours.

DEB: Deao llnes •re Monoay,
Wednesday, Friday: please get that
throu9n vour thick skull.

LOST: Manila envelope conulnlnt
Important pepws tn Norton cafeteria
Tuosd.ay afternoon . PluM all Tom
874·5904.

LANCASTRIAN : you have 1 fan club,
-·re collecting them - our s hri nk
needs practice•

IS IT TRUE that The Spectrum Is
published by little red elves?

BENSON • What's this about hiding
Inches? Like to ttnow the O.lalls
Hedges

EVERY DAY
mushroomt

WHOEVER found Pllr he!CII90flll,
rimmed, brown glu.... 2·F, noon
betWMn Gooci)INr-olef A (betllnd
McOonald) . Turn them Into Spectrvm.

EIS1 It vou d on' t want the AIIW!hurst
bill sent home, we'll voluntMr t o
e xplain the WHOLE situation to you•
parents. Love, the Hope fan club!

ACQUAINTANCE desired of rare
w om an ,
18 · 2 2, S '0" - 5 '6'',
emotionally stable, hUithY , lean,
a ttracttve with wtrm, mild, even
disposition . ThiS woman w ould have
no dlfllcutty mMtlng men, but this
man (25) with similar traits has trouble
meet1n9 her . I nqulre Bo&gt;l 70 .

COCKEY (1! thllt's the name)
find me and uy hello. Midge.

mlu you, pluH c ome home!

ACC, you r•allze, of cOtHH, tnat we
won't M able to 1fford any blrthOaY
OAHnts lor you for the oeJCt 13 )INn
. . • that kind of rules out W«&lt;dlnt
prueots, too.

HORSIE: I know thoro's no r-.on but
WhY don't you •Pol091.te anyway . The
C&gt;t\Onevolce.

I'VE BEEN neglected. NObOdy wanu
to buy mo. My name Is Anastula and
I'm for sate for only SllO. I'm 1
2 · door, blue Tem~t w ith an
automttlc tra nsmlulon, 82,000 mllft,
and 1 very se)(Y boc:tv. I I lntere ued, a. II
AI 831-4113.

LONELY GUY ~1&lt;• m .. nlnfilhll
relationship with w•rtn, understandtn'il
91r1 Con tie l Bo" 22, Spectrum olftce

oral

w ord assoclo1tlon g.ames while wattin9

for t ne office se&gt;&lt; sym bol are •tckl

•A·

LOST.FOUND

IT MAY BE your T.V. and your car
but they're MY bath towels!

CHER N .M. Bonne Anlversatre, S.B.

Of.

LOST , Min's s1111er tO briCelet,
engraved with "!Eddie." Call . Oot
831-2383 Of Ed 131·238 • • R-Md.

JH t -

FOR SALE

Lcwe,

DEAR NANCV from Ftusnrng. hiPPY
six montnsr
rney've been

FREE Allertlonate olaylut otacl&lt; and
while female kitten noeos a 9000
nome. Call M•rytii37..04S6 .
FIRST ·RATE \&lt;lrvtce, not II,.\ rate
sates at 1 ndependenl F orelgn Clf
Servtce. 839 1850.
HIGH performance m..:hantc rooking

lor summa• lob Specta iiJI on HEMI,
••o.
383 Allo rur and a nd •usoen•lon
work Pruflclertl w1tt1
pnase• o f n1vn
111

Now l1iring.

pert o rm.tn c- e

rnodfftc•ttun5.

C •H

Shades 8 31-4046

Not long ago everybody was, or ~o II seems . Tomes change
And ~ 0 do many ,ales careers, lor example We ftnd th1s "
true to on extent tn our bustnen Because, typtcolly, the
person we h1re olreody has somt• selling experience 1n another
ltnc of w ork Chances ore, too, he was successful But now
greener pastures beckon
What do we offer such o perwn? Expert supervrs10n ond
1r01nrng when he storh ond obove· overoga eorntng~ os he
progresses . An onnuol 1ncome high rn the frve · ft~ure brocket
1s not uncommon for servrce• rendert&gt;d on our bustnen
dtnign 1ng f1nonciol pions for individuals ond businesses
fh,nk about it. And then f you're tnletested n tofktng about it,
call Walt Cozmark or 8rll Wagner al

AUTO R~OI OS and tapes Sales and
servlc:e 10'1\. 01\COunt wlln tnl~ ad
Grupp Bros 877 ?2!&gt;0

886-2350

PillA GO GO TntS week onl y , ouy
two suos get one free 8lii·4!&gt; S 7 NOW
O PEN SU NDAY

DO YOU GET hungty al I he od&lt;llst
hours&gt; DELl PLAC E RES 1 AU RANT
IS o pen 2 4 nours every l hu rsday ,
Frtday and Satur d•v In se•ve your
ta•ort1e oosnes Hnl krusnes. oancal&lt;es
~no eggs , bago•• a no II&gt; • at Unlverslt ll
Plata

I'EMA LE serHUr needs lOb Can do
m any types ol w ork, Ptelerabty In UB
•rea Ca ll Mar y 838-489Z
ANT tQUES ana n•Odern lurnlture ,
See Sid at
, eramoc-, ~h1na. etc
Yl\terd•Y &amp;. T nn\orro"" S h o o. 1439
!~erlel Ave

APART MENTS WANTED
WOMAN , 22 , needs place to II~•.
Prefer o w n roum C all Debbe 837..0744
(keep lrylng)
3-4 BEORO O ~ apartment to rent:
wllttln campus wlll(lng oluance : for
summer ana tall 1g72 Call 831 ·208!1 .

-"'a..-·· •

.-........~.,

If M &lt;lrf WJUIW· TV, Cb... ..t

•

....

..,.......,~

.. ..-......

W/Mrvl•• NI1M. \C.o,.,h flit -4 S..J.y. !lint. 1//o

fEMALE graO student Wllh (well
behaveo 1 009 oestres 1 or 2 bedroom,
lurr1 ls!led or partly lurntsneo preferred,
by Mar cn l Under SIOO Call Lindt
883 8037

A.I.E.S.E.C.
and Student Association Speakers Bureau
Sponsor

Victor John Yannacone, Jr.
(Noted Environmental Lawyer)
Speaking on

Management and Environment: Is the Law the Answ~r?
Monday February 21, 1972

Norton 231
Time: 7:30p.m.

'

Friday, 18 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

~

�Announcements
UB Vets Club will hold a meeting for ele&lt;:tion of
officers tod~y from 5 7 p.m. in Room 332 Norton.

NOW is sponsoring a panel diK ussion, "Child
Care In Erie County," Tuesday at 8 p.m.,
WestminiHer Presbyterian Hall. For further
information, !S36-2873.

UUAB lherary Arts Committee will sponsor ~
poetry reading to benefit the Independent School of
Buffalo tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the Fillmore Room.

Shabbos at Ch~ad , tonight, 6 p.m
tomorrow at 9 :30a.m. at the Chabad House.

Seminar on " Induction and Scientific Method ,"
today at 4 p.m., Building 4244 , Ridge Lea, Room
II

New York Sta t e Na t io nal Guard has
approximately 30 o pening~ and is presently
acceptmg applications for them Anyone interested,
t.ont.lcl B1ll at 823-3217 or Gene at 825-5040
Korean Student Association i~ sponsori ng ~pring
Frogrunce, lnternattonal Month Korean movie today
at 7 .30 p.m ., Diefendorf 14 7 Ticl..et~ are av.ttlable .11
!he Norton Hall ticket office

~n d

UB Table Tennis Club and the intramural
proaram will have tournaments for both men and
women this evening at 7 p.m., Norton Recreation
Area . Competition restricted to University students
not members of the club .
Hillel 1s now taking reservations for the Sabbath
dinner to be held Friday , Feb. 25, 1972 Sign up •''
the t.~ble or at the Hillel house.
AIE.SEC and SA Speakers Bureau pre~ent live
Victor John Y.tnnalone )peaking on the top1c ,
"Management and the Environmen t: Is the Law the
Amwer?'' Mnnd..ty at 7.30 p.m., Room 231 No rton.

CAC movie HumiC/ w1ll be ~huwn on Monday a&gt;
Ressurection House w1ll hold an open house
well al&gt; today and tomorro w .1t 7 30 .tnd 9 · 30 p.m.
in Capen 140. Ttckeg wtll be av.ttl.lhlt' .tt tht: No rton ton1ght dl 8 :30p.m
Hall tid..et office.
UB Opera Club w1ll present Gilbert and
Club Latino will hold J general mcctlnJ( lllti,1y ,11 &lt;;ullivan \ Po lienee , tomorrow. Sunday and Monday
.. 7 p.m , Room 232 Nortnn
at 8 30 p.m • Batrd Recital Hall Adm1ssion is free .
Represenuuves of all clubs Jft' rnv1tcd to o~llcnd
cl meeting concern1ng the upcom rng Inter n.ltll&gt;n.ll
Fteit.l today at 6 p,m , Roon1 262 Norton .
Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuauese
and the Department of Th~ter are pleased to offer a
lecture by Will iam Weaver, " The Lonehnes~ of tht!
ILllian Writer, " Tuesday , reb. 22, 1972 dl l p.m .,
233 Norton . Mr. Weaver h the Natio nal Book Award
winnet for hr~ translation of lt.tlo L .tlvino 's
Cosm1Com1o .

UB Table Tennis Club annoum.es the Up ~t.ue
New Vorl. Clo,ed Table Tcnnt\ Tnurn..tment' for all
1nterested players Compt'l1t10n w1ll be held 10 six
classe~ tom on ow .tl 10 J .m., Norton RN.rcatron
Area.
Hillel w1ll hold J !:&gt;Jbbath s.erv1c.e th11. cvcnrnJ( at
8 p.m 1n the H1llel Huu* .

International Month Coffeehouse to night and
tomorrow nrght, rir~t F-loor Cafeteria..t
UB Sports Car Club mvite~ dll intere,ted
member' to the YMCA car rally lecture ~ries
TuC\day at 7·30 p.m., Delaware YMCA
German Club will spon...ar a film Tuesday at
7 30 p.m., Room 233 Norton.
Course in " Brrtish Pr1mary Schools" will be held
fmm June 26
July 21 at Did)bury College,
Manchester, England . This course is open to both
w-aduate and undergraduate students.

S po rts I nformt~t i on
Tonight: Varsity lencmg at Cleveland St.Jte
Unive"ity.
Tomorrow : Var~ity hoc~ey vs Kent Stdtc,
Amherst Rec Center , 9 ·45 p.m.; varsi ty basketball at
Rochester, 8 .30 p.m. ; freshm an basketball .1t
Rochesrer, 6:30 p.m.; varsity wrestling at Cortland
State ; varsity fencing at Case Western Reserve with
Air Force.
Sunday : Varsity hocl.. ey vs. Amerrcan
International, 11 30 a.m., Amherst ReG Center
Saturday night 's hockey game will be broad~t
live over WBFO radio, 88.7 on your FM dial.

Outriders poetry progr&lt;Jm has shifted to Monday
nights at the One [yed C.tl, 28 Bryant St., Monday
evening
A Po ulin, 8.30 p.m. All readings arc
lollowed hy an open reading

UB Ice Skating Club will meet today at 11 30
Kibbutz K1ravan wrcl&lt;.end event~ rn(.lude •' am. dt Br1ghton Rink. Bu..e) leave Clark Gym ~~
LOffee house ton1gtn and tomorrow mght at lJ p.m 10 45
tn the r trst r loor Cafeterta, Norton , ddmi!&gt;!&gt;ion ~.50 ,
Chabad House will hold a Mmcha &lt;,ervrce
an exh1bit in the Center Lounxc Norton today,
tomorrow and !&gt;unddYi guerilla theater, S.aturddy ar Monday at 2:30p.m Room 346 Norton.
12 30 p m., Center Lounge Norton , a symposium,
"L1fe rn Utopid, " Sunday Irom noon 2 30 p m 111
The Astronomy Club w1ll hold election of
the Conference The.Her, and a party Sunday n1ghr oflteers Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Observatory .
pwce~~mg orders
Hcmdbook Anyone mt cre~ted ,

CAC needs help rn
Birth Control

TICKET OFFI CE
Avai lable at the T icket Office
Studio Arena Th~ter
Thru Feb. 20. Th~ Trial of the Cutonsv;fle Nine
MMch 2 26 : Romeo and julltt
Rock and Folk Conceru
Feb. 20 : Ye) and j . Gcils (K)
Feb. 21: Canned Heat and Jo hn Lee Hooker (8)
Feb. 27 : Don Mclean (K)
March 1 · Kinks and Fairport Convention (K)

fur the
w nt.sLI

Debb1e or R.tlph , CAC offrcc

What 's Happen ing?

Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra (K)
Feh 19 &amp; 22 : Christoph E~hcnbach, piano
Feb. 27 &amp; 29 : Leonard Pennario, p1ano
March 3: Gershwin night

Saturd.1y , Feb 19

Erie County library

lum.crt " Rage Ov&lt;'f thC' lrJ\l Beethoven,'' B p.m.
and 10 p.m ., Albright-Knox Art Gallt•ry
Concerr Bulfalo Ph1111.1rmon" Orchc\tra , 7 30 p m.
Sunday , Feb. 20
Concert · Rage Over the Lost Bcrthoven ," 7 30 and
9 p.m , Albnght Kno" Art L»alle1y
Loncert Ye' &amp; J C.cih Band, 7 p.m .. Klrrnh&lt;~r'~
Monday, Feb. 21

r ilm

I he Murd~' ut Fred flumpron , ~ p,m . Roum
233 Norton
r ilm The Rubble. 3 p.m. •rnd 8 p.m , Confete.• nce
Theater
Concert. UB Oper.s Club prc\cntinx Grlbert Jnd
Sullivan's Pollence, 8 .30 p m, Ba1rd RecitAl Ha ll
Concert Canned II eat wrth John Lec Hool..er ,
Buffalo State

Feb . 18: Claude Kipnrs Mime f heater
Albright Knox Art Gallery
r eb. 19 &amp; 20: " Rage Over the Lo~t Beethoven '
Feb 26 &amp; 27 : Company of Man
Buffalo Braves Basketball (M)
t- eb 22 : Balt imore
Feb. 25: Boston
Roller Derby (M)
Feb 21
Dipson's Plaza North Theater
Fiddler on the Roof

Courtyard Th~ter
The Trial of the Ultonsvlll~ Nine

\V
The Spectrum offiu will be dosed Monday,
Feb. 21 . The next issue of The S~ctrum will ;appear
on Wednesday, Feb. 23; deadline for ads and
back page is today.
1·1

Coming Concerts
March 8: Delaney, Bonnie &amp; Friends, on sale
Feb. 21 (K)
March 19: Shirley Bas.sey and Woody Herman,
on sale Feb. 21 (K)
KEY :
K - Klemhans
M - Memorial Auditorium
B - Buffalo State

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                    <text>Vol. 22, No. 56

Stat. Uniwnitv of New Yen 11t Buffllo

Wednelday, 16 Febrowy 1972

Movement still atiye

People's Coalition reveals
CJllerular joT coming year
by Paul Krehbiel

and Lynda Teri
The People's Coalition for Peace and
Justice (PCPJ) was one of the national
anti-war coalitions which planned the
massive May Day demo nst ratio ns last
spring.
This year. their activities are mo re
locally based and include supporting the
Harrisburg 8 and Angela Davi s;
dem o nstrating and organizing against
verty; and un11ing for wo rker's rights.
t- o unded in December 1970 in Chicago,
PCPJ is a result of a split which
occurred in the New Mobilization
Committee to End the War in Vietnam .
The marc h o n Was h i ngt o n in
N ove mber 1969 was the largest
demo nstration in US. h istory - o ne
millio n strong. It was o rganized by the
New Mobilization Committee and its
forerunner, the National Mo~il iza tion
Committee to End the Wa r in Vietnam .
During this time, rising fric tion between
various elements witltin the Mo be
occurred while differences in po litical
strategy increased .
Anti-war activity expanded in man y
local regions ac ross the country,
especially o n college campuses after the
major November demo nstration . As m o re
and more campuses became involved,
individual struggles cOirninated in the
hi stortc nation-wide Ge neral Student
Strike of May 1970 I t was at th is time
that the New Mobe split 1nto two
groups.
A split is created
The basic differences were whether t o

expand the war protest to include o ther
releYant issues or to isolate the anti-war
protest and concentrate on that alone.
The Socialist Workers party was most
instrumental in maintaining the anti-war
issue, independent of all o thers. They
initiated the Natio nal Peace Action
Group (NPAC) wltic h has since o rgan ized
demonstrations under the slogan o f "Out
Now." They believed they would acquire
m ore support if th ey confi n e d
themselves to the Vietnam War. Ending
the war w as cons1dered the most
important task to be acco mplished .
The other group wh1ch emerged from
the New Mo be split attempted to find a
n e w direction for the a ntJ · war
movement . They believed it was time to
broaden the anti-war movement by
i nc luding ot h e r pr essmg 1ssues of
national importance. They li nked the
war with the growing econo mic problems
and political repressio n. The Comm1ttee
to End Wa r, Racism and R epression was
an inital atte mpt to merge all national
issues.
The Communist Party played a major
role in establishing that committee but ,
as others became involved, an attempt
was made t o form a larger. more
broadly based coalihon. In December
1970 a conference wu called in Chicago
and the People's Coalition was born.
Representatives from almost every
majo r city in the country, including
Buffalo, were present. Three national
demands, similar to the three national
demands o f the General Student Stnke
( May 1970) , wer e presented and
adopted . They we re:
I. Immediate withdrawal of all US.

forces and equipment from Indochina.
2 . Guaranteed annual income o f
S6500 for a family of four .
3. Freedom for all political prisoners.
Anti-war groups and po litical defense
committees pressed for the first and
tturd demands, while Natio nal Welfare
Right s Organization pressed for the
second . The coalition believed all issues
were interconnected (i.e. the war helping
to cau5e the growing economic crisis and
poli t ical repression) and a national
coalitio n should address itself to all
three.

New priorities
Many believed ending the war in
Indochina was a priority and that more
peo ple would move against it if they
realized how it affected them and was
connected to their daily lives. They felt
that problems of poverty and repression
should be dealt with on a national scale.
At the PCPJ fo unding conven tion, the

National Student Association presented
the peace treaty they had just completed
wi t h students o f North and South
Vietnam . The " People"s Peace Treaty"
was adopted and implemented for use in
o rgan izing additional anti-war support .
In January 1971 , a conference was
called in Ann Arbor , Micltigan to discuss
PCPJ's spring activities. Here, plans for a
no n-violent May Day demonstration were
made. The pro test wu to include civil
di sobed ie nce with the intention of
"tying up " the Pentagon, Selective
Serv i ce and other war making
institutions to temporarily hinder the
war effort. The actions of the V-i&amp;nam
Veterans Apinst the War and the April
24 anti-war march in Wasbi.n«ton were
endorsed by PCPJ .

Fint local meetina
In mid February 197 I , representatives
fro m Buffalo called the first local PCPJ
meeting to discuss Buffalo's participation
in the up&lt;:o mmg spring activities. A wide
range of groups were represen ted and
three committees were formed to deal
w1th t h e May Day and April 24
demon s t rations and circulate the
" People's Peace Treaty.'' Most attent ion
was g1ven to the Ma y Day actions
altho ugh 7000 signatures were collected
111
support of the peace treaty in
Buffalo.
The May Day de m onstrations showed
the world how the US. government was
dealtng W1th the growing American
ant1·war movement by arrest ing I 3,000
people Some groups dec1ded that the
dtsruptmns nf May Day may not be the
type of act1V Jt1es they wished to
endorse
Aft er Ma y Day, the local PCPJ
chapter began to ex pand by organizing
and su pporttng a w1de range of activities .
On H1rosh1ma Day (Aug 6) the local
PCPJ c hapt er, tn connection with
national gro ups, called a downto wn
demonstratton to protest the war and to
remember the vic t ims of that atomic
blast. I n the summer, the local PCPJ
co mbined with the newly formed
Buffalo chapter of the Vie tnam Veterans
against the War and initiated com munity
meetings in Hamburg, Lan caste r,
Clarence and Grand Island .
Against Attica
In protest of the Attica massacre.
PCPJ mobilized 600 people to attend
the Albany demonst ration, Sept. 23,
1971 When Agnew came to Buffalo,
Oct. 7, they organized a demonstration
----contl nuecl on page 8 -

�-

Marijuana Commission report

Decrimino1iz'ati0n or bust
by Howie Kurtz
Campus Editor

The Nation al Commisston o n Marijuana and
Drug Abu se h as u n a ni mously decided t o
recommend Chat all cri minal penalties for the
private U$e and possession of m arijuana be
eliminated. The commission will o fficiall y maJce
t hese recom mendations to Congress and President
Nixon on March 22.
ln 1 related development , former number two
federal drug investigator J o hn Finlator VlSited
A.lbany yesterday to lobby for state rem oval of
crimmal penal ties for possession o f manJuana. Mr.
Finlator, retired d eputy duector of the federaJ
Bureau o f Narcotics, was part of a conference
sponsored b y the National Organ1zallo n for the
Reform of Ma nju ana l aws.
Th e organ izatio n IS backing a bill by
Assemblyman fran z Leichter (0., Manhattan) to
leplize marijuana and let the state tax it , as it
now does alcoh ol and tobacco. Mr. Finlator said
lut week that it is "just wrong as hell" to send
mariJuana users to Jail.

Prmlte pot

home.
Stud ies ha ve sho wn th at grass is a social
drug, most o ften smoked at p arties, and critics
feel the majo rity approach would open a th icket
of questio ns about th e legality of pot smoking at
rock concerts , cocktail lo unges, dormitories, etc.
Liberals on the commission have argued without
success for complete decri minalization of aU the
incidents of use by adults. The 13-member
commSSton is conservatively oriented , with niJle of
its members appointed by Presid ent Nixon. The
most liberal votces on the comm ittee are sa1d to
be Sen. J acob Javits ( R .. N .Y .), Sen . Haro ld
Hughes (0., Io wa)· a nd J oan Cooney, producer o f
Sesame Street

President 'Nixon p ublicly opposed legaliza t ion
2. 1971, when he
said "Even 1f the comm issao n does recommend
that 11 I pot I be legalized , I will not follow that
recommendat t on " Whether Mr. Ntxo n wt.ll
consider foUowing a commtSSJon recommendation
of partial decnmtnalization or reduction of
penalties IS n ot k nown.
Dr. Brown, dtrector of the NIMH, satd: "l
have personally felt for a lo ng t ime th at the
penalhes for use and possession are much too
severe and much too o ut o f keep1ng with
know ledge abo ut its harmfulness. I have stro ngly
been in favor of decrimin alizatJon," added Dr
Brown, which h e defined as "penaltieS that do
not Jail people for u~e. "
Decnmtnahzalton was also th e wo rd used by
Mr Ftnlator, wh o spoke in Albany yesterday at a
conferen'e s upporllng Mr
Le1tcher's state
legahzat10n btU . Mr Leichter's bill never got out
of comrn1ttee last year. The state senate passed,
but the assembly rejected, a m o re co nservative
ball ~all1ng for reduced p enaltaes for possesston of
small am o u nts of grass. This was Assemblyman
Ch ester Hardt's (R, Amherst) bill, wh1ch has
heen reintroduced into the state legislature thts
year, dS reported 1n Monday's The Spectflnn
al il news conference on Ma y

The nation~s top psycltiatrist, d trect or o f the
National Instit ute of Men tal Health , JOined Mr
Fin tator by urging an easing o f marijuana laws.
Meanwhil e, the National Co mmi ssion on
MariJuana. persuaded by 50 commiSsioned reports
and several hearings during their o ne-year study,
concluded ttuat the cost to society o f the current
stiff marijuana penalties o utwetghs the dangers
that mtght occur from libera.l.Jzang them . The
commiSSIOn dtd no t advocate full legal1za11on,
favonn&amp; cnmmal penalties for the sale: of the
drug. They also recommend J.'lll sentences for
such actions llS growing manjua na, gJVlng it to
fnends, transporti ng it or smoking it 111 public.
The commission 's conclusions were based o n
the results of studies wluch yielded three maJor
po1nts. that marijuana is not addi ctive nor
physically or psychologically harmfu l. even a fter
long use that tis use does nut lead to the use of
hard drugs, such as herotn. and that ll\ use does Pressing for concessions
not lead to enme
There are several unknown pomts as far as
the Nat1onal Commtss1on 011 MMtJUana ·s final
Just like Prohibition
drafl of the report tt will present to the Prestdent
"Th ere IS &amp;ncreas1ng evtden&lt;.e t.hJt we are and Congress 111 March II is yet to be seen
approaching a sirwation similar to that at the lime wh elher the IJber~aJ or conservative viewpoin ts will
the Volstead Act wa.~ repealed" and Prohib1tton wm our f ormer Govern or R aymond p Shafer,
was ended, wro te Dr James 1'. Carey, a professor the cha~rman of the comm ission , ts sau.l to be
of cri minology at the Universt ty of Caljfo r naa at prcsstrtg for con.:essions tha t wo uld result m a
Berkeley, 111 a report to the commL'iSIOn T h e unanimous lc!port. " They said we'd be a rubb e r
commission ciJ~o found a stmt.lant y between the stamp for the Nixon administrallon, and we've
present, when there IS extenSive diSregard of already sh pwn that isn't so," commen ted Mr
rnanjuana laws. and the penod JU~l before the Shafe1
end of Proluhlhon, when mt.lltons of Amc:ncans
Many observers feel the cornmtsslon's report
were dunking aJeohol illegally A &lt;;tudy by the co uld generate a dramalll shtft tn the public's
commtsston found that J~out 24 mLihon attitude towart.l the legal statu!&gt; of the drug In
Amencans have used manjuana
tight of th e gnlWing support on the \IJte Jnd
Another o t the 50 reporh hy ~:omm1SS11.m federal leveb for the lessenmg of pennlttes,
member.. and outsJde co nsultants WllS made by decnmlnaiiL.allun cH legahzatwn elf man1 uana,
Ench Goode, assoctate professor o t soc1ology at where almost none ex1stcd tw u yea r~ ago, 1t
the State Umversity at Stony Brllok. Or Goode's would seem th&lt;ll a 'h1ft m the pubhe's at11tude l.S
report found th at cutting the ltnk uf Illegality already happe n1n g.
between marij uana and herutn w ould to~ke "the
Wh&lt;!lher I Y7l 1.an he !il..cncd t1.1 the penod
young manJuana user out of a &lt;.rtnllnal drug ustng prinr to the repeal nf Prolllbllton depends on
subculture" &lt;~nd ~ubsequently reduce herom one') Vlewpomts. but tl would seem s.~fc to
add1ct1on
Onl.' lOntrovers1al potnl wlllun the pred1ct that the sttff pcnall1eo:, for rn.mju.lna on
commiSsion IS the maJOnty's view that smoktng the ~tdte U1ld ft'deral lt'vels Jtc IH.•adt'd for s•&gt;me
pot sh ould ht' illegal outs1de of the nvac.y of the type of redul:lton

~HAIRSTYLING
Joe's Theatre Barber

Sub«ript/on ,.,_ .,., $4.50 11M
..,..,., or $8.00 for two _,.,-.tWJ.

Scond a-~ Pllid lit Buff.lo
Nllw Ycri.
'

COLLEGE TEXTS • PROFESSIONAL BOOKO#Y"""""A
MEDICAL • NURSING • DENTAL
• PAPERBACKS •

IIIII~FALtt
1r~)[1rllttttl~

STttRBS, II~.
3&amp;1e Mal• St.

Free

o~rklnQ

a1

presents

THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAY
Feb. 17 &amp; 19

b31~~.877 -2989 ~~~

N - York, N. Y. 10011.

Commi ttee w as recognized as 3
club by the assembly At the
moment, it ha s o nl y 15
members but IS open to all
undergr adua te stude nt s . A
speaker for the club said they
w o uld h old debates, forums,
workshops and other services to
the commun ity.
Budgets were passed in favc&gt;r
of the Sptrit , Unity, Peace
SympoSium and the Histoncal
Simulation Club. Also passed
was a budget to hold a three
day folk festtval later lhts
mont h . S u ch a festival will
include concert workshops and
live performances tn Clark Gym .
There a r e 39 vali d ated
representatives in the Student
Assembly . The 13 delegates that
at t ended M onday's meeting
acknowledged that not all
representatives might have
known that a meeting was being
held. This tn cluded one stude.tl t
w h o c I aI m e d
t o hav e
acctdentally wandered into the
meetins room. It was thus
suggested that a better publicity
campaign be inslttuted to allt:tct
absent_ members

THE UUAB FINE AR1S FILM c:x::M\11 TTE E

WIGS •HAIR COLO RING

R•p r•••n tfKI for lldt~t~rtiung by
.N11tlon111 Educ•tlolllll Adt!Hti•lng
~lctl, Inc., 360 LexingtOn A..-.•

Marred by poor attendance,
last Monday's Stu den t Assembly
was u nab le 10 act o n proposed
co nstituti o nal reform. As a
result , the meeting adjourned
barely an hour after it began
Greatest con I ro versy and
con tenti on surrounded the
proposed St eve Stills concert.
Ear I ie r I hi s semes ter the
assembly voted to book Stills
for a concert IJlte tn Apnl.
Since then there has been much
debate on the S20,000 salary to
be paid Stills with the assembly
decidtng to reconsider the
allocation.
The d Is c \J s s ion
was
remmtScent of past meetings.
Some representatives su p po rted
the con ce rt as a low risk
venture that the student body
would respond to . Others
questiOned the amount Stills
was to be p:ud and also debated
the very need to put on any
type of concert. When a vot e
t a k e n ,
i t
w a s
w a s
overw h e lm i ngl y m favor o f
can celling all plans for the S tills
concert
T h e B u f fa I o Lab o r

, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .._~._. .._~mUQI~IIIIIUm~IUIIItma,._. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .~

lOSS Kenmo re Avenue
(A t Colvm Tlteutrt' )

The Spectrum ,. publi6h«1 til,..,
tim111 II
Wllllk, -ry Mondey,
w.d~Wdey lind Fri~My: during th•
r.guler eclldemic y•r by Sub-Board
1, Inc:. Offic• lint IOCIItfKI 111 365
Norron H111/, S~c. Univ11n ity of NhV
York fit Buff.lo, 3435 Mllln St.,
Buff111o, N11w York,
14214.
Ttllt1phon11: Aract Cow 716; Edltorillf
831-4113: Buumm, 831 -3610.

Student Assembly votes
to cancel Stills concert

Nixon opposition

FRIDAY &amp; SUNDAY
Feb. 18 &amp; 20

AMOVIE
INTHI
TRADmON
OF THE
MARX
BROS.

George Segal
Ruth Gordon
in

WHBRE'S POPPA

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TICKETS 50¢ before 6 p.m. - 75¢ after Faculty, Staff, Alumni - $1.25

CJmJ•tlon: 16,000

Page two . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 16 February 1972

D lv. of Sub BOMd 1,

�GSA~

,

..

Grievance

WNYPIRG will present
fiscal p)ans to Lorenzetti

aired

A first draft of grievance procedures
encompass1ng all aspects of graduate school affairs
will be presented to the Graduate School
Executive Committee today.
While the procedures are expected to apply
for grievances against both faculty and students,
the main concern seems to be the lack of
structured recourse for graduate students in
instances where their rights may be infringed.
The problem of grievance procedures is one
which tas been ever present in the memory of
most University inhabitants . While some
departments and at least one faculty have
adopted structured procedures, u is only with
disputes dealing with grades that University-wide
processes have been instituted .

This vacuum is considered especially grave for
graduate students. While relattvely little can be
done to prevent the undergraduate from receivin~
his degree if In possession of a sufficient number
of credits , the grad student's fate may rest on the
whims of his advisor or his dissertation
committee. likewiSe, troubles with felJowship
demands and assistanuh.ip stipends are foreign to
the undergraduate.
Committee refonned
lmtiaJ procedural dr;afts rue the product of a
formal subcommittee of the Graduate School
Exe c utive Committee o n grievances. This
committee, according to John Greenwood , GSA
vice president for External Affairs , was originally
formed last year at th request of GSA to set up
procedures to be followed when confronted by
particular cases.
little was done over the summer , and a
reconstituted committee, chaired by Richard
Koehl, Dept. of PbiJoso phy, readied the proposals
wtuch will be distributed today
GSA President Mike Nicolau and Mr.
Gfeenwood dillcussed the dlfOcullin wttich have
been faced in setting up a grievance mechanism.
Mr Nicolau said : "There have been sporadic
attempts to set up procedures which have met
opposition with some faculty and administrators ."
Some of the opposition apparently lies around
the fear that any formal mechanisms will open
the way for infinite complaints.
"The argument goes," explamed Mr Nicolau .
" 'once you Institute formal mechanisms, students
wtll take advantage of them.' But as It is now,
grieved students simply have no protectton."
Additionally he remarked : "If a professor really

wants to aet a student. He can be got1en."
Other areas of opposition also exist however.
Varlous means of fundina this
Some quarters of the faculty regard any moves in
the direcdon of a grievance apparatus as direct campus' Weatem New Yorlt Public
Research
Group,
threats towards their academloc autonomy. Still l ntereat
othen feel that no real need exists for fonnalized (WNYPlRG) wiU be presented
procedures - that grievances are best settled In tomorrow co Anthony Lorenzetti,
acting vice president for Student
an informal environment.
While qreeing In theory with this, Mr. Affairs. At this time, Dr.
Greenwood feels this philosophy to be rather Lorenzetti wlll comment on the
useless in practice. ''The whole academic process legality of alternative methods.
Jeff levin , a WNYPIRG
with ~ds to graduate students,'' he stated ,
coordinator.
reported that he
"revolves around oral promises. This is fine 1f the
expec
t
s
Or
.
Lorenzetti to
prom ises are given in good faith , but
recommend a referendum that
unfortunately that's an utopian ideal."
One of the more frequent dilemmas involvtng would raise the mandatory
graduate students IS a general absence of definite student activities fee. However ,
requirements. Mr . Greenwood declared : ''All too Mr. Levtn remsrked that he was
often students get in a bind only because they opposed to the plan According to
didn't know they were supposed to do something. Mr. Levtll , the added revenue
~at we're trying to do Is get the departments to might not be aUocated to
set up a formal process so the student knows WNYP I RG but to other
where he is, what he is expected to do and also organawtions for o ther uses.
Mr
levin favor s a
to Inform the faculty what IS expected of them ."
quasl ·voluntary fee in which each
student would be assessed an
Up through ranks
The procedures wilJ outline the general path "automatic" $2.00 charge to be
wh 1c h the gnevance will follow during the coUected by the bursar. Upon
appellate process. For instance, a grievance would Individual request , the money
likely start out on the departmental level, and wo uld be returned to those
then proceed to what ill referred to u the students desiring refunds.
Th1s system, Mr . ltvm
division (somewhat analogous to faculty) level.
co
mmented , "worked out
If still unresolved, the grievance would then
s
uc
cessfully " tn o ther states.
be considered by the appropriate dean. to be
notab
ly Minnesota. But , he
followed by the academk vice president and
continued
· "We may have a
finally the president. At all steps 1n the process,
struggle
to
institute that system
excepting those of personal consideration (such as
here."
that by the president), student participation
would be significant.
While vuytng pievance mechanisms do, as Future atrudure
Regarding the future
stated, eXJSt in certain segments of the U"!_versity ,
it Is hoped by Mr. Greenwood that the "other srructure of WNYPIRG. Mr.
mechanisms would be null and void as applicable LevJn explained that it wUJ
include local boards designed to
to grad students, so as to avoid duplication.
communtcate
and carry out the
Today 's p res entation of the appeals
policy
decisions
of a regional
me chanism wtU be foll owed at subsequent
board . Such a regional board
meetins&lt;~ by a detailed report supplemented with
additional documentation. Students Involved with would , In tum. be composed of
representatives from the vanous
the preUmtnary planning are quite hopeful that
local boards
these procedures will eventually be tmplemented
The number of these local
and prove valuable. Stated Mr Nict)lau " We are
boards IS undetermined, with
now receiving vital support by faculty and
Mr . Levan , pointing out thai
admmistrators who have finally become more
only part1capat1ng colleges would
aware."
be members with interested hagh
school and communaty people
JOllllng the co llege groups
GENUINE REPENTANCE
"V• turned 10 God f\'om 10 o1s
ft C.l Wever, he added. II I~
to ""'• the llvlni 1n0 true God ;
•no to w11t tor his Son from
possible that some cummunny
hNYen, whom he r1lsed from
111e deiO, •v•n Jesus."
htldies wuuld instst 0 11 forming

Bible Truth

lThes 1 : 9,10

I
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I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
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I

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..

their own boards.
Each local board will send
o ne representative to t h e
regional body, but as Mr. Levin
reported, an added vote will be
pven for every 4000 members.
According to Mr. Levin, this
wou l d insure that any
c;ommunity group would not
possess the voting stiength of
larger college organizations.
At this University , as
explained by Mr. Levin, any
1nterested community member
would be represented on the
University's local board to
provide for a dilution of power
among Its members. Voting and
seating on the WNYPI RG board
will be limited to those students
who paid the $2 .00 voluntary
fee.
'Incentive'
Such a Hmitation, Mr . Levtn
feels. is to provide an
"t nee n t ive" to JOin and to
Insure that representat1ves
"ca re " about WNYPIRG .
Present WNYPIRG plans
anclude a continuation of a
petition dnve to gamer student
support . Mr. levin commented
that the dnve will last unill a
minimum of 51% of total
students have !igned. Such a
goal, according to WNYPIRG
officials, will be reached by lhls
Fnday . Mr. LeVU\ added " I
would be hsppy tf we reach
I 3 ,000." Thls would be a
thousand more signatures than
needed for a student majority .
After completion of the
petation drive , Mr . Levin
outli ned the next step u
formulating a funding method
and adopting a constitution.
nus co nstitution , he added ,
wou ld be a replica of the
M1nnesota PI RG's document
Wlth "only slight modtficallon ."
WNYPIRG h as already
s ubmitted a spr1ng budget
before th e Mtllard Fillmore
College Executive Commtllee
requesting money 10 h11e a
summer executive director.

HANG IT ON AT THE

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
WEDNESDAY
I
FRIDAY
I
I
"Cocktail Cruise with BARBARA"
Engine Room - Singles Nne
I
Free Hors d 'oeuvres - FREE BOOZE I
Free Fresh Popco rn
I
I
(at the sound of the bell )
I
I
Games
Prizes
Sing
AJong
Draft Beer JSc
I
with OON BURNS
I
M USIC - Casual Dress
I
Entertainment - such as Fencing,
I
Karate , Card Sharks
I
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT .EVERY NITE !
I
S T A R T I N G FE B . 15. 16, 17 GROOVE TO "T H I N G S T 0 C 0 M E " I

SHOWBOAT

IT'S ALWAYS A GAS AT THE SHOWBOAT
BUFFAJ,.O, N.Y.

I

I

Wednesday , 16 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Paqe three

�Common Council

Busing evokes heated debate
the Board of Education, the mayor and state
officials to find "a reaso nable solution."

by Dave Saleh
Spectrum Staff Writer

tower Delicatessen;···"
'try it, you'll like it'
AI first glance It's another
Food Service line. There are all
the familiar fixtures; the bent
forks, the cracked plastic trays,
the aluminum ones w h ich
weren't ripped off for sleds; and
the walls ti led 1n t h ose
marvelous insutullonal colors
like Oramamme areen, that
indescnbable yellow that looks
Like unwashed white and the
ever-pop ular grey -green-blue-purple.
But there's a difference.
Hebrew National cold cuts stare
out of the genwne deli-style
cooler Cheeses ue contentedly
on the 1ce and shces of roast
beef SJI back and relax as the
warm gravy washes over them .
J ean C appelini , buyer for
Food Servtce, stratghtened out a
pile of kosher hot \logs and
explalned why the new Tower
Delicatessen IS opemng up " We
finally reaiJZed
well maybe
we'd better not ~y fmally
we realJz.ed that maybe contract

lll~m~~W.~e-amcALL:

feed1ng as such is on the way
o ut."
Yiddisha yummies
So Mr . Cappe lln1 and
Hayward Parks, manager of
Tower Food Service urut, have
expa nded the sernces to meet
the needs of the growmg
number of students who do
their own cooking. The deh will
provide all of the usual food
and in add ition, pastrami,
corned beef, cheese, ham , salam1
and fresh baked good~. among
other things, at the lowest
pnces possible.
" We feel we arc go1ng to be
lower than most pnces," saJd
Mr . Cappelini. A survey of the
SUNY system has shown thut
the pnces are equal tu or lower
than prices anywhere else
The new Tower Dell wLII be
open fro m 7 a.m 7 p m .wd
wtll al~o offer prepared food to
Cojt there or take out
Clem Cohtc·c·r

AlAN

837 - 0393

Only 410 ...u evellebl• - open only to stud•nu. •mplov- end femiiiM

o• s 1LN Y

ALSO: EUROPE TRIS SUMMER

UU. , _ eft OOTI'T&amp;JIDOie lATa Ull DATD 10 EU1.0P1 ft1l 1U101D

Seminar on

"U.S. - CHINA
RELATIONS;

Busing as a means of school desegregation has
recently exploded into a major controversy for
the Buffalo Common Council and local Board of
Education .
Last week State Education Commissioner
Ewald Nyquist issued an order to the Buffalo
Board of Education calling for more extenstve
busi ng programs in order to desegregate the city's
"racially imbalanced schools."
The Buffalo Common Council and Board of
Education both failed in attempts to resolve the
problems generated by Mr . Nyquists's demands.
I nstead, local meetings last Tuesday became
scenes for heated discussions in which parties on
both sides of the issue clashed.
The Common Council meeting became the
scene of very loud and prolo nged debates when
no less than six resolutions reached the floor. Of
the six, only o ne was acted upon. This proposal
was a plea by University Councilman Charles
Volkert asking Mr. Nyquist to rescind his order
and "return the city of Buffalo to the
netghborhood school idea." The plea was defeated
10 3 as the overwhelming Dentocrattc maJonty
rose to defeat it .
Immediate compliance asked
The only other major ac11on was a 7 b vote
to defeat a receive-and-file motion on a resolution
sponsored by Councilman Delmar Mitchell and
George Arthur calling for immediate complrance
with Mr. Nyquist's order. The resolution also
called for the allocation of funds for legal counsel
"to 1mmediately beg~n court action for a
city-suburban school district ."
The resolutions brought out stern accusatiOns
from both s1des. and a strong plea by DemocratiC
majo11ty leader Mitchell w the council to steer
clear of "cheap demagoguery" and "come up
W•th some formula to keep our society from
fal/Jng apart," rather than encou rage divisiveness.
Mr. M1tchell also told council members to face
the facl I hat integration IS the "law of the land"
and 11 L~ " the decree nf the courts" that we
comply.
Earher 111 the sess1110 ( \ Htncllman Wllham
Hoyt attacked council at tempts w pas~ such
reso l u I ions saying : "We all 1-..now that the
problem Will not be resolved 111 the council We
may make ourselvcl&gt; ll)ll~ good to \)Ur
constituents but at the same lime we arc only
exagger:111ng the emotmns and 1ens1ons w11tun the
city ." Mr . Hoyt urged the counc1l to join W1lh

Slominski objects
These statements drew sharp criticism from
Ms. Alfreda W . Slo m inski, leader of the
two-member Republican minority. She challenged
statemen ts by both Mr. MitcheU and Mr. Hoyt,
claiming that the former "was m istaken" in h.is
claim that integration was the law of the land,
and that he gave no evidence to support h.is
claim.
Concernwg Mr . Hoyt 's statements, Ms
Slominski stated : "We need a change where
councilmen will get involved before the city 1s
torn apart." Ms. Slominski also said that city
schools are in such terrible condition that she is
forced to send her children to parochial schools.
In the Board of Education meeting, heated
debate over Mr. Nyquist's order also resumed but
here too no action was taken. The meeting was
highlighted by debates over the question of the
legality of the decision and whether or not the
issue should be taken to court. Board Chairman
Joseph Manch showed signs of despair over the
whole issue as he claimed that hls pnor
desegregation attem pts have failed and he has no
plans on further attempts to solve the problem.
Fleischmann backs busing
Th e busing coni roversy became more
inflamed on Wednesday of last week with the
release of the state's Fleischmann Comrnisston's
recomm endat ions o n sc h ool busing. The
corruruss1on report backed Mr. Nyquist's order
calling for more liberalized desegregation plans
throughout the state especially in Buffalo and
New York City .
The commiSSIOn urged a regauna1 approach to
1ntegrat1on through busing recruitment uf
mmority group teachers and school constructiOn
such as large regional "exemplary schools to be
built on urban outskirts with federal or state
funds for students of all rac1al and econom1c
backgrounds " The report went on to say that
school mtegrallon is ··a mean' to create an
atmosphere tn whtch our soc1ety's remarkable
racial and cullural divers11y can nounsh to lht•
benefit of all ."
Commenting on the Situation 111 Buffalo , lhe
report stated . "Almost nothing com;retc has bee11
done to overcome such [ractall Imbalance . And .
gaven current community atlltudc and lack 111
leadership, there 1s very little reason tu expect
lhat anything will be done voluntarily

'Patience' performance
Can a s.imple milkmaid find true happiness in the arms of a long haired fleshly
poet? Can a woman who has been aesthetically transfigured ever again accept the
light lo,e-talk of a Heary Dragoon?
Answers to these and other pressing questions about true love are to he found
in the Opera Club's production of Gilbert and Sullivan 's Patience (or: Bunthornl' 's
Bridt') in Baird HaU this weekend Saturday. S unday and Monday (Washington's
Birthday) at 8 :30 p .m. each evenmg. Admission is free.

OLD
M.AIIll

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
Mod Styles for Guys and Gals

Pa9e four _The Spectrum . Wednesday , 16 February 1972

Ll
1111 IIOADWAY

_ .... ,

.....HIDO

THURS. Feb. 17 thru
SAT. Feb. 19th

_.

�' ,.'

~

'

.

•'t'• t•

Amherst town meeting defines
educational funding problems
'

by Amy Weiss
Specrrom Stoff Wwer

-santos

'Wzzat?

Armored columns rumble across frozen
wastes, a crippled army surrounded in a devastated city, a decisio n
must be made; a last stand in the city or surrender. Russia 19437
No, room 340 Norton Hall , every Sunday from noon until 7 p.m .,
where the UB Conflict Simulation Club holds its meetings.
Members gather to test their skill in battles of both a historical
nature and of their own creation. New members are wefcome.

~!

Brazilian Carnavaltime
Cantavul! Wildl y h:1ppy
dancing, fren2.1ed hands dap pmg
rhythms over heads, and a
contagious spint of re.Jotctng
prevailed in the Fillmurc Room
last Saturday mght
The Brazilian C lub , Spanish
Club and PODLR sponsored the
celebration wh11:h lasted from 8
p. m . - 4 a.m. The· evemng was
an Jnternallonul Month event.
un dttempt lr• share loretgn
cultural activities
I n BrJzll. tloc people work
anJ when
hard Jll yc:11
(",u n;tval tt me ,11 nvc~ . cvcrywll'
pJrlttlpates
~~~ung. &lt;~nd
old
t•ountry and "t y dweller~ all
tollll' out 1ntu th~ ~tll"t: t ~ for
danc1ng and pHtytng. The
celeb rati on bcgl11S before Lent
and lasts fur five days, d
continual party att ended by all
people . They d on elabora te
ws tumes and parade through
the streets tn festtv1t1es very
stmiiar to th~: New Orleans
Mardi Gras
The Camaval here was given
an authentic tou ch 1n its
ll e c o r a t i o n s . M u lt1 -co I or e d
crepe-pa per !lowers. moblles and
streamers hung from the ceiling.
L&gt;a n cers ripp ed off streamers
a nd tied them around their
heads. lndian-5 tyle. T o add to
the genu1ne atmosphere, 35
Bra z.i 1ian students from the
InternatiOnal Fellowship were m
attendance. Tht·y were given a

Unusual
Diamond

.A

fJ

chance to have Cornaval :JW3Y
frnm home , cxperiencmg J
"foreign versionH

Unified joy
Th e Rod ngucr Band W&lt;~!o
employed
to
prov1lle
Lat1n·f1avored music , which set
everyone moving, Ci rcle and
chuin dances snaked through the
crowded floor , rutsing the
temp eratu re 111 the FiUmore
many degrees Recorded mu.~iL:
w.ts pia yt•J when the h.1nt.l
h tul.c . No mat tn what WJ'
piJylng. everyone w;l', danlln!(
wtth &lt;1 happy abanllnn
Carnaval was opc11 l l &gt; tht'
community and rt drew Va11uU'
group~ nf pcnplc StuJents that
were both member~ of th1·
sponsonng cluhs and those that
weren' t seemed to equally share
the umfied JOY of thc evening.
Adult members of the Buffalo
wmmunity were also enjoymg
the mood of Carnaval. Portugese
and Spanish were heard
throughout the area , interspersed
with Enghsh sh outs.
Bob Martin . president of the
Braz.tlian Club, was very pleased
wi th the results of Carnaval. He
hoped that with its success,
bringing out ~o many people
havmg a good time. there would
be another Carnaval next year
Mr. Martin added : " It's all we
hoped for and we're glad the
people ..:an take part m Braz.illan
cul ture ''

lntncacics concerning till' future ol the
educatiOnal sys tem in New York Sta te and the
nation were the subjects of dehate at "an Olde
Fashioned T own Meeting" sponsored by the
Amherst Jay cees and other lo.:al civic groups
Saturday at Rosary Hill College.
Titled, " Property T :txcs and The1r Impact on
P ublic Education With Spetial Attention to th e New
Fleischmann Com mission Report." the program
st rived to deline educatwnal funding problems and
seek alternatives to the t:X1stmg property tax .
l ocal properly taxes pay for over half the cost
of public edu.:atwn nat 10naJiy ~ Some .:ommumttes
are able to apporttun more money for per-.:hild
expendtture due tn the vJrianct: 1n number of
c hildren enrolled m puhhl sthuol , the rate ol
property tax directly voted on by the community
and the property values of the area . Thus the quality
of education varies from community to commum ty
Recent court decisions 111 Ca lifornia, Minnesota,
Texas and New Jersey have declared that the
property tax is un constitutiOnal because 11 permits
unequal educational oppCirtunities
Revision needed
The rece nt relea~t: pj the Fletschmann
CommiSsion report has reiterated the need to rev1se
the properly tux funding practice . The commiSSIOn
recommended that New York State assume complete
funding of its pubhc education system. The report
also advised the state to undertake a monumental
desegregation program, uuhz.ing bustng across
t1tstnct line.~. tf necessary, to attam rac1al balance.
Duane Mongerson, vice pres1dent o f the S weet
Home St.:huol Distnct, led off the meeting, directing
h1s remarks to the nsing costs of public educat ion
Citing statiStics from his distrirt of Sweet Home, Mr
Mnngerson demonstrated t h&lt;~t the unwtllingncss nf
the distnct residents to allo&lt;.all: rnore money for
rllu.:allon had furled thc board Ill adupt numer0\1~
h udget cuts.
Dr. Lawr~m: c Southw1ck, asst•c1atc professor of
Ma nagement Science at the State University o f
Buffalo, commen ted that whik 111equittes ca n be
found in the l'Ollection nf the property ta'l( the
income tax and exdst: tax aho pc&gt;ssess inequi ties . If
the stak would finance th.: publ1 .. sch t•ol .&lt;~ys lt!itl
ent1r~ly, 1t would additionally t;tke over control o f
the cdu..:ut1011 prtlct:SS thcrcm . he .uhlt!d
Urged Fleischmann ~upport
Vott:lng the sent1111cnt that 'ctthcr vo: ud.1pt or
lutun.: \hod, ~ct\ 1n. " w.1~ ( omllliSSIOrlct l·wald
Nyquist'\ d~~IStant , r
Alt~IJII
MacKinnon lie
Jdvt~ed thdt the Flc1~lh111ann C ' vtntnts~mn's hnd1ng.~
be enacted I he support 1.t the hus111~ •~sue, he
explained, ~~ contmgcnt no the tact that the
destmat1un ol the husl'l.l dultl •~ one of belll"r
educational opportuntty Spcak1ng ahout tht: goo~l ol
ranal nttegratton m the ~tJtc . Mr MacKmnnn ~a1d .
"Difference IS a thing u f valut:, n11t a thtng to he

feared or denied.''
7•
State Senator J ohn LaFalce praised the
scholarship of th e report but warned that it was not
something w hich the public should immediately
a.:cept or reject. Instead, he hoped the report would
be reviewed carefully by the State Education
Commission at public hearings across the state in the
near future. LaFalce adm1tted th at the system o f
fLnancing education in New York State must be
revised whether by choice or necessity.
He further took tssue w1th the report on t w o
grounds wttich he labeled ''ph ilosophical and
theological.·· LaFalce argued that the slate does n ot
have exdusive responsibility for providing education
nor can the Fleischmann Commission assume th at aU
men actually act
as
brothers. Comm issio n
recommendations anticipate that New York is a
··tt~ven here on earth" and such conditions d o not
exiSt, said Senator LaFalce.
Value-added tax proposed
Possi.bilities for a value-added tax were discussed
by William Mac Dougall of th e Intergovernmental
Relations Comm1ss1on. This tax would alleviate the
need for property taxes to support education and
would be paid on a natwnal scale. Regressive
features of thts tax will he studied and elimin ated.
Mr . MacDougall urged that although it is a
lem ptation to forget about the Fleischmann
( o mmi.SSion's findings, it JS most tmporta nt that the
report be evaluated and actwn taken
Dr. Charles Benson, executive director of the
Fleischmann Commtsston , then defended the report.
He accentuated the proposal that low-5pending
dtstricts would be brought up to a standard level and
no one wt.ll be levelled down. Extra money will be
placed tn dJStncts where there 1s a h1gh rnte of
failure, with academic testmg OCl'urnng early and
often .
A state-w1de property tax rate of S2.04 per
hundred dollars property value IS to be mstitu ted
Jnd the state will also assume the responsibilities of
LOilertive bargaming and mandating new services t o
the SY$tem. Regionaliz.ation of servtces such as
transportation
and
school
lunches will be
maintatned . Mr Benson does not see the recent
&lt;.ourt
de.:tstons
as
calling
pro perty
taxes
unconsut utional a., long as th ere are protective
"'uur-o~n!c&lt;ls that cud\ district is gettrng cqullJ money
for .:ducution.
(.'hJrles Gt'nm:h. ar11ng J~ moderator. opened
lhc Onor f&lt;lr ljllt'SIIOfllllg IJe repeatedly stressed his
destrt: that the meetmg be one of true give und take
ht:twt:t:n lh~ panelJsb and audtenre . Comments by
members of the gathcnng perta1ned tu the unfair
.tSpco.:ts of tlw ex1sllng property tax . Srn10r t lttLens
spoke of the dtsproportionJte tax burden wh1 ch they
must ~houldcr no"
Mr LaFalce rephed thdt
IHC&lt;J~ures lo rclu:ve the11 s1tuat10n would o.:ertmnly he
111trod U~o:Cd 1n the ne'l( I kgt\IUttve SeSSIOn
Th1s met:ttng WI!!&gt; the lirst 111 u serw~ ol ruwn
llll.'ellng.s held to dtscul.S l'tlntroverstal top1cs
affet:tmg tht: Amherst community .

ALFA ROMEO

* FERRARI
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CONFERENCE THEATRE

EVERY MAN SHOULD MEET
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Roc• ScO&lt;o l'roovuo by MANFRED MANN

GRANADA

Sat. &amp; Sun.

Wednesday, 16 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

EdiToRiAl

J

Is the Assembly dead?

The inability for campus governance units to function
effectively is by no means monopolized on the second floor
of Norton Hall . The Student Assembly has also staked a
claim to such an infamous designation. At ~onday 's meeting
of the Assembly, only one-third of the members chose to
attend. While some of those in attendance theorized that the
remaining members may have been unaware of the meeting,
we must reject this proposition.
First, several advertisements and notices in the campus
media attest to the wide publicity prior to the meeting.
Secondly, it is the duty of the members to keep abreast of
Assembly meetings. It Is a rather sad commentary on the
responsibi l ity of the Assembly delegates to their
constituencies, that two-thirds o f the membership took no
steps to verify the existence of a meeting.
There will be elections within a month. If the student
body does not register its disfavor with such occurences, then
perhaps they deserve the consequences of irresponsible and
imcompetent governments.

SOH611H65 I THIUK'...

ToThefund
or.
creation of the Western New York Public Interest
Research Group is a great idea. Unfortunately, the process of
actualizing this dream is fraught with vague ness and
uncertainty. No one has yet proposed a stable plan for
WN YPI RG's operation.
To date, the only hints regarding the group 's future
activities are vague descriptions of a local elected board at
this University, which would ill turn, send a representative to
a regional board. The method of election to the local board
has yet to be defined . Further, no WNYPI RG spokesmen
have committed themselves to a firm timetable for
establishment of the local board. Instead they have put all
their energy into efforts to provide themselves with funds.
This, we contend , is wrong.
Another grey area within WNYPI RG is decision-making
authority The power of determming research priorities
seems to he within the regional, not the local, board . Since
we believe that students should retam primary control over
their monies and not be relegated to a secondary or tertiary
role, this factor is qUite unacceptable. While we admit the
neccessity of regional cooperation, we believe that the local
boards must retain an option to reject the regional board's
priorities. Otherwise, WNYPI RG will have succeeded in
insulating themselves from direct input by their fee·paymg
const ituency.
There is a need and an urgency for a group that can
provtde professional consumer research . In many respects the
PI RG proposals appear to meet completely the expectations
~f such an
organization . WN YPI R G should become
operational as quickly as possible. However, until the
question s s urrounding their governance modes and
decision-making authority are answered, we feel it would be
irresponsible to recommend their funding by the students of
thts institution.

THE SpECTI\UM
'\lot 22, No. 55

Wednesday, 16 February 1972
Editor-~n.Chief

Denms Arnold

Co-Manegino Editor
AI Benson
Co-Ma,....Ono Editoo Molo.e LIPPmann
Alit. Mllneging Editor - Susan Moa
BUJi.- Man-eet J.cl. H«lan
Advwtislno Man...,. Susan Mellentont
Jo-Ann Arm80
Jffff G reenwald
Howoe Kurtl
City
Copy

Aa.t .
F..ture .
o,.phlc Ans .
a.c:t&amp;peg~~

Jams Croml!f

Ronm Formen
Manl Gano
Clalre Kriegsman
. . . Lynda Teri
. . Tom Toles
Amy Ahrend

Layout

Maryhope Runyon

Aan.
Lit , &amp; Drama
MV~~c:

Off.Campua
Aan .
fltloto
Aa.t .

Spont
Aa.t .

.v~an t

Mocheel Sollltrblatt
.Bolly Altmen
Lynne Treeger
. • ,

. II~Mlt

Mockey Ostl!frticher

. . . Kim Santo.
. Barry Rubon
. . Howie Falwl

TM SPIItCtfiJm os served by United Pr- International, College PrS.-vlce, the Los Angeles "Tomes Free Pr... the Los Angel• Tim•
Syndi~t• and Loberation N.ws Sen11ce.

ReptA»Iicatlon of m.tter herem wnhout the expr.. eoMenf of tt.e
Editor-in-Chief '' forbidden
Editorial Polley is determined by the Edotor·ln.Chlet

I

Page six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 16 February 1972

Don't be your own doctor
Nevertheless, I thought he made one valid po1nt
th.at we sho uld not play do~:to~ wath ourselve!, •I
A' Addle 081115 finmshed her talk a few we don"t really know what we are doang. For even
10teres11ng thmgs happtned A man, whose name I though Adelle Davas tells us of the (!.feat vitamin and
have forgcl tten , came to the macrophone mtrodu ced nutnuonaJ anadequactes and put-ons an the Amencan
tumself as someone from the Baology Dept , and dtct. we should not rush down to our local Health
Food store and 5tart buyang A , D , F , magnesaum ,
pro~eeded to make a few com ments. He ~aad t h at
whut we heard from Adelle wa.s about SO% true/5 0 % etc.
Thts as sort of a blind hegannmg to good health
false li e then added somethmg to the effecl, " Wh• ch
Although whtle it is probably true that many
as 11bout what an average- monkey scoreb on an
peo ple tn the audaenl'e were lack.•ng 10 the vitam•n~
mtclhgen.:l!: test "
I personally have heen anterc~tet.l in nu1n11on for and mtnerals that Adelle sp~:c •hcally mentio ned . and
1he pa~t .:!'12 years ol my Life ( whu.. h may be 2'h years wh1le 1t's also probably true that the general
long~:r than the man from the 810 Dept
as you Amera c an d1et ( lt oste~ twtnlctes. hot dogs ,
may k nllW lhe Medtcal s~.hool co mplex at SUNY A B. hamburgers, packaged cereals, etc I as buUshJt (oh
what IS the nght adJec:uve"H I, but people need to
JJH.I almost llll the med .... al ~~.hools m Arnen ca do not
tt:JI..h nutntton ) S1n1.-e I became a vegltarian about determme tndtvJduaUy what as goo d for theu hod•~
I ~ years ilp.O, I hllvt been a~.tJvely .:heck1ng mto the and what they need t o mwnta1n good health I
subJed through readtngs, research. exchung:ang w11h suggest, 1f you really are anterested tn nutrition and
~ople , and even trtal and error, to keep myself yOUI health, read up o n tt Spend J little t1me to find
out the tnfo you need as there ure a lo t of good
healthy
In mak.mg ~n educated guess , I would say that sources ava1lable today You can even read Adelle
the man lrorn the Bw Ue pt was perhaps MO~· wrtlng Oavi~\ It's Fxit R1ght To A. t'(P l-It .
Jnd 20% right (Far wu~c thJn I he average monkey
no111cl Lo:er.wn
s~:orl.'s
intcll•gcm:c test'l

to tht' l:drMr

on""

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
Aher mul'h .::onlcmplatwn .mel Sil ting here
ht"IL•rc tlus typewnt~r to r the past IWtl Jnd c1 h.Jif
hours I have t·ome lo the ~o ndus1o n that 1t asn't
worth very mu~h th1~ wcel. Now I know that every
cnlummst un th~ ntW)paper(?) h.ts a tenden~}' to
~tJrt ea.:h dfort hy let11n~ you kn o w h o w httle he
h.ts tu wnte .•101! I knu"' hllW )tckerung that 1-dn be
(al lc.a.sl I know how ~ll:l..emng 1t IS to me) In my
ow n Jrroga nt (ashton , 1 must ddmat that I attempt to
JVllld !has ~ltuataon Jnt.l usually. tn fact. go so far a5
to tven have a topic t o wnle about. Today, however ,
I must Jd m it defeat Therefore be forewarned . use
thiS p11per immediately for ~orne suLh useful activity
as wrappmg fish . If you msast upon readmg further
(wh•~h I douht anyone wall
an fact I doubt that
anyone has read tht!&gt; far) I can accept no
responSibilit) for the hMedom Within which you WJII
soon find yourself envelllped You' ve heard of
stream of ~:onscaousnes!&gt;, well. th1s as d puddle of
anamty
There ~ a perfectly lojpcal explanatiOn ror my
anability today . I am , at present, tn fact quite stoned
I llave o f late developed a terrific ability to utthte
th e residual dope in my bloodstream to get off for as
many as three days in a row . This saves both time
and money. There IS also a perfect ly logical reason
for this garbage to appear 111 this spot on the
editorial page. They have to find something to fiU
that hole (and people don ' t believe we're short on
staff1).
For Dave Stemwald who com pla~ned to me that
his name wasn•t mentioned an last week's column
ffi, Dave!

fh~ only person wh u w uld possibly have 1cad
through th1s mul!h of this thing b t h e typast an the:
pro duction room . I hate to put you through thos
torture, but you're halfw ay home
Now that I have eltmtnated all but the most
dedicated o f my readers (that I!&gt; I've narrowoo 11
down to lhe friends 1 threaten wtth phystcal
VIOlence) I can d1scuss the real topu: o f thas column
There as d house 1n one of the resadential suburbs or
thl~
caty which is fast becoming the rnost
well ·k.nown , lillie-known hotspots an town. This den
Of iniqUity lS located 10 3n area frequented by
LOIJege lupp1e type.'l, and Is ~nown to be under
surveallancc by the Shemff"s Department, the FBI .
the East Chippewa Merchants' A:ISociation and a
Russ Meyer ftlm cre w . Wlule from the outside tlus
edtfice .1ppears to be no more than a modest garden
apllrtment, eyewitnesses have reported that some of
the most unspeakable acts are performed instde. The
establashment t.s guarded by two vtcaous watchdogs.
one of wluch was inJured whale teanng a federal
undercover agent to slueds.
I , for one, must con fess my sh ock and outrage
lWer such goings-on. If the authorities cannot protect
the c hildren of this veat metropolis, something must
be done! We can no longer allow these people to
wander the st reets un challenaed I It is time to mov e
ut on these wanton creatures of lust and debau chery '
We demand a piece of the action!
My condolences to any of you who have read
tlus far and are not parttctpants 1n the ... J JUSt
returned after the bomb scare; and I have no idea
how that sentence was supposed to end . As a matter
of fact, I have no ideas at all!
And remember, beware the Brotherhood of the
Bell!

�-

I

Poor record quality
To

t.IJt!

Edito' :

40 n Jan uary 3 I , I b o ugh t a co py o f Sha w n
Phillip's album " Collaboration." I made t he sad
mis htke o f buy mg It at Ca vage's Main Place
st o re,when if I had go tten it a t the Universit y
Plaza sto re, I could h ave saved abo ut stxt y cen ts.
(Wh i•;h I found o ut too la te t o do any good . )
My second miStake was picking o ut th is
pa rt ic:ular album . T h e fi rst cop y I go t sk1pped
badl)• o n th e last cut o f th e first side, so I t ook
it ba·ck.
1fhe second oo py, which I p1cked up at a
dafferen t bran ch of Cavages, sktpped th e sam e
way
I d ec1ded th ilt th e b ene fi ts of t h e alb um

;. AM MARRIW.

o utw ei&amp;bed discardina it fo r one tittle sc ra t ch . f
kept it.
After p laying it ab out a half dozen tim ~ it
has b ecome the scratchiest, cheapest soundin&amp;
recording I o wn. Thls w as the ftrSt A.l:M record
tha t I've purchased recentl y , and l 've decided that
th e poor quality is manufac tured into this album
b ecause of the trouble I've had . I've never
handled a flim sier, mo re paper like reco rd eith er.
I have d ecided that because of the poor
qua li ty in this album I wUJ not purch ase more
A&amp;M recordings. I pass thas info rmatio n o n t o
any ot her pot en tial record bu yers.

Dnn Van F.vt ry

Where's the food?
/o flu• f dllur
I w1sh w t!nd o~e wholehearted ly the Food
Servu:e for compiJng Wit h the State\ attempt h1
hold th e Une on expendll u rt.s In ,, bnllan t
exam ple of h ow to sta y wt t h in th e hrn ttl&gt; set by
th t 1gu1d eh nes, the U 8 food servtce dtmax~:d
wtth a fan tast ic show of penny p tnch tng
On February 9 seconds lor dmner Jl 1 &lt;'wer
calet1:11a consJsted of .1 staggenng one meatball
Th!l&gt; tops even such mfamous ~rcond~ a.\ d • pu:c~
of cabbage, a spoonful ot noodles. or a \pear ot
broco•lll, T h ts nigga rd ly ~h ow o f p arsomuny is lou
muc h even for th ose w lw usually don't tnd ulge 111
second$ for fear ol th cu thgc~lr'ole system' llu11

We are all people

Endorsements
! ' tht•

and other object s rn food IS one th ing, one bite
meals are anoth er. T o add msult to mjury one
studen t went back eight tunes amassing e:i&amp;ht
meat balls Is 11 possible that t h ose servin g failed
to realize th at it would ha ve been eas1er all
around if th ey had g~ven th e st ud en t a d ecent
po rti o n a fter t h e second ti me b ack?
T ltiS se rving of a sotita ry meatb all occurred at
T ower Dmmg Room follo wmg a g~nerous m&amp;Ul
course of one small slice of ve.tl, a spoonful of
stuffing and a scoop of potatoe~ Well done Food
Serv1ce. keep up t h e good work One final
questiOn When IS th e F ood Serv1ce gomg to start
:\ervtng f~H&gt;d?

f.'dttor

In Y&lt;•ur rc::pott l)f the hllU IIY S taff Laucu.~
ruc:cllng ~tently you omrtted rnen t10n that thC'
l S( endorsed the lollowmg candtd&lt;ltc.&lt;. lor
Umvers1t y off11;e Mill Hammond lor Secretary uf
tlw Faculty Senat~. M11rvm Feldman and Manila
(;ric:. for re-1!Ject10n to the SUNY Senate · .rnd
Pu:rre Hare for alt ernate SUNY Sennt or VlCe
Robert Rossberg I wo uld be grateful rf you
~.::ould msert a ~milll no t icl' t o thr~ elfe• I
J I' .\ u/lu•un
Chu1r111atr
F'atull\ 'l'tulf Cuw 111

used lor ''educ;tl tonal" purp•l~l'S tn the Gaza Stflll
hdm 19b7, I unde rsta nd whe refrnm the twiSting

I would Irk..- to emphUSIH', lot the la\1 trmc.
fl&lt;ltnh

I do not believe 111 tndu~d negultJ!hln!&gt;
ev1·n throu&amp;h th~ letters sntrun ul ,, new~paper
l"he1e·fure, l am not gurn1.4 ICI wnte .mym11rt"
l etter:~ (o ther than th rs one)
::? I realize th a t Mr. Fu rghaly's kno wledge rtf
tustory tS uf the well ~nr•wu, Ru~1an tyvc
rt •~
tw~:.t~d .tncl tnlt.&gt;lprcted an:mdtng lo hr\ lc.ukr'
need~
I .tm nut a.. ew.tng Mr l·.ugJlJiy uf tim
twt\ltng Alter Vlt:Wing the h,wl,, wh11h were

More information
flpectnun hd&lt;o m.tt.l&lt;" a senou'
Oll\tdke 1n "''' g~vtng then reader. mun: rntornratt•ll'
o~buut the ransacktng of Undercurrent' nlltle'
The prcture dtptcls their offllC tn .!h~olute .rnd
mmplete diSarray and th e unknowrng reade r nHght
J'~ume t ha t it w a~ secunt y who made t he lOG).\
I am nut dde ndmg selllflty sm..:e I ~nttv.
nutlung of th~ 111t:tdent but I dt&gt; knnw that the
untidy, llH''iSY offtce shown tn the 'ifl&lt;'l..lrunr
Wedn~sday louked very Similar to the nurr11J.l
opt!ra t anp. er&gt;rtdtttons the Underlurrenr stall
no r maJJy Wl)rl-&lt;&gt; tn In nther wt&gt;tds, thrtr offll't 1\
normally t hat ftlt h y

enthuslaSII~;iiJJy

endorse Mr. Farghaly's

I mal , nnduswn and 'uggestron about cutting out

the U\cless n1nversattun and let's do thtngl&gt; I also
agree wholehe.utedly of what we can do. but I
am .tlways wrlling. 111 4unte. ·look at each oth er
a~ pt'ople " I hehevc.- th at I ' h urc this feelt na wtl h
mnsr lsntelis. Lei's all hope th at a day w ill c•&gt;m e
t hat Ius feeling wtll he ~hJred by till Arahs as
wtdl

Unfair photography

Tt• the l:.duor

1 believe TJrr

t

thr~e

/11

tJtt' fJI/IIT

l hi~ polS I l-ttday, rht• Sf'&lt;' I (IIJ"' ~.trrlrlt .Ill
.rrttde Jbout thc fir~l gcnt:ral nu:ctrng &lt;~I 1111'
Stude~nt Healt h A~bmtdltnn (( AC's Bnth &lt; onll••l
C'ltntc ProJeCt.) 'I he C4Wcrage w,L, rc ..tlly &lt;JUtlc
.r&lt;.cur;r,le sometlung we were all thankful fur
The pholo that was pnnted ahuuve the
ultl\.ll', howcver Wd:&gt; ..evcrdy trntatrnj! AI the
mccttng. we ~led the phntographct nul tu
mduJe a ptcture of buth contro p1ll~. he• JU\&lt;' wr:
are dearly not Jl'"h1ng htrlh .:nntrol prlh 1h1·
tall t.S that he tgnorcd ""' rrque-.t Jnd rnJde
Ilungs worst' by lltdudr ng a pll turc ul hml\cll
h~)ldm&amp; the ptlh /1. ptd ure ol a man hold rng

hrtth lllllllol pllb '\CCJ11) awfullv like lh&lt;' 'crp~nt
hult.l111g tht apple. and wt: don't need thai 1m01ge
101 thr dtm, 1
1 wa' nl•l gotng tu wntt' thL~ lel!cr, but aft e r
hcanng thlll other people thought the pH.ture
made ,, )(lk~ PI the arttcle, I felt ll had lll be
wnttert I J~tingr ze l&lt;ll he1ng prcky, h u t a lot of
peoplc h.tvr pul a lnt ol lllll&lt;" ~reallng a
prote"IOrtdl Jltttudt· ahout the &lt;.IIIII&lt;. and that
k 1 nd ol phutographtl JOUrn.rhsm was s1m p ly
un~oallcd lor .t nd un I au

Nanry R Let•rnt
Chotrman
Studt•nt Heultlt tl ssodatton

Stick to reviewing

Discrimi nation
To the Edttor

To th.r 1- dltur

Phi Delta Kappa IS a honorary fraternrty fnr
men m educat ton It IS currently undergoing ~""'~
con troversy on w hether to adm1l women There: arc
currently few stgn~ that the "men only" dause wtll
be d ropped or t hat, like Harva rd. the Buffalo chapt..-r
w all have the wurage to admtl women .1nd fac~
suspension In th e mea n time the orgam7alion hi~!~
used universrt y facili ties for its lu nch eon m~XIIllgs,
a nd I be tieve the re wall he ano the r one here at the
Facult y C lu b on Fe bruary IQ The umvers1ty
cu rren tly h as no pohcy o n use of rts facilities by
outsid e orgamza ttons practactng race or Sl"\
discriminatio n , although after ahou t 12 phone calh I
was ass ured th at some were bemg developed _ T ht!y
would n o t , ho weve r, a p ply t o the Faculty Club
where a m em ber need o n ly reserve facilit1es for t he
use o f himself a nd his " guests "

In rcga1d~ tu the artiLk, "MtLhdcl S
Levms.on Sub-Board C'andtdatc" that appeared 1n
your Spe..trum. Wed Feb 9, 1972. I thought
reVIews wert to tntorm your readers as to what
one of your reVIewer.. aest het ically thou&amp;ht of d
part1cular event In fatrness 11 m tgh l be helpful tu
mclud e t he reviewer 's name in Ius (or her) revrew
an d kee p revie ws o n t he revie w page:. Se.. o ndly , I
felt t he "review " became a story w ith w rontt or
slanderous in form ation. There were close t o lOO
peopk at the event, not 100, the statement that
"th e l&gt;nly reason th e ban d was there ww. because
t he drummer was the head of UUA B a nd hi!
t hrea t e n ed t o close d o w n t he place" ww.
com pletely ridic ulo us . If the wri ter wanted to
kno w t he reason the band played , it migh t be

wJSe to ask llliAH or my~ell S 1\ drd not pay
SJOO 00 to video tape the whnle csffair; tl was
taped hy th~ U\lAB Vtde" Cummrtte~ at a cost
of aruund S!! S 00
AlluaJiy the tlnly th1ng the wnters sa1d w1th
any sub$l:an~o.: was It~ do~1ng hne, ''I'm not &amp;oina
to wJSte rny It me amn~ my optntons any m o re."
Maybe your problem has heen rectified.

Lo"y Stein
Prtl idtnr·Director

UUAB
tdaor j

T he Spectrum regrtts thJJt labelm'
stoty a~ a hum orous [eQ ture Well
overlooked
Thu, we {at, w o uld lla11t
com pensated your nh;ections to tht covtragt.
"'''''

of rltt•

Rnn Goodenow

Wednesday, 16 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�People's Coalition.

-continued from

• •

protesting the war, the massacre at
Attica and the wage -freeze. One
thousand peo ple attended. Earlier this
month, local chapters from Buffalo,
Roc hes t er and Syracuse. called a
demonstration 111 Rochester to support
the Auburn 6. These are the six black
Aub urn pnsnn leaders who face
conspiracy charges after a strtke erupted
demanding better prison condit1ons.
Since the foundtng conventilln of the
People's Coalittun fur Peace and Justice,
a number of the IIH.:JI chapters. 111cluding
8 u ff a Io. have expanded the second
national demand hy call ing flH Jll end
to the wage- frect~ and pledgmg support
to the 11ghts llf stnkJog workers
Nationally, PCPJ has pledged to fight
against the dtscrimina!lon of Blacks,
other non-whites and women and to
sup port the ProviSIOIIal Revolutionary
Government of South Vtetnam 's
seven-potn t peace plan

heavily infiltrated . fnst ead, the U.S. has
fallen back to pro tecting major cllles
and U.S . au bases. Because of this weak
military position , the U.S . .has resorted
to intensified air attacks . Th e
I nduchinese expect the bombing of the
North to con tinue and warn that nuclear
weapons may be used agains them . They
also sa1d opposttion to the Thieu reg_Jme
is widespread. Sixty-one student leaders
were recently jailed and newspapers are
constantly censored they cnntmued .
Mr Peck mentioned two priorit1es for
the anti-war movement. I) to expuse
anJ demand an end to lndtscrtmtnate atr
war. and 2 ) to demand that U.S .
wtthd raw ~u pp ort of the Th ieu
dictatorship. Mr. Peck's trip was tu help
set up the World Assembly for Peace.
wht c h wa~ held sn Paris tht~ past
weekend The tntetHton i~ to aga11t ratsc
t nternat tonal protest against th e
continued U.S aggression tn I ndoch ma

National meeting
A political strategy meettng was hclu
tn Boston, Jan . 22 - 23. to plan a
calendar of events f&lt;H this spnng.
Delegates to the meet1ng represented
local coalitions from at least ten states
and also vanous national urgantlallons.
No one group dominated thts
Cuordtnattng Cummillee meetihg.
The meetwg opened w1th a report
from Sid Peck, member of the int erim
committee of PCPJ . Mr . Peck had just
returned from a tnp to Pam where he
met wnh rt•preSt'lltatlves of th e
DemocraltL Rcpublil l)f V1etnam (North

Political policies
No polittcal candi da te 111 the
UplOm iO g elections will rece1ve the
suppmt uf PCPJ . They hope lu CtHlfront
can di da tes wtth the tssues nf war.
economic conuit1ons and poltttcal
repression The C'i 1i.tens Pledge will be
presented to each candidate. The Pledge
calls fiH the pres1dent to Immediately
stop the bumbmg and set a date withm
three mon ths for complete Wt thdrawaJ of
men und matenal. It calls fo1 the cutting
of all military funds tor Indochina and
the Th1cu dtctatorshlp. The public 1s
urged Ill Sign thiS aJIU state they W1ll
tttll worl.. rH vote for :my candtdatc th:tl
do~~ flo! d11 ~~I
P('PJ hope~ 111 cmtiHHll the candta t c~
w1th &lt;.:ntctJI t~ucs . cxposl' tht'H past
vottug record~ a11d puhltt.r/~ thc1r
rea..:twm to PCPJ demands Au attempt
will bt• m.11k HI lor~.-e ftberals to grant
COtlCC~SIOIIl&gt; Jlld expose the candidates'

V i e I n ;t m 1

.1

nJ

Ihe

P r o v 1 ~ 1" n a I

Revlll u 11011:uy (.nwrnlliL'nt 111 )IIlith
Vtetnam lie reportl!d that the U.S
military posttton tn Vtctnam wa!\ very
weak.
Al'CIHI.illt)( to M1 Pl·~k. th~ l l S
rar ely u~s the ARVN turccl&gt; now
bee :1 usc they are su unreliable and

p19• 1-

~MAl.

lack of concern in resolving these issues.
Whether local coalitions want to support
candidates is up to them. The national
coalition hopes to build its own strength
in order to keep up pressure on these
issues, regardless · of who is elected.
An o ther matn thrust is uniting
coalitions in local economu.: and political
struggles to bu1ld their strength . These
groups arc to present and coordinate
demands and suggest ions reievant to
them .
A calendar
The NatHin:ll Conrdtt1at111g Committee
111 the People\ Cmlfttwn for Peace and
J u~ttce passed the following calendar of
events fur the spring offens1ve :
I) N ation all y ~:oordina ted
demonstrations or statements at the time
of Nixon's trip to Peking, urging htm to
go to Pans also ~ince he must end the
war there . H1s tnp is scheduled from
Feh 20 25
2) A pnl 15
War tax reSIStance and
locul antt-war dtU)wnstrat1ons awund the
country Demonstrations c.;an be at IRS
offices and should link the war with
economic cns1s.
3) Late April ot early May (exact
dates to be announced) National ActJOn
Group (NAG) calls for dernonstrattons at
com pll c it co rporations' stockholders
meetmgs. CE, ITT , Honeywell, Standard
Oil and Testron are betng considered as
targets because of their role 10 war
production.
4) May J 10
Mass loca l
demonstrattons to lutk up with European
May Day marches agatnst the war ,
jXlltt1cal repress1on and 111 suppml of the
labor movement and workers' struggles.
)) To support mass demonstrations in
Harnsburg .1nd San Jose in ~upport '''
the Hamsburg H ami Angela Dav1s
(I) T11 nrganiLC deml\llstruttnn~ at
both the Republican and DemocratiC

FLeeR-EAST

••1•e•• '

a.111. -

'

conventions in San Diego and Miami
respectively .
7) To support WAW proposal to
organ1ze small sustained actions (e.g., a
few people tying up a recruHing center
for a day).
8) To support all National Welfare
Rights Organization action.
9) To set up telephone chains in
order to mobihze instant demonstrations
in times of a cris1s ( 1.e.. unexpected
mass bombing raids, ett .)
The local chapter is publicizing the
N atiOnal Peace Act1nn Coal1 tt ot1
demonstrations on April 2:! in New
York City a11d Los Angeles, demandtng
"Stop the bombmg. Out now ."
For more 1nformation. wntact the
People's Coalition lilT Peace and J ust1ce .
Buffalo chapter at 58 Cottage St. or 25
Calumet Pl act Thetr nu mb er 1~
883-6512.

LI·E~

I•·•••·

PR UMU1'1Nc; UN Tiff. PRf.'M!St DIN!N&lt;.i AND f'ACAAGI:.' TAI\t. UVT I·'OULJS.

PACKAGED MEATS

Jewish Rye Bread . , .
$.41 luaf
Oniun Rye Bread . __
... 4 I loaf
Individual Jewish Rye Luaf
I 7 - 1/Llb. loaf
Chocolate Spice Cake
. . . . . . . . 20 a cuI
V3rious Baked Goods - Sud1 As ·
CHEESE CAKES
SWEET ROLLS
FRIED CAKES
(Delivered fresh Dail y)

Kosher Salami . .... _ .. ..... . $ .69 ( 6oz.)
Kosher Bologna . . ....... ....69 ( 6 oz. )
Kosher Pastrami
............ 87 (4 oz.)
Kosher Weiners . . . ..... , ... .87 ( 8 oz .)
Pepperoni .. .... .. . ........ .63 (4 oz.)
Genoa Salami . . . •
. .. .63 ( 4 oz.)
Hard Salami ... . . . . . . . . . . . . .63 (4 oz.)
Vienna Pastrami . .
.55 (3~ oz.)
Vienna Corned Beef
.55 (3 ~ oz. )
Capocolla
I . 7 3 ( I lb. )

Ttt\\'1~1~ S1111CI~ lla11·
~IASEA\BIT~

\

-.

I'll/. tlJJU~T /Tt.'MS WILL BE A I'AII:IBLI Hl:RF /.\ Till:.
TOWHR S.\ACK BAR A F T E R 7· W I' 111 'Iii /0 W I' 111
TOWER FOOD Sl:.RV ICE WILL WELCOME THE OPPORTUNITY TO SERVE
S T U 0 E N T S
S T A f F
and F A C U L T Y

Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday , 16 February 1972

�Howard Cosell will appear at
annual athletic dinner banquet
This past weekend, Buffalo's sixty·third Block
B athletic banquet received a real boost. It was
announced that the guest speaker at the dinner
honoring Buffalo athletic achievement would be
nationally prominenet sportscaster Howard Cosell.
CoseU, of American Broadcasting Company
and Monday night football fame, will appear
along with Gerry Philbin as master of ceremonies.
Philbin, a 1964 graduate of the State Umversity
of Buffalo, is a star defensive end for the New
York Jets American Football Conference squad.
Just last year, Philibin was honored by admission
to Buffalo's football Hall of Fame for his fine
play as a collegian and Academic-All America
status.
The dinner will take place at the Hearthsone
Manor on Monday, April 10 at 7 p.m . On tap for
guest from varsity, club and intramural sports will
be a chacken dinner followed by the annual
awards presentation. Among the maJOr awards to
be presented lre the Furnas Scholarships, I::C AC
Medal of Merit , I ndividual sports MVP's.
Alumni-Scholastic Achievement award, BenJamin

Aaster (hockey) award and the John N. Bennett
(basketball) award.
A $ 1500 grant from the Student Athletic
Review Board will make possible the appearance
of Mr. CoseiJ . Tickets to the public will cost
$12.50, while st udent tickets will be $5 upon
presentation of an identification card. Presently
tickets arc avaalable at the Alumni Office and
Clark Gym ticket office with future dastnbution
at Norton Hall expected.
Originally, Cosell was asking for $~500, but
after a talk wath Philbin , agreed on $1500. The
AJumni Associatio n and the Student Athletic
Review Boa r d hope t o make back their
investment on the banquet in ticket sales.
Reportedly, tacket sales should be of lillie
problem wll h proper publicity in the Buffalo
comrnunaty. J oe Ashwal , chairman of the Student
Athletic ReVJew Board estimates tltat I JO t11:kets
need to be sold to break even. The Hearthstone
Manor in suburban Cheektowaga seats 1300 tor
banqueh of thas type.

Another victory

Matmen defeat Canadians
by Dave Geringer
Sptc"trum Sttl{[ Writu

Guel ph , Ontario
Apparently neather Canadian
wrestling teams nor a different
~ct
of rules can stop the
wrl·sthng Bulls from continuing
thcu winmng ways. The Bulls,
wrl· ~thng under free style rules
lor the ltrst ttme an a dual meet
srnce I Q70, rapped Guelph 26·8
Monday even mg.. the victocy
r:med Buffalo's won-lust mark
to I 11 I
Dave lll•rshman, wrestlmg 111~
lil\1 VJolty match of the
~ .• ,or •. '&gt;la rt ed the Bulls on the
wmeung track b&gt;- defeatmg Ja"e
V:mdenpol. Guelph's 126 pttutH.I
wrt•,tler 7 I Hershman notched
three takedown s and two,
lY.o·potnt predacaments
( takedowns are worth only one
po •n 1 under t hcse rules) 111
getteng the Bulls' first win of

the even mg. " Hershman wrestled
a fine match," observed Buffalo
assistant coach Scott Stever
" He looked hke a rx&gt;llshed
wrestler out there."

wath thJs style of wrestling "
" Buffal o certaanly has an
excellent team," agreed Gryphon
coach Orlando lacuvclh "We
moved everybody down one
weight class in proparation for
Brandt ices match
the Ontano champlllnshtp) tlus
Weth the score 21·6, scrlltll
weekend."
co-captain Ron Brandt put some
The Bulls, ranked nanetecnth
acang on the cake as he by Amateur Wrestling News, the
decaswned Guelph's Neck Shun " Btble of arnatuer wrcstltng"
by a score of 4·1 Brandt 's were dropped from seventh to
vactory came over a wrestler I ea t h in 1he latest Eastern
who was the Canad1.t11 I nte rcollegiate Wrestltng Poll.
entercol leg iate champion tn The poll, conducted by the
1470 Brandt o pened the match W ilkcs· Barr c Sunday
wtth a predicament m thr lee\1 Independent Carnes cunstdcr ahly
rx•reod and later added a tlurd lcs~ weaght than a natiun-wtde
fX'rl&lt;ld tat...edown . I hr vector~
poll such as that cundultcd hy
rJescd the cx-Mas.sapequa lhgh a nallonal wrcstl111g new~paper
The Bulls wtll go 1111 the wad
Sdwol star's rewrd to lb·l
'"They were J much stronger Saturday to face the Cortlaml
team than we antrctpated," State Red Dragons 1n
added Stever ··1 think that we pr eparat1on for the NCAA
dad qUJte well considering the qua ltfymg tournament a few
weeks hence at Cincinnati.
fact that we were not

NORTH BUFFALO
FOOD COOP.
main &amp;winspear
Hours:

Stmnded

Missing: one bus
by Lyncb Teri
Feature Editor

Socialization st rikes again!
Standing outside the Amherst
Recreation Center waiting for a
bus that never returned is a
strange "feeling. Your head IS
chock fuU of expectattoras and
roles. It tells you af a bus
brought you here tt wall come
pick you up. Chartered buses
don't strang people Correctron,
c hartered bu~es don't usually
strand people .
Friday afternoon, about 12
State Universaty of Buffalo
stu dents found ou t that
"transportataon to hockey
game" mean~ just thJt Nottung
should be tnferred about gettrng
back. I know two g.trls who will
now make it a pomt to ask for
round·trip tickets.
The plot runs normal enough,
hut the endmg has hints of
Hitchcock. IRC chat tcrcd a bus
to take students to the Friday
morning hockey game Maybe
raght there we ~hould have
realized thangs were gumg to he
craLy. A hockey game .tt I I JO
a.m. isn 't exactly normal
According to nne IR C
representat ive, the hus Wa\ for a
round 1r tp pcrlormancc and
they didn 't even know we were
stood up. ( Y1ck 1 Stood up by a
bus! J hat could sh.tl.c up a
person's ego.)
When a student called the
JRC office to mform them ol
the mishap. they were surpnsed
All they cduld du now. they
explained, was call the bus
company and complam
Being stood up by a bus ts a

uniqu~ experience, to say the
least. Waiting outside, a part of
your head says· "It isn't here.
I t asn't commg, either. l'm
s tranded ." Another part
answers. ''Don't be silly. Buses
don't just desen people." They
don't, eh?
My fnend and I were the last
staunch su pp o rt ers of a
tradition The th~ory rs when a
chanered bus bnngs you to a
hockey game, 11 always returns
to bring you back home. You've
heard of that tradetaon, haven't
you? Well, here's a news flash .
Lik e alm ost every ot h er
tradition ... it's obsolete.
Secure 10 our farth that the
bus wouJd show, we waited . As
cars started pack you up.
Chartered buses don't strand

people . Correction, chartered

Hear, 0 Israel

pulling our or the parking lou
and o l her fellow passengers
started gelling rides back to
campus, we waetcd Deep down
tn our hearts, we knew the bus
would come and rescue us. We
had fatth and we walled
Fnday mornmg hockey games
don't seem much 10 demand
these days and the number of
cars was mmamal As more and
more cars pulled out, the
moment of truUl came. Sorry to
say, truth came and the bus
dtdn't. We lost fatth
Whether it was the fault of
IRC, the bu) company or a lack
ol communtcatton, 11 doesn' t
rcaJiy matter anymore. It 's over
and mtraculously we all
managed to get rides home.
What does matter as that this
was a une-trme fiasco . I'd hate
to think of three bus loads of
students stranded Jn Batavia. Oc
anywhere else for Uta! matter.

For gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE

'*''*'*'*'***'*'*'*'*'
lete.

Phone

Too

you

875-4265

m1ueo

Snrove

TuH&lt;S•y

MONDAY - 11 :00 - 8 :00 p.m .
THURSDAY - 11 :00 - 8 :00 p.m.
SATURDAY - 11 :00 - 4 :00

p.m.

MEMBERSHIP
RULES :

4 hours work per month

$5 support fit (refund•ble)

•

presents

THRUSDAY, Feb. 17th
" JOHN KERRY ON AMERICA"
HAl lounge, Norton Hall
8:00p.m.

Wednesday, 16 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�-

Basketball Bulls face

Major opset

Icemen defeated by Lakers
by Howie Flliwl
A ur. SptJI'fl EdllfN

The rapidly moving hockey machine at
Buffalo came to a screec:hing halt this Sunday as
the Bulls were stunned by their most shocking
loss of the season. The 8-7 sudden death
overtime upset to the Oswego State Lakers will,
for many months to come, remain in the minds
of Coach Ed Wright and his boys as the most
devastating setback of any season and the one
defeat that might have many consequences at
playoff time.
A win on the Lakers' home ice - something
the Bulls have failed to accomplish in two years
- would have virtually clinched a top four seeded
position in the rapidly approaching' ECAC
Division II playoffs. While the Bulls will most
definitely receive a playoff bid, they have
probably sacrificed the aJJ·important home court
advantage with this heartbreaking loss.
It was more than heartbreaking however, as
Buffalo once again got totally shanked by some
obviously blatant officiating. Coach Wright
himself, generally a well·reserved individual,
became visibly outraged by the 15 penalties
handed Buffalo, most of whjch were ei ther the
wrong infractions or shouldn't have been called
altogether.
lt began as the fired up Lakers jumped to a
quick 2 0 lead with their first goal coming off a
Buffalo stick. Their next four goals came on
power plays. Howevet the Bulls fought back each
time and tied the contest on five separate
occasions. Yet on each occasion as the Bulls
gained momentum, their drive was squashed by
yet another penalty .
The boards in the Oswego arena have several
funny bounces, particularly behind the net. Much

Stony Brook Patriots

to the goalie's dismay the puck tends to bounce
off these boards directly in front of the net.
Mike Dunn was once again the victim when he
attempted to clear the puck around the cage.
Uttle did he realize that his clearing shot had
bounded off the boards back in front of the net
where Oswego's Rich Tremblay had been waiting
for mother nature to play her tricks.

Turning point
This made the s.corl.' 7 ~. but one minute
later freshman Dick Will, whose two goals and
one assist led the Bulls scoring, knotted things up
for the fifth time in the game. Neither team
could score in the remaining seven minutes of the
period, yet with less than a minute to go, the
turning point of the game, and perhaps the
turning point of the entire season, occurred.
The B u lis' Jack Richards got his stick
entangled with that of an Oswego player, and
when the latter's stick was jarred loose by
Richards, Jack was called for interference - thia
when Buffalo had possession of the puck. Thus
the lakers began the sudden death overtime
stanza with a power play, and with only 22
seconds gone, Oswego's Jim Kelly rebounded a
Randy Scharfe shot for the clincher.
It would be unfair to take anything away
from the upset-minded lakers. Their I - 9 Division
11 record was certainly not indicative of their fine
brand of play wruch surprised many a Bull. They
proved lo be extremely tough at ho.me. Yet you
can't expect to win many games when you give
the opposition a one man advantage for half a
period which is exactly what the Bulls gave up to
Oswego.
What happens now? Well that all depends on
the remaining Division II games against A.I .C. and
Ithaca and the judgment of the ECAC Playoff
Committee.

r.

Once aaain the strugling
varsity basketball Bulla take to
the road . Still stung by an eJaht
aame losina streak, Buffalo
(7- 12) travels to New York
tomorrow to face the State
University of Stony Brook~ The
Patriots (13 - 8) boast a new
coach and several junior college
tra nsfers in their most
com petitive squad ever. Last
year's S tony Brook mentor,
Roland Massimino, a defensive
s trat eg i st, left for an
assistantship at Pennsylvania . In
Massimino's place is 25-year-old
former assistant Coach Don
Coveleslci.
The Stony Brook schedule
this year was purposely
toughened up , i n c luding a
rugged six game Southern tour.
On the tour , the Patriots
defeated Texas Wesleyan
(76 - 62) and Rollins (81-80)
while dropping four other
contests.
Of interest to Buffalo were
two Stony Brook losses to
Georgia Southern, whom Buffalo
defeated 86 - 83 . GSC edged the
Patriots 95 - 85 at the Mercer
tournament and then blasted
Stony Brook I 16- 79 on their
Statesboro, Georgia homecourt
Since returning east, the
Patriots have moved to a 6- I
record in the m etropolitan New
York Knickerbocker Conference
The only conference Joss came
at tough Hunter College, 77 - 73 .
Other losses for the Patriots
came at Albany State (69-62)
and at CCNY (74 - 62). Coach
Coveleski reprds his win over
C . W Post (75 - 56) as the

Patriot!' key contest of the
season.
The Patriots will really have
to be on taraet to beat the
Bul.la. In their two previous
contest, Buffalo won 62-53 in
1969 and 96- 62 at Clark Gym
last year. In the Clark Gym
contest, Buffalo 6 - 6 junior Curt
Blackmore set a school record
with 29 rebo &lt;~ 1ds and added 28
points.
Key players for Stony Brook
have been 6 - 2 forward Art
King and 6 3 senior forward
Roser Howard King, a transfer
from Staten l~land Community
College, was a highly sought
after prospe•
and leads the
Patriots with 20 points and 13
rebound p e1 game. Ho ward
averages 14 points, the same
total he scored against the Bulls
.
last season.
Stony Brook has some size in
several big soplu, but more
ofte n than not S - 1 1 Bill
Myrick , 6- 4 Bill Graham and
6 - 2 Steve Skrenta see the most
action. Stony Brook's biggest
player ever. 6 - 11 Ri c k
Schambera has been nagged by
le&amp; problems and has been or
little help.
The Bulls problem recently
has been inconsistency and lack
of support for Blackmore and
guard Bob Vartanian. With only
five pmes left in the season ,
Coach Ed Muto has yet to find
:m adequate third pard . After
meeting Stony Brook tomorrow
the Bulls travel to Rochester for
another meeting with rival
University of Rochester. Buffalo
leads the Ro chester series
33- 30.

t

SUCB Concert Con1111ittee
presents

Canned Heat
and

John Lee Hooker
Lighting by Greased Lighting Lite Show-

F'EBRUARY 21, 7:00 and 10:30p.Dl.
AT THE

NEW GYM

T I C K E T S:

Tickets

.v~lt.ble

Page ten . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 16 February 1972

-

BUFFALO STATE

STUDENTS
NON.STUDENTS

CAMPUS

$1.75
$2.50

at State Ticket Office and Norton Hall

. U.8. Ttekrt

Office

\I

�AD INFORMATION

15 words.

CL.ASS tFtED ADS may be placed
Monday thru Friday between 9 a.m.
and 4 :30 p .m. at 355 Norton Hall.
THE COST ot an ad tor one diY Is
$1.25 for th e first 15 words 1nd $.05
ror each additional word. $1 for uch
additional Clay . The deadline for
Monda y Is Friday ; f or Wednesday, It II
Monday; and
for
Frld ly,
It Is
wednesday by 4 :30p.m .
"HEL.P
WANTED"
ads
cannot
discriminate on the basis of 541X , color,
"eed o r l'latlo nal origin to any extel'lt
(I.e., preferably Is still discriminatory).
"FOUND" ads will be r ul'l f ree of
charge for a maximum o f 2 days and

Money-back guauntee.

WANTED

WAITERS
and
b usboys
neetled.
I nexperlence no problem . We'll train .
Nut and able to ge t along well with
peopl* a necessity. ApproKimately 25
hours a week. Call for appointment
between tha nours 11 a.m.- 3 p.m .
826 · 8900.

WANTED:
Pa per
relating
to
Education,
Emotional D ist urbance ,
Disabil ity, Development or related
topics- will pay- 837·0981
CV. BED wanted . Call
834·0827.

John

CH

Gall

GROUP WANTED - to play 01'1 March
4 f rom 8 -12 p .m. For ln tormatlol'l call
Dave 634-0890 .
STUDENT
EMPL.OYMENT
In
Y ellowstone and all u.s . National
Parks. Booklet tells where and how to
apply. Send $2 Arnold Agency, 206
East Main, Rexburg, Idaho 83440 .

......

...

i·:· a tYOUR

I UNIVERSITY

RIDE NEEDED to N . Y
Call 886-5052 .

I
~

NEED Rl DE from Bronx to Butralo al
some time shortly alter Feb. 23 Call
Mike 834-8876 .
RIDE NEEOED to New Haven. Conn,
Fri . 2/18 or Fri. 2/25 . Please uti
836· 0360 .
RIDE

I
I
I

to Unlv.

Mass. at

I
I
I

or

GRAD STUDENTS
- MARRIED 1to work 5 hours per week.l
A t t r ac t i v e f i n a n c i a
I arrangement.
I
CALL
I
PAT EGAN
I

I

on Campug·

'I

I
I

I R~~~·~i:~~~e~!s I
COME IN AND LOOK THROUGH OUR SPE:::!AL

WANTED

1- - - -TWO
- -MBA
----.

II

f,

Feb . 19·21.

HEL.P ME get home to N .Y .C . Fri .
Feb. 18. Share expenses, arlvlng. Call
Flo 883-6541 evenings.

~
BOOKSTORE ~

G IRL. NEEDS ride to NYC Feb. 17th
or 18th. Will share expense. Call Janice
833 ·7571.

I'VE BEEN neglected. N ObodY wants
to b uy me. M y oame !s Anastasia al'ld
I 'm tor s.te for only fllO. I'm 1
2-dqor,
blue
Tempest
with
an
automatic t r ansmission, 82,000 miles
and a very sexy body. If Interested, call
AI 831-4113.

NEED RIDE to Hartford, Conn. or
vicinity on Friday, Feb. 18. C a ll Felicia
831 · 3579 ( urgent).

FOR S ALE

RIDE BOARD

:~:

THE G IANT 1moeba has eogutfed mel
Please send help to W1ter1Jrott1ers, 51
Allen St.

START $2 per nour salary plus bonus.
Worl&lt; 4·8 p.m. weekdays , 10·2 p .m.
Saturdays. Call 835·3803 or TF9·0402.

3394 BAIL.EV AVE. - furnished apt .
three
rooms,
$1 SO/mo .
Call
832·6963.

::r~ ~:.-...-.wx««&lt;-'....:-&gt;:-:««-»:.:·x«-»:.=«-:-:.:-: .r.-:·:·:-:-:-:·:?/.·:·:·:&lt;&lt;·:·:~~

NEED RIDE to Rocl&lt;land, NYC,
Thu rs ., Jan. 17. Call Barba" 69 1·8011 .
Will share elCpenses and driving.

RID E
NEEDED
to
Burlington,
Vermont or Albany, Thursday night.
17th or Friday morning. Call Burt
838·3461.

APARTMENT FOR RENT

has announced th~t Buffal? Draft Counseling
Center personnel w1ll be h oldmg on-campus office
hours every Tuesday and Thursday starting
immediately . Pau l Post and Bob Musek from the
Center will be available on those days from 9
a.m.· 1 p.m. in the UB Vets office, in Room 260
Nortan Hall. Students should also note that
24-hour emergency service is avai lab le by phoning
897·2871 .

your Sl~ter - bUt selling miii!IZin-,f that •s getting low!
'

NEED USED copy of PL.AVS FOR
THE THEATER by Brockett for
Theater 105. Call Roberta 833·7571.

FUL.L. OR part-time tobs available with
Bestllne 1 nc. Call Art 886·2094 or
Mike 835·5215. Meetings at E xecutive
Ramada Inn.

The Student Association

Amherst (n. .r Bost o n ). Leave Friday
morntno, Feb. 18. Call Scott 831·3367 .

I
I

-853-87545:00 p.m.

after

·- --

a.JJ~·i1.6.5.. -

MOVING
must
sell
1963
Volkswagen, sooan, sunroof . Excellent
con d ition. 886·5052 .
1964
Chevy
Impala.
Excellent
transportAIIon, mechantc•s ear, $200
fi r m . Gas Station, Eggert ·Delevan .
SPEAKERS! Two literally brand now
spukers, extremely reasonable, call
John 835 ·8704 (Haopy Anniversary
N.A .G .) .
FISHER 180-watt receiver, 505T with
two XP·7B speaker system. All with
FISher guarantees. Call Paul 835 -~535.
SAVE MONEY - record your own
"8" track stereo tape cartridges . L.ear
Jet player-recorder, $200 . Includes
speakers, mikes, etc. 825-4852 .
PHYSICS PhD slloepskln from top
eastern university. Use as pop-art
decoration,
attractive
converut ion
otece. Best olfer . Wlite 2 34 Oakmont
Ave.
1969 vw van, 34,000 miles . Only
$1600 . Can
take y ou anywhere,
anytime . Ell 835 · 2561
1970
JAGUAR
XKE
E&gt;&lt;cellent
conditi o n . Brand new AM/ FM stereo
raaoo Included . Call 688 · 7327 evenings.
REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
ana
washers. Recond itioned, dellverea ana
gu~ranteea .
O&amp;G Applian ces. 844
Sy camore. TX4·3183 .
" ANA5TASIA" needs a home. She's a
1961 lovable, little Tempest. 82,000
mllu. All she costs IS $110 , Call AI at
831-4113 or Dobbie at 832-6815 .

PERSONAL

- -·

THt- , NATIONA L
Commtuoon o n
Marflulll'lll
and
D rug
Abuse
reco mmends L obanose red .

ti;E=:r:~1;:~~,.e!,s;1fci~~~:::J

L.A ST TwO days fo r an no versar y
spec ials
at
TIPPY'S
M EX IC AN
F OO DS ; lor meat ta cos
s I .5 0 , meat
burrit o - S.49 , en chllaaa. tamale or
M e xican
dtnne"
S 89
2JS I
S heri dan Drive . 8 38 ·39 00 .

Wear A Little

H APPY BIRTH D A Y " R o b yn Br ook s"
y ou' re a reat fantasl iC friend . LOve .
Sha ron .
I 'M A graduate stu d ent , singl e, wh o
believes
that
a
mon o ganoous
m ar ro agetse&gt;&lt;
11 1~
Is
DOrin g
~nd
unlulfllll ng There I S an alt erna tive th4t
offers sharing and con tin u ed gr o wt h on
a
man ·w oman
rel at onn sn op .
Any
onter estea lem•le, w rit e Jell R ob ert s.
B o &gt;&lt; 232 , Bulfal o, N .Y 1420!&gt;

,-··---··---·'1

MRYHP:

lsiP~OiFI

I COUPON I
iFREE·
~!.~!~~'

.
I
I

1 Bottle of

Henri Marchant
I (or Winston) Cold Duck
When you order dinner
(or Entree) for two
and present this coupon

I

IUCDfiiiTI SlOP
fh~ 111-el 1..4 Sf... Hevw

1111 hi•••"

•••

••

•

111·1111

F- REE PARICtNG
ATLANTIC STATION
£XPt 8ES APRIL I. 1972

••

I.

1

••

F i rst

th e

c ogar etles.

AUTO SERV I CE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable
Imported &amp; Domestic

- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834 -7350

WHAT THE hell Is e Sz.cz.yvlel ?

LOST &amp; FOUND
PURPL.E AN D p i nk purse - lost whlll
hitching up Main to Lafayette and
Oxford, Sat. night In VW. Call Marilyn
877-()137 .
FOUND : Dog male - lookS tlke
beagle. Main-Bailey p arl&lt;lng lot 2/13 at'
3 a.m. Call 838 · 1930.

ROOMMATES WANTED
MAL.E ROOMMATE . Own bedroom .
Rodn•y near Holden . $47 olus utilities.
Ric or Alal'l . 833·9358 .

2 FEMALES on Englew OOd . $50 •
utilities, own r oom . Call Dianna
837·0403 .
ROOMMATE
WANTED,
furniJiled
apt. Rlcnmond al'ld Utica. Call Stan work 845·5804 or home 882 · 2066 .
NEED TWO• .jmmedlately - female or
male, $60, l!Wn room. Main -Fillmore.
Pets O . K . 837 ·3483 .
WANTED : One female roommate for
3· boaroom house off Maln·Winspear .
Own room, lurnlshea. $60. Starting
Feb . 1. Call Mary 838-4892 .
ROOMMATE WANTED - own room
cheap, $27 olus. Fillmore Ave.
837 ·2641.

MISCELLANEOUS
HIGH performance mechanic looking
f o r summer lob . Specialist o n HEMI ,
440, 383 . AlSo rea1 end and suspension
worll . ProflciOnl with •II phues of lllgh
performan ce
modifications.
Call
Shades 831-4046 .
TYPING, e)Cperlenced. nNr U .B .. $ .40
per oage. 834 · 3370 . Fast ..rvlce .

GARY : I t was nlc o taik lnC) to v ov.
even II I f o rget to -..y su ch things at 6
In the morning. Midge.
C AT -FE.ET - Sure . got any c hase rs In
mind? FVT77

~

WANTED : 1 female bY 25-year ·old
male (life tong veget arian-hygienist,
160 p ounds, 5'8", dark complexion) to
be
18 · 22
years,
5'0"-5' 6" ,
emotionally adjusted, sound teeth ,
lean, attractive and wltll warm mild
even disposition. Write Sl)eetrum BOIC
70.

PtZZA ·G O G O : This week only , buy
two subs, get one free. 838-4557 . NOW
O PEN SUNDAY .
00 VOU vel hungry at the oddest
hours 7 DELl PLACE RESTAURAN1'
Is open 24 hours every Thur5daY\
Friday lll'ld Saturday to serve your
favorite dishes. Hot l&lt;n lshes, pancakes
ana eggs, bagelS ana IO.o&lt; " University
Plaza .
1F

YOU l o ve vour tore lgn car, your
foreign car'll l o ve I ndepenaent F orelgn
Ca r Service . 839·1 8!'&gt;0

--------

FEMAL E son lor needs jOb Ca n do
many types o f w o rk , prefer abl y In UB
area . C all Mar y 8 3 8-4892

A NTIQUES and moder n furniture ,
ceram ics, ch i na, etc . See Sta . at
V esteraav &amp; T o m o rro w Shop, 1439
Her te l Ave .

---------

APARTMENTS WANTEO

3-4 B E DR OO M apartm ent to rent ;
w ll h ln cam p us walk1 1'1 9 d h tance ; for
s u m m ~ r an a fal l 197 2 C all 8 3 1·2085 .

then

Study in
Guadalajara, Mexico
The Guadalajara Summer School, a
fully accredited University of Arizona
program, will offer, July 3 to August
12, anthropology, art, folklore, geog·
raphy, history, government, language
and literature. Tuition, $160; board
and room. $190. Write Office of the
Summer Session, University of Ari·
zona. Tucson, Arizona 85721.

Now l1iringe
Not long ogo eve rybody wos, or 60 it seems Times change.
And so do many soles careers, for example. We find this is
true to on extent on our bu~ne~. Because, typically, the
penon we hire already hos some selling experience in another
line of work . Chances ore, too, he was succ~ful. But now,
greener postures beckon .
Whal do we offer such a person? Expert supervision and
training when he starts and above-overage earnings OJ he
progresses. An annual income high in the five-figure brodcet
is not uncommon for services rendered in our bu$lneu:
deJigning financial plans f~r individuals and busineues.
Think about lt. And then f you're interested n talking about it,
call Walt Cozmark or Bill Wagner at 886-2350.

Wednesday, 16 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

-

�Announcements
The Bridge Club will have a duplicate bridge
game tomorrow at 7 p.m . in Room 233 Norton.
UnderJraduates uking French courses, please
pick up a copy of the department newsletter in
Room 214 Crosby.
Kundalinl Yoga beginning classes in exercise and
meditation are being held daily at 7 p.m. at 196
linwood Ave. Call 881-0505 for information.
The CAC Be-A-Friend project needs male
volunteers. The kids need your friendship and
companion~hip. Contact Bob Moss at 835-5535 or
Arlene Gordon at. 831·2281 or stop in the CAC
office in Room 220 Norton.
The Council of UB Campus Ministries w1ll hold
"meeting today at I 0 a. m. in Resurrection House.
The Undergraduate Psychology Association will
have a meeting today at 7·30 p.m. in Room 244
Norton. Elections will be held, there will be a
d1scussion of the budget and effic1ent course
evaluating procedures and WNYPI RG representatives
will speak Also welcome are persons having
suggest1ons for ac ti vities such as the recently UPA
spon!&gt;Ored sens1t1vity weekend
Students taking MAS 302: there ·~ d meeung
tomorrow Jt I 30 p.m m Room 35, 4244 R1dgc
Led .
CAC Day Camp Committee wtll meet tomorrow
Jt 7 30 p m 1n Room 264 Norton. All mvulvt•d or
mterested .He urged to .111end

The Office of Cultural Afhirs presents the
UUAB Video Commtttee wnl show john Kerry
Claude Kipnis Mime Theater at the Buffalo Public on America, tomo!TOW at 8 p.m. in Haas lounge.
library, lafayette Square, this Friday at 8:30 p.m., Admission is free.
General admission is $2.50 and students are $1.00.
Tickets are available at Norton Ticket Office. Free
UB Outina Club will hold a general meeting
buses leave Norton at 7:45 p .m. and return after the tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Room 340 Norton. There will
performance.
be a discussion of the budget and trips.

WPHO Broadcastina would like poetry to be
read o n the air. If you ,are a poet and would like to
read your own works to listeners, send a copy of the
poetry with your name, address and phone number,
along with some biographical data to WPHD
Broadcasting Station, 425 Franklin St., Buffalo, New
York 14202.
Group R is having a communion today at 9 p.m.
at 139 Brook Lane Drive. If you would like to share
your religious (or non-religious) experiences with us,
please come. For more information, contact Bo b
Moch at 834-6470.
Terrace House needs volunteers on Mo nday,
Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 8 - 11 p.m . It is
d recreation program for alcoholic and homeless
men, If tnterested, call 831-3177
Chabad House hold s a daily minyan at 7 a.m.
followed by bredkfast.
Anyone interested in working for CAC's "Night
People," a project duling with alcoholics, is invittd
to a meeting in Room 220, tonight at 8 p.m .
UB S tuden ts for McGovern urgently need
work fur George McGovern in the New
Hc1mpshire primc~ry . If interested, conuct Jeff
Osmski at836-8437 .
canvc~ssers to

The State University of Buffalo Amateur Radio
Society will meet today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 334
Norton. Every one is welcome.
Environmenul Action Corps will
tomorrow at 7:30p.m. in Room 262 Norton .

meet

The Program in Religious Studies of College B
presents a film Roodslgns on a Merry-Go-Round - a
comparative exposition of the world views of Martin
Suber, Friedrich Bonhoeffer and Teilhard de
Chardin. Film will be shown today at 6:30 p m . tn
Room 246 Norton .
Thete will be a meeting for those interested m
learning more about the overseas program at the
University of Grenoble, France, today at 4 p .m. in
Room 204 Townsend Hall . Slides will be shown and
a question and answer period will fo llow .
The French Club will meet today from 2-3 p.m .
In Room 234 Norton. Plans for the coffee hour and
upcoming club activities will be discussed .
The Western New York Environmental Research
Associates are looking for students interested in
developing
and
promoting
educational
environmental programs in regional high schools .tnd
junior high schools.
Call 881-3551 days and 832-6912 or 837-0073
evenings.

First place prize m the Department of Statistics
weather contest held last semester goes to AI
Rosenberg for his guess of ten inches. Mr. Rosenberg
was only .13 inches away from the official Buffalo
Weather Department of 10.13 tnches.

Wh;al 's Happening?
Wednesday, feb. 16
Mu"wlogy lee ture · Dr Donald J Grout of Cornell
Untverstty wtll lecture on "Htstory and Mustc
H t~tory," 3.30 p m ., Batrd Hall .
Eye-con '72 · Rtchard Myer~ screen~ and dtscusses ht'&gt;
films Oeothstyles c1nd Confrontation at Kent
State, Norton Conference Theater, 8 p.m
Jnrernatlon~l Club Exhibition : Through Feb. 28,
Room 119 Norton.
Symposium on Black Theater: tht Blac k Studie~
Department ha~ g.Jthered Ed Bullim, playwright;
Lofton Mitchell ; Woodie King, actor c~nd
director, to spear. m Norton Jt 4 p.m
Thursday , Feb. 17
'::lemtnar "The Utilildtton of the Peak Shape tn
Chromatogtaphy " by Prof Elt Gru .. hlo.a of the
Chemi~try Department ol the Stc1tc Universtty
of Buffc~lu , 2 p.m ., Room 122 Ache'&gt;On Hall

Sports Information
Tonight V..H"tY swtmmmg at Ftedum,t \t,Jil'.
7 30 p m .
Tomorrow . Varsity hm.l..ey at Cmton rech ,
Canton, N.Y ., 8 p.m., Vilr)tty bc~slo.etbdll dt Stony
Brool--.., 8 p.m .; fre~hman basketbal l dt Lt~ntsiu~
Koessler Athletic; Centet, 7 p.m .
Friday · Vdf~lty fenc1ng at Cleveland ~tdll'
Saturday . Var~tty hocl..ey vs. "-cnt 5 tc~tc,
Amhcr~t Rcc. (enter, 9 45 p.m., ttckets ..tVdtlable dl
Clart.. Gym , Vdrstty bd~ketbc~ll dl Rochc,ter , 8 :30
p.m ., freshn1c1n bdsl..etball c1t Rochester. 6. 15 p.m. ,
v.lr\ity fencing .11 Case We~tcrn with Oberlin .md Atr
Force ; var~lly wrestling c1t Cortldnd State, 2 p .m
Sunday
VJrstly
hucl..t:y
vs
Amt•r tcdn
lntrrnattOnJI College, Amhcf\t Rec Center, II :30
J m ., ticl..et~ .wc~dable at Cl.~rk Gym .
Ttcket.s for the hockey games this weekend .tre
JVdtldblc .11 ( 1.11 lo. Gym nn J fir,t come IHst servetJ
basis
The Athlctll Department hc1s Jnnounced that
I riddy \ h ot.~cy gc~me with I thdCd College hd'&gt; been
shifted to r rtdJy morning Jt I 1.30 a.m. The sh ift
wa~ necc,sitated by excessive lc1te starting dates at
the Rec Center Additionally, the Ithaca Bombers
refused to stMt the1r Division II battle with the Bulls
at such J lc1te starttng t1me a~ was origtnally
proposed. The Friday morning contest is the first
morning date tn Buffalo athletics since the bd~ketball
Bulls met Albdny State during a period of campus
disorder.
-os1errelcher

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                    <text>Vot 22, No. 64

State Unlwnity of New Vortt at Buffalo

Commi~ion

Mondey, 14 Fen..y 1972

reports

Proposed legislation seeks
reduced marijuana penalties
by Howie Kwtl.
Campus Eduor

"The law treats marijuana and heroin the same
way People's oplnlons have softened a little abou1
manjuana In the past few years. Now that people are
bemg more open-minded about it, it's about time
our drug laws became more realistic."
These are the feelings of Chester R. Hardt (R .•
Amherst}, a Republican assemblyman who is
chatrman of a state commission studying drug laws
and has been worlung in th.ts area for several years.
"SeU1ng one JOint of marijuana IS the same
felony as J:?OSSessing 1/8 ounce of heroin . Now there's
a helluva difference between marijuana and heroin ,"
said Mr Hardt. When asked 1f he felt marijuana was
at aJJ harrnful, Mr. Hardt replied . "Over the years.
we've talked to many people, observed people under
the mfluence of mdrijuana and lnvesugated tons of
research. I lt~st don't believe marijuana i.s as harmful
as most,people· think ."

pot look at the laws and the government's attitude
and they say 'I know it's not true .' Thus, they figure
warnings about harder drugs aren't true either." He
strongly cnticized the government's legal policy of
grouping all drugs together for this reason .

'Concencnted Cannabu'
Mr Hardt feels has bill concerning regulation of
legal drugs as almost cenain to pass the state
leg~slature, but he IS more doubtful, thoug.h
opllmi.stic, about the bill dealing with illegal drugs. A
more lenient bill sponsored by Mr. Hardt was
defeated in the state leg~slature last year
Ttus year's bill imposes harsher penalties for
possession of over four ounces of·grass, as opposed
to eight ounces last year, due to a revised opinion of
"quantities that mdicate the likelihood of sale ." This
year's bill also differs in that it separates
"cuncentrated cannabis" (hash) from the reduced
penalties sta\ed for grass. " Higher potency material is
apl to give more people an adverse reaction,"
explained Mr . Hardt
He anticipates trouble In the legislature for the
Pracripdoo in lriplicat~
Mr. Hard1 l:w introduced two bills to the state marijuana bill ainc:c "it's a good posture for
lcaulaturc. The first one deals with lepl drup, pollticlana tD be toua,h on drugs - the whole law and
eonlrollilla theJr ma.n..u.facwre. d.tllrtbu11en, orcicr bit ." Yet, be reiterated, the attitudes or people
prescription and dbpensJ.ng. Present &amp;tate statutes are about mariJUana "h.a~e changed considerably." Mr.
"quite unworkable in light of the revision of federal Hardt recaJJa that he had to keep modifying his bill
Jut year '1ust to get it out of committee."
l:aws last year." accordmg to Mr Hardt.
He is hopeful that tJus year's bill will pass since
The bill creates five classes of bills contraband
"our
proposals will Jall those who . are making a
substances such as heroin , cocatne and opaum an
Class One, amphetamtnes and drugs that have lawful fortune by supplying drugs to our young people."
medtcal uses in Class Two, barbllurates in Class He pomted out further inconsastenctes tn our dtu«
Three, tranquilize!'$ and depressant~ in Class Four, laws by staling. " I could have a 20·1on truck full of
and substances such as narcotic cough medicines 111 amphetamines and only get a ma.ximum sentence of
Class Five. The bill requJres tnplicate prescriplions one year " The commi.sston recommended stiffer
by doctors for Class Two drugs such :~s penalties fo1 po~sess1on of amphetamines,
amphetamines. pep pills and morphine because U1ey barh11ura1es and hallucUlogens. such as LSD,
have " the htghest potential for abuse." The triplicate mescaline. etc
prescnpuon formula has been successful in
Grass tax ?
California and Illinois, noted Mr. Hardt.
On the quest1on of legah7auon of marijuana,
The second btll, dealing with allegal daugs.
Mr
Hardl disclosed that "we have a fuU-time
provides that pos.ses.s1on of up to 1/4 ounce of
lobbyiSt
workang an Albany for the legalization of
marlju~ should rece1ve a maximwn sentent;c uf not
marijuana"
He f~ls the legislature is not ready to
more than three months, the term for a Class B
accept
legahzatton,
but feels that development is
misdemeanor. AI present such an offense IS a Class A
"only
a
matter
of
11me."
ThJS would be many years,
rrusdemeanor, carryin&amp; a max1mum sentence of one
however.
and
Mr.
Hardt
staled
he "couldn't advocate
year However. the system of deferred prosecut1on 1s
legal1zat10fl
today
.
There
are
Still some dangers
presently beang used for possessmn of up to 1/4
tnherent
for
certam
people,
enough
for caution at
ounce of grass. whereby the VJolator 1s placed on
th1s
t1me.''
probataon (at the d1scret1on of the JUdge) after wh1ch
Controversies have evolved from research of
ume he st 1Jl has no cnmtnal record
some people md1callng that manJuana usage leads to
harder drugs, mcludlng heroin " Most addicts started
Those New Vofi( prices
pot," Mr. Hardt admits "It's a pattern on
When asked why 1/ 4 ounce of grass was chosen
lobacco,
then alcohol, pot, let's pop a few pills', a
as the cutoff point, Mr Hardt replied : ''We sampled
few
trips
on LSD, and then Jet's try heroin. However
street prices and weights, 13rgely based on testimony
there
i5
nothing
causal in marijuana that leads to
obtained in New York Cily, and found thai to be the
heroin
.
It
's
more
than likely the associaUon with
approximate we1ght of the normal nickel bag worth
certain
groups
of
people
that leads one on to harder
15. That much could be a gift , but nobody gives
dru~," Mr. Hardt continued.
away more than SS. Now possession of an ounce of
looking ahead to legaliz.ation in the future, Mr.
marijuana, which produces 60 joints (sic) ts
Hardt
speculated that there wW be licensed
indicalive of seUing in many instances . I'm not
manufacturers
of grass, JUSt like alcohol. ''There will
saying in all instances, but we had to draw the line
be
tight
regulation,
strict supervision and an age
¥Omewhere."
limit,
such
as
I
8,
I
Imagine.
And there will be a tax
Mr. Hardt also commented that his research
imposed,
I'm
sure
of
that.
In fact , one estimate
found that the price of most drugs in New York City
1s much higher than in Buffalo. He feels that the predicted that lcgalizatio!l of marijuana would yield
prnent unJ"'Olistic marijuana laws "breed a certain S2.2 bWion a year in revenue ," added Mr. Hardt.
contempt for the law. Kids in school who are using That's a lot of bread for grass.

�Censorship charged by 'ethos'
by Jeff Greenw.ld
C11mpu1 Editor

space. Their o ffice is just no t
used ."
tT h e e th o s c ommentary
mentio ned o t her "organi zatio ns
with equal and Jre&amp;ter space
which is unwlaely used o r to taU y
w asted ." E xamples were The
Specrru m , Buffalonilln and t h e
Black Stude nt Unio n . AU o f these

eth os' charges of censorship
BOSTON - The Massachusetls
PITTSBU RGH - Preliminary
a
n
d
po w er p olitics (ethot,
Supreme Court has upheld th e researc h i nd icates tha t a
February I 0, J 972) have wrought
reqwre ment that a fetus be born component of marijuana may be
alive before t he ctuJd 1S co nstdered useful in treating heart pat1ents, a a combina t ion of outrage,
a legal person. The requ1rement UniVersity of Pitt sbu rgh ast o ntsh ment and am usement, to
" lays do wn a sensible and easil y pharmacologist said tod ay Dr. t hose groups an d persons d1rect1 y
administ ered rule," t he co u rt said M.l . Oskoui, associate professo r of co nnected to t he attack .
T he c l ai m s by erhos'
tn
unanimously upholdmg the phar macology, md uced artifi cial
management in last Thursday 's
JUidelines. Such a rule also helps heart irregularities 1n 40 cats and
issue concern a request by the
"reduce to a minimum" any rabb1ts by t he use of drugs
Umvers1ty Umon Council (House
ftc ttt1o us claims, the co urt said
H e found that sub seq uen t
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Leccese of mJectlo ns of the com po nent of Council) that ethos move 1ts
Wllmmgton had s ued two doctors marijuana pro vided "significant operations from its p resent
f or S I m illio n alleging that protection" in delaymg and location m Room 34 5 Norto n
prenatal care by the d octors was prevenllng heart irregula rities. The Hall to th e somewhat smaller
Roo m 337 Norton
responsible fo r theu baby injections of tetrhydro cannabinal
Expla1ning the reaso ns for the
T
HC,
th
e
mariJuana
compo
nen
t
,
daughter being s tillb or n
Att o rneys f or the Leccese~ also brought on a de crease m requ est , David G. Sm1th, chairman
c la1med lbe requuement was ~xual mterest and d general of Ho u se Council, said ..We
o utmoded because of medical und dtsonentallon amo ng laboratory I House Council) feel eth os tS
SCientific developments. Eighteen ammals, Oskou1 reported He sa1d underusmg theu spat:e. We wanted
states provtde fo r recovery of the an1mals rece1vcd about the to find more space for o ther
damaaes for injury to a fetus ~m e variation in mariJuana d oses gro up~ that may no t need an
as migh t be fo und tn a rand o m entiCe room" T h ese grou ps
being stillborn, they sa1d
selection o f mariJuana Cigarettes. 1nclude Internati o nal Club,
Oskou1, who has j ust re cc1ved a Debate Club, Africa Club and
NEW YORK
Next Tuesday,
people in Clunatow n wtll be S5Z. I60 grant from the Nat1onal Counc1l of Rel1g1 ous
In stitutes of Health lor hLS Organrz.auons
W1Shmg each other a ha ppy 4670
The de~ISion to ask ethos t o
resear c h . sa1d h e be ca m e
Each person wlll have to decide
for hunself whether he is being 1 nterested 1n the mt:t.l1 cal move was based 1n part o n a
propertJes of manJuana because surv ey tak en by the Norton Hall
w is hed a m o use or a ral.
According to t h e C hinese C hee
up to I 'J40 1t was prescflbed for n1ght managers staff. This survey,
Yu e Co mmunit y Association , 1ts calnung effect and as an by re luting ho w many peo p le were
in each room. indtcat ed that some
wluch held its New Year's Eve ant•-epileplll Jgent
groups, ethos mcluded, were no t
party Wednesday mght , Tuesday
w1l l be the ftrst day of the Year of
ALBA NY
The Stat e Court f uUy us1 ng th e1r space "I I'~ nice
t he Mouse
of Appeals rult:d l"hu rsday that to ha ve space for a goldf1,.h bowl,
"
But 1n Albany, where tht
New York State has the fight tu bu t
leg~slature approved J happy nt'w
deny aborl1ons on d emand tn
year r t'solu110n proposed by
MedJLald re c1p1ents. The: ~.:o urt . 1t1 Astoundjn g a ltitu d e
Carl Roett e r , su pervising editor
C lunatow n Assembl y man loUIS a spht 4-J rulmg, sa td Soc1al
o I c 1 II &lt;&gt;s , called ·the su rvey
De Salv10, next week IS regarded
Serv1l·c~ Cornmis.~ioncr George K
as beg~nmng the Year of the Rat
Wyman had the power to nrder "g,ru..,,ly Inaccurate ... He pomted
''The Ch1nese namt: lor 1he year 1s Mt:dll"llld fund .. be used only fur out I h.at the survey also s howed
pronoum:ed ·shu'. explamed Pao .Jborttonlo that are IIICdi&lt;:.JIIy no one 1n the production room o f
Lee ol the Chee Vue A~ouatwn
requtred
The· Spectru m for an e nttre week .
· rtu' lan mean ell h1."1 motut or
Mr Smll h , while admitllng the
1 h c court overturned tw n
ra1
survey had some tAaccuracies
lower ~ou rl deus1on~ whtch saul
·· we usually th\t)k of 11 as bein~ New Y &lt;Hk wulu not ban tht: use ma1nta1ned they were not of th~
th e Year of th e Mou1.e because 11 t)r Mcd1card fees for mdigenl
nutgnlludl· to invalidate cert11in
IS th e beginning o f a 12 year cycle
House Counc1l decisions.
women '&gt;t'ek1ng abortions under
and we are starling wuh J small the ~lute's !Jberal Jaw Associa te
The all llude o f th e eth os o rga n izations took exception to
an1m aJ and progressmg to t&gt;1ggc.-r Judge Jarnes G•bson. ld llt:d
manJge m ent was puzzhng to thi~ statement! .
ones
Wym.m\ order "repugnant ··
some Mr Snut h sa1d : "The1r
the den1al to "md1gent
a p proa•h seems to be very 'A siam'
C'LEV I::LANV
R u~scll
wnmcn of n••mbursemcnl for suhJect1vc and l d on't thmk they
AI Benson, co-managing editor
Means. d1rec..tor of the Amt:rll·an
.Jburtmns . the d irective services to
made th emse lv es open 10 of The Spectrum commented .
l nd1an Center he re, \l!Y' he w ill
rcv tvc the ~ubstantial evil wh u: h
understanding what we w ere "All anyone has t o d o is look at
lead a group of l nd 1ans to North
I he .thortmn law was dt:s1gned to
domg. If th ey had , I don ' t think our office." Mr. Benso n c1t ed as
VH~Inam to 'ondull
\eparate
e II n11 n a I e... G1bson sa1d
lie
they would have responded wtth a reasons for The Spec rrum :S need
negol1at1ons for t he early release
warned that 1f tndigcnt women are
front
page blast." Elizabeth for space, the outs1de co ntracts
of 80 Amencan·l nd1.1n pnsoners
demt:d abortiOns under Med11.:a1d
Schactner. cd ll o r o f Buffoloman
let , amount of equ1pment used , 1ts
of war Means sa1d he wants to
they w11l resort to "untra ined concu rred, stat1ng s he d1dn 't feel
large staff and pro du cti On load .
' 1mpress upon As1a that Amen.:an
l nd1am should be .:ons1dercd m bull hc" u~mg coat hanger~. wJth " he I Mr. Roetter I has ever really " As it 1s," he added, " we do n ' t
any 1n te rna tiona I rda t 1on~ Inade q ua t e cqu1 pnt ent 1n considered 1f he reall y n eeds that have enough s pace for filing or
unsanitary \utroundmgs and
c't abltshed w1t h the US" ··we
w 1t hnut propt:r po~t -()pcr.JliVe
have o ur sovereignt y a~ do other car~ o
nat1o ns because o f our \ pec1al
relat1onsh1p to the lederal
government ." Mean ~ ao;serted
Xerox those notes you've missed,
'1 he Supreme Court ha) det1ned
the reservallons as dependent
NOW!
durucstu; nations" Mean!&gt; sa1d tlw
tup to North. Vietnam was ~et up
It's a real zoo near u am time.
1n July when a group nt A rucrh.:an
l nd1an women mci wtth
See Gustav
Vll'ln.unese women 1n V .an,·uuver
Bnt1sh l'olumb1a He d1d not ~a~ 355 Norton Hall.
when the tnp would talo.e place

··ay

----------·

. .. ......
--------

·---------The Spectrum It pubNthlld thrfltl

rfm•t

Happy Valq.tine's Day

•

wHir, ....,.,., Mondtly,
w.dn~y •nd Frld.y; during ,,.
r.,u!N «:#Khmic y•r by Sub-Bowd
1. Inc. Offic•
loe~~tlld t1t 365
Norton Ht~/1, Sr.te Univ.rtity of N...,
York •c Buft.lo, 3435 Milin St.•
Bufft~lo , N•w Yor/(, 14214 .
T_,tlp/IOfHI: A f'M CodfJ 716; Edltorltll
831-41 13 ; Bullntm, 831..:1610.

•re

R tlprtlttln tw1 for lldtlefti#ng by
N • t ~ofltll Eduutionlll AdwrtillfJII
s.r,ICtl, Inc.• 360 L•xington A...,
N- Y~k. N . Y. 10017.
.•

MONOAY 11 :00 - 8 :00 p.m.
THURSOAV 11 :00 - 8 :00 p.m.
SATUROAV 11 :00 - 4 :00p .m

SiiCond CIMI Pon.t/e paid t1t Buft.lo
N- Yori-,
'

RULES :
4 hours work pe r monttJ
$5 support fe e (refundable)

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday, 14 February 1972

-&lt;&gt;stenelcner

Mr. Benson agreed · "Buffalonwn
needs large amo unts of space
because of thelf layout They also
need mu ch storage space, they're
pu tt ing out six I year I books ttm
year."
One member o f BSU ~mply
said : "We need all we ha ve ·
Ltnda MeUnik , managing ed1tor of
n h os, disagreed , chargmg that
"BSU requested their room for
large fun ct io ns hlte films, yet only
sho wed two films las t semest er "

main &amp; winspear
Hours:
MEMBER SHIP

JSS Norton

chosen carefully as a alam and not
be c au s e o f any co n crete
evidence."
O e fendin&amp; Buffalonilzn
Ms.
Schactner said : We need a'u our
space - ; som e days we bave as
many u SO or 60 people here."

NORTH BUFFALO
FOOD COOP.

Sul»cr/ption ,.,_ •• $4./!i() PM
_,_., or 18.00 for n.o

'*".,.,.,,

productio n ." A lleaed Mr. Benson

"the three orpnizatipns wer~

�·'

SASU and USS unite
to fight tuition increase
The leadership o f the Student
A ssociation of the State
University (SASU) and the City
University Student Senate (USS)
have united in an effort to appeal
Gov. Rockefeller's intent to raise
State University tuition and to
impose tuition at the City
University (CUNY). This marks
the first time that the leadership
of over 500,000 students has
comb1ned in a common Interest.
Both groups are com m1tted to
affirmmg the right of every state
resident to public hig h e r
educatio n at no cost. They further
favor mamtaining an admiSSions
pohcy which allows equal access
to "the college or program of
one's choice." According to SASU
membetll, other alternatives exist
to meet the rising costs of bjgher
education in New York
Mee tings in Albany and
B 1nghamton o f the execu tive
bod1es of both organizations have
lead to thiS action The two
1110ups h.1ve asked the1r respective
const1tuenc1es to respond to a
draft resolution on no cost public
h•gher education. Additionally , a
resolution dealing With
researchtng alternatives to t.u t the
cost of higher educat1on has been
requested A joint meetmg of
SUNY and CUNY students has
been called in Albany fm Feb 27.
Collective wiU
Such a meeting w111 develop a
unified posllion and a means of
state w1de Implementation of

strategies. Richard Lew is, USS
chairman , commented o n the
upcom1ng meeting: ''I look
forward to the meeting o n the
27th, where, for the frrst time,
student governments o f CUNY
and SUNY will sit down in one
place and exercise their collective
will t o put the state on notice that
stud ents will not be forgotten , nor
will they capit ulate to the power
brokers 1n Albany and New York
City."
SASU C hairman M ark
Borenstein, commenting o n thel
joint statement and proposals,
stated : "Students are the most
transcient , least orgamz.ed, and
therefore , most exp l oi t ed
constituency of the Umversity "
lte contmued. "The cost of pubhc
higher education, now squa rely
the burden of middle and low
Income families, effectively
proh1b1ts resident!t from the
education they need 10 order to
be successful, unless they are
willing to mdenture themselves
for large sums of money for many
years."
Acl·onllng to Mr Borenstein :
" It IS unfortunate that st udents
w1ll have to spend thetr l ime
o rganiZing and fighting for no~ost
public educallon ; but Without th1s
fight , pubLic h1gher education 1n
New York wul be destroyed. Only
through the coordmated act1on of
both t he City University students
and the State University students.
through USS and SASU, can we
hope to be successful "

HEy-you

News Analysis

Incompetence is evident in
ranks qfCampus Security
by Howie Kurtz
Campu1 Editor

The S tate University o f Buffalo
is a city. It is a cit y of 25,000
people
students, professors,
administrators, staff, technicians,
Janitors, secretaries and labo rers.
Most c1ties of this size are
necessari l y pro t ected by
well - trained , efficient potice
forces . The St at e Universi t y of
Buffalo has Campus Security.
This is not t o imply that
Ca mp us Secunty should be
expected to perform the same
functions as policemen . Security
officers are legally d efined ·as
peace officers, and as such, t heir
function is more limited. But the
protection of o ur campus and 1ts
people IS too Important to sit
back and 1dly tolerate the
alarmtng number of mcidents
Involving Campus Secur1ty
officers.
Early last semester, a graduate
student was stopped by Ca mpus
Securit y for allegedly runrung a
st op sign on campus. According to
the student . he was subsequently
harassed and beaten by the two
secunty officers that stopped h1m
In November, a scuff le
occurred between a black student
and a wh ite girl in the d o r ms over
which television channel to watch
Campus Secunty was called upon
to intervene. They Intervened
wi I h n 1gh t s llc k s, b lack)acks
(which they're not supposed to be
carrymg). and the black student
required sill stitches. Do these
incidents sugest poor j udgment
and overreaction?
Leftov~ jerks

N TltE doRMS

In Ja nuary , It was alleged tha t
two Campus Security officers
entered the Undut'urrentoffice at

Still cooking for yourself and eating cold cereal
for breakfast..
Tired of running to the plaza in the co ld snow
every time someone borrows your foo d , by
mistake, of course ...
you just made a great tos.~d salad. but
dre!&gt;Sing i~ frozen solid in the window
siU ...
And your ice cream melted when your freezer
blew a fuse .
And yo u just burned your spaghelli dinner .
Sure it's fun to cook in your room. with
smoke, grea~e and dirt y pans. but wh y
bother'!

WHE.N IT'S ALL AT THE

owER DElicATESSEN
ANd CAfETERiA
(FIRST FLOOR LOBBY - TOWER DORM)

It's too bad that wanting babies
isn't as important as havmg
them.

4·30 a.m . and ransacked the
place, ca us1ng S 250 worth of
damage. If the mc1dent is true.
and Unde"·urrent pnnter Tom
LundquJst da1ms he eyewitnessed
the who le thing, it IS notlting
short o f malicious mtent. These
incidents, while scarnng the image
of the secunt y force as a whole ,
pomt o u t an mteresting fact.
It IS the feeling of many
well-informed mdividuals, some
very close to the situation, that
there is a seclion of Campus
Security that has periodically
proven itself incompetent - using
wrong judgement , making wrong
deciSlons, overreacling at the
wrong time
These ..Jerh"", a.~ one observer
termed them, are the officers left
over from the old days, when
securit y standards were lo w~:r
Yet, due to the protect1on of a
st rong umon. they renuun on the
force today
some who haven' t
even passed the C1vil Serv1~c
Exam now requiTed to hc ~.:o nu.· J
secunty off1~cr'
Unsafe a t night
Any 1mpnwcmcnl of t ampu~
Security musl ~ta rt wtth the
removal of thc\c 1nconqwtent
officerc;, or the1r tran,Jer l&lt;l
poSitiOn\ when: they t.:Jn do k \ \
harm With rohbt•rac' o~nd rapt''
beconung rnn1e Jnd mnrc
frequen t Ill the dorntttones, wtth
mcreas1ng c.nmc and mcidcnts on
campus to the pntnt where many
are afra1d In vent urc out alone dt
n1ghl , 1n o.:o rnpeten t:e within
Campu !&gt; Sn urtty c.dnnnt he
lokrated The: :.eo.:unty off1cer'&gt;
wh o prt•tecl U!&gt; w1thtn tho:
boundane:o. ot Matn and Ba1lcy
and Winspcar arc not armed
their only weapOn!&gt; are good
JUdgment, good reaLtions and
bemg adept at human relations.
The Committee on Campu~
Security
appomted by

Pres1dent Ketter to study the
problem and make meaningful
recommendations. According to
committee chairman Mac Allister
H u II · "Getting t he pro blems
solved without money is going to
be difficult ." Dr. 1-luU already
expects the recommendations to
come la ter than t he original March
I 5 tar&amp;et date.
''Nothing lS gorna t o be
accompl ished," com m e nted
student Tom DeMartJ.no, who is
servina on the committee. The
co mmittee ex pects t o make some
positive recommendations, such as
greater student awareness of their
three options 10 any Ulcident : go
to the student JUdiCUiry, go to city
court o r forget about it. O ther
recommendatiOns wuJ call for
greater oommunica 110n between
students a nd securit y
Persisting problems
Uowever, t he pnme need IS for
add1llonal tra1nmg, and that spells
dollan.. Unles.~ a restructunng of
pnont1es IS effected, then the
money just won't be there, given
the present l"Onditlon of the State
lfntvcrStly oudget
Without
money. no maJOr upheavals can
Olt:lll
1 ht.&gt; re~ull wul be mak mg the
he'l of a bdd SituatiOn , via
lnt. rCiiSCd &lt;:0 0\lllUOICiltiOn. lighter
~ccunty mca~ures tn Norton Hall
und the dorms, etc. Problems,
although they wtll definitely
pers1st , may he reduoed . But
tn t 1dents like flncler('lrrnrt and
bli.H:kja&lt;:k tng wul .:nntmue un til
the "Jerk:." are gotten nd of.
(,1ven present enforcement and
financial problems, the campus
must at least have a umf1ed force
of well-educated, mt elllgen t peace
uffiLCrs who cond uct themselves
and perform thetr duties in a
professiOnal manner.
Jt"s t he least a CitY of 25,000
people deserves

ALFA ROMF.O

iN OR TAkE OUT

*FERRAIU
presents

"DO YOUOWN YOUR BODY"

Co~plETE

MEAls
OR jlJST A SNACk

Leave the cooking to us-

MONDAY - FEBRUARY 14th

12 NOON

* 'MASERATI
Slllu • suvice • pariS

USED CARS

••BOBCOR ••
Motor Om Ltd.

/974 Eggert - Neor Bailey
834-7350

U.B. FOOD SERVICE

•
Monday, 14 February 1972. The Spectrum. Page three

�Travel S4Sl!
Student A110eiation of tb.e State Univenity of
New York (SASU) has announced the creation of a
SASU-University Travel Propam. Avallable to aU
SUNY students, faculty and ttaff, the proaram offen
t S separate departure~ and retwn fliabta to and from
Niaaara Falls and London's Gatwlck AjtpOrt.
Fliahta in the SASU pro,um will be offered
from May 19 to Sept. 22 and the cost roundtrip Ia
$179. Accordina to .SASU offic.ials, the coat of the
fliaht is considerably cheaper than the rate offered
by commercial airlines. The proaram also includes
the SASU travel packqe which containa applicatlona
for U.S. passports, health certificatea, Student U-raiJ
passes and other help.
For further information call 831-3735.

Kibbutz Karavan depicts
Israeli communal living
I n coord rn a ti on with
International Month, Students for
Israel. will present " Kibbut.t
K aravan
Problems and
Perspect ives m Communal L1vina"
ar Norton Hall the weekend of
Feb . l8
As publil:rzed , the kibbutz IS a
communal-type soc1ety co ncerned
pnmarJiy with human
advancemen t
t hr ough
cooperat iOn. Its members work
together in agricultural , industrial
and educational J'rojects .
According to its sponsors, the
KubbUt7 Karavan will attempt tn
convey a reahsli&lt;.: p1cture of the
kibbutz life style The program
will concentrate on the un1versal
problems of ~·ommunc~ a&lt;&gt; well J~
lhe problems 1n the Israeli soc1al
setting

I n&lt;luded m the lhrre~ay
presentahon wul be a cnftee
house FrrdHy and Saturday n1ght
at I.J p m . 111 th~ Rathske llar.
b.ntel"tatnmc:nl will be prov1ued by
Shum-Batzal IThe GariJc.Qnion
Company), a group of young
Israeli smgers. The Ahavat Yisraeli
Dan cer~ and
poel-slllger David
Kaufman wtJI also perform hrarll

tood and drink will be served .

Kibbut z life
Additionally, an exhibit on
kibbutz Ufc will be displayed ln
the Center Lounge starting at
I 2 :3 0 p.m
Saturday and
continumg all day Saturday and
Sunday . The exhibit will include
pictures, photographs and books
on communal lif~t . A guerilla
theater will· dep1ct the general
assembly of a kibbutz in session
Drsspelling rumors of a Schoellkopf dorm Demart, noting " basically a misunderstanding' on
A wmposium e ntitled " Ltfe in
"split"
from the Inter Restdence Coun cil (IRC) and the part of the dorm residents. Since these meeting~.
Utopia?" will be held an the
developing
proposals for a "community Uvi ng" few st udents have waived their fees as compared tn
Conference Theater , Sunday
afternoon, noon
2:30 p.m . international dorm were noted by students active in those who had mainlamed !)ley would . This wa'
Here, young kibbutz scholars will
agreed to be the case as separately stated by M'
dorm affairs .
examine t h e social and
Respondmg to the rumor of secess1on from IRC , Demart , Mr. Feldsott and Jeannette Walkem , .tl\
psy c hol o gi u ll pro blems of
Ka t hy Demar!, resident advisor of the second floor international dorm resident.
.:ommunal Life
mternational
dorm exclaimed : "It's nothing Uke
Among the lecturers wtll be
that.'' She rep orted that " quite a few kids" on th e 'No problem'
Muki T ~ur, origjnato r of t he
Kibbut7 Month program . Mr. Tsur second Ooor did not participate In I RC activittes.
Ms. Walkem also said tltal there was " uu
also .::o·edited a book entitled, and they felt that collection of the $8.50 student fe~ problem" and the matter wa~ overstated . She and
Till' St•vrnrlt Vay whH.h analy 1.ed
Ms. Dcmart are among the international dorm
was not Ill their benefit ,
the feebngs of partiCipant s 111 tht'
Ms. Demart added that s1nce international dorm r~si dents developing proposals toward dorm
SJx·day Arab-tsraeh war nf 1966
In addition Michael Kidron will students only rel:eived funds as pari of Schoellkopf expansion At present, Ms. Wallcem noted successlul
lecture o n the problems of the Hall and allotment as a floor, some students wished maintenance of a "free .. atmosphere, including the
ed u c at tonal and psycholo&amp;kal to waivt their fees and possibly collec t a fund on international second fl oor's exchange of cultural
development of the k1bbut7
their own This slat ted what she termed a "chain ideas, such as the tutonng of English and foreign
woman and child
reaction" wrth other SchoeiJkopf resi dents who also languages. In addition, Ms. Demart is hopeful fnr
wanted Ill waive fees . Such a decision was already increased funding.
past the waiver deadhne date
Proposals being invest igatcd do not particularly
eurll ,,,ueo rrom ~~ 2 look towards a large physical expansion, but rath er a
Remedy situation
development o f "community living" with greater
"Norton liall IS tremendously
After the tdea began to ~ircu late about two student Involvement in governance . Established tillS
overcrowded ethos ts nor being weeks ago , I RC officials tried to remedy the year as an "ex pe n mental residen tial environment", a
asked to d o anything more than
situation. Stuart Feldsott , IRC treasurer, explatned proposal to be o ffered for next year will be clarilietl
any o t her stu\Jent group ." Dr .
Gruber a\Jded that "House that a meeting was lleld soon thereafter for and presented within the next tw o o r three weeh
Counc1l has used obJective and Schoellkopf resident advts~&gt;rs , followed by an o pen T o deal with this. meetings Involving foreign and
fatr cnt e na for rhetr evaluation I meeting for rnterna110nal dorm Jnd other Amencan students have been occunng Wed nesday~
w11l back Ho use Counc1l In thtm
Schoellkol'f residen ts These meetings were to at 3 p.m . in T o wnsend Hall . AJthough a group ha\
action ."
explain the use o t I RC fund s and the diliadvantages formed. any one interested is invited to attend .
Concurring, ML Smith sauJ
Applications for the international dorm w tll bt:
flatly Ho use (.ouncil b nut !~Omg of separation from IRC
Mr. f'eldsott apparently agreed with Ms. available during International Month until March J 2
o ut o f 1ts way tll persecute ethos
To say 1t 's censorship leavC!s rne
speechlt!SS "
The next move in th1s game of
AUTO SERVICE
musical rooms seems up tu t!tllu.t
COMPLETE
as Ho use Coun-:11 is adamant in
the1r detcrnunation that ,eth os
AUTO REPAIR
will be moved . The front page
Honest &amp; Reliable
announcement s~gned by the
erhmstaff suggested that legal
Imported &amp; Domestic
steps might be taken. Mr. Roetter
daimed aU that was needed to
- BOBCOR prove the ch arge of censorsh jp
AUTOMOTIVE
CENTER
was to prove a different treatmen t
1974
Eggert
Near
Bailey
among t h e various student
834-7350
organiza ti ons and ethm . That
they would still have a room does
not necessarily mean censorship
was not present, he added.
Meeting of
Mr. Roetter said etho:r would
publish a special edition next
UNDERGRADUATE
Tuesday. In it, he conclu ded,
MEDICAL
would be all their evidence of the
SOCIETY
wrong being perpetrated upon it.
Three dental students
WANTED : CAMPUS EXPEDITION
will speak
RE PRESE NTATI VE
for new

International residmts

Dorm expansion is proposed

Censorship...
M r. R oe ttcr , St'C!rningly
c ontrad1cttng h1s pub1Jcal1on's
statements. asserted that " tt's no t
that we think the other
organizations are not using their
space, but that they are being
treated with different cnttna than
ethos.'' A ~cordmg to Mr. Roetter
the main differentiating critenon
IS I he amount of " poHtu.:al
th e par11~ular
p o wer "
o rganization might have
Ms. S~huctner seemed tu frnd
this idea rJthcr humorous. ·•t
tlunk If 's a toke thai we might
have any 'political rower' " The
BSU member, whLie seemingly
Jdmitting a degree or pohttcal
effe ctiveness, Intimated that t&gt;tho.t
was simply Jealous. Ht stated ·
''Polit ical po wer IS y1elded by
people who can influence othe r
reople . Who do es ethos mtluence'!
Nobo\Jy ..
The censorship ISsue has been
ratsed m conjunction with th e
power pouhcs charge. Mr. Roetter
.:ontends that House Council's
request is just the latest in a series
of m c1dents designed to, in time ,
pt:rhaps, elimina te ethos from this
cam pus.
This feeling has been roundly
criticized as ludicrous. James
Gruber, director of Norton Hall,
voiced agreement with last
Friday's The Spectrum editorial,
wh ich called the ethos charge of
censorship "a shameful distortion
of journalistic ethics." Said Mr.
Gruber : "Censorship is a dirty
word . It should not be used with
che pretext of crying wolf.

eelucetlon comoany, to obtain
oartlcloanh from your school tor
scientific fletel ex~lons. Excellent
Income o ppo rtunity. Interest ed
Sophomores •nel Ju niors write
ruotlng quallfl~tlons to : DAVID
TROOK, Adventures In Eeluc•tlon,
68 L.~arel St. Bellmont,

02178

•

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, 14 February 1972

TUESDAY, Feb . 15th
7:30p.m.
233 Norton

M••·•

NO

L.EASE

REQUIRED

�Buffalo llidce Council

Amnesty is supported
The Buffalo Peace Council
gathered last Wednesday rtight at
the l afayette Presbyterian Church
to confer o n a possible amnest y
position, unconditiona l o r
otherwise, for draft resisters and
military deserters.
Dan Amigone, chairman of the
Buffalo c hapter of Vietnam
Veterans Against t he War,
rep resented at the meeting various
veteran organizations including
the UB Vets Club , the American
Servicemen's Union a nd the Third
World Veterans Alliance. Favoring
amnesty to resisters and deserters
because they did not submit to
U.S. Govern ment service, Mr.
Amigo ne said: "They should not
be penalized for their actions.
They did nothing wrong. They
have com mitted no cri me. They
are in fact in their present
condition because they refused to
commit crimes."
As well as backing resisters and
mi l itary d eserters on moral
grounds, Mr. Amigone JUStified
their actions politically by saying
''t hat the war in Indochina does
not and never has benefited the
vast majorit y of t he American and
Indochinese people ; that t he o nl y
people this war has benefited are
the small group of men who run
the businesses and governments of
this country and the U.S. -backed
military dictatorships in Southeast
Asia." He commented that he
would be "opposed to any kind of
amnesty proposal that includes
any sort of alterna te service
position by which draft resisters
would be forced to work at low
paying jobs for two or three
years."
J. Edward Cuddy . presently a

professor of history at Rosary Hill
College and a former
congressional candidate, p ro posed
an eve n more encompassing
amnesty presentation. He favors
"across the board , total amnesty"
for all resisters, deserte rs and
military criminals such • Lt.
Willi am C alley . Mr. Cuddy
included Lt. Calley in his proposal
because " he was a victim of the
brutalization of the American
government." He expressed ·that
this would show fai rness to all
people who were victimized by
t he war.
HistoricaJ precede nt
Mr. C uddy also stated that
there is an historical precedent for
granting amnesty . He cited
examples such as George
Wa s hington pardon1ng
participants in the Whiskey
Rebe llion and President Truman
offering amnesty proposals at the
end of World War I I.
Congressman Cook and
Senator Taft of Ohio have
i ntr oduce d proposals for
condi tional amnesty to the
Congress. Mr. Cuddy criticized
these suggestions because they
implied that the draft evaders and
deserters were "wrong.'' These
motions view the draft resister as
a "poor , misguided soul." Mr.
Cuddy noted that the anginal
Greek meaning of anmesty is
"forgetfulness". not "forgiveness"
as it is now interpreted .
Mr. Cuddy used the arguments
of Charles Porter, former Oregon
Congressman and head of the
organization, Amnesty Now. to
reaffirm his position. "No man
shuld suffer punishment for an
immoral war . I would only
support a proposition which
points out that the government
was wrong and these men were
nght," declared Mr. cuddy.

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of Henri Marchant
I (or Winston) Cold Duc k
11
When you order dinner
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and present this coupon

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Government , the aggressor
He also showed h1s disapproval
of the way the general public wa!'
allowlllg the double ~tandard of
government violence to cont1nue.
" Wh en there are kdl1ng~
comm1tted .til the way f rom
Danang tu Attt..:a , the public IS
ap p ease d becau&lt;&gt;e of 1ls
impersonal nature, but when
traffic 15 stopped 10 Wash1ngt on .
people be..:ome very exc1ted and
Intolerant," sau.l Mr. Cuddy
''How lS 11 that we mvadc and
bomb Vietnan and then label the
t!nemy the aggressor'?" he add ed .
Mr. Cuddy daimed that 11 IS this
American government that is
guilty of cnminal aggression .
Mr

Cud dy conclud ed ht!&gt;
address by re1terating his support
of total, unconditional amnesty .
He said "There are limits to
patriotism . A man must stand
with h1s conscience even 1f it pit~
him against his c.ountry ."

-con en

Common Cause focuses on
nation's major political issues
Common Cause (CC). a nationally established
"People's lobby," IS presently organizing itself in
Buffalo . Founded two years ago by John Ga rdner ,
former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare.
Common Cause boasts a membership of nearly
250,000 people and was influential 1n such •ssues as
the SST and the Mansfield Amendment .
Western New York's Common Cause includes
nearly I 300 members and has existed for about six
months. Headed by Rev. Hugh Carmichael, it is
interested in implementing a network program of
quick communication among its members to
facilitate immediate responses to urgent issues.
Acco rding to Jerome Fink. a Common Cause
member, CC is attempting to make the government
more responsible and accountable for its ac tions. He
explained CC as a non·partisan group focusing on
non-part i~ar• ISsues. FU1thcr he termed the
urgani7atiun u type of "co·ed WPIItcn·~ league of
Voters ."
Biondo bill backt.'d
Companng cr to Plhcr 81t1Ufl~ MHh ··~ " Nauer \
Raiders," Mr Fink com111entcd that ('(' IS 111ore
concerned With rx•htll'&gt; than cc~n; umers : but if
another organ11a tion is worku1g tow&lt;mh the ~:1111C
ends. they will surely hack tht'IH
MaJOr tssues 10 be tatkled tim year ..t\ uutlincd
by John Gardner , arc · J) campatgn &gt;pcmllllg ; 2)
lobby regulatll.ln ; J ) cunflt..: t of interc ~ l\ bet ween

.

Presently, CC is trying to es~ablish better
orga ni7..ation among its members . Their goal is to
institute a letter and telegram communication
system, similar to that of the National Rifle
Association (NRA) . The NRA boasts that it is able
to get out nearly I .000.000 letters 111 a week 's time
on issues concerning them
Action-oriented
There is a $1 S nrembershtp fee for entrance into
('C, but it i~ not publici7ed as a profit -making
org;Jniz.alion . As lb members point out, the $15 is
lliC1cly to L\IVCr operating expenses .
Mcmberslqp or the group lbclt IS m;unly
voluntary I here .ue relatrvely few full·lunc staff
nH.'tnb e1 ~. and there IS an absence of any real
bureaunacy Ar tinn onented. the group 1~ looking
lm mtere~tcd tndtvtduab . Information about the
organt7.allon n1ay be gamed by contacting student
comd1na1or MH.:hacl Silverman
In the future . a visit IS planncll to the Butfalo
;uca by John Gardne1 nn Apnl IJ Tentatively, he IS
'thcJulcJ t11 appear llll campus at 4 p .111 . that day

Nationall:uard cpenin;:s
Help is in the offing for recent panic ·slricken winner.. of Nixon's lottery festivities.
A Unit of the New York State National Guard has approximate ly 30 openings a nd is
presentl y accepting applicatiom for them. Anyone interested should drop their
Greyhound Toronto bus schedules and contact Bill lit 823·3217 or Gene at 825-5040 .

The S'I,UI&gt;ENT
ASSEMBLY!
WILL MEET T 0 DAY AT 3:00
in the FILLMORE ROOM
ALL UNDERGRADUATFS ARE INVITED TO OBSERVE
AGENDA :

representatives and their o utside occupations; 4)
anti-secrecy laws; and 5) the seniority system. Aside
from thts. CC rs presently engaged in a push for the
Biundo Bill . which would allow the new voters in
New York State to participate in the upcoming
Presidential primary . Petitions have been circulated
for this cause. and a vote o n the bill is expected in
the State Legislature this week .

Constitutional AmendmentsReport on ElectionsTreasurer's Report-

PLEASE NOTE :
Any representatives who lwve missed BOTH the December 15 and January 24 meetings
have lost their voting privileges. Contact Lee Schwartzberg for informaJion - 831-5507

SUC B Concert Committee
Presents

Canned Heat
John Lee Hooker
and

Lighting by Greased Lightning Lite Show

February 21 , 7 :00 and 10:30
At the New Gym, Buffalo State Campus
Tickets for

Students $1 .75
Non-students $2.50

Available at State Ticket Office
Norton Hall Ticket Office

'-------(Funded by Student Activity Tax)'- - - - - -...

Monday, 14 February 1972 . The Spectrum. Page five

�I

l

EdiTORiAl

High intrigue
Once again a bill to reduce penalties for possession ot
marijuana has been introduced in the Assembly by Chester
Hardt of Amherst. His current proposal is far less reaching
than last year's which wou ld have made possession of small
amounts of grass a violation instead of a Class A
misdemeanor.
It is unfortunate that the Assembly chose a year ago to
defeat that measure. It was a rational, logica l and quite
defensible bill, but for various reasons an unholy coalition of
upstate and black and Puerto Rican legislators from New
York City combined to kill it. While New York's drug laws
are not as archaic as some states -Texas foF example. where
possession of two joints can get you up to 30 years, but
manslaughter carries a maximum penalty of seven years they are a striking example of an oligarchy using the law to
legislate moral codes of behavior.
Most of the antipathy towards and fear of marijuana
stems from propaganda campaign produced by federal
authorities in the thirties. Prior to that time possession of
marijuana was legal throught the nation. Then, to combat a
slight spread of cannabis use from jazz musicians to other
sectors of the society during the Prohibition years, Mr. Harry
Anslinger of the FBI began to distribute literature which
stated that marijuana use caused insanity, sexual aberrations
and death. From coast to coast, posters decrying the "evil
weed" appeared .
Almost four decades later 'the effects of this campaign
linger. Public opinion surveys reveal that many citizens still
believe that marijuana causes brain damage. Fortunately,
several groups are engaged in scientific and objective research
of marijuana. The,....National Institute of Mental Health has
recently laid to rest two myths about grass. They have
concluded that marijuana does not lead to heroin use, nor
does it create a tolerance in the user .
Spokesmen for NIMH have urged that the drug be
"decriminalized ." This euphemism for legalization suggests
that finally some researchers and government officials are
becoming aware of the blatant hypocrisy of America's drug
laws. The criminal persecution of many young people for
smoking marijuana has done much to foster disrespect for
the law. Further, as long as law enforcement agencies are
provided with anti-cannabis laws. they will never crack down
on the real danger to society, heroin. It is far easier for the
police to harass small·scale marijuana user;s than it is to stop
organized crime's heroin ventures.
Marijuana should be legalized and placed under
constraints similar to alchoholic beverages. There is no
excuse for continuing laws which have no basis either in
scientific evidence or societal danger. Then and only then can
we begin to destroy the top urban killer, heroin. After all,
did a joint ever kill anyone?

THE SpECTttUM \
Vol. M, No. 54

Monday, 14 f=ebruary 1972
Editor·in-Chief - Dennts Arnold
Co-Man.ging EditCK

AI Benson

Co-Man.tine Editor - Mike Lippmann

A•. M.Mgling Edit01

Susan Moss

Buti_. M.~ - .lKk Hertan
Advenilino Menagw -S usan Mellentfne

C.mpu•

Jo-Ann ArmfiiJ
.. Jeff Greenwald
- .Howie Kurtz
.. Janis Cromer
.... Ronni Fofman
'
. - Marti Gani
.. Claire Kriegsman
.. Lynda Tllfi
. .. . Tom Toles
.. Amy Ahrend
~

Ctty
Copy

....

F..tu,.

Q,..pflic Ar11

Bedc....

.

.

..

...

Uyout
A..t.

Maryhope Runyon
~ .vacant
L it. 81 OfW\'la
Michael S1fverblen
~uac
...81fly Altman
Off.Campus
.... Lynne Traeger
A..t.
.vacant
' .
Photo -.
Mickey Ostl!freicher
.Kim Santos
A. ..
Spons ..
. ... 88rry Rubin
AM! .
. . . Howie Faiwt

.

..

..

TM Spectrum is served by United Press lntllfnationaf, College Press
Service, the Los Angeles ·Times Free Press, the Lo' Angeles Tim•
Syndicate and Libel' at ion News Service.
Rtpubli~tion of metter herein without tha e11press oon•nt of the
Editor-in-Chief is forbidden .

Edhori•l Policy Is datllfminod by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page six . The S}&gt;ectrum . Monday, 14 February 1972

Beyond Ketter's control
ru the J::dttor
Your recent ar11cle on thll deOI1SC o f tile S tudent
Judtciary amplied that it wa~ dtlnt: I&lt;&gt; dt:ath by the
Adn11nsstrauon's antipathy : that lhe Admmistration
would not allow a Student~ tci ary to try any
important cases such as thoSe anSing frorn t h e riots
and. therefore, 1t would bll 11n empty exerc1se to
create art o perative Student Judic inry . let us put
aside the question of t~ow the Student Judiciary h as
performed in the past when 11 dad have th is
responsibility and also how It m~ghl perform if
re·charged with this functaon . Let us Instead look at
the power of the Admmistration to implement a
Student Judiciary assuming it was a full agreement
wtth your goals.
The Education Law of the S tate of New York,
Section 6450, passed by the Leg~slature and signed
an to law by the governor in 1969 , states that the
Trustees of the Universit y must adopt rules for the
mamtenance of public o rder on SUNY campuses and
provide procedures for theit enforcement. If the
Trustees do not do so , no state money for the
Unaversity The Trustees on July 18, 1969

promulgated the SUNY Rules and Regulat ions fo r
Maintenance of Public Order, which mandated the
creatiOn of a Hearing Board, now popularly known
as " The Committee on Campus Disruption ." These
rule~. as amended. state that the Hearing Commillee
shall co nsist of fa culty, administrators and student ~
m set numbers and try students only. The chid
admmsstratave officer (i n our case, President Ketter )
l1l required to create the committ ee and see that 11
ope rates accordihg to the Trustees Rules. He has no
discretwn to endow an all student body wath
authority to hear and determine offenses deahng
with riots and the Uke.
To lin e thts out for you more clearly · the
Legislal ure and the govenor are superior to the
Board of Trustees If the Board does not follow the
law , no money. The Trustees are superior to
President Ketter. He must do as instructed. In fin~ ,
students, lobby at Albany to change the Education
law , imJ&gt;Or1 une the Board of Trustees t o change
t h eir rules, but do not raise a lamentation at Hayes
Hall for mtttters beyond ats co ntrol.

Howard L. Meyer
University PrMecuror

Nutrition problems
The 1ntense co ncern emerging m the
consciousness of many people. especially the young,
with man's relationship to his environment and to
his fellows offers the o ne optamsstic element in any
othcrw ISe dtsmal anticipat1on o f th e future . A lively
Interest in human n utrition ts one manifestation of
that concern . But just as an its Qther aspects , the
anx1e1y over the possible inadequacies of our diets
and m anipuhttion of our food supplies for
exploitative purposes b itself open to exploitation .
The ability to pro;ec t a sy m pathetic attitude and
some familiarity with the technical vocabulary of the
subject are not adequate credential~ upon which to
ba~e a reasonable confidence in the validity or u l ility
or even th e harmlessness of the information offered,
in fact they are as commonly the stock tn trade o f
the charlatan
It IS indeed an outrageous fact. and one more
1tem of evtdence of the irresponstble inadequace o f
the American educational system, that in an area as
Vttal to man's well-being as his diet there is an almost
UtUversal and appalling ignorance. The least a decent
education ough t to provide in this regard , and in
every other aspect of the impact of sctence and
technology on tbe human condition, is a basic
structure of facts and concepts, along wath a critical
altitude, as some modicum of protection against
th ose who exploit ignorancy for gain, whetller Iiley
be food manufacturers or self·proclaimed prophets
of the new dietary Jerusalem . Surely all would agree
that that knowledge ought to be, but LS not.
com prehenswely available at the most elementary
level of the educational system . What . then, can we
say when we learn that in the last bastion of
protection against the dangers of ignorance m health
matters. in our training cent ers for physictans and
other health professionals , we find students so
frustrated at the inadequacies o f their education that
Utey are forced to seek out some pittance of
knowledge from .,whatever casual sources they can
identify and at t'hetr own exptr'lse? They ought not
be faulted for the naivete or enors in judgment
which may be exhibited in such e fforts.
These remarks are not to be cons trued to
suggest that all that is necessary or useful in the
science of nutrition is known and available in the

right textbook. EYen less should it be inferred th at
they are Intended to ueny that the patterns of food
production and distnbutton contaw elements wh~&lt;.h ,
even on the basis of cutTen! knowledge, can be
identified as dest ru ctive by human standard~
Certainly wcieta l patterns tn this area fall far short
of what they o ught to be , even in th e face of the
present imperfect state of the sciences of nutritio n
and toxicology Thts is a manifestation ol the
Widespread defect in our society (which requttcs a
pohtical not a scient ific solu tion) of producing for
profit , not for human need
But of even more 1111pact 111 the long run as th e
necessity to acquire a much greuter depth o f
scientific knowledge of human nutrit ion and food
science. Most , if not all, of the ttcute mantfestlltJ&lt;&gt; n~
of deficiencies or the dtetary essentials are known
We can define minim um dosages requned to ward
off these signs and symptoms. What we know almost
nothing about is long-term e ffect of inadequactes,
imbalances. and artifi c ial additives in our dtet Is
Pauling's h ypo th esis right? Is there a long range
beneficial effect of vitamin C in dosages greatly 111
excess of the 50 to 75 mg a day sufficient to prevent
scurvy? Can high levels of vitamin E increase human
longevity? Is th ere a relationship between zinc tn the
diet and cholesterol deposition in the anenes7 Is
there a nutritional aspect to cancer therapy? Whut
are the possible consequences of artifical food
additives or art ificial conditions of crop g.row th 1 No
one knows with confidence. Whoever assetts th e
contrary is a quack .
The answ ers wUI be haJd comtng. They wtll
require commitments of resources well in excess of
those cutTentl y available to finance t h e researl'h
Even more important they will depend upon the
hard work and insights of the researchers who
undertake their study. At the moment the level o f
training for careers in research and the intensity of
researc h activity in this country are declining. not
mcreasing. That too Is a political not a scaenufic
problem.
I have discussed only problem ~, not solutions.
The latter perhaps for ano ther time and another
place.

Harold L . Segal
Professor

�Support WN'Y PIBG
T o tbe Edito r :
T he growing student commitment at the S ta te
Universit y of New York at Buffalo and other
colleges around the state to t he fo rma tion of a
Western New Yo rk Student Public I nterest Research
Group ( WNYPIRG) should be encouraging to all
citizens interest ed in developing knowledgeable
citizenship. The hardworking and idealistic students
leading this effort know t hat building the
institutions of citizen research and action is the basic
pioneering need in this country. Ot her statewide
student groups in Oregon. Minnesota, Vermont and
San Diego have already voted to contribute a few
dollars per student per year to retain t heir full-time
lawyers, scientists and other skilled professionals to
advance the forct:s of genuine progress and justice in
helping to solve serious problems besetting many
Americans and the nallon
Ma ny students today want to correct injustices
and apply the resources and inteUigenl.!e in the
na t1on to the enormous problems that prevuiJ now
and which will loom even larger in the future.
Everyone knows about these problems such as
poverty, unemployment, disc riminatiOn , pollution,
l.!o nsumer injustice, threat of war, concen trot1on of
powt:r in fewer corporatio ns and larger governments
and the growing futility of the dollar t&lt;&gt; respond to
people's needs.

Stud ents can do something about t hese
prob le ms while they are st udents. They can research
them, develop strategies for change and participate
in their imple mentation. This is the most in tensive
educational experience for it challenges the intellect
and the value system of the student in tandem and
motivates effort and dedication , One of the ma1n
purposes of ed ucation is to develop the capacity and
will to be effective citizens, whatever their respective
value systems may be. A diversity of' vtewpoints
indeed renews and Invigorates responsible
citiz.t:nship. What is needed is a student directed
institution which will act as a cataly,;t for
opportunities which students can takt: hold of and
dirt:ct toward problem-5olving. Before most forums
of deciston-making - government, corporu te •)C
union - spec.al interests are well represt:nted but the
public or broad cit12.en interest Ill uvt. The:
establishment of WNYPIRG would prov1dc students
with an effect1ve professional vo•c:c hdurc: thc~l'
forums and enlist enormous student psrtll'tpallon,
by way of research, laboratory teSting. anu other
skills both during the school year and dunng sumnw1
vacations. C1tizcnsh1p experience should be an
Integral purl of educat1onaJ atlatnmcnts II ~~ hoped
that students will support the WNYPIRG proposal
and heir create a conslruc:IIV&lt;' und dynawk for.:e tor
good 111 the state .
Ralph Nauo

Donate your books
To the Editor:
AL the Feb. 1st meeting of the exet.UtJve
committee of the Hillel Foundation we were able to
talk to a past mmate of Attica Prison, and he talked
of a serious problem which faces the prison smce the
September uprising . During the September
disturbance the library at the prison was destroyed
and the prison was left without an important part of
rehabilita tiOn. Hillel in conjunction with the B'na1
Brith Women of Greater Buffalo are engaging in a
project to help refurbish the book supply at Att1ca
State Prison. In a project already started by the
former mmate. Hillel wt.ll be collec ting books in

Norton Unum daily fo1 the pnson PermtssHHl hus
been g1vcn by state authontit:s to get the hooks ICJ
Atll ta
We are asking all students, taculty ,
adnunistraltoo . and staff to stop by Norton and gJVe
books for Attica rehahihtal1on . All bonks no rnallcr
what the topic will be useful bel.ause 11 Is now 111 the
point whe re any book Will help 1'h1s is ont:
worthwhtle proJeCt thai th~ wholt: LlntvcrsltY
community should unite behind Thank you for
your coopera tinJ)
Robnt Bumck
Hl'llel Chatrman
II I tJca Book IJnv~

Hitch right
To tbe Editor:
Sitting here thinking about that cute, egotistical,
nltcle written by Jesse E Lev1nc 10 "Lost in the
Ozone" (The Spectrum, Vol.22, No. 50 , 2/4/72),
about hitchlukcrs, makes me want to puke
Quote, "They are never demanding, hitchhikers
too passive for that." Unfortunately only the
quote "Non-lUtcher" (the driver) w1.1l ever see the
real absurdity of this statement. however, I the
"non·hitcher" feel a duty to at least put a pin hole
Into this one-s1ded philosophy
OLre

I know It is considered un·h1p to speak o ut
you cool, quote, "one of Amenca 's
numerous minonty groups," but you've put me 1nto
a mental bind about your sincerity. Just to get the
record stra1ght, I'm not against hitchhikmg, I'm
strongly in favor of it. J think it's high time people
started to help o t hers, even if it's only giving them a
ride; however, human patience plays an important
role ln this kind of PRAXJS . What I'm "driving'' at is
the inconsiderate behavior of a great many of t he
"passive hitchhikers ." Examples of this kind of
behaVlor are as foUows . the smiling freak who is only
going to the corner, the people who cram themselves
tttto yow- car, llke greedy sardines, in front of
Norton, the people who keep their mouth shut till
you~ 111 the passing lane of t heir intersection tn
aga~nst

whict• t hey WIWt to get out at , the person who
hitches all by h1s lonesome while his five fnends are
hiding In the bushes. the people who walk out and
leave your door open, thr people who dose your
door but walk out With your books. etc .• the people
who are too lazy to get out at a convu~nanl stop for
the dnver but prefe1 a much more congested slop a
block away,. the hitchhtker who smokes In your
non-ventilated Volxswagon, the person whn litt.-r:;
out of your car window because you're liable {{H h.L~
actions, etc., etc, Httchhtkers of A men1.a p!Uit~e
realiz.e that the ''non·hJtcher · has a lot of
responsibtlities (1.e trying In ~op llO d bu&amp;y street .
responsibility of your welfare as long :Js you're IT\ the
car, etc.)
Su you, quote ··
arnating group of people,
the hitchhiktrs.'' tlus rtght winged , btgoted
reactionary article is atmed at ··vou :· 1 hope you
poor little wretched souls get calluses on your ass
from all your wt:IJ deserved rides, bur "stnughten up
and HITCH right" or else I'm gomg to get a JOh w•th
the N.F.T. and splash water in your socks. When thts
happens, Mister Spectrum Writer, there w11l bt one
hundred and fifty c:.ars and one bus passing you hy
on Kenmore Avenue in five degrt:e weatht:r
P.S. By the way I still share my car, I hope: Y&lt;JU
alJ get what I'm '' DRIVING" at
John 1: Maslakowsk1
RED VOI,KSWMiON. MS ()684

IRC for granted
To the c·dttor.
At first it did not bother me that 100 dorm
residents waived their activittes th1s past St:mester
After alJ, I rationalized any organization wh1ch
c oncerns as many people as Buffalo' s
Inter-Residence Council must have its share of
·llpathetic people not caring to become involved With
Its services. However, after returning from the annual
NAACURH (North Atlantic Association of Collt:ge
and University Residence Halls) convention recently
held at Kent State, and seeing for myself the notable
differences in the quality and multiplicities of the:
servtces between Buffalo's IRC and the others, J
must take exception to those students who have
waived their fees.
No other resident hall association at the
convention whose diversity included schools from
Maine to Virginia, has even come close to providing
the types of functions that our I RC does. In
J)3rticuJar, I refer to its free movie programs, two
cooperative grocery stores, the refrigerator rental

Affic;1
t.'dlfor's nore Thi.r mlumn. prepared by Thr• A ttira
Defense Committee. wfll pe appeanng regularly tn fhe
S pcctrum 111 order to present medtcol anti legal
lllformarillfl tJn the aftermath fJf Attica.

by The Attica Defense Commil1ee
1'11e two general practitioners (doctors) that are
a.t.vtgnt'd to r!Jis inst/rutivn , Dr William s and Dr. Sternberg,
when mok111g tlteu rounds during Jh'k -ca/1, reveal such a
racist affttude that they rebuff any request for medical
asststan'''' mud1· hy any of the brut hers. Jrut to give you a
few examples / '1•e been askmg to be allowed tv see an 'eye
ductm' Slll&lt;'e thr• 17th of September, becduse I need and
wear gla.rses. the re$J?O nse I received from Dr. Williams wru
' thor I wasn 'r gu111g anywhere so I don't need to see ·
S111Ct' after nmtmuully trymg to approach these doNors m
a civilized manner to nv avail We have taken the posillon

that we nu longer will pur!&gt;uC If) our attempt to receive
adequate medll.: al attention trom those who have already
voiced theu aspirations that they wouJd ltke to see all of us
dead ..
Tilt' joud JS bad nuw
worse tllan before - and
the Wtllfury cund1twn.r, in food hand/mg. are very bad.
The tray.r are washed in a m np stn k , the buwls afld utensils
in a regular two-bowl kitchen nnk ... "
1 hese are exC'erpts from letters of two of the men at

Attica. The Defense Comm ittt:e has on file letters from
do:t.ens of men They all say the same thing - that
conditions now at Attica , specifically health c.onditions,
11rc deplorable.
Health had been an iSllut: well before September. The
pnmary responsibility had been assumed by two
~tate-employed doctors, onJy one of whom was fuU ·time.
Both have private practices m the rural areas around
Attica. Both are totally unprepared to deal with blacks and
Puerto Rtcans in any capacity - so much so that during
medical exams, doctors and patients were separated by a
waH of chains! " Back·up'' facilities were provided by t he
Medical School only for surgical pat1ents. Other services
extended only 119 far as "epldemiolosica.J research"
performed on the inmates.
In the hour:; following the retaking of tht: prison by
stute troopers and national guard, some University medical
people were granted permi.~1on to enter the prison, but
they were hustled o ut before they could do much more
than patchwork Doz.ens of post-operative patients were
left unattended Out of a total o( 400 seriously wounded
rnen , 50 were tudged so cntlcal thut transfernng them to
better su rg~cal fadlilles was deemed absolutely necessary
Only e1ght were transfered St&gt;veral of those not moved
wt:re labeled , " r~ng leaders." Fifteen nurses and doctors
from NYC. Wlth a court order from a federal JUdgt: , were
dcta1ned for hour:; at the prison gate, and returned to New
Yurk without ever getting inside Ho urs after issutng hiS
order. the Judge, lat-ed Wlth the pnson's refusal to comply,
withdrew tht o rder At the med1cal school, several
hundred people ~!aged a 51Hn ;~nd forced Dean Pesch to
say t ha 1 1 h c med1c.al school would accept full
r~ronmbil1ty for tt1e Inmates' ht.lllth. WtthJn the next
week, he was fired
Medical co nditions now are worse than before. What Ill
most dJBt urblng lS the high level of hostility bet w~n the
trlmates and the- lloctors. Drs. Williams and Stembcfg, by
their racist atlltudt:s and actions, have created deep-6eated
mistrust throughout the prilion populat1on. The health of
the prisoners ts being denied as another form of
harassment. The same people who mete out punishment,
can not provide decent health care.

program, and its own dorm unentlld and controUed
radio station. Determined, and now seemingly
forgotten , efforts by past IRC officers whtch have
made possible co-ed llvtng, and optional board
contracts, should be reme mbered 111 the light of the
fact that the vast majority of the school~ attending
tbe convention have not even approached the levels
of development our I RC has.
It has become all too easy , and 1n lhe same ve111,
all too popular to take for granted the serv1ces IRC
provides Attending the NAACU RH conventton
helped me to identify with this problem and reahze
how easy it is to feel thas way I have written thas
letter, therefore, not in a spirit of censure, but rather
to remmd all dorm residents of the many facets of
IRC, and additionally, to remind them that unless 1t
can maintain a concerned constituency, all further
efforts to reap new benefits will prove fruitless.

By the first week in January, the Medical School had
Ignored its com mitment by doing nothing but establishing
a commiuee whose sole purpose is to mvestlgate what role
the University m1ght play 111 tht: health care al Athca . So
far, not ane lflrriOte has been examined by the I'Vmmllfet ·

We demand that commttment be honored!
At this point, we are instshng upon the
1mplementstion of the followmg demands from the
September Mamfesto .
We demand a change in medical staff and mtdrcal
policy and procedure The A I rica Prison Hospital it totally
Inadequate, understaffed and prejudiced in the treatment
of inmates. Numerous "mistakes" are made · improper and
erronentu medication is given by untrained personnel.
We demand periodical rheck-ups on all prisoners and
suffirient licensed practitioners available 24 hours a day.

Den1111 A IIerman
IRC Rep

Monday, 14 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�Life workshops: 'a
sense of community'
Got an interest? Get a group!
Vario us interest groups are
be~ng estabLished to bnng a "sense
of community" to campus. " Life
Works h ops" are under the
auspices of Ann Hicks, assistant
director of S tudent Activities. and
Coni Burnbam, assistant for
Student Activities. They are an
attempt to &amp;Jve each llldlvidual an
o pportunit y to co ntact and meet
with o ther indiVIduals who share
similar interests.
·'T h e 1dca ts n e w a nd
dynamic," stated o ne member. " It
rests solely o n the amount of
fee dba c k r ece1ved from the
University comm un1ty " People
are badly needed to g~ve th rir
ideas and time for the forma tion
o f gro ups
Wo rkshops may be of any type
and serve any purpose TheH ma10
obj ect1ve IS to offer a " w1de range
of learn1na a nd ~ harang
expenences." It IS hoped that the
groups will prov1de tnd1viduals
with a place to "aro w through the
voluntary gathenng of people
wllh specific mterests or goals.
Atmosphere of alienation
" l ife Wo rk s h ops" ts tn
response to an atmosphere of
alienation perce1ved by me mbers
o f the Universit y. Feedback from
P syc h oma t a nd University
Research , cou pled With numerous
requests for p ee r gr o up
cou n selin g , c r oss -c ultural
programs and art1St1c workshops,
have g1ven ev1dencc that a need
does extst on th1s carnpuc; "L1fe
Wor kshops" is attempting to

answer those needs.
A workshop may be formed o r
suggested by anyone and can be a
single event OT a senes of meetings
continuing over a specified or
u11Specified period of t1me. There
arc no stipulatiofiS a.s to what
interest may be represented . One
goal of the workshop is to prov1d e
a meeting place .
Some suggestions have been
music groups, career guidance,
international cookery , human
r e lati o n s , s tud en t -fat:u lt y
work s h o ps, off1ce manager
training and peer gro up and
marnage counseling. Three grou ps
have already been established and
awaiting membership.
One group is focusmg on
decisions about determming a
major while another is attempttng
to ans w er the question of
employment once that dec1s1on ~~
reached. The tttird group 1S a
factl rtators workshop for those
Interested in interpersonal
relations.
" Lrfe Works hops" 1s 1n the
plannmg stages and ts seek1ng any
a nd all suggestions by the
Umvernty communit y . Whe t her
you wish to o rgam ze a group or
merely have an idea , you are
n ee d ed. Me mb ers of " l 1fe
Workshops" hope that all facet~
of University life will sho w an
interest in this project.
AJI mquiries and suggestions
may be g1vcn 10 Room
Norto n o r telephoned in to 2511
It is hoped that things w11l he
underway by March and those
Interested are urged not tu 1it:lay

'Wzzaf?

ri~t

Raider~

Nader's Raiders to the
of us. Nader's
to the left of us. They seem to
be everywhere. Seem to be? WNYPIRG is alive and wefl and taking over Buffalo. If you didn't catch
them here today, they'll catch you there tomorrow. They come to your classes with their petitions and
follow you throu~ Norton with their plea ...
" A consumer's best friend is WNYPlRG" and WNYPIRG's best friend is UB.

ns

Voting law illegal
(NEW YORK)
A federal
JUdge ruled wt Thursday that a
state law wtuc.: h requues would-be
voters to have been registe red m a
general elec tron before they can
vote m a pnmary elccuon was
unconstll u Ilona! .
ChJcf Judge Jac.:ob Mishlet of
the U .S
Drstnc t Court rn
Brooklyn sa1d part of the state's
73-year-old elec tion law vtolates
rights guaranteed by the first and
fourteenth ame ndme nts. He said
the law also violated the Voting
Righ ts Act of 1970 . The judge's
ruling means that vote rs, who had
to be enrolled 1n a political party
before a general elec tion rn orde r
to vote rn that party 's prunary the
fo llowmg year, now can be
enrolled 1mmed1Jtely by g01ng to
t.he board of elections in thei r

dtstncts.
The Judge's decision came as
the result of a s1ut brought by the
New York C'rvil Liberties Umun
on behalf of a student and a
lawyer represent i ng three
llld1v1duals. ACLU attorney Bert
Neuborne said MishJers dec1s1on
will allow some 750,000 students
wh o w ere not reg.s tcred m
November's election to reg1stcr
for the June 20 Presidential
primary .
Th e suit w~s ortg 1n ally
instituted on behalf of Steven
E1sner. 2 1. a senior at the State
University of B uffalo . The
defendants in c l uded Guv
Rockefeller, Secreta ry of State
Jo hn P. Lomenzo and eler tton
officials in New Yo rk City Jnd
Nassau County .

-Compliments of a friend

Page eight . The Spectrum . Monday, 14 February 1972

�Review Board will decide on
allocations for athletic budgets
In 1ts latest meeting, the Student Athletic
Keview Board (SARB) dealt with several important
ite~. Foremo~t on the a.ge~da of the committee,
which deals With appropnatlons for intercollegiate
athletics, intramurals and club sports was the
llUtdoor club budget.
The outdoor club, another of the risfug
recreational clubs at the University, received an
allocation in the area of S 1500 for its initial year
under the ausp1ces of the Student Associat1on . The
a1m of the outdoor club appears to be that of
teaching outdoor a~:tivities to its membership
through backpacking, camping, climbing and
c ross-country sk.ling. Those interested in joining
\hould contact the Student Associatio n at 83 1·5238
for further informatiOn .
Additionally. next year's budgets w1JI be up for
discussion shortly , thus chairman Joe Ashwal's plan
lor decentralization was put into effect . Under
Ashwal's plan a committee of five SARB members
will meet with coaches of the University to discuss
the Intercollegiate budget allocations. A s1mllar body
&lt;1 1 two members each will decide club and mtramural

and recreation budgets. Presently, the SARB has
under its control, the allocation of $240,000 10
mandatory student fees . However. formal approval
of all budgets m~t come from the Student
Assembly.
lntercoUegi.ate budaet poup
On the intercollegiate budget , Mr. Ashwal
appomted Mike Engel, Steve Shapiro, Jon Oandes,
Howie Faiwl and Barry Rubin . lntramurals and
recreation will be handled by Steve Weinberg and
Danny Churnoff. Further assignments included Seth
Bloom on club sports with Ashwal supervising the
total operation. Final approval must come from the
SARB as a whole. and presentation before the
Student Assembly will come from the individual
areas.
A thud question resolved by the SARB was the
question of an athletic banquet in April for the
Umversity's athletes. The S ARB went on record as
supporting the concept of the banquet as long as
intramural and club athletes were mcluded

'Matterman'

Dreams performed on stage
" I believe tn a theater of joy fantasy " In his work MatterfTUlll
Jnd pleasure - the joy m the full emphaSIS IS placed on a fullness of
~·xrcnence of a moment, even if it vision, thought and expressiOn
1\ a pamful o ne," says Mr Morton
" The thmg to shoot for ~~ the
LJ I.' hter. pre se ntly the return to youth in the fullest
pi a y w nght-tn-residence of the moment of pleasurable play .. The
lkpartment of Theater He and a c h ild-pla y descnbed evokes
~ruup of actors from New York pleasure lor the self. of course,
.111d Ch1cago will be performing but also for the playmates and
•liiC nf Ius works th1s week in the
on ·lookers.
IIJIIIman S tudio Theater.
" Actors are themselve~,
lh' rheater is conce1ved as a whoever they may pretend to be,"
~oii.II!C nf words. sound , poetry. Mr .
Li&lt;.:hter expla~ned, in
liii1YC111cnt and dance; m other r eference to hi s work m
word~ ·d Juggling act of personal Mafl erman
" Things are not
fin1shed, ever
T 1me J rld
POPCORN
experience derive a who le ."
The work deals w1th dream,
CONSTIPATES
and with the d issolving differences
between primitive and modern

9:OOpm -

3 : 00am
It

BEEF &amp; ALE

THE

3199 MAIN ST.
(0. Blect. S... Of UBI

A MAXI MUS. SUPER
PARTY
f

by Dave Geringer

MS

TUESDAY - FEB. 15

Wrestling team sweeps
through home quad meet
SpPrlrum Sla{f Wrlrrr

behav1or
The movement 1~
toward the ~ubwnsc1ous, not the
self-conscwus. In many ways 11
deals with the translation of the
dream and the subconsctous
memory of dreams into words and
onto a stage
Mr. L1chter ltkened h1s theater
p1ece to a spnng of water. There ts
a general dnecllon , but not a ngtd
and sho wy type u f overl y-obYlous
contro l.
Mauerman wiU be performed
in Harriman Library romurrow
and Wednesday, at 8.30 p.m .
Tickets for students cost $50 and
can be purc hased at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office.

One Night Only!

~antOI

Califo1n1a State, St. Fran~:•~
and St . John F1sher may wtsh that
they had not decided to enter the
wrestling Bulls' home quad meet
Saturday afternoon What was
supposed to be a tough battle
turned Lnto a romp as the Bulls
defeated all three of the above
schools, by scores of 34 3, 51 - 0
and 45 -6. The victones hiked the
Bull record to a superb 15- 1,
Six Bulls logged perfect 3- 0
records on the afternoon as the
BuffaJo matmen swept the meet
142 lb. cn-captam Ted Lawson a
semor. ran h1s rec01d to an
unblemJ.Shed I 5 0 as he racked
up rwo opponent~ and gamed one
wm by forfeit
After trouncmg California
State's Wade Go~hcky. 12 O,m
the opening match for the Bull~.
Lawson pmned Jack Decker of St
Francis in the BuUs' second
contest. The pin came off of a
second penod takedown and left
Lawson with a total of six pins for
the season. se~..und only to Ron
Brandt's seven Brandt, the other
Bull co~aptatn who was also
wrestling the final home match ol
his career, won three tunes Ill
extend his own mark to I S I
Bulls rip Vulcans
The Bulls started off qu1ck1y
agarnst Cal State, racmg to a 22 0
I ead against the Pennsylvania
school before they lost a bout
The Vulcans, who ripped Buffalo

in their dual meet fast season,
prov1ded Buffalo With its toughest
opponent of the afternoon.
The Buffalo-St Francis match
was a rout from the start. The
o nl y Bull wrestle r among the first
flve to win by a dec1s1on was 134
lb. juruor Roy Guanno. fhe
ex..('orning CC star defeated the
Franktes' Gary Ptro7..zola , S 3,
Wlth Piro1.2.ola JUSt mtSStng a tte
on what St. FranCIS Coach Tom
Vaux thought was a reversal at the
buzzer. "That was a bad call,"
reaso ned Vaux. " Piroaola was
do ne an mjusllce 10 that match. I
hope that PirOZl&lt;ll3 mee ts rum
ag;un 1n the na11onah
1f he luld
wrestled h1 m 1n Pennsylvlma,
Wlth a neutral referee. he would
destroy him ."
The final Bull v1ctory 45 6
over St. John hsher \ Cardmals.
estabhshed a new record for the
Bulls. Buffalo won rb fifteent h
dual meet of the seasc.1n, breaking
the record ol 14 set last year m
Bull Coach Ed Michael's imllal
season . Coach Michael's two year
record at Buftalo now c;tands al an
excellent 24 7 .t tnbute to the
JOb that he has done, both
coachmg and recruiting
St Francr:. Coach Vaux had
some harsh words lor the Uull
coa~h. alsu
r~:rnark1ng. "'t f he
wasn't so hungry lor the wins he
wouldn't have made Ul&gt; l'ome up
here~. Everyone else let u~ cancel."
Apparently Vaux d1dn't real11e
that contracts were m&lt;~de to be
honored

REE

Now hiring.

T- SHIRTS
PILLOWS
AND OTHER ASSORTED GOODIES!!!
M A X t M US

SU PE R

50

¢ 1

een

SCHNAPPES 25¢/SHOT
HAMBURGERS 25¢
HAPPY HOUR OAIL 1 1:00 p.m.- 7:00p.m.
LUNCHEON SPEICAL- MONDAY -FRIDAY - 11 :30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.

Not long ago everybody was, or so it seems. Time$ change.
And 50 do many solel careen, for example. We find this is
true to an extent in our buuneu. Because, typically, the
person we hire already has some selling experience in ano.her
line of work. Chan«~s ore, too, he was successful. But now,
greener pastvres beckon.
What do we oHer such a penon? Expert supervision and
training when he storts and above-average earnings as he
prooreues. An annual income high in the five-figure btacbt
Is not uncommon for sMVI~ rendered in our businftll
designing financial plans tor Individuals and buaineues.
Think about it. And then f you're interested n tolltfng about it,
call Walt Cazmarit or Bill Wagner at ~2350.

Monday, 14 February 1972. The Spectrum . Page nine

�Hoopsters blasted by
former Bull player

~defeat

~Y BuDs blast Ithaca
by Michael Zwet,

by 8any Rubin

Sp«trum Staff Writtr

Spons Editor

It was a quite painless defeat
for the opposition , a rather
Impressive showing for Buffalo,
yet not a I a II su rpnsing.
Ho pefuUy, there were som e ECAC
eyes on the Bulls as they
outclassed a OtviSton II Ithaca
team with an 8·2 Iaugher, bnnging
Buffalo's re cord to Q.J.
Outstandmg skating and puck
control tn the first period explains
Buffalo's 26 shot s o n goal, two of
which ripped the cord s for a 2-0
advantage. The first goal was
tallied by Teddte Mts.kolczt, hlS
first of a patr, on a power play.
MISkolczi has been playtng with a
fractured wnst, but It doesn't
appear as tf anyone has told him
about 1t. The second goal was all
J ack Rt c h ards, s.katmg first
around a defenseman and finally
outdeektng the goaltender
Explosive second period
The second penod was agatn
Buffalo's strongest , outsconng o
bedazzled lth.1ca squad 5-0 in the
st anza. Play was h ighlighted by u
rink long rush by John Stranges,
waltzing around anyone near h1m
and almost antichmacticly putting
the puck tn the net Mis.kolczi,
S 1 ranges agatn, Oohnoge and
Kl ym also sent spectal deliverie~
past goalie Joe Bterdron, who
lasted two penods At least he
wasn' t bored
The thtrd penod saw Buffalo'!&gt;
Mtke Dunn lose hiS shutout after
J.tck Rtchards tncreased the lead
1o R.O Mtke shut Ithaca out tw1ce
tw o yea rs ago, maktng the late
:.cores by Scanlan and Parks a long
time comtnR
In genc:raJ. Buffalo's offense
was all over the 1ce. wtnnmg the
battles 1n the comers and dearly
domtnatlng play The: po werful
line of Dolmage. Klyrn and
Albano put shot ilfter shot on net
un!Jl act1on took on the
resemblanle of a power play . The
comb1n at 10n of hard nosed ,
hustling J al k Ru: hard~ and
smooth skaung elus1ve J ohn
Stranges has become more and
more convincing as the duo have
now contributed 22 goals between

- Zinne~trom

Victory!
them , the same number as Klym
and Oolmage.

The Buff1llo hockey Bulls s.c:Ofed
eight goals apiNt Ithaca, a
Division II team, playin g an
almost flawless game.
Buffalo d efeated Oswego• earlier
this year 54, but the Lakers have
been improving and a lacklus ter
effort could prove damagtng.

flawless play
Buffal o's fourth hne of
Coach Wrigh t has indicated
Bowman, Reid and Murch ie did
that should the h!am win its
not score. but they received a
remaining games and fintsh with a
good deal of greatly needed 1ce
12·1 record, Buffalo would likely
11me The defense h ad little occupy a top four position tn
trouble co nLaimng Ithaca's Div1s1on II , gtving the Bulls a
so-called ' attack ,' and they
homecour1 advantage for the first
successfully moved the puck up round tn the playoffs. ECAC
tee. chclung passes mechanically
standang.~
are not determined
Bob Goody was a standout , solely by winnmg percentage. The
stopptna everything at the blue questton m doubt lS whether
line and adding to . Ithaca's Buffalo has gamed enough respect
problems w1th a few boomtng slap Without factng other top flight
shots. The team played practically
DiviSIOn II leaders A home cour1
nawlessly until the game had been crowd could eastly make the
secured.
d1fferen ce 1n the playoffs.
The Bulls move on to Oswego ll opefully, Buffalo's potential
Sunday , where they must win.
12-1 record would speak for itself.

Interested in attending
the
OLYMPIC GAMES

at Munich?
Some tickets and
accommodations
available.
~~..--_ _.. hone 8334638- - - . J

ttre being se nt o ut to every undergraduate in a general mailing thi!-. wee. The~e
may be used to jo111 an interest group at any time during the semester. so don't
throw them away. Instructions for joining are on rhcm, and the ballot can be
mailed in a campus mailbox without a stamp.

Page ten . The Spectrum . Monday, 14 February 1~72

Little Ron Gilliam is back , and
Friday he made the Bulls pay the
price as Brockport trounced
Buffalo I 02 - 60. Gilliam, a
transfer from the Buffalo
basketball program, saw the
contest as one of the big games of
his career. Gilliam admitted : " I
was sky high for this one, and oh
so nervous. It was good playing
against the boys again."
Prior to the action. the always
outgoing 5-9 guard exchanged
pleasantries with his former mates
and coaches. Then, the Elmira
Free Academy product proceeded
to demolish the BuUs wrth 26
points, nine assists and six steals.
Early in the game Gilliam
appeared to be pressing, keepmg
the Bulls in the contest . Also
experiencing early trouble was
6 - 4 Brockpor1 fo rward Guy
Vickers, another former Buffalo
player. After the game Vickers
confided ; ''It was great to play
against Buffalo after waiting a
whole year, but I' m disappointed
that I did nothing." I n all, Vickers
who was averaging over ten points
this season, scored but one field
goal .
Gilliam shot 10 26 on the
night, missing hts first five shots,
but soon Gilliam, center John
Collins and reserve forward Bob
James caught on fire . With Gilham
leading the running break and
forward Nonn Bounds clearing
both boards, Brockport surged to
an uncatchable 5 1 30 t.alftime
margin. The BuJJs shot poorly.
both from the field and foul hne
and co mmitt ed numerous
turnovers.

Besid es Gilliam, it was Bounds
who proved a thorn in the sides of
both the Bulls and the officials.
Bounds , who was declared
ineligible earlier this year, prides
himse l f on his abuse and
intimidation of rivaJ players and
officials. During the course of the
contest the talented Bounds was
charged with one technical foul,
and was put out of the contest
briefly after threatening one of
the officials.
With rumors of ineligible
players being used . Brockport has
been accused of being a so-called
"outlaw outfit" and Or. Harry
Fritz, Buffal o's director of
a thletics said that Buffalo will not
schedule the Golden Eagles next
year. The volatile combination of
Bounds and frenzied fans created
an aura of fear and intimidation
on the court which even the
offictaJs found hard to combat.
After

leading

Brockport

( 15 3) to thetr btg win , Gilliam
told this reporter o f his happiness
at Broc kport . " I 've gotten
married, and I have one year to go
in my sociaJ welfare program here.
I always liked UB, but I find the
two schools hard to compare.
Brock port is a much smaiJer
area." On the subjec t o f post
season play, Gilliam commented:
" I don't care where we go, either
the NAlA o r NCAA will be line
With me."
The only bnght spol on the
night for Buffal o was an
tmpressive 8 1- 73 win by the
Baby BuUs over the Eagle frosh .
Chuck Axe, Buffalo's 6 - 5 center
led the attack w1th 33 points
whiJe Bob Dickinson added 20 for
the 3- 10 Bulls.

�AD INFORMATION

FOR SALE

"FOUND" ads will be run free of
charge tor a m11tlmum o f 2 day• and
15 w o rds.

FULL OR part ·llm e JOOs available with
Bastllna t nc. C all Art 8116·2094 o r
Mike 835-52 15. MMtl ngs at Executive
Ramada Inn.

WANTED

APARTMENT FOR RENT

UNION BOARD wants all energetic
people to apply for chai r manship of
any comm ittee. Room 261 Norton.

TWO·BEOROOM married couple,
grad student, $125 . Available March 1.
Near school. Cal l 833 ·16 18, again too.

STUDE N T
EMPLOYME N T
In
'(ellowstona and all US. Na tional
Parks. Booklet tells Where and how to
apply. Send $2 ArnOld Agency, 206
East Main, Rexburg, Idaho 83440 .
Money·baCIC gu ar antee.

BUS TO BOSTON lor 3-day weekend;
will leave c a mpUs on Friday, 2/18 and
return Monday, 2/21. Call Greynound
reprflentatlve, Ken Slrlln, 836· 4169.

U N IO N
BOARD Is th e one
organ lntlon on pmpus w hich books
a11•nu f or
the entertainment of
stuaants. Apply for a UUAB position
In Room 261 Norton.
FISHER 180·walt receiver, 505T w ith
two &gt;&lt;P-78 speaker system . All with
Ft.her gu atln tHS. Call Paul 835 ·55 3!&gt; .

RIDE BOARD

wAITERS
end busboys needed .
lneKperlenca no prob lem. We'll train .
Ne.ot .and able to get along wall with
people a nacanlty. Appro~tlmately 25
nours a wMk C all for appointment
oetwaen the hours l l a.m.- 3 p .m .
826· 8900.

RIDE NEEDED to NYC . Leave Feb
16 or Feb . 17 or Feb. 18. Return to
Buffalo Feb. 21 Call 831 · 2060 .

NEED USED copy of PLAYS FOR
rt~E THEATRE by Broel&lt;ett. For
rneater 105. Call R®erta 833 -7571.

NEED RIDE to Rockland, NYC
Thurs., Jan 17 Call Barbara 691-8011
Will snare e~tpense\ and drlvln9

wANTED:
Good quality stereo
com ponents (amplifier, spe.akers,
turntable) under 1 yNr old In e~tcellent
cn nditlon. Contact Mike 834-8876.

GIRL NEEDS ride to NYC Feb 17th
or 18th. Will share e~tpense Cell Janice
833 -7571.

BABYSITTER for small baby; M onday
and wed. aftern oons. In your noma.
Call 839·•017 .
s TART $2 per hour salary plus bonus.
wurk 4·8 p . m . weekdays 10·2 p.m.
Salur cUYS Call 835-3803 or TF9.0402.

GUSTAV A. FRISC H, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMO RE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BU FFALO, N.Y. 14226

RIDE WANTED to Unlv Mass. at
Amherst (near Boston) . Leave Friday
rnorntng, Feb. 18 . Call Scott 831 · 3367 .

RIDE DESPERATELY needed for 2 to
Albany. Leaving Feb 18 Returnong
Feb. 21. Please call 832·0249.
NEED rode to Hartford, Connecticut or
vicinity on Friday, Feb
18. Call
Felicia, 831 3579 (urgent!
RIDE NEEDED to Burlington
Vermont or Albany, Tnursday nlgnt,
17th or Friday morning C all Burt
838 ·3461.
NEED RIDE to NYC or L I , Tnuos .,
Feb. 17. Call Jon 838-4186
FIIOE NEEDED to Ct11ca90 for 2.1eave
Feb. 18, return Feb 21; call 831 · 3770
or 831 - 2285.

•••••••••CLIPANO SAVE• • • • • • • • •
:
R ESE ARCH (TERM) PAP E RS
:

:
:

I

I
I
I

I
I

We cover virtually all topics and subjects.
All our writers are college graduate specialumg
m your topic.
OR II NIAL PAPERS: $3.50/page (Discounts are available)
FlU COPIES: $2.00/page

:

I

~: sen:~~~i~::~i.ption and money order

Call:
203·527 0631

FOUND :
EY•tiiSSU outside of
Michael . May klantlfy and claim at

CLAIIIFIII

" HELP WANTED" a1h unnot
dlsctlmlnata o n the bests of Hit, color ,
etaad or natl o nll origin to any a~ttant
( I.a ., ~farabiY Is still discriminatory).

P.O. Box 12159
Hartford Conn

1
I
I

0~11?

---------------------TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
Mod Styles for Guys and Gals

DAVENPORT - converts to bed . On•
year 0111 . Green. $50. You move 11. Call
692.0988 .
WINTER
TIRES 69!&gt;•14,
con d ition, cneap . Call 876· 7609.

good

SAVE MONEY - record your own
"8" track stereo tape cartrldg~ . Lear
Jet player-recorder, 1 200 . 1ncludes
speakers, mikes, etc . 825-4852 .
PANNE velvet maxi dr~ses &amp; sklrU
Included tn sale Items at "The People,"
144 Allen 882-6283.
CANVAS SHOULDER bi9S, duffles,
knapuck•, colorful, lor men &amp; women
Ma nutacturers close-out. At "Tne
People," \44 Allen St. 882 6283.
COMI N G TO The People. Scandinavian
dMign wrap dresses. Very comfortable,
great with .a turtleneck 144 Allen
882-6283
PHYSICS PhD sheepskin from too
eastern university
use u pop art
decor a tlon, attractive con versati on
prece . Best ott er Wr ite 234 Oakm ont
Ave.
BIG REO the rr119hty metro loves to
travel. He's a '61 I nternatlonal step-van
with rebuilt engine and ne.althy Dody
838 · 3146
1969

YW van , 34,000 mila.. Only
Can t.ake you anvwne••.
anytime Ell 83!&gt; -2561

s 1600.

1970 JAGUAR
XKE . E xcellenl
condition Brand new AM/ FM stereo
radio lnLiudod. Call 688 7327 evenings
REFRIGERATORS, st o ves .and
w.oshers. Reconcllltoneo , delivered and
guaranteed , O&amp;G AppltanceJ, 844
Sycamore I X4 · 3183
"A NASTASIA" n eeds a hOme. She's .a
1961 lovab le littl e TempMt, 82000
miles 1),11 sna costs Is $110 Call AI .at
831·4113 or Debbie at 832 6815.
I&gt;ERSONAL
THANK
vou to whoever "
responSible tor the hosted brownte1o In
the vending machine~ Friday•

---

IF YOU spent a weekend In Bulfelo ,

STUDENT DISCOUNT
on all
redecurattng needs
art supplies, ptcture framtng
D.M . RECH PAINT CO .
3209 Bailey Ave.

Spect~um o ffic e. 355 N orton .

ROOMMATES WANTED
YO\I could have partoOIC fpartak..,,
partakatMI - 10 d on't l ook es though
you wen betrayed,

O NE ROOMMATE
n . .cSacS
f or
downtown apt . C all 1182·7065 after 7
p .m .

MALE 35, college professor, tw o
children, ' " k ' female companionShip,
marriage possible. P.O . Bo• 1031,
Atlanta, Ga. 30302 .

MALE R OO MMATE wanted for apt.
on M l n nftOta, $40/mo. Available
Immediately, Gary, 8 37·2658 .

DEAR NANCY, Happy
Day. Love, always. Shelly .

ROOMMATE WANTED, furniShed
apt . RIChmond and U tica. Call Stan,
work 845·5 80a or home 11112·2066.

Valentine's

KITTENS N EED good home. They
have shots. C all 883.0968.
THIS TUESDAY Is t h e Chinese New
v ear and Tower and Goodyear
cafeterias are having a special cSinner
(4:3C&gt;-;:30) to celeb rate. SMing that
It's the Year of the Rat , we thought
you might like to attend
DEBBIE BABE : Happy Valentine's
Oay
fr om Artie Babe a nd the
Ham•ters.
FEBRUARY 15 : Dear Snugglepun,
.arf! arf! Love, Sam and Ban .

FE M ALE ROOMMATE
needed
Furnished nouse directly acrou from
cam p us. $ 50/month Includes utilities.
Av a ila ble Immediately. 1133· 7049 .
Keep tryi ng .
NEED TWO IMMEDIATELY , fem ale
or
mala,
$ 60,
own
room .
Main-Fillmore. Pet1 O .K . 837 · 3483.
WANTED: One female roommate ror
3·b eelroom h ou~e off Maln·Winsp•ar .
O w n room, furnished, $ 60. Starting
f&lt;ab. 1. C all Mary 838-4892 .

LARRY, collect your Valentina's Day
presents from 2 · 7 on Sunday.

ROOMMMATE WANTED
own
room - chaap S27 plus. Fillmore Ava.
1137· 26a l.

DONNA : A
lively e~tuberant very
yummy hiPPY birthday from M .J.M

MISCE LLANEOUS

I'M A graduate student, single, who
believes that
.a mono ga mous
marrlaga{se~t
lila Is oortng and
unfulfllllng. Tnere Is an alternative that
offors sharing and continued growth In
1
man wom.an relationship . Any
Interested female, write Jeff Roberts,
BoK 232, Buff.tiO, N .V 14205
FVT - got any
en ased 7 Cllt·feet

locusts

you want

l HE GIANT AMOEBA has engulled
m e' Please ..nd nelp to W.alerbrothers,
51 Allen St

STA RTING feb 14 we w tll be open
Monday• u well n Tues . Fri. "The
People," a folk arts bO\rtiQue 144
Allen. 88 2-6283
JANICE W ould you be my Valentine&gt;
YesJ N o• Maybe' P.S
You don't
have to pay for th is.
I'VE aEEN neglected . N obody want\
to buy me My name I s Anastasia and
I'm lor sale for only SilO I ' m a
2 - door, blue TemoMt w ttn an
.automat It transmission, 82,000, ana a
very \e&gt;CY bOdY If lnteoest ed , c all AI
831~113

WANT£0
I fe male by 25 ·year ·old
male (lite long veget.arlan hygienist,
160 pound~. 5'8", da•k comple&gt;elonl to
oe
1 a 22
ye~rs .
!I'0"- 5'6".
emolion~lly
adlusted, sound teeth.
lean, attractive and wllh warm mild
even dllposlllon. Write S pec trum. Bo•
10
SUC KERS wh o mluacl Ina brownie•
tne bus ou t to Ridge Lea,. free
LOST &amp; FOUND
LOST
I nlroductlon to Slallstou
Needacl desperately . Please return to
Cooke 310 or cat i 8JI 3186

The Student Association
has announced that Buffalo Draft Counseltng
Center personnel will be holding on-campus offtce
hours every Tuesday and Thursday starting
immediately. Paul Post and Bob Musek from the
Center will be available on those days from 9
a m 1 p m tn the UB Vets office, tn Room 260
Norton Hall Students should also note that
24 hour emergency service is available by phoning
897·2871 .

JEFFERSON AIRPLANE , Pat Sky,
2001, dramati c events
you un bring
them If you want too Apply In Room
261 for a UUAB position .
INDEPENDENT Fore19n C.ar Service The pl.ace where customer satisfaction
cou nts lor mora• 839 · 1850
HELP! SELL' Buyl VX6 Renew 6ocl2
volt batteries . Salesmen needed II a~ m .
to 12 noon , Tom. 894 . 150

----

TYPING
EX PER IENCEO - IBM
Selectric,$ ao per page 8J8 .. 808 .

T E FIM PAPERS,
pr olesstonal typist,
S.40f page . 87 3 19J8

d i ssertations ,
IBM Selectric,

TYPING
bu•lness or personal - term
papers . mass m ail ings, rusonable r.ates
C all 937-6050
FEMALE senior need• tob Can do
many types o r work, preteraoly I n UB
area . Call Mary 838-4892
EARN M O NEY I n your spare time
listing .accounts, generous commission .
Write: Empire, Bo&gt;&lt; 3096 , Cleveland,
Onlo 44117
EXPERT VW and t o relgn car "'•tea .
Modern mechAnical \ecnnotogy
surrounded 1n an atmosphert! o l 0111
European comfor t and decor Mallin ' s
Motor W Orks, 497
Ridge Rd
826.(;717
FLY BUFFALO Student Flights lo SilO!
let . LeAve N . Y C. Marcil 3L Return
April 7 From SJ79 Contact Alan
Mar mulsteln even lno•
6 -9 sun
837.0393
ANTIQUES AND muoern turnllure,
c eramics, china. &amp;It
See Sid at
Yesterday &amp; Tomorrow Snop, 1439
Hertel Ave

1- - - -TWO
- -NBA
----.
I
or
I
I
GRAD STUDENTS
I
I
- MARRIED I
I to work 5 hours per week .l
I A t t r a c ttve

1

l l n a n ct all

arrangement.

1

CALL
PAT EGAN
- 853-8754-

I
I
I
I
after 5:00p.m.
I
I
I . • - .JJZi·USRJ • • ..1

TIRED OF PAYING HIGH RENT
FOR "SHITTY" APTS?

•DO SOMETHING•
There

is u /I I!IV tom/111/I&lt;'C'

/ow-nJSI studen!ltollslllg

/J\ '

Plan . pure huH'.
consultanrs

JOIN

/tii'IIIIIIK to derdu{J Jl{UII\ fm

Sl:.Pl'/:.MHL:'R I . 1 117:;
and

manage

clwellliiK'

\\'lit

A

1\

II It

SET UP STUDENT REFERENDUM IN APR IL

HELP-

·
For mure in1r.ormatwn
Norton. or call 5502.

''CJ
~ IIIOc l

Helen Pius

in

Room 214

Monday, 14 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�I Love You

Announcements
Students interested 1n Cutoring math at grade
and high ~hoo t levels contact the College of
Mat hematical Sc1ences at 831 · 1704 Mondc1y
through Friday , 12·30-4:30 p.m.
'
~he Undergraduate Med1cal Society w1ll have a
meetang tomorrow at 7:30 p .m 1n Room 233
Norton All pre·med1cal and pre-dental students Are
urged to attend.

FNSM n2: "Controversies '" St1ence Conflict Mid R~lution" will meet on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 10 a.m. in Room 362 Acheson Hall .
The topic for this week is : " The Polywater Caper
How Eminent Scientists Can Fool Themselves and
One Another." Visitors are welcome
Student Th~ter Guild will hold an A~tmg
Wort..shop today at 8 p.m . in Room 344 Norton
New members are mvlled.
Hillel class in Beginners Hebrew will meet
tomorrow at noon in Room 262 Norton
. The Undergraduate Philosophy Club mooting
Will be held tomorrow at 4 p m . in the third noor
lounge of Norton.
T.he Debate Club will have a meet1ng today at 8
p.m. 1n Room 330 Norton Parliamentar y debaters
mteresled m up&lt;.ommg tournaments must attend
The Food Co~p will have a meeting tomorrow
at 7:30 p m at 3225 Main St. ~nd W1nspear Ave.
Store hour~ are· Monday and Thursday , 11 c1.m. 8
p.m . and Sa turdc~y , II a. m.- 4 p.m.
The Hillel class in jewish Ethics will meet
tomorrow at 1 p.m. in Room 262 Norton .
The Buffalo YMCA, in cooperation with the UB
Sp&lt;?rts Car ~lub, IS holding a Car Rally Lecture
Serres : .a ser~es of lectures by the most experienced
car ralltests tn Western New York and will cover all
.1spects of the sport The first lecture will be given
tomorrow at 7 :30 p.m . at 2564 Delaware Ave
YMCA .
'
MaJe~onsciousnes.s nisint group will hold its

fir~t meeting tomorrow at 8 p .m. tn Room 242
Norto n.

A Graduate Student Association Senate Meeuns
w1ll be held today at 7:30 p .m . in Room 233
Norton. All graduate students are 1nv1ted and are
a~ked to contact their scncltors to 1nsure that the"
department is represented
The Bufhlo Theater Workshop Dance
Repertory Company ha) openmgs for production
workers (including work on lighting and scenery)
They are also auditionmg dancer~ for the Afncan
Dance Ensemble c1nd male dancers for roles in the
major modern dance productions. For further
mformat1on cont..tct Ann Herman at 83 1 2 195 or
~ynycr llanesworth Jt 83 I 414 3
Hillel IS holding a Boot.. Drive for Attl&lt;.a Stell('
Pmon All kind~ of book!&gt; are needed Whatever can
be &lt;,pared w1ll be appreci.Hed Books may tw
dropped off at the Hillel Table in Norton.

UB Women's Liberauon and Women's Stud1h
College are sponsoring a worf..)hop, "West Side
Wo men's Project : Community Women in Buffalo"
to be .held tomorrow and Wednesday at 7 p.m .'1t
108 Wmspear Ave, Women\ Studie!&gt; House
F~ture Staff of The Spectrvm wtll meet today
at 7 p.m. 1n Room 355 Norton All new members are

invited to attend.

Sports lnformat1on

Norton Tlcbt Office.

What's Happening?

Monday , Feb. 14
Becket will be pre~enred at O 'Youv1lle College
on Feb. 18·20 Jnd Feb 25·27 at M 30 p.m Spec1c1l
student ra tes are t~vailable in bloct..!&gt; of 20 or more dt
~I per person by reserv.llion only Regular prices
are : $2.50 per person, S 1.50 for students. Call
883-3425 for reservc1tions c1nd mformation

Anyone Interested in working on an 15f3el
Emersency Fund come to the meetings today and
tomorrow at 8 p .m. in Room 346 Norton .
Matterman, a dancing. trip for actors with poetry
.net .sounds, will premiere in the Harriman Studio
Ttiater at the Su~ University of Buffalo tomorrow
¥ICf Wedhe:Scf1y at 8 :30 p .m. Admission is $1 general
publk, students $.50 and tickets ~re available at the

Saturday: Vars1ty hockey vs. Kent State,
Amherst Rec Center, 9 : 30p.m .; varsity basketball ill
Rochester, 8 :30 p.m; freshman basketb;all at
Rochester, 6 :30 p.m., varsity wrestling at Cortland
State, varsity fencing at Case Western Reserve with
the Air Force AC&lt;tdemy.
"t
Sund;ay : Varsity hockey vs. AIC, Amherst Rcc
Center, 2 p .m.
. Tickets for this weekend 's hockey games will be
ava1lable: for the Saturday Kent St.lte game pickup
starts Wednesday, whtle AIC Sunday uckets are
avatlable starting Thursday until Frid~y afternoon.
The 1972 Buffalo varsity b;asebllJI schedule:
Apnl 12 at Buffalo St.lte; April 14 at St. John 's;
Apnl 15 at Brooklyn Poly (2); April 16 at Seton Hall
(2) •. ~pril 17 at Farleigh Dickinson (2); April 19 at
Cams1~s (2); Apri.l 21, West Virginia, April 22, West
V~rgm1a {2); Apnl 26, St. Bonaventure April 28 at
Scrilnton; April 29 at Syracuse (2).
'
May 1, Colgate; May 6 at Kent St.lte (2) · May 9
R?Ghester (2) ; May 10 at Toledo (2), May 11 at
N1agara (2); May 12, Pittsburgh (2), May 14 at
lthilca (2); May 17 at Rochester (2) . All home games
at Peelle F1eld adjacent to Clark Gym. Buffalo's
southern swing schedule will be issued shortly. Last
y~ar·~ baseball squad earned a bid to the NCAA
01stnct II playoffs dt Prmceton University . .

Film Stray Dog, 3 p.m c1nd 8 p.m., Conference
Theater.
Concert. University Chamber Orchestra, 8 :30p.m .,
Ba1rd Hall, features works by Mo.zart Bach and
Vaughan Williams, Carlo Pinto directo~.
Concert : Ray Repp, noted co mposer of
contemporary liturgical music Fillmore Room
8 p.m., ticke~ are S I for st~dents, $1 .50 fo;
non-students and are available at the Norton
Tict..et Office.
Panel diSCUSSIOn : "After Prison What ?" with W.S
Powell, Jr. - U.S. Probation Officer and Mitch
Rivers . Project TACT, 8 p.m., University
Presbytenan Church, corner Main St. and
Niagara Falls Blvd.
Video : Do You Own Your Body? presented by the
UUAB Video Committee, noon, Haas Lounge.
Tuesday, Feb. 15

Tonight: Varsity wrestling at Guelph.
Wednesday : Varsity swimming at Fredonia State
College.
Thursday: V;arsity hockey at Canton Tech
Canton, N.Y.; varsity basketball at Stony Brook
p.m.; freshman basketball at Can1sius Coll~ge
Koessfer Athletic Center.
. F~;ay : Varsity fencing at Cleveland State
Umvers1ty.

8

Film : Stagecoach with john Wayne, C laire Trevor
and Andy Devine, classic western , 3 p.m . and 8
p.m., Capen 140.
Concert : Student recit.ll, noon, Baird Hall .
Demonstration : The Art of Roy, 7:30p.m., Center
Lounge Norton.
-AmyAh~nd

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

Student ideas go
into Master Plan
Student leaders from the various state campuses traveled
to Albany last weekend to make their con tributions to the
I972 Master Plan . Submitted to the governor and the
Regents every four years as required by law , the Master Plan
t:harts the future plans and goals of the State University
system.
The Student Conference on the
1972 Master Plan was viewed by
Charles lngler , associate
chancellor of Policy and Planning.
as one step in the Master Plan
deliberation process. According to
Dr I ngler, the drafters of the plan
want opinions from all facets of
the state system: "We are
mlerested in a full spectrum of
1deas and opinions,"
H owever, the s tudent
conference was primarily the
wt1rk not of the State Umversity
nf New York ~.en tral staff but of
the Student AssociatJons of the
State UniversJty (SASU) , A~ Dr.
I ngler commented 1n his opening
~tatement to studen ts IJrt Sunday .
" I can't presume to welcome
yuu
th1~ ts a student meetmg
hrought about by students on
then own U1Jttattve '
'Hollow document'
Students pre~ent ;11 the
meeting were generally pleased
that an opporutmty fot student
anput was provtded However,
many were skeptical that their
remarks would be included in the
final plan . Additionally 1 ot hers
feared becoming the "apologists"
fvr a "hollow document."
Regardtng this, Dr I ogler
mamtamed that •f the Master Plan
were mc.Jeed tu become a hollow
document. it would be the fault
of its formulators.
Accurding to hun, the "burden
of proof' ts on State Un.versity
members to make the plan a
commitment W1th meaning. In
add1tion to doubts that the Master
Plan would actually be followed ,
some students charged that their
optntons would be discounted.
Objectang to Dr. lngler's comment
that those at the conference did
not olllciaUy represent student
opmmn, Karen Shat7kin of SASU

maintained that those present
were an effective voice for
students' ideas . Thus, she
concluded, their resolutions must
be included in the plan.
DiBcussion groups
The 56 students at the
conference were subd1v1ded mto
six sub committees to consider
the work of previous symposia
(whtch met last May to October)
on structure and governance,
access to and deltvety of
educattonal serv1ces. the
f each 1n g-learnmg process and
evaluation, the quJIIty of the
campus experience, the campus
and external relationshi ps. anc.J
financ1al and other rtsoun:es
These study groups after fMmtng
resolut11)ns consulted w11h
representallvt:!i uf SUNY Central
staff
Que~twning the effectiveness
of such a process. one student
commented: "Some central staff
representahves are treatmg us as tf
we are asking them specaftcaJiy for
answers. rather than vtewmg us as
formang answers through
convera.ation." Other critici$rnS
1nc lu ded the argument that
student mput was taken W1th not
enough lime provaded 10 senously
constder the many problems
After two days of meetm~ and
dtscussJons and a recepuun with
the chancellor, student work into
the plan ended until 1ts 101t1al
draftang tn March When th1s first
draft 1s completed, mod1ficatwns
or addlltons may then be made.
The finaJ plan when presented to
the governor W1th those of the
City Univtrsily of New Yo£k
System and private colleges will,
as Dr. Ingler satd, ')mlVIde a
smgle overall tndtcat1on of what
New York state is plannmg to
accompltsh 10 higher educat1on ''

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 53

State Univenity of N- York 1t Buffalo

Friday, 11 February 1972

Tenure battle

Control over who will teach
by Barbara Mink
Sp~ctrum

Stoff Wmrr

"1f students want control over
who teaches them, then the
question of tenure is important ,"
said Marv1n Resn1koff
(Departmen t of Physacs) .
Apparently , students want such
control since ancreasing numbers
of them are protesting the
seem1ng sacrifice of excellent
teachers for excellent researchers.
However, m most cases they
appear powerless to mfluence
faculty tenure dec1swns
Grantlltg tenure 1S th~:
guarantee that an instructor has a
(XlSitiun at the University for as
lo n g as h e d c s u c s B a s 1c
quahficat1uns fur granting tenure
are the amnunt published work.
teachang Jb1hty and UrllvcrSIIY
and commun1ty serv1ce . Many
departments also 1nv1tc opul1ons
from schola rs at other un1versit1es
who are famlliar with the
applicant's work to pruv1de an
evaluat1on of h1m

Department. there are onJy "rare
cases where excellence in leachmg
outwe ighs nega t ive points."
MacAllister Hull , acting dean of
Graduate Studies, believes that a
balance betv.een publishing and

revrew board;s purpo~ has been
to maintain an overview of the
standards set by eac h
department's personnel
committee. However, how each
appointment will be individually

Scholarship vs. teaching
B ernard Gelbaum, v1ce
president for Academic Affa1rs,

maintains that scholarship and
teaching are equally unpt&gt;rtant
and that the University's function
IS 10 ''add to knowledge, as well as
communicate 1t " Yet he also feels
that "1f someone excels 111 one
and IS a failure in another, hr 1s
not qualified for teuure ."
The amount nf emphas1lo
placed on teach1ng nr scholarshtp
var1es betweeu tnc.liVtdual
deaprlulents Robtrl Newrna11.
director of Undergraduate Stud1es
fo1 l:.ngl1sh. reported •vrhe
f:. 11 gl 1sh Department IS more
h os p1table to JUSt teach1ng
strength than other departments
Strong letters by students have
s.tufted some faculty votes "
Accurdmg to Robert Ltvely .
chatrman of the H1story

teaching is needed ''I ( ont' wishes rev1ewed by the pres1dent himself
onJy to do research , he shouJd be "AU of us at tlw level are
at an rnstrtute lake Rockefeller. If uneasy." remarked Dr. lively,
une w1shes only ro teach, theu the "th1s is 01&gt;1 theu (the
best place to be 1s al a four yca1 adrrunistrallon 's) functron."
college of ~\•me sort "
Quest 1ons have aJso been raJ sed
by a member o f the Faculty
Faculty uneasy
Senate Pxecutivc Committee as ro
When a professor a pplies fot whether quotas are being
tenure . he IS first voted upon hy t:Stabltshed fm prumution Some
the members uf h1s department
r dCUitreS have U$ICOS1bly been
These resulls are then g.vcn to the asked Ill rank thu~e mstructo~
department's per\IJIInel chgJble for prumOUfln Although
cnmmtttce which 'ends 11s t:.xecuiJve V1cc Prdldent Albert
recommendattons 111 the Som1t reported lhat 'to the best of
Umversu y rev1cw board Theil h 1s k nowledgc th1s w~ not
deliberattonb are subsequently oc;cuTJng, lhc l·x clUtlve
reported tu Dr Gelbaum and then Cunun1tlee dcc1dcd that the
gaven to Prc~1dent Ketler lor finJI hc.ulty Tenure Jnd Pr1v1lege~
Comm1ttee (f T&amp; P) ~hould be
approval
Tradit10nallv. th~ Univcrs1tv
conllnuoCI on Pol901 2

(CPS) - Nearly 2000 devotees
of the televis1on program Star
Trek filled New York's Statlet
Hilton, Jan. 21 -23 with talk of
trekkies, tnbbles and phasen
"Star Trek Con," the first
nat1onal convention of "Trek"
fans, drew a mostly college
crowd from New York, New
J ersey, Pennsylvania ,
Connecticut and as far 1way as
South Africa.
-

UPI

-contlnueCI on

~

8-

�Who will teach.

• •

-continued from page ) -

informed of this ranking. Dr.
Gelbaum and Solon Ellison, head
of the FT&amp;P Committee, will be
invited to the next Executive
Committee meeting to discuss the
matter.
'Pure hypocrisy'
Tenure , according to Dr
Ntwman, "is a matter of force ."
If the thing is real, you don't have
to force people to do 1t. Society
should reward the pure researcher,
or th e pure teacher; but don't hnk
them." He continued: "Studen ts
are sa1d to b e naive judges o f
teaching so there is no way of
measuring teaching ability . Th1s 1S
pure hypocrisy - do you mca11
that we can tcach students to
analyte poetry, but nul tu JUdge
teachmg?"
Dr Resmtkoff, who was dented
tenure , felt that "if you want
teactung ability to really count as
half, then hall of the comm111ee
should be made up of students."
Dr. Resn ikoiT. a member of the
former Faculty 45, Is convinced
th.'lt he was den1ed tenure be~.:ausc
ot pol11tcal con~c.l e rations "I
look dJ(ferCIII and act d1lferent ~o
l lo~t "

Department chairman, "but this
was just an excuse they landed on.
I'm not bitter, though ; I 'm not
even sure I reaJiy want to remain a
part of the Univers.ity life."
Not everyone is so resigned .
Thomas Rainey, a Russian scholar
m the Department of Hist ory .
who has not been recommended
for reappointment, will appeal hts
case. " I likt teaching here. and I'd
really like to stay "

Archaic way
Or . Rainey has rece1ved over
100 letters of support by
students, and Dr. Lively termed
him a "fantastic teacher .. " My
qualtf1 c ations have been
rccognrz.ed by the departrnc1ll Jnt.l
by my students," mruntatr1cd Dr
Ramey "The enrollment 111 my
courses L\ 111creasang whale tltc
ert roll m ent 111 the ll l\lllfy
Oepartmeut atself ha' dropped
3 0 %. " He cun ttnued
' l ite
adnttntstration calb .lhiiUI
teachmg bemg a maJor ~ rrt e r1a ,
yet they are dropping lhe be'l and
mml popular teachers. lth· Crolly
tn
c con om res, J P I IIIIi'' 111
poltttcal scaence "
At:t.ordtng lo Dr RJII te)'
"These people who are c~hle 111
Dr Resmkoff has taught here
dose rhe gap between the•
I or four years, has had 20
adnHntstrJIICJn &lt;~nd the studetth
publu.:at1ons. 1cceived a re~ear~h
fhe trent! 111 nthn tHttversll te' "
grant and served ~ a Vl&gt;lunteer
111 reward lcachtng strength
consu ltant to the Boatd of
here WI' h:tve :.n ;11chaac w~y nl
Ed ucation He also started sc1encc
del.adang prctlllOIIIIrt
centers 10 the tnner city, 1tttlaatcd
Studcui ·IL'adacr rl'laliumhtp' .ut·
a " Phystcs for Poets" wui\C,
tiH· mo~l llltpor lant thttlP,) I ll'.adt
he adcJ the remedtal me~t h
UUfll1l! thl· &lt;ac,tderlllc yea1 Jttd
program 111 1- PIS for twn ancl ,t
I C\e J tCh
dUll Ill! the \llllllllet
h a If year:. Jnd w~ nn tiH'
be~.:Ju\1: I feel tltJI IC:J ~ hllll! " .1
pre,tdelltaJI comttlllll'~ !111
lull -tune 111h '
manmtl)- hmng
llrtlrl the pr••hlrnt 111
\dtularsltap vcr~u~ teacllln!: .Jbrlary
Excuses for dertial
1S rl'\olvc:d . thr (e &lt;H ·~ tha 1 ~o ntc
"I roccivetl one uns&lt;J ftSIJc tory nl lltt' hl•st lcadu•r, m,Jy he lo~f
recornmeruJat• or~ lcr ter . fro111 a 1 hough \futlcnl~ have Ill til' &lt;.llfC:CI
man who aim did not agrel" wttlt lllnll!'ll-:1' 1111 f!'ttlll!' ck~l~ l(lll~ .
me pultltcally ," \Jtd Dr
lellt:r' nl 'uppurl wall lldiiHicly
R e~na J.. off. who recc1ved
the help IIIII har111 1lte11 laVUflll'
support ot the: Ph y~tt:\ l't1UI.Jlllf)

International Month
International Mo nth IS underway , hti!UII 11n feh
9 and continuing unhl March I 2. A wide-rangtnJ!
program o f events includes variou.\ forei11n film M,
lectures, folk dancing mstruction , guest Spt.'akers , a
k.ibbutz. karavan , 11 Japanese tea ceremony. an
international nhihit , a music recital and man y other
Spt.'Cial event!&gt; The spectal month will culmmete wath
an intemauonal f~flval ntght , March II . and an
international feas t. March I 2 Watc h 7 h~ Spt!t' lrum
for wet'klv announcements of InternatiOnal Month
even!J\

'i I I d!lll~il!\i:»i l lil~~li~M~l

alentine Candy
.-..::-:~~.... 1 Chocolate Heart

Intensive campaign to register
new voters proves successful
During the week of Jan 3 I , the Erie County voters proved frui tless. Rocco T ermini, head of the
Board of Elections patd a five -day visit to the halls of De mocratic Youth Division, stated that this
Norton as part of its voter registration drive in thts mformation was not available until one year after
county. This vtsit was o nly part of an ex tensive registration. At the same time, however, Mr. Termini
campaign by the election board to reach the now was unable to explain how this very information is
pubhshed almost daily in various newspapers and
elrgible 18-21 year old vo ters.
Peter VanDuskJ , a Board of EJec11ons officaal magazines.
Asrde from this, he expressed surprise at the
explruned their campatgJl as "going out tu the
large
number of new registrants who are not
putent1al voters" racher than havang the cegrstrants
affiliating
with any party . He pomted out that those
comang to them. He ex prt:ssed pleasure wrth the
who do not affiliate are not eltg~ble to vote in the
results
The drave. lhu~ far. ha~ VIM ted three area prtmaries. Mr. Termini emphasized that the pnmurics
campuses the Stale Universtty o f Buffalo, the State were where the real decision as to selection of
candidutes as made.
University College at Buffalo and Cantsius College
Another Oemocraltc spokesman , Ntck Satgcnt
In the futu te the ho&lt;~rd plans to vtsll uthe1 area
un wh'!t he felt was an excellent JOb hy
commented
colleges and set up cheu tabl e~ m the outly111g
of
Electtons at pmcunng new vocers Ht&gt;
the
Board
suburban dast rtCI\ uf thr~ ~.:oun Iy
added
that
such
a function was previOusly the
At:cordrng tn Mr V;tnDuskt. \tncc Jan 17 ul
respon~1btltty
of
the
pohltcal parttes, bur w:" 11111
ltm year . the bc•.ua.l hJ\ rcg1s1crcd approxnnatcl)
longer
necessary
g~ven
the curre nt work ol the
IXOO lll'W vuh!l~
h52 ul these c.:om111g from tltl\
No
1epresentattve
of tht' Republican Parry
board
ca mpu~
was
available
for
comment
l:.flurl\ to tiud nul p&lt;~rty alfilratrort of the new

Nader representative.

Calish promotes WNYPIRG
The arnv;al1111 carn pu~ 1ll Ralph
NJtlc1 rcpresenlaiiVl', Caren
C' ·""". has finally put \otne
ud ttlt!ion hehutd che letters.
WNYPIRG.
Ms. Calash sloppc&lt;.J ot the S tate
I lrtiWtsiiY of Buffalo last Mllflday
and I ut·~day on lht• '"'' leg uf a
hJid 'ell pronwltnnJI campa1g11
lor che We,ccrrt New Y111J.. Publtl
I II I I' I l' ' I I{ I' 'c J , I. h (. I u u p
1 WNYPIR&lt;.) Slw .u~., vasatcd
,ever.sl utltc1 lo\:JI \llltvcr~alte'&gt; and
appc•.urd 1111 th e• WBI·N fV talk
' how. (; mlflrf
Ms ('al lsh ,llt t•m pl t•d lo
c I( pi J Ill I Ill· I " II d IIIII u I
WNYPIJ{(; to a lmgc uuwd 111
IIJa\ LlHtltgr I Ut'\day attcrtWl•rt
( CIIIO.:l'tttctl • 111,1111ly Wllh lflc:
lurultrtg nl cltc• tHf!JtttiJihlfl \11~·
J\kl·J lhJI Jll' talanm he \IP,IICd
plcdg~ng $:! 111 ",attlumalac
Ices
tmva:d WN Yl'l R&lt;, Thi\ money
she '~"d would hl· u-.cJ tu hu e
proi&lt;'''&gt;IVIIal~ . \ttdl J\ IJwycr\. tn
~:llf)' t1UI J)Oiti.V dCt.l~lllll~ ol the:
WNYPmG •cpr&lt;'Sl'tttattvt·'·
'Nader mspireti'
M~ Caltsh c'\piJIItCd chat l'&lt;ich
JI!'J lltiiVCt\11~ wnuld \t'l 11p a
lu ~ .1 I h 11 .1 t 1l " I c• !1• l I l' d
rcpresentdtlvcs 1 hi\ hll JI hnatd.
\he sarJ
wnuiJ
nt.lltllattl
communiCaiiOIIs on c.:amp11 ~. ' e~nd
also srat a rcprcscntaltvc on the
regaonal board, '1' hc regulnal
board," she COIIImued, "would
determine pWJet.l prtontae' "

WN YPI RC would he a pan ur
the large cham ul Nader·urtented
PIR(j \ already tn progress 111 20
d.tTcrenl )t:Jtes 1 here wtll be no
tt e~ at all between Ralph Nader
and chese groups, .. l&gt;aid Ms. Calish.
" they'll hr Nader·lllSpared . but
nut 'Nader's Ratders • Ncilher are
tltcy assoct:tled wath the person of
lhc ,tuthnnty nt the \late '
In an exdustve The Spectnmr
111tervaew M~ l ala~h remarked:
"The st11dtn1 muvt.•ment lacks
conrttaurty" It t) rncffecttve, shi&gt;
expi&lt;~Hlcd. hct..JU)C of rl~ rnability
111 keep ,11 " pruhlcrn WNYPIRG,
.slth11Ugh run p11n1 :1 rily by
!.IUdc:ti iS, wall C,:lltlfiiiiH' Ill OflCitiiC
durtng vac,lttun~. e'atns, e t ~.: with
Ull!)lde proiC)SHIII:tlltelp
Addtllonally . 'he ~Jt d ,
WNYPIR&lt;. Wtii.JIIalk pr11blem~ 10
rhrc:c w.tys
cducalton and
puhltl'tfv luhhymg. and legal
a1.111111

Positive reaction
Ms. Calt~lt fee ls cltac the general
public's rcactinn wtll he "very
posattvc" Ac~.·ordHtg to her,
- Ve ccaro
studentc; w1ll work Wtlh puhllc tn
··areas of cnmuhul con~:l'llt " The
pubht. . sard M\ C.th\h con)tder~
lhts "a Vl'r} 1.'!111\IIUl.IIVI' l,.atH1 of the ~tudcnt's request Thus. ~Ill'
alltull "
sa1d, WNYPIRG will reOIJIII
Vicwang lhc httute. Ms. Caltsh au t onomou~ of admimstrallllfl
docs tllll believe thai WNYPIRG &lt;.: onlrol
will be plagued hy the Ices control
WNYPIR G's c. hun cts lor
problem bcset1111g other sludenl success, concluded M ~ . Calt~h.
organizations 011 campus. The "look very good "

Caren Ca/ish

DeliCJouxlv Fresh, l .ovmgly Made

New Gardt'fl Chocolates
Names F!Ut
(Mat/ Eurly)

The Spec:trum 11 publ11h«1 " " "
11
wHir, ftl'ery Mond11 y

Reprtts&amp;nrlld for ildverr111 ng by
NtH~onel EdUC11tion111 Adwlrtlllng
SMVte•. Inc.• 360 LeKington A&gt;'#
New York, N. Y. 10017
·•

~LAIIIFIEit

RUSSIAN LESSONS
by a n.ilavc
lnd1v1dual 01 dij"

t1mes

w.d~M~~t:Uy lind Ff/dily: dur~ng ,,.,;
r.,ulllt M:lldfNf,c r•r by Sub-Board
1, Inc. OHices ere loc.tlld lit 355
Norton Hell, St11re Untv flf'llty of NfiW
York llf Buff/I/o 3435 Mam St
B uffalo, New ' York , 14214:
TtJiephon11: Ar88 Code 716, Edltofle/
831 -'11 13; Business, 831 3610.

Altl

THE SpECTI\UM
Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, 11 February 1972

Sublcription ~res are $4.50 ,.,.
,.,..,.,.,. 0' $8.00 lor two swn.ren,

S«:ond Cl- Pos~ 1»1d •t Bufflllo
N- YtNk.
•
Clreullltion : 16,000

Bursar's Olfit.c. c;hc repuncd . wall
cullecc the fee Jlld be retmbursetl
for the costs con i rae ted 111 tlw
cullcct tl&gt;n fhe lee . as Ms. C.tll\h
expla1ned 11. would be neathcr
mandatory rwr voluntary . but
"automat tc" and refundable ac

refe r en~c'

- Mrs. David Harker
886-2666
- ~~.......,;. ~......,;..

\

4•

Poi~e. ·n
•

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J.sus ~vs : "Except " m an l)e
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John J ·3 · 7
::Being bo1n of GO&lt;S . "John l : lJ
Bv lhe Word o f God.'' l Pet. 1 2J

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�News Analysis

Master Plan Conference
Editor's note : Last Sunday and Monday, the Student
Conference on the 1972 Master Plan was held in
Albany. Ostensibly, it was held to provide for
student input into the formullltion of the Master
Plan of the State Umversity system . One participant
and observer of the scene was Tht Sptctrum Campus
Editor Jo·Ann Armao. The following are her
comments.
Students converge on Albany . T heir target is the
19.72 Master Plan. Their goal is to ensure that
student opinion be included m this blueprint of
State Univenity future . With enthusiasm and high
hopes they meet , discuss and consult for tw o days.
Yet , thetr final realization IS o ne o f failure.
At the outset , there was much talk of drawmg
up concrete resolutio ns and forcing SUNY Central to
accept them into the Master Pla n However partl y
because of the hugeness of theu task and the short
penod of ttme, and partly because o f a lack of
student cohesiveness, these resolutions never
matenalized Instead, o ne left the conference wtth
less kn o wledge of the St.tiC' \lmversity than befo re
the meetmg)
Equal blame

- ouerrelch••

"HZzat?

Do you recognize any o f your favorite folk
stars? ProbabtV not, because these people are just part of the guitar
workshop which meets fNery Saturday at 2 p.m . The genereal
meeting place is Room 340, Norton, but after awhile you can find
good people and sounds throughout the Union's third floor.

Type and amount of
fees review debated
I nterv1c~W\ wtth Chancellor
l rne s t Boye r and further
11egotiat10ns between students and
admtntstration have attempted to
~:ontrol the who le tssue o f student
lees Spet:Jftcally, recent even t ~
hc1ve ratsed the q uestion o f what
type and amount o f fee revtew •~
needed to msurc that st uden t fee~
111eet state guide lines
OtscussWlg the problem wtth
&gt;ludenl offictal., last weekend
( hancello r Boyer explained ht '&gt;
understandin g of auard of
1 rustces' regulatto n Clf studl!ln
Ices
Acco rdtng to tum , any
regulatiOns exl\t to pruvtde
1111ntmum control over then usc
lie tnterpre tc.-d thetr creatton a:. a
torm of protet:IJOn for the s tat e
In no v.a y, he maintained, doe~
Alban y wISh ro n:strkt or con trol
.. tudent~ tn the u~e of thetr fees
Rather. h e remarked , the
regulaltons ..tre lousely·worded
Jnd borad m con~ept \

Inherent ambiguily
Accordtng to Anth ony
I orenz.ettt , acting vtlC prestdent
tor Student Affatrs . thts mherent
ambtguit y and uncertainity m the
gutde hne.s has partly con tnbuted
t o the confusion about their
Interpretation
Ternllng the
gutdeltnes "unclear," he expiatned
that the Umverslty admintstrallon
was not exactly sure o f tts actions
" I n the tnlttal stages .
stnce
we d idn ' t kn o w what the
guidelines meant we weren ' t
exactly sure o f what we should
do," Dr. Lorenzetti commented
Because o f th1S, Dr. Lorenze tti
e'p latned the administration's
seeking of legaJ opinions from
Albany. Or Boyer maintained

that there was little reason for
lo1..al o~dmtntstra t ors to con tact
Albany for advtce o r dec ts1ons
Addtl m nally , he commented
that any opin1011 recc tved from
Alh..tny wuuld neccl&gt;~Jnly be
conservattve to proted the s tale
Respondtng t o th is. Dr Lorenzetti
satd that Alba n y wa~ contacted
" to test out some meanmgs and
rules." Ho wever, he tntdt:ated that
JS a
result of meetmgs with
student\
the adnumstratiOn
would conmlt the Llmverstt y
cou nsel. J o hn Leach Further. he
~1d Albany would be co nsulted
on ly when law , nnt policy
quest 10m e'11s ted .
Operaling process
Other procedures fur student
rees, ac~:ord1ng to Dr. Lorenzetti ,
utc}ude a rive-step process Such
an operat tng process w11l first deal
o nly wtth wn tten requests I f
these req uest~ fit the gu1delines,
approval will be granted
immediately . However . if
questiOns anse then negotiations
between administratiOn and
students will oet:ur. If these
negot1at1 on~ fail to l&gt;olve the
pro blem , then the Adv1sory
Committee o n Student Fees will
be asked for their help "to assist
us in th tnking out problems."
Finall y, 1f any legal pro blems did
ar1se, M r
Leach would be
c.:onsulted.
This procedure IS presently in
ope ratio n. Other stude nt fee
tSSues still pending are the s tatus
of athletll mcome depostted in a
Faculty Student AssoClation
ac~:ount and the future of the
Inter-Residence voluntary fee .

The blame for the latlure u t th e Student
Contereme on the I '17:! Mastel Pl.tn IIIII$! he equally
~ha red by SUNY tentral ~taft , lmal untver~lty
adnunl!&gt;t raltom, ,.IJid llno~ll y the \IUtlrnl&lt;i them~elves
SUN Y Central \tatr t:a n be t.~ultt&gt;d lu1 not tnvolvtng
~t udcnts
in .til c1spects o f the Master Pl.tn
fmmula t10n. Whtl ~ 11 IS true that student~ were
tncluded 1n some ol the symposta, one seme~ that
to t.tl student parttctpatiOn IS \Omehow tacktng
As an example one comnuttee o f 2S OICIIlhers
tnduded only three students Addtlton.Uiy 11 ~h uul d
he llllled that all stude nt delegates were fro m
student governrnentl&gt;
11 appeal"i t hat no .ttrempt
was made for dtverstty in the~e tml1al planntng
sesstons. Central '&gt; laff must alsu be cnttct7ed lor not
obta101ng leglttlllJte \tudent respnn\e In the hndm~
of these sympos1a
Negligent
Regardtng th1s , local admtntstrahons were also
ne&amp;haenl in makma the inlltal reports available to
the \:.lmpus commumlles Spec1fically, at most

camplUCS, the reports were tucked away in the
libraries with little noticeable publicity. In addition,
on this campus, student officials were given one
week to obtain studen t reaction to the symposia
papers. This is hardly enough time to read the
documents much less respond to them .
However, the final blame must be laid on the
students for their lack o f interest in and preparation
for the Master Plan. At the conference, one was
struck by numbers of students discussing concepts
with little understanding of them. Some delegates to
Albany even neglec ted to read the preparation and
plannmg mfo rmat1on.
Unfo rtunately , ttus ignorance d1d not influence
the d iscussions for a ruling motto seemed to be .
''When m doubt, bullshit." Wttich , when you come
nght down t o it, IS what the conference was.

One could also argue thai the whole concept o f

a Mast er Pl.1n for the State University system is o f
the Slime substance Regarding tht!&gt;, a fa c t no t
pro vtded (although demanded by students) was how
much o f the 1968 plan was ulttmately fo llo wed
Ac..:ord1ng to a central staff representative, thts
tnform.ttton is presently being calculated . Wtth
drafllng to beg1n 1n Marc h , February IS a httle late tt)
find nul 1f the Ma~ter Plan IS , a~ Charles lngler
warned ".1 hnllow document "
Ftnally there WJ~ wholesale dtstnclmatiOn tu
.:onSJder the: St ate Untventty ~ystern as a statewide
..:ohestve net work Instead, disc ussiOn\ centered on
parochtlll '-Ot1Lc:rn\ In short. the State Umvers1ty
was not dehattd but rather the merits or
disadvantages ul SUNY ill Stony Brook, Auburn
Communtty CoUege or whatever
Perhaps, the 1nev1tablc d oom of tht&gt; conference
l·an be!&gt;t be typified tn .1n ext:hange between two o f
1ts parttc tpants dunng 1ts last sess1on ''I'm getting
really, really fru~trated wt t h thiS whole tlung,
nutlung ~~ betng acc;om phshed or re~olved "
"Only no"'? Y vu mean you've been o ptimiSt It
ht:lu re tht&amp;alternnu n'1 "
F o t those optuntsttc that somethmg co uld be
done the dlSappomtment was mevitable, wh.tle for
those cymcal at its be11nntng, httle sallsfactton could
be taken Ln " I told you so "

Treasurer's Office
1)
Election for club officers for the 72·73 year must be held and names
turned '" on the form available '" Room 205 Norton.
Dr. Ketter's audito rs are upset that we don' t have specimen
signatures of current officers of undergraduate organizations
receiving funds. Anyone that stgns R.E.P ·, th1s year must p1ck
up an authortzed signature form in 205, ftll tt out and return 1t

All organizations that wish to have funds allocated tor 72·73 year must
p1ck up budget request forms 1n 205, fill them out and rtrtum them before
Marc h 1, 1972. By state law we must submtt our budget fo r ne~et year to the
admmtstration for approval before the end of th•s semester. Any club or
organization that receiVes funding this year wttl not receive money at a later
date
2)

3)
Proposals for special prOJ8CU or soctal-culturat or educattonal
symposiums for the fall semester of 72 should be subm ttted by March 1st

EXA MPLES
(1 I Steven Sttfls concert
(21 TELOS sympos1um

(31 Record Co-op

Act1vittes of this type are needed in add1t1on to regular activities funded
from student fees Any student can plan and get pa1d for some special projects.
BYdget requests can be picked up m 205 Norton

For informa1ion and help see Dave Keiser - assistant treasurer, S.A.

Friday, 11 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�I

aetion line

Q : 1 a m a gradua te stude nt and I b elieve that I have been
mistre at ed by a fac ul ty m e mber in m y departmen t. Wh e re ca n I ge t
advice abo ut wh a t t o d o?
A : See R onald H . S t ein in the O ffice of Student Affairs and
Services (20 I Harriman L ib rary). H e w ill ad vise you as to whe ther o r
not your rights have been violated and will point out to you avenues of
red ress open to you.
Q : Are ID cards s till bein g valida ted?

A: Yes! You can have your ID ca rd vaJidated in th e basement of
Foster H all , R oom 16 on Mondays from 9 a .m .- noon a nd on F rida ys
from noon - 3 p .m . Changes of address , if you have moved into th~
dorms , may also he made at th is time.
Q : C an stu dent fees be used to m ove a s tudent fro m th e infirmary
to a Buffalo hospital?
A : As far as we can d e ter mme, they are not med for this purpose
However, w e t alked to the H ealth Services and they tell us that the
health insura n ce may cover a part of this cost. They also mentioned
t hat when possible, t hey try t o m ove st udent s by t axi , which is
ch ea per ; and if th e st udent cannot affo rd to pay the fare , it is tak en
care of.
-

Collegiate Assembly

Q : 1 am a transfer studen t . D o my m arks from my p revio us school
becom e p a rt of m y cumula t ive average at the S ta t e U n iversi t y of
Bu ffalo?
A : No , they do not, Y o ur t ranscript fiom here will show two
c umulatives. o.ne from your previous school and o ne from here
H o wever, this is nothing t o be worri ed a b o ut. I f you are thinkin g ol
graduate schoo l, m ost schools average these two o ut w hen th ey see that
you a tt e nd ed tw o undergraduate schools.

Erl ebacher

Grievance process debated
The Collegia l e A ssem bly
devoted aJmost its e ntire meeting
last Wed nesday to disc ussio n of a
grievan ce procedure. T hat debat e,
co upled with the. premature
d epa rtur e of man y members.
prevented any ot her subs tantial
action from ta kmg pla ce
Grievances have d o rnmat ed the
assembly's work all year Most
notable wa s th e w ell-puhlici7ed
quarrel be tw een Bamb11 Abelson
and S t anly Dayan. That affa1r
helped pomt out the as~ernb l y'~

pool o f volunteers. That prov1swn
s t irred some deba t e, as members
o f th e asse mbly w o nd ered
whet h er anyone would volu nt eer
for s uc h an ass1gnment. One
perso n who had prevwusly served
m s uc h a position said s he would
d efuut e ly no t want to serve aga1n
As o ne represen t ative s:ud . " It''
ub~urd. It 's not a pO\Illon anyonl'
would put t h cm~e l vcs m "
Alsn ,·ons1daed wa~ IIH' role
played by the as~ernb ly 1tsdl m
th e gn t·vance pr9ccdu rc Somt'
member\ \.Jid that the J~semhly
shou ld bl' t&lt;lll\ll lt cd ll\ only a l,,,t
tt·snrt. allt'l all o th er method\ had
fatkd Other\ wanted tn do away
almost cnlHl'ly wtth the dtffl'rt•nt
mc&lt;hat 1nn .tntl arln t r alt on pand'
and fer the assemb ly be the has1 c
platform for de.::is10n-makang It
was potnted out th a t .1
lu t..t-f 1ndtng tea111 would be
essenlt al to msure dut• prntess 11
the &lt;~~semb l y wa' tn handle thl'
many different gnevann•s

acknowledged inability to dea l
with s u c h contro versies and
prompted Wednesday 's debat e.
The grievan ce procedures as
presented stal ed : I) that th e
ind1v1dual parties will be
e n co uraged t o set tl e the ir
diffe rences be tween them selves,
21 that a m ediat iO n panel o f three
people will be appointed : 3) if the
prevlUus method~ tad , an
arbttrat 1on pam: l w11J be lorrnnl
The member~ of the arb ttra t wn
panel (..,ouh.l be selected fwm ,,

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'

--------------Page ~OUf
. The Spectrum . Friday, 11 February 1972
t

A A~ tar a~ we kn0w thcr~· 1~ nco! 'lldl .1 'Cil ldy on campi"
Howl·vcr, rememher that the Stltlknt A~soc1a t10n and th~ c:raduat~
S tud ent Assoc1&lt;1tttHl ha ve retained the scrv1ce' ol an attorrwy und ht&gt; "
avali.Ji:llc 10 the S tud enl Assonatwn o t f1ce~ nn r ue,d ay evemng~ In
addttton to thJ~. a~ we hdv c mcnltoned abov(· . Ronald Stctn ts availahk
1n the OfiJ ~.-e of Student Affu1r~ and Serv1u~&amp; fnr anyone who feel~ that
h1~ nglll~ have bn·n vwlatcd

Q · We had a n apartment last semester. Wh rn w e moved out wt:
sold the furnit ure to a n other gro up of s tudents. Now t hey won 't pa y
the las t SJOO.OO th ey owe us. What ca n we do '!
A There IS o ne avcnut• open to you and that " lhl' Small Clallll\
Cou rt 111 t h e ( 'tt y of Buflalo. If yllur da1m 1s und,•r ~SOO you ..:un mat.. e
u~e llf lht&lt;. fact hi y for a f1ling lee of $ ~ I &gt;I Uut 11 the stud enb an~
under 2 1, 11 may he that any contrllct you ha vt· wtth them IS not valid
bec·ause they •Hl' under age to make a valtd .:on t ral'l 01 O.:l1Ur~e. an (llht· r
dVenue upt•n 1s l1• redaHn that portion of the futnllure wht ch was not
pa1d tor. l--or more mfo rmat10n on the Small Cla1m~ Court you should
come to the Ofltle of Student Affairs and Scr~t&lt;:cJ&gt; 1n 20 I ll arnm&lt;~n
I 1hrary llu:y have form~ wh1 r h tell you how 111 ~~~ ahout ustng thl '
fJtlltty

F RE E PAR KING

~'tLANTI C StA T I ON
£ J&lt;P'Iflt!S"A.. AI L I. 197 2

Q ; What do you do when you're clo10ed o u t of a course after you
have gotten the permissio n of the ins truc to r?
A . If you followed I he procedure~ you s h&lt;IUid not hav e bct·n
duse d out. In the tnlerest o l clanty, here arc the procedure~ for thl\
sc1n~st er 1 o get mt o a dosell ..:&lt;o urse you need the permissio n of the
tn~truLlnr. Ttu~ must he a wntten perrnL%ion on department stat ionery
Sign ed by the Instru c tor Once you have th1~ you then take 11 to th•·
department that offers thc cour,e . They will then tell you if thctt' "
s pa o.:e ava1lahle 1r1 the classroom If there IS. they w11l accept you 111111
th e class .Jnd take ca re of the net:c!&gt;Sary procetlutcs wtlh Adrnl~t Orh
and R cl·., rd~ . II the rot~rn capat: tl y has been read1cd, the department
may ho: able to rl'4Ue~ l a Lhangc tn this frottl the appropnate offt&lt;.e .Jntl
arrange to get Yl•u In to the dass But remember tl IS the ins t rullor ,1nll
the department that dctermtne the Sll.t' ol the da~s. And it is from tht'
that Facillltes anti l'l annmg a ll ocate~ the cla~H&lt;•0 111 to be u~cd Stl, you
may not bo: able to get mto a c.:OUT\C If tlw m ~truct or and llw
departm e nt d u not want u larger c.:las~ .

I

REE=

PL US

- 2nd BIG HITTo be announced

Q · Is th ere a legal aid society on campus?

11npat1ent

m~.:etmg

unt1l no quorum

Notice : In last week's column we had a question uhtlut
"incomplete" grades a nd mentiOned that there IS no time limit on wht:n
they must be removed ll owevcr. t hts ts on the part of the school fh e
tndiVIdual inslruo:tur can, and sumetimes does. make a rule that he lll
s h e w an ts all inco mplctes remove d by a certain t1me If this is the case ,
then the instru~:tor L&lt;Jn g~ve you an '' F" 1f you do nor co mplete th~
work Wllhm t ht: as~tgn ~:d t1me.

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS
Mod Styles for Guys and Gals

�Year round school
appears successful

Commentary

and the teachers were worried
Imagine going to school the
whole year round, without a about how much a child forgot
summer vacation like all the o the r over the long summer vacation.
kids have. Imagine this, and then The Park School ·was reorganized
try to imagine liking it. WeU , into quarters, with 200 school
that 's the verdict from the pupils days a year, instead of the no rmal
at the Park Elementary School in
175. School commences on July
Hayward, California. Students at 6, a nd the pupils get fo ur
the nation's first all-year.round
vacations anualJy, none o f them
more than a month long.
sc hoot will a ct ually h a ve
completed an extra year of
45-15 plan
studies, by the time t hey have
A different plan which is being
fin ished their kindergarten to
tried out in communities in
sixth grade program.
California, Florida and Illinois is
This experiment in education is
the 45-15 plan. Under this plan
now in its fourth year. and
the students do not receive any
administrators at the school are
ext ra instruction . but instead, go
convinced that it is really paying
to class for 45 days, and then get
nff Robert H. Williams. llaywa1d
a 15 day vacation. The basis here
directo1 uf education , says . " I
is not so much to provide better
don't think 1t's the old Hawthorne
education, but to avoid costly
effect
the phenomenon th:ll
new construction by scheduling
anything new in educatwn wurks
pupils during the summer months.
for the first couple of years." The
UPI
According to Williams, the
Hawthorne effect gut ils name
childr. in the Park program "are
from a study of factory workers
really exc1ted about school.
whose productivity went up when
They're getting a lot of learning
the factnry was painted . It was
you don't ordinarily see.
concluded that the increase in
reconnaissance miSSIOns over 25 provrnct&gt;s and c1t1e~ productivity was due to the Howeve1. life 1s not so beautiful.
m Nort h Vietnam . U.S. tactical a1rcraft 11nd B-52
One of the b1ggest problems in
missions averaged 54 ra1ds per month m JI.)61J, and 10crease in attention pa1d tJ1e' running a year-round school is
rose to over I 1!0 ra1ds per month tn both 1970, and workers, not the new Clllor on the textbooks. Standard textbooks
the first s1x months of 1971. In 30 months under factory walls.
are written for the 36-week year .
Nrxon, the U.S has used in South V1etnarn more
Another problem is what does
explos1ves than the U.S. used m WW II and thc Ahead of other~
Korean War together.
a parent do with his vacation tf his
Williams says that hecausc the
Under Jo hnwn. the yearly averagl' of U.S.
ch1ld is in school? The year-round
children
get an extra year of
bombs used rn both North and South Vtetnam was
idea limits the family's warm
80,000 tons per year. Under Nixon, the yearly learning, they are proportionately
weather vacation to ei ther J une or
average of bomb~ dropped o n South V1etnam alone, ahead of other students each year
September. And If the family has
1~ 1,377,000 tons! On July 19, 1970 , the French After ftiUr years, scores nn tests
newspaper Le Monde stated tha t thus far 1n 1970,
othe r children on the
show that the Park youngsters are
the U.S., under Nixon, has dropped an el!uivalenl of
conven ti unal schedule. they might
II Hiroshrma s11e bombs (I I 20-kiloton A-bombs) ahead of o tJ1er children in hoth still be in sehoul. or just starting
rcadmg ami 111alh. the ouly
on lndoc·hina. And the record ..:on tmu e~
~·hooJ dunng that time
On f:eb ~.:!, I'Joll , the U A Jlr·hombt&gt;d JSO subjects for whtlh 1here arc \lid I
fvl'll witiJ nil these problems,
prisonc:r; in the Kong-ll o-R1rh ..:onn~ntral111n .:amp tests .
the
Park progruru ~ccms ru be a
In Kontum rrovinl·e l·rutll )&lt;Jt)l) until the prc·~cnt ,
fht· ltk.t t&gt;l ":h&lt;u)l tl1e yt'Jt
big
SUl'l'~~s
Appmv&lt;ll by Park
Nrxon has used o.: hcmr..:al warfar~ 111 l ndmh10a . wund ~~ 11111 a IICW uuc. In the
p:trcuts has 111l'reased steadily. :JIH.l
laymg to waste at l eJ~t l,kHO.OOO hclta" ot IJnd.
)(100\ tcad•e•s Wl~rt· lut\:tl lot I 2
and po1~omng at lt-ast liOO,OOIJ r~orle . On Mard1 I X.
uow stands at 8R'f,,
months.
aml the stut.lcnt- got tll1ll'
1970 . ten~ of thousands of US and S:ugun ttoops,
4
otf lor h;uve,ts . The rtlca was ~eautiful, hand-paint-;!
~•ded by wave~ u l hnmhcr-;, .ttt,td.t•d I ,1n1hndta
J-rom Del I. 1470 to Apnl 1971 , hundlo.:d'&lt;•f l i.S
brought '" Hayward lor two ~ PORCELAIN HEART
80 XES for Valentine's
a1r ~:raft bombed tlw ('a Mau anll Rad1 (oJ.I .trca' Ill H'ti~OilS , lflVIliVing bnlh p&lt;11CIIt~
Day.
Vietnam , and 111 'Cllllllndlun Wtth grniHHI '"'"Jl'
and tcadll'r' The parl'llts were
THE LOTUS SHOP
killed 241 I per~ons of t h1s an~ a
435 Minnesota 836·2666
making 111Creas111g cdu&lt;.:atio11al
Hours 10·5 da1ly
demands on the school system; •
•Thurs 1&gt;119
Deception

Nixon talks a good peace
by Paul Krehbiel
Sflt't·tmm Staff Wrller

Last month , on Jan . 25, Pres1dent Nixon
Jnnoun..:ed to th~· nation his new "e1ght·point peal·e
plan ." He then claimed that it was the DRV dnd
PRC . and not the U.S. that wa&lt;. holdmg out at tht&gt;
peace talks 1n Pans . The mass med1a earned the
PreSident's so-called "pcace·101tiat1ves" to millions of
people
Two days later . on Jan n. U.S. helicopter
gunship~ and U.S. F-4 Phant om ltls destroyed a large
hosp11al complex 111 the central highlands of South
V1elnam Scores ot people Were killed o r injured .
That sallie day, hundreds of D-52 bombers were
ordered to saturate I.Hge area~ of Laos. at least 3.~
nlanes dropped .~O-t1•n bomb lnaJ~ The mcdw
1gnoreJ or hardl y mcnt1oned the'e humb1ng raHh.
and most Amcrk.tn'i ~til l don't know about I hem
N1xnn talk s ··pea..:e" to the Amencan peupli' .
then 1111ens1fie~ hombmg r:ud~ h~·hmd therr bad,~
Yet , these two inudenh are nnthmg out of the
nrdtRary. the ll S has c'..:alatcll the a1r wJr m
lndnchma lor thrl'e years now
More barrier~
The most re~.ent massive bomb1ng wa:. done the
week aftc:r C'lm~tmas ror l1ve slr&lt;.11ghl day~ .
thousands of U.S . bombers made over 1000 atr
\trike~ rn North Y1etnam
These ra1ds werl' the
hcaVIC\l
N1xon IS cll·arly prolonging the war, he's putlmg
up another barner around our POW 's, and he rs
add1ng to the number of POW's by ordering new
ptlots to fly over V1dnam . And N1xon's new "pe.a.:e
plan" is really not new at all, since he again 1gnores
the two cruc1al issues Involved in a just peace: ( I )
the set11ng of a date for the total withdrawal of all
U.S. troops and equipmen t from the entue
lndochrnese area , and 12) the w1thdrawmg nf
support from the Thicu d1c.:tatorsh1p m South
Vietnam . After 12 y.:ars of US . mil1tary aggr.:ss1on
111 the1r country, the DRV and PRG huve made a
number of concesslOns to the U.S . m thetr 4uest for
peace .
Yet , the most ..:om prehenslVI: document that
exposes Nixon's h1story of mijjlary aggression, both
ground and air attacks, is m a report by the DRV,
that was submitted to the Umted Nations last fall on
Oct. 14, 197 I .
Most explosives ever
Ttus report was repnnted 1n the Daily world ,
Dec. 2, 1971, and exposes Nixon's aggressiOn in
Indoc hina for the last 30 months .
This report shows t hat U.S. planes flew 31,215

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I n f-'chruary 1971. th!! ·u ~ nwhtl11.cd .:!000
planes to Invade SL&gt;Uihern LJ&lt;''· L c~' than one mnnlh
ago , On Jan. 31 and Fe!&gt;. I, J\172, the U.S 'teppcd
up the bombing of North V1etna111 w1th the heav1est
ra1ds smce the Dcccmhl'r raids. Al~o. H·52\ Jropped
an estimated 700-1.)00 tons of bombs m South
VIetnam's central hi14hlands, during tlus penod
These arc only J scattered sampling uf U.S.
hombing raids. Jn light of the~e fads , Noxon·~ troop
withdrawab can only be seen as another means to
de CCIVI~ the Amencan people into believmg th.st the
war IS ending. Pett:r Jay from Satgon, wrote 1n the
Washington Pust on'Jan. I , 1972 . "Of the slightly
more than 150,000 Ameri..:an servicemen now m
South Vietnam, about 28.000 are tn the Alf For..:e
with most of t hem assigned to functions other than
Oytng o r serv1c1ng supersonic attack aHc raft Not
included in the troop to tals Wastungton uses when
discussin g withdrawals from Viet nam are more than
~5.000 airmen in Thailand , assigned to six big bases
from where most of the bombing missions are Oown.
and over I 0,000 men assigned to the Navy's offshore
carrier operations.
There are t he people who carry out the brunt of
the air war, and appear certam to contmue doing so
i": the months and perhaps the years to come."

Hear, 0 Israel
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Friliay , 11 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

I
No more fee fiascos

In an interview last weekend Chancellor Ernest Boyer
stated that there is little or no reason for the local
administration to contact Albany in regards to student fee
decisions. Further, he felt that such opinions would almost
always be against student interests.
In an attempt to prevent this form of buck-passing,
students and administration officials have agreed not to
contact Albany except on matters of law. Instead, policy
interpretations will be first sought from the local University
counsel, John Leach. This, however, will only occur if the
administration voices concern over specific fee
disbursements.
These administrative objections are the crux of the
problem. At no other school in the 71 -campus State
University system have any problems developed over
interpretations of the Trustees' fee guidelines. This, p lus Dr
Boyer's comments. points directly to Hayes Hall as the
troublemaker. Whenever an organization whose political
creed is hostile to or different from theirs is funded, they
have rushed to the phone to ca ll Albany, Thus when the
SUNY Counsel retu~ a poorly researched and often
ridiculous "legal opinion," the administration is provided
with an excuse to cover the political implications of their
actions.
Of late, several items that had prev1ously been delayed or
denied by administrative fiat , have been approved . This is a
positive, if belated. sign of good faith. We hope that
President Ketter and his assoc1ates can con tinue to overcome
their biases and carry out their fee responsibilities with a bit
of magnamity .
In essence. we are suggesting that they simply stop raismg
fatuous obJections to anything that offends their conception
of right and wrong. The guidelines were supposedly designed
to protect, not repress, students

Crying wolf
Censorship is an ugly word . It a lso is a serious matter and
charges of censorship should therefore not be voiced without
any sound basis for so doing. Unfortunately, ethos has seen
fit to claim the Norton Hall House Council is censoring them
by requiring them to move to slightly smaller facilities. At
best, this is ludicrous. At the worst. it is a vivid example of
distortion and invective designed to protect the vested
interests of a " magazine."
No publication should ever cry censorship when it
doesn't ~xist. Moving an organization to space more
consistent with i~ ~arj, and function is certainly not
censorship. ethos' char'l)e is therefore both unsound and a
rather shameful distortion of journalistic ethics.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol 22, No. 53

Frtday. 11 February 1972

Editor-in -Chief
Denn1s Arnold
Co-Managing Editor A I Bunson
Co-Managing Edotor M;ko L;pp;nanro
ASS1 . Managrng Edotor Susan Moss
Business Maneger Jed· Hl!flan
Advenoson9 Menlt{ler Susan Mellt!nlonl!
~mpus

Coty
Copy
Ass1

FNture
Grephic Ans
Beck~

Jo Ann Arrnao
Jell Greenwald
Howoe Kur11
Jenrs Cromer
Ronni Forman
Manr GOlllo
Claore Krollg$man
lynda Tero
Tom Toles
Amy /\hrend

Leyout
Aut.
lot &amp; Or;~ma
MUSIC
OH Cempus
Aut
Photo

Aat
Sports
Aut

MaryhOIJt' Runyon
vtK.anr
Mod&gt;IH!I Solverblall
Bolly Altman
Lynne rraeger
vacenr
Moc·key Ostorroocher
Krm Santos
. Barry Rubrn
Howoe Falwl

The SJ&gt;tJCtrvm IS sarved by Unrted Pri!IS International, College Press
Servrce, the los Angeles Trmes Free Press, the los Angell• Times
Syndrc:.te and lrberaroon News Sen11ce

Rapubhcatoon of mlltter hl!feon wilhout the upress consen1 o f the
Editor-In Choef '' forbrdden
Editorial Pol;cy rs determined by me Editor rn-Chtef .

Page aix
., . The $pe(ltrum . Friday, 11 February 1972

Oh, .m;J 11 •~ JUSt d hwely eYen ang , lovely Z ero
'lily dSS tlcgrec' ou t srdt 11 •~ eleven o'clo..:k rn a
drt"cuy c:venrng dller d lon(!: .md hJ~Iey day Jl ye old
mst11ul1on. there seem to be: a number of swollen
~:rnth and o ther assorted early warnmg s1gns of
11npenc.ll11g phys1 olog~t:al doom, o~nd II was necessary
111 ru11 through three or luur pen~ from ye o ld
p11fercd pen collec.·tlo n to llnu one that wntes well
t'tHough to 5pell physao logJcal w1th a y rnslead of an 1
u1 the third letter pos111on
nnt to mentHln mark1ng
111 the stems on thc p\ 'lllU: the typewnter 1s
'umewhat 1drusyncral1c
Jl best. (Ooesn'l
evl·ryc.tnc l. ec:p ren\lon n o the nbhon reels wrl h o ld
ruhhct hand''') I No &lt;;(IJllC peopk 11\e an ehxll or
llnrtl hlood nf a ~an.a511~ nght'~ I (left, thanks. and
lllu~h l.11er )
The ah•w&lt;" would of ~:our"~ ht• more tolerabl~ al
II werl! not lor rhc more llliiJCll ttJnc:rr n that th1s as
l1t•1ng typed 10 a rather cold :and Iundy apartment 1n
whu:h I feel largely hkt a stranger even th o ugh I
l •fl llllllly hvc hcH' Scenh hke tht• lddy and I c an't
make up uur 1111nds who hvc\ wh.:Jl' . , among other
!lung.' But .;um&lt;' kmd of Ul~tanct• 'e~·ms to be
llell'S\ary upon lllla~HHI And lomght's 1sulatrt•ll as
\cll-1111 posed
(,nl Jhout five h•lU''
'IC!ep las t n1ght Wht l h
did 11111 help lhe t&gt;urt4eon1ng nceprng cru;J wh11. h
\Wcllcth gland~ and doe~ who knows what al c~ll ( II
m.ake\ \Cnsc folk!.. )11\l rcclc.l II 'low ) II n1ay Ollspl.a~c
.10 ou..tstonal wnrd , hut I tll111k that 1Ius .tXt' nught
be J dtfferent s tmy I ISud1 hoslrl11y .rnll
I 1h1nk
I'll go now) She hJd ,onw 'luff lu work through ,
and "'we d1d that Wh en I IIH'Illwnnl, w1lh pcrl\ap~
01nre than a touch ol (!:rnwl 111 111y vn11:e, lhar rt lett
ftlllllY un some level\ ll1:tl wlult• feeling 11111
p.ttll&lt;eularly well lh.rl I 'hnul•l hl' up ~l' lale till'
IC,pnn,e 'eemcdln lilt' lo1 h•· prl'lly lw~tllc
Wh a..h hnng' to\ vutu 1lly ''' the \UhJed co l
lndJ}- \ 'crn1un Tholl hl'1ng n•,pnn,lhlhty he I wet'n
l'l'ooph: I th1nk th:rl h.1"' til )' I ,1o11 prdty .two~re 111
othcr people ~ly lll.JIC' rc~pooll\t: 111 IJd ~~ th.sl I .1111
l•lll .tw.rrc tll lhcm All ul wl11d1 proiMhly h." J grl'.ll
Jcal lo "'' With hl'ln~ -...11ed 111 dt:Jih col mmt col
lh\'' 11 ·\llynnc wh,, "" 111 the KJI Ilk\' a hlll'U
~1111ll~hlcr 111 .1 gaadc 1 lliiiVIl' 1\• 1h hrly w.tldlln~ ,1\
tllMIY pt'11pk "' j)ll\\lhh: " ohVH111~Iy IIIII l;of,rlly
lll lllf.,lt.lhk .1111\11111 !,:IPIIp~ olf , 1111ng••r- () 1 1111 ,~1
ntlll'r lolk' \'ilhl'l

,,r

rta" ,e,-m, '" ""' 111c•tl·d ,,, le;"' p.~r11.111y "' J
••'fiJin .tll\1111111 ul ,·on lu""" ·"to how 11lh\'l lll'"l'ln
h\'Jlh w11rl. or uqn't w11r~ If "'''"" 111 llll' 1o1 h 1·
.tpp.sn·nl lhdl every 1n•lrvtdu.11 IIIII\ I on "'m•· ll•vel,
U\l lu~ to\\ n heJJ "' J 11111dl'l lur how .111 Ill&lt;' '"'' 111
l lhhc Ill her rcnpk' ht'Jd\ Willi. I lmd ,, hdld '" J'l.
tor I h111g.' an o1 very Jrrt'd llldnrll'l I 11uJ~e a lol
111\lt'Jd It make' lhe expel'll'd rqedaon ea~acr to
handle when II I.!)IJIC!&gt;
Beang a guy wtw "
fundamt:nlally alraad nf ovcrslaylnl! ha~ weil:ome, "~
wdl dS ddens1vely aware of other peuplr HI general.
result:. 111 a la1rly ,frcdadable hypcrawareness nf
where o ther people ilre whl'n they are d o 1ng
something for me. Su~;h as klll11g rne hang out
aruund their house on Sunday afletn&lt;lon. or
something.
Tlm tncludes people helpmg work thmugh sume
ktnd of stuff 10 my head Sometames I have been
know n lo run prematurely because I thought that
people were tired of my prl'sen..:e when they an fact
were not. And sometime!. I overnde due~ th~tl 1
should pick up , as, perhaps nol ansign1f1can t1y , 1 d1d

to the sa.me lady 1n que~tr un on a recent evenang .at .1
fnend's house Whatever deitY you l h oose to bch&lt;"w
1n wlll prnhably readily wnfrrm that I am nul
perfed (Sure is hard to w ork up a good ca~e of
nghteous andigna110n when yvu keep thtnk1ng up
e,.;amples of the hc:hava or yuu wash tu h1tch about "'
your o wn rep1toare ) I You sure du lake tu kttl.
people when they arc down, dnn'l you'1 Want '"
borr..&gt; w my ax and co mplete the JOb? I
there will be a temporary lnlermtssron wl\rlc
th~ fvrt.c~ of nghteous regroup and deal With a
certain r11mpsrt sclf-centerdness
Okay Folks, all out, end of the line Quano.lry
lane. la~t stop Well, that 's whal you get fur wotklll)(
I rungs ou t an your head and then lo rgetllng to I urn 11
orr nrt Wit Sorry to have hrought Y&lt;JU th•, far on thl.'
prcm1se that w~ were Jt:tually gmng somc whcre
Why rn the HELL does my head turu every s11uat1un
anlo a many stded o ne''
Well , whether I fu c.:k up
or not, the Issue as st1ll the
same Hu w much obligalmn
people hJvc to ca re for c alh
tH hcr , anti in what way s
n,cre turn nut to be so many
way, for people to ~hut eac.h
ot h er off 11 as amaz1ng that
a nythrng at aU ever gets
bySttnt
1 hrough I was ra1s~d to 1hrnk
o f food a~ a baSI&lt; snc1JI 1hang
If ~omebody c.:omes to ~ee you, you feed )hem I ~l'l
l'nnfused by people who don ' t do that And wht'n
folks arc ~lt.k you, app:w:ntly , lake ~an: nl till' Ill.
c~nd d on'l a~k thcm to lake c.:arc o f you . (Take~ "
wlulc hut I h.- uld head finally gch l u the hu\lt
pmhll'lll, don't 1!1) IH yuu tlon't hke 11 yuu ltJUid gu
lind :rnofhcr lerttfJed mdnaat 10 haunt II
Mos l people appear lo ha11e ~IIIHiar JfCJ' "'
hJ\\Ic~ U cy, lhr~ as 11nportan1 I&lt;• me and whl'll Y"ll
\1~1' tlll II II fouls me up. lype lh1ng&lt;&gt; And lhC\l'
thmv.' arc there lo he found out Without mud•
lrouhk
Pruple wtll tell you 111 c.:ra/)' wJy,
\OIIH'Itmc,, but they will lei you knnw whal lhcy
w.tnl II you w.1n1 lo hc:aJ .md/nr '\'e 11. Mml folio,,
dnn't \l't'lll lol want lhc tl.tl a, they don 1 km•w wh:rl
Ill dol woth of , lht·y arc t oo hu~y IJI.IIIg c.:a1e of IIH'II
"""" hcaJ, Wh rre1n lH'~ J grt'&lt;~l part of ~~~~
llllllll\llln
II "qullc tkal to me lh;ll lht'tt' Jrc rhrrll(~ thJI I
•JII dco lor 111~ , .1ntl tlrlll!l.' th,11 I ,,rnnol Othl'l
p~oplc arc 111-'ll'~'ary for my t:XI\1\'n,e It) h&lt;' v.:r-.
l'lllllYJhll' I'll lake.· cvrry '&gt;lllgle l.r~l hug I ldH gl'l
th.JII.._ vn u k1nJiy And while I OIJV 'lllllt!lrmt:s '"''"
IIIYWII 'hpp1ng lllln ll Ictal ptJ~IIIllll Jnd do1ng lh.rl
tur fll)''t'lf 11 JUSI dors nol t.lo thl' \JIIIe tlung lor 1m·
.11 Jll' A11d what I 'eem ttl have \Oil\c:how learncJ "
lh.tl lhc hest hug:, arc .mutual one.\, when huth
par(ll'\ Jrl' ltally Ufl for that sort of th1ng
Metaphors aside, ..:anng seem~ naosl mcamn~lul
whcu shared. And inhe rent in shanng and ~,;unng
\ec:m~. perhaps o nly to me, to be a need for Jn
awarcne!l.s of what the other party needs and what
they want . A realtonably heavy offshoot of thai
awareness 1f then the issue of whether or not you
wn meet those needs. but that gloomy stuff can
waJt. Peo ple are , as prev1ously argued herein .
cxtraordmarily senSitive lillie devils. However, w1th a
little affectron and much time and patience they ..:an
fre~uently be h o usebroken . Good lu ck . . ats st t.ll
the only game in town anyway. Pax.

The

grump

�Captain Beefbeart

Good dose ofrock n' roll
Was Rock ette Morton
really the bass player for the
Spike Jones Band? Who is
Spotlight Kid r~ally?
W at's a Trout Mask
_ plica? To find out these
questions to some answers
ramble on down to Clark
Gym Friday night at 9 p.m.
Appearing on stage will be
Captain Beefheart and his
Magic Band al ong with Little
Feat a fine country group
conta1nmg Roy Estrada a
former Mother.
Now, the Captain's music
is pure form rock n' roll , its
got that underlying beat that
rattles the souls of your feet
and sends your anatomical
rhythm sections flying . Be·
sides think of it you'll
actually be able to see Zoot
Horn Rollo the most extraordinary guitarist around, his
fingers do things that qualify

-l

him for a role in Tod
Browning's Freaks, coupled
with Artie Tripp (former
Mother). Drumbo, the
Winged Eel Fingerling, and
· the magic musette and harp
of the Spotlight Kid. The
Magic Band also contains one
of the most outrageous stage
acts ever to be seen, just by
standing there. But who
knows?
There's been a little
controversy over the Captain .
Some say that the new lp is a
sellout to what he resisted
for so long, that being his
eventual emergence as the
best white blues vocalist in
recording history ; others
think that the creation of
Trout Mask Replica was to
the Captain as Gone With the
Wind was to David 0.
Selznick . (How does one out·
do sheer genius?)

Anyway, the fact that the
Captain is coming-to Buffalo
is of no little consequence
because what Buffalo needs
is a good solid dose of Captain Beefheart to get it off its
dead ass and back onto the
shakin' street where it natur·
ally belongs.
So after your woman
brings you some white jam
and you blabber n' smoke
and realize that when it
blows it stacks and you'll
eventually end up with Alice
in Blunderland or become a
participant on the new game
show called, A neon Meate
Dream of a Octafish hence
getting rid of your Dachau
Blues while watching Big
Joan Set Up with Ella Guru
and laughing at yourself for
your Trout Mask Mistakes
you'll be there Friday night
with your rock n' roll boots

all a glitter and your dia·
mond ring a shinin' for to see
the Spotlight Kid is an
occasion worth waking up
for, besides to warm you up

will be Little Feat and to say
that they're a solid warm up
group is an understatement
as was the rest of this preview.

A weekend of mime theater

On Friday at Saturday, Feb. 18 and 19, the Office of Cultural Affairs is presenting
a weekend of mime theater. Mime is a traditional form, but it is a form that relies upon
constant revitalization and constant ingenuity. '
Two vital and ingenious troupes will be performing. The first, the Claude Kipnis
Mime Theater will be presenting their piece Men and Dreams. This performance will take
place at 8 :30 p.m., Feb. 18, in the Buffalo and Erie County Public Library Auditorium .
Student tickets cost $1 .00 at the Norton Hall Ticket Office. Free buses to and from the
library will leave Norton at 7 :45p.m .
The second troupe, Adrian Pecknold's Canadian Mime Theater will be performing
Shapes and Shadows at 8 :30p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 19 at the Wick Center, Rosary Hill
College. Student tickets are free but should be obtained in advance at the Norton Hall
Ticket Office.

�Ill I II I

lllllllllt 111111111
1

Jazz Track
A cold bleak mid-day, typical for Buffalo . This day , however,
off~ somethtng special. Plissing through the glass revolving door of the

Fairta)(, the thought entered my mtnd that I was meeting an artist, o ne
whose art projects and reflects the very essence of black creativity. It
was about 1 .30 when I entered the hotel room to find Mwandishi just
cra wling from the covers. His first comment was, ''I'm late?'' For us, it
was the afternoon. For him, it was the wee earl y morning hour In the
process of gettmg dressed, he listens to music recorded from the
previous night .
On our arrival to t he WBFO studro to record an 1nterv1ew, we were
met w1th a pair of headphones and the engineer s1gna1tng that we're
"On." We focused on three themes during the 1nterv1ew . his
fourth'(;oming album, black mus1c and its politics.
Mwandishi 's new album is still in the process state. It w1ll .nclude
all members of his present seKtet and is due to be released in the month
of April.
Their travels 1nclude a trip abroad to Europe th1s March In
discussing European apprec1at1on of thetr music as opposed to United
States, the dichotomy seems to eKISt 10 European sens1t1v1ty and
appreciation of senous muSIC Th1s country . 1n turn, seems to focus on
everything from top ten to Buddy R1ch (who supposedly represen ts
so called "jazz") , and refuses to accept and understand pure Amer1can
cultural muSIC
Htrfem Music Center
One of the many concerns of Mwandlshi IS the format1on of the
Harlem Music Ct~nter The theme of the center is, "Gateway To
Harlem." The center IS designed to serve as a v1tal c111tural facility m
which to learn and listen to old and new forms of music. Students and
accomplished musicians will engage m research, develop the1r skills and
present their works to appreciative audiences. The umque feature of
the Harlem Mus1c Center will be its functiOn as a home for black music
of the world. As a mus1c cooperative, the center will serve the needs of
various musical organizations and individual mus1cians. The Board of
Directors mclude Donald Byrd and Herbie Hancock as pres1dent . The
advisory board cons1sts of accomplished mus1c1ans, such as Miles Dav1s,
MaK Roach , Billy Taylor and D1z1y Gillespie
Upon the conclusiOn ot the 1nterv1ew. the quest1on was asked ,
"Who are your msp1rat1ons7" He posed , then replied , "Miles, McCoy
Tyner , Stravmsky and Bud Powell "
Later that evening we sat 10 on a few sets down at the Rev1lot Spot
and were satrsfied completely by, as he terms it , ''new music." He
performed tunes from the MwiVIdishi album and other vmtage h1ts such
as " Riot"' and "Speak L1ke A Ch1ld ·• He went on to take the audlen&lt;.e
our a bit further with new matenal such as "Water Torture" and "What
It Is " Mwand1$hl or Herb1e Hancock , dependmg upon the listeners'
awareness of the man and h1s mus1c, wtll contmue to play truth He
places a very h1gh prem1um on knowledge because 1n h•s knowledge IS
h1s strength and h1s strength IS grounded 1n h1s mus1c
Begmning Feb. 7, another artist of truth w1ll be on spotlight , down
at the Revtlot Fredd1e Hubbard See you there!
Cary £ Cass1s
The Women's Club
ot SUNY/AS
presents

Pete Seeger
SUNDAY, Feb. 13th
2·30 p.m .
at
Bennett Hrgh School
2875 Main St
~tudents $2.50

Tickets

at

Adult' $4

WI&lt;IW It THEATRE 11-IES PRESENTS

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12 -

8:00 PM

CARLY SIMON
&amp; MICKEY NEWBURY
THEATRE SERIES
674 M1in StrHt

856-4180

Orch.

00

Nonon, Buf. State,

Can1s1us, and Record Runnl!f

u .so. s•.so ''''· s..so, $J.so

•

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT NORTON TICKET OFFICE

Guitarist suprenw

The many and varied faces of Jose Feticiano wet"e
displayed In Kleinhans lan Saturday as the blind
virtuoso of the guitar entranced the audience with
his playing and singing.

Our Weekly Reader
If the cavalry
Gets in free,
A musketeer
Gets in freer

Cyrano De Bergerac, by Edmund Rostand,
Translated and adapted tor the Modern Stage by
Anthony Burgess, Knopf, $5.95.
Cyrano De Bergerac , until recently has had only
one Enghsh translation considered the best ava1lable
and the most au thori!Altive, this was Brian Hooker's
1923 volume (it prov1ded the basis for the
screenplay to the Jose Ferrer film). Anthony Burgess
(I hat 's rrght, another book m the burgeoning Burgess
bibltog) has produced a new translation of the
class1c, and he has done a superlative job.
Burgess has written h1s version 1n verse, like
Hooker and the ongmal author, Edmund Rostand,
but Burgess's verse revamps what has gone before.
H1s new translation is considerably differen t from 1ts
predecessors and Burgess has been extraordinanly
rngenius in coming h1s descriptions of Cyrano's
now legendary oversized nose - as you will see
Where Hooker's version 1s stnctly faithful to
Rostand - he doesn't cut a line of the five-act play
- Burgess, though not unfaithful, (" It must dip into
your cup./You need a nasal crane to hoist it up.")
shapes the work to three acts and creates
combustion from this compression . It is, however,
still a long play. three hours plus on the stilge, and
when Burgess' work was recently performed 1n
Minneapolis, ("What's that - a wnting desk?") more
tnmmmg was needed.
Burgess has also melded weaker c haracters In to
stronger ones, improved on Hooker's puns and
removed Ro xana from the scene with the guns. But
the best part is the new verse.
For me, (" I'd say it was a rock, a blutf a
cape./No, a pentnsula - how picturesque I") , and for
you generally. this book is bener than any stage
production that could come from 1t, because all the
beautiful technical mtncac1es of the verse would be
lost 1n oral presentation . Dramat1c verse almost
requtres h1dden and lost rhymes. thus, here, t he
delight 1s 1n the reading.
The origtnal Cyrano was wriuen in rhymed
Alexandnnes
twelve syllable French lines, but
don't worry about it Hooker translates it mto blank
verse - lilo.e Shakespeare that doesn't rhyme·
tradit1onal English stage verse Now Burgess ha~
returned to rhy~e ("Ah, Triton nsing from the
waters./Honking his wreathed conch at Neptune's
da.ughters"), but has produced a rollicking, speedy
mtx of verse forms - sprung rhythmed heroic
couple t~. rhymed and unrhymed Alexandrines blank
verse with free rhyme - all of which means it ~unds
neat .
Not all o f this would be swallowed in
produc tion, for Burgess is right when he says in his
introduction that rhyme "can bnng out wit where
our prose·attuned ears may fail to catch 1t." (" It will
drag you in the mire/ Head first, the weight that's
concentrated there."), and we are treated to fun
stuff like .
Musketeer (in a silly mock&lt;onfidmg cone)

or
Gentlemen, a nose that makes one feel
Like squealing. "0 God, no. tt can't be real,
It mU$t bfl dtJtachable - tS, I 'm prt!pared to
bet. ..
But Cyrano's never been known to detach it yet

The cleverest verse rs spin up between
characters, wh1le Burgess keeps the rhymes and
rhythms mtact. This IS a splendid effect, on the page,
("QUite a useful gadget, that./You hold it h1gh and
then hang up your hat,") but I fear 1t would be lost
in the natural autonomy of ind1v1dual characters on
the stage For example, m the openmg scene
Chnstian IAllks about h1s new love with his fr1enrt ,
Ltgn1ere, while in a crowd a t the theater .
Christian: - It 's mad. You'/llcnow her Food$181/er: Oranges. Lemonade.
Christian · - You know everyone
F oodseller: MIICJJroons.
Christian: I'm so afraid .. .

Th1s kmd of effect is also attempted 1n strange
stage directions like . " The audience boos and hisses
for three beats of a line" but the total effect is only
felt fully when read
Despite all this nr t ·pickery, Burgess' translat1un
1s t he most dramatically v1able Cyrano ever, much
more so than Hooker's long, Shakespearian vers1on
("How much to view the monument?") I suppose a
lesser poet than Mr Burgess would have let his verse
st1ck 1ts nose more obviOusly and obnoxiously mto
the play
Two !mal notes on the play 1tself, for those
readers as yet unexposed to Cyrano .
First be forewarned that the cttaracter of
MonsieUI de Bergerac leaps, almost alarmingly and
immediately, if not sooner to hte, upon h1s entrance
to the action. The o ld device of making us anticipate
a charac ter through the dialogue before h is entrance
gets a large and most successful wo rk-out in th1s
play . Usually when Billy the Kid or Black Bart
finally gets to town, we wonder what all the
excitement was about. Not here. This is Cyrano's
launch ing pad . His stage presence is phenomenal.
Also, do n't anticipate those wedding bells ("Are
you fond of b irds? How sweet-/A Gothic perch to
rest their tiny feet .") t hat seem to be ind icated by
the beginning of the play. The ending is serious and
moving despite, and partially because of, the light
openmg. The reason is that the batt le scene acts as a
kind of airlock for the change in element.
" Put that in a lottery/For noses, and it's bound
ro win first prize. "
-James Paul

�'ROund things are . . . boring'
by Terry Bro mberg
The time is long overdue for someone to make a
definitive statement about o ne of the finest, yet fo r the
past three years totally ignored, bands ever to step up on a
stage. You'll see. when t he Institute for Rock &amp; Roll
Studies is established, there as gonna be a whole room
devoted to them. Because in my mind, once you get past
the obvious rock and roll immonals (Chuck Berry, Little
Richard, etc.• and their offspring like the Stones and
Beatles}. there are very few . if any, bands of greater
musical prommence
I mean, they certaanly aren't the kings of rock and
roll, but surely they are at least crown prices And I'm also
sure t hat you all (especaally if you're from New York City)
had thas same affection for them at one ume. But you let
It slip away wat h you r childhood, probably to the point of
no t even knowing whether they exast any Ionge•
Well, let me tell you, although they have gone
through great personnel and d1recuonal dlanges, the
Rascals are alive and doing f1ne and stall makmg great
rnusac. "Does he mean the Young Rascals? T11is guy musr
be crszyl" Well, while everyone was busy discovermg the
Grateful Dead , Felix and company were QUietly churning
out consistently tine albums, although 1n a totally
dafferent genre from thear earl1er classacs Lets talk about
rhose early class1cs

"Do You Fee/It,
You Know I Do "

The Rascals (they were Young then) burst upon the
scene 1n 1965 with " I Aan't Gonna Eat Out My Heart
Anymore " Although Eddie Bngata sang lead on 1t, it was
organist Felix Cavaliere who did most of the vocals on
their f1rst and ensuing albums. Even then. It was pretty
obvaous that he was the guiding force an the group.
That first album was a gem I'm sure af you look
hard enough vou can find a copy of 1t, probably up m
some closet, right alongside your Monkees records . Well
take it out, dust it off and listen to the energy that jumps
off the record. Felix possesses one of the finest rock and
roll voices ever and it you want ev1dence 1ust listen to him
waal on tunes lake "Slow Down, Do You Feel It, Mustang
Sally, Midn1ght Hour" and the one that propelled them to
stardom, "Good Lov1n' " You 'll remember exactly what I
mean
The only problem w1 th the album 11 the two cuts
&lt;.lone by Eddie besides the aforementioned "Eat Out My
Heart. " Eddie seemed to have a penchant for
sentimentality, which is fine except 1t was usually
overdone On the first a lbum, this was especially true of "I
Believe," and on following albums there were "More, Since
I Fell For You, How Can I Be Sure," and " Raany Day "
But dlthough Eddie tended to get kand of mushy, he was
always s1nging about optimistic thangs, and opt tmasm has
been the greatest theme in Rascal musac all along, eather tn
rhe musac atself or an what they wea e sangmg
Collect1ons, theu second album, tollowed an the
mold of their farst outing Basacally, ats pure rork and aoil,
filled with the sp1nt that 11 ue 1 ock and roll as supposed to
have fhmk back to the drive with WhiCh they dtc1 "Come
On Up, Too Many Fish In The Sea," and "What Is The
Reason " They were even able to pull off a Smokey
Rob1nson tune, "Mickey's Monkey," 1ust ltke they were
&lt;lhle to successfully do "Lake A Rollmg Stone" on rhe first
album But the two highlights of the album are "Lonely
Too long" and " love Is A Beautiful Thmg "On the lust.
Felix sangs with the utmost of JOY, somethang really
lack111g an most of today's rock stars And the second IU"'t

un!v ers ity
un1 o n
a c tiv it ies
board

embod ies t he who le feeling that always radiates from t he
Rascals.
They had reached their peak, popularity-wise, by t he
time of their third a lbum, Groovin , The title cut, t heir
fifth o r sixth successive smash h it, remained number o ne
on WA BC an New Yo rk fo r about seven weeks straight . But
on this reco rd. you can begin to see changes in t he ir
musical d arect1on .
On their first two LP's, the mstrumeotataon Is very
basac (although I always got off on Dino Danelli's
drumming, even though some people felt all he could do
was twarl his sticks) . But on this third one, t he Rascals
began to branch out There is a flute solo on "It's Love"
and orchestral arrangements on three other songs And the
whole mood of the music began to change. The o nly real
rave up rocker on Groovlnn ' is "You Better Run," with
everythmg else being more set back . Thts album also
contains my all time favorite Rascal number , " A Girl l ike
You ·•

'There 's Much To Be Sa1d,
But It's All In Your Head "

In 1968, thear fourth album Once Upon A Dream
was released . They were being influenced ar thas time, as
were many others, by the upsurgence 1n lndaan musac and
philosophy . As a result. the pu1e rock and rdll was gone,
and much mellower music occurred On one cut, "Sattva,"
Felix even plays sitar, Dino plays Tabla and Eddy plays
tamboura . But although the sound was changmg the
quality of the music didn't suffer. "Easy Rollin" and "It's
Wonderful" exude as much spirit and class as Felix ever
put fonh It was just coming under a dafferent guise
In June of 1968, I saw the Rascals and at was one of
the most memorable shows I've ever seen After the deaths
of Manin Luther Kang and Roben Kennedy, AtlantiC
Records held a "Soul Together" an Madason Square
Garden, and all Atlantic artasts played Kmg Curtis, Joe
Tex . Sam and Dave, Aretha Franklin . and the Rascals.
That's pretty stiff competition tor four wh ale boys from
New Jersey. especially sance the audience was
predominantly black . But next to Aretha's ''Respect," the
Rascals " People Got T o Be Free" receaved the greatest
emot1onal response. and had to have been the highlight of
that incredibly musical evenmg
Thear next album, See , as probably their greatest
trans1t1onal album. It's a total synthesas ot the old Rascals
and new Rascals For example, the tatle tune as musically
straight out of the old stuff , very alive and vabrant But the
lyrics ate speaking of more cosmic things and be1ng at
peace Wtth one's self "My mother " the unaverse mv
father IS the sky " T h1s is the domanatang feel of their last
thaee albums. Also high lighting See are "People Got To Be
Free" and "Carry Me Back ," two of the solidest of all
Rascal tunes

"The Flame Of Life Bums On
It's Never Never Lost·
Search and Nearness . tht:ar last Atlantac album, a!&gt;
Important 1n many respects Farstly. thas as. the last album
that bJd1e and gu1tarist Gene Cornash play on before thetr
departurf' front the group And secondly, Felix seems to
have really achieved a sparatual resonance w1than hamself
and the whole album reflects at In "Ready For Love," he
sangs. "I m a httle btl older now, little bat waser now, when
the wand calls, I'll be ready, ready for love" And m
"Thank You Baby," Felix says, " I have heard at saad. that
love IS so good, that two hearts were one but I never
1anderstood, thPn I saw you my whole hte has changed ,
you are my saster. my lover. my fr at!nd " At thas poant,

rtfl· llliA U MUSil COMMllll:l·
(lfl'\('f/(\

Ill L(l/1&lt; (It

Captain Beefheart
and His Magic Band
plu:,

Little Feat
SUN Y/AS

CLARK GYM

FRIDAY . FEBRUARY II th . ONI:. SHOW at 9 00 p .m
TICK ETS

NORTON HALL T I CKET OffiCE
Nrm-.\·rudcnls $ { 50

Sltui&lt;•nt::, &amp; A fumni '&lt;.?50
"'--~----------~-"f

•f\ OIVI\Ivn of Sub

,..

Uud&lt;l.ll

Felax's mus1c has become lUSt as personal as Joh n
Lennon's. but rts much more enJOyable to listen to
someone who has achaeved somethmg anstead of someone
who IS lost and searchmg
About all I can say about the11 first Columbaa
release, Peaceful World is that ats a masterpaece. To replace
Gene, Felrx got Buzzy Feiten, late of the Butterfield Band .
That as like replacing Howard Kom1ves with Earl Monroe.
Buzzy is one killer guitarist and he fits perfectly, along
with the complete horn section Felix assembled for t he
a lbum ,
The Jazzier rhythms t hat Felix experimented with on
the three prevaous albums reach fu ll maturity here, and
once he starts sanging, you get that old Rascal feel back.
It's the perfect meetang of two worlds I t's a joy to listen
to and if we ever reach a peaceful world, you can be sure
thiS album will be the background musac.
Peact~ful World led me to my most recent live Rascal
experience, last October at Kleinham Playing befo re a
three-quarter em pty aud itorium dtdn't bother them any
and the band (Fe lix, Dino, Buzzy, a bass p layer, and two
girl sangers) really let loose. Felix turned back the hands o f
tame and treated us to "Groovin', Mustang Sally, Carry Me
Back" and "People Go t To Be Free,'' along with much of
the1r newer matenal.
Felix never let his mus1cal stardom alter his
perspective on life and he describes the band and hamself
perfectly m ''R1ght On." off the StMrch And NNrness
album "People keep staran ', they actan lake they crazy, but
I was born wath some pnde, so I let rt all slide." That is the
wholtJ th1ng nght there Prade and mtegrrty are vtrtues
sorely lackmg 1n many of 1972's bands, but they are two
qualataes Felax never lost sight of
So put down whatever you've been lastenang to
lately, and let the Rascals introduce, or reintroduce,
themselves to you . They rust don't make bands like t hem
any more There is no t hing more for me to say. except
that if you can't get mto them . then you must have, in the
words of a famous New York D J " A ho le 1n vour soul "
Editor ·s note Mr Bromberg IS currently treasurer of
lnstttute for Roc!&lt; and Roll Stud1es

the

university
ur1ion
a c tiv iti es
boa rd
iJ looking for q ualified people an the followmg areas :

ART
COFFEEHOUSE
DANC E
MUS IC
DRAMAT IC ARTS
LIT ERAR Y ARTS
FI LM
PUBLICITY
SOUND
We have position openings for next $18mBSter
ApplicatiOns are now being taken in 261 Norton
UUA B.

,

�~Trial of Catonsville Nine'

Historical play tries and dies
Spectrum Drama Critic

"acting text" ~ prepared for this (and all ?)
productions not by Daniel Berrigan but by Saul
Levitt.

Studio Arena Theater, Februar y 1972, is a
radical theater, and its steps to the left, no matter
how faltering, deserve encouragement (although God
knows there's plenty ot space to the left of I
Reml!mber Mama) .
Their production of The Trial of the Catonsvi lle
Nine, although it falters, doesn't stumble. The point
is, it's alive a nd walking. Daniel Berrigan's play
(actually, his excerpts and arrangements of sections
from the t ranscript of his trial) is not the boring
recitation that its title might lead you to suspect it
of being. Catonsville Nine is part of the emerging
tradition of "documentary" literature - the theater
of re·enacted fact . poetical history

Humility vs. stardom
The acting text focuses the play sharply on
Daniel Berrigan - he stage manages, narrates,
intrudes. When on trial, he did not make himself a
star, and centering the play upon him is a decision
clearly out of tune with his humility and modesty .
We see the play as Berigan's dream vision, his
memory ; events occur out of sequence and are
sometimes expressionistically exagerrated.
We completely lose the litany and the ritual of
the court·room which the original text captures and
develops. Berrigan's play could make the audience

by Elliot Krieger

Anticipation

Carly Simon will perform at
Kleinhans Music Hall this Sunday
night at 8 p .m . Miss Simon
entered the music business in the
earty 60's as one ha lf of the folk
singing Simon sisters.

THE UUAB FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTE E*
PRESENTS
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12th

.

~aUens LO~

JN){ ROLLINS

CHARLESHXJff[
-

-,

.,

"bananastf'-&gt;

GJo

COlO~ by!A!luxe·

Un1ted Art1sts

FRIDAY AND SUNDAY
(che~.-~

'how

cdo;e

Radical innocence
It is start ling, moreover, how close history can
come to being theater It seems that. the actual trial
must have had not defendants, but a cast . The
Catonsville Nine was not just a group of radicals who
happened to be in Baltimore and to decide
collectively to destroy draft files . Each member of
this group o f devout Catholics had an exceptional
background - either highly educated or widely
expenenced . Most had been worker·prtests in
France. or Amertcan or Catholtc representatives in
Africa and Latin America. They had seen revo lutions
quashed, land stolen, secret police secretly armed.
They knew the face of American imperialism, a nd
thus appealed to their judge and jury with t he voice
of reason and experience .
Well . they are more expenenceu now . Their
attempt to modify government through the use of
the government was naive. When we watch
Catonsv!ll'e Nine we are not only Ieat ning about the
education of nme rad tcal Americans. but are also
watching them in a moment of great collective
failure . The play IS not a contemporary . but an
historical document, and we can clearly discern in it
a peculiar sense of mnocence lost . We are
simultaneously aware of how much we've learned in
four years, and of ho w little we've done.

lor time)

Movement theater?
Dante! Berrigan is well aware of htstory's
changtng perspec tive on the tr tal. In hrs brilliant
tntroductron to the published version of his
documentary play, he speaks of the futility of their
ap·peal to the judic1al branch of government as an
mtervemng medtum between the War President and
the people, the powers that be and the powers that
ought to be . "The Courts
are turning to stone
The functions of power ate fu~1r1g," he writes .
Havmy seen that thtm act10ns produced nothmg
through use o f the judlt.tal system, he apparently
decided to red irect these act10ns at the central
nervous system of Amenca, transportmg the whole
st1 ucture
judge tncluded
onto the stage and
usmg drama as a medtum between self and problem
But can a play stop a war any more than a lltttl
can 7 This play can certainly move you. but proiJahly
not to ac t1on. The fault lies not in the play lt~l'lf, but
in the strange bastard tzed versiOtl of the pldy
rhP

un!versity
un1on
activities
board

Noone •
can restst
our chicken wings.
They're the Woodshed's newest taste sensation,
mild, medium or hot. Swi rl'em arou nd in tangy
I, Ita• cheese sauce. a nd finish the experie nce with
crispy celery s t icks. Non-stop pea nuts are on
the house, a n d spirits are 50 &lt;" after 3 P . M. The
Woodshed ... whe re the kitchen 's always open
and the mus ic's always on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North Tonawanda, just over
the Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann. The Woodshed's
open from 11 : 30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

-rttE WllD~Stt£~

feel like impotent judges and jurors of history ;
Levitt's re·write has us as an audience to a merely
ordinary, if highly literate, drama.
Perhaps, then, It is not fair to critic1ze Jake
Dengel's performance as Dan iet Berrigan . He tS a
prancing pixie, who gives us barely a glimmer of the
playwrtght 's intelligence and sens1t1vity But hts role
tS embarrassing - a star vehicle. no doubt, but tr~te
neither to history nor character.
Otherwise. Studio Arena 's productton IS more
than adequate. Robert Tolan 's direction IS relaxed
and intelligent. He and his rather good ensemble cast
achieve a fine ambiance with this stattc. almost
nar ro.~tive, drama
Michael Miller and Tom
Mard1rosian should be si ngled out for the quality of
thetr performances (although the latter's hair is too
long tor a prisoner's)
The Trial of the Catonsville Nine 1s a play worth
1eddtng and worth producing . My questton tS stmple
why nor ~.&gt;roduce '' the way it was wntten?

The UUAB Music Commi~ee
And Buffa lo Festival
In Concert

Present

THE KINKS
FAIRPORT CONVENTION
LINDISFARNE
March 1 at Kleinhans
Tickets

$5.50, $4.50, $4.00

limited student discount t i.ckets-$1. off regular prices ; on sale Saturday,
February 12. One stud.ent discount ticket per validated I D card, limit 2 10
cards per person. Opt1on ?f purch~sing as many tickets at regular price
ajoining discount seats. D1scount ttckets on sale only at Norton Ticket
Office.

�Professor is mistaken
To

Editor

Monday night, Dr. ti.L. Segal , professor of
Bao lo gy, interru pted nutritionist Adelle Davis'
lecture in the fillm o re Room I believe Dr. Seal o wes
Miss Davis and h er audien ce a public apology . H is
remarks were b oth rud e and unscie ntific. H is
statement t hat : "fift y per ce nt o f what was said is
enco rrect , and that is about the average a n~onkey
would mak e d oi ng a true an d fa lse test ..." was a
crude and uncalled-for temark for a man of D r.
Segal's profess1onal positio n .
In criticizing Miss Oavas' remarks, he asked the
aud ience to " take a critical atti t ude and look for
SCientific mformataon .. Certamly an excellent
suggestio n
H e emphasa7ec.l that · " There were
numerous errors made." Perh aps. but let's examme
with a ''c nt ical attitude '' what those errors were
as
pomtcd ou t by Prof. Segal.
Adelle Davis stat ed that vegetanans should
supplement their dtet wath vitamin B 12 since at is
not available from vegetable ~ources. Dr. Segal Cit ed
thts as o n e of t h e " numerous errors" staling . " There
has never been a def1c aen cy of B I 2 demonstrated an
.1 human , except af he has pernacaous anemia" One
hal&gt; o nl y to look anto any freshman text o n nutntlon
to rmd 1hat at 1s Segal who I'&gt; m ~rror and not Dava)
For t:xample , the S&lt;·opt• Marr11al on Nutrrltl)n
l co mpaled by the Department of Nut rit ion, School
nt P ubhl H eo.~lth , lia rvarll lln•ve rs1ty), wh1 ch IS
d1stnbuted to most medala l Jntl dental st udent s,
sta t el&gt; .
"('yanocobalanun I v1taman 131 2) '' obtained in
hu lli.J n d•ets frnm foodl&gt; ol antmal ong111,
pdrta~ ularl y lllt'Jt 1hver J nd k 1Jney are very n ch) and

Vets for amnesty
To

th~

As V1etnam W:u erJ vet~r .ln\ we w1 sh tn dearly
~tat~ o ur posll1on on th~ QUI!SIIorl of "am ne\1)1 " 1t1r
draft res1sters and nuhtar)l tJ~serte~ . We: say that I he
wo men and men wh o hav~ rc~1sted th~ .Jtt~mpts elf
lhc U.S . government In lt\C thl'lll agaenst the
l ndm: henese people sho uld not be penah.rcd for the11
.h.. teons . They
did no th1ng wrong
fhcy have
Hlflllllltled no c nme !h ey o.~r~. 1n rall, en theu
present positiOns becau~c the y have rt:fu,ed h•
ro mmit c nmes.
Those who have Iell th~ HlUIIlr y u1 g~111c
"undereround " t o avoid the draft those wh o wen~
~ent to pnson for refuSJng mduct1 o n , and those wh o
have dcsertcc1 the mUiury have only acted o n
lO nVICti Ons tbat w e, through bitter expenence have
ln unli to be correct: that the war 111 Indochin a d&lt;)CS
11nt .1nd never has benefitted the VJq OlaJtmly ol the
Arn~n n1 n Jnd tnd oc hmese pcopll'. that the o nly
1•cn plc this war has benef1tt'd arc the s mall gro up 111
rnen wht\ run the busmess and governments o t lh"
"'unlry and tht' U S hJ1 \..eel n11ht.uy dlllattH\hlp'
111 Soulllt:a't As1a
We Jre o pp11\ed tu .lily lo.uHI ol ··.1mnnty'
JHe'llll'-Jl lh II llldUdC\ JOY \1111 Ill .eltt:rlldlt' 't'fVIo..C
pruvt~lon h}' wh1ch drall r&lt;'w.ter, wnulc.l be lor... ed 111
worlo. Jl low pJ yt ng J•)hs lilt t w n or thr.-... ye.H'&gt; W ~
heh\'VI.' that 11 1~ m• .m n&lt;~d e!me tltJI the \lf\&gt;ngc\1
bal lo. cr of \UC.:h ... 'ulutum . Scn.Jinr l .llt o t Ol11u 1 ~ o l
thl.' ~.eme 'I Jlt famil y thJI t'Wil\ W (jl{ I h i.' pulley o l
th.Jt q,t(lnll dunng the r.c~ ··nt NAIH~ I sin ~ &lt;- &lt;~ I
1111I&gt;Oitlll!; \\.10 lahor anu ,dll.'lll('ltlllg Ill " IIJ~h lhc
IIOI&lt;lll ~h llW' the .Jtlitii.JI' lh,tl f Jll JlhJ hi\ k10tJ hJV\'
(IIWJi d ~ wurkeng pcPpll.' Sc•n I Jll·, PIU J"".!I lllo.c
Nnnn\ Wage Pn•e h cc.rc I' lll\1 Jlh&gt;lh&lt;·r wav .,f
lor, 111g tit'• p k tu work lot '''"' wJI\~'' "hilt' 11th1.'1
" t.tt , .. ,, .. 1e·.•p'" the I&gt;~"''"
I

/J I , /1

Suggestions wanted
r Cl thl' Ed il o r ·
10

d~llt!IOp an~ m10."

Prof Segal's o ther specific criti cis m o f Mk&lt;l
Davas was in response to h er clai m that natural
111tanun D (from animal so urces such as fish liver oil)
1s des1gnated 0 3 and that the syntfieh c form (D2) is
more toxic t h an 0 3 ." I'd !Jk e to re fer him o nce again
to the Scope manuaL
" The co mmonly used sy nthe ti C variety, D 2, ts
structu rally d ifferent from D3 in having an
unsaturated side-ch ain. It is prepared by irradiation
of ergosterol, a vegetable sterol present in ergo t and
yeasts D 2 varies m 1ts anllrachltac (anti•rick ets )
potency an vanous spec1es, and as rat her more toxic
t han the naturally occ unng anamal v1taman."
Dr Segal said 11 would h ave been "mesponsible
of me not t o reply" to M•ss Duvts' remarks, b ut tt is
dear from the above that 11 would have been less
1rrcspons1ble of lu m to keep qutet
It IS admirable that Dr. Segal as so concerned
about studen ts " looking for scie ntific tnformation,"
but the guod rrofc~bor ~ ho uld do hi~ own h omework
befure attempteng to l nllC17t: o th ers
Jami!J 1.

Redding

International month

th~ Edito r .

I .101

dairy products. Negligible quantities a re present in
foods of vegetable ongi.n. Herbivores obtain their
cy nocobalamin from bact erial synthesis in the
rumen , but in man , intestinal microbial synthesis
provid es very little of this vitamiJa.
" Perso ns who live exel usively o n vegetable
prod u cts and who do not even eat d airy product s
and eggs are called vegans or "strict" vegetarians .
Vegans are likely to develop m ost of the signs of
pernicious anemia including gloss it is (inflammation
of t h e tongue) an d evidence of Involve m ent of the
long tracts of the spi nal co rd but d o not wually

worlo.10g 1n ( tiii):H'"II'·"' Kn\l'ttlh ..ll',

e~ll1u' und~·• the dli~PI~I.'' nl rh&lt;' Sl ~'I \\&gt;."hutglon
Semc,tcr l'fiii(I.JIIl I would tH h.Jfl[l'r 111 rc:~CIH'
'll!(li.C~ Ie ou' trn111 the S I IN\' AH • orn!llllllll' for
lcgi,)Jtteln that we 1111ght mtwc.lth &lt;' Of nuerw I ~.111
war ... cly pmnme that the 1d~.e' th.tl I re ... c 1v.: wtll he
cnJdCd , hut II llllghl ne lllltr~steng to hc.H an y
~uh~tantuJI pwpno;al~ th at pc·oplc lll.IY hav1.· Thank'
l11r yo ur 1nop~nt11111
[luh Ft•IJ IIIUII
e·/o ( '1111/( /Jc•ntulll/fl Rost•nthul
Ra 1•burn ButldmK
R oom 2.f 5 1
W.nhlfl)llon DC 20515

7o th1 l:tl/lm

I ct&gt;ruary 4 thro ugh March 12 Annlhrr r hange that
bce!n made 10 thes regard IS the hnl dmg of the
l nternJllonal F estival 10 Clark lt)&lt;lll tn orcter that
111any 111on: pc:ople w1ll have the daam:e tu attend
than an lh c pa~t (400 comphment.1ry l~t:kets are
hcing sent t o department &lt;.h aumcn, ,administra tors ,
.1nd ~tud ent lt!aders, 100 llt:ket'&gt; a1e In he sold to the
general pubh&lt;., and 500 tickels w11l b~: ava.Jla ble for
purchase by UB ~tuJen t \) In add1t1on m the past
n nl y about SJOOO was ~pent o n I h~: I nternalional-Wt:el a•llvt hes, but thts year more than S7000 is
be1ng put anto lnternauonal Mo nth In an effort to
malce 11 poss1ble for a large numher o f stud ents to
attend both In t ernational Fesuval Naght and lhe
I nternat1onal Feast . an admiSSion fee o f only S 1.00
hJ~ been .~et , whicll wdl odmrl them to both events.
Tu:kcts for fa culty MHl staff wtll be availa ble at
~2 00 ca c.: h , arid tho'c lor general publk will b e
$3 00. I t 1s th e hope 1lf aJI who are part1ctpating in
the program that you will allend and wtll lea rn
\Uillt' tlung that w1ll he o l 111tere~t In you, and
perhaps 11\Jt you wtll &lt;O lli e tu tlunlo. m ore Jbout the
, h.1nu• for ~u ltu r JI a·'&lt;~h.mg~ th.tl t''&lt;l\1!. .tl lhls
untver-• t y
I n o~Jdlllnfl tu the l ntl'fiiJIInll.JI 1-c.ISt and
lnt ~rnatiiiii .JI I c:.uv ..el
•1t111 wht, h w1ll tJio.e piJc~ o n
MJt \ II I I .Jrld wall IH' the 1\Jghlighl of the program,
\IIIII&lt;' ol I h e ut h er prC\COIJtiVIl' \ l ht&gt;dult:c.J to take
pl;~&lt;e Jrc an " wternJIIIHIUI " or foreq~n lilm every
I· n d ay l'Vl'lllng clunr1g till' " Month." tn 01clent1o rf
147 , JllJ lht' annua l exh1btllllll of 1n1e1n;•tional l!rls
.wd dJit'&gt; e)n lht.' ~e,on J IIPnJ c1 t Nortnn l l nwn
(I
u.u )' I 5 tllwugh ~·J 1
1 h ~ vanou' lme~gn 't u.J cn t duh' 11l the
l lllv1·rstl}' h.1 ve .-nga~ec.l "'lilt' r~no wn,•d \pea kers to
Vl\ll the lJIIIpUs Jl d1ll o:reut lillie., tht&lt;•ughuul the
Mnn lh , Jnc.l c.Jdl duh hJ' ahu JrtJ!lgr&lt;.l tc&gt; hav.- a
d \'llllln,tr.lll&lt;ln &lt;&gt;f lllll' ol lh nJ II IIO·, .Il ls un a
'J'edlh c.IJil' uunng I he \1onth
I .:1 llle fi:IIIII\J \&lt;!Ill Ill dU\IIl ~ th..al IIH' ['Uipo!.t'
e~l the• l n lnu;IIII&gt; IIJI Mnnth pro~~or.1111 1\ 11&lt;&gt;! It&gt; make d
prnltl , hu t 111 .cll ord J tJT\' nppcHitlnll) lur h)re1gn
Jnd AIIH'IIl.JII 'tucle•nh , l.llull)l, \IJII Jlld the
1(&lt;'111'1.11 puhlll Ill ~d (Cl!(l'lher Ill lhc L&lt;lllll"&lt;l nr U
u11turJI t·~dtJII II,&lt;' In l'lln I 11 w1tl h~ .a de:smc.: to
lour tlll'YinrlcJ l11r &lt;. IIIII
hil~

A'" generally ttul.' on L JIIIPUM~' thrnughnut the
l ln1t c:u St;etc~. furea~tn students o n the l·ampu~ u l the
SUNY at Buffalo tt•nd '" a:.uiJte thL"mselws 1 here
arc m o re than I SOO lure1~n students ,,n the t'31ll('lll\,
lor dll parts of the wnrld . fhas fa r l ought tu pHlVIde
Jo opportunely lor the fnrc11~n vtsl t ors and AmenLan
~ tuc.lenls t o enj\&gt;Y cdUldllun and sonal hfc togeth~r
but 111 realtty th1s IS no t 4UIIt' what happens
A large part of the proble m as , a~ 1111ghl he
c'peded, that the t u,l o m &lt;; and phtloso phee' ut the
foretgn and Amen can studen t ~ d1ffcr ll o w evrr, o.~her
t h ey have been here awh1le , th e maJonty of tore1gn
) 1 u dents be.:ome qutte well a\:quaintec.l w1t h
Amen ca n l'us t om~ Yet they uwGtly 1 ontmue to
1\(II.Jit' themselves
The tault i1. nn l en tudy thai of th e forctgn
stuc.lenh, for it i~ .1ho up to Amcr11.·an stucl cnt~ In tr y
to ,·ommun e ~ at \' !lltHI' Wilh lh &lt;•H lore1gn das,mJte'
.1nd tel get along w111l thl'lll \\IU,tlly , fo r 111s1anu· , hy
111Jio.1ng mnre o f an cllt•r l to we that they .Ill'
111duJetJ Ill , Ill Jl lcJ \1 lnVIIl•d Ill p.trlldJ'·Ill' Ill
~JIII pU ~ JdiVllll'\ and fll ll{tl·Hih
&lt;\llnf lht .thovc h •" to IH' Jl&lt;Oillpli'h'·J w1th J
ltut hl'l fall tn uunJ llw IIIJIIIfll} o f lort'l~n
,tud,•nt- have hcJ vy prngr "'"' of ' l uJ y J 110 ln1 1111,
reJ\I&gt;rl rheu fn• c t1111e" u'uJII~ 41111 1' hm1 1... d Bul 11
&lt;'Jdl o ne LU llld c.lt·vo te a \IH.all .1111ount c&gt;l lillie' 111 111'1
"'w ln tly IIIIJll&gt;danl JlliVI I}' . 11111l'l1 w r&gt;u ld tw
J,l,llllpli'IWJ an brea k111~ &lt;luwn the h.trncr ~ thai
l''(hl h&lt;·tw n·n IPtCI!(fl .Jnd \llll'lll.ttl '111de•nts wtlh
CJd l \I.J~· 111111gltng \IIIISf,lfltl y With e111h llil'll 11\Yil
homoogrnc&lt;Hl\ group
h11 eegn \ludenh sh1ntltl tl.'.tllll' thJt lhe'rt' IS .111
coppn1111ntl} IO ~.till 111 111 h 111&lt;111 lh,en .til .r~.Hklllh
cdth.tteun 1n ,ud• J IJ rge 11111\1\'1\IIV ·" lh" wh1d1
thq h.tVl' trav,•lktl '" l.u Ill Jlll'llc.l llll'rt' Is the
1 h.I0\1 lpr ")LI.II ,111\1 1 IIIIIH, el I '(.Jl.llll!l' f1l'll' 111.11 1\
,t\ 111111h .1 O.. lt:\\,II Y lll!(rnfii'J\1 hH SU\\1'" Ill lilt•
lltcodt• rn wntltl ,1\ gomd !(t.llll'\
W1th what I have pl'il ,,11u 111 111111c.l 11 IIJ ' w e'lll&lt;'d
In 1111' th.11 th&lt;· " l ntc.:rnJII&lt;IIl,al Wed. · ol Ill&lt;' p;e,l h ."
bn·n Jlt ' "" ,hc\1 1 a p~· r 11•c.l n l 111111' lr• dt•vnt•· In
ltl!t:lna llc&gt;IIJI J• IIY III I'\ 1111 ,1 lJIIIJilh Wtlh ,,, III. III Y
h•t&lt;' IIP' 'ludt'lll' ll olll ,,, 111.111}' dlfh·lul1 I.IIIU \ J\ th1'
c&gt;lle· I h••rcloll' thl\ yeo.~ I " lnt~rnJII•HI.II Wn·k ' ""'
hn·n ,., pandcd d!IJ h.t' l&gt;t·en dt'~I!(II.JI&lt;'tl
lnll.'lnatlon.ll Month ." '""'llnl! tilt• fl&lt;:rlnJ tr11111

l'l••

/'r'll'f A. ''"~·

( 11111,/1110 /llf

/llt•·"l&lt;lll•llinl StuJ,•nt l //Uifj
'i//1./t

II(

t \\llc·/tl(/tJ/1

Administrative interference
.1111.1 .!limn that th•· 'lutlt'!lh .. t ttH, •H .1ny orher
l&lt;IIIVt'(\IIY woulc.lltl\1.· II&gt; eiiJIIY

T" tlrt! 1-.tllfm

In H'l'cnt wee k, , I have. 1eac.l many Mt•LI~, 111
bo th The Rt•portt'f .Jnc.l f/lt' Spet trum &lt;.o n .:crntn!(
.:o mplantts hy Unl\er\lty la Lu lty \~r tnll'rferent·c hy
the Kettt:r .adrn1mstrat•o n m Departmental matter~
fht:r~ seems to be much resentment
to the
admanastrat 10n's mtrudmg tnl o affa11s that .:ould h~
handled mu..:h more efflt:len tly by the fa c ulty dnd
departmental executaves mvolved In additaon to
this , Pres1dent Ketter wants to greatly influenc.:e h o w
the student body uses the huge amount of funds 11
produces by ~xercisang co ntrol o ver student fees.
This 1S a great' hindran ce to the freedom of cho ice

It I&gt; ev1den1 1hat Prc\ldcnt KC'tln 1s l1}'1!1g to
pul th1~ Un1ver1.ity n n thl' rn Jd tu t·c nlrah.raiiOn o f
J•·adcnuc.: ant! stud en t Jlllvi tl c' I n .111 m~tt t ut10n of
th1s s11e
.entraiii:JIIon. a .. o pposed to
de.:entrJIIlatlon ..:ould bnng d great deal o f harm . Is
tt possable tho~ I Pres1dent K eller s .:urrent
preoecupateon ~,., l hang1ng the name o f thiS
Uruverstty to Ketter Lln•versrl&gt; or maybe State
Umverslly of New Yurlo. al ll a)le~ Hall'1??
Mtt clteJI Regenb~gen

Friday, 11 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�Star Trek fanatics
crowd sci-fi exhibit
Ac tiv t II!S got o ff to a nying
start w h ·• guest of honor Gene
Rodden nerry, originator an d
executjve producer of the s ho w ,
was greeh d by a standing ovati on,
and th e11 nearly mobbed by the
crowd . H e spoke of the possibility
o f Star Trek's ret urn to the
screen, and o( its message to lis
fans. " T hts human bi ped thmg,
this strange ~:reature who's
awkward, vain and wesk
dumn
11, you're ge&gt;rg~·ous. And we Juvl'
you.''
Pro a pproach
What were the most appealing
aspec t s of the series'' I'artu:tpanb
echoes Roddenberry 's np tllltl\nt
an d
mentioned Stc1r /'1d.'
professional and high hudl!~'t
approach to sdenrt: ft, 1 ion ·· J
think Star Trak says ' I nnk
a head. don ' t bt: llfratd nl tit~·
future '," said a L o ng l~land
University studen t " I have ovct
2000 s~:tence fiction books .•tnd I
really loved the \how . Th e
sttuations were tntcresttng, tiH'
personaltties w ere intcre~ltng It
was fantast tc "
lsaar A~J'llOV, tl eJn -.•t. fl wnlct
and professo r, spokl! tel the group.
as d1d II a! C'lement, a nor hct
teacher whose sc.: tence ftc:ltott
fame is widespread Dorothy &lt;
Fontana, an ongJnal con i nhutor
to the senes. also appeared
But the specdtes secmet.l k'~
the fot·u~ of the convent ton than
was the e&gt;pportumty for tht• L1t1\
to tradt&gt; ton~~ . buy memunahtlt&lt;J
Jnd d t -s up as Stur I r('/..
c hara cter' Saturduy mght ~aw tln·
H1llon tnvaded by an assnrl llh'nl
of ahen~ and eart.ltml'n Jlt•·rHltnjl.
the ~·otwrntton'~ "tnstume hall
SntTit par!lctpanb warnct.l th&lt;Jt

-cQntlnue&lt;l from Pll!l8 1two kinds o f Star Trek buff must
b e carefully distinguis hed - th e
authentic, fact-sprouting fans wh o
view the s ho w as the best realized
of aU television science fiction and
the wild -eyed •·tre k kies." Star
Trek. groupies who cove t Leonard
Niemoy, memorize his "fave"
colors (green and blue), and
remember the start of ht s cureer,
ap pearing in Frann.r (im•.r to ll't'&gt;l
Pvlflt.
Uuth lund~ ul fans were drawn
to the 'I radang Room, where
1ewdry, old ..:omJc book\, muVIt'
'tllb. pla.~ t i..: heads of Spm:k anel
elay -glo poster~ were hawked
1 lwre secrneel t o he ~little: overl&lt;~p
nl tnt~rests. for arltft~al~ o l
Middle l: arth and II.P . Ln venaft
ah&lt;l 5old well. li en: you cnu hJ huy
.t SltJr Trek cookbm•k • .111 &lt;HtlPilal
lhH:k R ogers ray gun and .1
'hopptng bag l'tlltlld!Clncd wtlll
" In Spm:k We Trust " In t.Jrry tl
.illtn
A ''Hpn.stng
hut J ' 11 turn'
out, not so unlikl'ly
.:xhtbttor
wa s the Nattnual Aerooault&lt;.:~ dOd
"pa,·e 1\dmmt~l rat ton (NASA) .
whtch set up a large dtsplay ol
lun ~ r
tnoduk and ~pan· 'utt
tuo cku ps . One conventJUII
puhltt.:atJon menttoned tht: dd&gt;l
NI\SI\ owed to "Trt'k" fans
wtw,o;c kiln wnt eng t:antpatgn not
,nJy helpct.l \uvc NASA from .t
ongressronal ~ul tlatk ol lund\
lor I ht• ~pace program, hul got 11
J n
1nc·r~use tn cxpcndtlure!\
1-Jnpuwn . whe c·h enflucnl'l·d
t't•ngre~' · ha' yl't II• 1n11111ph over
NB&lt;' the rwtwmk that ~ .Jtrtl't.l
Jru.l Cdn,cll~·d
St111 Trd. Y1·t
RnJdcnhcrry report' n,•tworJ..
llltc·r ... ,t. 11aruullarly ;1\ rwv..
dt!nwgraphto ~how Stdr l1ek!..er'
tu he a 4uah t y aud1ent:c

CANISIUS COLLEGE ond BUFFALO FESTIVAL present:

-;

"YES" and J. CiEILS

Sunday, February 20th at 8 P.M.
KlEINHANS MUSIC HA~l

floor $S.SO - $4.SO lalco~ty $4 .SO · $4.00
ro.ct.... Oft ..... ltOW at luffolo F.ativol Ticket Office, Stotler Hilto,.
.....y (__. ord~ a«opted with •to ...... JOif-oddronod •nvolopo);
C..ni•hta Stoodent u.. ion; U. a. Norton Hall; Stat• Collet• Ticket Office,
foil• Tid!eh, Hae .... le "•••· Nl011ara fa ll•.
All Seot1 lteMrved

Mo i~t

GUSTAV: THE CHEAPEST COPY CAT IN TOWN
o nly 8 cents
m ore than

3

a copy, 7 cent s if

you 're making

copies f rom the same original!

b y Jesse E. levine
grew up in N ew York City Queens to be exact. Growing up
in New York City is more than
jtiSI
growing
up.
It 's
schoolyarding, and loud -mouth
rapping, and JUngle law surviVal in
all its prec.:ocious vt ctousnes~ . It's
might makes nght, and being able
tn take more than you could
possibly dish out. It ·, se parattng
the ntt·n lrom the h &lt;&gt;Y'&gt; at an early
age , d•1tng your best tu keep that
\l.ttu~ . and llv1ng and dytng on the
rx•ten.:y of th unportance l h
rcputattnns. wteldtng and dealmg.
l'l!llt\111 tn Its htghe~l genre Tho:
IIHJSt"llltrtiiY·tdenllty neuroses I hal
havt• to he defended ~·very day . lh
\ nntrontation , eltnunatton and
th~·
;~lwJy~ hetng nn your toes"
~ll.:k ne" ol ~.:unttn\1\lll~ 111clod rarna
1urncd real
(;tnWJng up 111 NY(
t~
~dtoolyartl argurnt:nh
.tnd the
n t IH: r d a dy ap pend.1ge' thai
tlnnllll •tle lhr ltfe ol a c hild . Ytllt
Ml ~key
!..nnw, who·~ hctter
M.111tl~ or Wtlly May&gt;. Kou lax or
M.Htd1al , the Do dger' ••r the
&lt;.;t.Jnt ~ It ' , rny father f,wght tn
tilt&gt; wur . wh.Jt war dtd yuur lather
ltghl tn ''' Tho: (.'unver'~ ,He hcl(cr
than K.eds reality nl I'll play Y•IH
tint' on o nl' anyday It '~ doll.H
bet'. Jnd what dtdcha get nn th1·
ll''l . h.J h.J I t'~ betng ..:a iled a
tug!:ut len C\cry word you mutter
It '' twtng ashamed tel walk down
the ~trel'l wtth yout mutlrer. 11 ·,
tt~·wr hc1ng a pussy , or hcrug one .
hut 11111 ktttng Jnynnc know
,, ., ~Itt kbull
h.J\J..t·rh ,tll.
lonthall, p1Hti.lthall ttl} ~tloVl' t&gt;
ht•lt~·r
tlt.tn yn111 glove
you
"'~·tl'n ' t IIJt M til vahed. fight, 111
thr ~dwoly;11d , and abuv._. .1ll ,
lwmg Jn ~·v~· r lovw · p.ul of 1he
I(Jilg 1111.' " when you're a Jcl ,
you'll',, 11'1 .til ttw way" my~tiQ~I"
ol c htllllrtwd mania It\ berng
).,l)oJ hnng the hcst at gt'llin~;
,JW.t}' wtth tl11ng~ at '~h.,ot.
J..nnv.tng fh•• rope~ on how to
hll':tl. tll!' ittk'

II \ thc polttl,, 11 1 wh.tt :trc ynu
tn be whert Y•ltt gruw up
dnd e&gt; r , la..-ycr , CI'A " llcy , La11y ,
..- h.ll \ ,, CPI\ ,,.. It \
I'V .Jttd
)llc''dJ}' ntght watd11ng ( 11111hol .
.JIIJ m.l tn g t iH· \IIOW.JV lt 'gotng
down In the vtllagt· l111 1111: 111\l
tun.: .1nd telltng all you1 IJtt' nd ~
what a 11,rnovy ~ccne tt t.~ 11 ·~ tht•
Y11nng Ra~~:JI~ . .Jnd you t ltr~i
.:nn t:e rt
I he ~txth gr.Jd~· party
wlwrt' Jell t..:el' 11p l·i lccn . and
J-tk,·n dnc,n't wanr to
.1
rqttlt.Jt I lilt
l(tl111j!.

&amp;'''

'"""Ill

It ' , thfl}Wlllg
111\• J II 'i
Wttltng ·' the tt·.ti.ltt'J
'ud,s" on the bi.H khoard .end
lc lltn)! \ettt· t., It\ rttlll tH\ . .wtl
"&gt;rnctlllc hnngrng 111 pt~:ture' . llt at
lu, t,tt he I gnt Ill rr.m ct.: tl tlftllg r ht•
wat , t'l pl'opk , oh no . " lu t:k tng "
Dttl } "I ' u heat that '' It·, b~tng
afratd to go to ,,hn(ll thc next
t.lay llnJ&lt;he tiH.'rt:\ tilt~ heg krd
that 'ay~ he's gonna kt.:k your as~
tl y o u tlo
YcJh, 11\ gftiWtng up, Jll pari
ol 11 fhat ftr!-t &lt;.:tgardtc . Jnll the
fctlhwl. ng ones that gJve you that

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable

Imported &amp; Domestic

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Page eight . The SJ:Jectrum . Friday, 11 February 1972

The first joint
lligh \tht,ol. Th e teacher
tl•lltng you that now you are
ladtr~ ,end gent~ . soo n you'll have
to t.lkt• thc Regent s. H ey Ira :
'" What tilt· fud; arc R egents''"
SIILking gu111 unJ.:r the scattn the
a ttt.ltlcHtttll1 1\nd ht•Jrtg amazeJ at
that 1\Jd they lll~l look dWay for
"''' st .1ntl1ng up 111 ~a lute the
Anwrt~..tn tlag ·· Jmagtnc thut . th«:
keJ Jtl\t t!'lll\t.'U to salute the
,\mt:ll •·••• 11.1~ Boy, rs ht: gonna
g~·t tl . prohahly t•x pclled "
It , h l)!h "honl mad ne ss, and
thai \atlrtt'~' o l hctng rt!jected , you
know !tom cn llegt' and all th at.
" l&gt;1u you heJr Jhoul Charlie. he's
not glllng It• t·nl lcge . ht: ',. nut
gonna h~ othk tn get a joh ."
I h.1t ltf\1 101111 What do they
~: all tilt' ' tutt . hashtsh Well, I
gu~·~\ 11 '~ c·onJ l'Vt'ryone else sayS
11 '' Wow . the mustc , a nd have
ynu bt'l'tl tn th e fillmore East , the
1-ln·tn t Ctrr m '' "One uf my
gtrJirtl' IHh I' go1rtg llll( Wtlh thiS
guy 111 Ulond . Sweat and T ears ,.
I'he I'' on1 Rebellton T he war tn
Ytctnam , ant.l the warm you r own
house "My parents are c razy , are
your,·&gt; Th ey JU~ I don't und erstant.l
tll c'" t\r&lt;' you gotng ba..:k to camp
till' 'ummer''"

you, ''F or you honey , o nly 15
dollars." It's getting your license
and driving out t o Plainview, L.f.
to pick up c hlc ks in .the shopping
center h angout. It 's frustration
and pimples, and wh o's got the
longest hair in the sch ool. Wh o
can grow a.beard , o r a mustache ,
a nd wh o ca n't ; or wh o ca n , but
w o n ' t. It's joy rid ing, having the
"you're just using me blues,"
talking behind people's bac k . and
getting beat for a nickel of grass.
It's that first whisper about who's
d one LOS a nd psy;.; hedelk light
parties, anti "an: you hip: '
I co uld go un and on and on
and o n . But, who t h e hell c:ould
ever understand all of th1s s lut ,
unless they were playing in your
same ~ch oolyard . or atlendtng
those same illsane high school
c lasses, growing up alongside you .
There will always be a place fo1
the people that lived thts trytng
part of my li fe with me. Pt·ople
ask why children fa iJ. Well , t hl'
q\.i~tio n ls, how the heU do tht•y
ever su~:~'~?

The fir..l acid
ll1gh " "hnlll

•~

hetng horny , and
prudt:s or t ' l ·~ .
And gotnl! In ynur lrr~t s kin llt~ks
o n 4~nd St &lt;I ll J sunny Saturt.lay
.tfl t&gt; rnoon It ' , hctng 15 year~ old,
.111d &lt;.ltgt~tng tl wla-n that whore
c:omes up ro yu u on 44th St . and
Avt· of the Amcnca~, and te lls

,Il l th1• gttl'

~r~·

Model Abortion
Program
hnn~t•dtale

fh(' first cagareltt:

t &lt;~ft' tcna

-.

extra boost of prowess. And then
forgetting t hem in your coa t
pocket , and your mother finding
them , and the tears. Getting a
" U' ' 1n behavior , and the t ears. A
note home from the teacher , and
the tears. Years. years. and still
mort: tedfs .

Help With Nn DeluyK

WICKERSHAM
WOMEN'S
MEDICAL
CENTER
~.ntlt ~•···•·I

1.1.1 t·: ..-1

N.. w 'uri..

t\ (.(l:O.tl-.ti JNI f\
,\llOHTION SEHVIC:E
t\1 '1 11.11\'l'FI&gt; WITII A \1/\ltlH
Mt-:TROI'DII t ,\N If( tSI'II t\1 .
tlt~t•qu~llt-d safc• ty r~ntrd of
(lliiH' IIi iiiiU UUI · pullt•nl ohM
tlun~ ll\ lluard·cerriflf'cl I!Y'"'
&lt; nln.:&lt;&gt;lh ,,,.(! .ut~•stJwsJUitl t.:ists

in

Gt~nt•rH1 ·11\••c:,lhl·Sl&amp;l ·~ use~J rur

the right .
contracepttve

for you

Right, becau se It' s effeetivst
Right. becauss it's gentle. so you
can use it with confidence. And
these are the big reasons wily
Emko Foam should be your
contraceptrve. Over ten yea rs
of testing and medica l studt es
prove Emko ons of the most
effec ti ve contraceptives avail able. Yet ttcontains no hormones
and therefore cannot harm your
general tleatth and well · being.

lllllit•nl t.nutfurl
l, nw

~n.'lts

of

o~hurlluJI

pr&lt;n.t:

durt•s
Pt+')(O.IOI

v

w !..• ll 1!. &lt;.:. $150
D t. C, $2!i0
14 :•4 wt•t·ks. $allrw nr
M1•1·hnmrnl tnrltu lwn $400
In nll l· t·:c·&lt; u\'&lt;~ r 10 weeils
prvj(nancy, Wt ckl'rsharn·s med·
ic at ~.eft•ty standa rd s c.equir•·
uv~rnt!lhl hospital stays
Fr~•r prof cs siunnl st•rvit.c·s
nvnilnhlt• to oborlion patiPnfs
1nt..lttdt· psvclti~tri c counselinl(,
family plannin!l and birth control. No rderral n!ledcd. No
refe rral fee or con tribution so·
licitr.d evl'r. Privalt•. Confidential. No red tape.
liP In til

1111 tu

14 wk~ ,

Of course, Emko Foam has
other impor1ant advantages.
too. There a r e no complicated
schedules to follow ; no preS&lt;;riptlons or fittings . and you use l t
only when you need protection
Besides, you hardly know it's
there. With all of these advantages. you owe It t o yourself
to try Emko.

Emlro Foam Two Ways ...
• Regular with delicate, a/eat
applicator
• Pre - Fi/, thllt can b6 filled up
to one week in adv11nce

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LOUIS . M O

�Chabad Ericounter: Jewish joy
It looked like a scene from Fiddler On the R oof;
tables laden with bottles of schnapps, songs that
made the floor shake, men in black hats and coats
and beards, girls in bright dresses and jeans, and
women in furs . It was Chabad "Encounter," and it
was a unique weekend.
Chabad is a branch of the Chassidic movement

Such was the case last weekend, when the
special Encounter started Friday evening with a brief
service welcoming Lhe Sabbath. A Sabbath meal was
then served to the more than 80 people wlw
attended, and 1rving Bloch, a Chassidic rabbi from
london, Ontario, spoke about various aspects. of
Chassidic life.
Loosening the tongue
The most important feature is joy - Chassidism
stresses the necessity of singing and dancing to
worship God most effectively. This !'appincss in just
being alive was evidenced Friday night . and eve11
more so the next evening at the "'M1dntght
Verbrengen.'' Tlus is an old Chasstdic custom, which
involves sittmg around a table, expounding on ideas

Rahhi Gurari

-

Kaufman

JuJatsrn. heaLkt.l 1 a lubov1td1er Rahb t 111 New
Y11 rJ... Rahbt Nossn11 Curan and lm wife Mm,tm
\ t.tr lt•d the l"habad Hou se 111 Septl'mher to help tilt'
Jt·w1~h you th under~taml what the11 1clagum and
hL'IIIagc ts &lt;~bout. Due to the pers•lllaltty 11f Rabbt
(lut;ut, and the even ts Chabad H1•1bl' t~ffcrs. the
ltlllr blue-aud-wlutl.' bu1l1.llng uo Ma111 (jt ts nltcn
&lt;IIIWdl'd .
111

I ()Nt&gt;ON
A ll.IIICIIIJI \I;Jll' •• t l"llll'fj'eiHY WU\
d··· • +I'll Wcdno.'\tl.1y h\ 1111' goVl'llllllt'lll 111 an o:llort
"' ~ •., p ~11.11 wrv1n:.-. lunlltoon)g tn thl' I IIIII W\'Ct.. ul
lie,· n.tiiOII\\Ici.' 1.0.11 111111CI:.· ~lllkt' I IIICigl'III.Y
I"'W&lt;'r' 1n~lude lh L' nght to ""' ''"I'P' Jnd tmr•""
hl."~"lih 1111 the populauon
ll ov.l'Vl'l IIIHile
'lc·"•·tary Rl'lpn,tld MJudhn~ told P.llh.llll t' nt that
llh'"' nte.J\\IrL'\ would In• usl'll "Lill i} d 11 hnnll\L"&gt;
.c h,,.lu tl'ly l''"'lllc.d 111 nrc.JL•r tn m,llnl .!ln Vl l.tl ~l.'rvh.'CS
IPr ll11' nattoll "
&lt;:overnmt'nl uurhoriz.atron Wl'lll Ill the { t'ntral
I ll'Lt 11ut y G\'llcr:.llng Boarc.J to allow I hem w
1111pos" blackouts on a mtatron pus" . Thl.' board sa 1d
lhl''-l: Olackouts WOU(tJ not la:.t r1101l' than IU\Ir hLlUr\
.11 a 111111' !'OWl.'! l "U() 1\.'11 ((l the redUCIIUil In SCfVIll'
"" dcc.:tnc rail l'OiliiiiUil'r scrVICl'' out ol Lomll&gt;ll
iii &lt;''JJy rught
I he emergency rr"damaiJ&lt;ln wa~ MgncJ at J
'I'''' cJIIy .:o nvl'ncd Pnvy Cou11ttl rnel'tlng. The
llll'l'llltg was presidl'c.J over by the Quc;:11 Mother. and
P11u n·~s
Margaret, m the ,riH,en.:e nf Queen
ll11;1hcth . who IS on a tour ot &lt;ie~uthea't A\Ja
l&gt;c"' lllb;:r llJ 70 wus the Jate ot lhl' la\t state lll
&lt;'II&gt;L'I!!Cilcy 10 t:ngland, wh&lt;!n tll&lt;'rt.' w,1\ an ell'.: In ..
I'"Wt:r Wl)rkcrs slowdown

or feetings, and loosening the tongue with liquor anJ
the feet with dancing.
More than 100 people , some who had been at
the Chabad House all day, and some who came at
midntght, listened to Rabbi Bloch. The discussion.
which was interrupted frequently by songs
refreshments and "L'chaim," a Hebrew tuast to life•,
lasted until 4 .30 in rhe monung.
A "Teftll111 Brunth " Sunday aftnnoon
wncluded the lcstJVtlles Rabht Bloch cxpre~seu
encouragement at the progress of Chabad in Buffalo
Ref1ecting on a visit he 111ade hCtl' several years ago .
he ''would 11CVL'I have 11\'IH'VCU II. "
Though thr 1-. rH,:nunter ~~ over. Ch.thad " l:tr
from rnact1vc IIH•re arc services and nll';Jis {'Vt•rv
flllla y nrghl and Saturday murnmg. " MJiavalt
Maika ," a pally to usher out rhe Sabb.lth . " hrld
every Saturday n.ght. lbhh1 Guran readJL'' th1rc·
scpar:.tc d:~ssc~ 11 11 &lt;'h&lt;t\StdJ\tll Wl11ch arc ht•IJ "Ill&lt;: .1
WL'I.'k on Tuesdw. Wcd11e~da} and Tht11\d.1~ .111d .tc,
open ro everynrw
fhahad llou~c h.t~ t•arnl'll o11ly pt.ll\l' , '"'
atnwsphl'rt' " tclaxt•d auJ 111lnrmal. tiH' Jlc'•l)lk ·" ''
fnendly. anti the food 1s dchcHlllb ,., f1 11 prctpl
who want tn expenencc \ll111t'thmg lll'W ;uld l'll.ntut••
the Chabad Huuse IS a must. Try tl
yu11 II IJk,• ''

hh' "' h.t1111
duld would
defe~h . lh,tt
rapt' or tlltul

hL'I phy"" '' "' llll'lllal IH·.d fh tlt.tt lit
hl' h•rrn With gr;IVt' phy\l,,tl ell lll&lt;'rll.d
tht• pregnJrhy h,ld re~trlf(•d front ""'·'t .
tllt l'fulur'c w111i a l&gt;ov IIIHil'l I I&gt;

WA S IIINt~ 'l C&gt;N
( 11111, l arr o rdered IIIL,J I dr .111 ho~,,rd , '" '·""··I
111dut:t10n orller~ fur 11 ,000 1111:11 a11c.J In piJ1.L' lll&lt;lfe
than 600,000 ot her~ 111 a .. hnldtng· · ,·atL'gotv th&lt;l\
VIrtually exempt tng tlll'm from nuhi.Hy , Jit-up I h1•
T uesday order was h~'rJ o n the CitllllllJiton ell .dl
draft calls dunng the lrrsl thtee month' ttl th" yL·:u
The 11 ,000 fall rntn th.- category of thmc lllCII
whll Wl.'re ongtnJlly ordcrnl tnc.Ju.:tec.J Iilii&gt; the .1111\l'd
furles 111 I 1:171 , and wl111 rnt·rvnl po~l(H&gt;IIl'llll'lll ' " to
the ftrst r ail nt 19 72. 11r 111111llurlher nollll' · ·" Wl'll
as thu~c who had po~!Jlll!lellcL'nl' " h..·Juh'd to
!c:rmmall' on a 'PCL:Iflt dat•· prror In April I . I 97 2
T ho'L' whn wcr1• pl.llL'J 111 the hPidtng
da:.srfllalrot1 tndudcd thnw whc1 INrrt• lllt'lllhc" of
!he 19 7.! extended pnolll)' group ''""fltl\l'd nt tnl'n
eltg1blc: for IIHilldiOil Ill il/ 7 1 Wft11 Wl'll: nut ' alkcJ ,
hut who Wl'll' at least .!0 Y&lt;'JI\ nt .Jgt' hv lhl' ~nd ol
the yc:ar ami held draft h&gt;llny 1111111h1'1' lnwt•r th.rn
l.!ro
It JJ,u tthluc.Jc:d th"'l.' ~· hc:Jull'J lc11 tndlldl&lt;tn 111
IY71 who held draft rtlllllh&gt;:l'&gt; nt .!00 nr ,Jhii\ C:, .JMJ
who w1ll he 10 years"' Jg&lt;' hv the L'llli pf tlw ye..tr
Tdrr 'iJtd he WdS sctt111g the ,c:t11ng. Jl ,, IC:III(lnrarv
200 1hL\ year, and that 11 would he l"wcrrll 1.111'1 nn
111 the year . thus freeing mnre you th' lto111 tf)L' lhr~·..rt
of the dtJft

Cemmissioo report

Reduced penalties for
pot are recommended
A state comnuss10n studying said he favored even further
drug laws recommended on penalty reduction. Assemblyman
Tuesday that penalties fU! rli Wager said the commission
possession of marijuana be sh1 1•1 have treated hashish in the
sof ten e d . Chester R. HarJt. san•· manner as marijuana in its
Republican assemblyman &lt;llld libe c 'i zed recommendations.
commissio n.. chairman, said the
A substantial revision of the
proposals were an effort to make sta 1•• \ public heaJth law was also
drug laws "more realistic and pro 1•• •sed by the commission. The
enforceable." " We are hopeful .. assemblyman said that many of
Mr. Hardt said, "that
rhc •ecomme• Jations "ere based
pwposaJs will jail those wit
011 +~ l'W federal Jaws, lou t that in
through callousness and son ··· cases, the proposals were
indi fference, are mak ing a fortun e• rn,. stringent than the federal
hy supplying drugs lo our young stalltte .
people."
The suggestions to case the fu ,r her recommendations
pc rl a It ies for po ssessiOn nf
t ther ·l emeul · of th e
marijuana were similar to , bur nnr
11ssion ·~ tan 111cluded :
us lenient as. recommendatl •&lt;~•'
that passed the state ScnJtt• h111
Set tinr up a c' ssifica tion
uil'J 111 the Assembly hht yt'a r
\\
m
for .t1 ugs, ' '' •ing from
Mt . Hardt said th at a 111
\.
.rl&gt;:111d • ms such
LSD and
of thr nmc-mem bcr con111t
'"
I ll in n .....s One, l q narcotic
asrrcd that a pl'ISOn COilVIll
u1 t• It rnedlcr 11cs in Cia" Five.
po~~C\\illfl " ' 11p to a qu;ntt•r
P\1fllll)! con trol 1)0 some
1111 ~l· of 111..
•sana \hould ll
•t r
i Ill lu ding , 11r ph ine.
;t 111;"111111111 \\.'lltl'lll\' Ill illlt 1,
.1"'1
tJillliH'·, anJ " prp prlls" by
than llifl'o' llWilllt~. ll.o· le1111 I
" ''I' ·rug lrtplt~:ate pr&lt;'\Criptions
Cia'~ U llll~d l'llll'aiHII t\1 pr1'
I• he wnll~ll by dllO.:lctrs One
\llc..'h :Ill •lll ll'•l' ,, .t Cl,l\•
••P\ •lf the presc:r1ptton woult.l go
IIII~Ul'llll', t tlo ll ,
l,JIIVIII~'
'" th1· StalL' Health Deparfmelll
lllJ ... IIIllllll \•'ll kll~C 111 Ill\(' I
l.t~l
ye:t I I h e \ Olllftll
lilll llcllg phy\IU&lt;JOS Ill
,,., 11111rncnded that 1 tu~t •Ilk"
,, 11h11tg. only a '0·dJy ~upply
P''"'-'"tng .1 quall ~l ·tlllllt •·...-7
d tu g~ 111 any one per!&gt;un .
IIJ.llll liJil;t
he ~hal rnl \\ t'
111 tll~llll\lllal Vlltlatlltll pun "t'
R cqu1nng uut·ol -statc
'I' f11 15 Jay' 111 Jail
111ufac!urers ol drug~ who ship
hstnbute their pt •ldHcts in
Other penalliel&gt; uppeu
•' Ymk State to be ltrcnscd by
111 ,ra re 111 ;~ ~osl uJ $';tl(l
I he: l'o mm' ~' ' ""
+l'llllllrtlL'IIdcd ~t!lkt (ll'llalr r,.
Bar1111rtg rhc l.'lliiCrll pral·fice
11"'~~·~\11111
ol harllllll .cl
pJ
r.u
rll.Jl'\'U !real nllll.'t' rrl s gJvirrt
"
.unpltl'latniiiC\ anJ h,tllu~·""'':'"'
,. ,mpk~ 11f produ t: t ~ w1111 dru)&lt;(S Jll
( llffl'llll) . tlH' Jfi,IXIIIHI!ll P· I ell'
lltl'lll 111 dotl llr&gt; a&gt; ,, loml of
flit llll\Sl'\~111!( ~Udt drug~ I\ •II
Jl • 111111111111
\' \';"
111
1·"'
I hl' Ullllllll~
pi "PII\l'd that tlH' 0.: 11111&lt; ' I •
Rl'I.Jllll tng all drug I.Jhleh tu
'upgt.1deJ " lt c ... CJ:h, I&gt; kl• 11\ ht· l.tbelcu w11h a Lode tltJt ~how~
Wltlt ;t S\'VI.'n·yeal ~ellll1 11l.'C ;1\ the thl' nature ol tlw p111tluct a11d 11\
rop puni~hmcrlt
lllilllllfacturer
r 11 , ,. l' 111 c 111 be , ~ " 1 t h"
Concluu111g thl' pre,rtli.Hion Lll
o.: •tnlllll~'"ll' d1sagrL'l'd wtth p:ul\ the: lllfllllll\~1011 1&lt;.'~Uit Mr Hard t
ul th e: )U bllltlted t~p1111
~.ud ' 'Wtth al111o~t lllle·llllarter o l
A;scmblyrnan Emccl S Bet tllls a II le g J II y 111 .t 1111 I ,Jl; t u red
s:11d h1• opposed k~~l'lllllg the d,tllgcmu ~ drug~ he111g tllegally
fX'IlJIItcs on marlJU.JilJ . wh11l' L&gt;r Jbu~cd. the 1111ll' h11~ ~:orne for
Allied M FrceJman . a ph)\JL"Jall. :.taft' drug laws w1th ~OillC teeth."

NI· W ORLEANS
In .1 rcsolutwn pas~cc.J
'vlonday , the Arnencan Bar Asso.:ratwn lt11li\L' ot
lki L·gates s:ud thai all 50 stale~ ~hnuld allow
.tbort sons, even self-ad rnrmstered ones, up 10 Ihe
twentieth week of pregnancy . Th~ standmg vote on
th&lt;' 'ta tcrnc:nt was 200-20 in favor
I he: group also called for .:1 rc:je,·tf• n of the
NEW YORK
Fo1 those pcupk tntcre,tcd '"
" llll·f.llllt" divorl·e laws wh1.:h would allow J c:t1Upk
to dtvrde their property up out nf .:ourt . thu~ .. tatistlcs. here's one lor your reco rJ~ . 80'« ' " the
,IV&lt;m1mg legal fees . The recommendatio n on the valent1ncs bough t an· bought by women It IS
ahortwn law would allow any woman to have an presum.:d that the same percentage send~ these
ahortron performed by any licensed physic1an, or to cards. By Monday, there will he more than half d
.tltow her to perform an abortiOn on herself under billion valentines in the mails. And fully o nc: -th1rd o f
lltcdical supervision, anytime during the first 20 these ..:a rds will be signed. "Guess Who· · or won't
have any s1gnature at all. The stat1st1es ntrne from
weeks of pregnancy .
An embryo could still be aborted after the first Norman Rowland of Hallmark Cards. who dlso satd
fm· months if the doctor had any reason to believe that the f1rst valentine wa ~ tntroduLeJ tnto the:
the following : that there was a substantial risk that Umted 1States hy a woman. Esther Ho wland , who
•ontinued pregnancy would endanger the mother's dted a sp1nster

Friday 11 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine
1

�•

Gilliam returns

Hoopsters face Brockport
by Barry Rubin
Sp&lt;&gt;rt1 EdltM

Thr« yean ago, Ron Gilliam
was on the threshold of a brilliant
car«r at Buffalo. Tonight, after
sitting out one year of play .
Gilliam and Guy Vickers. a fellow
LraJUfer from the BuUs' basketball
program, lead Brockport State
against the Bulls.
The always physical bailie
between the BuUs and Golden
Eagles takes place on Brockport 's
court, but the BuUs hold a 22- 1
margin in the all-ume senes.
Brockport ( 13-3) leads the SUNY
conference, while Buffalo (7· 11 )
contlnues reeling on the heals of a
six-game JOSJng streak
Few people that attended
Gilliam's la st game (State
University of Albany) an Buffalo
uniform wul forget how Ron, a
S-9 spark plug came off the bench
to lead Buffalo to vtctory From
that last game of the 1969·70
season tmhl May, both Gillaam
and Vickers, pnme figures an a
boycott of black players at
Buffalo, chose to stay at home an
Elmira, N Y. rather than face the
threats and harassment accorded
them an Buffalo. In essence. the
two bro ke the back. of the black
player boycott by returnmg to the
basketball pr og ram after a
five-game absence
ALFA ROMEO
* FERRARI
* 'MASERATI

Geor~c Gervan. the Hurous
supcr·soplt laved up to balhng
addang Jo potnts and IS
rebounds . Th e Bu lls' Bnh
Vartantan. with ten ~Wasts . broke
Cdliam 's mark for most assists an
a season at Buffalo Vat1anaa11
now has 75 on the yeaa

$0lel • urv1rt • ports
USED CARS
•• DOBCOR ••
Mt&gt;tor C(lrt I rd.
1974

l!.ggert

Gilliam, who averaged 223 as a
Buffalo soph told The Spectrum
after h.is traJisfer: ..There were
many nights when we couldn't
sleep because of telephoned
threats made by unknown
persons. We are leaving Buffalo
because we weren't allowed to
stand up for what we believe."
To understand the immense
pressure both Vickers and Gilliam
played under while at BuffaJo is
to listen to tlteir further reactions.
Gilliam explained : " f here were
many limes when I wondered if
someone might try to kill me
during a game ." Now Gill iam,
averaging over 25 per game, and
Vickers ( I 0 ) lead the Golden
Eagles agauut thear former
Buffalo mates. Only sen1ors Neal
IArtgeber, Orv Coli and F rtc
Rasmus.~en were members uf Ute
IQ69-70 squad wath Galliam thc1l
remwn an the program
I rorucaiJy . Buffalo men lot Ed
Mu to tutured Gtlliam when Ron
led tJtc Baby Bulls to a tine
season, averaging 30 point!&gt; per
game. Now Coach Muw has
numerous headaches w1th Ills
Bulls who are sttll tn the agonmng
throes uf a losang streak.
Tuesday night the Bulls fell
agaan to s tr eaki ng Eastern
M1chigan ( 1(14 ) . I Ot&gt;-96 at Clark
Gym. The Bulls' Curt Blackmore
talhed 36 poan ts (career high) and
~t a Buffalo record with lti field
goals in the contest

Near Barley
834 -7350

Ruffalo guards fail
Th e Bulls lost with poor
shootang from guards Greg Bruce

and Vartanian plus the Joss of
forward Greg Laker to an anlcle
sprain The BuUs missed Laker
under the boards although Joe
Evans and Eric Rasmwsen
s u pphed offensive punch .
Blackmore's perfonnance aided
by deft feeds from Vartanian also
featured 23 rebounds. Curt 's 36
markers were only five short of
freshman Coach Jim Horne's
record at Clark Gym.

Hockey team hopes
for weekend sweep
by Howie Faiwl
A sst- Spons EdltM

For those of you who don't
plan on going to class tltis
mornang , there 's another
alternative available be3Jdes
han&amp;in&amp; out in Norton or lounging
about at borne . WouJd you believe
a Buffalo BuUs hockey game at
the Amherst Recreation Center?
Oh, you thought that game was
later tonight , did you? iWeU, with
This season the Golden Eagles a schedule t h at is rapidly
have lost but three contests. becoming more elusive than John
Earlier in the year, they lost at Stranges, the Bulls will be hosting
Ithaca College at I I :30 a.m.• ln a
home to Capatal (Ohio) v1tal Division II contest.
University , 77-64. Then on an
Th is last minute scheduJe
extended m1dwest trip, they were change was necessitated after
turned bock at Eastern Michigan goo d o ld reliable Amherst
( 110-99) and at Akro n (84-73)_ announced that game time could
Big wans for Brockport have come not rommence pnor to 10:30
ove r Woos t e r 73-7 1 State p.m., a fa ct that Ithaca Coach
Unaversaty of Albany ( 106-74) Forbes Keath dad not rind too
and Ma tyland (East Shore). amusing.
He promptly anformed Coach
106-92 Coach Mauro Panugwo, an
Ed Wright that he would not bnng
h1-' fourth season at Brockport. Ius players mto town that late .
has made has squad a fam aly affaar. Wnght , recaLLing Last year's ECAC
wath has son Make and godson, dec1sion to deny Buffalo a playoff
Bounds, an the lineup.
~po t
because of too many
c a ncellat1ons , •mmedtalely
However. their 1s an aura of arranged for lhe only other open
allcg111macy surrounding the legal time slot.
battle between the ECAC and
Norm Bounds, Brockport 's 6-6 Ithaca prospectus
Ithaca College, wath ~~hedultng
star Early !has season, the ECAC
lllffu.:ult
ies' of their o wn , have thus
declared Bounds ineligible to play .
but Bounds succeeded in gaining fur only played .six garnes thts
yea r They've spht that total Jnd
aJl anJunctaual 111 court whach
stand .tl 0·2 in Davasio n II wtlh
permi t ~ him to play In all , the
losses to Oswego State and J 2· 1
legendary Bounds, whu played at overttrnc dec1saon to Lowell Telll
b.rae Communit y College, has Buffalo has beaten both these
played an ten Brockport games.
teams rather hand1ly this year
Two of Ithaca ·s willS have .:ome
If fu tuac cuua t actaon upholds ag;unsl RIT , a team that Buffalo
thl' i'.CAC, the aU IUillatiC bid to oblaterated 10-2 lui seuon, and
th e NCAA College DtvlsJon looking back over the ycSt':l. the
tourney may have to be settled
berwecn Albany State and Buffal o
St;u e All and1cataons poant to a
possable Bro,kport furfea turc of
all conte:.ts m whrch Bounds has
partactpatcd ancluding con lcrence
KENT. OHJO
Cumang oil
games
yet another of thcu lopmlcd
VIClones this season. tit\' wrestling
Bulls return home to Clark Gym
tomo rrow afternoon ( l l.JO) foa
thear last home matdaes of the
season . Preparing for their
quadrangular meet , the Bulls
ripped Kent State 40-&lt;6, to run
their record to 12-1 on the sea~on
After losing the fia:.t bout , the
Buffalo squad roared back to take
command . Junaor Doug Ru tter, a
transfer from Conu ng C'ommuaut y
College, deadlocked the match at
3-all by blankang tl1e Golden
Flashes ' 126 -poundcr Dave
Wo lfson, by 4 - 0 . R utter·~ vacrury
raised his record tu .1 very
respectable 10-3. Rutter ts nne of
seven newcomers to thas year's
Buffalo squad wtuch as currently
rated seven th 10 Ute East
Followmg Rutter's match the
Bulls, a1ded by four pans , raced t(l
an easy victory _ After the Flashes
had cut the deficit to 18-6, the

Wrestlers victorious

now being offered
by

SUNSHINE HOUSE
IN A DDITION TO OUR OTH ER
CRISIS A ND RE FERRA L SERVICES

VAtiNnNE'S DAY
A Tl- To Soy
I Low You
In Thot :SP"ciol Woy

Call 831-4046
24 HOURS A DAY

n DA YS A WEEK

Aot U11uauol Gift
froM 'C:rou tho S.ot
Ch111o Or J o-lry
Are S~r• To PlooM

Wlt.ro To Got 'Em
Ht r•' • Whoro l'ov Go
Out Rt. 16 To

TSUJDIOTO

oamn..u.

.utft-O~

tlMYev - . _ . . . ......
D.ULY I t loo I • R l. It .. t • lVII 1..

.... s-- II. (al. I l l a-. ii,W,
I IIUto left • I ~ IVA . • 1
- - - - Nl 2-USS _ _ _.,..

Page ten. Th,e Spectrum. Fridav. 11 Februarv 1972

Bulls meet Oswego Sunday
Ho pefully the Bulls wtll not be
lookUlg past the upsut-minded
lthacans to Sunday afternoon's
to ugh Dtvision II ~on test against
Oswego Stat e on the Lakers home
ace Th1s game. scheduled for last
Saturday naght , pustponed oue to
h eJvy sno w , wa ~ fanally
rescheduled for 2 p m Sunday A
weekend sweep, alt.:Omphshed
two weeks hack agaanst Salem
State and AI\ , ~eems quatc
possable agaan Jlowever. the B ull~
mu~t not let down a~ they ttlmost
dJd apanst o~wc:go earlaer l h l~
year.

Home from Kent

PREGNANCY
COUNSELLING
IS

Bulls have compiled a masterful
104 mark against the lthacans.
However, as many of the teams
Buffalo has fa ced this year. the
lthacans are young and quite
talented. While drawing most of
their personnel from the richly
talented MassachUsetts Bay area ,
they boast 15 freshman and
sophomores out of a possible 20
skaters.
For those of you
contemplating hijacking a Rtdge
Lea bus to view the game, you'll
want to keep your eyes on
Ithaca's no. 12 , Dave Parks. Parks,
as Mike Klym of the Bulls, is a
fres h ma n and the lthacans'
leading scorer with eight goals and
three assists Parks is aided on
offense by last year's second
leading scorer , Bob Scanlan and
senaor Bob Driscoll.
Alth ou ah r elatavely
inexperienced, the Jthacans are
reported to be fine skaters and
hustlers. Their main strength
appears to be at goal, where
so phom ore J oe Bied ron ·~
s po rting a respe cl3blc JJ
goals-agamst average

boun~:ed back a~ btl'
Knuut1la\ pan at lfl7 pmtnd:.
baoke rhe rnatch wade open
Star ttng from a posttton ot
advantage 111 tht' thrrd pNiod ,
Knuutala broke his oppoueut,
Dave Carste n ~ :111d muled him to
the mat at four minutes, J I
~econds
T he VICtory was
Knuuttla 's lourth of the season hy
p111 and teutlt w111 of the season
" It was a line team effort,"
stal t&gt;d Bulls' mentor Ed Michael
"We have three very big matches
com ang up Saturday, and I was
pleased that our wrestlers were
nol lookang past Kent S tate _"
''Buffalo certainly has a well
balanced squad," agreed Kent
S tate Coach Ron Gray '1'hey are
certainly one of the finest teams
that we have wrestled thas
season "
The Bulls receive\! more goud
news Wednesday night, as the
Amateur Wrestling News, the
"b ible of amateur wresrltng"
released its mid-season poll. The
Bulls were rated nineteenth in the
nation in what was believed to be
the first Buffalo wrestling squad
so ranked. The Bulls will face one
of their toughest opponents o f the
year when they take on California
State in the third round of
Saturday's quad at Clark Gym_
The o ther entrants are St. Francas
and St. John Fisher. The BuiJs
have never beaten California
Stale. but figure to have their best
shot ever, tomorrow.

8 u II s

�CLAIIIPIII
WANTED
THE VILLAGE SHOP, 2797 Delawa re
Ave., Kenmore, N .Y. 14217 .
sunflower seeess $ .55 lb. Pum~Hcln
SMCSS • 1.29 lb. Fertile ~ $.65 doz .
wnol e Wheat bread $ .35. Cannon
Yogurt Asst. $.27. Milk - non·fact,
powdered, $.75 lb. Many otner Items
1n hNitn foods. 873·3246.
BABYSITTER for small baby; Mond.ay
and Wed. afternoons, In your nome.
Call 839-4017.
DEAR ALLENHURST: for those
people Int eres ted In l .. rnlng how to
play the guitar, Join 1ne guitar
workShOP starting Monday nlgnt, 9 :45,
11 tne coffeehouse (you're kidding)
see Bob 508A.
AN VONE possessing recordln9 o f
Wates·Garcla Concert, 1/29172. contact
T
_ _o_m_ 6_6_2_·7_5_9_8_._ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ •
wANTED: For volunteer projects; 2 or
J students NCh In chemist ry, medicine,
ptyslcs, engineering, law
Boll 3,
Col den 14033.
CRAN KSHAFT for Honda 160. Also
other parts for 160, S·90, 175, 250, or
305 cc. Call 8111 886·8154.
START S2 per hour salary plus bonus.
work 4 ·8 p.m. weekdays, 10·2 p.m.
Saturdays. C•ll 835·3803 or TF9·0402.
f'ULL OR part-time jOOs available With
9estllne Inc Call Ar t 886·2094 or
M1ke 835·5215. Meetings at Executive
Ramaoa1nn.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
UNE BEDROOM apt. furnished, $110
mnnth • utrlltles, 5 Comstock Ave.
uo1111rs between 10 a.tn ana 5 o rn .

RIDE BOARD
BUS TO BOSTON lor l·oay weekend ;
will leave campus on Frld.ay, 2/18 and
return Monday, 2/21 Call Greyhound
represent.allve, Ken S1rlln, 836·4169
AlOE NEEOEO to Burlington,
Vt•mont or Albany . Thursday ntgnt,
11111 or Friday mornln9 . C•ll Burt
818 J4&amp;l.
NU D RIDE to N.V .C or L I Thurs.,
Feb 1/ Ca11Jon838-4186
RIIH NEEDED to Ch•cago lor 2; leave
feb . 18. return F eo 21. call 83 I .H lO
"'A Jl 2285
l•llll wANTED to Bln9hamton any
w•eK&lt;mO S h•re Onvln9, el(penses. Call

Eric 837..0460.
RIDERS wanted to Cortlano, F riday
afternoon. Call Jim, 138·309 e .
RIDERS wanted lmmecllately to snare
driving and expenWi to Seattle or S an
Fflnclsco. 634-4462.

FOR SALE
MOUTON LAMB Jacket . ~ xcellent
condition. S ize 12. Call 69HI634.
OLD COL. OS POT refrlgarat or, U 7.50.
684·32 72 (Or best offer) .
KODAK 8mm movie proJector, S.l5 or
best otter Call 838-4062 and ask for
John.

FOLK~LASSIC
guitars, n.-uNCt
Martin, Gullda, Gll)sons, Gurlln, etc~
E1gle l)enJot, Oor091 dulclmera. The
string snoppe, 524 Ontario, 7 p .m .-9
p. m. Set., 12·5 p. m. 874..0120.

8 ·T RACK &amp;. c.uette buyers . All
current top ertlsts &amp;. llbumt - l.aac
Hav-s, B.S. &amp; T , C.C.R., Sent1na,
Chluto, etc. Top labels - Columble,
C.apltol, A&amp;M, Master Music, RCA,
Atlantic, etc . 8 · treck Of cuMtte $3 .85. February special - save 1.50 on
any tape. Cl ll today or w rite for frH
catalogue - Tne Tape Deck, P .O. Box
31, wast Senec., N ,V. 14224.
823·321 7 .
HI Fl Dual 1219 S4)NI&lt;ert, AOC ,
amplifier Dynaco, I'INdphones Fl~et,
$520. 837·2259.

JAIIIICE : Would you De my valentine?
Ves7 Nor MayDet P.S. Vou Clon't hhe
to pay for thlt.

PtZZA - GO GO : Tnll weM&lt; only, ~lf
two sul)t, get one free. 83a-4557. NOW
OPEN SUNDAY.

I'VE BEEN neglecteCS. NOIIOCiy wll\,ts
to buy me. My name It Anastasi• ancs
I'm for Mia for only 1110. t'm 1
2 · door, blue Tempest with an
automatic tr•ntmlulon and • very sexy
bOCiy. If Interested, call AI 831-4113.

WANNA LIVE on a farmf We rul¥e a
farm In E. Amherst and need
roommates Immediately. Call Rlc:k
632..0188.

WANTED r 1 female l)y 25·YNr-old
male {life-long v~tarlan-hyglentst,
160 pounds, 5'8", dark complexion) to
be 18·22 years, 5'0"-5'6",
emotionally edjusted , sound tHth,
INn, attractive and wltn warm mild
1\fen diSposition . Write Spectrum So"
70.

FOUND: Feb. 3 In front of Michael
Hall, golo - rl mmed glasse• Call
837 ·2705 - •Sk l or Kathy.

PANNE velvet maxi dresses • sl&lt;lrts
Included In sale Items at "Tne People"
144 Allen . 882-6283.

1967 RAMBLER, very good condition.
Motor exc ellent, $ 350. 633-4899. Call
a fter 5 p.m .

FOUND : Two silver keys tteo with reo
wire In GoOdyear-clement lot . Call
Ray 831·2462.

CANVAS shoulder bags, duffles,
knapsaclu, colorful, for men &amp; women .
IIIIa nu hcturer's close-out at "The
People," 144 Allen St. 882-6283

FOR SALE '64 Chevy, 56,000 actual
miles, GoOd transportation, S 100 Call
674·7959 alter 3 p.m .

TWO RINGS outside Of Norton - a
double top.z ana a jade - Reward .
Call collect 778-8266.

COMIN'G TO The People. Scandina via"
design wrap Oressf'S. Very com fortable,
9reat with a turtleneck . 144 Allen
882·6283 ,

S 16 00 .

FOR SALE • living 10om, Olnlng 100m
and bedroom furniture, lamps, rugs,
oell massager TF7·6525 . Reasonable.
STEREO SYSTEM
Heathkit AR 14
receiver, Garrard 40 ml&lt; 2 changer, 2
Sl1etf speakers
$150. Call 826 6620
after 4 p.m.

- -- - --

1965 OLOS DELTA 88, power
steering, power brakes, radio. EKcellent
.:on dillon
call 8 77 ·8982.
VW BUS. New engine, gas neater,
radio, great cross-country tripper Beat
so•lng's lnfl.atlon $600 or best offer
832 6564
PHYSICS PnD sneepsk rn from top
eastern university
Use .as pop·art
Oec:orallon. attractive conversation
piece 8&lt;"1 bid over $10 Write 234
Oakmont Ave .
BIG REO, tne mighty metro l&lt;&gt;ves to
travel. He's a '61 International ~otep.van
wHn rebulll en91ne and healthy body
838·3146
1970 VOLKSWAGON sedan. eocellent
con0111on
Best reasonable olfor
837·6158

-------

1970 JAGUAR XKE. Excellent
condition . Brand new AM/FM S tereo
radio Inclu ded . Call 688·7327 evenings .
REFRIGERATORS, stoves and
washers . RKonOitlonld, delivered and
guaranteeCS . O &amp;G Appliances, 844
SycamOfe. TX4·3183.
"ANASTASIA" needs • home. She's a
1961 lovable, little Tempest . All sne
costs Is SilO. Call AI at 831-4113 or
Debbie at 832·6815.

PERSONAL
THE GIANT a moeba has engulfed me•
Please send help to Waterorotners, 51
Allen St
THIS IS much too personal 10 be made
a public notlcel
STARTING Feb 14, we wilt be open
Monaays, ai well •s Tu~ . Frl "The
People," a fOlk •"• boutique. 144
Allen . 882 ·6283.
DEAR HUGH, we'd like to Jee our
mldnlte picture Love, Tne Meyer
Gi&lt;IS 894 IS 16
ALICE WElT lMAN - where are you&gt;
I'm going to C.alllornla for Euler Call
me. Mari an 884 1248 .

EARN MONEV In your spare time
listing ~e;cou nh. Generous comml&amp;alon .
Write: Empire, 8011 3096, Clevelanel,
onto 44117.
ACAPULCO, B.,bados, Banamu,
Europe - wMkly trips, packaga from
S219. Easter week still av•ffable.
Contact Molly 877-8442.

FOUND: eyeglasses outside o f Michael.
M•y Identify and Claim at Spect rum
office. 355 N orton .

BEDROOM set for sale, $30. Good
cond ition, Don. 897·1765.

VW va n, 34,000 mnes Only
Can take you anywnere,
anytime. Ell 835·256 J.

FEMALE SEIIIIOR need.t job. Can do
many types of work, preferablY In US
.,.,, Call Mary 138-4892.

LOST It FOUND

SKIIS, bindings, poles. All In e xcellent
condition. Used five times. Must sell .
Call Lori 894·8209.

1969

WE'RE lnter..tl&lt;l In buying land.
People with llgn ln N orton. PIMM
contact Mike at 836·2650.

EXPERT VW and foreign car service.
Modern mechan1cal technology.
Surrounoees In •n •tm o q,nere of old
European comfort and decor . M.rtln's
M o tor Works, 497 Ridge Road.
826-6777.
FLY BUFFALO Stud e n t Flights to
Sunny Acaeulco via Universal Airlines
OC-8 Jet. Leave N .Y.C. March 31.
Return April 7. From •179. Contact
Alan Marmulsteln evenings, 6-9 p.m .
837..0393.

ROOMMATES WANTED
O WN ROOMS for ona or two.
Furnished. Available Immediately.
M•le or female . Dll Fillmore.
832·3708,

OFFSET PRINTING : fast , (100)
81/J&gt;&lt;Il, $2.50; (1000), $7.45 . (100)
IOxl4 posters, t5 . University
community only , 343 N orton, 9
a .m.-5 p.m. 831 ·5588.

,_,ALE·FEMAL.E wantad , Hertel near
Colvin. Own I)ICSroom, fully lurntsned,
S40 •. 875·8260 after I I p.m Keep
trying.

ANTIQUES and mOde rn furnitur e ,
c eramics, china, etc. SH SICS at
YeJteraay &amp; Tomorrow Shop, 1439
Hertel Ave.

NEED TWO lmmeesla tely lem.ale or
mate, 160. Own room Main-Fillmore .
Pets O.K 837 -3 483

SENIORS - POST GRADS

MALE DR FEMALE
nouse,
fireplace, own oeoroorns. lots o f lana
$60 month . 634-4462 .

Earn good money
Pan or Fullt1me
while dttending school
call

WANTED · One female roommate for
3-0edroom house o ff Maln·Winspear .
Own room, fulniShed. 560 Starting
Feb I. Call Mary 838-4892
ROOMMATE wanted
cn aap, $27 plus .
1137-264 I

own room
Fillmore Ave.

MR .SILVER

MISCELLANEOUS
HELP• SELL! 9UY 1 VX&amp; Renew 6KI2
volt batteries Sal~men needed . 8 4 m
to 12 noon. Tom. 894 ·2 150.

853~754

AN AL.TERNATIVE to the dealers
servicing "
our only concern !
I ndepenaent Foreign Car Service,
839 1850

Now that you can fly to Europe for peanuts,

~:;.:1

here's how little you shell out to get around:

You shell out $130, and get a Student-Railpass.
All you need is the bread and someth1ng to show you're
a bona fide student between 14 and 25.
Our Student-Rai lpass gives you all that unlimited
rail travel on the 100,000 mile railroad networks of those
13 countries. For two foot-loose months. So with low a1r
fares and Student-Railpass you've got Europe made
Our Student-Railpass gets you Second Class
travel on our trains. You'll find that there's very little
second class about Second Class . Besides being comfortable, clean, fast, and absurdly punctual, the Euro·

pean trains have some other advantages tor you. They
take you from c1ty center to city center, so you don't have
to hassle airports. And the stations are helpful homes
away from home, with Pictograms that give you information in the universal language of signs, and dining rooms,
bookstores and other helpful facilities.
Now, here' s the catch. You can't get your
Student-Railpass or the regular First Class Eurailpass in
Europe- you have to get them before you leave the country. So see your Travel Agent soon. Meanwhile, send in
the coupon for a free folder, complete w1th ra ilroad map.

-----------------------------------------------------------·

SJUDENJ•RAILPASS

The way to see Europe without feelinc like a tourist.

Eurailpass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
Eurailpass, Box 90, lindenhurst, New York 11757.
Please send me your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map. 0 Or your Student-Railpass folder order form. 0
Name:_________________________________

-

P4NC41Baad

$130 for Two Months of unlimited rail travel In
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Gennany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg,
Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.

BIISPECI4L
r

Mon. thru n
Until 11 c1 m. c~nd
Sun thru Thur...
AFTER 9 00 p.m.
Sun. thru Thurs.
3 BUTTERMILK PANCAKES
OR TOAST PLUS 2 COUNTR
FRESH EGGS, as you like 'em .
~erved

65¢

3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE
7 UNION ROAD

••llliiiilliliopieiinii24iillhilrsiit'~I~Y·..,..QE!Itt

I

I

FREE

•

• Tired of sound systems?

•

Become part of the live

ROCK AND ROLL

I

"I

i

NEW
1 McVANS :
: The

N~~a~~~~~:a~;el

:

II
=

Friday and Saturday

plusBEER
A FREE

I
I;

to holders o f this
announcement
(One per person)

(Coo~":~,~~~
.. .J;

~..

So&lt;.(

Friday, 11 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�Announcements

Available at the Ticket Office

The Conflict Simulations Club will have a
meeting on Sunday from noon-7 p.m. in Room 340
Norton. Attendance by all members is necessary for
elections.

Studio Arena Theater
Through Feb. 20: The Trio/ of the Catonsville
Nine
Mar. 2- 26: Romeo and juliet

An SDS demonstration to support the Irish
rebels will be held tomorrow from 1- 1 p.m. at
Genesee and Main. Call 895-6033 or 831-2884 for
further information.

Rock and Folk Music
Feb. 11: Captain Beefheart (C)
Feb. 12: Carly Simon (K)
Feb. 13: Pete Seeger (B)
Feb. 20:; Yes and). Geils (K)

The Debate Club will hold a practice meeting
tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Room 244 Norton for
anyone interested in upcoming tournaments.

Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra (K)
The Junior Club of Buffalo 1s sponsoring a_ ski
trip to Interlaken, Switzerland, ~arch _29 - Apnl 5.
The trip (eight days and seven mghts) 1ncludes room
and board round trip by Swiss Air 747 and the cost
is $350. F~r further information contact Brian Rusk
at 632-2707.

feb . 11 : Pops Valentine's Night Florian
labach
Feb. 12 . Cinderella
Feb. 19 &amp; ~ : Chris toph Eschenbach, pianist
reb. 27 &amp; 29: Leonard Pennario, pianist

Islamic Society of Niapra Frontier wtll hold its
annual general meeting tomorrow from 4-7 p.m. in
Rooms 246 and 248 Norton.

Buffalo Chamber Music Society (K)

WIRR will have a general staff meeting, Sunday
at 3 p.m. in Clement Hall North Lounge: All persons
wishing programs on WI RR for the spnng semester
must attend this meeting.

Roller Derby (M)

Feb. 15: Ouo: Rampdl and Veyron-Lacroix

Feb. 21
Buffalo Braves Basketball (M)

The UB Committee to fr~ Angela Davis and .111
political prisoners will have a table with information
and bail pet1ttons today and throughout the trial in
the Norton Center Lounge.

Feb. 11 Dctrott
Dipson's Plaza North Theater

Collegt! A 216, Blues and Soctety, will not meet
o n Monday

Fiddler on tht! Root

Coming Events

Hillel will hold Sabbath services this evening at 8
p.m. in the Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd . Dr. Justin
Hofmann will discuss. "Torah Legislation on Theft ."
The Mu sc ular Dystrophy Association of
America 1s ~ponsonng a Valentine's Day Dance to be
held Sunday from 7 11 p.m dt the Buffalo State
College Student Union
second floor . Jack
Armstrong of WKBW will be there. Donation of
$1.50 goes to muscular dymophy .
UB Students for McGovern urgently need
canvassers to work for George McGovern in the New
Hampshire pnmary . If interested, contact I elf
Osinski at 836-8437
UB RldinJ Club will have a m~ting today at 3
p.m. in the third floor lounge of Norton.
SCUBA Club w1ll meet tomorrow at 10 a.m.
Active divers go to Room 315 Clart.. Gym and those
taking crrtificatton coursr report to Room 3, Clarl&lt;.
Gym.

The Hillel Talmud class will meet on Sunday at
3 p m. in the Hillel House Library .
The Buffal o Theater Wortcshop Dance
Repertory Company IS now audttionmg male dancers
for roles in its mator modern dance producttons.
They are also audttiontng dancers for the African
Dance ensemble The company has openings for
production workers (including work on lighting and
scenery). Call Ann Herman at 831 -2 195 or Synycr
Hanesworth at 8314143.
The Hillel Conversational Hebrrw classes will
meet on Sunday in Room 262 Norton . The advanced
group will meet at 12 ·30 p.m. and the elementary
group at 1 :30 p.m.

The University of lbadan tn lbadan, Nigeria ha~
agreed to consider the applications of up to 20
highly qualified State University students for places
m the Facully of Arts and Faculty of Social Science~
lor academic year 1972-73. For further informdtion
and applicatiom, please c.1ll the Office of Ov('rsea~
Academte Progr &lt;~ms, 831-4941.

H1llel is now conducting a book drive for Attica
State Prison. The entire University community is
urged to contribute books to thi~ important cause.
Books may be dropped off at the Hillel table m
Norton

Resurrrction House wtll be )howmg

tr~~

lilm;,

0/ogle.\ und Isms, Archaeology uml the Bible and

The Unfini\hed StorY, today dt 8 JO p m

I

Resurrection House will have worship at 5 p.m
Sunday to be followed by an informal "Meet Ray
Repp" soCial hour at Newman Hall.

Psychology Drp.utment rc~earchers arc
evaluating short term treatment to help people
overcome insomnia. If you might be interested '"
free treatmrnt, send a po~tcard through the campus
mail with your name, phone number and the nature
and duration of your sleeping difficulty to Dr. John
Lick Department of Psychology, Ridge Lea Campus.
You' will then be called and given further
information.

CAC Project Shdw need) tutot~ •n all ;ub1ctts.
Give the tnner CitY h1gh ..chool t..rd' the extra help
they can't get 1n ~hoot Come to the CAL uflrlc,
Room 220 Norton, or cJII Mttch .tt !S74-6057

-

M.u . 1 The K•nl...\ .1ntl fatrport Convcntton
on Sdle r eb 12 (K)

Elvis Presley w1ll appear in person m a concert
at Buffalo Memonal Auduonum on April 5 at 8:30
p.m. Tickets dre on ;ale through Feb. 14 at Memorial
Auditorium Box Office. Aher Feb . 14 they will be
available at Buffalo Fe\tival, Hotol Statler-Hilton
lobby. Ticket prices c~re: $ I0, $7.50 and $5. For
mail orden, ~nd )elf-addrc~sed ~tamped envelope
and cheer.. or money order to Elvis Presley Concert,
Buffalo Memorial Audttorium, Buffalo, New York
14202
The Braz11tan Club IS spon~oring a Carnival
tomorrow from 8 p.m. 4 a.m. in the Millard
Fillmore Room, Norton. Admis~1on ts free. Come in
disguise if you like.

Chabad House, 3292 Main St ., holds daily
ninyon at 7 d.m . following
Chabad House, 3292 Mam St., holds daily
minyon at 7 a.m. following

Sports Information
Today : Varsity hockey V'&gt; Ithaca Collegt!,
Amherst Rec Center, I I :30 .!.m., var~ity basketball
at Broct..port State, 8: I 5 p.m.; frc~hman basketball
at Brockport State, 6 : 15 p.m.
Tomorrow : VMsity fencing at Syracu~e Wllh
Cornell; varsity wrestling quad at Clark Gym with St.
John Fisher, California State and St. Francis, 12:30
p.m .; varsity indoor track at the Rochester relays ;
varsity ~wimming at Syracuse; Vd!Sity women 's
swimming (only home meet of the season) at Clark
Pool vs. Rochester, 2 p.m.
Sunday : Varsity hockey at Oswego State, 2 p.m .
Monday : Varsity wresll~g at Guenlph College,
Guelph, Ontario,
Wednesday : Varsity swimming at Fredonia
State.
Thursday: Varsity hockey at Canton Tech,
Canton, N.Y .; varsity basketball at SUNY Stony
Brook, 8 p.m.; freshman basketball at Canisius
College.
The hockey game at Oswqo ~bte, postponed
from last weekend, has again been changed until
Sunday afternoon at Oswego, 2 p.m. faceoff.

KEY
K Kleinhdm
M Memonal Auditorium
B Bennett H1gh School
C Cl.ui...Gym

What' ~

Happening ?

Friday, Feb . 11
Film · Getting Strolght wtth ElhtH Gould and
Candice Bergen, Capen 140, call 831 H04 lor
\how tJmes.
Eye-con Yvonne Andersen screens dnd discusses
films made by ch1ldren in the Yellow Ball
Workshop, 8 p.m., Albright Knox Art Gallery
Open rehearsal: The Cleveland Quartet, II 30
a.m. I p.m., Room 101 , Baird Hall
film : The Hired Hand with Peter Fonda , Conference
Theater, Gall 831 354 I for ~howtimes.
UUAB coffeehou~ : 1ony Barr and and john
Roberts, Norton fim floor cafeteria, 9 p.m. and
11 p.m.
Chinese film : [;tecutlon In Autumn, presented as
part of International Ml)nth , Diefendorf 147,
7·30 p.m. and 9 :30p.m.
Seminar : "Induction tn Scientific Mtthod," Room
11 , 4244 Ridge Lea, 4 p.m.
Saturday, Frb. 12
Metropoltun Opera Aud1tion : r1nals, 8 p.m., Batrd
Recital Hall, admission is $ I at door
ldrnivat· Brazilian Mardt Grd), 8 p.m., Fillmore
Room, admtss1on i~ free.
Film. Bononos with Woody Allen, Cunlercnlr
Theater, call 831 ~S41 for ~howltmt'\
F1Im · Getttng Strolqht, Capen 140
UUAB ~ootfeehou-.e
I ony BJrrand .md luhn
Roberts.
E- ye&lt;on
Yvonne Ander\en
children's film
wurf..,hop, Albnght Knoll Art Go~llery ~.o.tll
882-!S700 lot tnformatton
~

Sunday, Feb. 13
Concert. Evenings for New Music, !S:30 p.rn ,
Albright-Knox Art. Gallery.
Concert: Pete Seeger, 2:30 p.m., Bennett Htgh
School, ticl..ets available at Norton Ticket
Office.
F1lm : The Hired Hund, Conference Theater
-AmyAhrend

Backpage

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                    <text>THE SpECTI{UM
Vol. 22, No. 52

State University of New York a1 Buffalo

Wedneld8y, 8 Febru.y 11n

Communicative Creativity needs
funds to keep children learning
by Cl~m Colucci
Specuum Staff Writu
Ned Regan was coming. So were the Courier-Express
and Buffalo Evenmg News. With Mr. Regan's endorsement
and the help of t he local press, Com munica t ive Creativi t y
which, under Bambii Abelson's leadership, has helped
handicapped ch ildren from Onta rio to Rochester for three
years, just might stand a chan ce of getting the state and
federal money to take- eare 'of the more than 500 children
waitmg to be helped{
\
Ned R egan di4•ft show . Ne1tber did t he press.
"communieati Jol Creati~"ty wu founded in 1969 by
Ms . A~~~QTI under the ausp·ces. of CoUege A to provide
c reat1ve arts and com umcallon experiences for
handicapped children. For ~ he past three years students
have been " big friends" evei"}\Sunday for these youngsters.
Last Sunday Communicative Creativity met in the
Fillmore Room to show the world the fine work they've
do ne for so long.
The world didn' t bother.
The first o ne saw was children, c h1ldren of all SIZes,
shapes, sexes, colors and ages. Eventually Ms. Abelson
came Ulto focus, a clapping, smiling, laughing blur m
several shades of blue and red, defymg the laws of physics
by be1ng everywhere at once. AU aro und were tables full o f
sc1ssors, paste, crayons, paper and glue , cardboard , old
magazmes, pape cleaners , staples and stnng. The walls were
hung wath dra wings, posters , paper cha1ns and signs tha t
the children had made.
Smiles
Up fro nt , a circle o f big fnend s and their htt le
fnends danced to an o ld Yiddish folk t une In the midd le
was Ms Abelson, jolly and ebullient, ho lding a crying
you ng boy named Jason who had braces o n both legs. His
tears stopped and she puUed some people out o f the line to
form a second . concentnc circle where Jason danced with
all the rest.
Andy, a five-year-old autistic, came in cry ins for his
mommy, fraghtened by the unfamiliar room and aU the
people . Some children and student volunteers went over to
help thei r little friend .
A band, t he UB Blues, gave up a paying engagement
to play here free o f charge. They played for t he children
and taught them the names of the different anstruments .
Andy was relaxed enough to go up on the bandstand with
Ius bag fnend gnnning and playang with the wires.
Elsewhere an the room , Mic helle, another auhstic child ,
JUmped up and do wn with JOY watching her reflection in
t he phot ogra pher's camera .
Why were these children so happy? They're deaf,
bund, mentally retarded, autistic, Vlcttms of cerebral palsy.
e mo t ionally dasturbed. Yet the s miles on t heir fa ces were
unmistakable.

By no w Ms . Abelson had slo wed do wn enough to
talk about the group's work . There are pro &amp;rams for the
bltnd , deaf and retarded, but none whach would get a ll
sorts o f handicapped children t oget her so they might
understand each o ther's problems. In Communicative
Creati vity these child ren can make frie nds in a mo re
normal atmosphere and end the asola tio n and social
backwardness all too common among the handicap ped .
Some of these children were considered hopeless:
teachers could n' t handle them " We haven't had any
proble ms," saad Ms. Abelson. She added that the program
was not desagned as a subst itut e for s pec aal schooling but
as a necessary supplement. In the case of autistic children
lik e Andy and Michelle, howeve r, there are no o ther
pro grams, and there is no o ther help
The program has receaved so me cnt u:asm from
fa cu lty members who claim that the volunteers are
" unpro fessao nal. " Ms. Abelson re o irted " A professional is
anyo ne who cares and wants to help ."
A co mmo n accusation is that C'om mumca llve
CreatiVIt y IS " the blind leading the blind ." This as true.
They're proud of the blind chtldren who teach o ther blind
child ren braille : they' re proud o f the dea f child ren
teachtng the manual alphabet. In spate o f these c nlldsms
the Univers1ty administration has endorsel.l the group, a
development Ms Abelso n found "very funny ," even
"u nbelievable."

.

Post~rs

and pictures
Cu rr e ntly the program opera tes o n Sunday
afternoons . But there are plans to have a daaly workshop
by the end of the year. They' ve made consaderable
pro gress already , movi ng from eight chaldren to 90 with 3
watllng list of over SOO . They also provade free babysi tting
serv1ce so parents can get out of the ho use. Thas as 3
necessary servace because, as Ms Abelson asked ''Who'!&gt;
goang to babysit a 16-year-old wath cerebral palsy?" Or the
s1x -foot three inches mentally retarded 17 -year-old who
passed b y u she spoke?
The chUdron bepn work ina o n po!!_en, drawings and
booklets which would tell people what Communicative
Creativit y d o es. Ms. Abelson will take these along with
hundreds o f le tters and thousand s of signatures when she
goes to Washmgton . D.C. t o try to ge t funds to handle the
extra children .
All were workang happ1ly and dallgently 1 he re wa~
11 -year-old Jo hn wo rking on a drawing. 10-year-old Kathy
cuttang pictures out of a magazanc.&gt; lm a po'tcr about
fnends , her 7 year-old brother Larry tra..:ang ha&lt;. h1g fnend'.,
hand , Laune, a IS -year-old vact un of ..:erehral p11lsy .
depactmg ch1ldren dan~:ing. and I 0 year-old Landc1 mal.ang
a pacture of J esu~ sangang wllh little.' chtldrcn
Spell the name right
Some we re subJect to the sam&lt;' vunatu:s as the rest of
the human s pecies. E1ght-year-o ld Pt.'tcr Sll.tpansk•.
t hrilled a t the prospect of appeanng in pnnt , ins1stcd h•~
name be spelled nght and the pw nunc.:aation be put in
paren theses Daniellc, a lovely mnc year-old bla~:k gnl,
didn' t quite believe that she was go1ng to we her name 1n
the pape r.
Wildon. a five-year-old boy , drew a blue-faced sold1er

Photos by Zin.-strom

wath obvaous glee. Sam my, two o r th re years o ld ,
adentified numbers and letters watho ut a mistake
There was Bobby , whose eyes would have been a
beautiful shade o f blue had it not been fo r the accident or
disease which struck him saghtless and turned the blue and
wbate anto o ne and ashnguishab le mass of color. He looked
darec tl y at you when you spoke and worked so intently
that you wouldn 't know he was bland Asked af he enjoyed
the program, he looked straaght at you and said: " Yes,
that 's why I &amp;o here every week ."
GrarefuJ parents
Pare nts who were o uts1de looking a t the thanss thear
c hildre n h ad made had nothmg but pra1se for
Co mmunacat 1vc C reativit y. " We think 1t 's grea t that there 's
a program like thas ... I ' m unpressed that there a re so
many stud ents who want to take part " saad Andy's
mt1ther "There JUSt aren't any programs for autiStiC
c.;haldrcn," al.lded another mother "Our kads deserve a
..:hancc too" The mother of a chald wath cerebral pal~y
t h an k ~
·· tt '' helped a lot He Wei'&gt; really ternf1ed of
people
today he came 111 very anxmu\ to plc~y "
A vc~lu abl c program that doe~ ~o mulh for so many
may not he c~ h l c to expand enough to ~:are for all of those
ciHidrcn whu want and need help The local press d1dn't
come ('uunty l::xe..:utave Regan pronmed to come anl.l
d tdn ' t evl.'n bother to tell an yont" that he wouldn't show
up ""1 hat really sucks." raged an 1nd1gnan t bystander " I
hope the \lory tears them apart " You couldn't help b111
feel angry as you left. but o n the way out. a ~•x · year old
black ctuld named Brian opened the door for you and
smtled whe n he heard that he'd see tus name m the paper
There JUSt maght be some hope for us yet

�Dharma Dmg Abuse COOter:
help offered anyone, anytime
by Janis Cromer
Cify Editor

Michael S. Levinson:
Sub Board candidate
Friday nigh t. Clark Gym. The \:Osm ic rapper. Th e can&lt;.ly
wrapper. sweet tal kin· Lev. Who? Michael Skphc n Lcvin:-.on .
That schmuck?! Well. ych . bu t it's free. Okay, but ..
You sec. I'm really not too ex perienced writing reviews.
I'm on the cam pus stuff and u..;ually th is shit is left for the
Lit and Drama guys. So you &lt;J'il.. " Wh y me'!" W ~ll , tf you're
L tt and Drama. yuu feed your c11o
At the 1111H1\cnt the poll~ ~how
lly wnting ahout play~ and bonk~
not about some 1dWI who Ms . Lev1n~on run mn~ .1 strong
~:ullelled
1000 stgnatures and thtrd, behtnd Pat Paul~en and
hullshtlled hts way through tons &lt;..'Icon Jones
Bc1ng J pra~:tical person.
of bureauuacy to gel a haskethall
1eah11n&amp; \hJt tus mother's ch anu~~
court on a freeztng Frulay r11ght
to wm were sl1t11 , I ev antlounced
Anyhow. I got the JOh
his candrdacy for t he next highest
The Cllrnpus edttor sanl to me
"You can h&lt;1ve sorne fun wHh the o ffu.:e. head of Sub Board llts
rev1ew ." Arm&lt;·d wrth tfus frrsl proposal was to c hangl· the
knowledge , I walk ed mto the gym name nf Suh Board tn Jcllfl
With an ovn00W l'fnWd of ahn ut Subrnannl' Jn , lie wa!&gt; Jl~&lt;l n•.1dy
I 00 people
Not the teennng to make nnyune tn the gy rn
rni11al ~tuckholdcrs To say the
thou~and~ Lev predt(tcd'' Oh well
Thc:n '&gt;(Jillt: band came on In lealot. Ills proposals wen: met w1th
enterta111 us ttl! Lev appeared I ent hu.,Hrsttc rndtfferen..-c
M y lr1cnd JU~t remnHll'u me
I hmk lh.ll the only rea~on 1h.tt
they were then~ •~ that the that I ' m gctlllll!, away lrom nry
drummer •~ the head nt LlliAH . ungtnal rd.:a nf .1 non ·rt·va•w I
and he threatened to dow til\' really don't want to try and tl'll
place down tf he drdn't gt'l tP yuu what happ~ncd and throw 111
my o ptnion and t hal who!.: ~,·enc
play
You prohJhly ~l,ln ' t L.trc . It you
L ev f1ndlly ,tcpped up
lmmedtatdy ev~ryone left the do . g•J In the SA YoLI 'ee , lht•y
bleac hers ami .:rnwdeJ around t h~ g;tv~ L t&lt;v $300 to vtul.'o ·tap~: the
stage
The L ev1n~on dtJnsttld. whole o~ffarr , and s1ncc rt's Y"lll
nghl1 No, rt\ JU~t !hal thl' tntkl' money . I guess ynu h.tVl' J rrght It&gt;
use the film . I m nnt gmn!!, tn
wa!&gt;n ' t turned up loud l'nmt~h
li e ~tarted the t•vemn~ Wtt h hrs wast~ my ltnH: atrrng my optnt&lt;Jtls
'tntY of Adam and tve (Ad rnJn any more.
and I ven) . Tht~ 1~ really a ftnt:
ptlem to h~tcn to . The word~ flow
AUTO SERVICE
srno,lthly und overlap creattvely
COMPLETE
and ~·vcryone '""led Jnd sat
qut~tly
I hat poent IS al~o 111 hr~
AUTO REPAIR
hook hut II JUSt Sll~ Ill rnnt You
Honest &amp; Reliable
h.1vc to ht"ar lev smg 11

(o unseling stressed
" The meat ol our p ogrJm IS detuxtltlatwn "
noted Mr. R evo, "y.:t there is a stgmfkant emp hasts
on .:ounseling servrccs as well " Counseling St.'ssions
may be individual or group meetings and may last
anywhere from one week to stx months or more
depending on mdivtdual need "Thl're is no set
lormat. We try to frnd ou r patil'nts' needs and then
work to fulfill thost: needs," added Mr llennessy
In add1t1on to the counseling and d&lt;!toxifkation
aspct:ts o f rehabthtation. Dharma prov1des other
means of rc.tdjustment. Th e staff also works to
provide vocatwnal guidance, and wiU assist rn
locating housmg and welfa re benefits for the patient
Dharma serves also as a referral agency for drug cases
it cannot handle personally. Pattents it ~.:annnt treat
bc:cause of age limits will be transferred to other
rehabilitation organ1zatrons.
~u rther rn thl' realm uf a rderral body, Dharma
has plut:ed dll'rtts 10 toul' h w1th such programs as
SEE K . l:: J&gt;I S and the Co-operat1ve College .
Concerning the Dharma philsophy of total
ass1stance. Mr Hennessy said : " We ·ust kind of take

GUSTAV A . FRISCH , INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 K ENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

rea~on ,

L~:v

111trnJul'ed ht~ mother li e
cxplarned that thts ktntlly old lat.ly
rn the mtnt-skirt was running for
pre~rt.lent. smce Lev htmself was
not old enough to be president.

Reach-out work
The Dharma staff has also been sponsonng.
educatwnal programs 1n the oommunity and •~
available for speaking engagements . The next suc h
program will be presented to the Buffalo Teacher·~
Federatton on Marc h 6. For those who are reluctant
to approach the actual Dharma offtce, the staff ha'
also been pe rformi ng "reach -uul'' work in to bars,
pi7.Za parlors and other frequented city spo ts.
"One of th e toughest things about this type ut
w ork is that n o one seems to hav e th e answe r. Some
centers ahve a program t hat works for a certain k111d
of individual, some have a successful program and
don't know w h y, but there is no o ne solution to
drug abuse. Hopefully . with a httle cltpenmenting
Dharma is meeting the n eeds of the whole process o f
rehabilitation," claimed Mr. H ennessy .
Dharma Dr ug Abuse Center ts open Mondlly
through Saturday from 1- 9 p .m . In additton a st~fl
m ember can be reac h ed o n 24 · hour basts at
885 - 0145.

books
eveflyilan·s llocli st0f8
iJI the Unlv~ullll ort(l

3102 Main St.
between C.ute·r &amp; Li.tbon)

WKBW 1r THEATRE &amp;ERIES PUSEMTS

KLEINHANS MUSIC HAll

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12-8:00 PM

CARLY SIMON
&amp; MICKEY NEWBURY

THEATRE SERIES
674 Main Street
Orch. $5.SO, $4.SO

856-4180
Bale. $4.SO, $J.SO

•

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT NORTON TICKET OFFICE

- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

The Spectrum is published thrtJe
11
week, lWery Mondey,
Wedntnday end Fridav; during the
ftlfJUI/Ir IIC«hmic veer by Sub-Board
1. Inc. Offices ere IOCIIted et 355

times

N orton Hall, S~te Unitlfii'Sir{ of New
York ar Buffelo, 3435 Main Sr ..
Buffalo , New York, 14214.
Telflphone: ATN Code 716; Editoriel
831-41 13; Butint~U, 831 ·3610.
Rep resen ted for «JtltHTislng by
Nat ional EdUC4rional Advertising
S«vicfl, Inc., 360 Lttxingron A..e.,
New York, N . Y, 10017.
Sub!/i!Cription Tlltes are $4.50 pet
utmester or SB.fXJ for two sttmfiStei'S

Second C/11$$ Postage paid at Buffelo,
New York.
Circulllt ion: 16,000

HEY YOU WITH THE INSTAMATIC
OR IS IT A LINHOFF
A)

If you've always wanted to learn the fundamentals of photography-

B)

If you couldn't get into the ART DEPT's Photo Course1f you would like to do color photography-

E)
m uma.w. ~e-a m CAlL!

Al A N

8 37 , 0 3 9 3

Ontv 40 .eats available - open only to ttudenu, employ- end femliiM

su N Y

Since the cen ter opened last fall , Dharma has
had 105 req uests for h elp o r information, and has
actively handled 40 cases itself. The majority of
th ese patients have been heroin addicts but the
ce nter has also dealt with useers of speed and
psy ch edelic drugs . Mr. Revo said : "We pretty much
have run the gambit of drug users. "
T he s taff of the cent er consists of Dr. Larry
N1meth, director of Dharma and physic ia n on the
s taff of C hildren's H ospital, a nurse, Dee Johnson
and four counselo rs. Staff members have varied and
wide-ranging bac kgrounds . Mr. Revo was involved 10
the State University o f Buffalo's rehabilitation
graduate program while another member worked for
two years with gangs on Buffalo 's East Side. Two ol
the staff members are ex-addict s.
There are 13 cou nty-funded drug abuse
programs in Erie County. " H owever," said Mr Revo ,
"Dharma is unique beca use unlike m ost cent ers, wt:
have a doctor as direc tor of this pro~otrarn . "
" Most drug cen ters are JUSt not w ell enough
equtpped to handle hard drug ad d icts . They tend to
deal mamly wtt h s peed freak s and acid heads,"
added Mr
H ennessy . The major c riti cism of
Buffal o's drug programs g~ven by Mr Hennessy wa~
that "there is a tendency to deal more wtth the
clinical approach to drug addicllon. and somewh.Jt
ignore the psycholog~c.tl and practiral asp.:..:ts."

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

C)
D)

of :

Many help requests

Imported &amp; Domestic

Strung third
'1 hen lor no part 1..:ular

" We are virtually the only drug rehabilita ti on
center in the Buffalo area t ha t is equipped to handle
hard drug users," commented Jac k H ennessy,
counselor at Dharma Drug Abuse Center. The
Dhamla program, located at 87 Elmwood Ave. in
Allentown, was starteo in O c t ober of last year under
the ausptces of Buffalo's Children's H ospital.
The cen t er . which is funded by Erie County,
was establis hed to w ork wtth drug and drug-related
problems in an adolescent popula tion "Ad olescenct'
tS defined as being 2 I and younger but unofficially
we make eJtt:epti ons to this so that no o ne who
needs help is turned away." said Assistant Dtrector
and Senior Counselor Terry R evo .
Mr. R evo satd that Dharma's program fell into
th ree major areas : detoxification , counseling for
those wh o want tt and after -care or follow-up
sessions. The detuxificatton process for herolll
addiction mvolves using a replacement drug such as
m ethadone. hald ot or valium . For tht: ba rbit uat e
user. detoxtf11.:atwn Cllll~tsts of decrenstng doses uf
barb11uates until ,, levd of complete abstention 1s
n!alht•d
l'hc renter deals w1th both tn · patients and
atnhulatory or out·pat1ents. In-patient care IS hmited
to persons Ill and ynunger and t~ only avatl:iblc a.t
Children · ~ ll usptlal
Medtt:.ll attention for
u ut -pattt:nts 1~ Js~octatcd with the methadone
dctoxtficatrun un1t Jl Meyer Memorial ll ospt tal and
the methadolll' tllai!HI.'noncl' program .11 Stsler's
ll ospllal

t h e patient under our wing in a drug-free
environment.'' Assistant Director Revo noted th at
many patients have expressed that the staff of
Dharma "are the first people who have trul y cared
about in a long tim e ."

ALSO: EUROPE TBIS SUMMER

c:AU. , _ 001 OUT8Tll01111&amp; UTI8 AD DATil 1Q IUUfl TIJI I1I10ID

Page two . The Sp~trum . WednepAAY u9 ftQruary 1972

If you are interested in holograph - three dimentional Image MakingOR - ALL Of THE ABOVE-

Then come to a Photo Club meeting
•
ANY THuRsDAY EVENING AT s :oo p.m .
332 Nor ton

�Talented students to
be given their break
"Th e Umvemty 1mports most T heate r Wo rks hop for thetr
of tiS entcttainment . Why? There
th eater plans by channelcng these
ts plenty of talent tn the productions t o commun tty
Un1verstt y ~:o mmun1ty that'!&gt; hospitals. high schools. etc. Mr.
completely tgnorcd because these Sincla1r also recogmzes t hat there
kids have no opportunity t6 are man y st udents in t he Art
expose them~elves "
Department who are "dying" t o
The speaker was l::arl Stnda1r
exhibit t heir work but have no
assistant ooordmator of Norton opportun1ty In this area , the
Hall , who, m ~:o nJunc t ton wllh group· IS con t emplating an art
student Jeff ReltnJn and
exhibit of stuuen ts' artistu: and
Community Aclton Corps. IS photograph ic works at locales hke
org3nt71ng a group that wt ll give
the Elhcolt Mall.
talented student\ a d1ancc In
One t h ing thl' group
pt.!rform 111 the community !'he desperately needs is a student
group mtcnds to Jrrange theate r coordinator. who will receive a
productions and l.'onccr ts for
monetary stipend for h1~ efforts.
presentation where It wo uld he As far as funu1ng . 1he group hopes
greatly appre1:1atcd
.Jt dtufl·hc'
In fl'CCIVC assistance from C'AC.
high sc hClob. hmp1tah. n1ent.tl
UUAB , variou s derarl ments of
inst1tulton~ and o ld agr home~
the Llmvemty that they work
throughout the I.UIIItnllnlly
wtth and Sub Board . A ~mall sum
" I'd hkc to IJkc .t 'urn·y of fr o m Mr
Stnclall·~
pnvate
how many ku.l&lt;o there arc 1n 1111\ ac..:ount may prov1de the m111al
~h ool who Lan really plt~y goml
mont'tary tmpetus for the group.
gu1tar." ~..ommcntcd Mr S1nd•.111
Mr S1nda1r urges any member of
He hope' to even tu ally org.JmJe thr Umvers1ty commumty who
" pad..ages ol 'ihow' •
.t rod.
feels he hd~ somethmg to offer
group, a foil, \Inger, ct .. on the .t\ a musician, ar11~t. !&gt;tudent
same b1ll "Bc~1Ue\ opc n1ng up the ~..oordtnat o r or pldtn cnt h u~mst
.1rea of mW.Il. ma ybe we'""" heir tu 'I to p by h1s off1ce , R~1111 H4
change the w.J y thl' co mmunitY Norton Hall
VJew~ the Un1ver\lty," \aid Mr
Wh1le various df01ts mJy he
S1nda1r lt e Icc!\ that d1stortcd !&gt;larted 1n J few month\ , the gr(lup
1mage ts l hang111g, hut "not la\1
hopes to he lully opera11onal by
enough "
September M r S111da1r 1" an
t:ntiHlS ia~tlc organ1zcr who ha'
Enthusiasts wa n ted
plans 111 all d1redwn!&gt;, even ~~~ far
The new group Will not tw
U\ Sunday aflt&gt;moon pll'rtJC~ on
JevcluptnJ! rll'W
fliOil''-1' cam pus grass m the ~ummer H is
thcm sc lvc~. l"lul rather "e~t ros1ng
IJtc ~ t
proJed '' parll..:u larly
CXI,IIng l.tl cnt' 1•1 the
valuahle heca u\c 11 w1ll g1vc
.;ommunlly ,' .lluHJing to Mr
exposun.' to the Iudden talen t ~ of
Re1rnan hn lll~lan~.e . they will
the lln1vcrs1 ty wh1lc prov1d1ng a
work m t·on)u nd wn w1th the gn·at .Jid to lht.! ~:o mmun1ty as
I hcalrr C1ulcl .and the• C'A(' well

T he Student Associat ron h as an noun ced that
Buffalo Draft Co unselin g Ce nt er personn el will b e
holding on campus office h o urs every T uesday an d
Thur..day ~tarttng im m ediately . Paul Post and Bo b
Musek from th e cen ter will be available on those
days from 9 a .m . I p .m . in th e UB Vets office, in
Room 260 Norton flail. Stud ents sh o uJd also n ole
that 24 -h ou r em ergen cy service is available by
ph o ni ng 897-287 1.

U.B. VETS CLUB
and the
UNIVERSITY CHAPTER OF
VIETNAM VETERANS AGAINST the WAR
will show 4 films m the
CON FE RENC E THEATR E
7:00p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 9th
ADMISSION FREII

Adelle Davis lectures

Nutritional theories discussed
b y Jim Mc Fe rson
Spt'Ctrum Staff 'WTIIer

A part1san crowd com p letely fille d the· FiUmo re
Room last Monday nigh t to hear n utritio nist Adelle
Davis la m bast t he "foodl ess" foods which she claims
ma ke up th e d iet o f m ill ions of A merican s.
From the long applause of her en t ran ce to th e
genial good humor wh ic h perm ea t ed m ost o f h er
onc-and-a·half hou r appearance. it was evid ent th at
Ms . Davis was in fn e nd ly territory; however , a vocal
minor it y in th e pe rson of Haro ld L. Segal.
De partmen t of Biology. b roke the spell and accused
Ms. Davis of ma k ing ''unreliable rem arks. hal f

flo ur and h ydrogena ted o ils; and, particularly
nu tritive supple m ents.
It is h e r advocacy o f such supplements as
vi t amins A and &lt;: a nd t h e 8 complex vitamins that
drew m ost of Dr. Segal's criticism an d has caused her
work to be de no un ced by fellow nutritionists .
Ho wever, sh e stresses tha t "you don't need to h ave
vita min su pple ments when th e food we eat ~
who lesome and well-grown ."
Un fort un ately. she adds, "most o f the food we
cat IS trash ." Until t he foods availa ble to the
American public do mee t nu t rit ional standards.
th ough , Ms. Davis st rongly recommended tha t
n u trit ive sup plements he used, al b eit with care.
R esea rc h no nexiste nt
Ms. Dav1s spent must of her lecture analyzi ng
the vanous preventattve and curdtive effects tha t
proper usc of v1lanun and mmeral su pplem ent s can
have In thai tune. she b lasted the pharmacuetical
industry for p lacmg profits .tbove the well -being of
people M~ Oav1s asserted that research on nu t rition
is &lt;ltmo~t rHtncxlstent She ...:ont1nued "'Ralph Nader
put Ius lin~cr un 1t when he sa1d , 'Nobody 's trymg to
llnt.l out hut a great many rx·uplc are trying very
hard nut hi litld out
Money for research in
nutnttcHl llltncs lrom th e poisun spra y people and
th e lerlllill'l people Jnd 1111111 the erwched Oour and
sug:u pcnpk ..
Ag:1111 ~ 1 thew at.IVl'I\.HIC\ Ms Dav1s placed her
hope 111 "you11 g people. J geJtcr&lt;t tmn applymg and
pracllc lllg nutiiiiClll .. M o~l ul that nutrition should
Clime lll&gt;fll MX loud!., ~he ~a 1t.l
1111lk . rggs. cheeses.
mea l\ , lt1Jtl \ and vq:etahl c~
'Green .;tuc,l '

Adelle Davis
co rrect and th e o ther h alf mcorrect. A lltllnkey
could do as well.·· h e added
Though Dr. Sc~l was greeted with h1'w' .11H..I
several md1vte..l ual outcnes, M, Dav" appl'.ll ct.l
conctlta t ury. adm1lltng "thai a lot ol my wort.. h,l\
been c l1n1cal. w htdt \Cientrst\ cctll\lt.ICI llfl'iCICnttlll ·
"But," she Cllntmued "t t m1ght Jl'o he lallet.l ntcm·
human 11anan than tl11s ~::e11tleman\ ."
Vitamin value
T hat , however, was the only Ullrlcasan l II JUt.le nt
marring her appearance. For an htuu M ~ . l&gt;avl\
expou n ded her nutnt1onal lheunc\. Sht• th en
answered quest lOllS from the auu ac~t cc lc11 a hall
hour . Usmg an anc...:dutal \lyle Jnd olten relc11111g to
the several huok~ she ha' wnlleu ahoul nulrtliCHt,
Ms. Davis explored the nutnt1onal value ol
ically grown foods; refined foods like

Vc~c lar1an d1 e ls ~:a n he n•mplctely sa fe , Ms.
Davis sa1t.l, hut waruet.l that "'tract vcgetanan d1ets
ca n he very dJngcruus" largely because ol a
dellc1ency 111 the V1larn1n B ..:om plex. She alsu
cautmned ag,.t111st unnecessary su pplements. like
chloroph yll, " wh1ch only g1vc~ you green swot." she
qu1ppcd . " wlm:h 1\ .tlln~ht on St Pall ILk\ Day, and
that 's ahnut all "
Members ol fhl' r11Cd1cal '...:houl\ lrt•\hlllaJI da"
were resrxws1hk lur hrtttj!lll~ ~h D.Jvl\ lu cam pu'
Thry l'X prt•swd a horx· thJt thl'Y could h1111g olher
'pcat..cr' 111 the ~rue .Hl'J hecau~e ·" one siUdenr
put II " Wt•'rc: llllerC:\ICU Ill IIUIIIIIOII Jlld tJH•
l'VIItroVt'l\}' .1h11111 11 Jlld we lt.~vc huth ,1 lack o f
IIUtllliPIIJI kflClWkt.fgc .111J l!JIIIIIIg ..
M' IJ.1v" It;" hl'CII l'\11 c:ml'l y u111~ .11 , 11 llll'U K.ll
":hooh 111 th1• P•"' l111 ll'ltl\111!( 111 u1dude llllll'l'\ 111
llUlrlll•tll Ill tht'll l.'llrrtl'lll,l l&gt;1k, 1111\ ,Ill' lilt Ill' ttfre11
ccm~.:c:r 11 CU only With Ul\c,ne .JIIJ 11111 wtlh health .
' he o p111cd " W1• ' ltould he ,1\h,ullc:J •&gt;I nur grc.tl
lllCUic..aJ CC:II tl't\.'' \lit' liJIIICIII CU ''I hat Allll'lllall\ all'
"'unhealthy we llel·J lhl'lll ..
St1ll. M~ l&gt;avl\ 1e111:t111' up 111111~IJl .lhilill fhe
hl':t llh of hlllll e Attll'rkJII\ "Wl•'rc 111 ;1 stage 11glt1
IIOW Wlll'lt' thl·e~·\ ~t;utlllg II• l\l' an llliCIC'I 0111
there\ l'llt 1u:a tl y cnuuglt . ~he ...:und udet.l . l· ldctly
hut \eC IIIIrtgly uldcla11gahlc. appt'MJII!! •m tcl.:vl\11111
talk ~h ow ' ant.l c.:an1 pu'e' .KIO\\ the 11.tt111n M ~ l&gt;dVI\
may yet ..tmtt\C the lo.111d ol lllltrtl11111al mlc1e\l ~he
thtnks we 'll need

Films.

D1fferent Sons
Dewey Canyon Ill
Only in the Begmnmg

UUAB

un!versity
un1on
a c t ivities . •••••• ••••••• •••• • •••• ••
boa rd

The Wmter Soldter Investigation

dramatic
arts
UUAB DRAMAT IC 1\R 1S dnd
I he,1trc
pre\e/11

T ER MI NAL
TONI GHT

8 :30p.m .

Harriman Library )tud!l
Student~$ 1.00

Al u m n i $ 1.00
Non-Students $2 .00

film

FEO I Oth and 12th IIIURSOA Y AND SATURDAY

.

~aDen's [9~

lACK ROllHiNS
CHAHllS
JOf ll
~-

"bananas"
(chcc; ~ ~how

Cd)l'

lor time)

"'l'bl
lind
lllld"
rR IDAY AND

COl'"' by Del«&gt;.

""'
uxe
Untied Arlssts

-

Wednesday, 9 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�'The Last Mone'

The plot just never thickens
loosely , is centered around a movie company.
(Television and movies are notorious for feeding o ff
of themselves for stories.) This movie company goes
All right , t his time no holding back ; no beating to Mexico to shoot some western films complete
around any bushes or hedging any bets. There does with bogus bloodshed, phony fighting, sham
not seem to be any polite way to say it: The Last shooting and trumped-up terror.
Movie is terrible. Just terrible.
When the movie company leaves the area the
The production i:. a veritable cornucopia of happy natives begin re-enacting the scenes, with one
mistakes and all-around badness. I suppose the best slight difference. They don't realize that what the
place to start handing out the anti-accolades is with movie company was doing was "just for fun" and
director Dennis Hopper. Surely everyone remembers that nobody was really getting hurt. The natives
him from th e days of Easy Riders and began re-shooting the scenes. only this time there is
understandable movies. Well. Mr. Hopper is not only genuine violence and death. " Hey,'' you say, " that
the director of this movie. hers also its co-writer.
sounds like a good idea for a film! " Don't you
Director!
now there's an exaggeration. He believe it ! Whlle it may be a good idea, the fellows in
seems to have directed this film with the care of a charge really blew the whole deal.
drunken milkman directing traffic.
Good points
While I am in a kind mood , it would be
Unfinished raJm
to mention that the photography 1n the
appropriate
I give him obviously undeserved cred1t when I
concede that nobody would intemionally set out to film is quite good and, at times, even beautiful.
direct a film in order for it to come out like this. The Note. for example. the lovely blue sky and clouds in
actors arc directed to display complete unawareness the scenes which show a close-up of a dying cowboy .
that they are speaking to people when they deliver Or even the dusty , almost black-and-whiteish quality
their lines. The film is disjointed and irregular, in the scenes of the movie wrthin a movie.
looking and sounding like a flrst read -through of the
You may take that last paragraph as an
script or a collectiOn of flubbed-out takes. Hopper extcnsrve listing of everything I could find thai t~
can not even preserve unity within an individual right with the pretentious production . This is not tlw
scene.
type of film that people should pay money to see
What is disjunctHHI tn each mdtvtdual scene II&gt;
For the record, th1s boring lemon ·1s JUSt
disunity in terms of the whole movie. This could be bcgmAing a (hopefully) short run at the North P.drk
the fault of Berlatski and Mahak iam, the film and ('enter theaters. Be careful not to confuse it
editors. Perhaps it is Stewart Stl!rn who is wtth a reportedly gnod mov1e &lt;.:ailed The Last Picture
responsible (he co-authored the script and wrote the .\'how
screenplay). It could be Hopper's fault - his talent
for silly self-reflexiveness and pretentll&gt;US
Responsibility
fragmentatron 1S e:v1dent everywhere in the nwv1e
by Jay Boyer

Spectrum Staff Writl'r

'W.zzaf?

Bob Lieberman, a Tower Resident,
consumed tw.enty pieces of Food Service chicken to surpass the
former record of nineteen pieces. No bones about that.

.

... IMPORTANT NOTICE • u
STUDENT MEDICAL INSURANCE
Enroll now for 2nd semester!

for enrollment details phone
NIAGARA NATIONAL INSURANCE

853-0931

853~3 1

or
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES

Plotless boredom
Suspectmg what I was in for , and realizing that
some movies take a while to establi~h their prcmtse
and plot, I did not tnittally look for a story line. For
the first quarter of the film. I was t1Hl pre-occupied
looking for dialogue to worry about the story. I defy
anyone to show me any genuine d1alogue 10 the first
tfUarter of the film .

WE HAVE NOTHI NG TO SAY

ABOUT OUR PLACE

SEEIN G IS BELIEVING

Wlteu it linally came. I W:lS ~o exerted I could
have risen allll cheered hut my JOY d11.l not last long.
Havmg finally heard dialogue. tt was then my
rcsponsrb1hty to take up the search for "plot." Just
when I was about to give up, I not reed a connectll&gt;n
(a looo;e one. granted, but a connection IS a
conncct1un) between tw(l consecut1vc scenes and we
were tn hus1ncss. It wasn't exactly what I would call
a plut , but you l:tl..,• what ynu can gel

COME F I ND OUT FOR YOURSlLF

Anacones Inn
3178 Bailey Ave.
(next to Garden ofSwt.oets)

Tlw "pl111." .1nd ot

----------------FINO
OUT
WHAT
JO-ANN ARMAO
DOES
AFTER
HOURS!

to
Till'
Spectrum office, J:;:;
Nolton, tontC)Ill at 7 ~
A 11
current
and
prospecttve members
of the Campus, City
and Feature staffs
should attend .
Come

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Page four. Th.e Spectrum . Wednes&lt;lay~ ...9

Feqruacy 1972

cour~e

I

USl'

the term

If 1t can be said that a film like this one has a
"biggest fault," then thl' b1ggest fault of the
production was its dearth nf bclieveabllity . It ~~
impossible Ill Identify with a11yone at anytime and
throughout the enure movie one lls constantly aware
that 11 is just a movie, and nothing what-so-ever tO
get wrapped up in or excited about.
In this article, the term~ " failure" ,"lcmon·· and
"'disaster'' arc U!&gt;Cd to dcscnbe this film; I use them
not only because I am angry with those connet"tell
wrth the picture for havrng contnbuted to the
wasting of an evening of mine. but also due to J
responsib1hty, after a fash10n , to protect others from
the same f:tte . I woul~ even go so far as to recount
the enttre plot here in order to spoil your suspen~e
and ru111 the story for you so that you'd dec1de not
to see rt But , as I sard before, I really couldn't find a
genuine plot . Finally . let it be said that if all llHIVIC~
were like thi~ one then , fo1 me, this would truly Ia·
The Lasr Movie

EtnergeiiCJl co11jerellce
The United Commun ity Centers, Inc. of Brooklyn, has issued an emergency call for
statewide conference lo be held this Saturday , Feb. 12 in Albany . The conferen ce
program includes a keynote speech by Paula Storch on " Building a S tudent Movement tu
Save Public Education."
Other topics which will be covt.&gt;red in a discussion with legi.~lators are · no tuition at
CUNY or SUNY ; no public aid IO non ·public schools and colleges; and no cutbacks 10
education. Students and faculty from th roughout the state are u rged to attend the
conference, which will be held at the Campus Center, SUNY Alban y, 1400 Washing ton
Avenue. All faculty und student~&gt; interested in attending please contact Ellen Block at
837-1043.

Unu~ual J,.

Diamond

rJ

Enga~ement

R.in_m
dfsi~tr
c~atm~oor

cratts~n

€ri1~eweLeots
II ALLEN ST., BUFF'ALO , N. V.
116·6900

�Community Action Corps movies
Marc h 3 - 4 (Fri.- Sat.) Eye1 of Hell
The audience will wear special 3-D J)asses during the dark and magical fantasies
which are inflicted upon a young archeologist and a psychiatrist by an ancient ritual
mask. This is a 3-D stereoscopic picture and is "as gruesome as anything ever ~en o n the
screen." A Taylo r·Ro ffman production with Paul Stevens, Claudette Nevins, Jeff Mo ro n
and BUI Walker. There will be spec1al almost midnight sho wings of this in the Fillmore
Room.
March I 0 I I (Fri.- Sat.) I Never Sang For My Father
This fi lm is a briiHan tly portrayed story of a grown son torn between responsibility
to Ius parents and bis desire to be true to h imself. Melvyn Douglas received an academy
award for h LS portrayal of t he father of Gene Hackman and EsteUe Parsons who are
reunited from their supporting roles 10 the great Bonnie and Clyde . D1rected by Gilbert
Cates.
.March 17· 18 (Fn.-Sat.) Silent Mov1es
acco mpaniment.

Both of these

fli~ks

wall have hve piano

Friday - Sally of tile Sawdust
Th1s 1925 W.C. Fields class1c combines comed y,
melodrama, rural-romance and race-t o-the-rescue finish . II is the first silent feature to star
Fields. Long thought lsot , th1s recently discussed classic is anvaluable. Also as D.W
Gnffll h's only comedy

March 24 25 (Fri.-Sat.) Marx Brothers
Friday - A Night in Casablllnca This classic finds the Marx Brothers ri&amp;ht in the middle
of a gang of tttieves plotting to take over Ronald Komblo w's (Groucho) hotel so that
the y can remove a cache of jewe ls and art treasures ttidden in the hotel. Cruco joins Harpo
and Groucho t o foil t he evil plan . With Groucbo, C ttico and Harpo Marx , Sig Roman ,
Lisette Verea, Lois Collier, Dan Seymour and Charles Drak e. Directed by Archie Muyo.
Saturday - Copacabana
G roucho Marx is a theatrical agent for C armen Miranda (she
does the great Tico-Tico number) whom be books as two acts in the same nightclub.
Hilarity and complication set 10 when Carm en tries t o keep up with her dual role. Cast :
Groucho Marx, Carmen Miranda , Andy Russell, Glo na Jean , Steve Coch.ran and Earl
W1lson . Duccted by Alfred E. Green .
Apnl14 15 (Fn. Sat.)/{
Th1s fil m depicts the dominance of the strong m a seethm&amp; indictment of private
educa ll un 10 England. Eight sharply etched episodes depict the o ff-hand accepta nce of
mino rity oppression, homosexuality and beatings, the influence of the military and the
hypocnsy of t he administration and clergy . Cast : Malcom Mc Donald , R ichard Wa rwick,
()a vid Wood . D1rccted by L10say Anderson.
( Fn Sat ) 2001
A Space Odyssey
1s more than a mov1e It IS an exploration of technology and of man's constant
que\liOnlng toto hfe and death " W1th some of the most danhng v1sual happenings and
tcchnllJI Jlhlevemcntc; 10 the lustory of the motion p1ct ures." Cast Keu DuUea, Gary
Lm:kwuud. WalhJm Sylvester, Don R1t:hter. Ouected by Stanley Kubrick .

1\pnl.:! I

.!~

Th1~

Saturday
Phantom of the Operu
Lo n C haney , the screen·~ greatest horror film stJr
portrays a twiSted and deformed monster 10 th1s fnght enmg drama 1 he unma~kmg scent.&gt;
IS a class1c 10 ~10ematic ho rror. Darected by Rupert Juhan

• ••• ••• •

•

•

RUSSIAN LESSONS
by a n a t iv~
Indiv idual or class
re feren c~s
- Mrs. David Ha.rl&lt;er-

886-2666

*
*

ALFA ROMEO
*FERRARI

MASERATI
sales • service • parts

USED CARS
••BOBCOR.,.
Motor Cars Ltd.

1974 J:.ggert

Near Bailey

834-7350

•••••• •

•

•

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• • CLIP AND S AVE • •

•• •• •

•

•

•

• ••• •

•

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·---------------------·
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i WANTED: i
II

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ASSISTANT

II

TREASURER, S.A.

To work 'til March 15th
Must have afternoons free
Stipend $125
Interested : see David Keiser, 205 Norton

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oro
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Op

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TED

\\

Wednesday , 9 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

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EdiToRiAl

Why bother?
Petitions

for

Student

Association

candidates are

currently circulating and before the ca~didates are known it
might be worthwhile to examine several aspects of student
government at this school. The first. and most obvious
conclusion. is that most undergraduate students simply don't
care about the SA. Whi le this isn 't surprising - since very
little of an attention-grabbing nature ever occurs -

the

magnitude of non-participation in elections is staggering.
nearly 90% of the undergraduate population.

' HilLOI I AM HINIY IUISINGII -

HA$ ANYOMI CAlLID POl Ml YIT?'

This pattern has continued for the last several years and
is found at many other schools. The unfortunate part is that
each year nearly 3/4 million dollars are collected in student
fees, and then wasted for the most part. By comparison. the
University of Michigan manages to exist on $30,000 in fees

Basis for criticism

and boasts a student program that outclasses this campus.
While the causes of this incompetence are never
discussed. many groups are always pointing fingers at various
scapegoats. It has become fashionable of late to blame all the
ineptitude on

Hayes

Hall's ridiculously restrictive fee

interpretations. While we can agree that their motives a re
suspect, they certainly cannot be the cause, since the evil
predates President Ketter .
The lack of accomplishment is evidenced in other areas.
Not a single word has emanated from the SA about academic
maners this year. While provosts disappeared. deans resigned
and budget cuts threatened. s1lence reigned in Norton's

To the Editor:
Something was lackmg m Lynda Teri's ar t1 cle on
two productiOns of Th t' Tnal of tht' Catunsvtlle
Nme , l-7-71, and that1s any recogmtion of what the
Stud1o Arena really IS S he seemed to be operating
under the a~umpllon that because of the play 's
pohtical nature, to put 11 on at a leglltmate theater
and charge ad miSSI On t~ t o degrad e the essence of I he
play
Ms. Ten seems lo ttun k there is so rnc:thmg
wrong wllh the Stud1o recognizing that it has an
obliga t iOn I n d o all types o f th eater . In light of the
fad t h11t t h1!! 1s one of I he few profeRsional theaters
m 1he ,uea, 11 1s .tlmost ~~e nt1al to its existe nce that
11 presen t a vanc:d rrograrn Few people are awa re of
the rrcssurc put on the County Leg~slature to t-ensor
S tud1o Aren3 prnductro n~ aher 11 co-spo nsored 1he
lh~

production o f Hair over th e summer. fhat the
Stud1o Arena still con tinu es to present plays of a
controversial nature, even under the threat o f
cen sorstlip and loss of funds, IS laudable.
If Ms.. T eri wants to oompa re these two
productions, perhaps she sho uld see th em b o th o~nd
co mpare their theatncal ments
I should ho pe the prof1ts of any performan ~o..:
should go back to improve the Stud1o's productions
That the people d o nat e theH t1me free to lhe
Co urtyard theater is cool. But that the Stud1o Arena
pays their actors is cool too Profits from lhe S tud w
production will go, hopefully , t o lmpmvmg th eu
future productions Profits from the Court yard
Theater will go to the defense fund of the Buffalo
F1ve. Is thas any baSIS for ... n11~1sm of rh.e Stud1o
Arena production'?
loan f

Wt'H&lt; ntr

second floor. Has anything been heard from them on tenure,
the new campus. admissions criteria? No.
The sole issue which has motivated student " leaders"

IS

the administrative threats to financial autonomy . The
conclusion is obvious. Since any power they have stems from
their huge treasury. they regard any adverse developments in
the realm of fees as a potentially fatal attack. It is
unfortunate that the bulk of their energies are devoted to
fighting for their own vested interests.
The Student Association has done virtually nothing to
merit its continuance. We hope that the candidates who
understand this point are forthcoming. If not. the elections
won't be worth the trouble.-

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No 52

Wednesday, 9 February 1972

Editor·m -Chief Oenms Arnold
Co-MaN~g~ng Editor
AI Benson
Co-Manag~ng Edrtor
M1ke L1ppmann
Ast. Manag1ng Editor - Susan Moss
Butln- Ma,..., - Jack Hetlan
Adv.ttslng
Susan Metlentme

M.,...,

City
Copy
AS! .

Futura
GraphiC ArtS
a.dc.,..a

Jo-Ann Armeo
Jeff Greenwald
Howle Kurtz
Janis Cromet
Ronni Forman
M1rt1 Gani
Claire Kr~egsman
Lynda Tan
Tom Toles
Amy Ahrend

Layout
AS$1 .
Lrt. &amp; Dtllma

Musrc
Off-Campus
Asst.

Photo
Asst.
Sports
Alii .

Maryhope Runyon
vac41nt
Mrchael S1lverblan
B1lly Altman
Lynne Traeger
vacant
M1ckey Osterreicher
Kim Santos
B~rry Rubrn
HOW18 Falwl

The SPtiCtrum •S served by Unoted Pr.u International, College Press
Servrce. the Los Angeles Tomes Free Press. the Los Angeles T•m•
Syndoc.ate and Lobe&lt; at ron News Se""c'

Rapubli tton of matter herern Without the express consant of the
EditOt'·ln-CnreT IS •v•u•"\._~

Editorial Policy ls determrn;a-by the Editor-rn-Chiaf.

For what it's worth
by HIIY)' Lipman
In the great tradltton of Barnum and Bailey, the
Marx Bro thers and the Three Stooges, your Student
Association proudly presents (drum roU please) The
Undergraduate St udent Association Elecuons! The
real fun and games will be mitiated February 23, the
day nommating pet tti o ns are due. If yo u 've never
expenen.:ed an SA election you're m for quite a
trc~at The electl&lt;&gt;n dates are March first , second and
thrrd, but unfortunately recall peii!Jons wLII not be
o~va1lable until March fourth . While the offic1al ballot
1~ not yet r.:ady the candidacy ol some indiVIduals IS
o1 l~•regonc condus1on
Frrstly, let me put one miSleading rumor to rest
IJenms Arnold w1ll not , I repeat, NOT be a cand1date
IM .tny office lte IS known, however, to be pustling
the cand1dacy of o1 promas1n(l new pohtical pros pect
whose name I am not yet at liberty to reveal Suff1ce
rt to ~ay that he IS the m ost ca pable and Intelligent
~ .~ntlldak to (CIOlC u pon the UB scen e in .11 least a
dc l·ade.
Ont' persou whu has Jlrcady thrown h1s beret
Lnto the: nng ·~ our l"'ddlcal-in-residence, Ke1th
Frankel Some: ~l l you may have fo rgotten how Ketth
earned his IIIII! Am o ng other thmg.s he was the
brarns behrnd the proposal to have the words
.. Student Asso.:t.1t10n" placed on all athletic
umrorms. He will long be remembered for those
famous words, "let them wa1t!" , during the grueUng
fight over stipends. ThJs quote was directed toward
members of C AC who were wa1ting t o have the
Sunshine Housl' budget passed . At the time,
however, Mr Frankel was bus1ly seeking to have h1 s
o wn stipend ra1sed and obviOusly had not time to
waste over tnv1al matters
Another likely presidenhal candidate (though he
has not yet offic1ally a nno un ced) is that veteran of
the political wars, Bob ConVJssar. I am sure any of
my friends on the second Ooor of Norton who read
tlus will be quJck t o pomt o ut that yours truly was
partially responsible for enJorsin(l Mr. Convissar last
year. However, m my own defense I must remind
you t~at he was running uga.inst one Harold ''Spot"
Guberman. I must admit , however, that if 1 had the

opportunity to repeat that act1on I wouldn't It 's not
that I don't like Bob
I JUSt wouldn't vote for h101
He has been a critic of the present group of
mcompetents, but then apm be was hardly a p1cture
of efficiency dunng Ius o wn term as Pub!Jc Affa1rs
Coordinator. At any rate I should point ou t that I
have no definite mdlcahon that he will be a
candidate . Just be prepared .
The candidacy of Minority Student Affair.~
Coord mator Bob BeU for the office of vice president
has also been raised . The best thing that can be satd
for Mr. BeU is that he didn't run on the ZAP t1cke1
last year. He has, ho wever, fit right into th e normal
routme of ineptitude on the second floor. Come t o
thmk of 1t, he might be perfect for the office.
To the crushing disappomtment of many of h~
supporters, Fred Aueron has announced that "II
nominated, I will not run.'' The loss of this great
student leader will b e felt in every nook apd cra nn y
of the University. Fred is the man responsible for the
most memorable and excitma graffiti in Norton Hall
history. Who will ever fOrget those pearls of
!Jterature scrawled on the walls of the Norton
elevator and the third floor bathroom. Goodb)i'e,
Fred, we'll miss you .
The disgusting aspec t to tlus farce is that on ce
ag;un w,e are faced with the same collection of
egocentric, inept and tn some cases downngbt
d ishonest candidates as always. So what t.ltis really
amounts to is a plea . A plea to somebody out there
in this zoo they pass off as a University who doesn 't
need Ketter's recommendation to get into law
sc hool, who doesn't need to raise tlis own stipend to
buy a new stereo, who honestly believes that
s tudents are fightin&amp; ror their polihcal lives right
now over tbe control of fees and who has the guts
and t he political awareness to stand alone il
necessary aga.inst the tyrannical edicts of the State
University. A plea that somebody challenge the
clowns who would use student government for
notruna more than their own bettennent. A plea for
that somebody to step forward now and fight, and a
promise that there are still a few of us left who will
back you. They're walking all over us, people, and
we're not even malting tbem work for it.

�Better services
WASHINGTON - The chief mediator for the
federal government announced Friday that top
unio n a nd co mpany negotia to rs had accepted a
proposal 1\e offered to end t h e seven-month-old
strike by workers of the New Yo ric: T elepho ne
Company. The proposal must still be ratified by the
rank and file members of t h e Communications
Work ers of America, but spokesmen for the
negotiations said t h ere was an optimistic ou tl ook for
approval. Until approval is made, th e stnkc:
con tinues, with operatJOns beang mamta1ned by
supervisory personnel.
NEW YORK - A comm1ttee of 800 doctors and
nurses has been formed to press for the repeal o f the
sta t e abort1o n law o n the grounds that th e law is
" anhuman and danserous 10 varyang degrees to the
c h dd , mother and doctor" D r. Ada Ryan ,
co-cha1rman of the Comnuttee of Doctors and
Nurses for Repeal of Abortion Law , said that one of
the group's aims was to "show the people of th1s
state what IS relllly at stake tn the concept and
I&gt;T8Ct1Ce of the &amp;borllOn law wluth has heen 10
operatton for the lasl 18 month'"
ATLANTA
The Hong Kong nu has stru~k .111
50 states, Puerto R1w and the Distn ct of Columhu1,
3lcording to a report released Wednesda y by th~
No~ t tonal ('en t er for D1sease Control Although the
NCOC said the outbreak could not be called an
cpHlem1c, they calegonzell the d1~ea~e .Jl&gt;
"wallc:spread" an 20 states, and on the dec hne m
\'tght uther:.. However, they dJd con~;.ede that tl
~t•uld have reached epidem1c proportions m some
wmmunities. ~ew Yo rk C it y and Washington, DC
have been noted as being two of the hardest h 1t
o~rea:. Poll!&gt; of :.tate heal!h departments revealed that
the bug IS uf the A·Z vanety, as oppo~ed to the
maider B-typc ThiS ll&gt; the thtrll sunes!.ave year the
l•ug ha~ struck brg m the Uruted Stat es.

the profitS of manufacturers who are making a
fortune by selling the n eedles "to those who have no
lawful purpose in possessing thern." Rangel said he
was ab le to get a sh ipmen t of needles and syringes
from a veterinary supply firm in Nebraska by mail,
with "no quesllons asked." He said h e had one order
sen t to 1\is Washutgt on address, and 011e to hiS
address in New Y o rk .
BUFFALO - A federal grand jury ind~eted lour
persons Thursday for co nspiring to stage a shootout
at a hippse househ old man attempt to frighten away
t h e residents . The mdi ct ment agamst the four ,
tnclud1ng a former Orleans Cou nty deputy shenff
was for violating the co mmune members' c rv il rights,
forced enlr)l..._and ot h er vio latio ns . One of the
commune residents was shot 1n 1he December 1'l(lQ
raid
ALBANY
Gov. Ro1kefellcr named a spe.. litl
ass1stant counsel Fnday to keep tum adv1sell llll
vanous investigations 1nto last September's Attka
pnson riot. The unexpected a ppom tment, ~a1d a
spokesma n for the governor, w1ll "have to speak for
itself" The appo111tee. Ber1nlln 0 Sarafo~n nf
Rockville Centre. will wrve d~ "h,u~un between th..governor's off~~:e and l h ~ offic1111 group~ mvest1go~tmg
the events of th r pasl Septrmlwr a t th.- Alii \'&lt;~
Corred1unal Fa~1llty "
NlW YOR io.
Approval &lt;If lhl" ·nld.Jult '.JUiu
at..t..tdent Insurance system was annvunced Sund.sy hy
th e New Yo rk C1ty Bar AssociatiOn The I o·mernber
cornm1tlee hsted the followm~ reasons for appmvtnlt
th e "lll•· fault" ~y~II!IU " I llS 1lifficult lt,lhl' fllll!ltuf
be•nl! Impossible 111 many 11 11111 most ~J'e~. tu
deternune fault
1ncludmg the iibJ&gt;ence uf
contnbutory negligence" Under the lault' !&gt;y~tem.
many vttttm~ rece1ve no compen:.at1on. pJymeut,
when made, IS slow, settlements arc not scienllfat.,
tnv1al clai ms are overt.ompensu tell and senous onn
undercompensated, tlupht..ate benefitS are frequently
pa1d I he present system c. untlonom•c. o~nd the
CUUrt') oH~ dogged With .!UtOmoblle 1111ury ~a~c\

Nl:-W YORK
No Ont knows how or when the
1\·tr~r was left hy I he casket of slam New York
I'Jt1ulman Gregory Foster but l&gt;rane Fo~tcr, Widow
ttl t ht· policeman found gunned down w1th Has
NEW YORK
One of the lvrcmost poe" n t thl"
f\Minrr, Rocco Laurie, a week ago, found the
tullowang letter addressed to " Mr Kool," Foster's day known fo r her Wit about the peculiant1c~ ut
nat kuamc on the streets of the lower East Stde " If 1 plant and animal Life, and the prowel&gt;S of the nld
Brooklyn Dod&amp;crs, dtcd m her sleep Saturd1ty ttl the
t·~er ho~v.- the templallon of gelling mto trouble, I'll
age of 84 Mananne Moore, who had suffered trom a
dnw nay eye~ and I 'II beheve I see you walktng down
the .~venue
You w!ls .tlway' gomg mto our length y 11ln~ . was cons1dered one of the foremo~l
poets of the day , w1th her work allmued by many
'luhhu11~c: and aslung us
·Arc you keepmg kool,
but under~tood by few . Her last work was publrsht•d
kllh'1 ' I'll always rememllcr when you played
un her l'ightieth b1nhday
,1nd wa' ertl ltkll,
h:l\kt&gt;thall and baseball 111 the ~oummer with us m
l~th Street park
We Mill have your &amp;Jove and Compltte Puems
aemc:mher the I.JSt trme you used 11 to pitch a game
N[W YO RK
1 he Board nf D•rell'''' of tire
lor u-; l·very time you heared about some k1ds tn
Ament..an Cancer Soc1ety announlcd Saturday the
trttublc, you used to look fM us and mak e sure we approval of expendatures totalang Sl nulh&lt;1n over the
had nu part of 11 We'll always remember your last
next two years IC• t..umbat breast cancc:r One of the
word\ to us
' Keep out of trouble, hey guy~ . stay
recommendaltons of the soctety\ task force wa~ the
konl Wtt know that you are Still With us walkang development of 12 demonstrataon pru)t'CI~ at.rm\ the
lluwn the avenue and keepang u:. kool We 'll miSS you
country aJmed at t4rly daagnos1!&gt; and tr«!Jtrrlenl nf
.and never forget yuu for we are sure you'll he bes1de the d1sease, wh1ch 1S the lead1ng cause ul death from
II\ hom now on, all the other cops w1ll be ' Mr
cancer among Amen~an women
Kool' to us, hut none as kool J S you "The letter wa~
\lgncd by I I huys who hved l•n J-n~tter and Laune ·~
'f:ALOMAR
Astronomers Jl the H11le
heJI
· Obo,ervatones have diScovered layer~ nf ga\eou'
clouds 111 the far ren~:hes of 'pa~:e wludr may he
assoctated w1th a qua~ar fhc. QUa,ar may b~ thl·
WASHINGTON
Rep ChJrles Rangel CO
second mnst t.hstant obJet.:! kn!Jwn ()r Marto~an
"' Y J c h arged Thursday lhat synnge Jnd
hypodermic needle manufacturer\ were grow1ng n~h Schrn1dl 1&gt;&lt;11d th~re a1t- \IX dtstlnt·t doud I.Jycr\, t1nd
poss1bly other; between Qu11sar Plll 457 Wllllh "
by selling " th e accessories of deu t h" to drug iiddicts
.
I
n1ne hllhon hghl years from the e.1rth
llr ~ailed for federal regulation wh1t:h would .. ut 1nto

ACUJ sponsors
membership drive
by Dave Saleh

monthly newsletters that are sent
to each member."
Further commenting on the
possible responsibilities that an
ACLU member ca n assume, Ms.
Bow en also sta t ed: " Any m ember
who w ishes to become furth er
mvolved io ACLU activities can
volu nt eer the1r services in a
number of ways . , . This includ es
any se rvi ce from typifli to
co urtroom observat ion . This is
one rea$on for o ur great interest
10 student members Although we
do have many non-student
members wh o are very hel p ful t o
our cause, much o f the volun teer
help we rece1ve comes from
Interested students who have
gaven us much needed assistance
10 the~e areas"

Sp«trum Staff klrrter
I n the hope of makmg its
services better available to area
stude nt ~. th e Niagara C hapter o f
the Amencan Civil Liberties
Union ts sponsonng a membe rsrup
dnve on campus th1s week A&lt;. a
part ,,f thl.S funcuon . a table will
be set up an Norton t o bo th
rnform stud e nts o f ACLU services
and to allow those who are
1nlerested to JOin
the
orl!amzat1on
Pnsc1lla Bowen , ~ha1rman of
the mcmbershsp commit lee of the
N1agara ACLLI , IS 1n charge of the
c.:ampus dnve and commented nn
1ts goals " I he membership of 1he
Ntagara ACLU I!&gt; o nly I 000 Th1s
•~ "d1~appotnt1ng 1••, ul the total
pnpulataon of l· ne C'nunt y

It b nur hope that th1~ llravc
wall nut only Increase our
rnerniH•r,hap .11nong \I udenh but
.rl\u g1vc them .1 oellcr
undcr,to~ndu1g nl thl' ~ervac.:~!&gt; we
olfcr
Many penplr:: an: totally
UOtiWllr&lt;' Ill I he \C(VI~·r, I hat we
have rllo.u.k avarlablc to tl1rm , a11ll
we hope In rnake I h~~~ serv1.:es
hettt'r known V&gt; they ~Jn t.Jkc:
JdVJOtage ul them whethtr thc:y
Jl r member\ of the 11n1on or no I "

Bill of Righl s foundatic&gt;n
Ac.. ordtng to M ~ Snwcn , the
of th~ ACLl l oHl'
based on the 8111 ol R1~hl\ .JIIll tl
I!&gt; d gena:rJI hclld 111 .an&lt;l
adhr::rent..c l\l 1h1' \CI..l iOil ol the
Con5 t11ut1 on whit..h IS the
fundament.&amp;! requ\rement for
member;h1p
Ms
Bowen aho
tommenti.'U on thr l1nunnal
reqturemcnl\ of the U111&lt;1n when
s h e s I u 1 t' cl 1 h a I ' ' a S J 0
memhersh1p ft-~ rs requurll tor
non •audcnr..., hut rhe let• " .. ut 1t1
SS tor 'tud~nls Tht' tl"C' 1' a ,over
.. hargr:: for pnntell mforma11nn we
produtc:
\U~h
as the three
tound.!IIOO~

Chin~

Represents both sides
Ms Bowe n showed concern
nvrr the image she feels that th e
A('Lll has seenungly acquued as a
lc:lt w1ng organu:at1on
" The
A&lt; I ll ha' been 111 eXIStence for
over SO ye11rs and we have
represented people on both sides
of I he J1Qht1cal spe-.:t rum Because
we defend people un the rad1cal
fnnge~ the Amen can pubLic has
ldcnl tfaed us t ha t wJy The has1c
goal ut the A&lt; lll though has
been to protect th e nghU ot all
Amencans and to lry to preserve
Amencan JUStice ThiS IS what we
l.! ll true patnohsm and not
\lntply bhnd patnott\m that many
people possess
''The success of the campa1gn
&lt;It the Umven1ty will also help us
to de .. 1de whether or not we will
extend our c;ampatgn to other
cam puse' As of now though, we
are plannmg a s1muar drive at the
Buffalo State camrus "According
to Ms 8 nwcn, ot hc:r ACLU events
llldudc their annual meeting on
Apnl I to. wh1d1 wrll fealurc
Stephen K&lt;, w..tn dS .1 guest
~pealo.r::r, and a CBS documentary
falm on the Btll of R1ght~

exhibit

.

There wiJI be 1 Ch m ese paantmJI exhtbi taon by
May Yin11 Lee on Wednesday , Feb. 9 at 3 p .m . in the
Nortun Cen t er LounJie. Mrs. Lee, 1 renown ed artist
from Brooklyn , N . Y .. has held many exh ibition s in
Hawau, San fran cisco. Hong Kon11 and New York
Acco mpanyin11 th e exhibition will be a hfe
demonstriiiOO or the actual art of Chmese landscape
painting. It ts being sponsored by the Chinese
Student As.'joci•Hott In celebratio n of th e co minJI
Chinese New Year whic h will be celebrated Feb. I S.

Heai, 0 Israel

HAIRSTYLING

un!versity
un1on
activities
board
Warner

••••

Jue 's Theatre Barber

1"1-H· UUAU MUSIC COMMITTH·

for gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
phone

I OSS Kenmore Aven ur
{JfC'.W II I\

875--4265

Ill c fi/1('( 1Tf

B ro~

~ld~~~-rs

Rccon.l1ng Arttsl

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Captain Beefheart
and His Magic Band
plus

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o:;. . -. N;..~ .;;:.I'MAna..~ ~t OS I
felt'" ~ ~'' t'RlHC.If'Ll~: I

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1

FRIDAY. FEBRUARY lith, ONE SHOW at 9.00 p.m
TICKETS - NORTON HALL TICKET OFFICE

..

~--

•

Students &amp; Alumm $1 50

~~---~MH'IIIW--.,. A Division of Sub-Board I

Non-Student~

$3 50

GUSTAV: THE CHEAPEST COPY CAT IN TOWN
only 8 c:en1J • copy. 7 cents if you're making

more than 3 ~es from the ..m• origin.ll

Wednesday\'-9 f'~ 1972 . The Spectrum . Pa(je seven

�'

EVELYN WOOD

I Rllading Dynamics lnstitutfl
3606 MAIN STREET, 8UFFALO, NEW YOiliC. l4226

SPRING

DISCOUNT

0

e

(716) 837-2823

F F E R

Dear S .U.N.Y. at Buffalo Student:

This time of year you may be thinking about your school situation . Is the pressure of
reading assignments. papen and exams going to get you down? You should ask
yourself what your biggest time consumer is. We know that it is reading. And if you
could cut reading time in half, you might get out from under the academic heap. But
this new semester there will probably be even more reading and more pressure than
last. The form below may be the answer to your problems this semester - and all
semesters to come.
Yes, now you can do something about your reading. The Evelyn Wood Reading
Dynamics course can show you how to increase your reading rate three. four, five or
even more times. In addition, Reading Dynamics will help to improve retention of
what you have learned and give you methods to help you study more effectively .
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics. the nation's largest speed reading and study skills
school, is famous for d~rect methods and excellent results. Reading Dynamtcs
guarantees to refund your tuition if we do not at least triple your effectiveness en
reading. In addition to the rapid reading, the course stresses study skills, lecture note
and test taking. These techmques can reduce your study time by well over fifty
percent . Reading Dynamics is the only course that guarantees its results and also
mcludes a lifetime membershtp allowing free re-take privileges anywhere in the
United States, Canada and Europe.

'

Classes m Buffalo will meet onoe a week from 7 :00 to 9 :30 p.m . on weekdays or
once a week from 10:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m . on Saturdays. All classes will be at our
institute, 3606 Main Street beginning the week of February 28th .
The national selling price of the course 1s $225 and at demonstrations second
semester will be offered at $175 . However , if you pre-register now . you can get a
spectal dtscount price of $125.
To pre-register . fill out the form below and send rt and a check for $125 to the
address above. If you wesh to use MasterCharge, wnte in your charge number and we
will send you the necessary forms for completion .
In order to take advantage of this sepctal reduction m cost , you mus1 pre-regester
before February 26, 1972.
If you would like more mformation about the course. you may contact Warren
Waldow at 837 2823.

Evelyn Wood

Plc •.t::,e note:

Give three

Adll rvss
Ci ty

Institute
phone

r. ....

t pftte_. 'ji10II

S tate
Zep
Plt•ruw ttl'cept my opp hl·atum for actmesswn tn t he- Evelvn Wood ll!'arlmg Dvnamu·..
Jnqetu lt&gt; I w,ultl Jlrl'ft• r t he folluweng class !K'hl.'dulf'

days t~ t ime~

Sat 10-12:3{
~l on 7-9:30pn
Tu e 7-9:3 0 pn
Wed 7 9: 30pn

.....

Name

choices
from the
followJng "'-

R...Utt~ ~namles

3~ o• A?-f/· v.s r

1ST CHOICE

rorahnn

fut ile

JuJ( ...,4/A3r

2ntl c:hn•&lt;'t'
z ~
_v

oo
~~

&lt;~

~~
en-

&lt;.:&gt;

w

(::t:

Due befo re
Feb. 26th

U.y

n .. t.

I in"'

IAJ&lt;".. tlon

d·puct' ta li?IP ' O • JIA ita lit I aha 0$ JI•Je '.Phie fitsttOOit iz :efancJable
"' "'' kJ ID) i:aal elacc if I netld; .,,c h ... ka:k: of"'' iRk:::• ts eenael
leaa• t8 houas
hefora t:ho a._.. •' W.a aiM! I ..IIIII ......... tahat M5 ftRDIIIM M 1J ttMtiea l•• i. 1!1-.e a• "''
A

"ecbec.J

jg m)'

•*

iN•I••a"
TUITION AND FEES
Registration and 1'H ting F ee
(no n refunda b le )
-~
25.
Tuitio n
I~- T o tal _
~s oo

~

-'

(Due At Fint Chu a)
Sipature _ __
DC l'&lt;&gt;rm &amp;-1 ( 7-70 )

Page eight The Spectrum . Wednesday, 9 February 1972

_

·

-

I wo uld prefer the followmg met hod
or payment fo r Uw bala nre d ue
_ Ca11h o r checlr payable to "R eadmg
D y namics"

Muter Charge

#

8&amp;nkAtUEiltstd •
_. ~ilioa Set oioce aac.. Budget Plan •

'

••tel~ p~ntl)

�------------ JIJsT FoR. Fd~---------by Eggman
Fridays. A day that means a lot
of things to a lot of people. Por
some people it means the last day
of classes. Of course at this
school. Wednesday is the last day
uf classes for some people. For
other people it marks the
beginning of the weekend, the
beginning of a trip home. the
beginning of a trip. For me, it
means I've got to write this
ass1mne column.
Of course, it's been a guo\.1
week for Eggman in light of
lucking out in the Fourth Annual
D•aft Grab-Bag with a number in
the 300's. (Ever see anybody kiss
,1 UPI machine?) Can you imagine
\Curs from now, when the draft
iotteFy goes the way ul sports and
(h1 1st ma:. and becomes
..ver-commerCJalized? Telev1sion.
prune ttme color coverage at the
ve1y leas! Picture the national
H•·twork coverage of this
tlal.ll tiPilal event.

...

•

• • •

...1 hi~

1s lfa1 ry Seasoner in
for the tenth annual
v~.·r)lllll of "Th1s is Ynur Draft."
:'llllmhl'r' will he !~elected for all
,,.,v, tu111111g 16 this year, to
d~.·tl'llllHil' wh&lt;l Will gu UJI to
d:lrnll our country on the
h.1t tldil'lth o l L&lt;Jos and Hawati
"Aithull~h many of the hoys
ltHflll1~ II' 111 1'&gt;78 Wtll have low
lhalt mllnh ... rs. many of them may
m·vt'l ;l(;tually l&gt;e drafted . D1aft
,,db .tiC Jt the lowest poin t since
tilt' Ch11u:sl.' 1nvas10n of HonnluhJ.
T 111' ,., in a(;cordance with
l'rt'\JJent Ktss•ngcr's plan to have
111 Jil automated army by the end
''' IW\t y~.•ar If the National
~l.ll'l1u' I·PIIIldat1on cnntmues to
p111d1tt:c .:omhat andrOids at rheH
J11C\l'llt rJtc , 11 will result 111 the
'\ic"' Lunl..' :mny and this year\
lnllt'IY wtll bel.!ome merely a
tnrmaltt y.
"Anot her advantage of the
Jl",P"'ell llll aliiOmated llmly ts
th.lf l.'tllttl11ued production may
c11ahk u~ to match the Chinese
,,lmhat lnrce ol 4.000.000
'oiJn:r~ fl m great ma~s of troops
h-1~ CllablcJ them Ill WIO tJVCIY
111a 1o1 h..t ttle w11h American
diVI~IOII~ M&gt; I:H Simply by sending
wave~ o l humanity at our soldiers
and hJvtng more left st:mding
when the shooting stops. They
have wnn these victories despite
'ulll'llng e&lt;1sualt1es of 600.000
&lt;k·aJ 01 wounded in this year
JIOnl'
Thr automated army wtll be
'P'-'ua lly equipped to match the
C'hmese success at guerilla tactics
111 the underbrush of Hawaii.
Wa,l1111~tnn

• • • • • • • • • • •t

"Heh-heh, hey Frankie,
what are you and Marj:(ie
waiting for?

••••••••••••

Meanwhile, the Switzerland Peace
Talks .. are still at a standstill , as
each si d e yesterday firmly
rejected the opponent's 79-point
peace plan. The United Nations
Secretary-General, Clifford Irving,
said in New York today that the
U.N. was helpless to act due to
votes of ''no actlt&gt;n" by the
majority bloc of the 183 African
nations.
" Here in Washingtou, V1ce
P1 esident Bella Abzug today
lashed nut at proponen ts of usmg
nuclear firepower on the Chinese
by stating: 'If they go, we go too .
brother.· Meanwhile. apparently
looking forward to election year
in 1980, Mtnnesota Sen . Hubert
Humphrey announced that he had
a secret plan to end the war .
Former President Richard N1xon
announced that he was 'feeling
fine' after his hcall altack Jl 111~
San Clemente mansion , .111\.1
revealed plans tv publish h1s
autobiography . Mr. NtXun lelt
that he was 'dumg h1s duty for
Amer1ca · when he reJected a
compromise propu~al With the
Chinese 111 I Q7" wh1ch led tu the
Honolulu mvasiun .
"But now. folks. tile moment
you've all . been w:uting for .
Dire c tor of Selective Service
Abbie Hoffman IS •eachtng 1nto
the twin barrels to start the
drawu1g. The tension is amazmg.
folks. And here's the first
numb e 1 : 1 u n e I 4 . . . 26 1 .
Congratulations to those born on
June 14 . since the Pentagon
doesn't expect draft calls tu
exceed 240 next year. Her~.··s the
next number AprtT I
:!9 . Wait
- the big blackboard is hghtmg up
yes! A pnl I 1s one of the 12
Lucky Birthdays of the ye:u All
16-year-olds born on April I Will
receive. in additton H• nn 2&lt;}, a
set of bedroom furn1t1tre And Ill
kee p that furniture in
a brand
new hed room! Why don 't you tell
us rnurc ahuut that, Frank? "

•

• •

•

..

Well, it look' llkt: the draft
lorte1y 1s gn111g to he part of the
Arncllc:tn melodrama tor yea~"&gt; ll1
corm· Se1 1uUsly though. let's hope
an all-volunteer '"my ts fcasihle
by next year. so that tlm~e whu
got bun11ned out Wtlh lnw dralt
numbers ta~t week and HI past
years wtHI't have tv hassle with
p111k lctlt·r~ and phys1c&lt;tls ami
&lt;.:.0 \ and even (;urnhat. But
beyond that, let's pray lu1 sume
ratronJ.I government action and
hope that we t.:an see au end to
thib sttnk!llg war 111 Southca~t
Astol. Peace.

Co~ track season could be
an all or nothing performance
by Bruce Engel
Spcctr11m Srafl Wrltl'r

If last Saturday's indoor track
tournament at the University of
Rochester field house is to be any
indication, the coming track
season will be an "all or not hing
affair." It appears that in every
event t he Bulls either h:tve
excellent competitors or none at
all .
Shot putter Tom Pauhtcc1.
distance mnner J1m McClu rkin
and middle distance mun Bill
Heim are all to p notch perfmnll·rs
and did very well Saturday .
Paulucci won the slwt Willi a
throw of 47 feel and tlllC tnt'h .
McClurkin , runnmg ill botlt tht•
mile and two-milt- race~. ton" J
second and tl11rd, wlulc lle1111 led
all the way anJ tinishcJ li1 sr 111
the oOO-yartl da~h. Buftaltl h'''"
thm.l behind Rm:hcs1e1 and Rll
111 1he llvt··team tournament.
dc~p11c the ~t:a 1 C1ty ot Bull
co mpetitor~

few Bulls entered
In ~cveral events, Uuffah1 lwu

no entrants at all. The pole vault,
h.igh jump, hurdles and 50-yard
dash were void of Buffalo
competitors. l n the• 50-yard dash,
Kinzy Brown is already out for
the team , but could not compete
in this meet. Last year Brown and
Gene Nance formed a great 1-2
punch in the sprints. Nance
transferred when fnotbull wus
dropped . hut Brown 1S back and
should be a consistent winner.
•
Htgh jumper Don Tolbert hab
had knee 1flHible and may nPI
come out this year . Poi&lt;' vaulter
U!rry KrJjcwski is nnt ll\11 yet
either . Due tu the squad's lack nl
depth. the Bulls will he in a lui of
trouble if they have tu give away
these even ts in tlw sprmg meet~
With the ex..:eption of the
quarter mile. the Bull ~ placed 111
cvt·ry event they were t•ntered 111
Otlartc• 111a11 Delio Valdc; 1S hurt
and may 1111SS part of the outduor
sea~on. llnwl·ver. frl·~hmell Fd
Mt:N tft , alt~~lg. Wtth seCtliH.I-ycal
111:111 Doug L&lt;lkt·. ~h•H dd be :1hlc 1t1
gel Buffalt1 llll the ~cwrhuard 111
the sp1111g. McN1ff tool-. sev~.·n th 111
the qua1fC1 at R&lt;l(hC\fl'f. wh1lc

Lake ran with Heim in the 600
and finished fo urth. Other than
McNiff , t he most promising
freshmen are shot putter Mike
Corbett and half miler Larry
Menthowski.
Other Buffalo scorers

The other scorers for the BuJis
Were 81.11 McCart t1y 1·n the half
mile (2 :06.7) and Bob Gower in
rite 1000-yard run (2 :28.4) . All
lime~ Saturday were way o ff due
to the running conditions.
I ndonr times are always worse
than outdoor times. Additionally
the Rochester track is small and
(;ramped . Half of the track is in a
runnel stl that the spectators m1ss
half of every race . Nonetheless.
the Rurtulu trat::kmcn and coaches
arc happy 111 he ahle It' run there
Altt'f ,1ll. the Bulls have no facility
of t helf nwn. and without
Roche~ler 's generos1ty 111 IOVIttng
B11ft.rlll In these meets. the Bulls
could have no mdoor season Due
to the \hortnc~' ol the outdoor
'ea\1&gt;11. the lo~~ •II tht~ WJilter
tuurup would bl• ca ta ~lw phK

Swimming and fencing

Penn State pack~ a wallop
Th e Penn State Nittany Lum~ 1ts suh!&gt; Jltll ltll Uuthlln Ill lfy
arc. m every S[l(Ht. nne of the ~Vl'I:Ji pCllple 111 new l'Vl'l1 t\ a~
w,cll as soml.! of 1h \Uh~ Pcn11
most respecteJ teams 111 the l·a~l
!'hen swu111nmg aml lennng State WJS k11td enough to put only
one goo\.1 man 111 cJ.;h event whu:h
teams are no exception to 11m
Last Saturday , Penn Stat~ hmughl kept the whole meet clme
bot II ot these powerful ~quad,
tnto ('I;J(k (.,ym It&gt; face their Exriting relay~
'IIH' relay, Well' p:llfiLlli.lli}'
ovennatchcd Bull .:ouute1parts
~·,~·
tflng due to tilt' Jlll'\l'llu' •&gt;I
Prctlu.:tahly , Peun State w~111 hnth
~talt'
·, \el'«IIHI lint• It'alii I Ill'
m e~.'ls
cJeteat111g the Bull
1
1cl.1y'
we~t• ~pill w1th J.1v R.twll'V .
~WIInulel\ S &gt;-4J .nul Bull :llu\
S
I
e
V
l'
S 1. It ll 11!1 :1 11
( • l'O I gL'
tcn~:cr' I 7 -I0
(
h
IIIII
flM•II
Jlld
(
;l't&gt;l
gt•
\ t,lf11
l· or the Bull ~wimrm~r\ rl wa'
laklll);!
the
&lt;!()(J.vard
lll'l'styk
1el.1~
thCII 11111th l•hS nf the SCti~O II
lo1
Butlulo
111
tltl'
l1111'
fllllt'
'"
ll!l,allfS1 two VICIOI IC~ t\~:llllst
State last yc:u Bulf alo w;~ ~ n•ally J JS.4 Schuhna11 wa' till' r11dv
J cmnhsht•t.l I h1wcve1. th1 ~ yt':H II tlldtVHJual WIIII1Cf 1111 tltt• Bull\
was a IJr llHHl' tr1C11dly llll'L'l tai-111g th~.· '0-yarJ ln·~.·,tyk 1!1
Whu.:h \CIVCtl ,h );llttd pr;Jt.ll&lt;:l' fo1 :!4 I Hutlalo tt&gt;uJ.. \CLillld 111
hoth team~ Tilt· tlutcomc wa, eVl'IY other rJt:l' ('(t,,c.,t to
never 111 uuuht Utlf the lllel.'t gave WII111111J4 wa' (ocorgc Stalll 111 tht·
Penn State a chance tn u~c a lllt of 200 -yard bad..strol&lt;.c whu tur1ll'd

£LAIIII~I~It

Altl

THE SpECTI\UM

111 Jll excellent 2 I \ 4 In thl'
1000-y:.ud frec~tyle . State\ lloh
K111nmel sma~h cd l3ultalo's pool
tl·cmd W1th a speedy II ()4 4
Last yea• lhc fcncmg con tc~1
ended wnh Pc1111 StalL' wullltllg
IX-II The Butfafu 1ea111 wa~ mud1
' trnnge1 then . Thl) ycllr Uttllal,, ts
wc.. ~a·r and utt•xpenrn~.·,•d S•l 1111'
)~'Jf' do~ ... , 17 IIIIi"·' Jefwild\
ICJIIl'scllh prtlg.le's l111 tlm Yl'al \
young ~quad Tht· h ~·'t pt'l lwllll'l\
lr•r th1· Bulls Wl'fl' 111 tn1l lloh
I ati-.J~ ~-0 11 1 tlrl' '"hfl.' AI
~..:hncldl'l 2-1 a11d 111 tht· t'()l'l.'
IIPWIC h 1ruW11 ~-1
llw UuiJ,
ll'tUlfl II• ~Uillll ~Jfu1day at
heatahll' Syracus1' w1th lughh
1atru Cu11tell also r)ll h~nd .

.---------~

I

KARATE·

:

STUDIO :

I 5th DAN BLACK BELT IN)T I
IN FORMA liON
I
I
1
12:00 - s 30p m
I
1
•MON . tu SA t.•
I
1
Call83o-60 t8
1
3144MainSt
1
I
(Near U.B.)

._

Bible Truth
SEARCH THE SCR IPTUR ES

"Faith comell'l by hearlnq, and
near~ng by the Word of God . "
Rom . 10 : 1/
"Blessed Is he thai readelh-"
Rev . 1 . 3
" Blessed are they that near the
word o l God and keep 1t."

IIIIFFALtt

1r~J[1rllttttl~

, II~.
3t11tt A• I• St.

·.;,-·.·.;,-. . ·.-. .·.·.·.-.-. .·.·.· · ···· :· T IPPY---------'S

~:;z:;:;(~~:~::~;:::::=:===:;~

r···· ·MexlcANFooo 1

Luke 1 I :2 8

IIIV'I"""""OLLEGE TEXTS • PROFESSIONAL BOOK
MEDICAL • NURSING • DENTAL
• PAPER~ACKS •

:!!i
v

~;~

1st ANNIVERSARY
-SPECIALS

Reg.

I~~~!~~~=·~~N~ER: :::: :::~:

;:; TAMALE DINNER ......... $1 .19
1~i MEXICAN LUNCH . . . . . . . $1 .1 9

Free parking '"
University Manor

•

~

- EAT IN OR TAK E OUT ~ 2351 SHERIDAN DRIVE
:;:; (Across from Putt-Putt Golf Course)

SPECIAL

$

~
~

~

~ 89
~i I
~

.

89 ·;:;

Call ah...d for f,:
Fast Service
· :·

838-3900 ~

~='="~:~;.~:~:::c5!SI Prices Good Feb. 10 thru 17th ~h!~:~:::;x:;»:;::•:.

�I

OVERTIME

Boost for wrestlers

Cunningham declared eligible

by Bany Rubin
Sports l:."du or

We ll, 1t 's over agam . The JOCk s on th1s campus have surviVI~d yet
anoth e r Student Assoc1a11on referendum No matt er h o w many
\ludenl\ o n th iS c ampus had voted pro-a thl et1cs, there will s t1ll be some
all-know mg stud ent representat ive da1mmg that the vo1ce o f th e
' ' udent s had not been heard
The wo rd 1n the key SA c1rcles IS that money for mter co lleg1ate
..tthlet1 cs. 1ntramurals and rec reat1on will not be raised . merely k ep t the
same But as tar il!&gt; lh lS reporter can re&lt;~d . the s tud ent\ voted for murc
!RR I) or the same ( 706) at a rate of thret! t\l o nt! elVer le~s (44Ci) or
not h1ng I 170 ) o n the to tal SJ40,000 budget
Mayhe I' m wr o ng , hut 1f s tudents had voted MOO the \a me and 1!00
decrease. then we would hav e seen a dec rea se But no w thut the
ant1· athlet11.' fo r~.es have lo,t . they ' re: ~aymg, ·'okay , g1vc: thme t nc k ~ the
S ~40,000, hut no m ore "
A s tar as ~: an be esl uua lcd . the Athleti c Department ~hnu ld gc.!l at
leas t an aJditwnal 5~0.000 lor''' fme s h o wmg m th e rclere rH.Ium It
~ hould he noted lhJI lhcn.• w"' littl e o r no organ11a tmn of Butfalo''
dt hlete ~ 10 ge t I hem t&gt;U I II&gt; th&lt;' poll'
l:xn·pt for a o ne -man po~t e r ~.·a 111 p.ug11 hy I{ 11. h B.wmgJ rt en and
'orne Oye rs 1\~ucd hy th e Clt'm.:nt hou~c coun~.· il tlwr c: wa' lit t le
pubiii.'IIY .u:cord e d the rclerenJum Jihl wa1t until th1· S A cl••dlon'
when the 1!00 or \O will cdn:t thc11 147:! 71 lltun,trdly Y1·1 1111, "
,on~u.Jerr d repre\entai!VC
Further. Jll fnend\ ol Jlhlcl ll' on th1~ campus 'hould re .. JI/c tho~t
tlus vo te wa\ htt le more I h.1n .1 ont'·Y&lt;"dr Icaw on h lc A motion , h ould
be broug ht up Jt the S t udent A '&gt;:&gt;ernbly In con,trud" thrce·yc.~r pl.w
lt1r at hkll t\ Tht&lt;; wa y e a c h ~tudent .1t the Umver,lly w11t get a th Jn.:c
to vvtc on the 1\\Ut' of .tthkllt' dunng hi\ ~lay o~t tht: Umvcrslly
Wh en I look at tho~t I ~-1 4 Novcmbt:r vote m the Stud ent A\\t'mbly
o~nd ..:ompare 11 -..1th th e thr ee to 1111e \UP Jl&lt;HI for athkl11.' 1n tht·
relerendum, I tusl &lt;:nnge
I wond!!r how many o ther huge
appropnJtH&gt;n' w11h le" puhht·lty h.tve hecn pJ\\t'd •lr l'ltnlln&lt;Jtnl h).
lhr kn n -.. ,til 'll' Jli C\t'IHJIIVt' \(U\h-111 hod}' "

I ht• Bulfa lo V.Jr\IIY h od.t'Y lea 111 1\ flOW e'rlkllll!; II \ la't llltocdh of
piJy tht' wason S11011 lh t• Bull' w1ll hnd o ut lh&lt;'ll \ I.Jitl\ 111 lht•
e1gh t k·lm H ' A( p layolh II .tpp car' mmt hl.. t•ly th.1t tht&gt; A u ll~ will n &lt;&gt;t
b.: wetlrll 111 th.: flf\l Iolii , IIIII\ th ~ UuJI, will lt.IVl' In II J Yt•l to lh&lt;' Nt•w
lngiJIHI Jrt:.l to piJy
I he H · At playoll 'ch:d !tHt pr.,,c,, lcJV&lt;'' IIlilCh to he dt:\llt:cl I ht:
pJrl1.1h1y ol the ,l'\t;'lll\111 rr&lt;~l.l'" w.l\ nt•v..r '" I'Vuh·nt ··' ' ""' yt•Jr wh~n
.I lt',lfll 'Udl J \ 10 'I l'. tl!Widt W,l\ Wkdcd &lt;1\'1.'1 0 \Wl'!ll' ~l.ilt' Whldt
11.1'111 7 ·• 1 he 'Jill&lt;' IJI&lt;' tuu ld h.tvc .11 1.-.t•·d the Hull \ hut 1111.'11 7 I
"''"'d ' hnuld he enough lor J plavoll '""'

.

by Dave Geringer
Staff Wriler

Sp~trum

1 h e wrestlmg Bulls , already o ne of the top
..quad\ m the t.as t . got an add11to nal s h o t in the arm
IJ~l w ee kend wh e n th e eltgtblltt y o f Me l C unningham
wa\ delermmed Cunnmgh am will become eligible
1mmed1at ely
('unnmgham , wh o w o n the ~la t e c hampi o n s hip
wh tk wrc,tling for N1agara Full' Hagh Sc h oo l, has
been 1.all cd " th e greatest wre~tler ever produced by
N e w York State" by many h1gh st.:hool coaches.
ll o wevc r , M&lt;' l ha ' been out of high schoo l for th e
t,~ , , ltv e year~ . 'P\' nd1ng the Ja,t three working'" the
~lt:cl
mill'
" W1th hi \ add1lion, we' ve g rea tly
1mprnvt:d o ur depth ." ~ lal cd Buffal o Coac h Ed
Midiacl . ·-.tnd I th1nk that we c an b eco m e o ne of th e
top t w o 111 I hrce 'ti ua ll~ 111 the t.a sl "
('unnmgh.tlll. wh o wres tled at l:!fl lhs. 111 htgh
,,hoeil , lan ht: 1..1 llcd .1 ln mplete wrt!s tle1 " li e 's
\lrc~ ng Jnd very qwck. · \talcd M1chacl. "a nd very
t.nu wlt:d~r.1hk ahoul wrestling
I n add11111n , he
work\ hard and '' very 4U Kk to learn
h e rarely
mJkc:' th\' \at n c: 1111\lake LWI\.e I know that he w1ll
h•· ,, ltn~ .tdd 11mn to our \tJIUll
WrC\tle-off c ompetition
ll u-..cvcr ( unn•nghillll a' any t't her wrestl e r ,
w1ll have '" e.trn a ht:rth an the l&gt;lartmg lmeup.
Rei!UI Jr fl41\I IIOn\ m wre\thng are usually won m
wrntk~111'
rJther than betng handed o ut , and
&lt; unn1ngham \ ~.:ho~ll e ngc w1ll be handled the same
w.ey Js w ou ld any o ther Mel wtll p robably attem pt
to dtullcngc for I hi! p os111on at 126 lbs. although h e
\.O uld lh.JIIcnge .11 I 34 fhe loser of th e c hall e nge
w1ll probably shill ha s 1.·hallengc t o a Jtffercnt weight
!.las,, 01nd the Bulls wtll wmd up w ith an exce llent
Wll.'sller 011 the hen t.:h 111 any t: ase .
One wres tler wh o may have to f1ght o ff a
. halll-nge from ('u nn1ngharn IS the Bulls' re gular at
I l4 . Roy Guartno Jumor Guanno , another of t h e
Bull\' many s tandou t trans fers, h as co mp1l e d an
lmprl'\Stvc H J· l log and qu1 e tly makmg htmsclf mt o

z·

~

Mel Cunninxham
o n e o f the more cons1s t e nt wres tle rs o n the: ~uad
Roy has al so s h o wn htrn self to be an e x celle nt rtdcr ,
leudmg th e team in both pre di cam e nts and n e ar falls
In add tlt o n , h e IS I ted for thtrd pla ce wtth co-c.:a ptain
R o n Brandt , as ea c h has 12 taked o wns. Guar ino wtll
be one o f th e Bulls' s trong po1nts for tomgh l 's match
agains t Ke nt Stat e o n the ro ad

r-----------------------------------------------~

~o
CKfiJJIJd.l
r
-

TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS

It\ lh1· lultll&lt;' the Bull' 'houl.l .tllt.:mpl '" ,,hc:dul,· the DtVI\1111\ II
r&gt;&lt;•wrr... lJn .,.,dmn Vermont .wcJ ...f .I'&gt;.\.J•'hu wth 11 lhc:y .uc to gd a f&lt;llf
'hJkt• m the piJyt•ff \\'lnlwn Why not lr} .1 .Jouhleheadt·r at lh t· J\ud
wetll HuiiJio .J.:.Jin\1 Vermont .JIItl ( orndl.t~.un~l ( lo.~rkmn ur Col~,,,,•.,
Ill!" lht· hn,kt') flfllgtJIII "HII&lt;l I urn .1 pr•&gt;fll ~h1k prnv1elrng t''tlltnp
flo, l.n .tdlctll lo1 lh\' lan\

Mod Styles for Guys and Gals

I h•· ~·"'''&gt;' hJ,kt·thall 13ull, "'·'"'&gt;~ 'ntkd '"'ht'll lh\'Y '"'' to
&lt; nrnell I Ill' Uulh n•l'JrJ th.JI ~.tllle Jlll.l '""'' ut lhl· pl.1y.:" ll~llrl'd
I h.11 I hl') u•uiJ I!.Jit.. •Ill~ th•·rc: Jnd t'a\11)1 hc.1t the B1g l&lt; cd
I he'll 1.J 1tiC Northern 11111101\, Army .1n.J N1Jgara ,md " le""'ng
'tn·,,k I hr Bull' .11.: .1 'tuhhmn hundt. hut l.td.. the d•·rth .wll 'Jll'&lt;'d to
pl.ry lllp "flron .·nl\ d.ty In .1nJ dJy uul P c:rhap,, th~.: Bulb w 1ll hl· mo1 c
'""'P\'11111&lt;' '"' ' ' YL'&lt;~f Wilh Boh D 11.k1n,o n a nd prt•bahly two l r;lll\l l:l\
111 t lw lnl.t
B111 111 rca lit y. 1h l' B ull~ Will never be Jbk I&lt;) "" '"Pel \'"" .1 111.1101
level until ,, v1ablc gran t m ·dld progrJrn '' ~:stabll';h .:d wh11.h w1ll cnabk
B ultaltltngt•! lh•• hlue ~. htp play.:r I h e 'dlllt' goe' fnr ll.'l' h th.k&lt;'y, 11 th l'
Bull\ .He to gel rlo~ycr' o t Dl\1\100 I t'aliht:r It '' rn.:c: In \,ey ynu Wollll
bag lillie \pon, at lhl\ llntvcr\lly, hut th.tl k1nd nf IJik tllel\1 h1• h.t&lt;k••ll
tip w11 h re' fHln~lble at.:tllln

Quultfl• /Jtum o ndt

• Boulevard Mall •
• Seneca Mall •
• Niagara Fulls •
~...-::~·:·=·~·:::::::·::=~~=·:::::::·::::;::~::;~~s~:::::~::::.:'»J~~iS!ll:RSI!l~~WJ~mt9JilRSl$~?i'IS&lt;~~w,;s::~~~~='=;:::;:::;:::;:::::::::::::::;::::::::::~:

~

«

:::

:

1::
~
·:·

un!versity
un1on
activities
board
is looking for qualified people '" the following a reas :
ART

~

i~j
~

i..
f~.~::i

,•,·

COFFEEHOUSE

UUAB.

Page ten . The Spectrum . Wednesday , 9 February 1972

.

PAetiti~n~ areelno~

avatlable for th e gen eral Student
ssoc1atton ectrons, to be held on March 1, 2 and
3, in room 205 Norton. Positions are: President, 1st
President,

Activities

LITERARY ARTS

We have positton openings for ne.xt semester.
Applications are now being taken in 261 Norton

~

2nd

Vice

President,

Treasurer,

Academic Affairs CoOfdinator, Student Ri!ttts
Coordinator, Student Affairs Coordinator, Student

DRAMATIC ARTS

SOUND

Don't like us?
Run "Ujourself.
Vice

DANCE
MUSIC

FILM
PUBLICITY

:::::::

Coordinator

National

Student

Affairs

Coordinator, Minority Affairs Coordinator, and
International Student Affairs Coordinator. Petitions

~

must be turned in by FEBRUARY 23rd at 5 :00p.m .

~

..~

I

li

~

I~

n

.~;~:=.~

•

�AD INFORMATION

CLAIIIFIII

CLASSIFIED ADS may .,_ placed
Monday tnru FridaY betwean 9 a.m .
and 4:30p.m. at 355 Norton Hall .
THE COST of en ad for one day Is
$1.25 for the first 15 words and $ .05
for each additional word . $1 for each
additional dey. The deadline for
Monday Is Friday; for Wec:lnesday, It Is
Monday, •n&lt;l for Friday, It Is
wednesday DY 4 : 30p.m.
" HELP WANTED"
aCis cannot
d iscriminate on the basis of sex, color,
creed o r national origin to 11ny extent
(I.e., preferably Is still discrimin atory) .
" FOUND" ads will be run free of
charge for a maximum o f 2 Clays and
15 woras.

WANTED

.'

Work 4·8 p.m . weekdays; 10·2 p .m.
SaturCillys. Call 1135·3803 or TF9·0402 .

MV DOG needs a lift from Brooklyn t o
Buffwlo . Travels well. 882-6674 .

FULL OR part-time Jobs available with
Best line Inc. Call Art 886· 2094 or
Mike 835· 5215. Meetings at Executive
Ram•da Inn.

FOR SALE
HI Fl Dual 1219 speakers AOC,
amplifier Oynaco, heaCiphones Fisher,
$520. 837 ·22 59 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT
ONE · BEDROOM
apt.
furnished,
$110/month • utilities. 5 Comstock
Ave. upstai r s - between 10 a. m . and 5
p.m .
FURNISH ED apartment, 3 bedroom s,
l. r., garage, carpeti ng, Manhattan Ave.,
S21 0/mo Includes heat, gas . 883 ·861 7.

BEDROOM SET for sale, $30. Good
cond ition. Don 897 · 1765.
1964 PONTIAC Grana Prix, power
steering, brakes. Runs veri' well. Slight
front
end damag e. $100 . Call
831 · 4545, between 10 a.m . anCIS p .m.
GOOD

BOOTS, lug solos, lined,
waterpr oof , mens 8 (women
9·10). bought t oo large, worn less th4n
10 times. Lynne 88 3·0003.
lns ulo~ted,

IS DENNIS ARNOLD rea lly R , C rumb
In d isgui se? Is Mr. Natural really
oennls Arnold not In Cllsgutse 7! 7 Be
certain tonight, 355 Norton. Current
and perspective writers - ci ty campus,
feat ure and off·campus reporters baCIIy
neoded .

RIDE BOARD
RIDERS wanted to Cortlan d, Friday
afternoon . Call Jim 838 · 3099.
Rl DE
WANTED
to B inghamton
(Harpur) any wee kend, e.s peclally Feb.
18· 21. Please call Sheila , 634· 1782 .

SPA NISH-JEWISH grad stuCient seeks
cha llenging rewardi ng Job. Can work
mor nings . weekends. US. resident .
Albert 834· 0695.

RIDERS WANTED Immediately to
share Clrlvlng and e&gt;&lt;penses t o Seattle or
San Francisco, 634 ·4462 .

wANTED bells , gongs, tam-tams,
drums (not sets) 837 ·3679.

RIDE TO Harpur needed tor 2·3
people, preferably leaving Thursday .
Call Shelly 834·0966 .

wANTED: For voluntee r projects - 2
or 3 stuaents eac h In chemistry,
med•c•ne, physics, engineering, taw .
Bo1&lt; 3, Colden 14033.
CRA NKSHAFT for • Honda 160. Also
other parts for 160, S·90, 175, 250 o r
305 cc. C all B i ll 886·8154 .

ROOMERS wanted, own room, utility
Included, telephone . Sl2/waek .
15·onln. walk. Cllll 832·2 154.

RIDE NEEDED to Vermont (Rutland,
Burlington) or Albany, Wed . p .m. or
Thurs. a.m . C a ll Anne 8 31·2145 or
838 · 2633 .
RIDE N EEDED to West Vl rglnl&lt;t o r
someplace near, I.e.• Southern Ohoo,
arounCI 2/16. C all 831·2456.

FOR SALE '64 C hevy, 56,000 ACtual
miles. good transportation, $100 . Call
674 ·7959 after 3 p.m .
'66 C HEVELLE Malibu automatic,
V-8, radio, power steering, 52,000
miles. Clean. 832 · 5450.
1969 VW van, 34,000 miles. Only
s 16 00. Can take you anywhere,
anytime. Ell 835 ·2561 .
1970 Jaguar XKE . Excellent condition.
Brand new AM/FM
stereo radi o
Included . Call 688·7327 evenings.
REFRIGERATORS, sto ves
and
washers. Reconditioned, del ivered and
guaranteed. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
S y camore. TX4 · 3183 .

SKI
CLU B
mem ber shi p and/or
weanesday lessons. Call 835 · 8072.

''ANASTAS IA " needs a home . She's a
1961 lovable , little Temptest. All she
costs Is Sll O. Call AI at 831-4113 or
Debbie at 832-6815 .

CHEAP! Large office desk, stove,
ref r igerator, chest, 9&gt;&lt; 12 rugs, roll -away
bad . After 5:00 876-6 180.

PERSONAL

MALE
ROOMMATE
wanted,
$47/month plus utilities. On Rodney
near Holden. Ric or Alan - 833·9358 .
TO SHAR E
2 - bactroom modern
ap.Jrtment with t wo males. Call Rick or
Doug. 688-6295 . Bill Brown. Call
again, t oo.
MALE ROOMMATE wanted for apt .
on Minnesota, $40/ mo . Available
lmmec:llately . Gary 837 : 2658 .
WANTED: one female roommate for
3-bedroom house off Maln·Winspear.
O wn room, f urnished , $60 . S tarting
Feb. 1. Call Mary 838-4892 .

MISCELLANEOUS
PIZZA·GO GO: T h is week o nl y, buy
two subs, get one free. 838·4557. N OW
OPEN SUNOA V .
WANNA live on a farm? We have a
farm
In E. Amherst and need
roommates lmmec:liately. Call Rick
632..0188.
WE' RE Interested In buying land .
People witt\ sign In Norton . Please
contact Mike at 836·2 650 .

GOLDEN ret riever, AKC. two years
old , h ou sebroken and trained. All
shots, Sl OO. 836-0148 after 4 p.m.

IS MS. Armao really liberated about
l!'lleryth•n91' F ind out tonight 7:00
p .m., 355 Norton. Current wr iters: be
there! Now writers needed. City
campus, feolture and off-c&lt;tmpus staffs.

MUL Tl·lamlnated wood skh with
bindings, size 7V• buckle boots, $35.
Jeanin e 832-4368 . Keep trying.

DEAR SUNSHINE: Happy llttn Love,
Marty.

1967 RAMBLER
very good
condition motor excellent, S350 .
633-4899 . Call after 5 p.m.

MUSHMELLON , I'll lOve y ou fwever,
happy annlversar y. stay as sweet &amp;
lovable. Barbra, Belly. V~rglrlla .

'69 CHEVV Belaire, blue. 7 tores
Includ ing new snow. No rust. Sdtrlflt.e.
$1100 . Call 8 38·2186.

LOST : one Lori "Love-Joy" PollaCk
and one c ase Bloody Marys - together
1f lounCI, deliver 65 Flower.

EARN money In your spare time
listing accounts, generous commfulon.
Write: Empire. So• 3096, Clevel.,nd,
Ohio 44 I 17 .

I'VE been neglected. Nobody wants to
buy me. My name •s AnaUaSia and I'm
tor sate for only $11 0 . I'm" 2 -door,
blue Tempest with an automatic
transm1n1on and a very se&gt;&lt;y body 1f
Interested, call Al831·4113

ACAPULCO, Barbados, Bahamas,
Europe
weekly trips, package from
$2 I 9
Easter week
sull available.
Contact Molly 877 8442

START $2 p er hou r salary plus bonus.

LOST &amp; FOUND

WAYWARD Pu11tan lost Fr~day, 2/4 111
blue c.a,
Ptea~e
contatt Tefl dt
834·2922 1f found
FOUND

FEMA LE senior needs lob. Can d o
many types of worl&lt;, preferably In UB
area. Cllll Mary 838-4892 .
BEGI NNER' S Photogra phy Class.
Elghl weeks for $30 . Call 881 · 1025
o e tween 7 a n &lt;I l 0 for more
Information.

- - - - - - - - --

E&gt;&lt;PE R r
Modern

FOUND
Feb . 3 •n front of M•r.hael
Hall, gu ld ·rimmed glasses
Call
837 -270!&gt; Ash for Kathy

vw and foreign car
rnechdn•t&lt;tl

\unouf'ded

servl~e.

technology

tn an atmospnere

of

old

European com f ort ana decor ~ MarUn 's
Motor
Wori&lt;s, 497
R1d9e Rd.
82&amp;·6777

TYPING, exper~enced. nea• U B.
per page 834 3370 Fast sen11ce.

s

40

two \liver oeys loCO Wtlh

rod wtre In Goocsyear·Cien1ent lot Ca11

R&lt;tY 8J I 241&gt;2
FOUND : Wll\twat cn
~ppa•Jtu&gt;
room, Clark Gym . Please conoe 1u
room 200, Clark Gym to •denltly .
FOUND
prescrlptoon glasses
&lt;tile•
basketball game
Clark Gym
made
Rlver heaa , N .Y. Ple&amp;$8 Identify at
room 200 Clark Gym
ROOMMATES WANTED
I WO

ROOMMATES
lo &lt;hare
4~bedroorn
house
''' mile hom
e-ampu~.
uwn bedroorn, S!JO/ruu
tlt•l•l•o&gt; Call Jeff 836 7639

Cf)NSLIENTIOUS serv•te • student
dtstounts
guaranteeo w ork
complete c.sr care at t ndepenoent
Fore1gn Ca• Se•v~te . 839 · 1850.
HORSEBACK 11dmg. Indoor arenll .
/\lso slay rides and hayndes. Group
rates
Information 941·5008 . The
Horse Palace. Center and Partridge
Roads, Holland, N Y
FLY BUFFALO S ludent Fligllts lo
Sunny Acapulco v•&lt;t Universal Airlines
OC ·8 1et, Luave N V .C M~trch 3 J,
return April 7 Frnm S 179 Cont~ct
Alan Marn-vtstetn evt!tnHtQS, 6 ·9 p m
837 0393

FEMALE
roommate
needed
Furntshed hou\e dtrectty ~t•nh tronl
campus $50/ month ~ncluCIC\ uttllttC~
Avarlable
•mmed•alely
lllJ 7049
Keep tr YHI9

A C... APU LC 0,
Barbados. Bananlls.
Europe
weel&lt;ly trtps. pa&lt;.l&lt;age rrom
~219 .
Eas ier week
Sl•il available
Cuntatt Molly 87? 8442

MALE OR rema•r

OFFSET

own

-

bedroom~.

11"'-JSe, t .. eplace,
lf'.lt~

ut

litnd .

$b0

montll 634 ·446:'
OWN LARGE bedroom and balhrHUn•
Ava•lable •mmed•alely CJII 1161&gt; 4o i.'
anyttme

PRINTING .

rast

(100)

8'''" II. $2 50, ( 1000). $7 4!); (100)
10,14 posters. S5
UniverSity
commu"'tY only
343
am !&gt;p.m . 831 ·5588

Norton,

9

J\NT IQUES

and modern turnltwe,
CtltOd,
etc.
See s"j
•t
Yeslerday &amp; Tomorww Shop . 1439
Herlel Ave

cetan11C\,

T.P.U. of HARTFORD, INC.

let the professionals servtce
the load!
LIMITED RESEARCH TIME?

OVERSEAS JOBS for students
Austl31ia, Europe, S Ame11ca. A fr1ca,
elc All profesSions and occupations,
$700 53000 monthlY. E&gt;&lt;penses paid,
overtime.
sightseeing
Free

•ntorm.auon

WrHe

Jobs

Overseas,

uept
E!i. Box 15071. San
Call•urnla 92115 .

D•ego,

call or write
(203) 522·1185
43 FARMINGTON AVE
HARTFORD, CONN . 06105

APARTMENTS WANTED
WE NEED a IWO· famlly apt lllal can
nouse '"' people (three '" e&lt;tCil naif)
for June. Will pay good money , If
taken . Call Betty 837 ·0430 .

SUMMER JOBS
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer employment
at numerous locations throughout the nation
including Natiqnal Parks, Resort Areas, and
Private Camps. For free information send self
addressed, STAMPED envelope to Oppor·
tunity Research, Dept. SJO, Century Building, Polson, MT 59860.

Strohs.. eFrom one beer lover to another.
TUI!S'Taote 1)11£\ll'llt~- OOJ.Il'AI'ot'Y OliTAOI1'. 141CHK:AN U12~ .

APPLICANTS MUST APPLY EARLY.

Wednesday, 9 February 1972. The Spectrum. Page eleven

-

�Announcements
UB Ice Skatina Club announces free ice skating
tomorrow from 9 - 10 p.m. Bus leaves Clark Gym at
8 :30p.m.
CAC Masten ProjeGt is still in need of about 15
volunteers for Monday- Thursday afternoons. Call
the CAC office, 3609 o r Suzy. 836-4481.
SJ)41nish Club will hold a very important meeting
today at 7:30p.m. in Room 264 Norton . There will
be an election of officers and a discussion of the
budget.
The BraziliVl Club will have a meeting tt&gt; elect
officers, today at 8:30p.m . in Room 231 Norton .
State University of Buffalo Common Cause will
be holding a meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in
Trailer 7. All are welcome.
Hillel's new community service project
"Operation Goldenlight, '' is in need of volunteer~.
This mvolves visiting with an elderly person c~nd
helping with shopping. Car desirable For further
information call Don Bernstein, 833-3577 or Htllel,
836-4540.
UB Photo Club will have &lt;1 meeting tomorrow at

The Greek CJub is meeting tomorrow at 7 :30
p.m . in Room 234 Norton to discuss eleGtion of
officers and upcoming events.
Communicative Creativity is holdi.ng a pe tition
drive tomorrow at 9 p.m . In Room 340 Norton. I t is
imperative that all students of Communicative
Creativity attend.
Psychomat will be held todc1y in Room 233
Norton from 3-5 p .m. and tomorrow in Room 232
Norton from 7- 9 p .m
A The Spectrum Staff Meeting will be held
tonight at 7 p.m . in Room 355 Norton for current
and prospective members. Writers are badly needed
for cam pus, feature and city staffs.
Kundalini Yop beginning classes in exercise and
meditation are b~ing held daily dt 7 p.m. at 196
Linwood Avenue. Classes are also held on Mondays
dod Wedne~days at 4 p.m. in Room 334 Norton. Call
li81..()505 for information.
CAC will have a meeting of all hospit.cll project
heads tomorrow at 8:30p.m. in Room 262 Norton .
Student Theater Guild will meet today at 6 p.m .
in Room 246 Norton for election of officers and
production discus~ion .

8 p .m. in Room 332 No rton . New members are
welcome.
UUAB Video Committee will meet tomorrow at
7 p .m
t n Room 334 Norton to discuss
reorgan1za t1on.
The Housing Committee will have a meeting
today at 7:30p.m . in Room 244 Norto n .
Activ1st Youth For Israel will be meeting
tomorrow a t 8 p.m. m Rooms 240 and 242 Norton.
The Student Physical Therapy Association wtll
meet today at 7 p .m . in Room 332 Norton

The CAC Be·A-Frlend project needs male
volunteers. They have enougtl ch ildren from broken
homes for any volunteer who wants one. Please help!
The kids need your friendship and companionship.
Contact Bob Moss at 835-5535 or Arlene Gordon at
831 -2281 or stop into the CAC office in Room 220
Norton .
The German Club will have a meeting and coffee
hour tomorrow at 2 p.m. in the department lounge,
Room 244 Crosby.' There will be an election of
offit;ers. Anyone interested In becoming an officer
leave your name with the department secretary in
Room 240 Crosby. If you are unable to attend the
meeting, ballots will be available until Feb. 15 .

UB Vets Club and Vietnam Veterans Apinst the

War are showing four films on veterans and the
anti-war movement in the Conference Theater, today
from 7-10 p.m.
The Sociology Department is sponsoring a
career seminar for sociology majors - seniors, today
at 3 p .m . in Room 42 . 4224 Ridge Lea.
.Representatives from the University Placement and
Guidance Office will be meeting with those who
attend .
Women interested in forming a radic.1l therapy
collective: there will be a meeting tomorrow at 7:30
p.m . In Room 244 No rton. This also includes the
people who signed up during the Women's Festival.
The UUAB Video Committee will be showing
the closed~ircuit presentation of Do You Own Your
Body?, one of the most controversial programs ever
to be shown on television, tomorrow at 8 p.m. in
Norton, Haas Lo unge. The program examines the
conflict between the law and the individual 's right to
control his own body.
The Women's Club of the Sute University of
BuffaJo presents a concert with Pete Seeger on
Sunday, Feb. 13 at 2 :30 p.m . at Bennett High
School. Tickets are $2.50 for students and $4.00 for
adults, and are available at Norton Union, Buffalo
State College, Canisius College and the Record
Runner.
The New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation is seeking ci tizen input
in the creation of a master environmental plan to
protect the State's natural resources and control air,
water a nd land pollution. Comments may be sent to:
En viron m ental Plan, N.Y .S. DepiUment of
Environmental Conservation, SO Wolf Road, Albany,
New York 12201 . Com~N!nls may deal with any and
all environmental Issues: air~water·nolse pollution,
energy, raw materials, urban development and
w II d Iife. For more information call Howard
Goldman at 836·3338. •

Whal's Happening 7
Wednesday, feb 9
Open Theater A different show will be prcscntet.J
each n1gh t, 8:30 p.m., H.miman librdry
Thea ter, &lt;1dmiss10n IS $1 .00 (or students, S 1.50
for alumn t a nd $2.00 tor non-~tudenh, will be
shown tomorrow mght too.
Mu"cal lnnovatiom.2 1 W1th jcflr&lt;'Y (., Kowctl~ky ,
d~SI~Idnl condu(.tOr of the Stdtl Untvcr\ity of
Buffdlo Per~..u~sion Ensemble, 9·05 p m, W!Kf-1 M
Thursday, Feb 10

The Fearless Vomplfe K/1/t'f\, llHcl.led by
Romdn Polansk1 , 7 p.m .•tnd Y p.m., Capen 140
E '&lt;hibitton Ortgmal graphiC Ml, etchmgs, woodcut,,
hthogrcJphs by Picasso, Bc~~km and Goya tnr
\Cllc, Cc~m~ius College L1brc~ry, 11 c1 .m. 7 p .m.
~cmmtH. ''Strongly Coupled Diffusion Fluxes," by
Prole!&gt;'&gt;llr E.L. Cussler of the Department of
Chemical Engineering of C.~rnegte-Mellon
Universny, 2 p.m., Room 322 Acheson Hall
F1lm

Sporh Information
Tonight
V.tr~lly WH!\thnK .tl "-cnt ~lcltc
University, 7 . 10 p.m
Friday · Var\ity hv~.t..cy vs lthJl.t, l\mhc1~l Rc,
Center, 11 30 ,, m , Vdhll y bc~~kctbc~ll at Brol I. port
'ltdte, H 1S p.m, fte)hm.m ba,J..eth,ll1 o.tl Hrod.port
6 IS p.m
!)aturday · V •H\Ity hod-..ey Jt O)wcgo S t.Jlc, 7 30
p m., v.Jr\lty _i ndoor tr.ick dl the Rochester relc~y~.
Vdf)lly wrestling quadrangular w1th C&lt;llifornta St.ttc
S t. Franc1s. and St. John Fisher , v.tr~1 ty fenc1ng c1t
Syrc~cusc With Cornell, VM~i t y swimming c~t Syrc~w~e
The student athletic review board w1ll meet
Wednesday night d 7 p.m in Room 233 Norton Hall
/.
All member~ dre urged w dltend
A compet itive paddleball tournament wrll ~f.HI
Mo nday, Feb . 14 w1th entnes Jvailablc now and ~e
ThursdJy . The o~nnuc1l mtramural sw1mming meet ~~
set for reb . 18 at 5·30 p.m. Nine event~ are
scheduled with trvphte~ awarded to the first place
team, its individuc~ls and the rndividual student who
compiles the greatest number of points.
Intramural basketball league playoffs at ClarJ..
Gym begin Monddy, Feb. 21 to decide the campo)
championship.
The Buffalo-Ithaca hockey game, originally
scheduled for a live broadcast on WBFO, may be
broadcast at the new 1 I :30 a.m. game time. The
Chanae depends upon whether or not time schedules
c.1n be~ in Lime. Check Friday's The Spectrum
for furthct information.

- AmyAhrend

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                    <text>Management Schod
to shift cla~ication
In a move apparently designed
to
increase
its academic
prerogatives, the School of
Management has decided to
withdraw from the Faculty of
Socia l
Sciences
and
Administration .
The path for such action was
cleared last month when the
pohcy committee of the facul ty
pve what amounted to grudging
approval
for the move to
Mana geme nt
Dean
Richard
Brandenburg. In wording their
approval, the policy committee
reported
they were
"not
opposed," but the commentary
accompanying the statement was
reportedly unenthusiastic towards
the school's decision.
According to Lee Preston ,
c hairman
of the Sch ool's
Department of Envuonmental
Analysis and Policy , the shift
results from management's "desire
to work cooperatively with many
facets of the Umversity which
may
not
be appropriately
classified within a capital " F"
faculty."
No conOkt
Speaking as a concerned
faculty member, Dr. Preston made
11 clear that this deciSion is not
the aftermath of any "crisis or
conflict," but is merely a
rnanifestatwn of the school's
policy to "adapt to student and
community needs."
N. Dr. Preston pot.nted out, the
~hoot contains a multitude of
dtverse departments and proarams
o utside the scope of social
and finds tJ1at its
as much directed

towards academic schools u it is
towards those of a professional
nature. The very objectives of the
ICbool, he added, are such that it
must lend itself to involvement
with disciplines totally unrelated
to
the
social
sciences.
Consequently, the need for
disaffiliation is a matter of critical
importance in that the schnol
must be able to freely associate
with institutions unconnected to
the social sciences.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 61

SUt.e Unlvenity of New York lit Buff.ao

Mond8y. 7 ftbnlary 1$72

Common knowledF
Although Dr. Brandenburg
refused to make any comment on
the decision , Dr. Preston felt it
did not warrant any clandestt.ne
treatment. The issue is basically
o ne
with
which
everyone
connected with the School of
M anagement
is
fairly
well
acquainted as exhibited by the
fact that a petition endorsing the
change in structure was recently
circulated about by management
students in the graduate school.
Continuing, Dr. Preston further
maintained that many other
professional sch ools presently
under the jurisdiction of a larger
body are in the same state of
dissatisfaction and are senously
considering becomt.ng separate
entities as weU .
The decision which has yet w
be acted upon has caused much
co n cer n
with i n
the
admtntstration.
Bo th
Dr .
Brandenburg and Dr. Gelbaum
stated that the matter is now "in
the hands of Pre$ident Ketter"
and is contingent upon the
Faculty Senate's arnnHl&gt;Vlfl

Undercurrent office
Uoderwrrent nmsacked

Guards accused of vandalism
by Howie Kurtz
Campus Editor

The Undercurrent staff h~ accussed Camr
Secunty of conducting an unauthorized search of
their o ffice tn the early mommg hours of Jan 27. It
is alleged that two security officers ransacked desks,
file cabineu and mail b oxea apparently In search of
narcoHcs. Further evidence of vandalism consisted of
the spilling of machine ink on about 700 comic
books stored in the press room for later distributiOn,
yieldtng damages estimated at about S250 The
alleged entry occurred at 4 4 5 am. and lasted for
approximately ten nunutes.
The incident was Witnessed by Thoma~
LundqUist, an Undrrcurrl'lll pnnter who wa!&gt;
workmg late 10 the office that nsghl. "J had the
feeling somettung wasn't nght, so I crawled
underneath a table Ill the back ·· expla111ed Mr
Lunquist "Undunned polscemen came 111. lool-.cd
around and walked nut. A few rnmutes later they
came back, !&gt;tarted rumrnug1ng thwugh the dc~k~.
and 11p11t the otl ovet th e com1c buokli .. he
continued
Look for dope
"They were mak1ng remarks about the
condition of the o ffice." sa1d Mr . Lundqusst. "They
said ttungs like 'Look at these floors' and 'What a
bunch of cocksucking pigs' and 'Let's look for some
dope'." The Witness feels that while the officers may
have had some original purpose for corning into the
Undercu"ent office, thesr return v1sit was to "tear
up the office and have somr fun ''

Fi~ uncertainti• .,. pt-..lnt the Western New York Nucl•r
R.,..rdt Cent8r in the wake of a c:ut in Gov. Rock.tell•'s 1972·73
bu~. The Center Is now in the ~ of seekint .,tet'Ntive
m•ns of funding which would stabilize the Income over • longer
~odoftime.

For furth• infonn.Uon ... the story on P8ee three.

Two Campus Security offic. . heve been c:hwged by
the UndtJI'Current staff of conducting 8n
unauthorized seerch of their offices. The staff
members claim that the off'IC. . ransacked d•ks and
file cabinets in an alleged search for druga.

endanger the hearings. However, Undercu"ent news
director Jo'ul Stiny feels Mr. Griffin's goal is the
overall upgradsng of campus Security , and his silence
is designed to t.nsure that the two officers are
dismissed. "I trunk he wants to shepherd this hearing
through and get rid of these guys," commented Mr
Suny.

Mr. Stiny feels there is a spUt t.n the Campus
Security for~ between two factions, the better
educated, more qualified officers, and !he less
qualified officers left over from the old days, when
security sta ndards were lower He further feels that
the existence of permanent shifts leads to the Jess
qualified office rs besng put on the night shift, which
is naturally less desirable. " I think Griffin and
Glennon arc trymg to upgrade the security force,
and in domg ~u. would like to see these less qualified
llfficers moved uul ," Mr Stmy !tatd
Nighttime incidenh
The alleged ransadong ul the Undercu"ent
office IS yet another ancident that the Comminee un
Campus Secunty will have to cons1der tn trying to
Jrnve at 1ts rccommendatrons 1 here have been
many other mc1dents involvsng campus secunty, a
recent one be1ng an mcident where ltecunly officers
allegedly used a blackjack and "exccsstv~ VIOlence"
011 an underyaduate student 111 the dorms. result1ng
1r1 six ststches
Oddly enough, many of these
mctdents have occurred at night, wluch many
1bservers feel ts patrolled by the more ancompetent
.ectaon of Campus Security.

Mr. Stsny stressed that Campus Secunty has
been very cooperallve in invcsllgat1ng the incident ,
T t.e ucxt day, Assistant D~rector ot Secunty which he views as isolated. Mr. Griffin did comment
Leon Cnffin asked Mr. Lundqusst to come lu Ius that incidents that undernune the overall Campus
office 10 an attempt to identify the officers anvolved Security image were resented by the force. To
Although no posiltve 1den11ficat10n was made, Mr pursue the theory of the "incompetent section" of
Griffin apparently contacted the officers who were security, it will be tmportant to note, when the
on duty Thursday n1ght Mr Gr~ffin later mformcd names of the officers are made public , if any were
Undercurrent that the two officer~ would be brnught involved in past security incidents.
up on charges via the slate Civil Sericc rev1ew
In a later development, three security officers
procedure, set down in the lengthly 1f complscated
entered
the Undercurrent office in the early morning
Art1cle 75 of the Civil Serv1ce Law the names of the
of
Feb.
4
and proceeded to take four or five Polaroid
officers mvolved will not be made publsc unlll the
mots.
The
people from Undercu"ent said their
formal charges are brought up sometime th1s week.
impression was that one of the men was a union
representative. When informed of the early morning
Two factions
visit, Campus Security dispatched an investigator
Mr. Griffin refused comment on any aspect of who proceeded to take statements from two of the
the Undercurrent incident, claiming it would staff.

�WNYPIRG presentation ~ CIHib, a N8der Raider, will .peak Tuetelay in Bau Lounte at noon. Bro uaJ:t
here by tbe Weltem New York Public hlterat Reeearcb Group (WNYPIRG), Ma. Callab •
remarlta are part of a campajp to prom ote WNYPIRG 11 a ..table oraanhation on this
campw.
Other WNYPIRG ac:UYitJa include the continuation of their petition drive. Anyone
wiabini to lip a petition autbortzina a voluntary atud ent fee to support WNYPIRG
lbould 10 to their table in tbe Center Lounae.

Anthony Lorenzetti prepared
to deal with variety of woes
by Susan Rosenbluth
Sp«frum Staff Wrlttr

" I rea lly lilte rum," said Student Association
President lan OeWaal , expressina a typical reaction
to Anthony Lorenzetti whose straight-forward
approach wins rum much confidence and many
friends.
Or. Lotenzetti, in his position as associate vice
president for Student Affairs, is laraely responsible
for the functionina of the Student Affairs office. He
terms it an information and referral service. where

AntlllllyLormzetti
students are always welcome Witho ut appotnl m~nt
"to disc uss difficulhes of any kind ."
" No student should feel hke he h.as no one to
talk to " says Or Lorenzetti Students are assiSted
wtth problems whtch range from bureaucratic hasslelt
to legaJ troubles. The latter are handled by the two
law students on the off1ce's part-time staff.

Double duty
In add1tton to tlu.s funct1on, Or. Lorenzetti IS
currently serving as acttng vice pres1dent for Student
TUTORING AN D GUIDANCE~
SINCE 1938
•

MCAT- OAT
LSAT-ATGSB

Affairs , replacing Richard SJUelkow who is on
sabbatical this semester. This new title carries with it
the supervisory responsibility for all activities an&lt;!
services which the Uruversity sponsors outside the
classroom. These include financial aid, foreign
student affairs and Enalish program, off-campus and
uruversity ho using, Norton Hall, Student Counselin&amp;
Center and University Placement and Career
Guidance.
The Student Affairs office is deslpted to relate
the needs and wishes of the student body to the
administration and the outside community . Such a
task requires cJose cooperation with the student
governments. This indeed is frequently the case.
The Undergraduate Student Association , for
example, worked with the flnanc13l aid office to set
up a loan fund and also parhctpated in the formation
of the Security Aide system in Norton. While
student governments are working towards increased
independence, they seem to find the adv1ce given by
student affairs personnel helpful and the servtces
they offer vital

'Inrerface'

Trouble with fees
by Mike Feely
Spectrum Staff Writu

Pres1dent Robert Ketter stated
Last Thursday night that student
fees for activities that " may not
primarily concern" the Uruversity
body, represented a "mitior
trouble area" in administrative
relationships with the student
body.
Fees issue
Spealting on the WBFO·PM
Or. Lorenzetti is now charged with reviewing program , Jntufact, Dr. Ketter
student vouchers, a cumbersome and prospectively discussed mainly the use of
fees. Mike
explosive assignment. At present , he IS in the midst graduate student
Nicolau a nd John Greenwood
of the conflict over review of student fees. He
expressed neutrality on the issue: "There is 8 represented the Graduate Student
question as to whether student fees should be Association .
Dr. Ketter explained t hat
mandatory or voluntary . Freedom goes w1tb
voluntary fees, but there is the problem of changes m the fees policy at the
State
University
of Buffalo
collecting."
Or. Lorenl.etti expla1ned that all mandato ry stemmed from 8 recent rutin&amp; by
student fees must be revtewed to assure thetr use State Comptroller Arthur Levitt.
complies wnb State Uruvers1ty guidelines . While The rulma, Dr. Ketter said,
voluntary fees aren 't subject to this check , they can't declared that state universittes
no
responsibility
for
be collected by the Bursar 's Office unless a review 1s have
allowed. Any fee not collected by the bursar would voluntary
fees
and
that
be d1ff1cult to collect
"mandatory fees must follow
Dr. Lorenzetti also commented on what seems guideline:.."
to many an 11\herent contradiction 1n the role of the
"The collection of fees ," Or.
Off1ce of Student Affairs. Thts refers to the fact that Ketter asserted, "represents a
though the office is a branc h of the admlflistration , trust ."
The
Uruversity,
he
11 is dedicated to student mterests. He spoke of the explained, has a responsibility to
spmt of a common goal wh1ch should btnd students determine the "legality" and
and admimstralton .
"value" of any activities to be
Dr. Loren zetti sees the administratiOn as people subsidi1..ed by student monies.
Ln responsible positions who are trymg to develop
pos1ttve things for the U mversity . H1s personal v1ew Graduate co sts
IS that fiexib1hty should be built Into all poliCies,
Questioned about tW optmon
always keeping the edu ~:ation of the students of the use of student fees to
foremost in mind .
sub$idize student food costs off
campus, Ketter maintained that
be was uncertain of the legality of
such,action "
He added . " It JUSt doesn't feel
right."
Mr. Nicolau, at one poinl,

~;_,utiful, hand·palntil'~
l li

GRE

{

• Preperation few tnts required few
adrmllion to grlduata and prof. .
liorwl

-Kimmal

qocm

Six and twelve IIISSIOO COUI"'ft
• Small groupe
• Voluminoua nwt•lel few honw
0

roRCELAIN HEART
BOXES for Va/Brltine's

Day.
THE LOTUS SHOP
435 Minnesota 836·2666
Hours· 10-5 daily
Thurs. 1111 9

prepam bv exP«U In Net. field

The Spactwm t. pub/lrh«J th,..
flmltr It wHit, ftWY lrlonday

• Le110n tcl'l«&lt;ule can be tail«ed to
meet lndwldual needa. L.-ona
can be spread over a period of

~'*'*Y lind Friday; during ~
audwnic y_. by Sub-Soerd
located 11t 366
1, Inc. Offlc. Norton Hall, sr.t. Un/PIW'I/ry of NIIW
Yott Itt Buffalo, 3436 Mltln St
Buff1tlo , N•w York, 14214~

of onewaetr.

•Opportunity for review of pan
' - via c.pe at the c.ntar

SummwS...o.•

IITANLEY H. KA~LAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTO.

·-----...···u-(212) 331 5300

~

(511) 631 &amp;&amp;

04\'S f VINIHQa, MII(I-

Bf8nehas In

Trustees adamant
One listener warned Or. Ketter
that cutting down on graduate
students may result in a decrease
of those professors who prefer to
teach graduate students. Reply111g
to Dr. Ketter's statement on the
use of research facilities, the caller
added there seemed to be "little
attention paid to the library.''
Dr. Ketter agreed that library
facilities were in defirutt need of
improvement. The libraries, he
said, contain "20% of what we
should have for reader stations "
He also noted that the Board of
Trustees had been inflexible on
the number of books to be placed
in the libraries. The number had
been set 111 1968 at not more than
two mill1on volumes.
Asked 1f he approved of the
ratsing of FSA prices above the
national standard set by the
Wage-Price-Board, Ketter replied
that be wu not aware of the pnce
ch.ange. Ho wever, if it was above
the standard he said, a definite
case could be brought against the
FSA.

~,.,

SIIYeral mOnth&amp; to a vaar, or for
out of town students, a P«iod

Speci81 Compect Cou,_ dwing
w•enc~~ - lr.-••klnl

expressed
concern
over the
graduate school tuition which he
termed "too high ." Or. Ketter
responded that tuition in a stat~
university pays only a fraction of
the cost per student. The avemge
cost per undergraduate student
per year is about $2500. The cost
per student worlting toward an
M.D., he continued, is $10,000
per year. He asserted that
graduate student tuition was
higher
than
that
of the
underaraduate because of the
increased use of research faciltt1es
Dr. Ketter also noted tha t a
plan had been suggested to make
the graduate student pay the full
cost of tuition. This, it W&amp;.)
proposed , would result '" a
decrease in the number Qf
graduate students and thus save
the state a great deal of money.
AJtbou&amp;h o pposed to such a
drastic plan, Dr. Ketter dtd say
there were "too many going t o
grad schooL ..

Tlllltp/IOM: A,_ Oodtl 716; Edltorllt/
.831-4113; Bulin-. 831-3610.

TUE.FEB.8

Rltpr•r•nw for «JwrtJ.i"' by
f(ittlonltl EcJuc.tiotNI Adwnhl,.
S.WC., Inc., 360 Litx/ntton A..._,

TWO SNOWS
7=30 111:00 PM
fWII( 11101

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Yott, N. Y. 10017.

Subltcrlpdon ,.,. .,. $4.60 I»'
.,_,., or 18.00 for

two,.,....._

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tSitcond
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CiteuMdon: 16J)OO

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday, 7 February 1972

'

"You want to have a kid,
Evelyn? All rl&amp;'ht. we'll
have aldd. Maybe that 'll
patch thlnra up."

�Budget arts

Nudear reactor may
be forced to shut down
Continued operation of the
Western
New
York
Nuclear
Research Center is presently
threatened by a cut in Gov.
RockeCeJJer's proposed 1972-73
budget. Previously. the center,
wltich IS hou.,ed on the State
Uruversity o( Buffalo campus,
received about $90,000 from the
state budget.
According to William HaJJ ,
center director, this $90.000 was
a "contract to provide service over
11 fiscal year." With it.~ cut from
the budget, the center is forced to
seek alternative means of funding.
A subcommittee was formed by
the center's Board of Trustees last
Thursday to investigate · such
funding.
However. Mr. HaJJ declaned to
co mment
on
what
these
altemaHves may be terming them
"a little sens1t1ve." He did remark
that tht; o ther alternative would
stabilize the income of the center
~wer a longer penod of time.
Funding uncertainity
Accordtng to Mr Hall, thss
uncertamuy
of funding has
already adversely affected the
center He reported that personnel
have left and are considering
leaving the center for other places
As an example of tltis, Mr. Hall,
ctted the departure of Sivasankar
Pillay to the Umversity of
P ennsylvania.
Dr
Ptll ay,
matnta1ned Mr. HaJJ. 1S "an
1nt ernat1onally
known
sctenenhst . . his departure ss a
areal
loss
to
the center "
Additsonally, Mr. Hall said that
there are more considering or
looking for other employment.
Mr Hall commented that h e
must sound "too cynical " about
the
cen t er.
H o wever,
he
remarked : " Wl1en J get cymcal, I
must quahfy 11 by st&lt;1ting that the
loc al udmimstration s hould get illl
the uedtt for reau1mg the real
need for people wsth nuclear
b11c.:kgrounds, a need th.tl wLII
grow tn the future" Albany, o n
the other hand . Mr Hall agreed,

'The Cage' :inside of prison
Written, acted and produced by former inmates,

The Cage will be performed thls Wednesday and
Thursday at 8 p.m. in th e Fillmore Room. First
produced at San Quentin Prison five years ago, The
Cage is ded.i cated to promoting crime prevention and
pen al reform. Voluntary proceeds from this week's
performances will be donated to the Attica Defense
Committee.
Student Association, throu&amp;h its Office of
Student Rights, is sponsonng the play's production
According to Student RJ&amp;hts Coordinator Dave
Steinwald : "The importance of bringing tt here is
obviously that what happens m pnson is sometlting
that a lot of people have become concerned about."
He contjnued that "there is a need for education
about what happens in pnson . . Thr Cage is a good
vehicle for tallcing about it."

has been "less than enthusiastic."
If the center were forced to
close down, the costs of sealing it
might be prohibitive. Accordin&amp;
to Mr. Hall, the cost would
depend
on "what kind of
shutdown.'' He continued that if
the
ce nter
c losed
down
permanently, the price might run
a quarter million or higher. Such a
shut
d o wn
would
involve
removing and shipping nuclear
fuel , fLiling parts of the center
with
concrete,
and
decontaminating the buildtng or
radtoacttve materials.
On the other hand, Mr. Hall
explained that the center could be
" m othballed" over a period of
tin1e. However, he said this st111
sould entail a cleaning up process,
expenses,
paper
work , and
"general
agony"
Such
" mothballing"
he
maintained
would cost "not greatly Jess" in
the first ye11r than operating the
center
Concerned
ahoul
the
fun cttomng of the center, Mr Hall
feels that tt offers ·•a whole
spec trum
of
services
to
educatiOn ."
Spectfically,
he
explaJned the center's use for such
actmttes as laboratory courses,
and
s tudents'
tndependent
projects. In addttton , he reported
that the center was used by o ther
campuses mcluding Brock port and
St. Bonaventure.
When
asked
If
he
was
optim!.Sttc about lhe center 's
future, Mr. Hall commented
"Let's say, I 'm hopeful ... not
o ptimistic." Further. he believes
that in terms of its former
viabtlity "we have already lost ."
As the o nly reactor on a State
Umverslly campus, the II year
old facility has been des cnbed as
the thud most powerful rea c tur
and mml powerful pul~e type
reactor o n any America n ca mpus
Another meetmg of tls Bo.trd
of Truste~ L~ scheduled fo r next
mont h when reports on allern1.1te
fundmg wtll be submitted

Referendum salary
Pay for anyone who worked on the Student
Association Athletic Referendum will be available
today anytime after noon in the Student As..wc iation
office 20S N

Grand Opening
FEBRUARY 7

8 &amp; 9th

MIKE'S GIANT
SUBMARINE

Sight , sound, feel
Specifically The Cage, as tts creators potnt out ,
"offers the sight , sound and feel of prison life
tncludtng the emotional tmbulance that becomes
everyday routme for men Ltvmg day after month
after year in a cramped pnson ~:ell
thetr cage." The
audtence gains addtttonal tnstght with " the raw
portrayal of the reactton of guard' to the plig,hts of
those who are caged ."
After the drama's performance, the troup will
join the audtence to answer their questjons, bear
their comments and make comments of their own.
For Utis part of the production. Mr. Steinwald
reported t hat such other persons as a parole officer.
a JUdge and people newly released from':iatJ , are
ex pr ·•ted to participate
In addttion to the ntg.hts perfo rmance. the
ex·tnmates are available to meet wtth classes on both
Wednesda y and Thursday . Anyone interested in
havmg thiS gorup attend, should contact the Office
of Student Rights at 831 ·55 07

Mishandled monies

Athletic fund: solution pending
Adminsstrative and
st udent
officials are awdehnes to read : "AU prOJects, aupported all or m
currently workin&amp; to resolve the alleaed mishandhna part by mandatory student actiVtty fees, wluch
or an athletic income mto a Faculty Student involve the collection of recetpls, shall be supported
Assoc1at10n (FSA) account The Student Assoctatton
by a detailed statement of rece1pts and expenditures
charged thai this depostl was illegal, violating state
PrOJect receipts shall be depostted tnlact and are
gutdeltnes for mandatory st udent fees .
SUbJect to these fiscal and accounttng p rocedures "
Subsequently , as explained by SA President tun
On the other hand , Vu:e Prtlltdent for Systems
D~Waal in a letter to President Ketter, the athletic
and Operations Edward Doty has nuuntatned that a
budget was frozen t o protect the ucco untabtlity of
spectal pohcy surrounds pro grams that are funded by
SA and Sub Board I Inc Thss free1e , he ma.tntamed ,
more than o ne source The athletic program ts
would last unttl " rrstttutto n o f the momes 111
'upported hy ~tudent fees. New Yo rk State and lhe
questton ss made tn lhe pro per Student Assoctatmn
UB Alumnt Assomlltun Ho wever . studCJtt fees
111 hlellc accoun t '
c'tclustvely fund up eratmg expenses o f the
Ho wever a~ Athlelt t Dtrect o r Harry fntz
tnlerl.ollegJat e pro gram , equ tprnent um{o rms, rental
matntamed " I helteve that the matters prectptt uttng
o t fa cLltt tes, travel fo r pro fessto ntl co nventtons and
the freeze are currently hemg resolved " At a
o pposmg t ea m gua rantees Slate morues pay salanes
mretmg between adm1nt~tratton and students la~t
wlule alumni money l'&gt; sssually destgnatcd for
I uesday. Dr Keller reported thai he would seek
Sl h t1larshtps.
legal opinwn from Universsty co unsel John Lt:;~ c h
Alth0 ugh the budget ts trnzen , Dr Fnt2 does
r:oncermng I he monte&lt;;
nut fore ~ee an y pro blems tn fundmg o ngomg athletiC
r•ogram' AllOrdmg to him , the lreeze. "shouldh't
Guidelines
th · problems arc bemg worked
At thss ttme, Sub Board I has communu:atcd tu last for long
Dr Ketter its arguments fo r h.1vmg the money out " P·&gt;~thle tn conventencc: \ that co uld occur. he
~.o nttnued would be that uffic:tals mtght have to wall
returned t o tts account) Bastcally lhey contend that
fo r thetr 1.hcLk S t o he drawn .Jnd tnps might have to
an y mcome generated by sl udent fees t) )Ub)e(.l t n
he ananged o n credtl
\late gutdehnes. Regardtng tlu~ . they o.:tle sudt
~.-..~IIC~

The STUDENT
ASSEMBLY!
Will Meet On

SANDWICHES

MONDAY,FEBRUARY14

BUY 1 REGULAR MIKE'S SUB
AND
GET ONE

FILLMORE ROOM

FREE

WE ALSO HAVE - Coffee - Hot Chocolate - Soda Pop

in the UNIVERSITY PLAZA

In The

All members are urged to attend.

I

The previously distributed Constituttonal I Also, pellltom are \till avatlable for all
Amendments must be acted on before rhe 1 Executive Gommlttee positions m Room
scheduled electiom of March /, 2 and 3. I 205, Norton

Monday, 7 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�I

EdiToRiAl

The silence is deafening
It is barely three months since two campus policemen
were accused of blackjacking a student in an incident
precipitated by an argument over a television program. The
maner was investigated by an ad hoc comminee which

Vt~TNAM! ·

1iH£ WAR liOO
UIV£ 10 HA~

concluded beyond any reasonable do ubt, that the security
officers had used " excessive fo rce."
Now two more members of Campus Security are alleged
to have broken in and vandali zed the Undercurrent offices in
the early morning hours of January 27 . Whether these two
men were acting unilatera lly o r upo n orders from their
superio rs Is unknown since most security offi cials have
refused co mment o n the matter.
Although

the accused should be afforded all

!Mot

the

""blhh•n

Hollll,..tlnto

2 -6

protections due to them by the law, we do not feel that
withholding their names is necessary . Funher, the silence
concerning the responsibility fo r the secu rity action is a
serious mistake.
Security's reputatio n is in dire straits. The blackjacking

feedback

and the unautho rized search have aggravated an a lready
tenuo us

peace.

If security

expects either

respect

or

cooperation fro m the University community, they will hav,e
to

accomodate themselves to publi c scruti n y. Thus we urge

im mediate disclosure of the names of the patro lmen involved
Hl

the Undercurrent affa1r. Funher, Campus Security should

accept o r deny the responsibility fo r authorizing the search
In any event, t he answer to the latter q uest1on w11l
simply document pre-existing pro blems within Security.
D1sc1pllne and mora le within secu rrty are poor, and it is
therefore lik ely that the ac tion was entirely uni lateral.
However, the po lit ical biases o f cena in security o ffic ials a re a
matter of public record, and we w ould not be surpnsed by
evidence o f pnor approva l from such o ffi c ials.
The incid ent is disturbing because of 1ts obvious po litical
oven o nes. Security consta ntly c laims that their function

IS

pro tective, not pro hibitive, and th is incident belies that
clai m. Without a full explanation of this matter, we w ill be
forced to conclude that secu rity's goals are inimical to the
University community's in terests

Vol 22, No. 51

Co-Menagi"9 Ed1to r
AI Benson
Co-Manavi"9 Ed1tor M1ke Ltppmann
Alii . M.navl"9 Ed1tor Susan Moss
Busin- M.n•r
Jack Herlen
Advet1tSt"11 Men~ - Susan Mellentone

C tty
Copy
Alit .

..=eature
Graphic: Aru

Badcpege

r,

/lit· 1-tlllt)r

I .un wnllng lhtl&gt; 1n rc~ponse to Mark Zehlen's
letter In T'ht· Spectrtun nf Jan 31 concerning the
Jbort10n ISSue I fouml h1s sat•ncal a pproach to a
very senous q uestiOn dtstasteful and offensive. tu
d1V1de t his 1ssue 1n to dogma tic terms of right an d
wrong L~ .10 unfa1r and u nrealiStll' over-s1mp1Jfil:atlun
Who IS he t o condemn wo m en lor the nght ,,,
choose whethier or n ut t h ey want to bea r t: h 1ld rcn?
Certainly no one is advnl.tttng ahortlon as a regular
mean~ of birth co ntrol
II 1s finanCLally absurd n&lt; ll
tn menlton the emotional o~nd physu:al consequence~
1nvol11ed _ II the medl(at prote~sJOn was truly
rc~pnn~tlle to the ueedll. of tlu: people there would be
nu net."d fur abortwn because of safe, effet:ltve hJrlh
cor1trol
mel·hods
and
w1de
dtstnbutwu
of
1ni&lt;Htn.JIIOI\ 1&gt;n btrth control If he ts so conc~rned
Wtth the ISSU•: of abort1on w hy not work to nldke 11
an unnecessary recourse by pushsng for preventative
mcdt&lt;:1ne (li.lw getting involved wt th helping to ~et u p
the cam p us Birth Control ('hmc) His letter served
no const ructi11e purpose other th.Jn to perhaps
releo~sc a lot of the anger he: tdt tnstde.
I respecl tus feehng.s .Jnd the nghl to express
them, hllwevoe r , abort1 o n ·~no t J topll for sarcasm
St&gt;veral things he sa1J .trc !&gt;Imply nnt true Fu1
C\.!Oiple , II IS nu t Wllh CJ\C thJI .J WOillall c.: l\nu~CS Ill
ho~vo: an .thurllon . J'&gt; he sec111s l u heltevc 1" The tune

ol feeling guilty over the tdeJ ol getting an abon1u111
IS old fash •oned, everybl•UY ') getttng their '-h•ld
aborted these days. As a maller of fad 1f yu11
haven't had an abortion you're do w n ngnt
unpopular.") Come on nuw, Marl-' Se~.;ondly , taw'
p rolub11Jng abortton will not p re11ent a woman tru111
o tt taming one by J skill ed , sympathettc: doctor or "
butch er He s;u u that the legahty of an actwn
deter m tn es an w divi d ual's morality smce when an:
these t wo concepts synonomou!!? War is no t 1Uegal
l11s sta t ement about rnintsters pushtng abortions on
wome n IS plainly false . Any respons1h le o rgamzatulll
giVIng abortion co unseung w1ll 1nlorn1 lhe wo man ol
her Jlternaltves a nd aUo" her In make the fmal
Jn 1\ton o~c.:o rdmg to what I'&gt; he:. I fur ht!r
nunk about t lus , Mr Zehlen 1 ry to fcl'l whJI
11 w,,uld be like 1f ynu wert! a wumo~n who founu
tllJI \he wa~ pregnant Jl J tJulc~ when 'he dtd nut
wJnl to he Bear lhe c tuJJ and g.tve tt up fm
adup11011 or have an abort1on '! I w on't argue lcor
ell her one T h e choit.e is a vt•ry perso nal o r11: Keep
yourself o pen and th ink abt'UI 11 It won't be un ea!&gt;y
de~· •smn At least be flexihlr enough to grant that J
wn mdn should have the oplltln of abort1on as a baSil
rtghl ot t all human bctng.~ llo co ntrol theu o wn
hu u1cs LJytng a gu1l1 I np 011 us serves nu pur post•
Sht'lld OriJrJ..
l'n·xntJ/11'\ ( nunseling St•rvrn ,

Monday , 7 February 1972
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arno ld

Ca m put

Abor--tion satire distastefr..tl

Jo-Ann Armao
Jeff Greenwald
Howte Kurtz
Jan.s Cromer
Ronno Forman
Martt Gatr •
ClatrtJ Knegsman
Lvuda Ter t
Tom roles
Amv Ahrend

L ayou t

Asst.
L tt. &amp; Dram a
MUSIC
OH C1m,..s
Asst .
Pho to
Asst.
S poru

Am .

Maryht!pt:&gt; Runyon
\18C8nl
Mochael Stlverblan
Billy Altman
L vnne T r aegt~r
vacan1
Mtckev OsteHe tcher
l&lt;.trTI Santos
Barry Rubtn
H owte Fa1wl

Thtl Spec rrum •s St!tved tJy Unoted Press lnter,attonel, Coll ege Press
S llfVIte, the Los Angeles Tomes f-ree Press t he Los Angeles Times
S yndicat e and Ltberatton News Servoce
Replbllattlon o f mlltter herem w tt hout t h e eKpress cof1sent of the
Ed itor-in.Choet oS forbodden
Editorl•l Polic y 1s determlf1ed by the Edi to r -on C hief.

Page tour . The Spectrum . Mo nday, 7 February 1972

Huntan side of the issue
ro t lrt 1-.dlfm

Jew~

fwm

lt:avm~

Ru"10.1 , wh1lc flu.• /wmq
Ill CICL Upi•'J P.1le)t1ne ll&gt; prell~llflllg Ill }'
pt•ctple lr0111 g•&gt;lng ha~,;l- 111 lh 'II home.

t'~!Jbhshntent

I II' l!l.ul 111 't't' th e 1\rah·Li nrtl\l 1ssue hroughl
lu I h r f'Jl!l!l&gt; •J I I ht .\puuum t I U\C " Ar.th l 1nn1'1 ·
be. ,111 ~c
/t oni' Ill extcnJ, far hcyuuu hr.tcl 1
Ho wev er I t (L'I qu1 tc sad, J\ J PJkstuu.tn ' " \et thJI
the • •
ol 11
"rttblem " lwtng m•gkcled . ttiJ.tnly
the natwn~l .1 nd h11111.1n nght~ nl my p.:oph: t
won Ul'l tl anyom· 'I til Ulluhls the l.tll I hat ls rad wa\
o:siJbhslu~J ott t he expensc o l rny people• 1he
Palest•mans. T he Zton1sts tell u~ that they we• •
pcr~e, uted in Europe Jnd that they had no lhnl~,;l!
but to invad e Palestme and t o establish J purely
JewiSh ~to~te . Ho wever. one cc1nnot corr t!d ,,,&lt;
11\JUStlce hy ~ommltttng another o ne, and 1L" unt 111
th.at my people should hav~ to p.Jy t he pu" tuur
homes, land. an d human need)) for wh;,. the
Eu ropean s ditJ to the1r J ewts h CI II Lens. the · Let m}'
people go" slogan should be t h e slogan of t he
Pales t in1ans. tnot of t he Zi onist~o But my peo ple arc
''The fift h column" in t he wo rds of Go lda Meir, a nd
I hey can not ~:o back . The Russians .~re restric ting th e

'

I wt•uld ltke I•• tJ.J ,, ,, I " ,, M r I m·uen ·,
ktlcr I J.tn Jll meu tt•&gt;t" lit '"'t-tl ttl)ll\IH:e th.11 stlll
pl.1g111'' Ar.th "" I&lt;.L\ l11 hl· t.nr ·'
Ill \UY the truth ,
hl· 1 , 11111 I
1 j, ~( \(I Lioll 1111 11 , I l ht: l'X pl&lt;indfiOil
loor lh•· un,t.•hl 1 •lltu.:JI M, 110 " I he l\r.1b world
I 1'1 11~ lloll f•H!!t.'l lh , on l'o,·
1 ~I U t' there ~IM1
•' \hi 'OLidl '"IU~llu''· \ lll h ,1, lht! Jt~t:nnHnat1on
lht: OroentJI t l:.JSI.:tn) )l·w,, ~nd ce rta1n
tlhru.· group,, ~u ch d~ th( hraclttn (t he ··Black
PatttJ1er•.'' )

·'!!·""''

Ho we11er, the SOCIJI .:ont..l1l10ns wtl htn lhl·
respectiVe ~.ountnes do not co n)tllute the core of t h e
problem. Th e real ISSue L" the one created by Ute
C::SI:ibltshm ent of Israel anU th e CVICIIOO of the
Palestimans from their land

A Abu·Ayya.rh
Geography Departmen t

�Middle East 'tragedy'
To the Editor:

"TH6W6 OOT
APP£.AUt7UJ6 .
I

Ma le responsibility
I dill wnt1ng thts ktter as an answer to the lettu
enuued, "AbortF&gt;Il\ for Sale,'' by Mark Zehlen
First of all, ~r Zehlen mentioned that hJvtng
;m abortaon shov. ..1 lack of responsib1hty From the
tone of the art kle. I get the 1mpressu..&gt;n that anyone
who has had an abortion, becumc pregnant by
unmaculate conceptiOn. What of the respl.lnstlHhty
of the guy who knm:ked her up m the farst place'/
Abortion has fin&lt;1lly g1ven women the po wer 1&lt;1
have control of thear bodies and a l..tttle more control
nf their lJves. If Mr Zehlen IS so conct'rned with hie,
then it simply 11mazes me how he faals to l•}nsad-.:r
the unha ppy life ol an unwanted ctuld
Th.i.li article bas been brought to y(lu by tht
foundahon which believcos women are people too
(iotl l/nJ[nr

This letttr is in response to a letter by Mr.
Frieder (/an. 31st) which wu in response to my
letter of Jan 26. Now, s1nce Mr. Frieder
mo nopolized the comic part in his fust Jetter, I have
no choice but to write a traaic letter (altbou&amp;h I
hope we11 alternate t urns later , since I'm very bad at
writing tnaedies).
J will comment in this letter on only one of the
comic statements that Mr. Frieder mentioned in his
letter, namely the well kno wn "If tbe Arabs really
want peace, why d on't they negotiate'?" Well, Mr.
Frieder, let me ask you this: iC someone kick&amp; you
o ut of your ho use, would you " negotiate'' the
matter with him? (especiaUy if you know a priori,
that he is convinced that your house is his). This IS
exactly what happeneded to the Palestinians, whu
are living now in their pic-nic camps, and they figure
they have an unne~ociable n gh t to go back to
Palestme (after all, let's face 1t, after 24 years, one
usually aets bored in any pac-mc)
You see, Mr. Frieder, the problem is that those
stupid Arabs cannot understand why the J ews who
were persecuted in Europe for so long, who sufl e red
from genocide at the hands o f the Na1js, then finally
having enough, put up a forceful struggle, m whH.h
they exrubated II remarkable military ingenwty
agamst
. the Palestinians' (One wonders why thJS
rrulitary ingenuity, that agressaveness, did not
marufest atself where 11 was needed the most , that IS
m Europe, where the persecutions happened). Also,
the Ar3bs cannot undemtand how Palestine is the

lew's Promlsed Land, since u most o f t hese Arab&amp;
claim the posession of the tbird edition (and ao far
the final) of the best-seller "God Speaks Ria Mind"
(otherwise kno wn as the " Ko ran" copyri&amp;bt 673
A.C.). Since no mention is made oC this promJse,
they figured that either the AllmJabty UnchanJeable
bas changed His mind in the couple thousand yean
between the fust edition and the third , o r else that
the promise was made by some other Cod , w hich
raises a serious legal pro blem , since then according to
the Moslem's traditions, this promise , in order to be
valid and honored by them, should have been
notarized, and countersigned by two o ther Gods o f
at least 21 years of age, whach is not the case of
course.
Hey Mr. Fried::r! I just had a glimpse o f wisdom
(as it so usually happens to us, Egyptians): wh y
don't we cut that cumelshit, and Instead of arguing
over who's right and who's wrong, do something
about the real problem · the suffenna of the people
over t here I do not mean the Palestinians o nly but
also th~ IsraeLIS, because, although they scored so far
a sensauonal 3 0 over the Arabs, they probably hate
war as anybody else
To t eU the t ruth, I r&lt;·ally don't know what you
and I can do here and oow. Ma y be we can
I
don't know
. start smiling to each other?. . look
at each o ther as people, and not as Jews or Arabs or
blacks o r Wasps'l
I really don't !.now
Let·~ thin!( together about 1t , Mr Frieder

Jlassan Fa rgha/y
(;raduatt: Student

Apologies for 'Beckett'
To rhr Bdllur
I would hke to apologa7e to all t hose people
who wanted to see the perrormance of .lad,
MaLGowran in the " Works of Be.;kett" on Thursday ,
January 20, and who were unable to get tickets the
latter havang sold out very qutck.Jy indeed
IJnfortunately, Harri man Theatre seats only 200 and
II turned out that close to a thousand people wanted
to attend We were unable to run the show fo r a
longe r penod of time because a) this wll!l Mr
MacGowran's o nl y free date and b) we could only
afford \o have him here one night anyway.
I also wanted to draw attention to an omusion
tn the publicity mformat1on that was carcuhtted

llbout th1s event It \hould havt' reild "sponsored by
the Office uf Cultural A[fatrs, m as.socustion W1th the
Department of Theater" s1nce Without the
extraordinary ~onnpe rati on of that department , both
in rnakini, the theater ava1lable fur the performance
and in provtdang a fine ted1n1tdl crew , which worked
very hard and long, 11 would not have been possable
to present MacGowran berc I am very grateful to
Cordon Rogoff, 01nd to the Department's faculty,
staff and student body for wo rlcmg JOintly wath t he
Office ol Cult ural Affam m bringing this
outstand1ng theatncal production tn o ur campus.

Esther Swarrr
A.rstsftJII t to tht- Prt11denr jor Cultural Affaus

No sbnple abortions
To the bdtft&gt;r

Moral j udd,emen t
/iJ tht' Editor

I have com\' tl&gt; wntr an response to lh~ l&lt;'lll'f
titled "Abortaon\ Fur Sale· wluch o~ppcdred 1n the
January 31, 1ssue It seems to be the mostarrationaJ
most unmtelhgent. most unreasoned pae~oe I have
ever read 1n my hie When diSCUSSulg somcth1ng as
pertinent 11s abortiOn:., especaally 1n the medta , It IS
not .J t11ne to he cute ThJS approach does nnt
present vtews IO&amp;JllillY, hut uses cmollonal~m a 11d
morbad-sar.·asm m the place uf jud1ctal analyza110n
Just becau!.e abortaoru. are now leg.al m New
York State, 1t do~ not mt:.ln that at~ d requarernent.
Tite Ia w is not decJdang morality now, us 11 was by
declann g them allt:gal, but IS leaving tha t up to the
Uldtvidual by giv1ng her t he c hoice of havang or not
having dn abort ann
I }l.L) art ide has been brought to you by the
toundauon t!edt1 a ted to ~ttaog!Jng 'en!.ele&lt;.~ne«~
hd&lt;1re 11 gets a d1.1nn lu 8'' u n·nottl·ed
IJallld I flf&gt;t•nllour

Driver safety
1'o the l!'dlfor

Betng a woman I can sympathize with the two
women who accerted a lutc h wath four men and
were robbed and nsped
However, being a driver, I can also sympatruz.e
wath people with empty cars who pass up
rutchb.ikers. Letting a stranger ride watb you can be
dangerous for a driver, JUSt as accept ing a nde from a
stranger can be dangerous for a hitchhiker
There are two sides to this, both potentially
harmful Think about it

Anorhtr wnman/dni'U

We would likl' to 1tply tn Mark Zehlen·~ leiter
,,( I .ll 72 (Monday's Spel.lrum) on ubort1on~ We
feel th;at he 1s unfamthar wath the subJeCt , thus lm
pomls .ue tllog1cal .Jild vague Ill so many cases 1t 1~
10\pt&gt;SStble for J woman to carry a child for phys1cal
ur mental rc~tsons, u1 because the ch1ld as unwanted
An unwanted child 1s one of the saddest ttungs tn
th1s worl~l . and it 1S oftw much better 1f the chald
were never hum Certaanly we agree that 11 would bt
better 11 the ctuld were not conce1ved 1n the hr~t
pluc.e hut b1rth control methods are not foolprnnf
and neat her are they petfe~.tly safe lor all women.
wtth po)S1babt1es of cancer from the p1ll, uterus
penetration w1th IUD's, and so on As far as glVtng a
~:hild up for adoption. it seems that this would be an
rxtremely dafficult decisaon for any woman to amke,
but especiall y for a marned wor:nan because of
~ucaetal pressures.
The phystcaJ and mental stratn 1:1eated by .J

pregnan..:y 1~ sornethmg that Mr .lehlen has
obvio usly never thought uf Wht•n the duld IS
unwanted, the mne rnonthlo that he ~o hghtly tosSl'S
off are often pure phys1caJ nusery Also, he ~ecms to
forget that o .. 1ety frowns upon unmarned pregnant
women, wha'h 1~ not very pleasant mentally On the
opposite h.lDd, .sbtlrt1uns them\eh•e\ arc: no $1mple
matter e1ther l he mental stram placed up&lt;1n a
woman by docto~ and nurse~ who ll18appwve IS
enormollS. It\ a very d11ficult dectslon to make To
have lin :sburttun I\ a per.wna/ rhotce not one that
should be d•l·tated by law or \O~:.telal pressures
We'd bke to ~: able to dtscuss thiS face to ta~oe
wath Mr .lehlen 1f he'lo anterested 1n a calm
tnleiLgent debate 1mteatl of S~Srcasm and Irrelevancy
Maybe we could alllea~n surnethang from it
Sumlu! Th ompson
Sutanne Regmund
Ftl1rc: /lurles
.~tJe Schoulrra

Emphasis on Spritzler?
To thl' b'd1tor
I have to Lake strong exceptiOn t o the art1cle
wh1ch appeared m the Jun 28 1972 ISSUe of The
Spectrum
concerning a
muting of the
Undergraduate Council of History Students. lniS
il.rtacle co mpletely distorted the actual proceedlngs
of this meeting, creating the wrong impresston that
the emphasiS of this meetmg was upon the remarks
of Jo hn Soritz.ler. During the meetin~. l gave Mr.
Sprltzler the opportunity t o explain the conten ts of
a mimeographed sheet which he had distributed to
the Council a t the begi.nrung of the meeting. lie
spoke for about live to ten minutes, after wtucb I
gave tum some advice and we then continued on
with the meeting. The meeting of the Council dealt
mainly with its affairs of the past semester, includ.ina
iL'I recent acquisition of full voting rights in alJ
departmental and committee meetings, the current
status of departmental tenure recommendations and
a new change in the requirements for a major in
History.

lr1 realling tlu~ .&amp; rt u.:le, I must ask the editor why
a 77•e Spec trum reporter und il photographer came
to ou r meeting? Did they attend the meeting to
cover the aciiVllltlS of the Count:iJ or were they
mainly concerned wtth the remarks of Mr. Sptitzler'?
If their intenltons were pnmariJy to publiciz.e t he
alleged g.nevance of Mr. Spnt2ler, then the Council
should have been notafied I as.k the editor, was Mr
Spnt2ler'l&gt; presenco: at the nteeting purposely staaed
for t his article'' And perhaps the ed1tor can also
explain why my photograph was erroneously implied
t o be that of Ma Spntzler.
Steven Keuler
Pre.r1dent, Counnl nf flisto ry Student1
Editor's Nott. Your allegat10n that our covera~ of
the HiJwry Council meet1ng was based on Mr.
Spritzler's preunce 11 ludicrotLJ. We had no advance
Information regarding hiJ interutoru and we
probably share your belief lhal the Halstead iJ.rue
ha.r been overdone by all concerned.

Monday , 7 February 1972 The Spectrum . Page five

�~Trial

of the Catonsville Nine'
questions the integrity of law
and men who fight for lives
by Ly.nda Teri
F~atuu

Editor

"Th1s is wrong. This is immoral. This is illegal."
" We are just doing our job."
"Every one we approached said they were just
obeying orders."
It sounds like a scene in the Nuremberg Tnals,
but It hits much closer to home and much more
recently. United States. 1968. Nme human berngs
were placed on trial for voicing thetr protest against
the Vietnam War by burning over 300 draft files .
They were on trial for destroying draft certificates
wh1ch they considered "potential death certificates •·
Thetr trial for multiple crimes of arson,
conspiracy against the United States government ,
theft of government property and burglary in a
federal building, was more than a trial for criminal
act1on. The issue centered upon whether or not the1r
violation of the law was actually a criminal act. Were
these men to be tried for their political beliefs or for
their actions? Could the two be deliberately
sepa rated? Was It justice to attempt to ignore the
cause of their actions and consider their "crime''
independent of their beliefs? Today. these quest1ons
rcmatn unanswered
Two's company?
These nine people have come to be called the
CatonsvtJJe Nine. Thetr resiStance was staged tn
Catonw1lle, Maryland . May 1968 A play The frral
pf tit~ Catonsville Ni11e , wUI be presented at twu
theaters in Buffalo. Why two places at once? Why
now? These questio ns evoke responses almost as
mterestmg as the trial itself.
The Trial of the Clltonsville Nine wtJJ prevtew at

Courtyard Theater Feb . 12. It is scheduled to run
every weekend in February and the weekends of
March I 0 and 17 . lt will also be presented at Studio
Arena Theater Feb . 3-20 . The ideologies behind
these two presentations are diverse, to say the least.
Rod Griffis, director of Courtyard Theater, a
non-profit organization, believed the play
represented a highly ret evant and important issue
which should be presented to the public. He sees the
performance as a means to accent his conliTUtment
with the issues II presents.
Blossom Cohan. director of Public Relations for
Studio Arena, believes politics are not tl1e issue for
presenting this play. She described Studio Arena as a
" non-partisan organization" which has an
"obligauon to do all types of theater." The objective
rn presenting the play at Studio Arena is to give
patrons a "balanced season with something for
everyone to see," according to Ms. Cohan
Ne1ther performances are for a prolit-run
organization, but the channeling of money serves
two very d1fferent purpose~ . Any profits made from
the Studio Arena production will be forwarded to
the theater to "improve productions," said Ms.
Cohan - She said that profit5 go back into
maintenance of the theater and that all actors were
Equity actors who were salaned at S 150 per week or
more. Funds for Studio Arena are also provided by
Erie County and the City nf Buffalo.
Cuurtyard Theater IS an Independent enterprise
whtch rece1ves no support from county or city
sources. Most workers and actors donate the1r time
and talent. A large proportwn of profits made from
this particular play will be going to the defense fund
of the Buffalo Ftve . Mr. LriffiS stated · ''We are the
stepchild We retclve tltl financial help other than
front the acttHS who .ue my fund ra1ser~. donating
their wmf.... talt!nl .tnd 11me free, and provtdmg the
theatet \ nnly ~ourre ,,1 lfll"llllltt, li S bo.x offi(e."
George (,rtl lis ~~~ lllrcch•t, Jdded "We also
cuntnbutc 1l\ll ttrnt' tree

personal interest in the actual Catonsville Nine trial
or in the ideologies behind it. Ms. Cohan said that
the actors in Studio Arena were "professionals" and
their political beliefs were not relevant to the
production.
Chuck Darst, a member of the Buffalo or
Buffalo Five, is a member of Courtyard Theater cast.
His brother, David , was one of the Catonsville Nine
who was subsequently killed man auto accident. Mr.
Darst was arrested m August 1971 while trying to
destroy draft files and remove Army Intelligence
records. This action has a stnkmg similarity to that
of the Catonsville Ntne In a bnel autobiographical
note, Mr. Darst made the comment : "Army
lntellJgence? Is that a umtrad1ctmn of terms?"
Mike Dougherty . un~ ol the Washington Nme,
appears in the cast aho. Mr. Dougherty is a
"~onvicted peace L:ru1unal. ·· (One questions tJle
sanity of a society that w ns1ders the'word peace an
adjective for cnnunal 1 lu lu~ bnef autobiographical
sketch , Mr DuuKht cr~ wmte . ".
awa1t1ng
ternunation of appc.tl'. and pnsun and an earth tor
children .''
Ted Howes, anoth~t member of the Courtyard
...ast IS greatly tnvolvt•tl m peace movements and
the l"4111(l'tn\ anti JCIIVtttes of whtch I
wrote "
am a part evolve 1111111 my confinnation of the
Christian eth1c .
Others in the Courly~rd Theater production are
Dorie Friend , Derwtmcnt ol H1story at the State
University of Butfalu Father Bub Smythe, chaplain
for Rosary Hill College. Bob Wagner, copy editor o f
Buffalo Eveninx News . Denrus Sparks. conscientious

Political or ll()n-partisan?
T/1(11 I'II/I lll'T 1111 WhiJTI'I'I'f VOII ~IY

_1"011 bl!fieve
he a Chn"stitJII Tim is what
Chn"~l nmmT when ht• llrt•J Wr /wt•e tl(l/ unit· ru
talA.. but t/ we ~ee smnt'thmg wrong Wt' IUJVt' 111 be
wtlllng tn t/11 ~umethmg abu111 11
Tilts

IS

wlwt

11 111&lt;'tms 1u

The ahove 4011lc, lrom The Trtal 11[ thf
Nlllt'
represent~ what Mr
Gnffis
cuns1dered hi\ re.t~nns lor pet fornung thts partrcular
play . l ie saal that hi~ tnt crest~ had long kept 1t1n1
away from politics. He CllrtltnucJ "The struggl e has
seemed IIICVItable anc..l WJJ\. J phase we mortals are
passir.g lhrou~h fh1~ pl.1y however, ~ay\ what I
have alwa&gt; \ tell [hese peupJe have Ihe ~·ourage to
take a stand thai I feel we must aJI eventually take.
The play~~ beaulltul. The people arc heaut1ful. This
IS aJI oppotllllltl y and a pnvtlege tor lilt.' "
Tlus sen)e of wmmttment was not shared by
StuUIJ ArenJ Qu1te the contrary, Ms. Cohan
bclit!~ed Studio Arena was presentmg the play as a
play , not w1th :Illy poht1ca l mtent The political
lcamngs uf any member of the cast or staff d1d not
enter the tssue, accordtng to Ms. Cohan
Ms. Gnffh viewed the play as a very strong and
moving Ioree to be reckoned With. "It is hard to stay
untnvolvetl wlule watclung the performance," she
t:ontinued " It pushes around the edges and becomes
sometlung stronger than a play of words." She said
she and her husband, Mr Griffis, "did not just want
any play," but wanted to perfonn this play."
Most of the actors in Courtyard Theater have a
Colonn•tllt

photos by Cohen

Page six . The Spectrum . Monday, 7 February 1972

ubJedor, Marge Jnd ll •.tJ 1&lt;.,, l.owsk1. Joey He1n7.
Dan Zepetello and l·•*''''' I hmunel a contrat.:llll
who dass1 tied h umd I .1 .1 -Ill f" •und dove •·
Those appeurtll!! 111 llw Stud1u Arena
prc!&gt;enlation are Stt•vc \lld l"t\1111, Marion Belchct ,
RJchard Branda . l&gt;ot1 llto:uuo:t IJf...e Dengel, Barry
Ford . Bill Herndt&gt;n Mun"•u Ill, f...,. Jean Paul Labtn,
Jac;k Landron . Tom MJtJ HI''·tll Mtt:hael Miller, Els1e
Robertson and Kenneth %ctul.tll

Not just a play
The tnal of tJ1c l ah•nwtllc Nme and the
subsequent events a11tl u•nlltll~ over "lawful
procedure" requires llhHl" 'UIIII ny than this article
(and this reporter) IS ahll.' "' g1vc. The play leaves
quite an impress JOn II appc.m that the ent1re
judtcial system would necJ J ornplete overhauling if
it is ever to "JUStly.. JcJI Wtth the "ctvtl
disobedience" in protc~l tu lite Jtrucities of war .

�personal interest in the actual Catonsville Nine trial
or in the ideologies beh.ind tl Ms. Cohan said that
the actors in Studio Arena were "professionals" and
their political beliefs were not relevant to the
production.
Chuck Darst , a member of the Buffalo or
Buffalo Five, is a member of Courtyard Theater cast.
His brother, David, was one of the Catonsville Nine
who was subsequently ktlled in an auto accident. Mr.
Darst was arrested m August 1971 wh.ile trying to
destroy draft files and remove Army Intelligence
records. This action has .1 ~triking similarity to that
of the Catonsville N111e In a brief autobiographical
note, Mr. Darst made the comment: "Arm y
Intelligence? Is that a ctHHradtctton of terms?''
Mike Dougher! y. ww ol Ute Washington Nine,
appears in the cast .1ho. Mr Dougherty is a
"convicted peace crutunal " (One questions the
sanity Of 3 SOCiety lhJt \llnsrders the 'word peace an
adjective for crimmal ) lu ht\ brtef autobiographical
awa1tmg
sketch, Mr Duughtcr,. wwte, ·· .
termmatton of appcJb Jnd pmun and an earth for
children ."
Ted H owe~. o~nnth~1 member of the Courtyard
cast is greatly mvolvcd m peace movements and
wro te "
the ,·on,cnh and acttvittes of which I
am a part evl)lvc lrnm my confirmation of the
Christian ethic
Others in the CtHHIVJrd Theater production are
Dorie Friend , Departrnent n f History at the State
University of Buffalo, l-ather Bob Smythe, chaplain
for Rosary HiU College. llob Wagner, copy editor of
Buffalo Even inK News. Oenms Sparks. conscientious

In the play, the defense attorney, prosecutor
and judge battle over the semantics of the case. Their
disagreement represents more than that. It poses a
question which must be answered . Are these acts of
civil disobedience a crime? Or are they violations of
a law? A law which, is in itself, a crime?
The case of the Catonsville Nine illustrates a far
reaching problem. It wiJI continue to present itself to
our judicial system for as long as that system
attempts to deal with opinions and beliefs as if they
have no substance. Father Berrigan said: "The legal
process is an autopsy.'' An autopsy performed by
people who wonder if thetr victims had a soul.
The question is raised as to the validity of an
argument wh.ich declares the destruction of draft
files illegal and the destruction of human lives legal.
Is it valid in the greater complex of human law?

Nightmares of Nuremberg
The play is mundated wtth harsh realities of the
actual trial .
"Files whtch destroy human hie no longer have
the right to exist!"
"We are betng toed for the burnmg of paper
tnstead of children."
"Think of the children "
These sentiments echo throughout the play. One
cannot sit back and think how mteresting it is. It is
more than mteresting. It is ternfytng It tS real. And
it is happening now and continues to happen .
"People are sacred . They are not meant to be
used as a means."
" I am on trial for the totally unAmerican
assumption that 11 is better to burn papers than to
burn children."
One .::annot calmly reOect on the controversy in
the courtroom . It is more than a controversy. It
- involves more than a .:ourtroom.
Nightmares of Nuremberg and NaZJ Cennany
pervade the atm~pherc as the judge "agrees
completely J S a person" but must uphold the letter
of the law A l.1w whidt ~an,·tmm the desecratiOn of
lives. A law wlmh many beltcvc ts not only IOJUSI
but. mhurnan The JUdge vteweJ the heltels of the
defendanb a~ "rea,onahk " hut retused to take
those beltef\ llltll J(\.'OUill rhl' r.I\C WJ!&gt; tned llll
"evidctKe" The burntng nl 1e~nrd' ~.I\ the tssue tn
be dealt wtth That .md .uily tla.1t "tltc ~~~uc 11f tim
case."
"Unpleasant thurgs .Ill' h.tpp,•ntng here and
around the world ,' the tudgl! admtltl'd 1 he~ snu~t
be dealt with in a legal lliJnner "The ha\h.. prlltClpk
of law ts that penplc utust move tn an orderly
manner."
The defense attorney Jt ttrnptcd t\1 tnt rod uce
the questton ot consc•enl'e Nu' Belief and deed are
not related in the courtroom The .:rux of thrs ac11on
w&lt;JS to be tgnored. To dnse your eyes anJ nnagine
the judge pla&gt;tn~.t the dual mlc ol prosecutor was
very easy. " Tht) ca~e wt.ll 1101 be dec1ded on the basts
nl
~.oonsctcnce. but 011 the bast~ ollact~ "
objector; Marge JJIJ I h.1d R 1 1-.owskt, Joey Hemz.
On trial for behefs'' Or a~: lions?
Dan Zepetello Jnd I , ..uh•• ttummel a contractor
" I JUSt want to let people hve th o~t \ o~ll."
who dasstfied humcll J' · J ' Ill pnund dllve "
'We don't want men lllltvertcd 10111 .:anonfire
Those appeJrlll!! Ill thl· S tuJto Arena
presentation are Stl'\&lt;' \ nlfo•J,ou, Ma non Belcher .
RJchard Brand&lt;~ . Ourt llr&lt;'llllrr. lJke Dengel , Barry ·cup of violence'
Napalm. The very word has earned a terror all
Ford , Bill Herndon. Mutl"ll' llt.k\, Jean Paul Labin ,
Jack Landron, Tom M.trJir ,,,,111 , Mtchael Mtiler. EISJe Its own. " It ts Jelly. It adhere~ It bums." People die.
They do not dte qu1ckly or patnlessly, but rather,
Robertson and Kennetlt '\her 111.111
slowly and brutally They die a death that only the
mind of man could devise . They die "slowly like a
No I just a play
The trial of Ute !'.llo!fhVtllc Nme and the piece of meat on the grill." Burning flesh is legal.
subsequent events anJ '"n fh&lt;:ts over " lawful Burning draft cards and Army files ts a crime.
"Each tndividual has the right, the responsibility
procedure" requires ullll t: ~uut111y than this article
(and this reporter) is ~hk In !-'.lYe . The play leaves to stop war just as every German had the
quite an impress JOn It appl'Jr\ that the entire responsibility to stop Hiller " The cnme of the
judicial system wouldtte•·d J wrnplete overhauling if Catonsville Nine was the destructiun of government
it is ever to "justly" •k1l w1th the "civil property and of that they were lound guilty . They
wanted to "sound a .:ry." A cry that would rally
disobedience" in proll:\1 tu th~: :ttrocities of war.

others to stand up for what they stood up for A cry
that would rally others to stand up lor what they
stood up for. A cry that would become louder and
louder until its presence was not unly heard ;mJ
dealt wuh, but its purpose reaJtled
" Problems our country are fat.:lllg wtll be
resolved," the judge said. "The .:ountry wtll get
better."
"Our cup of violence will 1111 up and bnm over,"
satd one of the Nine . " People .::annot develop unless
they change."
"How many must die \jefore we a1 e heard?"
How many indeed?
Nure· Tlw qun res from the play oppeunng tn rhn
stc 'Yore not 1•erborrm. hut ore constructed as c/mely
os ;wssible.

Monday, 7 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�School segregation not
practiced in most cities

AJthou.ab it il now 18 years
after the hiltoric U.S. Supreme
Court decision, a study by United
Press I ntemational of racial
d.btribution amona the m~or
school districts in New York State
shows that almost every city in
the state could be hit with a Education ComlfUssioner Bwald
school deseareaation order. The Nyquist had origin.ally ordered a
aoal of the state Board of Reaents " ao slow" attitude in the
is to have each school in a district politically sensitive areas, but
represent a croSS-$CCtion of the recently issued intearation orders
population of that district.
for Buffalo and Utica.
The study, however, disclosed
that durina the 1970-71 school Bxchange students
year, three-fourths of the state's
Nyquist is considerina asJtina
860 ,000 black and Puerto Rican the legislation for new integration
students attended schools where devices, if the segregation
they made up more than 50 per continues. One of these devices
cent of the enrollment. State would be to cross school district

SUMMER JOBS

lines,
exchanaina students
between the cities and the
auburbs. This idea wu used in
Vl.rainia, when a federal court
ordered Richmond schools to
intepte with two suburban
districts. Nyquist has ordered his
counsel, Robert Stone, to look
into the plans, and see what
chanaes must be made to apply it
to New York
Stone said that some of the
obstacles which would prevent the
implementation of such a plan
were tax and debt li mits of some
districts,
law g for
the
consolidation of dtstricts and
questions on how state aid would

ao to any district ordered to
mcrae. Althouah Stone said it wu
"too early to tell" if Nyquist
would propose such a plan,
Conservative
lea isla tors
throuahout the state have
threatened to take action if the
commissioner orders "wide scale''
racial busina.
Nyquist has moved more
slowly since the Supreme Court
threw out the state's "anti-busina
law" last summer. He can only act
in cases where local integration
challenaes are filed. However, ht
can
re-enter
cases where
jurisdiction was retained, as he did
in the Buffalo case.

Few foUow guidelines
Nyquist does not have very far
to look to find schools which do
not meet the stondards he set for
Utica which were that each school

'Consent to mitWrs,
'\

A campa.ip has beaun for the repassage of a bill
deslaned to aive people between the ages of 18 and
21 the rlaht to soUcit any type of medical aid
withol)t parental consent. The "consent to minors"
bill passed last year, but was vetoed by Gov.
Rockefeller. It has recently been resubmitted and a
drive bu been initiated to urae the aovernor to sipt
the bUI Jf aaain passed .
In conjunction with the statewide effort , the
Community Action Corps (CAC) is sponsorina a
petition drive. The petitions will be sent to the bill 's
sponaor, State Sen. Tarky Lombardi (R., Syracuse).
Starting today, a table will be set up in Norton Hall
to ptber sianatures. CAC uraes all students to sipt
the petition.

Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer employment
at numerous locations throughout the nation
induding National Parks, Resort Areas, and
Priva18 Camps. For free information send self
addressed, STAMPED envelope to Opportunity Research, Dept. SJO, Century Build·
ing, Polson, MT 59860.
APPLICANTS MUST APPLY EARLY.

An informal discussion :
" The application and admissions process
to professional school$"

Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMO'RVE CENTER

All senior pre-meds/pre-dents are invited to
come and share their experiences, advice,
warnings, etc.

1974 Eggert - Near Bai'ey

Junion, sophomores, and freshmen desiring
some insight into ''that trying year" should make
this meeting a must.
Elections for the 1972-1973 officers of the
Undergraduate Medical Society will be held at the
meeting.

Home Fries
Bacon
Toast &amp; Jelly
Coffee or T•

Further data show that most of
the state's maJOr cities, could, 11'
Nyqu1st wtShed to do so , comC'
under school desegregation orders,
since they do not fo Uow the five
per cent gu1dehne set up in the
Utica case.

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable

DOG
HOUSE
2 Egos

In Rochester, 48 out of 56
schools are apparently outsid'!
average 24 per cent. Thirty~ight
out of 42 schools in Yonkers are
outside the 14 per cent average ,
·and school percentages range from
0 to 73 per cent at individual
schools. New York City , with a 35
per cent black population , and 26
per cent with Spanish surnames,
has ranges from 9 to 85 per cent
in elementary and intermediate
schools, and ranges of two to 8n
per cent in hJgh schools.

Peer Group Advisement,
Undergraduate Medical Society, and
Student Association
present

Denny's

(any style)

not nry more than five per cent
from the district averaae of
minority pupils. In Utica, the
averaae is 13 per oent, but
percentaaes at individual schools
ranaed from 0 to 73 per cent.
Other areas throuahout the
state fair little better. In Albany,
over 20 schools are outside the
JU.ideline for the 14 per cent
average. Riaht here in Buffalo ,
where the average is 39 per cent
black , 90 to 95 schools arc
outside this average. Percentages
at elementary schools range from
0 to 100 per cent, and secondary
schools vary from 9 per cent black
at South Park High to 99 per cent
at Woodlawn and Clinton Junior
High schools.

Refreshments will be served
• • • TOMORROW • • •
Tuesday, Feb 8th 7 30 p.m. Rm. 233 Norton Hall.

834-7350

- SPEEDED READINGAND STUDY
Div. of Unde~raduate
Studies again offers Mrs.
Nichols non-credit
course. Weekly sessions.
Nominal fee $15.00
payable at re~tration
m
1 06 Daefendorf.
Some classes still open.

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----------------------------------------------------at GRANTS UNIVERSITY PLAZA STORE

...,
PaQe eight. The Spectrum. Monday, 7 February 1972

"

�Hoopsters lose fifth straight
to Niagara's Purple Eagles

Oswego waits

Hockey postponed

Spor11 EdlttN

" I 'd like to play them when we have a full squad
out there," proclaimed an exasperated Buffalo
basketball coach Ed Muto. Muto's exasperation was
caused mostly by the Bulls ' fifth st ra tght loss, 96-76
to Ntagara , but Muto was also a bit peeved at the
officiating. The officials, AI Masino and Frank
Magiapane, called a t o tal of 6 1 personal fouls in the
con test , 34 on Buffalo. In the process, three Bulls
were fouled ou t wnile three finished with four
personals. For the 14 S, tournament bound Purple
Eagles, two playe rs were slapped with four fouls,
while six Eagles had three. Eagle forward . Jim
Chassar summed up the players' feeling when he just
walked o ff the court shaJcing his head in disbelief
after a "foul."
In the first half th e Bulls stayeu close to
Ntagara, having IJttle trouble wtth the Eagles'
pressing guards, Mars hall Wmgate .tnd AJ Williams. In
fact. Wtlliams, th e 5 9 Ntag.tra s parkplug was
saddled with early fouls. For the Bulls, early foul
trouble hit the btg men, 6 6 Juntors Jtm T n bble and
Curt Blackmore. Tnbble was asses~ed wtth hts fourth
wttb ten mmutes to go m tht! first half while
Blackmore was ch arged wtth three tn the first etght
mmutes Wtthout thctr beef tn there, the Bulls
nonetheless fought but were hurt on t h e boards.
Addttionally both 6 6 forward Greg Laker and 6 - 2
guard Bob Vartanian cam e up wtth first half tnJUries.
Laker suffered an ankle spratn , whtle Vartanian
~uffercd a painful knee brutse. The last lour mtnules
of the first half, SJw four subs from the Bulls's weak
hm.:h 10 th e lineup Still . by hilt aug 1Q of 13 free
throws the Blue and (;old trailed only 4&lt;1 39
Ro of caves in
The second hal t ~aw tiH: Bull ' lilt down the
[ .tglc~ · margan befpre the ruof tH runrc pn:.:tsdy the
••tft.:tat10g ..:aved tn. Only Gtl'l!l Bruu: , Huffatu·~ ftne
,oph guard could es~: ape tlw cl"' t&gt;rntnl\ eye of the
11fft&lt;.:t.tls Th.mkfully for th•• Bulb HrU&lt;C was .thlc to
tilted the .Jttack tn a hnr dt~play Mull&gt; tailed t ht\
g.~mc Bru.:e's .. be:;t agatnst pre"urc" J' Bru,e proved
.m able leaucr Bru..:e scored I J p\liOis vta 7 of I 0
twm the .:hanty stnpe
Slowly but surely. the Bull' ,;happed Jway at
'IJg.Jra's lead and futJlly got 11 dl)ow 111 (l&lt;;
wtlh
ten nunutes to go in I he .:on I est II o-wn,., wtllun a
t-wo mmute span. I ratoblc U I.J~o:i.nHHe .~nu L.mgeller
lou led out Jnd V Jrt.II11JO wa!. thascd \\ tth hts fourth
pcf\unal From there . ltd hy h S soph ..:enter Zeke
l&lt;oy\ter. the EJgles rJn off .! ' \tr.ttll,ht pntrat\ ,1\ the
Bull\ latled to score a \tngle mart..cr ova J "'&lt; tlltttut.:
'ttcll.h. Before .onyoa\1! knew wh.1t WJS h.tpperung.

c;.,

ECAC division race
Presently the Rulls stand 7 I

The

Foul play

Ni agara
Purple
Eagles defeated the Bulls
Saturday night in a game
that saw a total o f 61
per1onal fouls called.

Tickets for this weekend 's
Ithaca
ho m e
game will be
available at Clark Gy m t omonow
s1art10g at 9 p .m . Remember,
Buffalo st udents with validated
cards will be able to pic k up one
tic k et only. WBFO-FM radio, 88 .7
with Jtm Masson and Jim Drucker
wtll broad cast the Ithaca contest
live Last week, Buffalo received
one of tts major honors of the
season when cent er J ohn Stranges
wa.\ chosen ECAC Division II
sophomore of the week. Stranges
stands tlurd in Buffalo scoring
wtth 17 pomts, while freshman
Mtke
Klym
(23) and
Dale
Dolmage (2:!) co ntinue to lead the
Bulls'
marksme n
Besides
Strange~ .
freshman defenseman
Bob Epplett , senior goalie Mike
L&gt;unn and Mt ke Klym received
hunmable men t ion on th e ECAC
all-star weekly squads.

111

•n

•n

IMPORT \ N "'OTICE
STUDENT ME:DKAL INSU RANCE

Royster, Wingate. super-sub Bob Mtller .and guJnl
Doug Farrell fast broke Ntagara 1010 an XK 61
commanding lead. Royster, subbmg for the IIIJllfCll
6 - 11 Jtm Hegmann ~t·ored 15 p otnh anJ puli.:J
down 13 rebounds Wtng.llc: led all ,,·urt'r' -w tl h I X
potnls while \l allt'r hJd 15 Jrhl hi o;;tret'l i&gt;'"ted I I
Bob Var1.tii1Jn led lht• Bulh wath I' pntnt,
while Bruce and LJngcher JUdell I \ I he Rulh "trdv
m1Ssed thetr htg tn,u.J.- gun\ hut 'oph h I ftc•·
shooting forwJrd Joe l::v.tn' I&gt;(JVc th • Bull' tll•hl •·
their late second hJII ~·onniJ. pundt wllh I' au.ar~··"
Tomorrow thl' Bull:. lClllll' ur .J~Jifl't the lUll I
gun Eastern Mtchtgan ll uron' Jl ( l.trl.. &lt;,yua !X ILl I

U.B.
STUDENTS!

• 'te t.&gt;ivist o n II race, tied for
.n ond with Bowdoin, which was
... ,,. et Wednesday by Merrimack.
.,_1,..sachusetts leads the pack with
111- I . while Merrimac k stands
lourt h at 8-2 . Rounding out the
first eight are Vermont (6-2),
Withams (8-3-1), Boston State
(10-.'il and Colby (6-4-1). It
shoutu be noted that the first fow
teams m the playoffs will be
seeded as home teams, while the
last four playoff teams will travel
•n the first round of competition.

Due to I 2 10ches of snow and 1
power failure in the Os wego &lt;Hl'.J
Saturday night's hockey tW
between Buffalo and Oswego wa.'
postponed. The crucial Division II
contest between the Lakers and
Bulls will be played this co mmg
Saturday night at 7:30 p .m. m
Oswego. Thus, the Bulls will be
faced with the pros pect of
back-to-back Division II contests
since th ey are sc hed uled to meet
Ithaca CoUege Friday night at the
Amherst Recreatio n Ce nter.
The Oswego postponement was
Buffalo's second of the season.
Just :w o weeks ago, Buffalo's
game at Ithaca was ca ncelled due
t o ice problems at ComelJ 's Lyna h
rink. A further troubling aspect of
this week could come for the
Bulls if st arting time problems at
the
R ec
Center
perstst .
Reportedly, Fnday mght's Ithaca
home game may have t o sta rt at
10:30 p.m.
Coach Ed Wnght told l1tt·
Spectrum . " We may have to mnve
the game to Fnday mornmg, tf we
can't get an earlier startmg time ..
Coach Wnght tndtcated that
It haca has already ..:an~;elled game'
with other schools over sc heuule
problems. Buffalo's main dtlcmma
10 this new ~..: hedule hassle is thJl
Ithaca is a Daviston II team

by Bmy Rubin

Enroll now tor .!nd semester!
for enrollment deulls phone

NIAGARA NA TIONALINSURANCE
853-0931

853-0931
or

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Room 318 Norton from 9 00 a.m. 4 30 p m OAIL Y '

LOW, LOW, PRICES ON VITAMINS &amp; FOODS

Monday, 7 February 1972 The Spectrum . Page nine

�Basketball Bulls look ahead to
match
. with Eastern Michigan

After faci ng five major opponents in their last
17 points and nine rebounds.
6ve games, the Bulls ret u rn to Clark Gym to mo"ow
A t center, the Hurons start 6ft. 5 in. senior Bill
evening t o face college division Eastern Michigan. James, who gives away height and weight but can
However, the Hurons {1 54) are no easy o pponent as jump with the best. James averages 1 1.9 with 10.9
evidenced by their 12-game winning streak and rebounds. At guard, junior captain Lindell Reason
number five national ranking.
leads the show. Reason averaged 20.2 last year, but
last year the Hurons went 22-11 and finished has slipped to 143 this year along with fiVe assists
second in the NAlA (National Association of per contest.
Intercollegiate Athletics) champio nships. Jf you'U
The o ther guard figures to be hot shooting Gary
remember, it was Kentuc ky State and the Buffalo Tyson. a soph from Detroit. Tyson, a .538 shooter
Braves' Elmore SmHh that defea t ed the Hurons has scored 10.2. The Huro ns rate fifth in the nation
102-82. last year's big EMU gun is gone. Kennedy in scoring with their run and gun attack . The Bulls
Mcintosh , a 6 ft. 7 in . forward was chosen as the must assert themselves on the boards or they could
Chicago Bulls' number one draft pick.
be run o ut of the game, even o n their Oark Gym
This year. the Hurons are hot after their fifth home court.
straight 20-victory season under Coach J1m Dutc her .
Eastern Michigan opened the season w11h losses
However, a new star has emerged o n the scene in 6 at Toledo (87·82), Purdue (94 ·84) and Mictugan
ft. 7 in . forward George Gemn
(89-88) before malung the1r mo ve. EMU's other loss
Cervin, a soph, rates fifth 1n the natio n in c.:ame a t tughly rated small college power Eau Oaire
scoring with a 30.2 mark and 14 .8 rebounds Cervin (Wis.), State (79-76). Big victones have come over
weighs in the area of 180 pounds, but has seasons's Duquesne ( 70-69), Grambling (87·80), Brockport St.
highs of 44 against Ashland and Cleveland State and (110-99) and Kentucky Wesleyan (80-74).
33 against Purdue. Gervin 1s rated EMU's best
Th.is season the Hurons were admitted to tl1e
na tural shooter ever and ftlls out one of the Huro ns' Mid-American conference, but will cumpete in the
wmgs with 6 ft. 6 in. senior forward Earl Dixo n .
small college bracket Uus year before moving up for
Ducon, a veteran performer IS averaging 15 .7 the b1g t1tle in two more years. The o ne major plus
po1nts and 11 .7 rebounds, while using h.is great on the Bulls' stde could be the home court advantage
quickness t o lead the fastbreak. Last year in EMU's where the Bulls have won 58 and lost ten over the
88-76 win over the Bulls, Ducon hurt Buffalo with past eight yea rs.
STUDENT DISCOUNT
rG
-U
- ST
_A
_ V_A_. ..F...R
_I_S_C_H_, -1N
-C
- -. - - -- - - - - - RUSSIAN LESSONS
00
all
Jeweler - Optician
by a native
redecorating needs
41 KENMORE AVENUE
Individual or clau
art supplies, picture fram ing·
(at University Plaza)
references
D.M. RECH PAI NT CO.
- Mrs. David Harker3209 Bailey Ave.
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226
886-2666

un!versity
un1on
activi t ies
b oard
Warner

Snow forces wrestlers
to cancel Oswego match
Ol d
m an
winter
buried
Oswego, N.Y. under a heavy snow
Saturday
morning
forcing
cancellation of the wrestling
match between the Bulls and the
l...a.kers. The Bulls' record thus
remains at II I .
The axing of tbe Oswego
match from the schedule was the
second cancellation o f the season
for the seventh-ranked Bulls. The
first also involved Oswego as Lock
Haven
of
Pennsylvania, a
perennial wrestling power, could
not get to Buffalo from Oswego
for their Dec. 18 match.
The Bulls thus wilJ rest until
Wednesday, when they travel t o
Kent, Ohto to take on the Kent
State
Golden
Flashes. The
A ashes, under new coach Ron
Gray, are led by 158 lb. senio r
George Paulus . Paulus, who
ranked
th1rd
1n
the
MiddJe-Amencan Conference last
season, wdJ take on the Bulls'
J ohn Kopalek in cme o f the key
bouts of the match .
K o p alek , who
has
been
struggling at the .500 mark thiS
season for Buffalo , came up w1th
a very b1g VICtory in the Bulls'
triumph over Cleveland Stair at
Clark Gym last Wednesday night
The S- II JUruor transfer from
Broome Tech nailed Cleveland
State's Gene McCune to tum a
close match at 9 - 6 into a
runaway at IS 6 . Reversing his
.opponent , Kopalek, who started
from the botto m position, was
able to ho ld on and force McCune

to the mat for the pin. Kopalek is
an excellent wrestler o nce both he
and his opponent are down on the
mat. This is borne out by the fact
that John has compiled a 6 - 5- 1
record while taking his o p ponent
down only twice during the entire
season.

Bulls rated seventh
There will be a few o ther key
matc hes fo r the Bulls who are
currently rated seventh among
Eastern power.. . Buffalo is ranked
behind its only conqueror, fourth
rated Clarion Stat e , and five teams
who a re no t on the Bulls'
schedule. However, it is no
diSgrace to be rated behind teams
such as Penn State and Navy , and
the fa ct that Buffalo bol!..StS such a
fine squad is a tribute to the
recru1tmg job d one by coach Ed
Michael.
Ano ther o f Michael 's recrurts,
Gary Kumm of Kenmo re, will
fa ce a stiff test in another key
match at Kent State. Kumm, the
Bulls' regular at I SO lbs, will be
gorng against Tim Whitaker
Wlutaker, who missed the first
quarter at Kent with academic
pro blems, was fifth in the
natronals last year. The senu:n
fro m Rochester, NY . is rated as
an excellent wrestler by almost all
o bserver.; Kumm will have to be
at tus best lo top the Kent State
J 50 pounder. Ho wever. if the
Bulls can win these two key
bouts, they should be able to
defeat Kent State.

THf UUAH MU SIC COMM ITTEE
presents
TOPS &amp; BOTTOMS

m concur
Bro~ .

Record ing Artist
t•lce the shirts right off our
S.ve 20% on Mything with
liMY•. Hundreds of long
tope; 7 ,000 p!lirs of Bells
.lldlets to matc:h. l Mttler jeclcets;
boots end Pllfic•. LN levi
Wnngler, Campus, lancltubber'
Mille, etc. Be "in" - S.w Mo_.f

Captain Beefheart
and His Magic Band

.,..,e

-Shop Armv.fiiiiVV.

plus

Little Feat
SUNY/ AB - CLARK GYM
FRIDAY , FEBRUARY 11th . ONE SHOW at 9 ·00 p .m
T ICKETS

NORTON HALL TICKET OFFICE

SIUdents &amp; Alumm $2 50

TENT CITY

7 30 M•ln At l upper 853· 15151 Olv w•shlnvt on Surplus Center
Master, Empire, B•nk Amet
1/2 Ht Free P•rl&lt;lnlf

u niversity
un ton
a c t iv ities
board

UUAB Video Comm1ttee
Presents
"The New Conciousness Series"
Featuring this week
" Wa1tmg For the Change"
Monday. 12 noon, in Hass

"Do You Own Your Body?"
Thursday, 8 p.m ., in Hass

is looki"i for qualified people m the followmg areas:
ART
COFFEEHOUSE
DANCE
MUSIC
DRAMATIC AR TS
LITERARY AR TS
F ILM
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
PUBLICITY
SOUND

We have position openings for next StJmester.
Applications are now being taken in 261 Nonon
UUAB.

...
Page ten . The Spectrum . Monday, 7 February 1972

�AD INFORMATION

tomorrow's .,ectlon. If )'OU Wllh to
run for any o ffice and did not 11tn up
at tlla last meetlnt, call st- t31·2.ur7
by6 p .m.

CLASSIFIED ACS may be p laced
M on day thru Friday betwMn 9 a.m.
and 4•30 p .m . at 3 55 N orton Hall.
T HE COST ef an ad for one Clay Is
U.25 for the first 15 words and $, 05
for eacn additional word. $1 for eacn
additional day. Tile deadline for
Monday Is Friday; f or Wednesday, It Is
Monday
and
f or
Frid ay , It
Is
wednesday, by 4:30p.m.
"1-iE LP
WANTED"
ads
c:.nn ot
discriminate on the basis o f sex, colo r ,
creed, or national origin to any ext ent
(I.e., p referably Is still discriminatory) .
'"FOU N D" ads will be r un free o f
cllarge for a maximum of 2 Clays and
IS words.

WANTED
WANTED: For volu ntHr proJects; 2 or
3 students eac:hln chemistry, medicine,
physics, engineering, law. Box 3,
Colden 14033.
CRANKSHAFT lor Honda 160. Also
other parts for 160, S-90, 175, 250 or
305 c:c:. Call Bill 886 ·8154,
PART-TIME w orkers. Make $ 2(1-$30
per evening. Easy, fun, no Investment.
No risk. 773·5313.
WANTED : Dead or alive?
HORNY
wants
Immediate servlca.

Horny :

Fast,

UNFORTUNATELY, this tremendous
Job offer unn o t be explained bec::~u se
we
aren't
ell owed
to
a&gt;&lt;pres.s
Cllscrlmlnatlon on the basis o f race,
creed, sex or national origin.
ST UDENT at Allenhurst desperately
needs garage space there. If you know

TERMPAPERS
UNLIMITED
" WE GIVE RESUlTS "
295 HU NTIN GTO N
BOSTON , MASS. 02115
(617) 267 ·3000

FOA SALE
WANTED : Electric bass and/or fender
or compar able amollfler, 886-7104 .
Stule.
EARN extra money. Get cosm etics at
40% d iscount. Ca ll 838-4949.
HI ALLENHURST! You say you been
pluc:kln that guitar for a year and still
don't know a note. Guitar workshop
f o r beginners . Join! See Bob 508A
Allenhurst.

831·2487 b y six p.m.

M OUTON LAMB J~tket. Excellent
condition. Size 12. Call 8!1 1-11634.

HI! Mike and Fred, we miM you. Pat
and K.ren.

1967 R AMBLE R, very 900d c:Qndltlon.
Motor excellent, 1350. 633-4899. Call
after 5 p.m.

NOBOD Y likes me. Everybody hates
me. I tlllnk I 'II go . .t worms.

HEAD SKI S, boots, poles, ski rack.
Best offer . 693-4578 .
HOOKER h ..ders. Fit 68 new er GTO.
Poor/fair shape, but useable. Call after
6 p .m. 881 -2659, 115.

STA RT $ 2 per h our. Sala r y PIUS
bonus. work 4·8 p.m . weekd ays; 10·2
p,m. Sat urdays. Call 835 · 3803 or
TF9·0402 .

'69 CHEVY Balalra, b lue, 7 tires
Including new snow. N o rust . Sacrifice,
$l100. Call 838·2186.

COLLEGE grad wants to babysit
evenings. Loves c hildren and has lOIS of
free lime. Call 831-4113 da ys. Ask lor
Leslye or leave message.

RUG, beige wool, size 9x12 or 15,
excellent condition, $35; 4 maple
kitchen chain (smalll, $16 ; pair vanity
tamps. $8. TF3-9384 after 6. p .m.

FULL O R part-time jobs available with
Bastllne Inc. Call Art 886· 2094 or
Mike 835-5215. Meetings at Executive
Ramaaa Inn.

FOR SALE '64 Chevy, 56,000 actual
miles. Good transportation, $100. Call
674 · 7959 after 3 p.m.

I NEED live, part·tlme sales people.
Earn spending money - flexible hours.
Excet!ent o pportunity wltll nec:esury
sales ana produ ct tral nlnv provided.
Call
874 -2020
for
appointment.
evenings 5:3~ : 30.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
RENT country grocery and barn . $250
or dicker. Do anything legal. Room
aplenty. 894-7571 evenings.
SEVERAL modern furn ished rooms,
Individually controlled neat, etc., In
~&gt;&lt;cellent loutlons, unbelievable price .
896-8344 evenings.

RIDE BOARD
RIDE NEEDED to West VIrginia or
som eplace near, I.e., Southern Ohio.
Around 2/16. Call 831 -2456.
MY DOG needs a lift from Brooklyn to
Buffalo. Tr:~vels well . 882· 6674 .
RIDE NEEDED to L .l ., leave Feb. 10
or Feb. 11. Return to Buffalo F eb . 13.
Call Kevin 835 -7787.
RIOE NEEDED to New Haven, Conn,
WMkend o f Feb. 4 or Feb . 11 . C ali
Deb 834-7980 after 9 p ,m .

'66 CHEV ELLE Malibu :~utomatlc V -8.
radio, power steering, 52,000 miles.
Clean . 832-5450.
FORO '6 4 good con dition, 200 dollars,
835- 1616.
1969 VW van. 34,000 miles. Only
$1600 . Can
taka you anywhere,
anytime. Ell 835·2561.
1970
JAGUAR
XKE .
E~&lt;cellent
con dition . Brand new A_M/FM stereo
radio lnc:luaed. Call 688·7327 evenings .
SKI CLUB sill lessons for
Tuesday nlgnt. Call 832 -5634.

sale

-

REFRIGERATORS ,
stovM
and
washers . Rec:onattloned, delivered :~nd
guaranteed.
D&amp;G Appliances , 8441
Syumore. TX4· 3183 .
"ANASTASIA" needs a home. She's a
1961 lovable, little T em pest. All she
costs Is $110 . Call AI at 831-4113 or
Debbie at 832.()815 .

PERSONAL
PRE MEDS
and
predenu:
All
candidates must prep~re a one -page
statement
to
be
read
prior to
tomor r ow's election . If you wlsll to
run for any office and did not sign up
at the last
meeting, call Steve,

~--------:-.

I

KARATE·

:

STUDIO :

I 5th DAN BlACK BElT INST. I
I
INFORMATION :
I
12:00 - 8 :3op.m.
I
I
I
• MON . toSAT .•
I
1
Call836-6018
1
1
3 144MainSt .
1
...

(NearU.B.)

•

---------*
ALFA ROMOO

*
*

FERRARI
MASERATI

sales e service • parts

NORTH BUFFALO ~~ C~p ~
now
o pen.
Mon day,
Thursday,
Sat u rday, corner Maln-wlcu~r ( ne)(t
to liq uor store). Come on l n.
BEST ouarantM In the business - 3
montlls or 3000 milesI Independent
Foreign C.r Service. 839· 1850.

F l RST -+iANO cllopped liver Is even
worse t han second-hand sauerkraut ,

1-iORSEBACK riding. Indoor arena.
Also slay r ides and llayrldes. Group
rates.
1nformatlon 941 ·5008 . The
Horse Palace, Center and Partridge
ROAdS, Holland, N .Y.

MHR : MY body Is not for you. 1 can
walt no longer. I need you bad ! AC.

T YPING experienced , IBM Selectr ic:
$.40 per page. 838-4808 .

I 'VE BEEN negleeted. Nobody wants
to buy me. My name Is Anastasia and
I'm tor sale for only $110. I'm a
2-c:toor,
blue
Tempest
with
an
:~utomatlc transmission and a very se&gt;ey
body. If Interested, call AI 831-4113

TYPIN G - busi ness or personal - term
papers, mass mai lings, re.,onable rat es.
Call 937--6050.

A N YTHI N G that's really
they reJect laS oosc:ene:

personal,

NE.EO $1007 Call 882· 1080 for
lr ror matlon. Second Annual Newman
N'ovement
Arl
Exhibit.
Feb.
13-March 19 at Bulckfleld Center
s.u.C.B . Ent r ies due Feb . 7 &amp;. 8.
Special student prizes .
FOLK guitar lessons on or off campus,
Jeff 835 -3384 , 835· 9229 . Ht.w are you
Jenny?

LOST &amp; FOUND
WHOEVER removed two noteb ooks
fr o m
the
Spectrum
office
on
Wednesday, piNse c::~ll Dave 83 1-2478.
FOUND: Wrist watch apparatus
room, Clark Gym. Please coma to
Room 200. Clark Gym to Identify
FOUND : PrMcrlptlon gluses - after
basl&lt;etball game - Clark Gym. Made
Riverhead, N .V. Pt..se Identify at
Room 200 Clark Gym.
LOST : One pair of go ld -rim med
wlre-frameo glasses , 6tn floor Clamant.
Reward, $10. Con tact 831-4056 or
832-4076.
FOUND : Main and Springville Ave :
young male German Sllepher d . Call
836 -1866.
F OUND : urge brown paper package
at Allenhurst. May oe picked up at 713
Clement
FOUND : a Bronx Hl9h School of
Science cl ass ring. T o Identify, c:.ll
Maddy 831· 3970 .

ROOMMATES WANTE D
WANTED
o ne roommate for
furnished apartment o ff Main Sl. bwn
room, 166 lfu;lvCIIng vttlltl~. C11\l
838-2567 .
TO
SHARE
2..0edroom
modern
apartment with two males. Ca ll Rick or
Doug. 688--6295 , Bil l Brown. Call
again, to o.
MALE roommate wan t ed for apt . on
M lnne,; oU,
$40 /mo .
Av ailable
fmmedlllely . Gary 8 37-2658.
CO UPL E. two girls wanted , snare four
bedroom, Main- Fillmore, S50 . Own
room . Call 837 ·3483 Immediately .
WANTED : On e female roommate fo r
- 3-bedroom nouse off M aln ·Winspear .
Own room , furnished, 160. Starting
Feb. 1. Call Mary 838-4892 .

MISCELLANEOUS
PREMEDS
and
predents :
All
c:andldatM mun prepare a one-p age
statement
to
De
read
prior to

CAPE COCI collate wellfleet for rent
July and August. Lovely secluded small
nouse loc:.ted on fresh water pond .
E.Kcallent
for
swimming,
walking
distance fr om private ocean beach .
Reasonable. 837-5424.
FLV BUFFALO student flights to
sunny Acapulco via Universal Airlines
OC· 8 Jet. Leave N .Y.C. March 31 .
Return A pril 7 . From $179. Contact
Alan Marmulsteln evenings , 6·9 p .m .,
837.0393.
ACAPULCO,
Barbados,
Bahamas,
Europe, weekly trips, packet• from
$2 19. Easter week still avail . Contact
Molly 877 ·8442 .
EARN
top
money
Pllrt
time :
promoting student travel programs .
Write
(Including
phone
number I :
Uni· Travel
Corp.,
12
Pine
St .,
Swam pscott. Man. 01907 .
VX6, a new chemical formula over t en
years old saves 6 and 12 votte batteries
from dying of cancer. Mal&lt;• money.
Sell VX6 to all car, truck , taxi, ous
operators . Saves S20 t o $50 for new
battery .
OFFSET pri nting : Fast. (100) 8 'h xU .
$2 .50; (1000) , $ 7.45 ; (100) 10&gt;&lt;14
posters , 15. University community
only . 343 Norton. 9 a.m.-5 p .m.
831 -5588 ,
ANTIQUES •nd moder n f urniture,
cerami cs, chi na , etc:. See Si d a\
Yesterday &amp; Tomor.-o w Sop , 1439
Hertel Ave.
I NTERESTEO
In
attendln9
the
o lympic games In M unic h ? Some
tickets and accommodations .available.
Pnone 833-4638 .
OVERSEAS JOBS for students
Aullralla, Europe, S. America, Afrlc• ,
.tc:. All· professions and occupations,
$70(1-$l000 monthly. Explf'lses paid,
overtime, sight-Ing. FrM Inf ormation
- write : JOCs Overseas. Dept. ES , BoK
15071 , Sa n Diego. Califor nia 92115
TERM
PAPERS.
dissertations
prOfessional
typist, IBM Sel ectric,
$ .40/page. 873·1938 .
FEMALE student w ants o wn room In
apartment near ~mpus . Call Terry
824 ·31413 . Please n utry.
WE NEED a two-family apt. that e&lt;~n
house st.c people (three In each nalfl
fOr June. wilt pay good money, I f
t4ken. Call Betty 837 -0430 .

USED CARS
•• BOBCOR ••

Motor Cars Ltd.
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834-7350

Informal Lectur&lt;' on ·

"The Untted States and Japan in World Affairs"

·u niversity
un1on
activities
board

film
TODAY
Feb. 7th

,. A Woman in the
Dunes"
FREE
Capen 140

3 :00 &amp; 8 :00p.m.

UUAB Events

••••••••••••••••••••••••

dramatic
arts

dance
arts

Feb. 9th &amp; lOth
OPEN THEATRE

TODAY

8:30p.m. each night

"The Red Shoes"

d elivered bv

Kazuo Murakamy
Deputy Consul GeneraJ
of
JAPAN

Wed~esday1 _F ebruary 9

2.30 Room 340

'+ .00

p.m_
Norton HaU

Feb. 7th

Open to all interested faculty and students

Harriman Library

Theatre
$1.00 Students
$1.50 Alumni
$2.00 Non-students

FREE
Conference Theatre

9:00p.m.

Sponsored by :
Council on International Studies,
Committee on Asian Studies

Monday, 7 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

-

�What's Happenlns?

Sports Information

Moncby, Feb. 1

Tomorrow: Varsity basketball vs. Eastern
Mic:hlpn, Clark Gym, 8:30 p .m.; freshman
basketball vs. Niagara Community College, 6:30 p .m.
Wednesday: Varsity wrestling at Kent State
University.
Friday: Varsity hockey vs. Ithaca at the
Amherst Recreation Center, 9 :30 p .m ., tickets may
be picked up at Clark Gym starting T uesday at 9
p.m.; varsity basketball at Brockport State, 8:15
p.m.; freshman basketball at Brockport, 6 :15 p.m.
Saturday: Varsity hockey at Oswego, 7:30p.m.,
varsity indoor track at the Rochester relays; varsity
wrestling quad at Clark Gym with California State,
St. Francis and St. John Fisher, 12:30 p.m.; varsit'y
fencing at Syracuse with Cornell; varsity swimming
at Syracuse.
Saturday evening (Feb . 5) hockey game at
Oswego was cancelled due to snow and power
failures In the Oswego areo. The contest will be mode
up this Saturday night at Oswego starting at 7:30
p.m.
Student athletic review board will meet
Wednesday night at 7 p.m. in Room 233 Norton
Hall .

Film: A Woman In the Dunes, bmous allegory of a
man and woman held captive at the bottom of a
sandpit, 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. Capen 140.
Art show: "Prints in Progress," Art Department
Gallary, 4240 Ridge lea, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. and
tomorrow.
Photo Club Exhibition : Room 219 Norton, through
Feb. 13.
Dance film: The Red Shoes with Moira Shearer,
Conference Theater, 9 p.m.
Tuesday , Feb. 8
Eye-con : Jay Leydo screem and discusses
Eisenstein's unfinis hed film, Que Vivo Mexico!,
Part I, 4:30- 6 p.m.; Part 11 , 7- 9 p.m. ; Acheson

5.
Yiddish film : A Yiddishe Nigun with English
subtitles, Conference Theater, 8 p.m., tickets:
$ .25 for University students, staff and faculty
and $1 for the community, available at the
door.
Concert · Carnatic Music, Baird Hall, 8 p.m.,
admrssron is free, for information call 832-7027.

Announcements
Tbe Uoclerpaduate MedicaJ Sodety will have a
meeting tomorrow at 7 :30 p.m. in Room 233
Norton to discuss the application and admissions
process to professional schools. Elections for next
year's officers will also be held .
CAC needs tutors. Give a little of your time to
help victims of the Buffalo school system. Especially
needed in high school subjects. Contact Amy at
3609.
UB Women's liberation Mtd the Women's
Studies College .tre sponsoring workshops on
Lesbianism for all in terested women today and
tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. at 108 Winspear Ave.
Students for Israel will meet tomorrow at 8:30
p.m. in Room 346 Norton.
Students who are interested in the study
program at the University of Nice, France: there will
be a meeting today to learn about the program at 3
p.m. in Room 311 Townsend Hall. Slides will be
shown and a question-and-answer period will follow .
A new bowling league is forming on Wednesday
nrghts, starting Feb. 9 at 8:30 p.m.; $18 covers
bowling and trophies. Sign up at the Recreation
desk, Norton.
The Environmental Action Corps Will hold
meeting today at 3 p.m. in Room 262 Norton.

d

FNSM 222: "Controversies in Science
Conflict and Resolution" meets on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 10 a.m. in Acheson 362. The topic for
this week is: "The Meanings of Probability and
Scientific Reporting." Visitors are welcome.
CAC Oay.Camp Committee will meet tomorrow
at 7:30 p.m. in Room 266 Norton . Anyone
mterested in joining is welcome to attend.
IEEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Eng1neers) will have a meeting today at 3 p.m. in
Room 127 Parker. There will be nominations for
nex t year's officers.
The Debate Club 1s meeting tod.ty at 7 ·30 p.m
rn Room 244 Norton.

The Chess Club will be meeting tomorrow at 4
p.m. in Room 248 Norton. Election of officers will
take place.

-

Student Theater Guild will hold an Acting
Workshop today at 8 p.m . in Room 344 Norton .
New members are invited.
Volunteers are needed to help transport
musicians and craftsmen participating in the
Appalachian symposrum (March 21-24) to and from
Buffalo airport. Call Carol at 835-1'044.
WNYPI RG (Western New York Public Interest
Research Group) 1~ conducting 1ts petitioning
campaign this week. All petitioners pick up their
assignments at the Norton table 1f they haven't
ell ready done so.
Activist Yout11 for Israel announces-the opening
ot its new off1ce in Room 346 Norton. It is open
every day of the week except Saturday . Come in and
~Y what's on your mind or call 831 5 116.
A 90-minute " Black journal" special designed
to dllow black people throughout the United State)
to commumcate with their leaders
and with each
other
on an unprecedented scale will be aired
tomorrow at 8·30 p.m. on Channel17. The focus of
the program, utled /5 It Too Lore? will be the
physical and cultural survival of blacl.. people in the
United States.
Interested students are trying to form a
synchronized swimming (water ballet} group . It will
meet every Tuesday night from 6:45- 7:45 p.m .
beginning Feb. 15. No synchronized swimming
but must be adequate
experience is necess.try
swimmer,
Activist Youth for Israel wrll have a meetmg
today at 8 p.m. in Rooms 240 and 242 Norton.
Movie!&gt; will be shown.
UUAB Video Committee will show Walling for
the Change, a graphic and uncensored expose of the
varieties of repression in today's American society
that features Ralph Nader, Frank Mankiewicz and
Abbie Hoffman, today noon- 1 p.m . in Haas
Loun~te, Norton. Admission is free.

- AmyAhrend

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                    <text>Vol. 22, No. 50

Sute Univenity of New York

at

Buffalo

Friday, 4 February 1972

Student fees meeting leads to
mixed emotions and annoyance
"No co mment," noncommittal
answers and vague generalities are
the aftermath of last Tuesday's
meeting between admirtistrative
a nd s tudent leaders which dealt
with the expenditure of student
fees.
Such
a meetang was
requested by Student ASSOCiation
Pres1dent lan DeWaal to answer
quest iOns raised by the recent IRC
voluntary fee decisaon and the
deposal of athletal. ancome ant o an
FSA acco unt .
Ge nerall y, 11 appears that
President Robert Ketter 's promise
that there be no o ffa caal press
releases was constru ed by many as
a com mitment to silence. As
Execu tive Vice Pres1dent Albert
So mat explained · " We felt that it
would be best If II were no t
treated as a news story nght
now ." !low ever, he did remark :
"Jt was a very co nstru c tive
meetmg where many diffe re nr
vaewpoints were discussed . . I
think everyone understands the
issues."
Agreemg wath this Antho ny
Lo renzetti , acting vace president
for Student Affa irs, reported : " I
thtnk
the
meetJna
waa
productive . . . the fee reVIew
question was duc uased a t areal
length ."
H owever.
while
admamstrative o fficials &amp;enerally
agree
that
' 'muc h
was

at the meeting appear d ivided in
their
assess ment s
of
the
conference' s outcome.

was everytim e we started to press
Kett e r o n an issue, e.i t h er peo ple
didn ' t give him a c hance to answer
or m o ved o n to o ther points "

Kttter conunitted
Most leaders agreed with Mr.
O e Waal 's
prefacing
rema rk .
" Don' t ask me what hap pened last
night ... I don't kno w myself."
When furthe r pressed, ho wever,
Mr. Oe Waal catalogued several
concrete accomplishments of the
meeting.
According to
tum,
Pres~dent Ketter pro mised to set
up a committee to resolve the JR C
wue a nd to consult Jo hn l each ,
the University co unsel. for legal
o pimo ns.
While basically pleased wath
these com mitments, Mr. DeWaal
was disappointed that President
Ketter refused t o revert IRC t o ats
former status o f no administratave
review . Regarding this, a student
leader who requested to remain
an o n ymous, remarked : " Probably
th e most important thing that
came out was that Dr. Ketter will
not allow a voluntuy fee t o be
co ll ec t e d
w ithout
any
restnctlons." This d ecision. he
continued , " hurts."
Another student com.m ented
th.al "while a lot o f points were
brou&amp;}}t out, nothing constructive
was done." This was dUt, he
explained , to the way students
q u estioncd
President
Ketter :
" Wbat went wronaat the meeung

God· like
SA S U
C hurman
Mark
Borenstean felt that thas occurred
beca use too many people were
present Ano th er explanation by a
student cntJCIZ.ed t h e way an
wh ach
th e
quesllonang
was
conduc ted . "President Ketter was
an the ce nter of th e room
. wit h
people finng questions at ham and
demanding yes o r no pohc.:y
answers Thas IS no way to dtscuss
as~ues"
li e
~ontan ued
that
pohcy-mak1ng sh ouldn't be d one
by one god·like fagure, but should
be a JOint g~ve·&lt;~ nd·lake affaar
A n o t her
stud ent
at
the
meeting, also request 1ng to rema1n
unnamed, faulted :;tud ents for
f3llure t o present a united,
prepared front In tus o p inion,
stud ents didn't go ant o th e
meeting
demandang anythmg,
rather the y S&lt;tid . " We would like
you t o do so rnethang "
On tbe whole, most c redated
the meeting for beang th e first
tjme
that
s tudent s
and
admuustrators " got t o gether for
an anformal thrastu ng o u t of
ISSues." GS A Presadent M1ke
Nicolau
reported
" Basacally ,
there were co mmllments vn both
sades to gel t ogether c~nd revaew
presen t proled ures" 1-urthcr, he
sa1d, "t he best th1ng as that at got
everyone toget her
f.H.t' tl' t••~~ "

Three·way situation

'

However. as Suh Board I, lm
Ex ecut1ve
L&gt;are tlo r
Stcv~
Blum enkranlz
reportt&gt;dl y
remark ed, th e Icc quest1 on as a
thr ce·way
SitUation
hetween
Al bany,
adrn1na,trat aon
Jnd
stud ent~ Such a sa tuat10n , .ts Mr
NicoiJu maantaaned , ~:annot be
settled when o nly two of thc
partacapants negotaatc:
It stall appears that T uedJy\
m ectang dad accomplish \ometh1ng
wllh another o ne pl.1nned 111
which
st ud en t~
w11l
present
Spt;~:afil
po1nl~
to
Pn:s1den1
Ketter He, an turn, will ~end these
to Albany hopefully pressunng
Ch ancellor Boyer to re~:onvene has
Comm1ttee on Student ALIIVItaes
Fees
At tha ~ t1me, varwu~ st udent
leaders are meetang tryang to reach
so m e kind of agreement bctwan
them. Som e .1rc optam1st1c, some
skeptacal and oth e~. frank ly
pessa mastic.

- Fox

Frenzied activity

President

Ketter's regional
admissions policy aroused the
interest
of
last
Tuesday's
Faculty-Senate.

Faculty Senate approves
of new admissions plan
After t wo h our~ o t debate , the
Faculty Senat e last Tuesday
a ppr oved
Pr esade nl
Robe rt
Ketter 's dectsaon to insu re that SO
per ce nt of ancomang freshmen he
from West ern New York
Dr . Kett er had added the 50
per cent stipulat ion to ad m ass1o n
pohcies formed by a Senat e
co mmtttee
wath out
thear
knowled&amp;e or approval One of
th e reasons given for thas achon
by
Exec ut ive Vice Presadenl
AJ bc:rt Somll was to persuade area
leg1slutors to mtercede on the
State Uruvers11y of Buffalu\
hehalf an Albany fhe b.elUtlve
CnmmJt tel'
uf
the.'
SenJi e
presented d motaon ~IJt1ng th.t t
they were "n•n•erncd that the
P r~~adent ... htl\t' lo mmtafy the
lllll'tll
uf
Ill\'
JdiiiiS'\IoO\
polll y
Wllh11ut
pr1or
lonsulta tlo\n Wi th the SenJtc"
'J akJOg 11110 JllOUOt thul "tunc
pressures m.ay have rcqu1rcd
wh1 ch
prt'dud ed
a.: I tnn
furt h cr
l onsult dllnn'
Jnd
delay
' the Sl·natl· "o~ncdt:\ It&gt;
tht•
50 pcr l~nt goJI for
fll'\hman"
frn111
th.:
hght h
Juda cial D1s1mt tor 1'172 only.
Willi J
r~quest
fn1 uonllnuant:
pr .. gro:~\ n:ports
' Med wcre sc hool'
Judg~ng

from

IJ't
year'
ulf P•&gt;~nt
he X4 tur
We)tern New Yo rk students and
Q;! for students else where an the
~tate McAllister liull , head nf the
Jdmass1ons wmmallee, reported
that thas three·po1nt datferenu: I)
not "edu~:alwnally S1gn1f1can1 ..
Reportedly , thas quota would
provHJe
s tudentl&gt;
who
ne
linanciaJiy un able to go away to
school a t. hance for a un1versity
edu~ataon .
The percentage o f
fr~'hman dJs~ the lUI
fur d.JSS .1ver.~ge:. would

Western New Yurk stud ents a t
lhas
University
has
ranged
be t ween 48 and 54 per cent.
George
!loch field
of the
hnghsh Department, argued that
so great a number of Western N ew
York studen ts, ar a geographic
quota were arbatrarily enforced ,
w o uld make a " mediocre school
out o f o dlSttn&amp;UIShed Uninmty ."
Mamn Zelen, Statistics professo r .
co unt ered that wlut ma.kes a
umversaty med1ocre IS its faculty,
not 11s students " The President
has acted bke a but!," maintained
Dr Hochfteld . .1nd saJd tha t the
''l.arcfully drawn motto n" served
Jh\ purpose ot he r th an t o "save
the Pr~1de nt 's face " He urged
&lt;:;enalo~ to "dasagree o penly ,"
and propn~ed a subsl alute m ot ron.
'tat1ng lhJt the Fa~ulty Senate
\lrungly rea ff1 rms t ! \ op pos111nn
to geographical quota~
Negatave manner
An amend ment to the ong111al
1- xccutive Committee resolutaon
wa\ offered hY Chauman uf
ll1gher 1-dut.:alwn Robert Berdahl.
Thas amendment would provade
lht' 1-Jlult y Senate w1th the nghl
to reduce the number of freshmen
hom the bghth J udacaal Dastncl
1! lht" welfdre ot the Unavers1ty
w~r~
at stc1ke
Dr
Berdahl's
o.~mended mollon was passed t&gt;y d
4 I marg1n
Other Senate Jctwn mduded
Dr
Ketter's report that the
llnave rs at y would t&gt;e receavtng 3
S:!oO.OOO cu t an ats su mmer
program The arnpacl of thJs loss as
.:omparable to the cam:eUataon o f
dO entare summer sessaon Other
Umvers1ty centers through out t h e
~tate wall also lose money, but
Jccord ang to Dr. Ketter , Buffalo
has " b een rewarded for its
eff1 caen cy in a lughly negative
ma nner"

SA election petitions
The responsibility for much of the

Jolin Telfer

Amherrt
on

campus

construction

newly-eppointed Vice
Presid.,t of Facilities and
rests

Planning

John Tetfw.

For his

thouFts on this undert.king, see
intwview on page three.

Petitions for the Student Association elections wiU be available beginning today in
the SA office, Room 205 Norton HaU. One hundred valid underaraduate sianatures and
social security numbers ue required on the petitions, which ue due on or before Feb. 23
at S p . m . Petitions can be obtained for the SA poaitlons of president, lst vice preaideot ,
2nd vice president, treasurer, student affairs coordinator, academic affairs coordinator,
student rights coordinator. student actmtlea coordinator, minority student affairs
coordinator. national student affairs coordinator and international student affairs
coordinator. The elections will be held on March I, 2 and 3.

�Ban on hexachlorophene
results in staph outbreaks
AJmost two monthl&gt; ago. the but 11 is the o nly one presently
Food and Drug Admamstrallon known."
Gluck sard the use of
warned of the possable effects on
the braan from contanued use of hexachlorophene had all but
prot.lu cts
contaan ang eliminated staph. but that, " now
hexachlorophene. At that point. we're back agaan where we were."
many hospatals arourlll the nation The professor mdicated that it
discontanucd the pral·tacc l11 could cause luxu;at y at taken
hathang new-born mtanl\ 1n internaUy m used an maJOr do\e!.
he xa ..: h lorophene-contatn1ng on raw skan. bu l " if 11 t!&gt; u\ed a~
prodth:ts. Th1s. however. has prcsc riheJ on bahy sk rn~ . I have
no
know ledge of toxic1ty
ca u,cc.l even mnre problems
produ~ed
tillS way ."
The Natannal Center lo1
Drscase \nntrol 1n Atlanta . Ga ..
\aid Tuc,da y that it had rere1ved Nursery closed
One of 1he six nursenes at
report\ from across the natann of
uutb1eJK\ of staph tllfecllon Yale-New Haven, Conn. hosprt.sl
among new-born anf:~nts m was dosed because of an outbreak
hospuals whach Jt~ nnt us1ng there. but ofllciab sa1d 11 w11l he
hexachlorophene u•ntJinlng reopened later thts week . and that
nurses 1here wtll resume UMng
products any lnnttcr
hexa~·hlorophene as a gcrrn-J...IIIcr
Some of the hmplliib wcut
A spok.esm;m for the ltlll&gt;pttal
back to usmg these produd~ wheu
!Witd lhJt the l)Utb realo. had not
they notu.ed the rnuea)e an
reacheu epadeanu.: proportauns, hut
$,taphylocon,JI rnlellwm The
that "there has been an mnea'e 1n
NC [)(' still due) mil J.. now how
staphylococcal colo mL.attOn
the
widespread the nuthrealo. ll&gt;, but
presence of haclena on the
the possttllllty that 11 IS l1nlo..ed to
~urfJlC of b..tb1es' sktns
and I hat
the non-use of hexachlorophene
presen.:e ~.·uu ld lead to anfectaon ..
products wall be revaewed an
Nurseb have been anst rue ted w
Washington later tim week. at J
resume u~ing hexachlorophene ,
meet1ng uf FDA (lffi~ 1al \ anJ
hut they would then nnse the
rerresentat1ves of the Amencan
rnfant w1t h lap water so that the
A~ademy of Ped 1 atr1~'&gt;
hexachlorophene would not he
ah,mbed through the '"'" · flm
Any relationshap?
woultl allow the gerru-k1ller 111
Unttl that t11ne. tiH· N('J)( h.t\
W1Hio.. J~ well J\ reduung the
wntten state hcJith depoJJtntrllt\ pt.l~~~hlc d;angcr
lrom
the
lt&gt;t ~omplete •~ pull) "" tlw substan.:e
''u threak,
D1
\ ,,uh l.lud...
Staph IS J ~ommun bactcrtal
pl\lfC\SOt ol Pet.halftc' .st the
Htlectaon luund "" the skrn It ~:,;,a n
Umversat} ot ( Jltll&gt;lllta Jl S:1n
ca u~e sores and abs.:esse~ and can
Dlegu. SJIU "Th~·ae\ 1111 ttUe~IIUII
get mto I he hlovd~t ream ),•me
rhe bart on tht· me of \(1,1111' Jre very IC)ISIJfll Ill
h~,J~hlor.lphene h.s' rt•,ultrd 111
Jtlltblllll~~ . Jnd lhercloae t.ltflllllll
the liUIOit.'.Jio. ul ~l.sph ..
Ill ~urc The FDA repmt two
(.;JUlio. . •tJ&lt;IIl~ With ~~~ Wtllf...et
1111111111\ Jgtt s;ud that Cll.le)SIVC UM~
Or I laruld Sunun hJve puhh,hcd of hc'\ad1ltuuphene t.:\ttdt.l have a
a lllll!lher ot rape!' 1111 the ~llhtCll
ht\1\. cllcll on the hloodslrearn
s1nce they hcgan " 'tully ol at .1t J~ \hown lrl C\flCIIII\CO ll&gt; With
Stanturd 111 l'l 'l•l "We predlt.let.l dill IIlah.
thl\ as a matter of lat.t Ill tult1 ,
A \latctiH?r\1 lto111 the f·DA IS
how the thang would 1.0111e about. cxpeclct.l later thas week . w1th
The ul&gt;C o l hcxachhll\lphcne \ll ICC.:IIIIIInCildat tOil\ .S~ ltl the lJ)C llf
wash babae~ wuuld seem fl) u~ Ill hexachi•H•Iplwne. ami whether m
be essenttal. II there were an not It as relatell tu the reLent
altern:lfrve wr wnuld havt' uwd II nuthreak~ nf ~l :tph

'W'.zzaf?

Guess what the three guys pictured above are looking at. Maybe it'll be a little
easier with one clue: they're all 19 this year . ... Right II That' s the UP! listing of the Draft Lottery as
1t came over the wire tow days ago. AU males who were born in 1953 found out then which of them
would have to try to get a C.O. to stay out of the army. For those of you who have a morbid curiosity
about what your number would have been if you had been 19 this year, a complete listing appears on
the classified page of The Spectrum (if this was your year, you probably already know your number).
If you were born the day after March 6 , and breathed a sigh of relief when it was drawn number one,
our condolences at com ing out number 2. July 23 was lucky number 365 (there's no 366 since 1953
was not a leap year)

Suggestions wanted
Emphasizing the crucial problems confronting the mud em university. the Searrh
Committee for the Provost of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Administration i~
soliciting any and all advice in the selection o f a panel of highly qualified candidates. Tht~
slate wiJJ then be offered to President Robert Ketter for consideration .
Such help might include the submission by students and faculty of names of
possible candidates. It is hoped that any person doing so would also include a short
explanation of his choice(s) and any other information deemed relevant . The committee
wishes lo remind the University community that the Provost's post is an extremely vilal
and sensitive one. S uggestions need not be limited to fac ulty of this University.
Info rmation should be sent to th~ cominiuee, c/o Rose Levin , li S Hayes Hall
State University o f New York at Buffalo.
Anyone ha"ing questions concerning this not1ce should contact any member of tht'
search committee. Committee chainnan is Richard Schwartz, Provost of Law and
Juruprudence. Other members are Wolfgang Wolck, Department of Linguistics, L~
Preston. School of Management ; Jay Nisberg, graduate student ; Frank Hendel'\on .
Department of Political Science ; Jeffrey Greenwald, undergraduate student ; John
Eberhard. Architecture ; Arthur Buder, Department of Economics; Nancy Broderick.
assistant provost of Educational Studies ; and William BaiJey. assistan t vice president ol
Marine Midland Bank.
On , ,.h

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886-2666

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t'""' ft "•"•" lft •ll,utO

Well-known nutritionis t Adelle Davi~ will he~peakina on Monday. Feb. 7 tn the Fillm ore Room
of Norton Hall at 7 p.m Ms. Davis a noted
b10chemasc whose books have sold million' of copres,
Wll~ lllVtted to ~pea k by the State UntverSIIY or
Buffalo Medtcal School.

rde rence~

It •

VALENTINE'S DAY
.,.,.. .. ._ .....

Adelle Davis speaks

'Wo+ "'• &amp;

Wl.t,t

A Yuu'd "'"''•' •-

IIH t

RUSSIAN LESSONS
b) • nattvc
tnliiYidual or dJ"

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call 694-3100

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The Spec;trum

11 publ1sh«J thrtte
r1mes 11 w 11e/o., ewry Monday.
WtldntncJ.y 11nd Fnday. during rhe
re{IIJIIIr IICtldllmiC year by Sub-Bo ard
1, Inc. Officss are loe~~rtld ar 355
Norton Hall, Stlltft Umtte~iry of New
Yorlt; 111 Buffalo, 3435 Main Sr.,
Buffalo, N e w York, 142 14.
Telephone; Area Code 716; Ediror~al
831-4113; Business, 831 -3610.

Represen ttld for lldttertlsing by
N iHIOfllll EducationBI Advertising
Service, Inc., 360 Lexrngron Aw.•
New York, N .Y. 10017
Sub«:riPIIOn r»tss are $ 4.5(} pttr
sttmesrer or $8.00 for two sttmsste~.
SIICond Class Post• P81d at Buffalo
Nttw York.
'

3800 HARLEM RD. ... .... . ............ . 837-227a
NEAR CLEVELAND ... NIGHT 83~0566
Page ._two . The Sp_ectrum . Friday, 4 Februar-Y 1972

CIIT:ulllrion • 16,()()()

Acareer In law ...
WithOUt law SChOOl.
When you become a Lawyer's Assistant.
you 'll do work trada ttona lly done by lawyers
- work whtch as challengang, respo nsable
and Intellectually st1 mul at ang . Lawyer 's
Assastants are now so c nt1cally needed that
The lns tttute fo r Paralegal Traa n ang can
offe r you a posillon an the c1ty of your cho1ce
- and a haghe r s tarting salary than you 'd
expect as a recent college graduate Here
as a career as a professional wath ftnancaal
rewards that 1ncrease w1th your develop1ng
experttse.
If you are a student of h agh academ1c
stand1ng and are Interested rn a legal
career. come speak w1th our representatave.
Contact lhe Placement Off ice.
A representa tave of The lnstatute
Will v1 si t your ca mpus on :

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10
NOTE II the above c1ate IS rnconvenrent lor vou.
Please call or wr1te The lnstrtute lor 1nlorma11on

The Institute for
Paralegal Training
13th floor

401 Walnut St . Ph1ta
(215) WA 5..()905

Pa

19106

�Support voting reform
Common Cause, a citizena' lobbyina aroup, il advocatina reform of the votinalaw•
which diacrim!nate apinst new ( 18·21) voten by mak:ina them inellaible to vote in this
year's praidentW primary. They are supportina a bill which will enable anyone who
reaiJten up to 60 daya before the primary to be able to participate in it. Common Cause
uraes ltudents to write to their coaaressman Oft their own, or ebe rtll out an index card at
the Common Cawe table in Norton HaD's Center Lounae. The Index cards will be used to
petition Albany en masse for the passaae of the bill.

Telfor: problems at Amherst
by Jim Mcferson
Sptctrum S taff Writer

As the fire drill ended and the
cro wd outside Ha yes Hall tramped
irritably back into the building,
John Telfer might have regretted
fo r a minute co ming to this
University , o ne o f th e nation's
more o verc ro wded. Dr T elfer is
the
recently
a ppoin ted
VICe
president for fa cilities Planmng.
an d now ht is res po nsible for all
those
people
packed
1nto
classrooms, haiJwnys and offices.
1f
Mr
Telfer
was
B ut
diScouraged , 11 d1dn't sh o w as he
sat m Ius second Ooo r o ffi ce
trying to close a d eal o n a new
house Movmg a househo ld fro m
Connec ti cut to Buffalo must ~eem
like a nunor affaH to the m an 1n
lharge of moVlng a who le cam pu:;
to a new location
As Vl&lt;.e pres1dent for facthttes
Planmng, Dr Telfer Will not only
be respo nsible for coordmat10n
and plannmg t)f the new Nort h
Campus
in
Amherst,
class
scheduUng and inventory, but Will
also ove rsee co nstruc tion an d
rehabilita tion, architectu re and
planmng and J slew Clf o ther
related are..t~ oo th~ present
ca mpu s

Experience and enthusiasm
l:kf ure
~ c.•m•n&amp;
to
thl\
Un•vcrslly
Or
f elft!r
WJS
aSMStdnt
vac~
prcstdent
lor
phys1cal planning at ( olu mt11a
Umvers11 y Pnor to hi\ JOh ..tl
&lt;. olumh•a
l&gt;r
Tdfer
held
ptl~lllllll\ Jt
I he lJ mvers11 y of
M1chig.Jn . wht&gt;re h~ hJd J l&amp;rge
h,md 1n the t:tHI\ Iru ~tmn of
M1dugan ·~ north ~JJll flU\
une of
1he lldllon ·, new f'&lt;.l 1nd mo\1
heaut1ful l·ven mo1e lfliJl(lrlant
lhJn 1h1!'. e~reucncl.' l&gt;r Teller
th~play,
.1n enlhuslo~\111 hadly
nct:tJed, ,II a hlllC lhl\ l ltllYel\ll y\

new
c ampus
fa ces
serious
construction cutbacks.
In fact , one of Telfer's first
official moves was " trying to
make it entirely clear to the
vari o us agencies - SUNY /Central
a nd
the
State
University
Construction Fund - that fund s
are desparauly needed. " Should
A mherst be allotted fund s more
quickly , Telfer declared : " We'll
break our nec ks to get back on
schedule ,
but
ther e
are
co mpli catiOns."
Inflation haunts
Co mplicallon number one u
the
fiscal
cn.sis m
Albany
Although t he impact of the recent
sus pens1on o f SJO million worth
of const ruction planned for the
Amherst ca mpus was lessene&lt;l by
t he permanent ehmmat10n of
t h ese
pr ojec t s,
future
"suspensiOns"
will
be mu ch
harder to take
Even if there were no m o re
proJect
sus pensiOns,
t hough ,
anot h er hobgoblm consis ten tl y
bedev1ls co nstruct ion planners
inflati on . The usual rate of
mflat10n whtch 1s buil t tnto most
plans is 6-8 per cent. accorc.hng to
Telfer , but the rate on the
Amherst project has zoom ed to as
much as 18 per cent.
The state has emph as1zed thai
the o npnaJ co mmittmenl t o butld
So50
million
w orth
ot
oonstruct•on at Amherst still
s tdnds ,
but
because
ol
co ns I ru cllon delays, progress L\
mu"h ~lnwer lh&amp;n usual Thus the
longer 11 takes to com plete , the
mor~ anflo~llon will subt ra ct lrom
the amount butlt. Telfer admlls
"Thl'rt.' will certainl y be adt.htiOnJI
~.:u l~ mto space and quality " Th~·
nng~nal $650 miJhon plann1ng had
bU1It·1n mflat10n con trol'\ hut
w11h the rate vf mflatwn Jt ll'U&gt;I

OLD RIVOLI
1111 BROADWAY

Friday and Sa turday
~~

....

~"

H

LAU~NCE OlJVI~
.MEm.E O~RON

IN

DAY10 NIV'N

,~,.V he,ut

-~G

"'-" '"' .... h'Ot•d ,l.N•

SUN.,

FEB~

6th

doubled since then , Dr. Telrer
noted , "it will be quite a ravage."
When the campus d oes co me
on line, the problems wo n't be
over.
" Initially,"
p oints
out
Telfer, " the ca mpus w tU be very
inefficient because o f normal
movem e nt
conflic t
between
co nstruc tio n
wor kers ,
tru cks,
students
and
so on
T o ta.l
d1srupl10n wtll be almost a way o f
life on the Nor1h Ca mpus fo r
almost a decade We're gomg to
alleV'IJte these problems hy trying
to ca refully work out scheduling
of prOJeCt), working ro remove
most constru~:t• on e rfed~ on
normJI al:tiVIIY "
T ra ff1..:
problems
are
no
oovelty tu the present c&amp;m pus.
however " There 1\ tremend ous
nvercrowdm g.' IJmentl!d Telfer ,
'11 nd thL'&gt; uffl'cts quo~hty pf
Instruction an d
hampers the
learnmg pruces\ "Overcn mmg the
problem nf too many people with
too lillie spal:~:, S&lt;tld T elfer , 1s a
"matter of mnney
we'll use .Jny
pos~•ble way thJt can hr loun c.J
w•llun our means to tl'c.luu~
nvercro wd1 ng "
Rcnteng spuce IS a lelllptlfary
methoc.J llSed lh1s yeOJr, wh1ch
a .:lord lng
to
admanlslration
ftgu res
reduced
overuowd mg
somew h..1t from 17 3 per len t to
I SS per ce nt 111 the Facu lty nl
Soc1al
Sc•enleS
and
Admmlst r&amp;llon ..1nc.l frorn 147 pe1
~:ent
to 134 per c.:ent m the
I-acuity of Arts and l ettef\
The
ult•m..tlc
.'tolutu&gt;n
however
h es 1n the
North
&lt;'ilmpu~
felf~r
wlll have It•
devott' mut: h of Ill\ energn~'
t nwarc.J,
t.:&lt;Hll pletwn
nf
the
Amher't
'"mpus
t-o~~ulty
diS~311S t JlllOn With the llmptn~t.
prngre\S
ur
cnn,lructu&gt;n
.••
Anlher~t
"
well lo.nown
the
llnlvcrSIIY IIIJY not he ahk It&gt;
,IIford huvmg tlw, •J mpl~ IHlll d.tll'
' lloved I&lt;HWMd .mnt twr t1ve yeJr'
Dr
Telfer Wtll likl'ly hl'
work•ng
dosely
wtlh
ol hl'l
:u.lnllnlSi rotl &lt;lf' and weth l're\ldl'nl
Keller w h" cllurh In suuL•ed
li e adn111\ tnu that Ill' l' llfOY'
·•worlo.1ng w1th tht• l' rL'Sid~·nt vt·ry
mu~h" and a•l&lt;" th.11 Ketrt·r\
former Uli.'Uflciii~Y ol the l·.•··•lillt'\
P l&amp;nmn~~o offll~ makes wullung
With h1m that JtiUl'h l'JSICI

-Kletn

Birth control clinic
is coming to campus
In 11170 . 19 per .:ent of .til t he cun1c was co mpletely set up it
tnfant&lt;o born 1n Ene County were would o ffer free Pa p s mears, give
born I&lt;&gt; women under 2 1 years of pregnancy tes ts for S 1.1 0, free
age, 35 per rent o f w hom were V.D. tests, birth co ntrol pills and
no t married Dunng thAt same I U D 's,
and
pregnanc y
and
year. 30 per cent of all 1he abo rtion co unseling.
abortions
p erformed
in
fn e
Plans for th e chnic we re firs t
County
were
performell
t•n
formulated a bo ut one year ago. It
mtnors
wul be o pe n t hre e nights a week
Karen M1tchell , one o f th e
after all the detatls are settled but
organi1.ers of C AC's fl edgling birth
fo r an undetermined period will
control cli111c, ci t ed these stallst1cs
be open o nly about o nce a month
at
Tuesday' s
o rgaru z.ah onal This IS viewed as unsatisfactory
meeting. All th1s served to st ress
for many reasons , mostly because
the Importance of getting su ppo rt
1n traut enn e birt h co ntr ol devices
for the "co nsent t o mmor;" hill
must be reinserted dunng the
J'lus bill w as Lnlroduc.:ed IIll O
woman's penod .
the o;ta t e legiSlature last year It
As Ms. Levine put tt. " We're 10
lowers from 21 to 18 lhe age at
the pOSi ti On nght now where a
wh.n:h a perso n can seek medi\.JI
woman ha.s got to have her period
ca re wll hout parental co n sen r
when we have a clinic." Condom s
Sulh medi cal help 1ndude~ b 1rth
will be available fo r men and Ms.
~.:on trot dev.ces and abortions as
Levmc encouraged them to make
well as IIlii mal a1d T he b11l pas:c.cd
lull use uf tlus semce. " What ever
hnth the Senate and the Assembly
techmcal respons•bt.llty a man can
hul Governor Rot.kefeller vetucd
takt: un we'd IJke lum to take o n ...
11 State Senator T arky Lo mbardi
she s.ud
tR Syra.:useJ has re· mtruduced
I hi' bill where PJS\age •~ d{l.illrl
Wh at sh ould be surpnsmg IS
ulll\ldered hkely
the need lo educate young rnen
( AC Will \cl up tahlc~ to \l.trl
ami wnrneu thked 1f there was
.1 petition and letter wnlmg dnvc really that much of a problem .
1n lwpes thut they ca n gt.'neratL' M!o
Lt.'v1ne said . "Yes, 1t's
enough ~ upporl tc• ~:o nv1nu: ( ;nv
Jma7ing. Peuple don't kn ow at all
l&lt; orkefdlc:r 1o .Jcrep t 11.
what their o p tiOn~ are ... r o help
rec tif y
this. tht&gt; clime will
r~d•st n bute the Sperm and Egg
Planned period?
Of mnn· llllllll'til.lfc llllfllllla n Lc /lundbonA. and cvndu1.t classes
were lhl' prohlcnh ut orgJ11111ng (rlland atury tnr anyone who seeks
the Lam pl!~ d1n1l Nan~;y I ev1ne. help) 1n c.:on lraceplwn anc.J human
\I!XUallly
.11101 her orgam7.er scud I hat when

Feel Rite

t
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HEALTH FOOD SHOPP
1451 Henel Avt. (corner Nmwalk)
:\

I

837-7M I

1'&lt;1/Uftii&lt;J

\),~~~~~DANNON

YOGURT

l 0 W, l 0 W PRICES ON VITAMINS &amp; FOOOS

&amp; THE DETROIT WHEELS

NEW HOURS : Now Open Every Night 'til 9 :00p.m.

(PARAMOUNT RECORDS)

M.C.: WYSL'S JACK EVANS
TICKETS: S4.00, SS.OO, &amp; S&amp;.OO
IAL£1: OLO IIVOll TIE.ATIE, lilA'S IECOIII,
IDITOl 11101 JY I I

STlJOENT HEALTH SERVICES

of Unde~radua te l
Studies again o ers Mrs. I
I Ni c hol s n o n·c redit
course . Weekly sessions.
I Nominal
fee S I 5.00
payable at re_gistratio~ l I
n
I06
Oaefendorf.
I 1Some
classes still open. t

~ ------~ I
I
ALFA ROMEO
FERRARI
MASERATI

USED CARS
853.()931

or

I
I 1Div.

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AND STUOV

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NIAGARA NATIONAL INSURANCE
853-0931

I - SPEEDED REA DING-

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En ro ll now for 2nd semester 1
for enrollment details phone

LIVE! IN CONCERT

r------~t

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..... IMPORTANT NOTICE***
STUDI:.NT MEDICAL INSURANCE

HlACK MARIAH

J

•• BOBCOR ••
Motor Cars Ltd.
/974 Fggert Near Bailey
814-7150

Friday, 4 February 1972 The Spectrum . Page three

�I
-

aetion line

/lave u problem' Need help? Do you find it impossible to untangle
the University bureaucracy? In cooperation with tire Office of Student
Affairs and Services, Th~ Spectrum sponsors Action Line, a weekly
reader service column . Through Action Line indivrdual students ran get
un.rwers co puzzling questions. find out where and why Universil l'
dectsions are made and get action wherl' change is needed.
Just dial 831·5000 or vi.rit the Action line booth in the Center
l.mlnge in Norton Hall for individual auention . Th e Office of Student
Affairs and Servtces will tnvestigate all qut•sttons and complaints. and
will answer them indivtdua/ly. The name oj the tndividua/ originating
the inquiry is kept confidential under all t'lft'llmstances. The more
common questions will h£· answered 11t this column each werk.

Q : I thought that the grade reports wer~ to be m ailed to us luna
before this? I s till ha ve n ot received mine. What is the matter?
A: Most of the grade reports have alread y been m ailed . However,
th ere are some that wtll take a little longer because of spec1al
difficulties. These dtfficulties may not be of the st udent's making, so
d o n 't worr y about it Your grade report will come through wrthrn a
short time.

Q : I have an "incomplete" on my r~cord . How long do I have to
aet it removed?
A: T here is no trme limit. The "inwrnplete" grade will stand until
you finish the course work. llowever, we suggest that you take care of
rt as soon as possihle. The more you delay , the greater t h e chances are
that you will never complete the work . So, our advice rs to have all
"incompletes" removed from your record as soon as you can
Q : What happened to the day care cen ter?
A . The day care ce n~er r~ alive and fund wnrng rn the ha~crm:ut of
Cooke Hall. However, at the present trmc, it rs owrcrowdcd If ynu are
rnterested in using it~ l.tdhties, we s uggest that ynu .:all 10()11 and
arrange to have your name put on the w.titing ltst.
Q · Can't anyt hi ng b e done to enla rgt&gt; the faci litielo availablt• to
stud ents? For example, a gro u p I belong to finds it almost impol&gt;.~ibl e
t o reserve space in Norton Hall, We n eed more faci lities!
A : You are t:ntrrely nght Notion llall. tnr example. was tksrgnetl
to h.1ndle the needs t&gt;t' I:: .000 persnnlo and 1oday nHm' 1h.1n .!~.000
persons go through rls doorlo each day Wh.1l wrth the l'llrdget;.Hy
problems of the State of New Ynrk .rnd rh Unrver~IIY. 11 Jm·~ nol seem
Likely that there \.\otll h\.' any luturt· rnas~rve burldrng on 1111~ campus S••.
the best we t.:an nfler llo rhat Jn~ gruup~ wantrng t\l ll~t· the v.ulllll\
fa clltltes ul thl• &lt;.!mpu~ "'II hJY&lt;· Itt rnJJ...: thctr rt'\l'rvalton~ early I he
Norton llall ~tall ts Jorn~t .rll 111 11~ power to •h'&lt;'nmmnd;rlt' '''"'''"'
gruups. HuL the sp.t.:e" lrn11teu JnJ lhcrl' 'el'lll' r11 lw "" wuy nut 11t
the prnhlcrn at thllo ttnn·
Q · Could you tell mt' why I h ave n 't received my award rwtiee yet
from Alban y about receiving the Sch olarsh ip Incentive?
A Wrthout havrng mort· wlurrnalton, we ,·un'f tell you very mulh
I t all depeiHJs upon when you ~enl 1n your request If thrs wa.~ IIIOTl'
than e1ght "'ed~ agn. then p.-rlup~ you , Jwulu twg.rn In m.Jh• inqutrre,
The piJl't: '" wntt· •~ thl· offrn.' 111 t\lh:ury :rnd nnt nn our .:amp1 1 ~ I hl'
S-:holar.;hrp fllll'llfiVI.' 1~ rhll hJnc.llt•tlln~·.dly .If ,Jit lloW\.'Vt'f . don't wrrtc
Albany unle~' "Hilt' IIIII&lt;' ha' )!.\lnl.' ~~~

Q When tlo I have to pay my tuitron 311d ft'e,1
1 he: hrll~ tor lh"
ho: rMrd by l l•h II
statemenl
t\

~Cilll'\ll'r

mu~t

,1re 1!"1111,! nut ng.hl now and thl'Y
1\ t'lh i&lt;IWd With t'adl

1\ 111111: In I hi\ dk, I

Q: Is thert• an y place whert' I carl go and rap with ~o m e hudy'! I
mean. like I d on't ha ve any need for 11 p~ychiatrist or anyont' like th;tt,
but I would like t o talk 10 someone .
A Yes. there are ,.-wr;rl plaLe\ tor you !11 go It you rusr want 111
taiJ.. wrth so 1ncoue on ,, ono:-ltHllll' h'""· rhe 'latt nt th~ Otltll' ot
Student Atla1rs and SerVIle' 10 ~lll llarrtlllJII l1hrary rs ;r! yuur ~l' IVI &lt;'~
The1r stall •~ gearl·tl 111011 l\1~1 "'hal you rnent1oned Bur rl y .. u w.1111 tu
rap with ll..'llu\' \llllknt~ ..rnd taualty .1r1d ''·' tt 111 ~rour~ . thcn tlh'
Psychom;.st '' your I hill~. I h&lt;' p,y,hollll,lt ".1 "11\tt'lllllj! and ,pcak111g.
expenenn: It " .111 oln·go1ng .llld trl'l' IIIIWIIIj! prnl'r.lnl Jl''ll!lll'tl
~pecrfrL,tl l y tu hnng. j)l.!&lt;~pk !10111 .Ill Sl'J,tflll'nh od th•· t 11\IVl'I\IIY
..:ommunrty together IP lllll'r:r , 1 111 .111 Pfll'll lll.llllll'l ab.nl! the
contmnn~lltu:~
uf lrllliiJII 1'\)ll'lll'llll'.
lllr ~p.:,· rih go,tl ''
per~on -lo-pt.'r:..tlll ll&gt;lllflHIIII\ .ltlllll .. l'\)'&lt;=holll:lt Ill!'''" I'JI h We\llll'\d.ry
from .\ I' 1H ~ p 111 111 Ho111111 2 ~' tol N"rt1&gt;il ll.rll W•· tli111J.. lh;1r }' Oll
might find thl\ olll nhil.ll.ltlll),! I..'~Jil'll\'111.1.'

Grapplers .iuhi/ant

Wednesday evening before their usual fine home
Clark Gym crowd, the wrestling Bulls btasted the
Cleveland State Vikings, 30- 9 . The win was a big
one for Coach Ed Michael's grapplers, who take to
the road tomorrow afternoon at Oswego State.

Matmen defeat Cleveland for
thei r,~.;~~~~~~,nt~ ):~~~~~~!~~ 0~~.~~~'~:. : ·:
H\.'lnr\.' nllt' 111 tht• IJrgt'\t wed.rughl uowds In
w1lnl's~ .1 wrt~llrng 111a1 t h . th ~: WIC\thng Bulb tonk
&lt;Jnothi:r g~ant ' rep toward' l'll111plcllllg th e11 llHI\.,._,
~lltt&lt;'S~ tul ~l'&lt;JSOII 111 rc.:enl me1nnry The Hulh ran
;.sway tronl tou~h Cleveland State. ~0-9. at Cl&lt;H~
Cy111 Wcdne~tlay n•ght tor the11 ekventh Vlti"IY tlu'
~c.l\011 Jgainst a lone \tlha~ok
fhc mat.:h wa~ Jeaulnd.t•d Jt (l-(l :.dtc1 tht· fir~t
tour houl\ a' T ed Lawson 111.'0 the nwtth lor the la)t
tlltll' with hts 4-~ wu• over the Vik 111gs' j:rank You .
Yuo , who captains tire Clevel:.rnd State mat squad, •~
ud.nowledgeJ to he thcrr 1&lt;1p wres tler and has the
l' redtntiab In prove 11 ll uwevcr. the wrestle• who
wtm huth thl' Mrd -S tare~ and John ( ;.rrrnll
t••urn&lt;~tll\.'nt rh.llllJliOil,hir~ IJ ~ t season wiTcred h"
fir~l los~ 11! th\.' year l:IW\1111 l'Xtendcd ht~ r\.'&lt;.:nru to
,t ptrlcd I I 0. WIIHIIng lh\.' ntJII: h hy revcr~tng Yoo
111 tht• thud pertod

Hull' tak e lead
I hi.' Uulh tuo~ a ll.(l lead 111 the I 'iO lh 111aldr
.111J Wt'll' 11ever h&lt;.•aJed i\ltc• Cury Kumm·, Vt1.' 1llfy
111 that bout. the Y1kurg~ wcr\.' ~tdl well wttl1111
had1n~ tii\!Jn&lt;.:l' lltlWCWI , John Kopakk . \lallltl ~
fr&lt;llll tht• lwtlum po~ittllll Ill the \I.'COilU rllllllO . lll;llk
wh~t rt1.ry h.tvc lll'tn hJ~ mo~l tmporlant movl' ol lht•
~ca~on
Thl' ex-BrlHIInl..' Tedt ~t an&lt;.lt\\11 rl'VI'f\\.'J
('(eveland State's Gene M.:Cune and pllllll'J htr11 tn

Mo111t.;hm Stare. bn.. ~l\.'d the Bulls' lc;HJ tu I 'i-6 ••111d
they were tlft and runnrng.
liH' V1ktngs managed to .:lo~t· the gap Ito IX 11
hut prn~ hy Ron Brandt and TPny P1•ltcarc strct chl'U
'Buffalo\ final margtn by \.'Vl'n nwr e . Pnlrt arc \ pllt
came agamst Ed Castleman. J' hb m:llch agalr\\t 6-X
~40 lh Chuck l:rhart dad nul CI&gt;IIIC off. l:rharl WJ'
11nahlc to wr l!~tlt: Polr.:art dth' to,, had kne\.'. a~ tlr~:
Vrkes' had tlt'l..tdetl tu lh•hl h1rn utrt ol att11111 urtll'''
the rnat1. h w:r~ dose

Juhilant win
!'he Will uver ( levclatltl ~late . .r Wllllll'l \IVI.'I
Buffalu\ lone .:onqucror. C'l,tru•n Stat\.' , 111 ;.s quJd
meet lett the Bulb ttthtlartl ··we swept 'em'
exd:umcd Bulls· cao&lt;.:h L &lt;.1 Mkhacl aft\.'r lm team\
vH:torv . ''The lo~~ to Cl:utort 1111gh1 have rumed 0111
'ca~un . hut I a111 glad to \l't' thJt ow WIC~Ikr~ Jll't
were tlctt•rmincd cvcn u1o1t to go thfllllglt thi.! rt't ,f
the sdledule unhcaten . I am giJJ th:tl we Wt'rc .rhlc
to dl•tcal a tt'Jill !IS ~trong a~ lh\.' Vrk1ngs wt•rc I
thmk th.tt Dtd.. Honac.:t h:r' ll'lfllti\.'J well hut we
wete JUSt roo \twng 1111 tllt'lll "
The Bulb travel Ill o~wcgo 101\)1\lrllW Jllt'r 11&lt;101)
to wtestlc a 11-;rm th:tt th\.'}' havt• ncvt·r be.rlt'll
F-ollowrng that. tht• Bulb n'tur11 to C'l&lt;rrf.. (1y111 lor
the fiuaiiH•mc tllatl'lll'~ ot the 'Ca\flfl. J qt~.tdrallgui ;Jt
lllct•t tc.Jtltnng (';rlttornl.t \t;llc . 1.\t harwt~ and St .
J o hn h~hcr .

HAIRSfYLJNG
Joe\ 'f'ltellfl'e !:J11riH'r

I 055 Kenmore A venue
(at ('utvin Thea lrt'•
WIGS HAIR COLORING

. ._ _ 877 - 2989

--~

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable
, epa irs on
Imported &amp; Domestrc
- BOBCOR AUTOMOliVE CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834 -7350

Page four. The Spectrum. Friday, 4 February 1972

Monday
3:00p.m.

Room 311
Townsend Hall

�Rough competition

Fencers strain to
keep up the pace
by Mike G lant z.
Spcrlnm; Srofj Wrut·r

But bad luck seemed to be
wath Buffalo when the sabre team
took a co mplete loss o f 0·9, whi c h
caused
the Swas hbucklers to
experience a c.:rU$hing defeat of
18·9 . 1-iowie F o rman , the usual
pacemaker for the epee team , was
s hock ed at Ius nwn performance
of 0-2 and r~marked dfter t he
meet : " I don't understaml 11
We 've fenced Hobart before. and
never have taken a loss like this .
S cheve me. when llobart comes
to BuftJlu in a lew weeks. t h ey're
not g()ang to g~tl a ~~tond ..: han cc .

Wtlh u nt: of th e toughest
&lt;:ompe lalavr s&lt;: hedul e~ ever, it
seems as though the Buffalo
fendng team ts finally feeling the
st ra in o f trying t o meet il wi th
success. ll o ldmg a .l-2 recnrd, th e
Bull Swashbucklers traveled to
West Pwnt tn clash with a s h ar p
Army squad and .1 reputable
Patterson Stat~ tcanl r aeldtng 3
talented
hut
rclut avely
an e xpenenced '4U JU o f fen~ers,
Uutto~lu ra al tlltl• ,-,un ph catlllllS.
ben
th ou~.th
'a plain Bnb
Wins wanted
Jo hnson went ·' ·J fua th.: d;ty 111
fhe !cant L' worncd
I heir
fllil
wath
ll uwae
1-oaman
rt'ulrd now as -~-5 wtth tht: two
d"piJying a ~ IIHilat 3-l 111 epee.
tpughest t eum~ yet Ill he len..:ec.l
the Bulls to o k twn ht:av y llefcah
Next Sutunlay Buttalll ta.:kles
hy a ~cure 1ll ::!J-4 agaanst bo th
l'enn
Stat~:,
a gre.t l
fen.:tng
~l h 1111b
fravelang
b :IL'k
to
powerhouse wlu..:h po~c~ a grt~at
llult.tl n, th~ dtshear tened team
thrcJI
t o th e Swds hbud.ler!&gt;'
lwoskd moral.: Jlll.l pl.ulned Ill
reu11d After tlw•. th~ Bulls go nn
..:arry o ut a hard week of pract11.:e
to lcn~c ( prnell , posstbly th&lt;'
hdure le.l,hlrtf! &lt;lUI .~g,llnSI a
numher o 1H' team 111 the .:nuntry
'klllt:d ll obJrt te am ,at (;enevJ,
thl\ ye..tr Th e nul" ne~d these
Nl'W York
. "'HI~. ll&lt;•l nnly feu the re..:urd's
\akl.·, but ltl:JIIIIY for tllurak
lt cll fr o m Ho bart
C'1.1a~h Sdrwa1lt expl&lt;uned ll
Wh en
prerara!JoO
l•&gt;r the 1111~ way " We 're 111 a bad slump
,·onnng meet wa~ l'lllll pkll', s ptrtl s lhl\ year I t's not as tl we don't
r,tn h1gh and t l.ldc h e~ Slhwarll llJ ve the tJlent
tt ', there But .
o1111.l &lt;;Pid\tl'l ll w ere umf1dent that
many of the guys need utudt
,a ttl wugh 11 m1~1l be ~ hdllengJng
IIIOrt: CXpl'fll'nlC Ill l'(&gt;lllpt' ltl WII
Huffalo s hould have been &gt;1bk to When a team urul~:rgun s udt
cli J ik up a Vl...:hlry Jgaanst llohart
Jrastlt rchutl\ltng a\ we arc dt&gt;lll)ot
llh· m~et ~1Jr1t•d 11Ut wllh ll ohart !Itt~ year , at's logJl.'al th.al tltc11
kad111g ~llghtl~, t&gt;ut the Bull ~ perfo rmance IS nnl gotng to cqu..tt
~Cl'metl to have t&gt;olllll.l'U back
the11 potenttal "
when Jo hnson w~nt 2-0 and
The ~.:oaL h ~ ale Ulllf1&lt;.h:n t , hut
freshman epee rnJn J'om Bremer lllllfl' nnportant •~ tilt: \l',lll\'s
went undefeat ed 3-u
altrtude f hey have smc.:c delved
tnlo Lom·en t rated pr.tdtcc anc.l
spmt •~ on th e rise .tg.rm lltey
realtt.c t hal they need these wms
.tnd they're uclnmmcd to gl'l
th em Th··y arc hungry l"r va.:tnry
Yl'IY h11ngry
But wtlh thl'
clfort Jlltl 'Pirll tll ,tt tlw tl.'.llll ''
dtsplaytng now , 11 ll"'~' preullt\lll!!
tl1.1t th t'tr a(lpllltle wtll bt: ~al 1all:d
Th e Women 's Club
ol SUNY/AB
presents

SUNDAY , Feb. 13th

~I li!

I it.\ W' \

· ~

111 ntl

-

~ NEW STUDENT MENU_:

livt:r and ~rown Kice S1~5
Californja Swinger .... 1.95
Hamburger Stroganoff 1.45
Small Sirloin Steak
(Boneless) 1.45
Chicken Roqudort .. . 1.65
Beef Bourguinon .. .. . 1.75
1.35
Choice Omelet
Ground Beef (Organic) 1.45
1.95
Pe tite Filet IV' ''!.non
Vegetabk fempura,
Brown Ri'-e1.45
Veget.tbk ~c all op'&gt;,
Brown Rice1.65
Roast Sesame Chid.l'll 1.65
Egg Plant Parmesi.111 . . 1.75
and man y d.1il y s pecials

cEN-rsAZE ON NbiAI

ONE
.......

D UBLIN
The Rcpublt i.' of Ir e land w.1s t:loseJ
d own Wednesday tn a nattuno~l day tlf mourning. to
,;o mmem oratc the death ~ ot t J pcr,on~ s hnt by
British troops 1n Nol'th~rn lrelunll Most hll~llll'~ses
were shut down . as were th e doc~ s at the maJor
ports, and na~ flew al hall-ma~t Dublin A trpor t WJS
dosed for two hours durang lht• Lo nd onderry tuneral
serv1ces Bnu ~h EuropeJil Airway~ annuunt.:etl the
..:a n c.:e llat10n ol all fltg,h t:. lu Duhhn, thus o:tranding
over I 000 passenge rs an Brat.11 n All prngr J nts tlft 1h t•
natrona! radt o network wer e I n bt• hiJtke•J out
dunng the fun erals
V IENNA
Strutcg~t:

An o l!tn.al

~pokesm,,n

lor

thl.'

the Unite d States pay fuU reparati o ns for aU d a mage
ca use d t o the people of all Vietnam
MOSCOW
A leading Soviet psychia trist h olds
that o ne o f the most drea ded m ental ill nesses.
scht z.o phr c nta , is a h,:reditar y disease that can b e
diagnosed 1n children as early as o n e year of age. H e
also said that sc hrzo phre nra is m o re like ly t o exist
among exce ptionall y gifted persons and among ci ty
dwellers . He said the professions with the h rghest
rate of the disease a re mathematics. physics and
psychtat ry
itself.
P rnfessor
Ma ra ! Vartanyan ,
re!&gt;eardl assoc tate of the Sovtet Institute o f
J&gt;sylhaa tr y , d1scussed the m e ntal d1sorder in an
antcrvtew
pub lis h ed by t h e
English language
newspaper. Moscow News. H e said his view of
'il'htw ph rema is a n extreme o n e but th a t m any o f his
S1w1t:l ~:o ll ea gues share 1!. H e noted that the s hildre n
ot ~l· hrzo phrenics are 14 times more bke ly to s uffer
fr &lt;Hn the disease than other persons. Vartanyan sa id
the!rl' were no laboratory method s to detect th e
Jtlnl~.·nt. hut that psy..:hta t rists were able to diagnose
tilt· d1seasc through climcal met h ods at a rema rk ab ly
ea rl y age Vartanyan sa1d tha t alt h ough th e re are
fewer ~dllzo phrem t:s tn the cou ntryside than in
t..:I lte~ . tlus IS due
to the "migratory trends"
assouated with the schizo phrenic perso nality , and
" no t liv1ng co nchltnns t&gt;r urbanara tt nn as such "
Dl.'spa t.: his theory on the h e redit a ry na ture of
'&gt;~h1wphren1a . V3rtanyJn ~aid he s topped short of
suggest mg that s&lt;.:httophrenan s h ould .avotd h avwg
dul d ren nr sh•Juld undergo ahnrt wn~ t n prevent
c.:h ildhltt It

Arms Llnlltdll&lt;Jn l'alks Jnnt•Unu·d 1uc~1htY

th a t the pre\t:llt round of nl-,.:ottatiOn s will ;adjourn
Fnd;t y Allhuugh the spok usman refused tel ~ay
where o r when the nex t rnunc.J wnuld hcgi 11 ,
dtplornalt.: sourc.:es satd that a rc~ulllplmn was llkcl}
twforc Presidrnt Naxon got's to M o~c:ow an MJ y Jnd
th e prohahle plat' e would be ll eiMnka SelUrt·e~ ~atd
lhe Jdjnurnmcnt dtd not mean a "l&gt;•ea ktl n wn " tn
SA I T , anti that pro~::rcss was " no les~ e n,·ouraglllg
than hdort· " It was hmletl 111~1 ,, llr~t-~lagc
agr..-ernent rntght be near at hand .
A I BAN Y
Leadcr~ ol lu Hh huu,_e, '&gt;&lt;~ 11.!
that they were 111 lavor n t letung lhl"
~npk
vutl'
on
a
pwpl•\l.'ll
co nslltuttonJl
anu.•ndntcn t w lmh euuld lead tn leg.Jiizcd casinos
&lt;&gt;pons hellin~ ur eVt'll " lllllllilt'r&gt;&lt;" Ill t ill' 'l.tl l' rh l'
Jrnendmenl ret.tuare' .appmvJI h y hot h t h e I~ ? l anti
t &lt;JTJ lcgisi:Jtures lwfnre 11 ,·oulcl go In the pl.·oplc 111
Novctubcr I Y7 ~ I he Olltr.ad llt'lllng CtiiJHIIIS~It&gt;ll
ttt J 1epo rt . ~ ~ tl ' llt l"g,tl l(Jtnhllng ron1prt~1.·~ &lt;Hit''''
the largest lHNIIl'~' cnterpr"t'\ tn till\ \late We ln·l
that ,, IS lllltl' to l'll~ltall' II ( ellltlllltl ollld ti l'VOl l' It~
t·norrnnu' profth to lq:ttunall' puhl11 twctl' I ;"
Vega' t&gt;l the Lt\1 . .1nyor1&lt;.''1
Wedne~tlay

BU ~ FALO
The Atomac l:.nergy Com mrssi0 n
'),IIU M&lt;1nJay tl Ira" rece1vcd 11' flr!\t appltcation for
peri111'\)IIHJ
to
llllplaiH
nll\ lear-powered
heart
p.t L e 111 a k e 1 s
111
h u 111 an s
Batt cry- p owered
PJI.'emake~"&gt; . whid1 s upply cle~trr~al o;tirnulatinn to
tlagg1ng heurt~ . h.tvc heen tn U.\e fo r year~. hut t h ctr
enl?rgy ~oun· e hJ' to bl" replac.:ed !rom time to time.
requmng perwd1&lt;.: dlest su rgery . Th e nuclea r
palemaker w&lt;&gt;uld lunctann fnr yea" wtthou t
rcplo~ceml!nt surgery
l'he htens.- app lica tion , now
llndt•r
rev1e w ,
.:amc
lrom
the
Veterans
1\Jmmtstr.. ttnn lt o~pli.J 1r1 Ruffal o The h osptl al
asked authonz.at10n l&lt;l 1mplan 1 pat:emakers in ten to
twenty paller\ls •·on .1n mvestagatlonal basts"
At om- powered pn &lt;.:e makef'l&gt; hav~ n cen implan t ed Ill
.~nillt.tl~ ~inn• 1'1(1(1 in e xt ensave expenmcntal work
lo t.levdnp a s11fe and relwhle devrce. Meanwhile , the
A I:C 1s Pt&lt;H.'t'etlrug ''' tJevelop o ther " h eart ass1st
dcvtln" HHiudang a " fully 1mplantahle artificiill
lwatt " Waltl J HlltiiiHUill Ilk elf tt•n years. Suc h
devtn'.'
~d
tllt'tr
energy
lf(llll
rad10adive
plutnn1unt JX wl11d1 provatle\ J \OUrtt' of h ea t whic h
,·nravc rt., tnlo ell~• tnLaly

WASIIINt;IUN
Nev. Yml.. Rcprc~entattve
Keuap !.aid h 1d.1y lh:ol Ill' mtrodurctl J
rt-~nlllllon prupos1ng a con~ talltlltlrllll ,tllll'ndment to
pwhl.·Jhtt lite ulntpulsory husmg 11! ~tu dent ~ lor
whatever rea~nn fhe proposal \tales ' 'the right of
'tltd.-nl\ 111 a ttend tht: public S1. hool nearest their
plJI..c nf re:.tdcn~y shall n u t be d ented nor abridged
1&lt;11 reast&gt;ll' nl ~.·olor , nat tunal ongm. reltg~on or sex"
Kt•rnp , .J R e puhll ~an-C'onserva llVI! from Buffalo , said
Jla\~age n t the ,tmcndmenl "would prevent mass1ve
~.:l•lll pul~ury hU~1ng acros~ school t.list n c t , com mun it y
.11td even s tate lines. " ApJHoval of the amendment
hy ( ·ongr cs~ would prevent "ancalculabl e harm to
stu d en ts, sch ool system ~ and intolerable ex.penses."
he said . Kemp sa td he t1ffered the amendment in
response to Stat e Edut:a lton Com m ission e r Ewald B.
NyquJst's ord er t o the Buffalo sch ool system to
suhtnrt " tlcsegrcgatmn plan b y April I He said the
order "t hreatens the dlln pulsory busing of pupils
Juoss dtstn ct lmes for purposes of rac1al balance ."
The lreshman co ngressman satd his proposal w ould
"'aleguard the ~urvtval of lo&lt;:al .:ontro l o f
n~tghhorhood schools." K em p also mai ntain e d the
c.:umpulsory bustng wa s "a kind o f racism l1l reverse
hno~u~e the 19S4 Supreme Court decis ion removed
..:olnr .IS J f,Jt. tnr an dt"tern;rrung where l' hildren go to
sdtool"
J.aLk

Pete Seeger

•._..,.,.... , ,j...........,.......

ALBANY - Two attractive blondes were named
Tuesday as th e N e w York. S tate Assembly's first
female pages. Follo w ing the tnnd set by the
Co ngress and the s tate Senate . Assembly S p ca k ct
Perry Duryea a nno un ced that Marsh a Ba ker , 16 , and
Mrs . Margaret King, will Join lhe m:tle p ages rn their
vanous duties , s u ch as putting bills in books,
d ist ributing memos a nd
running erra nd s for
assemblymen. Th ey will be paid the same wage as
the male pages, $2 an h our plus ti ps. but will only
w o rk from noon - S p .m . Mtss Baker (wh o hates'"
be re fe rred to as Ms.). IS a juni or at Voorheesville
C'ent ral Sch ool 111 New Salem . Mrs King, wh o~t'
husband ts a c haplatn's asststJn t m Vietnam IS an
English major who co mpleted tw o year&lt;&gt; at the
Universi t y of' Tennessee. and who now lives 111
S.:hen e&lt;:t ad y

2 :30p.m .
at
Bennett H1gh School

2875 Ma;n St.
~t udents $2 50
Adults $4 00
T ickets at · Norton , Buf. Stare.
Cants•us, and Record Runner .

I' A I{ IS
N11rt h V 1&lt;'1 ILtllt dl\llo~ed Monda y
dddlh nl tis owrl wuct nttw fl•llrtt V1etna111 JH'Jll'
pi:JII and IIL&lt;.:u~ed l'resulcnl NtX&lt;H1 "' "clupli&lt; 11 y' 111
reve.tlang
c.JetJih
IJ~I
wn·k
td
'l'lret
I I a n01-Washm~tton
ucgot tJf i&lt;HI'
At
a
m·w~
t..\Hifncn.,e. Nguyen Thanh 1 1.· the flit'~' ' P•Ike~rn;nl
lor the North Vt utno~mcse dclq:atHIII tn tht' l'am
Peace talks, handed uut to ncw&lt;;mcn the nu1c pn1nt
program
t ht· C'ontrnunl\ls presented
to ll '\
prcsrdcnllltl advi~el Jl enry Ktssanger on Jun l' II, la~t
year. Mr Naxon 's dCL' i\11.111 to unveil th1.· ~t'lll'l t.tlko;
i.~ "a1 rn ed at de...:eavang world puhlil' n rurt1 on 111 th1.·
United S t ates a nd the world. at servmg Mr Naxon ·~
political o bje(;tives an thi~ elc~tinn ;md allowrng h1m
t o pursue a Vietnamizataon of the wur .and nut to
serve the ca use ol peace as he danm." annnun.:ed
Nort h Vie tn am . The co nf1dent1al ll ano• pla11 Lalletl
for the total withdrawal of all ll .S and allu:d forces
befo re tlw end of 11)7 1. It ~aul that relea.~c o l
rruhtary and c1viltan pnsonet ~ would he rar ned 11UI
111 parallel and completed at the !&gt;ame time as t he
trnnp wathdrdwal These proposa ls were te~lati!J 1r1
the puhh c Vtel Cong plan annuunu:d ..t Wl't:l\ J,tteT
I he ll anw pl&lt;ln also rqJe;ttl·d tl~ \:~i ll lor I h i.'
ovcnhrow u t the S.11gon ge•\lc111n1eut an d asked that

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Friday , 4 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�IQuality orEdiTORiAl
quantity

I

The Faculty Senate's approval of President Robert
Kener's lo~al preference admission plan does not close
discussion of this issue . It is unfortunate that the initial
consideration o f this maner had not been carried out with
more speed, since the fact that admissions are currently
under way certain ly hampered the Senate's policy-making
ability . In tact, many of the Senators voting to approve the
President 's modification, did so because of the lateness of the
date for admission policy changes.
While the present plan will not by itself turn the
University into a mediocre institution , a local preference
policy is a dangerous precedent. If we become inflexibly
commined to admissions criteria of this type, we will lose
sight o f the educational reasons behind striving tor acadern1c
excellence.
The new system does discriminate against students
resi ding in the 56 counties o urside o f the 8th Judicial
District . While some may sta te that a high school average
difference of three points or a variance of 20 points o n the
Regents Scholarship ,Exam is not immediately detrimental to
educational standards, they are o verlooking the simple truth
that such a d o uble standard m1streats applica nts outside this
region .
Despite any pretestations to the contrary, this is the
State University of New York at Buffalo, not the University
o f Buffalo. Regional preferences are not o nly educationally
indefensi ble but mora lly and fisca lly. Why should a student
fro m the New Yo rk City area not have an equal opportunity
fo r admissio n? Further, this Un1versity is supported by tax
monies collected thr oughout the state. If Western New Yo rk
wants a school of their o wn, they must be prepared to
support 1t financ1all y.
Other academic inst1tut1ons have ado pted regional or
local preferences in the last few years One such campus, the
University of Wisconsin at Madison. since initiating a
preferential system for W1sconsin resfdents has experienced a
drastic drop in the quality o f their undergraduate populatio n.
Such a trend can be documented 1n two ways. First, the
statistica l levels o f the c lasses have dropped and secondly,
many faculty members have described the existence o f a
noticeable qualitative change.
The University o f Buffa lo ceased to ex ist a decade ago
Since then, we have progressed from a third·rate finishing
school to a center of learning . If we continue to seek, by
regional admissions preferences, to re-embrace a local
institutio n-identity. we wilt then suffer the attendant loss in
quality. While the residents of the community may welcome
such a prospect, we believe the University community sho uld
regard such a prospect as anathema.

Vol 22. No. 50

Fnday, 4 February 1972

Editor-in-Chief

Denn1s Arnold

Co-M•nettno Edotor AI Benson
Co M•n.eino Editor Moke Lippmann
Awt. M.negine Editor Suun Moss
Buti,_ MMt~~ger
~ck Herlan
Adv.,.ilint M.n~~ger Suun MeUentone
C.mpus

Jo-Ann

Arn~

JeH GrNnw•ld

Ctty
Copy
Awt
FNture
Gr•phoc Ans
BICic~

Howoe Kunz
Jano5 Cromer
Ronni Formen
Man~ Gen i
Cleore Kro1191men
Lynde Teri
Tom Toles
Amy Ahrand

Leyou t
Aat .
Lot . • Dr.m•
MUIIC

Off..C•mpw
Aat .

f'tooto
Al81 .
Sporu
Alii.

Mllfyhope Runyon
Vlleant
MIChael Solvtfblett
Billy Altmen
. ~ l vnne T fNQ«
vec•nt
Mickey Osterreoctler
KlmS•ntos
. Barry Aubon
, .Howie Falwl
~

Thr-S,.crrum 1~ llt'Ved by Un.ted Press I mernetional, Coll~~ge Pr•s
Servoce. the Los Angeles T1mes Free Press, the l os Angels T omes
Syndoclte end Lobention News Service
Repubhcetoon of matter hereon wothout the express conwnt o f the
Edotor on Ch1ef os forbidden.
Edltori•l Polley os determlnad by the Edotor -on..Ch lef.

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, 4 February 1972

.........,_

@AII"t #~----~

1141 IRISH WAT

Several years ago . JUI\.onever you mmd huw
mJny
I hall the pleasure of altendmg 3
plulosophy class taughl by 3 dapper and gentle rnan
now unfortunately. fnr us, nut he, fled lo sunruer
dimes. In L11c course of said course . . . that
~om bi nation reall y was an acc1dent . ~ a group of us
uwolvcd m the course were accused of formula t1ng a
new phllusophJcal fallacy Th1s was chmtened by the
good doctor as "lhc slippery slope fallacy "
The concept so chrastened was as magn1ficently
\ tmpk .tnd sweepmg as all good maJOr phllosoph1cal
pnnc1ples are supposed to be
II was bas1cally that one never
gave lhe governmen t anythmg,
un the grounds that it would
turn around and bite you wilh
11. The sl1ppery slope sec tion
COnSISts of the admiSSIOn that
Lh1s might nol be lrue, but
that there was no accurate and
'klfe way to test the problem ,
s1nce 11 n were true . lhere was
cltarly nu way in hell to wrest
the already yielded ground
back from the uppus1tmn.
Thence the claun of fallacious thmkmg on our
part lay 1n h1s datm that ~uch abuses would not
occur, and/or they could be rect1fied. The tra1l ut
the ;1Jieged conspirators to k1dnap Henry K1ssrnger
upens soon 10 Harnsburg And I he ducken) of some
years ago
or IS 11 V\llture~
have mdeed cnme
home to roost The government recently cssued a
second mdictment tu supersede the llrst rather
hastily drawn one The new mdictment IS based
largely on the conspcracy laws passed some yea rs
ago. In theory to make hfe d1fficult for organized
crime.
Whatever your opmton ol the vanous figures
mvolved in the rather btr.aarre events which remained
rat her ~adowed w 1h1s potnl , 11 IS bizarre events
whach remamed rather shadowed to th1s pornt , tt ~~
the Malia Thus the U)e of a leadmg government
expert on orgamzed cnmc 111 draw up an mdictment
satlsfactonly vague and tllusronary as to net ~ome
kmd of conv1cl10n lmthe Untted States Covernmen l
is an unfortunate example of slippery slop1sm 1n
1Call ty Since J . EJgar Huover said il happe'ned, we
better fucking well get a conviction And to du so,
we will usc any and all weapons ava1lable. regardle~s
ot the1r ongmal purpose
There is no excuse lor what o) happenmg m
llarnsburg. Some of my uld liberal m~t mcts would
hh to make much of the presence of Ramsey Clark
011 the defense. And there ts, to be sure, a certa1n
very dass1c confrontallon between an ex-A ttomey
General and the man who succeeded tum . But much
more critical is lhe gross mequJty of the resources
involved. The government tbs both sufficiently
vague laws and suffic1eutl y enonnous amounts ol
money and manpower to make genius VIrtually a
prerequisite if there IS to be any c.: hance at all of a
courtroom victory . The triaJ ts a gross and dJsgustrng
example of a government wllhng to do what 11 claims
and its enemies' major goals. the refusal to abide by
the laws of the land m principle, and a willingness to
make a sham of the judiciary process for its own

The

grump

ends.
And how then 1S such a Situation recoverable''
Hnw then en a natwn of frcgh tencd people lack111g
~ieCu n ty ul a conSJstcntly ehpngwg world are sud1
unjust laws to be rescinded when , mdecd . I he
current is in the opposite dHection? We are a fcadul
na11on 10 an ever more llist urb111g world, and lh1•
clamor seems to be fur evrr more laws lu replace the
constaolly erodmg sense of md1V1dual responSlblllt}
and secuuty The Departmenl of Jc1St1ce? Mu)l lw,
that tS what 1s engraved 111 the marble out 111 front
In some of Robert Hc1nlein 's ''future ume"
stones. he refers to the penod we are now mch111g
our way cautiously through as "t he cr31y years " I
assume that some of the New Yorkers m the readn1g
pubhc know more than I do about the legal
confusion around abortions 111 the New York C1ty
public hosp1tals. As I understand it, a legaJ professor
from one of the law sch ool!~ has bad himselt
appointed as guardian of all unborn fetuses. and 111
that legal capacity, hu en jOt ned the public hospltab
from any acts involving such fetuses
That. tht COutU would flnd lt ncnasary. in their
august wisdom 10 set up a test of such a mallet
seems relatively crazy to me ... but then, I neve1
was a lawyer. It he W1shes to transplllrlt his fetuses to
test tubes where the state can grow them with nn
effect on the uldividual who IS requesttng th('
te rmrnallo11 of a pregnancy , 11 would seem a~ 1f the
tssue might be clearer fo argue, as this dcx:1sllm
seems to, 11 so follows that a pregnant woman has no
nghts to engage in actJVlttes wtuch could resuh 111
spontaneous abortion e1the1
And what is the penalty for havmg such a fetus
terminated'? It is my impressJOn that the law has
been cons1stenUy clear that personhood is an
acquired part of gestation. not inherent. If the
abortion of an underage fetus 1S not murder, what
then is it? And down, or up, a dizzymg sprral of such
que~tions lies the hooker of "just what do the ltvwg
owe to the not yet born?" And where between post
conceptton and pre-b~rt h do such owed rights and
pnvcleges. tf there be same, begJn and end? What arc
lhe ngh ls and privileges of the woman who hosb
su..:h a pre-person'
I have U1c: msane deme lo type . " How Many
Angel:. Can Dance On The Head of a Pw,'
repeatedly until the end of the column. Clearly Jll
Irrational and Jtrelevanl 1mpulse since we are dealmg,
qUJte lrlerally, with matters of lr fe and death I.Jul
some place in the cu rrent attempls of bloch nl
proponents of various caus~s to sway public opunou
and law 111 une directiOn or another, we are qu11c
clearly losmg contact wuh . and awareness of, each
other as liv1ng. breathing, hurting mdJviduals. We all
seem to be going down this particular stretch of road
on a one-way basis, whatever your views nn
afler-life. :~nd the fears and pushing and screaming
and greed are gomg to bury a lot of us before we
nught have had to otherwise go.
It might be nice, in view of the previous
statement as something of relative h.igh probabiJJty ·
to try to make the most of what you do have 3
chance at, by makmg 11 as full for both yourself and
others as you can Care now, tomorrow may be too
late. Pax (hopefuUy).

�Jackson Browne: phenomenal performer
by Robbie Lowman
Sptterrum Mu11c RtwirNtlr

I've just been sitting in Haas Lounge
watching a video replay of last Friday's
concert of Natural, McGrath and Potter, and,
most importantly, Jackson Browne. Instant
replay is a weird experience, especially when
it concerns a concert that in a lot of ways
was very special to me. You must forgive me
for slighting McGrath and Potter, and
Natural, but this review really doesn't

suppose typical of the way most of Jackson's
songs are.
Very few of his songs cou ld be termed
the type that knock you on your ass, but
very few are the type that you forget . Slowly
most of them creep into your conscious and
surface just at the moment you need them .
I'm very glad that Jackson himself has finally
surfaced with a whole batch of new songs
that so very well capture the moments and
feelings that are so important to us. I know
that that's a hard statement to take, but

whose lyrics rise above being mediocre and
banal to anything memorable.
Lyrics aren't the whole thing though,
otherwise we could just read poetry. There is
something special about a song . Let's face it,
people don't go around reciting poetry to
themselves, they go around singing songs to
themselves. That's why Jackson's songs are
important and that 's why the genre is
important and that's why the music of those
songs are important
Very few people go around humming
" Under my Wheels" by Alice Cooper. I know
I don't very often though I really like it and
occasionally I've even put it on first thing in
the morning. But there is something about
hard rock songs that isn't too hummable and
even though they m ight run about in my
head tor a while they usually fall away fairl y
quick ly . So songs like Jackson's become
important in the quiet moments, the
reflective moments, because Jackson's songs
contain many memorable refrains and
melodies.
Rock Me on the Water
Before I get to far off on a tangent let me
get back to talking about the concert. I
wouldn 't want to give you the impression
that Jackson's songs are all quiet and
reflective because that would be far from the
truth . A good example o f that would be his
gospel song "Rock Me on the Water." He
originally sat down to the piano to play the
song, but dec1ded that the piano player on
his album did such a fine job he just couldn't
compare so he went back and played it on
guitar. The song starts out slow with a sort of
gospel flavor and then breaks into a rousing,
memorable gospel chorus.

concern them. The importance of this
concert for me was seeing Jackson Browne.
I have lived with Jackson's songs for
many years (though up until now they were
all sung by other people) and I have always
considered them among the finest songs ever
written. (I suppose I should make some
clarification by saying "of the genre, " but
from my own personal view I don' t make
those
distinctions.) More
important,
however, than saying the songs are well
constructed, or whatever, is the way that
they slip into your life.
A friend of mine was telling me during
the concert about how he had found himself
in Oregon singing "These Days" and had no
idea where it came from but was compelled
to trace it down. I suppose that what was
implied in the telling of the story was that
Jackson's song seemed very appropriate fo r
the time. Perhaps a song with lines like
"These days I seem to think a lot about all
the things that I forgot to do" is bound to
seem important now and then. It's odd that
the song didn't immediately grab him, but I

you're just going to have to take my word for
it and get his forthcoming album .

This was also an example of all the
aspects of Jackson's stage presence. Midway
through a guitar solo he made a mistake and
cracked to the audience "told you I couldn't
play piano." Perhaps not the funn iest line in
the world, but a n1ce touch . Also at the end
of the song where there is a whole chorus
singing (on the a lbum cut) Jackson tried to
sing their part . I suppose it could have
sounded foolish but instead it added a lot of
life to the song.

Congeniality on stage and off
The first thing of importance in reviewing
a Jackson Browne concert is to mention his
congeniality both on stage and off. Due to
my immense importance as a reporter from
The Spectrum, I was lucky enough to talk to
Jackson for an hour before the concert, but
anyone who saw him on stage Friday is well
At th1s point it would be rather silly to
aware of his wit and friendly nature. The talk about ind ividual songs though they
stories that he interspaced between songs certainly warrant it. All I can say is if you
gave us a clue what things seem important to missed 1t - you missed it. Jackson's going to
him and what things he seems to notice.
be touring with Joni Mitchell soon so I
The stories he tells are in a lot of ways no suggest you catch that and in the mean time
different than the stories any of your friends buy his alb um . It should be out any day now.
might tell, except perhaps that the
He's a sincere and gifted person and it's
perceptio ns are a bit clearer and the analogies
nice to know that success isn't going to spoil
catch you a bit more. I suppose what I'm him. A concert by Jackson is like a session
saying is that what he sees and feels is no with a special friend . Partly because o f
different than what any of us do; it's just Jackson and partly because of his songs.
that he tells it better. I suppose that sounds
Anyway. sorry Bat, sorry Don, but you
silly, but that's a rare gift that most don't
know
...
have. There are very few songwriters today

�Our Weekly Reader
One Hand Clapping by Anthony Burgess. Alfred A. Knopf,

$5.95.
"The best first thing to do, when you've got a dead
body and it's your husband's on the kitchen floor and you
don't know what to do about it, is to make yourself a
good strong cup of tea." Janet Shirley (nee Barnes)
murders her husband in the climactic, penultimate chapter
of Ant hony Burgess' novel One Hand Clapping and,
characteristically, she indulges in a bit of her home·spun
Bradcaster philosophy.
One Hand Clapping is a funny novel that deals with
an unfunny theme - the preferability of suicide to an
unsatisfactory and unsatisfying life. It's sort of an
extended "to be or not to be" played out with com•c
variations in a middle-class British setting.
The trea tment of philosophical problems in comic
popular-novel style is central to Burgess' technique as a
writer. His novels are paradoxical hybridizat•ons of
experimental and popular styles. With a flick of his
metaphysical wrist, he transforms his spy novel Tremor of
Intent into an "eschatological thriller."
In The Wanting Seed, he transforms the science
fiction futuristic mode into an examination of divine and
human moralities. Both film audiences and "armchair
Intellectuals" can see how neatly his Clockwork Orangee
turns cultural paradox and experimental language
technique into a twenty-first century pop·cultural
grab bag.
Burgess has attained dubious fame an an intellectual
popular novelist but he also has copped the prize for being
our only popular intellectual novelist - and for a good and
basically uncomprom1s1ng wrtter that's quite an
accomplishment .
Burgess is an Y.ncanny writer with a marvellous ear
for verbal nuance. He is a gifted musician (reportedly
engaged in the creation of a musical comedy-opera version
of Ulyseesl, he is a Joyce and S hakespeare scholar, a
linguist and a noted professor ·lecturer He is also the most
astonishingly prolific living movelist - at one time
averaging two or three novels a year.
Why , then, does One Hand Clapping fall on its face?
One obvious reason is that this novel, like Burgess' The Eve
of Saint Venus, is not new ~ It was wntten in 1960,
published in England tn '6 1, and belongs to Bllfgess'
so-called middle penod . As such, the novel is not as

~';.aurlful, handpainri!'tlf•
~

PORCELAIN HEART
BOXES for Va/encme 's

~

dazzingly playful as other later endeavors.
In describing the " normal" life of his aggressively
dumb- h ero ine, Burgess indulges in few of the cryto- and
logo-gra phic diversions that are so enigmatically am using in
his later novels. Burgess generally works on three separate
levels. First comes the material level of plot, and one can
always count on this author for "a good read.'' The seco nd
level is philosopt)ical - here it is the co(lfl ict between life
and death. The th ird level is the level of word-play. In
Tremor of Intent we persue the solution of a cyptogram
through to the end of the book . In Clockwork Orange the
reader's s:owing understanding of the punning Nadset
idiom invented for the book does much to create a
terrifying reality in the place of what might have been
another arch anti-utopian vision .
The skillful manipulation of three levels makes a
Burgess novel an integral whole, but m One Hand Clapping
one of the levels, unfortunately, is missing. Burgess has his
dumb-blonde heroine, Janet, narrating the book. Although
the use of first -person narration in most of his novels Is
deft, in limiting this book's perceptions to those of a
stupid narrator Burgess discovers he cannot fall back on his
own brand of intellectual word·play. Much of the humor
in One Hand Clapping is thus derived from easy laughs
inherent in the use of uneducated English dialect .
Having limited himself to only two levels (surface
plot and philosophical substructure), Burgess soon
becomes surprisingly pretentious. The suicidal impulses
and cynical blandishments of unfulfilled living are not
easily balanced by the silly narrator and her husband ,
Howard.
The "quiz-show scene" or ''riddle interrogation" (by
now a stock piece in a Burgess novel) Is dull because the
author cannot allow his characters more than shallow
glimmerings of wit. Howard, the husband w ith a
photographic brain, appears on a quiz show answering
questions about literature. Normally , the scene would be
super-ingenious. Instead Burgess poses questions as trivial
as those asked on Graduate Record Exams and twice as
boring.
Horrible excursions into extra ~marital sex with a bad
poet only lead to a page or two of bad moralistic poetry at
the end of the novel . The bad poetry Burgess created for
his novel Enderby is elaborately and parodically awful.
Here, half-hearted attempts to satirize T.S. Eliot's The
Wasteland are incongrudus and (more importantly)

Anthony Burgess

Anthony Burgess, whose
no vel, A Clockwork
Orange, thrust him into
the forefront of the
11atio nal lit erary rcene
"hu fallen on h is face"
with his latest novel, One
Hand Clapping.

tedious.
The sound of one hand clapping, according to the
Inscrutable Zen master who poses the question from wtrich
the novel's title is taken, is silence. This belated appearance
in America of Burgess' early novel is an unfortunate
breaking of what should have been a well-kept secret
After the structUral brilliance of MF it i5 disheartening to
encounter a Burgess novel that is only a good read .
·
- M. Silverblau

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�'The Go Between' goes
over like a lead balloon
by Elliot Kri891f
Sp«:rrum Film Critic

One goes, well, I went, to see The
Go-Between because of an old (but fading)
interest in its screen-writer, Harold Pinter.
Pinter known particularly for his plays, has
also written several other screenplays notably for The Accident and The
Pumpkin-Eatt~r - all for Joseph Losey's
direction. Although I have not seen any of
the other Losey-Pinter shows, The
Go-Between may have been enough to
quench my latent desires to do so .
The advertisement for The Go-Between
(which manages to sound hke a lewd
come-on by talking of the film 's
"stgnificance" - it's called both having
your cheese-cake and eating tt) calls the
movte a story of "an end to tnnocence "
The only ended innocence I noticed was
Pinter's.
The geography of time
The movte opens with the portentous
statement that : 'The past 1s a foreign
country ; they do things differently there."
Now, when presented with any geographic
embodiment of time - Never, Never Land ;
That Other Eden ; Land of our Dreams - I
do n't bow, I duck .
It's not that people dtd things
differently, it's that they do things
dtfferently which goads Pinter. We never
do get the sense that the behavior of the
artstocracy has changed significantly since
" the past," and thus we can only conclude
that Pinter has placed today's English
aristocracy in that "foreign oountry,"
perhaps so that he will not suffer anxiety
about his now all too obvious impossible
dream of joining that class.
Ptnter wrote England's first great

working-&lt;:lass oomedies, and thus earned
the title 'The Poet of the London
Underground
(i.e . Subway)." He
introduced the Bunkers to the Royal
Shakespeares. But lately, it's been
goodybye to all that, and he's been writing
plays about the upper crust with the stiff
upper lip, and these plays are just· boring.
The Go-Between is the apotheosis of the
new, successful Harold Pinter - for on the
screen his films create an outrageous
splendor which even his handmaidens at
the Aldgate Theatre wouldn't reproduce on
the stage tor him . Pinter's writing trembles
like a supplicant before such settings, and I
found this embarrassing.
Pinter's emptiness
Judge it as you will on the stage, the
sparstty of Ptnter's style just doesn't
survive on the screen - at least not on thts
screen . Losey can only till up Pinter's voids
with more voids! Close-ups of Julie
Christie, whose face is about as expressive
as a painted balloon . stlver tea cervices,
croquet; cncket .
In the films of, for example. Orson
Welles or Robert Altman the over-lapping
dialogues are a sign that there is more for
them to say than they ever could do in just
the one movie. Here, the gaps in the
dialogue indicate that Pinter IS more bored
than I am. Showing emptiness and being
empty are different. At least on stage,
Pinter's pauses are pregnant - here they
are barren .
The "emptiness" of the aristocratic life
tn
turn -of the ·century
England
ts
presented, but not exposed ; and, at last, I
felt that Pinter and Losey must accept this
life as noble. Certainly, the only alternate
model - a farmer played by Alan Bates is such a complete boor and ninny that we

have to be in accord wtth his neighbors'
deprecatory JUdgments about htm
Pretentious filler
The remainder - two boys spending the
summer together. Guest gets crush on
host's older sister, serves her by running
love-letters tor her and when he discovers
what he is dotng he is both appalled and
intrigued . Somewhat like "Summer of
'02 ." But at least in American summers
people make JOkes and have fun . These two
public school brats are miniature lords

when with their elders and when left alone
behave like Mouseketeers sorely in need of
frontal lobotomy Include children among
the many things this movie does not
understand.
I would have seriously resented the
thoroughly awkward flash -forwards , had I
felt that there was anything for them to
mar . Likewise tor the crap about black
magic. Losey and Pinter must think that
these trappings make the1r movie deep and
meaningful. The problem is - they make
the movie longer.

An Open Experimental th,eater

ConSidered by many to be the most experimental
theater ensemble now in eKistence, The Open Theater has
relentless in their perception of
always been
eKperiment.ation and ttte meaning of group performance.
Their past work has included America Hurrah/, The
Serpent and Beckett's Endgame . These productions are
now landmarks in the history of ttte off Off-Broadway
theater movement.
The Open Theater will appear in the Harriman
Library Studio Theater to perform two of their new
works. The first, Terminal , wilt be performed on Tuesday ,
Feb. 8. The second, The Mutlltion Show, a
work-in-progress, will be performed on Wednesday, Feb. 9 .
Performances begin at 8:30p.m. Student tickets cost
$1 .00 and can be purchased at the Norton Hall Box Office.
Open workshops and draft counselling services which will
be conducted by the group will be announced.

�...

RECORDS
Boz Sceo91 &amp; Band (Colvmbla C30796J

In this ai!Jum, released last November,
Scaggs sets out to prove he can blow Doc
Severenson and the Los Vegas All-Star
Brass rrght off the Sands bandstand
Unfortunately, he's successful, and though
Boz and hes seven bandsmen really cook
through all nene cuts, the mustc becomes
repetitious, the solos unmspered and the
Iynes embarrassrngly banal Vet they
manage four gems and make Bor Scaggs &amp;
Band a venyl primer en powerful, rave up
big band rock
The album's a let-down for Scaggs fans
because the group's preveous Columbia
release - Moments - took Boz' ferocious
production numbers to a conv1ncing end.
Moments is a brtlliant mrx of Hollywood
and driveng rhythm and blues, an
overlooked lp which marked the debut of
Boz' new band and h1s reun1f1cation weth
producer Glyn Johns In it, the group
steamed
through a potpourri
of
-\,rchestrated
ballads,
movre
themes,
up-tempo shouters and full -blown blues,
not even stopping to take a breath.
Scaggs· ferst solo album - Bor Scllfi!J$ on
Atlantic
shares with Moments a (eerce
drive and v1tality, but was deeper into an
R&amp;B flavor Recorded at Muscle Shoals
and featuring not only the meanest studeo
musecians around. but rock hall of famers
like Duane Allman, Tracy Nelson. Marlin
and Jeannee Green and (co-producer) Jann
Wenner. Boz SC~~ggs 1s one of the fenest
R&amp;B d1sc.s ever cut and a rock classec It
totals 47 menutes. and every second Bo l
and the whole stud1o get so funky you can
smell 11 . For sheer rrllensity and soul, the
album es unequaled
Earl1er en ht~ career, as a member of the
Steve Meller Band Bol wrote numbers like
"Mv Baby 's Cdllen' Me Home" and
' Deme-a D.mce Roman c~ ... whtch showed
an already developed mastery of the R&amp;B
form Comeng o ff hes solo album weth a
new band and on a new label, Boz
developed a style whech culminates 1n Bor
Scaggs &amp; Band Though I strongly feel he's
gone the wrong way , 1t remarns that what
Suggs does now 1s still 2000 hghl years
ahead of any present day get 1t·on groups.
" Up to You" is the best cut on the
album I Boz wrote CJII the songs), a rolling
country·ltke rocker written wtth Clive
Arrowsmith Over flavorful backing vocals
and a can't farl rhythm sect1on, Boz tells us
how h1s lady gave h1m the shaft, then
shoots tn to a guitar solo whech sounds like
a cross product of Roy N1chols and Steve
Cropper It's a un1que cut en 1ts not1ceable
count•Y flavor and non use of the horns.
the kmd o f thing ht! should do more of
In contrast
the precedmg song,
"Runnin' Blue," written with trombonest
Patnck O'Hara, features a big brassy intro
and fmger·popping beat of the Tony
Bennett variety It even has a cascading
brass glissando mto a pair of n1hy solos by
Boz and saxman Mel Marten Toppeng 11 off
are Iynes like "Got no holes en my
pockets/Got no holes tn my shoes/ Don't
know if I m leavin' Dee tro1t/ Or com•n'
1nto Baton Rougue.'' Yet the IJiece IS so
slick . 1t's hard to put down, as long as the
effect is undiluted by other sim1lar
numbers.
There is the weakness of the album
"Runnin' Blue" heads a list of product1on
numbers which are its unfortunate cousins
"Monkey Time," written With Arrowsmith ,
"Why Why." wr1tten w1th Tim Daves and
" Nothmg Well Take Your Place" all exh1b1t
a dtstressing s1melartty first l.hete's a
crescendoeng tntro, then Boz reals off some
trite blues lmes and the band moves ento a
nice 1 2 beat underneath a rotatmg guetae .
sax , organ or (yecchhh) flute solo. There's
-,no deny1ng that each song is superbly anct
professionally done, and that's about all
that saves them A good one word
description is boring.
That leaves two cuts - " You're So
Good" and " Flames of Love" - both of
which acheeve the neat sort of groove
Scaggs got on hes ferst two lp's. "You're So
Good" opens with soft understatement,
follows Boz' comfortable vocal, then really
percolates while Boz hums. The band's
keen dynamic sense, evident throughout
the record, offsets the vocal line perfectly .

I I "You're So Good" toasts the
satisfying and relaxing post-climax period,
the "Flames of Love" is aroused and eager.
The opening bars featu re satanic flai lings
by Chepito Areas and Mike Carabello on
congas and timbales and the supercharged
drumm1ng of George Rains. Boz talks
about the troubles his main squeeze has
been geveng him while giving his guitar a
work-over. Exceted by the orgasmic moans
and wailtngs of Rita Coolidge and Dorothy
Mornson and w1th the rest of the band
raceng the percusseon, he takes off . battling
Hymm Joachim Young on organ untel the
whole thing explodes to a climax .
That takes care of the songs. but
neglects the really superb work of the band
as a band Besides O'Hara, Martin, Rams
and Young. there's Doug Semril on guitar
and p1ano, Daved Brown on bass and Ton
Poole on trumpet and fleugelhorn . They're
all fantastic musicians and nval Booker T .
and the M.G .'s for tightness.
Boz Scilggs &amp; Band IS a good album , far
bener than most. but tor Boz. et's a
miSstep, a stylistiC freeze that we can only
hope 1S temporary . In the meanteme. get
his first two lp's and listen to some good
mUSIC
Jim McFttrson

Paul S1mon (Columbia KC 30750)
Geueny en to Paul S1mon ·s world 1sn't a'
e&lt;Jsy as 11 used to be Gone are the days of
glor1ous
folk rock. when
he "nd
Hollywood hopeful Art Garfunkel sang up
a storm, sold m1llions of records, and
thrtlled audiences from coast to coast with
the11 choir like vocals, and Innocuous
liberal lyrics. Thetr songs were the kind
that made Middle Am'&amp;nca roll over in bed
and take a look at themselves. at least long
enough to dec1de that they should flip
Bookends over and yes, S&amp;G are qu1te
darling.
Of course. after a wh1le even Paul and
Art couldn't take all the slush Remember
that they started en Queens as Tom and
Jerry. a not too wbtle •Uempt to become
a sixties Everly Brothers re·rncarnat 1on .
But w1th "Till I Kissed Her" and "Cathy's
Clown" memories to even the youngest
baby drivers, they had to seek their
fortunes elsewhere en the musecal world .
And so. the folk duo of S1mon and
Garfunkel were born But the folk revival
was waneng, and you couldn't get away
w1th cutesy arrangements of Ed McCrudy's
" last N1gh1 I had the Strangest Dream" if
you wanted to be rech and famous
someday
The begenn1ng of the1r star r&gt;eriod was
"Sounds of Selence." The toke was on
them, seeing as how Columb1a took the
a&lt;:oustic vers1on from the Wednesday
Morning album. dubbed 1n some rock and
ro ll background noise, and released it,
without them knowing, as a single.
Garfunkel was studying at Columbea and
S1mon was en England when the song rose
to the numbef one slot fhey deceded to
do a whole album of "folk rock " and that
was 11
Now Paul Simon is not the most prolific
wnter in the land He definitely surpassed
hemself with Parsley, S8(16. Rosemary and
ThymtJ and its been downhill ever since . In
the mtddle of all this came The Graduate,
wh1ch propelled them even lurther into
stardom but was a wre s1gn of demese. The
Bookends record had one s1de of old
sengles, and two verstons of the ''Bookends
Theme," wh1cl1 not o nly gave them two
less mtnutes to f1ll up but also spawned
countless bonng theones o f what little Paul
was w11ttng about.
It was clear that thetr days were
numbered . Br~dge - Over Troubled Water
was probably the last S&amp;G lp, and there are
moments, but not enough of them "The
Bo~ter" remains, to me, as the only truly
great "song" on th~ whole record But
things get difficult rtght around here. 1
remember in an intervtew around this time
where S•mon states that he wanted to write
pleasant songs. not particularly Important
or even good songs, JUst " pop" songs. And
recent listenings to the frbubled Water
album reveal a lot of really good pop songs

- "Baby Driver, Only Living Boy in New back to Evesham from time to time and we
York," and "EI Condor Pasa," with those still alugh . And this album es gonna surprise
hideous flutes that seem to never leave You as much as it surprised me."
your head after you've heard it.
Jim Capaldi
The b1g tep-off to the whole record rs
the "live" vers1on of " Bye Bye Love" with
Luther Grosvenor is a 23-year old
clapping and screaming drowning out the Englishman who became a professional
whole song. Their big chance to show musician as soon as he left school. He ferst
where they really were at all this time. and 10ined a band called Deep Feelmg, in which
he played guitar alongs1de Traffic
no one would listen.
So finally . here is Paul Simon's ferst solo founder-member, Jem Capaldi When Jim
album. and, though it isn't too good, 11 left to join Traffic, he and Steve Winwood
certainly 1s "pop ." Things get off to a recommended Luther to Mike Harrison,
Muzaky start with "Mother and Child then leader of The Vips. Luther joined
Reuneon." for which he went to Kengston them and. stayed on when they eventually
to get just the 11ght atmosphere. It sounds became Spooky Tooth . Up until last year.
awful the first time, with nonsense lyrics when the band split up, Luther was an
and bonng music, but after a while , et seeps mtegral and potent part of th e sound that
was Spooky Tooth and became one of the
1nto your consciousness.
It's a good choice for a single (it is) but best mus1c1ans in England. He also
not halt as good as "Me and Julio Down by appeared in the flick entitled Groupies
the Schoolyar&lt;t" a great pop song with whech many of you may have seen.
lines ltke "Goodbye to Rosie the queen of
The name of Luther Grosvenor's new
Corona" and "when the radical pnes1 come album es Under Open Skies. The album is a
to get me released/ we was all on the cover masterpiece as far as double-trackmg and
of Newsweek." Only Paul's whistling solo mixing 1s concerned. Luther sings all the
holds the song back
vocals and plays lead, acoustic, slide and
All of the songs have lousy Iynes and bass guitars. Mike Kellie plays drums and
the topics are absurd . "Congratulations" 1s John H&lt;1wken is featured on the piano.
about divorce; "Papa Hobo'' is about
The style of Luther's musec and sound es
h1tchh1krng
in
Detroit
("Detroit. very close to that of the origmal Tratfec.
Detroit/ Got a hell of a hockey team" big The variations that do exest, however, are
joke of the record; the Red Wings fmished in luther's lead guetar work suoh as en
last a year ago). "Paranoia Blues" fails " Ride On." The cut starts out slowly w1th
where "Acute Schezophrenea Parano1a M1le Kelfle softly tappeng h1s cymbals and
Blues" by the Kinks succeeds Semon IS no John Hawken play1ng a typ1cal soft p1ano
Ray Dav1es. In "Arm1stice Day," the progression. Then Meke opens up on h1s
narrator IS stuck for days try1ng to see h1s drums as does Hawken on hes p1ano
Congressman ( "Oh Congresswoman won't Luther then comes en w1th a s1rong lead.
you tell that Congressman/ l've waited such
Right way to begin it
a long ttme. I've about wa1ted all I can .")
R1ght way to begm
"lmcoln Duncan" could have been a
I'm JUst a lonely sinner ac heart
good song but isn't The first verse, setting
R1de on in my will
up our hero Mr Duncan in a cheap motel
Been around to the northeast stde
Never Tlmbucktoo
w1th a noesy couple balling in the next
Heading down to the south11rn gate
room es the best single verse on the whole
Never let me gttt through
record, but Duncan's story, about hooktng
up w1th a gerl who's a Jesus Freak, ts
bonng And those awful flutes, straeght
Luther's voice IS very s1m1lar to Steve
from "AI Condor Pasa" are back again Winwood's and blends en well w1th the
They both further rutn the 50ng and also bac k~round harmonies. H1s voice es li\1411}'
make it hard to fofget. During each flute and will ascend when he w1shes to get the
passage, Simon sings " I know, I know, I g1st of his song across. Hes acoustec work is
very similar to Steve Winwood's too, but ts
a bit more leveller as tn " Here Comes The
Oueen,"
In "When I Met You" Luther plays a
heavy lead. He es quite fast at t1mes and my
head gets lost in h1s leads. I really don't
thenk such fast leads are necessary and they
only confuse the listener Luther should
listen to the confusing Alvin Lee and learn
that a super fast ·nff does not cont1 ibute to
a good style and a desereable effect
The back up band is a good one and the
sound that emanates from the lp is very
well balanced, If th e drums or piano should
tet loud it's for a good reason. ''Wa1tlng" 1s
a soft cut as Luther's hand gu1des his pick
with an amazmg delicacy The old Tratf1c
sound 15 Quite prevalent here, too, and the
sweet background harmonies adds a lot to
know." Ha knows we've heard those flutes thts cut. John Hawken's p1ano work IS
before and he knows he's caught us aga1n
never choppy and contnbutes to the soh ,
Crafty young man, that Paul Simon.
flowing music.
Hes guitar playing, often hidden on
After Luther spht from Spooky Tooth
pmvious albums, is up front and that's he spent a summer in Spain He returned to
good. smce he's a truly g1fted musecian
England with a Swedish w1fe, Githa, and a
There's great acoustic work on ''Armistice batch of new songs which appears on the
Day, Peace Like a River," and "Everything album . Githa helped Luther write the lyrics
Put Together Falls Apart." And, oh yes, a for a few cuts. One of the songs she helped
minute long instrumental With violinist to wnte is "Under Open Skies." The songs
Stephane Grappelli called "Hobo's Blues" tell of an honest and free world that can
that 's really refresheng. Recorded in Pans, exest at times unde~ an open sky according
France. All the way to France for one to Luther.
minute See what you can get away w1th
Under open sloes there are no ltes
when you're a star7
I feel so free like the blue sea
- Billy Altman
I always want to be frtNJ the people and
me
Who sa1ds it's right who satds it's wrong
Can I stay forell8r my friend and me
Under Open Skies Luther Grosvenor
rogerher
(Island SMAS--9312)
Everything is siiMce and a sound is nor
too long.
" Luther and me walking through
Evesham late at night with an acousttc
Under Open Skies es a good album and
guitar laughing 'this IS my boy, no
the musical ability of Lutfler Grosvenor
enterviews please,• me playing the part of a comes across convincingly If you like the
manager talk eng about his boy. Luther was sound of the original Traffic group as much
about 16 and I was about 18. We laughed as I did then you Clf'e sure to like Luther's
and played our way th rough lou of
new album .
different setuations and changes. We still go
- ShtJidon Ksmit!niecki

�,

O'ur Weekly Reader

work in d irect word-by-word translation
and,· though Merwin seems to be the best in
producing fine English rhyt hm s with Neruda's
words, they all do their job more than adequately.
The earlier poems. those written prior to 1937,
are quiet echoes of the French symbolist tradition.
The elements of his imagery meld here in surreal
configurations.
Neruda's word seems to 8\/0ive into more
intimate and more human realms. "Cabalero Solo "
("l one Genttemen"), for example, wri tten in 1933,
exhibits much less o f the surreal imagery that was so
evident earlier. It is a sensual, sexual exploration of
the human life. Neruda tees around him :
The crisp sound o f stockings C8rfJSS8S.

T•m; trenslated by A n thony Ke"igan, W.S. Merwin,
Alastsir Reid and Nathaniel Tarn. Delecorte Press,

$ 12.50

Although he is considered the
greatest living poet in the Spanish
language, Pablo Neruda has just
had his poetry collected into a
comprehensive English volume.

Pablo Neruda

•

COU.UT'WIOI IHIATIH II( -

t:::j

GRANADA

It is not often that a poet can give voice and
breath to the whole organic soul of his nation, his
continent o r h is roots. Blake sung of Albion and
England and succeeded in embodying this living
geographic unity. Whitman sung of America and
found his energy in the sp~ri t of the land . Pablo
Neruda has cap tured the soul of his Chile and its
presence is felt in fNery poem of this volume.
Neruda's vision (like Blake's and Whitman's) has
been called "ham peri ng, gross, mystical and nude."
His art spans the historical and political epic of hts
continent, not ham pered by any programmatic line
of h is political ph ilosophy, but tactile and organic
and filled w ith h is land . He deals with the very flesh
of the life around him .
Born in July, 1904 , the son of a railroad worker,
Neruda attended local schools and began a life-tong
affinity w1th The Chilean Communist Party m his
early you th. He published h1s ftrst volume of poetry
at 17. and has s1nce published one book practically
fNery year. He has been translated into at least
twenty four languages. He was awarded the World
Peace Prize in Moscow, 1950 and the Stalin Prize in
1953, and won the Nobel Prize for l1terature.
Pablo Neruda enjoys only a small foJiow1ng in
the United States, and fNen though he is considered
to be the greatest living poet 1n th e Spanish language,
this volume is the first comprehens1ve volume of h1s
poetry to be translated to Enghsh The book spans
h1s ent~re career ( 1924 1967) and although the
Engltsh versions can nfNer do JUStice to Neruda's
rollmg, musical Span1sh, the translators of th1s
b1lmgual volume do thetr JOb faithfully and honestly.
occasiOnally succeeding splendtdly
The common "o" and "e" sounds '" Spantsh
lend a beautiful round, sonorous Quality to the
verse . one does not fNen need to know the language
to hear the intensity and beauty of the line :

Women 's breasts shining like

I have to remember everyrhlng.

Keep trsck o f the blades of grass, the threads
of the untidy event, and
the houses, inch by inch
The long lines of th e railway
The teKtured face of pain
(TIWls by A . Rttid)

These lines, from an early poem translated as
"leaning into the Afternoons" are fme '" the W.S
Merwm·~ English translatiOn as well, suffering only
1n Engl!shed word order
The night gallops on tts shadowy mare
shedding blue tBssels over tile land.

of my
H.t frtiiiKhl .......

ey8S~

In 1937, Neruda published "Canto General"
denouncing all of his previous poetry and declaring
himself "a poet of the people.'' Neruda wrote to
America: " Poverty and tyranny impinge on us much
more closely than they do with you We can't afford
the luxury o f being uncommit ted." T he "Canto
General" is the epic of his continent, including
Columbus and the Conquistadors. The work rivals
Wtlliam Carlos Williams' In The American Grain in
ItS sense of the life and the real presence of history.
After this work, Neruda seems to concentrate
on trimmmg all t he unessentlals from his work. His
"Odas Elementales (19541" (E lemental Odes) are
extremely spare works, the lines often trimmed
down to one word. He distrusts abstractions; the
"Odes" are physical ent itles.
Algena wrote of Neruda's later works, " He does
not describe, he glorifies " These most recent poems
dre perhaps the most powerful of the volume He
fmds deta1ls and catalogues them. each fact adding
1ts presence to the overall effect of the poem. His
poems become stmpler here, yet these Simpler verses
express more and more complicated truths that
become 1mmediately real rather than philosophical
and atry . In a poem wmten tn 1964, ''La Memoria"
(Memory) he writes .

Galopa Ia noche en su yegua sombna
desparramando espigas azules sobre el campo.

\

I

~n tially

Pablo Nerud a: Selec ttld PCHNns, edi ted by Nathani el

Here " the night" rs a tame opening when compared
to the grabbing power of the first Spanish word
"galopa."
The translators throughout the volume

Th1s 1s the kind of dtrect s~ficity that m&lt;!l"k$
the later works and tends an earthy strength to all
that Neruda writes in the lattm half of the volum e.
Pablo Neruda is too real to remain unknown tn
America.
- .lamtJf Paul

WKIW £ THEATRE SERifS I'RlSEHTS

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YEAR'S BEST!"
,. ,...
"liST BO!" _..,.......

..........
..

.. 1111 Pta•lnllr .., ..~.
~~.

THE BEST MOVIE THIS YEAR BY FARI
A •umpluou\ emot1onolly chorged

.. ...

,.., ,

--ll..... c.tr.

'"'"'.,. «&lt;&gt;01. rite N - y.,..,

e•penencel"

NO W
S H O WIN G

llllnlllll
filii II

.,....,.

•

TICKETS A VAI LADLE AT NORTON TICKET OFFICE

thl

~:anfarmist
. - · ~ERNARDO 8ERTO lUCCI

lRJIO
NO W SHOWING !

.-

BOVll "ARO MAL&lt;

·~.

I

.,..,.,,

North Park
ICM MtiTI&amp;.

�John McLaughlin bowls them
over playing that jazzy rock

..

J

-

Guitarist
extraordi11aire

,

)
Jose Feliciano comes to Kleinhans
Music Hall this Sltnday night for a
7:30 performance. Feliciano rose
to national attention with his
recording of "light My Fire" a
few years ago. Since then, the
blind songster has awed and
captivated audiences around the
world with his uncanny mastery
of guitar. He has twice appeared
as featured soloist with symphony
orchestras.

John
Mclaughlin got a come from the electric guitar and
standing ovation. 1t seems that violin,
produ cing
powerful
whenever these jazz guys try to currents which
merge with
play rock, they make shambles of steadying counter-currents from
the resident rock artists who are the piano and bass, with the
trapped in their own electrical drums all over the middle ground.
decadent anesthes1a and storm
Hooteroll was the other band,
past all conventional boundaries. headed by Howard Wales and
Time and time agatn It's happened featuring Jerry Garcia . The biggest
where someone wtll step tn and question when they came on was
revolutionize the stagnattng style how 1n the world are they gotng
of playing. The Tony Withams to foltow Mclaughlin? The
Lifetime d1d it wtth Emergency, answer was reasonably stmple and
Albert Ayler did tt With New logical : they couldn't.
Watching the · bass player
Grass, and look what happened
when Miles Davis got mto it. Miles (named Jelly1oll) do his most
At The Fillmore is levels above nauseat1ng
best
to attract
stgnalltng for the
and beyond anythtng that can atten tion
even be compared to 1t And don't spotliyht when he d1d his solos,
say bullsh1t tf you haven't ltstened screamtng, "Iemme hear ya say
to 1t Smoke, turn tt up loud and yeah! A little louder YEAH!!" Howard Wales typtcally pathettc
ltsten.
Mustc ltke that does somethtng on the keyboards he tust can't
to you, and so does Mclaughlin's. fathom, and a drummer who was
Energy nstng ltke ttdal waves and like a fagot compared to Billy
crashing, etc .. etc.. peaks of Cobham, made me yawn more
excitement,
etc.. tnterplay, than it made me taught.
innovation, perfection, etc., etc .
Routine and uninvolved
you had to be there, that's all
Garcia alone saved the band
The whole show seemed ltke
one long song that had everything from total failure He played
tn 1L The baod would stop great, but there was a lot working
occastonally so that Mclaughlin agamst h1m . He dtdn't fit tn, there
could grasp the mtke wtth both was absolutely no one backing
hands. almost caress tt, and him up and anyway, he wasn 't
breathe a few barely coherent domg anythmg new at all He tust
words about nothing out to no did his old stuff very well . It all
one tn particular. and then p1ck seemed
so
routine
and
up playing where they left off
unemot1onal , and those fake
bursts of energy from Jellyroll
They were all totally spaced
were obviously tust for show.
Whtle
Mclaughltn 's mustc
Energy poles
The way the group 1S set up 1s screamed I'm alive, Hooteroll was
that there ts a h1gh energy pole of shoutmg Look1t mel Ah'm
It's an
tnteresting
Mclaughlin and Jerry Goodman, p/aym'f
vtolinist, and a low energy pole of compar1son
The Mahavtshnu Orchestra is
Jan Hammer, keyboards, and R1ck
latrd. bassist B1lly Cobhams, the the rejuvenation of acid rock ,
drummer. mediates between the which has been stagnatmg for the
two poles. The hard drivtng forces past year or two. This music is as
CANISIUS COLLEGE and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present:

"YES" J. GEILS

and
Sunday, February 20th at 8 P.M.
fR]~3

To-night at
7:20&amp; 9 :30

3rd BIG WEEK ! ! !

AMHERST
UOO MAIM

COLOR
Sat. 'tal 2 p.m .
AIJ seats S 1.00

IJ4-71SS

KlEINHANS MUSIC HALL
All S.OII ltoNt'fod Mo l,. Floor $$.~ • $4.~ lolco"y $4 ~ • $4 00
Tidlota 010 aalo 100w 01 I11Holo fo•tivol Tic~et Offico, Statler Hilton
La*4y (moll ......, occoptecl with tlo"'t&gt;od tolf-oddrot..., e~Welopo );
Coniaiua Studo101 Union ; U. I . Horton Hall ; Stale CoJioe• flcltol Off lco:
fatlt Yidlob, Hoo~lo Pia. ., Hloeara FaNa.

Denny's

DOG
HOUSE

Noone •
canrestst
our chicken wings.
They're tht- Woodf;hcd's newcl'lt taste sensation,
mild, medium or hot. Swi rl'e m around in tangy
hl uc t'heese sauce, and finish the t•xperience w1 th
nispy celery s ticks. Non-stop peanuts are on
the house, and spirits are 50r after :J P. M. The
Woodshed . . where the kill'hen's always opt&gt;n
and the musit''s always on. Wt·'re right next to
Thl' Packet 1nn in North Tonawanda, just over
the Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngma nn. The Woodshed'~
open from 11 : :JO A.M. every day except Sunday

-rttE Wlltl~SHE~

2 Eggs
(any style)

Home Fnes
Bacon
Toast &amp; Jelly
Coffee or Tea

wildly exciting as the old Grateful
Dead stuff, it's got more depth
and talent and it's fresh . It 's
happening now and is pushing
further ahead but . . .
There is more to a concert than
that, and it wtll involve theories in
aesthetics a nd commercialism to
set it straight. There are pure art
forms and there is art po1soned by
the stench of American business.
John
Mclaughlin
ts
yet
another pure art form destined to
be poisoned and this time the
blame falls on Columbta Records.
So far. his music is honest, but
still there were those forces
wor k1ng against artistic purity in
the name of money
Break1ng the unity
The Mahavishnu Orchestra ts
made up of five men who together
form a sort of collective. It ts
trom this union that the essence
of their music comes . Yet
commercial interests work to split
them up. Like spotlighting. All
mght the spotltght was directed at
only one person at a time. never
at the whole group. In tht!
spotlight wtth thousands of
people all looktng at you, tt 's
1mposstble to be unaware of the
egottsttcal stwatton This puts a
lot of pressu1, on the per for mer
who feels that he's got to do
something more and suddenly the
well -balanced untor1 1s off-balance
Commerctal destructivism, or
destructtve commercialism, tak"es
another form en limiting the
amount of time for each set. AmJ
why dtd there have to be that
dehumaniztng crush outside the
theater to get the closest seats J
Obviously. because there are not
enough seats for everybody to be
close. This is because there was
only one show So why are there
one·night stands?
To begin wtth, rock musician5
charge enormous s11ms of money
for thetr art (Steve Stills is getting
$20,000 for one show up here
truly dtsgusttng) . whtch means
that the theater must be full m
order to mak • enough money to
pay them Th1'i 1s hard to do lo t
several ntghts m a ro w But wen
more
tmpo• 1a nt, commerceal
arttsts don 't lr.tve enough matenal
to go for tour or five ntghts. The
newly
eeformed
Traff1c
(Barleycorn) was born tn May and
was dead by October because they
kept doing the same stuH over
and over aga1n
Mustc tS the expresston of
human essence, of the soul Ancf
commerceal arttsts have sold thetr
souls. They have the emotional
depth of a hundred thousand
dollar bill That is why most rock
bends IOUnd SO stale, SG boring, SO
unimaginative. The spirit is gone,
and .with tt, the ability to create.
Great artists ltke Jerry (growl
growl) Garcta now look end sound
detached They still play great,
but there's nothing behind tt and
nothing new
The Atrplane's
"Volunteers"
sounds ltke a
crumpltng dollar btll when they
play tt today And people ltke
Jellyroll
(Just
ltke Dav•d
Clayton Thomas). come off ltke
phony plastic shitheads. For these
people the art ts no longer fresh : •t
can't b~ ren~wed, and only by
hyptng tt wtth cocaine es et
tolerable even for the performers.
John Mclaughlin is very mut.h
alive and thrivmg nght now. but
the fact that no one has ever
survived the commercial onstaugh1
casts a pretty dtm shadow on hts
future . You'd better get into htm
now, because soon tt wtll be too
late

- Norman Sa/ant

�1.4ttsf 111 fl1e
by f • 'e E. Levine
Spen•
af{ Wnt('r
There cxtsl$ 1
c tty of Bulfalu , as
well us all .:itt• ~
daily ac ttvuy wh1ch
many 11nd cruc1al to their mode of life. A
procedure 1n whtch people come to depend
on nothing more than the mtlk of human
kmdness to destine them from one
de~tmation In another . Whether the rea~un
he a'-adermc. ur economic, nr JIISl plam
personal . each day P&lt;'Ople place the rmclvc~
on th l' corners of urban Amenca. al the
111er..y ol other urban American~, and cad1
tlay in the process. people Indulge 111 an
acttvlly that has as rts lesson , J powerful
111 e~~uge Just wha t m the ht·ll IS the
twentieth ceutury man all about''
A' you've already guessed. the .tdlvtly
" hll\hhik1ng. The answers awa11 every
h1tdth1J..cr. every day ol h1~ luldllukmg
hie . J l&gt; \Cason~ change to u thet \CJ\1111\, J l&gt;
t1·mpcrallncs nse and fall , a' th~:y \Iafier
tht'lll\Cive' !tum o ne u&gt;1ner of tht• nly to
the othct. ltkc a large •thtrusiV l'UHI,ptra ~oy
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111 1w11 th;tt o l tl1c l11tdter and that nl the
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of them, altho ugh angry and despondent ,
seem to leave their troubles outside the
cars they gratefuiJy entertain . The
lutchhiker never seems 10 ask a favor
beyond that of "Guing my way."

A pas.~ive people
Among themsclve~ a.-. all minonty
groups; there 1s a certam cultural
awareness. An 1dcnt1fkatlo n of meam and
methods,
t1mes and
troubles. The
hll l hhiker 1111derstandl&gt; the pltght of Ius
companions lie understands; that take
somebod y's ca r away. and just what are
they, another h1h:hhiker or bus rider. like
the rest o f us There even IS .:omtng to
exist, what IS bemg rc lerred to a~ " The
lirtchhikers Rules ol FtU.JUetlc •· A \et nt
re:.pected rule\ and prm.:cdure, . that eadt
participant by the vcr} fall th;tl he
parttcipatc~ . teeb uhltgatcd and utdcrd
wants h• lnllo~
1 hey arc 11cvct
demantl111g. htl t hc" arc 1&lt;111 p.l"lvl.' a
people lor that But 011 J lollt'ly ..:tHilel n f
Main St. o n ;1 cold Wl1ll~t nt~ht . the l.tlt:r
:J IIIVaJ ll:ttllr:tJiy llll':t\11111\ htlll\cJI &lt;ll

P"'''"'"

ltt.'"ell tn the IIIOil' dt•utt't c
wattmg the11 turn . piCJ\Jilll) autl patt•t:lltly ,
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that at.lvanlJI/.t' on thc11 htlllhl'T' 111
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lcrnal c holdtn)! 11p th.tl etl'tnal thumh !111
t l11• \akc u l not on Iy hn,,•ll . hut 1wo mak
uHtnterpatts who hJve IH'I.'II \Cl'HI)! h.111l
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------------------------~

Grand Ovening
MIKE'S GIANT
f::TIBMARINE
t·

EBRUJ\RY 7

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c.ol)&lt;,
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WII~IJio•\u\

V''

WE ALSO HAVE Coffee Hot Chocolate
in the UNIVERSITY PLAZA

.J fWI ~ H

tJ
Hut d

\111\W Ill \'III II \. JI til tJo11 '1 ltJ..1&gt; 10 gel
lht· uplt11hl&lt;'ll 11f vo11 r '\t'JI ~ wet , or JUSt
t.lnn ' r ltkl' to ''I'''" lhl.' tl•tt•t long enough 111
;~llow tlt1.· ·o ld .111 111 l'llll'J I ptl y you Fo t
tho"' 111 you wl111 \.'.1 11.1 1111hand yuu t
I 11d.t\ "' , ,,lntd.l\ 111~ht d.tlt•long t'tlllUglt
l11 ftl•fp \llllll'lllll' IIIII Ill\ ·llltl'll'\l faugiJtt.'l
J.!ll\'\ IIIII II \1111 I PI tit"'~ th.tl Jlrlllldly
'"'·" I "'"''"''' ''" l.. t'l\ '"' theu rear
wutd\h lt.•ld Jlld lhl'll 111'1 J' proudlv pass
tht'll kllt•w ~ot udt.'lll\ .11\d icllm\ pt•oplt• hy
tlpofl tllll\l' \ Ill f..t.'l\ , you ,Il l' IIIII wftJI lhl'
llnn ct~tl\ \l. lllth hH And fot thll\t.' 11fyou
th,tl .Ill' lll't 1:11 1.•tl10 JttVl' Ill \ee pl'ttple Ill
h.11tl lll lll'' tlll'h' " uotl11ng ll'ft iu ttlY
IJ,·,IIt "' '·" .th11111 V\lll llh' K11 1k~ \a&gt; that
tl11· '"'''lll rl'I J. 1l'lltlll)' n1.111 "Jllltrtt·J ~tlh
" tth.' ..... lttt•tpht&lt;'lll.l l'.tr.llhiiJ Dl\t.\1\C. I
til II I
t•l.illl 11)!1\ \t'ill\ftllC"

vt:

ht.. l

w,ntt: c1t

··ve

M

Mt~

v wu,cJ\
Jttt-H' ..... 411

jJhun(l

875 426!:.

•1 I

ex:hibition
an1d sale
original
grtaphics

I
l

GRADS

.11 11 ):1 •od IIIUncy
l'.lll •'I I IJ II t IIlli'
wflJI,• 1111 ndtng ~honl
1. rll

I

'\111{

\ILVER

853~754
I

'

)

SUNY at BUFFALO
CENTFI=~ I OUNGE
NORTON HALL
3435 Main St.
Monday, Feb . 7 11 a.m . - 9 p.m .
.~

1'0~1

BIBLE

purchases may be charged

Soda Pe p

I or '"""' nt you tl!JI Jll't &lt;lon'l hke tn
!(1'1

l m """" lr nm th"

Ut'h''\lttf1

tldYI' nt.•ltl•v•

v~ IH! ItevE• tort IIU~ INt i iiiHI\, h•tW

\ t1dll

BUY 1 REGULAR MIKE'S SUB
AND
GET ONE

FREE

w,,.,

-Bible Truth- ,.... Hear. 0 Israel-

8 &amp; 9th

SANDWICHES

wt:ll
11 yo tt :nc :Jiratd to live .
ulrattl "' ltll' tht•tt '' " 1.. vnurself 111 your
h iiii\C ..... 1 tH'Vt'l ll\I. J\11111 Yttt ll ~dl on tl1"
wotld . 11 1 'umc 111 '"want ,Jl~\peratcly 111
lllllllll'
\ ml 11 \1111 1lt• pJtlJke m tht ~
~~~tltl ""'" Jc.dtll' lh&lt;tl \ollll don't t~olatc
\11111\t'll '"'"''I ,1 't'.t ,,f lnllllull\ o t people
th.tl Ill ""~~'
111 another need each
ltlhl.'l

BASKIN. ROUAULT. DAUMIER AND MANY OTHERS
ARRANGED BY FERDINAND ROTEN GALLERIES
BALTIMOR£. MARYLAND

TERMPA PERS
UNLIMITED
'WF G I v E AEs u ll s..
295 ~UNTINGTO t­
BOSTON , MAS S. 02115
(611 ) 267 ·3000

·Fnday , 4 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�Sharp-shooting. cadets triumph
over stubborn basketball Bulls
by Barry Rubin
SpoTTS Editor

West Point , N Y - During the past few weeks
the Bulls have found many new ways to lose to their
maJOr opponents. Wednesday night , the'BuUs found
another way, losing to Army and a man named
Sherwin The Cadets triumphed, 80 74. despite a
stubborn Buffalo squad which refused to give in
Bob Sherwtn , Army 's 5 - 11 JUmor guard , talhed a
career high 37 po1nts. Sherwm's t o tal was far above
the 21 7 average for the Anaheun , CaiJfo rma native.
The Bulb Jumped ahead, 4 0. but soon found
themselves tratHng 22 10 as Army combaned hot
shooting, an aggressive zone defense and a tough fast
break to take the lead llo wever, the Bulls were to
come back as their accurate shoottng and deep
penetration consistently nddled Army 's vaunted
defense. Under new coach Dan Daugherty , formerly
with VaJlanova, the Black Kntghts of the lludson
utt.lt7ed many pre~ure and 1one ta cl acs Ho wever ,
Buffalo refused to fold

_,

Shot-for-shot
led by an excllrng first half perfo rmance by
Junior pivot Curt Blackmore . th e Bulls were able t o
match Army shot for shot and trailed , 42 31 at the
half Black more's 13 points and 9 rebounds led th4;
Bul.ls an the half wttiJe Greg Laker aided the attack
with 8 pomts. Laker has moved in as first forward

I

WmninJ days

leers at Oswego
Winning days are happy days,
and so the hockey Bulls • shaU
hopefully
prance onward to
Oswego where they ~hould again
come away smtling, leaving the
oppositton With n01tung more
than a "wait till ne~ year."
indeed , thlS year is one)o grow
fat for Buffalo

while Capta in Nell Lanaelier has reverted to the ro le
of sixth man . Before Buffalo left for tts Army
contest , ll was learned that JUnior forward Rick
Matanle, a starter last year. h ad qutt the squad
Matanle left the squad for personal reasons, both
academic and athletic.
As tn the ftrst half, the second stanza featured
Sherwm's bombs as he totaled 37 pomts. In all ,
Sherwm (Onnected on 16 of 30 field goal attempts.
mostly from the outstde . The Bulls' man-to-man
defense stymaed everyone but Sherwtn As 10 pa~t
co ntests. the game was decided at the foul hne The
Bulls outrebounded and outshot the Cadets, but lost
as Blackmo re h1t only three of ten free throw tncs
Additionally , Bob Vartanian. Buffalo's hagh-sconng
JUnior guard, could only hit one of th ree free throw
tries The Army .contest was one which the Bulls
could eastly have won , espectally co nsadenng
Buffalo'-. determmataon and heart
N1agara. back on the wannmg beam after
dropping four stra.rght co ntests. IS led by seru or
guard (n 4) Marshall Wmg.~t e Additionally. guard
AI Wallaams and forwards Cleve Royster. Jam Chassar
and Ed Street figure to start for the Purple Eagles.
Niagara leJds the ~enes, 33 14 and last ye;~r edged
Buffalo 90 77 at the Aud . Bla ~·kmore, tn perhaps
his fin est showmg as 1.1 Bull , led the Bulls wtth 33
points in that co ntest. Tue~;day n~ghl , the Bulls
return t o C lark Gym wtth an 8 30 p m contest
agamst natio nally ranked Eastern M1chlgan

One should not hesatate lo
clatm that Oswego h as had 1ts
problems thlS year Thear ECAC
record stands .tt 1·9. and theu
o verall mark of S I I ts o nly a
trifle better
Fx cuses are for
losers,
but
Oswego
has
a
legitimate gnpe With no indoor
ice to prac tice on, and a relatively
inexpericn.:ed sq uad . Oswego had
two stnk es ag,unst thl'Ol from the
st.trt
O'lwego's surprising tumabout
Both problems have deared up,
the lac k of ex penence of course
o nl y moderately, &amp;Ad Oswego
tlllsn 't been playing dead recently .
l:.nJoyang th e home 1ce advantage
for most of the second half of

---------------------1
SA-GSA
:

End

~ithUUAB

:

:

I

MICHAEL STEPHEN LEVINSON

:THEENDOV
:
BULL SHIT:
Events I
:
FRIDAY,FEB.4:
•CLARK GYM 9:00 p.m.1

••
••

•••
••
••
•••
••
••
••
•••
e•

ART
COFFEEHOUSE
DANCE
MUSIC
DRAMATIC ARTS
L ITERARY ARTS
FILM
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
PUBLICITY
SOUND

i

i LEV

The Buffalo defense, which has
been greatly 111ded by Pall Dunn.
fllltng an lor the IJ'IjUred L~
T~phc ky , 51111 must be considered
to be the Bulls soft spot. Knock
on wood fo r superb goalteodang
Asade fro rn Teplic ky . the Bulls
have suc~.-ceded an staying away
from c nppltng tnjunes Knock on
wood ag;un , and o nce more JUM
for good lu.-:l

iJ looking tor qualified people rn the followang areas .

I

present

Buffalo managed to defeat
Oswego 54 at the Amherst Rec
ttus year wtth only a half-hearted
effnrt The Bulls have to figure to
be better than that at this stage o f
the season and should likely halt
Oswego's spoiling hopes.

university
un ion
activiti es
board

:Speakers
Bureau,:I
I

Week :
I

their schedule , they have managed
to win four out of their last five
games, one of whtch was an
astonishing upset over powerful
Colgat e, 6·5 . The line which has
led Oswego on ttus late surge
consists o f Ford. Allanson and
freshman leading scorer, Glenn
Sisman . Thts center iceman has
compiled 29 points on 13 goals
and I 6 assasts.

We have position opemngs for next semester
ApplicatiOns are now bemg taken m 261 Norton
UUAB.

~---------------------1
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~~~~~r~ity
UU AB COFFEEHOUSE ::
act1v1t1es
board
•

• • • THE UUAB FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE'
presents

Friday, Feb 4th

Sunday

Saturday, Feb 5th

reb. 6th

Cltnt Eastwood
Lee Van Cleef
Eli Wallach
Directed by
Sergio Leone

I
I
I
I

Check Conference Theatre showcase for times
SHOWS 50¢ before 6, 75ufter 6 p.m .

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • fA Oiv. of Sub-Board I

I
Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday, 4 February 1972

•

•

in

e
e

concert

: DAVE
:
VAN

:
:

I

THE GOOD.:
THE BAD~ :
&amp;
:I
THE UGLY I
CONFERENCE THEATRE

PRESENTS

I
I

and

:

RONK ::

"THE FREAK SHOW" :e
A

MULTI
FEBRUARY 4 th
FRIDAY NIGHT
1st FLOOR
CAFETERIA

MEDIA
T I C K E T S

EXPERIENCE :
FEBRUARY 5th •

$1 .00 in Advance SATURDAY NIGHT •
$1 .25 at the door
RATHSKELLAR .
SEE NORTON TICKET OFFICE FOR SHOW TIMES

•

Inc. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

I

�CLAIIIFIEI
AD INFORMATI ON

ev e nings,

CLASS I FIED AOS m a y b e placed
Monday thru Ft lday b e t ween 9 a .m.
a nd 4:30p.m . a t 3S5 Norton Hall .
THE COST o f an ad l o r one d ay ts
$ 1 25 fo r the l lrst 15 word s and s.o5
f or ea c h a dditi o nal word.
•' HELP
WANTED"
ads
c annot
dtsc rtmlnate o n the basis or se&gt;&lt;, color ,
creed o r national o r igin to any 11&gt;&lt;\en\
11 e. preferably ts stilt discr iminat o ry) .
"FOUND" aos Will be run free o f
cnar ge l or a Olll&gt;&lt; lmum o l 2 days and
15 w ords

WANTED
Sl ART s:&gt; per nour salary plus b onus
work 4 8 p m weekdays, 10·2 p 111
Saturdays Call 83S 3803 o r T F9-0402.
Pr RSON w11 n some e&gt;&lt; pe , enc e tn
wuod
rellntsning
to
finish
paint
removing and sl1allattng 0 1 '-lichen
Wtll pay $50 lor com plete lOb . Call
836 79')8
WANTED Ski Club lessons at ~ B
Any no9nt Call 634-4739 alter 6 pm
wANT£:0 S KINN Y (very tnon) temale
pnotography models f or photograpny
&gt;tuden\, $ !1/hr, c a ll 885 683 I mornongs
'" alter 8 00 p m
BFO N EfOEO Prelerdbty "• or double
bu;,a so' 1n9, rn.tttreu • hanu~ needed
t..all 837 4 593, [roc
((lLLE:C.f GRAD wanh to babysot
~ventnQ\ Loves c nlld r ero and hu tots o l
!ree nme Call 83 1·4 I 1 3 days Ask t or
Le•tye '" INve mesuge

week e nds

CHEST of draw e rs and dress er with
S.pArale mirror. Solid cherry wood
$75 , Cill832 · 7 139.
FOLK
c laHic ljulta r s, N ew
used
Martin, Guilds, Gibsons, Gurian, et c
Eagle banjos, Oorogl Ou l,lmers. The
String Shoppe, S24 Ontario, 7 p .m
9 P m Sal. 12· 5 p .m. 874·0120
SWISS wat ch, automatic day, date
Al most new Chinese Jewelry, as~&lt; lor
Roo Pnone 832 1663
'6j MERCEDES 190. Good condollon,
r"lew snow tues, battery. sun-roof Call
Marc 882 1294
TYPEWRITER,
633 7!&gt;!&gt; I

portable,

$20

Call

1970
JAGUAR
XKE.
E•~ellent
condl tt n n Brand flew AM/FM stereo
oadlo lnctu dod . Ca ll 688 - 7327 eventng\
S KI CLUB si&lt;l lessons lor
Tuesday n19nt Call 832·56J4

"AN ASTASIA" neeo s a hom e sue's a
191&gt; I lovable, ttttte Tempest All she
costs os Sil O Call AI at 8J I 4113 nr
Oebbte at 832 &amp;815
1 9&amp;!1
M GIIOO,
9000
running
conOtlton Needs Dody w or lo , s 200
C ~ll Steve 8 35 6127

PERSO N A L
Brother. dear Tl1a nks lOr

1 111 L uR part ttme tOOS availabl e wolh

tne nunev• Your fa1thfut \ISteH. EIUe

Bestttr•e 11\c Call Art 886 2094 or
M•ke 8J!&gt; 521 ~ Meellnq\ at E &gt;&lt;e&lt; oll•ve
namada lnl\

WE T n EA' YOU, senuo

APARTM ENT FOR RENT
Sl VERA!
mdt\'Ulu•lly

modern fur no shed ooum\,
&lt;.ontrotteCl

heat. etc.. 1n

eO&lt;&lt; ellen\ too atwns. unbeli evable prtce
B'lb BJ44 eveowtgs
MUD( HN, tw n bftdroorn C}&lt;lrden apt .
Ul\h Wd \IIOo,
dl~posal,
r a nqe,
r~ t llgardtoo onctuO~d
full y 'arpeteo
f u11 b4\ttment wlttt \tora ge drea and
HtiiOl\ fn, wash1nq mdc.h•ne . Avattable
Mdrcl
I
s 17&lt;,
a month
t;.all
td 1 4~8;&gt;

RIDE BOARD

HAVE
k nowoeoge
t n ler esteo •n s s s '
Ask lor Roc after 5

1

t '"

FOR SALE
IIUUMI-'11 O,pollore llardtoP Best offer
)Oorn

lll~'liiiBrtlle•!&gt;

It
vut K!&gt; c atnprnobote pop top
l v~rvtn"'~ loke new
Under 8000
""o e' l All 782 ~4 30 N oag Fails
I

tJ HI )

IJ11IIttt\

1&lt;111

t.a
a~~

ljh Od
1 () lft

omlotoon

200

Tt&lt;IIJMPII Sootltrl', 11,000 mo
S2000 or oest u ller Call
8111 4l41

""J"~"'V.
Molo~

Hl()l.l( II)M

lurntShH19S, deSk\, IOVIII4
•tCftl\,
n'~~Jtlfeues,
sprtng\,

H1111n

Md•Que\,

1ea~onable . 837·652~

t&lt;lb9 vw van, 34,000 miles 011ly
SlbOO
t;.an
lake
vou atoywne•o.
""Vtome Flo 83'&gt; '561
I&lt;( r..; I II
·•~liiJ\Iu.

INt AH 10 A soe.t'-er system,
hJ\Pe"''""· tnur months old
••ower &lt;. aOI&lt;.•tv. 75 watlJ. rms, perfect
I Olldltlnn s.?tlO Kenny 832-b&amp;84
MILLIMI'.TEH enlarge r wolh ~Q
IHIIIHnetet
fJ ~
entarq1n9
lease
I •lell~n\ ~c•ndtloon Call &amp;92·~~ 76
I
HI v GIIINGO, noy se e sler. dol, dt)l ,
J'&gt;

rJot

bedo oom dressers.
r11ght table, bed d ing, doshes, healer,
Ydtu1un, lamps, aesk c. half . .-not e
f liRNt I

u RE

of

cal&lt;ulu\'

Call b9J 7990

PI LA MBDA TAU
a chang1n9 so,lal
o • gar"lolatoon on a cnang1n11 carT&gt;pus
For tnlormalton, call Can 6J:&gt; 0299 or
George 834 1Q89
NEEO

l

'1 00&gt;

Call

882 1080

Sec.ond Annu•t

f or

N~wm•n

Moveonent Art E•n•bol
Feo
13
Ma rch 19 at Butckfoeto Center S U C.B
Entro~ due Feb 7 &amp; 8 Specta t student
FOL.K C.Ut r AR tenons on or o il
larnpus, J~ll 835 · JJ84, 835 922'1
t iow MC you Jenny,

Brewster St. neat M.tHl filltHote
Com pletely furnished
() wn
tclOnl
$45/ononth
onc:ludes
ullllltCI
835·0377
~4

WANTED One lemate ronrnrna le lor
J·oeoroom house o lt Maon Won1oeao
Own room, l urntshed. ' 60 C,tartortq
frb 1 C a ll Mary B38 4B9'
COUPLE lookmg to Sl\4re apartment

house or farm wttn a"otne' cuuple
838 4091

MISCELLAN EOUS
FL V 8Uf'f'AL.O S tud e nt FtrqhH to
sunny A c apu lco o.na Unhte"cll A If line\
OC 8 Jet
Leave N .V .L Ma rcn 31
return Aprt t 7 From
19 Ct\ni•CI
Ataf"' Matmui Ste•n eve ntny~. b 9 p m
837 0393

'J

ACAPULCO,
Barbadol,
BM1drot•S
Europe
weel&lt; ty lot os , po~ct.a11e trom
S 219 Easter weel&lt; Still ava11 Lnntact
Molly 8 77 ·844 2
BOB. Haooy Borlnda y
"'u't&gt;ly
Ma ny
more
tclq eHl~H V es• Gtnl
TOP

promoting

money

student

oove ynu
t•aPPV &lt;Jays
paol

tr ttvttl

loone

ptU9tAff'S

Write
(Including
phone
n•Jrnoe• J
Uno Travel
Corp.,
1.?
Pir•r
!&gt;I ,
Swamps&lt;oll, Mass 01901
QUE TO ta'k o r Intere st, 0 T Club •1
~le

" 1tems tor sate Include

and

Tr8a~uret

f"ot
V"l

contact

tnfounauon,
837 3650

Pre~ooent

further

u1

:,te\,je

LIGHT HAULING ano movonv wtth
~matt van Call S teve or Peto 83J 8~82

S •ve nunlbtH
vx-6, • new cnemtc.~ll founut• ovcH ten
year~
old
Save• 6
ano
1:&gt; volle
barterun fr om dy1n9 of t.•nfCU

M•"-&lt;'

I M AY be 9ttnerous. \dllur. bu t I Cd n't

SERVICE IS our OHiy bu\ltUJ\\ 11 V•n11
\dtl\f.tC-1101\

83' 40 7b
~ UUNIJ
M"n ano Soron&lt;Jvtlle Ave
young mate German \neonero C~ll
8Jb 18b&amp;

( OIJN() SoHuroav on UB, lo9t11 nruwll
do9 wtlt1 whole tnrrJ~I drld raO&gt;~o;J.
t llrvlld I All b89 854 3
~OUNtl ldo Qe brown pdpeo packd911 dl
AllentHH\1 May De pt~k ed UP at /13

c•ement
Bran&gt;

f..tdS\

sc;1en~e

nnq

t119h

Tn

sc huu•

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ttl

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tow p t Huoter•H Cunc..ert t•\1 ~!lit

taent•tv

and''""""'

.(_l)UJ"IL li., lwO 9111s wa niOO
\lldoe
lour b~droom~. Mar n -'Follmur o, $ 50
Qw11
room
cad 1!37 J483
Hnrne&lt;:t1atety

II~.

I• St.
(716) 833·713 1

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OVERSEAS JOBS lu• &gt;luCent\
Aus1raHA, Eutope, 5 All"lertt.4, ~'''*'
etl All ptoresston~ c1nd octuP•I•utt\,
$ 700 S3000 monthly E.•oenses para .
uverttme
S19tll\~e"'9
f"irre
tnfurtnat•on
Wr~le
Juti\ c htttr\ctct\,
Dept
E5, 80K 1~071
S~oo UhlgO,
C:IIOIOrnoa 92115

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INTERESTED
otvrupiC. 9anle\

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''"'"'d"''l
tile
M u•u• t't) c,' htte

fh•. kf!h dnd li((0ff\fnUdi11UUI\ •vdltfttUil~

"·

APARTM ENTS WANTED
WE NEED a twO·Iamoty apt. 11111 &lt;.d"
house .,.. people (lhrl!e on ea&lt;.h hall)
too June W11t pay gnod munev. tl
take n Call Belly 8 J 7 04 30

3 COMPLETE ROOM S OF
NEW FU RN I T UR E
2 pc ltvtng room SUite,
2 Sleo-end &amp; I co,ktaol table
2 tamps, 3 p c. bdrm set, (dbt
dreuer , chest, Obi soze bOO.
c:lbl. b ox spgs/mall., S pc ooneltl'
11 table, 4 ch~lrs)

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100
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274
310
3JJ
216
246
122
118
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ISO
328
42
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1'&gt;7

OFFSET
PRINTING
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CQnltlh.HHtY' (toly J4 J NnrltH1 , 9 d 111
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ROOM MATES WANTED

IIIII~I~AI~tt
1r~][1rlltltll~

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RESTAUHJ\NI

l014\e and 'UaJ.)It&gt;

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PLACE

GOOOWAV

Maddy 8J I J9 70

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One pau or qutd , unruea
wtt&amp; · ftaf'ned gtanes. tilh flour Clenu!nt
lleward $10 C.onta&lt;t 831 40~fo '"

fOUND

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LOST &amp; FOUND

January
I
2
3

mone y . Sell VXb 10 all ca o, ""'"· ""'·
bu\ o per dtO" Sdves $ 20 Ito S !70 toto
n ew banery

govc Wl1dl I don't got

COLLEGE TEXTS • PROFESSIONA L BOO KS
MEDICAL • NURSING • DENTA L
• PAPERBACKS •

3&amp;1tt

TWO ROOMMATES to st&gt;are room on
beautifully
lurnosned
aPartment 2
blocks
from
campus.
Av•otable
rmmeo lately. Call 832-4442

sponsounq a .. 9oln9 out o t bu\tness

Ptt/0\

or FeD
I!• to 8 Jd 1'1110 .titer 9 p no

FEMALE roommAte wanted
L .)rge
n ouse ,
goo d
location
AvaolaDie
rmmeolat eJ y Call 8 39 3019 aller b 00
prn

EAR N

IIH"ll Nl £ llfll t(l New Haven, t..onn
4

oltner lean

M Y NAME os Anastasoa 1 am eleven
yea" young My daddy oeserteo me
and I'm looking lor a new one . 1 t!lve
an ~utomatlc hansmtnton and ct very
loe&gt;&lt;Y body . You can navtt one t (H o nl v
Sil O Ca11At83 1 · 4113

lnforn"t at ton

• t:b

MALE ROOMMATE, West Side, o wn
room
$41.6 7
montn .
Par!
ullt
838 · 1482.

mon•e~

ll tlH Nl ~U(U 10 l 1 te•ve FeD 10
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OWN BED R OOM, JO dollars a month
plus utilities. On Hertel Ave near
Park slde.
Call
Steva
or
Curtis
838-48 16 .

wte

RE.FRtGERATORS,
stoves
and
W4Shets R e ,ondll•onea . dei•Yerec:l anCI
9uaranteeo
O &amp;G Aopllan~es, 844
Syumore TX 4 -3 183

DAVID G

FEMALE
roommate
wan t ed,
37
M errimac
St.
flye
minutes lrom
Norton, 10 sha r e room, $ 4 0 otus
utilitie s. Clltl 8 3 7 ·5313 •'"" 6 p .m .

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$369.95
J . B e r g F urnoture Co
2363 Broadway, / Hartem Rd
nightly ' Ill 9:00 P.m. e&gt;&lt; Wed &amp; S at
-895:~3~3 -

Friday , 4 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fift een

�Anno uncem e nts

The UB Riding Club will meet today at 4 p.m.
UB Vets Club and the University chapter of
in Room 264 Norton. The Club is sponsoring English
nding lessons and anyone in terested in taking the U.V.A.W. will meet today at 4:30 p.m. at Gables
lessons must attend or conld.ct Sue Raichilson at Restaurant, 1285 Hertel Ave.
831 -3602.
The Hillel Conversational Hebrew classes will
T he Junior Club of Buffalo is spon)oring a ski meet Sunday in Room 262 Norton; the advanced
trip to In terlaken, Switterland, March 29 Aprtl 5. group at 12 :30 p.m. and the elementary grou p at
The trip (1:1 days and 7 nights) includes room and 1:30 p.m.
board and roundtrip by Swiss Air 747 . Cost is $350.
CAC Friendship House Project needs people to
For further information contact Brian Rusk at
tutor high school subjects anLI they need a
632-2707 .
self-defense instructor.
College E cour~ 302 S~. Analysi\ nl RocJ..
The Student Association announces that today
Music
Sunh/Br~tton, will meet on Mondays ell 161
1s the l.tst day to pick up all boolo-~ &lt;1nd c~ll checks
Mlnne-.ota Ave, from 4 6 p.m.
from the Student As&lt;,Q~..ta t ion Boo!... Exchange. No
The College of Mathematical Science is offer~ng bool..s or checks will be returned after today .
tutoring )essions for the students of Calculu) 142.
Times and place-. are . Monday, 3 5 p rn ., Acheson
The Conflict Simulations Club will h.wc J
Annex 4, Tuesday. 2:30- 4 p.m., 1 railer 5, meeting Sunday from noon 7 p.m . in Room 340
Wednesday , 2 4 p.m. , Cro\by 225 and fhui\LI,\y, Norton. Bring games. Elec tion~ will be held next
week.
2.30- 4 p.m .. Trailer 5.
SCUBA Club w1ll hc~ve a meeting lnr
.... membership c~nd organtzation tomorrow ,11 lO .t m.
in Clark Gym, Room 3.
Hillel will hold a Sabbath Service I hi\ even1n~ .11
8 p.m. in the Hillel Huu~ . Allen Kobrin, president ,
and Judi Pri nce, ~ecretary , will givc a report un th~
National Conference for Action ~or Soviet Jewry ,
which they .mended at the Universtly of MtHyl,lnd.
The Studen t Film Club wishes tu annountc thc~l
all cameras and film are available rmmediat~ly All
tho)e members wishing to obtarn equipment can
piclo- up informJtion sheet' on how to go abuul it .11
the .nformation desk at Not ton .
T he University of lbadan in lbadan, Nigeria he~,
.tgreed to consider the dpplicallons of up to 20
highly qualified Swe Un1vcr~ity stUdents for pl,ltC\
in the Faculty uf Art~ .tnd Faculty ol ~o&lt;.1JI S~.-ien&lt;.es
for atademic ye&lt;~r I CJ72-71. For further 1nlorrn.1tion
and applito~tiom, please &lt;.cill the Ollite I)( Ovcr\ed~
Acddcmic Progr,,m,, 83 I 4941
The Women's Club of the State University of
Buffalo pre')en t' Pete Seeger tr1 ct•n&lt;.ert, SunJ.ty I ch
13, 2 30 p m .11 Bennett I ltgh ~chool ltLkeh .ue
$2 .50 for students c1nd $4 .00 for adult'&gt; .tnd .ue
available Jt Nnr to n liC~ et Offic..t', Bultc~lo S t .~lc
TICket Office and the Record Runnl'l , For furthtr
inform,Hion call HJ9 3634.
Applications are now bemg accepted for tht'
Compu ter Science Department's Undergraduate
Concentra tion Program . Applilant\ 'hould h,IVI'
taken lS 14S (I AC:, 14&lt;;, MJth 14'i) or he t.:~J..rng rt
now ~tudent\ olll' U\lJ,dfy not JtCI.'Pti.'d .1ftcr lht•
beg1nnmg of thcrr ltlnior YtJ I Applrc&lt;Jtron' m.:~y he
obtained from thr Computer Stien~.e Dcpar tmenl
Office, 4226 Rtdge Lea Ro&lt;~d . Rt10m 4 Appllwtron'
will be acct&gt;pted until M.m.h 3 I
The Hillel class in Torah with Commenta rie~ wrll
be held tomorrow at 3 l() p m. in Dr . Hofm.tnn \
home, I 2 Colton Drive
Kundallni Yog.a beginnmg cf&lt;l,,c~ rn cxt:rl-l~t· .end
med1t.ttion are held ev~ry evening .11 ll)fl Lmwood
Ave., 7 p m., 881 0505. Cl&lt;~~se~ Jrr ..ebo held MondJy
and Wedne\day .11 4 p.m . tn Room 114 Norton .
Community Action Corp~ '' .111crnptrng to set
up J free summer 1..1.1v cc~m p lor u1nct -crty t;.hildre n.
1 he \..imp would u&lt;.e C'&lt;ISII nJ.: U111ver,ity l.1tifrtie~
~uch JS the gym, thus elimin.111ng m..eny uwr hc.td
co)t\ Volunteers with c...tmprng expertcnc.c and/or
l...nowledge uf the tl1tnmun ity are c\pecially needed
If you Me Interested, plcc.tse con tJct the CAC offtce
tn Room 220 Norton or &lt;.all H' I 3609
Students for Israel .rnnoun~.-e~ the open1ng of
tht•ir office in Room 346 N&lt;&gt;rton. Peoplt&gt; can 'top by
lor 111 formation on fol 1-- danetng, the ~chedu le tor
futun· progr"m' .tnt! trawl, \tudy ur worlo. programs
tn l&lt;.ra~l
The Spanish Club Party with the Latin
American Club will be held today dt 8 ·30 p.m. c1t 34
Addison St ., one bloc~ from intersectron of
Millersport l lighwJy J.nLI Eggert Road
For

The cultunl event feawring Michael Steven
Levinson, presented by UUAB, SA and GSA,
originally scheduled for 8 p.m. tonight, is changed to
9:15 p.m.

additional information and direct ions, call either
Rolando, 894-6447 or Mark, 83 1-3062.

The second Aliyah Conference for the Buffalo
.tfCJ will tdke place at the jewish Center on Sunday
at 2 p.m. The Conference aims at providing current
inform&lt;~tion about Israel to prospective touris t~
vi&lt;.itors and student&lt;. as well ds tho~ who ar~
wnsidering settlement. The Jewish Center is located
dt 787 Delaware Ave., 886·3145
f he Hillel Talmud class Will mt'CI Sunddy

oil

p.m. in the Hillel House Library .

The photograph which appeared on the
Back page of the Feb. 2 The Spectrum, was taken by
Stan Radzewicz.
Volunteers are needed to help transport
performers in the Appalachian Symposium (March
21 - 24) to and from Buffalo airport. For
information, call Carol, 835-1044 .
Students Interested in attend ing the Regional
Hillel Inst itute to be held in Niagara Falls, Ontario
over the weekend of reb . I I, should get in touch
with Rabbr Hofmann immediately. Schoof,
participating rn addition to Buff.tlo will be the
University of foronto, York University and the
University of Rochester c~mong others. The Institute
will begin 1&gt;n Friday afternoon, Feb. 11 and
conclude on Sund.ty in the e&lt;~rly afternoon .
Activist Youth for Israel will have an o~n r&lt;IP
.u 1 30 p.m. in the lobby of
Schoeflkopf Hall
ses~ion Clll ~und.ly

~

WPhD Broadcast ing Station i) lnol--mg for
poetry If you have poetry that would sound good
redd to mu\IC, send it with your name, address •.tnd
phone number to WPhD Broadcasting Stc~tron, 42 5
Franl..lin St,, Buffalo, N.Y. 14202. Please ~end JUSt a
c..opy uf the pot&gt;m a~ it mc~y not be returned .
WBFO proudly present\ the ~econd AnnuJI
WBFO Trivid contest .tnd Broccoli Steam thrs
Sund&lt;ty. Tht&gt; world -famou~ WBFO trivia panel wtll
meet Jll turners in discussions of S.lH.h matters .t) the
name nf Supergirl\ c.at, who wa~ Cldrc~beffe tht:
tfllwn and wh.tt was rtub·&lt;i·dub's fJvonte food
Lt&lt;.tcncr\ may ct~ll in during the broc~dc&lt;tst to d)k or
.trhwer que~tiom at 831-5393 starting cit 11 p.m.
Properly trrvial prl/c\ will bc offered for (.Otreu

Avai lab le at the Ticket Office
Studio Arena Theater
Thr o ugh I eb 20. I he Trw! of the Cotonwtlle
Nine
Mar . 2 19. Roml'O o11d juliet
Rock and Folk Music

I eb. 6 Jose Fel1ciano (K)
reb 6. The Temptation' (G)
Feb 8 · Teegdrden dnd V&lt;1n Winkle (F)
Feb. 11 : Captain Beefhm (C)
Feb. 12: Carty Simon (K)
Feb . 13 ; Pete Seeger (B)
Feb. 20: Yes and ) . Gcib (K)
Buffalo Chamber Music Society (K)
feb 15: Rampal and Veyron-Lacroix Dll•i
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra (K)

.m~wer~

Chabad HOuSt!, 31.1.)1 Mam 51., will hdve Sabbdth
..ervM·~ Jt b p.m
tonight and Jt 9 ·30 d.m.
wmurrow. At 4 · 1'l p.m tomorrow tht&gt;y wtll h.tvc ,,
minch&lt;~ .tnd at 8:30 p.m. " m 'lrtv.ih m.dk.1h . Sund~y
c.tl l p.m h .t brunch ,md rap '&gt;C\\Hlll, "And NiJW
Wlw "

Feb. 4: Pops ltaltan Opera Night
Feb. 6 &amp; 8: Michdel Tils()n Thomas
reb. 11 : Pops
Vc~lentme·~ Night
l.1bcich
Feb. 12 : Cindetellu
Feb . I 9 &amp; 22 : Cmtoph [ \thenb,t&lt; h
Buffalo Braves Basketball (M)

What's Happening ?
friday , r eb 4
I tim · Wall Un/1/ Outk, With Audrey HcphlJrn .tn\.1
Alan Ar ktJI, Ltpcn 140, t.tll H'31 360&lt;1 for
'how times.
Concen : The Americc~n Mu ..lt (,roup, Nef'ly Bruce,
D1rcctor, ,, pr ugt Jm ul cJrly Amerrcan musi~. ,
8 :30 p.m., B .~rrd Rec1 t..el H..tll , tickets ~ I .SO
generJI .1dmi~sion, ~ 1.00 f.J culty .md stall , ~ .S O
~tudcnh, &lt;~Vt~ilJbl~ dt Nort11n l itket Offin·
Art Show " Prints in Progre s~ ... Rtdg(• LeJ, Y a.rn ~

p.m.
(,t•wq~' 0irl. Dlclcnd(lrf 147, 7 · 10 p m .md
9 30 p.m , ~ 2'l th.. kl'h .Ill' ,,v.lil.tbk Jt Norton
fi cket Offici! .
UUAB Colfcehou)e. D&lt;Jve V,u\ Runt... l11st flnot
Nwton cJfetl'rtd, 7 30 p.m. Jnd 10 ~0 p.m
tid.rl\ S I .00 111 c~dvJnLe, ~ l .lS dl Joor
I rim . I Httul of [)n/lun , with Cltnt [..e ~ tw ood
Cuntercntc The&lt;lter , S 50 hl'IIHl' 6 p m. S 7~
.rlter b p.m., t&lt;~lf 154 I lor 'hnwtrml'S.

I 1Im

I eb. 4 New York
I eb 8 Milwaulo..~'&lt;'
Feb. I 1· Dctrort

Dance (K)
Feb. 5 lose

Gre~.o

Roller Derby (M)
I t•b . 21

Drpson's l'lua North

Thcc~ter

(,ddlt·r on the Roof

KEY
K Klelllh&lt;Jn~
M Memor1al Aur.Jtturnmt
I
I lllmore Room
&lt;.. Cldrk Gym
G Geneseo State
B - Bennett High School

Saturday, Feb. 5

Sports I nformation
lrlnt · For u Fl'w Dollun M()le, wtlh l11nt [J,twood,
Confercm.e fheater, call H41 tor ~howtimc'.
UUAB Coffeehouse · D&lt;~ve Van Runt.. Ratll\t..elfJr
7:30 p.rn. and 10:30 p.m., llct..'eh $1 .00 ir~
advance, S 1.25 at dour
F1lm: Wv1t Until Dark, CJpen 140
Art Show · " Prints rn Progn.")'," 4240 Rrr.J)(c 1 &lt;',l, &lt;)
J m
noon .
Sunday. Feb . 6
Film: The Good, Tht• Bod and The Ugly, w1th Clint
Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef, Conferl!nce
Theater , call 3541 for showtime~ .

Backpage

Tonight . v..,sity hocJ..ey at O~wego State ;
lrcshmJn bds!o-etball dt N1agara
Saturday : VMStty bdsketball vs. Niagara at
Mcmoridl AudiLorium, 7 p.m. ; Canisius v~ .
Manhatt.tn , 9 p m., tiLkets are avarlable at Clark
Gym \tith the srudent athletic rev1ew bo.lfd
subsidrting Jfl ltcf..et), an 10 card gives you a ~4
reduced prier tic!o-et for free; varsrty indoor track dt
Roche~ter with Nidgara, Vdrsity wre)tling at Oswego
St.nr: v.tr~i ty fencing vs. Penn State, Clark Gym, 2
p.m., Vdr)tty ~wimming vs. Penn State, Clark Gym
Pool, 2 p.m .
Ticke t s for Satur day evening's Aud
doubleheader are available at no charge to
undergr ad\ .lt the Clark Gym ticket office. The
~tudent dthletic review board will subsidize dll
student tickets. The Bulls meet Niagara at 7 p.m .,
while Canisius meets Manhattan at 9 p.m.
downtown.

• loridll

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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Vol. 22. No. 49

State University of New York at Buffalo

Wednesday. 2 February 1972

FSA meets

VendinK concepts discussed
by Sari Menes
Sfll'&lt; tnnlc

Sto/J Wrtta

Drsspelhng rumor~ of a vend1 ng "consj)lracy " and
resolving the transf~:r of Amherst land were two maJor
issue~ disc ussed at
last Monday\ Fat·ulty Student
A'Stlnatiun I FS/\) mecrrng
bl ward Uot y. I' SA I· Kl'L ullvc Dr red or, reported to
the Board thai hi\ "uJnt:cpl" for 1rnpruving vendmg and
uther food servrces was nut j)tH I of any "r.·onsprra.:y ." or
an a ll t.'rn pl Ill llldc ..wythJng. ll llwever. hr· drd t'Xj)rcss
com:ern lor j)rc,cnttng the con\:c pl at Montlay's rneetrng,
feelrng rt W(l\ -.ull "a lrttlt: prcruatu r~."
Mr Doty expla rned that the coueepl ouly rnvolves
ven dm g, hut also ot her a:. peels of FSA . sr11.:h .JS food
~~:rvree, and rl feasible t he hookstore The piJn cl.llls fnr th~'
eventual mc rg.t og ol luod .~ervh. c ,rnd vr•nd tng rnlo o ne
enI crpri~c

No rlh t'anrpus vr-: riiJiy WJ' 111W co l t he rc,l\llt" lo1 lhc
conccpt. ll nwcvcr . .~~ ut hcr Board llll'lllht•r-. pnrnll'll P ill ,
the stalled const rUl!Hm hrtlUghl th e vrahrltly o l tmrnet.liate
irnplemt·ntalton rnto quesltnn
Many FSA memher~ wr.•n· '' '" 'l'th't' trtetl with 11t1• l(_k.,
and its 1n1t tal deliverum·e J,&gt;hn &lt;.rccnw•&gt;od . nl 1h1· CS/\ .
ter med the whole maller "very ,·rHr•'u'" .rnd w•mdt•Jcd
wh y employees wert• lt r'l tnf&lt;•rutcd . h~rl hct , he
questrnn1'd the tiOit~srtm nf lim pl.tn at .1 hudgc:t mn•tHJg
dealing wtth th e: Amhcrsl ~a rnpu~ dt•vt'hlfHttr•nt
The: mattn will he lurthc.:r dJ~u"~etl hut ,, rc ~olu tton
passed that the Boa.rJ W•luld rcvrcw .nry pl.rtl ~ tor the
movcntt•nt of the vend rng 1omp.ony frnm 11~ prncnl
loeat ron on Mtll e~port llig)rw:ry Mr D111y aga·ctl wrlh
lllts and 'tatt:d urt tt:l"t&gt;rtl Ill t' lll ployt't'S and ntlwr
~:o ncerncd thai th ere wrll ht' no rn.rs' l.ryoll~ .Jt prewnt
Other action
Charles Balkin , I·S/\ \t'llclaty
PIO J&gt;rhcd thrc1•
re.~olu ttons for the t ranslc:r of ~ Ill .o.: tr•, of Amh cr~t I.Jnd
from FSA to Suh 8o1artl I. l n.: All rc~nluttnn' provtdl'tl tor
the t ransfer wtth mean~ t&gt;t her thiln drre,·t o wnersltrp hy
Sub Board . Al·eordrng to Mr Balk111 , th ts wa~ due In a
SUNY lawyn 's opmwn that ..1 proptl~ctl dtred toanskr
would be "of questionable lcgdltt y "

Monulith
I h~: plan suggest&lt;, co rn:cssronrng out rwo· thr rds or
loud ~ervrr:e lo o ulsrde trrnr ~. 1\r.eonlrng Ill Mr Do ry, these
outstdc r.once"rnnarre~ would be under indtrect r.' c) nl rt&gt;l of
the present food scrvrce manager and FS/\ . Mr . Ooly
argued that this would end "monuhthr l food ser vrn~" and
cnahle student ~ to rt:r.tJVe a beller selecl ron and mon:
e ffluent servu.:e hceause of ~ornpelltro n .
&lt;:ompe trtro n, Mr l&gt;o t y rema rk ed , would give a
necessa ry comparrson of ~crvtrcs~howmg the value of the
present vending openJtton News o f this concept was fir.~t
"leaked" by fhomas Schr lln . vn:e president of Au xiliary
Fnt r:rpnscs. who wtshed to quell rumors ~o nnectcd with
the planned demolition of the Raud\ huildmg whk h
presently houses vending.
Mr Schlllu reponed to thr Board that he tnformed
vendmg empolyecs at a hme he felt wu " right." Mr. Ooty,
lookmg ba~k. no ted ttu~ wu »n " unwise move on our
part " but one meant With hest intentiOns for the
ernployec\

Students present at the meeting argued to dtrtl tly
transfer tbe land to Sub Board I, Inc. since a large portion
of the land monies had initially come fro m student ft-cs
The resolutio ns, if eventually pas..;ed , would put FS A In
control o f allotting the income.

Stalled con.&lt;.t ruc tion
The t'orrtpelrl w u ~~~ n ~cpt was partl y based o n the
plannl'd expa rr ~ttlfl to Amhrrst ML Ooty cxplaincd that
the la,k o l &lt;~ny altt•rrratrve drmng areas'" t he 1mmed1ate

Other items mentio ned included rnune y J V:ttlllhk lor
No n o n Hall services and IRC' radto elfUif)lltC.:rtl Jrm
Gruber, No rl on Hall director , repo rted rn hrs yeally hudgd
statemcnt that they wc:re "well w1lhrn" lht• nrtgr n.tl

Basically , Mr. Balkm stated thai the 510 ane~
mvolved should be qutho nzed for sale "a t market value: "
Funher , FSA would hold sale proceeds to prr.Wi tl l' tu
provide for "educatronal and cultural purposes ft•r the
benefit uf the: students." Mr, Balk in tenuctl suc.:lt ""
arrangement·« "quasi-endowment fund ..

FSA Board of Direc:ton djscuued new concepts in food
service o perations. A plan to introduce competition onto
the campus was qu.-tioned by members present.

-

csli matc hut he requested reserve funds to keep the
Norton ttall cluakroom and Clfndy counter in o peration.
President Ro bert Ketter said that rhis mafler would be
drs.:ussed wrthm t he nex t two weeh. Nc&gt; acrion should be
taken untrl tha t l im
Thl.' FSA also rati fr ed Jn ad to g1ve Alan Mtller, IR C
prcsrd cnt , approv11l In perm&amp;ncntly huy radro equrpntent
lor WIRR . the l ntr•r Restdcnt·c: Coun.:tl radro ~tatron

FSC criticizes admissions policy
'Ttl

been had ." w mmc:ntet.l
Connnlly \If the E ngli~h
Department ,
c h argrng
the
administration with deception in
urder 1t1 ubt:un ~uprx•rt for ih
adrnisstons poh~:y
Dr Connolly's remark was just
one ot the semnt ~ criticisms o f
admllllsrrative poli.:y vmced at
lllst Mo nday 's Faculty Sta ff
Cauws (FSC')
The
caucus.
according to Its charter . is a group
of memhcrs uf the fa culty and
professioual stall ot the State
Uruvers1ty of Bu ffalo whose
concern i~ " with the protection
and promotion of the liberal spult
in our University , particularly as
this apphes
to
educational
policies "
Referring to Pres1den1 Ketter's
regional admissions plan wh1ch
acce pts at least 50 per cent of
entering freshman
from the
Eighth Judicial District . Dr.
Connolly explained that he had
been duped
by both
the
administration and Admissions
and Records. He charged that he
was fed " delib erately misleading
statis tics" that led him to believe
that the 50 per cent figure was to
be a ceiling. not a floor for local
students.
Thoma~

Dr . \ounolly asserted that he
votmg for what I tho ught
I was,'' and promised tu d emand
that these "shifting statistics" h e
exposed at this month's Facult y
Senate meeting wh ich was held
" wa~ n 'l

yc~terday .

The recent adrnisst on~ policy
change came under repeated fire
duri ng the meeting as rnany felt
the full rmplications of the
decision hadn't been considered
Gcw !(C Htx:h field , Department
uf English . was one expressing this
view . " I have a feeling," he said.
" that th is is being treated more
lightly than it sho uld . I think it's
an absol utl!ly disastmus move."
Accord1ng ru Dr. Hochfield ,
sett ing a nurrimum quo ta of
Western New York students while
expanding the student populatio n
would result rn a decline in the
quali ty of t he classes. TI1is
decline, he claimed , was already
noticeable in his o wn courses.
Cow college
Others concurred with Dr .
Hochfield . Christine Duggleby .
Department of Anthropology .
called the policy "an inroad"
towards, what in her view is, a
national trend . Giving an example,

she dcr.l3red
lli et.JU~c
of
regiunalllalrorlj the y a1e urr tlt1·
verge of turmng the llnrvct~ tty of
Wrsconstn at Mad1son 11111• J t:ow
college."
lrv1ng Mas.\ey Dep:rrtmrnt 111
Engl ish , also expressed wru ry over
regiona h?.at1on . Su.:h pttltt:ie'. he
feared . would have: ~eve rely
harmful effects \tpott htghe1
education . He addell that "our
surv1val as a maj01 Untvcr~lly i~
very much rn douht "
One member ol the ('au.:u~
however, lei t th,JI the J·SC may bt:
going too far 1n li S oppu~itton to

regWn Jit\tll . Kohcrt I·"J.. I a-:ulty
tlf Edlll:ttlo na l Studtc\ . warned
that the t'auu1s mus tn' t fnrget the
"very re&lt;JI need~" of Wcslt'lll New
Yorkct~ fw a fir ~l da~~ univcrsrt y
Dr . ll o~:hfield . daJJiyrllg tm
postlron . ex plained he had nu
objertwn In any ntrm bcr of luc:tl
~tudcnt~ a~ lorrg as rl was the
result
ol
n!11111al admi&amp;Sitln~
poln:y /\~ an alre111a ll vc , he
suggc~t c:d
publk ~upporl
111
f&gt;ftvalc
~c hool\
Thts would
..tpp&lt;~rently provtde l&gt;t udcnb wrtlt
the
upporl unrly
of
quality
edu~· aturn 10 nthe1 th.tn thc11 own

part1cu la1 geugraphll localron Or
ll m ·hf1eld
cmpha s r7.ed
the
mtptll lance of Buffalo be~.:un11ng a
lrtll' University ('enter.
FacuJty participation
The causus expressed a general
dlssatlsfa c lto n wtth the current
adntinist ration . Where thete had
prevrously been clearly tlefined
1ssues. the feeling was. the
Uni\lersity now suffers from a Jack
nf communica tion and t rust from
llaycs Hall.
One of the guJls of the FSC is
~onllnued

on page 3 -

In search of a Dean
A search committee for dean of rhe Graduate School hilS been established by State
of Buffalo President Robert L . Kelter. The committee is charged with
recommendina to Dr. Ketter a panel of nominees. The search committee is interested in
receiving names of possible candidates to review. according to committee chairman Edwin
A. Mirand. The committee requests that names of candidates, alona with their curriculum
vitae. be sent to the chairman of the committee : Professor Edwin A. Mitand, Roswell
Park Memorial Institute, 666 Elm St .• Buffalo , N.Y. Please submit this information by
Feb. 18, t 972.
The other members of the search committee include: Mrs. Patricia Colvard,
assistant to provost, Social Sciences and Administration ; Donald DarensboufJ, assistant
professor, Department of Chemistry; Stefan Fle.ischer, 188ociate professor, E"liish
Department ; Stephen Goldbei'J, araduate student , Department of hycholoar; Leo
Loubere, professor, Department of History; Donald Rennie, associate chairman,
PbysioloiY Department ; lrvina Shames, chairman, Department of Enaineerina and
Applied Sciences.
Univ~rsity

�JIJsT FoR. FIJ~
by Eggman
I 1 happens to all columnists Deadline
duy wmes, your column is due, and you
haven't the vaguest not1on what to wrate
i!bout The typewriter keys stare buck at
you a~ you wait for some ~ort of divtne
tn~plrallon: Instead you tap your lingers on
the desk, chew on a pencil and end up
~ndtng out lor a corned beef sandw1d1

l:vcry culummst knows the teehng.
lll&lt;&gt;St llOtaiJly the yellow juurnalim that
write for this rag. Take Harvy Ask llarvy
what this week's ~.:olumn IS gmng to be
alwut , and after he wakes up. he 'll tell you
he has no idea Or take Steese (you know.
he wntes that big long thmg on the
cdltl)nal page) . Steese tS hkc lluward
llughes
Mbody knows who he IS H1s
~..ulunl n JUSI mystkally appears nn the
t:lhtur's desk In fact, my thcllry IS that
Stce~e 1t Howard Hughes Maybe I can
wnte Ius autnb1ography
All ut whtdl t\ w lead up 111 the f.t~t
that I don' t f...1WW what tu wmc uhout
wJay (I uoled you, d1dn't I') Latdy
though I have been thtnktng ahout
huthdo~y~ (what subtle transtllon) M&lt;~n y of

SPf£D£D READINGAND STUDY

There's somethmg intnnsically frightening
about be~oming 10. maybe it's because the
birthdays don't matter that much any
more. After all . when y,)u're 13 you're a
teenager. when you're 17 you can dnve,
when you're I~ yuu 1.Jn dnnk. but when
you're 10 .
all you can du is he old
(Sh1t imag~ne h1ttmg W 1 You're almost
ready In retire to Mtamt Beach to lie in the
sun with d11cken fat on vour bt~dy . )

Adult price
t ~uppow the teal ~tgntlkam:e of h11ting
20 1s that , ,uctologt~.ally ~pe:l ~tng. you're
no lllnger a teenager That 's why becommg
IJ and entertng the Teenage Years (a
documcn ta1 y un adolescence, tonight nn
CBS) b ~111.'11 a big Jflarr I mean. when a
hoy hel'OIIll'\ tJ tl\ J BIG Til iNG
he
develops a swagger 1n hts walk , travels 1n a
pack and be:.~ I~ up ''" II yea r olds. He gets
lu~ t)Wfl ha~ketball
1.J1 rae~ "' tranM~tor
radio Jruund Jlway\ ~now' what song 1:.
No. I anti pay' &lt;~dull pllt:C to ~el tnlo the
rnovte\. where he SitS tn tht' bJ~.I.. row Jnd

The Spectrum 11 published thrtH'
rlmtts tt wetJk, ttllt!ry Mondtty,
W&amp;dn11sday and Fr1day, duflng thtl
rtlgCIIIIr academ1c year by Sull·Board
1, Inc OfftcfJS artt lnc8ted at 356
Norron Hall, Stare Untvemty of Nttw
York 111 Buffalo. 3435 Main Sr.
Buffalo , N ew York .
14214
rfJiepflone Area Code 716, EdltOflll/
831 4113. Busmes.s 8313610

Uiv. of U ndcr_gradua te
Studies again otTers Mrs.
Nichoh
non -c red i t
cour;e . Wet.&gt;kl y o;;e'\Sinn~ .
Nt)tninal
fee S 15 .00
pay&lt;~ble at re,gistra t iun
tn
I06
l&gt;tefend ort
Sume da\\es s till open

\

my friends have been reaching thetr
twentieth birthday amid much fanfare ,
hornblowmg and cries of ''Over the hill!"

GUSTAV A . FRISCH , INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y 14226

Second Class Postage f)Btd ilt Bufft~lo
New York.
'
C1rculat1on

16.000

CARLY SIMON
&amp; M ICKf:Y NEWBURY

856· 4l80

lHE.ATRE SERIES
674 Mam Street
Ore.,

H SO , ~4 ~0

:-!:

:~·:~T!::~:

B•lc

$4 ~0. SJ.SO

•

T::RTON TICKET OFFICE

''Let's Gee Acquainted"
SPECIAL

MR. GUY'S
Pizza &amp;Sub Takeout
697 Englewood , Cor. Starin

Call 838-4799

A_

da1ly 11 am. to 12 m1dn1ght·weekends ' til 1 a.m.
FREEDELIVERYTOCAMPUS8 :30pm 'til 1130p.m. ~
pen

Happiness is... ~§;'~~,
•

•

•

COUPON • • • . .

PIZZA smau 20¢ ott 1 ,.
-------- or ---- ---- 1

~..__ P

:~~~~~~ar:; ___'!,~~-o~f__ :(\1{k.'JiJJb
Submarine Bomber
20e off
This Valuable Coupon Good
February 2 to F«xusry 9

mom~
dl&gt;sigool

C:r~
oor

c~ared ~

--~

craft3~n

iJ{_;Ewclc

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

I1.•

If one t~ not Jewt ~h. h( is usually
confirmed. and there IS a similar
cclebratton wtth much less fanfare Oddly
enough, these families would rather save
thetr $3000 for such ndicuh.1u~ at:tiviues as
eating aud paying rent. Some arc more into
lllltdl&gt;ing the Schwarll fam1ly down the
hlu~..k and hold thetr aflan m the grand
hallroom of the Waldorf-1\stnna Ctrl~&gt; who
reach thw tlmteenth bH1hday are JUSt told

So much for btrlhdays. (Really dragged
that subjecl out. dtdn't I?) Well one final
tl depresstng. note. Today is the draft
luttery . Good luck to everyone whose
btrthdays will be ptc.: ked ; Eggman is b1tin~
hts nails tuu . Maybe if we dassificd
everyone over 35 -yeurs old I A ;rnd hold
U1e lottery for them, we'd see an end tu
war. Wunder when John Mitchell\
h1rtllday would be pte ked /\nyhuw . lor
lhose who get bummed out With number'
under 80, buses lor Toronto are leavtng ""
the hour Peace.

$u1Jscr1pr1on ratfJS are $4 50 per
rsm0$rer or $8.00 lor two serntfltBrs.

SATURDA Y, FEBRU ARY 12- 8:00 PM

1

Still playing stickball

When a boy reaches his thirteenth
birthday, it dawns on him that girls have
c¥fferen t physical attributes than boys, and
tftey also think much differently. By thetr
twentieth birthday . guys are stiU reach~ng
the same conclusion. (lllogical? Nah.)
Meanwhile, 13-year old girls are only
looking at those old 16-year old guys. who
are juniors (gasp) in high school, and have
sharp clothes and long stdeburns and some
of them even drive cars. And you're still
playing stickball. Great disillusionment seb
in when you reach 16 and realize a I J.yeal
old girl ts only a little kid .

l'

WKSW &amp; THEATRE SERIES PR£S£NTS

t

The actual thirteenth btrthday is really
far out. If the boy is Jewish, he has a
Bar-Muzvah , where his parents prove they
have made it in the world and have
achteved socaal status by blowing $3000 on
a four·hour party. For the k.td It's a gas : he
recites a short passage 10 Hebrew in front
of the congregation while his friends try to
make him laugh. At the affa11. he dresses
11p m a glittering tuxedo that he has no
1dea how to put on (what the fuck is a
..:urnbcrbund'r), shakes h&lt;Jntls with 16.000
relattves he's never met while pockettng
thctr checks.

to wait patien tly for their Sweet Sixteen.

Rl'presen red for adverttstng by
1Var1onal Educa ttonal Adver!IStnfl
Serr1ce, toe.. 360 Ltuangton Alii!
New Yor4 IVY 10017.
.,

...........................
•

throws popcorn on people Now Is that
where it's at or what'!

I
I
1

____

suif
•

Page two The Spectrum . Wednesday, 2 February 1972

�-s~ntos

Connolly duped?

Thomas Connolly of the English
department,
accuued
the
administration of purposefully
duping him about adminions
policy.

Faculty Staff Caucus ...
allamment ut mOucm.c m the
Faculty Senate and the Un1vers11y
10
general
M1ch acl
Fnsch,
Oepartment of H 1story, stressed
the need to modern11c the Senate
He -.:om pla1ned that "th e 1mpact
of the Senate in telhng people JUSt
what the hell is gomg on IS just as
expected
nobody
know\
:~nythmg . "

Dr . Hoch field qucstwncd the
vtabihty of the Senate and faculty
partiCipation 111 It "Th1s kind of
group ts dead lor th e time betng,"
he satd. add1ng.
" Academtc
had convi nced me

-conllnuea lrom page 1
that 11 will not rev1vc until some
emergen~:y occu rs·· The turnout
for the meetmg substanllated Dr
H oc h field's observatton and
prOVIded for several renecttve
comments. Noting the size of the
room and the sparse turnout, one
professor reOected that "someone
was too optimistic m choosmg
this room."
The bitterest remark on such
lack of faculty partic1pa11on both
at th e causus and 111 departmental
affam came from Paul Garvin
" Thll&gt; JUSt goes to show that we're
no better than the students.

"ONE OF THE_,....,......,....,...
YEAR'S BEST!"
,..,. ,,._
"A BEST BET!" _...,.M.....
"Otto Preminger bas made
his toughest,
most
interesting
film in
years."

HARRISBURG , Pa.
A new panel of 65
prospective JUrors was called m the Harrisburg Seven
Consp1racy tnal on Monday. and 34 were
tmmedietely excused from the case. U.S. Dtstnct
Court J udge R. 01xon Herman excused 27 or the
prospective JUrors when they disclosed that they had
fixed optntOns on whether or not the Reverand
Ph.ilip F. Berrigan and s1x ot h er anti-war act1vists
were guilty or Jn alledged kldnapping-bombmg plot
Ot h er perspe.:t1w panelists were released from jury
duty because of complaints that the prospect of a
lengthy tnal
would
pose excessive personal
hardsh tps Throughout 1he first week of th e traal,
sympathllers of the dd-..ndanls staged a nightly
"count er-Ina!" to retiUt government arguments 1n
co urt. The thes1s of thi:. program sta tes that "the real
criminals an: not antt-war dtssidents but are those
Amen ca ns who cause th e l ndodtina Wa r and those
who, by s1lence and 1n11Ct1on, have permitted 11 to go
on " In court, the government and the defense
pressed to get a JUry ot 12 .1nd ~ix alternates to try
the Uarnsburg Seven acc used c.f plotting to k1dnap
Henry A. K1sstnger, blow up the Washmglnn federal
bulldmg healing sy~tem, and vandallle draft hoards
tn nme ~tate~
BALliMORc. Md
&lt;itud1e., 111 Johns Hopkm\
Umve"1ty tndu::ate th .. t wumcn v. hu use or.JI
.:ontracepllves for a few years are not more prone 1&lt;1
develop cerv~.:al cancer than women who do not hut
they fale J SIX ttme&gt; great..-r fl'&gt;k ul t'tlund dol\ A
survey of 3 24 women who use the p1ll w.Js mad..- hy
Or Oavtd l'homa~ lie \aid he found nu ev1dem.e of
any greater mc1denle nr early \1gn' e~t Lcrvi.:JI.:.tnLer
tn thJt group I hun 111 a ··ontrol group ot lOJ wo111en
who d1d not use the p11l But r homJ\ w:mted 1hal
lu~ ~tudy only lovered the fir\! tw11 .Jnd J h.tll ye..ar&lt;,
l,f us1ng the pill
lie l'Xpl;uned th.tt "'file
cancer-ca11~1n~ wbsl&lt;tn.:t!!. Jre known tc&gt; all &lt;)Illy
.tft cr a lort~ penotl IJI IJI.:n ... y Another ~ltH.Iy .Jt
ll upk 1ns showed thai Wl•ttt.:ll wh•• ll\l' the p11l .t'rl"
more hkely to devd&lt;lfl dol\ 111 hlow.l ve&lt;,~cb alter
al-.:ldcnt\ or \Urgcry tlun women who do not U\C
oral contrac~pt1ve~ Thc qtudy was ha~&lt;'d un

WAS HINGTON
Defense Secretary Melvtn R.
La1rd says there wLII be no draft call through the
month of March. Thts marks the longest planned
break 10 conscnpiJon ~•nee the end of the Korean
War. " We're mov1ng 1n the direction of Jn
all~volunteer
force world-w1de dunng thts first
quarter nf the ye..tr," Mr Laird sa1d . The secretary
l'lted three reasons fnr the dec1s1on to suspend the
draft th1" quarter . !&gt;Ubstant1al pay ~nuease~&gt; effective
Jan
I , the slow~ng of the V1etnam War and
Congressional requtrcments to tnm the Army by
70,000 men . Smce the Korean War ended there h as
never been a no..&lt;Jrafl quarter except for last sum m er
when Slect1ve Serv1cc exp1red hefnre Congress
.:omplete :n:tlt&gt;n on the h1lltn extend 11
OAK LAND. C.1hf
ll uey Newton, Black
Panther Party co-tound~r ha\ annountell th.JI the
Panthe" h.Jve rejected th..- "p1ck - up·lh~-gun-now"
philosophy Jnd wtll now turn thetr effurts to
··orgJnllt' the l!lmmunuy " ll ow~ver, the party sllll
belteve' th.tl rcvolu11on l\ prnb.Jhly lllt'Vltable tn the
Unned StJte\ and 11 may be vwlent Mr 1\oewton
'l.lld The PJnther~ Intend tu wurk non-viOlently by
ptd,dlng merlhJnh to for~..c them to .:ontr1butc
nwne~
nr nunhandi\C and .1 new nattonal
vnter · regl~trattnn drtve whH:h Newton satd would
extend tn the J)ee('l South "I dm not optlmlSlll
Jhout .1 new ,y,tettl ol thtn~ ~:ommg ahoul through
the dnloral PCOll'\\ but I belteve tn ~ome dfeds we
... an get 'om~: hend11\." he \Jid "And 1n arl3~ where
wr ~Jn'l . wr .:an 'hnw thJt clel:loral pol1t1cs ~:an't
!I)Ve 11 h• u~ " Newton dl l USed Fldndge Cleaver .
heJd "' ,J nvJI t'.1nthn tJdtOn nl bc1ng a "renegade
\lJb tr~1tor " Ill' ~aHI ('Jc;Lvcr lned to turn the party
o~way lru111 .. ,, ·~ ong111al VlStttn ""The gun ttscll due~
nol 'ymhol11e revoluttnlliltY Fascist~ also larry
gun\ In order In wtn the revolution you must
PJrllllPJte." lOOIIn&lt;'nted Newlun

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -------------~
SENIORS

YOU SAY

ho11k'

"·"u un·d l11r th" wlltntt' l
I"'' p.11d ,, 111.1dtt1tl' Ill~ l.. r

vou

~o il I•Htttd

I\ I I r1 \ I

Ht' lllt.•ll

Ml&lt; SILVER

h

853.875~

Y Y 1 Il l t I A I &gt;

*
*

WilY N&lt;JT

F RIDAYI!!!

R I I AX .111d I INWINI &gt; 111 till
I I I IN

_.,-.,.,c..,.,,

2 I I (/

,., Yort Tl-•

{/ ; lr l ,

*

I{ l I lIM
,\I

)o

muncy

P-trt u r I ulltime
whik ..tllt'IH.I111g "'flpol
• . til

•• • " P 111 lt .. t .111

111 \ &lt;• llr .... tl .ul .t t IIIII&lt;

I~ I KIN I &gt;1 I I I I A

POST GRADS

I..Jt n g•w!.l

Tlu: Bu~Jr\ o(hlL lo,t your lllll l ~&gt;ll ~h.: ... k , .lg.ttn
And your room tn tl1t· durr11 h,,, "" hc.tt
And dll' buuk,ton 1' lt ' lllp• 1r.trt ly u tll u f .dl the

And
And

STARTS

compansons between 60 women who deve lo pt'd
clots aft er InJuries or operations .Jnd a similar group
wh.Jch dtd not. It showed the pill-takers chan ...·es of
clotttng were stx t1mes greater

ALFA ROMEO
FERRARI
MASERAll

.';tl/t • ~ • Vt' fl 'll't' • [JIIfl\

r( c I ll

YOUR I'AVOK.I fE OWK I All S
11111\'

4 : .) 0

lll

5 ·110

• ~ 1u me ·u1~ • •

soc

Mt~ tPr

I nd.1 v

/ 1

174 l.f(Xt'r/

C'un I td
~t·ur 1/udt•t

"&gt;N· 73~11

Lec;;&lt;i than 1 out of every 10
U.B.

STUDENTS VOLUNTEERS TO WORI\. IN THE COMMUNITY'

IF YOU 'RE ONE OF THE OTHER 9 CONSIDER YOURSELF ONE OF T HE

Silent M:ajority
220 NORTON HALL

-

831~3609

Wednesday, 2 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�I

EdiTORiAl·

I

More crap
FSA has reasserted its involvement in any moves against
its enterprises by mandat ing that the Board of Directors
would review any proposals for moving on phasing out
vending. White this prevents any secret o r semi-secret
schem ing from being rushed through to completion, a fir m
committment to the vending employees is still lacking. Job
security is unlikely to stem from a promise that no mass
layoffs will occur at the present time.
In another matter, the administrative members of the
Board are playing the oft-used game of "SUNY says no."
Over a year ago, the Board agreed to transfer the FSA land to
Sub Board . While this may appeal' benevolent to some, it
isn't, since FSA origi nall y bought the land with student
monies. Now, on the strength of another ludicrous legal
memorandum from the SUNY Counsel's Office , Charles
Balkin, FSA Board Member has introduced resolutions to
rescind that committment.
Among the "facts" cited by the Counsel's Office are that
FSA has access to student fees . This is patently false . This
also is an indication that when an administrator feeds Albany
false or partial information, the result is a legal opin ion based
on falsehoods .
To do anything other than transfer the land back to the
students is dishonorable. Student monies were illegally and
secretly appropriated to buy the land and therefore control
shou ld be vested in the students. Nor is the proposal that
FSA administer the profits for the cultural, social and
educational needs of the students desirable. Such a not ion is
b latantly paternalisti c.
The o nly thing that is of "questionable legality" is the
ch icanery, manipulat 1on and outright dishonesty of some
administrative seat-holders on the FSA Board of Directors
Perhaps if FSA truly represented the constituencies it claims
to, they wouldn't develop such questionable pol1cies

'TILL Ml AGAIN ABOUT THl MILK PliCI INCREASE •.

Who is Thomas Schillo?
lr• the l:dtlor
Will you ple;1~e pmvale me Wllh some
mt orm dl 1m1 Wh o IS Thomas Sch1llo"l It seems
m~· rel11hl ~: h• rnc: thai so me Insulated bureaucrat
w1tl11n lh ~: h&lt;•web of the adm1mstral10n can cause ~o
much fu rm about vendmg sc rvtt:S , the housing u l
lJOIVCf\IIY \ tUd cnl s. I'lL
It ~~ not \II lllU&lt;-h the fad that this tndtvidual
doc~ e x1~1 ltul I&lt;• whom IS he rc~fllllhlhlc and are
they awarr th.tt he cxtsts? If &gt;&lt;&lt;•. wh.tl IS th etr

Primaries extension bill
I,, Ill• I i/11"'
ll11' ""''1' 1. rht• lloMoJ 11f H ec tt u n, IS on ca mpus
I•&gt; tC!!"Il"l tu.: w V11tc" hu anyone ovc1 IX lhl·
p1 o..:c~\ "H'IY Stntplt:
you only need proof of age
•111d y(lllt I I) • .trd I .tk e th em to Ihe Board nf
f' l&lt;·.t """ l.thlr "' N&lt;&gt;rton 's &lt;'•·n t cr I o ungc .
Uut &lt; &lt;&gt;II IIII OH &lt; o~u se wants to rcmrnd you that
111~1 hl'l',lll~t'
reg1~terc~l doe~n 't lllc.'&lt;Hl you can
vn lt' 111 lite l'11111.tlll''~ Y&lt;•ur :tlllon 111 1eg•stcr1ng th1 ~
wn·l. w1ll let Y•HI vote 111 Novcmhn huf nol lht'

Include students

reactton t o ht~ repeated a !tempts to c real e more
trouble on t:ampus by h1~ heavy hantkd and o fte n
downr ight st upid handling of what see ml&gt; to he bt~
offi~:e There are enough problems on this ~.;a m pus
w ithout the prcsenct! of perso ns 111 pos1110ns wh crt'
1hey can crea I e more .
It is my si nce re hope thut till' I·SA dtredors wtll
!ell Mr Schtllo wh ere lo go w1th lu' plans about
ventl111g am.l 1h,1t tht• .ldtnlntstr,!lmll ul tlh·
UntVt!rSlly wtll then Sl"C thut h l· t,:IIC\ th l' ll"
i:rJr/ /( Stdlt·r Ill

Much cogent and constructive criticism of admimstration
pol1c1es was vo1ced at Monday 's meeting of the Faculty -Staff
Caucus. The need for such a group has never been greater
Y""
Faced with serious threats to their cont inued input into
University decision-making, lhe faculty and staff can do well
to span the existing governance groups through such a body .
One problem seems apparent however. Since students
too, deserve an equally Important voice in cam pus affairs we
urge that the Faculty-Staff Caucus be broadened to include
students. Such a body wou ld not only be strengthened .
embracing as it does three large constituencies, but would
provide students with an alternative means o f Involvement m f ., t/11 I ht111
University ·wide affairs. Student government. particularly dt
I IH· ''"tll" nl ,,,,.Vl"llll"lll ''' tiH• past h&lt;ts heen
the undergraduate level , has paid increasingly less attention • 11.11~· tn tH'd l•y .1 lnl uf rhclonl .1nd very littk
to educational policy matters over the last tw o years. Unless .,, ,n,tn" ltV&lt;'·" 111111 Slutknl ,ld J VI~"' dcpencJ, &lt;Ill th;·
this trend is st opped, and we believe inclusiOn of students 1n ' ''•l&gt;&lt;lll .I lid Ill&lt;' I ltii ii&lt;' I\IIY t.dl'lldar Wl\tdl I!IVl'&gt; II\
the FSC would do just that, students may find themselves 1111 it' h.t'l' l111 III II).: tr'llll ll"\Uil\ We otre 1101 I'Yt' ll
totally removed from the realm of academic decision making. l.th.1·11 w llnii,IV lor 11 "as~U 111 ed th.11 ' 11 will ~I I tll l'

sprtng wh e n ~&lt;lnvcntl"O Jclr.:l(.lll·' att• dl.,wn ,\ , .1
result you'll he vut111.,: lor 'omeo11e clw·, c ho1 ce 111
Novt' rnher , nol your~
Comtnoo Cauw t\ ''Y"'I!. to lh.tlll!.~' tlt t' hy
extcnd mg th~: rcgtstratwn pntncJ 1,,, tl11· prolllaiiCK .
Attn y()u reg1 ster 1:&lt;1 111e t o &lt;lllr l.thk .wd Wrtl&lt;' y.. ur
New York State kg~,talor~ /\ -;~ lh.:m t .. \IIJ)P"" lh•·
fflt'nnl rt•r.t.flrtl/ltl/1 /It// If 11 !).t\\l'\ you , an 111 .1kl· .1
Voting dn'tM on lim 'IHi rtg th.11 llll !l,hl ~·w yo111 .1 r•·.ll
ch oa·e tn Novcmlwr
/II/I (

1111111111/f ( t/11\1"

Action, not rhetoric

THE SpECTI\UM
Wednesday , 2 February 1972

Vol. 22, No. 49

d n wu · Ami ,·vcn tf 11 d '"'' " ' t d11' down . nut old
lllt'll1111h IU'I dnn '1 "'t'lll 111 wnt k wll cn c.onstd nlltl(
lhl' 111'\H'r In hnll.d f)lnltlcrll' 111 lml.ty .
It " 111111" we •tudenl~ ''"P ~ llltng arlHind
phdn~t •PIII/111~ .11111 \1.111 J &lt;.:ttng J11111 J gr&lt;IUf) Sllltl a!\
Ci\&lt; pr&lt;lll'&lt; t or ( •llllllHlll C'Ju~t· t\nd. l11•lp or~a n111'
WNY I'IHC , . 1 group wh1d1 ncc&lt;h t·v~·ryorw·~

•nnlllhUII OII I feel WNYI 11tH. '' lhl· vchll.l•· whl•h
studt•nt s hiiVC hcen ln.,._tr)}! l1•r ,, lull 111n~· , ..,,al
dt:llloo group wll1 lh 'uh~talllt.Jie' " ' word ~ "1lh
re,l'.Ht h WNYPI RC. nt••·d-.. fi&lt;'lti!Orl&lt;·r, IHlt 11 )1111
c;m 'l .:untnhut,• 11111e 'h""' I"'" '"1'1'"'' lty ''~""'!! ,,
pc'lt llnn
l"h c11~ llo .llloth t' r Vt ldl l\\111' Pl"(tplc Jll" 11!-II&lt;HHl!J.
I he slate '' 'q 111'1' 11111! lit &lt;" It ll' "ll I ol ·'' uth'lll
ddtVtllc\ ll·r, Wh y a1~· we ~ ril ing IIHr•· .1 11d t.ll-.tnl!. 11 1

Ynu tlt•n 'I

hav•• In tw ,, Kal ph Ntt&lt;.kt tn
111 'i&lt;lllcly llr rtl' .tiC 11thl"r way, , I ht·
t•mc Ita' lllllll" lor lc~s rht•ton,· .11111 111111l J&lt;.:llon tor a
Lh;lll!(l"
~u ntrthul.:

Ed1tor in C hief - Denn1s Arn old
Co -Man89•ng Edotor
AI Benson
Co·Man89ong Ed1tor Mtlo.e Lippmann
Asst . Managing Editor Susan Moss
Bustness Manager Jael&lt; Herlan
Advert1song Manager Susan Mallen11r1e

Ctty
Copy
A sst

Feature
Gr•ph•c Arts

Back page

JoAnn Armao
Jell Greenwald
How1e Kurt/
J an1s Cromer
Aonno Forman
Man r Gat11
L Ia ore K roegsman
Lynda Tero
Tom Toles
Amy Ahrend

Layout
Asst .
Lit. &amp; Drama
MUSIC
OH-CampOs

Am .
Photo
Asst .
Sports
A sst

Browsing privilege abuse
1rr I ll, . l .rli I r If

Maryhof.)e Aunvon
oacan r
Mochael Si lvert&gt;lalt
Billy Allman
lynne Traeger
oacanl
Mockay Osterreocher
.K•m Santos
Barry Aubon
Howoe rarwl

The Spectrum os servt!d uv Un•ted Press lnternatronal , College Press
Senrice. the Los Angeles Tunes Fret! Press. I hi! Los Angeles Tomes
Syndicate and l1heral1on News ServH:e
RepubliClltiOn ot matter here1n w11hout the
Editor·in-Chlef IS IOrUn.lden

e~press

con$enl of tha

Editorial Poticv IS determ1ned by the Eduor '" C h•el

Page four . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 2 February 1972

It 1\ trlll"tl'\11111,: to nott· thai lhe lJrHvcrstt y
13ul•k\lore IIIJtnl atns a pnvate IH11wSing lihrar y for
l"CI IJ III sdc,·ted \I Udenh \ If lht~ Umvcrsity rh c
st :ti\'J purposl' 11f I'H•I IIlbrttng h1owsing privilege' for
rn eJ1,·.t1 ~~ udenh unly , an onus ha.~ hecn placed upon
;Ill oil her..
!Ill' 1r11plic.Jtion lb thai non· ml'dt l" al
~tlilll'nts are snnw hv w le-;:; truslwnrthy than all
o lh l'l ' What cVt'l f&lt;'Json is g~ven for this prefcrcntral
treat r11ent . 11 wnuld ap pl y to the ulhcr dtsci plin..~s as
well lhere '' !HI log~ t·al rca~nn why o ne area nf
study at th1s Univef'.tty ~ hnuld be singled nut for
prcfereollal trcJ trn cnt If the origJnal prcUHbl' ahuut

redunog thdts 1~ true then all lla· rc\t 11 1 u~ Jll'
pay1ng tor the np o ffs o f mcdtutl tnt .; It wuuld
seem that th e mcdll &lt;d studenh themsdvc' w t~uld he
akrt l"nnuglt lo question sudt dtsnllnm.lllltn lest
tlwy h l' J&lt;.:l"UsccJ o f at:ademic elttl,lll .
Other n:tail huuk,tores 1n th..- Jrl',l LO ntrnuc 111
permtl unrestn.::ted browsing Jnd even though th ey
du "'" enJOY the obvtous econonue hencllts thdt I he
Un1vcr~lty Bookstore has, they still tulll"IH111 as
profit mak111g co ncerns . I s uggcl&gt;t that the Un 1v er~1IY
Bookst or.• d c&lt;.cntra h7e for the hct ter 'l"l IIILl' o f all
th l' Slllt.il'lll\ at lhtS lJntverslly

�Hockey hustlers

Matmen match strength
with .Cleveland Vikings

Bulls continue winning ways
by Howie f aiwl
Ant Sports f'drror
The mark of a champ1onsh1p team LS ont: t h at
can combine expertise and fortune to win games.
This was certamly t rue for t h e Buffalo hockey Bulls,
destined for a top playoff spot in OtVJ.SJon II , as they
n•pped Salem State S 3 m what m ust be co nsidered a
very
medtocre
performance
The
exhausting
weekend roadwork whJch brought the S uUs 400
nules to SpnngftehJ ,tnd Salem. Mass. left many of
lhc players "wtthout legs," a fa~.: t that was qutte
ev1dent 1n thetr Vtl' tory over the V1k1ngs on Sunday .
tJnhke the prev1uu~ n1ght \ romp over A .l.C.,
where a ~..ombmcd team cffurt saw th e Bulls skate
and hust le lhetr w ay In a M! JSon high I 2 goals,
Sunday's c.:ontest dppeared, a' John Stranges
pen:e pt1vely desc.: nhcd as, "a bund1 o f guys out tor a
Sunday skate "
F re n c h ' m agnifi ce nt '
It WdS n&lt;ll o~lllu~J.... huwcver J~ S.tlem State put
together an tn\pm:d dtott 1 he (l -6 · 1 Vtktng.o. had
heen ~.n mtn~ on 'trong JS ell to~IL'. wilh wms over
A I(
L nwdl 1 edt Jlld Norwtdt J Ill' JgJIIl\1
JXIw~·rlul ( olhy o~nd a dn\c It ISS hi ltf\t Jli.JL e
Bnwd&lt;un
Yet So~km \.Ouhl 11111 l.tJ...c JdVMtldgc ul the
Jt,tJc,, Bulh . Jllhuugtl llll·y tlt.J uur,hnot I:Juflo.~lu
43 · n 1-rt.'Shmo~n Ru" l·rrndl WJ \ Ill the ncb for
l:luiiJiu, glVtng \COHH Mtl..e Dunn d weii..&lt;J~ervcd
n::'t
1-rendt
t&gt;nlt: J.. nown tor ht~ wJndenng
t ~·d1nt4ue&lt;,, hJ\ tt.radually lcJrned 111 'lay doscr to
hnm~ wtlh q1111c po~tltVl' rc,ull\ l ie w.t~ ruagntlt~.cnt
thro111!,hnut po.~rl t LUI.uly tn the ltrst pt•rtnd when he
,topped 17 Salem sh~•ts
many t..ommg at pn1nt

blank ran ge.
Wit h things und er control o n Buffa lo's s1de of
the 1ce, t he Bulls wen t to work on th e VJkmg's Vin
Ca p oriccto F reshman w mger Mtk e Klym, w hose
prod uctive weekend resu lt ed m seven pomts (SIX
asststs, one goal), pu t Buff.Jio a h ead on a po w er play
goal wtlh assists from BtJI Newman and Dale
Dol mage at 6 0 I of the first penod . The Bulls made
11 2~ m the \econd when dclensemJn Larry Carr
took a pass f rom Klym and sldmmcd 1t home The
perwd ended at 3·1 o~ftct the Bulb' Bot-. Alb.1no .md
Salem top scorers lom l tv1ng~ton ;~nd Rtd1 ML Bnnc
~~ch pi.:ked up,, goal

Goody saves th e d ay
\ommg out tn the tlmd pcrmd tht• llr~ll l:illll\
tncd desperately to hang onto thctr sltm h!Jd Wtth
only tw11 and a half m1nutc) gnnc, however , S.tlcllt
Stdtc'~ B11l M.: Bnne ~Jmc dn vtng do"n u:c wtth ,,
brco~I&lt;..JWdY In h1s only mtsto~J...c ol the game, Hu!&gt;.~
f-ren~:h .:amc !0 ll:1.·t uut nf the net:. Jnd "" dc.Jnng
attempt Laromed otf Mdlnnc\ leg o~nd tntu the guJI
lor a J.J ttc
I wclvl" nunutc' IJtcr John '\tr.tngl'' onu: .tg.un
&lt;JIIIC up With the dut~.h go.tl I t"·" nnw .t 111Jitcr of
dtlJ...tng nil th~· WI.&lt;IIH.Is "'' S.tlcm StJt~ J...cpt UJl th•·
pres~urc Wtth lc" thJn ~ nnnute tu go thn' pulled
gtMhc l .tpiHILLICI o~ddtng .tnot h~·r lor" Jtd In thr11
a ltd.\. J... But Bullo~l u L\1·1.Jpt o11n Uuh (,uud ~ gut hnld
of the pud. ,tt hh owu c ud .tnd l11~ dt:.JIInll 'hut
bnun1.cd oft the hu.trcl\ otl1d IIlio '\,tklll \ t1Jll'JI lll'l
tm th.: ltnal '\ ' 'Ltlll'
HultJln , no" 111 J ttl' l1•r Wlfllld pl.tll' Wtlh tlw
llruvcrMty ol MJ\sa~.hu~l'll\ wtll t.tl..&lt; lht'll X I
l&gt;tv"ton II rcuml .tj,\Jill\1 llo~Jllc'' (hwq:o St.tll'
l· nday ntght on &lt;IH' l.JI&lt;.ef\ hutnc 11:e

H E U U AB FIN E.:--:A-=R-=
T-=s~
F~IL"'":'M~
C~
O~~~~~=:==
Friday,

~a t un.l.Jy, Feb 5th

Feb. 4 t h

~~i~~rsity

:

•

b oard

•

•

UUAB DRAMATIC ARTS COMMITTEE

•nd
THEATRE DEPT

e
e

present

•RTA RRY NTGRT•
FEB . 2 and 3

FREE

•
•

FILLMORE ROOM

•

:

FREE

I

I

REDUCED

to

Poise·n Ivy
IOU llMWOOb AVl.

get ttcketsat Norton Ticket Office

0.111 'tit

W KBW '

, ,Jo, ,.,..,., .,, , _oo

116-001'

.,J

(Near U .8 .)

I

THE ATRE SE RIES I'IH S£NTS

1

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

1

:

Sunday, February 6-7:30 PM

:

I
I
I
I
1

I

JOSE FELICIANO

I
I
I
I
1

AHD DAVI D BLU E

THEAl'RE SERIES
674 MAIN ST.
Orch ~6.00 ss co
T il

KI:.TS

•
e.tcony

856-4180

ss oo

&amp; $3 ,SO

A V AlL A BLl:. A T NOR TON TI CKET

1

OFFICE

UU AB COFFEEHOUSE * !

aC tiVIti eS

:

SALE II
200Jo SQOJo

I All WINTER SPORTSWEAR

••••.......................-••-••••••••• ;

:

:
•

I

-----------------------------

~----~-.~.·.-.~.~.:;;o;;~;d:-1;

•

M id-Winter

1

3144Mam~t

1

Check Conference Theatre showcase for times
SHOWS 50¢ before 6, 75ufter 6 p .m .

•

the only unblemish &lt;!d
among th e Bull sta rt e rs
{10~) w&amp;.ll fat:e w h at could be h is
toughest challenge of the season
Lawson w tll take on C .S .U 's
hank Yoo. Yoo , who ca p t a in s
the Cleveland State squad , IS
undefeated 'o far th1s season Yoo
lO mptled a tl-2 dual met!l mark
lust ~cason tn ratse h ts career
ret:ord to ,, ftnc 24 ' Yuo. w h o
~:a pturcd
the
M ld · States
lnvttatmnal and John Carroll qu a d
lhJ111f111&gt;11~hlp'
last
season,
h;111dily dcleatt!d Buffalo's Dave
Qudttrnnl' 111 tilt' Bulb Vtkings
duJI meet la't &lt;oea\on Ttm bout
1.11Uid he the key to the matd1.
1 h•· Vtl..e, hJvc .1dd~J 'omc
nt•w
IJ\.e\
,tnd
th e
mu~t
fH 11111 lllC II I
.! lll&lt;&gt;llg
I ht•rn
1\
hc.t Yywctght
( hu \. J...
l:hrhart
I hrhJrt who jliiC\ II II K Ill o~nd
l4() Jtl\ CIV~IfliiY..l"ICtf lll ol htS
l4 npponet11' 1,, ,, \C,I\110 J~ d htgh
"h""l 'entlll Ill· "'"" ~o uf ht~
vt\.lortc· ll} p1n anJ lt.,:ure' In gtve
liuJI, hc;tvywctght l• ln} l'olt tare a
rough h,tlll&lt;' I ht' m.ttlh . wlmh
th•gtll\ ,11 X fl 111 lnllllwtn.,: the
I• lO p 111 JV prdtlll ~11uld c,t~tly
I!" down lo tit( "trt' .tnJ 11 11
doC\ p.,Jt, .tr1' Will hJVt· Itt Ol' Jl
hh ht'\l Itt Jlltll nlll J Buil Vt\.1111)'
record

STUDIO : II

...

CONFERENCE THEATR E

•

:

I

THE UGLY

i
i

.---------:-.
KARATE·
J St h DAN B LACK BELT IN&lt;., 1 I
I
INFORMAT ION
I
I
12 ·00 8 JOp .rn
I
'MON to~Al '
I
I
l.dll
t:S36-60
18
I
I

THE GOOD,
THE BAD,
&amp;

•

l•ivu ta l 142. hour
Anollll't i.1·y h11ut 111 lhl\
ev ctlln~ ·, m.tldt .,.. til he .tt I &lt;I ' lh '
Hull ,;o Lolfll.lln I L•tl I .IW\1111 who

~port:.

I

presents
f l'l1 hd 6. 6rh

H eadtng into the home stretch
of lh eir sch edule, the wrestling
Bulls t ake on perenmally tough
Clevela n d State tontght at Clark
Gym. The match p romtses to be
the toughest to da t e for the Bulb
The Bulls wtJI be takmg on a
revengc-mtndrd "&gt;quad th&lt;tl wtll
try to reverse last year's I:Jutralo
VICtory T he Vtktngs Will return
e1ght lettermen from the '411ad
thJI fell
17 - 15 111 ('Jcvcland
However. the Vikes d)so d1d o1
good Jllh uf tct:tulltng .tnd carne
up wtth at• cxcclknt group of
new.:otncf\ '\' J rc&lt;.ult . f 'oJlh
Dtd li ..n.tut \ n1Jtll1l'n llJVl' o~n
t:XLdkt\1 hknd ol youth Jlld
l'Xpcnenn· th.tt wtll he tough to
he:tt
I lcvct.~nd \to~lt: " led h}' J JM11
ol tur·lltght returnee' St l'\lc &lt; tb,
wh o wre\llcd .tt holh I II'! .tnd I~~~
lh' 1.1\l yt'.tr '' 1he r.:gul.tr .tl I I!&lt;
th1' ,e,J"•n I tJ...J pt"tcJ .t rerln t
1-&lt;.0 ttldrk la'l yt·ar ,tntl J.td ed tu
h"
l.tur.:J, hy .tnnt'\111!: lhl·
lhJmpttlll, hlp ul till' M1d StJln
111\IIJiitlll,ll t l&gt;llllt.tliiCIII

PRESENTS

:

•

•
•

an

•

e

concert

•

DAVE VAN RONK !

:
:

•

i

!

and

•
•

•

:
• (
:

•

"THE FREAK SHOW"
A

MULTI

•
•

FEBRUARY 4th
FRIDAY NIGHT

•

1st FLOOR CAFETERIA
7 30 and 10:30 Shows

MEDIA

EXPERIENCE

T I C K E T 5

$1 00 in Advance
$1. 25 at the door

:
•
:

FEBRUARY 5th .
SATURDAY N IGH T·.
RATHSKELLAR

7 .30 &amp; 10:30 Shows :

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • f AD1v ofSubBoardl Inc; • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Wednesday , 2 February 1972 The Spectrum Page five

�Track competition

Hoopsters zonked by
the Illinois Huskies
What 's the key to l&gt;U«.:~ess tn
4:••llege basketbull'1 A~:. far us
Northern llhnots Coach Tom
Jorgensen 1s concerned . JUSt
r~:~:rutt the to p high school players
from Indiana and llltno1s With a
12 2 talen t-laden squad. the NIU
Jlusloc~
blasted the bJsketball
Bulls IOo-Ro at the Memonal
Audttonum
I he Bulb. wtl h an Jgress1ve
1nn~.: defense and 'l~lppy llusJ...IC~
play werl* 10 th~ hallgame fM
mulh of the f1rst half. hut tell to
the lluskie fast break . lluskie
super soph, 6-&lt;l Jun Bradley and
JUOior guard Bill ll arn~ led the
fi~t half Husk1e attJ&lt;.k At the
h.JII the Bulls tratled 4 '-24 while
~o.o rnm1tmg
::!0 turnovers anl.l
'ht~uun g J:? per .:ent horn the
tlnur
Huskie~

pull away
In the ~econd half the lfusloes
mad~
fewer
mt~~.ue-;
and
C&lt;lpttahted w11 h J deval&gt;lo~llng fJst
breo~l.
Ill ' ) I 06 po1nts was
shghtl y o~hove thctr 100 J o~verage.
wh11:h IS thtrd 10 the nattnn
behind UCLA dnd Or&lt;~l Ruhcrts
for the Bulls 1n the ~elt)ml half
Bob VJrtJnlan J1m I nbble and
( urt Blallo..more led the JltJd
VartJn1an II 1-~ I I l~d the [lull'
With ~ ~ point' wruk I rthhle .tnd
lo potnts
Bl.•llo..llHlfl' o~dded
a pi«.:~ I.'

Bra ..I ley Irum I .JSI &lt;' htl.t~ll
lndlo~nJ lell all \lorer' "'11h ~ 7

Paulucci~fi potential pays off
discus than the shot due to the fact that I e 1s
actually small for a shot putter. Indeed , shot pt. oters
are generally bigger than discus men.

by Bruce Engel

potnts and added II rebounds and
USSIStS Blackmore led all
rebounders wuh 14 enabhng the
Bulls to equal NIU's total. For the
Bulls, JUmor transfer Greg Laker,
starttng his first game, contributed
I 2 points and eight rebounds. The
lo"S, Buffalo's ninth stra ight at
Memunal Aud1tonum put the
Bull s
at
7-X
whtlc the
mnetel.'nth-ranked Hu ~J...11.'S rose to

Spectrum Staff Wmer

SI X

About one year ago, Dr Delano Menwether . a
27·year-olc.l Baltimore hematologist. took up track as
:.1 hobby Meriwether had al ways been interested tn
!rack but had never run before in competition . He
entered ~o rne local meets and then worked hts way
up to the b1g national events a'nd was an tnstant
\Uccess Despite Ius lack of traimng and expenence,
the doctur had enough natural talent to Will many
60 and I 00-yard dashes ag:unst some of the world's
best wn1pc1 1t1on . Today. Menwcther is 0 11e of the
wvrld\ hest spnn tcrs when he ~::~n gel away from Ius
lab .
S1m1larly though nut qu1te as dramatll. IS the
~tory of Buffalo's state champ1on ~ot putter. sentuf
Tom paulucc1 Paulucct had always followed tracJ... .
p&lt;~rt1cularly the weight ·events. hut never competed
until 1111c year ago when a fnend convinced him of
lm potentiJI Somehow the wurd potential IS not
4wte enough . In the words uf a teammate " ft c'~ got
the hesl hutld I've ever \Cen ..

13-2

fnn1ght at Wc~l Pu11H. Nt•w
th~: Bulls m.:ct Army (8-7)
10
theu sel:nnd meeting ever
Army. under new l:oa~o. h Oan
Daugherty. has had tts ups and
down.~ I hiS \Cason Bob Sherwtn J
6-2 guard leads the C'adets wtth a
.l.2 6 ~conng avera~e In the nnly
o ther mect1ng h.:twecn the'&gt;e two
1ea m~
tn
J 9 6 2 -6 l ,
Army
trtumphe&lt;J
73-61
Saturday
eventng the Bulls return to the
Aud to fal·e tht! NIJg.JrJ J&gt;u rplc
Yurk.

l:.a&amp;)e\ J t 7 p m

Quick learn~r
In Ill\ very first competttHII1 lt~st wtntcr, P3uiiUll
threw 40 teet. quite an effort tor a ft1lil atte1npt But
hy the end ol the spr1ng seasun, he had unproved tn
a he~t ul 47 ft 4\,Jz 111 and won the !&gt;IJte
dt.tr11p1onsh1p' '" well. Additionally . he had thruwn
the dl\lUs 152 feet. a respectable collegiate mark .
Paululu 11.-el\ he may tn the long run be better 1n the

Niagara leads in serie!&gt;
Ntag.ttJ ~rort~:d .1 12 ~ rnord
bcluH· nW«.:IIIItt Dayton Monday
night .II the Aud r he Purpk
.. agl~\ le,ld the all ·t11nc \t'rtes ,
J.l-14 and bc.11 lhc Bull\ 90 -77
l.1q
ycJr Leadmg ~:.~nrer lur
N tag.~ra
IS b~ ~en1or htpt.un ,
M.tr.hdll Wtngate (IX X). wlule 5 -9
hat~~outt
mall' AI Wtlltams "
'l"nn~,:
I J .11
'l u: k~t~ may h ~:
flit l..t.'d up .tl I h\' &lt;'I.trio.. ( iYttl llll.t·t
ooflt&lt;.l' &lt;JI no dlaljo!l'

HAIRSTYLING

••••

/tu• '5 T'heatre Barbet
I 05 5 Kenmore Avenue
(at Cnlvin Theatre)
WIGS HAIR COLORING

==:.8~77 -2~98:9==r:

This indoor season, Tom had tmproved ven
more. He has won three tournaments , the last ·wo
with identil:al throws of 50 feet , three inches,,. 11Ch
gives tum the school record. He now practices tv • or
three times a week at Fredonia State (there 1 nu
place for htm to throw indoors here). under the tble
di rection of Dr. Everett Phillips, an expert " ' the
shut put and track in general. Paulluc1's form. wlt 1ch
he admits 1s bad, ts tmproving rapidly. "Right 1111W,
my big problem is getting my legs to move fast ,·r m
the circle My arms are ahead of the rest ot my
body ." Tim ts a common problem for the
mexpenenced shut puller Paulucc1 IS still trying to
muscle tus throws. But tl he can unprow hts
technique. Tom could very well surpass the SX feet
he has .set up as an mformal goal for th1s spring
Bull veteran cindcrman
Although th1s year's track tearn w1ll lacJ... the
depth it I1Jd last year. Paulucc1 t~ not the only
talented veteran Spnnter Ktnty Br11wn and n11lcr
J1m McClurk111 h.Jve al~n placed 1n the mvitat1onal
tournaments that the Bulls have entered . The Sl.lU:td
as a whole has JUSt recently started pract 1ce am.l w1ll
see act1on SatuHI:Jy at Rul:he~t er Th1s meet wtll be
largely time tnals for Buffak1·s ctnderman The
wmter season •~ really only a tune up fu1 the
~hortened spnng ~cason .

- - -- T.P.U. of HARTFORD. INC .
let the professionals
the load!

AUTO SERVICE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

service

Honest &amp; Reliable
repairs on
Imported &amp; Domestic

LIMITED RESEARCH TIME?

call or wnte
BOOTS! BOOTS!

s
a

H•v• we got boots/ Boots by
Shew.
E ndte:ott Johnson .
G.ar9&lt;t
G""' · Truol The US Army.
Conv•~. Monn o Tollk•. e t c
Booh tor Guys •nd Galsl
O ur•t~go.

1

Fer-ou1 .

funny,

freaks and

r.eroous boots. Get the good
ones and save money Shop
Army N&lt;tvyl

e

1JO

TENT CITY.

Matn At Tuooer

8~3 - 1~15

s

43
FARMINGTON AVE
HARTFORD, CONN . 06105

a
1
e

O••

• Boulevard
• Seneca Mall •
• Niagara fall s •

Dfmy
bast frlands 11111•••

llmB....~~~~~K~»E~~~.---==-..c~
..~K~~~·&gt;8~-.oa~.......--..mm.~...

SA-GSA
Speakers Bureau
•

1n

- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIV E CENTER
1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834 7350

(203) 522-1185

association ~ith UUAB
present

LEV

MICHAEL STI:.PHEN LEVINSON

~~~~~~,,~~~
SUM MFR STUDY
\'flt~t/\llfl 'tl

In

CLARK GYM
FRIDAY, F'EB. 4-8:00 p.m.
VISION FREELY GIVEN YAY
Page six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, 2 February 1972

,

11]

pflulm ratln n

wtrh

till' u/dnt untl

the
If/(/ \/

/./lcrattm . 1/t~r, '"'

Larl!(llll/:t', 11 rt.

PROGRAM

/'wo Wt•t·k~ ojtfUI11'' rhmugh Custih'. Dnn

QtJU.IItc 'l J.a Manat lw wul A ntlaluna. St.'C
wet•-'. 1 " ' acatlem1&lt; wor-'. 111 '&gt;ulamanca
''lilt j/t'ld trips anti otht•r 1'. \ tra cumcular
ucttvttn•s free timt! 111 travt'l through the
restofSpam 111 thrvugh l:'ur(lpt•.

CULTURAL EVENT
LEV EYE UH THIN
LEVIATHIN THE MEDIA MAN
VJOEO TAPE LIVING TELL
A VISION T ELL LEV VISION TELEVISION
FREE YEW SEA FWHEE YIPPIE

111

Fl ELOS OF STUDY

THE COSMI&lt;. WRAPPI:.R

THE END OV BULL SHIT

tire Sl .'li) / A IJ

L 1111 cnltlucl dt Sulamanca, 11111
1 ch·hrutctl Ulltl 't'r\tiH'S m f urutw

IN SPA I N

ELICIUIUTY ·

Open 111 tfUalijieJ untlerqatluatt' untl
gratluutr.: students. Consult address below
jor further infumwtum 1111 availablt'
courst•t utul credtt 1.

PERIOU

Appmnmate/y mid-June

CREDIT ·
COST :

Up tv 8 crt•tltfs,
$700.00

For further tnlormation and applic:ttions,
James A. Micltielli, Ditec tor
Overseas Academic f'rosnm '

contact:

end oj A ugus1

107 Townsend Han
SUNY/ AB, Buffalo, N.Y. 1421
Telephone: (7 16) 831-4247

�CLAIIIFIII
AD INFORMATION
CLASSIF IED ADS may ~ plac ed
M onday thru Friday between 9 a.m .
and 4:30 p .m . lit 355 Nortort H&lt;~tll .
THE COST of a n •d for one day Is
$1 . 25 for the first 15 w ords and $ 05
tor each addltlon•l word .
"HELP
WANT ED"
ads
cannot
discriminate on the basis of sex, color,
c reed or nallonat origin to any extent
(I .e., preferably Is 1111 1 discriminatory) .
" FOUND" ads wil l b e run free o f
c harge for a maximum ol 2 d ay s and
15 words.

Mtke 835·5215. M eetlr\gs lit Exec:ullve
Ramada Inn.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
M ODE RN, two-bedr oom garden apt .
Dishwasher,
d isposa l ,
range,
refrlgerlltor Incl uded . Fully c arpeted .
Full basement w t tn storage area and
outlets for wasn lng macntne. Avai lable
Ma rcn
1.
$1 75
a
month
Call
633 ·4582 .

RIDE BOARD
TWO GIRLS need rid e t o and lrom
Albrlght· Knox for film sarles· f o r 5
Sunday afternoons b eginning FeD. 6 .
Call Joan 831 ·2765 .

WANTED
WANTEO : SKINNY (very thin) fema le
ph o t o graphy models fo• pnotograpny
student ; $5/hr ; c all 885 ·6831 morn ings
o r a Iter 8:00 p.m .
NEEDED.
Preferaoty
'I•
or
BE D
douole, b ollsprlng, mattress • frame
n eeded . Call 837 -4593 , E r~c .
CO L L EGE GRAD wants t o baOyslt
even ongs. L oves c hlldten and has lots o f
f ree time. C all 831-4113 days. Ask l o r
Lest y e o r leave meu•ge .
F UL.L O R part-time Job s avai lable with
a es11 1ne Inc. Call Art 886 · 2094 or

Hear, 0 Israel
for

gems from the

JEWISH BIBLE
phone

875-4265

RIDE WAN TED to Toronto for 2/4 0 1
2/5 . Will share driving expenses . C all
2 78 5 or 3766 .
RIDE NEEDED t o L. l., leave F eo. JO
or Feb . 11. Return t o Buffal o Feo . 13
Calf Kevin 835 -7787 ,
RIDE
WANTED
to
R oc hester
T h u r soay
afternoon .
Will
share
expenses. C all 835 -7 5 79 .
RIDE WANTED t o C tucago T n u os.
morning, Feo . 3. s nare d ri v ing and
el'penses. AI 8 3 !1· 663 7
RIDE NEEDED t o New Haven , Conn
weekend o f Feb. 4 or F eb . 11 C a ll
Deb 834 - 7980 after 9 p .m.

FOR SALE
FOR SA L E 1972 Henk e R o yal ski
boots , si ze 11. Originally $ 140 W ill
sell f o r $85 o r best o ffer. 1ra 831 ·59 7 3.
' 63 MERCEDES 190 G ood condttl on.
New snow tires, batt ery S u n·ron f Call
Marc 882 · 1294 .

FURNITURE,
lamps,
applianc es,
desks, books, dl~nes and much more
for sate , Re.asonable. Call 838· 4207 .
LAFAYETTE 150-watl' receiver, one
yeu o ld, $165; Criterion 4X speakers,
n~w, $100 r;llll lr. 836-0148 .
MI C R OSCOPE, Olympus Ol n o c utar,
suitabl e for freshman medical or dental
studen t ,
$450
new .
Best
o flef.
836 · 0148 .
CASSETTES !
Pre-recorded
(name
brands) a n d other. Far out selection
Call Mitch 834-0966 .

-----------

--

NOW TH AT snow 's here , Sk i c lub
membersh op f or sate , c helltp . C all S usan
83 5· 5265
T . V ., b&amp;w , A r my field tac ket and
Army raincoat. C at• alter 9 p .m
897 ·1234

ftFFANY -slyte leaded gtus snade, 4 34
piec es, 2 1'11" I n diameter . C a ll Lew
after 5 :00. 873· 7284 .
1963 VOLKSWAGON , green, good
rubber Inc ludes snows, AM radto, new
shoc k s,
to w
mileage,
dependab le
transpo rtatio n . Ask i ng $ 3 50 o r best
o ller . C all 8 32·5 2 90 .
T Y PEWRIT E R ,
633·75 5 1

porl301 e

$ 20

Ca ll

1970
JAG UAR
X KE .
E• ceii Of\t
&lt;;ond lll o n . Brand new AM /F M &gt;teoeu
r od to 1r1ctuded C all 688 7 32 7 ev ottong&gt;
S K I CL UB sk ; teno n s for
T u esd a y nigh !. C all 8 32 ·5634

onacar oneet7 L.ove, Your StanN. .

FEM ALE wanted for apartment nl!.lr
Allenhurst . Call 836-4169 .

SORRY DIDN'T meet you 10:15 a .m .
Friday B o ol&lt;store. P11111se c.a11. I'm &gt;l tll
interested In buy ing Information .

' 54
BREWSTER
ST.
nea r
Main- Fillmore. Completely f urntshed .
Own
room,
$45t month
Inc lude s
utilities. 835.0377 .

CO ME TO P,;yc:homat
R o om
N orton . Wednesdays 3 - 5 P.m

REF R IGE RAT O R S,
stclve&gt;
an d
washers. Recondi tioned , deltvered and
g u&lt;~~r anteed
D &amp; G Appl tances. 844
Sycamore. T X4 ·318 3.

"A N ASTASIA" needs a home She'&gt;~
1961 tovabte , lit tle Ter n pes t , All sne
costs'' foliO. Call AI at 83 ! 4113 or
D eO b te at 832·68 J !'&gt; .

""'""''I

lAST CHANCE TO JOIN ...

---------

0 pen to students. staff and faculty

~ Nuwr

t tove yuu ocen

"'Y d•., rv'. SlftLtHely , \..&gt;fHHnJ

W H AT 'L.L II be tnt\ tlmu

Ct'Hl(0l~tt2

PVd dlfH}.

taktt

G UITAR lesson s on o r o il
c.. mpus, Jeff 835 33 84 , 8 35 9229
H o w ~ · e y ou Jenny&gt;

TWOSHOWS

TY PIN G, exO&lt;!rtencea, nea o U B $.4 0
pet page 83 4 -3370 Fa\ 1 se rvoc e.

CAR K E V S lost and f ou nd on &gt;econd
row o f H ootera ll Con~torl last Sal
ru 9 h \ l (l e n l t fy and c.'.tlln •n Spe&lt;:tturn
n flo c e

~

O F FSET
PRINTING
F.nl
( 100)
8•11x1 1, '52.~0: (!0001 $7 45, ( 10 0 )
I O x 14
puste f\ ,
'~
Unovers •tV
con,murH t y only, 343 No• t On, 9 • .m
5 prrt 83 1 55 88

LUS I
I:Htlwn
and
Detge
s-at I ,
Sa t urd dy nogl1t at J Gao&lt;••
ptNse
my nee I&lt;. "co ld 8.3 7· 8859
Satu rday on UB

b rtl W H dO~ W ith
r a l\ed c.urved ttt H

t iHUat

WhUe

FE M ALE SENIOR 1n sea r c ll o l Job
C an do many ty p es ot wo•t.., prefe r ab lY
1n UB area Pleast c all Mary '\ 3 8 -48 92

ltghl
o\nd

A N T l f~ UES 4"0 trH1dern fu•rttltll el,
co• amtcs, cn·n~. etr
s ee St&lt;l 14 39
H uotet Ave

FOU N D
Wa t&lt;.l1 found '" l\t.11esun
H a ll ("all 88(&gt; 9740 . A&gt;~ l tJt M e1o1n1e tu
td t!Oi t fy

FOH
I N STANI
pHnttn g,
lhtnk
t.UUUWAV W11 p t trtl aflythtnt;~ I&lt;J&lt;

HClO MM A I E

tH)iHIIl)OfH

wantud to SliMe

n w 11 lr)()l'fl. '(.d) t 1HiiH1tiiQ

L Afl NH"'d 8J8 ·?t; b I

U1tltttc-~

penrue!. a 1.UPY
1ne~e~.
•e!;urn es.
p.-.mphltth, tHe. W f! di~Q btf'10. rut a,
t •')ld l ~ and stap1o ~~~~yle .xeu)h c.op •es,

'08 ~acn wr,coe' r.ooo w A" Co p y
Lottto•, 436 Ma1u S l and t.uurt acro!.s
ltotn La t avf!tto S q ua•r
M F
9 5
p ff1

1\vtllt,tOIC

nuw
MALE
O W fl

IHHJMM ATI: jWc&gt;l C,tdl'
'41\L7 1110 U1 P1Hl utd

rtHHT,,

8J8 148~

~

INlEHESfE()
oiyn•v•c. gan1C&gt;

Of

H&lt;iUM M AlE w,ottlert
11wn
UOQttt()IU
1,d 1 phi 1~ 'lflll , tC'I
~o('IIH"V
ttC~I H u ldCt\ 8Jl C)j")ij A ,,, ,, +H k11

lit

•llendony
tne
Muntch' "&lt;tome

ttL k et\ and dCCOtT1n,odaltons avaH,\tJIC

Phnn" 833 4b38
&lt;)V E R SEAS. JOSS
Ausrr"''" · El•H&gt;P e. S

lor

•tud enl\

tHH• M MI\1 ~
IN.JIIIN1
IH
nedrtuun .•q )'""'' ... 't •lfl M•" "
&amp; h·w••tl , f. It} P'-'' nt u\flt ( ,,II t l"lud•·•
,Jt d jt_, II /&lt;1ti

I\ me' ttd. 1\ lrttd,
pr o f eSSIOns .trH.f Ot:cup.t t lOt\).,
' 100 i JOOO UIOII t hty [.o(p~n\-e\ p.11d ,
,,ve•ttt t lt1,
~+&lt;t~ht\cetrt9
F1ee

I t M/\t t

I 111n1

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\ll~,,. fW•'

Iiiii

UNDERCURRENT &amp; WPhD PRESENTS:

&amp;
Van Winkle

DEL. I PL. A C E R E S T AU RAN T atooss
fr o m U B . O pen 2 4 h o111' a d ay T ll u r s.,
F• ., ar1 d Sat Got no u nchoes at 4 am '
w e're her e to se rve you

F O L~

ch

AU

•nf,u~tt.ltHH1
ti;IJIIIIIIiJ1f'
i&gt;~•Ht

hllll\t'

~

WE SERVI C E Ptnt os too• Tlle y' r e n o
my ~ tery t o u s• Independen t For01gn
C ar S er v ice. 8 3 9 1850.

M t \ Ll

Registration - Saturday. Feb . 5th
10 :00 a.m. Room 3 Clark Gym

Teegarden

V O L.UNTEERS are neeaed t o ~ t • lf a
D rug Edu c:al t on Prog r am lor High
Scchoot s and a Counset"' 9 C e11teo near
campu,;, Tra on ing pr ovi de d
Jo seph
Don o fr io 8 56 -4494 , ext 29

NEED
$ 100'
C all
88 2· 1080
fq r
tnf o r m a1 1on S econ d Annual Newm• n
M o vement A rt E • h t Oi t
Feb . 1J
March 19 at B utc k fleld C enter S.U .C 8 .
E n tries due F ~ o . 7 &amp; 8 . S p ec oat st u de n t
pnJ" es .

()N I

W omatl
L.E N

Certification Course starts Februa ry 12 , '72

vou

MISCELLANEOUS

PI L AMBDA TAU - a c hanging SOC tal
organ tu\l o n o n a c nangl ng campus.
F o r on l orm at oon, c all Da n 6 3 2·0299 o r
G eo rge 834 · 7989 ,

ROOMMATES WANTED

PERSONAL

fttadtnq

LOOKING
to
share
C O UPLE
apart m ent , house or f a• m w it h another
c ouple 83 8 -4091 .

~200

E. M PL(JVMtN J
ll1t' Wur~tnqn • ~n's
Dr e.&gt; ti1
Sltipl tly All11t (~rf11fl wt
opoi0\11 / e lur l n e hv er stQIHl
H OW UO

WANTED : One female roommate lor
3-bed r oom house off Matn - Wonspear
Own room, furniShed, $60 S tartong
F eb . I Call Mary 838-4892 .

MY NAM E IS Anastasia . I arn eteven
years y o ung . My daddy deserted me
and I ' m to okong for a n ew o n e. I nave
an au t o matic transmosso o n and a very
sex y body . You c.an nave m e l o r o nly
SilO . Clltll A1831 ·4ll3

FOUND

•u

2 33

LOST &amp; FOUND

BR A N D N f W l " ae l t \ h i!OPII•IO Luat
l or s.ll e C all 8 7 3 3203 lm tudneo
In f orm ation

SCUBA CLUB

ROOMMATE wanted - own room,
$ 55 month . Ten-rntnute walk from
campus. Call Mr. Berk 631 · 5621.

H AVE KNOWLEDGE of calculus&gt;
I nterested In $ $ $ $ Call 693 ·7990 .
Ask for Ric after 5 .

w le

1965
M 01tOO
uood
t.Or&gt;Otii&lt;JI' NCCOS DOdY w nll&lt;,
Colli Steve 83:. t&gt; I ;&gt; I

beautolull\1
turntsned
apattment 2
blocks
l rom
c,ampus.
Av•tlable
Immediately. C all 832-4442 .

TWO GOOD looking, Intelligent and
sensitive
und orgrads
Interested
In
meeti ng
girl'
with
that
"speci al
something . "
Serious
replies, write
Tower BOK 454.

t..:fl.lt4t!.

lo••

w

llllt'\.1

111•111

t.pljl

/\y.ol,1fl)t•

\ Ml t1 P • 101'' .lit'' ' (

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W • tte
l nb\
nv•••J~oe.n ,
Hctx
I '11) I I
•.. ~to IJ•NHJ
'I I'J

APAR1 MENTS WANT ED

• t MA l l

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furrtl\llt!d

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Hl

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:l'lltf'

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C;:H 11 f•lliiJ
Htllnt.'Y , t1

Bible Truth

NO&amp; 10:00 PM

CUSPE L M EANS L•UOD NEWS
" H uw tttat Cl,•ht dte d f ot out
\In\ ac:t oroenq tu lhC ScrlpluJe!t,
and thai he w en butted and th a t
he

tQ~e

dQ6tn

the

•"u d

CS!41 V

accordlnQio ! he Scttptures"
I Cnr l!&gt; 3 , A

books
every~ai\'s hod;

••••••••••••
..•••••••••••

sfofe

,, ''''' t'i""'''*"'' nrt·u
:11112 Ma in St.

come up to 355 Norton

~-.c~&gt;mDC~&gt;Dit{~)li~-~--[--BI!I-··-~mww:lal·
•• • IMPORT ANT NOTICE **•
STUOI:Nl MEDICAL INSURANCE

1 lt1f., Nulr\ ,. .. ~frd l •IHV I•Nir you

"""'('j ht"IO HI flll 1d l lllt!' Wt•
1

,.,, 1mun~ud bvy•n~ ''·'"' \U llt.tl
~IHI I II\ IJ\t" lt1tttH -f~ yOO '\tud)'
ftuo 4\\IRIIt~O Iii ltV Ul nuvtl dlld ,f\
~'

ht"'pftJI rttvlt'VY

IHU)f

Enroll now fo r 2nd semester'
for enrollmcm dttJrb phone

tu .. ,,.."''

'·'' tn~ fl•ll \ Note~ ;nu nted

lnd.ly You II ,et .. h, lnry lr t11e

NIAGARA NATIONAL INSURANCE

1HPtt",e0 ~tudy IIHJ uf m+iltUI\\ Ol

'lodrnl\ ndltrlrtwode •f' ~ 1 II ; oul
llt•le• , nul ul • l•tl• h• ca11 K~l
,!f\Oit"'' 14\1 '"' " ' lto ll ' Hull" '"

853-0931

853..()&lt;)3 1
lll

STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES

NuriJ 200 lttfts - I IWIJI IUIIdlt

whruer
0111

Ul~l

$1 tl( -

art ulf

Consider the humble noogie

Wednesday, 2 February 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�Whar 's Happening
Wednesday , Feb. 2
Play 5,tarry Ntght with puppets, people and (TlUSIC,
8 30 p m , fillmore Room, admission free.
lld.eh ava1lable at Norton T tckel Office, al..o
,hown tomorrow
Film L.Ht Year at Mar1enbJd , ~ p.m., D1efendorf
147
&lt;..on~oert
Don..tn Woodwtnd Qumlet, worlo..~ by
Beethoven, Perle, 8 30 p.m., Baird Hall.
Art \how· " Print\ in Progrcs~, " 4240 R1dge Led, 9
.1 m
S p m , c1nd l hursday
111uq1,1ted lecture "Ab\tract E:.\pre'&gt;sJOnlsm .tnd It'
Hcrrto~ge ," by lrvmg Sandier, prole~&gt;ur ul Art
HJ\tory .tl New Yorio.. Un1ver,ity, 8:30 p m.,
(,.tllery Auditorium, Albrrght -Knox Art Gallery.
Ll·tturc "I he Role of L.tw in dn t 'pcrrmenting
\ourty" by Or . DonJid CJmpbcll o l the St.llr
llnivcr~ity nl Bulf.tlo I .llUIIy of L.1w dnd
luri,fHlldrnu•, 12 lO p.m , 77 Wl''' LtJ.tl&lt;' '. 1
Thur~day.

11101

Feb 3

//(ll/(/1\ of 0111111111,

7

r m .tnd

-

11111

Announcement~

The Amertldn Soetety for Methantc.af Engtneer~
w1fl hold d mcc 1tng tomorrow .11 t p m tn Runm 2F.
Pdflo..l'r f ng1neenng

r

rn

Psychom,u will tw ht•ld Wn.lllt:,lLIY' trorn l 'i
In Rt\(om l H Nor IIIII

The SCC I(f- of A&lt;IIVISt Youth for l~raet ''
rm·t·tmg lllrTHirrow .11 H p rn 1r1 koom' 1·10 .HIU 1·1:!
Norton
SDS will h.1ve ,, ml'o•tin)( toolc1y .tt X p m t)l.u.o:
.111d pmtct.J '"Nor ton

wtll he Jnnoun&lt;cd

...

.• -#~

p.m. ( .lpt•n

l)

110
\111t'nd

"

1 hur,day &gt;ldfting tomorrow through March 9 rhc
weekly two-hour \emtnM\ Will deal with v.anous
c.l\pec;t) of Welter resources .tnd are open to all
Interested persons. They w1ll be held .1t 1 p.m 1n
Room I 04 P.trl..er Engmecnng

UB Photo Club w1ll meet tomorrow .11 8 p.m
Room 332 Norton

The SCCIEF w1ll prc\cnt Let My People Go, d
mov1c about the format1on of the state of Israel
doLumented with ~odpturcd Na1i films. today at 8
p m tn Room 233 Norton.

111

There wilt be a m~ting of all Hillel members
tomurrow •It 8 p m. '" the H1llel House to dhc.u~~
\Omc urgent m.tttt.·r,. of bu\tnes~. Everyone is urgetJ
to c1 ttend
Ivan Bur, cha i~rman of the Northern Ireland
Civil Rights A~sociation , w1ll he spea king tonight dt
H p m. in Hac1s Lounge, Norton, on the current
\lluauon 1n Northern lreldnd .

CAC will h.we u m.md.tllu y lltl't:llll)( fo1 111
I utOrtdl Prutclt lh'Jlh tomorrow .11 7 lO p 111 111
KCllH)\ lhtl Nllrt Oil

Eye-t-on '72 series presents lvdn Pa~ser. Czech
filmmaker, who will pre\cnt two films 1n Norton
lonkrcnce The.tter tOnight dt 8 p m Milos r o rman
w11t 1101 dppcdr

Sociology 367 Will h.tvt• Ur lrcm· (ol•nJttl'l from
Bo,ton Un1vehl\'r \P{'..t\..10)( tod.ty lr,Jm i 'i lU p m
111 Room l12 l"wnwnd t 1.111 ~ht· w1ll dt\lU\~
Pa/esltn&lt;&gt; clOd hr.td Jnd Jn yww lntt'fC\ICd lll.ty l1HI1l'
to the lecture

1 he Philosophy Department w1ll have J mee\tng
lor .til undcrJovcidUdtc mator\ c1nd ~tudents interc~ted
rn phrfo\ophy, tomorrow at 4 p.m rn Room I 46

C P Snow ZJ'i, p,y&lt;hr&gt; Phy\JCal Sym'ms, w11t
move to I tdtlcr "' fnr todu\ 111llv .1111.1 w11f mt•ct from
1 'i p m
CAC... w1ll hold .111 "rtent.tllon rlll'l'ltn)( lor
Buffalo St.ltl' Ho\Jlll&lt;il Yoluntl'l'f' tod.ly .It 7 lOr"'
1n Room 240 (U1111 t,) .111d Room .!•12 (NI,tg.HJ Un•t)
of Nwton Hall Anvorw tntcre,tl'd m .tth:nc.lmg rtw
meeting ~~ wclc..oml
UUAB Film Comm1 tt ~c will meet tc&gt;&lt;f.oy .11 'i
p .m. 1n Room 232 Norton
Peace Corp~ .1nd V1sta representativt·s Wtll he""
~dmpu' tod.ly from 'l J rn to 4 p.m . tn tlw ( enter
Lounge of Norton . I he" .11 l' tntere,tctJ r11 I 1 cn~.-h
mdtm' to 1 tc&lt;l~oh lngl"h '" .1 -.t'lond ldnl(udgt• tn
rrenlh \pe..t king Aflll..tn t.OUillllt'\
There will be .a m~tmg of .til undergr.tdu,ue
'wdents of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese tod..ty Jl
7 30 p m 1n 1-le.llth Sc:1emc' I ~4
The French (lub will have J very lmpcHtdnt
meetmg tud.t\' .11 2 p m tn Room 2 ~4 Nwton
Elcctllln of oflr~.-er .. for next yc..tr w11i be hcfJ II no
one Jtl.:nd,, the c.lul'l wtlf hl· d"b,JOdcd
All Utldergraduate French majors ..trtd .til
undergr.luUJte' tal..1ng f rcnlh ~oour'&gt;c~. plcoJ'l' pill. up
a copy ol the department ncw,kttcr c1nd d lUPY ot
the du euory todJ y 1n Room } 1•1 &lt;..rmby
CAC need\ tulors. G1vc J ltttlt: ,,f your t1me to
help Ylc..tlm, of the Buffo~lo \Chool \ys tem \ of .til
age\. Contc.1ll Amy at 3609
The Modern L.tnguage Club of Rosary Htll
College pre~cnts "A Preview of the Summt.-r
Oly~pic&gt; in Munu;h " and "A Hhtoric Trip to the
MedllerraneJn Sea" tomorrow at 4 p m. 1n Lourdes
Hall, Rosary Hill College
The Western New York Public Interest Research
Group (WNYPI RC.) es sponsonng a "Student
Speakout " wtth H Dale Bossert, the regionc1l
drrector of the New York. SL:lte Environmenul
Conservatron Department, today at 3.30 p.m. in
Room 146 Diefendorf.

-GIIwtt

(AC Masten . Protect
dc\pcrately
need~
volunteer\ for J IUilOring rcvcJtJOnal progrJm lor
hl.u.l.. ekmcntMy o,choul l.1d\. No C\JlNiencc
nctl'\\,H y PleJ\e tdll the CAC offic.c, Room 220
Nortun,M31 3f&gt;09ol Sury,836-4481

Di~lendor f

(A( 1' lnterc\ted m people tdlented '" .any ot
the mU\IlJI drt\, Jr&lt;lmdtJC arts or VI\Udl arts who
would he w1ll1ng tu don,!le thetr services to
pre,entJitliO\ Ill the commumty If you have talent
tn Jlly ol the drt\ .Jndl would like to help people who
ll'.tlly need 11, wntact leff Re1mar dt 831 -3609.
I he Crea tive Craft Center will hold Batil..
wwl..,hup' Wcdne)dJy\ from 7 10 p.m . tn Room
107 Norton, mcludmg tonight S1gn-up sheets are
lnl.tll'd 111 thl· &lt;..enter, Room 7, bc~scmcnt of Norton
The Western New York Public Interest Research
Group '' holt.ltng .tn 1rnpor tdnl meeting tomorrow at
·I 30 p m . 10 Roorn 2114 Norton to hand out
pl'ltlllHHng '"'ignmcn 1\.
The American Society
for
Prophelaxis
Obstetncs w1ll he ,howtng " film on prepared
Lhlldtmth l'ntltlcd Nuot Alont• toda y o~t 8 30 p.m. tn
Rnom 145 (Jpcn llhc film lollow) c1 couple from
thl' 'cwnth month of pregnancy through the c1ctual
b11th ••I the ~ohtld DonatiOn S.50.
Thr College of Mathematical Sc1ences pre~enl\
Dr I knry Potldlo.. \pt•Jio..tng on " Rclatrons between
thl' Apphl.ltlun' of M.Jthemat iC\ Jnd the Te.aching ol
MJthemJtll,.. tuddy c11 8 p m m Room 146
D1elendw f
CAC needo, vofuntec" to worlo.. Jl Buffalo Sute
Hmp11dl dny d.ty or lime of the weel... Minimum
requ~rerncnl 1\ two hours. Volunteer~ w1ll worl.. as
assistants to recreational therape~t~. occupational
therapt\1\ , .J\ comparuom or anythmg you would
lil.e to do. Special volunteers are needed to ~peak
Poli~h or Ru~sian with elderly patients. Volunteers
needed to ob~crve patients at Day Treatment Center
work mg with
p\ychologist.
(Monday-Friday,
9:30 10:30 d.m.). Mu1st provide own transportation.
Volunteer&gt; are also wanted to visit with day care
patients and volun te&lt;:rs fami lies under supervision
with training (3 houn. per week). Volunteers please
fill out btue and whit.e appliCcJtion in CAC Buffalo
State Mailbox, Room ;220 Norton.
The Faculty o11 Engineering and Applied
Sciences of the Stat•e University of Buffalo will
sponsor c1 "Workshop on Water Resources" every

Summer Shuttles, N1.1gara
Universit y Travel
london, Jherty JJtc~. jet
~ 179 roundtrip
Also, ~pend Passover rn lsrdel , New Yort.. City dnd
Aprrl 10 lrom $355 . Feu
Tel-Aviv, March 27
information come to Room 323 or 316 Norton 01
call 83 1-3602 or 3603.

r Jlt&lt;;

" A Public Affair/Election 72," begim 11~ wrel..ly
reports on the polit1cal yc.tr w1th a look .11 the
process of selecting convention delegates . " The New
Delegate"
an examination of the Democrallt..
party's new streamlined procedure for choo~ing the
delegates to the Miam1 Beach c.onventton
w1ll he
..een on Channel 17 at 8 p m tonight.
Interface, WBFO 's Thursdc1y n1ght sencs,
provrdes the Untversuy community wuh c~n
opportunely to drscuss current problems and policic\
with Prestdent Ketter and/or Dr. Somn. Begtnning
tomorrow at 8 p.m Jnd continutng every Thursd..ty
therea her, Interface wrll be brodd~oa\t live from
Room 327 Norton Members of the Umversity
community arc 1nvued to dttcnd c~nd dsk qu~tions
Th1s week Presedcnt KPtter\ gue\ls w1ll be M1l..c
Nicolau .tnd John Greenwood of the Grc~duc1te
Student AssoCiation. Both of thl·,e men .arc officer\
of the GSA Jnd both arc tnvolved 1n the c1ctivit1es of
Sub Board I, Inc. If you cdn't come by, listen to the
live broc1dcast on WBf O.fM (88.7) and call your
questions in at 831 ·5393. Take advantage of a good
opportunity to find out whdt you .tlwc~ys wanted to
know, but never had c1 ch.1nce to d\k.
Amy Ahrend

Sports Information
Tonight. Vars1ty ba,kctb.Jif Jl the US. M1l11ary
Academy, Wc~t Potnt , N.Y. 7 p.m, freshmcJn
ba~ketbdll ell [lie CC, vJr\rly wrc\tlmg vs Clevelc1nd
State Untver~lly, Uarlo.. Gym, 6 30 p m
Frrday · rrt:\hman bJ\ketbJII Jt Nt..tt:.troJ, Vot/Stly
hotl..ey Jl o~wcgo St.!IC
Saturday Vcll)lty bJ\Io..etbdll ~. Nragara dt
Memortal Aud11onum, 7 p .m., Cants~Us v)
MJnhattan, 9 p.m., tiCI&lt;.ets arc available at Clarl..
Gym w1th the student .athletic review boc1rd
subsidizing c1ll tickets. An ID card gives you .1 $4
reduced pnce tid..et for free; varsity indoor tracl.. c1t
Rochester w1th Niagara; varsity wrestling at Oswego
StcJte; varsity fencing vs. Penn St.ate, Clark Gym, 2
p.m .; var~ity swimming V). Penn State, Clark Pool, 2
p.m .
Tickets for Saturday evening's Aud doubleheader are
Jvatlable at no charge to UB undergrads at the Clark
Gym ticket office. The student athletic review board
will subsid1ze all $I .25 studen t tickets. The Bulls
meet Niagara at 7 p .m. while Canislus meets
Manhattan College at 9 p.m . downtown.
All tennis players are to report to Coach Sanford's
office any day at 3 p.m.

�</text>
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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 48

Monday, 31 January 1972

State University of New Yo rk at Buffalo

Administratil'e ultimatum

Voluntary fees disagreement
by Jo-Ann Annao

·rnomas
Schillo
(asst.
vace
However, he admitted · "At the
president of Housing and Auxiliary
time,
I didn ' t reali7e the
E.oterpnses) and Edward Doty
ramificatiOns this agreement wo uld
have on the rest of the campu~"
f'ommenting that now "the (vtce president of Operations
Mr Miller was referring to the fears
whole story " would be out, Inter Systems) "a mutually agreed upon
of some student leaders that review
ResJdence Council President AI compromise with wha ch each party
Miller explained what he termed an shared significant sa t isfaction ." o{ voluntary student fees wo uld set
Jdmmistrative ultimatum . Mr. This assessment, acco rding to Mr. a dangerous precedent that could
be applied to all voluntary fet:S. lie
Maller's recent remarks an an Miller , IS not the case. Rather he
dJd ma111ta•n though that "at no
exclusive The Spectrum antervaew co ntinued " When we went away
time did I think I was selling ou t "
amounted to a reversal of has at the end of the semester fo r
Mr Mtller concluded . " At J
preVIo us co mments co ncerntng an vacatJon , we thought everything ·
agreement t'letween the I RC and was taken care of. We thought we mee11ng of students th e ol ht:r day
The Spec trum Edtlor·tn.('htel ,
the Uruvemty .
would gel a sem ester peno d of
Dennis A1 nold , satd we were
This agreemen t enabled the grace with the: University t:ollecung
blackmailed
he Wa!&gt; prdty
UnaversHy to collect voluntary J RC our fees, as always ."
cln~e ." Rca cttn g tu Mr
Mtllo:r '
fee~ only if they were subJeCt t o the
charges. Mr Schtllo maant.uned
same kind of revaew as are No choice
mandatory
fees
When
this
that th•s asc:essmenl "soumh M1 nu l
Mr Mtller further stated thJI
c~greement was announced, Mr.
o t '- haracter ••
when h e returned from vacallon at
Mtller
mam taan ed
that
IRC
Mr Schtll o believed that lhl·
the begmmng of January , a letter
uffic tals were "cooperatang" wath
a cc u~ttons related W hlnt hy a /71t
from Mr. Schallo (whach appears o n
the admmastration in trying to
Sputrum reporter were "not qutte
thts page) offering an Immediate
w o rk
ou t
0111
tXJUitable
acc urate .•· Rather than t:u mm cn t
chotce was wailing for turn . " It was
at ra ngcmen 1
on remarks h e helieved untru e, Mr
a cho tec of acceptmg these
Schillo said that he would prefer t o
co nd1ta ons
and
co ntinue
'Administrntive lackey'
meet perso nally wtth Mr Mtller
operataons o r o f not accepttng
Anordmg to Mr Mtllcr at that
and hear hls charges. tl n wcver. he
them and try to fight It o ut Wtthn ut
tune
·They I the University
dtd remark that the agreement wtth
any fundmg ," he saad
&lt;~dmam~trattnn I as collecung our
I RC wa~ "not tnt ended o~ s an
fee :l&amp; a ~ervice .
We , as a
'' When presented with such a
ulttmatum
we
are
not
~.u urt csy, will let them see o ur
situatiOn, we had no dlotce.''
adversaries "
Su..:h a meet 111g
hudget " However, Mr Mtller ro mmented S tu Pels o tt . I RC
between Mr.Sch1llo , Mr Millerand
cxplatned that a recent letlcr tn treasurer Mr. Miller added ''we
Th e Spectmm IS expected tooc.. ur
We hav e
'nu• Rt'portn from Presadent d1d 11 for expediency
som e tune tht&lt;; week .
Rohe rt Ketter to S A Pre,td ent Jan always had good results With the
In relat ed devel o pmenh Mr
[)eWaJI annoyt:d htm " Ketter's admtntStrahon in the past . We
Miller . 10 conjun ct ton Wtlh &lt;ll he r
Jetter makes me sound hke the tho uJht that by cooperatan&amp; w1th
student groups, is conducting 11
them we would be able to work
petition dtave which states. " We
o~dmmtstrative lackey everyone has
heen making me out to be something out." According to Mr
support the student nght t o
regu late student activities fee:•
(referring to recent critu.:isrn o f his ~hiler, he did not wan t In
jeopardize chances of future
Additionally, Mr. Miller satd ··we
Je tt on~ lly hoth student leaders and
success by
embarraSSing the have entered 111 wllh the rest o f the
pre!bl ·•
groups to try t o get thas wh ulc mess
Dr Keller·s l~tt er termed the admi'nastrallon with pubhcalton o r
stratghtened o ut ·•
ag;r.:enu:nr hrtween Mr Miller, the a&amp;reement's details

Campus l:.dlfor

Edt tor 'r nore · Th e /111/uwtrrx i.r a fetter receil•ed by /RC
Presrdenr AI Miller from Thomas Schillo , dlfector of
1/ousrng. which .rt1pufatn the wntents nf a decwon
regarding the cnllertltlfl of tho Jf&lt; C vohm rar)• {u {1Jr
tilts stmtsler

De.:embcr

~3

IIJ71

Mr Al Mtller , Prestflcnt
lnt er-Restden ce C'nunnl
T o wer Hall
Cum pu \
Ucar AI
I n you r Jbscn&lt;.e we wer e lorced to make a
del tsion regardmg th e Lt•llel'IIOn of the IRC fee next
se mester Vt..:e Presadents t&gt; o ty and Siggellww agreed
tl1 the f1,llnwing sUhJc ct to your o~ cce ptan ce.
I We would pru.. ced a\ tn previous se me~ t ers to
mdude the IRC' fee as part o f the general room c harge,
~ubtet:t to the stud ent'!&gt; nght to waive the fee wuhan
the ftrst weel,s ol the 'emester After th1~ w&lt;~tve r
penod tndiVIdual rc:funds wuuld be proc~s~ed by the
II{(' ol ft t:c
l In retllrn Jut cullectmg tht~ fee lrom the
rt!&lt;:Jdcn t s tudents, the l!ntver~tiY would expect IR(' tn
u•ofurm t o lht: budget revtew pmcedures establtshC'd
lor all o ther mandJtory ~ tud en t fees lhe budget
rev1ew would be wnd ucl ed hy Mr. Deuell of Ur
Stggell..o w \ ofhle Jnd ahe authon7ahon o lmd tvtdual
po~yment voucher; would he ma lie by a representative
o tt h e Huusmg offn:c
J. Thts arrangeme nt wmtld termanate 111 the t- nli
uf thts ~e mester and a mure acceptable procedure
established befo re Aug I , l 1l7 2
Please let me know whether you a.r e Wllllng to
JC t ept the'&gt;e condtho n' hefore the heginnmg Clf the
new semester I Jan I I )

Smc erely .
Thomas J Schillo
Dtrector of Ho using and AssJSIIInt
Vt ce J&gt;re~J tlC'nt for Au.xiliuy Enterprises

Fee misuse charged by SA
by Barbara Mink
.'ipt•t /rum Sto/{ I+'Tift•r
C harg~n~
" tms handltng o f money
generutcd h y student fees, tht:. Student
As.m-. t.&amp;lt on I \l'l"llttve Co mmittee llo~:s
fro ten
1he
athlt:ttl budget and
•~
demandmg an tmmedtate tnvest igatton min
the J fl Jtr The alleged 1lts~ rcpancy t nvolv.:~
the depostt o f athletll m o mes tnt o a
Fa~ulty
Stud ent
A~'octauon
(FSAI
JCl\&gt;lllll
In u roulutc budget review. SA Va1.c
Prestd l'n l Scoll Slcsm~cr dtscovercd that
th e Athle tic Depa rtment faaled to depos•t
any tnwme anto its Sub Board account
Ufl(tn tnvestigatmg, h e learned that athlell l:
proceeds (from such things as basketball
games) had been se nt to Vace Pres1den t l•f
Operallo ns and Systems Edward Doty '~&gt;
office and placed 1n an FSA account
Accordtng to M r S l~tnger . " II I!&gt;
agatnSI stat e gutdehnes fo r any st udcnt
mco me generated by stud ent fees to be put
tn o u tsad e accounts " He continued " I
(()und o ut that all the mo ney collected by
the Athletic Department has been :.ent to
Mr Edward Doty's office, who in turn put
it tnt o an FSA account for athletics . This •s
definitely against stat e guidelines."

Frozen fees
In a letter to PresJdent Ro bert Ke ller on
Jan 28, SA President I an OeWaat stated.
"It has com e to my attentton that th~
Athletic Department contrary to sta te
guidelines which you endorsed in your
letter to me last week (The Reporter , Jan.
27) , has been forwarding all income
cenerated from student fees t o Mr. Edward

Doty."
Additionally, he explained : "Since the

'tate has sa1d lhat all such generat ed
tncome falls 111 the realm of the guadeltnes
fur mandatory fees, to order to protell the
Jl'Cou ntability of the Student Asso ciattll n
.tnd the dis bursing agent, Sub Board I, I nc.. .
I Jm furt:cd to freeze all lines nf 1he
athlctt c budget excepting payroll unlll
rcstatut10n o f the m ontes 10 questaon "
mJde to the proper Student Assocta ttun
Jlhle ttc al"lOUnt :•
Reportedly, as Mr OeWaal daamed 111
Ius letter, Mr. ~o ty ex plained t hai the
at hlellt: inco me d oes not fall wathtn the
mandato ry fee guidelines becllu:.c Studen t
Association tS o nly o ne co ntributor t•• the
program
Ho wever. JS
Mr
l&gt;c W.1al
remarked : " Though the StJle n f New Yurk
Jlsu co ntnhutes to the prngrarn trl
mamtenance and c;alarH'&lt;., tha~ doc' nvt
e&gt;.plaan what the m o mes J re dwng tn an
FSA J CCo unt. "
Ground grist
Other co ntnbut or&amp; to the Athlct u.
Department hcstdes mandated stud e nt lees
mc lude . New Yo rk state. wtu ch provides
mai ntenance, gym nasaum~ and l;Odc.. h es
salaries; and alumm grants, whJ ch are
utahzed mainly for athletu: sc holarships
Regarding
this,
Mr.
S lesioger
co mmented : "Though Mr. Doty claims
that student fees are not the only source o f
tncome, FSA gives n ottung to th e athlettc
program, and the money s hould defimtely
not
be
put
there,
under
any
anterpretation." Mr. Doty . at t his time.
refuses to explain his actions co mm enti ng .
"Everything bas been so misconstrued that
anything 1 say now would just be more
grist for your mill."
Dr. Ketter claims no knowledge of lhe
transfer. Further, he admitted that he did

not kn ow 11 d epu,t t tng the mcoJll')' Ill that
rashlllll W,l\ J(!.aln'&gt;t \late !(UtJehne'
Alhlelll Dlfl'ltOt !larry l· nt1 , wh•• ~en t the
money 111 Mr Dnty's uffHc hut du.l nPI
kn ow es.11:t ly whe n.• ct wa' p la ~cd.
mat otJtn' th.tt "t here ts no prnhh'rn rh o:
money serve\ the ,,tm e end' 1111 lllJII t:r
where 11 1\ p ut. .tnd people Jn· mak eng
'omethtnt~olltl•l nuth tn!! ··
ll u wcvc r , lh t SA 1:\eo.:uuve I llllllllltlt••·
ft:eb that thts rcpre-;clll\ .J grn\\ 1111\U\l' ttl
~ t a t e guadelute!&gt; A'&gt; Mr D.:Waal rcpcn t l·d
"S tJic aii&lt;Hncys have .cgtccd wtlh our
lllt t: rprctJI H•n th..tl Jll tnt.:olllt' g\·n~:otlcd tn
1hc athlc-11~ pru~trulll at ll uffalu ho:hHI~\ to
the sl udcnh .md mu.,t ldll urul.r thl"
gUJdd•n••,"
l&gt;emand anvestigatio n
S111..h an drgument ·~ hJ~td un the tact
that Suh Bo ard wa~ founded lwo yea rs ago
to replace FSA oiS J .. lU\tUd tal dOd
dtspenstng .tgent"
lur ,tuJcnt
fee~
Supposetlly , the '&gt;IU•lcnt,,perJ ted Suh
Bo ard W.t.\ es tablished h• g~ve stud.:nt'&gt; .1
voace 111 lOntrolhng thetr uwn fund'
SpeCJiically regJrt.hng thc Athlettl
De partment , SA leaders contend that the
only co ntnhutmg o rgani7atton that ..:an
recycle m oney recetved from tH.ket c.ales at
sports eve nt~ as Sub Boa rd I.
Subseque ntly , 111 h1s letter to Dr Ketler .
Mr. DeWaal h as charged " Thas blatant
disregard for the state gutdehnes o n the
vice pres1denllal level severely co mpro miSes
your l Dr. Kett er's I insastence o n stn c t
interpretatto ns of th e stat e fee guidelines.
This hypocritical stand has once again
indicated a lack of credtbility in your
administration ." He continued . "Since
even tbe highest administrative levels of the
Athletic Oepanment did not know the

EdwardDoty
monac' · de!&gt;ttnatton alter bemg deuvered to
Mr Doty 's offi c.:e we tnsist that a th o rough
inve~t tj!jllh.ln
must
be
Immediately
underta l.. en ."
Such
an mvesllgatlon
is already
underway ,
bcg~nnang
With
today's
sc heduled FSA meetmg and continuina
wtth a pnvate co nference to m o rrow n igh t
between Dr Ketter and tbe SA Executive
Commattee.
Hopefully ,
il
will
be
determined whether state guidelines have
indeed
lleen
crossed
and
who is
respon&amp;ble, or whc:ther someone is making,
as Dr. Frill remarked, "something out of
no thing."

�WYNPIRG speakout

'Interface'

The Western New York Public lntereat Research
Gro up (WNYPJRG) 11 aponsorina • ''Student
Speakout" with H. Dale Bot~ert , the reaional director
of the New York Stlte Environmental Conservation
Department. The speakout will take place this
Wednesday at 3 :30 p.m. in Diefendorf 146. Mr.
Bossert is also holdlna the series of speakouts,
includina two downtown on Monday and Tuesday, in
an effort to m couraae public input on priorities for
thls reaion.

Maximum sentence for
Tonawanda shoplifters
Don't shophft m Tonawanda won't hJve a poltce re~:ortl , but
Due to an mcrease in shoplifting insrsts he wall am pose the IS days iu
and ri poffs 1r1 that town , jail for anyone who shoplifts an
fonawanda J udge Tippit has Tonawanda
decreed that any person found
guthy of these cnmes will receiVe 'Not my problem'
When
asked
abl)Ut
the
the max.mlUm sentence of IS days
an Jail , to be served 111 Erie County psycholugJcal effe~r ~ tlll the
Penitentiary "I wrsh I could stop rr tndividual student who IS thrown in
(the shopliltmg J some oLher way . wtth hardened crunmals llll nppmg
t&gt;ut nothmg else has worked ." off $1 -5 worth of goods (the usual
e\plarned
Judge
Trppll v10lat1on) , J udge T1pprt replied .
Supermarkets are reponedly berng "That 's not my problem When he
the hardest hn by ripoffs. wnh reaches college age, he knows the
)UCh place~ a~ T opp:. and Park Edge difference between nght and
betng partrcularly vrcllmtzed by wrong rve spread the w&lt;lld around
StJte Umver:.aty of Buffalo that tillS will happen and they' re
going ahead ami breakmg the law
'tudents.
Accordtng to J udge Tipprr "( anyway ." The judge c11cd hts
started Lhe ftrung (for shophlttng J "responsibility to the comnJUnrly"
Jt S25 and went all the way up to as the reason for Ius strtt:t
tnterpretatron of the 13w.
~~ S O . but that drdn't sto p 11 "
Cla1mtng that he IS not a firm
Shophftlllg rs J peuy lar~eny
uune puntshahk by a year 111 J311 behcver in jail, the judge
Jnd up tu ~ 1000 tine . hut 11 rs continued " I f shoplifting cuts
alway'&gt;
reduced
to down , I won' t permt 111 sendmg
alrno\1
dt)orderl\ l onduct whu:h hJ\ J people tn jJII t'm nut sad1stac "
S2 SO maxrmum fine and /or IS The: tact rcmams that students who
day~ tn 1arl Judgr Tipptt warm tu
11p llff Jn apple or some theesc 1&gt;r
cm1t1nue the redu, t1on to a charge some frutt lrom any store 111
nl d1s.onlcrly ~.ondul.l '!II) vtolat~m supermarket 1~ nskang a ~tmt 111
~..
. ~~~ Ene County Pen . So don't shoplilr
~ geButdul, hBnd·ptlmttJd
m Tonawanda lr's not worth it

~g~~~Lf~)~a/~rfn~~

Day.

[

THE LOTUS SHOP
Hours 10 5

daolv

Thurs

t o119

Faculty Staff COllCus meets
There will be • meet ina o f the Faculty Staff Caucus today at 4 p.m . in 33S Hayes Hall
The Caucus Is • aroup of memben of the faculty and pro fessional staff o f the Slate
University o f Buffalo whose concern is " with th« protectio n and pro motio n of the liberal
spirit in our University. particularly as this applies to educational policies."
Included on their aaenda b endorsements for Umversit y office, SPA and thrState ol
the University.

DICTIONARIES
WEBSTER

.....

l• l&gt;ror~

, .,w
The Spectrum os publi1h8d rhrH
l ttnll' •
w11111t, ~W.rry Mond•Y.
Wotdnes&lt;Uy 11nd Frr&lt;U!y durrng the
r~,.r ttciKIIImiC yur bv Sub Board
1, Inc:. Offict11 •r.r /Dated , , 355
Norton Hall, Stllt .r Uni11Brsity of Nf!w
York 11r Bulf•lo, 3435 Main St.,
Buff•lo. N11w York,
14214
Tlll.rphone. ArN Codtt 716, Edrtoroal
83t ·•H 13; Busmeu. 831 3610.

\O l C

•, t oll "'

1971

tJ.\.\

(o~l

l&gt;rmtd

t'd olo v r

ro l!w

'1&gt;4 5 1)0

Wall Sell for$1 5
•

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1\.

f~t

H It••

tt

IJM II

M ull to

NORTH AMERICAN
LIQUIDATORS
14 50 Nio go ro Folta ll .. d .
Dept.
Tonowo ndo, New Yort. 141 50

Rttpressnl'ed lor adllttrtmng bJO
Nlltronal Educlltronlll Advertr~rng
S8f'VtC8, Inc., 360 Lexington A v11
New York, NY 10017
.,

( 0 lJ

U tdt• • •

iCPQ\tt

Subscrrprron ratttS artt $ 4. 50 pet
•emflStBr or SB 00 for two Ulmtllt..-.

Po~

4.,•nr-IL·~~

huloncr

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P le o\f' OtM \ 1 1, ,,.,_a roq•• t rn.l h antJitnq
New '¥'odr ~ t o tr H!'\ tcfenr tHid \)pftlifOh f

Second CIIISS Postll!/8 pstd 11t 8uff11lo
Nttw Yorlc .
•
Crrr:ullltron

''If marijuana were legalized , wouldn't it enable role in drug pushing, at least not on the street level.
When asked whether the Engtu h system of
police to spend more time catching the pusher! o f hard
providing free heroin to addict s was effective, the
drugs, like heroin?" asked one girl.
" Perhaps" replied the featured guest , a State Captain said thai the number o f addicts in England
University o f Buffalo law student, " But it has been had increased greatly, and that " it is ho rrible to think
observed that every addict has smoked marijuana at of an addict shooting up on a park behch, with little
children playing around him ."
one time.''
The scene is WBFO's live interview program ,
The police station does not run rehabilitat ion
lmerf ace, and the guest is a rather unusual studen t ; programs, but does refe r addicts who seek help to
Captain Stanley G. BoUas, the new head o the various crisis centers. if a parent or clergyman were tu
Narcotics DiVISIOn of the Buffalo Pobce. Mr . Uas, report an addict , the penon would not be arrested A
who as working on a masters degree in crim · justice new program has also been instituted fo r drug analyst~
in the Law School here, answered q
1ons from a with no fear o f arrest.
small studio audience and home listeners.
One of the most interesting to pics was not Drug analysis
Envelopes have been pJaced in every prec:mra
d1s~.ussed: Captain Bollas made it clear that he would
not answer any questions on the Gristmacher case, o r house rn Buffalo; a sample of the drug is sealed in the
about any of the old narcotics squad members. He did envelope , a stub with a number corresponding to that
explain , however. that confiscated drugs are either of the envelope is kept , and the drug is analyzed at the
turned over lo Albany for destruction, or g~ven to police lab downtown. One can then phone in for the
non-prufil ho:.p1tal1&gt;, dependmg on their medtcmal results Envelopes were also available at Norton Hall ,
value Only uffiLers are allowed to remove drugs , but bu t were removed due to lack of response. This scrvJt..:e
m the Grast mad1er heanng 1t was revealed th:ll a cadet was started because of the prevalence of dangerou:.
substitutes being sold, everything from aninr&lt;~
signed the hen..Hn out.
tranqudazer to Drano.
When asked whether the laws governtng the use ut
M:tJOr crime cause
Drug addtcllun wa~ ctted as the cause of mosl soft drugs, such liS marijuana or hashish, we11•
un reasonably stnct, Ca ptain Bolas rephed that ht~
~.nme 111 Amerrca . "There are 78,000 addicts 111 the
United States and one-half of these are 10 New York function was as a law-enforcer, not a law-maker
Stare. Thefts cost Ene County mtllu)ns of dollars each " There IS always need for reform, but I carry out I lie
year, anti necess1stales the eXJstam:e of Mike Amaco's people's laws to the best of my ab1lity I expect 111 )fOb (1.-.rte County Shenff) as well as our own." Captam men to get the d irl and pusher! off the street 50 thcv
Bollas does not beheve o rgamLed cnme plays a maJor can't e11danger any funher tndividuals "

l . .

435 Mtnnesota 836 2666

..

•

BoHas talks on drug issues

~ole\

row

16.000

Met'r Mark ~hire. Age 19 He'sJewish Doesn't talk ablltlf it. Doesn 'r think abuut rt t!rther In
ful'f. lw c·an 1 umlerstand why there rlwuld bt• aS torr' t&gt;j'l srael. ,4 fter all, why a Jewish Statl'1
1/(' l' t'r knew Ius Krt•ar grandfatht'r Mol\ltt• hlttojsAl . murdered
uncles gassed It• dt•ath m tVtl&lt;'entrutmn C'amp~

IfI'

TODAY
is the deadline for
student fee waiver
applications The Student Association Office
Room 205 Norton

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday, 31 January 1972
1/·-::, r.·J·J ..;.JJ::: r r' ~\~ ~ ~' ·''-'i'•oLLG.'{&amp;L:r•...M

H•l '

1

111

a pogrom A ums and
·

~rghr 1 ~ 0 "' 11 Jut. fnllr£' nJ "" famtly lw1•1.' their liPcs ''"the line. In rhe So~tiet Union. In Arab
IIJUIIIrtes

A 11d tnlsra£'1. Fa till~)' he doe~n 't er•en know uhout. The Jewish People.

Hey Mmshe. I mean Murk
musrl1vc.

flunk. abma II Do sumcthing abow it. I'[Jewsore to livt•.lsrael

GHETTOJEW, " LIBERATEDJEW "
EMBARRASSED JEW.

Start by experiencing the film , " LET MY
PEOPLE GO," this Tuesday and
Wednesday, Feb. 1 &amp; 2 at H 00 p.m. in 2JJ
Norton Hall. See how you fit into the
picture. If a c:hvlcing sense of emvrion
overcomes you we will help yuu dear your
tiiTOilt
and your conscience

EMBARRASSED ABOUT BEING JEWISH?
BECOME A WASP!

But1[ this alternative doeJn 't suit you or if
you admit that you are a bit unsure abottt
your iden tity, ·then start to think abo ut who
you are. Maybe there is som ething more
about your people than bagels and lox.
Sunday school, and B 'nai Brith. Find ou t.
See t/kfilm " LETMYPEOPLEGO."

�Wew Consciousness Series'

Referendum results

Beginning of University TV
by Howie Kurtz
Campu1Editor

The te levision set in Norton Hall's Cent er Lounge
was on. A cro wd of people watched curiously as the
boob-tube pictured two kids blo wing a joint and
instructing viewers ho w to achieve incr eased potency
in their grass.
A new netwo rk sh o w? No, it's " The New
Consciousness Series," a video tape presentation by

Waiting for the Change featured a varied format ,
dealing largely with to pics that would never get past
the censor's scissors on public t.v. One scene featured
Abbie Hoffman instructing young Americans to rent a
safe d eposit box from a bank (for a nominal fee of
SS - 6) and to then place a fish into it. Sin ce banks are
prohibited b y law to open these boxes, th e incredible
stench six months later wou.l d force t he bank to m ove.
Apotber scene involved a mao-on-the-street interview
in Manhattan with a conservative-type business man
espousing such epithets as: " You gotta be crazy t o
• wear long hair" and ''radi cals are a bunch 'a nuts."
Another scene instructed viewers that they could
rrutk e their grass d oubly potent with the proper use of
dry ice. A look at politics presented a gay fellow
insisting that " Lindsay should talk to h is h omosexual
constit uents even if it means losmg a few votes in
Qut.1ens or Stat en Island ."
Much of t!le pro gramming is serious too, such as a
soliloquy by a bearded professor about the dange rs of
drug abuse. He indicated that "the establishment is
delighted that our kids are st o ned all the time, because
that means they're not thinking." He' also warned thjlt
you never reaUy know what you're getting when you
bu y drugs due to "ind iscriminate and unscrupulous
dealers."
En th usiasm
In addition to airing th e purc ha ~ed video tup~s .
the UUAB Video Commiltec is g01ng to h(' mak1ngits
own. They are limited by th eir one ~:amera and tight
budget but presently have 20 enthusiast it: members t o
compensa te for that They will also be working in
conjunction with Video ConnectiOn , a Student
Associa tio n-sponsored club wh1ch enables students to
gain experience m video projects UUAB Video plans
to produce video tapes similar t o the torrnat of th.:
"New Consciousncs~ Senes," hut they have o ther
ideas as w ell.

UUA B Video Committee . .. It's a new concept in
televisiOn, getting away from the passive garbage of
the networks," explained Ed Mellnik, th e committee's
ch ainnan. The hour-long program which was show n in
Norton Hall Friday was purc hased fro m the American
Progra m Bureau in Boston , an independent group of
''vid eo freaks" who prod uce su ch proj~cts for college
audie n ces .
Friday's program was called Waiting for the
Change and is o ne of the ten p rograms of the "New
Consciousness Series." all purchased by UUAB Video.
Another program will be presented today from noon
2 p.m. and Thursday evening from 8 - 10 p.m . 111
Uaas Lounge. Mr. Mellnik eventually ho pes to have
Norton Hall wired for these presentations and to
pres.:nt them in different locat (ons in Nort o n Union
and p ossibly between mov1e sh o wings in Capen Hall.
I he

" We ho pe to make video tapes of the Jerry Garcia
concert as we ll as o th er concerts, coffeehouses and the
like," said Mr. Mellnik. " We also hope to tape some
stud ent government meetings and show people the
absurdity of what goes on there.'' The commit tee will
welcom e volunteers in the areas of welting, art ,
covering news events and technical knowledge .
The programming varies (rom the dead senous tn
the absurd, but largely deals w1th top11:s wh1ch would
never make the public air waves. A comtng show will
featur e the lewd Commune, who were arrested fo1
nudity in their o wn home (a felony) , abortion re form
discussed by Bill Baird and the depic tmg of an actual
abortion. Try to find that o n NBC . As Mr Ml"llnik sa1d
of this exciting excursiOn . " llo pcfully, this 1s the
beginning of UB TV."
~~~U'S':l~~~

3 COMPLETE ROOMS OF

NEW FURNITURE

1451 Hertel Ave. (corner Norwalk)
:\

2-pc. living room suit e,
2 step-end &amp; I cocktail tablt,
2 ltmps, 3 pc bdrm . set, ldbl .
dresser, cn Mt , db I. size bed,
dbl . box spgstmatt.. S pc , dlr&gt;ette
( 1 ltble, 4 chairs)

837-7661

feururing

J . Berg Fur n it ure Co .
2363 BroliOway, 1 Harlem Rd .
nightly 'til 9:00p. m . ex

weo. &amp;

Search committee

Social Sciences in
need of a promst
P resident R obert Ke tter has
appointed a search comm ittee
!.!hat ged wtth recommending a
panel of candidates for the
provostial position of the Faculty
of
~ocial
Scien ces
and
Administration . That post was
vacated last September when Ira
Cohen
resigned
because
of
"unworkable conditions." Since
that time, Edwin Hollander has
served as acting provost.
The search committee, chaired
by Richard Schwartz (Provost of
Law a nd
Jurisprudence)
is
composed of faculty, students and
a Bu ffalo l.!ommunity member. In
his charge to the committee, Dr.
Ketter
stated .
"The Search
Committee lor Provost of the
Faculty of Sol.ial Sciences and
Adnunistratiun is charged with
recommending to the preside nt a
pauel uf nominees, no fewer than
two in number, fo r the position in
question ."
Requests
He continued . " In the conduct
of the search, candida tes from
minority and/or female segments

$369.95

~,~~~"·DANNON YOGURT

The at hle ti c budget lCame o ut on top once again in last week's
referendu m with 881 of t he 2202 students voting, calling for an
increase in the $240 ,000 athletic b udget an d 706 stud ents voting fo r it
to remai n the same. In contrast , only 445 students voted for a
decrease in the budget while 170 stude nts said tha t t here should be no
money allocated to athletics. Students also voted 1622 yes t o 564 no
on t h e quest ion o f whether th e Stud en t Association should fund
intercollegiat e sports.
The controversial men's intercollegiate budget also got th e nod of
approval with the majorit y of th e students voting for an increase in
funds or for the fund s to remain the sam e (793 and 662 respectively).
Students also voted that funds should eit her be raised or remain the
same fo r women's interco lleg.Jalt:~. mtram u ra ls and dub sports. T h e
margins for these three votes were 3 - I or better.
Most of the students (a 2 I majori t y) who voted 10 the
referendum sa1d that they had o.:ompeted m intramurals ;wd attended
intercollegiate sports even ts whtle on ly 374 declared that they had
previously partici pated in Intercollegiat e sport s events .
The referen d um was called hy th~: Student Assembly after the
a thleti c; budget 1\ad b een approv!'tl by the narrow mar~n of une vote.

of our population sh ouJd not be
overlooked." Additional requests
include that car1didales not be
ranked and that periodic progress
reports be made to Vice President
for Academic Affairs Bernard
Gelbaum, with co pies sent to Or.
Gelbaum and Or. Kette r.
The suggest ed dates for these
deadline&amp; are Feb. 18, March 3 and
March 24. Dr. Keller will then
consider th e final candidates upon
receipt of the March 24 report.
Complete membership of th e
commiuce foUows : William Bailey,
asst. vice president of Marine
Midland Ba nk ; Nant;y Broderick,
assistan t 10 the provost of Faculty
ut Educational Studies; Art h ur
But ler, Economics Department ;
J ohn
Eberha rd .
Architecture
Department ; J effrey Greenwald,
undergraduate
S tudent
Assodation; Frank Henderson,
Polittcal Science Department; Jay
N i~ berg,
Graduate
Student
Association; Lee P reston, Schoo l
of Management; Wolfgang Wolck,
Linguistics
Department
and
Chairman
Richard
Schwartz,
Provost of Law and Junsprudence.

Sat

l 0 W, L 0 W PRICES ON VITAMINS &amp; FOODS

The Council on International Studies
Middle East Committee

NEW HOURS: Now Open Every Night 'til 9:00p.m..

present

Dr . Irene Gendzier

--.-In

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who will speak. on:

PALESTINE AND ISRAE L
WEDNESDAY, Feb.2

3:00 - 5 :30 p.m.

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Room312

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Monday , 31 January 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�,,
Norm Elfman

Legal assistance
Every Tuesday. Norm Effman
can be found in the Student
Association office, providing wh at
he terms legal first aid. This
includes advice on any and every
legal problem tmaginable, most
commonly land lord, criminal and
matrimonial.
When the Advocate's Office was
closed in August 1971 . Mr Effman
was
retained
by
Student
Assoctation and the Graduate
Student Associatio n to offer
counsel
to
their
members.
Previously h e had been one of th e
two lawyers ill the Advocate's
Office. In the Advocate 's Office,
Mr Effman was empowered to
mvestigate complaints and tmttate
proceedin~ 1n cases when an
tnfraction of nghts had occurred .
He
both
represented
and
prosecuted students hecause he
was comrruss1oned to uphold the
regulations of the Umversity as
well as defend lhll\C whose nghts
were v1olateJ by the University.
The
Advocate's
Office
was
established and subs1d tzed by the
admmist rati on. A con tl1 ct of
Interest was often suspected and
the 1m age of the Advocate's Office
vanc:d wuh tts ~a~e~
In response to thts conflict. the
role
of the uffke changed
nud~tream and 111 I &lt;170 71 tuok
no part 10 the fltllSCCUtJOn of
students on behalf of the
lln1vers11y As finances ;ue t1g.l1t
and the admuustralllHl re~:ogmted
the trony of ~upportmg a legal
office wluth would accuse but not
rep1esent it, the expenment nf an
Advocate's Oftice ended.
Several gaps
The dos1ng ,11 the orr.ce left a
tcluple ofrmportant gaps The frrst
was the ab~ena l&gt;f a .,;entral
locatmn for memher~ of the
Un1vers1ty to seek JUStice if they
believed thcrmelves den1ed legal
nghts. At present the Office of
Student Aff:urs cum~ closest to
fl.lhng the gap but was not designed
for that purpose. Orgamzations
such as the .. awlty Senate have
developed ~nevance machinery of
theu own 10 an attempt to fill the
void
The other crucial ~erv1ce wluch
wa!l. performed by the Advocate's
Oflice one wluch en~.ompassed HO
per cent of 11~ cascload, was
admement (legal first a1d) on all
legal
matters
be
they

University-related o r of personal
concern. For this reason S tud ent
Assoctation and Graduate S tudent
Association jointly contracted
No rm Effman to rernam as legal
co nsultant to any of their members
who wish to avail themselves o flus
services.
Though distress9d l'h.at most of
the
University
commuitlty
( rned1ca.l. dental and Millard
Fillmore students, faculty and
staff) no longer have the benefit of
Ius counsel. Mr. Effman is generallv

Consumer Committee attempts
to keep up public information
Mr. J eff Osinski, a 20 -year-old ' chairman . Mr. Cohen formerly program. He said,: "The Consumer
State
University
of Buffalo served on the staff of a Pro tectio n Committee will have
student has been appointed to the Congressional
Com millee
on the task of keeping the pubhc
Erie Co~nt y Consum er Protection Consumer Affairs and has edited a informed on new developments m
consu m er pro tection , but will not
Committee. The form ation of the handb ook on ~o nsumer Jaw.
necessa rily be a receiving agency
committee was announced last
for specific complaints." The
Thursday by Count y Execu tive Watchdogs
committee ho wever, will receive
Edward V. Regan.
In announcing the creatiOn of
complaints
and
suggestion~&gt;
" This co mmittee will monitor the new Ene County group, Mr.
con cerning the way the over-all
Regan also noted that plans for a
present
consumer
protection
consumer protection apparatu)
consumer
protection
actiVlhes in· the county and t ake an regional
functions in Erie County, Mr
Jre
presently
being
active rt1le an a new regional system
Rega n elaborated. He sees thr
by
the
Federal
consumer protection syst e m , the formulated
committee acting as " watchdog.s"
plans for which are now bemg £xecut1ves Assoctation. lie said for the co nsumers of Erie County
linali7ed by federal govern m ent that member; o f the local Erie and the group will be expected In
Consumer
Protectio n
agencies which have off1ce5 m th1s co unty
make frequent co nsumer report'
Commtttee wou ld be represented
area," Mr. Regan sa rd .
In additio n to Mr. Osmskt
on the board uf the regional group.
:;tudent representation on the
Ms Daniel R Donaldson was
The nlunty executiVe outhned 19-member
committee
aho
appomted
chairman
of
the
commlltee and Buffalo attorney the dutres and responsibtlities or mcludes a I 7-year-old senior at Mt
Freclcnck B. Cohen was named vrce the f uc County consumer aL110n St. Joseph 's Academy.

Innovations suggested

Prison reforms underway
NormEjfman
plca~ed

with h1s present JX•sirion .
" I enJOY practicing law and I enJOY
the t:ourtroom . My expenence
w1th the Advocate's Offlct' was
wurthwl11le and I am happy tu
rcma1n \Ill the lnnges of the
UntvcrMty ..
Mr . fffrnan is now lree to
praCIJLe law P reviously · 10 hr~
admU11Siratrve position he cuuld
a1Jv1se and refer d rents but could
not repre)cn t them . Tim was to
aVoid Lonfhct of tntercst He may
ru&gt;w represent any stud ent who
w1~hc~ to retain his s~:rvkes .
Mr E:.ffman IS :1 g1aduate ol
State Un•vcr~tty of Buffalo and
BuffaiCJ\ Law School He feels a
spec1al empathy w1th students here
and enJoys. haVlng them for chents
He has also w orl..ed as an
adnltrllslrator
here
and
i!&gt;
acquauHed with Lhe funclloning of
the UnJVCrl&gt;ity from several angles.
He IS al'u familiar w1th many
admm1strators wh1ch enables hun
to hanJie student gnevam:es wluch
o n g t nate
fHWt
Umverslty
bureaucracy.

unjversity
un1on
activities
board

A special comm ill.:e mvestigating lhc state 's
prisons has found them t o be " rem o te bastilles" 1n
need of wtdc·rang.tng reforms Releasing a serres of
36 proposals for public debate, the panel, created
last October . sa1d 11 was "profoundl y troubled" alter
tis 1n1hal VIStts t o the state's correctional rac1ltlles
" The system appears to be one that wdl not
furniSh the needed protection to the puhhl, IS not
faH or even safe for its personnel, and rs nnt
co nsistent wath twenfreth ce ntury tel:h n ology,
admtntStratron and standards of treatmen t for Its
mmatc~ . " the group reported on Tuesday
The comm1ttee has '\cheduled public heanngs
lor f-eb . H In Albany, Feb. I 0 1n Buffalo and Feb I I
111 New York Caty, to cons1der the proposals rang~ng
from attowmg more V\Sits to inmates to developing
pnsons closer to rnujor urba n areas. After the
heanng.~.
the cornmtl lcC will develop ddinite
l'l!''nmrnendatJOns fur the legtslat ure .
The J S-member panel was named by Gov
Rockefeller and fegtslallve leaders to Jouk mtu all
aspects of pnson n·form C'hatrman of the comm11tee
1s the pre!&gt;1dent of the State Bar AssoCiation, llug.h
R J ones.

AJicn institutions
fhe IJ:tllcl sa1d that most of the pnsons were
mstJtUllons where mmatcs, pnmanly blac:k ancl
Puerto RJLan, IJve 1n o1n "alten environment " w1th
guards and staff ma1nly from the rural upstate areas.
The d1~cussJOn pruporals mcluded expand1ng
VISIImg pnvtleges, hmrted only by "sec:unty
cons11Jeratrons, .. end mg ccnsorstup of outgo1ng mall,
censonng mcoming mall only for contraband or
poss1ble securi ty threats and expandmg work release.
educational and vocatwnal programs. Ideas lo
1mprovc pmon condllton~ were also suggested , suc:h
as usmg predomrnantly mmatc labor fur 10.~1de
construLt1on, 1ndud1ng bng.hter paint 1n ~orne ..trea\,
1mproV1ng food preparatton, upgrading medtc:al and
dental ca re and allowing surgery at outside hospitals

UUAB DRAMATIC ARTS COMMITTEE
and

present

Page four. The Spectrum Monday, 31 January 1972

Allowing the death penalty for any(!al\'
convicted of killing a per&gt;on 111 a pnson wJ~
suggested as a method of detcrrell\.e C urrentl y . l:tw
11ermrts the de.llh penal I y only if th e victim 1~ .111
employee ol the State Uepartment ~lf C'orrecttUn;tl
Serv1ces or rf the suspect 1'1 already servrng .J hf•·
term
Many faults were also found hy the inve~tlglltlll~
comm1tt ee 1n the area of adrntni$tratton nl
..:01 rectional facilttres . A poss1bthty tor Improvement
may be rnov1ng the Comm1ss1on on Corrections from
the department to R,Ut 1t dtrectly under the goverrull
who w11l Jppornt the rnember1 The comm1ss1on wtll
then set P\lltcy, Jeavtng the '-OmtniSSioner to run lhl'
dep.art rnent from day to do~y
Although the report cono;entratell on the mma(l·
&lt;;Ide of the pnson 1ssue, it also vmced sympath y fw
prison ~taffs The ..:ornm•ttee view~ p1ison employe~'
as overworked, usually workrng at some dlstan~,·
from lhe1r homes , and fac1ng law suits from inmate'
and crrt1c1~m from the publil. "They are the vu; t1m~o
of our negled,'' the commtttee sa1d "scapegoats fut
tl:luse cntacs who seeJ... to attac.:k the bY~&gt;tem Jtself and
soc:tety, but who have ntrther the courage nn1
wisdom to focus on core 1ssues "

I
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UUAB FILMS T 0 D A Y

Fires on The Plain
3 and 8 p .m.
plus

·sTARRY NIGHT• : DOWNTOWN
FEB. 2 and 3

8:30p.m.

'

¥
FREE

Fl LLMORE ROOM

We have position openings for next semester.
Applications are now being taken in 261 Norton

UUAB.

Impro ved staff
In regard to new stafftng policres. the comnnltcc
will explo1e such 1deas as recr01t1ng more bbck 01nd
Puerto R1can guards, proVldmg conttnuous tramanf.
for personnel and making the ~&gt;l ate. rather than
mdtvtduals, liable for lawsutts filed by 1nmates

UU AB CURRENT EV-eNTS
THEATRE DEPT

Is looking for qualified people in the followmg
areas.
ART
COFFEEHOUSE
DANCE
MUSIC
DRAMATIC ARTS
LITERARY ARTS
FILM
CONTEMPORA RY ISSUES

Oivers1fyrng facilities
from minimum ll•
max tmum security was slated as a way to g,v•·
inmates mcentives to "work their way ou t " By
using the current Ossining facility for New Vorl.. C'1ty
area mmates, and perhaps county Jails nr
penitentiaries 1n ot her areas, 1t will be possible In
locate pnsons closer to urban areas, panel memh''"
said.

------CAPEN140

~I Troube In Paradise
TOMORROW

I
FREE · get tickets at Norton Ticket Office

4 :45and9 :45p.m.

CAPEN 140 FREE

�Employment: the wofkingman's dream
by Lynda T eri
Ptoture t:ditor
Wh at do you want to be when you grow up?
Employed!
Ah , d reamer.
If you have ever seriously considered earning some
type of worthwhile living when you receive your degree
from umversity life, you already l..now the mood o f this.~
article. So why read o n? Perhap~ . there really ts a bit of
masodusm tn all of us.
Come now ,11 can't be allthJt bJd Or ..:an 11?
Untversity Place ment and Career CiUtda nce,loca ted m
l layes C. publis hes a b1-monthly hullcun to tnform semors
JUSt ho w bad thmgs are. But, that ts no t a fa1r definition. The
bulletin is really to mfor m s tud e nt s of the types of JObs
ava tlahlc to vanous d isciplines and t t' .lrrange interview~ t •n
camp us t o secure these jobs .
It IS not th e office\ taull thJt tht~ hulletlll i~
con tatntng less and less opportuntltcs for grllduates lhc
truth ts that there are stmply ~ or c:ornplr).lyl fe~Aer jubs
Noth.tng new
Unfortunately, the hullettn rc,Hh llkl: .t ~ad story lor
moM maJors T o list all that Jrc m•t even mentioned in the
bulletin w ould be unnen:ssanly &lt;.rucl Sufftle tl to -.ay that
ou t o f over 50 dtfferent degret!S offered. ten mtght enable
you to breathe tredy. Provtdmg you ~·an breathe frc~ly
knowmg then~ Jre a handful o f po~tttuns tur J room lull of
JpJ)IH.antl&gt; fhe day~ of"demand" ~cem over

Just joblcs.~
L.trry Or.tkc, .t\\Ot.Jatc tJtrcllot S tutJ cnt f&gt;t:,...unncl
ServtLC Pl.l!..t:lllent , .sum martt.cd the JUb Sttuatt on u:. tn ''very
rough \ho~pe " lie :o.Jtd lhe only areas relattvdy unhtt
the
relC\Ston were An:ounttng. fn g)lu:enng ,lnd nther hu,tne\\
rcl,JtetJ ticltJs hen the-,e , hi." ~td, h.1d lightened up
lUilMderahly "At one tunc thc.w tlt&lt;;..:tpllltCS h.td c1ght or
n1ttc opportuntt tc\ for employme nt .. he • •1ntmucd . "now
1ht·y ,·onc;tdcr I hemselvcs lu..:ky 1f 1hey hc~v~ tone "
1 he held Sot.taf and Behavtural S(.'ten~·cs ..1ntl Lthero~l
Arb weec the h,utl c~l lut 1 hough pla t·c rnent \t'n,h out
rclju~·~t .., hi 'thtHJS.tnd~ n f cnrnpanJe!&gt; natlllnWillc.' ttwy
lt'U'IVC lcwcr lh.tn 250 repltc~ Only YlJ UJtllpJnte~ have
'lhcdulcd tnt.:rvtrws fur Spnng 1'17: Mr l&gt;r.JI.e s;11d thJI
pt..t,~ment h:l.l&gt; held serntnars for .til ntaJUI Ot&lt;;~.tpltnes 111 Jn
.1ttcn•rt to JltiUJi nt \IUdent~ wtth the Nvhlcuh they w11t hl·
ta~lllg . Pl.tlCIIH·nt "111 a hclplc\~ \tluJtJOn , Jl\\trd•ng to Mt

ny

,,f

..

Drake. "Companies d o not have any openmgs. They all have
been hit by the recession .''
All sorts o f nightrnansh sttuattons enter the mind as
one thinks of finally graduattng, ready to ba ttl e the
windmills of th e world and fi ndtng the windmills have all
hcen repla ced by iron bars . How do we fight a system wh1c h
evtdently wants little, 1f any, part of us? Ito w do we support
ourselves whlle trying to light?
Whether we blame the re~c\Ston poht11.:s. nr the limes.
th e st tuatton ts a desperate one On~ or I he cruel trumes of
ltfe appears tn each bullettn ~
Dtsctplmc•s All Acacll!ttlt&lt; A tCI/1
Upporrurutu•s Salt!.\
W T Grants anyone?
An annou nce ment from the Boy~ SniUI\ of Am~m.: a
appeared tn bulletin number st'\ Not 111 d1• any tn)u~ta ~e lo
this noble tnst it ution, it is a lill h: dl,hcart c ntng for so~:•o logy
maj or~ tu realize that that I!&gt; th e only Jd whi..:h mentton'
them I s uppose there should he some d egree of gratitude lor
betn&amp; mentJOn~d at all. hut \Clmehow . Blly Su1uts of
Am enca '"'of lattle solace l mo~g~ne thl' t.JIIuwmg ~•tuat1on
occ.:urnng and try not to laugh too luucl!y 1 he truth ''
he..:ommg &lt;;t rang~r JnJ c;t r.1nger

Imagine
!he selltng •~ d n&gt;om ~orn,•whcH' 1111 L.lrnpuc; ()uc In
hu.:k nl 'pace, probahlv J gencrutnr ruu111 1r1 Adlc\l•n or
f'ark er fi ne, StKIOIOg)' IIIJjiH~ ;111\IOU\ty .tW:JII ;.tll lllfervn:w
w1th S1r I M. htabhshed, so..:ioh1gt ~l at l;~q~~ ( l40 r••uml\1
who" llttervtcwJng forth~· Boy Snnel\
Str I Ito •ntcrvtcwcl.')
.111d huw h.t' ltfl h ..,.,.
I rea tang you'1 t\rn you tcii111C \CIIII~·thtnl! .thnut }"Ur,t•lt 1
Ahc Sosh Yes. well , l '111 11 Yl'.H' .. tot Ill)' w1h' quet
ht~h \dlnnltu ~ct marnrd
Str 1-' Reall y '' Wh n tlld ,h .. 111M r~ '
Ahlc (a htt &lt;.onfll\l'd and ll'.tlllllll! th.11 &lt;..,n I proh,•hh
tnrerVICW\ thiiU'&gt;dnds Jlld ~Ciulcln't r~ally c ..Jfl.' It'\\) Uh. 1'111
~ .l Yr.tr~ uld m.srned got my UA tn \"' "''"g&gt; .11 I I t) l
( ould yuu tell rne,ornethang.Jhout tiH' Jllh 'l
&lt;itr I U' \&lt;H.tlllu~J~I\ t.atltl .1 Jlll\tttnn , nut .t Jnh ) 1111
wouhl h t• ~nvlng your ,·uu nt ry , bUtlt1111~ ht'll\'f nH'tt
tnucdstng tulture through dt.k&lt;tiiJ tc ~o•rlllllatum 1 Why , we
would h.tve le" en me, no htpple~. mor~· young men wh11 t. ar c
dl'll1UI then t.IIUtltry 1 No drall dcH.Igcrs' Y&lt;llt don ' t . nt u•ur\c
'&gt;ld~ With these types o t p~rvert'' l&gt;o you'1
Ahle ~avo1dtng the qUC\11011, uncJ\IIy) WhJt wtllth•:.
10h , er , postltnn entJii? What would rn y postlton he'~

Sir E . Oh . . . coordtnator or intergroup socw l
relattonships.
Able : What is that?
Sir E: That is th e guy who arranges for the boy scouts
to meet the girl scouts. ( Leaning ove r and giving a famous
I M. Established grin) Understand?
Able : Er. yes I suppose so Will that be the only duty?
I mean , there must be more .
Str E . Yes , well , how shall I putthts? let 's\U ... sort
of a den mother and ftJe clerk But . remembcr , you will he
dotng your &lt;.:(IU ntry a service. After all. we make mtn mtn
t'tc1y~!

A hie . lsn 't that men out of boys?
Str I· Into, o ut of, what tS the difference? Your
cou ntry need~ you . Could you turn on all of mank ind'1
Ahl e I cJouhttl . I even have tro uble " tuming o n" my
WJII' I

S tr l: Oh , by 1he way , were you ever a c ub ur htty
Your ret:ord do esn' t mention it
Ahie fh.Jt tsn't my record you're looktng at. Thai is
an lrtVOilc for 500 mtntature Ameru:an flags Here is my
re1.otd (lie hands tt to Str E)
S tr E Ynu were a boy scout lor ten years? And I
thought they &lt;~nly went up ttl caglt ~cout 1 What t( Yt•ur
rJn l. "
Able &lt;"1•mrnandcr Abk Sos h . Str
. 000000 I po~t
NO
Str l (get~o up and shak e&lt;~ A hie's hcmd I Commander
I M blahltsh(d
0000001 pust Y .u · K Welcome
.JI&gt;ualc..l,liJad II&gt; h.tvc you'
1\ hie fh.tnk y.. u
"\tr I
R~·p;•rt twrr totrWrtu~~.&gt; lrt,rrliOI! Jrtd I'll \hn~
~nll.t lhlng\u tw~·
I c\lt !\hie .mtl ~~~ I I
'~uut

1

1A' A hie w.Jiks Jway out o l "ght !runt Str L he
tl'IIIIIVl'\ the \lulklng Cdp hl' hatl hren weanng dunng the
llllcrvtew l' ulhng the h.1nds ofl h" ll•ntc ltleak pnny tatl he
gTIII\ hr••o.~dly !Its flowered V W ha \ a ,·hang~· of doth.:s and
tour lrtcnd' WJtttng '"''dc r,, h•m All arc members uf
"A hit'\ (.'npper Callie,," a rmk hand A'&gt; the y Jnvc olf 1nto
th~· pnltutton Ahlc annn\lrtll''. 'I've scheduled us t o play at
.1tlthc Boy ~.:out n11x~·rs "All sm 1kc over thl' new J&lt;lh
')tr l re\l(oVl~ and ts lUrrc:ntly advl\or to the Prestdcnl
uf the US Ill' pm1tHHt WJ~ ftllctl hy J Mrs Ampftre who
hcltcvcd 11 her Juty 111 mal..c hoy' tnt.• men (and men tnto
monkeys)

~--~~~k~~~~--------~·
**• IMPORTANT NOTICE • • •
STUDENT MEDICAL IN!)URANCl

MAYBE RELAXING
CA N HELP

Presents

Enroll now for 2mJ semester!
for enrollment deta1f s phone

NIAGARA NATIONAL INSURANCE

8530931

Sao Feedback can help to
deveton voluntary control of
neur at retaxateon tmpulses.
Alphatton Alpha and Theta
Bratnwave Trainer, $69.95.
For more tntorrnatiOn wrtte
Krauss Research Bo~e 601
Buffalo I 4205

THE NEW MEDIA
"F ive an d Dime TV "

851 -0931

Presents

ur

The New Consctousness Senes''

An Expenmenc io Televtston

STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES

-·

Acareer in law ...
without law sChool.

MONDAY 1/ 31/72
12 noon lO 3 p .m. Hass Lounge

~-------

When you beco me a Lawyer s Asststant
you ' ll do work tradlttonally done by lawyers
work wh1ch IS challengtng , responstble
and tnlellectually st1mulattng . Lawyer s
Asststants are now so cnttcall y needed that
The lnstetute for Paralegal Tra•nmg can
o He r you a postl1on tn lhe ctty ol your c ho1 ce
and a higher starteng salary than you d
e )(pect as a recent college graduale H ere
is a career as a profess•onal w1th fin anc•a l
rewards that tQCrease wtth your developtng
expertise.
If you are a s tud ent of h1gh academ1c
sland tng and are tnterested •n a legal
career come speak wtlh our representative
Contact the Placement Office
A representattve of The lnstttute
wtll v•s•l your campus on

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10
pte:~se

L

It the above date •s rnconven•ent lor you
call or wnte The lnslitule lo r onlormalion

I

MCAT- OAT

LSAT .. ATGSB
GRE

• Preparaloon for tes1s requ 1red tor
admosalon to grwiuate •nd ptofessoonal xhools

I

• So•

and

twelve seuoOO

COurSOl!~

• Small groups

• Volumlnoua tnal"«lal for home study
preperl!d bv ••pariS '" eKh held

I
THE END OV BULL SH IT
I

I

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I

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• Lnson schedule can be •••lored
meet tnd•vldu• l needs Ll!tlons
can be ~read o..er • penod of
sever"! months 10 • year, or lor
out of 1own Sludenu, il penod

10

o l one wHII

•Opp&lt;&gt;rlun&lt;ly lor rev•- ol 1&gt;85'
lessons vtl tape 11 the eenl¥

Special Compect Courltel dw-ing
Weekends - lntene.lont

(Michael Levinson)

u

Stamm• Salions

I

COSMIC WRAPPER

STANLEY H . KAPLAN
EDUCATION AL CENTER LTD.

,171l••''""~·....ltfi .. Y

ClARK GYM 8:00p.m. FEB. 4th Friday

(2121 136--6300

15UII 5384666

presented by

The Institute for
Paralegal Training
13th floor 401 Walnut St Pntla . Pa 19106
(215) WA 5 0905

A D•v111Ut1 r1f Sub Board I 1m. - - - - - - - - ·

- - - - - - --- - ---

THE
NOTE

TUTORING AND GUIDANCE~
SI NCE 1938
~

THURSDAY2 /3/72
Eventng 8 t o 10 Hass Lounge

&amp;JAw!, t

,,.,._..-_A,

.JI,....yl

N(l .. t"O$

Branchel on pnnc1pal cotles

UUAB - Division of Sub . Board I, Inc.

-

- -

-----------

J

I

n. r-·~ Scr-(JIUI .......... ,.,• ,,.,,..ll..,....J . . .

Monday, 31 J:muary 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

\

�I

r:ew

A
~ ~vl40
K::fJ M05T OF S

EdiTORiAl

~0

WAR-

As yereap

I

r

THe-

WAR .

\

Last week President Ketter delivered a desultory phillipic
upon students protesting his arbitrary and capricious fee
disbursement policies. Friday afternoon, however, it was
discovered that despite his tone of righteousness, the long
arm of iniquity had crept into Hayes Hall , resulting in his
appearance as a hypocrite.
While he was busy criticizing the students for showing
flashes of self-respect. his Vice President for Systems and
Operat ions, Edward Doty . was involved in a serious violation
of Ketter 's holy creed of "as Albany speaks, so shall ye
follow."
As shocking as the d isclosu re of the illegal siphoning by
FSA of Athletic Department income into their account - a
move directly contrary to the exalted fee guidelines - it is
simply one more injury in the long series of administrative
manipulation of student fees for political ends.
The guidelines are not based on legal truisms. Nor are the
Albany interpretations. Rather they stem from base political
motivations. So too, the blackmailing of Alan Miller over the
voluntary I RC fee .
The charade o f legality must be ended now. Maybe
others will still lend credence to the pontifications emanating
from Hayes Hall , but no longer can we give them any we1ght
The credibility gap has come home to roost

Another bug on the road

A snub?

/11 tlto•

The newly -appointed Social Sciences provostial search
committee seems to be seriously defic1ent . While we have no
objections to the specific individuals named, the committee
seems to have been chosen by criteria other than an
educational basis.
Four o f the largest and best departments in the Faculty,
History . Socio logy. Psychology and Philosophy. are not
represented 10 the group chosen by Dr. Ketler. While it is not
necessary for each department to have a representative, a
search committee must be composed of individuals familiar
with the problems and concerns of their faculty and its
departments. To bypass these departments is therefore
educationally unsound Certa inly a member of one of these
departments could add far more to the committee than a
banker or the appOintees from Educational Studies and Arts
and Letters
It should not be overlooked that the Faculty of Soc1al
Sc1ences has been something o f a problem to the Ketter
Administration . The circumsta nces leading to the former
provost's resignation and the totally uneth1cal conduct
displayed
by
the administration
in chairmanship
appointments, such as History . are documentations of their
antipathy to this Facu lty . Thus, the committee's rather
unrepresentative com posi tion comes as no surprise. In fact,
the only thing that could surprise us would be the
nomination by this committee o f candidates more concerned
about this Faculty's integrity than about Hayes Hall's
prejud1ces

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol 22. No 48

Monday, 31 January 1972
Ed1tor m ·Ch•ef - Oenms Arnold
Co·Men~H'9 Edotor
AI Benson
Co -Men~u'9

Edttor Mtl(e ltpflmann
As:n . Menegtng Edttor Susan Moss
BuSiness Man~~ger
J&amp;cl&lt; H~tlan
AdYeftoStng Mano~r Susan Mellen ton~
CamPUJ

Coty
Copy
ASS1
f uture
Greptuc Aru

Back page

JoAnn ArmiiO
Jell (orl'enwald
~lowoe Kurt/
.Ienos CrorY'Ier
Ronnt r or man
Mant Gallt
Cta111' Knegsman
Lynda Te o
I uo11 Toles
Arny Ahren•1

L1yout
A sst
Ltt . &amp; Dram•
Musi c
OH·Campus
ASS1
Photo
AsS1
Sports
A sS1

Maryloop~

RunyOr\
vacanl
Mochael Stlverblatl
Bolly Allman
Lynne Traeger
vacan1
Moc!.cv Osterreocher
KomSan•o!.
Barry Rubon
How•e Faowl

ThB Sp«:trvm os seoved by Unit ed Press tmeona11onat. College Press
Servoce, the I os Angeles 1 ttnes Free Press. lhe Los Angeles T1mes
Syndic~ne and LtbHiiJ ioon News Servtce
RepubiiCIIIton of mallei here11o wothOul the eJtpress consent ot the
Editor-in..Ch•ef IS lortJodden
Editortel Pohcv os determone&lt;l by the Editor tn-Choef

Page six . The Spectrum Monday , 31 January 1972

h.llf/11

suggestt!J hy a representative '"
.JS d student of th e UnJ\Iersrty, l
wnlc lh1s leiter to Tht• Spel'trum tn th e Interest tll
tutme hiiYt~l'l. of tht\ p;trl~&lt;. ular car. lhe 1971 , 147~
&lt;m :kcl
We IHHI!\hl the car , ar1 ll after much ha g~llng wtth
th1• lf,•,llrr and ~: alb to Syra\.use, and Oe trutt , the
l.lllll)U \tllll I\ that tillS pJrtJc ular lar has several flukes.
lhJIIIII(I.lll llf'Ctalllln
I tr\1 ul dll, the cable, wh11.: h goes lrum sh1fl to
rc.tr t nd of car, IS frag~ l e enough to bend and al feel
\h1rtmg, frc '"' fu"SI to secnnd Secondly. 11 IS nnl Ihe
n&gt;ld weatlwr lh.JI t.reates a co nd1t10n wherehy the c.H
doc' nol ''art, hut IS due 10 l&gt;Orne l'On!hiiOn m the
Ltrtlur.lltH Th~r~· '' .tho d ~~.cud hurnnung ClliJIIIIg
trum thc .tH'J ul the d1ffercnii.JI, and cvenlhough the
r..Jr h,,, hec n 1n lor repa1r there are excuses upon
c~&lt;ll\1''· hut the """Jitton \!til perststs We are told.
hr't 11 1\ ..1 lll.tllt"r 111 parh , then 11 maller of tgn oranct"
ul the type ul ,.., on I he part of the mc..:h.m•c~ lhl'n
I h&lt;•y olh W,IIIIO(t loll 1.1101 pany engiOCl'f\ to Show lhl'lll
huw to rqlotll 11 .JIId diiY ulhl"r ahh1tho~1 wtll appl'JSe J
1. 11\llllller ·, J n~cr
I feel Jur In I hr IIJrn.tge &lt;-JW.ed hY the tmptopcrly
111.1dc 1...1hll:~.• wht1. h rt''&gt;UII In pour dnvtng condiii&lt;Hl~ .
.utdlack HI p.111~ • .trill htlk o l kno w how nn the pJrl nl
It

was

Wa~hlngll)O ,

n.c. that

1he mechaniCS, the ~.·ar ~hcluld tle taken off the m;1rh•t.
(l)r safety reasons, unt1l the Chrysler people can pu1
out a far more so ft!r 1.ar, '" 1he 1111crest of go oil
managemenl and puhh1. welfare.
I know th.tl a lot of student.~ t"ntoY the euHIIliiiY
of a small ~.·ar. b ut ,,s we have hcen haUling thts
Situation for live monlh~. I ln•lthal 1! 1~ lnlheu he\1
Interest lo shy away frnm tlus par111.Uiar mod~l
C'Spectally as the Slone~ from the tone mana!!,~' 111
Rochest~r .tnd I he men 1n l&gt;ctr rul, plu~ what t&gt; \did
from the dealer IU~I Jnn 't ltn plam f-ngh shl flhc
l:' veryone has lhc1r o wn tak Ill te-ll and tl amounh lo ,,
lnl of bullshltltng around, suundtng hi-e ealh t&gt;rtc t\
lrymg to r..over up hts own m.tnure
The fdc.:t IS s• mpk lind dear , WII h 1hJt damn lJhlc
on 1he under s1dc o ft he .:.tr, and prttnt" tn get11ng hl'nt
what 1n the hell would hitppt·n II d 1. arlo ad o l k•d' wc1c
gomg up or down o1 tull Jnd 'uddenl) fuunu lhq
ntUidn't get lhe &lt;.Jr hJl'k •ntn pruper geM, Jntl hnw
wou h.l they get the ~:a t 1n1n Neutral fm" pu,h, or tnl11·
towed, ur lor thai III.Jitcr wh.JI l.1nd llf &lt;.tln lrul would
be left I&lt;• th~m·&gt;
The mdfll:r \l.tnd' lool.1n~ 1nl1• o~nd J&gt; nl t hi'
rnoml."nl.rall\ h.tw hecn lfi,HIC Itt Wa:.l11ngton. D~t 1011
( 'leveland JIHl Rol hc\lcr Jrld Sy!JUI\l' r hi\ 1\lllll' hug
I hat need~ lo he ~q u:~shecl11r made wcll 11
1\fn

( 'uoifll flllol/1

Distortion of the truth
To

lito

I c/l!ur

II "11111 my mtcn111111 Itt upcn J Ul~lll\~htn ,,h,•ut
th&lt;· Ar.1h htJI.'h pwhlem on lhc pagl.'' nl f111
.\po·1 trl/111
ll uwcvct, 1! ~·em' tu lilt' lhJt M r
I.Jrgh.Jly \ ktfl"r, publiShed January 'It," .1 typ11.t1
Ll•sturlhllllll f.tll\ .utd thu~ needs a reply
l he '' x dJY' W.JI W&lt;!l&gt; laund1cd after the
I gypiiJih dn,nllhc lllll'fll.tltun.JI watl.'rwa y of l~r ;tn
wludl leu ht.Jcl 111c;u1t e.unonu~.:.tl strangulJIIIII\
r..llrl•&lt;'lllr.JII!d XO,OOIJ ,old•er.; l!lJUtppcd w•th the l'lt''-l
nl Ru'''"" we..1ponry at a po1n1 wht1 h '' k~~ lh.tl IOU
mtk' .tw,ty (ront the renter olls1Jl'l , ev1dnl thl· pc.t•1·
kt:l'J'Hng Hill'lll.tllllll luru· . aud Jcclarctl rh.tl lh&lt; (lfll&lt;'
r~ 11pc tu Jlllllhllalc h1.1cl
II M1 I arghaly, 111 .tny ••t ht•r pcr,wl ln1 th.ll
lll:tll•·• h,l\ .my tlol\lhh lh.JI tht• slrall\ "t 111.111 .If\'

•ndt'l'd tntcrn.JIIunal water he 'hould ll·o~rn J h1l "'"'''
Jhuut m ternatlonall y .t).:r Cl"d d e hmt tun~ uf It l.'l'
w.Jierv.Jy~

llll' br.Jcll\ lledared a numhcr uf times that tiH')alc rc;Hly In rcltnqu1sh rontr••l u f m.lUPICd 1\r;~h
lcrntnnc:~ under a pe.tle agreement to be a~.;h1evcd m
chrell nc~Ot1a11 ons II the Arab~ n:ally wan I pc.1u'
why dun't lhl'y nqtliii.Jil'" lo; 11 be~.:ause ncgutl.tlllln'
Will lllt:.ln j!IYIOi_( ur .. •' J-o mal Solution" Ill lhe NJLJ
wuw'1 Or mo~yhl' 11 ml'Jih lhall•me there w•ll he pca1.c
111 th t.' Mu..lulc fo.t~t. the Arah governments Wtll he
'""'-'d 111 &lt;lcJI with fhl' fl.'lll prohlcrno; of tllltl"r.J~Y
1111\I.'TY, puv.:rl y Jlld \lH.:i.JI lntUStllo.' thai \till pla!(Ul'\
lhett\Otwty''

�~CC~Df~G

I

'"e- RJus
IIJK IT'S

THI~

rrs

I

I

'

.,WTtU·I

Guest Opinion

I~HORAt-. .

IH~ORAL. .

by Ca rtos Kruytbosch
The perenrual issue of the relationships between reward, punishment
(reinforcement?) and academic freedom are raised o nce again by a glance
at how t he Faculty Forty-five have fared during the 18 months since their
collec tive bust.
Is there an y evidence that the conventional s tigma o f public
indictment has affected the1r advancement in thas University? As a first
step toward an answer to this questaon, l checked the faculty stat us of the
45 as lasted an the 1969/70 Faculty and S taff Telephone Directory (i .e.,
before the bust), and compa red 11 wtth their ltsttngs in the 1970/71 and
197 I /72 dtrectories. Information was a.yailable for 40 of the 45. Tit ree
were not listed In any directory , one wa~ graduate studen t and o ne was a
vtsiting lecturer
In terms of the1r "before" status, ten uf the 40 were tenured
prolessors and associate professors, 30 were non-tenured assistant
professors and lecturers. Etghteen months later, one of the tenured
professors had left the Unaverslty, the rest cont anued on tn the same s tatu~
as before Of the 30 non-tenured teachers, 19 continued on at t heir
previo us ra nk levels. three were promoted to assocaate professor, and
eaght had departed the Umverslly etther permanen tl y or temporarily on
leave
Fagures such as these du nut, un the fa~:e of at. lend much support to
dtarges nf socaal and pula Ileal dascrtmanataon an faculty appmntment and
advar~~.:ement The departure ofeaght out of 30 (27 per cent) non-tenured
fa~.ulty \IVCr the IH-month penod as probably not too far off the
lJmverMty-wade ;1ver:~ge turnl&gt;Vet Nl&gt;r does a ten per cen t ra te o f
pmrnntaon to tenure over the same pcnod ~eem 1nordmately low
The prdure 1.h .mge~ quatc sharpl y. however when the professors are
dsvadet.l a~o:1.t•rdtng to thear depart ment.tl at fihatwns Nme o f the 30
nun tenured teacher'&gt; were affiltated wllh the Engltsh Department, 21 an
lither department\ (Only one ul the ten tenured prutessors was tn the
l:ngltsh Department a ~urwu\ asyrnlfletry) .
Rou~hly twn thtrds nl the ju111m faLulty 111 each grou p (six of the
Lngltsh l.srulry, I ~ uf the other\) con tanued m the same status after 18
month~ 8111 I wn nl 1he: nme lnghsh professors had recetved promotions
11.1 H~nurt' appoanament' whale only one of the other 21 professo" was so
hunured Agarn, unly une of the l· ngltsh prnfe~urs left the Untversaty (un
kave), whale ~even uf ahe urheh left
In sum, while publtc mdactment seemed to have a negative-effect
upnn 1h c rclcntlun and pronaurwn uf nun-English Department JUnsor
!:~tully 11 appearet.ltP have ~.·o mpa ratav ety no effect f(lf members of the
tngltsh Dcpartrnt'nt
Ouc \lwuld nur JUIIIJl to ha~l y umc:luswns. huwever. abnul the
t&gt;llcd' ul llhcr.sl or ~.on~cnallvc "dcpartment:~l dtmJIC\ ·• upon the
1.JICCI\ ul Jllntnt IJ1.Uity I •H c'l.ample. 11 could be argued thai
sncmber~hap 111 the l·ngltsh Department. bemg a departancn 1 ul Very Hagh
l're~tage (rf. rcrcnl Carller ralmj1..q, re~.ruah 3 htg.hcr l.JUUiity nf young
laurlty than lllh1.•r l) l iNYAB 1.kpartuaeu1~. ergo, they would naturally
h:~ve lu~het ICtentton Jnd pturnotrun rille' Or a varrattun, that the
.r~aderuKall)' he\t 111 hellt'r Yl•Un(l. L ngh~h t,u:ult} llll!mbers have
'"ltlltlllltlellf\ to pohta, .tl ;111d \OI.Ial .tllaon , whale 11 b plllllJnly the le~s
pwdulltVl' ta~.ultv lr•HTI other departnwut~ whu hclc11ne ~u anvolved
(A~.· tually, three ciUt uf tht• 20 non taudty lorty -fivc a~~~~lant prule~SOI\
111 I he l uKl"h Dt:pariiiiCill rctcavrd prumlllltHI\ 111 tht- ..ame period II 5
JX'I 1"1'1111
\U~gC\IIn!( "cqualtiCJtllleltt" Wlthlll tholl Ul'fl.SIIIJH:nt )
Of tlliH\e other pl.111\1hlc mterprct.ttaou' ul the \\.:Jtlly d.tta u1uld be
:tdVJII•l'df' eada lll'&gt;IIIVIItg "luaalwr IC\I:''arda .. "-icverthele\) the lad that J
,,., c11t 111111 I ngla'h lkp.lllllll'lll prolltntce '"''~ rettuned dunng the
pre •ll'" "' I he:' .;o11\1de rat u 111 to pr 11V1dc ptool ,,f ho~va ng ,.,no 111.1 ed dd~es
dllllll!( tht• 'lttk1 ll'tHh \cll\11' lll'llclllC teo the pohtt•c• \\li.IJiprt'fcrcnn:
hy pol heM\

PR&amp;HATVRB
~ORAUTl(.

I

1- :z_

Wlw's to blame?
I,,,,. 1-tfll,,
It l&lt;:rta111ly takes 11 rather srmphsl ll and !ldiVl'
nHnd to pan lh l' hlame fnr the '1'17 w.ar nn Israel 11
~~ Utlicl. I he fmllll y of the .UCJ , II hCl'llllleS OIWIOih tflJI
I gypt ,on,pan•d II&gt; rnake Israel ddr\er lhl• f1r't hl1&gt;\\
\n thai ' he wc&gt;uhJ \cem the aggre,~ur
hr't the c.;tr,ut' of Trran " re~.ogn11ed h• hl o~n
anlt:rnataull.tl w.II\'(WJ&gt; hy all uf thl" lli.Jtur m.mt•mc
nat run~ I he hlud,ade nf thr Stro~rl~ r~ uncJt•r
tnto:rnall&lt;HH.II IJw, an ;tl:l of aggfl'\\lctn
Se~.ond. 11 as a LOmrnon maSL(&gt;nc.cptaun lht~l lh•·
dosanlt ul the Straih was thl" cvl"nt whrl'h lnggnccilh~
w.ar II wa' 111\lcad. Nas~ar'~ou,llngnf fht- UN lfltl'P'
Jntf lhear rcpla~emenl by H&amp;rt&gt;OO l:.gy('llltJn\. for.:111~
hmd to mohahtc her "peoplt''s army " I hJt was tht·
III.Jrn laU\C hro~el ,ould not slay rnnbllllecl l11r 11\&lt;Hc
1han two weds wathout do1ng arrt'perahlc darno~gc: II&gt;
her e~.onomy
and Na$Sar knew thi~ Satd llcrk.JI
c:datur of lht "Willl·offacaal" AI ;1hru111 "Let "ra el
Begsn 1 Lc:l () Uf \ctnnd hlow lht'n h~ ready' ( l'lll h&lt;',l
kncH:knul 1 " In N;as.-.Jr's lanlltU\ '&gt;('II!C:lh nf July ' l
I '&gt;11 7, he .td rtlllll'd hJvrng dnvc:n h rat'lto w.H
The refugc:c:' lrnlll thl' Sue/ &lt; Jnal • 1111'' wrr&lt;'
muved hy NJs.\ar 'n lho~t he u11ald brt'dl- th" \.C:J\l' Ill&lt;'
Jlltl hcgJn hi\ War,,, Allntwn IH.tc:l dill nntlc111.C: tlw
rdugecs to lcJVl', Na~'&gt;Jf ordered thcmtu
It Jl~o tat..e, ,, r.tther samph,llt rn11HI to lltC:rL'I}
look at a mJp .mtl \.311 lsrat'l ~·~p.llhl&lt;\111\l 01n1l
dfl.&amp;fCSSIVC:
lhc fll"W I,JnJ~ 1\racl ollljCIIICd Ill 1111111 WI'IC lht&gt;
result ul &lt;\rmr~llu: Agreement' II the: Ar.ah Narron'
who acquarcJ nhtre Palest1n1an Arah land 111 the"'·"
than d1d Israel had hcen willing I&lt;~ \Ollie h.tlk '" th&lt;'
peace tahle as requtreJ hy the Agrc:c:mcnl\. tl11:y may
have been dhle tu hargarn ha•k \IIIII I: nt lllc:"' IJnth
That the i\r&lt;~l'l~ have ~.ontrnunu ... ly lhr ~:al&lt;'rH'd
genocadc lo thc: Jew, 1~ so well tlotultlenlecl J' to need
no support her&lt;' ulh!!t thantu tnl'nfton thJI alllull!,! till'
do1.umen1~ brac.&gt;l 1.Jp1Ured 111 1'1(&gt;7 wl'r• hJIIIe pl.w'
to not only t&lt;~t.., ,,vc:r village:,, hut '" k1ll .Jll tin·
Inhabitant ~
Oue' one really hc:lreve tho~l "•ng
llu~ern's Bedu1n tr•tnfl' art· gomg '" h• ,tny m.-·r tu
lhe J ew~ than they wcr~: to lhl·u ow11 P.d&lt;'\ltnran
brothers an the Scptl'lllbl'f &lt;·,vii W.H 1
Hassan Far~aly. hr.tcl wc&gt;n t h,tV&lt;' lu/urd anntht•r
''reason" tu laun,h a prt'vc:nl.llllil' w.11
11 "
unreasondhk allltude~ Ilk~.· your' th.al lc.•d '" polll1•·'
that prrii'ICI~ rea'""' tor WJI\
Let .:ool hc.Jth ""·v.til nn huth ,IIJc ~ ll·t · ,~l·ltlw
.:!0 ,000 Sovacl 111 •up~ oil I 111 I· gy pt •""' lc: I\ ho~v,·
d1rect nc~ollaltctll ~

""l'

•• ,

111111'1 ' 1

Abortions for sale
I~•

,,,,. I clti"'

I hi\ 1111111th ""'~ .rlt Jl~t•rllllll\ wrll h, If I ull lh•·
ltclllll.JIIn\\ Jllht' II you '•e l..lll~lfl!(.troun&lt;l .1 JHotlul.l
,,t lfH \\'\ rl'\cJ(ll(HIII .JI\cJ cJo11'1 Wall! ICI atlqll lhl'
rt'\(leln,lhtltl} ol 11 ·" t now .rnd ,,,vc We have tulltiiiiC!
rr\llll,ll'r' "" h.IIHII" It'll Y••U "'' lnr ll~&lt;•lwttl'rrncnl ,,,
111;1111-.trlc.l lor lhl· good of Yl•llr ..:hald. Jrl1l tlw tlllly
r:IIICIII.II dl'C:I\1011 ynu UlUid make , 1\ 11 lhJI
l,tllon.llr.•c·d ·1 II you •..til 11ow ,1nd have !Will\ we wrll
l..tllllll· "'l.lllld 1111&lt;' lrt•c: ol dt.tlgl' , th1nlo.. ut !h.tl two
lur the (lllll' ul nne lur 111 Jdclrtrnu.tl S'i Olltlrl.' lt:l\1\
•~nn ' t 1.111&lt;1 111 lht tra'h lJII we wrll pul h101 111 a &lt;nltrn
o~ncl g1vc: hun J h\ln.tl We: lh.rllJng~ Jny tunerlll hom,•
1n lop th.tt 11llc:r. Rt'llll'lllhl'f Jhnrttc111\ arc: now mc)fl'
lt'g.al 111,111 t.•ver and rl law .:an'l dt:ll'llllllll' an
llldtVIll'•·•" IIIIIIJhty wh.tl Ioiii •\ \ !\doll woultl ~.Jy
Don lor the latlterl.tlld'
lhc: tllnc:of tccltnggually

uvn Ill&lt; tde.J ol !;l'lllll):! .ell ahottllilll 1\ nfll IJslllunc~l.
cvt'fyhud~ \Ill' II In~ thl.'ll • htlcl Jhurdct.lthl''e day) A'&gt;
a r11.111cr ••l I.JI.I r1 )-•Ht havl'll 1 llatl.•n .th&lt;lrlwn yt•u're
cJuwn r~ghtunp11pular l · ~er)'llllt: I.. now' thJIIf enough
peupll- &lt;'\('ll'•IJII)' rl c:\pt'll\ and lc.tOl'l\ -.andtnn .t
u~rlatll ,1\.(IYII)' 1h.111 th.ll Jtlllilt)- I\ rrghl JIIO IU\I
Rtghl ull Adnll 1 It our CtH11('1l'lllur dnwn al the
.Juop11&lt;111 n•ntl·r l111\ YtW w1th thai ~pill about parenh
who Wltllllhllllr.:n hur,·an 'lllJVl',tlly,nl thalthc:tr1~a
Ol'llltlnd 1!11 hahtn don't kt 11 lnflucnll' yuu After all
llw 1..11.1 Ot'\l'tVC\ thc: dc:.Jih ,,ntcntc hr had no nght
~··ttwg .:ulltlc.'HJ fhc: tall th.JI you luvc lu 'arr} hun
tor n1nl' month' grw• yt•u lhc nghl lu clu 11 to ham
l'has.trllde ha' h&lt;'CO hroughlll• yc111 h\' th&lt;' toundataon
d.:da.:atcd to strangling duldren hclorc they get a
dlun~..c In breathe
Murk /,r'lrll'n

II

Monday, 31 January 1972 The Spectrum Page seven

�. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ADVERTISEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....

The Student Association Presents:

The Special
Direct competition

Record Co-op stock seized
the o~dmmisrrati o n "its tln .. l offer." T h1s offer
included : a guarantee rh.H thl'
op could conunue in
oper.utOns, th e relco~-.e o f previously frozen Coop
funds, the- placing of the Co-op under FSA jurisdiwon
..md .ontrols. and ;~ promtse from thf' Co-op th.u it
would not .allo w other groups to sell mcrch,llldiSc from
thetr Hed. The Co-op re-fused to consider the- o ffer d.\
being ~enou5. As nnl' member s~i d . "They've got to be
kidding. The first thing they w ou ld do 1\ raise our
price) a bud an Jlburn."
The "fin.rl uffer" o~nd sub)e4uent evcnH h .. vc led
w ch.&amp;rges th.H the Univcro,rty never mtended tu
b.ug;un 1n good fa11h. The fil\t of these woa~ the dunge
of lod.;) on the Co-op dour. In .:r still to be c'(p!Jtncd
m.1nner however tht· Cu up g.11neJ entry to till' ruorn
and continued in ope-ration.
Thto, wo~s followed by the mcr~t recent Jcti•ln the
SCIZUrc uf~o op )totL

Another 'to~ge 111 the leogthy controversy over the

c,,

pre~t:m.c of rhe Record Co-o p in Nnrwn Union h.ts
lfliiH'

to

01

close w1th the st·izurc o l Its stu(.k by rhe

H .. ye~ Ho~.ll admim~rr.HIOn
The dispute olro~e .. ttn " dec1s1on by the
.ldmumu·.. rion to d1scont1nue the processtng of Co-o p
vou,hcrs. Th .. t .tcllon w.1s uken on the b.1s1~ th.tt "the
cxbtence of rhe Coop on the Stare Univer~iry o l Nrw
Yor k .u Buffalo c.1 mpus 1s 1n d irnr ~ompernion w11h
otf t.unpus mcrch.mrs."
\ourtes close 10 the d ispute conte\1 th .. c this w;u
rhe m.-en c.~use .... eung the ns~ng frustro~llon ,,f the
Uruvcr'll y Bookstore .11 the Co-o p 's success Stm e rhc
l n 11p\ opening 111 the Umon b.uement th e Bookstore
h.t) n:dutcd it&gt; retlHd tnvencory b) rwo-thuds. T h e
'"'' o l \tgnifrunt revenue t reportedly to be use-d for
tht• &lt;t&gt;rt&lt;truuion of FSA factliues on the Amherst
t .omptH .end rurnurs th.11 o1 Book Co np W.l'l .. bout 10
lw lor rrll'd rt:portedl~ lcd to tht' 6ook)turc '5 vC'hement

The wherl.',,buur' of d1c ntcrch.uula\c ts ~1111
unknown Ac&lt;.ordmg to nne &lt;..o op member, " We
d on't lto~ve o~ny idea where it ts They came m la\t night
o~nd •ornpletely cleart&gt;rl '' ou t They even took the
Co np rec.1rd pl.:rycr
lo
Oead o~nd Z.tppo~
po\tt•f\ "

" "mpl.tlllt' .tbuur tht• C.n "P \ cxtstenu: Th1\ tlllllo~l
·"non h~ thc .. dmmrstro~twn W.l) s.ud ru tnvolvc: we-ll
11\'t'l .1 dltiU\.tlld Jull.on 111 Co &lt;&gt;p lund~.
I he L" np loowner \'IIWI.'d "' rern.un upen It
lrnmnl! .• tch l•c)ot~•• I'•IVIII!! lt•t merclr.utdl\t' uUI ul
,J.,eh rt'• t''l'' ' Tht, ""' .:rpr~r• nth urtc:\ptt reJ o~nd lor
.1 \o\llllt• II '&lt;' t'IIH'II "
tl ,1 1 ''"'IHI)I\11\c.' \l&gt;lutl&lt;&gt;n W.l\

fhe ~OIItruvcrsy doc\n 1 wclll tu h&lt;· end.·d To
4uote UIIC' Jngry Cu op mcmbn "Thq hdvt•n t \l.'l.'n

l'""'bl.

1\11

I \l oll ll I \ l111

l~o•w,·••·r.

\I l l

h ••

I 11111!'11•11\"l' dl)o1Jlpl

the l.&amp;&gt;t of 1a yet II wr: h.lVc ''' w•·'ll ~ell I rom nut ol
tltc juhn '

.lft:d

'''rl' th l' p11 \ lltl.ll\1111 111 \\h,,r "·" !l'llllld b\

WNYPIRG refused funding
because of fee interpretation
1\ m.rJ"fll\ ol 'rud~nh
,lfl,l 1h, \ •~ It' Cullt:~tt• .&amp;1

.11

rlu: St•lc Uu1vn~l!Y

1\u ffo~lt&gt;

h .1vc

\i)l.ncJ

pl.'tlluon dunu~ tht• P·"t wt·r:k •·,prc&gt;S\1\~ then
'upport nf thl' W,·,lnu Nnv York Pubh. lnt.rru

staff of prc•lc~\ion.Ais who wrll ·'"i't WNYPII{(,
rnt:;trl It

Alb.lll\ •'"' •.II tcrnprtrq, '
( ltl~t·o ''udcur' potnrcd tout •vflu:y w11uld hk~ "'
In lot• )U~I Jllutht·t rmpntt'l11 group th.ll pull· rite

A 'P"I«'"""" lm WYNPIJH, ,t,llccl rh.1t rl hr,
urgilltll.lliort w.n guing to lw n:,pur~&gt;ivr to ,uodl.'ll b
.md 1 Clll\111111111\ 111.'cds. "wr will nn·d the ltt'l.'cluall t"
gutdc &lt;&gt;Ur\clvl.'' l~t'l.' of H.t~l'\ H.rll rt•,tr.llnl

(11

''"I'

thun

Al..n Mtllrt. Inter-Re-side-nce
Counc.:tl presrdent , t o day
.mnounccd that this semester's
.Jiocation to fund the A llenhurst
Bus. h&lt;~s been turned down Mr.
Maller stated thJt he h.1d been
informed bec~usc the bus directly
competn with NFT public
transport.ltrun It could nor be
funded wuh student iees.
Mr Miller sto~tc:d. "When thl'y
told me. I lou ldn't bdrcve it.
They ~re go1ng to con tinue
running the bus during the d .. y
Mond~y through Frid01y. but not
on the huur~ I RC funds 11." When
o~skl.'d fm .1n ex planatrcon .. n
o~dministr ..uive source replied,
"State funded hours .A rc fur the
purpose of tr.msporting s tudents
to d ..ssc:s, ••nd thl.'reforc can be
justified. The IR\ evening Jnd
weekend hours wt:re nut for
cl.assroom purpo~e~ .md bn ~u'l.'
of thIS the t 0111 pe11 rron wHit ,,
publi. lorpllr.Atwn lake NfT L.tn
nut g&lt;J un."
Stu f eldsut 1. I R&lt;.. tr C.t5urt•r,
rt'\lgned 1n drsgust. in poArtlllg Mr
f.Jd~ott ~.uti. "It\ goucn Ill .1
puull tlt.•t I ,,.u'r pro(.e~'
Ylllllh,r werhout It hting thrown

WNYl'IIH; lrnpn lh,or \llldt·nt~ well 111111&lt;' .. , .. J
dt·ln ....d dt.ot thev 11\.llllt,allt ll1111 riglrr 111 'P&lt;'Iul
'"'"'' ~' \lucl•·•rt~ dl'\lfl'

A s thts 1ssue went to press, a last minu t e edic t from Hayes Hall announced the
closing of the State University of New York at Buffalo and the entire SUNY system. The
decision was made by the Cha ncellor of the SUNY system, Dr. Ernest Boyer.
Dr. Kener was caught entirely by surprise. ••Thts was news to me. Dr. Boyer
explained to me that the state univenity was in direct competition w1th private
enterprise. I never thought the student fees issue would strike home."
It is rumored that the facilities of the University will be turned over to that
corporation submitting the highest sealed bid. When it became known that Sub-Board I
was seriously contemplating ent ering the com petit ion, Dr. Ketter in a last defiant gesture
annou nced that surplus studen t fees could not be used to purch ase a university .
Or. Boyer was unavailable for comment.

bt Jble 111 do d"'·"
Inter l{ned elltt' Coun.rl
officers olrt' Wl)lrtt'd .tbUUI whJI

th~

o~dmmt~tr.;tiull r111ght ''"l~·
next. Mr frld~ott whu
rl.'t,Hncd h" po~lllltll .. ~ th.,., 111.o1o
of IRC Bu~iiiC\~t:~. lnL., s t.Jtcd .
''I'm rco~lly p.rr.runed rh.H tltt•y
llll~hr decide tu l11t the ( olllh
d~&gt;w11

U11derground
·''"' rl.'fn!l-cr.tlur
;&gt;rogram nt'xt .utd .titer tlto~t who

UUAB sees plenty of
Hayes Hall problems

111 ' ' '

Tht• &lt;illiJl'lll A~~lltl.ll\111\ I\ trylllg Ill (I.CilU.tlt'
\upp11r1 lnr thl' .ICIItllllllll\ ul \llllll.'nl 1111111ic' It 1\
fdt th.;t Alb.tny' nmtrnl-. -.lwuld ht l11111it·J to 11\&lt;.tl
.;nd dl\hur,llll\ rl·•Jillll'llll.'llt\ 111 llhur" th,;t proper
fl!u&lt;rdrn~ p1 IILI.'tllllt'' ,,r,
lulluwt•d
""&gt;pnt"
(..ubcrrll.tll. '\.A 1,1 Vrlc hnidcnr. lu·l"'''&lt;'' th .• t
"Ail&gt;.rny .wJ dtt• \ JnaVtr\lly Admint-tt.lll"" ,J,ould
not da IJlt• how -ruJt•nt' \pend thur h•t·, ·

back in my face." M r. Feldson's
o4Jlnoya.nce was due to the bu~
decision along wtth the
crackdown on c.tmpus mcw1es
Earlier in the day lRC was
rnforrned th01t free movies could
no longer be funde-d Js they we-r e
in direct competitwn with private
the.ue rs.
When asked why he thought .•11
these actions h.tvC' luppl'nccl so
sudde nly Mr. Mtll rr told us, "tht'y
ltht' .•dmini,trJtion 1 lo.avc h,,J dw
power to do rhi~ o~ll &lt;llung. Thl'y
opcr.ue wuh J set of .ubrtr.ary
rc-gulo~11ons th .. c dtc-y Cdll mtcrprer
10 theJr o wn wJy ,H their own
d 1~c rerion
The ~tr,rngc rlting
.. bout it b thJt we have ~
vulunt3ry fe e, .111d they s hLluldn 'l

Fee restrictions

1111w by bctornllaK involvt'd 111 th~: prute5s th.ll ,J,,apC's
IIIII CnVIIIII\IIII.'Ilt "
A Hudcnr !\turd l&gt;f r&gt;~rc&lt;lor&lt; t&gt; now bl.'llll(
eled,·tl to o,dl.'t.t an ~Xt'tUI\Vt' dart'&lt; tor .;nd to lwt ~

Rc'".u' h l.roup .md thcH dcstre 111 lund thl.'
org.HlllJtHHl through .1 buf'dl &lt;ullc&lt;tcd studt·nt fl'c'
fhr .;pprov,ol 11! dtc IWO JuJI.u let• ,oJinllJ by
hrllh 'o(. h .. uh
r c'pn tivc hu"·'r' olftt c,, whtdt
provrdC'&gt; .&amp; ~ample llll'dlJni\111 '"' rduucl wrll h·· u~ed
to fund .ldinllt\&lt; rn&lt;.tr.h b~ ,rudt•nh. 111ttt thr·
problt'lll\ fo~ctn~ the Wt·~tl'lll Nt·w Y or!.. rc~tun
WNYPIRG h~&gt; bt'l.'ll tdll\t'J In Jllnw the ll.'t· In
•'I'P''·" 1111 tht: l:luro,.;r', htll A•, ord111g In .1 l11gh lt•vt·l
\tudcnr ,,ffit 1.tl "Arhnr.tr\ lutc·c prL·t.otron' ul v.1111111~
~!.lit' Unl\'&lt;'f\IIY n...rrd Ill ltU\ft'C (:uldt·hnt:\ ..,,.
n·,trh 1111~ 'ruJt•nt .o&lt;{l\'lllt'' ro tho~&lt;: 'golden d.rv,· of
guldlhh '" .rllnwan).i Studt:nt ,ft11uld w.tLt• up 111 th ,
rc.dtr I .,f \\.lt.ll th&lt; \IIJ.. 'Uitt·d pull Ill~~ h.ot J,., Ill

prupu lrver t'.Adt N .. vrtnhrr w~ h.rve

Allenhurst Bus has
fees and hours cut

rhc All\\ I!C\ Bu.. rd, dltiHHJ~It
Ill Jllt''l'Ot d.allji,Cr, feo~r~ the
trl.'nd of lurrlar rC'~tnuivt:
IIIC.t5Uil'\
Ull
the U\C o f the
Jlli'vllll' fre~. l..nry Stt'lll,

IIIli

Pre~•d,•nl "' UliAB. rold ll\, " Ill
ltghl .. t the Adlllllli~tr.lllon·)
.,t !tOll\ "" I Rl dtl.' Fuod Co up
Unt\'CI\IIV l' tt''' .tnd other group'
undc1 \lllllllt\. wt m.1y bc ne~t.
t lur pro~~,r~n" 111 111.:rrtv • .~~c!&gt; .trc tn
dunt 'utllprlll\1111 with pri•.tlt
bu~lllt'\&gt;
(fi lm!&gt;, COOler(\,
'uffeclwu~t·
.utcl although uur
tcrt.1l opcr.;tton '''t'' no profit. we
rno~y be a~k,•d to tlltllply wllh tltt•
'uufan •uurpet11w11 thing th.at
H.1yes H •.JI L eep~ rcdctrrng tn ..wd
th.tt's nut cvt'n in the Tru)tce·~
Guidehnt'' on Student Fcc~ "
T o du thi,, UUAB fe:tr~ either
·• dn\11\j~, of •"•npctitive venrurc~
ur ·• 3110% pncc- luke in film~ ..~nd
lliii&lt;Crt\
"Th .. rr: 15 a muvc
urtdnw,,y by no~ltonal film
diJ&gt;tribu tur~ to rt'!&gt;trict the ~ollefl.e
c lientellc: by offering priva t r

the.Hcr~ prrvilt·jl.n of .:rdv.tnlcJ
buok111g, .11\cJ l'\dU\IVI.' lal\1 IIIII
filrnl&gt; ~to~red W.th Uchnke, UliAU
Filur Commtlttc ( lt ..urmo~n, "We·
Jft'
.rfr.1id th1•y MC brillfl,illlo(
pnl 11 il al prc~MII ,. IJII H.t yc4&gt; 11 •.11."
P,oul Ro,cn, Ch.tiCIII&lt;In of th•·
Mu'a &lt;..nmrnntcc rl.'o~c.ted. "if w•·
•·•n 't h.lVe tompctiiiVI.' concert~ .11
S 1.0() or $2.0() cfl!&gt;t:OUIIt riH'II
wh.rt's the pmnt '' Thr UUAH
Drdnutit Art5 Ch.ttrnt.ln, Sul&gt;.an
Schw.1u, ~t.atl.'d, "Tht• Univcn.rry

community u n•c cun~&gt;eious of tht·
polutc .. 1 economiC role of 1he
Univef\ity. ,huuld rc:o~lt1e th.tl
these .trc dirt·u reprcS)IVt'
me .. )ures ort rhetr right tn
~ti l detcrlllln.arion trf their own
monte~." Mr
Stein st.ued, "I I
priv.tre industrie' .wd univcr~lt y
.rdnunist rat ion~ It .ave the forcs&amp;glt t
tu plan ahead .irtd rt-press th~
thrr,il of Mudenc power, w~ JS
studcnrs must mo~tch this with
being prc-p..ued

to ho~ndle the&gt;e

s ituation~ ."

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ADVERTISEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
Page eight . The Spectrum . Monday , 31 January 1972
I

1..

t

\

I l

1

�. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ADVERTISEMENT . . . .!!~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~

Unfair competition

editorials • opinions

Food Co-op forced to close
The U.B. Food Co-op which began operation
only this m o nth w as forced ro dose today because it
used stud ent fees to operate, thereby, quoting an
administration official, "giving th e co-operative a n
un fai r a d vantage in competition with local
merchan ts."
Administration officials announced that '"since
the store opened most students h ave tur... _J there for
their gr ocery shopp ing. Local merchants have
(om plained o f significant losses."
Prices were somewhat lower than in surrounding
stores. This fa c t , plus th e relaxed atmosphere of
s h opping convinced students to sw itch their
sho pping habits with donni tory residenu heading
rite list.
Donnitory students praised the op eration of the
Grub and U nderground, two student c o-ops already
operating in th e reside nce halls but argued for th e
ueed of t h is new enterprise.
" We need the additional items wh ich th e
dorltlitory stores cannot provide because of th eir
1po~c c limitations. "
~. Resident:c h;l!l students bitterly complained that
"we llf(' now forced tO pick up board contracts
because area stores are outrageously expensive."
Commented one donn reside nt, " I can't afford the
prices of University Plaza but the Co-op w as

reasonab le. I don't have transportation so J 'II have to
go bad: on board."
Student lead ers feel tha t the Faculty Studen t
Auociation pressu red the Administration to rtfuse
the Food Co-op because of the significant drop in
the number of st udents taking board contracts. It
w;u felt that students would be forced to eat on
campus again.
Members of the Food Service staff admitted
th at business was slo w b ur denied th at it was th e
result of the Co-op's existence. " We h ave lived with
the Grub and Underground for over two years. Their
operations as well as that of the Co-op 's specialize in
unprepared foods so th ere is no competition with
the food service."
President of tlae Student Association. l;an C.
DeWaal stated that " I am confused by the .1pparen1
hypocricies in Administration policy. On o n e hand
th ey say th e Co-op can 't u sc the Umvcrsi t y property
to compete with private business, yet if we move it
off campus they won 't let us usc student fee s
because non-studen ts may usc the service~.''
Mr. DeWaal furth er ~rgued " I d o n't sec
em pl oyees of Facu lty Swdcnr Assoc iation
Exterp rises checking to insure only members of the
University communrty use their services "

Sunshine House's operations
curtailed by fee interpretation
Stnct

enforcement

of d1 e Sta te's Trust ees

Gt~idr liu e\ lw the spending o f ma ndatory student

11v1tv fee5 h:u scri()usly curtailed t he operation of
Huusc. ~ crisis interventio n cente r
)U p p u rt e d
by Stu d~n t AJS&lt;&gt;~;iJtion via the
Cummunity Actiou Corps. Although it is involved
p1im&lt;~rily wuh emergency 01id and referral services
f11r Umvenlly ~tudcn t s, Sunshine House has also
rrteivt"d r .;ll\ from proplr living in t he UniverJity

service wliich h a.s ht'lpcd over l 500 peo ple in t he
past sia m onths.

.11

~ 11 " ' h 1nr

At·cnrd111g to Dcunis Drescher, CAC Pwjcct
uf S un~hinc Huusc. •myone w h o t.:a lls or walk.s
111 tu tile hl&gt;usc will be required to give their student
In number, .dong wtth other Mmilar staristic.al facts.
"It will br in1pos~ibll.' (or us to continue working
•IIH.lt'• thnl' umditiom." sa1d Mr. Drescher. ''It
would be o~bsurd for us 10 ctuestion a person o n ;a bad
tn p feor sud1 relevant infonnarion ..s h is srudent ID
numhcr. To t'llpccr us ru rurn someone in need away
iu•t heC.IIIM' he isn ' r J student would be imprac ttcal
.1~ wdl J' iu!.um anc Helping o thers iu no w;~.y
lllrt.uls our aboltty to help students."
It IS believed that if Sunsh ine House dues not go
.~lou~ with th e restnct1um , funds whid1 have bee n
allth .ttc~d rro tht·m will be lrcwen bnngiug to an end a
I t,•,ul

CAC cumiled
The Community Action Corps w;u mformr:d of
..1 ~lash tn their budget Mo n day . via a letter !rom
Hay es Hall. The CAC budget hnr " Projru
Resources" was Lh &lt;~nged from SJOOO to SO. Offic1.1ls
of CAC talked to this reporter :w d ex pl.1ined th e
situation. T h e CAC "Project Resour ce~" linl.' •~ u•cd
for such things .lS trips :1nd su pplil'S for CAC
p rojects.
Tedd Levy. director of CAC c,.pl .. tnrd i1 !111 ~
way, "We can ' t even huy books for nur tutortng
projects, did you rver try to tutor without h &lt;lO ks' In
th e past we've taken m .. ny of our projl't" on rrip,,
now a field trip for inner c1ty k1 ds to th e c lf(ll~. m
even .a museum is no Ionge• p osJ&gt;ible "
The reasoning behin(! the mav~ •~ .an
interpretation of the Ttust N•\ Guidelines for the
spending
m:rndatoty ;ICIIVIty fees. Suet. 11101110
must he spend 011 "t fc,r Univen.u y 'ru d c n t~.
Accordin g to llo~y es Ho~ll dH· " Ptojnt ftn1111rLt· \"
line of the C A&lt;' budget '' ..1 dc.u violo~ti0n of th e
Guidelines.

or

None of the events described on these two pages has
actually occurred. Their possibility in most cases is very
plausible. They have been
presented in this fashion to
highlight a pressing issue
currently being pursued by
the Student Association and
other groups that depend on
student activity fees for survi val .
Student activity fees were
originally designed to allow
students to supplement co·curricular activities provided
by the University . As times
became scarce and University
fundl!fl student services began
receivmg
the
ax,
the
administration increasingly
turned to student gov·
ernments to provide the
services that they were ready
to sacrifice.
Not long ago, students
began a violent reaction to
what they perceived as blatant
hypocricies in the University
The State University of New
York quickly moved to collar
the effort of student govern ·
ments to provide the nece&amp;Sary information to their
constituencies. In an un·
justified overreaction not
only were fiscal and account·
ing procedures instituted to
prevent common rip-offs, but
additional guidelines were
imposed to dictate what
students could fund These
guidelines were supposedly
open to indlVidual inter·
pretat10n by SUNY campuses,
but it soon became obvious
that decisions on contr·
oversial issues were being
controlled by Albany .
When innovative
expenditures were proposed
such as allocations to the
Buffalo Draft Counseling
Center to provide services to
the campus community, or
to Sunshine House for the
purchase of a per man en t ho
me, the administration turned to Albany for the
decisiOn The case of the ball
fund also fits th1s pattern We
believe that these non·
isolated inciden LS reveal the

..............................................

trend of the administration
to sacrifice the autonomy of
this campus to the political
whims of Albany bureaucracy:
The Student Association
rejects the claim of SUNY
Central to dictate "guide·
l ines" f or s tudent
governments . What was
originally termed as a political move to appease a
hyperactive legislature has
resulted in a serious attempt
by Albany to dismantle
student autonomy .
One reason which has been
used to defend negative res·
ponses to such proposals as
the Food Co-op is that they
unfairly compete with local
private enterprise. This
rationalization must be clear·
ly dispelled. The state has
contracted with the Faculty
Student Association to
provide services to the cam ·
pus even though it directly
competes with private enterprise (Anyone who visits
campus can eat in Food Service) The policy of denying
students the right to establish
their own services is an
obvious hypocrisy .
What we need is an
administration which wants
not to "live with the guide·
lines" but which is committed to defending student
self·determi nation by
interpreting the guideHnes in
a manner favoring student
independence. This is quite
legal since the guidelines are
open to individual campus in ·
terpretation. We need an ad
ministration which doesn't
blackmail student officers into accepting questionable
''compromises" under the
threat of sacrificing theu
organizations as was done in
the case of the Inter-Res·
idence Council.
We need an adminiStration
which does more than talk of
campus autonomy as a
high-ideal but which supports
1t 1n 'all 1ts day ·to·day
operations
But most of all, we need
your vocal support

~~( ~«)II"~ ~~e ,en rd

lnterprctal ionl:-l VH

t1~ud(~~n ll ~

~
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ADVERTISEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .
Monday, 31 January 1972. The Specti urn . Page nine

�Icemen beat \ellowjackets t6
tie for second place in division
by Howie F aiwl
A#l .

Spons Edflor

Spnngfield, Mass. They caU
Springfield , Ma&amp;'l. the "crossroads
of New England" but as far as the
Buffalo
hockey
Bulls
are
concerned 1t is simply a crossroads
to a high post-season playoff
berth Even before the Bulls took
the ice against the YeUowjackets
of
American
International
f'ollege, they received news that
div1sion II leader, Uruversity of
Massachusetts, lost a key contest
to Vermont the night before,
hoosllng Buffalo mto thud place
Buffalo
then
proceeded
to
hum1liate A IC J 2 4 and thrust
thcmlodves into a tie for second
place m the 27-team division II.
The lopsided score was not oil
that one-sided as the young, quick.
Yellowjackrts skuted the Bulls
through a scoreless first period
The weansome SIX hour road tnp
left rn.my Bulls weary, but AJC
faJied tn O.:.lp1tal11e

The Bulls cam storming out in
the second period, however, and
quickly went ~~d fous.. to one,
on goals by Ted Miskolcz.i, Dick
Will , Dale Dolmage and Bob
Albano. AIC however never
faltered and cume wittun one goal
after scores by Paul Pacific and
Doug Anderson. Soph John
Stranges, came up wllh a crucial
goal at 18 ·43 giving the Bulls a
5 3 lead mto the tturd period
Buffalo barrage continue8
Buffalo continued its lightning
scoring barrage the next penod
w1th seven Bulls ligl1tmg the red
goal I.Jghl and paving the way for a
final 12 - 4 victory. fhere were
many stars in the game that saw
Buffalo produce tts lughest
scoring attack uf the season . John
Stranges.
Bob
Albano , Bill
Newman and Dick WiU each
scored a pan with s1ngle to1ll1es
from Dale Dolmage, 8111 Reid ,
M1skolcz1 , and Ja\.k Ril.hards.
Mike Klym ch1pped 1n w1th four

,
-~

assists to sbare the team scoring
lead of twenty points with
Dolmage, who had two assists to
go with his goal.
It was also a game that saw
relatively few penalties. In fact
only one BuU, Bob Goody. was
sent off the ice and one has to go
way back to recall a game with so
few BuffaJo penalties.
It was a sweet victory for
Coach Ed Wright, who rt:sted ttis
club overnight before a short trip
to Salem. Mass. where the Bulls
met Salem State in yet another
vtlal div1s10n 11 game. If the Bulls
can play anywhere near Saturday
rught's level, the BuUs should be
coasting back to Buffalo With a
comfortable H- 1 record. After
workm~t out in Buffalo all week ,
the Bulls will take to I he road
agam Fnday at Oswego State
Oswego was beaten by the Bulls
here 1n Buffalo but recently has
played wdl 1nclud1ng a 6 5 upset
of diVIMnn I Cnlga te.

BuDs l'S. Huskies

Basketball at the Auditorium
W1th hlllc du111ce f11r rest 111 s1ght , the varsity
Bulls ..:ont tnue nn wrth the tough portuln of
thetr '~hcduk. Tontght at 7 p.m 10 the Menwnal
Audllnrrum . the Bulls challenge the na tion's
ntneteenth ranked maJor ba~kcthall team rn Northern
llltnm... Umver:.ll) The llusk1e\ . who rnet South
Carolina at Ch1cdgu ~IJd1u~ thts pa~l Satu1day &lt;,ported
a I~ I won·lust recmd befct~c Lheu hattie wllh I ranJ...
M~:C.,urre's Gamecod;'&gt; Included Jtnong thetr I 2
Vlllunes have been II stratght wins. The ll u~okteb' only
setback thiS year came 1n their se~()nd game of the year
Jl B1g T('n Purdue, J J ;!.gq
ha~ketball

WltltUUI much doubt this year"s HusJ...JC qumteiiS
1111e ~1rntlar to the one that edgeJ Buflalo 77-71 at
Oek.1lh, IU . last ye;H Huwever . lht' one maJOr addllton
to the Huskie five has been 6-9 supe1 suph forward Jam
Bradley, Bradley , lrnrn l:.ast Chicago , I ndtana, d1d not
play lre~hman ball last year in order to concentrate on
rus stud•e~ . Coach l Olll Jorgensen helreves Bradley can
play any posltwn on lhe noor In prC·SCason, Sports
IUu~rated magaz.we featured a full page shot of
Bradley as one uf the nation's line~t soph~ . fhus far,
Bradley has led the II usk tes with 23 2 potnl!; and 15 .9
rebounds per game. along with a .535 lleld goal
percentage.
In addition to Bradley. the Husk1es returned rune
lettermen from last year along With four excellent
so ph prospects One of the so phs, b· I 0 center Bob
Patterson has shared ptvot dutjes wuh center Larry
1 urne1 , last year's leadtng rebounder tn the newly
formed M1J-Wes1ern Con fercnce . Northern Illinois is a
charter member of this up and cormng conference
whkh features llhnoas State, Southern lllino1s, BaU
State and Indiana State Another man )(lOmtng high 10
the ll u~k1c game plan should be b·5 scnto1 forward
Je1 ry Ltrltn~okt. wh .., has played agamst the Bulls tw1ce
tn h.J, ~.areer. Twu yea1s ago, Zielinski burned lhe Bulls
STUDENT DISCOUNT
on all
redecoratmg needs
ar I supplies, picture frammg
D.M . RECH PAINT CO.

.....

3209 Bailey Ave.

AUTO SERV IC E
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR

Honest &amp; Reliable
repair$ on
Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER

1974 Eggert - Near Bailey
834·7350

27 points at Clark C.ym, but last season wa' held 111
I I markers at the lluskte lieiJhuus~.

fur

Junior back court
AI guard. Coad1 JurgCII\CII ~alb on a pau col
'pecdy Jllntor lettermen an Uall llarns (b·2) and Larry
hck~un ( 6· 1) But II Harm and Jackson boast field
goal percentage~ of uvcr "0 per ~ent Jnd have M.:ored
I X 4 Jnd I 3 ~ pmnts per game respectively As for
hench st renglh. the Huskies have 6·3 senior co-captaut
Clevel.wd lvey, a rwo·ye;u starter who has heen
pu.shed cw t by the NJl l talented sophs Jvey has sttll
pumped an 4 J pe1 game tn lamtted act ton . The llu~k1es
lt"c tu run Jnd gun and :Jre nat10nally ranked 10 several
~l:lll\tu.:s lrr sconryg the Husk1es' 100.3 per game IS
third only hl UCLA and Oral Roberts. Jim Bradley
figures twenty-ttghth in natiOnal scon ngand etghth in
the rehuunJtng rJce
The Huskies' most imprCSSIVC Win came at home
when they upset lnd1anu, 85 71 Other victones have
wme over Ball State, We)teru , Ill , Cahfornta Poly,
Hardm Surnons and Cal1forma Fullerton The Husktes
also copped the Cowboy Classic at Abilene, Texas.ln
the all·llme series, whtch began tn 1965-66, the Bulls
trail four to one. Buffalo's o nly wm came m 1969·70.
87·78 at Clark Gym . In their two previous Aud
meettngs. the Huskies dommated 90·77 and 66-57
For the Bulls to wm , Northern lllin01s' hetght
must be neutralized . Last year, Cttrt Blackmore had a
line game m scoring 21 potnts and 13 rebounds, but
thJs year the Husktes Jre ~ontrolltng the buards,
a~eragmg 6 1.2 rebounds per game and shooting .483
as a team After fa..:ing the Bulls at the Aud , the
Husktcs resume ac twn Wednesday night at St.
Bonaventure while the Bulls travel to West Plltnl to
bailie Army. In the Q p m feature game o l 10111ght's
twtnbill, Ntagara battle:; the Umver~uty of Dayton
Flyers.

Basketball Bulis lose
to Big Red Cornell
by Barry Rubin
Spons Edrt&lt;H

Maybe 1t 's the bright lights or
maybe it's the difference in the
court, but Memorial Auditorium
is becoming somewhat of a jinx
spot for the varsity basketball
Bulls. Saturday evening the SuUs
fell 84 - 70 to Cornell Umversity
to run Buffalo's winleM streak to
eight at the Auditorium. The loss
put Buffalo at 7 7 whjfe the Big
Red rose to 5 - 9 on the season.
No relief is io sight for the Bulls
since ton1ght they come right
back to the Audit orium to meet
Northern
Illinois
UmversttY
(12 2). Saturday evening the
Huskies fell 83-72 to South
Carolina lor thetr second loss of
the season
Cornell ~on tinued 1ts mastery
over Buffalo with little trouble,
annextng 11:. runth straight w1n
over Buffalo. The all-llme sene:.
stands I 9 q, Cornell, and th1s
time the Bulls gave the Big Red a
ballgame Cornell, stung hy a
major black player boycott and
1;everal key IOJUnes, looked ltke a
team that the Bulls could beat,
cspectally cons1denng Buffaln''i
ltne showtng 1n lhetr last contc'l
.11 Maryland. But, the Bull~
IOmmlltcd 2~ t:oslly turnovers to
J Btg Red prel&gt;l. and f~ll w11 flout
much of a fight.
Comell outshines
rhe flr~l hall leaturcu a
St'o-saw batik , with Btg Reel
~upenomly at the toul bne telllll[l
I he
tJ le
Overall
10
the
Audrtonun1 prehmrnary ( ornell's
22 32 frnlll the foul stnpe far

outshined
Buffalo's
anemic
charity shootina of 14 - 26.
Buffalo Coach Ed Muto had told
this reporter several weeks ago
that the Bulls' foul shooting
would hurt them sometime, and
Saturday evening proved the time.
Before a Canisius doubleheader
crowd of 5108, the Big Red led
by 6 - 4 senior forward R1ck
Amato and 6 5 soph forward
Skeeder Stewart spurted to a
49 - 41 halftime lead that they
were never to relinquish .
Bob Vartanian carried the
Bulls offensively in the first half
with 12 points, but he added only
four in 1he second half in leading
Buffalo's scorers. The biggest
problem for the Bulls was gettmg
the ball tnside to Curt Blackmore ,
their big center, and Blackmore
had to settle for only ten shots
attempted on the night. llowever,
Blackmore sttJI added 13 pomts
and a game tugh 14 rehounds
Maybe tt '~ rncffu:1ency or mJyht
it's rivalry, bul the Bulls ~·annnl
win without getttng sconng punch
from Blackmore, and Blackmore
cunnot s~:ore w11hout the b:sll.
A rugged Cornell press l oo~
tls
toll JIIYhme the Bull~
atternptetl a ~·omcb;H: k Bull\'
soph guard C.,reg Bruce comm1tted
ten turnover-; h1msclf 1n the
~lo pp1ly
played game
After
tomght '~:. clt~~h wrth Nor I hcrn
lllln o1s, the Bulls are :tt Army
Wednesday , before coming ba~~
tu th t' Aud Saturday night at 7
p.m wllh Ntag.HJ ( 12 5' nte
~tut.lent athlt•lat revrew boartl will
subs1di1c S I 2 ~ fnr each st uclcnt
whu ptlk~ up a ud,ct at the Clark
Gym ttc._el offi~:;e

STUD IO SPACE
WORKSHOPS
BOUTIQUE STALLS
Avarlable in unaque new shoppmg Bazaar Rents are
commensurate with s1ze . All are priced to attract new young
entrepreneurs, local talent, and group endeavors.
Parktng available.
For mformation contact
Warren Waldow 854·2323

t.11p

ano uvc

____f!B 197~
S NTWTFS
I 2 3 4 5
a 1 a g 10 u 12
13 14 I~ IS 17 18 li
lO 2111232.4 2526

2HUt

s

Han we got boots! Boots by
Durengo ,
Shew ,
Endicofl·Johnson,
Georgie
Gient, Trult. The U.S . Army,
ConverM, Mlnn·I·Tonke, etc.
Boots for Guyt and Gals!
Fer-out. funny, fi'NkJ and
•rious boots. Get the good
on• end uve money. Shop
Army·Nevyt

a
1

e

TENT CITY

s

a

1
e

130 Main At Tupper 853·1515 Olv. Wuhlngton Surplus Cenlet

Master, Empire, Bank Am«
.,..N'III"W''.I"W''.I"W''.I'W'Ioi'W'Io""""""""""AP

Page ten . The Spectrum . Monday, 31 January 1972

- l/2 Hr. Fr" P..-klng

A L E

VWY\IVW'VW'\o'VUOVI"""'"'-"AJI

�AD INFORMATION

CLAIIIFIED

CLASSIFIED ADS may 1H placed
Mon4•Y thru F rfd•y between 9 a.m . and
4:30p.m. at 355 Norton Half.
THE COST o f •n ad for o ne day ts $1.2S
for the first 15 words and $ .05 tor oech
additi onal word.

APARTMENT FOR RENT

"HELP
WANTED"
ads
c.nnot
discriminate on the besfl o f sex, colo r,
creed, or n ational o rigin to any extent
(I.e. , preferably Is stilt discrim inatory).

FURN ISHED apartment and several
rooms, excellent locations, television ,
dishes, etc. $35-$40 per bedroom .
896·8344 evenln!IS.

"FOUN D'' lads Will be run free o f charge
for a maximum of 2 days and 15 words.

SINGLE HOUSE for rent . 5 male or
female students. $75 each w /ut llltfes.
Leue and damage deposit. Three ba thS.
838-3367.

WANTED
FULL ROO M and board plus wta ry to
student In exchan~ for bab ysit ting residence Etmwo~W.Ferry. Details
negotiable. 885· 9133 after 6 p .m.
START $ 2 per hour s.lery plus bonus.
work 4·8 p .m. WMI&lt;'d&lt;IYS, 10·2 p.m .
Saturdays. Calf 835-3803 or T F9·0402

MODERN, tw~bedroom ~rden apt.
Dishwasher, d isposal , r ange, re frigerator
Inclu ded. Fully carpeted. Full basement
With storage area and outlet s for
washing machine. Availab le March 1.
$175 a month. Call 633·4 58 2.

RIDE BOARD

WANTED: Femal e photography models
for photography stude nt; $5/hr: call
88S-6831 mornlnlJS or aft er 8 : 00 p.m .

RIDE WANTEO to Chlugo, T hursday
molnlng, Feb. 3 . Share driving and
upenses. Al835 ·6637 .

ATTE NTION : Pott~s jewelers, etc .
Earth •n Wear, 3368 Bailey Is looking for
quality handCrafts on consign ment . C alf
838· 35 74 for Information.

RIDE NEEDED to New Haven, Conn.
weekend of Feb. 4 or Feb . 11. C all Deb
834 -7980 after 9 p .m.

R N.s PART o r full tlmo 81/e., part-time
days. Become part of tre&lt;1tment team o n
small, community orient ed , psychiatric
unit. C alf 882·2551 evenlnlJS - late.
GE NERAL kitchen help. Male or
lemalo . Full or part t ime. Must have own
tr.onsportatto n . C all 8 25·9577 M o nday,
r r&gt;ursday or Saturday after 3 p.m.
t..O LLEGE GRAD wants to babysit
evenln9S. Loves children and nas rots o f
tree tomo. C all 831-4113 days. Ask f o r
Leslye , or leave message.
l'liLL O R par t ·llme jobs avail able with
BMtllne Inc Call Art 886 ·2094 or Mi ke
83:&gt; ·52 1!&gt;
M eettn91
at
Executive

FOR SA LE

5 :00.87 3-7 284 .

night. Call832· 5634 .

BRAND NEW Israeli Sheepskin coat tor
sate.
Call
873·32 03
for
!lUther
Inform ati o n .

CLEA RANCE SA LE 10-65~ off on
many Item$. All January. M lsce111neous
Shirts,
dresses,
skirts, etc. Some
afghanistan c:o.ts. The People , 144
Allen St. 882·6283 for hours.

'69 Fl REBI RD overhead c.m engine,
automatic , power . sleet Jng, 23,000
miles. Muot sell . 837· 3028 evenings .
" ANASTASIA" needs a h ome. She's a
1961 lovable, little Tempes-t . All she
costs Is $UO. C all AI a t 8 31-4113 or
Debbie at 832-6815 .
1963 V OLKS WAGON - green , good
rubber, Includes snows, AM radio, new
shocks,
low
mileage.
Dependable
lransportltlon . Asking $350 o r b est
offer. Call 8 32·5290 .

REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
and
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed.
D&amp;G Appfllnces, 844
Syumore. TX4 ·3183.

PERSONAL
MICHELLE who I met at Invasion Body
Snatchens, I'd like to contact you . C all
Alan 834-6169 .
KITTENS need stable homes now "I nterviewing" - ull 88 3-0968 .

TAPE DEC K played 20 hrs. Sony Model
TC-255, $125 . Extras Included. Call
Doug 855 · 2195 .

NATALIE, who lives on Amheut.
Remember me from Parkedge . I lost
your
address .
Plene
c:all
Barry
837- 1886.

1959 TRIUMPH TR ·l parts. Entire car
to be taken apart Name your price . Call
Gary
835 · 7731. Leave name •of
number.
TYPEWRI TER,
633 · 7551 .

T . V . - B&amp;W , Army field Jacke t and
Army raincoat . C all after 9 p .m .
897-1 234 .

snare, bass. t om·tom.
D R U M SE1
sym b ol, p lus many acc essories, $110 .
Conga w ith it and , S80. 838· 3244 ,

POST 12" sllder ute. Like new. C~ll
873· 7284 after 5 : 00 .

SK I CLUB member\hlp, lessons and/or
ski rental f or sale Cheap . C all837 ·6185
anytime.

TIFFANY-style leaded glass shade , 434
pieces, 21 V1" In diameter . Call Lew after

REFR I GERAT O RS from $19 .95 and
IJp. HWA, 1282 Clinton St. 823·1800.

SWISS WATCH , au t om atic, day, date,
almost new. C hinese Jewelry, ask f or
R ob. Phone 832·1663 .

NOW THAT snow's here, ski club
membersh ip f or sale . Ch eap . Call Susan
835·3265 .

1967 CORVAIR- good transportation
- t wo new llrM S400 . C all 825·0324
bet ween 6·9 .

WAN TED • One female roomm1te for
3-oedroom house off M•tn-Winspeer.
Own room, f~nfthed, t&amp;O. Sterling
Feb. l. Call M•rv 131-4892.

portable,

$20 .

Call

1970
JAGUAR
XKE.
Excellent
condition . Brand new AM/FM stereo
rad io Included . Call 688 · 7327 eve ni ngs .
SKI CLU B ski lessons lor sale

What is life without love?

Tuesday

MV NAME Is Anast asia. I am eleven
young. My daddY deserted me and
I'm looki n g for a new one . I have an
automatic transm ission and a ver y sexy
body . You can have me for only SilO .
C all AI 831-4113.

Y"''

GOURNA WOMAN, "We know you 're
good," EB and GMsk and BR .
GUVSJ Need haircut or trlm1 Call
Joscelyn spec . In long hair style$ . Call
692·3868 f or appt M o n . only .
THE PEO PLE, 144 Allen St. IS h aving
thei r f irst clearanc• sale until Jan . 31st.
Phone 882 ·6283 l o r hours.
a changing social
PI L AMBDA TAU
orga nization on a changing cam pus. For
Inform ation, call Dan 632.Q2g9 or
George 834 · 7989 .
NEED $100' Call 882 1080
for
lnrormall on . Second Annual Newman
Movement Art E"h lb lt. FeD 13
Mar"' 19 at Buick field C ent er, S .U .C.B .
Entrl~ due Feb. 7 &amp; 8 . Special studorH
prizes.

LOST S. FOUND

----

HA \IE YOU lost your Jew ish Identity'
Find 111 See "Le i My People Go," Tues .,
Wed .. 8 p . m . Norton 2~3 .
FOUND : Watch f ound In A cheson Hall.
C all 886·9740 Ask tor Melanoe to
Identify.

ROOMMATES WANTED
R OO MMATE wanted, o wn room, $ ~5
month , ten ·mlnute walk from campus
Call Mr. Berk631 ·5621
FE MALE wanred tor apartmenr nur
Allenhurst. Caii8J6·4169.
ROOMMATE
wanted
Ow n
roo~ r ll
oJvallable nowt '40 rnontn • ulllltles,
'ampus
(; all
dtnner111ne
near
836 · 8 22!&gt;.
aREW !&gt;fE R
!.1
ne a r
54
Main Fillmore Com pletely tuonlsned
u woo
t norn,
S45 / montl1
ltldu!le&gt;
ulolllhl&gt; 83 5·03/7
HOME TO share o n Eooglewond Willl
student\, 1 5 minute wal~ lU cam pus.

p o re,, ,

b~&lt;.ky~rd,

nu

security.

no

landlord, l~rgo bedroom available lor
one M /f o r cou ple, IMgo living roono.
d•n•ng
room,
and
kitchen,
c lean
fUnc tio nal bathr oom. Call838 ·2248

GUSTAV A . FRISCH , INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

.----------~
KARATE I
: STUDIO :
I

I 5th DAN BLACK BELT INST &gt; I
I
INFORMATION ·
I
12:00
8
:30p.m
I
I
*
MON
.
to
SAT.
I
I
1
Call836-6018
I
t

I

...

3144MainS t.

1

(Near U.B.)

•

----------

SENIORS - POST GRADS
E..trn good money

Part o r Full time
while .tttcnding school

call

From one beer lover to another.
nQSBOII la.IWD.Y COJoaANY, D£TJ.OI1', NlCIOGAN au'

MR . SILV ER

8 53-8754

FEMALE
roommate
w1nted,
37
MerrlmK Street , five minutes from
N ort on, $40 per month plus utilities, to
lh1re room. C•ll 837~313 after 6 p.m .
COUPLE looking to Sll•r• apartmerot,
house or f1rm with another couple.
838-4091.
MALE
UNDERGRAD
deJII"M
roommate 1nd place to live. Will Share
all expenses. C all876 · 1101 evenings.
ROO MMATE wanted - own r oom . $65
Including utilities. Hertel and M•ln .
83.3 · 71 60 .
TO SHARE t wo-bedroom apt , with two
male sludents. Modern apl. , swimming
pool, call 688~295 . Ask for Alc k or
Doug .
MALE R OOMMATE wanted, stt;ar e
room, Delaware Park area, available
Immediately, $5 2.50 lnclu d~ utilities.
881-4504 .
TYPING eJ&lt;perl enced IBM
$ .40 per page. 838-4808 .

Selectric,

MISCELLANE OUS
WE'RE p roud
of our w o rk ! We
guarantee
It'
Student
discount.
Independent
Foreig n
C ar Ser vice.
839- 1850 .
OFFSET PRINTING : fast (100)
8 1ilx ll. S2 .50 t (1000) $7 .45 ; ( 100)
10,. 14
posters,
ss . University
community o nly , 343 N orton. 9 a .m .~
p .m . 83 1·5588 ,
TERM
PAPER S ,
d issertations
profenl or,.l
typist.
18M Se lectr ic,
$ 40/page. 873 · 1938.

TYPING - business o r personal - ter m
papers, mau mailings , r easonable rotu
C all 937-6050
ANYONE Interested In having U .S .
Bangladesh benefit co n cert , con tac t
St eve. Spectrum o ffice, Bo• 60 . Phone
236-036 1.

-----

FEMALE SENI OR In search of JOb.C.an
do many types of worl&lt;, preferably In
UB area Please call Mary 838-4892 .
TWO KIT1 ENS
837 6575

need

home. Marty .

ANTIQUES and mooern turnllur o,
cerami cs, china, etc See Sid . 1439
Hertel Ave .
FOA
IN ST ANT
prlnt1n9 ,
thlnl&lt;
GOODWA v . We print anything f o r
oonnles a c opy
rheses , r esumotS,
pamplltets. etc We also bind. fold ,
co late and staple . Singl e X ero " copies,
$ .08 eacl) . Wher e / Goodway Copy
Cent er. 436 Ma in St. and Court. across
rrorn La fayette Souare . M F . 9 ·5 p .m
INTEAES TED In attendlngtne Olympi c
g.,rn('s In Munf~h 1 some tickets and
accommollatlons
available
Phone
83) ·4638 .
OVERSEAS JOBS fOr students
Aus11a11a , Europe, S . Amerl(a, Ahl c a,
etc A 11 professions and o&lt;eupatlons,
~700 $3000 monthl y . Expenses paid ,
uver!lme, sightseeing . free Information
write . JoDs Overseas, Dept . ES, B o x
I 50 7 1. San Diego, C&lt;lllfornla 921 15

APARTME NTS WANTED

---

MALE GRADUATE student needs apt .
t o share w ltll same, Immediately . Near
d o w nto wn Call Jay 886 ·3686.
WE NEED a IW O· fa mlly apt . lha\ c an
lluuse six peop le (three In e&lt;&gt;cll h all) lo r
June. Will pay good money, If lakell
: a11 Betty 837·0430 .

*.

AL FA ROMEO
*FERRARI

*

MASERATI

snit'S e sen•ice • pnrtr
USED CAR.'i
"~ 808('()1&lt;. n
Motor (ar~ I Ill

1974 t.'ggert

Near Batley

814-7350

SPEEDED READ IN G
AND STUDY

Oiv. of Undergraduate Studies
again otters · Mrs. Nichols
non-credit
course. Weekly
sessions. Nominal fee $15.00
payable at registration in 106
Diefendorf before Feb. 7th.

\

'

Monday , 31 January 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

\.. \&gt;~j ;

.

\~.~ •:'t..' -·~ ,\~)~f L~·~: l ..... ' ;1 t _, ')lt_"'

L

' ·

••

,'1-..J' ~.l.&lt;i

�The College o f Mat hematical Science is offering
tu tori ng sessions for the stude nts of Calculus 142
starting today. T imes and places are: Mo nday, 3-5
p.m ., Acheson Annex 4; T uesday, 2:30- 4 p.m.,
Trailer 5; Wed nesday, 2 - 4 p.m., Crosby 225; and
Thursday, 2:30- 4 p.m., Trailer 5.
T he Com m unit y Actio n Corps E nvi ronmen tal
Action gro up is sponsoring a glass recycling project in
the front of Norton Hall. Located at the bus stop, the
center will ac;cept any brown, green or clear glass.
Preferably the glass should be rinsed, nd'wever, labels
can remain. All metal from any glass should be
removed before deposited.
Aaivist Youth for Israel will show a movie, Let
My People Go, tomorrow and Wednesday at 8 p.m. in
Room 233 Norton.
The Office of Cultural Affairs is sponsoring an
exhibit of photography by Robert Fichter until Feb .
29 in Hayes Hall lobby .
Peace Corps and V ista representat ives will be on
campus today through Wednesday from 9 a.m. - 4
p.m. in the Center Lounge of Norton. They are
interested in French majors to teach English as a
second language in French -~peakingAfrican countries.
Th e Junior Club of Buffalo is sponsoring a ski trip
to lnterlaken,Switzerland March 29 AprilS . The trip
(eight days and seven nights) includes room and board
and roundtrip by Swiss Air 747 . Cost is S350. For
further information contact Brian Rusk at 633-2707
Hillel class in Beginners Hebrew will meet at noon
tomorrow in Room 262 Norton . The class in je wish
Ethics will meet at 1 p.m. in the same room.
CAC will hold an organiz.Hional meeting for all
those interested in the Allent o wn Community Center.
today at 8 p.m . in Room 264 Norton.
Kunda lini Yoga beginning classes 111 exercise and
meditation are held daily at 7 p .m. at 196 Linwood
Ave . and Monday and Wednesday at 4 p.m in Room
334 Norton.
Video Conexion will have J meeting to discu\s
elections and polity tomorrow at8 p .m . in Room 332
Norton .
College E staff will reldte progrdm~ to ,111
mterested , tonight at 7 p.m . in Room 404 Haye\.
Chess Club will meet ltiJnonnw .11 4 p.m 1n Rnom
248 No rton.
CAC Project P 5 . 17 will hold dn organizatio nJI
meetrng today at 7:30 p .m in Rn o m 246 Norton .
Volunteers are needed for the progrdm .
Student Theater Guild wdl have .t work,hop 111
acting toda y at 8 p.m . in Room 344 Norton . N('W
members are welcome
The Comic Co-op will have an rm port.tnl
organizational meeting today at 4 p.m . m Room 205
Norton . All interested in joinmg are invited to ill tend

BaCkpage
The Depart meht of l inguistics presen ts
linguist ics on television. Today at 2 p.m. is "The
Spectrographic Analyzer,'' and at 2:30 p.m.,
"Hallucination." Tomorrow at 4 p.m. is "Generative
Phonology" and at 4:30p.m., "Noam Chomsky." All
are in Room I 0 Foster Hall.
CAC needs volunteers for high school tutoring in
all subjects at Friendship House. Cooking instructor
also needed. Contact the CAC office, Room 220
Norton, 831 -3609 .
The H illel House ha~ extensive information on
Israel programs of study, touring and work study
available. Call 836-4540 for appointment.
CAC needs volunteers to work at the Cradle of
Black Pearls Day Care Center. If interested, go to the
CAC office, Room 220 Norto n, or call Leslie or Ken at
836·4169.
The Sch ool of Medicine is o ffering sever.ll courses
in the next six months. Feb. 1, 3, 8 and 10 (evenings).
" Principles of Respiratory Care," will be given in
Kenwell Auditorium, Millard fillmore Hospital.
Further information may be obtained from the
Program in Continuing Medical Education at 2211
Main St. or telephone 831 -5 526.
Hillel House has information dVaildble about
o penings for positions as summer camp counselors.
CAC will hold dn orientation meeting for the
Buffalo State Hospital project today at 9:30p.m. in
Room 240 Norton . All volunteers assigned to unit one
and anybody interested in volunteering are to please
attend.
The Graduate Linguistics Club presents Dr.
Frederick Gruber who will give a lecture on, '' Is
' Naturalness' NdtlHcll ?" toddy at 8 p.m . in Room 205
Didendorf.
Club Sports meetings are held every Tuesday and
Thursday from 9 a .m. noon in the Athletic
Department offi ces, third floor Clark Gym. Will the
following clubs plea~c contact Denni:) Albaneze:
bowling, cheerleader~. rcc skating, karate, pep ban.d,
radio, riding, soccer, squash and 14ble ttmnts.
lmponant information will be distributed.
CAC will hold .t meeting for all project heads of
social scrvrce proJect to ntght at 7 p .m in Room 244
Norton.
Gallery

West

will

be exhrbiting Folio · d
thcmdtic lithographs by
" The West Coast Ten ,"
t omorrow through Thur~day, Feb. 24.

pre~ent&lt;ltil•n of developed
&lt;...uev.t~, I kcdd, R.lmo~ ..tnd

CAC Birth Control Clinic Projec t will have rb fir~t
generdl meeting tomorrow at 7 :30p.m . in Room 234
Norton .
The Hillel Executive Committee will meet at 8
p.m. tomorrow m the Hrllel Hou~e . All olficers .1nt..l
comm 1ttee chaH men Jre urged to dttend

An nouncements
The Ame rican Debate T eam mectrn~ will be
today at 7 :30p.m. in Room 260 No rton .
CAC Day Camp Com mi t tee will meet tuday at
7: 30 p.m. in Room 266 Norton . ll is the first
CJrganizational meeting for all interested students.

What's Happening
Monday , Jan. 31
I ilm : Fires on the Plum ..tnd Dvwntown, C.tpcn 140, 3
p.m. and 8 p.m.
Art sho w: "Prints in Progres~." 4240 Ridge Lea, 9
a.m. - 5 p.m . dndTuc~day .

Tuesday, Feb. 1
Poetry reading: Bill Knott, New York poet ,
Conference Theater , 8 p.m ., free .
Film: Trouble in Paradise, Capen 140, 3 p.m . dnd 8
p.m.
Concert: Student recital, Baird Hall, noon .
Film and lecture : To Open Eyes speaker Dr. Teddy
Brunius,
Philosophy
Department,
State
University of Albany, 4240 Ridge Lea, 2:30p.m.
Amy Ahrend

Women's liberation will hold free karate classes
on Tuesday and Thursday, 7- 8 :30 p .m . in Room 330
Norton.
FNSM 222 : "Con troversies in Science - Conflict
and Reso lution" will meet on Tuesdays and T hursdays
at 10 a.m. in Room 362 Acheson . Visitors are
welcome to hear this week's topic, "Controversies on
the Nature of Light and the Problem of Matter, " by
Dr. Mendel Sachs.
A Hillel class in Conversational Hebrew for
elementary st udents is now being orgaflized.
Interested students should call Arlene Langer at 3884.
Meyer Hospi tal CAC project needs 20 more
volunteers. Orientation for everyone w ho ~ill be
working this semester will be held tonight at 7 p.m. in
Room 234 Norton.

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                    <text>Dream of student-wide judiciary dies
by Howie Kurtz
CalffpUI Editor
The student-wide judiciary is dead .
It died on Jan. 17 when the Graduate Student
Association, in a move which surprised many people, voted
30-6 not to participate in the judiciary. The reasons ranged
from distrust of the administration to th~ dampening
presence o'f Exec utive Vice President Albert 'Somit at the
meeting.
Graduate student Christine Grahl, who originally
helped draw up the proposal for the student-wide
judiciary, did not speak very strongly for it at the GSA
meeting. She felt there wasn' t enough information
presented to the graduate students, but rather the whole
thing was just presented and voted on. It was never given a
hearing or a quesHon and answer period. Ms. Grahl also
felt that the presence of Dr. Somit at the meeting, who
gave a talk on " The Duties of the Executive Vice
President," instilled a "feeling of negativism" :11 the
meeting.
No delusions
Student Rights Coordinator Dave Steinwald, who
was "disappointed" over the GSA's rejection, feels the
graduate students never viewed the judiciary within th~
proper perspective . " 1, for one, never had any delusions
about the JUdiciary having broad. sweeping pow ers," sa1d
Mr. Stein wald . "It's generally known that anytime there

• was anything really important the administration could
bypass the judiciary. What we were hoping for was a
student-wide court that could solve problems on a certain
level, such as disputes between students or stealing from
the bookstore, and save a lot of kids from having to go to
court downtown."
The future of student courts is somewhat clouded.
The student-wide judiciary, no longer st~:~dent wide, will be
reconstituted as the Undergraduate Judiciary . The
graduate students are kicking around a form of redress to
be known as the Graduate Student Union , but it is still in
planning stages. Ms. Grahl said it is " possible" that the
student-wide judiciary could be brought up before the
GSA again, but there would have to be considerable
sentiment in that direction.
Ex.perience shows
Roger Cook, a sociology grad student, agreed that
Dr. Somit's general presence and Ius comment on the
judiciary in particular helped. lead to 1ts downfall. •·somll
said the judiciary would ha ve to prove it muld be a
responsible body , and then the admm1stratio n m1ght
extend its inOuem;e," explain~ Mr. Cook . 11 ~: Indica ted
that many graduate students were discouraged by the
events of 11J70 , when the student .:ourts were bypassed
during the riots and the llearing ComnHss1on o n Campus
Disord ers was created .. As experienre demonstrates. if
you have power, then Yl1U try for a JUdt&lt;"hJIY You ..:an ' t
try for a judiciary if you cion •t have power first." Mr. Cook

continued.
In ap-eement with this point of view was GSA
President Michael Nicolau, who said that t he judiciary was
defeated "due to the actions of past administrations.''
Indeed, the resounding feeling among grad students is that
the administration would never allow the judiciary to
reach any level of importance, or at least it would be
ignored when any important issue arose. Many of them
cited th.e events of 1970' as proof for what they could
expect from a student-wide judiciary in 1972.
Constant threat
The studen t-wide judiciary was supported in a
state ment by Vice President for Student Affairs Richard
Siggelkow , fo llo wing an incident last year where the
Inter-Residence Judiciary ( I RJ) was bypassed by the
admi nistration. Perhaps a similar statement of support by
Universi ty President Robert Ketter would have. given the
graduate students more confidence in the administration's
smcerity . However, as Mr. Steinwald noted : " There's
always the threat that Hayes Hall could take away power
from the judiciary no matter what they say now ."
And so, the dream of a student-wide judiciary is
dead Its death is partic ularly disappointing to the many
students who put m months of time and effort trying to
get it off the ground It IS uncertain whether the individual
st udent entcrpnses, such as the Undergraduate Student
Judiciary and the propn\cd Graduate Studen t Union , will
wo rk as well as the student wide judtclary might have.

Outside vending to be
considered by FSA

THE SpECTI\UM

by Lynda Teri
I· o'OI/ort hilt or

Vol. 22, No. 47

State University of New York at Buffalo

Friday, January 28, 1972

..

1\ It \.Uilllfl).\ ltl t~n·t 1tl
T he quc~t11111 \II whether or not
Jll 11Ubide vt:flt.ilng ~om pan y wtll
sCIVtt·c o...nnpth JS to he consu.lert.·d
at the n~xt f-aculty Student
AsSt.loatton ( FSA) meettng this
Mo11day
AI tins ttme , the
proposal to tnttoduce an outstJe
firm and general re port will be

presented
Oirc~:tnrs

Sub Board meets

Publications are reviewed
Vending, Sunshine House, appointment of a
new business manager anti the mid -year rev1ew o f
publications highlighted last Tuesday night 's Sub
Board meeting.
The major po rtio n of the meeting was taken 11p
by the Board's mid-year review of publications, suc h
as The Spectrum. Hthos, Undercurrent, Telos,
Column Left March , and in part, Unity PluJse One.
The review was ostensibly to determine whether
the various publications had "fulfilled their
obligations." These obligations were to put out a
specified number of issues. Scott S lesinger, however,
recommended that funding be eliminated this
semester for all speciai interest publications.
These include Column Left March, Red Buffalo,

Foreign Students Coordinating Council NeWsletter
and Uroty Phase One. Mr. Slesinger seemed to feel
that the money could be better spent. ln·~Uon.

he indu.:ated the Student Associatio n may be wdllng
10 take over Ihe funding of these publications.
Money for Edtos
Jim Campbell. Sub Board Publicat ion ~ dtvJsron
director, was opposed to this, stating that a year's
commitment had been made to these groups. He le lt
a decision to cease funding should be contingent
o nly if their printing obligation had no t been
fulfilled . The Board generally agreed with this
position .
For the most part , the reviewed publica tio ns
were found to have met their obligations, and thus
their fun&lt;J.ipg was contir\fted. There were some
exceptions. The Board expressed desire to continue
the publishing of Ethos (which had been funded
originally for only one semester), but noted that
-&lt;ontl"uecl on

p.~ije

6-

tn

the

Board

gtven to them. He said that
proposal detailed what his firm
would du to make vending on
..:a rnpu~ " more efficient, more
productive. more serviceable. and
in general, meet the demands of
the students and faculty."
Mr. Batt did not know if his
company would be contrac ted to
take C)ver vending, but said he
hoped they would. He dtd not say
whom he believed h1s new boss

of would be in that case. Mr Schillo

Tho111as Sd11llu, believed that FSA would get any
a~\lstant
v1~,.· e
prestdent
uf ffi110 ey that would be coming
Au\lllarv httcrpr1scs .
from o~n outs1de vendor. Another
Ahhoul:\h Mr l:)~hdlo 1!01~ ht.·cn murce believed that any funds
.:wl\1dc1 111~ 1111~ propmal tor well
flur11 an 111Jb1de vendo r wo4ld ,gn
IIVCI Ollt' ycat , till~ I~ the tir\l IIIIIC IIII o lfiiiVCr~ity nudgct anJ.(not
11 wtll tw ol finally dt~lll~\t.•d w1t h 111tn the! I SA l11r faculty or
thl' HtiJ!&lt;.I Mr Sdullo ha~ .rlt cady st11dcnt
uw
It
is
" pure
hat.! an \IUhtdtr fir111 ro111t: to ~peculatwn , " hut he said he
t'Jtllptl\ Ill "\IIIVCY " till' t&gt;pCrallllll brltcved that a certarn per centage
oI
Vt.'rhhng
;u\ll
prt~pti\C
nt r11otit would go lu the vendor
;tft Ctii.IIIVl'' lit th..: I' IIIICIII 'V'Ic'll\ and J ccrta111 per.:cntage wouJd go
111111 Dr Ktttcr\ budget for the
tt.IIVl'l\11 y
Dr
Ket ter
was
Silence
rhc fll Ill c.;cl vH·c ~ Y'' Clll\ J u11avallahlt' lor .:o111111C11t .
~Un\IU I !II y
Ill
thl' l)clntolltl'
Co1p01JII\III. "·" f:IVt.'ll tht' ll Proh~l'trng :-.tudcnt~
M1.:hal'l N1l:olau, memhc1 of
C~l1 1 11:tlllt11 &lt;!f h11W the I.IIIICill
vrnllrng
\llllatttlll
''Hth.l
ht: tlu: I-SA Board of 01rec lurs,
unptovcd lt•rry Ball , ~CIIICH Vtce ex pr~~cd a .:-o1H.e rn that the
p1e\rdcnt of Servtt.•t• Sy,tl'lll\. "st11dents will ger hur t .. tf an
\t:Jtc:d tha t the prccposJI '' "vr ty outside venuur ..:arne on cam pus.
l."lll dldt:ll tl,tf .. and WIHliJ rhll ll1s fear!&gt; were shared by Steven
urvulge ally 10 futlliJI I(Ill
M I Blurnertkrant7 , direc to r nf Sub
Mr
Blumenkrantz
")dullo would also nut dt~Cit~\ lltt' Buar&lt;.l
1hought the idea n f an outside
l•llllcnl~ of the proposal
lloweve1
lltlortne&lt;.l ~nurcc~ f1rm was "absurd ."
Mr. Blumenkranlt sard an
llldt\.ate that the consult ant \
report mdudc~ the J emovul ol 2/ J uuts1de firm would only be
uf present vendmg madnnes and tntercsted in profit and not in
an tncrease tfl loffec from$ 10 to service lie felt that the ~ urrent
vendmg
t.:om pany
is
more
Mr . Ball did stat e tha t the concerned with service than profit
study was a '\,onsultative study" and are still able to make some
and that it was basically a profit. " Roger Frieday and his
disc ussion of what the c urrent people are doing a fantastic job,"
vending situation was like . It he continued. Mr. Frieday is the
discussed the number o f machmes direc tor of Vending an~; in a
currently in operatron, their previous interview. stated that he
locations ~\ the
service
and also believed his company was
management of these mac h1nes doing their job very well.
Once again, the key issue of
and a synopsis of the "entire
vending situation on campus."
space
is
disputed.
Mr.
He further stated that the Blumenkrantz said that space was
report described how Service just an excuse. "They came up
Systems would handle the vending wifh the idea that they are going
operation if the contract was
-contlnu.c:a on IM9e 2--

·uo

hy

�Master plan

-Educational direct iQ__ns
Required by Education Law to
fo rmulate a qUadrennial Master
Plan for the State University
system, the Chancellor's office is
presenUy seeking the board
participation and involvement of
all New York State campuses.
Such a plan, to be submitted to
the Regents and Governor in June
1972, is intended to indicate t he
basic directions of th e University
system for the next decad e.
Over the past few months.
members
of
the state-wide
university community have been
involved in preparations for the
1972 plan. This involvement h85
been ftrst in symposia, and m ore
recently in further discussions on
each campus, usi ng the symposta
reports as a basis.
Differing from previous years,
the process for developing the
Master Plan has been devised to
continue
and
expand
th e
participation of all m embers of
t be
University
communit y .
Additionally. according to the
Master Planning Symposia Papers:
''This time, in con trast to J 968,
the initial focus of the process is
on University-wide concern."

forumulated statements on five
issues: structur e and aovernan_ce,
the ed ucational process, teaching
and learniria •. the quality o f
campus expenence a~d _the
campus and external relationships.
Each symposium was asked to
strive for new and . prom~i~g
questions a nd alternahves w1thin
its
subject.
These
groups'
deliberations have produced a
series of st at ements co~ ce':l ing
various approaches and d1rechons
th e Universit y might take in the
1970's. These que~tions , opi ni ~ns
and reco~menda t 10ns are bemg
made available to the various
campuses for feedback.

Maximum participation

The third phase o f the 1972
Mast er
Planning
process
is
presently occurring. Here, each
campus is being asked to provide
their own reactions, alternatives
analyses and recommendations.
The objective of this phase is t o
provid e for max.imum campus
participation in the p lanning
process.
At this Universi t y, Academic
Affairs
Coord ina tor
Lester
Goldstein h as circulat ed a random
questionnaire to 100 student s.
Communication channel
The papers continue that However, he reports that response
em phasis has been in setting up has been poor.
Furth er phases in the plan will
channels for opin1ons and ideas.
Such ideas will be transmitted to include a conference h eld in
th e
Chancellor
for
his Albany early in February . This
consideration on incorporating will proVIde an oppor tun ity for
iaculty and students to convey
them into the Master Plan
The first two phases of th1s thetr v1ews directly to the central
planning process have now been staff.
F1nal phases of the proJect will
completed. Dunng these stages,
five Unrversity-w1de sy mposia be concerned with drafting and
on
the
final
mvestigated separat e series of consultation
concerns. Worki.ng throughout the document wtuch 1S submtlled as
summer,
th ese
groups the 1~7'1 Master Pllln

Outside vending.
-continued

from~~~·

I-

to get rid of vending and then
they came up w1th the thing
about space." He contmued . "On
a campus this size, if they found a
need for vending, they'd find the
s pace."
The fear t hat most mach.ines
would
be
removed
from
''unprofitable locations" is sha1eu
by many. There are vending areas
on campus that are not that
profitable but, are in convement
places for students. A prutlt
motive theory would certaanly
remove these sit es. Out •Jf
approximately 500 machines un
campus, it was believed almost
350 are
in
"unprofitable"
locations and in danger of being
removed. This would leave 150
vending machines operable.
Mr. Batt stated : " Anything our

• •

clients wanted us to do, we
would ." Huwever , he d1d believe
that II would be h.is responsibility
to "make recommendations" if he
believed the operation ~mild he
run more effectively tn another
manner .
Mr. Blumenkrantz. said he
wanted tn keep the profit motive
off campus and would prefer to
keep any finances generated by
vending on campus . I f FSA
decides to do away with the
present vending system, he stated
Sub Board w ould take over and
run the vending operation. In this
way, be hoped it would keep
funds on campus rather than in
the hands of a private wncern.
Among recent developments
was a meeting yesterday between
M1ke Nicolau, Roger Friedau and
a CSEA official.

-£rleblleher

History incident

$4.60 pw

Stlcond Cl., l'on1lge PBid e t Buffrllo,
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TenUJ"e wrangling
Five faculty me mbers, Norman Baker, Michael
F risch, Jo hn Larkin , Lewis Perry and Th~&gt;ma~ ,
Rainey are presentlY being considered for tenure
The d epartme ntal ten u re committee recommended
all five and sent the recommendations to the
committee of the provost of th e Faculty of Social
Sciences and Admin istration wh ich approved tenure
for all except Dr. Rainey .
The matter 1s no w before the presidential
committee whe re the result is uncertain . If de med
tenu re, Dr. Rainey was quoted as p romising a fight
before the grievance com m ittee. " He was quite
definite about it ," reported o ne o f his students. Mr
Kessler pointed out the success the council had 1n
co nvin c ing the dep a rtme ntal commit lee tu
recommend tenure for him and suggested a n11Hc
vigorous campaign of letter writing.

Appropriate committee
Counctl members advised hrm to check the
regula t ions govermog expulsio n and reported that
tile Coun cil would bring this up before the
appropriate grievan ce committee. S teve Kessler,
chairman of the Coun ciJ, hinted that it might
"poss1bly take larger action."
T he new dep artmen tal requ irements for h1~t ory
m;ijors were presented. The m ajor ch anges include:
I ) Nine one-semester history courses instead of 1 I ;
2) no cognate cou rses instead o f a maximum of

Other business invo lved st udent partici-patiOn tn
the search committee to fi nd a new faculty member
specializing in Medieval flistory to replace retinng
J o hn Horton and Ko nrad von Moltke who will go on
leave.

BEFORE YOU BU I
Your CoUege Texts
S~e lfS
at~ant

first if "Off
to save money

We hove a huge stock of slightly

Wtllllt, ....,ry Mond11y,
Wlldnerdey 11nd Fridlly; during 1M
~ler IICIIdtlmic yser by Sub-Bo«d
1, Inc. Offic• are loet1r.d et 365
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Buffelo, Nt1w York, 14214.
Ttllephont1: An. C&lt;xM 716; Edltorilll
831-4113; Bulinea, 831-3610.

Sublcription nltfiS are

three; and 3) two his to ry seminars. S tudents who
graduate this year or have already been accepted by
th e History Department have the option of sa tisfymg
either set o f requireme nts.
G iving st udents a role in po licy-making, t he
History Department will h ave six graduate and s rx
undergraduate h.istory students sit in 011 all
departmental and committee meetings as fuU vot•n.:
members in all questio ns e xcept tenure decisions It
is hoped, h owever, that the studen ts will try to make
their presence fe lt in curre nt tenure decisions.

Ra c ism charaes, requirements and tenu re
dom1nated last Wednesday's mee ting o f the
Undergraduate Coun cil o f History Students. Prior t o
the meeting, the Council liste ned to the com p laints
of Jo h n Spritzler, a former student in J o hn
Halstead 's "History of Modem lm peralism." Th1s
c lass was e mbroiled in last summer's trial and
expulsiOn of Dav1d Levy_
Mr. Levy charge d Dr. Halstead of racism and
was subsequently tried and ex pe lled for d isruption.
At We dn esday's meetmg, Mr. Spntzler detailed his
:tlleged difficulties in presentipg a point o f vie w
contrary to Dr. Halstead's. According to Mr.
Spntz ler, Dr. Halstead is ' p ro-imperialist" beUeving
that the subjugation o f Astans, Afr icans an d othe r
underdeveloped people is th e best thing tha t ever
h appened to them.
Additionally , Mr. Spn tz ler alleged that Dr.
Halstead called him a "commumst dogma tic" and
"disrupter" ltc fu rthe r claimed that Dr. Halstead's
defini tion of a disrupter is "anyone who comes to
the class with the purpose of ex posing racist ideas is
a disrupter." Rep o rtedly , Mr. Spri tzle r claimed tha t
he was thro w n o ut of the class.

The Spectrum Is pub/11h«&lt; thffllf

.,..,.r or $8.(}() for two . . ,. . . .

Spritzler

Cour.se requirement changes
are made for History majors

t im•• 11

Rt1preun r.d for adtlflrtiling by
NstlorMI EdUQt/onlll AdWirthlng
Service, Inc., 360 L•xifll/ton Atlfl.,
New York, N, Y, 10017.

repotUd to last Wednesc:t•v's
Unclergr-.du.._ Council of Hist.o ry students of an
llleglld incident between him lind John H..steed.
Such ., Incident. Mr. Spritzler cl•lmed, resulted in
his expulsion from the class.
John

:

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3610 Main St. Auess tr- U.l.
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STORES
INC.

�SA meeting convened to
plan against inadequacies
La belling
the
Ketter
Administration
"puppets
of
Albany," members of vanous
student governments met last
Tuesday and assailed Hayes Hall
as being unresponsive to student
needs.
The
meeting was
caUed
primarily
to
allow Student
Association representatives to
confer with members of the Inter
Residence Council and Sub Board
I, Inc. They were concerned with
learning various student positions
on fee control. After reaching a
basic agreement, those attending
attempted to devise plans of
action pro testing administrative
review and control of student
fees.
SA Preaident lan DeWaal
remarked : " What I'd Uke to see is
ttus administration stop going to
Albany and get somebody here
who
can
make
decisions."
According to tum, "everyone in
Albany Js influenced by po!Jtics''
and therefore has no business
regulatmg Umversity and student
affatrs
'Dangerous precedent'
It wa.~ generally agreed that the
a~: lions of I Rr offictals allowing
review of voluntary fees created a
" dan gcrous
precedenl."
A
precedent , as
one
member
explained , which ~:ould eventual ly
be applied to other student fees.
Regarding thjs, SA Vice President
Scott Sleslnger reported that the
control of student fees will
"sooner or later" threaten such
&lt;tctivihes as movies, concerts and
campus publications. It was afso
noted that no student government
or organization exists totally in a
vacuum
Cooperatton, It was
argued. is necessary for survaval
However, as
lan DeWaal
pointed out, 11 would do no good
to argue or complain about what
has already happened . Tho~

present decided that "some type
of educational campaign" was
needed to make University
students "totally aware of what
the situation is with fees and why
we're movinund what we feel
we've been s~ted to up to thi.s
point."

Total control
Mr. DeWaal voiced thls main
concern of the body : " There's got
to be some . way of actively
involving the student population
at large in terms of letting them
know what's going on."
Such an effort will be launched
immediately
involving
the
participation of such groups as
Commuruty Action Corps, UUAB
and IRC. All present felt that only
after students knew what the
issues were, would they want to
become involved. Educational
plans included leafletting, posters,
ftJms and meetings with various
student groups.

It was also decided that a hst
of demands should be presented
to the adminisHation. Basically ,
the meeting argued for student
control over how their fees should
be spent. Additionally. 1t was
noted that no set guidelines exist .
According to National Student
Affairs
Coordinator
Keith
Frankel,
the
administration
alternately
changes
their
arguments and rulings. The end
result , he commented , is "total
control and curtailment" of all
student expenditures.
Mr . Frankel added that the
message to the administration has
to be "What we're (students)
saying is that we're getting a httle
ltred of you (administration)
telling us what you want and what
you don't want We want you to
start representing the people that
you're
supposed
to
be
represent mg."

Committee action

Questionnaire asks students'
feelings on Campus Security
by Howie Kurtz
Campu1 Editor

The Committee on Campus
Security i.~ now pondering the
dilemma of security vaa its three
subcommittees:
Operations,
Procedures
and
Training;
Involvement and lnformataon
Ex.change and Comparison with
other Uruversities. The three
subcommittees
are
meeting
separately and each will report
about its individual area when the
committee
of
the
whole
reconvenes.
The charge date for the
Committee on Campus Security
to make its recommendations to
University
Presjdent
Robert
Ketter was origmally March J 5,
but certain committee members
have suggested movmg that date
back to May 15 This would mean
the report would be released a1 a
t1me when there are no students
o n campus, and \ny concrete
suggest1ons could go VIrtually
1gnored. llowever. commttlee
Chaarman Ma(;Aihster Hull satd he
''hoped " the repo rt could be
completed by the March target
dale so the ~uggestions would be
released wh1le there was sull 11me
left 111 1he qe mester
Re:it!nlment
Undergraduate l orn DeMartino
of the Office ot Student Rtghts is
now servmg on the Opcrat1ons.
Pr o~oedures
and
Traan1ng
sub.:o mm1ttee, wtdcly fell to be
the most amponant of the three
groups
Accordmg
to
Mr.
DeMartino, the subcomrruttee has
met , but progress IS still in the
diSCUSSIOn \I age. "A key facror 18

the various points of friction
between Cam pus Security and the
student
body
there's a
peTVading sense of resentment ,"
noted Mr. DeMartino. Citmg that
"different segments of the student
population feel differently toward
Campus Security," Mr. DeMartino
supports
the
subcommittee's
decision to run a full-page
questionnaire in The Spectrum to
determine the attitudes of the
student body. Members of the
staff will be asked to fill it out, as
weU as the Campus Secunty
officers themselves, who may do
so anonymously.
" By
use of a detailed
questionnaire we hope to get a
general feeling of Umverslly-wadc
attitudes,
rather
than
JUSt
speculating and generalizing,''
explained
Mr
DeMartano
"Obvtously, I can't speak for the
enllre student body " He feels
!hal wtu.Jc some secunty fon:.e IS
necessary, he doesn't lake the
"watchdog polily" of the present
for1.e. Another problem pondered
by the subcommattee wa~ that lit
least half the npoff!! that ou:ur m
the dorms aren 'I reported to dorm
reps. A student has three opt wn~
m the event of a npoff I) Go
through student t:ourts, 2) go
through &lt;:tty co ~t downtown ,
and the most popular alternative,
~) forget about 1t
Excessive violence
Should security officers carry

fuearms7 This question also
elicited split response from the
subcommittee. Those who say,
yes, feel the need for protection
of the individual officers, while
those who say, no, view guns as an
alienating factor and also question
the officers' responsibility to
handle them. It should bo noted
that the committee was formed
foUowing an incident where two
security
officers
employed
excessive
violence
on
an
undergraduate,
including
tbe
unauthorized use of blackjacks.
Another point worth notina is
that although security officers can
carry firearms by Jaw, there is a
State University of New Yorit
regutauon prohibitin&amp; it, 10
spectal approval would have to be
obtained from Albany should this
be dectded on
A central tssue, ttt.t of
add1t1onal
tra.uung
for
the
offt(;ers, was not discussed . This
was
pOSSibly
due
to
an
a'knowledgement by Lee Griffin ,
asststanl dcrector of Campus
Secunty , at a prevaous meeting
that trainmg means overtime, and
overume means dollars. The
general feeling IS that given the
finan ctal
outlook
of
the
U niverstty, to obtain funds for
oudlllonal training would be
extremely difficult . Ironically ,
many observen feel that this is
the improvement that 1s needed
I he most

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356 norton
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Friday, January 28, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�ACTI.ON recruiting continues
despite budget cutback threat
Representatives of th e ne w federal agency, this is a step 10 the dtrec tion o f general redu ct10n of
ACTION. wh11:h 1ndude~ PeaCt' Corps and VISTA, volunteer programs."
In the future , Mr. Yarborough ex plained that
will make the1r spnng scme~ter VISit to th1~ campus
next Monday , 1 uesdJy and Wednesday . Th1s ACTION wtll h ave a budget o f li S own and n o t be
recru1tmen1 VISit Will occur dOlJd:.t specu la ti on thai dependent on the moods of su ~o.h parent agencies as
the Peace Corps w1ll be ~evc rely lumted If Congress the State ()epa r tmcrH or thl' Offi~:c o f Econom1c
Opportumty .
fails to approve 11s annual budae t rl'quest.
"A few weeks ago the news med1a ea rned u
s to ry repo rtm&amp; that Peace Corp~ Wa!&gt; pu lling out o f Hopeful
In hgh l nl th1s h.tc: lo.~rounJ, Mr Yarborough
some cou ntnes and rcdullng th e total number of
volunteers abroad by 50%, " commc:ntetl Oavu.l comm.:ntell un tht• dr c tsJOn to ,onllnue n!ctUi t ment :
Yarboroug h , an A(,' JON re presentative . He '"F1rst . by naiUrc, wt:'rc prelly hopeful people
co ntinueJ ; "' No one 1s pac kmg h1 ~ bag!&gt; yet but a lot Hopef ul , in th1s case, thJI ('l)ngress w1ll g1ve us th e
of people a rc, und er!&gt;landubly up 11ght. " lie furthe r money we need T Ius IMI" t JUS I ho pe 1n a vacuum."
n o te d thai many news sto n es unpiled th at people lie continued " W;:'ve h nnes tl y ht:cn surpnsed at th e
were a lready retumin&amp; from forc1gn prujeds when, pubhc reac tion tu the budge! cut stories. People
in fac t , the Peace Corps had o nly announcctl plans t o keep callin g u s t ott:ll u ~ that they've dune some thin g
wnllen thl'lt ~ongrc~srncn, for ex ample
to
make c utba cks 1f the~r budge t was rcdu.:ed .
The Peace Corps' current f1s.:al probll-m~ came exp ress th e1r concern."
t o a he ad nght before Congres:. took 11s holiday
Another reason for ~o ntt nucd recru1tme nt ,
recess. Unexpectedly , the Ho uSt' set a cc 1hng un accordmg to Yarho rough , ~ " the people we're
Peace Corps expend1tures thJt effe.:ttvely cuts, re cnnllng now fo r hoth Pea~;e Corps anJ VISTA will
&lt;~lmost m halt , t he money that the agency h.ts lo
start trammg 10 the ~ummer and by then we'll be
operate on dunng the last quarter of th e fiscal year
operatmg on o ur u wn budget "
Optimiml
How eve r , \ arburu utl.h remJrkcd
" We're
opli ml~lll' that th e House and Sc:nate Will get 11
t ogether Jnt.l g1vc u~ enough mu ncy sn that peopk
who arc 1n volunt~er &lt;ll&gt;!&gt;lgnmenls n o w overseas w11l
get p3ltl anti ntH h Jvc to ~oume hornl.' early.'
Au:ordmg to Mr YJrborough th e 1ssue wtJI be
resolveJ Wlthtn the nt•xt le w wee).. ~
Asked dhUU I (ongre)l&gt;' rea\Un iOl\ bChiOd the
pro p osed c utba clo. , Y..rhorough pom tcd o ut thJI the
Peace Corps hu dl(ct 1~ !&gt;till J part o l t he fore1gn
assistance pac kJge ··wl· ~t'l ~o JU!I-hl 111 the headWi nd
of fo rc1gn atd ~oU t )," he s;ud . " VISl A ·s hudget
hasn't bt'cn r ut anti there\ n0 ~o lld ~ v1tlcn t:t: thttt

l ron1cally , the pwposctl hu dget .:ut occurs JUSt
when e nthus1.1srn for vo lunteer programs IS begmmng
l (l
grow o n college \. ampu~l&gt; An:ordmgly ,
Yarbo ro ugh reporred that ACTIO N re~o.ruJimg effo rrs
las t semescer were mme ~UCles:.ful th an any 1n th e
preVIOUS fiVC yea rs.
Mr. Yarhurnugh and u ther redu llcrs Will man an
ml u rma110n huo th from 4 am t o 4 p rn . m the
Norton ll all Center l oungt'
Tht:y wtll be
pa rt iC ula rl y Jntt"rcsted 111 rncct1n~ With ~tudl"ots an d
Buffalo res1dents f'\1\!&gt;l"..,~lng degrt:cs m hu!&gt;lness.
math, sc1ence . cdu l·atlon , nun.111g, .rr\. h lte, turc, law
and LIV II cng~ nel' tlllg. Alw, Jn yonc w1th a
ha cll.gruu nd 111 agr~eu ll urc 1s nectlcd

Amherst campus

Construction shelved
John 0 . T elfer, v1ce president
o f Facllitles Plann•ng. has
announ c ed that the S t ate
Un•vers1 t y o f Buffal o has
maintamed a stro ng commitment
f or ca p1tal cons truction 1n
Amherst valued at S650 millio n .
There w11l also be a number o f
new projects m 1972-73
In regard to th e announcement
made las t week concernmg th e
su spe nsion o f vario us t·onstru cti o n
projects a t the North Campus. Mr
T elfer noted th at " the m3,1o r
por tio n o f th ose proJec ts had been
dropped from th e ca mpus master
plan some time ago, and thiS was
an o ppo rtun e hme to re move
them fro m the books. It provides
us with a more prec1se assessment
o n which to base our planning.
The dropping of the (HO)ec ts doe:.
not, many way , reduce or weaken
the S650 m1lhon comm1tment."
It sums thai it Will take longer
to ~oonst ruc t the en t1re Amhers t
cam pus, but Mr Te lfer observed
that m Gov R o\.kefeller\ message
to the legislature he m cluJetl a
S64 m•llion requ est l or cap1tal
construction projects at the S t ate
UniversitY of Buffalo . Mr Telfer
added th a t proJe c t s e1ther
completed o r underway a t the
new SJte are valued at S 11 5
million and that another S9 2

millio n in projects are presently m
the p lanning stage.

Deleted
T he deleted projec ts include
fa cilities fo r tbe health scienles
which is seheduled to remain ai
the prese n t South Campus, and
instru ct1onaJ space, whic h had
been planned fo r areas adjace nt to
th e I.M . Pei dormitory . dining
c omp l ex pres ent l y und e 1
constru ction. Also deleted from
constru ct ion were colleges th at
will not be built.
"The postponement of tht
buLidtng of the lib rary fac1lille ~
may ha ve the most seriuu~
co nsequences," Mr. Telfer sa1tl
"but we are g1vmg th is space th~
h1gh es t prio rity in plannmg
f1nan c 1a l a lloca tio ns 1n the
immedJate futun:- and for the
1973·74 f1scal year."
He further explamed that tlw
"shelving" o f the o ther prnjell'
hsted wo uld result m a "good de.tl
of 1nconven1ence and sorn~
1 ne fflc1ency
fo r students and
faculty usmg the new campu~ '
Those projec ts d e layed mdud t:d
fa c1 hlles fo r phySJcal plant and
bus 1n ess oper at1ons. st udent
act1V1 1les. a food comm1ssary anu
some gene ral site work.

CAC needs talent
Th~

Commun1l y Ac tio n Corps, in conjunc tion w1th lh t No ri HII Hall s taff and vario u s
th roughout campus. is in the prOCl'S.'i of c~r~amz mg 11 group of people ,
tall'ntrd m any !ll."J&gt;CC I of the arts, who would ~ willini to donate their servicu tu
perlorm at Yan ous o rgantzattons thro ughout the Buffalo area If you h ave a talent tn any
uf the v1wa\ arts. dramatic arts or musiciaJ arts, and wo uld hkl' t o pre..ent your work ,
plt'a!&gt;l' con ta ct J eff Re1man in Roo m 120 Nor to n HaJJ o r call 1:13 I ·3609.

departml' nt~

o.--)Pitl'!lif-J:'N
....c!C311111:-L-E--=-5--A-M--S
~=-.-:·~-·-1

r·--1011!11·.-c·

IS NOW OPEN!
A DIFFERENT SOUND,

1
Sat. 'til 2 p.m .
AJI seats S J .00

A DIFFERENT LIGH T

ALWAYS A GOOD TIME

2525 W"alden

I

You have to see it to believe it.
SUNDAY - student Sun. all stud ents w1th college J.D. admitted FREEt
MONDAY - astro logy night, current sign admitted FA EE!
TUESDAY- appreciation night, everyone admitted FREEl
WEDNESDAY- ladies night FREE!
THURSDAY- dri nk'n drown night, all the beer you can drink
GUYS $3.00 - GALS $2.00
FRIDAY
and SATURDAY

ALWAY8 /\ WIL(' \A/Er=KENO

(proper attire r~u1tedl (f&gt;loooof af egoe mUS1 betflottn'fpls 19. guya211

Noone •
can restst
~~r chicken wings.

I hPy n· llw Woodshed's newest taste sensation,
mllcl, ttlt'ch um or hot. S wirl'em around in tan gy
l1hw' IH.&lt;t"W sa uce, and finish thet'xperience wit-h
t•nspy Cf'lt•ry :.;ticks. Non-stop pea nu tR are on
!ht· hou~o;t•, and spints art- 50r after 3 P M . The
Woodshed ... wht•re the kitchen 's a lways open
and the mwnc's always on. We're right next to
The Packet Inn in North Tonawanda, just over
the Delaware Avenue Bridge. Drive out Delaware or take the Youngmann. The Woodshed's
OJX'n from 11 :30 A.M. every day except Sunday.

-rt~E WllD~ttit

Page four . The Spectrum . Fnday, January 28, 1972

•

�State University

High price for appearance of
Steven Stills evokes criticism

Regents propose
•

•

• •

a ra1se 1n tultlon

(UPI)
The Board of Regents
Wednesday
proposed
ratsmg
IUJ i ion at the State University,
and providing more scholarships
to e ncourage stud ents to attend
private coUeges. In a far-reaching
"pos•t ion paper," the gbverning
body for education 10 the state set
plans to coordtnate pubbc and
pnvate coUeges in the state for the
next decade.
Among the re~.;ommendations
were: ra ising the State University
of Ne w
York
tuiti on, and
1mposing
tu~tion
on
undergraduates for the first time
at the City Umversity of New
Yor~
No
amounts
were
suggested, but the regen Is also
.tsked for anot her $54 mtllion to
mcrease sc h olars h• ps for needy
students, hav•ng the state take
ove r all financing nf upstate
•omrnunity college), thus freeing
counlles of the burden the ten
now share , and cont1nu•ng the
SJO mtllldn Bundy pmgram to auJ
pnvate colleges.
Other recommendations wert!
rctainmg C'1ty UmveNty\ "open
admissions" program hy us111g
tu1110ns from upper c1nd rn1ddle
1ncome student\ to. 10 effed,
fmam. e lho~e from pour famllle\
t.eep1ng C'LJNY ~epara l e from the
Stale
Umvers•ty
'Y'Icm,
111
,·untra'&gt;l to I.11V
Rod.dellcr',
propti\Cd merg.:r 11 he regents ~a HI
tho rncrf.\er would rnakt' thr Stule
llniVCT\IIY \Y~It'lli UOWI\'Illy), lu
hJVC the )(.Jil' p~y l"r Jll luturt'
Jno..rea\t:d ltl\1\ at ( rty lJmversJI)'.
10\lt:aJ .,[ I ht: 50.pt'1 ..:e111 II no\1.
fl.lY\. ICljUirJilg (lriV.IIC .,;olleges tu
r.11,c then 11W!I ~dwl,,r,h1p plam
ru p.Hitclpute 111 llllf\'Jwu ~tudenl
vld prog.r.JIIb

No ..et anwunt'
pru"·•hl)' lht· mmt
• nrnplrx pro~r.ml 1he rC):t'lll' have
Jllnple'd
ulllllllcnletl
t'Yl'l
I du~JIH&gt;Il C 'orrltlll\~tniH'I I walt!
Ny4u"1
lh' '·"'I the 'PCllfll
ftllfltlll JIIIOUf11\ \1/0UI(l h,tVl' lo he.:
wl hy lht· Stat1· lfrHVl'T\Ity Ill New
' I h"

''

Available

m

York trustees an d the New York
City Board of Higher Ed uca ti on.
S p eculation bas been that the
trustees wouJd raise tuition from
tts current SSSO to $700 tttis fall.
The proposed City Universily of
New York increase is hotly
disputed in the city The paper ,
sup ported by a ten-page research
document, noted that full-t ime
colJege enrollment 1n the state
more than doubled 111 thl' past
decade. During that t tme, s tate
support to private and pu blic
colleges spared from S I I I rnilhon
to over $600 milli o n last year. It
also noted Lhat tu it1ons rangrng
from S 1500 to S2800 at pnvate
schools have forced more s tud en ts
the
two
big
pubHc
int o
uruversities.
By ex panding the Sch o lar
mcenllve
grants, the reaents
csllmated they could f1ll 10 ,000
or thl' projected I 5,000 vacanc•es
1n the private ~choob over the
ne~tt five years Under the plan , a
student whose famil y tn come was
below S lOOO J year would bl'
elig1hlc fur $I SOO m atd A
student Jrnm a famlly w11h
1nenmt" he tween
S lOOO &lt;tnd
SSOOO 1uultl get S 1100 l ht• Jld
wuuhl tlnlrne .1s lht: lnt·nme rmc.
so tl1.1t .t 'tudcnt frnrn J tamlly
w•th ..1 SW.ooo •m&lt;•nu· wuulu gt:t
nqth1ng
l!stiiH.IIC\ were th.•t d a \th•wl
.ftt.Jrgetl S I 'iOO lUll lOll, " sluut·nt
whost' lanllly had .t S6SOO IH.thle
illtt'lllt' w&lt;•ulc.l f'a} S40() .t Y•'.tr
In p.UIILIJlJh: the pnv.tll 'dlnul\
wnuiJ h.JVt' to lllJllh onl' thlld "'
lhr JW,Hd \ In fanllJIC\ IH'ItlW
~'10011
I ht regents aiM• u1~nl ·'
Ill j,WI
\YSII:III llf rcgHHhllrlilll
puhhL .1nd prrv.ch: &lt;:ollc~t•·~ to
share IHlhltr' .uul LUI l•''h
YIJIII\1 \Jill th( \l.ttt \IH•ulcl IJf...l'
over the l llllllllllniiY uollc~t· tCI~h
"wl\t'lll'Vt'l 11 Lall he flfl,llh't"d "
l he ''·''~ 1111\\ pruv1c.ln \'1~
nulh11n .1 yc.H. lo p;1y 411 per tl'lll
n t 111\'lr 11p~rJimg '0\1\ I he• rr~t
llllll~\ I 11•111 the .:ountll'\

STUD I O SPACE
WORKSHOPS
BOUTIQUE STALLS
un1que new shopping Bazaar

Rent\

ar~

commensurate w11h ~•Le All arc pncecl to dttrart new young
entrepreneurs, local l&lt;llt!nt, and group endeavors.
Park•ng ava•lable
Fo1 mformat1on conta&lt;.t
Warren Waldow 854 2323

Reacting to a recently conducted poiJ,
negotiations to bring Steve Stills to Buffalo are weU
under way. The results of the poU had the Jefferson
Airplane out o n top. The Airplane was, h owever ,
unavailable. The decision to have Stills, who finished
second in th e p oll , was made by the S tudent
Assem bly. ti e is tent ativ ely sc heduled to a ppear in
late April.
Paul Rosen , University Umon Actjvities Board
(UlJAB) co ncert c hairman, eltplalned how the
si t uatr on came about. .. I spok e t o Stills' agency," he
related, "a nd the y said he was available when we
wanted tUm . They said he would want $20,000 fo r
one night. I co uJdn ' t handle any lhlng like that so I
we nt to the SA."
Whe n asked whether he thought that $20,000
was too mu ch money, Mr. Rosen said. "Sure tl\ a
Jot. But thls is the co ncert the students wanted. We
can o ffer cheap tickets and still avoid losing money "
At the last Executive Commrtt ee meetJOg of the
SA the proposal to book S ttlls passed with ltttle
argument. Three days later the Student Assembly
was fa ced With th e same 1ssue. One person spokt' 10
opposition to the pro posal, saying that at leas t two
good bands could he cn ntraded for the -..~me
$20,000 Ltttle other debatt ensued and the

Allenhurst Coffeehouse

Entertainment /'or students
1\rl' J"ruJay and Saturday n1g.ht'
.t drJg'l Do you tLave to 1nv~:nt
new Jnd tltffe rent thrng.~ to do lu
lag.ht off boredom'' rlfctl ul
pay1ng eocortll tant lover c:har~-:es
just to g.ct 10 out of the lOitl'l
('ommerc~;th'lnl got you c.luwn'l
J'hcn 49() Allenhu"t l'an he J
f"t'f resh1ng "hange for you.
I he Allenhurst t'ofkehousc
ha'&gt; heen 1n operation for 'on1.:
ltme hut barely anyone seem~ 111
f...now 11bout 1t There 1~ Ill)
.tdmtsston dusrge, no nhhgulitln Itt
huy .•nythllll:&gt; and 11 i~ O fl l'll lu all
, 11Jicgt· ~tuc.lents
not JUSt
1\llt·nhur\t re:.rJcnl\
Jlle
n•lfl'dtou-.c
r~gular 1\lknhur!ol
,, p ,, 1 I fill' II I I h .tl h a\ h C e II
u&gt;nvcrlt•d mtu ,1 lJUit't pl.11c With
.1 w.11o11 Jlllltl,f'lh·rt• 1\ ~m.dl
canJh· 111 ll'tl Jml 111.11 ~ 11111111
filled w11h 1.lfl' tal&gt;lc' &lt;Jilt! lcollltll~

"..e

ONE COMPLETE SHOW

GRANAOA

Positivtly

LAST

5
STARTS AT 7 :30 A.M.

"THE 'NIGHT OF

THE LIVIIG DEAD"

One complete show every Eve. at 7 :30p.m .
Sat. &amp; Sun. at 2:00 · 5:00 · 8 :00p.m.

'V • ,,

~

c.half'&gt; makes up the rnarn part ul
the tultecht&gt;usc I he uthcr toum
t!\ ~ct up lrkc .JII mformal si.Jge
I mrn wtm h coflcl'house patrons
can VI&lt;'W the folio. rtlLk performc:r'
who voluntrl'l lhetr ~··rv l &lt;:l's.
lnlld C:nfal l y , mo~l of lht'!oe
clllt'rlaincr,, Jlthough .JIII.Jt~ur~
..t re
rca II y 4111ll' ~ootl
I he
col lee holt\\' h." .th.u Ill'&gt; I
purl hJ-cd ,1 nrw ~rcrt'o snuml
SY!otem In pi.•Y J1mng the
pl.'rfornwr,' hrt ,,k,
thue's
never,, lull 111 llw IIIUSic l'i lh~:.r

"'u

Marvelous menu
I he utllc'l'lhHI\1." llll'IIU thdl "
\Ofllt'lhmg lh.rt lllll\1 "" \t'l'n lo ht'
hdwvcu ( 'uuf...rl·~ lur J pt·nny .
1n1n1 ,as.\,tlr.l~ .JnJ 11tlll'l 1-IIIJ\ of
l1';~ nllt•rt•J Inc .t Ullllt' ..lllc.l, 11!
t'HUIW OJ cn11d lll·u,'l)( •liP &lt;II
t'lllfl'l' With llil'"'' Pfl~l'S, II IMI't

hard to ..ee that the coffeehouse lb
Jd mttdy nun-prof11
Anyone who tb tnteresteJ 111
Yt)lunteering cn terta mment for
th ~ coffee h uusc should con tal.l
L&gt;ehbie (~oldman a t 482 B
1\llt'nhurst or Mike Rieger at 479
B
Allenhurst for more
tnlonnatJoll and an aud•llon .
Volunteers are very much needed
.1nd will be mu1.h apprectated by
t·ofteehousc patrons
t•or those who .-re wondenng
how tu g~:t tu 1\llenhuut , t here's a
fll't' hu~ that ll'ave~ It om the front
of Norton llafl ~:very lO rntnutes.
"io tht·n·'s no c'CcU~ f1lf not going
scuuc FrrdJy ur :O.JturdJy ntghl
lrum '} r.m lu I J Ill,
t'Vt"n tf
11' cmly "' ~.ht',~ 11 out ~uf
di.lll&lt;'t's ,, n· you 'II '' o.~v
/11/Ju rrul/u

Nixon's peace plan caiJs for
U.S. withdrawal in six months
hy IJJH\ {'rollu.•r

1111 0(1 (

Ulllf&gt;lll

I J11'"

f're,Jdt'rll "'''"'' IIJ.ttl• puhll•
J UC\cJ,iy
tllg.hl
.J
\ellcl
lhrel.' rnunth·ulc.l tJ S pc.~tc pl.111

THE ULTIMATE HORROR!

FR"EAKS''

representatives voted to co ntract Stills at what one
admitted, was a "ridjcuJous amount."
Dave Kauer SA assistan t treasurer. defended
the pro posed co~cert. "First," he commented , "this
is the concert the stud ents voted for . Secondly, w e
can offer low ticket prices : S 1.50 , $2.50 and S3.50
for students and a dolla r more for non ~t udents. We
figure to sell about 13,000 ticke ts in Memorial
Auditorium, and gross $39,000 with ortly a $32 ,000
overhead." These seemed to paraUel the feelings of
most of the members of SA except for one who
o penly adm1tted: " Well, I like Stills."'
T here were, however , ot her opinions. One
student mentioned that Bill G raham had closed
down th e fillmores in protest to hlgh-priced
performers He felt that perhaps the S A sh ould act
wit h th e same considerations. Another. paraphrasing
a Stills song, said .. If you can't be with the one you
love, love money "
Other groups appeanng on that November poll
~ncluded Seatram, The Doors. New Rrders o f the
Purple Sage, tl o t Tuna, Poco. Frank Zappa, Leon
Russel and the Allman Brothers None of th ose
groups were asking more than $10,000 In rega rd to
pnc:e\, mu~t notal'lly that of Stil ls , nne ~~ udc:n t
simply sard ' t-ud tl"

4~=1

PUC411u4
IHSPECilL
~erved Mon. thru Fri.

Until 11 a.m . .md
Sun thru Thu"
AfTER ':1:00 p.m.
~tJn. thru fhurs .

3 BUTTERMILK PANCA KES
OR TOAST PLUS 2 COUNTR
FRESH EGGS, as you like 'em

65¢

3300 SHERIDAN DRIVE
3637 UNION
both npen 24

hr~

r•••P•"·"

jh1· w;cr
rt~e·
callt:ll
111r
""'"lt.Jilt'HU\
Vidll..tlll
lr•u•p
I hl· l'rt'"&lt;kllt """ th.11 th.:
WII hcJraw.JI\ ,!flO Jlrl'&gt;IIIICI ft•lt',l\l' l&lt;'«trcl wtll 'how "unntL\lai..Jhly
Wllhlll '1\
lllnllllt, .JIIJ tli ~
thJt IIJilOI
not S.Jt~llll or
re\lj;II.JIII&gt;II , ol tlw P"' " 'nl S.llj;l'll W.... lungt&lt;lll
h.J' lll.tdt I ht' Waf
legJIIl~
Ill .ttfV,JII~I' u(
(lt'\1. 11&lt;• "" ' ~orne A IIJCO • ·• n p.h 111\l
cl~, lion
wnup' anll rdJtiVt'!o "' ll S
tn
,,
'Jll'l''h
bit~.ld~."'
ptl\\0111' " ''' w.11 have &lt;hargcd that
ll:tltPIIWIIk 1111111 hi' Whill· llllll'l' 1ht• I lrllll•d StJil'\ had llt'Vt!l made
11f111 ,. M1 Nt \1111 ,,,td tlt.tl lw \\ ·"
,J
lollltJI Wilhllr.Jw.JI deaJim.:
ollt•r to thl" C01nmumsts tn
lli\do,ll1~ hh P• ""' "tiel .tl tlt.tl
llllll' Ill tll•·ftupc· 1h.11 II " 111,1) hdp , '' 11.111~~ lor a pnsnner release
Plt'JI. .J \l'l ll'l di'JIItt h ~ .II 1111' But \h N11wn SJid thJI un May
l',lrl\ l'l!.llt' t.tlt-, Ill' ,,, ..J lhJI Ill
ll Jl IIIIC 111 the: JlTIVJic! ntCt'IIOgs
lht• lO runnth, 'l.11t111~ 1\u~ -l
1n l'arl\, the Llmlec.l StJil"!&gt; uffc:rc:ti
I 'Ill') .tml t'llthng l.t\1 1111 ~~ Ill
'pt•ull,ally tu Jgree Ill .J JeaJltne
I I c Illy
II. 1\\llll(l'f .
NJI I IlLII lor II~ wtlhdrawal Jl e said that
Sc.unty 1\ll.m' Adv"t't
h.itl "" Jun&lt;' h , ,11 the ucx t pnvate
llnwn \Cllt'lly In PJn~ 1 ~ 111111:' 111 1nc:cttrtj;, the North Vietnamese
1r y 1" negoltJ te .1 '&gt;l!llle mcnt w1t h '''J&lt;'ll c:d 1he 111 tcr and pnvately
tllp North VJclnamt'!&gt;c h:.Jdt·r'
P•&lt;•P&lt;&gt;,cJ
tn~tt•ad
theH
own
n111c p01nt rlan whtc.h t~isted
' ' Unt•l rc~tntly th•s ~"'""'
showed )lgJI\ of YH:'Iumg \llllll' 1fiJI thl! Uruted SlJles overthro w
progre~ Now ltnw~vcr. 11 '' 111 y
the present governrrH!nl m S.Jtgon.
juJgmenr thar lhl' purpt"~' ul
rh" 'North V1etnamese plan has
peat:~
will he\l he s1·rvell hy ,,·m;ur~~c.l sc&lt;.:ret, but Mr. N1xon
brmg111~
out
puhhc:ly
the Jl11lult01..eti that the United Stales
propoSJI' WI.' hJvt: been mak1n!!, 1n wuulJ not ob)CCI 1f Hanoi decided
pnvatl'" coHHlleuted Mr Nl\llll
to llldkc 11 puhhc
lie alsu &lt;;a1d the new puhlh pl',IU'
plan wJS prnrnpt~:u h~ ConHlHifl"t
Proposals restaled
prnpagand1~h who have twgun to
Mr
N1xon
rellera t ed
the
undermme anc.l uemoraliz.e tht:
American people by mrunlJintng proposals he had confident1aJly
that
the
Untted Stales wa' ulfl'red last Odober. Major am o nR
UlJW~hll&amp; to ncgolr•lt: 4P ,..rlll 1~ .
continued on pa911 7-

Friday, January 28, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�Sub Board...

-continued from

1-

The co ntroversy over U1e FSA vending
operatio n also came under discu ssion. A motion was
passed expressing ''Sub Board's willingness to take
over the present vending operatton tf FSA should
dec ide against it." FSA is considermg the contracting
of competi tion for the extstmg e nterprise.

they could d 11 so only if "money was avai lable." The
Boa~ expects the necessary money to be located ,
anJ pa&amp;d the $6500 budget dependent upon d o ing

so.

Eve resolution
p.~ge

--

The o nly su bstanttal change in fu ndmg policy
mvo lve d the Foreign Students Coordinating Council
Newsletter and Umll' Phose One. buth of whtc h had
the tr fund s froze n .

Profiteering condemned

After the meetmg, Sub Board Executive
Director S teve Blumenkrant7 explamed· "We're
It was bn&gt;ugh t to the Board '~ auention that the concerned abo ut keeping vend mg as a service . We
n ewsleller , due II&gt; "rn ternal difficulties." had not want to keep the profit mo tive o ut of ven ding.''
The meeting concluded w tth the appoin tment uf
pu blished at all . In co nt rast . Unity Phase One . wh ile
pubh~hmg twt~e. had nul yet used any of the tunds Leste r Gold ste in as business manager, replaci ng Mark
lk&gt;re nstei n . Commcn ung on his selec tion, Mr.
m.Jde available ttl it.
The l und ~ lo bllth we re lmL.Cn, pemlrng a Goldstein sta ted: "The reslnf the year will be a trial
response from the management nf t he two period. The Board will see h ow I work ou t, und
publrca tJUm. with in the twu-weck period before thc supposedly at the end of the tria l, I will he given a
year cont rac t il my work IS acceptab le."
next Sub Board meeting.
Bts first duties wtll be to establish a pay scale
Through ac11on taken by Slrb Board , th e saga 01
"wt
th
some equity'' for all Sull Board employees.
Sun~ me Ho u:.c :~ppe:.m ll&gt; h ave finally end ed
a11d
to
mecha n ize the accounting prot."Cdure~. "The
happil y. 'iub Board &lt;~Krecd It' t:1kc
the necessary
husiness
manager IS not what he used to be." satd
step~ h &gt; ltnahtc th e pun.ha!&gt;C ol a re )rdence fnr
Mr.
Go
ldstein.
" He ts not a pulley-maker any more .
Sunsh111e House It is cxpet.~ed that wtlhin one
Hts
job
will
be
to conduct day-Ill-day busmess. It's
month the do!lf) w1ll upcn "' I 00 Wmspear for
very
c
ut
and
dry
"
Sunsluru: liuu~c I nl

Respomot re&lt;1uested

an

,

WONDERFULLY MOVING.

Clive Barnes, N .Y. Times

"Eloquent lr Powtrfll"
leo11o rcf Her ll&gt;, WCIS.TV

OH STAGE

rMOTORCYClEINSURANCE-,
'IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE
1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I
IU P S T A T E C Y C l E I ~ SI

I

I

Twu , Wed , F'-w•t

..1111

~-W.

STU:&gt;IO

ETER NA l. l.tFE IS IN C HRI ST

"I am the resuttectlon, and the
Hie; ne tnat bollevern In me
thou11n ne were dead , yet \hal 1
he Hve " "Becau1e I live, yo
sha JI live •ho."
Jolin 11.25,14 : 19

MAIL AND PHOttE
ORDERS NOW ACCEPTED
7 U ~0. ~·

so.

e J,O,

Set

) , "-"

Sl

)0. '""'•"' U .lO
S6 ~o. U
S4 )0,

" ' t ll Sot '
so,
S!wd • "' l f • o,.I.,J Sl .SO Uu'''· 1,
\u• • F: lo o 1 JO
\) 1S. S• c;,

DICTIONARIES
WEBSTER

,IA. .IIO;, ..U .....Iooillj. U H . \Oud••t \? SO

Tl

''A* Vour Broker About Us" • _I

Bible Truth

FEBRUARY 3-20
t

I

all 694·3100

t-

,~'T o ·~ 15 :: 1 1.'.\111 ST 1

' )G 'Jl.I'JO

ltltrCJr~

new

197

")•lt'

\1 111

t

bro"d

f't,Jrttllll

1" bu• Cu\1 ne..

S4S 00

Wdl Sell for $15
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NORTH AMERICAN
LIQUIDATORS
t -450 Noago ra Falll lllvd

s a Crisp Corn Torrtlla Shell filled
with G r oun d Beef (Spices added),
Cheese , Lenuce and Tomat o! Hot Sauce
optional. Try them a t their best.

Dept.
Tonowondo. New York. 141 SO

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Tippy's Taco House - 838-3900
23S 1 SHERIDAN DRIVE

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h'

Impeach _Rockefeller
by Lynne Traeaer
0/f.Compus Editor
Assemblyman Arthur 0 . Eve
tntroduced a resolu ti on in the
Assembly Tuesday caUing for the
impeachment of Gov. RockefeUer
for his mishandling of the Attica
priso n riot last September which
cost the lives of 43 people . The
Buffalo Democrat termed th e
handling of th e s1tua h on " lawless
acts of o fficialdom ." Eve had
been the unofficial cha1rman of
the observers co mmittee whtch
had been set up to attempt th e
med iation
of
a
peaceful
settlement in the upns1ng.
Eve w ould like the Assembly
to co nsider the resolution , and has
asked Assembly Speaker Pe"y
Duryea to call for a h earing o n
proceedtngs to ascertaan that hr~
charges are, tn fa c t. I rue Ills
statement
sa1d
" Rud. efeller
followed a co urse ol co nduct
during the AIII CJ rebellton wh1 ch
was a part of and contrrb utctl to
the lawles~ ac ts of o ffactaldorn .1nd
wruch WJ~ reSpttnStble fnr th e
deaths o f 43 perso n~
" The
Governor
~AIIItully
rejected rtl)Uo!~b to go 1&lt;1 t he
A t11ca
Ctlrrct.llonal
I .t ~ llil y
during th e 1nma1e reln· ll10n 111
co nfer
wrth
the
nh\erve r
co mmtll t:c
The
&lt;.ovcrnor
dtsplay ed a C.:d iJ t:lu~ d1srcgard lo r
human hfe ar\d ,1 woctull y
inadequate rcc.:ogmlmn uf hr~
~tatutory
.tnt! wnst itutronally
mandat1n.l
el(l'LU11Ve
responsibilrt 1e~
G uv ~ rn o r
Rockefeller is d1rec.:tly 1mphca1ed
in th1s massa cre bel·ausc 1&gt;f l11s
responsJhrlity for )cntllrt(; th e
Nat1onal Guard and ~ tat ,• po llee
1n . for senllmg them m o~rmed as
tht:y wue , .JOI.I lm till· lad. u l
co ntrul am! dnec.: twn lh.tt WJ\
nhrh1tc.:J 111 lh t• u~e ol Jeadly
lm~ e ..
Publ1c mu't del idt'
1:- v~
wo~nt\ .1 puhla.
hc.lrtng
•ontludc d \II lhJI lhl· pe u pl~
,uuiJ tletermtne 11 kod&lt;ddlcr
Wa) wrong 111 h1~ ;rd 1110' Th1~
he.urng l&lt;IUI.I
he .undudcd
Wltlwut the rc,ululrou he111g on
the noor ol till' AS\l'lllhly 1 h e
As~t'mhlym .111 prr~pow·. I h,11 ( •ll\
Rvd..e tdln . h1' w•n·t.ll y Boh
Dought ~ Jrtd ot her\ h,• t'Jih•d ,11
till' hc.Jnng 111 .111 ,It t empt 111 get ,JI
1111 thl· I.J \h A llllfU III!! Ill 1! 1111
the Gov .. rn&lt;ll haJ .1hJ1&lt;.II\' I 111,
rc\ptlll\ihlhl} l11r tIt ow 111 ''·'"'
10\lll\1111111\,
S\&gt;Uill'\
111
lhl.'
i\'"'ttlh l ,
rnd 11..ll nl I h.ll llw flint 11•11 WI &lt;lid
m·~er re.1d1 t hl· llnur o l 1he hill I\,.,
..tlld w1ll rr••h.Jhl} hl' 'qu."ltnl "'

FRIDAY &amp; SUNDAY

th e Rul es Committee. RockefelJer
appeared unconcerned about the
charaes when b e appeared fo r a
news co nference in his office. The
Governor said , " I d on't think 11
calls for any co mment - b e's been
sayjng t hese things all along. We
have a ciur.en's comm ittee th at 's
going t o bring out aU the facts that's why I haven ' t been saying
anyt hing."
A s pokesman fo r
Rocky regarded Eve's m ove a\
"persona l ,
p o l iti cal
grandstanding."
However, Eve satd that ther~
was no pa r ty politics involved 111
the reso lut to n . His life wa~
e ndanger~d by berng an observer ,
and
his
family 's
ufe
wa'
e ndangered by his accusat1o n'
aft er the not . When asked tf the
Democrats supported lus measurt
re plied
th at
Buffaln
Eve
De m ocrats like Joseph C'rangll
an d Frank Sedtt a had no pari'
affiliations with htm . Ba c k rn~ ln1
the pro posal has come OI.JIIth
from himself, said Eve , with th,•
l'Onc urren(;e uf ltis wtfe and oh.h"l
son All hough ~uch accu~:tllo n,
rn1gh1 mean :he end of '"'
poht1cal t.areer. the Bu lto~t.1n1.1n
leg~slator
was aware ,11 lhl·
pOSSible! uln~e qu~rt Ce~
Eve feCI\ I h:tl rhe peu ph: hJv~
ru. chang~· the ~y,slem. whelhn
t hey t.lo 11 from Wtlh1n M f1 n111
wrth{lUt 11 i\ leg~slat or's JOh ·~ "'
keep the confidence of rh.·
people, and . "As for polltll.ll
gain , I h11vc not used it and I w1ll
nu l becau~e I value human Ill&lt; '
satd Eve.
fh c plan sparked btttcr dch.tl•
o n I h e pllfl of so me, Jnol
lad.. adaiMcal tntcrc~t on th~.: p,111
o l oth er~ In n:hullal, Mattllll\
Leader Jo hn I· K1ng)mJn 1R
Mmeola) !&gt;.l id , " Wh.tl we nct·J I•
di:(;Ompllsh pen11l rclorm, 1~ J h• l
fc-.s rhei &lt;Hh.
.Jnd \Oille of I he"
'IJtcments I tlunt.. , are all el11fll '
'" ga1n pnhlrt.JI ad\antage "" tit•
b.u:t.. of 4' dead men ." S""''
lawmat..er~ ~led.Jr&lt;'d the mm. 1
dcvu;e ,,, hnrtg. lh\· 1\lltl.l ""'
before the 1\o;,c mbl y
lrnpt',lt hnll'tll fll lH.:Cl'UIIl~' I
rJrcly u,eJ 111 th e i\~\cmhh 111
ortlcr 111 hrtng d!o~fj!&lt;'' JgJIIl'l '
( oUVc.'rrllll, ,I tllJjtlnly O ( J\~Wtlllo i 1
vo te\ .trt' needed 'I h e t: har gc' Ho.·
t llcu h carJ hy the Sl!nul&lt;.- .111ll llh
nu:mhcr~ u l .t ( ' ntrrl ot APPl'·l"
In ordl'r lu •·ffccr remova l tr.• m
nt ft.;l' J I W O· t hmJs Vlllt' h llt'Cdt•d
ll hl (.lnd .tt kJ\( ur ,,, Ifill\
t h l' ""'• l
1111•·
tnlpcadtrll\'rtl
(lrll,~·o.·dlll!' W ••J o. \U' e\\ fllf w,1, trl
I 1'13 whert l.l no· W11lrart1 \ult&lt;'l

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'""1fl.Jigll lund,

l.IUAB Video Committee
presents

(Jan . 28 &amp; 30)

''The New
Consctousness
Series"
Jean-louis Bertucelli's

an experiment in
television

''TAKING Off'' IS ABOUT PEOPU.

Ramparts Of Clay

,.Ita ,_ llllllllllr. PIOjllt Itt "- lllllly Ma 1111 sfrtlf.
Pqteata~.

FRIDAY
JAN. 28
12 Noon-3 p.m.

"TAKING OFF"
A l()tM4"'f ( ~ H~A"'

''The finest documentary of d'le third world &amp;
workers struggle... unforgetable...must be seen."- Daily Worbr

H:

'I()(Ju(T'(JN

IN 4\)Q(IAti()hlo W1f., ( lAl..Of: IUit

CANNES JURY PRIZE AWARD

CONFERENCE THEATRE
THURSDAY ·· SUNDAY Jan. 27 - 30
Check Conference Th11tre showc:ae fo r t.imes
SHOWS 50¢ before 6, 75¢ after 6 p.m.

.,,,, n1 In

.......~~iMi!HI~++................~~.......... A ow. ~Sub.ao.nt l, lnc.

Paqe six . The Spectrum . Friday , January 28, 1972

CENTER
LOUNGE
NORTON

\

�I

act1on L1ne

Peace plan ...

I

Q : Where d oes one ao if h e has lost h is 10 card?
A: As it notes on t he back o f t he card , you s h o uld re port this as
suon as possible to 20 I Hamman li brary, the O ffice of S tuden t A Hairs
and Services. They wlll IS.'IUe a temporary card to you and you ca n have
anot her per manent card made up m Foster Basement Room 16

Q · I received an " R " ror a co urse after havi na successrully
co mpJel ina it. R o w d o I ao abo ut aettina th e a rade ch anaed t o t be
mark I am entitled t o?
A: T he usual way tu do this IS to ask the instr uctor to send a
change of grade n:qucst to t he Office of Admissions and Record s. Th ts
IS a standard for m an d it usually takes abou t tw o weeks for th e change
in grade to be noted on your t ranscn pt. In you r case, ho wever, you
to ld us that the Inst ructor ~~ no longer at t h is Uni versity. And m that
ca~e. o ur best info rma t ion IS tha t must see t he head of the depar tment
10 w hich t h e course In po1nt IS hst ed, and he can h elp you.
Q : For how lo n g i.~ t he healt h insuran ce aood?
A . T he hea lt h 1nsurance offered as a serv1ce by the Umverslly
l lt:all h Serv1ce , IS good from September tv March and can be renewed
tor t he pomod from· M.m.. h to September. So you do not have to renew
1t until the begJnmng of March Forms for ttus are available at the
lle:~lth Serv1ces office 10 the bawment ul Mll' hael llall or from the
Ac.:t1on lme tahle 1n NortC)n Hall
Q When I reg i'lt ered t hey t old m e that I could ta k e o nly 19 ho u rs.
Now I fin d out th at somt' of my friends have lo ts more t h an this.
Wh at's th e st o r y"
A fhc.- 'tnry ~~ that studc:nts are .tllowed to regJster for only 19
huur&lt;, at the tn1I1JI rc(I.J~trat10n so that o!JI may have a fau chan~e 1&lt;t ~et
the c.:tnlrws they want But dunn~ the drop Jnd add penod . wh1dl
cnl.led J.tn ~I ~tudc:nl\ ~ou ld re(I.J'Icr t01 up to lJ hour' ·to reg~~ter
lor rnon• Ih .lll 2.1 hour&lt;. I he \ludent nec:d' I he permiSSIOn nl h1~ or her
.1d Vl~lll

Q· Can we drop o r add an y courses righ t now?
A Yuu ~an drnr ,1 ~\•Urst• up tv Apnl 14 ll uwcver 10 .Hid .1 ..our,e
now you need a lc:llt:l nr approva l from the lnS!rUtl\lr ullcnng thc
Lour;c . I hi1. kiter, ~lolling th oll you a1e allowed into the ~.:ou rse , must
be wntten 1111 dcpurtmcnt 'tallonary and must ht~ve I he m~lructor\
Signature

Q . Where can I fj nd ~ou t abo u t possible job lead s?
A A~ we: have n11to:l.l tn the past . thl· llntver~lt)' &lt;lHcr~ .1 Jllb
pla~emcnt o~nd l ar&lt;·~ r c.:&lt;•u n~clJng se rv1c.:e. I h&lt;· Placeml'nt Ofrt~e 1\
llKJtcll '" llay&lt;" ( .•nd offer~ d lull g.~mut of servic:es dealing w1th
utrecr; .1nd plalcnlclll It vuu're .1 JUniOr and hdVC not yet st.trted a file
w1th them you should llo ~o tmmed1ately The Placemcont Office also
nffe!') lealh lor part t1nte ~:mp l oyment when It IS available Of co urse ,
With the 11gh1ncs..' o l tho: )Oh mad. c t nght now. they ~:&lt;~nnnt guarantee
a ny unc .1 p.1rt tunc JOb hut will do I hell IlL..., I

Q M y pa r kmg perrntt \liY' on it th ;at 11 e \ p lrt'S right now Why
didn't t hey issue tht'm for the whole yeu 111d wh ert• do I havt' to go to
get a new one"
A fhc cllplratlt•n date o n tht' parlung pernlll' w;1., J mc.t.tke I he
tlne ynu r~ce1vcd 10 Septl:mhcl 1' gtln(l lor the l'OIHc year So you l.luu't
hav.- to get a new une lhl wever , II yuu ncvt'r had .t parkHl(l p~r1111t ur
have purtha,ell a nl:w .:ar 10 the past month o r sn ple.l~t' go tu rht:
Sec.:urltY Ufflo ~·.I I I'Jh Wln,pcar Avc:nuc Th t&gt; p.Hklng permit\ Jlt' 1\\l!Cd
thert:

Q: How ma n y upcr un cn t al course' ca n one ta ke m a sem ester?

A . Al~nrc.llllg tu the advlsellll'lll nffkt' of nus only u nc
expenmenfullliUf)e ~~ allt~wl•d tor cred11 t:al'h ~cmc~ t er

Q Wh t're

l'l tl On t' 110 to 11e1 un emergt'ncy loan'!
AI the prc.:scn t t1mc there .tre 01..1 emergenl y loan t und s
operat1n~ on the lilmpu' lhme whl l' h were tn operat1onl.l1ed be~.tU\C
studen ts dul no t pay up tht:u luJJI) At tht' present tlllH' tht' loraduatt.•
Student A~snc1a110n 1S t.1l k1ng o~h ou t ~c!llng up some SOl i I){ emergency
hun func.l lor graduate '&gt;llldenh But this 1\ '"" 1n the l.tlking ~t.tge and
IS not J reality yet

A

Q How ca n I b rtuk my food contuct?
A A.:cordlng to th e rood coni r.td th.tl )'OU have ~lgnecJ II IS valid
lor tht: entHl' semester It o..a n be hroken nnly for tw o re.tson~ One IS tf
you leave the Umversll) The o;~:.:ond 1~ .111y senous med1~al reason
wh1ch would dtctate that you l ..mnot eat tht: food offered f o r lh1~
latter you need a s1gned letter lrom om~ n l the dtx.t ors at the Health
Semces

Q : How can I reaiSter to vot e"
A It you are not J rtmdent u f Fne County you must regJster in
the voung d1stnd 10 wh 1ch you ma1ntatn a permanent residen ce. In thiS
case st o p tn and see them when you arc at home or wntc to them for
an applica t ion . If, h owever, you are a res1dent of Erie Coun ty (wluch
m eans havi ng hved here loa a yea r an d mamtaming a permanent
resi d ence) you may reg1ster at the Board of Elections, 134 West Eagle
Street in downtown Buffalo dunng th e followmg hours · 'J a m . - 5 p .m .
Mond~y th rough Friday and 9 a .m . noon Sa t urdays. The Ene &lt;:;ounty
Board of Elections is also comtng to you next week Represen t atives of
the board will be in the Cen t er Lounge of Norton Hall from Monday ,
J an . 31 to Friday, Feb . 4 from 9 a.m. - 4 :30p.m. To register all you
'have to bring is proof that you are a res1d ent (e.g. d river 's licen se, etc.),
an JD card and proof that you are over 18.

Q : My instru ct or info rmed m e that if I want to ta.l te a co urse o n a
pass/ ran buis, 1 must ao to Admissio ns and Records and fill out a fo rm.
Ia this true?
A : No! As of now , 11 IS JUS! a proposal pending approval - possibly
for enact ment in the fall To take aq S/ U option a stu4 eot Jle~d O{ll)'
notify his instructor within th co fi rst four weeks of t he course.

these included a to tal withdrawal
fro m South Viet n am o f all U.S.
and aUied fo reign fo rces execu t ed
withi n
SIX
months
of
an
agreem ent and the release o f all
priSoners of war concurren t with
tha t p uUout . Mr. Nixon also called
for
m t ernationally
su pervtsed
elections , wllh th e restgnation of
the Th1eu government one mo n th
before
the
ballolang
Accom panymg
this
ww.
the
President's pledge ot neutrality
from the Umted States. Ot h er
po1nts of the peace plan tncluded ·
Bot h sides will respec.:t t h e
I 'J S4
Gcncvu
Agreemen t on
lndochma
and
th e
I'U12
Agr ee m ent un Laos. w1th no more
foreign in tervt: nllon m Indochi na.
Futu r e
Indoch inese
problems will be settled by the
&lt;"ountne~ t hemselves. w1t h eac.:h
nation's forces rema1nmg behmd
11s o wn fronuer~
A genc:rdl .:eJ~e-hre s t.1rt1ng
when the o~greement IS s1gned w11 h
nu more mfiltmtton from that
oJatl' un
l nternatmno~l 'u pcrv1~1lln ut
I he o.:ea\t:·l m:. I'OW release ilnd
lrt)l)p Wll hd rJwJIS
lnternatwno~l guo~ro~nt~l' ol
the n~ht~ uf I nd och 1nese pn•pk .
t he "&gt;tJ 1u' til Jll .:ounl nc\ 111
lnduo.: hlnJ Jn,l fnr IJ,tmg po:.l~l' 1n
th1~ rl'gwn
\dd111nnall y. hoi h
\Ide~ would el!.fHns wtlllngnc.:" tu
partiLipatc 111 .m mtern:tlwnal
con fc:ren ~l' l~lf .:onslllerullnn nf
the'~
proru~ul'
Jnt.l
11Lhl'r
.1ppropnate matt er'
Comm w1i ~l '&gt; caned
M r N1 ~on ,,ml

- co!'tl nol ed rrom

.,.~

5-

no
compro mise
w1th
th e
Communists,
no
coalition
govern men t a nd no Com m untsts
in
t he
government
In
a
natiOnwide
radio
bro ad cast
sho rtly after Mr Nixon ·~ address
on Tuesday , Ttueu supportt'd the
U.S. Presid ent's statements by
also caUi ng for a new Snuthea~ t
Asia peace co nference to d1~c uss
neulroilization or the .trea
Allhour.h no actual men!Ju n o l
11 was made m the President's
message to the natmn , Mr N1xlll1
ts reported to he concerned about
a
heavy
North
Vtetna m e~e
butldup in Laos and Cambudw
along th e South
V 1 et n a mt:~e

the just a nd logical se ttl emen t o f
the V1e t nam p roblem." These
pom ts
were
that
Arn en ca ns
refused to stop V1etnam1za t ion of
the war . and t hat Am erica ns
persiSted m ma1ntammg Pres1den t
Nguyen
Van Tlueu and h 1s
"puppet reg~me " 1n offtce.
Th e Vu!l Cong statcmt:nl was
far stronger than t he o ffit:1al
rcoa l tl o n lrom Hanot The Vtet
C.ong ~a1d th.tl the N1xon plan wa~
.umed at prolong~ng thl.' J\lllen can
c:ngo~gemo:nt m Vtetnam pursui ng
t he Viernumiz.ation plan and
1mpos1ng
upon
tho.'
South
V1ctnamc't: po pulatuon " the U.S .
neoc.:olumolist yok.c .'

bonlcr The mcreJ~es 'cent to
111dio:ate that the Cummllrll\b ,ore
planning .1 lfiJIII lmc.:e a\S.tult mto
t h e Ccntr.al l hr,hlunlls &lt;~huut the
tune N1xun IS on Ill' W.J )' tu
Pekmg,
j,WVt'rnmeul
,uur~c:s
reveJietl
ll 1gh
Jl.lnllrmtr.IIJ()n
uff1~1al~ h.1vc exp resscll le.u thJt
'u~ h
.1 0
n ffen,lllt
rrught
unl.ll'l HI IIll' NIXoll·, Vl\11 111 ( h111.1
N1~un·,
l tH''d•• Y
n1g ht
otiiOCIUn•·t:ments JPPl'Jil'd In lw
lf YIIlg 111 he.1J •lrf th.Jt )111\\lhlllly
hy IIOVCIIJilg !he pnYJIC llll'l"llllg\
With IJJrHII
In .ll.lllllloll, thl· m·w l'•·••l" pl.111
W.l\ an .III C:IIIpl Ill jliiiVl' Ill llll'
AIH&lt;"rl\.111 eledor.llt:
'"lnl' .. r
wiJunl Mr N1xnn '-lid
' lt,,vc
hnollll' a•lll,tnmt:d 111 111111l1ng
lh.tt whatt:Vt:l ttlll !!ltVl'llliiH'III
'JY' rn u ~t he tJiw . I h.•I 1111ly
CUIIIIllllll"'
rcsi\I.IU.l'
11&lt;11
Amcrt •.an
rclu•l.lll•l"
''
IC\potll\lhk
lnr lhc V1l'111.11n
u111tlrll In parltl u iJ r tit,· ' llC~dt
was ·• uwvl· leo oJ~priYt" lh·mu1.1Jtll
hopl!fuh nl tlH"tr d.11m th.11 the
Jdllllnl\1 fdtiiHI h.td IH'Yo'l Ill fl.' red
to
\el
·• clcflmtc !!.ttl" )llf
Wllh.lraw.tl and the 1dc.1,c '''
pnsoni!T\

It Jl~n dC)I.flhed the pru posed
re\I[Ulahon
of
I he
Thieu
g•wern1nent hefore eh:o:!lons ds a
"maneuve r" th.tt would mcorely
help h•ep 1ni.Jd &lt;Ut h puh•l'
mad11ncr y .~~ the system o f
U)ni.C IIIrJIIOII camps .tnd "11gn
~.~ge\ .. I he stJtement Jskell ft•r
full lumphan ~e w1th the Vtl't
Cung\ ptJn o l J urliiJter.ll l1\Jnl!
&lt;t l l hl· date o f .1 lull U.S autliiJry
puliCiut lhe over throw of I h1eu
Jllol tlw lolrrll.tiiiiO o f d •noth laon
govcr11n•n•t 111 SJI!!-"n I he rdea~c:
hom lht: V1ct ( t•n~ ~.oududed
.. I hi.' w.n w11l not 1:0111c to o111 enll
.tnl.l V1l'111,1111 prohlen1' •.1nnnt h.:
WlllnJ
l&gt;y
IIICfl' l l \
ITIIC))'I
WII holr ;ow,tl WII houl ''"PJIIIIg .oil
nl ho•1 A lllCfl1. Jfl mterVl'nlHHI 1n
SPullo Vll'IIHIIII '

mt"e ttng

t h.ll t lw 1&lt;~'1
with
the
No rt h
VlctnJmt:~c wJs o n OU .:!5 and
that an dyccment tu meet .tgaan
1111 ~ ov 1 0 Wo.JS never tulf11led
hec.1use tht Com rnun1 \ ls o.:JIIed II
off lie ~;ud the: only respo nse to
the Umt ed State:. plan was to step
up troop lllhltrJt wn fmm Norih
V1etn&lt;.~m o~nd rn1l1tary &lt;llfens1ves tn
1 Jo'
Jrld
Camhod1.1
"Our
propo\dl ft'll pea o.: t' ~ J\ .Jn\wered
hy Jll lrl\.lt'J\&lt;" In till.' WJI • ht:
Jedarcd " I hal 1' whcrc 11\.Jitl'rs
,t.tml tud.ty ·•
II the CumnH1n1't' '1111 ri.'IU\C
puhlt~ I y I t1 ncgCI I IJ Ic •In the h,l\1\
ul th1' \Jntc " tar -rc.l t' hm~,: Jrtd
genemus lJ .S .,ffc:r NPmn 'aul
the Urnted State~ will ,ontiiiU&lt;' to
w1thdro~w II\ tr oo p~ .ts Su111h
Vlettlallll.''l' lnr.:e" develop lht
.1hll1t )' In dc:lend I hcm,clve'
lt1 u1 ndudlnl-\ hi\ 'talcmcnt.
Mr N1xnn n·wrrcc.:lctl th~: proOIISl'
mile mal.lt' by L yn,Jon J ohmon
that th&lt;• Umtel.l .'itJtl'' would
' ll tlply IJrgc ~~Jk elOIIOIIIIl atc.l to
hoth North Jnd South Vl&lt;'ln.tlll
onrc J P••llllt:al .1~1cernent w.1s
Jo..h1o:ved John'&lt;ln hJc.l lllent JOned
an ovcr.~ll devclupml.'nl a~\1\lallle
o f o ne billion duiJ.tr,, hut Mr
Nl\un ~PC\.Ihed no amuu a\1
M1~1ng from the lJ S utter w.1 '
.JOY referenle h• whJI has ht:en J
ley Co mmun1:.t puMIIon murc
Important that th t' pn.,oner ol w.tr
1ss ue. T~ was the dem.tnd thJt
tht' Umted St.ttes Withdraw Jll
support
frum
the
Th1c.-u
government, both pohtl~dl and
log~stlcal The Umted ')tdtc., ho~s
tnd1 ca ted 10 the past that 11 would
not Jc.:cept \Ulh .1 ~omldlt 1on , dnd
the Pres1dcnt made 11 de.tr that
that posltlon h as not cho~nged . Mr .
N1xon spet:1fic:t1ly rt:Jc ct cd that
Cllndttlon by SJy1ng "The: unly
th111g th ts plan does n(H do 1s to
JOin ou r enemy t o overt h row our
ally . which the Untted Stat es w1ll
never do."
The President's dtsclosure that
the U.S . peace offer h ad the
end orsemen t of South Viet namese
Presid ent Thieu represen t ed th e
major new aspect of p roposed
ne&amp;ohations In h ts o wn recent
one-man cam pai&amp;JI for re-&lt;:lection,
l lu.cu's p latform b ad been o ne of

mcl'l1ng

Nurth oppo!&gt;es plan
On
Wt:d nesd.ty
h .. w.·vl'r ,
North V1etno~m Jnl.l lh.: V1ct ( un g
reJel.lc:d Pre~1dcnt N1X1111'\ pco~ o.:c:
pi.Jn &lt;1rtll th e lldno• c.lclq;,lllnn to
th e PdnS PeJle tall ~ \Jill thJt
N1x o n had bruken h1s pledge not
lo diScl ose sel ret tails held w11 h
llenry K1ss1nger " In deudlflg to
unilaterally
make pubh t: the
co n tent uf the pnvate met:tmgs
that hiS delega t es had prllPliSed
and promLSed to kec:p secret , Mr
N1xon gave further prouf tha t Ius
admmistrat10n very eas1ly brt:o~ks
1ts engagements," the
llanm
sta t ement said .
Hanoi said Lhe peace-malong
effort collapsed because both
Ambassador William J . Porter 1n
public meetmgs and K1ssinger 10
private sess1ons had fa 1led to
respond to the Commun1sts' two
bale qut s1tons-"fund amenta• for

O LD RI VO LI
T H EAT R E

896·

1111

2600

Broadway
Held overt Ton1te &amp; Sat.
8 15, Mat . Sat.2&amp;5pm
Ernest Hemmgwav's
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS

The Ot11JIM8t, u n surcussed
SAMUEL GOO.: OWYN 5 . _ . _

.......... "',....,..... .....,,....
d-.... .,. .... .....-tt~
~

. .. .... •vt04'4 ,Wh

and
BLACK MARIA
Tire~ - 896-2600

Friday , January 28 , 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�At the Coffeehouse
Dave Bradstreet, pictured above and
balladeer Owen Mcbrtde will perform at
the UUAB Coffeehouse this weekend
The shows begin at 9 and II. Anlmo,~unn
1s 50 cents.

"TEA" Rlf:'F'IC

1972 Buffalonian

•

OEUCJOUS
SATISHISC
A'\ll'ltE - \Ol' 'A \IF. IT 1\"E'\'E GOT 11 '! T~u Frnm
All o.... ~ \\orfd . . . Tu
B•p Alld '--••· A•d 1,.
" ~.._...., .. ~"-H T•• Pmt
Too \\ ••h lla&amp;lt I•
Shame. e T u C1dd•••
e Tu 11•11• And 01
Covne Tu C•""• ''I
Craci&lt;•tt• Wo Aim to
Tut At

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO YEARBOOK

Box K, NOI'Ion Hall, 3435 Mam Street, Buffalo, New York 1.C214

Telephone (716) 831-2505/831·5570

.l n nuary .28 ,

1972

TSUJIMOTO
O aJtMTA L 4aT8-(IJn - FOODII
l-.M y.., . . .ln • f•• lte Aat ..
D ' llY l lt.el • r-•t 11 ' - t • ltJ' l· t
UM ~"""~ M ( 8' I I ~ ltlae. 1C T .

I •n" [ u t

•f

----"11

Tn••''

. __ _ _ Nl 2-lJU

• l' i . It •

Below you will

find a

coupon requPsting that you

l1st

your

rwme , llPgreP and &lt;H'tivities .
Tf you wi s h rhis in formation printr&gt;d in the 1C)7 2 HIII·I"ALONIAN, t iH, University yParbook ,
jusr plaCP
thf' &lt;' oupon in an e n ve l ope addr essed t o :
1972 Hu l't'alon i a11 1 !lox K,
Norto n ll all , Cam pus, a nd drop i t in 11ny ca mpu s mail s l ot .
Or , i I'
i t is more co n ve ni ent , t h e coupon may he dropp&lt;'d &lt;1t the
cn· r on

TnJ' orrnatio n C'ountl,r or at our ol't' i cc

in Hoom

\orton.

))f• ,

l' h e information must ren c h us uy ~1ar C' h 1 , 1c) /? ,
rPf:rPttahly , we \.;ill be u na blP to i11c l11 dP your nam e .

a1't0r \dll c lt ,

Al so , if' you wish your photo~ r aph in c lud ed in t i1 C' yE'ar i HJok,
Il ene not had a sitting , please c hP c k the ho'\ at th•., uottom of
11tP coupo n and r etu rn the co11pon immP di.ately.
WI' will then c.tll
you to make an appointment lly the last wrek of s ittillf,'S in late
February .
uut

Sincerely yot1r:; ,

HElP
YOURSElf
IIIli TO SOME
9
EXPERT

i' &gt; J/:....-·/.t '
p . :-.. .

ADVICE

"A"
"H"
''C"

Cliff's Notes are w11tten w1th
you tn m1nd lhe e•pell
scholars who prepare them
know what you n!'ed 10 help
you understand lhe loughesl
literary works lhey analyze
characters, d1scuss
underly1ng meantngs,
tnlerprel, e1pla1n all wtlh a
v1ew toward help1ng you gel
more than tusl a grade out of
ltlerature courses T1tles
ava1table now cover nearly
200 frequently assl&amp;ned plays
and novels

"I&gt;"
II~ II

"I·

II

•• c; "

tln the co upon the following co d e s h01tld l1e 11sr&gt;d
T·nC'ulty :
FacuJ ty o f' Arts and L f'tters
l·'aculty of' Fdu catio u n l S t.udies
facu l ty or EnginePrin~ Hlld AppliPtl Sc i ellC I~"
Fnculty of' IIPaltll Sc ien ces
l·acu l ty o J Ldw a nd Jurisprudencf'
~aculty of Natura l Scie n ces and Mathema ti cs
l·ac 11l ty of S ocial Scie n ces and Adm inistrat i o n

Cor yo11r

--------------------------1

Get T11111 Wlllrem
l11ks Ale Sel•

oaty $1ud

' -

£•d1t or

....
..

Page ~t . The Spectrum . Friday, January 28, 1972

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

PLEASE PRINT

Lalil Num.-,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

F'tr~l.

_ _ _ __

Mtddlt&gt; - - --

Local Addr~~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone - - -Pt&gt;rma nl.'n t Add r e~s _____________________________ Phone
Ocgrc~&gt; - - ---- Ma jor------------------ F'.II' Uir ~--------------

Date of Grudualtool (cm:lt&gt; one)

Jan

May

Aug. '72 or

Jnn '73

Please lislall acttvllll'l&gt; parltcl pated in ,.nd h&lt;mors rt&gt;cet\'ed at ~LINYAB

•
LJ I

wo uld like to have 111~ photo~:rnph includl'd in thP hook Pleasl' call mP

for an appointment

�'Clockwork Orange'

Kubrick indulges excessively
in what appears to he obvious
by Michael Silvublatt
Lir llnd Drama EdirOI'

am reviewing A Clockwork
Orange before its arrival in
Buffalo because it is a f11m whose
advance publicity has been as
misleading as It is overwhelming
It is a film that has left the
majority of its reviewers in
speechless awe. Unfortunately.
these critics have fallen into the
same trap that Kubrick fell mto
when making the movie. the fatal
snares of overindulgence
A Clorkwork Oronge IS a film
that IS essentially coreles~ The
sunphstac "profundity" of its
futunst1c VISion has , I assume.
forced
Kubnck
to eschew
meamng an favor of endless VISual
effects The film ~hnws more than
11 has lu show . tor longer than 11
has to show 11 , and shows what 11
shows with uver-elaborateness and
overelabo1ataon
Flaming Youflt
The film , based on Anthony
Burgess' novel , takes place in an
England
whose governmental
system borders on mechanw:d
Soc1allsm . fhc vasaon IS dystopac
and Orwellian and an excuse for
yet
another
uf
Kuhrack'~
idtutl&lt;.:ally
conceived
and
wtrtcately exe.:uted future-scape~
that were . alter all, over-used 111
"1001 · A Spar&lt;' Odyss~y The hem .
or (to he as ananely pa1aduxu:al a\
the film 1~ tbell ) the anta-hertm
hero (or herotl anll hero) ts mae
Ale, , leader ol olll' o l the many
gangl. ul teen·al(e hm)dlums that
te1rvr11ed Engla11d hy tll¥-ht lie
and ht~ druog~ ( meantng fnrnd~
when rendered 111 Nad~et
the
Fnglt~h Ru.,~aan Col·kncy
tcen-sla11g ~poken hy Ihe gan~: an
the mnvae) e111oy a ~caelllc·fictton
nagltl ·hfc Rapang, kallang, kacklng,
thompmg, ~hun pang, rnmpang &lt;tlld
lootang whtlc h:\lhtctnattng nn
-synthe-mesc makes up the first
thtrd of the film The caro!·free
goangs-on of tranoccnt vouth arc
brought to an abrupt end when
Alex and the dmogs. Pete ,
Geurgll~.
and Dtm vanously

Alex at all.
It Is here, in this deeply
parad~xical
(and
therefore
minimally visual, and boring)
section of the ftlm , that ideas
really falt er. Kubrick wants so
much to be a film philosopher,
but In thts film he just does not
seem to be able to handle both
idea and image at on.ce. The fi rst
section of the film is so visual that
it becomes increasingly tedious.
l=he second sect ion is so foolishJy
"phtJosoptucaJ" that one longs for
the ted1um nf the opening
sequence~. The tlurd sectton. yet
to be described here, IS so
repeltttve and pred1c\jlble that I
personally began tu fC\Cnt the
en tare film

participate in the murder of a
woman.
Musical Scores
These sequences of violence, as
in all of Kubrick's films, are
elaborately and ironically scored.
You've seen the technique in2001
as the satellite waltzes to Strauss .
You've understood the irony in
Dr. Strangelove when , as the film
dissolves in a holocaust of
mushroom-shaped clouds, we
head a 1029's style lullaby Wht
then. are we treated to this same
JOke or non-joke time and tame
aga1n 'in A Clockwork Vrange J
Does Stanley Kubnck thtnk hts
aud1ence is so dumb that they
can't understand what he ts saylflg
about violence and art
'"
technology and art, or any
combtnatiun of the three''
Once we've seen the boys
maim an old writer and Ius wtfe
by k1cking and punching to the
tune of "Sing~n' in the Ratn ,"
we've golten the trontc pb,
unsubtle as it is. But no, Kubnck
goes the whole hog - rape. suicide
and looting in synchronization
with
Purcell,
Rossani
and
Beethoven
The plot continues
Ale.x IS arrested for the murder
nf
the
woman.
and
ts
subsequently incarcerated wath a
14-year sentence After servang
two years, he agrees to undergo a
treatment that will cu re ham or all
desare for vtolence the treatment
•~ .:ailed the Ludovtco tedtntquc
The technaque, whllh anvolve~
lorung the pattcnt Ill watch all
sorts of atmdty ura film scored
Wllh
musac.: "loa ernotiuual
heightening··. be~ornes a foola,h
and graturtuu~ metaphor lor
Kubnck's film . The LladnVIro
technique leaves Alex helpless
he cannot witness or tal..c part an
acts ol violence wathout beuuuing
violently and physically til. We
hegJn to like Alex more - he was
really cute dunng all that
nastiness. and he's so oppressed
by the "establishment." The
problem 1s that we shouldn't hl..e

The novel and the film
The Burgess novel points ''"t
that Alex and his gang have
free·wtll, they can be natural ltke , the "Orange" on the title
TI1eir freedom h(lwever. turns to
terror and dasregard foa art The
government
1s
mechat11zed
("cloLkwork" , according to the
title) When Alex is treated by the
govecnment he heromes "A
Clockwork Orange " Surprise! Ills
ltfe as miserable. He can't
expencnce
HX
without
remembenng
the
Ludovicu
techntque and wanttng to die He
can't defend hamself when hiS old
VICitms revenge themselves on
h1m What Burgess IS sayang as that
thC're IS nu happy rnedJUrn, that
both stdes of the nun are s11ll 1111
I he SCIIIIC lU ll I
I helL I\ Oil
an~wer
unly
amhtvJient
jX'\Simtslll
KubncJ..
the
psyd1Jdehl'
film-maker docsn t hlend wl'll
wtth Kuhtll. k the plttlll~qph~• . ami
Kubnck tit~ \at ansi Thus Kuh~~t: k
ha~ Alex cured at the end 111 thl'
film, and by the I&lt;HJk in Alex\
beady little eye~. we k11ow that
the whole thaug w1ll \ tart all ovn
agaan
a maudlin httle moral,
made
rnwc
unhearahle
by
Kubnck's ampfk,Jiton that tl11s
movement toward vtnlcntc •~ uut
only tnevllablc . but tn m.my way\
good

Starry Night Theater
Starry Night Theater on Feb. 2 and 3 11 8 30 pm 10 the Fallrnore Roum Adm~ion '"
frt-e, but tickets should be obtained al I he Norton Hall Ticket Offace to &amp;.\Sure a loU I.
The p1ece, wrillen by two members of the en~emble, con~rst~ of myth~ and faary
tales woven together in a sinale continuous story about change and tht dfecc~ of change
on institutions, ideas and people. Puppets. music and varied theatrical tradtliom are used
within tht context of the laraer event " the communacat ion of some freling 11bou1
evrrychina that is happeninato us now ."
Tht Starry Night Theater present a vivid theatrical imaae of change.

~· -w1•1
••• IMPORT ANT NOTICE • • •
STUDENT MEDICAL INSURANCE

SPEEDED READING
AND STUDY

Oiv. of Undergraduate Studies
again offers Mrs. Nichols
non-credit
course.
Weekly
sessions. Nominal tee $15.00
payable at registration in 106
Diefendorf before Jan. 31.

In the novel, tlus ~yde ot
return is passable
we can label
the repeulton wllh cnttcal terms
like ··ctasstcal symmetry·· ur
"novellst al· architecture " In a
film , such repetllaon b !.:&lt;illeJ
"vasual
n·dundarlly '
ur
··boredom ..
fhe acttng, Wllh the CXLepiiOII

of Mr. McDowall's AJex , consists
ma1nly of uninspired mugging and
exaggerated
twitches . Palrick
MacGee has been encouraged to
be as silly as possible and he
outdoes himself. The cast seems
to blend into the set.
an uninspired
And what a set
collection of obvious tcomstic
nouveau future-art (a giant
ph all Ul&gt;,
plastic
art
and
ceo-women). Other cnucs may
call thts a relentless vision of the
future of art. I don' t think
Kubnck 11 that smart. His
1.vllect1on of JUnk is neat to look
at, and af one i~ overly-unpressionable, 11 may even constitute a
\Cmblance of a ''VISion" but my
feeling ts that , like the enure film
the VISual coUage •~ over-inflated
Jnd an:.tgntficantJy unperceptive .

NEW COURSES
I

1n

CLASSICS
Clas.sjcs I 13

Starry N1ghr, a new play with puppels, people and music will be pt'rformed by the

!!!i!!3!iiiiiEBi!!iEiiiiiiii!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!iift

In the last thard of the moVIe,
Alex returns to Ius parents who ,
tn a hideously overlong and
unamusang scene, reject htm . He
then returns to each and every
locale where we've seen him hurt
someone . (The cnmanal always
ret urns to the scene o f the crime).
Being defenseless. he as of course
given his own back 111 spades. His
vtctims have apparently been lying
in wait for two years

3

Classics 289:
Introduction to Classical Archaeology (Art History 289)

Enroll now for 2nd semester!
for enrollment details phone

(Permission oj instmctor is NOT required for any nf these courses)

NIAGARA NATIONAL INSURANCE

tlksJ-093 1

853-0931
or
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES

I

Myth and Retipnn 111 the Anc1en1 Wurtd (English 113)
Classics 2 19
The Jews in the HeUenistic Age (History 3 I0)
Classics 302
The Greek Mrnd 111 the Making (HiMory 309, English 306)
Classics 304
Psychoanalysis and the Classics ( Engli.'lh 307)
Classics 416 :
The AENEID : Vergir~ Journey into rhe Wasteland (English 419)

NOTE on "closed courses" : because of possiblility of computet
error, p&amp;eax confirm any announcement that a coune has beal
do!ed with the Department of Classics (390 Hayes, 831-2816)
or with tbe instructor involved

...

Friday, January 28, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�I

EdiTORiAl

I

Villainy
Further investigation into the Thomas Schillo-Ed Ooty
vending proposal indicates that once again administrato~ have
secretly conspired against the interests of the University
community. The revelation of a year-old consultant's study of
the FSA Vending Operations is a clear indication of the intent
of Messrs. Ooty and Schillo to destroy Vending long before the
current space problems provided them with an excuse for
immediate action.
The most damning fact is that no other member of the FSA
Board of Directors knew of the study by Service Systems
Incorporated. Secrecy may have been necessary because the
steps proposed in the report are clearly detrimental to the
University community . First, at least two-thirds of all
machines would be removed and only those in profit-making
areas would be retained. Secondly, the price of coffee was
slated to rise to $.20.
It is therefore an unassailable fact that all the justifications
provided last week by Mr. Schillo, such as a "desire for
competition" and the "crucial space problem" were at best
half-truths.
One point overlooked by Mr. Schillo is the effect of any
Vending cutback on their employees. True. he did promise
them jobs with maintenance. but that's an insult and not a
favor to men trained for skilled work. Several months ago, he
justified raising FSA prices by stating that additional monies
would go to provide raises for FSA employees.
We now maintain that Mr. Schillo has no true regard for
any FSA employees and simply uses them as a convenient
excuse whenever an occasion arises. If he had any concern for
them, he would not have been the architect of a plan that
would cost several FSA employees their jobs.
Another disturbing note is President Ketter's public silence
on this matter. Although he has clearly expressed antipathy to
this plan in private, we believe that a public statement
documenting his opposition is necessary. Continued silence
could indicate his acquiescence in a plan designed to exploit
the University community.

Keep talking
Facilities Planning Vice President John D. Telfer in his
initial statement has clarified to some extent the muddled
Amherst construction outlook. Unfortunately, he has also
leant heavily upon the $650 mi ll ion state commitment, a
commitment that as stated in an earlier editorial is meaningless.
The local administration has heavily criticized the flow of
construction information from Albany , drawing cute
witticisms such as SUNY Central uses "paraplegic turtles" as
messengers. The information flow here is far from perfect if Dr .
Telfer believes that stressing the $650 million figure will
comfort those concerned that Amherst becomes a reality .
The basic questions that still exist are what specifically will
be built and over what time period. We await the answers.

THE SpECTI\UM
Friday, 28 January 1912

Vol. 22, No 41

Edrtor m -Chief - Denn•s Arnold
Co-Maneging Editor
AI Benson
Co-Managi09 Editor - Mike Lippmann
Asst . Managtng E.11tor Susan Moss
Busmass Manager - Joel&lt; Herlan
Advert111ng Meneger - Susan Mellen! me
Camput

C ity
Copy
Asst .
Feature
Graphic Ans
Bac:kpege

JoAnn Armao
Jeff Greenwalll
How1e Kun1
Harvy L1pman
Ronn• Forman
Marty Ga111
Claore Kr~egsman
Lynda Ten
Tom TOIIK
Arny Ahrend

layout
Lot. &amp; Orama
MuSic
OH-Campu~

Asst .
Photo
Asrt .

Sports
Asst .

Barb Bernhard
Maryhope Runyon
Mochael Solverble!l
~Bolly Altman
Lynne Traeger
Jani5 Cromer
Mockey Oslerreocher
Kom Sant11s
Barry Autun
How1e Fa1wl

Tht! Spectrum os served by United Press lnternaoonal. College Press
Serv1ce, the Los Angeles Free PtMs. the Los Angeles Tunes Syndocate and
L1beratoon News Service.
RepublicatiOn of matter hereon without the eJ~press consent ol the
Ed itor-ln-Ch1ef 1S forbidden
Editorial Policy 1s datarm•ned by the Ed11or - •n~Ch1ef .

Page ten. The Spectrum . Friday , January 28, 1972

'ITOP WOIIYING -

WI'LL CALl fT PIOTICTIYI IIACTIONI'

WeU, 1 aan't allogether the brightest guy m the
wo rld but every oooe in a while I figure out
something. For example, the fact that I was falling
asleep o ver th e haJf finished column t ha t l just
discarded finally convinced me that it might be
boring, very , very boring. That's a shame, it was such
a ni ce erudite piece about the problems of how to
change the culture around and all ~ . . and even
writmg that o ne line caused me to yawn and bade
off~ Oral. Double drat , since the demise of that
effort leaves me co mpletely without an organizing
co ncept or topic for today 's lecture.
The whole thing was an o verbearing and too
long diScussion about how it seemed to me that
there was some reasonable doubt about violen ce
heing exactly the mosl effic~tcioua method o f getting
41n unfortunate situation lo change. Northern Ireland
heing a good, a bloody good, example of a sit uation
in wh.ich violen ce seems to have resulted in little
good for anyone. TaJkjng too long might serve as a
departure point of some worth.
Had an argument the other day . Happened on
Sunday, it did . Started a while after "The Bram
Parasi t es" ended and went on un til 9 a.m . or so.
Echhh . (On the other hand , Saturday night was an
all time great TV night. .. Destroy AJJ Planets"
started at 9, and was followed direc tly by "The
Gtant Gila Monster'' - honest, an d a fine exam ple of
hot rod/bop/monster instant fitinmaking it was and then on intu the Brain Parasites. Let 's hear 1t for
C hannel 29 ,") Perhaps o ur brams were addled, and
that is why we fought. It was a good h o n est - well,
maybe so m e dtshonest here ami there on lh~ edges
and 1n the clincher
fight wh ich dredged up a lot of
s tuff wh.ich probably needed to be d ealt with . But it
took so damned lo ng.
lt event u ally wore me to a fraz.zle and I had to
Withdraw on the ground~ ol physical disability ~
'I alking seems to be one, of a great many. of those
lhtngs wh1 ch people muck around w1th a lot I had a
feeling before this last marathon epiSod e that there
wa~ too much verbah z.mg g01ng on . Yerbahz.mg here
1s dl's1gncd
pure and Sim ply
to rf.!fer tn
non-purposeful and of doubtful meamng nu1se
produc tio n whteh passes fo r talking on some levels
fh cre are , to be sure, t1mes when th e natul~n.:e runs
out of the m out h almost to the degree 11 runs, ve11ly
11 poureth, from my pen on Fndays But I th1nk I
.lin getting a IJtt le better, and a httlt- w1scr , 11hout
outmg when I am wandenng nff tnto art'a~ of
relat1vely Little meaning,
We are talk mg of many reasons ln r .;udl
behavior. Fea r 1s o ne that obviously affecl s what th e
lady and I say to each oth er ~ If I say he/ she/11 w1ll
get mad or hate me. and yell atjleavl'/Sinke lil t' $~1
maybe •f I sneak up on 11 they w11l nc:vcr nott~·c thai
I am .:alling them a miserable so n-of-a
Watd1 11
punk , or I'll ~'lend th1s hilly dut&gt; over your ca r y,.,
dear. So mvch for fear .
An afll1etwo wlt1ch frequently cnnvolutc' my
head m arguments/dis..:ussions/hassle.s 1s tha t 11 seen"
to be very diffi c ult to know exactly what 11 1s 1 Jill
feeling. then what 11 is I want to say 1 mean. 1 1 u~t
get wyselt ni cely up o nto the sevt·oth level n l
abstra c tion removed from anyth111g to do w11 h
reali t y and pow!, she wants to knvw what I um
feeling about s uch and so (
usually her, &lt;ll ,·oun.c ~
It betng hanJ to tslk when you arc Internally d1ggmg
your way ou t from under seven luyers of collapsed
rntton candy douds. my response is frequently to
look wise
or at least as much as possible
Jnd say

pontificaUy "a lot!" , and then duck.
(If this is as bad as 1t may very weU be, Dermil&gt; ,
just run the text of the latest N1xon speec h 1n the
usual space, nobody will notice.)
Which is a cu tesy way o f sneaking up on a real
subject. It is hard t o know what is really gotng o n
underneath all that defensiveness. That , after all , 1s
the point o f a defense, so that you don't trunk about
whatever it is that was causing all that trouble before
you got it safely under co ntrol. Most of us behave as
if we were sca red of other people, for example, but
it is never reaUy put that way . " Look both ways
before crossing!'', can be loosely translated mto
"Never trust anyone wh o drives a car I" We grow up
in a culture wh.ic h very carefully sets up an
untrusting atmosphere fo r most of us. H o no r m
school, for mstance, is supposed to be the rules o f
the institution - don 't c heat on exa m s
and 1S
co uched in terms of self-advancement , if you let
t he m c heat 1t wo uJdn 't be fau to you ,
So, given a culture in whi ch you are su pposed to
lock your car every tim e you leave 1t. why w n uld
anyone want to develop the abiht y and termtno logy
to talk about trustmg o th er people? {Could 11
possibly be bec;IUse they 01re lonely'!) (Good boy .
you can have an extra crusl of bread to ntght I The reIS a phrase - really a rather awful phrase
wh• ~h
goes "meaningful Interpersonal co nta c t .. (I 1 1sn ' t
mine, hon est!) It clearly has sornethjng to dn w11h
the rath er doubtful propos1t10n that two peoplr can
actually find some kmd of meanmg 111 the
relationship between them . (A clearly suhvcrs1 vc
proposition!) (How d1d you get o ut'! I
Since touching is a thtng whu.. h JS not don e very
easily o r gra ce fully by many o f us, m11Jal co ntat:b
lend to be handled vernally
And badly . I have a JHeJUdJLe
I hat most peo ple never ~et
c:nough closeness
even if they
run like hell from 1l bc:cause
they are so damned scared . It
seems htghl y probable to me
I hat every lime someone speaks
to so meone else 1n a sn&lt;.~ &lt;~hle
way ll IS probably S&lt;~fe til
by Sttae
believe that so mepla ce 111 there
IS st II:Jst a vest1gal st1rnng of a d estre l o h..- really
close and tmportant to so111eunt&lt; dse {Qutd&lt; . ~-' y
sornethmg Light to brea k the mood 1 ) (Scn•w you
Jack, handle your own sar.;asnt )
Good at luding such feellng&lt;J '! espec1ally jrum
our~elve:. ? It .:ertamly does look that way from ht:ll'
01 co urs e as you begin to recognize th e existemc '''
suL11 u prohle m H heg111s to nutigalc rapidly . And
Y~'u 'oon can open people u p consJderahly h~ller
Just c:nuugh so that when you get r~next&lt;dly
ddcns1vc and push someone away, 11 hurts bolh uf
you twt ce as much . And ohv•nusly anyone wh n c tin
~tanc.J mu ch o f that Wdnts suml' thlng from you and 1~
ohv1ously untru~tworthy o n thal ,~ount
I really du thmk 11 1 ~ b oth tH·t:essary and
tulfillmg to gel do~c to ot her people Bctng a
rt'lal•vely honest sort I have t o admit that 11 d uesn'l
sct'm to be that easy for roe ye t
hut I have mel
S(llll~· very n1ce - tf somewhat wc1rd
penplt' hy

The

grump

t I) lilt(

And ~omcday , I promise. there w1ll he" cheery
mlu111n before the week e nd . mstead uf tht' usual
blllt: funk .
( II ow would it lnol-. With a nice black border
Jround 11, Oennis?)
I\

�Hitching victims

Think before striking

To the Editor.

To the Editor:

On S11turday at about 6 p.m we were
hitchhiking in front of Norton U nion. We wore
picked up by three young black men in a large, four
door, dark colored , ea rly 60's model c~r. They had a
gun We were robbed, taken to a h ouse, and raped
We are writ ing this to warn all hit chhikers that
lutchtng even in front nf Norton Unton IS not as safe
as we are accustomed to thankang We also warn all
lutchhakers to be on the lookout for the car and the
men that we have descnbed We especially warn all
women not to enter a car when 'outnumbered by
rnen , under any carcumstances
There IS no way to descrabe our feelintts of fenr
~nd helplessness and our feelings of vactimization
Wt• hope th11t all th ose people with empty •ar~
who pass up hitchhikers wall thank twtce
Two

Our Studen t Association president, Jan OeWaa l,
cites frustra t ion with student inaction as one reaso n
why t reasurer Dave Barmak and others have turned
tn SA resignations. Now h e plans a litudent strike
that would shut d ow n all cam pus activities for three
days, su pposedly to protest increased gwdelines for
student fees.
Before the st udents o f thiS Universaty undertake
such drastic action as a stnke, which would probably
make most participatang students academic losers,
maybe they should examme more closely the reason
for the proposed strike. If at IS really to protest the
increased guide lines for student fees, th is at:llon
t:ou ld be very w ort h wtule However, perhaps Jan
OeWaal IS gett ing trustrated with decreased support
of student government , tO•) As quo t ed an Monday's
ISSUe of The Spectrum, Mr. OeWaal stated: " I want
to find ou t once and for all whether ~t udent
government means anytlung, whether the st udent~
gJVe a shit "
Protesting 101:reased gutdehnes for student fees
IS worthy of ll stnJte, but proVIng or refuttn&amp; lan
OeWaal's personal conva cllons (u~, not gaVJng a ~h1t)
l5 not We students w11l have to decade which as the
real issue at hand, and act acc.ordingly

Wom~n

WNYPIRG praise
To tiH' J:.'dIf m

Lawrencl' Bortz

As an undergraduate at thas Umverstty, I would
like to applaud the efforts of those students who
hAve taken time o ut from their studaes, JObs, etc to
beco me involved an th e WNYPIRG movement. I am
pertacularly g:ratafied about thiS idea because, until
JUSt recently . many of my beliefs and attatudes
toward the g:rowtng ecologacaJ and consumer
problems were frust rat ed by the mere fact of my
ansagnafh.ance toward the gaant com merc1al compleJo.,
wh1ch seems to be runmng the co untry Now a
solutaon to this appears to be wathin the grasp tl(
every student in Western New York
Mass
part acipallon In this group, and others ltke it 1n other
states, will assist in, sooner or la t er, breaking down
environmental poUut1on and consumer fraud and
bu1lt.hng
up
envuonmental
preservation
and
t:on~umer protection
WNYPI RC •s offenng an outlet to the mdavadual
wlw wants action, and an my o panwn. through thiS
gJOUp, he wtJI get It
Jumt:t Cormlt'l'

1

Quality f aculty'

f, the Fdllor
I sh.uply dt~grec Wllh the amphcat defmalton ul
'qu.alaty fac ulty'' presupptN!d tty Dr Ketter Jml Dr
H.lUtnt:r. when they rep.:&gt;rtedly ITht Swcttum Jan
24 l'l7.!, p I) regard expan~ton tu the Amha't
&lt; ;11npu., and a nataunally cumpetJIIVe ,alary strudurc
&lt;1.~ amfl{•rtant fa~:tors 111 attaa..:t~ng 4Uality fJ~ull y
(;tven ~llnternporaty lJ .S VliiUCS these two fadttf\
wall undoubtedly help lu Jllfacl .tmhatmu~ .111d
"renowned" fa~ulty bUI thiS h:aVl'\ thCII c.jUJhly ,an

Campus police lauded

feedback

(;enerahut•ons about the pohce h~tve bet:ome so
overwhdmmg that the task of the tndmdual off~t:er
has become almost tmposstbly dafftcult However ,
o ur experience at Sunshtne House with the campu~
pnhce
have shown them to be extremely
unden~t:andans c1nd anxtous to help whenever thc:y
t:lln.
Sunday eve nang, I called Campu:. Se~ unt y from
Sunshane H ouse requesting tht:u help war h lt
SI IUallon that re.Juared emergency transporaatmn tn
Meyer Memorial Jl o~ pit al I conlacred Mr Kevan
O'Connor, who explained their pro~edure HI ~ud1
t.as cs, to make sure al IIICI wal/1 our Jpproval t&gt;rl11re
JUY uncornfurf able \II ualaon arost: ltm Bnll and
JJmt:S Brantly were \Cnt up to uur nl li t:a: au handle
the call, and th ear dd1on' t:,l n only he de\LrJI1t:d .a~
nemplary
RegardleS\ uf huw hJad I rry , tht're 1' no WdY I
~o.dn •Onsader diiY 1111c: 111 tht:'l' IIIC:II 111~ I hey Jllt'd
J'&gt; human hemg.\ who wert• vc:ry •omcrned with the
well-heang uf Hncll her who net'ded I hear help We Jl
.Sunshane ll o u~t' lhanlo. them lur the: help they h.avt'
g~vrn us wheuevcr we huvc re4U1rcd 11
S111c t' TI'/ 1',
/lt·nnt,\ !Jrt'!l'hC'!
J'TfiJI't

r

Jlt'IJ I/

A c'l'lll J I rul 11 " '
/'urr lltn• /n\lrutlt•r
lhtl&lt;lrllllt'/1/ of l'llt/•Ho(lll\

Stickers of the past

Save a life

In thl' l.tlllul

I" lht• l tllfur
J'k,l\1! hd p IIIC
I un•d .1 ~HJna:y II~Hl\pldnl \\&lt;.,utu ~fi)'CJih Ill
anll:rc~l nl 111 donJI 1n~t J ~ad ncy to 1111:
I .1111 ;a nwthcr ••I three lhalllrcn l7 )'\.".11' 11hl
and wuuld hl.e lu t"ntoy hie agaan
A' uf now, I Jl11 .UI out [l:llaent at lll'.l'-1'1"'"
ltii\PIIJI I gu fWil'C a wcck, \IX hour., t:Jdl tanu: ''"
lhl' knlncy fficiLhlnc: AllhcHJtth lh1· rna..:htnc ~ccp•. 1111
illiVt'. I have 'evcrc rcJdluns Jllcr the lra:atlllt:alh 1\
1-lt.lfH'Y transplant '' n1y onl\ hopt' lhcrl' "nu ••11•·
tn lilY t.nntly thai '"n donate one J~ they .trc .tll"l u
dallt.: rt.: Ill hlood I y pc I hJVt' 0 PmalaVl' I y pt• hlw ul
II .anyone 1\ anll'H'\tt:d .tnt.! h.t\ O ·Po\111\l' wuultt
you plcJsc ltlnsada:a 11 I Jill Jc-.poalc I would lll.l·
t" lavt JgJi II
Mr.\

,.

'"

( i/ut/tJ I ,uc/ui\\A I
,.'i V J Ill Sf/}

Sc•t•Jnt; fh,at lhnl' WJ\ 1111 11lht·1 WJ\ ut vcllrJnl(
'" 1h,11 ollh&lt;'" III.IY :thu ll'Jialc 11 I
dn1t.fnl ftl .uJdJC\\ tht fli'OI"'(t' lhruu~h n1c
\'pn rmm
It rt&gt;.tlly t\11 t .a Vl'f)' e.arth-!&gt;hJitt'rllll(
rr·•hla:lll Jllhuutzh I than!. II dl'\I.'TYt'\ \1&gt;1111' .actcnltlln
I w•ll awl pa'' &lt;~ny tud~auenl un t.tmpalgnang
.. x.cpl when 1! '' uwr walh we ~hmtld11't tw
h11thcrt:d walh al JIIY 11111rt' In p.attaLular I ~~~~
n·h·rnng tn Lht• l.ugt· qll.tlllilY nl '·'"'PJign posfL' r'
.111tJ '&gt;tl• lo..cr~ rc:ma anllll( .lltl'l the Sl'diiJ lJIIlJlJII,\11 IJ'I
1.111 I Jill nul J'&gt;klf11t th.at M.1y01 Sl'chla "r;qx· l',tlh
''1•1-.. r off lhL' tr.l\11 , Jlh .and l.llllJlll'" lunasclt J\1'&gt;1
lht Jlt'OJllt' who put them Ufllll tlar Ill'' pl.",.
J Itt' tnay \t't'fll In ht .1 vn" lravaJirt:qlil''l .• n.t al
1
I tll\t thuu~ht thl'&gt; tliJ\- ht'IJl .1 lillie hat h• mal-.•·
thl' t U L.ampu' lllllfl' •ll'~ lhrlll
Whn O&lt;'t"•h arflli•'IJI flowl'r~ '
MtJr}.. I rf, /lu1 lll'f
IIIV ~·o mpl.ttnl

..
Friday, January 28, 1972 The Spectrum . Paqe eleven

•

�'

IT'S EASIER THAN
EVER TO JOIN
THE STUDENT ASSEMBLY•••
'

Under the new guidelines passed 1ast month, a mail ballot may be
used to register and vote in an interest group rather than the
in-person verification required previously. Anyone wishing to form
an interest group can come to the Student Association Office, Room
205 Norton; he may then take ballots and distribute them to
undergraduates for voting. When 40 undergraduates have replied
either by mail ballot or in-person voting, the interest group is
considered officially formed .

In addition, anyone presently in an interest group and wishing to
change his or her affiliation, may do so until Feb. 18. You must
however, come to the S.A. Office, this may not be done by mail
ballot.

In a general mailing later this month , all undergraduates will
receive the Assembly ballot .

�)

•

Jackson Browne: songwriter
possesses superstar qualities

~

John McLaughlin to
head upcoming ShOw
rh•s Saturday mght at q. o~t the
( •·ntury Theatre
downtown
Maw Street
t here's gomg to be
,J uiOCl'rt hy John ML Laughhn
Jill! the M&lt;~hJVtshnu On:hestra and
fl ootl'rofl WII h Jerry (;arcia &amp;
ll &lt;l Wdfd Wales. MLLaughhn JUSt
,,•leased an ;tlbum called Th••
lrrna llfmm/1111( Flam&lt;· and after
tuunng around the States tn order
to t.Jilllll.Jn/c the peopll• wrth h•s
tt~p·kvt:l louper rock, he'' ~:orne to
Uutlalo
John Md .JUghhn play\ gUitar,
111&lt;1 not only IS he levels above
,,nyhtHiy
but he'' umstantly
l!l'lllng hetter lle playe J wllh the
lor .IIIJ!11 Bond Organ11at10n a long
r1111&lt;' JI!O and for .1 whtle he
tr .rH·It:.l
w1th
thl'
rnuedthle
I •llnln IJ,Ifiii'WI , lhl' (ot'rffidn JC!Zl
.• rthl whom no one rn Amem: a
,.,,., IH·art.l of, unfnrtunately.
.,, l.Juv.hllll ll'tt 1--urnpl· tn jmn
thl'
lony
Willian!'.
lrktime.
'urd~ till' "l'.Jiof\ o l ~h,lt "1uld
h1 •. died the N..-w Rmt.. Ill- w,,,
"1111 lhl' ldetl!nc lor ,thrllll two
~l·.rr~ Junn~t whto..h I wu o~lhurm
"'''~ ll'l&lt;Hlled
I muJ(NI• 1 Jrll.l
lru•r It ol'&lt;f
!1.11d he alsu
ll'l &lt;Hdul wrth Mtle~ .1 few trrlll'l&gt;
It• ,, \llr•nt way Bttd\1.'\ ljH•w a111l

I 11 •

•

nl

Nov. 011 h1s own

Mdaughiln

ha~ sun:eeded 1n dt,r:uvenng four
mustctan'i who are good enough to
keep up Wtth tum . Btlly Ct1bha111,
t he drumnwr. 1s fwm Dream~.
Jerry Goml man , I he VJOhnist, I'&gt;
h om The Huck J.Jn llammcr.
keyboard... .
wa,
lree-lanctng
around . and 1he bu ... s piJycr. Rlt t..
Lmd , wa' fUSI there at the nghl
ttme. All of them form the trght
u ntt
ner:cssary
for
s11d1
~o phiStiCJ I Cd m USII..
Jerry l.areta rs, ol eo ut~c. Jerry
Garc1a Th en.~·s really no need tu
~;o mln any eden~J\11.' dt St.. USSlun
of how h1g the Ot:;~d have gott.:n
tn the la't year. But Garua ha'
done a lor o l hrand11ng uut lately,
playmg guttar ami steel guttar
wtth vanou~ grouplt to "broaden
hl~ hnn1ons " Lately . he teamed
up wttJl keyboa rd man Howard
Wales for Jn album un Dough!'&gt;
Rel'ord) lalled /loott•ro/1
Till•
re.pon~e w •• , gond enough for a
qut'k tour In he unt.krtat..cn ·\
,·,tutwn IS ncl'cssary lur .JII thml'
who cxpcd tn \ee a &lt;irat~:lul Uead
type ~ how , hccaus,· tl11~ atn't tl
fhl' ~how I) hc•nl! put '"' hy
lllJAB. anJ uct..ets .He S l '&gt;0 lor
'tudents .~nd $5 for m•ns It
should he one of the mort•
arlrsttLally pleaMng pcrformanr:e'
lt l the year Don ·r Jilt\' tl

Acareer in law ...
WllhOUIIBW SChOOl.
When you become a Lawyer's Ass•stant
you II do work. tradttlonally done by lawyers
work. wh1 c h ts challengtng. responstble
and tntellectually st1mulatmg. Lawyers
Ass1stants are now so cn t 1cally needed that
The lnstttute for Paralegal Tratntng can
offer you a post Iron tn the c•IY of your chotce
and a htgher starttng salary than you d
expect as a recent college graduate Here
1s a career as a professional wtth f1 nanc1al
rewards that rncrease w1th your develop•ng
expertise
If you are a student ol htgh academtc
standing and are Interested tn a legal
career. come speak w tth o u r represen ta t ive .
Con tac t the Placement Offtce
A representattve of The lnslttute
w tll vtsi t your campus on

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10
NOTE . 11 the above date 1s lflconvement to• you
please call or wnte The fnst1tute lor 1nlormatoo•1

The Institute for
Paralegal Training
13th floor. 401 Wa lnut St . Ph ifa. Pa 19106
215 WA 5-0905

On Frid ay J a n . 28 at 8 30 p m
tn the Fillmqre Room the UU A B
will be presenttng prohably one ul
A m erica's best sonj! wnter~ I
k n ow
that's 4U1te a heavy
recommendation
lor someone
who doesn't have an alhum yl!l tl
hear there IS one on the WJY
though) but few song.~ ol h•~ thJI
have been recorded hy lHttsts sul'h
dS the Byrds and '! om Kush ·••e
enough li.l jUStify Who.1t I' m S.Jytng
But more than that , I've jt'• 11
Ja c kson Browne .1nd t..11uw he hd'
a wholl: p.n: t.. ul son~~ the callher
of "Shadow Dream Sl1n1(''. " I hc\ l'
Days" , and " JJmal'ia "
Perhaps o.1 ltttle h1~ury ""ulll
be murder Around lllh7 J .. ,t..,llll
Browne w.Js hemg hcrJideJ hy .111
the trade papers dS the m·w \11~
poct~ongwnter lie w"' onl~ t•J
at the lillie If&lt;' h.HI &lt;."lllll( 11om
LA . and had heen thrown 11110
the
New
Yurt..
duh Sl:Cn&lt;'.
~pendmg Ius tlllll' .1nomp;~n1ng
N1u1 I hl' former lt!.H.l \111g_l.'l 1n the

V civet Underground
She ~uh~cquently re&lt;.:orded J
number of hts songs on ht:r ftr'l
album fCtr Verve. But 11 sccms that
all the hyp ..- and prcssurt:s proved
lou much for J a~ksnn and he
r..-treated haLk to the htlh out~tde
of LA
Penudi &lt;.:JIIy alter that therl'
would he rumors to t iH' l'flcl t
that Jaek'~'n was gotng to lome
&lt;lui ol htdtng to he ,, h1g ,tar . hut
l''Cu~pl for a few bnd .Jppearan.:t:\
wtth Luur.t Nyro !.1 numl&gt;er of
tl1elll I know he &lt;.:a n ~e lled out) Ill'
h.1sn't June Jnythtnj!. nattunally I
\JW JJ l l.. \l•n peri•Hrtl 111 d gutt.rr
\tuJw wt " '"' Stll'l'l tn SantJ
Morm.l lhtllng the d.tyt1me the
plan· ~olll gutturs Jnd g,tvt· lesson\
/1.1 ntght they moved cvl'ryrhtn)!
uti tu the 'ldl'' .111J set up dl.rus
j ,,,t..,on pl.,yed .1 1- rt.l.•&gt; Jml
SJturJJy lll!(ht Dill (I Wl'rtl hut h
111ghl\l wllh ~11111&lt;: lwl,(clahil'
Wll!IIJII \1111-\er
JJ l ~\IITI playcJ
lrr\1 on l11da y 111gh1 "' that h,

c.:ould go sec Leon R u,~sell a t th e
San ta
Montca
Ltvics
center
Saturday mght he tuld us all
about the concert. lie was rather
tm p rcso;ed
wllh
L eon'lt
showman~tup, but n1&gt;l a~ muc h as
JJm~ Brown
Browne exhthll\ quite
an
Jtlrdctrve, ~hy smile 11 thats g01ng
to attract anyone. li e has u more
than
adequate
v•ucc
though
perhap~ not great. and hts guttar
style I!&gt; 4llttc good But most
trllp•trtanl he g~ve~ hts 'ongs t h e
'"""IIVt' rc11dcnng they need, and
an evemng wat c h1ng lum perform
4urte a wurth-whtle expene nce
Remcmh er not gomg wLII be
ynur o wn punishmen t when he'!&gt;
htn1ou~ 1n .1 httlt· whtle 11nd your
p:ry111g \CHill' rlUI ragcnu' pnce for
Ill" t'l~

Also "" I hl· hill \.\ rll he Bat
MLC.rath .111d Dott l'ollcr. two
"lncnd' ' .. rt ' llll ~k M.ln!UIIfll!, a nd
Na tural
l( ohhtc L P WmJn

Jack McGowran

Beckett per_formed at its best
I a~l 1 hursd..ry
l:icckellt~nt

hunched

cv..-nmg
11 ~

thL·

way

qumtel&gt;,CilLC ol

a rc vrtal11c(l

Ollt••

ll..trfllllJII fheatre stage and ~unc..-dcd 111 lJp tllrtng
the teal\ dttd IJuK!Hcr uf a lull h•tuse thruu11.h 11s

J

\l'll\U.tl IIIJ\It'lpll't..e a/\ Inial a-.hll'VC!liCIII, wholly

"llll'lttllled hy M 1

lk..:kctt h11nsell

mJI&lt;'rt.JI wa' &lt;'ven wnttell
per lor niJOLl' by M r Bcd.l'll

S11111e of the

cspeuall)

lor

the

dcdeptl Wll .trH.I g.ra\pol stngul,trtt y
Pcr~um ftl'd 1111 J hvm~ . Vlltrant s tagL' . v1a thL'

J(lor/ prte'l Jad&lt;. MdlllWIJII the v.tllllll~ W111t..' .11ul
worth ol 5,Jillllel lkd.ett boumcd altvc Jlld
elcctn tyulg Rapt wllh spell bound Jllellltttn, the
audtL·nce 1a11 1he ~tnlut of
lkckett \
work

Pcf\n na l I nt e rp re ta tion
Yl'l d~\ptte Jll the 'he~·• thcatmal 'plcndor nl
the Wllllh uf the Jdllllb llf the CIIIUI I\IOS, tht~
rev1cwcr l'Otrldu 't help hut ll'el saddened by young

hl!l ltfe ts shcer beauty tu CApenerH:C

people ta~ well a\ uld) putltng lorth \llch tntensc
lceltn!!. mto ""netlung wh1 ch 1~ t)ld. 'omcthing th at
t\ wntte11 by an uld lonely man for thu~c who are
uld .1111.1 lunely I d,,n 'tttunk Beckett ts a poet of the

The o ld man
Bent •tvcr wllh

,111 anal'hront~lll nut able to
a lll'W agl', a 11ew !!l'llCrJtron, whose
lrupc' and It•,"' and hvn Lannut and will 1101 be

enmttt~ nally . from 'ympathy 111 L'lllpathy

The JOY
..rut! sadne~ uf u11~ human he1111!.' Wtltd/rc.JLilllll'&gt; to

1

new

hh'. UH''"'d 111

,ft,thhy ~ll')'

.1

..:oal wtth 'h"L'' '"old thell Ull\lllll''~ lllUid hl' kit
throughout th~· llllllll :nul wllh ,f fll'r'•'ll'lll ttdt 1111
Itt\ bJc ks1ll c

a~e.

Ill'

I'

~\llll''Jl"ncJ w1tlr

J ;h.k Md;owrau hll•tJgftt

111 ltlc wtth

lllllll:tllllJtl' tende11tl'" Lk.. ~ctt' w orth
I ht•'c
ranged Irom 1 utk} ·, 'fl&lt;.:cdt 111 C,'nt/nl tn .1 1!1&lt;•\\lflg
IIHI!llelll ICifmg ol J \\lllte lrPI\l' Ill! ,J J.11 dt\lalll

\ll'l'JX'Lf rn '"htlldl'

.uH.I

wa111ng

11 "

.111

audrence

wludt " lllllt''Jl"lll.lllt~ In "' liiOthlton cle.tn~.·a lly
.111d 1 ill'lllll'ally W.lllllll! l&lt;ll thl'lll I' 111111-I'Xl~le u t.

I h&lt;'\' h.tve 1111 ltllll' ''" hcrng
what Y...ttllng • .111 tin

''·•II•

Wh.•t o.:o~n h.•JlP''" '" .. tJu' lhJt lltll\1 be
tlllllllllally rcllllltdc•d nl tis llll'lllllltdt• ,111cl ultllll:JtC

ho11/llll hetng lollownl hy J dwar t.·J ligurt•

1

Sk1lllully l&lt;lltthllllllg the pal ft,, ami h!l.utt y ol
all l&gt;f Bed,ett \ di.HJlll'f\, Ml.(,.,wrJn 111'1 1111gltt

111\l~llrf ll.lllll' 1 ( ;Ill II \II! VI Ill' Ill will Wl' hCutmC
ll,lllllll JIILf ( hove 11111111~ aY..JY Ill IIIII hJ\C!lll'nh

have hecn

the CoJt&gt;l

cxpc, ted

fnr

"' l o11~ hy

VI :.ttl 111111

and h s l ragtlll "' IIIJVIH' :r yo u I h lui
(,ornpJrtllvcly that I\) 11.1111111 hdt&lt;f&lt;' thl' .uiVl'nt 111

'P'"'

l.k.ultn Vlt.rlrty .rml lre\lt
1--VI'rvnn&lt;' know~ the !!ICJirtl'S\ nl Bc,kc tt.

All I

,··"' .l1• '' qu&lt;~t~· hnn ,tn&lt;l '·')' · qu..rqiiJijll:t'tiiJ

Ill, lrft'
Wh •tfi'VI'I he

w ··~

Me( ri\Wf:HI '

(l&lt;.'f

orr• ...... "''"

------tiMoVJ....a....41"'-le...__S~mherst Strawdogs
Granada . Freaks!The Night of The L1vrng Dead
Old Rivolt For Whom the Bell Tolls
Kensington 2001 . A Space Odyssey
Conference Theater Ramparts of Clay /Talt.1ng Off
Studro Ar ~na The Tna/ of the Canronsvlfle Nme
Hoi iday 2 · Star Spangled Girl
Holrday 1 The French Connection
Loew's T eck Amencan Sexual Revolut1on
Loew's Buffalo Diamonds Are Forever
Center The Last Movie/The Hired Hand
Penthouse Honk.y
Colvin· D1amonds Are Forever
Crnema 1 The Go Between
Crnema 2: Dlfty Harry
Plaza Nonh : Fiddler on the Roof
Crnema: Srrawdogs
North Park . The Last Movte/The Hired Ham/
Towne : Gone Wi th The Wind
Bail ey : Tok.lat
Backstage · Dirty Harry
Palace: Refinements In Love/The Harem Bunch
Sheridan Orive·in : The Anderson Tapes/Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice
West Twin Drive-in : Women In Cages/The Sterile Cuckoo
Park D rive·m : Catch 22/Goodbye Columbus

~ra: Th8

Llldy IJf'ld Tllh Tramp

Jost'plr / r•mbut
~ NEW ST UDI:I" T \1 ENU _:

her

-

:-l rvt:r and l:irown K•ce S 1 . ~ 5
CdltforrHd Swinger .... 1.95
H ambu r ger Strog,moff I .45
Sma ll Sirloin Stedk
(Borll'le~s) 1.45

Chtcl.. cn

Roqudnr 1

1 .65

I . 75

Beef Bourgui n on
Choice Omelet

.... 1 . 35

Ground Beef {Organic) 1 .45
P etite Ftlt-1 M '~non

.. 1.95

V egetJbk rem p Utd,
~r own Rtce 1 .45

Vegetable Scal l op~.
B r own Rice 1 .65

1 .65

Roast Sesame C h ickl'n

l:gg P lant Parmesi.w .. 1.75
a nd m any dai ly specials

ONE C.EN'f SAt_E oN NDII/
117

-

_. -

-

-

II.&amp;CIIIIITB SliP

51.a.w.;;.~ .._. ':itiua
,... ......., .,._.. .........

.....l

-----------~~---llliililiilliiiiiil

Friday , January 28, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

...

�Commentary

Depression~· eye of the storm
men as Samuelson. Freidman, Arthur
Burns. etc.

by Ina Liebowitz
Spt:C'rol tn Thr Spnrnun

One rr1onth Jltrr the wurld\ hJnl&gt;.er!&gt; Depression
Depressu.m s n~.crrr exadly a~ thrs one
"re-ahgnetl" world flhlllCY. \turul d1lud~
111 "depres~1ng t:~ll&gt;." are g;Hhcring Ill
I)
proceed mg. The cnsrs is c:IUsed by,
.111J .h..ce lerates, a growrng tl 1screpancy
l·urope and the li.S. This i~ not to
that the pre!&gt;t'nt 'JX'llllative run lln the h~·t ween tutal cxr~ttng paper capilaJ
dollar. terrtfymg I uwpe once aga1n wrll ( \tll~k!o, bond~. lliiiCilCie\, etl .) and
be the t11ggcr Ill the Atlllnt~ i\gc
pruJudlllll ul real wealth upon whtt:h
Depres~ton . 'There are ..everal temp111Jry
hunrartrty\ eXI\tent:e actually depend!&gt;. In present one. merely forces the fad of
nther word'&gt;, a grnw111g lwtly tlf paper ~uch a "d iscrepancy'' in lo the perhaps
measures that 1'1111/d put dcprcssron olf
tJOtil late l'n~
rap1tal {MI mcrcaMng pur 111111 ttl wllldl IS unrecepuve minds of experts in these
mailers. The crisis of underproduction
I H IIIIOUf&gt;) ultimately lllU\t lJII upon
Depre ss 1on~ .uc mcJ~urcJ 111 the
\ome ltll m nf r~al wealth ll&gt; rcahte 1ts become~ J
monetary cns1~ 111 the
starvatron anti Jlllllllllallon 11f rrnlhu11' ul
f olluwln(! way . Beg10nmg 111 1965
I he human I J~t:
[ he LJUc;('~ Ill till\ "11'11 1111 ' \II "prtlftl.'
Wh.rt h." hecn " uverluol&gt;.ed" by especrally . a~ rates ol real wealth 10 the
tJ e pre\\ 11• n
:1 l r 1sr s ul IJ w I u I
CUtllllllii\IS
I~ a lllng CXI\IInjl. criSIS of
"Thtrd World" and Europe began to
underprt•tlultrPII , Ill the entrre worlt.l
wtdt'r{lrodul'tiwt
ol
rc:.tl
"ICIJI
wealth
10
level a~ ava1IJble "profit" 111 prop&lt;ll t1on
ecunorny. can already be mc:,1~uretl 111
the wlllld i\c;rdc flllrtl t'VIJCrtl'C available to ex 1sting t::tpital, an acce lerating ral(•
~uch things as the ~7-ye:tr·h,ng-live~ ol
by cuunfmg the rrtiiiH•n'&gt; ul human of ~:1edit fnrmaiHtll was adopted by the
mill ion~ below I he T 111prc ul C.tlllCr. 10
hcu1g\ 11tl the !&gt;(.r.tp heat· of '&gt;Ut:II.'IY who cap11alt't nattom as a whole . lnnation .
Urban Rtll . tn .111 forms of misery wh1d1
arl' no longer lJpahlr ol prndrKIIVc ltves. Government\ o111d lither~ began pumpmg
)o mdww well' tlvcrluol&gt;.ed hy the
there Jre m.uty "cullllllllll" rtldlc.Jturs. credit 111 to the cr.;unumy tn pruv1de Jn
affluence ccoottrrmb. Thts deprn~111n
Madunc 111111 orders now '&gt;IJnd at SO per Immediate , ttt:lltiOUS " 1eturn" 1111
wh1ch we con front lllUid very well mean
.:cut U.S. et:llnomy " furu:trunu1g at 73 outstandmg llltal debr. 111 t:.Jprtal. The
the end 11f the human race as we knuw
11, unle~s we are prepared to admm 1stcr
per ~ cnl of even ''·' ohsol€!tt' and "solut ion" ts ~hur t term. A~ holders of
the proper lUte
m.vujfit'lt'lll r·uput 'lll'. Numbt'l\ of rdh:d
capttal-debt accept this cret11 1. they
The subjCt:t tlf this ftrst 111 a sene' nl
\\-trrke-r~. th11~ hemg \larved to dealh m
merely put off until tomorrow theu
.Jrllde!&gt;. 1S prelmllnary mvesllg:llwn to
wdf •.rre "fulled lahn1" \lhernr,, .rrc .1bu demand fnr ~nnlt' form of rtal wci.Jth
establish 1wn IJll s fi'rvl . We are alreud}'
"Tomorrow" uf course feature~ a thus
ava1lahft:
enterlll)l a dcplt'\\11111 .\('('UIId . 1-l.lll\lflll(\
A glant:c at tht world ·wtde lwusrng enlarged total debt demand for the Still
taught Jt all U.S ~arnpuses. ha~ heer1
s hrtnk rng body of real wealth'
~htHtJ~e. fl1oll
~tutage and c\pt:t:lally
deciSively dt~~reJ111:d by the event~ 111
thr.;· tact th;.~t the .~lumlord of /ivi11g tn ''Tomorrow" was Aug. 15 1
Aug. I 'i Totlav the p.hb assurJflt:C\ that
ar t':l\ ~ut:h J\ South i\mcoca have
By thus issumg themselves l OU's 10
the tt:11nomy "-J' "hu11t-m 'tahtlttctl "
ut·tiiiJIII' go/It'll worst• ~llllC World War
the furr11 of aedlt, the capitalist class as
''deptt'\\11111 JlllHlf" et~
brrng'
a whole becomes indebted to tlself. has
II " l'VIdenle enough
embarra,~nwnt
to the lace~ uf thc-.c
a "balance of payments" deficit to Itself
· experl!.·IO·mJIICrl&gt;-ul -wtShful thmkrng '
Monetary crish
The tnternat1onal monetary system,
We wdl bnc
rcv1ew the recmtl tll ~uch
A
tend to

"'Y

they represent the ull 1mate " last call"
f(lrm of th is mushrnom1ng cred1t The
speculation agamst the thus den uded
dollar 111 Germany . which u nhinged the
1nternat1onal monetary arrJngements un
1\ug. 15. thus pruves twu essentral
thmgs The measure t&gt;f the worthlessness
of all p.1per capital, espe~1ally the dollar
Second ly. the mu~h talked about $1 J
btllion deficit of the U.S. was merely a
measurement at one national border uf
the \c l f- tndebtednes~ nl tire entrrc
l'lllrltllliY I
Depre~ion

- thingb gel wo~
The t:r1s1s. a u11lapsc lll 1111ernatrttnal
exdl.Jnge wtuch was narrowly avoided 1111
Aug . l'i . will trtggcr an at:tual
Jep1cr.ston. World trade , produdton for
export. ceases: employmen I, consurnpt 11111
etl w1ll also cea:.e lur mtllrurt:.. That
lYf..'lflnlt disaste1 began to o(lllf
cNpCCIJIIy durmg the lunr 111nnlh~ aftef
Aug IS befure ~~1me "re-alignment" of
exchange rates was arranged . (It was th1:.
chaos wh1ch accompanre\ " lluatmg" the
c u rrencres. which ha~ ~au..e d Mrhou
Fre1dman tu repud1a1e hi\ enure Wilting~
whrch 1gnnrantly p1uposed exactly the

UUAB * Presents the

SAN FRANCISCO JAM BAND
HOOTEROLL
Staffing

JERRY GARCIA
AND

HOWARD WALES
Special Guest Star

The MAHAVISHNU ORCHESTRA with Jon Mclaughlin

)

Thf~

MHhawlshnu Orchestra

"'"' tohn Mc:LIIuohlln

TtM: lnnt:r Mounting t1amc

~

,.

!

....~

.(~ .

"Tile Inner Mounlina Flame" 1s the

title of

'The Mahavlshnu Otthest•a's new album.

wh•ch features John McLaughlin. vtofintst
Jerry Goodmen (Flock). Billy Cobham
(M•Ies DaviS, Ftllh Dimension) and some
super support .

(Each LP available for $3.28 at the Record Runner, Univ. Plaza)

Huffy/ Tickets going quicklyi

THE CONCERT STARTS

SATURDAY EVENING . . .JAN. 29
at 9 p.m. at the Century Movie Theatre
~.. :.Qll ..Main St~--

Tickets: $3.50 students
$5.00 public
On sale at Norton Union and

Buffalo State College

---------------------~
II1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111•A Owh/onofSubBOMd /, lnc. lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll..lllllllll
. •~~ . • n

_ ,... .

.JtTO

"""

r

()" · -

•

•

.,

Page fourteen . ~e Spectrum . Friday, January 28, 1972

�RECORDS

that o ne " N o Ma tte r What" was a mino r

hit.

aU. It can si m ply be a tt ribute d t o the fa c t
that Carol-e Ki ng Is n o w writing m ost a:&gt;f her
lyrics instead o f Gerry Goffin , o r T o n i
Stem , o r D . Pa lm e r ( who eve r they an:). On
he r first tw o al b ums th ese three p•eo ple
wrote so me bea utifu l ly rics. In fa ct., th e
lyria o n " It 's T oo L a te Baby" perh ali&gt;S th e
best n e w so n&amp; on the Ta~stry alb um w e re
w ri tte n by T o n i Stern .
Obviously th e re are a num b ~:r of
pro b le m s
a nd
fee lings
tha t
arc
gen era ti o na lly
a nd
cu ltu rally · quite
common. Son gwn ters , p articula rly the
good ones, capture problems wit h a 1!&gt;11 of
poet ry a nd our music. Certain prolt&gt; lems
a nd feelings hke teeling lost and empny a re
recu rri ng t hemes H owever compar•: th e
ly rics from the song " P arad1se Al ley" nff
Th e City albu m
Take me c&gt;n down to the pasturt'S of

Music Carol~ King (Od~ S P 770 13)
By now everyone must know who Carole
KJng IS Everyon e s hould su rely be able to
ro~ttle off the nam es of a few of t he hits s h e
and Gerry Goffin w rote
t h e six ti es.
)IXIJes were t he t ime w h en Carole King
111ade stars of o th e r peo ple through her
, 0 ngs and the sevent ies are th e times when
t arole Ki ng is maki n g herself a star
1hrnugh her own songs.
Un fortunately, the quality of the songs
,h\: has been writing has dec1dedly fallen
nil s1nce she became • s t :n It seems very
, , range to me that the~e songs (the o ne' o n
the Tapestry and Mus1c albums) s hould
p1npcl her to b1ggest s tard om. It 's not that
1hnl' two albums don't 1nclude some good
101 very good c uts . It 's JU~t that the Wnter
tll!UIII (her fl~t \O(I) album) and The (io•
tlhum fan album ,he d1d w1th Dann y
.,_,,,t,h and Charl1c Larkey I are JUSt
, ,,cltc:nt
1 111 not rea II y ~u re I c an ex pia m why
t .tr••lt: Kmg h as become such a hit now , o r
,,.,dly how much of 11 was a matl~r nt
lm 1. o~nd huw much o t 11 was a matter ut
11111111~ I'd like to try and explain why I
"'"'''r her earlu:r o~lbum s and maybe I t.:.tn
h11 upon J few rca,ons Jnd InSights
lq!Jfdlllg ht:r SUCCt'\S
I ht' f1rst tlung that 1m mediately s truck
"'" Jhout the n ew a lbum M us1c was t h a t it
"'·', hnn ng
Th l' mu~t c has become
p.all,·annl Jmt slln~d \!.I IJy 1n my room
mnj!. .111 1 ,,.,... ,~J to be heJ nng wJ s
ll,utn~ "-ontd1 jliJ')-111~ riff, that :.eem hke
th,
,hould h' 111 &lt;•t her so ngs. Jame:.
l111.. r ''111!111&amp; \l.Jdup' 1n the same old
111nl way and (' arnk Kmg makmg the same
llllt'c' ~ he m ;ulc otl th t· '·'"'album .
' ' .1 m,tl 1l'l ol f. "
1he wlwlt album
,,., " hkc ..a ho~ll,"v ,, , ' cot a CJrulc K1ng
tlh11111
I t..a &gt;W lh 11 11 lll tght ~ound
'"'" ulnu~ ·" u-;1111!
mcnne ol c.:opymg
th•"IIIW ivc' bul at ~cc . , thJt th.: well from
"hnc \he " 1 t.. ·d h1•r 1111 formuld hJ~ run
&lt;ll\
,,, "'·''' the c.:r.:,tltw p.trl has.
I hl' o1 h .:1 as ped of the album th.JI
llllntcdlat e ly dnesn'l ~,tr lh me'' t he lyn L'
It ' nnt thai I hey arc p.1rll~ uiJrly o fl ~ n s1vt:
!Cather 11\ t hJt the y Jr c lur lht' mn~t pJrl
f'Jili•UIJtl~ 1111thmg. lhcy '&gt;et'lll Ill ht: J
'·1)!11\' .:olleduln nf
tiiUral d1dw' golf\~
II11Uild
fh t' d.ibllll t lt:hleV~!&gt; very IC\\
lllnll\~nb o l :my t y p l.' 1 pt.'rsonal fl.'d
I h" trend starl ,·d o n t h~ 7'«fl&lt;'llft'
alhum . It seem~ the '1111\11-S arc wntt e n w1th
1111." 1dea of rdlec.:t1ng the c urrent c ultun.al
1n·nd' and feeling:. ralher than per,onal
that happen lo renect o ur cultural
tco:hnj!.S. A song bJ..c "You've Got a
I ncnd'' work s very well th1s way and I WJ'&gt;
really glad thdt tl was wntt e n . So many of
hl'r o ther songs lad , h owever.
I h~
'l'ntlments seem trite and hollow
It mjght see m odd that the qyabt Y o t
('arole King's Iyn es shouJd decline over the
lu!&gt;l two albums. but 11 really isn't odd at

m

The

plenty
Delivn from tile" Vt•r o/ nont'
I'm abo ut to drown , and m v r up rs so
empt_Y
Pleau fer me J.now when m .v t1m e lla.r

cume with any tlung sh e has written dt::t hng
wit h the same feeltngs of her last two
albums.
I don 't know 1f the problem he' 1n the
fa c t that Carole's trymg too hard t o wnte
for I he c ulture o r that her I yncal
.:apabihties are tntcly like the &lt;.IJrrent
cons ciOusness. Smce th e record tndustry
and lhe lyn cal cont e n1 o f song:, tend' to
innuence current consc10usness 1n "
watered down form , I'm n o t too ~u,rc we
don't have a case o f that gone full .:y de
I d on' t mean to be hard o n Carol e and
her new album
It 's JUSI that 11 ·, so
d•ssappomtmg What I recommend you do
1f you haven't gone o ut and bought her
new album IS t o go down to the Co~•P and
o rder her o ther tw o albums. Bo th o t them
are on Ode After hearing them. (1f you
haven't heard them already I you'll
understand why I'm so disappOint ed

- Rn bbu· Lowman

1"'

''"'&amp;S

Live-I:. vii Mlfet l)aan (Co l c; UJY ~4)
Alhl'll Aykr l\t111/d 1111 J d Jk 111 huup.:.
run oul ul mont:y . and h..111~ tu mdkc ,,
record 111 order w get up the bread tu LOme
h ome . H ome Amema w as so glad In St!l'
him t hai he JUI!lflt!d In lht• nvcr
M11111 11 rlt,• Jwa/111~ (llrt&lt;'. hut ntal Y•HII
lllU\1\ het\ \ &lt;Ill j!lllt,l IJ.'Jrrl I ll rt.1y II~&lt;'
~t.an (,&lt;'II 01 lb vt· Brubt:, k I h.tl', 11111\t&lt;
h ny 1\,iwll' ••I y,1ur hl.,,t.. \ llll \ uu 'n• hi.J "Jfld )IIIli pl.ty hi.JL (.. 01!" .11111 Wl' don'( W.JIII
you , hoy Now !(1 1. Jlltl d tln' t 'onw h.l~l-.
11\ .1 lt'rllbk I hill!! tn tw ,..,,., ••·d '" .a
man . o~nd 11 ', .alinus l •" ll"fllhk I" Ill'
fl'jl:lll'd ,1\ .111 .trll'l lmJ).!IIll' hl"lll)! ll"ll"llt'tl
for tllll' hi"•JII'l nl lit•· ••llwr \u
1&gt;\,.
\llwrl
h~H· a ph'a,o~nt dl"" 11
Wh.-n I r.mk WIIJ.!h l W.J' 1111 Wl-..1 K an
Nnv \ .art.. Cal) .1 It""' wed,, ·'!!" h,
Jntl&lt;~lllll• J 1h .al h•·'d Itt: dnlllJ.! .a 'h"w .11
l'rlllt &lt;' ~ 11 ee1 f t.HII- h;11l InTI! 111 Nc "' \ '" ~
lnf , 1 I)UIIliWr o l Wl'L' I,. ,, IICII Wtll~lllg. I ~ I
f'11 u· \(H'•'l I\ llrnell&lt;' ( ok lllJil \ hJ"&gt;I'IIIl'&lt;ll
lo ll It\ tlttl ..1 duh. 111'1 .a h1g ''"'"' wh•·rt·
()rn,•lll' .-u t I ncnol1 a•1d \, a.:hhofl and
wh• H ''~' .l'l•lll.JII} llHI'I&lt;I.JII' Ill&gt;.•• I 1 Jlllo.
W111'h l (Wif,.rm I ht: 'ho\\ w.l\ In ht Ill&lt;'
I.J\1 lolll\1 1 .app l'Jran~t• nl llll' qu.ult'l
ht•ltm• IIH'Y ht'Jd l·d lot I urupc I u rnp•·
J-r ~ul ~ h,11l w11h l11111 tlll WK('K a p.Jrt nl
:a t,Jflt" hl· 111./lh' o l ,1 hvl.' pt•rl&lt;lllll:tll&lt;'l' .ahll tll
" ' Wl'l'b t:a 11ier 10 P h.tadelphl.a On 11 w."
\llrlll' f.1r •1111 fret: form pi.JYIIlt!. (&lt;Ill~·.
l'IIIOIIIIII.tl .1nd tugethcr II wa~ L alll-dl'&lt;'un
On 1l1t• C nn•t•rtull'latlt'l, Jlld 11\ \I !Ill\ to lw
n\JdL' mlo ,1 two-r.:L&lt;IId '&gt;Ct. II wtll ht·
rek ... scd 10 I urllpt
r hc Nt•w Ja/7 i~ blal ~ I he 11\USICIJO,
drt· blu,•k . th e mtcndcd aut iiCilt:l' •~ hlat:J.. ,
and th,• pu rp o~ IS to c x press hla c k nc s!&gt;
1h r uu gh ITIU!&gt;II. . toward s a seno;c t&gt; l

J.!"""

S traigh t Up Radfmxer ( •I pple ST 1187)
N.aw thJI tit• ll .an~IJ llt:\h Jtlhllllt
e\lr,tvagan/J " 111 ..11 the alllth!ll l lt11111e'
.. , ru" •\menL.J llll'rl''\ .J ~m.dl ~ llan •t:
,ornl'llne nughl reJh/c lhJI then:\., l•tGhl y
gifted group o l mu\l c.:lan' thJI han!( .JICIUihl
Apple r~u&gt;rJ~ Jnd m.tkt' really goo._t ftlll\h
f"IH' group ~~ IJ,tdlmgCI and tht:ll m'"
alhum. StrOIJ:hl (/11," a gem.
Badftnger ll r~t ..:.11 ne to light 111 'HUXI•
( 'hnuwn , Rmgo \ 111~1 brg movae rol&lt;
rhey d1d J few sung~ lor the suuruJtr.tl lo.
o~nd nm· ul th~m . " ( o we and (,et It ," w11h
J cal c.: h y l i llie rnd o dy , ht:lJillt: ..1
sub!&gt;tJntwl h 11 I h1'1f lp, M11g1C Cilr.t.lfWII
Mus1c, came ou! )Oun dfterwards and
proceeded to b o mb uul. e ven thou~h 11 wa s
.J fine re cord . f he next o ne, No D1t t', was
better, but also d1dn'l sell. A smgle from

Valentine Candy .N'6W
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The h it s.i nlle from S traight Up is " Day
Afte r D ay," w h ic h I th.inJc is the best 4 5 in
m o nths. Good c atc h y m e lo dy aga in, som e
great Beatle-s ty le harm o n ies, a G e o rge
H arrison g uit a r bre ak . l n!lvitably, the band
is always looke d upo n as a k ind o f Bea tie
tak e-off (around Rubber Sou l h me ) and
th at's p robably true, but it d oeSR't m ake
the 1r music any le.ss exclt mg or
e n tert ammg. T hey are a true p op grou p.
wi th a lm ost no prete n sio ns o f be ing heavy
o r relevant , wh1c h is some a ccomp lishme nt
these d ays.
Most of the vocals a re spht up bet w een
Peter ll am, the lead gu1tan s t a nd J oey
Molland , rhy thm gu1tanst. Contrary to
pop ular opm1on, Ham ts not the one th a t
sounds h kc P aul McCart ney. It's Tom
Evan s, th e b o~ss player, wh o a ls() plays like
McCartney. Th e d ru mmer )Ou nd s lik e
Ringo when h e p lays, an d the g u tlar w o rk
is a c ross between H arrison a n d Clapton.
These guys are very confuSing None of
them play ptano, but the re's a lo t of p ia n o
on thelf J lhu1m
I'll hll you w1th the new the o ry I used
to th mk thJI Badfmger was the Beatles.
After oil . there wac nn las l name ' lis ted on
the ir firs t re ..:ord and p1 c tures of only th ree
of them On t he second album. they had
b1g PlLturelo. n l .til of~ hern , w1th the1r full
names hs ted by ead i p!dure Confustng.
huh 'l Then . the pwcr de rest~tantr, Pete
H am \ hOW !&gt; up 10 play the .Jt.:nuSil C gu1tar
o n " Here Come~ the Sun" on Bangia Desh
Sound~ JUSI like lhc glutar o n Abht'l' R oot) .
You rneJn '! I hal 's nghl. T hey ' re rea lly 1111.'
s tud1 o mu s1..:1ans fo r t he Bcatles Af lcr all,
Ge o rg~ \:tid •m the Cavett sho w thttt th.:rc
were n1ne ur te n Beatie\ Maybe \Omeone
wanden·d 1nl o lhe ~ 1ud10 Jnd \:IW l v;ar.piJymg Md.'Jrln..:y's po~rts and lhat \ h o w
the " PJul 1s de..1J" rumor ~t.m~J
AnywJy , th e re,ord\ really grt:JI and .1
whole Jlhu111 ·~ c heaper 111 tht: io n): 11111
than ..1 s1nglc:. ~~~ why nol ''
lit ill' A /11111111

'l

DPEI TILLIIIIIHT ~
31. IAIUY Aftll(

communio n , pride and s trength . But th e
s uppo r t for the New J a zz by the black
community has bee n di.sappo intinB to say
the least. Frank said it' s understandable ,
sin ce the p e o ple don't h a ve th at muc h
mone y to go to the conce rts o r to buy the
record s. But w hen it was p o in te d o u t th at
they have m o ney fo r the Jac kson Five and
the Te mpt&lt;~ tions, h e had no answ e r.
A fe w years ag o, Miles Davis was
dC~covered b y the roc k w o rld with B itchts
B rew. There h ave always hec n t hree grea t
thmg.s abo u t Mit es - h L'i gro up , his b o rn
playing an d the mu sic al setting. The group

and t he music have undergo ne big c hanges
th ro ugh th..: ye a rs. fro m the Colt ran e-bop
days lo the Tony Wilhams~upermu s1c d ay!.
l&lt;l the Ch1c k C orea-elec tn c.
Bttch··~ Brew won .til the JWards , but
Mlft•.v A 1 Tlu• Fillmorl:' wa ~ th.: land m ark
lor 11s l&gt;ht:t•r explos111Cne~~ a11d •nnovatlon .
Jail pun'h called 11 l'lednL 1&lt;~77, h u t 11
WJ!&gt; rnLk Jtl the way
the most exc1 11ng.
larlht:\1 u ul , t rees! , wald c~l rut-k you'll ever
ht:..ar \ lUl.tlly, M1les wa&gt; \lrll playmg hi !&gt;
u ltl JJ// 11fh _hke he Jlway\ dtd , but the
W.J W.J Pl'd,ll he hoo ked ur tn ht' trumpe t
mJdl' all lhc d1tfercnn· \nd lht• dec tm.
kt•y ht hlrd \ Wtlh ~ hunt:h uf l TollY dCVlCC~
whll h t. Jn bend and lw1\l .1 note 1010 any
, &lt;lllt.:I.'IVabk ~ound t.Unlnbutcd tu the
JlruiJlm ml lux
I 11••· I v1/ ,., mud1 du...:t 1u '' t o~tgh l rot. k
lhJI1 I 1 1 lit· l•tll m nr&lt;' and 11111 surpnsmr)y ,
m u rl' hunng. lhcfl 1~ J lui more
.;om:en t rallon on th e part ' '' lhe muSician :.
who. hy tht' way , Jrc .ll111oSt all tanu liar
lilll'' ll.l•ath JJrrel , J,, ~.· l. l kJohm•fte. J o h n
Md .Jlll(hlm (,,,ry Ha rt l ·\arrn Mnrl'ara and
M ldl.Jl'l I ll·udc l\o n du111111Jil' ..111 lour ~•des
ul lh•· .ll h ttn a. Jlld lh ere ..a ll' •.tllltos by
'N .aynl 'ihulh'f
1 htd.
llerb&gt;e
IIJ n"'' t.. DJW ll t~ll.wd. lm• /awmul. Ron
I .lll t'l Jlld .1 lew &lt;JIIit'l\ C.,11y UJr ll Jlld
l.ll ~ l)d olllll' llt' lll' V•'I
'liiHil'J "' guod .
111d Ml"l ,aughhu .and
1111 1'11 ·"'' Jlway~
)!11'·11 '\u '' \of~~~'
I h• '' "..1 ll'l'!lll~ ul ~· ~~~II .1 H'l) ,ubth:
jlllll&gt;llli:. fill a Ill'" 11111 I&lt;' I 11! '"Ill&lt; ktnd
1 hl'lt: .art· "" hreaklhrou~th' 1111
/;111/
hut 11 hJ\ 11\ lli•HIII.'nl \
J, l, ,· the
'N .Ht.Jtlun" by ( liiHad R 11hl'lh wh1d1
IIIIlS( hl' hl',lld 10 bl." ndan-t:tl 1\ nd II\ fu ll
nl th e ht:~l clcLIII• Nn• I( &lt;H ~ hc1ng
pl.ayt•tl
II\ I h i.' Yi.l ) t!JJ ~ 11\1 111111\\' lh..al Oil
hJrt~ ln1 till' llllh&lt;'lllllg .!00
Blllho.thl'
.alhu111~ ul lh&lt;' Yl'JI ~111,·, I&gt;.JVI' ...,_,,n'l.:ven
lhlt•d, c olti .JIIt: w.l\n'l ,,,I,·J t.ll'!&gt;l'llc thl'
•••k.t\l' ol Sun S/atf1 til Alll(lhl an IJd , CHI
lllll' W.l\ ll\l l' d
AI thl' en d 111 l1.111t.. Wtt ~hl\ lllll'IVII.'W
''" Wll.t ' l{ , lw wa!&gt; d!&gt;ked 11 he hJJ Jnytlung
,•1\t• 111 'JY hclorc he lett I augj11ng I rom
tht• p.1111 Jnd lru!&gt;lrat1on ol 111e J hsurd uy o t
the tlhVhl U\Ill'~~- he ~a1ll 'Wt• wuuld hke to
pl.tY IIH lh• pl.'opk ol
t:W \ ut k " And
wlwn ,\I tnt• I f Tla,· 11&lt;'11/IIIJ: I '"' 1 OJ Th e
Clrrr \'t'rlt', W1flt Albc11 Ayll'r playtng lhe
v.:ry e~SC II •C u t hi' ~p111t , th.: tnnermosl
,·ry
lUOVtli iOO tt l hiS !&gt;OU]

I"""·'

I,.,

Norman Salon/

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Friday, January 28, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen
\

�Depression.

-continued from .,.ge 14-

• •

last f&lt;fur month's floating terror.)
In short , a depression is a cnsas an
Capital paper which paralyzes exchange
and therefore further "busts"
productiOn. This cnsis causes a plunge
downward and ts caused hy a lawful
pnor •·gradual" decline in produ~ tl tln
and therefore human production
non-solution
There as developmg a certasn proposed
solut1on among economists, governments
and pre sadent~
wage gougmg . Th1s
poLicy ancludes: wage-contro ls, anflatmn
and taxation. The purpose of this po hcy,
also called " austerity" go vernment . is to
suck needed real wea1th from the very
bodies and hvmg standards of the
world' s wor king and unemployed
populataons N~w we wall step back 10
examane the "r~ord"' of noted experts·
on the subject nf depression wh1d1 •~
upon u~ .
Wage gouging

What do econo'mists know?
The crt'den tials '&gt;! the world\ leadtug
l'~onomas t s were revol&lt;t'd on Au~
I 'i
Theu almost entire collected work ~
maantamed tl1a1 day was unposs1hlc The
economy 1\ "depression pronl ," or at
least an \llme technu..al sen\~! 11 "
wpposcd h• be ''depres~mn proof "
Paul ~.lluUd\llll
tlw m;an \\'h,,-,c
\.Hil) .... , rt'&lt;J. JQ/
!&gt; IUJCOI~ pay 'O IIIUdl
tur
reletvcd the Nnhd Pr11e lor
\Jyang thang' such a' tim " The mnllern

fisca l sys tem has grea t in herent
stabilizing properties. AU through the
day and night , whether o r not the
President IS to be found m the White
House, the fiscal system is helping to
keep our economy stable . If a recessio n
~hould get unde1 way while Congress
was ( lUI o f seSSion, powerful automatic
forces would go instant ly into action to
co unteract 11 withou t the need fo r
exercises of any human in telltgenc.~...
1-.'t'&lt;JIIormcs, 7th edallon
The chief economast for the New
York nmes. Ed wan Dale. tn effect
moaned . " What the hell is happening,
doesn't anyone kn uw how the damned
thmg works''" Literally , on Aug. IS he
'&lt;lid : "There is o ne over-udmg fea ture of
the present monetary turmoil that must
be rep&lt;Hied Nnhody really ~nows what
In do.
The U.S guvernment, the IMF, the
\wtss Nattona l Bank, do not know what
tu do . Academac prufe:..~m' throughout
the industr ial world lretJuently give Jn
au of assurance , but they Jre sufficiently
tlrvrded so that 11 c:Ul safe ly be Sllld that
they d0 not know what to do
A1.adenuc "airs ot assurance:" are
\ Imply astvrushmg tn thcar cunsastent
lawtul record ot erhH Paul SJmuel~&gt;n
has sauJ " We have loCCn that CXISimg
wclf.m~ progrJnh suc.h J\ unemployment
.-orrtpen!&gt;allon and uld ag~ rcttrcmcnt
henefib. dn tl\.1 as Jutomal ll \l;rhrhter~.
rrsrng au toma ltcally . wht•n inwmcs fa ll

Jnd need increase ." (We have seen
!xactly the opposite , welfare cuts in this
·'innationary recession.")
Arthur Burn s, Chairman of the
Federal Reserve commented . "True, we
have made considerable progre s.~ toward
full employment and economic stability
in our generat ion, a nd we have
accomplished this while preserving the
essen tials o f political and economic
freedom . Finan c ial c ra ses. whi ch
frequent ly disrupted the economy in
earlier times, no lo nger exascerbate uur
troubles .
the conti nuan ce of
prnspenty ts our best answer to the
Marxast prophesy of crasis and co ll ap~e
ul free cconom1es "
The business cycle
George Schultz, Dtrec tor llf Nixon 's
Otflcc nf Management and the Budget
~id in May 1971 : "The Pres1dcnt ha:.
been ear nrng the reputatwn for
~:red Jbahty the hard way When he came
mtu office he s.ud he would ~l uw the
tncreastng mome ntum nf anllatmn
Others S3td the innationary thru!&gt;t cuuld
never he ~.unta med wllhuut vrrtual
takeover ot econom1c activity ur a major
dcpre ss w11 It was
and wt thuut
ctther."
If anyone ~hould rare 111 a tlcmpt 111

rescue the reputatio ns of these men ,
replies are welcome. However, we shalJ
agree with Edwin OaJe's opinjon during
his rhoment bf severe panic. These men
do not know what to do. In the next
article we will discuss the policy of
wage-gouging as the solution to a
depression" which aJI economists must
gravita te towards or pack-up and seek
employment elsewhere.
We will revtew the case o f one,
Professor Abba Lerner , of New Yor..._
University, who in has debate with a
member uf the Nationa1 Caucus of
Labor Commrllees (NCLC) let the cat
out of the bag. Namely he indicated
who was the tnaltator of " wage gouging"
as an anti-deprcsston solution in th1s
century: Hjalmar Schadat.
A repeated offer· II any professor of
economics on the State lJnaversity of
Buffalo campus ca res to rnamtain that
we have " thrown the bJby 1\UI wath the
bath water'" m chu ~.:k1ng oul Samuelson
et. al , let that person ~tep forward lu
s h ow that academtc economacs
curresponds w human realtty

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D I S&lt;. OVER

JACKSONBRO
He wall ht• playing m con cert T 0 N I T E ! a t the Fillmore Room al
X JO p m &lt;and hi' tll~il ill 'omething you Wt)ll 1 wan ! to mi'-'· On lw, fir,l
a lbum fur Ally lum Rl•t·urd \ h e j, b ad,ed up b) the like-. o f Rt""' Kunkel
Lee Sklar Je,,c O;avid , Jim Gordon Sneaky Pe te and Da" id l ro\ll\ Ill\
mu~ic ha' been rcn&gt;rOl'd by thc B)""- l 0111 Rtl'.h .and m a n y n wrl' Ut• j,
managed hy tht• -.:am e people who brought 'yOU L:11 11a Ny ro &lt;tlld l n&gt;,tH
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AT T HE FILLMORE ROOM . NORTON UN rON. at X:JO p.m _..,.

P S The JA CASON BROWN/:. ulhum wt/1 suo!/ be ut u n·mrd stort' 11cur ,.,,u
ON ASYLUM Rt.COH.DS

Page sixteen . The Spectrum . Friday, January 28, 1972

,\olltJtl Utuo"

tJIJtl/Jujja/u .')' tall' ( 'u/kgl

�Lttsf 111 fl1e ttzttlle
by Jesse E. Levine
Probably the most de!Jcate, but
essential,
of
the
human
interactions that occur in our
Lives, are the ones that are least
essential
to · the
productive
pro.:esses of the social system
the ones t he external structure
hold least important because of
their limit ed serviceability 10
perpetuating
the
efficacaes
involved 10 its power functioning.
Thus.
ma n y of us become
unha p py, not because we ca nnot
function an th e socaal realm, but
because we function too well,
tgnonng the basac pn meval urges
tbat are most -essential to our tife,
but least essenttal to the life of
the whole.
We a~ soc tal betngs are taught,
.tnd andeed come t o find at easter,
to negottate, than to converse
Negotiation, betng a controiJed
.tnd predictable medtum, tn which
thl'
methods
of
mteractton
hdween two human betnp, come
tl&gt; reflect the mottvattons and
o:nham.:ement of the ~octal realm
we ··occur'' an And tn occunng,
w.: are not seen a~ part of an
nnportant
whole, but rather
lll&gt;l..tnceS 111 ll!t functtOntng. rhe
l'l fell bemg, 1 hat we relate on a
~· .Jil' that has uttle to du with ,
wh..tt ~~truly irnportJnl to us. In a
ni.Htncr of \peaking. we abstra.:t
..ur live' by takmg them to lcvch
w;: lll'lthcr care about, nor deem
onopt~rl.tnt, yet perstst 10 betng the
too.tln
111~1 ru rnent
of
our
ollllllfiiiii,Jttve prOCC\Se\ Thts I!&gt;
h""' 111.111y of us l.ome to admifl•
.... h.tl 1\ hlp or what IS lOOt, nevl'r
qiH''11•HIIf11! whJt It •~ tu he thw.e
1''"\' rht.th hecause 11 t:. easter
lll'f Ill ttl' th~m [he dbSlraCllOIIS
111 " " '
hH'\ l&lt;lnt~· to he ver)
llltpurl.lfll l•• Pur 'Ullltnlllty An~!
l ttlh lllft'llll): , .tl 'l' ,rlont! lhl\ ltne
••I •lt.'lf\,lllttll , (tllfll' tho~e who
d&lt;lll 1 h.-it~\\' Ill wh.tl I hi:Y I!Yt.,
lo.t\t' th•· power 111 dt.utgl 11 hut
liH'I( Jll)'W.I)'

Our uwn reaJitie'&gt;
,, hm· th..tt l 'vl' l.ft en heard
t.'l'lll' to ~t1.:k out. "Never talk tn
'""'t'llnt! you don't know about
'"'" thtn~'· pohtJcs and reltgJllll ·
In these tune\, those two sUbJe'-h
.tnJ uthers ul their class JU~t might
•dlelt the easaest and most
111nm.uous (t)pics of discussion .
I ur mure than anything, t h ey lead
yuu
away
from
the
mmt
nnporiJnt, &lt;~nd at the samt: time,
the most dangerous plate to tread.
the dl\lovenes about yourself and
1h.- world you l.Jve 10
not the
\\.•Hid that you functaon 1n. 1he
\\.ourld that ynu hve 10, the world
tho~t truly matters to you Thl'
\\'Urld mtght very weU spm on the

potencies of th e pohhcal and
religious axis, but your ow n very
special world does not. And many
of us, seem to likt: nothing better
than to coerce our own realities
and blend them into the reality of
the whole. Or. if I may infer, lose
ourselves in all the outside rubble.
The rubble we neither care about,
or like to talk about , but
nonet heless do . Leaving behmd ,
the most precious and sacred part
uf our hves ; our lives.
It
is tndeM difficuH
In
converse wath people today . And
by
converse
l
don't
mean
int ellectual polemics. because we
are proficient enough at that, hut
rat her, I mean, discuss and try to
make
another feel
what 1s
anwardly sacred to us. There are
probably many other reasons for
lhts extreme form of ahenatton
but one, seems to stand above the
rest It is a gnawing and somehow
debihtatmg process, that comes
from the same long 1nteractaon.
and paralyzmg stagnation. ol
Intense
cultural
mttmaly
motherwords; livmg, breathmg
o1nd beLAg ms1de the same culture,
for a long penod of time, wtth the
same cult urally stifled partners
C ultural stagn atio n
After J
time vf rcpe:ued
nuances
wtthm
the
same
cnvaronment, newness JS a mean~
to pleasure, not only he~.·omes
vital. but become~ so met rung
short of obsessiOn
so met hmg
that can overcome even the
allstract processes, and domtn;lfc
every part ol our hetng l lem·e.
for exampk, most people relO:IYC
the11 fd~ctndtton wtth travelmg,
more lor the fact that tl sallsftes
tlu) pnmeval motivation. thotn the
l.llf lhllf the new surmundtng.~
.tllune I hear ured senses
Let\ fil,e 1t. 1f's not "'much
lhl' plal·e. hut the peopl.- lh.tl
mJt.e up the plat..e i\nd lht'
peuplc are only a...' guod J\ th;:
IICl'dS that they S.ltiSiy 111 )'tiU
Nut •~· \&lt;~Y that l'ach per~nn ''not
prt:I.IOll'&gt; an their own nghl. but
morl' In say, that certam &lt;L\fll'l't'
uf your hfe requ1re certatn Jspccts
ut Ltv1ng, and of ..:ourse thnse
.tspects are pred lomtnJtely the
reiJtion~h.tps you a~.qutrc wllh
people. Tiresome sttua11nn~ hJve
an annoymg hab1f of hel&lt;lllllng
more
tiresome.
i\nd
those
mvolved tn tires ome sJtualtons
also haVI.' a habit 0f 11nng bnth
qUicker, and easter
Cultural stagnata llll '' !Jr from
a new phenomenon I 1 h.i~ .: \I\ Ied
m some form. since the time thJt
men have grouped them,dv" 11ff
together m fear l&gt;f the do~rk
tremulous, world uuhtJe
I he
mtenseness of tha~ pht'numenon

however. IS unmatched by the
soctaJ aren(IS of th e twen t ieth
century. People are much morrr
umformly socialized today than
ever before SoctaliLed to the
potnt an whtch , hardly any of us
rea ll y notice that we don't like
w hat we're mto, until we're no
longer tnlo 11
paradoxical. and
at the same t1me fngh temng. For
a.s the world becomes more
closely cohesive in terms o f
communicat i On
an d
t ra ns port a ti on,
as
tech nology
comes to fu rt her per meate o ur
lives, eve n t h e now frequen ted use
of travel will no longer fulfill,
what it can fulfill now . l et's just
hope that man's nature does not
rematn co ntrary to hts abJitly .
Search thro ugh travel
It ts no t surpnstng that lhts
tmmense proliferation of the
desare to travel, ~:ames at thas
lime C'ahfornaa, the West. and
Europe,
are
fast
becomtng
mfested wtth the seJrchmg soul's
of tet:hnology·~ chtldren . And 1f
we could peak 1nto Orwell's world
of I 'lH4, wh"h Jt thts po mt as not
wholcly out of re,~~:h . we maght
)CC
d
world on the way to
betomtng
tncredtbly
and
fnghtcmngly umfnrm A world
where to travel wt.ll ltttte fulftll
the cultural refreshment that now
seems so tmportant , to so many of
us, tn our quest lor open roads
and ,1nnual rehtrth l·vcn today ,
there IS talk among the summer
~eardwrs lur new honLon\, Asta ,
South 1\tncnc.t, the Ncar btsf.
WhJt ever happened to the born
and hred Brouklyncr\, who were
~all\ltcd With hvtng 1n lhc ettles
beldUM! o l thetr upportumty, and
cultural stlmulauon Bdore. ~:lites
were .t place where people ... oufd
expertenn· the .Hb .wd the vaned
.ttlturn uf the world, 111 thetr own
hJd. yJrd Now 1he .HI " ho\\.o to
gel out ot the, 11y, J\ ulten and dS
~.hco~ply .ts P""'hle Cttte~ ..tre the
pl.rt e you \tJ y long enough to
pto•Uil' \lllllt: •.JPiloJI, tn mder lu
koJYl
Wh y 1\ II tlut phlle\ \Ul' h "'
Europe, o~nd even piJce:. 111 the
Untft•tl Sto~te'l, Jre thl' fanl.t'IIJ
thJt peupll' m·cd'' h 11 'IO rnuch
thai they o~rc bclter, J~ mudt as
they are ddlercnt'1 We ltkc what ts
dttkrenl 111 our f1ght In save the
t:ICUtiVe llllpUbl'S fhat !HI: ht:tng
squeldted, wtlhtn the recH:, unng
rhythms of our own l'Uiturc
Our t·realwnal univer:.e
Pcopll' th.tl ltVl' 10 pl.tll''l Ill
wl11d1 th' , ulture ha' rl'Jlheo..l ...
htt~.h
pntlll "' It dtllll.tl o~nd
cori(.J n11.t t1on ..al
1fll&lt;'ltl Jltnn
n.JIIIr.aJI)&lt; lJilllCII .:lkd J' Wl'll
thnsc ..... tt .. h,l&gt;e h•ed th.ol SJIIH'

fi
~

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p
hyUHJ ' )Otfl ).Ufte
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Berg Furnoture Co.

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Kensington

To night a t 8: 15p.m .

•• •
Sat. 'til 2:00p.m.
A LL SEATS 75

k.tV.ti(C~

,

HtJriOtTl Rd

t1o&lt;JhiiV'1119,00r:om e~WeCI
89!&gt;· .)

2001:

' ou &lt;..JII h;: J lot llltlft· neJII"l'
when )'UU JTC With \OmeonC \\.oh\1
.tllu.,.,.~ you .tnd wanh you 111
creat l' And o~ren't andl'ell yuur
hc.:\1 .:reJIIllll\, thuw lhJI .If&lt; nul
h,trll pt:r cd tn the1r urtgtn.ll .nt ''t ''

IJIHP\, j Pl bel"" \~C . (dbl
e~\et. t.:.hf!'\1 db I S•l• c:&gt;ed .
dbl bu• \09S n1~11 . !.t Pt. cJifltlte

J

MGM """NTIA STANLEY KUB!nCK ~OOUCTION

rmlieu So tn order to ptecemcal
that essenttal need to ~rea te , we
necessarily turn toward~ that s11ll
burning ltght on the other sto..le of
ou r creatwnal umverse , that b.:tng
anywhere that has nut wmplctely
dominated the tllrllads ol our
crea llYity , our ung1nal ~.reattve
t.:unstruction Thus on to bigger
and heller thtngs , whtch on a
aeauve level arc pmhably 110
hetter, but on the level uf kecptng
our own p(o~\lbthltes altYl', 1\ hot h
nect'~sary as well .J&lt;; &gt;U prl'tlll'. even
tf tt IS by 0ur uwn ,oh,tr.Jll
111etht~dS uf r;:tnhulton

&amp;!&gt;at

A U TO SE RVI CE
COMPLETE
AUTO REPAIR
Honest &amp; Reliable

repatrs on
Imported &amp; Domestic
- BOBCOR AUTOMOTIVE CENTER

1974 Eggert Near Bailey
834·7350

urgency of human tnleractiOn is
endl~s. The fas.:inat1on
wtl h
di fferencc.
bqond
ahstr.n.tton, ~~ the dommahng
tal t1or 1n both homogenous and
hctcrogemou~ sexual encounters.
M o~t l·onvcrsatwns don't tak.e on
the self COIISCIOUS htSlrtOOII:S that
usually .accompany the Buffalo
rap, or the N Y .C
rap, or
whall'vcr
T he
overwhelming
quahty of betng tmpress1ve by
an'IWl'r to your own cult ural
nt)rm\, thai of ynur &lt;.~Wn c1ty or
..:ountry , wem to wurk famously
ou t ~tdc the pla..:c where they were
!!)Yen thc1r Ort!!,tn l nothcrwords,
ciiH' lJII lw left tccltng thetr k ool
t.ul, hur r.tp nuts1Je thctr o wn
&lt;ultun• reJIIy as J kc11•l rap To
th,· pc~·•n anvnlvcd , 11 's J mce
tedtrtg
h11th
relrl'\hang and
10\plrtllg
o~lmo't

I h&lt;' prtobktn Ill'' 111 l he fact
1h.11 .til ul "' ,,111 I he world
IIJH'k'' A11d tll&lt;tsc thJI l&gt;lll, &lt;.:an
pruhahl~ d11 11 hill IWII llltlnlhs a
Yt'..tr
It "'' ,ould
we .:ould
prohJhl~
1-.el'P &lt;lilT very own
p~'l'tlltal .tgl' o f enlightenment,
,pJrl.llug hrtghtly, tnJefinttely . It
"
nnw
nctess.try
to hegin
p1 ovttltn~: \ll 111~ ul I hose alI ernate
vanahles 111 your own habitat.
llow YllU do that, can be the
l'lt'al tve l'&gt;.. pl'rJCnce you're loolung
tor Whcu everything starts to
'IHtntl hkt' hnc. then you know
11 ·~ ahuut that t1me. So why,
K ool k ulture ra p
dun 't you Stl yourself down at
In alternate cultures. (both 111 your toe:~ I bar, have a couple of
the United States .JIIU n thl'r heer\. h~tcn .o a few c hu11\s of
places, wtuch for nmst probahly rock and roll, even possibly
e,ntajls Western liur~ •
~ "let' -..ume bar tuDe- madness,
conversation
and
immedtate and lhtnk about at

I ht' msptr,otlllll t hJt dt..tnnch
t:j!ll, .tlld thu, ~n·p, .dt\'c th.de~tr' to .llfl'IIIPI ,11\d •lll1t.j U l'r h
thr lt'cltnt~. that ' I lll..tlll'r I hoJYl'
\IIIIICihtng ttl ~.1) .. /\Ill! \\hl'fl I\
th.tt lel'ltng ever ~tre,lt&lt;·r th.tn
when one 1s 1n llll'lllal lctgntt.tn•l'
w1th :1 per~on who ytlll bl.'ltt:Vl' "
n•ally listening. When 'lnmcunl'
has ~ometlung new 1•1 tdl yuu.
you lbten ; when not, Y••u rno)tly
hear. Somehow, am1d~t the \a me
conunuous variations nl c ult urc.
most of us JUSt keep heanng

Friday, January 28, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seventeen

�Hockey Bulls to hit the road
with hopes of superior play
by Michael Zweia
Spectrum S toff Writer

It 's time for the hockey Bulls to get back 011 the
road ag.ajn. Hning been detoured by a vision of
upsetting the superior team of Ohio State, Buffalo
faces two Division II games this weekend.
A.I .C. will play host to the Bulls Saturday night,
as will Salem State on Sunday . Buffalo's 6 · I Division
II record could be niftily enhanced to an outstanding
perceota&amp;e, almost assuring the team of a playoff
~rtb . The playoffs, of course. is what the whole
thing is about .
The two road games do not present t hemselves
as picnics, but after encountering the wizards of
Ohio State, it should feel aood to take charge now
and then. A.I .C. posts a 4-5 record and they are
ridin&amp; a modest two-pme winnin&amp; streak . They
defeated the Bulls lut year with a very strona third
period in a crucial pme. They skated basically the
same team last year, so they fiiUre to be better.
Their prize winner a nd hi&amp;h scorer is center iceman,
junio r Clem Morrison, who has tallied 8 goals and 18

assists. Buffalo's defense, which may have to do
without Les Teplicky again this weekend , hopefully
learned a few trunp from Oh.io's Ray Myers. They
can't expect anything better than rum .
Upset at Salem?
Salem State, who Buffalo handled with much
pleasure and delight earlier this season tn a I 04
romp, has since then come alive. While facing som e
ruged competition, they have compiled a
respectable 6-5 -1 record . Defeating such teams as
A.l.C ., Lowdl Tech , St. Anselm's and Norwich
should be a fair warning to the BuiJs. They also seem
to be a rather comfo rtable squad playing at home.
They've lost onJy once m mx games there. Beware
BuJis! The scent of upset may be lurking in the
distance, sweet as pie to your foes .
Should the Bulls come away with both th1s
weekend, we may once again revert back to
dreamin&amp; for 1 while abou t such things as play-offs
or Ohio State. For a unit which was merely a club
two years aJo, the possibilities of such potentiallhes
is no t only encouraging, but pleasingJy promising.

Victory at RIT

Wrestlers score tenth win
by Dave Gering«
Sr1utrum Stoff kirlltr
Rorhesre r, N.Y
Resummg
lhctr wtnnang ways, the wres tlmg
Bulls upped the~r record to te n
and one We dnesday ntght With a
3 3· 7 wm over Roche~ttr Tec h
The ro mp came at Rl T's K)'l'fl .
Bulls' co&lt;aptatn Ted Lawson
ke pt h1s Vtcto ry streak a hve at te n
w1tho u1 a defea t thts Sl'ason
l.&lt;~w son pm ned (,reg t uUe r. son
of T1ger mat Coach f-arl fuller , u1
the las t minute o r the ir
150 po und mat ~:h 1 he transfer
stuth:nt from Ne w Yo rk M~arat1mc
Academy thus hn:amc the f1rst
Bull to go mlo double figures •n
the Vttlo ry column thts season.
" I lhmk Lawson has pro ve n
h1mset1 to ~ a very valua ble
uddll to n to thas te am ," s ta le d
Bulb' mento r Ed Mtl hael. " 1
Uun~ he has as good a cham·e as
anyo ne else o n th1s squad for
p ost-season ho no rs " Lawson's

victory broke the match wide
open as RIT had parrowed the
count to 94 before his match.
RIT evaJWJfion
" I thtnk that RIT has a la~rly
good te am ," saad Coach M~thael
"They were tough tn spots, and
ha ve a few wrestlers who c ould be
heard fr o m later. Farl fuller 1S a
lughly respec ted c oach , and he has
cert,unly d o ne an excellenl JOb fo r
the matenal thai he has ru wo1k
With '

" The Bulls are J well balanu:d
SQuad With no apparent weak
~ pots ,''
fuller offe red " In
~tddilwn
to that , they are u
well-di SCIPlined outfit and I
expec t go od thmgs fro m the m ror
the rC\1 o f the seaso n."
The Bulb' hcavywetght I uny
Po hcare, ran h1s conscc ut1vc w1n
stre ak to etght Wednesday eve nmg
as he pmned R IT's Mike Nnv1cllo
at three mmutes, e tght ~lOnd s

After s~: oring a first-pcnod
takcdown, Policare re ve rsed h1s
o ppOnent 1n the second period
and qu1&lt;: kly ended the match The
vll.:to ry ra1sed Po licare 's record to
te n and o ne, whtc h le aves h1m 11e d
w1th 190-po und co-captain Ro n
Bra ndt fo r the squad's second bes t
record
The Bulls have th1s wee ke nd
o ff as they pre pare to fa ce always
Iough Cleveland State Un1vers1ty,
Wednesd ay evenmg at Clark Gy m
The V1ktngs are led by two
stando ut le tte rme n ; All-A men can
f'r~tnk Voo at 142 pounds and
I 18-round Steve Cika. Saturd ay
at 12: 30 p.m. at Clark Gym, the
Bulls wiJI host a JUnio r varstty
qua4.1 Bes1des BuffaJo. squads
e nte red arc Ene CC, J amesto wn
{'(' and Co rnmg CC. Coach td
Mtlhacl previously coached at
Cornmg and has brought many o f
his talen ted grapplers with htm In
Buffalo

Cornell next

Hoopsters have good
showing at Maryland
by Barry Rubin
Spom Editor

Usua ll y w hen the vars1ty
basketball BuUs lose a game, they
walk with their heads down, but
af t er thea fine showing at
Maryland, one could aee pride on
all their faces Coming into the
game, the BuUs (7-6) were given
tittle c hance for victory against
the nation's t ighteenth-ranked
club. However, with the use of a
1-2-2 zone defense and with great
patience on offe nse, the Bulls
were able to harrass Lefty Driesell
and his highly rated Terrapms. AI
the conclusion of the contest,
most of the Bull s praised
Maryland's indivtdual talent , but
scoffed a t their comparison with
UCLA . Coach Ed Muto fee ls the
difference between UCLA and
Maryland "is simp l y
organization."
rhe final score had the Bulls
on the short end 82-5 8 , after
trading 35·2 8 at the half
However, the fm al score dad not
mdicate the closeness of the
contest , smce the Bulls were
Wlt htn three po mts o f Jhe Te rp~.
39-36 wllh three mmutes gone 1n
the second half Then, the Bulls
left Coat h Muto's game plan
wh1c h calle d for IJttle o uls1de
shooting, and were outscore d
14-4.
To m McMtllen , o nly a soph hut
a 6· 11 legend , spurred 0 11 the
Terps w1th 29 po mts ( JJ- 17 ) but
o nl y six rebo unds. Le n Elmo re
the Te rps' 6-9 cen te r was most
1mpresstve dcfenSJvely , leadmg the
Terp s With n1n e rebo unds,
blocking r.ve shots and limthng
Curt Blac kmore to four field goals
in I I tnes The physical battle
between Flmo re and Blac kmore
was cla$.\lc, and Blackm o re was
no t to be shamed by hts game
leading ten re bo unds and three
blocju~d sho ts.
Vartanian leads BuUs
But the star fo r the Bulls was 6·2

JUnior guard Bob Vartanian .
Vartanian led aU BuffaJo scorers
with 27 points (1 3-20), his top
total as a BuU. For bis great
e ffor t , Vartanian received a
standing ovatio n from tbe Terp
fans. After the contest, Vartanian
agreed that the Terps bad several
fine individuals, but added,
"They're nothing as a team."
Vartanian's best scoring came on
short jumpers and in leading the
fast bn:ak, which was surprisingJy
effective. The BuUs will need
similar punch from Vartanian if
they ue to keep with their tough
schedule in the next two weeks
Saturday night (7 p.m.), the
BuiJs take on 4-9 Ivy League
ComeiJ Universtty at Memorial
Auditorium. In the nightcap,
Canisius takes on LaSaiJe College
from Phi l adelphia's big five
c o nference. Cornell has heen
blistered by a black player
boycott wh1c h broke early m
De cember
After their early
boycort, the players re turned . hut
last Satu rday . Bnan Wright , the
B1g Red'~ leading scorer, qu1 t
agrun Wnght leads the Red Wllh
a n 18-pomt average, whllr b--4
sentor captam Rtc k Amato star,
w1th 14.4 po tnts and I 0 rebo unds
per contest.
C'orncll has beaten Sc...ranh&gt;n,
Roc...hester, CoJg,Hc and Columb1a
and boasts a 1·3 conference
Amo ng c ommon foe s,
record
Corne ll fell at S yracuse 95-8 2
while the BuUs lost to the Orange
I 04-RO. The BuUs have lost thcu
last e1ght ~ontests With Cornell ,
thctr last w m COIDN'I an J94 2,
5&lt;&gt;-46. To morro w ntghl the Bulls
hope to snap their e tght-,amc Aud
loslna streak . 1'he last Buffalo w•n
downtown came m 1968 , 66-60
o ve r Penn State tn o vertime . LJst
wee k th1ee Buffalo playe rs
re ~:e 1v e d
s upp o rt 1n ECAC'
ballo ttng. C urt Blad..mo rc and
Bo b Va rian 1an recetved A 11-Eas t
men tton . wIt tic Creg Bruce
garner e d ~ upp o rt tn lh e
Sopho mo re of the Week ballo t

Discover

URNINGTIME
Head Shop and Boutique
PANTS, SHIRTS
PIPES, PAPERS

1717 Eggert Rd.
Between Millersport Highway
and
North Bailey Avenue

POSTERS, CANDLES
INCENSE

..... AD .ENOUGH?
We Have!
JOI N THE

HOURS :
MONDAY SATURDAY

10 a.m. to 10 p.m.

PHONE
835- 2169

Democratic Youth Coalition
Inaugural meeting Monday, Jan. 31 - 8:00p.m.
ROOM 340 - NORTON HALL
Bill Hoyt- Oelaware District Councilman
and
Hugh Carmichael, WNY Coordinator, Common Cause
will sp•k

�AD INFORMATION

THE COST o f a n ad f or one d a y 1s
$1.25 for t he first 15 w oress ana $ .05
tor ..ell addition al w ord .
"HELP
WAN TI!D"
ads
cannot
alscrlmlnate on t he basis o f lex, color,
creed or n • t1onal o rigin to any e xtent
(t.e., p refe ra bly Is still d isc r iminat ory) ,
·•FOUN D" ads w ill be r un tree o f
cn"9't for a m aximum of 2 days ana
15 words.

WANTED
oESK(S) wanted - must be cnup or
tree. C all 1134· 7461 or 836·5357 Ask
for

Mlnd~Y:...·------------

wANTED : Guitar lessons. Call Renee
832·0168.
GENERAL. kllcllen
remale Full or part
o wn transportation.
Monday, 'nur\day or
p.m .

llelp. Male or
time. Must nave
Call 825·957 7
Saturday after 3

NEED
1
copy
of
SPATIAL.
ORGANIZATION bY Abler Adams
and Gould . C all Carol 625 · 8298 bef ore
4 p . m . tod:..a:..Y: . . . · - - - - -- - - -- FULL ROOM and ooard plus Mlary to
stuo enl In e•cn ange for babysitting.
Residence Elmwood-w.Ferry. Details
neQotllble 1185·9133 after 6 p . m.
WANTED :
Female
pnotograpny
muaels
lor
pnotography
sludent;
$ ':\/nt , call 885·6831 mornln~ or after
8 .00 p m
FEMALE war~ted Immed iately for
babysitting a lew llours per week on
e. cnanoe tor tree room. 633·7594.
ARIGATO
JAPANESE
.STEAK
HOUSE deSires to employ WAITERS ,
WAITRESSES. BUSBOYS, KITCHEN
HELP,
632 2171
WAITRESSES wanted: Part and fu ll
tune, evenings. Over 18. 685·3100. Ask

Htrtti·MIII tary, C all Matl 1 77·%451 .

CLAallllll

CL.ASSI F IED A DS m.y 1M Plac:.d
M on!Uy tllru Friday b.tw•n 9 a. m .
and 4s30 p . m . a t 355 N orton Hall.
for Doug or BOb.
COL.L.EGE GRAD w ants to bllbi!Sit
evenings. L.oves chil d ren and n as loll o f
l r M time. Call 113 1-4113 d ays. Ask lor
L..es111e, or leave m essage .
FUL.L. OR oart·tlmeJobs availa b le with
Beslllne Inc. Call Art 118 6·:1094 o r
M ike 835· 5215. M eetings at Executive
Ramada Inn,
STAAT t2 oar nour M llrll plus bonus.
Work 4·8 p.m . WMkdii!S, 10·2 p .m.
Saturda\IS. Call 835·31103 or TF9·0402 .

A PARTMENT FOR R EN T
SINGL.E HOUSE tor rent. S m.lllt or
tem.111e students. $75 each wfutllltles.
L.eue and damage deposit. Tnree
Dains. 838 · 336 7 .
MODERN two-bedroom gorden apt .
Dishw a sh e r,
d i Sposal,
range,
refrigerator Included. Fully carpeted.
Full b asement with storage area and
outlets for washing macnlne . Available
Marcn
1.
$175
a rnontn. Call
633 ·4582 .
FURNISHED IPI&lt;lment and several
rooms, excellent loc.atlons, television,
dishes, etc. 13S·$40 oar bedroom .
896·11344 evenln~

Str•toc.aster, S 125; S h u re PE-54 , st and,
1 !10; Fuu, $ 2 0 ; w.n -wah, $ 30. Fine
cond ition . Also tookl n g f or M artin or
Guil d
acoustic
slx·ftrlng.
N orm,
837·92 75.
TYPEW RITER,
633·7551.

portable,

S20.

Here tney come• Hundreds o f
Guys and Gats know thiS IS
the
place .
ArmyNavy
blr~lns wit h today's look
Good goods; good prices,
good people' The real L.evo's:
Flare and Straight, Denim Ot
Cordur oy Air Force parku,
Government
Great Coau.
H.,vy nuffl Come see tnt
real
M cCoy's
ana
SAVEl

CITY

130 Main At Tupper 853· 1515 DIY W• snlnqton Surplus Cenle•

- MISCELLANEOUS
NEW DUAL. 1219 turntable , snerwoo&lt;l
receiver: Sony sp eakers; Pioneer reverb:
K.OHIA chusls; si&lt;IS C. bOOts : stove :
ALSO : WANT RIDE - N .V.C. - 31St
- 3rd. 833· 7270 .

FOUND - large sliver rln9 last fall first floor women's lavatory - Foster
H all. Call 2406.

FOL.K.CLASS I C g u itars. N ew - used
Marlin, Guttd s, Gibsons, Gurian, etc.
Eagle banjos, Oor ogl Dulcimers. The
String Shoppe, 524 Ontario, 7 p . m . 9 p .m. Sat.; 12--5 p . rn . 874..()120.

L.OST - vicinity Mudowlu-Oxford,
ginger colored tiger cat, 4 montns Old,
male . 839· 1248

SKI CLUB memberslltP, lessons and/or
Sl&lt;l rentlt
for wle. Cneap. Call
1137-6185 anytime.

FOUND - Karl In CrOSbll 301 on
Monday, Jan. 17. Claim by Identi f ying
at Spectrum office.

FEMAL.E senior In searcn of lOb . C a n
do many types ol work, prefer ably In
UB are1 Please Uti Mary 838-4892 .
TWO KITTENS
837-6575 .

ROOMMATES WANTED

WOMEN
wh o
t ook
"Women In
Contemporary
Society," come to
pot · luck dinner, S1turday, January 29
11 5 : 00 at 108 Wlnspear .

TO share on En91ewood wltn
studenls; 1.5 minute wala. to C .llmpu~,
porcn, backyard, no sacurlt y , no
lanalord, large bedroom . Available for
one M/F or cou ple, large 11v1n9 r oom.
dining room, and kitchen, cl .. n
function•• bathroom Call 1138 ·2248

STEREO
compon ent\,
90 ·w•tt
Ha1mon
Kardon recelvet, G arrord
lurnlable, 2 SpNkers, $ 200
C all
838 ·2281.
SKI CL UB Sl&lt;l lessons tor
Tuesday night. Call 1132·5634 .

s
a
1
e

- - -- -

IF
PERFORMANCE
COU NTS
count on Independent Fotelgn Cat
Serv ice 839 11150
ANT IGUES and mocsern furniture,
ceram ics, cn lna, et c See Std. 1439
Hertel Ave

WANTED • One female roommate fnr
3·bedroom house o ff Maln·W i nspear
Own room, furnlsned, 560 Starling
Feb . I . C111 Mary 11311-4892

sale

REFRIGERATORS frOm S 19 .9~ ~nd
ul) HWA, 1282 Clinton Sl 823 1800
RI:FRIGERATORS,
stoves
and
wasne&lt;l. Recono ltloned , Clellyereo and
gua•anteed
O&amp;G Applianc es, 1144
Syc;amore TX4· 3183.

FOR
INSTANT
ptlntlng,
tnlnk
GOODWAY we pr int anlltttlng for
pennies 1 copy tnesas, resum~.
pamphlets, etc we alS o bind, lola,
cotate and staple S1n91e xerox co pies,
$ .08 each
Wherel Goodway Copy
C enter. 436 Maln St and Couot, across
from Lafayette Squore M F, 9-5 p.m .

FEMALE
roommate
wanled,
37
Merrimac Street, five mlnule~ from
N orton, S40 per montn, plus utilities,
to sllare room. Call 8J7 5313 after 6

o.m.

----

l MALE to snare laoQe apartment near
scnoot
Clean
and
coonfortable
Completely
lurnlsned , '55 /mo
on
LaSalle A¥e. 631 5621

TERM PAPERS types $ .35 Pet paQe.
833 ·9012 .

STUDENTS (male)
large OOu Die
bedroom l¥allatlte lor two stuoenu,
adl olnlng Datnroom , kltc;nen privilege~
10 minutes from campus 833 5426

INTERESTED
on
attend in g
tne
olympic gam~ In Munlcn7 Some
tickets and .ccomrnodattons haltabte
Pnone 833-4638

GUVS : n eed haircut or ttlm &gt; Call
JoKelyn spec. In long hair SlVI~ C all
692· !868 for •PPI MON. O N LY

ROOMMATE wAnted
20 -mlnute walk to
&amp;34 ·0413

WILL BABYSI T My nome, 5 days .
Pre•Knool 838-41108

IRVING love Hockey, BAC , Spagnettl
Naney

COUPLE looklnv to snare ap,u tment
house o• farm with ar1olher couple
838-4091

PERSONAL

O wn
campu~

room,
Call

OVERSEAS JOBS fo r students
Aust•alla, Europe, S America, AlriC.l,
etc . All professi o ns and occu p a uons,
$700- $3000 monthlY. Expenses Plld,
overtime, sightseeing Free In formation
Write Jobs Overseas, Dept. E5 , S o •
15071, San Olego, C1 11fo rnl .. 92115

WH O I S TOM MEADE I

THE PEOPL.E, 144 Allen St Is 114vlng
tnel! first clearance sale, unlll J~n
3 ht. Pnone 882 · 6283 lor nou•s
0£A R L T

-

T n at's a great 1084 1 Call

MALE unde rgrad desire$ roommdle
and place t o live
Will st1arr all
ewpense~ Call 876 I IOJ evenon9s

APARTMENTS WANTED

HOOMMATE TO sh are l w u oedrooon
duple!&lt;
ne•r
Bell
racolllles.

FURNISHED house fo• '&gt; qorls c;lose
wa1k 1n9 diStance from campus Fall
C.alt 831 25«&gt;8 , 8 3 I 2662,
83 I 27SJ

·---------------------·
I

T~E pAST is A
fOREiGN COUNTRY;

T ~ Ey

do T~iNCfS

diffERENTly T~ERE.

:WANTED::
I

I
I

I

1
;t •

All Seals S 1.00

juliECHRiSTiE I AlAN bATES
..Spec. KJddie Show...

T~ E qn.v-

b

1HI$

~\
l:. I W

YrAit S OIINIO l'ttllC WINNCtt Ar IHE CAifNfS

~~RET lEiGHlO~
~..-

I££N

. ........

dOMI~ic GuARd

1.~ 3 ll·"'·
"Tom Thumb
Sat • .l Sun.

fl(lol ll$tiVAL

MicHAd REdGRA\If

piAv by H"AOld PtNIIA

S&lt;Ru ..

bHu11v1 PROducrR RobeRt VliMt
Mw\a

l•t~~~~ptf\•d

•"'d ltJAd.,. ud try-

PAOdu&lt;td by

lokN

~.hktllu,M•d

HlY""""'IoH&lt;l

N!.IA""""'

I'MI(,(,IN
OiAH l(d by k»(pl-o l~£y
A RobfRI VlWU lokN H(Y"""" P«ldUC ti()N

hCl4Nteoln.~ ~ .. ·- ·- • Culu,..bu. l'ttru•H .. ~.."' Q P

~

llOUL(VARO MAl•

I

·~·
"·~
...,
IIIII~".~ ~.:~-;.";.;\ ;.~ t

-•

WE NEED 2 -bedroom apt lor !em ales,
\lartlng February nur U.B . Witt pay
&lt;jiUOd price Call 831 3989 anytime,

1

ASSISTANT TREASURER. S.A.

wE NEED a two f1 mlly apt tnat can
nouse six paople (tnree 1n ell ch n 1111
for June W ill p,)y gooo money, 11
t•ken. C a ll Belly 837 0430

I

1

To work 'til March 15th

I

..
. ed
......~
Beautiful,
hand-pamt
.

1

Must have afternoons free

I

I

1 w o FEMAL.ES n•ed •part m ent n e•r
UB .• oaaly Wil t pay good ortce Call
Terry 824 ·3143 . Keep trVI"II

I

I

I

.Hl

;eon ester

:

I

Blvd . Mall Early Bird Mat.
Mond1y to Saturday
'til 2:00p.m.

nome. M arty .

OEL.I PLACE RMtaurant across from
UB. Open 24 hours a day, Tnurs . • Fri.,
and Sat. Got muncnles •• 4 a.m.&gt; We're
here to serve you

~OME

1970
JAGUAR
XKE
Excellent
con dll ton Brand new AM/FM stereo
radio Included . C all 6118 · 7327 evenings .

need

GRADUATING students oe sure to
mall In coupon from Buffalonian ad In
tnls paper

ROOM for rent In four-Da&lt;lroom
apartment, 53 Englewood, S60 montn
837·0460,
634-6767 .
Available
Immediately.

CLEARAN CE Slit 10·65' off on
many Items. All January. Moscettaneous
shirts,
dresses,
skirts, etc
Some
algllaniStan coats
Tne People, 144
Allen St. 882·6283 tor nours

Mod St y l n for Thole Who Know I

TWO M AL.ES neecs.o
o w n rooms beauti f ul big housa available now . C a ll
837.0285 . Addreu 124 Orel&lt;ef .

FOUND - watch on l/20 In practice
room B aird Hall. May clllm In
Record L.IDrary, Baird .

FOR SA LE

BELL.S, TOPS, BOTTOMS

MAL.E R OO MMATE w anta&lt;l , share
room , D elew er• Park area, ao;all able
Immediately . &amp;52.50 Inclu d es utilities.
881-4504 .

LOST S. FOU ND

1964
TRIUMPH
Spitfire
1 200.
Excettent running condition, 900d
body . Too small f or our growlnQ
family. Phon e 886-4650 .

'62 IMPALA
Excellent condition
Standard, 6&lt;yllnder. s ISO Chelp'
Call 874-4590 .

end THI NGS

O N E FEMAL..E roommate, own room,
f urnished, n e •t to c.ampus, S60 month.
838-48 92 .

BL.ACK WAU..ET, vicinity of Amherst
and Ctescent; r-ard, phone 834-6608
Defore 2 : 00p.m.

DRUM SET - snare, bass, tom · tom,
symbOl, plus many acceuorles , $110 .
Conga with Jland, S80.

RIDE BOARD

FENDER twon reverb, $300 , rellnosned

PI L..AMBDA TAU - a changi ng social
organization on 1 ch anging campus.
For Inf o r m atio n , can Dan 632..()299 or
Q80f9't 8 3 4 -7989.

FOUR·FOOT black llgnt ana lll&lt;ture
for •20. Catt Snelly 834..()966 .

o w n room .
H ertel and

TO SHARE t w o-oedroom apt . wlt l'l
t wo m ale Uuden u . M odern apt ..
swlmmlnt pool , u 11 6 8 8-6295. A sl&lt; f or
Rick or Dou9 .

Bal'tlara.

N EED $1007 Call
882 ·1080
for
Infor m ation. Second Annual N ew man
Movement Art E&gt;CIII b lt. Feb . 13 March
19
at
Bulckfl eld
Centet,
s . u .C .B. Entries due Feb. 7 &amp;. 8 .
Specia l student prizes.

KNEE L.ENGT H A ir Force overcoat,
110; Polaroid B16 Swinger camera
with case, 1 8; Morse stereo lll·fl, noeas
repair, any offer . 893-oJOl.

TV. black a. wnlte floor modet, $35 .
Also repair TVs and Slereos. C all Ed
896-4409 evenings.

RIDE WANTED for two gtrh tu
Boston or ¥1clnlty on Sunday, 1/30
C all B onnte 833- 7571 . Wi ll snare
el&lt;penses

m e at 837-6057 -

Call

ACROSS CAMPUS 3400 Matn St
Furnlsha&lt;l. 1 bedroom, 1140/month,
hNt lnctu da&lt;l. 833· 9858 or 833 · 1600

RIDE NEEDED to scnool Mono~v.
WednesdiY, Friday before 10: 00 from
Union and Matn . Free puppies . Peter
631·5230 .

R OOMMATE w ant.ct S65 lndudlnt
utiiiUes.
Ma in . a 33·7160 .

I

1

Stipend $125
Interested: see David Kei5er, 205 Norton

I

I

r

•

PORCELAIN HEART
BOXES for Valentine's
Day.

THE LOTUS SHOP
435 Minnesota 836 2666
Hours .

10·5 daolv
Thurs ull9

~--------------------1
RICKET~~
J266 MAIN STREET
( ht'tween Englewood ami 11&lt;-atll}

sale up to 50% off sale
POSTERS· CANDLES· MOBILES
INCENSE· PATCHES· SEALING WAX
s
and more
HOURS - MON. thru FRI. 10 - 5 p.m. - SAT 1/
CLOSED WEDNESDAYS

p.m • • •

Friday, January 28, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nineteen

-

�The Arab Cultural Club will meet to night at 7
p.m . in Room 232 Norton.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Afric:~ Club will hold a general meeting
tomorrow at I :30 p.m. in Room 232 Norton.

The Attica Defense Committee urgently needs
books fo r a book sale today from 11-5 p.m . in the
Center Lounge of Norto n. If you can donate books,
please call 8 33·21 19.
Undergraduate french majo~ a nd all students
taking Fr~nch courses, Qlease pick up copies of the
newsle tter and direct ory today in Room 214 Crosb y.
The UB Riding Club will meet today at 4 p.m.
in Room 264 Norton to make arr.:~ngcmcnts for
nding this weekend.
The Conflict Simulations Club wtll have d
meeting Sunday, noon-7 p.m. in Room 340 Norton.
Condottierre will be distributed. Bring your games.
C habad House IS t10lding cour~es in Cha~sidism
by Rabbi Gurary i US B 239, Soctological Study of
Chassidism, Thursday, 8 9:30 p.m., USB 274,
Jewtsh Music in literature, Tue\day, 8 9 ·30 p.m .
and USB 275, Jewish My\t tei&gt;m in Religiou~
Practtec, Wednesddy, 8- 9:30p.m.
The
Htllel
study
group
tn
Advanced
ConverQtional Hebrew will m~et Sunday c~t 11 30
p rn tn Room 262 Norton
Resurrec tion House t) ~pun,ortng c1 vt~tl to
luthcrt~n Ho~pit.e, Home for the Aged tod.ty o~t 6 30
p m to be followed by a tree ltlm at Rl"&gt;ttrrectton
lfou\t' cntttled, "Song to Reml'rrtbcr," with P,wl
Mullt

The Office of Finane~! Aid is distributing
financiil wistance applications for the 1972·73
academic yeir. Students may obtain fo rms at the
office, which is 16Gated in Room 21 6 Harriman
library. Completed applications a re to be returned
to t he Financial Aid Office not la ter than March 1.
Financial sta tements will be required in all cases and
these are to be completed and sent to the College
Scho larship Service not later than Feb. I, 1972.
A lunar eclipse will be visible Sunday morning
from 4 11 7 ·23 a.m. The observatory, sixth floor of
Hochstetler Hdll, will be open to view the event.
UB Photo Club wtll meet today at 8 p.m . in
Room 332 Norton Members are requested to bnng
in work m preparation for exhibit next week and
final arrangements will be made for the field tnp.

111

Club Latino is holding c1 meeting today dt 8 p.m.
Room 234 Norton.

The
H illel study
group
in
Beginning
Conversattonal Hebrew will meet !&gt;und,,y ,11 1. 30
p m rn Room 262 Norton.
Womt'n's Studtes College ts tnvtttng the women
who tool.. "Women tn Contemporary SOI..tety" ldst
~t'niC\tCr to o..om~ It&gt; a Pot I ud.. Dtnner tomorrow at
S p.m . .JI IOH Wtn'&gt;pCcir Ave Meet women who ~hare
your mterc\h Brmg food Ill \hare. I m more
mlorm.llton, t.4'll Cynthi.J .tl !!93·8604 or Judy ,Jt

students. If you are interested in any u pect o f radio,
come to the meeting, Sunday at 3 p.m . in Cletnent
Hall Lounge.
C hilbid House, 3292 Main St., will be holding a
Chusidic Shabbos tonight at 6 p .m . Services
tomorrow Me at 9:30a.m.
Sight Point I nstltute is an experimental
summertime community of scho lars which is being
set up by a group of Reed College students. It will be
located o n a farm o n the coast of Nova Scotia and
will be a small communi ty of 25 studen ts who have
gotten together to live in the country a nd study with
o ne another in a free and informal a tmosphere. If
you are interested, write to Alan Walworth , Box
1156, Reed College, Portland, Oregon 97202.
Hillel Sabbath S crvtces w1ll be held tonight dt 8
p.m. in the Hillel House
Resurrection
Ho use
rs
'&gt;Upper discu~sion Sunday at 5 p.m.

holding

a

O'Youvllle College Theater Department i~
putting o ut a casting cc~ll for men and mU!,idans ror a
World Wdf I musical. If in tere~ted , contact the
Theater Depdrtment dt 886-8100, ext 520 ut 'iSS
UB Photo Club wrll have a field trrp tomc~rrow
.Jt IS J m. All member\ are urged to brtng cc~mcra ..
..tnd be in lronl uf Norton .11 7:30 ct.m
The Hillel class tn Torah wirh CommcntMies wtll
meet tumulluW &lt;1t 3 10 p m 111 Or I tufrn.mn\
home, 12 Colton Ortvt'

8962717 .
WIRR , thl' new \tUdrnt r.tdto \t.ttuort,

oc~tl

Thr H illel Talmud das!&gt; wtll rm·c t '-,unJ,Jy .tt '
pn1. tn the Hillrl Lthr.~ry

Available ar the Ticket Office
Studio Arena Theater
1.1n 28
l.1n 30 Mamu
f cb 3 20 The Tnulof the LtJitmwlllt' Nme
Rod. and Foil.. Music
J .tn. 28 B.il MtGr .tth .tnd Unn Putter ( r)
Jctn. 21.J· Jerry Gctrtt,, .tnd ll owo.~rd Wale' . t~nd
th(' M.thavt~hnu Ort.he,tr.t wtth John Mtlt~ughltn (C)
I oV' 29 30 ft\U\ l lfl /\I \upt'l\fut
\old out

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~YW~~~~~

I .:b 6 )u\e I chu.tno (K )
f cb I 2 L.Jrly &lt;,rm•m (K)
I eb ll Petl.' .,eqt~:t (H)

Backpage

Huffalo Phtlharmonic Orchestra (K)
/.ul )~ !&gt;p.mt\h Nt~ht "''P'
I ch 4 : lt.t/r.lrl Opl'r.t NtKht Pop'&gt;
f l'h. n &amp; 8 Mrth.tl'l 'tbon I IH•fll·"
I ~h II Vo.~lcnttrtt•\ Ntf.!.hl
I lnrt.tn L,tlt.Jth
f c'b I 2 · ( indert'll.t

Buffalo Chambtr MusJt \u, tt'ly ( K)
r cb I Berltn Philh.unHJnrl Ollt't
r l'O ,., Dw· R.unp.JI'V~\'IHII I Ill"' .
Buffalo Braves Basl.etbo~ll (M)
l.tn 2~ C:.c.tttll
f dt I ( lc\'l'I.Jnd
~ dJ 4 New Yw ~
r l'b ~ Mtlw.~uJ..,.,.

Sport!&gt; lnformc1tion
0dnce
I ch

"&gt;

,,,.,,. (,,,.,

r• (Kl

I umorrow V.tl\tly h,l\kt•th,tll v' { •1rncll .11
Mt'tlllllt.tl Audtlnrtum, 7 r.m. prt'll'ding r1:gul.1r 'I
p rn C.JIIt\IU\ I .D.tlk h.lllil', ittJ..('l\ lur 'tudt:llt'
Wtth Ill l.trd' Jll' .JV.ttl.thk lw ~I !5 tn .t Ul\llltJnt nl
1o ·I t tt i..l'h. Vdr ~11 \ hu~ J..n, .11 1\ tlll'flt..tn I ntern.tlton.tl,
vctr"tY knttn~ .Jl lluh,ut , I r ,.,hm,tn IJJ,J..cthall ,JI
(ol.'llt.'WO ':&gt;l.ttt:', tuninr IIJr"t} Wfl'\tltng .Jl ( I.Jrl.. c.ym
Wtl h Btrll.tlll, t: rtt' ( C I tnll'\tOWII CC .tnt! Cut ntng
&lt;C, 12 W p.m

Roller Derby
lt!b. 21 (M)
&lt;.uurtyard Thedter
I he I 111/l (}(tilt

(attJII\I'IIIt• N/1/c'

Oipson's Plct7a North
Ftddlt'r 011 thr• R.onl
C.oming Evenb
Fch 20 Ye, .1nJ I C.l·1l, (1•11 ,,,k
K(Y
K Klctrlhcirb
M Mernortal Audttonurn
F
ftllmore Room
C Century Theater
B ~ Bennett High School

1/ ~

I) (K)

Mond;y . V .Jf~tt y h.t.,J..ctll.tll v' Nmthcrn lllrn~tt\
.Jt Mcnwri,tl Audttoriurn, 7 p.m ., Nr.tg.u.t
Umvcr~tty of Dt~ylon, q p.m., lltJ..ct polity ,,mw d~
Cot nrll K-ime with lit l..ch .tv.ui.Jblc tmltl lht'&gt;
Jftcrnoun Jt 2 p m

v.,

Anyone wishing to pf.ty for lhe

Lauo~e

Club

\huuld t.ornc to,, rrtt't'ltn~: tht' Sund.Jy .11 Cldrl.. &lt;...ym
,tl I 2·1 'i p.m. )tic t..~ will he \llld .1nd c~Jdtttunc~l tnlo
will bt• p.t"cd uut 1\llcnd.tntc "mo~nd •• tmy .md it
y~u L.m't .tlh~ru.l , ~.til Jt•try .tt 834 7'i!:ll ~H.• fon•
\undc~y

Till' l ppon Judo Club ntl'l't\ cvcty Mond.1y .md
I htJt,ddy Jl tJ 30 p 01 lor bcgtnners and 7 30 p rn
lor Jdv.Jnu·d students tn the wrc.,tlrng rcJom of CIMI..
t&gt;vm . There r~ dlso a )dturd.ly chtldrcn's Judu
prugro.~m. See Coach Btll S.mfurd "' Ciarlo. Gym fur
rn i&lt;HmJtton

The student athlet ic review board h.J' voted to
'ub.,idizc the two basketb..tll gMIIC\ .tl Memorial Aud
un Fcb 5 again~t NictgJrd Jnd on M.11 ch 6 against
Buffalo Sldte. When lickct~ drc due lor dispersal, the
~ARB will pay the $I 25 The SARB has dlso voted
tll a~lo. Dr. F rttz to c,eek d retrproc..tl dgreement
whereby students uf t'.tl..h \Chool on the college
ba\J..etballt..trd~ will be let tn dl no thc1rge.

What 's Happening
Fridcty, Jan. 28

!&gt;atc1day, Jan. 29

film : Perlormunce, with Mick jJgger, C.tpen 140,
checl.. for showt ime), ltckets available at Norton
Ticket Office.
Open rehe.1rsal: The Cleveland Quartet, noon, I 01
Baird Hall.
Art show: Prints by students of Harvey Breverman
4240 Ridge Lea, 9 c1.m. 5 p.m.
'
Film: The World of APU, Otefendorf 147 7 30
p.m., donation $.25.
'

Library W ncert : The Cleveland Quartet, 3 p.m.,
Butfalo and Erie County Publtc Libr«ry
Auditorium.
Film. Performance, Capen 140
Art show: 4240 Ridge Lea, 9 a .m . 12 p.m.

-AmyAhrend

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                  <text>&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Vof. 22, No. 46

State UnW..ity of New Yorflft Buftlllo

Wectn.dey, Jllnuary 26, 1972

Students to decide future of athletics
by Bowie faiwl

Alit. Spcnr Editor

For thousands of Buffalo sports enthusiasts, for over

600 student varsity members, and for scores of coaches,
faculty members and assistants, tomorrow and Friday
loom as extremely important days. In the following two
days, the students of·Buffalo shaU take it upon themselves
to decide the fate of athletics in a carefully designed
referendum approved by the Survey Research Center.
This referendum will, if anything, finally erase the
controversy which hu hovered over Clark Gym for several
years now. The serious question as to how much , if any ,
student fees should be allocated to the athletic department
- an ISSue that hu been constantly shuffled about in
present and past student governments will be decided by
a binding student vote.

Stvdenl A5!Cmbly vok indecisive
nus vote was necessitated after a spht Student
Assembly narrowly passed the $240,000 athletic budget,
I S-14, last fall Many believed that the large negative vote
was too close for comfort and fatJed to represent the
actual student body consensus. Cntlcs of the budget
n~htly believed that one vote was too small a margin to
dec1de upon such a large e.xpend1ture Hence, to be trul y
representative. a referendum was decided upon by S A
o fficials.
Student~ will be questioned whether they wish to
expand, maintain or decrease the present athletic budget

of $240,000 obtained directly from student activity fees.
This money is overseen by the Student AthJetjc Review
Board wtuch after deliberation, allocates specified
allotments to intercoUegjate, club, intramural and
recreational activities.

funds reaUocated
Of the $240,000, $139,771 Is allocated to
intercollegiate sports consisting of the II varsity teams.
Basketball, hockey, baseball and wrestling all received
substantial increases over 1970 due to redistribution of
defunct football funds. The hoopsters top the ladder with
$49,300 followed by hockey $24,810, baseballS 15 ,000,
wrestling $11,000, track $8426, wo men's sports $8335,
fenc..ing $8000, swimming $7700, cross country $3010,
tennis $2300 and golf$ I 890.
Club sports divide up S 15 ,000 in funds with the
crew club and soccer team accounting for almost half the
total. Judo, lacrosse, rugby, ski team, table tennis, bowling
and cheerleaders dJvtde the remamder.
An additiOnal $22,000 was allotted to the intramural
program (men's intramurals. recreation and Women's
RecreatiOn Association) following a heated debate in the
Student Assembly . The bulk of this money was extracted
from mtercoUegiate sports. This upped the total intramural
budget to $48,000. The rema1mng $53,360 of the original
quarter million goes to general administration fees ,
promotion and publicity

There are several facton that must be considered
when reviewing the athletic budaet. There are absolutely
no athletic scholarships awarded to any Buffalo varsity
member through student fees. Vanity money is directed
strictly to materials and supplies, contractual services and
the bulk to travel costs. A few tultJon waivers are extended
but only in hardship cases where the talented recipient Is
unable to meet the cost.

Grants-ln-aid are auppUed only by the State and not
through Athletic Department resources. The intercollegiate
scheduling of the II vanity sports has realized an
impressive upgrading in competition, which has
necessitated increased traveling oosts. The baseball,
hockey, fencing and wrestling teams all JUrtlcipate in
major top-calib re University divisions despite the ablence
of scholarship aided playClrs.

lnln.murals popular
No one can deny the success of the widely expanded
intramural program. Under the able direction of Wtlllam
Monlursh , it has attracted well over 5000 students. Yet,
Mr. Monkarsh will be the first to admit that the $48,000
allocated to mtramurals is an excessive figure and serves
largely to pay for student salartes
Wo men's sports has received a warm response by the
Athletic Department. Since I 969, funding in this area has
steadily Increased, resulting in expanded programs and
rotters.

Sensitivity

Weekend explores .teelin&lt;!!S
by Lynda Teri
FI'Dturt' Editor

Talk1ng does not always bnng
understanding. One can mouth
words to different individuals 10
different SitUatiOnS Witho ut a lie
ut bond ever bemg established
between them The re are many
ways 1n wh1ch our interperso nal
commun1ca t1o ns are nothing more
than an exchange of w ord~
words giVIng a modest I ype 11f
~at1sfact 1o n , sufficient at 11mcs
but more oftc:n than not, lack1ng
•ny real sense ol understanding or
commitment
A workshop m interpersonal
rdat1ons
scheduled
for the
weekend of Feb 4 6, will try tu
establtsh
thiS
sense
of
understanding
between
1ts
participants. It will attempt lu
give those mvolved an ms1ght mlu
how they affect and , in tum, art'
affected by those around them.
The sensitivity weekend shall
be held in Norton HaU and will
" focu s
on
understanding
mterperso nal proc~es and 1n
part1c ular, on developmg .10
awareness
of
o ne's
own
~nterpersonal style."
'Experimentation and honesty'
It IS hoped that over the course
of the weekend, participants will
be able to "explore the manner in
which they interact with others.
hCJw others perceive them, how
they percetve others and how
the se
perceptions
are
commumcated ." This interaction
is often neglected in the course of
daily meet1ngs and • activities,
according to Michael Edelstein,
one of the ten sraduate students
involved. The sensitivity weekend
ia an opportunity to have a
meaningful interaction with other
individua.la.llid Mr. Bdeldein.
He Yiewod tbe weekend liS a

chance for "experimentation and
honesty " Too often, we react to
people o r have them react to u~ 1n
un clear and ~on fusing WltYS . he
contmued
If we receive a
v1hration from someone and
1ewond to 11 we seldom expla1n
our own al lions He hoped 1he
wee l..end would g~ve students an
o pportunity
to study
the1r
"mterpen~onal style" and questiOn
why they react or are reacted to
111 Lertaln ways ...lhe group will
hopcfuUy he a safe envtronment
where o ne may test out different
st yles of intera~tion and re,e1ve
honest feedback .·· he sa1d
A time to learn
Three vaneties ol "learmnj:
expenenccs" w11l be prov1ded
There will lle time to actually
ex pcnem:e
new
SltUJtllHIS .
stru ctured or no t . hrne to
conce ptualize
about
the
experiences; and Lime to diSl us~
the: "transfe mhthty'' of these new
expenences to locales outs1de the
worksho p
All ex penenLes dunng the
weekend o~re .sn attempt to
ach1eve some type of cohesion
between "emotion and intellect,
expenence and thought , Without
neglectmg one for the other." The
group&lt;; will be run in different
styles
depending
on
the
preferences of the tnd1v1dUal
groups and trainers.
Sponsored
by
the
Undergraduate
Psychology
Association , tl1c weekend is being
conducted
by
ten
graduate
studen ts
and
two qualified
supervisors.
The sraduate students, Charles
Constantino, Michael Edelstein,
David Ekstrom, Carol Edwards,
Myles Edwards, Athlaie Joy ,
Steven Lewil, Wynne O&amp;Jesby ,
Howard Peadlon and In Rubm,
are all member&amp; of the Psychology

Department ut this University.
Having had train1ng 10 sensitivity
and experience m vanow group&amp;,
they are hopeful about lhe
weekend.
All graduate studen ts Involved
hJVC parttelpo~ted 10 ~CSSIOn~ al the
ren o wned
National
Trammg
Lahoratnnes (NTl) Jt Bethel ,
Matne M o~t of them Jre members
of the o n-going two-year program,
the Graduate Student Professional
Development Program, sponsored
by NTL. They view the weekend
as a " learning experience" for
themselves
as well as the
part1c1pants and look forward to
cunducllng the1r "mlrn,Juctory"
workshop.
The s uperv1sors at tl11: weekend
w1ll be Barbara Benedict Bunker,
PhD
in
Soc1al
P~ych o l ogy,
dSSistant professor at the State
Umverslty of Buffalo and Hal
Kellner,
PhD, consultant m
o rgamzation development and
traming.
Not therapy
The weekend is no t to be
vtewed as a therapeutic Situation .
The trainers were defin1te about
this and discouraged anyone w1tb
severe emotional problems to
participate. They believed they
are able to handle a group
s1tuat1on. but are not
yet
experienced enough to g~ve the
type of rigorous help such
mdtvidual students might need
All applicants will be screened
for the dual purpose of slftang out
a ny
emotionally
troubled
indivtduals and getting the tramers
familiar with the goals of the
partic~ants. The trainers stated
that this is not to infer anything
neptive about those who are not
accepted into the wedcend . They
believed it to be an honest
•a~ment or their limitations and
ca pablliti es.

-ostM.... C~

The traJners shared the opinion
that all groups should be run by
experienced 1nd1v1duals and were
skeptical of people without
proper training leading groups
Being sensitive
Graduate student Ira Rubin
believed · "A I ramer ~hould know
when to push and when not to
push." He beheved that more
harm than good could be done in
a poup which is lead by an
iaeffectual leader. He believed a
leader should be sensitive to the
feelincs of those in the group and
biahlY peiceptive of situations
which will affect different
u\dividuala in different ways. He
continued that a trainer must be

able to watch for those unable to
function in a group situation and
help enrich those who can best
benefit from 11.
Perhaps
the quesHon
of
understanding can be broken
down into two aspects. How do
you rea ct to people'! Just as
impo rtantly , how do they react to
you? And perhaps, the answer can
be found in a weekend of "honest
feedback ."
All mterested students are
invited to apply. The $7 fee is
being Uled to retain the outside
supe r visor,
Mr .
'(ellner.
Applications may be picked up in
tbe Underaraduate PsycbolOSY
Association. Room C-10, 4230
Ridge Lee.

..

�Student government

Absence of:iudiciary crucial
The Student Association , by
failing to appoint a n ew judiciary,
is "seriously jeopardjzing the legal
rights o f students," main tains Lee
Ginsberg, a graduate assistant in
the Office of St udent Affairs.
According to Mr. Ginsberg, the
S A's inaction, whether due to
apathy or low priority, represents
the
gross
inefficie n c y
characteristic
of
student
government .
At present, t he judiciary
consists of the Uuee remaJrung
members of the summer judiciary ,
a small body considering the
enormity and complexity of this
University . Elizabeth Schachtner,
editor of The Buffalo nian , and
o ne of the three presiding justices,
feels that the prolonged job has
become somewhat of a "hassle."
She attributes this to the
temporary reduc tion of the
judiciary from five to three
members, and emphasizes that the

judiciary's jurisdiction covers
20,000 students. Alt hough there
have not been ·a substantial
number of cases recently, Ms.
Schac btner feels t hat the necessity
of a student judiciary cannot be
overlooked.

City court shunned
The establishment of the
student judiciary, Mr. Ginsberg
pointed out, was one of the
primary demands made by the
demonstrating students two years
ago.
Without a functioning
judiciary, it was arg~~~a
university is incapable of handli g
Jls o.wn legal matters.
continually leaves city court as
student's only recourse. To most ,
such an alternative is not
welcomed.
Those
opposing
the
fun ctio nings o f the judiciary at
that time held t hat a unjversity
must not be allowed to exist as a

separate entity divorced from the
comm unity at large. Accordingly,
it was telt t hat any crime
committed OJI t he University
warranted the attention of the
city court regardless of its relative
seriousness.
According to Mr. Ginsberg,
Campus Security favors such use
of city courts for campus
offenses. However, Mr. Ginsberg
feels tftat this preference for
taking cases do.,.ntown is by far
"not in the interest of the
students." Of the same opinion, is
Tom Camess, presently Chief
J ustice, who commented t hat
students sent to city court " do
not get a fair shake."
Mr. Ginsberg is convinced that
the formation of a student
judiciary merits top priority . As
this is not the case, he urges
students to pressure the Student
~ociation to take action in this
direction.

Erie Health Council fortned
to improve medical services
Thomas K. Craine, 29, has been
appointed
aHistant
to
the
presid«~t at the State Univenity
of Buffalo , effective immediately.
Mr. Craine has been director of
ardlitecture and planning in the
Facilities Planning Division since
1968, and was involved with
coordinating the academic and
facilities planning for the new
campus at Amherst. Mr. Craine
succeeds Donald G. Dunn, wteo
was recently appointed executive
assistant to Erie County Executive
Edward Regan.

New assistant

The Spectrum ;. publi$h«&lt; thiW
tim111 II WIIM, ~ry Mlm~Uy,
~Y •MI Fricay; during

m.

,_r

r.t~~~IK

«:Mhmic
by Sub-Board
1, Inc. Offic• MW IOCIIttJd 111 366

N orron H111/, Sbt» Univenlty of NYork 111 Buffillo, 3435 Main St.,
B uff11lo, N 11w York, 1421 4 .
TeltlfJhone: AIW Code 116 ; Editorlt~l
83t-4f13;Bulin-. 831-3610.
R11pr~111n twJ

GUST AV A. FRISCH, INC.
Jewele r - Opt ician
41 KE NMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUF FALO, N...V. 14226

I

for Mlwrtising b l&gt;'
EduutloMI Adwtn:#ing1
S«Yke, Inc., 360 Lalngton A w.,
N11w York, N.Y. 10017.
N ll t /011#11

Sul»t:riplfon ,.,.

INfl

In an atlempt to " reorganize and furthe r Service Council and an attempt will be made to
improve" area health services, County Executive better coordinate it with county health services."
Among the most important duties assigned to
Edward V . Regan formally announced last Friday
the formation of the Health Services Council of Erie the counciJ according to Mr. Regan will be its
"advisory role to the Erie County Office for whose
County.
This new committee, which replaces the Health , efforts are directed towards assisting in the solution
Welfare and Hospital Coordinating and Planning of the many and complex problems facing a large
Council, is designed to take a much more active role and needy segment of our population." This move IS
in the planning and delivery of county health designed to "provide for the elderly, an improved
services than its predecesso r. Mr. Regan also · health care program ."
announced that Or. Kenneth Eckbert, former
chairman of the coordinating council , will continue 'Useful to people'
Concerning the fiscal impact of the health
in that position on the new council.
Noting the problem of "a complicated services change Regan stated : "Health services
technology in County Health Services,'' Mr. Regan expenditures now consume two-thirds of the county
claimed thai "the Health Services Council will bring budget. We will not necessarily_increase o ur spending
a high quality of health care to all the citi:rens of in thls area but we will rechannel it into areas which
Erie County ."
wiJJ become more visible to the citizens of th1s
county. Our plan is to take the present health care
'Integration and coordinating'
system , make improvements where necessary and
To accomplish this goal the council was granted make it more useful to t he people. This can be done
a broad list of responsibilities concerning the by pinpointing responsibility for health care with1n
planning of area health sefVl ces. both pubhc and the government. If we do this then we will know
private, and will be charged with "the inLegration who's accountable and will be better able to
and coordination of the planning of county health coordinate our services throughout the com mumt y."
services with those planned and conduc ted hy other
By "coordinat ing" health services, Mr. Regan
official planning groups, the volunteer agencies, the referred to both the public and private aspects of
State University of New York at Buffalo and the health care, and he claimed that it will be the maiO
private sector.''
·
concern of the Health SerVIces Council to "gtve all
Mr. Regan explained that "health service at UB people the assurance of an equal opportunity to
will be re.analyz.ed and reviewed by the Health obtain a high quality o f comprehensive health care.''

$4.60 ,.,

I 'u,m•rtttr or $8.00 for two ..,.,.,.

BEFORE YOU BUT
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Spectrum . Wednesday, January 26 , 1972

3610 M•in St. Aaess fr- U.l.

UJ-7131

STORES

INC.

�Legislative influence

Borenstein: effective SASU
by J~ff Greenwald
Campus Editor

Editor 's no te: The following Is the second in a
two-pan .feries on Mark Borenstein. This segment
will discuss the Student Auociarion of the State
University
(SASU)
and
Mr.
Borenstein 's
po.rticipatio fl in it. SASU represents the first attempt
at New York State-wide student organization. Mr.
Borenstem, active in SASU from its inception and
vice chairman for rhe past semester, was recently
elevated lO the post of ChDirman.
- IUufm•n

Student Assembly deals
with budgetary proposals
A poor showmg of only I 5
representatives at last Monday 's
Student
Assembly
curtailed
Original
plans to vote on
constitu tional amendments. The
meetmg thus dealt onJy with
budget proposals and entertained
Idle conversation.
The Assembly's main concern
was
a
proposed
Executive
Committee resolution to transfer
$245 from the frozen account of
the Arab Cultural Club (ACC) to
the International Cluh Money
WitS frozen in the ACC's account
when its president was charged
with forgery. QuestiOns surround
the club's compoSition and until
they are settled in a case pending
before the Student Judacaary, its
funds rema.an frozen.
However, the lntemahooaJ
nub requested a transfer from
these funds for ats month-long
~etebrata on.
ObJections
were
nused by one faction of the Arab
Cultural Club who contended that
until problems were cleared up,
the
money
should
remain
untouched
Representatives
.ipparently agreed wath' this
CORRECTION
Regtstration for Mrs. Nichols
Speeded Reading Course will be
In I 06 Diefendorf

argument, voting I 1-3 not
alloca te the money .

to

Verbal proclivity
Other
Assembly
concerns
mcluded a proposal to contract
Steve Stalls for a one-mght concert
10 the Memorial Auditonum . One
person questioned the validity of
such an expenditure, pointing out
that the S20,000 demanded by
Stills could put on at least two
quahty concerts.
H1s argument was "There o~re
many fine groups who wall play
for less than $10.000 I thmk
Stills as askmg way too muc.:h for
one mght " This was the only
protest, however , and the motion
clearly passed.
Mic h ael
Levinson,
who
collected 1000 signatures to g~ve 11
" rap an rhyme" next Monday 10
Clarl Gym, was the final speaker
He asked the Assembly to g~ve
him $200 so that the three-hour
speech coul&lt;! be taped and
distnbuted The allocation was
quickly approved aft er Mr.
LeVInson demonstrated hiS verbal
prodavaty
Add1taonally, the Assen~bly
passed budgets for the N1agara
Day Care Center, Buffalo Draft
Counseling, the Comic Book
Co-op and Sunshine House

Beller Late Than
THE DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE
and

THE CENTER FOR THEATRE RESEARCH

''SASU offers a tremendous opportun1ty for all
those involved . It 's a new organizatton and we leel it
can provide students with a large range of services
and information." Mr. Borenstein 's enthusiasm was
qu1te apparent as he related the planne~ venture~ of
SASU
''We hope 10 affect four constituencies," he
sajd. These would be student governments and their
agencacs; students, by providing direct services ,
providing 11dmissitlns
transfer students, by
information; and state organ izations such as the
Board of Trustees and the Legislature
Explainmg further, Mr Borenstein placed
special emphasis on action affectang the Leg.aslature.
"The Leg.aslature has been increasingly more actave an
the area of higher education " He cited the
numerous bills on the dockets concerning higher
tuiuon and student fees as especaally vivid examples.
SASU plans to keep a very close watch on the
Legislature an the future . "Out lawyer will serve as a
legal analyst for us. He wtll get all the balls filed 10
Albany and prepare background informatum
concerning the ramifications upon students. Our
analyst will also suggest the positaon he feels SASU
should take
"At that pomt the Executive Comm1ttee of
SASU wall decade the appropriate puSitaon and begtn
maJcmg ~.:ontacts w1th the vanous leg~slators These
contacts wall be handled by SASU afftliates an all
parts of the state When the btll is up for passage, we
will renew contacts at the capatal atself."
Ugjslative proposals
SAS ll, however, W1ll nut merely react to
pending legaslation. hut wall also propose laws "At
the end of February:· an formed Mr Borenstem,
"SASU w ~l come out with 1ts leg.aslative proposah
fo1 I 972 . They will include a progum for revamping
the scholarship system. A110ther bill , if pas.1ed,
would require the opening up of 'Board of Trustees'
meetings, and mandate that publac heanngs "e held
before the trustees took any "maJOr act10n "
Whale adm1tting that SASU appears mtent 1111
working through the system, Mr Borenstem
remarked "You m1ght see SASLI taJcmg a very
radical posataon 1f certain tuJtaon changes are made,

PLAYWRITIN G l (Theatre 405)
given by :

M O RTO N LICHTER
Pta rwnght-m-R e., idem&lt;'. tl 1 tor and Dlr(•ctor

2 00

Stop Press

~

J 50 p.

-•*-••••

BASiC ACTING I RETURNS'

Lichter will teach a new section of Theatre 108.
Tuesday , Thursday 2 00

3 50 p m .

PLEASE REGISTER at

He as also hopeful that SASU can coordinate
conferences o n ISSues of State University-wide
concern Possible top1cs include student rights and
Union Board aclivitaes.
There are presently about fifteen afftlliates of
SASU , representmg about one-third of the State
UnivefSity's students A rise in membership is one of
SASU's goals "We re:~ctily admit SASU has done
little m the past. We hope we can proVIde services
and information of the sort that will encourage other
campuses to partiCipate."
Lured from SA?
Mr Borenstem washed also to clear up what he
felt may be a rmsconcep11un concerning SASU's
mvolvement 111 the recent Student Association
resignations Some have accused SASU o f luring
Dave Ba1mak and Alan Schwartz away from SA with
lucrative salary offers. Said Mr . Borenstein : " Both
Dave and Alan had strong leanings toward ruigning
long before SASU came into the picture.
" As for salary, Dave will be paid less than he
had been rece1vang at SA, and Alan will be getting
slaghUy more." Concernang tus own salary, '1'm
making notlung,'' he assured
Upon
assuming the Chairmanship, Mr.
Borenstein has temporanJy moved SASU offices to
Buffalo. He has been busy in the past weeks
developmg a staff. Besides Mr Barma.k and Mr
Schwartz, th~&gt;se accepting posts with SASU are
Lance Newman , serving as assastant to the Chairman,
Ann Kirschner, secretary, James Drucker, public
mformataon officer, Steven Cohen, legal assjstant
and J ohn Charles, research assastant on legal and
leg~slatJve matters
Mr . Borenstc1n emphasized that this staff was
nut enough AdditiOnal help IS VItal and he ''pleads"
that anyone anterested 1n ''buildjng an effective state
organazatltlfl .. con tact h1m at the SAS U offtce at 9
W No rthrup PI or to get 10 touch wath the SA m
205 Norton Hall.

A conference on the St'vrn Princ1ples of Nallon Buildina , futunna various speakers
from Black and Puerto Rican studies will be held Jan 17-28 from ~ a.m throuah the
rvenina in both the Norton Hall Conference Theater and Goodyear HaJJ.
The conference will beain w&amp;th an address by Dewayne Baker, chauman of the EPIS
Student Association . Followin11 will be a panel discussion and vanous workshops
throuahout thr afternoon. At 4 p.m. on Jan . 27 , the Black Drama Workshop will prctlt'nt
fhr E.'lutrontc /lliggrr. Sister Son11 and Where Wt At 1
The second day format is basically the same The confereoct' will conclude in
Goodyear Hall at 8 p.m. wath an lmani Music festival. Partu:ipalln(l will be the lmanl
Music Workshop, poets Celt's TISdale and Pedro Peru and • jazz prescntallon
lntrrestcd students are uraed ro consult naers 11nd posters for all other limes and
locations.

anriOIOl('l'

Class will meet Monday, Wednesday

SASU unknown
Mr. Borenstem mentioned that numerous
student services were being considered by SASU.
Expansion of the present block booking system,
ctissemination of scholarship and fellowshlp
mformation, institution of more low cost student
travel services, and the distribution of records and
stereo equipmrnt at discount prices were cited as
examples.

Ethni(· conference

/Jwl \ltldents ca11 nuw rt'CIJin for

Cand1dares please submit u bm'f' sample of any poerrv.
ficrion, piiJ~· or jilm scnpt (Cw~s will hr l1mited to rcn
students)

or if CUNY (City University of New York) merges
with the state and loses its free tuition. It would set
open admissions back years.
"SASU will not be a lackey for the Central
Administration ... If the time comes that we have
to take forceful actions, we will. It may destroy the
organization, but we won't just sit by."

Bible Truth

Unu~ual

Diamond
Engagement
Rtnm
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~l'iJ~~..eleRS
II AI.L.£HST ., BU FFAI.O,H.V.

JESUS CHR IST IS ALIVE
"I am He lhal tlvelh. and wes
dead ; and behold, 1 am alive
lorever mote, Amen, and have
lhe l&lt;ey\ or Hell and Oealh "
R evetatoon 1: aa

Hear, 0 Israel
for gema from th•
JEWISH BIBLE
phone
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Wednesday, January 26, 1972 The Spectrum . Page three

�JIIST foR. Rlrf
byEanun

Some of you may have been wondering about this column.
Nobody is reading it, but quite possibly somebody somewhere is
wondering about it. Allow me to enlighten you. Conceived in a
moment of weakness, the column's purpose is to examine the facets of
everyday life from a satirically humorous standpoint (''What's he
saying, Ralph?" "That it's supposed to be funny, lrV.''). As far as the
identity of Eggman goes, the mystery can be solved by playing Side one
of Magical Mysrer Tour backwards at 78 rpm and connecting the first
letter of every obscene word uttered by McCartney or Harrison .
Our discussion today (drum roll, please) concerns an in-depth look
at an inevitable part of every person's daily life : the hack. A hack can
range from a small annoyance to a nerve-racking abomination . A hack
can be used interchangibly as many parts of speech ("What a fuckin'
hack!" "You're hacking my head ." "My girlfriend is the ultimate
hack.''). Synonymously known as a hassle, a bitch and a swift pain, a
hack can be applied to a wide spectrum (note the plug) of hfe
situations.
For instance, the Chauvinist Society of America (known locally as
the Pigs) supplied us with this vignette : "Every girlfriend or wife is a
hack. Hacking is part of the female 's basic nature. There is no such
thing as a woman who is not a hack. Your best shot is to try to lind
one who is a minimal pain in the ass."
With some chicks, hacking is more than a pasttime; it's an art.
ConSider this interlude:
"Whaddya mean, you're coming home late for supper? Did it every
occur to you what 1 do aU day · Do you realize that I spend all day,
slaving over a hot stove. cooking and sweating, just so your supper can
be ready when you walk m'f"
"All right, all right . I'll make 11 helme on time. What 's for supper.
anyway?"
"Tuna salad."
Hacks come in all shapes and fur ms and occur at all times.
The foll owmg is a lrst uf 32 hacks ~·ommonly encountered in life.
A hack is .
l A busy s1gnal 2. A parkmg ttcket ~ I 5 page term papers 4 . A
red hght 5 A prude h . Berng pulled ovc:r by a cop for a license and
reg~strJitnn check as you're Jhout to hght up a joint 7. Parents 8. A
g~rlfnend 4 l'1,mmg home tn a house lull of relatives smashed out uf
your face o n THC 10 The fit xt dJt~ wtth a gJrl II A girl pullmg your
hand away I ~ A gtrl pulhng her hand away II Bumper -to-bumper
t ra ftil
14 ~ The AM 1adlll '" Vlltll r:u I ~ Lo,ing your wallet 16. Havtng
two ounces ul hash ancJ nn mah:hc~ 17 llulding back a tremendoua
nuw of post -nasal dnp and finding your Kleenex box is empty IlL
Hav111g your 1..H .uuenna tipped oft 1'1 . Your aunt trying to set yuu up
Wtth a grrl by teUm~ you "She hlls a wonderful pcrsonultty" 20 . The
dentist 21 Meetrng a beauttlul g11l Willi's gtVIIIg you the eye, hut yuu
can't do anything becau:.e your gtrlfrtcn(J'~ there
22 . Geurng up in the mornm~ 2\ Th'' Mntur Vehtde IJureau .!4 .
Running into your girltnend 's he~l frte11d whi11~ you're cheattng 25 The
wo rd " no" 26 . "Not nuw " 27 l o(klrt(t yolll kt•ys 111 the cur when
you're 45 miles from hume .!~ . Getting turned duwn by a grrl and goir1g
out to play basketball the nell. I day and hear tug ahuut it 29 . I:Jeing o;ick
30. A blind dale who turns out to look Ilk~ a gtmlla in heat 31 . When
you tnterrupt something 1mpmtant to Jnswet tltl' phone and 11 stops
ringing as soon as you get there 12. When ymu gnHtdmother :1sks y1w rf
you ~moke marijuana.
Now that you have been ~ufflrtently l.'llltgjllellcu Jtwut th~: naturt:
ol hacks, the time has ..:omc to tCrllllll&lt;tt l' tim ..:olumn. I've g~ll a tew
hacks of my o wn to take ..:arc o f Set ylHI ne\1 week w111t sotlll.' 111ore
words of wisdom . . . pearl~ ul plca~urc
globules of
well.
whatever . Have :1 gooJ week Pca...e

Statllord. University dismisses
professor for inciting violence
by Lynne Traeger
Off Campus Editor

For the first lime in 70 years,
Stanford University has fired a
tenured professor, on the grounds
that he incited violence on the
campus last winter. In a decision
reached Saturday the Board of
Trustees of the school voted to
adopt the recommendations of a
seven-member faculty panel and
dismissed
radical
English
instructor H. Bruce Franklin
immediately. The faculty panel
had held six weeks of hearings on
th&lt;i charges brought against
Franklin by Stanford President
Richard W. Lyman.
Franklin and 100 supporters
chanted in the rain outside the
downtown San Francisco office
building where Ute board met .
Lyman called the vote against the
37-year -old
self-proclaimed
"Maoist,'' "a landmark in a
difficult but essential effort for
higher education" to protect itself
against those who would destroy
American
universities.
Tile
decision
read
as
foUows :
"Resolved · That Ute Board of
Trustees hereby ~oncurs ... that
Professor H . Bruce Franklin be
dismissed from the faculty at
Stanford immediately."

faculty self-discipline procedure;• you nor your administrat.ion nor
said Brown. "The faculty and the the majority of the faculty you
administration determine ' the hire wish to permit a Communist
revolutionary to teach in your
basic facts.''
University."
Continuing his praise of the
On
Sunday ,
Franklin
action, Lyman maintained it
announced
he
will
continue
to
would serve to "distinguish
teach
at
Stanford
while
he
appeals
between the protected free
expression of ideas, no matter the decision. He said he would
how repugnant to how many teach a course on "literature and
people, and a license on the other revolution," which he started last
hand, to wield any weapon and week in a dormitory meeting
room. The course is officially
exploit any opening to attack and
taught
by a graduate student
bring to a halt the function of one
supporter
, but Franklin is actually
of the greatest strongholds of free
the
one
who determines the
expression in the world today
grades and gives the lectures.
the American university."
The ooJy pr~edent for the
case was the dismissal of a
Youthful dissenten
professor who advocated the
Tile charges against Franklin municipal ownershi~ of San
stemmed from the disruption of 3 Francisco railroads. This occurred
s peech
by
former
U.N; · In 190L
Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge,
a sit-in at the university computer
center and a night rally where he
supposedly urged violence. The
faculty board found him innocent
of the Lodge speech incident, but
guilty of the other two charges.
The two dissenters on the
seven-member panel were young
faculty members who had been
elected by the alumru-at-large in a
new Stanford policy designed to
give greater student and faculty
partici pation. Denis Hayes, a
former student body president,
said the action had damaged free
speech on the university campus,
and the fLnal deci~ion wa~ based
on ''a very, very ambiguous set of
facts ." Hayes said there W3S a
difference between "advocacy and
im:tternent" and incitement had
not been proven in Franklin's
case.

Previous suspension
Franklin had already been
suspended from hts teaching
duties and barred from the
campt.Js las\ spring, but had been
on full pay ·ever since . The board
direded that he be paid his salary
through Aug. I in a lump sum. No
witnesses were called durmg the
two-hour sess1on. and the board
spent the time considering a
One of the pieces of evidence
IM~ -pagc report from the faculty
presented to the boa rd was a
cornmittce, along with the
written at tack by Franklin l lll
Cllncurrmg recommendation by what he termed his "kangaroo
Lyman .
hearin g." Franklin wrote, "The
Trustee Chairman Robert Ming
essence of the case is that neither
Brown said that under Stanford's
tenure policy, the board's role was ••b!!J1••llll!k~s••••••••
1\l determine only whether a
s1x-wcek hearing before the
W8fYat9A~S hvd; SfVfe
In lh~ Unn&gt;&lt;!TIIIll ntM
faculty buard was fair and tis
3102 Main St.
condusiuns 1.:01 respond with the
{between Courer &amp; Lubo.•)
evidence. "This is essentially a

00

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Page four . The Spectrum . Wednesday, January 26, 1972

T ... l! 1!"'1(,0 CO., ST. LOUIS . MO

�Nixon unveils deficit federa1 budget
President Nixon unveiled a
$246.3 billion federal spending
budget o n Monday that contained
a deliberate $25.5 billion deficit.
He coupled his "red ink" budget
with a demand that the Congress
enact a legal ceiling to prevent
expenditures from going above
t his figure.
In his formal budget message
to the Congress, the President
described his deficit budget as the
"strong but necessary medicine"
required to restore the still
sluggish economy to vigorous
health. He said: "We- take that
medicine because we need it, not
because we like it."
Nixon's forecast of a $25.5
billion deficit for the 1973 fsscaJ
year which begins Ju.ly I was the
largest intentionally allocated by
any c hief executive since World
War 11. However, it was well
below t he $38,8 billion deficit he
conceded for the current budget

year. A year ago, the President
bad predicted a S I 1.6 billion
deficit for fiscal 1972.

Increased defense spending
The President proposed no
major new programs, but as he did
in his State of the Union addre.u,
Mr. Nixon urged the Congress to
act on the major programs that he
had suggested, but had failed to
win approval of, last session.
These programs included revenue
sharing and health care increases.
An
increase
in
defense
spending was advocated, however.
The
PresMent
recommended
$76.5 billion be allocated for the
military budget, with an e mphasis
on
rebuilding
the
Navy's
conventional fleet and developing
a new submarine-launched nuclear
missle system. Noting t he winding
down of' the Vietnam war. which
absorbed large portions of the
Pentagon's budget in recent years,
Mr. Nixon t old the Congress that

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"it would be foolhardy not to
modernize our defense at this
crucial moment."
In asking for $702 million
more for fiscal 1973 th~
slated for use in the previous llSCal
year,
the
President
urged
Congressional lawmakers to avoid
the "costly mistakes" of past
defense spending cuts. "Nothing
could be more wasteful than to
have to pay the price of
weakness," Mr. Nixon declared in
his budget message. " It costs far
less to maintain our strenBth than
it would cost to fall behind and
have to catch up, ev"n if that
could be done,'' he said.
This request for increased
defense
spending
reflected
administration concern over the
rapid expansion of Russian naval
and nuclear forces and over the
lack of progress so far in the
Soviet- U.S.
Strategic
Arms
limitation Talks (SALT). " Until
sueh time as there are agreed
limits on strategic forces, we must
prepare to meet the growing
Soviet threat," Mr. Nixon said.

Democratic aiticism
Nitton 's
"prescription"
of
defidt spending was seriously
questioned
by
Democratic
congressmen .
Sen .
Edmund
Muskie told a news conference
that the Nixon budget showed a
"disastrous management of the
nation's economy." Sen. W11liam
Proxmire, chairman of the Joint
Congressional
Economic
Committee, said that a huge
incre-ase in the military budget is
"indefensible at a time when the
incremental cost of the Vietnam
War has dropped by S20 billion."

The Senator added, "How can we
justify spending more money for
the--Pentagon when the Vietnam
War is being wound down?
Instead of rubber-st~mping the
President's request, J call upon
Congress to cut the military
budget from last year's level and
cut it bard."
Despite the deficits, Mr. Nixon
insisted that his 1973 budget
would not spur inflation because
income would exceed spending by
a thin $700 million if the
econ omy
were
at
fu ll
employment.
The
President
commented: "I s trongly ur&amp;e the
Congress
to
respect
the
full-employment guidelines this
year." There was a veiled hint that
if Congress votes increases in
spending,
Mr. Nixon would
chaJlenge Congress to couple the
increases with a boost in taxes.
Domestic funds hiked
"Human resources spending
will be 45 per cent of the 1973
budget. Our policy of end.inj our
involvement in the Vietnam War
lw helped make this possible by
freeing resources to keep us strong
externally as well as internally ,"
commented Mr. Nixon . Increases
in the area of human resources
mclude a record S 1.4 7 billion
Justice Department budget with
n.:arly half of the S246.3 nullion
increase going toward treutment,
rehabilitation
and
law
enforcement program6 to combat
drug abuse. In addition, a $900
million increase is slated for the
Office of Economic Opportunity.
which includes such self·financmg
features as Social Security and
Medicare, but also a S300 million

boost for food stamp~. Mr. Nixon
proposed to drop the SS .60
monthly
premium
paid
by
Medicare recipients for opliont.l
iriSunnce coverage of doctor bills.
Federal aid to education is in
store for a cu t of $28 million
which Mr. Nixon said could tum
into an increase if Congress
accepts his revenue sharin&amp; plan
and approves his S 1.5 billion plan
t o ease local school desegregation
problems.

No new taxes
The new budget calls for no
major additional tax increases or
tax cuts, except for SociaJ
Security taxes. It proposes that
the Social Security tax, not
scheduled to rise on Jan. 1, 1973 ,
t o 5 .65 per cent for each worker
and his employer, will be kept at
its present rate of 5.2 per c~nt .
However, Mr. Nixon wants the tax
levied on the first S I 0 ,000 of a
worker's earnings instead of the
first $9000.
l11e President revealed that 38
per cent of government revenues
will come from income taxes paid
by individuals, I 4 per cent from
corporate income taxes, 26 per
cent from Social Security taxes,
10 per cent from borrowings, 7
per cent from excise taxes and S
per cent from other sources,
including tariffs and estate and
gift taxes.
Nixon said his new budget
breaks d o wn to 3 1.8 per cent for
national defense, 45 per cent for
human resources, 10.4 per cent
for physical resources, 8 .6 per
cent for interest on the national
debt and S per cent ror other
programs.

Berrigan trial

Rebirth ofanti- war movement
In a statement released Sunday
evemng, the d ay before the
beginning of his trial , Rev Philip
Berrigan urged a crowd of young
protestors to rekindle the an ti-war
movement.
The
protestOr\
g~~thered on the lawn of the ~rnall
county pnson, sang son8fl and
listened to speeches.
Berrigan . along with SIX others.
1s c harged with plotting to k1dnap
prestdential
advisor
Henry
l(jssinger, bomb heating systems
under five government buildings
and raid draft board of!l!;es Jn

.......,...,_.......-....11111111!~!111!11~N EW STUDENT MENU ::l
liver and Brown I&lt;. ice S 1 ~5
Californicl Swinger . . . . 1.95
Hamburger Stroganoff 1.45
Small Sirloin Steak
(Boneless)1 .4S
Chicken Roquefnrt . .. 1.65
Beef Bourguinon . _. .. 1 .75
Choice Omelet . . . . . . 1.35
Ground Bt&gt;ef (Organic) 1.45
Petite Filet M'~non , .. 1.95
Vegetable Tempura,
Brown Rice1 .45
Vegetable Scallops,
Brown Rice1 .65
Roast Sesame Chicken 1 .65
Egg Plant Parmesian .. 1.75
and many daily specials

mnr stat~:s . Sill. of tht! seven saymg this time that our lives are
defendants are, or have been fruit and peace, both of which
e1 ther priests or nuns of the mean resistance? . . . Let's back
Roman Catholic left, and aJl four up o ur rhetoric with our lives . ..
prosecuting lawyers are Catholic, Let's push back the darkness.
two in the traditional bent Tile Tirat's what they said about
d efendants are contending that Christ . you know. He pushed back
the government is harassing them thr darkness once and for all. ·•
for o pposing the war, and that
An earlier rally o n Sunday at a
pretrial publicity wul prevent a church about four blocks from
fair tnal. The area of Pennsylvama IIH' court house was addressed by
frorn whtch a venire of 175 was J.
Theodore
Glick, another
drawn for the start of the: Jury defendent who will be tried
picking
Monday
h
u separately from the seven . Glick
predommantly Protestant scctwn SBJd, " We're going to take the trial
of conservative political thought
and say , 'Thank you government.'
We' re going to say 'Thank you'
11nd
turn it aro und And we are
Message! to crowd
goang to use it t o ini11C I you the
Berrigan 's message was read to government."
the crowd by J. Thomas Menaker,
one of the battery of I;Jwyers Conscience on trial
defendtng him. It read , " Jiow
Defense sympathizers marked
about using th e trial as .ill the o pening o f the trial Monday
occ11sjon for giving r~trth to the with
a
procession
to
the
anti-war movement? llow about courthouse carrying a black coffin
giving movement to somet h ing which con tained mutilated dr.tft
that never really movt."-d, at lea~t In records. Staged by the Harrisburg
11 sustained way'/ Ho w about
Defense Committee, the coffin
will be the symbol throughout the
lnaJ of " various instruments o r
People are DOt just the cause
war that deserve to be buried." ln
of the"popaaatioo problem."
a statement at a press conference,
lht: defense sympathizers said,
Thcy\ot also the victims.
" We know that what is on trial
here
iu
Harnsburg is
the
conscience of America. The
people of this country will be
watching th.is trial to see if men
and women who have cried out to
the government 'thou shalt not
kill' will be put in jail for that.
The people of this country will be
watching to see If ener:getic
opposition to war will be
considered a crime, wben the
greatest crime is war itself."

Wednesday, January 26 , 1972 . The Spectrum. Page five

I

�I

~lN.\~ TO
~(~T?
I

Athletic uncertainties
Tomorrow and friday, undgraduate students will vote
on on the funding level of U.B. athletics. The $240,000
correctly committed to athletics rnust be cut. That amount
is certainly not reflected by student support of athletics and
other far more worthwhile projects are constantly begging
for funds.
The dilemma of athletics on this campus is profound. On
one side, the State has constantly moved to curtail
intercollegiate athletics, while the student committment is
precarious, as evidenced by last fall's 15- 14 vote on the
athletic budget. Further, the sole reason the allocation was
approved then was that many Assembly members felt that
the Executive Committee's previous financi al promises to
the Athletic Department must be honored.
We believe it to be both wrong and inappropriate to
expect students to either increase or maintain the present
level of support. Thus, other alternatives must be
investigated. One proposal, the Administration 's plan of a
School of Health Education, seems doomed by the State's
austere financial outlook. Hopes that alumni will raise their
contributions also seem ill -fou nded .
Perhaps only one thing is totally clear : Despite any
Administration promises the future of intercollegiate
athletics is not promising.

A student sandbox

Wednesday , 26 January 1972
Editor-in.Chief - Denn1s Arnold

Co-Manegong Edrt«K AI Btlf'lson
Co-Manegong Edlt«K M1ke L1ppmenn
A.c. MANICIIntl E .. ttor - Susan Mou
Dual~~ - Jack Her1an
Adwe&lt;11alng M~ - Susan Melleotrne
C.mpu•

City

Copy
Aat.
"-tu,..
Graphic Aru
BackP~~ge

JoAnn Armeo
.Jeff Graenwald
How18 Kunr
Harvy Lipman
Ronnl Forman
Many Gatti
Claire KriiiiJsman
Lynda Teri
. Tom Toles
Amy Ahrtnd

layout

.. Barb Bernhard
Marvhopa Runyon
lit. a. o ...m. . M1ctlael Sllverblatt
Mulic:
.... .Bill y Altman
. Lynne Traeger
Off-Campus
.. - . Janis Cromer
A.IIC.
Mrdley Osteneic:her
Photo
. ... Kim Santos
AM.
• • . . . . . . . . barry Rubin
Sporta
. . . . Howie Faiwl
AM.

..

~

.

The Spectrum 11 serv«&lt; by Unlr«&lt; PrfiSS International, College PrfiSS
Service. the Los Angeles Frae Press. the Los Angel81 Tima Syndiate and
Liber'at10n NIIWI Serv1c1
Republication of mattw htrlt n wuhout tht ellprfiSS oonwnt of the
Editor-in-Chief Is lorblddtn
Editorial Poli&lt;:y Is detarmin«&lt; by the Ed1tor-in.Chraf.

.

'

Page six . The Spectrum. Wed.ntsday, January 26, 1972

IAXfAI

C(~

IS
'?

PRQSRAH .
I

No true attendance
7il th~ Editor.

To date the Student Association of the State Univers1ty
(SASU) has been absolutely wo rthl~. The current
chairman , Mark Borenstein, has blithely admitted that in the
past year and a half, nearly $~,000 have been wasted
throughout the state. Thus Mr. Borenstein and his
newly-formed staff have a difficult task in making SASU
effective, let alone making it work .
Of late some have charged that the move of two
SA·resignees to SASU are simply a case of student
goverment personnel moving from one sandbox (SA) to
another (SASUJ . While we believe these specific charges are
unfounded, the description of SASU as a sandbox is
somewhat appropnate.
This campus contributed at least $6,000 to SASU this
year. So far the sole return on the expenditure has been to
provide travel money for local SASU members to attend
monthly meetings at various points in New York State.
Therefore, unl~ a drastic overhaul occurs in SASU
operations in the next two months, this University should
cease to be a member.
Students presently get little enough for their fees and the
contribution of a worthl~ program would be nothing more
than a blatant admission of the financial irresponsibility of
our student "leaders".

Vol . 22, No. 48

1 c;t).

In the SpN'ttum o f Wednesday, December 8,
1971 you printed a letter m which we stated , "Since
only ten of the approximately 50 students present at
tltis meeting signed an attendance sheet (not
mcludmg the 2 alternatts and 2 representatives)
wluc h the full hody was repeatedly reminded to sign ,
we have no way of guaranteeing their status as
stud tnts of the Spanish , Italian and Portuguese
Department "
It has been pointed out to ~ tha t it was not
dear to all tht ~tudents presen t that this sheet was t o
h~ u~ed as .m att~ndance s he~et Some o f the students
hehcved thJt they were to s1gn only 1f they were not

already o n the undergraduate maihng hst . It is also
true that others did understand tt to be an
attendance sh eet. Nonetheless , only I 0 of the
approximately 50 stude nts present have been
recorded as being prese nt at the meeting (not
includmg the 2 representatives and 2 alternates)
Therefore a true attendance shoot for the meeting o f
November 12 is lacking, and the vote of 32 - I with 6
abstenlions repudiating the actions of last year's
representatives has been questioned by member.~ o f
both the student body and the fa culty
John Aquillllll
Vlrtrmo C Botd.
Undn1raduott Studi!IJI l&lt;epresenrotiVI'I
/)rparcme'lt /SP&lt;J nlth , lta lwn and Pnnugueu

7

'&gt;(

nt

p
sl
~

d·
n

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
tlcat

ur t h t' osl, Pablo , hete comes the
ln4U1SII10 n a11ui n Or so it see ms. The Great Catholk
(.' hurt h Conspiracy trial begins this week as the high
pnests l"'f the Order uf the American Flag. Brother
Mst r hell a1Hl Rev . lloover, seek to have the snridels
elt~o mmunlt:ll l ed The ridicul o us 1hing is that Dan
Bemgan and h1s fnend~ readily admit hav1ng spoken
and l"ven written letters about the 1dea of kidnapping
llenry Kiss1nger. But then , JUSt :~bout everyone I
!..now has at \Orne time d1scussed the feas1b1hty o f
sllootsng N1xon I'm not sure 1f any of them were
serHlus, but I d oubt thJt ll ~:ase of ~·onsp•ra~y could
be bu11t aga1nst them
The arguments for abohshmg conspira~ y Jaws
arc well k nuwn and. qu1te frankly, lughl} JuStifiable
Suffsce 11 tu say that ther~ is something slightly
fnghtemng about statut es govermng what md1viduats
tlunk But lhJS IS not .A column about cons ptracy
laws. or even really about the tri11l of Dan1el
Bernpn fhe topics for this column are .1nger and
frustrallon and c.:yru c1sm. Whal upsets me most IS the
fact that few people seem to know or care abou t
what ts go mg o n . Two years ago, the students on thts
campus were outraged when the Umted States took
e1ght men t o 1rial tn Chicago o n conspiracy charges.
People screamed about refusing to be beaten mto
submission , about f1ghting until victory was won .
all those fme young revolutionaries. WeU, the going
got a bttle rough and we found out that the
establishmentsystemmachineadministration had us
fiaured pretty well We were nothing more than a
bunch of gutiC$5, disorgamr.ed middle-class white
kicts. Nobody knew what revolution even meant ,
( never rrund having the stomach to fight one But
' there were Abbie and Jerry , playing around Hke the
freak version of Martin and lewis so tbat they could
ao out and nght cute ' radical' rip-offs at S2 .50 a
copy. We were convinced that this was what
revolutio n was about - and then the gas turned to
bullets and everybody ran scurrying for their

•·&lt;Hpeted nri:&gt;ons. h1dmg m the smack and lht l·okc
and the speed.
Well , let's get one 1h1ng stra1ght folks
revolutwn IS not ~omet h ing you JOin for a hllle wh1lc
so that yo u'll have some mteresting stories to tell
your grandch1hlre n Revo lutiOn IS saying blacks and
Puerto R1 cans and I nd1ans and Chicanos and poor
wlutes are still bemg tortured by the rotten core nl
Amenca and that you'll be damned if you're going
lo Sit there and let Jt happen . It 's refusmg to let the
down~ In Washmgto n 1.hange the color of the bodu:ls
1n Southeast As1a and tell us that the war IS ending.
ll 's putting yourself on the hne, maktng a
commllment t o d o somethmg about changmg thiS
mess We are livmg 1n a world of id1ots governed by a
collection of madmen, and the bisgest fools arc
those o f us who real11.e I hat a nd do nothing about 11
to save thetr o wn ~amty
The Hcmgans tned t o take some meaningful
actton agamsl 1he msamt y What the fedeul
government d.Jd' t o them was to be expected What
theu supposed supporters have done by their
machon IS dtSgraceful. This trial should bnng
thousands of 'a ctivists' out of their holes because the
people mvolved here are worth more than all the
Abb1e Hoff mans and J erry Rubms this earth ever has
and ever will kno w, but it won't. It won' t because
we have found that 1t is much more comfortable to
Sit around the apartment with a new water pipe than
to risk all this nice new-found security . August will
come and we'll all complain about the disgusting
choice of candidates for the election, but three
months later, mosL of those concerned young voters
will go out and vote for the Democrat no matter
who he is, forgetting aU about Ctucago and Tonkin
and JUst who sent those auys into My Lsi And aU
the wlule the Berngans of this world will go on
seeing t he suffenna and being punished for movinr.
to end it. Ttunk about 11 the next time it's three in
the morning and feeling sort of suicidal. Maybe
you'll understand.

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�CIMIIIIIMIII

R.

by Jo-Ann Annao

To the Facuffl'
Ralph Nuder's Public lntcr~l Research
Group (PIRG) IS designed to help students cope
with such social problems as corporate
mespons1biljty. consumer fraud , race and sex
dis~.onmination and ~:nvirnn m en tal poUution. It's
goal is to form an orgamzat1o n 111 which students
can t:mploy a pmf~:ssional staff to bring about
social !lettermen I - effecti\lcly. legally and
nonviolently .
During the we&lt;!k o l Feb. ? the Western N.Y.
PIRG (WNY PIRG) will petition the University
students to ratse their s tudent activtties f~:e by
$2 .00 per semester wath an option for those who
do not WISh to panac1pate in the fundtng. TillS
money will be used to h1re a staff of protessionals
suda as lawyer.~, ecologiStS and urban plann~:rs
whn will work tor and under the direction of the
studtnts.
WNYPIRG needs your help The most
effcctave means of reaching all of the students
will be to take up 5 minutes at the ht:g111ning o f
yuur class to hand out the petitio ns We are
JSking for your consent and support.
ltaving a professional staff in their em ploy
wall enable students to cope with social problems
111 a manner wtuch benefits, ruther than
Interrupts, the1r education. Working closely with
the professaonal staff, st ud~:nt researchers co uld
heg.tn to apply ao;ad~:mic lessons to re11l life
si tuatiO nS.
College students need to learn the stra t~:gtes
.1nd techniques for applying knowledge lo further
JUStiCe and peace in a tho usand or more contexts
throughout society . We need to learn how to
research empirically. interview and dig out fact l&gt;.
pacce together and evaluale, develop a sense of
timing and f-orum for using programs devised for
sol'ial ach o n. The major problems of o ur nation
challenge almost aU the various disdphnes taught
at this University - from the physical and social
SC\ences to the humanities.
This new kind of educational expenence ca n
nourish rapidly with the establishment of
student-supported professional representatives
working full time for the students. We need 5
minutes of your class time to make this
organization a reality ,
You are now helping to teach students skills
that will create a better society Now give us 11
chance to put those skills to use.
Thank you .

Student autonomy is diseased - diseased with
the encroaching cancer of admiitistrative eontrol.
Such control has most adversely affected student
fees for this year has witnessed the steadily
increasing castration of their· usage.
Legal opinions, state guideli{les, and voucher
reviews have all been used against students with the
net result that this University boasts the most
stringent control of student fees of any other state
facility.
Student governments have allowed , even
encouraged by Uteir inaction. this development. As
an example, IRC President AI Miller reacted to the
Hayes Hall edict that voluntary IRC fees undergo
administrative review with the remark that the
University was providing a service. In fact , he
observed that IRC and the administration were
"cooperating." It appears that cooperation (or is it
co-option?) seems to be the byword of all student
government-administration dealings. One might even
charge collusion if they were to inspect the grad
school recommendations of several leading student
officials.
However, as lan DeWaal stated, '1'his bubble of
inaction has burst" and plans are currently underway
for a massive student protest. Proposals range from a
shut down o f all student activities to grandiose plans
of guerrilla theatrics. On the surface, student
government schemes fo r such tactics seem
wo rthwhile. But this conclus1on forgets the history
and personahty of student government for even now
a good cause and good 1deas have been abandoned
forgotten in a rampage of ego infighting.
A meeting last Saturday of student leaders was
transformed into a stage for indiv1dual polemics.
senseless rhetoric and verbal assaults. In addition, the
sheer hypocrisy of several officers was revealed. As
an example , within one hour Keith Frankel first

argued for a boycott of all FSA operations and then
proceeded to buy out the third floor vending
machines. It also should be noted that several
officials are opposed to a student strike this weekend
as there is a Jerry Garru concert.
Instead of conciliation and cooperation, there
exists only the wishes to bulldoze through personal
schemes for individual glorification. These same
factors ruled the handling of such incidents as the
Med Schooi·Attica controversy and Poverty Hill.
Unfortunately, in this case students have much to
lose - the right to put their fees to meaninf'ul use.
This defeat could be a final one totally destroying
any vestiges of student power.
When one considers the actions of student
governors, the conclusion might be reached that Ute
administration is wise in strictly controUing student
affairs. However, this solution, not only repugnant,
is too hasty and too easy. Instead , students must
work for responsibility and reason in the handling of
their affairs. Possibly, it is not too late for student~
to direct their actions into a workable, cohesive
effort. Such an effort must include a massive
program to educate both students to the
consequences of lost autonomy and the Buffalo
community to the failures of the Ketter
administrataon . The Buffalo community must be
taught that all Is not peaceful and calm on this
campus and that the Unive~ity administration is a
mere puppet of Albany unwilling to fight for local
autonomy.
The hope for such an educational effor1 is a.s
d1m as the hope that shJdent leaden will acquire
some responsibility
This past week has seen the resignations of three
SA officials. All cite frustration as their cause.
YiewiJtg the present antics of student leaders, one
can understand their resignations and possibly Wish
that there were more .

Sea of aggression
ro th l! 1-dtlur.
In 1he Junuary 21 1ssue of Tht• Spectrum you
published a ~:artoon ndicultng Pr~:s1dent Sadal ol
l.!gypt, and for that nutter the whole hgypllan
people .tnd the1r struggle to hberate lhe1r la nd It IS
very unfortunate that tins ranoon appeared 10 a
paper that JS ~upposedly run hy young, open· 1~unded
students, and I thmk 11 wo uld have been rnnre to the
p..110t lo publish a cartoon that would ridicule lhe
agre.ssor r11ther than the victim
And , hy the way, just In case you're "confused "
about who is the agressor and who IS the victun, as
you probably ar~: . I would like to re mind you that
the efforts of th~: Egyptian people are atmcd at
ltb~:ratmg the Stnai penmsula that wa1&gt; o~.&gt;cu p1ed by
Israel as the result of the Stx Days War. That war was
launched by brae!. The reason for th1s war , there I\
always a reason (of course): to reopen the strati of
Tiran . Peace lovmg Israel killed thousands o f
l:.gypflall~ , forced hundreds of thOU!'llOdS Of Others

to fie~: thear &lt;.. Jtaes ufr er .:onstantly shelhng them (the
Suez C~tnal Cities), occup1ed tcmtones wtuch are
thrl.'e 11mes the stze of its own , 1n order to reopen
the two-nnll.' w1de stratt of Tmln, wtuch IJcs, by the
way , 111 the f.gypt1un temto nal waters.
&lt;;u pkase. M1 Editor, stop believmg what they
tdl you , namely that the Arabs want lo drive Israel
mw the sea . In fact histo ry tells us that Israel not
tJn ly wants to dnve the Arabs back mto the sand,
but that Israel 1s actually dnvmg them back to the
!land . (Just look 111 the map of the Middle l:.ast tn
1947, 1949 , IY5o, f9CI 7 consec.:utively and nottce
the increase m the size of Israel.) fhen you will
krww why one o l the most favontc JOkes 111 Egypt, a
!~lt d JOke indeed. IS no tlung hut the well publtctzed
'/.!rue/ needs sc~ure bo undanes ," whereas 1n fact 1t's
lhe Arahs who are 111 urgent need of such
hount.larn·~ . befnre the lsrat:lts lind anuther "reason''
tu launch a new "preventi ve" war.
1/ossufl FargiJaly

(;raduate Swdent

Where does the cash go?
To the ECJitor ·
As a former mental puttent who has been
runnmg into quite u Little
Cash for worn? Students who pay to do
two-fifths of the work in out of my head and sll
down to figure it.
Why me? Why mine? Left alone, we are healthy ,
active, able, creative. Yet my children 11nd I have
been assaulted , in one case palsied by assault, and
run into mslltutions as prime examples of mental
defectiveness. What for?
The answer came Like a great vital experience,
with thunderbolts, hail, swirling hallucmations with
pink and purple polka dots, and when the mist
cleared, a small quiet connection registered.
"Cash , baby. Cash!"
Cash for whom? Students who pay to do
tow-fifths of the work in psychiatry free?
Attendants at $5000 a year? Nurses at $6- 11,000 a
year? Doctors whose institutional salaries generally

run below those in pnvate practice? Top
admmtslrdt or.;? There aren 't really many Who gets
the c.:ash'!
My children and I , by our seedy selves, with
account numbers in : the County Hospital , a State
mstitutton, Federal Insurance , State Aid, ADIC , have
moved a low estimate of $73,000 in a year fro m
Washington and Albany into the local area, and with
claims for services cited as a matching draw to
federal funds, rnore.
Who got it? We didn't you didn't. Plants and
maintenance per patient aren 't that much per
patient.
Where does the immediate health cash go when
it comes into an area?
In view of concerted efforts by pubbc
employees, particularly police and public worlu;
employees to knock down "health" cases, somebody
had better find out .•

Ozrol CorrigDn

Wednesday, January 26, 1972 . The SpectrUm . Page seven

�STUDENT ASSOCIATION ATHLETIC REFERENDUM
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
Jan. 27 and Jan . 28
T H E QU ESTIONS AR E AS FO LLO WS:

1.}
Student Association presently gives $240,000.00 to
Athletic budget. Should the athletic budget receive :
MORE

LESS

SAME

the

NOTH ING

2.)

Should Student Association fund Intercollegiate Athletics?

YES

NO

3.}
Men 's Intercollegiate athletics receives $95,636; should it
receive:
MORE

LESS

SAME

NOTHING

Women's Intercollegiate athletics receives $8,335; should it
receive:

4.)

MORE

LESS

SAME

NOTHING

5.)

Should Student Association fund Intramural Athletics and
Athletic Recreation?
YES

NO

6.}
Men's and Women 's Intramural A thlet1cs and A thlellc
Recreation receives $55,500, (including summer budget); should it
receive:
MORE

LESS

SAME

NOTHING

7.)

Should Student Association fund Club Sports?

YES

NO

8.}

Club Sports receives $7 6,500. Should it receive:

MORE

LESS

SAME

NOTHING

9.}
Have you participated
Recreational activities?

in

Intramural

and/or

YES

NO

10.}
YES

Have you participated in Intercollegiate sports?

77.}
YES

A th/etic

NO

Have you attended Intercollegiate sports?
NO

Voting will be by machine at the following locations: Norton,
Goodyear, Tower, Diefendorf, Ridge Lea, and Acheson.
A fact sheet with definitions of terms and a bud~Pt breakdown
will be available at the polling places.

Paqe eight . The Spectrum. Wednesday, January 26, 1972

�..........

••

Memorial Auditorium debut

I

.______o_~_T_IME
_ _ ____. .
by Barry Rubin
Spont Editor
One turns around and it's here again . It's a referendum tomorrow
and Friday, and once again the supporters of intercollegjates are being
told that their reams are in jeopardy. It's Uke t he case of crying wolf,
where const antly, cnsts after crisis has evolved in th e athletic program
at Buffalo.
According to the Stud ent Associati o n , th e referendum will be
binding upo n the Student Assembly, which three months ago took
upon itself so gallantly to recall this year's athletic appropnations Even
the most ard ent sports people at this school must give c redit to those
against athletics. The o pposition just n ever gives up and seems to have
the tngenu.ity to create more and more turbulence.
For what tt's worth . athletics ar Buffalo dunng the past few years
have com e under tremendous fire for lh etr supposed d ehumantztng
effects upon both athletes and fans. Oh, no h o mecomtng queens at
Buffalo nor that fraternity nonese nse. Athletics are out. That's do~e
Who in the world were those 4007 at Sund ay's Auditorium hockey
game and what about the combined total of over 2000 for Saturd ay's
events which were in dtrecl conflict wtlh each oth er?
Those at this school who say n o one gives a damn about arhleiKS
must be mistaken. Tlus column was not mean t as a personal attacl., but
the anti-sports factto n on this campus has already dragged the athl eltc
program through th e mud in recent years. And now , with Buffalo one
o f the laughing stocks of the nation, there is an attempt ro draw the
final blood and guts from the athletic program
Okay, raise inl rarnurtls at thiS campus by $20,000 but remember
even tntramural director 'BiU Monkarsh has satd he doesn't need any
more than he asked for. The extra money allocated to tnrramurol\ wtll
be wasted on lugher &lt;;ludent sala ries. facts are lc~cts. Thts camp~!!&gt; has"
tremendous lack of athletic facilities, not for intercollegiates . hue JUSt
for you and m e sh oottng hoops or pla y tng handball. A vote ru keep the
appropna tion for athletics at the same level or hy VIJitng for an
tncrcase, studen ts can e'IC peel brg thin"&amp;$ .
Student fe~ suppott all of our campus ream~ .wd thcu operaltntt.
~o~ots
At no time have srudent fee'&gt; been used for grant tn-atd lo
athh::tcs The basketball SLhedule has undergone a fa cel!ftrng 111 rc~;ent
years, wluJe Buffalo ~tudenls should also he proud of the atd rhey have
g~ven to squads tn hm;key, wrestling and baseball. When Buff..tln hnd.cy
becumes a narionally l.nown trademark, 11 tS rhe Buffalo ~tudcnt hmly
thai deserves much 11f thl.' cred11.
There has gut lo rn me a time on tht~ lampus when lht're will be
equal represento~lton for all lt appCclrS ro lhts reporter lhdt ~:am pu~
)potts ent h usta~l\ have lt:ndcd towards apathy rn recent years I hts ts
11 Support at the polls ts an absolu re ne~;c!&gt;.~IIY tf rhc Studrnr A\sernb!y
e. tu lw shown the at11tude of the student body
f.ven thuugh httk t) satd about the women\ tutcr~oolkg.tale
prn!!IJnl 011 tim l'ampu~ 11 should be noted that funds for women have
e)l,panJed from $361W to $8335 tn jUst two years. Furthermore,
Buffalo's w.1men\ teams have made fine reputatton fot thcm~elves
nationally Hul again. I he women havc nor asked for morr rn .. ney If
the llernand 1\ rhcrc. rh c t\ money to the women should rncrca~e. ,u,r as
unum:d tnlhc l·a\e of I he duh s port\ budget
J u,r remerntwr 11 you wane dthlclt &lt;:ll, tnlr.ttnur;tls o~nd duh \j'l&lt;HI\
on lhl\ cam pti\, vurc lm .an tncrease nr rernJtn lht• 'dmt' tn luud~ lor
athldtr~ . If you're agatrl\t tJth letrcs, then voce JU\1 the oppuMie I hctc',
very IHtlc chance th.JI athletic!&gt; anJ rccrealtunal ,JCttvtltc' on th1s
can1 pu~ ~uultl pn!&gt;Sthly &lt;:lUSt wtthout ~I uJcnl ftnarH:tal atd

r. . . . . . . .
•

--~• rr~ww~-..rr

,SA

.

BELLS. TOPS. BOTTOMS
end THINGS&gt;

Mod Stvles for Those Who t&lt;nowl
Here 11'1ev come' HoJndre(l~ of
Guys 4nd Gali krHlw tiHi ·~
th&amp;
place.
Army NdvY
P•rga•n• wrtn today's took

Good goods. goud Plltes,
90od people• Tne rear Ltv•'\
F t•re and SttdiCJh t . Oerut" ,,
Corduroy AH f otc.e p.at ... '$,
Governn1eut
Gre.at
t.uah
Heavy slu f P C on1e ,~., the
re••

Mt&lt;..uv's

.1110

SAVF 1

130 Ma in At Tupp., 853-1515

CITY

leers can't overcome Ohio
" T o beat Ohio State, we h ave to put together
three great periods of hockey." Thus spoke Buffalo
mentor Ed Wrigh t in a pre-weekend analysis of the
highly rated Buckeyes. His mom entous words were
almost realized on Sunday when th e Bulls dropped a
5-2 heartbreaker to Ohio State. 10 Buffalo's hockey
debut at Memorial Audttonu rn .
It was certainly an auspicious beginning for the
Bulls as the surprisingly large parhsan crowd of over
4000 were treated to two su perbly played periods of
hockey In an attempl to reverse the previous mght's
6 I defeat , the Bulls matched the Buckeyes on
every move
Thctr dreams
for
upser
though , were
momentanly thwarted wh e n Ray Myers, the
country's number one scorer, notched his etghtecnth
goal of the season at I 38 of the first period Yet the
Bulls conttnued to skate and check well wtth JUntor
Jack. Rtchards evening the score up at one aptece nn
a puwer play goal.

Bulls take lead
Buffalo continued to pur rh e heat on rhe
Buckeyes tn the second pennd Mrke Dunn . the Bull~
ever·tmprovmg netminder, played perhaps h•~ frnest
varstty gamc as he ,~.:arne up wtth an unbeltevablc '\.!
saves Wtlh two mtnulc' left tn the second penud
Buffalo. for rhe frrst t1mt tn four games agamst thr
Bu~okeyes. tnok the h:.Hl an J John Strang,l.'s
However. the 4utck movmg Bu~ol.eye~ came rodring
bac k a mtnule later and (led 1 he ~;on test al 2 2 on a
(iurd Pt!lcr' goo~l
Thu~. the thu d pcrtod hc14••n wtth thr ~we~:r
ta~te of upset sttll un rvrryhuuy·~ longue
lr
r~matncd a dream however as BuftJto played .1 very
lad..tuster penud of hw:l.ey The 11rcd Bulls l.lll~d 1~1
sl.ate . fMeche..:k or .on nell on passe~. Oh111 StJie
t•\OI. QUI\.1. .tdvo~ntage. cnmprhng rhn~c goal&lt;. 10 tl\c

II"·''

Incompetent offiCiating
One must dlso wonder what has become of
..:o-captatn BtJI Newman. For rtasons unknown, the
sen tor center has not been ska ttng well at all, a nd is
certainly nor rhe team leader he was expected to be.
Hopefully lhtngs will stratghten out thiS weekend .
To be farr ho wever . th e Bulls d1d not ge1 many
breaks frulll the o ffictals Referee Peter Dumont, the
ECAC's an!.wer to Herman Munster. might find tl
&lt;;afer if he dtdn't return to Buffalo. H1s tncompet ent
offtciating hoth games cost Buffalo several chan t:es
to narrow the gap. Vel such ext:l!!&gt;cs will acqwesce
few college coathes . tn partic ular l:d Wright The
Bulls coudr t\ presently setltng hts s1ghls on a
weekend \Wt'eiJ that would leave Buffalo wrt h .tn
ex.:elh:nt K-1 OtV!Ston II re~ord and in sound
pustltCIIt lm a pololsed~nn playotf hcrlh

Basketba11 gets the go ahead
from Ketter for recrttitment
Appa rently,
UuiiJio ',
h:.rskethall grant-in-atd program
wlll survtv e &lt;It least,another year
Th•s past wet'l&lt;end , Buffalo'!&gt;
Var\tty ~.oa~ohtng staff wa~ g~vcn
the nl..ty lo resume re~.ruttt ng for
nexl year lit.: $10.000 reljUC\ted
hy Pre~tdt&gt;nl Keltl.'r fr.,n• lhl'
.ilurnnt ha\ bccn turned over 1&lt;1
Bulfal o'~ t:UJI. ht!S
On t hl' way t rn111 ll,tYI'' 11.111 ''
,, leiter lron1 l'te\tth:rll K1·1tn lt•
Dr lb ny 1 nit Buflah1\ dtr l'lhtr
nt 1\thkll"
I hi\ 1••11• r will
nfhuJII) gJH' the Bull\ IIH' nod 111
re• rut I
Bullalo
Ita'
\l'VCt..tl
11p1111n' open In 11 tn dt,pcr,lltg
lht• '!.10,000 111 .ilumnt monic'
hu
example,
Buffalo u1Uid
.tll~mpr rc• hnng 10 ftve players .1~
frc~hnlJn un onc-year gr..tnl\, hul
1111, po..~rbtlrty hJ'&gt; been dl·emed
~ unhl.l!ly by rile varstty coadung

s
a
1
e

period enro ut e to a 5-2 w in and th eir thirteenth
victory in 17 games.
There were several
bnght
as well as
disappoinhng aspects 10 the double loss that left the
Bulls overall record at 6-5. By far the most pleasant
surprise was the spectacular goaltending job of Mike
Dunn who won the heart s and p raises o f many a fan .
Sophomore J ohn Stranges and h ust ling wingman
Jack Richards played exceptionally weiJ as did
vereran Ted Mtskolczi. l eadrng Bull goat scorer Mike
Klym showed he can skat e JUSI as well as he ca n
shoot while freshman Larry Carr showed much
promise on defense .
However, one must wtnce at the ove rall slo ppy
play of the delense whu;h all season long h as had
much trouble tn getting the puck oul of their own
zone. Perhaps rhe return of les Teplkky will solid1fy
things, espet:rally tn this weekend's cructal Division II
~oo nrest ~ agamst Salem State and A I(' on the road

~raff

Mo rc thun hkely . I he Bulls wtll
attempt to bnng
om: super
player fnr a four·Year granl
($8000) or IWII jUnior l·oiJcgc
rran~fcr.
fw rwo years ~ a •h
lnttlffllCd '&gt;Cttll•n have tndKateJ
th..tl I he )l.lllttH nlll&lt;'ge plan w•ll
.dtnll\( Jdtrutcly bl' u11lrt&lt;•d fur
Ill: XI yrar\ fClllllflllj!.
I ht' (1,1'1
year . th .. Llull' n·•tU1Icd lhrn·
j UOitll u •Jh'gt• lfJII\Il'l~ fot lhctr
till' II deplclnl var\11 y lfnwt•Vt'r.
lhc
ldl!.tl \ltu,llt un lot
tlt1·
,·o.uhlflj!. '1.111 would he 111 hru1~
'" pl.sYl'r\ a' ftc\hl111!11 .tn.t mold
1hl'111 111111 J \ohd luur-yc,tl 11011
1\S 1)1
'S&lt;Iillll, l' .Clllll\ll' IIIli:
pr.·,IJ,·nl
ut
rht:
Un1vcl\tly
rcrnJrl.cJ
Wc ' rc huy111g IIIII&lt;' "
1\ltcr 1ncclrng M.~r y lr~ll\1 la't
ntghl .11 ( ollcgc P.tr._ . I hc liulf,
nt.Jkc
Chell
""'
Mcllliiii.JI

'll

Planned Parenthood

Children by choice. Not chance.
F o r further information . write Planned Parenthood ,
Box 431. Radio Ctly Station, New York. N . Y 10019

01V

LEARNING CENTER COURSES

Audttonum appt!aranL.: Saturddy
evcmng ag;unst Cornell Untve rsJty
14 1)) . rhe 7 p m Cornell con t est
will be a ptcltrtHnJry to a &lt;J p m .
Cantstus-LaSdflc botflle Buffalo
'tuJcnts wtll be ~ harged S I ::!5 fc•r
regular $4 rc,crvcd ~e.Hs, wllh
lllkl'h avatlahk al CIJrk Gym
unrtl I rt.l.t)' .sl ~ p rn [lulfalo
~ludcnts .tr~ hetng dtJrgeu \tnle
C..tnl\111\ ( 'nlkgc '' hO\llllg the
tWill h1!J JnU ,J, wdt ptd-' Up the
lUI&gt; lor ~ I.JdtUIII ICIII.tf
Mond.ty •·Vt'llllll\ . ,, \ll111lat
ltd.t:t pultt y Will flll'VJtl ..t\ the
Bulh l..tkl' &lt;111 Nmrhcrn llltn u" al
7 rIll lhl' llu \l.tt•\ J tamth ..H
Bulla In uppunt'lll. hrlJ'&gt;l ..t I U I
retnrJ . ..111d were rarrl.cd twcnttelh
1n 1."1 wl·t·k ·, lJ Jl l roll nr lllttJ•H
,·ollt:)!l.t' h."k d h.JII l •·d hy n·Y
\Upcr '""" Jtrrr Bto~dl c )
tht:
Jl u,J..tc~
tlll'CI '"'ulh ( Jrotin..t
t.,.tlurd .n
htt.Hc:
dl.Jiicng~ng
ll ult..t .. lu 1111· ~.tllltdJ)' rughl1.ap,
Nt.t!(.tiJ
II~ I)
IJtC\
the
l!tuv.:r~tty 111 I&gt;JYI•tn :tl 7 p 111

OLD RIVOLJ
fHU.fU

1111 lltOAOWA'I'

8H-UOO

TONIGHT ONLY t 7 t' m. Ll VE

WE HAVE NOTHING TO SAY

rn

ABOUT OUR PLACE

Rl:.AI&gt;INC /STUI&gt;Y 'iK ILLS
WRITING
ORAL COMMUNlfA I'll &gt;NS
MATHEMATICS
DRAMA WORKS! I&lt;&gt;I'
E&lt;~rn

Jmprovc b.c.rc
Ac.tdemK sktll.,
Collluf 1

U:ARNING Cl N'll R
4230 Ridgt• Le11
831 -172)

SEliNG IS BELIEVING

Acadcmu.
Crcd It'&gt;

COME FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF

Anacones Inn

Thurs. 8 :00p.m.

Fri. 8 15 p.m.
Sat. S &amp; 8 : 15p.m.

3178 Bailey Ave.
(next to GMden of Sweets)

Wednesday , January 26r 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

-

�IT'S EASIER THAN
EVER TO JOIN
THE STUDE:NT ASSEMBLY~~.

Under the new guidelines passed last month, a mail ballot may be
used to register and vote in an interest group rather than the
in-person verification required previously. Anyone wishing to form
an interest group can come to -the Student Association Office, Room
205 Norton; he may then take ballots and distribute them to
undergraduates for voting. When 40 undergraduates have replied
either by mail ballot or in-person voting, the interest group is
considered officially formed.

In addition, anyone presently in an interest group and wishihg to
change his or her affiliation , may do so until Feb . 18. You must
however, come to the S_A. Office, this may not be done by mail
ballot.

In a general mailing later this month, all undergraduates will
receive the Assembly ballot .

..
•

Page ten ; The Spectrum . Wed.nesday, January 26, 1«!72

.

/

(

\

�..

--

•.

,
2-e.droom ~l on Main A
J-ett. 170 ,., monttl. C1U Cleuclla

THE COST of lin 110 for ooe d.ly Is
11.25 for the flrsl 15 words lind $.05
for uc:h llddltlonlll word.

. , . ..74a.

"HELP
WANTED"
lids
c.11nnot
discriminate on the basis of Mill, color,
crMd or nat1on11 origin to any extent
(I.e., pref..-ably Is still discriminatory).

dependent people and mentll health
problems of urban poor. Extrem..y
toueh Job. Break O.K. El!perlanc. mav
substitute for d89ree. Clll 881·0096
after 7:00p.m.

"FOUND" ads Will be run fr.Jitof
dlar911 for a maximum of 2 days and
15 words.

WAITRESSES Wlnted: pef't 1nd full
time, evenings. Over 18. 68$-3100. Asl&lt;
for Ooug or Bob.
·
- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - .
COl.l.EGE QRAO Wlnts to blbYSit
evenings. Loves children and hat loU of
free lima. Call 831-4113 d1ys, Ask for
l.eslva or leave message.

·WANTED
FEMALE Mother's Helper must
enJoy PIIYing with 2 young children.
Provide
own
tr1nsport1t1on. Cl ll
633·8321.

FUL.l. OR part-tlma Jobs IVIIIIbla with
Bestllna Inc. Clll Art 886·2094 or
Mike 835 · 5215. Meetings at Executive
Ramada I nn.

WANTED:
Female
photography
models
for
photogrllphy
student 1
$5/hr.; Clll 885-0831 mornings or after
8 : 00p.m.

START $2 per hour, llllrY plu s bonus.
Work 4 - 8 p.m . w . .kdays, 10·2 p .m .
Saturdays. Call 835· 3803 or TF9·0402.

HELP WANTED part time earn
$5()-$100 • week. Hours flexible. Car
needed. Call Mr. l.anoau or Mr. Esbln,
832·5910, 835·7733.

APARTMENT FOR RENT

FEMALE wanted Immediately for
O.byslttlng 1 few hours par w . .k In
exchllnge f or free room . 633·7594.

MOOERI'I two-bedroom g~rden apt.
Olshwlsher,
disposal,
range,
refrigerator Included. Fully urpeted.
Full basement wltn storage aru 1nd
outlets for washing m~ehlne. Available
March
1. 1175 a
month.
Call
633-'1582.

ARIGATO
JAPANESE
STEAK
HOUSE desires to employ WAITERS,
WAITRESSES, BUSBOYS, KITCHEN
H El.P;
ORIENTALS
preferred,
632·217 1.

FURNISHED apartment and several
rooms, excellent locations. television,
dishes, etc. $35-540 per bedroom ,
896·8344 evenings.

STUDENT needed to ure f or 5 Yr . old
boy, 2:3()-4:30, Tues.-Frlday . Will
n • to pick him up from w:hool .
87.,8174 or 883· 8286 .
OJaflECTOR
for
IOCII
treatment
pt6iaram for heroin addicts. Ooctor1ta
l~sych. deslr1bla but emphlsls on
a"if.'rlance
working
with
drug

.

3 COMPLETE ROOMS OF
NEW FURNITURE

TWO MINUTES from umpus. For
men. New rooms. Private entrance.
Fridge, some cooking, furnished . C1ll
834·5312 (privata home) .
TWO BEDROOMS three miles from
c.llmpus, $120 month with hut
lawn
people with children preferred .
893· 8453.
ACROSS cam pus, 3400 M1ln Street.
Fu rnished, 1 bedroom, $140/month,
heal Included. 833·9858 or 833· 1600.

2-pc. living room suite,
2 step·end &amp; 1 cocktail tabla,
2 limps, 3 oc. bdrm . set, (dbl .
dreuer, chest, dbl. size bed,
dbl boll spgs;matt., 5 pc. dinette
( 1 table, 4 Ch llts)

WHOLE
HOUSE, 11/r
blOcks to
umpus.
l.arge
single.
2
baths,
furnished. Mature rtudents O .K . ~xlmum 6 - $280 • utilities or $31 0
all utilities Included. 835-0226 or
834 · 1989.

$369.95
J . Berg Furniture Co .
2363 Bro.dw1y, 1 H1r1am Rd
nightly 'tit 9:00p.m. el' Wed. &amp; Sat
895,'!~.3·

SPEEDED READING
AND STUDY
Oiv. of Undergraduate Studies
•gain offers Mrs. Nichols
non-credit
course.
Weekly
sessions. Nominal fee $15.00
payable at registration in 106
Diefendorf before Jan. 31 .

R IDE BOARD
Rl OERS wanted to Cort11n0 this
waekend. Call 838· 3099, Jim. Leave
MesSige If not ln. Will drop you off In
Syracuse too.
RIOE WANTED to N .Y.C. luvlng Jan.
28th or 29th . Shire Orlvlng and
e&gt;&lt;penses. Call Nlkl, 837 ·61 83 .
AM GOING to Montre11 . Anyone
bored 1nd wtltlnt to hive fun JlnUifY
2J w-end. Call 873 ·2568, O.bble.

HAIRSTYLIN. G

REFRIQERA'I"ORS from $19.95 1nCI
up. HWA, 1282 Clinton St. 823-1800.

STUDENT (male) to tlh41re a ......
double with
anot!Mf
stucsent -:bAithroom act.~olntng, ldtcn•n prMI..-,
10 m tns. from c:.~mpus. 833-6.26.

AI DE
WANTED
to
Queens
or
ther. .bouts, Sundly, Jan. 30. Snare
expenMS/drMne.
Marc
833-5 496.
Th11nkS.

REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
1nd
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guar1nteed. O&amp;G Appllanc:., 844
Syc:~mora. TX4-3183 .

Ft:MALE
roqmrn.te
wanted
tor
near-campus house, nartlng Fte)ruary.
Clll Sh1ron 836·23"04.

RIDE NEEOEO to Ohio, luvlng J1n.
28, nrturnlng J1n. 30. Call Ruth,
835·1628.
---------------

PERSONAL
SPECTRUM
1111or).

FOR SALE

Joe's Theatre Barber
1055 Kenmort&gt; A venue

WIGS - HAIR COLORING
- - - - 877- 1989 _ _. .

aln'tl

FOR SALE: 1968 Triumph 500, new
tires, new paint Job, two helm,ts,
excellent' condition. $800 or best o ffer.
Call 1 · 778 -8926 after six. Ask for Joe.

NEED $1001 Call 982 · 1080 for
Information. Seco'1d annual Newman
Movement Art Exhibit. Feb . 13 M1rch
19 &lt;~t
Bulckflald
Center,
S.t.J.C.B. Entries due Feb . 7 &amp; 8 .
Spacial student prizes.

SMAl.l. refrigerators with freezers : one
good for 2 people, other for 4 .
Excellent condition ; fairly new. Call
8354596 .
'62 IMPAl.A. E&gt;c.callenl condition .
St1ndard, 6-c:yllnder, 1150. Cheap!
Call 874-4590 .

LOST 8r FOUND
FOUND - watch on 1/20 In pr&lt;~ctlce
room Batre! Hall . May claim In
Record Library . Baird ,

MGB, Sprite, Tr ium ph usad parts.
Independent
Foreign Car Service .
839·1850.
1960 FORO panel truck FlOO, p11nel
In side. Phone 8 37·4016 .

FOUND - l1rge sliver ring last fall first floor women 's lavatory - Foster
Hall. Call 2406 .

1970
JAGUAR
X KE .
E&gt;c.callent
condition. Brand new AM/FM uareo
radio Included. Call 688·7327 even ings.

l.OST vicinity Meadowle• Oxford ,
ginger colored tiger clll , 4 months old,
male . 839· 1248.

HARDTOP for MGB. Used 3 monthS,
Reasonabl• . Call 874· 5621 evenings .

WATCH found
MondiY, Jan.
931 ·2084 .

CA MERA Pentax Sl. 35 mm, 1 : 2/55
VashiCI ·D
1 : 3.5/80, Sony 630·0
tapedecl&lt;
Crael
to
real) . Richard
875·8195 ar1yttme.

FOUI'IO: Women 's ring In Diefendorf,
Jan. 17. To Identify, leave phone
number In Spectrum bOl&lt; 87 .

FOUND - In The Spectrum office, a
sm111 change purse left there Fr idaY .
Claim In Spectrum office. 355 N orton.

'64
vw
bus.
Excellent
running
condition with body rust . S300 or best
offer . Will Mil parh sap1rately . Call
837·8264 .

ROOMMATE S WANTED
ROOMMATE w1nted for mO&lt;Iern town
house, 2-bedroom apt. near R .L. Own
room . Call 691-6282 nights

1967 Pl. YMOUTH Belvedere, 4-door
sedan, automatic power steering, good
condition. Reason1bta. 875 · 3912 .

TWO ROOMMAT ES lor apartment,
own room, $66 Including utilities. C&lt;~ll
Nina 838· 256 7. Available now.

STEREO
componentt,
90·WIIt
Harmon Klrdon receiver, G1rr1rd
tuH•tablt, 2 speetwr~, $.200. C111
838 ·2 28~ .

MALE ROO MMATE wanted . Own
room,
roomy
apartment,
fully
furnished, n81r Starin. S5 8 .33/ mO.
Available now. 836·7799.
FEMALE roommate
2·mlnute walk from
bedroom . $33 month
Paula 836·2424.

sale -

CLEARANCE sale 10-65% of! on
many Items. All January. M iscellaneous
shirts,
dresses,
skirts, ate , Some
afgMn lstan coats. The People, 144
Allen St. 882-6283 for hours.

In Clark Gym on
17 . Contact Tony

FOUI'IO: Sco~rf In Crosby 301 on
Monday, Jan 17. Claim by Identifying
lll Spectrum office.

1965 DART 6-cyllnder standard, radio,
heater, 7 mounted tires lncluCIIng 2
studded snows, 42 ,000 miles. Always
starts, IIWIYS goes, $100 . Clll Ranc!y
838 ·2488 .

S U M M E R ST U D Y

wanted, Apt.
campus. Own
~ utilities. Clltt

TWO MALES needed, o wn rooms.
beautiful big house available now. Call
937-6953 Address: 124 Oreul .

ELIGIBILITY :

PERIOD:
CREDIT :
COST:

Approxunately mid.June

ANTIQ~

1nd
ceramics, china,
Hartel Ava.

mO&lt;Iern furniture,
See Sid. 1439

ate:.

FOR ADOPTION : Sllll· yur•old golden
retriever spJnlel mala. C1ll Olvld 7- 10
p.m . 882-6674. •
WANT TO 1e1rn how to make 16 mni
lllms for free? Coma to the mMtlng.
Student Film Club , Wed., Jan. 26,
8:00, Room 234 Norton.
FOR
INSTANT
prin ting,
think
Qoodwly . we print anything for
l)ennles 1 copy theses, resumes,
PlmPhlets , etc:. We 1lso bind, fold,
col1ta 1nd st1ple. Single Xerox copies,
$.08 tiCh. Whara? GoodWIY Copy
Center, 436 M1ln , St 1nd Court acrou
from l.el1yette Sou"•· M ·F, 9-5 p ,m.
TCRM
PAPERS,
dlssart.atlons,
professional
typist,
I BM Selectric,
$ .40/page. 873-1938 .
TERM PAPERS typed, $.35 per PI9A·
833 ·9012.
INTERESTED
In
attending
the
Ol)'mplc g1mes In Munich? Some
tickets and accommod1tlons avall1bla.
Phone 833-4638 ,
WILL BABYSIT. My home, 5 di)IS.
Pre- w:hool . 838-4808 .
OVERSEAS JOBS for students Australia, Europe, s . AmeriCI, AlriCI,
etc. All profaulons 1nd occupations,
$70()-$3000 monthly. Expenses Plld,
overtime, slattts.atng. Free Information
- write : Jobs Overse•s. Dept. E5, Box
15071, S&lt;~n Diego, C1llfornla 92115.

APARTMENTS WANTED
TWO FEMALES need 1partment nur
IJ.B. baQiy. Will PlY good price. Call
Terry 824·3143. Keep trying.
WE NEEO 2-bedroom apt. tor females
starllnu February , NNt U .S . Will PlY
good price. Call 83J·3989 anytime,
LOOKI NG
roommate
835·5604 .

tor
female
graduate
lnd/or
aplrtment ; uti

WE NEED a two·famlly IPI . thlll Cln
house six people (three In each llalf)
f or Juno. Will pay good monev , If
t1ken. Call Betty 8 37.0430.

MEETING
Undergraduate Medical

Society

THURSDAY
(Jctn. 27)
7:30p.m.- 240 Norton

DICTIONARIES
WEBSTER

end of A ugusr.

Lobrory

laok acala lltc..at tf lltt '-•c• 11••••4. IIJ tloktta tariJI

JESUS £HBIST
St1PEBSTAB
l1thrlz,. StJcwMII Oeaotrt Vtrsl•• wit'- Caat ef 40

"The Rock Opera Wit h Revere'!ce

4 p(RfOIMANCES: Sal, Jan. 29

,:,,~·~·"'·

II

0ft 0.«• t.Urda

.....4 , _

San, bn. 30: ~:::

KLEINHANS MUSIC HAll

8 credits.
$700.00

All teat• reMrved: Main Floor $6.00·.$S.OO
lalcony $5.00·$4.00
107 Townsend HaU
SUNY/AB, Burfalo, N.Y. 14214
Telephone: (716)831-42.47

Jicleat ea Mia MW et WfWe '-etfvel ndlet Offke, ....... Httt. . ~
......-4 _. .............,.....,, U.l . ""'"'
....1 .....
l1dlet OMce; . . . n.ll............................

C-' .,.,_ . . . . . wilt!

.....

S1Ze.

191)

edii•Cm ,

new ~loll '" bo• (o$1 new

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL bring back

to

Oveneu Academic Prosnm•

TVPINQ, experienced, near U.s. 1...40
per page. 834·3370. FISt wrvtce.

I N SPA I N

Open to qualified undergraduate and
graduate students. Consult address below
for further infnnnat/011 on available
c:ourses and L·redits.

furthes lnfonnatton 1nd applications,
contact: James A. Midddll, Director

5~p.m ,

t

Quixote 's La Maflflcha and A ndllluci4. Six
weeks uf academic work in Salamanca
with field trips and o tht•r extra-curricular
aC'tivities. Free time to travel through the
rest of Spain or through Europe.

For

lnstltutlonall;r.ed hlppl•?
the law ? B• 1n observer
p ollee 1nd decide. Call
MonCiay-f'rtday between

t

Two weeks of travel through Castile. Don

Up

MISCELLANEOUS
PIGS or
Lawless or
wltn the
831-'1847 ,

FEMALE roomm•t• wanted to share

Sponsored by the SUNY/AB in cullabvration with tile
Universidad de Salamanca, one of tht! oldes£ and most
celebrated universities in Europe.
FIELDS OF STUDY : Language, Art. l.iterarure, History

PROGRAM :

ROOMMATE
wanted
to
lhert
aPirtment.. Two b.csroom, swimming
pool, air conditioning. Close to sc:hool.
854-7147 days. ~91-6518 evenings.

we

PI l.AMBOA TAU - a changing social
orgllnlzallon on o chlnqlng campus.
For lnformatl'o'1, Clll Dan 632·0299 or
George'834·7 989.

3:00 - 5:00 p.m.
I
WEDNESDAY - ROOM 233 NORTON HALL
I
Psychomat
wa
initiated
to
facilitate
;.,
penon-to·person communication among all students. It is
I
•.
an open-ended, free-flowing session where you can share
~t~
your feelings about experiences.
I
~· ~LSO Thursday evening 7-1 0 p.m. 232 NORTON HALL• .......

~~.

(hey

THE PEOPLE, 144 Allan St. Is having
tnelr flrst ctur1nce 111a, until Jan.
31st. Phone 882-6283 tor hours.

TV. bl1c;k &amp; white, floor mO&lt;Iel, $35 .
Also repair TV's 1nd stateos. C.ll Ed
896-4409 evenings.

SKI Cl.UB sl&lt;l lessons for
Tuesdav nlgllt. Clll 832 ·56.34.

(at Colvin Theatre)

personals

BEWARE, Norton third floor hllve 1 mutr1nt In our midst.

SKI Cl.UB membership , lessons and/or
Ski ren!ll
for sale. ChNp. Call
837-6185 anytime.

1966 Pl. YMOUTH, 6-c:yllnder, station
wagon, automatic tr1nsmlulon, N .Y .
State Inspected, $325 . 1'&gt;&lt;6·9966.

••••

;: -J)syCliOinat

Rte 90E, 8 1N. Will drot&gt; off anyone en
route.

$45

Wdl Sel l for $15
Moll to

NORTH AMER ICAN
LIQUIDATORS
14SO Hiogero Foil~ ll•d.
O.,t.
Tonowondo. New Y~lo 141SO
ort.l"" enclo~c S I 00 good
Pov bolon&lt;e plu&gt; C.O.D.
on dtohverv Be sot•sfled on
f+on Ot refurn wtthH'\ 10 dOy' to,
,~lund No t.Je&lt;olers. eoch volume we&lt;
locolly •lompN! not lor resole
Please odd S 1 25 postooe ond
New York Stole rn•denh odd Opj)Jic,o bl'l l
soln to•
C0 0

defX»OI

P•no

c.-...

Wednesday r January 26, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page ele'len

•·

�Announcements
The Council of Hbtoty Students will have an
imporunt meeting today at 4 p.m. in Room 202
Diefendorf to select representatives.
The Gr&lt;~ee West Side Tutori~ project will hold
an orientation meetin&amp; today at 7 p.m. in Room 240
Norto n. Students interested in tutoring lafayette
High School students through CAC should attend .
Psychom&lt;~t will bt held tomorrow from 7- 10
p.m. in Room 232 Norton.

UB Ice Sk&lt;~ting Club announces free skating
to morro w from 9 - 10 p m. at Brighton Skating
Arena in Tonawanda. A bus will leave Clark Gym at
8 :30p.m
The Student F ilm Club wrll meet today at 8
p.m. in Room 334 Norton. All students Interested m
directing, producing and filming their own movies
are invited to aHcnd.
The UUAB Film Committee will have a meeting
today at 5 p.m. in Room 232 Norton.
The Bmilian Club will meet today at 8 p m. tn
Room 234 Norton. All members ple~e attend .
The Office of Fin.tnci&lt;~l Aid is distributing
financial .tSsistance applicatrons for the 1972-73
academic year. Students may obtam forms at th~
office, which Is located '" Room 216 Hamman
Library Completed &lt;~pphcallons are to be returned
to the Financial Aid Office no later than March 1.
FinanCial statements will be reqUired mall cases and
these are to be completed and sent to the College
Scholarship Servrce no later than Feb I , 1972
CAC will have a meetrng of all tutors from
Lafayette Communrty Center protect today at 7
p.m . in Room 244 Norton .
Women Studies College rs ofterrng WSC 301,
Women and the Group Pnxes~, Thursdays cJt 7. 30
p.m. in Room 113 Towmend. There arc still
openmgs for credtt or non credit.
CAC Envtronmental Action will meet tomorr(lw
at 9 p.m. rn RClnm 134 Norton All those in tcre~ted
in workrng wtth thl!&gt; pro)et-t th" semester \hOuld
attend this rmp&lt;Jnant meelln~
The Student AssoCiation WdiH' .my rntere\ted
per\on who would hl..e to wurk on the lummrttce or
I ntcr n.ttron,tl Mvnth Atldrr, to plc.1~e I~J vc your
name and telephone number in Room 205 Norron ur
c.llf P~ter Kong dl 5507
Psychology 207 m.JI..e up ell.dm from '·"'
..cm&lt;-sler wrll he grven 'lJturd.ty I .ut 24 tn R&lt;)l)m
C 26, 4BO Rtdge led lr11m 10 J m tu I p m

Lepl Problems of tht Schools, a course in the
New College of Modern Education taught by
Thom.tS Harmon, will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays,
3 4:20p.m. in Room 204 Diefendorf.
CAC Cerebral Pa lsy Project will have an
organizational meeting today at 8 p.m. in Room 242
Norton.
Kundalini Yoga cl.tSses irf exercise and
meditation are being held daily at 7 p.m. at 196
linwood Ave. and Monday and Wedne~day at 4 p.m.
in Room 334 Norton .
UUAB announces thrs i~ the last week to get a
free girt pack. Bring your ID card to Room 26 1
Norton for them.
The Western New York Public Interest Research
Group (WNYPI RG) is holding an important meeting
tomorrow at4·30 p.m. tn Room 244 Norton.
The Chess Club will meet today at 4 p m in
Room 248 Norton . Meettngs will be held for the re~t
of the year on Tuesday)
The Undergraduate Medrcal Socrety will have a
meetrng tomorrow at 7 30 p.m rn Room 240
Notton to distu\s appll,ation procedures and Cdreer~
in osteopathy.
Mu~im Students Associ.atron announces th.tl
lrd-ui-A1ha prayer wrll be held at 8 .t.m. tomorrow
m Room 340 Nonon

Common Cause wrll h.1vc ,, meetrng tomo11uw Jt
7 JO p .m. rn Lullege A Trailer to dl\cu~s vott!r
regi'lr .1111111 rnfor m.ltl()n .tnd the !,peCI.II E.nro llment
Brll
The lndi;, S tudents Assocration wrll have a
Rt'publr' D.ty celebratron tod.ty dt 7 30 p m rn the
Norton HJII Contrrem:.e I hcJter l:.lc(lrun\ for new
off icers wrll Jlso be held
tAt 8.tsketb.tll League

ntt~ct ing

writ be held

tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 246 Norton. It is an
important meeting for all CAC basketball coaches
and referees.
Filmmaker's Series presents Stan Vanderbeek
who will discuss experimental films today at 8 p m.
in the Albright-Knox Art Gallery .
The UUAB Video Committ" will hold a
meeting tomo rrow in Room 261 Norton. Needed are
writers, artists and production and progr.tm staffing.
Call 831 ·51 12 for time of meeting.
The Pro~mming Commltree of WIRR will hold
meeting tomorrow at 7 .30 p.m in Clement Hall
North Lounge . Anyone interested in gettrng ii
program please attend

.1

The YWCA H;alf-way House will hold a
volunteer meetrng tomorrow .tt 8 p.m in Room 266
Norton .
A Search Committee for dean of the Graduate
School of the State Unrversrty o f Buffalo has been
apporntcd by Dr . Ketter. The nine-member panel has
been asked to submit no fewer than two nominees
by MMch 24. The committee will be ch.tired by
Edwin A. Mirand , a professor of biochemical
pharma~oology . MacAllister Hull has been serving as
acting de;~n of the Gr.tduate School since October
1971 .
Minrmty ~tudents who are contemplating
attending law school in September 1972 are advi~ed
to write to the Council on legal Education.tl
Opportunity, 863 Farr Street S.W , Atlanta, Georgra
30314, to obtarn the necessary .tppl~eo~.uom for a
srx-weel. in tensrve tro~.rning progriim rn ldw prror tu
matriculating at a ldw school Candidate~ for the
CLEO program must have completed all
undergraduate worl... by ~eptember 1972, have taken
the LSA T and regi-;tered for LSDAS service,
completed a pph c.t tton~ to at lc.lst two .~cc rcdttcd 1.1w
schools by March I and must he a US Cltrzen

Sports Informati o n

•

Backpage

To nlght : Varstty wrestlrng Jt Rochester Tech, 7
p.m ., fre\hman basl..etball at Nragara Community
Collcg&lt;·.

Saturday: Varsrty

ba~ketbc~ll

vs

Cornell at

Memor rc~l Auditorium, 7 p.m., CJnrsru~ v~ . LaSalle, 9
p.m, frc~hmdn basketb.lll .Jt &lt;.,enc~eu State, varsity

hockey dt
Ame11C,1n lntern.ttinndl College,
Sp11ngficld, Mass., 8 p.m., var,ity fenctng at Hobart,
runrur V.H,ity wr~stlmg quad dt Cl.trk Gym wrth
Bullalo, Cornmg C C . r rre CC . .tnd Jame~to wn C &lt;.:.

Wh.tt's Happeni ng?
Wednesday, J.tn 26

Thursday, Jan 27

Music.tl lnnovatrons
WBCF fM , 9·05 p.m , I ilm lnVIJ\iOn of the Body ~Mtdum. 7 p m. clOd ")
featuring Dr Robert E Mc&gt;ls, diredor o f
p.m., Capen 140
Undergr aduolte ~ tudr~' and .t,su~rdte profc,sor Mu'''olugy Lecture Series· Chmtoph Wolff,
Columbia Univermy "J.S Bdch's 'De.tthbed
of musrc Jt the State Untvcrsrt\- of Buffalo.
Choral'· A Critical Ev,tluatro n of J Myth ," 3 30
Art show P11nh by ~tudenl\ n f ll.trvey Breverm,m,
p m Room 101 Barrd Hall
4240 R tdge Led, 9 am 5 p.m .
Semrnar "Cuntrul of Lhromowme Reph,JIInn rn Art Show 4240 Ridge Lc.1, 9 .s.m. S p m
Bacterr.1' by C.h.trln Hdmstcth:r , 4 p m, R11o111 Seminar " A Small Angle X r_,y DittTolctron Study ol
Myelrn MembrJnes" by C_!wlc~ "-\ Al..er,, 3 JO
11, 4234 Rrdge l ed
p rn ., 4234 Rrdgc Lec1, R~'om 11. I
!,cmrn,u '' Pharm&lt;~cokineti cs nd C(l l&lt;rnetrc Modcb
rn CJn~o.er Chemother.tp " b Profe~\or " B
Br~hoff of Cornell Untvcrstt
2 p.m .• Room
322 Acheson Hall.
- Amy Ahrend

Sut1d.1y · VJr&lt;.ity h&lt;Jckcy at Sdlem State, Salem,
5pm

Ma ~s.,

Mond.ty V.u\11 y b.t\ l..etb.sll vs Northern llhnors
.rt Mcmorr.tl Audrtorrum . Nragdfa v&lt;,.
D.ryton, Y p.m., lreshm.tn bJsl..etbJII at St.
Unrver~r l y

Bnruv crllur~

Tickets for the two basketball doubleheaders at
Memorial Auditorium this week are JvJilable in
UJtl.. &lt;.,ym untrl frrd.1y at 2 p m Bufl.1lo students
L.m purchc~~e $4 llt.l..et\ tor '1 .25 The '&gt;.rle of ticl..ets
'"a nclcs~rty since CJnisius College is pay ing .111 fees
lor the rentJI of the Au d. There will be no reduc.ed
prrce trckcrs at the Aud on the day o f the ~mes
S.uurday evenrng the B'ull~ meet Cornell and Monday
night meet Northern Illinois with both games
'&gt;tart ing at 7 p.m
A referendum on the future course of student
activtty fee ard to athle tic~ takes place tomorrow dnd
Frtdoly Jl various c.ampu~ locations. Tho'&gt;C supporters
of BuHalo .tthletics ciS well as dissenters are urged to
render a vote.

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

Vol. 22. No. 45

St.te University of New York a1 Buffalo

Fee guidelines challenged
'

S ID{f ftlrlt~

Despite reports to the contrary, State Uruversity officials
emphasized tast Friday that $30 million in construction projects
at the Amherst campus are merely "in suspension" - not
cancelled.

Adioo plirioed

As a protest to inoreascd JUidelines for student
fees, Student Association PreSident fan DeWaal has
proposed a student strike and auspension or all
st udent-fee subsidized activities. This action would
last three daya startina Peb. 3 and hopefully involve
aU facett of the campus.
·
At lut Wt!Ck's Executive Committee meeting,
Mr. DeWaal reported the neceaity for students to
finally confront the administration over control of
their money. Accordlna to Mr. OeWaal, it "would be
an initial action to pressure the admln!stration to
loosen up on controls or student fees." Additionally,
sucb an action would detennine 1f student
p&gt;vemment is a reality

S~ctrum

Monday, January 24,,972

control their money by seekin&amp; legal o pinions and
mandates from Albany. Mr. DcWaal believes that ••an
alternative exists" to thJ.a control : "That fa the
University must becin to fl&amp;ht for its autonomy in
the area of student fees. The r.dministration should
encourage rather than stiOe individual iniUatlve by
chanaina the status of our fee proaram from bcina
the most recuJ.ated in the state, to ono of mutually
agreed freedom ."

Last week, The Courier Expres1 reported that the State
University construction prOJects costing $34
illion
"probably never be built.'' However, Martin
. Kelly,
information director for the State University Cons
tion
Fund, told The Spectrum he had been misquoted in
Courier Express article and added that the 12 projects on the
new north campus had "been put on the shelf."
Fund officials had announced suspenaion or 232 projects
throuJhout the state Wednesday nigbt , citing cancelled
appropriations in Gov. RockerfeUcr's proposed budpt as the
reason.
There was a good deal of confusion concerning the status
of several projects, including those in tbe Western New York
area, totalling about S60 million.
fund's commitment

All 232 projects were supposedly "suspended ," according
to fund officials, but the smaller schools appeared to C.ce
permanent suspensions. " In thpse places I Buffalo State CoUece
and State Umversity Colleges at fredoi'WI and Geneseo I. I feat
'cancelled' may be a better word ," sa1d Oscar E. Lanford,
general manager of the fund

EftD Th~ Sp«rnlm'!
Rcprdina lhis, Mr DcWaal remarked: "The
strike will try to get students angry enough to do
somethin&amp; ... to put the1r asses on the line for
somethin&amp; and not JUSt wait for student government
officials to act for them." Involved in lhe strike
would be the shutdo wn of such acuvilles as UUAB,
the music room , the cra ft center, IRC functions and
campus publication~. The result, as Mr DeWaal
commented, would demonstrate to students that in
terms of "what the admm1stration does in the way
of student services . . IS nil ."
In addition to his proposals to the Executive
Committee, Mr. DeWaal sen t a letter to President
Robert Ketter charging the administration wilh
"castrating both student and campus autonomy "
According to DeWaal, his letter was prompted by
both a decision mandating rev1ew of I RC volunh&amp;ry
fees and recent SA ruignatlons. These resignatiOns,
of Treasurer Dave Barmak, Student Activities
Coordinator Mark Weiner and Director of Public
Information Alan Schwutt, all cited frustration as a
reason.

Furthn tmpenlllng the "suspended" projects at the
Amherst campus were Mr Kelly's statements m The Couner
expresJ lt appeared that the state had already decided to
eliminate some $30 million wortll of construction completely .
Nevertheless, Kelly maanta1ned that the art1de was erroneous,
reiterating the Fund's com mitment to build S650 million worth
Of facilities at the Amherst Site.
Though the University, accordmg to Kelly, will benefit
from the ongmal $650 million commitment , several smaller
state schools will appa rently lose projects planned for their
campuses. Cancelled pro)ects involve mostly dormitories, health
11nd physical education buildings, student unions and simU&amp;r
"non-essential " complexes. Ehmmaltn&amp; those projects, said Dr .
Lanford, was consistent with the fund's policy of " giving top
prionty to those project~ thal will produce the gteatest aml'.uot
of student-academic use."

Frustrated ~~etions
Commenting on '&gt;tudent 1nactton and frustra ted
efforts, Mr DeWaal stated "Up un til th1s potnl,
Student Association has only hmted at 1ls
d1ssatisfacbon with the manner in whtch student fe~
are regulated . However, the current decision to
monitor tbe Inter-Residence Council ~luntary fee,
has burst the bubble Of 1nact100 and we must VOICe a
strong protest of not only tlus acllon , but also those
that have preceded it "
Spec1fically,
Mr.
l)eWaal
charges
the
administration w1th JCOpard&amp;.ung ~tudents' nght to

Benion

Jan DeWaal
Plans are presently heang funuulat.:d lu
unplement tlu.s student strike and,1f nc"'essary, some
are speaking of a boycott of all Faculty Student
Association operations.

SUNY expansion reduced by
newlrnrnmtionsonthebudga
In order to meet new budget
re:&gt;trictions, the State Universaty
of New York is drastically scaling
down further expansion, to th e
tunc or S39l milLion Although II
IS
now the world's largest
u.ruversJty system , after a S I
billiOn growth over the past ten
years, tbe State University of New
York announced Wednesday that
I( IS cultang o ff constrU~;;tiOn of
planned dorms, dasses snd uffiu~
space. ThiS entails ahout halt tht:
gtowth expected for the decade ol
the 70's.
The
current
budget
L~
unaffected, but the cuts wiJI mean
a retarded growth, leading to
smaller future enroUment, with a
gteater number of students livtng
off ca mpus. Dr Oscar E. Lanford ,
general manager of the State
University Construction Fund .
said : '''fie are giving top priority
to those projects that will produce
the
&amp;reatest
amount
of
studeot-ecademic use."
The cancelled construction
involves what has been termed
" non -essential"
complexes:
dorms, health
and
physical
education bwlfinas and student

umons,
among o thers.
The
cut-huck announcement came JUSt
24 hours after Chancellor Ernest
Boyer said thot a tuition h1ke w~
hemg consadercd to keep the State
UniversitY of New York operatang
under Governor
Rm.kefeller·~
"austenty budget "
future enrollment cuts
AIt hough present plans call for
an ln&lt;:re.~~e in enrollment from the
current 226,000 to 408,000 by
I 980, the cuts reduce next year's
growth by a thud . from 15,000 to
4600 Mamtenance costs wtll be
lowered , due . to the reduced
number of planned buildings.
One-fifth of the proposed budget
for the State University system
would
now
go
toward
maintenance.
According
to
Rockefeller's game plan , tuition
lUkes can be kept down, since
construction is cut . The tuition
hike scheduled for the upcoming
year S700 for resident students,
S 1200 {or non-resident students
will meet general budaet cuts, and
continue paying for the S I billion
construction since 1960 .
ln order to employ space more

e~ on o n11 ca II y,
Royer
ha)
announced the f\llltlWtn~ step!&gt;.
lengthening the d.ass day and
expanding the use o f closet!
l&amp;rC UII and off-&lt;amp~ study
programs , enrolling more students
in the Empire State College thl'
newly formed "college without .1
campus;" regionalizing the State
University
of
New
Vurk .
guaranteeing placement ir a
student allends a school near h&amp;s
home, thus lim1ting the need fur
dorm1tory space.

What's been cut?
Hle following &amp;s .1 hst of themaJOr
construction
proJCd~
cancelled by the State Universaty
system : Buffalo
S30 mallion at
the
new
Amherst
campus.
includuig
an
administration·
-sendee-physics complex and two
instructional facilities; Buffalo
$2.8 million for a classroom
buUdin&amp; at the State College ,
Albany - SS8.8 miiGbn for a $29
million west podium extension,
health and physical education
building, conference center and a
married
students
housing
~ontlnu.a

on

~aoe

ten -

At the Umvemty , a spokesman reported that existing
bwldings wJ.IJ be used by more st udents and be open longer
hours In addit1on , he continued, there will be more emphasis
on such thtngs as educatiOnal teleVISIOn, off-campus study
programs and independent stud y

In a letter Circulated to faculty last Thursday, President
Rohert Ketter ernphasJZed t hat the ~.ourrent fiscal cnsis would
not endanger the quallty of the Uruversaty over the long run.
"We know that funds wall be an sh ort supply for academac
1&lt;&gt;72-73," wrote Pre&lt;&gt;adent Ketter. "Nonetheless, I am confident
that the Umversity wall conllnue to move ahead both 1n
IC-J72-73 and 111 the years thereafter"
Laying partkular emphasas on a quality faculty, Ketter
declared that expansion tn the Amherst campus and "
nationally competitive bulary structure would insure "a
significant expansion ot our faculty beyond its present
strength "
Not feasible
Kett er's letter, however, was predicated on an Amherst
campus that will be read)' for use starting 1n 1973 , Wtth the
present suspenSion and already laggang construction timetahle,
at appears that this starting date IS tn extreme jeopardy
Fac.:ulty
d1s~.ontent
over
the
long-promised out
never fanJShed new c.tmpus 1s.well known "A lot of people on
campus now have oeen b1.1uye,J on promiSes sance at least
1"166," noted W1U1am Baumer, exe\ uttve Y1Ce chaJnnan of the
Facully Senate, ..and these developments certainly aren't going
to help re ~:ruah n~t"
Though PreSJdent Ketter promiSed to usu endowment
funds tf ne~:cssary for "key tac ulty appoantments," Dr. Baumer
pOinted out that faculty morale was bound to suffer if
completiOn of the Amherst campus was delayed much lo nger.
"The kmd of faculty we can bnng and keep," he 11dded, "will
largely deternune the kind of'umversity we have,"
Unfortunately, nobody on campus seems to have an
understanding of the cutbacks and their immediate and
long-range effects. A non-functJorung communication Oow from
Albany appears to be responsible. As Executive Vice President
Albert Somit noted last week, information from Albany is
arriving with all the speed of "parapalegic turtles."
Until the cutbacks can be studied 111 detail, it is difficult to
determine just who will be hit the hardest and where, but it is
certain that one more delay won't help It is now estimated that
the Amherst campus will not be completed unbl 1978, and even
that prediction seems to many, rosily optimistic.

"

�'Interface'

Ketter discusses
financial problems
Regarding
the
current ventured: "You might specualte
controversy
over
University that dormitory fees will go up
review of activity fees , President next year."
Robert Ketter commented last
Thursday
night
on Chides Senate
The Faculty Senate was on the
WBFO-broadcasted Interface that
the Bursar's office "should get out receiving e.n d of most of Or.
less
complimentary
of
the
collection
business Ketter's
altogether." He continued that if remarks during t he discussion o r
students were to set up their own the new admissions policy . He
machinery fo r collecting they twice chided the Senate for
could keep the mandatory fees waiting 14 years to take any sort
and spend them "any way they of stand on admissions and t hen
sending in the recommendations
see fit. "
This was one o f the many two and one half months too late
topics discussed as WBFO aired to be of any use. Dr. Ketter
the semester's first Interface with asserted that in mandating that 50
President Robert Ketter and per cent of the entering freshman
Assis tant
to
Direc to r
of class be from the Eighth Judicial
Admissio ns and Records John District he was merely making
polic y out of common practice
Hammond .
Dr. Ketter {ieJded questio ns since 48 to 54 per cent of all
about the probable effects of the freshman classes already were
governor's proposed "austerit y" fro m Western New York.
budget on present and future • Dr. Ketter artfully hedged
University operations, par ticularly charges that the University was
.
the constructio n of the Amherst trying to c urry favor with local
The Student Association Executive Committee
campus. Responding to a query legislators in an atlempt to get
about the results of a $30 million more funds .
started spring semeater last friday with a meeting
Although
Executive
Vice oonsiderin.a budgets and proposed student actions.
slash
from
the construction
budget Dr. Ketter pointed o ut President Albert Somit (speaking Specifically, many oommittee members felt that
that most o f the funds had been for Dr. Ketter at the last Faculty only throuJ)t direct student participation could
earmarked
for the pro posed Senate) reported this to be true. administrative lim.ltations on stud en t fees be relaxed .
Health Sciences complex .
In proposins a suspension of aU fee-subsidized
Registration woes
activities, Presidon~ [an OeWaal commented: "Dr.
Registration and its attendant Ketter and his ad mi.tllstration won't stick their neeks
Resolution forwarded
However, since current plans woes took up most of t he out and I want to fOf'Ce them to. If not, at least we' U
keep 1t o n the South tMam St.) remainder of the program. When show people that they aren't willing to answer to the
campus. this money wo n' t be asked about SARA's effectiveness students." He contin ued : "One of the fastest ways
needed . He did not say, though , Dr. Ha mmond claimed : " This to do thUl would b~ to shut down all campus
what money had been provided to system has worked very well ." activities fo r t hree days. This would include The
expand and improve current According to Dr. Hammond Spectrum , mo vies and maybe even Norton Union . I
facilities .
Citing
unavoidable rou ghl y three-fourt hs of the full want to find out once and for all whether student
delays he estimated that , had hme students got registered for 12 go vernment means anything; whether the students
construction begun as pla nned in or more cred it hours o n the first give a sh1t."
1967 , a great deal , approximately try .
three mijjjon square feet , of the
Dr. Kelter pointed to the ~trike plans
campus
wo uld
have
he(n
success of the computerized
Mr. DeWaal is plannin$ to ho ld a press
completed seven years ahead l•f system in schedultng exams. He
conference
to publically criticize the Ke tter
the present schedule (m1d 1971l)
said that the University was able administration . It is his belief that the Buffalo
at somewhat more than half the
to take two days less for exams communi ty thinks that Dr. Ke tter is do ing a good
current cost
with only six conflicts out of a JOb due to the calm air that presenlly envelops the
Commenting o n the lil.ely
possible 23,000. Dr. Hammo nd ~:am pus,
effectiveness of last Tuesday's
also gave a sho rt rustol}'. of the
lt was pointed out that t he committee members
Faculty Senate resolution calhng
computu registration system.
sho
uld
not rush into this plan , as a poor sho wing of
fo r the fastest possibl e comple tion
The program was marred by a s tude nt s upport would give more strength to Dr.
of the Amherst campus, Dr.
Ketter's position . The committee is hoping to draw
instance
of
technical
Ketter
said
" It
will
be rare
in many issues during the "strike" most no tably the
forwarded" to Albany. Cuts from difficulties. Listeners who turned
the State Dormitory Autho'rity o n their radios at 8 p.m . were question of mandatory student fees. As Keith
Frankel said : "Ketter isn't representing the students
promise to Jffect present students treated to five minutes o f really
more
direc tly.
Dr.
Ketter fine classical guitar playmg by an and they' re letting h!m get away with anythjng."
explamed that all dormitory unnamed artist while the first
students are "being subsid iz.ed to problem was worked out. Another
the tune of $200" resulting in short break in transmission was
dormitory fees being less than particula rly unfortunate as the
of
$392
million
in
requiied to run the facilities at fate
cost. Asked what immediate construction funds was decided
effect this would have Dr. Ketter during the silence.

Executhe Committee

Tentative
student
strike
plans
.
~

The present plan is to institute the strike early next
mont h .
A major area of controversy also covered by the
Executive Committee was the utilizatio n of funds
previously allocated to the Arab Cultural Club. The
club's budget was frozen last semester after fo rgery
charges were brought against its president. The case
is presently pending before the Student Judiciary .
Money q uestions
To obtain partial use of t hese funds , the
International Club requested $245 for their month
long celebration, I nternational Week. The motion
wa.~ passed despite the disapproval of some Arab
students in attendance. It was t heir complaint that
t he SA was overextending itself by taking upon itself
to decide which students represented the campus
Arab population. Pinal actio n must be taken by
today's Student Assembly before this mo ney
transfer could be effected.
Other committee action included the passage of
budgets. Among those passed were $7200 to both
the Buffalo Draft Counseling Center and the Niagara
Day Care Center, $250 to the Food Co-op , and $200
to the Undergraduate Anthropology Club. An
additional $375 was allocated to form a comic book
co-op to be run in the same manner as the record
co-op.
In the final minutes, S 1000 was given to
Sunshine Ho use, in o rder to purchase pro pert y at
106 Winspear Ave. It was also dec ided to contract
for an engagement by Steve Stills to be held in the
Memorial Auditorium late thi.s semester.

BEFORE YOU BU I

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DICTIONARIES
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1971

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We have a huge stock of slightly

USED
TEXTBOOKS

NORTH AMER ICAN
Ll QUI DATORS
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Paqe two. The Spectrum . Monday, January 24, 1972

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
M11M• St. Aaess fr- U.l.

W-7131

STORES

INC.

�Administrative faults

Borenstein airs his opinions
Editor :S nou : ThiJ past wulc has seen three resignations from
Student Association officials. The Spectrum earlier reported on
those of Mark Weiner and Awn Schwartz, who both cited
frustration as a main cause in their decision . The following is rhe
letter of resignation of the third, David Barmak, SA treasurer for
the past year and 1.1 half
January 19. 1972
Mr. lan C . OeWaaJ, Pres1dent
Student Association

by Jeff GRenwaJd
Campu1

Editor

Editor's note: Mark Borenstein recently resigned his
post of Business Manager of Sub Board I, Inc. and is
presently devoting his energies to words the fledgeling
StUdent A ssockltion of the State Universil)l (SASU},
The following is the fvst of a two part series
covering Mr. Borenstein's rwitch, and his views on
Sub Boord, SASU and the Un;,mity in general.

Dearlan :
As you know , I have been growing Increasingly impatient and
disillusioned with Student Association over the past several months.
I had, of course. hoped that in our term of office, students could
finally be united ; that Student Association would finally become
the legitimate spokesman for the student body and, therein , be a
broker in the dectsion-making process of the University.
All of the Executive Committee must admit, l think, that we
have failed m all of these areas.
Per.;onally. I was very d1sa ppointed in the actions
(non-actions?) of certam mdiv1duals and 10. an almost constant
vacillallon and vagueness on major poltcy directions All of these
factors helped contribute to the fatlure of Student Association 1n
proVldmg any leader.;hJp. But , 1n the last analysis, the failure of
Student Government at U.B. does not IJe in the failure of
tndividuals
rather, what we must spe:1k to IS the mherent
lim1tat10ns of Student Government.
Bas1cally, I belteve that Student A~ot..lallon. inherently, must
fa1l as a govrrnmenr That IS, 1n lis fum lion as a dec1s10n-maker and
power broker at SUNYAB If we were to he able to play a v1able
part m the po 1Jt1cs of the Umver..Jty, 11 would only be with the full
support of the student body But, Student Assoc1at 1on has
consistenUy failed to mob11Jze student support on significant 1ssues.
Clearly, a government Without a constituency IS no government.
Frankly , I have never been able ttl determine whether the fault
lies with a lackadaisical student body or with 1ncompetent leaders.
In any event, I have found this fallure frustrating Although my
position as treasurer would see m at first to he the one most steeped
in Beauracrat1c (Sil) detatl , I have alway~ preferred concen tratmg 1n
policy areas. Therefore, Student Assoc1a11on's fa1lure 1n
policy making has been extremely disheartemng ror me.
As an "assoc1ation," Student Association has also failed
Students do not get three-quarters of 11 mtllton dollar.; of servtce.
Most dasconcerting of all, perhaps, 1s that I am still unsure of
Student Assoc1a1Jon's policy onentat1on as to the allocatiOn of
resources · 3 man1festa11on of the " non~1rect10n" that w.: have
proVlded through the Execut1ve Committee and the Assembly
In sum, I have fo und Student Ao;soc1at1on largely dysfunctional
After month&lt;; of comm1tment and long hours on my part tn scrv1\:e
of Student A..SOCiatttln, my dlstllustOnment has supe r-.eded my
ded1cat10n I would never not even (M three weelo.~. want to
conltnue tn my post11on g1vmg less than I .1m capabk of. Therefore,
I respectfully reque\t that you acLept my res1gnatton as Student
Assoctatton treasurer, cfte...t1ve f-eb I, llJ7 2
I smcerely hope that 111 the last days of your adnHnlslrJtlnn ,
you can 1ntl1ate a senous rcth1nklnt( of the roll! Student As:.oL1atwn
can, mll!&gt;t , or &lt;;1\uuld t&gt;lo~y Ill Lllmlng yeu·,
S1ncerely,
LJIJ lltu &amp;rmiJJ.. , /'rt'll 1/Jfl't

Stuut'"' A.uoctiJ '"'"

·we~

we
UUAB MUSIC COMM ITTEE

-osterrelcller

Mark Borenstein
For many students only vaguely familiar wrth
government, the name Mark Borenstem
m1ght conjure up images of a latter day Richard
Nixon , or a tenacmus octopus, greedily using Jll
ctght am1s to p1ck as many pockets as possible
While the former may have somewhat more
truth tr1 11 than the second , niether picture 1s really
accurate. and both are qutte unfa1r. He IS, m fact , a
rather 1ntelltgent person whose ideas are mo:.t
tntcreslln~ and ma y even surpnse a few people
~tudent

• • • • •
"hankly, I l1ke Dr Kctt CI alli.l Or Som1t, hut I
really ~cc th1~ :sdmtniStraii{IO ~tdl111~ tl1t' gmwth ol
th ts place The Umvcrs1ty has stagnat eJ Nearly all
creative pwgrams have been curt.ulcd , ami wh1h.' 11
may nul have hecn their fault , they ~.:c rta11lly could
have pushed rnure than they did "
Ounng a lengthy conver!kllmn wtth The
Spt•ctrum, he further explained his compl:.unts With
the lln1versrty'l&gt; h1erarchy, mclud1ng the Central
Admmtstrat1on 111 Albany "SUNY Central and th1s
admtn1stratwn havr to stup hiding behind each

other's clothM. Ketter must stop using the excuse
'Albany won't let us '." When that delay is used, Mr.
Borenstein pointed out, SUNY Central invariably
points back to Buffalo calling whatever issue may be
in question a "local admanistrative decision." And so
the cycle continues.
--.,_
Mr. Borenstein was particularly upset with such
adverse rulings as those regarding student fee usage
in various areas, Student Association ownership of
land and the vending operation.
"We seem to be returnmg to the old way of the
administration mandating tltings and then students
reacting to the mandate. Decisions like fees and
vending have been filly without student imput."
He continued · "S dents have to be in on the
decisio n process f om the ground level up. They
must help make pu •cy rather than just condemn the
policy
"What ts needed •~ some agency that really
represents !&gt;ludents to react to things like this; a
group to handle studen t w1de questions." Mr.
Borenstein feels that e1ther Sub Board or a Sub
Board type nrganll.&lt;~tlo n IS the veh•cle that must be
used ''The luture uf thas type of organization on
th1s campus IS very 1mportant
"A ~mpmat1un such as Sub Board lends ttself to
a grcJt amount of eflecttve student act1on. There are
so many legal thmgs a corporatton can do that a
non corporatHtn ..:an 't People need to reali7.e that
studen t government contml~o $1.5 million. That's not
peanuts, 1t's b1g bus111ess .
Tainted image
Concernmg the management of Sub Board, Mr.
Borenstein expressed pleasure over the appointment
of a new executive director "Students are finding
themselves rncapable of effectively and efficiently
using the1r money. A full time director is neoded to
make the most out of the available resources.
Students should remain tn control of the board, but
the executive t.IJtector IS necessary."
Among the more cruc1a l problems facing Sub
Board J!&gt; cvrtknced by the Poverty Hill affair is its
1mage Wtth the student body SaJd Mr. Borenstein:
"Sub Board has 1t1 change 1ts pubhc image away
from that of a b1g autocratiC orgamzation." That
problem will he among the first taken up by the
cxccu t1vc dtrcctor
M1
~oJ Cil~tctrl
.Jtlt.lcd that he would be
\.llrlliiiUHig hi\ IIIVolvemcnl w1th Sub Board in
cc• t•un way~ "Very shortl y. I'll be givmg a list to
'iub Board L'ltrl~.:cnllng tlllllj.\.~ I feel should be done.
The talk of restructunng Sub Board was a good
thmg, but 11 JU~t dtcd It IS nl great importatrce''
"Sub lloartl ulfeJed a real opportunity to me
two years ago as a !ICW orga111tat1on w1th unlimited
potentwl ," sa1d Me IJ11ren~ t etn 111 cundusJOn, but 1
hatl begun 1o linJ my,cl f ddendtng the urga nization
JS Jn tnstiiUtiiiO rather than looking at the ideas
hch111d the attacks hu many reasons, 11 was Simply
tunc to get out •·

Prl'H'nt
In t c•llt c•rt
Epk Ret•ording Arti-.h

AT McGRATH&amp; DON POTTE
A~ylurn

plus
Recording Artist

JACKSON BROWNE
plus

NATURAL
Friday , January 28. 8:30p .m .
fillmore Room Norton Union

·-

S I .50 students

$2.00 non-student'\

Tickets on sale .:~t Norton Ticket Office

WANTED

•
•

ASPIRING FILMMAKERS
How would you like to direct, produc.e .1nd tllm your very
own rnovie~?

COME TO - NORTON 334, 8 :00p.m.
WEDENSDAY , JANUARY 26,
FOR MORE INFORMATION.

--

STUDENT FILM CLUB

A Div1sion of Sub Board I, Inc.

Monday, January 24, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Student boqy to decide fate
of athletics in a referendum
Tllis ~oming Thursday and Friday, . the are clouded, but it appears d efinitely that a
Universat y's undergraduate studen t body will vote in dominant voice of monetary reductions could signal
a referendum on athletics. The referendum, an end to athletics o n the Buffalo campus. As usual,
sanctaoned by the fledgling Student Assembly , was the Buffalo at hletic program could be in a crisis
deemed unbiased by Bruce Francis, associate stage. The search fo r stability has been one o f the
director of th e Survey Research Center Accordingly , major problems for Athletic Director Harry G. Fritz
the fate of the University's athJet ic program IS on the since h e arrived here two years ago.
line. The $240,000 athletic budget passed last year
includ ed funds for in tercollegiate athletics, women 's Uses of student monies
sport s, recreation and antramurals and a new item ,
Student fees h ave been a focal point of m uch
club sports
trouble in athletics at Buffalo since a referendum
Questions to be asked number ten with a format four years ago . Last April, the student body voted to
of more, less. same and nothing answers for each keep all fees mandatory thus saving athle tacs. Now,
question, for mstance, question one will ask, should t he voice of t h e stud ents will be heard on ce again on
the S240,000 athletic budget receive more, less, etc
the specific questions involving a thl etics. A point not
Oth er subjects to be coverecj in th e referendum are clanfied by the referendum are the possible uses of
men's intercollegiates, women's intercolleg~ates, student fees an athletics.
mtramurals and participat ory questiOns. According
Presently, no student monies are used to supply
to Student Assocaallon officaals, the referendum will or support &amp;rants-in-aid for athletes. Student monies
be banding on the Student Assembly whach ~:reated channeled to athletics are used for transportation ,
maJOr headlines last November by pas.•;ang the meals. equipment and saJareas or graduate assistants
197 1 72 budget by the slim margin o f I 5 14 wllh in add ition to administrative costs. In We4nesday's
Presadent Jan DeWaaJ bre.tkmg the deadlock .
17u Spectrum
further anformation
on the
Predli.'llons as to the results 1lf the referendum referendum wdl appear.

Register to vote
I f you're over 18 and haven't yet regsstered to vote, take noce. The Board or
Elections will operate a reaistntion table in the Norton Center Lounae from Mo nda y,
Jan. 11 to Friday, Feb. 4 from 9 a. m . - 4 :30 p.m . dally. If you are 18 or over and h ave
lived in Buffalo for at least a year, just brina proof o f aae and your 10 card and you can
register to vote. Additionally , anyone who wasn' t yet 18 at the time o f t he last aene ral
elect io n but will be by the n ext one, and re,isters now wUI be eliaible to vote in the
presidential primary.

Ski Norway. ••

the"Roof of Europe"
from only$3oooo
f 01 JU:.t about v.hJt 11 "'uuld ~:n' t to skt Jt home,
.\AS gt\cs you your chotte of Norway·~ two
1111)\l fabulous .,~o,.; resorts · Vo~s n r Geilo. What
c.:vcr 1-..tnd of '&gt;k-ung you enjoy most, Norway
gave' ynu the be~t nf tt - from thnlling slalom
~Jopco., to un~:rowded cro.,~-country terrain. Include' round trap air fare , hotels. meals. tips
and taxc.:s. From as little as $300.00

Take (lff wUh rhc Scandinavians.. NaV4tators oflhe world ... since 11 was tlat

CONTACT:
YOUR NEAREST
TRAVEL AGENT
Page four . The Spectrum Monday , January 24, 1972

TALLAHASSEE - Florida has
put up "no vacancy" sagns on its
prisons'
doors,
in
an
unprecedented
and
probably
illegal m ove, to cut down on the
overcrowding in th e state's reform
system .
Corrections
Director
Lou1e Wainwright said : " If I'm
sued, I' ll lose ; but I'd rather go to
jail than invite another not by
further jamming our prisons."
Florida Attorney General Robert
Shevin said that Waanwright's
o rd er was probably iJJegal, but h e
supported it. One of the steps
whlch might be Isleen to alleviate
th e situation would be to release
those prisoners who are ready for
parole, or whose terms expire
shortl y. Until something is done
to ease tlle crisis, new inmates will
be turned away from the gates of
Florida's prisons. Inmates at some
pnsons are sleeptng on the floor.
and are packed three anto a cell
designed for one A riot at the
main st11 te prison a year ago, in
wh1 ch 60 tnmates .and guards were
mjured w.as blamed part:ally on
uvercrow dmg.

Th1~ year's
WASH INGTON
draft lottery . whu.: h aftcds all
men burn dunng the year I ~153 ,
will be held m february several
month., earlier th.an 111 tile p.1-.1
The
Selective
Serva~c
in
announcmg thas dec asion f nday ,
~1d that the dat i! wa!&gt; mo ved up
so !hat young men who fa ce
inductiOn dunnt~ 1'17J w1ll know
where th ey .\land o1.~ so urt a'
po!.s1blc The drJfl IJ&gt; due to
expuc m 1~73, !&gt;o 11 I!&gt; hkcly that
those men .:alh:d up 1lunng the
lirst part o f I &lt;n J, wall bt the l.tst
men actually drafted under the
Iotter) 'Y\Iem Th1!- I!&gt; m hn!! wrth
lht• a\JnlllliSirai JOn'~ rl.lll Ill hUV\'
an .111 volunteer .mn y by 1971

AIR H)R('[ i\l'ADL l\11"1
A
student honm "&lt;Mrd c11 thl' Au
Force
Academy
MIIHlUnced
FncfJ y th.1t the number o l cadet'&gt;
to und gu11ty m the al.:td~my·s
third ch catang sc.rnd.al w11l11n a
1.h:ca&lt;.lc may go w~:ll past th e 20
studenb alre.ady found gu1lt y
l- our ~tud cnt!&gt; wen: unplt..:aleJ
Fnday
.md turned 1n thear
shouluc1 hoards beforo: l ca VIIljP. lht•
s d1 onl

tn1 litll.lllnJI lht• .I•.Jtll'111)

ho nor code, which read s: " We will
no t tie, cheat or steal nor tolerate
among us those who do." Not all
t he cadets found guilty were
accused o f cheatjng, but were
accused of failing to report it.
Those found guilt y will be
dascharged honorably, rather t h an
appeal th eir convichons. In an
earlier scandal, in 1965, whach
centered around athletes, 109
cadets were forced to resign .

KEY BlSCA YNE - Accusmg
Congress of draggin&amp; its feet on
th e matter, Presadent Nixon
announced Friday tha t he would
ask the lawmakers to end the We~t
Coast dock strike by imposing
btnding arbitration In its one
hundredth day, th e strike has hll
thousands
of
farmers
asnd
busm~men who, a ccording to the
Presadent ,
have
been
made
" hostages to the anterest of those
few who persist m prolonging th l'
daspule." Nixon proposed th.at
Congr ess
pass
emergenly
legaslataon
to
order
th~:
longsh oremen bac k to work , ,rnd
set up u three-man arbitratron
panel to d1c tate a settlement tho~t
labor and management wo uld b~
fo rced to accept fo r the nc)(t 11&lt;
mo nths. llowever, 11 was doubtfu l
that Congress woulc.l go along With
lhas proposal , and would probahh
vo te in favor uf u renewal ot thl'
Taft -Hartley At·t hack·lo·wctrk
Wllhnut
lnt tl&lt;l\ln~
p e r1 od,
settlement tt:rm&lt;&gt; Whil e lll tU'&gt;l'
spok~:snH•n
dcc hm:d
It•
~"Y
whether •H n•\1 Nl'&lt;cln would
.Ine pt thl\ o~lll·lll.ltlv,·
Ill .. flii'VICW ,,,

NEW YORK

a report ol J nallcHt Wid&lt; ,urVl'\-

c.lrug... lb ymunc.l Sd1.1ln
cha1rman
11f
the
N.1t1nn.ll
('omm1ssmn ou M.anJuan;.~ Jllu
Drug Ahu\&lt;' o;.ud Wednesd ay 111~ht
thJI
.1h1•UI
1:1ght
nt11ltt111
A rn er i .:;a n 'l
U\l'
man1liJJl.1
r~gularly . Jnu dhnut three tlllll''
th;.~t number hav&lt;· lrtcd the wc·nJ
dl lea.l&gt;l Ollu.• rh l! \Urvey ShmH·J
that 15 per t.:l'tlt ol thuw undl'l I x
h.1J
d o ne
'"
Dr
'I •1111
un

Un d cri~:JJcr

J

•un,ultan~:

hlJirl\1 In Ill\' \111111\\lnn
'&gt;au.J " Man y fll'nplt- tl~~ martJI•.uJ,I
.utcl h ;1vc tto prohkul\ Murn
" ' hl'f\ J ..
fl'&gt;Y&lt;

Books seized

Cells of Attica cleared
of all 'potential weapons'
Followmg. till tli\J,I\'r .11 \ll1~o.1
ln ,talut~
111
~t!pll!ltthcl th~: )tuJru' .rnd \lollc
trouper' ~.o mrl~td ~ dcarcd &lt;•U t
the inmat,., · lclh Evt:rytlung 111
th~: celt.. WJ) t.aJ..en vut ..rnd
des troyed, presumably !-O no
artu:lt! ~.:o uiJ be U\Cd as a weapon.
Whet her a hook ran he used as u
wec1po n or not ~~ d e batable, but
all the hu nk, were tak en from the
pnsoncr~· .:dis and
used for
landfill.
Damel
Whale
a
St;ate
Unavcr!&gt;lty
~(
Buffalo
undergraduate who was released
from Alt1~.:a e1ght months ago,
know~ how badly the anmates
need hooks "What else do the
pnsoncrs hJvc t o do hut read'!" he
asked Acco rding to Mr . Whit e.
there are some act iVIties at Attica
but not nearly enough and the
literary purge of Septe'mbcr has
left the prison library quite
( nrrc~otiiiiiJI

u~ plcll•d
( II ht•lp oiiJl'VI,Ifl' thl!&gt; SltUilfiClll
Mr Wh11&lt;' I' ruanrung a r.1hlc
luday through I hursday 111 !Itt•
Nnrtnn t e ntt'r Luungt: to cullnl
hl)Ok~ lor the Altll.J pn)oner' II
anyone ha) bouk) o f any type,
novels, cdu~.:ational texts or JUSt
anything , that they no longer
need or use, please bnng thern to
the table lh1s week Mr. Wtute
would also greatly appreciate any
volunteers who would be wffiing
to help h1m man the table for thiS
worthy c:ffort.
Most of all . however, he needs
books. All the boo~s that are
coll~ted waJJ be taken to the
Alllc..t prisoners hy Mr. While's
Department
ol
VocatJonal
R eha bi litation
representative.
Your help is needed
please
donate any books you can
Lonely and bored mmates will
really appredate it

�State of tbe Union

Nixon: '1972 a year ofaction'
by J anis Cromer
A sst 0/f-Ormpus Editor

Drug Center requires
trust and acceptance
An open door to all those w1th become famtlor wtth 1&gt;.1ds 1n th e
problems IS a promise Of the sch ools
and oth ers an
th e
newly formed West S1de Drug community" and extend the
Abu se
P reventJOn
Center , cenrer's sphere of m 11 uence Mr
according to Rtchurd Metter, Me tter contmued that the o nly
01rcctor
way 1h1s program will su~ceed 1S
Currently ll•cated at :!4 Grant w1th
cooperarion
from
the
Street, the center has etgh t commumty.
qu a lafu:d
anJ
co n cerned
A phCl ne serv1 ce, manned hy
counselors ava1lahle fo r those who the same qualified counselors. as
ilre troubled 11nd ~ee k ~ome t ype avatlablt: for th ose who find
o f assistance. There art fadhh es themselves havmg pro blem s lH
for counseling In thtl cente r o n faci ng an eruergerH:Y ~ n,e number
group, and lVI dual and fa m1ly bases is 8R3 I 600
with refe rrals to ut h cr agenc1e!.
proVlded when needed
More than treatmmt
Pnmarily concerned w1lh the
Education IS ancllhc:r aspect of
pre ventiOn a nd trea tm ent o l dru8 the center's plan \ounselors will
abuse, the center aJrns at " helping be gomg to different schools 1n
people to better und ehlcind the1r th e
Wesr
S1d e
commun1t y
~utuati on, .allcmpt tu 1.ltscov~r wh y
leltunng, showmg films and
th ey use drugs o~nd to dtJt wtth leadln[t d1~cusstons Some of the
related problems "
"trust" sn necessary for rh e
th e cen ter
w1ll
l(uccess
of
Real caring
hopefully
t:ome
from
these
The counselur&lt;~ worlo.tn~ o~ t the meetmg.s
Guest speaker) anti
cen ter are attempting to make lha~ literature Will al\Q be prc1v1d ed by
more than a JOb Jhey "stress ,, the cenrer Thetr goal IS t o
close relationship" With the1r ctlucate Jnd " mfo rm the ynuth
clients lind ho pe Ill e~ ta bh\h a and adulr pubhc about drug usc,
"long time•· aff1hat1o n Mr Metter tffec t~. legal aspects, drug abuse
believed the co un~&lt;elors ;1r~ willing prevention and rehabilitation "
to get very 10volved wtth those
The staff of etght cons1sts of
seeking a¥l. He ~laled that hts live ~.;ou nsel ors. one s.:cretary . one
st a ff IS there to help " full t1me" d1rccto r and o ne sem or ~o unse lor
and doe.s nClt see as!ltstance ~~~ There
are
currently
tw o
heing "restn cted to o ff1ce hours ." volunte ers and 1t IS h o ped lh&lt;tl
He mentioned that 1t is not once a I ra1ning program 1s
unusual· to find tw o o r three established more wtll ap ply The
clients in the ho me of hts sen1or cntena fo r vo lunteers IS no t ye t
counselo r . Jo h n Merc un o, dl any formulated . Th1s wtll ho pefully ht&gt;
gJve n lime. The client~ are allowed completed within th e nex t tW ll
to stay wheth er they JUSt need .. weeks, according to Mr. Metter.
place to stay o r need h elp wh1le
Counselors have all necessary
gowg thro ugh Withd rawal ··we mformatwn to refer md iv1dual\
want
ro
bu1ld
a
tru~t
for
mcd1cal
treatment
ur
rela110nshtp," he contmued
e111ergerll y hO!.flllala.ation They
Reahz1ng the probltml&gt; ot c1 are cu rr~ntly participating 1n a
nc: w cenr er, Mr Meller ... tilled lhdl detolofi~.;attcln program with J
11 all depends on pubhc relatutns
IJ.Xal hospttal Clie nts can be
Thc&gt;l&gt;e tn need musr le&lt;~m In rcfened llJ oth er agen1C1es for
ac~·e pt .tncJ tru.st those Jt th e
serv 1~:es such as J&lt;&gt;h placement or
center He underslood tht) In be legal assiStance.
an 1mportan1 step anJ reali zed
Only t wo weeks o ld , the cente1
that o ft en people arc ~us piCIOUl&gt;, ha~ alreutly had o ne guest speaker
wondering 1f a newly cst .. bhshed on abortion referrals and held
center 1s afn1ated w11h the po h~ e
what Mr. Mette r descnbed as
Hence, a strong h t!S1lat1on t o " kmtl o f rap sesswns."
confide in anyone . lie hoped by
An open house is he1ng held
helping individuals one by one. Mo nday, Jan 24 from 9 a . m. 9
th e reputation o f the center p.m. and all are inVlted t o vistt the
wo uld grow and people would center at this lime.
realize the counselors are there to
The center is one of 14
help. " They are there because neighborhood fa cilities funded by
they are con...erned with the the Ene County Department of
1&gt;roblems fa c mg the communit y Mental
Healrh . It is open
and the 10d1viuals 111 1t." sa1d Mr
weekdays fro m '} a.m .
9 p. m ,
Metter.
Saturday from It a .m. - 6 p.m.
An "outreach" program wiU be and Sunday from 4 p.m .- 7 p.m.
started for th ose who feel It lS located on 24 Grant Street
uncomfortable commg to the and the number is 883 - 1600.
center. Counselors wtll "hopefully TheLr door IS topen t o all .

"l am not presenting pro posals which have
attractive labels but no b ope of passage,"
commended President Nixon last Thursday even10g.
On the third anniversary of hls inauguration , Mr.
Nixo n delivered a State of the Union address that
contained few new pro grams, a plea fo r th e
enactment o f o ld mitiatives, many requests fo r
non-partisanship, and quite a number o r hints :~h o ut
the agenda he in tends to o ffer next fall .~
In the mtroduct ory statements of his speech,
the Pres1dent said that although the nation is facing
an electi o n year, he had no intention o f presenting a
''huge" list of reforms and new proposals . " I
presented to the leaders of Congress today a message
of 15.000 words diS cussing in some deta1l w here the
natio n st ands and setting forth s pecific legislative
items o n which I have asked the Congress to acr "
no ted the 1'1-esident. Tllken together, the President's
speech and written st atement o ffered new pro posals
co ncerning defense s pendmg, edU l-atlon finan cmg
and new possibwlles 1n t ech nology
Increases for defen:Je
W1th reprd lu defen~e . rhe Pres1dent SJid,
" llec:wse of nsmg rescsr.:h and development .c~l~.
because o f mcreast&gt; 1n mthtary an1l CIVIlian pay and
hecouse of the nt'etl tll proceed with new w eJp&lt;HI
~y~tem s, m y budget lu r the c:ommg fiscal year wiiJ
prov1de ror an m crease 111 d efense spending. Strong
mllltllry defenses are not t h e enemy nf peace They
are the guardwn of pca1 e "
Th1s announcement o t a IJrger def~tnst&gt; huJgel
was not t o tall y unc xp ecred Mr N1xon ha' heen
under p ressure hom th e Pentagon to mu t1. h S11vtet
expenditu res in weapo ns research and developutent
In add ition , he ha ~ been seekmg new b0lrg:u111ng rools
at the Strategic Arms L1m1tal io ns Talks, &gt;Hid h ~ ha~
heen heavily c ntici t.cd hy (;O nservallve R epuhhc:an~
for " falling h ehmd " the Russians
Mr N1xo o also mark ed the~uy, 11t f1nan~1ng
educutaon ..ts an a rea need1ng 111ut:h allenllun 1n the
com tng yea r. " We have lo ng looked m t h1 ~ na11un 11.1
th e loca l pro pert y tax dS th e main source u l
financ10g ror public pnmary and secondary sch ools,"
declared the President He went on to say that
cver·m c reasing pro ptrt y tax e-s " threate n.. s~: hools
o~nd commun111es lie ca lled t he tax oppr~ss1ve dnJ
diSCnmtnatory hecau~e 11 ruts at the elderly and
retired most l. ru ell y
Po10t1ng out tlutt he has named several fetlnal
group~ to lno~ 1nlo th~ probh:ms o f sch ool lin.wce,
I he Pre~1 d en t added •· All nf rny recommendatiOns,
ho wever, wlll be rvutc.-J "' unt&gt; funtlJmentql pnnC~ple
whll' h I here CJrl be uu ~:u111 pr omlSe lo~·.J J sdwol
tman.h IIIU.\1 h.IVI' n1n tr ul elver local ~l'huub"
Government-private partnership
Ano th er prugnm. wht~h Ma N1•wn '&gt;:lid lu·
would c:~pla1n m a !Jtc:r mc:s:~ag~ 111 ( ongrc,~. woultl
estahhsh a partnerslup hetwt•t•n lhc kde ral
govcrnn1cnl an c.l pnvatt: andu~try t.t cnt.~•uragc
t cdwo l o~~:a l re!.ean: h tlfld devclop111cnt .Jnd ", reate

new industnes as weU as creati ng new jobs.''
Presi dent Nixon abo bnefly announced less
ambitio us suggestions such as lower draft calls, more
federal wd for predo minantly black colleges, new
authority for the Civil Ri&amp;hts Commission to
monitor discnnunat1on against women, beavier
purchases o f farm surpluses, extra job training for
workers, ex panded programs fo r the aged and an
"allied services act " offeri ng more efficient delivery
of federal p rogra ms t o the poor.
Ho weve r, Mr. Nixon's primary purpose was not
to put rort h new programs, but to ask fo r support of
o ld ones. He satd that Congress had failed to pass
more than 90 major pieces o f legislation .
"One year ago I latd before the o pening session
o f tWs Congress SIX great goals . One of these was
welfare re form . That pro p osal h as been before the
Congress n o w for nearly two and a hair years. My
proposals
on
revenue
sharing,
go vernment
reorgantza u o n , health ca re and the e nvi ronment have
now bee n before th e Congress for nearly a yea r.
Many uf my o ther maJo r pro posals have been here as
lun~ or longer . I '171 was d year o f conSideration o f
these measures Now let us JOLn 1n making 197 2 a
yeJr Clf al11o n o n them "
Po liticaJ unity necessary
The Pres1dcnt stres~ed tus call for pohtJCal umty
d~p11e the' upcommg elect1on tty ~ymg . "Th ere are
great nJUonaJ problems that .ue so VItal rha t they
lrans,end parl1san~h1p let us JOm," he contmued,
"1n mJkmg ~ure that legJ\Idtlon the nahon needs
does not becume hvstdgC: tu the pohllcal interest~ o f
.tn y party ur •.tn y peNon "
lie I hen wen I ou tu rnl!ntwn th e su~:cesse~ of h1~
prevwus yc:..trs 1n nff1cc: Asserltng that he has
mhentetl J nat111n full of "the agomes of war, of
lnflalu) n , ,,f rap1tlly ns111g cruue and of dt&gt;tenoratmg
c1 11es," Mr . Nixon said that in th e past three years.
tranquility had n•turned to the campuses and o rder
to thC' nile~ The rdle ,.( .:nu\e ha ~ go ne d o wn , he
SJid, tl\ well as the ra t e of mflat1o n
Ml NI)WO louch~td O il the broader aspects or
forc1gn po hcy only bnefly. yet h e d a1med s1gnifi~:ant
g;11n~ , lie l&gt;.lld that h1s s dmm1stralto n had ad o pted a
mure rnu~Jest and rea hsltc: v1ew of the country's
11b1hty to defend freedom around the wo rld . " We
w11l mwnuun a nucle..r deterrent adequate t o meet
any th reat to t h e ~e~:unty o( the United States or o f
our alhc~ We wall hl'lp o ther nat10ns develop the
l;ipJbibty l'f defentlmg tnemsl'lvc~ We w11l faithfully
honor JJI u l ou r lredty commitm ents We w 11J act to
tlefend o ur mteresls whe ne ve r 11nd wherever they are
lhrealc:ncd Jn y piJl't' 1n the world
··nut whc:r~ o ur 1ntere~l\ or our lreaty
,·orn rnltm c:n ls Jrt' not Involved , our role will be
luruted We: will na. t 1ntC'rvenc: nulltunly But we will
u~e nur anOuen~:«' 111 try 111 :-.hlp 11 On..:e war IS over,
we wtll do clltr ~oh.na• 1n hdpmg h1nd up the wounds
PI llltoM' who havt part1upated tn 11 " He mentioned
V1ctn.un only 1111~c M co~nw h1 k from the gatlari es
.1hovc th e lf nu'c Ouur. Ms N1x1111 and her tw o
tlJughl c~ hearnnl dpprov.•l .al lhl' speake1
Ms
N1~on Weill' ,,.d . I fi~IU w.. n· whlh' .tnd Julie wore
hluc:

Dunn appointment
Donald Dunn. presently asmtant tu Pre,,denl Ke tter. haR been named as EX('CUti~
AllSastant for Management to Erie County Exec utive Edward V Regan .
Mr. Dunn 's duties in hb new S2 1,492.a-year job wilJ b~ th~ direction of internal
management and day-to-iby administration of the County E.~ecutive's office.
An official campus source reponed tha t the vacancy in tht president's office will be
fiUed b y Thomas Craine. direc t or of Architecture for FaciJities Pbnning. However , no
administrative officials were available to confinn or deny this appointment

Lecture on

Transcendental 'Meditatio
A s taught by

Yog..

having=:

Whata · that
is
often IDCft important
than wanting them.

Tuesday , January 25

8 :00p.m.
Room 233 Norton Hall

Monday , January 24, 1972 The Spectrum . Page five

�I

I

EdiTORiAl

by Stanley Dayan

Ooud in the North
Of late much speculation has arisen over the future of the
Amherst campus. The only point that seems absolutely clear
is that the oft-delayed construction ~ill not be completed
until 1978 at the earliest.· Other questions persist unanswered
by either the State Construction Fund or this institution.
First, will the North campus still be constructed on its
original scale? To maintain that the State's $650 million
commitment is still firm fails to answer that question.
Inflation has ballooned construction costs so high that a
1967 monetary figure is meaningless as a 1972 commitment .
Two and a half years ago, Robert Ketter lost his job as vice
president fo r Facilities Planning because he said delays and
inflation wo uld raise construction costs over the billion
dollar mark. Therefo re the conti nued stress upon the $660
million commitment seems to indicate at the very m inimum
a drastic reduction in the scope of the Amherst campus. .
A second lingering question is whether monies will be
available to o pen whatever buildings are finished in the next
two fiscal years. Several other SUNY units faced with similar
problems are the proud possessors o f new, but financially
unusable, edifices. This is a cont ingency worthy of attention .
Finally, there seems to be a severe communications
P-ro blem between Albany and this campus. The University
community deserves full and cand id information rega rding
fu ture construction, and if the facts are not forthcoming, we
may have to conclude that neither will Amherst

Try it, you'll like it
The Erie County Board of Elections is finally taking
some actions that will likely ameliorate the embarrassingly
low percentage of registered 18-2 1 year·olds. Because of
New York's restrictive registration laws and the lim ited
opportunities to register last fa ll , many young people wishing
to register were prevented from so doing. The Board's more
than occasional harassment of students further limited the
number of young voters.
The opening of a registration table in Norton Hall , slated
to operate for one week, is a commendable move. However,
we believe the Board of Elect ions could go one step further
by pressing for an amendmen t to the New York voting laws
so that persons registering now cou ld vote in the June
primary , Currently, the primary rolls are frozen except fo r
those having turned 18 since Nov . 2. We believe that in order
to atone fo r their past failings the Board must begin apply
pressu re upon the state legislators who control our voting
mechanisms.
The question of voting's true worth IS sti ll being debated ,
but most will agree that if it has any intrinsic value, the
wisest place to try it is in this year's presidential contest. We
therefo re urge that students take advantage of next week's
opportunity to register.

THE SpECTf\UM
Vot. 22, No . 45

Monday, 24 January 1972
Editor·ln.Chiei - Dennis Arno ld

Co-M.neging Edilor - AI Benson
Editor - Moke Loppmann
Asst. ~Nflng E.Jitor Susan MOiS
Butin- Mllneger - Jack Herlan
Advertising Menloer - Susan Metlentone
Co~a~ng

. Jo-Ann' Armao

C.mpus

1
•

• . .Howle Kurtz
Harvy Lipman
.. ~ Ronni F orrrn~n
~arty Gatt1
Asst
Claire Kriegsman
fNtura
Lynda Teri
Gr11)ttie Aru ..
.. Tom Toles
Bidepage .. .
Amy Ahrend

City
Copy

. ..
'

layout

.Jeff Greenwald

lit . &amp; Drama
Music ..
Off-Campus
Am . ..
Photo . .
Asst. , ..
Sports
AJat .

The Spectrom IS served by Unoted Preu lnternatoonal, College Press
S8fVice. the Los Angeles free P1eu, the Los Angeles Tomes Syndicate and
liberatoon New~ Sllnlice.

Republication o f matter hereon wothout the
Editor· in-Chief is forbodden

e~epl8$$

(opening directory)
Hendenon, Fredrick - stationary enpneer.
Henderson, Gwen - principle clerk . Henderson,
Robert - Senior mechanic. Henderson, Robert Associate Director of Student Union. This must be
t he man. He is far from the Central Admini.stntion.
Day. He says the instructions come from you
people?
Gel. I did not say that. I am not aoina to judge
who is incompctant and hwo isn't. All I said was that
just b ecause a p enon had a n jnterest didn 't mean b e
deserved t o be part o f t he academic community.
Day., WeU, look, if the Colleges are viable the
Monday, December 13
way they stand they will develop - and the
develop merit will grow from the people involved . A
Day. I hear a rum or that you would lilce to see much better method than "augmenting" them from
more faculty members in the Colleges.
above. And if they ate not viable let them perish.
Ge/1. Yes the d irector of the Colleges asked me
~1. I disavee
if we could augment , strengthen th e program.
Day . WeU, I h eard another rumor th at you
wanted to do away with the voluntary people .
Day. I don't think it needs strengthening, I
Gel. I said no such thing.
think the way the Colleges are run ning 1s fine .
I was a soldier in WWII . A rumor went liroun d
Gel. llut. th ese volunteers, what If they decide that the Red Cross d rank aU the blood it got. Som e
h&gt; qui I, what is going to happen to the is it 3000 of us ch oose not to believe the rumor.
Day. Well, I brought it up just to h ear what you
enrollees? Certainly 011e wou ldn 't want to deprive
would say about it.
them of the value of the Collegiat e system?
Gel It's not true.
Duy I think it is very unlikely that these
Day. Let me ask you another question. What d o
volunteers will quit. And in fact I feel that the value you thmk abou t centralization of power?
of the Colleges is almost entirely because of th e
Gel It is necessary.
volunteers. I feel the Colleges were crea ted as a11
Duy. Why?
alternnte t o the "business as usual" of the untverslty
Gtl. Well h ow is t he Medical s~h oo l going to get
to try out new feelings con cerning education .
more biology students'/
Day They would stmply write a letter to t he
Gel. I disagree, I think there is quitr a pos1t1vc
hiology
department. If funds were necessary the
possibility that these people w1U lose Interest.
matter could be brought to th e proper committee of
Day. I'm su re t hat would be so if you the fa c ulty senate
"&lt;;trengt hen " the coUeges with faculty members . but
Gel. Ahah! see
you would have centntltzed
tf you leave it a lone there 1S very little chance of power m the £acuity senate.
'tnlere..st being lost
Day. Fine . better than m 11 lluperflous
ad ministrauon
(;1'1 I disagree
Gel. The Faculty Senat e has all the puwcr 11
/)oy Let me expla1n why I ttunk the Colleges
have a Vtable future along thl.' IJn~Ji they are wants t o assume.
Day Gee, I didn't know that.
developmg
Gel I have asked them time and t1me agatn to
Look . I went here 4 years as 11n undergraduate
take responsibility.
Gd In what major.,
Day. What about the provostts?
/Jay Philosoph y Then 2'11 yca1s of graduate
G&lt;'l. What about them '/
school.
Day. You ha ve los t a tew . AnJ I keep hearin~
Gl!/. In what major?
Day Philosophy . Near th e end of that time I cryptic remarks to the effect that the admmistratiun
rcalill·d that I hadn't learnw anyth ing at all really . I was usurpmg lhllir power
Gel I don't k now what you are refemng to . J
had swallowed the line all along that I didn't
unden;tand the value of the mat erial but I w ould think you misu nderstood the entire case.
Day Well, what about Baumer's prom otion tn
later. Well. you know, tht&gt; material was not too bad
full professo r agaJnsl the wishes of the Phllosophy
!.lui 11 was taught wrong.
Department ?
Gel. I have another idea of why you didn ' t learn
Gel. That happened llus summer did n 't 11 Weill
anything hut since you have a nt:3t thco1 y I 'll leave
have nothtng to d o with events wht ch happened
II
before I arrived .
D&lt;IJ' That 's QUJte funny (laughing)
Day Look , one doesn ' t get to be V1ce PresJd cnt
Well I went to wo rk at Bethle hem Steel. I got
my hands dirty . But you see I wanted a share of the of Academi c Affairs m a vacuum . Certainly you
academic life So I gravitated back to school But the must know th~ rest of the admm istra ti o n , know 11nd
regular parts of the university are all unacceptable to understand their policies.
Gel. Would you ask Willa Bran~ why he
me. T he Colleges are ~ort of a halfway house.
Gel A half way house bel ween where and exterm111ated S million Jews in WWII?
Day Sure. to see h iS reaction . lie would say "I
where .
[)a,.
Tho.- umvcNitY and th... non·academt~' h.ad n o hand in 1t" and "I did not agree wtth tl."
Gel Well , I have no hand 10 11 I 11m nut
world
Gel. Whlt h way are 1he people ~mug 111 1h1s half responsible
way house.
Day But people you are working wtth dtd do 11
Day. What"
Gel. Look , I can only talk about my affaH-s Go
G,-{ Are they COilliO~ froru the UOIVCISI!y '!
to anuthcr o ffice to d iscuss their affairs.
Yes.
c;t'f. Where aut t h ey going?
Day. Well, I have something else to ask Am I
Day to the umversJty Lt ts tor the people who taking too much li me? Sh ould I leave?
find the regular worl.mgs of the school ugly and
would yet lik e to be port of the academJL world .
Gel You h aven't taken too much t1me yet.
l1ke myself .
Day Well , Jo you think an admtnis trataon
Uel But just because they want t o be part of
the at·ademlc world 1t doesn't mean they are sh ould use every and any means for executing 1ts
wiShes'!
necessarily acceptable.

In Plilto i tim~ phllo1ophiC1JI gentlemen were
occasionally entreated to recite a dialog at which
they had been present. Sometim~s the dialog had
tlllcen ploce that m orning: Other times several ytar1
ago. I gue11 It dtptnded upon the im portance of th e
dialog. The following is a convenation I had with
Ytu - President of Academic A/fair~ Bernard
Gelbaum. I was able to rtmember it for two ltour1.
During which time I managed to set down th e
discu1sion a1 I remem ber~d it.

nu,.

Day. How would !h at be?
Gel. lncompetant, ignorant , imrnical

. Barb Bernhard
Mllryhope Runyon
Mochael Solverblatt
Billy Ahm11n
Lynne Traeger
Janis Cromer
Mtckey Osterretcher
.K1m Santos
Burry Rubin
Howoe Faowl

oonsent of thu

Edltoriel Pol icy is determined by the Eclitor·in-Chutf.

Page six . The Spectrum . Monday, January 24, 19 72

Day. I think its a guy named Henderson.
Gtl. Well lets just see' h o w central this fellow b.

Day. I see. Now I am trymg to argue that th ere

is a strong motive for volunlel!rs in the colleges you are arguing that the volunteers are 1ncompetant.
Gel. What exactly are you asktn~'!
Day. It seems ...
Gt!l. You don't answer a questton w1th 1t seems.
Day.
Well
O.K. Is this at..lministrat.Jon
responsible'!
Gel. Responsible for what '!
!Jo.y . Is this ad ministration ac ting responsibly?
Gel. Since I have been here every thing the
administration has done has been co mpletely
res ponsiblc.
Day. Thankyou. (Shook Ius hand and left.)
Day. WeU the administration is giving them
trouble and you are part of the admints t ratiClnn
Gel. Well who exact ly told them they wlll have
to leave.

GeU , Ltke guns?

Day

Guns

wouldn't

work

in

the

present

sttuatwn .

, Gel. Wha t then do you mean?
Day. Well for example it seems as if the
administration is going abo ut causing trouble in all
sorts of places when they can't possibly expect to
carry through all their threats.

Gel Name one .
Day. WeJJ lhe vendors in Norto n have been
hassled ab o ut the1r having to leave.
Gel. Yo u mean the people at lh t' candy counter·!

Day No. The people who stt
era ft Items for sale.

1111

the Oom wtth

Gd. What J oes this have to d o w1th me? This ts
lhe o ffice of Academtc Affairs .

�-

rt

Fig~t for autono"11ql
Cool screw
To the Ediw r.
I can fully e mpathize wit h Michael Stephen
Levi nson when h e gripes abo ut his d ealings with Sub
Board J and the abs urditi es connect ed with the
persona rnvo lved in it. I, too, was given a cool scre w
b y Student Association in m y qu est to become a
put o f t h e "Stud ent-Wide" Judic 1ary.
I regret n ever having been ci rcumcised .
My Jove t o the O ffice of S tude nt Righta.
Diane Z woltn.f41

Wire tapping
1'u

th ~

Eda ur.

There have b een peo ple, pnor to t he present
!!Ubcomm1ttee, who have done some mvestaga iJ ng of
Campus Security Ther efore, I suggest t hat the
presen t ~uhcom m i ttee call upon Campus Security to
pro vuJe a ~.om plete repvn of all wife-tapping of
la~:ulty, st ud en t'&gt; and ad m mtSt ra tors by Campo~
Secu rity for th e period Man.: h '70 to Jan . '72.
If 1'h~ S(lectrum wtll then p ublish th is reporl ,
we will bt: hap py t u ind ica t e to yuu II t h e repor t IS
1.:ompl ete . We have documen t atmn o f w1re-tapp1ng
by Camrws Secu nty.
Cm11111' /•rcdt&gt;rtd..son

Sunshine House
7i;

lht'

Hdttor

I 11111 wntlng t h1s letter tn Student Ass()(;iatlon
und Sunsh1nt: llouse in regard to who ~ho u ld have
t h e right to have lin a I say be t ween ~J llcath St. anu
I 06 Wm\pc.tr 1\ ve.
As .1 st;llf membe:r •&gt;f Sunsh1ne House, I have
been per,onally involved wtth t h e hassles between
both \Ides. R1ght now, we still don't h ave a house to
set up J Cnsis lnteriention Center an d drug
elluc:at ion program, an d we 'ittll don't know even if
wo: wtll gel .1 house now .
On ru.:sduy. Dec. 7, 1971, we of the Sunshanc
tl ou~e con tr onted the "Concerned Rcstdents of the
llnivc rsil y Area." Jt was held at t he University
('h ris llan t hurch at Engle wood and Cornell St , We
c.~tpla1nt'd ClUrsdves and our fun~o:t1ons to these
people Ia•.: to face. There v. as a so&lt;alled
councthi\JJ• present at t h e meeting who was g~vmg us
01 lot of pul o l1~;al pressure 'be~.ause most of t h e people
there wo:re .tg.unst us and there wa~ no way these
people wo:•~· going to chan1e the1r mtnds fllr
Sunsh me l lnu!te to move to a residen tial area And of
1-ltUrse, tht' cou n cilman was try1ng to wi n hu.
aut honty (or vot es) over us AI leas t we explained
nur prmc1plcs ve ry well a nd we dtd 1n fl uen ce some
of t h e PCO ilh: there. bu t t hey were afraid to vot e for
us heeausc of "what would the ne1gh bors t han k if we
were for an organ 17.at1on IJ~e t h iS who voted aga1r1st
us?" Oh , hy the way, only four people vot ed for the
Sunsh me l luuse and over 35 voted agarnst our
organazat ion
I jUSt WL,hed that one member uf SA ExecUIIVI'
Committee was there to see th 1s, and maybe they
would have underst ood why we needed I 06
Wtns pear
I am llred of bot h s1des figh tmg at one another.
of th e day to d ay, week to wee k bureaucratic
prl)cesst:s ut w hk h we h ave been gning through sm ... e
Sept ember
In my own o p inaon, I thtnk that Sunsh ine House
should h~:~ve the nght to choose a h ouse stnce we are
the people to set up a cns1s center for U B students
and young reo ple of the Buffalo commumty
If SA turns us down, then young people wtll nor
have a place lo go and wtll prcmably turn bacJ. toJ
lunelmess, ahenation, or bal·k unto the streets.
I hope that some day Sf'. and Sunshtne House
will understa nd one another m a better way.
espec1.tll y certain people on ho&gt;l h s1des Then I
mysel f and most of the other Sunslunt: ll ouse starr
will be h apry
Speak 1 n~ lor the maJunty ul thl' \tlllf memher~
ouf pur pthe stay~ the o;arnc , uur staff and go•tl~
renect U\11 name: Sun\hii1C llnusr
w.trmth and
hght
lot' Bntf tlll
1o fll'lflt'l Coordtnalur
Sum 111 n c IIou w

To rh e Editur:
Up until t hil point , St ud e nt Association has
o nly hinted as its dissatisfaction with the man ner in
which st u dent fees uc reJU}atcd . However , the
curren t decisio n to monito r the Inter-Residen ce
Council voluntary fee, has burst the bubble o f
inaction and we must voice I st ro ng protest of not
o nJ y t his action , but also t hose lhat have preceded it.
It is o ur understandins that tho bulc: concept
for having student fees is. to allo w stud en ts the
ability t o surmount pps ln the educational
o ppo rlunity provided by the Un iversity. Originally,
stud ent fees were entirely administ ered by college
officials, and later, as co urt cases were wo n , t be
res ponsibilit y for spe nding fees was re turned to the
stud en ts, where tt belo nged .
T his n o ble concept tS se rio usl y su fferi ng fro m
Universit y ind uced erosion . Furt h e r decay may mak e
It Im possible ror st uden t fees tO physically SU p po n
any prozrams. It is one m atter to make funds
ctva1lable for s t udents to sp end . It is another to allow
them enough freedom to make the venture
wmt hwlule or meaningful
In ' p ri vate d iscussum. we hav~: spoken of t h e
supposed auto nomy of md1v1d uul SUN Y un1ts as 1S
pubhdy heralded by SU NY Central, and the
uppos ing private deme of SUNY Central to be
mform ed o f decisions befure t hey a re implemcnteJ .
Ttus co n flict or mte rests has had senous
rcpcn:uss1ons i11the a rea of student fee~.
fhe Ftnanc1al ReVIew CommJIIl"l' mandated by
thl' Board of T rustee:. and .tppomted by yourself 1!.
suc.~.essfully castratJng bNh student o~nd campw.
autonomy. It has cont 111 uously relu~ed to tackle
cnntrovernal ISSUes as 11 IS mandated to do by the
frus tee guidelines. K11ther, 1n an innocuous
p rocedure, 11 seeks ••Jegal op1n10ns" hom SUNY
Central as to it 'I proposed ..&amp;el lOn\. apparently
lnokmg more for mandate~ than o pt n lons
The hc1ght of l h1s suppresSIO n h us rt~u l ted m .,
refus;~l of the Rev1ew Board ro &lt;1llow Student
A!..~octahon ro nwn rea l property Ccontrary to uur
understandmg that tl IS perle~tly legal h•r
unwco rporated assoc1at10ns to own property), to
allow Student Assocl3110n to fund th~: Untvers11y
Food Co-op, and to allow lu nd tn&amp; nf the POUER
Day Care Center Tlus last rtfusal IS even mor~:
dangcro4S because the Financial Review Board vo t ed
agatnst t he aprropnat ton bt'/tJrt' 11 haJ been
approved by Student A\.'IOl' latwn 1The Trustee
gU1delines st1pulat e that the ~ ~:vu•w Buard 1s to lake
&lt;1Ct10n only on upJ'lt!;ll aflcr th t' Jdi!IHII!.IrJitve

designee
t urns
down
an
appro priation
or
en cum bran~ . )
Other p ro b lems result fro m the re fusal .&gt;f SUNY
Central's t o recognize th at student corporation (i.e .,
Sub Board I . Inc.; I nter-Residence Businesses, Inc .;
Food Co-op , University Press) are not priv~tte
busi n ess ven tu.r es. They' are esta bllshed by students
to provide services for st ud en ts, thereby closely
a pproaching the funetio ru o r student governments
who suppo rt and encowage their existen ce .
It beco mes apparent that the administration
views S tudent Government as no thjna more than a
ca tch -aU fo r University projec ts that have been
eliminated because o f b udge t cuts. This prevalen t
attitude m ust cease. Student Associatio n should
supplement pro grams, not be fo rced to wholly
support them.
Di rec tly or ind irectly, there IS no JUSt ifi catio n
for th e in tensi t y of regulation o f st uden t fees to b e
d et e rm in ed by the to tal b ud get Situation o f th e
Umversity.
Fortunately the Student Association still has
the power tu at least deter mme the amounts to be
spent 1n the a.reCis 1t IS a llowed to fund .
Un fo rt u nat ely, th is u. the only tr ue a rea of
harg;11mng power that extsl s.
The Student Assoc1a t10n IS currently mitia ting
budge t h eanngs lo r the '72-'7 3 sch ool yea r .
Hopefully the allo~:allo ns we make wall nrJI have t o
be reduced m sensiti ve areCis the llmvers1ty now
Lake~ cred1t for sponsonng (t.e , athlettt:s, stude n t
\ervll:es) It may mean we have to lighten our
'\.ultural" belt~ and do wllh 'lOme less programins
tho~n we now enJoy. llopi!fully the puhll~.: pressu re
thai w1 ll he arou~ed will maJ...e our drought but a
!&gt;hurl nne
An altern attve eXISts. lhJt •~. tht Un1verSi ty
mu'l begin to ligh t for 1ts .tutonomy 10 the area of
studeqt fees. The ad n11msrra11on should encourase
rat h er tha n sllnc m d ividual inlhattve by ch anging the
iollltu~ of our fee p rogram from be1ng th e m ost
regulatt:d one 111 the stale , to one nf mutually agreed
freedom .
ll11s &lt;;&lt;~rnpus would be 1n a rather Slld stat e of
affatf\ tf there w.tS no ~tudent g1&gt;vernmcnt to
JdOltntSter fees
Jun C l&gt;dYaul, l'r~stdt!nt
.\tudt•nf A.um·tgtmn
l:ih/tlf 't nott• 71tc
l'rt'~l!it•nt 1\l'ftl'l'.

oholll' lt•ttl'r wu1 ortXIftdlll' .rent tu

IRC funds reviewed
l"o

fht'

l.dltor

11 hccomc:s

The editor nr /7rt• S(lt't trtun llJ!&gt; lllle,ltoned whu
am worJ.ing for , my l·onSIIIUt:lllY ur the )lnus111g
Offl-.t: fhc 4Uc~twn was m rekren~oc to my tal:lt
ap l)roval of t&gt;ur funds hetng rev1ewed t\s an .tnswer
lo nur funds he111g r.!vlewed , I can tJITt:r I he
folluwulg Pt•rnts
I The IJnivcrs1ty ha\ wllc~oted ttUf Ices as a
favor to us.
1 1 he nature of our fees ~~ nell her manda tory
nor voluntary. but somewhere 1n hct w~:t.•n
J The Un1vers1ty no longer Jl'SHed t•J ~oollell
uur lei.'\ ( 1bere was no real re.t\On why 1ho:y should
bes1des trad1!1on) If they duln"t , wt· would h..&amp;ve lu
set up vur own collectwn systl"rn , .111d have Lo spend
money for someo ne to run 1t, and not rece1ve the
percentage of paymcnt we Jo now. With both .of
those factms cornbmed, we would huvo: lust
t housand~ of our $21,000 (Mt $42.0001 and not
have bee n 11hle to prc·n u e nearly the cxtent nf
sel'"ilt.~~ wo: do now Wou ld that be to the stude:nts'
btnclit ·&gt;
4 The nature of l.R (' Jnd II\ expenditures
maJ...e:s rev1ew jUSt a formality , our type of expenses
bemg '&gt;llldy lor the bcnefit of restdcnce h.11l students
wnuld not l&gt;e 4Ul'StiOneJ
S L .a~tly, th1s system 1~ nnly 10 cfle\.1 thiS
~em~tcr. Some t11ne th1c: wm~ter , there w11l l&gt;e .1
rt'v1~w ul 1he ~ystem anJ .1 new I&gt;YI&gt;tcm eitht:r totally
mt~ndatory or totll ll y vo lu ntary w 1ll be insll l u ted . I f

.1

mandatory let!, II

~hould

he lrc.-ated as

dll other nldndatory fee!&gt;, and If 11 hnurnes a truly
vulunt.HY fee, 11 w1ll not be rl"vtewed In the
lllt'itrlltme, I kit Jt W&lt;~s mvre 1n the lrllere:o.t ol t hose
who elected me to nmtmue rhe ~crv1~oc~ that people
have ..:ome t" expell rathe1 than
to tdealism ,
tollcct our vwn fee~ Jnd not be Jhlc lo pwv1de those
scrvtees.
~ t o you r personal attJ~o' k ~·n tnt! and m y
sum mer joh , I re rnai ned het e t h1s pa~t summer to
mamtain I R C operattons. and to run a re lngera t o r
prugram for summer te)tdents Summer presence is
nol m.mdatury of an I R C pres1dent and I 'm sure
nu one would exped 11 from someone whose stipend
for th~: ycJr 1~ JU~I roorn My carmng power for t h t
summer wouiJ 1.erta1nly be h1gher 1f I had gotten 1
reguiJr 1oh As I. R \ dol'S not use Its fu nds fo r
salancs u~ Jn PI her student governmen ts for th ear
otficer'&gt; and lor newspaper ed1 t ors, but rather spends
them nn ~erv1ccs, I had to look cl~ewhcre for m o ney
lor thc 'ummcr I wound up drawing a salary fro m
the rt:lngerator progrJJII. and gladly accepted a
&amp;Aiury frnm Mt Sch1llo for helptng wit b the
freshmo~n onentattnn. I owe no favors to Mr Schillo,
dS I d1d my job. o~nd I hcheve I ,bowed that in the
J.K J ~.ontroversy t h1s y.:ar. I leave the final decision
of who I work fur ht I he dorm rt'~ldt:nts , and no t
non·re~tdcnt cd1W r!&gt;

''"·k

11/an M. Miller
President

Monday, January 24, 1972, The Spectrum. Page seven

-

�\

IT'S EASIER THAN
EVER TO JOIN
f

THE STUDENT ASSEMBLY•••

THE STUDENT ASSEMBLY
will meet
MONDAY , JANUARY 24th
at

3 :00. in the CONFERENCE THEATER

All m embers are urged

to

bring their Constitutional

Amendments; the discussion of !he Amendments will be
a priority issue.

Page eight. The Spectrum . Monday , January 24, 1972

�Matmen take two of
three at West Point

West
P o int,
N. Y .
the Hudson .
Come-fro m -behind vict o ri es are
The Bulls ran neck and neck
q uick ly b ecoming t h e fo rte of t h e wit h Marylan d before coming
wrestl ing Bulls. The Bulls wo n from b ehind t o nip the At la ntic
t wo com e-fro m-behind victories Coast Con fe rence ch am p ions. T h e
over Army • nd Maryla nd at West Terrapins, who have co pped the
Point Saturda y afternoon befo re A .C.C. title since the in cep tion o f
t hey su ffered a 23- 14 defeat a t the confe ren ce, h eld a 16- 10 lead
t he hands o f Clario n St at e. The before the last two b o u ts, but
VIct ories were Buffal o's second co-ca ptain Ro d Brandt go t the pin
and third sin ce the mid- sem est e r that the Bo Us needed to t ie t h e
recess in whic h the BuJis ha d t o ma tch . Brandt. who began t h e
cut a d eficit do wn t o win .
second ro u nd of t he bout wi th an
T o n r Policare, the Bulls an swe r advant age from the referee's
to Frank Merriwell, was th e sta r positio n , st u ck the T erps' Pat
o f th e w ins o ver th e Cad ets and McCall to th e mat with just 3 :4 6
Terrap ins by r esp ective scores o f go ne in t h e b o ut. The st age was
18- 15 and 19 - 16. Each t im e the set again , an d Policare cam e
Bulls ente red the final bout t ied , t hrou&amp;h in the clutch once more
and eac h time Po licare came T ony best ed Mary land's unbeaten
through u nd er pressu re. Po licare, Mark Reid for t h e win. Reid , the
who beats &amp;rapplers th at a re A tla nttc
Coast
Conference
b1gger than he is b ecause of h •s c h amp1on
at
heavy we1ght,
qu1ckness. handl ed A rm y's Dale couldn't cope with the for mer's
Morga n to climax a st reak of four q uickness.
~traight wms T he Bulls h ad gone
T he Dull's loss to Clanon
1010 the sixth mat ch tra1ling 15 - (&gt; State's Gold en Eagles. the Buffalo
before they were able to tum it squad's first setback of the season,
nn against the Black Kmghts of was actually closer than the ~core
1 1Jld1cated. T h e Eagles won five of
STUDENT D ISCOUN T
ten matches and drew once, but
on all
two pins by the esc squad late 10
redecora t ing needs
the matc h put it out of reach . "I
art supplies, picture framtng·
thought t hat we were as good as
D.M . RECH PAINT CO.
Clarion Stat e." remarked Buffalo
3209 Bailey Ave.
Coach Ed M1chael , "but havmg
been be&lt;!ten by Army. I thmk t hat
they
were
10
a
hetlcr
SPEEDED READI NG
psychological state of mind T h ey
had just lost to Ar m y and were
AND STUDY
I I , wrule we were trying for a
clean sweep. Neve rt heless. I would
0 i v is1o n o f undergraduate
say that I was pleased w1th the
studies a gai n o ffers Mrs.
way we wrestled . We beat two
Nichols no n -credit co urse.
tough teams out of t h ree un the
Week l y session s. Nominal
road and survived probably our
~ fee ,
$ 1 5.00 payab le at
b1ggest test of the season. We are
~ r e g1strat1on in room 305
no lonp r unbeat en, but we have
~ D 1e fend orf - b efore January
proved to ourselves that we arc
right up among the top sch ools of
~ 31st.
the East

-5eled nlk

'Thrashed and mashed

Icemen outclassed by Ohio
by Howie F aiwl
' t m Sport~ fditur
fhe OhiO State Bud.eycs
famed for the1r
nationally renowned haskctball and football teams
are qu11.. kly \.lraw1ng much attention as one of the
dass1cr hockey tt:am~ tn the ndtlon T hey Jlso
po~seo;.~ the nation's lead1ng sl'orcr in ~ophomorc
1.Cnter. Ray Myers Thas llashy Ontano nallve. who IS
..:apablc of ~kallng l'lrdl.'~ amund cnttre teams, ~cored
twu:e 10 the Uud.cycs 6 I thra~h10g o f the Bulls
Saturday night at a Jammed pa.:kcd Amherst
Recreation Center
Buffalo was clearly outdassed 10 t he contest
.tlthough they dtd skate w1th the Buckeyes for the
fir~t 15 mlnUII~' of the game Goalie Mike 01111n wa~
spccl&lt;li..Uiar 1n thwartmg scvcral OI'W State shots on
goal liowever the Buckeyes
a po1sed , well
baldnred , and fine 'ikJllng dub
put together a
vtCIOU\ onslaught 10 the fmal t1 vc mmutes of the f1rst
penod Wllhtn a span of lwn mtnute~ lhty slammed
thret' goals pd\Scd Ounn and flnt,hcJ the pt'nod w1th
a comfortable 4 0 leJd
The SuUs. conung oil a three week layoff.

.:ould not seem lcl get untracked agamst the
\treakmg Bud.cye\ v.h o earned the momentum
throughout Then on ly score came With I I 7 gone in
the second penod when defcn~eman Bob Goody
slapped J shot past Buckeye goalie Bill Mc Kenzie.
However ~~.ores by Dave llolye, late 1n the second
penod and Hdon Simp\&lt;ln early 1n the third put the
g.~ me on 1~e for Ohll&gt; Slllll'
But talo d1d hav~ a llndl ..:hance to add to then
I&lt;Hdllate 10 the th1rd pcnod when Bulkeye Ken Lerg
w;\' ~cnt nff the ll'l.' tor a f1vc nnnutc m~wr fighting
renJlly and u game llll~conduct that \ent rum to the
~howcr~ . However the Bu,·keyc defense st1ffened and
tile Bulls laill'd to .:aplt &lt;llllc
It was u d15appo10t1ng n1ght for the Bulls both
o n and o ft the t~t· ( Ocilh l::d Wnght learned that
backup goalie RuSl. F1enlh wLll m~s o~ ..:llon for two
week ~
wh11t' 1he
mu ch needed scrv1ces of
delt:meman Lcs lephl ky w11l he lost for at least
another week Although th1s loss o~nd yesterday's
contc\t at Menwnal Audllonum will not mar the
Bulls' ex lelknt h I D1V1~ 10n II rc,ord 11 does
JOdt..:ate th e unlortunate dl,tan&lt;&lt;' h~twe&lt;·n Buffalo
and schlll.H,Iup Jldl.'d I C.JI'I\ '"the .:ount ry

Feel Rite'

,

EALTH FOOD SHOPPE
(corner NorwJIJ..)

H l7-7ool

/t•tJIIIIIfiV

DANNON YOGURT

"We only want two kicl!!.
Rut If we don't have 11 boy
we'll keep t r ying!"

L 0 W. L 0 W PRICES ON VITAMIN S &amp; FOODS
NEW HOURS: Now Open Every Night 'til 9:00p.m.

THE

BEEF &amp; ALE
3199 MAIN ST.
(ODe Block Soatb Of U 8 I

••••••••••••••

*

UNCHEON SPECXAJL
CRIME IN THE STREETS!
Or, just off the streets, at local newsstands
everywhere, the February issue of the National
Lampoon. Go " on the pad" with Dick Tracy;
thrill to a whodunit by Edward Gorey; take on
GM with Ralph Nader, public eye; recoil in
terror from Chairman F.u-Manchu; relive the
golden age of the Mafia in the Cosa Nostra
Comic; and let Angela Davis take you on a
tour of the Big House. All in the Crime issue
of the National Lampoon, on sale today.

MONDAY :
TUESDAY :
WEDNESDAY :
THURSDAY :
FRIDAY :

SPAGHETTI &amp; M EAT BALL S
HOT ROA ST TURKEY
LIVER &amp; ONIONS
SUK I YAKI
HAM STEAK

*INCLUDES SOUP &amp; DESSER T

THIS WEEK

••••••••••••••

ONLY! (M ON. JA N. 24 - 29 - 11 :30 - 3 :3 0 p.m .)

Buy one lunch at Reg. Pr ice Have another for 25¢
Monday, January 24 , 1972. The Spectrum. Page nine

�Budget limitations.
complex; Plattsburgh - $20.2
million
including
classroom,
dorm, dining hall , library and gym
bu ildinp ; Utica, Rome, Herkimer
- S16 million for general site
wo rk; New Palt:r. - $7.2 million
for dorm and health and physical
education buildi ngs; and Oneonta
- S I I.7 million for housing and
physical
education
b uildi ng,
garage
and general
parking
rehabilitation.
Not to men tion, Potsdam
$9.4 million, including dorms and
library additions; Stony Brook
$ 13. 1 million including graduate ,

• •

physics and chemistry buildings,
science lecture center and a gym
buildin&amp;; Cornell College of
Apiculture - $7.7 million for
rehabilitatio n of plant science
building and an animal research
building; Delhi - $5 million fo r
an agricultural science building;
$ I 2.6 million
Brockport
including donnitories; Cortland $2.2 millio n including a new
heating plant ; Fredonia - $ 1 I .6
million including new math ,
physics and helath and physical
education buildings; Geneseo
$8 million for donns and a new
education b uilding; Binghamton

GRAD STUDENTS -

ETTING SHAFTED?
The G.S.A. asks grad-studenlll treated unjustly by
Dept. (work loads, stipends • prelims, etc.), to contact :
John Greenwood or Mike Morrell
G.S.A. Office. 205 Norton, 831-5505- immediately .

-(IOn tlnued f r om

pa~

on-

S 7 .6
million
for
library
alterations,
d ining hall and
collegiate structures. Smaller cuts
were made at other campuses
throughout the system .

HoOpsters challenged
by Maryland.Terps
by 8any Rubin
Sporll Editor

It's that time again . Yes,
to morrow at jam ·packed Cole
Field House on the University of
Tripled tuj tion
Maryland campus, the varsity
In order to "relieve the
basketball
Bulls will do battle
burgeoni ng increase in costs to
operate the system , an d to push with the Terps. Maryland, ranked
the system towards the goal of sixteenth in the nation in last
self-su pport ," Assemblyman Tom week's UPI poll, boasted a 10-2
Brown , (0 Albany), filed a bill record, prior to meeting hapless
Wednesday which would almost Navy at College Park on Saturday
triple the State University tuttton . evening. Although most teams
Brown said his bill was designed would cherish the th ought of a
LO bring in an estimated S IOO
10..2 season, there is some
million annually.
disappointment in the early
Under the proposed phm ,
tuition for New York State showing of this edition of the
residents ln the undergraduate Terps.
When Mary land Coach Lefty
divisions would jump from the
present S550 to $1500 next fall; Dnesell was brought over from
and
for
non -res ident Southern Conference powerhouse
undergraduates, t he jump would Davidson in 1970, he vowed to
be from $900 to $2700. Graduate tnakc Maryland, "the UCLA of
student lhcreases would be from the East " However, in two
S800 for resident students to seasons. Lefty 's charges have
S2400 , and from $1000 to S3000
for non-resident students. Brown's played 27-25 in the tough
btll has li ttle chance of approval, . Atlan tic Coast Conference.
Since Driesell had recruited
some of the natton's most sought
after players two years ago, many
thought that this year's edt tton of
the Terps would be unbeatable
Assistant Coach Jim Maloney ,
fmmer head coach at Ntagara,
commented . " It 's very difficult to
go
undefeated
anywhere,
especially in the ACC It has taken
ou r sophomores trme to get
accltmated to playmg ACC road
ball ." Both of Maryland 's losses
have .:orne un the road in
t:o uference games wrth Virginia
(78-57) and Clemson (63-61)
Terp advantage
In the11 two prev11&gt;US showings
at Maryland. the Bulls have f11llen
badly I n 1969-70 the Bulls fell
97.77 and last ~eason, the Bulls
were embarrassed I 09· 70 before
13 ,222 fans . Still, Assistant Coach
Maloney expresses respect for the
Bulls. Maloney added . "We do
know that Buffalo is weU coached

Gus. Sr. will reproduce

al most anything

355 Norton Hall

lack 11111 ltec..u ef the

competition. This is Buffalo's
biggest gam e of the season, and
you just know they'll be up. One
of our problems will be in getting
our players up ."
Saturday evening, th e Bulls
(7-5) warmed up for their contest
at Maryland with a tough 86-73
win over stubborn LeMoyne. Phil
Harlow led all scorers with 3 1
points, but it was Buffalo's
balanced scoring led by Curt
Blackmore with 22 points and 20
rebou nds
that
made
the
difference. Bob Vartanian, the
Bulls' fine iunjor guard added 18
points, I I rebounds and nine
assists while Jim Tribble added 16
points and Greg Bruce 14.
Maryland 's strength appears
centered in tts tremendous height
up front. Soph Len Elmore (6-9)
is rated the Terps' best defensive
threat and has led in rebounding.
In
the
recently
concluded
Maryland Invitational , Elmore
copped MVP honors for his great
rebounding.
UCLA of the EAST'!
The biggest name on the Tcrps
is pre-season AII·Amencan Tum
McMillen ,
a 6-11
forward.
Mc MiUen averages 19.4 to lead the
Terps, and has shot 58 per cent
from the field . Jim O 'Brien at 6-7
completes the frontline with seven
footer Mark Cartwright, the
number one reserve . The Terps
have shot 54 per cent from the
floor to lead the nation along wtth
foul shooting of 72 per ccn L
In backcourt, Junior lloward
Whtte (6·3) and soph Jap Trimble
(6·3), along with 64 junior Bub
Bodell. get the m ost action. The
key to rhe Terps offense lies in
getting the ball inside to their hig
men on their ·3·2 offense.
Stopping McMiUen has nut been
easy as evidenced by his reaching
the 30 mark three times. As Cutt
Blackmore remarked : ''We're not
going down there to lose."
But , ch:mces for a Bulls vr~tory
are virtually impossible . The unly
ray of hope for Buffalo ts tha t the
Terps will be caught looiOng
ahead to their mee ting wtth Nurth
Carolina, whom they play after
the Bulls con test. In all realtty ,
the Terps will be out to unprove
thetr nattonal ratrng and to show
up the local newspapers who have
been acco rding Driesell and
cumpany few compliments. One
paper said : ''Maryla1d the UCLA
of the East? Maybe he UCLA of
the
Washington metropoli tan
area. " The big sl~w gets under
wu y ut !:1·20 p.m . live over
WBFO-FM, 88.7.

lll•r•

4•••14.

IIJ tlolltb eadJI

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL bring bade

-Compliments of a friend

JESUS CHRIST
· SUPERSTlUI
lltlilerlle4 Slllweo4 Oeaoert Yertl" wl_. Cast tf 41

"The Rock Op4tra With Reverence''

o..

!::':..~:--

4 PERFORMANCES: Sal, Jan. 29 •o~~~ ~M. San , Jan. 30 : ~:::
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
All HOt• ,...rved: Main ifoor $6.00-$.5:00
Balcony $5.00-$4.00
Tid....

011 . .. . • • •

o1 a.Molo k.tlvel Tlcllot OHko, S..tfo, Hat.. LoWly

c- a ••-..• ._..,,., _.... '""'11"4 ......4...............)I u.a. ...,...
HaH; Skte C.U... Jkkot Office; .... Yklcott, HaMMe l'lu• ...,_
.......-

......
Page ten . The Spectrum . Monday, January 24 , 1972

.

�CLAIII!IEI
CLASS,FIED ADS · m a y be placed
MbncLty thru Frlo.y between g a.m.
M\d 4 a30 p.m. a t 3$5 Norton Hall .
THE COST of an ed lor one day Is
•1.25 lor the nrst 15 words and •.os
lor acft additional word.
''HEl.P
WANTED"
ads
cannot
discriminate on the b.sls ol s.x, color.
creed or na tional origin to any extent
(I.e., pte lua bly Is still discriminatory) .
WANTE D
WAN1'EO: Flute lessons. 816·74!14.
ARIGATO Japanese SINk House
deSires
to
employ
WAITERS,
WAITRESSES, BUSSOVS, ~ITCHEN
HELP.
ORIENTAL..S
preferred.
632·2171.
R.N.s PART OR lull time eve., part
time cUys. Become pa rt o f tr~tm e nt
team on smllll, community oriented,
psychiatric
unit .
Call
812·255 1
evenings - late.
WILL PAV lor term pllpers, lasts, a ny
Information from Investments 402
tauvht bY Gupta. 881·2659, ~eep
lrylnl).
MOTHER'S helper w•nted . Must enJoy
playlnv with 2 young children . Provide
own transportation. Call 633·8321.
800~ WANTED : "The Meanln9 of
the 20tn Century," Ken.neth Bouldlnv.
Pal)lHOack preferred. Call 831· 2692,
M.,k ,

STUDENT NEEDED to cllre lor
5 yr old
boy.
2 · 30 4 . 30
rues - Friday . Will need to p ick him
up
from
school .
8 76-4174
or
883·1286.

FULL O R part·Ume loos .,_IIebi• wit h
Best line I nc. Call Art 8 8 6-2094 o r
Mike 8 35·5215. M.U.gs a t Executive
Aama9a Inn .
START 82 per hour wla ry plua bonus.
Work 4.. p.m. weekd ays, 10·2 p.m .
Saturdays. Call 835·380~ or TF9.0402.
APARTMENT FOR R EHT
MODERN, IWe&gt;-bedroom garden ilpt .
Dishwasher,
diSposal,
ra nl)e,
refrll)erator Included. Fully carpeted.
Full bas.ment with storate are a a nd
OUtlets l or wuhlng machine, Available
March 1. •175 a
month. Call
633..582.

1065 DART 6&lt;yllnder standard, radio,
heater, 7 mounted tires, Including 2
studded snowt, 42,000 miles. Always
starts, always goes, $100. Call' Randy
838·2488 .

METRO Van - perfect for travel camper or 1111111 hauling. Rebuilt
anvlne. $600. 773~693 after six.

WHOLE HOUSE . 1'h blocks to
campus.
Larl)e
slnl)le.
2
oaths ,
furnished . Mature students 0 K .
malllmum 6 . $280 • utilities or $310.
All utilities Included. 835· 0226 or
834· 1989.

1967 PLYMOUTH Belvedere, 4-door
sedan. automatic power lleerlnv, IJC)od
condition. Reasonable. 8 75 ·3912

R IDE WANTED
RIDE WANTED to NYC weekend of
Jan. 27 and/Or return Sun. 31. Call Gus
881· 1302, Mon. 9·11 p .m . Share
e.ocpenses.
RIDE NEEDED NVC . Wed . or Thurs.
Call Debb ie 838· 3244. Will share
e xp enses.

TWO Gl RL..S need ride to Cleveland ,
Feb. 4 . Will share expenses. Call wynne
after 3:30. 876-6774.
FOR SALE

4 SALE - new Pentax Spotmatlc 1.4
T akumar lens. Rita 833· 7956 ,
FIBERGLASS
skiiS t
Rossll)nol
Concorde - brand new , oev er bMn
useCI. Must sell . S70. Call 675-0663
evenings
TWO HARNESS tabla loorn. Lilly .
Uled onc e . $4~ or best offer. Call
132·2227, Mary. 5 - 10.

:~

OOAY Af .S &amp; 8: 15 '..M·
MON &amp; fUI. At I , ,M

·...• '
·•••

'

.

\

/ '

FOUND - In The Spectrum o ffice
a
small Chln&lt;)41 purse left there Friday
Claim In Spectrum olflce, 355 N o rton .

CLEARANCE SALE : 10-65% off on
many Items. All January M IKellaneous
shirts,
dresses,
skirts. etc.
Some
afghln lstaf\ coati . The Poople, 144
Allen St. 812-6283 for hours.

OWN ROO M In house. C all alter 6
p .m. 839·3019

STEREO COMPON ENT a nd Ampe&gt;&lt;
Mlcro-86
tape recorder
tor sale .
877· 7393 •Iter 6 p.m .

TWO MALES noO&lt;Ied, own rooms,
beautiful big hous.. Available now
Call 837-6953 . Address : 124 Or.,.tl

REFRIGERATORS from $1 9 .95 and
up. HWA, 1282 Clinton St. 823 1800,

FEMALE mommate wanted lu snare
2.oeoroom apartment oo Main &amp;
J-ell, S 70 per month C all Cl ~ u d•~
836-4748.

----

FOR SAL..E . Ski renta l, IJO for 10
!Iones. Call 831 2 184

1

TERM
PAPERS,
dissertations
p rofessiona l typht , I8M Selectrh;;,
$ .40/pege . 873- 1938 .

ROOMMATES WANTED

-------------------

OELI PLACE RESTAURANT, across
fr om UB . Open 24 houn a day , Thurs.,
Fri ., •nd Sat. Qot munchies at 4 a .m. ?
We're here to serve you .
TERM PAPERS typed $ .35 per pel)e .
$33 ·9012
INTEREST ED
In
attending
the
Ol ymp ic games In Munic h • Some
tic kets and liCCommooatlons available .
Pnone 833-4638.

STUDENT Cmal e ) to snare a ••r!l6
double with
another
student
b.othroom adlolnlniJ, kitc hen prlvlleve• .
10 mlns. horn camJW._ IIJl-54 26.

WILL 8A8VSIT My h om e 5 days .
Pre ~ KhOOI 8 3 8 ..808 .
OVER S EAS JOBS for students
Austr• lla, Europe, S America, Africa ,
etc All professio ns and occupation•,
S 70G- S 3000 monthly Expenses paid,
overti m e , sll)hlsei~lfl9 . FrM Information
Write Jobs O verseas, Dept. E5. Box
15071 , San 01890, Ca lifornia 92115.

FEMALE 9rao student prele rrea O w n
room, Westside, 1 67 50 Avail able Feb
I Call 886 ·2604 .

APARTMENTS WANTED
FEMALE
roommate
wanted
lor
near&lt;a mpus h o use. Slarllnll Febru~ry
Call Sharo n 836·230a

WE NEED 2 · bedr oom apt. l or femal . .
starting Fec&gt;ruary Near U .B Will pay
~ ooo price Ca ll 83 I 3989 anyl ime .
Gr•Ouate
student
desires
NOTE
•h• rtn g ap t. o r hou•e with same Call
Jay 886 3686 Thank you

B ELLS , TOPS. BOTTOMS
end THINGS
Mod Styles for Those Who Knowl

Here they corne! HundreCIS ol
Guys and Gals knuw this Is
the
place
Army Navy
barga lnl with tooay•s look
GoOd IJOOdS ; good prices :
IJC)Od people' T"e real Levi'S ;
Flare and Strll lllht, Denim o r
Corduroy All Force pa rkas,
Government
Gr86t
Coah .
Heavy slul1 1 Come see the
r ea l
M cCo y's
and
SAvE•

u

STANLEY H . KAPLAN
EDUC ATI ONAL CEN TER L T O.

CITY

~

730 Malro AI Tuppat 853· 1515 O lv

OATS lYUUNGI -(KlHOI

BranChes In principal cltlft

r.. r•

T VPING - business or personal - ttfm
papers , mass malllnvs. reasonable rates.
C all 937-60!10

ALE

_. I

Spec:W Compect Cou,.. during
w...... - l " ' -lont
Summer Sellione
____ v

FOR
INSTANT
1)4'1ntlng,
think
Goodway . we ptlnt anythlnv for
pennieS a copy - t h - . ~es umes,
pamphlets, et c. We also bind, fold,
colate and steple . Single )(erox copies,
s .o8 u ch. Where ? Goodway Copy
C enter , 436 Ma in St lind Court acrou
froon Lafayelle Square. M -F, 9-S p .m.

MALE ROOMMATE wanted, S52 50
Including util ities . Oet•wate Park area
Available tmmedl.otely . 881-4504

KAREN : Don't tead Crime o~ n d
P unishment I have a better troJMI•lluo
Mdg

• Le110n achedule can be tailored to
meet 1ndlvidual needa. L-one
can be spteed over • period o f
several mOnths to • veer, or for
out of t&lt;Mn nudents, a P«IOCI
of one weak
• Opportunity for ,..,_ of ~ ·
lftiOI'IS via tape at lhe c:.ntef

1212) 338-6300
1518) 531-45&amp;6

Clark Gym on
Con tact Tony

S~l

PERSONAL

R

WANT TO learn how to make 16 mm
films for free7 Come to the meetlnv.
Stu dent Film Club, Wed., Jan. 26 ,
8:00, Room 234, Norton .

In
17

FOUND : Scarf In Crosby JOt on
Monday , Jan 17 Claim by ldentlfv lniJ
at S pecttum office.

FREE ENGLISH setter , ltetO bted,
1-yr old female, spayed , e• tremely
ltleodiY C all 881 29 16

• Prepwetion for hiltS r«~Uifed fOr
edmtllion to gredue~ end protsionel cool'
• Sill! and twelve -.on c:ouniM
• Small groups
•vo~umlnou,tnl'l•iel for hom4l nudy
prepared by exl)4trU In nell field

WATCH found
Monday, Jlln .
831 ·2084 .

SKI~INDINGS.
BRAND NEW
CHEAP•
One pair NCh : Marhtr
Rotomat ; Soloman 505 88 1~077 .

1970
JAGUAR
)(KE
Excellent
condition . Orand new AMIFM ltereo

.....2. .

FOR ADOPTION : slx· year-otd IJC)Id en
retriever spaniel male. Call David,
7- 10 p .m . 882~674.

FOUND S mall gOIO r1n9 near 81lrC1
Hall 1·19· 72 Call SIeve 8 76·5493 t o
cla im 11.

FURNITURE beds, lamps, other stuff
Good prices. Cell 838~207.

OLD RIVOLI ~~
m
nn aaoAowu

LOST&amp; FOUN D

1966
PLYMOUTH,
6-cyllnder,
statlonwal)on. a utomatic tran~mlu lon.
N .Y . State lnspecteo , S325 . TX6 -9966 .

REFRIGERATORS ,
sto,es
and
w,uhtr5 . Reconditioned , delivered and
guarantMd
D &amp;G Applianc es, 844
Sycamore. TX 4 ·3183

PROFESSIONAL Bosch t une... p s at
Independent
Foreign Cu Service.
039 · 1850.

LOST vicinity Meadowlea Oxford ,
ginger colored tiger cat, 4 months Old,
male . 839· 1248,

FOUND women's ring In Oteleodort,
Jan. 17 . To Identify, leave phone
number tn Spectrum Box 17

sale

MISCE LLANEOUS
PIGS
or
lnstltu lo nallzed hippies?
Lawless or the law ? Be an observe r
with t he pollee and Cleclde . Ca ll
831-484 7 Mond ay-Friday between
5-f&gt; p.m

ANTIQUES and mOdero furnitu re,
eeramlcs , China, etc. See Sid. 1439
Hertel Ave .

STEREO COMPONENTS . 90-watt
Harmon Kardon receiver , Garrard
turnt~le,
2 spukerl, $ 200
Call
838· 2281

CLUB ski lessons lo r
TuesdaY night . C all 832·5634

ROOMMATE
wanted
to
lhilre
apart ment . Two-bed~oom, -Imming
pool, air conditioning. CION to school.
854·7147 days. 691~518 evenii'IV$.

EE STUDENTS - get Involved - Join
IEEE. Electric•! Envlneerlnv office has
Information.

GUYS : Need haircut or trim - cell
692 · 3868 for appt. with Joscelyn.
Spec. In lonv hair styles. MON . ONLV.

SKI CLUB membtrsn lp a nd/or lessons
lor sale. Leta! transfer . Call 836~476
before 5 p .m.

838~091 .

Pt LAMBDA TAU - 1 chanoiJ!j social
organization on a Ch•nvlog campus.
For Information, call Dan 632.0299 or
Georl)e 834 -7989 .

'64
'1/w bu,, Excellen t
running
condition with body r ust, 8300 or best
otfet. Will sell parU separately. Call
837-4264.

GRE

''~'-'

THE PEOPLE , 144 Allen St. II havlnll
their first clearance sale, until Jan .
31st. Phooe 882~283 for hours .

ONE
FE M ALE
roommate
lmmedletety. own room. 81oc.k from
campus. $ 55/ month lnctuCies utilities.
Call 136·2403.

TWO MINUTES from campus. For
men. New rooms. Privata entrance,
frldl)e, some cooking, furnished . Call
834· 5312 (P&lt;'Ivate home) .

1960 FORO panel truck FlOO, panel
In side. Ph o ne 837~016 .

LSAT-ATGSB

CAMERA Peotax SL 3$ mm, 1 :2/S:i
Vall'llce-o
1 :3 .5/80 Sony
630· 0
tapedeck
(r...
to rMl)
RIChard
175-4195 a oytlme.

COUPLE loot&lt;lng to snare ac&gt;artment.
house or farm w ith ll n o t h tf coup le .

MODERN l · bedroom apartment ne&lt;~r
campus. Available April 1 tor 3 or 4 .
Call 833·3 161.

WAITRESSES wanted t Part lind lull
ume, evenings. Over 18 . 685· 3100. Ask
ror Doul) Or BOb.

MCAT- OAt

HARDTOP for M Q 8 , U'*' 3 monthS.
Reasonable . Call 87•·5621 even lniJI,

FEMALE roommate w a nted, own
bedroom In furnlll'lad a.partment , •so
month . Transporta tion to SChOOl, 314
Rich mond upstairs.

ESTABLISHED rock g roup s.aks nute
player w ith eddltlonat sax ta lent . Must
De able to solo on both and p lay 1
6-f'llte
wet*.
Call
8g5-o330
or
89-4·2875 .

N EED $1007 Call 882· 1080 lor
Information. Second annual Newman
Movement Art Exh ibit. Fat) . l l Ma rch 19 at Bulc ktleld center s .u.c.e.
Entries due Feb. 7 &amp; 8 . Special student
prizes.

RIDE NEEDED to Oh io, INvlng Jan
2 8, returning Jan. 30. Cllll Ruth ,
835· 1628.

TUTORING AN D GUIDANCES
...
SINCE 1938

radio Included. Ce ll 688·7327 eve nings.

EIGHT ·TRACK stereo and AM · FM
stereo rad iO with forty tapes and a pair
of Koss
K-6 headphones, •150.
Wlthou t heed phones and tllpes, •100.
832· 5910.

SLEEPING room, private entrance, "'
block from UB. 834_.792 illter 6 p.m.

DIRECTOR
lor
local
treatment
program tor heroin addicts. Ooctorllte
In Psych. desirable but emphasis on
experience
worklnll
with
drug
dependent people and mental health
problems of urban poor . E&gt;Ctremely
t o ugh Job. Break O .K. E&gt;Cperlence may
&gt;ubstl tute t or degree. Call 881 ·0096
alter 7 p .m .

COLLEGE GRAD wants to babysit
evenings. Loves children and hlll lots or
""" lime . Call 831_.113 days and
875 1944 nltes. Ask lor Leslye ,

COME TO t he Psychornet~chomal·
--f&gt;5yehornat on Wed nesday•, 3-5 p .m ••
• Room 233 N orton .

.._,s.,.., ..... "'r ,.,.,__.11.,.-

SHOWBOAT
REDUCED PR ICES
POPCORN

free

GALLERY!
CASUAL DRESS

MUSIC

for
female
grad uate
and/or apartment . Call

WE NEED a t w o family apt. that can
house six people (three In eac h hall)
l o r June Will pay goOd money, 11
taken . C a ll Betty 837~430 .

3 COMP LETE R OOMS OF
NEW FURN ITURE
2 o c. llvln9 room suite,
2 step-e nd &amp; 1 cocktail 1ilble,
2 la m p s, 3 pc . txlrm . set, (dbl.
ores-. c hest , dbl size bed ,
dbl bOX SPIIS/mlltt., 5 pc dinette
CI table , • c hairs)

$369.95
J Bert Furnrture Co .
2363 Broadway, 1 Hatlem Rd
nll)hlly 'Ill 9 :00p.m . ex Wed &amp; SAt
895· 3

EED MONEY.

SINGLES NIGHT
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT
AT THE

Now appearing in the ENGINE ROOM BAR - TH E

s
a
1
e

LOO KING
roommate
835 !1604

You can get it from S.A .
We need people to run voting machines and sit at
voting desks this Thursday and Friday for the
Athletic Referendum. Contact Lee Schwartsberg in
205 Norton today for scheduling times and locations.

1 HERTEL AVE .

Monday, January 24, 1972 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

.

�Announcements
The French Club will be meeting today at 4
p.m . in Room 234 Norto rt. All undergraduate
French majors and prospective majors are requested
to fill o ut a student data form in Room 214 Crosby
so that a new directory may be compiled.
Hillel announces new House hours: Sunday,
2- 10 p.m.; Monday through Thursday, 9 a. m.- 5
p.m . and 7- 11 p.m.; Friday, 9 a. m.-noon ~d 8- 10
p.m.; Saturday, 8 p.m. to mid night.
The Student Association announces that all
judiciary applicants who have not had their
interviews must make an appointment today in
Room 205 Norton.
Psychophysial Systems, C.P. Snow 235, will be
held on Monday and Wednesday all semester from
3-5 p.m. in Diefendorf 104.
ReUgions of India, CB 279, will meet Mondays,
2-4 p.m. in Room 18 Diefendorf Annex.
Women's liberation will give free karate
instruction to all women on Tuesday and Thursday,
7- 8:30 p.m. in Room 330 Norton.
r

Sports Information
Tomorrow : Varsity basketball at the University
of Maryland Terps, College Park, WBFO-FM radio,
8:20 p.m .
.
.
Wednesday : Freshman basketball at Niagara
Community College.
Saturcby: Varsity basi&lt;elball vs. Cornell at
Memorial Auditorium, 7 p.m .; varsity hockey at
American International College, 8 p .m .; junior
varsity wrestling quadrangular with Corning C.C.,
Erie C.C. and j amestown C.C., Clark Gym, 12:30
p.m .; varsity fencing at Hobart; freshman basketball
at Geneseo.
Sunday : Varsity hockey at Salem State, 5 p .m .
The student athletic review board will meet
tonight at 7 p.m. in Room 264 Norton.
The
Buffalo-Maryland basketball contest
tomorrow evening will be broadcast live at 8 :20p.m .
over WBFO-FM radio with Joe l ockwood.

What's Happening
Monday, Jan. 24
Films: Ugetsu and Strut of Shame, 3 p .m . and 8
p.m., Capen 140.
Art show: Pri nts by students of Harvey Breverman,
4240 Ridge Lea, 9 a.m .- 5 p .m .
Tuesday, Jan. 2S
Film : Bringing Up Baby, comedy with Cary Grant
and Katherine Hepburn, 3 p .m. and 8 p.m .,
. Capen 140.
Concert : Student recital , noon, Baird Hall .
Art Show: 4240 Ridge Lea, 9 a.m.;-5 p .m .

- AmyAhrend

The Student Th~ter Guild will have an acting
workshop today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 340 Norton .
The Office of Fi~ncial Aid is distributing
fi nancial assistance applications for the 1972-73
academic year. Students may obtain forms at the
office, which is located in Room 216 Harriman
Library. Completed applications are to be returned
to the office not later than M-arch 1, 1972. Financial
statements will be required tn all cases and these are
to be completed and sent to the College Scholarship
Service not later than Feb. 1, 1972.
Th e Student Occupational
meet tomorrow at 4:30p.m. in
Or. Hullar wants student
appointment of a new chatrman

Therapy Club will
Room 322 Norton.
optntons on the
fo r the department.

The Junior Club of Buffalo io; sponsonng a ski
trip to lnterlc~ken , Switzerland March 29 April 5.
The trip (eight days and seven nighh) includes room
and board and round trip by Swiss Air 74 7 The cost
i~ $350. For further informc~tion con tc~c t Bnan Rusk
at 633-2707 .
Filmmaker's series presents Mike Snow, an
experimental filmmaker , \C.rcening and tallo.ing about
hts films tomorrow at 8 p.m. tn Room 147
Diefendorf. Admt~ston is free.
Co-ed Bowling league applications c~rc dVdilable
at Norton Recreation desk or the Recreation office
in Clark Gym starting today. The league will be
Wednesday evenings, 5;30 8 p.m. beginnmg Feb. 9.
College A course, Communicative Creativity,
an nounces registration for physically hand1 cc~pped,
mentally retarded and emotionally disturbed
children and their unaffected brothers and sisters for
classes in creative arts, every Sunday. Ages 3 16.
Work will be done in wcle groups dnd on a
one-to-one ba~1s. Fo r inform.lt,ion on registrc~tion for
c~ll children, call 831-5389. There will be no chc~rge
for this course.
The Student Association, which '" sponsoring
the Appalachian Symposium in March, is bringmg up
from West Virginia, a group of craftsmen, musicians,
dancers and speakers. They would like any faculty
member interested in housing ~ome of these people
to please call Sue Schonwetter c1t 838-4896.
The Department of linguistics c~nnouncc~ a
series of ldpe~ to be run thi ~ week. "Generative
Phonology" will be run at 2 p.m. and
"Confrontation in c1n Unknown Langudge" at 2:30
p.m. today. "An Interview with Charles-James N.
Bailey " IS at 4 p.m. and "The Spectrographic
Analyzer"•c~t 4 30 p.m. tomorrow. All arc \hown in
Room 10, Fo\ter bc~sement and Jre open to \tudcn ts
and faculty .
The German Club will hold a gener.1l meeting
and coffee hour tomorrow dl 2 p.m. in Room 244
Crosby. There w1ll be an election of officers and a
discussion of ne' t year·~ budget. Attendance ~~ urged
for all who wi\h to be involved in activities in the
fu ture.

-GII wll

Backpage

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                    <text>No paychecks force
nurses' resignation
by Howie Kurtz

Additionally, she was informed
that if her position was not
approved she would have to pay
Beverly Mathews is a Millard back two salary advances that she
Fillmore College student who was. was able to o btain.
bired as a put-time nwst by
University Health Service in Nooexiltalt
September. Since that time she
~- Mathews' predicament is
has worked on weekends in th e shared by another nurse, G. V.
28-bed infirmary in Michael Hall. CouabJ,in,- who was hired at
Since that time abe bas failed to approximately the same time and
receive a si.nJie paycheck . Last also resigned this week . " We were
Monday she resigned.
hired for a position t hat did not
In her letter of resignation to exist," said Ms. Mathews. Dr.
Paul Hoffman, Director of Health Hoffman indicated he wu "very
Service, Ms. Mathews stressed that upset.. a bout the resignations and
" more
and
more
s he bas been unable to ascertain blamed
"even an approximatO date as to complications" with Alba ny for
when I mi&amp;ht expect to be the missing paychecks. However,
reimbursed for my services." Ms. Dr. Hoffman said he had received
Mathews indicated that she ver6aJ, albeit unofficial, assurance
the
Vice-President 's
discussed the problem with Dr. 1 through
Hoffman often, as well as the office that t he nurses' positions
personnel
and
payroll would be approved by Albany .
Ms. Mathews was told at the
departments of the University,
but the only answer she received time of her hiring t hat there
was that her position had been would be a 4-6 week delay in
disapproved by Albany and no gettmg paid , which didn' t seem
money would be forthcoming unusual . " I finally got my first
u n I c:ss
if
was
approved.
continued on page Sll(-

Vol. 22, No. 44

StArt• University of New Yorit ~ Buffalo

Friday, January 21 , 1972

Otmput Editor

Rising costs

Tuition may increase
Students throusho ut the State
University of New York system
may face anothe r tuition increase
next year. "Differences in t uition
policies are creating ~rious
distortions within the higher
education system," said Gov.
Rockefeller in his annual mess11ge
to the Stltte Legislature on
Tuesday. The increase would
Intend to allt5Yiat.e the ptessURS
on private colleges.
Gov. Rockefeller noted that
the private colleges in the state
have room for 14 ,000 more
students,
while
the
State
University system has enrollment
pressures
and
shortaaes
of
classroom space. However, be did
not say how much tbe new tuition
hike would be. According to
assistant press secretary Gerald
McLaughlin, "definite numb~rs
and fa cts will not be known for at
least a month." Before acting on
this matter, t he legislature is
a waiting
the
report
and
recommendations of the Stale
Task Force for the fmancing of
higher education in New York .
This committee, headed by Dr. T.
Norman Hurd, was organiz.ed to
make financial suggestions dunng
the
lCJi&amp;lative
session.
Mr.
commented:
''It
Mc Laughlin
looks like the task force is heading
in favor of an increase and the
governor certainly has been
alluding to it."

admissions standllrd as well. Thes
proposal was based on the "city's
fiscal problems and the rapid
increase in the sta te's financial
support of higher education ."
Eventually, he said , t he state
s hould also take over commun1ty
colleges. Rocke(eller indicated
that community colleges are
becomina difficult for the local
governments to finance , even
though "an important share o r
t heir support is met by the state."
Other increases proposed
In addition , the state university
may have to increase charges for
tuttion because of Rockefeller's
proposed " hold the line" stat~
budget. This plan calls for a $470
million budget for the University .
of which $407 millio n is provided
by the state. The remaining $63
millio n must be determined fro m
University
sources.
Existing
tuition and fees wo uld provide
$37 million of the required S63
million . The rest wo uld be
generated t hrough such things as a
S I 00 increase in dormitory fees,
the
elimination
of student
tele pho nes and the end to bo nd
borro wing.
The governor's budget also
inc\uded such points as campus
schools a nd t he SEEK program
The State University is no w
studying the future of the campus
schools such as t he one o perated
by Buffalo State
University
College and is expected to
recommend new arrangements
bet ween the locaI school dist riels
and the colleges or phasing out
the schools entirely. Also, for the
first time, matching funds may be
required
from
up-s tate
communit y colleges for t he SEEK
progra m to hel p disadvantaged
students. Last year, the state
appropriated $2.6 million to pay
all the costs of the program . This
gear, Gov. Rockefeller would
spend o nly S I ,2 million and
require matching funds from
community colleges.

Another larJe jump
Currently, the State University
cbafles of $550 for tuition are
greatly surpassed by the average
$2 100 asked by private colleges.
State University tuition is already
scheduled to climb to $700 in the
fall of this year.
" In order to maintain equality
of educational opportunity for
the needy student," the governor
said, "a tuition increase should be
accompanied by an expansion of
scholar incentive awards and
student loans." Mr. McLaughlin
also stated t hat this matter would
be
cons id e red ,
and
recommendations made by the
Rockefeller has set the increase
financial task force .
in enrollment at 4600 students.
Another suggestion made by~ under investigation by the
Gov. Rockefeller was that ttle ffilancial task force is . the
State University system absdrb p o s s i b i 1it y
t ha t
the
the City University of New York. student-faculty ratio would be
This mi&amp;ht mBJk the end or the increased so that thez;e would be
City University~ policy of free more students o n campus per
tuition and may affect the open faculty member.

More resignations?

Frustration causes two SA
officials to leave their posts
Citing profound frustration j(o'd disappointment.
two Student Association officials resigned from their
respective posts this week , with the prospect for still
more resignations quite stron1.
Mark Weiner, Student ACtivities coordinator and
Alan Schwartz, direc tor of Public Informatio n, in
letters to SA president , Jan DeWaal , capitulated their
reasons for resignation .
Mr. Weiner stated that he could "no longer . .
serve in my position ... I have lost my desire to
commit myself as I d1d this last year and a half I
do n' t believe I would be fair to myself or the sd \Ool
without thts total commitment."

creating constant antagonism within the office, thus
making his o wn job harder.
In his letter, Mr. Weiner expressed this
disappointment with his co-workers : "So many
members of our Executive Committee pretend to
play awe inspiring roles, even thou~ they often lose
total conception of their roles as coordinators or
officers snd as membe~ o f the ... Committee."
Both were extremely c ritical of the new Student
Assembly. Said Mr. Weiner: " With the advent o four
legislative body, which . can only be considered a
total farce , we (SA officials) are judged by students

Potential unrealized
Mr. Weine r·s loss of .:ommit men 1 and frustration
with SA res ults f•om his belief that although State
Umversity uf Buffalo students ma y be " apathetic ,"
student government has a vast potential that it is not
living up to. Mr. Wetner maintains SA w uld be
taking positions o n :1dministration actions such as
tenure decisions , ye t the officers lack the
cohesiveness. leadership and courage to do so.
Rather than making irnpmtant pohcy decisions.
Mr. Weiner no tes, SA ullowed themselve~ to be
intnnidated by certain o rganizations into distributing
rnuney unwisely.
Mr . Schwartz.'s frust ru tton stemmed in part lro m
ra ther different sources. The nature of his position
particularly affected his eventual decision . " Fo r the
most part , I was the oply member of the Executive
Commijtee whose joh 4esign was to prqvide seTVlcn

fot tltb other members:· his letter States.
Thus, the fac t t'lutt he was unable to provtde
services in areas of perso na I In t crest . pwved
extremel y
disheartening.
Mr .
Schwartz's
disillusionment was not . however, cunfincd to this
particular area .
Egomania rampant
His letter further explains · ·•t huve been to tu lly
amazed at some of the Execu tive Commtttee for
their partic ularism, lo.c k t1f respect for unpopular
opinio ns. and overall arbitrariness and u ther
manifestions o f .
swelled ego. I also have been
disappointed with a total disproportl()nllte workload
handled by various members of the Exe~ uttve
Committee. It certamly is il shame tu see Student
Association brought under by pellple wh11 talk a
great deal but work little ."
Mr. Weiner had somewhat similar cum platnts.
He felt rather trked that many mernhers of the
Exec utive Committee do no t do thetr o wn jobs. but
persist in criticizing other officers to t he point of

Mark Weiner

Alan Schwartz
wlw hove no knowledge what st ude nt government is
ur should be...
Mr. Schwartt called the Assembly the " most
disappointing aspect of t he year" for hi m. " I had
great faith, " he wrote , "in Its potential, but I've seen
ltttle but a reOecliun of the same problems .
magnified in 1ntens1ty and tmpac t by the Assembly's
increased numbers and power Nevertheless , the
Assembly still has g•eat potential. I just hope some
people stop get tmg mto student government for
reasons that hardly reOect the interests o f students.
Mr . DeWaal reludan tl y accepted Mr . Weiner 's
res1grtatiun in a letter which pra1sed h is ho nest
committment and successes with the activities
w mmitt ee and the Speaker's Bureau The Bureau
was set up under Mr . Weiner 's dtrecttOn
Continued committment
Mr . DeWaal noted Lhat he shared in the
•·disillusionment over the inability o l members of SA
to overcome personal differences tn quest of
common goals."
Both Mr Schwartz and Mr . Weiner looked
.to wards continuing thelr cont nbutlo n in some way .
Mr Schwartz will become Director of Services of the
Student Association of the State University (SASU).
Mr. Wein.er, in th.e period before his resigna tion takes
effect , will work o n recommendations "to improve
Speaker's Bureau. the funding of our recognized
organ1zattons. the Ac tivities Committee and Student
Associallon ."
At the t1me of this writing, it appears tha t the
resignation of David Barmak, SA treasurer, is
unmincn t. Mr. Barmak has also expressed strong
dise n.:hantrnent with SA . He considers SA a
structural failure which "doesn't function , but
spontaneously goes on" distributing money . Most
members o f SA , he feels, are unfortunately not
~ attuned to what is important and unable to take ,
decisive action on academic issues and questions of
student rights. It is expected that Mr. Barmak will
abo join SASU .

�Union hours
Tlte roUowinl are the official aprtq ~-er
buUdina llows ror Non on HaU :
Monday throuab Thunday : 7 a.m. - midniJhr ;
Friday: 7 o!Wil . - l a.m.; Saturday: 8 a.m. - I a.m .;
Sunday: Doon - midni...t .
For any additional information ple&amp;K eon lact

Appal~R-~:t'

Culture and.lifostyle
highlighted in festival
" I trunk it's very ex4:ttmg
because students will have the
chance to get involved in the lives
of
mountain-style
people,"
declared Linda Felix. head of the
program which wtJI sponsor an
Appalachtan Symposium . The
symposium ts scheduled for
Tuesday, March
21 through
Friday, March 24 .
The purpose of the festival is
to
edua.te
t.h e
Universit y
commumty about the people and
the culture of Appalachia. Ms
Felix, a gradua te W9QI-dying,
quilting.
wood-lathing
and
mstrument-making (banjos and
this area, having spent three years
Uving a self-sufftci~nt life working
o n a farm in West Virginia. Dunng
this expenence she learned about
her neighbors and thetr lives. Now
Ms. Felix lS dedicated to bringtng
crafts people and their wares to
Buffalo m an attempt to get
studenu mvovlcd m an American
culture that 1~ slowly fading .
Proud people

or

The

schedule
the
sympoSIUm
Will
mclude
a
demonstratio n
of
traditional
era ft s such as b as ketry , weavmg
11 p1nntng .
btoo m -maktng .
wo o l daytng ,
quiltin g,
w oo J - lath111g
and
ms rrum eut-rnakmg (banJm Jnd
dulcm1ers ) b y the u afl ~ mcn . They
will be 111 No rt o n l ro m 10 a .m
4 p m ., wu rkmg 011 thetr e rath .
take on several
w11ling
to
apprent " c~ 1f there JI C \t udenh
mteresttd m l~aniiiiK U1e baMl
techniques.
These
111en anJ
women come fro m a small co unt y
In West Vtrgmia o ne that ~~ va~tl y
outnumbered b y the c.:ampu ~
populatum.
For ~o me , 11 wdl be thetr first
expenence lcav1ng the1r farm s and

their county These are very
proud . independent people who
h ave established a certain stability
in their hves. Their spmt is one of
rugged individualtsm , and Ms
Felix hopes that this will he
comm11ntcat ed during their visit .
The c rafts people are being paid a
fee to come and art making the
trtp as a group veniUre.
Bluegrass
The soctal 1ssues whtch play
Important roles tn thetr lives, and
111 the pauerns of cultu re of all
Appalachian people , are going to
be d iscussed. There are pJans for
guest speakers. including Ha rry
Cauldil , au th o r of the book ,Night
Comes to the Cumberlands and
Wylnwood Montell author of a
book abou t a small Kentucky
commun1ty
These
1ssues .
poverty , welfare . eco logy and
stnp-mm1ng . are hest known to
the Appalachtans themselves and
they will be available to gtvc
first -hand accounts.
In o rder to dis play th e culture
of App;alachta, there w1ll be a
dan ce gro up and a group of
musician' whll will s1ng and play
bluegrass tnll \ 1( .1nd h.tllads Thc1c
w11l
also
be
lo ur
film ~
t uulii!IICIUSiy shown :thout the
sodal and l'Ullural rn1tr11fes tatwns
Wutl..\ hufh anJ pJnd dt st ussH&gt;rl ~
w1ll h e held 111 ltuthl' r t? nlighte n
stud en h
The ' y mposiUm , wh11:h 1s bctng
lund ed
hy
the
Student
Assoctatwn. w11l also leal ure the
unique pu~1h1hty for ~ tudent s to
a s so.:: tal c
dire c tl y
with
A ppalach1an
people.
seemg
first-hand
the
pwnecrs
of
Arneru:ana. All interested students
are urged to attend and come 1010
contac t
wtth
a
c ompletely
dtffereut American hie-s tyle.

GSA:
Somit discusses role.
.
of Executive Vice President
'

" Bein&amp; attached to camp~ s~curity suarantt~e~
that I eet two phone calls a day; o ne complaining
tlUit too many tickets are pven out, and one
complainjn&amp; that not enough tickets are pven o u t."
This is only a minor problem in the lifo of a.n
executive vice president , revealed Albert SomH in a
brief lecture Monday nipt. Dr. Somit was invited by
the Graduate Student Association Senate t o
ela b orate o n wha t the role o f an executive vice
president is, a.nd its relationship to that o f the
president and other University officials.
" With 24,000 s tudents, SOOO e m ployees and
seven faculties, the University is much too big and
complex for one man to h andle." Or. Somit's post
was created to screen o ut som e of the minor
decisions and problem s, and to make exec utive
decis10ns w1th the authority of the president.
Equal time
A quesllon was raised a.s to wheth er President
Ketter IS mo re involved with community a ffa irs, and
Or. Som1t with campus activities. " He spends more
time outstde than I do," was the answer , "but that
doesn't mean that he doesn't do mside work. It's a
good approximation, but don't push it too far.'' Or.
Somit added later that "Or . Ketter spends as much
tJme w11h students as with any oth er conslttu~ncy ;
so much that the taculty JS now clamoring for equal
time."
Whe n asked about the admmJSt ration's lltlitudes
toward the new budget cuts, Or Som il hsted four
object ives for the commg years
I) Completion of the Amherst t:ampus , this IS
esse ntial m providin&amp; a far more effecttve learrung
atmosphere for a university this size.

2) Ho pefully the administration will 10 through
1972-73 with no c utbacb in student or fac ulty
population .
3) Budaet cuts will be absorbed with a minimal
impact on the instructio nal program. Thouah th e
fac ulty1tudent ratio is movina up, I see no great
difference in the quality of education i( thoro are 16
o r 16.S students in a class.
4 )SUNY AB hu • been accorded national
distinction, a nd the hlrina of an excellent faculty is
instrumental in maintaining this high level of qualit y .

Hiringlwsle
Some present questioned the delay in instituHng
a program in Jewish Studies.. They noted that 11
higbJy qualified professor had recently been
recommended by the third search committee.
Allen Lyto fsky, assistant professor in Semiltc
Studi es at the University of Vircinia, has been
prominently mentioned but thus fw b as n ot been
appointed to any departmental p osition.
In furtber action , an amend men t to th e
Graduate Student constitution concemint the
student judiciary was challenged . One graduate
stud ent senator proposed substituting a graduate
stud ent union for a jud1ciary. He maintained that
ttus would provide the students w1th barpimng
power.
"The jud1ciary ," he asserted, "as 11 ellists now, L~
merely a Mickey Mouse body ... tl is set up as a
puppet court, and if it acts like the adminis tration
wants it to, it can continue ." His sugestion was
o p posed o n the grounds that a judiciai}- and a union
serve entirel y different funct1on~ . The amendments
were soundly defeated.

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�Commit~ report

Governance system proposed
" We may not come up with something totally
sat isfactory to all parties ... But it is my hope that
it will be a satisfactory bepnning to start with and
evolve from ." Thus commented Marjorie Mi x,
chairwoman
of
the
Unh:ersity Governance
Committee in announcing that that committee bas
accepted ratification procedures from nine invo lved
campus groups t o approve proposed Articles of
Governance.
Although the iniUal d raft of these articles bas
been rdeuod Dr. Nix explained that the

Marjorie Mix
~:ommittee

was first concerned with ratlficalaon
procedures : " We may have put the cart before the
horse, but we didn't want the specifics of the articles
to be mvolved in that dascussion." Bastcally , the
ratification procedures cons1st of having the mne
existing groups conduct membership referenda. Such
BfOups 1nehld~: ~assified employees, dental

studen ts, facult y, graduate students, medical
students, law studen ts, professional staff, Millard
Fillmore CoUege students and u ndergraduate
students. The proposed governa nce system will have
to be approved by each of these groups with final
written approval coming from President Robert
Ketter.
' Unk:ameral ovulay'
Terming the proposed system as a "uni-ameral
overlay on the present governments," Dr. Mix
explained that this proposed university assembly
would be in addition to existing organizations such
as the Faculty Senate and Student Associahon . She
commented : " Although we talked about some plans
in other universities where they c reated a totally new
model , we decided to s t rengthen present bodies
rather than reconstruct."
Accordang to Dr. Mix , the only limitatio n on the
assembly model is "that at can't intrude o n areas of
authority of existing constatuencies." She con tinued
that thts IS a "rather unique model" as most
universities with campus-wide governments tend to
absorb any different separate governments.
By limiting its jurisdiction and bui ldang a
"model to include many possibilities," Dr Mix
hopes that this university assembly would be able to
consider such problems as regionalism and
curriculum polices. Presently , there as no such body ,
includang all University fa cets that effectively deals
with such issues .
Advising body
F rankly admitting that she "didn't know;,; af thas
assembly will be able to function effectively . Dr Ma x
remarked . "AU governance, an a sense, as
recommendtng . . Authoraty as very hard to define
or use" llowever, she beheves that the model ts
presumed to be "a strong adVJsory hody" that ~:an
succeed .
Regarding faculty willingness to share authonty
with students, Dr. Mix commented that as evidenced
by fa culty and students workang t ogether on the
governance commattee, faculty is willing to
cooperate.
The fanal draft will be ready for consrderallon
and modafication, accordang to Dr. Max, the
beginning of February . If soon thereaftet ratafiedr
Dr. Ma x com mented that the university assembly
would be operable by the end of this semester.

Bible
Truth
COO IS NOT DEAD
"And ye shall teek me, and fin me,
when ye shall sea rc h for me wllh all

FEE WAIVERS

your hear And I will be found o
you , nilh lhe Lord ."

Hear, 0 Israel

All Student Activity Fee Waivers

f or gems from

must be filled out and returned to

me

JEWISH BIBLE
phone

875-4265

The Student Association Office
Room 205 Norton
By February 1, 1972

::
;

:
:•

SAVE MONEV t VOU'L L
NEVER HAVE TO C ALL
HOME AGAIN WHEN VOU
SENO VOUA PAR E NT!". A
GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE SPECTRUMII!I"

:
:
:
!
:•

Continuation of Amherst
construction supported
The
University's
Faculty
Senate voted last Tuesday in favor
of a resolution which would place
priority
on
t11e
a
high
continuation of construction of
the
Amherst
campus.
The
resolution
wntten
by
!he
Executive Commallee mamtained
!hat a halt an construction "would
seriously jeopardize both the
current o perations and the future
prospects
of
the Umversily
Center ."
Executave
Vace
Presadent
Albert SomJt, actang for Presadent
Robert Ketter who could not
attend Tuesday's session , stated
that many buhdings at the
Amherst campus are already
completed , but cannot be opened
due to a . lack of funding.

'Puaplqjc turtles·
ln his opening budget talk . Or
Somit stated tha" this year's
budget is "sketchy at besl " as all
information at the present time as
based solely on a phone call from
the chancellor Communication
between AJbuny and Buffalo has
been so poor. in fact, that Dr .
Somtt
stated
that
he was
convinced information was being
sent VJa "paraplegic turtles."
The proposed budget a~ 11
stands nnw as SM .5 million. a ~urn
of money whad1 would constatute
"very !&gt;enuus trvuble," ac1.ord ang
to Dr. S&lt;Hllll On the surface . tim
sum of money appears tu be a
S4 .5 millmn decrease from what
was originally allocated lu the
University last year. However, 111
terms of actual expenditure , the
sums of money are the same.
Accordang to Dr . So mat. there
will not be enough money to

We Are Now Open!

MIKE'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
SANDWICHES
WE ALSO HAVE - Coffee - Hot Chocolate - Soda Pop
47 KENMORE AVE. IN THE UNIVERSITY PLAZA
......... WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING .........

make additional appointments to
the faculty beyond what was
mentioned
in
Dr.
Ketter's
previous letters. Enrollment will
be slightly affected .
On the agenda as well was the
resolution
dealing
with
modifications
of
admissions
policy . This proposal asks that SO
per cent of the regular freshman
class be comprised of students
coming from the Eighth Judicial
District,
an
area
covering
Allegheny,
Cattaraugus,
Chautauqua,
Ene,
Genesee,
Niagara and Wyomtng counties.
There seemed to be some
controversy
over
this
new
admissions policy when one
faculty member accused the
administration of usang admissions
as bribes in o rder to receive more
appropriations from local and
reg.ionallegislatures. However, this
idea was no t expounded upon .
Instead, at was moved that the
amendment be referred to the
Adm1ssaons Co mmittee and be
brought before the Fac ulty Senate
at thear next meeting.
The
question
on
the
University's status was then
discussed . The argument stemmed
I rom the ques t ion of whether the
Ur11vers11y is mme a department
uf ~ tate government than an
o.~utunom o u s
edu c ataonal
mslltulaun A~ 11 was marnlamcd,
a great univcrsaty requires some
degree uf autvnnmy whach tha~
Un1vers1ty
la~k s
The
admanastratiun and dte vanous
department s. at was felt , had to be
the linal arbiters an many
dec tstons whach state and local
governments
presently
have
control over .
Other Senate actwns included
the announcement by Dr. Somit
of John D. Telfer for appOintment
as vice president for Facilities
Planning, a position vacant sance
Albert Bush-Brown left last year.
Dr . Telfer holds a bachelor of
architecture and a master of city
planning
degree
from
the
University of Michigan and has
been assistant vice president for
physical planning at Columbia
University . According to Dr.
Somit, Dr. Telfer possesses "a
demonstrated record of success"
and
would
have
"major
responsibility for planning on the
Amherst
campus."
Telfer's
appointment is expected to be
confirmed by the State University
trustees at their meeting J an.

25-26.
A t the nex t Senate meeting,
discussion will center on the
distribution of monies referred to
as "institutional funds."

�WASIIINGTON
Despitr. a Coasl
Guard ullunatum to set sail by 2 p m. EST
Wedne~day , hyo Sovtet ships have refused
to move from the area around St . Matthew
l ~la nd toward a U.S. port. Accordmg to the
Soviet embassy, the shjps, wh1ch were
se11.ed by a Coast Guard icebreaker wllhm
the 1.!-mllc hmit off the Alaskan island ,
were JUSt seekmg shelter from heavy 1ce
and ot he1 ·'unforeseen circumstances:· A
spokesman for the embassy asked that the
two sh1ps be relea)ed . The confrontation
develt1ped when one of the ~lup) tned to
run with a U.S. boardmg crew still on
board At one pomt. the Icebreaker Stnris
was gtven permiSMnn to lire warmng shots,
but the tm.h:r pruved ltl be unnecessary .
The emb.tssy spol.esman s:ud : ··we are
ready lU d1scuss and sell~!! the matter vf
the twu fi shing boats. but th ere IS no
reason to hnld up th e ~ lu ps or force them
We regret that
mto an Ametkan pori
Ihere was ~ ud1 as lnt'ldenr. "
1\' t: W 'I OR I\
Pal.1sla111 A mba~ador
Agha Shah1 ~hargetl Wednesday rhat Indian
troops on the West Pakistani border were
l'OilllllllllfH.! Jrro~Jlle~ m vmla11on (If the
~ea)efire .111tl .t)l.ctl the United Nations tn
slalwn tlh~c1vcr) 111 the area A ~co rthng to
Sh.thal llll' IIICitlcnb !lldudcd. "the
hUIIIIIIg n l VlllagC\
Jtflh,.llleS and the

hea~ is "the unreasonable tax rate in
New York City and New York State." Tax
spokesman William A. O'Aaherty said
higher cigarette taxes in Pennsylvania , New
Jersey, Aorida and Connecticut , as well as
Chicago, has created a nationwide. "mecca
capturing of Paldstanis by Indian forces."
and a bonanza for people to make money."
Shahi reported these incidents during a
meeting Wednesday with Secretary GeneraJ
WASHINGTON
ln a tough new
Ku rt WaJdheim and Security Counctl
policy aimed specifically at Latin America,
Prestdent Abdulrahim Abby Farah .
Pre~dent Ntxon announced Wednesday
tb.l!_t the ) United States wouJd cut o ff
DETROIT
In an unprecedented
foreign aid and would block mternational
move, the Federal Deposit Insu rance Corp
bank loans to any nation that se11.es private
has approved S60 millio n in emergency
Amencan pro perty without paymg the full
loans to prevent the coUapsc of Detrmt 's
pnce for it. Although no spectlic countnes
Bank of the Commonwealth . The loan,
were named , American pro perty in Chile,
approved Tuesday . assured depositors an
Peru , Ecuador, Guyana and Buhvia have
the bani.. one of the natwn's SO largest .
been seized in the past few years without
that their accounts were protected to the
adequate compensation .
fullest amount allowed under the FDIC
MEMPHIS
Rev. Ezek1el Bell ,
msurance program Ac~o rdmg Ill the FDIC ,
the bank would be "in danger o l closing" pres1dent of the Memphis chapter ol the
without the loan. FDIC Chairman Frank Southern Christian Leadership Conferenl)e.
Wille s:ud he had no knowledge that an y has an nounced that he will launch o~n
banktng regulahons had been violated and all-out boycott of merchants until "some
refused comment on the possibility o l meamngful steps have been taken to
correct pohce brutality and other forms o f
cn mmal charges.
discnnunauon ."
The
announcement
NEW YORK
Bootleggjng is back 111 followed the third shooung o f a yo11ng
black by Memprus police m the last two
~tyle , -10d accordmg to the chtef of the
Tobacco Tax Council, the problem IS weeks. The tncident tX:curred only a few
spreading
nationwide. The problem hours after Bell had told a Ctty Counnl
mvolve~
the boutlegging of cigare11e mectmg tha t "the ~cnseles~ and ruthless
stupments and the hijacking of trucks kHhngs of blatks had ttl ~top •· At the
ca rry mg cigarettes, wl\ich has hit a peak in oouncrl meeting. whtte Ally C:trltou
New York State The cause uf the problem, Wilkes charged black leaders wll h failing Hl
teach black cluldren respet..l lor the law
.~~ told tn a State lnvesugatton CommissiOn

We've invented the small sensible solid

American car all over again.

CHICAGO - A federal grand jury
returned a 16-count indictment Tuesday
against Ronald Kaufman, 33r.suspected o f
planting bombs in the safe deposit boxes of
banks in Chicago, San fnlllclsco and New
York. Kaufman, once a roommate of
Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman , had been
the object of an FBI search since Jan. 9.
The indict ment was returned before U.S .
District Court Judge Julius Hoffman , who
presided over the Chu:ago Seven trial
CHICAGO
Two coUcge youths were
charged Tue~day with oonspiracy to
commit murder 111 a plot tu poison this
city's water supply wilh typhoid and other
deadly bacteria . The youths, Alan
Schwander, 19. and Steven Pera , IIi. were
allegedly part of an organ11.ation called
Rise, which had "planned potso ning water
suppllcs and spreading deadly dtsea-;e~ tn
nhnois and elsewhere. Members ot Rise
were ... to be innoculated and immuruzed .
enabhng them to survive the potsonmgs
and dtseases and to form the basis of a new
master race." Mayor Richard Daley, as well
as Chtcago's Police Comrmssioncr and
Water CommissiOner held a news
con fer ence to verity that "there 1~ no
mdicatton of any tnfectJOn ol publ i~ WJter
or other pub!Jc tacthties.'' Substanl'es
found 111 the far North Side home wher e
the youths were arrested were ldcnttticd a'
typhoid
mi cro -organts ms.
Water
Cumnusstuner Jardtnc sa1d that the wholt'
1de:.r was "pretty fantastic In fact, I regard
11 as .1 harc-bramed , chcme."

rMOTORCYCLEINSURANCE-,
: IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY StZE ~
I NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! 1

fU P S T A T E C V C l E I N SI
call 694-J 1oo

I

t_

YDU BUOYED TH£ FEAST,
tiOW OOOY Tit£ FAST . . •
THE ORIENTAL WAY

!.-:'m:: :t:' A~u ~~i:f:'~

::e.
:r:r..;: ~~,::~~;
•.,, .... •••1
tbe • ••n4•

•lt iN ..... .....,... ,
• A nntt1 .t tn•

•.......
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na•.,..
&amp;:11""'
(A • .,,..."

. ........,, ,.........•-t ,••
We wlU M lll•••r c• ...

''"

~till C:omg On .
Januan lfl«&gt; Di,rounl 'iall'

TSUJIMOTO
tJM •••r ....~ • '-"•"• c~. , •
DAII 1' Jllel • Fill It lA t • .. .,., 1·1
OIII£VFAI

AJlT~ItT-f&lt;IIIO­

••. Cal. Ill &amp;Ia&amp;
r
• ktlfot la.t&amp; •f Traul\ ( U .3 U

lUI -

_. .~~"!_"!_-_N_
l_
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_

... ----- -6- -· ------

···-- ---·-·-~-:...
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===-==
- ·-:.7=
"":.;:;" ·- ..
:_---.·-_r.i·;:._ .~
~- .. ~~--~

·~---

...--..

VI/hen people shop lor o smoll cor !hey look lor $01Tlevef'/ somple
bent&lt; values Dependobolory Economy of money and style Good moleoge
ond long l.le
Those bosocs o re our bnhploce The tv'oodel T, lhe tvc:x1et A. the
lors1 f'l'lOSS produced SIO!oon wogoo nome o bosrc rdeo, and chances ore
Ford bvollol
Now to Ford P•niO
Ponro ·~ os stmple and sol•d o smoll cor os !here os on the world.
And •t's pnced lower !han the three leodong ompom, lower !han rts moror
U S Compe!tiOI Yet rl ho) l!'olefY baste modem nec~•'Y
A gVISy !ollie engtne rhot gets !he some economl(ol ~tnd of gas

---

-":"':...~- •-;_

m•leoge os !he lmle omports
A solrckls.&lt;&gt;-rock four speed tronsmru1on Sports cor steenng
A welded~ body worh Sol&lt; COOlS of poont
Botl-joonl front suspensiOn, ond o wode SIOble stance on lhe rood
Ponto ts one small cor !hot doesn't hove to feor o superh!Qhwoy
And ftnotly Prnto gt-.,s you comlartoble tl'lleftOr leg and shoulder room - yer •l's only l'h •nches longer rhon the leodrng l11tte 1mport.
See the Ponto 01 your Ford dealer's tfs 40 yean llewef lhon the
Model A - bvr tl's strlllhe some bosoc odeo

Wlte• rou tet lt•cll to lt•slcr. rov tot It• ell to for4.

-¥-

FORD PINTO
FORO DIVISION

.. .......

,__,.,. ............
.. ,., .. ,,

~

~

Page four . The Spectrum. Friday, January 21, 1972

I

" Astl Your Broker About Us" · - '

\

�Buffalo police face brutality charges
by Janis Cromer
Am Off·CAmpuJ Editor

"There are virtually no effective means of confronting
the . problem of police brutality in this city ." Th us
commented Stephen J . PerreUo, Jr., Staff Counsel for
Buffalo's branch of the American Civill.Joerties Union.
On Jan. 30, 1970, eight organizations and 21
Individuals fLied a class action agamst the city of Buffalo
charging that " Mayor Frank Sedita and Pollee
Commissioner Frank Felicetta have condoned or
encouraged the Ulegal, improper and unconstitutional
conduct engaged in by some of their agents or employees
in the Buffalo PoUce Department." After two years of
legal red tape, including a dismissal and appeal to the
second circuit court, the suit is nearing a trial date .
Included in this action are from 15-20 individual cases of
alleged police brutality in which the plaintiffs are suing for
monetary reparations while asking that disciplinary action
be taken against the policemen involved. A third section of
the su11 requests the appointment of a federal employee to
llversee police activities and invest igarc compldints.
Complaintants handicapped
Mr. Perrello expla1ned that due tu the llm1ted ways for
mdividual redress of gnevances, the ACLU has joined
together with organ11.at1ons such as the NAACP, CAUSl:.,
the State Unaversity of Buffalo's American Assoc1at10n ol
University Professors and most notably, BUILD, as well ;b
w1th many tnd1vidual plaintiffs, to hnng complaints about
pohce VIOlence to tnal with ''some semblance of unity ..
The A(' l U has noted two maul c;ourses of act1on available
to an 1ndiv1dual 1f he Wishes to reg~ster a brutahty
l'omplaint The rno)l common ml'thod IS to file charg~
d1rec1ly w11h the lilY governrnl!nt (usually the pohce
depart menr 11self or the Deparrmenl of Human Relations)
fhcse ch:ugcs must be filed within llO days ol the lllCidenl
Mr Perrcllt• ex.pl:nncu, however , thai the per)on mak1ng
the complaml IS must likely lac_ing charges himself
(\.ummonly resistmg drrest, assault or faifure to comply

with a pohce officer's request), "and. at present, puhc;e
policy IS not to pursue the compla11H until all crirn1nal
charges have been d1sposed of ..
Due to the bac;klog uf cases m the courts. many
criminal trials arc not completed unnl years after the
mitial mcident. Thus, Mr . Perrelln pomted 1•ut thl'
Orutahty complaintS Jre often dropped JUSt to avwd
funher mv11lvement with rhe cuurl~. Another reason stated
by the ACLU fur the small number of m ~tanccs where
charges uf police vtolence are pressed 1S the platnllft\'
"justified fear that thl! wurls wtll allempt tu lo~y further
criminal charges on htm ur :11 lca\t fighl h.uder to n.ake
the original charges ~t 1c k .'' If the person WJits un11l ;~It er
Ius own trial is elVer to file a complamr. the chance., are
that hiS 90-day margin will have elapsed 111d h1~ nghr lo
complam will be lost
Alternatives
..What 1s more surpnsmg," staled the lawyer, "1s thai

often, in brutality incidents involving a lor of
documentation in favor of the plaintiff, such as doctors'
reports and Witnesses, a deal wtll be made w1th the city to
lower fines and drop crimi.nal charges 1f the brutahty
complaints and threats of suing the city are abandoned ."
Even if a police vtolence case is brought to court , it takes
the form of a civil suit in which onJy monetary reparations
are awarded . The policemen involved are not 10 jeopardy
of be1ng sentenced to a jail term .
An alternative to direct city appeal is available , noted
Mr. Perrello. Instead of ftling claims with the municipal
government or its agencies, a citizen may contact an
organization such as legal Aid, BUILD or the ACLU . The
drawback with notifying Legal Aid or the Public
Defender's office has been that these offices are funded by
federal , c1ty and county governments. Th1s handicaps such
organ11.ations, as Mr Perrello explained, 10 trymg ro press
charges against what is essentially their employer .
However. legal A1d does forward police brutality cases to
the ACLU or BUILD. BUILD's law Enforcement
Commiuee Chairman l.E . Pierce noted that most of the
com plamtants "reach BUILD through neighbmhood
here~ay of its deahngs w1th such incidents " The ACLU
and BUILD then confronts many uf the same legal barner!&gt;
the unassisted llldtvldual did when "fightmg CIIY hall "
City respom.ible
The merger ol mganrlatiUII\ ar)d mdtvlduah rnvulved tn
1h1s pcndrng tnal I.Jille dbout wrth the hope' ul no1 llnly
acqutr~ng monetary reparallom, hul wtth the lntentton &lt;&gt;f
also seekmg "inJunlflve relief," ac,ording to Mr. Perrella
He .tdded " The C'1v1l R1ghts Act authonte~ such reltef
agamst supcnor olllc1als who du nuthrng abuut the known
offenses of theu suhmdmatcs The city government IS
respon,1hle 1111 the lnndurt11l m pnhcemen wh1le they are
on duly"
The \Uit '&gt;larted a!&gt; a petltllln to Gov Rockefeller.
stat mg gr1evan~:e). clttng mdtvtdual examples and askmg
lor further inve~lll!,alion . Th e petition was never
-continued on page ten-

Now that you can fly to Europe for peanuts,
here's how little you shell out to get around:
$130 for Two Months of unlimited rail trawl In
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg,
Norway, Portucal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.

KARATE
Studio
kJrn ,ell Jdt·n~c·
!rum M r W.tn 1. Ll'l'
5th Dan Bl&lt;~cl.. B1· 1t ln 't.
1 Kurc&lt;.~n ~ tyle T c1c 1\wnn 0&lt;~)
CLASS

HOUR~ .

I 00

2 00 Ddy ciH'e'
M 4S Nile ~.lassl''
(Mond.1y
r r1day)

tl ()()

You shell out $130, and get a Student-Railpass.
All you need is the bread and something to show you're
a bona fide student between 14 and 25.
Our Student-Railpass gives you all that unlimited
rail travel on the 100,000 mile railroad networks of those
13 countries. For two foot-loose months So w1th low air
fares and Student-Railpass you've got Europe made.
Our Student-Railpass gets you Second Class
travel on our trains. You'll find that there's very little
second class about Second Class Besides being comfortable, clean, fast, and absurdly punctual, the Euro-

pean tra1ns have some other advantages for you They
take you from c1ty center to city center, so you don't have
to hassle a1rports. And the stations are helpful homes
away from home, with Pictograms that give you Information in the universal language of signs, and dining rooms,
bookstores and other helpful facilities
Now, here's the catch. You can' t get your
Student Rallpass or the regular First Class Eurailpass in
Europe you have to get them before you leave the coun
try. So see your Travel Agent soon. Meanwhile, send in
the coupon for a free folder, complete wtth railroad map

-- - --- -- --- --- - -- ----- -- - -----~---- - -----------------------·

STUDENT•RAILPASS

The way to ••• Europe with out f eelinc like • tourist.
Eurailpass is valid in Austria, Belgium , Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.
Eurailpass, Box -90, lindenhurst, New York 11757.
Please send me your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map. 0

Or your Student-Railpass folder order form .

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ Street----- -- - - - - - - -- - - - - """'"'-

INfORMATION
1 1 oo
8 tl c; n m
( M o rH.I.t y I n S .ll U r J J \
&lt; i\ Ll 8 H'l !10 I~

)

1111\-iAIN"I
I NearUH I

OLD RIVOLI
1111 BROADWAY
Tonight at 8 :00p.m
Sat. 2, 5, &amp; 8:15p.m
Sun . 5 &amp; 8 :15p.m .

Student
with /
..... -. prices
.

0
·

"Sure I want babie3. What

else is a woman for?"

OJanned Parenthood

Friday , January 21, 1972 . The Spectrum Page five
I

l

' '-

;

f

�Nurses
pay check on Dec. 3 for $60, and fiscal problems. I fear he was
when it should've been something using us as a political footbaU
like $250-300. So I went to the with Albany to get the positions
payroU office on Elmwood Ave. he wanted." However, according
to find out why, where they told to Dr. Hoffman, "We didn't know
me, 'You're not entitled to this that part-time employees would
you've
been be caught up in that freeze. We
c heck
dtsapproved'." She was now were not being untruthful when
without even the $60 check but we toJd her she would be paid ."
she was able to get a-% advance on
This month , the personnel
salary, amounting to S I 95.
office informed Ms. Mathews that
if her position isn't approved by
Part-lime problems
Albany when the new budget is
Next Ms. Mathews took her drawn up in April, she would not
problem to the personnel office, only be deprived o f the balance of
where
they
"acted
very her pay , but would have to pay
reluctantly ," so she discussed the bac k the salary advances she has
matter with Dr. Hoffman, who already received. On Jan. 10,
to ld her not to worry . " He told Director of Nursing Services,
me he was having a lot of Virginia Troy called Ms. Mathews
problems, but guaranteed me that and told her that there was
there was a job and that I would nothing to worry about, and that
be paid. This pacified me."
she would be paid by Jan . 14 . On
Dr. Hoffman explained to her Jan . 14 she was not paid, and was
that he had a s mall fund which given the same story by the
previously paid the salaries of payroll office. On Jan. I 7 she
part-time employees. However, typed her letter of resignation.
this year Albany has turned those
Ms. Mathews is very upset over
part-time positions into "line"
positions
(requtring
specific what has transpired but feels she
approval), and the poSJtion had was "forced to resign" due to lack
been disapproved due to the State of money. Dr. Hoffman is also
Uruversity
freeze on hiring. quite distressed and tntends to caiJ
However. he indicated he would both Ms. Mathews and Ms.
pay her out of that fund if he had Coughlin and try to convince
to.
them that their positions will be
"It's peculiar that we were approved. "I'd be very happy 1f
hired
at all," insisted Ms. they can stay on," said Dr.
Mathews. "Dr. Hoffman had to Hoffman .
"They
are
both
know there was a freeze on hinng exceUent nurses."

McGrath, Potter
and Mangione

Bat McGrath end Don Potter, pictured lbove, will

..,.,_r tonight at the Peec:e Bridge exhibition Ctwtter
with Chuck Mangione. Mangione returns to Buffalo
with • quartet for this concert.

AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIEO •ds may ~ pl•ce&lt;l
Monday thru Frld•y between 9 am
and 4 : 30p.m . at 355 Norton H•ll .

THE UNDERGRADUATE PSYCHOlOGY ASSOCIATION

ts sponsoring an introductory weekend in
HUMAN RElATIONS TRAINING

........................
••
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entitled
"Becoming Sensitive in Interpersonal Relat1ons "

:

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A variety of techniques will b.: used , such as Sensitivity
Training Groups, Personal Reflection ~nd Non-Vetb~l
Techniques. The Weekend will be Held on FEB. 4,5,&amp; 6. If
interested , call the Undergraduate Psychology Office, at
811 -1701.

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~ag~ ~ix. :. T~~- ~l?~ctz:u.~ .. Fn~ay, January 21, 1972

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Fresh coffee
Hot chocolate
Donuts, Fried cakes
Sweet rolls, Danish
T \last and Jelly

New Hours·

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730 Main AI Tupper 8&amp;3-1515
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8:30a.m. to 2:00p.m.
Monday thr&lt;lugh Friday

(U.B. Food Service. Your Campus Food Service)

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Send em
to the
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Your boss. Your
mother-in-law. Your best
friend . Yourself. Anti you'll
get everything you deserve
Cant.astic chicken wings and
tangy sauce. 50&lt;' spirits
from 3 P.M. on. free
peanuta to shuck, giant aizE&gt;
sandwiches in a basket
lt'11 strictly come-as-yo'u·arto
to Th.e Woodshed. where
the kttchen's always open
and the music's always on.
~h£' Woodshed. Located
~tght next to the Packet Inn
tn North Tonawanda. Drive
o ut D('laware or take the
Youngmann.TheWoodshed's
JUBt over the Delaware
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except Sunday.

�tHarold and Maude'

•

&amp;ntimental love stnry if life
by Frank MMudtWio
Sp«trum FOm Critic

The movie is a complete entity

- a cyclical film. Its end is a

beginning, and this beginning
Very seldom, as a movie critic approaches an end. I can't divulge
(or film freak), have I wanted to too much lest I spoil the buildup
see a movie more than twice in a of tension . I can say that it is a
row. But when I find a film that 6Jm about life and death. Maude
entices, seduces, mesmerizes me expresses it well ," ... burials and
into seeing it four times, I feel it births .. . the great circle of life.
must be shared. The film is Harold All linked together."
and Maude and must be seen to be
believed. It is one of the finest Harold and Maode
motion pictures I have seen in a
Maude, Dame Marjorie Shadem
long time, not because of its ( Ruth Gordon) is one of the
artistic merit or cinematic value, warmest characters I have met on
but because I fell In love with it . the
screen . She
talks of
How can a cynical movie critic reincarnation and coming back as
faU in love with a sentimental a sunflower. What she really is is a
film? This question must be phoenix. In Arabian mythology.
carefuiJy answered. First , Harold the phoenix is the symtsol of
and Maude is brilliantly directed immortality , a bird which after a
by Hal Ashby. Ashby has a fine long period of time, consumes
co mic
sen se
(graphically 1tself in fire and arises from the
illustrated in the suicide scenes), ashes as a youth to begin life
yet he can capture the wannth of anew .
a movie in love wtth life .
Maude has been everywhere .

HOLDS FOR ANOTHER WEEK !

•
TOO BROWNINGS
•
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•
"fREAKS" AT: 7:20 &amp; 9:AO P.M.
•
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DEAD AT: 8:20 P.M.
•
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•
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• Don' t Miss This Underground Classic Presentation

•
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•
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•
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FREAKS'' ..

NIGHT OF
THE LIVING DEAD"

REll .~(;iOl JS S1lJDXES

COURSES

There are a vqrietv of new Rellgious Studies
courses offered through College 8 which still have
open registration :
CB 206 INTRODUCTION TO NEW TEST AMENT (4 cred •ts)
Brewster Tu 1·3 Reg No.
CB 208 PRIESTHOOD AND MINISTRY IN THE JUDEO-CHRISTIAII
TRADITIONS (4 credi ts)
Fisher Arr Reg. No. 172723
CB 222 WORKSHOP IN NEW TESTAMENT (4 credo ts )
Nllu Tu 10 12 Reg. No 172381
lcB 224 RELIGIOUS PERSPECTIVES ON CONTEMPORARY
SOCIETY (4 creditS)
Snedeker M 2-4 Reg No 172392
CB 243 RELIGION, LITERATURE AND VALUES (4 credits)
Buerk W 2 5 Reg. No 172676

done
everything.
She
tw
experienced birth, garden partie\,
officers with flashing uniforms,
marriage, campaigning for the
"big issues" - liberty , rights,
justice:
war. concentration
camps, created art and Odorifics,
''you know, sort of an olfactory
banquet." She has liberated
canaries from their pet shop cages,
believes that the world "dearly
loves a cage," and she steals cars
as a constant reminder, " here
today , gone tomorrow, so don' t
get attached to things." She ill
approaching 80, "time to move
on."

Family Life
Harold, Harold Chassin (Bud
Cort). Is -the product of an
overdressed ,
oversophist icated .
overbearing widowed mother . She
sw1ms to Rachmanmoff, sp1ces
her dta.logue w1th JUSt the nght
amount o f French and relates to
Harold to a senes ot l)ne-al.l plays.
She thnves on lheatm:~ He
answers her tn the only manner
that he can
on her own level.
lie stages bnlltantly elaborate
(and h1lauous) fake su rdde~ He
has a , hnnk . but s1nce they dress

An~cted

child can really rock
the cradle.
.~

Maude, on the other hand. sliU
alike, you begin to question just
retains
the
freshness
and
who ia the doctor and who is the
patient. He also has an uncle, Gen. innocence of a child, but her body
Victor Ba11, who not only looks is giving out. She and Harold fall
like a hawk, but was ''Gen. in love. They even share it with
MacArthur's right-hand man," the audience: it is the love of Ufe.
even though his right arm has
been amputated . Oh, yes, Harold lbe production
A few words on technique.
also drives a hearse and likes to
Colin Higgins wrote the script, an
visit funerals .
At one of these funerals , we exceiJent one. Cat Stevens wrote
meet Maude. The scene: A quiet the music, wh.ich added a great
funeral in a cemetery . The usual deal to the ftlm, especialJy the
group of mourners, including beautiful songs Tt!tl for the
Harold . They are seemingly Tillemuzn, I Wish, I Wish and the
praying. Medium shot of priest almost title song,// You Want To
reciting over casket. " . . . the Sing Out. Also strong was the
innocent of hand and the pure of final montage accompanied by the
heart." "AAACHHOOOOO." Pan song Trouble .
The acting was superb. From
to grave in background; woman
who sneezed is seated o n Vivian Pickles as the mother .
giving smug, melodically bitchy
gravestone eating an orange .
intonations, to Eric Christmas as
the sexualJy obsessed priest. AJso,
Tissue? 1 don't even ...
Maude has entered and wtth a Charles Tyner as Uncle Victor and
simple sneeze, she has defined her G. Wood from Brewster McCloud
character. Harold meets Maude . as the shrink were strong. Bud
Cort. Harold. is one of the finest
They become fnends.
actors
around .
His
But Harold strll has problems. young
He ts doomed from the opemng perfo rmance tn Brewster McCloud
scene. a su1c1de .
one of 19 was great. and his performance
staged "not fur h1s mother's here IS marvellous . He was made
benefit .. These su1c1dcs though for the role. Ruth Gordon,
terribly funny prepare w. for Maude. 1s l1ne of the grand old
Harold's untimely dem1se It IS Dames of the American Theater.
only a matter o f time His mother Broadway
stage,
Algonquin
recalls that as a ch1ld ," Harold was Round Table and the screen . f
prone
to
every
101aginable w uld wnte pages about her
disease." He IS doomed
but performance m th1s film . She is
not from any disease. lie IS radiantly beautiful at every
doomed because h1s existence moment. I love her .
luc;ks v1tahty . In lacl he "enjvys
See the 111m . Take everyone
being dead ." lt e needs to greet the you know . They'll love you . Al
dawn with a ••breath uf Inc "
the Ho liday 2.

is proud to present

Douglas Recordinx Artists

HOOTEROLL
JERRY GARCIA &amp;
HOWARD WALES
The
plu1.

MAHA NU/SHNU Orchestra
SATURDAY , Jan . 29 at9 :00 p tn .
THl:. CENTURY THEATRE. MAIN ST

Students $3 .50

Tkkets on

Non-students $5.00

sale Norton Ticket Office

Orchestra se.its on a first&lt;ome basis, balcony only after that I

a Division of Sub-Board I

Beef &amp; Ale House
3199 MAIN ST.
(0.

presents

A TWO - WAY WEEKEND

CB 279 RELIGIONS OF INDIA (4 cred1tsl
Chawla An . Reg. No 170889
CB 322 PHENOMENON OF LIFE-SCIENCE AND RELIGION
(4 credits)
•
Dr. Chawln, Or Bertell Arr. Reg. No. 172870
An aNempt to establish a relationship
between the scien}ific and religious
philosophies of East and West concerning
the physical and mental
phenomenon of life and death

For further information call
John Riszko, 831 -3631, 138 Dtefendorf

Block Soat.. Of UB\

Friday &amp; Saturday
Rock and Roll
with
E REVEREND SUNSHINE
I RITUAL HARMONY BAND!

I
I
I
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I
I

SUNDAY

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Nan Eichler
9 :30 - ?

Friday , January 21 , 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�I

EdiToRiAl

l

Poor plan
The Faculty Senate has quite properly recommitted
President Robert Ketter's proposed modification of next
year's admissions policy. We believe that Dr. Ketter acted
without proper basis. both procedurally and substantively, in
directing the Office of Admissions and Records to implement
his new policy.
Admissions criteria are the province of the faculty of this
university, not the president. Further, the timing of his
moves during a vacation period says little of his respect for
the work the senate had previously done i ~- establishing
admissions criteria.
As to the merit of the suggestion that 50% of next year's
freshman class be drawn from the eighth Judicial District, w~
feel that such a criterion has no place in admissions decisions.
Due to the huge number of transfer students admitted each
year, this institution already draws 53% of its student body
from Western New York. President Ketter's proposal would
likely boost this figure to over four-fifths of total enrollment.
To advocate a plan which would return the State
University of Buffalo to a local-university basis is to
repudiate the goal of national excellence to which we are
supposedly committed. Further, this plan is little more than
shamefaced pandering to the area legislators and as such
should be condemned out of hand.
It is depressing when the administration of this university
believes it necessary to compromise our ideals rather than
attempt to stand on our merits when dealing with state
legislators. Therefore, the Senate Admissions Committee
should refuse to countenance this novel arrangement .
Educational factors, not politics, should be the key
determinant in the foundation of admissions policy.

Wise actions
Within the next three weeks, the University Governance
Committee will release for public consideration proposed
articles of governance. Additionally , they have quite wisely
finalized
ratification
procedures
for the
various
constituencies before any controversies arise over the actual
substance of their proposals .
The Committee has also managed to avoid a pitfall u~on
which every previous attempt to establish a University-wide
government foundered. By not attempting to delineate in
advance which issues are University-wide and which are for
consideration by ex isting constituencies, they have averted
the self-destruction of their efforts. Jurisdiction shou ld be
loosely defined and any new body must be allowed to chart
its own course. not one set by another group.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol 22, No. 44

Friday , 21 January 1912
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold

Co-Managong Ed;tor
AI Benson
Co-Managing Editor
Moke Lippmann
Ast . Managing E..~otor Susan Moss
Business Manager - Jack Herlan
Advertosing Manager - Susan Mellentlne
C.mpus

City
Copy
Asst .
Feature
Graphic Am
Back page

Jo-Ann Armao
Jell Greenwald
How1e Kurtz
Harvy Lipman
, Ronni Forman
Marty Gallo
Claore Kroegsman
Lynda Ten
. Tom Toles
Amy Ahrend

Layout
Lit. &amp; Dn~m•
Music . ,
Off-Campus
Asst .
Photo
Asst .
Sports
Asst

B&lt;~rb Bernhard
Marvhope Runyon
Mochael Solverblatt
Bolly Altman
Lynne Traeger
Janos Croml!f
Mockey Oster reocher
.Kim Santos
Barry Rubon
Howoe Faowl

The Spectrum os served by Unoted Press I ntemauonal , College Press
Servocl!. the Los Angeles Free Po ess, the Los Angeles Tomes Svndocate and
Loberatoon News Servoce

Repui.Jiocatoon of ma11er hereon wothout the exj.lress consent ol the
Edotoo 111 Choef os forbodden
Edilonal Polley os deterononed by the Edotor-on·Chlef

Page eight . The Spectrum. Friday , January 2~·~ 972

==

-

' . . AND A Lin. AND A lltOtff. AHD ANontft Lin. AND A aiOHY JAL AND A Un.

A friend and I were forced to go carousing
recently . Had rnade a date to come for runner and
stay over, and it turned out to be the occasion of a
bridge party for his wife and some cohorts.
{Interesting to watch someone get anxious over an
ordeal - trial by examination of house - that they
clearly feel is suspect, but which is still of great
tmportance.) Which left us the choice of going
upstairs and sitting about with a six pack and the
chess set, or going out on the town .
So we went out on the town . Wheeeeee It
wasn't really a to tal disaster We were able to talk to
euch other. But being out on the town had
absolutely nothing to do with
that. In fact my paranoia
made it at least somewhat
more difflcull. My response in
a strange bar is the same as it
is In the Rathskeller. Keep
watching the people, because
1f you don't . .. apparently
they are gotng to get you .
byS-.
Somebody moved, check it.
Somebody came in, check it.
Nl of which ntakes me, as folks keep telling me. rwt
the easiest person to talk to 10 a public setting.
Anyway , he being a good listener and all, we
were getting into soule relatively interesting and
meaningful things about people and bars and the
state of the world and my semi-domestic affa1rs ,
when we JOined by a real live bar freak. Which
confirmed my basic suspicion. People in bars are
there for t&gt;ne hasit reason. They are looking for
something. They have an unknown itch which they
are trying lo find a means lo scratch and whkh
apparen tly goes away. at least momentarily , if
rubbed against a bar.
The world seems to be full of people whu are
afflicted by unknown it.:hes . This particular
Individual was a very lonely guy, who desperately
needed/wanted to talk In ~omeone. So we talked
about the army and such for a while. (I may be a bit
fouled up a lot of the time, but when I start telling
army stories, I know something funny •~ gutng on .)
Then we shot some pool, I actually won a couple
by hi:. sc.:r:Hching. (Lon!!IY and I , stnce friend wa!&gt;
somewhat polled by n{IW ) And then we (lnend and
I) split , hi go home . Gt•tllng to his house about
I I :20
you know ltow habitual ~.:aruusers are, they
we diM. overed that the
stay out until all hours
bndgeit::s had not yet 11bandoned the area.
So we ullreptdly set mrl to lo~.:ate another bar.
Where fri end had some rnore cigars .1nd a meatball
sandwt~h to crlchratc his liberauon and night out.
Th'c mt;;rtball sandwidt was apparently as had as the
first ctgar bat:k at ha1 one had been . fht5 bar was
SC\mewhal hvelier lhan lhe firsl unc ltaJ been . llcre
were .1 hund1 ''' I~ to early twenties upsi&lt;Jtc New
York small town ~~~y~ pl&lt;~yutg cards &lt;Jnd pool Jnd
whoopmg 11 "fl wtlh Jt1 JhundJIWc ,,r Y•Hithtu l

The

grump

Spirit .

Bcrng a ~fi l lY uhf m,tll I had 11\ltt,·eu leiJIIVciy
well and carefully th~: thr~:c young IJdk~ who had
appeared earlier 111 the t'Vening at bar I . and had
stayed fnr a wh1le shooting put• I and Sll forth . And at
bar two 1 recalled the old Lenny Btth:e nff about

...

going .to bed homey in a hotel and knowing that
somewhere in the hotel there was a young lady whn
was going to bed in the same deprived condition,
who probably would prefer not to. He proposed a
large scoreboard or information exchange in each
hotel where such vital information could he
exchanged .
It seemed to me, it, my mildly bombed state,
that there was clearly a oosmic imbalance in the
universe. II may be saying something about my head
that you have not already suspected if I say that I
tend to suspect almost everyone of semi-permanent
horniness. And it was clear to me thlt if somehow
three of the males in this bar could somehow havt•
made mutual1y satisfyjng contacts with the three
ladies in the first bar - there is a hint of chauvinism
there? - and inate preference toward dyads, ton
that somehow the whole world would have slept
better.
But to suspect that folks could put tl together
that much is clearly wishful (wistful?) thinking
Comes right down to it virtually none of the people I
know (including me, obviously) (especially me.
obviously?) are very good at being straight with what
they are wanting or giving. Which is not so very
surprising. Seems to me that we live in a cold
society. In which the people who are capable ut
giving, o r at least sharing, are in a woeful minont y
So folks bumble around hoping that they will
stumble across someone who can care for lhem
and/or like them , and/or love them.
There would seem to be a strong possibility thai
people in bars are looking even more strongly than
most other people, that they are in touch with thl'
emptiness and the loneliness a little more than somC'
- or are at least affected by it more . They get drrvcu
&lt;!n their rounds, a couple here, over to there for a
few more, and let's see what's happening at a new
place, by some constantly renewing hope that they
will happen across something or someone that wtll
make them feel better.
Of course most of the people that have any
sense of what they want , of the fact thai there arc
other people in the world who can and will share of
themselves, are not in bars . They are home - except
when the bridge dub is . I have the fantasies of the
crowded bars teeming with gorgeous woman . but
somehow tl never seems to be worthwhile to act on
such daydreams. There are entirely too many good
people that I do nut have the satisfactory amount ul
ume to be with now, much less I should start doing
the bar btl.
Bul tl is hard not to respond o n some level tu
the real sense o f need in such places, and specifically
an the Rat much of the time. A really restless allll
funny place, the Rat. Currents sliding around the
tables and chairs and up the walls People looking
people hungry and alone. Not knowing that it starts
at houle, in the inside, and that the best way to get
Mlttlel htng is l.l try and give Something. [f you foul tl
ttp. at least it was an error of reality whtch c&lt;sn be
\n,•kt•d at. not somethittg internal and intangibJc
tt'lltkred rndecipherable by tno m;my perhaps and
tnJyhes.
To give is risky, but it is the only way out of the
hole, the only way to get anything back. And the
real secret ts thaljust trying it works. Pax.

�Guest Opinion

Thank you, John
To the Editor:

by Bob Convissu
Only the name of John do I know for a
sophomore in pre-med a t the University of Buffalo.
Yet, 1 would very much like to thank him for
rallying to my assistance after a bad fall had
occurred to me on Main St. on Nov. 12. He tried
unsuccessfully to secure medical help for me and
finally took me to the Sisters Hospital from which
point I could manage independently .
John reinforced what I had always believed to
be true - the inherent goodness and kindness of
today 's young people for those in need of help. I am
tremendously grateful and would like to hear from
John if be recognizes himself from this.
Mrs. L. If. Ruslander

Paper parity
To the £dtfor

On Dec H. I IJ71, a letter In th e: c.d1tor
concerning the De partment of Spanish , ltaltan, and
Portugese appeared in The Spectrum wntten by
Shelly Eager. My only purpose ror tlus letter ts to
repudiate as overt lies virtuaJiy every sentence she
stated . I will only agree with a slight segment of one
~enh:nce in which she says, "To starr with , the utter
chaos and lack of d emocmtic procedures at the
meeting in my mind inva]tdate the credibdity of th~
vote." Yes, Miss Eager this as well as your entire
lclt er is all rn your mind• Her very next sente nce
states. "Several of my colleagues of S.I.P. refused to
allow any sort of oppOSition ... " Considermg as
was corroborated by the vote, you were the only
opptiSIIion (2 vote agat nst ). I'm sotry rf you were
not given enough time to expn:ss your own views.
Her nex t sentence states, .. After inv1hng 2 o f last
years representatives to the meeting, they refused to
let them answer the allegations they were accused of
and shouted them down with false accusations." One
of the 2 peoplt m-vited to the meeting was Mr. l.
Candee who spoke for 20 full mrnutes, but refused
to answer any ques t rons, wluch was supposedly his
purpose at the meet mg. After hearing Mr. Candee's
ho ring rhetoric, the mujority of those who were
present demanded d ir.-c t answers from h1m . ller next
sentences were : " They werl· shoutmg down those
very people that gave them the right to have a say in •
th~: department 10 the first pla ~..e W1th o ut the work
of last ye11r 's rcp1esentallvts there would he no
student panty within the SIP department today ,"
Dear Miss Eager , the panty y011 s peak of was only o n
paper The negative vutc regard1ng those very
under~raduates wh&lt;• gave us th e nght to have a say is
&lt;lnly J ~n nfirn\Jllon of I h t l..t~ k of s l uden t parity
t hat cx1sted rn thl.' dq&gt;otrtm~:nl Ja,t year. Next, sh~:.
rn ~nlron s that
" One o f the stude:nts tnStsted on
reading pantcular parts seleded by h inu.elf, of the
sec ret adv1sory co mmHit:e's report , w1th o ut letting
last yearo; representatives respond to what they had
111
n11nd , and refu~tng to Jet his fellow
undergraduates know his soun:es" Mrss Eager, you
forget very easily that at the same tim e that student
began read1ng tht: "secre t '' adVJsory report , Mr.
Ca ndee qutckly ldt Ih&lt;! ruum llo w .;an you expect a
" representative" to re~pond to the report when he
was nul prt~sent _to listen to the repmt Ill the first
place'' As fo r the student not allowrng his fellow
colleagues to know the o ngtn o f tlus report . that
very studtmt told his colleagues that such an act
could hurt t he: o.:aret-rs of certJIII 111dtv1duals, at the
same time telling them that 1f they so desired
" within 10 m111u1 cs" the repv11~ o.:&lt;Jllld be produ~..ed .
Not one student md udmg yo u Miss Eager insisted o n
further pursurng the matte r.
M1ss Eager I hen d e nies the vahdrt y of the
, tude rr t vole. She says, "They then pr c.~..eedcd to
cou nt the Jbstenttons fh ~:re were none." The re
were ' ix absten tiOns . as has already heen con firmed
hy o ur present rerresentauvc Jo hn AliUtlina in ll
lett er printed in Tht• Spt•crrum un the s:Jme date as
yours. Whose validitY ~h o uld he unubted, the
valtd1ty of the stud ent~ to vo t ~: . ur your vulidity to
co unt ''
hnally , she also \late' ' I he p1!1111on w,1s
o.:uculated by a hwlogy niJJ!ll du rmg d ass tum:
throu14h my l!al. 10 1 das~ . . " Ag:~in Miss EJger
ynu ncglel'l 111 llll'lllrun thai I he stu&lt;h'nl "a duuhk
111ajor
hiolt)gy :1 tH.l II&lt;ilia n . P ~tr h a p~ I Ita I '' what he
was J oing in an ll:tl 101 l.'l,ts.; wilh a pi.'IIIJOI1 th,tl
1.vncernet1 the future:.,, that very clc1~s
Hl cltl I • c·11r.wrr

Our student government leaders have a sad
tendenc)A to exclaim in desperation, ..but we have no
control over the situation,'' and then passively lie
down and let the administration and Albany steani
roll over them .
'rtte Student Association, faced with a serious
attack on student fees , Is doing just that. And the
Boyer Express, named after the beloved chancellor
of SUNY , rolls on, threatening such student projects
as the Food Co-op, the Draft Counselling Center,
University Press and the Day Care Center.
It is easy for our student leaders to throw up
their hands, sigh and retum to their desks to await
the next chance to throw up their hands. It is easy
for Albany to create policies which cut d own
student rights and privileges. It is easy for Dr. Ketter
to point to AJbany and for Albany to likewise point
to the ..law," that amorphous phrase which
somehow makes everything right for Albany . It's so
easy .
But law supposedly works for all and recourse
tel it · shouldn't be dismissed un til it is tried , nor
should the law be accepted until it IS proven. It is
not as easy to fight ; to put forth a position and stick
to it. It 's hard to defend something you think
belongs to you , because it takes guts and effor t.
"But elections are only a month and a half
away ; we'll be out of office soon. And besides, we
already got our last stipend check "
What happened to the hig talkers who inhabit
the SA offices'l The ones whu wtshed to be classi fied
as Angry Young Men The bullshllters who talk big
m a meeting, bul who quake In their work shoes
when sometlung needs to be done. You know where
they are - inside Dr Ketler's office. waiting for his
signature on a recommendation to Law School. A
signature which means he's been a good little boy all
yeai and hasn' t created any trouble ...
Standing firm and saying, "you can't push me
any further without getting pushed yourself," is
what we need from our student leaders . We need

someone with the courage it takes to stand on a
picket line, or someone who will be t~e first to stop
buying h.is Bic pens at the Bookstore or someone
with the intelligence to hire a lawyer who can fight
the SUNY system in a legal setting.
What is stopping the present SA leadership, our
eJected leaders, from having~ lawyer present a case
before a court or calling for a boycott of FSA o r
surrounding Hayes Hall, or putting any pressure on
Albany at all? Nothing except initiative, courage,
intelligence and the will 16 achieve.
"Why rock the boat when it aoesn' t really
matter. There is nothing we can do about it. Besides,
we' re all graduating in May ....
There are numerous exc\Jses, numerous reasons
for doing nothing. They range from the plausible to
the absurd. But people who seek excuses aren't
worth t he time it takes to listen to them . An excuse
works when it is proved to be viable. But that proof
itself requires action . When someone says that a
boycott won't work , how the hell does he know?
Out tl is a nice excuse. And the SA is fuU of excuses.

We will probably hear a great deal of talk and
saber·rattling fro m the SA , but most likely , nothing
will come from it . Students are correct when tht!y
say that the SA is Ineffective. But t he cause lies not
only with the system, but more basically with the
people who head it, those who make the d ecisions
that speak for the student body as a whole. These
so-called leaders, who move up the ladder from
''group1e," to tJnderling, to elected official, are
myopic in their viewpoints, limited in their goals and
totally without creativity. They react to crisis' with
alac rity and speed, except that they retreat . And the
government. and all that it could do, is carried alonJt.
But these leaders stay and perpetuate
themselves. And when It is time for reelection,
everyone who did not graduate will run again and
hope the students will either forget their inactions or
will have become so used to the situation that it will
no longer matter.
Good luck. gentlernen , wh&lt;~teve.r y ou decide

False accusations
To th(• l£tlttor
I fmd 11 necessary tu (O mmr.nl o n M!Vtl:.tl
care less stat e ments made tn let t c r~ wh•ch apptarcd rn
Tlte Spectr111n of Wednesday , Dec H, regardrng
undergraduate student n:prescntat1on 1n the
depart ment nf SIP
A letter by Mr . Cam.lcc st ated that the volco. at
a meettng o t the undergraduates of the department
refused to allow the1r maJors to be ascertained Th1s
10tatem cnt ts fal~e . 'I he t.(Ue~ l ton of whether or nnl
the vot e r~ wcrl.' maJOr.&gt; was nul evt~n hrought up at
thai meeting Mr Candee also stated that " there was
st rong ev1deni..e
t hat a majonty of th o~e vot111g
were not I majors I " I d rallenge him t o produce tills
"evJden&lt;;e."
In anothe1 letter, ~ hell ey l· a~er 111ade several
rderences t o ..tn umdenttfled "one o pposing vote,"
Without mentiunmg that th1:. "one" was herself I
would no w like to speak o n hchalf of the o ther 32
votes. As I am lhe author of the r ct1twn t o which
she aJso referred, I feel th:tt various Clrto neous
remarks mad e by M1ss Eaga must be clarified
F1rst of all , I am not a ~o ph o more ; acco rding to
my n:cords, I am u nclassified . Though at tl\e time of
the appt:arance of her letter, I was eight ho urs short
~tciiiCVIng junior status, I have enn ugh aedits t o do
so now . Secondl y, her attempt to use tillS Irrelevant
fact against t he v:ll1d1ty of my pe11110n 1s bt1th
amusing and ridi c ul () u~ I have already declared my
majo r in Spanish and to date I have lllkt:n 16 credit
hours o f Span ish courses rn the 200 level and
un()lhcr It• ho ur. in the 300400 level I lim
rnncernod ,1hout anti intere~tcd In tit~: curn.:utu w
and the teadung qualit y uf the d c purtrnenl , as
anyone tak•ng .:our":' tn lht&gt; depart men I would
n.rluratly lw And th1s f:rll JP I"ll le~ to 110n-ruajor.. as
well ~~ to ui:IJ&lt;Hs
M1s' J·.ager a,;, u~e~ 111.: nf hadl y .thusJng th~:
"panty" which vur Tl'l"liC\l'J1lJttvc' strugg!eu lu
oht aln 111 11170 , and damls that \ln~o.e I wtts not at UB
111 that ti111c I have nn undc:r~tanding elf th e~e
runblcrns. I ""' !:loth Ll&gt;nfu~ed Jnd :rrnuscd by Ml~S
hager'' lng11.. I he ~ubjed of m y pct1tion IS not what
happened In IY70 , but wh:11 happe ned rn II.J71 ,

dunng which time parity was su pposed to be 10 tts
first full yellr of existence. The past d et ails of the
struggle to formuJate student parity are meanm&amp;)ess
when that same parity is subsequently perverted and
man1pulated as 1t was in 1971 .
Lr) t year the majo nty of the undergraduates
were never informed about their meetings and did
no t e~e n know who their "representatives" were.
Thetr 11ptnions about the teaching quality of the rour
professors 1n question were never polled. most dtd
no t even knnw tha t the evaluations were takrng
plale When affairs within the department (on which
undergraduate representallve~ are ~u pposed to vote)
are kepi secret fro m the student hudy, ho w can
demoo.:racy extst''
It L~ thi) d1~ho ncst representation to wluch my
pe11t1o n refers, the false democra~:y that t.s now a
part of the pro~:edures of th e d e partment of SIP IS
wor~e than oo d emocra ~..y at all.
An\llhl.'r letter by Mr. Martm . Mr P1cclu , Miss
Bo h:k and M1 . Aqutlrna contarned the statement thft t
"only len o f thl" Jpproximately SO student s present
at thts meeting ~• gned an attendance sheet . which
the full body was re peatedly reminded to sign ., Th is
is a lie , No sud1 "atte ndance sheet" ex1sts, before
th ~: meeting, I spokl." w11h Mr. Aqu11tna , who
tnformed me that he was ~:.ompiling a list o f majors
fvr future use as a mailing hst. This is the list that
was crrc ulated dunng the meeting, and he asked only
that th os~: whose: names were no t already on the l1st
should stgn
I ;1111 rro t the o nly undergrad uate who L~
ext rr.mcly tlrsappo1nt ed with tl11s arret uth ~r actions
taken by •lllr re presentatiVes lhts ye&lt;H Mr Aqu11ina
and M tss llcHCk seem to be constantly in
disagreement wtth thetr to nstltucnts Although they
werl.' elect ed hy nnly I S voter,, they have quc~t1nned
the val1dity of a peltll&lt;ln- ell nlatntn~ 1'15 sig n atu re~ .
And 111.&gt;t only ha vl' they fail ed to ~uppo rt a vote o f
.l~ - 1 fwm tlwu l'onstt t ucnts , hu t they h3 vc nu w
:1tll.'m ptcd 111 und.:tnllllt' the 1ep1~:~ental iverti.'SS of
1h1s V&lt;lle 1• xactly who ar(' th ey n.:prc~enting'l
(\·rt;llnly nut the 11ndcrgrutlu.tlt: o;tlHJ~o.n t s.
/'utrrnu Campl1ell

UIHlo •rgrtul llllft ' .'&gt; fi&lt;J m.vh

MaJor

Friday, January 21, 1972. The Spectrum . Page nine

�Brutality charges.
acknowledged by the state government. The petitioners
then decided to present the charges to local city and
county police commissions. "Only out of desperation did
we take ow case to the federal courts," said Mr. PerreUo.
" We had no other alternatives."

District court ft!ftllfld
The compound case was originally dismissed by Judge
Henderson in District Court on the grounds that the
complaints did not state a course of action. In November
1970 the suit was taken to the U.S. Court of Appeals in
New York· City . In the appeals presentation, ACLU
lawyers argued that the lower district court "appeared to
believe that the only appropriate relief against the
defendants (Sedita and Feticetta) was the 'ballot box' ."

CONVERT YOUR
SPARE TIME INTO

IUbpoena witnesses, the board merely became an adviJory

• •
The appointment of a federal ••overseer" wu explained u
being only one alternative to insurin&amp; adequate police
review . "The di&amp;missal of this case from the district court
can only be justified by a failure to distiQ&amp;uisb.between
right and remedy even if the remedy sought was indeed
unavailable," swnmed the ACLU appellants. The Court .of
Appeals unanimo usly reversed the decision. This action
sent the case back to the original district court , where the
suit will be retried.
Lost control

Mr. PerreUo mentioned two methods of instituting
"checks" on the police department and other government
agencies. One alternative, a pollee review board, has
previously been tried in Buffalo, but lacking power to

cdmmfttee. The baud was also handicapped by the
opposition of the Police Benevolence Committee,
according to ACLU workers. The creation of the European
idea of an ombudsman h.u also been suggested. Here again,
aaid Mr. PerreUo, the public is in opposition to any
attempt to single out the police department for possible
injustices.
Mr. Perreije
concluded that someone must take the
-...___..
responsibility and account for the mounting numbers of
citizens' claims of police violence, if not the individual law
officers, then the supervisors and employers of those
officers. As the legal brief presented to the U.S. Court of
Appeals states, lf Mr. Sedita and Mr. Felicetta have
encouraged or condoned the "illegal, improper and
unconstitutional" conduct of their police officen, then
they have "so lost control over the conduct, practices and
policies of some of their employees and agents as to make
effective law enforcement impossible."

$$$$

We don't call our new beer

"Super''for nothi~J9.

M cl)omuf Super IS d1fferent hom ord.ndry beer or die or mdlt l1quor 01e Cdn dnd you11
know just how different N\dxrmus Super rec:~lly ts. '&gt;6u11 dlso know how IN'e drrrved dt 1ts fldme.

SPEEDED READING
AND STUDY
Division of undergraduate
studies again offers Mrs.
Nichols non-credit course.
Weekly sessions. Nominal
fee, $15 .00 payable at
registration in room 305
0 i efendorf- before January
31st.

~,
JUCAIIud

IHSPBCW.

Served Mon. thru Fri.
Until 11 a.m. and
Sun. th ru Thurs.
AFTER 9 :00p.m.
Sun. thru Thurs.
3 BUTTERMILK PANCAKES
OR TOAST PLUS 2 COUNTR
FRESH EGGS, ;u you like 'em.

65¢

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3637 UNION ROAD
-...__,:;.. h open 24 hn. Clally .._.,~r

Liver and Brown Kice $l .H5
California Swinger .... 1.95
Hamburger Strog.moff 1.45
Small Sirl o in Steak
(Boneless)1.45
Chicken Roqucf on ... 1.65
Beef Bourguinon ..... 1.75
Choice Omelet ... .. .. 1.35
Ground Beef (Organic) 1.45
Petite Filet M "~non ... 1.95
Vegetable fempura ,
Brown Ri ce1 .45
Vegt-table Scallops ,
Brown Rice1.65
Roast Sesame Chicken 1.65
Egg Plant Parmesian .. 1 .75
and many daily specials

Page ten. The Spectrum . Friday, January 21, 1972

�Freaky horror flicks ,

Keeping a delicate balance
Setting the mood for horror isn't easy. you have
to create a delicate tension in the minds of the
audience. The pace of the editmg, the undermining
quality of the musical score, the forcefulness of the
images, all must combine to form a continuum of
experience. A cont inuum wluch can be shattered by
the sliahtest tittering from an audience member or
the roll of a soda can from the back of th e movie
house to the fro nt. Such is the delicate balance
bel ween t h e true horror movie and the 'monster'
movie.
In the lustory of horror films , there have been

all too few moments of startling horror. Lon Chaney
Sr. when he is unmasked in the Phantom uf the
Opera, the stabbing scene 10 Psycho, the scene in
The Brain That Wouldn't Die where th e mutant
locked up in tbe room escapes and proceeds to tear
the flesh from a man's neck ; who can forget the
ho rror of th e moment when the creature turns
around with a bit of flesh dangling from his
Jeformed hps (for that matter wbo can remembe r
the movie?) Cannibalism. the unkown , darkness,
laughter all are mgramed 1n the horror film

freak.s
Back 1n the early tturt1es a movie was released
enulled Frt'ak.s . The film was so homfying to
.1udiences that it's showing was banned in the Umted
States until 1963 D1rec ted by Tod Brownmg (whose
.:reattons include the first Drac ula film w1th Bela
Lugosi and Dt'vr/ Doll Freaks was the qumtessential
horror film of the thirties . In a delicate combmation
o f pathos and uneasiness, Browmng brought to th e
~necn a tender yet homfy ing story or revl!nge
CurrentlyFreaks IS tounng with J
new
generation horror film entitled Nrght oj the /.rvrng
Dead Made JUSt outside of Pittsburgh . the film was
released a few years ago and nobody saw tl or even
.:a red to see 1t It was lost m the shuffle between the
\hck cnmson cuJt films of the Hammer organiz.atton
dnd the rash of sex horror films like Thr Vr/11et
Vumptre .

Recently It has re-emerged and quic kly caught
nn Since then •t's been a box-office smash. The ftlrn
whtther consciously o r subconsciously is a synthesis
l)f tilt horror/monster film . It is a combination of
.:anemattc cltches and diaJoaue riaht out of a clteep
dtme gothic ho"or novel, which makes 1t alJ lhcb~t~
.

~29 ~
half price

It easily evoke$ laughter from the so phisticated
audiences of today and quickly becomes all the more
terrifying. Lon Chaney Sr., the master of horror,
once said that the most horrifying thing was to open
a door at midnight and find a clown's face staring at
you. Laughter and fear are symb1otac creatures and
one cannot exist without the other.
The opening IS minutes of the film are just
exquL~ite. Editing that's so tight it h:~rdly gives you
lime to breathe coupled with the simple exposition
of ' They're coming to get you Barbara ' (which they
immediately do), the film Oies off mto a flight of
ghoulish delight.

RECORD OFFER
50°/o

Midnight Feast
As the audience sijs back in its seats and says
'Oh, my god,' the fllm enfolds with a series of head
smashings and blood drippings. The climax coming
when the young heroine named Jud y and her
muscle- bound boyfriend get fried and eaten while
trying to escape the confinement of th e su rrounded
house The scenes of corpses gnawmg on bones and
play1ng with entraals is as entertaimng as anythmg
Feli.Jn1 accomplished in Satirycon .
One of the more startling aspec ts o f the ftlm lS
its hero, black man named Ben . This dude keeps bts
cool thrcrugh most of the ftJm and. surprisingly. not
once as it mentioned in the dialogue that h e is black .
It's always ' that guy' or ' Ben' or ' h1m '
ThiS bnngs up a pet theory tlus reviewer has
about the film . For me, Ben becomes the carrier of
the dasease which causes the dead to hve once again
and c rave after flesh Ben knows ho w to fight the
creatures, he is in the h ouse all the time with the sick
ltttle g~rl who IS mystenously affected by the diSease
whtle htdden m the basement. And, finally, Ben 1s
shot whtle the rescuers are looktng for survtvors,
uonu.. , yet not so rf he is the carrier
The biiJing of these two films shows the lasting
power of a good mov1e Frt!a/cs and the power of a
lasting moVJe made 1n the lhlrtres shU retains aJJ of
the horror and repulsiOn that a movte made m the
sixties does
And besides, if you want to go to the theater
and tear the end off of your popcorn box and cover
your eyes as weU, that's okay It 's fun to be
friJbtened once U\ awbUe!

- Drlvrd Grq

THE STUDENT ASSEMBLY ·
willrneet

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L-------------~---~

Friday , January 21 , 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�1'

·-

(
act1on
lin€
I

I

Evelyn Wood

l/a11e a problem 7 Nud help? Do you find it impouible to untangle
tM Uni11emty burtaucracy? In cooperation with th e Offiu of Student
Affairs and Ser11ices, The Spectrum sponsors Action Line, a weekly
reader service column. Thro ugh Action Line, individual studentt can
get answers to purzling quutions, find out where and why Um11ersity
decr.rions are made and get action where change is needed.
Just dial 83 1·5000 or visit the Action Line booth in the Center
Lounge in Norton Hall for individual attention. The Office of Student
Affairs and Service1 will investlgat~ all questions and complaints, and
will answer them individually. The name of th e individual originating
the inquiry is k.ept confidential under all circumstances. The more
common questions w1/l be answered In this column 1!4ch wuk.

Q : Do 10 cards hiVe to be validated for this semester?
A : Yes, they do. Yo u may have them validated in Room 16 Foster
HaU. The ho urs for the next tw o weeks will be Monday through Friday
from 9 - 9 p.m . After th is t ime, there will be shorter hours t o be
announced . So we urge you to ta ke care o f this now. The validated 10
card is necessary if you want to check books o ut of the Ubrary, if you
want to cash a check , etc.

Take afree Mini-Lesson and increase
your reading speed on the spot!

Q : I bouaht a couple of boob from the Bookstore and now flnd
o ut that I don't need them. Can I return t hem?
A : Yes, you can. Here is the policy of the Bookstore on the return
of textbooks :
I . Hard cover books must be returned within 20 days from date o f
purchase w1th cash rejpSter receipt. Under no circumstances will a
refund be made without yo ur cash re&amp;fster receipt.
2. Paperba ck boob must be returned within ten days from date o f
purchase along w1th cash re.Uter receipt.
3 . Those books which were purchased for the fall semester after
Dec. I , the spnna semester after April I or the summer session , 14 days
after the s tan of the session will not be refunded.
4 . Books must be absolutely free of aJI markinp.
S. The Bookstore is t he sole JUdge in determining whether books
are in new o r used condition.
6 . "S pectal Order" books are not returnable.
7 Review books are not returnable.
8 . Defec tive books wilt be replaced at no charge and sho uld be
returned at once.

Know why we invest so much
m our free mini·lessons7 Bro·
chures and catalogues can't
possibly describe what it's
hke to read a book
like
Exodus (all 499 pages) in 1
hour and 48 minutes. Or an
entire Time Magazine in 35
m mutes.
Instead we invite you to spend
6 0 minutes this week at a
m1n i·lesson. We' ll stlow you
why two presidents (Kennedy

&amp; NilCon) personally brought
the course into the Wti1te
House so staff members c ould
learn the Evelyn Wood tech·
nique.

lesson reading slowly.
One last thing, back in 1964
we adopted the following as a
national policy : "We promise
that you 'II read at least 3
times better than when you
At a mim·lesson, we actually star
ted or we' ll refund your
increase your reading s~ tuition."
That policy still
on the spot. Just e little, stands.
to be sure, but enough so
you 'll know how it feels.
By the way
don't worry
about how slowly you read. That's 1t The schedule o f free
Everyone comes to a mml· m1m·lessons is listed here.

a t EVELYN WOOD READING

Fr iday, J.nuery 21 et 7 :30p.m .
end
SATURDAY. J.nuery 22 et 11 :00 p .m .

DYNAMICS INSTITUTE
3606 Main St.
(Next to lk.lf. Textbook)

-

For further informrtion Clll - Warren Waldow 837-2823

Q: I wan t to havt the mandatory student fees waived. How do I go
about it?
A You mu.~t fill o ut an applicatio n for waiver o f mandatory
studen t lees Th1s ap phcallo n IS available an the S tudent Associatio n
office . Room 205 Norton or .tt t he Office of Student Affam and
Serv1ces. ~0 I Hamman L1brary The completed applicatio n must be
returned by feb I, \ ()72 t o be considered. We should note here that
the Student Assoc1at1on hsts as reasons for a fee waiver o nl~ the
follo~.~-ang -;cvere financ1al hards h1p or independen t study abroad or
away for the Buffalo area For more mformat10n please see the St ud ent
Asso~1at1on 10 Norton

I~

Q I got a " Bursar Chec~top " on m y course card even th o ugh I
bad received notict&gt; that I was rt&gt;ceivina Scho lar Incentive Award. I had
to pay it t"ven though lht" money will come through enntuall y. What's
the story?
A On Oe~o .1, 1'171 , J memo was 1ssued for all students from the
Bursar's Office Th1s IS what 11 sa1d "To av01d a s pring 19.72
regist ratiOn " Bursar Checkstop" students should cle&lt;~ r any o utst anding
balance 1mmed1ately. It IS Im po rtant to understand that NO credit has
been extended for any summer sess•o n 1971 Scholar IncentiVe Award
nor for fall 197 1 Sc ho lar l ncent1ve Awards dated after Oc.:t. 4 , 197 I.
Credit for fall I 97 1 Scho lar Incen tive A wards dated prior to Oct 4 .
1971 can be gran t ed o nl y if a power o f attorney is on file prior to thai
da te" You will , ho wever, rece1ve your money from the Scholarship
lncenttve when 1t com es. Th1s wtll be g.~ven to you 1f you ha ve no
balance or Will be credited to your account. It s hould be not ed that th1s
IS one of the few schools that extends any credit Most schools demand
payment when you register fo r that semester. The hassle above 1s about
debts due from thr prev1ous semester

9

m mme~ = •c ~

NOW OPEN!

A DiffERENT SOUND,

II
I

A DifFERENT LIGHT

ALWAYS A GOO D TllME

Remember that th e Office n) StuJI'nt AJfaiT.I and St'TVH't•s ol.w
operates the ActiOn luu• table tn the Center Lmmgt' of Nort on each
day from I 0 a m
.J p m An,. problems you ha l't YIIU wn bring there
for o reach and qwd. answu The bonth rs stuffed hY studenls und
sta ff 111 addlfu.m w atlvrsurs from DUS.

2525 W"alden

Campus Productions Presents

CHUCK MANGIONE
QUARTET

M

I

You have to see it to believe it.

and

BAT McGRATH&amp; DON POTTER
In Concert

FRI., January 21

8:30p.m . .

Peace Bridge Exhibition Center - Porte• Ave.
L1m1ted amount of $4.00 tickets on sale now at: Festival
Tickets - Statler Hilton Lobby ; Norton Union - U.B.; Buffalo
State Ticket Office; Falls Tickets - Haeberle Plaza, ·· r a
Falls. WHEN GO NE, ALL TICKETS $5 .00

SUNDAY- student Sun. all students with college 1.0. admitted FREE!
MONDAY- astrology night, current sign admitted FREE!
TUESDAY - appreciation night, everyone admitted FREE!
WEDNESDAY-I~di~ night F ~EE!
THURSDAY - dnnk n drown nrght, all the beer you can drink
GUYS $3.00 - GALS $2.00
FRIDAY
and SATURDAY

1
"

l_

ALWAYS A WILD WEEKEND

(proper attire requ ired)

(P~ of ... m ust be It!own gels 19, ouys 211

.r

~~~~33. . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . .a.....

Page twelve . The Spectrum. Friday, January 21, 1972

_)
/

�You WeU Meanina Brouabt Me Here Ralph
McTdl (Paramount PAS-60/JJ

~EOClRDS c
"You know my dog died just yesterday
And left me all alone
The finan ce company dropped by today
And repossc1sed my home
But thats just a drop in the buck~t
Com{Jflred t o losing you
I'm down t o sus and Item s again t oo. "

Lose

in

the Otone Comtr~~UJd~r Cody

!Paramount I'A S60J 7)
I'm sure you 've all heard " Lase Lonely
I Jgle" from the New Rid ers album Well ,
tlu you recall the reaUy pretty piano
Jt.:ompaniment on tt'' That 's Comm ander
t ody And even though h ~ has been
.tround a good while, that is as much , tl
~:v~:n th at much, as m ost people know
.thout !lim . Whi ch ts trul y a shame, because
111 these tryi ng ltm es. genu ine fun atn'l all
that easy to come by. An d that ts exactly
whJt Commander Cody and Ht~ Lost
I'IJrwt Atrmcn are toto.
I h~:rr music rs an authentu.. rn rx ture of
• •Htnt ry ;md weslern a nd sou th ern rock
.11ul roll And I mean rea l C&amp; W, not West
r "·"' rock hdnd turned coun try . country
nuhtl And therr rock and roll tS JUSt the
'Jm~. wrth tllctr root&lt;; com mg stratghl from
( .trl Jicrktns. Jerry Lei.' lewis a nd Elvts
It J. c;cils rs 1ru• second genera lio n
ttJh.tn rod...111tl roll. then the Co mmander
,, 1 hell rurJI counterp.ut. And tf you don't
hl·lu:ve tl JUSt hsh 1 to \Orne nf thetr
rumt.~
A belter ~cl ol rock and roll
'"'"lendJtures I hJV l'n't heard BtiJy C
I o~lluw from l&gt;t:~o:&lt;t lur , Alabama , Buffalo
Uru• e lla rl11w. La'",. Dickerson. Wesl
\ tr~ttntd ( reeper I\Ill• rcplaled by Bobby
III.Jdd tnd tU~I '" ,!Jnw that they 'rt- not
prqudltl'U thert· " \ nt ly Stetn nn fiddle
JnJ,,tx
I It,· .!lhut 1 '' hast~o:ully d tvtded 1nto tw o
wttll
rh..ftrst
stde
being
JH&lt;'&lt;htllltll.lflll&gt;
n111ntry
"8Jt'l.
To
I \'tllll'"l'\' · " Jhnut J ~.:ounl ry ho) wh o
lll·.uh ''" l&gt;clrott , ~eh t~red ut '&gt;ntfftng glut&gt;
tnt! •k•tdc' 111 "httJlk one o l lhcm hrgJet
tll.tll&lt;'' .1nd ~~·on had. In Tennes~ce" F or
tnt"l of 1h1~ \Ide, tht' band LS pretty
,,.,,r.JIIH'd, l'flh tlnly the Com mand er
tl' tlh L\lo"mg on ptauo He play~ o~bout
till' h.,nl..y tonl..u:sl ptt~nn you'd ever wo~nt
'" hl'JJ l·veryonc ~,,,. '' playtng perfec t
"'urttry pJrt~. really ~wcet pedal o;h•d from
th1 t rt"eper, Btlly ('\lonesome harmonu;a
Jlld '\ ndy StcJO ftlllllg 10 all over on frddk

P·""·

I h,· ne\t two &lt;;tlllg:&gt; ~ort nf gu logethc:r
' "-till' Do Yer Stuff" '" abt,Ut o1 guy who
Itt' gJrl, heads f,lr the har ,JOd dro wns
•1111 111, '"rmw "Sel'lh And Stern s" se ts th e
'-•lite wene, only tis ,1 dtlferent generation's

It,,,.,

Ostensibly, these two son~ sh ouJd be
sad. but th ere is humor in the lyrics and
vocals of almost all lheir ~o ngs . Another
example is " Family Bible." a tun e about
·Just t hat, and all t he m emo ries it holds. It
would be really touching if sung by an old
southe rn er, but here it comes off
humo rous. In the mtddle of th e song,
rhythm guitarist J o hn Tichy delivers,
obviously tongue-in-c heck, a sh o rt ser mon.
''You know thiS o ld wo rld of ours is so full
o f trouble, But I th tnk thiS o ld wo rld o f
ours would o h so better be, If w e found
more family btbles on the table, And
mother's si ngrng Rock o f Ages, cleft for
me " It must be heard .
" Lost In The Ozone" opens sadc tw o.

" I'm lost

tn

fire O=une agatn,

I'm lost 1n th&lt;' Oznne axa1n,
One dnnk of wuw,
T'wti t.lrin AI 1,/ /(ln.
And I'm Ins tin tlu• Uzonr aKOin. •·
Self-explanatory. tlc re, you cll n begm lo
hear the band step o ut wtth both Btll
Ktrchen on lead and Buffalo Bruce o n has~
getttng o ff sptffy nffs. " Madntghl Shift"
keep~ yuu rockmg and tt features BtUy C\
best l:.lvas voice, and, once a~an , a fine
pta no pa rt by th e Commander
" Hut Rod Lancoln" fuii&lt;IW' Jnd 11
spo tlights the frog-h ke vocab
the
Commander hum~ll Stmtldr to a to~lktn'
blues. rt'~ .;lmul dro~ggang d own the stnp
and 11\ hilarwu\ Througlwut 1ht.: s!IH}' ,
the Creeper, Stem and Kir~. hcu J)r••vtdc till'
.tppropnate hackground Jl;\.UIIIp.llltmenl
tomplete wrlh Andy', fiddle hel;umrng .t
pohce stren
1 he last three ~.ut&lt;&gt; are ltvc " What'~ The
M.Jtt~r Now" slow~ !hangs IJuwn a btl ami
wh en Btlly L say, " tell 'em Com mo~ndcr ,"
he don just chat li t~ solo c. followed by
pc.:tlaJ steel, fiddle and gutt ar solo~o, all short
and tn thl! pmnl 'Twenty Fhg.hl Rod,"
bring:. the pJ t:t nghl hat.:k agatn, .tnd the
humor too . I I'~ Jtwut a guy whu ha~ J grrl
who lives on the twentieth nt~tH ,IOU her
l!ll'Val cn i.~ hrokt:n
Fa.:ed wtth tht'
thkmrn.t, o~nd Jl'o reJIIy ~dnltng to Jtlll.
and rull he de,tdC'' to ntn up th.: \IJih
When Itt gel\ It• the top, Ill'\· l out ltr&lt;'U

••I

w

Ru~. 1..

"toni tnlllllg Wit It lht U1om· Rr.ts~ .
ltttle huugr~.: wvo~t&lt;' t,dled 'B&lt;':tl
Me 0Jdd y Erght Too lh~.: HJr · I he lund
reJII&gt;- gt:h 11 on hl're, wtlh ~.:vcryou,
'olmng Ftr~l the ( otllm J nd~:r ilh'll pnl,JI
,,,.1.'1 h; tlu: Creeper Andy ~tetn on 'J'
then Btlt K.trc hen pub down ht~ llUIIJr JnJ
dot:' Ill Jlt lhrngs, ,I frolnthllill' \IIIII thellll'
Inc: 0/.()n&lt;' Brass). J ltllle hJrp ''''"' Btllv 1
.tnd \UIIIl' bass run' from BuiJ,Jio Bruu·
Then I he hJntl "JJIII\ onl! 11111~ • .onJ you·v,·
JUSI ltnt~&gt;hed cute "tllrr ol all alhum I'lL"
Up /r1.11 In Tnt• O·r11t1' Jnd have: yuu rwll .1
lint• 11111.: Yuu dewrv,· tf
hen:·~ J

In recent years England has given birth
t o so m e very ft.ne folk sinaers. Their newest
co n tribution t o t h e folk world is Ralph
McTeU. He h as made three succe~ful
English alb ums and h as solidly sold o ut
Festival Hall in l o ndon twice within six
mo nths. Man y consider him to be
England's m ost talent ed folk artist a nd h e
no w stands o n the verge of international
recognition
His new album is called Ynu Well
Meaning Brought Me Here an d is very
differe nt
from
his
o ne-m an
stage
performance. The si mple sonas are laid
• over a complicated fou ndatJon of drums,
harmoniu m , mooa, strinp and brass. " I
d o n't wish to tell peopie what. to do o r
how t o live. I' m o nly ju~t lea}ning myself,"
McTcll a dmitted in a recl!uUi nterview w it h
Circus maga zm e. He never rea d s his good
reviews, but h e collects h l!l bad ones in
o rder to learn fro m them. He wants to
kno w exactly wha t the people aren't
relaltng to in his music.
McT ell start ed an Eng}and :ts a "busker·,"
a street mustc ian who lives o n the co1n'
people toss to hrm He sang lm way across.
Eu rope many limes only ta return In
Engla nd because of severe stckness. li e
once had to spend a few nights to jarl as J
requJt of singi n g in the Pans ~treets. "Old
Brown Dog'' IS d retl~ct ion on th e lnn~l y,
desolate, rag cove red street beggar
"nfC• 11/d brown t.log slt't'ps 111 tho ratn
unlt•:ss tlrl! Hln hal

•hont'
ntat old hrll\\ln dog l,f alllllrmt• .rrnt't' tJit/
Btl/ l&gt;t't'n Rllflt'
1nd rlt'&lt;'/ltfiJ: "' !Itt• ralft on/\' Kfl'l'\ u Jot:;
tJ bad nam1•
I I IJc/1 ~&lt;t'rt' a/tl!r I /..IWW h•· \\ 1111/tl
J,·ntf,• Ill Ira 1'1 fill' Wltlt'
1111111/ t/1111 I' ..
Itt~ vntc•· •~ st rona but flnws .:;alrn :.tn1l
\Wet:lly Jllcl Crl'aiC'&gt; the tmJ~l' of U WJ!Ol
)Uilllllt.:r mnrmng tn the ~.:ountry li t~ gultJI
piJytn~ c. generally
hght ~u .. h Js tn
"Gene~ts I Ver.e 20" Jnd bi!I.Oil\0::. heavy
at tt mes when he ts acl;~nlln~ " pJrttcuiJr
part ol J song Thts style I&gt; very eflclltVl' u\
prnductng J de!&gt;tred mood .tnd when hl' "
try1ng to relate .an 1dca.
Tht' ~lrong pornt of hts new Jlbum" the
'"" Pic lyn~., of hi!&gt; SOilS' M .. I en·~ 'on~~
J re tl\ually .tOO lit SUbjeCh I hJt Jtt: IIIII wdl
~.overe d . lie llelll'l SlOt!&gt; about 111~ I11Vc
prohlems like other tolk st n t:ter~ fn..t ,·.td hl'
''n~ .thout
,tn ln,·tdenl fl()nt lle5.\e·,
StJdhlluh,t I ' I h•· h:trynr.an' I 111 lh~
-~lleC:t' lit I 1111&lt;11111 ..
In 'ltr'\1 tnd 1.1\t Man Mlldll'\f'll;tH"
tll.IOY o1 n.lturt•\ ~1mpl e du!Je' th.tl lte
lulttlh JJtiY M.. r 1.'11 tclh lhlW he 111!1\l he
hoth .1 lalhl'f Jntl" rrovtdo·l II•• ··n,h lh•
\toll~:t h) ll'lltng Y•IU ho~ he keh "'"•Ill hh
enllr e roll ,,, ,, man
I 11111 tlr,· ma/...t·l of tnll\11
lntlth1· fl'ada tl(lltt• llt'l/1' 1'11\
fum 1111• "'"'"'' nf maKtt'
t /lol llrl' l&lt;'afl'l 11/1/llflll\

I

&lt;Jill

1lu

11n11

r

The band that wu formed solely fo r the
pro duction of the album it Uvely and very
toaether. Thei r foundation ad ds a lot to
t h e melodies o f the songs t h ey are used in.
When McTeU wan ts to bury you in
happiness and good feelings he1J use the
electri c instrumen ts. Caleb Quaye, who has
played with Elton John , plays electric
guitar o n a few songs and co m es ac ross
clean and fine . "Claudia," which is the best
cut on th e album, is about a whlt e man and
a black gin enteri ng a bar together. A racial
battle later en su es a fter a few drinks. Caleb
Quaye's guitar work relates the tenseness
of th e sce ne and , along with the drum s,
co mes in later during t h e fight to h elp give
you the feeling of a raging battle . The song
end s quietly with the h elp o f some
brilliantly placed violins. The electric band
and strings are never misplaced, wasted or
overdone o n th e album.
You Well Meaning Brought Me Here is a
ve ry fine album . AU the so ngs are well
written and are weU arranged. Ralph
McT ell sh ould become a g~anl in the music
world here 111 America once he tl&gt; h eard.
And I never meant to com e tltrs far
II ;rei lt1t'W'r rhouglt t I'd /osr my woy
And" "~'-' I know who rh rv are
IJut I .rrt!/ get hun h1• th&lt;' thrngs they
fall

I'm sur.: Ralph McTell Will never want
to read my revtcw and hvpdully our "well
meamng'' wtll he s hown.

Sheldon Kam 1emerkr

·· You're married a year
now. When are you gotng
to give us gran dch ildren'"

"I bet my parents would
send ua money if we had

a baby ... "

" Why knock myself out
wnrkrnJC when I ran h11 vt'
II hahy ~"

Planned Parenthood

Children by choice Not chancf&gt;.

111 11111J

I 11m tlr' lt'.l r a11cl lui/ "'""
l11./ 1/ /1 1111/tl ll'ad lfrc /ttlttr.·
I ll'tw/tl til/... hw 11111 111, om•

For further tnformatton, wntt·
Planned Parenthood, Box 431,
Radto Ctty Statton, N. Y., NY 100\9

111\WCr

B&lt;a.c k.

fv.., .fk fcUni ly ?

ITS NOT TOO LATE TO REGISTER FOR

NeetJ a. vcz.co.tio H ~
Na..lce Hr. Goodl:»ca.r you ..
hott\e Q.J,Jo..y ft-oM h o '-' •our- f~iLy
..
wiLL tca.ke C4t-a of you.

~~~o~o

t

EUROPEAN
DRAMA

r-

A study of Shakespeare to Artaud
Grven by Distinguished Faculty Professor

·Rene Girard

•,. _:
/

English 431 - French 469
Tuesday, Thursday 1:30 - 2:50

G~, G..~c"
It eo.-. ......

p-~ a.: ~£io He..-t.L
Mon. ~b.J'l . 11""

II

Friday, January 21, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�Hockey action

Bulls face stiff cOmpetition
by Michael Zweig
Sp«fnlm Staff Writer

Like always, the puck will be dropped at center
ice for the opening raceoff this weekend against
Ohio State. What's m ore, both teams will send the
usual six players on the ice, each equipped with a
stick to do battle. This will not , however, be an
ordinary contest.
Despite the fac t that Buffalo is enjoying by far
its m ost successful year, th e hockey Bulls came away
fTOm their visit to Ohio State bitter and almost
embarrassed. The experienced Buckeyes were
practically playing for the fun o f it as th ey sent the
Bulls home with 6.{) and 9-3 d efeats. Although the
four games sch eduled with Ohio Stat e will not
blemish Buffalo's impressive 6· 1, Division 11 record ,
their showing against this fine club might give
h ockey at Buffa lo an additional shot in the arm .
Home ice is always a strong variable that canno t
be overloo ked . A romp is no t likely. It will be
interesting to n ote if Buffalo's best goal producers.
MiJce K.Jym and Dale Do!mage, will be able t o
continue their soaring scoring binge. The defense
must be tightened and goalie Mike Dunn , who was
absolutdy brilliant against Ohio State despite the six
tallies scored against him, m ust repeatedly be
"Johnny on tbe spot .'' In a recent occu rren ce,
backup goalie Russ French, has injured bis arm and
might not see action . Les Teplicky has glued thinp
together d efensively, but due to a freak s nowmobile
accident h e is an extremely dou btful starter. This
will undo ubtedly hurt . Ohio State will have t o do
without winger Prentice who burnt the Bulls with
four goals a nd two assists in the tw o Oh io games.
The BuUs must stay out of the pe nalty box to
win. Jn the 6-0 defeat , fi ve o f th e goals came while
Buffalo was shorthanded . In t h e 9-3 loss, th e BuJls
b.ad cut a S~ lead to S-3 when two Buckeye po wer
play goals put the game out of reach
Another key to victory is slammmg th e door ·
shut o n h igh scorers, Myers and Peters. Between the
two of them , they rolled up 14 pmnts in the two
games aga inst Buffalo At times, tl was llke wa t chi ng
a pinball machine
Ohio State h as defeated respectable teams such
as Bowling Green , St. Lows and P ri nceton. Their
11 ~ record is no fluke . The Bulls tbem~lves feel
that they can win A frustrate(! Russ French said
assuredly · " Wat t 11JJ they come to Buffalo We'll take
two there ."

Coach Wriaht pJaces Ohio State on par witb
some of the Divi.s ion J teams. If Buffalo plays to its
potential, no one can skate them off the ice. It may
have bceo the foreign icc or fear of a big name
school, b ut the Bulls we.r e not the real hockey Bulls
in Ohio. Coach Wriaht indicated that "we skated for
only one period." Buffalo outscored the Buckeyes
2~ in the second period whlcb has acen tbe Bulls
score 20 .,.ta this vear. ita atroJW~~t staM.t· bY far.

Nev~STthel~ . t he Buckeyes came on strong when
they had to. Shots o n goal f;~vored Ohio 48-25 and

42-24 .
Sunday's game will m ark the Bulls' first
appearance at Memorial Auditorium. Everyone .is
stro ngly urged to come down to support the Bulls , in
what will be a high caUbered contest. The game
begins at 2 :30 p.m . with a high school playoff
preliminary sta rting at 12 :30 p.m . A S I bus will
depart from the Faculty Club at abou t I p.m .,
fo llowing a luncheon. Saturday night's game begins
at IJ :4 S at the Amherst Rec. If Buffalo is to have a
future playins in tbe Auditorium, a strons student
t urnout is crucial. A convin cing pe rformance o n the
JCe could hring oth er h ockey powers to Buffalo . A
h tg weekend it will be.

Hoopsters zipped by Akron
by Barty Rubin
S!JOrtt Eduor

AKRON , O HIO
1 he varsttY
basketball Bulls romutg ot f ut' a
th ree-week layoff fell l:l 7 to 6R lu
t he Unh•cr~IIY of AJ..ron Zip~ 1\
huge total of 30 turn o vers
coupled w1th an outstanding
performance by Len Paul kd t u
the Bulls' demise. Paul, Akron\
6~ little All-American sparkeJ
the Zips with 32 points.
Looming large among Buffalo's
problems was a fine defens1ve job
done on Kurt Blackmore m the
first
h alf.
/\kron
tinuted
Blackmore to three points tn the
first half, shutting him out frum
the field . In the second half,
Blackmore sparked the Bulls
carrying 5 p oints. including a tno
o f three-point plays. However,
Akron's
big
lead
proved

unbeatable belure a t~mmcd 3200
parttsan .:rnwd at Memo nal Hall.
Buff.tlo JUnior Jim Tnhble,
playmg wi thJO 20 miles of hts
hometown Clt'vehtnd . leu all Bull
scorers with 17 points. f nbble's
perfornlam:e agawst the Zips was
hts best stncl! hts fine 20 -pomt
outing "t l'omt Park Blackmore
added 22 rebounds f~H the Bulls
who dominated both boJrds, but
cornmilled
numctuus
costly
turnove rs
Th .. Bulls got nut Ill a ~uick. 11
to 8 lead but then Len Paul took
over, tallying I H ltrst half ma rkers
includ ing eight tn a ro w in one
stretch . The Ztps , dght h in t he
Associated Press college t..livtston
poll, ran their record t u 11-2 and
annexed
the11
twenty-stxth
straight home co urt victory .
[ronically Akro n 's first win o n

their current streak came in IIJ70
against Buffalo. Akron. whJch
finished 20-6 along with a berll\ in
lhe NCA A's last year, appeaiS
headed to t i S finest season in
man y years. Coach Wyatt Webb's
seasoned varstty evened
t he
all-time seri es w1th Buffalo al stx
ga m es each .
T omorrow evemng at 8 :30
p.m. in Clark Gym the Bulls meet
Le Moyne (5 ·3). Lead by 25
potnt-per-&amp;ame gya rd Phil Harlo w
(5-10), the Dolphins also boast a
fine soph forward in 6·5 Rick
May . Last year the Dol phins
edged the Bulls 80-72 at Syracuse
b ut still trail Buffalo 4-3 Jn the
all-ti m e series. Buffalo journeys to
College Park Tues day for a clash
with
the
sixteenth
ra n ked
University o f Maryland Terrap ins.
WBFO-FM radio will carry the
contest live at 8 :20 p.m .

Future of basketball's
aid program uncertain
by BarTy Rubin
Spom Editor

Ou ring
all
the
furor
s urrounding
the
re cent
grant-in·ai~ crisis In basketball,
Uttle has .,been said about the
future . Even, the Bulls' varsity
coaching staff is asking the
questio ns :
How
will
the
announcement be made? What
guarantees will President Ketter
make t o the program? Wha t
relation does this new c risis have
to do with last year's dismissal of
football?
Varsity basketball Coach Ed
Muto has said that recruiting
would be hampered on a one-year
basis. The question seem s to be,
how many players will come to an
institutio n on a o ne year grant,
when most o ther sch ools are
offering four year grants? The
consensus at Clark Gym is the
need for some long range planning
by th e administra tion.
On the su bject o f manner o f
announcem ent ,
even
varsity
Coach Ed Muto is w ondering what
President
Ketter
will
do .
Apparently , as some point o ut ,
there is a need for the president to
appear .~ television t o explain his
plans fo r the fu ture o f va rsity
baslcetball at Buffalo. Coach Muto
feels that it would b e extremel y
difficult to rec ruit without people
knowing wl!at Buffalo is actually
o ffering the prospective student
athlete.
Altho ugh, the administration
has vowed to take care of all the
recent problems in athletJcs, some
alu mni and Athletic Depa rtment
members remain pessimiStic. One
Athle tic Department m emb er who

1. Elections for club Presidents and Treasurers must be held and names of
new officers turned in to 205 Norton Hall by Feb. 15.
2. All clubs and organizations receiving money from the Student Association
this year must submit budget requests for the 1972·1973 academi&lt;; year by
March 1. No organization will receive money next year if they don't submit
their budgets this semester.
3. Any students interested in submitting budgets for a special project or
symposium for next year, contact Dave Keiser, Assistant Treasurer, in the
Student Association Office.

Page fourteen . The Spectrum - Friday, January 21, 1972
,

many have ~uggest cd.
As is known to many, a large
number of the varsity hockey
team's members receive tuition
waivers as foreign students from
Canada. Bu , in the fut ure if such
waivers
are
eliminated ,
by
negating Canada as a foreign
nation, the hockey BuUs could
very well be in trouble. Thus, as
has been suggested , Buffalo w ould
Jose aU of its sports where athletes
receive some fo rm of financial aid .
Agatn this corresponds to th e
"domino theory of sports."
A
fu rther
pu zzlement
throughout th e whole grant-in -aid
d iscussion
has
been
the
relatio nship between the alumni
and President Ketter . The alumni
are still st u ng by the dismissal of
varsity football whtch he lped
them raise much of their m oney
and wtuch served as a focal pomt
for
t h eir
activities
via
h omecomings and such . Dr. Somit
told thl~ reporter : "The alumni'~&gt;
highest priority does not He in
ath letics ." However it sh o uld be
not ed that Or. Ed G icewicz. ;_t
formet Buffalo athlete is president
of the Al umni Association. The
domino theory's feasibahty in 11s
application to this situation can
only be l..nown by lhose who
made the d ecisiun , b ut the
basket ball program still waits for
the answer to its fate .

NEW COURSE
OVERSEAS STUDY:
ITS VALUE&amp;
DIMENSIONS
International College 400
Tuesdays: 1:30 - 4:30 311 Townsend Hall
Credit : 4 hours

Student Association Treasurers Office

refused to be named sees the
basketball situation, "aa following
the same pattern as ln football
before the sport was dropped.''
This scXaued "domino theory"
emphasizes the theory of a
conspiracy somewhere In th·e
University or in the State
University of New York system as

Instructor : Michielli

A seminar -w orksh o p with principal
instructor and guest participants, the oourse is
designed to prepare students for a profitable
study experience overseas, and to underline
the unique benefits that can accrue from living
in a foreign culture. Emphasis will be placed on
the history of study overseas, its importance,
c hoosing a program, cultural · adjustment,
re-entry to the American campus, scientific
studies of student overseas experiences, and
future directions for study abroad. Further
details available at class.

�REFRIGERATORS from 119.95 and
up. HWA , 1212 Clll'ltOf'l St. 823-1800.

CLAIIIIIIII
Wll..L BABYSIT for baby or tOCidl., In
my home days. U .B • • ,.... 832·3699.

AD IN FORMATION
CLASSIFIED ADS may 1M place&lt;~
MondaY thru Friday betw. .n 9 41.M .
and 4 ;3 0 p.m-. at 155 Norton Hall ,
THE COST of a n acs for one day Is
$1.25 for the first 15 wordJ a nd S..o5
for eKh additional word.

FULL. OR PART·TIME lo bS evallabll
with B.tllne Inc. Call Art 886·2094 or
Mike 135·5215. Meetings et Executive
Ramada Inn .
I WIL.L buy your toy trains In •ny
condition . Call 831 ·7396.

1965 DART 6&lt;YIInCSer standerd, radio,
hutw, 7 mounted tlr.. lnchldlne 2
studelecl s nows, 42,000 mit•. Always
st.rtt. AIWIYS goes. 1100. Clll R1nCSy
831·2488.

FEMALE wantacs Immediately tor
babysitting a few hours per week In
eKCh lnge for free room . 633·7594.

METRO VAN perfect lor travel
C41mper or tight MUting, Re«&lt;ultt
engine. $600. 773~93 after she.

"FOU ND" ads Wi ll be run free of
for 1 ma1c:lmum of 2 days and
1S words.

START $ 2 per hour. Sl llfy plus
bOnus. Work 4·8 p .m. weekdevs : 10·2
p.m. Saturd lyS, Clll 835·3803 or
TF9.Q402.

JAGUAR 1964 XKE road .. e r. 81ft
offer, 831·3048.

WANTED

APARTMENT FOR RENT

WILL PAY for term paper), tests, any
1n1ormatlon from t nvestmt(lts 402
taught bY Gupta . 881·2659. Keep
trying.

rHREE ROOMS lurn~hed, one mile
from C41mpus, t or couple or stngte.
Available Feb.
I, U25 Includes
utilities. 838-3!128.

MOTHER'S HELPER wanted. Must
enJOY playing with 2 young children.
Provide own
transportation. Call
633·8321.

MODERN 3 ·beCiroom apllftment near
umpus. Available April 1 for 3 or 4 .
Cell 833· 3161.

--------------------

BOOK WANTED: "The MNnlng or
the 20th Century," Kenneth Boutdlng.
Paperback preferred, Cell 1131·2692,
Matk.
SAXOPHONE Setmar B· flat tenor
wanted . Please catt Rich . 862-6811 or
862-6104.
&lt;,TUOE NT needed to C41re for 5-yr.-otd
oov. 2:3o-:30 Tues.-Frlday. Wilt
nMd to ptck htm up from school
a 16 II 1 71 or 883·8286.
for
IOCII
trea tment
01 RECTOR
ptog•am for neroln add icts. Doctorate
1n 1'\ych. desirable, but emphasis on
exporlonc•
working
with
drug
dependent people and mental hNith
problems of urban poor. Extremely
tough job. BrNd O.K. Experience mlly
•utUtltute for d-oree. Call 11111·0096
•"•• 1·00 p.m.
WAITRESSES WANTED: part and full
ttme, even1ngs. Over 18. 685·3100. Ask
for onug or 80b.
LARN WHILE In school. $300-$500
tleo •110. Campus representative for
'~'""'e forw ard ing setvlc.e. FleKible
t•mHs
For full lnformatlot\ write
Nallnnat Resume Servfc•. P .O Bo"
t44!&gt;, Peorta. Illinois 61601
COLL fGE GRAD wants to Oabysll
oven111gs Loves chil dren lind has tots or
lret' time Call 831,..113 days and
8/') 1944 niles Ask lor Lestye

l~f'J

ART S I UDENl
to pllnt r1tsed
oetl&lt;'•"''l on old rash1oned DOllies Pick
"" \oon1P ••"• ,;,nh Cllll Ed 82S -9S 77,
t

'J

FURN ISHED modern apartments and
rooms,
just remodeled, Including
television, etc.. near UB. ch8llp.
896·8344 evenings.
HOUSE FOR RENT
WHOLE HOUSE
111&gt; blOCks to
umpus.
L.arge
single.
2
b•ths,
furnished. Mllture iludVIIS 0 K . maximum 6. S280 • ullttttes or S310
lilt utilities Included. 83!1·0226 or
831·1989.

p .,, • M

r

rOLl&lt;
classic guitars. New
u ..d
Marttn, Guilds, Gibsons, Gurian, etc .
Eagle BanJos, Oorogl Dutctme... Tne
St r lnQ Shoppe, 524 OntllriO, 7 p.m - 9
p.m Sat. 12 S P m 874-0120

••1111C•I-II:.*K!ID-·IC:~~-DC~~~~

.)l«anwa-;c•~a.~•a:•I'W!•I0:[1'1

I
I

II
I

3

whi&lt;h mtt in Oi~fcndorf 304 .u 10:00 am. on Fnd~y.
J o1 n u a r y I 4 , w i II con t t n u e as s c h e d u Ied
(Mon. - Wed - Thurs.-Fri.; 10-10 50, Diefendorf 304) .
Those students registered for Math 142 CA should
re-register for M.1rh 142 CB.
Any students who were registered for the 11 ·00 .t.m.
section who cannot make the 10:00 a.m class should go to
MATH 142 0, Park er 32, Professor T.C . Wu's section.

I

..---------·couPoN·--------·
. . ....,.,....,l..vC.._....
i-~~~~~r~~? ~~
-,.-~

,
.A;~-:-:N
=?~qj~4f$~~~
I fO"u f:il 1
2351 SHERIDAN DRIVE
@ll

dt TIPPY 5 EX

~:~f~j
~:~:~:~
I -:·:·:·
!.11_11
.....

h~:~;~

1:;:;:;:
:::::::

I~t~i

(Au ou From Putt-Pvtf Golf C~n M )
N £ W· S E M E S T E R

~_;~;~;I

:-:-:.:1

!: ::.~~:E.~r .~·fafER9
! Rc
~~~
eg.

3. Mex i1an lunch . . .
UMIT ,o PER CUSTOMER

S1.1 f

SEA

=~~BI

=~*.
~=x

t~·
~~~~~

WITH THIS COUPO"'

1
tf
-6AFIIIO.FA.6011Ff :::;ALSO SERVING:
l:~:~kHJCK.EN -

.....

HOT SAUCE~
OPTIONAl. ! ('i-:!!1

~~~~ T1ppy' s Taco House - 838-3900 :

I

~-----------------------~
~ ~~ ()ioF£ii .Exriiiti.jAN..'3·i~~ V-

.

.

THE GIANT 35·1b amoeba ch ah h
walling to engulf you 11 Wet••
Brothers, 51 Allen St

•••.1 IIJr I \ 1//
.u/t'

Hours :
V1/omm 1
Tues. Wed., Thurs., Sat

LOST &amp; FOUNO

FOUNO S.&lt;.atl tn C•o•bY JOI on
Monday, Jan I} Claim by identotvtnq
at Spectrum otflce.
FOUND: Jan 14 Ole! A Gorman
language bo.Jk Call 8 36· 75 7 7

837-7661

I " ",.,.. UJrl/1/1/

----------

FEMALE share bedroom - furnished
Apt . Englewood Ave. One mile umous.
S66.67 month with utilities Anne
837· 2497
MISCEllAN EOUS

NEW QUAL \2\9 turntable; Sherwood
receiver;

Sony

~~•k•n•

PurAd

speakers ; Pioneer reverb; skts &amp; bOOUI
Fri;ICSIIre renge1 ALSO : Wtnt rl&lt;le to
N v C . .tan. 23, 24, 2~ Rick 833· 7270 .

NA 1/IHA/ VIIAMIN &lt;
/IHJ Int. unrh 11 .7~ ( /00 \J

6 :30 Mon. &amp; Frt 9.30

9.00

JESUS £HHIST
SUPEHSTAH
A•tllarlztll Stlcweoll C••••rt Ytrtltl wltll C11t 8f 40

o..... t-·
_,
4 PERFORMANCES: Sat, Jan. 29 ,o~~;·~., Sun. Jan. 30
The Rock Opera With Revere nce"

0"

bit buSiness!
Car Service.

DELl PLACE R•staurdnt, acrou from
U8. Open 2 4 houri .a d.ty, Tnurs. Fri.,
olnd Sol\. Got munGhfttJ al 4 a.m • We' re
here to serve vou
UNUSUAL employment opportunity
Salt a tore1gn ShiP this summer Men
•na women , no e,cperlence Sen d
Mil-addressed envelope, M.cedon Box
224. ltv1ngron. N J 07111
TERM PAPERS IVDed. $ .35 per page.
833·9012.
"ALIC E'S
Resttur4nt"
(United
AtiiSU) Slllrrong Arlo Guthrie. Bulfato
State Union January 21, 8 &amp; 10:30
pno Frlday,Janu~ty21 $1

-----

INTERESTED
In
attending
lhe
OlympiC gomes In Munich? Some
ticket$ and a ccomm Odations avllllabte.
Pl1one 833-4638 .

PRIVATE SKI lessoM available tor
Mon.,
Tues.,
Wed .
nttes
that
SchussmeUters go. Lessons very ch6llp
For Info 1:4111 Eddie 83 I ·JS62 .

J

laok acal11 ~eca11u tf the he• "'"'""· ltly tlohta 11rlyl
WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL bring bode

0

TWO FEMALE roommates wented .
Apartment off W. Oelev1n, S60
Including utilities . 886·6732 .

WILL BABYSIT . My home, 5 days.
Pre-school. 838-4808

U\Jflffl•c/1/ 71J

9· JO

FIOOMMA TE
wanted
to
share
apartment. Two oedroom , swimming
pool, air conditioning CtQ)e to school
851 -71 47 dllys.

BIG VALUE
not
tndeP&lt;!ndent
Foreign
839· 1850

(curner Norwalk)

II 1111111'&lt;1

TWO
ROOMMATES
(any
c:omblnlllon) tnr furnished nouse with
garage - IO·mlnu te walltlng dlstlnce,
$50 • NC!l. 837·!1938

GUYS . Need haircut t&gt;r 111m ~ Jii
692·38t&gt;8 fOr liPPI With )t&gt;Kflyn
Spec In tong hair styles. Mon ontv

FOUND, Small gold ring neat B~lrd
Hall 1· 19 12 . Call Slt!Ve 876 ~493 lo
ctelm It

I , 1IH ¢ ( p/U/11,

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted . Own
o.c:troom In furnished epa•tment, $50
montll. Transporta tion to sehoot. 314
Richmond upstairs.

STUDENT mechanic who needs bread
does auto repair\ cheap. Call Bob
832· 1663.

DANNON YOGURT
'I

ONE OR TWO roommlltes wanted.
Own rooms. l..0C41tlon: Hertel, one
block o ft Main . Cell 1138-2890.

RECORDING
SlUOIQ,
Have
4-channel mobile &gt;ludio Wtll toavel
Rock to Bach Rtck 832 5929

I t:Uiurmq

r. . . . .

OVERSEAS JOBS for Uudents Auuralla, Europe, S. Amerlu, Afrlu,
etc All professions end occupations,
s 700
s 3000 monthly. ExpAnses
paid,
overtime,
sl9hlseelng.
Free
Information
Write : Jobs Ovor.. u,
Dept. ES , BOI&lt; 15071, San Diego,
calllorn•• 9 2115
APARTMENTS WANTED
WE NEED ol two family apt. that un
house six people (three In each half)
for Juno. Will pay good money, If
taken Call Betty 837 0430
LOOKING
roommate
835-5604.

-----

tor
female
gradu•te
and/or apartment. Call

~,,

• rM

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

:~=:~1
FOOD - MEXICAN STEAK SANDWICHES :.f:~l

.mi~ll !- 00-0 PREPARED MILO -

NEED SIOOl Cllll 882·1080 tor
Information SeconCI annual New man
Movement Art E&gt;&lt;hiDII . Feo . I J
March 19 at Bulcklletd Conte• S u C B
Entries au• Feo 7 &amp; 8 Special student
prizes

HEALTH FOOD SHOPP

..~~.a. .a..-......ma~~~~~~~

FEMALE
roommate
wanted
for
nellr-&lt;.ampus house. Starting Februllry.
Ca ll Sharon. 836·230.a.

ONE
FEMALE
roommate
Immediately. Own room. Block from
C41mpus. $5!1/month Includes ulllllles
Call 836·2 403

Feel Rite

t451 Hertel Ave

1 OR 2 . female roommates wanted,
furniShed house, 10-mlnute welk from
campus. Call 834,..510.

ELLEN, 1 tove you . N..a you want
you. BUT CH,

EE STUDENTS
get lnvotveCI
JOin
IEEE . Etectrlcat Eng1n•erlng office ha&gt;
Informal ion.

ENGINEERING MECHAN ICS Stattcs
and
Dynarnlu, and Statics and
Stren;th by Sllames. For Eng1neor1ng
205 . BrlU1d new . Call John, 759·8859 .

FEMAL. E
needed
t or
roomy
semi- fu rnished
Gen esee -B• IIey
apartment .
$ 37.50/month.
C all
893-1125.

ROOM AVAILABLE to male Jludent .
Own room, lll)¥tment fully furnished.
CHEAP! A fine abode. 836·7799.

PI LAMBDA TAU
A Chan91ng socllll
orgllniZIIIon on a cnangtng umpus
For Information call Dan 632-0299 or
George 834· 7989

CLEARANCE SALE 10 65% oil on
many 110m' All J•nuary. Moscellaneolus
shirts. messes. skltls, et c
Some
afgnanutan coats. T"ne People, 114
Allen S I 882 628.1 for hOUIS

FOUND: In TIM Spectrum o ffice - 1
smlll chin. . purse left thete Friday.
Clllm In Spectrum office. 355 Norton.

SINGLE attractive female. 25, wants
to meet Single male over 30. Call TIna
.. 837·3650

their first Clearance wte unlit Jan 3 Ul
P11one 882-6283 tor hout5.

HONDA. 1971V&gt; CB3SO c anCiy 110ld
Luggage rack, rlghl · hand mirror. 2')00
miles. EMcellent condition . 881 ·26!1 9 .

LOST:
Gold ring lnltl..eel S.G.
ProOibly lott In C41mpus bathr ooms .
PIMM return thiJ 8er· Mitzv41h ring!
s.num..,tAII value etuctteel . c•1 Steve
831-2696.

COUPLE
LOOKING
to
51\are
apartment, hou5e or farm wltll 1nolher
couple. 838,..091 .

----THE PEOPt..E , 141 Allen St. Is navlng

sale

STEREO component dlld Ampe&gt;&lt;
Mlcro-86
t•pco recorder lor "''e
811 1393 after 6 p .m .

J

DEPARTMENTOrMATHEMATICS

SKI CLUB ski lessons for
Tuesday nlgnt Catt 832 5634

LlldiM WitCh - sliver With
Gruen - R-erd. C1 tt
IS!I.00!17 after 5 p.m.

FEMALE PARTNER (In Clomlnant
rote) wanted for mild wdo-masochlsm
(lit her choice). Please resp ond with
phone number or other arrangements
In Spectrum Personal ads. - L.T .

WOULD tna student who gave the
GoodWill I ndustrles' slide presentation
In ctan, please contact Goodwill:
854·7686. Thllnk you•

1971 AUSTIN America, 8000 miles
Stick wllh radiO Fllctory watranty
Neeo 1:41\h test 825-48!12, 4:30 6,
10- 11 p m . All day Saturday

THE GREAT CAR. A 1964 Pontla~
LeMans.
Very
good
condition
Two-door,
slxcvttnder.
automall,,
radoo, new blttory. snow tires, twu
spare flms ASking $100 C.all Jim
837 0674

M A T H E M A T I C S I 4 2 CB

VERY REALIABLE 1'1 sources w1rn
us
to
avoid
fourth-generation
peyote ..

FREE : beautiful long-halted kittens
Ellrty c:holc• now. Call 881 0062 or
837-3666 .

SKI-BINDINGS:
Brand
New
CHEAPI One pair each: MOi rkot
Rotornat; Soloman 50S. 881-0077

USED 7·ot. dining room set, droner.
pi.Jy pen, desk Cheap. Call 833·6339

ESTABLISHED rock group seekJ ttute
ptaylf with additional yx tatent. Mu•t
be able to soto on both lind ptay a
w..k . Call 89S-0330 or
6 ·nlte
891 -287!1 .

STEREO
component$,
90-wall
H1rmon Kardon receiver, Garrard
turntable, 2 spukers $200 Cell
838·2281

RIDE BOARD

FOR SAlE

OEAR HERMAN : All Is forgiven, we
didn't rNIIV mNn t o g tve you away Love, The Rat.

ONE YEAR old grHn hooded Army
Jacket (Orllnge llnl!'fQ), size S·M.
E,.cette nt condit ion. Best olfer. Dale
886·3535.

1966 PLYMOUTH, 6-cytlnCI•r, station
wagon, automlltlc transmission, N v
State Inspected, S325. TX6·9966

RIDE NEEDED to anCI from Union
ana Wllllllm M·F. 837-0211, eiCI. 37.

OAUR "B" - The MVenth floor wishes
you ll hiPPY birthday with hopes for a
coming YNr of lncreued point control
and luflilng ability.

SKI CLUB membership lnd/or lessons
for sale. Legal tramfer. Call 836.0476
before 5 p.m .

LOST :

black tiMid -

ROOMMATES WANTED

PERSONAl.

1967 Pt.. YMOUTH Belvedere, 4-door
sedln, eutometlc power steering . Good
condition. Reasonable. 8 7!1·39 12

SINGLE HOUSE lor rent . S m11e
studenu, sao eacn w;utlttlles. Leas• &amp;
dem191 deposit. 3 OathS 838·3367

RIDERS needed to N.Y .C, L I area.
Leaving Jlnu~ty 22 or January 23 Call
834.()!162

631~327

FOR SALE: Ski rentet $ 30 for 10
ttm•. Catt 831·2184 .
•

'6&lt;4 vw BUS - eKcetlent runnlne
cond ition with body rust. $300 or best
offer. Will sell parts sep.trllle ly . Call
837-e264.

FREE KITTENS to a good nome .
Cute, plllyful. healthy, litter trained
Call 83J· l801 ...,enlngs.

TWO GIRLS neec:t ride to Cleveland,
FeD. 4 . Will S hare expenMs. Call
Wynne after 3 .30, 876-6774

STEREO tor sale: ' very good condition;
will ~ell 11 a reuonable prlc•. Call Mark

EIGHT·TRACK stereo and AM •FM
stereo tlldlo with forty tapes and a pair
or
l&lt;oss 1&lt;-6 headphon•, $150.
Without hNdPhOOM and lliPIS, $ 100.
832·5910.

FOR RENT: Tnree-Oodroom single
home nea• cllmpus: Graduate students.
83!1· 1719.

----

Need • male socootogy grad or
ul oQPt 9rad student who Is good at
••"•119 O)(ams. Please call John

$ ' $
82J

TWO MINUTES from campus, tor
men. New rooms. Privllte entrance.
Frtdge, some cook ing, furnished Call
834· 5312 (private home) .

REFRIGERATORS,
stovM
1nCS
wuhen. Reconditioned, delivered and
guerantMd . D&amp;.G AppUanca, 144
svumOte. TX4·3 183.

RECTIL.INEAR eccoustlc: wspenslon
stereo SC)elkers. Powerful a nd efficient .
Brand new . M ust S41Cflflce at $145.
832-6684.

"HEL.P
WANTED"
acts
C41nnot
dtscrlmlnat• on the basis of ..... color,
creed or natlonet o r l91n to 1ny extent
(I.e., preferably Is still dlscrlmlnttory).
char~

,.,. CHEVY VAN - runs w eu . Pteasant
company aklne t250. C all 838-43 17
1nd 111&lt; for Mart&lt; .

LOST : c.lencllf wetCh wl tft brown
1\end-tmlde b41nd. Sentlm.tt.ll value.
C.lt Pfter at 837-2154.

All MOtl reMrv.d: Main 11oor $6.00-$5.00
Balcony $5.00-$4.00
Jk...tw •• .... 11ew ot lvff.le felll•el ndret Offlce. S..ltef HUt... t.Woy
(.....JI • ...., oueptecf with . .,.,..,. aoolt...U..UI&lt;II e u.a.,-1; U.l . N•rtN

,.... St••• c.11et1e
Nttl;

Yicl1.. Office; Fetlt

r.a..., ....._..

~'~~~••· NID. .,.

•••••••••••••••••••••••
FOUND- dMnge pune in Cepen
l)llftling lot-owner m41Y ident.
In room 225 Norton Hall.

......................,

Friday r January 21, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen
• f' ...
• I i
1 't
I •

�Announcements
Independent School of Bufhlo is looking for
volunteers on a regular ba~s in Math, Astronomy,
Biology and Dance. For more information call
836-1332 or 875-6640.
Students interested in worldna on the staff of a
journal on educational alternatives please contact
lind.t Hanlon at the New College of Modern
Education, trailer nine or call 831 -5388.
Hillel will hold Sabbath Services tonight at 8
p.m. in the Hillel House. Of. justin Hofmann will
spe.1k on, "Ethical ReOections of the Rabbis,"
The Brazilian Club will '&gt;e meeting tomorrow at
2 p .m 1n Room 24 Crosby, Anyone interested in
helping to decorate the Millard Fillmore Room for
Carnival is invited to attend. You need not be a
member.
The UO Riding Club will meet today at 4 p.m.
in Room 248 Norton. Plans for Satu rday and
Sunday ilfternoon's riding will be d1scussed . All
planning to go riding must attend .

Mid-year reviews for publications funded by
Sub-BNrd have been scheduled for Jan. 24 fron'l 9
a.m.- noon in Room 205M Norton. The meeting is
open and students are invited to attend and/or
provide input for the evaluations.
The Office of Overseas Academic Programs has
announced a SUNY program at the University of
Nice, France. The program offers juniors, seniors and
graduate students who have above average scholastic
records and sufficient proficiency in French, the
opportunity to enroll in the regular courses of a
Frend'l university and to become familiar with
French culture and way of life. Further information
and applicatit&gt;ns can be obtained from Professor
Piere Aubery, Room 214 Crosby Hall, extension
5457 or from the Office of Overseas Academic
Programs, 107 Townsend Hall, extension 4247. The
deadline for Applications is Feb. 15, 1972 .
The
Student
Association
wants
all
undergraduate applicants for student JUdiciary who
have not had their interviews to make an
appointment wtth the secretuy tn Room 2 0 0
Norton today or Monday.

UndefJraduate students interested in tutoring
for academic credit: DUS 499 Independent Study,
College B 322 - Phenomenon of Life, Selene
conuct Tutorial lab, Room 3, Old Facu lty Club vr and Rellaion, four credits, is open for regio;tration .
call831-4945 .
Contact Dr. Chawla at 837-7357 .
Chab&lt;ld House, 3292 Mam Street, will have
Sabbath Servtees tonight at 6 p .m .. followed by
Hassidic Meal. Services tomorrow are at 9 :30 a.m.
Mincha will be at 4 .30 p.m. All are welcome.
Kund1lini Yop begmning clds~~ in exeruse and
meditat.on .ue being held daily at 7 p.m. at 196
Lmwood Ave Call 881.0505 for mform.won
UB Vets Club will meet doay at 4 30 p.m. in
Room 330 Norton.
Controversies in Science, r N\M 222, will be
Tue~ ay and Thursday, 10 II :SO am, in
Ache~on 362

held

[ducational . Law
Surv1val m Your NatiVe
L01nd , will be o(fered through the New College of
Modern Educdttcin Intere\tcd 'tudenl\ \hould ~.-all
Tom I Iarmon at r S-0708

The Members' Council of the Albrlgtlt-Knox Art
Gallery will present an outstanding new series of
eleven Ytlms entitled, Museum Without Walls, to be
shown Feb.-March , in the auditorium of the Gallery
Films w1ll be ~ hown Sundays at 3 p .m. and Mond&lt;Jyo;
at 8 :30 p.m. Ticket prices are. gallery member or
~tudent, ~ 7.50; non·member, $10 Only series tickrts
are available, no single performances. For more
mformation contact the Albright-Knox Gallery .
New courses in the Classics Dep:anment are:
113: Myth and Religion in the Ancient World ; 219 :
The Jews in the HellenistiC Age; 302 : The Greek
Mind in the Milking ; 304: PsychoanJiy \IS and the
Clilssics , 416 : The ''Aeneid" · Virgtl\ Journey into
the W.tstcldnd Permisston Clf in\tructor i~ not
reqUired for dny o f th~e wurses
Prodigal Sun
pulled hilm\trtn~

doc~

Hillel clus tn Torah with Commentanes w1ll
meet in Dr. Hofm&lt;~nn\ home, 12 Culton Dmc,
tomorrow ill 3:30p.m.
Hillel Talmud class will rneet Sunc.lJy Jt 3 p.m.
the Hillel Library . Conversa t10ndl I tcbrc~
(adv.:tr1ceu) wtll m~ct .11 I 2 . 30 p.m. Sunday m Room
262 Norton
m

not .1ppcar thi&lt;, wrek due to ,,

Available at the Ticket Office

Buffalo Chamber Music Society ( A)
feb I Berlin Philharmunlt Ouct
Feb. 15 Duo R,mlp&lt;~I/ Vl'Yt&lt;Jn·Lacrot'

Studio Arena Thuter
Thru Jan 30· Moma
feb . 3 20 . The Trial of the Catonwtllt! 9
Rock and Folk Music

Backpage

jdn 2 1: Chucl.. Mangtonc Quartet {P)
Jan . 28: Bat McGr,lth and Don Potter (r)
J,m . 29: Jerry Garctd and Howard Wolle~,
Mahavishnu Orchestra (C)
Jan 29 &amp; 30: jesu~ Chrilt Supentor (I\)
Feb. 6: Jose Feliciano (K)
Feb.12 CarlySimon(K)
Feb. 13: Pete Seeger (8)
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra (K)
jan. 21 . V1ennese N1ght
Jan. 23 &amp; 25: Masuko u~hldda, VIOlin
J dn. 26 · Arthur Rub en~tc111 \old out
Jan. 2~ · SpJnlsh Night
feb 4 : Italian Opero~ N1ght
Feb. 6 &amp; 8 : Michdel Tilson Thomas
Feb. II : Valentine'\ Night flotian Zaba~o.h
Feb . 12 : Cinderella

..,

What's Happening?
Friday, Jan. 2 1
CAC movie : The Maglc.ion by lngmar Bergmdn,
Capen 140, 7:30p.m. and 9 :30p.m.
Movie · El Cid, Diefendorf 147, 8 p.m ., tickets
available at Norton Ticket Office, price S.25
Film: The Learning Tree , 3 p.m., Woodlawn Junior
High School, 450 Masten Ave., tickets at door,
price : adults S I, students $ .50
lecture : "The Politics of Sociology" by Professor
Seymour Lipset, 2 p.m. , Room 14, 4244 Ridge

lea.

Saturday, Jan. 22
CAC movie : The Mogiuon, lJpen 140, 7.30 p .m.
and 9 :30p.m.
Indian movie: /trefoq , D•efcndorf 147 , 7 30 p.m.,
students $ I , non-students S 1.50
Film : The Chicago ConspiroLy Trial, Fillmore Room,
1, 4, 8:30 p.m., general ddmission: $2; $3 at
8:30p.m., students : $1 at all showings.

Buffalo Braves 8~ttb.1ll (M)
Jan. 25. Atlanw
Jan. 28· Seattle
Feb . I Cleveland
Dance
Feb. 5: J o~ (.,r(;~.o (/\)

Dipson's Plaza North
ltddlu on the Roof

Courtyard Theater
The Clever Else

K[Y
K
MP
B
F

Klemhans
Memoric1l Auditorium
Peace Bridge Center
Bennett High School
Fillmore Room

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Vol. 22, No. 43

Vending price hike: competition tO blame
..

by Lyncfa Teri
Ft!Dture Editor

Take a close look at that ten cent candy bar you just
purchased from the machine. It might cost you S. 15 or
$.20 soon. Competition, that great American pasttime,
may be coming to campus. The result? An increase rather
than a decrease in prices will come along with it.
Thomas S chillo , vice-president of Aux.ilary
Enterprises (of which Vending is a part) believes
competition is needed on this campus. He said this action
is in response to the continuum of gripes and complaints
he hears reprding the businesses on campus. Overcharging
and underservicing, are two of the examples he mentioned.
Joseph Pieri, accountant for Food Service and
Vending, sees " no justification for this action." According
to Mr. Pieri : " Vending has always been self-supporting and
has consistently made money." Roger Freday, \'ending
director said he felt "at a loss to give any ~swers . " "We
don't know where we stand," he stated

puts it , "no business man in hill ri&amp;ht mind'' would have.
Mr. Pieri fears that to entice an outside ftrm to campus
these "choice locations" would be given to them. That
would leave FSA Vending with the remaind er, a not very
profitable and possibly a losing position. Mr. Schillo did
not see any problem here. The market would be equally
divided with no one gettin&amp; a laraer piece of the pie. ''Jr
tJtey want real competition , both should be present in one
area," Mr. Pieri stated.

No competition
That idea might be the most ideal on an abstract
level but realistically, Quite &amp;mpoaibJc, accord in&amp; to Mr.

To provide service
The aim of the Faculty St udent Association which
funds and receives funds from Vending, according to Mr.
Freday, is " to provide service to the UniversHy at lowest
possible cost without substan tial cost to the University ."
He and Mr Pieri agreed that Vending has done just this.
According to 'them : "Any profit made by Vending has
been available to FSA for any purpose they feel is
profitable or necessary for student activities."
Wh y then re place them by an outside firm whose
profits will go into its own pocket and nowhere else?
Mr. Schillo stated : " We were firmly convinced that
the only way studen ts are ever going to believe that the
FSA is run in a business·liJce fashion and to their advantase
is to deliberately ~reat e our own competitio n." If the
o utside firm does a better job than the current enterprise,
he said, it would " highlight" the shortcomings. On the
other hand, there is the chance that an outside firm would
not do a better job. If this is the case, he believes, "maybe,
in time, students will accept the fact that we really do do a
pretty good job." He also believes that this system of
competition can be expanded to include Food Service and
the Bookstore.

Debatable
J ust ho w competitive th1s new plan would actually
be is a subject of debate. Prices seem to be the key fac tor
m any business competition but these, according to Mr.
Schillo, would be regulated . It would be a contractual
stipulation that the outside firm does not excessively
overcharge but , according to Mr. Schillo, some items will
be increased . Vending has not charged all it should in
comparison to the rising costs, and Mr. Schmo st~tted this
will be changed. Therefore, while keeping certain prices
from the outside firm down, students can look forward to
an overall in crease in other items.
" Vending has held prices down despite the FSA
board of directors consent to raise prices," said Mr. Pieri,
"and we're still making profits." He repeated that all
protits go back to FSA and stated that bringing in an
outside firm would " defeat the purpose of FSA to handle
student, faculty needs at minimal cost." He continued : " If
Vending were losing money with bad service then this
action would be justified." As things now stand, he sees no
reason for the current situation

Schtllo . When asked if he honestly believed students would
travel from one end of campus to another in search of a
better vending machine he said : " No, I don't believe that
for a moment.'' He replied : " People don't bounce around
from one store to another." Instead, he said , they learn to
expect certain prices and serv1ces in each store. Mr. Pit:n
believed unless the machines were actually m the same area
it was "no com petitio n at all."
Mr. SchiJlo felt very strongly about competition
being wanted by the students on this campus but, Mr . Pieri
did not agree . He said if' students fe lt badly treated he
would have heard complaints. "There are a few," he
admitted, " but, nothing like the deluge Mr. Schillo alluded
to.'' He said if students had actually been dissatisfied the
monetary vblume of sales would have dropped . Since 70
per cent of Vending income comes_from students, he said
they would have made .themselves heard . If things were as
bad as Mr. SchiUo stated, Mr: Pieri believed Vending would
have been " boycotted or something."

Key issue
Mr. Schillo believed service to be the key issue in the
idea of competition . He believed the two firms would
"monito r" each other. It was his opin ion one firm couldn't
provide "miserable" service while the other did a
"superior" job.
Mr. Pieri could not see where service would be any
issue. According to him , FSA Vending has four full time
mechanics while the largest vending firm in this area has
only two. " Within one-half hour of a service caU, a man is
on the job," said Mr. Pieri. " You can bet right now that if
an outside vendor were here it would be I wo weeks."
There are certain positions on campus that are very
profitable for vending machines and others, as Mr. Schillo

Space problem
According to Mr. Schillo the idea of introducing
competition is not a new one and the only reason Vending
was picked as a starting point was due to the lack of space
for operations. He stated that Vending is "forced to
vacate" their current building by July I , 1972.
" We are being asked to leave," he said. ''That's what
it amounts to and l don't know where we're going to go.
We haven't been promised any space. They can't lease us
any space. We can't afford to rent any space." He
continued : " The University has been instructed by Albany
that they may not lease any more space. There is no more
space for Vending out of University funds."

Additionally, Mr. Schillo stated : "Ordinarily. it
wouldn't have been Vending first. We ought td fold up our
tents and quit . We' re not about to do that."
Mr. Freday also agreed that space was a mlijor
problem. Maintenance needs the space Vending currently
has, to service the new campus, according to Mr. Freday.
No other space bas been found by the administration.

'Garbage'
..S pace is an excuse,"'sa.id Mr. Pieri. As far as he ts
concerned , the idea of administration being unable to lease
any space is " garbage." He continued : "As far as
maintenance needing space - t hat's also garbage. What the
hell are they going to be maintaining at this time?"
He stated that Vending has moved three times and
space has always been found . According to Mr. Pieri,
Vending has been chosen because it has the "greatest
ability and strongest chance for success." He stated that
they could sell vending to an outside firm because it is
sellable. He believed conflict over space gave the
administration the impetus it needed .
Employees of Vending are greatly alarmed at this
situation. At a meeting of 1ast Monday, Mr. Schillo
announced his plan to the Vending em ployees. According
to Mr. Schillo, th is was done "in fairness to the men" so
that they would not be suddenly confronted by a pink slip
in their pay envelopes.''
Contract stipulation
He stated that "every effort humanly poss1ble"
would be made to secure positions for these men . Some
may be able to get on the state payroll as maintenance
workers, according to Mr. Schillo, with others gettina a
position with the outstde vendor. ~ u1d this would be
accomplished by making contract stipulation that some
men be hired . There also might be "a job or two" within
some other operation of FSA. He further stated , some men
would be able to remain with FSA Vending as it will still
be operating.
With the curre~t freeze on stale jobs the employees
don't feel at all hopeful. Mr . Pieri explained : " In effect, he
( Mr. Schillo) did not pro mise anything." Mr. Pieri also
mentioned that with state finances being as they are, aJ1
employee would ·•merely be placed on a preferred list."
This means t hat the employee will only be considered for a
state job tf an openmg ts made by retirement ar ot her
causes. Mr Pieri sa1d th1s arrangement held "no
guarantees. ·• He also stated that there were no promises
that an outside firm would indeed hire an employee from
Vending. "It lS an unsatisfactory solution," he declared.
Mr . S~:htllo believed the men "should not be
surprised by any of these developments. Since o ne and a
two years ago we started exploring alternative ways
half
o( providmg a Vendmg service .'' He cautioned that the
Situation should be "kept 1n context or things get mushed
up as apparently it has in the minds of the men."
'Mushed up'
Things are much more than " mushed up" for the
Vending employees. The idea of losing your job 1S not very
appealing to anyone. One employee has already decided to
retire because of this situation. Described as a very active
man, Mr. Pieri feared retirement wouJd do more harm than
good.
ThlS action may result 1n the loss of key people
according to Mr. Pieri. " A climate has been created and
people are worried about their jobs," he continued . " If.
this plan goes through, you are talking about at least 1000
people. If they pass it for Vending, it will go through for
all the others." He believes mechanics, cooks and managers
will leave rather than wait &lt;Uld wdrry about their jobs. He
said : "It is a very bad situation."
Mr. Schillo stressed that his entire idea is merely a
proposal -and before anything is done the FSA Board of
Directors must approve. Although one firm has surveyed
tbe situation, he stated that no plans are being made.
Mr. Pieri does not believe that things are still in the
preliminary stages. He said: " lf it were merely the talking
stage I don't believe Mr. Schillo would have~me to speak
to the employees. Now there art: a lot of scared people on
this campus."

�(\)

Incentive aid
Graduate assistants and" tuchi.Q(I Mliltanta are
now etiaible to receive fui'CU throup the Scbolat'
Incentive Prosram. FuU-time ttudenta (ll creclita)
holdina araduate feUowsb.ipe, teachlnl, anduate or
research assistantahipe are requmed to apply.
FuU-time araduate students who are New York State
residents and are maldna satisfactory proaresa
toward an advanced dearee should apply .for the
Scholar Incentive award. Needy students who are
academically lneliaible for the Scholar Incentive
wboae families ban a combined New York State net
tuable income of S 1800 or lea should apply for a
State Univenity Scholarship. Applications for the
Scholar Incen tive Proaram are available in
departmental offices, offices of the Provosts and at
116 Harriman Library. State University Scholarship
applicati01w can be secured in the Office of Student
Account&amp;, Hayes A.

Interface

Somit answers questions
Hey there, Bunkie. You say
your computer form got folded,
spindled and mutilated and now
you're registered for Advanced
Yoruba 417, Intermediate Inertia
30 I and the History of Aboriginal
Underwear 10 I? You say the
bursar checkstopped you because
you failed ro turn your jock back
in to the Athletic Department?
You say SARA, the friendly
computer, got 3 bad case of
indigestion, burped out your IBM
printout in pieces and now you're
not a person anymore? ts that
what's melting your snowbaJls
today, Bunkie? Well , WBFO
provides FAST, FAST, FAST
relief.
Asst. Director of Admissions
and Records John C. Hammond,
will be the guest on WBFO's fi rst
Interface of this semester,
tomorrow evening at 8 p.m. w1th
Executive Vice President Albert
Somit to answer students'
questions concerning registration.
As usual , on Interface hsteners
can speak directly to the guests by
caUing WBFO (88 .7 FM) at
831-5393, and any and all
subjects may be considered. uot
only the general topic of the
evening.
Pertinent channel
"This program is a channel to
the school administration from
both the student-faculty
population and the Buffalo
community ," said WBFO Program
Director David K.arpoff, ''and
we'll encourage listeners to bring
up any subject they feel is
pertinent with Dr . SomH and Mr.
Hammond." WBFO makes an
effort to get current newsmaking
Universi ty administrators or
faculty members on the air.
' 'During the Med School-Attica
situation we had Dean Pesch ,
when there was a controve rsy over

~LAlli

library services we had Myles
Slatin , and when the basketball
problem came up Coach Muto
came on," said Eric Schoenfeld,
who moderates the program along
with Karpoff. He continued :
"This is the student's one chance
to talk to Ketter where he can't
go to a meeting or walk out of his
office.'' AI though President
Ketter is officially sch eduled for
all Interface shows, Dr. Somit
frequently substitutes.
Unique and interesting
When asked the extent of the
call-in respo nse, KarpofT replied
Lhat the amount of calls has
increased in the past few months.
''As usual with WBFO , most of
our problems lie more with public
relations than with programming.
We offer many unique and
interesting program services, but
nobody knows about them to
turn them on in the first place."
I n J t1 d ition to Interface he
ou t lr n td shows on women's
liberation. the history of rock and
roll , the Community Action
Corps , organic cooking and poetry
readings as examples of new
mnovative programming.
Karpoff agrees that WBFO may
suffer frum 3 snob appeal image
that alienates it from student
support. ''The important thing to
remember is that we're a public
radio station and committed to
programming to minority listening.
groups, whether these groups are
classical music listeners, blues
lis t eners, women, blacks or
anyone else. We rega rd the
students as a part of the larger
community, and as such do not
d o too mu ch programming
direct l y to the stu dents."
1nterface, with Dr. Ketter and Dr.
Somit, tJ1en becomes a unique
opportunity for communication
among many different groups
concerned with the University.

Interface, tomorrow at 8 p .m .
Try it , you'lllike it.

.·

University admissions policy
modified by President Ketter
A recent modl&amp;ation of admissions S&gt;Olicy by
r r eslden
Robert K.etter has sparked some
discussions on both the method he employed and
the implications of his action. The revision Involved
recommendations of the Admissions Committee of
the Faculty Senate which were adOf)ted by the
Executive Committee of that body.
While the recommendations were substantially
unchanged, Dr. Ket.4!r proposed an additional
section which would mandate that 50 per cen t of the
regular freshman class {this does not include special
students or 'transfers) come from the Eighth Judicial
District.
The modification was basically a result of the
feeling that the University has a certain regional
responsibility . Executive Vice President AJbert
Somil co mmented : ..It's expected that the
University should serve the people in the region as
weU as those in other areas of the state.''

William Baumer, vice chairman of the Faculty
Senate concurred: ' 11 don'~ think the cf)anges would
result in those fean being realized at all ."

Confrontation averted
In addition to the nature of the recommended
revisions, it was felt by some that Dr. Ketter acted
arbitrarily on an issue of great importance to the
academic community. Thomas Frantz, secretary of
the Faculty Senate Exec\ltive Committee, explained
the situation from the point o r view of the Executive
Committee.
It was their understanding- tfiat Dr. Ketter felt
the revision was merel y "a minor administrative
matter, and thus acted without consulting the entire
Faculty Senate. From a legal standpoint , the
President had the right to do what he did. The
question is one of f~culty trust. Was he wise to do
it?"
~
Dr. Frantz added that the Executive Committee
agreed that ..we would defend Dr. Ketter's policy."
SUNY plot?
However, to allay what he said "could have been a
This last point has at times been one o f some major confrontation between administration and
controversy. There is a fear among many that the faculty," a compromise was reached.
State University Central Administration has plans of
Every two weeks or so, a progress report on the
turning many of their branches into strictly local admissions thus far granted will be made to the
institutions. Indeed, Dr. Ketter's recommendation Executive Committee. If, at any time during this
gua ra n teei n g a certain percentage of local process, the committee feels the regional admissions
matriculates, has fed these very fears .
are getting out of hand, appropriate measures will be
Dr. Somit, h owever, sees no reason for such taken.
worry. He points out that this year's class had
nut compromise, too, seems rather uncertain,
approximately 55 per cent of the regularly entering since yesterday's Faculty Senate meeting was
freshman residing within a 50-mile radius.
expected to take u p the entire admissions issue . Lee
The Eighth Judicial District Includes an even Preston, School of Management, ~cd the
larger area. Thus, Dr. Somit coo tends, there will be a feelings of many by saying: " I was happy he went
..slight lowering of the Western New York mix ." He this far [by compromising] • and 111 be happier if he
added that "if anything, they [those apprehensive of goes farther." Apparently, however, the only way
an overrepresented Western New York) are w.orrying Dr. Ketter could go any farther would be by
completely shelving tua revisions.
about the wrong thing.''

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Page two . The Spectrum . Wednesday, January 19) 1972
• •

'

•

_

J

ILI.f1•

W..71J1

�University has right
io review IRC fees

Student fees rollected by the Inter Residence Council
through the University Bursar office are now subject to the
same kinds of review as mandatory student fees. IRC fees are
voluntary fees o f $8.50 per semester totalling about $4 2,000.
They have previously been collected through the bursar's
office and dispensed by IRC with no review necessary.

Howeve r, as explained by IRC
President AI Miller and IRC 1972 when h o pefully a more
Treasurer S tu Feldsott, the favo rab le solut ion ca n be arrived
University didn 't want to be at.
bothered with the ''hassles" of
coUecting the money. Mr. Miller Administrative review
commen ted· " The IRC (fee ) is
All conce rned parties seem to
the only voluntary fee the feel that the administrative review
University collects ... in turn , it is merely a minor, p rocedural
(the Uni versit y) doesn't want to ineonvenience posing little threat
be seized by more tequests from to IRC expenditures. Mr. Miller
other groups to do tilb same." He remarked : "The¥ rthe Universi t y
con t inued that this combined administration J is collecting our
with University adherence to new fee as a service . . . We. as a
budget guid elines prompted the courtesy, will let them see our
administration to inform IRC that budget." Further, he commented
they would not collect the funds . that nothjng in the IRC budget
would be que s tioned \ as
'Betwixt and between·
unacce ptable. "Tbe very nature of
After consuiting w1th Albany our organizat ion
providing
and conferring with Thomas services and activities for dorm
Schillo. Housing director and vice re side nt s
makes our
president for Operations and ex p enditures acceptable ," Mr.
Sys t ems Ed Doty, the Feldsoll said.
administration decided to collect
Conc urrin g with tins
the fees for this present semest er assessment, Mr. Schill o termed the
(the last time it will do so) if IRC review "a relattvely minor
submilled its budget vouchers for inconvenience." He added that
rev1ew. Mr. Schillo explained that .. while I can't guarant ee that there
the "re-,tl problem with I RC fees is will be no problems, I certainly
that they are neither voluntary don ' t foresee any ." Accmding to
nor mandlllory . . . they are him , ..every IRC expenditure that
I know of IS or would be
betwixt and between ..
According to Mr. Schillo , if the acce ptable •·
Neither IRC o ftkials nor
fee were entirely mandatory. then
it would au t omaticalJy be administration view th e budget as
su bm1tted t o administ rative a means by the administ ratio n to
review . O n the other hand, he co ntrol student funds. As Stu
said, if they were entirely Feldsott commented: " We have
voluntary. then the st udent been very su ccessful in workmg
government would simply collect with the ad mints! ration in solving
them . " Bel"aUse the Universit y i~ our problem s. We are all
collcding the fees."" he said. " we cooperating and we hope to
c ontinue t o cooperate .
~AJn 't show any favoritism .'' This
system will o perate until Aug. I . everything IS going sml)uthl y."

psychomat
3:00 - 5:00 p.m.

WEDNESDAY - ROOM 233 NORTON HALL

Psycho mat
was
initiated
to
facilitate
person-to-person communication among all students. It is
an open-ended, free-flowing session where you can share
your feelings about experiences.

Subcommittee's repqrt

Campus Security examined
by Howie Kurt.L
Campus J:'ditm
A far·reaching host o f questi o ns ret~uinng many
answers was r.used Monday afternoon as three
subcommittees made their reports to the Committee
on Cam pus Security. The problems facing Cam pus
Security, such as definition of ro le , co mmunity
relattons. training, image and junsdictwn wert.·
defined but not examined .
A ce ntral dilemma recognized by the co mmittee
was that o f j unsd1 ctio n . specifically , what role will
Campus Security play in the University co mmunity"!
How fully will sec urity officers be trained? Sho uld
they co ntinu e t o se rve as traffi c co ps and parking
llc keters. o r sh o uld that relatively min or fun ct ion be
delegated · elsew here? Sh ould security officers c.:arry
side,arms'1 Should they make arrests? These are the
quenes for which the committee must recommend
spluttons.
The commttlee . mad e up ol I C) men and fo ur
women from fa &lt;: ull y. ~laff. alumm. student and
co rnrnumly groups. was crea ted fo llo wmg a
contro verstal mndent 111 De.:e mh er tnvolvmg th e
alleged h ealing o l a tlorm st ud ent hy two ca mpu~
scc:unty guard s The c.:u nllnlllee was d1v1dcd 1ntn
three ~ut&gt;..-omnllllee~ h y l· hamnan Mac Allister Hull ,
act1ng dean of th e GnuJual e School. The -.uhscct1nn~
are I) Invo lve m ent and l nfurmat10n hxc.:hangt· , to
deal Wllh l'lllt11ll Unt l'..l ti OII~ &lt;tnt! " linage ,"
~)
Ope ralt on ... . l'wc.:edurc~ J11tl lr:.l lmng , and ' '
Compan~on w11 h o ther unlvcr\ltll.!,,
Police exlension
A ques tion baste t o thr Wl'Ut tt y prohkrn . lhal
n f tra tntng. wa.' raised tn A's1stant Dun ·wr of
Secunty Lee Gnffin":. reptH I to the torn mittec .
A&lt;.:co rd1ng to Mr Grifflll , en rolling scc unty offtccr~
in the E:ne Cou nt y Shcnff's Tra1n1ng Academy
wo uld not he l ol;~ lly d es1 rahl e, sw ce 40 per ct!nt of
I he subject matt er covl'red there "ts no t dir ed ly
related to n ur lun r lt o n " In addJt1 o n . Campus
Sec.:unty has hcl!n c ntt CII.Cd lor Vlcw tn g ttself a:. an
extenswn of th e Buflalo Po llee Ocparlrnent , and

Academy tra1nmg would mak e that o bjec 11on
accurate.
The possibtlity of rnandatory stat ewide training
was discussed . However. under the terms of the
umon co ntra c t , secunty officers must be paid a fixed
r.tte when recalled for tratmng. Also, such I raining
would have to lake place after h o urs, si nce men
could no t be pulled off their posts. " When you're
talking overtime, then you ' re talking dollars,"
explained Mr. Griffin . He indicated th ere are
tentat1ve plans to h ave the sec urity force learn more
ab o ut human relations through the Speech
Communtca llon department.
Unaware
A Rumo r Control mechanism of some sort was
s uggested to prevent isolated incidents from being
blown out of proportion . Agam, the problem of
securit y 's image was brought out. 1t was suggested
that Mr. Griffin spends a " dispropott.ionate amount
of time" defending the acti o ns of h1s force. Mr.
Griffin feels that nol o nly is Campus Security
misunders tood. but, 111 th e ca ses o f large numbers of
students. 11 JS tgnored . "Nmety-rune per ~ent of
s tudents aren ' t even a ware o f security," said Mr
Griffin . " Many semors d o n't even kn o w where lhi.'
o ffi ~e is. and many Clement girls are to tally unaware
of th e pro blem of burglaries there. There ts a nee.d
for more co rnmunicill tn n , possi hl y thro ugh use o f
the medta , between Campus Se..-unty and the
co rnrnumty. •·
It was nutcd !hal 7S per l."enl of l"fllnc on
Cil rnpus IS " tmpo rt ed ··r1m c," that is, per pt:trated by
ll&lt;HHIIt!f.llben; of t he Untvers tl y co n11nuntl y Vanous
mcthnds for k ..:ep ing undesirables nut were
ment1oned . The ~u h o:o nttn.lt ee o n n&gt; mpanson
rcportt·d that many o ther sc h oob are undcrgo tng tht•
same pro ble ms as But falo : c hangtng attitudes
I n ward~ sl!c.: urit y. a redefiml1 on o l ~crunty"s role. a
growmg umverstl y, etc
Man y quest to ns and few answers . that \ the
sttuatll&gt;n facmg th e Committee on Ca mpu:. Se..:urily
nght n o w . Hn pdully , mves ltgati n n Jnd dt~.:usswn tn
fort hco nung w~:d.s wtll y1eld so me of thmi.' answers.

IT'S EASIER TO JOIN

COA-l£ UP TO RUOM 355!

Wednesday, January 19, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Homicide ruled

International week scheduled
AJtho ugh offi cutlly titled International Week .
th is year's international celebration and educational
progtam will last longer than a week and wW invo lve
mo re than foreign studen ts~ Peter Ko ng, Student
Associatio n Fo reign Student coordinato r, ex plained
tha t Inte rnatio nal Week, lasting fro m Jan . 2 1 to
mid-March , will "encourage people to invo lve
themselves in a whole program."
He contin ued : " It 's hard to get peo ple involved
in programs ... t here ure 1500 fo reign s tudents and
more t han ten clubs. Each club isolates Itself b y
conducting individual activities." Ad di tionall y, he
noted that American students have traditionally not
concerned themselves with foreign st udents'
act1v1ties or programs. By spreading the events of
Intern atio nal Week over a period of li me, Mr. Ko ng
hopes tn catc h t he interest o f more studen ts.
Festivities begin

The festivities Will begin w11h a ~ne:. of
InternatiOnal movies w he shown twtce a week from

Methadone causes
death of110n-addict

the end of January to the middle of March .
Previously, the movie was a one~owing affair
Another change is the housing of the international
exhibition in the Norto n Hall second floor lo unge
rather than Haas Lounge. Mr. Kong explained this
shift as a security measure because Haas Lounge has
no locks. The exhibit will run two weeks fro m Feb.
15·29 and will continually change its contents during
that time.
Other activities include a fiesta March II to be
held in Clark Gym at 6 :30 p.m . An internatio nal
feast a nd a fashio n sho w will keyno te this event with
invi tatio ns going out to department heads;
ad mmist ratio n and student leaders. Final plans are
for a demo nst ratio n and speaker but arrangemen ts
rn ust be fi nalized .
Peter Ko ng hopes tha t all face ts of the campus
will invo lve the mselves and enjoy Internatio nal
Week. Anyone wishing to J OIO t he International
Committee should contact Peter Kong at 5507 or
leave the1r name and number at the S A office. 205
Norton Hull

A city judge in Austin, Texas ruled Friday that the death
of a University of Texas student last October was homicide.
The student , freshman James Andrew Knox, swalJowed a
dose of methadone, a synthetic drug used to treat heroin
addicts, and died the next day . Judge Ronald E. Earle
referred the case to a grand jury for possible charges against
the physician who prescribed the drug for Knox.
Ju d ge Earle told a news
confe re nce : " On the basis of
Arti c l e 1400 of the T exas
mal practice statute. and because
1h e m ethado ne was given a
no n -a d d ict w i th o ut f actual
determi na tion as to whether h e
was an add ict . r am rendering a
ve rd ict of homicide in t his case."
Although the Incide nt sho uld no t
result In the banning of the drug.
l:.arle stated . "It sh ould show IJ1at
safeguards must be preserved "

Supreme Court to debate the
future of capital punishment
On Mo nday the llmted St.~te)
Su p reme Court
began
deltberattons ~1n whet her or not
cap1tal purushment ~hould he
abohshed forever .1S "uuel and
unusual punishment" forb idden
hy the E1ght h Amendment to the
C'on~t l tulton . It has been almost
live years sinc.:e o~nyone has been
executed in t he Umted Sta t e~ . and
the 694 10mates on death row 1n
J3 sl ates are anxtously awat ting
word from the Court
Back to full strength With the
!&gt;Uitng of Justices Lewt!&gt; F Powell
Jr and Wilham H Rehnqu1st , the
Court will hear four death penalty
appeals . l:.rnest James A1kens Jr.,
conviCted 10 th~ mpe-murder of
two women in San Franctsco,
Joh n Henry Furman convtct ed 10
lhe murder of a ho meo wner whv
s urpnsed h1m 1n a burglary.
Luuus h ~: kson Jr , conVIc ted of
the rape of a doctor's wtfe in
Savannah, Ga and l:.lmer Branch ,
oonYll' ted of the rape of an elderly
woman 10 her Texas home. T here
LS a lo la I of IJ8 death s ' ntence
appeal' on the doc ket for the
Htgh Court to rev1ew , and a
dectston IS expel.led :.ome tune
before J ui)A!
One of society's e vils?
Professor Anthony Amsterdam
of Stanford Umverlotty Law
School led the arguments agamst
ca pital purushment and Walt atded
bY atto rney Jack Greenberg of the
NAA C P Legal Defense fund
Amsterdam is a board member o f
the American C1v1l Liberties
Umon . Opposing arguments will
be presented by state off1c1als and
attorney Charles Alan Wnghl of
Austtn. Tex.
The AC LU LOntends that the
death pt:nalt y "affro nh the bas1c
standards of de ce n ty o f
contemporary soc1ety. " Sl a tmg
that the penult y IS unevenly
administered , t h us altering
drastically its supposed purpose as
a cn me deterrent. the ACLU
po1nted out that thousands of
peo ple are conv1cted of murder
each
but
a few are

selected 10 dte. "Most whu du: are
Blalk, vmually all ore poo r anti
powerless, persunally ugly and
sm.tally unacceplahle. As capttal
pumshment beco m~ mcreas1ngly
ro~re,
11 become:. tnt.rcas1ngly
d1scnmmatory "
S ocie t y's pro tectio n
Argu1ng for capital punishment
o n Monday were Ca liforma
Deputy Attorney General Ronald
M George and Georgaa Assistant
Atturney General Dorothy Beasly.
C.eorge contended that because
t apttal pumshment ex1s1ed at the
lime the E1ghth Amendment was
adopted In t 79 I , the author:. o f
t he Constit ution d1d not 1ntend to
pro hJbll 11. Geurge sta ted t hat "a
much more accurate barometer"
l)f JlUbll ~ Opinion IS ''the \;nnst.an I
n u mbet of defe ndants whum
JUtles annually senti to the
nat t o n ·~ pnson syslt: m~o under
sentence of dea l h." The death
pena l ty , he sa 1d , WJl&gt;
co n t e m plated as a necessary
pumshmenl "fe&gt;r the protec.: t1on n l
!&gt;&lt;K.Iety •·
Amstetdanl , however , S.Jtd that
publt l OpiniOn has ri!J CCit! d
elel.lrolUtlon, gass1ng a nd hangang
of wro ng-(joers as a rehc of
barbansm . " It is an extreme and
mmdless act of savagery prac ticed
upon an outcast few . T h1s •s
exactly the evil against wh1ch t he
Etghth Amendment stands"
Am s terdam asserted that the
pun tsh me n t IS dtscnmtnJto ry
because mne stat~::s uutla w thC"
death penalty (Alaska, Uawau .
I owa, Matne, M tc ht gan ,
M1nnesota , Oregon , West Virgima
and W1sconsm ). and five state~
allow 11 1n only ~ pe c 1al
circu m st.tn ce~ (New Vorl. , New
Mex1cn. North Dak u iJ Rh ode
Island and Vermont).
In a related n1hng 111 New

dispensing me thadone in August
1970 . Th e a llegat io n w a s
dismissed , ho wever.
R a burn s aid this of the
tncident : " I do n' t know anyt hi ng
abou t it. I do n' t k now any names
and I d on't k now any dates."
J udge Earle, acting as Trab1~
County coroner. sa1d : " Insofar as
it is possible to de termine, the
deat h of James And rew Knox 1'
the fi rst ever reported resultmg
from pulmonary edema caused hy
an overdose of orally ingestcrl
met hadone." Earle ruled undc1
the Texas statute which holds ·•
docto r respon.~1ble 1f he "shall by
the use of any nox1ous substance
administered tn a grossly ignorant
manner produc e death ."

Controve rsial drug
M et h adone IS n or m al l y
ad rn i niste red o ra ll y u nde r
guv_srnment su pervision as a
maintenance drug for heroin
addicts. Its use and abuse has
provoked a contro versy ll1 medrcal
. - - •.A NNOUNCING - - •
and legal c ircles.
LIVE MUS IC
Or. W.E. Raburn . lhe doctor
at
who gave Knox the methadone, is
MAXL ' S
associa ted wit h the Ft . Wo rth
(corner Mam l!t. Ferry)
clinic of Dr Peter Joseph Carter,
Wed.-Thurs.-F ri.·Sat
who had been called before the
Evenings!
featunng
State Board of Medic.al Ex.am mers
on an allegation o f unprofessional
MOOSE J AW
modest ad m. c harge
co nd u c.: t i n connectio n wt th

Jersey, the Supreme Court oft hal
state ruled Monday tha i the law
providang for t he deat h penalty 10
New Jersey IS unconst1tutto nal
Ho wever lhc ruling only staled
that the statute was
unconstitU tio nal. not the deat h
penally Itself The 6- 1 dec1s1o n
lifted the threat of executton
fro m the 20 men now o n deat h
ro w 111 New Jersey . T he New
Jersey law provided for t he dea th
penalty o nly when t he defendant
was convicted by a jury trial If a
defendant was charged w1th d
capital offense and pleaded gutlty ,
t he maxtmum penalty was IJfe
un pnson rn ent

a Neww• hew•• RaCCX»CM•
(Tbe""Moungl Joocl• • .abel)
THE~

GOOD AND DlNfY
If you thought bluegrass mu11c

Thas IS Raccoon Records' ltneat - The
You03blooda The lineup of tunu look$
like a rock 'n' roll revaval, led hy some new
Youngbloods hus "Suggcr Lee," "Th•t's
How Suong My love la," " WIIhc and th~
Hand ltve," " L~t the Good Times Roll"
make up the revtval part of the album and
ntw songs by lessc Cohn Young. ldtcrey
Cam and loc B1uer fill out !he LP to mak~
It one ol Raccoon'a hVlllg room ttudto best

for add1ct1 only, you'rc In
for a pleal&amp;llf surpn!IC with High
Country. winners in two cate
goriet of the Topanga Canyon
Old Ttme Fiddlers Convention,
Topanga, C..hfom1a. The Pr12e
Winnmg Band Htgh Counuy
makes ch.mp1onstup mus1c on
Rac:c:oon Records.
w as

........•............. ,
FOUND- d\ange purse in C•pen
pet'klnt lot-onwv !dent.

m roo"' 226 Nor1001 H.ll.

IIIIOiiiilillllillillli

THEATRE

GUILD

fir st meeting of the S eme~ter

CRAB 11JNESI fi1GGINS
Thti 11 •nc)ther ftnc effort from the Raccoon Bunch

6.00 p.m. THIS EVENING!
Roorn 330 Norto n Hall
Workshops, Productions &amp; Project~
will be discu~scd .

ALL ARE INVITED
Refreshments will be serve d.

and theu hvm&amp; room Jludto Fururcd on thlf

11

bum arc I~ Bauer ~nd Banao1 of the Youngbtooch
The 11tle of the 1lbum
10ng1 contatncd

11

the~•n

an fact a fuocltOn of the

Jlncc

Cr~brunc&gt; NOM,Inl

hu "Crabtu nc'" numbcta I 6 and " Nogg111 Ar
1empH" numbt:rs 1-4.

\

Page four . The SpectrUm . Wednesday , January 19, 1972

�Rockefeller's proposed budget
increases funds for SUNY
by Janis Cromer

t h e fint time since RockefeUer Rockefeller recommended $4?1
took office '4 years uo, state million for tbe State University's
aaeocies will actually have less to operatina funds. He said tbe
"Hard realities have sha ped the spend than the year before.
money would allow SUNY to
state budget," commented Gov.
The aoverno r uked the expand Its present enrollment of
Nelson Rockefeller wt Sunday leplature to approve a total of 123,500 by 4600 students. State
njght when be proposed the $652 mUlion in state spending to University Chance!Jor Ernest L.
1972-73 "austerity" budaet. The help operate the State University Boyer had sou ght to expand the
$7.9 billion plan rCduces state System, community colleges, t h e system by 15,000 students.
spending in all but a few areas City University of New York , aid ""Rockefeller noted that the $105
such as school aid, welfare and to private colleges and speciaJ million increase in education aJd
prison reform.
programs fo r the disadvantaged . was due primarily t o buell-ln
The budget, which calls for no Under the governor's " tighten the increases caused by more pupils.
a dditional taxes, represents a belt" policy, the figures are To not provide the increased aid
reversal of the once liberal virtually the same as this year's would actually mean a dec rease of
s pending poli cies of the budget.
3.5 per cent in assistance which
Rockefeller administration. .for
In hts budget message, would result in higher local
property taxes. The increased aid
will also permit the payments o f
some $4 .8 million in negotiated
pay raises for professional staffs.
State a1d for commumty
STARTS- THURSDA Y, Jan. 20 thru Jan. 25
colleges also remains at the same
S8 6 million level whu.: h the
N IGHTLV •t B:OO·p .m . MAT INESS Sat . &amp; Sun. at 2 :00 &amp; 5:00p.m
governor said '' will permit the
colleges to rnamta1n enrollments
and · academ tc qual1ty" f~H thctr
more than 103,000 stuc.h:nt!&gt; In
add 1l1on , apprO'(Intatcly SJ
miJlion ts slated for spec1al atd to
disadvantaged students at
Aut. Of{-Ctmtpul Edit()l'

OLD RIVOLI

..........,
COOPER
111111

,~om rnun ily ~:olleges .

Aid to I he City Umvers1Ly of
New York. wtuch has rc~:ently
come under alla.:k from &lt;;1lOH'
legislJtors for eb open enrollment
polictes, es listed at rune nulhnn
dollars and Rockefeller 1s Jl~o
re~:ommend1ng funds fm CUNY
to continue its self-help program,.

BERG...MAll

-~·MfWMa.lll

. , . CAUIIl ... unu Mllltl
&amp;G. DdYLVA,......., ,..._

......................,
Sam Wood
......

Parochial controversy
ntrcc controversml prul!,ralll'atd to pnvat&lt;- ~:olleges, auJ In
paroclual schools and dtd to
c ultural mstitutions, were Jll
included tn 1he hudget without
any cuts Pnvnte c91leges rcce1ve
$30 million a year, paroch ial
schools
S I 00 million, indud1ng

---ftu~.,_.,,

I he S33 million teacher aid
program whtch is now under court
challenge. Two notaiJle exceptions
to the proposed "hold the line"
polky for educataonal aid are a
c ut 1n educational telev1s1on
progroms from $450,000 to
$60.000. and a reduction en
s&lt;: h ool lunch programs. The
federal government IS expected to
pu:k up the los1&gt; 10 the latter .Jrea
Next t o school aed . welfare and
Med1ca1d well gel the second
largest hudget IOlrcase under the
proposed stdlC spcnd1ng program
Although claiming his llJ71
rcfom1s have ~lowed the in .:rea~e
10 welfare caseloads, Rockefeller
s..eed the add111on of $95 million
wa' nee~cd to 111a1nlam lurrcnl
level!&gt; of hend1b Jnd cover .en
I! Xpet..fed
JJl ,QO() IOt:rt'J\C Ill
rec1p1cnl'i tills year

S I .8 billion. Under the budget

proposal, basic payments for Aid
to Dependent Children recip ients
would remain at the reduced level
1mposed last year $208 a month
for a family of four
TotaJ spendmg for Medkaad ,
which provides medical services to
welfare recipients, the elderly and
disabled , was put at S45 million .
The $34 million encrcase IS needed
largely to aid nursmg ho mes
threatened Wllh a federal aJd
cutoff. In add1l10n t.o urts have
re1nstatt'd lt'rlaln Medica1d
~:utbacks voted 1n 1"171 , such .t&lt;;
tugher eligib11i1y standards and the
loss of some benefits including
drug.'&gt;, dentures and eye glasses
Ro~:kcfeller noted that stnct'
July tJH• work requ1remcnt for
" employablt&gt;" adults on welfare
had resulted tn I 3,000 rec1p1ents
findmg JObs and another .20,000
Federal welfare assistance
I osing thetr benefits for not
"Tile unly adequate, long·terrn ~:o mplytng. ''The 1971 measures
answer lo the 'ld&amp;genng welfare have been successful tn reducing
ru't' of ~talc and local the incidents of fraud and abuse
governmenh 1s the federal 1 n our welfare system,'' the
takeover 11f those programs" Gov
governor sa1d , "and we have evt'ry
Ru~:kefeller '&gt;.!ld Of the e&gt;.pected
1nten t 1on of 1mproveng .and
$4.2 b1lhon welfJre and Medicaid expanding on them "
cost t hts year, the state and local
What Rockefeller termed a
governments will pay S I .2 billion "si&amp;JUficant increase" - probably
t:ach and 1he federal government
continued on ~»~ 8 CaJnpus Productions Presents

Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics

CHUCK MANGIONE
QUARTET
and

BAT McGRATH&amp; DON POTTER
In Concert

FR I., January 21

8:30p.m.

Peace Bridge Exhibi t ion Center - Porter Ave.
Limited amount of $4.00 t1ckets on sale now at· .#estival
T1ckets - Stdtler Hilton lobby, Norton Un1on - U .B .• Buffalo
State Tecket Office; Falls T1ckets - Haeberle P1aza. Neagara
Falls. WHEN GONE, ALL TICKETS $5.00

2 out of the last 3 Presidents
invited us to teach our Speed Reading Course
to members of the White House Staff.
EWRO has been tau!flt to the
White House staffs of ·Pre!&gt;
1dents Kennedy and Nixon;
Senators Proxm1re, Ted Ken·
nedy. nibicoH. Symington.
and thousands of people in
politiCs. the arts. business and
professional life and .. . thou·
sands of students.
These students have found a

way to free themselves from
hornework drudgery and get
better grades, too. We can
teach you how to do hours
of homework in mtnutes by
increaseng your reachng speed.
concentratiOn and note takmg
abilities.
We have arranged for a free
mtnl·lesson to prove. in one

fascinating hour. that you cart
read at a taster rate that you
can 1r1crease your reading
speed ri!fl t then and there
tha t old readmg methods
dOn't apply any more
Attend the mine lesson that's
convenient for you . It should
be worth an hour of your t1me
to save thousands.

We Are Now OpenI

MIKE'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
SANDWICHES

ATTEND ONE THE THESE FREE MINI-LESSONS

at EVELVN WOOD READING
DYNAMICS INSTITUTE
3806 Main St.

(Next to Buf. Textbook)

Wed.-day , January 19, at 7 :30p.m

Thursday • .Mnuary 20. at 7:30p.m.
Friday, January 21 at 7 :30p.m.
lfld
SATURDAY, Jenuary 22 at 11 :00 p .m .

FOR FURTti ER INFORMATION CALL - WARREN WALDOW 837·2823

WE ALSO HAVE - Coffee - Hot Chocolate

Soda Pop

47 KENMORE AVE. IN THE UNIVERSITY PLAZA
OPEN DAILY 9:30 - 1:00 a.m.

Wednesday , January 19, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page five

�•

r _E_d_iT_oR_iA_l_
L--

__.Aj

~--

Retain vending
On the basis of a desire to bring competition to this.
campus, the Faculty-Student Association has proposed the
import of a non-university vending service. While the notion
of competition is both admirab le and desirable, it is not
Vending that has brought the most complaints.
In terms of monetary influx, Vending is the smallest of
the FSA enterprises. The Bookstore and Food Services
siphon off a far great percentage of student and faculty
monies each year. Further. these latter ventures are the
center of much justified criticism, not Vending.
Thus this proposal must be viewed as a diversion designed
to convince members of the University community that FSA
is not an administrative monopoly, while continuing to
zealously guard their food· and book-selling endeavors.
Vending is undoubtedly the best-administered of the FSA
enterprises and should . unless FSA hamstrings them by
limiting their space, be able to compete well. If however,
Food Service or the Bookstore were forced to compete we
are sure the results would be greatly different.
After all, neither of those operations is competing either
price-wise or in service with outside concerns, despite their
rent-free, utility-free and tax -free status. We therefore advise
the FSA Board of Directirs to reject Mr Schillo's proposal
for vending competition and instead develop proposals for
alternatives to the Bookstore and Food Service. Then, and
only then, can FSA even begin t o merit its claims of serv1ce
to the University communi ty .

Illegal review
The tale of student fees continues. The University has
now decreed that the fees collected by the Inter-Residence
Council, although voluntary, must be subject to the same
review and controls as mandatory fees .
Since I RC does not have a history of controversial
expenditures. its officers are not concerned about this
development, believing that the Review Committee will
simply rubberstamp its allocation. Unfortunately, this
short -sighted attitude does little to help the student body.
Further, their motives are quite subject to suspicion. ~
State review of voluntary fees is counter to the current
guidelines and th is tacit approval by Alan Miller of a giant
step backwards forces us to ask whether he is working for the
students who elected him or the administrator (Thomas
Schillo) who provided ,him with a summer job.

THE SpECTI\UM
Wednesday, January 19. 1972

Vql. 22, No. 43

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
C~Mging Editor - AI Benson
Co-MaNQing Editor - Mtke Lippmann
AS$\. M.Nging Editor - Susan Moss
Busin- M.nager - Jack Herfan
Advenising Menege;' - Susan Mellent~ne

C.mpus

Cttv
AIR.

CopV
Ast.
fNture
G,..phic Arts

JoAnn Armao
Jeff Greenwald
,Howie Kurtz
Harvy Ltpman
. .vacant
Ronni Forman
. . . Marty Gatti
Cla1re l(riegsmal'
.vacant
Tom Toles

..

layout

'
lit. &amp; Or8tna
Music ..
Off-Campus

Alit ... .
f'tloto .
Spons
ASS1 .

Barb Bernhard
.. Maryhope Runyon
Michael Silverblatt
Billy Altman
Lynne Traeger
. . Janice Cromer
. Marc Aclcerman
Mickey Osteneicher
.. Barry Rubin
.Howie Faiwl '

The Spctrum is served by United PrfJSIS International, College Press
Service, the Los Angeles Free Press, the los Angeles Times Syndicate and
Liberation News Service.
Republication of maner herein Without the
Edltor·in-Chief is forbidden

8 )(p1'8SS

C:OnJent of the

Editorial Policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

. Page ·six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, Jan';\~ 19, 1972

·~~WEJ.L...
t~or

\

v-~~

-::;t; ~ '

'YOU'LL IE DILIOHTID TO KNOW I STILL PLAY AS WILL AS IVIIt .

Investigate Health Service
To the 1::(/itor

l would like to see the Student Assot.:iation take
the initiative and tnvestigate the quality of the
service of the University Health Servtce. I call for
this fact-finding on the basis of my own personal
experience and upon episodes related to me by other
students.
Th1 s 1nves t tgatio n should , ul the least ,
.:ommunit.:ate by qutls!lo nnaires to th ose peo ple still

a part of th e University community and who have
availed themselves at the Univen;ity Health Service
during the past three years.
I frankly do no t know if the Student
Association has ju risdi ction over such a study, but
the student body constitutes an overwhelming
percentage o f recipients o f t he medical services and
upon that reason alo ne . the Stud~nt Associatton
should start action
Ju y Bielut

-

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
With the pa~~ing of perhaps the dullest Super
Bo wl in 1hat even t 's bas1cally unmterestmg h1story
we have finally co me to the end of the pro football
&amp;l'ason (yeah , I know about the Pro Bo wl - don ' t get
picky!). Des pair no t, ho weve r , for w e are JUSt
entenng the most exicltng season in American sport
t he presidential campargn. It is a strange aspect of
American life that everything from cake baking to
poli tt .:~ ts co mnared to football (a ny day now I
np~c.:t c;raharn Kerr to phone T om Landry and
w ngral ula te lum .) i\&lt;:tually . considenng the' warhke
feat ures of football th1~ IS not overly surpn&amp;ing.
Mind you , I speak as a willing add1 ct of the sport as
well as a pac:ifist. 1f yo u can figure that o ut ( I can't).
Perhaps th1~ L~ SIOi pl y further ev1denc:e o f my
sc.: hi.w phrensc nature
Anyway , 1t is the tune of the year when my
fnends , realiz.Jng what au upm1o nat ed , conc.:e1ted
bastard I am. ~tart askmg me who I would lik~ to see
get the nom1nat1on Well, qu1te frankly the only
person I could vote to r Witho ut reservation IS me.
Thi5 res po nse, ho wever, 1s always me! w1th smtrk s,
groans very had JOkes and ..c'mon , who do you
really ltke'1 " Well , people. let me settle th1s here and
now I don't parlicularly like any uf them . I d o . of
course, have a ba ic m s 1 1n~tual desire to see Nnwn
tarred and fea t. e red and run ngh t ou t of
Washington I By 1I • way, d1d you eveJ realize that 1f
Sll per yn yo hJ.d heen an AII· AmCnl·an at Wh1ttier,
George Alh:n 1111ght have called lum from the White
llmtst·. ) Rcy ond t hat I have an ever l~sl.' ning level tlf
llllcrl.'sl No w 10 the specifics.
Ttw Repu blit·ans are hardly wort h th e space one
uses to comment upon th em . There 1s always Dkk
Nnwn
enough said there. Then we have Pete
Md.'lnskey, who probably should be congratulated
fo r tw., th1 ngs real11ing what a disaster Nixon is an d
gomg v n the D1ck Cavett show to make a fool of
Jack Kem p. Beyo nd that , however, the Congressman
IS hJfl.lly an 1mposmg candida te . As for John
Ashbroo k , well let me JUSt say that the Republican
party deserves J o hn Ashbrook.
1 he Democrats, as al ways, are more mterestlng
Not a whole Jot heller - but defimtely more
mtercs11ng. First, I suppose, there is Ed Musk1c.
Astde fo r the fact tbat I am wary ot politicians who
walk around doing A !le lmcoln Impressions, there
are a lot of o ther good reasons for disliking Muskie.
His p osillon o n the war has varied from
noncommital to carefully moderate. His su pporters
would have you berieve he's the greatest
conservatiomst Since Smokey the Bear, but the truth
is t hat Muskie was always LBJ's henchman fo r
watering down environmental protect ion b1tls.
Nevertheless , the odds lean heavily toward Muskie
(rumor has it that J immy the Greek has set the odds
at 3-2 that in a Nixon-Muskie-Wallace race everyone

will lose).
01 the othe rs, o nl y George Mc.:Govern could
seriously be considered an alternative . H u mphrey 1s
well Humphrey. Electing Hubert wo uld be someone
what akin to electing Captain Kangaroo. Sam Yort y
is the reincarnauon of Curtis LeMay. Wilb ur M11ls ts
o ne of the most po werful in Washington . Why he
would want to be vice president (wh.ich is what he 1s
likely to get) IS beyond my comprehe nsion. The
o ther s trong vice presidential contender is Henry
J ackson . He has just what the party is look:tng for
a hardhne on Communis m and a rclut1vely sol10
liberal domestic record. Gene McCarthy is nn t11s
prin ci ples alone t he best of the lot. H e also doe,n't
have a prayer of get11ng t he nornmat1on S h1r lt:y
Cltisholm IS a fin e. fi ne woman who may yet wreak
so me well-deserved havo1. upon the Demotrall t
party ; but she also has not even the fa1ntest h o pe .
John Lindsay is the enigma of the Dem ocratt c party
I d on't believe he is nearly as bad as both h1s rad11.:al
and reactionary enemies think No r cJo I fee l he IS
the · anywhere near as good as the tmage h1s
supporters have tned t o c reate What I do b~hew lS
that Llndsay could be a positive pohttcal for..:e 1f h~
would stop wasting his time tynng to get tnto a
pos1t1on to d o ~o. He was 11 polt!nt1ally great
congre~sm an until h e started campaJgning for mayor
(about three yean; before the ele~.ouo nl and a
potentially good mayor who fatled b ecau se he was
too busy campa1grung for the prestdency to be a
good mayor. Maybe 1f he gets elected president h.:'ll
finally stop campaignmg and start acting. That ,
ho wever, is something w e wo n ' t find o ut this year,
however, because Lindsay has a slightly hetter
chance than McCarthy .
All o f which brings us baLk to McGovern fhe
South Dak ota Senator is probably the ~1n ly
.:andidate fo r whom this reporter (and I use that
term very loosely) wo uld consider vo t ing. He ts a
nice liberal who d es pite that handicap has managed
to keep a reasonable amount of contact with reality
He was one or the first to suggest that amnest y be
extended to men who had fled to Canada to evade
the draft. Both his foreign policy and d ornest1c:
records border on ratio nality, which puts him abo ut
three levels above the competition. In a time when I
believed electing a president wo uld change things I
wo uld even have campaigned for him , but that time
is past.
Finally , we come to The Man . There are o nly
tw o people in Alabama whose names have been
heard north of the Tennessee line. One is Bear
Brya nt (football, remember?). He is probably the
mo re preferable presidential candidate of the two. If
you've been in Outer Mongolia for the 'past decade,
the o ther is George Wallace. Wallace doesn't really
figure lo have any chance of being elected . He will
just get enouJh votes to remind us what a sick nation
we live m.

�Guest Opinion

Appeal ProceB:S
To the Editor:
The Graduate Student Association, with the
Graduate School Executive Committee, is drafting
procedures to allow students t o appeal grievances
above the level of the department. However, we need
a file of case histories o( past and present grievances.
This file will serve several purposes : ( I ) rt will
guai"Mltee that particular problems can be handled
by the process; (2) It will provide evidence to those
who question the need for du e process procedures ,
(3) It will allow the GSA to immediately help
shafted students to resolve grieva nces that art going
untreated .
The University Survey showed that students
believe that these grieV311 ces exist in large amounts '"
many ar eas. However, t h ose who honestly do not
know how to evaluate survey data or who for other
reasons choose to deny its validity need data that is
defined in terms of indivtdual cases. This file will be
used to generate case histones which , if necessary,
protect the ident ity of the st uden ts while still vividly
pointing out the essence of the grievance.
Any area of grievance is relevant whether 1t
mvolves unfair assignment of t eaching or research
workloads, arbitr.&amp;r y prelim . exams, unfair treatment
by advisors or dissertation committees. unl'a1r o r
arbitrary evaluation of termination, et c .
While recognizing that informal discussion is the
best method to deal with perceived inequsttes in an
academic sy11tem, there must be a process available
to deal with problems which cannot be resolved th1s
way This also protects against ine&lt;JUities due tC'I the
wide diversity in treatment of graduate students
acros.'l the University . While programs dirfer, ta11ness
should not be a variable across the Umversity
1l1e GSA ~&gt;trongly requests student\ who are ur
hllve been aggrieved or who know of ~uch gncvam:cs
to contact John Greenwnod (Psychology), M1chacl
Morrell (C'ivil Engineering), or the GSA off1ce (20~
Norton , HJJ -S505), 1mmcdiatcly.
John

(;fl' t'fl Wlllltf

Vttt• l'rt' ftc/l'llf fill h "Cfl'mal Ajjatrs
(;rudtwfl' SWdt'rlf As.w ctafton

Brothers, don't rip off
li• rllr 1:(/ltor
Regardless ot lh~: ~:xpcctcd resporlse lrum some
nf I h&lt;&gt; so-&lt;:alled "togel her" Brothers .t nd Sister&lt;; ur
the: "humor-finding" Kactsts, I ~uh1111t 1111~ opl'n
lt~tlt'r ul complamt to The Spt•t·rrum
nu r1ng the summer scss 1011 of 1'171
unmedlately after thr final exam of Soc 101 a
Brother came 10 to anange a make-up exam After
domg this. he asked me to loiln h11n my null!\ lu
~tudy from . His radar must have hipped hnll to thl'
full that I was, shalL I S'-'Y. a "stupid" Sister whu
lirmly believes in togetherness of hlack people With
" s mile of confidence, I willmgly obliged him . Smce
my name and addre~~ w:1!1 on the cover, he assu rt:d
rne of 11s retum . It is now Januar y, Brother, and you
haven't found rne yet! Even the Imperialistic U.S
Post Office would haw returned 1t for you had you
111ercly dropped it in a m;ul hox!
You were ''heavy" enough It&gt; fiddle away your
'ummcr belause YOIJ knew some foollille me would
dt&gt; the work for us hoth! If you were or are really so
"heavy." my note~ ~hnuld have served you well by
now I am now askmg you to leave the book at the
Nmton Union Lost &amp; .,ound At least be t.lack
enough to ''do" something heaut1fult
To a not her Brothel , Norman L .• 1f you l1ked the
.tlburn of "Message to the Grassroots" by Malcolm X
so well , why not buy a co py so that you can return
nune'l Or ~~ it that your comprehenswn of the wur(l\
he spoke so well is so limited?
Should this letter seem facetiOus, valueless
.lfld/or msulting to any nt you readers. I forg1ve ytlU
since your lack of ins1g.ht IS most ltkely not ol your
own dotng. To those ol you who are gifted With
awareness. Right On! The aware students, especially
those who read that spec1al newsletter will indeed no
longer tolerate the depth of Rip-Offs that hJve
tnvaded flus cam pus. Silen~:e is not golden . at least
not anymore!
As the mother of three children who could very
well be futu(.e leaders of my people, I will not let the
Rippers who 'are, or will be, fa thers and mothers get
by unnoticed. lf you will not get yourselves together
and be independenUy proud of your own
achievements, then back off and get out of my way
and others like me who are striving for a definite,
together and solidifying future . A "new breed of
Toms" is so unnecessary!
Sandria J. Walker

('

It's Christmas Eve. The reds, greens and blues
flash conspic uously in front of me; flickering false
notions of Christmas innocence, in a world where
Christmas has become a dnce-a-year vigil towards a
holy idea that died a long time ago. Drowned in one
man's soft whispers. It's funny h ow we have
continued, and continue, to lose o urselves in those
soft whispers, ever since the kingdom in its nascence,
abruptly died. For it is the soft whispers, lost in
those subtlest acts of violence, that continue to
dominate even th e ceremonious prayers, that are
l!ccurring at this very moment , all over the world .
Ch rist died for o ur sins, we dle for our own.
At this very designated sacred time of yea1,
when people humble themselves before the eternal
glory that IS t heirs to share before God, before
themselves. always; you would think lhat ~ome, if
not just the people who have some control over the
destiny of humanity, would stop to reconsider. stop
to search for some alternative to the intense and
corrupting passions that are thh age Glory. glory.
hallelulah , h1~ truth is matching on. as few of u~ see
H. and even fewe1 of liS ch oose to march with H.
1\nd sadly. today. lor most . God remains a discarded
rnass of posthumous Christmas resolutions lhat
survive, but for the fact that they patiently :1wa1t
rhe1r wrruption, as the Christmas belb fade uHo tlu:
already fading Chnstmas a1r.
So o nce again, we've c;omc upon our onle·a-year
VIgil, candles aglow. religiOus whtsper,. Smiles that
somehow glow, now, here, today. allvt' in the soul of
grasping and groping rhythm~. NQ 1111e qUite
understands why this time of ye:u suc.:ceds like no
vthcr. In bemg the time for second efforts. one more
at1C111pt But yet It exists; the extra sn1ilc, the
torced , but SOillehOW helievahfe Sllll.'ellt y foor IHIW
mud1 else i~ left 10 a world where we a1e fir~t
heginning to understand how close we ;ue to los1ng
tt, to losing ou1 ve1 y ow11 hold (lll 11, to losing our
very lives
Christrna~ is a ltme to JOIIl ha111.lS, hands lhat
have alive in their essen ce. the preparation to part as
soon as this cultural asstgnation terminates.
('hlistmas is a time for all uf us to he brothers m
unity with Christ , all the time kn1&gt;wing that Chmt ,
for most , is somethjng you buy, but seldom live. Th~
world's most renowned Chnstiam are the ~me men
who support wars and 1acism (no llt:ed tu continue).
The first to mmlemn as wrnng. but the first tu
supp011 a~ necessary Sit~tc when 1~ nwr;1l1ty fed hy
inunorallly 1
Chrtsl ma~ is a 11111~ vi prtstnts and g1v1ng.
hro th ~rhoou and tru.:e~ . P&lt;·oplc stopp1ng lu say .
"Tim IS wrnng. the killing uf man lly m:w," long
elll&gt;ugh tu sartlon1cally 1grllne 11 or h&gt; plan rhc next
1111.:urston with regwupcd torles. rcplc111sheu
supplies Peuplc go1ng In the !&gt;IIHe to huy gifts,
artide~ to he depos11ed under a tree of hypocnsy.
Hypowsy that condones the buymg and ~elhng of
salvation The onc.:e-a·year personages. that send
Cmpor:.te America mto soaring prnfib because of
guilty consciences. Don't feel alune, 11'5 not only
Ameril.':l . Most asrure to the comforts that many ot
us possess. J t's a gu11t y world . Let's h1 1pe we're fast
enough tu abort the t1en&lt;;ts. that can 11nly leave us
r old and crymg at the door to our Brave New World .
And kt ~ further hope that our tiravc Nrw World
ISn't iliSI another forlorn tnvcntHln of our dymg
i n1agwat con

( I ' m sorry. but even at t.IUs lime, even during the
one-a-year extra attempt at happiness, o n Christmas
Eve and the days surrounding the new year, we must
choose to remember, and not forget. We must
choose to affirm what we are by not ignoring the
fact that at this time, even while we celebrate,
American Phantoms haunt the night skies over
Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. And we cannot ignore
the fact that a tnan such as Richard Milhouse Nixon
can be named by Time Magazine as Man of the Year
(wh o's man , and what year?).
And yes, at th.is time, this very special time, we
must not let the joy paralyze us into delusion. For
C hristmas, more than any other time, can be the
uJttmate in delusion. The point is, to make this
holiday succeed in a world such as ours, it is
necessary to decipher the thin line that separates the
pleasant illusion of Christmas with the darlgerous
delusion of Christmas. To myself, the essential
diffe rence lies in the fact that to he deluded is
dangerous, to be illuded is not. IUusion being a
conscious misrepresentation, delusion a mere
misrepresentation . Tite face of tru t h shines brightest
when the candle of illusion reaches its most fervid
potnt uf intensity. Christmas is a time where we
e1ther comple tely ignore what we are, or we stare
ourselves and each other in the face.
Christmas is the most lucid reOectlon of w hat
we aJe. And sadly, our festive lights can't, and
shouldn't. anymore blind us to the fact that there
are no lights happily radiating in many parts of the
world, and many parts that we are not that far from,
both in the literal and figurat1ve sense Things such
as ghettos, VIetnam, Bangia Desh, and the Fourth
Wutld (the J1,.1nkee World}. must, and will, keep
haunting us, haunting us to act, to respond ; to
alleviation, and to eventual and comprehensive
amclwrallun .
Christmas il. no longer a tsme to absolve
ourselves by a personal rite of all we have done. It is
not a holiday that cleanses us in order to start us
o nce again on out condoned, and at the same time,
obscene plight, It is not a holiday meant to make us
forget the past by telling us there will be another
Chrtstmas here next year, to absolve us of any sins
we have committed m the intermitten• period .
Christmas should uot mea11 that Christmas will be
here next year so don't worry about what you do,
and even WlH'SC , what you don't do, unhl that time.
I guess what is must important is the realiza tion
that, in :~11 the perve~ity that surrounds us,
Chnstmas can be a time 111 see, to be . An
opportunity to begin to live wh;tt fu1 twelve months
we conjecture. A p11y , wo many of us ch&lt;&gt;ose to
lorget instead ol remember And sn even greater
p1ty, most of u~ choose to furg~ve vumdves , tnstead
of resolve flllr'Selves
Latc1 that same evenmg, I went to Chnstmas
Mass. I wasn ' I raised t'hnsllan, but nobody has to be
Christian in o rder to feel the power and beauty of
this hohday. The priest blessed a man tn the first
pew . Then, the rest of the congregatiOn passed on
the blessmg by means of embraces and handshakes.
It was a very emot1onal and touc hing expenence
When I left , I fell very high . Everyone d1d . As I
walked into the l' Ovl Colorado air. I JUSt wa111ed tl)
make every one believe in the ophmism I was
feeling. But I settled for slowly walking home,
thinking : ..Thank God for Christmas!"

by Jesse levine

Don't buy bootleg
record from a company and musical person/group
that are already well off. if not indeed, nch T h e
I' m ~ending th1s letter to protest a particularly Bengla Desh bootleg IS another matter - h er~ you
low form of cornmerc1al actiVItY - the sale tn are diverting money from th ose who are 1n d esperate
Suffalq o f the bootleg recording of the need into some hip capitalist's pocket , and you ca n
Harnson-Oylan.Clapton Bengla Oesh (sic) concert
be damn sure that none of his profits go to Bengla
The artists who took part w the concert did so for a Desh .
specific reason - to raise money for the aid of the"
Instead of spending your money on the bootleg.
Bengali people From what I've read. a legit album of I urge U.B. students to wait for the legit album . If it
the concert w1ll be released , and a good deal of the gets held up by the company . send the money to the
price is slated for the Bengali refugees. It follo ws UN ICEF Harrison-shankar Relief Fund , in care of
that the people who are man ufact uring and selling the U.N., New York City. You might even give a
the record are indirectl y depriving destitute people thoupt, before you buy ttult next lid or record, of
of aid. Buying an ordinary bootleg album is one those that need your help so desperately .
thing - you are only diverting several dollars per
Stephen Keller
111 tilt' t.dtCclt

Wednesday , January 19, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�..
I

New budget.
CO P EN HAGEN
King F rederik IX ofi
Denmark died Friday at the age of 72 . Ruler of
Europe's o ldest monarchy for 25 years, Frederik fell
ill with influenza and pneumonia on New Year's Eve,
and suffered a heart attack on Jan. 3. The popular
king's condition took a tum fo r the worse, and the
official announcement came Friday' evening: " His
Majesty King Frederik JX, who had been lying
unconscious since I a.m . passed away quietly at 7 :SO
p.m." Frederik was succeeded by his eldest daugh ter,
Princess Margrethe, 31, who became Denmark's
second ruling q ueen.
SAN FRANCISCO - The murder tnal of the
"Soledad Brothers," John Clutchette and Fleeta
Drumgo, erupted into a shouting match Friday, and
the judge threatened to clear the courtroom of
spectators and throw them in jail. The shouting
began when defense attorney Floyd Silliman was
questioning an ex-convict who had previously
testified he had wi tness to the slaying of a guard.
The resulting clash between Silliman and the
prosecution sent the spectators into laughter,
whereupon Judge Vavurlus said: "If I hear any more
cynical laughter out there, I'll clear you aJI out and
give you five days and $500."
SAN FRANCISO - Bail has been denied again
for Angela Davis , and her attorneys say she i$
running out of money fighting charges stemming
from the 1970 Marin County shooting in which four
persons died . The ruling cleared the way for the start
of the trial, scheduled to begin Jan . 3 1. Ms . Davis'
attorneys say that funds from donations and other
sources are vutually exhausted, and the defendant
still fa ces a SIX to nine month trial. They claim that
the state should pick up the defense costs "in o rder
to equalize the apport unity ."
NANCY , FRANCE:
A fice-and-a-half l111ur
rebellion by prisoners 1n the Charles Il l Jall m tl11s
French CitY was crushed Saturday by riot police
supported by helicopters and tear gas venades.
Jlrisone~ u~ed bottles, dubs and bncks as weapons
to back then demands for better treatment. It was

the third serious jail riot in Fra nce in six mont hs,
and followed a repo rt admitting poor conditions and
brutality in qwst French prisons, many of which are
over I 00 years o ld .
WAS HI NGTON - Made available Sunday for
the first time were the results of the military's urine
tests for d rug use. The report indicated that th e
problem is largely confined to the Army and to
Vietnam. The tests show that world-wide only 0.2
per cent of t he Marines tested were o n hard d rugs,
0.3 per cent of the Navy men and 0 .5 per cent of the
Air Force men were on hard drugs. However, the
results from the Army tests showed that 2.8 per cent
were drug users. The tests made in Vietnam we re
held without warning, and uncovered a greater
amount of drug use, rangi ng from 5.6 per cent down
to 4 ,5 per cent for the last two weeks in December.
MONTPELIER , VT. - The Vermont state
Supreme Court declared the state's abortion statute
unconstitutional last Friday. Vermont's law, first
established in 1846, allowed an abortion only if a
woman 's life was in danger, The case was brought by
Ms . Jacqueline R., two months pregnant, who sought
the abortio n in Vermont on the grounds that she
co !.lid not afford to t ravel to New York . The justices
opinion said : "We hold that th e legislature, having
affi r med the right of a woman to abort, cannot
simultaneously, by denying medical aid in all but
cases where it is necessary to preserve her life,
prohibit its safe exercise."
ALBANY - The Public Service Commission
approved a $ 160 million annual increase for the New
York Telephone Co. Monday. Calling the increase
" distressingly large," the PSC said it was necessary to
support the co mpany's planned Sl billion
investment per year to improve service. However, t he
PSC also ordered a plan whereby two million
customers, mainly in the New York City area, can
get refunds o f $1.50 per month when their service
faUs below a certain level. The ·average inc rease for
additional message units will be 4 .6 - 6 .8 per cent ,
the increase in flat rate servi ce will be eight to nine
per cent, and an increase in service connection fees
of about 25 per cent.

-continued from

~ge $--

• •

totaling aro und six Dlijlion dollars instance, state wo rkers will not
- was included in the budget for aet a raise this year, unless t hey
the sta te prison system. He said decide to rue other a ovemment
the fu nds would provide better employees to provide t he money
secu rit y m eas ur es, a • for t he raises. State de partments
reorganization of adm inistrative will ha ve to "abso rb '' S 18 millio n
staff at all facilities and other in previously negotiated pay
changes J!eeded at a time when "it raises, without any overall
is vitally important tha t the state's increase in their budgets. To make
facilities be managed as wisely and up the f unds, program expenses
h u m anel y as possible." In will be cut and vacant jobs not
addition to the new o perating fill ed . Also, all mlijor ]lew
funds, t he budget i~cludes the highway construction has been
first monies for a long range suspended because of last year's
reconstruction of state prisons. defeat of another $2 .5 biUion
Included was six million dollars t ransportation bond issue and the
for t he reconstruction of the exhaustion of earlier bond issues.
The state spending program
Attica Correctional Facility and
$3.3 million for a ''maxi-maxi'' proposal was scheduled to be
security facilit y at an as yet dist ributed to members of the
legi&amp;lature Monday. By law. it has
undetermined site.
Citing the "ravages" of to be passed by April I . Assembly
narcotics addition, Gov . Speaker Perry B. Duryea has
Rocke f eller's budget for the warned, however, that the budget
coming fiscal year also asks a total may u ndergo additional cuts
of S II 5 million to combat drug before it wins legislative approval.
abuse. This is the same amount In conclusio n , Rockefeller
allocated in this year's budget. stressed that his budget was
The governor requested $75 balanced on an anticipated $400
million for the State Narcotics million increas~ in federal revenue
Addiction Control Commission. sharing_ If this money is not
The agency plans to continue its approved by Congress, he said.
new emphasis on short-term further budget cu ts and
detoxification programs as "rollovers" wo uld be used to close
opposed to long-range residen tial the gap, rather than hiking taxes
treatment. He recommended $40 again this year,
million for state aid to local
ant1-drug programs. Although the
state will contmue to seek local
partic1pat10n , Rockefeller sa1d it
would ask all localities to review
their narcotics programs to
determine which are the most
productive

Gustav

Continued cuts
Rockefeller said his budget will
mean further hardships for muny
branches of government, state
workers and the public. For

Xeroxs cheap!
355 Norton Hall

. ,.,... -- ...,.,...

ttrt AWAno WINHEA

GENESEE ·BEER POSTER COMPETITION
FIRST· SECOND -· THIRD · \.FOURTH PRIZE-S500

EACH

liUUS AND CONOITlON8
1 Compellloon is open to all pereona

111 years of age

and over No proof of purchaae or olhar COflalderation
•s requlrod.
2 Competlllon pefiOd. January 1 thru ~arch 31. 1972_
All entnea musl be received by March 31. 1972.
3 WtnneJS will be reproduced In full colOr lithography, 20" x 28. All entries muat be 20" " 28" . either
horizontal or vertical.
4. Eac11 on1ry muat show Of depict, In eome manner.

somewhere In the &lt;lnign 111e Gene- name Of logotype, or a G e - package (Gennee Beer. Ge,_
Cream Ale 0&lt; Fyfe &amp; Drum Beer).

S. Entries will be ludge(l on a b&amp;ala of orlginalily. art
technique and aullabHity fM reprodu&lt;rtlon. without
limitation u to theme or content, aublect to final approval o1 Stale alcoholic beverege conlrol agencoes.
6. Each of tour wlnnera will rec:elve $500.00. Winning
entrlea become the propef1y of Great lakea Prase

an&lt;! wllr be uaeo •n the sales promotion activities of
the Genaaee Brewing •::0 Inc.

7 All entrants will receive a sat of the
poatera..

tout wonnong

8 Each entry most be ldenlllled. In upper lefl hand
comer of the raverae side with enllanl'a name, aOdreas. age. and home address to which entry should
be returned alter ~arch 31 . 1972.
9. Judges will be Leo Kaplan, Artost, Rocheetef, N. Y.:

Jim R•diOn. Asaoc•ata Pro•essor, scnoo1 ot Fu&gt;e Art.
Syracu.. Un•verslty; Jamea 1/eatch, Fine Arts MaiOf,
State University College at Brockport.
10. Emp~ of the ~r. membe,. of th&amp;ir famIlies. and aponaor'a advertlsl(lg agency. are not eligible. State alcoholic beverage control regutatlone
amo prohibit partlclpetlon by retail or wholesale 11end membe,. of their tamiiiM.
11. Competition Ia 110ld where prohibited by State
aleollOIIc be-.ge contrOl regula~

cen-•

ENTRIES SHOULD BE SENT TO:

GENESEE BEER ·POSTER COMPETITION
c/o GREAT

PRESS • 439 CENTRAL AVENUE • ROCHESTER, NEW YORK 14605

Page eight. The Spectrum. Wednesday, January 19, 1972
''

"

�Swimteam improves

Geneseo defeats Bulls
by only a slight margin
by Bruce Engd

were Chip Whiteside in the
200-yard individual medley and
Marty Barron in the 200-yard
Buffalo's much improved swim breaststroke. Whiteside's victory
team got an additional shot in the was particularly impressive for
arm last Saturday from senior Buffalo. Whiteside had faJlen into
transfer
Steve Schulman 1 a third place after the backstroke
sprinter. After transferring from leg, but took the lead with the
New Paltz one year ago, Schulman breastroke and increased his
had to sit out until this semester. margin in the freestyle .
But Saturday, against Geneseo,
To date Jay Rawley (63) and
Schulman started in grand style George Starn (62) are the team's
what will be a short swimming ttigh scorers though neither had
career as a Bull. ln his very first individual wins against Geneseo.
race, the SO-yard freestyle, Steve Starn was on both winnin&amp; relay
edged out Geneseo's Marty teams, but was surpassed on tlle
turn
Shopes to win in the fine time of last
of the 200·yard
23.5 seconds. Later on Schulman backstroke and had to settle for
picked up a second victor y taking second . Rawley, who has been a
the JOO.yard freestyle. This time wnsistent winner . had an off day.
Bu f fa lo's
captain
George but still managed to score six
Thompson came in second. points from two second • place
Schulman ended a perfect day fo r finis hes.
The
Genesco
meet
put
himself by swimming the second
leg on the Bulls VICtorious Buffalo's season's record at 2-6
with five meets left The Bulls
400-yard freesty le relay team .
Geneseo won the very close have already tmproved on last
seesaw battle 59·54 . The Bulls had year's 1·13 record and have done
the early lead after winning the much better even m lostng roles.
400·yard medley relay with ease . Buffalo may yet win anoth er meet
But the two diving event~ really this season which would make it
hurt Buffalo as Geneseo swept Buffalo's best year 111 four years.
both dives. This first enabled Mo re importantly the Bulls are
Geneseo tu ta ke away Buffalo's developing some fine SWimmers ,
early lead while the latter event which sh ould make next season
clinched the meet for them . Pat une of the best in a long time .
McGonkey tied the Clark Gym Next meet is at Buffalo State o n
pool record tn the o ptional dive . Feb . I . Then Penn State comes to
held by Buffalo's Tim Leo . Leo is Clark Gym on Feb . S.
still ineligible and will probably be
redsh irted this season .
Spectrum Staff Writer

..

..,.,....

the Harrimtn

Theater Studio tomorrow at 8 :30p.m. performing a
on•man show constructed from 1he works of

One man show

Samuel Beckett. The production, hailed as a tour de
fon:e by New York critics, and approved by Beckett
himself provides a rare opportunity to see a
performance of magnificent litenry/theatrical works
by a most acc:omplished actor. Tickets are available
at the Norton Hall Ticket Office.

INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE COURSES

INC 200I BLACK IDEOLOGIES (4 credits)
Chinwezu lbekwe •
Sec N

Buffalo winners
Other winners for the Bulls

.:._ Seminar Wednesday 2- S 204 Townsend Hall

INC 201 POUT/CAL AND SOCIAL ECOLOGY (4 credits} PauJ Tensor

Sec . I : ARR Reg. No. Sec . 2 : ARR Rea. No.
INC 204 CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION (4 credits) Kirk Robey ARR Reg, No.

lmm cdl~t l e

INC 206 STUDENTS AND THEIR INSTITUTIONS: (4 credits)
A CROSS- CULTURAL STUDY Joseph Williams ARR Reg. No.
INC219 AHISTORYOFTHEMODERNMIDDL EEASTT 17Y8
(4 credits) Judy Kolbas ARR Reg. No.

1967

INC 242 STUDENT- DESIGNED COURSI:.' (4 credits) Carol Rinnert

Reg. No.

INC 326 MODERN MID - EAST POLITICAL STRUCTURES (4 credits) Ali M. EJ.SaJafy Reg. No.
INC 356 TOPICS IN THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY: IBERO- AMERICAN PHIJ.OSOPHY
(4 credits) Jorge J . E. Gracia ARR (Cross-listed with Philosophy 356)
INC 361 URBANIZATION IN TRANSITIONAl. SOCIETY (4 credits) Robert Mattern
ARR Sec. I &amp; II Reg. No.
INC 366CULTURE &amp; LITERATURE ·FA R EAST &amp; AMERICA (4 credits)
Uchang Kim Th 1-2:50 p.m. Hoch . 3 16
Reg. Nol70629
INC 370 COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN SlX'IAI. WORK (4 credits) Marvin Bloom ARR
Reg. No. 170630
lNC 371 TEACHING ENGLISH AS A FOREIGN I.ANGUAG£ ,(4 credits) Judity Melamed
ARR Reg. No. 170641
INC 394G FIDEL CASTRO &amp; CUBAN REVOLUTION (4 credits) Albert Michaels
(Same as His. 394G3) Th. 10 - II :SO HL 29 N Reg. No. 170652
~~

INC 396 LEGAL HISTOR Y OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN (4 credits)
Howard Bennan ARR Reg. No. 171131
INC 400 OVERSEAS STUQY: ITS VALUE AND DIMENSIONS (4 credits)
Tuesdays: I :30 - 4 :30 - 31 J Townsend Hall
Instructor: Micbielli, Res. No. 171142
INC 482 PERUVIAN CULTURE (4 credits) William Stein MW 11 - 12:20
4234 RL Rm. 21 1 Reg. No. 170696
•
INC 499/NDEPENDENT STUDY (1 - 12 credits) Michaels
Rea. No. 171153

Model Abortion
Program
KARATE

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WICKERSHAM
WOMEN'S
MEDICAL
CENTER

Studio
trarn 'ell delcnse
Wan ) . lee
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l rom · M r

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A COMMUNITY
A UORTION SERVICE
AVF lt.I ATEO WITH A MAJOR
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r.ologists ond onesthcsiolo!ltsls
Cr nura l onoslhr.sia is \IS!'d for
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Low costs of oborl&lt;on procr·
dures :
Pregnancy
up lo 10 wks . 0 &amp; C. $150
up to 14 wks .. 0 &amp; C. S250
14· 24 weeks. Saline or
Mec ha nicAl lnduclion $400
In oil cos1•s over 10 weeks
preg nancy. Wickerahnm·s mcd·
leal sa fet y s tandards require
ove rnighl hos pital s tays .
Free professional se r vices
available to oborlion patients
include psychiatric counseling,
family planning and birth con·
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llcited ever. Private. Conftden·
tial. No red tape.

DIRECT SERVICE LINE
TO MEDICAL CENTER ·

(212) PLaza 5-6805
Call 8 AM to 8 PM
Mondays through Saturduvs

HOUR~ .

INFORMATION :
11 ·00
8 : 45p .m
(Monday to SaturdJy)
C A l l 8 3 6 ·6 0 1 8
3144 M AIN q
(Near U .6 . )

It's about time!
A calendar of men
for women.
:&gt;latl 1he New Year wilh the most un
u~ual ca lendar you've ever seen. Th
972 Calendar of Men for Women. ;
pholograpblc, not pOrnographic s1ud y o
11 unique men.
This is a large hangin,g calendar (I Y
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--------------------------------Calendar, P.O. Box 827
Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735

'lenr.t rush__ca lendars ot $2.50 ra . (plw
~0 cents rost~ge nnd hnndling) . Enclose~
' my cbcck ' money order for --

-

~rinl

nome
dd ress

&lt;_.•diedi/M.O. ~·'*to~~
Wednesday , Janu·a iy 19, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�I

OVERT·DIE ,
by Barry Rubin

Spom Editor
During th e recent interseassio n o n campus, Buffalo's basketball
program suffered its btggest defea t by far. When President Ketter t o ld
the alumni and friend~ of this University tha t they would h ave to
support the grant-in-aid program , h e in effect said tha t the pro gram
would have to b e toned do wn som ew hat. ln reality, Kette r is askjng a
group that co uld barely come up w ith $20,000 when Buffalo had
football, to cover a $40,000 grant-in-aid pro gra m for five new players
each year.
Actually. even Coach Ed Mu to and Athle t ic Director Harry F ritz
ad mit t h at th e Bulls could maintain th eir present competitive level wi th
onl y 16 players on grant, four per year. Th us the total cost would be
$32,000, still probably t oo much.
A qu estio n tha t should b e asked by al l reques t ing a change in S tate
University o f New York policy to aid athlet ics is what goes on in th e
programs at other State University of New York branches. How did
Brockport Stat e recruit R on Gilliam and Guy Vickers from Buffalo?
When Gilliam coul d have gone almos t anywhe re in th e East, why did he
c hoose Brockport? And, if Stat e University of New York branch es do
not give gra nt-in-aid from st at e opera ting funds, how d oes Buffalo State
contin uaJiy come up with powerful basketball squads? Do you honestly
t h ink Randy Smit h of th e Buffalo Braves played at Bu ffalo State for
nothing?
One coach in t h e at hle tic de partment claims that Dr . Fritz and the
athlet ic d ep artment are too st rict in the en forcement of NCAA
eligibility requirements and in financial a1d to a thletes. However, even
th e basket ball coachjng sta ff feels tha t Buffalo should compete a t a
level that the alumni and students could support I f it mean s a drop
back to th e college division uf the NCAA and admission to th e
SUNY AC conference, it is far better than no p rogram at all .
Hopes among the alumni that state policy will change within the
next ten years are pipedreams. The only way Buffalo can field
successful squads in both basketball and hockey's big time level is wit h
grants-in-aid financed by both alumni and friends of the University. l l
would be great to have th is University and the State Universi t y of New
York finance athletics, but any rational being can easily see that such
support is not forthcoming.
President Ketter and Dr . So mit both speak of their support of the
a th.Jetic program; yet sance Ketter took IWcr, football was dropped :rnd
basketball is on the verge of a toning down 10 fwo years . Next yea r th e
Bulls will still have II on the varsity wath grants·in·atd, but then in
1973-74. the number dwps to five, not enough to field a hig-lime chtb .
Also, a further quest ion to be askeu is huw the current athletic hudget
can be stabilized.
The ad ministration of thib University ought to sit down with
student government in an alfcrupt to give the athletic department a
stuble four-year program to work with . Hopefully, this year's close
15-14 passage of the budget 111 the Student Assembly has awakened
those behind Hayes Hall's ivy covered walls. If the University wants
Maryland and Syracuse on the schedule, then Immediate leadership is
needed . If those same people dun't want big-time at hletics. then let the
BuJJs drop to the Hobart , Geneseo und Fredoma level. If the University
wants a program commensurate With the status uf this University 1hen
support of inten.:ollegiate athlelil:s 1s a necessrty.

•

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Rare has there been an occasio n in recent years,
when one would see the varsit y basketball Bulls o n a
lone winnln&amp; strcalc. But , after their fin e southern
to ur, the Bulls seek their fifth straight win to night at
nationally ranked AJtrp n. The Akro n Zi ps b oasted a
10-2 reco rd prio r to t h eir c~ ntest at Buffalo St at e
Monday evening. Last year, the Zips' b est -in several
se.a sons, Akro n w ent 2 0 -6, finishin g third in t he
NCAA college division mideast regional. Last week,
Coach Wyatt Webb 's Akro n tea m was ranked eighth
in the Associat ed Press po ll of t h e sm all college top
20 and t en th in th e UPJ poll.
Des pite their high ranking, the Zips fell twice
last week . O ne loss came at t h e hands o f the fl u bug
which cost t hem t he services of five players. Their
second setback came to unheralded major Clevela nd
State, 62-57. Earlier th is season, Akron achieved its
high ra nk wi th st unning upsets of major Kent St at e
(53-39), Toled o (80-76) and Ashland (84 -64 ). Th e
Zi ps' only o ther set back in ad dition to Cleveland
State, cam e at t h e ha nds of BeJJarmine (69-68) o n
the ro ad.
Part of 30-year-old Coach Wyatt Webb's big
success has com e on Akron's h om e Memorial HaU
Court where t he Zi ps went 14-&lt;.J last year, and 7 ..()
thus far this year. In t h e series with Buffalo, which
began in 1954-55, the Bulls ho ld a 6-5 margin,
alth ough Akron has won the last lhree contests
played on its ho m e court. OnJy on ce in 1957 have
th e Bulb beaten Ak ron away. Last year, th e Zi ps
edged the Bulls 7 1-66 in a contest played at Erie
Communi ty College. The S uUs led 36-26 at t he half,
but fell in th e face o f a rugged Akro n press. Cu rt
Blackmore, Buffalo's leading scorer (1 9 .0) a nd
rebou nd er (17.7) led all scorers with 20 points and
17 rebounds.
The heart of this year's as well as last year's
Akron squad , is Li ttle AII·American, 6-4 forward
Len Paul. Paul, a 19.9 scorer last year, has continued
his tricks t his season wit h the same scoring average
and 8. 1 rebounds per game. Coach Ed Muto feels
that the Bulls must keep t h e ball away from Paul in
order to stop th e explosive Zip. Starting up front
wi th Paul are 6-7 senior Randy Anderson and 6·5
junior Harvey Glover. Glover averages 12 points and
t~n rebounds, while semor 6·3 guard La rry Quarles
averages 13.4 points. Will Schwarzinger, a 6·1 senior
fills out the Ztp star ting lineup. Coach Muto
descnbcs fhc Zips as a "disciplined ou t fit , wh o will
run and play well together." The only Zip mi~sing
fmm the contest wtll be soph Larry Jenlcins, who IS
mehgible to play !Ius year. Last year, Jenkins, a little
All Amencan as a freshman burned the Bulls badly
For the Bulls, besides Blackmore up front.
Captain Neil Langelier and 6-6 junior Jim Tribble

phone

875-4266

SU M ME R STUD Y

•

ELIGIBILIT Y:

c~akd ~ oor - - - - 1

crartsmrn

I'

iJSJewele

I N SPA I N

Sponsored by the SUNYfAB ttl m//ahorottu/1 wttlz rile
Universtdad de Salamanca, om· of the oldest and mvst
rt'lebrated uni1•ersities in Furope.
F I ELDS OF STUDY: Lunguag~. Arr, l.llcrattm·, J/mury
PROGRAM :

~igool (:f

D iv ision o f u ndergraduate
s t u d ies again o ffers Mrs.
N ich o ls n o n -credit course.
Weekly sessions. No minal
f ee, $ 1 5.0 0 p ayable at
re gistratio n in room 305
O iefendorf - b efore Ja nuary
31 st.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::=~

Hear, 0 Israel
tor g8'ms from the
JEWISH B IBLE

SPEEDED READING
AND STUDY

•

Th1s Sunday's varsity hocl.ey wntest at Memorial Auditorium 111ay
be u milestone m ahe uevelopmcnl of Buffalo's hockey program. For , if
not enough people nttentl, future Aud games must be considered a
financial risk , 111 the face of the $1000 rental fee. All those Interested m
M:eing the Bulls upgrt~de their schedule, especially at horne, sh ould
attend . Despite all the talk about new rinks, the Bulls would be bes t off
at the Aud, where any team 1n the nation would je happy to play .
Plans for the luture , such as a Christmas tourney, the 'Bc~nd NCAA
championships, can best be accomplished in a rink such as the Aud . A
crowd of three or four thousand would be encouraging, creatang
increased hope for the future .

PERIOD:
CREDIT:
COST:

Grex Bruce

Heart o f the Zips

Two weeks of rrav&lt;"l rlzrouglz Castile, Don
Quixote's La Munal'ha and A ndaluda. Si:c
weeks of academic work in Salamallco
with field trips and other t'Xtra·cttrricular
activities. Free lime to travel tltrot1glt the
rest ofSpain or through Europe.
Open to qualified undergraduate and
graduate students. Consult address below
for further ittformation on available
courses and credits.

will start. T ribble returns to h is hometown area and
replaces Greg Laker in th e opemng five . Coach Muto
feels that h is first th ree forwards are easily
mterchangeable, giving him greater maneuverability.
At gu ard junior Bob Varta nian and soph Greg Bruce
will get the o pening call. Vartanian's repu tation as a
gunner h as switcb ed to a more team-player type,
while Bruce appears ready to star for th e Bull~.
Avera ging 11 .7 pomts per game and with a 44
percen t fi eld goal percentage, Bruce has ra ted a
major Buffalo sur prise.
The Buffa lo freshmen get back tnto action at
6:30 p.m., Saturday against th e LeMoyne College
junior varsi t y. The Baby Bulls {2-3) are led by 19 .4
leading scorer Bob Dickinson and Chuck Axe w1th
14.8 points an d ten rebou nds. The varsity returns tn
Buffalo, with LeMoyne Saturday evening at 8 .30
p.m . at Clark Gym.

NEW COURSES
I

1n

CLASSICS
Classics I 13 :
My th and R eligion in the A ncient Wo rid (E nglish 11 3)
Classics 2 I 9 :
The Jews in the HeU~nistic Age ( History 3 10)
Classics 302:
T he Greek Mind in th e Making ( Histo ry 309 , English 306)
Classics 304 :
Psychoanalysis and the Classics (English 307)
Classics 4 16:
The AEN EID : Yergil's J o urney into the Wasteland (Engljsh 419)

(Permission uj instmctor is NOT required for any of these courses)

Approximately mid-June - end ofAugust
NOT E o n "closed courses":

Up to 8 credils.
$700.00

FOJ' rudher information and appiJc.tions,
contact: James A. Midlldli, Dilector
Oveneu Academic Ptopama

because of possiblility

of computer

erro r, please confirm any anflo uocetnent that a course has been
clo~ with the Department of Classics (390 Hayes, 831-2816)
107 Townsend HaU
SUNY/ AB, Buffalo, N .Y. 142 14

Telephone: (716) 831-4247

o r with the instructor involved.

�AO INFORr.t!ATION

o ; 11rt1 me,
llg htseel n g .
F r ee
Information. Wr ite Jo bs Oversus,
Dept. £5, B o le 15071 , San Otego.
C ellforn la 9 2 115.

CLASSIFIED AOS mey be PIKed
Mondly thn.l Frldly betwMn ' 9 e .m .
and 4 • 30 p.m. at 355 Norton H all .
THE C OST of an eel f or one day Is
U .25 for the flrtt 15 words end $ .05
for u ch additional word.
" HELP

WAN TED"
" '
c:.nnot
dl~ertmtnete o n the besls of M k, col o r ,
creed, O{ national origin t o eny e lltent
(I.e ., preferetiiY Is still ~tlscrtm lnatory ) .
" FOUNO " IdS Will b e !\On free o f
chuoe for a melCimu m o f 2 d ay s ~~~~d
15 w o rds.

WANTED
STUDENT needed t o care f o r 5·yr.·old
boy, 2:3CI-&lt;':30 Tues.-Fri. W ill need
to pick hi m u p f rom sc h o ol. 87 6·81 7 4
or 8 8 3 ·8 2 86.
Dl REC T OR
for
loca l
treatment
prog ram fo r h eroin addtc\S. Ooct o rete
tn Psych . desirable b ut emphasis on
e.c p ertence
work ing
with
drug
deQ4ndent peo ple and ment al hul t h
pr o b lem s o f urban poor. ElCt r emely
tou gh job . Bread O . K . Elcper tence m ay
substitu t e f or d egree. Call 88 1.009 6
ef ter 7 p .m.

SUB·LET APARTMENT
FOR SALE

ROOMMAT ES WANTED

S KI-81NOIN~S:
B rllhd
n ew
CHEAP!
o ne
pair
u ch :
Marker
R otom.1t : So toman 505 . 881.0077.

F EMAL E r oommete wanted . Own
bedroom . $ 5 6 month. Ten-m inute
drive f rom umpllkCllll 177 -6057.

197 1
stick
N eed
10·11

A USTIN America , 8 0 00 m iles,
with radl o . F actory warra nt y.
cash fast . 8 25 -4852, 4:30-6 .
p .m. All d ay Sa turday.

T WO
R OO MMATES
( eny
comb ination) fo r furn ished h o u se With
garage - 10-mtnute wal k ing Olstance.
$50 + each .

(2 ) NEW TIRES 6.95 x 14 , 4 · pl y,
whitewalls w ith rims, 1 3 0 . 8 82·3806
after 5 p .m.

QUIET, neat m ate student wantad to
shere buutlfu t 3·bed room Amherst
apt . w ith couple .1nd ch ild . F u ll house
u se, W
&amp;
D. Cll shwuher . W· W
carpeti ng, llh b . $95/mo. 6 93·3 64 0 .

823· 7 5 7 2.
BABYSITTER two efternoons per
WMk. F teiCibte h ours. C all 6 88· 9 4 29 .
A RT
STUDEN T
to paint
relsed
lett er i ng on old&lt;faahl oned tlo ttles. Pick
up some elltra cash. C all Ed 1125·957 7,
3 · 5 p .m ., M ·F .
BABYSI TT ING f o r tlaby o r toddler In
my h o me days U.B . area . 832' 3699.
F ULL O R part-tl melobs available w it h
Bostllne Inc.. C all Art 886· 2 094 or
M ik e 835·5 21 5. Meeti ngs at Ellocu!lve
Ram ada Inn.
I WI L L bu y y our toy train • In any
con d ition. C all 834·7396.
F EM ALE w anted Immedia tely for
bllbysl ttlng a few nou rs p er w eok In
ellc h an ge tor fr. . r oom . 633·7594.
ST AR T $ 2 p er hou r , satn y plus bon u s.
W ork 4 ·8 p .m. weekd ay s, 10·2 p . m .
Saturdays. C all 8 35·38 0 3 o r TF9.04 02.

SKI CLUB sl&lt;l lessons tor
Tuesda y night. C all 8 32·5 634.

sate -

HONDA, 19 71 11&gt; CB350, Cand y gold .
LuiiDI!ge r ack , rlghl·han d mirror. 2500
mil es. Ellcellent cond ition. 881·2659.
MG and Triumph par ts for sate,
Indep e ndent
Foreign
Car Service.
8 39-185 0 .

MODER N 3·b ed room apartmen t near
campus. A vaila ble April 1 l o r 3 or 4 .
Ca ll 833·3161.

EARN WHILE In K h ool. $ 300·$ 500
per mo. Campu s representative f o r
resume forwerdlnll service. F telllbte
hou rs. F or f u II In f o rma ti on, w r ite
National R esume Services, P.O. BOll
144~, Peoria, I llinois 61 601.

A PART M EN T In Tonawanda - one
bedroom ,
k itchen ,
bath,
stove.
refr i gerat or, $50. Call Dan 831·35 4 6 or
694· 3855.

WA N TED: Someon e to help w it h
housework Sat.s o r Su ndeys. Gooel
money . Call 834·2336 eveni n gs.

T W O M INUTES from campus. For
m en. N ew rooms. Private entrance.
Fridge, some cooking, fu r nished . Call
834·5312 (priva te home) .

BABYSITTER
for
year·Oid
glrlt
Monday's 1 100 p.m. to 4 •4 5 p.m;
wednesd ay I 1 :00 p .m. to 7:00 p.m.
and sometimes Friday's I :00 p .m. lo
4 :45 p.m. Shoul d h ave transporta ti o n .
$1 per hr. Call 832·704 5.

FURN ISHED moder n apartments and
rooms,
Just
remodeled,
Including
television,
etc.. near UB, cheaP.
896·8344 evenings .

wl LL PA v for term paper s, te~ t s, any
on! ormation from 1nvestments 402
taught by Gupta . 88 1·2659. K eep
Irving.

FOR RENT : T nree-bedroom single
nome nea1 campus. Graduate students .
835·1719.

COLLEGE GRAD wants t o ba b ysit
evenings. Loves child ren and has lots of
free limo. Call 831-4113 days and
8 75 1944 nltos. Ask for Lesl ye.

s

Need a male sociology grad or
undergrad studen t w ho Is good 11
tailing
ellams.
Ptu se
call
John
$ $

SINGLE HOUSE lor rent . 5 malo
students. $ 80 each W/utllltles . Lease &amp;
dam~ depoSit. 3 b.lths. 838 · 3367.
RIDE B O ARD
RIDE NEEDeD to and from Union
and William M ·F . 837 ·0211. ext. 37 .

ROOM M ATE
w an t ed
to
shtre
apartment. T w o-bedroom, swim ming
pool, air cond itioning. Close to school.
85 4 ·7 14 7 days.

CLEA R A N CE SALE 10·65'14 off on
m any Item s. All Janu ary. M iscellaneous
shirts,
dresses,
skirts, etc. Some
afghani stan coats. Tne People, 144
Alle n St., 882-6283 for hours.

F EM ALE snare b edroom
f u r n ished
apt. Englew ood Ave. One mile cam pus,
$66.67 mon t h w lln utili t ies. Anne
837· 2497

books

••••

tilt U11 lt&gt;cr.titll

nrta

3102 Main St.
11e1toeen CU8ter cf. L iaboll)

Joe's Theatre Barber
(a l Colvin Theatre)

WIGS - HAIR COLORING

JOHN MITCHELL HAS CALLE D
Video
''The Frontal Extension of
Communist Subversives"
Sign up for
THE UUAB VIDEO COMMITTEE
in
ROOM 261 NORTON

component ana Ampex
S rEREO
Mlcro-86
tape recorder
for
sale.
877 · 7 393 after 6 p.m .
REFRIGERATORS from $19 .95 and
up. HWA. I 282 Clinton St. 823·1800
'64 CHEVY van . Runs well. Pleasant
company asking $2!&gt;0 . Call 838-4317
and aSI&lt; for Mark

REFRIGERATOHS,
stoves
Mitt
washors. Reconelllloned Oeliverfld and
ouarantl!ed . O&amp;G Appliances. 844
Syc.amore . TX4 3183 .

LS, LEATHE R S , W EST E RNS
S t yles for Young Moderns!

SE E WH Y

THE GREAT car. A 1964 Pontia c
L eM ans .
Very
good
condition .
Two-door,
sh&lt; ·Cyllnder,
automatic,
radio, new battery, snow tires. two
spare rims. Asking S400 . Call Jlrn
837 ·0674 .

'66 VOLKSWAGON bus, new engine.
Can be seen " DraiJOS Mobil Stallon,
M~on and Amherst.

~~~~~~~~A~L·E·~-~-~-~~~~~~

un!versity
un1on
activities
b oard

ENGINEERING Mechanics Statics and
Dynamics, a.,nd Sta!lcs and Strength by
Shames. For Engineering 205 . Brand
new . Call John. 759·8859 .

1964
BUICK
Wildcat.
4 ·dr.
poSitractlon. cr ulsomatlc, full power.
mechanically 900d, snow tires. reliable,
$275. 892 ·1 143,

l OSS Kenmore Avenue

These freakY guys will
sell you overytn1ng tney
nave on. Over 7,000
pairs of Dell tlottorr&gt;s by
Levi, Lee Landlubber.
Wra nglerd Campus, Male.
Tremen ous setoctlon .
Leather jackets. boots,
packs, field jackets. Att
Force parkas, peacoats.
tops and oouoms. For
Guys and Galst Be Hip
- Save Money - Snop
Army-Navy'

START t he term off rlghl with a
subsc r iption of t h e VILLAGE VOICE .
Cheap student Introductory offer . Call
Alvin 833-6503.

SUPEREX PRO ·BV headphones w ith
guarantee
about
$45 .
Panasonlc.
miniature tape rec:order with c ase and
mlc atlout $40 . Call Paul 835 -55 35

HAIRS T YL I N G

8Yef)'il8A'S b(lds Sf(W)8
111

HOUSE FOR RENT

s

a

1
e

TWO FEM ALE room m ates w anted o ff
W.
Deleva n,
S60
a par tment
Inclu d ing utilities, 8 8 6-6732.

V O L KS W AGON tires - 2 b rand new ,
4·p ly wh itewalls, $ 20 eaCh or best
offer. D ave 873·3455.

APARTMENT FOR R ENT
wAITRESSES wanted : part and full
ttme. even l n11s. Over 18. 685-.3100. A sk
for Doug o r B o b .

F EMA LE r oomm.1t e wan ted, m odern
apt ., tO-minute walk f r om cam p us.
Ask for Wendy or M o n a, 837 ·21 9 5 .

ON E
ROOM M ATE,
$ 4S/mo. with · parllo~l
Side. Call 881 · 3672 .

FEMALE roommate wanted . Apt , near
cam p us, $ 40 mon th, p lus utilities. Call
anytime after 6 p.m. 837 · 5313.
MISCEL L ANEOUS
COMIC BOOKS - I'll buy and sell
Have old MarvelS, D.C.'s, Atlases, etc.
lor sale . Will buy comics In lots If price
Is right. Call Norm at 834 ·0970 .
DELl PLACE restaurant, across ltt&gt;rn
UB, open 24 hours a daY. T nurs .• Fri ..
and Sal. God munchies at 4 a. m . '
We're here to serve you.

translators tor stereo. $50; Bongos,
some records, etc . 8.32·5910 . Russ
MINI CASSETTE
te ror der
microphone, carrying ta se. delu&gt;&lt;e
features,
sh"P
Model
R0·408 .
s89 .
SaLriii Ce
$40 .
O r iginally
895 ·0172 .

GET WHAT you pay for 1 Independent
Foreign Car Service. 839· 1850.
TERM PAPERS typed, $ .3S per page
833 ·90 12.
" .O .LIC£'S AESTAURANT" (United
Artists) starring Arlo Guthrie. Buffalo
Stale Union . January 21, 8 &amp; 10 . 30
p .ITl . FriddY. January 21 Sl
INTERESTED
In
41tendlr)9
IIH'
Olytnplc. games tn Munt c h7 Sume
llcl&lt;ets ana accornnH&gt;dllllon&gt; nvallable
Phone 833-46 38
WILL BABYSIT
my nun•e
Pre·«:hool 838 -4808

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dav&gt;

ii.SS&lt;)r" dVdlidllle I at
Wed .
r11 11"
Ill at
o., Lesso•u vt~ry che4 P
For Info call Edd1e 831 ·3 51&gt;2

TYPING. experienced, I!Udr u e .• \.40
pet page 834 · 3310 Fast servrte
OVERSEAS JOB~ l Ot stua.,nts
Australia. Europe, S Amertcd , A lrrc a.
elL . All professions •nd occupations,
S701)- $3000 monthly. E•oenstts

P•'"·

Bible Truth
ABOUT C HURC H ATTE NDA N CE
" Let us hold test t h e PJOfOISion o f
our f aith w ith o ut weveri ng : N o t
foruk lng t h e IS5embli ng o f o urwl v
toget httr, •• the manner of some is."
- 1 C or . 10 : 1

FLY TO EUROPE
from

$ 170 mund triJl , 'llldtnt

V~CdtiOrlS

.Hid IUUI\ , empluyllltnt
et c
Air mAll lor full
dt't•1b. Cdmpu&lt; Axents rel!Uirtd .
A. A .S. A . limited. 15 High St..
Ventnor •.W, England
~ r vtces

THE UU AB FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE*

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WOU L D the stude nt w h o gave th e
Goodwill 1nd ustr los' sli de p rese ntat ion
In cteu, pleue cont act Goodw i ll :
8 5 4 ·76 8 6 . Thank you !
T H E PEOPLE. 144 A llen St. IS having
the ir first clearance sa te until Jan . 3 1st.
Pho n e 88 2.fi283 f o r hours.
PI LAM BDA TAU - a changing social
organization on a ch anging cam p us.
For ln l ormetlon , call Dan 632~299 or
~oorge 834 ·7989.
EE STUDEN TS - got Involved - join
I EEE. Elect rical Engi n eering office has
lnlormatlon.
COM E TO the Psychom.a t·Psychom• t ·
..Psychomat on WednesQays 3 · 5 p.m .
Room 233 N orton
WBFO
RADIO
IS
lOOking
for
entnuslastlc people to worl&lt; In Its N ews
department. No e&gt;&lt;pertence necessar y .
Contact P1u1 or Eric. Room 327
Norton .
NEED $1001 Call
882· 1080 lor
Information. Second annual N-man
Movement Art Exhibit. Feto 13 March 19 at Bulckflelel Center S .U .C.B .
Entries due Feb . 7 &amp; 8 . SpeCial student
prizes.

THE GIANT 35 lb . amoeba chair Is
walling to engulf you at Water
Brothers, 51 Allen St.

PRIVATE SKI
Mon. ,
T ues •

sound ·cotor

AL L LOCA L bands w lshlno to ptey In
th e H aas Lounge, p lease contact Pau l
Roso n
In
R oom
261
N o rton .
83 1·5 11 2.

U N USUAL employment oppoflunlty .
Sail 11 foreign Sh lp tnls summer . Men
and women, no e&gt;&lt;pOrlence . Send
sell -addressed envelo~Mt. Macedon , Bo&gt;&lt;
224, Irvington, N .J. 0_
7 _1_1_1_.- - - -

Schuumelster~

pair

T HERE WILL be a campus St olfi a n d
r ecruitment meeting t o n lgrtt at 7:30 .
Anyone wlst\ l ng t o Join The Sl*:tr um
&amp;hould
attend .
Attend a n ce
Is
m andatory f o r all p r esent c 1m pus
( eporte r s.

"LAW SCHOOL - Will I lll&lt;e 1\1 Can I
make It?" A new book by a rec11nt l.aw
graduate tor prospective taw students .
Send $2.91) Kroos Press. Boll 3709A.
Mllwaul&lt;ee, Wis. 53217 .

drurn

SlOO i

PERSONAL

EXPERT VW and foreign car serviCe .
Young German bOy trying t o mol&lt;e
good here fn Stales . Martins' Motot
works. 497 Ridge Rd . 826-6777 .

GUITAR AMP, (Traynor), twrn IS "
speakers. $300 IHm. tender Jaguar
with Gibson luzz, S22S: Roberts
1740X stereo dec k • mlcs, s 100: cnup
set,

own
room,
utilit ies. West

THREE R O OMS furnished, one mile
from campus, f o r couple or si ngle.
Avallatlle
Feb .
1. $125
Inclu d es
u tilities.

presents
StMts ThursdaySomewhere between
the innocent girl and
the not so innocent
mistress is the bizarre.
sensuous story of

Luis Bunuel's

01/STANA

Starring
Catherine Deneuve

RECORDING
STUDIO :
Have
4·ch annel mobile studio. Will travel.
Rock to eacn . Rick 832 · 5929 .
ANV Inform ation regarding a hlt·run,
9 12 ,oo. Baird lot 1/14/72. please call
8341 ·8833 or 835·7920.
lOST &amp; FOUND
FOUND : Jdn
14 01ef. A German
language book . Call 836 · 75 17 .
LOST: Ladles watch - sliver with
black band
Gruen - tCwollrd Call
839·0097 •Iter 5 p .m .
FOUNO : In The Spectrum olflce. a
~mall change purse telt there Friday .
Claim In Spectrum ofltce. 355 !\lOrton .
GIRL'S Identity Drdcelet found nur
Sutler Contact Gary 831 ·2622
MIXED breed dog
Spaniel crouod
with &gt;hoopdog, I OII"d neM Ridge Lea
on Niagara Falls Blvd
Jan
lOth .
Conlac l 831 · 1126 or 837 ·2 081 after 6
p ttl
L..OST :
Gold
nng
I nitialed
S G.
Probably lost In can,pus battHe&gt;Om&gt;
Please return this Bar·Mrtzvlh rtno•
Sentimental value attached C all S\eve
831 · 2696 .

-----------------

~N EW STUDENT MENU :::

Liver andHrown Kice S 1 .~5
Californ ia Swinger .. . . 1.95
Hamburger Stroganoff 1 .4 5
Small Sirloin Steak
(Boneless) 1 45
Chicken Roquefort . . . 1.65
Beef Bourgu inon ..... J .75
Choice Omelet ....... 1.35
Ground Bed (Organic) J .45
Peti te Fi le t M '~non . . I .95
Vegetable fe mpura,
Brown Rice l .45
Vegetable Scallops,
Brown Rice 1 .65
Roast Sesame Chicken 1.65
Egg Planr Parmesian .. 1.75
and many daily specials
/

F ORC ED CANCElLAT ION OF "THE C ONFORMIST'. d u e t o pr- u re pieced o n o u r
D i stributor b y • l ocal theatre end their distributOf.

CONFERENCE THEATR E
TICKETS AT NORTON T ICKET OFFICE
• A Division of Sub-Boud I

Weqnesday, JanlW}' J 9r 197.2.. The Spectrum . Page eleven

/

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Announcements

CAC will hold an important meeting for all past
and future Friendship House volunteers tomorrow at
8 p .m. In Room 242 Norton .
The UUAB C off'e ehouse Committee presents in
concert Gordon Bok and jeff Greene Saturday, Jan.
22 at 9 P-.m. and 11 p.m. Admissio n is $.50 and
tickets are•sold in Norton Ticket Office.
UUAB Is proud to offer free gift packs to all
students. Pick up yours in Room 261 Norton. Bring
an ID card.
The National Affairs Committee of the Student
Association will be meeting tomOrrow at 3 p .m. in
Room 205 Norton. The committee will be involved
with projects that Include voter registration, peace
movement activities and t h e Appalachian
Symposium.

SOS 361, Critique of Amerian Capitalism:
American Politic~ Economy, will have its first
meeting today at 3:30p.m . in Trailer 1. All students
registered for or interested in the course must
attend.

Common Cause will hold an organizational
meeting tomorrow at 7:30p.m. in Trailer A . Student
members and/or anyone interested in voter
registration and in formi ng new voters' lobby are
welcome to attend.

The Bridle Club will be glvlng bridge lessons
every Wednesday nigh t from 7- 11 p.m. in Room
262 Norton. The club will hold a duplicate
tournament tomorrow night at 8 p .m. in Room 340
Norton.

A ny faculty member interested in the possibility
of developing a SUNY program(s) with Israel,
particularly those who have experience r~l ated to
Israel, please cont.lct James A. Michielli, Director,
Overseas Academic Programs, 107 Townsend Hall.
Call 8314247 for further information, preferably by
j an. 21.

The Student Association Committee of
International W~ Will hold a budget meeting
tonight at 9 p.m. in Roorn 232 Norton . Call Peter
Kong at 5507 for further information.

College E announces that course 350 - Poetic
Encounter, will have an organizational meeting
tomorrow at 7 p .m . in Harriman Library Room 56·5 .

The UB Amateur Radio Society will hold a
meeting to nominate officers for · 1972 at 7 30 p.m.
tonight ln Room 332 Norton.

Students for lsraet will have an organiLational
meeting tonight at 9 p .m. in Room 264 Norton to
discuss kibbuu seminar weekends, Jewi~oh studie~.
folk dancing and other projects,

The Student Theater Guild will have an
rmpo rtant meeting on spring semester's production&lt;.
and activities today at 6 p.m. in Room 346 Norton.
Rachel Carson College's Workshop in Outdoor
Living, a non-credit program, will meet today ell 4
p.m . in Room 234 Nonon. All interested please
attend.

Modern jewish History, History 230, will meet
Tue-.day and Thursday from noon 1:20 p .m. in
Haye) 335. It is an overview of Jewish History froro
the Middle Ages to the establishment of the St.tte ol
l ~rael. There will be lectures on Zionism, Cha~&lt;.idism
and Jewish literature.

UB Photo Club announces the change of
meeting night to tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 332
Norton. New memberships will be accepted.
Members should bring in work for photo club
exhibit.

The Spanish Club writ meet today at 7 :30 p .m .
m RQom 233 Norton. Plans for the spring film
frstival, Carnival Club party dnd Tristana are &lt;~mong
the thing) to be discw.sed . New members from all
levels of Sp.tnish are welcome

Psychomat

rcsumt.~

p.m .
English Horseback Riding lessons are being
sponsored by the Women's Physical Education
Department. There will be an organizational meeting
for those interested today at 4 p.m. in Room 242
Norton.

The School of Medicine will be offering nine
in continuing education in the next six
months. The first is jan. - June 29 (Thursday
evenings) on Cardiac Clinics and Physical
Examination of the Cardiac Patient and is held at
Sisters Hospital , further information can be
obtained trom lhe Program in Continuing Medical
Education at 2211 Main St., telephone 831 -5526.
course~

The Spanish Club, in conjunction wrth UUAB 's
showing of Trlstana , is sponsoring a panel discussion,
with audience participatio n, on the film and the!
novel on which it I) ba,cd, tomorro w at 8 : 30p.m . in
Room 233 Norton .

Psychology 207 make-up exam will be given
jan. 29 from I 0 - 1 p.m. in Room C-26, 4230 Ridge
Lea.

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The Chess Club will meet today at 4 p.rn , m
Room 248 Norton.

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Sports Information
Tonigtlt : Vars1ty ba~ketball at the University ol
Akron, 8 :15p.m .
Friday : Varsity fencing at Patterson State.
Sawrday: Varsity basketball v~. LeMoyne at
Clark Gym, 8 :30p.m .; vMsity hockey v~ . Ohio State
at the Amherst Recreation Cen~er, 9:30 p.m .,
freshman basketball V\. LeMoyne, Clark Gym, 6:30
p.m .; varsity fencing at Montclair StdtC, varsity
1ndoor track at the Cornell Invitational; varsity
wrestling at the Army Quadrangular with Maryl.snd
and Clarion State.
Sunday ; Varsity hockey vs. Ohio State at
Memorr&lt;1l Auditorium, 2:30 p.rn
Tickets for this weekend's varsity ho&lt;:key games
may be picked up at the Clark Gym ticket office dll
d.1y today , tomorrow and Friday. Other ticket
outlets for the public are : all Dekdebrun stores,
Ludtka and Laux Sporting Goods, Mathias Cig.u
sto re on Court. Norton and the Amherst Rec Center.
All Buffalo students will be admitlt:d free of
c.hc1rge to home sporting events upon presentc1tion of
an identification card . Ticket) must be picked up for
hockey games, wrth one tide! per ID card.
Sunday's hockey game with Ohio State will be
broadcast live at 2:25 p.m by WBFO·FM radio. j m'l
Masson and Jim Drucker will announce.

•I

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Sunshine House w1ll hold a general meetlhg
today at 8 p.m. in Room 3 10 Foster Hall .
RCC 404 - Environmental Information in
Buffalo
will be meeting Tuesdays and Thursda\'s
from 10- 11 :20 a.m. in Room 7, 4224 Ridge Led.

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Rachel Carson College announces two new
courses for Spring 1972: RCC 222 - Problems in
Understanding the Functions of the Brain, being
given on T uesC:Iay and Thursday, 9 - 10:20 a.m.,
registration number 184114 and RCC 104 Freshman Seminar rn Ecology, given on Monday,
Wednesday and Friday, 8-8 :50 a.m., registration
number 171006. For additional information call
831-1721.

Women's Studies College presents San I ranc.isco
Women's Film today and tomorrow at 3 p.m. and 7
p.m rn Diefendorf 146. Tomorrow's '7 p.m. showrng
will be in Diefendorf 14 7.

Students interested in tutoring mathematics
should attend the organizational meeting tomorrqw
at I p.m. in Room 35,4244 Ridge Lea.

•

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What's Happening?
Wednesday , Jan. 19

Art show : Recent wort.. \ hy Ruth Morrison 4240
Ridge Lea, noon - 5 p.m.
'
Lecture: 1. Carter Brown at Albright-Knox An
Gallery, 8 :30p.m .
"M usical Innovations"· Allen R . Sigel, professor of
music is featu red guest on WBCE -FM, 9:05p.m .
Thursday, jan. 20

A.n show : 4240 Ridge Lea, noon

5 p .m.
Frlm : Colossus: The Forbin Proiect, Capen 140, ~-9
p .m.
Concert : Giselle McKenzie dnd Warren Covington,
Kleinhans Music Hall , 7 11 p.m .
- AmyAhrend

fBackpage
I

worship
religion
Persons
to play .

Colleg~ A 214 is a new section of the
Cooperative Community Workshop being offered by
Dr. jerome Fink of the American Studies
Department. It is concerned with " Voter
Registration - The Imperative 18·2 1 Year.Oid
Vote ." If interested, please attend a mandatory
meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. In Trailer 7 . For
further information call 831 ·5386.

WSC 275, Black dnd Fcmc~le, will m1--et
tomorrow from 10 11 :50 a.rtl . in Room 20-A
I ostcr Hc1ll . For informc~ t ion call Verna at882-3965
or Lucy .lt 884-7239 .

The Office of Cultural Affairs presents New
York Drama Critic's award-winning production of
Jack MacGowran in the Works of Beckett, tomorrow
at 8:30 p.m. in Harriman Theater. Tickets are
available at Norton Hall. General admission Is $2,
students are $ 1 .

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Group R will have an experiment
get-together with the topic of people and
tonight at 8 p.m. at 139 Brooklane Drive.
with talent in instrument playing are invited

The Labor Committee presents a ~tudy group in
Mdrxist Economics conducted by L. MJrc:us wh1ch
will meet today at 7:30p.m. Cc~ll ~374273 ..1fter 2
p .m . fur locauon.

today in Room 233 at 3

Women's Studies College is offering for the first
time "A Feminist Perspective on Philosophy" (WSC
231). For additional information call 683-6135
Class will be held Monday , Wednesday and Friday at
11 a.m. in Diefendorf Annex Room 18.

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�</text>
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•

.

Vol . 22. No. 42

•

State University of Nevv Vo.:k at Buffalo

•

MowMiay, .January 17, 197;!

Basketball's grant-in-aid program
hinges ·o riin1mediate aluriuri action
by B:_arry Rubin
Sports Editor
The. State University of Buffalo dropping varsity
basketball?.. Not so, say President Robert Ketter and
Executive Vice Presillent Albert Somit. However. although
Buffalo is not dropping the sport •• the varsity basketball
grant-in--aid program will no longer be supported by state
funds. Walter J. Relihan Jr.. the State University of New
York vice chancellor for legal affairs, wrote President
Ket~er that: ••Trustee ruling (67 - 386) clearly precludes
the provision of student subsidies based primarily upon a
student's athletic ability by any agency of the University."
Thus, Buffalo's use of state operating funds for the period
since ' 1967 for grand-in-aid purposes has been declared
illegal.
According to Dr . Somit: ••we have found no case
where other SUNY branches have grants out of state
funds. Rather, they can use work-study monies or it is
conceivable that student fees could be used, but we have
no evidence." In effect, Presiden Ketter has been told by
SUNY that the University's grant-in-aid program through
tuition waivers and remission of dormitory fees must end.
Balance in fate
As a result, Dr . Ketter has issued a letter to all alumni
and fr-iends of the University who have contributed to the
Buffalo athletic program in the past. As Dr. Ketter's letter
explained: ••1 f we receive $10,000 from contributions in
the next two or three weeks from outside sources, our
coaches will be able to recruit five players for one year
estimated at $2000 per grant]. Fully funded the total
grants-in-aid program for intercollegiate basketball costs
$40,000 . ''
In e5sence, the inl'tnediate fate of Buffalo's basketball
recruiting program lies in the balance. However, even the
administration does not see the $I 0,000 as the key to the
futurt;, of the grant-in-aid program . Dr . Somit added:
.. What we're doing is buying a year's time. The long range
optimum soh~tion would be a three or four-year plan. A
change in SUNY policy might be a way , but change within
the next year is doubtfuL It looks more possible in three
or four years ...
Major schedule
Thus , with the $I 0,000 in the coffers, one year
grant-in-aid would be offered, not the usual two or
four-year grants that most present Buffalo athletes have
received in the past . Varsity basketball Coach Ed M uto .
whose Bulls presently are riding a four-game win streak,
told The Spectrun1 : ··1 f they want major level basketball,
then realistically the sun1 needed is $40,000. We cannot
recruit offering one-year grants. when our competition is
offering full four-year grants . "
Coach M uto has already scheduled 15 games for next
season, which many consider will be Buffalo's best ever in
basketball . Muto added : ··we've already scheduled nine
majors for next year , and in our nine remaining games to
be scheduled we would like five more majors to give us 14 .
Our players have shown that they are deserving of the right
to play a major caliber schedule." The Bulls have already
scheduled . Cornell,
Niagara, Army . Northern
Illinois .
Illinois State , Northeastern , Sanford, Georgia State with
The Citadel and the University of Maryland in the
negotiating stages .
Presently,
the
Bulls'
12-man
varsity
has
ten
grant-in-aid players , while the f-(eshman squad has but two.
The two, Bob Dickinson from Plainview, N.Y. and Chuck
Axe from Sharon, Pa. have expressed an interest in
transferring if the Buffalo grant-in-aid program should die.
However. Coach Muto and all involved have attempted to
clarify that Buffalo is not dropping basketball and that at
least for next year, the schedule will remain of major
caliber .

.

Confidence
Harry G_ Fritz, director of athletics, indicated that he
had expected the Trustees' ruling to be unfavorable but
added: .. 1 have every confidence that the $10,000 will be
raised." Dr. ~·s anger wa5 directed toward the local
media which re~ly seized upon the story at an
inopportune time. Acc~rding to Dr. Fritz ~ uour Jan. 3
meeting
with
President
Ketter was a . . meeting for
information exchange and better uncilerstanding. I really

came out ot· there teeting better than I had in the past six
months." However. a front-page story appeared in the
Courier Express reporting that grants-in-aid we_re through
at
Buffalo. The next day. Jan. 4, President Ketter
conducted a news conference in which he attempted to
clarify the situation. Dr. Fritz ru&gt;ted: ..We want to be
assured of at least a three or four-year program. The
$10,000 will enable us to launch our program. W e hope to
compete at or better than our present competitive level."
All involved agree that if no private funding cannot be
found. then Buffalo t&gt;asketball is sure to drop in caliber.
Ironically. at
this
time last
year. President Ketter
announced that varsity football was being dropped from
the University's athletic program. Dr. Somit sees a link
between the two sports and added: .. It's a continuation of
the same problem, only football was multiplied _"
Priority questions
The major problem now for those involved is to come
up with the S 10,000 on or before President Ketter's Jan.
21 deadline . According to informed sources, the fund has
already been promised $3000 from Mr. Bernie Skirker and
$1000 from Mr. Robert Rich. Dr. A . Westley Rowland
would not confirm or deny these reports, ~ut said : uAt
present [Friday] we've received six answers,.five of whom
pledged money or sent checks." The money that is
received
will
be
chanelled
through
the
University
foundation and its adjunct in athletics, the Golden Bull
Fund . Rick Wells. director of the Golden Bull Fund and a
former varsity football player and coach said: .. We're very
disappointed, but for once the administration is pushing
the matter a little more . Now athletics are getting more of
a priority, but it is a question of how big the •p• is."
Still there was much grumbling in the local media
from alumni disappointed in administration pol ic y, going
all
the way back to football's dismissal . Dr . Somit

Dr. Kelter
defended the administration : .. We're trying to help raise
the funds for -gr":lnts-in-aid and we've given the total
athletic budget $450,000 exclusive of student monies.
We're putting in as much as we can.""" lndeed, there are
several who refuse to be quoted; that information was
leaked to the press was done so to bring the Buffalo
athletic situation to a head .
Still lingering in the minds of the alumni was the close
15-14 vote ·n the fledgling Student Assembly on the
athletic budget. Dr. Somit considers this problem between
the students and athletics as serious and hoped .. that the
student officers would take the politics out of this and
help give some basis for long-range planning. It's a matter
of working with the students." Whatever the solution.
once again the SC)Ivency of Buffalo•s athletic pregram is on
the line again .

U nnessary rules

Student foes closely exa~nined
Burdened by state guidelines and restrictions , the use
of student fees has co rne under close scrutiny by the
admin.istrat.ion and its advisory review com mittee . In two
meetings, held over va ca tion , the Student Activity Fee
Review Committee, composed of faculty, students and
administration, reviewed s uch ex penditures as the food
co-o p , PODER Day Care Cent~r and the draft co unseling
center.
Additionally . Joseph Bress of the State University 's
Counsel office advised the group on procedures outlined in
Trustee Resolution 302.14 of Chapter A of Chapter V of
Title 8 of the Official Compilation of Codes, Rules and
Regulations of the State of New Y ork as adopted hy the
Board of trustees March 24, I 97 I . Ba sica lly , Mr. Bress
stressed that such guidelines must be adhered to .
Several
student
leaders
fearfully
view
this
development as a possible obstacle to existing and future
student programs . Terming the rules as .. absurd" and
..cumbersome," Student Association Vi ce President Scott
Slesinger asserted that student fees are so controlled that
they are virtually unworkable.
Ruling precepts
Included in these rules as the precept that all ventures
funded by mandatory student fees must exist for the
direct benefit of the University Community. This ruling
po~ble .threatens the existence of the
food co-op, the
draft counseling center and the off-campus based day care
center. Additionalty, there is an additional ruling which
prohibits the use of University facilities except· for FSA
operations to create unfair competition for outside
concerns .
Regarding this,
University Press at
Buffalo was
prevented from accepting outside contracts because as Mr.
Bress pointed out in a letter to Vice President for Student
Affairs Richard Siggelk.ow : ••Jn effect, the University Press
is a private commercial enterprise using University facilities
· without authority." Yet, if University Press were to move
off can:apus, it might not meet the guidelines of serving
student interests
Antl1ony Lorenzetti, acting vice president for Student
Affairs. explained that no negative action has been taken
against
any
request
for
student
funding
by
the
administration in reviewing vouchers. This is due, as Dr.
Lorenzelrti
commented,
because
no specific
written
proposals
have been submitted.
Accordin_g to him:

.

••Everything is soJDewhat in the thinking-through process ...
Dr . Lorenzetti continued ti'lat the committee met to
.. get some general ideas about format . . . We didn't get
into specific ideas or programs . . . Joseph Bress met with
the advisory co mmittee and talked in general ideas about
principles . ,.
Further,
decisions
could
go either way
depending upon the specifics of individual programs _
Presently ,
according
to
David
Keiser
(asSistant
SA
treasorer) ttle Student Association is ••in the process of
making up proposals meeting state guidelines ." These
proposals will be submitted for approval to the Executive
Committee
Friday
and
the
Student
Assembly
the
following Monday .
Some student officials have severely criticized the
actions of the committee in reviewing such proposed
expenditures as the PODER Day Care Center and the Draft
Counseling Center . SA President Ian DeWaal explained
hat the committee went beyond its limits by considering
pl"ograms that were not present&amp;9 for review to the
administration. In regard to the d"3-y care center, Mr .
DeWaal said that the student representatives were not
prepared to defend its funding at the committee meetings .
No definitive action
Again stressing that no definitive action was taken
regarding any budget, Dr. Lorenzetti commented that
written proposals have to be submitted before decisions
can be made. Dr. Lorenzetti continued that the University
is
..stuck
with
the
guidelines . . . The administration ~ ­
shouldn't be viewed as in an adversary situation with students - we have to see that the guidelines are met and
that the budget is f"lScally accountable. ••
However, Mr. Slesinger feels that the University
administration
is
being
unnecessarily
careful:
••The
aEgument of where the power lies in Buffalo or in
Albany - has been used too many times aga.in.st students ...
Charging that there are too many · .. unnecessacy rules ..
hindering the use of mandatory student fees, Slesinger sees
a solution in voluntary fees collected by the Bursar's
office. •• After three years of writing resQ1utions and
fighting for mandatory shldent fees, I've come tO the
conclUsion that the only answer is in voluntary fees," he
commented.
The future of such programs are uncertain with some
viewing the outcome optimistically while others see the
scrutiny as the forerunner of more restrictions.

�\

.

Nader proposes the
fin~cing of PIRG
"From now on leg1slators will money and energy at then
pay senous allention to students. ·disposal. WNYPIRG hopes to
Therefore, the student vote and channel these resources into an
the student ut1Len arc mtimately effectwe and viable means of
(;onnected.
Student
Public soci31 change. It will deal with
Resea rch
Groups such public interest problems as
I ntere s t
IPIRGs l composed of full ·time pollution,
social
inequahty,
professional advocates and able consumer fraud and occupational
orgamters recruited by and hazards.
representmg students as ci tizens
Joe Hillard, another Raider,
c an
have
an
enormous. feels that ..students react very
comtnH:Ilve unpact on reality " emotiOnally and very sporadically
Rolph Nader to problems
but there is never
any follow ·through . There is a
If
Ralph
Nader's
plans total lack of continuity." PI RG
materialize (and they usually do), would provide the expertise and
students all over the country will continuity rarely found in existing
be forming PIRGs that aim at student organizations
solving such social problems as
environmental preservation and
consumer protection The Western Into the community
York
Pubhc
Interest
New
The ,plan has already exclled
Research Group (WNYPIRG) •~ other students across the nation .
now formmg at the State As many as 25 states and the
Unwersuy of Bu ffalo and hopes District of Columbia have student
to spread to every campus 10 the PI RGs
in some stage of
Western New Yorl reg10n
orgaruzation. In Minnesota and
PI RG 's plan ts s1mple. Fnst , .1 Oregon, where students have been
~ufl1.:1en t
number of student actively working on numerous
~upporters
must pe1111on the projects, the PI RG tdea ts provtng
student senate, board of regents 1tselt effective. MPIRG IS worlung
or uustecs to tncrease actJvity fees on a food price companson survey
by $2 per semester. Th!S money throughout the state. Some other
wojlld then be used to hire a staff projects in which the students are
of"-professio nals such a~ lawyers, involved include investigating
engmeers ami ecologJsts to work permll applications for dumping
and
analyzing
the
full lime on behalf of the students wastes
on local and state t.ssues. The Minnesota plan for implementing
gro up's function will mvolve the Clean A1r Act of 1970.
study and research of spe\:lfk
The WNYPIRG students are
social problems, follnwed by fightrng for a chance to take social
professional analys1s , pressure by change out of the phtlosophy class
duect or mduect lobby. pubhc and mto the commumty In the
education and. a~ a last resort, next few weeks they wtll be
hllgat wn m the court s
publtcllJng theu gr&lt;lup across
~:ampus _ At
the end of th1~
SociaJ betterment
L'3mpa•gn. they Will pelllmn the
WNYPIR(, MrgtnJtcd on th1~ Umvers11 y ~t udent body for a $.:!
campu) \In Nov 5 when Donald mt.rease rn acllvity Ices to fund
Ro~ . one of "Nader's Ra1ders."
the group in hrnng a professron,ll
spol..e about the 1dea "' Non on st.Jff. Mr. Nader has esumated
Hall " PI RG's goal 1s to lorrn an that students spend about "S2'i0
orgarutarwn m whllh ~ tuJen ts a year on c•ga rellc~. &gt;llfl dnnk'
..an ~rnploy a prolc~swnal ~taft to Jnd alcohvl Next to that figure ,
hnng &lt;~hnut socta l betterment ." $2 per term •sn't the greatest
cxplamed M r Ros\. The piJn \dUlticc ever asked •Jf a man ."
l':.tptured the lm.Jgtnalloll of ahout
Mr. Nader and a stafl o l ten or
15 UntVCI\tly ~tudenb who urutcJ
IS lawyers already have made
to lmm the l'Orc grouf) for chc
'•gnrflcant dents u1 this country's
nuw growmg WNYPI RC
bureaucracy. It is thw belief that
I he ideJ J1a\ 1ts rootl&gt; 111 the 11 there is a similar staff work1ng
helle!
that
studenh
have 1n each state. the 1mpact w1ll he
enormou~
re~crv111"
ul llln'· enormous.

New year for SA
Th~ Stud~nt A ss~mbly

will hold its first

'W'zzaf?

For all you Rathskeller gourmets, that is a worm. It wa acquired, free of charve on
a Rathskeller salad (sort of like dressing) (or a prize). Mildly munching tt~ w-v ec:roa the lettuce, the
worm (Herman) was apparently oblivious of all the commotion he cre~~ted . A tint hand account of the
activity by the lucky purchaser follows:
" Noticed Herman in salad. Br()U11ht beck to employee. Employee was amazed. Displayed worm to
fellow employ. .. Employee threw Hef!"an away. I r~ed in and got him beck. We brought to Food
Service. Food Service called Personnel Manager. Manager came in and mrted to joke ~!bout. We askec;t
why (worm in sal.cf)7 He said ' It's a vegetable wonn and it's Impossible to check ud'l head of let1llce
thoroughly due to the larva amount needed for Food Service.' I asked how they could prevent this from
happening eg~in ."
So do we.

• p-\. :

G.-o...H,.Y
i'

Go.J.cct•

CoN 14Q. •••

f·f.·&amp;.: 1180 He . .1eL
Moh. "J"o..n . 17n4

WATERBED&amp;
$14'. 15
PILLIW&amp; SPREAD I

m~etmg

o f the new year on Monda y, Jan . 24 at 3 p.m in the
Conf~rence Theater. Norton Hall. All mrmbfors ar~

uraed to

1111~nd

Old RivoU Theatre
Ill BIWADW." \

The Spectrum IS published rhrH
II weak. ....,ry MondiJV,
WedniiSday and Friday; dunng rite
rtlf/UIIIr scsdtNnic ye.r by Sub·Board ,
1, Inc OfficiiS tue located at 356
Norton Hall, SUJta Universiry of NYork at Bufftllo. 3436 Main St.,
Buffelo , New York, 14214,
Telephontt: ArN Code 716; EditOfllll
831 ·4113; BuslntiSS, 831-3610.
t lm fls

Tonight &amp; Tue6 Jan. 17 · 18
H umphrey

Joel

Sylvi•

Boaut McCrea Sidney
IN THE ORtCINAL

"DEAD END"
Plua Cli•ptera 3 -4-5-6

''ACE DRUMMONI&gt;t"
Thrill packed serial!
AND STARTING TIIURSDAY
JAN. 20 - 11fE UNCUI'
Student prices with 11·
.•

..

·.

.

Reprttsen ted for edvttrtislng by
Natiomtl Eduational Adwlrtislng
SMVic•. Inc., 360 Lexmgton All'll.,
Nttw York, N.Y. 10017.
Subsf;riptlon retea ere $4.60 per
.-m..rer or $8.00 for two ~«r~MIIf'l.
S.Cond Clas
New York.

~

Pllid at 8uff11lo,

Circullltion: 16,()()()

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday, January 17, 1972
,,

t

t.t ,

.·.

TAPEITIIEI
AMiliA CHAIRS

18% ITIIE•T IIICDU•T

�.

Smelly and dirty

The 'pit': a 'hairy' workrQom
A Dec. 17 memorandum calling the area of the
Bookstore known as the " pit," a fire hazard, has
resulted in remedjal action by both the Departments
of
Environmental
Health and
Safety and
majntenance.
.
The memorandum sent by Student Association
Student Rights Coordinator David Steinwald to
Robert Hunt, Environmental Health and Safety
Director, Thomas Moore, general manager of the
BookstQre and James Gruber, director of Norton
Hall , stated that " the ' pit' lacks adequate ventilation
fo r use as a work area and may constitute a fire
hazard ."
Located in t he basement of Norton Hall at the
end of the passageway leading to Harriman Library ,
the " pit '' is used both as a workroom and as a
storage room.
According to Mr. Steinwald , the " pit '' in
addition to lacking adequate ventilation, is dirty,
containin g both in!ldequate lighting and highly
combustible materials and is like ''something out of
a 19th century work factory."

by the University Bookstore in the area of the
Bookstore known as the 'pit'." Upon receiving Mr.
Steinwald's memorandum, Mr. H11nt sent an
inspector from Environmental Health and Safety to
check the area. He in tum determined that the lack
of ventilation and means of entry constituted fire
and safety hazard.
Commenting on this potentially dangerous
situation, Mr. Moore maintained tha t health and
safety matters were the responsibility and concern of
the Department of Environmental Health and
Safety.
According to Mr. Hunt , corrective measures will
be underway in the near future . These measures will
include the installation of exhaust fans to circulate
the air as weU as the removal of obstacles barring the
doors in o rder to provide for a safer means of egress.
In addition, o ne door will always be open a nd
covered by a metal mesh . d~r. which will provide
more air for the people working within. T~ door,
however, will be loc ked to everyone on the outside
and will open only for those working inside. This IS
to prevent thefts which have recentl y occurred .
Mr. Steinwald stated that if immediate action~
not taken from within the school, he will n ul
hesitate lo contact o utside consulta nts.

Dangerous situation
Mr. Stemwald stated that complain ts were made
to tum "alleging violation of health and safet y codes

Society symposium
•

There will be a symposium un the Experimenting Society on Thursday , Feb. 3 in
the Conference Theate r from 9- 11 :30 a.m. and 1- 3 p.m . Guest speakers wilt include
Edward V. Regan , Erie Count y E'lt~tive, discussing the Viewpoint of a Prac ticing
PoUtician in Local Government; Prol: (&gt;onald T . Campbell, Northwestern University ,
speaking on Methods for an Experimenting Society ; Prof. Robert Weiss, Department of
Psychiatry , Harvard University and Prof. Edison Trickett, Psycho-Educational Clinic, Yale
University. All interested persons are invited to attend this symposium.

J~~~~~~~ ~~\\\\~
7 DIYS/WEEK

51 UNIVERSITY PLAZA

837-2322

OVER 400 ENGLISH LP's
IMPORT SOUND - AMERICAN PRICE!
TAPE OF THE WEEK

RECORD OF THE WEEK

Blind Faitla,
•

29"

197

TOP15LP's $5.98liST

e

$3.39

LONDON CLASSICAl SALE

IT'S TOO BAD THAT ONE INCIDENT
CAN RUIN MONTHS OF HARD, SINCERE EFFORT .

Blumenkrantz becomes
director of Sub Board
Citing
in crease d
communication to the student
body as his first major goaJ,
Steven Blumenkranlz assumed
duties last week as the first
executive direc tor of Sub Board I,
Inc. His appointment culminated
a
lengthy
selectio n
process
conduc ted by a commHtee of
three Sub Board members.

Student-wide go.emmeut
"We can go into a lot of areas
big business is in and compete and
M· r .
B I u m e n k r a n t z run things a lot better than big
acknowledged that he was coming business can ." He conceded that
is a lepl problem
to the o rganization in the midst of there
an extremely critical period, in
light of the tremendous damage
the Poverty Hill affair did to Sub
Board's public image.
Involved in this is the negative
connotation Sub Board's status as
a (;Orporation has with the general
:.tudent
populace .
Mr .
Blumenkrant7 staled thai he must
C'ducate the student body as lo
the "nature uf a corpor:rlion. I
want to communil:atc tu the
students and tell lheu1 exactly
what they can du wrth tllls lype
of wrporation. Though we're
working within the system, we
can use it fvr tHll mcaus "
Money is power
Mr. Bl umt:nkrant7 expressed
great
optimism
concerning
possib le
future
Sub
Board
ventures . "Politi(;S IS run hy
money , and we have money." But
he emphasi1.ed thai Sub Board's
actions were completely up ro rhe
students. " If we can explain to
the
students
I hat
il
Ithe
corporation ~.;o11cept] 1s nul cv1l,
we can Lake any d~rection the
students desite. We should all be
pulling together . 'I he st udt:nts are
~wckholdcr~. we have to get their
opinion as for what tlu:y want
done wtlh their money ."
M1 Bhunenkra11tt.'s cnthu~rasm
was
not
tt'mpered
hy his
knuwlcdgc lll slate gu1delines
goverr11ng the expenditures uf
student ar11vrty tee~ . It wu' his
feeling that 111 many cases thtm~
guidelines
C111Jid
hi.'
legally
side-stepped .
Us1ng a hypothetrc.tl ~•luat1o11
M1 . 131um cnkran!l cxplamcd " If.
for mstance, you want to set up a

ST UDENT DISCOUNT

BEFORE YOU BUY
Your College Texts
See ars first if."o"
tt~ant to save money
We have a huge sfo(k of slightly

USED
TEXTBOOKS
•*

MMt
tit • the 1«.. , ....., Wt ..so .,ty ... teJlll '"'era..Gs-supplies
___.,....., pes.t en-tlts..

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
3610 Main St. Acress fr.. U.B.

133-7131

STORES
INC.

community non-praftt store, in
contrast to the capitalistic stores
students are now serviced by.
you're being political, but you're
not being political, at leas t in the
sense prohibited by the state."

on dll
redecora trny needs
art supplies, picture framtng ·

D.M. RECH PAINT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.

-Sant«M

Blumenkrantz
concerning business competition,
but contended it could be
eventually overcQme
Regarding Sub Board's role
within
th e
Universit y,
Mr.
Blumenkrantz. said that he would
"basically like to see Sub Board as
one unified student government.
Students are much better off with
a unified front. Of course , as I
said before, it is completely up to
the students what direction Sub
Board will go "
Mr. Blumenkrantt sees hrs new
$1 .1,000-a-ycar job as one of
impleme n ting
poltcy,
not
determining policy " I will take
the Board's policy deci~ions and
carry them out," he staled
He added that it would be his
duty to "g~~ ther rnformation , gel
the proposals together with the
students. and present findings to
the board, wlm:h will ulrsrrr.Hcly
determine the polky I will
implement."
Mr
Blumenkranl7
IS
an
alumnus of the State University of
lJuffalu , and received a law degree
from Brooklyn Law School last
June

Wo Are Now Open I

MIKE'S GIANT
SUBMARINE
SANDWICHES
WE ALSO HAVE - Coffee - Hot Chocolate - Soda Pop
47 KENMORE AVE.lN THE UNIVERSITY PLAZA
OPEN DAILY 9:30 - 1:00 a.m.

Monday , January 17, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page three

�. Feel ·Rite .

HEAET·H~ - FO~D

~

SHOPP

1451 Herter Ave. (comer Norwalk)' 837-7661
1-'eotur/nfl

DANNON YOGURT
•

98~ (plaln, cofftt, vanilla)
6 fru!Jtd ass(JrWH 1. 79
•••1 for 1 SA LE- NA TUR.At. VJTAMIIV cu•
Vita, in E sole - !00 l11t. units $1.75 (tOO's)

1

4 for

Hours:
Tues. Wed., Thun., Sat. - 9:30 - 6:30 Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30· - 9:00
LiATHERS, WESTERNS
Styles for Young Moderns!
These fr-.l&lt;y guys w ill
sell you everything they
h•ve on. Ov« 7,000
pairs of bell bottoms by
L.evl , t..M Landlubber,
Wranglerd Campus, Male.
Tremel\ ous selection .
Leather Jackets, boots,
p.~clu, field Jackets , Air
Force p.~rkas1 peacoats,
tops and bottoms. For
Guys and Gals! Be Hlp
- Save Money - Shop
Army-Navy!

The New York Civil Liberties Union will present
the BBC film, The Chicago Conspiracy Tr7al this
Saturday in the Fillmore Room. There will also be a
rap session with a group ot' law school professors
after the 8 :30p.m. show.

NYCLU presentation

s
a

1
e

KARATE
Studio
learn self

dcfcn~e

J. Lee
5t h Dan B lack Belt ln st.
!Korean style Tac Kwon D o
from : Mr. Wan

GUSTAV A . FRISCH. INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO. N.Y; 14226

Bible Truth

***P L E A S E

CLASS HOURS :

N 0 T E***

Because of the severe shortage of seats in Schrader
Gym , the State University College of Arts and Science
at Geneseo is requesting that fans of basketball teal"(ls
playing Geneseo N 0 T make the trip with their team.
1 T~e fans traveling to Geneseo will not gain access to

A REASONABLE REQUEST
"Come now, let us reason together, ..
·rh the lord; though your sins be
scarlet, they shall be as white a&amp;
~e~m .
snow."

I :00 - 2 : 00 O.ty classes
4:00 - 8 : 4 5 N itc c la sses
( M ondc~y
Friday)

.

INFORMATJ~ :

11 :00 - 8 : 45p .m
(Monday to Saturday)
CA LL 836 ·6 018

lssiah I : 18

3144 MAIN ST.
(1''4.ear U .8 . )

•••••••
WE NEED

BLOOD

NEW COURSE

MAJOR

- THE

ISSUES IN

ANNOUNCEMENT !

LATIN

AMERICAN

STUDIES
(GEOGRAPHY - HISTORY 272)

SpECTf\UM

•••••••
Liver and ~rown Rice S 1.85
California Swinger .... 1.95
Hamburger Stroganoff 1.45
Small Sirloin Steak
(Boneless)l.45
Chicken Roqurfnn ... 1.65
Beef Bourguinon ..... 1.75
Choice Omelet . . . .... 1.35
Groun d Beef (Organic) 1.45
Petite Filer M!;!,non ... 1.95
Vegetable r empura,
Brown Rice 1 .45
Vegetaale Scallops,
Brown Rice 1.65
Shrimp Tempura , Rice 1.95
Roast Sesame Chicl,en 1 .65
Egg Plant Parmesian .. 1.75
and many daily specials

COORD INATORS :
Dr. Marvin Bernstei n ( Hist ory)
Dr. Barry Lentnek (Geography )

Due to the high level of interest in Latin American Studies at
SUNY / Buffalo students will be offer ed an opportunity to examine
systematicall y several of the major issues confronting the peoples of Latin
America. Among the topics to be examined will be : Race and Population,
the Cultural Heritage, Social Organization, and Economic Development
Problems. Guest speakers from many disciplines will deal with specific
issues in depth and discuss their implications with the students. Grading
will be on a pass-fail basis with student option to obuin a letter grade.

ONEcfilrsAiE ;., N~JAI
.......

~~..._.ww

IUCDIIITB SlOP
Tloe , _ . ,

1171 hhlnn

ke4 .,... N -

111-1111

.... , ....' - Att-tl• ltetl""!

Page four : The Spectrum. Monday, January 17, 1972

DIEFENDORF ANNEX ROOM 30
4 CREDIT HOURS
TUESDAY- THURSDAY: 1:30 - 2:50 p.m .

Holiday VaUey takes more
skiers up the mountain with more lift than
ever before.
Our new 1600-foot double•
chair lih gives us a total
lift capacity of 6800
skiers per hour on 7 lifts.
And we've got something
new going down. A new
llftline slope called "The
Chute" and a new ski
glade. "The Shadows·· 'for the skier who thinks
he's seen everything.
Add to that 1000 acres of
challenging ski terrain for
skiers of all abilities. three
chalets for merrymaking,
snowmaking, lessons-and
much. much more.
Ski Western New York's
biggest and most complete
ski resort - in an authentic,
fun-loving, ski town.
Ski Holiday Valley.
We've got it all.

,~y

YA!l#.

Ellicottville, N.Y.

Phone 716-899-2345
Ski weekdays and save!

Monday is Couples' Oay;
Tuesday is 4dies' Day;
ThurSday is Men's Day.
Skiing, lesson and lunch for
just S7.50 per person.

�Sguash anyone?

Wrestling Bulls win
Winter intramurals.· fine start sixth straight match

With the return to campus for this year's second
semester, the Buffalo intramural and recreation
department has announced a fuU slate of interesting
activities. The campus' most important intramural
winter tourney, in basketball, resumed Monday and
continues until Feb. 20 for the playoffs. The same
teams will compete again in each division for campus
laurels. However, there are several openin~ for new
teams due to forfeiture by previously competing
quintets. See Clark Gym Room I 13 immediately for
information.
Next to come on Bill Monkarsh 's list of
tourneys is a handball tournament slated for the
week of Jan. 3 1. If you're interested, entry forms are
due Thursday, Jan. 20 at 5 p.m. Following handball,
squash and paddleball tournaments are also planned .
Squash wUI begin Monday, Feb. 7 with entries due
by Thursday, Feb . 3. Paddleball will start Monday,
Feb. 14 and all entries are due by Thursday, Feb. 10.
For the women, starting TuesdQy. Jan. 25, the
intramural department will conduct a weekly
women's paddleball tournament, hopefully the start
of a more useful women's program. Also on
Tuesdays, last semester's well received co-ed
badminton will continue in the main Clark Gym
from 7:30- I I p.m. All are invited by the int~mural
and recreation department.
Intramural swimming
A swimming meet sponsored by the intramural
department with the help of Buffalo varsity
swimming mentor Bill Sanford and his assistants will
also be held shortly . Entry forms
be

now with the tentative date for the meet as Friday,
Feb. 4. If not enough interested students sign up by
by Dave Geringer
Feb . 3, the meet may be postponed until Feb. I 7 or
Spectrum Stoff Writer
18 starting at 5 p.m.
·
Much of the intramural's department's problems
They say that all's well that
stem from a lack of publicity both from the athletic ends well, and the wrestling Bulls
department and campus media. However, II$ a started slowly but ended qui~kly
solution, a new infonnation reporttff. "the Clark Saturday afternoon. The net
Gym reporter," will come out ifl the following result was a 27- 12 victory over
weeks. The paper will pertain to facilities. recreation Brockport - the Bulls' sixth
and intrat:nural sports. Additionally, an intramural straight win without a loss. The
sports information table wilJ be set up outside tM Golden Eagles suffered their first
intramural office (Room I 13) for the purpose of setback in six matches thia se\son.
issuing news and information concerning intramural
The Bulls turned the match
sports at Clark Gym .
around after dropping the first
As an outgrowth of Dr. · Kenneth Cooper's three bouts to trail, 12-0. Dave
recent visit to the Buffalo campus, interest was
expressed in a cumulative distance swimming Eisenman , starting due to an
injury, then came up with what
program which would give students and staff the
coach
Ed Michael called the "key
opportunity to swim 30 points per week . Since the
win o f the match." "Eisenman
Red Cross already has a )O·mile schedule, it was
.
decided upon to use t¥Jr schedule. The schedule is exceeded our expectaiJons, and
d aroun d a very t ou gh
broken down into c~rt;~ation segments of ten-mile turne
match,'' said Michael. "I expected
unit~ up to 50 miles. It is recommended that softer
a dose mat&lt;.:h. This was one of our
swimmers start with only 18 lengths per evenings
biggest meets of the season and I
doing at least one mile per week . As strength is am pleased that we were able to
increased. a mile will seem an easy task 111 1040 defeat the Golden Eagles."
minutes.
Buffalo battled back following
The recreation department will give medals to
those completing 25 miles. A trophy goes to 50 Eisenman's vi&lt;.:tory to tie the s~:ore
miters and a special trophy to the person or person~ at 12 all by sweeping tlte next
who can complete 100 miles thts semester. Fur four mat~:hes Fred Marcello's
information read ThC' Spc(·frum xports Vl~tory at 177 lbs . put the IJulls
ahead 1•1 ~lay Mar~·cllo'~ vu;tmy
IRIK'"~' ""' call 83 I ·2924 .

left him as one of fou r unbeaten
Bull wrestlers.

Rated eighth
The Bulls, rated eighth in the
east by a poll of eastern coaches
and writers, lost a chance for
national recognition when a Dec.
18 match against Lock Haven was
cancelled because of snow. The
Bald Eagtes called a few hours
before the match and informed
the Bulls that they would not be
able to make it. The Bulls had just
beaten lthaca College, 38- 5,, the
preyious week were set for the
bi
tch in recent memory.
BuU wr
n
see1c
xtend their undefeated mark
ey take on Geneseo State
, tom ow m.ght a t Clar k Gym .
' 11le
tch, beginning at 8 p.m.
signals th start of a big week for
the Bulls. Buffalo will travel to
West Point Saturday afternoon for
a quadrangular meet involving
Army. Maryland and Clarion
State. These three opponents are
all rated over the Bulls in the
eastern wrestling poll . Victories
over the~e teams are essential if
the Bulls aim to muve up from
their eighth slut

NCAA ruling-

at your

UNIVERSITY

IKIIIRE

Freshman eligible for varsity
last week at 1ts annual mcc.ting. the NCAA
(National Collegjall• Athl~tiL Assmiallon) votl'U 1•1
make all freshmen eligjhle at member Umvcr~rly
division schools for footha\1 and basketball.
Previuusly, routl:lall and ha~kcth.lll w~·re the only
sport~ m wllll h lrosh wen: nut ullilll'd Jt 0\Jjllr
schouls The r..nthJII Vo1!C Wa~ 94 h7, whale the
haskethall nlotron pas~cd un a v,li\C v,11..:
Immediately the rea.:tiun from Ivy L~:ague rncrnher.-o
was unfavurJblc , srrnilar tn thctr urntcd o ppositrun
em the usc of fn:shman Ill holkey Ivy lcagu~
m~:mher&lt;&gt; have V&lt;IWnl to t•nJ tolllJWtllron wtlh
oppunents that employ lrc~hruan &lt;•I thc11 ~qumh
The trnmcJaatc dlcLt on Bull.rlo '' l'lou~kd due
to the shal-.y posllu~t1 nl tlw Unrvn~lly\ g1ani ·J11 Jrd
program , hut 11 should be tlllh' d th.rt the U\t' ot
freshman nn varsrl y tt·anl\ ;.:ould t'Vt'lllll,1lly help
r~tduc:l' thl' nurnhl.'r nt .11 hlcte' ncctkd on ~ranl ·rn ·.lld
tn run a prograau
Buffal1&gt; v.lr&lt;;il y u 1a;.:h I d M~th• . u ,,,.,h1n:rn
coac:h hrrHsell l1&gt;r I " ye.-r' . 1' a 111111 bl'lrt·Vef 111 lrtt'h
baskcthall , hut adn111~ th:rl lhl·tt• .rn· 'om&lt;' who .nuld
immeiJiatdy pl:1y hq!.-tlllll' VUI\IIY ba,l,.l'(h.lll ( 11.1&lt; h
Mull• added " It dnc"1'1 make 'en,~· tn h.IV\' .Hr
int'Xfll'rll'lh't•d trc,hm.rrl '1111r1g 011 tho: v.ll\lly\ hcnd1
when hl' &lt;'11111\1 IH' g.umng valllahk n.pcrr.:nu• oHI thr
junior v;.ar,,ty · ll owt•v,·r. t'Vl'n Cn.adl Mut11 wnttld lw
one of tlw ru"it It&gt; udm1t th.ll the Bulb llue
freshman Hoh Krt'klll\011 , a h \ llli.HU 11&lt;1111
Phlinv,ew. New Y11r~ . 11111ld havl' ht·lp~:d tlw 111111\'
varsaty a great deal !Ill' y~;.H
Financial plight
The cligih11ily ot frc,hman rn lht· nlaJor

stooe with yot.r pudlase c::l a

RING DAY
Tues.&amp; Wed.

Jan.

I he ~rth\' 1 rl t'Ol nl lltJjtH 1ntcr~:st Jl the NCAA ,
llollywood , Ho11da rut:etang.s was the vult: of the
tklcg.ate' a~ansl holdang a spt:cial summer
&lt;.:&lt;HIVCntwn lo ~.·onsrder a new packagt' of m~surt'S
hmllltllt frna11u,1 1 ard and n:~truc:turang o f the NCAA .
l&gt;r llarry (; l· n17 , Bu~faln's drrec.·tor of athletr~.:s was
a delc~te ;11td Dr. 1-J1V noted . " Thesc proposall&gt; wtll
pn•h.thly he rece1vcd a bat more fav•ttahl y next time
wlll'n I he \l hooh are a ht lie woN.: otf frna ric:ially ."
fh c ba~ll &lt;.hungt• &lt;;ought an the Jrea of
...-holar,hrp\, 1s a c. han~t· to &lt;~W.trd money solei)' 1111
!Ill' htl\1~ nf need Al,u. 1ht• rest rut tunng ~nught
would pJJtl' \l ho11h ,rl ll•vcb \lllliiiiCI\~Ura le Wtlh
th~·rr lrnanna) .JIId lOIUpetltVI.' L,qMI.I htre'
( urrt•nlly . th~ NCAA uH1~1'b ol lwll d1v"m"'
t lw ,,...._ Jll~c.l ITIJJ•H unrver~lt y drvl~ll&gt; ll JIH1 the
~.:olk~c UtVI~IOn Bu u~lll pr~ent ly competes Ill the
N( AA '~ Un1vcrsrty drvrs1un. Dr l·nlz noted thc
~Vt'.JI amount o)f ectiiHHIIIC: hardshrp among hi!t~ollc;~gues, whrdl tcaJ~ one to helieve that :o;ume
lh,ange w1ll n..:cur 111 the nl':&gt;.t year or two lo t'llJhle
~dluc.&gt;b to ~..nmpl.'tc .11 ~ rcJitstl,. ftnancr.1l and artt~ltc
level

SINGLES NIGHT
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT
AT THE

ON AN:; ~~we1 offer you a

fde9e ring ctno ~cost
...thatScool

arena~

ut loot hall and' ha~kclhall WIve~ to furth&lt;'r rllu~trate
the pl1ght nl many sehoul~ 1n the Jrena PI lln.mce.
rh~t ~t.:hools opposed to tht· use of frush besides Ivy
Lt:aguc membelb are many b1g time schools who can
afford t o (!JVe thcar frosh a yoar of seasoning. J . D.
M11rg.!n . &lt;~thletit c.hredm ol natwnal basketball
power lJ('l A nlltnl " I'd like tn roinr &lt;lUI that Ill
rel&lt;~tlon to ha~kcthall. I tlunk thai the rre!&gt;~ure o f
fiVI! montlh of pr:~ct rc.·c Jnd play1ng rs JU~I tuo ruuch
rressure lor a lr~hman '

SHOWBOAT
REDUCED PRICES
POPCORN

free

0\SUAL DRESS
MUSIC

I HERTEL AVE.

Monday, January 17, 1972 . Th~ Spectrum . Page five

�IStatus overemphasized

•
•
l
Ed ITORIA

IBlatant h

To the Edttot :

L-------------------;7"•"""'-!:c~----..o~

.
ypocrtsy

The student tee game is still being played by the University.
Through combination o f ingenious moves and artful sophistry the Stete
University of New York has succeeded in choking off any potential
political power that could arise from the huge sum of student fees
collected MCtl year.
By the latest series of developments University Press, the Food
Co-op, the Buffalo Draft Counseling Center, the Niagara Day Care
Center and PIRG life all threetened with either a partial lack of funds
o r total extinction. The State Univeuitv has decreed that University
Press is a private commercial enterprise and as such cannot operate
within tax-free campus facilities . University Press is neither private nor
profit·making, has greet educational value to the people involved in it
and therefore belongs on this campus.
The State unabashedly admits the double·standard fo r students
and administ rative ventures that we accused them o f last month. As
they say : " Units presently contracted through (the) F acuity-Student
Association are privlledged In the ~nse that they do not fall under the
same provisions as other ventures, relative to use o f tax·supported
facili ties. •• Since the FSA is not a threat, makes profits and 11 nothing
more than an 8dministrative hotding company for the State University,
they are free to v1olate the ru les specifically designed to strangle
student monies
This blatant hypocnsy is enhanced by some less than ho nest
University conduct. Attempting to prevent the purchase of a house for
Sunshine House, the S UNY Counsel's office 93ve a legal opinion that an
u nincorporated entity such as the Student Association could not
purchase real property. T h1s appears to have no factual basis in
Ameri t:an jurisprudence and is stmply another example of Al bany
mantpulattng the law to setve thetr ends.
The local adm inistration is tar from blameless in thts affair. When
confronted with these circumstances, they neatly sidestep the issue by
placing full blame on Albany . In t u rn, SUNY Central stat es that the
responsibility for interpreting and admimstering the fee guidelines falls
upon t he local u n its . And while they pass the buck , the studentsrutfer .

It is clear that the UnM!rsity's goal is to make the mandatory fee
system so unworkable that in a fit of frustration students will again
embra&lt;:il voluntary fees . No state campus that went to voluntary
collection has ever received ~ ~n a tenth of their prevtous vear's
intake By forcing volu~nry f~s upon rhe various units IIley would
effectively d~roy all stu ent ventures.
To batt thts trap f ther. the State has satd that a voluntary fee
system would be unrestri ted They can change theu rulings to fit thelf
whims at any time. and
believe that anyone who trusts their
prom•se o f unsupervised volu tary momes IS a blind fool. I 1 is qUJte
unfortunate that some of our udent " leaders" have totally fatled to
understand the Un tvet"Sity's tact s and are playmg rtght mto thelf
greasy palms by ad vocating a retur"'-to voluntary fees
The only solut1on seems to be a'v•gorous camp&lt;ugn of opposition
to th is offical misconduct . First, a law Stilt cnargin&lt;J dental of equal
protectiOn should be filed . Several le&lt;Jal authon t1es have already
expressed the o pinion that such a suit would be successful , due to the
State's obviOUS double-dealtngs. In additton, pol1tical means must be
used to combat the Univers1 ty . If a boycott of FSA enterpnses or a
strike is necessary, so be tt
These rultngs must be fought and we have little to lose but our
shackles.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 42

I

Monday, 11 January, 1972
Editor·in·Chief - Denms Arnold

t'

Co·Managtng EdttOf' AI Benson
Edotor - Moke Loppmann
Alln M.~•no Edoto r Susan Moss
BUSIM$5 M1nager
vacant
'
Advenistng M1nager Susan Melltmtme
Co-Ma~ng

c.mpos

Coty
Am.
Copy
Am.
Feature
Graphoc Arts

Jo Ann Armao
Jeff GreenwaltJ
How•e Kur1 1
Hervy Lopman
vacant
Ronru Forman
Many Galt•
Claire Knogsmau
vacant
Tom Tot~

Layout
Lot &amp; Drama
Mu11c:
Off.Cempus
Am
Photo
Sports
Am .

Ba•l&gt; Berr,nard
Maryho!Je Runyon
M•chael S llverblatt
Bolly Altman
Lynne Traege•
Jan•ce Crorner
Marc Ack erman
Mockev Osterte•cher
Barry Rubon
How•e fa1wl

The Specrrum IS served liv Uru led PrllS~ lnternat•onal, College Press
Servoce. I he Los Angeles f ree Press, the Lo~ Angeles Times S yndocate and
Loberatoon News Serv•ce

Repobhca11011 of mell or hereon wolhout the expoess consent o f the
Editor·on C hoef •s fotbodden
Editorl•l Polley Is

det~~rmoned

bv the Ednor tn.Chief.

Page six . The Spectrum Monday, January 17, 1972

1 would like to brln&amp; into clur focus a form of
direct diu rlminatlon o n the part of you and the
board that araots tenure to the pro fessors who
emphwze researc h at the expense o f teachina. Dr.
J.P. J o nes of the Po litical Science Department is
beina d ssmissed because be teaches and spends h is
extra time helpina students. Yo u are discriminating
by bein&amp; more concerned about the status o f the
University than its students.
Dr. Ketter, blacks bave many obstacles to
overcome in pinina admission to this Universit y. A s
a stud ent who is not functionina in one of the
special proarams through which admittance is
11uned, I s pent from February t o September being
sent to different offices in an attempt to find out
how to pin e nt rance t o colleae. As a student who
did not s o to hish school and had been away from

·

.

pined~ ~8h

formal eduelltion for ten yt;ars, I
sch ool eql.dvalenoy dlploma. Because of
y
backpound, I am lacltill&amp; In many areas VI~ t
coUeae counea. Dr. Jones reco111iz.ed my ~~le
and ,has aone out of his way to help me by
explainlna procedures and tuto rina me for many
hours outside of class time.
I am 28 yean old. My wife, my family and I are
wUJina t o sacrifice fo r my education. I intend to gain
the fuU benefits In this field fro m your University
and I stro naJy object to m y c hances of d oing this
beina jeopardized b y your concern with the status of
the University .

Te"y L. St. John
Edito r's note: The tlbove letter i.:t a copy of one
originally sent to President Ketter, We reprint It here
In the public interrlt.

A strong disagreementwas

To the Edrwr.

As every budd y kn o ws, over C hristmas vacation,
Lev became an u nsuccessful candidate 1n h is quest
for the direct orshi p o f Sub Board I , Inc.
Ha ppy screw year
This as in s pite o f m y own o nginal submissio n to
the Board and letters sent m my behalf fro m leslie
A. Fiedler here at SUNY AB, and Maurice Mcluhan
( Marshall's brother) from The Centre for Culture and
Techno losy an To ront o.
Hc wever . dunng the past semester, I spent
more tame wtth t he Board .tnd 1ts prob limbs then
1he membershap themselves and presently know
more about theu affaars (and t he 6 student govU)
than they do
I also developed a whole series of short -range,
tong·t trm programs for the bored that would create
lo ts o f JOb~ for the ste w d ense (tt's your mo ney
folk s) and 1mprove the quality of life m the
n eighborhood . Programs that would &amp;enerally
benefit the UnavenHIY comm u nit y at large.
It wasn't until the student body sphl for
vacatio n that the c ha1rman , Paul Cumming, -told me

that his time
worth S 10 per hour; no. he had
never bo t hered to look at the material I gave him and no, I would not be &amp;Jven the chance to meet
with the screenina committee (there was none) or
wath the Board itself.
It is questio nable ll!l to the legality o f the
appoant ment and Cummi ng has indeed broken the
Corporation's by·laws.
Furthermo re, there is dissention on the Board as
to the Whole busmcss Jack.Suntina, the oldest laving
member and former vace chairman told me I was
g~ven a " ream JOb."
An understatement · giVen the rub by the sub.
Lev (the old aheep) wti masle4 into t hinkin&amp; he
was goang to get the chance to serv e you. Now I
dascover that because of the Board 's duplicity in
relataon to the job and thelt suppressiOn of m y adeas
that I am being forced into leavmg the Un1versity
communaty
Ho pefully we wall have the cha nce to gather
tQsetJier (i n the very near fut ure) - rue about it and
have a good t irne. Lev IR leavlna. say sood·bye .

Mir harl S tephen Le11mson

.Ar-lclnn_te
by Stanley Dayan
It " custo mary in edu cational systems to leave
the strut:lure of 11 course entirely in t he hands o f the
ms truct o r 01nd his departmenl Students have been
condlltoned to accept wh:tt t he hetratchy wants to
g~ve them One teac her for example may dec1de that
he teat; h o nly sample data and ask for memorization
Anot her mtght decade to g1ve the essential structures
ul d \:Crlam top1c. But whatever the instructor
chuoses, J ~·a de1llll cust o m does not require h1m to
JUS!tfy htl&gt; ch Uice to the st udents. When he does
JU~ llfy h1s cho tt:e he puts tl in a way which does not
SltmuiJte dascusston but 11voids it. Since he feels , and
thiS ts another custom , the material Is muc h more
im po rtnnl than u di~c ussion of why we should study
thts malenal II) th l:. wa y
I canno t help fcehng lilts custom i.e. t hat the
~l udents have no \'Oice m the structure, to be
arbi trary and mo re tm portantly something which has
managed to kill the th1rsl for know ledge ln many
~tudcnls.

I pro pose the follo wmg change. The students
not only be allowed to st ructure the course
but sho uld be encouraged t o lake as large a part as
the tn\tructor
The mstrudor menttoned before feels the
nveyance nf data IS suffic1ent. Say the students
&gt;n't lcel lhJt t h1 ~ IS educat iOnal. They ask the
'' ru c to r t o JUSt 1fy lu~ ~.:o urse of ac tion. T hereupon
the dd\S d1~cu~es the partu:ular nature of\ the
,J t~c.:aphn e The tnbtruc.:t or attempts to show them
wh y the dJIJ J re so nn·~ary This could go o n for
several week~ llo pefully the Instruc tor and hss class
wmc w Jn under~tan dang of whJI w1ll he taught
Ant&gt;lhl·r L\ teachtng il htst ory oourse. T he
studen t' feel that some preJUdice ts o perating in the
tnterrH et.tttnn n l th e matertJI. In thjs case they
'lrudure lhl' lUllr.c 'o thJt it includes logtc.:JIIy
erntu!lh I he tea l her':. pcrsonJI philosophy
A thtrd lll~tructur 1sguH.IIng a sc:nuna r Yet the
\lu,lcn" feel J gJp hctween what t hey are supp,lscd
tu dtSO:ll'-'&gt; Jlld what the y want to disc uss. One
stullcnt helt evc~ thai the phtloso ph y of educat1o n of
the Univcrs1 1y (grad es and credit) 1s responsible for
tlu~ dispunty This cour.;c then spe nds some lim e
taii..Hlg ahnut lh l.' phtlosophy o f cducafi(ln of t he
llr11ve r~1IY I"'' Jll\:lllpl ~~ th ct11 mad e to darily thts
plulmuph y aud I,H:a l &lt;' th e suhject matter W1lhn1 11 or
outstdc 11. The dtsruss10 11 hopefully comes to a
saiJ,j&lt;J~tory ~.:ondus10n
hl..c a~·~epl ing the grades
and crcc.J1tS .mc.J capital1sm and :.eeing that the course
fits 1n well or rejec ting the socio-econom K s lrul'ture
&amp;nd onenttng the dtscu:;sing .1ccordingly.
(An e&gt;..Jm ple would he d chnu.:al psychology
cl:lss. The Instructor tlunks the aim of counseling is
the pat1ent's "fittang in." The stuc.Jents widen the
das,US.\tul\ to o ur econom1l struct ure. t.a ke a stanc.l
~hould

~

against the structure. Thel) for example they reonent
the course toward spontaneous action as the end.)
I kno w too well that the c ha nae in our customs
which I propose is next to impo$$tblc at th is
Universaty. Even if an ins,truct o r wanted to give the
studtnlB this right to ' struct u re the course. he m6st
probably will lack the skill to put i t in te rms wflicll
the st udents can respond to Ho wever this proposal
is 1 descrlplinn of the chan&amp;n J have a1teady made
and tried. I am fairl y certaan tbat this is the solution
to the major part of our edu~tional fr ustration~&gt; .
n ae problem can be summarized this way
Students t o day have been diKOuraged from taktng a
hand in the strul!ture o f a coune. Neit her have they
been able to develop the tka ll to restructure courses .
Yet in the yeat rnuJ on ty o f cases the stud e nts are
frustrated by the struc ture and limits wh1ch the
lnstsuctor tmposes.
The solutjon is for s tudents and fa culty to thm k
u deepl y as poss1ble abou t the cause o f the.~e
frustratio ns : ro r the students to demand the nght
and lor the faculty to encourage and be receptive to
student attempts at stru cturing.
T he fo llowing two courses will be t a ught an
College E t h is spnng ( College A is not wha t it used
to be.) The courses were too late to be ltsted in the
catalog because of the polilic.al problems we we re
anvolved in during t he fall. I invite any students,
faculty or admin istrator to s1t 1n on tlus course. I
feel the d escn ption I have given of these pract ices is
lnferiM Jo the way they actuall y work o ut. My
course COE 4 74
Revolut1on ;as the creation of
value:.
TTh 4 .30 b:OO l he important revolutio n
wul be understood as the revolution 1n values.
Drawang heavily o n ltfre ex istentialist tradition an
phaloso phy and literature "ueation o f values" w11l
be defined and 1ts poht1cal •mphcutions examaned.
One o f 1he mam problems t o be handled is that of
exactly what soc..auJ c hange as consistent with the
philosoph y o f Neii7.Sche. Jo hn Dale y 's course COE
J4H
Poetry· TheCtty
TTh J ·00 - 4 .30 Withi n
the ccunmny of some poetr}- anscs the city , defined
in c areful relata on~ . C harles Olson an c.J W. C. W1lllams
huve sought th1s cit y an thctr poems, so each has
gJven place to his purtkula r c1ty . Language use, the
pnssihillt y tn wonts to crea t e a c1ty ' . . to build o ut
o r sound/ a wall / to th l· t.:ily
' (Olson of
(lfouo.:cslcr), is ;Jlw. o f th1s course I wtll use t hetr
pnet r y juxtaposed t o som.: tlung.&lt;. here in Buffalo
where I've .1 la w J) rac..l tce. Out o l tht~ practice are
l!O illiO&amp; l.'&lt;t\es tnvolvtng courts and other polillcal
mcl'h;uusms 111 ronuc te \IIU,ttoons 77H• Max11nus
l'o&lt;'ms und l'utt•noll will ror ca n nea tc an ao.;t ive
YOc3 bulary With whtc h to mcJSure this local scene
RegislrJtion numbers w11l be il5:&gt;1gncd to these
courses withan the next week ur tw o llowcver Jo hn
Jnd I would hkc to meo.:l wath the tnterested s tudents
befo re the rewstrallon me,· hamsm is available We
will meet dl 4 :,30 tn the IIJJS Loungt! tonaorrow.

�Flying high

Hockey Bulls make it big!
by Howie Faiwl

England CoUege and

Low~U

Tech

7- 3, 9-S respectively.

AJ$1. Sponr Editor

As the Buffalo hockey BulJs
prepare to launch the second half
of their skyrocketing season, one
must recoUect the amazing feats
thus far amassed by this ever
improving squad. Wfih nine solid
games under their belt the Bulls
stand 6- 3 overall. However a
more important stat istic is their
6- 1 Division II standing, good for
fifth place among the 27 team
setup.
Their only loss in Division II
came-at the hands of highly rated
Merrimac k in· the finals of the
Merrimack Tournament during
the Christmas vacation The 4 I
defeat came on their thtrd
successive day of play after the
Bulls had manhandled New
C~pus

New stan are bom
These three games saw the rise
of several bright new stars for the
Bull$. By far the most striking and
s tartling
s tand out
wa s
hard-shooting freshman Mike
Klym. The Leamington, Ontario
native, a right winger on Dale
Dolmage's number one line,
totaled )even goals. on success1ve
nights aiainst New England and
Lowell Teen . His II total goals
lead the team and h.is I 6 points
share the to p spot with Dolmage.
Another line that has suddenly
begun to click, has been the John
Stranges line, with the rookie
sophomore center continu ing h1s
umque ability to Yleak goals into
the net. Bob A1bano and Ted

Productions Presents

CHUCK MANGIQNE

QUARTET
and

BAT McGRATH&amp; DON POTTER
In Concert

FRI., January 21

8:30p.m.

Peace Bridge Exhibition Center- Porter Ave.
Limited amount of $4.00 tickets on sale now at : Festival
Tickets - Statler Hilton Lobby; Norton Union - U.B.; Buffalo
State Ticket Office; Falls Tickets - Haeberle Plaza, N1agara
Falls. WHEN GONE, All TICKETS $5 .00

Miskolczi have continued their
hard nosed-play and co-captain
BUJ Newman has recently shown
signs that he Is ready to do some
more scoring.
Defense has become the most
improved department on the
team, due notably to the return of
junior Les Teplicky. According to
Coach Wright , Teplicky, out most
of the season with a leg Injury, has
"stabilized the defense and can
almost solely be accredited with
keeping us on our winning ways."
Goaltender Mike Dunn, perhaps
the · mos~ - underrated Bull , has
recently r.,me into his own, in a
quest to remain the number o ne
n et m i nder .
Dunn
w as
exceptionally tough in Buffa lo's
1-2 vtetory over Hamilton l!st
week and hopefully his sparklang
saves arc here to stay .
With all th1s added sconng
punch, :1 patched up defense, and
a strong mouvating desire to win .
the Bull's success should not be
shortl1ved. With the toughest pari
(1( the schedule yet to come, there
still remam five and p&lt;&gt;\s1bly six
home contests agamst such
formidable opponcn Is as Ithaca,
Kent Stale. AIC and Ohio State.
This weekend the Bulls face
the
Ohio
State
Buckeyes;
Saturday mght at Amherst and
Sunday afternoon in Buffalo's
hockey debut
al
Memorial
Audllonum The Bulls w11l seek to
avenge Lhe double defeat they

out
s.

New star

Mike Klym was just one of the
standouts for the hockey Bulls
this ..ason. He has scored 11 goals
for the IUSOn and shares the
point leed with 16 potnts.

suffered earlier th1s year on the
Buckeyes home ice. Buffalo will
be minus Grant Nicholson, the
6 3 semor whom many of you
from last year remember as that
huge stickhandling defenseman .
Nicholson in a poor showmg tillS
season, has been cut from the
!&gt;quad after a series uf tll nesses and
personal problems.
An additional s1delight that has
recently come about IS some
senous dtscussu;m over new and

bigger home ice accommodations
for next year. With the crowd
attrac tion of the Bulls and the
increased attentio n of the media,
both Grand Island and Clarence
have offered to build rinks over
the summer with the Bulls as
tenants and seatmg up to 4500
people Although little is concrete
now , it is more than ttl&lt;. ely that
Amherst will no longer be
"burdened" by the Bulls come
next season

8 lAM
. .~~. ..a¥E&amp;
..QC:•fM
...
1Mt~. .ma. .~:~
. .~CIMfM~:~~! amc ~
M A T H E M A T I C S 1 4 2 C8

which met m Diefendorf 304 at 10:00 .t.m. on Friday,
Janu.try 14 , will continue as schedu le d
(Mon.- Wed. Thurs. Fn., 10-10:50, Diefendorf 304) .
Those studenh registered for Math 142 CA should
re-register for Math 142 C8 .
Any students who were registered for the 11 :00 a.m.
section who cannot m&lt;lke the 10:00 a.rn. class should go to
MATH 142 0 , Parker 32, Professor T.C. Wu's section.

Exclusive Ar• Showing

FREAKS~'
ONE COMPLETE SHOW

GRANAOA
STARTS AT 7:30 A.M.

"THE NIGHT.OF
A deferred payment plan lets you buy the life insurance policy
you'll want tomorrow at prices you can afford today

THE LIVIIG DEAD"

One complete show every Eve. at 7 :30p.m.
Sat. &amp; Sun. at 2:00 - 5 :00 · 8 :00 p.m . 1

Mon"day, January 17, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�·..

2nd SemeHter-Sale
NEW

LO W L OW PR I CES

( LOWER THAN D ISCOUNT PRICES)

r--------------------~
I
list
SAlE PRI~I I

i
i

2.70

$4.9B

3.30 !
3.80 :

$~.98

:

$6.9&amp;

I

f

i

.

.

.

I
I

----------------------

ALL IN THE FAMILY

EVERY LP SLASHED ALL WARNER BROS .. REPRISE. ATLANTIC, ATCO and ELECTRA

included in this scns.tti o nal S A L E ! ! !

I
I

VAN MORRISON

FACES

LED ZEPPELIN

T . R EX

UNBEATABLE
University
Plaza
CAVAGES
{only]
•

\Page eight . The Spectrum . Mo~day, January 17, l972
~

' ' • "' ,- "'' ..: ' t

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' •

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\ •

•

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•' .

(

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It

�Basketball Bunl are victorious
throughout their southern tour
by 88ny Rub.in •
Sporn£dit01'
Despite the recent snag that
seems to have d eveloped in the
Buffalo basketball grant-in·aid
program, the Bulls continue to be
successful on the court . The mock
headline on Coach Ed Muto's wall
reads. "Mutomen march through
the south; it'll never be the sam·e
again." That was t he feeling of
most involved with the BuJis after
Buffalo swept three straight
vit·tories
from
its southern
opponents
during
Christmas.
Added
to their pre-vacation
~0 74 victory over major IJiinois
State gives the SuUs a four game
win streak , three over major
uu1versity division opposition.
'I o open their march through
th~· south, the BuUs traveled to
StJtl!Shoro, Georgia to hatlll'
Ccmgiu Southern College. Tl1e
Eagli!S were 3 - 3 when they met
thl: Bulls. one of thctr to~scs
0:11111111&amp; at the ha"ds of powerful
J ., ~· k sonvilltl University . However.
tht' SuUs spurred on hy their big
wm o ver Illinois State began 11\c
.;nnlest on fire 11nd rodt: a (1:! per
( cnl
first
half
f1eld
goal
Jll' rn ntage 1nto Jll ~b ~J win . It
w.•, two o ne and o ne foul
!&gt;tlUJtlons co nverted hy snph

guard John Forys in · the Jast
minut e that turned the trick for
Buffalo. Earlier, C urt Blackmore
with 25 points and 25 rebounds
spurred on the Bulls alo ng with
four other teammates in double
scoring figures.
Greg Laker, Buffalo's 6-6
transfer from Seward, Kansas
Com munity
College,
was
particularly effective from the
field and on the boards. After a
slow start, Laker has moved in as
one starting fC?rward with captain
Neil Langelier wltile Jim Tribble,
Buffalo's other 6 - 6 transfer
forward had become the sixth
man. T ribble. playing with an
injured knee for most of this
~cason gave the Blue and Gold
strong su#)port for Blackmore on
the boards. In their vict ory at
Geo rgia 6outhern , t he Bull~
neutralized most of the Eagles,
hu t were stung by soph hot shots
J ohnny Mills for 34 points and
Richard Wallace for 11 points.
Tile win over the Eagles wa~

consi~er~ a big one for the Bulls
and was rated by the Buffalo
coaching staff as tbeit biggest road
win since the BuUs won at
Villanova in 1960,63 - 62 .
Easy win

Next the Bulls faced an easier
task at winless Georgia State. The
Panthers,
playing
a
major
schedule, were no match for the
Bulls who broke open the contest
after a close first half. Their
second half outburst could best be
described as an tsXplosion as the
Bulls out scored the Panthers
57 - 36 in the half for a 98 - 69
triumph. Blackmore dominated
his 6 - 10 opponent Ron Ricketts .
and tied his school field goal
record with 15 ror 31 poinh
against the Panthers. Bla~· kmoll'
also grabbed in 26 re bounds 1o
lead the Bulls who nearly J11uhkd
Georgia State'~ rcbounll tutal.
Be.~Jdcs Blad.. mon.:, only Ltng~lier
with II and ~oph Greg Bru.:c w1th
I 0 hit doul:llc figun.~\ . ltowcvcr, all

of the Bulls saw action and hit the
scoring
colum n.
Behind
Blackmore, Tribble led the Bulls
with 1S rebounds.
to complete their road trip
with three victories the' Bulls next
traveled to Binningham, Alabama
where
they
defeated
the
dissension -ridden
Samford
University Bulldogs, 78 - 63. Prior
to meeting the Bulls, Samford
Coach Van Washer suspended
three of h.is players who had
returned late to practice after
lhei.r Christmas vacation . The
Bulldogs missed these players
including Laymon Williamson
t heir leading scorer, and were no
match for the Bulls, despite the
fact that Blackmore was the
victim of early fouls. In . the
Sanford contest. Buffalo guards
Bol:l Vartanian o~nd Greg Bruce
turned in fine performam:es.
Vart.an1an ~cored 16 points and
tied the scho nl rcc 0rll with ten
ass.~ts m the game . Brut-...:, fasl
hccuming ;1 fmc guard . ~ot 7 16
for I'\ po tnt~&gt; wtth fu ur ,Glf\lsh
Bulls' fruutline bunch
lfowl,'vcr , Bt. l~km orl'
tlll1011 :101.1 ltt\lld W l&gt;r t'

\dW

(lUI

ltttlo:
l.'lg.)\t

points and eight rebounds. In the
big man's absence the other
members
or
Coach
Muto's
' 'frontline bunch" did the jol:l.
Tribble had 12 points a nd 12
reboUQds, again playing with his
bad knee while Laker scored ten
key points. But the big surprise
for Buffalo was 6 - 6 backup
center Don Van Deuson who
came in for Blac km ore and scored
seven points with four rehouRds,
including a key lap-in tha t gave
the Bulls enough impetus to win.
Throughout their three game
spree t he Bulls outrebounded
t heir opponents 200 133 and
boosted their rebounds average to
54.2 per gnme, highest ever l'or
the SuUs. In addition the Bulls"
team
field
goal
shooting
percentage at 4 7 per cent ties for
h1ghest among all Bull tet~~n s .
Presently ,
th~
Bulls
an•
regr ouping in preparation for the
t(lugh e~t part o f the1r ~dteduk
whiC.:h IJes ahc.:~d . After playing at
Akron o n Wednesday , rhe Bull,
arc ho rne at C'larl.. Gym (8: 30
p.m ) wtth LeM o yne Saturday
evontng hefo re fa .:mg natiOnally
r.tnked Maryland at Co llege Park
un Jan 25

WE HAVE NOTHING TO SAY

STUDENTS

ABOUT OUR PLACE

SEEING IS BELICVING

SPEEDED READING

UP liGHT? MONEY WISE ?

AND STUDY
'1

D 111 lSI On of undergraduate
u dies again o ffers Mrs.
N 1chols non·credtt course.
Weel&lt;ly sessions. Nominal
fee . $15.00 payable at
registration in room, 305
D1efend orf - before January
31st.

COME FIND OUT FOR YOURSELf

~t

0 0 L LARS ( S)

SAVE

Anacones Inn

BOARD CONTRACTS STILL AVAILABLE

3178 Bailey Ave.

7 days, 20 meal plan
5 days, 10 meal plan

(next t o Garden of Sweets)

De~igtll'd to fit the need~ of the

Commuter and lht Dorm Students

Dynamics

(For details STOP I N, food Service Offic e
Goodyear Hall)

NEW COURSES
I

1n
Take afree Mini-Lesson and increase
your reading speed on the spot!

Know why wei~ so much
our free mln i·le~sons? Bro
chures and catal~s can't
possibly desc ri be w at it's
like to read a boo
like
Exodus at I 49&lt;9. pages ) In 1
hour an . 48 mmu~es. 9r an
enure T1me Magaz1ne 1n 35
m1nutes.
Instead we invite you to spend
60 minutes this week at a
mini·lesson . We'll 5how you
why two presidents (Kennedy
111

J

&amp; Nixon) pe~sonally brought
the course mto the Wh1te
House so staff members could
le.arn the Evelyn Wood tech ·
nlque.
. .
At a m1n1-lesson. we actually
increase your reading s~ed
on the spot . Just a little,
to be sure, but enough so
you'll know how it feels .
By the way
don't worry
about how slowly you re~.
Everyone comes to a m1n1·

lesson 1eadiny slowly .
One last thmg, back 1n 1964
we adopted the follow•ng a!. a
national 1~olicy · "We IHom•se
t~at you II read at east 3
t1mes better than when you
started or we 'll refund your
tuition "
Tha: pol1cy st1ll
stands.

That's •t. The schedule of free
mini·lessons is l1sted here.

CLASSICS
Clas~ic~

I 13

Myth aud Rt&gt;hgaun 111 the Anctenl World 1English II J)
Classics 219 .
T he Jews in the lfellcnislk Age (History 3 I 0)
Classics 302
The Greek Mind in the Making 1tlbtory .l()&lt;). English 306)
Classics 304
P~&gt;ychoanalysis and the Cla•.sil:' (English 307)
Classics 4 I 6 :
The AENEID · Yergjl \Journey intn the Wasteland (English 419)

I Permission u/'tn.l'lflll' l nr

ts

NOT req11ired fnr alii' of th ese courses}

Monday, January 17 at 7 :30p.m .

ATTEND ONE OF THESE FREE MINI - LESSONS Tuesday, January 18 at 7:30p.m.
.Hour
BUFFALO INSTITUTE
3606MaloSr
(ou.r ro Buffalo Te xtbook Store)

Wednesde: , January 19 at 7:30p.m .
Thursday, J
ary 20 at 7:30p.m.
Friday, Januar 21 at 7 :30 p .m.
Saturday, Janu
22 at 7:30p.m.

NOTE on "closed courses" : because of possiblility of1cornputer
error. please confinn any a nnouncement t hat a course has been
closed with the Department of Classics (390 Hayes, 831-2816)
or with the instructor involved .

For further information call- Warren Waldow 837-2
Monday, January 17, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page nine

\

�kitchen prlvlle~. private entrance.
Foreign stud ents welcome. G rad u ate
male pr ef erred. Call after 6
Monday-Friday. 834-4792 all day
S•tu rday-Sund ay.

CLAIIIF111··
p.m. S h ould have t rAn sp ortation . S!
per h r. Call 832·7045.

AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED ADS may be placed
Monday thru Friday bet ween 9 a.m.
and 4 ' 30 p.m . at 355 Norton Hall .
THE COST of an ad f or one day Is
for the first 15 words and $ .05
for 4i1Ch additional w ord .

s 1.25

"HELP WANTED" ads cannot
discriminate on the basis of sex, color,
creed o r n ational origin to any , 9xtent
(I.e., preferably Is still discriminatory) .
"FOUND" aos will be run free of
charge for 'a maximum o t 2 days and
l~ words.

WILL PA V for t erm papers, tests, any
Information f rom Investments 402
taugh t b y Gupta. 881·2659. Keep
trying.
COLLEGE GRAD wants to babysit
evenings. Loves children and has tots of
free time. Call 831 -4113 days lind
8 75·1944 niles. Ask f or Leslye.
$ s $ N eed a male Sociology gr•o or
undergrad student who Is good at
taking exams . Please call John
823- 7572.
BABYSITTER two afternoons per
week . Flexible hours. Ca ll 688·9429.

WANTED
WANTED : Someone to help with
h o usew o rk Saturdays or Sundays.
Good money . Call 834· 2336 evenings.
BA BV S t T T E R
I or year ·old girl :
M o nday's
J : 00 - 4 : 45
p . m .,
Wednesdays 1 ; 00 t o 7 :00 p .m . and
sometomes Froday' s l :00 p .m . to 4 :4!&gt;

ART STUDENT to paint raised
lettering on Old· fashloned bottles . Pick
up some extra cash . Call Ed 8 2 5 ·9577 ,
3- 5 p . m ., M ·F .
BABYSITTING for baby or toddler on
my home days. U .B. area . 832 -3699 .
R.N .s PART or fun ttme eve.•, part -time

days. Become pa r t ot trea tment team
on smaJI, community oriented ,
psychiat ri c
u n it , C311 8 8 2,· 2551
evenings - late.
FULL OR pa r t·tlmo Jobs available with
Bosttl no Inc. Call Art 886·2094 or
Mike 835·5215. Meetings at Executive
Ramada Inn.
I WILL buy your toy trains In any
condition, Call 834· 7396 .
FEMALE wanted Immediately
for
babyslttll•ll 11 few hours per week (n
exchange for free room. 633·7594 .
START $2 per hour salary plus bonus.
Work 4 -8 p.m. weekdays; 10·2 p.m .
Saturdays. Cali 835·3803 or TF9·0402.
SAXOPHONE Solmllf B · flat tenor
wanted . Please call Rich. 862·6811 or
862-6 704 .

HOUSE FOR RENT
FOR RENT : Three -bedroom sing le
n o me near campus. Graduate students.
835 · 1 719 .

APARTME NT FO R RENT

It's about time!
A calend.a r of men
for women.
Starl the New Yeur with the most un ·
t l\ttOJI ca lendar ) Ou ' ve ever seen. The

l Q7'2 C a lenda r of Men for Women . A
pho tographic, not pornographic study of
I~ unique m en .
Thi' i' n large ha nging calendar (I J• x
19"), 1 1 p:tgc ' I including cover). It's the
fl r-~ o f i r' l.i nd ;11111 "ill su"'I Y become a
.olle.ror ' iicm
h n 1 ir al&gt;oul ro me men been me ohjec r~
for han~;on.:"
'ipnial srudenl p rice $2.50. N a tionolly
ad ve rt i,ed a t

S '.95.

Calendar, P.O. Box 827
Farmingdule, N.Y. I 1735
l'l~n'~

ou,fl

c:o lt~uf.u, ;ot ~~ ~0 &lt;3

~0 ccnh "''" ·'~· ·""' hJnd looc l
'' m~ '"-hrd·. nulnt·v order (ot

t rlus

Fndosed

prt nl tl.om&lt;--- -- - - -- - - -

:tll l l r r " - - - -- - - - -- - - -

,

find
·out.
355

• •

Norton

LARGE clean 3-bodroom apt .
completely furnish ed near Clllmpus on
L .Salle. 1-year tease for f our. 155
each. 631 ·5621.

Cheap student Introductory offer. Call
A lvin 833~503.
ENG INEERIN G Mechanics Statics and
Dynam ics, a n d St1tlcs and Strength by
Sho1mes. For Engineering 205. Brand
n ow , ~all Joh n, 759-8859.
CL ASS CONFLICT prevents UIAI ot ski
equipment package rental. Wish tp sell
to Schu ssmelster memb er . 759-8418 .

APARTMEN T available now. 3 rooms,
$80 per month - all utilities Included.
Call 885· 7962 .

THE G REAT CAR. A 1964 Pontiac
· LeMans. Very good condllton.
Two-door, she cylind er, automatic,
SINGLE HOUSE for rent. 5 malo
radio, new b,ut ery, snow tires, two
students. $80 each w;utllltles. Lease &amp;
spare r ims. Asking $ 400. Call JlfTI
damage deposit. 3 bathS. 838-3367 .
"' 837.0674 .
FURNISHED modern apartments and
~ooms,
Just remodeled, Including
tolevhion, etc., noar UB, cheap.
896·8344 evenings.

RIDE BOARD
RIDE NEEDED to and from Union
And William M - F. 837 ·0211, ext. 37 .
RIDE THERE end b•ck needed
despe&lt;ately , N .Y .C .-L .I. Weekend Jan .
21 . Driving expenses shared . Marty
837 ·6575 .

STEREO component and Ampex
Mlcro-86 tape recorder
for sale.
877·7393 a fter 6 p.m .
REFRIGERATORS f rom $19.95 and
up. HWA 1282 Clinton St . 823· 1800 ,
'64 CHEVY van . Runs well . Pleasant
company asking 1250. Call 838-4317
and ;Hk for Mark.
SUPEREX PR0-8V headphones with
guarantee. About $45 . Panasonlc
miniature tape recorder with case and
mlc about $40 . Call Paul 835· 5535.

FOR SA LE

ROOM
a o ubto
available, male
only, seven· minute walk . $1 2 per
week . Phone 832· 2889 .

CLEARANCE sate J0-65% off on
many Items. Ali January . Miscellaneous
shorts , dresses, skirts, etc . Some
afghanistan coats . The People, !44
Allen St ., 882-6283 for hours.

,WARM , QUIET . large Sleeping room
with study accommodations. Shower,

START THE term off right with a
subscription of the VILLAGE VOICE .

1964
BUICK Wildcat , 4 - dr .,
posltractlon, crulsomatic. full power,
mechanically good. snow tires, reliable,
$275 . 892· 1 143.
'66 VOLKSWAGON bus . Now engine.
Can be seen at Dragos Mobil Sta t ion,
Main and AmhetSL

STUDENT ASSOCIATION
BOOK EXCMANGE
NOW
ACCEPTfNG BOOKS ' TIL FRIDAY JANUARY 21st.
ROOM 231 NORTON HALL
SELLING BOOKS

STARTI NG T 0 0 A Y I I

IS F.S.A. Vending, a non-profit serv1ce, responsible t o the
students, being phased out (wholly or in part) to be replaced by
a profit-making commercial enterprise, which ts not student
oritented?

(Paid for by F.S.A. \'ending Employees)

Page ten . The Spectrum . Monday, January 17, 1972

�'63 DODGE . Da rt 270. BeiiJe. GOOd
condition. One own .... A lwayt su ru.
Best offer . Call 8 3 8 -4764 ,

EO . PSVCH. (TEO 4 00) the l ive r~ulred books condition. Marc 833-6496.

REF RI GE R ATO R S, H&lt;3v e s an cl
washen. R econ clllloned . Delivered end
guaran teed. O .. G Appliance~. 844
sycamore . TX4 .J183.

STUDE N TS WANTED to a\tend
UUAB music commltt~rll meeting
of second Hmestr., Mond ay 7 p .m . In
261 NO(ton. All people lntererted,
please come.

GUITAR AMP (Tro~ynor), twin 15"
speakers, $ 300 firm; Fender Jaguar
with Gllnon fuzz, $ 225; Roberts
1740&gt;&lt; nereo deck • mlcs $100;cheap
drum set , $lOOt p a ir sound-color
transla t ors for stereo, $50, Bongos.
some records, etc. 832·5910 Russ .

G e ntile Gr U t

sa.

DEAR ALICE - We all miM you.
Hurry and 941\ well - The G Iris - ha ha
- I mNn, Ladles of Norton Holll .

B ILLY - your bOOh w ere m ade for
walk ing, to p ick u p your f. .tl
WOULD THE student w ho ga ve the
Goodwill Indu st ries' slide presenta tion
In clan please contact GoOdwill:
854 -'7686 , Thank you!
THE G IANT 35-tb. amoetla chflr IS
w aiting to engulf you at Water
Brothers, 51 Allen St.

ALTMAN Brother where Is the garbage
you promised I Mdg.

RECORDING STUDIO: Have
4-channel mobile studlu, will travel .
Rock to Bach. Rick 832 ·5929.

MINI - CASSETTE recorde r
m tcropnone, co~rrylng case, deluxe
features, sharp Model R0-408.
Originall y S89, sacrifice $40.
895·0172.

COME TO the Psycnomat·PsychomaiPsychom at on Wednesdays 3·5 p .m ..
room 233 Norton.

ANY INFORMATION regarding a
hll·run 9·12 :00 Baird Lot, 1/14/72.
Ptuse call 831-41833 or 835·7920

DRAGONS are extinct! Tra-ta, tra ·latl

APA RTMENTS WANTE D

VIOLA, excellent con dition, with case,
560 Instrument Is wortn three limes as
mucn . Call 831·3270.

TWO GIRLS seeking apartment In
Unlyerslty area . Own bedrooms
preferred. Please call Bobble 8 34·1993

PERSONA L

WBFO RADIO IS looking for
entnusoastiC people to work In Its News
Department No experoence necessary.
Conta ct Paul or Eric Room 327
Norton.

THE PEOPLE, 144 Allen St., is haYing
tnetr tlrst clearanc e wte until Jan. 31St .
Pllone 882.()283 for hours.

JKM : I'm bored wllh only watChing
you fr o m a d lnance. Soon I'll reveal
myself.

WELCOME 8ACKI Join In
communitY cel ebrati on on
e .. perlmental worthlp. Jan. 19th
8 00 p.m.- 139 8roolctane Drove (nur
new campus) . M o re In fo. 834-6470
ASI.. for Bob.

N EED $1001 Call 882· 1080 for
In formation Second annual Newman
M ovement An Exlllbll
Feo .
13 M;orch 19 at B ulcl&lt;fleld C enter
S . U .C.B. Entoles due Feb. 7 &amp; 8 .
S pecial student prizes,

PI LAMBDA TAU - a Changing social
organization on a changing campus.
ror Information cell Dan 632~299 or
George 834·7989
C£ STUDENTS

get Involved - join
tEEE . Electrical EngtnMrlng offoce nas
ontormaUon.

GAIL: When does the public
l&lt;nowtedge become an announcement&gt;
Us .
"LAW SCHOOL - Woll I like otl Can I
m•l&lt;e 111" A n - oook by a ••cent law
graduate for prospective law students .
Send $2.95. Kroos Press. Box 3709A,
Mllw•ukee, Wis. 532 l7 .

GOL.O CHARM lost near Onetto•s 2
bells on round medallion . R-ard .
632.()4 6 8 .
Gl RL. 'S Id entity bracelet found near
Butler. Contact Gary 831·2622.
Ml XED BREED dog - spaniel crossed with meepdog tound neo1r
Ridge Lea on Nlag.tra Falls Blvd. Jan.
lOth. Contact 831· 1126 or 1137· 2081
aller 6 p .m.
LOST: Gold ring Initialed S.G.
ProbablY lost In c ampus bathrooms.
PINse return this Bilr·Mit zvah ring•
Sentiment•• value attached . Call Steve
831 ·2696.

ROOMMATES WANTED

WOMAN NEEDS apllrtment wotn
same . Must like cats Call Mary
886 ·3686.
WANTED: Apartment
beginning
June I. Close to umput. 3 or 4
bedrooms. Call Jell 896·3911.

FEMALE roommat9 wanted. Modern
apt 10·mlnute walk from campu\ Ask
for Wendy o r Mona 837·2195
TWO FEMALE roommates wanted
Ap;ortment oil w. Delevan, '60
Including ulllllles. 886-6 7 32.
ROOMMATE wanted to share
apartment. TwO·bfl&lt;lroom. swimming
p ool, air conditioning . C tdse to scnoot.
854- 7147 days ,

WO MAN GRAD s••uient and dOg (he 's
cute &amp; nousl!broken) des!Mirately need
apartment (co-ed fin e) 837~531.

FEMALE roommate t or Rl~hmond
aru Apartment furnished. o w n room,
$62 .50
utolllles onctuded . Call
Roberta 886· 0265 .

LOST &amp; FOUND
sliver w ith
R-ard Call

ROOM available to m al e ~ dent O w n
room, apartment fully rurniSheO .
Cheap• A line abode 836· 7 199

FOUND In The Spectrum Offoce
a
small chan9e purse lett there Frod•Y
Ct• lm In Spectrum o ffice , 35~ Norton

FEMALE snare Dfl&lt;lruom
luontshed
apt Englewoud Ave One no ole , .mpu\
' 66 67 montn with utot
Anne
837 2497 .

LOST: Ladles wa tch
PlaCk Dand - Gruen
839.0097 alter 5 p. m

FEM ALE roommate - o w n bedroom,
8 E . De p e w , apt . 4 . Ava ilable
Immed iately, $48/mo . UtllltiM
Included. 832·3124 or come e.~enlngs.
COUPLE LOO K ING to snue
•partment, house Of' farm with anothet
couple. 632-6767.
·
ONE ROOMMATE, own room,
S45/mo. w ith partial utllltoes. Watt
Side. Call 881 ·3672 .
FEMALE roommate wanted . Apt. near
umpus. S40 month plus utilities. Call
anytime after 6 p.m. 837 ·5313.

MISCELLA NEOUS
TE RM PAPERS typed, S 35 per page.
833·90 12.
INTERESTED on attending the
olympiC games In Munich? Som e
tocl&lt;eU and accommodations available.
Phone 833-4638.
FREE GIFT packs to Olll students hom
UUAB In Room 266 . Brln9 ID cer d .
FREE three-month old kltllo,, really
cute and lovable. H;ove snou . PIN54
callsoon 8 34 -746 1
WI LL BABYSIT . My hOme, 5
Pte-KhOOI 838-4808

day~

PRIVATE Ski tenons available lm
Mon . , Tues., wed
nile' that
Sctwssm etueos go Lessons Yery ch eap .
For Info call Eddie 831 · 3~62
TERM PAPERS, douertatoons
profeulonat typist. IBM Selec tric
s 40/page . 873·19311
TYPI N G, e)(perlenced, neat u B ,
per poge. 834·3370 Fast ser vice

s

40

Fl Y TO EU ROPE
trum S 170 round rrop , srudent
v~ullons utd tours , ernployment
;.ervoces etc 1\or rnail lor lull
det"l~ C.•m pus Axenh requorfd
A .A .S.A. Limited . 15 lligll !&gt;l.,
Ventnor t W • f.nRianct

U. B ST UD ENTS!

10 % OFF

EARN WHILE IN SCHOOL
$300-$500 permo

ANY M ERCHANDISE I N 1 HE STORE !

with 1.0. CARD

(' •mpus representAtive for resume
fttrw~rdong
Hrvir.e. Fle•ohle
houn for full onformatlon wrote
National Resume Services. P 0
Oo" 144 S Penroa Ill ill fiO 1

GOOD 'TIL 1/24/72

BUSINESS MANAGER WANTED .

•
•
•
•

Knowledge of accountmg
Some experience w1th studant publications UUAB
And/or student govcnmcnt
Personable.
Send resumt to

Steutt~

lhn enkratz

Room 214 Norton

S..b·Board I. Inc:.
. .- - •COLLEGE OF MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES - - - - .

THE u•ITED •ATIOIIS EOUCAT1GaAL, SCIEIT1FIC A.D CUlTURAL ORGANIZATIO•

CHANGES

a J~t:ltlllled axette)l of tllf Urtlted Natlo"' &lt;kdlcated to pe11c:•

and

MAS 207 wtll not be offeted thts Spring

THE STUDEIT AID SOCIETY
o n(}ff·prof'r n f)n·pollricol orpn uadon
tu htlplnK rf\ldents to help

d~tdlcorrd

th~mJ'~I vt!J

offer
STUDY ABROAD
• Parts, France. 1972
• New 19th Edition
• Each copy •s trilingual • 644 Pages
tn English, French and
Spanish
The most complete scholarshtp dtrectory tn the world ltsts mo re
than 234,000 scholarships, fellowshrps, loans and gr ar~ts tn m o re
than 129 countries o• terntones! Tells who os eltgoble, foeld \ of
study, fonanc1al assistance, HOW, WHEN AND WHERE TO
APPLY! Reflects the latest scholarshtp approach cos ted by
ftnancta1 need!

$6 Vllue

VACATION STUDY ABROAD
• Each copy IS tnhngual tn l:.ngltsh. French and 5panosh
More and more Amencans are flockong oversea~ for summer
vacations, and an increasmg proportton •s young Amertcan~• Wtlh
the proce war now rag•ng on over seas airfares, record·breaktng
numbers o f young Amencans will surge across Eutope lh1s
summer• VACATION STUDY ABROAD tells how qualtftecl
people wtll go free! Provtdes tnformatoon on short c our~e s .
semtnars. summer schools, scholarshtps and travel grants avaolable
each year to students, teachers and other young people and adulh
planntng to undertake study or traomng abroJd dur mg thetr
vacattons. These data wefe provided by some 500 organtz.Jitons "'
54 countrtes!
STUDENT AI 0 SOCIETY membershop dues Servrces offer ed
$ 5 value
• Scholarshop tnformatton servtce.
Answers questtons concernrng schola.-shlps worldw1de 1
• Travel servoce
~
Plans lnterestrng tours to exotoc lands!
• Reference Service.
Ill
Drafts term papers. essays, book reports, theses. et~:
frequently using prtmary sources .Jvatlable unly tn the
for
Library of Congress! We do not actually w11te the ftntshed
only $6
assrgnment smce that would deprrve the student of valuable
educattonal expertence and defeat the very purpose for
wr tting for oneself in the ftrst place We woll provtde
background tnformalion and btbltographtes whoch rank
"Your ~ferenc:e serwce
wtth such tools as the College Outltne Senes and encyclo SIJVttd fTHI much vMiuabltt
tlfTHI whiCh I pur in on
paedia reference serv•ce'&gt; available onlr w tlh expensive ~ts
limit o'1 one draft at small addttiona ch.Jrge, per semester
other sub,ecrs. Retulr 5
per student tn good standtpg. We cannot answer any
As ttnd f 8 ...
quest ton whtch we feel requtres the advrce of a d!&gt;ctor.
CN. Ann Arbor, MICh
lawyer. architect, engineer, or other tocensed practtttoner ,
"TIHI V11ntage Pomt ·• II II
nor can we advise concerning your ftnanctal Investments.
book put tog.ther by 5
Netlher can we undertake market research of surveys or
ghost writttf'l 11nd «Jitttd
provide home study courses.
by LBJ. Your rofttrttnc:e

$1 .SOvalue

------

unlic:tt is ttlmolt lib my
own f)M'U)MI gh01t writttr "
LC. Gllinttmlle. Fl11.

...,. 3 ,..,.,..nc:. bookr
of which WtHY rtudttnt
IHitfdl pttf'IOMI copies
, . Study Abrwd, •
good dlct fonttry 1111d
~rus. I got ttltO,OOO
..,., ll:holllf'lhlp front
Sfu~ AbroM/...

AR.

BM*ttl~.

Otllf.

.---- - ------------------~

A id Society, PO Box 39042
I
lI Student
Friendship Station, Washington, D .C. 20016:
I Gentleme n: I enclose $6 for Study Abroad,

I VIICIItlon Study Abroad and annual dues.

I

1 Name

-

:Md~
. , City, State

Zip

•-----~------- - ----------

1
1
I

:
1

1

M..S 322 Automata Theory (183·975) by D Thompson
will have an organtzational meeting Tuesday. 1 00 p.m
room 35 - 4244 Ridge Lea.
ThiS 1s an elementary mtroduct•on to the mathemattcal
theory of computation, Top1cs well mclude Turning machines,
recurstve functions, effectrve computability and Church 's thesis,
recursive enumerabtlitY. undecidable predtcates. computattonal
complelCttY and and ftntte automata
Students interested in tutonng mathematics should anend the
orginazat1onal meetmg THURSDAY . tn Room 35 - 4244 Ridge
Lea at 1·00 p .m . Enrollment m MAS 302 ts still open
OTHER QUESTIONS CONCERNING
'THE COLLEGE Of MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES
WILL BE ANSWERED AT 831 1704

SKI WING

alld ltafe the drtvtr.~ to us

BUS SPECIAL
WED. JAN. 19
land every WEDNESDAY on January )

$9

PACKAGE tNet.u.DES :
CHAIR LIFT , T ·BARS, all day ticket
ROUND TRIP BUS

Bus leaves Boulevard Mall 8 .30 am
EXTRA, Skt Lesson $3 00

returns 5 30 p m

GLM Lesson $6 00

(short skts tncluded)
Skt Wong - gentle mounteons aud long, lon11 run$
For more ontormation end rnttrvetoons. call Mon . &amp; Tu•

before

51

Ski "Wing
GRAND ISL A ND TRANSIT - 853-3377
. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .r.C~
IIIP8~~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

Monday, January 17, 1972 . The Spectrum . Page eleven
l 1

�Announcements

•

WBFO is looking for energetic curious people to
· work in the News department. No experience
~essary. Contact Paul or Eric, Room 327 Norton.
Kuncblini Yop beginnins cl&lt;~sses in exercise and
meditation are being held daily at 7 p.m., 196
Linwood Ave. Call 881.0505.
Foreign student . tuir.ion Wiliver scholarship
applications for the sprina 1972 semester must be
submitted to the Office of Foreign Student Affairs
no later than Friday, jan. 2 1 .
The litenry Arts Committee is looking for new
members. If you have any suggestions as to writers
and poets to speak this semester, contact Beryl in
Room 261 Norton.
The deadline for filing for degree cards for
graduatmg seniors is Feb. 15 . Applications are
available at the Office of Admissions and Records.
All students applyina to medical or dental
school for f.all 1973 ~mission register immediately
with the Premedical Appraisal Committee secretary
in Room 105 Diefendorf.
A II people interested in organumg
" lnterrutional Wedt" leave name and telephone
number with the receptionist in Room 205 Norton.
Community Action Corps needs volunteers to
work at Buffalo State Mental Hospital. Contact
Room 218 Norton all day j an. 19, 2 1, 24, 26 and
28.
There will be a meetinJ of all undergraduates
interested in tutorina for academic credit today at 4
p.m. m Dtefendorf 148.
The UB T11e Kwon Do Karate Club opens its
classes for beginners today at 3 p m . 1n the basement
of Clark Gym .
The Gradu11te Student Association Senate
meeting will be held tonight at 7 :30 p m . in Room
233 Norton.
Hillel ~~presenting an illuw.lled talk by Chaim
Kasson "The Art of the Safer ." Mr Kas!&gt; i~ &lt;1 Scribe
(Safer) pract1ctng his art tn Jeruylem He wtll speak
about the art of lettering and the meantng of the
leuer~ Open to all , 11 w1ll bt' held at the Htllel
House , 40 Capen Blvd ., at 8 p m . tomorrow

..,
Methods of Multi.Science, CFC 302, will meet
this semester on Mondays and Wednesd11ys from
1-.-1:SO p.m . and on Fridays from 1- 2:50 p.m.
Contact Regina Cohen at 2768 or 1665 or at College
D for further information.
Women's Studies College offers the followirtg
new courses: WSC 235, exp., Literary Attitudes
towards Wo men; WSC 318, exp ., Evolution of the
Position of Women in India; WSC 322, Politicat
Economy of Women's Liberation; WSC 334, Writer's
Work~op; WSC 496Q*, (English 496Q). Proble!Tis in
j.)petr¥ Rhetoric in the Intellectual Tradition. Q*
Wo'nlen in British Literature since Mary
Wollstonecraft.

Resistntion for Auto Mechilllics 416 will be
held j an. 18- 20 at 7 p.m . in Hochstetler Room 300.
The Future of Man Semimr will be held
tomorrow at 2 p.m. in Room 29,4248 Ridge Lea.
The first meetlnJ of lnterrutlonal Colleae 219
History of the Modern Middle Eau, will be held
tomorrow at 7:jO p .m . in Harriman Library, Room
56 South.
SOS will hold a meeting on Wednesday at 8 p.m .
in Room 330 Norton.

Sports Information
Tuesday : Varsity wrestling vs. Geneseo State,
Clark Gym, 8 p .m .
Wednesday : Varsity basketball at the University
of Akron.
Friday : Varsity fenci ng at Piltterson State.
Saturday: Varsity basketball vs. LeMoyne, Clark
Gym, 8:30 p .m .; freshman basketball vs. LeMoyne
6:30 p .m .; varsity Hockey vs. Ohio State Amherst
Recreation Center, 9 :30 p .m.; varsity In~ Tnc-k
at. the Cornell I nvitation~l ; varsity wrestJing at Army
With Maryland and Clanon State, West Point, New
York.
Suncby: Varsity hockey vs. Ohio Stilte at the
Memorial Auditorium, 2:30 p.m., Amherst hockey
preliminary, 12:30 p.m.

Seniors in the Te011eher Education Program will
be able to schedule a half-semester of their courses
during summer school this year. For a listing of the
courses being offered, contact the Education
Department or Prof. MacArthur in Room 319
Foster.
The first meeting of Rachael Carson College
course 3 18 (Teaching Environment) will be ,held
tonight at 7 :30p.m. in Room 262 Norton.
Colle,e 8 course, Priesthood ~d Ministry in
Judeo.Christian Traditions will meet from 10 a.m.-S
p.m. today at the Newman Hall, with Rev. Fisner. /
Hillel clus in Beginners Hebrew will meet
tomorrow at noon in Room 262 Norton. A class in
jewish Ethics will meet in the same room at 1 p.m.

Tickets for this weekend's hockey doubld'leader
with Ohio State can be picked up at the Clark Gym
ticket window starting Wednesday.

Students interested in joinina the Hillel classes
in Convef'Qtioml Hebrew should call Arlene Langer
at 3884 for further information.

The second half schedule for lnttamunl
b.uketball begins this afternoon. There are still some
openings for new teams, with the deadline this
afternoon for their entries.

Communicuions College will hold an
organiLational meeting tonight in Rooms 240-248
Norton, at 7 p.m. for students who wish to
re-register and at 8 :30p.m. for new students who are
pre-reg1stered .
CB 322, Phenomenon of life-Science and
Religion, will ho ld a meeting today, from 2:30 3:30
p m . in Room 3 40 Norton. Call Dr. Chawla at
837-7357 if you cannot attend . His Exp. CB 279,
Relig~ons of India course, will meet in the same
room from I 2 : 15 p .m .
The first m~ting of SOS 308 , Pop Music, fro m
the ~OC1&lt;1I Setences College, wtll meet tomorro w
from 7 10 p.m . in Room 110 Foster Hall

All Buffalo students will be admi tted free of
charge to home sports events upon presentation of
an identification card.

What's Happening
Monday, Jan. 17
Art show · Recent work by Ruth Morri~n . 4240
Ridge Lea, 12 p.m . 5 p.m .
Tuesday , Jan. 18
Student recil.dl : Batrd Recital Hall , 12 p.m .

Woman in the Dunes, scheduled for today, will
be shown on Feb. 7 Exact time and date will be
listed 10 Arts-Letter.
A special series of kibbutz seminars will be
presented on Feb. 18 20. There will aho be .~ coffee
house wtth famous Israeli artists and food on Friddy
and Saturday evenings.
The UUAB Video Committee w1ll hold a
rtlcettng tomorrow at 7 p m tn Room 330 Norton to
discus\ the formation of a televtston med1a on
campu\
The Chemical Engineering Seminar w1ll meet on
Thursdc1y) at 2 p.m. in Acheson Room 322. All
graduate \ t udents are reminded that their attendance
i~ required in order to receive credtt for Ch . E. 612 .
Chabad offers the followmg courses this
scmc&lt;.ter USB 239, Sociology r&gt;f Chassidism; USB
274, Chass1d1c Music as Ltterdture, USB 275, jewish
Mysti Cism and Religious Practice . Fot time
schedules, please contact Rabbi Gurdfy at the
Chdbad House.
The Oepanment of Classics offers the following
this semester : Classics 113, Myth and
Relig1on in the Ancient World (Eng. 113); Classics
219,_The jew' in the Hellenistic Age (History 310),
Class1cs 302, The Greek Mind in the Making (History
309, English 306); Classics 304, Psychoanalysis and
the Cla'&gt;sics (Engli~ 307) ; Class1cs 416, The Aene1d :
Vergil's journey into the Wasteland (English 419).
For further information contact the department at
390 Hayes or call 2816.
course~

further information contact the department at 390
Hayes or call 2816.
College A announces a new course, Human
Relations, dealing with all aspect~ of racial and
cultural experiences. Contact the College for further
information. It also announces the first meeting of
2 16, "Blues in Society," to be held tomorrow at 3
p .m . in Trailer 7. The Communicative Creativity
meeting of the College will be held to night at 8:30
p.m. in Room 340 Nonon.
Modem Middle East Politic11l Structures, 326,
will meet on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays
from 2 - 3 p.m. in Diefendorf Annex Room 5.

- Osterrelchet

�-

•

-Community Action Corps

Sute University of New York R Buffalo

Spring1972

�..

·Introduction
What is the Community Action Corps?
The Community Ac tion Corps (CAC) is
a student volu n teer organization w hich
attracted over 1100 students last semester.
Volunteers are organized( to work in
various community proi$!Ct5. Objectives of
the
organization
include
actively
contributing to the "elimination of
poverty, social mjusuce and inequitable
opportunities for knowledge, health ,
happiness and S4!furlty that plague a
number
of
people
in
the
local
community;'' and also to "advance
students' knowledge of the comm_unity, its
social problems and the debilitati ng effect
of these pro blems upon people and the
community .''
How is CAC o rganized?
Volunteers are placed 1n the J)(oject of
thetr cho1ce (assuming thete are sttll
volunteer openmgs 1n that project) . Each
project is organized by the project head lsi ,
A program coordinator for each area of
Interest supervises the project heads of that
area
(i.e.
tutorial
and
recreation
coordinator) . The coordinator is directly
responsible to the Central Committee, the
main administrative body of CAC. This
committee mcludes the director. assistant

directors, program coordinators. research
and development C9ordinator, activities
coordinat or and interested project heads.

Why should I volunteer throulfi CAC7
Ther-e
are
many
advantages
in
volunteering to work in community
projects through CAC Firstly, CAC has a
diversified program of community Pf"O;ects.
These projects are ongoing, well organized
and planned activities, thus shortening the
time the experience-seeking student
volunteer can start rendermg effective help.
By the virtue of their knowledge and
experience, the 8Kist1ng o rganizations and
projects are capable of producmg the
orientation. direction and supervision every
volunteer needs, thereby reducing the
likelihood of serious mistakes, failures and
frustrations
Additionally, CAC IS geared towards the
student volunteer and hts or her needs.
CAC provides transportation to and from
our projects. When car pools cannot be
arranged CAC has a Volkswagen bus
(courtesy of Grandville Motors) which can
be used for transportation, scheduling
permitting. II the Volkswagen is not
available, we gladly reimburse volunteers
tor public bu5 fare CAC has a resource

library which can be uMd by CAC
volunteers. It includes such things as
books, reco rds, sports equipment, tape
recorders, etc., all of which will prove
helpful to volunteers. CAC has advisors,
who are professionals in their "field and can
be called o n by a volunteer for assist a nce.
CAC also has the complete cooperation of
the University's Office o f Urban Affairs.
This office gives advice and guidance to
CAC and has always PfOven to be of much
assistance to all in CAC.
CAC finds, organizes and funds
activities for each of our projects. Ouring
the skj season. CAC with the coordination
of Schussmeister's Ski Club bf'ings 15
ghetto youths a week to ski at Kissing
Bridge. Other recipients of our service also
benefit from our activity programs with
trips to movies, sports events, plays, the
c1rcus, etc.

However there were 1100 volunteers last
semester and we e~epect c lbse to 2000 this
coming semester. We feel that it is not
possi ble tor us as students and that' we are
not qua lified to grade 1100 fellow
students. We aleo feel that student$ should
not be volu nteering to help o thers because
they can get four credits.
We do suggest th at if you are interested
in getting credit that you do it as
independent
study
through
the
departments. If that doesn't work you can
petition the CAC Central Committee for
credit. Howevet only in very rare
circumstances will credit be granted to a
volunt eer .

a volunteer In CAC7

If I w• • CAC volunteer last semester
do I htve to fill out a form again?
'
Yes, in order for us to maintain accurate
records this must be done. A5ide from th1s,
it is necessary in ordec for. us to reali~e
wh ic:h projects are In need o f additional
volunteers.

CAC gives credit to project heads and
central committee members. All of these
positions are presently filled for this
semester. As a rule we do not give credit to
proJect volunteers, although we do fee l the
experience and efforts warrant credit.

How do I volunteer7
Just fill out the enclo'sed Volunteer
Placement form and drop it off in the CAC
office. You will be notified within a few
days.

Can I get ac;ademic credit for woricing as

Letter
To the Umvers1ty Community,

Let me fUSt take this cha'nce to stress the importance
of what we can do. The quote "Gee, I have my own
tutorin' teacher" is often heard 1n our tutorial protects
The lo..1ds tutored 1n our programs, more often than not
want to be tutored These feelings are expressed
throughout all our projects Hosp1tal pat1ents des1nng
compan1ons, chtldren from broken homes lookmg for a big
brother, people w1th drug problems searchmg for a helping

hand, or kids just looking for a place to play some
"hoops" all benefit from your energy as a voluntet!f The
amount of good one devoted volunteer can do is hard to
imagine. As John Kennedy sa1d, "Each man can make a
difference, every man should do his part ." But the rewards
are not one s1ded . Often a volunteer gains more than he
could ever hope to give. The way to learn is not only in"the
claSSfoom, but also m e~eperiencing some reality.
CAC must evaluate and scrutinize its operations and
phllosoph1es and we feel that CAC volunteers are 10 a

position to do the same. I hope by now you've come to
realize that CAC is, and can become even more so. a
creative and fleiCible organization. We are open to and
encourage your ideas.
If any of th is interests you, come up to the CAC
office in Room 220 Norton and rap awhile or give us a call
at BJt 3609
Hop1ng to hear from you soon,
Tedd Levy
Director

Project summaries
Below IS a brtef descnp11on of each CAC project, includmg locat1ons and t1mes If a
pttrtlcufar project mterests vou, a detailed descnpt1on can be found on the following
pages

Times
Available

Prorect Oescnpuon

Minimum
Time Required

Tutonal and RecreatiOn Program

2
J
•1

!&gt;
li

tJ
9

tO
11
17

IJ
14

Allentown Comrnunrty Cenler 122!&gt; All~r• &amp; ElmwoOd)
NffW project - a recreatronal and ilrtS dtld cra llsl)fogram Voluntt!ers ~ullllfllrie loyht Indoor recrea11on
Be A Froend laHangedl
A coonpanron program lor ~ohold11!n lrom broken homes
t. AC. Baslo.etball League (U 8 G ym)
A basketball program •mototong a Llltle League l)rogram Vo luntetlrs organrle the league as well as serve as
teem coeches and as relerees
Fr~tmdsh•p House 1264 Rrrlge RO&amp;d Ldckawam•al
Fnendsh1p House •s a well 8QU•P08d after $ChOat commun1tv ctonter Setlllles pet formed bY 1101\Jnteer ~
range from tuto11ng on a one- to-onl! bas•s lspecral tratnong ~srons 111 t uwnng techn•ques a11artlblel , aru
and cratts end danc1ng 10 ~:ooktng, sewrng and drama
Gr•ce West Srde Project larranvedl
New protect
a tuloroal for Lalayelle H S studenl$
lnd llpendent Tutortng (arrar•gedl
A tutor~al program wh1c;h matc:hes sludents Wllh t u tors not assoc1aled wllh other tutarlitli
Lafayette Tutor~al 1875 Elrnwoodt
Tutorial llrg broth~ 1ype t)tOICt 1 for 6 18 veer olds Tutors mtlf'l eothl!f "'the &lt;.'Cnter ot ar tht! chtld s
home
Lafayelle Recreatronal
A recre&amp;IIO'\ program 111cludrng basketball, hockey , bowhny. lvoll&gt;all , swrmtntnO, archllry , •ce skatong,
tobogg.tnong, etc
Mailen Pro1ect fEast North &amp; Locust Srree11
A 11ery llexrbte and crea1111e classroom farnoly type tu\01181
Perry Protect (St Thomes Eposcopel Church)
A recreatronal program workong wrth poor whole tunoor and SlllltOr lugh $Chaol ~\udems
Protet:t 17 (P S . 17 Ma1n &amp; Delevan I
One to-one tutOftng of Inner Clly YOuthS B0e 6 - 12
Lourde-Columbra (arranged!
A student teacher student aod program at Our Lady of Lourdes end St Col umbra schOOls
ShliW Protect I Grover Cleveland H S I
Naw protect - tutorong for studenu of Grover Cll!lleland H S
Tonewanda lndoan Aese"'euon (Akron)
A program for young lndoans (pr•school through hogh school) which 1ncludcn tutonng, arts end crafts
recreatoon end compenron programs

arrang9d
flaxtlllt!

2

t 1 a 1'1

Sundays 9

Thurs J 30 5 00 ages 7 12

Mott

h~

/ wk

2 hrs /wk
I JeSStOtl

7 30 9 00 ages 14- ]l
Sat 9 00 1 00
arranged

2 hrs / wk
1 hrs./wk

arrang&amp;d

2 hrs lwk
2 hrs / wk .

Mu11 . lhlrrs. 4 5 ·30r&gt;nt

2 hrs /wk

Mon 1 10

3 hr s./wk

T ues

I)

m

Thurs 3-4 30 p nt.

Mon - Frr. 9- 3

1 seU.OII
1 hrs / wk
2 h" /wk

Sat afternoon &amp;
one even ong

3 hn./wk

Mon - Frr. 9 t2
Mon - Frl 1 5
Evenings (errengedl
Mon.-Fr. 9 2

3 hrJ./wk

Mon - Frr 9

2 hrs./wk

Hospital PtoSP'am
15 Buffalo State Hosprtat (400 Forest A11e.l
Volur•eers work on sax rnnovet1ve rehlbilltat ron

pr~ams

for the patrents

16 Cenulrcran Cent111 (3233 Me.n St.l
ThiS school teaches end trarns menrelly retatdecl ctlrldren 6nd eclults. Volunteers lutor as welt as 1Upen. 1se
recreet10n end group Klrvltres.
17 Carebral Palsy Center ( 100 LeRoy Ave.J
Serves handic.epped people by offering toeial and recr•tionel programs. Volunteer~ work 1n recreatron
program as well as aid In day care fOf -erely hand~ prnchoolllf"S. Volunteen also save as teechert'
eids.
18 Meyer Hospot.al (462 Grider)
A Vlt~tlng program for Side and lonely plltlents at the hospital The areas rn which 110lunt_., wOfk IS 81
flexible M the hospitelatself.

/

llexrble

11

2 hrs./wk

2 h,../wk

�.~

19. Self Help Program (Norton Union I
New project - Self.:tfelp Is • group of phvslc:.lly hwld~Qppad women who Of'lil'tlad 1tlamllllltl to ..elp
~tOme the meny problems of their afflictions. Voluntewa will particlpete In dilculllon groupe with
t t l - women, c:onc:.mlng the hwldlatpped and poSble projects the women C8rt embertt upon.
20. V.A . Hotp~l (Belley Aw.l
Stud41nt compenlon ~on 1 o,.to-ona bais.

2 hra./wtc.

3 hrs./wk .

Social Science Prowant
21 . Project Aware (Michigan Ave.l
New project - program funded th rough model citi~eslgned to get rel111ant information to welfere
reciplentll.
22. Project Rep (6 cent ers t h roughout cltvl
This project is coordinated throuGh the CAO of Erie County llld helps Bleck high .:hoot youths get into
college by providing information on edmltaion requlremenu, flnenclel eld, .:holarlhips, ate.
23. Project T .A.C.T. (51 Court St.l
This project aids the public oHender in ell arees, employment, housing, etc. VoluntMn w ill be llllist ing m

flexible

3 hrs./wlt.

arranged

3 hrs./wk .

arranged

3 hrs./wk .

flexible

3 hrs./wtc

Mon.-Thurs ntgtlt

3 hrs./wk .

Mon - Fri. 4 - 7 p .m .

arrenged

flexible

3 hrs.lwk .

arranged

3 hrs ./wk

Mon -sat 1 5
7 1

3

7 days 9 p .m . Jam

2 hrs/wk .

flexeble

3 tvs./wk

fleKeble

3 hrs./wk

24 hours 111ery day

4hrs l wk

flexeble

3 hrs ./wk

th-aervi~.

24. Talent festival
Eech Mmlller a group of CAC voluntMn goe1 into an tnner city school. Th- volunteers organize end
produoe a production.
25. Terreca House 1264 Lower TlmiCII
A shelter for homel. . end/or elcoholic men, whiCh attempts to renabelitate them by ldentifyeng theer
needs and mating t h e n - y referrals to other agencies. VoluntMn Mrve • companions end participate
In recrNtional ectlvities.
26. Ttt.tre P roject - Buffllo Program ForThe Performing Arts (campusl
;
A group of primarily high .:hoot 9 amateur ectors, the group performs free at IChools and in the
community. Volunteers will perform v.rious roles a119Ciated with a theetre group.
27. Vlnee Reth Building
Th is egancy (Erie County Sociel Servlc:esl oHen social welfere eervica to the poor and needy throughout
Erie County. VoluntMn eerve a epprentice social workers es well • en emervencv tqued, interpreters,
tutors, etc.
28. YWCA !North St.l
Voluntews wort~ a companions end supervisors, involving themlllvn In especu of recreetlonel ecuv11y
with women of ell~ Activltia ,.nge from cooking end erts end cnfu to dilcussion groups.

Drug R.a..d Propm
29.

Cheektowag~~

Youth CoonMIIng (3725 Union Rd.l

N- project - the center III'Va a • drug infonnation canter, counllllng center and rep center
30 Night People tW. C h ippawe)
New project - opentn in a aorefront In downtown BuHelo. The norafront is a drop-ln counseling center
serving the nreat people of BuHalo's venion of 42nd St. Volunteers will provide counseling and recreation
Mrvlcel.
31 Project 4590 (4590 Main St.l
Center servnas • drug en format ion center, counseling cenut~ and a rap center.
32 South Buffalo Youth Project (2196 Seneca St.l
N- project - center llt'VIS • a drug mformeuon cantil', coun"''"ll cent !If end a rap centlf
33 Surwtuna Houta ( 106 Wintpeer)
Deehng wrth drug emergencr• 11 well • any problems en llveng. A hO'IM dnegned for people to come on
bad " trips". Extensive referral fila provide -"ice en sud!.,._ a d,.ft ooumellng, aborteon enformateon
and family counseling.
34 Tonawenda Storefront ( 1173 Shwldanl
New project - center servaas a drug enformauon center, counsehrtg cen ter and e rap center

hr~ lwk

Day Care Program
35. Comlfhouse Nursery (Caoyuga and Milton St.
Willlamevill•. Calvery Epilcopal Churchl
lntegreted nursery school in Wrlllamll!elle whech busaas en mrnorety cheldren CAC volunt..,s serve n
teechers' llllinents, supervise llld work w ith children rn c laua.
36. Cred le Clf BliCk P-Is ~ ichigen Avenuel
A dey care center in the black communety for children eges 2 - 7
37 Neegare Dey Care Canter (605 Neag~~r~ Stl
New project - dey care center for pre-school children ages 3 - 5
38 UB Dey CIA CentDay Clf'l centlf on cam pus serveng the Unrversity communety
39 Wells Memorial Cultural Center (456 Glenwood Ava.l
Volunt_.s serve in 1 Hlldstert progrem for ctuldr-" eoea 3-6

Mon

11 JOa m .
1 3 :30p.m

Fre 9

2~

hrs./wk

Mon - Fre 9 5

3 hrs /wk

arranged

3 Ius / wk

Mon - Fre 9 5

2 hrs./wll

Fre 9 5

2 hrs /wk

Mon

Action CommittH Program
Benh Co ntrol (Michael HaUl
Last veer CAC set up a committee to put a student binh control cllnec on cam pus. The commmee Is now
en the process of being incorporated to become an endependent entity.
41 Day Cemp Committee (CAC office)
New project - CAC will be orgenrzeng volunteers to work towenh satteng up a free day e&lt;tmp on thes
campus tor youths of wetfere familia
42 Enveronment Action ICAC oHecel
A looeely structured progrem, derecung uself tow•ds enveron(Y\elltal problems en the communoty Work
encluda locating pollution problems and applyeng prnsure to help ell1111ate them and a consumer
protection OrQilnization.
43 Job Program Committee (CAC offecel
New project - Lortg Island HouM lddrnses are paented on the curbs en front of the house We well be
tryeng to do the same in BuHelo fiiiVIfiQ summer jobs to Buffalo ghetto youths Summer 1obs organiZing the
program wrll be avai lable to tha commettee.
44. P U.S . (City Hall &amp; CAC oHicel
New project - MCh veer thousands of complaints are filed by Buffalo resedents rengeng from needeng a
corner traffic light to nopping pollution. Without the. proper channels rnany problems go un10lved The
Complaent Board helps to act on thne problems. AIIO thrs yaar the board will be collecting d11persong
meterial to t he community thlt would eHect an aw•en- of channels available to them to help solve
problems.

•

arranged

3 hrs /wk .

flexeblo

3 hrs /wk

llexoble

4 hrs ./wk

flexebl~

3 hrs /wk

flexeble

3 hrs /wk

J

�Project descriptionS
...

1. Allentown Community Center

7. Lefeyetta T utorial

"Helping people help themselves" - that's the theme
of the Allentown Community Center. Residents rummage
old clothes in order to help fund the center. The open
philosophy of the director, Or. Rawal, calls for volunteers
participating in the decision making. Proposed for the
volunteers in addition to the multitude of existing ·
pro~ms are a guitar workshop for Saturday afternoons.
as well as an expanded recreational program. Volunteers
may work in the playschool with arts and crafts, Yoga you name it,
The ebullient atmosphere of the center is everywhere.
Be part of it.

Lafayette Community Center, a non · sectarian socfal
service agency is the location for this tutorial. The project
serves the children of Buffalo's upper west side.
Volunteers meet with their "Tute&amp;" tither at the
center or at the child's home. The project aside from strict
one . to • one tutoring also avails itself to a "big brother"
type program.

8. Lafayette Recreational

The Athletic Department of the Lafayette
Community Center has become a growing and ever ·
challenging organization. Beginning from a somewhat
unstable and immature state in September, it has been
2. Be A Friend
constantly engulfing new areas of recreation, that have
&amp;
Be A Friend is a project desigoed to help children attracted more and more individ uals.
Specifically , in order to gain stability and cohesion In
coming from broken homes. It involves the children in
various activities, giving them the attention and guidance early October, basketball and floor hockey leagues were
which is often difficult to receive at home. Volunteers act · formed. After attracting over a hundred individuals,
"in a big brother" role. The children have the benefit of a ranging from ages 9 to 20 (they're divided Into different
male or female influence in their lives, and they ere able to leagues) . It was &amp;vident that new programs could firm ly be
have another responsible adult (and friend) to mlk to, or undertaken. With that thought in mind, bowling and touth
football leagu• were formed . In addition. special
just be with .
Set up this year, Be A Friend has two proJect heads $wimming events,held in an area high school, and archery
who set general policy, as well as publiciLe the program to clll$$8$ and contests attracted muoh enthusiastic response.
the community. They give individual guidance to the In all, during the Fall semester, well over 200 children ,
volunteers, and hold staff meetings where new ideas for teenagers and young adults took part in the varied
activities are brought up. As a !P"Oup, Be A Friend hopes to activities.
However, the program at the Center will not stagnate.
sponsor sporting games and trips to events, theatres, and
local sights. On an individual basis, each "friend" Free snowmobiling will be offered as soon as the snow
encourages his or her child's natural interests and tries, to arrives,. (Have you &amp;ver known Buffalo without ~now?) A
number of special events such as Ice skating, toboganning
introduce new horizons and goals.
and snowman building contests will be held throughout
the winter months. With the arrival of S pring, baseball
teams will be formed and entered into area leagues. Al50,
3. CAC Basketball
frequent bicycle hikes and picnics are planned.
Thus, as you can see, II$ we grow, we wifl need a great
In it's first year of operation, this project already has
130 participants and about 30 volunteers. The players are many individuals who are interested in taking a responsible
5th and 6th grade boys from the local public and private position in an ever · growing·and challenging program. The
schools who participate for free . Games take place at Clark speclf4c duties of the volunteers are to supervise thf!$8
various activities. But please keep in mind, &amp;ven with all
Gym here at UB &amp;very Sunday ~orning f'rom 9 to II .
the subtle difficulties that have arisen and always will, this
The league has been divic}ed into 12 team5 with a
is not a fo rmal organization. we all have a good time .
..draft" deciding which players would play where. Each
team play every other team once during the schedule and
the league climaxes with playoff$ and ct\ampionships.
Or. Fritz of the Physical Education Department has 9. Masten Tutorial Project
provided equipment for the league as well as use of the
On the east side of Buffalo is an area known as the
facilities,. Health accident insurance and liability insurance
fruit belt . Up until about fifteen years ago the area was
policies have been taken out as precautionary measures.
predominantly German middle class_ After black people
began moving in, the German people began moving
uptown. In 1971 , the area is black lower class. The Masten
4. F r iendship House
· Fruit belt district comes, complete with a high crime rate,
Friendship House, a predominantly Black Cocnmunity a high VO rate, broken homes, heroin, and a delapidated
Center, is located in the First Ward of l ackawanna in a educational system.
From 3 :30 until 5:30 on Monday - Thursday
new and well equipped building. There are no o ther
vokmteers truck on down to the Masten Park Baptist
recreational facilities, of this kind in the neighborhood,
The majority of our volunteers are involved in the Church on North and locust Streets, in the heart of the
tutoring program, under the direction of Mrs, Brewer, the fruit belt area. From fifteen to thirty children from the
"language enrichment" coordinator. Each tutor, who must community come over to the church for various reasons.
first take several training sessions, meets with an assigned Many come over fo r the specific purpose of being helped
child once a week. Evaluation groups are held following in reading, homework, math, and the usual run · of · the ·
each session . Remedial reading equipment is available, as is mill academic subjects. Others come over to play with
a small library . Tutors are encouraged to visit the child 's clay, or any of the other crafts, such as beads, painting,
home, and get to know the parent$. Group trips are being coloring, cooking, and collage making, And there are some
who come to see their friends (very often the volunteers) .
planned for tutors and the children.
Volunteers also help to teed interest groups available And finally. some come to hang out an~ get their
for the younge.r children each afternoon. Activities include frustrations and anxieties from school and home out. The
arts and crafts, dramatic:~, cookifl9 and recreation. A kids range in age from 5e'Ven to thirteen . There are al50 •
newspaper written by the c:hil~ren Is being planned. bunch of o lder kids from the community. seventeen to
Several volu~teers work at the Friendship House at night nineteen who've been helping out. Community
with the teenagers of the neighbo(hood.
involvement, and eventually community takeover of the
project is an important goal that hM been set. This past
semester the first real attempts at community involvement
were made with a meeting with parents and many visits to
5. Grace Westside Project · New Project .
the homes of the children .
What really distinguishes this project from the
CAC Projects in the past have often overlooked the
needs of those "so close to graduating high school standard tutorial project is the opportunity foe volunteers
students." This project will attempt to meet this need . to get to know the children outside of the project Itself. In
Grace Project, totally new. will allow much freedom on addition to the group trips to t!he ski slopes, movies, plays,
the part of the volunteer to create a workable program . All and museums, volunteerl very often have a few of the
students are warmly invited to join. Please specify which children over the house for an afternoon, and In a few
Lester of the children over the house for an afternoon,and
H.S. subjects you are capable of teaching.
In a few instances, this past semester, for a whole weekend.
(Eddie even took Lester camping early in the ftlll at
Allegheny State Park) . This idea of emotional involvement
6. Independent Tutoring
with the kids also has its many pitfalls. ln.addition to the
At least once a week CAC gets a phone call from Buffalo pleasure received from gaining a new friend, interpersonfl
res,idents seeking tutorial assistance. This assistance can be eonflicts with a child must also be accepted 'Bnd dealt with.
In any case, if you come on down to the project, all of
for a young child who needs help in reading, or an adult
seeking help with H.S . Equivalency tests. Slnoe tutors are the above will become somewhat real. Before going down
placed into projects at the beginning of a semester. It is for the first time,informal meeting will be held to di!:Cuss
hard to find people to do this kind of tutqrlng. Thus what's happening there and what we hope to do In the
Independent Tutoring sets up a file of students for this coming semester. We've got big plans.
purpose. This project i5 geared for anybody needing
tutoring 8t any level of education under the college l&amp;vel.
Tutqn arrange with individual students the time and place
of meetings.

10. Perry Project
Ttle Perry YoU1tl Project W8$ creeted in 1968 when a
Vista worker was stationed in the area. She organized a
racially Integrated group of junior and seniO! h ~ school
studenu who want~ tutorial heip. She then contacted
SYNVAB to obtain volunteers.
.
Since that timt, the program.. h• changed both in
membenhlp and format. It is now a recrll)donal youth
group for neighborhood kids. The participants •• almost
entirely white. These ldnds havt no place eise to go. The
attendance ranges from 30 to ~ on any given Monday
evening. The group had PfWIOOiiy been structured by a
pre • established I to , 1 relationship between tutor and
tutee. It is now a m ore flextble situation ; we meet as a
group and let friendstl~ naturally ~eveloP.. The opt ion for
tutoring Is still &amp;vallable.
.
On Monday evenll\9' we l;llan various actlvitie5
Involving sports, arts and crafts, dfsc:ussions, games and
social &amp;vents. Occasionally. o" we;ekends, we take trips to
such places as Toronto or Letchworth State Parte
Our meeting place Is the St. Thomas Episoopal Church
located at 537 S. Park Av~ue. Th is street acts as a
dividing line between thr18 eroops: the black$ in the
Project, the whites in the Ward and the goal is not to
change values but to expose all members of our group to
other ideas in order to foster better undel'$tandlng, We
hope meaningful relationships will develop so that Monday
night isn't the only nllttt for communication.

II. Project 17
· At Public School 17. thru 12 year old inner · ctty
children are tutored in reading, math, english, spelling and
any other area in which ther is a need.
The project presently consists of student volunteers
working on a one · to · one basis with a ohlld who is
seeking help. Twice a week the tutor meets with his tutor
and trias to create an atmosphere which is condusive to
learning which is at the same time less structured than the
daily classroom routine.
The program Is held every Tuesday, Wednesday, and
Thursday from 3 :00 p .m . until 4 :30 p .m . in P.S . 17
located at Main St. and West Delevan.
There is a supply4of reading material wtlich will be
increasing es the serrMster contll'lues. Aside from books,
aeativity on your part will play an important role jn the
success of the project. It is not easy; there will be
disappointments, but the rewards can be great · both for
you and the child .

12. )-ourde Columba
Lourde Columba i:; a student aid program working in
St. Columba and Our lady of lourdes School. In St.
Columba, classes are divided up Into several groups. This Is
done because the school works on a non-grade level
system, which means that each class is determined by age
only. and that the groups in each class reflect the
educational grade level. This system provides more
flexibility and a greater opportunity for individual student
achi&amp;vement. CAC volunteers are assigned to work with
, Individual 9f'Oups.
Ai Our lady of lourdes vo lunteers serve mainly as
science teachers and assistants to the reading specialist
working with either a group of students or an entir&amp; class.
A unique situation exists at the school as two CAC
volunteers act as a gym teacher for the 1st • Jrd graders.
The project is a good experience for education majors.

13.

~haw

Project

Similar to Grace Project, Shaw Project will offer new
alternatives to nearby H.S. Students often ignored in the
past. This project will al50 provide much freedom for
volunteers. All students are wettomed to help the troubled
west · si(fe. Please specify which HS. subJects you are
capable of teaching.

14. Tonawanda Indian Reservation
Indian children are a minority in primarily whit&amp;
public schools, and thusly run into the typical minority
group problems · no one to identlfy with, lack of interes,t
in school, falling behind in work, in short, alienation.
We at CAC are trying to alleviate this problem in
offering academic tutoring to the youn Seneca Indians of
the Tonawanda Indian Reservation in Akron, New York .
The Indians range in age from grade school through high
school. After a day at school they come home co the
reservation where many of them Qongregate at the
Community House a central building under the supervision
of Mrs. Ramona (Norma) Charles. The Community House
is equipped with a basketball court, a library, and rooms
upstairs for studying. This building is where the CAC
volunteers interact with the kids.
In addition to the tutoring program, we try to be

�friends with tht children • glvinv them m meone to ttava a
gocMt time with end 1l1Qn)~e to whom d'\ey can relate
their g o a l s = their probleml. We ere SUftlng
besketball
for Indian boys and girls, and .ai&amp;O a n
Arts &amp; Cra
gram, although we realize only Indians
should and are able to teach Indian arts &amp; crafts.

,.

15. BUffalo State HolfJital
Buffalo State Hospital is a hospital for the mentally
and emotionally disturbed, located at Elmwood and
Forest Avenues, It accommodates 1700 patients at the
present time. CAC has been providing volunteers to the
hospital for the past three years. This years program Is one
of re-evaluation and expansion. There are six therapeutic
programs which are serviced by the 140 CAC volunteers.
The first program is a paraprofessional training
program. which includes $Upervised training in the areas of
behavior therapy, case work, recreational therapy, and
community work. The training includes classroom
instruction, readings and supervised t herapeutic programs
with patients.
The second program of specialization is social work .
The volunteer5 in this area work directly under social
worke~ on twO units of the hospital. These volunteers do
case studies, aid patients on an~ out • patient status and
assist social workers in dE)aling with patients.
The third program is day care. Volunteers in this area
work in the YMCA and also in Family Care homes. The
YMCA is a place for patients to go outside of the hospital
which does not have a hospital atmosphere and tllus offers
a different environment for therapy, Family Care homes
are homes wl'tere out patients live with p(fvate families
when discharged . Volunteers are supervised and aided in
guiding patients on how to deal with problems which may
occur.
The fourth area of therapy offered is in recreation and
occupational therapy. Volunteers are supervised by
therapists in individual wards. Volunteers assist in already
existing programs and initiate new programs.
A new program offered is in music therapy .
Volunteers work individually or in pairs and either bring or
play music for patients. Patient activity has increased when
volunteers are present and there has been staff cooperation
on this program.
The final program offered is observational work for a
psychologist . Volunteers observe patients ins1de and
outside of hospital env1ronment. A trained psychologist
assists and supervism; m aiding other therapies being
performed.
Volunteers should remember that their primary
purpose is getting patients actively involved In some
lherapeuuc program . Most of all, 110lunteers should
remember that they are dealing with people and that tt
you are sincere, then you can help another pel'lOn.

16. Cantalician Center for

Learning

The Cantalician Center. a private school for the
mentally handicapped and multi ·handicapped children and
young adults, is located at 3233 Main St. adjacent to the
University From a Fehcian Psychological Clinic in 1949
w1th an enrollment of SIX day pupils, the Center has grown
to an enrollment of a pproximately 200 pupils from the
Buffalo area.
The Center is based upon the philosophy that the
mentally retarded Individual is a person and has the right
to the fullest attention and and resources of education that
he can receive. The great majority of mentally retarded can
be educated or trained : some to support themselves ; some
10 be productive members of a community, working in
sheltered workshops; ideally all to live happy. useful lives.
The Cantallcian Staff , under the direction of Sister
Raphael Marie includes other Sisters, lay teachers and such
specialists as a speech therapist, consulting psychologist,
physical therapist, occupational therapist and phys1cal
education personnel , This statf working along with the
volunteers make every effort to structure the prog1am so
that the school environment resembles that of any olhet
public school as far as possible.
The Volunteers are given a variety of opportunities in
which to operate at the Center. They can work within a
classroom, with the class as a whole, or if t hey Pfefer, they
may single out a n individual child on a one to one basis. As
of last semester a new program was instituted at the Center
to further increase the involvement of the volunteers with
the children . Those volunteers with specific interests (i.e ..
speech, 0 .T ., P .T .. art, dance) are given an opportunity to
do work in their Intended field by planning and executing
actual theraputic methods of their choosing. This semester
if our personnel allows, an additional program on Saturday
will begin. With the permission of the parl!ntS, a different
group of children will be taken to various activities,around
the Buffalo community, that might be of some interest to
them.
The curriculum at the Center is "What the child is
capable of doing,'' whether it be reading, writing, learning
how to eat with utensils or simply tieing his own shoelace.
The emphasis Is not academic but rather a total effort to
train the child to perform to his fullest potential. And this
potential can not be realized without the assistance of the
muctl appreciated volunteers

17. Cerebral Palsy Center
The United Cerebral Palsy Association is located at

100 Leroy Awenue, o,_ block from Main Street. The
Association serves htndiqapped people of all ages by
offerlnc~ educational, tOCial and recreetlortel programs.
CAC volunteers aid in all aspectJ of these programs.
The majoritY of o ur volunteers we)f1( as aides in the
educational setting. For the not«»·118Verely handicapped
children there are Nursery, Pre-school, and Kindergarten
programs. Most of these kids are ambulatory, some are
wheel chair bound. Volunteers hefp in the ctasvoom by
offering assistance w ith all classroom activities: reading
stories, helping with arts and crafts, singing 10091, or just
being a "pal." Other votunteers work in the gym, helping
to supervise the kids. Still o ther volunteers have a regular
schedule of taking kids bowling once a week.
The Day
program for the severely disabled
children has the greatest need for volunteQrs. The ideal
situation for these kids would be to have a one-to-one
relationship with a volunteer. for the greatest possible
amount of auditory and visual stimulation. Unfortunately,
the desired number of volunteers has never been attained.
The Association also sponsors afternoon get·togethers
for handicapped adults. Volunteers help with arts and
aafts, music, card playing and mOlt important, being a
person who cares and is willing to extend themselves to
those less fortunate than themselves. Related to this is a
Tuesday evening arts and crafts program and Thursd'ay
evening "outings." These outings include: shopping, seeing
movies and plays, a~ other act ivities of this nature.
Swimming and bowling are two other activities
paf1ici pated in by the adults. All of these ~ivlties require
volunteers in order to function . For those 'students
interested in the health related professions, there are also
110lunteer positions with the occupational, physical and
speech therapists.

eare·

18. Meyer Visiting Program
The Meyer Memorial Hospital Volunteer Program is a
group of CAC tolunteers who work in many areas of this
hospital. The volunteers bring vitality and concern with
them Because they only work an average of four hours a
weel&lt;. the volunteers help maintain a warm and friendly
atmosphere in main areas where workers have soccombed
to the routine drudgery of daily work.
CAC volunteers help lighten the work load of the
nurses by assisting them with the less technical work, thus
helping to bring better care to the patient. In addition, the
volunteers fill the gap between the patient and the outside
world which the medical professional cannot fill because
of the nature of their positions.
Interviews are conducted by project heads, who
coordinate the program at the hospital as a paf1 of CAC.
The prospective volunteers are then referred to Mrs.
Martin, Director of Social Services at the hospital, who
Introduces them to the personnel with whom they are to
work .
The volunteers now working, help in such areas as the
Clinical Center, Occupational and Recreational Therapy,
and on wards in Geriatrics, Medicine, Surgery and
Psychiatry . Volunteers also work in such diverse capacities
as friendly visitors for Social Services, distributing
knickkn~cks from a hospitality cart and as tutors. Ten
black volunteers are needed to work with Occupational
Therapist in Ped1atrics. The student volunteers will work
wit h black c hildren primarily in a recreational capacity.

19. Self·Help
A few months back CAC recieved a call from a lady in
the Buffalo community . She explained that she was a
member o f a group o f physically h•l'lGicapped women who
have organized themselves to help overcome the many
problems of their afflictions. She informed us that the
group had been holding meetings and had run into two
major obstacles - finding a place to meet and a way to get
there. She also expressed an interest in having university
volunteers participate In the group discussions. As a result
these women will be meeting In Norton one night a week ,
tramsportation provided by CAC CAC volunteers will
participate In discussion groups with these women ,
concerning the handicapped and possible projects the
group can embark upon .

20. Veterans Administration Hospital
The Commumty Action Corps has a Student
Companion Program at the Veterans Administration
Hospital in BuHalo, New York . The V.A. Hospital is a
government hospital located on Bailey Ave. across from
the S.U.N. Y .A .B. campus. The closeness of the hospital to
the campus makes it a volunteer program which is easily
accessible to most students.
The hospital's patients are either involved in or are
veterans of the military service, The volunteers play a role
in •their therapeutic rehabilitation. Each volunteer is
assigned one patient and it is hoped that they will develop
a meaningful relationst)ip. Often, the patient they are
assigned to, rarely gets visitors. Having a student visitor
means much to a patient who is in the hospital for a long
time with no visitors. The volunteers spend a minimum of
three hours a ~k with their patient. They set thetr own
times and are not required to obey the visiting hours set by
the hospital . Their time is spent being a friend to their
patient talking about the things friends talk about. They
both discuss their happy times and their sad ones and the
relationship is a two-way one, with each one givmg and
receiving.

If the patient is a llowed off the war, there are m.,y
places in tf'le hospital they can go together. The hospital
has facilities for phylk:al therapy, occupationa l therapy. •
manual arts th8f8py, educational therapy and gymnastics.
The volunteers can aid the patients in the different areaJ.
The hospital also offers the patients a well-stDCked library
where they can borrow books and magazines for the
duration of t heir stay in the hospital. Once a week, there is
a group meeting of the volunteers with graduate student
psychologists and staff to discuss any problems which may
have been encountered.
The Student Companion Program is a very rewarding
experience.. It helps the volunteers learn more about
themselves and another h uman being's life.

21. Project Aware
The intricacies of the welfare system are many . To
assist local welfare recipients with the many problems they
might have with the Social Service Dept. are trained
welfare analysts, employees of Project Aware. The project
is funded by Buffalo Model Cities and was proposed by
welfare recipients in the Buffalo Rights Action Group
(BRAG).
One of the beautiful things about this project is that it
proviaes jobs for community people - most of the
employees being acquainted with welfare from personal
experience, One client came to Project Aware explaining
that she had been cheated. She was a 20 year-old welfare
mother with an eight month-old baby. She had no
furniture and had not received a check on the first of the
month. Welfare told her, " If you want furniture, wri te
Rockefeller." With a minimum of effort, but the necessary
knowledge, a Project Aware Analyst helped solve the
problem.
CAC volunteers will perform in var1ous roles as they
receive ongoing training. This program should be
particularly attractive to social welfare majors, although
anybody w11nting to learn about the welfare system. and
about people should find Project Aware interesting

22. Project RAP
The purpose of Project RAP ts to provide the student
1n the inner-city with experience and know·how In filling
out application materials, such as, financial aid for college,
college admissions procedure, and various other forms . It is
necessary for each person to help in many areas
Presently there are five centers in operation which
need three volunteers to assist them . The centers are
located as follows : West Side, 381 Niagara Street: Fruit
Belt, 350 High Street; Ellicott, 438 Willert Pari&lt; ; Masten ,
1352 Jefferson Avenue.
The 110lunteers wilt be unci In wme ot ttle following
ways : they will help inform htgh school students of higher
education opportunities, provide sessions with guidance
counselors and student organizations. As the work load
mcreases, add1tional volunteers will be needed.

23. Project TACT
Project TACT is a non -profit organization funded
through the Model Cities agency under the sponsorship of
the legal Aid Bureau of Butfalo The project is designed to
demonstrate the effectiveness of inter-agenc y cooperation
and peer group support as an effective means in aiding
public offenders released from federal , state and local
correctional fac ilities to our area. Th1s IS done by providing
each with a combination of serv1ces, dependtng upon
individual needs, including social, educat1onal, vocational
and psychological needs through the establishment of an
organization which utilizes the services of existing agencies
10 conjunction with its own staH
Specifically. the princ iple hypothosis is that, providing
the appropriate cornbinauon of the above services will :
1 Help the otfender return to the community with
less diff iculty
2 Allow the offender to meet with o thers who have
had sim1lar exper1ences and who can alleviate some of the
anxiety felt by offender ,
3 . Aid in making the necessary agency contacts to
ass1st in arrangmg a program wh1ch meets the needs of the
individual and oHers a posiHon of dignity in the
community.
The list of volunteers in Project TACT is growing as
the project 1S now becoming much more organized. As o ne
of the youngest activities under CAC, TACT looks for
volunteers who have a special interest in criminology
and/or penal institutions. Formal background in these
areas is not necessarily required if the willingness to work
is substituted in its place. DUTY OF VOLUNTEER :
The basic duty now lies in having the volunteer man
the TACT oHice for intake purpose. Each volunteer spends
about half a day per week to ;
a)answer the telephone - get the client's or future
client's questions answered as briefly as possible. -II
b)assist ing the needs of clients actually commg in to
the office. i.e. - Telling them about Welfare1 Salvation
Army, available housing, possible leads on jobs, etc .
c)Mainly, we try to direct our clients to another
agency which can best satisfy their immediate or long
range needs.
Another important function of TACT is to be 95%
listener - 5% talker . When people have stated in a precise
matter what their needs are, we can better understand how
to deal with their specific problems.

�TN youth of our community •• faced with menv
problems - druga. home. pcegnanclel, alienation end
loMIIn. .-enct ft Ia our hope that we Cllll provkle real and
vahllbl•
The staff 11 the Sunshine House is maie up
of young ~ who 'tumpt to UM their penonal and
8Cidemlcally ecquired experienwa to •ld their peers. T~
staff members have gone through several training sessions
.• •t up by ttl• Sunshine House. We are a center that
provides Immediate COUr'!Mifng for those involved in "bad"
drug experiences or other problems in living. We are
attempting to fill thlt void of this sortfy misled 10urce of
aid. Through penonal knowledge and contact. we
understand the necesalty of ·an environment that w ill
bemore conducive to d•ling with tM .ttecu of a drug
than the police station. medical or fl*ltal ~ital , or the
loneliness of the streets. Alta available it clear and true
information OOncfnlirlg drugs. However, we will not be
limited to drug related problems; our structure and
functions will be determined by the needs and · uses to
which it Is put. We have complied a complete referral file
which allows us to handle many other problems that might
arise, I.e. abortions, runaways, d,-.ft, etc .
We have come to realize that one of the main faults
with many of the present forma of aid is their inability to
•tabllsh a trust relationship. Suntt.ine House's primary
interen Is In helping the individual. We do not exist to
preedl the evils or valuea of drug use but r8ther to provide
concr.te information, honest opinions, and counseling
assistance. A focus on lhe " problem" Is taken, not on the
morality of the person's IICtlons. Also, all of our services
are free and strictly confidential.
As a center woriting for the Buffalo communit y, any
feedback and criticism from that community will be glaily
aoc:~pted . We are open twenty • four hours a day, every
day, with trained person~ present at all times. Telephone
service, walk-in service ( for those who want to
communicate in penon) , and reach-out service in
emergency situations for Individuals with no means of
transportation Is provided. A physician is on call
twenty-four hours a day.
A nfiW and extensive abortion counseltng and referral
serv1ce will also be provided for people throughout the
Buffalo Community. Our new location is at 106 Winspear
Avenue, adjoining the U.B. campus. Please feel free to stop
by a.1d say hello, you're always welcome 24 hours per day,
seven days per week .
Our staff and our goals reflect our name-.Sun5hine
House-·warmth and li~t .

24. Talent Festival Projects
The Talent Festival project~ lest tem•ter in a
downtown Buffalo school. Once a w..tc, for 2-3 houra,
volunteers would meet whh shcth, ..wnth, .nd ei(ttth
grade students for rehearsals and coordination of their
show. The dancing, singing, and comedy were completely
original. The material was written and choreographed by
the students themselves. The volunteers were responsible
for the technical and directorial part of the show.
This semester we want to put on a more structured
type of performance. We are now in the process of looking
for a one or two act play so we can create a more
professional atmosphere. Peop~ interested in set designing,
directing and choosing a play, technical and any other
segment of theater are greatly needed.
The school that we will be wortting out of has not
been determined, but Woodrow Wilson Junior Hi~ School
and Bennett High School are under consideration. Times
for rehearsal will be determined by convenience for
volunteers.

•t

l.oc-llld
312&amp; Union Ro.d it a f.:llltv wtdctt will
allow young people to r..m tuldanc:e end ~lng
from ''qualifitd''~rw tlf'd trained volunteers. It will
at.o provide a pac. In which th. . young people can plan
end mcecute their own programs for atisfying 1heir
creetlve lntar.ts. Some of these programs thut br ••
movlet, speekan, group raps, volunteer training progremt.
medical and t.gll referrals, tutoring, job placement, etc.
Thlt p~m is spontared by N.V.S. and 1he Erie
County M11'11al Health Dept. and ru n by the Y .M.C.A. The
center ll8f'Va. the Town of Cheektowaga, Lancaster and
Alden . This aree includes approxtmately 9 junior and
tenior high schools. At present there ere 4 full t ime paid
staff and a small hand full of volunteers. There is a
desperate need for more help in the form of volunteers.

30. Night People Project
The Buffalo Area Council on Alcoholism has taken

over operation of the " Night People" storefront, 60 West
Chippewa, formerly run by the S uk:lde Prevention and
Crisis Service. The storefront operates as a drop · In
counseling center .erving the variety of people who
frequent Buffalo's version of 42nd Street .
The Storefront sponsors a thnte-fold prO!J"am offering
free coffee and a warm place for people to sit down; a
recr•tional outlet with people willing to listen and talk,
dealing with the problems of drug addicts, skid row
alcoholics, and the emotionally troubled; a ftadging
counseling program aimed at establishing on-going
counseling groups and counseling relationships with both
paid staff and voluntews.
The storefront is always hectic - some of the clients
ere frequently intoxicated and occasionally violent. We are
looking tor people who know where they're at and can
take care of themselves. Volunteers will be acting pretty
much as free agents - talking with whomever they please
and organizing and executing programs in cooperation
with the paid staff It's a serious business requiring a sense
of humor.

25. Terrace House Projects

Terrace House is a pubfic shelter for homeless llJld/or
alcoholic men . It is funded by Erie County, administered
by the area Council on Ak:oholism, and operated in a
condemned schoolhouse at 264 Lower Terrace, behind the
county jail in downtown Buffalo. The clientele range from
"Aqualung"·type skid row alcoholics to men who work
regularly but have no other place to live. The social outlets
availablejO these men are ffiW, they can either stay at T .H.
and watch TV or go out drlnk1ng.
The CAC project is aimed at providing a non-alcohol
related social outlet for the residents of Terrace House.
Volunteers are needed to play cards, games, and records
with clients as well as provide intelligent conversation,
aimed at showing these forgotten men that someone cares.
A number of other possible services can be provided,
depending upon the interests of the volunteers. These
include visrting clients who have been wither jailed or
hosprtalized and helping those clients tie up loose ends,
notifying employers, picking up mail, etc .• accompanying
clients to UB for movies, or just about anything volunteers
want to do (there's mueh to be done) .
This project needs prople who can give of their time 31 . Project 4590
and their selves to help a person who might not have
4590 Main Is run by a council of five members of the
another friend in the world. Both men and women are
needed .
community called the Amhem Narcotics Guidance
Council, and by the YMCA of Buffalo and Erie County, as
a part of the Erie County Drug Abuse Prevention Program .
26. Theater Project
The project illocated at 4590 Main Street in Amherst.
(Buffalo Program for the Plfforming Arts)
It sefves • 1 "drop-in" drug prevention and education
center. The people coming to the center are 12 - 17 year
The Buffalo Program for the Periormmg Aru is a old youths and their parents.
group of about 25 actors and actresses of pnmar1ly high
Our first uaining S8$Sion had thirty to forty CAC
school age. The group is a tight kntt group of people with volunteers and the same number of adults from the
finle prior acting experience It is one of the most community. The training consists of ; legal aspects of drug
well·conceivod, well -run and creative programs to help
use and abuse, medical aspects of drug use and abuse, cri5is
ghetto kids. The project performs free at schools and in intervention, counseling approaches and phone use. After
the community.
three days of training, while working at the center ,the
Volunteers can perform vanous role5 in the project volunteers meet once a week for a period of five weeks for
mcludtng such thmgs as stage manager, lrghtning drrector .
further counseling training. At the end of five weeks, while
makeup, props and costume ass1stant , house ·manager. continually working, the volunteers break down into small
publicity manager
groups among themselves. Here they may discuss problems
dealing with the project, their work and themselves
The specific jobs are : drop-in counselors, assistant
27. VISTEC
tramees with group counseling, and answering phones. The
drop-in counselors job is mainly to rap with people
VISTEC. Volun teers tn Serv1ce to Erie County, 1S a dropping into the center, greeting ttlem, and finding out
why they've come, etc.
program of the Department of Social Services The largest
social agency in Erie County, it is presently offenng a wide
vartety of opportunities which enable Interested people to
"do therr thrng" by making lrfe for someone else a little 32. South Buffalo Youth Project
easier
Currently, s tudents are successfully participating m
In the past year. two high school youths died of an
ProJect Intake. one of the many programs of VISTEC
overdose of heroin in the South Buffalo area. A third
Followmg a period of mtens1ve training, volunteers are almost followed suit . The community is concerned : The
helprng prospective welfare recipients ftll out complex South Buffalo YMCA at 2 196 Seneca is the result.
questionnaire forms. Mr. Burger and his assrstant Mr
P101ect 2196 has unlimited potential and volunteers
Lucken, drrectors of VISTEC, are most pleased with the would have much freedom as the program is not limited to
way volunteers handle the sometimes delicate and personal
drug oounseling. Oth~ than all kinds of counseling,
quest1ons raised in the course of completing thttSe
proposed are the creation of a theatre workshop, a
applicat1ons.
transcendental meditation program, and c rafts. Presently,
Other programs include Frrendly Vrsitation with the on weekend mghts, the center is inundated with more than
elderly, and S hare-ring, Care ring. People working in
100 kids.
Share ring make weekly phone calls designed to cheer up a
The community wants you and needs you CAC can,
lonely person. Those involved with Care·ring phone people
if available, and car pools will provide transportation, and
who are at nsk due to health or age on a daily basis to
training sessions will also be provided .
ensure that everything is all right .
Fmally, there is a vast number of odd jobs performed
by volunteers, ranging from occasional baby-sitting to
33. Sunshine House
wrndow-washing and furniture moving. Says Mr. Lucken,
··1 have never in my life seen such a co·operative bunch of
The word "sunshine" implies warmth and light . so we
beautiful, ded1cated people."
call ourselves the Sunshine House since we provide V(arm
and compassionate help for those who need it.
The people we will deal with are predoiT\inantly
28. V.W.C.A.
youths who have found their problems unanswered by the
existing agencies tor several reasons. Many young aple
Volunteers work as companions and supervisors
do not feel that they can trust ltlese "straight" age cies
involving themselves in aspects of recreational activity 'w1th
while others are unaware of the1r existence. And of co rse
women of all ages. Activities range from cooking and arts
many have found that the ~stJnce needed is not
and crafts to discussion !TOups.
evailable. However, whatever th~ re.on, the
le
Involved In the Sunshine House delinitely feel there s a
need for a communication bridge between the youth of
the Buffalo Community and these agencies, services,
appropriate professionals available to aid them.

•

'

'

\

.._.p.

34. Project 1173 (Tonawanda Storefront Center)
Project 1173, located in Workingclass, Gangland USA
is dedicated to the education and prevention of drug abuse
through the human relations approach. Individual and
group counMiing techniques are used.
The Center, open afternoons and evenings 1s packed
with young people seeking an alternative from the stteets.
Volunteers will receive ongoing informal training.

35. Corner House Nursery School
Corner House Nursery School is accredited and
registered with the New York State Education
Department. It is racially integrated, serving children of all
religious and various international backgrounds. It was
founded m 1965 by Calvary Episcopal Church because of
the desire of parents in the area to educate their children
realistically for the world of today . The need for this
school became evident in the concern of white and black
mothers for a common learning experience for their
pre-school children, especially since the suburb of
Williamsville is often charged with being " lily White".
While tuition is charged, ttle school is non-profit and
transportation for both black and White children Who live
outside of Amerst if provided free of charge.
There is an enrollment of about 120 children divided
into srx rac.Ji!IIY balanced classroom situations with a
teacher, an a1de, and a volunteer m eech dass. The school
is not just a baby-sitting center It IS an enriching, learning
experience for both children and volunteers whether in the
classroom or on the various field tnps the children take,
i.e. to the park, the fire house, a cider mill , or a pony farm ,
\etc .. all within walking distance from t he school.

36. Cradle of Black Pearls
The Cradle of Black Pearls, located on Michi!J&amp;n
Avenue off of Main Street. is a day care center
predominantly for black children between th\ages of 2
and 6. Th.ere are approximately 70 children \;er,, who
attend th1s center between 9 AM and 5 ~ . and
appro)\imately five teacheu who are permanent staff.
Due to the fact that there is an overabundance of
children. volunteers are necessary to aid the staff in any
way possible. The usual activities that the volunteers assist
in are: arts and crafts, story telling, lunch activities, some
teaching of reading. playground sopervislon, and several
nature walks. The children who come here are extremely
affectionate and comequently, the volunteers who 'NOf'tt
with them can both glv~ receive affection. The
building which houses the C,-.dle of Black Pearls is a new
building, and is well n.ffed with toys, an indoor and
outdoor playjp'ound, books, small animals
IO&lt;f
someleamingrnatetial.
'
The CAC project is open to any ideas .nd suggestions.

�At prnent ~ are ~inking of taking some of the children · Univenity using ~· gym and o~er campus facilities (thus
on a picltic Of to th41 z.oo, in the Springdme, but any other eliminating many ovemeed costs). Thenl will be absotuteJy
.idees wou~ ~appreciated.
·
no cost to the campers or their famiUes· ftr'd the campers
will be chosen · through 1he"Erja' CO\Inty Department of
Social Services. Volunteers with ~tnptng • experienoa
and(or knowledge of the community are especiaHy needed .
The Center ,is for Preschool children ages 3 to 5.
Certified teadlers work on a orie-to-onebasis in small
11oups and large grOUif. A flexible pr~am which
responds to the needs,A'If the children. Unique to this
Center· a language master is used to develop clear:.speech in
the child with language difficulty (i.e. speech impediment,
shy child, non English· speaking child) .

38. UB Day Care
Day Care is an essential, cooperative system of
fulfi lling the needs and rights of children and parents. UB
Day Care is used by the families of the staff, students and
faculty of SUNYAB. Children from ages 8 weeks to 6
years may attend the center, which is located In the
recently completed facilities in the basement of Cqoke
Hall. The cooperative nature of the Center means that the
parents of the children who use the Cen'er contribute to
the functioning of the center by working there for a
predetermined am~nt of time.
Voluot~ work on a semester. basis with. specific
hours arranged weekdays between 9 and 5. (A volunteer
must work at least 2 hours at a time, for a;; many hours as
convenient and / or possible) . The volunteers are to
"accompany" the children. There are playground facilities,
recreation rooms, games, toys, books and some arts and
crafts equipment. Mostly, the volunteer should be able to
form a relationship with the children · as people. As a
result of this relationship, the child's life will be enriched
and if you aren't afraid or closed minded, you. may find it
equally enriching.

42. Environmental Action
What's it all about at UB7 Can one student alone be
effectual in combatting the forces of evil ~at have been
perpetuated for years? CAC, through its Environmental
Action Project has. and is trying to make a dent in our
ecological mess. ·This past semester, two ambitious
recycling projects ·were undertaken, one for glass and the
other for paper. Through the dedicated effort of a small
number of volunteers, these projects have or will become
reality in the near future.
Other ambitious projects undertaken concern
themselves with the proposed Jetport in the Niagara
Community of Wheaton . In this undertaking, ~e
volunteers are acting as a cleari~ house for information
and a source of manpower for local citizen's groups.
The role of the volunteer is not a glamorous one; it
takes dedication to the cause of the environment. In order
to initiate change, many long hours over a long period of
time are required as a prerequisite. Even after this energy
hc,s been expended there is no guarantee that it was not all
·
in vain.
With strong student support, dedicated volunteers,
and the Environmental Action Project, significant changes
can occur to help our ailing environment project.

•

43. Job Program Committee
Employment opportunities in this country today. are
very limited. The situation in Buffalo is even worse. And
for inner city hi~ IChool youths, jobs are yet scarcer. CAC
• is attempting to help rectify this situation ISy creating
summer jObs for these youths.
Long Island house addresses are .painted on the curbs
in front of the house. We will be trying to provide the
same sefVice, · thus creating jobs for Buffalo's inner city
youth. Volunteers will wort&lt; towards establishing such a
project. Summer jobs organized by the project will be
available to comm!tttl&amp; members.

44. Project Urban Buffalo
Every year many complaints are filed by Buffalo
residents ranging from pollution problems, needing a
corner tra!fic light, to the dysfunction of city services.
Without the proper channels and a little "push", many
problems go unsolved. The Complaint Board will be
helping to act to problems In Councilman Horace
Johnson's office for the Masten District. Volunteers will be
manning phones and will be checking out each problem as
it comes into the office. The Board will also be collecting
dispersing materials to the community that will effect an
awareness of channels available to them to solve
complaints. This collection will include a list of
community groups, organizations, and services provided by
them.

39. Wall's Memorial Headstart
The Wall's Memorial Church houses a Headstart
program for three and four year old children. The classes
are arranged so_that each specific age group (3,3Y..4) has
its own classroom and equipment. Each class has
approximately 20·25 kids. There are "work periods"
during which the kids select the areas in which they wish
to play, (homemaking, building blocks, paints,etc).
The program itself is relatively unstructured and can
easily be molded to fit the moods and wishes of the class.
The CAC volunteers are engaged directly with the children
tn their play, either in small groups or on a one·to·one
basis,

Action Committee Program
A brief note : The concept behind these projects is to
mittate some sort of change in the existing structures, or to
set up particular types of programs within Greater Buffalo.
The group of projects under this area will not be working
directly with recipients of our services, as in other CAC
projects. Volunteers will be working with and through red
tape and bureaucracies in order to bring abou t change or
set up particular programs. A volunteer must be dedicated
and hard·working ··no "goof ·offs" or "unsure" people
need apply. Success can be achieved only with dependable
volunteers. Anyone who has time and a willingness to
work hard • and can accept possible defeats of efforts are
requested, and should attempt to get into one of the
follow ing projects.

40. Birth Control Clinic
The Birth Control Clinic Project was formed as
committee of CAC last spring. We have been working with
various community agencies, and University departments
to establish a birth control clinic on the UB campus. The
proposed clinic will be opened 2·3 nights weekly . It will
offer all gynecological serv•ces, including VD testing,
pregnancy testing, and prescription and insertion (when
necessary) of birth control devices. .f class on human
sexuality will be mandatory before an examination
appointment can be made.
In opening this clinic, we hope to provide all necessary
birth control services to as many people and for as little
money as possible. It will be opened to all University staff.
faculty. students, and their husbands and wives.
We are presently in the process of handling all
necessary legal aspects of the clinic, including insurance
coverage, enlistment of physicians, etc.
Abortion and adoption information and counseling
will also be offered.
·
An opening date has been set at this time, but we do
expect the clinic to open soon . Volunteers are needed .

41 . Day Camp Committee

-

The problems of the young poor are many. Their

day-by~ay living situation is harsh indeed. Many of the

niceties of life canoot ·be offered by the parents of these
~U~L

,

.

.

To help bring a ·little sunshine into these people's.lives,
CAC will be attempting to set up a free day camp on this

)

\

Osterrelcher

�..

Community Action Corps, as hes
been described in this paper, is the
primary community organization on
the UB campus. Although we are
funded by the Student Association,
we find our annual budget wholly
inadequate to meet both our needs
and the needs of the community. To
remedy the situation, we try to
bolster our budget by showing
popular films wery weekend and
subsidize various projects with the
movie proceeds. Very simply, the
more money we can work with, the
further into the community we can
expand.
If you have been inside Capen
Hall, you know it is adequate as a
lecture hall but far from adequate as
a movie theatre. To try to

compen'Sate for this situation, CAC
along with the Office of Facilities
arid Planning and the Instructional
Communication
Center · has
revamped Capen to a great extent.
For one. we have purchased a 30
foot screen - the largest screen on
campus. We have also purchased two
brand new projectors and lenses. A
new sound system was installed over
the Christmas vacations along with a
complete
acoustical
overhaul,
consisting of side-wall treatrtu!nt and
carpeting on the back wall. The
projection booth Itself will be
remodeled so that the lights in the
booth will be off .during the course
of the film. All in all, the showing
that you see will be far more
professional. Gone are the days of
bedsheets and muffled sounds.

. Our repetoire of films has been
llmfted, in the past, to very popular
films. This coming semester,we will
be greatly expanding our program to
suit the tastes of a larger portion of .
the campus. Yes, we will be showing
films such as Midnight Cowboy and
2001. But there will . be filf!ls that
1 have had little commercial treatment
- Eyes of Hell for instance is a
Western New York premiere. The
Marx Brothe~ films are two of their
lesser-known films and have received
little or no commericial or television
treatment in the past 15 years. Our
"Return to Innocence" weekend will
serve as an attempt to return, if even
temporarily, to the days of baseball
cards• and jump rope. The silent
weekend will signify a return to· the
days when a ticket to a movie house

meant both seeing a film and hearing
a piano recital. Finally, CAC will
proudly delve into the arts with the
showing of Bergman's The Magician
The film experience next semester
will be both wide and varied .
The CAC Cinema Series is run to
give financial support to many of our
programs. Movie money goes for
such things as toys for day care
center, and books for tutorial
libraries and field trips for recreation
projects. So the price of your movie
ticket is actually a contribution to
these different community efforts.
Support a nd enjoy our movies.
As usual , if there are ever any
problems or questions about our
movie program please come up to
room 220 Norton Hall and ask us.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------CLIP AND SAVE • CLIP AND SAVE • CLIP AND SAVE • CLIP AND SAVE

Tickers can be purchased at a price of $.75 at the
Norton Hall Ticket Office only. They go on sale
Monday of every week and they are available right
up to show times. Movies are ahown at Capen
740. Check the CAC film showcase, Norton
Information, or the Norton Ticket Office for
showtimes. All film programs and prices are
subject to change.

1/ 13 - 15 (Thurs. - Sat.) Midnight
Dustin Hoffman and John Voig star in .this
Academy Award winning production of two
hustlers who end up as losers by the vastness and
impersonalness of New York City . Directed by
John Schlessinger, this movie fully portrays the
fact that only the rich get richer. Schlessinger,
who directed Sunday, Bloody Sunday blcrtantly
pictures the depths to which " humanity" sinks.
1/21 - 22 (Fri - Sat.) The Magician
lngmar Bergman's jeweled horror film is "a
tale of mid· 19th century Sweden in the form of a
fascinating story of ghosts and the supernatural ,
clothed in a clash between ignorance and
intelligence." Th1s is the thinking man's horror
film. It is rich in comedy and melodrama, as well
as deepp philosophic thought. It is darkly,
moodily, and beautifull y photographed. Cast :
Max Von Sydow, Ingrid Thulin and Gunnar
Bjornstrand.
1/28 - 29 (Fri. - Sat.) Performance
Mick Jagger plays a one-time entertamer living
in seclusion with two hippie girls while
experimenting with ultra-modern musical forms.
Jagger's life is intruded upon by James Fox
JX)rtraying a professional criminal with bizarre
experimental results. Cast: Mick Jagger, James
Fox, Anita Pallenberg, Michele Breton. Directed
by Donaly Cammell and Nicolas Roeg.
2/4 - 5 (Fri. - Sat.) Wait Until Dark
This is a suspenseful and emotional story . oJ
an innocent couple who become involved with a
narcotics gang. Audrey Hepburn plays the
terrorized blind wife of photographer Effrem
Zimbalist Jr. Included in this movie is perhaps the
most suspenseful scene in cinematic history. Cast:
Alan Arkin and Richard Crenna. Directed by
Terrency Young.

2/11 - 12 (Fri.- Sat.) Getting StraigM
This film is a bitter social satire that deals
with youth, pushed to the point of total
revolution. E•liot Gould and Candice Bergen star
as students caught in the cross-fire of a campus
revolt. Directed by Richard Rush .
2/ 18,19,21 (Fri., Sat., Mon.) Hamlet
From the "finest Hamlet I have encountered"
(Judith Crist) to "never has Hamlet been rendered
with more clarity or timeliness" (Time magazine),
Nicol Williamson settles the question. without
qualification . Williamson is regarded as one of the
most brilliant actors of his generation and in this
portrayal of Hamlet he reinforces the conviction.
Directed by Tony Richardson.

,

2/25 - 26 (Fri. - Sat.) This "Return to
Innocence" weekend includes the "Rites of
Spring" segment from Fantasia and during
intermission, a recording of Mary Martin singing
tunes from Peter Pan.
Fri. - Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontter The exciting story of the fantastic fighting man
who became one of America's greatest heroes by
striving for right and justice. from Washington to
the Alamo. With Fess Parker, Buddy Ebson, Basil
Ruysdael, Hans Conried.
Sat. - Sign of Zorro - "The daring escapades of
the most romantic, rogue the world has ever
known." The masked Zorro, at his dashing best,
races through high adventure to right the wrongs
of wit doers. Cast : Guy Williams, Henry Calvin ,
Gene Sheldon.
3/3 - 4 (Fri. - Sat.) Eyes of Hell
The audience will wear special 3-D glasses
during the dark and magical fantasies which are
inflicted upon a young archeologist and a
psychiatri~t by an ancient ritual mask. This is a
3-D stereoscopic picture and is "as gruesome as
anything ever seen on the screen." A
Taylor-Roffman production with Paul Stwens,
Claudette Nevins, Jeff Moron and Bill Walker.
There will be special almost midnight showings of
this in the Fillmore Room .

3/10 - 11 (Fri . - Sat.) I Never Sang for My
Father
This film is a brilliantly portrayed story of a
grown son torn between responsibility to his
parents and his desire to be true to himself
Melvyn Douglas received an academy award for
his portrayal of the father of Gene Hackman and
Estelle Parsons who are reunited froJTl their
supportfng roles in the great Bonny and Clyde.
Directed by Gilbert Cates.
3 / 17 - 18 (Fri. - Sat.) Silent Movies - Both of
these flicks will have live piano accompaniment.
Friday - Sally of the Sawdust - This 1925 W.C.
Fields classic combines comedy , melodrama.
rural-romance and race-to-the·rescue finish . It is
the first silent feature to star Fields. Long thought
lost, this recently discussed classic is invaluable.
Also as D.W. Griffith's only comedy.
Saturday - Copocabana - Groucho Marx is a
theatrical agent for Carmen Miranda (she does the
great Tico-Tico number) whom he books as two
acts in the same nightclub . Hilarity and
complication set in when Carmen tries to keep up
with her dual role. Cast: Groucho Marx, Carmen
Miranda, Andy Russell, Gloria Jean, Steve
Cochran and Earl Wilson. Directed by Alfred E.
Green .
4/ 14 - 15 (Fri . - Sat.) If
This film depicts the dominance of the strong
in a seething indictment of private education in
England . Eight sharply etched episodes depict the
off-hand acceptance of minority oppression,
homo-sexuality and beatings, the influence of the
military, and the hypocrisy of the administration
and clergy. Cast: Malcom McDonald, Richard
Warwick, David Wood. Directed by Linsay
Anderson .
4/21 - 22 (Fri . - Sat.) 2001 - A Space OdySS4tY
This is more than a movie. It is an exploration
of technology and of man's constant questioning
into life and death. "With some of the most
dazzlirfg visual happenings and technical
achievements in the history of 'the motion
pictures." Cast: Keir Dullea, Gary lockwood,
William Sylvester, Don Richter. Directed by
Stanley Kubrick.

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Sp~CTI{UM

THE

"

State University of New York~ Buffalo

Vol. 22, No. 41

Fridrt, DecerniMr 10, 1971

I

...

I
I

-

\I

~-

T

I,

'Yes Virginia, there is.a

•••

'

�Day Care plea
Hdlwri nflte: 17te {ollowlnt WOJIUbmltted to The Spectrum b)'
Day Cllre Cen ter as a plt!il for ftnan~ial tLUIItance.

th~

(.IIJ

The UB Day Care Center needs your he1p.
We realize that there is more than one worthy concern
solic1tina money at th.is time on campus, but the situation now at
hand requires that we make this plea.
The. simple truth is that because the majority of families who
are en rolled in the center are fam ilies with low incomes, we do not
have a larae enough amoun t of money coming into the center. Our
staff must be paid a Jjving wage and in an effort to carry families
who can no lonaer afford to remain in the center, we have found
that we are critically short o f funds.
The UB Day Care Center serves 96 families . These are students,
faculty and staff of this Unjversity community. One hundred and
ten children are enrolled in the center.
We are one of the few centers in this area who take children as
young as eight weeks of aae. The usual age requirement is 18
months, and as h.igh as three years in some centei-s. Many centers req uire that Incoming children be toilet trained ,
we wo uld and do not.
The average fee for day care in this area is $25 per week
regardless of the time spent in the cel)ter. Our average charge is
$3 .50 per week and each parent's fees are determined by their
ability to pay.
The kids are happy,*\ our center and they are learning from
people who care about th!Sfr welfare and develo pment. We are a
damn good center operated -~y the parents cooperatjvely. All policy
deciSions are made by a ste(ring committee made up of parents
We ask you all for tidp.
There are better than 30,000 students, staff and faculty in th~
University. If aU who could gave $.50 , we would be in the clear.
We can promise you that everything will go to the children ur
this Unaverslly communaty
We do need your help.
We set up the center to serve the needs of parents who wished
to be able to return to school and who view the environment and
expenence of a cooperative day care center as beneficial to their
children and to themselves.
So please help us. We need cribs, books and any other article
that you feel might interest a child (and it would surprise you what
would ). And of course. we need money.
Please direct all quest ions and anq uaries to the center's office in
the basement of Cooke Hall, 831·3009. We are th ere from H a. m.
6 p.m.
Please· send any contributton to ·
U. B. Day Can: Center
Box I 'I , Norton Union
SUNY/\8
Buffalo, New York 14 21 4
Thank you,
U 8 Day Care Cente r

Pofitical Science students plan
appeal of tenure procedure
by Jeff&lt;irftowald

Scien ce , expre!sed llmilar
co n c erns . Dr . Blankenship
acknowledged that the University
must have teachers of a high
enou&amp;h quality to maintain student
Inte rest, and admitted that
presently his department is not the
most popular with students. Dr.
Blankenship said "the whole
department has agonized over this
s itua tion. We have all asked
o urselves whether we can afford to
see Dr. Jones go." He added that he
personally has " grave doubts we
can afford it,"
Hopeful of a reversal of the
department's decision , Dr. Jones
pointed out the nan owness of the
Initial vote. tie asserted that while a
few members of the department
were hard line " publish or perish "
people, a number of!&gt;thers may yet
be convinced to change their vote.
This would be possible if they can
be shown that tUs teach.ing ability
waa of such extreme quality that
his departure would prove greatly
detnmen ta1 to the department .

CofltTlbutiJtl Editor

Political science students are
presently organizing to appeal the
denial of tenure to J .P. Jo nes, a
political science teacher whose
contract will be terminated at the
end of next semester.
The recent actions by these
students is the result of a number
of procedures, beginning last
sp ring, concerning Dr. Jones'
tenure At that time, Dr. Jones'
creden tials were reviewed by a
departmental personnel committee
which presented its findings to the
department's tenured faculty . The
decision of the tenured faculty
(which voted 7-6· 1 to deny tenu rt)
was then in turn reviewed by a
committee of the Faculty o f Social
Scaences and Administration.
A heretofore finaJ review was
conducted by Bernard Gelbaum,
v1ce president for Academic
Affairs. Dr. Gelbaum recalled that
he found Or. J ones to be "an
extremely outstandina teacher, but
has research and publishmg record
do not mee t the standards under
wh1ch the University felt it could
properly &amp;rant tenure.

Researchers or teachers?
One of the big questions rai~ d
by this tenure case involves the
Unaver si ty 's perceived
responsibility to the students
attending thts institution . Is the
school to e~tis t primarily as a
research-oriented University, or
shall it he d1rected to provide 1ts
s tudents wath the best possible
c:ducat1on , seemingly necessitating
the allaanment of teachers who can
teach?
Most people seem to feel tha t
both allernattves are of great
Impo rtance. However, there was a

1

•

lP. Jones
difference in t,ht! eyes o f some
observers as to the means by which
such diversification should be
attained . Dr. Gelbaum t»aintains
that the school must concern ltae!f
with finding "re~•rch people that
can also satisfy the teachln&amp;
quaJjfication ."
Dr. Jones takes a somewhat
different view . While expreasinl
that he was indeed interested in
resea rch , it seemed to him that
there was "a place on this campus
for both full·time teachers and
full-time researchers... Dr. Jones
pointed out tha t there are certainly
teachers at this school who are not
ve ry good at thear teachtng
fun c tions , but were clearly
vaJuabiCJ"'Nhen it came to workin&amp;
individually with students on the
graduute level, where knowledge an
research procedures was vital.

'Publish or perish'
Vaughn BlankenshiP, cha1rman
of the Department of Political

rNiOTORCYCLEINSURANCEI
IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE

I
IIU PST ATE

I

I NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I

CYClE IIV S I
I

call 694·3100

" Ask Your B roker About Us" · - '

...--25th Annivw11rv - - •

luncheon

FILET 165
MIGNON
(Petite)

l..ettu writing
" It's conceivable that students
may be able to say somethang
which could swina(the vote) in the
dep a rtm e nt, "
Dr . J ones
comme nted . Dr. Blankenship
IJI\ICd that this was a possibility,
but added tha t if letters were
written , "quality is the important
thing."
Dr. Blankenship continued
saying that one or two things could
c hange the present situation .
"Either Dr. Jones can initiate a
grievance in the Faculty-se nate, or
he could come forth with new
evidence about his scholarly work
and/or teaching." Le tter w riling
emphasizing Dr. Jones' teaching
ability may be considered as a type
of evidence.
Steve Lauer, one of the students
involved wit h the movement to
retain Dr. J ones, is urgjng all
students who have taken courses
w1 th Dr. J ones to send letters
containing "meaningful statements
o f his {Jones' ) capability," to
President Robert Ketter and Dr.
Blankenship .
Gene r a lly optimistic about
stu d ent actions, Mr. Lauer
remarked : " I have always thought
Jones was aood enough - so good ,
in fact, to keep him. Last semester,
there wasn't much hope, but we
definitely have a chance ... things
have happened ." Any student
interested in o rganizing for Dr.
J ones can attend a meeti ng today
at 3 : 30p.m . in Room 234 Norton
liall.

U.S. Choice

• Choice Potato

...........

ILlCDIIJTI
,..
,.,. , SlOP
tlfl ......,.
-..at
. ._

_,.R ....... A .....t$o ltw"-

The Spectrum is published thr•
t i m•s 11 week, tlwtry Mond11y
Wedn.sdlly 11nd Friday; during ,,;,
regulllr IICIIdtlmiC y•r by Sub·BOIWd
1, Inc. Offic.s · ,,.. loartld 111 355
Norton Hall, St11te Univttrslty of New
York 11t Buffalo, 3435 Mllin St.,
Buffalo, New York, 14214.
Telephone: Are11 Code 716; Edl torl•l
831-41 13; Busintlss, 831.:1610.
Repreun ttld for lldllflf'tislng bv
National Educ11rionBI AdWiffltlng
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Subscription rates 11r11 $4.50 ~
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Second CIIISS Posrage Pllid 11t Buff•lo
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_/
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Circulllti(NI; 16,000

Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, December 10,

~971
'

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Monday dle

SenAte

wppoin~Dt

of Lew~ F. Pcnniii,Jr. to die
Court. ()sly ooe ICJlatoc, F.ed R.
llams (D., Okla.), Yoteci apiftlt die
oa.finnattOtL Jbm:s npWue4 wby lac
~ fM Wol)' he til : ., dliak he 4oeta't
uwe the deeP.~~ fc:.- tittle peop6e
I'd like to~- f 5 t lac's IIIOtdy fc:.- tile
white, tM licll, die COOlfoct.llb6e. dte
...,rowec~, dtole wlao ~ .,ad ill COUD.b'y
dllb4ra. . . ~"
Powdl was a bit ~ by tile '
lletioUDallimity cl the •ote (89) -.s aid,
"'dleacar•-aatyofdleiiiJIPOrtfrillatem
8C a litde. I . . too (XMtlrj0111 cl _, owa
ldtitatioaa to take 1t at face .-.e. I .&amp;aid J catlllot li.e .., to .ads taCh
e.apectatioas. .. Powdl. a fonaer America
~ Associatioa pretidcet, wilt sucoced die
Jatt: Justice Hqo lila&lt;*..
llowew.r, dllc o6cr SGpnae Court

CAJn,gressional
•,

Sup~me

~

.._,.aist, is aot
eJEpeetCid to laaw .-dl aa easy tu.e of it.
Oppoueats. W by Sea. 8irdl layta (D.,
llllll.) aid Chat lie laa ... a recant ol beillll
ao .. u.u,

...-.a cirillibc.rtiea, a wdla beiQa ...,m.t
ciYi1
Tbe ~ time f« a vote to
tie tab:a 011 tile ........ II&lt;Winatioa is
eillael' Ia~ dtis ~«arty ocn week.

,_ts.

The House 11:at Ptaideot NW.
lcpd•tioa •dtcxirJnc S2 billioa iD c:Yd
c.e .IC!Yices primuiy for eeedy familiel,
aftel' it ~ the bil ~a lJG-186 raiJ

call vote. o.ty 3lllepubllc•notedfc:.-tlle

coapromile cx.ce.iorl

of a.ll.li1)0"1erty

wllida p.-d tJie Seaefe lalt week
by a Yok ol0.17.
Tile bill •dlorizea free educat:to.at.
Dll1litioaal .,. bealda tcrrioel to c:tliWr'ea
tra. c..;ijes widl aJl IIUIUl iDCOIDC below
$4320 widl below&lt;Oit fees ...-...~ oa a
puatecl ICale to .we af'lllleat f. .iliea
Fedea.l fuacb woald be ud to kip baild,
eqaip ud tn.ia stat&amp; f« Jocal .ad state,
pDqte « pahlicday care Cll':Uen.
pr'Oinllll

.

--

earty aext Year on propOied ooutitutio!W

~up

a.eadmeats to pre¥ent involuntary busin&amp;
oC scboot c:ll.ildren to achieve ractal balance.

oaJy two mondu -.o, yet it ~ce1~ aJJ 81
•oteJ in a roll caD •ote.
Almost S J 00 tDiUion W'dl be wed to
support cliiUc:a in blac:t ~unities. wlacre
~ could ao ror tem
det!crm.iae il
dley lane tate cl.itca:tc or carry die Fltetic
trait ..-:It oould be p....a on to tk1r
dt.ildrell. About oee oat of ewry SOO blaclt
babies are bol'q with dle
and die

1Ubmitte4 to the COmmittee, aU of diem

to

a.c.c,

before tlteir fortieda birdaday. A liJDllar biD
is expectled to Fl quick IPPIOftl in dle
Howe ol Reprecntati¥ca.

.............

Thirty..fave separate ameodmcnts haw 'been
Approadrml ttle illue ill a differat way.
The Price Commillion bas &amp;ranted an
ioCRae to U.S. Steel Corporation wluch
cou.ld poaibty affect dle cost of evefYthina.
11te TUC81tay decision p.e U.S . Steel
ponra.i.uion to bOOJt itJ prices an awe.rqc or
3~~ on itJ eatire liae of products between
now aad Aq. I. ID a ~lated iDcidcat, tile
U.S. Cbaalbel' of eo.men::e blasCed die Pay
Board for allowi.Q&amp; inctea~C$ past ·tbe S.S~
p.ldeline. Tile Sheet Metal WOlken Ullioa
alllo attacbd tbe Board for IWtinJ
oorutructioa iathastry PlY miles wb.i1e abe
panel rwicwa tbe operatioa of tbe
Conatruction lnduatry Stabi.l..izatioa

A(1) .... ......,.
CIWrman Emanuel CeUcr (D., N.Y.}
Geoid Ford, Route llepublicalllca4el',
aid it was uallitdy tlaat PI 11 • t Ni&amp;oa anaouooccl Tue.day that the Houte
would +PiCriC tlte bil. Tille .-..scifta f« lt14iciuy Comari~ will hold Ileum.. Committee.
.eto were dW dlebil pwe first
priority to Joc:al P'OIIPI operatilll day care
ceaeen, ratJier aa.a atea, ... daat die
l'k ~~~ ,.,......., • a UFO radio llaow nay
~ nut~ OOUiltlef to Nixoa 's welf~
n....ay .._.. , _ 8-9 p.-. diW a-be1 6e lecal -.edl e1
ftlfcxa co.oepe of p~ free clay an
CWIIYa, We. Ia 6e . . . 6ey lane tadried -.cia ..... • hliae
cmces f« W'CIItillc .aodlen. ne w. does
_. Ca
nity WeAe«' 1 11, Be ' 1 Law _. Ptk • lldeue
DOt~ dl.at 80dlen - . t add A job to
Pw-.w of Erie c..ty Jal .,. ................. , _ Mdl 8illa
qaalif)', bat it will 1Madit wod:iJc ..adww
fill ada liiiiMioL QFO ..... COU)GM ._ .a.id ... .a.t . . . . .
oa.allctds.
.
Oa W~. die SaWc paged a tMU
aa
Law . . . . . . .
1
Si1Ke ..-fill • . . &amp;o.
f-aiea, fty .ot ca..e ._ UFO, &amp;oo. JlS Nonoa 00. Uld
audloritia&amp; a t.Jareo..year, Sl4llllillioca filltt
. . . die . . . Nf'CII . . . • • . . . dlat ~ u J'O'I c:.a•t
apimt actie odl a.eaa&amp;a, • 4ca41y Wood
~ c..e ill 11.7 FM oe nu..lay ~. Dee. 16 at 7 :4S
4.ileae tlut atrects at leut l .S aiitioa blfdt
p.a.fcwdlc....._.W•......
A.cDencaaJ. 11le
.... introduced •

die......-

Law and the family

F-,.

1.. •'h•

... "

WE WISH YOU A ...
•_Merry Christllllls
•••Happy Htmukka

.:.Groo., New Year!
etc, etc, etc
(ad infinitum)

Bob and Clrer

I

hge four . Tbe Specttwn . Frida~. December 10, 1911

�Editor's note: The following II a ltatement by Student AIIOCiation
Pre1idmt Jan DeWaal concerning uveral propolt!d amendments to
the SA Constitution which he ha1 propolt!d. The amendments are
currently being considered by the Student Assembly.

SA ainstittttional amendments
heard by Student Assembly

The Student Assembly Wednesday recommended
The structure of the Student Association has changed m~ny
that all funds for thct"Arab Cultural Club be frozen an4
times in its history as new groups of uhdergraduates altempted to
that it be enjoined from holding future meetings until
establish "more perfect" means o f repreSenting undergraduate needs
and desires. The last major alteration occurred last year when a new
a case regarding the legitimacy ofitscwrent president
constitution ado pted by referendum (after a flurry *Of activity
comes before the Student Judiciary.
during a period o f two weeks) resulted in what has now proved to
The recommendations came in the form of a
be an iyffectual document. If the Student Association wiU
report by the Student Association Activities
c..fj.tinue to survive, it must change.
Committee, heaaed by SA Student Activities
The attached constitutional amendments are meant to move in
Coordinator Mark Weiner. The report stated that 19
that direction. The questions are not as have oft been proposed in
Arab students had approached him recently and called
the ca mpus media : " Is student government necessary? Is student
to his atte ntion the question of whether or not Emil
government possible?'' Each year at least 25% of the undergraduate
Mikhail
was president of the club.
body on this campus turns over. These new students have come to
Mr. Mikhail has also been charged with the alleged
the University to learn, not facts, but themselves. Some of them
forgery of $455 in vouchers by the club's treasu rer.
seek to learn about themselves in studen t government. In such a
Nabil Chilazi .' A formal complain t has been lodged
contracted , intensive learning period , Tour years, many ''mistakes"
are made. If realized 1n their proper perspective these mistakes will
with the Student Judiciary.
be viewed as a natural function of learning, rather than a reflection
In other action, SA President Jan OeWaal
of the impossibility of student government .
introduced his proposed amendments to the SA
If student government is to function at all, its structure must
Constitution . If passed at the next· Student Assembl y
recognize this learning process that is inherent in its functioning .
meeting, the amendments would do the following :
Hopefully, the amendments I propose will streamline the
- eliminate the offices o f National Affairs
functioning of Student Association and allow it to continue as a
coordinator, Student Rights coordinator and second
necessary part of campus life.
vice-president. Instead, the fun ctions of these offices
The constitutional amendments I propose are wide ranging and
would go to existing ones:
drastically after the structure of the present Stud ent Association.
Substantial powers such as budgeting and approval of appoi ntments
will be vested solely in the Student Assembly. In addatlon, the
Proposed amendments
matter of stipends wall be inserted 10 the constitution 10 the hope of
- remove all execut1ve cummattee members (with
eliminatina the yearly debate on what amount stipends should be.
the exception of the vice president who will chair each
Certain positions on the executive committee will be
meeting) from the assembly and strengthen the
eliminated, the National Affairs coordinator, Student Rights
Student Assembly . The purpose uf this would be to
coordinator and the second vice president. Their functions will not
create a more powerful Student Assembly more
be eliminated but directed to other areas. Additionally, much of the
independent of the SA executive committee :
power o f the executive committee ha~ been returned to the
- change dated ele..:tions and state quorum ,
assembly though the committee will s till be able to act in
proxie policy and appointments:
emergency situations when the assembly cannot convene.
Other changes include chan&amp;ing the date of elections in order to
- create a standing commi ttee on student
allow the new officers and coordinators the ability to work with an
athletics to stabilize the athletic budget ; and
experienced w.sembly in drawing up the following year's budget. •
- equalize all SA Execut ive Committee stipends
Tttis must be done to conform with the state requirement that
to S700 .
budgets must be approved before the student activity fee will be
In a prepared statement. Mr. OeWaal saad : "The
collected .
constitutional amendments I propose are wide-ranging
These proposed changes do not reflect on the performance of
and drastically alter the structure of the present
any of the individuals now holding positions in Student Association.
Student
Association . These proposed changes do not
Rather, they reflect a desjre to improve Student Association and to
reflect on the perforll\Jince of any of the individuals
create a more functionally perfect orpnization.
now holding positions in Student Association. Rather,
they reflect a desire to im~rove Student Association to
create a more functionally perfect organization ."

Two sectio ns of the amendments were approved
by the assembly. Bo th involved changing the term of
ufnce on the executive committee from May J - March
15 and the date of elections from A(lril IS- March I .
These were approved in order to allow the new
~ecutive committee tu prepare its budget for the
following year.
In o ther action , the assembly moved to
recommend tu the executive ..:ommittee the purchase
of a house at I 06 Winspcar Ave. for Sunshine House .
Dennis Drescher, head of Sunshine House. told the
assembly that the residence at 83 Heath, which wu to
be purchased by the assembly for Sunshine House's
use , be bought because of neighborhood opposition .

..

I

lS

Join

this

THE SpECTI\UM

man

and
ready
find
to out
sneeze?
355
Norton
Frid~y,
I

..

December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five
.. . . . .

~

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I

EdiToRiAl

I

Tenure for Jones
A denial of teml're to a faculty member is always painful. However,
the pain is worse when the dismissal Is undeserved. The denial of tenure to
Or. J.P. Jones of the Department of Political Science is, we believe, such
an instance.
Or. Jones is an outstanding teacher. Each semester his classes are
packed, something that rarely occurs in his department. While his list of
research accomplishments is not overwhelming, his loss would greatly
damage this University. Further, the Department of Political Science IS
not exactly noted for Its good teaching and this intensifies the need for
1lt6 5\Ht ()L,tJ WAR.
Dr. Jones' retention.
Several times in the past year, high level administrators have spoken
\
favorably of student lnvaty_ement in tenure decisions. Unfortunately. on
this particular caso, the students and faculty disagree and unless there is a
dramatic turnabout, Or. Jones will be leaving our campus at the close of
the 1971-72 academic year.
The 'tudents of political science are currentlY working to reverse the
tenure denial. We support these moves unequivocally and join them in
urging all present and former students of Dr. Jones to write to department
Chairman Vaughn BlankenshiP and President Ketter to request that Dr.
Jones be granted tenure.
This Umversity certainly seems large enough to encompass faculty
members who place a h1gher pnority on either research or teaching. Since
there are already numerous professors in the natural sciences who haven't
seen the Inside of a classroom for several years, this institution would not
be too far off base 1n rewarding good teaching through the granting of
tenure.
helping other people, it is clearly not sensible or
Upon occasion it happens
Or. Jones belongs here and if admln1strat1ve comments on student
•possible
to think In such terms. Such endeavors only
that I get really emotionally
participation are anything more than lip-service, we are confident that the
get the helper Into trouble. Besides which it is
labile. The result of this Is a
coming months wilt w1tness Or. Jones' reappomtment with tenure.
dangerous. It tends to get you involved with other
hyper state in which things go
folks, and you know what a frightful mess that can
on in/through/around my head
• be. And besides which .. . I only write long
at a rate which is apparently
paragraphs when I am anxious. In closing, may I
somewhat past the speed of
point out that your closing, "you can't run ' cause
Student Association President lan DeWaal has introduced several, comprehension. Things start
there's nothing to run from," Is simply not true ; my
long overdue amendments to the SA constitution. The most important flying out of my mouth life can be- seen as a monument to t he
whole
and
idea
things,
as
thought
changes would be the abolition of three positions, National Affairs
opposite
point of view. Like now ' rinstance .. .
opposed
to
bat,
butterfly
and
coordinator, Student Rights coordinator a'nd second vice president, and
hdp!
thin
~
that
I
was
not
bird
the removal of all executive committee members from the voting Student
aware of harboring until the moment of appearance.
My almost exclusive response to inquiries about
Assembly .
It Is left to your tender imagination what the feelings my current state of ''doing" is to say "surviving."
Our reaction to these measures is largely favorable . The National of a control freak trapped in the same organism with
(Your damn atraisJ'lt I'm changing the subject!) It
Affairs post is nebulous and overbroad and often meaningless. This has no an out-of-control consCiousness could be.
hu been suggested that such a response is desf&amp;ned
Anyway. the day preceding this notable effort to be an attention getting device. Which is patently
doubt prevented anyone from achieving success in this role. Th1s we
at the production of deathless - or is defying? believe, mandates its abolition.
absurd. Why would a nice quiet unusuming unneedy
prose has been a wild and wooDy one. I would like dude like me want to attract attention? At least in
Student Rights is a slightly different problem. Rather than being an to extend public thanks to the individual who last
unimportant post. It is probably the most important and potentially Tuesday night picked up the black attache case with person? Anyway, 10 tlle emotional heights to which
being maruc can carry me, there is , at times, a
effecitve ot any 1n the SA. The functions of the Student Right the Initials E.CS. on it in the student parking lot
tendency to contemplate changing that response to
coordinator should be lodged 1n the director of the Office of Student between the dorms and health sciences and turned it something bright, and cheerful, and alive. "Muddling
Rights. This would remove this sensitive and time-consuming posit1on in to Lost and Found. (Eric Crispin, thank you. through," for example. That received a considerable
from the wasteland of SA inter-office politics and more fully establish the Crispin means curly-headed - or is It haired? - in amount of attention .
Scandinavian, and was almost my first name. Eric
existence of the Office of Student Rights.
A piece of Jesse Levine in last Wednesday's (the
the Derrick was bad enough, but Crispy? Echhh.
The second v1ce president is simply a redundant position and should Then there was Bayou, which I earned in a notable I st of December) The Speci1'Um set me to wondering
be abolished on that basis alone. Mr. OeWaal's proposal that the executive high school argument about Francis Marion, the again what causes the blue funk in me and in others.
committee members be 1emoved from the assembly IS an excellent idea. Swamp Fox , who . .. has very little to do with this There is one thing I would like to suggest. Which is
that denim blue and olive drab are not exactly the
The executive branch of a government does not belong in the legislative column.
world's
uppest colors: It may be: my association with
There are times when I do funny things, but
branch and the amendment's passage would realize that ideal . The
the army that makes massive doses of flat colors
driving
away
In
my
car
leaving
the
mighty
magic
bag
Student Assembly has not been an exciting or scintillating body to date,
depress me, but there still seems to be a nutty thing
and passing this amendment will help to alleviate their sorrowful plight of sitting forlornly on the macadam is pretty whirly
going on around here. To wit, everybody tends to
me.
(That's
what
happens
when
control
even
for
absolute dependence on the executive committee.
passes to you long-haired freaks and leaves us wear down colors in the winter and spruce up, if at
sensible folk out of touch with reality!) ((Reality? aJJ, in the spring or summer when \rungs outside are
Where? When the Progressive Labor Party has good enough to help out anyway. Why does nobody
debates about whether China is socialist because Mao wear oranges and yellows and bright things in the
has invited Nixon to visit where is reality then, my winter? Outside of the fact that most american
friend ?)) (Don't friend me, you one-slave-a-week clothing manufacturers seem determined to make
Friday, December 10, 1971
Vol. 22, No. 41
creep. If us sensible folk had control of this organism sure that everything even moderately inexpensive
all that sloppy crap such as laughing, and yelling and looks dowdy
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
. , of course.
losing things wouldn't happen.) (Relax fogey, it is a
Co-Mef\llllng Edhor - AI Benson
Closely allied to this question is the thing about
Co-Managing Editor - Mike Lippmann
shame for people to go around losing their lives Chmtmas decorations. Given, aU·too-infrequently as
f.A•·ManAiflng Editor - Susen Moss
before they find themselves , and if going off to it is, a sense of decorum and taste, outside
Bulin- Man..,er - Jim Drucker
freaky funny places results in an occasional foul-up, decorations around this time of year look rather
Adven iling Mllugw - Sue Mellentine
so?) ((Anarchist)) And it is nice to know that there nlce, especially when limited, for my taste, to lights.
Campus ...... .. . Jo-Ann Armao
Layout ...... . Maryhope Runyon
are some decent folks around who stay straight with A somewhat mad lawyer of my acquaintance just
Aat . . . . . .
. .. , , .. ...vac.nt
................Howle Kunz
Utat sort of thing when other people make mistakes. retools his pine tree in the front yard witll new lights
• • . . . • . . . • . . . • . . 8 Ill V ac:c:ero
Lit, II Drama .. Michael Silv.rtJian
The last sentence goes with the first one! HINT!
every holiday season and lets them go until they
City ......•..... Hervy Lipman
Mutic .............Billy Altman
and you can just ignore everything in between .
Copy •....•...•• Aonni Forman
Off.Campus . . .. • Lynne Traeger
burn out. Why the heU not? What's wrong with
Oh yes, and some nut wrote me a letter . calling them winter lights and keeping them up as
• . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . Marty Genl
Photo .......... Mere Ackerman
.A.t. . . . . .. Claire Krlegsman
.......... Mickey Ostet"relcher
Anybody who writes me letters, - whoever you are, long as you want? Some place at the bottom of all
F•ture . . . . . . . . .......vecent Sports • •. •• .•. .. . . Berry Rubin
(m:1m), has to be weird . Letters that make me this is no doubt a hedonistic plot to overstimulate
Aat . .....•...... Howie Faiwl
Graphic Am ........ . Tom Toles
nervous and want to start digging a bolt hole are children, but I seem to have misplaced it at the
even
more suspicious. Besides which your letter is moment. The last two paragraphs seem summable
T1HI Spctrum is MrVed by United Press International, College Pr41S$
full
of
inaccuracies. I never ran around Toronto in a too . The world needs more pleasant things to look
Service. the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los angeles Times Syndic.ete end
full length black cape. The only black thing I have at. Whether this would drive the blues away or not is
LiberMion News Stn~lce.
ever owned is a United States Army parka which questionable, of course. but would it reaDy hurt to
R~icetion of mener hereift without the express consent of the
reached only to my knees. As to the therapeu!ic try?
Editor-In-Chief is fOfbldden .
value of this column - well , it is far cheaper. for me,
Be a pleasant thing to look at. smile. People do
than analysis and 17re Spectrum throws a couple of look so much better that way. Have a good week.
Editbn•l policy is determined by the Editor-in.Chief.
pretty decent parties during the yeas: but as for Take care.

Yea, Ian!

The
grump

THE SpECTI\UM

l.

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, December 10, 1971

�'.

To the Editor:

We believe that the Student Assembly
understood why we took the actions we dld. It Wll$
only to let the Student Assemb.IY know that If they
didn't take this matter seriously, the Student
Association Bxecutive Committee would have never
taken any poSitive actions. Instead they would' have
turned the budget down blindly: •
We believe that the Executive Committee bu
developed into an elite bureaucracy with the Student
Assembly being only a rubber stamp. We bope lhat
in the future the Student Assembly can look lnto the
important matters that affect a.U the students ~n this
campus. That is, the individual orpnlzations tbat
represent students, rather than havina the Student
Assoctation Executive Committee decide wh.at is
best for the student today.

We would like to tlXtend our thanks to the
Student Assembly for considering PODER's Niagara
Day Care .Center budget proposal more . seriously
lhan the Student Association Execufive Committee.
We also want to thank those organizations and
individual students who worked and supported o ur
struggle for these funds.
As always, when people are struggling, they
develop friends and enemies. Althou&amp;h we were
accused of trying to intimidate lhe Student
Assembly to grant' us the funds when we took over
the Nov, lOth meeting of the Student Assembly,
they made the motion to fund lhc proposal.
Ironically, we ask ; who really was intimidated by the
actions we took? It couldn't have been the Student
Assembly.

P.O.D.E.R .

False advertising
To the Editor:

I

~

Consumer boycott
To tile Editor:
In the article in Monday's 771~ Spectrum, "Book
Store Refuses Bo ycott" (of war product
manufacturers), the manager of our bookstore says,
"If people want Eaton paper, then it's my job to sell
them Eaton paper." The completely missed point Is
that if people understood that Eaton is a division of
Textron which produces muJtiple ejector racks for
Air force bombs, they wouldn't want to buy the
·p aper. The purpose of the consumer boycott is to
educate people to such facts and to let lhe
corporations know th.at we will not fatten their
pockets with our money while they produce nose
assemblies for M 126 bombs, herbicides, demolition
charges and proltimity fuses for Zuni Rockets. We
will not spend money on war,
So, when you're typing your next thesis, buy
anything but Eaton paper. That also goes for Saran
Wrap. In fact, don't buy anything made by DuPont,
Dow Chemical, RCA or Textron. Help support the
Consumer Boycott .

Gary Frit!nd
Joe Walton
Tom Pisarri
Robert Roso[sky

Sober thought
To tlte Editor:
Re the short epistle to The Spectrum mourning
a reporting error I sincerely hope Mr. Glennon
spends as much time each day 'correcting' his
officers and teaching them protocol as desired by
society, the University staff and students and their
office.
( Recently two Campus Secunty officers, each
weighing 190 lbs. or over were faced with
overwhelming odds I one docile student weighing
140 lbs I and had to resort to trunch~::ons and
blackjacks to subdue the student.)
Instead of appointing costly commissions (if not
costly , time wasting), I suggest that the money be
spent on basic training because in the past , there
have been establishment commissions and
commissions and commissions ... almost always
arriving at decisions exonerating the perpetraton; of
anti-social acts. Sometimes if the commission verdict
is not favorable to the leaders of society, it is
disregarded and another commission set up tU~til the
"right" decision is amved at. So please, no
commissions.
[ must also take the opportunity to comment on
Steve Laz.oritz's letter of 12/6/71 , " Blackjack ."
He writes "The Campus Security force is here to
protect our lives and our property, etc." Bearing in
nund the police rencted so violently and PO life
(except that of the victim) or property Wlili
th.reatened or in danger, we should all shudder to
think of the consequen ces if life or property was
threatened.
It is a sobering thought.
L. Smith

On Dec. 8th, we went down to The Record
Runner after stopping at Cavages, to "get some
buy!!" on a few records. We had plans to purchase
the Rita . Coolidge album and four or five others,
when we found out the Rita Coolidge album was
over $4.50, we decided to wait until Christmas and
buy it at home where it is cheaper. At that point, the
owner said th11t it can't be purchased anywhere
cheaper. We replied th11t it is less expensive on Long
Island .
We paid our money for the other albums,
including two copies of the new Dylan album . After
they rang up the bill , we asked how much the Dylan
album was. Finding out it was a lot cheaper at
Cavages, we told Utem the price there and asked
them to lower theirs, as they advertise is their policy.
They refused to make It any lower than Cavages'

pdce, saying that they would be loslna money. The
owner threw the Dylan albums against thi!! wall, and
the rest at us. He screamed, "I'm sick or you rfcb
Long Island Jews. Get out of my store." He hit one
of us and started to bodily throw us out o( hls store.
We demanded our money back, which he also threw
at us.
We were thrown out rather annoyed, and a little
frl&amp;htened, not knowing what to do. We're not sure
what type of action to take. Legally, we know we're
rigbt and can take him to court Cor false adverti&amp;ina
and assault. What we hope to pin from this letter Is
everyone's realization that(fhe owner of The Record
Runner is a pig who stfould be thrown out of
Buffalo.

Judi Berek
Alysia Brattn

Letters of protest
are willing to take responsibility for and enpge m
further discussion of the contents of that Jetter.

To the Ed1tor:
111e Spectrum's inadvertent omission of a full
list of the signers of a letter to the editor defeated
the purpose of using letters to the editor as a vehicle
of protest. Specifically, we are referring to a letter
we wrote about seltist research being conducted in
the Psychology Department which appeared in the
Dec. l issue of The Spectrum . A\1 of the undersianed

Marcia /loward
Wynn e Kon Oglesby
Sandra Lattanzio
Carol Edwards
Loraine Heilbrun
Anita M . Smtrk

Lilly Plait
Kathy Jones
Natalie Joy
Carol Reich~nthal
Ellen Kirk
Jan'U Wa6ner

A lot but not 'everything'
To tht' Editor:
We wist\ to correct a possible misinttlrpretation
of the finely ironic title of Wednesday's article on
the dr.ift. The information presented in the article is
nothing like "everythjng" that anyone needs to
know about their situation up against the draft.
There was no discussion of lhe broadened exemption
for ..:onscientious objectors, nor of ways to take
Selective Service to court or vice versa, nor of the
possibility illegality of all induction orden; (more
than 15,000) issued since September, for some
examples. Each registrant's situation is unique.
Selective Service's polic'y is to handle each registrant
separately : to divide and induct - or perhaps to be
forced to deal with a knowledgeable individual more
nearly on his own terms than with a registrant kept
ignorant and therefore powerless. Draft boards are
required by law to follow ~heir own regulations, and

will do so rigorously only if forced to do so.
Wednesday's article is about as inadequate, for
com.- rete action in connection with the draft, as Dr.
Reuben's book is inadequate to its subject. In either
situation , a concerned person should seek individual
help from experienced and knowledgeable sources.
One typographical error made the sixth
paragraph confusing. A man found temporarily
unacceptable at an army physical will be held in l·A
pending re-examination, rather than reclassified I·Y.
The fifth-to-last paragraph also has a misleadina
error. The last sentence should have read : "After a
man has determined his position, the counseJing
center will help him to prepare to represent himself
before the draft board ." Again, for individual draft
counseling, contact us at 897-2871 .

The Draft Counseling Center

Fbod Co-op repressed
To the Eli/tor:
We would like to add a clarifying note to an
article in the Monday, December 6, The Spet•trum
concerning the U.B. Food Co-op.
Ever since University people suggested starting a
co-op in the U .B. area, our ideas and efforts have
met with one bureaucratic roadblock after another.
We followed all necessary parlimentary procedures,
submitted our propo~als to all the right committees,
and attended numerous discussion meetings dealing
with our proposal. Finally after a four-week delay ,
we received a grant from Student funds .
Unfortunately, all our efforts took place while
we were under the assumption that this money truly
was a grant from stud"ent controlled funds. But , alas,
our illu.~ion ended last week in a Hayes Hall office
when one of the numerous administrative
bureaucrats informed us that the administration was
unsure of the legality of financing a food co-op with
student funds . He used as his evidence a 10-point
guideline from the board of trustees telling students
how their money can be spent. Of course, the
guideline is about as open to interpretation as the
U.S. Constitution, and there is little doubt as to
what type of interpretation will be given by a
reactionary State Board of Regents.

The result is a Student Association with no
more power than that of a puppet government . All
financial allocations by the student government must
receive final approval by lhe administration. It is
time that we, the Univen;ity community, discard the
ridiculous notion that students have some ·say in
university affairs, especially those dea.l ing with how
supposed "student funds" can be spent . Thus, when
Dr. Siggelkow makes the absurd statements, "I can't
tell students bow to spend their money,'' or defends
his actions as "trying to protect student funds,'' it's
enough to turn the stomach.s of any people who have
had any dealings with the University hierarch y.
The University food co-op is one of the first
student funded projects to meet with such repressive
measures, but, unfortunately , it probably won't be
the last. There is a concerted effort taking place on
this campus to restore the "good-old-days" of
submissive . obedient student bodies. Perhaps the
time has come for people to initiate their own
independent actions
starting alternative
institutions such as co-ops, boycotting University
controlled operations like the food service and the
bookstore - that would combat such regressive
attitudes.

People of tht U.B. Food Co -op

Friday, December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven
I

�Bangia Desh in conflict

Karim sees hope fOr victory
Enayet Karim, Deputy Chief of the Bangia Desh
Mission in Washington, D.C., said at a press oonference
Tuesday that he has every reason to believe that
Pakistani forces occupying Bangia Desh at the present
time will be driven out within six months.
Basing his assertion on the enormous and rapid
progress of ,the liberation forces, Mr. Karim
maintained: "The BanglaDesh army is not a small or
ill-trained force . One observer testified that based on
their quick learning, the Bangia Desh army wiJI be the
most educated in the world."
The seemingly endless conflict stems from
Paki&amp;Jaoi President Mohammed Yahya Khan's
indiscriminate slaughterings of more than a million
Bengalis in an effort to pr~vent autonomy in East
Pakistan, also known as Bangia Desh (Bengali Nation).
In an attempt to get at the root cause of the
conflict, Mr. Karim explained: "Prior to 1958, there
was some semblance of democracy but from the
mid-fifties the real power went to the military and
whatever democracy remained was a facade, a show.
The real power was in ~he hands of the military."

Wzzaf?

The Community Action Corps Environmental
Action group is sponsoring a glass recycling project in the front of
Norton Hall. Located at the kiosk facing Tower Hall, the recycling
center will accept any brown, green or clear glass. The glass must be
rinsed, however, labels can remain. All metal from any glass must be
removed before deposited (CAC officials note that Boones Farm
wine bottles have a metal ring that must be removed). Eventually,
the project will be expanded to other locations at Allenhurst and
Ridge Lea.

University Press·

Liberation forthcoming
Continuing, Mr. Karim further maintained that
the military grew more powerful as the result of
capitalizing on the fears of the people, specifically the
supposed omnipresent threat of India.
It is Mr. Karim 's contention that "by exploiting
the fear of India, the government diverted more
resources to defense expenditure in entering to
defense agreements and in buying arms. The power
balance was stilted from the people to the military."
When asked to discuss the crucial problem of the
readmittance of Bengali's nearly ten million refugees,
Mr. Karim assured that "all refugees will be taken back
once Bangia Desh has established its polity fully over
the territory . This will take both time and money and
both voluntary and governmental assistance wiiJ be
urgently needed.''
It was brought to Mr. Karim's attention that India
has sent 110,000 troops to Bengal to fight the

tf~~~~£0KS,

WE
ADULT \\
PERFUME' JEWELRY,

I

~"-.Tmllu-

Page eight. The Spectrum . Friday, December
,

10~

1971
'I

Pakistanis. To the question of whether there would be
any f,.9reseeable problem in getting India to leave once
Bangia Desh has established its independence, Mr .
Karim replied: "I don't see why the problem of getting
India out of Bengal should present itself. There are
many reasons why the troops are there. The refugees
have placed an intolerable and unacceptable bu rden
on the economy and political and so'cial structu• of
India . It is for this reason that they are trying to pt• an
end to the conflict. I do.not share the view that 1!y
are there for personal gain."
U.S. people sympa.thetic
Continuing, Mr. Karim explained that " Indira
Gandhi has slated in no certain terms that the relations
between the governments of India and Bangia Desh
will be on the basis of complete mutual respect for one
another, as it is between any two sovereign,
self-respecting states. I foresee no real problem in
India's withdrawing after the struggle."
Speculating on Bangia Desh 's future relations
with the People's RepubUc of China, Mr. Karim said
that "it will take quite a time for BanglaDesh to forget
what China did. It is difficult to explain why and how
they supported Yahya's government and therefore I
see difficult ties between China and Bangia Desh for
the immediate future."
It was stated by one reporter that the Uniled
States has come to the support of West Pakistan to
which Mr. Karim retorted that he would like some
verification. As was explained, the United States l•as '
labeled India as the aggressor. The United States has
recognized and continued to argue that the best
solution is a political solution while Pakistan is united .
To this, Mr. Karim replied : "No country has
recognized Bangia Desh. It should take some time but
I eventuaiJy hope that your country will recognize
Bangia Desh as a republic. Your press, your public
opinion and your Congress have been tremendously
sympathetic. It is hoped that your administration will
be equally as sympathetic."

�Tuesday 's Faculty-Senate bact., IOIDC pcopams ••must be
meetift&amp; · saw a sreat dul of aBowedtoexpnd "
dis c unto n coace r njog the
UoiYersity ' a faculty tenure Tlle~ ..CII' ;a
procedures and its fiaancial
Add ressiog hirmelf to the
difficulties. In addition, Dr. probkm of tenu.re, Dr. ~tter
· • Berurd P . Gel,baum, VJc:e ncmd that the current proc:edures
Ptesiidecrt ol Aaldemic Allain, wu 'for &amp;noting tenure were
fOOIIIIy iatcod.ucecl fA) the body . '"irulppropria.te" for a president of
a u:niftrsity to resulate by himself.
Plc:siiJalt Robert ~tter blamed
No feedback oo the proce~ has
.,..,... political' pound~" for the
oome from the Faculty-Senate,
prob1bk ADMCUI cutbacb ill
howner, which hu before it
clepartmc:at Mel tcnioe waits. Dr.
le'Yea1 proposals formulated by
Koetter added that the Uajwnity
the •tandin&amp; Senate oommittce on
.,.. fw1her bampered by a ..clelay
teo~ and promotions. Thete
situatioo" bec:auec die leaden of
proposaiJ have been distributed
abe State Uai¥enity ~)'stem are.
"lmonc
Senate memben but none
waifin&amp; for fioandal indicatioa.a
of them have been motioned oo to
from

tlae New YQC'k State

LrcWa..re belore iofOCJDinc

this
l.:laM.nity of ita exact economic

date.

Dr. GeJbaum, expounded on his

Yiews OOIKleming tenure explaining
lituatioa.
tmt it should be p-anted accordin&amp;
Dr. Ireta admitted that ""dlcre to a ""UMersity-«fobal view," aod
will be certain propams wbidl will should not be determined
be pbaed oat,.. 1m01J1 them eome aocordin&amp; to the attitudes of the
of thole padoate prosrams wbida Ylrious departments.
a r e c orreo tly undergoing
Dr . Gelbaum bad also
ro-ew!uaaoo in order to p1we out preriously outlined his conception
tbote programs which ha.e not of his role in the UniYersity,
attrac ted sufficient madeot describing it as one involving the
interest. Dr. Ketter pledJCd. reappraisal o f a cademic
bowewer, that there would be departmental structuring. He abo
meetiQp and discussions bef&lt;Me added that he would get aa many
any unit is eliminated. He also members of the University to relate
maintained that while IOfJlC to their "culture" and to become
prop-ams wo uld have to be cut ..keenly aware of what's going on."

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Friday, December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum. PageDiDe

�WE' WAN,T TO RECOGNIZE
ALL OF UB?S GENIUSES
15

..

Submit yow original
photogw aptly, artwolk,
stlldies,. opinions.
writing, etc. to the
1972 Buffalonian.

made onUS A

@ HVA5

-.-.a ......

To
of . . 1972 BufWoniM,- ..... lbtD . . . . .
...... ,...... of . . hallly tAns _. l.llaln. En a·
sa r •
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Deadline for entries:
January 31, f972

Buffalonian Office:
356 Norton Hall

831·2505, 831 ·5570
./

p_. 1811 • The Spectrum • Friday. D--nb-10, 1971

Gil

n

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�Bangia Desh program
.

...

The stnt!(.f(/e .for freedom
by Barbw. Malmet

present work for t he Band a Desh
m ovem e n t. Dr . Planck also
mentioned the group of concerned
Buffalo students and faculty that
meets every Thursd ay night in
Trailer F {College F), to determine
ways to aid the Bangia Desh
struggle forfreedom.

S~ctrum Staff k'rlt~r

Enayet Karim , Deputy Cruef of
Mission and Minister of the Bangia
Desh Missio n , sp oke to a full and
emotional cro wd in the Conference
Theater on the crisis in Pakistan
Tuesday njght. The talk was
sponsored by t he Speake r's Bureau Strive Cor auto nomy
and Action Bangia Desh.
Citing Mr. Karim's various past
" I think we have the makings of endeavors, Or. Planck explained
a lively program he re ton(&amp;ht ," the roles of Min ister of Pakistan
ex claimed C h a rl es Pl anck, relations in India and services in
int roducing Mr. Karim .
West P a k is t an, t h e U nited
Outsid e t h e Confe rence Kin gdom and the United States.
Th ea t e r . a s m aU group of Mr. Karim has served in the
demonstrato rs gathe red , carrying d iploma ti~ corps fo r Pakista n. un til
signs which read , "One Na tion , this past Aug. 3, when he made the
One Pa kistan ." O nce Mr. Kari m decision to defect and devote hts
began his tal k, t he sign-carriers energies towards the autonomy o f
entered into the t heate r, and stood Bangia Desh .
in the back of the room.
" There is a great lack of
Dr. Planck , Department of knowledge of our part of the
Polttical Science, o pe ned up the world," Mr. Karim began . He
discussion by introducing Mr. proceeded to give an extremely
Karim's put activities a nd his informative explanation of the

I '

D

.I, ~~

rl!Opte s marne

Tbe Bl ac k Dan ce Wo rks h o p will be
sponaorina a People's Market which will olrer a
variety of a uthe ntic and unusu.l gift items, a U
c rafted by Black people. Such ite ms as African
fabric and carvings, Arabic rings, baskets, jewelry
and incense burners wW be available. The ma rket
prese nts an ide al o ppo rturut y to purchase
m eaninaful Christmas alfts at reasonable prices,
a nd an o pportunit y for Black people to support
Black buainess. The marke t will be ope n o n
Saturday and Sunday, Dec. II and 12, and the
f o ll o w ing weekend , Dec. 18 and 19 , fro m
noon - 7 p.m ., at S West Utica, near the corne r of
Main .

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crisis in Pakistan, apoloaizlng to
those memben of the audience
who thought his points were
obvious.
He said that he was speaking
from perso.nal knowledge and did
not wish to p ut forth pro paganda,
but to make the truth kno wn. Mr.
Karim who is an East Pakistani
from the Dacca region, described
past history in order to understand
today 's serious problems.

Exploitation
He was an active participan t in
t he movement to create Pakistan
back in t he late 1940's. He
explained that t he people of Be ngal
were deeply committed to ma king
the experiment of Pakistan work,
despite the m:Uor problems. The
people were very hopeful that t.he
country would succeed and that
t hey no longer would be exploited.
I n order to illustrate the pom t
of Bengah willingness to have
solidarity wit h t he West Pakistanis,
who were differen t tn attitudes,
language, history and culture, Mr.
Kanm noted the sacrifices made.
Mr. Kanm vtews all these Bengali
sacnftces as bh1tant mtstakes now.
The senous compromises and
adjustments made first included
the East Pakistanis' willm&amp;ness to
let the ~apital of Pakistan be in the
Western part, despite the vast
pop u lation differences. (East
Pakistan's population denstty per
square mile is approximately 922
as compared to a square mile
de nisty of 136 in West Pakistan .)
The capuol be~a me Karachi.
Secondly Fast Pakistan permitted

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six ot the 44 members sent to the
first constituent assembly to
onginate from West P11k1St11n. Mr.
Karim made t he analogy of New
York letting two senators from
Minnesota represent it in Congress.

Military machine
Mr. Karim elaborated further,
explaining tha t the West Pakistanis
sought control and economically
exploited the Bengah people .
There were even outright a ttempts
at depriving the East Pakistanis of
their cull urc . The Urdu lunguuge of
the West WJ S made the offil!ial
language uf Pak tstan, although
Bengali was suppoSt!dly the .;e-:ond
language. (l::.ngllsh !&gt;hall be used for
offic1al purposes unt 11 1970 )
The m1li tary machme of the
West P akistams was gammg
strength under the leadershiP of
~.:ommander in chief of the Army,
(ieneral Ayub Khan Mr Kanm
~tated that the small ~kcl group of
Army officials were o peratmg 11 tor
the1r own e nd l!o Jnt.l nut for the
pre~rvatton
of Pal-.l!&gt;tan
fhc
/\rilly bccaml' !&gt;u JIUWt:ll'ul that 11
took ovt:r the rt'1gn) o f
government , ma1ntatntng tt:. own
vested mterest at the expense of
the nat10n
The power of rule, ~aid Mr.
Karim, 1s lltiS.~essed by an chte
membership uf Army pcopl~:, a
hureaucracy and several monied
tnd ust riali:.ts, who huve provided a
luxurious capital t: II Y 111 t he midst
&lt;&gt;f me red iblc poverty

-5hlveiJQn
Sp•ker's Buruu and Ac:tion
Bangia Desh spon10red Km~y.t
Karim, Deputy Chief of Mini n
and Minister of the Bangia Dellh
Mission, on Tuesday. On unNiy
crowd forced the adjoumlng of
the meeting.
Pakistanis and primarily t:.ast
Pakutanis into a "terrorized
submission," where people are
afraid to votoe an opposing
opinion. The Army has been
systematically committin a
atroc11Jes in the Bengal nation,
asserted Mr. Karim.
The Bangia Desh movemen t isa
struggle for freedom a n d
democracy. It is a strong and
unified attempt to overthrow t he
occupation forces of Ayub Khan .
It is a rebel movement whlch is
seeking world recognition in order
to help the cause. Mr. Karim is
working for the Bangia Desb
t reed u m movement and he
descnbed the Bangia Desh army as
bemg one of endless strength and
motiVatton, fighting for a chance to
be equal. When the victory is won,
East Pakistans refugees can return
to the1r land . Th1s end was sought
tn the begmnmg by the Bengalis,
but over th~: course of the past 24
year!. uf the Pak1stan expenment,
they fa1led
I he ltberat1on movement would
have sut:ceeded tn six months time,
prcdu.:t~:d Mr Karun . if it hadn't
been for the c urrent war with
I ntlJa. He emphas1zed the fact that
the People of Bengal did not want
th1s war. The amount of time
requ1red now to liberate Bangle
Desh and reconstruct the ravaged
count ry is unknow n . but Mr.
Kanrn asserted : " I t will take a long
tlmt:."
The audte nce reacted in a mixed
fash1on to Mr. Karim's speech .
Ques llons were ratsed and answers
were g1vcn. emotiOnalism rang
th1 ough loudly at several pomts,
and Dr Planck was fUlled upon to
mtc rvcnl.' for order. FinaUy . he had
to adjourn the mectmg as the
crowd became unrulv .

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Unrul y cro wd
Mr. Kanm submitted that th~:
present Situation is the result ot
past events, includmg poht1cal
dcpnvation , et;onomic
exploitation &lt;~nd atta~lo,) on
culture. The military fo rces of
Khan ha ~ forced both West

The Oivi.s ion of Undergrad uate Studies still
requires two sem esters of physical educatio n in
order to graduate. Students graduating afte r
Ja n ua r y 1 972 may no longer petition t be
~ommittee on Degree Requirements to have the
\ ~-~quire m en t waived. Medical waivers, however ,
will be take n care o f in the us ual way thro ugb
the s tuden t health service .

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rm

A.I.C . SERVICES (Phlla.) 215-885-1646

24

HRS.

Friday, December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven
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The suff of The Spectrum
wishes you the very best in
holiday greetings. Today 's The
Spectrum is the last paper of
the semester. Publication for the
spring semester will resume on
Monday, Jan. 17. Deadline for
Mticles a.n d advertisements for
the first paper is Friday, I an.
14.
dennis arnold, editor-in-chief
al benson, co-managing editor
mike Iippmann, co-managing editor
susan moss, asst. managing edilor
b usi ness
druc ker, husintss monoqer
\Ue mellenline, od~trli11nf} munuqrr
helen scoll , 5trre tory
~·II smlth, rl!leptlcmlst
le slye a del man
benJo
SIU IC berger
mike grimaldi
leslie karp
luos l.•bron
m1ke loomos
ale x ri ngelheim
.tn thony Ler•

hm

umpus
lo·ann armc~o, editor
howie kuru, tditor
b1ll v•ccaro, tditor
1eff benson
jerry danaher
ed jaffe
jess1e levone
biirbara millmet
george muchfield
jim mcferson
uri menes
barbara mink
debbie miron
maryanne morgan
bob murret
susan rosen blu th
ronald sandberg
linda teri
linda trotta

•

ci t y
huvy llpmdn, i!dilor
j.anis cromer
don van every
pat maloney
do\ve saleh

Pa9e twelve. The Spectrum . Friday, December 10, 1971

co lumn ists
sunley d;~yan (ondontt)
steese (lhl grump)

composition
mid ge bork
ann e coon
leslie dickie
b;trb;~r;~ dillenhauser
jane eidler
shirley (llglla
pat mal011nowlcz
donna mcgowan
l011rry mcnlece
jo mocney
syl via przcmlelewski
lisa s tilhl
contrib u ti ng edito rs
;amy ahrend
mike engel
1eft greenwald
sue weiser
c:opy
ronm
marto
c la ire
debbi
karen

forman, l!ditor
gattl, editor
kroegsm•tn, ont. edttor
kerr
skeldon

gr;aphlc ar u
tom toles, tdltor
ken benditt
bob budlansky
hedy klein
steven lauk.ait1s
gretchen surnijok1
solomon schanze r
layout
b drbara &amp;ern hard, editor
mary hope runyon, editor
gretchen
g.ayle watn iC k

lit &amp; dram01
m~th.ael silver bl.all , edttor
.lndreas
10n ackermtn
jay boyar
JOn ciner
kevm hamilton
elliot krieger
Jeffrey londer
ro bert lowman
james paul
ke ith shand.alow

music
billy ill tmiln, editor
tom boguckl
joe brancato
terry bromberg
mr. clnn
gary clnn;amon
joe fe rnbac her
shelly k;amlenieckl
noman salant
norm ;m w;ahl

off -umpus
lynne truger , t dltor
curt miller
puppins

photography
marc ackerman, editor
mickey osterreicher, editor
milrylin brenner
m•rk erlebacher
Kary friend
piiul gilwit
rock hilas
jackson
bob kaplan
stuart kilufman
robin king
bob klein
ravi ku mra
ene linger
rbara perkons
d. radh;akrishnan
ilene rosen that
kim santos
lisa schulman
lonny shavelson
r;~y sikorskl
d011vid g. smi t h
ron snios
david zieter
eric zin nerstrom

~

sports
barry rubin, editor
howie hiwl, asst. editor
dotn c;aputi
bruce engel
dave ger inge r
michael zwelg

�Supreme CoUrJ to hear
case cot:tcerning SD~
The Supreme Court agreed
Tuesday to decide lnJts present
term whether college authorities
have ths right to ban the
left-wing Students for a
Democratic Society (SDS) from
campus. The case in question
- directly involves the SDS
dlapter ·It Central Connecticut
State College, whlch has the
American Civil Liberties Union
on its side.
The ACLU contends that the
stude nt s at the Connecticut
college were forbidden to form
a chapter of S DS simply
because "the college
admi nistration has hoped to
keep certain ideas and
undesirable e lem ents off
campus." The ACLU noted that
the co liege ~ud granted
recognition to other political
groups su ch as the Young
Americans for Freedom, the
Young Democrats and the
Young Republicans. Two lower
courts had ruled that the college
had the nght to bar the SDS
chapter from the campus.
Court to hear poilu tion cue
In ot her Supreme Court
action this week, the justices
decided to hear arguments later
this term in a challenge of a
Michigan law requiring federally
licensed Great lakes vessels to
in stall a speci fi c t ype of
an 1i ·pollution equipment. The
Michigan law requires watercraft
to be equipped with either a
holding tank to retain sewage
for subsequenl disposal at
on-shore treatment facilities or
an incmerating device wh1ch Will
turn all se wage to ash .
0 p era tors of such watercraft
contend th at the federal
government has already taken
over pollution control to the
exclusion of the states; that the
Mi chigan Jaw interferes with
interstate commerce and
uniform maritime Jaw and is
unconstitutionally vague; and

Sockin' some swl

that it denies the ship owners
"due process of Jaw."
The court refused to rule in
a case involving the
co nstitutiona l r ight s of a
Christian Scientist woman who
was forced to take medication
while she was in a New York
mental hospital. The New York
Civil liberties Union said that
during the 11 weeks Miriam
Winters was a patient at Central
Islip State Mental. "she was
forced daily to take medication .
orally or ":f injection, over her
express religious objections."
Violation or not?
A federal district court held
that medical treatment of
Christain Scientists in state
mental hospitals does not violate
the First Amendment , but that
ruling was struck down by the
2nd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals. The Appeals 1:ourt sen t
the case back to the district
court, when New York state
and city author ities then
appealed to the Supreme Court .
The Supreme Court has also
agreed to hear cases this term
involving the 1968 gun control
law which permits governmen.
agents to searc h business
premises without a court
warrant, as well as a case
Involving a Kansas law which
permits the state to recover
m o ney it spe nd li on
co urt -appointed lawyers for
cases where the defendant IS too
poor to afford a lawye r...
However. the court refused
to hear the ca~ involving a
New Jersey law providing free
school. transportation for many
p r iva t e and parochial school
students. It also refused to hear
an appeal by four building
co nstruction unions and two
apprenticeship committees from
a ruling they had discrimmated
against blacks in a Seattle.
Washington training program.

The Pllf'li.Mntnt lftd Funbdelic
extrav9nU Will do their thing
Sunday at CWk Gym. The show
starts .t 10 p.m . Md tickets are
$2.

Section II

Vol. 22, No. 41

Friday, O.Ctmber 10, 1071

•Not enough to go on'

Kent de.fendant~~ di~fimi~~~~ed
Conceding that ''we didn't
have enough to go on," Ohio
Attorney General William J .
Brown announced that the
charges against the remaining 20
defendants in the Kent State
disturbances of May 1970 , were
dropped. The announcement
carne Tuesday after a Portage
County Court jury had just
acquitted the fourth of 25
persons indicted on charges
stemmmg from the disorders in
which National Guardsmen shot
and killed four Kent State
)tudents.
legal technicalities delayed
the dismiSsal order. since Judges
Albert Caris and Edwin Jones
said the charges could not be
dismissed until th e Ohio
Supreme &lt;:'tun had ruled on

affidavits of prejudice filed
against them by a defense
attorney. The Ohio chief justice
said he ~;:ould not dismiss the
c harge s until he received a
formal request from a defense
attorney to do so.
Failure to be identirted
Mary Nicholas was the
student wh o was acquitted
Tuesday of charges of intefenng
wnh firemen when the ROTC
building at Kent State was
burned the night of May .2.
Two prosecution witnesses failed
to identify Ms. Nicholas as
being one of the demonstrators
at the St:ene. The two Witnesses
were Stephen Sivulich, an
assistant director in the Kent

ALBANY
John llathurn, state duector ol
lnd1an serv~ces, announced Tuesday that he will step
duwn m March, and recommended that he be
succeeded by an Indian. Hathorn made the
announcement at a meeting of the Capital District
Chapter of the American Society for Public
Admin1strat1on , wh1ch was attended by the chiefs
and presidents of the Onondaga Indians, the St.
Reg1s Mohawks. The Oneida Nation , and the Seneca
Nation . In announcing Ius decision, Hathorn said :
"We'll have more and more Indians serving lnd1ans,
and that's the way it should be ." Chief lrvmg
Powless of the Onondaga l'ndians told the following
story, which shows how little white people know
about tnd1ans. Twu ~:hildren came up to him on a
Syracuse street and asked him if he was an Indian.
When he replied that he was, the children asked him
how that could be since " Indians ;ue ex linct."

State Department of Student
Conduct at the time · of tt-.-f'tre.
a nd C oiUn Bicheler, a local
volunteer fireman . Bichcler
testified that he had not seen
Ms. Nicholas at the scene of the
fire.
Shortly before the jury of
five women and seven men were
seated to hear testimony in the
Ni c hola s case, Thoma s
Foglesong, another defendant,
pleaded guilt~ to a charge of
first degree rf"t in connection
with the campus disorders.
Attorney Gen~ral Brown said
that the charges were dropped
because, " we went as far as we
could possibly go, ethically and
morally , and we just weren't
going to waste the taxpayers'
money by trying to go further ."

Rep. Jack Kemp (R., N.Y.
announced Tuesday that Buffalo and Erie County
have been approved as a special impact area by the
Econum ic Oeve lupment Admmistralion. This
selection IS the first in the country under the new
public works impact program destined to provide
jobs for areas hard hit by unemployment.

MANILA
Ernesto T;ue told police a month
ago that he and h1s corflmon-law wife, Adelajda
Cru1. . k1dnaped and sold 17 children for as little as
Sl.66 eat.h. Wednesday, however , the wife told
puhl:e she was the only one who acted in the
abductions. However, pollee are still holding Tigue as
an acl:omphcc, smce a woman identified him as the
kidnapper uf her son and daughter, ages two and
four. Adela1da, 49, told polil:e she started kidnaping
and selling children at the age of 38, and had been
arrested and put on parole once. Tigue told
STANFORD , CALIF.
Bombs heavily investigators: ''I don 't know why she ..old the
damaged the Stanford linear Accelerator Center children. But ~he told me it's because she hates the
Tuesday , and the FBI was called in to investigate the motherl&gt;."
sabotage. The ce nter, one of the nation's major
nuclear research mstallat10ns, was damaged by either
Nl:.W YORK A su11 was brought against New
one m two bombs. Offic1als said the bombs were set York Slate Munday , 1n an effort to compel the
off sumetime during the week, bu't they d1d not ma1hng of ab~ntee ballots for the primary next June
know exa£tly when . The cen ter has been closed since 14 Filed as a class actiOn against the Boards or
Dec. I, in a ruu tme shutdown . The damage was Election ol New Yurk C1ty and Nassau County, the
estimated at S I 00,000, but the h1ghly sophis t1 ~:ated sull alleges that the state's failure to provide
klystrom tubes were not damaged . The linear absentee ballut~ •s unconstitutional because it denies
accelerator IS used rur clas~ified researt.h by the the c1111enl&gt;' nghl s to vote, to travel and to enjoy the
Atom1c t:.nergy CmnnliS)Inn.
equal protection of the law. The suit was n.Jed by
lour New York State voters and citizens' lobby
NEW YORK A New York County gmnd jury group.
1mhcted II . Rap Brown and three other men Tu e~day
in connection wllh a robbery and shout ou t at a
WAStiiNGTON The Senate Foreign Relations
West Side bar last Oct. 16. Brown , the black militant Committee voted Tuesday in favor of restricting
fugitive, is still recovering from his wounds in power of the President to commit American troops
Bellevue llospital, and is being held on $250,000 abroad in fu ture wars without consent of Congress.
bail. All four men were indicted on charged of The committee approved by a vote of 13-0 a biU
attempted murder, robbery, assault and possession which would require a President to obtain
of weapons. No trial date has been set.
congressional approval in advance before Committing
U.S. troops. The unanimous committee approval
WASHINGTON
Sen. Edmund Muskie (D .• indicated that it would pass through the Senate
Maine) will formally announce his candidacy for the easily .
Democratic presidential nomination in a nation-wide
television address Jan. 4. Muskie's declaration wiU
NEW YORK Howard Hughes, the mysterious
come just two days before the filing deadline for billionaire , has spent the last year touring the
entry into the New Hampshire first·in-the-nallon Weste rn He m1sphe re and transcripting his
primary .
-eontlnued on P•911 fourftlen-

~

�~

Students find difficulty
·registering for the vote
by Dave Saleh
$p«ln1m S taff Wrlttr
6ariier this year the 26th
amendment to the Constitution
was passed, lowering the voting
age to 18. It WllS the passaae of
this amendment that was
supposed to end the controversy
over the youth vo te, giving
millions of 18, 19 and 20 year
olds this "covete&lt;l'" right.
In New York, as in other
states, however, the solution has
not been quite so simple. Students
have found areal difficulty in
registering to vote where Jhey
attend school. As this continued ,
a number of legal rights aroups,
includmg the American Civil
liberties Union, took the issue to
the co urt s. The so-calle d
" residency laws" which were used
to prevent these ()Ut-of·town
students from votina have been
challenged as unco nstitutional and
a major court battle seems
1mmanent.
Local action
Here in Buffalo, ACLU lawyer
Stephen Perrello 1s in the midst of
a very Important case concerning
this problem. Mr. Perrello seems
very con fident of .e favorable
decision. In a recent interview
~·o nc:erning the
r egistration
problems, Mr. Perrello eltplamed
the ACLU's stand : "A recent
amendment to the Erie Count y
voting law sta tes that students
who are not Uvi ng with the1r
parents tn Ene County and who
cannot show permanent res1de nce
here are declared aneligible to
vote, regardless of the length of
their res1dency. On the other
hand , non-students are merely
required to be residents of Ene
County fo r three months to
become eligible to vote at agl!
18.'.
A cco rd1ng to Mr. Perrello
students are "first questioned
co n cerning their age, manta!
stat us, financial dependence on
their parent s, perman e nt

Warnin~ label~

...

Hexachlgrophene danger?

•

The Federal Food and Drua studies done by Winthrop chemjcaJ.
t
Administ ration warned Monday Laboratoriea in which newborn
The FDA indicated that it
a,cainst bathina with products monkeys were bathed daily for 90 mr
· t, at a later date, make a
c ontaining 3% o r more "-Yawitbsolutionsconta.inin&amp;3% move against other
hexachlorophene on the grounds hexachlorophene, the same b achlorophene prqducts, either
that the widely used soap p~rcentaae that is found ill on &amp;'rounds of safety or on the
Ingredient may cause brain Phisohex. The monkeys showed basis of evidence that the
damaae. The warning was mailed measurable amounts of the products fail to deliver on claims.
to 4octo rs, and is based on new chemical in their blood and brain
In a related story, the chief or pediatrics at Strong Memorial
scientific data which casts doubt lesions, says lhe FDA .
on b o th t h e safety and
Two other studies were cited Hospital in Rochester said that
effectiveness of t he product. by the FDA, including one in the death of a youna boy
Hexachlorophene has been used which SO newborn babies were undergoing treatment for burns
for years in homes and hospitals b a t h e d d a i I y with 3% over a large portion of his body
to bathe babies, cleanse wounds hexachlorophene solutions and may have been connected with
m e a s u r a b I e the use of hexachlorophene an
and bums and trea t various skin s h o w e d
• aod scalp ailments.
hexacblorophonc blood levels, but trealf!lent of the bums. Dr.
Discrimination
Robert J. Hagerty said the child
A spokesman for Winthrop "no obvious toile symptoms.''
Mr. Perrello also pointed out
the unconstitutionality o f the law , Laboratories, a division of
The warning label, to be placed had been treated with the
Drug In c ., on the product sold, was chemicalfortendayaatano ther
statina: " To restrict students from S terling
voting as opposed to others manufa ct11 rer 's of Phisohu, published in the Federal Register hospital before beinJ transferred
took Issue with the ruling, Wednesday. and says: " Warning: to Strong, where the child died a
violates the protection against
such discrimination as provided saying, " In more tha n 20 years Do no t use for total body bathing. short time later. Hagaerty said:
"The p ostmortem findings,
by both the ftrst and fourteenth of use and tens of millions o f Rinsethorouahlyalteruse."
amendments to the Conshtutio n ." cases, there has n~ve r been a
Hexachlo rophene is used in including swellin&amp; or the brain,
He added : "T h e whole single r~port of harm from thousands of soaps, deodorants, w e re co mpatible with
Ph 1so h ex when u se d as vaginal douches, feminine hyaiene hexachlorophene as a cause of
regi s tration question lwill go
before the Supreme CQurt -soon , directed."
deodorants and skin creams. death ." · Based on the FDA
and there 1.s no doubt in my mind
However, the FDA action is s tud ies' f indings, h e said ,
that a favorable decis10n will be WaminJ based on studies
ltmited to the few products wttich " hexachlorophene certainly could
reached . In fact I am most
T he FDA based its wam mg on contai n more than 3% of the have been the cause."
confident that the reg.istration
problem wiJI be solved in time for
--eontlnued t rorn PI~ lhlftMnthe 1972 election ."
The Buff:alo ACLU IS a
relatively young orga nization , and autobiography on tapes to be published nex t March . and then got a job with the same department wttich
is still in the ex pansion stage. It is
McGraw· Hill Book Company announced Tuesday was issuing her checks. In the meantime, her
onl y in recent months that the
thai it had acquired the world publishmg rights to husband was earning more than $200 a week .
rull services of the organization
the manuscript whtch Wlll come o ut March 7. Another case involves a New Yo rk woman who has
have beconur- known, and the
organization is finally becomina Hughes said he written about him has been been on the relief rolls since 1966, a earns $600 a
m ore widespread. Thro ugh a ..misleading and childish.'' Huanes collaborated with. month woman who has been on the relief ro lls since
number of fund-raisins and
J966, and earns S600 a month o verpayment to her ·
Clifford Irving on the work.
membership dnves. the ACLU
S17,000. BerUnger was critical o f the handling of
hopes to be able to tncrease 1ts
welfare checks, saying: " We will find o ut what's
support and further eltpand Its
ALBANY - In order to deal with the staLe's
servicos. In conjunction with the
wrong with a system that permitted 45 .000
economic plight, several proposals may come from
fund-raising cam paign, the ACLU
duplicate checks to be issued and cashed in the past
Governor Rockefeller later this month . Among the
IS showmg a two and a half hour
yea r, whh the loss in New York City alone lotaling
possible goodies are included an income tax ttike
BBC production of lhe Chicago
S4.S
million last year:·
conspiracy trial. The script o f the
retroacttve to Jan . I , and hikes in levies on gas,
film was taken from court records cigare ttes, liquor and mo tor vetticle registrations.
and th~ film has received excellent
SANTA CLAUS, IND. - Each year, residents in
Richard Dunham, the state budget d irector, said the
r ev 1ews throughout North
and around this southern Indiana community pitch
income tax htke was more probable because I) it
Amen ca. T here will be three
in to address and send off a letter from Santa Claus
could be made retroactive, and a sales tax hike could
showings of the film on Jan . 22
to answer a child's letter. This year, the letters are
and tickets are now o n sale at the
not , and 1) a sales tax of 8% fo r New Yo rk City
pouring
in so quickly that efforts to answer them
Norton T1cket Office
would pu t New York far ahead of any other state in
have resulted in an economic problem. Bert Reinke,
thai field . The projected state budget gap is Sl.5
Santa Claus postmaste r, said: "This thing is getting
billion
to the point where the cost of it is almost
prohibitive." However, he said : "For the cost of it. Jt
WOODBURY. L.l. - According to records of ts well worth it. It brings immense joy to rhe
the state"s welfare mspector general, a Lo ng Island children ." The economic problem mvolves the cost
wo man received over $1 5,000 tn welfare payments of mailing lhe letters to the kids, since the postal
" jiNGI.f lEU$, JINGll IIUS"
the time she was employed, under a differe nt rates, as welt as the volume o f mail, has gone up .
during
" OH WHAT fUN IT IS TO''
name . T he case was just one of SO uncovered by "The letters some from all over the United States
Welfare Inspector General George Berlinger since his and from foreign countires," said Reinke. All the
Well '"'-"'• ..,. So"'
You II le $1"91"11 Ao You
office
bcgJn operatmg in mid-September. The letters are answered with envelopes bearing the Santa
&amp;row.. Thro1J91\ 11\e Ab·
oolulelv Mo"'olouo Holi.
woman
tn queslion was receiving checks from the
Claus postmark. The letter cautions children to be
day Gl fl&gt;. fnod&gt;. &amp;. 0•&lt;·
nrQIInn•. We Olfe~ Th•m
count
y
Department
of
Social
Services,
remarried,
good and mind their parents.
Ia You 1ft
possessJons, etc. Based on theitt,
answers to these questions tbo
stu4nts are either accepted or
rejected as elipble voters."
Aaain pointing out the
preference to non-students, Mr.
P errello also stated that
"non-,tudents who may be more
financially dependent on their
parents than students and who
may also own fewer permanent
possessions, are usually accepted
as eligible voters after merely
Gllina the residency requirement."

Round up

• • •

House
Council*

The Spectrum is publitlttld tltrH
t im•• • Wlllllc, ..,.ry Mond11y,
Ww/,..Uy •nd Frid.y; during tM
IICMJ«nlc ....,, by Sub-Board
1, Inc. OffiCe ""' loc:.tfld 11t 355

r~l11r

Norton H11ll, St11t11 Umverri w of NYorlc lit 8uff11lo, 3435 Main St..
Buff11lo , N•w Yor k , 14214.
Tf!lttplloM: ArN Cod/1116; Editortlll
831-41 13; Buslntl#, 831 -3610.

CHRISTIIS SHOP

tt

Rttprtttttn tlld for ltdvwtising by
N11tion11l EdiiCIItiOfllll Adwlrtising
Stlr'tlicll, Inc.. 360 Lexmgton At~~t.,
N - York, N. Y. 10017.

;f.\

Sub«Tiprion ,.,. .,., $4.60 pM
...,_,., or $8.00 for two ,.,.,.,.,.

ABUNDANCE l VARIETY

TSUJIMOTO

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Circu,.tion: 16,000

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1·3:13:&gt; - - - ·

***********~***********

Ski- Chamon ix, France
SKI CHAMONIX - NEW YEAR'S '72
SPONSORED BY
UNIVERSITY TRAVEL

a.

SA-GSA
Speake~ Bureau
presents

JOHN KERRY
former leader of VIetNam Vets against the War.

SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB
DEC. Z7, 1971 - JAN . 1, 1972
$196.00 JUST FLIGHT TO
CHAMONIX, FRANCE OR COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
$298 PACKAGE IN CHAMONIX, FRANCE
fOR INFORMATION :
'I

ROOMS 323/316 NORTON HALL EXT. 3602/ 3603
OR : SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB
ROOM 318 NORTON EXT. 2146/2146

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday, December 10, 1971
a.

.. .

.,.._ .

a;, ~,.-

,.u..a..,.l'

Dec. lOth

Haas Lounge
Friday

7:30 p.ltl.

�•

'The lnfestigation'

4 play that leaveS it~ mark
When Peter Weiss' explosive

fbyMamt/Sadcwas pcrf&lt;'rmed in
New Yo rk, Weiss W3S immediately
recognized as one o f the most
pcl\1 erfu l modern playwrights at
work toth•y . His work is precise
and poetic and always relentless.
n us weekend. beginning toni&amp;ht ,
Wei ss ' most powerful
documentary drama . The
lnt~ntiglltlonwill be performed in
the Fillmore Room. Performances
beJjn at 8:30. The play will be
done tonight, Saturday and
Sunday.

Coearowenial draJu

....... Ollie,... ........
..... ............... n.e ......

a...- ....

iiiiD Khl.._
. . . . . . . . . . ......, . .tat

•=
• ,....

l'M¥ .-r e....t. ct.n

....., ..........

. . . . . . . . . .; .......... tMy

..................... tiMY

'The ~()erpellt'
Tile Wflllo

rro.- for die PafonaiJtt Am,

willa CAC, wll prant TM
~"'· • ~' . , Jea..aaale .... lttalie,
• .....,, Dee. 13 Md T...aay, Dee. 14 at 8
p.a . '- Roo. 140 C.. a•. Adlalllio• i1 free
_ . ticbta are ......,.. tluoaP Nortoe Ticket

i•

coopaaCiD•

omce.

•

Tile dlatft .....,, . . . . . . prerio....,.
rae..~ • Tk Sl'ft'"'"'· il ~P Dad or Jlaetto
~ f.._ ..,falo'a Wat Silk. Tiley luM bcea
Cllt off r..,.. City Hal r--. _. were llalided
bJ CAC, IMt fie...W diffiallties peniat, ud dtia
ailllt be dwir ._. pafOI'IUDCC. Tile poup il
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . il .,....... tbil
pafonu.ce •
a fH01re of tJaaab to the
thU•enity for its
' JMCP •

The play is a dramatic
condensation and transcription of
the Nurenburg Trials and
examines the polarities of
oppressor and victim, theories of
mass auilt and of mass submission .
The director. Steven Adler of the
Student Theater Guild. has tried
to present the play in aU its
uaUness and contrcwersial impact
but has intentionally wo rked
tnward a conditio n in which there
b
no easy answer. Trials are
arter-the-fact vindications of
h istory, they do not j ustify
injustice or dignify cruelty.
The play has a large ca.st - 24
members who have, according to
their director. been steeped in the
literature and the myths of the
Third Reich .
Walter Kerr in theNnv YC&gt;It
Timenaid of the New York
prod u ction : "These are no

handful of ~rticular people. They
are somethJng deeper, more
appalling than that. They · are
nothing Jess than humanity's own
delight in ridding itself of
human ity . One listens and
shudders. It 's disturbing in its
implications yet incontestably an
experience."

lodMdual Rapoue
The play has provoked
impassioned response, wherever it
has been performed . Whether you

Music Room*

will not
·'
nus production is praentecl as
the second major produaion by
the Student Theater Guild th.il
term. The Student Theater Guild
is completely student-run IDd
student-directed. New members
are always welcome.
Tickets forTite ln~~atitJption
may be purchased at the Nor1oo
Hall Ticket orr~ee.
like the play or

n~

be left unaffected.

-M. T~

Bruwsing library•

I

•

88
r

FISI/f :R

Friday, December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page fifteen

...

�San Jose

Date decided .for
Anxela. ·Davis· trial
PALO ALTO, Calif. (UPI) The murder-kidnap trW of former
UCLA instructor Aqela Davis
was set Wednesday to belin Jan.
JJ in &amp;In Jose, seat of Northern
California's middle-class,
predominantly white Santa Clark
County.
Judge John T. Racanelli, chief
judae of the County Superior ·
Court, said in San Jose a
.. consensus" of jud,es had
decided the trial should be held
there, rather than in Palo Alto,
where Miss Davis is in jail.
1brec hours later, after a brief
cloted-door ~nferenee in Ptlo
Alto · among attorneys and Judse
Richard E. Amason, who is
presidio&amp; over the Davis case, the
trial date was announced.
Defense attorneys said they
mi&amp;ht file more pre-trial motions
which co uld delay the
long-delayed trial again, but at
present there was nothina on the
docket to change the Jan. 31 date.
T,o be moved
Miss Davis is accused in the
Aug. 7, 1970 , Marin County
shootout at San Rafael , Calif., in
which a judge and three othen
were killed.
Since last Thursday, she bas
been jailed in Palo AJto but
officials said she would be moved
to " another facility'' before the
trial.

•

If she is moved to San Jose,
officials said, remodeling would
be required o f that facility for
security reasons.
Santa Clara County . in the t
center of Northern California 's
aerospace and tight industry, luis a
population of slightly over one,
million persons.
Miss Davis was arrested in
October, 1970 , in New York City
by the FBI foll owing the

co urtroom lcidnapina and
sbootout in which a poup of San
Quentin priaoners and an outside
ac:c:omplice who smugled a\ans
into a courtroom took Judae
Harold J . Haley boataae. Haley
and t~ of the kidnapcn were
shot to death.
Miss Davis was accused of
hdpina plot the kidnapinJ and of
bJ#ying auns for it .

In another trial in California,
Prosecutor.. Donald P. Whyte
Wednesday called Huey P.
Newton ... mad doa" and said he
wu really JUilty of first delfCe
murder in the 1967 lcillina of a
poUceman.
Newton is accused of
manslaughter in the death of
officer Jobo Frey . Whyte
delivered closina arauments in
Newton's trial, the third he has
underaone.
The prosecutor said Newton
had advocated the kiUing of police
officers " while they are sipping
coffee" in a Black Panther
periodical and "anybody who
does that is a mad dog."
Newton claims he was shot by
Frey. when stopped for a traffic
check, and blacked o ut so that he
c ou ld n o t remember what
happened immediately afterwards.
Whyte argued that Newton was
conscious enout;b to comm»ndeer
a c ar and to destroy his
ident j(i catio n p~tp ers while
awaiting treatment at the hospital .
In 1968 Newton was acquitted
of murder in the case, but
co nvic ted of ma nslaughter.
However. the conviction was set
aside because of a judicial error
after Newton had served 22
months in prison. A second trial
~rlier this year ended in a hung
jury.

Supreme Court strikes ~
Idaho· sex discrimination law
Washington, D.C. (CPS) - 8y a unanimous vote
of 7-0, the Supreme Court struck down an Idaho
law giving men preference over women, affinnin&amp; for
the ftnt time that the 14th Amendment applies in
sex discritnination cases.

The Court did 1\0t pant the plaioptrs
contention that dilcrimination WJPj))epl unless a
~inl reuoo waa stven for' it, leaviJaB women
the burden of proYin1 in the future that
discrimination practiced aplnat them 1n1 solely on
the basis of sex. Sex ~rimination wOJ be subject to

Chief Justice Warren £ . Burger · wrote the cblllenge only on a cale-by-c:ase basis.
opinion nullifying the state law wh.k:b says'women
./
are not to be treated equally with men •
CODJtitutioall
administrators of estates.

The hiab court bas been bearlns sex
discrimination cases since 1872, four yean after the
sub-comm.ittee approved 6 - 4 a proposed
constitutional amendment outlawinl '1epl 14 th A.meodment became • put of the Constitution.
.
.
In an Dlinoil case in that year it upheld a deoial of
distinctions" between men and women not based on th ri.a. of
tic:e•la
••physiological or functional differences:• But the P Y ea-t WOfllCit-tO prac
w.
full Judiciary Committee voted down the
One of the justkes wrote in that clecilion. "the
amendment a few minutes after the hi8h court\ puamount deltiny and miaion of women are to
decision, saying that women's ri@hts could be · fulfill the noble and beftiF offices of wife and
sufficiently established through the courts.
mother. Ibis is the law of the Creator...
Earlier

in

the

day

a

Senate

Judiciary

The court ruled in 1961 ~t sex discrimination
• was constltutiooal.. In a Florida cue, it ruled a law
constitutional,. that denied women equal ript to sit
Ironically, this amendment had been opposed on juries.
by many women's groups because it was not an
The test case ruled upon last week was IDed by
across·the-bo.rd ban on sex discrimination. As in
an
Ada
County, Idaho woman. Ms. Sally M. Reed.
years past, the s ub-committee's proposed
After
her
son Richard died iD 1967, both Reed and
amendment was watered down due to the efforts of
her
husband,
Cecil R., applied to be administrator o f
Senator Sam J. Ervin (D-N .C.) .
the estate. Because of the law gjving males
The Supreme Court decision was based upon the
preference, the father was named administrator.
clause in the 14th Amendment forbidding denial of
..equal protection of the laws." "To give a
Her challenge was rejected by the Idaho
mandatory preference to members of either sex over Supreme Court in February 1970, which said that
members of the other is to make the very kind of the state legjslature ..evidently concluded that irt
arbitrary legislative choice forbidden by the equal general men are better qualified to act as
administrator than arc women.••
protection clau~~e. " Burger wrote.
Watered down

Studio Arena presents
Tit~ M~ Nobody Know1 , tbe awvd-wianiot rock
mwdc:al · wW open at the Studio Areu Tbater ~
Thursday, Dec. 9 and will run throuth Jan. I.
Winner of the 1970 Obie Award for belt
musicaJ, Tit~ M~ Nobody .K:f-ow• il baed 011 the
funny , ud, poipant and w~ writinp of lbetto
children about thdr daily experience and il
perlormecl by 11 yCMI.ftlllten .,eel dtbt to 18.
Tickets and ltudent diecount information may be
obtained at the Norton HaD Ticket Office.

Fee 1 Rite·····-· ·· 1 ,~

1

*

HEALTH
FOOD
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L
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..._~
Ci~
~
~

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(corner Norwalk)
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.

Rudolph,

PSYCHIATRIC GUEST LECTURE SERIES

.,

is presenting

Prof. George W. Albee
of Psychology
at the University of Vermont

the

P~ofessor

is looking for a Business Managerdesireable, but not n~essary.

and

Past President of the

experience

American Psychological Association
spealtlng on
..Current Trends in Mental Health Delivery"

December 16
8 :30p.m.

'

To apply for an interview call ·831-4113 or see wil at
The Spectrum Office, 3SS Norton.

Capen 139

Page sixteen . "nle Spectrum . Friday, December 10, 1971

I

red nosed
moose

�Mass production·

Edih/es hold health hazards
NEW YORK (LNS) - Walle
down the aisles of any
supermarket, and you see that it's
harder than ever to find food that
hasn't been doctored up with
artificial flavors , colors and other
ingredients that make it easier for
the manufacturers to mass
produce.
The food industry is the single
largest retail industry in this
country, grossing $125 billion a
year. But a huge slice of its profits
comes from using products that

have no nutritional value, and
may, in fact, be danserous to your
health.
Bread manufacturers., for
example, chemically "mature"
flour to make a uniform ,
easy-mixing, impotent white
powder void or its original
nutiition. If thiamine, riboflavin,
vitamin D, niacin, calcium and
iron oripnally removed by this
process are put back into the
bread, then the flour is advertised
as "enriched."

In order to avoid gunldng up
the machinery, industry doesn't
use fresh eiP, but dried eu solids
treated with silicate to make them
free-flowina. Gluten is added,
which is a product of the chemical
breakdown of starch, to make the
bread lighter and e&amp;sier to work
with in the factory .
Since homemade bread, with
its more n.lltUral ingredients,
doesn't lend itself to such thinp
as wrapping around bot dop,
commercial manufacturers add

Attention botTowers!
The Office of Student Accounts, Hayes A, announces that the federal
aovemment considers It mandatory for aU students with National Ddenae Loans
who cease auendina tlais University or who drop below one-half time status (six
boun) to arrante an EXJT INTERVIEW. The interview enables students to clarify
their riabts and responsibilities concernina repayment and to determine a repayment
schedule.'
If you are araduatin• or terminatlna thia semester, please call 831-473~ to
adledule an. appointment for an EXIT INTERVIEW.

Introducing a

Maximus Super.

chemical softeners to keep thelc
bred flexible. Even more
chemicals ue added to keep the
bread from coin&amp; rancid during its
stay in the store, and other
chemical additives are included to
pve the bread a "good" feel to
prevent crumbling and to keep
mold from growing.
One of the original chemicals
used to "matu.r e" flour, called
Agene, was finally banned after
experiments found that it caused
running fits in dop. Not all
potentially dangerous or actually
dangerous chemicals have been
exposed yet, and other chemicals
that have been rt~puted by
scientific ex!lminatlon to be
possible health risks, are still
widely used in commercially
prepared food .
The mass-produced food we
eat may be protected in a sterile
cellophane wrapper, but It often
has the potential for serious
long-range damage.
Cycla mates , artificia l
sweetners, were suspected of
having potential cancer-producing

properties for years befort ' tbcaovemment finally d~lared their
danaer . Food and Drua
Adminutration tests in 11)50
showed a high frequency of lung
tumors and other rare malignant
IJ'OWths in experimental animals,
but they allowed a drug
application for Sucaryl Sodium
anyway.
The basis of FDA practice bas
been described as "innocent until
proven auilty."
GRAS

In 1966 Japanese scientist.s
diJicovered that cyclamates were
transformed in the body to form a
compound which has, in some
cases, produced sbnormali~es in
embryos similar to those
produced by thalidomide .
Nothing was done until I 969
when FDA scientists reported
similar findings .
Cycla·mates were finally
removed from the federal list of
Generally Reco&amp;Jl,ized as Safe
(GRAS) ingredients in 1969.
Products usina cyclamates were
-continued on

jN9e eleht•n-

kind of beer.

Max1mus"'Super is not an ale or a malt l1quor. ~t •t's very d,fferent from ordinary beer One can and youll know
ju~t how different Max1mus Super redlly •s. '&gt;bu11 also know how vve amved at tts name
::NEW STUOE~T ~ENU-:::
~

It ts hnallv srnktng n our t h•ck
skull th at " grP.Il mdtO" IY lnot
stlentl of the student bodv d on't
really have very muc" money 10
spend for good tood There osn' t
much t can d) '''"'h the o•esent
edmm•str.uron to reuorP the
grants. loans, t'IC . whrch Mo .
N11con 's peoplp havt' pftm,n;ued
However. I can como&gt; up w11h a
SP4!Ctal stucJ,.nt menu wh•Ch wrll
IJe r 101dlv "'~tr ~,· terl to sturl!!nu
only whl'H'IJ~ thcv fi&lt;USI prf'so!n t
th~tr 1.0. c.t•ds
Noth•no on thl' m~nu ""''" be
over Sl !'15 .,nd rhE' \l'l~cl!ons wtll
be qu1 te hroad . TI'H~ 1dea 1s based
on J large volume of hus1ness. so
'' vou woulrl Ilk" to ser th1s •dl'a
~ucce~d
•·JI'
•r"' '" vou 10
tnvP\119-JIP '' Some sample dtnner
oll'm~ ,,, '"'l'd below - Sf'tVICe
beg1ns at 7 u .m. Be a m•ddle class
eKecut•ve "''' one dcJvl but come
iiS vou arc :~ncJ eat " tate lunch or
earlv d1nner and se,. how the

..............................
liver and Hrown Rice $1.85
California Swinger .... 1.95
Hamburger Stroganoff 1 .45
Small Sirloin Steak
(Boneless )1.45
Chicken Roqu&lt;'fort ... 1.65
Beef Bourguinon ..... 1 .75
Choice Omelet ....... 1.35
Ground Beef ( Or~anic ) 1.45
Petite Filet M • .~ non ... 1.95
Vegetable rempura ,
Brown Rice1 .45 •
Vegetable Scallops,
Brown Rice 1 .65
Shrimp Tempura , Rice 1.95
Roast Sesame Chicken 1 .65
Egg Plant Parmesia n .. 1 .75
and many daily specials

........ ..._
......................

ILICDMI . . .
~

1m

-.aaa

Friday, December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seventeen

,

{)

�Health hazards ...
required to be removed from the
market by the Fall of 1970. •Jt is
estimated that, in the 1960's,
more than 75% of the U.S.
population used cyclamates as
sweeteners.
The GRAS list was first
compiled in 19 19 when the FDA
used the responses of 355 out of
900 scientists who replied to an
FDA questionnaire on food
chemical additives. The original
validity of the GRAS list has been
criticized by Ralph Nader's aroup
because only 194 of the replying
scientists either had no comment
or concurred that the listed
compounds were indeed GRAS.
The c yclamate issue
condemned more than a billion
dollars worth of merchandise.
Their manufacturers have
appealed to the government fOr
retmbursement, and it is reported
that In one case, products
containing cyclamates have been
shipped off to that reliable
r eceptacle of Ameri c ana ,
Southeast Asia.

Greasy kid stuff

idea, but due to the resultant bad no limit to the possible uses of
publicity, they stopped usina specialty synthetic flavors in
substitute and natural foods."
-tJSG for the most part.
• The Infamous C hinese
That's funny, sure doC$n't taste
Restaurant Syndrome is so named like it's not tomato juice.
because ,t is often associated witb
Articles in tbe trade press
eatina commercial Chinese food discuss all sorts of processing
that co ntains MS G . The devices, artificial flavors,
symptoms are facial preSsure, emulsifiers, preservatives, bindina
burning sensations and chest agents, colors, etc. Have they been
pains. Not everybody develops the carefully tested for causing
syndro me, but it is definitely cancer? Innocent until proven
produced in certain individuals guilty.
after eating quantities of MSG
The American food industry
that American manufacturers of doesn't keep to home either. It
the chemical say are safe.
perpetuates its hoax on an
FDA now requires that MSG international scale as well. The
be identified by name on food baby food industry, for example,
packages, but does not restrict its has been advertising and selling its
use otherwise. About 60 million solid foods and enriched milk
pounds of MSG are sold in this products for years overseas. An
country each year; equal to article published recently in a
almost one--third pound a person. trade journal called Food
Technology , describes the tragic
Specialty syntb~ics
effects of selling products
Most natural color additives are designed for use in this country
GRAS , but the FDA also when they are sold to places
recognius almost I 00 certified where modern utilities don't exist.
colors, whereas Canada allows
only I 5 and the USSR only three. Greed grows
Trade journals for the food
Gerber and MSG
When the canned baby food is
Monosodium Glutimate, whjch industry blata ntl y advertise used, it is "almost impossible" to
"accents'' the taste of just about i mit at ion foods , assuring the give the ~aby an uncontaminated
everything, has also been found to manufacturers that customers will container in a country where "a
be hazardous by scientists. When never know th e d ifference mother may have only one
young mice were either fed or between the real thing and t~e feeding bottle and nipple, no
inje c ted with MSG , t hey fake .
storage space (let alone electricit y
developed a peculiar abnormality
Two-page spreads of tasty pies, or a refrigerator), water only from
Th.,.'s ,..lly no need for rock &amp; of the brain. These results cakes, pastries, cheeses and breads a pond or stream, and because of
roll rwivals with Sha Na Na prompted the experimenter, Dr. are lauded as the end products of minimal fofnla l education,
•ound. The boyt from Columbia John Olney, to sugest that MSG ersatz egp, butter, milk and difficulty in following written
University will help us all k"P the. should be restricted from use in flavoring. A photoaraph of a &amp;lass directions or preparing food s
flllth this s.turday night at the baby foods - one of its bigest of water is labeled "fomato properly.
Peece Bridge Exhibition Center. users.
juice." Below it says "Tomato
"Under these circumstances,"
Also on the bill is Symbol. Bring a
At first , Gerber ridiculed the juice without tomatoes? There's continues the article, " doses of
T-thirt.
milk are administered with large
quantities of bacteria - the result
is starvation and diarrhea, too
We aU know who Leon RuaeU ia now that often leading to death."
While Third World children
he's a bla supentar. But how many people knew
him when he wu a member of the PhU Spector suffer the most dire consequences,
orchestra? Kow about Leon u producer and the same disregard for the health
arranaer of all the early Gary Lewi8 and the of people who eat the food affects
Playboya recorda? Did you know that he aot a this country's po pulation, too.
The food industry continues to
Grammy for " Thia Diamond Rtna?"
Next Tuesday niaht on WBFO's Extrftlilm stuff us with fried com chips,
proaram, a veritable Leon RuiiCU . OIJY ,..01 be aerosol cheeses, imitation meat
broadcast. AU of his work In the rock bwineas and chemical substitutes ; the hope
durina the put dea.d e will be hlahliahted. Tbat'a that the concern for societ y could
midniabt on Tue.clay for the Muter of Space and surpass the industry's greed grows
Time.
dimmer.

Leon Russell

/'I
I I
I

·,

He's busy! Busy!
Busy! Banging out the
Christmas ba~bl"l
Need • gift lift? sr.
1om over to Erik's and
check out the Ice handcrafted diamond
rings and things!

SKI

) 111'11/1 ) l
I1 I(,' (I I
1

1

I

I

STOWE

Send em
to the

JANUARY 2-7 ·

\\bodshed.

Your boss. Your
Your be.t
fr~ end . Yourself. And you'll
get eve~ythi.ng you deserve:
fantaat1c ch1cken wings and
tangy aauce, 50¢ spirits
from 3 P .M. on, free
peanut&amp; to ahuck, giant size
saodwiches in a basket
lt'a atrictly come·as·yo"u.are
to The Woodshedl wher~
the kitchen's alwaya open
and the music's always on.
~he Woodshed. Located
nght next to the Packet Inn
in North Tonawanda. Drive
out Delaware or take the
Youngmann.TheWoodahed's
over the Delaware
o10. ·ve~'""' Bridge. Open from
:30 A.M . every day
••x:ce1&gt;1 Sunday.

(Christmas Vacation)

m~t her· in·law.

Page~ghteen.

HHUSSMIISIIRS SKI CLUB

Eril{
_JEWELERS

81 allen st .. buffalo. n.y.

The Spectrum. Friday, December 10, 1971

ggoq

-includes 5 day-lifts,
lessons, meals,
transportation

LIMITED SPACES-SIGN UP SOON

�..

Basketball Bulls blast Blues
Qf Toronto with fine playing

Pro Football
by Dan C•puti Jr.

by Barry Rubin
Sportt h,'dftt&gt;r

Last week, tlte University of Toronto absorbed a
119-67 drubbing from Buffalo State; and Tuesday
the Bulls blasted the Blues 116-58. However,
Toronto Coach John McManus believes these games
against American opponents are beneficial to his
squad. McManus said: " We are at least 15 years
behind American basketball, and we're just grateful
for this opportunity." The Bulls were also grateful as
they rode a, 55-27 halftime lead into a 58 point
romp.
Fo r the Bulls, center Curt Blackmore looked
more like his o ld self, with m ore mobility aro und the
basket and 25 points (I 2-18) and 16 rebounds. Greg
Bruce, a soph guard, along with junior transfer
forwud Jim Tribble added IS points each . The Bulls
lost Bob Vartanian, their steadying hand in
backcourt, and the loss hurt some as evidenced by
Buffalo's 22 turnovers. Coach Muto pleased with the
Bulls' victory laid the blame for the erro rs o n the
erratic running attack. The Bulls bench also came
thro ugh with flying colors as center Don Van
Deuson , forwards Rick Matanle and Greg Laker and
guards John Forys and Eric Rasmussen all saw
considera ble action.
Laker, the Bulls' transfer forward from Seward
(Kansas) Junior College finally shook loose and
appears to have gained his confidence. Laker's help
off-the-bench figures to solve the Bulls' surprisingly
anemic bench production, Van Deuson , in relief of
Blackmore, proved tough on both boards and
collected 14 rebo unds in limited playing time . In aU
the Bulls shot 52% from the floor and totally
dominated the boards 66·34 .
NCAA participant
Saturday, the Bulls tra vel to Mt. Pleasant,
Michigan to meet the building Central Michigan
Chippewas. The Chippewas, 18·9 last year, have
appeared in two consecutive NCAA College division
tourneys, but must replace four to p players. Thus far
new Coach Dick Parfitt's Chips have shown well on
their home court, winning two of three contests.
Last night the Chips played their initial road contest
wilh the Ball State University Cardinals.
In their firs t contest the Chips topped Alma
8 1~3. but then lost the opener of their invitatio nal
tourney 90-88 to Eastern Illinois. Saturday, the
Chips came back in the consolation over Western
Illinois 88-7 1. To beat the Chips, described as a

physical club, the Bulls must $top Chip captain
1
Kelso. Kelso has averaged 24 points per game, while
center Chris Young has marks of 15 .3 points and 14
rebounds.
On the plus side the Bulls sho uld return jumor
guard Bob Vartanian , who suffered stretched ankle
lipments In a practice session last week . Vartanian
wanted to suit up for To ro nto , but it was fell that
his recovery would be speeded by rest. Last year the
Bulls upset the Chips 80-73 at Clark Gymr
In the freshman preliminary the Baby Bulls
recorded their initial win 97-82, over the Buffalo
State junior varsity , Buffa lo led at halftime, 4441 ,
and coasted to their 15 point margin with a late
spurt over the Bcngals. For the Bulls, guard Bob
Dickinson was high with 2 1 points, while center
Chuck Axe had 18 and fo rward Jim Roche added 16
for the winners. With the victory, Coach Jim Horne's
frosh evened their record at 1·1, with their next
outing Tuesday evening preceeding the varsity clash
with Ohio Northern at 8 :30 p .m . The Baby Bulls'
opposition at that time will be the always to ugh St.
Bonaventure frosh.

Record holders

Before the swimmtng season
started this year Buffalo mentor
WtJliam Sanford had special towc;ls
made, with the words " Buffalo
Record Holder" printed on them.
T h e plan was that wt~en a
swimming BuU set a school record ,
Sanford would literally throw him
a towel for his efforts. Wednesday
naght, in the first home meet of the
year against Canisius, two towels
went in the first two events as
Buffalo won t h e meet
convincingly, 72-40.
George Stam, Buffalo's best
backstroker, started off the first
race, the 400 yard medley relay.
wath a clocking of 59.4 seconds for
the I 00 year.backs{roke. This tied
both the school anb pool records.
Then fr eshm en Jay Rawley
remained undefeatea in the I 000
yard freestyle . Rawley's strong,
consisten t stro ke had ham in the
lead aU the way . His tame of 12
minutes and 8.5 seconds bettered
by almost I 0 seconds the reco rd set
two years ago by former star Bill
Scheioer, who was lookang on from
the stands. Both Stam and Rawley
were presented with thear towels
and a victory kiss from red-haired
Meg ... locke. the fJrSt o f the

Psychology 680
Advanced Social Psychology
Will be offered next term by Dr. Pruitt

Fridays. 12 :30 to 2 :20p.m .
Room 12. 4242 Ridge Lea
Registration No. 170710. 3 Credit hours

Thi\ .\ eminar is the basic Graduate-/ea•el offering in
Social Psychology. It is open to all graduate swdents
in the University .

HAIRSTYL I NG

••••

Bullettes (a group of girls who will
help out with scoring and statistics
at the home meets this year).

THE UUAB FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE

Jue's Theatre Barber
JOSS Kenmore Avenue

()tVimmers splash
by Bruce Engel
Sputrum Staff Wrirrr

The wizard enters. his Last week with a 9 144-8 record for 6 7%
following a ruased 5-7·1 slate last weekend .
New England 24, Jets I 7: Plunkett has Pats flying high after upset
of Dolphins.
Dallas JS, Giants 10: Cow.boys are making a habit o f late season
comebacks.
Kansas City 27, Oakland 20: Raiders making too many mistake$
on offense,
Los Angeles 20, Washington 14: Gabriel should be able to
puncture Skin defense with running of Ellison and receiving of Rentzel.
Miami 28, Baltimore 21 : Dolphins have more o ffense than Colts.
but will need stellar defensive showing to win .
Minnesota 22, Detroit I 7: Lions haven't beaten Vikings in three
y ears; it won't happen this time either if Eller and Co. have their say .
San Francisco 28. Atlanta 24 : This is a must game for both teams;
but 49'ers have more experience an pressure game situa tions.
Philadelphia 23, St. l,ouis 16: Eagles are rapidly gaining
respectability under freshman coach Kh yat.
San Diego J l, Denver 20: Hadl unleashes aerial circus o n suspect
Denver secondary.
New Orleans JO. Cleveland 27: Saints' potent offtnse can score on
anybody .
Pittsburgh 24, Cincinnati 14: Meaningless tilt finds Steelers playin
just as hard as they did in their first ga(Tie.
Green Bay I 7, Chicago I 3: Bears will be lucky to finish at .500
after great start ; Pack still rebuilding.
Buffalo 27, Houston 23: Shaw should exploit Oiler defense with
pitches to J .D. Hill and 0 . J ,

Presents

(II Colvin Theatre)

WIGS - HAIR COLORING
- - - - 877- 2989 _ _. .

JOHN CASSAVETES'

HUSBANDS

Several Bulls star
But those were not the onl y
stars in Buffalo's romp o f Canisius,
which is the first Bull victory of l.he
season. Captain George Thompson
and Dave Sexton were both double
wmners. Thompson swept the
sprints. the SO and p 00 yard
freestyle!&gt;, as well as anc honng the
winning 400 medley relay team.
Sexton took both the 200 and 500
yard freestyles. Sexton won the
200 with ease, but Rawley gave
him a sl ruggle in the longer race.
The closest race was the 200 ya rd
breast stroke where Buffalo's
Marty Barron led all the way before
gettmg napped at the ftnish by
Can isius Captain Gene Adams.
Adams was a double as was diver
Ken Fuller for Canisius. Those
were the only Canisius wmners.
Next meet for the Bulls is Saturday
at Waterloo .tgamst both Waterloo
and Wayne State.
Tht: team dedicated the \ anlsius
meet to diver Tim Leo. leo will be
eligible an the second s~:mester. had
just exp~:nenced a personal tragedy
and mJy not come back .

WITH
JOHN CASSAVETES
PETER FA LK
BEN GAZZARA

'l~
Bird,
NlgtltOwl .

PANCAIBaad
BDDSrBCI&amp;L

Conference Theatre
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
December 10,1 1, 12

1HY1D IIIIONCIAY THIU ft~~Df.Y
UHnlll A.M. ANO AfTU 'P.M.

J /IIIT11INIU( IJIUflS

·}OIJ1~2(/J(Af11W

-~--

6Jc

1'7ii:SII.

a

'\

TICKETS
SOc Before 6 p.m .
75c After 6 p.m .

1 lte cellee
fJI til

•m•

20'

01

T ickets at Norton Ticket Office

UNCLE JOHN'S
OPEN 24 HOU P.S
'-

3300 SHERIDA N DRIVl
3631 UNION RO AD
\

I

Friday , December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nineteen
I

.-

\

�UC1 AUIIIIc•• If tU tllp ~11lill! IIY YM ~ faY!

actJon Ltne

WKIW AND BUffALO FESnVAL IRING lACK

JESUS CHRIST" SUPERSTAR
Authorized Stiawood CQncert Version with Cost of .40

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
FOUR P£1fORMANC£S: SAT., JAN. 29 ,\,rf;... SUN., .tAN. 30 \ ~~.
All seats reserved: MAIN FLOOR f()-$5 BALCONY

t5-U

Tick... .,. Uti• ,.,.....,, Dec. 1•, et hffele f ...inl Ticket Offk • , llei...· Mir- L~~, 1-11 .,.,,
e cc.,.t•4 witll .,._.....,. ....._....... •"••l. .• ): U. L N.n.., ...II, l tete Cel.... lkll., Offi..1 ..... Tlclleh,
......_,.. Pleoe, HI•...• fel...
,

Italian
Menu

EDUARDO'S

Veal Cutlet Parmigiana ......... $2.95
Veal Scallopine Marsala ..... .. ..... $325
Veal Francese .................. 325
Eggplant Parmigiana ................ 2.95
Shrimp Marinara ............... . 3.75
Shrimp Scampi ............... ...... 3.76
Chicken, Veal or Sousage Cacciatori .......... $3.50

,,

Home Style Cheese R.violl
Baked Stuffed Rie-toni (meat)
Baked Manic otti (cheese)
Baked Stuffed Shells (cheese)
Home-Made Baked Lasagna

S225

Soaclt!.tt'1

Wlth~Mnt Balls
W1th MMt Sauce
With Tomato Sauce
W1th Marin«• Sauce
W1th Mushroom Sauce
With Butter Sauce

•

·-------------------------------·
EDUARDO'S Take-Out Service
•Pizza•
SMALL LARGE
$120 $1 .80
.30
.40

of each ingredient
Green Olives-Sweet Peppers-Pepperoni-Black Olives-Mushrooms· Hot Peppers·
Onions· Anchovies·Sausage

ENJOY A WING DING

. , - - - - - - - - - - - - --

A Del•c1ous Plttttttr of Ch1cken Wmgs Sttrvt!d ~~tllfh
Ct~t11ry P1t!Ctts ttnd • Cup of Blue ChtJese Dressmg.
PLEASE ORDER.SWEET , HOT OR MILD
SINGLE ORDER 1 50 -DOUBLE ORDER ..2 .50
THREE ORDERS OR MORE $1 00 p11r order

pbone

~3

4•

3 773

·-----------------··-------------·
3297 Bailey Ave.-Res. 834-3773
The Colleges
Spring '72 Catalog
IS on the way
It hould be available on campus by December 17th.

Single copies are now located at:

• I 06 Diefendorf
• Norton

Hall

• Trailer No. 7
• Outside 133 Crosby

'

Page twenty . The Spectrum . Friday, December 10, 1971

Q : What is the laat day that I can pay my tuition this semester
without hariq my reaiatratlon rejected?
·
A : As we noted last week, the last day for Uris is Dec. 1S, which is
next Wednesday.
Q : I am qwtti.na tchool at the end of the semester. What are the
procedures and implication• involved in doina such • thina?
A: First, you need to fill out a resignation form. This can be
obtained from the Admissions and Records Office, or the Office of
Student Affairs (201 Harriman Library) or the Division of
Undergraduate Stud ies (Diefendorf). This form, once you have filled it
out, must be signed by your advisor and by a staff member from ,he
Office of Student Affairs. It then is return ed t o the Admissions and
Records Office. If you intend to return the following semester we
suggest that you fill out at the same time a form for readmission to be
activated the foiJowing semester. This form can be obt ained from the
Admjssions and Records Office. In a ny case, if you withdraw from the
University following this procedure, you will have little trouble in
reapPlying.
Q : Wby is tbe llahtlna in the library so poor?
A : It's a matter o f subjective judgement how bad it really is.
tiowever , the University and the Libraries in partic ular are hard hit by
the current budget problems. There are many improvements that the
University w ould like to make but can't because o f the lack of money.
This is just one or them.

Q : How can I find oufmore about the courses in Women's Studies
Colleae?
A : A catalog is available for immediate referen ce in 108 Winspear
and will be available for ceneraJ distributio n soon at 108 Winspear and
133 Crosby. Instruc tors offering co urses will h o ld office hours with
students Dec. 9 - IS at the times posted at the Winspear location.
Permission of instructor Clln be obtained during these office hours.
Q : Wben can araduat e studen t. reaister?

With Chicken Liver Caruso ......................................... $225
With Italian Sausage ............... . ................................ 2.25
Linguine with White or Red Clam Sauce ....... . ..................... 2.25

CHEESE
EXTRA ORDER

I·

A : Graduate students should pick up their registration packets at
the Admissions and Records office from now to Dec. 23. They sh o uld
return them to the Admissio n s and Records Office as soon as they have
them filled out. This can be done by mail or in pe rson at the office. It
Is advisable, h owever. to do ll as soon as you can.

Q : I will be 18 sh ortly. Can I reaister to vote? H ow about the
primaries? I live In Buffalo.
A : The Board of Elections for hrie County tells us that central
registration of voters beg.tn on Dec. J and will continue until 30 days
before the 1972 primary electi on (t his date IS uncertain . but it most
likely will be 1n June). Res1dents of Ene County can repster at the
Board of Elections. I 34 West Eagle Street, tn downtown Buffalo . The
offices are open Monday through Friday from 9 a .m. to S p.m. and on
Sawn.lays from 9 a .m . to I:! n oon . To reg1ster in Ene County. you have
w prove that you are a permanent member of the community. Proof of
th1s m1ght be t h at you lave w1th your parents in Erie County. Or. 1f
your parents are from another city or county. u dnver's license or car
regist ration g~vmg your name and .1 loc11l addn:ss w1ll be acceptable.
Q: I chink cbac I' m preananc and headed for a nervous breakdown.
Whac can l'do?
A : You say that you •·ttunk" that you are pregnant. We suggest
that you rush and not walk to the HeJlth Services in Mi~:hael Hall dnd
make sure. They wtll as~:crtain whether or not you are pregnant. After
that, there are a vanety of avenues open to you. We suggest that you
tsee som eone tmmediately for counseling on this matter. The doctors 10
the Healt h Services will help. Or, if you wish. see som eone in the Office
of Student Affairs and Services (201 Harriman library) o r m the
Counseling Cent er (in the basement of Harriman library). There is help
available and yo ur problems can be solved. Please seek help now!
Q : I jusc received a parkina tic ket that I feel is unfair. Wbat can I
do?
A: T h e best thmg to do Ill to call the officer whose name appears
on the ticket as the 1ssutng officer. His name IS on t h e bottom of the
ticket. Campus Security tells us that you may be able t o explain it to
tum and if your complacnt IS JUSt , somethcng may be able to be done
about ct.

Q: What exactly is the Alumni Association and how could l find
out about the trips they sponsor?
A : The Alumna Assoctatcon t5 JUS! what the name st(ltes : it is the
official organazallon pf the Univers1ty for graduates of The S tate
University of Butfalo. Graduates are automatically enrolled as members
of the Asso~:iatcon for the first year after they graduate. After that , to
belong. they must pay dues. The association sponsors a number of trips
and tours during the yea r as a part of its program . If you are interested
in any of th ese we suggest that you call the Alumni Association ( 123
Jewett Parkway) a t 831412 I.
· Q : Where can I take' civil service examinations for federal and state
jobs? I am interested in the field o r social servicea.
A : There are many and sundry civil service examinations offered
each year by local, county , state and federal agencies. F o r information
on the area in wttich you are interested we su&amp;gest you ca.IJ the
following: State: Department of Civil Service, I West Genesee Street,
Buffalo, 8424260. federal : Civil Service Commission , 68 Court Street,
Buffalo, 842-2834 .

The Spectrum•
SliJ Board 1•
.

~

�Hod&lt;ey Bplls scheduled for
challenging games with Ohio·
byMidiMIZW!til
Spectru"' St•lf kMter

Tbe undefeated hockey Us have 10ne oo a
rather distaot r&lt;*l trip to Otuo State University.
This weekend marla the first time Buffalo will e.et"
CDCOUAter this ICbool, as two pmes have been
scheduled, ooe toftiattt and one tomorrow. Without a
doubt, Ohio rqwaeots the molt severe test for
Buffalo this aeuon.
Altbou&amp;h these c:ootesta are not a-rt of Division
II play, a sood thowina would peatly aid Buffalo's
~I advlnc:ement in boc:key. Buffalo will play
them twice more at home next semester, uaurin&amp; the
BuDs of an equal opportunity to prove themte!va
apinst this club.
Ohio State is a-rt of the Central Collepate
Division Ilona with auo Univenity, St. Louis and
Bowlint Green. Coedl Ed Wn,ht bas indicated that
they are ..on flU 'fitb the ~ I teams...
Obio ltaDS to be .-rtkula.rly touch at home.
After bowq twice at St. Louis, a conUn&amp; team in
the aation, they returned home to whip them twice.
Thil year's record stands at S-2 continuin« last year's
impressive 21-9 performance. The fact that Ohio
State is uodefeated at home only makes the prospect
of a Bull victory aU the more sweeter.

-

Great upec:btioM
Ohio's strenKf.h lies in their experience and
The services of Les Tepllcky, who wouJd ably
consequently, solid positional play. Ohio Coach fill in a weakened defense with hJs ~Wesence, are in
Dave Chambers bouts two AD-American candidates question. He has been hampered by a leg injury. It
in center Ray Nycn, a topbomore and defenseman would be no surprise to see fluhy Russell French in
fJdon Simp100, I IeniOr. ()bjo's sreat expectations the nets for one game, although the more
this year aJso ride with their 13 aenion, compared to '"experienced Mike Dunn wUI Ukely set the call
Buffalo's seven. If you can imasJne some of our tonight. The Bulls will have to receive additional
younser players in a couple of years, such as John scorins punch from their no. I tine of Newman,
Stranp whoJe moves and puck control haYe already Beaver and Nicholson if they are to win. Thus far,
opened many an eye and dropped many a jaw, you the scoring has been fairly well balanced, the center
may then realize Ohio State's capabilities.
icemen of each line, Newman , Dolmase and Stranaes
Coach Wrilflt look.s for ... roup and tough drawiq particular attention.
game, characterized by the west em ltyle of play." If
All considered, Buffalo looks to be a slight
the referees are a bit more tolerant than what we've lmderdog this weekend . However, lf the Bulls play to
seen so far, perhaps the Bulls at least won't have to their potential, nobody can embarrass them . The key
b3ttle the penalty box.
is the 'if.'

Intra-city rivalry

Matmen smoth~r Ben!(als
Gerinaer

by Dave
Stoff Wr1tc-,

S~t·trom

What can be done to stqp an
avalanche? The wrestling Bulls'
opponents are faoed with that
problem. The Bulls sto rmed to a
4-0 record WednClday night as they
buried crosstown rival Buffalo
State. St.(). It was the Bulls' most
k&gt;psided victory of the season .
Ex-Bull sur and current
assistant coacll Scott Stever
summed it up when he said :
..Buffalo State has a young team.
just a step below us, but they
weren't in our class tonight." The
Benpls certainty weren' t in the
BuUs' class as Buffalo scored seYen
victories by pin. The cUstinction of
notc:hin&amp; &amp;be quickest pin of the
niJht went to BuffaJo•a In-lb.
starter, Fred Marcello. Marcello.
who transferred to Buffalo this
year, used the fireman's carry to

take his opponent, Charl~y
Catalano. down to the mat.
Catalano was quickly pinn~d in just
one minute. 24 seconds. Marcello's
victory. anticlimactic as far as the
result of the match was concerned .
gave the Bulls a 42.() lead after the
first eight bouts.
Quick lu.lfalo start
The Bulls began with a rush as
their first three wrestlers aU won by
a faU . Ken &amp;matz, starting at I u(
lbs. pinned his opponent, Joe
Gustaferro . in the second ptoriod .
Two more pins gave the Bulls a
qu1ck I 8-0 lead which they never
refinqwshed. Ted Lawson's vic tory
in the fifth match gave the matmen
a 27.() te.d, which clinched the
match at that point, sin~ the
len&amp;als did not suit up a
heavyweight. Lawson defeated
State captain Roger Wolfe, a
transf~ from Coming Community

'

College and an ex-teammate
quite a few of the Bulls.
In the wake of their last win . the
Bulls are left with leVen starte~
who are still undeafeated . This·fa~.:t
impressed State's I 58-Jb. wrestler .
Tim Ounmyer, who stated , "the
BuJis are one of the best teams that
I've !leen this year. We lost to
B10ckport by the same score. The
Bmckport·Buffalo match should
be an excellent o ne ." Tbe Bulls will
meet the Golden Eagles at Clark
GymnaSJum on Jan. I S.
The Bull~&gt;. after settling the1r
crosstown nvalry for another year ,
will journey Saturday to coach Ed
Michael's hometown, Ithaca, to/
meet 1he Ithaca Bombert.'
Followins the Ithaca match, the
Bulls will face their sternest test of
the first hllf of the season as they
conclude t~ir homestand apinst
powerful Lock HaYen on Saturday
aftemoon.Dec. 18.

UUAB (linion Board). TICket Offire.
University Trav.el*
Cm/1 Gnter •
Undercurrent •
I

Friday, December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page twenty-oot

�00011 condltton, Ur.l or belt otMtr.
139·3754. \

ILA.IIIIIII
AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED ADS mey be P IKed
Monda)' tl"u Frlellly between 9 a.m.
and 4 :30p.m. at 35$ Norton Mall ,
TM£ COST of an ao tor one dav Is
$l.25 for the first 15 worcu ano a .05
for Men edotllonat word.

tO FIOflelil? Coup.. - ·
,.._ .Jan. lit. ~ c;~n s~ or
Aty-. 13e·2761.

"~OTMER'S MEL~R"

A RIO£ TO NVC It Mlntt offered for

wanted, thrM
afterrtoons per - k. Lltftt work In
ggoct home. Gooct Alary. Mutt N¥•
own trans!M)rtalion. Call 618-6al J .
Wf\NJ'£0:

"M£LP WANTED" aos cannot
discriminate on the oasiS of ,.• • co tor,
creea or national 01191n to any 111tent
Cl .e ., preferably Is still CllscrlmlnatOfy) .
....OUNO" acts will be run frM of
char. . for a maKimum ol 2 Clays and
)5 WOldS.

GoOd used t\.141d room.
mooel preferaDre . Call
Anne IS4-5285 nl1fhts.

sm.1l' froor

WANTED : Retpanlll:lle driver B u lriiiO to e o uloet, CotofliGo - to
oe llver car a•l car 111~
re•mbu rMCI. R e t . r -. Ci111156~17 1.

WANTED

PLA V8 0V dat lrl$ p .ayt fl. LU¥1
name anel numoer In 8911 22, Spectturn
olfice

M£LP WANTE I) Wa are open lor
Duslnes Chrostr ,as O;av eno we are
recruttlnt worMers at Clouote t ime rete
lor wa tt reue s, o lahwasten, etc.
Appll~ants lor these lObS will be glvaf\
pr1ference lor ..,.ortc In the com ing
term . BlaciCsmlt h Shop 816-9211 ,
111· 1757.

MAI..E, FEMAL E - rattaurant 1talf
reQultlel for all I)Ostlions at nrstorlc
Roycroft Inn . Tnose neat, personal)te,
w1111nv to IMrn, may apply In person
40 s . Grove St., E . Aurora, M- F, 1--..

CASM• R ip off your CladCJy's war
trophies, med111s, badges, ft.,s, da191rs
- 11\Ythlnt l Call Dan 615·2420.
DRIVERS wanted to Utlcl toys to WISt
Senetca School tor retarded children,
Sat. 12/ 11/ 71 . Call Judy 131·2431.
FLVING TO NVC this ,wMICert01
PIMM Ill w jth 4·year•Oid. MOderate
' "· 139-3754.
BUSINESS STATISTI CS term ~per of
fine Quality neeoecl. Will ~Y
rMSOI\II:&gt;Ie IN. Call Larry 132·(l395 ,
TVPIST t to correct and type
(naturally) a ~per . GOOd anel cnup ,
lmperath••t Carl , Stu 131 ·2797.
O£SP£RATEL V nMCJeCJ : Russian
Milt ory 222 ~Pet'S from SP""fl
semeter 1971. Call 131·1942. Keep
lr)'lnt PIMSI.
DOWN SLEEPING
Mark 194·3917.

b~

lor chup. Call

I

ROOM OUTS I OE: Buffalo for my cat
and myMII. CooP«allvlly appreciated .
Call Roy 131·3244 evenlft91, mornlncrs.
MALE/ FEMALE to travel In camper ,
21 over. Snare expenses. c .. t Rot
137-0159.
LAC ROSS£ PL.A VEAS - any .Ue,
CJrad or under9fad lor U .B . L~rOIM
Club. 1 I nave Cletermlniltlon, come to
meetlnt. Frldily, oec. lOth at 3 p .m . In
b41sement Clark Gym .

~IVINQ

.-£MALE to ... rtlcJ ...te In , _
colletlate llvlnt 111 p erll~ 1ft
M.c:Oonaf• H&lt;llt. Call I :U·2. . .

APARTMENT FOR RINT
ROOMS ,.OR RENT - In Nll~Pfl FallS
aru . Private • · bedroom, lrl·level with
c olor T . V ., l)lr , patio. P11vate
bedrooms. AppiiCilnt mwt be m.tture,
ratponsiDre •ndrvlduar. RIOe potU. . . to
and from u.a. $30/Wk, lncruelel all.
C a ll llob Strilchan , 131 ·•lo~,
297·5 315 Of 212· 9163.
•
4·8E:DROOM -rtment 101 r«~t . All
ull lltfes lncludld. Furnlthed, 5 beds.
J5 · mlnute walk from umpus. Call
132·1677.
TWO Gl A L.S wanted to thare nice
modern house . Own rooms ;
..washer/dryer; conventent. 160/m-tn
• utllllle. Cilll Chris or ,..V 135-2642.

137.()474

David.

8UICK Wildcat, posltr.c:Uort,
mounted snow
tl •• , two spares, mecllan!GIIty
u .. ~lettt,
aDte, S275. 892·1143.

N£EDED r RtO. to Florida - about
Qec. 15th. Will .._.,. cttlvl~ellpen-.
CaiiLtu or Shelly 131-4761.

FAIOQITTI!: re~l..,ltor, 5 .5 cubic
fMt ver y~ un, 9fMt lor dorms or bilr.
Call IJ7·l461\ alter 6.

Milt

T----y,

0«.

)4 ,

RIDE NIEED£0 Watt (Sin P'ranciKO) ,
etc. Will Shire e11pen-. Dec. 16 or
after. Cafl 117·1313 ClaM.
AIDE WANTED to Botton or Albany
0«. 23. W ill lhilre lllpense. Call
Carole 8 38 1922.
MAL£ AIDER w.anted to LA/CIIIf.
Share expen- 1 VW ; L.Uvlnt lbOUI
Chrinmas, one WilY only, Call eob at
831~301 (a.m . only). Luve n1me ilnd
plio-.
AlDERS WANTED to LO"fl Island.
LU¥1"9 Dec. 10 - one way only. Ciill
81rb41rl 836.-2304.
AIDE NEEDED to Lont ISland
TueiCIIV or WeciMSdiV IIIII I WMIC. Will
.nare . ..,.,.... c .., ceo at •34· 7910
after 9 •.m.

w•
-"'

AIDE NEEDED out
after Oet.
15. ~h.ve •~v•ne
••pen- to
Colorado or c ..u. P I - utt Nancy or
PiiUJ 13e-2241.
TWO WOMIEH want riO. to l"lortda.
Will t f t - dflvlnt aMI U p M -. L-e

.voune Dec.
131-47&amp;1.

J5tn -

OPENING Dec. 1 .. , A - to "The
Pliloole,.. f ...urlf-. h.vMICtlfts of AsU,
Africa, ttM A-lcM. Klcb ton, ~.
UltUIUII, mOderately llf'~ tift 11-.
144 Alleft. ~~~ 112,.2a3 fiH hourJ.

COMPLET£\. V furnlthed 5.._,oom
hou•, 2 baths. , _ CMnpus. Av..llllle
Jan. 1st.
135~312 .

"'THE P£0fi\..E," a fOlk ...U bOUtiQUe. '
._turlnt «ttnk ....,.., JeweHy .n4l
l\lltelelafts. 144 AIIM 112..2a3.

J FEMALE pad '*IHIIftt preterrea.
Share room, luxurioUs. CloM campus
..,t. 150. 137· 1917 after 5 .

RAMBLER 1M4 - lu• lmpected 1150. MWI ..... C.vt't a"oN lneur-.
Price netotl•••• · Serafin cr•t
741·3110.

ON£· B£DROOM IP«tment, 295
Vermont St., ..,.ll..,le Jan. 1. ItO plus
utilities, couple preferred. Call Don
Weyand. N2-4696 .

RIDE BOARD
TO/ NEAR 8rootctyn. Arouncl 0«. 26.
Return arouncl Jan. 1 . For hWO.
134-1713 _,ift9S. ThllnJC .

1M4

cru•so"''t •c, redlo,

t-...

----------------sw.rs ,,. v•ry good condltton, on ly one
YMf Ute. ROH•VOOI Str•tO' I 205 em .
Call Nell . .e..eeu.
FOA SP I..E
Almost , _ &lt;JoUI)Ie
m.ttres~. LIOJC Sl)tlnt ano
lt ..
cheap, litO 111111 portable metill closet ,
Ce •t 837 0393.

on• -

19&amp;2 vw, 9000 runn tn9 ..o ..o tllon .
Cheap, mull 1111. Cilll Janet 884 -1968.

MARMAN · t&lt;AAOON Slii'IO rec• lver
330, 1 YMr otct. excellent condition.
Clllll LM U2-66. . , U 75.
GESTEPNER MOdel 120 ClupiiCiltll\9
m.chlne for All, S60. Call 137-3916.
I!ULLS.OILEAS Ueket for Sunday's
tame. 87. s - n tlcJcet loclt•on on
50·varct line. &lt;;all O.W at 134-6699.

..OA SALlE: N- Aftnanl coats, .._,
quality, belt PfiCI, mtdl ilftCI .._..lar
llnttft. Call N2.3277.
AlA I"ORCE: parkil , men's _.a 42,
.,..,. Worn only 2 months, $30. Call
AnCSy 132-4933.
1964 TR-4 GLASS BEL TEO tires.
, !:luns good, 2 t ops, $350. 8111
8 37 -6214.
lt66 MUST ANG cnnverl•b le V ·l,
3-sp...:l. e l'cellent cond•t•o n . Many
, _ ~ru, $ 700. B ill 137~214.
'G3 FORO VAN rebuilt lf\91n&amp;, new
ca~ . fuel pump, va rves. rtft91. N...:ls
some work , S175. Howle 18 l ·1 M2 .

A~IA Cl AC:SIC.AL t u•t•r. lncludlf\9
CiiSe An d song boot.J. Excellent
condlt•Oft, 1 60 836·11147.
G IBSO N S .Q . solid bOdY electric Drancs
l'ew, $ 200 or bast offer. 883·2703.
8LAC I&lt; PER S IAN lamb coat, mink
trim, s•z• 10 · 12 Gooel condttron, very
cnMp. 8 3 2-6323 anytime.
) 960 VOLVO good condition
OOdy-wiM lftd mechanically. Good
fllla!lle ttanJDorUllon . Must Mil . Call
134·9731.

FOR SAL£ nearly , _ twin
m.tttrws, bOll sorlltfl and bed boaro.
c•tl37~ .
•

GUITARS : Gibson , Guild, Martin,
Gurian, •c. 8uy, ...1, trade. TheSttift9
Sh~. 524 OntMio, 7 p.m.-9 p.m.,
csallv. Sat. 12•5, 174~.120.

MICAOSCO~.

MICHELIN (2) 1551115 '*\ldcled -

sn•..,, LIM

WESTSIDE APARTMENT for 1'11"1 lele.al for 3 to 4 ttuctents, $110/m-tl'l
InclUdes utllltlw. 11,·3535.

c••

RELOCATI N G s e lll"t apt .
refrl,.,ator and stowe, tMie, six d\11"•
T.V., * - · •c. R-nlllle. Cilll
INfY Lou 833-410 1 .

81noeul-t·

Relc:'-1.

PleiJ.Se Join Us
for
SUNDAYBRUNOI
12:30 p.m .. December 12th
SIGMA D£1.TA TAU SORORITY HOUSE
-QA..a.unc(oppoeite tile caiDpul)

• DISCUSS IMIDbenllip il ....iouiiOIOrity!
• MEET ptl wt.o wttco.e a ..,..,..,
• CREATE your owa poap!

1963 BUICK L~. E**leftt
rvnnlnt COftdltl-. 1300. C ..t 8CIO
Strac:flan, 131-4802, 297-6315 or
2a2-'9163.

R.S. V.P. by S.tvrdlly to

1965 TAIUMfiH TA4. t.bny •tru,
but t..-s wonc. S350. L - , _ . .

ilt 13~-5121.

Get Even with

Yo4r Parents.
Remember the New Christy Minstres Album, the Bible, the
ruor, the Collected Works of Billy Grwm th~t you ~rents
lovingly plxed under the Christm~ tree for you last ye.v?
Well now you can strike bxk!
Giveyourporents

t'

THE SpEC~II\UM

••

·"'

..................._.... azs
.- .as•_.. .. . .. .......
• SNC.~

•-ass•m••W
. ....
1•

Special

. . .11.0, .., . 14114

CHRISTMAS RATE
(Rea. $4.50)

i - -=~:··--····---·-·---···--··-····-· · · · ·
••

ADDRESS-•••••••--...............--.··-··--········· ··-····
CITY........-·····-·······-··......nA TE•••••••.- .2.1P·-·············

Pap tW.ntJ·two . The Spectnma • Friday,~ 10, 1971

�F EMALE roommete w1nted to th1re
mod«n apartment, l Oomln. walklnt
d istance from campu$, $5e lt'ut
•ectrlc. 837·2195.

CLAIIIPIII
tires. N- 81 10. Used one seuon, 860.
833·2806.
TV lSI' Emenon po rt able, VHF-U H F,
1 y• r old, $60 - or .,..t o ffer.
894·2538.
REBUILT V.W. f.st l»eck runs
fantastic, cyclone eJtllaust, new tires,
rebuilt c..trbur•t ors, etc. $ 800. ~lcnle
832.. U3 .
USED BEDROOM furniture - double
bed, dask, ctreuer, nlte table reuonablt - Ken , L y nn . 835·7082.
LADIES BUCKLE SKI boots, slz.e 7
narrow. EJCcellent. 130. Cell 831·5472
csavs1 634 -11625 eve.. Stephen Margolis.
VOLKSWAGON BUG 1967 . EJCColllent
condition , 8900 or best o ffer, Call
after 4 p.m. 877·2081,
VELVET
Kaftana, neavlly
embrolcterect, tunic and maxi lengths ,
at "Tile People," a folk arta boutique.
1« Allen. 182-6283.

them II TIPPII'' Taco HouH, 23151
S heridan Or, (I«OU f(.Om PUtt•Putt
Golf) 838·3900.

FOUND - I»IKIC .. 9f'aY female tiger
cat, white collar, w hite pews, vicinity
Hert.. a. Voorll- 837·1232.

OPENING DEC. 1st, annex to "Tile
People," feeturlng hlndcr~fts af Alia,
Afrlc..t, tne Ametlc..ts. Kids toys, too.
Unutull, moCierat.ty prlc:ect gilt Items.
144 Allen. Clll 8112-6283 for nours.

DIS APPEA RED - O rpn\c; Cnem Lab
notebook In or between Hocnstetter
and Ac:f!•on , Menct•tory for course
completion. Cell Klren at .6g3.QOIO.

SUSAN• so, someone Is flnllly
gra&lt;1u1t1ng from Buffalo. How'd you
do 117 Now It 111 begins. - t..uv,
Blrbarl, Jane, C l•uct la a~ct Jo-Ann ,
BARBARA - you were too good for
Buffalo. We h ope .Cornell pU1ys hlfder
• m•. We'll even th ink of vou from
time to time. LUll - Jane, Clludla,
Susan 1nd Jo·Ann.
L VNN - 269 LaSalle will not be the
ume w ltnout you. Love, Pnyllls,
Rutllellen, Ell~ and Co.
WNJ - come live and plly with me In
the Sunanlne, Altlf Boy.

ROUNP. OAK tllb le, 815 : oak chairs,
15 • I klngstze watetbed/ frame, 830;
3'117' worktatlle.tdesk, 810. 875-4671.

VELVET
Kaftans, heavily
embroldere&lt;l, tunic and maxi lengthS,
at "Tne People," a folk ar1s boutique.
144 Allen. 882·6283.

'71 VW super beetle, AM/FM, 5 fOOd
tires, sunroof, ex~llent condition.
Mike 876.0256.

EIS r 1 am only trying to take up lime
to fight o ff fear of being alOne w it h
myMif and I don't know If I'm using
yOU.

NIKKORMAT FTN; 50 mm, Nlkon
lenil 85·205 mm Vlvlllf te1ezoom
Ions; l•tner c:n.S; 401oae·uP bellows,
$300. 834·5384.

NY'S HOTEL. TUDOR o ffers SUN Y
rates. Reservations and lnformltlon
832·0611.

DEPENDABLE 1964 F11c:on
convertible. Bleck with white top.
Good _general, c:ot'Mlltlon. Winterized,
Inspected, rMsona-..e. 837·7554.

BEAUTIFUL ha(lctm.cte gold a nd sliver
1-etry - wedjllng rings - a1 sensible
or1ces. J .P. Tile Goldweaver, 655
Elmwood at Fet&lt;ry St. 181·3400.

SUPER 88 L.\Jlcury Oldsmobile 1963,
perfect condition. A r•l nonev for
little money I Call 886.e178 .

NIGHTTIME- Treettouse and all the
little owlS wlsn you a very nappy
birthday, love 11ways.

SN OW TIRES, 2 Dunlop CW44 , size
G78· 14, wn ltewall , used, 815. Call
Gary 835·5851.

WE NEED a cnangel House swap,
anyone? Looking for 3-4 bedroom
house or apt . In exchange fo r
4·bedroom noun nur c..tmpus.
834· 3401.

STEREO CASSETTE PIIYtrtrecoroer.
Excellent condition, 850. 683-0635
after 6 p.m .
TV's - table and floor mOdels, $30 or
best offer. Also repair TVs and stereos.
Call Ed 896-4409 evenlngi.
SABRE ticket season ticket - location
Section 14 Grays for 6 pmes during
vacation. Call Dave at 8 34-66gSI,
MODULAR Elec:tropnonlc: stereo
sy11em. AM·FM tuner, B.S .R . c:nanger,
&amp;· track tape dec:k, 2-way speaker
systems. Need c:asn - $80. Call Joe
634·5621 .

STUDYING for finals got you down'
Let Sha Na Na get you ofl, Sat. Dec.
1111 8 •30.
DEAREST Bunkte - nope you nad 1
very hiPPY blnhdl. Here's to an lnune
life - wllh sincerity and love, puny.
DESPERATE! Mustn't flu'1k out.
Anyone knowing easy teachers or
courses, please' please' Call Jonp
83S·8704 .
"SNOW IN WINTER," don't luck wlln
mv mind, your mouth won't ever get
better. Skip,

PERSONAL
WHAT'S a burrito? II Is I Mulc:an
sandwlcn filled wltn ground bHf or
retried beans, en-• and c;nlll con
carne. Bean, $ .49 , m•t. $ .69. Try

FEMAt..E roommate wanted -4 own
room off Henel. Rent $43.75. Call
837·2889.

LOVABLE ART student would like to
snare apt. with same - co-ed preferred .
Lo~~te, 876-6180 Donna.

ONE GIRL needed to sttare room .
Modern furnlsned apt. acron street
from campu,. Call 83!&gt;-4603 .

AMHERST ·Delaware. M1le or female.
Own room. Tenofl"'lnute ctr~ to
scnool. C4111 K~tn 877·5270.

THREE female roomm1tes to snare
apt. spring semester, Maln·Hertel area,
own room, t.e6 • utilities. Call
837.0395 .

1 OR 2 female roommo~~tes for Weslilde
Apartment
$60/mo. eactt (Includes
utilities) . Call anytime 886·353S.

FOUND - Baird Lot - 110rgeous tiger
cat. white feet, amber plastic c ollar.
Roy Hutc h ings. 831· 3631.
LOST : Women's gold Hamilton watcn
Sentlmer~tal vAlue. Generous reward
837· 1J18 .
FOUNO: Hayes 181 during Resellrcn
Foundation Application . Man's
ralnco.u , Size L . Call 4 722 sn1r1ey
Stout.
FOUND at Marcuse lecture
black
men's wallet conUins perso nal
papers. Call 886·7182 lor Info .
JACKET found In 5th floor C lement
Lounge. Call 831· 3967 to odentlly
Found before Tnanksglvlng.
FOUND - please clllm 1962 Ford
EC0'10ifne telepnone truck, standard ,
6 -cylln der . Call Merry 838·2768.
FOUND - blue tinted prescriPt ion
lensed glasses - 90id rims
may c laim
In Tne Spectrum Ofllc:e, Rm . 3SS
Norton

DO YOU WANT TO GET HIGH?

Call For Information

MY

RETAIL

PRICE

.•

• $30
$15
$8

t11Ci

AL

~

~oz.

STEVE - 883-4707

ROOMMATE wanted - male/female,
compatible, serious IICa&lt;lem lc:ally. Clll
Oo~~vlct after 6 . David 883·7273.

MALE TO Sllare room, $40 plus
utilities . Call arter 4 :00. Big apartment,
tnree other guys . 367 Grider .
894·2340.

FEMALE roommate wanted lor Jln . J
own room
furnts.hed apt.
Engl-ooct and Main locatton - c111
837.0206. -

FEMALE r o ommate wanted
lmmedlltely. Rent S50 1)4r montn plus
utilities. Opp, VA Hospital C all
836.006S.

ROOMMATE wanted In currently
co-ed flat , furnished , own roo m . Prefer
female. Hertei ..C olvln are1 . 877-0137 .
MATURE femillle

TWO FEMALE roommates, own room.
2 blocl&lt;s from campus, SS4.20+ .
fyr nlsl"!ec:l , U3-Q~Z7 .

*

10

Share modern

epartment

with

same,

MC~&lt;-"f"'"· ld•l kK:atlon. Phone

875·f219.

COUPLE w ishes to ti'IIIO'e lerte nom!
wltn e notner couple, $50 mo. r.n
816·2133 aftet 7 p .m.
.J

\

ROOMMATE went~
own room ~
151/ montn . Stlfln and Teuton. A fi nd
1bocte. Call 836·7799.

t
I

~ FEMAt..ES to tl'lare large lloo.faia.

i5-fnlnute walk from ~mpus, available
Jan. 1st. Cookie. 838·2697.

• MISCELLANEOUS
MOVING? N.-d , helpf Clll Nul II
032.0188.
'
MUST GIVE aw1y male d09, mixed
breed, bl1c:k , seven monthS. Vtry
aft~Uonate. 137·0430.
HELP! Will pay fM Abnormal Psych
222, final fro m last year. C all evenlntJ
838·2890.
TVPING - business or personal - term
pal)4rs, mna malllnga, reasonable rates.
Call 937-6050.
E)(PERIENCf!b typln4, term paper~ •
dlsMrtatlons, t hesis - 833· 1597.
ANYONE - Nl191ra Falls to London
- one w1y , 1115 . Return $220 M.T .W.
881.0306, Thursday night, 873·5660,
5:0o-10:00 p.m. Weekly departures.

-

QUICK, efficient typin g done - 1 .40
per page. IQM Selectric 838-4808.
PRIZE offered for best costum e from
the •so·~ at Slla N• Na Concert,
tomOfrow nlte at Peace Bridge Center.
INTERESTED In going to the Bavarian
Alps and the Olympic; games In Munich
August- September 1972t Phone
833-4638.
PHOTOGRAPHERS! Interested In
exhlOitlng tnroug n Coo peratl\le
Floating GalleryP Come to next
meeting Monday, OK. 13, 7:30 p .m.
Unitarian Church, ElmwoOd and w.
Ferry or call Rodger 6 88.e855 .
C&amp;H JONES Professional Tvplno
Sen11c:e
computerized IBM
equlpmer~t plus our e~eperlence give
but possible presentations of
dissertations, thesis, term papers,
re.umes and employment application
letters. Very reasonable , Call
741 ·3958.
BABYSITTING for workl'1g mothers.
A creative personality pr09ram
conducteo bY a qualified tuc:ner . To
Degl'1 Jan . lsi at 1010 Elmwood Ave .,
BuflliiO. Limited enrollment. To
arrange an lntervl-, write Ma ry Betn
Hill, 103 Claremont, Buffalo 14222.

Tlte Orgaul:alinns. S taff. and Directors of
Sub Boord / , Inc., wish You and o/1 Mankind
PEACE

Lotus Shop
StJ mtthlll~

GREEN knapsack purse lost tn 2nd
floor cafeteria, Mondo~~y . R-ard lor
return of purse and contents, Call
831 · 4113, Sue. Important PliPen
urgently needed .

CUSTOM MAOE LEATHER PANTS
FULL LENGTH CAPES (wool/cotton)
HAND MADE LEATHER BAGS
COLORFUL WOOL SASHES
Antique Moratania Stones (Goulimine)

FEMALE w1nted to snare furnfsr.ed
apartment. Own large bedroom. Near
campus, reasonat)le rent. 837·34 11.

ONE ROOMMATE wanted, own room,
clean house, cooperative people. Call
838·3244. Leave name •net telephone
number .

dt f frrmt m u
Chmtmas Kt/1 ? On~t nul tlt st/(n
n ltarul pumtf'tl c htna, ft' Wt'/ry ,
lam fJ~ and pusttls.

LOST&amp; fOUND

I just got back from Morocco with some great stuff.

ONE FE MA LE roommate wanted own room, furnished . Henel off Main,
$65 month . Call 837·1887 . ..,
'

1·2 FEMALES neeoed to share
seml·fur'11tlled apartment for Jan. Own
room - $3? •en - Gen~ee·BIIIey .
Call Chris 897.0593.

FACES Cactus audience Thurs., Dec.
16tn. Memor ial Aud - an lro'} Spur
Production .

REFRIGERATORS, stoves and
wuhen. Rec:on&lt;l•tlonedJ delivered an&lt;l
guarant ..d. O&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore, TX4 ·3183.

HELP! we need two fem11e roomm1tes
to snare room In beautiful apartmen~
ten·mlnutt Wllk from c:1mpus,
$55/ mo. Includes utilities. Beth or Pat .
837·9014.

MALE roommate, separate bedroom.
10 min . rrom c..tmpus. Share rent and
telephone, 875 mo. Call 835·4339 or
832·?155.

16S-15 Michelin tires on VW rims : 2
snow tires, 2 &lt;'9. 839·1924 alter 4:00.

1963 STUDEBAKER
good
condition - clean, new tires (snow) .
Greatengone. 885-6013.

ROOMMATE w1nte&lt;J Single or
couple - own room In half nouse Hertei·SUrl, Ma rty, Ellen ,
835·7082.

ROOMMATES WANTED

ROOMMATE wanted Jan . H I. O wn
room, $52 mo . • utilities. Herlll ~rea .
Call 837-6682.

MOROCCAN Imparts - dig lhfte
pri c es . cust om made LEATHER
PANTS - $ 30; lull lengtn WOOl/COtton
CAPES - $15; nanct•mllde LEATHER
BAGS - $8; colorful WOOL SASHES
12 . 50. AntiQue Moratanla
(Gullomlne) BEADS - 18/ctoz. Call
Steve 883...4707.

1·2 FEMALE roommate. needed next
semwter. Amnerst-Parwrldge area. Rent
Includes utllltl... Clll 836 &lt;5 186.

DOES ANVONE know where tne
White sheepskin coat that Wll lut SMn
on the coat tiCk 11 tne Art. Dept. the
Tues. before Tllanksgl\llng Is . Vou can't
lmlglne the sentimental value. R-arct .
Call 835-4356 ptuse.

MA RV In desperate need of
expeflencect first beseman. Prom lles
ball91me of • lifetime. I nqulre with in .

FOR SALE: CJIS stove, dresser with
mirror, cheap. 877·0137.

COUPLE to shire moctern convenient
apartment close to c..tmpu&amp;. AbOut
145. Ellen 836·2499.

MISSING - N orton Cafeteria - purse.
Keep money - return purse, pel)4rs
(Nortoo Lost • Found). N o questions.

'66 IMPALA excellent condition brand n - transmission, 1900. Must
sell. Need bread. 881-4067.

1969 M6B low mileage, e11ce11ent
mechanical condition, body perfect.
Call between 4:3o-6 : 30. 836·048!&gt;.

NEED FEMALE roommate. Furn ished
apt. near Rosary Hill College•C•mpus
Manor. J ln. tst., $55 mo. Includes
utilities. 83g-44l6 Paula.

ONE FAMIL V of Golden H1msters.
About tllr. . weeks old. 834-6519. Ask
for Clink or Dluy.

SHARE ROOM, $55 Includes ulllillel,
Large m o dern •p•rtment. Very
friendly people. Kenslngton·Parkrldge .
Avalllble Immediately. C all J ohn
83S·26S7 .

FIXED FEMALE Colt avlllable free.
Extremely lffec:tlonate. 675-4168. Call
alter 7 :00 p.m.

-•Y•

LOST : Flve.-trlng tenor banJo lite Fri.
nlgnt (0~. 31 1crou from Center
Lounoe In Norton. Co~~ll Bonnie
832·9420.

JOANN, "Sill Is of the llesn Jnd
therefore transitory; Iova Is of tne soul
and thus eternll ." Underslano thiS , for
I love you . DenniJ.

1970 KARMANN GHIA coupe, orange
with bllck Interior. Driven 1 yr.
18,000 miles . $1600. 649· 1883.

BEDROOM In modem furniShed house
In country setting only 15 mlnutee
Full kitchen , bath and pettclng
prlvll eg~. S!Weo, T.v .. etc. we ere
open-minded types 1nd moderately
Slflous students, $90 Includes pnon•
a net utllltlts. 634·7185.

FOUND - two keys on money cli p
ring - found fn Main Street/Ba iley
parking lot. C laim In Spectrum Office.

1970 JAGUAR )(KE. Excellen t
c ondition. 4·speed sunctard
transml$$1111\, 811'10e w'Ttl'l black SOft top.
Rldlal tlrestwlre sneels. Brand new
A~·FM $ltrto raolo lnc:luoed. Clll
Dave 684·2000 between 8 a .m . &amp; 4
p . m . weettctays, or 688·7327 on
w-ends.

DEAR MIDGE - Love Is never navin9
to say you.,e wrry '- F,Od,

ROO MMAT E Wlnte&lt;l to sna re
buutlfully turn lthed 2-bedroom
ctupltl&lt;. 10 minutes from c..tmpus. T .V.
and stereo. Call 831·2011, eltt. 45 or
634-41 9g.

.Z·I»edroom

$2.50
$8/
Doz.

43S Minnesota
...__ _ at Bailey Ave. _ __.

MCAT-DAT-GR
LSAT-ATGSB
NAT'L. BOS.
•
•
•
•
•
•

Large Selection of
JEANS
CORDOROYS
KNIT TOPS
SWEATERS

Pf"~at ion tor test. reQuired tor
admitlion to graduate and protsionel.:hools
Six end twelve session courses
Smell groupa
Voluminous matef'itl for home sn.dy
preptred by eJCpe!"ts in e.ch field
LeSIOn schedule can be tailored to
meet indlllldual needs.
Opportunlfy for review of pNt
lessons vie tape tt tht center

SHIRTS

Summer Sessions
Spect.l Compect Counes
Weekendt - lntenessiona

Bring sonu!lhing home for th e
"older guys and gals"
during this h~lfday season

For more inform1tion
Contlct
BILl BLANK
- - -837-13&amp;0- - -

from

The KEYHOLE

8TANLI!V H . KAt-LAN
DUCATIONAL CI!NTaft..,.o

(;;~:.;:;·
(516) 538-4555
DAYS lVlNIHG$ M:£t(lHO$
aoPo~"~

• ''"'- • w~. 0..00.. ..

..,.s.._, ..,,. •••

n. r ....

5.1

UNIVERSITY
PLAZA

81NCI 1. ..

L•A,.._ •

N..~. . . .

-

FASHIONS FOR MEN (AND WOMEN , TOO )
UNIVERSITY
PLAZA

tt....• -

Friday, December 10, 1971 . The Spectrum. iage twenty-three

.' '

.

I. • • •

• •

• I

' • • t ' , ..

..

�.

"I

...

Annountements

!ttadlents for lsnel announm fflat Preedom
lights for Soviet Jewry will be held Sunday.
UB Symphooy ~and will give a concert this Transportation from in front of Norton at 6:30p.m.
Sunday at 8 :30p.m. in Goodyear Hall. Admission is Li&amp;hting takes place at Temple Beth-El at Sheridan
free and the public is Invited, ·
•·
~d Egert.
The W~"'-'s Studies CC)flqe Politics of Health

~urse will 'SO&amp;w the film , Our P~l~ Mozambique,

on the medilal system of Mozambique, Dec. 16 at
8:30p.m.~ 124 Winspear Aven.ue.
'

Computina Center User Services announces a
seminar In Nybmul given by Dr. Finn on Monday at
7 p.m. in Room 10, 4238 Ridge Lea Road. It is
rec:ommended that att~ndees obtain a copy of the
NYBMUL (version 4) documentation for use in class.

UB Gay Liberation Front ill meet on Dec. 15
at 8 p.m. in Room 232 Norton. 1'

al'd

C~ Band the Prosntn Itt-~
East
Central European Studies of the State University
College at Buffalo announces two concerts to be
performed by members of the Center of the Creative
and Performing Arts, the Buffalo Philharmonic, The
Department of Music at SUNYAB and the Cleveland
Quartet. One on Dec. 17 at 8 :30p.m. in Upton Hall,
SUCB, 1300 Elmwood Avenue and the other on
Feb. 26 at 8 :30 p.m. in the Campus School
Auditorium, St;JCB. Admission is 12 and $1 for
students; tickets are available at tfie Norton Hall
Ticket Office.

Hillel will have a dinner tonight at 6:15p.m. In

tfle- J1illel House, 40 Capen Blvd. For reservations
University Travel and Schussmeisters Ski Club call 836-4540. Also, Judy Prince will speak on ''The
are sponsoring a SAS Jet to Geneva, Switzerland Judaic·Marxist Dialogue."
with a ski package in Chamonix, France or on to
Copenhagen, Denmark. For more information come
The Student Theater Guild will be holding
to Room 316, 323 or 318 Norton Hall or call
production of Out At Sea on

The Ninth AnntgJ Family Holiday Festival of
the Education Department of the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery will open on dec. 28 with two performances
of Films for the Family which are free and open to
the public. The programs will be given at 11 a.m. and
3

,_
'

sponsoring Alitalla Jet to
information come to Room
or call extension 3602 or 3603.

Center of the Creiltive and Performi"'
t the second concert of this season's
tngs for New
on Sunday at 8:30
p.m. ;u the AI
lery. Admission is
$2.00 for the
ents.
Tickets may hAWI..;;tl.x.l#f
the Norton Hall Ticket 0
offering a
Chabad House will have a p.uty tomO{row night
on "Overseas S
. Its Value ill 7 p.m. All &lt;~re welcome.
,,....,nun• • " for undergraduates who plan to
next year. Admission with
Millard Fillmore College in conjunction with the
..,..,...,...,.;
For additional information Department of Higher Education, Is introducing a
new course, "Critical Issues in Higher Education,"
spring semester 1972. Interested persons may
is offering contact the College al 831-3809 for more
Linguistics 11
a course dealing information.
with language
1 socio, culturo,
linguistic anal
love, hate. Not
The Department of French is sponsoring a
open to social
lecture by Gerard Genette, French critic and author,
on "Valery et Ia Poetiquc du Lang~ge, '' at 8 p.m. on
today and Monday in the Faculty Club at the State University
tomorrow in
available in of Buffalo.
•
No~on Ticket
Julius Eastman, instructor of music and a
ittee of the Political member of the Creative Associates at the State
a meeting today at University of Buffalo will be featured on " Musical
to discuss the denial Innovations," 9:05 P,.m. on Monday on WBCE -FM.
All past a.nd present
to attend.
Chabad wants you to enjoy a Chassidic Shabbos
tonight at 6 p.m. at Chabad House. Tomorrow at
now distributing 9:30 a.m. there will be services and other activities.
the 1972-73
academic
the
office, which
Library.
to the Finane
1972. Instruc
appended to the app
I

The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will have a
UB Riding Club will meet today from 4- 5:30 :r.heater Party on Sunday,, Jan . 23, 1972 a(•ttJ,e
p.m . in Room 332 Norton. All persons planning to 1Studio Arena Theater. The play will be the wodd
ride Saturday, must make reselvations at today's premiere of I Remember Mama. Tickets are available
meeting.
at the Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd. and at the Hillel
table in Norton.
Rachel Carson College is offering ''The
Nutrition Battle - Health Fads vs. the Chemical
The Department of Music will present the UB
Feast". Four credit hours will be given. RCC 178 - Percussion ' Ensemble under the direction of Jan
Sara No. 183511 .
Williams tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Recital
Hall. The concert is free and open to the public.
University Travel and Hillel are sponsoring an
Olympic jet to Tel-Aviv, Israel via Athens, Greece.
Chabad House will have a Chassidic Chanukah
For moro information come to Room 316 or 323 with ~ festi~e activities, refreshments, singing and
dancing, Monday at 7:30p.m.
Norton or call extension 3602 or 3603.

(No
Roller Derby
Jan.3
Courtyard Theatre
The Clever Else
On - Campus Events
Jan. 29 &amp; 30: Jesus
12/13) (K)
KEY
K
M
P
B
C
N

r ( on sale

Kleinhans
Memorial Aud.
Peace Bridge Center
Buffalo State
Clark Gym
Norton

Sports Information
Tonight : Varsity hockey
Tomorrow: Varsity
p.m.; varsity basketball at
varsity wrestling at lthaQ;
Binghamton, Clark G
swimming at WA!terloo
Tuesday: Varsity
8 :30 p.m. Cluk

Northeastern,
UCCI,II.ClLUdll

VS.

Bryant &amp; Stratton, 6:30 p.m.; varsity wrestling vs.
Lock Haven, Clark Gym, 2 p.m.
There will be a meeting this afternoon for all
persons interested in Buffalo Club lacrosse, Clark
Gym room 8 at 3 p.m .
The Buffalo Club bowling team in its first
tourney of the year finished fourth out of 32 squads
at the Monroe Community College Invitational meet.
Gary Patton , with a 1go average led Coach Norb
Baschnagel's initial club squad.
There will be a meeting Tuesday for all indoor
track c.mdidates in Room 3 Clark Gym at 4 p.m.
, The hockey Bulls have announced that they will
meet New England College on Wednesday, Dec. 15
at 8 :15p.m. The contest will take place at Concord,
New Hampshire.
·

�Kink Krazies Konquer Kampus Kiddies
boys were off. Dave banging wvvay
Mutfc EditOI
at his Les Paul, Ray stumbling
about the middle of the stage,
I'm not quite sure how to eves glazed, arms fWing, even
break the news to all of you. stopping to play a few notes.
Because while all of you sit and Ray's arms mov~ too much for
bitch about outrageous prices for him to be hindered by guitar
concerts and half ·hearted playing, but when he does, he and
performances by groups you Dave go into the noisiest,
thought were gods, you all missed rockingest jive yo.u'll ever hear • -the best show of the year. It took Mick and Keith included.
place on Sunday afternoon, not
"Lovely to be here - at
the most logical time for a Hooobatt College" - sly little grin
concert, in Hobart College in with that little space between the
Geneva, not the most logical place front teeth. A few limp wristed
for the Buffalo rock 'n' roll waves to the adoring multitudes.
delegation to truck to. And it was Someone offers Ray some wine,
by a group that all of you know, and, instead, he asks for the kid's
whose songs you
sing, but floppy white hat, which, as he
whom you probably wouldn't jumps around, drifts all around his
shell out two measly dollars for head without ever falling off.
('cause that's how much tickets Then into "Brainwashed" from
were there and would have been Arthur, and more explosive rock.
here if you would have opened
Ray motions the new keyboard
your mouths up) .
man over to the piano as he picks
The group, brother~ and sisters, up his acoustic. He tries to
are the only Briti$h band from the introduce the pianist, forgets his
early 60's other than the Stones name, then remembers it (John) .
to still be around, and how many "Someone asked us when we got
of you went hundreds of miles to here if we would do this one - it
see them two years ago? They was one of the policemen." Ray
possess more pure rockln' spirit induces the audience to sing along
than any band that will bore you on the choruses
in Buffalo this year, or next year "L.O·L·A·Lola" - everyone is
(unless someone has the ounce of having a spectacular time of it,
intelligence to realize what they especially the Kinks. How they
woutd do to this city and books could get themselves up for an
them) . The group, brothers and afternoon concert the day before
they're flying back to london, I'll
sisters, are the Kinks.
never know.
Kink Konsc:iousness
By the time the group got to Sunsets and sunny afternoons
A big surprise next as Ray
the stage, the small crowd at
Hobart was already on its feet, soft I y moves into "Waterloo
testifying to the amazing energy Sunset," possibly the finest rock
Kinks Krazies hold in reserve for song ever written . Dave's
their boys. "God Save The Kinks" "sha-la ·la's" are beautiful. One of
has become more than just a cute Ray's greatest talents is to build
Warner Brothers advertising acceptance into his songs of
campaign - it's become a verbal resignation, so that we're left
rallying point for a lot of us. The feeling happy, even though we're
Kinks have gone through stages all living on Dead End Street and
that no other band could begin to there's no way out.
It's Dave's turn to step up to
cope with without completely
falling apart. But Ray and Dave the mike, and "You're Lookin'
Davies just keep rocking on, even• Fine," a classic rocker ("First
though they've been known to get time I s;m you, you looked all
into fistfights on stage a few times right/ Second time I s;m you, you
and their drinking habits got them looked outasight") again uncorks
thrown out of the U.S. for two the band into some manic playing.
Dave is now number two on my
years.
The amps were lit, waiting to rock 'n' roll guitar list, not all that
be wailed through as Ray's far behind Keith either. He just
spanking new Telecaster lay atop has it, and he knows it. He'll play
the Hammond. Dave also had a a lick and then smile, as much to
Telecaster, an old, beaten one, himself and the rest of the band as
and a black Les Paul. As a matter to the crowd. About two years
of fact, Ray's still had the little ago, Dave got bored with being
Fender How to Take Cllre of Your told he really wasn't that good, so
Guitar booklet dangling from the he decided to be great, and he is.
Just like on the Live Kinks
end, just so you'd know he just
bought it. Of course, they still had album, Ray made everyone sing
their backs to us and not a note the last chorus to "Sunny
had been played. Suddenly, Ray Afternoon," with a promise to
turned around and smiled at the take off his jacket if everyone
crowd. Dressed in a patchwork sang. Behind cocktai• strip music,
shirt, f big black bow tie, black Ray turned his back to the folks,
trousers, purple boots (the whole and in his best Elvis·Little Richard
band had purP.Ie boots, Mr. Clean) stance, slowly shed his coat and
and a white jacket with a tricucle placed it over a mike stand
horn coming out of the breast (wouldn't want to get It dirty
now, would ya?l . Eight bars of
pocket. (Honk Honk) Class.
"Yes, it's number one! It's Top ''Marianne" (validating my Ray
Davies Calypso rock theory) and
of the Pop81"
A warped chord progression in then "Apeman." "Come on and
the "Louie Louie vein and the love me. by my apeman girl and

.

by Billy Aftm.n

all

we' ll be so happy in my apeman
world."
Time out for a plug for the
new album Muswell Hillbillies, on
the new label , RCA, and then a
few newies - "Skin and Bones"
and "Acute Schizophrenia
Paranoia Blues." Both were
phenomenal, the former being a
great anti-thin song, the latter
being a great anti-everything song.
It's strange that just because Ray
writes about real life and everyday
people, they call his stuff "social
commentary," and dismiss it. I
think he's the best pop songwriter
around other than lou Reed and
since they're both on RCA now,
look out.
Btue I i-ts and a Queen
One soft song, "Get Back in
the Line," from the Lola lp, with
spectacular vocals by both Davies
lads. And another surprise, "Big
Sky," .which, oddly enough, was
requested as it was announced.
Ray pauses for a sip of wine :
"You know what they say: If it
tastes good, swallow it." Ray calls
for blue lights, sighs as his wish
comes true and sings about the
pr9blems of having to live above

the world - Big Sky's too big to
cry .
A bit more rock with
"Victoria." They've played over
an hour now, and as Ray spins
around, playing with his hair,
throwing his arms around like
they h\Ki their own director, I feel
that this is too good to end. What
can possibly push me past this
point of exhilaration and
exhaustion?
''When we started this tour, we
promised ourselves we wouldn't
do this one cause we've done it so
many times. But the first night we
played, they made us do it. And
we do really still like it a lot. It
was out first hit . . . it's called
"You Really Got Met" Like a
cannon, Dave hits the strings,
Mick Avory slams his snare, John
Dalton zooms a bass slide, and
they're off . Everybody is up
dancing (Thank God for some
kind of physical release) and the
song turns into "All Day and All
of the Night." The fever is all over
everyone, and my faith in rock 'r(
roll is restored and replenished.
This stuff is the best, I swear it.
The song ends and Ray waves

to everyone, then steps up to Joe
F. and shakes his hand. Joe looks
down at the hand, looks at Ray
and two share a split second of
instant knowledge and forever
joy. When was the last time the
band came out to meet you, huh?
There was a delayed encore,
mainly because the bpys were
tired and wanted to leave, but the
screaming wouldn't stop till there
was another appearance, just so
we'd all know it wasn't just a
dream . Ray swaggered back to the
mike, all smiles, and they did an
·aU too short version of "Till the
·~ €~ of the Day," which I was
go~ng to yell out for, but felt
wasn't fair to the other hundred
and forty or so songs Ray's
written f!lat I love equally. It
seemed hke seconds, and they
were there and gone.

I was going to walk back to
Buffalo, believe me, I had the
energy. But I had to get back to
tell you all what you missed. All I
can suggest is buying Live Kinks,
and playing it over and over till
you drop. Either that or fly to
England see them there. And you
know what? I might do just that.

�f ·-:~-·

I

.-· ·

.

(!leentown lowdown ,Out of the spirits of music
{

......,..., th• -"wrd couru th• vulfllll'"

1

Hiya, Kids ... hiya hiyal Here we are again, chock full of rock 'n'
roll goodies. Did you see Kalmeinz Stockhausen In all his Tetitonic
splendor last weekend? He played some interesting tapes of his 20th
century version of what John Cege c.lls "sauerkraut music." He also
spoke charmingly, though at some length , about the problems and
pleasures encountered in the composition thereof. I think his work is
"Important," like they say, but not quite as important as he seems to
think it is. Karl baby, I 'II tell ya . , . clean up your act, maybe grease
your delivery some, and I can make you as big as .. . well, the Turtles
. . . ya dig?
For all you Stones fans (thank you, Mr. Sullivan) the hot flash this
week is that Keith, Mick and Little Mlck are in L.A . this week finishing
their e)(tensive Riviera collection of takes with a proper California
flourish . As I said hut week, don't hold your breath .. . but they are on
the way .

•

• • • •

This week, as a public service, M'r. Clean is going to provide a list of
highly recommended alternatives to the usual Beattes album for Xmas.
There is a lot of pious (&amp; impious) crap floating around out there,
masquerading as relevant. I mean, there is no earthly (or unearthly)
reason why JC, su,.rrtar should sell another couple of mlllton pieces
during the Holiday Rush . So, if you're dubious about plunking down
your gelt for Lenny's M8SS , why not see below. You might even end up
surprising yourself and your Joved ones. Anyway, who really speaks to
your condition ... Norman Vincent Peale or Mark Farner?
1)Bargain Basement Numbers: Just across the street, at Grants, for
$1.88, lies one of the most satisfying albums that any human could
hope to give or receive, viz, With a Lot o' Soul, a brilliant Temptations
lp. Recorded at the group's pinnacle, it features both David Ruffin and
Eddie Kendricks as exquisitely as they've ever been heard. A real gem
from the days when you knew who the Tempts were .. . and "You're
My Everything" is worth ten bucks by itself. Also to be found in the
cheapo bins and highly recommended are almost all of the Doors'
albums. Everyone who is anyone knows what we lost, and just consider
the possibility of giving your Ded The Celebration of the Liz11rd tor
Chanukah. The Co·op has these albums for $1.50. What more could
you ask?
2) Full Pr'" But Worth It At Twice: Heading up the ltst for
Christmas, 1971, if there is any justice, has got to be E PLURIBUS
FUNK. Not only is it a truly fine, fine, superfine album of sweet,
strong rock &amp; roll, but most of your friends probably don't have it
Most college students and certainly most mothers and fathers are
boringly true to their respective generational biases, which means that
none of them have even heard GFR in a reasonably favorable situation
before. Be the first family on your block to ,mellow out around the tree
listening to Mark &amp; Met harmonizing oo the intro to "People, Let's
Stop the War," or stretching on out with the Cleveland Symphony on
"Loneliness." Far onl

•

• • • •

For Your liiMNif Friends &amp; Nei~bora : Ttfe new Crawdaddy
co~~ms a brilliant poster of the 65- 66 Rolling Stones in a lobby ...
waiting for whatever the greatest rock &amp; roll band in the biosphere
waits for . It also contains more than you ever really wanted to know
ab~ut the Who, and John lennon writing about Imagine track by track.
Th1s would mike a great cheap gift for anyone you want to remember
but not too much . And, for those for whom you care enough to send
the very best don't forget Peter Furalnick's brilliant Feel Like Gain'
Homtt: Port~••its in Blut!$ snd Rock &amp; Roll (Outerbridge &amp; Oienstfrey,
$2.95 paper) and Ed Sanden' terrifying and trenchant The Family The Story of Chsri8S M8nson's Dune Buggy Attack B11ttslion (Dutton
$6.95 cloth) . And don't forget the colossal CoiiBCterJ Poems of Frank
O'H•rs (Knopf, $7.50 cloth) . Be sure to buy these long before you
hav! to wrap them up and give them away, because you'll want plenty
of t1me to read them yourself.
So have a fine vacation, rock on, and remember .
Ya iust sin 't go no cout '
without ys got some purple boots .

He's sweetin'
Look at him
Optical promise
(You'll be dead end in hell
before I'm born
Sure thing
Bride's maid
The o'ntv solution Isn't it amazing.

The Liard King
The Lizard King tells UJ the
mysteries of the "Celebration of
the Lizard." We are awed.
Actually Morrison the poet has
been trying to create his
celebration for awhile with only a
small part appearing on the
W.l tlng for th• Sun album which More knowledge comes to us of
tells us for the first time the word the revealing shaman :
story of the oelebrati'on. Now
(Do you remember when we
Morrison the art form creates h is were in Africa.)
life's masterpiece. Not recorded in
its entirety until the Absolutely f inally :
Live album . The small part
When all else tails
appearing on the Sun album Is
We can whip the horses
titled, "Not to Touch the Earth,"
And make them sleep
a mere fragment of a longer
And cry ...
celebration.
In this ceremony MorrisOn the
Stopping off at Morrison Hote,
Shaman takes us ..on a complete Morrison the art form matures
journey through time and space to and sets its course:
his place of origin . The iourney
'She was a Princess
begins:
Queen of the Highway
''LIons in the street and
Sign on the road said,
roaming
'Take us to Madre. • •
Dogs in heat, rabid, foaming
A beast caged in the heart of a
No one could save her
city
Save the blind tiger
The body of his mother
He was a monster
Roning in the summer ground
Black dressed
He fled the town.
In leather

•v•

The Mansion Is warm, at the
top of the h ill
Rich are the rooms and the
comforts there
Red are the arms of luxuriant
chairs
And you won't know a thing
till vou get inside.
Dead president's corpse in the
driver's car
The engine runs on glue and tar
C'mon along, we're not going
very far
To the East to meet the Czar."
Self-Affirmation :
"I am the Lizard King
I can do anything
I can make the earth stop in its
tracks
I made the blue cars go away."
The return :
'Now nrght arrives with her
purple legions
Retire now to your tents and
your dreams
Tomorrow we enter the town
of my birth
I want to be ready •
Pure art
From here on it's Morrison the
an form , pure. Shunned by
uncomprehending fans, snided by
cntics the art form begins its
maturat1on . Yet another
e)(cursion into shaman trance
world's Is required for the process
of growth to occur in the new art
form . True insight into the
shaman's journey Is given :
'How you must think and
wonder
How I must feel
Out on the meadows
While you're on the field
I'm alone
For you
And I cry .

She was a Princess
Oueen of the Highway
Now they are wedded
She is a good girt
naked as children
Out in the meadow
Naked as children
Wild as can be
Soon to have offspring
Stan it all over
Stan it all over
American boy
American girl
Most beautiful people
In the world
Son of a frontier
Indian swirl
Dancin to the midnight
Whirlpool formless .
Surviving documents
The Morrison art form
transmutes itself into Morrison
the art form sage, the soothsayer.
The coompletion of the shaman's
vision quest culminates in the
formation of the total mature art
form . 'Absolutely live.'
This is the document which
must survive. The pure essence of
primal art created out of
destructed chaos. The concept
fulfills itself. A recording of live
performance's of the shaman's
dance, the poets song. 'The
Celebration of the lizard' makes a
recorded dd&gt;ut. The dream quest
is complete, the lizard King has
his own reality . Yet another
transmutation is about to occur.
The art form sheds its old skin
and surges forward in its pure
essence of form .
Comes the end of the journey .
The truth as far as It can be told
by this shaman . Morrison the art
form crystillizes and begins anew
through a destruction of the old
and a synthesis of the new.

IN CELEBRATION of CHANUKKAH
Hillel Presents

SHLOMO

CARLEBACH

Chassidic Folk·Singer

4th SMASH WEEKI

Sat. til2:00 p.m.

All S.ts $1.00

Sunday, December 12 at 8:00p.m .
In
147 Diefendorf
Free to members of Hillel
50¢ with Student I.D . Card
ALL OTHERS $1.00
Tickets at Norton Ticket Window or at Hillel

by
Joe
F.-nbKtlw

R•-emerge Into the world of
Morrif!Ofl the poet/ priest. A f\8W
child with new journeys, new
destinations.
Underlying the journey
throughout has been the Big Beat.
A germ of a poem in 1969 it
becomes t he ultima te Jim
Morrison song :
I want to tell you bout Texas
Radio and the Big Beat
Comes out of the Virginia
swamps
Cool and slow
With running precision
With a back beat narrow and
hard to master. •

Somo call It heavenly in its
brilliance
Othen mean and rueful of the
Western Dream .
I love the friends I have
gathered together in this thin raft
We have constructed pyramids
in honor of our escaping
This is the land where the
Pharoahs died.
The negros in the forest
Brightly feathered
Their saying
Forget the n ight
Live with us in forests of azure.
Out here in the perimeter
There are no stars
Out here we's stoned
Immaculate .
Listen t ' this I'll tell ya bout
the heartache
Tell ya bout the heartache an
loss of blood
I'll tell ya bout the hopeless
nigh ts
The meager food, the soul
forgot,
I 'II tell ya bout the maiden
with wrought iron soul.
I'll tell you this
No eternal reward will forgive
us now for
Wasting the dawn.
I'll tell you bout Texas Radio
and The Big Beat
Soft, driven
Slow and mad like some new
language .. .''

And what of Jim Morrison,
poet. Who will remember? Who
will become the new shaman?
Who will become the new poet?
What of the spirit the shaman
passed along to his followers?
What will become the spirit of his
music? Must we fefl l sad at the
passing of the Lizard King? Can
we feel sad? What is the cry?
' Zara th ustra , the dancer,
Zarathustra, the light one who
bekons with his w ings, preparing
for flight, beckoning to all birds,
ready and head v, blissfully
lightheaded .
'Zarathustra, the soothsayer;
Zarathustra the sooth ·laugher, not
impatient; not unconditional ; o ne
who loves leaps and side leaps : I
crown myself with this crown .
'This crown of the Iaugher , the
rose·wreath crown to you, my
brother, I throw this crown
laughter I have pronounced holy:
you higher men learn - to laugh'
Thus Spake Zarathustra.
And yet h1s image lingers, the
clnemator still creates, his words
leave his epitaph :
'Snakeskin jacket
Indian eyes
Brilliant hair
He moves in disturbed
Nile insect
air'
- 1 ,, New Crt111tures
J. Mo"ison

�'What the Butler
. Saw'

Zany farce pushed too far
'

«1

by Michael Silvlfbl.tt
Lite~ture &amp;

D111m• Editor,

"!:/

~

Joe Orton's psychic m'"tor is clearly Oscar Wilde
but it Is a Wilde whose chromosomes have been eugenically
crossed with those of that effervescent funster, the
Marquis de Sade. Orton's play, Whst The Butler Saw has
all the frenetic deception of highly ingenious parlour
comedy. It is, hovtever, some hybrid-mutant of farce some
dark and demonic revelation of the un-natur~l and
unfunny underside of what we blandly call frothy French
comedy.
In Orton's conception of comedy there are no holds
barred. Traditional labels and orderly societal conventions
disappear. Boundaries between male and female sanity
and insanity, hetero·and homosexuality are thrown' out the
window in the face of the fr.,e-wheeling and chaotic
medium of farce. Things move from the funny to the not

l'ttotos by Osterreld\er •nd Brenner

It all begins whert Or. Prentice, a psychoanalyst
interviewing a prospective secretary from the Friendly
Faces Employment Bureau, instructs her tQ undress. Ju5t
then, in walks his alcoholic, nymphomaniacal wife, who
has just been assaulted in a hotel linen closet by a bellhop.
Sub·plots too intricate to describe at length involve an
imaginary. secretary who manufactures white tar-babies to
promote improved racial relationships in ghetto areas, a
mad voyeur named lgno Rance who hopes to make a
,best-selling novel of the rapidly increasing perversity, 1
woman who dies a horrible death in the explosion of •
local gasworks and the missing sexual organs of Sir
Winston Churchill.
What, no bestiality?
Sound complex ? We'll add to all that four or five cases
of transvestitism, one lesbian, three putative homosexuals
and a tap-dancing elephant named Matilda. If you didn't
notice the tap-dancing elephant, perhaps you'd better
re·read the play.
When terror, tedium and hilarity reach their inevitable
climax, Orton has yet another card up his sleeve.His
bloody ,staggering, exhausting cast of characters are all
blood relations. I ncestl Mother has slept with son, father
has attempted to ravish daughter. Doris Day performs
unnatural acts with Donna Reed . Dear, dear. What is our
world coming to 7 Gunshots, nasty incidents and now this.
Director Barry Koron has skillfully directed the
plece ·there are surprisingly few fumbles and the
split-second accuracy needed for this kind of madcap
endeavor was nearly perfected at the performance I saw .
Vocal difficulty
There was a sort of problem involved in the varying
vocal styles o f the actors. The humor of the play is
extremely British, i.e. droll , wry, and extremely verbal.
What results is a cast of characters studiedly delivering
their lines in what I can only call clipped pigeon ·British.
Once one gets&gt; used to the cast's sounding like a muddy
conglomeration of Noel Coward, Arthur Treacher and
Hermione Gingold (not to mention a few Olivier-ish
pretentions) it is easy sledding. Orton has written th e play
so that one belly laugh follows another. He is, quite
literally, the Neil Simon of the avante garde. He has a real
gift for comic metaphor, for grotesque comparison, for
immediate fabrication .
There is one built-in problem with wit as fast and
furious as this : the actor is either delivering the line too
slowly and thus preparing the audience for the laugh, or
else-delivering the line too quickly and it comes out as
snappy, but unintelligible repartee. The problem, as 1 say is
built Into the play and there is, unfortunately, no happy
medium . Thankfully, consistently prec•se direction and
inspired acting tides the production through to its edifying
and patriotic conclusion .

so funny with starting rapidity. What Orton has done Is to
push farce to its breaking point : What happens when one
assumes so many identities that consciousness of self Is lost
in the maze of disguise? What happens when the drinking,
the deception, the good·natured run in and out of doors
nature of the Three Stooges comedy is interrupted by the
numbing truth of gunshot blood and death 7

Smutty

Successful Production
Productions of Orton 's works that I've seen have
always seemed to me to be misguided efforts. Perhaps it is
because the plays themselves, in spite of their extensive
plotting and cra fty maneuverings, are vacuous and
essentially centerless. Perhaps it is because the productions
I've seen have gone for the comedy and let the terror take
care of itself. The Student Theater Guild's production last
weekend was a step in the right direction - it roughly
approximated something of an affinity for Orton's
terrifying and near-nihilistic aesthetic. It was marred, as
these things always are, by gratuitous zaniness and rather
cumbersome technical difficulty. but it was sufficiently
well -acted and well-conceived to merit th1s admittedly
lenthy consideration.

The play abounds in unlikely sexual
metaphor . In reference to her sexual perfo rmance, Doctor
Prentice accuses his wife of being" harder to get into than
the Reading Room of the British Museum ." She, in turn,
likens his sexual endurance to a jack ·m·the·box .
A II the high-handed pacing and nimble·footed
wordplay requires an extremely versatile and physically
alert cast. Particulary praiseworthy were Eliot Burtotf, a
marvelous actor who treats his lines like sharp kn ives
handled with the cutting edges out: Fred Knapp whose
quirky and dislikable Or. Prentice was a tour de force;
Marty Tackel who was charmingly surly as a good boy
gone wrong.
The women were less adept but still much better than
average. April Starbuck as a hysterically shrill secretary
gave an awfully good performance for a debut. Marlene

S. U. B.

Rosenthal was bitchy and tough and finally totally lunatic
in her portrayal of the nymphomaniac-cum·lesbian wife.
Sergeant Match (whoever he may be) was good too.
There was a lot of self-indulgence involved in the
production: a silly program replete with silly notes, •
beautiful but overly elaborate set by Steve Normandale, a
totally gratuituous, incongruous and almost destructive
opening scene.
All my carping is useless however, these people have
really done a fine job. I can't detract from that.

jokes

CONCERT COMMITTEE
presents

MOTHER EARTH and Keith Sykes
DECEMBER 13
7:00 and 10:30 p.m.
STUDENT UNION SOCIAL HALL

(Buf. State)
Tickets available at But. State &amp; Norton Hall

STUDENTS $1.50

NON-STUDENTS $2.50

THE COUNTRY'S NO. 1 SONG
IS NOW THE SCREENS TOP EXCITEMENT!

NOW

Lights by GREASED LIGHTNING

SH 0 W I

r~

G

North Park
1421 HIITIL

116·7411

�{

·RouOO things are. .. boring'
.

.

Fof. me totk n • roll has always
had something to do with INISive
energy and contorted volumes,
I've always had more pleasure out
of full volume headphone
gymnastics than with full volume
speaker gymn.stics. I guea it's my
early acceptance of my own
electricity, my mechanization. I'm
a technocrat brat and I know it and enjoy it. The growth of
technology has alwavs lived with
my innate nihilistic tendencies. I
like the death vision of the
mechlne. !like my electricity.
Born of a television
environment, t 'w elways attained
a certain amount of Pavlovian
sexuality from · the rapid visual
structure preached at me by the
tube, or the crystal nipple as I like
to ~II it. The intensity of that
structure coupled with mammoth
volume poteotialiti~ presented by
rock n' roll has always left me
with p_knowing smirk on my face.
I've even enjoyed standing two
feet in front of the MC 5 in the
early days when they were only in
it for the volume and going at full

....

so n ic bJalt . I m ust admit, Looking back co~Sfmtl y 141ith
however, that. the best thrill I'Ve watm feelings of nos'tllgia, I r~
ever had conc::emlng rock' n' roll the sheer thrill at the opening'
distance was standing three feet in guitar phrase from the Animals
front 9f Ray Oavi•. Witt\ the MC " When I was Young" (let's here
5 it was really kind of 100thing, it for Hilton Valentine) and the
sort of like an audial electric beauty of distortion achieved by
Lou Reed and Joh Cale during the
blanket.
They say that man always caustic raunch out bombshell
returns to the sa, me, t'm "European Son," the sheer pain
crawling back into a light socket distortion of " 19th Nervous
and ride the electrons for eternity. Breakdown" and "Satisfaction."
And you know Grand Funk
So volume doesn't upset me.
Chaos and volume juxtaposed on Just might be the third best rock
structure and ferocity have always n'roll band goin'. And people
really should give them a chance
been rock 'n' roll for my soul .
Yet, being the environmental because its quickly coming to a
creature that. I am, I've let myself Darwinian showdown where it is
be lulled into the serene chaos and going to be the survival of the
structures of Hendrix, Blue Cheer, loudest. The survival of the form
the Blues
Magoos must be preserved at all costs- the
(rememberPsychfdtlic Lollipop form being rock and roll.
Anyway, take a tip from Or.
well I was breast fed on that one)
.nd have been led astray from Joe's Musical Herb and Root Kit
true electricity .•. the Troggs, the for All Ailments : set the record
machine on number 10 and play
Oevlats, Allee Cooper, etc.
So when it comes time for loud a) " Gimme Shelter'' by the Stones
musi c I'm th~re, with my - art, aesthetic, rightl
electrodes plugged into my neck b)"Gimmie Shelter" by Grand
and a bare wire in my hand. Funk - primitive, primordial

IRONSPUR MUSIC and Wt&lt;BW
present

'•'lo

WITH

CACTUS
Thursday, December 16

7: 00p.m.

MEMORIAL AUD. IN BUFFALO
TICKETS AT;
NORTON lr.ION
BUFFALO STATE
~DO'S IN NIGRA. FAUS
DENTON COTnER &amp; DANIELS

Mr. Goodbar
Casey'S

Town Squire
Theatre Series/Wurlitzer
lkild~ Downtown

All Cavage'$ Stores
~irport ·midtown · thruway. university plazas
boulevard·~ · seneca· malls ·

,,

rock 'n roll pure form :
Farner's lyrics are simple and
c)"Satisfactlon" distorto alotus; tell a cl&amp;ssic male/female story in
d)" 19th Nervous breakdown"- terfus of the Jetsons and the Brave
yeahll;
New Worlct: "She's a real
e) the Velvets doing " Euro'pean upsetter/ least she's tryin' to all
Son-Cosmic come;
•
the time/ Y~ know I just won't
f) Grand Funk 's new lp E let her/ Break this heart of
Pluribus Funk . Then rest your mine/ ... Upsetter got me layin'
musical soul 'cause you've just awake/All night/ Upsetter, like to
had some rock n' roll.
make me cry -" yeah /Upsetter, got
What you eventually come up me layin' awake/Upsetter, I'd
with as a result of this exercise is better to die."
rock n' roll defined as, or by,
" loneliness" Is Ike and Tina's
emotional distortionallty . One " River Deep, Mountain High" put
satiates the mind, one makes the in terms of sonic rock 'n' roll.
musical enzymes go willy nilly Farner's cries for love are heard
into your soul, the other makes over the hoarse rumblm' of the
you want love- of the purely band as Terry Knight, producing
physical kind, the other- yeah!, his ass off, blasts in with muted
the other, pure rock n' roll no strings and horns playing eternal
nonsense at all, and the last high one-note·blasts. Two generations
level energy bursts-no need for have fused.
reds, or booze, or doge just go
Two generational e)(periences
ride the music for this is rock and have occurred. Does anyone
roll for the soul.
remember the long fade out
E Pluribus Funk presents a orchestrated note on the end of
mileston'e in the history of rock n' " Day In tt-e life"? Well It's all
roll . Suburban blues nas been here once again but different In
born. Rock n'roll has a future . the sense that it's reaching an
And its getting louder tool
audience that has to have the
T aking the basic fact that I like continual driving beat of the band
the album plain and simple and underneath the frills of the horns
setting that aside : F'arner's guitar and strings-a rock n ' roll
has increased In stature 100 audience that wants, that needs to
percent and his rhythm wrist move Its body with the music .
certainly can be put along side of
E Pluribus Funk" is rock n' roll
Keith's and J . Geils in the Rock music, and It stJre sounds sweet.
Now, there are a lot of groups
and Roll Hall of Fame. The bass
lines are solid and the rock n' trying to break in on the sonic
funk rhythms abound. Its also an rock and roll b usiness. Yet, there
important political document.
are only a small few wh9 attain
Coming close on the heels of greatness in the genre. Numter
Dylan's "George Jackson" single, one, is obviously Grand Funk,
Farner 's " Let's Stop the War" just number two is Black Sabbath and ,
m~t give rise to a new and
true to their concept, they d on 't
non · de cade nt pol i t ica l even try harder, number three is a
consciousneu.
group called Bloodrock.
A conciousness which is vital
Long under the tutelage of
to the continuation of a Terry Knight they've split the
generational political awareness. master and gotten themselves a
Certainly Dylan's song will reach new produ cer man , John
OUf generation with much impact, Palladino, for their latest effort,
bUt Farner's song will reach the Bloodrock USA.
Hampstead children with as much
While I'm still thinkin' that
force as our generations first their one smash ass hit single
listenings to"Hattie Caroll ." And "DOA" can never be equaled, the
the children of Hempstead will new albums kind of pretty in its
listen to the lyrics, they will own Bloodrocky way.
respond when Mark shouts out,
First of all, th ey've come up
" If we had a President that d id with an lp which possesses not
just what he saidfThe country only th e m ost br ill ia ntly
would be just alri~t and no one audacious front and back covers
would be dead." And there's hope but also has the best list of song
with the new children, no longer titles on any record to date. Not
do they care for bullshit, they since " Anthem of the Sun " have
don't even care for their own we been treated to such titles as :
bodies, giving them much more ' ' Don 't Eat the Children ,
power than we have because we Hangman ' s Dance, American
still care what happens to our Burn, Rock 'n ' Roll Candy Man,
precious skins.
Abracadaver" (the absolute best)
E Pluribus Funk is a simple and " Magic Man.'\.
The album ·s billed as
statement for stopping the war,
the rape ! ~ our planet, and just Bloodrock's attempt at coming to
plain loving one another. So who grips with the forces of good and
evil in America and while the
could argue with that?
There are three classics on the lyrics are obscure and often just
album . The first is an example of plain lousy, I suppose they do
rock n' roll pure form , no what they set o ut to do.
The last song on the album is a
non sense at all. If ever a
5ynthe5is
song of the new
summation was ca lled for
concerning the true nature of rock Bloodrock sound. It opens with a
n'roll it would come with Farner's shocking electric piano solo
(which is very demonic and more
" Footstompin" Music:"
than likely should've been put on
"Comtl on tlverybody
the beginning of Woodstock much
We'nr gonm hsve s good time
more than the ones that've been
Gimme sll the love that's in ys
put on before) and launches into
And I'm Gonns give ya mine
an absolute musical battle
I wanna ht111r $1()me handclappin'
I wantchs to gt~t in thtt groove
Wt~ 're gonns play this
Footstompln ' music
Everybody {/lit up and movtl"

The second is "Upsetter" and
what this song is to the children
A Williamsville (Hempstead being
the latters' counterpart) what
"Satisfaction" and Fred 'Sonic'
Smiths ''Shakin ' Street" should be
to the children of " I Wanna Hold
Your Hand ."

between good and evil. The guitar
is piercing and the keyboards
augment the bass-drum rhythms
fully . Also " Magic Man" is the
best lyric on the record: " Magic
Man come take my hand and
let/ me feel your powa'/loosen UJ&gt;
the mighty grip that makes the
sky your tawer/ let me walk upon
your chest and watch/ the spatial
flashes/1'11 never know how long
you'll live but/ l'm from dust to
ashes."

�What's become offolk music

Gordon Lightfoot: old friend
When we walked Into
Kleinhans Saturday night, I was
afraid that maybe It was the
wrong nilt\t. Instead of Gordon
lightfoot, perhaps Jerry Vale was
playing. The crowd was the
strangest mixt..,re I've ever seen,
predominated by middle twenties
mod-hip, each self-consciously
trying to be more stylish than the
other. Is this what became ot the
early folk audiences? I guess
Gordon Lightfoot is a star of sorts
these days; and as I heard two
middle aged ladies talk about the
beauty of his voice, I wondered
what had become of fo lk music.
He finally ~tmerged onto the
stage, looking a little like a rock
star, with a mad poet hair style
and beard, and went into "Song
for Young Patriots," a typical
Lightfoot allegory about sons
marching off to war in a patriotic
fever and returning dead . It was
told in such a way as not to take
sides but there was enough of a
touch of bitterness to know where
Gordon's at.

Anyway, a good folky song to
start off with, and the audience
loved it. Gordon hadn't forgotten
his roots and, as a matter of faCt,
the audience loved most
everything he did . Then to
"Alberta Bound," a song about
going home, with everything just
as he remembered it.
Epitome of folk
I've heard Gordon Lightfoot
described as the epitome of folk,
and his voice is one of the nicest
around, sometimes soft and
mellow. sometimes with a touch
of bitterness and other times
cry ing . His guitarist, Mike
Clemens, was a one man band and
the bass filled out the other side.
He seemed to be sticking to gentle
ballads, like "Summer Side of
Life," a perfect top 40 candidate,
and "Softly ." Pretty songs, but I
was hoping for something to wake
up the audience.
Gordon was the master of it
all, and went into the one
everyone was waiting for, " If You

TheUUAB*

Music Committee
In conjunction with the

BAC &amp; WBLK
Present in Concert
To Blow Your Funky Mind

" THE

PARLIAFUN KADELICMENT THANG"

The Funkadelics
The Parliaments
&amp;

James Westley
Sunday Dec. 12
CLARK GYM et 10:00 p .m .
Tickets $2.00 students (with 1.0.)

$3.00 Others

On sale et Norton Tioktrt Office, Buffalo State, &amp; Audrey &amp;
Dells.
iil=ls::b::::t'I::I~~~A

Division of Sub·Board I s;a::u:=-*'1!r;:a:l1'1=8:d

Could Read My Mind." One of
the strangest songs ever written, it
escaped s'!lf·indulgence by putting
down self-indulgence. He did a
beautiful job here, so that at the
end you could almost hear him
crying softly. Everyone loved It,
so much that ne did another
chorus, which ruined the effect.
Gordon was clearly enjoying
himself, and did a few ramblin'
cowboy songs. "Reach for the
Bottle" is about a man who's left
with only that choice. "For
Lovin' Me" somehow lacked
something. It seemed as though he
was singing It for the audience,
and instead of bitter laughter, it
came off as just a funny song.
"Rock My Wprid," a new one,
was one of h1s best, and fit the
situation perfectly. It almost
sounded like a spiritual.
The set ended with
" Auctioneer" with Lightfoot
chanting the words, trying to find
the highest bidder. And maybe
that's exactly the way he felt . It
was a lot of fun , though and as
soon as he danced off stage in
tune to the music, there was a Herman Melville. Still it showed a
mad dash to the bar, while progression of sorts for Lightfoot;
everyone tried to figure out he won't do rambling cowboy
whether they were enjoying songs forever .
After a few words about his
themselves.
friend Krls, he did "Loving Her
was Easier" and " Me and Bobby
Getting down to business
The second set started with McGee." His renditions seemed
"Canadian Railroad Trilogy," one more sensitive than
of hiJ most powerful songs and he Kristofferson's, and his singing
was !Jetting down to business. The seemed much more natural here.
song starts by describing the He wasn't using his voice as an
Can\Kfian wilderness and the men instrument, like in the first set. He
who built the railroad through it. understated "Me and Bobby
It builds and builds until you can McGee" perfectly. in a sad and
hear the train rolling on by, as he resigned voice that almost
sings about the men who worked communicated witho ut words.
for a dollar a day and didn't care
about tomorrow. But in the end, The Minstrel of the Dawn
when the railroad is finally built,
Then the songs became more
they're left with nothing. The serious. " Boss Man" was the other
touch of fatalism that runs side of " Railroad Trilogy," a work
through it is what makes it work; song that realizes the despair of
man's destiny Is controlled by his the situation as the worker
realizes that only his death will
struggle with nature.
On this note he went into a free h1m . "Sit Down, Young
5hort talk on the effects of man's Stranger" held the audience in a
triumph over nature, and a song spell, and " Minstrel of the Dawn, "
aboot the now extinct blue his song if there ever was one, was
whales. It was a majestic song the perfect way to end it.
about the greatest blue whale who Lightfoot fits the part perfectly,
escaped the ravages of man and the wandering minstrel who asks
died a natural death after a for nothing in return except his
hundred years. The imagery was 'pride, and "by his words your
almost biblical in Its power, but it fortune's told ." The encore was of
owed more than a little to oourse "Earl y Morning Rain,"

_....__,

---- - -

-··

sounding a little sadder than
usual . He seid&amp;he planned to do it
all along wh~ther they wanted
him back or not, and I believed
him .
The minstrel of the dawn came
out with his pride intact, but the
whole thing was a little too
calculated for me. Lightfoot
played the part of the wandering
minstrel, the tro ubadour, and the
poet perfectly, but the audience
was too hung up on his voice to
make him work for anything. You
can just imagine him wandering
through the Canadian wilderness
with his guitar, rambling and
gambling, sometimes winning and
sometimes losing.
Of course li"'tfoot had won
even before he had walked on the
nage Saturday night. Lightfoot's
best songs speak to you in an
almost wordless way. but it's 100
bad if his audiences get hung up
on the self-indulgent side of his
music. It's cool if middle aged
ladles gush over "If You Coold
Read My Mind," but I hope he
doelll't ltrt it go to his head. An
evening with Lightfoot is like
visiting an old friend , but like the
sqng says, the laughter came just a
little bit too easy.

-

- Tom Bogucki

---

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(O~ae

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New YearS Eve Party

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•

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�..

.lJisneY flick goes avante-garde
byMidt... Si~
L l,.,..tu,. .t

D,.,. Editor

Thanksgivinu happened somewhere
around two weeks ago, if the calendar is
any clue. I was feeling nauseous with
holiday spirit and I figured I was about to
fall in love or experience an Identity crisis.
Having hung around with my favorite
juiceheads for far too long a period of time
for me to know any better, I figured the
only way to alleviate my hang-over was to
drink some more. It was only a short
stagger from the deserted campus to the
Beef and Ale.
let my betters mutter all they please
about certain metaphysical bars on
Elmwood Ave., the Beef and Ale is still my
favorite bar - the bartenders know me, my
friends hang out there and you don't find
huge articles being written about it in
various campus newspapers of low repute.
Ahem.
Enter George
Be that as it may, my friend George and
I (where did George come from 7) enter the
bar, guzzle nine or ten gin and tonics each
(half of them courtesy of a good -natured
boozer named Gomer who was buying
rounds as if It were Thanksgiving ort
something) and begin slapping each other
on the shoulders in drunken im itation o f
jocks on a post-game binge. Suddenly,
outside the w indow we saw the Granada
Theater glowing like Macy's window at

Christmastime. Our eyes lit up like
sparklers in the night and we looked as
winsome • new-born little pups (aren't
metaphors cute?).
After a tturred alcoholic pas-de-deux
with ttte manager of the theater. I
triumphantly emerged from the phon'l
booth with the miraculous news that l'dl
arranged compl imentary tickets.
(Everybody loves a drunken editor of The
Spectrum). A few more gin and tonics to
get the old blood flowing and it was off
out into the cold to make the perilsome
journey across the street.
More about George
I 'II tell you that my friend George (he
looks a bit like a Scottish terrier) slipped
and fell belly down into Main St. traffic.
I 'II tell you that because I won't tell you
that I fell belly-down Into Main St. traffic.
My parents would be so ashamed . My
friends wouldn't speak to me. Ah, the
insidious clutches of demon alcohol.
We emerged without a scratch.
Scratch less, we marched into the theater . I
forgot to tell you - the film Is Walt
Disney's newest Bed/mobs and
Broomsticks. Sing hal for the children
vomiting 1n the aisles of the theater. sing
hoi for the trips to the men's room every
five minutes. Sing tirra lirra, if you want. I
for one don't hke people who sing. They
can go to the devil.
The film is about wartime london, of
all things. Wartime l ondon and a witch

'\.

-

,.

named Eglantine Price who .owns a flying
bed (bi zarre sexual intonations), 8'
broomstick (which she thrusts between her
legs with wild abandon in spite of the fact
that her cat tells her it's not lady·like), and
a book of spells (mdlt of which back·fire in
the silliest ways). She has custody of three
cockney children (who must have been
selected from a world·wide Little Mister
and Miss Obnoxious competition - they
even outdo the pern icious little tykes in
Mary Poppins for simpering smiles and
syrupy pathos) .
Oh , God, what with the singing and
dancing fish and the Nazis and the laughing
animals and special effects, I was sure I'd
succumbed to terminal DT's. The only
thing in this movie a child could like is,
maybe, the cartoons. But these are not half
as lush and detailed as the ones the Studio
produced when Disney was alive. And
when the Germans come and actually
speak German with subtitles - what can ~
say? Walt Disney goes avante-garde?
Bye-bye, George
cho~. C?t this juncture, to look at me with
On my fourth trip to the john a little such vengeance that I rushed out and fell
boy was mauling his father, tugging his arm down the stairs. This little buck-and·wlng
and shouting things like " Boy, I hope Walt got a bigger laugh than the entire movie.
Disney has more like that, don't you
Well, Walt Disney has seen better days,
Daddy, huh, DaQdy etc., etc."
and I have seen better movies. George (or
I turned to the child and, hoping to does he look more like an English sheep
sound like some laner-day Bernard Shaw, I Clog?) has vanished into the night - I have
said, "Child, Walt Disney is dead and not seen him since. He is as dead as the
rotting in his grave as you soon, past, as desultory as a drunk, as fictitious
undoubtedly, will be." The pissing papa as a unicorn.

UNCLE SAMS IS COMING
.(

UNCLE SAM'S IS COMING
UNCLE· SAM'S IS COMING
UNCLE SAM'S IS COMING

A new experience in light ar:td sound.
You have to see it to believe it.
-.

I

�Asy'lum Choir II Leon RUSIIIII and Marc
Benno (Shetter SW8910)
Once upon a time there was a band
known • che Asylum Choir. It consisted of
only two people. One ~as Marc Benno, a
guitarist with a fine voice, and the other
was Leon R~l . who had done session
work almost all his grown life. They
refeased one album which rai~ a few
eyebrows and sold verv few copies. So they
broke up and went their separate ways.
leon got the big break he was destined to
get and became a superstar and Benno
went Into session work, most noticeably on
the Doors' LA Wom.tn album.
Anyway, since Leon has h is own label,
the two figured that they might as well
release their second album, recorded in
1969, and show the public what they
missed. It's a good thing they did, Asylum
Choir II is a great record.
What strikes me about this record is that
the songs are a lot better than the ones on
leon's Sht~ltxtr PtJOple album. Somehow
that one was so eclipsed by Russell's live
show that I don't listen to it any more.
But this lp has a few gems, and since
Benno co-authorect six of the ten songs, I'll
have to say that he's the reason this record
is so good. leon's a superstar and all that,
but I have to say that I was a bit
embarrassed by some of the Shelter l'w&gt;pl•
songs, especially "Theme from Mad Dogs
and Englishmen ." These older tunes have a
lot to them, especially lyrically.
Pe~Wnal favorites
include ''Straight
Brother," which has Benno singing the
choruses and sounds alot like "Aicatraz."
Two army songs, "Down on the Base" and
"Ballad for a Soldier," show a strong
political side to Russell that somehow
declined in the last two vears. There's even
an anti·smoking song, ''When You Wish
Upon a Fag," with lyrics like "One more
silly millimeter more to Forest lawn and
Save the coupons, walk a mile, your lungs
are getting tanned." And the chorus :
'When your base player's flat and your
drummer drags, I bet you wish you had a
fag ."
leon does most of the work
Instrumentally (when there's only two in a
band, someone's gonna have to play more
than one instrument), working on guitar,
keyboards, bass and some drums. Benno
handles the other guitar parts and most of
the background vocals. the two work very
well together, especially vocally. leon's
voice is gruff and snarly, Benno's is soft
and sweet and their phrasing is identical .
Don't pass this one up because it's old
stuff, 'cause if you do, you'll miss some of
leon's best singing and writing and Marc
Benno's able assisstance In creating a fine
album . I hope there's an Asylvm Choir Ill
lying around somewhere.

- Billy Altman
Bob Dylan 's Greetest
(Columbia KG31120)

Hits

Vol.

II

As Robert Zimmerman sits by his
fire.place in the Greenwich Village
apartment, he is tormented by frightful
images aroused by feelings of doubt and
pride. Weberman, Ochs, Don McClean,
Joan Baez - all, as if Imported from the
farm owned by a certain gin named
Maggie, are at his throat. He is constantly
c h alle~ to prove he is still the
innovator, the volcanic force behind a
generation of the disa~ected .
Despite the hurricane around him,
Dylan moves freely in the eye of the storm
and continues to make the best music

SAT.,
DEC. 11th,
8:30p.m.
P£ACE
BRIDGE
EXHIBITION
CENTER

.

..

•

RECORDS
around (with the help, of COUJH, of 10me
of the best musicians around). Despite ttte
controversy, people are continually looking
for keys to the man's inner conscience and
projecting theories in•o the music columns
and, surely, the politicel columns.
Bob Dyt.n '~ GIWten Hlr. Vol. II delays
the Dylanologilt for just awhile, and. it
forces us to look back rather than ahead in
musical time. It din be painful , and vet the
experience of listening to such an amazing
musical progression gives one a
tremendous, exhilarating rush.
There is, however, new material on the
album, as well as a simultaneous release of
the "George Jackson" lament. He dangles
the imaginary carrot of knowledge in front
of all the "experts" and has a lot of fun
doing it. " Pack up your money, pick up
your tent, McGuinn" he declares in "You

but unlike Dorian Grey he will not be
lmprltoned by the art. He is rather painting
musical landrcapes for him•lf, trying not
to be ..ienated from his wotk es e result of
Otrtside forces. Dylan's greet.t . hits is an
absurd term in itself, and to try to unify a
theory ebout his music:el progression is
absurd as well. Just sit back and enjoy the
album,nd be convinced that the musical
genius of Mr. Zimmerman will continue to
shine in the future as well as remind us of a
beautiful past.

Tom.
Instrumentally, the interplay between
Tom and Mimi's guitan work quite weU,
exhibited best on "After the Sugar
Harvest," the inevitable instrumental on
any Farina album. Also cfrumm• Jim
Ktltn• and pianist .Craig Doerge Heserve
special praise as they perform most ably
throughout.
T•k• HtNirt is the most sincere record to
come out in quite a while. It's one of those
late nl_..t albums that seems to set things
stra11jht. It's the type of record you share
with someone you really care about.

- TMT'Y BromberJ
It Is And It Isn't Gordon Haskell (Ateb
SD33·37B)

Take Heett Mimi Farina and Tom Jans
(A&amp;M SP 4310)

First there was King Crimson, wit that
album with the big red mouttl and t · ear,
and with Greg lake, lan McDonald \1ike
Giles and Robert Fripp. Then came . Thl
W.tke of POSINdon. and the KC vets
contributed a lot less, so some new faces
appeared to take up the slack - Peter
Giles, Keith Tippet and Cascade. Next
came Emerson, lake and Palmer; and McDonald and Giles; and Fripp recruited a
few more people for King Crimson's third
- Llz11rd. Gordon Haskell was promoted to
bass player/ lead vocalist and while to say
that he was spectacular would be overdoinv
h, he was all right as Greg lake's
replacement.
Now Gordon Haskell has his own album
out featuring his voice and song writing,
and I don't see how anyone could not like

Intense Identification with certain
artists Is the lpgical conclusion to being
intensely invoiJed with music. And there is
no telling whom you'll identify with since
my friends favorites range from Ray Davies
to Jim Morrison to leon Russell ,
Well, my allegiance, after all is said and
done, Is with Richard and Mimi Farina.
Whet1ever I'm at a loss to explain my
feelings, my situation, or almost anything
else, I can always turn to them, for they
{ just seem to have a beautiful way of
putting my sentiments into song.
So it gave me great joy to see Mimi,
after waiting five years sinoe Richard's
tragic motorcycle crash, release a new
album along with partner Tom Jans.
Accepting Mimi without Richard was a bit
difficult at first, but on its own terms this
Ain't Going Nowhere," and we can see he is really a beautiful record.
Mimi possesses one of the most
is trying to shake a few parasites out of his
exquisite
voices that I've ever heard and
hair. For that line alone, the album
her
harmonizing
with Tom is even a little
attracted my attention.
reminiscent
of
her earlier work with
The music on the album is tremendous
with the exception of the Isle of Wight Richard. She also has done most of the
songwriting, although Tom authored my
"Mi~ty Quinn" cut, on which Dylan,
Richard M.-.uel and Rick Danko struggle favorite cut, " Carolina." This one is not
about the state, but about a girl. The lyrics
to harmonize. We are treated to six vintage
Dylan cuts from previous albums are not profound, but they speak of, as
(including "Mv Back Pages, Hard Rain" they do throughout the album, things that
and "All I Really Want To Do") plus a live are close tO all our lives.
For Instance, "Reach Out," written by
version of ''Tomorrow Is A long Time"
~imi, Is about Chris Ross, a friend of hers
and a brand. new studio cut of "I Shall Be
Released" with clutch support from Happy wno suffered and eventually died from a
malady that Is striking with Increasing
Traum.
The rest of the cuts project the frequency these days, loneliness. "In The
Quiet Morning," is a eulogy for someone it. Oh, it's got no great message for the
post· 1965 Dylan with fine variety. To hear
"lay lady Lay" followed by "Memphis who touched all of our lives, Janis Joplin. people, and there are no deep-level ho,. esty
" Madman" opens up the second side personal confession-type lyrics on it, but
Blues Again" is to experience a joining of
Its filled with the same communal
and
the words are nice and easy and they're
two men and to find cultural schizophrenia
that
pervades
work
associated
with
a
spirit
unimportant anyway.
staring us in the face . All this we ponder,
The important thing is the music itself.
while the forthcoming release of an album Farina. like a madman, he drives himself
made with leon Russell stays at the backs to the grave/ Such a sadman, he never The record is made up of a dozen simple
of our minds. ' What's the cat up to?" knew how to behave/ Never at home with little tunes. They're lyrical and mellow,
_._.
some ask . 'Where does George Jackson fit
and , exc ept for one song, totally
in 7" And immediately Dylan is made the
inoffensive. The singing is soothing and it
cultural scapegoat of a group of people too
flows hke gentle fluid . You' ll want to sit
short-sighted and cowardly to admit their
back and relax, and think things over (for a
own failings.
change)
. The voice fits right In with the
Bob Dylan really does not owe his
instruments,
very steady and smooth, and
audience anything, for he has already
un·ego.
provided cultural fulfillment and a certain
The back·up band is fine, better than
moral consciousness. This is all that any art
average. The drums in particular are not
can do, and if Bob Dylan has done
anything he certainly has transformed
like the typical studio's back·up to a singer.
himself into a work of art . We may look at
Cat Stevens, for example, ruined his
• it, let it seep into our senses, draw
recordings completely with that obscene
conclusions from it, yet it gives no hint of
thumping. Tim Hardin was another who
recognition .
blew it the same way . Give credit to Bill
But if Bob Dylan Is two-dimensional in
Atkinson
for overall control. The lead
the audience's eyes, he is nonetheless living
gUitarist,
Alan
Barry, get.s in a few licks
flesh .and blood in the eyes of Bob Dylan , life, driven by his fatherts will/ Before he
having his own consciousness and a finds the perfect wife/ He's on the field, which aren't bad, but their purpose is more
to pass the time than to attract attention.
personal view of the world . He was public he'll fight to kill.
property in the voyeuristic world of the
"Oh listen to the earth my friend/It 'll Which is all right for this kind of music . I
concert tour, and the experience obviously bend your heart not break it/ Time is mean , this isn't jazz. It's rock. If you want
blew his mind. So, with the catalyst of a nowhere near the end/ And there's plenty to hear great playing, pick up a copy of
motorcycle accident hastening his of room for all of us to make it."
Sun Ship . But that 's a whole different
segregation, he withdrew into a musical
And for all you C&amp;W fans, there is " The thing, and to avoid unfair comparisons, it
realm rather than the realm of the street . Great White Horse," by Buck Owens, with
would be best to stay within the rock
Dylan is trying to paint his masterpiece. the lyrics shared beautifully by Mimi and
world.
On this record , everything is batanced
out perfectly, so the total sound is unified
ZIG ZAG PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS . . •
and even. Things don't stick out like on
U EYEifllli OF GOOD ILD lOCI 'a BOLL WITB
poor Cat's Tillerman. It Is And It Isn't Is a
well put together album.
Of course, there are things that can be
criticized, like the fairly meaningless lyriC$,
or the lack of virtuoso instrumentar breaks,
SIW£ UP AliD JOIN T.C£ CAMC - rill£$ fOI THE IESf CIIASEI
but what would be the point? When you're
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standing under a rainbow admiring its
fiCICUS ON SAU IUJfAlO ''"" TICICIT 0"1Cf:. H04UOH UNION.U.I ••
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FA.US TICIITS. HAIIIIlE ,\AlA, NIAOAIA FAlu, IWJfAW FllfiVAl.
STANI HIUON lDaaY
about the drizzle? This Album is sheer
pleasure.
NEW 4-WAY QUADRAIONIC SOUND

........

--

SBII-Nil~NA
ARD SYMBOL

..

-

- Norman S.l.tnt

r

�-'

'

CAVAGES
STORES
Long play Specials from A&amp;M and ODB
-..

,..

(OFFER GOOD THRU SAT. DEC. 11th)

CAT STEVENS

.

'·7.s(o~es. including .
University Plaza ··

.,~:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
•

'"""
Vol. 22, No. 40

State University of New Yo~ ~ Buff-'o

•

W.SMidev, o.c.mt. 8, 1971

Everything' you always
wanted to know about
the draft*

Editor'l note: The following article
ducusses some of the mOI'e important
chmrges in ihe draft with the passage ofthe
clraft extension bill, tmd suggests tluJt the
net effect of the recent changes/$ to ~r
down more inunstvely on a muzller group
of men. It was contributed by the Drtl/r
Coume1ing Center of Buffalo. (For drtift.
counseling, cmuact them at 897-2871.)
The tditon would like to note that the
center hils a funding propo$01 now pending
before the Student Association, and would
like to urge ltudenr support of th/J
proposal.
The rules by which drafl boards play
with their registrants have changed. When
President Nixon slsned Public Law 92-129
on Sept. 28, he extended his authority to
draft men for two more years. The bill
from Congress also enacted changes that
will affect most Sele ctive Service
registrants, and presumably, the political
opposition to the draft . The new
regulations issued by Selective Service to
implement the provisions of the revised
draft law institute perhaps even more
sJsnlficant changes.
Among the most important changes are
the disappearance of some old
classiOcatlons and the creation of ~ome
new ones.
Men who enter college in the summer
197 1 or after will not be eligible for 2.S
deferments. formerly the automatic right
of all full·time college students making
normal progress toward a degree . A man
who was eligible for a 2-8 during the last
semester of the 1970·7 1 school year,
whether or not he was actually classified
2-S, may co n tin L ~ to h o ld that
classification as long as he makes normal
progress under the old rules. Similarly, a
man who was eligible for a 2-A deferment
for apprenticeship or technical school
before July J can obtain or continue to
hold this deferment. Men who enter such a
program after July I are ineligible.

or

Goodbye I..S(C)
The other college student deferment ,
I..S(C), has also been abolished. Formerly,
men who received induction orden; while
they were full·time students were entitled
to a cancellation of the induction order
and a I ·S(C) classification until the end of
the academic year at which time he would
have to be reclassified and would have
procedural rights to personal appearance
and appeal. Now , a man who gets an
induction order while he is a full·time
student will onJy get a postponement of
the date he is expected to report for
induction. He has no procedural rights of
personal appearance and appeal available to
him at the end of the academic year as
these rights are only avallable upon
reclassification.
Class l-Y, held by almost four million
men, has been abolished. Previously, '!len
ph ys i ca lly , men tally or rnors'lly
unacceptable under current standards, but
eUgjble for reclassification under national
mobilization standards, were placed in class
1-Y. 1-Y has now been totally eliminated.

Unlike 2.S and 2-A , which can continue to
be held by met). who qualified before a
cut-off date.

4-F fora 1-Y
The definition of 4·F has also been
c hanged , so that men who were
permanently 1-Y and not subject to recall
for further physical examinations, are now
to be classified 4-F, formerly held only by
men who would not qualify for military
service even ·in time of national
mobilization . A man who is temporarily
unacceptable will not be retained in I·A,
but not suceptible to induction until after
he has been re-examined and found
acceptable to the military. The practical
effect of this change, and clearly its intent,
is to deny new procedural rights of
personal appearance and appeal to a man
who is re-examined and found acceptable
after failing a previous physical.
Formerly, in the past, a man who failed
a physical was classified 1-Y. If his
condition were temporary - broken ann,
mononucleosis, underweight, braces on his
teeth, etc. - and corrected, therefore
passing a later physical, he would have
been reclassified l ·A. Thus, he would have
a chance to seek a new claulflcatlon or to
delay by taking a personti appe11rance and
an 1ppeaJ. Now, since a man temporarjJy
unacceptable will be held in 1-A QJl be
mailed an Induction order immediately if
he is re-examined and found nt.
12S ceiling
The effect of this new change on men
who now hold l ·Y classifications is not yet
clear. It is at least theoretically possible
under the new regulations that these men
could be reclassified l ·A immediately .
without being re-examined, if they ~~~"
subject to recall for a future examinat1011
Or they could be reclassified 4·F if they arc
not to be re-examined , because ol
permanent conditions which make thl'nJ
unfit. This would be especially harsh fP I
men who are J -Y now , and who hJ'
lottery numbers under 125, which is tht;\
year's "ceiling," but not high enough to b~.;
reached in this next year (an election year).
For exam ple, if a man with a number of
11 2 were reclassified 1-A in December , he
would pass mto the l:.xtended Prionty
Select ion Group on Jan. I, where h1!&gt;
lottery number is ahead of number one for
next year. If he were then found to be fit
in June, he could be ordered for induction
immediately . This would be true even 1f
the highest number reached next year were
I 00, because his number would be
regarded as having been reached during
197 1.

What may happen in practice remains to
be see n . Selective Service National
Headquarters has not yet announced its
policy. Contra ry to the misinformation
published elsewhere in the public media,
however, Selective Service will clearly not
re-examine four million men immediately.
They will instead quite certainly wait until
such men would otherwise have been
recalled had the regulations not been
changed .

\

*But were never told

Recall dates are normally determined by
the Examining Station under a separate
body of Army Regulations, whlch are not
affected by cha nges in Selective Service
classifications. But, local boards now do
not have to wait for re-examination to
reclassify a registrant who iJ now subject to
a recaU physical at some later date. They
can reclassify him immediately. and
rr-rxamine him later. Whether Selective
Service will resort to such tactics In the
case of men now 1-Y, or hold them in 1-Y
until re-e,.amtned and apply the new
rcgul:ll ions ju~ t to men not yet examined,
wdl !" t's uruah ly be announced , or
deomo1 -trJtl.'u vrry shortly.
1' 1 c 1 \\
, lfication is 4-G . Section
(•("I " ' the ~~ •ttc has been amended by
( '\) ,., r· . ,h• that, except in time of
war 01 " "'" ' emergency, no one may be
drafted 11 ''" t,llher. brother or sis ter was
1.111 ·' ·• • 111 • 1 11•ecl in the line of duty
tlw Armed Forces tf such
rlle r Dec. 31 of l959,or
~ lt ;~ n t '~ father, brother m sister
•n,uriC\ received or diseases
n ' 11 thl hne of duty during such
I·Uithct, no man may be drafted
,, 11111~ any pt'lind of time in which his
lathe•. brolhl't nr sister is "in a captured or
.. 1 ''"g stat uo, .J\ a result of such service
\ pt in t;me of war or national
cro ·•ucncy.
l •ug~c,:. al~n clarifies that "'the term
'brother or 'sister' means a brother of the
whole hlo•··I qr a sister of the whole blood ,
as th
may be." The regulations
provide 1h.JI th1s broadentng of what used
to he t to
-.ole survivmg son" section wiJl
place th•M' men in class 4-G. Presumably,
men curren tly classifi ed fV-A for sole
surviving son status w1ll he reclassified into
the new class 4-G .)
The ·holding' classification
Another newly-created cJassification is
1-11 , the "'holding" classification for those
"not currently subject to processing for
induction." Selective Service intends to
avo1d work which it previously had to do
in classifying 18-year-old registrants,
putting up with their claims of hardship,
consclentious objection, etc., by classifying
them into ~ ..non•ppealable" class of
1-H until ~uch titne as their lottery numbers

are drawn, or until they pass draft age if
their numbers are never reached for
processing for induction . Men will be able
to state medical conditions or eUgibUity for
the classification 4-G , and these claims may
an fact be considered by the local board .
Psesumably, older registrants with higb
lottery. numbers will also find themseJves in
class 1-H.
One new provision o( the draft law
institutes a uniform national call oflottery
numbers. Formerly , the national quota of
men to be inducted was apportioned by
states, according to the number of men
classified 1-A within states, by the local
board. Separately, a lottery number ceiling
was established . Each state was required by
regula lion to fill its quota, so that if a man
in New York was granted a I.Q
classification or refused imtuction, another
lcgistrant had to be inducted from the
same state.
Local quotas abolished
In West Virl!inia or Ken1ucky. where
the1 e lS little dtaft re ·L,tance and little
cuunsehng. some local boards would fill
their quota without reaching the lottery
ceiling. ( In 1970 aU but eight local boards
in New York State reached the lottery
ceihng of 195, while the majority in
Kentucky did not, With some reaching only
160 or 170.) Under the new system, local
board quotas of men are abolished, and
each local board will order for induction all
men up to the nat1onal ce iling.
Proportionately larger numbe!l of men wiU
be drafted ·from rural states, already
discriminated agamst under the quota
system by having fewer men in deferred
classifications, due to the lower rates, say,
of college attendance.
[There is another effect of this change
which will also benefit certain registrants in
states where the middle-class abltity to deal
with immense bureaucracies is mwe wide
spread. In the past, men with classifications
which were. discretionary with the local
board, notably 3-A har-dship, often were
reclassified back to 1-A when the board
was having difficulty in meeting its
monthly quotas within the lottery ceiling.
Since the local board will no longer have
-continu ed on pa. .

"l.-

�Enttibcais, s'illOus plait

SA grants allocatioJ?.
to PODER for day care
The controversial allocation of
$13,000 for the Niapra Day Care
Center was approved 7.0 by the
Student Association Executive
Com mittee M o nday . The
allocation, which was previously
defeated in the Executive
Committee on Nov. I and Nov. II
was granted to PODER, the
Pu erto Ri can stu dent
organization.
After the two Executive
defeats, the Student Assembly
reviewed the recommendation and
sent tt back to the Executive
Committee, urging Its approval.
They included a statement that
the Student Assembly was in
favor of allocating the mo ney for
the Niagara Day Care Center, and
requested that the director of the
center be invited to address the
Executive Committee. Barbara
Shaws, director of the day care
center, was invited and delivered
an " illuminating talk'" Monday,
accordtng to SA President lan
DeWaal.
The critic1sms of SA funding of
such projects as the Niagara Day
Care Center have been that
University students do not
directly profit from off-&lt;:ampus
lnstitutio n t of t hi s type .
Conversely, some have argued that
it improves University relations
whh the C'mnm1111 itv And that the

BSU Breakfast Project
precedent in this area .

set

Study overseas in France
a

Basis of need
The Niapra Day Care Center is
operated for needy neigbborbood
children and located on Buffalo's
lower West Side. PODER uraes
Spanish•peaking mothers to brina
their children to th~ center, where
educational programs are provided
for the kids, such as the teachina
of EngUsh and other skills.
Additionally, PODER offers
scholarships to parents so that
their kids may attend the center
for free. Opponents of tho center
have charged that the scholarships
were awa rd~d with personal
influence , but Ms. Shaws insisted
that the scholarships are "not
awarded personally, but carefully
reviewed on the basis of need ."
Ms. Shawa noted that nine
parents were forced to take their
ctuldren out of the center after
losing their scholarships when the
center lost its fundina. She also
stressed that the center "can't act
funds from any other source."
Apparently , her talk wu
convincing to the members of the
Exe c utive Com mittee ··it
convinced them to finally approve
S I 3,50 I for the Niagara Day Care
C'enrer.

Interface
This Thunday evenina on Interface (WBFO 88.7
FM, 8-9 p.m.), State University of Buffalo Pr•ident
Robert L. Ketter and Aubtant Vice President for
Academic Afralrs Dr. Henry Richard• wUI answer
your queatioru li11e on the air. The number to c.ll iJ
831 -5393.
ThiJ is your opportunJty to confront Univeraity
admin.istraton pcnonally with your problema or
quatlona ... don' t blow it!

Get to know The Spectrum staff
Room 355 Norton

WE NEED

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tim•• • wtttlk, t~Wry Mond•y,
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CALL
IMMEDIATELY

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Sttcond Cl., Post.,e Pllid tit Buffalo,
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2450 ElMWOOD AVE.

Phone 174-0591

the beaches in their free time, as well as congregate
at the cafeterias of the university and the local cafes.
Dr. Aubery stated: '7here, nature is not rejecting
you. Here, in Buffalo, during the winter, we are
confined by th e weather."
Students have tU option of living at the
university in donnitories, living with a French family
or living in their own apartments. The projected cost
of the year is $1685- $1800, depending on living
arrangements. That estimate is based on this year's
figures, subject to change and not including personal
expenses.

An overaeas academic prosram sponsored by the
four SUN¥ centers wW be available at the University
of Nice, France for the 1972-73 year. The program,
in its sixth year, offers SUNY upper-level and
graduate students the opportunity to study at the
University of Nice and simultaneously become
familiar with French life and culture.
Each of the four SUNY centers, Stony Brook,
Albany, Binghamton and Buffalo, share in the
appointing of a resident director to the program with
position rotating from each school. This year, for the
first time, the resident director is from Buffalo,
Pierre Aubery.
The Nice program will consist of three
orientation sessions, to be followed by course work
at the University. T he first orientation period will
occur on each of the home campuses during the
second semC$ter, 1971· 72. The second period will be
a month ln Paris in September, and the last of the
orientation aspect wiJI be a month in Nice before
starling classes.

True communication
The position of resident director will ho)d the
responsibility of assisting SUNY students in Nice, in
academic and other matters. Dr. Aubery added that
he will consider the year to come as a learning
experience for himself, as well as for the students.
He hopes to find a true means of communication
between students and teachers, allowing education
to occur thro ugh dialogue, as well as in the
classroom.
Sketching the differences of attending the
University at Buffalo and at Nice, Dr. Aubery said :
"The rhythms of life are different." There, thing.s are
more relaxed, but the French students are more
directed and serious in their studies. Dr. Aubery said
that a big problem in the past has been that the
French students go to sleep around 9 p .m ., while
Americans expect socializing to begin at 10 p .m .
There seems to be less pressures in academic life
there, and both students and teachers are more
individual outside the school than rigidly encrusted
in academic roles. Education is less structured, for
the University of Nice is relatively new and liberal ,
encompassing many of the thinp French students
rioted for in 1968.
The possibilities of traveling are overwhelming
from the Nice campus. The Alps are very accessible,
as is Italy, North Africa and Spanish islands in the
Medittenanean. Students may use vacation time to
visit Europe and experience things not possible in
the United States.

Culture and life
The Paris orientation will serve to introduce
students to French culture and life. The second
mdnth will be a more intensive actiori on developing
JXOficlency In the French language. As the program
LS designed for students to take courses offered to
French students, therefore, proficiency in the
language ia necessary.
EligibUity for the program is limited to juniors,
seniors and graduate students, who have
above·average scholastic records and sufficient
Fr-ench background to enroll in regular university
courses. Any and all "majors" are welcome as this
program Is not necessarily language major-geared .
Former program participants enrolled in such diverse
courses as abnormal psychology, art history,
contemporary Spanish poetry, Europe in the First
World War and Russian composition.

Propam lldvantaaes
Citing the many advantages in such a program ,
Dr. Aubery explained that Nice is located in the
sout.h of France on the Mediterranean Sea, about 30
miles from ltaJy. There is an old part of the city
where a definite sense of the past can be felt. Aubery
explained that living there is a history lesson for
being in the midst of ten centuries of history is an
exciting possibility of the program .
He continued : "Not onJy the people in the
South welcome you , but the climate welcomes you."
Nice, which is on the French Riviera, has warm ,
sunny months, no snow to speak of, though there
are rainy months in the winter. Students gather on

There will be a meeting Monday, Dec. 13, at 2
p.m. in Diefendorf Annex , Room 16, for all
interested people, seeking infonnation about the
Nice program. Returned participants will be available
to share their experiences, along with Dr. Coleman
from Albany, a cent raJ administrator of the program.
For detailed infonnation and applications, contact
Dr. Aubery, Department of French, 214 Crosby
Hall , ext. S4S7 or go to the Office of Overseas
Academic Programs, 107 Townsend Hall , ext. 4227
The deadline for applications is Feb. IS, 1972.

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~or

Page two . The Spectrum . Wednesday, December 8, 1971

..

�Student Assembly to Ketter appoints Hull
hear censure motion Committee chairman named
Included in today's Student
Assembly actionl is the threatened
resolution by National Student
Affairs coordinator Keith Frankel
to censure Activities coordinator
Mark Weiner for his role in
charges against the Arab Cultural
Club president. Filing a formal
complaint with the Student
Judiciary , Mr. Weiner and former
Arab Cultural Club treasurer Nabll
Cbilazi charged that Emad Mikhail
knowingly foraed Mr. Chilaz.i's
name to club vouchers totalling
about S4SS .
Mr. Frankel's desire to censure
Mr. We.lner stems from his belief
that Mr. Weiner overstepped his
bounds as activities coordinator
and possesses personal biases
which influenced his actions.
Included in these biases, according
to Mr. Frankel, is the presence of
two members of Youth for Israel
on the Activities Committee and
s tateme nt s by Mr. Weiner,
himself, that his "mind was made
up." In his resolution, Mr. Frankel
states: "Mr. Weiner in the last
executive committee meeting
st ated that he has already made
up his mind and has no reason to
doubt the word of one of the
members who is trying to gain
illegal control of the club."

about other club membership ...
Membenhip or participation in
other clubs has no bearing ..• "
The facts involved in the Arab
Club situation are obscured by the
existence of two factions of
members, each maintaining to be
the official Arab Cultural Club .
One group asserts that ttiey
impeached Mr. Mikhail while the
other counters that no
constitutionally proper
impeachment occurred . In fact,
this group supporting Mr. MjJchail,
maintains that all charges agajnst
him are part of a plot to gain
control o f the club and its
finances.

Protec:ting interests
Answering these allegations,
Mr. Weiner maintains that any
charges against him are motivated
b y personal reasons. Further, he
contends that any action by h im'
was to protect student and SA
interests. Specifically answering
charges about the makeup of his
com mittee, Mr. Weiner explained:
" Prior to appointments on the
committee, I don't usually inquire

I
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I
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I

---------------------1
A LPHA

T R IA NG LE

No. 9

I
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presents a

COFFEE HOUSE
Featuring the

U .B. BLUES

1
loecember 10, 1971

I

Applaud rather than condemn
These claims along with the
forgery charges will be settled by
the Student Judiciary. Ho wever,
as Mr. Frankel contends, it will
not settle Mr. Weiner's actions,
and it is the responsibility of the
Student Assembly to ensure that
Mr. Weiner has nothing more to
do with the case.
SA president Jan DeWaal terms
the whole affair as "absurd:"
"Mark may have overstepped his
bounds, but Keith is turning it
into a conflict of personalities
rather than looking out for the
well being of the students as he
claims." Additionally, Mr. DeWaaJ
asserted that " Mark bns been one
of th e best act l vi'ties
coo rd inators . . . ' his
overen thusias m s h ould be
a pplaud ed rather than
condemned."
Other assembly action will
incl u de several proposed
constitutional amendments by Mr.
DeWaal.

R- 11

I

at

St. Andrew's U.C.C.
2205 Geneau St.

Donation
SI .00

I
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-------------

State University of Buffalo President Robert L.
Ketter Monday appointed Acting Graduate School
Dean Mac'Ailister Hun as chairman of the Committee
on Campus Security.
The committee, made up of 19 men and four
women from faculty , staff, alumni, community and
student groups, was officially formed Monday after a
controversial incident recently involving the alleg~
beating of a dorm student by two campus security
guards.
·
In his charge to the committee, Dr. Ketter said
that "the primary responsibiljty of the Committee
on Campus Security is to recommend to me ways in
which we can move in tho veara ahead toward

McAllister Hull
resolution of campus security problems in the
following four areas:
" - First. measures which might lead to better
understanding and relationships between the campus
security force and other members o( the University
community ;
" - Second, steps which might be taken by the
entire University community to improve the general
level of security at SUNY AB;
" - Third, ways in which the University
community might be made m ore fully aware of the
problems encountered by our security personnel in
carrying out their duties; and
" - Fourth, possible changes in present security
policies and practices which might contribute both
to the objectives previously mentioned and to the
morale, espirt de corps and efficiency of the campus
security force."
Charge given
Conti nuing, Dr. Ketter noted that "the
problems associated with maintaining security on the
campus of the modern urban university have
Increased in number, scope and complexity in recent
years."
He said : " We have come to realize that a truly
effective campus security program relies not only on
an efficient , professional security unity, but also on

undent-"ding and cooperation between the security
force and the campus constituencies it serves.
..This can only be achieved," Dr. KeUet
continued, ..if the entire University community is
fully aware of the range and seriousness of security
problems that are faced by students, faculty, staff
JDd visiton."
·
The initial progress report is due Jan . lS while
the interim and final reports are due Feb. 1S and
March 15, respectively.
Dr. Hull said that tbe charge given to the
committee "sounds reasonable., and will afford
pJenty of time to delve deeply into the campus
security problem. •'With careful study, we can
indeed follow that charge.,.
He said that " it's a good committee. We've got
to work hard for it" to succeed . Dr. Hull admitted
that the University has "been regularly at fault In
various places" regarding campus security but said
that the committee could be helpful in bringing
about "the kjnd of campus security that President
. Ketter and Ken Glennon [head of Campus Serudty)
would like to havt."
'Good committee'
He called committee member Thomas Blair,
deputy commissioner of the Buffalo Police
Department, "a very able cop who knows the score."
Erie County Court Judge Jo~eph Mattina, another
committee member , was praised by Dr. Hull for
being "very helpful during the time of the '45'."
Dr. Hull was referring to 45 faculty members
who were arrested in March 1970 during a sit·in in
Hayes Hall during disturbances on the State
University of Buffalo campus. They were protesting
the occupation of the campus by 400 riot·garbed
Buffalo police dur,ipg the disturbances.
He felt tfia't the representation on the
committee would assure that "rational
recommendations" would emanate from it. Dr. Hull
said that campus security needed "more staff, better
staff and more o pportunity for training" but realized
that this would be difficult with the current budget
squeeze.
Faculty members on the committee include
John G. Boot.. School of Management; Richard Cox ,
Politic~ Science. J;&gt;ept.; William Greiner, Faculty of
Law and Jurisprudence; Henry Richard, Asst. Vice
President for Academic Affctirs ; Daphne Hare,
School of Medicine and Edna Grexton, Office of
Student Affairs.

Committee members
The staff members are : Thomas J. Gulley,
Hou sing Office ; Raymond E. Dye, Student
Counseling Center ; Lee Griffin, Campus Security ;
James Gruber, Norton Hall ; Joan Claar, Student
Counseling Center; Norman Hostetter, Admissions
and Records and Hugh Scott, Jr., Civil Service
Employees Association.
Alumni and Council members are: M. Robert
Koren , UB Alumni Association and Phyllis E. Kelly,
CB Council.
Student representation includes : Bradley
Roberts , Mill ard Fillmore College Student
Associa tion; Hector Rivera . Puerto Rican
Organization for Dignity , Elevation and
Responsibility; Tom De Martino, Undergraduate
Student Association; Fred Cazar, Graduate Student
Association and Albert Berrian, Jr. , Black Student
Union.

NEED A RIDE HOME?
NEED A ROOMMATE?

THE SpECTI\UM
CLASSIFIEDS REALLY WORK!
This week only15 words only

355 Norton
Wednesday, December 8. 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

~

�German measles test

Need a rUheilil umbreilil?
Grow th retardation. Cataracts. Glaucoma.
Cerebral palsy., Giant cell hepatitis. lnterstial
pneumonitis . Anemia . Pulmonary stenosis.
Hypogamonaglobulinemia.
The above terms may not all be familiar to you,
but they may be someday. These are just a handful
of the biological malfunctions that can affect a
woman 's baby if she contracts rubella.
Rubella is a disease that is commonly
overlooked and ignored but can be very dangerous.
Eighty percent of people contract rubella, or german
measles, in its mild form during childhood. However,
if women who have never had rubella contract it
durlng pregnancy it can result in a rubella syndrome
baby. In this case, the mild childhood disease
becomes a dreaded menace to the fetus . The unborn

Jam• Chen, Nationalist Chin. . Ambassador to the United Sta•,
renewed the Nationalist's claim to.legitimacy in Mainland China and
said It was not likely that his country would be reedmltted to the
U.N. He made his remarks at a preu conference Monday.

c:hild wLthin the expectant mother is usually
adversely affected.
Fortunately, a reliable laboratory test has been
developed which detects if you've ever had the
disease and counsels you on what to do if you
haven't . The State University of Buffalo Medical
School is sponsoring such tests this week, by special
arrangement. Med School representatives urge all
girls on campus to come down and take the test to
avoid suffering unnecessarily later, possibly during
pregnancy. The test generally costs $10-15, but is
being • ffered at the special reduced rate of $3.50 .
The tests will be administered in Room 231
Norton Hall, today from 12- 9 p.m ., and Thursday
and Friday from 12- 5 p.m . Be sure and come down .
For more information, call 831-3811.

SA-GSA -Speakers Bureau
presenu

~LAIIIPIIIt

JOHN KERBY

A.l

355 Norton

DOlT

former leader of VietNam Vets against the War.
,11&gt;-

Dec. lOth
· Haas Lounge
Friday
7: 30 p. 111.
·o

The first
malt liquor
good enough
to be called

BUDWEISER'.

PROFESSIONAL
FULL COLOR PORTRAITS
OFFERED TO ALL
GRADUATING StODENTS
passport, application, J.D. photos
also available
appoinlments; in{onnation:
356 Norton, 831 -2505, 5570
I

Page four. The Spectrum . Wednesday, December 8, 1971

ANHEUSER·IUSCH. INC. • ST. lOUIS

�-continued trom

PI,.

o.-

••
art

a quota, this situation..will presumably arise less often, and
men who had classification 3·A for hardshlp who
previously missed the clerk's scrutiny (if such men still
exist) may find themselves on mucb safer around. In places
lilce West Vii'Jinia, however, where a re&amp;istrant is likely to
be pooi and less sophisticated in the mechanisms
pining deferment or exemption , there will presumably be
no change in their formerl y miserable situation.)

men who
fortunat.e enouah to draw "safe" lottery
numbers can ~onably expect to avoid the queation o f
whether to become a part of the military or to risk the
potential consequences of not doing so. For such 11
Ufe~ping decision he deserves full information and
counselina.

or

IS&amp;Jffalo Center
The draft functions, and is desianed to function, to
make Selective Service registrants feet powerless to control
their own lives. The point of draft counseling is to help a
relistrant or potentiol repstrant make real, informed
choices based on the facts or his tndividual situatio n.
Courses of action may range from tC?tal non-cooperatio n
with the Selective Service, to seeking classification u a
conscientious objector or even joining the rqerves or an
active branch of the military before getting drifted .

Minimal due process
Aside from the fact that it drarts men into the
Army, one of the outrageous things about the Selective
Service System is that its registrants seeking delerments
have always been afforded fewer procedural rights than are
customary in the licensing of tavern-keepers . This is a
direct result of the draft being instituted as an emergency
measure (as it had always been regarded in American
history) in J940. Under conditions of national alert and
later national mobilization, Congress chose to extend a
mimmum of due process to potential draftees.
Later, when Congress passed the Administrative
Procedure Act In the 1950's, it s peciflcally exempted
Selective Service from its provisio ns, which govern all
other federal administrative agencies. Jhus, Selective
Service has been able legally to get awoy with denying a
registrant elementary due process, such as the ri&amp;ht to be
represented by an attorney before his local board, the ri&amp;ht
to meet with an appeal board if he has gotten a raw deal
from a particularly raw-dealing local board, or the ri&amp;ht
even to be told why he has been tu rned down for a
classification he has requested .
Four new riahts
Partiall y in res ponse to the increasingly noticed
scandal o f this situation, Congress has added a new section
to the draft law, which declares as its intent "to guarantee
to each registrant werti n&amp; a claim before a local or appeal
board, a fair heari ng consistent with the informal and
expeditious processing req ujred by Selective Service
cases." This section, in its ambiguous good will , grants to
registrants four new rights :
1) A regist rant has a right to meet with a quorum of
his local board, so tha t he will no longer tal k to one
member who would then report to the rest of the voting
memben.
2) A man can meet with the appeal board , where
formerly just his draft me was sent for what was usually a
rubber-stamping operation by the appeal board , meetina
behind closed doon.
3) A registrant can now bring up to three witnesses
with him to his board meeting, as a matter of right rather
than at the discretion o f the local board.
4) A registrant now must be told the reasons why a
board has denied the classification he bas requested, so
that be can attempt to answer the board's reasoning, rather
than having to, in preparing his appeal from their deciston ,
guess why the board turned him down .

Abolishes other ri&amp;J1ts
But while Congress has created these new procedural
nghts for drat\ registrants, Selectave Service National
Headquarters has attempted to make at considerably
tou&amp;)\er for those unlucky enou&amp;h to draw low lottery
numbers, by abolishing other rights formerly gahted by
Selective Service regulations. In the past, each board had a
"Government Appeal Agent" attach ed to it, usually a
lawyer, who had considerable power to help a registrant
pin a reconsidera tion of his claim for deferment, or to
appeal his classification if the registrant had let the 30-day
appeal period pass. These positions have been abolished by
Selective Service. Another new wrinkle is the sh ortening of
the time during which a man can request a personal
appea rance or an appeal. He used to have 30 days ; no w the
repstrant has o nly 15.
The draft faces not only the mounting political
opposition in Congress which resulted in the long delay
before passage of the draft extens10n, but also increasing
difficulty in filling Its quotas. In some states, four

This knowledge can only be fully attained throuah
consulting with an advisor who is knowledgeable in dra rt
law and procedures, and is familiar with the moral snd
practical issues faced by men up against the draft. After a
man has determined his position, the counseling center will
then help represent him before the draft board.

induction orders are Issued for enry man ultlmately
inducted into the Army. To rtll Its quotas, Selectjve
Service has resorted not only to continual changing and
tightening of the reaulations, but to shadier methods.
For one example, men who bad never held
deferments and who had had induction orders postponed
across the hi1tus In induction authority this past summer,
could not legally be inducted , Selective Service ha~ aareed
to cancel such outstanding induction orders, on. each
individual's request. Dr. T arr was not cancelling the orders
of men who have not learned from an attorney or dnaft
counselor t hat they have the right to have thear concededly
illepl induction orden cancelled . Presumably many such
men were inducted iJJeplly in November.
Fewer face dn~ft
What this means for men facins the draft is that
there are fewer alternatives, fewer safeguards and fewer
ways to avoid receivina an induction order. While draft
calls are going down, and consequentl y lower numbea's
hecome ''safe'' numbers, fewer men have to confront the
drvft. However, if they must face the draft , they have to
confront it more directly, ln the absence or formerly
available deferments . There are fewer cushions ~etw een a
man ansi the choice o f what he is going to do In
rela tionship to the military.
It is here that the need for draft counseling arist5. A
man faced with the grim reality of the draft is forced to
make ch oices, the possible consequences of which include
death, disabling injury, i mprisonment, exile, enormous
constriction of his freedom to orpnize h is life as he sees
fit, or at least months or years of worry. hassle and
uncertainty . A man in such a position needs information
and all the help he can get .
One may be able to get some useful Information
from an attorney knowledgeable in draft law, if he can
afford it, and if he can find such an attorney. There are
fewer than SOO across the country. over half of these
concentrated in New York, Chicaco, Los Angeles and San
Francisco. There are a handful in Buffalo.
But even if a man is fortunate and wealthy enough
to retain a draft lawyer, he still may not be represented by
an attorney before the locaJ board . A Selective Servtce
registrant must represent himself before the Selective
Service System . A few men can be partly prepared for this
by their attorneys, but m ost cannot afford this, and must
get the aid in acting as their own advocatt5 from less
expensive sources. But even more basaca lly, a man must
fi rs t determine what position he is going to take in
relatio nship to the military and the draft.
It is no longer true, as it was two or three years ago,
that a man could retain a draft lawyer when be turned 18 ,
and stand a 99 per cent chance of avoading an induction
order by pyramiding a series of deferments. Now, only

The RecordRunner
-

will beat any price in
this paper ... down to cost

Counselina requimn~nts
To be able to be an effective counselor, therefore,
o ne must realite that his advice will aid a man in making a
decision which will ultimately affect the course of this
man's life.
The Draft Counseling Center of Buffalo, since Its
founding several years ago, bas evolved an efficient system
of providing skilled and knowledgeable counseling to men
in the Western New York area, and to men from all over
the United States referred to tho center by tbe Toronto
Anti-Draft Proaram . All counselors are trained intensively
for six months during which time they first attend six
ei&amp;ht·hour seminars on draft law and procedure, and then
must spend months of observation and Internship before
they are considered competent enou&amp;h to enpae ln
counseling. Further, all counselina takes place within the
center and always under the su pervision of the three
full·time counselors, at least one of whorn is supervising all
acti vity at the center at any time that counseling is going
on. This insures a level o! legal competence at all timca.
Finally , there iJ a monthly counselors meeting required for
the entire staff of approximately 40 counselors and interns
so that each counselor can remain current in his lepl
,knowled&amp;e and counseling technique. The continual review
or the center's o peration, workina In a communal actt\na,
makes it possible for tbe par t·time volunteer staff u well
as the full·tlme collnselors to maintain the knowledae
necaury for compre hensive counaclina.

Financ:w support needed
The Draft Counseling Center's ability to provide
thorough counseling has been possible only throu&amp;h the
generosity of the Buffa lo Friends Meeting, in whose hou~e,
at 72 North Parade Ave., the center has operated, at only
nominal rent. The Quakers c.-an no lo nge r afford this
generosity . and lulve asked the center to find .. new
buildina. This could be a financia l catastrophe for draft
counseling 10 Western New York. Until now , the center
could operate on a minimal budget founded on
contributions from counselees, stud~t aroups and
interested church aroups. However, the current level of
funding will not support the center, whose rmancial needs
now include the equipping, renting and maintenance of a
new buildina, which the center must find and move into
soon. It is possible, if the center is unable to find new
sourct5 of money and a suitable building, that counseling
operations may be drastically curtailed , or cease
altogether.
To keep from closing its doors at a time when good
draft counseling ts more needed than ever before, the Draft
Counseling Center is currently approachmg a number of
organizations for financial support . The center now bas a
request for fundin&amp; before Lhe Student Assocation and
would also appreciate any support from memben of the
student body.

UNIVERSITIES STUDY EVERYTHING IN THE WORLD :
WHY NOT THEMSELVE~

HEO 254: CRITICAL ISSUES IN HIGHER EDUCATION
SPRING 1972
Tua.- Thun. 10:30- 11 :50 1.m.
Mon.·Wtd. 6:50 - 8:05 p.m. (Millard Fillman)
The Department of Higher Education is offering 11{}8in an
undergrsdiJ6te course for thoss who want to l•rn somflthing
about the nature of univmitil$: how they d1Vflop9d, wh6t
purpom they ssrw, the problems they face, wheie thty mty
be h1Sdld. For more information, contllct:
Robert 81rd8hl, Chairman
OePfrtmlnt of Higher Educstion
16 Fotttr AnniX, 831..f806

Wednesday, December 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�to have restraints installed J hich
would keep tbe eQ&amp;ine from
lhiftlna if the mounts break . 'Ibis
recall aurpa.aea the one in 1969
when 4 .9 million GM can were
called bact for catbon monoxide
and carburator problema.
WASHINGTON - Ms. Roma
Acosta Banuelos was confirmed
Monday by the Senate to the
ceremonial role of U.S. Treasurer.
The nomination was approved
with&lt;M« debate or discussion,
although Ms. Banuelos, 46 , had
been opposed by the AFL.CIO on
the arounds that she had been
employing Mellican "wetbacks" in
her Southern Californian Mellican
food firm .
NEW YORK - A Fordham
University bachelor law professor
ha s been named "specia l
guardian " o f unborn fetuses
whose mot hers are awaiting
abortion in the city's municipal
hospitals. Robert Bryn , 40, was
named special guardian last Friday
by State Supreme Court Justice
Leyter Holtzman, in the beginnina
assault move on the state's Uberal
ab o rtion law . Holtzman also
directed the city Health and
Hospitals Corp. to show cause
why the corporation should not
be restrained from performina

abortions. The order is returnable
T uesday mornina. By bein&amp;
named special cuardian. Bym
becomes the protector of all
human fetuses between the fourth
a nd twnety-fourt!' weeks of
preanancy. His move was taken
the fourth and twenty-fourth
weeks of prepaocy. His move was
taken a friend of a class of
helpless or dependent human
beinp. The suit charges that the
abortion law deprives unborn
fetuses "of life, liberty or
property without due process of
taw" as auaranteed by the
Fourteenth Amendment.
DETROIT - General Motors
announced Saturday that It would
bqin recallina nearly 6 .7 mUlion
cars and trucks to eljmjnate
engine-mount problems. At a cost
of $35 million, GM will send out
registered letters to o wnCfS o f
1965-1969 regular-sized Chevys
and Novas with V·8 engines,
telling them to brina their cars In

WASHINGTON - Consress
hopes to be able to adjourn this
week ; but before their vacation
beains , senators and
representatives must consider the
followin&amp; items: the conf~tmation
of Supreme Court no minees Lewis
.Powell and William ~nqui.st ; a
foreian aid bill that is presently
boged down by an end-the-war~
amendment~ th e amend ment by
MIke Mansfield which would
require the withdrawal or u.s.
troops from Vietnam within six
months provided all U.S. prisoners
have been released; a S 15 .7 billion
tu cut bill, from which the $1

c heck off

for

Presidential

campaians was omnted for the
1972 c.ampaian and finally , a
Senate-passed bill which would
expand and extend Preai3ent
Nixon's authority to control
wages, prices, rents, dividends and
interest until 1973.
SAN JOSE -

Another trial

IRONSPLR MUSIC and Wt&lt;BW
present

WASHINGTON
A
cona;ressionaJ panel recommended
Sunday that the federal
aovernment put up the money to
create an army of up to 40,000
locally--elected citizens who would
help people to deal with the
national sovernment by cutting
red tape. The proposal , approved
by a majority of the Urban Affairs
Subcommittee of the Joint
Ho\.lse·Senate Economic
Committee, calls for a biennial
election of a " pubtlc intervenor"
or troubleshooter to represent
each 5()()().1 0,000 person seament
of the public. servi ng as
middleman between them and the
federal bureaucracy .
EDMOND, OKLA. - Students
at Oklahoma's Central State
University who live in untveraity
housing are subject to weekly
inspections. CSU Dean of Men
Alvin Freiberaer said there were
two reasons for the room checJcs :
I) 11 student might die and his or
her body would remain
undiscovered until someone

WITH

Thursday, December 16

7: 00 p.m.

MEMORIAL AUD. IN BUFFALO

(CPS) - The expected result of
a 22-month study o f drugs by a
special Canadian drug commission
is the recommendation that
possession of arass be legalized.
The five-member panel, stud ying
the effects of drugs from alcohol
to heroin, urged in a preliminary
report last year that officials not
impose jaiJ sentences for drug
possession. It also suagested that
slight monetary fines be imposed
as a form of "punishment" for
these co nvi c tions. The five
members included a doctor,
lawyer, social worker, sociologist ,
. psy c hiatrist and criminologist.
They vis•t•d 22 Canadian
universitttes during the two years.

nteUUAB•

Music Committee
in conjunction with the

BAC&amp; WBLK
Present in Cooc:en
To Blow Your Funky Mind

"THE PARLIAFUN KADELICMENT THANG "

Mr. Goodbar

The Funkadelics
The Parliaments

Casey·s
Town Squire

James Westley

TICKETS AT;
NORTON UNION
BUFFALO STATE
BIUDO'S IN NIGRA. FALLS
DENTON COTTIER &amp; DANIELS

NEW BRUNSwiCK, N.J .
The faculty at Rutaen College has
voted that oo credit be given for
ROTC counes. The unellpected
215·148 vote, taken by a mail
ballot, reaffirmed the May 1970
faculty stand which opposed the
pantin&amp; of credit for classroom
classes tau&amp;bt by the Army and
Air Force departments in Military
Scien~. There are presently 300
cadets in the ROTC programs, out
of a total or 6800 students.

(CPS)
A recent Gallop poll
shows that co-ed tlving is winning
increased acceptance among the
American people. Although 50%
of all those interviewed said they
were o p posed t o co-e d
dormitories, 46% said they would
not mind if their daughters tlved
in one. Of those people who had
gone to college 57% were opposed
to letting their daughter live in a
co-ed dorm . People over 50 years
of age opposed the idea the most
- 57% to 29%. The results were
based on u survey taken by 1501
adults over the age of I 8 in 300
nation-wide communities in J une.

Gustav Loves You.

CAC.TUS

smdled it and 2) tr a atuclent'•
room it constantly m-.y, thia
information is put on the
student's record, makina it
available to pr os pective
employen. Sin&amp;le students at CSU
• t live in university bousina
wftU the ap of 24. However,
most of CSU's students are
commuters, and are therefore not
subject to this rule. They are
subject, thoup, to the mandatory
attendance rule, whereby a
student who miases more than
30% of his class periock in any
one subject will receive an
automatic "F." Also, all dorm
visiton must leave by 11 p.m. Bia
Brother is watchin&amp; ~t CSU!

date will be set Wednesdty for
black militant Anael&amp; Davis, and
one of her attorneys predicts that
it will tab place in mid-January.
Superior Court Judp Richard
Arnuon , in announcina the
convening of the case, also
announced he will decide whether
the trial will be held in San Jose
or a branch court in Palo Alto.
Miss Davia' attorneys oriainally
wanted the trial chanaed to San
Francisco.

Theatre Series/Wurlitzer
lkilding Downtown

All Cavage•s Stores
dirport ·midtown · thruway. university plazas

boulevard ~ maiqllace · seneca malls

&amp;

Sunday Dec. 12
CLARK GYM at 10:00 p.m .
Tic ket~ $2.00 students (with 1.0.)

$3.00 Oth.-s

On sale at Norton Ticket Office, Buffalo State, &amp;-Audrey &amp;
DeUs.

--!D=~so:a::o:a~A Division of Sub-Board I s::~~:-=:~~~--=11=*a6

nge llX . 't'h.e ~pectrum . Wednesday, December 8, 1971

)

...

�India an&lt;il Pakistan: a
full scale war erupts
byLynoeTnqer
0/f.Camput Editor
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
of lndia announced Friday nigbt,
Dec . 3, that Pakistan had
launched a "full-scale war" aplnst
India, and that her country had
"no o ther option but to be put on
a war footing." Pakistan had
mounted air attacks almost 300
miles inside Indian territory , and a
state of emergency was declared
by Indian President V .V . Giri at 6
a.m . , EST Friday. UPi
corres pondents In Karac hi
reported that Radio Pakistan had
accused Indian Air Force planes
of penetrating as far as 30-40
miles into Pakistani air space in
the past few days.
To fully understand what has
been happening, one must know

aome history of the Indo-Pakistani
agressions. On Dec. 1, 1970, tbe
East Pakistan Awami League led
by Sheik Mujibur Rahman won
the majority number of seats in
the · 3 J3-seat National Assembly
on the platform of East Pakistani
autonomy. In February of 1971 ,
West Pakistani political leader
Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto threatened to
lead a boycott of the National
Assembly, in a bid to force
Rahman to give up his demands
for autonomy. Rahman refused.
Violence begins
Early in March , Pakistani
President Agba Mohammad Yahya
Khan announced that the opening
of the National Assembly was
postponed ind efiniteJy, thus
touching off violence In East
Pakistp. On March 7, Rahman

caJled a ~rtial strike in East
Pakistan , launchi na a civil
disobedience movement. on
March IS , Yahya departed from
Bast Pakistan after talks with
Rahman broke down. The Army
moved its bues in order to
reassert aovemment control in
Dacca, and mass kilUnp in the
city bepn. Shortly thereafter,
Rahman was arrested by the
troops. Yahya went on radio to
uy that he (Rahman) was guilty
of treason . Hindu areas of Dacca
were burned and the killings
continued .
On April 17, the rebel "Bangia
l&gt;e$h" aovemment was formally
proclaimed, and began operating
from Calcutta. Later in April, the
Indian and Pakistani consular
missions in Dacca and Calcutta
were closed after rebel Bengali
d iplomats seized one of the
buildinp.

fUhcb to care foc.&amp;be l .S million
refuaeea from But P~an who
had fled to India b~ that time.
Early in June, Yahya outlined
a plan to draft a constitution and
hold by~ecUons for the Awami
League seats in the National
Assembly , thereby transferrin&amp;
the power to the people. He said,
however, that martial law would
continue for an unspecified time.
In August, India and the Soviet
Union signed a friendship and
cooperation treaty callina for
consultation if either one were
attacked. This treaty was seen as a
bid by India to get Russian
support in the face of growing
tensions with Pakistan. Later that
month , the Pakistan~ aovernment
announced that Awami League
leader Rahman would go on trial
for treason . Terriorist activities
were stepped up as a blast ripped
thro ,ug h the H otel
Intercontinental in Dacca.

U Thant appeals
In May, Secretary General U
Thant Issued an appeal to the
member nations of the UN for

Reciprocal fipting
In the middle of October,
Paki s tan I au n c he d mass

..,._ _ 25th Anniv.,..ry - - •

SAT.,
DEC.11th,
8:30p.m.
PEACE
BRIDGE
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CENTER

ZfG ZAG PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS . • •

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U EtUIIIC IF CIOI ILD IKI 'a IILL WITH

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movements of ttoQps to the East
ind W•t Pakiltani borders, and
hdil reciptoc!at~ . A few day•
later, Yahya announced that the
reorpniud National AAembly
would meet on Dec. 7 , follow ina
the promulgation o f a
constitution drafted under his
direction. Near the end of the
month, lndian Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi left for a
three·week tour of the Western
countries, seeking support for
lndia:s crisis.
On Nov. J , the Indian
aovemment announced that tho
number of refugees from Pakistan
had reached the 9.5 million mark.
On Nov: 12, Ms. Gandhi returned
from her tour, and the level of
border inCidents showed an
in creasi ng trend. Nov. 22,
Pakistan charged India with
opening an "undeclared war" in
East Pakistan by sendina army
units across tbe border on major
offensives. The next day, Pakistan
declared a state of emergency.
India denied the char&amp;es, and
announced that she had shot
down three Pakistani jet planes.

'Full tcale war'
On De c. 3, Ms. Gandhi
announced the "full-scale war,"
while saying that the civil war in
Bast Pakistan had become India 's
war : " Today the war in Bangia
Desh bas become a war on India."
In Pakistan , meanwhile ,
President Yahya had called up all
ex-servicemen and ordered all
persons under 60 years old to
serve in any assigned capacity for
as lona as necessary.
Early Sunday morning, the
Soviet Union defeated by veto a
U.S. resolution in the UN Security
Council which called for a
cease-fire and bilateral troop
withdrawal a long the
Indo-Pakistan borders. Soviet
-continued on PA91 ten-

Get Even with

Your Parents.
Remember the New Christy Minstrel s Album , the Bible , the
razor, the Collected Works of Billy Graham that you parents
lovingly placed under the Christmas tree for you last year?

(

Well now you can strike back !
Give your parents

~··

•
I•

THE SpECTI\UM

...........~•••sasww••'............

• SPECTRUM
RM - 355 Merton Hall
SUNY AI
..ffllO, N.Y. 14214

Special
/

CHRISTMAS RATE $4.00
I

(Reg. $4.50)

i
•

•

Please

so:=~······················································· · ···· ·
ADDRESS .........................................................

CITY ................................ .STATE ........•...ZIP ..........•..••.

Wednesday, December 8 , 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�I

INo censure

The Student Assembly today will be faced wl1h a censure
motion by NationaJ Affairs Coordinator Keith Frankel. The
motion seeks to censure Mark Weiner, Student Activities
coordinator,' for his role In the Investigation of alleged
Improprieties in the Arab Cultural Club.
We believe that Mr. Weiner, In Initiating the investigation
at the urging of a large number of club members, has acted
property. It is rare that a Student Association coordinator
willingly tokes on such a thorny issue and Mr. Weiner should
be commended rather than censured.
Mr. Frankel, on the other hand, seems motivated by
rather base reasons of perwnality and ego. There is nothing
whatsoever to substantiate his grievance against Mr. Weiner.
Surely the presence of two Activist Youth for Israel members
on a committee seeking facts In the confused Arab Cultural
Club situation cannot be construed as bias on Mr. Weiner's
part since he did not know of their affiliations in advance.
Further, such club membership is Irrelevant. We can only
suggest that if Mr. Frankel emulated rather than criticized
Mr. Weiner, he might have a more sterling record as National
Affairs coordinator.
Therefore we must strongly urge that the assembly
reflect the Frankel censure motion as nothing mero than a
quite undeserved personal attack.

Wise choices
The Committee on Campus Security has now been
charged with the responsibility to provide a final report by
March 15. This amount of time should insure a complete and
intelligent examination o f all aspects of our security
problems.
One thing in the committee's favor is its outstanding
membership. While we are less than enthused with most of
the student members, the faculty and community members
on the whole are excellent. In particular, the appointments
of Erie County Judge Joseph Mattina and Deputy Police
Commissioner Thomas Blair, will bring a necessary expertise
to the committee.
Two of the staff appointees hail from the Student
Counseling Center. This, we hope, might be a sign that
someone in Hayes Hall understands at last many of the
problems of the security force stem from the informal
socialization process to which campus police are subjected.
Most of them view themselves as an extension of the Buffalo
Police and the sooner this view is combatted and eradicated,
the better off this University will be.
Since security Is a two-way relationship we must once
again stress that the committee seek out broad
non-committee opinions in order to accomplish their task.
Finally, we advise that progress reports be given to the
University community periodically.

THE SpECTI\UM
Wednesday, December 8 , 1971

Vol. 22, No. 40

Editor.fn-Ctlief - Dennis Arnold
Co-Mei'MIIint Editor - AI Beneon
Co-MIIMiint Editor - Mike Lippmann
MaMIIng Editor - Suun M~
Butlne~~ Men., - Jim Orucker
Adveftllint ~ - Sue Melleotine

A•.

C.mpus ...•.•... Jo·Ann Arm.o

................Howie Kurtz
.... • .. • ........ Bill VIIC:Qro
City ..........•. Hen~y lipmeo
Copy . . . . . . . . . . . Ronnl Forman

....• .. .•....... Mlrty Gatti
A81 . ........ Claire Kriepnan
Feeture . ..... ........ . . .vKant
OrllpNc Arts ....•.... Tom Toles

Layout ...... . Meryhope Runyon

A.t . .................~t

Lit. a Drwna .. Mic:h.el Silverblatt
Multc ... . .... .....Billy Altman
OH.Campue ... ... Lynne Treeger
Photo ......•.. . Marc Ackerman
....•..... Mlchy Orterrelcher
Spans ............. Berry Rubin
~ • •....... .... Howle Falwl

.,.,. Spectrum is ~~n~ad by Unltad p,_ lntern8tlonel. Coli• PrS.Vic:e, the Los Angel• Fr11 Pr-. the Lot angel• Time~ Syndicate end
LIMrllclon News Service.
R~licetlon of metter herein w~t
Editor-In-Ch~ It forbidden.

EdltoNI

the

ex~

content of the

JJO'Iey It determlnad by the EdltM-in-Ch'-f.

Wednesday, December 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eight

BOT

MOnia?/

MD~?
I

,
For what it's wOrth
by ttar.y Lipman

In the time honored tradition of' the Radical
Jewish Collective (Yea! - Boo!) it is only fittins that
I use this finti column of I 971 to gaze into my
quartz baJI (no, that's not perverted, IC's a pun) and
present the Fearless Fozdick predictions for the year
1972. As the orchestra in the backgro und plays the
gentle strains (or is that gently strained?) aounds of
~uld Lang Syne and the year 197 1 slips silently Into
the compost heap, the clock on the wall is tellins me
it 's getting late, and if I don't hurry up I 11 miss
dinner. And so, ladies and gentlemen, the moment
you've been waiting,for . The envelope, please.
January - New Year's Day arrives, as usual , on
Jan. I . Nebraska beats Alabama in the Oranse Bowl.
Dick Nixon, in his rush to phone Coach Bob
Devaney and congratulate rum, accidentally dials the
Milwaukee Buck dressing room. Kareem Jabbar
answers the phone and informs him as to what he
can do with his congratulations. After hanging up,
Dick says to Pat, "Funny, he didn't sound
Nebraskan ." . , Pakistani-Indian conflict enters
second month. President refuses to U$C economic
pressure to end fighting but does offer to send Bob
Hope to entertain troops.
February - Nixon announces further troop
withdrawals from Southeast Asia, denies charges that
he is calculating timing of withdrawals to gain
re-election . . . Lindsay says he is not a candidate for
any office and will not run in Democratic
primaries . . . Delayed reaction to Amchltka blast
sends tidal wave rolling over Mount Suribachi, AEC
says the disaster would have happened sometime in
the next two hundred years anyway.
March - Early thaw hits Western New York,
temperatures soar to five below ... Nixon wins New
Hampshire primary by amazingly small margin .
Democrat Musk.ie edges McGovern and Jackso n. Sam
Yorty receives three votes, blames defeat on ·
preponderance of "radic·libs" In New England\
pledges better showing in Wisconsin ...
April - Baseball season opens; David
Eisenhower rushes to R.F.K. Stadium to resume
duties as Washington Senators' statistician; is
heartbroken to learn team has been moved to Texas.
Daddy·in..Jaw Dick promises to use "whatever means
necessary" to restore team to D.C .. .. Agnew enters
Wisconsin primary as Nixon "stand-in," gains
three-fourths of Republican vote. Humphrey enters
DemocrJtic race declaring a campaign of happiness,
finishes behind Yolty as McGovern edges Muslcie and
Jackson.
· ~
\
May - Last of Kent defendants convicted,
Attorney General Mitchell declares "great victory fo r
justice" ... William Douglas forced to resign from
Supreme Court due to ill health; Nixon nominates
George Wallace to replace him. Judiciary Committee

Chairman Eastland says liberalt have "no real case
against Wallace as a racist." ... Henry Jackson wins
Indiana primary with McGovern and Muskie right
behind. Agnew takes~ty~flve per cent of vote .. .
Nixon sends Spiro on gOod will tour - stops include
Havana, Vladivostok, IW\oi and Prague . . . Pete
McCloskey beats Nixon in Oregon primary,
McGovern tops Muskie and JackJon by fraction of
percentage point.
June - Riot breaks out in El Barrio. Undsay
takes to the streets and quiets crowd, is declared
saviour of the Democratic party. He wins California
primary in a landstide of write·in votes. McCloskey
wins Republican primary; is assassinated three days
later by Gary Powers who claims "absolutely no
affiliation with the CIA" ... Senate rejects Wallace.
Nixon claima "they just won 't take a Southerner"
and nominates Julius Hoffman. Senate approves
nomination after thirty minutes of' debate.
July - Undsay campaign at a peak as Mets win
fourteenth in a row . .. In landmark case, Supreme
Court declares Bill of Rights unconstitutional by a
vote of 54 ... In answer to Woodstock, Bob Hope
organizes music festival in Nebraskan cornfield .
Sixty thousand Middle Americans gather; festival
ends as seven die In drunken brawl .
Augu st - Democrats nominate Hubert
Humphrey on first baJJot. Party leaders declare he is
only man "who can bring us together again."
Minnesota Fats chooses Sam Yorty as running mate,
denies he will become ''Democratic Spiro."
Republicans, after minute o f silence for the late
McCloskey, renominate Nixon by acclamation. He
names John ConnaJJy as running mate, promising to
"get somebody from the South to som~ position."

September - Campaign in fuJI swing ... Spiro
returns from Pek.ing after nearly inciting nuclear war.
Nixon dispatches him to ..important job" organizing
Eskimo voters . .. Mets win pennant, New York City
threatens to secede from union unless Undsay
elected president on fourth party ticket .
October - Mets lose World Series ; "Impeach
Undsay" Movement springs up in Manhattan ...
Powers convicted for murder of McCloskey ; Nixon
" bows to public pressure" and entreats Gov. Reagan
to pardon former U-2 pilot. Reagan appoints Powers
California Atto rney General ... polls show Nixon
fou rteen percentage points ahead of Humphrey.
November - Stock Market crashes Nov. I ...
Humphrey wins by hundred thousand votes ... Riot
erupt$ in Watts, Yorty is urged to go speak to
community leaders. He replies, "When you've seen
one nigger you've seen them all."
December - Nixon pledges "you won't have me
to kick around anymore." Spiro returns from Alaska
with important news of Communilt infiltration of
Amcltitka ; Hubert sends Yorty to investigate.

�..
To the Editor:

~
~ ~eeorr

~~\t

\\

Correction

-

11~ .
I

~

1)\1

!=

Robert C. Martin
huldenl o f Bf'Qz/lum Oub
Dattlel JIWchl
Prutdent of tlte lt4/um Oub
Vlctorlll C. Botek

John Aquilina
Undergradwte Represenos

'i

j

SIP vote

:1

l.

j

~~11 Qls ~~.

We. hope tbia letter will serve u a correction of
several Inaccurate statementa made in The
Spectrum of Friday, December 3. 1971.
Fi..nt, the vote rcpudi.atin&amp; all actions taken by
student repce~entatives lut year wu given u 36 in
favor and I opposed. The vote wu in fact, 32 in
favor, I opposed and 6 abstentions.
Second, The Spectrum states that this vote wu
taken amona the student body of the Spanish,
Italian, and Portuguese Department. However, thi&amp;
vote was taken at a meeting called for aU
undergraduate Spaniah, Italian, and Portuguea
students, not includina paduate students. Since
only ten of tho approximately fifty students
present at this meeting si~ed an attendance sheet

(not indud.ina the 2 repraentativa and 2
altematea) 'whicb tho full body w• repeatedly
reminded to aip, .we h.a\'e no way of auaranteeina
their status u students of the Spanish, Italian, and
Portuguese Department.

To the Editor:

In reference to the Spectrum editorial of
December 3, I feel that the vote repudiating the
actions taken by last year's undergraduate student
representatives of the department of Spanish , Italian,
and Po rtuguese, must come under further
examination.
To start with, the utter chaos and lack of
democratic procedurea at tho mcetina. in my mind
invalidated the credibility of that vote. Several of my
colleagues in the undergraduate department of SIP
refused to allow an y sort of opposition or
explanation o f the representatives' roles last year.
To the Editor:
' After inviting two of last year's representatives to
the meeting, they refused to let them answer to the
As one of the 1970- 71 Unduvaduate Student
allegations
they were accused of and shoulted them
Representatives to the Department of Spanish,
down with false accusations. They were shootin&amp;
Italian, and Portuguese, I feel constrained to point
down those very people that gave them the right to
up so me willful omissions concerning the
have a say in the department in the first place.
Department of Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese.
Without the work of Jut year's representatives there
Mr. Arnold's assertion that the student b~y
would be no student parity within the SlP
of the Department by a 36 to I vote repudiated aU
department today. One of the students insisted on
actions by student representatives concerning the
reading particular parts selected by himself, ~f the
"tenure" decisions is at best a mere mistruth.
secret advisory committee's report, adding his own
There were no tenure decisions taken in the
interpretations , without letting last year's
Department or Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese last
representatives respond to what they had in mind,
year. Three of the four professors involved were and refusing to 'let hla fellow undergraduate.&lt;~ lcnow
no t renewed, however, thljSe nonrenewal dec~ons
hill sources.
• ' •
were not of a tenurial nature. The fourth professor,
Marvin D'Lugo, was indeed renewed for one
additional year and had no basis whatsoever for
thinking that this was tantamount to dismissal at
the end of that year.
More importantly, of the 36 students who
To the Editor.
voted, while it is impossible to as~ertain , because
of refusal of those voting to allow it, just how
Dr . J .P. Jones of the Political Science
many of those 36 were Spanish majors last year, Department has been denied tenure by the senior
there is a strong evidence to support the members of that Department and will be dismissed
contention that a majority of those voting were from this University unless that decision is reversed .
not .
That decision evidently disregarded Dr. Jones'
Mr. Greenwald mistakenly assumes in his teaching ability, which, in our o pinion , should be of
article that the grievance committee's decision
primary significance in a tenure decision.
..
concerning the applicability or the Department's
That teaching ability can be easily vcnfted
procedUteS under the 1967 by-laws to the Faculty throuah reference to those of us who have been his
of Arts and Letters was a valid one. However, what students. As studen ts of Dr. Jones, we are of the
he faits to realize is that the claim that because the opinion that there should be a reconsideration of
by-laws required rank on rank voting would this decision, and we believe that the decision should
exclude any student representation forebodes pure be reversed and that Dr. Jones should be granted
chaos and disaster for each and every Univenity tenure for reasons like the following:
student on this campus. To say that because the
1&gt;' He uses his research in class presentations
by-laws specifically do not provide f~r st~dent where it is meaningful to his students. His field work
representation makes such representation illegal in the Erie County Judicial system and his research
under those by-laws is a mockery.
on the interrelations of relipon and politics have
given clarity to many of us in ways which are not
· Lawrence Candee
Faculty of Law cl Jurisprud~nce
12, I'Z..

'Thnure' question

The vote was handled in the following manner;
There were 45 students in the room. A hand count
was taken of those opposed to the alleptions o f the
lack of last year's representation. There wu o ne
o pposing vote. They then proceeded to count tho
abstentions. There were none. It was then decided
that the rest were aU in favor, until it was pointed
out by the one o pposina vote, that there were
present freshmen, transfer students, and students
who had never before taken a concern in
departmental affairs , who knew nothing about last
year·~ representation, and could not find anythina
out at that meeting.
As for the petition, it was written by a
sophomore. This student could not possibly
understand the struggles that our representatives
went through two years ago during the student strike
to obtain the power that she so badly abuses now .
The petition was circulated by a biology major
during class time through my Italian I 0 I class, which
was filled with Psychology an$f Philosophy majors .
How can these signatures possibly attest to
conditions in our department in the last two years?
If these students had gone about mobiliring
their forces more honestly. instead of trying to
deceive their renow undergraduates, then one mi&amp;ht
respect their position and usc of student power.
,
Shelly Eager

Support Dr. Jones
otherwise available.
2) He promotes critical think.ing as opposed to
an effortless absorption of the reading materials and
lectures.
3) He is readily available to students for the
purposes of discussion and/or advisement.
4) He stimulates students within and without
the department towards a greater academic pursuit
than they would have otherwise attempted .
We urge those of you who concur in our belief
that Dr. Jones should be granted tenure to write
letters to Dr. Ketter and to Dr. L.V. Blankenship,
Chairman of the Political Science Department,
informing them to that effect. Include in your letter
a statement of when and for what course you had
Dr. Jones as an instructor, and enumerate the
reasons your personal experiences indicate that be
should be retained .
\
Fern Schwaber
Stelle Lauer

Editor's not~ : W~bster's New World Dictionary
definu tenure as : a holding, as of property, offic~.
etc. While the decisioru taken in regard to the four
professors wer~ not tenure decisions in the
aCQdemic seme of the word, they did affect the
continued holding of their jobs and in such a
context did we rue the word "tenure. " Funher, if
is quite true that the students did vote to repudiat~
all actions taken by your~elf as undergraduate
representative in this matter,

PlU/l welcomed
To the Editor:
It was interesting to see that letter, last Friday,
calling the editors of Undercurrent hateful.
Thanks for the plug.

Gina Mathews
Publicity cl I+omotional Editor
Undercurrent

' DID SOMEIODY KNOCKt'

Page nine . The Spectrum . Wednesday, December 8, 1971

.,

�,..
~ontlnued frortl pt. . .,__.

.·

India and Pakistan. • •

WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU
ABOUT A MAJOR IN STATISTICS

Arrange to visit us at rm. A 1, 4230 Ridge lea
Prof. E. Penen, Clulirmen, 831·1231
Prc,f, J . Dickey, Director Underplduate Studies, 831·1238
SUNY
BUFFALO

DEPT. OF
STATISTICS

WKIW •IMIIUPfALO fmiVAL ,_.., tlte

JAMES GANG
ktOO llKOfdtng "'"''

Added Attraction: JAKE JONES

Sunday, Dec. 12 at 8:30 P.M.
Kleinhans Music Hall

Ambuudor Yak:ov Malik, soUdly
blckinalndil, uid be oppoted the
U.S. proposal because it placed
India and Pakistan on the same
level. Instead, the Soviets offered
a resolution cellina for a "political
settlement" In East Pakistan, and
urJina the Pakistan aovemment to
cease "all acts of violence by
Pakisteni forces In Bast 'Pakistan
which have led to a deterioration
of the situation." Indian
Ambassador Samar Sen told the
council that India would not
accept an'y solution that would
continue the suppression of the

AU s ..n ltM"e4: Mli1t fleer $S.S0·$4.SO; l ..c. $4.50.$4.00

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U.l. Nllffe4! Milt ltttt C:tllttt Tltlllt Offlftl , , . Tlcbtl, N

.,......,tl
MOTHER EARTH and Keith Sykes
DECEMBER 13

I

7:00 end 10:30 p.m.
STUDENT UNION SOCIAL HAll
(But. s~e)
rickets •velflble 11 Bu(. St•te " Norton

people of East Pakistan. The
Security Council meetlna wu
caiJed by the United Stites.
On Monday, the Indian
aovernment reooanized the rebel
BanalJ Desh government of East
'Pakistan and announced that its
troops, with almost total air
supremacy, were movina rapidly
throu&amp;h East Pakistan in hopes of
a quick victory. Most of the
victory claims came from India,
who reported major victories in
Kashmir, and announced that the
cepital city of Dacca had been cut
off from its supply routes.
Ms. Gandhi, In announcina the
recognition of the BanJ)a Desh
aovernment said : "Now that
Pakistan is waging war on us, the
hesitation which the government
was feeling in according
recognition to the BanJ)a Desh
aovernment has lost significance."
Stating that Bengali leader Sheik
M ujibur Rahman and the
outlawed Awaml League had
planned non-violent resistance to
the West Pakistani government,
Ms. Gandhi said, " they were
ceught unawares and overtaken by
a brutal military assault. They had
no alternative but to declare for
independence."

Hill

U.S . cuts off aid
The United States announced
Monday that she would suspend

STUDENTS $1.50
NON- STUDENTS $2.60
lights by GREASED LIGHTNING

•

I

$87.6 million in economic ald to
India, followina up by three days
the Qncellation ef all licenses for
arms shipments to the New Delhi
aovemment. Officials said this
move was taken to inswe that the
United States did not make an
economic contribution to a
country it considel"' at this point
to be the agressor in the
lndo-PaJcistan war.
No solution Is in sight for this
fuU-6cale war between India and
Pakistan. Each side blames the
other for startina the aggressJons
which ceused the flight of ten
million refuaees from East
Pakistan to India. The ouster of
t he Awami Leape from its
elected seats In the National
Assembly, and the putting down
of the rebellious BanJ!a Desh
movement .,as a result of the
election were alJ part of India's
decision to lend support to the
Awami League . Diplomatic
relations were not broken by
India with Pakistan, but Pakistan
immediately broke orr relations
with India, one. war was declared
by Prime-Minister Gandhi.
No peace-making decision has
come from the United Nations,
where members of the Security
Co uncil canno t agree on a
resolution to vote on. The U.S.
has suspended aid to India, Russia
has taken ln~ia's side, and Cltina
had pJedaed her support to
Pakistan . And s o the war
continues.

books·
for Cnrlstmu • no •ny time
mNnlngful books from l•rge
• no smllll presws ,
exceptlon11 cera s, chen
Jets, lmportea Cllenelllrs,
bNullful po sters 1ne1 otner
gift Item s.

WefYiliA·s bOOt stCRi
hl

th4!""U nloe r•ltJI car•ca

3102 Main St.
( bel w . .n Clttttr &amp; Lltboft)

•

J)()N

Mf~I~I~J.lN

The fbet/SinBer

Erik h11 b•n 10 busy he's
gotten behind In tome of
his work. So, he's working
extra hour~ on 1tle -.iel1
h•ndc:refted diamond
rings in town I

'1' Ill~ Ill f~ J.l N 1• II~'
17heSon8~TheA\bum
on Un\ ted Arb-sts Recotds f.T~pes.

~'A
;g Ln~

---

Page ten. The spdctrum . Wednesday, December 8, 1971
.I

Ern'
~~W~L~RS

81 allen at., buffalo. n. y.

�Drugs .and the law

Teen tells ofher arrest
was stoned ; there was no use to try to bide
it, and I bad to admit it. Period. No

Edllor'l note: ..4 L4 ·year-old g(rl wcu
picked up, along with h~r boyfriend, by
Detroit poUce while rite couple were on
their W4Y to a rock concert. It wa.r Iter ftrrt
experience with a drug THC and her ftrrt
a"e1t. Site tpent two night1 in the Wayne
County Youth Home and, at United 1'ru1
International '1 reque11 . wrote her
experience.

mention of what would happen if l did or
didn't say anything. So, after a while, I got
all mixed up and admitted I bad taken
some dope. Then she told me that since I
taad freely admitted taking dope, I was
under official arrest, and would be sen,t to
the home.

DETROIT - (UPI) - After considerable
hassle, we got talcen to the precinct. At the
statio n , after atrout an hour, a
policewoman took me into another room,
away from my boyfriend.
Until then, I was P,etty sure I could lie
my way out of it, and get away free. Since
1 wu stoned, the whole . thing seemed
totally unreal. .It wasn't until they
separated us that I got really frozen with
fright.
The policewoman told me she knew 1

Felt abandoned
l was handcuffed to another &amp;irl and
taken to the home. The woman told me
that if I bad a release I could possibly get
out that night. I held onto that and didn't
let myself thinlc beyond it.
At the home, after banding over all our
belongings, I felt as if the last thing that
was "me" was gone, and l bad nothing left.
Being stoned as.. I was didn't help my
feelings of abandonment. Finally~, I slept.
I was awake at about 6 a.m. I remember

looking at the clqck. The next thin1 I
mother's boyfriend had beat her up and
remember is lookinl d the ceilina in the • when abe went to the hotpital to see if
mornilit IUla tryin1 to remember what wu
they could stop the bleeding of her eye.
toinJ on. I was completely down from the
they had put her in the home ..for he.r own
pill I bad taken, but I couldn't quite
protection. •• She and others like her were
remember where I was supposed to be, and
still treated like criminals.
why I wun 't there.
A half hour before lunch Monday, I
My father visited me, He only stayed for
talked to a social wotker, who seemed to
a few minutes. He said he'd try to get me
think I'd be able to get out that day. I
out that day, Sunday, but be didn't know
fervently hoped so.
what he could do.
At 10, I got up, washed and put on the
clothes t!tey'd given me the night before.
Girts don't care
White tennis shoes and ankle socks, white
r wu too nervous to eat my lunch, so
underwear and white men's T.filirt.s for my new friend cleaned off my food for me.
blouses and sack dresses . . . I got a pink She said, ..after you've been here a few
dress.
_1 .)_
Looking out the ""'P!.ldow
at the &amp;ign on times, foi a month or so, nothing can upset
you. You've seen bow the girls are. Most of
the lawn, "WS¥ne County Youth Home," I
us just don't care anymore." For some
thought about myself, my friends and my
reason, that really shook me up.
sudden lack of individuality . I seemed to
just realize the full impact of all of it - the
As soon as ( walked into the room for
fact that no matter what happened, I was
my hearing, I saw a woman bepn filling
now a criminal; I had a record. I think
out what r knew was my release forms. I
that's the only Ume I ever broke down. I
walked out the door, really so shaky and
felt absolutely inconsequential.
light-beaded I couldn't see straight and
Some of the girls were there just
walked away from it as fast as I could. The
because they bad no place else to go. One
polluted old air of Detroit never smelled so
girl told me she was there because her

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Wednesday, December 8, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

...

.

�. ·,..Hockey.on the rcppd

VICO COLLEGE

Register now for our spring proaram of seminars intqtati'D8
literature, philosophy, and political thought.
VICO 204·1 Rome and Christianity (4-8). V. Doyno
VICO 204-2/VICO 438 European Intellectual History
•
in the Nineteeth Century (4-8).
J. Nardin and D. Hollinger
VJCO 34S Co-seminar: History of Education,(2).
K. Von Moltke
VlCO 401 Literature as History (4 ). E. Perry
VJCO 499 Independent Study (Var. Cr.). Staff
Departmental credit in English, Classics. History,
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BuDs to Play in toUrnament
After setting the ECAC Division II race on fire.
'
with three straight victories,
the varsity hockey Bulls
prepare for battle away from home during the next
two weeks. This coming Friday and Saturday
evening, the Bulls travel to Columbus, Ohio to face
Ohio State University in the first of a double homo
and home series. Next semester on Saturday, Jan. 22
the Bulls meet Ohio State at the Amherst Recreation
Center, and then on Sunday the BuJis and Buckeyes
clash in Buffalo's first game ever ~t the Memorial
Auditorium at 2 :30p.m.
After their weekend at Ohio State, the Qulls
return hom'e to Buffalo prior to traveling to
Bellerica, Massachusetts for their participatjon in
their second Merrimack Tournament. Two years ago,
the Bulls were eliminated in the first round by
Merrimack 10-4, while last year the Blue and Gold
evened their score at Merrimack with a 6·2 victory.
That win at Merrimack stands out as one of the
Bulls' top wins in their short history.
A star is bom
In the semi-final round of the tourney on Dec.
16, the Bulls meet Lowell Tech in the first game
while Merrimack and St. Anselm 's clash in the
nightGap. The two winners advance to the
championship bracket where the winner will be
decided. Both Buffalo and Merrimack were rated
among Division 11 's top five teams in a pre-season
poll among the hockey coaches.
For the Bulls, a star may have been born last
Saturday evening in Lockport when freshman
goaltender Russell French made his varsity debut.
French, who was sidelined previously with a pulled
groin, delighted the crowd with 28 saves. Buffalo
varsity hockey Coack Ed Wright called French, "A
Division I caliber goaltender" which leads one to
suspect that Wright plans plenty of ice time for the
St. Catharines, Ontario native.

JOIN

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Russ French
Lean and lanky, French's chief opposition for
the stating job remains senior Mike Dunn who has
been the Bulls' mainstay in the nets for the past
three seasons. Although, French may have caused
some worry with his wandering from the goal crease,
Russ appears the type player the Bulls need to build
their program with.
After their appearances at Ohio State and at the
Merrimack Tournament, the Bulls next play Jan. 8 at
HamiJton College in Clinton. New York. The
Hamilton contest is a Division ll contest as is the
Jan. 15 game at Ithaca College.

Although the Buffalo Braves dropped teams had met in San Francisco with the May and Mike Davis who replaced Dick
all three off their games last week , they Warriors pulling out a 106· 100 win.
Gauett at the start of the quarter. They
provided their fans with muny exciting
Frisco started Thurmond, Lucas, Ellis, each taUied seven points in the period
moments while showil)g that they could Jones, and Williams. Braves Coach Dolph which ended with the Warrio rs leading
play ball on an equal level with the "big Schaycs cuuntered with All ..Star Bob 5240. J'hunnond took scoring honors for
boy s " . Yes, Buffalo does have a Kauffman at center, Don May and the half with 20 points which Lucas
basketball team and many dubs who have Cornell Warner at the forwards, and Herm tallied 1S. For Buffalo, May was the only
taken expansion te:uns lightly now realize Gilliam and Captain Dick Garrett at the scorer in double figures with 13.
that Buffalo IS a team to reckon with .
guards. Warner had seen litt le action High-scoring Bob Kauffman was hetd to
Player·Coadt AI Attles hrought his San earlier in the season , hut because of his four points on two baskets which he

~;·r.:': ~:~·::~· :.:~.~·::~:~PRIN'TfN-c

~i~th s~~! B~~;~o~~HlB~7t:is.t~spue tile rcm)unomg
3

distance for the first part of the finai intin;
period as DOnnie May continued his baskP
outside shooting and Mike Davis and
W1
Herm Gilliam led the fast break. In locke
addition, the BuffaiQ defense tightened affec
up, forcing the visitors to take the long storrr
shots. Unforfunately, the Warriors were Buffa
equal to the task with Thurmond, Lucas, break
and Ellis all finding the mark Davis,
90nsistently . Buffalo closed within (six) great

. .&amp;."COMP&lt;lSlNr}::~·r.:·::~~.~·. :~:-::.
.c~.Vuu

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quesuo~~~~~::in:t :~~n:ra~~s v;~~ :~t;t

str.:ng111 cou1u prove vua1 oa uac
'tu-..
uuua
......
loss of superstar Rick Barry t\l the ABA against this tall Warrior team.
'in the half. During that stretch, ''The the Warriors coverted these turnovers into settle&lt;
several y•,.rr ""'' •"• w ........,... """". "•" """' w .............. Auff·l l~\ intf'\ ~ r-........ ...... . .J ... r~ ... : ........ -- ~-·A
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t
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boards.
quick 4.0 lead as they both hit jump shot after jump shot. The Frisco ~ttack
The Warriors came out of the locker Da•
The backcourt for the Warriors has shots from the outside. However, Frisco was paced by fine shooting by EIJis and room early for the second half lookir.gpoints
been their .weak spot. Ron Williams and came back with a string of seven straight the ever-present Nate Thurmond. The end rather confident that they could increase consid
Nick Jones are good outside shooters and points with Lucns hitting two of the of the 1h ird quarter showed San their 12 point lead. Braves' Coach 3 J. ~
know how to handle the ball, but both baskets. From that point on, neither team Francisco on top by only eight points at Schayes kept his players in the dressinf 29 po
luk experience which only playing time could seem lP find the hoop consistently 76-68. Buffalo had found itself in the room for a long time hoping to fire up hi! Buffal•
can give them . Both can score well, but and San Francisco maintained a small rebOunding column as Kauffman, Warner. ball club which had played a very poolbalJ a•
neither has ever been a high scorer. Jeff lead throughout a low scoring first John Hummer, and May collapsed on the first half - far below their capability. Tht two p1
Mullins is coming into his own, but he, quarter. As expected, Ka\lffman, 8J'\1ngdefensi~ backboards
Warrior front ' line had completet)and BJ
too. has been a hot and cold shooter.
away three inches, took Thurmond
Buffalo remained within striking dominated the backboards an~buelin

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Wednesday, December 8, 1971

�Basketball Bulls must try to
Iblend talent in order to win

OVERTIME
L----------~by 8lny Rubin
SponrEdltM

'

I

How close Buffalo's put hockey weekend came to beinJ cancelled
can only be known deep In the hearts of Buffalo's athletic director Dr.
Harry Fritz and hoc~ey Coach Ed Wright. It seems that New En&amp;Jand
CoUeae, after absort,.na a S·l lo• to the Bulls, angrily notified Oswego
State and Salem State about their delay in starting the Nov. 27 game at
Amherst . New En&amp;Jand was riaht; no hockey team should be forced to
wait two hours before taking the ice for a pme. However, the virtual
blackmail used by Oswego State and Salem State leaves a distinct bad
taste in one's mouth .
The truth is that Osweao State refused to come to Buffalo Friday
evening unless the BuUs financed their (Oswego's) overnight stay. The
Bulls, not wanting to lose thls important Division II date, paid Oswego
the blackmail, and took the game to boot. It seems th at despite all the
hassles over a home playing court, the ypung hockey Bulls have risen to
the occasion with their coach, and have shown the most class of all
involved .
Then, Salem State forced the switch of their Saturday night game
to Lockport's Keenan Center in order to facilitate a 9 p.m. start. Once
again, Salem State had a just arievance, for a bia time hockey program
cannot have its pmes starting at such a late hour. At the late hour, the
Bulls lose precious late news media coveraae, in addition to the fans not
willing to stay out until I a .m. for a hockey pme.
But it isn't Salem State or Oswego State that should be
admonished for their behavior, but rather the local politicos on the
town of Amherst recreation board who have thrown Buffalo hockey
around more than even Bill Newman couJd throw the puck around.
Ever since the summer, hassles have developed over use of the
recreation center, one of the few ice rinks in the area. The final straw
occurred at the New En&amp;land came when instead or the Bulls and
Pilgrims taking the ice, two bantam teams took over . •Of course, the
Bulls as usual were forced to take a backseat, but one must wonder
how much longer the Bulls can afford to accept the shaft from Amherst
offi cials and still maintain any semblance of integrity and respectabiJity
to the hockey proaram.
Durin&amp; the past year, the Buffalo hockey program has been riddled
by problems off the ice, most surrounding the use or no n-use of
facilities. First, the Auditorium was made virtually closed to the Bulls
except for one Sunday date and several unattractive Monday nights.
Then despite a contractual a&amp;reement to start all home recreation
center games at 9 p.m .• the Bulls are forced to start at 10 :30 p.m. or
later. What 's going on here? ls it that school officials are just too afraid
to properly deal with the sHuation. Coach Wriaht told this reporter: " I
was told that the Ath.letic Department would take care of this
situation, so I'm waiting for them to do it."
According to plans for the new SUNY Buffalo Amherst campus, a
hockey facility won't be ready for ten more ye.ars. The need ts g,reat
now. and just think how great it would be t~ be al)le to ao ice skating
at our own facility and then watch the Bulls on their own home ice.
What ts so unrealistic about applying a little pressure on the state to
move up plans for the hockey facility or possibly the use of Student
Associatlon funds for such a project. The SA was so gung-ho behind
Poverty Hill . why not an ice facility? After all, through rental to
outstde groups, the inittallarge investment could be made back in short
ttme.
·
Regardless, the hockey Bulls and their coach have stood above the
situation despite the loss of prestige to the Buffalo ice program . The
Bulls see their o pposition come in with at least half a dozen scholarsh•P
players. and yet the Bulls win. The BuUs see teams with their own rink5
which afford greater practice time, and yet the Bulls win. The only
place the Bulls have suffered set backs is off the ice, and these losses can
far outshine the on·the·ice victories if something is not done

immedBibt~eT;~htuation. Hear, 0
A REASONABLE REQUEST
'Come now, let us reason together,
ith the Lord : thouah your ~ins be
scartet, they shall be as while as
mow...
luiah I : 18
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Phone

875 - 4265
~H A IRSTYLIN G ._

••••

(at Colvin Theatre)

WIGS - HAIR COLORING

. ._ _ 877- 2989 _ _. .

HEALTH FOOD. SHOPPE
£
-......~
~

1451 HERTEL AVENUE
(corner Norwalk)
•
831-7661
LOWEST PRICES
Featuring

~
cti....
~
~
.....

DANNON YOGURT
4 • for 98¢ coffee • plain • vanilla
6 . for $1 .79 assorted fruited

Natural cosmetics &amp; juicers
"Great &amp;ift ideas for Christmas at Discount Prices"

HOURS :

Finals home stand
After meeting Central Michigan , the Bulls return
home prior to final s week with Ohio Northern on
Tuesday evening. Two years ago Ohio Northern gave
the Bulls a fine bat tie but lost I OO..SS . Then on

Friday, Dec. 17, Northeastern University, 17-4 lust
year, comes in. The Bu11l have a score to settle with
the HusiOes, who edged the Bulls 80-61 in last year's
Scranton University hoUday festivaL Finally. the
Bulls end their semester's work at home with a big
challenge from Illinois State UniVersity.
The Bulls seemed to pull together in last
Friday's loss at Point Park mainly on the outstanding
work of 6-6 transfer forward Jim Tribble. While Curt
Blackmore has garnered all the praise, Tribble has
quietly done his job . Great thinp are predicted for
Tribble, who opened up with a mediocre
performance against Syracuse but then proved the
Bulls' best at Point Park .
Althou8h transfer guard Bob Vartanian is
hampered by a severe ankle sprain, the Bulls have a
chance to improve their record against a building
Central Michigan club, and with three tough pmes
at home where the Bulls seemingly own the court.
The Bulls have become a zone defense club on the
road in order to cut down on their fouls while still
providing defense.
At home look for the Bulls to pressure more in
back-court In order to take advantage of their home
court. Their first win on the road will prove \0 be a
sw~t one for the youthful Bulls, who must blend
the talents of three transfers with the remaining
talent in order to win .

amaa~ga~~aaaaaaggga

LOW DRY CLEANING PRICES
at the Tower Service Center
8;.16tm&amp;nt of

Tuwt~r

HOURS:
De-Ily 2-6 p .m. Sat. 12-3 p.m .

ANV..COMBINATION O F THREE

pants. skirts(plain),

3for

sweaters(lightweight)

~f"P

complaing and find

out what's really going ~n:

Joe's Theatre Barber
JOSS Kenmore Avenue

Feel Rite········,

..~

Although the basketball Bulls were home last
nlaht with Toronto, they hit the road apin soon
after their brief one-game home stand. Saturday
evenJng, the Bulls travel to Mt. Pleasant, Michlgan
where they meet the Central Michigan University
Chippewas. Last year the Bulls pulled a minor upset
of the Chips at Clark Gym with an 80-73 victory
behind Curt Blackmore's 21 points. It proved to be a
big win as Central Michigan went on to a big 18·9
won'·lost record. Including a third place finish at the
NCAA College division mid-west regionals.
Now , Central Michigan has joined the major
university division of the NCAA In anticipation of
their move along with another Buffalo opponent,
Eastern Michigan into the Mid-American conference.
Central Michigan lost four starters from last year's
post-season club and additionally had Ass't . Coach
Dick Parfitt replace long·time successful mentor Ted
Kjolhede. The o nly returning Chip starter wiU be 6·3
forward Ben Kelso, who returns to captain this
year's squad. Other keys to Central Michigan are 6-6,
220·pound center Chris Young, 64 transfer forward
Leroy Allen and 6-3 senior Ricardo Thomas.

THE STUDENT
ASSEMBLY is meeting
TODAY
at 3:00

148
I

Diefendorf

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9 :30 - 9 p.m . Tues., Wed., Th. Sat. 9 :30 - 6:30 p.

Wednesday , December 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�Swim meet

Yellowjackets defeat BuDs
by Bruce &amp;,el
Sp«trum St.U Writer

The youthful Buffalo
swimmin&amp; team aot its fint taste
of competition last week.
Thwaday niaht the Bulb took a
lesson from a strona Hobart team
78·28. Then Saturday, Buffalo
traveled to Rochester to meet the
University of Ro c hester
YeUowjackets.
At the team meeting just prior
to the match Coach William
Sanford said: "I cannot remember
the last time we beat Rochester. I
think this may be the day."
Sanford's statement proved to be
slightly optimistic, as Buffalo lost
65-47. But his reasoning wun't
really too far o ff. For this was the
closest Buffalo has come to edging
Rochester, a perennial swimming

power, in many yean. In fact it
wu tbe fint time in a lona time
that Buffalo even pve them a

fiaht.

Rochester was lead by Tom
Lincoln (three wins), John
Gunther (two wins) and Dave
Wolker, who won both divin&amp;
competitions. Walker beat out
Buffalo's Ken l.ebbon and Sam
Mann , both of whom are
freshmen just learnina to dive.

Bulls' sq~per
Earlier in the year, Sanford
Aid he would give little away thls
year to the opposition.
Unfortunately, Buffalo had to
have some stratea.ic giveaways at
Rochester. The Bulls had the
maximum two men in each event,
but an aiHna Jim Rader as well as
some freshmen, still developina

Please Join Us
for
SUNDAY BRUNCH

12:30 p. m., December 12th
SIGMA DELTA TAU SORORITY HOUSE
- 68 AUenhurst ( opposite the campus)
• DISCUSS membership in a national sorority!
• MEET girls who wdcome a challenge!
• CREATE your own group!
R.S. V.P. by Saturday to

Shelly, 814·3850 tl'tntngs

Mara, 836-{)068 t l'tnings

were Uttle more than throw ins.
Not until next aemeater should
this situation improve very much.
At that time the squad will pick
up several fine swimmen,
presently ineUsible. Diver Tim
Leo and sprinter Steve Schulman
will fill the bigest boles.
Junior transfer Georae Starn ,
Buffalo's only individual winner
apinat Hobart , is undefeated in
two 200-yard back.s troke contests.
At Rochester Starn led aU the way
and won in two minutes and 18.4
seconds. The best of the Bulla'
freshmen , Jay Rawley , won the
100-yard freestyle with ease. It
was close at the start but after the
eleventh lenath of the 40-lenath
race he pulled away and it was
never close again, with Jay
winnina by almost two full
lengths. Rawley's time of 12
minutes and 17.8 seconds wss
very close to a school record .
Rawley also took second in the
500-yard freestyle, behind
Lincoln. Buffalo senior Captain
George Thompson won the
SO-yard freestyle, whlle Buffalo's
only other victory was in the
400-yard freestyle relay which
was stacked with the Bulls' best
swimmers - Thompson, Rawley,
Stam and Dave Sexton. Also
notable was Chip Whiteside with
two second ptace finishes .
Tonight wUJ be the ftrSt home
meet of the season. It is expected
that Buffalo will crush a very poor
Canisius squad. The much
Improved BuiJs will take on the
Griffins at 8 p.m ., in Clark Gym
pool.

Defeated swimmers

Last w•kend tM swimmlnt Bulla
opened their 1971 -72 SUIOn with

two stnight road losses n Hobart
and Rochester. Toni_..t at Clark
Gym pool, Coach Bill Sanford's
Bulls take on Canlaius Coli.-.

HHUSSMIISYIRS SKI CLUB

SKI

STOWE
.

JANUARY 2-7
(Christmas Vacation)

·ggoo
I@ POSTER" OF ONE OF THE
!~/ CANDIDATES!

COLOR IN THIS "MINI-

PRESJDENTJAL

-includes 5 day-lifts, lessons,

1. Buy a whole buncfl of Flair pens. You
need black, red, blue, green, brown,
orange, yellow, pink, purple, grey, aqua &amp;
olive. (You need them anyway for school.)
2. Now-color in the picture according to
these color guide numbers. Black (1 ). Red
(2). Blue (3). Green (4). Brown (5). Orange
(6). Yellow (7). Pink (8). Purple (9). Grey (10).

meals, transportation

LIMITED SPACES-SIGN UP SOON

Gillette Company

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday,

Decem~ 8,

1971

,•c. . Aqua (11). Olive (12). Please do not color
unnumbered areas.
3. Congratulations! You have created a
genuine full color portrait of someone you
1. know and love. Maybe. If he is not your
· favorite presidential candidate, have patience. You'll see your man soon In the
Flair Election Collection!

PaperMate Olvlslon ~ 1971

�lKS STOOEBAKEA, good conclltlon,

CLAIIII'III
IHIIIY on Wlnii)Mr. Available MCond
semester. Cell 835-3836.

WANTED
COUPLE moving Into unfurnished
apartment needs bed, dresser, table or
desk and chair. Call 896-o648.
ROOM outside Buffalo for my c.t and
myself. Cooperatlvlty appreciated . Call
Roy 838·3244 even1091, mornlnvs.
MPILE/fenu~le

over, share
137·0159.

to travel In c.mper, 21
ex pens•·· Call Rot

ROCK GROUP doing wide variety of
material wants partl•, dances, etc:.
NMdS used tambournle(s) 833-3942 ,
LACROSSE players- eny sin, grad or
undergrad for UB LaCrosse Clu b. If
have determination, ~:ome to meeting
Friday, OK. lOth It 3 p.m. In
basement Clark Gym.
FEMALE

to partlc:lpate In new
living experlenc:e In
Ma.:Don1ld Mall. Call 1314669.

~:ollegiUe

2 QUIET fem1111 need 2-«&lt;ldroom
ap1rtment, Wilking dl.1t1nc:e from
c.mpus by Jan . 1. Clll Margo or
cntzuko 833..781.
"MOTHER'S HELPER" wanted, thrM
afternoons per WMk. Light work In
good nome. Good salary. MIISI hiVe
own transPOrtation. Call 688.(1831.
GOOD USED nand loom. Small floor
model. Call Anne &amp;a4-5285 nights.
WANTED responsible driver Buffalo to Boulder, Cplorado - to
deliver c:ar. All c:ar expens•
reimbursed. References. Call 856.0.71.
Pl. A VBOV d•lriS Pllyglr1. I.UVI
name 1nd number In Boll 22 Spec:trum
Offlc:e.
MALE, female restlurant staff
required for all position• at historic
Roycroft Inn . TI!Oie neat, personable,
willing to turn, may IPPIY In person
40 5. Grove St., E. Aurorl, M- F, 1--1;.
OVERSEAS JOBS For Students:
Austfllll, Europe, S. America, Africa,
etc:. All ptofesslons and occupations,
$700 to 13000 monthly. Expenses
paid, overtime, sightseeing. FrM
Information. Write JobS Ovenus,
Dept. ES, Box !5071, Sen Diego,
Calltornla 92115.
STUDENTS to do tax returns.
Commi$Sion cull basis. We will train
you frM. Call 652·9247.

ONE-BEDROOM IPirtment, 295
Vermont St .. avlllable Jlnuaty 1 . 880
Plus utilities, couple preferred. C1ll
Don Weyand. 81~696 .
Sl NGLE

room Willi fu rnlsned
ap~rtment,
five-minute walk from
camPUs, very comfortable and quiet,
834-4792 after 6 : 30.

ct..n . N- tires (snow). 0r11t entlne.
185.(1013,

convet'tlble. 81Kk with white toQ.
Good oener11 c:ondltlon. Winterized,
Inspected, rusonable. 837 -7554.
SUPER 'II Luxury Oldsmobile 1963.
Perfec:t condition. A rul honey for
little money! Call 886.a17a.
SNOW TIRES, 2 Dunlop CW&lt;14, size
G78-14, wnlt-111, u58d - $15. Call
Gary 835·5851.

RIDE BOARD

STEREO c:usette play6r/recorder.
Exc:euent condition, $50, 6113.0635
after 6 p.m.

MAI.E RIDER wanted to I...A./CIIIf.
Shirl 111penses, VW; tuvlng abou t
Chrlstmes. One WIY only. Clll Bob 1t
131,.301 (a.m. only). l..uve name anel
PI"! one.

TV's - tabll and floor modelS, $30 o r
best offer. Also repair TVS lOCI StlriOS.
Call Ed 896..,.&lt;109 evenings.

RIDE NEEDED 12/9 - 3 :00 p.m.,
12 / 10 1nytlme, to Pittsburgh,
Johnstown, Loretto, Pennsylvlnla. Call
JOhn 13:2·95$4.

FOR SALE

vw Bus, 1966. Ne.u perfec:t condition,
body 1nd mechanical. Jon Rosenberg
831 -5122 (dlyS), 759.(1915 (evenings) .
TV 19-lncn Emerson portable,
VMF·UMF, 1 yur old, $60 - or Dill
offer. 694·2531.
TRIUMPH hard •top splt·flre (Mark I,
II, 1111.835-9108 after 5:30.
F\E8U II.. T VW fastback runs
fantastic , Cyclone exhaust, new tires,
reoullt carburutors, etc. 8800. Riehle
832 .. 123.
DOUBLE BED with frame and
headboard, $20. Call Len 832,...10.
USED BEDROOM furniture - double
bed , desk, dresser, nlte table.
Ausonable. Ken, L..ynn 835·7082 .
GIBSON folk gUitlf B-15, Sill months
old for $100. C111 Sob 133-6480.

SABRE ticket se~son ticket, location
Sec:tlon 14 Grays for 6 91m11 csurlng
vacation . Call Dave at 834.(1699.
VW, repalreble, chup; n - dual 1219
turntable! snetwooel rec:elveq speakers;
Pioneer reverb; Coldspot frMzer,
Frigidaire stove; skiS! Shelolng.
833·7270.
MODULAR electrophonlc ttereo
system. AM·FM tuner, BS.R . chenger,
l•trac:k tApe dec:k, 2·WIY SPilker
systems. Need cam - $80. Call Joe
634-5621.
1970 Jaguar XKE. Excellent condition.
4-speed standard tr~nsmlulon . Beige
with biiCk soft top. Raellll Ures/wlre
shells. Brand n1w AM·FM stereo radio
Included. C l ll Dave 684·2000 between
8 a .m.- 4 p .m. weekdays, or 618·7327
on wMkends.
"TME PEOPLE," a folk aru boutique,
featuring ethnic apgaTII, 1-etry 1nd
hendcrafU. 1&lt;14 Allen 812-6213.
'66 IMPALA - exc:euent condition brand new transmiss ion , $900. Must
well. Need IHIICI . 181-4067 .
PANASONIC l ·trac:k tape deck. Home
unit. Good offer. Clll877-6657.

LADIES buckle ski boots, size 7
narrow. Excellent, $30. Call 831·5&lt;172
ct.ys. 634-9625 eves. Stephen Margolis.

165-15 Mlcnetln tires on VW rims : 2
snow tires, 2 reg. 139·1924 after 4 :00.

VOI.KSWAGON Bug 1967. Excellent
condition, 8900 or best offer. Call
after 4 o.m. 877·2081 .

1970 KARMANN Gn la coupe, orange
with black Interior. Driven J yr.,
18,000 miles. 81600, 649·18113.

VELVET
Kaftans, heavily
embroidered, tunic anel maxi lengths,
at ''Tile P10p1e," a folk ~rts boutique.
14&lt;1 Allen . 182.(1283.

FIXED FEMALE cat available free .
Extremely affec:tlonate. 675-4168. Call
after 7 p.m .

APARTMENT FOR RENT

ROUND OAK table, $15 ; oak chain,
15 U; klngslze waterbed,/frame, 130;
3'x 7' worktabll/desk, 810. 175-4671.

FURNISHED thr ee • bedroom
'partment, 91rage, finished 1tttc,
$200+ . Avllllbll Jan. tn. 134· 7296.

'71 VW Super Beetle, AM·FM, S good
tires, sunroof, excellent eonclltlon.
Mike 876.0~56.

3·BE'OROOM furni shed tnodern
'Pirtment. Avalllble J1nu~ry first call 836·7799,

NIKKOR~T

FTN1 '50 mm Nlkon
1en11 85·205 mm Vlvatar telezoom
lens: luther c.ses; close-up bellows,
$300. 834-5384.

LIVING ROOM, bedroom, kitchen,
bath for two, 190/mont n . Block from

DEPENDABLE

1964

Falcon

196g M6B low mlluge, excellent
mechanical condition. Body perfec:t.
Ca ll between 4 :3()-6 :30, 836.0&lt;185.
FOR SALE• gas nove, dreuer w ith
mirror, ehup. 877.0137.
MOROCCAN lm1t0rtt Cllg these
prlc:U : custo~mlde LEATHER
PAN~S- 830;
ength WOOl/cOtton
CAPES - 115; ft Cl·made LEATHER
BAGS - 18 ; COIOI'fu l WOOL SASHES
$2 . ~0 .
Antique Moratan ll
(Gullomlne) BEADS - 18/ dOZ. Call
Steve 81G-4707.

IN CELEBRATION of CHANUKKAH
Hillel Pre&amp;enb

SHLOMO
Chassidic

CARLEBACH
F~k-SinQer

Sunday, December 12 It 8 :00 p.m.
in
147 Diefendorf
Free to members of Hillel
50¢ with Student J.D. Card
ALL OTHERS $1 .00

IIIIIIAII

••••••••••
•••••••
1061 Sherian Drive

Speclellzlng In Volktwii9M\.
Triumph, Volvo, MG. Austin
H..ley, Toyota, Oataun 110d
~-

877·9303

---------------------------

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GRADUATING
STUDENTS

874-6330

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AEFRIOEAATOAS, stoves end
wasnen. Rec:onclltloned t delivered 1nd
guaranteed. ot.O Appliances, 844
Sycemore, TX4·318S .
STEREO Fisher 125, 40 watts, RMS
per c:t11nne1 with SQUkers. Good
condition . One yur old. Prlc;.e
n190tlable. Call 1354623.
REFR IGERATOR, bed frerne,
mattre ss, other furniture. Call
837.0099, Marc, Ken or Mike.
OPENING DEC. ht, 1nne1e to "TI'II
People," futuring handcrafts of Alia,
Afrtca, ttte Amerlcu. Kids toys, too.
Unusual , moderately prlc:ed gift Items.
144 Allen. Call 882.(1283 for h oun.

PERSONAL
WHAT'S a burrito? It is 1 Mexican
sandwlen fllleC! with groun~ beef or
refrlld beans, chMse and chill con
carne. Bun, 1.411, mut, s.69. Try
them at Tippy's T ICO Mouse, 2351
Sheridan Or. (acrou from Putt•Putt
Golf) 838· 3900.
WII..EV (Fred) Please contact Tom.
VELVET
Kaft1ns, heavily
embroidered, tunic: and maxi lengths at
" Tne People,'' • folk •rts boutique.
1&lt;14 A llen. 182-6283.
BORIS, my darlln
on't be silly. He'll
be too busy re•u .• og tile suotltles.
Natash a.
NATASMA, my love, what If your
husband finds out I'm milling you at
The Silv ie Club film tonight at 7:30 In
Capen 1397 Boris.
ALPHEEIA - I love you very, very,
very much l RleharCI ,
PUT TME questions 1nd answers
together by c.lllng the offlc:e of
Student Affairs, 3721, or ACTION
LINE, ~000. Who knows, the cloud of
chaos may 1111.
RICHIE - such good friends - Happy
Birthday, 0.
OPENING Oec. 1st, Annex to "The
People." futurlng handcrafts of Asle,
Ahlce, the Americas. Kids toys, too.
Unusual, moder1tely priced gift Items.
1&lt;14 Allen . Call 882-6283 for hours .

356 Norton or 831-2505, 5570

L--·•••••••••••••••••••

LOST : f!'Yie c;~tl, )lttiOW 8IMI ""'"•
u~. Main end LaSalle, c:all 136·3124.

ROOUU-Tel WANTRJ
1-2 FEMALE roommates needed ne Kt
Mrnester . Amherst.Parkrldge · Aent
Includ es utilltl•. Call 836-5lf6.
MALE OR female, own room,
furnished, 850+, 3 blocks f~om
campuS, Julie 835,.168.
ROOMMATE wanted llntle Of'
couple - own room In half house Mertei•Stltln - Marty, Ellen t35 ·70t2.
ROOMMATE needed S20 a mon th,
own bedroom, Mertei..Colvtn 1r11. Call
Jim or Roti 873-9579,
MELPI we need two fern••• roomm•t"
to snare room In bMutlful IOtftl'llentt
ten-minute walk fr om cami)Ut,
155/mo. Includes utilities. Beth or Pat
837-9014.
ONE FEMALI! roomm1te wanted .
own room . Furnished. Hertel off Main ,
165 rnonttl . C1ll 837·18117.
FEMALE wanted to share turntanecs
apartment. Own l1t!ll bedroom. NMr
eami)Us, rusonable rent. 837·3411.
FEMALE roommlte wanted . Own
room off Hertel . Ae"t 143.75. can
837·2889.
ONE Gt RL nMCieCI to snare room .
Modern furl)l•hed IPt. across street
from c1mpus. Call 835·4603.
TWO ROOMMATES w1nted to share
apartment ne1r campus. •ss, own
room, utllltl• Included. C1ll 83~9726.
TWO FEMALE roomm1t• wanted.
own l'ooms, 3 b locks from cami)UJ.
851+ . Jan. l. Ca ll 837-1342.
THREE female roomm1tet to there
apt. spring semester. Maln·Mertel area.
Own room, 146+ utilities. Call
137-0395.
ROOMMATE Wlnted - mall/female
compatible. Serious ac:ademlcelly. C lll
DaviCI lfter 6, Oavlel 8113·7273.
FEMALE roommlte wanted - own
room - bNutlfut apartment Lexington
off Elmwood. Available January ht .
Call 881 ·3775 .
STARTI N G Dec. 22 or 1fter, female
room mate w1nted. Own room. Ml(tel
1nd Main. Call 137·9534.

SHOWBOAT'S Englna Room Bar singles nlte every Wednescsay . No dress
requirements, frM popcorn, Clr lnks
$ .75, draft t .35. 1 Hertel Ave, on the
Niagara R iver.

FEMALE roommates needed for
semester for nouse very ciOil to
c.mi)Us. Clll Sharon at 136-:2304.

BEAUTIFUL hendmldegold and sliver
J-elry - wedding rings - at sensible
prices. J .P. Tl'le Goldwuver, 65~
Elmwood 11 Ferry st., 881 ·3400.

LOST&amp; FOUND
FOUND: Ba ird lot - gorgeous tiger
cat, white fHI , amber plastic collar.
Roy Hutchings 831·3631.
LOST : Women's gold Hamilton watcn.
Sentimental value. Genffous rewarCI.
837· 11 18 .
FOUND: H1yes 111 dur ing R esearch
F oun da tion Appllce~tlon . Man's
raincoat, size L . Call 4722 . Shirley
Stout.
GLASSES with black fr1mes rounCI on
Fills Blvd . n11r UB - c:an be cl aimed
at Spec:trum office.
FOUND 1t Marcuse lecture, black
men's walle t. Conta ins personal papers.
Call 886 ·7182 for Info .
JAC KET found In 5th floor Clement
Lounge. Ca ll 831 ·3967 to Identify.
Found before Tllanksglvlng.

~~ec:ond

FOUR roommates - male 01' femlle wanted to share 6-bedroom house.
Chup rent . Good aru nMr Oetaware
Park. Call Bruce or Dave at 8315·2623.
MATURE female to snare modern
2-bedroom aSNrtment with same
second semester. Ideal loutlon. Phone
875 -1219.
COUPLE w ish• t o snare large home
with another cou ple, $50 mo. rent
8116·2133 after 71r.m.
ROOMMATE wanted - o wn ro om,
$ 58/ month . Stltln and Tauton. A fine
&lt;lDOCie. Clll 836·7799.

"'ISCELLANEOUS
INTERESTED In going to the Bavarian
Alps and the Olympic games In Munich
August·September 19721 Phone
833 -4638.
GO TO 201 Harriman - go d irec tly to
201 H frr lman
do pau tile
bure1uc:racy - do get action for your
qu•tlon or problem! Or call 5000 we have a monopoly on answers
(Questions too) - Office or Student
Affairs .

FOUND: Pluse claim 1962 ForCI
Econoline telephone truck, standlrel
6-&lt;yllneler. Call Merry 838·2768 .

TV PING , experienced, nMr U.B .. $ .40
per INIJ8. 834-33 70 . Fnt servlc:e.

REWARD lor lOst pa inti ng 20x24
from Art Dept. Feat~M,es on this
painting ~re an Indian bllt\keland two
c;rystat glasses . Call Tony 873·231 7 .

PH OTOGRA PHERS! tnterened In
el&lt;l'tiblllng throu gtt Cooperative
Floating Galleryr Come to n111t
meeting, Monday, Dec:. 13, 7:30 p.m.
Unltarl•n Church, Elm"-OOd and w.
Ferry or call Rodger 688 n 855 .

FOUND : Will the person w ho left •
possession wnan hltchlklng tn my 19$8
Cadillac h11rse the Other dill, PleiSI
Ident ify anel c1 1 1m It 1 1 the
Undercurrent Office, Rm. 343 Notion
Hall . Rick Gellman .
FO UNO : Blue tinted prescription
ll!lnii(J gluses - gold rims - may cl• lm

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HEY SMALL PEOPLE
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I

.I

offlc;.e, Am . JS,

NV'S Motel Tudor offers SUNV rates.
Reservations and lnform•tlon
1132-o611.

I •
I I
I I
December 8th is the last day to make an appointment for
your yearbook portrait!

In The Specltrum
Norton.

II

is selling
600 pr. of Jeans.
Cords, &amp;. Dresspants
between the sizes
of 26 thru 31 for
ONLY S2.99
P S . Long lengths, too
BROTHERHOOD3342 BAILEY AVE.
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best ponlbll pre5entatlons of
dissertations, thesis, t erm papers,
resumes and 1mployment appliCation
tetters. Vuy reuonable. Call
7&lt;11~3958 .

BABVSITTINO for w o rking mothen.
A c: reftlve personality program
~:onCiucted by • qualified tHc:her. To
begin Jfn. ht at 1010 Elmwood Ave.,
Buffalo . Limited enrollment. To
4rrange an Interview, write Mary Beth
Hill, 103 Claremont, Buffalo, 14222.
PROFESSIONAL Typing Service term papers, thesis &amp; dlnertetlonL
Ausonable retes. Call now . 876·7616.

APARTMENTS WANTED
FO UR ~ALES need 4-«&lt;edroom apt,
n11r ~pill:' Cell 832.a084.
2 GtRl.S d•perately need apartment
ctCHe to c.mQU&amp;. Re~sonably priced.
Call Lynn, Olen• 135-4637.
THREE or mOl'• bedroom 1pt. needed.
Ca ll T ony 8 33 · 1 ;)67 9r · Marvy
835·5535 •

·----------~-..J

Wednesday, _December 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�..

Announcements
. The Linauistic:s OepMtment innou~ in open
lecture in Linauistics 501 today at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 404 Hayes. Dr. johnson will spNk .on
"AnthropolOJY and Linauistics."
The Department of Music presents the
University Orchestra with Pamela Gearhart,
conductor, In a program of works by Saint-Saens,
Vivaldi, Bartok, Stravinsky and Sibelius, tomorrow
at 8:30 p.m. in Baird Recital Hall. The concert is
free Vld open to the public.
UB Gay Liberation Front will meet today at 8
p.m. in Room 232 Norton.
The Computina Center User Services announces
a seminar in Discrete Approximation to be given
today at 7 p.m. in Room 10,4238 Ridae Lea Road.
Psychomat is in the Millard Fillmore Room
today from 3-5 p.m. Be part of a listening and
speaking experience. Share in the process of
person·tO·person communication.
UUAB Literary Arts Committee presents Ed
Sanders, author of Monson Family, tomorrow at 8
p.m. in Haas Lounge.
The Student Association is sponsoring an
International Coffee House today from 7- 9:30 p.m.
in the Center lounge of Norton.
CAC wants any freshmen, sophomores or
juniors inlerened in being project head for the
Buffalo State Hospital project to contact Ralph
D'Amico at 831-3609 or to come to Room 220
Norton.

11M AlbfWit·knox Gallery, 128S Elmwood
Avenue, will be displaylna a collection of araphics
from New York plleries
now until jan 9.

tros;n
,•

The BruiUan Club will meet tomorrow at 7:30
p.m. In Room 234 Norton.
Cl~o

Italiano Vlnounces in afternoon of
classical music by ltaliVl composers performed by
Mr. Vld Mrs. lola Cerulli. The concert will be Jiven
today at 3 p.m. in the Conference Theater.
UB Opera Club will meet today at 6 :30p.m. in
Room 106 Baird Hall to discuss plans for the
February production.

The Student Film Club will haw a screenlna of
complete or semi&lt;amplete workshops today ilt 8
p.m. In Room 233 Norton. AU members who have
workshops bKk are requested to brina them. Any
new members are invited.
The State University of Buffalo presents il
Mechanical Engineering 125th Anniversary Seminar
Series. Tomorrow Dr. A.G. Davenport of the
University 1&gt;f Western Ontario will speak on "The
Interaction of Wind and Buildings" at 4 p.m. In
Room 104 Parker EnJineerina.
The Slavic Club will show a film, The
Grasshopper, today at 7:30 p.m . in Room 139
Capen Hall.

The Chemical Enaineerlna Dt:pMtment
announces il seminar on "A Study of Gas-Metal
Reactions using the levitation Technique" by
Professor A.E. Hamielec of McMaster University,
tomorrow at 1 p.m. In Room 5 Acheson Hall.

The Western New York Public Interest Reseilrch
Group (WNYPIRG) needs help in organizing. Corne
to the table In the Center lounge of Norton for
information.

The New Colqe of Modern Edugtion wants
anyone interested in a full -time live·in position at a
local free school to contact Elliot Smith at
831·5388.

UB Photo Club presents a lecture/demonstration
by Raoul van ligten on "Laser as an Art Form and
Holography" today at 8 p.m. in the Conference
Theater. Admission is free.

CAC has a new counseling project, The
Tonawanda Storefront Center, which needs
volunteers. If interested come to the CAC office,
Room 220 Norton, 831 ·3609 or contact George or
Norm at ttie Center, 875-2131 after 5 p.m.

The Buffaloniiln is looking for photographers
who are interested in submitting photographs for the
1972 Buffalonian . They should contact Mary
O'Brien, in Room 356 Norton or caJI831-5570.

The Student Polish Culture Club will show a
movie entitled "Spotkanie z Rodakami" tomorrow
at 8 p.m. in the Conference Theater.
The Bottle of Algiers will be playing today at 6
p.m. in the Conference Theater.

UB Ice Skatina Club will have skating at
Brighton Arena from 9- 10 p.m . tomorrow. Buses
will leave Clark Gym at 8:15p.m.

Beauty ilnd the Beast, directed by jean Cocteau,
will be shown tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 147
Diefendorf.

· The Prop-essive labor Party will have a forum
on "China - Is It Socialist?" tomorrow at 8 p.m . in
Room 330 Norton.

Sunshine House will have a general meeting of
all members tomorrow at 8 p.m . in Room 210
Foster HHall.

The UB Amateur Radio Society will have a
meeting today at 8 p.m. in Room 234 Norton. There
will be a vote on an amendment to the constitution
followed by a slide showing of an experimental
excursion to Cape Cod.

The Buffillonian asks that anyone receavmg a
de&amp;ree in Jan., May or Aug. 1972 or Jan. 1973 make
an appointment for his yearbook porlrait by coming
to Room 356 Norton or calling 831-2505 or ·
R'i t -5570.

The Student National Medicill Association
announces that Rubella Screening Tests will be
performed todily from .1- 9 p .m. and tomorrow and
Fridily from 1- 5 p.m. in Room 231 Norton. The
cost of the test will be $3.50. For information call
831 ·3811 .
The Student Theater Guild is presentina The
lnllf!Stlgotion by Peter Weiss in the Fillmore Room
on Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 8 p .m. Tickets at
Norton Box Office.
- AmyAhrend

.

Backpage
Student Association announces that there is a
vacancy on the University Health Advisory
Committee. This committee is of vital importance
because the Health Services on campus are in serious
jeopardy. If anyone is interested, please contact
Room 205 Norton {831-5507) .
The Women's Studies Collqe catalog is
currently posted in Women 's Studies College at 108
Winspear and will be available for mass d istribution
soon. Instructors will have office hours from Dec.
9 - 15 fo r consultation with students. A listing of the
time the individual instructors will be available is
posted at the College at 108 Winspear. Permission of
the instructor may be obtained during th is time also.
For more information, all are encouraged to visit the
College or call831 -3406 or 831 ·3405.
Studeots should clear ilny outstanding balance
immediately in order to avoid a spring 1972 "Bursar
Chec:kstop." It is important to understand that no
credit has been extended for any Summer Session
1971 Scholar Incentive award nor for fall 1971
Scholar Incentive awards dated after Oct. 4, 1971 .
Credit for fall 1971 Scholar Incentive awards dated
prior to Oct. 4, 1971 can be granted only if a power
of attorney is on file prior to that date.
The Department of Computer Science
Undergraduate Studies Committee is considering
possible revisions in its introductory sequence of CS
courses. They have gathered information from
survivors of CS 145, but have little input from
registrants who later dropped the course. The
committee wo uld like to receive constructive
suggestions from students who recently (since
September 1970) registered for CS 145 and then
dropped it. This includes the personal views of
students - why was it necessary to drop the course?
Please reply to CS 145 Survey II , Department of
Computer Science, SUNY at Buffalo, 4226 Ridge
lea Rd., Amherst, N.Y. 14226. Comments can be
anonymou~; anyone including his name and address
will rec~e a copy of the committee's report.

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Vol. 22, No. 39

~e

Mondey, o.c.nber 6, 1871

University of New York at Buffalo

College A shift

Abelson quits as coordinator

Fee usage questions hold
up Food Co-op money
Administrative and state
decisions concerning use of
student fees thr,aten non-5upport
of the fledgling UB Food Co-op.
Accordlna to Vice President for
Student Affaus Ri c hard
Si&amp;&amp;elkow, vouchers funding the
Food C&lt;H&gt;p are being "held"
pending cla rification from
Albany on questions governing
disbursement of student monies.
Such questions include 1.)
whether the off campus-based
C&lt;H&gt;p will benefit students and
2.) if the c&lt;H&gt;p as a non-taxable
University facility provides unfair
competition to privllte business
co n cern s. Both potnts are
included in State University
Board of Trustees' regulations
controlling student fee usage. Dr.
Siggelkow explamed that there
are " h igh ly techntcal and
legaltSttc questtons" that must be
answered by Albany before
money can be released to the
co-op.
H o wever , Food Co-o p
s p okes men and Student
Association offtctals are
pesstmistic about the outcome
fearing that students will be
prevented from fundmg the
co-op. Accordtng to SA Treasurer
Dave Barmak: "There are doubts
by the administration of the
status o f things off campus and
questions of unfau competition
. . . What it comes down to is a
ruling by Albany , the Board of
Trustees and Stggelkow
Our
hands are tied unless we can
work something out."
'Neutral' role
The Food C&lt;H&gt;p received
approval from both the Student
Assembly and the SA Executive
Committee to receive S5400 for
its program . With vouchers
received from SA and money
borrowed from the Lexington
Ave. Co-op, the UB C&lt;H&gt;p
purchased some food and made
initial deposits for a Main St.

lo

I#.

••

.,

storefront. These expendttures tn
the form of vouchers,
approximately $800 , prompted
the request to Albany for
clari fi catio ns . All student
expenditures are sent to Dr .
Ssggelkow's office for review of
appropriateness.
Terll'tn&amp; his role "neutral ,"
Dr. Siuelkow commented that
" 1 can't tell students how to
spend their money ... questions
were raised and I am
investigating them ... trysng to
protect s tudent funds ." Inquiries
about the use of student fees
were first raised with the
problem of University Press
accepting outside contracts .
Alban y decided that this was not
a benefit to students and that it
posed unfair competition to
pnvate prinung concerns (who
have such operatsonal costs as
rent. salaries and taxes)
Close scrutiny
,
This stance. according to Dr.
Siggelkow. suggested that other
expenditures be more closely
scrutimzed - thus the holdmg of
Food Co-op's vouchers While
not expecting J favorOJble
outcome. the Food Co-op ts
determmed to stay operatiOnaL
A ccording to one co-o p
spokesman : " We're going to go
through ... if only on the basis
of voluntary loans and donat1ons .
However, sf this IS to be the case,
it would be very difficult to stay
viable."
What exactly will happen is
clouded by additional concerns
and questions. If denied funding,
SA has recourse to the courts
where they could raise the point,
amona others, if a service funded
by students is actually a
University facility . Whatever the
outcome no final ruling will be
made until Albany is heard from
which should be, according to
Dr . Siaaellcow. "as soon as
possible."

Bambii Abelson , controversial
coordinator of College A - Self
and Community, has resigned
from her post , effective
immediately.
Her resignation came about
after the undergraduate staff of
CoUege A asked her to submit
her resignation so that they
could assume the responsibilities
o f administering the College
under a coordinating committee.
In a letter written to the
members of College A she said :
"At the time of Dr. Fred Snell's
resignation as Master o f College
A , I agreed to assume
responsibility f or the
administrative functioning of the
College, out of a belief that both
its basic goals and the interest of
the members of College A would
be served by taking such a step .
The events which have taken
place since that ttme have
changed that belief.
"Tilerefore I am withdmwtng
from my present role as
co-ordinator o f College A. and in
taking this step,'' she continued ,
" I choose not to join the new
coordinating committee which
expressed tnterest in discharging
the responsibilities that I had
been carrying out as
co-ordinator."
Ms. Abelson said. however,
that she plans ''to remain· in my
appointed position as the
graduate assistant for 'the College
and teach my course
'Communicative Creativity' until
May 1972. At that time, I will
further assess my position with
the College."

Bamhii Ahelsm
"l really think that It is
unfortunate that it took so long
to come to a decision on this
matter," he continued. "I h ope
that CoUege A is going to
develop st r ongly ... following
the resolution of this matter."
I n his rea c tion to Ms.
Abelson's resignation, Mr . Dayan
sa id, " I'm hopeful of being
accepted in College A and
though the Collegiate Assembly
has not guaranteed a position o n
the college A Coordinating
Committee, T'm hopeful of their
accepting my course and of being
influential in the ,x&gt;licymalc.ing of
the College.
Committee report
The ad hoc committee
recommended that , one, the
Collegiate Assembly recognize
the College A Coordinating

-Acl&lt;ermen

Committee as its administrative
head; two, procedures of the
Committee will be filed by the
end of the current semester and
three, that Stanley Dayan
resubmit his course proposal to
the new coordinating committee
for its consideratio n.
The Committee also
recommended that a general
grievance procedure be
established for the Collegiate
Assembly. It said : "It should be
obvious that this committee
functioned as a mediation panel,
and that such a procedure should
include a similar panel as the
fsnal step in resolution of the
grievances.
"It is crucial," the report
continued , "for any grievance
procedure to include a similar
panel as the final step in
resolution of grievances.''

' For students'
She said that "it is my belief
that College A is for students
and I hope that my present
action will facilitate our carrying
this on ."
Konrad Von Moltke , director
of the Collegiate Assembly, said
thc1t " I think that the Assembly
dealt effectively with two
si multaneou s issues
one
concerning Bambii"s res1gnat1on
and the other Stanley Dayan's
gnevance."
Stanley Dayan is a lormer
College A ~taff member who
petitioned the Collegiate
Assembly for reinstatement as a
member of the slaft. at
Wednesday's meeting of the
Colleg1ate Assembly , the
Assembly accepted the report of
an ad hoc committee on College
A gnevances. lt recommended
that a coordinating commsttee be
formed to run College A and
that Mr . Dayan re·submit his
course pro posals in order to
become a staff member.
Dr. Von Moltke noted that he
thought "the decision (of the
Assembly) was dictated by the
desire on the part of the
Assembly to provide for a
-osterretcher
resolution of both problems with Ralph Nader, nltlorNIA comumer edvocate, spoke In Clark Gym last
a minimum of interference in the Wednesday on ..c:h topics • product misrepresentlltion and student
internal affairs of a collegiate awaren.. • · well • explaining and proposing the formation of
campus Public lnt.rest R~ Groups. For story, see page two.
unit .

•

�,

SANTIAGO - After declaring
a state of emergency to be in
effect Thursday, the Chilean
Army declared an indeflnJte
curfew to be in effect Friday.
The curfew, scheduled from I
a.m. - 6 a.m. for Santiago
province, is aimed at ending
street violence which has injured
I 14 persons since Wednesday.
The disturbances started
Wednesday night when a march
of women opposed to the
aovernment of President Salvador
Allende clashed with Allende's
supporters. The women were
protesting a scarcity of consumer
goods and violence at the
University o f Chile. President
Allende announced Thursday
that such protests would have no
effect on his Intention to convert
Chile into a socialist state.
Allende said : "J will not take a
single step backwards."
N6W YORK - Former New
York City detective Edward Egan
was diSmissed from the police
force Thursday. just seven hours
before his impending retirement.
Egan , whose real-life activity as a
narcotics cop became the bas1s
for the movie, The French
Connectio n, was dismissed
following a departmental trial on

char~s which included failure to
keep an accurate memo book,
not ap pearing for trial and not
turning in confiscated drugs and
related paraphernalia. Egan had
been demoted three weeks ago to
the rank of patrolman. He had a
bit part in the movie and was
raaking another film when his
first trial date came up, whlch
caused the additional charges to
be flied against him.
WASHINGTON - The White
House Conference o n the Aging
closed Friday, and the delegates
took a wait-and-see attitude
toward President Richard Nixon's
promise to increase senior citizen
spending by S 113 million next
year. Some of the
recommendalions made at tl1e
conference included a guaranteed
$6000- $9000 a year income for
the over-65 group, greater food
stamp benefits, liberall1ed
retirement laws and natwnal
health insurance
ROCHESTER - A new trial
was ordered for the four
defendants facing charges
stemming from the June I 970
disturbances at Hobart College.
After two days of deliberations,
-conlfnuec:l on ~~~· nln-

IF VA GOT " BALLS",
VA GOT A JOB!
HELP NEEDED - 6'3" or better
236 lbs. or better
APPLY IN PERSON MONDAY &amp; TUES. 1- 9 p.m.
MISTER GOODBAR
1110 ELMWOOD- NEAR FOREST
(sort of 1 ''SUPERMARKET FOR BOOZE!")

UNIVERSITIES STUDY EVERYTHING IN THEWORLD:
WHY NOT THEMSELVE~
HED 254: CRITICAL ISSUES IN HIGHER EDUCATION
SPRING 1972
Tues.-Thurs. 10:30 - 11 :50 a.m.
Mon.-Wed. 6:50 - 8:06 p.m. (Millard Fillmore)
The Department of Higher Education is offering agam an
undergraduate course for those who want to learn something
1bout the nature of universities: how they developed, what
purposes they ssrve, the problems they face, where they may
be hBiJded. For more information, contact:

·

Robert Berdahl, Chairman
Department of Higher Education
1G Foster Annex, 831480G

Consumers' crusader'Nader
unleashes 1$ cutting attacks
Interested in his dynamic percepeion, sardonic Free and flexible
humor and charismatic cynicism, a seemingly
Mr. Nader further maintained that there is a
discerning and critical audJence listened to the man
who has done for consumen what Lincoln did for considerable lack of fulfillment of student potential
the slaves. Spealdng In an inundated Clark Gym, in the present system. However, because It is a
Ralph Nader, ace consumer crusader, unleashed in four-year ordeal, Mr. Nader asked the students:
full form his latest of unrelenting attacks on " Why not take the opportuhity when you're as
everything from feminine hygiene deodorant sprays free, flexible, idealistic and experimental u you'll
ever be and really pack it with the kind of
to the present day educational system.
throbbing environment and empirical investigation
Mr. Nader, employing his now perfected and analysis and problem-solving endeavors?" He
preacher-like rhetoric, presented facts of which the then reassured students that they would not have
public has recen tly become rnore aware but to to go very far if they attended school in Buffalo,
whlch it has remained apathetic. Directing hlmself for as he stated: "Every problem known to
specifically to students, Mr. Nader stated that he is Americans is here."
convinced that "today's youth has a great deal
Continuing, Mr. Nader also spoke of the
more awareness, individual consciousness and
fraudulent
misrepresentation of products by both
understanding of what 'power' is."
manufacturing and advertising companiC$. Among
However, as was stressed in the bulk of his the many products that were criticized were
discourse, students have not met their full " Wo nder Bread" ("helps build bodies 12 ways with
responsibility as citizens: "It is one thing to have a extra-terrestrial minerals and vitamins"), and
theory of accountability and another thing to talk cosmetics which, according to Mr. Nader, "genera te
about the innocence of the victimized citizen. an enormous amount of economic growth while
However, citizens are far from innocent when they manipulating people's minds around odor, bad
refuse to do anything about the situation."
breath and surface aestheticism."
Madison Ave. strategy
PtRG
This generation of economic growth Is one of
Speaking on the recently proposed campus
Publi c Interest Research Groups, Mr. Nader Mr. Nader's major concerns. He claimed : ''The
asserted that groups of this nature afford students United States Is developing sub-economies that are
the opportunity to supplement an education that is responding to needs that arise because of the
far from "analytical and normative." He contends deficiencies and frauds of prior goods and services.
that by active participation in such groups, When cars crack up at five miles per hour, they
students wUJ be able to transcend their present generate an average of $320 worth of damage per
unfulfilling and mind deadening education to one car. This in tum generates the sales of goods and
that will include an opportunity for personal services. This increases the economy and shows up
on the Gross National Product."
satisfaction and individual growth.
As Mr. Nader explained : "The process is really
quite simple. \t consists of the development 81\d
circulation of petitions which are in turn sent out
to those authorities where intensive discussion can
be expected to ensue. Publicizing the issue on and
about campus through the mass media is the next
step. The overaU issue is, can the society stand
citizenship?''
A major critic of the current educational
system, Mr. Nader stated that "based on my
observations of the regular four-year liberal

The Spectrum is publish«/ tllf'N
limes s week, every MO/JfUy,
~nad.ty end Fridey; during the
rtlfiUiilr IICMIBmic r•r by Sub -Board
1, Inc. Offices are IOCIIt~ st 356
Norton Hall, Stehl University of NIIW
York at Buffttlo, 3435 Main St.,
Buffelo, New York, 14214.
Ttllephona: Aree Coda 716; Edltorlel
831-4113;Business, 831-3610.
Represant«J for MJ11ertitmg by
Nstional Educational Adllerr1sing
S~~n~ice, Inc., 360 Lexington A.-..•
New York, N . Y. 10017.
Subscription n1tes l frll $4.50 ~~
semester or $8.00 for two sem•ters.
Second Class Postege pe1d at Buffalo,
New York.
Circulation: 16,000

NEED A RIDE HOME?
NEED A ROOMMATE?

THE SpECTI\UM
CLASSIFIEDS REALLY WORK!
This week only15 words only
355 Norton

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday, December 6, 1971

educational curriculum, one could team everything
in ten months, 'taking off Saturday and Sunday."

by Ron SandbeiJ
Spectrum Staff Wriur

Another concern lS the ingenious but
cfureputablt str;~tegy of Madison Ave. Accordtng to
Mr. Nader, advertising agencies bave the ability to
transform a concern into a neurosis and ultimately
escalate it to a psychosis. It is at this crucial point
that people run out and purchase unhealthy
deodorants. Mr. Nader fervently stated that these
cover-ups should not be used.
Supplementing his visit, Mr. Nader conducted
an informal rap session with students interested in
establishing public interest groups.

.---------------------~
WEWANTTOTALKTOYOU
ABOUT A MAJOR IN STATISTICS

Arrange to visit us at rm . A 1, 4230 Ridge Lea
Prof. E. Parzen, Chairman, 831 -1231
Prof. J . Dickey, Director Undergraduate St udies, 831 ·1238
DEPT. OF
STATISTICS

SUNY
BUFFALO

�War

proJuc~·

:-.

&amp;okstore refuses boycott
The Buffalo Peace .CouncU in liaison witb
Another Mptber for Peace, has requested that the
Booksto re cooperate with its nine-month boycott
of four major American corporations - Dow
Chemical, RCA, Du Pont and Textron lnc. The
request was presented to University Bookstore
Direct o r Th omas Moore by Peace Council
spokesman Miriam Becker and three unnamed
students during Thanksgjvina recess.
In an inte1View, Ms. Becker listed Dow
Chemical's Saran Wr.1p; Dupont's orion, dacron and
lycra-manufactu1ed sweatshirts ; Textron's Duo-tang
looseleaf, Eaton paper; Shaeffer pens; and Speidel
watcnbands as well as RCA records and tapes as
Items whJch the Peace Council wishes removed
from lhe Bookstore shelves. "The purpose of our
action ," Ms. Becker explained, "is to make
students aware o f the war produce presently being
manufac tured by these corporations.''
Neaative results
When asked for examples of such items being
manufactured under government contract, Ms.
Becker listed RCA's production of proximity fuses
for Zuni Rockets, Dow's production of herbicides
and Textron's Air Fon:e bomb ejector racks.
According to Becker: " There has to be a shift in
government priorities and we feel that citizens
should start a campaign similar to those initiated
by environmental groups. At this point," she
oontinued, "we have gotten no positive results
from Mr. Moore, who claimed that a boycott I! not
within his realm of respons1bility."
Mr. Moore responded: ''The decision is in the

hands of the FSA Board of Directors and Clan be
implemented througll an order sent by them to
me." I, personally, feel that my responsibility is to
provide a service to the college communHy;
political philosophy is not my prerogative. He ..
cont~nued: "If peoflle wanJ, Eaton pape~ , then it's
my JOb to sell them Eaton paper. Bes1des, if we
stop selling jt, you can rest assured that the guys
across the stree1 will continue to seU lt .
Paradoxical
Jhacho n from FSA treasurer Edward Doty
was equally negative : " I don't feel that the Peace
Council is soina about this the right way . Why not
pick on Bethlehem Steel? For the FSA to agree on
this ti:;t and not agree to boycott all similar
companies would be unfair." Continuing he
remarked: ''1 don't think that there is any
corporation in the United States that does not
make sales to the government."
On a different level Mr. Doty commented : " I
don't see the difference hetween selling the foods
that 10 Into the Gl'a stomachs or the bullet~ Why
should the selling of cigarettes to the soldters be all
right, but not bullets? It seems to b~ paradoxtcal. ..
The focal point of their efforts , be concluded .
should be directed towards the policy makers, not
the corporations.
As of this date, the Peace Council is planning
to effect the boycott through FSA possible
legislatmg (rom student input. A film entitled We
Don't 1/avt To Buy War, Mrs. Jonts IS being
planned for screening in an attempt to illustrate:
boycott gollls and philosophy.

Glass recycling project
The Community Action Corps Environmental Action group Is sporu!Orina a alass
recycling project in the front of Norton HalJ. Located at the kiosldaclna Tower Hall , the
recyclina center willa~ept any brown, areen or clear aJass.
Preferably the alass should be rinsed, however, labels can remain. All m etal from
any alass should be removed before deposited (CAC officials note that Boones Farm wine
bottles have a metal ring that must be removed).
Eventually, the project will be expanded to other locations at A.llenhurst and Ridge

GIVE A DAMN.
USE A CONDOM.

25 ~

ARIIVEBSABY
CELEBBATIOlf

TNt tk '""' ..t tf n1, ... JW'II •JIJ It ewe MW.I
Makin« love U. rreat. And If you r ..Uy Jive a damn about both your
liv• ... you'U •unt to protect her . .aJnat accidental precnancy. By
U8l~ a man'a contraceptive tbat'a been dalirned not 9fllY with fH'O·
leclion In mind, but with pl•oeun aa well. For t.oday'a new condoma
are exquiaitely ND8itive, while atill provic:Una the eame dependable
prot.etioo the condom baa alwaya been noud fori
And now rnlllly of the beat brenda of l'OOdbma are available by mail
from Populati.o n Plann.inr Aaaociat. ... and delivered to you In a
plain JMCUJe to Jll"Otect your privacy.
Send for our free illustrated brochure de3&lt;"rib1nr the wide eelec"tion
of coadoma we offer. Such aa the popular Trojan. The extra-thin
Prime. The pre·ahaped Conture. The Koin· PaC'k, JMIC'klfed in handy
I(Oid foi l "coons." And many more. All eledronkally tested to meet
ri1oroU8 FDA speciikatiorut.

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pecketa of the 4 brand8 mentioned
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made of auper·eensitive animal
membrana. For each aamplar,
piU8 our brodlure, aend juet 16
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All orders ftlled the eame day received and ahipped firat cla11.
Mooey back if not deli.htadl

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3 P.11.-8:00 P.M. SUNDAY
lAl£ SUPPEI 11 I'.M. UNTIL
CLOSING (SAT. 11 I'.M.)

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We oro NOT droppi"V qvollty
••o,..,otcl - only n.. l&gt;fl• bn•"" ..,
hleh.. ¥ol""'*· We erind our own
II out1 boko o•~r own OrQonlc brtMI
"'" poiJOn.froo 11'0""" bo.f and of.
lo• tobledott. ,.,.,...

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R

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lo 01 , . .Ill"' pt l. .. S.&lt;o"cl
ffttt . . co•tt you oft)y t~ ltwrvationt

...."1101

a

poe._.•

Jnvestigating the voucbers and
recommending that the budget
~e frozen . Mr. Frankel charges
that as student a c tivitiea
coordinator, it was not Mr.
Weiner's place to initiate such
action. According to Frankel ;
'"The whole thing should have
been handled from the beginnin&amp;
throuah the Student Judiciary
the affair bas been
mishandled from the begjnnina
to the end .. .''

Planned actions
Mr. Fr11nkel plans to move at
Wednesday's Student Assembly
that Mr. Weiner ..be censured for
the actions be has talcen up to
this time in regards to the Arab
Culture Club and be it further
resolved that Mr. Weiner be
instructed by this body (the
Assembly 1 that be or any
member of l\is committee are to
have nothing more to do wtth
compla int s or allegations
c oncerning the Arab Cultural
C lub" and th11t n s pecial
committee be created to deal
with such situations.

Defending his actions, Mr
Weiner claims that J.he charges
Frozen budget
Because of thiS duality and agAinst him are motivated by
the accusations raised over tbe purely personal reasons. In
alleged 1rreeularilles on certain addltlon. he remarked that he
vouchers, SA Treasurer Dave was concerned with pro techng
Barmak fro1.1: the Club's account. the interests of both SA and
Accordmg to Mr. Barmak : " I members of the Arab Cultural
Club: " I am being criticized
found out about the questicms becnuse I took some initiative to
concerning the vo uchers after get so methang done about
they had been screened I by the something that appearlld
Activities Committed . . . On suspicious . . . I don't see my
the rec om m endlltion of the office as purely a rubber stamp
Activities Commtttee. I froze the for club recognitions . ."
budget"
Mr. Mikhail's case will come
The entire affur has created a
furor within the SA Executive before the judiciary after the
('ummtttcc. Mr Wetner has been required ten day notifiC!Ih o n
severely cnttctlCd by Notional period . At litis lime evidence wlll
Student Affall s Coordinator be presented and the defense will
Keith Frankel for Ius action in argue its cuse.

Junior Year
in New York

Cltolct tf II lnlrtt•

I undtrst•nd that you will refund my
monty In full If I am not deli&amp;httd.
free lllustreted broehur• only.
t Qleote

The president of the Anb
Cultural Club bas been charged
with forgery on club vouchers
involving approximately $455 by
fhat club's treasurer and Student
Association Activities
Coordinator, Mark Weiner. In a
Nov. 18 notarized statement,
Nabil Chilazi charged that "Emad
S. Mikhail, did knowinaJy sign
h is name (NabU M. Chiln.i)
falsely to said vouchers, thereby
constituting fraud and forgery."
A foTtnal complaint wu filed last
Friday against Mr. Mikhail with
the undergraduate Student
Judiciary.
Mr . Weiner explalned that
res-earch was conducted into the
c1 ub 's finances after be had
received a letter siped by 19
club members obje&lt;:ting to
Presidential actions. Additionally,
there occurred a controversy in
which Mr. Mikball was reportedly
impeached as the club's
president. However. some hsve
argued the impeachment was
illegal be ca use a two-thirds
majority was no t reached. Thus,
at the presen t, there exist two
Arab Cultural Clubs.

(AOUUS)

Gentlemen: Please send me:
_ _ Christmas Gift S.mplers at $5
uch, plus 50¢ postea• end handllna.
I enclos
to cover co.t.

111me

-President of the Arab
Cultural Club charged

•'•'•

BLACKSMITH SHOP

191

life HmNJI feod SIHlt Httttt

___________ ..J
\lp

1375 Delaware

111-IZil

AU Porkine At1Qt141c Stotlftft

Washington Square College of Arts and Science
of New York Uo.inrslty sponsors a
J unior Year in New York.
The College, located in the heart of the city, is an
integral part of the exciting metropolitan community
of New York City-the business, cultural, artistic,
and financial center of the nation. The city's extraordinary resources greatly enrich both the academic
pro$ram and the experience of living at New York
Untversity with the most cosmopolitan student body
in the world.
This program is open to students recommended by the
deans of the colleges to which they will return for
their degrees.
There are strong and varied offerings in many areas,
such as fine arts, urban studies, languages including
non-European, mathematics in the College and at the
Courant Institute, psychology, and others.

• BREAD
" On the Waters"

• MAYALL
"Turning Point"

• DOORS
"Morrison Hotel"

• COLLINS

97

A qualified student may register for courses in aU other
schools of the University, including the specializations in
Commerce and Education.
The University sponsors programs in Spain and France.

Write for brocha~ to Director,
Jallior Year la New York

New York University

London Classics $3.47-$1 .67

RECORD RUNNER

NewYork.N.Y. l0003

Monday, December 6, 1?71.. The Sp~trum. P.age three
c

�JIJsT FoR. Rllt
by Eumen
Rituals. That's what coUeac
life is aU about - rituals. Those
soclolo&amp;ical phenomena that are
part of our four-year learnina
experience. The baptismal ritual
- 1ummer orl•ntation.
At 8 a.m., 1SO bewildered
·freshmen enter Clement Hall for
a continental breakfast ,
consisting of continental donuts
and continen tal frozen oranae
juice. Following this, they are
ea c h given a 12-pound
r~tration packet and told to
plan their schedules. Everybody
freak s out.
"Are they serious? This is
aonna take days to fmish! When
is this thlna due?"
"Three o'clock this afternoon.
What's MWF stand for?"
" I dunno - must be a code
for t he computer."

Later, the cattle are led en Hills Hiah School , d) in
nwae into Diefendorf Hall for a Brooklyn, e) a pain in the ass, 0
battery of ptycboloaical tests. other?
The questions run somethina like
4 . Let us disc uss your
this :
relationship with your parents.
t . The basic reason you came Did you a) wish you aot aJona
to the State University of with your parents, b) wish for a
Buffalo was a) to act away from closer, more meaninaful
your parents, b) its cultunl relationship with them, c) wish
surroundinp, c) the climate, d) they would leave you the fuck
you needed a 4-year vacation, e) alone, d) wish they would stop
to act away from you parents.
tellina you how thinp were
2. Let us discuss your social when they were your age, c)
life in high school. Did you a) . wish they were your aae?
date once a week, b) not date as
S . Let us discuss your
much u you wanted to because
of schoolwork, c) not date as attitudes about sex. Do you feel
much as you wanted to because oral-aenital sex is a) unbelievable,
you were too hardup, d) score b) dirty, c) delicious, d)· aU right
often, e) channel your aggressive for some people, e) you'd like to
drives i nto more socially find out, 0 a myth?
acceptable behavior?
6. Do you feel that after four
3. Was the high school you years of college you will a)
attended a) in New York City, b) become more radical, b) become
Canarsie Hiab School, c) Forest mo~ apathetic, c) become fed

up, d) experience oral-aenital acx,
e) araduate?
Orientation is only th e start
of rituals. Th~e months later,
the once-bewildered freshman is
totally immersed in coUeae life.
Wearina p. flannel shirt and work
shoes with hair about two inches
lonaer than befo~. he is now
tossina around elite phrases like
" Hochstetler Hall" and "Jan
DeWa.t." It is then that they
enpae in the ritual called What
are we gonna do tonight l
Joe: What's happenin', Sam?
(Note the use of the idiomatic
"in" phrase).
Sam : Not much. What do ya
wanna do toniabt?
Joe: Wanna ao down to the
Union?

Sam:

To watch

~verybody

hana out on the steps trying to
look cool? Not really. Isn't there
a movie in Capen?
•
Joe: Yeah, Andy Hardy Geu
a Girl in Trouble. It's only rated
R and I've already seen it. Isn't
there a speaker in Diefendorf?
Sam : Ah, it's some women's
lib fanatic
Sadie Sadoff
speaking on " Liberation from
Lingerie." I dunno - don't you
have any work to do?
Joe : This is UB, remember?
Right now I'm still an ad hoc
major. I never work. Wanna get
stoned?
Sam : I've had it! That's aU we
ever do! I came to college to
engage tn creative expenences.
To spend my tune constructtvely.
T o dedicate myself to the
betterment of our society!
J oe. Be over at 7 :30 ?
Sam : (Sigh) I'll bnng my pipe.
STUDENT DISCOUNT
•
on
ALL - redecorating needs,
art supplies, picture framing.
D. M. RECH PAINT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.

I

Another familiar ritual is
sianalled by th at fateful letter or
phone call. This one's called My
(JGTettll are comint up to 11i.lit.

"Ob, shit."
"What's wrona?"
"It's all over - my parents are
comina here to visit. We &amp;otta
move fast! Clean up the place,
put the stuff away, and take
down those two posters. Maybe
there's still hope."
(Later)
"So this is your room, Marvin .
It's a little meuy, isn't it?"
" Well ... heh heh . . . we've
been kinda busy lately ...
scboolworl and all, y'know?"
"Is that . . . person over there
your roommate?''
"He's really a nice guy, Mom.
(Gotta get 'em o utta here) Hey
- wby don't I show you the
dorm?"
"What's this on the wall 'Off the pig'?"
"Nothin&amp;, Dad. Off the Plg is
a rock group. (This is a losing
battle) It's getting late - don't
you think you should be aetting
back to the Holiday Inn?"
"Nonsense, dear - we haven't
even seen the student union
yet."
"Oh well
it's kinda
crowded . (Now I know how
Custer felt) Say! You must be
dying to see Niagara Falls."
And you always wondered
what made the FaUs such a big
tourist attractio n. There are lots
o f other rituals that haven't been
mentioned , like the Standby
plan e tickets ntual , the Kicking
your roommate our for the mght
ritual (''Hey , Bill . . . your
mattress isn't tO&lt;) heavy, is it?"),
the Food Ser~•ict• ntual . and the
Student A.uemb/1• m eetmgs
ritual. Remembex:, mororuc as
they seem, rituals are the spice
of life (and w1th that deep ,
probing thought , I leave you).
Pax.

ALGREIIIST
.Afapop;, 1' //,, ..4VJ

&amp;

LARGUS TORB GALLERY
cordially invite you to a preview of art works
by the most prominent WNY artists to be
auctioned on Tuesday, Dec. 14th at
Kleinhans Music Hall, 7:30 P.M.

The "PREVIEW" is at LARGUS TORB GALLERY
807 Millersport Highway
Amherst, New York
{716) 835- 5186
DAILY FROM 12 NOON to 9 P.M.

HOW TO GET ALONG
WITH BLACK PEOPLE

By the time Phil gets through paying

for tuition, books and an outrageous
ren:, he doesn't have a whole lot left
for a stereo.
BSR McDonald makes the RTS-40A
for people like Phil. It's a complete
AM/ FM/MPX Phono component stereo
system. The receiver delivers an
honest 50 watts and boasts excellent

... ------

I
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0 Clleclllttre If JOII want our fret cataloa
of tvmtalllta ltld sttrto IJSIMI.

H1mt-- - - - - - - - - - - - -

•AND 10M. RACK

by Chris Clark and Sheila Rush

~~U--------------------------

• L

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, December 6, 1971

Foreword by Bill Cosby
From What to call whom-colored, Negro Afro-American or blackto how and why to avoid white liberalism's ("we only want to help "
"it's not ~ause you're black"), here is a guide that reveals n~t
only the nght way to handle everyday professional and social situ•··
•tlons, but Why the way it's often done is wrong. Lively and enllght,ening,
THE TUIRD PRESS •« c.ntno1 P.r~~ W••t. rMwYorlt,loo25
\$5.95

�Grauel relates historic
account ofanti-semitism.
by Barbara Mink
Spectrum Staff Writer
" People ask me who r was in
the book Exodus , and I tell them
Kitty Fremont. They don't
believe me .. . "
John Grauel does not look
like Kitty Fremont; ,he is a tall,
dapperly dressed Protestant
c lergyman, who characterizes
himself as a .. fifty-year-old
hippy '' and is involved in
international drug reltabilitation
programs. He is also the former
second-in-command on the real
ship Exodus during the 1948
Arab- Israel! war and was an
Influential member of the Israeli
undergrounnd.
Unfortunately, Reverend
Grauel 's speech Thursday night
was sparsely ar tended. Anyone
who was not present , whether
Jew or gentile missed a dynamic
and authoritative recounting of
modern history.
Reverend Grauel said that the
Jewish community often suffers
from the delusion that "their.
fe llow man has a sense of
respo nsibility towards them ;"
such is not the case. He referred
to the horrors of the Spanish
Inquisition, when the "Golden
Age of Jewry" was ended with
the deaths and expulsion of
doctors, philosophers, writers and
rabbis from Spain.
He also described the life of
the Jews in old Russia , when

men resigned themselves to the
fact that t h e 1900-year-old
prayer "Next year in Jerusalem"
would never be "this year in
Jerusalem."
"Action was needed : I am
reminded of the story that some
clergymen tell of a man who had
a beautiful garden. His friend
walked by and noticing the
magnificent flowers and lush
tomatoes, made the observation
that Cod performs miracles. The
oth er man snapped back : "You
should have seen this hunk of
ground when God was handling
it by Himself."
Theodor Herzl sta rted the
wheels of Zio nism rolling, which
led to the promise of Palestine
for the Jews by the British.
"What amazes me is how history
has been rewritten by groups
such as the SDS , the Palestinian
Liberation Front and the Black
Panthers. I would like to say to
all those who criticize the
founding of a Jewish state, that
there is not a single Arab entity
that speaks on the floor of the
United Nations today that is any
old~r than the intent to create
the Jewish state. They came into
being because of Churchill and
the pressures of the times."
R esponsible for deaths
G r auel elaborated on how
King Feisal, the most influential
of the Arab leaders, had signed a
contract and made a public

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...and leave the driving tow:

"leaden of our country as well,
.. intellect uals like J. Edgar
' I
Hoover, Nixon, Reagan, Abbie
Hoffman , Senator Fulbright ... I
think I have finally come to an
understanding . of what law and
order is. The other day the head
of the FBI was at a hearing, and
as h e came out a reporter said to
him : " What's the answer, Mr.
Hoover? " A nd Hoover said :
"Law and ord er." The reporter
asked : " But what about j ustice,
· Mr. Hoover?" and he said: " It's
incidental."
Reverend Grauel has b een
awarded the "Fighter for Israel"
\.
medal , the only medal the
government of Israel has ever
issued. " J share it in spirit with
King Christian of Denmark," and
a "bishop of Bulgaria" who sayed
thousands of Jewish children
during the war by issuing false
baptismal ce rtificates and
returning them after. This bishop
was later to be Pope John.
j

- mcnlece

John

John Grauel
statement "welcomi ng our
Semitic broth ers home." As a
result of French intervention,
Churchill found himself in a
political bind, and created a
country "that never existed in
the h istory of the world,
Jo rdan."
He placed members of Feisal's
family on the thrones of the
oth~r Arab states, appointed a
family of Hus.seins to Jordan and
gave a sizeable part of Jewish
land, the Sinai peninsula , to
Egypt.
Grauel also accused American
and British leaders of being
res p onsib le for hundreds of
thousands o f Jewish deaths
during World War II , either by
passivity or direct action.
Righ t-wing super-American
groups t o ld Roosevelt that
"something 'must be done to
stop the alien influence in our
so cie t y.' As a result 1000
immigration certificates were
unused, in the period from 194 1

Graue t,

former
second-i n-command of th e
Exodua and Israeli underground

member, recounted Jewish
history and his role in it to
University members last
Thursday.
to 1945, certificates lhat could
have saved lives."
The refugees
Many refugee ships reached
the shores of America and were
turned away. One in particular,
the St. Louis, made its way to
Cuba first. Batista said that the
Jews were welcome to land in
Havana if they paid a half
million dollars a head . The
money was not raised .
"Delegations pleaded with the
Americ an government to let
these people come in, but they
were told that it was against the

law.
''Some members on board
slashed their wrists and jumped
overboard , their bodies washing
up on the shores of Miami. The
rest sailed· back to Belgium and
Holland , where they were to die
along with a little girl named
Ann Frank."
The minister expressed a lack
of confidence in the present

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DEC.11th,
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The Exodus, one of many
rescue boats Grauel was involved
Nith, was an American ship that•
had room for 450 people, 600 if
jammed. "At the end of a seven
month rescue operation we
loaded on 4554 people from
_camps and set off for Israel.
The journey, needless to say,
was not pleasant. Off the coast
of Haifa we were attacked b y
five British destroyers. After
being rammed 14 times and
reso r ting to h and-to-hand
combat, we were subdued. Most
of our people were taken back to
Germany to two " Jewish summer
resorts" - Poppendorf and
Bergen Belsen."
'
Reverend Grauel continued to
fight for Israel as a member of
the Haganah, the underground,
and came in contact with the
fu tu re presidents and prime
ministers o f the fledgling
country. He is still involved with
many facets of Israel and is
cons i dering moving there
permanently.
" 1 think one of the greatest
tragedies of the Israeli struggle
was expressed by Golda Meir
when she said : "We could forgive
the Egyptians for killing the sons
of Israeli mothers and fathers;
wh at we cannot forgive them for
is making us kill the sons of
Egyptian mothers and fathers."

1

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A.l EYEIIIIi OF liOOD OLD BOCK 'a BOLL

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N&amp;W 41...WAY QUADIIASONIC •ou.ND

Monday, December 6, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�IL--__
E_di_TO~R~iA~l~~l
Fee fiasco

BUT 11 FAll-eO

•

\

\

Another chapter in the continuing saga of stop the
students from doing something viable is now being written.
Administrative attempts, both focal and In Albany, to
subvert the UB Food Co-op are nothing more than petty
pandering to the outside community.
The non-funding of the co-op is based on two
questions. First, whether it will benefit students and
secondly whether the co-op enjoys unfair competition with
private businesses because of their non-taxable status. The
answef' to the first question is obviously yes. Anything that
will provide an alternative to over-priced supermarkets will
benefit the students.
The second question is more interesting. If the co-op
does enjoy an edge over outside competition, and this we
doubt since it cannot com~te In volume with the A&amp;P,
Tops and other private concerns, what of it.
There seems to be no logical rm11.o n for preventing the
co-op from having an advantage, other than placating
community food businesses. This would appear to be the
University's major concern here, and unfortunately so
because they are helping big business at the expense of the
students.
There is also an intriguing double standard that Albany
and the University employ in their fee decisions. In a
recent ruling that the student·run University Press could
not accept outside contracts, they based their denial on the
fact that UP pays no rent and that this constituted unfair
competition with outside printers. The University
Bookstore, operated by the misnomered Faculty Student
Association, pays no rent either, yet they are allowed to
compete. In fact, the state has even given the FSA a
monopoly on all campus enterprises.
Why the double standard that a student entity cannot
have an edge, but a University-operated concern can? Why
can University facilities be used to siphon profits from a
captive market, while students are not allowed to provide a
non-profit service of great benefit to the University
community ? The answer is politics. Politics that allow
Trustees and other officials to legislate against students
while aiding University endeavors ttiat profit from students.
While the pending ruling on the Food Co-op may be
enshrined in legalisms created by the Bqard of Trustees, the
resolution of this problem may have to be political. After
all, if the University can make a mockery of the rule of
law, then why should the students refrain from trying their
hand. at manipulative politics. Should the authorities rule
against the Food Co-op, then we should reciprocate by
ruling against the Food Service through a boycott. Then
and only t hen can this official misconduct be stopped.

THE

~$~,W~~:

SpECT~UM
Monday, December 6 , 1971

Vol. 22, No. 39

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-MIIlll8ing Editor - At Benson
Co-Minllglng Editor - Mike Lippmann
Alit. Manllglng Editor - Susan Mou
Bulin- Maneger - Jim Drucker
Advertising Ma~ - Sue Metlentine
C.mpus .. •• ..... Jo-Ann Armao
... . ... •.. .. . ...Howie Kunz
....•..•........ Bill Vaccaro
City ..•..•...... Hervy Lipman
Copy ....... ... . Ronni Forman
........ .. ...... Many Gatti
Atlt. . . . . ... Claire Kriegsman

F•ture .................vacant
Gntphic Ans ......... Tom Toles

Lrtout ....... Maryhope Runyon
vacant
Lit. &amp; Dr.me .. Michael Silverblen
Music: ..... ... .....Billy Altman
OH.Campua ...... Lynne Traeger
Photo .......... Marc Ackerman
• ......... Mickey Osterreicher
Sports .•...•....... Barry Rubin
Alit....... ....•. Howie Faiwl

A•. . . . . . . ..... , ...

The Spttctrum is sented by United Pr81S International, Collage Press
S«vice, the los Angeles Free Press, the Los angeles Tim• Syndicate and

Liberation News Service.
Republication of matter herein without the express consent of the
Editor-in-Chief Is forbidden .
Editortal policy is determined by the E91tor·in.Chief.
1

Pag&amp; six . The Spectrum . Monday, December 6, 1971

I TH(X){;Iff R£~/GlOO

~S

THt

~W6R.

I

1H~Kf SVRVlVAL-

WAS Wf A#$W6R.

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1
For what it's worth
by

H~

Lipman

Police corruption Is not a new element in
American society. nor is it a particularly unusual
occurrence. The Knapp Commission has spent the
past several weeks discovering the extent to wh.ich
police involvement in extortion, payola and other
pleasant activities has enveloped the New York
City Police Department. The citizenry of Chicago
might still be handing portraits of Alexander
HamUton to that city's protectors of the peace
when stopped for traffic violations, had not one of
Mayor Daley's enemies been elected to the post of
Cook County District Attorney a few years ago .
Indeed, it is an accepted fact of American life
that the public must learn to tolerate certain police
idiosyncracies as standard procedure. Activities
such as the numbers' rackets and frostitution
cannot survive without police protection\ A recent
example of this occurred in New York City. The
city arrested a woman in the Bronx and charged
her with being the banker for a local numbers'
establishment. It wasn't too difficult to find her. It
seems that the streets of the ghetto were lined with
posters directing prospective players to the
woman's establishment. At that address a large
advertisement invited gamblers to enter and place
their bets. One might suppose that sometime
during the months that the operation was in
progress, some policeman would have passed o ne of
the advertisements somewhere along the way. After
all, there are a few policemen in the Bronx.
The preponderance of prostitutes in the
midtown area of Manhattan would also find it
difficult to set up shop were the police overly
attentive to the law. There are understandable
reasons in such unsavory activity . The first and by
far the most important reason is money. In many
urban centers the average policeman makes about
the same salary (and occasionally a lower one) than
the guy who empities your ~rbage can
(sometimes) at seven in the morning. Say what you
will about the police, but no one can deny that
their job is far more hazardous than a sanitation
worker's. How many times can you drop a garbage
can on your foot?
As a result of this economic factor police
forces ra rely are able to recruit people trained in
areas of human relations in which policemen
should be trained. Consequently, law enforcement
agencies end up with men generally from the lower
echelons of academic development. This is not to
say that these men are not capable of being turned

into good policemen - many of them are. But
when this problem is compounded by the Jack of
further training and the temptations to rectify
illegally the conditions of low pay, we are left with
situations such as those previously mentioned .
All of this is as sort of prologue to a
discussjon of the current scandal involving the
Buffalo Police Department's Narcut ics Division.
Prostitution and gambling are victimless crimes.
The only real issue with either activity is that both
provide immense profits for organized crime. Of
course, if they were legalized, neither would serve
that function. In one sense, narcotics addiction is
also a victimless crime. The only reason for the
large number of drug related crimes is the
difficulty of obtaining heroin at Mafia ~rices . If
heroin were distributed by the government, in the
long run, money would be saved and the only
victim of the heroin would be the addict himself.
Under present conditions, however, there is
one member of the narcotics cycle who does
perpetrate a real crime against the society: the
pusher. Pushing hard dope is as despicable an
activity as one can find on the face of this earth.
Police corruption involving any other crime is
intolerable. In this connection it is the lowest level
to which a cop can sink. Evidently. it Is to this
depth that members of the Buffalo squad have
descended. The transfer of the chief of the
Narcotics Bureau, Capt. Kevin Harmon , and the
demotion of the entire 13-man staff to uniformed
patrol duty, indicate that the problem goes far
deeper than that firSt sample of heroin which
turned up missing in October.
One item that might be of interest to
investigate is the determination of how many of
these 14 men were recruited tO the division by its
former chief, Mike Amico. Since Sheriff Mike built
his entire reputation around his activies as Chief
and subsequently used that repu.ation to get
elected Sheriff, one might wonder whether the
public was misled more than anyone anticipated .
We had already declared that Amico had used pol
busts to build his arrest record and never really
challenged the big heroin pushers, but no one had
ever gathered enough evidence to publicly support
a charge of corruption. Now the question must be
raised , and if the answer is a positive one, what
must the condition of the present County Police
Department be?
We shudder to think of the answer to that. It
is better to believe that the Sheriff is merely a fool
mther than both a fool and a scoundrel.

•

�BVf IT FAiieO.

High

\

cost of music
.

••&gt;

On Satutday ni&amp;ht, Dec. 1 I , Buffalo will witnea
a show Wee it bu never 1000 with the phenomenal
mUiic ud visual antica of Sb.a-Na-Na toppinJ the
bill. ThiJ alone, however, Ia not the most important
upect. of tho concert. What ia, iJ the fact that it iJ
be:ina put on alm01t In the form of a protest to the
exol'bitant pttcee beina cbaraed for tickets to mo.t
Buffalo concerts.
{_ Zia Z..a ProductJona, the aroup which il
producin&amp; thia show, conaiata of coUeae students
who enjoy bavfna people enjoy aood music. This
sroup baa run into many problema and Ia doina this
Iii alone. Alone in the aense that they are receivi.n&amp;
Uttle cooperation from the local ractio stations.
Alone due to the fact that the other big promoters in
Buffalo bave been tryina to destroy their show by
bookina as many concerts u possible around the
&lt;bte for the Sha-Na-Na abow.

IZ-i"

8VT IT FA/UC/.

I

ne S4 coocert (o.It ba.clc and c.n stay
here II the people of Buffalo want it to. W,any peoplo
han worked
boun to mate thia concert U\e
belt ~ble. at tho c:.tleapat pric:e P&lt;*ible. They
alto have a oew quadtuonlc 10und system to tot up
Jn the Peaoo Btidp Elthibition Center wltida will
produce 10me of the bCIIt 10un&lt;b to be hatd
anywhere ill Bufrato; and haYe made the thow
FDcnl admillioo 10 everyone can lit with their
friench.
Th.la concert will be a fint if lt coma off. lbe
youna ap.l1ut the Eatablialune:nt. if you wllh, but at
any nte, one of the most penonal and relatable
&amp;bows to be bro\llht boro in a lona tbne.
So bri.q your head (whatever shape it's in).
arcue up your hair and join the a.anc at the Peace
Brldae Exhibition Center. Saturday. Dec. 11 at 8 :30
and you won•t be diaappolnted.
F~d up with loruy,
hlf#t priced conce''' ...

aos..

..

Have a little culture

ll

To the Edlto,:

Burning bucks
To the Editor:

O. K.! Harvy Lipman made some fine points on
Wednesday, especially about student government. I
guess, either very few people notice what is goina on
o r else they j ust do n't care. Personally, it bums me
to realize what a picnic these dudes are having with
our bucks. I think that our only coune of action is
to expose more of this fana&amp;lin&amp; with specific names
and some solid evidence - but, even if these steps
aro taken, the new government would probably bo
corrupt in a very short time. In any case, myaelf and
one o f my colleagues are working on a complete
expose of the problems o f our student government .
It will be ftnished in a few weeks and if this paper
refuses to publish it, we'll do it owselves.
In the meantime, party till the cons come home.
Joe D'Gutt

I would like to point out a paring omission in
the article on campus theatrical activities by Gerald
Danaher that appeared in 17re Spectrum, Monday,
Nov. J S. Evidentally, Mr. Danaher dld not do a very
thorough research job on his topic, since nowhere in
the article is it mentioned that the Office of Cultural
Affain is among " the aroups on thls campUJ
presenting the dramatic arts." There II D reference to
Cultural Affairs, but it is so distorted u to be
unrecognizable: the UUAB Dramatic Arts chairman
is quoted as saying that "because of budget cuts, I
have to get other student o rgaruzations to work
together," and then the article goes on to say that
s he " coo perated with the Cultural Affain
Committee in presenting the Bread and Puppet
Theater." This so-called Cultural Affairs Committee
is not the student orpnjzation that the article
sugests, but is the Office of Cultural Affairs which
is, in fact , very much involved in brin&amp;in&amp; theatrical
events to the campus. Its co-sponsorship or the
Bre:ad and Puppet Theater is one of its theater
presentatio ns this year; it also will present "A
Weekend of Mime" in February, with performances
by the internationally known Claude Kipnis Mime
Theater and the Canadjan Mime Theatre. Other
theater gro ups bro ught here in the past couple or
yean by the Office of Cultural Affain (on its own or
in cooperation with another campus organization)
include the Open Theater (in a two-day residency),

Jcan•LouiJ Ba.mult and Madeleine Renaud, The New
Troupe with director Tom O'Horpn. La Mama
Director Martin Brenull and the McMaster Dramatic
Society and a return enpaement by Martin Brenzell
with the Toronto Dance Theatre. In addition, the
Office of CuJtural Af{a.in pve support to the
BuffaJo Theater Worbhop, the Black Drama Theatu
and to an EPIS production o f p., IJacclult! . It also
played a majo r role in e$tablishin&amp; and administerin&amp;
DOMUS, the theater on Elmwood Ave. which
housed many University and taurine prodllCtiona
until its terminatio n this year, due to budseta.ry
crises, as a University theater facility . The Office:: has
also served u a source of advice and information for
many student gro ups who have brouaht touring
companies to campus. And its coordination of the
efforts and resources of several organizations or
departments has made it possible to bring events to
the campus that wo uld be too expensive for any one
voup to sponsor. Besid es its activities in theater, the
Office or Cultural Affairs baa initiated and otpniud
many kinds of events embracina not only tho
performing and visual arts, but festivals and
symposia that to uch on many other disciplines as
weU.
In the face o f all this, it is very surprising that
Mr. Danaher's ''study" was so careless as to omit the
Office o f Cultural Affaln.
E1ther Swa,I'Z
Alllltant to the President
{or Cultural A{fain

Blackjack
To the Editor:

-.

Your editorial of 12/ 1/7 1 seems to emphasize
the fa ct that you do not conSider the blackjack to
be a suitable weapon for the Campus Security
officer to be armed with, but you do not give any
hint as to what, if any, is. How much more
distasteful is the blackjack than the nightstick or
riot baton? Or both of theie than mace or tear gas.
Or all of these than a fa.st?
l hope I don't sound Like too much of a " p1g,"
but you fll'! \forgetting that the Campus Secunty
force is here to protect o ur Lives and our property ,
and a quick check of the records will show that
they do exactly that. If the proposed investigation
shows that a Campus Security officer did , in fact,
act in a questionable manner, t hen it is clearly in
our interest to discipline the individual. But to
condemn the entire police force, and strip them of
all measures of self defense and pro tectio n is an
lnJUStice. Ao unarmed pollee force might sound
hke a great idea, until the Buffalo Police slut
rtaSponding to calls. They too carry blackJacks and
guns.
Consider the allematm:s!

Sit' l 'f! I uzon t:

Undercurrent
To th t! Editor:
It was interesting to see that letter, last Fr1day ,
caUang the editors o f Undercurrent hateful.
Listen, you scumbags, don' t accuse me of
being hateful.

Richard Ptzchter
Music Editor
Undercurrent

Plan for the future
To the Editor.

As captains in the University communjty for
the Planned Parenthood Fund drive, we have been
working hard on our organization through the
whole faU so that the yearly drive 1n January will
be a success.
last year we doubled the number of our
workers from among faculty and faculty w1ves. As
a result, our University community was the star of
the who le Buffalo area cmapajgn in that we went
over our assigned quota by much more than any
other group. Again this f11ll we have drastically
extended the number of o ur workers, trying to
reach aU areas of the Universit y. Any faculty wife

who wants to help us in January, please call ~
now.
To the who le UnjvenHy community : Please
plan right now, before the holiday season, to
contribute to our Fund drive 10 January . Planning
IS always a good idea.
Mf'l. Beatnu Silber
Captain, Pliznned Paren th ood Fund Drive
Te/ephont!: 632-5636
Mr1. An11elie1e Garver

Co-Captain
Telt!phone: 592-7100

Black representation,
TtJ thr Edllor

Alter reading the letrer {Spectrum 11 · 10·71)
submittell by D M D, I wholeheartily agree that he
has a ra1.ast attitude. but d1sagree with him joining
George Wallace for the mere fact that he displayed
an attstude stronger than that of Wallace. George
WaUace should join hi lfl .
Only one's racist attitude could lead him to
mterpret the letter as a move towards segregation
or Black supremacy . The misinterpretation
diSpla yed in the letter of D M D indicates a stro ng
need for a Black operated newspaper. If Blacks can
undentand White communication throu&amp;h White
operated newspapers, then Whites surely can

undentand Black communication throu&amp;h Black
o perated newspapen.
The letter submitted by a Black man was
1ntended to challenge the position of the Student
Association and the paternalistic position in which
it took. The aspect concemjng the newspaper was
speakin&amp; to the fact that BaJcks had a right to
represent themselves within the Campus press
system since Blacks have never been equally
sntegrated within the present system.
This letter is not intended as a method to
facilitate actions of D M D or myself into a war
through the newspaper, bur for clarification.
A BJ.ack Man

Monday, December 6 , 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�..

TWA INTRODUCES·
·STUTELPASS.
BED~ BREAKFAST
AND SIGHTSEEING
IN 50 EUROPEAN CITIES.
$4.30ADA~

NOW TWA GUARANTEES YOU
A BED WITHOUT ANY ADVANCE RESERVAnONS.

TWXs Stutel pass* is a book of coupons that gives
you easier travelling in Europe.
Here's how it works.
Suppose you're in London, just drop into the
Stutelpass office before 3 PM and ask them to get you
a bed.
And we guarantee they will.
Or if you're heading for Paris, the London Stutelpass office can get you a bed there also, or in any one
of the 48 other European cities.
You can buy a Stutelpass book of coupons for 10,
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For more ways the Stutelpass can save you money
in Europe, call TWA.

*Ser vice ma rks owned exclusively by T WA, Inc.

Page eight. The Spectrum . Monday, December 6, 1971

�IRoundup.. ;
the jury returned an innocent
verdict on one of the two counts
of first.Jegree riot. However, the
jury could not agree on the
remaining eight counts. Dismissed
by State Supreme Court Justice
Fred~rick Marshall, the panel was
told tliat the court was "satisfied
t hat you have exhausted all
possibilities.'' But Marshall, who
did not set a new date for the
trial , also said he dismissed them
"with regret, because of the time
consumed and the effort 'Which
has been made."

-c:ontlnuect from .,... two-

I

Commit'tee as one of the
" courage()ua men" in Virginia

presidential policies than farui_ :ho . was determined not to
policy . The main ar ments ~ge in massive resistance to
· t B tz
fi gu S
c o u r t - o r d e r e d a-c h 0 0 1
agams
u
carne rom · en.
Fred Ham (D., Okla.) , who said desegrepttion. The same four,
that Butz had shown a "callous Sena~ors .Bayh, Kennedy, Tunney
disregard" for the poor and ~d dangHart, accusehd till~hnquist of
hungry • and had displayed a
a
c~o~ os ty to the
ca valie r attitude" toward gre a t ptrinctples of indi~dual
environmental
bl
tz freedom 1under the bill of nghts
pro ems. 8 u
d
al . . 1' all
,
replaces Clifford M. Hardin, who an equ JUStice IOr
peop1e.

is leaving the position to take an
exec ut ive post with t h e
Ralsto n-Purina Corp.

..

WASHINGTON - Vote is
expected early this week on the
WASHIN G T ON Last nominat ions of William H.
Thursday the Senate confirmed Rehnquist and Lewis F. Powell
President Nixon's nomination of J r. to the Supreme Court. A
Earl L. Butz to the position of possibl e una n imous vote is
Secretary of Agriculture. The expected for Powell, who was
vote, a d ose 51-44, followed d escr ibed by fo u r lib eral
debate that was spiced more with members of the Senate J udiciary

GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

Hear, 0 Israel

HAPPY BIRTHDAY,

for gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

875 - 4265

S. U. B. - CONCERT~COMMITTEE
pt'elents

MOTHER EARTH and Keith Sykes
DECEMBER 13

7:00 and 10:30 p.m.
STUDENT UN_ION SOCIAL HALL
(Buf. S1ate)
STUDIENTS $1.50

NON-sTUDENTS $2.50
lights by GREASED LIGHTNING

LOVE,
PICKLEFACE

·1 worked hard all summer
to get enough bread for a dO\I'Vn payment on my
new bug. So I'm goi~~ to baby it:'
~

f

..

You work~d hard for that new car o1f yours. Now all you've
got to do take care of it. Part of it's using the right
gasoline. Amocoe. The type rr.ost new car owner
manuals recommend.

ls

Amoco is specially formulated for your new car' s antipollution engine. Made to help it run better. longer. And
Amoco can double the life of your taril pipe and muffler
compared to fully leaded gasolines; spark plugs last
longer. too.
Amoco Super-Premium g1ves you all these benefits plus
better mileage than other premiums. It's the only .anti pollution prem1um gasoline you can buy.
That's one reason why more new carr buyers switch to
Amoco and oth er gasolines at Amencan than any
other brand .
So now that you 've got that new car. use the gasoline
you can count on .

You've got a new car We've got a new car gasoline.

You expect more from American and yo u get it....

'

Monday, December 6, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine
I

�Basketball Bulls lose road game to Point Park Pioneen;
by Bany Rubin
Sports Editor

Langelier hit a 2S foot jumper at the buzzer.
However, the Bulls could have taken a lead into
the dressina room if they had not sh ot 3-11 from
If someone had told Point Park basketball the foul line. Vartanian, a 73% foul shooter last
Coach Jerry Conboy that bJs Pio neers would open year, missed four himself. After the ,ame, Buffalo
this seaso n with upsets agai nst Fairmont State and Coach Ed Muto indicated that he felt the Bulls
Buffalo, Conboy wouldn't have believed it . Conboy played well, but Muto added : "You're not going to
indicated : "To be frank, J didn't think we had a win on the road by ,shootin&amp; 3 4% from the floor
chance to win both games, but we just outhustled and 47% from the fouJ Uoe."
Defensively, the BuUs stymied Point Park with
Buffalo." Friday evening the Pioneers edged the
Bulls 64-58 despite fin e Bull showings from junior a 1-3-1 zone. Ho wever, in giving up the shot from
behind the foul circle, the Bulls were badly burned
college transfers Jim Tribble !nd Bo b Vartanian.
by the Pioneers' Bob Rager, who hit seven of I S
Prio r to the contest, Coach Conboy saw his
shots and led Point Park with 16 points.
primary task as shutting down the Bulls' 6-6
Jim T ribble, a 6-6 Buffalo transfer from
leading scorer and rebounder Curt Blackmore.
Missouri Baptist Junior College led all scorers with
Conboy related : " We knew we had to stop
20 points (8-16) and added seven rebounds. Tribble
Blackm ore, so I to ld John Boddie our 6·8 freshman
showed just why the Bulls brouaht him all the way
who gave away at least 70 pounds, to give it all he
from Missouri, with devastating baseline drives and
bad."
several I S· foot jump shots. Tribble's play so
Last year Conbo y remembered Blackmore, infuriated Coac h Conboy, that he publicly scolded
who dominated the Pioneers with 24 points and 20 one of his forwards for failing to stop Tribble's
• rebounds in Buffalo's late season 86-69 win . drives. Bob Vartanian another Buffalo transfer,
Conboy. a fo rmer assistant to Lefty Driesell at scored 14 points(6- 16) and added five rebounds
Davidso n College, remarked : " Blackmore just and fo ur assists. Blackmore added ten point4 and
dadn't hustle. He had better lose some \Veiaht if 17 rebounds, but the Bulls just fell short, as Point
Buffalo is to win an y games. He lac ks the Park opened up their lead on an o ffensive foul caJI
touahness he had when we met ham late last year." that could have go ne either way.
Tomorrow evenin&amp; the Bulls return to their
Fint half
Clark Gym " pit" where their 23-pme winning
The Bulls stayed close in the fir$! half and streak figures to be lengthened against the
trailed by six, 29-23, at halftime when Captain Neil University o f Toronto.

Wi nniog streak

L"

~

Hockey team scoreS. . .
total weekend victory
by Howie Faiwl
Ast't, Sports Editor

The undefeated hockey Bulls,
increasing their winnin&amp; streak to
three games this weekend , have
clearly pro ven that they are the
team to beat in Division II of the
ECA C. Wit h Friday niaht's
exciting S4 squeaker over a
stubborn Oswego St. team and
Saturday niaht 's 104 lauahter
over S!llem St. at the frigid
Keena n Cen ter out in Lockport,
the Bulls now have the
his vocto ry by forfeit, he pinned momentum to go all the way .
Oneonta's Larry Brown in just
It was not aU that easy
on e minute 39 seconds. He .however, as in dic ated by
followed that up with another Buffalo's sluggis h play against
impress ave victory . Flattenjng Oswego Friday night. The Lakers
Bruce Gover, Wllkes' senior 190 came roaring out in the first
lb. starte r in just 32 seconds. period, catc hing the diso rganized
Thus, Brandt scored 18 team Bulls off &amp;uard . A frozen crowd
point~ in JUSt over two minutes
of I 000 sat listless as Buffalo
of action
quickl y fell two behind on a
Two BuU wrestlers in the painful SO-foot slap shot by
lower weaghl classes also had Os wego's Paul Sample with
p er f ect days . Juna o r Doug Buffal on a two-man advantage
Rutt er, a transler from Coming, and Wayne Swallow's second
scored three impressive wins. penod power play goal.
Rutt er buried hlS first opponent ,
by a score o t 14 4 a nd his last
Bulls wake up
by 7 2. In between , he panned
However the Bulls are too
Oneonta's Wayne George an just
good a team to re maan behind
under three minutes' time. The for long. They came sto rming
126 lb . Rutter was joined in the ba c k as Oswego le t do wn
triple wm column by the Bulls' mo mentarily, and finally got on
134 lb. starter, Roy Guarino. the board in the second period
Roy, a junaor, pinned his first
with freshman Mike Klym 's firs t
opponent, and then went on to notcher of the year. Senior Dale
s ~ore
I wo
m o r e victories,
Dolmagc, whose explosive scoring
ancluding a 12 - 4 t rouncing of streak thus far this yea r has kept
Wilk es' h ighly regard ed Art
Buffalo alive, notched the game
Trovci.
at 2·2. At that point Buffa lo
Th e Bull s cot1clude their
finally put five good minutes
c urrent home stand with Buffalo
together resultang in two m ore
Stale's vasH to Clark Gymnasium goals. The defe nse, a sore spot all
on Wednesday night at 8 p.m .

Matmen sweep home game
by Dave Geringer
Spt!ctrum Staff Writer

winning streak a t 17 straigh t.
The Colonels had gone t hrough
last season with a perfec t 13 - 0
Th ey say that h e who mark .
However, the Colonels' win
hesitates is lost, but the wrestling
Bulls did not hesatate Saturday as stre ak was not the o nly one that
they swept a quadrangular meet came to an end o n Saturday.
in their home opener at Clar k Walkes' 167 lb. wrestler, AI
Gym. After beating Montclan Zellner, had won 28 consecutive
State 43 - 3 a nd topping Oneonta matches until he was s to pped by
36-3, the Bulls trounced Wl lkes. 1he Bulls' Eric KnuutiJa by a
a perenmal Eastern power, by a score of IS - J 2. Knuutila took
his opponent down thJee tames
count of 11 6.
The BuUs' vJc tory over Walkes m t he first period an amassing an
must be ra ted a surprise. Coach 8 3 lead wh ich h e never
Ed Machael wJs o ne of those rehnquished. The victor y over
who was pleasantly surpnsed. Zelln er climaxed an Impressive
"This is truly a great vac tory ," he debut for Knuut ila, who bad just
stated . '' I thought that due to won the 167 lb . Iitie at East
t he fact th;ll we had a much Stroudsburg. Eric won all three
s tro nger team this year, the of his matches, pinning tm first
match should have been rated a opponent, Hubie Voltihma of
toss- up , but this is j u s t Montclair. in just two minutes
fantastic." The victory was the and 25 ~c..:omls .
Bulls' first win ever over the
Colonels, who have alw:~ys had a Four Bulls undefeated
Knuutila was one of four Bull
for mi dab Je w res t ling squad .
wrestlers
to ta ke three victoncs
Buffalo also sto pped Wilkes'
in Saturday's ac tio n. Ron Brandl ,
who was undefeated during last
25th Annivertary
season's dual meet action, pinned
two of his o ppo nents and wo n
another match by forfeit. After

FILET.."1 65

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MIGNON
(Petite)

CONVERT YOUR
SPARE TIME INTO

U .S. Choice

Kapp

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Sunday, Dec. 12 at 8:30 P.M.
Kleinhans Music Hall

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Plou, Nl..are Pella.

THE SpECT(\UM

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JAMES GANG
Added Attraction:

Choice Potato

'

weekend, let up once again as
the Lakers tied it up 44. Finally
Ted Misk.olczt scored the
deciding goal at 13 :45 of the
third period bringing on a sigh o f
reUef from Coach Ed Wright.
Saturday night 's 10 -4
whipping o f Salem St. saw the
Bulls at their best this season
with an all-around team effort.
Superb performances were turned
in by sophomore John Stranges,
freshmen R usseJJ French , Dale
Dolmage and Bob Albano.
Stranges' hat trick brought tile
crowd to their fee t as the rookie
center man finessed , deked and
bulldozed his way towards the
net all niaht. Frenc h, in his first
va rsity appearance at goalie,
showed much poise and quick
reflexes in turning away 28
Salem shots. Although be began
nervous! y , risking seveml saves
far from the net, Russell e xcelled
on angle shots and overall proved
that he has quite a future wtth
the BuUs.
Senior Bob Albano picked up
o ne goal and t hree assists and
played ha rd nosed throughout,
while standout Dolmage scored
his fourth and fifth goals of the
year and increased his team
leading total to eight points.
Both games were marred with
p~naltics partly a ttributed to
some o bvaously poor officiating.
There w ere h o wever, many
scuffles, particularly in Saturday
night's game against the highly
t o ut e d Vikings. Appaiently
Salem needed to compensate for
their poor s howing by taking
several cheap shots, yet Buffalo
handled themselves quite well.
Mo ral : don't mess with the Bulls.

Wtt&amp;" YOU J"UST
M..!D TD Wl"l\

SQ M'i lltttU:r OTKI."

ADVERTISING STAFF.

For informltion come up to 366 Norton 1nd
ak for Sue Mtllentint, ldvtrtising m1n1ger.

TliR!\ OLb l"£ftftS.
r.. a RDi, ICIUTStiiLTS,~

4i~1a8AlLtY

,ve.

?age ten . The Spectrum. Monday, December 6 , 1971

All Selta Rtat"ecl: M4lin floor $S.S0. $4.SO; l•lc. $4.50-$4.00

NEW and USED
RENTALS
TOP QUALITY AT BOTTOM PRICES
Emplr~

Tlmt! plan

Masur charge

ALBERT DePARIS LTD.
902 TONAWANDA STREET Buffa&amp;o, N.Y. (Riverside section)'
877-6550 ----(We •lao BUY used furniture)- 835-1616

�with male(a) h'a vlng stereo, 1'V and

CLAIIIFIII
AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED ads may be !)laced
Monday thru Fr iday betwHn 9 a.m.
and 4:!)0 p.m. lilt 35 5 Norton Hall.
THE COST of an ad for ·one day Is
$1.25 for the first 15 words and $.05
for each additional word .
a ds cannot
• •HELP WANTED "
Cllsc:rlmtnate on the basis of sex ,
c;olor, crHd or national origin to anv
e xt ent (I.e., preferabl y Is still
dlsc:rlmlnatorv) .
'' FOUND" ads will l)e run free of
charge for a max imum o f 2 days and
15 words,

WANTED
2 QUIET females need 2·bedroom
apartment, walking d istance from
campus by Jan. 1. C all Margo or
Chlzuko 83 3-4781 .

1 NEED • cheap room and a Job.
Desperate. Call Alan 833·4923. KHP
trying..
" MOTHER'S HELPER" wanted, three
afternoons per wHk. Light work In
good home. Good salary. Mu1t have
own transportation . Call 688-6831 .
GOO D USED h~tnd loom, Small floor
model. Cell Anne 834·5285 nlghU.
SOCIOL,OGV term paper w anted on
some social pro blem. Wi ll receive
some fin ancial benefit. Call 83 3·105 7.
WANTED . R espo nsi ble driver Bu ffal o to B ou lder, Colorado - to
·deliver car all car e.Kpenses
ret mbur sed. References . Clllt
856·0871 .
PL A VBOV desire~ playgir l . Leave
name and n um b er In Box 22
Spectrum office.
EM ERGEN CV sn ow snoveters.
Wanted . $3.50 per hour. Overtime
extra . Call 856-4150 Monday-Friday,
9:0Q-4:00.
MALE, female restaurant staff
required for all positions at historic
Roycroft Inn. T hose neat, person;abte,
wllllnv to learn may apply In person,
40 S. Grove S t. , E. Au ro!a, M ·F, 1-6.
OVERSEAS Jobs For St udents:
Australia, Europe, S. America, Afrtc:a,

etc. All profeulons and oc:cu4tatlons,
t700 to $3000 monthly, E'*penses
paid, overtime, slghtseeln9. FrH
In formation. Write Jobs Overseas,
Oept. ES, Box 15071, fin -o11Vo,
California 92115 .
NEED sophisticated entertainers for
downtown c:oHHhouse. Folk, )au,
blues, acceptable. Groups of more
than 2 need not apply. 852· 7129,
854-9651.
URGENT - need Hlstorv 337 final
from spring semester lmmedllltely.
Pay exc:ellent. After 3 p .m . Robin .
897..0593.
STUDENTS to do tax retu rns,
Commission cash basis. We will tr•ln
vou free. Call 652·9247.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
FU RNISHED apt. Ideal for couple.
I mmedl atetv or J01 n. 1st. Call
874-4778. Leave name and number.
w ith
fur nish ed
S INGLE r o o m
aPartment , five-minute walk from
campus, very c:omfortable and Quiet,
834-4792 after 6:30.

RIDE BOARD
G O I NG ANYWHERE near F lo rida
after finals?' Will snare driving and all
expenses. 877· 3996. Skip.

FOR SALE

ear for II)OPpln!l. 1ntervlew necessary
to detor·mlne detlrablllty. Clll Chris,
Joanle, l . lsa, Suey at 832·5440.
FENDER teleu5ter, 90od condition,
blonde maple neck sunburst finish
'66. Call 833·9760. Ask f o r Artie.
1970 KARMANN Ghla coupe, orenge
with black Interior. Driven 1 vear.
18,000 miles. $1600. 649· 1883.
ATOMIC metal Skis, 200 em., W/Look
Nevada bindings . Excellent cond . $60.
LA Dolomite slx · bu ckte boots.
Almost new, size 9111 , t50 . 881.0505.

BUIC K 1962 Special 8 , automatic
power steering, radio. Very clean.
$100/ best offer. 834·7355, 875·3220.
1964 RAMBLER , the car that made
Bobby bold and Muv Lou lose her
}nhlbltlons. Ca ll 832-0204.

FOLK guitar lessons also eplphone
electric 9ultar for sale. Jeff, 83!1·3384
835-9229.
•
SHOWBOAT'S En9lne Room Bar singles nlte every Wednesday, no dress
requ irements, free popcorn, drink s,
$ .75, drllft $ .3!1. 1 Hertel Ave. on the
Nlapra River .

FIXED female cat available free.
Extremely affectionate. 675-4168.
Call after 7:00 p.m.
1969 M6B low mlleave. Excellent
mechanical conclltr on . B ody perfect.
Call betwHn 4:30-6:30. 836·0485.

L-OST &amp; FOUND

NIKKORMAT FTN ; 50 mrn Ntkon
tonSI 8 5·2 05 mm Vlvatar tetezoom
lens; leather eases; cl ose-u p bellow s;
$300. 8 34 ·5384.
PLAVER p lan o gOod condition.
Recently tu~ . $ 120 Is bargain . Call
aftern oon s, even ings. Sherry
832·9526.
V AMAHA com binat ions, 195 em.,
Nevaela Grand Prix b indings, $105 .
Skllt only, $65. 83 1·2943 before 5
p.m .
.
VW '66 perfect cond ition. Must sell.
Call 886·2913 all day tomorrow.

'66 IMPALA exc:ellent c:ond ltlon brand new transmissi on $900. Must
sell . Need b read. 8111-4067 .

HEADS, 720 208 em, $72, wit h
Tyrolla 90; Nordica (13) boots, $15,
potes $ 5; set $90; 634·7210.

PA N ASONIC 8·track tape deck, h ome
unit. Good offer. Call877·6657.

dig these
M OROCCAN Imports pr ices: custom made LEATHER
PAN T S
$30; futt 18n9tt1
wool/cotton CAPES $15;
hand-made LEATHER BAGS - $8 ;
colorful WOOL SASHES $ 2.50.
A n tique Moraunla (Gulloml ne)
BEADS $8/dOl. Call Steve 883-4707.

SKIS Rossignol Strato, size 210 em, 1
season old . E~&lt;c:ell ent condition.
Marker b inding $ 100. 881·0505.

HEV teen angel forget the 7-up
commercial. Grab Setty Lou and
catch Sha Na Na, Dec. 11 et the
Peace Brlelge Center.
•

BEAUTIFUL handmade gold and
sliver 1-elry - wedding rlnvs - at
sensible prlcOI. J.P . Tho Gotdweaver,
655 E lmw ood •t Ferrv Street,
881-3400.

GUITAR AMP; 100 w atts, two 12"
speakers, like new. Call Larry
832-6417.

2SW AM·FM stereo With provisions
for phono tape. one year old . Must
sell . $75. 833-6366.
- - - - - - - - - -- - -- - ·
165·15 Mtcnelln llres on VW rims : 2
SI'IOW
tires, 2 r89. 839·1924 alter
4 :00.

SASHA I nHd you , you •re so
bright, vivacious, so voluptuous •nd
you nelp me with my problems. Love,
Leontlv

1963 STUDEBAKER good condition,
clea n . New tires (snow) . Great engine .
885·6013.
SKI
BOOTS
Ralcle
condition, great for any
$ 15. Call 831·2166.

good
beginner,

REFRIGERATORS, stoves arid
washers. Reconditioned; delivered an d
guarantHd. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Syc:•more, TX4·3183 .
1971 PINTO, 4 cyl. stiCk Shift, (!teen.
Call 883·9067.
STEREO Fisher 125, 40 watts, RMS
per ch;aM'Iel with sp eakers . Good
con d ition. On e year old . Price
n89otlablo. Call 835·2623.
REFRIGERATOR, bed frame,
m•Hross, other furniture. C all
837.0099, Marc, Ken or M1ke.

PERSONAL
PATRICK Tommy, p leue contact
Donna and Terry at 834·7296 .
N V'S Hotel Tudor o ffers SUNY ratM.
Reservations and Information
832..0611 .
W ANTED :

meanlnvful

11011011.

•

$1 REG. ADMISSIONe

58

ad

lan Bruce-Douglas with Copperhead will also
be appearing Wednesday, December 8 in
concert at Buffalo State's Union Social Hall.
Also on the concert will be Instant Ralston,
Tom Root, Mickie Leonard, jeff Goldstein,
and Jessie Nazaret, plus a special surpirse
guest. Two shows, 7 and 10 p.m. Tickets
$1 .50/on sale at U.B.; Buffalo State; and
Allentown Records on Elmwood.

STARTING Dec. 22 or after, female
roommate wanted. Own room . Hertel
and M1ln. Call 837· 9534.
FEMALE roommate to share
Ri c hmond area I Pirtment. Own
room, $62.5 0 utilities Incl. near
coop. 886·026 5.

GLASSES with black frames found
on F alls B llld. near UB - can be
claimed at Spectrum O ffice.

ROOMMATE to Hve with male grad.
student. Fu rn ished apt. Own room ,
$8 5 mon th . 886·8073, evontngt,
Delaware-Utica area.

LOST: glasses, cas e , turiJuolse.
Reward for return of contenfs. Call
836·7829 or to Spectrum Office.
FOUND at Marcuse lectu re, black
men's wallet contains personal
papers . Call 886·7182 for Info.
JACKET f ound In 5th floor Clement
Lounge. Call 831 ·3967 to Identi fy.
Found before ThankS9ivln9.
FOUND : Please claim 1962 Ford
Econollne telephone truck standard.
6-c:yllnder. Call Merry 838·2768 .
REWARD for lost painting 20x24
from Art Dept. Features on thh
p.tlntlng are an 1ndlan blanket and
tw o crystal gtuses. Call Tony
873 -2317.
FOUND: Will the person wi'IO left a
possess1on when hltchlklng ln my
1958 C adilla c hearse the other day
please Identify and claim It at the
Undercurrent Office, Rm , 343,
Norton Hall. Rick Gellman.
FOUND - blue tinted proscription
tensed glasses - gold rims - m•Y
cl aim In Tnt Spectrum office, Rm.
355 N orton.
L OST : male cat, yellow and white
tiger, Ma in and LaSalle. Call
836·3124.

ROOMMATES WANT EO
TWO ROOMMATES wanted to Sholre
apartment ne11r cam pus, S55, own
room . Utilities Included . Call
833-9726 .
FEMALE NEEDED for beauti f ul
apart ment. lO·mlnute wa lk. $57.50 •,
January. 835·4133, J•ne, Harriet,
Gall.
TWO FEMALE roommatM w anted .
Own rooms. 3 blocks from c•mpus.
$ 5 8 •. Jan. 1 . Call 837-1342.

Altl

WANTED : Female roomma te .
Ten ·mlnu te walk from cam pus. Snare
bedroom, $55/ mo. lnclud tn: utilities.
Apartment available now or second
semester. Call Pat 632·02 17 .
FOUR ROOMM ATES
ma le or
fem•lo - wanted to share 6·bodroom
house. Cheap rent. Good area n..r
Delaware Park. Call Bruce or Dave at
835·2623.
MATURE female to share m oder n
2-bedroom liPartment w ith same.
Second semester. Ideal location.
Phone 875·1219.
COUPLE wishes to share large home
with anotner couple, S!&gt;O mo. rent.
886·2833 aft er 7 p.m.
ROOMMATE wanted - own room
$58/ morHh. Starin and Taunton. A
fine abode. Call 836·7799.

MISCELLANEOUS
MELISSA, If y ou can get o ut
tomottow nl9ht, meet me at 7 p .m . In
Haas Lounve, Norton Union, so th11t
we can nea r the electrifying hllrd funk
sounds of MOM recording artist lan
Bruce-Douglas, progressive rock of
Asia and mucn more. Scooter, P.S.
bring this ad • tong cau se I'm snor t o f
of bread and w ith this •d, they'll let
you In for $.50 Instead of $ 1 ••.
af ter t he concert, we'll 90 out and
smoke some rope.
LEONTIV 1 know you nHd me,
but we cou ld have more tim e t09ether .,.
If you would only call ACTIO N LINE
at 5000, sloce they often know the
answers t o the questions. Passionately,
Sash a.
EXPERIENCED typing, term papers,
dluertlltlons, thesis. 833 -1597.
C&amp;H JONES Professional Typing
Service
com puterized IBM
equipment plus our e.Kpetlence give
but poulble presentations of
d lsseratlo ns, thesis, t erm papers,
resumes ;and em ployment application
letters . Very reuonllblo. Ca ll
741 ·3958 .

TYPING DONE In my homo. Fast,
accurate. Call 823-8568 . Ask for
Chlls.
EXPERIENCED typing bY electri c
typewriter, $.40 page. Call 873·1305.

15 words or less

PROFESSIONAL TyplnCjl Serv ice t erm papers, thesis &amp; dissertations,.
Reasonable rates. Call now. 876·7616.
WILL TVPE term papers at homo.
Would edit your m•tertal. Charve $.40
• page . 836·2433.

.....,.....
....

aMr-•A•r

GAY LIBERATION needs folding
chairs, tables and coffee cups to be
donate d
fo r
a Commu nity
Coffeehouse. Phone Dave 674-6981.

IO.lS &amp; THINGS- M..t Styles f• Y............

LU.n ·•·• ••••
_._..... ,acun

WINSOME
FEMALE, black,
Quasi-Persian , 16 months o ld, wants a
new home. 831·5378 or 886.0663.

aoon.uv•
SAYIMOI~ ,
SIIOP AI.MY NAVY

7. .712 MAM -ISS-ISIS .AI IUPPa

.."....'"''···

-

BABYSITTING for working m others.
A
creative personality p r ogram
conducted bY a q ualified teacher. To
beg in Jan. 1st at 1010 Elmwood Ave.,
euHato . L i mited enrollment. To
arranve an Interview. wr ite M;ary Beth
Hill, 103 Claremont , Buffalo 14 222.

WAIHIIIG1'0M SUIIMUS Cllll'lll

•

FEMAl..E roommate wanted. Own
room . Beautiful ap11rtment. L.exlngton
_Qff ~lmwood. Available January ltt.
Call 881· 3775.

COUPLE to share large t houn on
Grand Island, 20 min. tiflioeampus.
·Rent ne90t111blo. 773·53 13.

h

:~:.

FEMALE roommate wanted for Jen.
1 own room - fu rnished apt.
Englewood and Main location. Call
837·0206.

FOUND s Haves 181 d uring Research
Fo un do~tlon
Appllcilt l on. Man'S'
size L . Call 4722 Shlrky

raincoat
Stout.

THIS
WIBil
e•LY

355 Norton

TWO ROOMMATES 1\Mded, own
rooms, t55 plus utilities, -111 mile from
/
campus. Call 834-5731 .

TWO FEMALES to Shire room,
modern 1partment for 3, n . .r
campus. Available c nrlstm•s. CeU
Shari 8 37-4692 .

~LASIIFIHit

TUES. DEC. 7 7p•
Haas Lounge 6

ROOMMATE wanted male/female
compatible, serious ICidem~tty. Call
DIIVId afler 6 , David 883·727&lt;3.

L OS T : Women 's gold Ham ilton
w•tch . Senti mental value. Generous
reward . 8 3 7· 1118.

relationshiP

ITOIORROW NIGH II

THREE FEMALE roommat" to .n.re
apt. spring semester, Mlln.Hertel erM.
Own room , $46+ utllltfet. CaM
837-0395.

SEEKING QUALIFI ED art students
Interested In exhibiting thei r work.
Call 852 -1129 o r 854-9651.

APARTMENTS WANTED

•

2 GIRLS despetlltely nHd ap•rtment.
Close to campus. Reason11bly priced. _
Call Lynn, Diane 835-4637.
APARTMENT wanted for one o r two
or three with k itchen after D ecember
1. Call 831 ·2979.
F IV E MALES desperately OHd four
or five-bedroom apartment or house.
Call 8 37.0882.

-------------------------

Monday, December 6, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

-

�\

Sports Information

'

Tomorrow: Varsity basketball vs. Toronto at
C lark Gym, 8:30 p.m.; freshman basketball\vs.
Buffalo State. 6:30 p.m.
~\

Wednesday: Varsity wrestling with Buffalo
Sute. 8 p.m ., Clark Gym; varsity swimming vs.
Canisius, 8 p.m., Clark Gym.
I

\

The UB Skating Club w:U hold a meeting
tonight at 7 p.m. in the Haas Lounge. Guest
speakers will be Gilbert Perreault, Eddie Shack and
~
Kevin O'Shea of the NHL Sabres.

\

.

The student athletic - review w I meet
tomorrow night at 6:30 p.m. in Room 332,
Norton.

V

be

Students will
admitted to Clarl&lt; Gym for all
home basketball games by presentation of their
validated 10 card at the student entrance and will
be seated in all Blue sections of the gym .

Announcements

I

Hillel's Conversational Hebrew Class
(elementary) will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in Room
\
262 N?n.

)~e

Department of Higher Education is
offering HED 254 Critical Issues in Higher
Education: an undergraduate course for those who
want to learn something about the nature of
universities. For more information contact Robert
Berdahl, Department of Higher Education, Room
16 Foster Annex, 8314806.

/

\

CAC will hold a meeting for all Friendship
House volunteers and anyone interested in joining,
tonight at 9 p.m. in Room 234 Norton.

\
Graduate Student Association will have a
senate meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room 233
Norton.
\
Craftsmen's Guild is having an organization.:ll
meeting tomorrow at 3 p.m . in Rooms 246 and
248 Norton .
\
/
UB Tag Kwon Do Karate Club presents Mr.
Duk Sung Son, president and headmaster of the
World Tag Kwon Do Association , in a promotion
and demonstration, tomorrow at 1 p.m. in the
Fillmore Room .
/
"
The Buffalo State College English Department
presents Charles Bachman in a poetry-media
\
experience tomorrow a t 8 p . m. in the
Communication Center, Room N, State College.

\

/

The Undergraduate French Club will meet
today at 4 p.m . in Room 234 Norton .

/Open
' ' -Poetry

/

\

Reading sponsored by Outriders.
Featured readers tomorrow will be Tony Petrovsky Friday and 1 - 9 p.m. on Wednesday. The cost of
The speech is sponsored by the Student
(editor, Rapport) and Liz Mansfield (Cornell the test will be $3.50 and will be done in Room , Association - Graduate Student Association
University) . Readings are at the One·Eyed Cat, 28 231 Norton. For information call 831-381 L
Speakers Bureau .
Bryant St. (near Main), 9 :30 p.m. till midnight.
/
~
I
Fo r information call Prof. Wickert, ext. 4927 .
The Hillel Executive Committee will meet
The School of Nursing will have a program on
,......_
tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the Hillel House.
the problem of lead poisoning in children and its
Hillel's Beginners' Hebrew Class will meet
I
effects of mental retardation, slow learning and
tomorrow at noon in Room 262 Norton.
The School of Nursing presents Margaret related health problems, Dec. 7 at 8 :30 p.m. in
/
'Gallagher speaking on "Lead Poisoning in Children 233 Health Sciences. There will be speeches and
CAC Paper Committee will meet tomorrow ar in Buffalo" to morrow Jt 4 p.m . 1n Room 233 possibly a film on the lead poisoning problem .
9 p.m. in Roo m 26/4 Norton.
"'-.. Health S/ciences . ........_
I
"'~
The Yout h Subcommittee on Law
Vico College has a spring program of seminars
Classes will be given in Kundalini Yoga, the Enforcement will ho ld an organizational meeting in
integrating literature, philosophy and political Yoga of Awareness, Monday, Wednesday and Norton Hall at 7 p.m. tomorrow. It is one of five
rhought. For information about the program and Friday at 6:30 p.m. &lt;~l 124 Winspear Ave., second spin·off groups from the Citizen's Committe\.' on
registration, contact Charles Altieri, English floor and Tuesday, Thursday, Sawrday and Sunday Law Enfo rcement &amp; Justice, which held a meeting
Department, 831-4201 o r Elizabeth Perry , 176 at 196 Linwood Ave. For additional informatio n recently at the Statler Hilto n. The quality of
Winspear Ave., 831-3834.
call 881-0505.
" " justice in Buffalo was discussed.
'-. /
I
Chec k Norton information {831-3541) for the
CAC's Be A friend Project needs male
Hillel has Chanukkah candles &lt;~nd menora h!&gt; eJfact location of the meeting.
volunteers t o help fatherless children. Call available. Get them at the Hillel table o r in the
J
831-2281.
/
Hillel House.
Western New York Public Interest Research
Group (WNYPlRG) will be holding a meeting ...__ _ _ _ _ __
Th~ Schoo l of Management with the
The Chess Club announces a speed chess (five tomorrow at 6 p.m. Check at the information desk
cooperati.on of the University Placement and Career minute) tournament to be held tomorrow at 5 p.my for the exact location.
Gu.idance Office presents a workshop, "The in Room 233 Norton. Please bring clocks and a
·
Employment of Women in Business and Industry: ~.25 entry fee.
Sociology 367, an interdisciplinary seminar on
Problems and Prospects," today at 3:30 p.m . in the """""".
the Middle East, will feature four major topics with
Norton Conference Theater.
/
Undergraduates taking French courses, please outside speakers. The topics are "The Palestine
•' - .
pick up a copy of the department newsletter in Revolution, Village Life in Transition, Role of
The Greek Club will have a meeting tomorrow Room 214 Crosby.
/
Women in Arab Literature" and " koots of the
at 7:30p.m. in Room 234 Norton .
"'-._
Egyptia n Revolution." Course description is
/
The German Club will present a film, Schiller's available from the Sociology Department.
/
The Hillel Class in Jewish Ethics will meet Wilhelm Tell, tomorrow at 3 p.m. in Room 330
tomorrow at 1 p.m. In Room 262 Norton.
Norton. , /
"'-..
"Advising as a Learning Processs" will be
/
.
~
offered next semester for students interested in
The Student Natio~ Mediul Association
Enaytt Karim, Deputy Ch ief of Mission and advisement or related fields in education. For
announces that Rubella Screening Tests will be Minister, Bangia Desh Mission, Washington, D.C. inf~rmJ~ion conuct j.une Blatt in Di!!:,ndorf 2 1 3 . - - - - - - - - performed during the week of Dec. 6- 10 from will speak on the current trisis in East Pakistan
~1
~

I '-

._

/a.... _

-1-vond.y,
'

~:esday,

ThuBday and

7 ow

at 7:30p.m.

in theCoin~Theaur.

• '.

r end

- Amy

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                    <text>THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 38

Editor's note: The following is a mtmOf'Qndum, dtzted May 24,
1971, to the Department of Spanish, Italian and Portugune from
Chllimum Brurw A. Arcudi concunlng the '•Grievance of Allillanf
Profwor MQ/Vin D'Lugo against the Department ofSpanilh,ltalian
and Portuguese.
I regret to inform you that on May 20, 1971, Professor Marvin
D'Lugo filed a grievance in the Provost's Office against this
Department concerning our procedures. As a result of his action at
least two deceptively worded petitions apinst our Department are
being circulated In the English and french Departments.
We all know that certain elements in both the English and
French Departments have always considertd It their prerogatives to
Interfere with the affait'1 of the Department of Spanish, Italian and
Portuguese, as when they prevented .t,he Facufiy's hiring of the
renowned Dante scholar T .Q. Bergin by tossing in the name of John
Freccero. However, very fortunately, those are pressures which this
Department has always consistently and in most cases successfuUy
resisted.
I cannot express fully enough how very much Professor
D'Lugo's behavior dismays me. It reminds me of the action of a
certain Irish Lord by the name of Dermot McMurrough who in
1166 invited Henry II of England to send troops mto Ireland in
order to settle an internal dispute. We are still reading about the
disastrous repercussions of that action.
Since the French Department is also involved . it furth er brings
to mind the move made by the Duke of Milano when in 1494 he
Invited French troops into Italy, as a result of which Italy did not
become united unil 1861 .
I encourage the Department to provide Professo r D'Lugo with
whatever assistance Is necessary to clear up the mutter at hand .

Editor's twre: Tire following is Q memorandum, datt'fi June 2. /97 I ,
to ..A II staff and studem represetllatlv~s " from P~rer
Boyd-Bowtnllll, Department o[Spanish.ltalum and Purtugut!u. The
letter ronccms ''RetZppointnu:nt of Junior Faculty - general
remllTks. •·
To help put o ur Thur~ay deliberations into pro per focus , I
would like to offer the foUowing for consideratum :
I) There are over 1000 Institutions o ffering advanced courses in
Spanish, aU o f them looking for good people with experience .
2) Not to be reappointed at one's fir~t institution is neither a
stigma nor the end of one's career. but actually quite normal in o ur
highly mobile profession. Fo r example, neither of my own first two
three-year appointments (the first at Harvard , the second at YaJe)
were renewed , and this despite the publication of an early book plus
several articles and book reviews published in the NRFH , and a
major long-range rese11rch project which was shortly to earn me a
Guggenheim fellowship! (My third move was to become a
department chairman at a liberal arts college in Michigan.)
3) It often happens that a junior faculty member is a promising
scholar but in too narrow a field to meet the overalJ needs of the
department in which he happens to find himself. Or again, he may
duplicate in pan the specialty of one of JUs colleagues. Or else he
may be simply not interested in teaching those particular courses
for which he was hired in the first plaoe. None of the above
situations reflects upon an individual's professional merit or
prejudices his prospect o f finding a better position somewhere else .
4) Just as an JndividU4,1 is free to shop around until he finds a
job that really suits him, so each department must constantly strive
to select for reappointment and/ or tenure only those junior faculty
who appear to best fulfill the department's long-range needs.
Long-range needs are of overriding consideration in the matter of
re.a ppointments. Other factors to be taken into account are, of
course, a man's scholarly productivity, his overall relationships with
students, the spirit of teamwork that he exhibits within the
department, his tolerance of other approaches to his field and, very
important, hJs ability to attract and hold good sfudents in the
department's graduate and undergraduate programs. These factors,
plus evidence of effective administrative capabilities, should
continue to be the sole criteria in deciding on matters of
reappointment.
5) Lastly, as Provost Connolly pointed out at our last meeting
and 1 think wUJ readily confirm, a decision not to reappoint that is
made on the basis of the above criteria is not subject to appeal
inasmuch as the original fixed term appointment carries no
understanding (either legal or implied) that it will be renewed, but
only the individual will, In the event of non-renewal, be notified in
plenty of time to aeek a position elsewhere.

State Univenity of New York at Buffalo

Friday, December 3, 1971

Grievance Committee decision

Political discrimination found
by J eff Greenwald
S,«trum Stt1f! Wrlur
A Faculty-Senate grievance committee recently
ruled in favor of four faculty members of the
Department of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese (SIP}
who had claimed mistreatment in the department's
renewal procedure~ .
ReprdJng the charses of Professors Jurgen
Heye, Maria Roldan, John Oeredita and Marvin
O'Lugo, the Grievance Committee, working under
Senate Professional Association (SPA) procedures,
ruled Chat "the grievants' claim of discrimination
appears substantiated."
The pievants' claims were many, and stemmed
from Incidents occurrina earlier this year, concerning
the departmental administratio n. The principal issue
seems to involve the status of Bruno Arcudi as acting
chairman of SIP.
Ar. delineated by Leon llvmt!$tone, Department
of SIP, in a letter to the R r portt'r (Nov. 4 ), there
seems to be some question among a number o f
department members as to the legalit y of Dr.
Arcudi's appointment.
This question revolved around what WJS fe lt to
he secrecy surrounding not only Dr . i\n:udt 's
appointment, but h1s fun~tr onrng in that o ffi ce.
So me fa culty members contend Dr. Ar~udl
perfo rmed certain duties o f th e chairman with ~lUI
the kno wledge of those, who in the absence of a
permanent chairman , had been delegated along With
Dr. Arcuda, as members o f a three-man troika
chaarmanship.
Mistreatment cbar&amp;~
When Or. ArcucJi's ~&amp;ppmntment became known
to oil mllmbel'$ or SIP, much discussion foll owed
culmanat.nc 1n what ~rved as a vote of co nfidence
for Dr. Arc.:udi . Althou&amp;h a recret vote, it wu evident
from judlina tbe participation in the diScussiOn who
wu likely to have voted against Or. Atcudi.
Amo ng the six who did so were Or. Heye, Mr.
Oeredita and Dr. D' lugo . Dr. Roldan was absent at
that meeting. lt WitS no l long before a secret
departmental advJsory committee recommended the
terminatio n o f Dr. Heye, Mr. DeredHa and Dr.
R o ldan (whose feelings on the departmental
governan ce were felt to have been also kno wn). t)r.
D' Lugo's contract had prevro usly been extended fo r
one year. Such an extensio n, Dr. D' Lugo was
advised , was tantamount to dismissal at the end o f
that yea r.
The &amp;Jievance contcred around three issues:
discrimination, proc edures o f the advisory
committee and administrative in;egularities.
According to the grievance petition, the actions
desc ribed above , along with a few other
circumstances, proved to mark the grievants as
dissenters fro m the departmental line.
In fact , Professors Roldan and Deredita were
described as JUSt that (dissenters) in a letteT by Or.
Arcudi to Dr. Livin~ton e a full year befo re their
contract review. Actions stemming from this stigma
have been termed discrimination by the grievants.
Even more interesting ch arges follo w.
It rs the grievants' claim that whrle all rn volved
in the review process were bound to secrecy . and in
fact urged to remain quiet by Thomas Connolly .
then acting provost of the Faculty of Arts and
Letters, a number of memos were issued to all
members of SIP which proved to bias the entire
process. (The memos are printed elsewhere in 17r ~

Spectrum.)
Petition filed
On~
th~

of

tlt~lt

mtmos was wri11e n by Dr. Arcud1 ,

11ubject of which was " Crle1111n u of A ssistont

Professor Marvin D'lugo against the Department of
SJ&gt;8nish, Italian and Portuguese."
At this time, Dr. D'Lugo was in the process of
filing a grievance against the procedures of the
department, rather than the department itself, in
regards to the formation of the advisory committee
mentioned earUer. At a SIP meeting on May 25, Dr.
Livingstone charged that they were "secret
committees (established l without the knowledge of
the department l to aid the department] in
vindictively getting rid of members of the
department."
A petition had been started protesting these

measures and was being distributed to faculty in the
French and English departments. ·To Otis was Or.
Arcudi's memo di rected. He stated : "it . . . brings to
mind the move made by the Duke of Milano when in
1494 he invited French troops into Italy, u a result
of which Italy did not become united until J 861."
This statement and others in the memo were taken
by many to mean that Dr. O'Lugo was being called a
traitor to his department.
The memos
Another memo appeared one week af1er OT.
Connolly's request of silence ; this one written by
Peter Boyd-Bowman , Department of SIP. Or.
Boyd-Bowman's note pve numerous rationalizations
as to why the department should not feel guilty in
terminating the contracts of junior faculty . Or.
Boyd-Bowman was imadentaUy a member of the
advisory committee.
It was these two memos that were the
fo undatio n of the Grievance Committee's findings of
discrimination , us they were felt to have biased the

department in the1r judgements of the· four teachers
involved . These find in~ have been vigorously
disputed by both Dr. Arcudi and Or. Boyd-Bowman .
Bo th feel that the advisory committee's
recommendatio ns and the entire department's
decision could not possibly have been effected by
the memos, since they contend the memos were no t
di s tributed unttl the decisions were deemed
inflexible. Dr. Arcud1, m fa ct, maintains that the
vo le was unchanged before and after the memos
were d istnbuted .
Ano ther vital aspect o f thiS case, although it did
not affect the outcome o f the grievance, was the
conduct o f the advtsory committee itself. Tbe end
product o f the committee's deliberatio ns were
two-page evaluat1ons o f all those whose contracts
were up fo r consideratio n.
Advisory committee
A number of comments on those of the
grievants are most curious. Dr. Roldan was found to
have " demonstrated an unwillingness to adapt
herself to our (departmental) needs." Just what
"needs" are uncertain, but it should be noted that a
senior faculty member was once quieted, saying that
" junior faculty members could expect cooperation
from the senior fa culty only if they voted with their
senior colleagues ... " Or. Boyd-Bowman further
stated that the main consideration by the advisory
committee was "departmental needs."
Dr. O'Lugo was criticized because his " courses
are exclusive of approaches other than his own. It
must be pointed out that no one else's approach was
suuested.
Mr. Deredita 's evaluation notes dismay that his
approach to culture courses ''has an almost exclusive
interest in the culture of tbe Cuban revolution." He
-continued on page fou r-

•

�Psychomat provides a place
for individual communication
by Lyoda Teri
Spectrum Stllff WrlJu

U slffl wortJt
~ can't d~fine

And lpatklng
without communicating
W~'n thinking

unthought/ui/JI

AGORA projec~

Norton's center lounge
becomes a marketplace
The Norton Hall center lounge
now has a new function and a new
name. CaiJed the AGORA, the
Greek term for public forum and
debate, it is now the area whereby
student groups or organizations
can recruite people, distribute
literature or peddle their wares.
According to Jim Lummel ,
who is responsible for the
functioning of the AGORA, the
idea for a forum or marketplace
where students could sell the
wares that they made was hatched
last year. This was at a time of
increasing problems with hallway
overcrowding and state laws
prohibiting the peddllng of
merchandise.
Norton Hall staffers Ann Hicks
and Ed Dale conceived the idea
and saw it as a viable alternative
to these problems. Mr. Lumme\,
who took over the work of getting
the program off the ground this
September, said that the table
situation in Norton got so bad
that "it was causing traffic jams
and fire hazards." A recognition
of these problems was also
Jncorporated in the proposal for
the AGORA.
Question of need
Once involved in the AGOR.A
project, Mr. Lummel contacted ·
several offices within the
administration and the Norton
House Council. However, Mr.·
Lummel claimed that the Ho1!$e
Council kept putting the issue o/1.
"It's a good idea but we stiiJ need
to work on it," he said the House
Councillo ldhi m .
The situation in Norton got
progre ssively worse, however,
forcing t'he House Council's hand.
FlnaJJy, two weeks ago, Fred
Aueron, chairman of the House
Council, called an emergency
meeting to discuss the- situation
and put the AGORA prc?posaJ
into effect. The enactment took
effect Monday.
Mr. Lummel said that currently
there are 22 different spots in the
AGORA which h ave been or are
reserved at the moment. They
cover organizations like the Peace
Corps, Hillel, Newman House,
Chabad House, the Arab Cultural
Club, People's News Service and
the UB Veterans Club .
There are also peddlers of
candles, dresses, leather goods anA
"'
jewelry. Mr. Lummel said; "We
could have more groups but we've
run out of tables and we're
currently tryin&amp; to find more."
He said that since its inception
they have run into problema.
However, "every problem we've

come aero~ w ...·.... managed to
solve or work it out into a viable
solution ."
Some problems
Mr. Lummel said that he
expected more but said that there
are alternatives to hash o ut
grievan ces conce r ning the
AGORA. For one, he pointed out ,
"they [students) can petition the
Student Judiciary and formally
bring up charges against the
AGORA. Preferably, they should
see me if there is mistreatment."
He can be reached through the
Reservations Desk in Room 233
Norton or through the House
Council.
According to the regulations
stipulated in the AGORA charter,
only recognized student p,roups or
orga nizations within the
University may reserve a place in
it. Individual University st udents
may reserve a position to peddle
their wares o nly if they are
designed and made by the
individual student.
Each individual vendor or
organization is co mpletely
responsible for the security of all
items and revenues lnvolved in
their operation. Vendors must
record o n t h eir registration
application their New York State
SaJes Tax number o r sign a
statement attesting to their intent
' to file a "casual sales" tax ret urn
with the New York Stale Sales
Tax Bureau.
All required forms must be
completed and returned to the
Reservations Office before an area
in the AGORA can be reserved .
AIJ students will be required to
have a valid University J.D. card
and all organizations will have to
be checked as to their eligibility
through the Student Association
or the Graduate Student
Association.
..-------------,
The Spectrum ;, publish«! thr•

tim•• •

~nlldly

w•lk. _,., Mond•r.

Mid Fridly; during the

ngullr «::ddmic r•r by Sub·Bowd
1. t nc. OfficW .,.. loc.ttld •t 365
Norton H•ll. Stlltll Uni111nity of Nl'lll
York •t Buft.lo, 3436 Allin St.,
Buff•lo, N•w , York, 14214.

Tll•pllon•: A,.. CoM 116; Edltorl•l
B3t-4H3; Bu•ln..,, 831-3610.
RIPflllntfld for «!~tiling by
N•tlOMI EtluutioMI A~,
S.Va,
Inc., 360 t.xinftOIJ
Nl'lll Yorlc, N.Y. 10011.

A~.

Subleriptlon nnw .,. 14.6() ,_,
~or $8.00 for two Mm.ret¥.
SccMd

a.. I'W.,.,.I»id., Buffllo,

,.., Yon.
Cirr:u'-tion: 16,000

Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, December 3, 1971

And touching
without fe~ling.
No.
I can't hear you crying.
And you.
can't see m~ shivering.

Maybe
I'm not really listt ning
Just as
Youre not r~ally looldng...
Scratching at the walls of our individual prisons,
we wait, hoping to be heard.
It is as though an external barrier of quicksand
separates us. To reach one another and be heard, we
must aU brave the dangers of the quicksand . Each
uncertaJn step brings the threat of faiJing and the
promise of level ground. The captive safety of our
prison walls cause us to fear the quicksand and yet,
our scratching will remain unheard unless someone
ventures out.
Venturing out is what Psychomat is all about.
Every day we talk and listen to people, but how
often do we reaiJy communicate? How often do we
honestly try to hear anoth er person scratching at his
prison wall? Too frequently we become lost in the
superficial. Unaware of our emotions or the
emotions of those around us, we forget they exist.
Psychomat is an attempt to remember these
emotions and deaJ with them. It is an opportunity
for people to communicate, to "actually hear
another person."

Sitting in Psychomat, unsure of what would
happen and arudous -about what 1 wanted to take
place, I was asked if l knew what wu •·supposed" to
occur. "Nothlng and everythin3," was all I could
reply. Psychomat can't be defined. It is whatever the
people participating in it want it to be. A
conversation. A "rap." An experience. A sharing.
Each individual affects Psychomat. What you
bring to it; what you as a person are willing to give
and receive, will determine what P~chomat means
for you and those in it with you.
Psychomat is. people. It is people reacting and
being reacted to. Hopefully, it is people listening and
being listened to.
Having been ln different groups of people, 1
have seen many dHferent sides of Psychomat. More
honestly , I have seen many different sides of myself
and others. The free atmosphere with its casuaJity
and lack of definite structures asks only o ne thing of
those who attend - tQ_ try. Try to listen and try to
speak.
Interaction
Leave the artificiality outside. The roles and
rhetoric, th e feigned interest and indifference have
no place in Psychomat. Games and barriers are to be
relaxed and hopefully east aside. Bring t9 Psychomat
an honest desire to communicate. The willingness to
listen is the only prerequisite.
Different people come to Psychomat for
different reasons. We all have our own needs and our
own ways to acknowledge or deny these needs. If we
are willing to listen to each other perhaps we can
understand ourselves and others better. Perhaps we
can be pulled a little closer and begin looking past
our own prisons.
We all seek some fonn of understanding. To be
understood by another human being is a meaningful ,
and aJI too rare, event. To understand another, to be
able to tap into what is being said and felt. is just as
-continued on

pa~

she-

VICO COLLEGE
Register now for our spring program of seminars integrating
literature. philosophy. and political thought.
VICO 204-1 Rome and Christianity (4-8 ). V. Ooyno
VJCO 204·2/VICO 438 European lnteiJectualllistory
in the Nineteeth Century (4..S).
J. Nardin and 0 . Hollinger
VICO 345 Co-seminar: History of Education (2).
K . Von Moltke
VICO 401 Literature as History (4). E. Perry
VICO 499 Independent Study (Var. Cr.). Staff
Departmental credit in English. Classics, History.
Ph i/osoph)'. and Political Science may be
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registration, please contact Pro . £ . Perry
(83 / -3834) orProf C. Altieri(83/ 201).

~~~:..::E!!l:r!!!!;:.:d!~~

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GRADUATING
STUDENTS
December 8th is the last day to make an appointment for
your yearbook portrait!
356 Norton or 831-2505, 5570

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�Appalachian symposigm ·
-

.

J

· Handicrafts to he exhibited
Linda FeUx , a graduate student
at this University, used to live on
a mountaintop farm in West
Virginia. During her th'ree years
there, she became very involved
with the poor people of the
Appalachian region. "These are
unique people - everyone is a
character"' explained Ms. Felix.
The Appalachian people are poor,
but totally self-sufficient. They
also have some special talents.
" After 1 lived there for awhile, J
became aware that everyone in
the whole community was into
different kinds of art forms," said
Ms. Felix. "These people are
fantastic - they make chairs, rugs,
quilts and countless other items."
Most people aren't aware of
the Appalachians' talents, or their
problems. Ms. Felix wants t0
create a symposium on campus to
bring awareness of these people to
the University community. She
has invited about 20 Appalachians
to come to the symposium and
exhibit their crafts. She hopes the
exhibit w"l demonstrate to the
U nivefSity~~'Om munity the
poverty cbndltions of Appalachia,
as well as their cultural resources.

EPis·official claims her

dismissal was arbitrary
by Howie Kurtz
Campus l!'ditor

Appalachian culture
For the Appalachia_ns, it will
give exposure to their skills. They
will not be selling their handicraft ,
only exhibiting their work and
talking about it. They will receive
money only for travelling
expenses and possibly a small fee .
Ms. Felix has also invited several

In the h.-rt of Appal11chfa Is the
mountlln top town of Mill Creek,
West Virginia. Shown is Ms.
Fortney spinning wool on her
farm located in the Mill Creek
area. Notice the picket fence. with
~nning jan on the spikes.
prominent authors, lawyers and
musicians to take part in the
symposium. The problem is
mooey .
Ms. Felix applied to ,. the
Student Assembly for funding but
the motion was tabled . To speed
the bureaucratic process of
allocating funds, she has drawn up
a petition in support of the
symposium . Anyone who is
interested may sign the petition at
The Spectrum office, 355 Norton
Hall , or at her table on the first
floor of N orton Hall from
noon- 4 p.m. today .
Authors coming
In addition to the Appalachian
people , Ms. Felix has invited
authors Henry Glassie, Wlynwood
Montell and Jim C'omstm:k . Mr .
Comstock writes the West Virginia
Hillbilly, which has been likened
to the Village Voice. Lawyers
from the Appalachian Research
and Defense Fund will attend. &lt;~nd
the films of John C'hoen will be
exhibited . The Currence Bro thers.
a group or b luegrass musicians,
will also entertain . Anyone who
ca n a p prcciate this kind of
cultural symposium is asked to
help out and sign the petition .

Shirley Harrington Arnold has
issu e d a memorandum
complaining that she was relieved
of her duties as acting director of
EPIS for invalid reasons. However,
Dean of Undergraduate Studies
Charles Ebert maintains that Ms.
Arnold was never appointed as
acting director , but took
command of EPIS temporarily
because she was the senior ranking
officer when former Director
Julian Peasant resigned .
An acting director was never
named , explained Dr. Ebert,
because it was felt the position
should be appointed by the
associate dean o f Undergraduate
Studies, who would be working
very closely with the EPIS head.
Rob e rt Grantham has just
assumed the position of associate
dean , and named Emmett Lyons
as acting director of EPIS. Ms.
Arnold claims that Or. Grantham
replaced her with an individual
with whom he felt more
compatible, although she and Or.
Grantham had never had any
conversations or interactions of
any kind .
Holiday gesture
Or. Ebert poin ted out that Ms.
Arnold's official title has always
been assistant director, and cited
memoranda sent to her employing
that title . He st ressed that the
appointment of an acting dircctot
of EPIS had to await the arrival of
Or. Grantham; that Mr. Lyons is
c&gt;nly an In terim director. who will
serve until a search committ ee
names a permanent director ; and
thilt he is nut replacing Ms.
Arnold because she nevct was
acting dean .
Ms. Arno ld , un the o tltet hand ,
claims sh e was in fact named
acting director in September by
Or. Ebert, and t hilt she was very
surprised when infurn1ctl by O r~.

Grantham and Ebert that she was
no longer to function in thut
capacity. This disclosure, It must
be noted, took place Thanksgiving
week , which ls when the
admjnistration traditionally makes
moves it feels wiJJ be unpopular
because nobody is on campus to
criticize them .
Serious jeopardy
Ms. Arnold stated that she was
informed that some of the
problems of administration in the
EPIS program " may be better
handled by a man ." 'She feels such
an attitude is unwarranted
because the job is the important
thing, not if the holder is male or
female . When asked if she felt that
sim ilar discrimination on the basis
o f sex was being practiced
throughout the University. Ms.
Arnold replied : " I believe it is."
She furt her objects to the
aUegation that her involvement
with EPIS employees would
hinder her impartiality when
handling s u c h economic
necessities as a reduction in the
number of co un s el o r s .
"Sometimes unpleasant things
have to be done, but it's part of
my job," she stated. Ms. Arnold
intends to seek the position o f
permanent director of EPIS but
feel s her chances have been placed
in ·•serious jeopardy" by the
recent developments.
"To anyone who doesn't
know. it wnuld seem that I was
repla ce d be..:ause l was
incompetent . or didn't do a gt&gt;od
job.'' mainta~n ed Ms. A1nold.
However. D r. Ebert stressed in his
rnemo ranuum tlwt sh e had done &lt;1
good job in the interim period .
Ms. Arnold plans to meet with Dt
Ketter next week to discuss hc1
grievan~e). Dr. Eben said he was
disappointed in M). Atnold and
feels het a~.:~wns were latgely
influen~ed
by he1 pct~onal
feelings.

EQUIPMENT TO BE SOLD AT
" THE SKI SWAP"
Room 231 Norton Hall
can be registered-beginning at
11 :00 A.M. TODAY!

10% DISCOUNT
With student ID card

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in cooperation with
B'NA/ B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDA T/ONS

announces two
Winter Academic Programs in Israel

LARGEST SELECTION
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355 Norton Hall

"MODERN ISRAEL : The Kibbutz as Idea and Experience'
1. December 21 - January 4 (2weeks, 2 semester credits) - $450
2 . January 4 - january 25 (3 weeks, 3 semester credit.) - $499
Open to graduates and undergraduates. Cost includes
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Applications available from B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations,
1640 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036

Friday, December 3, 1971. The Spectrum. Page three

�Good direction

CAC Started new programs
by Muy Anne Morpo
St&gt;«trum St«/1 Wl'ltw

Under the direction of Ted Levy, the
Communlly Action Corps now has 1100 volunteer
workers and many new programs. The number of
volunteers ls twice that of last year and CAC ls
estimated to be one of the largest student volunteer
agencies in the country. Mr. Levy attributes the
increased siz.e of the organiution to "a good job
publicizing CAC'' and to "a really large budget from
the [Student) Association." CAC hopes to raise the
number of volunteers to 2000 In the near future .
Among the new programs is the Environmental
Action program, directed by Bob Rosofsky, which Is
currently working with the University maintainencc:
department for recycling glass and paper to
companies for re·use. Ten active members are now
also Involved in encouraging University use of
recycled stationary , Students are also doing research
and investigallon on the Pendleton Jet Port in the
area to study the problems of an airport near a
re idential area.
bpansion
" We can really see our common goal of serving
the community;' said Mr. Rosofsky in reference to
the work being done, though admitting 10 battling
W11h much red tape.
Under the d~rectlon of J:~net Weinstein , 1.2
projects on recreational and tutorial services in
Buffalo are being ~upervised und coordinated . About
400 students are involved in such prOJects as tutonng
on reserva tions and inner c1ty work . Parents in the
community are paJIICularly involved In this aspect of
the CAC.

in this field.
Previously this dividon of CAC worked with
such problems as potholes and broken lidewalks in
the City of Buffalo, but the need to do something
more exciting and qntflcant encouraged tho
coordinators to expand the program.
A basketball te-sue sponsored by CAC Is
receiving a large response in Buffalo and maintains
about 40 volunteers. The University has donated
athletic equipment for the 12 teams. composed of
Buffalo area children . AU star games or playoffs will
end the season.
SateUite plans
Volunteers are working In Buffalo parochial
schools, Our Lady of Lourdes and St. Columbus, as
student teachers, aides and gym teachers. Education
majors looking for experience as well as for
volunteering services are particularly urged to join
this program .
Other services of CAC include serving as mental
hosp1tal volunteers, providing companionship for
patients: serving on T .A.C.T ., which helps people
released from jail find jobs; serving on VISTEC,
which helps welfare clients 011 out lengthy forms and
the U.B. Day Care Center. which IS in Its second
year.
Terrace House, a f3cility for homeless men , is

also helped by CAC . Originally a recreational
o peratwn , volunteers are now involved in housing
research . Terrace House is also used as a referral
emergency center for new people In the city,
Under coordinator Robert Gilbert, such
programs as drug guidance counselling in Amherst
und tut(Hing on the Tonawanda Indian Reservation
are now underway.

Assistance to the organizatio n has come from
Wo1 king with Councilman Johnson of the
Granville
Mo tors, which has donated cars for
Masten DMnct of Buffalo, rhc Buffalo Cumpl:unt
trnnsportation
o f volunteers. The Ski Club has also
Board , directed by Ruthellen Lendenbaum: rs set to
offered
ski
trips
for students In the tutorial
begin its work in Janua1y. The committee will be
programs.
mvolved W1th urban planning, weJfare and legal
affaars, aiding the councilman m gelling informatio n
Plans to set up satelltte C AC's are tentative as
and generally helping to solve problems in the city . well as plans to further scrutiniz~ CAC's actions for
Between ten and I 5 students are workang voluntarilv purposes of self·improvemc:nt.

Grievance decision . . .
was nlso fou nd thai " he avo1ds oppos1ng viewpoints"
and thus has dissatisfied !&gt;"'udents. II is most
interesting that a course evaluation put together only
a year earl,er found studen ts praising Mr. Deredlta
precisely for his receptivity to opposing idea~ .
Or. Heye is sim1larly attacked on num erou~
issues regarding lhe handling of h1s classes, but
examinallon of studt:nt evaluations f;uJ to g1vc much
substance to these charges.
While the secrecy of the advisory committ ee was
questioned, 1ts compos1t1on has also been impugned.
Tlus is primarily m regards to undergraduate
represe ntation.
WluJe those undergraduates that were ancluded
on the committee clai m to have been the
duly..:lected representatives of their constituency ,
many undergraduates have co mplaaned that there
was absolutely no attempt to seek out student
o pinion concerning the qualifications of those under
review.
A petit1on has recently been started regarding
the representativeness of the undergraduate members
of the adviso ry committee. At a meeting felt to be
the largest in the history of the undergraduate SIP
department , a vote of 36·1 was recorded to
repudiate all action taken by the representatives
purportedly on behalf of the undergraduates.
The representativeness of this group has been
questioned in turn by both Dr. Arcudi and the
present undergraduate representatives, who feel that
the number of students signing the petition (about
8S) is rather meager in comparison to what they
term a department of "900 students."
The grievants lastly claim that there was
manipuJation in regards to those casting votes on the
recommendations of the advisory committee. It is
charged , in particuJar that one graduate student ,
Craig Johnston, was relieved from voting privileges

only after his posit1on regard1ng Dr. Arcudi's actmg
stature had been made cleur.
'Shadow o( a doubt'
Da. i\n:ud1 contends thllt he took a~ u on only
afler h e wa s informed that new graduate
representative:. were to take office 1mmcd1ately after
election Mr. Jo hnsto n, a:. he understood, had not
been rc~l ec ted , and therefore, could not vote. Mr.
JohnS1 on ho wever, has said that the electio n had
taken place at least a month pnor to the action
stripping him of his vote, and rhut "it seemed Dr.
Arcudi should have known well before that time."
Mr. Johnston Jlso commented that he knew of no
by-law specifymg when terms of office were tu
commence.
It seems that this student represent:Hton Itself
was a cause for the gnevance finding, since there ts
some question as to whether such representation was
a violatio n of Faculty by-laws.
Both Dr. Arcudi and Dr. Boyd-Bowman
expressed deep disappomtment at the grievance
decision. Dr. Arcudi called certain grievance claims
"out and out lies," while Dr. Boyd-Bowman was
very upset because of what he felt was the lack o f
opportunity to present an opposing side in the
grievance hearing. While members of the advisory
co mmittee were present , he was "absolutely
horrified that the Grievance committee did not see
fit to talk with any single member."
ln response to the fmdings of the grievance
committee, President Robert L. Ketter, however,
replied that while he doubted the claims had been
proved "'beyond a shadow of a doubt,' sufficient
questio ns remain to warrant the relief requested by
the grievants." The relief granted by the Grievance
Committee was a one-year extension on aJI the
grievants' contracts. Further action by a presidential
n11nel i!i oendinll.

Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, December 3, 1971

,.. actton Ltne

]

Q : 1 am a Mftlor m d bope to .,.du e. ill Jaoe. Tbt. year I applied
for t he flnt tJme for Sebolanhip laccnti•e. I hnea 't h•rd about It yet
and tbe 8 WNr 'a Offlc:t tella me that the cut-off date waa Oct. 4. If I do
rece•n It eaa I apply It ~~tinly on my bWt
A; Wo checked -with the Bursar's Office .and they tell us that you
must pay your tuition and other biUs for th11 semester in order to be
able to relister for the next sem~ter. However, if you do receive
Scholarship Incentive tbe wUl mail the check to you and then you can
use If for the next semser. But you must clear up your account for
thlJ semester now.
Q: WW my Reaenta Scholarship cover the toat of JOint to rummtf
echool!
A; The Resenu Scholanhip covers ei&amp;ht semesters, according to
the Financial Aid Office, If you so desire, you can use part of this for
tum mer school. Thus, if you take less than 12 credit hours in the
summer you will have a half semeeter deducted from your total of
eiaht. 1r you take more than 12 hours this is considered full-time and
you -will lose a fuJI semeater. All together you will receive eight
seme~tcrs and you can divide thls up u you wish.
Q : I heard that there's aotna to be a coune on Oceanoaraphy. Is

thil true?
A : Yes. The course is Ge()Jraphy 200: The Ocean World, and will

~ talltht by Dr. Charles Ebert. The course is a general introduction to

the world of the oceans and their social and ecological implications. It
has no prerequisites and for more information you are asked to call or
see your DUS advisor.
Q: 1 haven't been able to act the money toaether to pay my
tuition. What'a the deadUne to pay 10 that l can still reaJater lor tht
sprlna aemester!
A: The deadline was Oct. IS and has obviously passed . The
Bursar's Office informs us that you must make payment before Dec. IS
to 1\ave thiS entered into the computer. Practically , this means that .
even if you have paid after Dec. IS , the computer will not accept your
registration and you will have to get an override slip from the Bursar's
Office to be registered . As a result, you will have all the inconvenience
of recastering after everyone else has registered. So get the payment in
now.
Q : I'm a minority atudent and am tnterested ln aoioa to arad
sehool. Where ean I get the inlonnallon that I need!
A: First o f all, you should see your advisor. But , in addllaon to
thJs, there t$ a new book called Gradtuue and Pro[~uional
Opportunultl for Minority Students which should be of help It as a
new book published by the Educajional T esting Service, and it h
available at the Advisement Ortlcc In Diefendorf. I am sure that within
a short time you will al5o tind copies at various offices or the
Untverslty.

Q : I stopped In a bar on Bailey Avenue and they had a sian saying
that no one under lS yean of eae would be served. Isn't this
discrimination and thertfore ilJqal?
A: Yes, it Is discriminatory but not illegal. There are fed eral and
state laws outlawing discrimination on the basis of age for job
opportunities. But these were enacted to prevent discrimination against
the elderly rather than the young, although they apply to the young as
well. However, there are no laws saying that restaurants cannot
diScriminate against the youna. So, at the present time, it seems, it is
iJiegal for a restaurant to discriminate against o ne on the basis of sex or
race, but not on the basis of age.
Q · Where can I aet information on Phi Beta Kappa?
A. We checked with Dr. Barnette of the Psych o logy Departmen t
about this and he told us that ''students may present their own
credentials for consideratio n as nominees to the local Omtcron Chapter
of Phi Beta Kappa here on campus. There are only two such occasions:
one, at the end of the fifth semester (80-96 l~tter grade hours
com pleted ) and w1th overall GPA of 3.60 or better;second,at the end
of the seventh semester (112 letter grade hours or better) with overall
GPA of 3.40. Grades of "S" are ignored . Election to Phi Beta Kappa 1~
limited to stud ent undergraduate majors within traditional liberal art s
areas; students fro m engineenag, nursing, pharmacy , education, social
welfare and the like should not apply . (Frequently these professiono.~l
groups have honorary societ ies o f their own.)
Students who feel they qualify for this distinction by the close of
e1ther the fifth o r seventh semester, should send a letter (do /lOt
telephone) to Dr. Barnette, secretary of Omicron Chapter, at 4230
Ridge Lea ( Department of Psychology) providing him with the
ind icated mformatio n. Such students should also request the Off1ce ol
Admissions and Records to send To Dr . Barnette an official copy of
their transcript.
An initiation ceremony and reception is held each May for all
nommees from that academic year. Typically this is scheduled the day
before the annual May commehcement and to which parents are also
invited."

Correction: Th e two physical education credits do count towards a
management degree. Tills was incorrectly stated in the last Action Line
column.

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�U.S. ahead Of Soviet Impressions of Buft'alo
Union in armaments A comfortable place to live
Reprinled from I. F. Stone
The notion that the U.S.,
through inadequate defense
expenditure, is about to become a
second rate power, is now being
propagated by the Pentagon to
prepare the way for a bigger arms
budget next year. This is the
sheerest nonsense. He~e are some
basic figures , as culled from the
latest edition, just Jllrived from
london, of the Military Balrmce
s tud y for 1971 by the
International Ins titute for
Strategic Studiell.
In the first place U.S. military
expenditures continue to be far
greater than Soviet. The USSR is
spending $55 billion this year; the
U.S ., $78 billlon . Soviet per capita
defense expenditure was $222;
U.S . $373. The USSR was
spending a larger protion of its
Gross National Product on
defense (II% as against our 7 .8%)
but the Soviet GNP was $312
billio n, or less th:~n a third of the
U .S. GNP. which was $977
billion.

separate warheads on separate
targets. It will have doubled its

Striking r-Opacity.
Advanuge at sea
The same disparity in our favor
exists in Europe and at sea. The
US. and the NATO forces have
some 7000 nuclear warheads in
the European theater as against
about 3500 in the hands of the
Soviet Union and its Warsaw Pact
allies. At sea, the Soviet nuclear
strategic submarine fleet may
soon draw closer to that of the
U.S . in numbers but Is far
outdistanced in warheads and in
range. The Soviets are only now
testi ng an SLBM with an
estimated range of 3000 miles
which would make it comparable
to o urfJolaris. The Sov1ets have
about 350 underwater launchers
as against our 656. But 432 of our
launchers are the Polaris A-3 with
triple warheads and 64 are the
newer Poseidons with at least 10
MIRV's each. The Soviets nuy
catch up to us in numbers of
nuclear submarines by the mid
70's b ut by that time we will have
increased the number of o ur
unde rw a t e r strategic baiJistic
missiles "fr om about 1500
(capable of attacking 656 separate
ta rgets) to over 5400 (capable of
attacking some 5000 separate
targets)." In addition we are
already developing a new
underwater monster, ULMS.

Nuclear deployment
In nuclear stra tegic forces the
U.S. continues to be several years
ahead technologically. This is
reflected in our ability to deliver a
fa1 larger number of nuclea•
warheads. The USSR is trying to
make up in quantfty of ICBM 's
· for this disparity. Sociel ICBM 's
rose In number from SO to 460
between 196 1 and 1967 while our
A s imilar proliferation of
rose from 63 to 1054 . In 191&gt;7 we warheads is taking place in our
se t out to develup muJtiple bombing fle e t thro ugh the
warheads instead o f increasing the additio n of the new Short Range
number o f missiles. By this year Attack Missile or SRAM . This will
the Soviets had 15 10 ICBM 's do for the bomber what MIRV
while we still had only 1054. But does for tht ICBM. While our
all but 54 of our massiles were bomber force is st ill abo ut three
solid fuel while o nl y 60 of the times as large as the Soviet , the
Soviet's were the quicker.firing number of nuclear warheads each
solid fuel variety.
· bomber carries will be Increased
The Soviet Union is still testing enorm ously by SRAM . Each B-52
and has yet to deploy a multiple could eventually carry up to 24
cluster warhead while we have SRAM while the proposed new
passed that stage and are already B-1 bomber would be able to
deploying multiple independeptly carry 32 SRAM . The ISS survey
targeted vehicles, the MIRV . O f says, "The Soviet Union has
our 1054 ICBM's, 500 Minutemen shown no apparent interest in
are being equipped with three matching this particular effort."
MIRV's each. By 1975 our ICBM All this would give us an overkill
force will be able to deliver 20 54 of stupefying proportions.

Bible Truth

ASSURANCE OF H EAVEN
Jesus says: "He that bellev&lt;'t h on
me , hath everlasllna life."
John 6:47
Believers are paned fr o m death

to life."

ear, 0 Israel
for gems from the

JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

875-4265

Stephen Row an, former Penta1on
correspondent for CBS news, came to Buffalo as the
anchorman for WBEN television news about o ne
year ago. Recently, he pvc this reporter his
impressions of those 12 months.
Alt~o ugh he said that comparisons between
cities are often "odious" and "misleading," M r~
Rowan compared Buffalo favorably to other major
American metropolises. He commented that in his
opinion t~e negative reputation Buffalo h as acquired
can be largely attnbuted to the " mfenority
complex" which has afflicted most o f its inhabitants.
''The name that Buffalo has earned as being a
backwards and ugly city is com pletely ridiculous,
and I feel that it's the fault of the people who live

political dedication of youth : " The people in
Buffalo, including the kids, who talk about these hlg
changes among thefnselves yet take no action to
bring them about, are hypocrytes ... (they) ar~ JS
bad as the politicat bosses who are running this city .
lr the 4 5,000 18 to 20-year-olds who failed to'
register to vote really cared about the city's
problems, they would have registered •nd voted In
this election." He added that this wo uld "have hud a
grea effect on it."
The veteran newsman ulso had some biting
comments about October's Attica uprising. " I was
deeply llffeeted by the tragedy at Attica It ts
bec~tuse of what happened at Attica that I will never
listen to people talk of stereotypes again without
giving them some kind of argument. The people ot
Attica were not all vicious mUTderers, .as many
people want to believe. Richie Clark . one or the
leaders of the revolt . was doing 6 years then• for
attempted robbery .
" It turns out that Mr. Clark had appJjed fo r
employment with the New York City Police
Department and was waiting for a reply ut the tim e
of the attempted holdup . A man like this could have
heen a very useful member o f society , but sociel y
may have turned h im away from it as he became
desperate for money and committed a cri me. He
then was dealt &lt;1 severe punashmeot and was furt her
IUt]led agalnst sol'iety .
" II was peo ple like thas who took part an the
disturbances at Attica , and they are not completely
at fault for what happened . I feel it is our
responsib1ht y to try to help th em become useful
members of '&gt;Ociety again, instead of trying to
suppn!ss them in prisons such as Allic,J when~ thear
hal red for soc1e1y can grow ...
Advantag~

here thai this repu tation has developed. Man y
Buffalonians are so ne&amp;ahve-minded that t)lC~ Y see
only the clly's bad pomts. Instead of trying to
correct them, they constantly compliiin about them
and just make mailers worse.
'Archaic political machine'
" A good example of th1s attllude ts the poht1cal
s1tuataon here. Buffalo's politacs are still runy by an
archa1c political machine whtch IS l!ontrolled by a
number of minor league politicians. Such unportan l
projects as school integration und muss rap1d truns1 t
have been kicked around in local and state
government for over ten years and it looks hke
they'll be kicked around for another len hefore any
action tS taken . Thts ~•t uat1 o n Ill not unlike the
SJtuallons an other calles such as Boston , St. l ouis
and Kansas City . The people here, though seem to
think that their problem i~ unique and s1 mply sit
back and complain about it instead of !liking
action ."
Mr. Rowan threw some furt her verbal jab~ J t the
local political leaders "The political machmt! an
BuHalo has trained the people to bdieve that it
holds the answer to .til thear problems. People hke
Joe Crangle and Alfonso Bella nca arc thelling us who
we sh ould vote for an each election and this IS wro ng.
The people sho uld be the controlling political factor
here, ... not the machine. The only way !hil t the
machine can be beaten an Buffalo , though, is through
the mcreased political involvement by the city '~
more dctive and intelligent people."
Hypocritical youth
In that vein , he expressed doub ts about the

Mr. Rowa n did have several positive id eas ahout
Western New York . He e'ltplained some advantages
Buffalo enjoys over other cities : " I was able to ftnd :a
very cornlo1 tnhte and secure plal!e to live .. . very
close to the office where I wor.,_ for about one-third
the price of a comparable home m another cny. For
example, 10 Washington I laved in a house wh1ch was
right in between the outskirts of the black ghetto on
o ne side and the dtplomauc &amp;hello on the other. The
sl t uatio n there deteriorated to th e point where I was
rel uctan t to allow my wife uut of the house aft er
dark , even to walk the dog. Where J live in Buffalo.
though . the situation is not nearly as tense and my
pos1tio n ~~ mul·h more comfortohle."
Even culture
Mr. Ruwa n Lltd co mment thai " we have had
some diffkulty find ing lricndl&gt; m the city w ho have
the sa me interests as us. In fact we have had more
contact with our children 's friends in the past year
than we've had with our own ." He d1sputed the
chum that Buffalo is culturally bankrupt. "Although
Buffa lo has been called a culturally backwards area,
the people of Buffalo have a better overall exposure
to culture than most other ci ties, including New
York. For exam ple, in Buffalo one can get to see
many o f the major musical groups in the country for
a relallvely low price at any time, while in New York
a concert ticket might cost S 12 or S 13, and by the
lime o ne figh ts off all the heavy traffic and smog
you get to the point where you wouldn't go to a
concert even if you were pa1d.''
Sum rnanzjng his farst year, Mr. Rowan saad that
he has " thoroughly enjoyed Livmg in Buffalo. The
weather is very mild , as the winters are not as
terrible as I expected, and in the summer we may
have had six or seven days where the heat was
actually unbearable. The l'il y does have an air and
water pollution problem , but the air here is not as
bad as the Jir m cities hke Chtcago, New York and
Los Angeles ... I think the progress being made here
to clean up the problem is very encoura~ng. "

Sociology orientation
The Sociology Department will have o rientation and "s:ct permiSSIOn from yo ur
instructor" days on Dec. 8- 10. Faculty will be available in their offices to talk to
tudents these days. films will ai!IO be showing continuously Dec . 10 in Room 4 2. 4224
Ridge Lea.
Courses requirina permission are : Socioloay 383 (M) (Group Dynamics), 481 (K2)
(Sociolo(IY of the future) , 481 (0) (Voting Behavior), 481 (Q) (Social Stratification in
Socialist Countries) and 499 (13S) (Independent Study).

GAS is a Xerox 2400
Qcs adl/ Xerox as rntr1y copies ofalmost anything as you utult
04S u.tll do this as fast as any ot1rer copy maclutJe, Jaster than most
.Xerox did all this
G4S «ill cost you less than any other copy service around
· Gus doesn't ask you to fill Ot4t a~ic-hislory before he tull Xerox for yo11
Gus provides YCJl1 tdth all sorts o weird mid interesting people to stcUe at tdu'/e you twit for copies
kl1ere else could you ~tall this.
I-* cfd this - 355 Norton Hall - 9 a.m to 5 p. rra.

Friday, December 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I

I

Queentown lowdown
by Mr. Clean

WeU, all right ... do you feel all right'! .. .Iemme hear ya say
yeah!. God forbid! I hope you'U excuse m y fabulous Buddy Miles
irrtitalion (did you guess), but I was just so overjoyed to see you aU
~ack In class again that it just slipped out. We Queentown regulars
1\ever leave for anyplace more exotic than Elma or Trumansburg, and
thinp sure do drag in Sweet Home Buffalo when you 're gone ... Ain't
no sunshine, etc.
There's not too much to re port on this week. The record stores
(don't fo rget your very own co-op fo r Xmas goodies!) have been
glutted with Holiday Product - I'm sure t here's even a Chanukah rock
Orato rio if you want to search
but most of it is pretty
undis tinguis hed, or at least undifferentiated . Thos~ of us who take it
upon ourselves to differentiate gel prett y weary and crazy this time of
year.
There are so many moderatel y good records that I can only get off
on alb ums that scream during the Christmas s pree of pandering and
bilking. I don't listen to what they scream about, just as long as the
music is crazy. Very bad is infinitely more desireable than just alright
these da ys. But enough of this wretched babble and on to the business
at hand .

lndividuUI communication ...

-conllnuoCI from pago two-

meaningful and important. Psychomat is an ahernpt
to seek out that understanding and share it. A
..:hance to scratch ut the walls that shield and ISOlate
U) from each other, it 'is an mvitation to ventu re o ut
1 n 10
1 he
quicksand which perhaps 1sn't as
treacherous as we believed .
That 1s the key to Psychomat. You listen. And
sometimes. you hear.
Understanding self
No great compelling motive has to drive you to
Psychomat. A desire to understand yourself and
those around you is all you need . Yo ur degree of
commitment is up to you. Come willing to get

- - -

- -

Involved in another conversation or another human
being. Psychomat is the result of the personal risk
yo u are willing to take. You can share you r words or
your feelings; keep it casual or make it meaningful.
Jt is all your decision . You determine whether or not
you will walk away knowing you honestly tried to
hear and be heard .
If you ever tire of scratching the prison walls
unheard and feel brave enough to venture out, come
to Psychomat. It meets every Wednesday in the
Millard FUlmore Room from 3 p .m .-5 p .m. Who
knows! Maybe someone is standing just o utside in
the quicksand and would like you to hear him also.
All you have to do to see him is stick your head o ut.

- --

-

Stay tuned to this space
for Part Two.

--

---~

We can a id and - n
a lim• ted numtar of
quallf'-&lt;1 tenior or

gnduabt studenh to

for the telllon 1tarti119
fall 1972 In recogntzed

medical
schools
overseas
We ofler the loilowtng pro·
gram an on tensove 8 week
onentation and hoghly concen·
trated technocal language tn·
struct•on. (90% ol the doff,.
cultV tn anendtng &amp; remaonrng
tn a loreogn school os the language barroer .I The tntensove
prOgrams are goven on the
country where vou woll attend
medical school.
We offer a developmenta l alternative in education
for those who want to affect the s tructure and
priorities of our society. Programs in the art s ,
communications, the social sciences, prob l ems o f
minorities, educ a tion, urban studies, po li tical
science, law, environmental science, psychology.

For the qualifotd students who
Wish to partalte of lh•s program, admiaton can be sac·

ured

to a

rec:ogntzed European

Medical School .

Write today for
further information and an
application fo rm
EUROPEAN MEDICAL

Our sliding sca le tuition plan enables students
to attend who might otherwise be unable to afford
a quality education. A concu rrent work/study program helps students find mean ingful jobs to support
themselves and to comp l ement course work and Individual and group projects.

Talk wi th us . Contact:
Scott Newkirk , Admissions, Drawer E,
805 North Charles Street, Baltimore ,
Mary land 21201
TEL : 301/752-3656

Page six. The Spectrum . Friday, December 3, 1971

nudents pl-ment MrVica, inc.

3 McKinley Avenue,
Alberuon, N.Y. 11507

Your Name ______________
Schooi _ ____________-,,..Mailing Address ___________
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There is no charge for ap·
plication form and subse,
quent inteniew.

Slowly Rocking On
Heavy Stones Rumors Dept : The Stones, hard workmg lads that
they are, have two albums in the can already. One will be called
Jamming Wall Edward, , and features Nicky Hopktns, Ry Cooder,
Mick, Bill , and Charley (who's good t•very night). These are the very
tapes that Ry bitched and moaned about so loudl y last year to promote
his tour. Ry is a really s uper guitarist, but be was playing a tittle too
much slide mouth for my taste back then.
Kett h , regal as ever, brushed off Ry's whining with dignity and
aplomb in the big interview (a true rock &amp; roll landmark). Anyway ,
the record is probably fabulous and I look forward to checking it out.
But that's not even the big news, especially for all you K. Richard
fans out there. The Stones (the band this time, no t the corporate
entit y) have got a double set worth of Keith's songs tn the can. A
veritable
dream come true. Excelsior ! Of course there's no release date set.
The Stones are past masters at tantalizing t he public ...better keep
your sleeping bag hand y, 'coz it's Likely to be a while yet. (For all you
chromosome-damaged K. Richard s upplicants o ut there, the hottest tip
is that the man is tn NashVIlle this week to buy some new guitars. Those
Riviera junkies will rob you blind if you don't keep on your toes.)
Great Expectations Dept: The Kinks new album for RCA, MJ,Jswell
Hillbillies, ( Muswell Hills is the London J\Fighbarhood. t~e Da Y!~ l&gt;o..:Y~
co m~ froJI) 'houJd arrive jn Buff~lo ~y ltpgofled §Ometime l,efrlrt
Groundhog Day. Make every effort to track it down shopping center by
sho pping center. It's sure to be worth the tftort . And JOY of joys, there
there is an outside eh~nce t~t Jerry Nathan might bnng in a · Kinks/
Yes do uble bill in the next week or two. So consult your local spiritual
leader and as the coach always said before the big game, "Say it in your
own way, but say it ! " ... We want the Klnks and we wont them NOW!
Brother Terry, repo rting on his New York creep, said that the
Allman Bros were subdued but super 1n their first ap pearance stnc~
Duane shufn ed off the mortal coil. He also tes tified that the mighty J
Geils Band shook Madtson Square Garden with soulful thunder and
made 20,000 new friends while opening the bill for a psychotic Bnl ish
piano tuner. Rtght on, New York ! If it takes all year, never fea r!

• • • • •

News &amp; V1ews. Be sure 10 puck up on Phonograph Record
Magazine at one o f the commercial record out lets across the st reet. 11 ·s
a comer, that 's for sure. In fa ct , I think it 's right up there with Creem
and Rock and Circus already. They print onJy the work of an elite
corps o f depraved scene makers-don 't miss it.. ....
The new Dylan package ts a great surpns.e . His mterpretations of
of the recent songs are so vllal and engagmg that they really repay the
purchase price by themselves. His singing 1s truly funky (honest , it tS)
and hts hysterical rewrite of " You Atn 't Go in' Nowhere" - " Pack up
you r money , pull up your ten t McGuinn, You ain•t gom' nowhere'' is a
stone gas
And I'm sure thctt everyone who has ears knows about "George
Jackso n" one of Bob's most brilliant and moving songs ever. It 's a real
shame that it's not Incl uded in the new album . The morning seems
newer than ever. Carry on, Doctor .....
E Pluribus Fi!nk is the real thing. Not o nly h ave they got all the
vitality and most of the fans in rock today, now they've got the mustc,
too. I mean, I'm glad Van Morrison has a new lp, the single sounds fine
on the radio and all , but really, it does nothing for m e.
Mark Farner is writing blunt, crystal clear rock and roll songs that
are so genuinely stirring that I didn 't believe it the first time I heard the
record. And their playing is more together and alive tban a doz.en
Fleetwood Macs piled on a gross of Moody. Blues. Really , you owe it to
yourself. Knock yourself out .. Take care and keep a knockin' til next
time, and rememberYou can 't trek through the sleet
Without high ·heeled sneakers on your feet.

Marcuse on WBFO
The speech given by noted New Left
philosopher Herbert Marcuse in Clark Gym Nov. 20
will be broadcast by WBFO (88.7 FM) Sunday, Dec.
S on Lisun at 6 p.m. Marcuse , once araduate
ins tructor for black militant Angela Davis, is the
author of many books, including his famous Eros
and Civilization.

�The'l bird Eye
by Curt Miller '
Proving the existence of parapsychology to
non-believers has been a century long task for
psychic researchers. Although th ese researchers must
be congratulated for their persistence in trying,
objectively , to prove the existence of ESP, they must
be criticized because objectivity became a bane to
their cause.
Many objective tests have been conducted to
test for ESP an d although many resulted in complete
success. they lacked one important characteristic repeatabilit y.
This week we will look a t some of the successes
In objecti ve tests and next week a personal success
with a subjective test.
Early parapsychologists initiated the concept o f
quan titative testing and this proved to be an
important factor in legitimizing ESP research as a
scientific pursuit.
Pioneer efforts in American investigation of the
paranormal were made by Dr. J .B. Rhipe in Chicago
in the 1930's. He is often credited with bringing the
American concept of mass production to ESP
testing. He conducted an exhaustive experimentation
program using college students as his subjects.

-santos

"lJZzaf?

Two weeks ago before the ThMksgiving
vacation. tht Buffalo intramural and rec,..tion d..,artment
apomored its teeond annu.l turkey trot. Well Ollflf one hundred
runnen piltici.,.ted fn the run for tltht 1.,... turkeys. This
jul1
one of m.ny awnts IPOf'IIC)Nd by the recr•tion ctepvtm.,t. Many
new activities are pl.nned for the coming Mmest•.

w•

Mem -Brainl: visual
and audio experience
"The audience enters an
inflated chamber, 40 at a tame.
Seated on a soft carpet the event
occurs on four puffed out
projection surfaces and is heard
on four sets of stereo speakers,
one for each screen.
"Five cartridge playback units
will supply movina. shifting sound
to the environment. Fans
pumping fresh air into the
chamber will be adjustable so that
the chamber will appear at time to
breathe."
These are so me of the
"technical descriptions" set down
by Rob Fisher for Mem-Brain I, a
multi media show that he has
written, designed and produced it.
For one hour, groups of people
are bombarded with saghts and
sounds off all shapes and sizes
while sealed in a womb-like
structure. Reality becomes the
events insade, intense and
pervasive.
There are three parts to the
Mem-Brain I show. The first is a
dream sequence w1th nies and
crashing planes and naghtmares . In
the second , a newscast with
strange occurances like drive-in

screens being tom apart by
capsules from outer space is
shown. The long third sequence
traces most of man's history using
images and sounds . We evolve
along with mankind ,
and,hopefully, learn a bit about
ourselves in the process.
Portable mecfia
Mem·Brain 1 is probably the
highest costing multi-media show
to ever attempt to be portable.
It's Mr. Fisher's desire for people
across th e country to be able to
see the new happenings m
multi-media without having to go
to New York .
Mem-Brain I will be in action
today and tomorrow in the
Fillmore Room. Shows wiU start
on the hour from 10 a.m . until I
a.m . Reactions to it have ranged
fro"! strong apprecaation to
outright hysteria to hatred . But it
is definitely an experience, and
something that should not be
missed by anyone.
Tickets are S 1.00 for students,
$ 1.50 for all othe rs. It's worth it.
Things like this don't co mt.:
around too often .

Attention borrowers
The Office of Student Accounts, Hayes A,
announces that the federal government consid ers it
mandatory for all students with Natio naJ Defense
leans who cease attending this University or who
drop below one·half time status (six hours) to
arrange an EXIT INTERVIEW . The interview
enables students to clarify their riahts and
r es p onsibilities concerning repayment and to
determine a repayment schedule.
If you are grlduating or terminatina this
sem ester, please call 831-473S to schedule an
appointment for an EXIT INTERVIEW.

Cards and l)'mbo ls
Dr. Rhine made his tests with ESP cards
(originally referred to as Zener cards). The 25-card
deck, about the size of playing cards, &lt;.:ontained five
each of five different symbols: a circle, a square. a
cross, a star and a wave.
Chance guessing should allow the subject to
guess o nl y o ne out of every five cards all of which
were placed face down. Occasionally the resuJts
would be better, but In a large number of tests, the
ave rage would be five correct guesses for ~very deck
of cards.
In one aeries of testa with J . Pratt as the sender
and Hubert Pearce as the subject, a perfect run of25
correct guesses was recorded. However, this is no
more conclusive than the case of a woman who buys
one lottery ticket and wins S 100,000. The more
important, although less spectacular results, were Mr.
Prall's consistent scores of six to eleven hits in each
pack of cards.
The same team conducted, in 1933, a more rigid
series of tests to eliminate the possibility of chance
guessing or other oversights which might label the
experiments as fraudulent or unscientific.
In this astounding experiment Or. Prall and Mr.

Pearce were seated 100 yards ap3rt in separate
buildings on the Duke University campus. In one
building Dr. Pratt shufOed the cards and then one by
one placed them face down on a table at one·minul e
intervals. The entire test lasted 25 minutes.
At the end of each minute Mr. Pearce wrote the
name of the symbol he thought was on the table.
Duplicate ijsts were made by sender and receiver and
forwarded in sealed envelopes to Dr. Rhine. The
results showed that Mr. Pearce made J 19 successful
hits out of 300 trials - nearly double the expected
average.
Unconscious force
P erhaps the most modern of early
parapsychologists was G.N.M. Tyrell. Repeatability,
an important gauge o f the success of a scientific
experiment. was not experienced by research ers.
They wondered why they could not always, in fact ,
reproduce the successes which Dr. Rhine's reports
disclosed. Mr. Tyrell explained that ESP could not
be studied as a totally physical science as it was an
unconscious fon.e enmeshed with human
psychology.
Mechanical tests, Mr . Tyrell said, couJd not
always be expected to get the same results with
different groups of people or with different
experimenters. Dr. Rhlne's success could b e
accounted for by the great enthusiasm which he felt
for his experiments and which he conveyed to his
students.
Removing the subjects' inhibitions, he said is a
major function of the experimenter. The subject
must be able to relax so that he will be able to
unleash h is psychic abilities. It is a ma tter of control.
The application of Mr. Tyrell's principles led
researchers to give up the monotonous Zener cards
in favor of more provocative cards - usually
drawings of some object or scene. This keeps the
subject more inteTested and is especially useful in
long series of tests where. if the subject becomes
bored. he may score even lower tfum chance
guessing.
Although use of these cards is a departure from
traditional scientific com:epts of objectivity, it is
necessary in order to begin to overcome scientific
closemindedness to a force which we may soon
accept as readily as we do radio waves.

Nexl week
A p"smwl experience with
subJective I:SP testing. Stay tuned.

Maximus Super

New beer has extra strength
"One can and you'll feel it."
" Two cans and you're on your
way ."
"Three cans and you'd better
be sitting down "
By now , you should be
wondering what the hell J!&gt; in
those cans. The answer 1s a
newly -developed elix1r called
Max1mus Super. It 's a beer
but
no ordinary beer. Maximus Super
ha s approximately tw1ce the
alcoholic content of regular beer.
In other words, when you drink
three cans, your head feels like
you've had a six pack .
The F.X . Matt Brewing
Company has been "working on
thi s product for years." to
develop a double·strength beer
with "the right taste,'' according
to Marv Gellman, who handles the
company's rela tions with the
college market. Mr. Gellman, who
has been travelling across New
York Sta te visiting college
campuses and turning st udents on
to Maxamus Super, thinks the
beer's best attributes are a rich

and smooth taste and an eight per
cent alcoholic con ten 1 (regular
beer is about four per cent). Last
week Mr. Gellman visated The
Spec/rum office to display has
wares. Here were some of the
reactions.
" Hey! This stuff am't bad "
"I'm gonna go play tcnnas nl'W
- I'm gun na lose ·•
"Awright! Who ~pa ked the
beer?'?"
"Burp'"

Beer revival
M aximus Super CtlSt~ S . I 0
more a can ($ .35 compared to
$.25) than regular beer . Mr .
Gellman reports that "the college
market is going wild over at .. and
"it reminds people of grass. It's a
different type of high ." He also
predrcts that a beer revival will be
sweeping the nation . He cates the
reactions of colleges across the
state:
" Twice the lud. fur $.10 more
a can" -Colgate News
"Super Beer hits Utaca" Urica

Tangerine
"Three cans will knock you o n
your ass" - Syracuse New-Times
F .X. Matt II . vice president of
the Matt Brewing Company. feels
that this beer' is being introduced
1o
meet a modern need .
According to Mr . Matt , modern
man works in an air-conditioned
office and doesn't do as much
phys1cal labor as in former years.
Therefore. he doesn't need as
much liquid .as he once required
("Less traps to the toilet." notes
Mr. Gellman).
"The most common complaint
we hear from beer drinkers is that
11 fills them up too quickly,"
explained Mr . Matt. "Many people
lake beer and its pleasant effects
(right on) but don't want to
consume large quantities of
liquid ." Hence, the creation of
Ma xamus Super . The
double·strength brew should be
available across the Buffalo area.
It you're in to ogetting off, you
might try a can and see if it feels
like two.

Friday, December 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�IEvaluate AGORA

EdiToRiAl

I

Attempts tO reduce traffic congeStion in Norton Hall ·are
long overdue. Originally built for a univer1ity population far
smaller than the current mass of humanity that inhabits our
campus, the Union ' has simply become a replica of Times
Square at certain peak operating times. Thus, any plan to
alleviate the crush should be given speedy consideration and
a critical evaluation by the Norton Hall House Council.
Unfortunately, this has not been the case. The AGORA
proposal to utilize the center lounge was toyed with for three
months by the House Council. Then in a sudden move, they
adopted the plan without any modification or evaluation.
This is nothing more than a travesty of the notion of
responsibility.
AGORA has good points. By moving organizatio!l tables
Into the center tounge, human traffic will have a chance to
flow more freely. AGORA, however, has some quite odious
restrictions. The requirement that a student can only sell
goods that he has designed and manufactured himself is
asinine. Handicrafts may be admirable but need not be the
"
.
only goods sold.
The House Council has a chance to redeem itself by
initiating further study of AGORA. As a start, they might
poll the inhabitants of the Union for their reactions, instead
of continuing to make decisions in a vacuum. The Union
means a great deal to this University and the feast we can
expect of the House Council is that they will endeavor to
make it a better place.

Education-the hard way
The grievance of Professors Jurgen Heye, Maria Roldan,
John Deredita and Marvin D'Lugo against the Department of
Spanish, Italian and Portuguese is both educational and
Interesting. Educational because it is a glaring example of
what sort of factors occasionally influence tenure decisions.
Yes, Virginia, "professional standing" sometimes means
friendship. \nteresting because seldom, if ever, has a
grievance been so ful\y documented .
In addition to what may be termed unprofessional
conduct by certain key figures in the tenure procedure,
another issue, that of student involvement in tenure decision
stands out. The student body of the Spanish, Italian and
Portuguese Department by a 36-1 vote repudiated all
actions taken by student representatives in this matter on
their behalf. This is a question that has significance far
beyond one isolated case.
For the last several years, many in this University, most
notably members of the Faculty Senate and the
administration, have fallen into the trap of considering
elected stude nt representatives to be absolutely
representative of student wishes. In a perfect and
well-functioning democracy they might be, but they are
certainly not on this campus.
While this is admittedly only a small part In this
grievance, it only serves to further darken an
uncomplimentary blot on the notion of "professional
decision-making."

THE SpECTI\UM
Friday, December 3, 1971

Vol. 22, No. 38

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-M.nllging Editor - AI Benson
Co-Minllging Editof' - Mike Lippm8fln
Aat. MIINIIing Editor - Susan Moss
Buti- MM..-r - Jim Oruckflf
Advertising Mlln~~g~~r - Sue Mell~tine
Campus ......... Jo-Ann Armao
..... , ..........Howie Kurtz
• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bill VtK:Utro

City . ........... Hervy Lipman
Copy ........... Ronni Forman
................ Merty Gatti
"-t......... Claire Kriegsman
Fe.ture .................v8C8nt
Orephic Arts ... . ..... Tom Toles

LayCM.tt ....... Maryhope Runyon
Atlt. ' .. ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' . ' .118C80t
Lit. Ill Drama .. Michael Silvemlatt
Muaic ...•.........Billy Altman
Off~ampus ...... Lynne Traeger
Photo .......... Marc Ack•men
.. ... ..... Mickey Ostf!freiehflf
SportS ,., ....• • ....• Berry Rubin
Atlt . ..... . ...... Howie Faiwl

.,.,. S,.CtnJm is served by United Press lnt•n.tional. College Press
Service. the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los angeles Times Syndicate and
Liberation News Service.

Rtlp\blicatlon of nvttflf h81"8in wittwlut the express consent of the
Editor-in-Ch'-1 Is forbidden.
,1=ditorial policy il determinedt&gt;y the Editor-in~hief.

Page eight . The Spectrum. Friday, December 3, 1971

MV 6ll&amp;';

A~

BUIJPRX.CW,Rri« f
\

A number of people for whom I have some muttering that J just Uke physical contact because il
respect communicated the information that the last is realer to me, and when people do things such as
few columns had in some way reached them. Which touch my arm, or hug me (on special oCcasion), It is
leads me to believe that hurt and pain are much impossible for me not to recognize that they know I
more universal than I , at least, had realized. It is also am there - a situation I can usually defense with
hard to separate the time of year from this in my considerable ease.
head .
And accepting - o r whatever else is the opposite
AU the social activity · of rejecting. With which you can do anything your
occurring over the ..HoUdy crooked little head desires. To me it means, 1 think,
Season" can be seen as an that when I foul up it is going to be acceptable, that
expression of joyous spirits, or I don't have to be perfect to be likeable . Which must
it can be seen a.s a time of really be in there on some levels if, J go around
reaching out to other people fouling up in stupid little ways to test it as much as I
in almost desperate ways. For do. Me, likeable? Say that one more time before I hil
me a whole family thing you and run .
All of which ramblings are to try and get your
underlies this season. It is
something, to be shared with head to run along the lines of how families should
as many good people as possible. Thanksgiving · be, and how you would like to feel. I know very few
should be served to no Jess than twenty bright, people who have had excellen t families; who would
warm, loving people all of whom assisted in not, if they had the power, be able to contemplate
preparing everything. Christmas shouJd be a bustle of changes which could possibly improve the family
comin~ and going5 and hearings from and sharings they remember. Everybody wants to be car~ for.
and givings to lots and lots of good people. And New Try that as a basic postulate. But clearly they also
Years Eve should clearly be spent in a large house in want to be cared for as themselves, as they are now.
the country sitting around many large fireplaces with Which, for most of us, is a pretty mixed bag of
a wide variety of spirit lifters and high caliber likeable and unlikeable traits.
company.
Somehow likeabWty is something you learn , my
It seems clear that I am a people freak, and that head says. ..You have to be properly taught ."
this assumes a familial posture in my head when I Almost everything. And it starts back down there
start trying to figure out how to actualize wanting all somewhere in the family , where most things do, for
sorts of good people around . There is in most of us, like o r dislike. And here we come back around to a
either inate or learned - to satisfy either school of season of the year when we are aU supposed to be
thought on where such feelings might come from - a warm and safe in the family nest, only to find that
perception of what family life should be like. Which said nest does not fit as well as it might. It is
may or may not get confused with the question of cramped and conflning, and lonely as heU.
how people in general should treat each other.
So you get guil!Y as heU, of course. " Blood is
Note now that this perception of mine says thicker than water." How can you possibly not Like
nothing about reality. This is not an idea of how some of the members of your own family , or lik~
families should, in fart , operate on a sensible and them less than other peopJe? Obviously you can't do
real level on a day-to-day basis. "Should" here refers either of those things, since they are "bad." So you
to what, someplace in your head, you wanted your forget them and go home and have a Merry
family to be like when you were a kid . Or, more Christmas and a Happy New Year, and you ignore
exactly what a family "should" be like concerns the itch in the back of your head someplace which
itself directly with the way you now feel that you wants to be other places with other people.
should have felt as a kid , and what a family needs to
If you can't go home, or won't go home, you of
be like to make you feel that way .
course are liable to certain heavy costs in guilt and
Can' t talk about that for anyone but me, loneliness. Probably no one can be as warm and
obviously, and still ltave it be real, and it is not that accepting as you need them to be, since you have
clear in my own head . But there are pieces. Large , been banking all the need for that kind of thing
warm and accepting are things which come readily to neatly out of sight. Falling over it is, of course, no
mind. Don' t know how deep you wish to get into help, since you still have to not see it or recognize
my personal neurosis so let us just run this on just how much you need to be loved . Which just
relatively cerebral levels. Large, evident early on in plain has to be scarey as heU, and since there ain't no
this column, probably comes from feeling incredibly way you are going to find aU that , it is safe(!?) not
lonely as a kid , and needing to have all sorts of folks to even look. Which leads to safe, dependable,
around to know that somebody will still be there.
neurotic loneliness. And I'll be dammed if I can tell
Warm has physical connotation for me. Not a you how to break the cycle. Except fwd somebody
great deal of it is necessary; personally being too who c.an care and ask them to teach you. Good luok.
repressed to run around hugging everyone
All characters in the foregoing are strictly
constantly, it seems to me that too much is as fictitious, and any resemble to any individuals, living
meaningless as too little. A nagging little voice is or dead, is strictly coincidental. Pax.

The

grump

�-Cll'-11111111.
by Pat Mlloney

Undergraduate Studies Curriculum Committee which
approval for llll underaraduate co ursa. Five
or the votin&amp; members on the committee are
students.
2) Tenure . This presents a tricky situation.
Undergraduates may have an unofficially voice in
decid.ing tenure, but little else. S~veral problems arise
here. Evaluative techniques are largely unknown.
Faculty attitudes towuds student participation on
tenure decision can create barriers. And the tenure
system itself, which places a faculty member into
what one professor has termed a "crisis situation,"
needs some major overhaullna. The most aJarin&amp;
example oC this is the case of J.P. Jones, assistant
professor of Political Science. Mr. Jones has
widespread 1tud~nt support, but that can't get him
tenure.
3) Department size. The amount of students in a
department makes no difference in what the
students know, or can do. Fifty Spanish majors are
no closer to the problems of their department than
400 senior Enalish students are. The faculty must
often "decide" to live students rights in
depart mental &amp;overnance.
Department action is frequently influenced by
its discipline. The undergraduate EnaJish Caucus, in a
recent list of proposals, called for a literary
magazine, a bulletin boasd and curriculum revision.
Every major has its own particular needs.
The main problem facin&amp; English m.;ors is
pre-registration . In this instance, the issue counters
everything the department is supposed to stand for.
The real a bsurdity is that some English
undergraduates have fmaUy started meeting "to
make things better than they arc," and found that
fellow students didn't know what was going on in
the first place.
That seems to be an overall problem . Tbe first
step in getting people involved is getting information
to them . Departments aren't student governments they are smaller and more idiosyncratic. They
require a good deal of effort, with limited specific
political gains But , at lust , departments don't
traffic in Poverty Hills.
~d.les

! l.t/&lt;lr lT.

'Biased account'
To tht Editor:
I was really pleased to see The Spec:trum run a
special issue on the migrants. However, 1 was
annoyed to see that Howie Kurtz.'s article on their
poverty contained a statement with no conceivable
antecedent - "In sharp contrast to these shacks
stood tidy suburban homes, right out of Hewlett,
long Island, less than a half mile away. These, of
course, were the owner's homes."
A half mile away from the migrant camps in
!'Jorth CoUins, near Buffalo? Hewlett, long Island, is
quite a long distance from here. As I live in the area
I wonder - in what half·naUe radius are there any
migrant workers?? I know there are camps on Long
Island very near to Hewlett, but not that near. And
of course, the people in Hewlett own these camps? I
didn't know that.
I went to Hewlett High and we raised food and
clothing for the migants. Even this, we knew, didn't
solve their problertls. But I didn't know my fellow
students' parents were the bosses!
Can you support these poorly drawn and
confused statements, Howie? 1 hope so, but I fear
you have pven a too strongly biased account .
Kim Stanton

Ed11o r'1 note: Mr. Kurtz wa.r simply describing the
houstts by saying that they were of the type f ound in
Hewltll, not making a 110/ue ;udgement un Hewlett
itself

Explanation needed

Campua reporters have previously offered their
opinions on the actions of the underlflduate student
govern menta. The activities of Sub·Baord I have also
been aubject to close scrutiny. The people.who write
about these aroups have uaually been involved 'with
something that is known as Uruverslty·wlde
governance. If you've never heard of this, don't
worry. lt doesn't exist on this campus, and y&lt;'.u
probably won't find it anywhere else either. People
(students, faculty and even some administrators)
have been trying to put this policy into effect for
years, and they always run up against one mlijor
truism: it doesn't work.
tr you haven't heard about University-wide
governance and you stiU don't care, allow me to
suggest something: thert• ar~ other ways to run a
Univertity. There aren't many. but some options
(none of which are as wide-ransing as tbe
student/faculty/administration government idea) do
exist. If you have a vague idea or what you're doing
here academically, you might try getting involved in
departmental politics.
Case in point : the BnsJ,ish Department. Take a
well-ctocked (874 majors), tough (3 .0 requirements,
etc.), and " open" (students allowed nominal parity
in most departmental matters) department. De~lop
a large issue
in this situation, pre-repstration.
Forget to give the students adequate information.
This recipe does not miK well.
·
This is the main problem facing English mlijors
these days. The English Department has long been , if
not overly inviting, at least receptive to student
wishes. Unfortunately, undergrads have some rights
they don't even know about. This applies in other
departments as well, where students often have an ad
hoc positio n.
Using the English Department as a springboard ,
some generalizations 'bout the whole mess of
departmental governance can be mude :
1) Curm·ulum . Departments have curriculum
committees, as do the Faculties which govern the
departments. Overall , there is 11 Division of

Women overlooked
Tu

til~

Editor.
Recently UB had the good fortune to be
entertained in the same week by both the Chicago
Women's Liberation Rock Band and the It's All
Right To Be A Woman Theater. Neither event
received any notice in Tht&gt; Spectrum .
It's not uncommon to see in The Spl!ctrum
rev1ews of rock concerts held in Rochester, B1tavia ,
Fredonia, and, of course , 10 vanous locations in
Buffalo. t find it odd that the Chicago Women's
liberation Rock Band, who performed in the
Fillmore Room , and who had the whole crowd
dancing and enjoying tbemselves by the end of the
evening, were virtually ignored by Tht' Spn:trum

Equally puzzling lS the fact that the It's AU
Right To Be A Woman Theater received the same
treatment. The It's All Right ... Theater played to a
packed FilJmore Room, and put on one or the most
exciting performances I've ever seen . Both the band
and the theater groups are good examples of creative
women succeeding i fields traditionally dominated
by men.
I notice that lately Th~ Sp~c rrum has been usina
the designation "Ms," ln order to do their bit for
Women's Liberation. Such a device becomes merely
an affectation when unaccompanied by a real
willingness to deal-with what women are doing.
M. Hunt

To tht Editor:
I'm confused . Recently I went to the Browsing
library to read some of the magnines that my
budget won't allow me to buy anymore. After
running up four flights of stairs I was confronted
with this, "Due to a hopefully temporary budgetary
situation, the Browsing Library and Music Room will
be open from 10 a .m. to 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday only."
Surprised, I said : " What the hell?" A couple
passed by and I heard the sirl say, "Bill, he JUSt said ,
'What the hell?' to himself." The guy, who must
have been Bill, said, "So?"
I pondered the sign for a while. The part about
"budgetary situation" (obviously a shortage) puzzled
me. Since this incident occurred after the defeat of
Poverty Hill, I was doubly confused. I must admit to
a considerable degree of ignorance in the field or
economics, but I had always thought that if you
don't spend money on one thing, you have that
much more to spend on something ·else. Sub Board
saved something tike S63,000 a year by not
purchasing Poverty HiU . I would normally have
assumed that this money could be used on other
student services. Instead I find that rather than have
extra money, they have less, so much less that the
relatively inexpensive Browsing Library and Music
Room programs have to be cut back .
There's enough about a large university like this
that makes it hard for a poor, naive freshman to
adjust without having to contend with this Catch-22
system of running student services. Won't someone
p1ease explain these thin11 to me?
Clem Colucci

'Undercurrent' go away
To t11e Edtwr:
Upon reading th' latest lSSUe or Undunurt•nt
on Friday , Nov. I 2, 1971 , tt became exceechngly
apparent to me that the editors of this paper must be
super-fuck heads. Th.is is not a h1ghly unusual
reaction as 1 get this every time 1 read an issue or
Undercurrent {or similarly something written by
William ~ . Buckley). The SDS'er distributing his
leaflets Friday afternoon put the icing on the cake.
What cake, you ask? I don't know. At any rate, I felt
reaUy compelled to write this letter, hoping that you
as the campus newspaper, might find it wo rthy o f
printing in Th e Spectrum sometime in the near
future .
We who attend this University (or many or us
anyway) have expressed the Idea that it would be
nice if we could have peace instead of war, and also a
little love instead of hatred . The editors of the said
newspaper make it quite obvious that they don 't
agree with this idea. Hate comes barking off the page
at you like some kind of rabid dog. 1 am also qu1te
certain that with a f~w typographical chances, the
difference between Undercurrent and Buckley's
publication would be bard to denote.
It does not really take close observation to draw
conelation between the SDS'ers and the Birch

Society either. The Birchers, et al, seem to think
everything under the sun is a communist plot , while
their rivals attribute all the world 's problems to
imperialism, racism, or sexism . Thus, I propose that
we rid the world of these 4 to 5 j.sms and •poof!? •
we live happily ever after. How simple it aU is. It is
also of importance to remember that by killing,
hating {everyone who disagrees with your views),
and blowing up buildings, World Peace will be
achieved .
All this scrawling has brou&amp;ht my compulsion to
write to an end, but before 1 close, I have a
suggestion which may be of interest to Birchers,
SDS'ers, Undercurrent editors and anyone who hates
another human being without getting to know that
person {be he a cop or a long hair, whatever);
colle c tively purchase an island (preferably
god-forsaken) and work together toward your goal
of slitting each other's throats. The rest of us,
bumble though we are without your enlightening
auidanee, may be able to solve some or the world's
problems rationally (without interference from
hypocrites). Pax .
G. Hannon
D. Casciano
C. DeVole
S. Hubbard
P. Hess

Friday, December 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Red Cross provides
blood for hospitals
by Norman Wahl
Sp«trom Staff Wriur

It has now been over 300 years
si n ce Lo uis XIV's physician
transfused nine o unces of sheep's
blood into a 15-year-old boy. The
operation was unsuccessful :
humans can't use the blood of
However, the fact that humans
can use human blood caused
University o f Buffalo students to
donate through the Red Cross
recently in the Clement Hall
Lounge. Although the Red Cross
Bloodmobile squad is equipped to
accept about 150 donors in one
day , the staff deemed the turnout
"satisfactory" in light of a mixup
which caused them to move
o perations from the Fillmore
Room to Clement. Another 15
students applied for d onation, but
were rejected for medical reasons.

n

'

or drugs, or for recurrent medical
problems wtUch may preclude any
deliberate loss of blood, such as
epilepsy or heart trouble. The
donor must be between 18 and 65
years of age, and, to the dismay o f
at least one petite student , must
weigh over I I 0 pounds. A few
odd reasons such as travel in a
malarial country or the reception
of a tauoo within six months also
rule out donations. The worker
who asks the donor about the
massive collec~ion of diseases and
si tuations rather resembles a
Howard Johnson waitress reciting
the 29 flavors of ice cream .
Although the entire procedure
may take an hour, the donation
itself lasts less than ten minutes.
The donor lies on h is back on a
cot while a nurse sets up and
supervises the flow of blood from
a vein In the crook of the elbow
into a plastic sac. Among the
info rmation printed on the sac is
t h e hum o r ously Draculan
warning: "Caution - Federal law
prohibit s di spensing without
prescription."

Simple examinations precede
the actual d onation . The
volunteer moves to various tables
where he registers and answers
questions about his medical
history. His temperature, pulse
The average adult has over 12
and blood pressure are taken, and pints of blood in his system, and
he is given fruit juice to increase the one pint that is taken In a
his tluid conten t.
blood donation is no t sufficient to
cause any noticeable change in the
way he feels . His body replaces
Restrictions
the loss in from 24 to 48 hours
A prospective donor may be (his body normally replaces
rejected for certain current o r l/ 20th o f his blood supply each
recent diseases, In which the day anyway). A person may
b\ood may be infected with germs donate every two months, but no

Four tim• a v•r the Red Croa Bloodmobile visits
the State Univwsity of Bufbto c:ampus. Seventy-two
students donated their blood in Clement Hllll
Lounge recently. The next Bloodmobile will arrive
on awnpua in Ntty 'Print-

Giving blood
more than five times a year. Many
donors have given 15 gallons.

anemia, serum albumin for shock,
cryoprecipitate fo r hemophiUa,
gamma globulin for hepatitis ant'S
others.
Blood not 'sold'
Although Red Cross must
The blood is then refrigerated charge hospitals a minimal fee to
and shipped. It may be used for cover part of the expense of blood
open-heart surgery within 24 co llection, processing and
hours, or it may be used for ~ distribution (the United Fund
whole -blood transfusion for covers much of it), the blood
another type o f patient within 2 1 itself Is not ..sold." The expense
days. After this period of time, of collection is greatly reduced by
blood that has not been used is the fact that, with the exception
fra c tioned into its useful o f the registered nurses who
components; these include packed perform the medical procedure,
red blood cells for surgery or the workers are unpaid volunteers.

The Greater Buffalo Regional
Chapter of the American Red
Cross provides area hospitals with
over 42,000 units of whole blood
(or 85% of the total used) per
year, besides thousands of blood
fractions. A 24-hour emergency
center is maintained at the center
on Delaware Ave. Info rmation can
also be procured by calling the
Center.
The Bloodmobile visits the UB
campus four times a year; the
next visit is scheduled for early
spring. Although sheep are not
needed, any human may apply.

Get Even with

Your Parents.
Re member the New Christy Minstrels Album , the Bible , t he
razor , the Collected Works of Billy Graham that you parents
lovingly placed under the Christmas tree for you last year?
Well now you can strike back!
Give your parents

~·•

THE SpECTI\UM

..............~•••csaa:•~.-............

: SPECTRUM
RM - 355 Mort• Hall
SUNYAI
IUFfALO, N.Y. 14214

I•

Specia ~

CHRISTMAS RATE $4.00
(Reg. $4.50)

i
••

Please

se:=~···· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ··· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
ADDRESS ........................................................ .
CITY .................................STATE ............ZIP .......: ....... .

Page ten . The Spectrum . Friday, December 3, 1971

•

�•

.;

tSacco and Vanzetti'

...

Believe-ability is key ··
to courtroom drama
•

I

by Jay Boyar
Spectrum Staff Writer

It's gone but not forgotten by

a long shot. Every once in a while
a movie is produced which
warrants review even if problems
do not allow IJ to be considered
while it is still showing at the local
theaters. Such a movie is Sacco
and Van,zetti which recently
completed a successful run at the
Boulevard Cinema Theater. seem
so at first. It is stark but
unassuming and unpretentious.
The seem so at first. It is stark but
unassuming .and unpretentious.
The producers, Colombo and
Pappi, had a yarn with a message
but they didn't want to hit
anybody over the head with their
film's weight. And they did not.
UniversaUty
The story is simple and all too
common. Perhaps "common" is a
poor word since it could give the
impression that the movie was
mundane. "Universal" is a better
adjective to describe the story.

Movies like this one seem to
have faiJure built into them. Much
of the action, for instance, takes
place within a c6urtroom. If
handled improperly, this could
seem quite static. Courtroom
dramas are all right for Judd for
the Defense or Perry Masonbut
for the larger-than-life
photography of motion pictures,
one comes to expect more action
and variety than a group of
lawyers and witnesses prancing
from cue to cue in a court of law.
Jndeed, it is during these scenes
that the film seems to drag but
the ·acting and the writing, along
with some very interesting though
not gaudy photography , helps
keep the pace very much alive.
You ca n believe what is
happening. And that is the key to
this film. Believe-ability! Tense,
sad, depre ssing , disturbing
believeability .

If one attends a movie
primarily to see a host of stellar
names, this film is bound to be a
(iissappointment. The cast is very
good, but also rather obscure.
Gian Maria Volonte stars as Sacco,
and Riccardo Cucciolla is
Vanz.etti, or perhaps it is the other
way around- this is never really

You see, there once were two
self-professed anarchists, Sacco
and Vanzetti who never hurl
anybody . Because of certain
dubious circumstances. they were
~
,~~~ ..a.c~JJ~. ~.r~\&gt;.bcm' ~ ...ma9.e~~~ ..c~ ~1 ~ . .
ml,lrder.
Neither of the characters
When it became clear that they speaks English very well, but this
~d not, in fact, done· anything only serves to endear them to the
... .
.
Wrt&gt;ng, they were subjected to one audience as they sometimes
of the most annoying "frame up''
jobs by individuals of the United
"JI NGLE BELLS, JINGLE lEU$''
States government since, well ,
"OH WHAT FUN IT IS TO"
s1nce J don't know when .
CHRISTMAS SHOP

Minstrel of the Dawn

SAT.,
DEC. 11th,
8:30p.m.

If it sounds rather incredible to
you that such a thing could
happen in America, and if you
feel that the cast and crew should
be locked up for the spreading of
anti-American ideas, let me assure
you that the movie is based on a
true and well-publicized incident.

PEACE
BRIDGIE
EXHIBITION
CENTE.R

Gordon lightfoot, one of the most gifted
songwriters of the folk genre, will appear at
Kleinhans Music Hall Saturday night at 8 :30.
Lightfoot's last two album releases have sold over a
million copies, and his songs have been recorded by
almost every notable folk star.

ZIG ZAG PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS . . .

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On the practice and phisiologica l effects of

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Transcendental Meditation
GUEST SPEAKER

...

Mr. Luigi Bianchi
Friday December 3
Room 239 Hayes
8 :00p.m.
University of Buffalo

t

Friday, December 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

-

�J

'/ ~

··'

...

_...;

C-ourtroom drama .. .
mispronounce a word in an
understandable way. Sacco, for
instance, at one point says, "l'm a
love this country", and we all feel
that he really d oes. Also, since
they speak , slowly and
infrequently, it makes what they
say seem that much more
noteworthy.
Paradox
An important conflict which
the movie brings to the surface is
one that is quite often overlooked
in movies of this nature. "The
people,'' says Vanzetti, "without
them we would die just two
worn·out workers."
On the one hand, had they
been two ordinary anarchists (is
there such a thing?) and had their
trial been conducted with the
relative quiet and lack of publicity
which accompanies most murder
trials, they could have been
pardoned by the state without it

seeming as if the government were
en,dorsing the ' anarchist
philosophy.
On the other hand , if they'
were not well known, they
probably would not have even
received consideration to be
pardoned. They weremen who
were treate~ as symbols, and it
seems that even they could not
decide which way they actually
wanted to be considered.
' Their ch ief ally in their
unsuccessful fight for life against
the injustice of the legal system is
defense attorney Moore, played
by Milo O'Shea. Moore is played
with great life and the almost

prerequisite corniness typical to
my idea of a drama'tic lawyer. J
cannot refrain from mentioning
his tremendous eyebrows which
add in the characterization .
Another friend is an important
and influential American known
only as Mr . Thompson.

••

IF SOMEONE SHOT
~----YOUR BEST FRIEND
...Would you take
him out to dinner?
W'HAT WERE YOU
PAYING BEFORE
WE OPENED?
... still going there?

RECORD FOR RECORD WE WILL BEAT ANY PRICE
WITHIN SO FEET OF OUR STORE
$2.99 THERE - $2.87 H.ERE
S3.49 THERE - $3.39 HERE

WHAT

DO

-continued l rom page et.ven--

Y0 U

'WANT?

Bespectacled and silvermaned,
Thompson is the archetypical
hero-ln -spite.-of-himself who
agrees to aid Sacco and Vanzetti
after being convinced of their
innocence and, Inciden tly, after
being injured by the police at a
demonstration.
Katzman, the prosecu tor and a
fat judge whom one could easily
imagine genuflecting before an
American flag, are the ..bad guys"
and their parts are played without
burlesque. Music was sung and
partially written by Joan Baez
who must have believed in the
movie to do such a melodically
pleasing and inspired job.
Although the film is set in the
U.S.A. circa 1927, it has a
c urrentness which cannot be
overlooked. It is not colorful, is
not flash y. But it is moving and
Important. And that's a lot to say
of a fllm about a "Mutt and Jefr'
pair of anarchists.

~iU1"ERHDOD
~\.a,.~ i NG- ._
FOR TtiD~E'
Ot.t...~5\0WS

WI\E It '101J l"UST

K_m

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C.D"Dia 1 KIUTS.a8!a..TS1m,

·r1-----om I
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- -.

33~'A BfllLtY

·~·
I (I,
I

I·.,1~

I.I

I

I

I

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I
I
I

due to the Christm•
rush the Allentown Ace
will be chairborne. He's
putting wild blu ..yonder
diamonds in handcrafted
settings that really take off!
Knock the chocks and heed
for Erik's.

I
I
I

I

.....

I

;)

'~~

Eril{
_JEWELER S

81 allen st., buffalo, n.y.

Page twelve. The Spectrum. Friday, December 3, 1971

I
I

�Folk music

A religious experience
by Norm Wahl
Spectrum Staff WWttr

That beneath the greatest love is a
hurricane of hate."

The connection between folk
Folk music has not been music and religious experience is
without its share of overtly much more inclusive, however,
religious son~. Perfonners such as I han just folk hymns like "Hymn••
Joan Baez, Paul Simon and Paul and songs with rellgjuos imagery
Stookey have expressed their like "Suzanne " and
religious belief in their art. "Crucifixion." Not only is it
Stookey's "Hymn," for instance, possible for a song to be literally a
is a moving revelation of the religious experience, but it is
simple , unmovable faith he possible for a secular song to be
possesses:
like a religious experience to such
an extent that we may actually
''I visited your house again on call it one (using the word
Christrrw or Thllnksgivingf And a "religious" figuratively).
balded man said you weTe deod
One way this can happen is
but the house would go on living/ through the lyricist's use of
He recited poetry and as he saw mysticism . With Web ster 's
me stand to leave/ He shook his definition, that Implies that the
hNd and said I'd neve!' find writer and listener '"undergo
you . . . All I could say was I mystical experiences by which
believe in y ou. "
th e y intuitively comprehend
truth s bey o nd human
However , there are more understanding."
religious elements in folk music
than simply the folk hymn. Absorb, not conquer
Religious imagery is o ften present
in songs which aren' t necessarily
A fin e example of a mystic
purely religious. Leonard Cohen's song is Dylan's " All Along the
"Suzanne," for example, despite Watchtower." Although it seems
its near omnipresence at Catholic to take the form of a simple
folk masses, is of dubious intent. a liegory • the images are too
The entire second verse out of the numerous in this brief song to
three is, at least superfluously, reveal their meanings clearly. The
about Jesus, and the Suzanne of three short verses introduce a
verses one and three has the j o k e r ' a th ief, businessmen ,
defi nit e aspect of being a pl o wmen , pran ces, wo me n,
Madonna figure (she is called "our servants, a wildcat, two riders, an •
lade of the harbor" and has a " 1," a "you'' and an " us." Equally
tightly packed are the ideas,
·•perfect body").
wh ic h in cl ud e d esperation ,
Nevertheless, there ts enough frustration, ignorance, isolation,
contrasting imagery to cast doubt Oi ppancy , falseness and a host of
t)O the song's ultimate meaning:
others. often ambiguous.
"you can stay the night beside"
The fat;l that so much is
Sutanne, and she's "half·crazy .''
in 1 ro du ce d wi th so lit tie
In the end, the lyric is ambiguous
elaboration makes it impossible to
enough that we can never be sure
decipher the tale as if it were a
i I Cohen is inserting secular
medieval allegory. Rather. all the
amagery into a religious song or
listener can do is to absorb the
religious imagery into a secular
co nt e n t e moti o nall y and
SO{lg. Or, perhaps, Cohen is
intuitively, and abandon hope of
talking about religaon and a
conquering it intellectually. Using
secular situation at the same time.
his heart instead o f his head . the
hstener feels (not understands)
Inclusive connection
Dylan's interpretation of reality.
like Cohen's "~ist e rs o f
From Dylan's point of view,
Mercy" and "Priests," or Bob too, the ex perience is mystical. If
Dylan 's " I Dreamed I Saw St. we assu me that Dylan has
Augustine" are equally unyielding " com prehended truths beyond
to definitive interpretation.
human understanding," then both
tnll lal realization and his
his
On the other hand , sometimes
expression
of it in song are
a writer is kind enough to tell the
public what one of his songs intuitive and mystical. If, on the
means. This is the case with Phil other hand , we consider Lhe
Ochs' "Crucifixion." Here the obvious possibility that Dylan
l yr 1c de f init ely ha s t wo sec re tl y t hinks his lyric is
intentional levels: one religious, meaningless, then he may be
one secular. The subjects are the deceiving himself. For although
crucifixion of Christ, and the his lyrfc is not his conscious
assas sination o f Pres id ent mind's ptrception of realit y at
Kennedy. Both are " chosen for a that moment , it is still his
challenge that's hopelessly hard," subconscious mind's perception of
and for ea ch , "a blinding reality, and thus is equally
revelation is served upon his plate/ meaningful. A man who sits down

Basketball Bulls lose
opener to Syracuse

by Barry Rubin
stars Grer Kohls and DenniJ
to write "off the top of his head"
Sportl b'ditCH
DuVal that broke the pme wide
is really writing off the bottom of
open. Kohls, a senior who last
his head. Anyway, no matter
Syracuse, N.Y.-"We were year broke Dave Dina's Syracuse
what's happening inside Mr. lousy - it's just Uke that junior scorina record, Jed aJI
Zimmerman's celebrated brain, sometimes," exclaimed an scorers with 30 points ( 11-26)
the fact remains that the listener, exasperated Curt Blackmore. alona with six assists. DuVal, a
Blackmore, the Bulls' 6.{) star sophomore (rom Westbury. N.Y.
when he listens properly, has a postman had just scored 26 points added 18 points (9-17) and seven
mystical (and, figuratively , at Syracuse but the Oranae assists. The Oranae dynamic duo
triumphed I 04--80. Blackmore's ripped apart the Bulls' 1-2-2 zone
religious) experience.
explanation was similarly echoed defense with reckless abandon.
by the m~ority of his teammates The 1·2-2 zone iJ desipled to give
External source
as the Bulls committed en adequate coverage in tbe corners,
Tim Hardin, although his songs extraordinary 38 turnovers before but still Kohls and DuVal
are quite straightforward the Orange partisans at the managed to make their shots.
(including such gems as "Misty Manley Field House.
After a close first half in wruc.h
Buffelo's second year coach Ed
Roses" and "Reason to Believe" ),
the Bulls trallcd 49-3 S, a new
Muto
was
extremely
disappointed
has his own type of religious
in the showing of his Bulls, who strategy was formed for the BuJis
experience in songwriting. He were given a good chance of 10 attempt to aet the ball inside to
believes that the source of his upsetting the undersized Orange. Blackmore, who couJd muster
songs I ~ not internal, but , Coach Muto had expected the only siJt shots and six points in
the half. Blackmore commented :
somehow , external . He has no Orange to press the Bulls to "Tbey tried to aet the ball more
compensate
for
the
Jack
of
Orange
name for his source ; he doesn't
height, but the Bulls were still inside. in the second balf. But, I
attempt to give it one. " I can' t u n prepared . Co ac h M ut o didn't have my foul shootina
attribute songwriting to myself," explained : " We panicked. We touch. Four out of fifteen , oh my
Hardin said when he visited knew aJI about it before and we god- eleven misses."
In the freshman preliminary.
Buffalo last year. " I only know just lost our poise. Besides, we
that when I pick up a pencil to didn't capitalize on our fast break the Baby Bulls took it on the chin
attempts and we did a poor job on 94-53 from the strong Syracuse
write a song, something great is the defensive boards." Despite frosh. For Buffalo, Chuck Axe, a
going to come. I just have a their height advantage the Bulls 6-5 center from Sharon , Pa. had
handle on something.'' Whether were outrebounded 454 2 with 18 points and I 5 rebounds, while
that source is his subconsdous Blackmore leading all rebounders Bob Dickinson from Plainview,
N.Y. added I S points. Tonight . at
mind . some kind of supernat ural with 13.
the University of Pittsburgh field
force, a little man screaming in h1s Zone Ripped
house the Bulls face the Point
ear, it Is still true that songwrit ing
Let's not 11ive a ll the credit for Park Pioneers. Last year the BuJJs
is, in some sense of the word, a the Syrucuse victory to the Bulls' romped 86~9 at Clark Gym as
lack-luster performance since it Blackmore scored 24 points and
religious experience for Hardin.
Jerry Raven, owner of and was the nne shooting of Sfra cuse 20 rebounds.
folksinger at downtown Buffalo's
Limelight Gallery coffeehouse,
explains lhe correlation in simpler
terms: ..Music itself is a high In
itself; religious experience is a
Finals are jusr around the corner. Avoid the
high in itself. Ergo ... " The
rush later. Xerox the notes you've missed - N 0 W
li stener feels a visceral, gut
reaction. " It's the deep down
See Gustav in room 355 Norton Hall.
animal part of us that reacts most
strongly to music. Every
··· - - --1•7"'" '"-rite uses musk , beca use the
9 :30 - 4:30 Mon. - Fri.
people that designed the rite
realized that it has this effect on
people."

un!versity
un1on
activities
board

THE UUAB* FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE
presents
FRIDAY , DECEMBER 3rd

Akiro Kurosawa 's

Son~

HAIRSTYLING

••••

Joe's Theatre Barber
lOSS Kenmore Avenue
(It Colvin Theetre)

WIGS - HAIR COLORING
..._ _ 877-2989

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

-

HIDDEN FORTRESS
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY
DECEMBER 4 &amp; 5

THE BEATLES
•

1n .

YELLOW SUBMARINE

-

CONFERENCE THEATRE Tickets &amp; times at Norton Ticket Office
Tickets 50¢ before 6:00p.m.

75¢ after 6 :00p.m.

Friday, December 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

.

~

�Sea son openers

Cru~~:eekentJ!~~,hofkey
Sp«tmm Staff Writtr
Two formidable opponents will enter Buffalo's
hockey world this weekend. as the Bulls wilJ host
Oswego State this evening and Salem State
tomorrow night. Both eames are crucial as the Bulls
will be skating against some of the best competition
in Division II. A giant step toward a playoff berth
would be a weekend sweep.
As the freshman work themselves in with the
veterans, Buffalo's potential may soon be realized.
The students of this University can consider
themselves privileged to have a team of such a high
calibre yet Buffalo is the only team in its division
not offering hockey scholarships. Coach Ed Wright
has drilled and carefully molded his team into a unit
which can only improve with experience. The trick is
to win while learning.
On defense, freshmen Bob Epplett and Larry
Carr are paired together along with junior Les
Teplicky and sophomore John Reynolds with Bob
C.oody also receiving good ice time. They provide
goalie Mike Dunn with solid protection . The
forwards are skating well and should put the puck in
the net a few times. Of course, only a strong, all
around performance can win games.
Oswego hurting
Although Oswego had an impressive 7- 4 record
last season, they are hurting. Since last season, they
have suffered the loss of their three top scorers along
with their AU·American goalie, Pete Sears. Some fans
will undoubtedly recall the astounding acrobats he
performed in the nets last year as Oswego and
Buffalo split their two games, the home team
proving the beller both times. Oswego IS not as big
as they have been m the past so they are
concentrating o n speed this year. Thetr 0 2 record
this season does not indicate the play they are
capable of If the Bulls rc:lax, they'll find themselves

cheap - $ .08 I copy

Pro Football
by Dan Caputi Jr.
Momentum will be needed to carry them
througA.Saturday's test with Salem State. They'U be
At last we have cause for r1:joicing! Our hometown Heroes, the
looking1tt&gt; better last year's S - 5 tie at Salem State.
S41em has lost Alj;American Bruce Janaro along with Bills, won a baU game. Maybe we aren't the worst team 1n football after
two veteran de~semen, but they are perenially one aU.
After a week's layoff, the Wizard returns to continue his fin e
of the top Division II teams. Last year's solid record
of 9·6·1 typifies their efforts. Like the Bulls this performance. He blued to a 12- 1 mark last time which raised him'to
year, Salem has a few promising youngsters who will 86-36·6 and '70%.
Cle11eland 27, Cincinnati I 7: Browns are stagering to divisional
make their presence felt. Their weakness lies in their
lack of experience, something that will be magnified crown.
Dallas 34. New York Jets 20: Joe's back, but he can't beat the
playing on foreign ice with hostile inhabitants.
Playing on home ice is a strong advantage as the Cowboys by himself.
Chicago 2 I. Den11er 14: Bears have lost early-season claws, but
fans seem to be quite psyched for the occasion. A
boisterous crowd is expected for each game. Any they're still good enough to beat punchless Broncos.
Detroit 34, Philadelphia 14: Greg landry is fast becoming one of
premature optimistic visions of th~.: success of the
hockey Bulls can be ruined this weekend, but with a the top field generals in the game.
Baltimore 27, Buffalo 13: Colts expect little trouble from
strong team effort, expectations can begin to
cellar-dweller Bills.
become realities .
Green Bay 23. St. ~ouu 20: Bart Starr has returned to Green Bay
Location, time shifted
Uneup; he should inspire Pack to stack Cards.
For reasons still unclear, both the times and
Pimburgh JO, Houston 10: Scrambling to stay alive, Steelers get a
places of this weekend's series have been shifted . A break by meeting docile Oilers.
knowledgeable guess has it that the Amherst
San Francisco 24, Kfmas City 21: Chiefs aren't really so super
Recreation Center wants no more of Buffalo hockey Jeir secondary can be burned and Brodie will go right at them .
and subsequently has given the University t he shaft.
Minnesota 27, San Diego 7: These two teams had battle royal in
While the situat1on is clearly political, the center has pre-season; look for renewed hostilities.
Los Angeles 27, New Orleans 14: Manning beat Rams in opener,
hidden behind excuses of lack or rink space.
Both Oswego and Salem State have tndlcated but Prothro's men have improved quite a b1t since then.
that they will not come to Buffalo unless the playing
Washington 28, New Ynrk Giantl 17: Allen's sagging Redskins
times are changed to an earlier hour. Consequently. build up their confidence against Giants, who are playing out the string
tomorrow night 's pme has been moved to agaio.
lockport 's Keenan Center out in Ni 11gara County
M1ami 34, New J::ngland 13: Dolphins get a breather with big Colt
and will begin at 9 p.m . The center with an game coming up next week.
occupany of only 700, can be reached by way of 0
Oakland 27, Atlanta 24: Falcons will give Raiders all they wapt
Millersport Highway and then a right turn on Transit before s uccumbing.
Road. From that point on, you'll just have to follow
College FootbaiJ
signs Tonight's game aga1nst Oswego will remam at
by Barry Rubin
the Amherst Rec and will begin at 10:15 p.m. IRC
buses will be available for both games, one hour
The College wizard goes into his final week with a 130·38·3 record
before starting lime in front of Goodyear Hall.
and 78% on the season .
Penn State 23. Tennessu 17: Paterno's Nittany Laons &amp;re out to
prove somet hing in key intersectional battle.
Syracuse 20. Miami (Fla) 13: Ordnge need w1n to avo1d first lostng
T he Student Association will be conductina season 10 20 years. Big ego game for Ben Schwarzwalder should prove
interviews Moncby to fill two vacant positions on too much for Fran Curci's undermanned Hurricanes.
Sub Board I. Interested students should make an
San D1ego State J /, North Texas State 17. Don Coryell's Aztecs
appointment today in the SA office, 205 Norton sho uld give Eagles a hard t1me on the coast.
Hall .
Nebraska 42. Hawaii 7: Cornhuskers play the role of tourists, but
still prove unbeatable.

,

Positions available

-AT 356 NORTON

Beech~ood

Ageing

could be an
''advertising gimmick."

r

Feel Rite

'HEALTH FOOD SHOPP
1451 HERTEL A V ENUE
(corner Norwalk)
LOWEST PR I CES

Featuring

But it isn't.
(For instance,
last year we bought
almost 2~ million
pounds of Beechwood
sbjps ... enough to I
fill67 freight cars.)

DANNON YOGURT
4 · for 98¢ coffee · plain - vanilla
· 6- for $1.79 assorted fruited
of/ noturol11 itomm.s discounted

Whole wheat flour 25¢ lb .
837·7661

837-7661

CONV ERT YOU R
SPAR E TIME INTO

WHEN YOU SAY

Budweiser.

$$$$
JOIN

YOU'VE SAID IT All!

-··

ANH[US[R·8USCH INC. • ST LOUIS

THE SpECTI\UM
ADVERTISING STAFF.

For information come up to 355 Norton and
ask for Sue Mtllentint, advertising manager.

Page fourteen ., The Spectrum. Friday, December 3, 1971

�231, Norton tooay bltlns et 11 e.m .
not p .m .

CLAIIIFIII
WANTED

IUD£ BOJJt.D

UPWARD BOUND PROGRAM needs
tutorS! O pportunity for Independent
study c:rectll for quali f ied people.
Thote lnterettecl In tutoring Inner-city
high sc:hool stuctenu In math, sc:lenc:e,
rudl"g, writi ng, should apply Rm . 330
D iefendorf Hall or c all 831 ·2011 , e~t t .
45 .

• GOING • n vwhere near Flor ida after
finals? Will share d rlvln9 ano 111
expenses. 1177-3996 , Skip,

WANTED • one person t o sell bootl eg
records. C all Jeff 885 -1031 , Ron
88 6·2083 after 5 p .m .

s

11
need a man wh o Is a o r o at taking
exams. PlUM call John 823·75 7 2.
E M E RGENC Y
s now shov e l ers ,
w anted . $ 3.50 per h our . Overtime
e~ttra. C all 8 56_.1 5 0 M o nday-Friday,
9: oo-4 .oo.
r estaurant stil ff
M A L E, fem al e
required f o r all position s at hist or ic
Ro y cr o ft Inn. Tnose neat , person able,
wlllln9 to learn, may apply In person
40 s . G rove St ., E. Aurora, M - F, 11 .
TU T O R
f o r w oodburn's Or~nlc
Chemistry c:l au. Fair fH. Cilll St eve il l
876-5386 after 5 p.m .
BEG INN I N G
894·51126.

p lano

Huct ents.

wEL L
KN O WN com mercial rock
group l ook i ng for lead gu itarist w ho
AlSO $ln gs. Call Sob 674-8948.
ovERSEAS J o b s f o r Stu dents:
Australia, Europe, S . America, A f rica,
etc. All pro fessions ano occupa tions,
s700 to $3000 monthly. Expensei
Pilld, ov•rtlme. slghtseelng. Free
t nlormatton , Wri te Jobs Overse;as,
Dept. ES, BOlt 15071, San Diego,
California 92 115 .
NEED sophis ticated entertain ers f or
dow ntow n coffeeh ouse . Folk , Jazz,
blues, acceptabl e. Groups o f more than
2 need not apply. 1152·7129, 8 54·9651.
WA N TED :
G ara ge to ren t
In
V lfgii·T a unton a re a . Call Greg
876-4822 .
U RGENT - need History 337 fina l
from sp ring sem est er Immediately. Pay
ex c ellent . After 3 p .m . Rob in.
897 ·0593.
S TUDE N TS to d o tax retu rns.
Commission Ci11h b iSIS. Wt will train
you free. Call 652·924 7 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT
Tw 0
ROOM S availab le for r ent
S60/ mO op tional $ 40 extril l or
meals. Foreign students welco me. Call
83 4· 384 7 alt er 6 p .m .
HOUSE f or rent. Fur nished. N ear
campus. Silt bedrooms. living room,
d i n i n g room,
2
kltcnens. C all
853-46g1 .
•
THREE or four-oedroom a1)41rt $ 2110,
10-m ln . w alkrng d istance. Cell Gerry,
CiFOI, Cind y, 1132-6440 .
FURNIS H ED 3 ·bed room ap artment,
1150/ mo. Call 876·952 1 or 627•3901
atler 6 p.m .

- - -- - -

FOR SALE
SKI S R o ssignol Stnto, si te 210 em, 1
season o lo . E J&lt;cet lent c ond ition .
Merk•r, b lncllng 1100. 1181.0505.
v.w . - re1)411reble, cheap. N - dual
1219 turntable ; Sherwood receiver ;
Unlvenlty speakers ; PlonMr re~erb ;
English amplif ier; frHoter J stove , flute;
Skis • boots ; 83 3·72 70.
'66 MUST ANG (automatic) $4QO o r
best o ffer. Gooo running co nd iti on .
634-4861 ,
NIKKO RMAT FTN ; 50 mm, N lkon
lens: 8 5·205 mm, Vlvatar tel ezoom
l ens ; leather ca1es ; ci 0 141· UI) bellow 51
$300 . 8 34 ·5 384 .
O N E T WIN bed In greilt co ndition for
._,,, C all Laura at 837·0225.
"TH E PEOPLE," a ' folk arts bOUtiQue
feat uring ethnic ilpparet, 1- elry and
ha ndc rafts . 144 A llen 1182 --6 211 3.
OPEN I N G D ec . lsi , annex to "Tne
Peop le," f M t u rlng nand cr afts o f Asia.
A fr ica, the A m ericas. K id s' t.oys, too.
unusua l, m oderatel y p riced gift Items.
144 A llen. Call 88 2-629 3 for hours.
GAS STOVE Kenm ore,
8 34 ·31147 after 6 p .m .

$4 0.

Call

B RAN p N EW Israeli JtiHpSI&lt;In for
sate, very cheap . Call 837..0409 for
further Information.
PO N TIAC Tempest '66 automatic,
power steering, eKcellent condition,
$575, 3 blocks fr om campus. Call
1132-4950.
PLAVER plano good condit ion .
Recen tl y tuned . 5 120 Is b argain . Call
afternoons, even i ngs, Snerry 832 ·9526 .
B RAN D NEW girls $tar sa ppn lre ri ng,
vetueo at $ 95 . Asking $35 or best
o ffer . Call 831 ·3028 .
VA M AHA com bln111ons, 195 ern .,
N evad a Gran d Prix b i nd ings, $ 105,
Sklls only, $65. 8 3 1·294 3 before 5
p.m .
VW '66 perfect cond i tion. M ust 14111.
Cell 11116 ·2913 all day tomorrow .

AMHERST 658 ~IllS BtvCI., 3Yt
bedroom•. 3 blths, fireplace, v•s grill
In fenced ylrd, large family room, air
conditioned, c erpetlng, drapes,
atteChed ~rages. M l nutM f rom U .8 .
Low teltM, owner 1173-4114 .
SKI B OOT S - Mer111n1 Si l l II. Also
1)411r o f Head standerds, 210 em.
W l thO\.It b l nd l fi9S. $50 for both. Cell •
1131·2105.
1116 3
STUDEBAKtR
g o od
cond itio n - ciMn, n - tires (ln ow) .
Great engine. 1185-6013.
STEREO tao• recorder. Brand new m ust sacrifice , 1 150 , For o 196 3 w190n
- e~tcell ent,_mu st 14111, 8116-111 71 .
FO R SALE 1969 MGB hard t op . Call
after 6 p .m . 1154 ·3 160.
S K I B OOTS
R alcl e good
cond it ion. G reat f or an y beginner, $ 15.
Call 831·2 166 .
RE F RI GE RA TO RS , stov u
and
washers. Reconditioned 1 d ellverecs\;no
g uaran t H CI . D &amp;. G A pftlances, 844
Sy camore, TX 4· 31 83 ,
1971 P INTO 4 cyl . sttek sn lft, grMn.
Call 88 3 ·906 7 .
'62 VW, good running con di t i on, 225
o r b est offer. Cilll Janet 811 4 -1968.
CAM E R A sing le lens RefleK Zeiss Ikon
Cont rafle K wltn f2 .8 lens, b lack body
and st u rdy cue, tess tha n 6 month s
old . Price negotiab le. Call Bruce
835 ·2623.
STEREO F lsner 125 , 40 wetU, RMS
per Channel w i th speakers . Good
condition . One Yeilr 010 . Pr1ce
n~tlabte. C all 835 ·2623.
2 STUDDED whitewall snow t tres,
D unlop 775 ·14, 1 seaso n old . CAll
Oo1.1g at 836 ·3549 .
200 mm su per T akum ar tens In
excellent condit ion, $135 . Call Pn ll at
838 -3735 .
AT OMIC m etal ski S 200 em. W/ L ook
Nevad a b i nd ings. Exc:ellent cond . $60.
LA Dot amlte slx.Cuckle boots, almost
n-. size 9YI , S5 0 .
TY PEW R ITE RS, Royal por table, new
$45 . Und erw ood p ort able, $4 5, SCM
elec tr ic new, cneap . Many more. Great
Chr istm as gifts. 8 95-4988 alter 4 .

1967 vw sql,lareback . Gooo conoltlon,
$ 575 . 618-6510• •

GUITARS : G ibson, GullO, M ar lin,
Gurian, etc . Buy, 14111, trade. The Stri ng
Sho ppe, S24 Ontario, 7 p .m .--9 p .m .
dally. S at . 12·5, 874.0120.

H EAD'S, 72 0 208 em $ 72, w l\n
T yrolla 90 1 N ordica (13) boots $1 5 ,
po l es 1 51 set 190; 6 34 ·7210.

A E ~R IGERATOR,
bea ffimt,
mat t r e ss. o th er fu r niture. Call
8 37.00 99, Mere, K en or M ike.

BASSETT &amp;o Terrier p upp ies; cheap .
Call 6 811 -830 2 .

PERSONAL

M OROCCAN Imports d ig theN
prices : custom made LEATHER
PAN TS - $ 30; f ull l ength WOOl/COtton
CAPES - $ 15; nand -made LEATHER
B AGS - $ 8; colorfu l WOOL SASHES
$ 2 . 5 o . AntiQue M o,t.anla
(Gulloml ne) B EADS - 1 8/ doz . Cllll
Steve 8 83-4 707 .

OPENING Dee. lsi, al\nex to " The
People," feat urtng h andcrath o f Asia,
A f rica, th e A m ericas. ~'\ids' t o ys, too .
Unusual, mod erately priced gift Items.
144 A ll en . Call 8 82-628 3 for hours
CO R RECTI O N f or ad In Wednesday 's
S pe c t r um • Reg istration o f ski
eq ulom ent • t T h • c.u • ~ ............. """"'"""

Parts for Imported Cars
1085 Main St
a complete Une of:

F ~MAL.E roommate Wllflll4, OOI'n
room; opposite l(lelnhens, 1 50
lfWt\ldJrl9 utlfltlet. Avellellll Jiln. !st.
114·1968.

A RED lltht happenlf19; no ectmtssfon1
a splend iCI time Is gueranteecl for ell ,
Apt . 490A, 9 · 1 a.m ., every Friday end
slfurday ntte.

ONE ROOM IVallable for femM•
roommete In spacious apartment vlfY
near Cilmpus, $50/mo. Call Marcia
837-96t1.

DO YOU know whet a teco l sf Sl
signori It •s a crisp corn tortilla shell
filled with ground beef,
lettuce
and tomato . Try them at their best at
T ippy's Taco H ouse. 2351 Snerldan
(ecrou from Putt-Putt golf) 831 ·31100.

Ch-.

FOUR roommates, male Of' , female.
wanted to mare 6 bectroon1 house.
ChMP rent. Good ar• near ~w«•
Parle. Call Bruce o r Dave 11 135·262S.

STAN, I IOYI you. C heryl.

TWO PEOPLE t o mare apartment
Immediately, 140. Come betw-' 8
and l l p .m ., 20 Cotta941, Allentown.

SIC!(, OF peylng fiYe and si x dollars for
a concer t . Come to Buff State Student
Centlt Dee. 8th and 9tl Into the
sounds o f 141Vtn great acts plus a light
Jtlow f o r l ust $1.50. Show s at 7 and 10
p.m .
HEY J OC K O, I hear Oat Cia bOYS Is
coming to town Dee. 11 . Better bu y
$Gm t e~t t ra grease f or your hair . SH A
N A NA Is comi ng.

announces

Luggage and Ski Racks.
including

MALE or female, 7-room apt. Own
room, A mnerst· Delawere ar ea . Call
Kevi n 1 77 ·52 70 .

FOLK G U ITA R lessons, I ISO epl phone
11fec:trlc guitar for sal e, Jeff 835 -33 84 ,
1135-9229.

CO UPLE wllhes to sl\are ta, ge h om e
w it h another couple, t 50 m o . rent.
88 6 ·21133 after 7 p .m .

SHOWB OAT'S Engi ne Room Bar singles nlte every Wedneway, no dress
req ulrementi, f ree popcorn, drinks
$ .75, draft $ .35 . 1 Hert el Ave . on the
N iagara River .

ROOMMATE wanted - o w n r o om ,
1 58 / mon t h . Starin an d Tauton. A fine
abode. C all 8 36 ·7799.
ROOMMATE w an ted : lmml(ll atejy,
5-mlnute wal k from Cilm p ut, own
room, call 8 ~7·030 1.

ABLE student mechanic does a1.1to
re pairs cheap, V1 snop prices. Call Bob
8 32- J663.
REWARD tor Star Sappnl re rl ng 1na
9010 cnarm 10" N o v. 18. C 111 0 11ne
833 -6 4 71 .
BEAUTIFUL handrnadeg~ld sli ver
jew el r y - wedd i ng ri ngs
c$f"'"b te
orlces. J.P. Tn e Gotdwaa
• 6 :1 !'1
Elmwooa at Ferr y St., 881 · 34£0

LOST A f OUND
FOUN D : Will tne person wn o ltfl •
possessi on w hen nl t c nlk lng l n my 1958
Cadillac: Hearse tne other day p lease
I de nt lfy a no cl a l m
11
11
tne
unaer current office, Rm . 343 , N ort o n
H all. Rick Gellman.
FOUND : Blue tinted prescription
len141d gl aSSt\
gota rims - m ay cta lm
In The Spectrum office, R m. 3!$5,
N orto n.
LOST : m ale cat, yell ow and wh i te
tiger, Main ilnd LiiSalle. Call 8 36 -31 24 .
GREEN knapsack purse l ost In 2 nd
floor Cil t eterla Monday. Reward to r
return Of I)Urst and contents. Call
ll l l - 411 3 . Sue. tmpor!lnt paoers
ur gentl y n eeded.
SCARF f ou n d
1 1/ 2 4 IU!wtaen
H arriman and Lockwood , Owner can
claim fl Spec trum office.

ROOMMATES WANTf D
FEMALE r oommate t o snare
Richmond area apartmen t. O w n room ,
$62 .SO, utilities In cl., near co -op.
1186-0265.
TW O
F E M ALE S to share r oom ,
modern apartment for 3, ne;., cam pus,
1vallable C h rt stma s. C all Shltl
837 · 4692.
COUPLE l o snare large nous• on
Grand 1stand, 20 m i n . t o cam ou \. R ent
negotiable. 773·531 3.
FEMALE roommete needed
sta r t i ng
January. Own room . One b lock from
Cilmi)US. $ 55/mOntn. Call 836·2403.

I.R.C. Thinks the

$22.95

20% DISCOUNT for STUDENTS
on these low-tow prices

Open Daily 8 :30 - 5:30

Thursday 8:3'0 - 9:00

885-7005

NEXT SEMESTER own furnished
room, $ 50 • utllltl n . Good l ocation
down Kenm ore Ave Pltone 1177 ·3 996 .
O N E PERSON needed to snare lpt.
Fillmore-Leroy . Own r o om , $ 35 per
montn. 8 35 ·0377 .

MISCELLANEOUS
T l RED OF sitt i ng around stoned
boreo 7 Come on over t o the Allennunt
Co ff ee nouse every Fr i d ay and
Saturday nile, 9 · 1 am . Apt . 490A.
Eats.
JONES Prof essional T ypi ng
C&amp;H
Service
c omputerized 19M
eQuipm ent plus our experi ence give
b es t p ossl o le presenhtlons o f
dissertations, tnesls , term papets,
resum es and employment application
letters. Very reas o n.tb l e . C a ll
74 1·39 58 .
BABYSITTIN G f or w orlc tng mothers.
A
creative pers on a llly pr09ram
conducted bY a quali fi ed teacher . To
begin Jal\, 1st at l010 Elmwood Ave ..
Suffl l o . Limited en rollm ent . To
arrange an In terv iew , wri te Mary Seth
Hill , 103 C larem ont, Buffalo, 14222.
TVPING DON E In m y nome. F est ,
accurate. Cilll 823-11568 . Ask for Chris .
FREE kitten , pink , grey ana white.
W i ll 90 to tn e Po und If not wanted .
Well trained . Call 835·7 153 after 6
p .m .
EXPER IEN CED ty p ing b y el ectr ic
typew ri ter, s eo page. Call 873 · 1305 .
QUIC K , efficient typ i ng don• - $ .40
per page. ISM Seltctllc. 838-4808 .

JOHN my problems are no t all
solved by any meai'IS, but tne O f fice o f
Stud ent Affai r s at 201 H arriman Old
ntlp. Love. Mary .

IU PST A T E C Y C l E I P4 S I
call 694-3100
I
I
t_ " A* Your Broklf About Us" ,_1

and poles.

OW N ROOM . lmmeo latt occupancy. 4
blocks from c ampus. 560 month ,
Includes utilities. 836 ·3965 evenin gs Steve.

WA N TED :
tem.t te r o omm&lt;ltt .
Ten -m inute walk from campus. Share
bedroom , $ 55/mo. Includ es utilities.
A par tment ava ilable now or second
sem ester . Call Pat 632 ·0 217 .

I

S337 (AU Racks •
Clamp Bar Auy .)
$8.95
SJ37·1 (AU Racks · RiJer' Bar Assy.) S8.9S

2 FEMA LES, furn ished apt. 3 minutes
walki ng from umpus. Storage, T .V ••
telepnone, ~s. etec:\ rlc Includ ed . $50 •
montn . Call 83 8-4245 or 8~·592 9 .
Leave m essa9e.
-. r

ANYONE - N lager• Falls t o London
one way. sllS, return 1 220, M .T.W.,
881.0306, Thur sday n lgnt 1173·5660 ,
S:Oo-10:00 p .m . W H kly d epartu res.

1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I

Sting Ray with Custom Rack , Riser Bar,
and four set of skiis mounted on the
rack by four Ski Clamp Bars.

ONE FEM ALE roommate for West
Sid e apartment, 1 60/ montn Includes
utilities. Call anytime 886 ·3535.

ROOM M ATE to live w ltn male grild
stuaent. Furn ished apt . Own r oom,
$ 115 mon t n . 8 8 6 ··8 073 lhlen tngs
Delaware-Utica area .

f"MoTORCYCLEiNSURANCEI
ltMMEOlATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE

5322 - Fits: All models - A1fa Rdsu .• Corvair, :iat
Rdstr., K.atmann (ihia, Mercedes and Sunbeam Alpme.
Abo Corvette 62 and earlier, Ja&amp; XK-E Rdstr., M~B ,
MG Midget 1962-65, Mustana Cpe., Convl., Spnte
1961-6-S, Triumph TR-4 and TR-4A. Holds 2 palr of skis

MAL E r oommlie wanted , $50/ m o nth.
O wn room f urnlm ed . C all 8 311_.840
off Mlln . KMP try ln t .

MAR Y - T here ar e people who oo
care at 20 1 Harriman, O ffic e o f
Studen t A ffairs, 3 721. L o ve, Jonn .

FE f\11 ALE roommat es needed lor
~ond semester for house very c lose t o
cami)Us. C all snaro n at 836 ·2304.

e

MATURE female to Jtlar e modlfn
2 · beCiroom apartment wltl' same.
Second 141mwt er. Ideal l ocatio n . Pnone
8 75 -1219.

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Record Co-op
for our
•owing

RECORD ROOM

now
17 ALBUMS, TOWER

-

PROFESSIONAl. Typ ing S ervice term 1)41pers, thesis &amp;o Cl ls141rtatlon~.
Reasonable rates. C all now. 8 76·7616 .
WILL TYPE term pepers at hom e.
w ould OO it your material . Char941 $ .40
per page. 836 ·24 33 .
GAY LIBERAT IO N needs fold i ng
chairs, t ab les an d coffee cups to be
don • ted
f or
a Co m mun it y
CoHeen ouse . Pnone Dav• 674 -69 8 1.
W IN SOME
femal e, bl a ck,
q uasi-Persian, 16 months old, w ants •
nnom e. 8 31 ·5378 or 886.()663.
SEE K I N G
qu alified art studenU
Interested In e~t h lb ltlng th eir w ork. C all
85 2·7129 or 85 4 ·965 1.

APARTM ENTS WANTED
A PA RT MENT wanted l or one o r two
or thrH w i th k i t chen after Dec . 1 . Call
1131·2979.
FI V E MALES desperat ely neecl fou r o r
fiYI.Cedroom apa r tment o r hoU 141. Call
1137.08112.
COUPLE wants unfurnished apartment
In University area begl nnln9 Januery.
S5 for Informatio n lead i ng to eccepted
apartment. (Grlduatlr19 141nlors7 ) John
1137..0335.

Friday, December 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

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Sports Info rmiltion

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Today: Varsity hockey vs. OswesoStau, 10:15
p.m., Amherst Rec Center, WBFO·FM radio; varsity
basketball at Point Park, 8 p.m .
T omorrow: Varsity hockey vs. Salem State, 9
p.m., Lockport's Keenan Center ; varsity swimming
at Rochester; varsity wrestlina at Buffalo
quadrangular with Montclair State, Oneonta State
and Wilkes, 12:30 p.m ., Clark Gym; varsity fencing
at Rochester Tech .
T uesd.Jy : Varsity basketball home opener vs,
Toronto, 8":30 p.m.; feshman basketball vs. Buffalo
State, 6 :30 p.m., Clark Gym. All students will be
admitted free of charge upon presentation of an
identification card.
T he student athletic review board will meet
Tuesday evening at 6:30p.m. in Room 332 Norton
Hall.
The Buffalo lc:e Skatina'tlub will present the
Buffalo Sabres' Gilbert PerreaultJ Kevin O'Shea and
Eddie Shack Monday evening at 7 p.m . in the Haas
Lounge.
Rem&lt;~inin&amp;

tic:kets for th is weekend's varsity
hockey games may be picked up from 9 a .m.- 3 p.m.
at the Clark Gym ticket office.

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Follow The Spectrum sporu page for exclusive
converage of Buffalo's varsity teams at home and

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away

:

Studio Arerg Theatre

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Available at t he Ticket Office

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Dec. 9- j an. 2 l The Me Nobody Knows
Jan. 6- 23: I Remember Mama
Rock and Folk Music::
Dec. 4: Gordon lightfoot (K)
Dec. 11 : Sha·Na-Na (P)
Dec. 12: The James Gang (K)
DEc. 16: Rod Stewart, Faces, Cactus, Audtence

(M)
Bufhlo Philharmonic Orchestra (K)
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

3: Xmas Pops
S &amp; 7: Zoltan Rozsnyal
10: T he Nu tcracJ&lt;er
18 &amp; 19: The Messiah

Theater
Dec. 5 : Will Rogers, U.S.A . - James Whitmore

(K)
Courtyard Theatre
The Clever Else
KEY
K - Kleinhans
P - Peace Bridge Center
M - Memorial Auditorium

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UUAB and Pueno Rican Studies present a
Pueno Rtedn Thedter m HJJ\ Lounge tomorrow at
8 :30p.m.
International Club wtll h,1ve d meetmg today at
1 p.m . 1n Room 302 Norton to dt ~U'&gt;S future
activttles.
The Dance Club will hold a master class in iau
dance tomorrow from 9 :30 II :30 a.m. in Clc~rk
Gym (large gym).
University Travel ctnd Schussmeister'&gt; SJ..i Clup
SAS Jet to Geneva , Switzerland . Ski pdckagc 1n
Chamonix, France or on to Copenhagen, Dcmnark .
Dec. 27- Jan. 7 (11 days wtnter reccs~)
S I96 just
flight
package $298 . For more information come
to Room 316, 323 or 3 18 Norton or call ex tension
3602,3603,2 145 or 2146
UB Karate Club will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in
the women's gym. All c~re encour dged to attend.
Graduate Chemist's Club and GSA present
·
Pro fessor Pau I 01 yny k spea k .tng on " Th e Chemtstry
of Lake Erie Sediments" today at 4 p.m. '" Acheson
70

·

CAC wishes to announce the cancellation of the
film john and Mary originally scheduled for this
weekend.
UUAB Film Committee will be showing H;dden
Fortress today and Yellow Submqrlne tomorrow and
Sunday in the Conference Theater. Tickets for shows
before 6 p.m. are$ .50. Check at Norton Information
Desk for showing times.
University Travel and Hillel
Olympic Jet to
Tel Aviv, Israel via Athens, Greece. March 27- April
10 (Passover and spring recess 14 days) flight $355
- pac kage $559 . F or more ·an format .ton come to
Room 316 or 323 Norton or call extension 3602 or
3603
.
Ukrainian Student Club will meet Sunday at 7
p.m. in Room 234 Norton .

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Announcements

Africa Club will hold a general meeting Sunday
at 1 p.m. in Room 232 Norton. All members are
urged to attend.
Students for Israel will have folkdancing
tomorrow from 2 - 5 p.m. in the Fillmore Room .

Arab Cultural Club will meet Sunday at 3:30
p.m. in Room 334 Norton .

The Counc:il of History Students presents Dr .
Alisdair Macintyre, pro fessor of history at Brandeis
University , $peaking on "From the History of ldects
to the History of Actions" today at 3 p .m . in
Otefendorf Annex 30.
Political Science 115 will study the problems of
imperialism and crimes of war and is now jointly
t.Jught by five instructors. Information is available
from the Political Science Department, 4238 R idge
Lea

The Office of Financial Aid is now distributing
financial assistance applications for the 1972- 73
ac&lt;~demic year. Students may obtain forms at th~
office, which is located in 216 Harriman library .
Completed aplications are to be returned to the
Financial Aid Office not later than March 1, 1972.
Financial statements will be required in all cases, and
these are to be completed and sent to the College
Scholarship Service not later than Feb. 1, 1972.
Instructions relative to filing will be found appended
to the application packet.

CAC needs volunteers for the Lafayette
Community Center tutoridl project. If interested
please contact S tcven Moss in Room 220 Norton.

India Association ctnnounces that Mushaira," a
poetic symposium for alllanguctges, is being planned.
Interested persons may please contact Mrs. M.
Bhargava _ 716-873-1305 or Mr. H. Dayal
71 6-894·3232 at your earliest convemence.

The India Association of Buffalo will present an
lnd1.1n movie Sochhuo jutha with English subtitles,
tummrow at 6 :30 p.m. in Diefendorf 147.
Admission is $1.25 for members dnd $1.75 for
no n·members.

The Greek Club presents Greek night at Buffalo
Stctte College today at 8 p.m. featuring Greek music,
dancing and films . For information and
transportation call 693-0537.

AI'ttalla
. j et to R ome, I ta Iy
University T rave I
M.~rch 31 - April 9 (nine-day Easter and spring
n·•&amp;h t $ 198 - pac kage. ava1.1abl e. For more
recess)
info rmation come to Room 316 or 323 Norton or
call extension 3602 or 3603.

The Huma.n Dl' menst' ons lnstJ'tute of Ro•"'ry
... H'lll
College presents the second lecture of a three·part
sert' es o n Sex, God and Death, Sunday at 8 ·. 15 p.m.
in Kittinger Hall, Erie County Community College.
Admission is $1.75 and $1 for students.

SIMS presents Luigi Bianch i speaking on
"Physi o logical Effect s of Tran sce ndental
M~ditation" today at 8 p.m. in Hayes Room 239.

The School of Manaaement with the
cooperat1on of the University Placement and Career
Guidance Office will present a workshop with Ms.
Allallee Babbidge, Ms. Dorothy Feind, Dr. Theresa
Humphreyville, Ms. Mary Ann Stegmeier and Ms.
Betty Jo Zoller speaking · on "Employment of
Women in Business and Industry: Problems and
Prospects" Dec. 6 at 3:30 p.m. in the Norton Hall
Conference Theater. Open to all students.

Social Sciences College announces that anyone
taking S.O.S. 336 - Society, Sex Roles and
Liberation - for credit , must attend class the week
beginning Dec . 6 in order to complete the cour~.
The Deputment of Music will present the first
in a series of Musicology lectures today at 3 p.m. in
Room 101' Baird Hall . Guest lecturer will be Yves
Gerard, a specialist in nineteenth century French
music.
The Department of Music will present the noted
composer and authority on contemporary music,
Karlheinz Slockhausen, in a lecture/demonstration
tomorrow at 8 :30 p.m. in Baird Recital Hall.
Tickets, available at Norton Ticket Office, are $1.50
for. general admission; $1 fo~ faculty, staff and State
Untverslty of Buffalo alumm and $ .50 for students.

Pilot 100 will hold an orientation meeting today
at 2 p.m. in Room 262 Norton. Anyone interested in
acting as an observer with area police departments is
urged to attend.
Student Theatre Guild is presenting Joe Orton's
What the Butler Sow in Capen 140 today and
tomorrow at 8 :30 p.m . and also at 2:30 p.m. on
Sunday, Tickets are available at Norton Ticket
Office.

- Amy Ahrend

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�'The Clever Else and Other ':
journey into childhood nostalgia
by Jly Boyar
$pect fllm $t11ff Wrlt.r

Everyone remembers fairy tales. Those engaging little
stories about elves, and frogs, and castles and kings. And
fair young maidens who are forever In distress. We all seem
to remember these as wonderful yarns without which our
childhoods would not have been complete. But, if these
stories were so good, then we can only wonder why so few
of us aver return to re-tead these bits of fluff and gossamer
dnce our sixth or seventh birthdays are over. Perhaps those
fairy tales just were not as wonderful and engaging as we
remember them to be.
Last Friday, Nov. 12, was opening night for The
ClevtH EISI •nd OthtHS an anthology of fairy tales in play
form. The production took place at the Courtyard Theatre
on Lafayette and is slated to continue each FriditY and
Saturday night until deep into the flurries of December.
The Beginning
The play started off with a short sequence called
"Warm-Up." In this incongruous piece, the actors clustered

must have taken a lot of practice to do that!"
Then came "Concert." As the name suggests,
"Concert" was a piece of music played on guitar and
piano. Its dreamy quality was appropriate to introduce the
flock of fairy fables which followed this fantastic music.

on stage In small, informal groups and began "warming
up" with what we suppose are some stock techniques th at
actors UM in acting schools across the country to gain
confidence and proficiency on stage.
There was all manner of squirming and gyrating,
facemaking and frolicking. It was at no time clear what
this had to do with the production that followed. The
effect that it had was similar to that one would feel upon
opening a book and finding "The quick red fox jump$ over
the lazy brown dog," written several times so that the
author could practice his typing before actually beginning
his literary pursuits.
It was hard to tell just why this warm-up was part of
th~roduction. I suspect that it was to establish how free
and "avant garde" the production's attitude was. how
"n
and exciting" it would be, and how " hip" those
Involved with the entire enterprise w«e. Or maybe it was
intended to g1ve the generally middle-aged audience a
daring ta~of what that "funky new experimental living
theater" is ike. At any rate, it did not work. The whole
sequenc~t w
summed by by my ten-year-old brother who
said, wi~ ~ the facetiousness he could muster: " Boy, it

Kiddy T.V.
For all intents and purposes, the play had then begun.
The first featurette was "Henny Penny" wh icl;l was
followed by " Clever Gretel." We were treated to all kinds
of exaggerated speech and over-acting. This mi~t have
been over-lookable in a children's play. but the co-director,
Rod Griffis, informs me that this is really a play for adults
and, as such, such exaggeration is innappropriate.
The playlets that followed were "The Fish«man and
His Wife," "The Steadfast Tin Soldi«," and "Dark." The
best of them was "Fisherman." The lighting and sound
effects were particularly effective in creating the effect of
a turbulent sea. J im Kuhns, as the fisherman, was warm
and sincere when he kept telling his wife " It's not right,"
as she continually entreated him to ask the enchanted fish
for more and more wealth .
Stealing the show
' 'The Steadfast Tin Soldier" is the story of a tin
soldier owned by a little boy, and " Dark" is about a little
girl who was afraid of the dark. The little boy, in
-conll n~

on ••st

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of Ptodlpl Sun-

University Opera Studio

Presentations are delight/ul
by Mjchael Silverblatt
l .ltt'ra(urt' and Dramt~ l:'dltor

Two ma111elous operas were
presented last week by the
University Opera Studio. The
choice of the two works was
impeccable since both are visually
and musically Interesting and are
pieces that should erase anyor~e's
preconception of opera a5 a
"stuffy" art .
The first opera,The Breasts of
Tiresias, is Poulenc's musical
interpretat ion of Apollinaire's
surrealist play. The play concerns
a husband whose wife. ThereA,
decides that she has had enough
of being a woman. She cuts off
her breasts ("oh, fly away birds of
woman's weakness"). grows a
moustache and beard and takes
off to become a soldier-5en·
ator-president named Tiresias.
The husband decides, t it for
tat, to become a woman and give
birth to babies. His success is
monumental-49,009 new babies
enter his life- each a bundle of
happiness . Zanzibar (the
improbable setting for the play) is
faced with grave disaster.
Suddenly, after having faced a
g-eat lack of new babies (due to
the ravages of war). Zanzibar is
faced with a population
explosion . In order to rectify this
situation Theresa comes back to
her husband in the guise of a zany
fortune teller. prophesies all
manner of mirarto.s and succeeds
tn reuniting the ,.,en and women
of Zanzibar.
It is a charmingly improbable
tale, told with much d.elightful
wordplay. Characters die and are
immedi ate! '
re surr ected ;
newstands sing and dance; and
two gambler.&gt; 1111med Presto and
Lacouf stagger across the stage
arguing. about which one of them
has lost at roulette.
Obviously the director who
chooses to take on this mlll•nt/6
must be inventive and consistently
surprising while the cast must be

brought to love the verbal
absurdity that they present. The
entire production staff must work
to produce costumes, sets and
lighting which will daule and
amaze.
Since this opera is a great
favorite of mine, I attended with
few hopes of being pleased. The
degree of success reached by
directress Muriel Hebert Wolf and
her group, however, was such that
all my critical nit-picking was
flung to the wind. The production
(with only minor lags) was
unflaggingly entertaining and th8'

singers were excellently prepared
to deal w ith the tricky
complexities of Poulenc' s
patch-work score.
The cast
Charles Bachman as the
director provided an immediately
appealing opening. The director is
worried about his play .....will it's
message get across? Is it too
bizarre? Too real? In a marvelous
parody of sententious opentic
prologues Mr. Bachman provided
the note of serious leg-pulling
needed to bring the opera to an
exhuberant start. His voice is
large , resonant and really
deli~tful to listen to . '

Jane Bane and Marjorie
Rosenberg (who alternated as
Theresa-T iresias) were charming.
Miss Bane is physically adept and
funny on stage while her voice is
perfect for the canary-like trilling
that Theresa is called upon to
produce. She is ~ dynamo of
energy.
Marjorie Rosenberg provided a
different, but equally exciting
Theresa. She is more forceful in
her movement and perhaps a trifle
too aware of herself on stage. She
carries off with particularly
zestful ~an the scene in which she

turns into a man.
Robert Willoughby was floppy
and funny and perfect physically
for Apollinaire's fanciful husband .
His voioe is as bouncy and smooth
as the music he sings. Donald
Guastafero did not present the
same comic grace, but
nevertheless posessed a convincing
incredulity at the strange events
fate throws his way.
Of the rest, most notable is
Joseph Burgio who is a director's
dream Pettr Kurzdorfer did not
manifest the same inventiveness
everywhere present in Burgio 's
performance. Frederic Ford was a
perfect. suave,Fred Astaire-esque
baby.

Ellen Lang as a singing
newstand was sadly lacking) A
great opportunity for comic
improvisation was there but all we
got was her pleasant voice.
Similarly, additional work should
have been done with the
chorus- vocally they are fine. but
physically they could have been
much more surprising.
De Falla piece
The second opera Master
Peter's Pupper Show by Manuel
De Falla was overpowering. It is
based on the touching section in
Don Quixote in which Quixote
and Sancho go to a puppet show.
The Don becomes upset by the
performance and murders the
puppets. It is a piece that subtly
deals with personal versions of
real i ty and frustrated
romanticism.
St ephen Brown had all the
bradaggio necessary for a perfect
Master Peter. but more

importantly both Max ine Berens
and Joan Collopy (who alternated
in the difficult role of the
puppeteer's assistant) sung their
role with precision and youthful
excitement. Miss B«ens is nimble
and sure-footed, she pipes o ut the
narration with a curious mixture
of wonder and fear . Miss Collopy
was equally enchanting. Edward
Bogu sz's Quixote is vocally
magnificent but he isnor Quixote.
The puppets were human and
ingeniously staged. It is a high
compliment to say that they
I ooked absolutely wooden
through the use of effects. Robin
Willoughby, the directress staged
the piece magnificently.
High praise goes to Robert
Winkler and Denis Azaro who
designed the sets and costumes.
Carlo Pinto and his 35 piece
orchestra also deserve much
praise. I look forward to the next
p roduction by the UniV«sity
Opera Studio.

�Yardbirds Ltv. (Epic 30615)
Led Zeppelin (Atlantic S072()8)
Rough and Reedy Jeff 9eek
Group (Epic KE 3.0973)
Historically speaking, the
Yardbirds loom large in any
attempt to try and figure out
what happened to rock at the end
of the sixties. They were the first
electric band to go haywire and
then start to make their particular
chaos into a new order. The
Yardbird team. besides having
graduated Clapton, Beck and
Page, broke out into uncharted
areas and probably came the
closest to realizing what the
future would bring. " Happening
Ten Years Time Ago" remains
years ahead of itself and
everything else coming o ut of the
speakers.
Their center. or direction, was
never even vaguely defined.
though their roots definitely were
with strong blues influences from
Muddy and the Wolf and' the rest
of the Chicago gang. After a
while, though. things got hectic,
and the frenzy of their initial
infatuation with black blues
moved into their own white kid
electricness, and that's when the
weirdies set in . . Playing In the
Yardbirds could easily demolish
your brain and blow your ego out
to infinity (Beck); prepare you
and give you courage to venture
into new dimensions through your
past (Clap ton) ; or tune you in on
what makes the average listener go
bananas so you could later form
your own group and makes tons
of money yawning on stage
(Page) .
All these elements seem to
converge somewhere In the middle
of these three albums. Y1rdbirds
Li..,. is the long awaited, now
recalled record of a concert from

REOClRDS
·the Anderson Theater show in
MMch of l968. The group was on
its last legs, but their death
spawned most of what you h•r
now. Though they spearheaded
the notion of lead guitar as
weapon (machine gun, dagger
and/or whip), they didn't stick
around to reap its hatVeSt. Having
unleashed too much on an
unsuspecting world, they slowly
flew away into the stratosphere,
leaving behind the groundwork
for the rock of the seventies.
On the last tour it was Page on
"magic guitar," as Keith Relf puts
it. His playing here is wild and
exciting and unpredictable, which
isn 't exactly the way it works
with the Zep boys. The original
version of " D'azed and Contused"
is previewed hlf'e. Interesting that
it's the only track without any
writer credit listed. I mean you
can't really believe they'd write
"J. Page, R. Plant" underneath
because that would mean that
Plant stole the song from him!IBif
before he even wrote it. (Which he
didn't - folk singer Jake Holmes
wrote it.)
All of the Zep moves are there,
but without all the surface noise.
Page ' s work here is subtle.
Remember that he once was a
great and creative guitarist.
" White Summer" shows that.
Nowhere to hide as Keith, sensing
that the crowd would rather hear
Jimmy play than h im sing, leaves
the stage to let Jimmy do his bit.
What does he do? An exquisite,
country-based little tune, soft and
sweet. Caught you James. And he
doesn't even say "thank you,"
Keith says it for h im . Now Beck
would never allow anyone to talk

DOlT

for him, even though he hardly
ever makes sense, and when he
does, it's only to prove that he
knows he's the best guitarist in
the world, and he just might be at
that.
E~en ''Shapes of Things" come
off, with only one guitar, n Page
almost succeeds in doing his and
Beck's part together at once. Relf
mentions that " a lot of people
thought we'd never be able to
reproduce the solo1live, but ..."
and they don't realty. but that
just goes to show how hip Keith
really was. Don't forget, harp
snobs, he only has one lung. " I'm
a Man," all eleven minutes of h.
closes the record, and fulfills
ever ,y Yardb!rd frea,k's
expectation of just how good they
were.
I'm not really sure how the
average Zap fan would react to
this lp. Page reacted by suing
Epic, which says a whole lot. He's
exposed on it, and the formula of
led Zeppelin is interestingly
revealed by versions of ''Summer"
and "Confused." Just turn that
volume all the way up, and space
things out a bit. Find a lead singer
who can yell along w ith the guitar
notes, take all the art out, put a
lot of air in, find a heavy rhythm
section and go on the road to big
money and fame.
But we're not dealing here with
Z~ 1, or 2 or even 3 right now.
It's this new one, with the pretty
pictures and no names on it,
sealed with a little sticker and
with their name on It, so's you'll
know It's them . The banality and
all assuming obnoxiousness of the
cover of 3 is gone. And, believe it
or not, so is most of the
"Superhype Music" music. Not
only can you spend your nights
figuring out whose rune Is who's,
you can listen to the record toq, if
you wish, without being wasted to
the point of unconsciousness.
By no means is this a great

25th Anniversary

luncheon

FILET

165

MIGNON
(Petite)

U.S. Choice

Choice Potato
I I ltiUIIIfl

DOP

he ,.,_,,.., ..........

.__.,..................
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~

by
Billy
AltmM

record, that's for sure. But it's a
serious departure from their usual
"wanna see another rabbit?" Nt
of tricks. Two acoustic numbers,
bl.lt real acoustic numbers. The
only saving grace to "Hangman"
was that they admitted it wn
public domain and they only
arranged it. "Goin' to California"
is a pretty slow blues, and
"Stairway to Heaven" (no, not
the one Neil Sedaka did - I was
scared wt'len I saw the title. When
you cop from "Kisses Sweeter
than Wine," who knows what's
next?) is definitely the best tune
they've ever done.
Beginning with acoustic guitar
and mandolin (I think). this one's
good enoug~ . to listen to the
words and enjoy them . Gotta
hand it to Page - the inner sleeve
just happens to have the words to
this one printed in nice fancy
letters. And it builds logically,
which is more than I can say
abQut " Whole Lotta love," on
which Page stepped back through
time •nd stole Clapton's break
from " I'm Not Talkin'," It's eight
minutes of great music, and it
took them seven sides of wax to
get to that point. I know it's been
there all along, because Page is
one of the best, and he's too
smart to let any more than the
barest essentials of honest talent
show through at any given
moment.
It's all so simple, actually. As
unconsciously ferocious and
innocently heavy (Wowl the dial
goes all the way up to ten - on
the guitar and the amp. let's try
it.) As the Yardbirds were, Zep
has been consciously excessive
and bratenly prediCUible. But this
f\ew one, it's even got one called
"Rock and Roll" and it's a
normal , steady mammouth
rocker. And Sandy Denny's on
one tr'Kk? Too much . Recorders
and mandolins.
This one's going to bother
some people, bl.lt Page knpws
what he's doing every step of the
way, so you better get with it, at
leasf before the next one, on
which, not only will there be no
names listed, there'll be no songs
listed either. Led Zeppelin 5 will
contain a note' that will say, "See
side four of S~nd Winter tor the
~ngs on this album."
Up until now, all that Page and
Beck had in common was the
ability of each one to steal licks
from the other without anyone
being able to figure out whose it

w.s first . Anyway, after two
a diltMertening eccid&amp;r~t, a
disheert.nlng trip to Motown and
the usual ton of bad press
moutfliogs, Beck is Back (goOd
campaign slogan - better than
Where Have the Kinks Gone) . He's
in a different letting, of course
but one tittle lick, and you kno~
who you'nt heering. Jeff is one of
the most distinctive guitarists
around, and trying to hide h is
IOUnd would be like hiding an
elephant in your bathtub. Sooner
or later, you'll suss him out.
_In keeping up with his schizoid
tendencies, Jeff has assembled
well•balanced soul band with
slight jazz overtones. But each
time a guitar solo comes Mound
look out. If anything, the les~
heavy rhythms manage only to
make his guitar sound more insane
than ever. And considering that
Jeff wrote all ttle tunes on the
record, and none of them have
anything in their lyrics o r chord
pattern~ that suggest anything of
the Jeff Beck we've all grown to
love and hate simultaneously,
everyone's in trouble.
He writes good soul music.
with typical throwaway lyrics and
good beats. But those solos! He
sounds sometimes like it's the
wrong song, but just when the
phrases seem to be defying any
type of logical input to the song
and the rest of the group, he'll
burst into some beautiful, melodic
line that's just perfect. Jeff's not
smart, he's jurt a maniac.
The band is super good, and
that hefps a lot. Cozy Powell on
drums is a real find for Bec:k . He's
extremely adept at picking up on
Bec:k's waves and that's not all
that easy. Bas:sist Clive Chaman
plays those low notes, something
Beck's wanted ever since he
formed his own band years ago.
Max Middleton on piano is pretty
jazzy, and his solos offset the
guitar in a strange but satisfying
way and Bob Tench is a good
vocalist_ even though he ain't no
Rod the Mod. But then Rodd y
ain't no Sam Cooke, neither.
" Raynes Park Blues," a long
instrumental at the end of side
one, gives a good indication of
hoW'beautifully Beck can play, if
he feels like it. "Jody" shows how
blah his songs can get. All In all ,
it's a good showcase for ol' Jeff. I
always say you can learn the mo~1
about an artist from h is art, not
his words or his actions. And, I
know I wouldn't want to be alone
in the same house with Beck for
more than ten · minutes. He just
might kill me. But I'll always
enjoy his music .

veers.

a

251Ja
AlfiiiYERSABY
CELDBAnON

FILET SJ.95
MIGNON
c3o~cE
IIZI Tol IZ.-1 FOI Sl.!O
IMI ITIAIS COITIACTID
AVAIUILI ALL HOUIII

AlSO FUTUIJIQ GUll

ONE CENT
PROFESSIONAL
FULL COLOR PORTRAITS
OFFERED TO ALL
GRADUATING STUDENTS
passport. application, J.D. photos
also available
appoimmen ts, information:
356 Norton, 831 -2505, 5570

SAtE

E.N TREE FOR 2
(ADUltS)

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�Out of the spirits of music
" C•mer•• Inside
interviewing worms"

the coffin

No tel on Viflon
Jim Morrison

De1th came to poet Jim
Morrison unexpectedly. He was in
the bathtub. Alone for a ff!W
minutes. P1mela, his wife, went to
see how he was doing; he had
been spitting up small amounts of
blood recently, and when she
entered the bathroom, she saw her
husband lying lifeless in the water,
his famous cock floating , a
half·smile on his face. Jim
Morrison was dead. A heart
attack.
He died almost two years to
the day of Brian Jones. Jon~ died
July 2, 1969, Morrison July 3,
1971 . Both died of natural causes
while in the water. Jones was 25,
Morrison 27.
Both were splitting from their
groups. Both needed money.
Morrison was content though; he
was in Paris writing a screenplay
and his poetry ; Jones was alone.
Strange as it might seem,
Morrison 's death had been
forecast by R. Meltter in a story
written for the book, Nobody
Waved Goodbye (a book about
rock n' roll death) where he said :
"But it took a double-J to supply
the topper for the other two
single J's, Jimi and Janis. There's a
heck of a lot of J's left around
and any one of them could be
next. Jim Morrison. Mick Jagger."
Morrison was a modern
enigma. A man of paradox and
extremes, he never failed to be
Jim Morrison. Whether as a rock
n' roll star or poet, he was an
individual whose grasp of his own
situation and exilteoat w• 10
firm that he created out of his
dreams h1s own 8)(istence, an
existence so intense that it
became religious. He was out to
destroy a whole lot of attitudes
and make them nfiW and fresh
onoe again. He was a modern man
c aught in the mold of a
poet/priest.
Few people cou ld ever
understand Morrison, few tried,
but those who have know why he
was smiling when he died .
The male Harlow
Like a modern (male) Harlow.
he was a created sex symbol

(Harlow wore no bra, no panties, of the primordial unity."
Morrison wore no underwear &lt;Jnd
So here it is - Morrison
had a definite attraction to became a work of himself.
leather, both totally sexual beings
-both very, very human) . He was Broken bonlas at whiskey' bars
Dionysius, the god of wine,
Scene : Jim sitting around with
fertility, the god of the earth .
some friends. He calmly breaks a
Harlow to the Kid : 'Before you wine bottle over someone's head.
can pry any secrets from me, you Everyone gets upset. Jim doesn't
must first find the real mel Which understand so he takes another
one will you pursue?
bottle and breaks it over his own
What was Morrison's madness, head. Blood all over the place.
his secret vision of hTs and our They pick Jim and the oth~ guy
own special reality? Better vet, up and rush May before the
why was Jim Morrison?
police arrive. Cut. A perfect
A creature of his age, Morrison Breughel .
Besides being the art form
was a cinemator. A creator of a
known as Jim . Mouison, Jim
living, breathing cinema.
Recollections of this shy Morrison was also a poet/ priest
creating yet another kind of art
madn~ come to mind. Who
could forget the time when he was form . His poetry was sometimes
on the Jonathan Winter's Show vague and mysterious, often
singing ' Moonlight Drive, • erect simplistic his words never failed to
penis bulging, eyes glazed into a carry the weight they were
shamanistic trance? Who could Intended to.
Through his entire career
forget the flashing leap into the
set of nets, entangled, lost, Morrison wanted to be known as a
oblivious? Or the last time I saw poet and the day his book of
him live. The soft sounds of ' The poems was published (The Lords
End" flowing across thousands of 11nd The New Cr•turtJS), he was
sleepy people at the Toronto found in his apartment holding a
Rock and Roll Revival, which copy of the book, crying. Yet, etc., which made them money and
created the Plastic Ono Band, in a most of his poetry comes to us a person like Morrison who wrote,
football stadium. The calm through his songs. Always " The End, When the Music's
serenity of soft death overcoming conscious of being Morrison the Over" and "Celebration of the
every sense as he lilted out "The . art form , Morrison the poet was Lizard ," which made them
Killer awoke before dtNin/ He put highly successful in presenting his famous .
his boots on."
visions to an audience. His singing
The story goes that the first
Or his public recollections: the was his poetry and through his time the Doors ever performed
Miami arrest for exposing his real poetry, he created the first "The End" live, the audience was
so stunned that the group
self for the first time, the schizophrenic rock group.
obscenity charge.
Who could realize the immediately lost their jobs.
A prime example of early
What motivated this signlfiCMice of h1111ing a person
cockatrice? Morrison once said (Robby Krieger) who wrote Morrison the poet (pre art form
that If anyone ever wanted to " Light My Fire, Wishful Sinful," Morrison) comes in his song, " The
really find out why he was, they
should read Nietnche:
"In song and in dance mtn
expresses himself as a member of
a higher community ; he has
forgotten how to walk and speak
BRILLIANT... A beautifullg made film.
and is on the way toward flying
-Jud1tlr Crut. NRC TV
into the air, dancing. His very
'A singular experience .•. DARING!"
gestures express enchantment.
-R~eltGrd Sdid~I.Li/t M~o11rtr
Just as the animals now talk, end
the earth yields milk and honey,
supernatural sounds emanate from
him. too : he feels himself a god,
he himself now walks about
enchanted, in ecStasy, like the
gods he was walking in his dreams.
N0
H0
I NG
He is no longer an artist, he has
,.._~-----.
Limited enpgeme~t
become a work of art : in these
Nor th Park
last chance to see
paroxysms of intoxication the
1m
N£nn
tu·1411
this
classic film.
artistic power of all nat ure reveals
Itself to the highest gratification

ws

w

Crystal Ship," it was here that the
basic foundations for the
Morrison image/ vision were
beginning to take form :
" Before you slip into
unconsciousness
I'd like to have another kiss . •.
The Crystal Ship
Is being filled
A thousand girls
A thousand thrills ... "
This was Morrison the back
door man : "Men don't know/ But
-contlnue&lt;l on following page-

G .:-;,_

....

I ~I

1 IJ 'I '
,) 1 1/'li/j
I

I( /{

{I

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Send em
to the
\\bodshed.

MEM·BRAIN1
.
'
an extrasensory expertence

written and directed by Rob Fisher

riiUUftO IY UUU oiiiiTS UMMITT([ WITH
Soil UUKUS IUIIUU, foiiCUlTY OF oiiiiTS a lETTEIII.
a UUAI 11108( UA COMMITTU .
•

fiCII£TS STMDUTS - SUI. OTH(II - ll.tl
MILlARD Flll .OII( IIODM
DtelMilll ) A 4, II.H ••• ·- 11 MIUIGHT
SHOWS lVUY HOUII 01 THE HOUII

Your boss. Your
mother·in·law. Your best
friend. Youraeir. And you"ll
get everything you deserve:
fantastic c hicken wings and
tangy sauce, 50t' s pirits
from 3 P .M . on. free
peanuts to shuck. giant sizt&gt;
sandwiches in a basket.
lt"t~ s trictly come·as-you·are
to The Woodshed, where
the kitchen's always open
and the music's always o n.
The Woodshed. Located
right next to the Pac ket Inn
in North Tonawanda. Drive
o ut Delaware o r take the
Youngmann.TheWoodshed's
just over the Delaware
Avenue Bridge ..Open from
11 :80 A .M . every day
except Sunct.y.

�Spirit ofmu$k..:. :...·. ~.. __
little girls und.-stand" Morrison
the "erotic politici1n;" Morrison
the sensu11 aoonet caressing his
m1nhood underneath sweat
soaked leather pants. "Crystal
Ship" became "Soul Kitchen"
which became "Twentieth
Century Fox" which evolved into
the "Alabama Song." "Oh, show
me the way/ To the next Whiskey
Bar/ Oh, don't ask why/ Oh, don't
astc why."

• Hou... Md ROids
Here Morrison introduces 1 few
major themes in his writing, the
rOid and the house. l'll leave it to
you to figure out the songs, but It
does work and a strong tip is to
listen to Morrison Hotel.
After the nexl whiskey bar we
are transported to the " Horse
Latitudes" where we get a bit of
Morrison's autob iographical
abstraction:
"Poise
Delicate
Pause
Consent
In mute nostril agony
Carefully refined
And sealed over."
Actually, it's all about the
Image of hones being thrown into
the sea, swimming awhile, loosing
strength and going under. But it
coold be an allegory, couldn't it?

RECORDS

Comes the moment - Morrison

The Yes Album : Yes (Atlantic SD8283)
There comes a time when all heavy music walks
through your heed, INVing its footprints behind, and
all thole super guitarists start to sound alike. If you
feel like this, the cure is Th• Yn Album . It's a
record that sounds better every time you hear it.
Yes is an English group, and although I've had
my fill of that affected English-choir boy style of
singing, Yes's impeccable three part harmoniew, are
' What have they done to the always shifting with the musical textures until they
earth?
soond like anoth• instrument. It takes a little
What have they done to our getting used to because there's no low register, only
fair lister?
high, higher and highest, but it works beautifully.
Ravaged and plundered
At times the vocals float above the music, and
and ripped her and bit her
t~en Tony Kaye's churchy organ flows in until the
Stuck her with knives
vhices and instruments are indistinguishable. This
in the side of the dawn
album, their third, bears little resemblance to the
and ti~ her with fences
other two which were dominated by the organ. The
and dragged her down
difference here is Steve Howe's guitar which gives
the music constantly shifting chordal structures to
I hear a very gentle sound.
work off of.
With your ear down to the
The music is intricately constructed, yet it oever
groundloses It's vitality; theY are a rock band. The songs
take on the form of small suites, but they flow into
We want the world and we· each other so beautifully that you hardly notice it.
want it
" Yours Is No Disgrace'' is a long song d ivided into
Now I
several parts. It starts off on two levels with the
When Morrison is talking about music constantly changing until Chril Squire's bass
"we" he is talking about himself, brings it together. Special mention has to go to him
not us.
on this album. He plays bass like a lead guitar,
Now the cockatrice comes full something unusual for British bands.
blown out of the cock's egg with
It's impossible to talk about leads here;
the power to kill at a glance.
everyone's playing complements eech other
'' Is everybody in/ The perfectly, until the whole band sounds like one
Ceremony is about to begin."
instrument. "Yours Is No Disgrace" Is about a man
who finds hlmtelf in the middle of chaos. "On a
sailing ship to nowhere, leaving ~ery day, yours is
attains status • an .-t form.
'When the Music's Over'' done on
the srrang. O.YJ album as well 11
the Absolut•ly Live album
becomes the vehicle. Much more
of 1 journey than "The End," Its
power lies in its assessment of
Morrison in relation to his reality :

Amherst·Sundey, B loodY Sufldtty
Bailey · Pttty Misty for ~fflllclng Off
Boulevard Clntma I: Bleu the s - t ttnd tM Children
Boulevard Cintma II : Somttd'llng Big
B ~ffalo : Ther. was e crooked m.,~n i n rhe Wildttmeu
Center Somethtng Big
Cinema: Sundtty, Bloody Sufldtly

Colvin· The M11n in the Wfldttmeu
Granada: Bedknobr &amp; Broomlflckl
Holiday I : The French Conntctlon
Holiday II . D~rttte Chttrttetttf'l
Kena1ngton: Gontt With Thtt Wind
North Park: Ont' Dey in the L.lft1 of Ivan Oeni1ovich
Old Alvoll ThNtre: Thtt Wflltemttrflhs K id from Brooklyn
Plaza North : Kotch
Seneee Mall C•nema Bleu the B- t and tM Chi ldr•n
Stlr·Tonewanda. Kf111t'1 d'ltt Mttttttr W•th HllltMflhe Organizatton
Towne. The (kMgtl Manffhe Good. Guy1 .,d thtt Bad Guy1
Capri : Lovtt ln Hollywood
Loew 'a Teck : A ll About Lo~/Ridtl Hard R1de Wild
S.Shot. Httlp M• Bttforttlt
Penthouse: Shttft
Bac:kstege: Mona
Fine Arts. Glory RO«&lt;/$100 Wife
Plaza Perk : The Dtty We All Stttrttld/Dt vorce
Lake Theatre: The Counter Shift
Kenmerk : L ight Rldtm/FisltiFIIhl
Palace: Thtt Orfllnlztttion
Shttriden I Or~v•ln . Dittry of • Mad Housewiftt
Genessee: Hot Spuf'IIHarttm Bunch
Lovejoy: L.ttt'l Scttr. .}e$$iCII to lHBth/RO~tm~llry '1 Boby

N 0 W
SHOWING

no disgrace."
"The Clap" is an aCoustic Instrumental by Steve
Howe; • happy ragtime Interlude that dances like a
puppet. "Starship Trooper" starts off ominQusly,
with a whole orchestra being created on the organ.
Anderson sings lead here, the chorouses follow, and
the music bubbles under it all. Ttlen they take it
down In a series of sliding harmonies, end the music
follows, trickling down. This is another long song,
and goes through more changes than a Mother's
record, but it flows beautifully with everyone
working ~round the melody.
" I've Seen All Good People" is becoming an AM
radio hit and rightly so. The first part, "Your Move,"
features some beautiful interplay in the harmonies,
The end is amazing as the harmonies and organ race '
to a crescendo, finally joining as one. The music
literally dances, and in the second part, "All Good
People," it rocks out, with Steve Howe's guitar
flowing. It fades into an endless coda, almost
floating away.
It's here that the record becomes sort of a
morality pia'/. We're all pawns trying to capture the
queen and yet surrounding ourselves with ourselves.
"Venture" is a short song with the same theme, "a
man who realizes that alone Is no venture."
The album ends with " Perpetual Change,"
which Is about just that, with the music doing just
that. It goes from rock to ragtime to folk blending in
crescendoes, then dissipating, starting again and
ending in a joyous crescendo. It's a resolution for the
record - fo accept the endless change and go with it.
)t's Impossible to say enough about the record.
Yes's music floats like an endless river, with the
singing and instruments blending Into one. No home
should be without lt.
- Tom Bogucki

Childhood nosta/gill. -;-·~··.. "~ ..... - ·· ........ ··their way into our ears and out of Prince, Clever Else, Lazarus &amp; The
our h'earts. The most meritless job Drakens" and "The Bremen Town
of vocalizing was done by Joe Musicians." In these and in the
Catalano who, if he could carry a ones that preceded them there
tune, was expert in hiding that were some very funny li~es and
fact from his audience. The use of sItuations .
music during the playlets worked
Some rather fine acting did
much better since the mood
created thereby greatly enhanced show through, however, as in the
case of Willie Dorsey who played
the actors' movements.
such parts as Cocky Locky. Clever
Else's father, and a king. He has a
The temainder
quality of aloofness which has
Four playlets finished out the great appeal .
evening. They were "The Frog
Unlike much theater today
which seeks to produce plays of
WKIW RADIO and IUFF.4LO FESTIVAL prcsellt
"relevance" for its own sake (and
which , by the way, often fall flat
due to their abundance of
relevance but their lack of art)
this play seemed to try to
accentuate the art therein by its
lack of relevent issues. Why else
would anyone choose to perform
plays about something as
Sat., Dec. 4 at 8:30PM
audacious as fairy tales? But
throughout the playlets I couldn't
Kleinhans 'Cusic Hall
help feeling that their purpose was
mainly to nostolgically hearken us
back to the days of our childhood
M~in floor $S.S0. $4.50
rather than to introduce a moving,
8alco11y $4. 50-$3. 50
adult work which stood as art in
and of itself. It was cute as hell,
Tlckoh o" ulo "ow AI luiiAio fettl•.tl Tlcut Offko, St..lor HlltOfl lo•r,;
but that just isn't enough to hold
U. I . Horto" H•ll; llale Colloto Tic ket Offko; hill Tlckoh, KAc~rlo
together over two hours of
"•u, Hl•t•••
theater.

"Soldier... lan, and the little girl
in " Dark," Melora, were young
children who proved once again
that old show-biz axiom about
kids and animals stealing the
show.
After intermission a terrible
thing happened; they had another,
much longer "Concert" in which
several musicians got up,
mumbled some apologetic-sound·
ing words about themselves and
the songs they were ebout t9 play
and then proceeded to folk·sing

GORDON

.LIGHTFOOT
'•"a.

THIS WEEKEND AT

Beef &amp; Ale House
3199 Main Street
One bjock south of U .B.

friday and Saturday Nights

Reverend
Sunshine
and the

Spiritual Harmony
Band
Yes, VirginiaYou, too, can
Boogie with the Rev.

Sunday Night
Relax and enjoy
Buffalo's finest fc.Jk artist

Nan

Eichler
9:30to 7

I

\

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

S.. u,w.n~ty of New Vork at Buffllo

Vol. 22, No. 37

Wednelday, o.c.nbet 1, 1971

Ketter announces appointment
English pre-registration: of :Social Sciences Provost

New procedure

no one will be screwed
by Barbara Malmet
Spectrum Staff Writer

Pre-registration for all upper-level English courses will be
instituted for the spring semester. The .new sy~tem will aid
English majors and non-majors in selecting the· courses they
need.
The pre-registration procedure will consist of students
going to Annex B, Room 10 between 9 a.m. and 4:30p.m.
on assigned days. Senior English majors must go on Dec. 7-8
in order to sign up for their desired courses.
Junior majors will go to
Annex B on Dec. 9-10. while
non-majors wilJ pre-register Dec.
9-JO or 12-13. Sophomores will
do so Dec. JJ.J 4. Sophomores
who will definitely be promoted
to junior status in the spring may
register as juniors, on trust.

Many people feel shafted when
the SARA computer closes them
out of classes they need.
With the new system, the
pre-registration material wUI be
fed into SARA, including class
lists. If there are any problems or
changes, they can be dealt with

The new procedure was
announced at a press conference
Monday by Robert Newman, vice
chairman of Undergraduate
Studies in conj~nction with
student advisors to the English
Department. Dr. Newman said:
••Pre·reiJstration is a fifty-fifty
propositi()n cr~atcd by students
and faculty."

the usual drop-add procedures
after registration. Another
advantage is that an immediate
feedback on the supplies and
demands for various courses will
be available.
Depending on thb feedback,
classes may be altered tQ fit
student needs. More courses at
more times may be added, as
there has been a problem in the
past of many desirable courses
Pre-rqistration
offered at the same time. Of
Mr. 'Newman described how course, the most important aspect
the plan was originated by a of the new proce4ure is that it
student caucus of English will guarantee students, primarily
Department representatives. The juniors 11nd seniors, their course
students felt a stroJ\g need for a needs ..
Those students . presently
procedure whereby their specific
enrolled
in continuing courses
course needs would be fulfilled
must
place
their names on lists
with a minimum of hassles. After
distributed
by their English
several meetings the proposal for
instructor
in
order to be
pre-registration came about and in
pre-registered
.
This
will facilitate
its revised state will go into effect
two
semester
courses.
shortly.

Students are urged to pick up
copies of schedules so that they
will know which courses to
choose on their assigned days.
Senior majors will have a choice
of two courses and three
alternatives for a third course.
The third course will be
. processed immediately following
junior majors pre-registration.
Junior majors will also have a
choice 9f two courses.
The pre-registration proposal
was circulated in upper level
English courses for the students to
vote on. Dr. Newman noted that
the large sampling of opinion
(nearly 500 out of 800 majors
voted) was an important measure.
lt was appar en t that. the
guaranteeing of courses was
important to English majors.

Many aclvaotaaes
The new system, one of the
first of such a vut scope, has
se¥eral outstanding advantages.

Problem desk
The English Department wants
to deaJ with students on a humane
level, despite the depersonalization of SARA. Therefore, any
problems which arise will be
directed to a "problem desk"
which will be set up in Norton
Hall, Nov. 30- Dec. 2 .
All students are urged to
choose their courses and then
pre-register. SARA registration
material should be filled out with
the same choices as those for
which the student pre-registered .
If students pre-register and do not
find they are enrolled in that
course, the English Department
will take care of the situation.
Dr. Newman and the student
advisors strongly urge English
majors and non-majors to come to
Annex B and pre-register. If the
procedure works, it may be
expanded In other areas ,
by-passing SARA completely.

Presid ent Robert L. Ketter, acting on the
recommendation of the Policy Committee of the
Faculty of Social Sciences, has nominated Dr. Edwin
P. Hollander, Professor of Psychology, for the post
of acting Provost of that Faculty . Dr. HoUander will
take offic:e on Dec. 15, upon approval of th e State
University Board ofTrustees.
"
In a10nouncing the appointment, President
Ketter p1raised Dr. HoUander as an ..outstanding
faculty" mtember and a dedicated, involved member
of this University community." He said, "Dr.
HolJander's creative skills, strength of leadership and
active ro•les on the departmental, faculty and
University-wide levels will be invaluable to his
Faculty."
·
'
Dr. Hollander, commenting on his nomination,
stated, "'It's an honor to be npminated by my
colleagues: and for that nomination to be accepted
by the Pr•esident. I look on this as an opportunity to
provid e a service to this University, and all those
involved in directing this University on a trajectory
towards e•ven higher esteem in the academic field.

Replaces •:::ohen
Dr. lfloUander sa1d that he will assume his
responsibilities with "both ho1&gt;4f and optimism." It
may be n~membered that Dr. Ira Cohen whom Dr.
Hollander replaces, resigned earlier this year citing a
"general inability to work with the President's
office." Among other things, Dr. Cohen complained
that ..tho role of provost now is no longer a
significanlt policy-making position ."
Nonetheless, Dr. HoUander maintained that he
"didn't !foresee any difficulties." He did not,
however, wish that his confidence in any way to
"detract from Dr. Cohen's problems. He said he had
P,roblems, and I believe him," Dr. Hollander
commenwd .
Part of Dr. Hollander's optimism seemed due to
his tremendous enthusiasm for the Faculty on a
whole. H«: explained : "We have a very good Social
Science g1roup; really quite remarkable. There are a
great nu11nber of distinguished people. I am very
enthused with both faculty and students." Dr.
Hollander was particularly proud of the fact that
while many schools are strong in one or another of

Edwin Hollalllkr
the social sciences, Buffalo has achieved a marked all
round excellence.
Dr. Hollander emphasized the importance of
maintaininJ Jood student relations on both the
faculty and administrative levels. "I have always
regarded myself as relatively approachable faculty
member, and I ct:rtainJy hope that this positJon
won't be changed by my"added responsibilities ."
Continuing, Dr. Hollander said, "this type of student
faculty interaction is very important and quite
stimulating to me." Dr. Hollander added that he
would continue his teaching next semester even in
his role as acting Provost.
Dr. HoUander has been a faculty member since
1962, when he joined as director of the graduate
program in Social Psychology. He will serve in his
position at least until the summer. A search
committee for a permanent Provost is now being
formed .

Com11nittee formation

Campus security scrutinized
It watS learned Monday that State University of
Buffalo P'resident Robert L. Ketter will appoint a
committe•e to investigate the University Campus
Security within the next few days.
The formation of the committee will come in the
wake of a report by a three-man panel which
investigat4~d an incident involving alleged brutality by
two Campus Security officers in the arrest of a
dormitory student Nov. I .
The Jpanel, headed by Ronald Stein, associated
director ftor Student Affairs, JamU Hassan, legal and
housing dlirector of the Office of Student Rights, and
Tom DeMiartino, director of the Student Association
Office of Student RigJ\ts, recommended the
formation of a University-wide committee to
investigate: the Campus Security .
c...,
1 In all, the recommendations caJled for a full and
searching 'examination of the policies, procedures and
practices ofCampus Security.
Acco1rding to Al&amp;ert Somit, Executive Vioe
President , it appears that several nominations for the
chairmanrmp of the committee are already on
President Ketter's desk and he will make a decision

concerning them shortly .
Among those rumored for the chairmanship art
Richard Schwartz, Provost of the Faculty ofl..aw and
Jurisprudence and H. McAllister Hull, Jr., chairman of
the De~ment of Physics and Astronomy. Dr. Ketter
could not be reached for comment and , therefore,
could not confirm or deny these rumors.
According to the report , Jerry May, a dormitory
student , was beat about the head with nightsticks and
blackjacks by ..Campus Security patrolmen Thomas
Barr and Kevin O'Connor while allegedly resisting
arrest in Clement Hall.
Mr. May, at the time, was involved in a dispute
with another student, Susan Zuck, concerning
television privileges. Reportedly, an argument
developed and Ms. Zuck called Campus Security.
It is aJso alleged that the two patrolmen violated
various University procedures governin.J the actions of
security officers when It is necessa~ to enter the
dormitories. Among these regulations are procedures
for contacting responsible dorm and housing officials
for advice and assistance, not to mention advising the
complainant of alternative avenues of redress.

�t

up against the world

Marcu~: New Left lives!
by Barbera Mink

,.

S[J«trum Staff t.'rltw

Clark Gym was filled to capclty Saturday
ovenin-1, Nov. 20, to hear Herbert Marcuse apeak.
Tbe 71-year old philosopher wu brouJbt to Buffalo
under the alllpices of Telos, an orpni:ution of
.,..duate phJJoaopby students, who bad sponsored a
week.foq conference on politlc.a.l orpniz.ation in
conjunction with the Student AUociation.
Professor Marcuse, who emi&amp;ratcd to America
durina World War II, pined international fame as a
philosopher with his books Ero8 tznd Civil/z11tlon, an
analysis oC Freud, One·Dimemlonlll Man, which
deals with ideoloay in an advanced industrial society,
and Re111on ttnd Revolution, an outline of the
development of social theory In Europe from Hcacl
to Marx and: beyond.
Marcuse expressed a combination of criticism
and praise for the New Left with a decided opti mism
for its future. He maintained that the New Left is far
from dead, but is merely in a dormant staac, where
people arc re-evaluatina and rearoupina. The era of
"spectacular action" is past - "rcpressJon and
suppression have become intensjfied," so students
seem to be ''diacina in more solidly."
Educational importance
He also stressed the importance of education,
und cri t ic ized the arowing wave of
anti-intellectualism : "Theory is as vital as action to
• the revolution." Marcuse believed that every member
or the population can be an effective force in the
revolution to overthrow capitalism : " Revolutionaries
can even associate wtth, and I hesitate to even say
the word, liberals."
The professor also read a speech, soon to be
released for publication, on his atfltudes towards the
Women's Liberation Movement. He aareed that
women are victims of social repressaon and that their
positions must be changed, but felt that the female's
role as child-bearer deserves more credit than is
cjven.
The "predominance of the womb" and the
woman's position as eventual bringer of peace were
stressed. He referred to l&gt;elacroix's "Liberty Guidina
the Troops," where Liberty as portrayed as a woman.
" Her breasts are bared , and there lS no sago of
violence In her face . In one hand IS a naa, but in the
other a aun, showang that liberty must be fought
for."

FILET 165
MIGNON
(Petitt)
U.S. Choice

Differences dJicussed
" The disintearatlon of the Civil Service," he
continued , " the favorite child of the eatabUahment,
may be the be&amp;innina of the end ... Revolution does
not have to be bom out of poverty and misery social consciousness can also arise from the other
end of the strata." He told of a recent meotina of 20
millionaires, in which they aareed that the present
system does not work , and radical chanaes are
needed : "It sounded like a radical student aroup. I
don't take it very seriously, but it is indicative."
At this point 1 student pointed out that Andre
Gorz, the French author of Strattgy for lAbor and
Rtform and Rtvolutfon was also in the room, and
suggested that he and Marcuse discuss some of their
differences together.
Gorz, an associate and follower o f Sartre was
inOuential in the development of the theory of an
anti-Stalinist , anti-bureaucratic workina class
movement.
The vanauard
Thoulb h\1 and Marcuse aaree on most points,
there is one basic difference in their respective
ideolo11es, Gorz believes that any revoluUonary
development must come from the strughna of a
depressed class ; this depressed class is tbe workin&amp;
class, those directly related to production. Marcuse
believes that the Marxist idea of a proletariat is
outdated, and that the "masses" of the working class
are reactionary and conservati ve. Those privileged
enough to be educated are a sort of cUte, and
constitute the vanauard of the revolution. Their job
is to educate the " muses" - a word Marc1,1se dislikes
- to what their political situation is.
Gorz maintained that this position resembles
Leninist elitism, and could become ~pres:dve:
"Education should not be delivered by an elite
group ; undetstandina will emerge from struuJe."
Marcuse felt that the university is the place to learn,
and that philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle and
Hegel are worth studying ; Gorz recommended
tearing down the university, in a figurative sense at
least, and spreading that "educatiolt" to the masses.
Marcuse quoted an old Chinese proverb , ''You
think you're a vanauard - look behind you!" to
illustrate has poant that every dependent member of
the socaety, reaardless of class, is a potentaal member
of the vanauud. The American workina class,
perhaps is opposed to the European, will not revolt
if left to atself.

From science to yoga
A question and answer penod was held the
following morning at the Ridge Lea campus.
Approximately SO people plied the professor with
questions on topics ranging from science to yoga .
Marcuse felt that science is a potential liberating
force, but in its present state as used only for
destructive and repressive purposes. Hopefully a
''qualitative rather than quantitative science may
emerge."
The biochemical reproduction of man, "1f
undertaken within the present sociolo&amp;ical
26th Anniver..ry
Luncheon

framework, would be a catutropbe , •. The idea of
tcience creatina a human race smacks of absolute
idoaUsm, and overloob the buic difference between
man and nature. Nature remains that whlcb il
a.entiaUy other than man."
In response to a q'-estion about the value of
communal Uvina, dnap, yop, etc., Warcuse aaid that
the desire to withdraw and live ouwde the
establishment is futile. "You can't even 10 to the
moon without findina Coc:a&lt;:ola bobles, or aolf
balls • .. One m111t become conscious of the dearee
to which we are aU affected by the estabUabment."

books
t or Cnrlstmas 1nd •nv time
munlnoful bOOk' from ••roe

•net 1m1 11 prMses,
e~Cceptlonll urcn, chess

sets,

Import~

c•l•nct•n,

b•utlful posten •net otnw
Olft Item$.

Choice Potato

ILICIIIIITI DIP

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3102 Main St.
(brtwee.. C111kr &amp; L~l&gt;o"}

.

IIIIIIAII

........

Plllll. CAl
108&amp; Slllri4an Drive

Specillizing in Volkaw....,,
Triumph, Volvo, MO, Austin
Healey, Toyou, Datsun tnd
more.
877-9303
874-6330

Noise polhititin seen
as itlviSible meriaCe
by Jolul AdunnMA
$/}«t~m

s,.g letttw

Ecoloay. The very word evokes
imaaos of an outraaed army of
citizens marchina upon, and doina
batUo with, the despoilers of the
earth - thote who foul the air and
water out of ianomance, areed, or
a combination of both.
Until one or two yean aao, the
popular conception of pollution
included only these two prevalqat
forms, perhaps because they were
highly visible and clearly
danaerous. Now, however, there iJ
a aro wlns awarenea of yet
a nother type of poUution,
complex and i nsidious, which
seems to pose a whole new set of
problems for the urban man noiae polluUon.
The fact that the concept of
noise poUution has onlY re&lt;:ently
been generally recoanJzed, should
not be taken to mao that
scientific interest in the field is
equally new. Much research has
been conducted by acoustic
enaineers, audloloaists and
otolocjsts who have atte~pted to
determine what connection, if
any, exists between noise and
man's physical and mental well
being.

There wW be a S tudeot Aatembly meetina on
Wednelday, Dec. 8. location and aaenda will be in
Tlrr Spectrum on that date.

BLOOD
HOME AGAIN WHEN VOU
SEND VOUR PARENTS A

Elll .lEY
FIIIT
CA.Lt

GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE SPECTRUMIIIIII

IJIJIBDu:riLY

lllllaLIIIC.
24~

BMWOOD AVI.

,.... 174-0591
Page two . The Spectrum . Wedn~y, December 1, 1971

demonstrated that it becomes
difficult to carry on an ordinary
converution when tbe noice level
reaches the vicinity of SO decibels.
Prolonaed exposure to a sound, or
composite of sounds, of 90 ot
more decibels is often quite
danaerous, and can, in some cases,
cause a partial loss of hearing.
ConvenJenUy (in terms of
loc:ation), a problem hu arisen at
the Ridae Lea computer center,
where the workinp of one of the
computer's moc;hanical parts h.ave
ca used an annoyina, if not
danaerow, increase in noise.
Tl)ere are now plans to add
another com&amp;'UCer of the same
typo, which, It would seem, will
only serve to double the problem.
Or. Sanders wUI carry out
"discrirrunation testina" in the
preaenc;• ot the offending
machines, and intends to maintain
a continboU._•ttendance record
whJch couJcl pO.ibly reveal a
relationship b.etween a noisier
environment and an increased rate
of employee absenteeism.

StudentAssembly meeting
WE N.EED .

NEVER HAVE TO CAL.L

Dan~eto• cledbela
Thil i&amp; an incredible state or
affairs inum&amp;.~Cb • it hu been

Noise study
Associate Professor Derek
Sanders of the Department of Provide data
Speech Communications bas been,
Dr. Sanders' students have also
and is presently, involv~ in s uch initiated projects pertaining to
research activities.
noise pollution . Among them are
In a recently published study, a study of dormitory noise as a
Dr . Sanders and Dr. David function qf buUdina design, the
Weintraub, a member of the · results o( which could lead- to the
Depart f1\ent of Ped._lrics, and · developJMnJ of .n~a!chitcctural
hea$1 or the ~tr4! : ~W~ ~ . au~; 1rif: · i · :soo~vc
Ward at ChiJtlren ..,. · Keepitat,- · h6tO.C.;,M_ti; ~~$01!~.'
desc:ribcd thelr ~~ !Nt ~.&amp;. ~~"zia~~~
many incubators aenmt~ naif• · b••rJn} ~&lt;O'Q~·cvcll\)cl 1ft. tn
at a level which was, at least, · tndustrial llftyttof\Jnent. _...
potentially danaerous to certain
Undoubtedly, these and other
infants. Interestingly, they found investigations will provide
that the newer machines were concerned citizens with all sorts
somewhat noisier than the older of data which they may use to
models, in some instances, by as d ocu mcnt their cases apinst
much as ten decibels. When industrial sources of noise
appraised of the study's results, pollution, such as pneumatic drill
the company that manufactured and the pile driver. However,
the incubators promised to review unlike air or water pollution, the
the entire situation.
proble.n of noise is so com plex
Other major projects arc that it cannot be statistically or
planned. Dr. Sanders intends to evidentially exptained and thereb¥
conduct noise level tests in proven.
,
primary-school classrooms, in
While it can be assumed that 'an
order to determine whether or not individual who lives for many
th e students' hearing, and years in a factory town mi&amp;ht
indirectly, the entire process of eventuall y incur luna damage, eye
education, is hindered by irritation or any number of other
unacceptably hi&amp;h noise levels. A major and minor illnesses that are
similar study in a Seattle school
-contlnu~ on ,.ge four-

'"..........
.....111
..... ~.......Ilk . . . . .

SAVE MONEVI VOU'l.L

wbic:ll w• ~cent to a freeway,
revealed tbat the decibel level in
tbe cl...rooms wu conaittently in
the 90's.

Tht Spectrum i1 f)(lb/kh«J thr•
tlmtt• • wtt..t. ~ Mondq,
~y ttnd Fm.y; duri,. lhlt
, . . , IIC«Hmlt: .,_,. by Sub-8oerd
1, tnc. OH;c. ,,. lo&lt;»tfld at 355
Nonon Hill/, Sc.r. UnillltfJiry of N111111
York ttt •u"--o, 3436 frlltln Sr.,
Buffefo, Nttw York, t42t4.
Tltlttp/JDrJit: A,_ Code 116; Editorittl
63t-4tt3: Bullnltll, 83t..:J6t0.
Rttpr•••ntfld for ltd,.,;,ing by
Ntttl ona! Educ.tionel Adllertfli"'

~. Inc.., 360 Lttxlngtr)n A.._,

Nltw Y"'*, N. Y. tOOt 1.

SubcriptiDn ~,_ , . M.60 I'll' •
fo, two - - . n.

. . , . . , 01

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Yot*,

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Circuletlott: t11.000

�fba~~~ ~k~el~ ~~~ '.' .. ~ :' .,l .l

Kantrowitz · lectur~s

.!il}he.
deftinSe·ofAngela
,. , .. . . . . . . •1 ' . . .
t

.

•

"~gela Davis is an eneiny, not o( the . people

'

,

•

~

•

~

aevefopmentS, ·referring to it as the "anatomy of a
frame·up. "

but ()(the- Ni.xons, Reagans and ·Rockef~ers running
this country,"· explained Chadene Mitcfttll, direetor ·
of 'the Nlltional United Committee to free Angela
According to Ms. Mitchell , the evidence being
Davis in a recent speech given in the FiUmore Room. used against Angela has been distorted and sided. It
Ms. Mitchell con~ue~ .to say 1h3t "Angela bas been WaS further ' stated that the authorities are so
subjeeted to' the most inhumane treatment because convinced of her guilt that they have denied her bail :
she has done things in her own way, in the intecest ..This can only be done in cases where the
of the world's oppressed peoplb. She is opposed to presumption of guilt is great."
that whi'ch is bringing ~his country to ruin."
Ms. Mitchell reported that Angela Davis was a
. Despite the many organizations and individuals professor at UCLA where she was allegedly
calling for Angela's immediate r,e1ease from priso~ on discriminated against by the Board of Regents and
bait, the. alleged murderer; kidnapper and copspir.ator the University's administration . It was decided
continues to remain in solitary confinement. Ms. beforehand that her, classes would be non-credit,
most likely , accordi.!Jg to Ms. Mitchell , in an effort to
discourage st\l&lt;lents from taking them . Ms. Davis
hetsel f received no pay . However, because her classes
were overfull, both credit and pay were given . the
following fall.

on heart transplants
~ Admitting
his childhood Technical gains have been
ambition to be a fighter pilot , contjnually made until the
Adrian Kantrowitz, performer of development of a machine,
the first human heart transplant in currently used, which takes over
the United States, spoke to a the breathing and circulatory
filled Haas Lounge last week. His functions for three to four hours
message was one of enthusiasm and allows the surgeon to operate
on a realxed heart , That particular
and confidence for the future.
Dr. Kantrowitz sees this future step, according to Dr. Kantrowitz,
marked the opening of endless
possibilities in heart surgery.

-

Conditions and capitalism
~

In January •1970 Angela Davis came to the
defense of the Soledad Brothers and as Mitchell
pointed out proceeded to expose the ''horrible''
prison conditions in the country, relating them to
the "racist, exploitative nature of capitalism." Her
dismissal from UCLA came when the administration
and the Board of Regents, headed by Gov. Reagan,
subsequently decided that Angela was involved in
too many "extra-curricular activities." However, Ms.
Mitchell claimed, Angela's dismissal was the resuh of
her involvement in the Communist Party and
brilliant exposes.

Charlene Mitchell

'

Mitchell sought to make clear that Angela is the
victim of an illegal and immoral frame-up, one which
may in fact cost her her life. She feels the past
occurrences have been ~efinite examples of the
inequities and prejudices found in today's elitist and
racist society.
•Anatomy of a frame·up'
To give the audience a better insight into what
exactly has transpired in this case, Ms. MitcheiJ went
through the c ~ronological account of the

After many ensuing developments, and the
shootings of Maf.in County Court House, Angela was
placed on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted List and was
labelled as "armed and dangerous." Her arrest
foUowed in New York and she was eventually
ex~radited to Calif9rpia where she was arraigned in
court. Ms. Mitchell then brought to the audience's
attention that "Angela has been in jail for over li
year and has· continuously been placed in the most
horrid conditions, usually in the psychiatric wards of
the prisons. It is assumed in this country that if
you' re black and red , you're crazy!"
The need for involvement in the "free Angela"
movements was then stressed. Among the many
goals is the postponement of Angela's trial scheduled
to take place in Santa Clara County , California
where 60% of the people believe she is guilty of all
charges levelled against her. The involvement ,
according to Ms. Mitchell , must be in the forms of
petitions, campus committees. collections, tlonations
and meellngs with government representatives.
All those interested can contact the Angela
Davis committee on campus.

- Osterrelcher

Adrain Kantrowitz
as an "exceedingly exciting era in
surgery_;;! and hopes that young
pcopj!_~ill become involved in
'the field while it is rapidly
exapnding. He appears to have a
deep faith in the young for he
notes that most innovation is born
of young minds. " Never listen too
carefu lly to elders ," Dr.
Kantrowitz warned. ••they are a
so urce of information not
wisdom."
The bulk of Dr. Kantrowitz's
talk was a capsulized summary of
the development of hea rt surgery:
"Simple heart surgery was first
attempted in the nineteenth
cen tury after an understanding of
t h e physiology of respiration
made it possible to open the chest
without collapsing the lungs .''

Needed research
At present, 80-85% of the
30 ,000 children born with heart
defects each year can be
completely cureo . In ac.tamon,
lO,QOO patients annually suffer
from Stokes-Adams disease which
causes the heart to suddenly stop.
Previously, all faced certain death .
Now, Dr. Kantrowitz reported,
due to a small machine which
keeps the heart going, death is
rare.
However, 54% of all deaths still
are the result of heart -ilisease, a
total of 1.5 million people each
year. As part of the attempt to
reduce that figure , 175 human
h ea rt transplants have been
performed to date with 20% of
the patients surviving for more
than three months. According to
Dr. Kantrowitz, it is pointless to
perform many more such
o pera lions until addit ional
research is done into the process
by which antibodies reject foreign
organs.
Another b ranch of heart
research which Dr. Kantrowitz is
devoting himself to involves a
mechanical device wruch will be
ca pable o f performing the
pumping responsibilities of the
heart for an extended period of
time, thus lengthening its life
span. The original heart would
still be present to chemically
respond to the changing needs of
the body and communicate those
chan ges electrically to the
machine.

~""'-"~-

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1. .122

•a• -m-1s1s •• tuPPa
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...

�Noise pollution ...

-continued from page two-

directly attributable to air case, t h e elimination or
pollution, this is not the case with non~limination of noise made no
noise pollution, whose effects are difference.
What mattered in each case,
closely linked with one's attitude,
and what made the productivity
expectations and tolerance.
To quote Dr. Sanders : "One increase, was the workers' belief
cannot specify a particular noise that their new conditions were the
and then predict a result ... We result of management's concern
define noise in terms of our own for their well-being.
particular needs."
More standards needed
The subjectivity of people's
'Music to his ears'
For example, to a father, the responses to noise have hindered
sound of t.he neighbor' s the progress of those who a~tempt
lawnmower may seem both loud to examine its effects, as well as
and annoying, whereas the sound the efficacy of those who desire
of his own (when pushed by his to establish noise control
son), is music to his ears. It has standards that are modeled after
also been found that most people . laws pertaining to air and water
can tolerate a noise that is created pollution .
It seems clear that there will
by a source tttought to be
ultimately beneficial. An example h ave to be more conclusive
of this attitude is the general research before adequate
toleration of all forms of standards can be formulated. At
pollution which are created by the present time, so little is
known about the relationship
"national security" projects.
Not only is the response to between man and noise that there
noise almost entirely subjective, seems to be no basis for
but scientists still do not know regulatory statutes, apart from
whether or not•noise, of itself, can certain subjective reactions to the
affect behavior. In an industrial problem.
experiment recently, workers
In other words, it seems
were divided into groups. One was unlikely that we are prepared to
put to work in a quieter ban jet planes, because people
surroundings (noise control who live near airports, and claim
devices were installed) and their to have suffered a hearing loss,
produ c t ivity ros e quite demand such an act.
In fact, scientists cannot yet
noticeably.
The second group worked in as determine the magnitude of Ute
noisy an environment as before problem, although they have
the test began, but the interior of isolated certain of its aspects.
their l&gt;uilding was painted yellow. While it has been found that
Their productivity rose to the prolonged exposure to sounds
same level as that of the other exceeding 90 decibels can be
group. Thus, in this particular dangerous, researchers do not

know whether the effect of noise
is cumulative, that is, whether
continual exposure to a high, but
technically non-dangerous noise
level (such as exists in major
cities), can also cause physical
and/or mental damage.
This lfroblem could well be the
crux of the entire issue, and the

LOW DRY CLEANING PRICES
at the Tower Service Center
&amp;sement of TCJw.tr

single most im portarit" ' poiat in
any determination 'of itols~
control's future direction. In \he
words of Dr. Sanders: ~'The worst
thing about our attitude is that we
concentrate upon not exceedina
hazardous noise levels, and do not
consider the overall q uality of
life ... or noise as it irnpingea on
our daily activities."
Presently, the city of Chicago
is the acknowledaed national
Jeader in noise control, havin&amp;
recently instituted sweepinJt new
.regulations that hl•~ q\&amp;Mtted
'truckS, silenced 'churc~.beUI abd
,even sent noily ro01t9 off \Q t,lle
countryside. u is, or c'burso,·Too
early to look for r"'uhs Of any

ANY COMBINAT ION OF THREE

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Ute.

. •

•

REMEMBER WHEN TEMPTED
''God Is faithful, who Will not
suffer you 10 be tem'pted above
that ye are able: but will with
the temptation also IIUike a way
ofescape."
1Cor. IO: l3

for 11"'1 from the

JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

876-.4265

..

Is it true what they say about Peanuti? .
I

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BUY &amp; SELL USED SKI EQUIPMENT
·at··the
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December 3 &amp; 4

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SALE HOURS: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3 -1 p.m. to 6 p.m. &amp; 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4 - 11 a.nt. to 4 p.m.

UNSOLD EQUIPMENT MUST BE PICKED UP AFTER 4 p.m. on SATURDAY.

spo~~ored by
Scfuu~meid~~ SLi Cful
Page f9ur. The Spectrum . Wednesday, December 1, 1971·

~:

ear, O~lsrael

Bible Truth ,

HOURS:
Doily 2-6 p.m. Sat. 12-3 p .rri.

aeneral ' improveinenl in the
quality of life,• but Jt is possible
that the Chicago experiment
might, in time, be generally
adopted.
As with the problems of air
an d water pollution, it is obvious
that eventual control of noise
levels, h aza rdous " or merely
annoying, is contingent upon the
willingness of Individuals to work
for ,eneral improvement rather
than personal comfort. Or, to put
it another way, control is

...

'·.

�Medical It

Editor'l note: Medical questlons{problcml on your mind? Medical/, a
weekly column containing hetzlth related questio114 {rom the University
· community, is now In operation throuth the cooperation of- the
Medical School, Untvenfty Hetzlth Ser11ice and the Office of Student
Affairs and Services. IIUt dial 831 -5000 Action Line Extension,
addre11 a written question to Medical/, cfo The Spe&lt;:trum,J55 Norton
Hall or visit Action Line booth In the Center Lounge of Norton Hall.
Names will be kept In strict confidence, and quelt/ons fielded by
students and faculty of the State University of Buffalo Medical School
will be answered through the column, appearing NCh Wednesday. If
1tudents wish per~onal answen, supply your name and phone number
and a member of the #tdlcal School will call you.
Q : How soon after one recoven from mono can one aive blood? (I
caJied Mirsa and they uid that anyone who has had mono is not
ellaible to Jive blood at any time.)
A: l'he American Association of Blood Banks says an individual
may give blood after he completely recovers from the "sians and
symptoms" of mono. The person I talked to at Mirsa ~d they follow
Uili criterion. Apparently, whomever you talked to gave you the
wrong information.
Q: I note where a commercial plasma company is advertlsina for
donon. How many times a month is it safe to aive blood?
A: One unit of blood may be donated once every two months, but
not more than four times a year. I'IJzsma "donations," in which the
"donor's" red blood cells are returned to him may be made as often as
twice a week. The process takes longer than donating blood. Mirsa says
the SS0-60/month Includes two donations per week and the "bonuses"
regular clients receive.

CONVERT YOUR
SPARE TIME INTO

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For information come up to 355
Norton a nd ask for Sue
Mellentine, advertising manager.

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Brooklyn College restructure

SGS in/ear ofextinction
by Lynne Tneeer
Ofi-Oimput Editor
A restructuring of Brooklyn
College is underway, and the plans
go before the Faculty Council for
approval Dec. 21. If pused, the
coUeae would be divided up into
four fou r-year divisions, and two
two-year divisions, thus malting it
into a six school structure. The
four-year divisions would include
the Schools of Education,
Humanities, Sciences and Social
Sciences, while the two-year
divisions would include the
Schools of Liberal Arts and
Contemporary Studies. The plan
would go into effect September
1972.

social status and also to pve
othen a flnt chance In life."
Thou&amp;h it exists at Brooklyn,
SGS does not enjoy a prosperous
life. Because the budget for the
School of General Studies is based
on the number of credits taken by
its students, it receives only
one-thi r d the fu n din&amp; per
equivalent day-cchool student.
Brooklyn College is one of the
few members of the City
University schools to keep lts
SGS, but its use is rapidly
vanishing. Open Enrollment led to
a greater need for increased space

newspapen and politicians and to
the Boatd of HiJ)ter Education .
We are on our final stretch. Either
we become part or the new achool
structure and thus become a
permanent part of the structure,
or else we just melt Into oblivion .
The choice is not o un . We need
your belp."
Protest held
Wednesday, Nov. 10, SGS
students staaed a strike and
protest demonstration on and orr
the Brooklyn CoUeae campus.

The restructuring was planned
by the Curriculum Planning
Councils or each school to devise
the best plan for the maximum
degree of school and depart mental
autonomy. Each school would be
free to set its own requirements,
thus eliminating the inter~chool
requirements . Dean Bruce
Birkenhead of the School of
Social Sciences feels that the new
arrangement would mean new
curriculums and interdisciplinary
courses with possible team
teaching. There would also be
departmental con trol over
academic and budget
requirements.
With over 500 students and
faculty members participating,
leaders said that if SGS is not
However, students of the
Thaler isn't really sure what supported by the student body
School of General Studies (SGS) will happen to SGS if the Six
and the colleae community, 1972
feel that this six school structure School structure takes effect, but
would mean the end of SGS. An
will lead to the phasina out of he feers the worst : "There are
attempt was made to block traffic
SGS in the near future. Accordtng those who ask what will happen if
on Flatbush Avenue, a main
to Stanley ThaleT, president of the SGS sets swallowed up in the six thoroughfare near the K bool,
SGS student body, the 7000 school structure that is to ta\te when the students were prevented
J*&gt;ple who ao to school durin.a effect. The answer is too simple . fro m conduc:tlng a one-minute
Uie evening as a part of ~c;s hold First, Jt the trend is to continue sit-down on Campus Road by the
• • unique place in th-: Ute at and there is no reason why it
Tactical Patrol Force. The
'Jrookl yn College: "The students should n&amp;t , the day session due to demonstrators claimed they h,d
who attend the School of General Open Enrollment will continue to received permission for the
Studies arc people who for one the evemng and eventually take sit-down, and only the refusal of
reason o r another could not up a II the space SGS now the TPF to let them continue led
attend college in their younger occupies. Secondly. the college to the attempted disruption of
years and no w with a job and seeking to save money will cut traffic.
family responsibilities cannot sections wherever possible, will
• attend morning classes. There are cut courses and sections from the
The demonstrators then
also poor students who cannot late afternoon and evening except returned to the campus, where
attend day school even under for those an hi&amp;h demand .
they tried to bring other students
Open Enrollment because they
out of the1r classes. " Dump
have parents and/or brothers and
" What can be done now? I Kneller" stickers were placed on
sisters to support . There are also don't really know. Rioting and the door of Brooklyn College
students who attend other schools burning mi&amp;ht help. But that President Kneller·s office. At 8
during the day (such as divinity wasn't and isn't the way for those p.m., two hours after the furor
schools) and thUil cannot attend of us at SGS. We have condemned started , much of it had died
morning cla.sses.
it in the past and we stiU do. We down.
··scs was, therefore, cruted need an enormous amount of
to cjve some people a second newspaper, radio and especially lilp needed
chance in life to get educated and politicians' support. We need the
Thaler and other concerned
thus improve their economic and ordinary citizen who can write to SGS students are seeking the help
o f the community, newspapers
and ·politicians in their fight to
STAlE UN IVE RSITY OF NEW YORK
keep SGS alive. " We seek the aid
In cooperation with
of anyone who wishes to help. We
B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATIONS
cannot only save SGS, but we can
announces two
insure its survival for many
Winter Academic Programs in Israel
years."

Sa; headed nowhere?

41

and more teachers, so the first
place to make cuts wa~ SGS.

MODERN ISRAEL : The Kibbutz as Idea and Experience'

1. December 21 - january 4 (2weeks, 2 semester credits) - $450
2. j anuary 4 - january 25 (3 weeks, 3 semester credits) - $499
Op~n to graduates and undergraduates. Cost includes
tuition, round·trip jet from N.Y., and kibbutz accommodations
in Israel.

Applications available from B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations,
1640 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W., Washinaton, D.C. 20036

President Kneller reaffirmed
belief that the School of
General Studies should exist at a
press conference held the day
after the demonstration. He said,
"One of the most important
missions of hisher education is
education for adults." Kneller
pointed out that open hearings
wouJd be held to determine the
future of SGS, and asked that
they be well attended . He said,
..The time has come for us to cet
together and wortc tocether."
h.ls

MEM·BRAIN1
Wednesday, December 1, 1971 . The S~trum . Page fjve

I

�\_

Move swiftly
The appointments, particularly the Chairmanship, to the
Committee on Campus Security are still pending. The
importance of this committee cannot be overemphasized and
we therefore must urge that it be quickly constituted.
The committee has much to deal with on the general
level of security policies and Rrocedures. Additionally, there
still linger some extremely serious questions from the alleged
police-brutality incident of November 1.
First, is it a policy of Campus Security to arm their men
with blackjacks? Second, if Patrolman Barr's blackjack was
not within the realm of acceptable weaponry, will he be
disciplined for its use and pOSSes$ion? Third, does Security
even check its men in order to prevent their carrying such
distasteful weapons?
We believe these questions must be answered swiftly.
Also, the answers must be announced publicly so that t he
Security forces may have a chance to regain the confidence
of the University community, something they currently lack.
If a minor problem occurs and Security acts in a manner that
escalates the sit uation, many ind ividuals will be
~nderstandably reluctant to call them in the first instance.
There has always been ill-will between students and
Security and tt1e blackjack incident has served to extenuate
feelings and resurrect memories of the spring of '70. We feel
that the burden is now full y upon Campus Security to act •n
a manner that will lessen hostilities. Using a blackjack on a
student is not conducive to that end .
Finally, there have been two names widely rumored for
the Chairmanship of this committee, Richard Schwartz and
McAllister Hull. Either of them would bring suitable skills in
problem-resolution to the role of chairman. Further, we must
again stress the imPQrtance of public confidence In the
committee's function and appointees of their caliber would
create such confidence.

·••• ANe 'W'OU 'II 001... fO CHINA.'

.Artciar 1te
by Stanley Dayan

This morning I woke up with the st(angest
feeling of freshness . For the last two years or more I
feel as if I have been living with an oppressjve weight
on my sh oulders. It wall like a gradually worsening
headache. Nowhere and no time was I free of it. It
fell as if my chest was in a cast. Breathing was never
free, never really rejoicing.
I woke up this morning and things were
different. Somehow I was a free man. For some
reason I no longer had that oppressive anxiety. I
think the local junkie is responsible for this. The
series of events which led to this poin t began when
he stepped into my shop ;~ few months ago.
Let me mention first that I live in the black
gheHo here in Buffalo. Not in the center but near
the edge, but still in the ghetto. I own a store front
building. I Intend to defend that corner for a long
time; to assert myself In the c.:ommunJty as a
permanent member - not as a transient. Since they
are many and I am one, I consider myself their
guest.Well . I have been accepted as part of the
community . I have retained my ideals. l am not a
homogeneous member but a memhef-who is
respected because of my difference. In fact I am so
acceptable that even the local junkey think.'! that
approaching me It uol loo much that even the local
junkie thinks that approaching me is not too much
(l have to say before going any further that I
have no idea what exactly tl\~. rnen is. He may even
be a pig. You judge for yourself.)
First meeting: It was about three o'clock in the
afternOMI - f was making stilts for the kids in the
For the second time in recent months the Ketter area. This fellow comes and stands against the lamp
post . When the kids leave he walks into the shop
administration has made a good acting appointment. The after me. Opens the c.:rumpled full -size grocery bag
nomination of psychology professor Edwin Hollander to the and brings out a twenty-two pistol. He only wanted
post of Acting Provost of the Faculty of Social Sciences is an twelve dollars for it. I told him that people with guns
get shot. I wasn't interested .
•
excellent move.
Second meeting: II :30 p.m . He comes back
Or. Hollander, a faculty member for nearly a decade, is with what he calls a diamond ring. He said he ju.'&lt;t
familiar, not only with the broad matters of university robbed so &amp; so's jewelry store. He only wanted S 18
administration, but with the special problems of his for this diamond ring. I said I wasn't interested . He
often-beleagured faculty. Dr. Hollander also commands the was upset and said that he really needed the money.
Then ''If I came in here and pointed a gun at you
well deserved respect of both faculty and students due to his you would give me the money." I answered " you
strong abilities for dealing with their varied concerns. We darn betc.:ha I would ." Then I mentioned that I
h ope that this appointment is indicative of the would give him the money anyway but S 18 was too
administration's regard for what may be this institution's much. He said $9 . Still too much . I said I would give
him SS . He said O.K. So I gave him five and told him
strongest Faculty.
to keep the ring. He walked across the street and
boarded a bus.
Third meeting: 8 :30 p.m . He walks in and says·
that he is going to pay me back the five dollars. He
has to get it from the man in the drug store. He sees
me carving one of the recorders and boasts that he
Vol. 22, No. 37
Wednesday, December 1, 1971
can carve. So I pull out a .razor sharp hunting knife
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
from the drawer, gave it to him with a piece of soft
Co-MI!Niging Editor - AI Benson
wood. He started walking around the shop spraying
Co-M.naging Editor - Mike Lippmann
wood chips all over the place. However before he
Men..;nt Editor - Suun Moss
really did anything he decided to get my five doUars
Bulin- MM..., - Jim Drucker
from the men in the drug store across the street. By
Advertitlng MeNfW - Sue Mellentine
the way he had a quart of J&amp;B with him this time.
Campus .....•... Jo-Ann Armeo
Leyout . . ..... Meryhope Runyon
As it turned out he got stuck In the drug store - I
• .. , ........ ....Howie Kunz
A• . ......... . .. . ....VIICent
closed up and went upstairs. This time a black kid
•............... Bill Veocero Lit. a Oreme . . Michael Silvemlan
from the neighborhood was in the shop talking with
City .. ... ••. .. . . Harvy Lipman
MUiic .......... . . .Billy Altman
Copy •. .. .. ..... Ronni Forman
OH.Cempus ... • .. Lynne Traeger -... me whtn this guy walked in. When he left for the
...•............ Many Gatti
Photo .. . . .... .. Mero Ackerman
drug .store my friend said, "I don't trust that man at
A.t . . ... . . .. Cleire Kriegsman
...... . ... Mickey Osterreldler
all, Stanley. Don't trust that man. I've seen him on
F•ture . . . . ........... .vKant Sports .... • .... .• .• Berry Rubin
Jefferson St. He's a junkie."
~Arts . .• ...... Tom Toles
Alit... . ...... .. . Howie Faiwl
Fourth meeting: 8:30 p.m . I was \\lQrking at the
driU press looking down. He walks in, I glanced at
The Sp«trum is served by United Pr• lntem«lonal, College Prhim. His coat buiP.e~ out as if he has a gun pointed at
Service, the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los angeles Times Syndicate and
Liberation N - Service.
me in the pocket. I saw this out of the oorner of my
,
eye and kept working. He said deadly serious O.K.
Rctp\A)Iication of metter herein without the expnll$ consent of tM
you've had it. But the noise o f the machine kept th~
Editor-in-Chief Is forbidden.
words from having a lot of impact . I looked up and
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-ln.Chl.t.
turned off the machine. He ~id "I am going to shoot
you.'' No smile. ( said why and was in the process of

Good appointment

..

A•.

~: ."'!'Y'I.J
~~~e
.. ~ ~
I

Page six.

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The Spectrum . Wednesday, December

l, 1971

gathe1ing my ~its when he endeli. the joke - "I am
only lddding,~aking his hand out of his pocket.
Then he wanted me to drop 'some ac.id with him.
I said, "Look, pal, my mind is loose enough already,
you drop some and we can talk - all night if you
like.'' He said he needed a fiiWlcial p;artner. I said no
thanks. Then I began . to tell him about the
tremendous problems I have had with women. He
pulls out picture from his wallet of this white gjrl . I
said '••your girlfrlen~?~' He said · no - he just got
customers for her. I said thllt this wasn't exactly my
probl~m, We chatted a little wrilte longer and he left.
'Fifth meeting: This one shook me up. He walks
in with two other blacks. They were, as another
friend of mine who was there (he is black also) said .
" loud talking" me. One to engage my attention
whiJe the other cased the tools to see what was
valuable. Danny was In the basemen! when J walked
in. They thought it was three against one. When
Danny heard them he ran upstairs, ruined the whole
plan . He also recognized one of the others as a fellow
who makes part of his income on small thefts. Now
the junkie may have brought these fellows with him
because I told him I though he was a pig - just to
prove that he wasn't. Anyway as my friend told me
afterward this kind of conduct was a gross social
impropriety, especially in the black community. This
was to bring complete strangers into the place where
one keeps his more valued possessions. If the junkie
and I had had trust in each other it would have been
a different story. But we dido',,
The la$t Ume I saw him was yesterday. He
walked in the door . ..Hi Bro.'',To which I gave •he
very civil reply, "Got the fuclc out of here." I was
reaJiy angry. He left and walked down the block .
So, as I was sayi"g, I feel refreshed . Why?
Because he is' gone? No not at all . I am sure he will
come back. Tilat is what refreshed me . That he wiU
come back.

a

There is a distinction between fear and anxiety
(Paul Tillich makes it fairly clear In The Courage to
Be). Fear is of some thing with which one can deal.
Anxiety involves a helpless uncertainty. I don't
know how exactly to relate these terms to what has
happened to me, but It seems that my fear - which
is now mostJy overcome - rather the feeling of
overcoming - keeps me from feeling the profound
shall I say metaphysicaJ anxieties which were
oppressing me. That is I have for the moment no
anxiety of ultimate non-being, no anxiety of death.
The real possibility that he may eventually shoot me
seems to ease my anxiety about death. It really is
strange. aut it is consj$tent with the fact that police
and adventurers are so unmruphyslcal, and that
people guaranteed to· live to senility are terrified of
that possible non-being.
Well maybe I im totally wrong. But let's
consider the consequences if this hypothesis
concerning my feelings is correct . The most
important to me is that this stunts my development
as a philosopher. nus small overcoming leaves me
comfortable, without tenpon. Without intense
en«gy and suffering it is impossible to examine the
darker aspects of life. To really face them. Nietzsche,
that most tense and powerful writer lived so sedately
and gently that the people in the neighborhood were
sure he was a saint.
A social irony also follows. I pushed into the
city to Increase the tension ..:_ only here I thought is
there enough energy for a new valuation of life. And
it turns out that my tension is comfortably
dissipated in skirmishes. Everybody else wants to be
comfortable and they puSh: out from the city suburbanites and nature lovers, only to find the
metaphysical and absolutely oppressive tension
building up. I know a real estate man and a lawyer
who live in the suburbs who' feel they have to carry a
gun when they come to the city. I think they are
scared of annihilation.- So be it .

�Out of towners

Glennon sniffs out plOt

To tlte Editor:

T~6dltor:

It bu come to our att.ntion that the percectap
of out-of-town studentl, perticula.dy tllole from ~e
New York City uea, bu dropped coDiidenbly.
Since 2000 of the 2-400 Iewilb at&amp;adeutl on th1l
ca.rnpUI ue from out of town this ia ob-rioualy a cue
of overt cliacrimination on the part of the SUNY
adminiltration.
In adclition to this infrincemeot of ~ Civil
JUptl Act of 1964 couidetation mUit be pYen to
~e tcbollltic lne1 of ~e ICbooJ. The reason for
beiq admitted to a Univenity lbould be &amp;Cildemic
achinemeat aod not popapbjc location.
Total bomopneity is not induave to learnina.
The at&amp;adent leama u much fJom the various cultwea
with which he com• in contact u he doet in the
formal .dulroom tettina. Would there be u much
inducement to fordp st&amp;adents, to a Capen profestOr
of hiatory, to well known authors, to a Nobel prize
winnina tdentiat to implicate themaelvea with a
community l.natitution?
To quote the Nov. J S iaue of The Spectrum
"Fifty-one per cent of tbe undefll'lduatea at
SUNYAB are commutm ...but... c:ampua politics,
cluba and orpniutioDI are run primarily by
on-&lt;:ampua ltudentl." Wbetber or not tbi&amp; univenity
will continue to have active atudent IJ'OUJII dependa
laraely on the number of out-of-townen attendiq it.
Rellonalilm will aerve only to revert this
institution to the bution of lower leamin&amp; it wu
prior to the influx of New Yorkers it1 1962.

Cyntltill Falk
IHbby 1Hn1
Jeff Adler
Rolltn Gltuman
Craig SchlDngu

.
Dissatisfied customers

NOf1llllly, if I have anytbina to AY to a penon
in the way of critJc:iam,llike to make it fact to f~~c:e,
man to man, and be ud I, or abe aod I air the
pieftllcel on the apot, tbUI tettlin&amp; the lUtter.
However, I ban learned that there are tome facel-.
namel• people who write '-.tori•" and ..news
anal)'lel" for the paper which lilta you •
EdUor-tn.OUef, 10 the complaint I bave m\Wt be
reailterecl with you since you are reacllly ideotlfiable.
It hal to do with tbe atori• that ba.e beea printed
reprdin1 the arrest and trial of Ford, Le¥Y, Slaw*y,
Sober and Steinborn. Of coune, we of Secwity have
an inteJeat in aucb atori•, and we read them rather
reaularly. NormalJy, we don't object too atronJly to
aome of the inaccuracy and innuendo in the printed
..reportl," attributln&amp; them to entbuaiasm for a
point of view critical of the ..Eatablishment" -and to
the current habit of aU tbe media to inject penonal
point of view into, thus colorina, the facta.
The atory I have immediate reference to appoan
on pap three of the Nov. J7; issue of The Spectf'Um
and waa written by "Jim McF'enon, Spectrum Staff
Writer." 1 don't fmd him listed on yow masthead IS
put of your ataff, but I'm sure you have too many
on your staff to list there.
Amona the tbinp be doesn't pt straiaht are the
numben of penons who aupported the individuals
involved , but aaain, I attribute that to
overenthusiasm o n hia part and probably erroneoua
facta pven to him by aome persons he interviewed.
CertainJy penonal observation wu not involved .
Now, 1 wouldn't presume to tell you bow to run
your newapaper, because you hne a policy which
you feel you must punue. However, I do beUeve that
you have, or should have, a decent respect for fac:tl
and the truth of those facta. So I come to the
statement in tbia particular story by ..Jim
McFenon" which prompts me to write to you. I
quote, "At any rate, immediately after the fi&amp;)ltln&amp;
bepn, $tVeral uniformed Buffalo police appeared
and with the aid of aome plainclothes security
forces , dispened the 11oup. It wu during this time
that the defendants allegedly committed the
crimes." I' m sure you did not read this copy before

it w•t to print, and pwhape you baven't followed
the dory, e1te aome queationa would bave oc:curred
to you,Midlu:
.
"'*- did "Jim YcFeraoa" pt bil information
fOC' . . atone.?
Did be penonally oblene .,.ytltlq be reported?
, Did he botller to interview anyooe adler tban tboee
aympeth.cic: to t1ae defn4aata in tlda c.eT If
"uniformed Buffalo Police'' were illvoiYecl at aay
,ltaF of the aN, why were noae of tiMID t.tif1bla
ln court, •peclally if they were involftcl in IJ'I.tinl
tbe 4efen4anb?
Tbe fact of the matter is that Buffalo Police
were never on campua to tab put in any actioN
ap.inlt tbeae defendantl. Durin&amp; the atrual•
mentioned in tbJa atory, the only wdformed mea
involved were memben of the Calllput Security
force. The penon, or penona, who tolcl ..Jim
WcFenon" an)'thlna to ~e contrary are either
iporant of the fact that we bave wdformed meo on
our force. not very obte!Yant, or juat plain Han. Tbia
promptl the eritlciam that a ''reporter" intereated in
the truth would probably cbeck his "facta" before
be wrote his ...tory," and an editor, readina a story
written by a reporter miabt have a queation or two
about the story before be alJowed it to be printed.
Unlea, however, they both are only inur.tecl in
attemptina to dilcredit the "Eitabliabmeot" 01 aome
part of it, by the \lie of diltortion, innuendo, or
clear untruth. The diacreclitiq worta bo~ ways you
know. Wben the motivatJOM of parties who enpae
in aucb practices are clear and tbe true fac:ts are in, it
ia not the attacked, but the attacker who suffers the
discredit.
Kenneth P. Glennon
Dlnctor, Ctlmpru Security
SUNYAB

.

Edilor'l nou: Contrary to your porticuklr bnznd of
porDnoill, tht mfltake wu an lton111 one 1fnce tlte
CflmPJU pre1en« of Buffalo police wu a point
brought out by the de{endllnt1 and their de{e111e at
trUII. A1 far 111 the plot you perceive agaimt tltt
"&amp;tablilhment," WI' thDnlc you for tht compliment,
but 1uue11 tltat you contact your former boll, I .
Edgar Hoover, for further detDill.

To the Editor:
1he Women's Studies College would like to
repter a formal compla.iJ\t to Th~ Spectn~m , the
.t "~' · · ,• • •'Studtnt 'Aslotlatton anti the CoUeliate System
~~ ~· • • • I I ''' ~ reprdltlrthe c:overaae of ita actmtles.
Because we have been dissatisfied with the
covenee Jiven us, we have resorted to writina and
submittina our own articles for pubticatlon. Even
these have been lanored by The Spectrum, either by
error or by oveni&amp;)lt.
The article ~e wrote concernina the Women's
Studies CoUeae skills program was submitted on time
but never appeared. In addition, the Wonten'a
Studies CoUeae and ita prosram were almost totally
ianored in the publicity Jiven the CollCJiate System's
recent symposium.
We hope that this unsatisfactory situation will
be corrected immediately.
The Women~ Studiu CoUege

are not athletic, and couldn't make the gade if and

To 'the Editor:
One or the major aoals of any university is to
unite atudentl, faculty, alumni and the community,
and to have interaction, and exc:hanae of views from
each sroup.
What better way to accomplish this soal than
tbrouah intercolleaiate athletics? There is currently a
movement to eliminate intercoUegiate athletics on
tbia campus, which is led by a small IJOUP of
students who are playing political pmes to utisfy
their own personal eso trips. Probably the blaaeat
reason that they are apinst athletics is because they

when tbey tried to be. I wonder how many people
on the Student A.uoc:iation ever played on any
intercoUeJi,ate athletic: team. A&amp; the uyin&amp; goes,
..Don't knock it if you haven't tried it."
If you believe that ow univenity should have
lntercoUeJi,ate athletic: teams, you better become
politically oriented and fl&amp;ht the exisitns power
atructure on their own battleiJ'ound - The Student
Allociatlon - or interc:oUeliate atheltic:s will suffer 1
alow, aaonilina death.
"Gn~mpy"

Male chauvinist research?
To the Editor:

JUstified e:ristence
To tlte Editor:
Included in the Indian way of life Is 1 very
atrona Ideal that concerns our young and future
,enerations' existence in this world. Indian people
view their lives on earth u bavina a purpose.
Specifically, that purpose is to prepare and make IS
comfortable IS possible,' our · youna peoples'
existence on Mother Earth.
Different people cany out this duty in various
ways, but that is not the point, ell people have to
commit themselves to improving present conditions
for their young. PODER's proposed day care center
Is one step toward improvina those conditions and is
their way at attemptina to enrich the lives of their
younacr brothers and sisters.
We urae you. (SA) not to view these ~ouna
poople by race or value to the student body. We a.s k
that you take into consideration the effort PODER
is puttina into providina for the oomina aenerations.
Therefore, we, the Native Ameri~ns of this
C&amp;JDpus stronaly support PODER and their plans for
a Puerto Rican day care center and we hope to see
that the Student Association will also support the
project .
Patrice Stout

We are writina thia letter as concerned women
and u
concerned araduate students in 'the
ptychoiOIY department In response to an experiment
beina conducted in our depa. ..nent which we find
oppressive to women . The Spectn~m has run several
ads for subjectl for thia research, asldns for "shy
women who have difficulty meetin&amp; men."
We wish to point out aeveraJ strong objections
to this reaearc:h. PsychoiOI)' bu traditionally
functioned under an ideolol)' that is both
individualistic and reactionary. Furthermore, these
ideolopcaJ asaumptions are rarely adknowledaed . It
is our view that traditional therapy has consistently
identified difficulties that women and men
experience as arislna from forces within the
individual o r the individual's famlly. What this bu
meant in terms or women Is that "the man" - the
the power ascribed to him by this society u a
professional - teU. us that our pain does not evolve
from the political reality of oppression, but rather
from our difficulty in adjustina to men and a male
oriented society. We, on the other hand, believe that
all "paychololical problems" are the result of
alienation, that il, are the product of people bein&amp;
oppreaaed and then mystified (i.e . lied to) about this
oppression. It seems to us that what tbis research is
attempdna to do is to counter alienation wi~
further alienation. What we see bappenina is. that
women who are feelina some de.,ee of pain are

beina made to feel comfortable with that pain rather
than an attempt bein&amp; made to fi&amp;ht it.
In plannina this research, several facton seems
to have been overlooked. Aa mentioned above,
women experienciaa difficulty are -riewed
individually u "bavina a problem" ra~er than u
bein&amp; oppressed. The political implications of
adjuatin1 women to an oppressive sex role are
apparently ipored. An offer of help isaupposeclly
beiDa beJd out. We don't believe that what ia bcina
offered is help - we believe it ia further opp~on
and myltification. Tbe fact that there are competent
women therapists on thil campus, ~e fact that
aiatera are helpina each other in a variety of ways
tbrou&amp;h the women•s movement on thia campus wu
not offered to women anawereina the ad as a viable
alternative means of dealin&amp; with what they were
feelina. '
While methodolopcally the experiment may
indeed make perfect acnae, u R.D. Lain&amp; points out
we can no lonaer deny the truth by justifyina our
losic. We will no lonaer adjuat to ow oppression, nor
IS pcycholi&amp;istl will we in any way attempt to
"adjust" other siJtm to their oppression.
One oopy of this lettu is tolna to The
Spectrum , one to tbe te~e~rcben involved in this
experiment. We augat that 1'Jte Spectrum refrain
from rwutin&amp; the ad qain and we atronJly suaeat
tbat the experiment be dilcontinued .
Ctlrol Reicltentllal
1111d U othen

'

Wednesday, December 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

...

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�Dam depression ·

The 'Buffalo Blues' strike
byJa.eE. ~

Specitll to The Sp«tn.tm

There's aomething bappenina. tclcm't
know what it is, or bow it is, or in what
manner it came to be. It's something so
intansible that to write about it, or talk
about it, or even think about it, may be
futile. But it's somethina that I , as an
individual and possibly very much a victim
myself, can no lonaer ignore. l have to, for
my own personal equilibrium, attempt to
recognize its existence, and as best I can
(whether it be dysfunctional or not), try
and define it. Through this I hope that you
and ( can come closer to dealing with It,
coming to terms with it and possibly
defeatina it.
when I first came up to Buffalo last
year, people up by Norton Hall and around
the campus area used to talk about a
dreaded but very laughable experience
called the "Buffalo Blues." It was referred
to as some kind of morose syndrome that
at one time or another affects everyone,
transmorpifyina the spirit and placing one
ln a deep frozen depression for the long
winter (with very occasional but temporal
periods of relief). Hearing this, it was not
at all difficult for me to imaaine that
Buffalo, beina dark and dreary and cold as
it is, would be condusive to the "Blues."

"

Pay your dues

The winter set in, it was new to me,
but I watched myself, as others, fall into
despair. It was not a despair that chokes
and cripples, it was more of a romantic
struagle, you know : "Me aaainst the world,
the world aaainst me ;" with Buffalo and
the long winter taking on the role ofi the
adversary. People gritted their teeth,
affirming the challenge, armed with the
realizat.i on that spring sun is gonna shine
awfully bright when the darkness falls . The
winter was the long waiting period before
the sprinz. All there was to do was accept
the "Blues," and know that that's your
way of paying your dues.
Friday night I went to Norton Hall.
My intentions were casual : meet some
friends , talk , possibly go to the
Coffeehouse to see some folk singers.
Nothing unusual in that, but Friday night
was anything but usual . Norton Hall cross
sections a wide variety of people, and a
wide selection of variagated motives for
being there. People cruisin' for love, people
just cruisin', people just sick of their
houses or their dorm rooms, lookina for
s ome s pontaneity . Friday night was
different , so different that it made me
realize the change that 's occurred, that's

occ~a.

in people, in people with people,

In our 1i•1a.

,

The Usdea rhythm
I looked at the faces, faces flushed
with no hope, liven up souls, expiated wilts
movina aimlessly, desperately towards
somethlng to pUp, something not to be
found. There were the familiar laughs that
no lonaer rana familiar, the same smiling
faces but this time with unsmilina eyes to
match.
There were the usual bloodshot eyes,
watery with bowls of hash or too much
wine, and the slurred speech that
accompany soapers or aood downs: People
wandering back and forth, back and forth,
crazed and despondent, looking for
laughter, not findina it, but laughing
anyway. Bverythina at first glance seemed
awfuJiy natural , typical. The loud speaker
loudly tellina who should meet who and
where, and even possibly wtay. People
screamina and runftin&amp; down the ball, the
spare chanaers, aDd the sittina plleries,
pUeried from one end of the Union to the
other. There was ~n the usual "not
wan tina to talk," talkers, pausina briefly to
show conctm a.nd sympathy, and then
moving on with the same listless rhythm.
I looked and I watched and slowly I
bepo to realize that there are just too
manS' people who have stopped trying. Life
at 20·yean-olc:ltil a bore, a fucking useless
co nglomeraTIon or played out
combinations, remorseful attempts at
mediocrity, and pitiful incursions into a
world nobody likes, but everyone is stuck
with. Happiness, to these people, is no
longer happiness, it's resignation. Living
with yourself and the world and doing
your darndest to stay afloat. To affirm is
somethina that died with technology, enter
negation as the pr~ling medium fo r
going on . The negations of escape, the
negations of numbness, the negations of
beina there while you're not there.

Infinite mental impulses
For many, happiQ...ess has become
dulling out the world , tioating into outer
space, existjng in the clouds and loving at
and stretching it out to the widest reaches
of the imagination. An imaaination that no
loncer belonas to this world , but to the
stars and the beyond, and dimensions that
can maybe help us while we're there being
just another drop of o ur own fascination.
It seems we are becoming mental impulses
of infinite frequencies, searching out to
touch and possibly attach outself to but
another impulse, that can exist for but a
moment together before each gobbles the

Photos by Osterreicher and Affa

'

Page eight. The Spectrum . Wednesday, December 1, 1971

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oU.er's enerl)' and exhausts one another.
It is so very obvious the way we are
movina, pulsatin&amp; aimlessly, expectina a
million neptivea to result positively in a
totally uncontroUed universe. A society
run wild, and you, whose touch with the
beyond is beina dogmatically as weU as
mechanically satiated each day, in a million
different ways. Men, usina up other men's
possibilities. "One man ptherina what
another man has already spilled.''
It is no accident that Norton Hall has
become filled with defeated souls, too
many defeated souls. People filled with not
the "Buffalo Blues," but the "Buffalo
Ache," the "American Ache," and very
possibly, the "Earth Ache." The ache that
eats away at itself, havin&amp; little for
replenishment but a little piU, a short-lived
thrill, existential nihilism. It is no accident
that concerts have becomes excuses to go
out and aet high, and bleed with the
laughter that only stoned souls can
relegate, so emptily, so well. It is no
accident that parties and classes and you
name It, I can't, have become what they
are. People stopping, out of a long
forgotten impulse, to try to relate, on their
way to getting away, going nowhere fast, as
if there was something to love in unloving
something.

Bad kanna
Oh Christ, we've stopped loving
ourselves and it doesn't matter whose fault
it is, the results are the same no matter
how we got to where we are. And we're
there, and the hurt goes on beneath the
squalor and the incessant clamour of
people tryin&amp; to convince themselves that
somethina's got to give, even if they don't
give it.
A girl spoke to me that night, more
frightened than numbed by qualuds. You
can feel fear, it doesn't have to be explicit,
it's an electric emotion, penetratin&amp; and
urgent . She said : "Something's happened
to man; I feel it; I know it ; he's finally
done it; he deserves it; there l.s bad karma
comin&amp; down; there is definitely bad karma
- it's aU around ." Then she smiled, a sick,
forlorn , empty smile, aftd J looked at her
and I wanted to say something but I
couldn't, because I knew it would be fake,
a lie, to try and tell her that things aren't as
she said . I agreed with her silently and I
hated that agreement.
Maybe she was right ; maybe 1 was
right in agreeing with her. 1 don' t know .
But in afterthought, she wa.s n't. She wasn't
right, and I wasn't right in agreeing with
her. Shit, there's no bad karma coming
dow~, we're the o nly thing that's coming
down. And it's not just Buffalo, it's New

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' I • \ , ..... ' ; •

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York, and Philadelphia, and Chicaao, and
San Franciaco. We've beaun beUevin&amp;
thlnp aren't in our hands to chanae, and
conJequently, we can't cbanae them. And
that aoes for our personal Uvea as well as
the world.

1be trial
It frightens me to think, that the lona
cold winter has not barely be~un. It
fri&amp;htens me to think of what is 10in1 to
happen to those already conquered souls
through the next six months of triaL But
even more, it frightens me that so many are
aareeing to this destitute fate, lettin&amp; this
insanity drive them to the point of "Who
cares, what is reality anyway." Everybody
seems to be playing those same odds, you
know the ones that used to work five years
aao, when hope was still blossoming, and
we were younger, and more naive, and
always open to fresh sugestions.
WeU it's a suresbot, that the sureshot is
aonna come in every time, and you 'U lose
every time on yesterday's possibilities. It is _.
time to start playinc some lonphots,
because thtre are no other shots to take.
And that meam starting with your own
personal lives. You've cot to!
Wake up people; it is " not living up,"
that's where it's at. There is no where to go
but up. Stop turninc to those little
chemical kits that we've so neatly created
to combat our unchemical pain. Start
trying to feel again, because if there ain't
nothing to look forward to in your mind,
then there ain't hardly nothing, cause there
is hardly nothing now. You don't need to
walk through Norton Hall on a weekend
ni&amp;ht to feel that. And if we don't wake
up, if we don't start aetting toaether inside
ourselves and alona with others, when that
winter is over, and that sun shines again,
it's not going to be shining.
It is time to tum the music down, time
to put our feet back on the around, time to
stop shouting and turn down the lights,
and start feeling. Maybe it is time to loosen
up old cliques and venture into some new
ones, time to unbabit some old habits.
Time to start inventing some new
combinations or at least keep busy tryin1
to . It is time to atop not tryina, to stop
dyina. " Deliver me from reasons why
you'd rather cry, I'd rather fly ." It is too
late to keep talking about what is bad, it is
time to start b&amp;~ing about what is good,
and live that prom)so.

Now i1 tire time for your loving dear/ And
the tim~ for your company/
Now wht'n the light of reason fades / And
fire burns on tht' ua/ Now in tlris age of
confusion/ I have nud of your company.

Wednelday, December 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page·ftine

�Student enrollment intQ
private colleges planned
(CPS) - Gov. Roc:kefeUer's encounterod in puttina private
office and the oduQtion officials school students in tbe same
of the State University of New ~oom u a SUNY student.
York are discuuina the
Dr . Melvin A. Eaers of
poaibilities of enrollina students Syracuse Uninnity noted that
whe would like to attend a State
the State .University CoUeae of
University at private coUeaes.
Forestry and the Upstate Medical
At a hearina of the ' Joint Center are filled to student
Leaillative Committee on lfiPer Qpaclty. Both of these facilities
Education, it wu broUiht out
that there was a definite basis and were loQted on the private
campus of Syracuse University in
need for such action. The State order to expand the areas of
University currently hu all units
between state and
rillod and no money for new cooperation
private institutions.
facilities. The private coUeces have
many openinas and could
Such inter-institutional
accommodate many of the SUNY cooperation bu been lliaht but
students.
Robert McCambrid&amp;e, assistant
A spokesman for ~nceUor commissioner of the State
Boyer stated that any plan "must Education Department believes,
be educationally wile and fiscally "we'll eventually aet toaether
with one over•all plan."
constitutionally sound ...
The aim of the meetina was to
Tuition~· a problem
offer plans to make Gov.
A major point of interest Roc:kefeller's promise of a hiper
amona those at the hearina was oducation for each qualified hiah
the discussion of hiaber tuition school ptduate a reality. To
and costs of a private ooUqe, achieve this end, the plans for the
ap.lnst the lower tuition cost of reai9nalization of the SUNY
the state universities. There may system as well as use of private
be considerable problems coUeaes were discussed.

... ..

Concert·broadcast
By a qtedal arra....ment, WBFO (88.7 FM) will
bt-oadCiilt Doc Watson aDd hil19n Mede in c:onc:ert
thia enairi• at II p.m. The ,woaram will be a recordina
of theirN O't, 18, I 9 md 20 ~oncert• ia theN ortoa llJl
Colfeehou..

Term papers, aii)'OIIe?

Ghost writing agency seems
to be a promising business
(CPS) - A shost-writing company, started in
Denver and extended to numerous campuses
nationwide, expects to seD more than $100,000
wort!\ of term papen, nwten' theses and doctoral
dissertations d!Jring this academic year. The
compeny, Research and Educational Associates, Ltd,
(REA), wa formed in Denver last Feb. 1 and already
hu 500 students as clients.
If aU goes well, REA's founders expect to
double or even triple their expansions before the
third academic quarter begin$ next sprina. Moreover,
they see in academic ghost-writing a bue for
potenual multi-million dollar business in providing
information and literary services.
REA is a limited stoc:k company with five
youthful shareholden. The research and writing is
supervised by Larry Groeger, 20, an underaraduate
philosophy major at Denver's Metropolitan State
College. According to Groeger, "This year REA will
offer the fint nation-wide academk ghost-writing
service."

of

remain unsatisfied - particularly since the valuo
word-of·mouth adwrtilina Js obvious. Graeser says
that R£A auarantees absolute security of its records
and anonymity for its cUents. Dr. Frederick Thieme,
president of the University of Colorado, made the
observation, "It's a sad and lamentable thin&amp;." he
said . "Apparently we've overemphasized the
importance of a depee."

. Students who buy papen arc "cheating
themaelvcs," Dr. Thieme says. He promises tipter
policing of papen at hfJ university, but he doubts he
could act apinst REA. "I don't think there's any
illcpllty in what they're doing."

Rouch draft JeceJwd
Groeger wouldn't uy how much REA pays jts
writen, but it charps its clients S3 to $4 fief paae,
depending on the IUb~'s difficulty and the
research required. For that price the student gets a
technJcalJy c:orrect rquab draft, complete with
footnotes and biblloaraphy.

REA's typical clients are sincere penoN who
Writen easy to find
Recruiting an expert staff is no problem, haven•t been pven proper preparation by the
Groeger says. Because so many well-educated uniwrsity and \¥ho find professor's requirements
persons can't find jobs, he simply advertises for unreasonable, Groescr uys. Only about ten per cent ,
ghosts in the help-wanted columns of local papers. arc "looking for a quick, easy way to get out of
Customers arc easily attracted through newspaper doing their school work," he added , "end uaually
and radio advert)sing and by on-campus soUdtatlon they're rich kids." Even rich kids run lhort of cash
via school newspapers and distributed business cards. occasionally, but REA has thought of that, too.
REA says that a client needn't sign a contract, Very soon, they,J be able to buy their ghost-written
and that the company doesn't permit clients to papers through Bank-Amcricard and Masttr Charge.

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PaQe ten. The Sptotrum . Wednesday, December 1, 1971

PeperMete DIVIsion

C 1971

�'F"rench Connection'

Thrills:&amp; JVithout·pfot morality
by John Adc~"'
SpKttvm Stoff Wnttr-

rtr:orq'IOOS )leroin shipment from
Flaace, -and rQund up those who
are involv~d in the transaction.
Wl)jJQ Tlte French Conn«tiq_n His special quarry is the supplier.
(which is currently snowing at the a man named Chanier (played by
Hollda)l 1 Theater) is' undo ubtedly Fernando Rey).
one of the bC$1 thrillers of recent
~though the movie's central
yean, it also manages to rise concern - the traffic in heroin above many of the limitations of could easity degenerate into a
its genre and can, as :. result, be study in relevancy , there is
compared favorably with other absolutely no moralizing about or
movies that have bec ome lecturing upon the merits of
seJf.\nn1sc~ndent classics.
drugs. Rather, 'Ernest Tidyman's
T' he' plot Is quite screenplay leaves no room for
s t raigl\tforw&amp;rd, involving the unnecessary dialogue. It does not
obsessive "sleuthing" of a member subject the viewer to the usual
of the New York City narcotics . cryptic and endless moral
squad named Doyle (played by .messages about police. (This must
Gene Hackman of Bonnie and also be the first "police film" in at
Clyde fame). Doyle attempts to . least ten years in which no one
prevent die impending sale of an says "over and out.'') The result
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of this economical use of dialogue
is a truly visual fill1l, quite unlike
many other movies that are as
visually exciting as radio plays.
The meaningful film
H oweve r , if The French
Connection were nothing more
than an exciting pastiche of chase
scenes and shootings. glued
together by an updated cops and
robbe~ plot , it could be dismissed
as a good thtil~r . It might then
h owever be considered an
insignificant movie in an age
which demands that all art convey
multiple messages, ranging from
the superficial to the esoteric. The
"meaningful" fllm is one which
allows each viewer to believe that
he or she has discovered one more
meaning than anyone else.
Because It contained popular
political and social messages, the
recent thriller Z was received far
m ore favorably (by
"sophisticated" viewers) than
Bonnie and Clyde. It was said that
Bonnie and Clyde was nothing
more than a gory but entertaining
act ion falm , whose gruesome
simplicity was simply not the
thing for the age of peace and
love.
The single most outstanding
aspect of The French Connection
is the manner in which it has
incorporated a tevealing character
_ study into the framew ork of a
-eontlnued on PliQe tweh1-

'Butler' should·piove
to be an expet1enc~
Student Theater Guild takea turn to carnival? Saints
somewhat dubious pleasure in
. may still be ltissin&amp; lepers. rt is
kick.ina off this year's theater high time lepers
season with itS production of
kissed the saints , .. "
What the Butler Saw, Joe Orton's
The play's structure is that of
posthumously published black ' conventional farce . Characters
comedy, written after his murder swi tch c lothes, appear and
in Aug. 1967. It will be presented disappear, and are powerless to
in Capen 140 (officially known as control the confusions of the
the Edward H. Butler Memorial ballonin&amp; plot. The existence of
Auditorium), on Dec. 2 and 3 at several characters is denied.
8:30 p.m., and on Dec. 4 at 2 and Sexual identities are not only
3 :30p.m.
physically co-nfused, but
emotionally uncertain. They are
En&amp;lishman Orton, who left in the schizophrenic predicamen1,
school at 16, won the London as R.D. Lain&amp; describes it: "He
Critics' "Variety" Award for best does not know where he is or
play of 1964 with Entertaining where he is &amp;oin&amp;. He cannot aet
Mr. Sloane, his fU'St play. His anywhere however hard he
second play, Loot, won the tries . . . The future is tbe
Evening Standard Drama Award resultant of the present, the
for ttte best play of 1966. What present is the resultant of the past
thtt But/t'r Saw was first staaed in and the past is unalterable."
1969. and was a commerical
failure off-Broadway In 1970. The space
John Lahr ca ll s him a
Due to the renovation of the
"vituperative anti.Christ, isolated Harriman Library Theater Studio,
by his anarchist rage and cynical thls will be the first play ever
in his desolation ." Director Barry presented in Room 140 Capen.
Koron calls him a "fucking The director feels it is an eJCcellent
lunatic."
theater space with acoustics and
clear sight lines. The stage has
been extended up to the edge of
Unbounded madness
the front row, prohibiting anyone
The wtl in the wnuna will fro m sitting there. There are 440
probably roll you in the aisles. but seats available at the Norton
Mr. Koron (who mysteriou~ly ti cket off t ce for eac h
prefers to he known as freddy performance.
Destruction) doesn't think it's
Fred Knapp, Elliot Burtoff,
very funny . His aim is to have the Marlene Rosenthal , Marty Tackel,
audience (society) learn from its April Starbuck and Wayne
rejects and understand tllat all Davidson are the players in this
men are lost. bound together in pbantasmaao ri c psychological
communal insanity. I quote R.D. madcappery .
Laing:
" . . . When will the charade
- Lou Nattk

Get Even with

Your Parents.
Remember the New Christy Minstrels Album, the Bible, the
razor, the Collected Works of Billy Graham that you parents
lovingly placed under the Christmas tree for you last year?
Well now you can strike back!
Give your parents

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CITY .................................STATE ............ZIP ................

Wednesday, December 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

'

�'French Connection' ...--.·~·,~Nee·~
thriller. These two facets neatly
complement each other.
Doyle, the policeman, is so
dedicated to his job that It has
become an obsession. Yet his
obsessive approach is not based
upon any apparent principle or
ethical code. He exists as an
enigmatic figure because he will
not express (or does not have) any
viewpoint with regard to drugs or
crime in general. In a larger sense,
he can be said to have no
philosophy of life. His life and his
work are one and the same.
A man who .is totally
committed to a course of action
for no reason o ther than a blind
sense of obligation to his duty is
not accorded the respect that is
routinely given to the citizen or
anti ·hero. These c haracters
constantly question themselves
and those with whom they comein contact. They rely upon
conscience, rather than a sense of
duty , to guide their actions.

STARTS

Stranae heroism
Doyle , then exists far from the
realm of the anti·hero, as he
becomes nothing less than a
crazed heroic figure, choosing to
fight with all his energy a force so
powerful that it is able to ignore ,
rather than actively resist him .
At first , the movie's criminals
appear to be far saner than those
who enforce the law, if only

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an

dalre to triumph at
costs,
constitutes the basic point of
difference between 'I'M Frmch
Connection and most o ther
thrillers . A typical thriller
concentrates upon what iJ being
done rather than who is doi it
and/or why.
Lw:kily, the film is not marred
by a happy ending, or indeed, by
any real ending at all. The viewer
is left with the impression that the
action will continue even though
the fUming is stopped . The
indefinite point at which the
movie ends is frustrating but in a
very satisfying way . It's always
nice to be told what ultimately
happens, but in this case, it is
·quite obvious that any true ending
would have been anti-climactic
and annoyingly tidy.
The m ovie's two di1tintt
aspects, the pure thriller and the
character study, are, of course,
ultimately linked . The obsession
determines the course of the
action, and the mounting tension
of the characters' encounters
heightens their madness, which, jl'l
turn, enhances both aspect&amp;. ~
circular and successful uolty
achieved.
I n s hort , The French
Connection is well worth seeing,
Differentiation
and it can be enjoyed on many
The stntggle o f these two different levels, all of which can
manic characters, whose actions withstand the most picayune
are determined by an obsessive analysis.
because their operations are
motivated by a time honored
principle - the desire to make
money - whlle Doyle's motives
cannot be ascertained . It Is not
clear whether the initial contrast
between the forces of manlc law
and banal evil {as exemplified by
the businessman-like Chanter) is
en tirely intentional, or is not at
least somewhat overdrawn.
In any case, the distinction is
soon lessened through the use of a
chase scene - one of the best ever
filmed - ln whi ch Doyle
commandeers a car and pursues
Chanier's henchman, who has
requisitioned an elevated train.
For the first Ume, the viewer is
shown that both parties are
obsesse d with their roles.
Personally , Doyle can gain
nothing from stopping the
transaction, but he chooses to
attack the case on a personal level.
Chanier is so rich that one sale
cannot possibly affect his
life-style, but , Uke Doyle, he is
unable to co mpromise his
position . The struggle between
them has become a test of
strength upon whose outcome
they are prepared to stake their
lives.

�leers score victory but
n~ed unity·for strength
by Howie Fa.iwl
Assistant Sports Editor

Sights and sounds

While most Buffalo students
were home enjoying leftover
turkey, the hockey Bulls were
opening their season in fme fashion
with Saturday nighfs impressive
5·2 victory over New England
CoUege. Senior Dale Dolmage
sparked the BuUs in scoring twice
while co-captain Bill Newman
assisted on three goals.
Freshman Larry Carr and
co-captain Bob Goody turned in
superb defensive performances in
thwarting several New England
drives _and making it a relatively
easy night for goalie Mike Dunn.
The Bulls on the other hand kept
constant pressure on New England
as they peppered goalie Bill Foster
with 50 shots-on-goal.
Tied 1-1 after the first period ,
Buffalo finally pulJed away in the
next period as Dolrnage, Carr and
Nick Beaver each flashed the red
li ght. Coach Wright was
partic ularly impressed with
Beaver's hustling performance and
rewarded the senior wingman by
moving him up to Bill Newman's
No. lline.
It was a sweet opening victory
Mem-Brein 1 is an experiment in muti-media
designed, written and produced by Rob fisher. Mr. for the Bulls, coming off a
Fisher will be here Thursday 1nd Friday to discuss discouraging exhibition scrimmage
his creation, which_ places a small group of people in. the week before against RPI . New
an inflated chamber and bomberch them with siFts England was a formidable
and sounds for an hour. More on Mem.Srain 1 in opponent, boasting nine
Friday's
scholarship skaters and a rapidly
growing hockey program. Wright,

SPE
--

however, was not particularly •
happy with· the overall team
performance. He referred to many
missed passes and an obvious lack
of line unity-problems that should
straighten out as the season
progresses. In addition, the game
was failed with many individual
penalties as several Bulls Canadian
players have not yet accustomed
themselves to the less physical
nature of American hockey.
Late starting time
There appeared to be more
problems off the ice than on. The
game, scheduled for 9 :30 p.m. did
not get underway till 10:45 p.m.
due to the Rec's prior commitment
to· a junior Bantam· team. While ...
both teams grew quite impatient;
the game was further delayed by a
faulty PA system . This negligent
mixup in the scheduling will also
delay the start of this weekend's
series against Oswego and Salem
State.
At present, the Oswego State
game Friday night will begin 10:30
p.m. with Salem State commencing
II p.m . the following night. These
times are likely to change, so please
check Friday's The Spectrum.
Tickets are going very fast for these
important District II games. For
those unable to attend (cardinal sin
No. 1), the game will be broadcast
live on WBFO and also carried the
following day by Channel 5, cable

'IV.

presents
In the public interest

TOnight at 9:00p.m. Clark Gym

RALPH NADER
ALL DAY TOMORROW IN NORTON UNION, A SERIES OF
WORKSHOPS FEATURING DONALD ROSS (No. I NADER
RAIDER), TO DISCUSS (PIRG) PUBLIC INTEREST
RESEARCH GROUPS.

~

at the information de* in the Union for specific room locations and times.

Wednesday, December 1, 1971. The Spectrum. Page thirteen

�Matmen finish first in
~ East Stroudsburg Open ·
by Dave Geringer
Spectrum Stoff Writer

If someone has asked BuffaJo
varsity wrestling coach Ed Michael
what he would have wanted most
for Thanksgiving, he . probably
would have called for a first place
finish in the East Stroudsburg
Open. That's just what the BuUs
did last week in a tuneup for this
Saturday's opening home
quadrangular meet at Clark Gym .
The Bulls, in winning, handed
the host East Stroudsburg its first
loss ever in its own tournament.
East Stroudsbu rg took fourth , the
position that the Bulls occupied at
the close of last year's action in
the same tournament. Buffalo
won the tournament by 13 points,
a large margin considering the fact
that 48 teams competed . The Blue
and Gold rabked up 58 points
despite the loss of two starters
due to Injuries. Coach Ed Michael ,
very pleased with the resuJt . called
it a "great team effort." " I was
pleased with the performance,"
Michael stated, "despite the fact
that several of our wrestlers di~
not measure up to their potential.
However, I am confiden t that
they will improve. I consider .a
tournament such as this one an
asset , just as a learning experience.
but it's really an accomplishment
to win it."
Along with taking the team
trophy, the Bulls gained several
individual ho nors. Eric Knuu tila,
• the starter at I o7 lbs. won the
title at that weight class as he
swept his five matches. After

,,

beating two unattached wrestlers
to gain entry into the fin~ls,
K.nuutila defeated BUJ Benson of
Massachusetts by a score of 7 -I to
earn the crown.

BuDs falJ weakness

by Barry Rubin
Spol'tl EdltO#'

This evening when the vanity basketbaU Buill
open their 1971-72 season at Syracuse, upset will be
foremost in their minds. The Orange, 19-6 last year
including a trip to tlle post season National
Invitation tourney, figure to be tough to beat despite
the Joss of 6-1 1 center Bill Smith to the Portland
Trailblazers.

The Bulls appear to have
shored up a weak spot last year
However the BuUs tlave not beaten Syracuse
with this year's addition of
heavyweight Tony Policare. He since 1962-63, while amassing seven straipt
gained t h e othe r Buffalo setbacks. Overall Buffalo tnils Syracuse in the series
individual title with a victory over 17-5. In tonight's contest, third year Orange JtientorRoy Danforth will return three starters from bis
teammate Pat Russi. Russi, who
squad of last season. Co-captain Greg Kohls (6-1)
wrestled for the University of returns to anchor the backcourt after averaging 22
Buffalo Wrestling Club as he is an
points per game last year. To team with Kohls,
ineligible traosfer student, pinned junior forwards Mike Lee (6-3) and Mark Wadach
two ex-state champions en route (6-2) return for their second year in the starting
to his meeting with Policare in the lineup.
finals . Policare then took the final
by a scoce of 6·1 .
Orange sopha
Ron Brandt , who took last
Joining the three returning starters will be
year's I &lt;&gt;0-lb. title, was beaten for
the crown this year by Barry sophomore prospects, Dennis Duval (6-2) and Bob
Dooms (6-5). Duval is a highly rated sharpshooter
Reighard , a graduate of Ohio
from West bury, N.Y., who averaged J9 .2 for last
State . Reighard , called an
year's Orange frosh. Dooms is expected to be able to
outstanding wrestler by many
battle for the Orange on both offensive and
observers, defeated last year's top defensive boards.
Bull wrestler by a count of 3-2.
Coach Danforth feels his Orange will miss their
Co·captain Ted lawson , also very
highly regarded, took fourth place big man , Smith , and adds : "Our biggest problem will
be getting the rebound. We have fine overall team
in the 142-lb. class.
speed
and we've also got eight or nine boys who can
The Bulls open their duaJ meet
play." Danforth considers his biggest problems
season this Saturday wit h a quad
against Buffalo as, ''that big kid in the middle
at Clark Gym. The Bulls will take ( Blackmore) and their transfer personnel." In order
on O.neonta , Montclair and to stop the Bulls, Danforth figures, ''we must keep
Wilkes. a perennial power in
the ball away from Blackmore by utilizing our
eastern wrestling. This meet will various defenses. A lot depends on what kind of
provide the Bulls with an early game Blackmore has,"
test and should show whether the
For the BuUs Blackmore (6-6), Jim Tribble (6-6)
Bulls will indeed be a formidable and captain Neil LangeUer (6-4) will start along with
squad this season . The home quad junior guard Bob Vartanian (6-3) and Orv Cott {6-2).
opens at 12:30 p.m. in C\ark Second year coach Ed Mutto whose Bulls went down
Gym.
to Syracuse last year 80-7Q at the Auditorium
expects soph Greg Bruce to l)e his chief reserve tt
guard with 6-4 junior RicJc Matanle in first reserve up front .

WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU
ABOUT A MAJOR IN STATISTICS

Ammgd t~ visit l.IS i.tt rm. A1 , 4230 R id~ ' lt-!o.

Expect the BuUs to come out with either their
1-2-2 or 1-3- 1 zone with several other maneuvers to
apply pressure on the Orange. The Bulls must stop
an Orange squad that had the fourteenth best field
goal percentage in the nation last year. For the Bulls

Greg Kohls
to have any chance of victory, Orange guards Kohls
and Duval must be contained.
The Bulls will need every bit of strength and
rebounding adva ntage that can come from their
improved frontline. Blackmoro had a disappointing
training camp but he should be rea4y ~ ~iJ~ Jim
11'ibble, w~~ has proveu..~ip~se}f ev_e,rv.hit, as valuable
ll:f Blackmot'e to tJie'Bu.Rs' ~pe"tl&lt;!ed&lt;&gt;upl.it~W~ 11 A ·~
.
Coach Mutto admits the Bulls come into therr
opening contest with guarded optimism, lacking in
previous years. But , the Bulls face the task of beating
Syracuse at Manley Field ho use where the Orange
went 11-1 last year, Josing only to Holy Cross.
WJRR - 640 AM broadcasts live at 8: 15 p.m . with
Joe Lockwood.

Prof. E. Parzen, Chairman, 831 -1231
Prof. J. Dickey, Director Undergraduate Studies, 831-1238
SUNY
BUFFALO

DEPT. OF
STATISTICS

SCHUSSMIISIIRS SKI CLUB

Making LOve IS Great.~
Making Her Pregnant lsnt.
Face it. "Be prepared" isn't j~t for Boy Scouts. n you r~ally &lt;"a re
about your IHe and hers, you'll take precautions to prevent an
accidental pregnancy. By U!nng a l'Ondom. One of today's new
condoms ... so highly reliable yet so exquisitely sensiti ve that you
no longer have to sa&lt;"rifice pleasure for safety.
So why run the risk of accidental pregnancy? Especially now that
you can get famous-brand condoms privately-by mail-from Popu·
lation Planning Associates.
Send for our free illustrated broehure describing the wicle selet·tion
of •·onrloms we otTer. Su&lt;·h ns the popular Trojan. The extrll· lhin
Prime. The pre·.~haped Con ture. The Koin· l'a&lt;·k, pac•knged in handy
l(olrl foil "&lt;•oins." And man.v more All elef'lronicnllv tester! to meet
rigorou,.. FDA spedfwations.

SPECIAL
CHRISTMAS
OFFER!
Make Chri~tmas merrier this yea r
... with our unique Chri stmas
Mmpler t•ontaining 13 assorted
t·ondorn s in a gold foil box
trimmetl with a bright red and
lt'Oid tie. Conta ins quarter-do~en
parkets of the 4 br11nds mentioned
above ... plus one Crest-Skin,
made of ~uper-sensitive animal
membrane. For each sampler,
plus our brochure. send just as
plus 50f postage and handling.
All orders filled the same day re·
c-eived and shipped first class.
Money bac-k if not delirhted!

r::-----------

Populatlon Plannina Auoclates
105 North Columbia
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514
Gentlemen: Please send me:
_
.Christmas Gift Samplers at $5
each, plus 50~ postage and handling.
I enclose
_
_ • to cover C0$1.
I understand that you will refund my
mooey in full if I am not delighted.
0 Free illustrated brochure ooly.
foJeo;e orlnJ I

name

iddress

city
zip

s

stile

191
'-------------'------------:o...J
Page 'fourteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday, December 1, 1971

.Sl~l

t~l.4

II

Ttl IIA\~
••• Y••·IID\'e ftt \\'alt l11 ll11e •

llrilltJ a1 llttttlt.

�cLaallllll
ty.-wrttten ....-. w1111119 to P8Y fOOCI
-'~· C811 ltt-7072 attM • .-.m.

AD tNfOfiiMAT10N
CL.ASSI~IIED

pieced
Mondly ttiN f"r!Uv oetween 9 a.m .
.,..., . . •·"'· et 115 NOftOft Hatl,
adl

mey

THE CCMT Of In ld fOf

Zf:ISS~K.Of4
C~t1fte111
111 mm
..._.oto, F1.2 wkle • .,..., ~lorlar,
crotlfotCrMn, Cllffuston flit.,. - belt
off.,, 137·25U.

be

one dly II

TUTO,. for WOOdburn'• Orpnlc
C.....w.lry eM•• F1lr fM. Clll S t - It
IH-aiH lftW 5 p.m.

BRAND ntw tsrHII ltleep!Plln for 1111,
YWV ChMP. Cell 116· 7112 for furth8f
lnformetlon.

at.as
._ '"' ""' ts WOI'ds.,.. s.os
for MCh Mllltl~ll word.

ai!:GINNING
IN-5126.

•lHELI' WAfitTEO" IIU unnot
dllc:rlml.,_.e 11n till .,._Is of Mil, color,
creed Of MtiONI orltln to eny extent
(I.e., I'Nf•IMY 11 still dltcrlmlnttory) .

WllLL KNOWN comm8fclal rock
troup tootcl~ for IMCI vultarlst who
1110 ~~~Call BOb 6744941.

"FOUND" . . will be run frM of
chi,.. fOf • m1111tnum or 2 days and
15 wordl.

WANTED
COUNTRV h_,e outside Buffllo with
friendlY people for my ut end rnyseu.
C.ll Roy IH4244, evenln91.
TVTOAS ,_.... - opportunity for
tnctepenclent ttuCiy credit for quellfled
people. 'T'IIose Interested In tutoring
lnner&lt;ltV tilth IChOOI students In
math, tel~, rledlnt, writing, should
apply Am. 310 Olef8fldorf Hell or cell
831·2011, ext. 45,
WANTED • one P8fSOn to Sill bOOtll9
records. Clll Jeff 115· 1031, Ron
186·2013, after 5 p.m .

t t

a

Need 1 m1n who Is a oro 11
tel&lt;lnt e••m•. Pt..se cell Jol\n
123·7572.
EMERG£1'1&amp;0'1 MIOW shovelers wanted .
&amp;3.50 P8f hour. Overtime extr1. Call
856 · 41110 Mondey - FrldiY,
9 :0o-4t00.
MAL.E , femele rest1Urent staff
required for 111 positions 1t historic
Roycroft Inn. Tnos• n ..t, penoneble
- wllllnt to INrn - miY aopty In
~rson, 40 s. Gro~te St., E. Aurore,
M-f', J ~.
TEAM PIPit needed regarding any
upect reletld to si)MCn: neurologlcet ,
disorders of speech, psyeholln11u lst1cs,
speech In cnlldren, sch laoonrenll,
advertising, ate . Must be et l..st 15

pteno

ltUd8fltl

-

ov&amp;,.S£AS Jobs for Students•
Austrella, Eurooe, S. Amertu, Afrk:.l,
etc:. All prof....ons and occu..-uons,
1700 to 11000 monthly. E•penPIId, overtime, llth"-lnt. FrM
lnformetlon. Write J~ 0Yef-S,
Oept. ES, Box 15071, San 01190, Calif.
92115.
NEED sophisticated enterutners for
doWntown coffeet1ouse. f'olk, juz ,
btu• eccepteble. Groups of more than
2 need not IPPIY. 852-7129, 154·11651.
WANTED • gange to rent In
Vlrtii· Taunton area . Cell Greg
174-4122.

APARTMENT FOR RENT

·

THAEE or four-bedroom epartment,
1210. 10-mlnute walking distance. Clll
Gerry, carol, Cindy 832-6440.
FURNISHED 3-t)edroom eptrtment,
1150/mo. C111 876·9521 or 627·3901
after a p .m .

RIDE BOARD
RIDE w1nted from Center·Un lon 1r11,
West Seneu, diYS. WUI p1y. Call
674·2592.

FOR SAl.E
REFRIGERATOR, bed frame,
m1ttr1u , otner furniture. C1ll
837.0099, Mtrc, Ken or Mike.

00 YOU WANT TO GET HIGH?

CUSTOM MADE LEATHER PANTS
FULL LENGTH CAPES (wool/cotton)
HAND MADE LEATHER BAGS
COLORFUL WOOL SASHES

.• Ant(,Q"f

,.,.~oU. ~-o~ (GouUmine)

CIU For lnform1tion

MY

RETAIL

PRICE

.: :

$30
$16

~

....._

~oz..

STEVE - 113-4707

MUSTANG '67- ellcellent conclltlon,
V-6 power stM!'Int. new llatterv, new
brlkes. Call 137·102a.
VW '66 - perfect conclltlon. M(lst Mil.
C1ll 816·2913 all dey tomorrow .
APT . sin refrlgeretor. One yMr old.
Under warranty. $60 firm. C all
145 · 5793 or 835 · 78111 . Or .
Klri&lt;P8trlcl&lt;.
1967 VW lqUireblck. Good co ndition ,
$575.688-81110.
HEADS, 720 208 em, a72, with
Tyrolll 90; Nordica (13) boots, US,
poles $5 ; set 190;634 -7210.
BASSETT &amp;. terrier puppies; chNp.

HOUSE for rent . Furnished. N ..r
cempus. Six bedrooms, llvlnt room,
dlnlnt room, 2 kitchens. Call
au~•• ·

I just got btck from Morocco with some • • stuff.

SKIS Rossllhol Strato, alae 210 em,
one -son old. E•cetlent condition.
Merker blndlnt, 1100.111.0505.

c.u 688-8302.

NIKON FTN, l llcellent condition,
1275. Also t elephoto lenses. 111 ·2252.
MOROCCAN Imports dig thHI
prices • custom made L.EATHER
PANTS - $30; fUll length wool/cotton
CAPES - 115 ; n1nd-m1de L.EATHER
BAGS - 18; colorful WOOL SASHES
1 2.5 0 . Antique Mortlln ll
(Gullomtne) BEADS t8/ doz. C all Steve
883·4707.
'66 MUSTANG (automatic), $400 or
best offer. Good runn ing condlllon.
63.4·4861.
AR Turntlble, 1 month old , must sell
- ch.. PI 874· 5264.
TWO TIRES 5.20 •
cond. 125. 886·3005.

13. EKcellent

AMH E RST 659 Fells Blvd., 31h
bedrooms, 3 baths, fireplace, 911 gril l
In fenced ytrd, large f1ml1y room , air
conditioned, carpetlnv, dr1pes,
attacned 91r191. Minutes from UB.
Low t1xes. owner. 873-4114.
KLH FM/AM receiver, 50 Witts, II
montns old (2·Y.. r 9\.llflntM), 2
l lr•susoenslon si)Mkers, all for $ 275
(14« new) : Garrard SL72 turntabll,
blse, c:o... er, urtrlc:tge, 1135 n-, 170
- negot11ble. 173·1 443.
SKI BOOTS - Mergans size 9 . Also
l)llr of HNd Jt1ndards, 210 em.,
without blrtdlpgs, 150 for bOth. Clll

$8

$2.50

,,J-2105.

$1/
Do!.

1963 S TUDEBAKER g ood
condition - clun. Naw tires (snow) .
Grut engine. 885-6013.

meet our photographers eye to eye

FIVE rnaM1 ..,_.,..y n.ect. four M

STEREO tepe recorder. Brend must Mcrlflce: 1150. Ford 1M3 w190n
- eliCit lent. Mutt MM. 116..17f.

~room 8P8rtment

FOR SALE 1M9 MGa h.lrdtop. Cell
lfter 6 p.m. IU4160.

Tt1A£E or more beCifoom ept. nMCied•
Cell Tony 133· 1161 w t11rvv
135-6U5.

FOR SALE complete ept. of
furniture, TV and misc . lt.ms. Call
137-6525.
'62 FOAO GIIIIIV, 6 cylinder,
st1ndlrd, 64,900 miles. 1100 or belt
offer. Clll Joe, 134-2291.
SKI BOOTS Ralc:le fOOCI
condition. Gr..t for any betlnn8f, $15.
Cell 831 ·2166.
REFRIGERATORS , Jtoves and
washers. Recondltloned t delivered and
gu.rentMd. O&amp;.G Appliances, 844
Syumore, T&gt;&lt;4· 3113.

PERSONAL
FOLK 9Uitlf lessons, el so aptphone
electric gulttr for Mle. Jeff 835·3384,
835·11229.

00 VOU know Whit I liCO Is? Sl
signori It's a crtso corn tortilla snell
fllled wltn tround bMf, Cf\MSI , lettuce
and tomato. Try them et their best at
Tippy's Taco House, 2351 Sheridan
(1crou from Put -Put Golf) 138·3900.
CHARLIE, lfl you still allve f Pt..se
ctll me soon. Sandy.
NEED Information 1bout University
DOlley? ACTION LINE USUIIIY hiS the
enswers. C all 5000.
SHOWBOAT'S Engine Room Btr singles nlte every WedneSdly. N o dress
requirements. frM p o pcorn. Drinks
$ .75, dreft $ .35 . 1 Hertel Ave. on the
N ll!lltl River .
ABLE student mechanic does 1uto
reoelrs c n .. D - 'h shop prices. Ce ll Bob
832·1663.
BEAUTIFUL blbY, you've made
enother one of my d rN ms come true. 1
love you! 'four blbY·tO·b•.
REWARD for star MDPh lre ring 1nd
gold c harm lost Nov. 18. Call 011ne
833-6471 .
TA KE your ch inos out of stortge and
vruse your hllr beck SH A NA NA Is
coming, oec. 11 .
FOLK gu lttr lessons, also eplphone
ustno electric for Mle. Jeff . 835·11229 ,
835·3384 .
BEAUTIFUL nandmadegold and sliver
1-elry - wlddlnt rlngt - at sensible
prlc•. J .P. The Goldw..ver, 655
Elmwooc:t 1t Ferry St., 111-3400.

LOST A FOUND
GREEN knlpsacl&lt; purse IOU In 2nd
floor cefeterll Monday. Reward for
return of purse and contents. Clll
I 3 1·4 11 3 . Sue. I mport1nt Pipers
urgently needed .
LOST 1 laboratory notebook for
Chemistry 201 . Call 886-6017. Betty.
SCA RF fou nd 11/24 between
Herr1m1n and Lockw ood. Owner un
c111m at SIMICtrum office.
FOUND • 1967 ~~hOOI ring In
Diefendorf. B leck statle. MIY c111m In
S pectrum office, 355 Norton.

APARTMENTS WANTED
FI VE males desoerttel y need fo ur or
""'•·bedroom 1p1rtment or house . Call
837.0882 .
COU PLE w1n1S unfurnlsned l l)lrtment
tn Unt ... enlty tru beginning Janutry.
$ 5 for Information l..d lng to accaotec:t
ll)lrtment. tGradultlnt senlorsf) John
837.0335 .

HAIRSTYLING

••••

Joe's Theatre Barber
lOSS Kenmore Avenue
{1l Colvin Theatre)

WIGS - HAIR COLORING
. ._ _ 877- 2989 _ _. .

U7~82.

w

houte.

c ...

ROOMMATE Wlnted t lmmldllt..y,
5-mlnute welk from umpus, own
room. Call 137.0301 .
OWN ROOM, t47/month, wllkl~
dl1t1nce umpus. C•ll IH.e111 after
5.
ONE FEMALE roommlte for Welt
Side 1111rtment - f60/month lnc.tud•
utilities. Cell envtlme. 816·11135.
2 FEMALES. Furnished ept. 3 mlnut•

well&lt; tnt from umpus. Storege, TV ,
t81ephone, .... electric Included. $50 •
month . C all 838-4245 or 136•5929.
L .....emesMte.
OWN ROOM . lmmedlete oc:c:upeney. 4
blocl&lt;a from Clmous. $60 month,
Includes utilities. 836-3t65 evenlnes Steve .
NEXT SEMESTER own furniShed
room aso • utilities. Gooc:t locetlon
down Kenmore Ave. Pnone 877-39M.
ONE PERSON nMded to ~hare ept.
Fillmore-Leroy. Own room, $35 per
month. 135.0377.
ROOMMATE wanted In eur.-ently
co•d flit, furniJned , own room. Prefer
female. Hertet.Colvln trll. 877.0137.
FEMALE roommate needed, &amp;·minute
we ll&lt; off Engtawooc:t. Avllllble Jln . 1 .
B..utlful lplrtment. 834-45 97. 0Mnl.

MISCELLANEOUS
PROFESSIONAL Typtnv Service
term P8DetS, thesis &amp;. dlssertetlonL
R.. sonable rites . C•ll now. 876·7616.
WILL type term oapers 1t home.
would edit your m 1terlal. Chlr!ll aAO
per Pllll. 136·2433.
LEARN to play guitar well wltll an
ellperlenc:ed t11cher. Cl ll Bill E dwards
at 883-1928.
LANOLORO Is 1 Scrooge! Must give
IWIY lovable three-colored female
l&lt;ltten. PI..SII ull 839.0518 after. 6
p .m.
GOT questions? But aon't know Who
to .~ , C ell 5000.
QAV Llb8fellon needs toldlnll Chairs,
tiDies and coffM cuos to be don1ted
for • community coffeehouse. Pnone
Da ve 1174-4011.
WINSOME
fem1 le, biiCI&lt;,
qu11t.Persl1n , 16 monthS old, w•nts •
new home. 131 ·5378 or 886.066~ .
SEEKING qu1llfled art students
Interested In l xhlbltlng their work . Clll
852· 7129 or 854·1165 I.
NV'S Hotel Tudor offers SUNY rates.
Reurvltlons 1 nd Inform ation:
132-o&amp;)1.
C &amp;. H J ONES Profenlonll Typ ing
Service comouterlzed I BM
equloment l)lus our experlen~ give
but I) OU ible presentations of
dlnertltlons, thesis, term oepers,
resumes and emoloyment eppllc1tlon
tetten. Very re u onable. C lll
741 ·3958.
TYPIN G, e•oerlenced, near UB. 1 .40
per Pllll. 834·1370. Fnt service.

$U84.ET APARTMENT
TWO rooms I VI IIable for ne.r semester
for two femele roommates In
aptrtment near ctmous. C all Anile
137 ·9697. ISOtmo.

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC .
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

COMPLETE
HOME FURNISHINGS
NEW and USED ••• RENTALS
professional full color portraits
offered to all graduating students
passport, application, 1.0. photos
also available
appointments 356 norton, 831-2505,5570
.

ALSO!

-·

save on all of your color processing services
•pecially color prints from your negatives.

TOP QUALITY AT BOTTOM PRICES

Lill
AIABERT DePARIS LTD.
Em•'"

Tlm,.lon

.,,,.., , • .,,,

102 TONAWANDA STREET ......... N.Y. (Riftnlde ..ctionl
117-1110
CWe II• 8UV utili furniture)
836-1118

~~~------~----------------J· .
We4na,d4y, December 1, l9711 . The Spec~m
. Page
fiftee,n
•
• ..
• .... .. •
._ •

�The Depa'tment of Elementary and Remedial
Edueltlon and dM ~- 51udent Associatipn
will present Or. Vlocent Glehnon speaking on
"Teacher Preparation in Elementary School
Mathematics" tomorrow at 4 p .m . at 98 Winspear
Avenue.

Announcements
Students who have not yet picked up their fall
1971 Financial Aid checks, please inquire at the Office
of Student A~ounts, Hayes A .
The Computer Center User Services announces a
seminar in Discrete Approximation. It will be held
today from 7-9 p .m. in Room 10, 4238 Ridge Lea
Road.
The Department of Music presents The Guarneri
Quartet as part of the Slee Beethoven Quartet Series
tonightat8 :30 p.m. in Baird Recital Hall.
The Division of Underanduate Studies will ~old
an informational meeting for Architeeture and
Environmental Design students tomorrow from
1:30- 3:30 p.m. in Room 245 Health Sciences.

..

UB Photo Club will have an organizational
meeting today at 8 p .m. in Room 332 Norton. There
will be a lecture on " Laser and Holography."
UB Ice Sbting Club will hold an organizational
meeting tomorrow at 6:30 p.m. in Room 240
Norton. Following the meeting there will be free
skating at Brighton Arena for those interested. Buses
will leave from in front of Clark Gym at 7:30 p.m .
and will return to campus at 9:30p.m.

The Department of Biophysk.ll Sc:ie~Kes
presents a Hminar series in Biophysics 601 today at
4 p .m . in Room 21, 4234 Ridge Lea. Daniel Davis
will speak on "Experiments on the Insertion of a
New Gene into a Mammalian Cell."

The Bridle Club will be Jiving bqinning lessons
Students for Israel will have a meeting • tenilht at 7 P·!"· In Room 266 Norton.
tomorrow at 10 p.m . in the Fillmore Room of
Norton.
UB Gay Llbentfon Front will meet today at 8
p.m. in Room 232 Norton.
Students who wish to register for FS 160,
Future of Man, second semester, please telephone
SocioiOIY 367 is
interdiscipli~ry seminar
Kay Maher at extension 1323 to make an featuring four major topics with outside speakers.
appointment with Or. or Mrs. DaniellI.
Course description available from the Sociology
Department or International College.
A speed chess (S minute) tournament will be
held next week . Sign up on the bulletin board next
The Brldae Club will ha~e a duplicate
tournament tomorrow at 7 p .m . in Room 233
to the recreation desk .
Norton. All are cordially invited.
Applicants for SprinlfSummer Underaraduate
Research Grants are reminded that complete
Hillel announces that tickets are still available
applications must be received in Room 205 Norton for the Chanukkah Concert. Tickets are available at
no later than 3 p .m ., Dec. 6, 1971 . No exceptions the Norton Ticket Office, at the Hillel Table or at
will be made. All applicants are expected to come the Hillel House, 40 Capen Blvd.
for an interview between the hours of 3- 5 p.m . on
Dec. 13 in Room 264 Norton.
The History Department will have
pre-registration for Junior Seminars Dec. 1 through
Underaraduate students should pick up spring Dec. 8 . Course descriptions and forms are available
registration material in the reception area of in Diefendorf 231 .
Diefendorf Hall according to this schedule: Seniors
whose last names begin with P-S, Dec. 1; T -Z, Dec. 2 .
The Student Theater Guild will present a play
Juniors whose last names begin with A·F, Dec. 3; "What the ButJer Saw" by Joe Orton Dec. 2, 3 and 4
G.O, Dec. 6; P-S, Dec. 7; T -Z, Dec. 8 . Sophomores: in Capen 140 at 8 :30p.m. Tickets are prtHale only
A-K, Dec. 9; L-5, Dec. 10; T·Z, Dec. 13. Freshmen : and available in Norton Ticket Office.
A·K, Dec. 14 ; L-S, Dec. 15; T -Z, Dec. 16. Class
schedules will not be available until Dec. 6.
Psychomat is in the Millard Fillmore Room
today from 3- 5 p.m .
The Accounting Club will present Mr. Thomas
Kelly speaking on "S tatistical Sampling and Auditing
The 33rd Western New York Art Exhibition will
Techniques" tomorrow at 3 p .m. in Room 234 be at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1285 Elmwood
Norton.
Avenue, now through Dec. 19.

an

AI ESEC and Undergraduate Economics
Association present Professor Murray Brown who
will discuss "The Cost of Administering the
University" tomorrow at 8 p .m . in Room 332
Norton .
The Colleae of Mathematical Sciences presents
"Chess and Mathematical Theory," a public lecture
by John Isbell, today at 8 p .m . in Diefendorf 146.
CAC will have a conwmer protection meeting
tomorrow at 8 p .m . in Room 242 Norton. This
meeting will deal specifically with consumef'
education and the complaint boxes. Volunteers are
urged to attend.
Undergraduates Ukin&amp; French courses, please
pick up a copy of the department newsletter in
Room 214 Crosby.
The Department of Spanish, Italian and
Portuguese will have a meeting of ill undergraduate
students today at 7 p.m. in Crosby 307.
The Christmas Concert to have been presented
by the UB Chorus on Dec. 10 in Baird Hall has been cancelled.

Peace Corps/VISTA representatives will be in
Norton Lobby today to speak with students about
their various programs.
The lln,ulstlcs Department presents an open
lecture In Linguistics 501 today from 7 :30-9:50
p.m. in Hayes 404. Dr. Wolck will speak on
"Sociolinguistics."
The Women's Studies College-Politics of Health
course, will show a film Norman Bethune, about the
medical system of Ch ina, tomorrow at 7 :30p.m. at
124 Winspear Avenue.
Classes will be liven in Kundalini Yop, the
Yoga of awareness, Monday, Wednesday , Friday at
6 :30 p.m. at 124 Wlnspear, second floor, and on
Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday at the
Ashram at 196 Lynwood Avenue.
Students interested in working on the problem
of increasing human effectiveness in Buffalo's
poverty situations with the goal toward effecting
policy cJl.anges at the city and county level please
contact' PX&gt;fessor David Stieglitz at 881-3550.

- AmyAhrend

Sports Information

.,

'

Today : Varsity basketball at Syracuse
University, 8 :15 p.m ., WIRR radio, 640 AM;
freshman basketball at Syracuse, 6 :30p .m .
Tomorrow : Varsity Sw imming at Hot;&gt;art ,
Geneva, N.Y., 7 p .m .
Friday : Varsity hod.ey vs. Oswego State, 10: 15
p.m ., Amherst Rec Center, WBFO-FM radio,
remaining tickets available at Clark Gym ti'cket
office, 9 a.m .; varsi ty basketball at Point Park,· 8
p .m . •
Saturd~y : Varsity hockey vs. Salem State, 10:45
p.m ., Amherst Rec Center, tickets for Salem contest
may be picked up starting this morning at 9 a.m.;
varsity wrestling, quadrangular meet with Montclair
State, Oneonta State and Wilkes, Clark Gym, 12:30
p .m. ; varsity fencing at Rochester Tech ; varsity
swimming/.lt the University of Rochester.
All Buffalo students will be adm itted free o f
charge to home sports events upon present.1t ion of a
validated identification card .
Remaining tickets for Friday's Oswego hockey
same are available at the Clark Gym first floor ticket
office. Additionally, tickets for the Saturday evening
Salem hockey contest will be available today from 9
a.m . to 3 p.m. Remaining tickets wY!)le available
until Friday.
Tonight's Buffalo-Syracuse varsity basketball
contest will be broadcast live at 8 :15 p.m. over
WIRR radio, 640 AM with Joe Lr.ckwood at the
mike. Friday evening's Buffalo-oswego State hockey
same will be broadcast over WBFO-FM radio by Jim
Mason and Jim Drucker.
Recreational ice skatlnt buses leave Clark Gym
~t 7:15p.m . tomorrow evening.
The U8 Sbtina Club will hold 01 meeting
Monday ill 7 p .m . in the Haas Lounge. Guest
speakers will be Gilbertt.Perreault, Eddie Shack and
Kevin O'Shea of the NHL Sabres .

...

-&lt;&gt;sterrelcher

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                    <text>Editor 'I note: The following letter (dlzted Nov. 17, 19 71) wu
written by Richard A. Siggtllow, vice pr~dentfor mulent aflain,
. and 1tnt to IRC Prtlidtnt Alan Miller, Director of Housing 171otrUU
SchOio and Student Auocilltion Prelidtnt htn ~ Waal.
This is desiped to clarify misundentandina relative to the ad
hoc panel rec:entJy convened by the Director of the Residence halls,
that apparently by-passed eatablished JRJ channels. The matter
involves a cbarae still to be considered in the outside courts. The
foUowina points have resulted from discussions with the IRC
President and the Director of the bal.la:
First of aU, it has not been clearly indicated in The Spectrum
how the "hearina" actually came out. Mr. Schillo did not move on
his obvious lepl authority as Director of the Residence bal.la, even
with panel support, to have the alleged offender leave, an important
point if the intent had been to arbitrarily dismiss the particular
individual from the halls.
Furthermore, Mr. Schillo was acting properly within what he
believed wu his area of responsibUity. The procedure was not
perceived u a lepl hearin&amp; but as a human, informal approach to
avoid over..,Jepllzation. In addJtion, due process was indeed
followed. The indlviduaJ was repreaented by counsel, he could
cross-examine his accusers, proceedinp were taped, and other
safeguards were followed .
A queation about "outside pressures" on the Director was
raised. There have been absolutely no such influences exerted on
Mr. Schillo, other than his own aood intentions, which I fand
worthy or support in li&amp;bt of his personal desire to help rather than
harm the alleaed offender, a pocition supported by his own decision
to allow the student to remain in the balls despite the ~erious nature
of the cbaraea. Mr. Schillo's efforta a.n d results clearly reflected a
sincere desire to avoid embanusment to the individuaJ concerned,
and protect his privacy.
If any problem resulted becauae of lack of clarity to proper
procedures, tbe fault rests with myself u Vice Preaident for Student
Affairs. There has exiated some uncertainty u to bow Mr. Schillo ia
administratively accountable to this office. Jt is now definitely
established that tbe Director of Housins is accountable to me in this
particular area of student concerns. My own uncertainty left him
without adequate ditectlon, a commwlication lapse that was strictly
my own.
I can assure all concerned that tbe present IRJ channels are to
remain in effect and will be followed in all instances involvin&amp;
violation of student rules and regulations, misdemeanor offences,
; and lesser petty cbarps. If the Director has to proceed unUaterally
in an emergency, because of immediate physical danger to resident
students, the JRC President and the Chief Justice of the IRJ will
immediately be informed.
Finally, the "administration" in this instance is my office, and
I remain committed to the development of a viable form of
University-wide aovemance, and certainly to a strong student court
system . Subsequent cuet will be channeled throusb tbe IJlJ, unlca
that body determines not to assume jurisdiction in any pven
instance. External hearina will normally precede internal actions by
the IRJ or the Student JudJdary.
In conclusion, I am reaffirmina our intent to proceed alona
presently instituted channels because of the strong commitment to
a student court system .

Richard Siuelkow
L.. •

Stggelkow supports the
Inter-Resident Judicary

~

Vot 22, No. 38

Univwlity of New York et 8uff1llo

FtW.t.v. ,._....,11, 1m

Dorm student arrested

·campus security questioned
by

J~Ann

Annao

enues of redress and when·
ever possi~le, appropriate
University judicial bodies be
Tlte arrest of a dormitory student by Campus Security on utilized rather than outside
Nov. I has resulted in an examination of that evening's courts.
events with the subsequent questioning of Campus Security
•
and their actions. Specifically, two security officers have Ptocedures violated
been accused of using unreasonable or excessive force in
In the present case, it a~
subduing the student with nightsticks and blackjacks.
pears that none of these proIn addition, a recommendcedures were utilized. When
ation has been forwarded to several attempts to escape), O'Connor and Barr informed
the administration suggesting and even striking Mr. Ms. Zuck of the necessity of
that President Robert Ketter O'Connor, force was required presssing charges, neither one
appoint a University-wide to subdue the defendant.
explained the alternative of
committee to conduct a full
going before the lntei"and searching examination of Harassment
Residence Judiciary or the
the policies, procedures and
After these events, May Student Judiciary. ln fact,
practices of Campus Secur- was taken to Precinct 16 and both officers claim no knowity. Plans to establish this booked for violating Section ledge of these bodies' exiscommittee are currently 240.25, Sub-Section I of the tence. Neither did anyone at
Penal Law, Harassment; a anytime contact or make any
being implemented.
An accou nt of Nov. 1 and
various recommendations to
be instituted were prepared
by Ronald Stein (associate
director of Student Affairs),
Jamil Hassan (legal and housing director of the Office of
Mjnority Student Rights) and
Tom DeMartino (director of
the Office of Student Rights)
upon the request of Execu·
tive Vice Presidenl Albert
Somit. After reading the
transcripts and written statements of witnesses, interviewing those involved in the
incident , and questioning various University officials, this
three-man panel detailed as
best they could the facts of
the arrest.
Clmpus Editor

by Howie Kurtz

A edging a "strong commitment
to a student court system," Dr.
Richard
Siggelkow,
vice Siggelkow's letter defended Mr.
citing his
president for Student Affairs, has Schillo's actions,
"personal
desire
to
help
rather than
issued a statement in support of the
Inter-Residence Judiciary (IRJ), harm the alleged offender."
assuring students that "the present However, it must be noted that Mr.
I RJ chunels are to remain in effect Schi\)o unilaterally sent the alleged
and will be foUowed in all instances offender a letter of eviction, and
involving violations of student only the latter's refusal to move
rules and regulations, misdemeanor out of the dorms prompted the
offenses, and lesser petty charges." subsequent ad hoc hearing. "He
The statement of support for never should have written the first
student courts wu~eU received by letter," conceded Dr. Siggelkow.
the Student Association and IRC, He further stated that Mr. Schillo's
actions
were
along wittr other students who following
viewed the IRJ's credibility as characterized by a "desire to avoid
severely damaged by the recent embarrassment to the individual
concerned, and
protect his
lepl irregularities.
These irregularities occurred privacy."
In response to Mr. Schillo's
when a Tower undergraduate's case
rerouted standard legal procedure original insistence that he would do
and bypassed · the IRJ, being it again if the circumstances
subsequently ruled upon by an ad warranted, Dr. Siggelkow stated:
hoc panel of administrators. Dr. ..He will not do it again." It would
Siggelkow also stepped forward appear that some persuasion took
and assumed responsibiHty for the place on the part ofDr. Siggelkow.
recent incident, the blame for "1 believe that Siggelkow did
which has been largely directed at overrule Schillo," commented SA
Director of Housing Thomas President Jan DeWaal. "Siggelkow
Schil.lo, who if)itiated the ad hoc advised Schillo not to bypass the
procedinp.
This
unexpected student courts again.lfthe original
statement resulted from pr. case bad gone through Siggelkow,
Siggelkow's conferences with Mr. J•m sure the IRJ wouldn't have
Schillo and IRC President Al been bypassed."'
This assumption seems accurate
MiUer, leading the administrator to
blame his ..own uncertainty" for since Dr. Sisgelkow helped set up
the legal sidestepping.
cCampu1 Editor

--c:ontlnued on e&gt;a91t • -

Physical confrontation
Jerry May , a Clement Hall
resident, was arrested on
charges of harassment following a dispute between him
and another donn resident
Susan Zuck , concerning television privileges. Reportedly,
an clrgument developed with
May allegedly shoving Ms.
Zuck and telling. her to call
Campus Security if she was
dissatisfied .
Ms. Zuck, in fact, did summon Campus Security who
informed her that it appeared
to be a case of harassment
ne cessitating the formal
pressing of charges if security
were to act. Two patrolmen,
Thomas Barr and Kevin
O'Connor, accompanied Ms.
Zuck to the TV lounge where
a physical confrontation occurred wjth Mr. May,
While allegedly resisting ar·
rest, Mr. May was beat about
the head by both Barr and
O'Connor with nightsticks
and blackjacks. According to
the patrolmen, because May
repeatedly refused to cooperate, failed to accompany the
0fficers peacefully (making

violation punishable by up to
15 days in jail, $250 fine, or
both. While charges against
Jerry May have subsequently
been dropped , questions of
violated University proced·
ures and excess force have
been raised against Campus
Security. Specifically, there
are• guidelines governing the
actions of security officials
when it is necessary for them
to enter dormitories. lnclud·
ed among these_ are procedures for contactin! responsible donn and housing officials for advice, information
and assistance. rn addition, it
was agreed between administration and security officilas
that the complainant always
be advised 'bf alternative av-

effort to contact the appropria te donn or housing repiesentative on duty.
Regarding this, Patrolmen
Barr and O'Connor maintain
that in a case involving possible bodily harm, such a procedure is not reasonable or
feasible. It is the contention
of some, however, that the
facts of the incident do not
indicate an emeigency situation. Ms. Zuck was being
pushed, it appears that there
was sufficient time to contact the appropriate housing
official.
Additionally, it has been
argued that the force used to
subdue Mr. May was undue
and in excess. To supporl
--c:ontlnued on p~ge .,_

�Budget cuts curtail
Norton Hall services

Director of Publications

Job responsibilities defined

The current budget crisil revenues ftom are important.
affecting New York State hu now These places take the hi&amp;hest
hit Norton Hall.
priority,"
Mr.
Ermanovics
As a result or the defeat or the remarked.
state tnnsportation bond issue and
Many of those who have been
fiscaJ restrictions instituted by the affected by the cutbacks have not
Nixon administration, students at been pleased, according to Bob
the State University of Buffalo will Underwood, manaser of the
be among the first to feel the fiscal
Browsing Libnry. "Lots of people
squeeze through a lessening or are pissed off by the cuts,'' he said.
Edward Doty, vice President for
seiVices in Norton.
The four services hardest hit are Operations and Systems, expressed
the Checkroom, the Information little optimisim for the University 's
Booth, the Candy Counter and the financial fut,aJre. "We are going to
Browsing Library. For example, feel the impact or the budget
t he Browsing Library will now be restrictions in a few years
open only from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. especially th e neJ;Ct two," he said :
Monday t hrough Friday. This is a
cutback of approximately SO hours State, national problem
Mr. Doty noted that higher
from the previous schedule. "We
may have to cut out teaching tixes, increased tuitions and
classes ~itb low enrollments. state--approved borrowing might
ease tho present crisis. "However, it
Eventually, through Thursday, 11
a.m. to 1 a.m . Friday and 6 p.m. to areatly depends on the decisions of
I a.m. on Saturday. Both the the State Legislature," he added .
Information Booth and the Candy "For instance. our contract calls
Counter will now be single staffed for a 6% increase in wa,es across
except for the busiest hours of the the board . But the Nixon
administration has put a S'n%
day.
"
ceiling on waae increases. Your
Norton bud,et hit
guess is u good as mine as to what
A wage ceiling ranJing from they'll do."
S 1SO to S200 has also been put
Speculating on future cuts in
into effect for student employees. student
services,
Mr.
Doty
"We've been laying-off a few remarked : "We may have to cut
people who exceeded that ceiUng,'' out eaching classes with low
said Albert Ermanovics, assistant enrollments. Eventually, there may
director ror Norton Hall. "Some be a freeze on the number of
people have volunteered to leave, students enrolled here. You have to
which helps a little. Those included realiu that this is a state, even
some students who bad other nationwide problem, not just UB."
sources of income, of course."
The problem of supply and
Mr. Ermanovics is hoping to demand is also an issue. Mr. Doty
receive some Additional funds from pointed to the cafeteria at the
the Faculty.Student Association or Ridge Lea camp!JS u a prime
Sub Board I, Inc. ''We have example . ..Between the hours of 3
established a new schedule for the p.m . through 6 p .m., they don't sell
semester," be said. " At the enou&amp;h food for the people who
moment I don'Ueea break."
work there to be paid . This is
He
mentioned
that typicaJofwhatmaybeoomeaneed
profit-making areas such u the to cut out conveniences for oruy a
Candy Counter had to be kept in few people. It will defmately lower
Aervice "Thr. few 11rea!l that weeet . fhP-.enricbm~ot factorbere ."

To define the responsibilities of a new position is
the
primary
concern
of
Jim
Campbell,
recently-appointed Sub Board I, Inc.'s director of
Publications Division. Acc:ordina to Mr. Campbell, the
position becau.e of its newness "bas no specific set of
duties."
Explainina what he is tryina to achieve, Mr.
CampbeD remarked : " My ftrst duty is to figure out
what the duties of I Publications Director) are... He
continued that he is presentl y designing a job
description and responsibilities to report back to Sub
Board.
This report will be reviewed by Sub Board I in
January as part ofan evaluative process. Mr. Campbell
commented : ' 'Jt is a matter of not even three months
to act some ki.nd of direction and design for the
division and the director."
To aide in this formulation , Mr. Campbell is
meetin&amp; with editors and representatives from the
various campus publications. As Mr. Campbell pointed
out, there is a lot of confusion concern ina publications
and their role on campus. Included in this confusion
Are questions of the publications' relations ro each
other, to Sub Board and to the divisio n director.

r

' Positive po-.lbillty'
.
Termina his role "a positive possibility," Mr.
Campbell explatned that a possible function or his
position mi&amp;ht be that of an arbitntor: "One of the
most important roles that this job mi&amp;ht possibly
develop is an arbitntor role ... to serve as a third
party in settlina disputes whether they be between
publications and Sub Board , pubHcatio ns and
readership, or between individual publications."
One definite functio n of the director, according
to Mr. Campbell, is to divert some o f the "diddly,
tedious, day-to-day activities of the publications"
from Sub Board . An example of these actiYities is the
handling of Requisitibn-Encumberance-Purchase
forms (vouchers neceasary for funding).

fun

Campbell

To solve some of the confus.i on and answer many
of the questions surroundlna publications, Mr.
Campbell is seekina information from all interested
University memben. Accordin&amp; to him, any "praise,
complaints or suuestions" would be helpful to him as
director. Mr. Campbell's office is located at 216
Norton Hall and any comments can be directed there.

New snow removal procedure
planned to clear parking lots
Given a choice, Nanook of the
North would have preferred
stayJna where he was rather than
comina to Buffalo durina the
months of December to March.
Prepartions are now under way to
. help the campus parkin&amp; lots
survive Buffalo's infamous wanter.
To insure maxJmum parkin&amp;
during the winter months, the
Environmental Health and Safety
Department
and
campus
maintenance have devised a snow
removal procedure to clear o ut the
parking lots on snow days. The
ingenious procedure, outlined in a
memorandum sent to all dorm
students, is this : On snow days,
when the lots are to be plowed ,
maintenance will notify Housing
and Norton Hall authorities.
Announcements will be made
over the public address system
(which doesn't reach to the upper
floors of the dorms) informing
residents to move their vehicles to a
designated area so that plow ina can
take place. If a student ts
off-campus, or doesn't hear the
announcement, he finds his car
plowed in the next morning,
encased in frozen ice (snow freezes
over night).
What's the solution?
- 'itudl'nto; w h n nl)rmrtfly park

overnight in the Main·Bailey lot
will undoubtedly find themselves
som ewhat
inconvenienced .
However, the upkeep of the
University will take precedence
over student discomfort.
As Vern
Larson. Senior
Maintenance Supervisor explained :
" In most cases Maintenance knows
if plowing will be necessary by sin
the afternoon, leaving plenty of
time for notific~ttion."
·
However. what If the decision to
plow is not made until later in the
evening when many dorm residents
are not on campus? Mr . Larson
maintained: " Our job is to get the
ca mpus open for morning. If the
lots are not cleared by morning, we
get helJ from people looking for a
place to park . If we_go ahead and
plow during the night while there
are still cars in the lot , we get 1\ell
from peo ple whose cars are iced in.
We're caught in the middle. What 's
the solution'?"
According to Yr. Larson, this
plowtng
procedure
proved
successful when it was instituted
last year on an experimental basis.
There was cooperation' from
students even though there were
tnihal complaints.
Leon Grifftn, assistant director
o f Cam pus Security. assures
~tnrlt'ntll

thai a~ . lnnl! a~ ca~

:HI'

parked
in
the
Mam·Bailey
overnicht parkJna Jot they will not
receive tap, reprdfess of whether
the cars are moved ror plowing.
llleplly parked cars, however,
would be subjected to a fine and
perhaps aS I 0 towing fee.
When
told
about
this
forthcoming
procedure,
one
student replied : " It's not in the
student '~ interest. It shows a
typical lack of regard for students
while it caters to the needs of
faculty and
staff.'' Another
student who drives to school
everyday said that "this procedure
is necessary. Without it, people
wouJd never be able to get their
cars into the lots." One irate
undergraduate
commented ,
"Something like this could only be
pushed on the students. I've got
eno ugh problems without having
to dig my car out ofa solid block of
ice."
Mr. Larson empathizes with
those students who feel that they
are being subjected to unfair
tre11tment. For thi.s reason he
stressed
the
need
for
communication in the hope that
altematjve measures can be found .
Anyone with suggestions for
improving the situation can
confncl h im AI Xll-40 1(,

Re;fStr;tu;,-r;fo;;na;r;;~~~~
, Undera.raduate studenta should-pick up Sprina reaistration material in the reception
area or Diefendorf Hall, star tina Monday, Nov. 29. Accurate data is easential for trouble-free
reaistration. CJass schedules will not be available until Dec. 6.
Students should pick up thelrl material accordina to the foUowina schedule: Seniors
whose first names beain wit h A-f, Nov. 29;C·O, Nov. 30 ; P.S , Dec. I ; T·Z , Dec. 2 .
Juniors whose last names bealn with A· F. Dec. 3;C-O,Dec. 6;P.S, Dec. 7; T-Z. Dec. 8.
For the sophomores: A·K, Dec. 9; L-S, Dec. 10, T -Z, Dec. 13. Freshmen : A-K , Dec.
14 ; L-S,Dec. IS ; T-Z Dec. 16.
STUDENT DISCOUNT
on
ALL - redecorating
art supplies, picture framing.
D. M. RECH PAINT CO.

J.ds,

3209 Bailey Ave.

Page two. The Spectrum. Friday, November 19, 1971

GUSTAV A. FR ISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
4 1 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

Student Assembly meeting
Tbe Student Aaembly will meet on Nov. ll-at 4
p .m . in the Conference Theater. The aaenda includes a
constitutional amendment for election rules, tenure of
tbe Auembly, Sunlhlne House, Bud concert,
Atblelic Referendum report and the student Judiciary.
All &amp;llemblymen are UTJed to attend Iince an absolute
l/S majority of all memben il Mquired to make
constitution~ ttmendmenta.

-.

...-5th- ANNUAL
- ~AT
- -AUCTION
Sunday, Nov. 21, '71
2:15 - 5:30p.m.
$50.00 maximum bid.
AMHERST ARTISTS1
at the
Erie County Savings
Bank Community Room
Northtown Plaza

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The Spectrum is publithfld thrw
rlmat a wellk. -...ry Mond11y,
w.dnesdlly end FrliUy; during r,.
r.gular ~mic y•r by Sub-Board
1, Inc. Officet are IOCIIted 111 355
Norton H11ll, Stllta Uni11enlrv of Nt11111
York et BufftJ/o, 3435 M.ln St.,
Buffelo, N•w York, 14214.
Telephone: Are. Cofh 116· Editorilll
831-41 13; Business. 831-3fito.
RepretflntfH/ for advertising by
Educetlonel Adwlrritlng
S¥tlict1, Inc.. 360 Lflxlngron A.-..•
New York, N. Y. 10011.
Netio~l

Sul»cription ntlll$ 11rt1 $4.60 pttr
lllmllltH or $8.00 for two ,.,.,.,.._
S«ond C/11# Post11gtt peld s t Buffalo
Nflw YCNk.
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OPEN 2A HOURS
liM IHUIDAI DfUY'

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Vacation living
I

Foreign students are
hasseled by Hqusing
During its summer planning
stages, the University o f Buffalo's
International Floor in Scboellkopf
Hall was told that the dorm might
be open during vacations. Two
weeks ago, when the. students
went to Housing with the request
that the dorm be kept open to
accomodate them, Housing said
no , there were not enough
students involved.
The students then managed to
pt enough students from the
floor together to comply with
Housina's wishes, stating that they
would be willing to allow other
residents who wanted to stay to
do so on their floor. The foreign
students then got the p~ermlssio~
of the SchoellJcopf HouJC Council
to allow the second floor to
remain open over vacation,
provided the stairwells to the
other floors were securely
padlocked.
William Conroy, Area
Coordinator, assured House
Co un cil there would be no
problem , since the fmal decision
was based on two out of three
votes of IRC, Housina and the
House Council. Approval came
from IRC and the House Council,
which should have made the
decision final. However, Tuesday
night Mr. Conroy informed the
group that a S 10 deposit was due
the next day. Workina quickly,
the floor's RA rnana&amp;ed to collect
the money from 1S students, and
five othen handed their money
into Housin&amp; on Wednesday.
.

Nex.t coa in wheel
Wednesday momina, Housina
informed the students that the
House Council's plan was
inadequate, since it overlooked
rll'e regulations. In effect , IJousing

told the students that it alone had
complete jurisdicition over the
matter.
·
Wednesday n i ah t, an
emeraency House Council meeting
was held, and the following
maximum sexurity proposal was
made : I) the foreign students
would be allowed to stay in the
dorm, with only the outside doors
locked ; 2)they would maintain a
two·man, 24-hour security watch
at the front door, usina the
newly-installed buzzer system;
J)the list of students sitting
security would be posted before
the rest of the form 's residents
left ; 4)as each security shift went
off-duty, they would tour the
dorm, making sure each floor was
secure&amp; S)reallzing that the dorm
would be open for a functional
purpose, the students w ould
restrict the dorm to second floor
residents and maximum one guest
perresident.
Housina's traditional solution
is to accomodate students by
puttlna mattresses in dormitory
basements. However, size and
health reaulations limit the
number of people per basement to
four, which would necessitate the
openina of the other small dorms
to suit the number of students
who need housing. This in turn
would lead to a lack of security in
all the dorms open. This proposal
has not been rejected, but the
outcome looks bleak, indeed.
Six Buffalo students are
cunently at Oisbury University in
Manchester, En&amp;land, Wlder an
excbanae prosram. They are not
bcina kicked out of their dorms
over vacations. Can we not extend
the same courtesy which is being
extended to our fellow students
abroad?

Happy Thanksgiving

Adequatety ntfl..:ting the mood of the e.t.t Sub
Bowel I. Inc. meeting is Hvold " Spot" GubenMn
(C*'ter) and lan O.WMI (~t) . Action must be
done by tomorrow If Sub Bowel wilhel to ..e1 Md
negotillte ib option fof Poverty Hill. No1Nnt
" official" could be IICCompllttMd lit Tueadey'a
session since a quon.Jm was not pr......t.

Ah,yes
Poverty Hill

Sub Board will sell option
Sub Board I, Inc. decided Tuesday night to allow
Chairman Paul Cu"\mings to negotiate and sell the
option for Poverty Hill, instead of allowing it to lapse.
This action will have to be done by tomorrow, as
Sub Board's option on the lease expires then . Mr.
Cummings noted at the meeting that he had been given
a tentative offer of $10,000 and 100 acres ofland for
the option.
Sub Board had originally met to officially
dispense with the Poverty Hill land option. Because a
quorum was not present, no official vote could be
taken although the members are committed to vote
against purchi$C. That was the result of the student
referendum held aeveral weeb ago.
The Sub Board meeting started a half hour late.
This minor Inconvenience was what some observers
called a portent of what was to become a prime
example of futility .
After dispensing with Poverty Hill. it was then
suggested that the rest of the meeting be used to
discuss the future of Sub Board. An impatient Lester
Goldstein said : " I don't think that we should discuss

25 ...
UllltEISABY

Today'• ilsue of The Spectrum will be the lait
one publilbed until after the Thank.saivina recess.
The next paper will appear on Wednaclay, Dec:. I.
Deadline for all copy for this paper will be Monday,
Nov. 29. Have a happy ThankaaJYina.

CELEBBATIOI

Bible
Truth
VICTORY IN CHRIST

Hear, 0 Israel
for gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

"Death Is swallowed up in "lct ory, 0
d~41thu wh~re

u

thy

stllll~

0 .,..,.,

where II thy Vic tory'! But lhanka be
to sod wltk:h pveth us tbe Victory
tbrouah our Lord Jesus Christ.'

876-4265

- 1 Cot'. lS :SS·S?

FH.ET SJ.95
MIGNON
C:Olc,

alprta··ron

the future. We should discuss the present or the lack of
it."
The topic evolved to whether Sub Board should
also become the student government. However, with
people constantly wallc.ingin and out of the room,and
with most of the representatives holding private
conversations, Uttle if any significant work was
accomplished.
Larry Stein, Chairman of UUAB, was concerned
with the date that budgets 'are approved. "What
happens is that the budget is paped too late in the
spring and the first weeb of the fall semester are a
cultural void," he aaid.
He suggested that the budget be apprtWed in
January so that the spring months can be used to plan
next term's activities. Another alternative would be to
have UUAB switch officers in January along with the
new budget.
The meeting never actually ended; it dissolved.
Members of the board arbitrarily filtered out of the
conference room, muttering about how they had
wasted twohounofstudy time.

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3:00p.m.
HAAS LOUNGE

Friday, November 19, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three
'

�(

Congressional Record

Busy week on Capitol HiD

Siggelkow supports. ..
-continued from pag• 1-

the student courts, and did in fact
advise Mr. SchiUo to take the case
through I RJ. This advice forces one
to doubt the blame Dr. Siggelkow
assumes when he states: " My own
uncertainty left him (Mr. Schmo)
without adequate direction, a
communication lapse which was
strictly my own." The problem
may have stemmed from the
confusion a.s to what off1ces the
director of Housing should report.
Mr. SciUllo was formerly only
answerable to the office of Edward
Doty, vice president of Operations
and Systems, but is now jointly
responsible to that office and the
office of Dr. Sigaelkow.
Mr. DoWaal and Mr. Miller are
both very pleased at the outcome
of events. "A guarantee 10 writing
from Siggelkow's office IS a very
good sign," commented Mr.
DeWaal . "The many doubts we had
last week about the evolution of
student courts are somewhat
cleared up." Mr. Miller agreed,
stating he had "full assurances that
this won't ever happen again. These
things are clearly delineated now."
Dr. Siggelkow agreed with this
assessment : "We've got a few
safeguards in there now, to prevent
this type of thing from happening

again."
Dr. Siggelkow added that his
office had received only "good
reports" about the IRJ's handling
of past cases. He reiterated his
suppott of a viable form of
University-wide governance. " I'm
casting my lot wi.th judgment by
one's peers," he explained. "If the
court makes mistakes, at least they
will be educationai mistakes." The
only time Housing wiJI undertake a
unilateral action in the future,
according to Dr. Siggelkow, is "an
emergency case, such as a guy
running through the dorms with a
knife." Even in those cases, he
added. the I RJ will review the case
after the imminent danger has
passed.
It is Mr. Miller's opmion that Dr.
Siggelkow was "taking the blame
that's been thrown solely to
Schillo." Whether the methods
used were persuasion, pressure or
simple
reconciliation,
the
important point is the written
assurance that the IRJ will n9t be
bypassed again. "The case is in the
past,'' offered Dr. Siggelkow.
"We've set down the policy that he
{Mr. Schillo) will follow. 1 don't
feel that something like this will
happen again."

Ironically, only minutes before, the Senate had
rejected by a vote of 56 to '26 a proposed tax relieffor
families at or below tbe poverty level. Poor people
would have been reimbursed by the government for
that portion of the.i r rent which represents property
tax on their homes, and for what they pay in food sales
tax. This plan would have cost the government S I.7
billion.
On Tuesday , the Senate voted $7 50 million in
extra tax cuts to firms which open new plants in
declining rural areas or In big city ghettoes. The rural
development bill passed by a vote of 60 to 19, and the
inner-city biU passed by a vote of 56 to 24 .

Wash.inaton was a beehive of activity this week as
the Senate, House of Representatives and the Supreme
Court acted on many important issues. On Monday,
the House approved a S I .6 billion bill which will
oltpand the National Cancer Institute. This action may
lead to a clash with the Senate, which has voted to
create the new Conquest of Cancer Agency. Adopted
almost unanimously by a vote of 350 to 5, the bill
authorizes the money over a three-year period, while
providing $90 million for early detection of breast,
oral and cervical cancer.
The Senate bill. passed in July. was backed by the
American Cancer Society and provides for the new
agency which would have a director reporting directly
to the President. The agency would be independent of
the NIH (National Institute of Health). The measure
will in all probability, go to a House-Senate
Conference committee where the differences will be
worked out.
Acting reluctantly after a meeting with President
Naxon, Senate leaders agreed late Mo nday to continue
appropriations through Dec. I for foreign ai_d ,
portjons of the Defense Department, the Offi~e of
EconomiC Opportunity and the District of Columbia.
Congressional appropriations officially expired
midnight Nov 15, but Allen EUender (D., La.) and
chairman of the Senate Appro priations Committee,
said there was httle cause for worry. Ellender saad his
commattee would meet later in the week to act on a
resolution to continue the appropriations.

No residency requirements
The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that residency
requirements
for
welfare
assistance
are
unconstitutional even if the welfare program is locally
funded . Referring to a I 969 ruling which invalitJated
sate waiting periods, the court said then, " whether a
welfare program is or is not federally funded is
irrelevant
to
the
consitutional
principles
ennunciated ."
By a vote of 64 to 25, the Senate voted
Wednesday to suspend, rather than repeal, the federal
excise tax on new cars. Nixon had proposed that the
seven percent tax be killed, since he predicted t.h at an
upsurge in auto sales would result in the creation of
half a million new jobs. The suspension would cover
the penod from Aug. IS , I 97 I to Jan. I , 1973 .
VoHna was expected at the end of the week on a
Senate plan under the American taxpayer would
provide each maJOr political party with $20.4 million
to finance next year's political campaigns. The
minority Republicans hoped to defeat the issue, which
would give every taxpayer the option of checking a
box on his return which would earmark Sl for a
special fund . Bxperts In the tax field estimated that
the fund would be large enough to give both the
Democrats and the RepubHcans S20 .4 million each to
finance their presidential campaigns. George Wallace
(if he chose to run) would receive $6.3 million . The
i:.~ ue was expected to come up for a vote last
Wednesday ni&amp;ht.

College may pay off
Macldle-class parents of college students may get a
tax relief, if the Senate bill passed Monday is not killed
before II is enacted. The bill, which passed by a vote of
56 to 27, would permit parents whose income is up to
$25,000 per year to subtracr $325 from taxes owed
the government for each child in college or trade
school.
Under the bill, college expenses would have to
total S I 500, and credit would diminish in value for
parents with incomes over S2S ,000. The plan will cost
the government $2.2 billion per year in revenue.

Campus security...

-continued from pa9ft J-

this it has been pointed out
that I) May did not pose a
serious physical threat to two
ca mpus officers 2) the use of
nightsticks and a blackjack
for a harassment charge was
too severe 3) other less violent actions were not tried to
control the defendant and 4)
Patrolm en Barr and
O'Connor received no training in the use of such weapons.

resulting requirements for increased education of security
officers. In spite of these requirements and an upgraded
security post, neither Barr
nor O'Connor received any
formal training in security
work nor when to use or how
to use physical action.
To complicate matters, the
busiest time for security, between 3 and II p.m., is also
the most unpopular time for
service. Consequen tly, beQuestionable training
cause of seniority and union
The point of training for contracts, the most inexperiCampus Security has plagued enced officers are forced to
that office in the past with man these hours. In an at-

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356norton
Page four . The Spectrum. Friday, November 19, 1971

IIW281

A"-ttc .....

tempt to correct this incident
and to prevent its occurrence, the committee dealing
with the case made a series of
recommendations. Included
among these was the previously mentioned Universitywide committee to investigate Campus Security.
Such a committee is presently being established with
appointments of members
from all areas of the University community. However,
administration officials stress
that the initiation of this
Campus Security committee
was not prompted solely by
the events of Nov. I. Rather,
prior events problems and
criticisms of the University's
security force points up to
the need for such a committee and their resulting work .

LEISURELY
TAKE IT EAS Y
B ROWSS AROUND
)(ANY F~P! ID!:AS
CAN BE FOliNO
DECORATION ANO
Gll"TS
TO NAME A Jl'lfW
ARE ALL AVAILABLE
NOW TO YOU
ASK l"'R RELP
AND wz•t.t.o AOVJBI!l
SROPPINO EARLY
SURE X8 WISS

TSUJIMOTO
Orifatol AtU-(llrt.-F-

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tUO kne&lt;a 81. (JII. II¥ l ima, N.Y.
t llflca l:ul ef Traaal« IV .5 . U)

. __ _ _ 1'\L 2-a33S - - - ·

Pictures for your 1.0. card can now be taken
in the Buffalo~ian office (Rm. 356 Norton).
Membership closes Dec. 1.

HURRYUII

�SA debates funding
of Sunshine .House
by LyndaTeri
SpectrumStaf/Wrlter .

Sunshine House believes the house
at I 06 Winspear to be a better buy .
"It suits our needs better than
Heath," he continued . "SA is
worried about what they will do
with it if we go out of operation. Jt
isn't an easily adaptable house but,
for o ur purposes it .is the best one."
He explained that the physical
layout of the house on Winspear is
better suited for the type of drug
related tasks Sunshine Ho use deals
with. He said the rooms could be
easily converted into counseling
rooms and its location near campus
had many advantages. The two
entrancd to the Winspear House,
one leading to the street, the other
to campus, is an asset he believed to
be very important.
Lester Goldstein, academic
affairs coordinator of SA, has been
to see the Winspear House and
believed the rooms are "extremely
small." According to him, "an old
coal
burner
renovated
for
electricity, god knows how many
years ago," is a source of concern.
He did not ~eem at all pleased
with the physical layout of the
Winspear House. The attic, which
SunshlDe House had intended to
divide into thne rooms, has a
slanted roof that be deemed "just
about suitable for storage." Mr.
Drescher, however. believed the
attic could have been put to
excellent use.

The death ·or Sunshine House
may become a reality unless the
current conflict over funding is
resolved with Student Association
(SA).
'
According to its project head ,
Dennis Drescher, Sunshine House
will "go out of operation" unless
sufficient resources are allotted
them for purchasing an actual
house.
The problem is two-fold :
whether or not SA will grant the
fund&amp; and, if these funds are
granted, • what house will be
approved for purchase. Mr.
Drescher has been attending
meetinp with SA Jor over two
· months 'and believes be has been
given "one big run around."
"You go to one meeting and
they tell you they need certain
facts," he said. "After you give
them the facts they adjourn to
think it over. At the next meeting
they ask you the very same
questions. You supply the same
answers and everything starts all
over apin. It's just the same
information repeated over and over
again ."
The crux of the matter, whether
or not SA will grant additional
funding, seems to hinae on the
actual house purchased. The two
houses under consideration, 83 Conflicts
Heath and 106 Wins pear, seem to
"It is, without a doubt, big
be the focal point of debate. enough for what we wanted it for,"
Accordina to Mr. Drescher, be stated. "We wanted the rooms

House/or sole

Sunshine House is abo considerhtt
the house at 83 Heath (above).
Dennis Drescher feels its' matc&gt;r
drawbacks ar.e tight corridon and
tight stairways, produci"il an
uncomfortable atmosphere for
dealing with drug problems.

Cramped quarters

Presently having no house from
which to wOf'k, Sunshine House is
sharing the CAC office in Room
220 Norton. The tight situation Is
not an ideal one for dealing with
the community's drug-related

The hou• .. 108

Better buy

w................ actively toUtht

edv••ta•••

by Sunlhine Houle. Ita
are two entrance~,
one leedint to c:.npus: proximity to 1he Uniwnity;

and rooms ..Uy converted to cou,...l"' rooma.
Student Aaociation hes the final riiPOfllibiltty few
buying a location for Sunshine Houle but the
queltion is wHI they?
to house eme{cency crashers. It is longer any hope in pressina for
big enough for our needs."
Winspear" and that the whole either/or thing with PODER," be
Mr.
Goldstein
countered situation had turned into a said. "It shows shitty plannina by
explaining, " There is nothin&amp; " personal thin&amp; where logic does the student sovernment." Now
wrons with it (Wins pear) aa a not do an y good."
that the PODER issue is settled,
house, but it doesn't seem like a
Mr. Goldstein said a "personal there is no longer any problem
sood investment." He said that SA thing" was "really ridiculous." He about decidinR "either/or."
would not want to be "stuck with a declared, "I have no idea where
An additional $2100 ia beina
house" if Sunshine House ever that attitude came from.l'd like to requested by Sunshine House.
stopped operating or decided to see them set a bouse too ...
Together with the previously
move out. He said further, "Any
Up to now, the only alternative approved
$4000
"rental
house purchased by SA funds must to the house on Winspear is one at allowance" this money would go
suit the needs of Sunshine Ho use • 83 Heath. SA approves of this one, toward
a
down
payment,
and be useful to SA in the Ions but Mr. Drescher has many 'mortgase, insurance and other
reservations about it. He explained necessary fees for upkeep durint
run."
Mr. Drescher maintains that if that Sunshine House handles drug the first year.
Sunshine House ever did so out of related problems and feared that a
Currently operatin&amp; out of the
operation, SA could "resell with no "tight stairway and tight corridors Community Action Corps (CAC)
actual financial loss." A $4000 of the Heath house could really office in Norton Hall, Sunshine
allotment had been approved for bum someone out." He feared House handles almost five hundred
the purposes. of rental and Mr. "Sun.s hine House might st•rt calJs a month. With the acquWtion
Drescher saw ''no reason why if fucking more than h elping. If that of a house, Mr. Drescher feels the
they (SA) had to resell at some became the case, we would have to calls would go up to 2000. A bouse
later date they could not."
close down."
would make Sunshine House a 24
He said, "They (SA) would not
hour a day project which, because
be losing any more than the 'Sbitty planning'
of Norton Hall hours, is not now
Any possibility of renting an feasible.
original rental monies. There is
even the possibility of SA comins apartment
is
"long
gone"
Mr. Drescher expressed that it
out financially ahead, if reselling according to Mr. Drescher. would be possible to operate on a
Landlords will not rent to Sunshine 24 hour day because there are 60
were really necessary ."
House because it is a 24 hours a members in Sunshine House
day, seven days a v.;eek enterprise. curren Uy . All are volunteers.
Question of commitments
Mr. Goldstein said that the He said, "The landlords are afraid
Sunshine
House
cannot
possibility of reselling the Wins pear the neighbors would complain . I continue operating out oftheCAC
House was a possibility but SA is don't blame them either. There office. "There is so much more
not in the " real estate business." would be constant activity."
needed . One-half an office just is
He regarded purchasing a house as a
Hassles over purchase are not enough," Mr. Drescher
"big
legal
and
financial further complicated by availability declared . Unless the funding for a
commitment that SA would really of funds . Had PODER's show of house1 is given soon be fears,
have to look into." "Buying a force last week at the Student "Sunshine House will just have to
house isn't anything like buying a Assembly meeting been successful, cease operation. That would cost
typewriter," he continued.
Sunshine House would have been the University and the community
Mr. Drescher said there was "no refused funds, Mr. Drescher a much needed service.

problems.

Friday, November 19, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�.Hobart trial

'Tommy the Traveler' talks
by JuiiCromu
Spectrum Stt1f! Writer

"Tommy the Traveler," an admitted undercover
agent who has posed as a student radical, testified on
Wednesday that he had discussed the possibility of
'kidnapping Rep. SamuelS . Stratton with a defendant
in the trial of four persons arrested after a Hoban
College disturbance last year.

also in the efQployment of the sherifrs office from
_.March 1970 until 1 recejved my discharge papers"
shortly after the June drug raid.
He indicated that he bad traveled extensively
throughout Upstate New York for the FBJ while
distributing literature for the SDS.

'Royal family '
Dressed in a three-pieced sull, Tongyai said that
Thomas Tongyai , who was glven the nickname, he had told militant students that he was ..a relative of
"Tommy the Traveler" by students, said !he the royal family of Thailand and that I wanted to go
conversation took place with Rafael Martinez. in the back to ThaUand to start a revolution there." He
latter's apartment in Geneva , N.Y. in January of 1970, described the cover as ''bait" to lure radicals into
the day Stratton was due at the Hobart campus to trusting him.
make a speech. "He thought it would be quite
During the three hours of questioning, Tongyai
sensational since it had never been done before by a repeatedly answered, " I don't TecoUect" to questions.
radical group," Tongyai repUed under questioning by The defense attorney twice requested that Tongyai be
a defense attorney. Tongyai then said the idea was declared a hostile witness so the defense could ask
dropped, but he did not indicate why.
leading questions. Justice Frederick Marshall rejected

In testimony on Tuesday, Tongyai admitted
publicly for the first time that he was an undercover
agent for the Ontario County Sherifrs Department
and the FBI .
Admits undtrcover activities

the motion, saying the defense failed to prove that
Tongyai was unwilling to answer.
Tongyai admitted that he had promised to supply
gun powder and dynamite to students planning to
destroy ROTC offices on the Hobart campus, but said
he did so as a delaying tactic. "l prevented them from
getting gasoline and setting fire to the facility that
night," he said. He testified that he told the students
he would get the explosives in the near future because
the move had prevented a similar plotted attack at
another college.

Tongylli, who posed as an SDS organizer at
Hobart , admitted his undercover role at a State
Supreme Court trial in Rochester, which is dealing
with a student-police confrontation triggered by a
drug raid at Hobart on June 5, 1970. Four students
were arrested in the bust at Hobart. After the students
The former undercover agent became the center
were placed in an attending police car, surrounding of controversy shortly after the raid when radical
students held the car hostage until police agreed to students claimed that he had urged them to step up
release the students. Tongyai, a known organi7.ation their militancy and taught them how to make
leader of the campus, was never prosecuted.
firebombs. While on the stand Wednesday, he denied
In the present case, "Tommy the Traveler," w'as that he knew how to make Molotov cocktails.
requested to appear in court by the defense attorney
The four students standing trial are Rafael
Willard Myers 111 after the prosecution had failed to Martinez. of Rochester ; Clarence Youngs and Melanie
call him to the stand.
Wallace, both of the Bronx; and Gilbert Dillion of New
The former agent said he began worktng for the Brunswick. N.J . They are charged with first-degree
FBI "sometime in the spring of 1968" and that he was riot and obstructing governmental admlnistrat ion .

One word

best describes
the taste
of beer...
it's on
the tip of
your tongue.

WHEN 'tUU Sl-Y

Budweiser.
'«XJVE SAD fT AUI
~NHEUSU·IUSCH.

I.. C. • ST lOUIS

Page six. The Spectrum. Friday, November 19, 1971

. . . . . .,

........ ~

........ -a;.

-

.....

~

'The Buffalo' discuss
raids on draft boards
by Janis Cromer
Spectrum Staff Writer

"No longer can citizens go about their lives pretending
that they aren't responsible for what 's going on in the
world ." The speaker expounding this view was Charles Lee
Darst, one of the defendants arrested in connection with a
late summer raid on Buffalo draft boards.
On the night o f Saturday, Aug.
~1. five people were apprehended

by FBI agents and Buffalo police
in the old federal bujJding whiJe
attempting to destroy draft
records and remove ftJes from the
office of army inteUigence. The
five - Maureen Considine, Charles
Darst, Jim Martin , Ann Masters
and Jermiah Horrigan - were then
interrogated by the FBI for five
hours early Sunday morning
before being removed to the Erie
County jail. Arraignment followed
later Sunday and the flve were
charged with theft of government
property , destru c tion of
government propert y and
comrrutling !I crime on a federal
reservation. At a pre·triaJ hearing
on Aug. 3 t , they were ordered
held for further action by the
federal grand jury. Indictments
against the five on charges of
conspiracy. theft of government
property and burglary were
announced by U.S. Attorney
General John Mitchell on Sept.
30. As of yet, no trial date has
been set.
'Property worshlpping
Awaiting further legal
prosecution, the five, self-named
.. the Buffalo," remaln in the area
preparing for their defense and
holding talk sessions about their
actions and the entire scope and
future of the U.S. anti -war
movement. At an itHCtvlew last
Friday three of them addressed
themselves to topics rang10g from
thetr personal motivation to the
"property-worsh1ppmg" American
society.
Maureen Cons tdine , Jim
Martin , and Charles 03rst agreed
the reasons for their actions are
rooted in a sense of individual
res ponsi b illl y. "The greatest
motivating force
motivating in
the sense that it gets you off your
ass - is realinng that there is a
crisis at hanc and that you feel
uncomfortable trying to go about
your daily routine with the
knowledge that others are dying
in large number," said Mr. Darst.
However, the protestocs believe
that most people either don't view
the world as being in a crisis state
or, it they do have that outlook,
they aren't willing to make the
sacrifice to do anything about it.
Mr. Darst continued :

Ineffective tools
"A II people must feel a
responsibility to the people that
are being killed , not to the
Internal Revenue Service that
makes a claim on your paycheck.
We really don't owe them that
money, not the same way we owe
the people of Southeast Asia their
lives." Jil1_l Martin pointed to
ineffective tools for change as
partial motivation for his
involvement in the draft board
raid . "Oour only hope is to find
alternatives \&lt;&gt; present violence.
Voting, writmg to congressmen,
and social work to fight poverty

JUlit aren ' t working," he
explained.
On Oct .. 28 three more draft
boards were ransacked in the
towns of Geneseo, Rochester and
Batavia. Soon after, members of
o~•ttTe Buffalo'' issued a statement
which as they indicated at the
interview said, in effect! "We may
not know who the people
involved in this new case are, but
they are obviously friends. They
share the same concerns, are
looking for the same solutions in
the same way.''
They feel a responsibility to
help the people involved in the
recent raids. "They got away they can't make themselves public
without endangering their
freedom . A lot of work will be
required to contact those men
whose files were destroyed to let
them know that they have a real
chance of getting out of the
draft ," remarked Mr. Darst. In
Rochester a community action
group, Metroact, which was
contacted 'by the raiders, is
providing the needed public
relations force.
More than symbolism
Contrary to current opinion,
draft board raids may be more
than a dramatic symboUc act.
Maureen Considine of the five
said : " It's an act of symbolism in
the fact that there's over 4000
draft boards in the US .... That
we almost hit ten boards and that
three were recently hit looks
pretty Insignificant in relation to
the 4000 ." In legal terms,
however, what does it mean when
your draft record is destroyed?
Ms . Considine commented ,
" Authorities are not sure, more
mvestigution is being J one. but I
think it is safe to say that you
cannot · b e drafted with an
incomplete file " a I ,
Therefore, a person who can
prove that part of his record is
nllSSIO g is
•
Therefor, a person who can
prove that part of his record IS
missing is not draftable .
Furthermore , it is also likely,
according to the five, that a
person cannot be drafted out of
turn. That is, if a drafl board is
raided and tlJes are destroyed, the
person next in tine to be
processed , after the order of the
destroyed records, cannot be
drafted , and every draft selection
after him would also be illegal .

No more martyrs
Mr. Darst cited one Chicago
raid wbich took place in May ,
I 969. The Selective Service issued
notice soon after the incident that
the actions would pose no seriuos
problems for draft operations. Yet
31 out of 36 boards located in the
ransacked building are still not
drafting anyone. Ms. Considine
summed up tbe possible outcomes
of draft board raids: ''Probably
-&lt;:ot'lllnued on PAve 1o-

I

�J

act1on L1ne

I A rewarding experience

Have a problem? Need help? Do you ftnd it Impo11lble to untangle
the University bureaucracy l In cooperation with the Office of Student
Affairs and Servicet, The Spectrum spontors Action Line, a weekly
reader tervice column. Through Action Line, individual 11udent1 can
get amwen to puu/lng quettiotu, find out where and why Unlvustty
decuiont are made and get action where change u needed.
lull dial 831·5000 or 11i.Jit the Action Line booth in the Center
Lounge in Norton Hall for Individual attention. The Office o/Student
Affairs and Services will lnve.sligate all questions and complaints, and
will ~mw_er t~em Individually. The name of the mdividual originating
the mqurry u _kept confidential under all circumttanus. The more
common questions w11/ be afllwered in thlt column each wuk.
Q: Can you teU me when the Tbanksaivinll recess ofric:ially beains?
A : Classes end at the close of the student's final class on
Wednesday, Nov. 24, unless the instructor has indicated otherwise.
Q : Where can I park my car if I am stayina ovemiaht?
A : The latest tssue of the campus Traffic Rul~s and Regulutions
s tates that "overnight parking is prohibited except for resident
students. Faculty, staff and students, whose work requtres their
presence on campus after II p.m., mdy obtain a special permit from
Campus Security. On South Campus only the destgnated area of the
Main-Salley lot may be used for overnight parking." So the answer is
that the Main-Bailey lot is the one to be used end you must have a
special sticker to do trus.
Q : I am not on welfare, bull am livina on a very restricted income.
1 found out that l will need extensive medical care. Can I qualtCy for
Med~~M
"
A : We checked thts with the Department of Social Semces o f Erie
County and they told us that in addition to persons on welfare,
"medically needed persons" are eligible for Medicaid if:
I . they are under 21 or over 65
2. they are blind or disabled
3. they are members of fam ilies in which one or both parents are
dead, absent from the home, or the father is unemployed. The term
"medically needy person" means a single person whose net mcome
after taxes IS less than $2200 a year and who has less than $1600 in the
bank. For more information on this you are invited to call the
Department of Soctal Servtces of Erie County at 846-{1685.

Q: There have been rumors of some kind of chanse in the final
exam schedule. How can I find out the datea of my exams?
A · Although the week of final exams has not changed (they begin
Thursday, Dec. 16 and go until Dec. 23), the tentative schedule
published m the Reporter at the beginni•l&amp; of the fall semester has been
revised with regard to specific days for specific eJtams. Therefore, it is
wise to recheck the lishng of final exams. This new tisting is now
available and copies can be obtained from the Division of
Undergraduate Studies in Diefendorf Hall. Listings are also posted
throughout the campus.
A reminder: The final date for dropping or adding courses is Dec. I
before noon. This the Wednesday after the Thanksgiving vacation so
don't forget it.

Q : How do you arrange to have transcripts sent out?
A : Go to Hayes 8 , the Admissions and Records Office. They will
take care of you there. You must request the transcript in wnting,
however. There are forms for this available at the A&amp;R office. The first
transcript and transcripts that go to departments on campus are free of
cbllrge. Additional transcripts costS I each.
Q : Does the credH you need in physical education count towards
the 128 credits you need for sraduatlon?
A : These two credits count in most programs. At the moment they
do not count in Engineering and Management. In these two areas, you
need physical education in addition to your regular credits as
desicnated by the degree area .
Q : I have taken out the student health insurance coverage offered
throu11h the University. Can you teU me what it covers?
A : Action Line could not fully answer th js because of space
limitations and because of lack o f expertise in handling insurance
polkies. However, you were given a small pamphlet along wth the
application, which explained the coverage. If this does not explain the
coverage weU enou&amp;h. you can do one of two things. First you can caiJ
the Niap.ra National Insurance Company, the carrier, at 853~31 .
Secondly, if you want to talk personally with someone, an insurance
representative is at the Health Service Office each Thursday morning
from II a .m . to I p.m . Feel free to see her at that time.
Q : Is there a final date by which we have to have a parking sticker
on the car?
A : Yes there is. It is the end of November. Because of confusion at
the time of reP.tration not all the students aot their stickers and the
Security ctepartment has been lenient In n~ ticketin1 ears without
t.bcm. How~. tbey will t.gin ticketin&amp; cars after the end or ttUs

month.
Q : J •rn a frallinm ...ct pttfn8 4Qkldy bored by the W:k of tblnp
to do. I would like to do creative tllilatat and not just ao to m~Jew .
Wbat'a JOUat on that I can aet ul•olvcd foT
A : There are so many tbinp constantly happening on campus that
it is hard to number :dl of them. However, we can mention a few . If
you are interested in working for the betterment of the community we
sugest that you contact the Community Action Corps, located in 218
Nor1on Hall . ..:xt. 3609. Tbey are intQ many thing.s and lam sure that
you will find all of them interesting. However, tf by being "creatave"
you mean crafts or working with the arts, we suggest you visit thtCreative Craft Center, located in Room 7 !~lorton Hall. One visit to the
Center should alleviate any boredom you have. The talented staff there
will certainly be able to help you fulfill your creative needs.

\

Peace CortJs

The Peace Corps, which is celebrating its tenth
birthday this year, has &amp;rown from a small &amp;roup
which sent 800 volunteers to nine countries in 1961,
to an internationally known orpnizatioo which has
9000 volunteers working in 60 countries this year.
On.July I • 1971, the Peace Corps became part of
Action. Action is the administration's name for an
orpniz.ation which encompasses the Peace Corps,
VISTA , Foster Grandparents, the Teacher Corps and
three other service groups. When a volunteer now
6pplles to the Peace Corps, he or she has a choice of
serving either in a domestic or foretgn capacity as a
volunteer member of any of the aforementioned
service organtzations. However, Action's recruiters
center on applicants for the Peace Corps and VISTA ,
since there is a greater demand for these two groups.
Facts and figures
For those who might be interested 10 joining, a
volunteer must be at least 18 years old and a United
States cittzen. There is no upper age limit as long as the
applicant is in good h ealth . He can be married , and
except in rare cases, must serve with his spouse.
(One-fifth ofull volunteers are married couples.) If the
applicant has a family, th•Y may go with tum,
proVIded there are no more than four dependents
under 18 years of age. He must be medically qualified
and have skills or education in areas which wLII qualify
him fo r service with Action.
The training program is 12-14 weeks long, and
includes teaching the language as well as the customs
and culture o f the area where one will be worktng.
Almost four years of a language wtll be tau&amp;ht during
the trainmg, and this mean5 speaking the language
from 8-1 2 hours a da y during traini ng. Traimng IS
conducted both tn the Un1tcd States and abroad , and a
very h1gh percentage of those who start fnush and
complete their two years ,,r ~ervi ce.
Modest living
Once 11 volunteer IS overseas, he receive:. a
monthly hv10g allowan~;e whtch will cover his baste
needs for food, clothing, housing and incidental
expenses. This living allow..tnce puts him on a modest
living sta ndard in relation to the area in which he will
be workiO&amp;. As an example, volunteers in some areas
of Turkey receive an allowance of S 110 a month as
compared with the average community salary of
$60-80 a month.
To heJp a volunteer get back on his feet once he
returns to the States, the Peace Corps sets aside $75 a
month. This amounts to about $2000 (Jess taxes)
when a volunteer returns from service. One-third of
this amount wtll be given to the volunteer before he
leaves for home. Up to o ne-half of this readjustment
alJowance can be aiJotted to the payment o f financtal
obligations 1n the U.S. while the volunteer tS 1n service.
Full responsibility for health care throughout the
volunteer's service is assumed by the Peace Corps.
Children of volunteers receive the same care as their
parents. Annual physical and laboratory examinations
are given, as weU as the necessary booster vaccines. If
necessary . medical care may also be provided by
approved medical personneltn the host country, or by
evacuation to an American med1cal facility . If a
volunteer or his spouse becomes disabled ·dunng
service, they may be entit led to benefits under the
Federal Employees Compensation Act .

Volunteers
needed

Any people interested In
volunteering for the P..c:e
Corps (now part of
Actiont thould visit the
Action table in Norton
lobby on Nov. 29 and 30,
and Dec. 1 from 9 a.m .-6
p .m.

Once a volunteer is in service, he is worltirig for
the host country's government, and as a result, works
w1th the people. Each host country has a Peace Corps
dtrector who is responsible for the propams and
volunteers m that country. He works closely with the
host government 10 determining b ow many volunteers
with what skills are needed .
Transportation to and from training and final
assignments is provided, as well as transportation in
case of emergency leave. Each volunteer receives a free
passport , good for two years , and many volunteers
take advantage of thiS by visiting places they would
not normally go, using thetr two days leave per month.
Up until seven months ago, service in the Peace
Corps was a legJtimate draft deferment. However, this
was changed , and until December 1971, service in the
Peace Corps does not defer a man from the draft.
Two Action recruiters will be m Norton Lobby
after Thanksg~ving vacation. Stop by their table
between 9 a.m . and 5 p.m . on Nov. 29,30and Dec. I.
To quote Moritz Thomsen, a 48-year-old farmer who
served in Ecuador for four years : "The Peace COrP$
exists as a vehicle for acting out your fantasies of
brotherhood , and if you are strong enough, turning
the dream into a realtty ... Yet even though each
volunteer makes his o wn story, the basic problems of
fate, poverty , hunger, disease and ignorance are pretty
much the same. And the Peace Corps stiU exists as the
great adventure and the great challenge for individual
Americans."

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Friday, November 19, 1971. The Spectrum . Page seven

�L - - 1_

Ed_iT_oR_iA_l_
· ---.Jj (i"~~

_

Problems in secwity
The recent disclosure of an incident where two campus
policemen allegedly used ex.&lt;asive force in subduing a
student is disturbing. Also, the revelation that one · of the
policemen wielded a blackjack seems to place their actions
well beyond what can be considered reasonable. Another
aspect which gives us great pause is that the patrolmen
involved in this affair completely ignored established
University policy in regards to arrest procedures. Before any
students can be taken downtown, the security force is
supposed to check with University officials on all
non-felonious crimes. Nothing of that sort transpired on Nov.
1 and we must express chagrin at this failure.
Had this been the first incident of this !'lature, we might
be disposed to ignore it. However, this is but one in a long
and tragic series of mistakes in tactics and judgments by the
campus police. The claim by the two patrolmen that they
were not aware of the Internal alternatives to arrest, perhaps
gives a key to the problem, by demonstrating a glaring lack
of training.
Much bad feeling exists on this campus between members
of the University community and the campus security force.
The present incident, revealing as it does, the sorry state and
discipline of the campus police, may serve to further damage
an already fragile relationship. The task of preventing such an
occurrence lies squarely upon the soon-to-be appointed
Committee on Campus Security.
In order that the committee be able to operate in a
fashion that will maximize its credibility we must make
several recommendations. First, for obvious reasons, it must
be composed of as broad a spectrum of individuals as
possible. Secondly, we believe the committee must be given a
full subpoena power that will enable them to have complete
access to any and all security records on housing incident
reports that they feel are necessary to their task. Unless they
can operate in such a framework and thus guarantee a
thorough' investigation, it is pointless to constitute them.
Further, the committee must endeavor to make itself as
open as possible to input from the University community.
This can be achieved either by actively soliciting suggestions
and reports from individuals, as Wefl as possibly holding
public hearings. Again, if the committee does not receive
information from various sectors of the population, their role
is doomed.
A promising sign in this affair is the action taken by the
administration in having a report on this incident quickly
completed. While the administration does have concern for
the security problems of this campus, this concern has not
always been publicly exhibited in the past. Perhaps the
report and the swift establishment of the Security
Committee will serve as an indication of a new trend.

Fricby, November 1t, 1171

Vof. 22, No. 36

Edit«·in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-Mef\81i.. Editor - AI BiniOn
Co-Manl!ll,. E4itttt' - Mike Lippmenn

Mlnetl,. Editor - Suun Moss
lktllne. Men....- - Jim Drucker
Advet1iting MaMIII' - Sua Mellentine
~.

C.mpus .......•• Jo.Ann A r,_,
.... ..... .......Howle Kurtz
................ Bill VKCMO
City ... ...••. ••• Hetvy Lipman
Copy .........•• Ronnl Formen
. • • • • . . . . . . . . . . . M.ny Gatti
A.a ......... Cleira Krlegsman

Feetura ........... ... . ..vacant
Ckaphlc Arts ......... Tom Toles

Layout ......• Meryhope Runyon
~- ............... .. vacant
Lit, . Drame .. Micheel Silverblatt
Mutic .............Billy Altman
OH.Cempus ...... lynnaTr.eger
Photo .. .... .... Mere Ac:t&lt;armen
....• ..... Mickey Otterretehar
Spona ............. Barry Rubin
AlA •.. ...•...... Howie Feiwl

TM Spctrum is MfVed by United Pr., lntarnetioMI, College PrS.Vica, the los Angeles Free Pr~a~S, the lot engetes Times Syndia.ta aud
llbaretion Newa Service.
Rapublk:etion of metter herein without the eKprea content of the
Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.
Editorial policy Ia determined b\f the Editor-In-Chief.

Page eight. The Spectrum . Friday, November 19, 1971

~$l .!
I

•·· - - ·

P.O.D.E.R. supported
To

th~

Editor:

The University Child Care Center would like to
state publicly the following position on tbe recent
situatio n that has come about concerning the
Niagara Day Care Center. Be it known that thls
statement is made now as we feel the situation
.warrants our not remaining silent at this time.
Whereas the Univenity Child Care Center
cannot service the entire University communJty let
alone the utended community of Buffalo and that

Notes on an apparenUy terminal crisis in a major
relationship.
Dylan Is best for listening. Middle Dylan. Blonde
on Blonde, Bringing it aiJ back home. He bas been
-there and come out of it alive and bitching. "Sooner
or later, both of us must know, that I really did try
-to get close to you. Don' t think twice, it's all right.
It's all over now, Baby Blue. I want you" and "Most
likely you go your way and I 'U go mine," all such
usually powerful sonp come out even more
pertinent when you are bleedlns a little.
Bedtime is the worst. You
can keep yourself busy and
moYinc and active enough so
that you don't notice the
emptiness and stiiJness most
of tbe time. But comes time
to put yourself to bed and it
s udd e nly becomes very
apparent that there just ain't
nobody but you in the bed.
No backs to be scratched or
rubbed, and no snugling - o r activities more carnal.
Just the bed and you ... and your overactive bead.
But then the mornings aren' t too good either of
coune. Waking up, one tends to slide into wondering
what the other is doina, without even having been
aware o f a tendeAcy in that direction. And to block
off such trains of thought it seems necessary to
either ao back to sleep or cet up. Going back to sleep
means y•eldinc up certain controls in your head , and
thls unfo rtunately seems to 1ncrease the frequency
of thinp leaking through. Getting up and eating
something o nce apin rams the isolation down your
throat along with whatever else you are trying to eat.
Which o f course has to be anything but crow!
Then there is the shitty detail d epartment.
"Excuse me, but did I leave some things over there,
and would it be inconvenient if I picked them up
now?" Which , if you tend to be hypersensitive, turns
into a really nifty exercise in self-control. Because
you are, of course not going to acknowledge that
you are bleeding. That being an indication of
weakness ... or something.
So back to keeping busy. Walking around
Delaware Park Lake turns out to be not particularly
effective. Your head is not much necessary for
putting one foot after another, and tends to wander
to places unpreferred - which may, or may not, be
related to the fact that on pleasant weekend
afternoons Del8ware rark is inhabited by people
who seem to be paired off apprQximately 98% of the
time. Which doesn't seem to help the problem at all.
Housework is pretty good though. Largely
because you can keep Dylan dn at high vo lume, but
you do need to get at least partially involved in
sewing, o r IrOning patches on your jeans, or cleaning
up long deferred piles o f confusion. But the car is a
help too. AU the little crudd y things that usually
aren't worth bothering with suddenly become
significant and necessary. Windows all need to be
washed , both bouse and car. And when you are a
pack rat by nature there &lt;tre endless delightful boxes

The

grump

adequate Day Care centers are a neceasity we stand
t11mly behind the efforts of P.O.D.E.R. in its
struuJe to continue providina an exceptional Day
Care facility . Furthermore we take offense at the
methods used by Student Association in using our
Child Care center as the only answer to the needs of
the community.
SU111n Quinllln

Chlllrwoffltln, Unl11enlty Child Care Center
Steering Committee

and folders of papers to shuffle. AU of which helps.
A little.
'
It would be easier to help If there were not a
new added attraction. A bitterness so damned sharp
that it cuts through everything and draws blood, like
a razor, before you even know it is there. Before
such a unique and pow~rful stimulus the defenses
tend to coUarse and retreat , exposing the sense of
loss. Which trigen the secondary defenses and
everything geli shut down ... more or less. I don't
think I much care for beins bitter, but even
additional organic honey in my tea doesn't seem to
help. Ha . (? ? ?)
One of the problems with the bitterness is that
1t makes even harder to bend a usuaUy stiff neck,
and too reach out, or accept. Which is crazy, I know,
but don't seem to be able tD find an alternative for
it. Havi na tried to reach out and aotten burned
makes me tend to withdraw and take care of myself
- the ruck you world! syndrome - and to avoid
people who mi&amp;ht have the pll to point out that this
is relatively non-productive behavior. Which is even
dumber of cou.rse, because it simply reinforces the
sense of isolation already pruent. (How does it feel
to be cra zy? Not too good this week, thank you, and
leave three extra quarts of milk please.)
Don't know what other folks do, but one of my
major hassles is the " What U.. :• syndrome. Jn either
past or future tense. Suppose I bad done that , or
could do this. Would it have made a difference;
could it stiiJ? And behind the desire to have the
relationship not be cone, seen clearly ~ben some
third level of defenses becomes tired of self...pity,
loom the t~in fean of being alone and beina cra zy.
Or Is there any real difference? Mayhap It is
somewhat mad in the first place to be afraid of bein&amp;
lonely . Since it seems to be the constant , the
omnipresent wolf circling each individual Oickerin&amp;
fire. (Everybody is entitled to one line like thit
\l(hen they are really depressed!) At Attica the
phrase is " Everybody drn:s his own bit," meaning
that you do your time in whatever way you can, and
for yourself, since no one can do it for you. Which
would be a nict thing to learn bow to do.
Which is of course defensive crap. Because even
as it is written the sardonic portion of my bead is
pointing out the fundamental inability to ignore
other people. And, as always, I will wind up trying
to get things from people. By all past data, this
effort will fail - my won-loss record makes the Bills
look just fine - but (oh frail and stubborn word)
just maybe you get a little closer to being able to do
right whatever the bell it is that you keep rutting up.
Being an optimist, especially a needy,
hypersensitive, over-aware optimist, can be a real
drag. But fuck it, you don' t grow supr maples from
acorns. (An old family homily that I just made up
for the occasion.) Have .a good holiday, taking it easy
if you drive, and a plu,sant thanks&amp;ivins dinner ho pefully it won't be stuffed crow - (so maybe it
wasn't worth a repeat) - and take jt easy if you are
driving. Pax .

�•

Guest Opinion

Support stltdent courts
To

th~

Editor:

by Sbefley Taylor
In liaht of recent issues coneemina the judicial
procedure. on this campus, aU members of the
university community must look toward the
Student-Wide-Judiciary as an essential step to a ''free
and open" Institution. The existence of the Hearing
Commission on C~mpw Disorders is a threat to our
academic u well as ow indiVidual freedom . The
commisaion, established in the wake of distllrbances
in 1969, has never served in the intertsl$ of the
student population. It has, however, continued to
harass and muuJe those who should and must be
heard.
With the recent bypassing of the Inter-Residence
Judiciary ln dealing with an undergraduate
dormitory student,
still another administrative
fiasco has been created. An ad hoc committee of
administrators is only a smaU step away from further
implementations wl\ieh will again serve to exploit
students. We can not sit idly by as the administration
of this University impedes those efforts which help
to creal an autonomous university community. As
an ex~uudent justice on the Inter-Residence
Judiciary I am fully aware of the ability of that
court to handle any problems arisina within the
dormitory community. Last year the court handled
nearly seventy cases and never once neglected it
responsibility.
We, as students, must consider the actions of the
administration as contemptuous. We can not permit
the Hearing Commission on Campus Disorders to
conduct cloaed hearings run by administrators
servina solely In the interests of Albany and the
Board of Trustee~S, while neglectina the ri&amp;hts of
students to aovem themselve~S.
The Student-Wide Judiciary and the
Inter-Residence Judiciary are cond-tte steps to a
self-gove.mina University. Perhaps with the ultimate
success of both bodies the appearance of a
University-Wide Judiciary wilJ be inevitable. At this
point, however, student courts can not and must not
be bypas$ed. They must have tbe freedom to serve
all students in all cases and can not be dlscriminably
overlooked . All students must share in the desire for
an alltonomous university community, but most
important, they can not continue to condome any
administrative obstacles which sti Oe the proaress of a
"rree and open" institution.
Alllln Rosenberg

India, Palristan insulted
Tt1 the Editor:

ThiS has reference to the cartoon published on
the editorial page of The Spectrum of Nov. 17 . Thl.s'
cartoon typifies a common Western reaction to the
people of the Indian sub-contintnl - a mixture of
condescension and contempt. The cartoon seems to
say " You miJerable wretches, why do you wish to
compound your poverty with the foolishness or
war?"
From a utopian viewpoint. war may indeed be
bad . However, considering the finite wisdo m of
mankind and tbe many imperfections of equity and
justice both man-made and proVidential, that exist,
many would concede that the occurance of violent
confli ct and war is often plausible and
understandable, though stilJ regrettable. With this in
mind, I would like to suuest that war between the
poor countries of Asia , in this instance India and
Pakistan, is more understandable and IC5S foolish
than the violent paroxysms that countnes of the
West have indulsed in in the recent past. The causes
of both World Wars I and II were more reflective of
the foolish, vain and baser side of man than wars
between India and Pakistan . The latter countries,
desperate in their poverty and strugglina to find
sec urity , identity and se l f-respe c t in a
West-dominated world , are fighting over real estate
and over issues that are deeply rooted in history and
arise from factors that touch human beinp in their
core - like reHJion. Compare this with the frivolous
causes that pvc rise to WW I and the megalomania
that was responsible for WW II . It wo uld appear that
the rich western nations have much less cause to
fight than the poor nations. The enVironment of the
poor nations is much richer in war-engendering
causes than that o f the rich nations. To say that war
is a luxury that the poor natio ns can ill-afford is to
indulge in self-righteous cant while i&amp;nOri'l8 the very
causes that Jive rise to war.
I would submit, therefore, that cartoons such as
this insult, however unintentionaUy. the countries of
India and Pakistan by assuming a supenor pose and
charging these countries with dumbness and
stupidity . In reality, none could be more acutely
conscious of the price exacted by war titan these
countries themselves who arc trying to cope with 1.1 '
terrible and contlictrul situation in a critical penod
of their history.
Sotish Chandra

Reality, once apin, lw disturbed the bli.saful
dream of student government. Like its predeceaon,
the Student Assembly bas been found to be
imperfect. This, in and of itself, Is not a reason for
despair; it is not a sure sign of ' mpendina failure. It
would spell failure, however, were the current
members of the Assembly to ignore their
responsibility of improVing it in any way possible. As
an Assemblywoman, my purpose at this writing Is
two-fold : first , to inform the entire student body of
its government's search for improvement, and
secondly. to publicize these observations so that
action may be taken in tbe Assembly to correct any
.. wrongs here indicated .
Its basic problem , ty pically, is one of
communication. The Executive Committee, who
managed the Student Association's activities before
the Assembly was formed , is still a very active body .
They meet regularly , and as voting members of the
Assembly, are much better informed about the
orders of the day than ony Assemblyman. There are
aevuaJ problems with this situation . Since the
Executive Committee numbers eleven members and
since they are automatically seated ln the Asse~bly,
their one-fourth of the total voting body Virtually
c:ontrol the meetings. They are in the position to be
prepared in advance for debate on the issues which
Involve them. For the Assemblymen, however, the
first opportunity for consideration of the items o n
the agenda is durina the roll call for attendance at
the start of each meeting. This affords the
necessarily unprepared representative clearly less
than adequate time to read and decide about the
relevant issues demanding hi$ attention. This
situation makes it questionable, at the very least,
whether Assemblymen can rationally thinlc out each
problem before being forced into a votina situation.
Another very serious related problem is that
Assemblyman, ianorant
the preViously held
debates during Executive Committee meetings, are
apt to be wrongly awayed by a distortion of the
facts, the consensll! vote of tbe committee, or the
presence of persuuive, forceful apeakers. Without
fuU knowledge of the issue under consideration,
without a factual report of each committee meetina.
the Assembly cannot feuibly make a fair and jllJt
decision. That the Aasembly hu the flnaJ say on all
matters of lecislatloo, furthernlore, makes this lack
of information doubly serious.
f wouJ d proP&lt;* that members or the E:~~c:&lt;:utivc

or

Committee, poaibly those c:bosen from the
Alsembly ltad.f, abould Jive complete and factual
reporta or eacb Bxeclltive Committee meetina to
better inform the votina body. To atrord the rest of
the underaraduates a similar opportunity1 I would
further sugest that some mesns be employed to
publicly report tbe actions of each Alsembly
meeting. The Office of Public Information michl be
charaed with the reeponsibility or iauinJ a week..ly
statement to the press, includln&amp; commentary of all
legislation am1 issue. there cbscussed.
The:re is another quite touchy problem in the
Assembly as I see it. Thoudl Jt is clear that an
executtve branch is important and, in fact, essential
for the smooth functioning of a government, I
question whether some separation should not ex.ist
bet ween the executive and legislative arms. It would
seem to me that all of the members of the Executive
Committee need not sit in the Assembly and there
repeat their votes. Possibly the body should grant
the four officers votin&amp; power and offer tbe
coordinators a non-voting membership. This hu
apparent difficulties since aU of the coordinatol"5
were duly elected and since all previous legislation
was greatly affected by their presence in the
Assembly. In the light of the small number of
Assemblymen, however, the move might be seen at
one which , instead of &amp;ivina one side an unfair
advantage, equalizes the two branches of
government. Further, regardless of tbe number of
Assembly members, it might be more appropriate
were the officers and coordinators aJJke to fulfill the
same seating requirements as the other votin&amp;
members. This would avoid the kind of criticism
here displayed and , more importantly, directly
represent a greater amount of students in the
Assembly.
Com muni ca tion and strengt h, of the
Assemblymen and the body illel(, are of utmost
importance. A necessary condition of this strength
on the Assemblymen's part, is being informed of aU
matters, lnswing that their decisions are fair and
jll!t . Strength of the aovernment as a whole is
dependent upon constant, detailed communication
with lts members, llnd its constituents. A
s,overnment cannot function without student input,
involvement and support . The atms or the structu~
must not strangle each other into inaction ~ clearly
some separation between the two is occ:.essary. It
must be flexible and responsive at all costs. It is
essential, finally, th.at we wake from our dream or
&amp;ovemancc: and , for the first tJme, f'11ce rcaUty.

Niagara Day Care defended
To the Edltur:
In the last couple of issues of The Spet·trum ,
articles have been printed concemina the proposal
by P.O .D.E.R. for monies to go to the Niagara Day
Ca re Ce nter . There have been m a ny
misinterpretations and deliberate mistakes in
describing the P.O .D.E.R. proposal to the Student
Association.
First, on the article that appeared in The
Spectrum 4 Wednesday Nov. lOth Issue, BiU Vaccaro
misquoted, misinterpreted and misunderstood the
two P.O.D.B.R . representatives he interviewed . This
was attempted to be corrected by an article which
appeared on Monday Nov. I Sth issue of The
Spectrum written by Protestant ltom es. But Th e
Spectrum still refuse4t, to accept the responsibility
for the preVious erion~us article by Bill Vaccaro .
Second, The Spei:'t'fll!' has led the student body
to believe that P.O .D.E._W.'s takeover of the Student
Assembly meeting on Nov. lOth was a tactic to force
the Student Association to give us the money .
P.O .D.E.R.'s only reason for this action was so that
P.O .D.E.R. wou.ld be heard . At a previous Student
Assembly meeting. representatives from P.O .D.E.R .
sat patiently for three and a half hours while the
Student Assembly argued over the athletic budget
and when the smoke cleared the four P.O.D.E.R .
representatives were left all alone in the room
witho ut ever being heard This was why P.O.O.E. R.
took over the Student Assembly. P.O.D.E.R . wanted
some kind of decision to be made. There had been,
at least , seven previous meetings with the finance
committee and the executive com mitte~ of the
Student Association presenting our ,case for the Day
Care Center budget. If any members from the
Student Association and the Student Assembly felt
intimidated by P.O.D.E.R.'s actions , that fear came
from themselves, it was not P.O .D.E. R.'s intention
to scare anyone.
Thirdly, the editorial presented in Monday Nov.
15th issue concerning the "poor h.andling" of the
P.O .D.E.R. Day Care Center was without any facts.
P.O.D.E. R. gave out a seven page detailed budget
request to aJJ committees involved . The reasons for
t he Student Association's refusal to grant the funds
were centered around the point that the Day Care
Center "did not primarily serve the students on this

•

campus" and "there had been no attempt. to find
funds elsewhere." These excuse~S for not .,anting the
money bring questions to mind. What 's to say what
is serving the students? P.O.O.E. R. hu as a student
o rganization much input into the Center. There are
three representatives to the Advisory Board· of the
Niapra Day Care Center. P.O .D.E.R . ls also a
recruitina !lgency for staff and children . P.O.D.E.R.
volunteers have helped In areas of recreation and
teaching assistants. The cooperation between the
Protestant Homes and P.O.D.E .R . made the Niapn
Day Care Center a reality for the lowet West side.
The Center has been seekin&amp; funds from other
places. A day care center could never rely on student
funds for operating because o f changes in attitude.
But for the time, and witho ut a license from the
Health Department, it was very difficult to look
elsew h ere but from individual groups and
organizatio ns.
The type of questions asked at the executive
committee meeting were questions that would have
fo und a loophole so that refusing monies would be
justified.
P.O .O.E.R. does not want to undermine any
other project that is funded by the Student
Association or located on campus, specifically the
U. B. Day Care Center. P.O .D.E.R. sees the need for
this Center and aJso supports tm provins and
expanding the services offered there. But there is the
difference of location, the Niagara Center is located
on the lower West side where there Is a large Puerto
Rican population and also is considered one of the
poorer areas or Buffalo. The U.B. Center is located
on the U.B. campus which borders on the suburbs of
Buffalo.
· Now , it seems that the Student Association and
the University in general has decided that minorities
have gotten enough and now it's time we taught
them how to behave. The manner in which the
B.S.U. budget was handled , the runaround the
Native American Organization IS getting with their
newspaper and the refusal o f the P.O .D.E.R.
pro posal for funding the Niagara Day Care Center
show that this University is coming down on Third
World People.

Hector Rivt:rv
Central Commitlee, PODER

Friday, November 19, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

-

,.

�'

'The Buffalo'. • •
almost every si.naJe person whose
fdes were involved in such actions
wil have a chance to re~valuate
his draft status. The raids are very
r~ in this sense. It is feasible that
because of these some lives can be
saved, not only here but also
those that [American) young men
might have had to take in
Vietnam."
"The Buffalo" do not view
their actions as being particularly
noble, nor do they consider
themselves martyrs. One said : "As
long as people think that men like
Daniel Berrigan are supermen,
they will leave It up to the
supermen to do things." However,
destruction of selective service
files is now more commonplace.
Mr. Darst added : "As more and
more people are willing to take

-&lt;ont.,.uect from ..... 6-

the risks Involved, the martyr
value of each one diminishes."
There have been over 170 draft
board ra.lds itoce 1967.

Not justice - law
On the other hand, portions of
the public more critical of the
Buffalo's" actions find it difficult
to discuss the matter beyond the
fact that a law was broken. "It
doesn't matter if it is a bad law,"
said Ms. Considine, 'The law is
sacred to these people and not to
be tampered with." Mr. Darst
relates this attitude of the law
being sacred to the present
outlook of the court system . he
believ es the co urts hold
themselves to a very narrow
interpretation of the law - so
narrow that the spirit Qf the law is

t,nored. Mr. Darst recalled Judae

Pratt of Washington D.C. saying in
a "political" trial : "This is not a
court of jusUce, it Ia a cowt of
law." Mr. Darst emliwfzed that a
system wherein justice is ignored
in favor of adherence to the Jetter
of the law ... is...terribly wrong."

everyday as they do over the
paper we attempted to destroy
then I don't know it I could
complain. It would be a sood start
just to see property and people
are equal - but now It's not even
that."
Charles Darst pointed to the
concept of life insurance as an
example. of how impersonal
Americans have become. "That a
father would have to take out a
huBO life insurance policy to
insure that his family would be
able to continue If he died says to
me that there really has been a
serious breakdown in the notion
of the extended family. It says to
me that he has no relatives or
friends that will care for his
children ."

People or property
Maureen Considine voiced the .
group's opinion that much of the
public's disapproval of the draft
raids is due t o America's
over-concern with material
security. "When you start to see
In how many different areas
property is precious, you see why
people get so upset about the
draft thing. Those files are Criminal intent?
property. If people got as upset
When asked about future plans,
over the people that are destroyed one of the five replied : " Where

·1 put a ·lot of bread
into a down payment on my nevv ca[
And I'm not going to blow it~

-

we're- JOin&amp; from here is to tdal
and then to jail." The earliest
pouible trial date seems to be
sometime in January, but u of
now "the Buffalo" remain in a
state of "legal limbo." "two
weeks ago," sa.ld Jim Martin, ..we
nled motions to view the evidence
and to look into the grand jury
that handed down the indictment.
These should be acted on in the
next few weeks and a trial date
will be set."
"The ' Buffalo" are planning
their own defense case, based on
the concept of criminal intent.
They plan to argue that it wasn't
their intention to commit a crime,
but to stop one. In their defense,
they compare their actions to a
man who breaks into a burning
house to wake the occupants.
Technically, · the mnn could be
brought to triaJ for breaking and
entering, but no judge or jury
"with a · modicum of sensitivity"
could find that man guilty of
criminal intent.
To save Uves
"We did what we did to save
lives," added Mr. Darst. "The
Buffalo" Intend to stress that "the
jury does haye the power to
acquit a man of crimes if it ftnds
that he did them for some good
reason ." The defendants are
hoping for a sppedy decision in
order to keep public Interest high .
Ms. Considine commented: " If
the trial drags on, the community
will get tired of seeing and hearing
us and it is crucial to keep the
issue alive especially because of
the recent raids." The trial is open
to the public and all are urged to
attend . Plans for speakers and
workshops during the trial period
are also being finalized.
Charles Darst concluded: "Jail
Isn't going to be fun. The worst
part of it will be separation from
family and friends, but the
government demands that of
draftees everyday."

!kit groe her
tAe 'bird for

You worked hard for that new ca r of yours. Now all you've
got to do is take care of it. Part of it's using the right
gasoline. Amocee. The type most new car owner
manuals recommend .

~anksgiving...
Gioehera

diamond from

~R!Ji!

Amoco is specially formulated for your new car's anti pollution engine. Made to help it run better. longer. And
Amoco can double the life of your tail pipe and muffler
compared to fully leaded gasolines; spark plugs last
longer. too.
Amoco Super- Premium g1ves you all these benefits plus
better mileage than other premiums. It's the only anti pollution premium gasoline you can buy.
That's one reason why more new car buyers switch to
Amoco and other gasolines at American than any
other brand.
So now that you've got that new car, use the gasoline
you can COttnt on.

'rou've got a ~ ~ ~'ve got a nevv car gasoline.

Ern,
~€W€l€RS

You expect more from American and you get it. ...
Page ten. The Spectrum . Friday, November 19, 1971

81 allen st.• buffalo. n.y.

�.. .

..

Common Council bearing

House demolition discussed
In a marathon session last
Tuesday, tbe Buffalo Common
Council made a daring attempt to
catch up on the areat backJog of
work which had accumulated over
the election period . Over 200
items were discussed in the
meeting which was 1\ighUghted by
a very unusual hearing.
The hearing resulted from the
city's demolition of a house at
4 29 Elicott in Buffalo. The
owner, Mr.; Gilbert Mancuso,
charged the city with neglect. If
seems that th e house had
belonged to his 90-year-old
mother, but sh e was forced to
leave and move in with his family
when she became ill last August.
One week befo re the house was
demolished he received a notice
ordering him to have the house
boarded up so that it would not
be entered by neighborhood
cltildren. He stated that be was
rather surp rised when he sent the
carpenters to board up the house
only to discover at was no loqer
there. He stated that h e received
no prior notice of the city's

intention to remove the building
and that its removal came in fact,
as a complete shock.
Wbere's tbe bafJding?
The cou n c il members, in
questioning Mr. Mancuso, found it
bard to believe that no notice was
sen t. Some tried to claim th.at the
city had no way of finding the
real owner, and the refore bad to
remove the house without issuing
a notice.
The owner attacked this
argument from a number of
angles. He pointed o ut that by
ch ecking the tax records the city
could have discovered that Mr.
Mancuso had paid taxes on the
property, which would have given
them some indication as to who
owned it. Secondly, the Mancusos
have had all mail to the EUcott St.
add ress forwarded to his own
Traymore St. address for the past
two years. The city could have
located them through this mail
c h ange. In fact they were
obviously able to contact the
Mancusos concerning boarding up

GIVE THE NATION
BACK TOITS PEOPLE
J ohn W. Gardner, Chairman
Common Cause
Former Secretary
ol Heelth, Educetlon em1 We/lere

Who said citizen action is futile? Populism in the
nineteenth century left an indelible mark on the
nation. Citizen action won the vote for women in
1920 and brought the abolition of child labor. The
labor movement, the civil rights movement, the
peace movement, the c;onservation movement - all
began with concerned citizens. If we had waited for
the government or Congress or the parties to initiate
any of them, we'd still be waiting. Try to think of ·a
significant movement in our national life thal was
Initiated by the bureaucracy. Or by Congress. Or by
the parties.
For a while, we lost confidence in our capacity to
act as citizens, but the citizen is getting back to his
feet. And citizen action Is taking on a tough minded
professional edge it never had before. Never has our
society needed more desperately the life-giving
spark of citizen action. We must make our instruments of self-government work. We must halt t~e
abuse of the public interest by self-seeking spec1al
interests.
The special interests buy favor through campaign
gifts. What flows back is literally scores of billions of
dollars in tax breaks, in lucrative defense contracts,
in favored treatment of certain regulated industries,
in tolerance of monopolistic practices. And the taxpayer foots the bill.
To combat such pervasive corruption, we must
strike at the two instruments of corruption in public
life-money and secrecy.
To combat the corrupting power of money, we
must control campaign spending and lobbying, and
require full disclosure of conflict of interest on the
part of public officials.
To tear away the veil of secrecy, we must enact
" freedom of information" or ''right to know·· statutes
which require that the public busmess be done publicly. And that's only a beginning . We can regain
command of our instruments of self-government.
To accomplish this, each c1tizen must bec~me ~n
activist, especially the college student ~1th ~1s
newly acquired right to vote. He must make h1s vo1ce
heard. Common Cause, a national citizens' lobby,
was created to accomplish just that. It hoped to enroll 100 000 members in its first year, and got that
number' in 23 weeks! On its first anniversary, it had
200,000 members.

of the house. The owner therefore
found it difficult to understand
why they were not able to contact
them concerning its destruction.
Finally Mr. Mancuso stated
that on the ume property fro m
which the structure was removed
there is stiJJ a second occupied
house owned by his mother, the
occupants o f which could have
easily referred the city to the
Mancusos. Here again it seems the
city failed to Investigate since
I h ese people were never
questioned. The Council referred
the case to the Finance
committee.
Mrs. Slominski's mistake
Mr . Man cuso ' is n o w
considering legal action llJilinst
the city for neglect, and is asking
for reimbursement of aU his
mother's belonpnp. He feels,
h owever , that ''the personal
portraits and belongings my
mother bad can never be replaced
and some o f those things will be
very bard to part with."
In another interesting segment,
Councilwoman Slominslti arose
from her chair and delivered a
short speech objecting to a certain
measure under discussion . When
she finished, she noticed to her
surprise that no o ne knew what
s h e was talking about. She
discovered that she had been
arguing about a topic that had not
yet been m e nti o n ed .
Acknowledging her error, she sank
back into her seat.

• • • • • • • • • • • 41
It 's too fatf! for mf!,
Sovt! the womf!n and chlfdrenl

••••••••••••

Here Comes the Sun

Ridta. ~~. who's been
11r0und the folk tcene since the
mid-sixties, will ..,.,.ar at the
Nl....-. University Student Center
s.turday njtf\t •t 8. His inventive
int8fpretations of other writer's
matwial, especi.aly the Beetles,
has been ..,.,reciated by m.,y
folkies not too familiar with rock
m•teri•l.

Chabad encounter
The Tzeirei Aaudas Cbabad ofN ew "Drk City ia
offering " An Encounter with Chabad ,"and invitation
to Jewish students to participate in a sabbath-weekend
proaram with the chabad (lubavitcber) chusidm.
Reaistratlon to the cbabad chu.sidm is open to
any Univenity or c:oUeae student. Graduate students
are al.o invited lo attend . There is no prior
committment required.
The proaram wUl be held Dee. ll and Dec. 30, for
femaJe and maJe students respectively. For more
infonnatlon , contact Rabbi Gurary, 631-5483 or
833-8334.

SATTLER'S WANTS YOU.

• •

Bring in this ad and get savings on the best of

A &amp; M Records and Tapes

RECORDS
Catalog Price $5.98

TAPES
.Catalog
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• It wss the chief citizens' group lobbying lot the Constitutions/ Amendment on the 18-yesr old vote.
• It Joined with •nvlronmental groups to defeat the SST.
• It brought the first real challenge In a generation to the
tyrannical seniority system In Congress.
• It helped bring the House of Representatives
recorded vote on the VIetnam War.

On sate today (Fri.) and Saturday,
Nov. 19 and 20 onlv ...
And w ith th is ad only l

to Its first ·

• It has su~ the me/or parties to enjoin them !tom violatIng th e campaign spending laws.

There is much more to do. And the time to d~ it is
now. The American people are tired of being bilked
and manipulated. It's time to give thi_s coun_try back
• to Its people. For additional Information, wnte Common Cause, Box 220, Washington, D.C. 20044.

This sp•ce Is contributed •• a
People SerYice by The V•n Heusen Company

For---sheet music 8t tapes"'- too
it's SATTLER'S RECOkD
CENTERS
• BOULEVA RD MAU ..'
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North of Sheridan, A mherst
10 to 9 Mon. thru Sat.

Frida"i, Novemb« 19, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

-

�I

•

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WAS CHEAP THIS SUMMER,
YOU SHOULD SEE IT THIS WINTER.
..

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Page twelve. The Spectrum . Friday, Novem~r 19, 1971
r,9!1J uri1 Spt)&lt;i . ffil.f11'J9QC! ~.11

. 1\e1 .v 1

l9'dl!l9'1.')\1 (~."Y&gt;i

I

•t

.,

. J

! II

�DOnovan casts an enchanting
spell over Kleinhans crowd
Seeing Donovan in concert is
always a joyous occasion. There are
certain performers who are going
to malce you feel good, no matter
what t~ey're singing. They just pvc
off such good vibes that everyone
lmmediateJy feels like they're
getting a livina room perform ance.
Donovan's one of the few
genuinely happy people in popular
music, with an infectious young
boy smile and a lovely voice.
Don's
switch
to
Warner
Brothers was the original impetus
for this tour. An album was
supposed to come o ut to coincide
with the tour, but John Phillips,
the producer. aot too involved with
the Mamas and Papas revival album
to spend much time with Don , so
the release date got pushed back.
And since Mr. Leitch has been
away for about a year the people
haven't exactly been coming in
droves to see him . But he's a pro all
the way, an d he's been giving his
audiences all each time he
performs.

They've only

just begun

Richard and Karen, better
known by your twelve year old
aister and fifty year old mother as
th e Carpenters, w ill play at
Buffalo Memorial Aud itorium
next Wed nact.y , at 8 :30p.m .

Platforms and flowen
Anyway, Donovan's show is
essentially the same as when I saw
him at Camagie Hall in the fall of
'68 . Sitting on a small elevated
platform, with flowers at his side
(no incense thu time), Donovan

Baird Hall

Opening night for the Opera
,

They're busy at Baird as the opening night extracts from Cervantes' Don Quixote and set in
approaches. That is, th e opening night for the libretto form by the composer. It involves the
scheduled performance of a pair of seldom·performed interesting concept of a play within a play. a puppet
operas by the University Opera Studio of the show within a puppet show.
Originally, the play was done with a set consisting
Department of Music of the State University of New
York at Buffalo. The show can be seen at 8 :30p.m. on of puppet characters of large size watching a puppet
Friday, Nov. 19 and will be performed at that time show with smaller puppets in it. However, the
through Sunday, Nov . 21, with t he exception of University's production uses actors made up as larger
Saturday when there will be a special matinee puppets instead of wooden ones as was originally
done, thus. giving the audience a closer identification
performance at 2 :30p.m .
It only costs $ .50 to attend if one is fortunate with them.
enough to be an J.D . card-carrying student; $ 1.00 if
you're faculty, staff or alu.m ni ; and if y~st h~ppen The staff
The operas are under the care of Muriel Wolf who
to be a regular human being, you'll hlVe to come up
' '
serves as producer and stage director. Carlo Pinto will
Wlth$1.50.
conduct the newly-established University Chamber
Orchestra, which will be making its debut at these
Surrealist opera
The first of the two operas to be performed is performances. The lighting and set designed is
called Les Mamelles de nffiSias and was written by engineered by Robert Winkler of the Metropolitan
Poulenc based on a play by Apolllnaire. Don't let the Opera, with Denis Azaro handling the costume
t1tle frighten you, the performance will be done in designing and technical direction chores. Artistic
English and the title means, The BriNI$1:$ of Tiresias . We Director for the University Opera Studio is Heinz
are assured that t h is presentatio n has something or Rehfuss.
other to do with Women's lib (what doesn't,
The attitudes of the operas toward their audience
now-a-days?) . The opera was originally written in gell splendidly to complement each other. While the
1903, but it was not presented until almost 50 years firn attempts to move the audience to action, the
later in 1947. It is a "surrealist" opera involving such second contends that an audience can be moved to
Impossibilities as sex-changes (well, they were take action beyond itself.
impossible in 1903), resurrection immediately upon
Taken together, the operas should serve to tax the
death and people changing into inanimate objects.
imagination
in musical manner and are an example of
After this opera will come El Retablo de MII(J$8
the
expanding
work the University hopes to do in
Pedro which, translated, boils down to Master Peter's
regard
to
musical
theater.
Puppet Show. The opera is by de Falla, based on
~~tany could not get tickets ~t t ima
WKIW a• d IUFIALO FESTIVAL brlnt back

l eca• H so

2PERFnRMAKCES, Fri., Not. 2&amp;, 7P.M.&amp;10:30 P.M.
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
•

All .s••ts reserved: llhi u Floor $6.50-$5.50
B •lcouy $5.50-$4.50

Ticket. oot sa'o otow at Buffalo f ..t l¥11 nc•ot Offici, Statto r U
HUt:n HL~::
(Mi ll '""'" K CI,td wltll ttiM,.d Mlf•atltlro•od 111¥1. ., . ; • •
HaN; State Ce!!o.. Tl. .t Office; h it Tlc.ot e, HaoMflo Piau, Nla • .,a

,.,...

1

manages to reach a sublime state
very quickly. H,e opened up with
"Jennifer Juniper" and then
slipped into "Catch the Wind ." The
audience seemed to be up for
hearing most of his old hits, and
Don responded by working them
into bis two sets at a fairly regular
pace.
Since he doesn't do too many
long numbers, there were plenty of
tunes to do. Knowing that one
voice and some chords can get to be
a little boring at times, Donovan
has switched hi.s accompaniment.
Rather than have a complete band
as he did a while back, with the late
Harold McNair on flute and sax and
Ca ndy

J o hn

Carr

on

drums,

Donovan is working o n a lighter,
m~llowcr tone with Paul Horn on
sax, flute and clarinet and Peter
Mark , a real rind , on viola .
The first set included " Hurdy
Curdy Man," a bluesy version of
"Sun-Stune Superman," and a real
oldie, " To Try for the Sun ." Paul
Horn 's subtle accompaniments put
just the right trimmings o n the
songs. After a somewhat short set ,
intermission came upon us .
Donovan began the second set
with " The Trees They Do Grow
High," an old folk ballad that
Pentangle has recorded. The flute
and guitar arrangement cast its
enchanting (that's the word I've
been searching for) spell over the
quiet audience.
Violas and clarinets
The next tune was "Keep On

- Billy Altman

***********

JESUS t;HBIST
SUPERSTAR
Oritin•l Authorized Company - Cut of 5 3
" The ltock Opera With ReYe rence"

The writer in the sun

Donovan just kMPI Truc:ldn'
a long. Usi ng spa rse, subtle
ICComPifliment In his tunes, Mr.
Leitch thrilled the k leinh1ns
audience last w eek with his
peec:eful, sublime music. Even a
little harmonica and kazoo
thrown in itere and there to
remind people of the old days.
Truckin'," with Donovan doubllna
on harmonica and kazoo and Hom
on clarinet. Shades of the old days .
Then Peter Mark was introduced,
and for me, this was where the
show separated itself from the
average folk concert. What ensued
was some incredible music,
renaissance flavored and flowing to
higher levels of existence.
"Stealin'" was the first tune the
three of them did. The usually
bouncy song was done slowly, with
the melodies accentuated by the
viola .
The
combination
of
harmonica, clarinet, auitar and
viola was intriguing and lovely .
Next came a song from a movie
Donovan has m11de. The tune was
called "Sailing Homeward ," and
featured some intricate harmony
work by Hom and Mark .
Definitely the best song aU night
was "Lalena," on which Mark
managed to capture the haunting
melody perfeclly. Unfortunately,
Mark soon departed, and I wish he
could have been around for most of
the songs. He aave each song a
delicate texture that fit in well with
Donovan's voice and poetry .
Don finished up with " MeUow
Yellow" and "Atlantis," and
everyone drifted out of Kleinhans
with visions of 1967 and peace
dancing in their heads. To stay
happy in this day ts one of the most
difficult tasks around. Keep it up,
Don . The world needs you.

i

.~

How does it feel?

Campus champs

Wednelday afternoon X AM edged
the Stunners 7..0 for the campus
Intram ural championship. Bob
tc.pult scored the game's only
touchdown on the second half
kickoff. ·Kapult also ca•t the
PAT from XAM quarterback
Randy Corwin.

Friday, November 19, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�VArsity gets ready

Winter sports set to begin

Pro footblll
By Dan Caputi Jr.

by Barry Rubia ·

Th.is week looks to be crucial to divisional races sinoe there are no
fewer than three clathes between first and second place teams. Last
week the wizard wu safety blitzed for a 7- 6 record and 74-!6 - 7 and
67% for the season.
Pfti/4delph'i.a 20. St. Lou/1 13: Resuraent Eagles deck falling Cards.
New England 24, Clevel4nd 17: Browns' offense continues to
sputter.
Oakland 35, Stln Diego 14: Daryle "mad bomber" Lamonica won't
send a warning note to Charaer secondary.
Lot Angeles 21, San Francl1co 17: Rams grind it out with
defensive guts and Gabriel.
Cincinnati U, Howton 14: Benpls finaUy welting up after return
of qb. ViraiJ Carter.
M14mi 20, &amp;ltlmore 17: Griese-Kilck-Cronka-Warfield too much
for Colts to handle.
Pfttlburg 30, Giant• 14 : Bradshaw rips inconsistent Giant defense.
~troit 27, Chicago 21 : Llona must claw Cinderella Bears to get
back into race.
Minnesota 20, New Orleatu J3 : Vik.inp will need some offense to
stop paot-klllina Saints.
Jet• 28, Buffalo 17: Jets refueled by possible return of Narnath.
KaiUIU City 23, ~nll~r 16: Stagerlng Chiefs have to set offense
back toaether.
A. tlllnta 24, Green Bay 17: Falcons come back from tough Giant
loss with physical win over Pa~k .
V.ll4r 31, Wa1hfnrton 17: Cowboys finally explode and ride Skins
right out of D.C. Stadium.

Sport1 EditM

With the ThanJcslivinl holiday due to arrive
shortly, Buffalo's varsity winter sports squads are
addin&amp; last minute touches in an effort to be r~dy
when the "beU" rinp. Both hockey and wrestlin&amp;
open their seasons this week, while basketball and
swimming open up ri&amp;)lt after the end of the
'lbanksaivina recess.
In basketball tomorrow, the varsity Bulls will
scrirnmaae the Baby Bulls freshman squad. The
public is invited for the 9:30 a.m. tap-off at t he
Clark Gym. The frosh are· led this year by Bob
Dickinson, a 6 - 3 guard who is considered the best
of the freshmen . After their frosh scrimmage, the
varsity's last scrimmaae will be their •annual
pre~on jaunt to Olean, New York for a
scrfrn maae apinst the nationally ranked St.
Bonaventure Brown Indians. Buffalo's 6 - 6 star Curt
Blackmore will have his hands full at Olean with the
Bonnies' new 6- 9 sopb star Glenn Price.
Langelier named captain
The Bulls, who just recently named senior Neil
Lanaelier captain of this year's squad, wiU continue
to practice at Clark Gym until Wednesday, Dec. I
when both varsity and freshmen travel to Syracuse
to take on the Syracuse Oranae. Last year captain
Lanaelier boosted the Bulls apinst the Oran&amp;e with
II points, 17 rebounds and six assists. Aowever, the
Oranae en route to the NIT broke a tie with eight
minutes left to play and coasted to a 80- 70 victory.
The hockey Bulls are just about set to begin
their third varisty season, Saturday, Nov. 27 at the
Amherst Recreation Center apinst the New Enpaod
Colleae Pilpims. New England, a new member of the
23-team ECAC division II, is a team the Bulls must
beat to pin ECAC playoff recognition. Prior to
facing-off against New En&amp;land the Bulls will travel
to Troy, N.Y. tomorrow afternoon to scrimmage
Rennselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI).
Last year RPI finished eighth in the ECAC
division I with a 16-6-2 overall record and 7 - S-2
in division l pmes. This year, division I will be
comprised of 17 teams with division II bavin&amp; 23
teams. Additionally, a new division Ill has been
formed and will feature six schools this year. The
RPI scrimmaae should be a fine test for the
youth-oriented Bulls' squad.
The wrestlina Bulls open their season tomorrow
momin&amp; at the East Stroudsbura Open. Stroudsburg

College football
by Barry Rubin

Tutsdly , the v1uity

Captain

Langelier

bllsketbell Bulh elected
6-4 ~~nlor Neil L.,.elw,
QPtain of the 1971-72
aqulld. Langelier, from
Miot'l, N.Y. IUCCeeds the

tr•du•t•d

Roger

Kremblls.
is a highly competitive tourney and last year the
Bulls fmished fourth amona SO teams. Additionally,
Bulls' co-captain ,Jton Brandt placed first in the 190
pound division afler placina third two years ago.
Coach Ed Michael's Bulls open their reaular season
Saturday afternoon (12 :30) Dec:. 4 at the fint of
two home Clark Gym quadranaular meets. In
addition to the Bulls, the opposition will be
furnished by Montclair State, Oneonta State and
Eastern coUeaiate power, Wilkes CoUqe.

meet our photographers eye to eye

Last week's IS - 8 slate left the wizard 12 1- 35- 2 and 78%on the
season.
Colorado 24, Air Force 13 : Buffalos oust Falcons in bid for bowl.
USC 2 I . UCLA 17: Bruins have nothing to lose, while Trojans are
trying to save face for poor seuon on coast .
Wucotuin 34. Minn e1ota 23: Rufus Ferguson runs Gophers wild.
Louiliana State 11. Notre Dame 16: Ti&amp;ers need big upset win to
salvaae disappointina season in Bayou land .
We.rt Virginia 28, Syracute 16: SchwartwaJder's Orange have
·gotten to the ernbarrassina stage while Mountaineers remain
competitive.
Wuhinrton 36, Wuhington State 17: Sonny Sixkiller goes wild at
the expense of Washington State.
Toledo 31, Kent State 7: Rockets close out another undefeated
season with eyes set op third strai&amp;)lt bowl appearance behind Ealey.
A.rkanra1 2 7, Te;uu Tech 14: .Razorbacks need win to stay alive.
TenneJtee 24, Kentucky 17: Vols come off week layoff to victory.
Stanford 23. Ctlli/omlll 0: Cannot possibly be another San Jose St.
Purdue 21,/ndltlflll 10: Boilermakers sky hiJh after Michigan pme.
Dartmouth 23, Princeton 21: Ti,er have had a poor season this
year, while Dartmouth has been tough in a rebuildina year.
Bo1ton
42 MtultlchiUett• 0 :
down in class.

ORDER NOW!

~"\\\\\~\\\\
COMPANION
TH~MOKER "S

CUSTOM~SIGNED FOR THE DISTINOUISHED.
SOCIA( SMOKER. AVAILABLE IN LIMITED
QUANTITIES FOR PERSONAL PRE-CHRISTMAS
BUYING.
ONLY

$g 99 *
•

c:au. ~trawl/..... ...

a.. ......................

......................

.,..
.r
professional fu II color portraits
offered to all graduating students
passport, application, 1.0. photos
also available.
appointments 356 norton, 831 -2505,5570
A L S0 !
··
·t·
save on all of your color processing services especially color prints from your negatives.
Pa~ fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday, November 19, 1971

MAIL ORDER ONLY !!!
TO; ~\U4.\\l~ THE SMOKER'S COMPANION
411 COIIIIOIWUlTH AYEIUE. 101 I

IOSTOI. lilA 12111
PlEASE 1W1H liE
SMOKER'S COMPANION .
EIClOSEO RIO WCTlY t•.n FOil EAClf liT.

l•tt.n PlUS PAClAiill&amp;, IWU.&amp; MD TAl.)
AMOUIT EIClOSEO t
100 lOT SliD CASH.) SORRY 10 C.O.D.

..... ... ,....... .....,

lAME-----------------------ADDRESS --------------------CITY
STAn
ZIP-

�, _ tlr•, vwv tood eondltlof1, built-In
beet, ..,.,,,Cell '33-4042.

CI.AIIIPIII
AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED
Ads bttw
may..nbet a.placf
MondiY
tllru Frtdly
m.
11\d 4 :30p.m. at 3$5 Norton Hall.
THE COST Of an ad for one day Is
$1.25 for tilt flrlt 15 wordl and 1 .05
lor Nell additional word.
"HELP

WANTED"
ads
unnot
dt~erlmlnate on tnt basta of s.x, eotor,
creed or nAtionAl origin to Any extent
(I.e., preferably Is still diKrlmlnatory) .
"FOUNO" IdS will be run frH of
char.. for a maximum of 2 days and
15 words.

WANTED
THINKERS WANTED : A group Is
btlnt
formed
to
Mt
up
a
compret,.nshtt stuCiy of practk:AI
methods for Improving tile community
and race relltiOIIS. The troup btlnt
tsltbllshed (on umput) will provide
tna belle thlntclng requlr.a for the
development of a plan which will solve
our problems. The ntt&lt;l lor e finely
gtl dded and detAiled plan of action Is
s11n ntetSS~ry lly the group It a first
steo to sotvtnt the llask: problems
causlnt ur11an dllemmes. Got any
ldeu? Call 811·3550.
TERM PAPER SOU11ht on some Wlr
asptch also sociAl analysis paper. Will
PAY rusonallle price. TR3·3221 .
WANTED : PsychOIOfV paper ntteled
desperately. Will pay. Ur. .llt. Call
831· 2768.
WELL

KNOWN commtfclel rock
llfOUP too1ctn11 for l ..d 11u1tarlst who
also slnll$. Cell Bob 6 74·8948.
OVERSEAS
JOBS
t o r Students:
Aust rella, Europe, S. America, Africa,
tic . All prolentons end occupations,
$700 to $3000 montnly. Exoenses
PAid,
overtime,
Sightseeing.
FrH
lnlormetlon. Write Jobs Ovtfse.s,
Oept. ES, Box 15071, Sen Ol..o,
Clllfornt• 92115.
STUOENT WANTEO : Room And
board - In exch111ge lor blbysttt1n11
some evenlnliS eeeh wtetc - close to
cam pus - 837·8106 after 5 p ,m ,
MOTHER of one PftiiChool child for
one or more children In my home.
Good care, playroom, toys avellellle.
$20 wMkly lor one child, tall wHI&lt;Iy

for 2 c hlltktn of tile s.me family.
North
BuffAlo.
Call
Anytime.
836·8::106,
:-:-::::-:-________________
VOCALISTS : 1 malt, 1 ftmllt to
wortc on orlglntl material . 875·1561
after 6 p .m. AM&lt; for Joe.
NEED sophisticated entertalnars lor
dOwntown eoffeenouse. Fotk, Jau,
blues, acceptable. Groups of more than
2 nMd not apply. 852·7129, 154·9651.

RIDE NEEDED to U.B. morntn91 from
Sherldan-EtmwOOCI ar.. In Kenmore.
Pl..se uti 1141·2855.
RIDE NEEDED Monday thru Friday,
8 : 15 to 5 p. m., Parksld•Teeom• er..
•nd Norton Hall. Must oe Cleoenaabte.
Clll Mrs. Goldstein 11 131·25 11 or
838· 2639 alter 6 p. m .

FOR SALE

WANTED :
Gare11e
to
rent
In
VIrgil-Taunton
ar...
Call
Greg.
876-4122.

VOI.KSWAGON 1964 nMCis some
work, has snow tires , 1250. 878·0439
lfter 4 p .m .

APARTMENT FOR RENT

CONVERTIBLE - '64 OLDS - white
w/ Otue upholstery - full power -., rear
seat sp..ktfs - four n - belted tires one owner - less than 50,000 miles.
M•ke offer. 834·5338 wenln11J.

SINGLE room In prl¥ate home.
Ttn·mlnute walk from U.B. S erious,
mete greduate student oreftfred. Full
kltcl'len prlvll ...s. A11allabte Dec 1
838-4950.
. '

1963 BUICK SkYIIrk convertiOie V·8 .
Very 110od co ndition, 1300. 876·13 12.

WOLLENSAK T·l500 Upe recorder,
perfect
condition,
tncludln9
mk:ropnone, nl·fl Cllbte, attachment
cord and otner f ..tures. Darryl,
131·1166 or 835·2021.
·

REFRIGERATORS,
stoend
Wlstltrs. Reconditioned; delivered and
guarentttd . O ..G Appliances, 14&lt;4
svumore, TX4-3183 .

YOUR OWN room furn1Jf1ed 0#
unfurniShed. Short walk to umous.
Prefer trtd, $67 montf1, plus utilities.
138· 2186.

MOROCCAN Imports - dig tf1tM
prtces s custom made L ..thtr Pants $30; full length wool/cotton ClOtS U 5 , hand-made L .. tner Begs - l i t
colorful Wool SaShes - 12.501 entlque
Moraten ll (Gullomtne) Buds $8/ doz.
Call Stt~tt 183-4707.

RIDEBOARDD

TYPEWRITERS, sm•ll M lmeo vacuum
ctean«s, kitchen set, bed. 894·181 4 ;
835·7526.

MICHELIN 155xl5 studded. Used one
season. Lou 833· 2106.

MC INTOSH C·26, Ml 3, 65, Mer1ntz
23, Scott 2t9F, T1ndber11 12, Thorens
TD ·l2S, Altec A7·500 II, Dynjl PAT-4,
Stereo 120, Quad, 839·2378 after 6 .

VOLKSWAOON
Microbus,
1964.
Spare tires, gu ll. .ter, radio, fan,
extras. 1200 - or best offer. Call Seth
at 875·1195.

MAXI skirts . Printed velvet, h iP·I'Iug,
button front, S26 - while they lett (In
"better" store Buffalo It S3 5 ) The
People, 144 Allen St. 812·3740.

RUG, Gullstan, Ptfslen styte. Recently
et uned . 8x12. Asking S200. C;all
823-6335.

MENS shirts - hanCI· toomed fabrics.
Wlllac:e 8-y. band coll•r. western,
othtfl. 1n Allentown. The People, 144
Allen St. 182·6283.

IMPORTANT! Lou Strarducctt I am
not going to Boston with you alter 111.
Berb.

OFFERING rldt to MllwaukM, 1..¥1nt
Tuesday, Nov. 23r returning Monday,
Nov. 29. Phone Tina 839-4021 before
11 p.m.
RIDE WANTED to Flushlnt, N .Y.
Ltl\11 Tuesday, Nov. 23 or Wed., Nov.
24. Return trio preferable, but not
essential. S hare expenHs. M ike Engel
835·5535.
RIDE NEED ED to Boston.,.. around
Thanksgiving. Call Donna 134·5510.
RIDE NEEDED to N - York lrtl or
Long ISland for two for TlllnkS1jlvlng.
Cell o.b or Barb, 834·7980.
RIDE NEEOED to Detroit/Ann Aroor
for ThankS1jlvlng. Call Nul Trubowltl,
dly : 831·1150, Evening: 835·7885.
RIDES NEEDED to L.l., Nov. 22 and
from L .l ,, Nov. 28 . Will there cosh.
Cell Ke~~ln 135·7717.

Food service comes to you/

NEW Eplphone CIISSICII 11Uitar with
either soft or hard shell cue. Luve
message lor Larry. 854· 2997 anytime.
BILLS· JETS $ 7 ticket on SO-yard line
for Suncwy's game, Ca ll Dave •t
834-6699.
OALMATION
puppies
130 .
Negotiab le. Corne to 192 Norwalk S t .
or call 831·5318. Leave messallt for E .
Toooer.
'62
FO RD
Galaxy,
6-c:yllnCier,
standard, 6 4 ,900 miles. 1100 or best
offer. C11t Joe, 8 34·2297.
STEREO Wtbeor, tweeter-ooler In
eeell cabinet, dlemond stylus, old but
good,l30. 833· 1104.
VW 1964 - #USI tuned, valve job,
6-montll-old tires, snow tires, white.
$400. 831· 2 186.
TRIUMPH 1970, 650 cc, S9 50. Call
886·5778 .

Beginning Monday, Nov. 22, we will have a

Ne'W'

EXPRESS
COUNTER
•
1n

Diefendorf Hall
(Ground Level)
OPEN MONOAY·FRIDAY 11:30 a.m . to 1: 15 p.m.

HOUSE In Amherst, 659 Nll!llrl Falls
Bl11d. S minutes from umous. 311;
beclroomt, trl-levtl, 3 baths, modern
kitchen, built-In lrltldalre, dlshwesher.
Lartt
family
room
w ith
a ir
conditioner, Wood·burnlnll fireplace,
lltached 111r19t, fenced yard with tas
grill . Low taxes. O wner. 873-4113.
GUITARS &lt; Gib son, Guild, Martin,
Gurlen, etc . 8uy, sell, tr~de . Tnt S trln11
Shoppe, 52• Ontario, 7 p .m.-9 p .m .
dally. Sat. 12- s. 8 74.0120.
GUITAR Gi bson ES 335 TDC
Grover tunlnt mach ines - e•cellent
cond ition, 1290 or best o ffer. Will
consider trade lor Fender telecaster .
Call Dave 813-6575.
FOR SALE : 9o'S stove, drener with
mirror, cllup. 877.0137.
CHEVROLET 1968 Impala, 4-door
oowtf steering, brakes, 1 ir conditioning
new
tires,
brakes.
E ~tcellent
condition. 8 37-6 719.
TEN .SPEED b ike, new th is summer,
$35. E.V . 80·watt stereo AM/FM
tuner, B.S.R. chanter, speakers, $1 50.
'62 Chev. - good transportation cheap. 838·2369.
STEREO IIOt deck - Emerson - UOO
yerlflce. Brand new . Ford 1963
wagon. Best offer . Call 886·1178.
1965 VW - extra ctun, tOO&lt;! runnlnt
condition. Call 873·1019 arter 5 p .m .
VW Panel truck '68, overhauled enQine.

ROOMMATE

In

FEMALE roommate ntteltd, 5-mlnute
welk. Off EntttwOOCI. Avellallle Jan. l.
Btlutlful apartment . 134-4597. o-'le.
TWO MALE roommetes ntedtd. House
on Amhtfst, IS5f utllltlts. Own rooms.
L..v, Info Spectrum, Box 81 for Ote.
lst.
FEMALE roommate wanted. Own
room, one block from
umous.
Avellallte January. Call 838-4892.
FEMALE roommate
room, $70, utilities
691-6422, 2-10 p .m .

wanted : Own
Included. Cell

FEMALE, grad or medlc11 preferred.
Own room In beautiful furniShed
apartment. 175 Including utilities. 210
Wlndem«e. Cell 834-2483 evenings.

MISCEllANEOUS
GENERAL construction, remodeling,
furniture m1tclnt '"d repair. v ..rs of
experience. Reuonebte rates. Terms.
Free estimates. 876·7670, 132·9464.
SEEKING
qulllfled
art
students
Interested In exhibiting their work . Cell
852·7129 or 154·9651.

DO YOU wear white Jocks, tlgl'lt, black

pants, T·slllrts and comb your llelr
back7 Oon'l t. .l out of place,
hundreds do. Find o ut for yourself on
Dec. 11 It 8 : 30. SHA NA NA IS
comlnt.

ANYONE - Nl191r1 Fells to London
one wey, Sll5; return 1220. M .T.W.
181.0306, ThurSday night, 873·5660,
s-10 p . m., WMkly departures.

DEAK IllS arrived to tlve Buffalo
Plenty • • . L a shel mundo l J.S .,
F ,£ .w . , w K ., a.w .. D.H .

BRITANNICA'S
R ....reh
Servk:e
provides for 100 plus r-rcn reports
on all s.ub)ects. Write G. Dunn, 22
Mudow~ne,
Leekewanna,
N .Y.
14211. Spec:lfy definite mMtlng time.

EUROPE
over
Xmes
$145
roundtrip'. Guarantttel charter flights
to London . Sue, 835-4168.

QUICK, efficient typlnt done - , .40
per Pill•· IBM Seteetrle 131-4808.

FOLK guitar lessons - also eplpnone
C.slno electric for s.le. Jeff 835·922g.
83$-338...

TYPI NG done In my home. Term
papers, theses, dlssertltlons. 892· 1784.

piNM CAll G inny

EXPE RIENCED typln11 by electric
typ-rlttf, S .40 page. Call 173·1305.

BEAUTIFUL hendmede 110ld and tllver
)ewetty - wedding rings - at senslllle
orlces. J .P . The Ooldw..ver, 655
Elmwood at Ferry StrMt, 811·3400.

NOTI CE : On Monday, Nov. 22nd,
U .B . Food Service comes to YOU wltll
a
new EXPRESS COUNTER In
Diefendorf Hall (11round level).

Tan1jled up In red 11Pt7 ACTION LINE
will help straighten you out!

PHIL HILLMAN, your 19 Is w11tln11
for you . See Jim at Spectrum.

LOST a FOUND

NV'S Hotel Tudor offers SUN Y r~tes.
Reservations
1nd
Information.
132·0611.

LOST : Purple mittens, while hllchlnv
to U . B.
lrom Ma in and Utlu,
Wednesday . Call 816·0265.
LOST:
Small
black
Ferry-Delaware area.
Othello. C111 886-4612.

C&amp;H
JONES Professional Typlnll
Service
computerized
18M
equipment plus our experience Qlve
best
possible
ore~~tntatlons
of
dluertatloos, thesis, term pepers,
resumes and employment •Pollution
letters.
Located
betwMn
two
camouses.
Very
reason1ble ,
Call
837-6558.

dog,
west
Answers to

FOUND: Dog, male, resembles Irish
setter, 12 yurs old, on Elmwood nNr
State Hospital . 862-4127.
FOUND: Garman Shepard. Female,
black. Well-trained, friendly, with
chain collar at Fillmore &amp; Leroy. Call
83 7·3473 .

On • llmb7 With no net In SlllhH Call
Student Affairs at 3721.

PUPPY, part ·S h tPhlrd . Tan with black
snout. Red collar. Answers to Toby .
Reward. 8 37-6053. Balley-Kensln1110n

APARTMENTS WANTED
FIVE MALES desperately nted lour or
five-bedroom aptrtment or houllt. C all
837.0882.

area.
LOST: GrMn vinyl brlefCaH with 111
my books. RewarCI. Call 837· 2370.

THREE FEMALES Oeslre own house
or three rooms In a house near umpus.
Call S h1ryn, 833-4940.

ROOMMATES WANTED
FE MA LE
roommate,
own room,
modern furnlsheCI IPartment. 10 min.
walk - Minnesota . $65/mo. ~ utilities.
Call Jany 833·5428.

THREE OR · more bedroom apt.
needed . C1ll Tony 833·1367 or HII'\IY
835·5535.

WANTED : M11e or fem•te roomm1te,
own bedroom, 140 plus utilities.
Princeton Coun. C111 834..0340.

FEMALE would like own room with
otner girts In IPittment near campus.
Anything
available?
Call
Muy
831·3198.

ROO MMAT E
wanted,
private
bedroom,
alr-eondll lon lnt.
w ·w
cltoetlng, plped·ln stereo, completely

** CHAMONIX TRIP ••

Serving·

December 27 - Jan. 7th
fo r information
call
3602 or 2145

Homemade Soup
Deli &amp; Submarine Sandwiches

-----------

Hot Casseroles

1

U.S.'s Poor Boy Special Sandwich
Pastry · Fruit · Yogurt
Fresh Coffee

•••

SAYI.OIIEY
SIIOP MJIY .AVY

1
1
1

I
I
I
I

BIG MOLLY'S

··Tfole• n ••..

I

1
WINTER SPECIAL 1
Our Reg. 45¢ Ho'T!burger 1
Drtve · ln

~~
I
~~AJAt.»..\~ I

NOW

v~v-,

Cheeseburger 34 ¢
Offer good d1lly from S :00

(U.B. Food Service-Your Campus Food Service)

cu rrently

ftm.,e. Hertti.Col\lln ar... 177.0137.

PERSONAL

BILLY LIGNOS 662·7598. Ur11tnt.

wanted

p.m.

I

1

:

1435 Millersport Hwy. : .
(Near Maple Rd.)
I
- - -•631-51&amp;.1 _ _ _ -

I

'

Friday, November 19, 1971 . The Sper:trum . Page fifteen

1.'. ••.

..

-

co-ed flat, furnlsned, own room. Prefer

MOTORCYCLE stora1jt htlted,
Insured.
Reasonable.
Call
Btnlln
W~renouse, 877·0646, 9--5, Mon.-Fri.
1970 &gt;&lt;KE. Beige wllll b~ck soft top.
Stereo
AM/FM
redlo
Included .
Excellent condition. Call Dave 8-4
o.m., 684·2000.

RIDE ~EEDEO to Blnghampton,
N .Y., Nov. 20.24. C111 Ellen 837· 1344.

own room
842/montn

ROOMMATE w1nted - OWr'! room,
150, utltttt• Included. Call 131-4840.
KMp trying. Off Main Str. .t .

AMPEX tape recorder 2000 series,
Model 2080. Hardly Used . LlsU $450,
Mertflce, 1325. 878·1312:

RIDE NEEDED to Morristown, N .J .
for tile vacation. Will help sl'lare
e~epenses. Call Kathy 814· 7631 .

ROOMMATE wanted
unfurnlmed ee~«tment,
plus utlltues. 873-4117.

SKI BOOTS
Ralcle tpod
condition - grut for any btglnnw 815. Cell 831· 2166.

FOUR PEOPLE needed fo r l•rge
four-bedroom IPartment. Four block;
from Ma in off Hertel. S200 month
startlnQ Dec. 1. Cllj.837·2968.

WANTED :
Ride to Boston
lor
Thlnksglvlng. Call Kevin 832-4152.

turn~ private pwlclne. a7S(mo.
w(utHitltf. 1t74 Clinton nMf . . .. ,.
L.M¥e m . . . . . tor L.e«Y at IS4·2H7
0# Jim, 145-2325.

-

�CAC Cinema presents Monterey Pop with The
Who, Jefferson Airplane, Mamu and Papu, Otis
Hillel is holding ~ S.a.bb~th Service tonight ~t 8
p.m. Robert Burrick will give a talk on: "Civil
Diwbedience - The Role of the Jew," An Oneg
Shabbat will follow.

Reddin&amp; Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix toni&amp;ht and
tomorrow at 6:30, 8 and 9:45 p.m. in Capen 140.
Tic:ke,ts are $ ,75. A new sound system will be
installed for this film.

Pilot 100 will hold an orientation meeting today
at 2 p.m. in Norton 330. All persons interested in
acting ~s observers with area law~nforcement
a,encies are urged to attend.

Chabad House will ttave Shabbos: Miracle ~
Tranquilizer with Rabbi Gurary today at 6 p.m . and
tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. at Chabad House, 3292 Main
St.

U.B. Karate Club will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in
the women's gym. All are encouraged to attend;
beginners welcome anytime.

The Hillel Talmud Clus will meet o n Sunday at
3 p.m. in the Hillel library.

The Historical Conflict Simulations Club will
have a Panzer fest on Sunday from 12- 7 p.m. in
Norton 264.
Group R will meet on Sunday at 6 p.m. in
Norton 232 for a meeting of people who are
interested in gelting involved in studen t"'operated
(Involvement} group.
U.B. Sports Car Club will hold a car rally on
Sunday. Registration starts at 10 a.m. and the fee is
$3.50. The starting point is at Transitown Plaza,
Routes 5 and 78, and trophies will be awarded to the
top ten per cent of each class.

.

The Hillel class in "Torah with Commentaries"
will meet tomorrow at 3:30p.m. in Or. Hofmann's
home, 12 Colton Drive.

Ch.a.bad House will hold a Melavah Malkah
tomorrow at 8 p.m. at Chabad House.

The 1972 International Donn Committee will
meet today at 3 p.m. in Room 208 Townsend Hall.
All foreign and American students interested in the
organization of the 1972 International Dorm are
urged to join the committee.

The Hillel Conv~tlonal Hebrew Class
(advanced) will meet on Sunday at 12:30 p.m. in
Room 262 Norton.

The
lnternationaJ
Board
presents
an
International cafe tonight at 8 p.m. in the North
Wing Lounge, Twin Rise Dorm at Buffalo State
College on Elmwood Avenue. Or. Donald leopard of
the history department will speak on "Evening in
Zaire (the Congo) ." Tomorrow at 9 :30p.m. at the
same place there will be an African Social.

Operation Gr.eenll&amp;ht will meet on Sunday at 1
p.m . in the Hillel House for a Thanksgiving Party.
P~e Corps/VISTA representatives will be on
campus in Norton Hall lobby, Nov. 29 and 30, to
speak to those interested students about upcoming
programs.

The lintuistics Department presents an open
lecture in Lintuistlcs 501 on "The S lavic Languages"
by Or. Hamilton. It will be held on Nov. 29 at 7 p.m.
in Hayes 404.

Avai101ble at the Ticket Office
Studio Aren~ Theater

Hillel has received application forms for a
Student Leadership Mission to Israel from Dec. 19 to
29 . This tour is sponsored by the United jewish
Appeal and designed to provide a select group of 110
University students with a concen\IAted program of
lec tures, interviews and personal ex~rience with the
human needs faced by the people of~srael. Students
interested in participating should call Hillel at
836-4540 immediately for an appointment. The
deadline for applications is Nov. 24.

Through Nov. 21 : "Buying Out ''
Dec. 9 - Jan. 2 : ''The Me Nobody Knows"
Jan. 6- 23 : " I Remember Mama" with Celeste
Holm
Rock and Folk Music

Theater

CAC has a new project, the T onawancfi
Storefront Center, 1173 Sheridan, which is looking
for volunteers (juniors, seniors and graduate students
only). The project d irects itself to informal
counseling (groups and individuals} and workshops.
If interested, contact Bob Gilbert, Room 220
Norto'!, 831-3609.
U.B. Vets and Vietnam Veterans Aplnst the
War will have a meeting today at 5 p.m. in Norton
234.
CAC's Bufhlo State Hospital Volunteers can
have a van to use for transportation. lnteres~ed
volunteers please come to CAC office, Norton 220.
CAC is lookin~ for a student (freshman
sophomore or jun ior) to fill the post of Assistant
Coordinator of Research and Development. Position
entails creating new projects, revitalizing existing
projects and improving the organizational structure
of CAC. If interested, energetic and somewhat
familiar with the Buffalo metropolitan area, contact
Bob Gilbert, Room 220 Norton, 831 -3609.

Dr. ludwig landcrebe of the University of
Cologne, Germany, will be discussing "The
Phenomenological Concept of Experience" today at
3:30p.m. in Room 15, 4244 Ridge lea. This talk is
open to the public. Tomorrow at 3 p.m. at Oakstone
Farm, 9905 Braver Road, Clarence Center, Or.
Landgrebe will hold a seminar on his book, "Major
Problems in Contemporary European Philosophy';
and the relationship between European and
Anglo-Saxon philosophy. The group will be limited
to 25 persons. Those interested should call 831 -5294
for tickets.

Nov. 19: Le Tretcau de Paris (A)
Dec. 5 : Will Rogers U5 .A. - james Whitmore

(K)

Nov. 19: Mitch Miller
Nov. 21 &amp; 23 : Laurence Lesser
Nov. 28 &amp; 30: Judith Raskin and Hein Rehfuss
Dec. 3: Xmas Pops
Dec. 5 &amp; 7 : Zoltan Rozsnyal, guest conductor
Dec. 10: "The Nutcracker"
Dec. 18 &amp; 19: ' 'The Messiah"

Nov. 20: Detroit
Nov. 23 : Atlanta

Resurrection House presents ''The Au&amp;St&gt;urg
Confession on Rye" - a potluck discussion - this
Sunday at 5 p.m. Bring one food Item, enough for
two people.

Eid-EI-Fitr - Muslim Students Association will
hold Eid prayers tomorrow at 8 :30 a .m. in Room
340 Norton.

Bufhlo Philharmonic Orchestrot (K)

Buffalo Braves Basketball (M)

The International Conferenc.e on Polltkal
Orpniz.ation will draw up to 1500 people from out
of town. Housing is desperately needed; if you can
put some people up for a day or two, it would be
greatly appreciated. Please call 831-5507 and leave
your name and number. Any hospitality will be well
received.

The Puerto Rican Studies and Resevch Center
and the Offtce of Overseas Academic Prosrams have
Open Rap, WGR·TV, Channel 2, 1 a.m. announced a spring semester study program at the
following Johnny Carson Monday night, has four lnstituto de Cultura Puertorriquena, San Juan,
State University of Buffalo students discussing Black Puerto Rico. Staffed by leading artists, writers and
Sabbath's Master of Reality album cut, "After scholars in Puerto Rico, th~ program offers ~urses,
forever."
independent study, workshops and field work in
Puerto Rican culture, literature, drama, folk art,
The Buffalo Theater Woriuhop Repertory political problems and filmmaking. Sophomores and
Oanc:e Theater will hold auditions on Sunday from juniors who have a worklna knowledge of Spanish
12:30-6 p.m. in the U.B. Clark Gym Dance Studio. and a satisfactory academic record are eligible to
For further information call Synyer Hanesworth at apply. Further information and applications are
831-4143.
available at the Puerto Rican Studies and Research
Center, 204 Winspear Ave. and at the Office of
latin Amerian Studies presents a lecture on Overseas Academic Programs, 107 Townsend Hall.
"Race Relations in Brazil" by Abraham Monk, PhD, The deadline for applications is Nov. 22, 1971.
on Nov. 23 at 3 p.m. in Townsend 313.
lutheran students and friends will visit the aged
The 33rd Western New York Art Exhibition will at the lutheran Hospice, 117 Glenwood, tonight.
be held Nov. 22 through Dec. 19 in the Meet at Resurrection House by 6 :30 p.m.
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1285 Elmwood Avenue.
Resurrection House presents A Raisin In tht Sun
U.B. Ridina Club will not be meeting until after with Sidney Poitier as its Friday Night Free Film
vacation.
Special, 9:30p.m.

Arab Cultural Club is .meeting o n Sunday In
Norton 334 at 3:30p.m.

Nov. 20: Richie Havens {N)
Nov. 21 : The Oelfonics (H)
Nov. 24 : The Carpenters (M)
Nov. 26: " Jesus Christ Superstar " (K)
Nov. 26 : James Brown (M)
Dec. 4 : Gordon Lightfoot (K)
Dec. 11 : Sha·Na-Na {P)
Dec. 12: The James Gang {K)
Dec. 16: Rod Stewart and Faces, Cactus (M)

-&amp;.attn American Studies will present a lecture In
"POrtuguese Language in Brazil" by Kenneth
Rasmussen, PhD, on Nov. 30 at 3 p.m. in Townsend
313.

Courtyard Theater
Through Jan .: " The Clever Else " - every Friday
and Saturday
Key
KMNPHA-

Kleinhans
Memorial Auditorium
Niagara University
Peace Bridge Center
Hearthstone Manor
Amherst Junior High School

The following is the schedule for all the librar;es for the Thanksgiving recess, Wednesday, Nov. 24 to Sunday, Nov. 28 :

lockwood
Harriman Res.
Music
Sci. &amp; Ena.
Health Sci.
Rid,e Lea
law

Wednesday
8 a .m.- 5 p.m.
8 a.m.- 5 p.m.
9 a.m.- 9 p.m.
8 ~.m .-5 p.m.
8 a.m.-lt p.m.
9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
8:30 a.m.- 5 p.m.

Thursday
closed
closed
closed
cl05ed
closed
closed
closed

.

friday
8 a.m.- 9 p.m.
9 a.m.-9 p.m.
closed
9 a.m.- S p.m.
closed
9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
8 :30 a.m.- S p.m.

Saturday
closed
closed
closed
9 a .m.-5 p.m.
9 a.m.-5 p.m.
~ a .m.-5 p.m .
9 a.m.-5 p.m.

Sunday
closed
closed
closed
2 p.m,-6 p.m.
1 p.m.-11 p.m.
1 p.m .-5 p.m.
1 p.m.- 11 p.m.

...!::-

�Beach Boys give excellent
performance at Fredonia
Fredonia really isn't too good of
a place to go surfing. Actually I'm
not too sure what it is good for, but
I don't live there so it's not my
problem. Despite all negative
reasons, the Beach Boys showed up
anyway and performed quite
admirably in the gym at Fredonia
last Sunday.
I generally associate gyms with
high school dances, and back when I
was in high school, they used to play
a lot of Beach Boy albums. (I came
from a depraved high school - they
couldn't afford bands.) It would
seem then that it would be quite
appropriate to see the Beach.,Boys in
a gym. However appropriate it might
be, playing in a gym does not lend
itself to creating a good concert. This
• is especially true considering the
delicate harmonies of the Beach
Boys music.
Even in the darkest caverns,
however, true gold shows through
and the Beach Boys played a lot of
it. They started off playing "Good
Vibrations" and ended up with
"Help Me Rhonda." In between,
they covered a good portion of my
conscious I ife. Of course .it's
debatable how much of it has been
really conscious, but the part that
was certainly included the Beach
Boys.

The Beach Boys have been
around for so long that people tend
to forget what a good band they
really are. The amazing thing is that
over that period of tim~ they have
come out with excellent, if not great,
music and have essentially remained
the same innocent crew {the word
innocent was suggested by a third
party; I'd prefer to call them nice
guys). Though the Beach Boys
haven't exactly finished last, much
of their music .and the Wilson genius
has been ignored by the general
public.
One out of three
At the concert the audience only
got a chance to ignore only one of
the Wilsons. Brian doesn't do
concerts anymore. He spenm; his
time back at their studio living up to
his reputation as a weird genius.
Dennis didn't make the concert
either. He and James Taylor were
probably playing out a Rudolf
Wurlitzer scene somewhere. It's too
bad because I was really looking
forward to Dennis singing,
"Forever," but you can't always get
what you want, and I'm sure I L.. get
to hear it somewhere along the line.
How about having them here, eh?
This is the first time that I had
ever seen the Beach Boys. I was

always a bit hesitant to see them in
concert because I never could really
believe that they could reproduce in
concert the sounds that I had come
to know on record . The first inkling
I had that they could was when I saw
them on TV on the "Central Park
Concert." On the show they did
"Heroes and Villians" with such
incredible grace and ease that I was
quite taken back.
The Fredonia concert lived up to
all the expectations that the TV
show gave me. Listing th~ songs
would be like compiling a Beach
Boys grea~est hit album. What
provided the most interest to me was
the solo numbers they did .
Mike Love, the onlv

non-instrument member of the group
got to sing his song, " Student
Demonstration Time," which is an
adaption of " Riot in Cell Block
Number Nine." Except for when he
was playing something called the
theramin (they use it in "Good
Vibration"), Mike spent the rest of
his time on stage pantomining the
words to the songs and making cute
comments. He could of been
obnoxious, but he was a Beach Boy.
AI Jardine got to sing two solo
numbers. The first one was off of the
Sur's Up album called. ' 'Take Good
Care of Your Feet." This is a vastly
profound song and it's the first sonq
ever to advocate toe
-continued on tast ~~ of Prodl~l Sun-

'Ivan Denisovitch'

A chronicle of emptiness
by Elliot Krieger
Sp«trum Film Cr1tic

Casper Wrede, producer and
director of One Doy In the Life of
Ivan Denlsovlch, deserves credit for
posing himself, and to some extent
Solving, a question which I assume
has been orbiting the cinematic
circles ever since the publication of
Solzhenitsyn's book stunned the
literary
a nd
diplomati c
communities in
1962. The
question - how to make an
interesting movie about drudgery,
about the horror of a life void of
variety .
Many directors must have been
tempted by this book - from the
left because One Day is an
indictment
of fascism
and
revisionism, from the right because
it is an indictment of Soviet
policies. Moreover, it is a major
work on a minor scale, easy enough
to film in 90 minutes while leaving
nothing out and containing a
sc:reen play that could practically
write itself. But still, how is one
dreary, depressing day of one
shrewd but hardly radical or

incisive Soviet poli tical prisoner to
be
transformed
from
diamond - in-the -ro ugh
to
screen-gem?
Possibleviewpoints
The novel offers glimme(s -of
possibilities. A "democratic" JUm
would emphasize character
T seza r,
the
sophisticated
Muscovite who receives packages
and discusses Eisenstein; Fetiukov
("that jackal") who whines and
complains and will clearly not
survive;Tiurin the team·leader who
inspires a quiet respect and the
complete devotion of his men .
These three roles are admirably
acted (by whom, the inadequate
creditiflg does not tell us.). Yet, in
the spirit of the novel, character
remains an element of the
background, pa.r t of this film's
definition, not of its content.
A
socialist
film
would
I
emphasize the communality of the
prisoners, especially in their
to
their
daily
relationship
construction work. This film,
however, treats the building of the
a further
power station u

...

drudgery, a necessary part of a
struggle for a slightly higher bread
ration.
Unfo rtunately , this film takes
no
clear
political
stance,
maintaining its level of interest
essentially through illusionary
devices. We are treated to more of
S ve n
t'-1 y k vis t 's
Land -of
the-Midnight-Sun
photography,
which gives the "special prison
camp" an illuminated, colorful
aura! Arne Nordheim 's futuristic
music is also quite interesting,
although it too stands aloof from
the point of One Doy.
We shouldn't be made to think
of One Doy as fictional, as
futurisitc; rather, it should be an
historical document, and, by
extension, a chronicle of political
oppression even in the present
• moment - iA tropical and in
temperate climates as well. I
overheard a man in the audience
saying that it's "hard to believe
that all this~ctually happened." He
may have been right, and if so,
Wrede's film is at fault for making
this even harder to believe.
In ruding a book it is wy to

believe that we are reading about
the commonplace; we can accept
this day's being like any one of
3000 others. Film is something
else. We expect film to capture the
exceptional - if fictional, to
include sundard exciutionaJ plot
devices which our more educated
ustes might scorn In 'printed
fiction; if documentary to be a
record of something which

happens so rarely that it was
certainly worthy of preservation
on film, in other words, "news."
We can acupt Solzhenitsyn's
book n a tragic chronicle of
fatalistic resistance, and what's
more, u a compendium of
information about Soviet prison
life, but in the film we expect
iOmething more. Perhpu Rona.ld
-continued on following~

I

�A chronicle. • •

-continued from previous

Harwood was riJht in emphasizing
in the screenplay the tension
Detween guards and prisoners,
::ompletely ignoring any aspects of
muwal sympathy. By doing so he
created at least enough of the
goundwortc for a plot to keep our
interests, if not perked, at least
always in the c~ffee pot.

1096 DISCOUNT
With student ID card

LARGEST

SELECTION

OF JEANS AND TOPS
THAT MAKE IT HAPPEN!

KlEINHANS MUS IC HALL
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21 -

8:00 P.M.

JOHN DENVER
ss.so. s•.so - e.,,. s•.so.

53 .50

TJckets avall8ble at Norton Union Ticket Office

NOW
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North Park
101 HIITIL

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-,

But it is this constant
readiness·is·afl anxiety which One
Doy produces in us which brings us,
in fact, to the film's greatest flaw .
At every moment we expect hope for - some opposition, or
crisis at least, which will alter the
emptiness of the movie, make One
Doy a special day. Of course, just as
the crisis never comes from I van
Denisovich, it never comes in the
film. What he feels is a weariness
and an anxiety; what we feel is a
disappointment and a tension. We
are, finally, never in alignment with
I van
Oenisovich's
feelings.
Considering we have spent the day
together, we know remarkably
little abou t each other. If we do
know something about the Soviet
"special camps," it is nothing
which we couldn 't extrapolate
from prisons which we know about
already.
How do you make a film about
emptiness if you elect to use
neither character, passion nor
irony (fictional elements which are
excluded in the name of
documentary realism)? You make
the documentary look like fiction,
doctoring it with beautiful light
and sound which may distort the
image, but at least hold attention
by creating an illusion.

WK8W 1nd THEATRE SERIES Prc1cnts

Orch.

~

'TIL 2P,M.

ALL SEATS

F

75¢

S

Arkansat, Adios, • Ulrlous no~ by Earl M«R11uch
(Knopf, $3.50}

Rich• ~nd Ftmeand the PteasuresofSenteby K11thy
Bl«k (Knopf,$3.50}.

New fiction, especially new experimental fiction,
faces greater hazards In the publishing business than
almost any other kind of writing. At this time most
major publishing houses are decreasing the amount of
fiction (of any type) that they publish each season.
Fiction that does get published is sold for phenomenal
prices (although I am interested in John Updike's new
novel Rabbit Redux, I doubt that I would spend eight
dollars or more to buy a copy).
Many major experimental novelists are dropping
out of the field - the short story seems to be the
popular mode. The number of people writing short
stories (among them Borges, Barthelme, Robert
Coover and William Gass) vastly outnumber the
people who write modern novels (among them John
Hawkes, John Barth and Vladimir Nabokov) .
In these rather perilous straits, Alfred Knopf (a
comparatively adventurous publishing firm, in any
case) has moved forward to fill the gap. Under the
general nickname of "Borzoi Puppies," Knopf is
publishing a series of experimental and first fiction by
young writers. Hardcover fiction is expensive, but this
publishing house has maneuvered their costs so that
the booU can be bo~t for around three and a half
bucks (around half the price of the normal hard-cover
novel) .
Last week, I received two new books in this series.
The first, ArkllnSijS, Adios, is by Earl Mac Rauch. Mac
Reuch published his first book when he was 19 called
Dirty Plcturw from the Prom. It was sufficiently
interesting to make me look forward to this one. Now,
at the age of 22, Mac Rauch has shown (hopefully this
is not a final statem~t in Mac Rauch's case) that
bizarre impulses and comic charliCters are no longer
sufficient to make up a modern novel; that youthful
ebulliance doesn't replace good writing.
Mac Rauch (who is pictured on the back cover
sinlng, drinking a Or. Pepper and looking like a
cartoon version of a young novelist) has stocked this
rather mundane novel with a cast of comic characters
who are singularly unamusing. There is Lester Long
(brother, perhaps, to the mythic Lucy Long of J.D .
Salinger fame). He is a 12·year-old who has
miraculously been sleeping around since he was nine.
His idea of a good joke is to arouse a local 14-year-old
(who has somehow had transitive affairs with every
traveling salesman who drops into Red Mound, Ark.)
and get her to the point of frenzy . Atthis juncture he
pours kerosene into her orifice (very sophisticated) .
It is not that such an escapade is shocking to me;
it's that such escapades are almost predictable within
the frame of black humor and thoughtless writing.
Here's a cardinal rule: if nothing's happening in your
novel , why not bring things alive with an enema
amtqralus, with the grotesque humor of a rectal
operation, with the outrageous delight of writing
about characters that eat their own shit? Why not?
That kind of 'why not?' aura permeates this
whole book : Why is Lester's sister named Bolivia?
Why not? Why does Lester's mother throw a TV set
and a sewing machine out the window. Why not?
Towards the end of the book one gets the feeling
that the author has incorporated this random frenetic
writing into his novel in order to reveal the
tonelessness and boredom that ultimately describes
the life in this small town. Without a-eating
sympathetic characters, characters we can relate to
because of their comic yearnings or behavioral quirks,
this kind of plotting can never be effective. At the end
of the book people get married, the pseudo·villain runs
away, things are unendurably happy.
We are obviously meant to wonder about what
will happen to linle ~ecocious Lester Long. Where
will he go? What can he db7 When will he cry out,
" Arkansas, Adios! " Personally, I didn't much care.

WED., NOV. 24
MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM
1:00 ' ·"'·

I :JO I&gt;.M.

s~~;=-.:~~~2

I

MUSIC HAll

•

•

•

•

In a much more optimistic vein, Kathy Black's
Riches and Fsm11 and th11 Pleasures of Sense is
definitely a step In the right direction. Billed by the
novelist as a romlln vtNittJX, the novel deals with the
problems of writing in fresh and rejuvenated ways.
More importantly it deals with the problems of living a
life outside of literatur~ and finding a future away
from the college.
One would expect that such a novel would be
incredibly self-reflective, involved with its own artifice
and dangerously teetering into the pretentious. None
of this is true.
One would also expect that a novel dealing with
the futurelessness of our generation would be patent
and obnoxious like Tht1 Stnlwberry S~tement . This is
not true either. The last thing that Kathy Black's book
is, is cutesy. Nor is it gutsy and bleak in the style of
Hemingway's "Lost Generation." It directly addresses
its audience in an inventive and interesting way.
The author has interviewed her friends in college
at Columbia and friends traveling about in France
about their furures. These interviews are interwoven
with carefully wrought descriptions of the people and
their physical positions. Sometimes the description
parodies traditional novel style. Sometimes scenes and
phrases are repeated . Sometimes a tape is played back
during a new scene and a peculiar inter-mingling of
multiplex realities it the result.
It is the cut·up method, in part, to be sure, but it is
devastatingly opposite in its effect to the work of
William Burroughs. Burroughs is all climax and no real
self-analysis. Borges (and Barth) make the case that
writing should be a perfect combination of "algebra
and fire ," of thought and emotion. Kathy Black
presents us with a subtle and unique blend of the two.
Conversations, tapes, journals, letters and straight
narration combine in the novel , just as do all our
varying hopes for Marxism and communality, for
marriage and secority. All the poles are elCamined nothing Is left untouched . lf Miss Black cannot furnish
a final answer, it is because there is none.
I have one objection, and I fear that it is a serious
one. Often when watching a cinema verite piece, I
begin to wonder why I don't quit , walk out and leave
the theater Someone else's mundane daily activities
do not really interest me. That is not our traditional
view of the creation of a work of art.
Simtlarly, although I really liked Kathy Black's
skill for collage and her adeptness at transcribing
personal despair, l don't quite understand why I didn't
just stop reading it. This is a flaw built into the style of
the novel. It doesn ·~ mar the work irreparably, it just
intensifies the personal confusion of the reader. In a
book that confronts us with a life without a future, I
find additional confusion (why go on?) almost
painful.
Reading that last paragraph I have discovered that
tt is hi~ly complimentary . What a good surprise finally a first novel that works successfully against
itself. Kathy Black is anewvoicetobereckonedwith.
I hope she has another book out soon.
-M. Silverblatt

~ABPENTEBS
f.-t Floor Goldt &amp; Rodt, $6.00 ltoor floor &amp; lluot, $5.00
Gror• &amp; Orane••· $&lt;1.00

SAT., DEC. 4
KlEINHANS
MUSIC HAU

If the above is not enough to keep you away from
the book, the entire book is written in an unbearable
bumpkin..geoial dialect in which exchanges like this
are common :
"What you do with Cartoon Dog's dish?"
"I done flung it out of the window."
" I thought you end Cartoon Dog was friends."
"Not since he laid that turd on my bed this
morning."
Such dialogue and even dummer narrative style are
endurable in only a brief patch. Unlike the creation of
a distinctly American-colloquial style in Huckleberry
Finn, .Mac Rauch's style made me wonder whether
Mac Rauch is semi-literate himself.

GORDON

.LIGHTFOOT

MAIN ROOtt, $UO • $&lt;1.50

J .t1l1
..- ..,,~s
Y.
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-..rG

Al
.t1l1~

__._:_
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_. _·_______MAJ
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oo R_
, S_s_.s_o_·_:S_4_:.S_:,O_ _:,BA:.:.:L=O::N.:_:Y:_:•_:.S•.so . $4 .00
Ticbts .,. ..1o now at luHalo F..tivol Tiekot Offico, Stott.-HittN a..ttltr {-II orcle~ to«epto4 with
IteM~ ..w..-wrouocl onvolo!N); U.l . Nort.,. HaH; Stato C.U..O Ticket Offico; Folk TKlrots. HaoiNrlo
, ..... Nla. .,. Felt1..

�CotOSMUrp Uve W.mr Brothen (2XS
1942)

,.

RECORDS

Live albums are more or less a one shot
deal . If the group involved makes a mistake
during the concert, they hurt the quality of
their lp. That's why it takes a tight,
well-rehearsed group to come out with 8
great live album. If the group 'has a great
sound, along with well-arranged tunes, their
live album will exhibit it. This is the exact
case with Colosseum. Colosseum plays their
pieces with a heavy, driving force that is
unmatched in the rock world today and is
captured on their new, double live album.
A good friend of mine went to England
this summer and saw Jack Bruce do a gig in a
small pub. Next to the stage he saw Dick
Heckstaii.Smith, a one time member of John
Maya ll's
troup,
hanging
out.
Heckstaii.Smith has played with Bruce and
Bruce's influence has been Incorporated into
Heckstaii.Smith's saxophone playing.
In "Skelington" he plays two saxophones
at the same time in unbelievable perfect
harmony and takes a lead that is smooth,
precise and flowing . QuiCk, heavy drumming
backs up his lead, along with adequate
rhythm guitar work by Dave "Clem"
Clempson. Colosseum's sound rages on like a
river going down a steep mountain and their
beat is awesome.
Col~m Lilltl was recorded at the
University of Manchester and the lively
crowd is very receptive. In "Lost Angeles"
the people clap along with Dave Gleenslade's
speedy organ work. Greensllde makes his
organ climb up and down the scale with
original and unusual fashion . His playing
blends in wetl with Heckstaii·Smith's sax
work and Jon Hiseman's (another Mayall
graduate) drumming forms the center of
their heavy, jazz sound. In "lost Angeles,"
Greenslade plays the vibes and Chris
Farlowe sings;
HINVI 11m I alone in this city, hey now
kitty,
I just Wllnn.leBve and get .tWIIY from Lost
An(/(llt!S
Tht~nJ's 11 great city smog t1Nt'6 driving
meoutoftown
I don't w11nt to be here
I don't want to be around, takemeaway
ifyoup/Hse
I do not want to live in Lost Angeles
No, / don 't want to lilltlhllfVII
Clempson then goes into his lead and
extracts a rich crying sound from his les

un!versity
un1on
activities
board

Paul to demonstrate how badly Farlowe . that is hidden inside of you by turning
doesn't want to live in " lost Angeles."
yourslef on to Co/opt~um Live
''Tanglewood '63" is my favorite cut on
the album. The song has a happy melody as
-Sheldon KIJmienlscki
Heckstalf-Sm ith 's saxophone playing sounds
like somethlngs out of the' Mothers of
Invention's repertoire. He bombards you WEATHER REPORT (ColumbiiJ C 30661)
with quick staccato notes at different ranges
Weather Report is a new group
as Hiseman accompanies him on drums.
Then they all come in in perfect unison and consisting of Joe Zaqinul (electric piano).
Wayne Shorter (soprano sax). Miroslav
finish the cut in a hard,driving fashion .
" Rope ladder to the Moon" is another Vitous (bass), Airto Moreior (drums) and
excellent cut as Greenslade starts the song Alphonze Mouzon (percussion) . They've
off on vibes. The sound eminating from his put together a rather unique album,
vibes causes you to envision a ro~ ladder although there's nothing very surprising on
being let down from the moon to the earth. it.
What sets this record apart from the rest
You know the ladder hits the earth when
do~ not stem from any one thing in
particular. The difference is one of general
feeling .
Usually, when there is music, something
will spring from it and develop, and just
when this new idea takes shape, another
grows out from within that, and forever
onward to new and greater depths. A
constant flow of creation - that's what
jazz is all about.

Hiseman comes in banging his bass drum
furiously . Then the whole band comes in
and from here the melody of the song is
solitlfied. At the end of the piece they all cry
out;
Go rope llldder,
Go ropslllddr,
•
Go rope lllddr to th• moon1
Each song on Nch disc is professionally
arranged. There aren't any notes that are
wasted as each member of Coloseum never
plays to excess. Their music is honest and to
the point as each instrument helps develop
the desired mood by coming in at a
particuliar moment, playing in a particuliar
fashion and then leaving at a certain time.
Their music expresses a force that is hidden
inside each one of us, just waiting to be
released. Experience the release of that force

We11ther Report is sort of a twist on
that. The creative search does not come
from within the music, but from outside it
- it seems to be the result of a search. In
itself, it's not an act of exploration. The
feeling generated is not one of great
emotion or urgency, but closer to
contentment and security.

More specifically, the music is very
restrained and somewhat impersonal. No
one stands out, no one gets emotional.
There is nothing individual in it and there
are no dominating sounds. Everyone plays
all the time, except on " Eurydice," a cold
but lively number where Wayne Shorter
takes the lead . There are no solos or
breaks.
Normally, when five guys all play at
once, they tend to feed on each other,
leading to more and more intense feelings.
With Weather Report , this doesn't happen,
so the level of intensity remains pretty
much the same. There aren't any build-ups
or climaxes.

The result is, .,rprisingly enouglh, a
success. What's happened is that the five
have merged into a sense of oneness. The
group is the blending of its components.
With the exception of "Eurydice'' and two
others, the music is smooth and calm with
a heavy emphasis on harmonizing,
particularly by Wayne Shorter who plavs a
full and deliberate soprano sax .
The drums sound more like a percussion
section - light and subdued. The accent is
on producing sounds rather than rhythms
and every sound is delicate and carefully
placed. Airto Moreiro and Alphonze
Mouzon seem to be "using" the drums to
create certain effects, rather than
"playing" them as self expression. In fact ,
no one plays their instruments for self
expression at all.
During the fast numbers " Durydice,
Seventh Arrow. a Umbrellas," - I felt a
great urge to beat out the rhythms and
really get into them , but instead of the
songs reaching some sort of emotional peak
or a h igher level of excitement, they were
played with the same kind of detachment
as the slow songs. It felt like there was
something missing, something substantial.
The slow songs - "Orange lady,
Morning Lake," and "Tears" - have that
same feeling. They are all rich with
beautiful harmonies and a pleasure to listen
to, but there is something curiously
ambiguous about them . A friend of mine
ptJt it as the "sound5 you hear at night and you don't know what they are."
Isn't it obvious? Weather Report plays
the music of your dreams.
listen to it as you go to sleep.
- Norman Sa/ant

presents a Weekend of

·;ENTERTAINMENT

I

The UUAB Coffeehouse Committee
Presents

Doc Watson

The UUAB Fine Arts Film
Committee Presents

With
(On . riday) Pf!9 Leg Frog
and h•s
Motley Crew
(On Saturday) Friend of Fiddlers Green

Friday &amp; Saturday
Fri.-Sun. Nov. 19-21
Conference Theatre
Tickets
SOc before 6
75c after 6

November 19 &amp; 20

Tickets at
Norton Ticket Office
CONFERENCE THEATER

liMN....
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First Floor Cafeteria
Tickets $1 in advance
$1 .25 at door
Tickets at Norton Ticket Office

' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A Divisio11 of Sub Board I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __..

�Beach Bop ...
consctousness (I didn't say thatsee Mike Love). I think it's a fun
song, and one that's clearly Beach
Boy consciousness. The other song
AI did was, "The Welfare Song,"
which he did on acoustic guitar.lt's
probably the dosest thing the
Beach Boys have to a folk song.
'
Pt~~~eeful Carl
the
only
Carl
Wilson,
representative of the brothers, also
sang two songs. The fir~ was,
"Long Promised Road " and is one
of my favorites off the last album.
The other song was an acoustic
guitar solo of a beautiful Brian
Wilson song called , "Caroline No."
Carl has an incredible peaceful
feel ing surrounding him and
listening to him provided at least a
moment of peaceful harmony for
me.
The last mernbet" of the group to
have a solo spot was Bruce
Johnson. Bruce did a song from the
last album called, "Fantasy World
and Disney Girls." Bruce called lt a
song of innocence, but it always
reminded me of the same type of
innocence of a . Randy Newman
song. Perhaps it can be termed a
song of lost innocence, but clearly
written by someone who views the
subject somewhat tongue in cheek .
Bruce gave such a nice performance
(AI even applauded) that it's too
bad he didn't sing a second song.
All In all the Beach Boys
certainly gave everyone their
money's worth (it only cost two
dollars) . The only part of the
concert that really bothered me
was the audience at the end of the
concert. It seems such a shame that
people go to concerts and always
fall into the same patterns.

-c:onUnued from front ~
of Procll~l Sun-

Someone always has to stand up to
boogie regardless of the fact that
people might be sitting down
behind h im. The audience will start
shouting out requests though the
band has only completed their
second number.
The most annoying part is the
way the audience tries to own the
band . In this particular instance,
the Beach Boys did two encores
consisting of five songs. This is
after what was by no means a short
concert. The game seems to be to
try and bring the performers out
until they're forced to draw the
line.
I literally felt embarrassed
surrounded by 2000 people
stamping their feet trying to get the
Beach Boys out to do a third
encore. This occurrence leaves me
both sad and a little wary . Wary
because engaging in these mass
inane games only indicates a lot of
shortcomings in the "third world"
consciousness or whatever you
might want to call it, and leaves me
wondering where these games will
lead.
Sad , because knowing that
people would try and force the
Beach Boys to do a third encore
signals to me that perhaps they
weren't really listening to the
concert at all and really have little
appreciation of the artists.
Oh well, that's only my opinion.
Oh yea, I shouldn't forget to
mention the back-up band - they
tNeredynamite. Surf's up.
-surfK boy

rstar at Auditorium
lac}(j both taste and vitality
JC

Jesus Christ Superstar hit
B u f fa I o 's
Memoria 1
Auditorium last Friday night.
The rock opera, which has
done so well as to be piped
into the Vatican, has certainly
raised a few eyebrows among
the older set. For this member
of the younger set, though, it
brought eyebrows and eyes
down to a position not too
diffe-rent than
that of
sleeping.
The score for J .C. is
probably one of the dullest,
most insulting attempts at
popular music ever penned by
any "Hey, let's write a hit
opera" team yet. When the
music was not being played
with the force of a napping
kitten, it succumbed to every
rock cliche imaginable. 1t 1
want to hear those, 1 can
throw on "Sister Ray " by the
Velvets, which has both more
religion and about 30 times
more vitality (interesting
analogy, huh?).
Libretto-wise, we have a
half-hearted attempt to make
Jesus' story into a snappy
little musical. Any t_!_me you

•

try to take a subject that not
only is known· by everyone,
but is also pretty important to
their lives, you've got to be
careful. You can step on an
awful lot of toes and infuriate
quite a few people. It's a sign
of the times that a lot of folks
actually think this thing is
good.
lame and stumbling, the
manner in which Jesus'
undoing is presented should
shock any Christian. But
what's religion these days
anyway? Just another form of
entertainment, 1 suppose. A
place for the gang to hang out
on Sunday mornings to show
off their cars, their furs, their
kids. Listen, it shocked me
and I'm Jewish .
-~
I
found
it
almost
intolerable to listen to people
cheer King Herod's vaudeville
tune, with its lines like "walk
across my swimming pool."
As a matter of fact, that song
was the show stopper, which
just goes to show that no one
listem to lyrics nowadays
anyway.
All the time I listened to
J .C. Superstar, I could only
think of the days of the
Greeks,
when
playrights

w o u Id
b r lng
their
interpretations of the myths
to the festivals. Now everyone
there knew the myths inside
out, so plot·wise, the author
could not realty change too
much. But he would delve
deep into the mysteries of
Greek religion, into the nature
of the gods and the humans
and try to work some order
out of the chaos, doing so
with a reverence and devotion
to both religion and art.
The Superstar show, on the
other hand, tries to picture
Jesus as a modern superstar,
revelling in his own glory and
popularity until it all crashes
In on him. Heavy, right? A lot
of thought went into that
conclusion. No special points
are brought up to back up this
claim. We're just told to take
it and believe it for a few
hours.
As Jesus' body flew up to
heaven, mirror balls were lit,
so that all of the Aud was lit
up with moving stars. Right
on. And for an encore,· the
cast came out, Jesus included .
I guess that was the
resurrection.
- Bllly Altman

PRESERVERS OF GOOD OLD ROCK AND ROLL

&amp; SYMBOL
SAT. DEC . 11 -8:30

PE \C:E fliUUt;E EX. C:EYrt-:te
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lilt.\ IICK[IS •1 Ar&amp;£11U I'\. AlA NIAOIIRA fALLS eorr•1 0 rr'TIII
~liUIIII

.. II TON LCle8Y

OPEN 'TIL MIDNlTE TONI'l'E!
Hundreds of Store Specials:

I

TOPLP's
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to the

\\bodshed.

Your boea. Your
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fantasttc chacken wings and
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peanuts to shuck, giant eize
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It's atric&amp;ly com e-as-yo'u.are
to T~e Woodshed, where
the katchen'e aJwaye open
and the muaic'a always on
~he Woodshed. Located ·
!'Jiht next to the Packet Inn
Jn North Tonawanda. Drive
out Delaware or take the
"!oun1mann.TheWoodlhed'a
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Avenue Bridce. Open from
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61 UNIVERSITY PLAZA

837-2322

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.

SpECTI\UM

THE
V~l

22, No. 35

'
.
S1ate Univnty of New York at Buffalo

Wednelday, November 17,1971
\

" Migrants
... the forgotten people

-mcnlece

see pages 7 through 10
.

I

�Unjust treatment charged

Consumer nretection Angela Davis case continues
groups are formed

Recent visits by consumer student activity fees. The money
protection advocates have Jed to would be used to hire a staff -of
an increased consumer awueness lawyers, doctors, engineers and
and the formation of two new researchers, who, with the aid of
interested students, will examine
groups at this Univemty.
local
problems. Buffalo State
With greater manpower and
some funds, CAC's new Coosumer. Mental Hospital and Tonawanda's
Protection group will be fully Union Carbide were cited as
equipped to investigate and try to possible targets for investigation.
Reaction in Hayes Hall to the
alleviate consumer problems. This
proposed
Research Group was
is the situation as seen by Andrea
largely
positive.
Vice President for
Nager, who, with Lisa Schulman,
Student
Affairs
Richard
heads the Consumer Protection
Siggelkow
called
it
"an
group.
appropriate activity which I'm not
During an interview Saturday,
going to oppose." When informed
Ms. Nager listed the goals of the
that students would be sought to
consumer organization, the main •
aid
the
professionals,
Dr.
concerns being the familiarizatiqn
Siggelkow suggested that "credit
with student-consumer complaints
rrtight be glven. It looks like an
and the implementation of
exciting concept, and if it falls
solutions. Ms. Nager hoped,.
within the guidelines as an
however, the group would also be
educational activity, it should
able to sponsor · speakers for
have no problem getting the
consumer education and provide
administration's approval.''
legal guidelines for consumer
The Consumer Protection
protection.
group already has in operatio n a
Meanwhile, the first meeting of project to compare products by
the proposed Western New York unit-pricing them in order for the
Public Interest Research Group group to compile a guide for the
was held in Trailer Seven last best buys, according to Ms. Nager.
week. Pattemjng itself along the The Consumer Protection group is
lines of Ralph Nader's Washington also waiting fo r feedback from the
organization, the Research group blue boxes that have been situated
is attempting to establish a throughout the campus. These
student run and operated body, boxes were designed to colJect
with an orientation towards written
co mplaints
about
consumer
prot ect i on, products from irate customers.
environmental preservation and
corporate responsibility. The Involvement urged
seeds of this group were sown by
The
Consumer
Protection
Donald Ross, one of Nader's group plans to work with the
Raiders, dudng his. visit to the now ·being .fotmed
Research
University on Nov. 5.
Group. Ms. Nager mentioned the

.

The Research Group's proposal
would require a two dollar raise in

Charlene Mitchell, East Cout Committee
Chairman of the 'Committees to Free Angela ·Davis,
will speak on Ms. Davis and her upcoming trial
tonight at 8 p.m. In the Fillmore Room. Her speech
is being sponsored by the Buffalo Committee to Free
Angela Davis in conjunction with the Student
Association.
In an interview Friday night, members of the
Buffalo Committee to Free Angela Davis discussed
the events surrounding Angela's faring as an
instructor at UCLA by the University of California
Board of Regents. They also commented on charges
of conspiracy against Ms. Davis in the Madn County
Court House shooting incident last year.
According to Betsy Hartwell, a committee
member : .. It goes without saying that this is not an
isolated case." Another member, James Lawler,
pointed out that Ms. l&gt;'.avis has been in jail for over a
year now, despite the fact that the Marin County
probation. counselor recommended that she be
released on bail.
Mr. Lawler said that there we.re very cogent
reasons for her release on bail. One, her health is
imperiled. He said that she has received very little
excercise. Also, she is now suffering from glucoma,
an eye impairment better known as "tunnel vision."

Bail demanded
Two, she needs to be released in order to have
the freedom to prepare her defense. Ms. Davis has
already been granted the right to act as her own
co-counsel in her case.
Currently. the Buffalo Committee to Defend
Angela Davis is distributing a petition calling for her
release on bail. They hope to get a million signatures
to say that "one milJion believe she's being unjustly
treated," Mr. Lawler said.
In discussing the events leading to Angela's
firing at UCLA, Ms. Hartwell said: "There was no
practical reason for her firing other than political
reasons." She claimed that it was because Angela was
"working to build mass support for the Soledad
Brothers and the Black Panthers."

AI a result, she said, Angela was finally fired by
the UC Regents and later charted with co~pifacy in
the Marin County Courthouse shootout. Ms.
Hartwell said that this came about because what
Anaela was doing was working. "Her work
constituted a threat,'' she said.
Ms. Davis is accused of purchasing guns for use
by Johnathan Jackson, brother of Soledad Brother
George Jackson, when he attempted to bring about
the
escafC attempt. However, the

,

Angela supporters

~rleNchet

committee members noted, Angela purchased the
guns because of numerous threats on her life. Mr.
Lawler pointed out that she had, at one time or
another, received more than ISO letters threatening
her life.
Frameup
Regarding her alleged involvement in the
shootout, Mr. Lawler discounted it. "Angela was
always involved in large groups. This escape attempt
was not the type of political activity that Angela was
engaged in."
He charged that the government "Is trying to get
Angela because what she did were popular acts.
They're not really after her because of the individual
-continued on PliQe 5-

possibility of asking the Student
-continued on Pllll• 5-

books

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THRUSDAY
9:00p.m.- 12 midnite

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T.,•phontt: A,.. QxJe 116; Editori•l

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Dear Old Schussmeister,
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Not long/ In fact there are only 9 days left that the office is open for
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21 -

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ADDRESS YOUR QUESTIONS TO:
The Old Schussmeister

JOHN DENVER .
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1\

Page two. The Spectrum. . Wednesday, November 17, 1971

�Final verdict in students' tfial
finds them guilty as charged
by Jim Mcferson
SP«trum Staff Writer
With the final verdict in, five
former University students were
convicted of disorderly conduct
and two of their number found
guiJty of mi•demeanors. The
defendants - Bill Ford, Sberilyn
Levy, Norman Slawsky, Jim Sober
and Robert Steinborn - were
expeUed this 'summer after being
aneated
June
28,
at
a
demonstration
protesting the
auaperuion of David Levy.
Altbou&amp;h
the
defendants
seemed to feel the rope around
their necks at the outset of the
week-long trial, their mood
briahtened when tho jury apent
over two hours in deliberation
(hoping perhaps that one of the
elderly members was holding out).
Such hope vanJsbed, however,
when the foreman read off the six
especially
those
convictions,
flndin&amp; Ford guilty of resisting
arrest and Sober guilty of assault.
Ms. Levy, who was herself
acquitted of assault and resisting
arrest, observed that the resultsonly two convictions on the six
misdemeanor charges broUJ)lt
apinat the five - were a victory
of sorts. However, the defendants
Friday's TM Spectrum will
be the last paper before
Thanksgiving vacation
(probably). so if you want
to say anything in print,
you better come up to
355 Norton today with
your message - it's Friday's
deadline, and copy after
todaY won't be accepted .
Tough.

seemed resianed rather than
victorious and even less hopeful
about their appeals.
Nevertheless,
those
four
acquittaJs were an unexpected
victory . Slawsky, found innocent
of hJs assault charge, declared it
was "lmpossjbJe to get a fair trial
because this is a country run by
bosses." The five, all members of
SDS, as Ls Mr. levy, have been
politically active in expressing
their
desire
to
form
a
student-worker alliance which
would take power in the United
States. One of their attacks on
racism actually bepn the whole
affair.
The
demonstration
last
summer soupt to force the
openina of a closed disciplinary
hearin&amp; at which Mr. levy was to
explain why he should not have
been suspended for "disrupting"
John
Halstead's
"
Modem
Imperialism" course. levy had
charged that Halst~d's lectures
were racist, and attempted to
force a debate on the issue. Only a
week after the class had started ,
Dr. Halstead requested security
personnel to wait outside his
classroom in case be felt control
of students was needed . When
Levy continued to force the
question of racism in tbe class, by
..haranguing everyone," according
to Dr. Halstead, the professor sent
a letter to President Robert Ketter
chargin&amp;
Levy
with
class
disruption and requestin&amp; his
suspension.
A formal hearing commission,
appointed by Dr. Ketter, then
announced it would hold an
informal , closed session at which
only levy and his attorney or
representative
could
appear.
Thirty or levy's supporters
gathered in Acheson Annex where

the hearing was to be held and
were waiting to enter the hearin&amp;
room when ·st:uffling broke out.
Both sides claimed the o ther
started
it ,
artd
testimony
throughout the trial was highly
contradictory. At any rate,
immediately after the fightin&amp;
began, several uniformed Buffalo
pollee appeared and with the aid
of some plainclothes security
forces, dispersed the group. It was
during this time that the
defendants allegedly committed
the crimes.

Prevailina theme
Still , the five maintain not o nly
that they were innocent or the
charges but that fighting racism
cannot be considered a crime. As
Sober
commented :
" When
anybody fights racism, they will
be attacked , by the University or
the
country ." That
theme
prevailed in the defendants'
statements and was often injected
into their testimony on the stand .
All of their political comments,
however; were deleted from the
record, but not without their
effect on the jury, hoped the
defendants.
Politiciung their trial was, in
fact , an Important goal for the
five, and as Steinborn pointed
out : '"The trial was partly
successful, because over 100
people came out and want to
continue the fight against racism."
On last Thursday and Friday,
there were over 40 spectato rs
crowdina the courtroom, and
their
presence,
argued
the
defendants, served as a deterrent
to
anti-defense
rulings
by
presiding judge Michael Zimmer.
Zimmer, reported the defendants,
had " ruled everything irrelevant "
earlier tn the week but as the

CUT OUT-CIRCULATE , and return to The Sputrum Office, JSS NORTON

Th e S lltdenl A ssociation urge~ you to .'iign and help distribute tiH· j(~ l/owing
nal innal t&gt;&lt;'titinn sponsored by the Law S tuden t.\ Onm &lt;it

WE THE UNDERSIGNED ARE TOTALLY DISSATISFIED WITH
THE RECENT JUSTICE DEPARTMENT DECISION NOT TO
CONVENE A FEDERAL GRAND JURY TO PROBE THE
SHOOTING OF 13 KENT STATE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS ON
MAY 4. 1970. WE NOT ONLY FEEL A FEDERAL INVESTIGATION
IS WARRANTED , BUT THAT IT IS LONG OVERDUE. WITH THIS
PETITION WE DEMAND THE CONVENING OF THAT FEDERAL
GRAND
JURY
SO
THAT ·THE
ATMOSPHERE
OF
CONTRADICTIONS SURROUNDING THIS TRAGEDY MAY ONCE
AND FOR ALL BE CLEARED.
ADDRESS

NAME

courtroom filled · with people
sympathetic to the defense, the
judge was unable to be as blatant.
Draws criticism
It didn't appear, however, that
Judge Zimmer was cowed by
anyone when he announced to the
court after the trial had concluded
that the probable sentence for the
disorderly conduct convictions
would be $200 or 15 days ...And
they can be&amp;in serving that now,"
he snapped, before he was assured
that the defendants would appear
for the sentencina on Dec. 6.
Judge Zimmer drew a aood
deal of criticism during the trial,
from both the defendants and the

spectators. He was often forced to
call for siJence when spectators
lau&amp;hed durin&amp; testimony. Mr.
SJawsky
seemed
particularly
angered at Zimmer, declaring:
'' they ought to add up all the
sentences that Zimmer has ever
given, and make him serve double
that time."
Throughout the trial, the
defendants didn't hestitate to
voice their politics, and some
observe that this might have burt
them when the jury tt'nsidered
the verdicts. But, a.. Sober
concluded : "When enough people
fight back against them, we
expect to win and put them on
trial."

SPA meeting
The Buffalo Center chapter of the Senate
Professional AiiiOclation (SPA) will bo\cl an open
meetina today at noon in Acheson 70 to discu11
salary and economic: issues concemina all non-Health
Sciences faculty and non-teachinJ professionals.
Neaotiecioru wiJJ 10on be re-opened with the
New York State aovemment on these Issues and SPA
Is seekina to develop a position based on local input .
Members are urged to attend.

ORDER NOW!

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PlaN 11ew 3 ...U for IMivlty

Wednesday t November 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Wqe freeze eads

Price ceiling now in effect
RAVENNA, OHIO - A apecial
.,and jury report on the Way &lt;4,
1970 disturbance at Kent State
University In which four atudentl
were shot to death by National
Guardsmen wu ceremonio\.-ly
destroyed by fire on Monday.
Mrs. Lucb De Leone, Portaae
County clerk of courts, acted on
federal court orders, and aet fire
to the report and a copy in a
wastepaper buket in the parldna
lot. The report accused 25 persons
of "deliberate, criminal action" in
disorders precedina the deaths of
the students. The 25 were
indicted by the same arand jury
on rioting cbaraes. U.S. District
Court Judae William Thomaa
ruled on Oct. 16, 1970 in
Cleveland that the report would
prevent the 25 from aettina a fai'
trial.
The defendents
were
scheduled t9 ao on trial Nov. 22,

but a delay wu JrAftted until the
court acta on an appeal by their
attorneys who arpecl that the
report constituted aWJt before
trial One of the defendentJ'
attorneys, David Scribner, called
the report an evil, unlawful
do&lt;:ument, and uid, " mere
expungement from the record is
not aufficient. It must be
expunaed from the minds of the
people."
SAN FRANCISCO - The
Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals ruled Monday that Capt.
Susan Struck of McChord AFB In
Washinaton, the first air force
officer in biltory to ajve birth
while on active duty, can be
discharged
because
of
"a
compelling public interest in not
having pregnant female soldiers in
-contl•nAed on

1)41,. 14-

A.. of mldniaht wt Saturday,
the
tovernment
ended
ill
wap-price freeze, thus maltina all
federaJ employee8 eliJible to
coUect S5 billion in I»Y raises by
mid-1972 . In a list of rula that
wu announced Friday, the COlt
of Uvina Council waived its
requirement that the aovemment
be notified in advance for pay
raises in larae industries fallina
due by Jan. 1 \Older existing
contracts. Th.ls will benefit,
amona others, the United Auto
Workers.
In order to cover the pay
raises, these industries could raise
prices without approval from the
Price Commission. The one catch
is that the price increases are
subject to the 2.5 per cent yardstick for post-freeze increases.
Military employees will get an
almost Immediate S2.4 billion
raise, thus bypassing by a factor
of three the Pay Board 's 5.5 per
cent auideline for wage increases
during Phase II . Voted by
Congress as part of the draft
extension bill to attract an
all-volunteer army by 1973, this
raise is in addition to a
semi-automatic increase for all
aovernment
workers
that
President Nixon deferred until
July I .

controls, but Hf• and annuity
premiums are not.
Civilian federal workers are
el.iaible for in-srade, merit and
lon,evity increues, and will be
eliajble for the $2.&lt;4 billion raiae in
July that they share with tho
military.
The Price Comm.ission bas aet
an averaae nationwide ceilin&amp; of
2.S per cent per year for price
increases, while the Pay Board has
established a S.5 per cent
guid~line for annual pay raises.
President Nixon held a surprise
news conference at the White
House just as the Board was
announcina its exemptions, and
Nixon predicted that 1972 would
be a "aood year." He told
reporters lbat Phase II would
s ucceed "' with
continued
"enormous public support," and
predicted that the controls would
cut the rate of inflation in half
during 1972.
The Pay Board said that the
Construction
Indu stry
Stabilization Committee would
contmue
to
oversee
wage
contracts in the construction
industry during Phase II , in an
effort to reduce settlements
running as high as I 5 per cent.

DOT continues freeze
Blue Cross and Shield controlled
In other exemption rulings, the
council exempted workers making
less thlftl the federal minimum of
S I .60 fro m long-term controls.
Health and accident insurance
pre miums are exempt from the

In New York State, the freeze
on bus, railroad and trucking rates
will remain in effect until Dec. 3 1 •
acco rding
to
the
State
Department of Transportation .
Almost 100 companies in the
three categories have pending

appUcationt for llilber rates, and
many of tho increuea were to
have started Sunday. According to
Commillioner Parter, the purpose
of the extension is to allow the
DOT to examine each case and
determine if the increases are
conaiatent with the Phue n
auidelinel. The Commissioner
uid, "e.ery effort will be made to
expedite the examination. Should
the lncreue be found to comply
with the federal requirements an
appropriate order will be issued to
permit tbe increues to become
effective as soon as possible."
School teachers in New York
City will have a biaer pay check
as of Nov. 20 Their pay raise that
should have been effective Oct. 1
wUI be effective as of Nov. 14, but
will show up on the end of Nov.
check . Oct. I wu the date the
third year of the city's contract
with the United Federation of
Teachers went into effect. The
union a.raues that the raise should
be retroactive, but the Federal
Pay Raise Board must act on that
detail . The increase will cost the
city S50 million, and if made
retoractive, another $8.4 million
will be added to the cost. The
increase amounts to 6 per cent,
which exceeds the 5.5 per cent
maximum , but the union does not
expect any objection from the
Pay Board . President of both the
UF'T and the United Teachers of
New York, Albert Shanker, called
on other school boards to honor
existing contracts now that the
wage price free:r.e has ended.

CA:V:AGES- ~ GONE DI~OUNT
•

•

A~L

4

•

1j

\;

..

.

RECORD PRICES SLASHED

T .P .is .nteans every
record- in the store
.

RECORD PRICE POLICY
LIS 1
';.; 'IH

,:

",1

;l

•I

B

299

c

349

D

399

F

599

SPECIALS
CAVAGES

CAVAGES
Page four. The Spectrum. Wecblesday, November 17, 1971

WEEKLY SPECIALS
SLASHED EVEN LOWER
WESTERN NEW YORK'S LEADING CHAIN
OF DISCOUNT RECORD STORES
(
"WHERE RECORDS COST YOU LESS"

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

�ConsUmer protection ... Angela Davis case.
-continued from

act," he aid.
..We're (the comrnJttee) asking people to defend
an innocent woman. She is also a black woman who
II committed to freeing her own people,.. Mr. Lawler
u.id. He noted that ·~t's import.a nt to see Angela's
struggle for black liberation in this procesS."

~)ate 2-

Association for funds for hirina
professionals. In order to receive
other financial aid, and to show
support for, the development of
such a research program, Ms.
Nager would Uke the signatures of
"20,000 students" to be sent to
Albany.
In reaclion to the Research
Group, Executive Vice President
Albert Somit commented: "An
organization of this kind must
have students involved personaUy.
They should make every effort to
keep
student s
involved ."
Regarding the actual workings of
the organization, Or. Somit
cautioned the group by saying:
" Professionals may have difficulty
working with students, but by all
means, they should get involved ."
Student ~ssociation Treasurer
Dave Barmak also had some
advice
for
the
fledgling
organization. "A referendum
would not be necessary because
the money could be funded
within the student organization.
Adding two dollars in the manner
proposed would be illegal and
against the constitution. All they
have to do Is present a budget and
go through the normal channels,"
explained Mr. Barmak.
Research Group spokesman
Jeff l evin responded to Mr.
Barmak's statement of legality by
saying: " We want to abide by the

Bessie Robinson said that she saw the
eovernment as "a few people dictating to other
people. The law is quoted to the letter to us but
when the law is applied to them, it's a whole new
ball game. They (governmental leaders) never admit
that they've done something unlawful."
Maria Zelman sai&lt;l that "the main thing Is bail.
She's (Angela) pushed around. She was beaten in jail.

'

Hear, 0 Israel

MASS MEETING
on
WEDNESDAY . Nov. 17th

for gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE

at

Phone
875 - 4265

3:30 - room 233 Norton
to discuss

Don~~ldRoss

SA and the administration .
Nevertheless, we may seek out a
consti tutional
amendment."
Referring to the nature of the
organization, Mr. Levin explained :
"The
Research
Group
is
revolutionary in thought, not in
activity.'' Anyone interested • in
further information may find it at
Western New York Public Interest
Research Group's communication
table in Norton Hall from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m.

A~!~I:E!!:~v~N

Jesus uya: " He that believeth on me ,
hath everlastlnalife."
- John 6:47
Believers are passed fr om death to
ure...
- John s :24

?-~~~~~~~

TENURE FOR
DR. J.P. JONES
- King

To beat a woman Wee that il uabett"able... Ms.
Zelman also noted that Angela was put on the FBI's
Ten Most Wanted Ust even tholJih she had never
committed a serious crime before she was charged
with conspiracy.
The members of the committee feel that their
job is an educational one. They said that they waht
to let the public "know what the circumstances of
the case are."
The members have urged all those interested in
working on the committee to come to their meetinp
at the Shaw Memorial AME Zion Church, 453 Porter
Ave.. every Wednesday at 8 p.m. For more
information, call M8 1.0077 or visit the committee
headquarters at 1092 Elmwood Ave.

I
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Wednesday , November 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�... ..

·-

·- ·"' .,.

CIMIII 111111
by Jeff Gnenwald
Being over six months since the present officers of the Student
Association were elected to their various posts, it would seem whoUy
appropriate to undertake a serious appraisal of their performance to
date.
A quick look into the undergaduate student govemmen! shows
that the legislative branch is a mockery, hardly representing the
interests of the student body at large; the judicial branch is still
operating with lame duck members, waiting with eagerness for t~e
formation of a student-wide judiciary which unfortunately seems will
never materialize ; and tbe e.ucutive branch, well, the executive branch
is a pt&gt;culiarity in and of itself.
•
fypical remarks about the members and their governmental
activities are somewhat revealing.
"The functioning can only be called pathetic."
" .. . [the government) isn't .fulftlling its obligations."
Some of these comment• are most astute, however, in all fairness
it must be noted that a few of the members are not morons.
Ordinarily . these remarks wouldn't arouse much interest, as they
reflect the ;verage college student's general view of student
government whomever is in office. However, these statements cannot
be consider;d ordinary because rather than representing the feeling of
just "any student," 'they are the evaluations of the Executive
Committee memben themselves.
It may be abstractly argued, whether or not student government
can play a useful function in a university, other than dispensing funds .
This reporter is one of a diminishing number who feel it can.
Unfortunately, achievement of even the most insignificant sort can
occur only under two d1verse co~ns.
The first is fairly obvious. ~ inv~lves a degree of cohesiveness, that
we must assume is totally lacking in the present crew. This action is by
far the most effective, It proVides, at least a facade of a united Cront, to
any who are interested enough to see what the students are up to.
One member of the Executive Committee described that body as
being made' up of about five fa.c tions. That's pretty hard , since there are
only II members (elected). Two or three people out of J I cannot
generally be considered as a show of solidarity. Vet, that Ia all the
student body aets out of its "leadership." Even if agreement exists
within the body, it is unusual if that agreement is ever visibly
manifested. The personal animosjty is so intense that members disagree
simply for the sake of projecting their ever present egoes.
A government open)y laughed at by its constituency can expect no
more than sim'Uar scorn from the administration it must deal with when
purportedly fighting for student interests.
Judging from the ways the screws have been so well aimed on this
campus thus far this year, the administration has good reason to l11ugh.
It must be pointed out , however, that united action is not the only
way to get anything accomplished in a student government. There is a
slightly more cynical, if perhaps less effective way. This is to simply
acknowledge the fact that the people being deaJt with are complete.
Incompetents, totally ignore them and go about one's work on his own.
Not as much can be done this way, but the avoidance of aggravation
may be incentive enough ,This course has been shown to work a few times this year. The
Internal Revenue Service's decision to order the Bookstore to refund
money was prompted by the action of David Steinwald . The well
functioning Speaker's Bureau is primarily the result of Mark Weiner's
hard work. Lester Golds tein was instrumental in planning the very
valuable Collegiate Symposium. In addition, Dave Barmak must be
commended for just plain competence. A few other examples of
unilateral action probably exist.
The point of all this, as o ne may be wondering, is quite simple. It is
a desperate urge for the symbolic leaders of this University's student
body to give their constituency, in one way or another, the service they
are entitled. It is understood that few students will notice if this plea is
ignored , but it must not be. Either these officials must get off their
damned pedestals and work together for a chance, or, if that is
impossible, do what they can by themselves. Either way , they had
better do something for a change; one o f these years, the survival of
this University may depend on it.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 36

Wednesday, November 17, 1971
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold

Co-Manll(ling Editor - AI Benson
Co-MeMging Editor - Mike Lippmann
A•. Manll(ling Editor - Susan Moss
Busln- Man..- - Jim Drucker
Advertising Manager - Sue Metlentine
C.mpus ..... ..•. Jo·Ann Armeo

..........•.....Howle Kurtz
•.......•....... Bill Vaccaro
City ... . . • ...... Hervy Lipman
Copy ....•..•... Aonni Forman
. ...... ....... •.. Marty Gaul
A.t . ........ Claire Kriegsman
FMture ......... .. ... . ..11~t
Gnlphlc Arts ....... . . Tom Toles

Layout .. . . . .. Maryhope Runyon
A. .... ..... ..........vacent
Lit. 81 Drama .. Michael Sil11erblatt
Music ...... .... , ..Billy Altman
Off.Cempus .. .... Lynne Traeger
~to .......... Marc Ackef'man

. . ..•. . ... Mickey Osterreichet
Sporta • .. .•....... . Bllt'l'y Rubin
Aat . ............ Howie Faiwl

71Hf Spectrum is served by United Press lntwnetional, College{ Press
Service, the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los angeles Times Syndicate and
Liberation Newt Slln/k~t~.
..

Republi&lt;ll!tlon of matter herein without the e1tpress consent of the
Edltor·in.Chief is forbidden.

Editorial pollc:y is determined by the Edltor·in-Chief.

Just a little respept
co-oped by the companies and the reat, hopefully,
I'll be able to afford to pay for when the bills are
due.

To the Editor:

I'm really conJuscd - I was brouabt up with the
idea tbat honest hard work should be met with
My prices are and always have been $3 .87 for a
respect. Anyone who did not try' his best in this life
was looked down upon .'Vet now I find this is not $4.98 list album, and $4.57 for a $5.98 list record.
the case? Hard work, it seems, is met with scorn (or This is no secret and never bas been. Cherie and I
perhaps envy, Mr. S.?). Is making a profit for one's were hoping for a more personal approach In the
effort a ''rip-off?'' We'U make a small profit this year beginning where we could tallc with each customer
- but, as you know, Cherie and I work 8S hours a about his record and perhaps make a better
week. We have to make something to buy other suggestion. We wanted to explain why a record coat
people's products. Is that O.K.? Are we not entitled what it cost. We soon learned that the market was
used to the impersonal department store "A" and
ro this?
As for my Syracuse store, last week's article "D" code system and immediately switched over.
said, "my /lr~t store" was a student store. As the There never has been any monkeying around with
article explained, it no longer is "co-op" because of our prices . . . other than givins our customers a
the realities learned from my first year's loss. A better one than what they had before we opened. I
business bas to make some profit. Is that to be too can sell records for $2 .80 and $3 .4Q - in fact,
I'U go $2.75 and $3 .35 - but, I'll have to return
scorned?
Boy from Syracuse, come and look at my silver S I ,700 of the S2,000 records in stock . A low price
spoon if you will. I've earned every cent of what with no stock and no risk is no trick .
Mr. Syracuse, I suggest you look at your silver
little I have - in fact, 111 probably be supporting
ynu in ten years. ''Bread to open four record spoon before you ridjcuJe someone else who is
stores?'' Two of the four were closed to pay for the earnestly trying to make something of his life.
other two. The bank owns my business at 12 .5%
Bob Meares
inlerest . As for advertising money, much of it is
Record Runner

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman

Surely the previously cited coordinator would not
claim that the center's entire budget is provided b~
We have now h&lt;Ad nearly five months to consider students.
the accomplishments of the illustr.i ous student
If the conduct of the Student Association
bureaucrats who occupy 205 Norton. The tendency
is to merely laugh off their misdealings as amusing bordered on negligence, the conduct of the Puerto
ideosyncracies and let them pass . The problem , Rican organization bordered on the criminal. There
however, is that these clowns have control of large is no possible justification for their use of physical
sums of our money. In many cases distribution of force in attempting to intimidate the Student
this money is an innocuous enough event, but on Assembly into giving them the money. Any group of
occasion the boys come through with flying colors. hoods could barge into an assembly meeting and
A series of events this past week illustrate the force it to take an action against its own will. To say
that this is not quite the way one would wish
ineptitude of which these people are capable.
The Puerto Rican Organization for Dignity . government to function might be somewhat of an
Elevation and Responsibility has been attempting to understatement. If this is the way student
raise some S 13,000 in order to provide scholarships organizations are going to operate, we might as well
for children wishing to attend the Niagara Day Care disband them aJI and let anarchy reign (which is n't a
Center. The Finance Committee of the Student bed idea, but that's another column). It was, in fact.
Association refused not only to allocateS 13,000 but this type of activity for which Nazi Germany became
also any part of that amount. It is not the intent of noted .
this column to claim that PODER should either have
While this running battle has been occupying the
been granted or not granted that request . What I spotlight , the SA has also been busy has.sling
wish to protest is the actions taken on both sides of Sunshine House. At present, Sunshine House consists
the issue before the Executive Committee made its of three telephone lines in a corner of the CAC
finaJ decision not to allocate the money. There is no office and a number of relatively dedicated (for this
question as to the need for a community day care campus) workers. Several weeks ago the Student
center of rhis type. It is a very worthwhile Association promised to provide money for the crisis
undertaking. The actions taken by both the student center to buy a house, provided one could be found
government and PODER are indefensible. however. - and find one they did. It was a three-bedroom
The Executive Committee rejected the request building on Winspear, with University property on
not because they felt that the center was in some either side . The people at Sunshine House were more
way an unworthy projec t. but because they were not than satisfied with their tuck - unfortunately , the
convinced it was a proper expenditure of student SA failed to share their excitement. Jn the ongoing
funds. Once again, the elet:ted leaders of the student tndition of student government (watch out for
g~vernment have lost sight · of the University's number one), they decided that the house did not
obligation to the CQmmunity. No one on either the meet their requirements. Not that it wasn't suitable
Executive Committee or the Finance Committee for Sunshine House ; quite the contrary. It is simply
ever bothered to contact the ,director of the center that the SA is more concerned with whether it
to find out how important the PODER assistance would be able to sell the structure should Sunshine
was. The assertion by one coordinator that the day House ever move out. The fact that students who
care facility was told last year that it would have to had been working for nearly half a year at aiding
attempt to fmd alternative sources before the SA people with aiJ sorts of problems decided that this
would provide any new help is very interesting, but was the best available building doesn't bother them
somehow it doesn't seem relevant 'to the main issue. in the least. As ususal, the bureaucrats on the second
Either the Niagara Day Care Center is a worthwhile floor have proven they are more interested in
outing in which students can participate or it is not . protecting themselves than serving the students.

\

Page six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, November 17, 1971

�...

Migrants' life style a vicious/circle
by Jo-Ann Armao
Travelling vast distances, stopping
for work, picking crops and moving
on. Such is the cyclical life of the
migrants - a people slipping through
society unrecognized.
the larger
Separated
from
community by his migratory life styl
, the seasonal agricultural worker is
excluded from National Labor Law
protection, denied basic welfare and
medical treatment, and labeled as
someone else's responsibility . The
migrant does hard skilled labor, yet
receives the lowest wages and least
status of any American workers. He
has no job security, little formal
schooling and no fixed place in the
nation's economy or culture.
The migrant population - these
Am~rican nomads - are not limited
solely to California or to the West or
South. ihey live anywhere and
everywhere there is work for: their
skills. Harvesting the rich farmlands
on the fringes of Buffalo are
approximately 1100 such migrants
coming from the Southeast United
States, mostly Florida and Alabama.
Predominately black, they work in
52 camps over 'a 400 mile area
picking the New York fruit and
vegetable crops from July to
December.
Life and livelihood
Migrancy is their way of life;
agriculture their livelihood. There is
little choice in their plight as the
Florida summ~rs bring no work and
no money. By buses and by cars,
they come to New York to work and
to live. Their existence is almost
historical for they are the sons and
daughters of sharecroppers and day
laborers tractored off their land. As
one Alabama migrant drawled : "My
pa, well he was always workin' and
farmin' the land ... I am and I guess
my kids will be too ... "
However, there is no regret and
little bitterness, just a tired
resignation and acceptance. Again
and again, the workers in the fields
and orchards explained " I don't have
no choice, I have to go where the
fruit is." Ola May McCain, a
29·year·old black woman from
Florida simply stated : " I come to
New York for one reason, to
live ... there's no work, no money,
no nothing in Florida durin' the
winter ... Ya got to take what ya
can." Mrs. McCain has six children
that she "has to look out and care
for. Can't stay in Florida and let
them starve."
Migrant dreams
Apparent in many migrants is a
quiet pride in what they do. Mrs.
McCoy, a white Florida worker who
travels with her husband and three
children, resents the term "migrant
worker:" " It makes me burnin' mad
to be called a 'migrant' like I was a
bum or something . . . we ·enjoy
what we do, it is what we want to
do." Mrs. McCoy ·wouldn't "swap

. our
life
with
anyone
for
anything ... we work, we save, we
have a good life together." However,
she does dream of buying a trailer to
make life more comfortable.
Others also have their dreams.
John, a migrant for 10 years has four
children and would "like to find a
place to settle down into ... but
there ain't any jobs for that. So I
travel to where the fruit and jobs is."
Another migrant mused that he
would like to spend more time
together with his family: "That is
about the hardest thing - being
away from my wife and the kids.
Wish I could be with them all a' the
time."
Some of the migrants are working
to realize their dreams. There is
Margaret, a stoic black woman from
...E.Iorida, who is saving her wages to
set up a beauty parlor; and there is
the young black man who is working
in the fields so that he can go to
college in January; and there are
more - people picking and saving
and hoping for better homes and
schools and cars and vacations. Both
geographically and mentally, they
are a people constantly on the move
- always working and hoping for
tomorrow.
Used and abused
And they are a used people; toyed
with by the courts, the politicians,
the growers and the nation. Most
work six days a week for as long as
weather permits. They do not receive
minimum wage but rather are paid a
fixed price for a fixed amount of
crops harvested. Additionally, they
must wait for long periods of time
for the crops to ripen or the rains to
stop before they can work and earn
- they receive no just compensation.
There are laws both pending and
existing which prevent migrants from
striking or bargaining or unionizing.
Abused in the fields and in the
courts, they are also forced to
endure inadequate and intolerable
living conditions. They receive little
medical
treatment,
have
no
· recreational benefits and live in small
migrant camps. Their homes are near
the fields. The quality of the houses
differ between the various fa rms.
However, the largest cabin has three
rooms, the smallest one. Many of the
hosues have been condemned but the
migrants still live there despite poor
heating and faulty ventilation.
Similar to their work, most migrants
accept their homes: "I live where I
hafta ... no use complainin' or
cryin' ... you have to put up with
them , that all there is to it,"
philosophized a wizened woman of
61 who has been a migrant all her
life.
By now, most of the migrants
have left the New York farmlands
for the Florida fruit orchards. Even
now, tt:ley are travelling the distances
and toiling in the fields. Forever,
they renew their~ cycles of life and
work and forever do they slip
through society.

Photos by McNiece and Osterreicher

..

Wednesday, November 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�.,

Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday, November 17, 1971

•

�Chicanos survive with poverty
by Howie Kurtz
North Collins, N.Y. is a small farm town
about 35 miles from Buffalo.
Along the main road in North Collins, there
are farms and silos, fields and tractors, dirt roads
and mosquitoes. A closer look off the main road
reveals scattered clusters of worn-down shacks,
bordered by broken beer bottles and garbage. In
the n~rby fields, laborers are toiling under the
mid-day sun, picking tomatoes, strawberries and
grapes. These are migrant workers.
They travel across the country, settling down
for a few months at a time wherever they can find
work. They are Black, Puerto Rican, Mexican.
Most of them are from Texas, California, Florida,
Mexico and Puerto Rico. They work in the fields
and factories of North Collins primarily from
April to October. When it gets cold, they go
elsewhere to try and find work.
Jose Berrois is a Puerto Rican who works in a
North Collins factory. He operates the machine
which cuts beans as they are being processed. He
works seven days a week, from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
His slender frame and youthful features give him
the appearance of a boy 16 or 17. He is
30-years-old. He was forced to quit high school 12
years ago in Puerto Rico to support his family. He
worked as a shipping clerk In New York CitY for
seven years coming to North Collins.
Their plight ignored
Jose is paid $1 .70 an hour. He considered
himself lucky to have a factory job, rather than
working in the fields. He travels back to Puetro
Rico in the winter, to his wife and three children
who are living with his mother. He tries to work
in the winter, biut, as he explains in broken
English: " It is hard to find jobs without a high
school diploma. Once in a while I find
construction work ." He hopes to eventually finish
high school in Puerto Rico.
Next to Jose, Antonio Castro, an old man
with a straw hat, is sipping beer. he is 66-years-old
and looks it. His face and hands have been
wrinkled by the sun, the wind and time. He is also
working in the factory for his family back in
Puerto Rico. Despite his age, he too works 84
hours a week and declares, in Spanish, that he can
"still go a few more."
These migrant workers, and many others in
Western New York, live under impoverished
conditions, and yet their plight goes relatively
unnoticed. George Rivera, a Ph.D. candidate in
Sociology at the State University of Buffalo, is
heading a study documenting the conditions of
Mexican-Americans in the Buffalo area. " Many of
the migrant workers are Mexican-Americans," he
explained, "but most people aren't even aware
that this minority exists."
Univenity inaction
When Mr. Rivera first came to the State
University of Buffalo, he asked the Department of
Sociology if there were any Mexican-Americans
living in the Buffalo area. "They told me there
weren't any," recalled Mr. Rivera, "although I
later
learned
there
are
almost
200
Mexican-American families in greater Buffalo.
People just aren't aware of this minority in
Western New York. They think they all live in the
Southwest."
According to Mr. Rivera, there are
apprqximately 56 Chicano students of coUege age
that would like to attend the UniveFSity but can't.
Some of these studetns are Vietnam veterans.
"There is a quota at this University : so many
Blacks, so many Puerto Ricans, and so on.
Chicanos aren't even included. There are one or
two Chicanos admitted each year," Mr. Rivera
explained.
The Azteca Student Union (for Chicano
students) is supported by both the Black Student
Union (BSU) and Puerto Rican student
organization (PODER), stressed Mr. Rivera . He

indicated that he has talked to the EPIS program
(for minority students) about the Chicanos, but·
nothing was done. "If there's no violence or
threat of violence, this University doesn't do
anything," said Mr. Rivera .
Atrocities
Roque (pronounced Rocky) Ajuilar is one
Mexican- American who was admitted to this
University. He is presently a 23-year-old
freshman, but previously worked in the lettuce
fields near Oswego, N.Y. He picked lettuce 12
hours a day, seven days a week .' He lived "in a
shack like a pighouse, with 12 ~ther people. There
was no heating system, no refrigerator. When it
rained, the water came in," he explained.
Something even worse happened when it
rained. The laborers were unable to work, and
consequently, unable to get piad. Workers were
paid by their output: $ .32 for each box of lettuce
they picked. When it rained, no output, no wages.
"If It rained for a week," said Roque, "you had
no money for food."
There were other atrocities, such as no
medical attention. "One time, two friends of mine
passed out while working," recalled Roque. "The
supervisors just put them outside the field and
made the others keep working." There was one
bathroom building for everybody, with one
shower and a toilet that didn't flush. Another
obstacle was fatigue. "Around 4 p.m., you would
sometimes be so weak you could hardly move,"
said Roque. In this situation, there was
widespread use of pills, marijuana or liquor,
according to Roque, ''so you would be able to
continue."
A detailed examination of the migrant camps
in North Collins reveals conditions almost as bad
as in the lettuce fields near Oswego. There are
dirty wooden shacks that one would think have
been long abandoned, except for the dingy
curtains in the windows. There are broken
windows, doors off their hinges and holes which
have been hastily boarded up. For each group of
shacks there is an outhouse, which is in decrepit
condition and yields an incredible stench. A sign
denotes "Hombres" and "Damas".
Investigation of these shacks led to a run-in
with one of the owners, who protested the
of
his
private
property.
The
invasion
photographer was admonished not to take
pictures of the shacks because "no one lives
here." But the existence of curtains, a lock on the
door and a refrigerator inside somehow indicated
otherwise. In sharp contrast to these shacks stood
tidy suburban homes, right out of Hewlett, Long
Island, less than a half mile away. These, of
course, were the owners' homes.
A couple of miles away are more shacks, a
little more sturdy, but still very old-looking.
Outside was a beat-up 1958 Plymouth station
wagon, bearing Iowa license plates. In this section
is a modest kitchen-grocery store. A short black
man, wearing a filthy yellow suspenders outfit,
walked in and bought a can of Genesee beer. He
ran out quickly as his truck, which was picking
grapes that afternoon, started to pull out.
The forgotten people
Mary Bega works in the kitchen, where all the
area workers buy their food. She used to travel
from Texas to California, but has settled here so
her children can get an education. " People are
born into this type of work, and that's all they
know," explained Mary. " They can't get a
better-paying job because they don 't have the
education." Her six-year-old boy, Papo, walked
in. He goes to elementary school in North Collins.
It is obvious that Mary wants Papo to have
that better education. "He is learning to read
now[ she explains. "It was hard for him at first
beca~t'he didn't know any English." Outside of
the kitchen, four little children are playing with
the rusty remains of a bicycle. These are the
forgotten people.

They are not, however, forgotten by
everyone. Ronald Patterson is the coordinator "tor
the Community Action Organization (CAO),
whi&lt;:h tries to assist impoverished migrant
families. The two biggest problems of migrant
families, according to Mr. Patterson, are housing
and health care. ''There is a free migrant clinic in
(nearby) Silver Creek for the migrants, .but it is
not being funded, as similar ones are, by HEW,"
explained Mr . Patterson. "As far as housing, we
try to alert the law to substandard housing, but
then this just results in the place being
condemned by the Erie County Health
Department," said Mr. Patterson. "Then the
people are given three days to get out, and they
have no place to go."
.....

Suffering in seclusion
CAO tries to help the migrants obtain such
assistance as Medicaid and food stamps, and tries
to protect their legal rights. There are two types
of migrant workers. There are those that drift
around the country looking for work, and those
that are contracted by owners to come work for
them. " For instance, an owner will say to a group
of workers in Puerto Rico, 'l'lllend you the plane
fare to come here and work for me, and I will pay
you such and such an hour,'" explained Mr.
Patterson. ''Then when they arrive, he'll say:
'Well , I can only pay you this much : take it or
leave it.' He has the upper hand because the legal
battles take a long time and the migrants aren't
usually around that long."
In addition to all their other problems, there
are less and less jobs for migrant workers because
machines are starting to pick the tomatoes and
grapes. In North Collins, migrants only stay from
April to October. In the winter, they either look
for work in warmer sections of the country, go
home to their families in Puerto Rico and Mexico,
or, as Mary Bega, explained, "save up money for
the winter, like a squirrel." They are relative
strangers to Western New York culture, and as
such, they are pushed around, cheated and
abused. Unlike other minority groups, their plight
is not widely publicized. As a result, they are
suffering in seculusion .

Wednesday, November 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Health clinic open and ruming
toproviile migrants with care ·
Patients wilting for medical attention 'line the
reception
talking end reeding m~g~zines. They
are a little aJ)JWehensive becau• for many it is their
first visit to a dentist, their first physical
examination. They are the migrants and their doctor
is the Western New York Rural Heelth Project.
Established 18 months ago, the clinic located at
Mount View HospitAl! provides free medical and
dental treatment for migran!f and their families.
Presently funded by a $44,612 HEW grant, the
project was started, according to one of its founders,
Sister Mary Virginia Kogler, "because a few people
became concerned about the lack of proper medical
treatment for migrants ... this concern eventually
evolved into the Western New York Rural Health
Project."
However, this evolution was not an easy one.
Originally $300,000 had been requested from the
federal government for Western New York health
services programs in a five ·county area including
Erie, Chautaugua, Cattaraugus, Wyoming and
Niagara Counties. As originally proposed, the funds
would have been used to establish summer clinics for
rural peoples in Lockport, Silver Creek and Warsaw.
This original req uest was dfnied as no funds were
available for new migrant health programs.

room

1,000 migrants
A compromise arrangement was formulated
with the establishment of one clinic for Niagara
County to operate from July 16 through Nov. 30.
Niagara County was chosen because of its large
migrant population. According to Therese Tarajos,
program coordinator 1 of Niagara County, there are
about 1,000 migrants In the area, one·third of them
sick, one·thlrd of them needing the clinic.
The clinic has met with apparent success In
terms of people utilizing its facilities (a survey
revealed that one·third of the migrants used the
clinic's services during Its period of operation.) Yet
ther~ Is much dissatisfaction within the clinic .for as
Therese Tarajos pointed out : " All we have done In
terms of helping the migrant population is finding
out the need for medical care and the existences of
multiple health problems. In terms though of long
term care or prevention - we haven't even come
close."
Sister Mary Virginia agreed with this
commenting
that
"you
can't
talk about
comprehensive helath care with this type of people
(rural) ." She further questioned how such care can
be provided when the migrants, after being treated,
go back to homes with no heating, faulty ventilation
and outdoor bathroom facilities . Therese Tarajos
partially provides an an~wer to this problem : "You

go back to the cold house end solve the problem
there . ,. you treat this thing at its source."
You

It's for this reason that all Involved with the
project are quick to point out that migrant needs
don't start and end with medical treatment. " Health
was chosen because it is one of the most blatant
needs and not. because it is the answer," Sister Mary
Virginia explained. She added that : "We don't want
to remain just a health project."
The project thus remains open-i!nded hoping to
deal with housing needs, job training demands and
recreational facilities. To tackle this project is
incorporating
with
broader
goals.
This
incorporationn - YOU (Your Opportunity to Unite)
- as explained by Therese Tarajos plans "to meet
the needs of rural people as defined by their
geographical area." The definition is broad because
"we don't want to single out one socio-economic
group," she continued . The people, In fact, would
define their needs.
Clinic's reality
At present, however, no such program exists.
But the reality of the clinic does exist for the
migrant. Two nights w~ly , Tuesday and Thursday,
the clinic opens its doors at 7 :30 p.m. and closes
them when all are cared for. A two fold geographical
and mental problem needed to be overcome is that
of getting the migrants to the clinic. Free
transportation solved one aspect of this problem by
providing those migrants without cars a ride to the
clinic. But there was another difficulty involved, the
complex one of convincing the migrant that he has a
need for the clinic. "We are up against odds with the
migrants' thinking. They have only received
emergency medical care. It is tough to break this
down and convice them that standard physical
examinations are needft(i," Sister Mary Virginia
explained .
To help erase misconceptions. three community
aides were employed by the clinic. All three aides are
resettled, are women and are actively involved with
both the cliniC and the migrants. Tr~eling to various
camps each day, Arie, Vicey and VBf'onica spread the
news and the work of the clinic. In addition, they
drive people to hospitals, deliver medicines, and are
generally there, if needed . They, themselves, praise
the clinic for its work .
However, it is the migrants, the 1000 people
who work the farms, that voice the clinic's assetts.
As one migrant put it: " I like the clinic because it is
a good place to go when you need help. Hope it
could keep on going year round if it could because
this is the best th'ing ever happen to the people."

Page ten. The Spectrum . Wednesd~y, November 17, 1971

Donated to the Western New

York Rural Heetth Pf'Wt, the St.

Brfd9et

Clinic headquarters

Roman

Catho6C Church

MrYes • heedquarters for the
Niagara County migrant health
clinic. Although presentty funded
by 1 HEW .,ant, the future
funding and functions of the
clinic are still uncertain. If able to
receive support, clinic members
hope that they will be able to
continue and expand their services
to the migrant population.

�. ..

~

.\. •

Hockey games

c?!!!Re_and!.~! !..?.~~p ~.~cbeko ene.uwoilw!be~ardmso

•.ltdte_dsecoWI
, .thndou' tnoa

ticket with the option to buy one
more at the rate of two dollars.
With the start of the vanit)The Oark Gym ticket window
hockey season but two weeks will bo open from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
away, the Athletic Department on days of ticket issuance,
has come up with a final plan for beginning with the Nov. 27 New
hockey ticket dispersaL Acx:ordina England home opener. Tickets for
to the plan which will utiUze the the New England contest may be
Amhent
Recreation
Center's picked up on Tuesday, Wednesday
J 164 seats, tickets will be issued and Friday, Nov. 23, 24 and 26.
on a fint come first served baais Tickets for the Dec. 3 Oswego
until aU tickets are exhausted.
State game may be obtained
Of the Aml}erst rink's 11 64 Tuesday through Thursday, Nov.
seats, 1016 wfU be available for 30 until Dec. 2. Additionally,
student we with the remainder tickets for the Dec. 4 Salem State
going to the Alumni Golden Bull contest may be picked up
Fun~ visiting te~s and piay,rs' Wednesday through Friday, Dec.
parents. A ticket to the hockey I uotU Dec. 3 . Further dates for
games will be valid for any tection ticket pickup will be available in
of the Amherst rink with the the sports section of Th~
exception of Section G end ice, Spectrum.
which will be uscd for the
In addition to the above ticket
information, the Bulls released
non-&amp;tudent seating.
In order to pick up a ticket all several rules which will be
a Buffalo student must do is enforced
this year at the
present a validated Identification insistence of the Town of
card in person at the ticket office Amherst Recreation Board. First,
window on the flrst floor of Clark no tickets will be issued at the
Gym. Your identification card Rec Center nor will standing room
Spom EdltQr

Tomorrow
the
intramural
department will hold one of 1ts
biggest events to date. This will be
the second annual Turkey Trot.
The Trot is a foot race of
a pproxima rely
one
and
three-quarters miles, that starts In
front of the gym, goes across
Bailey Ave. and runs adjacent to
the golf course before coming
back across Bailey for the finish in
front of Norton Hall. Last year
the Trot was a bag success and the
same is predicted this timt as well.
There will be a 20·pound turkey
given to the winners In each of the
following
categories :
male
student, female student, male
staff member,
female staff
member, male fa culty member
and female faculty member.
Organizations can also enter as
teams with another turkey going
to the winning team . The race wiJI
start 3: IS p .m . rain or shine. The

lates( possible entry time Is
tomorrow
morning
at
the
intramural office or call Coach
Monkarsh
at
831·2924
or
831-2926. Come on out. Even if
you don't win a turkey, you'll get
into shape.
Intramural ice skating
But that is not all that the
super
active
intramural
department
has
planned.
Tomorrow night there will be
outdoor ice skating from 9 to I 0
at lincoln Park . Transportation
will be provided by the intramural
department. The bus will leave at
8: IS p.m . from the gym, adjacent
to the tennis courts. The rink is
not covered , so come prepared .
This is another rain or shine event.
The only condition is that you
bring your own skates, as rentals
are not available.
Just as with everything else the
intramural department has done
this year, last Saturday's Hayride
was a huge success. Fifty people

OVERTIME

ticket
and
a
wlidated
identification card. Additionally
the doors will open IS minutes
before pme time and anyone in
the seats prior to t~ clearing of
the ice, wiiJ be uked to clear the
area and go the the rear of the
lines.
Finally,
no alcoholic
beverages will be allowed at the
game. The Town of Amherst has
notified the BuUs that if these
rules are not enforced,- future
games at the Rec Center will be in
jeopardy.
With increased interest in
Buffalo hockey, the outside media
has become increasingly aware of
its possibilities. It is soon
expected to be announced that
Buffalo
home
hockey
and
buketball pmes will be telecast
over Olannel S, Amherst cable
television. Radio station WBFO is
expected to carry home hockey
broadcasts,
while the
Inter
Residence Council's WIRR, is set
to broadcast selected road hockey
and buketball contests.

were able to participate while 40
more had signed up but had to be
turned away.
Just now u the basketball
season is underway with record
turnouts, the intramural football
season draws to a close today. The
Championshjp will take place this
afternoon at 3 :30. The finalists
wiJI be the &amp;runners and XAM .
XAM arrived in the finals with a
great come-from-behind victory in
a weU played semifinal game last
Monday. XAM was down 20-0 at
the half to the Tasmanian Devils,
but
they
raUied
for four
touchdowns in the second half,
the winner being a pass to Alex
Ringleheim from Randy Corwin
with
only
one-and-onc·half
minutes to play .

by Barry Rubin
Sport1 Editor

Referendum, referendum. Just the mere sound of the word would
drive any athletic administrator crazy. Soon, you the student body of
Buffalo. will be faced with the ch oice of decidin&amp; the fate of athletics
at Buffalo.
The historic Student Assembly meetina, where the bicgest eaos in
this school congrepte, brought up the point o f just how close athletics
came to not being funded for the J971 - 72 season. The proposed
referendum, which will be formulated by the survey research center, is
expected to be binding on the Student Assembly. After aU, the voice of
4000 or more students on this campus would appear to be more
representative than the 40 or so Student Assembly members.
Tlli.J&gt;iggest problem in t.he Student Aaembly has been its lack of
information dispersal. After the IS - J4 vote in favor of the athletic
budget, several representatives complained that they did not have
enough information on the bud,et. In fact, at least one representative
voted against tbe budcet on this buis. How difficult would it be for the
Assembly memben to be able to aet their bands ·on the meetina•s
agenda and data, one day early at the Student Association offi~? It
would seem to this humble non-representative that at least this much
courtesy and respect should be shown to the Athletic Department or
any croup whose budget comes up for review.
The proposed referendum is the only answer. Througbour all of
this budget fiasco, President Ketter has said notllina. The alumni
grapevine has it that President Ketter will very shortly take up a
position on the future o f athletics. at Buffalo. In fact , one member of
the Athletic Department said that he hoped the budget would be
defeated so that President Ketter would be forced to do somethinJ.
The at hletic budget problems are not just a problem over student fees,
but of University direction in the area of athletics. The professionals at
Clark Gym and the Univenity's student athletes deserve an answer.
Some observers complain about the misuse of funds in the athletic
d-epartment, yet when it comes time to show some clear-cut evidence,
these same people hide behind their rhetoric . The athletic department
at Buffalo has made many attempts to become more responsive to the
student needs. The big-league treatment of mtramural basketball has
~ade il a pleasure to play. Who are the people tunning the show? They
are your friends and mine , working al the athletic department in their
spare time.
One columnist has satd that the end of athletics will come in the
near future , because the Student Assembly wants it that way. If that is
true, then the 1200 fans who will pack the Amherst Rec Center every
week are being terribly misrepresented . If athletics are to stay on a
stable basis, then it's up to you , the students. If you want athletics,
you'll be able to vote for it. There's not a soul at the athletic
department who'll disagree with that last statement. The people at
Clark Gym realize thai they cannot exist without the support and
interest of the student body .

'I

I!&gt;ANHOUNCB.S~

S.A. - G.S.A. SPEAKERS BUREAU
presents

Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz
world famous·

HEART SURGEON
The first heart transplant (into on
mechanical heart ever done In the U.S.

Infant) and

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19th

3:00p.m.
HAAS LOUNGE

Wednesday, November 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

....

I•

---------------------------1.

L.

Intramural department to hold
annual Turkey Trot tomorrOw
by Bruce Engel
Sp«trum Stoff Wrlt~r

.I

�Winter

.

Blackmore leads UB hoopsters
by Barry Rubin
Sport$ l::dltor

Curt Blackmore, three junior college
transfers and fi ve lettermen lend o ptimis m
as the varsity basketball Bulls pre pare for
their
season's
opener at
Syracuse
University on Dec. I . The Bul.ls, led by
second-year coach Ed Muto, finished 9 - 13
won-lost last year in an obvious building
year after a black player boycott had cost
Buffalo the services of its three top players.
One of the~results of the Bulls' buildmg
was the emergence o r 6 - 6 junior center
Curt Blackmore. Last year, Blackmo re
averaged 20.2 points and 15 .7 rebounds
per game while settina five school records.
One of Blackmore's records was most
points by a Buffalo sophomore, 445 , in
addition to being named sophomore of the
week 1n the ECAC 0Jvision I. The o ften
used phrase arou nd the Bulls last year was,
"As Curt aoes, so ao the Bulls." Will
Blackmore
improve?
Coach
Muto
remarked : " Ho pefully Curt will have a real
good year. Curt h as definitely im proved
our fast break since he has become a part
of it." Blackmore's shooting ranae is still
limited, but his dominance under the
basket cannot be disputed.
At the forwards, Muto will rely mainly
on Missouri Baptis t Junior College transfer
Jim Tribble (6-6) and 6-4 senior forward
Neil Langelier. Tribble can do it all and
should sive Blackmore considerable help
on the backboard . Last season Tribble had
marks of 21 .1 points and 12 rebounds per
pme. Lanaelier, an in-and-out player for
the Bulls last season is beina counted on as
Buffalo's top defensive forward . Known to
some as "the ice man ," Lanaelier came
thro u5h
with
aome
fine
clutch
performances apinst Buffalo State and
Brockport J.u t seuon.
Raave forwards
Behind the startana forwards the Bulls
have perhaps their best depth in years with
Seward County (Kansas), Junior College
transfer Greg Laker (6-6), junior Rick
Matanle (6-4) and soph Joe Evans (6-4 ).
Laker is rated the Bulls' top outside
shooter and probable zo ne breaker. Laker's
19-point scorin&amp; and 9 rebounds per pme
figure to help the BuJJs immeasurably.
Matanle, who lmproveJil slowly last year,
came on to start many pmef for Buffalo,
averapng 6.9 points and shooting 49%

fro m the field for the second strai&amp;ht
season. Matanle has improved his ball
handling ability and will see plenty of
action up front . Evans led last yea r's Baby
Bulls in scoring with 19 .8 points per game,
and Joe's hot shooting could 1be of
considerable help to the Bulls.
Additionally the Bulls have 6-6 junior
Don Van Oeuson backing up Curt
Black more at the post. Van Oeuson , a
former
varsity
football
player,
is
considered a battler and s tro ng rebo under.
Overall with the Bulls' more than adequa te
size, the rebounding game figures to
improve a great deal. If the Bulls are to fast

Vartanian
brc:ak as Coach Muto predic:ta, then the
rebound will play a key role. Coach Muto
added : ·•we recruited dlc junior coUeae
boys to shore ounelves up. We now have
four solid people up
front
plus
Blackmore."
Even with their improved fro ntline
offense , the Bulls still have yet to settle
their backcourt problems. Roaer Kremblas
gaduated , A1 Delman quit to pursue his
studies, and Tim Lennon underwent lea
surgery, leaving Muto with no proven
auards. However, the BulJs were able to
pick up Leicester (Mass.) Junior Colleae
transfer Bob Vartanian, a 6·2 guard to pick
up the slack. Vartania'n, an aU-around whiz
could easily be the best Buffalo auard since

Ron Gilliam. En route to being named th e
top junior college player in New England
last year, Vartanian averaged 23.3 points
with seven rebounds and 8 .7 assists per
game. Vartanian's game is hitting the open
man and moving the ball up court against
pressure in addition to leading the fast
break. Vartanian is just one of three
Buffalo junior college transfers who are
new to the squad. Coach Muto described
the biggest challenge for the trio as,
"getting to know, the offense ."
Backcoutt search
The search for a running mate to team
with Vartanian in backcourt has apparently
narrowed down to two challengers. Grea
Bruce, a 6-1 sophomore from New York
City a ppears to have the inside track on the
starting job after a fine showing in the
Bulls' scrimmage at Geneseo last Saruday.
Coach Muto described Bruce's play as
such : " He beats pressure, handles the ball
well and gives us good s peed and defense.
His only problem is a hamstrirfg pull which
left him behind in his conditioning." Coach
Muto will also rely on 5-11 soph John
Fo rys, who averaged 14 points per pme
for the Baby Bulls last season. Forys hu
impressed the Buffalo coaching staff with
an aggressive brand of defense and fine
shooting. Thus, in Bruce and Forys, the
Bulls wiJI apin rely on sophs to ao with
their more experienced guard, this time
Bob Vartanian.
In addition to the three guards already
mentioned , the Bulls will also be able to
call on two-year senior lettermen Orv Cott
and Eric Rasmussen. Rasmussen at 6-5 will
attempt to convert to gua.rd after two
seasons u a reserve forward, averaglna 4 .4
and 2.3 points per game. Cott at 6-l hal
been a two-ye.a r swingman for the Bulls
averaJina 4.0 and 1.8 points the put two
seasons.
The main theory behind the Buffalo
offense this season will be to get the best
shot possible, but also to hit the outside
shot in an attempt to draw the sauin&amp;
defense away from Blackmore. Thus, it is
hoped that Blackmore will be open more
underneath the basket. On defense look for
the BuJls to use the zone a lot. Still Coach
Muto considera the man to man his key
defense and he added : ..We can put more
pressure on the opposition this year with
our gre.a ter speed and overall improved
team defense. This year we'IJ bave all five

men playina defense.••
The schedule is touah with the season's
opener apinst Syracuse, a participant in
last year's NationaJ Invitation Tournament.
Last year, four Buffalo College Division
opponents, Buffalo State, A.Jtron, Central
Michi&amp;an and Eastern Michipn appeared in
the NCAA tournament . Additionally, the
Bulls face Maryland , ComeiJ, Northern
Illinois, Army and Niapra in a ten-day
period early next semester. Maryland with
a squad averaae heiaht of 6-8 fiaures to be
one of the nation's best teams when the
Bulls meet them at College Parlt.
Additionally, the Bulls will play eiaht
pmes at Clark Gym where the Bulls own a
23-pme win nina streak.
All in all the Bulls should have their
finest season in t he past three years with a
l 4- 10 or 13-11 season squarely within
reach.
With
luck
and
the rapid
development
of
their
backcourt
sophomores, the Bulls could surprise
several teams. Whatever the result, the
Bulls fiaure to be more interesting to watch
this season with more of an emphasis on
speed and the fast break.

Watermen must get together
in order to come out on top
by Bruce Enael
Staff Wrll~r

Sp~ctrum

Coach Bill Sanford reports that
this year's swimming Bulls,
despite poor records in recent
years, should have a respectable
season thls year. Of course,
Buffalo's watermen can do very
tittle but improve on last year's
• 2-11 record.
The $Wimming program has
suffered, 'and continues to be
~urdened with the same problem
as some of the other s ports here
since they have no scholarships to
attract some of the better
swimrnera. However, this season
Sanford has come up with some
rane young prospects. In fact , this
,-,will be a rebuilding year. The
squad has only five retutning
veteram and will consist mainly of
frahmen and sophomores. The
abllity of these people to come
throusfl and score some of those
-,

.

valuable swing points that win
matches, will no doubt be the key
to the team's success.
This year's squad bas better
swimmers and more of them .
lack of depth hurt the team last
year. The II individual events
(which along with the two relays
make up the dual meets) are
scored as five points for first
place, three for second and one
for third. So, in an event where a
team
has
only
one good
performer, even if he wins the
team gains but Qne point. Having
depth is obviously very important.
A teatn must pick up those
seconds and thirds as well as the
firsts in order to win. And this
year the swimming Bulls have the
depth. "Last year we had to give
away some events," says Sanford.
"But this year we won't give away
anything."
But Sanford has other reasons
for confidence as weU: ' 'Tbis team

Pa9e twelve . The Spectrum . Wednesday, November 17, 1971

has more fight than last year.
They are more dedicated and have
been wo rking very hard ." This
yea r's squad is stronger in every
event but the break stroke, where
last yea r's star and captain , Bill
Scheider, has been lost to the
team. Scheider is still in school
and
remains
Buffalo's best
swimmer. But due to personal
problems, Scheider has lost the
drive to swim competitively .
Two of the returning veterans
can be counted on as consistent
scorers and probable winners.
They are soph Tim leo, who is a
top-notch diver, and senior
Ceorge Thompso Jl, who is a
butterfly and spring man . There
are three other returnees - Marty
Barron (breaststroke), John Vasco
(backstroke) and Jim Rader.
Rader is the Bulls' best distance
man, but is ill now and won't be
swimming for a while. The best of
the new Bulls is junior transfer

George Starn . Starn is Buffalo's
best backstroker and is versatile in
other events. Other top prospects
are Jim Rawley (butterly), Mike
Dempsey (sprinter) and Dave
Sexton (distance).
The schedule gives Buffalo
three great teams this year - Penn

State, Syracuse and Wayne State.
These meets are Ukely to be far
gone, but the Bulls should be right
in there with the remainder of
their opponents. If Buffalo's
young swimmers come through as
expected, this season could be the
start of better things for Buffalo
swimming.

�I

,__

~.;,--

Sports
Hockey team can make it big!

Fine season ahead
for wrestling Bulls

by Howie Faiwl
A11t. Spom Editor

"There is no team in the nation five goals better
than us.''
Hockey Coach Ed WriJht
" We have the penonnel to. go all the way."
Bulls' Co-captain Bill Newman
"If we can put it all to,ether, there's no
question where we'U go."
Bulls' Co-captain Bob Goody
Hockey '72 is underw,y. With the advent of
screaming crowds, flying pucks and brutal checks,
come numerous team projec tions - both on and off
the ice. However, unlike previous years, there
appears to be a general consensus a mong hockey
enthusiasts that this season's edition will embark
upon a bright new era for Buffalo hockey, one that
should thrust the Bulls into the midst of national
hockey prominence.
Indeed, the skaters a re well aware of this fact.
They realize the s peed, depth and scoring punch
they possess and the probability of post-season
playoff berths. For those of us o bserving at a
not-so-safe distance from ringside, it is hard to
disagree with such auspicious predictions. As Coach
Wright proudly indicated, " there is no club in t he
nation that could e mbarrass us on any rink ."
Freshmen inexperience
However, some skeptics are holding their breath.
These perceptive individuals loo k objectively at the
fact that the Bulls are minus five of their top eight
scorers from last season accounting for 36 goals and
77 assists. They are quick to point o ut a noticeable
Jack of experience on the squad - in particular, the
over representation o f freshmen (I 0). Half the team
consists of incoming Canadian players who are
unaccustomed to American hockey and its greater
stress on center zone play . Those with a renowned
tendency to throw their weight around will find
hostile opponents in American officials and might
fin d themselves viewing- m6sl of tbe game from a
penalty box .
Yet one cannot possibly overlook the
tremendous abilities of these rookies. Senior Bob
Albano, a third-year veteran center sees t he freshmen
as ''fast skaters and great shooters." while co-captai n
Bill Newman calls t hem ''an exceptional group of
quic k smarf. players." Freshman wingmen Tunney
Murchie and Doug Bowman ha ve sparkled as have
defenseman Bob Epplett and goalie Russell French.
Sophomores joining t he ranks and showing great
promise are speedy BiU Reid and Jo hn Stranges.
Stranges, a man wHh exceptional moves and quite
tough in f ront of the net, will center one of the four
balanced lines Coach Wright has indicated he will go
with.
Scoring punch
The backbone of the team will naturally co nsist
of the ten returning letterman from last season't
8-7-1 squad. The explosive scoring duo o f graduates
Jim McCoubrey and Dale " Buzzy" Hill will be
difficult to replace as will the penalty killing skills of
puck handler Grant Nicholson whose crippling
middle ear disease has sidelined him for an indefinit e
a mount of time. However, four outstanding
centerman , Dale Dol mage, Newman, Stranges · and
Albano s hould pick up the scoring slack considerably
as will wingmen Nick Beaver and Jack Richards.
The defense, which was somewhat porous last

by Dave GaiJ1aa'
S[J(!Ctrum Staff Writ~

- Rubin

Ed Wright
season, has been strengthened with the addition of
policeman l es Teplicky and the experience of
co-captain Bob Goody. Goody, who has been
hampered t hro ugho ut t raining with a broken nose,
has j ust recently returned to form and should be
ready for the team's opener agai nst New Englund
College Nov. 27, at home. Senior goalie Mike Dunn
will once agai n return in the ne ts. The stocky Ft.
Erie native, while erratic at times due to a mediocre
defense, will benefit from this year's proven defense
and the knowledge of ca pable back-ups in Russell
Fre nch (out with a pulled groin muscle) and Do n
·
Marracle. Overall, the team will show more finesse than
physical strength. In th e remaini ng few days they'll
have to start , as Albano bluntly put it, " getting o ur
shit together." Prese"ntl y. several positions are still up
in the air and Coach Wrigllt is contemplating dressing
an unusually hlgh 25 players Tor opening day.
One problem which both Bob Alba no and
Coach Wright fear is the curren t lack of unity within
the squad . " The players are not psyched yet ... we
still don't know each other . .. s pirit is lacking and
there's some animosity between seniors a nd
freshmen ." However, this s ituation is common to all
training camps and sho uld redress itself by the
season't opener. Wright is confident that "we'll set
o urselves straight when games start comi ng arou nd
and personal hang ups are fo rgotten ."
There remains o ne disturbing aspect co ncerning
scheduling and rink space. Hockey has re mained in
the Amherst Recreation Centet where sea ts and
facili ties are seriously limited and detrimental to
team growth . Coach Wright, in echoing the plight of
several o f his colleagues, pleaded : " We cou ld easil y
dra w such hockey powers as Cornell, Colgate and
Boston University, if we were assured a date at the
Auditorium.
Unfortunately, t he team will have to make due
with the limited rink space they have this year.
Perhaps the need for a bigger ho rne will become
more apparent as the season progresses and stude nts
are squeezed out of the Rec, or more simply , when
t he team runs away with the ECAC Division 11 title.

shown great promile. Rutter was
fourth in last year's national
junior
college
championlhip
Everyone rises to the level of
tournament. If Rutter does win
their
competence,
and
the
the starting nod, the Bulls could
1971- 72 edition of the Bulls have six starters who formerly
wrestling team is no different.
started
for Coming, Coach
Anticipating · an improved squad,
Michael's former college.
the Bulls upgraded the quality of
Glenn Gentzke, last year's
their schedule from last year. This•
134-pound starter, who post~d an
season, Buffalo will take on such
Eastern wrestling powers as Lock
Haven, Wilkes and Army .
Balance is definitely one of the
Bulls' chief assets, as they have
five returning lettermen to go
with freshmen and transfers.
However, competition has been so
intense that only two of the
returning letterm e n are assured of
starting places.
One h oldover who is a definite
starter is co-captain Ron Brandt.
Brandt , last year's 190-pound star,
has bee n called 'a "pote ntial
national
winner''
by
many
o bserve rs. Brandt , who had 20 excellent 12-4 record, will not
vic tories and o ne tie in 2 1 dual return this season. ''Apparently,
meets last year, sho uld have an Glenn had a multitude of
equally brilliant seaso n this year. proble ms and felt that he had to
"One of my greatest thrills was drop wrestling," stated Coach
making mid-seaso n All-American Michael. Tho ugh Gentzke was a
last year,'' Brand t related. " I t's vital cog in the Bulls' successful
really a great goal to shoot for and season last year, Buffalo thinks it
ftll
a real honor if you a re selected . It has someone who
Gentzke's shoes
,would
really
be

accomplishment to be
t w~ years in a row."

selected

Kumm returns
Gary Kumm, who posted a fin e
8-2 record in dual m eets after
becoming eligible during the
second semester, should be the
starter at the 150-pound slot.
Kumm is the o nly other holdover
who is certain to start.
Bob Veres, last year's regular at
I 26 pounds, has switched to 11 8
this year, and is currenfly battling
freshman Ken Bernatz for the
starting job. Veres, who posted an
8-6 record last year, will have a
tough battle on his hands.
Bernatz, who starred at Pioneer
Central High School, had a 90-5
career record. Right now, the
position is rated a toss-up.
Veres
will
probably
be
succeeded at 126 pounds by Doug
Rutter. Rutter, another of the
Bulls'
many
transfers
from
Corning Community College, has

Roy Guarino, yet another transfer
from Corning. Guarino, who was
fourth in last year's Wilke n Open,
" has a very promising future ,"
according to Michael. " He could
develop into a star," the coach
added.
Coach Michael also holds high
ho pes for transfer Ted Lawson.
"Lawson is one of the finest
wrestlers I have seen in a long
time," Michael remarked . " He has
a c hance to be a national place
winner,"
Lawson, who was
elected co-&lt;:aptain along with Ron "
Brandt, sho uld give the Bull~ the
kind of strength at 142 pounds
that tiJey had last year at 1 t8
pound$, '?lith the graduated Ed
Brown.
All in all, the Bulls should have
one of their finest seasons in • ' 7
many years. With a few breaks,
the Bulls might be able to send
some of their stars to this year's
NCAA Championships at the
University of Maryt, nd in March.

Wednesday, November 17, 1971 . The Sp~trum . Page thirteen

�I Round up.

the military establishment." The
court turned down a petition by
the unwed nurse that sbe be
allowed to remain in the service,
upholding an Air Force regulation
providing for the honorable
discharge of women officers who
become preanant. The court said
that in hospitals in combat zones
in Vietnam, such as the one where
Capt. Struck once served, a
pregnant ' nurse could suffer a
miscarriage during an attack and
become "a liability and a burden
to the Air Force" instead of an
effective member or the military
team. Capt. Struck was the ftrst
Air Force orficer in history to give
birth while on active duty. She
gave up the baby girl for
{
adoption.
WASHINGTON - D Donald
Roth, the only acti e general
practitioner In a 45-mile area of
New York's Catskill Mountains.

-· . . . . __ I
~

• •
has won a last-minute reprieve
from the Army. Roth, 28, a
resident of Swan Lake, is a
lieutenant in the Army Reserve.
He was scheduled to be activated
Monday, but the Army ordered a
30-day review ' of his military
status Friday, after Sen. Jacob
Javits' office intervened. Roth
took his reserve commission under
a special Army plan in which he
was allowed to fulfill his hospital
residency. After two months Roth
quit his residency when Swan
Lake's doctor dled or cancer, and
he took his place. An aide for the
Senator said : "We are not trying
to help him get away with
somethina; we are tryina tb help a
co'inmunity keep their doctor."
Th~
other
two
general
practitioners in western Sullivan
County are in their 70's, and
therefore, unable to make house
calls.

psychomat
3:00 - 5:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAYS- MILLARD FILLMORE ROOM
Psychomat
initiated
to
f~eilitltl
person-to-penon communication amofll all students. It is
1n open..nctld, frM-ftowing IISiion where you Cln shirt
your ftllinia 11tout experiences.

~

WASHINGTON - The Senate
voted Friday to extend for 26
weeks
the
payment
of
unemployment benefits to jobless
workers in states where the rate of
unemployment is at Jeast 6 per
cent. The vote of 46 to 31 would
affect about I 5 states where the 6
per cent rate has been in effect for
at least 13 weeks.
WASHINGTON - President
Nixon announced Friday that the
sixth American troop withdrawal
Vietnam would leave
from
139,000 men there by Feb. I. The
new withdrawal order calls for
25,000 men to leave Vietnam in
December, and 20,000 more to
leave in January. Nlxon said
American around troops will be in
a defensive role from now on and
that "offensive actions . . . are
now being undertaken entirely by
the South Vietnamese."

Doc W8tiOn is one of • kind. He is

••ett

26th Anniv. .ry - - •
Luncheon

FILET 165
MIGNON
(Petite)

A true master

........ the
ec:oultic
.,tt.rist .... end one of the ,...
glentl of Americen folk m.tc. He
will be ............ 1rt the UUAB
CoffMhoute
thi1
week on
Thundey. Fridly end Se1urdey

U.S. Choice

w•

Choice Potato

..

••cas•.na..........
DIP
,........,,..,

_.,.
........................
111'1.......
--·

chtap - $ .08/ copy
AT 355 NORTON

~r1'

cret*d ~oar - - - - 1

c~

I'

iJSJeweLe _
Fine Arts Film Committee

Presents

..outraaaouiiJ

raunchJ,

bUI OddlY

molina.··

-UBII....-.

•

CONFERENCE THEATRE
Tickets
50¢ before 6:00p.m.
75C after 6:00p.m.
A DMslon of Sub·BOUd I

Page fourteen. The Spectrum. Wednesday, November 17, 1971

�WAHTlO
STUDENT Wlntecl IS -lstant In psych
r~h
PfO!«t.
Mu•
h - 111
motnlnll free. Study will be flnlttlecl
by Dec. 20th. GoOd PlY· Clll 80Ct
873·7152 oenlltlntly.
OVERSEAS
Jobs
For
Students:
Australia, £urotte, S. Am«lca, Africa,
etc. All prof. .loM 1nd occuPttlons,
$700 to UOOO. M onth ly eiCpenpald,
overtime,
algtltMelng.
Free
Information. Write Jobs over...a,
oept. ES, 80IC 15071, Sin Otego,
Call forn .. 92115.

CLAIIIIIIII
DESPERATE - !'Ieee:! ride to M1ryl1nd
or Washington, D .C. for Thank191v1ne.
Pl.... call Immediately. Jeri 134·7461.

AIDE WANTED to N - Von&lt; on
Friday, Saturday, N ov. 19, 20. PIN541
&lt;:Ill Rima 136·1779.

OFFERING
ride
to
M IIWIUkH.
LNYing TUISdiY, N ov. 23; returnlnt
Mondly,
N OY.
29.
Phone
Tlnl
831-4021 befo re 11 p.m .

FURNITURE of all sorta. a.ctl, sofa,
coffee table, delk, kitchen tab le,
c:halrs, etc. All In goOd c;ondltlol'l.
C hNp. Call 836-4627,856-4436.

SHARE. Driving my o::~r to Cincinnati
or en route for Thanksglvlnt. Call
Kathryn weekdlys, 831·2.401.

FOR SALE

GIRL SINGER, country fiddler, Pllno
playw. Send phone number to Tom
Root, C/O AI Giglia, 1 Delta Rd.,
Eggertsville
14226 .
Mualc11
opportunity.

AlOE NEEDED for two t6 N VC on
Nov. 19-20, return Nov. 28. Drive lhlre IJCjMnllt. Robert 835-4637.

FUN LOVING OUY MlkS fun loving girl
o;ompanlon. LNv• name 1nd number In
Bolt 22, Spectrum.

RIDERS Wlnted to Syrac:u541 thll
Thu""ay (that's tomorrow!) . Call AI ·
It 838·3099.

STUDENT WANTED board - In IICChlnge for
some evenings NO::h w umpus - 837·8106 1rter 5

NEED
RIDE
to
Albany
for
Thlnkaglvlng. Will share eiCpll'lllt. Call
834· 3850. P.S. good company. Help.

room 1nd
blbYslttlng
- close to
p.m.

lont.flalrecl, tan tMWf, tan marklnet
eyea. Reel collar. 174-5245.

FOR SALE• 911 stove, o r - with
mirror, ChNp. 877..0137.
CHEVROLET 1968 lmPtla 4--door
power
ste e rift9,
brakes,
11r
conditioning,
Ntlf"es,
brakes,
e~tcellent cond ition. 837-6719.

FOUND: German Shepard, ftomafe,
black, well-trained , frlendi'J(, w ith ~n
collar at Flllmote &amp;o Leroy. Call
837.,..73.

waton. Best offw. Call 116..a118.
TWO VW snow tlrll. Good condltlol'l,
815 a piece. Phone t41·56aO.
1965 vw - e~ttra eiNn, good rul'lnlng
condition . Call 8 73..a019 afr.er 5 p .m .
VW .,ANEL truck '61 , overhauled
engine, new tires, verv good condltlol'l,
bullt·ll'l bed, shelf. Call 633-4042.
1964 VALIANT convertible, power
steering - still trucklnt 8150 or best
offer. Call 832·7440 after''"·

838 -~369 .

APARTMENT FOR RENT

AIDE NEEDED to Detroit/Ann Arbor
for Thanksgiving . Call NNI Trubowltz,
day : 831· 1150;evanlngs: 835·7885.

FOUR PEOP\..E nlecled for large,
four-bedroom 1p.frtment. Four blocks
from Main - off Hertel. 8200 month
st1rt1ng Oec. 1. Clll 837·2968.

ANYONE wanting two tickets for
Jels·BIIIs g1me this SUI'Iday, o::all Rich,
834-616-o after 9 .

SKI
BOOTS
Ralcte
good
col'l dltlol'l. GrNt for o~ny beglnl'ler 815 . C11i 831·2166.

AIDES needed to L .l., Nov. 22 ll'ld
from L .l., Nov. 28. Will share coats.
Call KIYII'I 835·7787.

SKIES Rosslgwol Str1to 210 em, one
INSOI'I old ;- Rot0m1t heel, $100 or
best offer. L11'191 boots, size 10 - 170
or best offer. Boots, " - - 1140; skies
"-,
1170.
EMc•llent
condition.
882-~340. Johl'l.

WOOD epolty snow skiS, S11p·ll'l
bindings, good col'ldltlon, 1 30. Colli
Freel; late evel'lll'lgS, 837-2791.

R IDE BOARD
NEED two rides - Phllly or NVC 111111 Mondly, Nov. 22 - 1tter 6 TuesdiY. Nov. 23 - sh.re e1Cpen5es.
834·5384 .
RIDERS
to
T hlnkSglvll'lg.
Arr1ngement1
836·5357.

O.C.
or
arN
for
C1ll
Immediately.
will bl made. Mll'ldy

AIDE Wll'lted to New York 01'1 Frld1y,
Saturday, Nov. 19, 20. PIN541 &lt;:~II
Ctaudll 836· 1719.
AlOE wanted to St. Louis for two (or
ChlCI!IO
or
vlcll'llty) .
Split
coats/drhtlng. For Thll'lksglvl l'lg. Clll
Elly 836· 1779, Robll'l 835·5265 .
AlOE needed to U.B. momfl'lll\ from
Sheridan-Elmwood lrN In Kenmore.
PINJI Clll 876·2855.

1965 VW . N - pai nt,
rebuilt engine, 1400.

good

SABRES ticket 6 games during
vacatlo n, Sectlo" 14, gray seasol'l ticket
IOCitiOI'I. Clll 834-6699. Ask for 01Ye.
STEREO tape deck - Emerson: UOO
sacrifice. Orand !'lew. Ford 1963

SATTLER'S WANTS YOU. • •
BRING IN THIS AD AND GET
SAVINGS ON THE BEST OF
APPLE, CAPITOL AND SHELTER!
TAPES

RECORDS

Catalog Price $6.98

Catalog Price $5.98

tires,

399

REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
ll'ld
wuhet$. Recondltlol'lecl ; delivered and
guaranteed. D&amp;.G Appllal'lces, 844
Syumore, TX-.31113.
COUCH, t1ble, l1mp, chairs, IICCellent
8est
Offer,
Evel'l i l'lgS,
C:OI'IdltiOI'I,
weekel'lds. Call 835..0721 .
MOROCCAN Imports dig these
prices . custom mede Leather Pants 130 ; full lel'lgth wool/cotton Capes 115; hll'ld-made Leather Bags - S8 ;
o::olorful wool Sashes - $2.50; antique
Moratll'lia (Gullom l l'le) BNds, $8/ doz.
Call Steve 883-4707.

FOUND t Black Labrador pup, 3 mos.
old at Main and Flllmote. David
837..()835.

ROOMMATES WANTED
ROOMMATE Wal'llecl In currently
co-.c~ flat, f urnished, OWI'I room. Prefer
female . Hwtei.CoiYin arN. 877..0137.
FEMALE roommate needed, 5-mlnute
waite, Off Englewood. Available Jal'l. 1.
Beautiful aPtrtment, 834-4597. oeena .
TWO roommates, own rooms, aso
mol'lth,
ptos
utilities.
Furi'IIShed.
La fay et te · BIYI'IIS,
886·5937,
834-5384.
TWO MALE roommates oeeded. Hoose
on Amherst , 155 w tutllitles. own
rooms. Leave Info Spectrum 80IC 81
for Oec. ht.
TWO FEMALES to sh1re room,
modem apartmel'lt , alr&lt;ondltloned,
I'INr o::ampus. Available Oec. 23rd. Call
Shirl 837-4692.
FOR three•bedroom apt , Fumlshed
own room, 5 mll'l. wllk l l'lg. Cheap rent .
Call Phyllis 835-4637.
FEMALE roommate(sl, own room(S),
moder" furnished apartment. 10 min,
walk . Minnesota. 165/mo. + utilities.
Call Janny 833·5 426.

MALE

PAl A VW SI'IOW tires w ith rims. Good
col'ldltlon, s1a, 836·5484 .
MICHELIN 155x15 studded . U541d ol'le
...101'1. LOU 833·2806.
MOUTON Limb Colt, size 12, 835;
grey wool coat, size 6, $15; both very
good col'ldltlon . 834 -8331.
RUG, Gullstal'l, Peral a" style. Recently
CINI'Ied. 8K12. Asking $300. Clll
823-6335.
1962 VOLKSWAGEN Karmll'll'l Ghla
good
bodY
condition,
good
mec:hal'llcal. Best offer, 832·5910.

MOM
al'ld
Oad,
Happy
25th
Al'll'llvenary (OI'IIy 6 more to go) . Love
Ja"e and Joe.
FOLK guitar lessons - also eplphol'le
Casli'IO electric for sale. Jeff 835·9229,
835·3384.
BILL V LIGNOS 662·7598. Urgel'lt.

please &lt;:Ill Gll'lny

as $

need 1 man who Is a pro . 1t
tak l l'lg IKimS. Clll John 823·7572 .

BEAUTIFUL handmldegold and sliver
1-e1rv - wecldll'lg rings - at sel'lslbte
prlo::es. J .P. The Goldweaver, 655
Elmwood at Ferry St ., 881 ·3400.
LOST Ill FOUND
LOST :

Shepherd

collie,

Wll'llld: OWI'I
Included. Clll

roommate, 3 blocks from
o::~mpus, own
room, $80 mo. Call
838-4679.

FEMALE, grad or mediCI! prefetred.
Own room In belutlful furl'llshed
apartment. $75 lncludll'lg utilities. 210
Wll'ldemere. Call 834·2483 eveni!'lgs •
VOIC!: you r opinions o" Pollo::e
Commul'llty Relations - hNr questloi'IS
and a!'lswers from authorities 1nd
community
repr15411'1tatlves
o"
"Interface," I p.m., ~hurs. , WBFO ,
81 .7 - &lt;:Ill 831-5393.
NOTICE t On Mol'lday , Nov. 22nd,
u.e . Food Stlt'VIce comes to VOU w ith
a new EXPRESS COUNTER In
Olafendorf Hall (gound level).
TYPING done
137-1261.

PERSONAL
ALPHATRON IS COMING I

HEV, SEXVI Happy belated b irthday,
tootS! terrific (tee·hee)l GM, MP, BV,
Paul ll'ld Ooc.

SEATRAIN
Marblehead Messenger

FOUND: U.B. rlnt, '72, Mall'l St. bus.
Call Carl 12-.5562.

1962 CHEVROLET statlonwagol'l good COI'Id itiOI'I - 190. Mike 876..()256.

LIMITED '11141tYitiOnS still avalllble Thanksgiving buses to NVC ., $20.50
roul'ldtrlp. Contact Greyhound Campus
Agel'lt, Ken Slrlll'l, 836-4169 before
Friday.

BLOOOROCK
U.S.A.

LOST: ereen vinyl brlefca5e with all
my bO,OkS. Reward. Call 837·2370.

FEMALE roommlte
room , $70, utilities
694-6422, 2·10 p .m.

EUROPE over Xmas - $145 round
trip - guaral'lteed charter fl i ghts to
London . Sue 835-4168.

JOHN LENNON
Imagine

area.

MOTORCYCLE storage heated,
Insured.
AIIIOI'IIble .
Cl ll
Bll'llln
Warehouse, 877-o646, 9-5, Moi'I.·Frl.

MEET VOU •at 9 p .m . at A IIotta's Woody and Marc.

ON SALE TODAY (WED.} AND THURSDAY.
NOV. 17 AND 18 ONLY .. .And with this ad only!

Balley~ei'Nntton

TWO snow tlr•, 7351Cl4, $15 or best
offer. Call 136-8141 attar 5 p.m.
WOLLENSAK T · l500 tape recorder,
perfect
condition,
lncludll'lg
mlcrot)hone, hl·fl o::~ble, attachment
cord ll'ld other fNtures. Darryl,
831· 1166 or 835·2028.

TEN..SPEED bike, " -· Thll summ«,
835. E.V. IC&gt;-watt stereo AM/FM
tul'ler, B.S.R. changer, spNkttrs, $150.
'62 ChiY. Good tral'lsportatlol'l. ChMp.

PUPPY - Part Shepf\Wd, tan with
black snout - reel collar - a M -S to
To by .
Reward .
837·6053,

In

my

"home.

Colli

TYPING, eJ(perlenced, l'ltar U .B ., S.40
per page. 834·3370. Fast servlo::e.
PHIL Hillman, your $9 Is wafting for
you . See Jim II Spectrum.
NV'S Hotel TudOr offers SUNY rites.
Reservat Ions
ll'ld
ll'lform atlol'l:
832..()611 .
JONES Pro fessional Typll'lg
C 6H
Swvlce
computerized
IBM
equipment p l us our e~tperlel'lce give
bitt
poulble
presel'ltatlons
of
diS5erltiOI'IS,
thesis,
term
papers,
resumes al'ld empl oyment application
letters.
Loo::~ted
betwee"
two
o::~mpu111.
Very
reasonable.
Call
837-6551.
TUTORING In mlth s ll'ld so::lel'lces,
offered freshmen, Juniors, seniors, very
rNIOI'Iabte
rates .
C all
836-4988
between 5-7 p .m.
EXPERIEN CED
sacreUry
will
accurately type term papers, reports,
th.._,
etc.
Electric
typewriter.
ANsonable . a 74·1137.
SURELY we're all mad people, ll'ld
theY whom we think are, •rel'l't.
"W.T .B.S." December 2-4.

APARTMENTS WANTED
FEMALE would like ow" room with
other girlS In apartmll'lt I'INr campus.
Al'lythll'lg
1Yiilable7
C1ll
Mary
831-3898.

"A BEAUTIFUL
AND EXHILARATIN&amp;
EXPERIENCE!"

LEON RUSSELL

Shelter People

-CIIrlstlan Scltnct Monllor

•cit-l
EI'.'FIREJ

• C_!.RQ

for sheet music 8t tapes.c. t oo.
it's SATTLER'S RECOkO
CENTERS

STEVE MILLER
Rock Love

• BOULEVARD MALL
Niagara falls Blvd.,
North of Sheridan, Amherst.
10 to 9 Mon. thru Sat.

LEO KOTTKE
Mudlark

· ENOS THURS.

Wednesday, November 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

....

�Announcements
.
The Buffalo Theater Workshop Repertory
Dance Theater will be holding auditions tomorrow
from 4 - 7:30 p.m. in the Delevan-Moselle Recreation
Center. For further information call Synyer
Hanesworth at 8314143.
University navel and Sohussrneisters Ski Club -

SAS Jet to Geneva, Switzerland. Ski package in
Chamonix, France or on to Copenhagen, Denmark.
Dec. 27 to Jan. 7 (11 days winter recess ) - $196
just flight - package $298. For more information
come to Room 316, 323 or 318 Norton or call ext.
3602, 3603,2145 or 2146.
Psychomat is in the Millard Fillmore Room
today from 3- 5 p.m . Be part of a listening and
speaking experience. Share in the process of
person-to-person communication.
UB Gay Liberation Front will meet today at 8
p.m . in Norton 232.
Pilot 100 will hold an orientation meeting today
and tomorrow at 2 p.m. in Norton 330. All persons
interested in acting as observers with area
law-enforcement agencies are urged to attend .

The FilnHn*.-s' s.n. presents Harold
Hurwitz, director of ''The Proje(t!Qf'list," who will
screen out-takes from the movie and also from a
short ''The Immortal Tramp" tonight at 8 p.m. in
the Conference Theater.
The DepMtment of Music will present a recital
presented by the Creative Associates of the
department's Center of the Creative and Performing
Arts tonight at 8 :30 p.m . at the Buffalo and Erie
County Library Auditorium. There will be no
admission charge for this concert. The program will
feature cellist, Douglas Davis and pianist, Stephen
Manes.
University Travel and Hillel - Olympic Jet to
Tel-Aviv, Israel via Athens, Greece. March 27 to
April 10 (Passover and spring recess - 14 days) flight
$355 - package $559. For more information come
to Room 316 or 323 Norton or call ext. 3602 or
3603.
Dr. Wolfgang Becker of Cologne, West Germany
will lecture at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1285
Elmwood Ave., tonight at 8 :30 p.m. in the
auditorium. His topic will be ''Contemporary
American Art in German."

CAC needs volun~s for the Student
Companion Program at the VA Hospital. Anyone
interested should contact the CAC office, Room 220
Norton.
.Spanish Club will meet today at 7 :30 p.m. In
Norton 246 for a song session. Bring your friends
and guitars.
The Department of Biophysical Sciences
presents a seminar series in Biophysics 601 . V.
Renugopalakrishnan will speak on ' 'Theoretical
Studies Ofl Enzyme Mechanisms" today at 4 p.m. in
Room 21, 4234 Ridge lea. Also Ching Lungko will
discuss " A Consideration of Free Energy of
Phospholipid Bilayer (with discrete change
distribution) .''
The Biology Griduate Student Association will
hold a meeting for all first and second year Biology
graduate student tomorrow at 5 p.m. in Health
Sciences Room 10.
Prof. john R. Ferron of the Department of
Chemical Engineering, University of Rochester, will
have a seminar o n " Diffusio n in Polyatomic Gases"
tomorro w at 1 p.m. in Acheson 5.
The University Opera Studio of the Department
of Music will present a double bill of two
rarely·heard short operas tomorrow through Sunday
at Baird Recital Hall. The performance will begin at
8:30 p.m. and the works to be presented are " les
Mamelles de Tiresais" by Poulenc and "EI Retablo
de Maese Pedro" by de Falla. Ti.::kets for all
performances are $1 .50 for general admission, $1 for
faculty, staff and U.B. alumni and $.50 for students.
T ickets may be purchased at the Norto n Hall T icket
Office. For inforrTijltion call 831 -3704 or 3408.

Sports Information
1971- 72 Varsity Hockey Schedule
Nov. 27 : New England, 9 :30p.m.
Dec. 3 : Oswego State, 9 :30p.m.
Dec. 4: Salem State, 9 :30p.m.
Dec. 10: at Ohio State, 8 :00p.m .
Dec. 11 : at Ohio S~te, 8 :00p.m .
Dec. 16: at Lowell Tech, 6:00p.m.
Dec. 17: Merrimack Finals, 9:30p.m .
jan. 8 : at Hamilto n, 3:00p.m.
jan. 15: at Ithaca, 8 :00p.m.
jan. 22: Ohio State, 9:30p.m.
jan. 23: Ohio State-Aud., 2:30 p.m.
jan. 29: at American Int., 8 :00p.m.
jan. 30: at Salem State, 5:00p.m .
Feb. 4: at Oswego State, 7:30p.m .
Feb. 11 : Ithaca, 9 :30p.m.
Feb. 17: at Canton Tech, 8:00p.m.
Feb. 19: Kent State, 9:30 p.m.
Feb. 20: American Int., 2:00 p.m.
Feb. 25: at Kent State, 8 :00p.m .

Aud Memorial Auditorium
All o ther home games at Amherst Rec Cen
The. Li~guis~ic.s Department presents an open
lecture 10 LmgU1st1cs 501 tonight at 7:30 p.m. in
Hayes 404 . Dr. Zirin will speak on "The TG
.tpproach to Syntax."
The Ad Hoc Tenure Committee of the PoliticaJ
Science Department will meet today at 3:30p.m. in
Norton 233 to discuss the denial of tenure for Dr.
J.P. Jones. The presence of all past and present
\ludents of Dr. jones is requested.

- GIIwl l

Undergraduat~ students should pick up Spring
registration material in the reception area o f
DiefendNf Hall starti ng Mo nday, Nov. 29. Accurate
data is essential for trouble-free registration . Class
schedules will not be avai lable until Dec. 6.
Students should pic k up their material according
to the following schedule : Seniors whose last names
begin with A·F, Nov. 29 ; G-O, Nov. 30 ; P-S, Dec. 1;
T-Z, Dec . 2.
Juniors whose last names begin with A-F, Dec.
3; G..Q, Dec. 6; P-S, Dec. 7; i -Z, Dec. 8.
For the sophomores: A·K, Dec. 9; L·S, Dec. 10;
T ·Z, Dec. 13. Freshman A-K, Dec. 14; L-S ,Dec. 15;
T -Z, Dec. 16.

,.,

Applications for 15 summer aide positions are
available. Both course credit and financial
compensation are offered for those aides who will
work with freshman and transfer students from June
26 through Aug. 21. Applications are available in
Room 225, Norton Hall and deadline for applying is
Nov. 23.

Circolo Italiano and the Department of Spanish
Italian and Portuguese present a lecture o n "Da nte'~
Gadfly " by Glauco Cambon today at 3 p.m. in
No rton 340.

U.B. Photo Club will hold a very important
meeting, including a dark room technique lecture
and critiques, today at 8 p.m . in No rton 332 . All
members are urged to attend.

The Department of Germanic and Slavic
announces a lecture by Ludwig Ldndgrebe on
" Philo so phisch e
Probl eme
der
literatur-1nterpretation" tomorrow at 8 :15 p.m. in
,
Hayes 33 1.

The Department o{ Political Scienc~ announces
a special collo quim " The United States and B.10gla
Desh : The Case for Recogni tion" colloquium "The
United States and Bangia Desh : The Case for
Recognition" Science Department, 4238 Ridge Lea
Road.

The Student Art Board and the Student
Association present Dr. Wolfgang Becker from
Aachen, Germany who will give a slide lecture on
"Con.temporary American Painting" today at 2:30
p.m. m Room 15, 4244 Ridge Lea.

The Amateur Radio Society will have a meeting
and a film showing of "Standing Waves o n
Transmission lines" tonight at 8 p.m . in Norton
330. Everyone is invited.
University Travel - Ali~lia Jet to Rome, Italy,
March 31 to April 9 (nine-day Easter and spring
recess) - flight $ t 98 - package available. For more
information come to Room 316 or 323 Norton or
call e.xt. 3602 or 3603.

The Buffalo Chapter of Grey Skys Unlimited
announces an o pen poetry reading today at 9 p.m. at
Maxi's Bar on Main and Ferry.
The International Conference on Political
Orpniution will draw up to 1500 people from out
of town. Housing is desperately needed; if you can
put some people up for a day or two it would be
greatly appreciated. Please call 831-S.S(rt and leave
you~ name and number. Any hospitality will be well
receiVed.

�</text>
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                    <text>Vol. 22, No. 34

Mol..t.y, Now•u..,1S, 1171

Stllte UnMnity of New Yot'k at Bufflllo

Suitability for hoasiag

IRJ ~in student trial
by Howie Kurtz
C.mpul EdltOI

Surpriaed, anp-y and abocked reactions have
come from all acr011 the University foUowina the
dilcloaure that the Inter-RelidenQI!t )udiciary was
bypMted and a special ad hoc committee of
adm.iniltnton .et up to try • Tower underpduate
ltudent for his ".wt.billty for Univenity hoUiiaa."
IRC Prelident AI MWer, who dJdn't know about
U, was "burt and tnnoyed that we weren't
contacted." SA president lan OeWaal, who didn't
know about it, felt the defendant "didn't aet due
proc:eu.'' Richard S~ow, Vice Ptelldent for
Student Affain, said be J ~dviJed 1bom• Schillo to
10 tbroup the IRJ. 11r. Scbillo, llliltant vi"
pretident for Houaina, made the decision to bypass
IRJ and served u hearina officer for the cue.
The veil of secrecy IUITOundina the hearina
included administnton, too. Bdward Doty, Vi"
President for Operaflons and Syltems, said be "did
not know about it in advance" and Executive Vi"
President Albert Somit aid, "the whole thin&amp; is
newa to me." Mr. Miller feared thlit "IRJ's
credibility bad aone down the drain" and that
"everythina Jan and I had done to build -up some
sort of interaction and responsibility throu&amp;h IRC is
beina erued ." Mr. DeWaal •&amp;reed, atatiDJ tJW "to
arbitrarily aet up a panel is dilsraceful. It is beyond
my comprehension why the IRJ, a body that hal
proven very responsible over tho lut year and a half,
wu ipored."

would do it apin any time be felt the cilcumstances
warranted it. He said the ultimate responsibility
rested with him, and that he only had confidence in
the IRJ up to a certain, point."
Mr. Miller went on to uy that ••Schillo feels that
if someone rips off lounJe furniture and puta it in
their room, that's a cue that IRJ can handle. Well,
that'a not the way It wu set up. IRJ can and should
handle any cue involvinJ dormitory students outside
of criminal charpa," he continued. Mr. OeWaal
stated that "the whole idea of ltUdent courts is beina
destroyed. The administntion recoplzes these
procedures u vaJJd - they have proved to be valid and for them to make arbitnry decisiona u to when
to use them is preposterous."
A key point in the issue seems to be that of
reaponlibility. Mr. Scbillo has stated that his action
wu neceaary because be bad the ultimate
responsibility for boutinJ, and Mr. Miller uid, "he
told me be would only cbanae his philosophy (about
bypuain&amp; IRJ
when appropriate)
if the
responsibility was taken off blm!' Mr. DeWaal and
Mr. Miller &amp;Jieed that the whole action waa quite
..atypical" of MJ. Schillo, and Mr. OeWaal auspects
be miaht be under pre~~ure from somewhere.
No feedback

••ne quote that 10t me," exclaimed Mr. Miller,
" was that IRJ derives ita power from the director of
Routina. He'a Wrona - nu derive&amp; ita power from
Unlateal ectioll
students i.D the raidence balls and their confidence
Dr. Slgelkow t;eeerred jud&amp;rnent on Mr. in tile bQdJ ." He atreeaed that -. ad b~ penel of
SchWq'a tct'ioA liace tb' latter miabt ban ...d
" " ,_. wmaa people to be trytna
,....oe. dult lle lt_.akGw) wn ftt)t 'aware of, but "~on
the atudent. Mr. DeWaaJ ' concurred that "he didn't
c1aima be ''feeJI yery deeply about atQdent bowta" aet a fail trfa.l, ttnce no •tudent. w•re conau.lted and
.U.ce be helped tet theiiJ up. '"'We rnUit beain to no studenq wu. on tM piiWif."
malto the IRJ ~ble," be continued. "We mwt not
bypus the IRJ and student courta and expect them
In defense of the responsibility of JRJ It must
to Uve." Altho"''b Dr. Siaelkow knew about the . be noted that more than SO per cent of do~m cases
penel and advised Mr. Schillo to JO tbroup· the brought before them were decided in favor of
r~ student co~, .b e did not know about th8 Housina. Mr. Schillo hu claimed that be kept tbinp
?ri&amp;inal letter. o~. eVIction sent , to the ltudent, a secret for the protection of the defendant, but IRJ is
'unilateral actaon on Mr. Sc:hillo • part.
also capable of boldin&amp; a closed heariDJ. "I think he
Dr. Sigelkow plans to meet with Mr. Miller and kept it quiet to protec! himself from neptiv~
Mr. Schillo next week to cliscuu the lituatfon. Mr. feedback,
fro m resultma student outraae,
Schillo, the tarpt of much criticism, was unanilable commented M1. ~Waal . The SA.presid.ent also fears
for comment. However.. be did discUSJ the situation for the future vaUdtty of the Student-Wtde Judiciary,
with Mr. Miller. "He said he felt there wu no need presently beina formed . He hopes it will be accepted
to coo~ct me," recalled Mr. Miller. "He said that it by Albany as a substitute for the Hearina
was a case involvina special factors , and that be Commission on Campus Disorders.

Petition ptq)OSeS to
d:lange campps rule
byRouW~

o•er
into
the
praent
administration, accord.iDI to llr.
Block; ••Appobltm•ts .-4 to be
n..w lllodt, aq \mdcqAdaate ..... by IUl opa ~
CX)11Uidttee but dlll OtrtioUI&amp;y Ia
...... NOiltlttl'f drawt\ \a9 •
Petition c:aWna for tbe evenW.l no Jonpr tbe cue, as cieuJy ...n
,..patioa or Ualwemty ,_dent by the appointm_.. o1 . . N
Robert L. leetter. Block recently (iolbaum, vice presideut for
stressed : "ft'a either you aifee or Academic Affal.n and Charlet
disaaree
with
the
Ketter Ebert, dean of Underpaduate
adminiltntion. If you'R with Studies. Power Ia actually in the
them, they'll do everythinJ for bands of three peoplei namely,
you; but if you're not, they'll Ketter, So mit and Gelbaum ."
eitber ipore you and just let you
rot or work very much ap.inst PurJe
you."
Much of Mr. Block 's concern
witb
tile
present
It
is
Mr. Block's firm lies
conviction that the present administration's policy on tenure
administration is bo th politically de c iaiona .
Tenure
oriented and self servinJ and must recommendations were at one
not be allowed to continue if time made by a tenured faculty
student and faculty ri&amp;hts are to whose decisions would then JO to
be protected. lu Mr. Block the provost and eventually to tbe
vice president of Academic
expla.ined:
••This administration was a Alfain. But, u Mr. Block pointed
political thin&amp; at the beJinnin&amp; out:
and is very definitely a political
..It's been 'fer)' explicit that all
thing now." Mr. Block believes tenure decisions are beina made
that "Ketter became president on the deska of both Ketter and ·
because Rockefeller wanted a 'law Gelbaum. There are a lot o( youna
and order' man. If a 'law and people on the faculty who are
however, PODBR did come back order' man had not been comins up Cor important tenure
for funding. Hector Rivera, a appointed, Rockefeller's campaian decisiona. In aeneraJ, anybody
who wu identified with the
spokesman
for
PODER, would have been damqed."
commented that " from what I
studenta durin&amp; the strike or who
bu maintained a somewhat liberal
remember, they didn't say we Clandestine buainaa
couldn't &amp;et any money," thou&amp;h
The Student Auociation bas or raidcal stand is JOin&amp; to .ftnd
be added that liltewise, no money ' lent its support to Mr. Block by that not only will he be denied
was promised to them.
aJiowina him to uae their tenure, but that his contract will
Mt. Riven said that he had "no eq\lipment to run off copies of not be renewed."
~..
over what happened the petition. Academic Affain
Mr. Block continued that the
hu
already
Wednelday niaht. AcknowledginJ coordinator Lester· Goldstein administration
that many a.embly members may stated he wu "in favor of the SA "forced out'' those faculty
ha-ve been "turned orr· by their helping Block circulate the members who were somewhat
actions, he wu similarly "turned petition . . . and why not?"
liberal in their political and
off" by tbe runaround he felt the
philosophies. He
Another one of Mr. Block's educational
uaembly wu continually Jiving strong objection&amp; wu the way in referred to these actions as "clear
his orpnization.
which Dr. Ketter wu appointed. cut examples of purgers."
The SA officials felt their Apparently the confumation took
action wu uncalled for, and wu place at the end of June 1970 Lost credJbWty
Of the approximately 20
done m&lt;* likely because "SA is when the campus wu pnctically
an easy orpniz.ation to put devoid of students. Mr. Block people who sianed a petition
preaure
on."
He
further maintains that this was done to ap.inst Dr. Ketter's nomination as
contended that by relyin&amp; on SA avoid any student confrontation State University of Buffalo
for the day care center's fundina, that miaht have erupted had the President in June, 1970, many
PODER would only be doina decision been made earlier 'in thy have been forced out of the
Uniyersity, are no longer in their
"injustice to tbeir o.nt . . . . ..
year.
This practice or clandestine oriainal administrative positions
..It is likely U.y OMI6d aet
lppointmenta hu been carried
\ -continued on page fl~
-continued on ...- .._.
Spclnlm SM/T JIWt•

Student Assembly denies funds
fOr P&lt;D1ER day care center
An emer&amp;ency meeting of the
Student A.lsociation'a Executive
Committee
lut
Thunday
afternoon resulted in a vote to
recommend to the Student
Alaembly a denial of any and all
funds to the Puerto Rican
Orauization . (or
Dipity,
FJentioo
and
Respodlibillty
(PODER) for we towards the
Niqara Day Care Center.
The meetfnJ w.- prec:ipitated
by tbo un\asual activities of the
evenina
before ,
when
repR:Sentatives of PODER seized
the podium at the Student
Aasembly meetin&amp; and demanded
that their bud&amp;et be pasted
immediately. At that time, action
was postponed until the budaet
bad been reviewed once apin by
tbe appropriate bodies.
Tho vote in the executive
committee to recommend to the
usembly pusaJe of the PODER
allotment waa S-4 aptnst aucb a
recommendation. Amon&amp; the
rr.uons stated at the time for such

a deciaion were, "it (the day care
center) did not primarily aerie
studenta on this campus, and such
an expenditure would thus bo an
inappropriate use of funds," and
..tbere have been no other
attempts
to
find
funds
elsewllere. .,
One member of the executive
committee explained this socond
reason further. Wishing to remain
anonymous, he pointed out tha~
1aat year two day care centen
came to the Student Association
for fundinr; the UB Day Care
Center and the Niapra Day Care
Center. "They were both told,"
the SA official continued, "that
SA
couldn't
fund
them
indefinitely, but that they could
be and aubaequently wero Jiven
'aeed money' to get their
opentionsltarted.

Not recommeocled
..Botfl centers aareed they
wc:IUld aet outai4e fundin&amp; in the
future," be -added. This year,

-

�11aanday,Ncw.l8- ·~Rooa~doa"
9 a.m.: Paul Pic:c:one, (,Openina Statement," Fillmore Room
9:30 a.m.: David Scbanoea, '"Jbe WumiaatiDa llaiDDI«,"
Fillmore Room
I 1 a.m.: Panel on "Anarchiam Today," Conference Theater
1 :30 p.m.: Franklin ROtemont, "Surrealilt Point of
Deputure," Fillmore Room
3 p.m.: Panel oo "Unions and Ret&gt;olution," Conference Theater
7 :30p.m. : Trivo lnclich (SocioiOIY, Bei&amp;rade), Fillmore Room
9 :30 p.m.: Panel on ''The. Function of Radical Yedia," to be

anaoaecl
friday, No,. 19 - "hrty Structure"
9 :30a.m.: Rainer Zoll (Phllotophy, Frankfurt), Fillmore Room
1 1 a.m.: Panel on ''Culture and Revolution," Fillmore Room
1:30 p.m.: Lucio Wapi, Lucianna Cutellina (11 Mani{e1to),
Fillmore R90m
·
3 p.m.: Panel on "Urban Community O,rpnizing," Foster II 0
7 : 3~ p.m.: Andre Gorz (Lt1 Temp1 Moderne1; Paris), FiUmore
Room
9 :30 p.m.: Panel on "New American Movement," to be
uranaed

Sahday, No.. lO - 'TotaiJzation and Intermediations..
9 :30 a.m.: Sbiery Weber (Los Anaeles), Fillmore Room
11 a.m.: Nicolas Kn,sso (New Left Review, London), Fillmore
Room
1 :30 p.m.: Paolo Tranchina, Franco Caprotti (Lotta Contlnw ,
Boloana). Fillmore Room
. 3 p.m.: Panel on ''Sexism and Racism," Haas Lounae
7:30 p.m.: Herbert Marcuse (San Dieao, Philosophy), Clark
Gym ·
Sunday, Nov. 21 - "Bu.raucncy and Post Rnolutionuy
Problems"
I 2:30 p.m.: MitcheU Franlc.lin (Philosophy - Law, Buffalo),
'
Fillmore Room
I :30 p.m.: Martin Glauberman (News and Lttten, Detroit),
Fillmore Room
J.p.m.: Panel on " Revolution in Italy," Fillmore Room
7 p.m.: Kosta Mihoilovic (Economics, Belgrade), Fillmore
Room
9 p.m.: General Panel Discussion, Fillmore Room

Political Cooference to gatber
\\Oidly
thiilkers
Norton Hall wiD be the site for
ptherlng of contemporary
tbinken in an International
Conference
on
Political
Orpnization Nov. 18-21. The
conference is being orpnized by
the
Philosophy
Student
Aaociation in conjunction with
the Underlflduate and Graduate
Student AIIOCiatiom.
The conference will bring such
people u philosopher Herbert
Marcuae; journalist Andre Gorz;
Italian newspapermen Lucio Mqri
and Luciana CateWna; Paolo
Tranchina, a labor unionist; Lotta
Continua ,
German
union
orpniur and Yugoslavia's Trivo
lndich.
American contlngeou from
San Francisco, Chicago, New
York City, Boston and elsewhere.
are expected to attend the
conference. Many political .-rues
1

IUcll u the BlacJc Panther Party
and the Youns Lords wW be
sending repraentatives to the
conference.
Some of the topics to be
discussed in panels include Sexism
and
Raciam, Culture and
Revolution, Unions, Community
Orpnizing and othen. The four
days of the conference will be
devoted to four main areas: Grass
Roots,
Party
Structure,
Totalizations and Bureaucracy
and Post-Revolutionary Problems.
Uodentaoclin&amp; revolution
Launching the conference is
Andre Gorz, one of the most
influential political theorists. A
journalist since 1950, Gorz is 1
dOte friend and f~ower of Jean
Paul Sartre in his political
developments and interpretations
ofltbrxism..r...

The format of the conference

will attempt to overcome many of
the
lin1itat.ions
of
most
"conferences"
in
that
the
empbllia wW be on small group
interaction. The large lecture
format will onJy be a put of the
total conference and will not
dominate it. In this way, all
people wW be afforded the
opportunity
for
personal
discussion with all the s~ers
and participants.
According
to
conference
spokesmen, the 'problem of
organization is crucial for the Left
at this time. Following the
increased repression by the state,
the Left has found itself
f111gmented and unsure of the
future. Hopefully, the conference
will allow people to come to an
understanding of the problems of
revolutionary movements.

num\er
Student directory confusion

Sorry, wrong

Due to what some comider customary foul-ups,
students rushing out to buy this year's spanking new
University directory may be in .for a slight
disappointment. Nothing big, mind you, but simply
1 matter of hundreds of wrong addresses and phone
numbers o f primarily Un\ve~t~g resldents.
The main cause of this snafu ls rather slmple.
Some may remember being asked to fill out an
address update form when receiving lD cards. Some
may not. Basically, this is because someone forgot to
put out the forms for the first few days of the ID
card distribution.
Directory co-editor Harold Schiff could only say
" I don' t know why the forms were not out." Since
the directory is compiled using a computer listing of
the most recent addresses of students, the failure to
receive aU these update forms, resulted in the use of
last year's (or in some cases, the address of two years
ago) for those stu_dents who were unable to inform
the computer of their new location. Fred Aueron,
buslness manager of the directory, commented:
"The computer has a good memory."

Mr. Schiff emphasized, however, that the vast
majority of mistakes concerned resident students.
"The dorms are all screwed up. But nearly aU the
local and faculty listings are correct, and so are the
home addresses," he added. However, he couldn' t
explain mistakes made in this area . He offered that
there may have "been some error when it was finally
put in (the computer). But by then it's out of our
hands. We just handle the mechanics of putting it
together. As fo r the other mistakes, I'm really not
sure myself.,.
Confused students should note that the lisu of
dorm students' adresses are constantly updated , and
resident's phone numbers can be found by calling
any dorm desk. Numbers of these desks, for students
who would rather not buy the revamped directory
are 832..()453 (Allenhurst), (831}-4140 (Clement),
3239
(Cooke),
3300
{Goodyear),
3236
(MacDonald) , 3237 {Michael), 3243 (ScholeUkopf),
and 3237 (Tower).
For those students who wish to take their
chances, the directory can be purchased on the first
floor of Norton HaJJ for $ .50 (S 1.00 for faculty) .

---------------------------------1
SPECTRUM CLASS I F IEOS REALLY WORK. Aft.,.
•"· wh•t ~;. of The S pectrum do YOU turn to flnt 1
For r•tes •n&lt;l lnform•tlon, come on up to room ~55
Norton H•ll•nd •stt for Soozlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

--------------------------------HOW TO GET ALONG
WITH BLACK PEOPLE

The Spewum i$ publilh«&lt; thrw
tim•• a weak, _ , Monday,
~Y and Friday,· during the

~Jar ~lc .,..,. by s~

1, Inc. Offlc. ar. l0t2ted at 366
Norton Hall, St»r. Uniwnity of N._,
YMk a t Buf'-lo, 3435 M.in St.,
Buffalo, Naw York, 14214.
TWphOIHI: AtW C.0C. 116; Editorial
831-41 13,· BIJ$1,.., 831-3610,
Repra•antwl fOI' *'-tiling by
National Educ.tJoiMI AdwwtJI/ng
S.WC., Inc., 360 L•xl,.ron A ... ,
NrN Yo'*, N.Y. tOOt7.

This man was once an ordinar.y man ...
... We made him beautiful.

Subacrlption ,.,., _.. $4.60 ,.,
·,.,...,.,. or $8..00 for

two_,....

s.t:ond 0..

Nft!Yort.

,.,.._.paid at Bufftllo

,

Cin:u'-rlon: 16,1)00

Tile Buffalonian Studio
356 Norton Hall
I

I

Page two. The Spectrum . Monday, November 15,-1971

.

�Fu tore uncertain

y~ theatrical giVup

stifled by bureaucracy
by Howie Kurtz

enthusiutic and said their funding
"would definitely be extended."
He pve them the forms and said
One
of
the
most the funding would take about
well-conceived,
well-run
and four weeks to be cleared through
creative programs to help Jhetto the main office in New York City.
kids in recent yean is getting the Later, however, they were
bureaucratic runaround from City informed that they "used the old
Hall.
forms" and would have to apply
The Buffalo Proaram for the apin. Later still, Mr. Hanesworth
Performing Arts was created last informed Ms. M~ehan that he
even
submit
the
spring as a theater group for the wouldn't
summer to give some ahetto kinds application to New York ; he felt
a creative outlet for their energies they wouldn' t approve it because
and keep them off the streets. The they want groups that deal with
group was able to receive funding, criminals, lads from parole boards,
admittedly measer, from Buffalo etc.
city aovernment's Crime Control
proaram . A\lditions were held, A joke
and about 40 kids were recruited,
"He said that Crime Control ...
aae 13 to 19. primarily from wants a program not to prevent problems, the theater aroup has
crime, but to eontrol it," continued. The proaram was
Buffalo's East Side.
"It was very difficUlt in the explained Ms. Meehan. "Now origninally created by SheUy
bepning," explained Maudie what kind of philosophy is that? Drayton to provide ahetto kids
Meehan, one of the theater Maybe our problem is that none with "meaningful summer jobs
aroup's coordinatorw. !'These kids of our kids have raped or killed instead of just sweeping the
were antagonistic, sullen about anybody."
streets." It has developed into
authority - they felt it was just
Ms .
Meehan
was
not somethin&amp;
much
more,
a'
another gimmick. But after a few discouraged in her attempts to rewardina
and
successful
weeks, they really aot into it. liberate additional funding from theatrical program that keeps
They became a tightly knit unit. Crime Control. She bounded Mr. these kids off the streets.
It was beautiful."
Hanesworth and set up an However, its existence is severely
appointment last Wednesday with threatened
by
the
a representative from the New unresponsiveness of City Hall.
Fint contact
For the kids, it was a summer York office. " We went down Perhaps the best descriptions of
job, paying S40 a week. But it was there with 20 kids," she the program's effects can be
also much more. "It was, for explained, ..'and no one showed found in the letters written by the
many of the kids, their first up. Mr. Hanesworth apologized kids at the end of the summer,
contact with the arts," said Judy the next day and said it had aU describina their1 feelings about the
McDonell, another coordinator. been a mix-up. BuUshit. It was program : ,
•
"These kids needed help : there obviously a typical City HaU
"Twenty people managed to
were gang leaders, shoplift en, kids brush-off."
develop a sense of cohesiveness
involved with drup, even a
and sin&amp;)eness of purpose ... (we
semi-prostitute. Here they were Stumblins block
learned) something made up of
In the interim, the theater love and respect for human
able to get away from that and
learn a constructive art like group has applied to the beings, of an almost utopian tittle
University's CommunJty Action society four stories above the dirt
acting."
The learned the art well. Corps (CAC) for fundina. They and darkness of an American
Reheanals, funded by Crime received S I 800 and CAC has city.''
Control, were held on the fourth provided the group with the use
" We kids in our city really have
floor of the Wurlitzer Building. of a room in Diefendorf Annex to a sick name ana this I feel just
The theater group rehearsed and rehearse. TJ\e big stumbling block may be the thing to bring out that
refined their production of Th~ is transportation. "These kids there is more good in most of us
can't afford S.80 a day for than bad ."
s~rpen t. The presented the play
over the summer at the Studio transportation," said Ms. Meehan.
"For inhibitions broken down,
Arena Theater and Canisius " They hitch here, come any way values changed , hang-ups unhung,
College. The Buffalo Evening they can, that's how dedicated body stretched o ut , and just a
News called it "physical theater at they are." She indicated that a general atmosphere of love, the
its energetic best," while Scene few of the kids have had to drop only appropriate word is thanks."
Magazine called it "a relevant and out due to parental pressure. "The
" I never worked and cared so
parents don't even have lunch much for anything as I did this
imaginative statement."
They were such a success, and money for the kids ; they can't see summer."
" Before I got this job I was
the kids were so into lt that they them participating in something as
decided to continue over the unproductive as a theater group," forced to make money in other
winter. This is where the hassles she explained . Another problem is ways. To be truthful I could have
with Crime Control began ; it that the Diefendorf Annex room been called a semi-prostitute. This
viewed the project as nothing won't be available after Dec. IS .
program enabled me to show my
more than a summer program.
creativity in other ways, and to
Initially,
according
to Ms. Un~nsiveness
earn enough money to keep me
Des pite
these
econmic, off the streets."
Meehan, Crime Control Director
Grant
Hanesworth
seemed bureaucratic and transportational
Are you listenin~ . City Hall?
Olmpu.r Ed/t(N

Photos

by on.,..,.,

Monday, November 15, 1971. The Spectrum. Page three

�COOirnutet_students
lack school interest
Fifty-one per cent of the
undergJaduates at the State
University
of
Buffalo
are
commuters, and most people
don't know it .
Campus politics, clubs and
organlutions are run primarily by
on-campus
students.
Many
commuters, especially freahmen
who are Uvina at home, do not get
involved
in
extracurricular
activities for basically two
reasons: ·lack of motivation and
lack of transportation.
"Everyone seems to know
everyone else," complained one
co-ed, in reference to doi'JTl
students. ''They can appear
cliquish, "
agreed
Richard
Sigaelkow, Vice President o f
Student Affairs. "But there is
often a two-way lack of
understanding. The commuters
tend to put the dorm students in a
class by themselves, and the
residents may think 'I wish w~
had all tlie fun they think we
have' ."
Scott Slesinger, treasurer of
Sub Board I, Inc. had another
theory to explain the seeming la.ck
of interest . "Commuters have a
tendency to leave right after
classes," be noted . "It's easier for
Buffalonians to get jobs, so many
spend their free time earning
money." He also suggested leaving
home as a remedy for that
" left-out feeling."
Lack of excitement
Some commuters associate
almost exclusively with friends
from high school or youth groups;
others meet o n-campus students
through older friends or clubs.
Most commuters, however, agree
that this .. barrier" between dorm
residents and themselves can be
overcome with a little extra
effort .
" You have to go 75 per cent of
the way as a commuter,"
remarked Dorothy Haas of
University
Placemen t.
"I
understand the problem - 1wu a
commuter myself - but there are
&lt;;(' many thinp tn rt" nn ('arnru~

that everyone can get involved in

Niagara Day Care Center

no/~:

The fol/()wing f1111cle wa written by
Fuller, pubHclty director for the Nillt;rurl
Dtly Oln Center. It wa written in order to giw an
of/lclill hlltory of the communlty·nm center on the
Wtst Side. More importantlY, It b belilt presented in
order to cletzr up $/Ome mbrepnsentGiiom by
merrrbn'l of PODER in Wednesday's article In 'I'M
S~tfflm on the d4y can centtr.
Editor's

Dorthe~~

tOmething. That's the best way fo
meet people."
"I expected college to be
different somehow," said a
Kenmore girl. " But 1 hung around
here dutin&amp; my high school days,
so it's really nothing new." lbls
nus Niapra Day Care Center is not a
expreaaes the attitude of many student-run community center. It iJ a unit of the
COflUtlUters toward University life Protestant Home for Children which opened in July
- there seems to be a lack of of this year. This home has been serving children on
excitement usually associated the NJagara Frontier since 1917, fust of all as a
home for dependent children and now as a
with starting o?llege.
residential treatment center for emotionally and
socially
disturbed dilldren.
TransportatioA needed
On the main floor of the home at 605 Niagara
A Williamsville freshman said:
St . there existed some 134() sq. ft . of unused space
"1 played football here since I wu which the board of direc:ton decided should be put
ten years old, so when I lined up to useful purpose in serving children.
for registration, it was like going
An advisory -committee was set up by the board
to another football Jllme." to contact the New York State Department of Social
Another stud~nt commented: Services, the West Side Community Action
"The only difference I was Organization (CAO). Catholic charities and other
expecting between high school orpniutions to acquire knowledge of the operation
and college was better teachers of such centers and to useu the need for such a
and more stimulating classes. And facility in their area.
Ms. Elsie R . Elliott who heads up the West Sjde
even that's not always the case."
Community Action Organization at 381 Niapra St.,
Apparently
familiarity
bred
along with her staff, handled the survey of the
"blas~ness," if not contempt.
district and their findings revealed a real need for the
However, as Ms. Haas pointed
center.
out: " If you're interested in what
goes on in the world, you must be Contract made
interested in what goes on in the
The board of directors of the Protestant Home
campus."
was near a d ecision to establish a day care center in
For many commuters the this unused space on the main floor of the home
more serious problem is how to when a representative of the Puerto Rican
for
Dignity,
Evaluation
and
get to and from the campus fo r Organization
evening events. Witho ut a car, Responsibility (PODER) disclosed that they had
many students must forfeit been attempting to set up a day care center, but had
not been successful in locating a suitable place.
movies,
lectures
and
club
Vfe entered into a contract with PODER. feeling
meetings. This prevents them thet to form such a relationship would be to have a
from utilizing what the University community-based project for the benefit of thei~
offers as much as they might Uke children and the neighborhood . We do appreciate the
to.
support that the Student Association of the State
Rabbi Justin Ho ffman , HUlet University of New York at Buffalo has given through
advisor,
recommended
the PODER. This provides scholarship help, plus funds
reinstitutlon of a "club hour," toward field trips, food and supplies.
The Niagara Day Care Center helcl an •'Open
which was experimented with and
House
.. on Nov. I and poster&amp; to this effect were
dro pped several years ago. The
displayed at the State University of Buffalo so that
hours from noon- 2 p.m., for
members of PODER and other students might
example, would be reserved for
attend. Joan Given of the Buffalo Courier-Express
orga nizational
and
group did a feature article on the center in their Oct. 10
activities,
thereby
enabling issue. A subsequent article concerning the Open
commuters to participate more
House appeared in the Courier on Oct . 31.
easily. As this situation does not
WREN-Channel 4 sent Ann Eskridge and their
exist,
h o wever.
"carless
photographer to publicize the Niagara Day Care
commuters" must sometimes Center on Nov . l, as did WKBW-Cllannel 7. The
publicity we received in every case reflected the
settle for an extra evening of
interest
of those who came, saw and were unpressed
homework or tel~villioo watching.
with the cheerful, modem and well-equiped crieter
and Its staff of dedicated teache~.

Sub Boanl meeting

There will be • meetina of Sub loud I
tomorrow niaht at 6 :30p.m . in Room lOS Norton
Hall. Topict on the qencla include the final
raolutlon on Poverty Hill and a continuation of the
dilcuaion on the future of Sub loud I. AU
interested penou ue invited to attend.

Mod Styles for Young Moderns

730 - 732 MAIN -

#Tent City"

Near Tupper

In the Niagaca Day Cart Center, wh1ch Js open
from 7:45 a.m .. - 5:45 p.m., Monday through
Friday, we accept children from 3- 5 years ·of age.
This is a community resource which stretches out to
aU areas, not just the lower We$t Sid~ . We have
children from Grand Island ~d from ~burg. The
~bllity to the Niapra Thruway makes the
location advantageous to parents in ar~.

au

of

Ms. Barbara A. Shaw, director the ~ntet, and
her staff have designed a program tb stil:nula~ tlie
young minds of their charges, aided by the many
educational toys, games and records which the
average home could not afford. Field .trip• h~tve
included such interesting things as ,visi,s to t}le, zoo,
the Aquarium in Niagara·falls, Rutuy hiNd and a
trip to the airport to climb aboard·a real ietlillel'., •
On sunuf\er da~ the cffindrfn ~~ tl\~.'ad~i4ae
of playing in a yard. fenced 1R for tbeu ~~pulivcr. ~·
In inclemoot weather, they ~v~ U,.e ust ofth~ large
gymnasium in the Protestant Home. ·
'•
Mid-morning and mid-afternoon snacks are
provided, plus a balanced lunch at noon, all served in
their dinjng room with its child4~ ful'Pish'l!~ in
nat~ral fmiahcd wood: .Thep:~«rAa~eJ "'Mn,
soft music plays and the&gt; ohlldra1 ·~ 6 &amp;e
tlberglau stack cots which are washed after ea_ch use.

..

No welfttt problems
We have encountered no problems with the Erie
County Welfare Department such as the article in
The Spectrum mentioned. Some mothers who are
taking courses for only half a day find that it is
possible to send their children to the Head Start
program which they may attend on a half-day basis.
As a matter of fact , the Welfare Department is
extremely pleased with our facilities and have, and
will continue, to send children to us.
We wish to make it clear that the children we
have are not "slow learners.'' They are bright,
intelligent and interested children whose parents
appreciate the advantage of having their offspring
occupied throughout the day in a learning
experience that will better prepare them for school.
Where more than ono child in enroJJed, a sUdJng scale
is·'used , based on income.
Some children are with us because their mother
is working, in a training program, or going to school ;
oth~ra merely wish to have their children in a
learning prc&gt;tra.m which they could not provide.
The board of directors of the Protestant Home,
headed by Henry H. " Doc" Harper, wish to assure
The Spectrum readers that the Niagara Day Care
Center came about after two years of assessment, ·
investigation and muoh hard work to establish its
need in the community.
It has had no rocky past - nor is any rocky
future in store for 1t. As a matter of fact, within the
next week or so it is to be one o' the few day care
centers Ucerued by the Erie County Health
Department in this city.
"We cordially invite any members of the
University to contact Ms. Shaw, the director, at
883-4531 if you are interested in viewing Niagara
Day Cue Center. We guarantee you will find it a
worthwhile experience.

a proJect of UNIVERSITY ol WISCONSIN • EXTENSION &amp;
the CORPORATION lor PUBLIC BROADCASTING

earplay

d

•

scnpts

. . · is offering $15,000 in 20 purchase owords dur ing o competition which closes
March 3 , 1972.
. . will buy 60 80 add it ional scripts thi1 year outside the competition . . .
stortmg now!
'
.. . will p~uce a ll these scripts for broodcost notiooolly on n&lt;&gt;n·commerciol radio.
.. . espec•olly fo'VOrs scripts unde r 20 m inutes In length. However, scripts up to
30 mrnutes w1ll be considered.

.....

..,...rv. . .

Send scripts (wlt/1 sell·addressed envelope) to : e1rplay. Radio Hall. Madison, Wis. 53706

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, November 15, 1971

.. .

LOO&lt;Jr-.Ki

BELLS 8t THINGS-

BE HIP
SAVE MONEY
SHOP ARMY NAVY

.

IS

WASHINGTON SURPLUS CENTER

LEATHER 8t GOODS
BUSH JACKETS
FIELD JACKETS
BOOTS - LEVIS

'.

�Jewish_ ~ demand

Student :Assembly •••
-continued from Pl.. o,_..

more money elsewhere, but u far
u we bow tbey just baYe.n 't
macSe the attempt. If they had
attempted to do so, and were
unable to, perhape tben, our ( tbe
executive committee'•) stand
would be dlfferent."
A. for PODBR'a likely futre
action, Mr. Rivera lUted that
PODBR '..W atill be tryina to aet
money from SA, but we'll take it
from who,m~er we can pt it
from:"

'Nocliuer'
The
executive
committee
adjoumN abnapUy with tbe
annouac:ement by Studem R.iabta
coordinato~ n.ve Steinwalk that
he ..~cln'r had d.ln.Der in two
niabta~• md Wll hunpy. This
precipitated enouab departurea to
end the meetina. Aibona thinp

studies of their culture

left undilcuaed wu a boUle for body that a • referendum waa
"There are Black, Puerto
SUNbind House.
vltatiy needed in order to pin Rican, Chinese and Arabic Studiea
Later
Thunday,
in
a input from the entire student programs here. Why not Jewish
continuation
of Wed.Delday'a body on all aapec:ts of the atudent
rece.ed meetina, Jan DeWaal, SA sovernments Iundin&amp; of athletics. Studies?" ThJs is a quc'"tion that
prelident, info.rmed the Student
A motion introduced by Shelly no doubt many members of the
A.aembly
of tbe executive Taylor w• paaed, bindina the sizeable
Jewish
atudent
committee'• decision reprdina Student Aaembly t o the results community
of
the
State
the Niapra Day Care Center. He of auch a referendum, in all University of Buffalo have uked
told the aaembly that if they matten except where there are
wUhed, they could vote to now contractual obliptiona. This themselves. Now some are tryin&amp;
overrule the executive committee, motion
also
limited
tbe to do aomethinaabout it.
and uk to have a b'udaet of some referendum
Five Jewish groups, differtna
reaulta
to
aort recommended. The usembly conaideration of the 1972-73 essentiaUy in their empfwis on
ch01e not to do so.
fiac:a1 year, leavina tbia year's either religion, political action or
further
action,
tbe allotment in tact.
· In
contr~venia.l
athletic budJC!t,
In addition, tho usembly cultural orientation. met Tuesday
puaed two weeb aao, was moved to have a "fair and nisbt to discuas various tactica for
brouabt up for diacuuion once impartial" ballot to appear in the pttina a Jewish Studies program
apln. Votifta on a motion to referendum, drawn up by the initiated.
J'ClCODiider the athletic budpt, tbe University'• Survey
ltetearch
The IJOUps are the Chabad
•embly refuted by a IS - 7 vote. Center. A progeu report will be
and Hillel. both religiously
House
There was, however. a aeneral pven at the next usembly
oriented,
the politic:aJJy active
conaenaus within tbat lelislative meetina.
Jewish Defense League and
Activist Youth for Israel, and the
culturaJlyo()riented Studenta for
Israel The latter sponsors a
~ontlnued from Pl.. on.workshop in folk danci.na.
proarams which would meet the
"Ketter was very smart," he
At the meetina, representatives
needa of both students and continued. "The fint tbina that of the five goups decided to
faculty. Perhaps a man li.lte he did when he took office was to
organize interested faculty around
build up tremendous community
IC.inpnan Brewster of Yale."
support. That's why it'• goina to the issue of the proposed program
be so damn hard to say anythina and flood both campus and local
Community politics
The petition which la now in apinst him to people connected dty newspapers with cogent
the process of beina printed has with the community."
letters explaining the need for a
Mr. Block has serious doubts as
not been incorporated with
Jewish Studies program . This was
typical radical demands. Mr. to whether the petitibn will be
Block strove to keep it on a effective. What he does want to proposed in order to rally support
the
groups
when
somewhat more calm, direct and see though Is the "openjng up of behind
hiJher inteUectual level than most discussion among those people representatives
meet
with
petitions. Essentially it states that who feel the same way. It is o nly Executive Vice President Albert
the only way for the University to through the means' of a petition
Somit in the near future to discuss
achieve the potential it once had that one can see just how much
the matter.
Is to get rid of Dr . Ketter and to support there is."
All those interested in the
establish a more liberal type
Unkept promises
aliministratlon. But as Mr. Bloclc, petition can contact Mr. Block
If approved , the Jewish Studies
.-eallzes,
this 1oal will bo tlu"oush the Student Auocia~ion
program would consist of courses
exceedingly difficult to achieve. office.

••

or hlvc experienced dil6culty in
malntainina their positions.
. Mr. Block, who wu Student
Senice coordinator and who was
on tbe Faculty Senate Committee
on Student Affain, fed.s tbat he ia
fairly well copizant of tbe
problems confrontina today's
univenities. It is his claim that the
State University of Buffalo is
losing a areat deal of its past
credibility. When asked what type
of individual he would lilce to see
running this University, Mr. Block
replied: "Someone of a more
HberaJ vein who is more well
known nationally as a scholar. It
would have to be someone whose
main ~ea · waa to a~t thiJ
UnLversit¥ movin~ apjn with the
setting up of more progressive

in

Hebrew, Yicldilh, Jewish
culture, et.hJ,cs and pbD010pby.
Coune titlea milbt include
American Jewiah H.iJtory, Jewilh
Phlloeophy, Jewish literature and
18th, 19th and 20th Century
Jewish HJJtory.
It wa also decided that lf
nothina cornea of the meetiftt,
more dlutk meuurea will be
used. However, these meaaur•
were not dJscualed in detail.
They noted that clisc\llllon
durin&amp; the meetlna with Dr. Somlt
will
center
on
leYera1
commitmenta
which
the
Univenity made and which they
claim it is not foUowinJ. The
commitmenta are that, one, the
Univenity aponsor Hebrew 1n the
Critical Lanauaae Department if it
lhows enoUJh of a foUowtna: two,
that the Un.tverdty find a
candidate to orpnize and teach
full time in a Jewish Studiea
program.
The representatives argued that
althoup the enrollment for
Hebrew is up to 90 students,
much more than any other
language in the department, the
University has kept it there
instead of malcing it a full-fledged
department in its own right.
Big problems ...
Peter Boyd-Bowman, chairman
of
the
Critical
Language
Department, h as threatened to cut
back funds for Hebrew as it is
eating
up
most
of
the
departmental budget, even though
-continued on INI!Ie ,_,.,._

Complaint boxes
The Student Association Community Action
Corps (CAC) is setting up consumer complaint boxes
throughout the University. They will be looldng for
complaints on consumer goods and aervices u weU as
good buys. The boxes will be placed in Norton Hall,
the interim campus at Ridge Lea, Tower Hall and
Clement and Good year Halls.
For those who wish to help and for more
information , contact Andrea Nager and Lisa
Schulman at the C.AC office. Room 220 Norton .

Get to know The Spectrum staff
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Monday, November 15, 1971. The Spectrum. Page five

\

�0

....

Program UIDitatloas

'

Student theater gioups
wOrk on tight lmdget
by Gerald Panaber
Spectrum St4/f Wrft~Y

·.
~~~~~~~~~~· ~

---==------:------------:-----1 \\\'\ '. I'.-', ', ·. - ..:_

_·-l's..r--vTrir·:
I

'

Trial nears completion

Expelled students' hope fades
Pive former University students, expelled this belong, are offering rides from the campus to the
summer after being arrested at a demonstration, are courtroom and are distributing leaflets explaining
nearing the end of their trial in Erie County Court. the trial.
The disturbance this summer was an outgrowth of
The outcome, admit the defendants, looks bad .
All five - Sherilyn Levy, Robert Steinhorn, an earlier affair, when campus security forces were
Norman Slawsky, Bill Ford and Jim Sober - are employed to maintain order in John Halstead's
charged with at least one or two misdemeanors and a " Modern Imperialism" summer session course.
disorderly conduct violation. Maximwn penalty for a Another member of SDS, David Levy, interrupted
misdemeanor is one year or S 1000, and for Dr. Halstead's lectures, which Levy termed "racist."
disorderly conduct , 15 days or $30. The five were Levy was subsequently summoned to a disciplinary
arrested the night of June 28, at Acheson Annex , hearing upon Halstead's request to President Ketter.
where some 30 students, including the five It was in their attemot to enter than hellrino in
defendants, attempted to force their way into a support of Levy, that the defendants were arrested.
closed disciplinary hearing. Several uniformed police
and some plainclothes security officials not only Spectator deterrent
stopped that attempted entry, but dispersed the
In the five days of the trial, the defendants have
demonstrato rs with a good deal of brutality. alleged
attempted
to interject their political views Into
the defendants.
testimony, but have aUegedJy been cut off by the
judge. " We have tried to get University students and
'Real issues'
The triaJ has been going on for a week , and other people In the city to come and tum the
should end today, when the attorneys wW present tables," added Ford, "Anti put the University and
their final arguments to the six person jury . Nearly Halstead on trial." The large number of spectators
40 spectators fl.lled the court last Friday and were the last two days of the trial had conspicuously
warned more than once by presiding Judge Zimmer deterred the judge from making anti-defense rulings,
according to the defendants.
to remain silent or be held in contempt.
A packed court and audience participation has
been one goal of the defendants throughout the trial .
" With a full court and pickets outside," maintained
Mr . Ford, "we could have brought forth what we
consider to be the real issue - University racism and
defense by violent means." SDS, to which all five

If they are convicted, and they seem to think that
will happen today, the five wUI probably appeal,
depending upon their financial resources. Money to
defray legal expenses has been hard to come by, they
concluded , and would probably have to be raised by
donations. ,

Funds, space a problem

..........................
•.. but we LIKE Smokey Bear! II

•••••••••••••••••••••••

Faced with problems of lactc of
funds and inadequate facilities,
theater sroups at the State
University
of
Buffalo
arc
pedormina in aood faith.
The JrOUps on this campus
presentin&amp; the dramatic arts
include the Student TheatCT
Guild, the UUAB Dramatic Arts
Committee,
the
T heater
Department and the Opera Club
and University Opera Studio.
It seems that interest in theater
on tbis campus hu been intenJC in
the past. " We have never had any
trouble
ftllina
a
bouse,"
commented
Gordon
Roaoff,
chairman
of
the
Theater
Department. Yet, he feels : ''There
is a lot more interest than has
been tapped. The limitations of
the programs are caused by
poverty."
Dr. Rogoff is not the only one
to feel financiaJ constraints.
Muriel WoiC, of the Univc:raity
Opera Studio, commented : " The
budget for musical theater wu
non~xistent last year and is
crippled by the budget freeze this
year." She continued: "Tbe opera
programs have continued only
through the enthusiasm and the
bard work of students." Opera
groups are attempting to raise
money throu&amp;h performances
outside the University.

Lack of space is an additional
problem. The Theater Studio ln
Harriman Ubrary, which was
cause for many complaints in the
put, is currently beina renovated
and is not usable until sprina.
" Because of the lack of facilities
on tbis campus, the amount of
work involved in putting on a
performance
Is
doubled,"
commented Michael Silverblatt of
the Student Theater Guild .
Formerly, the University had
limited use of the Domus Theater
on Elmwood Ave. But the
administration recently ceased to
pay rent for that facility. Funds
must
be
obtained
from
non-University sources if student
involvement Is to be maintained .
It
seems
that
the
ad ministration's
success
in
providing for the dramatic arts has
been limited. The plans for the
Amherst campus include a center
for the performina arts, but Dr.
Rogoff
of
the
Theater

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Page six . The Spectrum . Monday, November 15, 1971

Time pion

Most1r chorge

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Department fcela that ..this pli n
bas many pitfalls." The new
center wW have all of the
perfortninc arts in one buildin&amp;
which can, Dr. Roaoff feels ,
..create more problems than it
solves. No o ne involved in theater
wu consulted in the plannfna," be
added .
Broad schedule
However, in spite of such
difficulties, students can upect a
broad and varied schedule of
performances this year. The
Student Theater Guild bas two
major productions planned for
each temester. Plans include
presentations of Peter Weiss' The
In vestigation and Joe Arton's
What the Butler Saw . to be·
presented in December.
The Theater Guild is entirely
student run and receives its
funding
from
the Student
Association.
The student aroup responsible
for musical theater is the Opera
Club. On HaUoween, the club
presented Horror Night at the
Opera to a full house in the
Conference Theater. Opera is also
presented by the University Opera
Studio (UOS), a coUaboratioo of
faculty and students.
Accordin&amp; to Ms. Wolf, the
goal of UOS is "to present musical
theater on campus as an
experimental art experience." The
fact that both groups are
performing, upon req uest, to
croups o utside the Univenity is an
indication of their popularity.
More productions
The Theater Department is
present.ing mon~ this year than it
has in the past . Faculty and
students are workin&amp; on three
Panteg/eze
by
productions,
GheJderade, Dr. Fawtu.r by Marlo
and Cosmiccomlcs by Calvino.
The
&amp;roup
primarily ·
responsible for bringing outside
theater to this campus is the
UUAB Dramatic Arts Committee.
This committee fulfills the dual
roles
of satisfying student
demands and brinsin&amp; in new
types of theater.
One problerrr,• chairman Sue
Schwartz explained , is that
"because of budset cuts, I have to
get other student organizations to
work together." So far she has
cooperated with the Cultural
Affairs Committee in presentina
"Bread and Puppet Theater" and
with the Women's Festival group
in their presentation .
Plans for next semester also
include a weekend of mime
theater and presentation of some
aspects of living theater. Ms.
Schwartz would like to see
students more active in decldin&amp;
what theater best communicates
to the University community.
All of the theater groups
expressed a desire for more
student involvement. Ms . Wolf
stated : .. We would like to attract
people interested in all pb.ues of
musical theater. We want to
involve people from non-music
disciplines so that we may be able
to enrich our program and be able
to present different types of
musi c al
theater."
Theater
Department chairman Dr. Roaoff
commented : "We are totally
receptive to non-majors." He
stressed the need for people not
rigidly defming themselves in life
styles and work," Jn addition, the
student run theater groups arc
anxious
for
more
student
involvement and increased theater
activity.

�•

Jill .JOhnstm's q&gt;timism for
acceptanCe by others grows
by Barbara Malmet
St11f{ f+'rlter

Sp«~m

Jill Johnston, speaklna to close to 3SO people iJlj
the Fillmore Room lut Wednesday niJ)lt, said:"( 10
to very few plac:ec these daya where I'm not
introduced u a letbian ." Her talk was aiven under
the auspices of the UUAB's Women's Festival, and
she was introduced by a member of the Women's
Study faculty, as "Jill Johnston, columnist for 1Jre
Village Voice and author of the book , Marm11ll.ldt:
Me".
Stattina off the evenina's event, the taU
denim-dad Ma. Johnston with martini in band , rctd
two IOiecdona of ber 'Dance Journal' {colum n for

-

Kaufm•n

'ntt Village Voice). She would, she said ''do these
two numbers and then aet some feedback from
you ."
The first column was a bit obtuse, with long
ramblings about women , myths and related ideas.
The second piece, entitled , ''On a Clear Day You
Can See Your Mother," drew some wild pictures of
women reveling in their identities relatina to other
women. Included here wu a lo na passage about Joan
of Arc beitla an archetype to women as Jesus Christ
to men. The audience responded during her readings
with applause and the proverbial "right-on."

Males ousted
Finished with her reading Ms. Johnston
requested people to start an exchange of ideas.
lronicaUy, the first · person to respond was a male,
Introducing himself as Mark, who complimented Ms.
Johnston on her readinas. The second person to
reach for the audience mike, was Michael Levinson
who made some incooaruous remarks and offered
Ms. Johnston a copy of his television scripture.
It was at that point that Ms. Johnston and
members of the group earnestly demanded the

\'Oluntary removal of all males from the room. Ms.
Johnston believed that with all the men separated
out the women rcmalnina could be more open and a
now of ener&amp;Y would be feJt.
Statina afterwards, Ms. Jobnaton said: " I think
the most important thin&amp; that happened here tonight
wu that the men did leave." Some were outrlaht
indjplant about leavina and it took a personal
experience related by one female to finally oust the
sole male rema.inina.
The aecond sex
Usina the rest of the time to discuss woman and
her revolution M.s. Johnston expounded on many of
her basic ide.ts. She proclalmed: "Until all women
are lesbians, there will be no political revolution."
She said that the true war in the world is the war
between men and women and until women stop
beina second class ciliz.ens in a male-identified world,
there will continue to be inane injustices.
Conlinuina she remarked that women must
m.a ke a primordial commitment to each other and
that includes a sexual commitment as well. Asked by
a woman in the audience to &amp;Jorify the Iovin&amp; aspects
of two women toaether, Ms. Johnston found if
difficult to verbaliz.e the personal feelinp she has.
She did state, however, that " all cateaories are types,
that strai&amp;ht is artificial and py is artificial , as is
bi-sexual."
Ms. Johnston turned thinp around a bit by
aslting the audience, "Are you all py?" There was
some affirmation on the part o f the aroup, but
nothing overwhelming. Ms. Johnston attributed this
to the fact that perhaps many women present were
" fuzzy" about their position in terms of lesbianism.
She h oped to overcome the stiama attached to the
word "lesbian" and show people that it i1 a beautiful
thing.
Continued cbaoae
Discussing the historical aspects of women's
role, she said there bas been no real history other
than what was written by men. She declared that it
was time that women got toaetber and refused to be
malt&gt;-dominated. She noted humorously that she was
not referrln&amp; to "the women who 10 t o Women's
Liberation meetinp and talk abo ut the 'oppressors'
and then go home to make dinner ro r the
'oppressor'."
Alluding several times to a utopia in the future,
Ms. Jo hnston felt that there was a telepatttic wave of
enerajes flowin&amp; from women all over the country,
towards this end. She questioned the worth of her
talk to the Fillmore Room audience, saying that
consciousness was being raised without her direct
interventio n.
.After her talk, Ms. Johnston noted her surprise
and pleasure to see as many faces as were present for
her discussion. Sbe is very optimistic that things are
chanaing and will continue to change for the gay
community and for lesbians specifically.

Community action

Dental school supplies aid
The dental school at the State University of
Buffalo is unknown to some, ignored by most and
unfamiliar to just about everybody. However, it is
involved in a great deal of work, both on campus and
off, which Is not of inconsiderable significance.
The majority of work which the School of
Dentistry concerns itself with is done on campus in
' \ Capen HaU . The service here Is no different from the
ordinary care one would receive in a private dentist's
office, although the complexity of the operation
would not suggest that this is so.
There are some problems with the unit . such as
overcrowding, but the size of the operation makes it
possible to have clinics which are more suited to
specific needs. Facilities for the student body are
located in Michael HaU ; the treatment is mostly of a
preventive nature, but there is a limited amount of
emergency work done when possible.

Outside work

It is probably the work which the dental school
Is involved with outside the University which makes
it exceptional. Included in these activities are inner
city, hospital and prison work.
One of the prosrams which the faculty is

concerned with is a cUnlc at Jefferson and Genesee,
which is able to treat the people of that are.t who are
affected by the m.aldistribution of dentists in the
city. The scllool is also involved with other projects
dealing with the Buffalo community, such as
treatment in hospitals and summer work o n the part
of dental students.

Also, the faculty is presently running an evening
program for dentists educated in other countries, in
an effort to prepare them for state boards. From this
picture alone, the degree of responsibility which the
school has assumed is apparent.

Health Services

.

.hvits legislatiOns
by Mary Anoe M0f110
Spectrum St•fl Writer

be felt until about fhe ~after
ita implemebtatioo. ·
Senator Ja.tts spoke of the

Addresaina a sbiverina crowd cruel aocial diltinction in t1ai1
last Tburaday ni&amp;ht at Acheson country and cited the fKts tb.at
Hall, Senator Jacob K. lavits the poor have three times mm-e
spoke in an effort to pt \SUpport beart disease, aneo tima u many
of the National Health Insurance eye defectJ, fiw timet a mucb
and Health Services Act or 1971. retardation, twice u peat infant
The
senator
is
currently mortaUty, four times a ~t
sponsoring
the
bill
before mat ernal mortality and pmeraUy
aborter life expectanciea than the
Congess.
Members in the audience rich. "The Am~can system il
included County Executive-elect areat for the 8S% who hate a
Edward Repn, Robert Ketter, reason ably stable existence."
Thlnkin&amp; positively, thoup,
President of the'""State University
of Buffalo, members of state-wide the senator said : ''I think it l$
health agencies and interested ,symptomatic of American society
people.
that we are proceedinJ very much
The bill, wb.ich is essentially alona lines . . . of a consumer's
built on Medicare, has provisions economy which is essentially whit
not onJy for hospital care of the United States ou&amp;ht to be .. I.
persons over 65 years of age, but Coupled with diverse ownership
also gives the aged the right to see of the means of prodw:tion .. . it
individual physicians for only a aives citiz.ens the ri&amp;bt to wear
small monthly fee. The proanun two hats, one political and one
will obtain the bulk o f its funds econo mic."
Durin&amp; a question and answer
from Social Security paymenta
which would be raised under t he peiod and an ensuing preu
conference, the senator pointed
bill.
"AU existina institutions in out that his scheme was not
both private and public sectors meant to be repressive. No doctor
should be used," the senator said, would be compelled to j9in the
citing the need to keep basic plan thouJ)l '"very few doctors
facilities, though oth ers may be can afford to stay outside the
needed. He also called for the system ."
simplification of the system by
taking most employees out of National health care
" I am hoping that one-third to
health care programs. "That could
very well cut the to tal number of one-half of American workers
beneficiaries ... by one-half.. lt is may o perate under private plans
the most unique feature of my and not be under the system at
plan ."
all,'' be said .
The senator also said he
expected a lar&amp;e lobby from major
Sponsors bill
Senator Javits called for dru&amp; manufacturers, thou&amp;h be
preventive health care which doubted that it would interfere
wou\4
provide
medi ca\ much in the passing of the bill.
examinations and diagnosis for The senator's bill is one of four or
children under eight-years-old . " If five bills now presented in
you have actuarial coverage of a Congress. Senator Javits ' proposed
broad mass of people .
plus program has been caJied , by many
heavy emphasiS on preventive political strategists, the bill most
health care ... you can red uce the likely to pass o ut of the group.
On other topics, Senator Javits
cost of maintaining the sjck."
On a final Jtem, the senator spoke in favor of his Methadone
pointed out that Medicare caUs Maintenance bill now in Congress
for " reasonable" charges of which would aid heroin addicts.
patients to be made by doctors "Crime attributed to heroin
and hospitals. Charges, however, addicts is suffocating New York
usually
c onsidered City ," he said. An estimated $35
a re
"reasonable" if they fall into the million a day is stolen by heroin
general pattern of charges, which users in New York. There are
very often is a burdensome price presently 7000 heroin addicts on
for the old to pay. In Javits' bill the waiting list for t~e plan in
"the word ' reasonable' is changed New York.
About the Supreme Court
to the word 'appro priate.' That
could drive the cost down by nominees, the senator claimed to
have no idea if the nomination of
billions of dollars."
Mr. Renquist would be confirmed .
On the overaJI topic the " I haven't heard the questions
senator said : " I consider the raised on Powell as I have on
national health le&amp;islation to be Renquist ," he said.
one of the greatest reforms to be
About the Supreme Co~t
made in this century.
itself, Senator Javits said : " So far
" I predict that there will be a t here have been n o major
national health care proanm or hist orical or significan changes
scheme within the next one to that would stamp it as the Nixon
three years,'' Senator Javits said, Court . . . but I anticipate one .
though warning that the full That doesn't necessarily mean a
reactionary court."
benefits of such a program won't

Prison work
Another aspect of the work which the School of
Dentistry is involved in is the care of the prisoners at
the Attica Correctional Facility. Some of the faculty
in the Department of Oral Surgery are on emergency
call for the prison and other members of the dental
faculty perform routine dental wortc at the prison
itself.

Gus, Sr. will reproduce
almost anything
3SS Norton Hall

The majority of the inmates are treated at
Attica, but the few serious cues W~4tlti7Ufe not
able to accommodate are treated at w.,-eDI&amp;moriaJ
Hospital in Buffalo.

Monday, November 15, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�I

I
An outrage

The disclosure on Friday that Thomas Schillo, director of
housing, had used an 8ld hoc hearing panel to by~ the
Inter-Residence Judiciary shocked many Individuals. While
this specific matter still disturbs ta greatly, we must
momentarily divert our attention to another facet of this
dispute.

It now appea" that Mr. Schillo, acting totally on his
own, dispat~ a letter to the student involved in this case,
evicting him-unilaterally. We must condemn this action. Such
a move is not only arbitrary and capricious, but flagrantly
violates the notion of due proca.
The time when a single administrator could act as· a
dictator, whether benevolent or tyrannical, and punish a
student singlehandedly, has long sincle passed. Mr. Schillo's
actions and reasoning conjure up images of a duke wreaking
vengeance upon his troublesome serfs.
Perhaps, as one student has suggested, Mr. Schillo was
under great pressure to resolve this case swiftly and quietly.
We must at least see that such a possibility is investigated
since hit past actions were usually enlightened and clash
sharply with his current despotic rule.
In any event, we feel that Mr. Schillo owes a deep
apology to the student involved and to the University as a
whole. Further, the Administration must publicly disavow
the proceedings of 'the ad hoc panel. Failure to do so will
prove the charge now being openly discussed that students
are used only to lend credence to administrative actions and
are usually absent from crucial or potentially volatile
decision-making.
In addition, a silent concurral by the Administration will
damage their credibility with regard to the developing
Student Wide Judiciary. After all, if they approve the use of
ad hoc measures to avoid carrying out established
procedures, ·then why should students or even faculty for
that matter, bother to participate in University affairs?

Record Bunner .r ip-olf
every media and

To the Editor:

open four record stores, advertiJe in
plan on openinJ other stores.

As a student who formerly attended Syracuse
U., I am familiar with the Record Runner, Bob
Meares, and his operation in Syracuse . .He does not
run a student store u you printed. It is a profitable
commercial ripoff on Marshall Street - one of four
record storet he has opened .
Poor boy tTyinJ to make aood? Pull the silver
spoon out of his mouth and he'U be pad to teU you
how successful he really is. It takes real bread to

If bis intentions are, u he says, to provide a real
service for students here in Buffalo, how come he
doesn't have auts enougb. to Ust his prices anywhere
in the store and compete out in the open with the
C&lt;H&gt;p and Cavaps? Why? Because it's much simpler
to rip off the unsuspectina customer that way!

One of the Boys
from Syracuse

R&gt;or handling
The request of PODER for funds to help the Niagara Day
Care Center has been poorly handled in many ways.
First, PODER never presented a full, complete and
factual justification for these funds, nor did they ever work
directly with the head of the Center in developing their
monetary requests. The SA must also be held responsible
because it appears that they never asked for such materials.

feedback

The mOlt grievous wrong, however, was the PODER
takeover of last Wednesday night's Student Assembly
meeting. While their claims of being given a runaround by SA
officials certainly have more than a little ·merit, it cannot
justify their heavy-handed attempt at intimidation of the
Assembly.

.Fbod Service lament
To the Editor:

Vol. 22, No. 34

Monday, November 15, 1971
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold

Co-MIIMtint Editcw - AI Benton
Co-MIIneelne Editor - Mike LiPPfT181'1n
A•. M.neeirw Editor - Suun Moss
Bulin- M.n..... - Jim Drucker
Advertising Man..- - Sue MeUentine

C.mpus .... • .... Jo-Ann Armao
.... . ........... Howie Kurtz
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bill Veccaro
c· . . ........ . . Harvy Lipman
Co
........... Aonni Forman
........... . .... Marty Gatti
ast • •..••••• Claire Kriegsman
F ura .................vacant
Gr
· Arts ......... Tom Toles

Layout ..... .. Mary hope Runyon
Alit . .................vacant
Lit. &amp; Drama .. Michael Silverolatt
Mulic ....... . ..... Billy Altman
Off.Camput ...... Lynne Traeger
Photo .......... Marc Ackerman
......... . Mickey Osterrelctuw
Sports ............. Barry Rubin
Asn............. Howie Faiwl

ThB Spt~t:trum is served by United Press International, College Press
SetVice, the Los Angeles Free Press. the Los angeles Times Syndicate and
Liberation News Service.
Republication of matter herein without the eKpress consent of the
Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.
Editorial pOlicy is dat.e rmined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page eight . The Spectrum. Monday, November 15, 1971

This is in regards to The Spectrum of Nov. 12 ,
specifically the letter by Mitchell Regenbogen titled,
"Food Service 'Stinks'." Althougb. I agree
wholeheartedly with the content of the letter, some
clarification about the situation is necessary.
The gross inefficiency and general lack of
concern for students exhibited by Food Service is
indeed a major problem. But I believe that the major
grievance isn't against the administration of Food
Service, but is directed at the product itself; the stuff
they laughingly pass off as food .
The board contract holders o f this University
have a right to eat food that is edible as well as well
balanced . Food Service is, unfortunately, highly
negligent when it comes to preparing food that is
palatable.
Who are they kidding with their hamburgers?
You can actually feel and taste the cartilage in the
meat. Or how about some of their tuna fish casserole
or (on the sa me menu), their grilJed bacon and
cheese sandwich - guaranteed to put you into the

bathroom within a half hour. This is not to mention
theii gross imitation of pepperoni pizza.
To be fair, there are some rare instances where
Food Service does serve something that closely
resembles the desired commodity, But a Kleenex is
thick~r than most of their slices of meat and their
chickens seem to be suffering from acute .
malnutrition. Let us not forget their seemingly
unlimited supply of Uncle Ben's Unqoverted Rice.
Even when the food is half-way-decent, you're
not able to get seconds unless you wait for about
three days for the seconds counter to serve it, if at
all. This doesn't include the food that 's incorporated
into their world famous lasagna and meatballs.
If it were just a question of money, then I think
most students would ante up. But the problem is
with Food .Service and the people who dictate its
policies. There are many universities where food is
actually enjoyed by students on board and where the
quantity of the more desirable food is not so limited .
Food Service: either shape up o r ship (or get
kicked) o ut.
Paul Kade

�-

..

To the Editor:
~

Last evenJng many persona from tbia University
community attended a -speech which Sen. Jacob
Javits presented in Acheaon Hall. As the "Green
Slime" waa concurrently being shown in Capen Hall,
the .udience waa compoled of th01e most interested
in a diac:uaion of the topic at band, the American
health care system.
1b.is letter concerns a matter annoyinsly of
notice to aU present. From soon after the Senator
arrived untiJ hls last reply to the audiencea'
questions, be was never for even a moment free from
the
distractina
presence and
activity of
photo~r~pbers . He obviously chose to not make a
point, tbrouab any comment, of this rude and
thouahtleaa conduct. I probably would not have
been as tolennt.
1boup I recopti:r.e the need and desirability of

i

j
I

To

th~

i

.Review
To tile Editor:
ln the miclat of all your rmewa of the peat
musical talent of our time (Dol Steveru, Jetluo DuJJ,
and The Drop Dead), it atruck me a odd that you
failed to include one of tho beat musicians of the
day, namely, Kris Kriatofferaon.
.
I realize that you must cater to t.h e tastes ot tbe
Univef!ity community, but that is no ~n to Jet
pasa unnoticed such a fine performance as the one
K.ristofferaon pve last Sunday eveninJ.
I have just about reached my tolerance point of
readin&amp; reviews of both Grateful Dead concerts and
recorda. It seems as thouJh redundancy is one of
your stronJer points. I think it mipt be a bit more
enliJhteninJ for everyone involved if you would try
to broaden your musical horizons every now and

Sportsth~

Editor 'I note: For the record, tlte pltotopapher who
distwbed the au.dlen« by ltu corulllnt po111U'inp,
•~t ndecorrutoru and l«mlntly perpetw~l motion,
wcu not a 1taf{ memb~r of The Spectnnn. He MU
l'PIU Hillman , wlto wu there on alipmmt {rom The
Reporter.

Editor:

I feel it ia vital for UB to establish Judaic studies
within its departments. For many years, concerned
Jewish students have attempted to organize such
relevant counes, yet, due to many inane obstacles,
they have never sueceeded . It is time for the long
awaited Judaic studies to be instituted . The demand
must be met immediately.
Terri F7~ischner

To

procuriJla photopapha for newt purpoaea u well u
permaoeut records, I, too, beUeve that tpOd tate
require~ ratralnt on the part of any pb.otopapber.
If to avoid tbia our photopapben must limit
their activity durin&amp; a speech or talco a atationary
position in a lower row, then I feel they are
obllpted to do this. SlmD.atly. the · campus
publications milbt make an effort to see that their
pbotolflphen enpae in more appropriate behavior.
If IUeat speakers can expect and receive proper
courtesy anywhere, I hope they can still do so here.
Stan StJmiJclc

Editor:

In the last few issues of The Sp~ctrum, I have
read several letten benting the athletic program on
this campus, augesting that it be cut compJetely on
the intercoDegiate level. Apathy towards sports
seems to be lfOwin&amp; on campus over the put few
yean. The moat recent surge of anti-sports sentiment
seems to have stemmed from the vote of the Student
Assembly passing the sports budget by onJy one
vote. 1bia leads me to wonder what their vote was,
or if they did vote on budgets for other student
oriente4 activities such u drama, theater and even
the paper's budget. I am not apinst these programs.
Quite the contrary, I feel tJtey are a very integral
part of the school, just as sports are. Bach allows the
individual to express himself as he chooses. To
eliminate athletics would deny bundreda of students
their means of expression. 1b.is is their area of
endeavor, their cboaen field of participation. Unlike
other activities, athletics has room for everyone to
participate. If not as a player, then as a spectator.
There are onJy a few liJnjted areas where a spectator
can get into an event as much as he can with sports,
and this winter, UB offen the chance to do it. WE
have one of the toughest hockey teams around; our
wrestling team should be one of the top in the East.
BuketbaU is coming aJont weU and we have a power
in fencing for quite a few yean. If our swimming
team would get a little recognition they could do
much better. We have the material to make this
winter's sports season very exciting. If each student
would make an effort to attend a hockey game or a
wrestling match, or any other varsity sport and really
get into it, I'll bet you'll realize just what you've
been missjng. The chance to blow off a little steam,
to reaJJy get excited about something might be just
what you need to break the monotony or school.
Once you have attended an exciting competitive
event such as wrestlina or fencing , you will realize
what would be lost on this campus by the
elimination of sports and we would not see another
close vote like the one thai has just been .
If any one would like any info rmation on
intercollegiate sports activities, contact me and I will
try to get the information.
Ed Hamilton

then. Kria Krlatofferaon is a tnae aeniUJ in the field
of real country muaic a admitted by nery music
critic'• Blble, ..the Rollyina Stone.'' l'm not puttiq
down any ol tbe other concert. ol Jut weekend, but
I'm ma-e.ly statina that you Jet oae of today'•
musical arcata como .lnto BuffaJo and JeaYe without
ao much as battinJ an eyelash. So do me a favor and
next time you write a review tellina what a ~t
orp.sm you achieved seeing fan Anderson twitch his
left noatril, or bow it sent chilla down your spine to
see Joan Baez make a ..tbrillina" cameo appearance
right on our very own Climbbands' staae, or bow the
Grateful Dead can atill leap tall buildinp with a
single bound ... dispense with aU the bullahlt and
just give me one solid line about one solid performer.

D. I+tnz

•

QmdOOif~~t; 'M~Ifl!~

ffAitl.~

'\'rf.-w

' AGNIW SHOULD NOT II RIPLACID,' S~ID SEN. GOLDWATIIl. ' I GUESS THAT IUGHT NOW
HE IS MOll I POPULAR IN THE RIPUILICAN PAilTY THAN Mil. NIXON.'

Monday , November 15, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page nine

-.

�...

-25·~---­
Luncheon

RLET
Ml~

~ntology

offers a program
of $1udy concerning knowledge

(Petite)

.
......
.
.
.
.._......................_.

by Linda Trotta
Sp«trum St•fl Wrltw

Choice Potato

.N.gjjj ...

......,
1111 .......

St.

Francis
had a
dream
I

....

I.

He dreamed that
He could be an Instrument of
God's peace
Where there was hatred he

could sow love
Where there was Injury, pardon
Where there was doubt, faith
Where there was despair, hope
Where there was dart&lt;ness, llaht
Where there was sadness, joy.

The Franciscans
still follow his simple,
challenging way.

'Misunderstandings' handicap
"Word clearing" is an important branch to the
communication aspect of functional Scientology.
Scientolo&amp;ists believe that tbe biggest problem in
learning is not having the precise meaning of a word
in your mind. Nomenclature and denotation are of
the utmost importance in communication and unless
a person erases his "misunderstandings" of words he
is greatly 1\andicapped.
The way ''word clearing" works is on an
in(Jividual
basis.
A
person
havina
"misunderstanding" will ao over words he has come
across through the years In various courses, books,
etc. · with a fellow Scientologist who is a trained
counselor to "clear up" these "misunderstandings."
Through this process, Scientoli&amp;ists claim that a

It you are Interested In learning
more about the Franciscan
brothers and priests write to:

Fr. John M. Felice, O.F.M.

The Franciscans
135 W. 31st Street

N.Y.lOOOl

.
I

I

.

,
.

I

I

Are you looking for "knowledge that applies to
your life?" Are you confused about who you are and
where you're going? Then Scientology may be the
religion fo r you .
Scientology itself means the study of
knowledae. It was founded by and evolved from L.
Ron Hubbard's new philosophy called "Dianetics" in
the 1950's. Scientology is not a worship form of a
religion in tbat it is nondenominational. In fact ,
many of its members attend both their place of
worship and Scientology meetings.
Unlike most religions, Scientology is temporal as
well as spiritual. Scientologists feel that their religion
brinp about temporal rewards while you are here on
earth. You don't have to die to feel rewarded. It has
been observed that the trouble with most of the
other reUgions is that they are built just on theory,
not on the application of a philosophy as a cult of
civilization should be. Technolo&amp;Y and especially
communication must be used to its full extent for
religion to be successful. In short, people must be
able to relate to their reUgion. Therefore Scientology
is mainly concerned with the study of applicable
knowledge.

greater understandin&amp; of everything that was
previously unclear in the subject addressed by the
counseling is suddenly bro'u&amp;ht about and the person
now " brightens up." He can easily return to tbe
study and practice of the subject.
To
prevent
future
"misunderstandings,"
Scientologists encourage careful reading. Never go
past a word that you do not fully understand . This is
a problem of most people since a reader usually goes
on in the reading to get some sense of U\e word
throu&amp;h con text. Passing a "misunderstood" word is
cited as the primary reason a person gives up a study
or becomes confused or unable to learn . All material
becomes confused because there will be a word or
words that he has not understood. He must go back
ro before he got into trouble and define the words.
A dictionary is most helpful in any study of
knowledae.
"Dianetics," meaning "through the mind," is
the oldest branch of Scientology, and is concerned
with experience in the study of knowledge. The

.•
-

I-. ~

YtJUY/

want a

((
{
at

your UNIVER

"on
BOOKSTORE campus"

�'Something dramatic'

~protest

ScietttoWY...

to

ability to confront and perceive your own personal properly balanced diet and a aafe environment
eXperience here is a m01t valued tool. It is this speciaJly desilned to reMbiHt.ate adclJcta.
control over relevant memories that is alJo a major
A bAsic cou.ne i.n conuaunk:ation and rela.tion in
atudy of a person's communication and relation to . life is pven to the addict. The addict learnt to think
the environment, both o f which are major concerns apln and discover for himself ho w to rectify what
of
ScientolOJY.
went wrona in hi&amp; life. The Narconon proaram iJ not
conccmina the Indochina war
L . Ron Hubbard is the fou.nder of the just rehabilitation but a total cdu.c:ation. The addict
widely known. Re said that news
u not fortbcomin&amp; from these movement .and the author of all the texts on the acts to the heart of the problem and resolves it for
battle zonea beca\110 of th e subject . In fact, there are rarely any books that do himaelf, u only he can do.
Narconon appears to be much more succeuful
oatun.J reluctance displayed by not bear his name. It is estimated that he has 20
tbe American embusy at bavina million words in print and SOOO hours of taped than methadone in the treatment of drua addicts. In
new• released. Mr. Branfman also lectures. All ScientolOJY courses are also ali&amp;ned by the four years at Arizona Penitentiary, Nan:onon bu
cited the fact that moct reporters him. ScientolosiSts look to Hubbard for leadership had S7 araduates. E.iaht have returned to prison and
are unwilling to follow a and guidance and all consi~er him to be amazingly 49 have become completely rehabilitated and lead
lona-ranae story, and in many adept and devout to his founded religion . He normal livea - with no drutl . Of theae, many
cuea, stories about atrocitiea presently is alive and well and continuin&amp; his actively work with Narconon to Insure the
reaearcb o n the subject .
perpetuation of the program and help tpread the
limply ao unpublished.
amazina reaults for other drua addicts. The
Religion criticized
percentaae of success is about 86 per cent. There are
'Epic battle'
As a religion, Scientology has been rather now about I 00 addicts in the proaram at Arizona
The war in Indochina can be
seen as an "epic battle of this kind viciously attacked . Many people claim that it is not a and the expectations of continuing aood results arc
of technology and the human religion but a school of thought and is only hi &amp;h.
aplrit," Mr. Branfman told the considered a religion for tax purposes. Their
aroup. He beUeves that the human argument lies in that with the cost of Scientology lncreasinJ conareption
With drugs being one of this city's m~or
spirit is winnin&amp;. He called the materials, lectures, courses, etc. it cannot possibly be
American covernment "a tiny a non-profit organization . Someone is reapin&amp; in the problems, Scientologists are tentatively plannin&amp; to
elite" and likened them to the "temporal rewards." Another attack that has been open a Narconon center berf in Buffalo . If the
made concerns the reported allegations of brutal and amazing results of previous programs continue here
Soviet Politburo.
Mr .
Branfman's
speech sadistic murders and tortures inflicted by the Sea perhaps the highly controversial methadone method
provided information for peace Ore. the executive body of elite Scientologlsts , on can be scrapped fo r a superior program without the
activitists who will be goin&amp; to the dissent en of Scientology. Much of this hearsay was use of drugs of any kind, lilcc in Narconon. All that
nation's capital on Wednesday to reported in a recent book, Sci~ntology : Th~ Now can be done ri&amp;ht now and in the future accord.in&amp; to
protest the war. Since last Rdtgion by Georae Maiko. Since publication, Scientologi.sts, is to watch and wait and hope.
There are millions of practicina Scientologists in
Monday, peace aroups from however, it is reported that Maiko has been brouaht
various parts of the country have to court where it was shown that his "foundinp" the world today with the nwnber increasing at a very
been holdina vigils at the White were based upon Charles Manson's claim to be a steady rate. This is not particularly amazin&amp;
House, leavin&amp; messages that 300 Scientolopst . These claims have been disproven and considering the effort put into the movement by the
Indochinese are dying every day Scientology is left with a clean slate, if not a clean reli,Uon's very devoted foUowen . Advertisements are
mailed and passed out in the streets and the churches
because of American military reputation.
One of the interests of Scientolo&amp;ists appears to are almost always open. kt · the Church of
action.
be sellina their religion. Commodities include books, Scientology of Buffalo on Kenmore Avenue the
The Buffalo Peace Council, one lectures, counes, etc. - anything that a penon is public is invited to come any time seven days a
of the groups involved in the willing to buy. Prices on these things vary ; but on week. Free lectures introducing ScientoloiY to the
protest, hopes to have 40- 80 the whole, Scintology can be pretty expensive. layman a.re at 8 p.m. and a Sunday service is held at
people in its contingent , set to Anyone interested in it had better have a 2 :30 p.m. In adddtion to the lectures, personality
leave Buffalo Thursday, Nov. 18. weU-padded wallet. However, Lou Blitz, a minister analysis tests can be taken at any time and there is a
Peace activilta from Syracuse and of the Buffalo Church of Scientoloay on Kenmore film by Jim Bush, a Scientology member.
Rochester will also be going to the ' Avenue, believes that the price is weU worth it. After
Those interested in Scientology may want to see
capital Thursday. Participants will completin&amp; counes in Scientology, be feels that a a television talk ahow (if they remember) that will be
engaae in a form or "people's penon can s.o into any field he wants and be televised on Dec. 18 on Channel 7 at 12:30 p.m . and
lobbyinc," like that used before successful at it. This supposition aupporta the apin after the Dick. Ca11~tt Show that niaht. The
last spring's May Day protects. reli..,n'a theory that SclentolOJY can be unlvenaUy propm, Chollenp, with Marilyn Stablk.a wW
feature Lou Blitz of the Cburcb of Scientolol)' of
Members
of
tbc
Buffalo appU'ed ; it reaps temporal rewards.
Scientoloty J.s coMtantly rejuvenating old Ideas Buff1lo o n .Kenmore Avenue and Sclentolou wiJJ ~
delegation will meet in the
with their new philosophy. It is probably one of the topict discussed.
morning with Congressman Jack
throUJhtthcse iruaovations that Scientoloay might
Scientology - the religion, the phUosophy that
Kemp. Later Thursday they will
someday attain equal footing with the major " applies ideu to change environments, gives new
bold a one-hour vigil at the White
reUgions of the Western world. One of these plans is viewpoints on education, makes ideas real to you in
House and will then attempt to
Narconan which is a treatment for drug addicts a practical form, moves you up in potentiality and
meet with Richard Nixon.
through the study of Scientology. Methadone is not capability" - may be what you've been looking for
The focw of this march is
used but an educational Scientology pro&amp;ram with a all alo ng.
directed at Middle America . Most
or the protesters wiU be older
citizens rather than students,
because orpnizers believe that
this is a more effective means of
reaching the ceneral public. Joyce
Reichert, a member of the group,
sees this protest as an attempt to
do "something dramatic." ,
Mr. Branfman told the group
that, ''if we can't break through
the American technology and
show people the blood in
Indochina, I wonder if we'JJ ever
be able to do it again elsewhere."

JW/iidze war horrors
Altbouab
most America.na
believe that the war in Indochina
is en4ina, deatruction continues in
Laos and Cambodia at an eYen
hi&amp;ber rate. That, at leut, is the
opinion of Mr. Fred Branfman,
wbo apent four yean in La01 u a
service volunteer. He spoke
Thursday niaht to a aroup of
about 30 people who met to
discuss planl for tbe Buffalo P~ce
Council's Nov. 18 protest in
Wasbiil&amp;ton, D.C.
The demonstration will be
conducted by bavin&amp; protestors
attempt to enter the White Rouse
to confront President Nixon on
the issue of the bombina of
Vietnam by American planes. This
will be done at 2 p.m. each
afternoon. As Rev. Kenneth
Sherman
explained :
"We're
working on the assumption that
we won't be permitted to enter
the White House.." He add ed that
the demonstrators are prepared to
commit non·violent acts of civil
disobedience in front of the White
House, such as "sitting down in
the driveway."
Increased bombing
According to Mr. Branfman, a
recent study made by ComeU
University showed that bombing
in
Indochina
has
actually
mcreased since the late 1960's.
This has especially affected Laos,
which has bad minimal ground
skirmishes with the American
forces . He explained that most
weapons being used are classified
as "personnel bombs" - which
are meant to destroy people
instead of property. "The lesson
of Laos is that we've waged a war
there for seven yean with no
IVOu nd troops . . . the fact that
there are no ground troops
doesn't mean a thing."
To help people understand its
effect, Mr. Branfman showed the
group one of the personnel
bombs. The "pineapple" bomb,
when exploded, sends out 250
pellets which can lodge in the
body. An average flying raid drops
I000 of these devices at a time.
The bomb is no longer used, as
the spealcer explained, because
military experts learned that its
vactims were learning effective
means for resisting it. He said that
now bombs that shoot pellets out
vertically are being employed.

HHUSSMIISDRS ... CLUB

Reluctant reporters
Mr. Branfman said that Laos is
divided
into
friendly
and
" unfriendly" zones for American
.-.· . . ............. _..J~t!' , ••••• .•. •.•. •.•._.• ... ..,.,, •• ·.·~.. v~~#·;.
troops. The latter are controlled .·.·!·
·.·.·~··."". .~ !II &lt;·.• ••••••••••• •., ·.·.·.·.•..·.·~.-. .. '
by the Patbet Lao, whom he ~::•!•!-!•!:~=&lt;·:"V'!·:·!!:·:·:O.!•!•!::·~:-:~o:":•!•!•:•.·:~";(~.~
claims have the cooperation of the
Laotians. "The Pathet Lao now
1.0., ~·::
controls more territory than when ~=~ appltcattons,
the bombing bepn," the speaker ~!=$ yearbook
portratts, ~
stressed. He likened their spirit to
gifts, announcements,
that of Cuban revolutionaries,
empbuizin&amp; that they seem to be
publicity, etc., etc. Call •~{-.~~::
..
winnint a war against advanced
831·2505 or 831 -5570 ~:~
technology.
:::$·
or come to Room 356 ~==~~
Telling the lfOUP that "we
have to pick up the shovel and do
our thing," Mr. Branfman uraed
them to try to make 'information ~~

~Pho~og~aphs

1

I

DON'T
for~]
WAIT
m IN LINE

~. ~~~~~-~~-'!~-----· · - . . . .

-.m

DEADLINE - DECEMBER 1st

Hillel
Deems it a privilege
to be able to present

SALLAH
Tire widely acciiiJmed
Israeli Comedy
Tuesday. Nov. 14 at 7 :30PM

JOIN NOW!

Conference Theater

MEMBERSHIP IN Room 318 Norton
Monday - Friday 9:00-4:30
Tuesday, Wed, Thurs. 7 - 9 p.m.

BRING A PICTURE
Monday, November 15, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�French poets invited Jewish Studies. ••
1:0 attend ~iwn .
')'be French Department has philosopher, literary critic and
invited three French poets and Visitins Professor at New York
one Canadian poet to Buffalo for · University, has published two
a two day poetry symposium on coUec:tiona of poems .entitled
Nov. IS and 16. The conference, Br«he and Let Depouellioltl u
entitled Poelie: Utre Rencontre, well u an essay on poetry, La
will feature Michel Depy, Gravitation poetique.
Jacques Garelli, Robert , Marteau
and Femand Ouellette. 'The poets
Robert Marteau, art critic and
read their works on Monday film writer, is the author of
at 8 p~ Diefendorf 146; there Royaumes, Thlvaux mr liJ: terre
will be an open roundtable on and De1 Chewna panni In arbres.
Tuesday momins at 10 · in In addition to his reauJar
Diefendorf Annex 18 and a contributions to th~ journal EqJrit
theoretical
discuaion
that he has written a number of film
afternoon at 3 in the library 1 scenarios dealins with the visual
Conference Room (Room 208). arts.
Michel De,uy, author of
Finally, Femand Ouellette, the
numerous volumes ef poetry - French literary· prosram direc:tor
Ble/s. OuJ.diTe, F/gunlti01u and of Radio Canada and author of
others- has also written works of several volumes of poetry (Let
criticism on Thomas Mann, Angtt de Jillll, Le SoleiliOIU Ia
Structuralism and the cinema. He mDI't, Dtuu le ,.,0 u), rounds out
is currently Visistins Professor of the
list
of
,uest
poets
French at Buffalo where he has participating in the prosram . .
been conducting oo~ on
The public is invited to attend
Jean.Jacques Rousseau and on
all three sessions of the poetry
twentieth century poetry.
Jacques
Garelli,
poet, symposium and to take part in
both the reading and the
discussions.
For
further
information contact Professors
xerox copies
Raymond Federman, Siliviano
355 Norton Hell
Santiago or Howard Bloch at the
French Department.

wm

----------·
(iJ

the Buffalo Jewish community
paid for the course to be taupt
oripn.ally.
Some people ay, however,
t.h.tt this threat is not u irrational
u it seems. They claim that this is
Bowman's way of showina that
Hebrew should be a fuU-tledaed
language within the Universit)'.
However, this is an unusual and
very roundabout way of sayins
somethins that could b~ said more
effectively directly.
If Jewish Studies is approved
by the Ketter Administration, it
will be partially funded by the
Jewish Federation .. of Buffalo.
They will donate $10,000 for
three years with the stipulation
that the University pay the
balance. This will make Jewish
Studies the only ethnic studies
program dependent for a time on
outside monies.
However, due to the University
budaet cut and an edict from the
State Univel1ity of New York
central administration in Albany
declaring
that
no
new
departments can be formed, the
prosptct of having to look · for
even more ~ndirig looms even
larger. The students involved in
the formatiQn of the program are
refusing to do this again.
From previous negotiations
with the University, the students
were given the responsibility for
fmding a teacher to head the

-continued from .... flw-

StiUlks Wllllted
program. One instructor from the
History Department was chosen
but was later dismissed by that
department.
Up to this point, volunteers
have taught the few Jewish
courses that have been offered on
campus. Also, the representatives
of the five groups have noted that
there are qualified teachers on
campus who can teach such
courses.
However,
their
departmental teaching quota must
be filled.

~. . . . ....... five .......
.,... on ampUl m.t T__..,
nit(ht to dilcull the ·~of.
Jewtlh studiel,...m.

for the positiOn of head of the
proposed prosram. 1 Ancl , 1he
students involved in Its fonnatlon
feel that it is tht University's)
responsibility to fmd someone, a
responsibility which apparently
hasn't been fulfilled.
When asked if Jewish Studies
could perhaps become a College
within the Collegiate system. Judy
Fergenberger and Beverly Toback,
students who have been most
instrumental in the development
of the proposed program, replied
that the colleaes are too unstable.

For sheet music &amp; tapes too
it's SATTLER'S RECORD '
• BOULEVARD MALL
CENTERS
Niagara Falls Blvd.,
Sale also at SATTLER'S
North of Sheridan, Amherst .998 BROADWAY and
10 to 9 Mon.
Sat.
., SENECA MALL

thru

Page .twelve. The Spectrum . Monday, November
. 15, 1971

-I

-

�,

New dire.ction

..

.,

.....

Crew Bulls get .into shape
by Bruce Eafel
SpectNm S teff Write

Wbelt one passes the Niagara
River, a lfOUp of rowen may be
often discerned. These aren't
some fanatic rowers, but merely
the Buffalo Club Crew squad
going throush its dally workout.
Crew, wr thoso of yt)u wh9 J'hay
not knb'A\ "U ~~ limPly a
rowipg ra"' in . Wow boats,
calletf shells, that look not unlike
canoes,~ to the layman.
The cre~ 1 which is
hoping; to go vanity after this
season, is now under new
directio.nJt IMnaiJ.s,Sdtaab · ,rbo
formerly •rhad•· much • success
coacrung 1i~t'wmgli.t' erew at Vat~.
has been ~gl'led on 8.s coach.
Schaab ~ despite be;.ng. only in his
mid·tw4pties, has a . Jot of
expeJieqt~. in • r~wiflg and had •
very successful career ~ crew
himself.

oars at the same instant - cannot
be overemphasized. There is .a
oecessi{y for smoothness and
balance. . The coxswain, who
shouta the commands, and the
oarsmen directly in front of him,
wbose stroke all the others must
stay with, are very important to
this synchronization.

latH

GUSTAV A. FRISCH, I
Jeweler - Optlclan
41 KENMORE AVENU E
(at University Pleza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

sri!

Crew, a sport steepe4 in
tradition, is a hopeful addition .to
Buffalo's varsity sports program
next year. This year's club
schedule will include both eight
and four men races apinst Wayne
State and Grand Valley u well as
trips to Florida and New York
City.

..

SUb 'Boardpositions
'

Two unchrplduate poeitions on Sub Board I,
Inc. are belna created. Any underll"duate clay
ltudent with a lot of time to spend on a rewardint
but controvenial extracurricular activity lhould
apply to the Penonnel and Appointmenta
Committee of the Student Allembly, Scott
Slealnpr, Room lOS Norton.

\

IN 1111! U fE•
OF IVAN MNISOVKJI

GRANADA
liH Ml'lNST,

0

ENDS THURS.

lll ·71 4l

0

q

0

()

Schaab has Inherited about 12
experienced oanmen and a
coxswain from last year's squad.
He reports that about ten new
men have also been doing well,
and he's hopeful for a good spring
season. In the meantime the squad
will practice its new style until the
weather forces them indoors.
During the winter, training will
consist of running, weight training
and
working
with
rowing
machines in order to get the team
in shape for the spring season .

..

Bulls' new style

''Up to now we have been
working more on style than
conditioning," says Schaab. He
has taught the team his own style,
which he
describes as a
"conglomeration the best
points of four styles I have been
exposed to." Practices run along
the following lines. After the shell
is first placed in the water, pairs
of rowers get used to rowing in
unison. Then when the whole
boat is rowing together, the boat
is rowed at a good steady pace.
While this goes on, Scllaab rides
alongside in a speed boat
co rrecting
mistakes
and
occasionally giving the command
for a specified number of bard
strokes.
Crew is very much a team
sport. The importance or all the
rowers rowina together - hitting
and leaving the water with the

chap -

S .08 I copy

AT 355 NORTON

•

~
1::;::.~::::.· /;.: · .~

~: yearbook
portratts, : ·
~gifts, announcements, '
publicity, etc., etc. Call
~831-2506 or 831-5570
&gt;-~"•'·
:~~).or
come to room
1\
.....
....
~Norton Hall.
•,

00

3561'

That's the difference between
Lemon Up and products with
just a little lemon fragrance
or extract. That's why Lemon
Up Shampoo makes hair shiny clean . That's why Lemon Up
Faciai Cleanser is far better than soap. And that's why Lemon Up
Antt-8/emish Lotion with hexachlorophene is your best defense
against oil-troubled skin.·.

~~~~Jf~~1f~~~&amp; '----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~
Monday, November 15, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�••.. ---- ... - . --. -. -...• -- . ---- ------

-~-- - - --

J•- -•.
r

At»tk ~til'*" IJotJr4

WKIW alt4 THEATil SIRlES PteHIIh

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL

Ashwal wges new direction
by 8an'y Rubin
Sport1 EdltM

With all the trouble recently
concern ing
the
A thletic
Department budget, the Student
Athletic Review Board (SARB)
has come under fire from all sides.
Organized, nearly fow years ago
with the intent to govern student
monies, advise the department of
student needs and to act as an
intermediary between the Student
Association
and
Athletic
Department, the SARB was
described by one columnist "as
having been emasculated."
Joe Ashwat, a senior and the
SARB chairman, has proposed
several changes in the SARB
which are expected to make it a
viable student voice. AshwaJ
remarked : "At the last meeting of
the Student Assembly many
representatives
and executive
committee members spoke against
the proposed budget even though
they had never attended an SARB
meeting. Although the outcome
of the meeting was favorable , I
believe a similar situation must
not occur again, especially at such
a late date in the sports season."
In a letter submitted to lan
DeWaaJ , Stude~ Association
president , Ashwal outlined the
four changes he h pes will be
supported
by
the
Student
Association and the Student
Assembly . First , Ashwal w ould
Wee to change the SARB " fro m its
present void status to a standing
committee
of the
Student
Assembly." Currently the board is
made up of students with special
interestes in athletics, many
connected with various clubs.
AshwaJ believes that under his
new setup, ..the conversation wUI
afford increased diversity and
autonomy." Ashwal would Uke
the chairman of the SARB
selected from the members of this
year's SARB with the joint
approval
of
the
executive
co mmittee and the SARB. As a
standing committee
of the
Student Assembly the SARB
would be made up o f six student
assembly
representatives
in
addition to any other students
who are interested in SARB
membership.

athletic policies should be made
jointly by the SARB and the
professional staff of the Athletic
Department. Asbwal hopes the
SARB can use referendum or
some sort of balloting to gain
student input. However, anyone
interested can still join the SARB
and exercise voting rights.
Thirdly, Ashwal believes there
should be a five year contract
agreement with the Athletic
Department for the sum of
$240,000 per year, subject to
review at the end of the five year
period by the Student Assembly .
AshwaJ commented : ''The present
situation at Clark Gym is grave.
Hayes Hall is silent. Many proven
professionals have talked of
resigning.
Contrac ting
future
athletic contests with other
universities is difficult because of
our unstable position."
Lastly and possibly the most
controversial of Mr. Ashwal's
recommendations is that the
future
Athletic
Department
budgets should be passed by the
SARB
and
the
executive

comrilittee only .
Ashwa l 's
fourth
recommendation was explained In
this manner : "The SARB should
be more than advisory to the
assembly. It works a full year on
the budsets and in one hour no
one group should have the power
to redo a year's work. Remember
we are dealing with a professional
staff, whose lives have been and
are devoted to student service. We
have an obligation to treat them
in a professional and respectful
manner."
AshwaJ's main hope now is
that his recommendations for a
hopefully more responsive SARB
will be fully discussed in tho near
future with Jan DeWaal, the
executive committee and the
Student Assemhly

. Orch. $5.50. $4, 50 -

l.,c, $4.50, $).50

TICkets Mtalllble et Norton Union Tick .. Office

Everything you need to know about
Venereal Disease.
How to avoid getting it.
What to do if you think you have it.
Sound advice for a worried friend.

'

At you r bookseller or, to order by

Contemplate living .. .

'.

moil aend $ ~ .95 (cloth) or $2.95
(paper) plus JOles tax and postage
with your nome and address to:
•

!PRENTICE-HALL

r-tiEnglewood Cliffs, N.J. 07632

A UnLE BIT OF PURPLE PROSE ABOUT LEARNING
TO SKI.
A lot of people will give you this thing
about the courage of the first man who
ate an oyster.
We would reapc&lt;:tfuJiy auggeat that
he had nothing on the first guy who
strapped himself to a pair of oak staves
and headed for the nearest mountain.
Whoever he was, wherever he
roamed, anyone who's learned that
some old way will tell you that if the
first skier had nothing else, he had guts.
In fact, until quite r~tly, guts was
the most important single ingredient
in learning to ski.

A drama tic d e ve lopme nt.
Recently, within the last 9 years, a new
method of ski instruction has been de·
veloped and perfected at Killington.
It is called the Accelerated Ski
Method"' ( fonnerly known as OLM) .
U you have even cuhred of desire, plus
enough coordination to hove picked up
this newspaper, you Clln learn to ski the
Accelerated way.
Guts is no longer the pivotal re·
quirement.

A grea t Idea.

STUDENT DISCOUNT
on
All- redecorating needs,
artt~upplies, picture framing.
D. M. RECH PAINT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.

MASS MEETING
on
WEDNESDAY , Nov. 17th
at
3:30 - room 233 Norton
to discuss

........~

-··\- &gt;...,..

F : 7~

~

..

Instead of strapping you onto a pair of
6 or 7 foot skis and sending you onto
the hill, the Accelerated Ski Method
·
you up to full-size gradually.
first lesson is on 39 inch
instruction skis. If you can walk you
can get around on these.
Once you've mastered the rhythm
and gained confidence you move up
to 60 inch, mid·length, training skis.
When you have them conquered, you
move on to skis which are standard
for your weight and height.
Instead of struggling for days with
"herringbones" and "sidestepping"
you will be skiing, unassisted , in
your ve.r y first hour. You will amaze
our8eJl.

·~

Some fab ulo us p ions.

Learning to aki is not impossible.

h'1 al110 not as expensive as every·
on.e'e told you.
At Killington we've put together
amazingly inexpcneivc lcarn·to-eki
vacations, whicb include everything
but your ..Jong-jobns. "Tbc:finestmetal
skis, mounted with the most advanced
releaee binding.. Thp quality buckleboots and poles. Hundreds of dollars
worth of equipment better than most
beginners buy for themaelves.
All this, plus lifta, plus lessons costa
$40 for a 2-day introductory weekend.
Por S days mid-week, we throw in a
few extras and char ge $70.
Don't expect any mir acles with the
weekend plan unless you can put together three or four weekends back·
to-bock. But if, at the end of a S-day
mid·week vacation, you're not a proficient skier , then you are very prob·
ably unteachable.

Some terrlflc s k iing .
Once you learn, you11 find that Kill·
ington won't bore you. There are four
mountains to ski. Among the more
than four dozen trails; you'll find the
longest one east of the Rocky Mta.
Of our eleven lifts, one, the new
Killington gondola, ie the longest ski
lift in the world! And, as you might
expect, there are a great many places
to rest your bones and pick up your
spirits when the lilta h~tve closed.

r·-p~~;·(·b;.~-~~;·;~·;k·;ti~gdl;~~r) 1
i Chandler will send you the facts.

!Foster Chandler

1540 Killington Road

!Killington, Vennont 05751
:
i If we know old Foster he'llabso· i
l lutely bombard you with brochures, :
pamphlets and all that.
1

.ii;:;;··········---·--·-···--·-··-·-----

1==;;·--·--·--·--·----·-·-·---

..i;.;-·- ·--------;;-;.-·-··-----··;:.,- - !.
'·--·-·-··------·------. ··------·------- . . -·---J

KILLINGTON, Yt.
World's capital ollearning to ski.

TENURE FOR
DR. J.P. JONES

~-

JOHN DENVE.R

by John Grover, M.D. with Dick Grace

Future policies
Secondly, AshwaJ believes that

Sponso red by
Ad Hoc Com. on Tenure

SUNDAY, NOVEMIEit 21 -8:00 P.M.

f

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Monday, November 15, 1971

�AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFI&amp;O eda may be placed
MOfldaV tnN Friday betw--. 9 • •m.
and 4 :30p.m . at 355 ~orton Hall .
THE COST of an eel ftW one day Is
81.25 for tna first 15 wtWdl and • .05
f« ucn edelltlonal w«d.
"HELP
WANTED"
ads
c.nnot
discriminate on tna balh of Mil, c;ol«,
« aed Of nat1on111 orltln to eny extent
(I.e., preferably Is ltlll diKrlmlnetory) .
" F OUND" IdS will be run frM of
c;hlrtl for • maximum of 2 days end
15 word&amp;.

WANTED
OVERSEAS Jobl fo r S tudenta Australia, EurQPe, S. Amlf'lc:a, Afrlu,
.tc;. All prof-Ions and oc:c:up.Uons,
$700 to •3000 monthly. ExpenHI
p.ld,
overtime, slontSMing.
FrM
lnform.tlon. write Joos OverSMs,
capt. ES, Box 15071 , San Diego,
california 92115.
BABYSITTER to take c.re of Trlna,
Dan ish 15 months, Mo n ., Wed ., Fri.,
9-12 end on Tu... , Thurs., 1- 4 - elso
Mf b rotlllf', 6 y Nrs. C all Rv N ielsen
837.0201. JOO Is still IVIIIIble.
TR UCK ti re neecMd Oeapw.tely. Size
7.50-16. RNfOnlble pl'1c:e. Clll Jeri
834-7461.
SHARE. Orlvlng my ur to Clnc:lnna tl
or en route for Thanksgiving. C all
t&lt;.athryn weetcdlys, 831·2401.
NEED
lnfOfmetlon
on
toc:l4!11y
r"ponSibl• firms for an ln v..tment
study. Preflt' firms In medicine or
pollution control. C111 JOin &amp;31· 289&amp;.
MALE Of fem ale senior Blo-Medlc:al
R-rc:h Tec:lln lcla n. B.S. required,
M.S. preferred. Strong biC:klfOUnd In
chemistry , bio-chemistry Of related
biology.
Must
h1v1 c:onsld lflble
research lib experlanc:e. Pat'm1nent,
full·tlma position. Contact M rs. Wo lff,
834-9200, IICt. 501 , M-F, 9 :3o-4 :30.
INTERVIEWERS : Merlclt R....rch .
Will t reln. Flexible hours. Good ho urly
rates, plus mileage. No selling.
873·5206 or 873-6084.
GIRL SI N GER, countrY fiddler, plano
player . Send phone number to Tom
Root, C/O AI Glglll , 7 Olltl Rd.,
Eggertsville
14226 .
Musl c:a l
opportunity.
FUN LOVING guy slll&lt;s fun loving girl
cOmPinlon. LNvl name and numblf' In
Box 22 Spectrum.

CLAIIIIIIII
STUDENT wanted: Room and board
- In IICC:t\an9e fOt' blbyslttlng 10me
avenin.. uc:h week - close to umpus
- 837·&amp;106 aftlt' 5 p.m.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
CO MPLETEL V
furnished
ler. .
thr-oedroorn flit for rent to taulet
responsible students on U.Salle nNr
P.,krldge, $60 per, 631· 5621.

RI DE BOARD
RIDE WANTED to N- YOt'k 01.
Friday, Satu rday, Novemblf' 19, 20.
Please .:.11 Rima 836·1779.
RIDE WANTED to N- York on
Friday, Saturday, Nov. 19, 20. PINse
C.ll ClaUdia 836·1 n'J.
RIDE WANTED to S t . Louts for two
(Of
Chlc:Ato
Ot'
vlc:lnlty). S plit
c:osU/drlvlng for ThankSgiving. CAll
Elly 836·1779, ROOin 835· 5265.
RIDE NEEOEO to U .l;l. mornings from
S herldan·Eimwood a rea In Kenmore.
Please c:111 876·2855.

MOROCCAN I"'PP'U - dlt ttt. .
Pflc:ett c:uetom mlde l.Nthet Penta &amp;M1 full leneth WOOI/C:otton c.,_ 1151 1\and-ade LMthw 8191 - 881
C:oiOffUI WOOl SUhe. - 82.501 ltltiQUI
Motltan141 (Oullomlne) B..OS . ./ doz.
c.tl st..,. M3-4707.
GUITARS • Olbson, Oulld, Mertln,
Gurian, etc:. Buy, Mil, trede. The String
524 Ontario, 7 p.m.~ p .m .,
dally. Sit. 12-5, &amp;74-GUO.

Shoc»tt~,

TWO Dunlap tlre5 6 .15 x 15's.
EICC8IIIf'lt condition. Prlc:e fl890tllble.
Clll Tom 832·3501.
TWO VOikSw...n snow tlre5 - 560x15
Semprett Mudded uterplllar pattern.
Fln.t non&gt;rad1411 snow tire Obtainable.
UNci two months, elmost brand n -.
Original cost - $ 37.50 uch. Sa«lflc:a,
nMCI brNd. Mutt sell by 11/18 . Plljlllll
all BArry, 832·1089 .
ROBERTS 1740X stereo dec:k, $125,
m lc:s, 125, color
org~ns,
fender
Ouo-Sonlc:, $75, Vox Imp, 140, both
$100. BanthM horns, 850, 832·5910
Russ.

TWO RIDES nMOed to NYC for
Tl\lnlcsglvlng. One anytime. One for
Fri. or Set., Nov. 19 or 20, roundt rip
or one way. C all 835· 1044.

MO TORCYCLE storage heated,
Insured .
RNSOnlbll. C ell Blnlln
warenouse, 877-G646 , 9 -5, Mon.-Fri.

FOR SALE

ZENITH stereo pOrtable
tOP
cond ition - d.tachebll speakers. Nstvlus, $40. C ell 137..al95, 6-8 p.m .,
weelcdays.

FURN ITURE of Ill soru. Beds, fOfl,
coffll table, desk, kltc:hen t able ,
Chairs, .tc. All In good condition .
ChNp. Ca ll 836-4627, 856-4436.
BAUER Supw 8 mm movie umlt'a .
Brand' new. Still In box. Originally
8 300; now $ 175. Box 82 Spectrum.
SN OW tires, 7751C14 , good condition,
$15 or best offlt'. Clll 837..a312.
WOLLENSAK T· 1500 tape rec:ordar,
perfect
c:on d ltlon,
Including
microphone, Hl·fl a ble, attachment
c:ord end other fu tures, Darryl,
831· 1166 or 835·2028.
lSABV
c:rJb
and mettress, good
condition . 834·2168 after 5 p.m.
SKI BOOTS
Re lcla
good
condition - 9rut for any beglnnlf' 815. Cell 83 1·2166.

PAIR VW snow tires with rims. GOod
condition, Sll. 836·5 484.

·'
BEAUTIFUL hlndmlde told lnd Mi llet
,_..ry - wedding rl"-' - at Mnllble
ptlc. ., J .P. The OOICI-, 655
Elmwood at Ferry Street, &amp;81·3400.

,., tlntt fu fl'llte\ed room. 15 mtn. '""'DM~r• ame Of -kMII u,..,.,M.,
150/mo. lnetudlnt utllltl• and nou11
ptlvl. . . .. &amp;37-6027.

LOU Bararducel • Sorry, but I •m not • NEED two female roomrnawt. Own
to1n91ftw all. Barb.
roomt. Nice ~CN~rtment, 15 min. we4k,
$50/ mo. plut utJiftlll. Call Carol,
137·2711.
WILL w h - stole my c:loti'IM from
Clark Oym PINse retu~n the rio_. theY are of Mntlmentll 'lllue. No
MALE roommate, 3 blockS from
QUeStions asked. f\tetOtlable r-ard.
.:.mpus, own room,
mo. Call
Pl•se. Spec:trum Box 10.
&amp;38 ....79.

••o

MO AND MO to Mo BenuUI on your
birthday fl'om t he eotts, Sharman,
ouv, Oervv and Jerf.

FEMALE, tll'ad Of medl&lt;:ll pr.._,ed,
own room In bNUtlful furnlsned
apartment, 175 lnc:ludlnt utilities. 210
Wlndemete. C•ll 134-24&amp;3 _I.,...

LITTLE Adel l happy 11th on the
17th. Someday you'll be 1 b ig ectal.
Love, big adll .

MISCELLANEOUS

LOST• FOUND

PHIL Hillman, your $9 II Wilting f
you. S H Jim 1t Spectrum.

FOUND: Man 's rl n9 In Biology
Departmen t r"t room In S ept. Call
Dennis, 8 31·2303.

NV'S Hotel Tudor offlt's SUNY rat...
Retarvltlons
1nd
Information.
832•

FOUND:
G dd-.lm
blue
tinted
wn9I11H1. Mev c:lalm In Spectrum
office, Rm . 355 Norton betwMn 9 &amp;
5, M-¥.

Ca.H JONES Prof..slonal Typing
Serwlca
c:om putartzed
IBM
equipment plus our e xpertenc:e !111118
beat
polllble
presentAtions
of
d lsllt'atlons,
t h ..ls,
term
papers,
reao m .. end employment appllc:ltlon
letters.
Loc.tld
between
two
c.mpuses.
vwv rNsonable. Call
837-655&amp;.

LOST :
Thre e
ki t t ens ,
Prlnceton-&lt;:ambrldge erN, 1 urev, 2
l.ln~range. REWARD. Call 836..a513,
831·5588 Chris, Joan .

I

MI CHELIN 155x15 studded. Used one
IMSOn . Lou 833·2806.

FOUN D, UB rln9, '72 Main Str•t bus.
Call Carl 824·5562.

PLAYFUL nine-week-old kitten
llttlf' trained . Very I'INithy. C.ll
837.0533 after etont.

MOUTON Limb C:Oit, size 12, 835 :
grey w ool c:oat, size 6, $15• both Vlf'V
900d condition . 134·8331.

FOUND : Black Ubrldor pup, 3 mos.
old at Main and Fillmore, Oevld ,
837.0835.

TUTORING In m eths and Klences,
o ffered fr..hmen, Jun iors, seniors.
Vlf'V rNfOneble rlt... Clll 836-498&amp;
betwMn 5- 7 p.m.

RUG, Oullstln, Persian style. Recently
c:INned. 8xl2. Aslclng $300. C ell
823·6335.

ROOMMATES WANTED

1962 VOLKSWAGON t&lt;armenn G hll,
good
body
condition,
good
mechenlc.l. Best offer, 832·59 10.
WOOD epoxy snow skis, step-In
bindings, good con d ition , $30. Cell
Fred, lite evenings, 837·2791 .

PERSONAL

NEW Eplphone classica l gutter with
either 50ft or hard shell .:.sa. LNVI
m.sage for Larry 854-2997 anytime.

a$a

REFRIGERATORS ,
stoves
and
wuhan. Reconditioned; delivered 1nd
guarantMd. O&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore, TX4·3183 .

SMOKEY the Bur 1nd his meta of
nine years, Ooldla, proudly announce
the adoption of 1 100, "Little
Smokey." Congratulation s Smolcey
and Goldie.

nMd 1 man who Is a pro at
talclng exams. Call John 823·7572 .

ROOMMATE
wanted,
private
bedroom,
11r-c:ondltlonln9,
w ·w
arpetlng, piped In stereo, c:ompletalv
furnished, private parking, $ 75/mo.,
wf utllltles, 1974 Clinton near Bllley.
LNVI message for Larry at 8 5 4· 2997.
FEMALE roommate(s), own room(s),
modern furnished apartment . 10 min .
walk. Minnesota, $65/mo... utilities.
Call Janny, 833·5426.
FEMALE roommate wanted • own
room, $70 utilities Included. Clll
694-6422, 2- 10 p .m.
GRAD student

-

Instructor, mala,

1111111&amp;11

meet our photographers eye to eye

•••••••c••
•••••••
1066 Sheridan Drive

Speciafizing in Volksw...-n.
Triumph, Volvo, MG, Austin
Healey, Toyota, 081Jun and

more.

871-9303 WINTER 874-6330
BATTERY SPECIALS
FROM $15.00
8t up · Exch.
6 &amp; 12 Volt - Installed
1 Pr. 6 volt - $30. + Exch .

~XPERIENCEO
sec:retary
will
ac:c:u,.tllv type term papers, rePQfts,
theses,
ate.
Elec:trlc
typewriter.
Rusonlble . 874-1137.

EXP ER IE NCED typing, term p.pers,
dissertations, t h esis - 833·1597.
SURELY we're all mid people, and
they whom we thlnlc are, .,,n•t.
"W.T.B.S ." Oec:amber 2---4.
APAR~ENTSWANTED

FEMALE would like own room w ith
other girls In 1p.rtment near ampus .
Anything
available?
C all
M.,y
83 1· 3898 .
FIVE MALES de5perately nMd four or
llv..O.CSroom apartment or house. Call
IS7.0882 .

PORTRAITS
BUFFALONIAN. 356 Norton
H111. ' ' p•oud to announce th;JI senoon
anCI all otner onterested persons may
now m•~ 1 •ppoontments tor tnelr
lull oe:o,lor porlraols. Ea cn person will
n••• 1 che11r e ol l111e color poses from
wntLh •1e rna) seoe .. t on• lor bi.Jck and
willie •tpmductton on the 1972
Bullatontan
ye3rbool&lt;
we
ofler
lull ( Colo•, prnle&gt;s•onal Quality portraits
al ~ut·tllle pnccs to all stuCicnts who
••• pllo'o9rdp,.,eO In aOOIIton, you can
~we still rnorc 1.t11 applyong your sitting
I ~ tnw••Os the OtHchase price o f 1 set.
for
•note
on formatlon
or
an
aopnt,tonent,
co~ll
831 · 2505
or
THC

8Jl :&gt;:&gt;/0,

professional fu II color portraits
offered to all graduating students
passport, application, 1.0. photos
also available
· appointments 356 norton, 831 -2505, 5570

ALSO!
save on all of your color processing services
especially color print from your negatives.

I

•

•

Monday, November 15, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�AnnoufMiements
CAC needs 40 volunteers for its Buffalo S~te
Hospital project. Pluse ~tact Ralph D'Auiero in
the CAC office, Room 220 Norton.
Ukrainian Student Club will meet tomorrow ;at

5 p.m. in Room 332 Norton.
The Hillel dUI in ConvcrgtiorYJ Elementary
Hebrew will meet tod;ay ;at 7 p.m. in Room 248
Norton.

The Craftsmen's Guild
will
have an
orpnintlonal meeting today at 4 p.m. in Room 233
Norton. All those who registered for the guild or are
interested in joining are urged to attend.
The Slavic Club is having a meeting today at
7 :30 p.m. In Room 232 Norton to discuss films and
a field trip.
The Student ASSO(iatlon U~uate
Researth . Council will hold sessions on appliution
writing in Room 205 Norton on Mondays and
Fridays, 3-4 p.m . untJI Dec. 3. Students who desire
to ~ke advanuge of this service should sign up in
Room 205 Norton.
Brfdte Club will meet tomorrow from 7 :30-11
p.m. in Room 233 Norton.
The Hillel Beainnm Hebrew class will meet
tomorrow at noon In Room 262 Norton. It will be
followed by Jewish Ethics at 1 p.m .
The Medic:aJ Committee for Human Rllhts will
hold an organiutional meeting today at 7:30p.m. in
the Medical Student lounp In the basement of
Capen Hall. All interested students and workers are
Invited.
A latin American Seminar on "Brazilian
literature" will be given by Or. Silviano Santiago
tomorrow at 3 p.m . in Room 312 Tow~ Hall .
The Arts Committee will have a meeting
tomorrow ;at 6 p.m. in Room 261 Norton to discuss
Mem-8rain I, a multi-media environment.

The Col.... of Mathematkal Sciences would
like anyone Inter..., In IUIDring m~ematlcs on
.,ade and hlJh school tewls to conuct them at
831-1704, Tuesday - Thursd&lt;ty from 3:30-5:30
p.m.

CAC will h&lt;tve a meeting of all people wlshina to
be on lhe Aaivities Committee, tomorrow at 5 p.m .
In Room 220 Norton.

The Student Association has applications
• available now for the sprint/summer Underaradu..te
The Buffalo Theater Wott5hop Repertory · R~ch Prosram in Room 205 Norton. Deadline
Dance Theater will be holdina auditions tomorrow for receipt of completed applications Is Dec:. 6.
from 4-7:30 p.m. at the Rowy Hill Student
Center, Room 113. For further informition call
I ntemationaJ
Conference
on
Polltic:aJ
Synyer Hanesworth at 831-4143.
Orpniution will draw up to 1500 people from out
of 'town. Housing is desperately needed; If you can
The
Student Association Undefaradu..te put some people up for a day or two, it would be
Research Council is looking for freshmen and greatly appreciated. Please call 831·5507 and leave
sophomores interested in serving as long-term your name and number. Any hospi~llty will be well
members on the Council. For an interview, sign up at rooeived .
Room 205 Norton.
Student Occupational Therapy Club will have a
Hillel will present the Israeli comedy "Sallllh " meeting for the election of officers, tomorrow at 4
tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the Conference Theater. p.m. in Room 244 Norton.
Admission is free. There will be only one showing.
Woman's liberation Will meet toc;lay at 8 :30
The Allentown Community Center, located at p.m . in Room 246 Norto~.
•
225 Allen St. needs volunteers to help its
short-handed suff. Activities include: pre~hool
Marshall Patner, general counsel of Businessmen
classes, after school workshops, athletics (basketball, for the Public: Interest, a Chicago "public interest"
volleyball, kickball) ping-pong, bumper-pool and &lt;trts law group, will be the first of the 1971 ·12 Mitdlell
and crafts. Please c:onuct Or. Rawal, 22S Allen St., Lecture Fund Fellows at the SUNY/AB law Sc:h&lt;)ol.
88~3. If no answer, contact Bruce Lucca, 62
Mr. Patner will speak on "Issue-oriented law
Mariner, 882-5002.
Practice - i.e., So-called Public: Interest Law," today
at 3:15p.m. at the Law School, 77 West Eagle St.
The AAS will hold a white elephant sale
tomorrow from 1- 5 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore
The lin&amp;Uistics Department presents an open
Room.
lecture in Linguistics SOl on " Neurolinguistlc:s" by
Hugh Buckingh..m of the University of Rochester.
The SA-GSA attorney will be available to give The lecture will be given today at 7 p.m. in Hayes
free lepl advice to students tonight from 7- 10 p.m. 404.
in Room 205 Norton.
Open Poetry Readlna tomorrow sponsored by
Shlomo CarlebKh, a well-known Chassidic Outriders. Featured readers will be Frank Antonazzi
folk-singer, will be giving a Chanukkah concert on and Peter Levitt. Readings are at the One-Eyed Cat,
Dec. 12. Tickets are now available at the Norton 28 Bryant St. (near Main), 9:30p.m. till midnight.
Ticket Office and at Hillel. Admission is only $.50 For information call Prof. Wickert, extension 4927,
with 10 card.
The Human Dimensions Institute of Rosary Hill
The Student Association announces that money Collqe, 4380 Main St., presents a public: panel
for the people who worked at the Poverty Hill discussion of "The Case for Natural Foods"
referendum tables will be available tomorrow at tomorrow at 8 :15p.m. in the Wick Campus Center,
noon in the accounting office, Room 225 Norton.
Rosary Hill Collqe. Admission is $3, students $1 .

Video Conexion will hold a moetina today at
8 :30 p.m. in Room-i44 Norton.

What's Happening?

Colloquim: French speaking poets will discuss "''""
views of poetry as part of the F rCf!ch
Department's
c:olloqui11J, 10 a.m.-noon,
Diefendorf Annex 18, Lockwood Library
Conference Room &lt;tt 3 p.m.

Monday, Nov. 1S

Sports Information
1971-72 Varsity Basketball Schedule
Dec. 1: at Syracuse, 8 :30p.m.
Dec. 3: at Point Park, 8 p.m.
Dec. 7 : Toronto, 8 :30p.m.
Dec. 11 : at Central Michigan, 8 :30p.m .
Dec. 14: Ohio Northern, 8:30p.m .
Dec. 17: Northeastern, 8 :30p.m .
Dec. 18: Illinois State, 8 :30p.m.
Dec. 27 : at Georgia Southern, 8 p.m.
Dec. 29: at Georgia State, 8 p .m.
Dec. 30 : at Samford, 7:30p.m.
Jan. 19: at Akron, 8 :30p.m.
Jan. 22 : LeMoyne, 8 :30p.m.
Jan. 25: at Maryland, 8:30 p;Jn,
Jan. 29 : Cornell - Aud, 7 p.m.
jan . 31 : Northern Ill- Aud, 7 p.m.
Feb. 2 : &lt;tt Army, 8 p.m.
Feb. 5: Nia,ara - Aud, 7 p.m.
Feb. 8 : Eastern Michigan, 8 :30p.m.
Feb. 11 : at Brockport State, 8:15p.m.
Feb. 17: at Stony Brook, 8 p.m.
Feb. 19: at Rochester, 8 :30p.m .
Feb. 26 : Albany State, 8 :30 p.m .
Feb. 29 : Merrimack, 8 :30p.m.
Mar. 6 : Buffalo St. - Aud . 9 p.m .

Film: Arsenal and Eorth by Russian director
Alexander Oovzhenko, 3 and 8 p.m., Diefendorf
147.
Wednesday, Nov. 17
Colloquim: Poesie: Une Renc:ontre, with poets
Michel de Guy, Jacques Gavelli, Robert Marteau Film: The Wor Gome, directed by Peter Watkins,
and Fernand Ouellette; poetry readings (in
famous documentary regarding overkill in the
French) 8 p.m., Diefendorf 146.
nuclear age, 6 p.m. in the Conference Theater.
Exhibit : "Portraits of Students," one-man show of Cohc:t!rt: Creative Associate Recital 11, 8 :30 p.m.,
photographs, 4240 Ridge Lea - Monday-Friday,
Buffalo and Erie County Library {free).
9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
WBCE-FM : Muslcol lnno~~at/ons, featuring Muriel
Wo lf, associate professor of music: and opera
Tuesday, Nov. 16
director,
discussing
the
complex
and
multi-media production of opera, 9 :05 p.m.
Theater: Amerlcollente (in Spanish) followed by Discussion: Harold Hurwitz will discuss and show
discussion and coffee hour, 8 :30 p.m., fillmore
segments and dips from some of his films, 8
Room.
p.m. in the CoMerence Theater.

\

Backpage

Aud - Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
All other h ome games at Clark Gym

The following is the schedule for all the libraries for the Thanksgiving recess, Wednesday, Nov. 24 to Sunday, Nov. 28 :

lockwood
Harriman ,es.
Music:
Sci. &amp; Eng.
Health Sci.
Rid~ lea
law

Wednesday
8 a.m.- 5 p.m.
8 a.m.- 5 p.m.
9 a.m.- 9 p.m.
8 a.m.- 5 p.m.
8 a.m.- 11 p.m.
9 a.m.-5 r&gt;.m.
8:30 a.m.-S p.m.

Thursday
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed

Friday
8 a.m .-9 p.m.
9 a.m .-9 p.m.
closed
9 a.m.-5 p.m.
closed
9 a.m.- S p.m.
8:30 a.m.- 5 p.m.

Saturday
closed
closed
closed
9 a.m.-5
9 a.m.- 5
9 a.m.-5
9 a.m.-5

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
p.m.

Sunday
closed
closed
closed
2 p.m.-6 p.m .
1 p.m.- 11 p.m.
1 p.rn.- 5 p.m.
1 p.m .- 11 p.m .

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&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>TH.E

SpE_tTI{UM
.,_

...... ..

\

Vol. 22, No: 33

New facility planning

Pathology Department
being shuffled around
A reshuffling and relocating of facilities and personnel is
presently occurring at the University•s research facilities at
E.J. Meyer Memorial Hospital. The moves consist of the
shifting of some departments from the Medical Research
building to -a back-lot University structure.
According to a Meyer official, the University's medical
school was informed "some time ago" of -the planned
demolition and of the necessity for location changes. The
demolition is in wake of construction for the new hospital.
Affected by this relocation are the Departments of
Medicine and Pathology. Previously stationed in the Medical
Research wing at Meyer, the school of medicine is doubling
up with present pathology facilities. According to Eugene
Lippschutz, assistant vice president of Health Sciences, this
involves "people being reshuffled . . . and entails moving
equipmen't out and into University research buildings at
Meyer."
Departmental dissension
This rather sudden shift of activities has met with some
reported dissension within the pathology department. As one
member of that department reported : "This was an imposed
dictate by Dean Pesch . .. (The moves) have disrupted much
work here and there is apparently no concern about what we
should do."
After receiving notification from Dean LeRoy Pesch of
the Med School on Oct. 16, one faculty member appealed to
President Ketter for his intervention in the affair. Mee!ings
are presently being conducted with both administrative and
medical school officials. John Sheffer, acting chairman of the
Pathology Department, commented that many of the details
are ..still up in the air . .. any information at this time would
be premature."
Dr. Lippschutz agreed with this commenting that too
many people are making too much of this whole affair: "The
whole thing can and will be settled amicably." He further
answered rumors that pathology research was endangered :
"There is no truth, whatsoever, to any of these rumors that
anyone is trying to do away with departments and research."
lt had been hinted by a few faculty members that the nature
of their work, methadone investigations and programs, is not
favorably viewed. However. Dr. Sheffer was quick to squelch
this charge : "There is no conncetion between the methadone
work and the present moves." In addition, Dr. Lippschutz
assured that ..nobody is going to stop anyone's activities."
Apparent problem
This recent development points up many problems
apparent both in Health Sciences and in the Pathology
Department. As one pathology doctor commented, ..The
Med School is completely incapabl~ of handling its own
affairs." One persistent difficulty , cited by many, is that the
Pathology Department, and others, has no permanent
chairman. Several ad hoc unofficial search committees have
reportedly been established by Dean Pesch. However, it is
only through President Ketter that any search committee
may be formulated . At present, he has not set up any such
groups.
Another criticism directed at Health Sciences is that "as a
faculty it is not organized and thus can receive no input or
relate to any important issues." One pathologist labelled the
whole affair "an impossible situation."
Albert Somit, executive vice presidept, commented on
the recent developments: "I received the impression last
Friday that all the problems were resolved . However, this
morning [yesterday 1 I gathered that some loose ends may
exist .. . they too, I am sure, will soon be resolved."

Housing holds bearing

Student denied due process
by Howie Kurtz.

"special hearing for a special case for one particular
individual" and asked that the case be transferred to
the IRJ. The motion was denied.
A Tower Hall undergraduate student was
Ron Stein, assistant director of Student Affain
recently judged ''unfit for University housing" at an and Services, delivered the unanimous opinion of the
"informal hearing" by an ad hoc panel composed of panel, which .also consisted of Mr. Boyce and
three administrators and a hearing officer, ako an Clarence Dye, associate director of Student
administrator. The Inter-Residence Judiciary (TRJ), Personnel Services. Mr. Stein stated that the lRJ
which is specifically set up to rule on cases of thfs receives it.s authority from tne director of Housing
type, was completely bypassed at the insistence of and that such authority is not absolutely delegated
Thomas Schillo, assistant vice president for housing. to JRJ. Therefore, the director of Housing (Ml.
The defendant was subject to the decisions of Schillo, who also served as hearing officer) "reserves
the committee despite frequent objections by the the right at his discretion to execute that authority,
defendant's counsel, Norman Effman, that the which he's doing in this case," explained Mr. Stein.
committee was legally inappropriate; that one
member of the panel, Assistant Director of Housing Paper procedures
This is not the first time that normal legal
Madison Boyce, had "preconceived opinions" on the
case and should be excluded from the hearing; and procedure has been bypassed in this University. "The
that the bypassing of the IRJ deprived the defendant IRJ and undergraduate judiciary are mechanisms
that only exist on paper," noted one undergraduate.
of his rights of due process.
"When it became unprofitable for disruption cases to
be heard before the undergraduate judiciary, the
Unsuitable for donn
According to the panel , the controversy Hearing Commission on Campus Disorders was
concerning the defendant's suitability for University created." Mr. Effman agreed , commenting that "if
housing stems from a night in mid-October when he the University is to have an internal judicial system
was found semi-conscious in his dorm room, that's meaningful, it must be used . It becomes
allegedly from a drug overdose. He was taken to EJ . meaningless if you bypass it anytime you don't think
Meyer Memorial Hospital and later released. Housing it's appropriate ."
' It must be noted that in addition to being
also charged that the fact that the defendant has had
several roommates indicates unsuitability for deprived of an IRJ hearing, the defendant's only
source of appeal is to two more administrators, Vice
dormitory living.
The defendant received a letter from the President for Student Affairs Richard Siggelkow and
Housing Office, instructing him that he had to move President Ketter. It must also be noted that two of
out of Tower Hall by a certain date. The defendant the four administrators at the hearing were
refused to move, on the advice of his counsel , Mr. representatives of housing and that one, Mr. Boyce,
Effman . Thus, the ad hoc panel of administrators was involved in all decisions prior to the hearing,
convened an "informal hearing" to determine, such as the letter of eviction sent to the defendant.
His qualification as a disinterested party, the
according to Mr. Schillo, "whether you (the
defendant) can gain anything from remaining in usual legal requirement for judges and juries, must be
University houSing." Mr. Schillo asserted that questioned. Mr . Schillo claimed this was irrelevant
University housing is "a privilege rather than a since it was an informaJ hearing and not a judicial
proceeding. " It's only an informal hearing but the
right," one to which not everyone is entitled.
result can still be the defendant's expulsion from
housing," argued Mr. Effman.
IRJ bypassed
Mr. Effman stressed that the case "should go to
the IRJ because the legal procedure of due process Unbiased?
lt must also be noted that Mr. Schillo, serving as
for dormitory students is set up that way. In a
hearing before the IRJ, my defendant would be hearing officer, is not only assistant vice president
judged by his own peer group. They know the for Housing but also made several statements very
standards of their own community and can best early in the hearing which cast some doubt o n his
decide whether he's an outcast, a deviant or fits right status as an unbiased hearing officer such as:
-continued on page two;in." Mr. Effman objected. to the ad hoc panel as a
Campus Editor

�Dueprocess denied. ..

_,_ .., personally am going to bo held cespon~ble
for whatever hapi&gt;ens to (the defendant] ."
- "There is a potential victim in the wings, arul
that's me, and the members of my staff."
- "I can't meet that responsibility unless I take
some action in this case."
- "I wo uld define it (the hearing] as a
disciplinary proceeding."
- "I'd rather have the Housing Office prove that
defendant] isn't suitable for University
housing."
The panel proceeded to hear testimony from
both sides in order to determine whether the
defendant's "presence in housing will produce a
negative effect on donnitory students," according to
Mr. SchiUo's criterion. It was cited that the
defendant has had five different roommates, eacb of
whom moved out. The statistic proved to be
somewhat misleading. One roommate left lhe
University and stated in a Jetter that he "enjoyed the
living experience with (the defendant!." Another
loft to join the Air Force. An additional roommate
left w triple in another dorm room because it was
cheaper for ltim to do so.

part of our community and in no way~ neptlvely
affected us. He successfully relates to people
whether they are black or white. His presence on the
floor has been fantastic in O)Jr attemptS to get to
know each other. His eviction would be a Joss to ow
community. His presence is a plus, not a minus.''

'Benevolent dictator'
At another point in the hearing Mr. Effman
asked that the case be dismissed because according
to student rules and regulations, housing must
" prove beyond a reasonable doubt that someone is
unfit fo r University housing . . . o r else no
disciplinary action can be taken." This is implied in
the housing contract the dorm student signs. "The
burden of proof is on housing, and you haven't even
come close," said Mr. Effman . His motion was
denied.
Follo wing all the testimony . 1he panel came to
the unanimous dec1sion that the defendant should be
asked to leave housing. Their decision was based on
the facts that the defendant has had five roommates
" If people know they have
in the period of one month. his own letter requesting power in the department, then
a single and the critical shortage of rooms in housing they can use it," declared Susan"'
(leading to the unfeasibility of providing him with a Kltchell, a member of concerned
single room). Their conclusion, submitted to Mr. s tudents
Supporting petition
in
the
English
One of the roommates moved out after a day Schillo, was that the University had gone "beyond Department , at a mass meeting of
because he "could not live with (the defendant) ." its responsibility" in providing five roommates and English majors last Wednesday.
Approximately I 00 students
Anothc1 roommate left citing the presence of that the defendant be asked to leave housmg.
Subsequently , Mr. Schillo allowed the defendant attended the meeting which
''raliiGII posters on the wall" for h1s exodus . The
plans
f1l1
the
llefenJant had ungmally requested a s1ngle because to rem:JJn 10 the dorms by allowing one of the discussed
of
an
English
establishment
he '' J' nut used w wltite m1lldle-das' pcuple due 1&lt;1 defendant\ fnends lO move 10 with tum, thus
caucus. However, prc-regist ra lion
Ius ~n vuunment and was ''more compatible w1th allevwung the roommate situation. But , un the eve eventually evolved as the most
of the c1eatum uf a student -wide jud1dary , the legal controversial 1ssue. Jeff Linder, an
luwer ·da~s people." The defendan t':. assertwn that
ther" wert' two people willing to room w1th hnu irregulantie~ involved in this case must be examined English student , reported to the
apparently dh.ln ' t sway t he panel's dcci~&gt;llln .
and qucstlllncd . A ~ Mr . Effmun observed: " If you group of the acceptance of
A p~ttt i un was tnlroduccd . wh1ch wa~ s1gned by don't have due proces'&lt; 1f every c~se doesn't fulluw pre·registratllln by the English
then :til Department. This Information
eve1y member of the defendant \ dl1rm floor e'&lt; c~·rt the junsJ1c11nn it's supposed to be under
tor two people whu "don' t l1ke l u s1gn pet1tiuns." you've ~ot IS a benevolent dict:Jtor at 11mes. And sparked an inquiry into the nature
uf the new progr:.m and the
The petllllln stated thai the defcndJnl "ll&gt; an integral that's n~) l the same as justice."
motives behind it. Many felt that
the Engl1sh Department was
OPEN LETTER
presumptuous in approvil\g the
pre.regist ra 1ion propoo;a I
ResurTection House
Arguments against the proposal
2 University Avenue
included
· the feeling that the
Buffalo, New York 14214
current system IS more open and
Phone : 837·7575
provides more of an opportunity
Dear Friends,
for more students to obtain
desired courses. Those favoring
The word "religion" is derived from the Latin infinitive " religare"· to tie back
pre·registration commented that
or to tie together. Here is a clue to the function of religion ••.any religion. It seeks
seniority was the best system in
to provide the over-arching and 1ntetstitial perspectives that unite a person's life,
running a department as large as
pulling the loose ends together and tying them all back to that ultimate reality we
English. Additionally, it was felt
call "God."
by some that English majors
deserve first choice and guarantee
God (literally!) knows all of our lives could use some putting together! Our
of courses.
emotions are often in conflict with our minds and consciences, our personal hopes
with our heritage, our ambitions with our abilities, our desires with our
Dead issue
responsibilities, etc., etc .... you name it!
Ho wever. other discounted tltis

English majOrs vefo··
pre-registration plan

The Spectrum is published th,..,
t i mes

•

weelr, ell'llry Mondey,
~nesdey end Frldey; during fiHt
~IN IIC«Nmlc
by Sub-Board
1. Inc. Off;c. •r• locet«J er 365
No'fOn Hell, Swte Um11efJiry of New
York •t Buffelo, 3435 Mein St.,
Buffelo , New York , 14214.
Telephone: AfR Code 716; Editoli11f
831-4t13; Buslntm, 83t..J610.

.,_r

..

Arlo J. Nau, Campus Pastor
Lutheran Ministry to the University
Resurrection House.

Represent«J for lld~slng by
Netione/ Educetione/ Adwrtislng
Service, Inc., 360 L.exlngton Ave.•
New York, N . Y. toot 7.
Subscription ntel en $4.60 per
~ or $8.00 for two a.ncen.

I

.2400
.

355Nort0n

Page .twQ • The Spectrum . Friday, November 12, 1971

-.

What did come out of the
meeting an~ the wurk of the
concerned Engl1sh majors WJS a
determined cfrvrt on the part of
the undergraduates to have their
voice heard in the department. In
speaking wJth tJle newly formed
caucus, Roben ,'lo\o!Wnlan showed
the committee:. some legal
c hann els
through
which
undergraduates can wo rk. For
instance. undergrad uates have
reserved places on the executive
committee, tenure committee and
the
curriculum and poetry
committee.
The meetmg ended with
students discuss1ng in small groups
future plans and next steps to be
implemented . The English caucus
expressed ho pes that they would
be receiving added support in
coming weeks and potential
programs. Anyone wishing to be
involved in this can contact Lewis
Janowski, Jim Morrino, Jeff
Linder or Susan Kltchell at the
English Department , 8314201.

Bible Truth

SOLUTION TO REAL PEACE
" Thef'efore being justified by feith,
we heve Puce with God through our
Lord Jesus Chr'-t."
- Rom . 6 :1
"And the PNce of God••.ttlell kf18P
your heeru end mind•."
- Phil. 5 :7

So, get a copy of the New Testament, or better, of the entire Bible. Talk your
questions over with your Christian friends. For further help, consult with a campus
minister or your home pastor, or take a course in the College of Religion division of
College B. But one way or another acquaint yourself honestly and openly with Jesus
Christ. He's worth knowing, believe me.

11

Rita Lipsitz. an administrative
assistant
in
the
English
Department reported that all the
new system would entail wus a
more concerted effort by faculty
members to g1vc preference to
English maJors when reserving
c ourse
spa c es .
V et.
pre·registration was subsequently
defeated and it appears to remain
a dead 1ssue.

reasoning and questioned the
effect of pre·registration on
incoming transfer students and
other non-ordinary situations.

If you feel the strain, may I suggest a path to pursue in your quest to put your
life back together. It is a religous one, but it involves neither a far-out mystical trip
nor an impersonal intellectualized course in doctrine. Rather, it is essentially only a
matter of getting to know wt~ll one other person - the most authentic, put-together
Person I have ever met, Jesus of Nazareth . You can find him in the New Testament.
He put service before self, love before law, peace before purile pleasure, and faith
before the confining constructs of human " facts ." He said that it is better to give
than to receive. He valued justice, but mercy more, and forgiveness most of all. He
even gave his life that we might be forgiven before the ~ar:\ of divine justice. What a
beautiful man! In fact , I believe he was precisely ~at 1 he claimed to be, God
incarnate. As St. Paul says: " In him all, things hold t~ether ."

Peace and Joy to All,

Such occurrences were not
considered by e1tber the English
Department or the ad hoc English
caucus.

Second Cl,_ ~ peid 11t Buffelo
N - York.
'
Cireuletion: 16,000

cheap - $ .08 I copy
AT 355 NORTON

•

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(at Minnesota)

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Opens at 11e.m.
Slle ends S.turdey

1
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I

I

�Student Assembly meeting

Vote O~J-.budget
iS:postponed
.
.

.

Three exhausting hop[s alter it
began, the Student . · A'Siembly
ended its strangest meeting late
Wednesday night. Due (o . the
many interrupt,ions and the
rabble-rousfng -tactics of those in
attendance, · orily part of the
original agenda was decided upon.
As soon as the meeting · was
called to order, a -number of
members of the Puerto Rican
Organi za tion
fOr
·Dignity,
Elevation
and
Responsibility
(PODER) forcibly took control of
the meeting. "We .waited tl\ree
hours last meeting and didn't get
heard ," said o ne of their
spokesmen .• " There is a nee~ for
this fucking C!=)mntunity center to
get people off of welfare and get
some respectability. The S~ is
starting to take on the likeness of
the Nixon administration, putting
things off, getting caught up in
bureaucratic bullshit."
In order to somehow carry on
business, a motion was passed to
suspend
assembly
rules.
A
spokesman for PODER expressed
their point of view supporting a
day care center: " Last year we
had a $5000 budget. Everyone
knew that wasn't enough. We
need the S 13,000. The finance
committee said we should bring
the kids from the community to
the center here. That isn't a day
care center like ours. We have an
educational facility . Most of the
people here haven't been to the
Puerto Rican community. They
don't know the problems we
have."

Oi.~turbing tactics
He went on to state that only
40 per cent of the center was
Puerto Rican. He made it clear
that " we're tired of bureaucracy.
We want you people to vote on
the budget

now. Jf not, we'll

playing games. We~ ,can call an
emergency. meeting t&gt;f the. fipance
committee and the· ~x~utive
committee tomorrow .and then
pass tbe budset right a~aY.• We
can't help you this way _, .. ·The
members of PODER said that
their a"Ctions appeared the only
wa'l possibte to obtain the. much
needed Jhoney.
Jt -was -&lt;tec1ded. to postpone the
on the budget utltil the next
day, after the finance committee
had conferred. Dave Barmak,
chairman of that committee,
threatened to resign his position if
such actions were taken: " Wecan't malte &amp; rational and
Objective d~cision from the
positio n you've put us in." He
changed his point o f view when
the assembly voted to by-pass the
financial committee and let the
executive committee handle the
budget before it is brought to vote
at Thursday evening's assembly
meeting.
the PODER
Even · after
supporters had
left, verbal
repercussions
from
theit
a pp earance
conspicuous! y
remained. One representative told
of being forcibly stopped from
leaving the room by members of
PODER. When he said he was
going to the men's room, they
remarked : " We didn't know who
you were going to call." He said
man y
r ep r esentatives
felt
threatened by PODER 's tactics
and he refused to give his name
for fear of physical harm.

vote

Sub Board considered
The assembly next turned its
energies towards the proposed
Sub Board I, Inc. budget.
Representative Bob Convissar
said : "J think, as most do, that
the budget be passed , but with
cer tai n
amendments:·
He
proposed that the allocation to
Sub Board be frozen early next
semester unJess certain reforms
had been made. Mark Borenstein,
Sub Board business manager said,
" I 'd be the first to ad mit that Sub
Board needs reform . However the

Board w.itb change without
mal&lt;ina
specific
recomme.odations."
The next hour was ·Spent
debatina, arguing ' over semantics
technicalities
in'
the
and
parliamentary
rules.
One
representative had to wait over I S
minutes to speak because an
opposing point of view had to be
aired
first.
An
alternate

-GIIwlt

PODER spokesman

amendment was proposed by
Dave Steinwald and a compromise
amendment was finaJJy passed. It
stated that the first piece of
business at next semester's initial
assembly meeting would be a
re-evaluation of the Sub Board
budget. Their monies would then
be frozen if the assembly was not
satisfied with their reforms. After
some further debate, the Sub
Board budget was passed by a
20- 4 vot e.
Throughout
the
meeting
representative Warren Hunter
effectively
pointed out the
deficiencies
in
assembly
procedures. Though most of his
comments fell on ~ sympathetic
ears no action was proposed. The
final business of the meeting was
the passing of the club budgets,
including allocations to the
Activist Youth for Israel and

Crime in dormitories
Cause strict security
A series o( early semester
dormitory crimes has. resulted in
stringent security measures. One
such measure includes the early
lock-up of Clement and Goodyear
Halls to start immediately. Dorm
lock·up which allows student
enttanee into the balls only on
presentation of an I.D. card o r
after the signing of a guest list was
changed from I 0 p.m . to 8 p.m.
While only Goodyear and
Clement House Councils have
approved the me.asure, Tower Hall
and other dorms are expected to
follow suit. Such measures were
considered necessary as crime
reports have increased. Since last
April, 24 robberies in Cle'ment
Hall have occurred with such
items as phonographs and TV sets
being stolen.
Campus Security judges that
the crimes have occurred during
the afternoon hours with a total
o f over $6000 worth of goods
taken. Jn addition, security
officials feel that the crimes are
mostly inside jobs as robbery
victims report that their doors
were locked.
The office of housing is
presently seeking funds from the
State
University
ce ntral
administration in Albany to
change the Jocks at an estimated
cost of $2500.

Other crimes
Other crimes have plagued the
campus. Three attempted rapes at
Tower Hall have caused a further
lightening of security measures
and a recently held Tower dance
resulted in six assaults and a
robbery. To help combat these
and other crimes, a Campus
Security plain-clothesman will be
added to the security patrol.
Students have been urged to
watch out for each other and to
beware of strangers in their
buildings. Tower women residents
particularly have been warned to
keep their doors locked when

alone ancS to question all oallen at
their doors.
AJ. Miller, president of the
Inter-Residence Council, believes
that much of the crime is due to
the carelessness of student!, and
Particularly to the fact that many
wander the building alone at
night.
Commenting on the wave of
erime, Mr. Miller cites the already
strong security measures of the
dorms as deterrents for crimes.
" We are pushing along with the
House Councils to get a better
system of locks along with the
security measures," he said.
Further aid ''depends on whether
security ·has the budget for_it ...s,
PoUce action
Mr. Miller continued : ''The
trend of robberies has been that
Clement pas had the most. The
doors in Clement are tbe only
ones on wltich you have to lock
on the way out . Other d orms have
spring locks." Spring locks do not
have to be reset e~ery time.
However. George Helser, a
studen t victim of a. Tower Hall
robbery, commented on lack of
security when neede4: "They
were very helpful after the fact.
They were here in minutes after
the crime. They said tint thing
Monday they were going to have
it (broken windows through
which
the
burglary
was
conduct ed I fixed. They did
nothing Monday."
Major factors influencing the
increase of crime were pointed
out
as,
"Carelessness
and
publicity" by Mr. Miller. " People
read about it and they figure the
dorms are an easy place to rob,"
he said.
PoUce investigations have Jed
to the acquisition of suspects but
because of Jack of evidence,
further moves are prohibitive.
According to dorm officials, the
security squeeze is one more
method to end crime acceleration
at the University.

come to every meeting and
disturb it until we get a vote."
While most of the assembly
was sympathetic to PODER's
need for $13,000, many did not
like their tactics. Keith Frankel,
National
Student
Affairs
coordinator, said : "~Y~o~u~·r~e~j~
u ~st;_~r:;es~o~lu~t~io~n~~i~s~t~hr~e:;a!!t!en~i:,:;n~g~~
Sub~-Y~o,:!u!!th=A~g:a~in~s~t~?o.,:a:.:;n::!d~F:as~c~is:.:;m:.:.,·;_-::-------------------------,

university
un1on
activities
board

presents a Weekend· of

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FILM

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The UUAB Fine Arts Film Committee Presents

ETHEL RAIM
and
JEAN RITCHIE
Friday . November 12
First Floor Cafeteria
Admission Free

DANCE
JAMES CUNNINGHAM
and
The Acme Dance Band
In

crncert
Sat. Novem~r 13 At 9 PM
Clark Gym Admission $1
L:...--~--C:::o:,:n:ter:,:en::;ce:,.T;.h:,:eat::;,;re:;.:.F.:.;ri~•.S;:u;.;n.;..N:.;,;o.:,".;.
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Tlc:;,;,k;;;;e;,;ts;.A;..;.;;.t~N;.;o:;,;,rt~o;.n...;.T.ic;.k..;e.t.O.ff.i.c.e_ _ _ A Dilllnon of Sub-Bocm~

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.
1

Friday, November 12, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�. . ..... .. .

,-.-. ,.

~

.... I!'

.. ----·

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Executive committee~ has-heavy load .
A move by St'*"t Aaoclation pmideat Ian
DeWul to discontinue any further consideration on the
purch.asin&amp; of Pcmrty HW by the Student Auoclation wu.
unanimously passed by the executive committee at their
meetins last Tuesday. Leaditl&amp; to this decision wu the
disclosure that the student referendum on the question of
whether SA should buy Poverty Hill if Sub Board I doesn't
resulted in a mere 71 vote plurality. .
Also on the agenda wa the purchasing of a house for
Sunshine House, the recommendation of David Smith to
serve on the House CouncU, the appropriations of money
to various interest groups, 'The Band.. concert, the
recognition of clubs and the approval of club budsets.
After much debate, the executive committee voted
in favor of the purchasing of a house for Sunshine House.
It had been argued that without a permanent facUlty
Sunshine House would coUap~e, for it finds it cannot
operate adequately'in its pment surroundinp, the CAC
oflloe at Room 220 Norton. It was .made clear that
Sunshine House is a student-operated, student-run
orpnization which must have 24 hour a day facilities in
which to operate successfully. It was then suggested that
the executive committee go on record as being in favor of
purchasing a bouse.
In the market
The arguments apinst the purchase 'Were that having
the SA buy property setJ a dangerovs precedent , and that
the SA would Jose money in case Sunshine House should
ever stU the house, since property values are on the
decline. The rentaJ of the house was suggested but this idea
was quickly dismissed. After much debate, a proposition
was drawn up which stated that "the executive committee
be on record in favor of buying a house for Sunshine
House and that the finance committee be instructed to

Reprdtna thJs, Wr. BeD~ the SA ofretortin&amp;
invest!pt; buyin&amp; a house at 83 Heath.•• This fesolutlon
to the use of ..sneaky tricks
pt tbt SA back into the
wu pused by the committee.
concert
bUiinoas.
What
I
mean
by
'sntlak:y' is all types of
Other business included tho allocation of money to
Jeslslation
that
you
can
do
to
make
it1lepl to talk about
the National American Cultural Awareness Orpnization
conoerU
beca.ute
eve~y likes concerts and iploring all
(NACAO) for which Bob Be.U, Minority Affairs
coordinator, served as spokesman. It wu aareed upon, that I proposed before abovt the NACAO."
however, that the Jequest for funds would first have to go
to the finance committee before the executive committee R-=inded policy
Mr. GoJdatein then retorted, ..You're aetting off the
could take any stand. There were many instances, in fact,
trac)t.
We made the decision not to go into the eoncert
where the executive committee referred those groups
business.
that's number one. We're the only people who
seeking appropriations to the finance committee stating
can
obviowly
rescind that. The Constitution says that
that it was absolutely necessary to prepare a budget for the ·
money
has
to
go through the finance committee first
finance committee before any action by the executives
whether it be in the concert blllineu or the "Native
could take place.
American Cultural Awareness Organization' business." The
move to rescind the previoua polJcy of not conducting SA
'Sneaky tricks'
concerts was passed. The budget for "The Band" concert
One such instance was. the question on whether or wUJ now proceed to go to the finance. committee and then
not money lhould be allotted by the SA for a concert to the executive committee for further deUbcrations.
which would feature ''The Band" to be held Friday. March
Other business that wu attended to wu the
24 at Buffalo's Memorial Auditorium. The Importance of endorsement of the 1' Activist Youth for Israel" proposal to
the concert was stressed by Keith Frankel , National establish a department fot Jewish studies within the
Student Affairs coordinator, who felt that time was of the University.
essence and that arrangements and preparations had to be
Of major concern were the 1972·73 State University
made as quickly as possible.
·
budget hearinp which Mr. DeWaaJ attended. He stated
The proposed cost of production would be $26,500, that there was an extreme lack of concern for the
a sum of money far higher than the University has ever universities especially now that the transportation bond
appropriated for a single show . However, it was the issue has been defeated. According to him, it will be an
conviction of many that the production of a show is a exceedingly tight economic situation for the school year
serious business and it has to be done right If it is to be 1972-73.
It was also proposed by Mr. DeWaal that certain
done at all. But as pointed out by Academic Affairs
amendm«jnts
to the SA Constitution be made and that, in
coordjnator Lester Goldstein, involvement in the concert
business could not even be considered unless there was a addition, next year's election dates be moved up, for it
move to rescind the vote that originally " got the SA out of should be the future officers and not the incumbents who
determine next year's poUcies.
the concert business."

to

Exam dates changed
The tent1Uve exam achedule printed in the f1U
class acbedule it no longer valid. A new scheduling
procedure hiS been instituted which will minimize
conllicts. The offic:lll eXIm schedule wW be mliled
to D.U.S., academic.deputments and dormitories b y
Friday 1 Nov. 19. Scbeduleslhould be posted on first
fioofl of most academio buJldinga, Norton •nd l~rge
dona.itoriet.

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Page four . The Spectrum. Friday, November 12, 1971

,..,......

AIUtctffM

IIIEIUDAI IIUYl
IAJ UIIOI ROAD

�.-

Ms. Kennedy

Ha11~

~

'Do you find it fmponlbl~ to unttmtlt
the Uni11~nity burtt~ucracy 1 In COOf"ffllion wltll the Office of Swdewt
Affair~ and Servitts, The Spectrum IPOniOTJ• Action. Une, a weekly
r~ader strllice column. Throurh Action Line. lnd.ill'idual 1tudents can
get ar11~m to purrltnr que1tlon.r, find out wh~~ tmd why Onl11.e nity
decisions are made and get action where chanre II needed.
Just dial 831 ·5000 or vllit the Action ,UM. booth in the Center
Lounge in Norton Hall for individll41 attMtion. · The Office of Student
Affairs and Suvice1 will inve1tifllt~ all queltlons and compkzintl, and
will answer them lndMduQI/y. The name 'of the indillfduol originating '
the Inquiry IJ kept confidenti'tll_ under all c:lrcumstanc~s. The more
common que1tionJ will b~ an1wered in thi1 column each week.
a

prolfl~m ? N~~d h~lp ?

1!-eminine activiSm supptJrtiiJ·
SUllO deJoatb-Keuf

Spectrllm S,./1 Wrltw

Florynce Kennedy ca.llJ .herself "a middl~
black lady." She's a lawyer, a feminist and the
: au~&lt;?r of A,bortlofl Rllp. She wears leather pants, a
cowboy hat, four ~np, two watches, a medallion, a
sweater with enormous fur lapels and sunatasses.
In the Fillmore Room Monday niaht, she
exf'lained to a srdall, h eavily white, heavily female
audience that she was late beC\use of plane trouble.
" I had a little trouble wida the plane tlriaht. I
missed the damn thin&amp;. Christ. One minute.
Wouldn't you know it? Shtt."
Q: I am receivina the maximum ec:holanhip incentive and am abo
Her cause for the evening was Women's
recelvina a Stat' Uo.lnnity ec:holanbip to make ap the rat of my cost Liberation, although just as easily, it could have been
of education. Yet, I received a bill from the buraar'1 offtce 1tatlna that I abortion reform, prison reform, feminist anarchism
still owed 1ome money. I thouaht that Jhe State University acbolan hip or Black Liberation.
would cover this. What pvea?
"People like Oily Rocky can turn into
A: The State University Scholarship is offered to those wbo are murderers at the drop of a hat," she said, pointin&amp;
receiving the maximum scholarship incentive ; but it pays only for what out the importance of Attica "for women and other
remains of the student's tuition. It does not pay for other costs. The new{y arrived nigen."
bill you received reflects the other costs of attending the University,
"Niaen" include Blacks, women , anti-war G l's
such as student fees. You could have applied for a waiver from stude.n t and other oppressed people.
fees to the Student Association. Unfortunately, the time for this
Ms. Kennedy noted that "loserism in the oilier
application is now past, the deadline on these having been Oct. I S. But community is very, very strona" and warned that we
why not make this application the next time around?
have to watch out for "the piaocrats and the
jockocrats in charge. They'll kill you if you become
Q : What is the Jut day to reaiater for a courae?
relevant."
A: The last day to add or to drop a course is Dec. I at noon.
Howeve.r , remember that to add a course you must !lave the written • Supports abor1ion
permission of the professor and there must be space available in the
One thing women can do to achieve relevance
classroom.
and . escape from "the split-level whorehouse"
(marriage) is to march. Ms. Kennedy is pushin&amp; the
Q : Is there any difference between a joint major and a double Nov. 20 abortion march in Washingto n. "It's the first
nationally celebrated women's march since the
m..tor?
A: Ye~ , so don' t confuse the two. In order to be granted a double suffragettes."
m~or, the stud ent must complete the full requirements for both
Ms. Kennedy feels strongly about abortion on
departments and both majors must lead toward the same type o f degree demand, and roundly condemns the "Friends of the
(i .e., one can't be a BA while the other is a BS). A joint m~or, on the Fetus who want to see every pregnancy carried to its
other band, consists o f departmental permission from each major to end ... Interference with women's private rights has
drop some of its requirements (I.e., less required courses) so u to gjve to be taken out of the hands of middle-&lt;~ged
the student an opportunity to gain extensive knowledae in two legislators."
unrelated field s. But bere again, the two m~ors must lead toward the
She recoanizes a hypocritical dichoto my in the
same degree. Before undertaking any venture like this, however, the attitudes people have toward voluntary black
student should see his or her advisor.
sterilization as opposed to voluntary white
sterilizaUon. Tubal liptions, she says, are beina
Q : I am con.lidering taklna a semester off from achool. What
pushed onto the black community; white women are
happens to my scholarship incentive? Do I just loee it?
disc:ouraged from taking this step.
A: You receive the \C:tu&gt;larship incentive fot eight semesters o(
Ironically, a black student pointed out after the
under&amp;f'lldulrte wtKk . 'Therefor•. it you take a semester orr, it wUI go on talk that the slogan In the black communjty is,
for an extra semester. Ro'-lever. if you intend to do this, you must " Hawo another,"
inform the Office of Student. Accounts and Albany so that your
scholarship Incentive wiU not be sent during the semester you are not
there. For more information on this, call the office o f Financial Aids
(831-3 724 ).

.

..

Q : My parents paid my tuition for the fine semester and then I
received a Regents Scholarship. How do I get my money bac:k for the
first semester?
A : lt i~ rather simple. Just go to the office of Student Accounts in
Room I , Hayes Annex A and ask for a " request for refund" form . Fill
it out and in due time you will receive your refund.
Q : Does the University offer a major in Toxology?

A : According to our sources, it does not.

Florynce Kennedy
Ms .
Kenn edy
is
admittedly
"anti-establishmentarian," but claims that she is not
a radical. " Will the real militants stand up against the
wall?" she asked, " I mean people like Gen.
Westmoreland . . . General Mills, General Foods,
General Motors."

Feminist party
Another positive goal for women is poUtical
involvement. Ms. Kennedy was respohsible for
founding th e ftrst chapter of the Feminist Party in
Queens Nov. 3, and for proposina Shirley Chisholm
u a presidential candidate in 1972.
" What's wro ng with a vote for Shirley
Chisholm?"
Adamantly against "that no-dick Dick" Nixon,
Ms. Kennedy advocates political chanae "by any
means possible.... There are several ways to ret rid
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Friday, November 12, 1971 . The Spec~um . Page five

�EdiTORi"l
lHe who giveth
Administrative dupticity has once again entered the realm
of judicial proceedings directed at students. Based on the
now famous logic of he who giveth taketh, Director of
Housing Thomas Schillo has not only stripped the
Inter-Residence Judiciary of all its functions and credence
but acted in a manner which demonstrates his disregard for
due process.
First, he unilaterally expelled a student from housing.
This clearly violates accepted notions of fair play within this
University. Second, he convened a hand-picked ad hoc panel
to hear this case, rather than allow the I RJ to excercise its
legal authority. Third, there were no students o n the panel ,
despite the usual administrative lip-service towards the
notion of judgement by one's peers.
The most disturbing note of these proceedings is the
apparent duplicity with which they were engineered. For the
last several months, representatives of the various student
governments have been working w ith the administration to
establish a student-wide judiciary. Throughout, there has
been cooperation and openness on this endeavor.
Unfortunately, one side, the administration, has chosen
to break this relationship by the secrecy under which this
particular hearing was held. One of the ad hoc panel
members had been helping to draft the judiciary proposals,
but neglected to immediately disclose to his fellow workers
that he had even participated in such a miscarriage of justice.
Had the student's counsel not objected both correctly and
vehemently to this legal manipulation, no one would even
have known about this case.
At the hearing, Mr. Schillo stated for the record that:
"There is a potential victim in the wings, and that's me and
the members of my staff." No, Mr. Schillo, you are not the
victim; the victim is the student subjected to those
proceedings and all of us who naively believed administrative
statements about the respect they had for due process.
Trust is a concept important to this University. If, under
their State Education Law authority, the administration has
allowed a system of student courts to be established, then
they should show some respect for and trust in the students
staffing those courts by permitting them to exercise their
jurisdiction.
We cannot accept the arguement of one of the panel
members, that since the IRJ receives its authority from Mr.
Schillo, " he reserves the right at his discretion to execute
that authority." While correct in a strict legal sense, such a
notion spells doom for the concept of students adjudicating
their own disputes. Therefore, if some administrative action
is not soon forthcoming which will signify their revulsion by
Mr. Schillo's despotic actions, we will have no recourse but
to urge a total boycott by all students of all governmental
activities stemming from administrative delegation .

THE SpECTf\UM
Friday, November 12 , 1971

Vol. 22, No. 33

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
eo.Matwgl"f EdhOf - AI Benson
Co-Men.oi"l Editor - Mike L•wm-nn
Alit. Man81i"'J Editor - Susan Mo•
Bull.- Man..,w - Jim Druck•
Adwrtiti"l MaNger - Sue Mellentlne

Campus ......... Jo-Ann Armeo
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Howie Kurtz
. • . . . . . . • . . . . .. Bill Vaccaro
...••..... Hervy LlJ)men
City
Copy ...... . .... AonniForrrMm
. . • . . . . . . . . . .•• Mlf'ty Gettl
"-1....... .. Clelre Krlegsmen
F•ture .................vecent
Oniphlc Arts ......... Tom Toles

Leyout ....... Mary hope Runyon
Alit . ..... ........ .. ..vacant
Lit. &amp; Dl"'lme .• Michael Silverblett
MUtic ...........••Billy Altmen
Off..Cempus ..... . Lynne Traeger
Photo .......... Marc Ackl!t'men
......... . Mickey Osterrelcher
Spans ....... • . .... Beny Aubin
"-1. .. ..... .. ... Howie Felwl

TM Spectrum is served by United Pr., International, Collage Pr. .
S.Va, the LOt Angeles Free Pr... the Los angeles Times Syndicate end
Liber.tlon N - Serva.

AIP'bflc:etion of rnettll' herein without the exprees consent of the
Editor-ill-Chief is fOfbklden.
Editorief policy is cMt«mlnld by the Editor· in.Chi.t.

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, November 12, 1971

'&amp;.If Ml SU THAT IICIPI AOAINI'

•'

Toronto. It had been too long since I had made shopping areas of downtown Toronto. Last weekend
that northern drive, or so I found out last weekend . they were selling chestnuts along with the usual
Went up Friday afternoon under grey and gloomy popcorn, peanuts and candy apples. The candy apple
skies, getting the usual check at the bridgty Funny , sold me outside Honest Ed's wu superb. Usually the
but the sun came out after getting there and it was :1 apples are soft and mealy you know, but this one
superb day, hjgh blue aky and wind enough to blow was solid and sweet, and it was altogether delicious.
the pollution out over Lake Erie - which seems to (As usual however, it took me several hours to get
be aU one can hope for these days, wherever you the bits of candy shell out of my moustache.)
might be.
But what the hell, it could be run and run and
The city is a Oat out gas. Every time Lhere i.s run. The bakeries, the nut shop, the food, the record
something new and different about the city - wh1ch stores, the book stores, all are there, and half the fun
is obviously true about any large city when one stops is finding them on your own. And the public
babbUng long enough to consider reality. Toronto transpor1ation Is the best r have seen on this
however is muJtivaried enough so that avoiding the continent, so it is easy to poke: Hound on foot and
differences and fascinating nuances is almost trolley, bus, or subway your way back when your
impossible. One of my favorite things is a place on feet wear out.
Dupont Street which proclaims "mosto por vino"
All of which is camouflage on ,some levels, I
and this year has added "grape juice for
wine-making" to confirm my suspicions. The same thlnk. It seems funny that It is rare for me to go
anywhere unless It is to visit people, and then to sit
Information is available In several other languages.
This space has previously sung the praises of the here and rattle on about all the things in Toronto.
Kensington Market located at Spadina some ten or The people somehow are more important to me than
fifteen blocks norlh of the expressway which runs the place - I thlnk. That is one of the things that is
along the sourthern edge of the city. There is a somehow so well defended that it doesn't surface
burlesque house, called the "Victory" I beUeve, very often. It is not easy to admit one cares for
which serves as a tine landmark - next to which is a people, after all. The result is liable to be
vulnerability, and openness
deli - Shopsys' - which can provide you with food
seems to .be a fine thing tn
to your hearts content and stomachs ambivalence.
textbooks but the scar tissue
The market i.s now off to your left as you drive
it leaves behind a.t times is
north, in 1 maze of smaU one way streets. One parks
something else again.
wherever one can find a space, and walks in. (If you
Like a great many other
go far enough up Spadina to where you have to
people,
I suspect, a good deal
foUow the street around a castle you have gone too
of my time is spent feeling
far .)
relatively lonely and isolated.
So what's in the market? It is an area of small
Which
is partly me, and poor
~to res selling food mostly, with some clothing and
communications.
It usually
such stores. There are two bakenes which are usually
first on my stop list. The first Is called Permulators - happens that as any effort is made to get closer to
or something - and their large bagels and onion Oat me, it becomes progressively easier, for me to say the
bread are just fine . Next door is the Imperial bakery wrong thing - or perhaps it is the right thing from
which I don't shop much, stopping only to dirty the the other side. When getting anxious and a little
window peering in at the superb tortes, cakes jl.lld weird therefrom, odd thin&amp;' may appear from my
mouth, without advance warning. Such happenings
other fancy goodies which they feature.
Around the corner are the cheese stores. These see rather consistantly to manage to create
stores cause me certain amounts of difficulty . J tend considerable distance between whoever is making
to go charging in and buy several kinds of cheese , of motions In my direction. Which I suppose f might
which I have never heard, and then bring it home look at more closely some day, when r have the
and stick it in the refrigerator - where it sits time.
undisturbed until it gets moldly and is thrown away.
Toronto for me Is rtst and relaxation, to be used
Don't ask me why. AU that seems clear is that eating sparingly since I know from past experience that no
is in large part a sociable thing for me, and without one can stand my consistant presence over long
people to eat with - cheese being a late night nibble periods of time. (Crazy? No!, ever been able to make
after all - it simply sits. (Hopefully the wrapping a long term consistant relationship work? No .. . .
wiU keep it from odorizing Lhe entire refrigerator.) See, that proves it , people can't stand me. What
There are a great many other shops, pastry and about the ones who say they can? They don't know
candy shops, vegetable stores, a Uttle german - l me well enough, soon as they do they won't be able
think - restaurant with really fine soup. (Would to stand me either. So, might as weU save the trouble
rather not be forced into making a choice between of trying, right? Rigbt!) Places where you can go,
their potato soup, or Shopsy's matza ball.) There are and just be , are rare. Places where you can talk, or
also several shops specializing in meat and fash and bellow, and be harassed , and keep being handed the
fowl. Got into trouble trying to buy some salami for baby are needed by us all.
my hostess. So who knows from German, Italian or
And the point of Lhe whole thing is that we
- what the hell was the third k.ind? - salami?
could probably do that for each other. But we get
It is also not a market for the more caught up in our heads, and our fumbling efforts at
faint-hearted. Rabbits and chickens are available on contact go astray, and we retreat again - hoping
the hoof, to be killed after you make your selection. somewhere Along the line someone would make
A situation which, while probably more real motions towards us. Which of course results in
psychologically than buying a fryer in a plastic bag defensive red alerts since people dearly want
at a food store, is somewhat hard on those - lilce me something from you, why else would they approach
- who would prefer not to have their food walk.ing you? All of which leads to an absolutely fool-proof
about in front of them. (Fort unately the lobsters system for being isot.ted and lonely. (and safe!)
recently brought back from Malne expired by Yah, right, safe! wheeee).
themselves, before being placed ln boiling water and
Cheery words for the weekend again. Tsk. But
banging the sides of the kettle on their way out.)
Toronto (To.) is really a gas of .a city, but take
There are still street vendors all over the somebody else to share it with . Pax.

The

grump

�Lack of infomr&amp;ation

Dump Jacobsen
To

th~

Editor!

To the Editor:

Wednesday's article on the SO&lt;lcer club once again depended
completely on Coach Jacobsen's opinions to draw ita conclusions.
Jacobsen's diaap pointment in the offense is largely his own fault.
No practice time was spent on developing the skills necesary to a good
offe~e. He did n~t make ~ffective use of foreian talent and experience,
and limited offenstve teamwork throu&amp;}l too frequent substitutions.
Tho team itself was dissatisfied with him as a coach to the point
where a virtual Dump Jacobsen movement is in effect.
Jacobsen should take all of this into account if he is truly
interested in the future success of soccer at UB. And Th e Spectrum
should recognize the situation if it wanta to report objectively.
KrJy

Guinano

Big business
To

th~

Editor:

After having our budget sufficiently butchered (there's no need to
bring attention to our specific club), and then setting it passed after
only a mere two months, our organization still can't seem to get off the
ground due to a form known affectionately as Requl$/rlon Encu mbran c~- Purcluue.
The magnimanlacs known as SA officers are so into the games of
bis business that I sincerely believe they have lost all their identity as
students serving students. They are pig businessmen manipulating,
corrupting and coniving the student body.
Even with a budget, a club isn't frco to do what it needs to do
without the SA causing at least a delay and, i( it so desires, a f~eze on
any monJes they want. A club is strangled by red tape.
Sub Board l , lno. is indeed a corporation. Any club or organization
has to kiss tbe ass of its superior (Sub Board) with typewritten
quintuplet forms and wait for approval (sometimes two to three
weeks).
As an SA officer said to me: "What can't we do for you today ."

F. Stop

----~feedback----

I'm writing this u a normal, everyday
(non-student association lackey) student. I've been
antazcd at the recent goinp on with the athletic
budset. It seems to me that each representative
wants to leave tus mark on the University by
coordinating some drastic change. For eumple,
wouldn't it have been easier for Dave Steinwais to
have made a motion to put his name on the new
jerseys. You heard o f Abc Sapentein's Harlem
Globetrotten. He wants Dave Steinwald's Buffalo
Bull•. He could then be lmown as the disciple who
successfuUy fucked over thousands of sports fans.
I think the whole idea of abolishing the sports
program is absurd. Basketball was the only activity
last year that successfully brought together I SOO
students both black and white. How are you going to
teU tbe 2000 fans th at CJOwded into the Amherst
Rec. Center Last year that there won't be anymore
hockey because the "elite" student association
members who raised their own stipends this year
voted down the athletic budget beause It was

padded. (I will admit that bultetball mfabt ha.e
been a bit padded, but d o you throw tho whole thin&amp;
away to act back at them?)
These reps are scrcamina for an increMed
amount of intramuntl Kti9ity. I'm sure thtse people
haven't been within so yards or the l)'m. The
schedule iJ 10 tiaht now 1bat it'a almott lmpoaible
to play a lim pie pme of basketball.
I believe that we should build up our tea1111 as
much at possible, b ecause believe it or not, •
successful team can be the greatest uniting force this
sch ool has ever had. I can ace it now. YAWP
chanting Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh, Buffalo is gonna win.
As the sports editor of a famous colleae newspaper
once said: ..You don't run a half·assed athletic
program. You either put the best team possible out
on the court, or you don't put a team out at all ."
If our non-1'epresentativee do cstabU&amp;b a
referendum, I'm be~g everyone of those 2000
fans who saw our hoctcy team kick Oswcao State't
ass last year to do a job and help lobby for a
continuation of our athletic program .
Cliff Pflle{lky

-

Continue our athletics
To tht Editor.

It would seem that one of the largest
undergraduate departments on this campus ~ould
have some substantive contact with its students. This
apparently not so. An informal meeting of English
majors on Nov. 10 proved nothing - except,
perhaps, that there are several hundred people who
don't know what they're doing in a department that
prides itself on allowing students much say in it!l
actions.
Undergraduates had little prior knowledge of
the meeting - nor did most o f them know that
informal groups had been meeting to form a nucleus
for an undergraduate English association. Worse yet,
the few majors who did attend the meeting (less than
100 out of a total of 872) were Largely unaware that
a preregistration process was being established in the
English Department.
This was bad enough, but the apparent lack of
information the majors seemed to have was even
more shockina. Students do not seem to know that
there are available means to work ln the Enalish
Ocpa(tmen' ;- not just as tokens, b\lt as mcmbere.
This may eound llJce a cop-out . BnJ).ish m.;ors

have the ri&amp;bt to elect representatives to the
department , to serve on committees and to work
with the faculty in recommendina professors for
tenure. Nobody seems to know this, and that is the
problem. At the beginning of the semester a student
may learn that there are elections fof something or
another, but nobody knows who tbe candidates are,
or what they're runnjna for . Why is this?
There are existing opportunities in the English
Department. The group that calJed the meetina
represented a first, tentative attempt to coordinate
all of this. If more people had bothered to show, and
had some decent information, something better
would have been done. Instead an atmosphere of
mistrust and misinformation prevailed . It seemed as
if no one knew what was going on , and no one really
cared .
Hopefully this is not the ~e. lf the 700 majora
who did not attend this meetina want to ltoow what
happened witb this first step towards a form of
departmental governance, they should contact
Robert Newman or Rita Lipschutz at the En&amp;lish
Department for more informaUon .
Par Maloney

Food Service 'stinks'

Legal self defense

To the Editor:

I am a freshman resident student and have been eating o n a
University Food Service contract board plan. There are a few things I
would like to say about it.
I know that the job of institutionalized feeding is a rough one. But
those who run an organization like that are expected to use a little
1ntel!jgencc. I will not try to show some examples of what I think is
blatant stupidity, which IS totally unnecessary . There are at least three
food counters that serve food in the Goodyear- Clement din1ng area
that t know of. On weekdays, when all the lines are open, the prO&lt;less
of feeding the students aoes fairly smoo~. But if you should happen
to come to eat an hour to an hour-a ·a-half before the meal is
sc.heduled to close, line S (the smaller Clement counter) is closed. This
necessitates a longer waitlna time at the oth er Jjne. On weekends it is
even worse. Line 5 is n#ller opened, and the waiting line at the larger
Goodyear counter usually extends all the way down the steps into the
basement, and the wait is unbearable. To add to this, when you rinaJiy
get your food, you find that Clement dining room is closed and they
try to pack you into hea~Uy crowded Goodyear dining room .
Even when the food lines arc running smoothly, their
incompetence of Food Service shows again . They continuously run out
of foods that are known by most people to be popular, and try to pawn
off some experiment of leftovers from the ni&amp;ht before. Things get even
more complex on weekends when residents of Tower Hall eat their
meals in Goodyear-Clement.
Food Service is supposed to offer balanced meals. But nine out of
ten times if you want to have a meal that tastes one-fourth of the way
decent, it ends up unbalanced, usually in the way of starchy foods .
The purpose of Food Service is to serve the students. It should be
understood that students sometimes have tests. And when there is a
test that mvolves a large number of students, such as when there is a
Chemistry hourly, Food Service refuses to acknowledge it , and
subsequently they run out of food, the lines arc a few hundred students
long, and when they get the rushed food to you, it isn't fully cooked.
There is usually a menu posted as to what is being served the next
day or at the next meal. It is, therefore, their responsibility to see to it
that everyone bas the same choice of foods regardless of when, during
the allotted time, the student arrives to eat. And, finally, I don't see
why (if there is a reason, please tell me) seconds in food cannot be
Jiven on weekends as is do ne on weekdays. The only reason I can see
for this is that Food Service is too cheap to spend the money.
I hope I have Jiven you some inkllna as to bow I feel about
University Food Service. The sad part is that I've only been here two
monUu and yet have been able to form these definite conclusions. It is
not juat my sole opinion expressed here. I have talked to many fellow
students who feel the same way as I do. Thank you for your time.

Mitchell Retenbopn

To the Editor:

disorderly conduct and acquitted of the resisting._
The sentence was a "conditional discharge,"
The purpose of this letter is to share some of my whereby I can be sentenced to a fine or jail for this
conviction again if I'm convicted of another charse
thoughts and experiences about legal self defense.
I was arrested near the rally that was held on of disorderly conduct.
I was up for doing my own defense because I
Sept. 13 at Lafayette Square. supporting the
demands of the Attica prisoners. It bad been illeplly wanted to : I) somehow break down some of tbe
broken up by the police, and the people had been distance between the court and tbe defendant, not
scattered to the surroundjng atea during the rush so as to become more acclimated to their rules of
bour. 'I went to three different comers and gave brief procedure and ideology, but to be at least a little
explanations of why we were at the rally and what more self~etermined, to have some more say in
was going on, since the people setting out from work matters concerning myself; 2) better qualify myself
were gathering and wondering why the police were in basic legal sel f~efense so as to be able to work
there at the square. I was pointed out by a this way again should the need arise; 3) raise poinm
plainclothes policeman, iUegally placed under arrest in the trial relevant to the issue o f prison reform that
by rum and a uniformed policeman, and charged llad brou&amp;}lt me to the rally on Sept. 13 in the fint
with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. The place.
The' court (the judge) would not allow much
smashing of the demonstration and the arrests were
typical efforts to smother voices critical of policies discussion or testimony outside the immediate scene
determined by those in whose hands power is of my arrest so that tbe mainly political context was
concentrated through the concentration of wealth. It lost for the most part . I think with most lawyers,
showed once agajn the arbitrary nature of class law. that aspect would never be raised, but would be
After opening myself to the different veiled over so as not to "antagoni%e the judge." The
possibilities of working it out otherwise (e.g., with a public defenders that I've seen in action are not
public defender), I got in to doing my own defense. equipped to present an adequate 61efense raising the
There were three solid witnesses who were right on issue o f the defense of civil Uberties within tbe
the scene of my arrest , and who agreed to testify. We context of a developing radical movement.
Getting off the cbarses is a mlijor thing. The
reviewed the event and then I checked out the laws 1
was accused of breaking, going further into past legal very being on their grounds with their rule.r is not to
precedents in the Erie County and UB Law libraries. our ad~~antage. The field for movement strengtbenina
The complexity of that aspect seemed at first to be in a courtroom scene is very limited. It is a very
almost overwhelming, but with a few questions to isolating affair. We don't assume that we can
the librarians, I was self~ufficient, digging out past significantly break down the basic cause of
cases to back up my own ease. The trial was held this alienation in the superstructural aspect of lepl ...
relations. That can come only in a strong, successful
Nov. 8 .
My defense rested mosUy on the actual facts as socialist movement. But aettina ourselves, our
brou&amp;}lt out by these witnesses. The prosecution friends and others better prepared to understand
only had o ne of the arresting officers to testify. those social relations in law, and also courtroom
Before the actual trial began, the judge announced procedure (complete lepl self~efense) can a.aiJt
that they would drop the more serious chuge of that human liberation.
1 would not have been as wcU prepared without _
resistins (a misdemeanor) if I pleaded guilty to
disorderly conduct (a mere violation) and I said that the assistance and encouragement of Carmen Putrino
the seriousness and importance of the events that and Mitchel Franldin, and the slogan, "the more help
day (Sept. 13) warranted a trial. Also, I thought the the better," especially for those new to the courts,
defense was adequate.
seems appropriate.
I was, after the testimony, found guilty of
Terry Keepn

Friday, November 12, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�:Feminine
. activism~ •••

Candidates exceed cost

-contlnuecl from pe. . f l . -

·limit charges Summers

A bLack prt expla.lned that b._ 1f0111.,._ are
reluctant to join white women "bec:au.e it means
aeparatin&amp; from our men."
..Every mulatto you see~ probably the product
Ctwslns
that
candJdates'
of a bLack woman and a wbite man," )fl. Kennedy spending
ln
recent
county
went on, empbasizin&amp; thal for centuries white men executive campaign exceeded the
had sex with bLack womeo. Today Ma. Kennedy sees
a reversal in thit trend c:auaed, probably, by the legal limit, a local citJzen has filed
increased pride bLack men feel toay. "But black a complaint with the Board of
women are too smart to stand by while their men 10 FJections and the State Attorney
to white women."
General's
office.
Donald
Furthermore, she said: "Black womon are too
Summers, a local fireman who
far ahead politically to wait for white women to pull •
their shit together. White womeo can work with unsuccessfully tried to secU(e a
black women on their causa, like the Shirley place on the baUot for the
Chisholm
campaian, but black women are not aoina election as an independent
Apracotts
Still another means of altering the present to do white women's work for them."
candidate, filed charges with the
Favoring activism, Ms. Kennedy warns ap.inst
lituation would be "aprescotts,'' according to Ms.
two agencies on Election Day.
.Kennedy, and the Feminist party is already at work "the motherhood baa," and says, "there's more to
Mr. Summers claims that
at several of them. An aprescott is a boycott with a life than that."
candidates
Regan and Sedita
new sound, and a new meanina. "When they dump
violated
a
section
of the State
on you, dump on them,'' Ms. Kennedy explained, Chanse tbro. mecHa
pointing out that soap and detergent sponsored
Asked if the traditional black matriarchy hadn't flection law which states that a
proa;rams promulgate the "new racist" view of libented black women lona aao, Ms. Kennedy candidate for election in a
women and should be dumped on.
replied, "I don't think beina abandoned necessarily
subdivision (county) may not
~
Political action has three power forma behind it, makes you liberated ."
- and Ms. Kennedy outlined them in this way :
She maintains that she is not one of the victims spend more than $35,000 on his
campaign. He believes that the
-· body power is the power to fi&amp;ht, work, in the black/white problem today.
study, picket, have an affair, have a baby.
"I'm so conceited and qocentric, I think I can two men spent a combined total
- vote power is the power to .. pull out the use white people faster than they can use me."
of about $750,000 on their
piaocrats and put in your own people
Bluntly -.nti·media, Ms. Kennedy nnertheless
- dollar power is the power we use every day." sees the media as a partial answer to the many campaigns, but did not elaborate
"I really dig dollar power," Ms. Kennedy said, movements she is involved in. She tees the media u a on his clai~. Stating only that
••and an aprescott can't &amp;et you hurt. It can't get you prime example of continued chauvinism, and feels ..any fool can see that theY.'ve
women should aet into media to brina abo.\lt chanae. spent more than $35,000,'' he
killed."
She advocates bank strikes, and sugests
Th~ Ntw York nmu is the pia, baby," she said,
sent letters to the two agencies
withdrawina money from major banks and puttina it illustratina ways in which their Op Ed paae uses "the
into savinp and loan banks instead. "The savings and old DA.C pme" (that's Divide and Conquer) to asking for an investigation of his
loan companies are the niggers in the bank business." 'increase friction bet wen anti-establishment factions. claims.
"We need each other," she said. "We need
coalition. I' m just an old middle-aged black lady. Premature?
Blacks reluctant
Politically, Ms . .Kennedy is a strong coalitionist. What can I do? You've got to do it. What have you
It may be some time before
After h~r talk, she explained that "white women done for socialism lately?"
Mr.
Summers' claims can be
And, closing her talk, she Ufted a dagger
can't expect black women to act as their boogie
studied.
According to the State
fingernail and said : "Move on the pig."
men."
of a hou.e," abe aaid , "and one II to bW"II it down.
Believe, rm not •lin it.••
But Ms. Kennedy alao feeJa atronllY tlult the
a)'ltem can be clulnpd without encouralina
masochism. At marc:bea and demOOJtrations, she
said, at the rust lian of violenCle, abe splits.
Runnin&amp; Shirley Chiabolm on the Feminist
ticket is not miSoc:hiatic. Tbe .,.rty opposes racism;
sexism; the wute of war, spjlc:e and imperialism; the
inequity of poverty; welfare for the corporations and
not for the people, and advocates retumina the
p&gt;vemment to the people without increaain&amp; taxe8.
"Wbicb would be lim pie," M.s. Kennedy wd, "if we
ended this stupid, bloody war."
.,

---.

Attorney
Generl&amp;l's
of&amp;e,
c:andJdates are required to me
their cla.ims with the state 20 days
before or after a primary and 20
days before or after an election.
Reports are usually made public
after these disclosures take place.
It would seem that Mr. Summers'
complaint is somewhat premature,
since expenses will not be on flle
untU Nov. 22.
Deputy
Com missioner
Sandusky of the Erie County
Board of Elections stated that no
action has yet been taken
concerning
Mr.
Summers'
c:omplaJnt. According to Mr.
Sandusky, one of the four
commissioners is not in town
presently, and all board members
must be available to investigate
such a matter. He also stated that
it is difficult to discern the
amount a candidate spends on his
election since a campaign may be
backed
by several
election
committees.
The State Attorney General's
office
has
forwarded
Mr.
Summers' Jetter of complaint to
its Albany office but does not
expect to take any action on the
matter until the Board of
Elections reaches some decision in
the
case.

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71
Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, November 12, 1971

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�Swashbuckler Blllls

Team faces many problems

ProFOOCW

by 0... Clputi Jr.

byMJbGMatt
Spectrum St•lf Writ,.

l.ut week proved succeuful for the wizard u be carded a 9·l-2
llate for 67-30-7 and 69 per ceot on the MUon.
XilfiiiU City 21, ae~d 13: Browns pUibed lelf4cstruc::t button
three weeks aao.
Denver 22, CinclnMti JJ : In and out Broncot should baadle
woeful Benaala.
Stzn F'Nlncllco 34, New Orluru 10: "9'ers allowed awe10me
defenae in deteatina Vikinp lut week.
Otlklllnd 31, Howton /4 : Raiders return to win.nin&amp; waya tlwl.ka
to hapless Oilers.
'
Miami 2 7, Pittlburgh 17: Bradshaw injury lriJ.ls Steder hopes.
Dall41 30, Plti14delphi4 1 7: New kicker Toni Fritsch pvet Cowboys
added punch to stave orr suddenly touah &amp;ales.
Wa1hington 27, Chictzgo 20: Bean beain to fold up drealDJ of a
divisional title.
Minntlota 20, Green &amp;y 14: Vikinp must improve offense if they
want to. be around at Super Bowl time.
New Englllnd 24, Buffalo 20: If Bills &amp;eta few breaks, they could
como up with first win.
St. Louu 28, Stzn Diego U : Charger defense allowed Giants 35
points ; case closed .
Atlanta 30, Gi4ntl 19: Sur&amp;ing Falcons sink talons into pliable
Giant defense.
&amp;ltimore 24, Jet4 13 : Jets' bid for second straight upset halted byunyielding Colt defense.
Detroit 2/, Los Angeles 20: Best aame of the week . WhoeYer
makes fewer mistakes will prevail.

Fencina
Coach
Sidney
Sdlwuu looked at hil team and
shook his ha~d . "ltiabt now, the
team looks pretty inexperienced.
It looks like we're aoina to have
to build another.'' He wuo't
ldddina. Protpects for thil year's
fencina team look very pim. Bia
problema seemed as thouJb they
were aoina to cripple the team's
performance .
Four top fencers had finished
up their careers with the team last
year and their absence is now felt
by both coach and team memben.
When the going gets rouah, who
would now pull the team out of
the pinch? With a schedule ahead
of .It includin&amp; su ch powerhouses
as Cornell, Army, Penn State and
Notre
Dame,
there
would
certainly be plenty of those
anxious moments.
Another problem of greater
masrutude is the lack o f fencen .
An adequate varsity · usually
consists of nine starters and 18
backup men. This provid es two
substitutes for each starter in the
event of injury or illness. The
Bulls had exactly ten fencers with
which to enter competition. With
such a meager number, no t only
would sprained ankles and Ou
viruses have to be completely
eliminated ,
but
during
a
quadrangular meet each fencer
would have to bout nine times!
After contemplating the situation,
it seemed quite hopeless:

CoU~ FootbaiJ

by Barry Rubin

ToucheI

Hard hours of practice • and
organization have prepared the
University's fenc:int t•m for their
opening mlltch with Toronto
Univenity and McMaster College.

But to Coach Schwartz and
Assistant Coach Goldstein, these
p rob l e m s
we#..
no&amp;.
insurmountable.
Experts
at
turning out champion teams, they
had conquered problems such as
these before. Schwartz decided to
hold two demonstrations, at
which time he would try to
recruit peo ple for the team .
Amazingly
successful ,
the
exhibitions pulled in 12 new
fencers.

Schwartz
made
sure
that
everything went exactly a.lf
t&gt;lanned.
T o morrow,
the
Buffalo
Swashbucklers open up their
season in To ronto against Toronto
University and McMaster College.
Schwartz, however, can now
proudly say that his team is ready
for action . After weeks of grueling
work, not only does the varsity
look good, but the beginners are
showing great promise as well.

In order to get the varsity
starters into shape, Bill Kazer and
Bruce Renner were taken on as
coaches.
Ka zer,
the
197 1
All-American
sabreman
and
eJpert foil fencer, immediately
began molding the foil team,
while Renner, the 1969-1970
team captain, wo rked on the epee
squad . Coach Goldstein took
charge of the sabre team, as he bas
masterfully done in the past, and

Team roster
Captain Bob Johnson leads the
foil team with Mike Glantz, Bob
Farkas and newcomer Howie
Feldman in reserve. The sabre
team, headed by AI Schneider,
will also fa~ ture Harold Schiff and
freshman Neil Pruitt . Pruitt
graduated from New York's
Stuyvesant High School with two
years fen cing experience. The
epee team will boast three tough

competitors: Howie Forman, Bob
Moch artd Harvey Karp. The Bulls
also boat&amp; several newcomers, who
shouJd be ready· ror competition
in a couple o f months.
When recently asked about the
s quad 's
prospects,
Coach
Schwartz replied : " We have an
extremely tough season ah ead,
but the guys seem to be shaping
up very quickly . Sabre has usuall y
been our stro ng point, but I think
this year, foil will come out on
top. All in aU, if the team keeps
developina through hard practice,
I would expect to have another
winning record."
Beginning tomorrow, the Bulls
will put all their hard hours o f
practice to work; and if things go
the way Schwartz predicts,
Buffalo should have its first win
of the season. Let's face H, when
it comes to building a fencin g
team, Coach Schwartz wrote the
book.

Expert coaching

Last week, the wizard hit on 16·2·1 to go 106-27·2 and 80 per cent
on the season. Tomorrow's slate figures to be one of the seuon's
toughest.
Georgia 21, Auburn I 7: Bulldogs cop big game in bid to pin Supr
Bowl berth.
Come// 21, Dartmouth 20: Big Red clinch first Ivy football title.
Wake Forest 23, Duke 20: Deacons edge Blue Devils in battle of
ACC rivals.
Noire Dome 31, Tulane 13: Irish continue to roll for Ara.
Air Force 21, Tulsa 7: Falcons keep winning with little trouble.
Texas 19, TCU I 3: Longhorns must win to keep title hope aliYe.
Syracuse 16, Navy 13: If Orange cannot edge Middies, who can
they beat?
Stanford 34, San Jose State 6: Indians roll o n waiting for roses.
Arkansas )2, SMU 17: Razo rbacks must get up for this one;
Cotton Bowl berth could be determined this afternoon.
Michigan 24, Purdue 14 : Wolverines must be wary of Boilermakers.
Pittsburgh 28, Army 23: Panthers have been hot and cold all
season , but Cadets don't have enough to make it close.
P•nn Stat~ 41 , North Carolina Stau 7 · Nittany Liollll roll it up
against hapless Wolfpaclc'.
Oklahoma 45, Kansas 16: Sooners continue to boast an amuina
offense.
Ohio State 24, Northwestern 9: Buckeyes come back from Spartan
upset.
Nebraska 28, Kansas Start 0: Huskers defense most underrated
featu re of undefeated top ranked club.
Michigan State 27, Minn esota 10 : "Flea" Allen outshines entirrGopher defense.
Alabama 18, Millm 1 (Fla.) 7. Crimson Tide come off big test in
Baton Rouge, Hurricanes pose little threat.
Kentucky 23, Florida 16 : Wildcats have improved all season and
should surprise the overrated Gators.
Florida State 21, Georgia Ttch 17: Seminoles have been strong aU
season; YeUowjackets could make it close contest.
USC 21. Wa4hington /6 : Trojans have been playing well of late,
while Sonny Slxkiller and Huskies are o ut of Rose Bowl contentio n.
Colo rado 27, Oklahoma State 20: Buffaloes continue to show the
nation just how tough the Big Eight can be.
Boston College 21. Northern nlinou 13: Yukica's Eagles are
sky-high after Syracuse win ; watch out for improved Huskies.
Toledo 38, Marshall 7: Rockets keep win string intact; while mere
ap pearance of thundering herd is a plus after last year's plane tragedy.

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Friday, November 12, 1971 . The Spectrum . Pa9'! nine

�BillRussell: 'what can happen
in the slums, happens here too'
by Barry Rubin
Sport1 EdltOf

by BruceEnpl

Bill Russell was a world famous athlete for

Sp«trum Stfl/1 Wrltn'

many years, but Tuesday eveninam his lecture on
the Buffalo campus, his theme was not basketball,
but "what happens to me, happens to you."
Once
inside
Diefendorf
147,
Russell
immediately began by saying: "I've been on
scholarship since third grade on," and added: " I've
been to many strange places in my tour of over 160
coUeses and Buffalo adds yet another stranp place
to my list." Earlier at dinner, RusaeU intimated that
he did not lilte to be labeled as a ballplayer, "but
rather, l'm a man that plays basketball. I was labeled
without deallna with the issue - my humanness."
However, the main focus of the Russell lecture
· was his advice to '&lt;think and participate, since all
you have at stake is all that you have." Russell
added ; "Think and participate with your enli&amp;}ltened
self interest in mind . What happens to me, happens
to you."
_,
Russell's main contention was illustrated when
Russell remarked: "The same dope peddler that Is
right here in the suburbs, on the campus and in the
junior high, took 20 years to &amp;et from the slums to
the farm. It's no thin&amp; new. What happens in the
slums can happen here. The same National Guard
that shot the students at Kent State, was in Watts,
Newark and Detroit, but this time it took only five
years to move from the slums."
National priorities
Russell also touched on the misplaced priorities
of the nation and exclaimed: " We've got to aet our
priorities tosether. The U.S. can send a man to the
moon in nine years, but in IS years it cannot
deaearepte the schools because of poor bus service.
Maybe we should put the rocket engineers to work
making busl.ll. There are men on the moon , but rats
in the city. Sen. Eastland sets $150 ,000 in farm
subsidJes, but that lazy good for nothing
three-year-old on welfare won't work."
Then, Russell touched upon the tragedy at
Attica prison. He remarked: "Personally, I feel this
was premeditated murder on prisoners and auards.
Law and order without justice is justice for some and
orders for others. As far as I can see, justice is merely
a by-product or the judicial process and no t the
rule."

Bill Russell
Russell then went on to racism in basketball and
reiterated that a quota once existed in pro
basketball, and added : "No school ahould ever brina
in an athlete unless he can participate in aU aspects
of campus life. They are supposed to be student
athletes. If there is racism, then the sports shouldn't
be on the campus, since they're irrelevant." Russell
aJso indicated that students, faculty and · regents
should all have equal say in athletic priorities.

RIWieU admJited he retired from basketbaJI ,
"because if I had continued pfayina another year, I
would be a mercenary. I had always pla¥ed for my
enjoyment." Russell then closed by adding: ''There
Hiah on people
Russell went on record as being opposed to the is no thing material you can have to enhance the
use of drugs and hard alcohol, saying: ''There 1s too feeling of Jove. You and me one at a time. If there is
much to do, so you need a clear head. I've tried a race war, nobody wins. Everybody loses. Got to
...~ marijuana once or twice ... alright, twice. I get high work it out. H we would just act out of
almost everyday just tal kin&amp; to people."
self-enlightenment and respect."

BELLEVUE'S
Exciting, Remodeled Specialty Fashion Shop
During Our

reopening week ·
November J 5-November 20
3124 Bailey Avenue

Make it your shop for
coats. dresses. sports wear and accessories

On Saturday, Nov. 6, Buffalo
harrier lim McClurkin continued
his tremendous season , as he
placed second out of 128
competitors in the New York
State Championships. The meet
held at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute saw the Bulls place ninth
as a team, amassing 198 points.
Somehow this season, the Bulls
fared better in tournaments than
in dual meets. Perhaps this was
because McClurkin's low finishes
were more effective in. keeping
tournament scores lower than in
dual meets. Now, the cross
country Bulls are in training for
the Niagara District Junlot AAU
championships, which will end
· Buffalo's competitive season.•
Coach Emery Fishec has long
considered sending McClurkin to
the NCAA Championships to be
held at
the University of
Tennessee on Nov. 22. In fact ,
two days before the State
Ch1lmpionships, Coach Fisher
mailed In the entry so that
McClurkin could run If the
decision were made for him to go.
Fisher was hoping for McClurkin
to finish in the top five at RPJ ,
and if so a trip to the NCAA's was
likely. But, when McClurkin
pulled off a mild upset and
finished in second place at RPI ,
plans for the Tennessee trip were
fuU speed ahead. Dr. Harry Fritz,
Buffalo's director of athletics has
approved the trip and McClurkin
has been busily preparing to meet
some of the nation's top harriers

at Tennessee.
This
year's · State
Championships
marked
the
second year in a row that a
Buffalo harrier has finished
second. Last year, the graduated
Ed Fuchs was barely edged out by
Brockport State's Rod Williams.
This year, McClurkin finished
second to Frank Verdoliva of
Oswego State.
McClurkin was up with the
leaders from the start , as several
runners were closely bunched up
front. In fact it was still anyone's
race until there was only three
quarters of a mile to go. At this
point, VerdoUva took off leaving
everyone but McClurkin and
Fredonia's Bill Fox far behind.
McClurkin could not catch
Verdoiiva and finished in second
place, four seconds behind the
winner in 24 minute$ and 46
seconds. Now McClurkin will
prepare for the NCAA's where he
will attempt to catch some of the
nation's best harriers.

Present This Coupon On Any Day
Between Nov. IS and Nov. 20
And You Will Receive A

10% discount
on any purchases made at our Bailey Store

-----------------FREE!$100
Deposit Coupon At Our Bailey Store

In Bellevue Gift Certificates
Dnwina Nov. 22

Name ____________~~----------~~~~c,,

�CLAIIIIIIII
AD INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED ADS may be PIKed
Mondlly tl'lru FridaY between ' a.m.
and 4:30 p.m. at 355 Norton Hall.
THE COST of an ad for ~e day Is
$1.25 for tl'le first 15 words and s.05
for NCI'I iddltlonal word . .
"HELP
WANTED"
ads
e~nnot
discriminate on the basis of sex, color,
creed or national origin to any extent
(I.e. , prefer•bty Is still discriminatory).
"FOUND" ads will be run free of
charge for a maximum of 2 days •nd
15 words.

WANTED
FUN LOVING guy seeks fun loving girl
companion. Leave name and number In
Box 22 Spectrum.
SHARE driYlng n'IY car to Cincinnati or
en route
for Thanksghllng. Call
Kathryn weekdays 831·2401.
NEED INFORMATION on socially
responsible firms tor an Investment
study. Prefer firms In medicine or
pollution control. Call Joan 831·2898.
ROOM AND board c:lose to campus In
exchange
for
bilby·slttlng.
Some
evenings · each week. 837-8106 after 5
p.m.

CIISI.,_. wlltlns to INrn offset
procfts,
photo
and
lltkscr. .n
experience
dftlfable.
On•yNr
commitment. Subsistence pa.y. woman
preferred.
Rftume
tnc:tudtns
tech nlcat
skills
and
political
bac:ksround. Apply to O.G., Box 1684,
Hertel Statton, Buffalo, N.V. 14216.
INTERVIEWERS: Market Research .
Will train. Flexible hours. Good hourly
ntes
plus
mileage.
No
setting.
813·5206 or 873-6084.
BABVSITTERS
wanted,
dlytlme
hours,
must
like
kids.
Elmwood-Delevan ar... 883·3060.
GUY looking for a female companion.
Write Box No. 84 at Spectrum office.
I'M looking for to buy a trumpet,
folks. Call Dave at 838·1167.
GIRL. singer, country fiddler, plano
player. Send phone number to Tom
Root, C/O AI Giglia, 7 Delta Rd.,
Eggertsville
14226 .
Musical
opportunity.

RIDE BOARD
TWO RIDES needed to NYC for
Th•nkSglvlng. One anytime. One for
Fri. or Sat., Nov. 19 or 20 roundtriP or
one way. Call 835· 1044.
RIDE NEEDED Monday thru Friday
8 :15 to 5 p.m. Parkslde-Tacoma .,.,.
and Norton Hall. Must be depend•ble.
Call Mrs. Goldstein at 831·2511 or
838·2639 after 6 p.m.

MALE or female senior Blo·Med lc:.-1
Research technician. B.S. requ i red,
M.S. preferred . Strong background In
chemist ry , bio-chemistry or related
biology.
Must
have
considerable
research lab experience. Permanent
rull·tlme position. Contact Mrs. Wolff,
834·9200, ext. 501, M- F, 9:30- 4:30.

RIDE WANTED to St. Louts for two
(or
Chicago
or
1/lclnlty). Split
costs/driving for Thanksgiving. Call
Elly 836·1779.

INTERESTED In earning $8 per hour
working part·ttme. No Investmen t ! No
risk! Call 773·5313.

2 Gl RLS need ride to NYC lor
Thanksgiving. Wilt snare expenses. Call
Susan 833·7571.

ESTABLISHED
collective needs

RIDE WANTED for tWO to Boston
area a.round Thanksgfvtng. Call Donna

movement
press
1
o r 2 graphic

·~4-5510.

NEED
RIDE
to
Boston
for
Thanksgiving. Will share eKpenses. Call
Bub 817·3723.

FOR SALE
L.ONG·HAIRED kitten, beige, litter
trained, 9 weeks old . Free to good
home. 688-6610.
1970 XKE. Beige With bleck soft top.
Stereo
AMfFM
tldlo
Included.
Excellent condition. Call Dave 8-4
p.m. 684·2000.
1962
CHEVROLET
ttatlonwagon,
good condition, S90. Mike 876·0256.
ZENITH
stereo
portable,
top
condition, detachable spNkers, new
stylus, S40. Call 837·8895, 6 - 8 p.m .
weekdays.
·

CUSTOM MADE LEATHER PANTS
FULL LENGTH CAPES (wool/cotton)
HAND MADE LEATHER BAGS
COLORFUL WOOD SASHES
Antique Moratania Stones (Goulimine)
~all

••
...
...
~

$1J!Idoz.

For t11torn,ation , STEVE - 883-4707

$8/
Doz.

FOUN D:
black
.,_,
t... Colt,
E119t-ood. Female. 11/5, 83+0127.

FOR SALE - Framous 12·strlng. Best
offer, 835·7082.
1965
DODGE
Coronet,
good
condition, t350, although negotiable.
V-8, Inquire Apt. 6, 235 w. Tupper,
Buffalo.
BRAND n - Israeli sheepskin coat,
$45. Clll 837·1674.
COUCH, table, lln'lp, chairs, e1&lt;ce11ent
condition.
Best
offer.
Evenings,
weekends, call 835·0'721.

ROBERTS 1740X stere6 deck, S125,
mlcs, $25, color org.~ns,
fender
Duosonlc 175, vox amp, $40. Both
$100, Banshee horns, S50. 832·5910
Russ.
'

TV Set, dresser, desk set, bed frame,
m1ttress,
box
spring,
etc.
Call
837.0099.

SCHWINN 5·speed bike with racing
handlebars, $50. See Peter:
I 07
Unlve,.lty across from campus.
TWO

Dunlop

tires,

6 .85

"

15's.

FILET
MIGNON
(Petite)

..

WINTER stotage, cars, bikes, safe, dry.
Blket - $5/mo. cars, 110·15/mo. Call
Dave evenings at 884·3683.
RAMBLER '64 mint condition. Must
sell. Make offer, 1016 Niagara Falls
Blvd. 837·4223.
REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
and
wnners. Reconditioned; delivered and
guaranteed. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore, TX4·3183 .
FOR SALE 1966 Yamaha 250 cc,
S200. New tires, Dattery, points, plugs,
not much lor looks, runs goOd. Call
838·1556 or 837·6309.
1970 JAVALIN, sliver-gray, black
vinyl top, mag wheels, V ·8 stick shift,
low mileage. good condition. c:all
833· 1198, Mon.-Fri., 7- 10 p .m.

PERSONAL

U.S. Choice

.Choice Potato

SlOP..
,IWISIIITB
.......,,.............
1111 ........
.....211
---~- .....-. •"-""

--

FRIDAY 8 a.m .. H.S. 139, Don
Amecne sings 'Easy t o be Hard' and
otner pseudo erotic marches.
TO
ALL
In Audiology 495
remember "The middle ear sucks, so to
speak - " oavls &amp; Silverman
LAW STUDENT would lll&lt;e to meet
girt who really digs sporu. Rob, BoiC
232, Ellicott Station, 14205.

.--------------------MAL.E
ana
females w•nted
for
California -style sensitivity sessions . Gus
Marceau 105 16th St., Buffalo, 14213
for Information.

TO BIG M

meet pur photographers eye to eye

MAL.£
C~mpus.

roommate 3 blocks from
own room, 880 mo. Call

838..a79.

LEAV ING school - must sell stereo,
$550 v11ue. Best offer. Marantz Utah
Shure Sharpe AR. Call Mike 833-6542.

TWO VOLKSWAGEN snow tires 5601&lt;15 Semprett Studded Caterpillar
pattern. Finest non·radlal snow ti re
-obtllln~ble. Used two months, almost
brand naw. Orlglnat cost - $37.50
each. Silcrlfice, need bread . Must sell
by
11/18. Please ull Barry 832·1089.

FOUND - brown knit V-nedt ltiOrt
lhlrt, medium ll•e - Wayne
Rogen mal&lt;e -Call Sacurltv.

s~-

MOROCCAN Imports dig these
prtcer. Custom made L.Ntller P.nu ROOM~TES WANTED
t30; full length wool{cotton Cap" - ·
115 ; hand·made L eather Bags - 881
colorful Wool Sashes - t2J)OJ antique THREE female roommates needed for
'-'oratanle (Gullom tne) BNds, 81/doz.
January for near campus hou... Call
Call S t - 883...707.
Sh~ron at 836·2304.

MOTORCYCLE stor~~ge lleated,
Insured .
Reasonable.
Call
Benlln
Warehouse. 877.0646, 9-5, Mon.-Fri.

Luncheon
MY
PRICE
$30.
$15
$8
$2.60

GUITARS ~
Gibson, Guild, Martin,
Gurian, etc. euv, sell, trade. The String
Shoppe, 524 Ontario, 1 p.m.-it p.m.
dall y Sat. 12-5, 874..0120.

JENSEN L.lfe·Time Column, two 15"
spkrs. plus llmpllfler, $160. Cllll Adrian
883·2486. Very good buy.

DO YOU WHAT TO GET HIGH?

RETAIL

Department r•t roam In s.pt. c.t1
Oennll, J31·2303.

ROBERTS . 5050XD, 10" r . .ls, cont.
11uto. reverse, 30·22,000, 3 db range, i'
7.5 Ips. Still under warnonty, $350 or
beSt otfer. 832.0168.

. .--25th Anniversary - - •

I just got back from Morocco with some great stuff.

Excellent condition. PriCe ,..otlabte.
Call Tom, 832·3501 :

-

nappy birthday ! with

Superuna mountable love - little M
(Alias "Grill")
•
B
_ _E_A_I.i
_T
_ I F_U_ L
_ h_a_n_d_m_•_d_e_g_o-ld- a-n d
- s-llv_e_r
Jewelry - wedding rings - at sensiDie
prices. J.P. The Goldweaver. 655
Elmwood at Ferry St., 881·3400.

LOST Ill FOUND
FOUND:
Gdd·slm
Dlue
tlntod
sunglanes. May claim In Spectrum
offlc:e, Room 355 N orton between 9 &amp;
5, M·F.
LOST :
Three
kittens,
Prlnc:eton-&lt;:ambridge area, 1 g,y, 2
tan·orange. REWARD. Call 836·8513.
831·5588. Chris, Joan.
LOST : "Modern Frenc:h" teKtbook
while hltc:hlng Wednesday morning on
Main or Kenmore. Call Art 836·2734.
FOUND:

Man's

ring

In

NEED two female roommates. own
rooms. Nice apartment. Fifteen min.
Vfalk. $50/mo. plus utllltlft. C1t1 Catot
837·2718.
GRAD student Instructor, mate,
renting furnished room, U min, walk.
OMlres same or serious undersrad.,
•50/mo. Including utilit ies and 11ouse
privileges. 837-6027.
ROOMMATE wanted- must like CIU
- $60 per month. 882-4""'.
FEMA LE grad
or
faculty
Share
2·bedroom apt., own room, 15 rt'lln. to
e~m pus, •70. 876-4118.
ONE ROOM partially furnished for
fem,.e. Available Nov. 15 In 1ar9e
apartment occupied by couple and
child. Main and Amherst. •&amp;o plus
utilities. 837-6958.

MISCELLANEOUS
DESPERATELY need UIHI of van going to NYC/LI over Thanksgiving to
move 4 yrs. of life, l uggage, furniture.
Will pay expenses. Give Information to
Spectrum, Bo~C 83.
TUTORING In matns and sciences,
otfered freshmen, juniors, seniors.
Very reasonable rates. Call 836·4988
between 5:00- 7 •00 p .m .
EXPERIENCED typing by electric:
typewriter, $ .40 page. Call 873· 1305.
TYPING. Near U .B.
834.0872.
...

Call

•

Eileen.

QUICK, efficient typi ng done - $.40
per page. IBM Selectri c. 838-4808 .
BRITANNICA'S
Research
ServiQe
provtdes for 100 plus research reports
on all subjects. Wr ite G . Dunn. 22
Meadowlane,
Lac:l&lt;awanno,
N .Y .
14218. Specify deilnrte meeting time.
TVPING done In my home. Term
papers, theses, dissertations. 892· 1784.
PLAYFUL nlne·w..k ·Oid kitten litter trained . very healthy. Call
837·0533 after elgnt.
ANVONE - Niagara Falls to London,
one way 1115, return $220. M .T.W.
88l·0306, Thursday night 87 3·5660,
5 :00- 10:00 p .m . WNkly departures.
C&amp;H
JONES Professional Typing
Service
computerized
IBM
equipment plus our e)(perlence give
best
poulble
present•tlons
of
dlssertat Ions,
thesis, term
papers,
resumes and employment application
letters.
LOCited
between
two
campuses.
Very
reasonlble.
C•ll
837 -6 558 .

-

NV'S Hotel Tudor offers SUNY r1tes.
Reservations
and
Information
832-0611.

APARTMENTS WANTED
HOUSE or apartment needed for
January - two males - preferably with
one or more roommates. Call Jim or
Howle at 837·2769.
$5 REWARD for efficiency o r small
apt. wanted now or next semester. Call
Phyllis 835-4637.

Biology

(at University Plaza)

f'MoTORCYCLEINSURANCE,_,
: IMMEDIATE FS-1 -ANY SIZE
1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I
IU PST ATE CYClE IN sl

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

call 694-3100

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.

Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE

I

I

~-

I

"A• Your Brotcer About Us'' · - '

WASHIIIGIO• SUIIMUS CIWID
AIIMF-11/UIF

professional fu II color portraits
offered to all graduating .students
passport, applicatiop, 1.0. photos
also available
·
appointments 356 norton, 831-2505,5570
A L S 0 ·!

save on all of your color processing services
.especially color prints from your negatives.

IB.lS·&amp;THINGS- M..t Styles fer Y•• • • •

LIAR • •·GOODS

••••ae~~~n
.._.... ,acan

...,._..,.
-~·

SAVIMOIIEY
SIIOP AUY •AVY

7. .732 •&amp;•-m..t515 NEAl 1UPPa

··Tf'•• c••···

Friday, November 12, 1971 . The Spectrum. P~ge eleven

-

�...

..

.,

.,

--· .
-.-

.
Sports Information
Tomorrow: Varsity fencing at Toronto with
McMaster.
Sunday: Roller hockey at 12:30 p.m. in the
Capen parking lot.
1971 -72 Varsity WrestlinJ Schedule
Nov. 19: at East Stroudsburg Open, 11 :00 a.m.
Dec. 4 : Buffalo Quad - Clark Gym, 12:30 p.m.
Dec. 8 : Buffalo State - Clark, 8 p.m.
Dec. 11 : at Ithaca, 3 p.m.
Dec. 18: Lock Haven - Clark, 2 p.m.
Jan. 15: Brockport St. - Clark, 2 p.m.
jan. 18: Geneseo St. - Clark, 8 p.m.
jan. 22: at Army Quad, 1 p.m.
jan. 26: at Rochester Tech, 7 p.m.
jan. 29 : Buffalo j .V. Quad - Clark, 12:30 p.m.
Feb. 2: Cleveland State - Clark, 6:30 p.m.
Feb. 5: at Oswego State, 2 p.m.
Feb. 9 : at Kent State, 7:30p.m.
Feb. 12: Buffalo Quad - Clark Gym, 12:30

William Reinig, a University
employee since 1958, is retiring
this year with the distinction of
being the first Norton Hall staff
member to leave. Working on the
Norton maintenance staff since
1962, Mr. Reinig is cited by both
fellow employees and students as
a valuable asset to the needs of
the University and of Norton Hall
Building.
p.m.

Feb. 14: at Guelph, 8 p.m.
Feb. 19: at Cortland State, 2 p.m.
Feb. 25 : at RIT - N.Y 5 . Invite, 7 p.m.
Mar. 3: at NCAA No. 2 - Temple host, 7 p.m.
Mar. 9 : at NCAA finals- Maryland, 7 p.m.

What's Happening?

Saturday, Nov. 13

Frlcby, Nov. 12

Rim: Th~ Projectionist
Film : Cot Ballou
Concert: Barbershop Quartet, 7:30- 11 :30 p.m.,
Kleinhans Music Hall
Women's Festival : It 's All Right to bt o Women
Theottr, presenting skits and performances
based on experiences in the lives of the cast, 8
p.m., Fillmore Room
Dance : james Cunningham and the Acme Dance Co.,
9 p.m., Clark Gym

Film: The Projectionist written and directed by
Harry Hurwitz, Conference Theater, check for
times, admission $.75
Film: Cot Ballou with Jane Fonda and Lee Marvin,
Room 140 Capen, check for times, admission
$.75
Concert: Slee Beethoven Cycle Ill : The Juilliard
Quartet, 8 :30p.m., Biard Hall
Women's Festival : Diane DiPrima, San Francisco
poetess and authoress of Revolutionary Letters,
7:30p.m., Fillmore Room
Music: Appalachian Women's Band presenting
mountain music, 9:30p.m., Fillmore Room
Coffeehouse: jean Ritchie and Ethel Raim, 9- 11
p.m., Norton Cafeteria
Exhibit: A one man show of student photographs by
Donald Blumberg, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m., 4240 Ridge
Lea

Sunday, Npv. 14
Film : The Projectionist
Concert : lsmaHia Temple Shrine Chanters, 7- 11
p.m., Kleinhans Music Hall
Television: Open Rap, WGR-TV, Channel 2, 9:30
a.m., fo ur State University of Buffalo students
discussing " Peace Train" from Cat Stevens'
Teoser ond the Flrecot album

Backpag-e
~

-Sue Welser

Announcements

Pharmacy and Pharmacology present a special
seminar on "I solation and Molecular Properties of
UB Kante Club will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in Synaptic Receptors" given by Professor Eduardo de
the women's gym. All are encouraged to attend ; Robertls of the University of Buenos Aires, today at
beginners welcome anytime.
3 p.m. in Capen G-22 .

The Chabad House will feature Rabbi N. Gurary
speaking on the Flintstone of judaism. This lecture
will follow the Sabbath Services tonight at 6 p.m.
with the meal. There will also be services tomorrow
at 9 :30a.m. followed by the Sabbath meal.

The Human Dimensions Institute of Rosary Hill
Collqe presents a series of three lectures on "Sex,
God and Death." The first of these lectures, " Do We
Need a Code of Sexual Ethics?," will be held on
Sunday at 8 :15 p.m. in Kittinger Hall, Erie
Community College. The other two will be given in
December. The fee fo r the entire series is$ 5.00; each
lecture separately is $ 1.75 and for students, $1 .00.

Resurrection House is sponsoring a continuing
series of Friday night free films. T onight: old-time
comics and kid's cartoons plus the travelogue,
Trinidad and Tabago at 8:30p.m.

The Buffalo Theater Workshop Repertory
Dance Theater will be holding auditions tomorrow
from 2- 7:30 p.m. at the African Cultural Center.
For further information call Synyer Hanesworth at
831-4143.
Women's Studies Collqe will be showing a film
54/t of the Earth today from 4-6 p.m. in Diefendorf
148.
The Office of Cultunl Affairs and the UUAB
Dance Committee present j ames Cunningham and
the Acme Dance Company tomorrow at 9 p.m. in
Clark Gym. The First Family and Lauren's Dream
will be performed. Admission is $1 .00 for students
and $2.50 for non-students. T ickets are available at
Norton Box Office only. No tickets will be sold at
the door.
UB Day Care Center is holding a book sale
today from 10-4 p.m. in Norton Lobby A of
English and Early Childhood Education bopks.
The Conflict Simulations Club will meet Sunday
from 12- 6 p.m. in Room 340 Norton.
The Department of Spanish, Jtallan and
Portuauese wil~ hold a meeting for all undergnduate
students in the department today at 7 p.m. in
Crosby Room 7.

The Arab Cultural Club is sponsoring a coffee
hour at 7 p.m. today in Room 232 Norton. All are
welcome.
The Departments of Biochemistry, Biochemical

The Student Art Board is sponsoring an
excursion to Toronto to the Royal Canadian Art
Museum. Bus leaves 8 a.m. tomorrow (returns 8
p.m.) in front of Foster Hall . The cost of $.75 per
person is non-refundable and is payable to Eileen,
Dennis, Carol or Richard at the Art Department
Office, 4240 Ridge Lea.
The UB Pep Band will have an important
meeting on Sunday at 7 p.m. at the band building.
All members are urged to attend. Rides will be
leaving Baird Hall at 6 :45 p.m. and all members who
tlave room in their cars are asked to please help out.
Chabad House will have Melavah Malkah Chassidic meal with Chassidlc songs tomorrow at 8
p.m. at Chabad House, 3292 Main Street.
Association of Collep Unions local qualifying
c.oumament will have events as follows: bowling,
table tennis, picket billiards and three cushion
billiards. The competition is open to any full-time
University student. Last cby to register for table
tennis and bowling is today. Dates for three cushion
and pocket billiards will be announced. For more
information contact Recreation Center, basement of
Norton.

Students for Israel is giving instructions for
folkdancing tomorrow from 2-4 p.m. and requests
from 4- 5 p.m. In the Haas Lounge.
Resurrection Ho use is having a Family Day this
Sunday, Nov. 14 at 5 p.m. Worship Service and
supper following. Car pick-up at Allenhurst bus-stop
at 4:30p.m., at the Goodyear Circle at 4 :45 p.m.
Students who have not yet picked up their fall
1971 Financial Aid checks, please inquire at the
Office of Student Accounts, Hayes A.
Hillel will have the ir Sabbath Service tonight at
8 p.m. in the Hillel House followed by an Oneg
Shabbat.
Men's Open Rap Session will meet tonight from

12:3~ p.m. Check with the information desk in

Norton

Jorthe meeting place.

Hillel's hayride will leave tomorrow at 8 :30 p.m.
from the Hillel House. Reservation~ are necessary.
Party open to all at 241 Wellington following
hayride.
Rabbi l. Buchen will speak on Orthodox
Judaism Sunday, Nov. 14 at 7 p.m. in the Hillel
House. All are welcome.

�1Juying Out' debuts

Studio Arena play is a flop
...

by Michael Silvetblatt
Llr•nuur• •nd Drama Editor

something was missing
I don't know. I've been a loyal
fan of Pink Floyd for a long time.
Their experimentation is essential.
They've been rock n' roll
innovators for years. As far back
as their first recording of
" Interstellar Overdrive" on Tower
records, with Syd Barren still in
the
group,
they've
shown
themselves
to
be
fearless
musicians constantly in search of
new concepts, new sounds and
new ways of making their sounds
public.

There was a time in American drama. say the
1940- 50's, when plays about internal splits in the
family were the son and the moon. "J:'hese plays,
centering upon one family (the Hubbards in
Hellman's The Little Foxes, the lomans in Miller's
Death of a Salesman) became a microcosmic
representation of something that was happening in
America. They were plays that centered upon the
economics, the morals, the current events and the
feelings of their times. The weak father, the
dominating father ; the weak mother, the strong
monster-mother; the married daughter. the
intellectual daughter; the fai led son, the successful
son - t hese were the keystones that copped the
imaginations and pens of America's naturalistic
dramatists.
The crippling morality that informs these plays
is dead. How can plays about the final moral
integrity of ~he family unit be written In a time
when the family is disintegrating? looking to the
cinema (which also at one time revelled in family
comedies and dramas - Andy Hardy's folks on one
hand and that horrifying menage of a family in Dark
at the Top of the Stairs on the other), one finds that
our movie ~gcfes are not from families - they are
originless.)t{ckground and evolution are surrendered
In the face o~ present flux and development.

So finally, I get to see them
live for the first time. First off,
they are the slickest rock
entourage going. They travel with
their own lighting designer and
employ a full 16 -track control
panel and quadraphonic speaker
system - and this is just for starts.
Th ey
gave
a
stellar
performance which left me more
unsettled than the god-awful
pre~oncert tape of Buddy Miles
and h is continuously oblivious
express (what taste - what nerve.
Buddy Miles before a Pink Floyd
concert.)

A new play - wow
Why then. has Studio Arena chosen to present a
play about . the family - clearly modell4jd on those
dramas of th'e '.30's arid ''40's - "' tpelr world
premiere on route to B ~oadway? Don't"they realize
that the Big Apple (as they called it back then in the
'60's) has to change in its \aste because the times
have changed? A con glom~rat ion of crushing cliches
and sludgy writing just does not make the grade. A
play that strains for its drama and strains for its
laughs and has people cry in order to show that
they're sad and laugh to show that they're happy,
belongs not to the realm of serious drama, but to the
realms of the farcical, the obvious. the unintelligent
and the idiotic.
A dead play - wow
let us say then that an anonymous non-descript
play called Buying Out is premiering at the Studio
Arena. Let us say that you don't have to see it to
know it's bad. Let us say that seeing it makes it
worse. Any play that (believe it or not) has dramatic
climax lines like "Tell him he can go fly a kite!'' and
"I've learned today that life is not a bowl of
cherries," should be spanked and sent to bed
without any supper. It is not worth serious
consideration.
The Studio Arena should give the playwright
Lawrence Roman. a refresher course in the use of
the English language and call it quits. The
production is only fit for presentation in an old·age
home for aging dramatists. Who can write a play so
uninventive and old-fashioned that it takes around
six references to the Cold War before we realize that
it takes place in the '60's? Who can write a play that
is so abysmally silly that it seems to parody itself?
I imagine that there is some way to use this
self-parody profitably. If one could take ..this
cliche-salad and turn it properly against itself, it
would reveal something valuable about its own dead
form and also speak cogently about a careless and
dying America. I doubt, however, that Lavyrence
Roman is adept enough to revitalize his form . I don't
think he is interested In revitalizing anything. To
bring the play alive one would need an ironist and
satirist with immense subtlety and skill. Enough said.

Pink Floyd: that certain

ooztng ability o nto a stage with nothing, but
nothing, to ooze it for. I will not mention the clutzy
staging by Warren Enters that has people grouped
gawkily about as if they were waiting for a bus.
I will not mention that anytime an actor comes
on stage early to prepare for his next scene 1an
extremely ugly multi-leveled set by Karl Eigsti
necessitates this). one need not see the scene to guess
with dead accuracy what will happen in it. And
please, let's forget that cello music or whatever it is.
Let's just not tal~ut it.

D.ISCOUrtesy .In/ th
. eater
Let me say this. Jhough. If you, any of you wh o
are interested in theater, let this type of play go by
without comment, you are killing theater. This may
seem paradoxical - but staying away is the best
thing you can do. If you don't want to see theater
become more and more predictable and less and less
exciting and fin!IIIY die away like vauderville - stay
out of the theater when theater people are doing
something they should be ashamed of.
If you do go (some of us love theater enough to
be willing to be bored to tears) don't be passive. If
writing embarrasses you. laugh at it out loud. People
have turned around and glared at me in the theater,
hissed at me. told me to $hut up. I will not be
Justification
Let me avoid the pointless barbs that will silenced until theater becomes an open system again
invariably be directed at me by saying that if the and audience reaction is important to the
play were well written o r in any way valuable, even management. In the 'lobby during intermission. I
though it is not original or new, I would write a heard people saying that the play was embarrassing
moderately friendly review. It is not and I w ill not . to them. Why did they sit there embarrassed? Why
Not only that, but I wouldn't and I won't and I didn't they have the courage to walk out or laugh
out loud at melodrama and make themselves known?
can't.
I would like to heartily congratulate Geo,ge
You might be interested in seeing Buying Out
for the sake o f its cast. Not a bad idea. The cast Voskovec and Irene Dailey on their fortitude . With a
contains some of your favorite character actors. It good piece they could be rivetingly effective.
Not with this bit of rewarmed hash.
also provides real demonic pleasure to see people

They came to the Peace Bridge
Exhibition
Center
Monday
even ing and performed what
amounted to Pink Floyd 's greatest
hits, which wouldn't have been
bad (what with "Set ' the
Controls ... Fat Old Sun, Atom
Heart
Mother,
Interstellar
Overdrive" and "Careful With
That
Axe
Eugene,"
etc.,
constituting a spectacular list of
greatest hits to say the least) , had
they not simply performed them
like some cosmic Julliard String
Quartet giving a recital on
Neptune.
I knew what I was going to
hear and I heard it. Yet,
something was missing for most of
the evening. something almost
intangible, sort of a spark, that
which makes them great artists an ability to not perform what
they are playing. An ability to
make fresh and exciting material
which has obviously been done
night after night, an ability to rid
the stench of staleness from their
work.

The constant experimentation
and innovation which has become
Pink
Floyd's
trademark
is
something based on fluidity - a
constant stra1ntng relation$hip
between the music they're playing
and what they can do with it . Last
Monday the fluidity just wasn't
there. A stiffness, a rigidity
seemed to be the basis of their
performance.
Nothing
truly
dynamic wormed its way to the
surface.
RecrAtions and orAtions
When they started to play they
sounded
exactl y
like
their
recordings. So you say, ''Well ,
they make some pretty complex

recotds," granted, but when you
have a 16-track control panel
hooked up to a quadrophonic
speaker system, you simply don't
recreate, - note for note, what
you've done before - that's
staleness. not creation, Besides. a
recording . is just a piece of
material which came out of some
musician's head on a particular set
of days, and its sound depended
on his environment. what he had
for dinner, what kind of hangover
he has. how ill he felt. Any
number
of
momentary
environmental factors make a
record.
It's a creation which is
extremely important to an artist,
but it certainly should take a
secondary position to the actual
making of that music before a live
audience environment, which
should be conducive to a creative
situation (though a good deal of
the time these days it's not, and
often acts as a destructive
mechanism
for
creativity) .
Improvisation on set themes is
essential to the core of rock n '
roll. Without It the thrill would
certainly be gone.
• A rock n' roll group (and all
there really are nowadays are rock
n ' roll groups and just plain roll
audiences - we, as an audience.
have almost lost sight of the rock
aspect - somebocly's taken the
bomp from th e she-bomp) - must
be able to weigh the delicate
balance between performance and
rock n' roll fluid ity - they must
learn to 'adapter adapter.' The
stones do it with great success.
Boz Scaggs comes across, the
Doors used to, the Oead as well .
All of the groups which formed
the boom had this ability to strike
the performance/creative balance.

Even the Beatles knew how to
attain this balance. Yet, their's
was on another level altogether their collective genius worked to
create so much on record that
their conventional need for live
~rform"'ce was sublimated for
the need to perform via their
chosen medium.

Mercury, but not the Sun
began
by
Pink
Floyd
attempting to set everyone's
controls for the heart of the sun,
but they fizzled out after a brief
v1s1t
to
Mercury,
attained
momentarily in 'Fat Old Sun'
from the Atom Heart Mother
record and the inevitable 'Set the
Controls .. .' a standard which
presented a few moments where
Pink Floyd liquidized themselves
and pushed on into interstellar
overdrive. Reaching Mercury ain't
bad mind you, but it sure isn't the
sun. Sounding like the music of
the ancient Krells from A ltair 4 .
-co'nt lnued on following page-

�-continued from preoedln9

!)Age-

• •
they leaped into hyperspace only
to return maimed and exhausted.
The mood of the evening was
set. Flash paper was an added
attraction offered up by a
member of the audience end
people kept trying to sell me acid
and NTA (whatever that is) .
Roger Waters walks on stage, a
few shoots of "awrlght Roger"
play across the seated aud ience;
he's wearing sneakers. They pick
up their instruments and launch
into a song entitled, "The
Embryo." Still another layer of
mood Is set.
Th e
atmosphere
almost
becomes compelling when they
launch themselves into "Atom
Heart Mother" minus orchestral
accompainment. It sure sounds a
lot better this way than with the
gawdy orchestrations presented
on the lp, and they tell me that it
didn't sound all that bad when
they did tt live with an orchestra .
The borderline of fluidity was
being reached as this number
progressed. The band began
extrapolating
rather
than
performing.
All in all, the first set had the

trappings of success, yet it was
still a performance and that
bothered me ~ whole lot. A rock
n' roll recital I d idn't need and
didn't want.
Starting the second set with
what just might be the definitive
Pink Floyd song called, ''One of
These Days" from their new
album Mtlddle , they immediately
set out to dazzle and transcend
performance.
Roger Waters had his bass
plugged into the organ, Rick
Wright played a synthesizer, and
the 16·track console was workin'
overtime as they set up an intense
rhythmic pattern between gushes
of recorded wind. A stunning song
which is my favorite because of its
image-producing capabilities
musically they created a scene
from another dimension, another
time. I responded immediately by
connecting the song with a poem I
had written. It amazed me how
solid the connection was made, a
total event had been created in
my mind . Listen to "One of These
Days" and seL if these words
don't fit, besides I told Dianne I'd
let her see the poem :

Far off In some corner of an
Ancient laughing Kingdom :
The bodyless riders cross
Pore black horizons
Screaming with painted breaths
The heardless crvs
Of their own emptiness
Their hoofless steeds
Panting great gushes of warm
breath
Sweat beauty
As they gallop to nowhere
A precipice appears
A gathering called
The riders greet
The god's of their images
In tall spires of molding,
crumbling
Stone
As these bleak legions march Being becomes rigid
and beauty - it laughs out
loud
The circles form
The wingless birds
Launch themselves down
Craggy, dark cliffs
The sky becomes a pure white

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The fires dance
Old harlequin's weep
The circl• get tighter
Beasts become imaginations
As the wind begins as an
Unknown breath
Terrorgods proclaim
The laws
Blackness merges with
The white night
Barkless hounds in ~owded
Deserts howl.
The peaks echo
Th e
sounds
surrounding
Emptiness

of

their

The ceremony completes itself
The riders mount their steeds
The birds seek their securities
The wind becomes a stillness
In the air
The gallop begins anew
Search begins anew
Madmother creatures probing
From no point to
NowhereAs lonliness sweeps the
Emptied hollow place
A single cry
Seeks out its new
Home

they headed Into "Careful With
That Axe Eugene" with Waters
edging his way ~k and forth
from the microphone cfeatingsounds In preparation for his
patented scream. And when it
comes vou know it's there. A
complete mood of malevolence is
set up by this song and to say the
least you felt quite menaced, as if
Wat~would float down from the
stage platform end do something
Incredibly evil. Of course, for
Water's scream afficienados we all
know that his scream in "Come in
51, Your Time's Up" is absolutely
bone crunching.
Next they did "Cymbaline"
from the More soundtrack . The
number was highlighted by a
stereophoic
journey
through
opened and shut doors. Footsteps
were heard hauntingly circling the
auditorium pausing momentarily
to open up doors which had
noise$ ranging from dogs barking
to people cheering.
Finally. they did " Echoes" and
It remains one of the most
solidified piece of fluidity they've
ever done. We almost reach the
sun on this one.
And yet, the crowd had" the
audacity to ask for an encore.

After "One of These Days,"

-Joe Fernbacher

Live broadCJlst
WBFO will be broadcasting live tonill\t's
concert by the Julliard String Quartet. This concert,
part of the annual Slee Cycle of the complete
Beethoven String Quartets, will include the Quartets
No. 3, No. 16 (the Grosse Fuge) and No. 7 .
WKBW o~nd THEATRE SER IES Pre~enrt

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HAYRIDE

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at Amherst Stables
Rain or Snow!
Free transportation from :
Front of Clark Gvm·(Opposite Tennis Court)
Busses leave at 6 :00
There will be covered wagons, and at end of hayride-campfire
and marshmallow roast! (room for 30 couples only - so make
reservations early)
CALL Bill Monkash at 831 -2924 or 2926 or
come in person by 6 :00p.m . Friday night .

12 MIDNIGHT!

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
SUNDAY, NOVEMBEit 21 -

8 :00 P .M .

JOHN DENVER
Orch. $5 .50 , $4.50- B1lc. $4. 50, $3 .50

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"C AMILLE"
Susan Lenox
" THE RISE AND FALL "
SUNDAY THRU TUESDA VI
Ingrid B~rgman
"G ASLIGHT "
James Stewart
"PHILADELPHIA STORY"

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�_RECORDS
The Morning After J. Gt~ils Band (Atlantic
packed and ready to split. J . Geils is resting
SDB297)
• his leg on his guitar case, and this time, it's
Wolf who's looking the other way
Rock and roll, as preached by the
(probably at some disengaged young thing
across the lobby).
masters (Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Little
Richard, etc:.), Is crazy music. Crazy In the
Once the record's on, there's no
way it sounds and in the way it makes you
stopping it. "I Don't Need You No More"
feel. It's not alienation music, it's not
starts things off. Wolf has the ability to
escape music. It's just crazy music. The
throw off some instant classic lyrics type that gets your feet shuffling, your
"You look so sweet, you look so fine, but
body moving and your mind blowing. It 's
Iovin' you baby just a waste of my time" fhort and to the point. The group playing,
really that simple. The great bands of the
'60's, the Beatles, the Stones, the Kinks, all
as always, is tight and never excessive. Next
started with crazy music, and with a little
comes an
instrumental,
"Whammer
time and a little maturing, they became
J8mmer" featuring Magic Dick's harp
what they were to our lives.
playing. I've said it before and I'll say It
But the Idea of doing this type of stuff
again now: he's the best white harp player
somehow eluded most groups in t he past
ever.
If it's roots you want to hear. the next
few years. They all seem to be after some
kind of unique sound, some ctearcut
two cuts give'em to you. First there's "So
distinction. All of wh ich is fine but has
Sharp;' written by Arlester Christian, who
very little to do with the foundations of a
was Dyke from Dyke and the Blazers.
youth culture that has in its hands the keys
Dyke wrote "Funky Broadway," the r 'n' b
to change, the road to world crazies, and
claS1ic. Great raw guitar by J . Then a slow
the right notions about how to deal with
one, "The Usual Place," by Don Covay,
who wrote "Mercy Mercy" (the Stones did
this universe since, as James Taylor said so
dryly to Warren Oates In the middle of the
that one) and "See Saw." Bladd's back·up
cross country race In Two Lane Blacktop,
vocal makes this one, along with J .'s guitar
"We're all in this together, right?"
pot through a Lesley. Rhythm and Blues is
The only new band to come around
something that's sorely lacking from
under-exposure and the band knows the
lately to give me a good case of the crazies
is the J . Geils Band . They "let It go in
value of this forgotten form.
"Gotta Have Your Love" closes side
one, and though there's really not much to
it other than a catchy riff, it shakes the
walls. Things really start cooking when
Wolf gets going on the maracas. Good solos
by Geils, Dick and Justman on this one.
"Looking For a Love" begins side two
and it's a time stopper. Startmg off with
drums and a piano riff, the song takes off
and never comes down. For three minutes
and 45 seconds, simply outrageous stuff
comes over the speakers. The solos cut into
each other, with Justman, Dick and Geils
trading licks. Wolf stays on top of it all,
"lookin' in the mornin', lookin' at night,
can't find my baby she's nowhere in sight."
The tune fades out building up. It should
Buffalo" last month at the stadium, and
go on forever .
their new album, The Momlng After,
"Gonna Find Me a New Love" is
unfortunately the next cu.t. Nothing could
oof'les hot on the heels of their manic live
really follow " Looking," but when
shOw. And though, admittedly, it doesn 't
have the sheer shock value of their glorious everyone shouts "North, South, East and
West, leavin' you baby gonna try the rest,"
first lp, it does keep them way ahead of
the crazies triumphantly return. "Cry One
everybody in sheer spirit and devotion to
More Time" is a slow ballad , and Bladd's
the principles of rock and roll.
The gospel, according to Peter Wolf, is drumming carries this one all the way.
The big blues number of the album is
to " Give it the juice and turn it loose."
" Floyd's Hotel .'' Starting with some fun ky
And Wolf, Seth Justman, Magic Dick, J .
piano work, the boys come up with
Geils, Danny Klein and Stephen Bladd
another instant classic. We get in a cab, go
certainly do.
way across town down to Floyd's hotel
A qu ick look at the cover gives you a
where " there's a lot of cheap rooms,
good idea what's Inside. It's their second in
a row in plain black and white (the color's always got something nice to sell . Smilin'
Jim , he's the cat that checks you in/don't
inside this one, where it belongs). The gang
ask where you're goin', he don't care where
is stretched out on two double beds in a
you been." Wolf screams "OK , Tarzan,
hotel room. A can of Bud, a pack of Kools,
pound it," and Justman takes off on a
table and waste basket knocked over.
brilliant little solo that captures Little
Wolf's got his shades on, but no pants.
Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis and Otis Spann in
Everyone Is looking at the camera except
Magic Dick , who's viewing the tube. On the about 15 seconds. Then , another great
verse - "There's a fella that hangs out in
back, they're sitting around the lobby,

.

The UUAB Music Committee would like some direction from the student body
concerning what music should be booked for next semester . Programming can continue as
tong as the money holds out. Although most concerts hopefully will break even , those
that don't w ill get substdized by the Mus•c Comminee until funds are depleted .
Ticket prices will depend on production costs and the size of the facility . The
possible facilit ies that are sometimes available are : a) Fillmore Room , capactty 900; bl
Clark Gym, capacity1800; c) Buffalo State's Gym, capacity 2700; d) Peace Bridge
Exhibition Center, capacity 3000; e) Kleinhans, capacity
00; f) War Memorial
Auditorium . Production costs are hi!tJer off campos, but seating cap ities are larger .
Please fill out the questionaire below and drop at the inform tion desk in Norton
Hall . Everyone should fill one out to avoid a small group of peo
asking for something
yo u don't want to see.
Please indicate your five best preferences by checking the appropriate spaces. The
"other" space is for other groups that you would like to see; be free with your space
(Note : ticket prices are approximated for on-campus faci lities.)
GROUP

APPROXIMATE PRICE

_ _fJil ly Preston
-.Mason Profit
- Leo Kottke
--Doug Ktf'Sham
---1. Gaits Bend
..._...Alice Cooper
- S teppenwott
--Deep Purple

$2000
2000
1500
2000·2500
2500·3500
3000
4500
4000

--Y oun~loods

4000·6000

-.Jeff Bedt

- S•tram
--Delanev68onnie

APPROX. TICKET PRICE
$2.00
2 .00
2 .00
2 .00
2 .60
2.60
2 .60
2.60
2 .60
2 .60
3 .00
3.00

5500

5000·7000
7500

\

,

the hall, they call him Tyrone just give him
five dollars, man, he can really tum you
on/' the inevitable cry of "J . Geils" and a
neat slide solo .
It's getting near dosing time on the
album, so Wolf let's us know that "We're
gonna make this one craazzy, baby!" It's
called, " It Ain't What You Do (it's how
you do itt)" and it's five minutes of
Insanity. Like "Gotta Have Your Love,"
It's just a riff, but Wolf's lyrical ability and
fervor carry it through. "Ain't what you
say, it's how you say it. Ain't what you
play, it's how you play it. Ain't what you
been through, it's how you been through
it. Ain't what you do, it's how you do it. "
That little verse explains the J . Geilr Band
perfectly. It's the spirit, the motive, the
drive, the dedication. And they have it.
When Ws time for a h arp solo, Wolf tells
Dick to " Blow your face out, Baby," and
he d oes, just like that. These guys mean
business.
Listen, rock and roll can save your life,
it you let it in. Pick up on J . Geils and join
the rest of us crazies in the college of
musical knowledge (not to be confused
with the University of Perversity) .

·Billy Altman
JouJouKa: A teo (COC49100 St)
Like J . Gerts tells us above, " It's not
what you do (it's how you do it) " and how
you do it is wfly you do it. Rock n' roll is
not a show and you must give a hoot for its
roots. So as a requirement for the college
of musical knowledge (and a d iversity from
the university of perversity) lay your ears
on the Pipes of Pan from JouJouKa.
But seriously, not deliriously, westet"n
ears must be seared to be geared to the
msuic of fears , the music of Bou Jeloud,
the Father of Skins, the Father of Fears Pan. First you must strip away the basic
time/space barriers which are set up by
western cultural environments. Lesson one
to get this done: a preparitory session with
the record machine, to help establish a
neutral time/space continuum . This is done
by a strict listening to Nico'siirst album,
her third efbum Otneruhof'fl, the Velvuu

doing Sister Ray, Heroin and European
Son, the StoogeS doing ' We Will Fall," and
all of the Pink Floyd albums with a
particular volume (very, very loud)
reference to " Interstellar Overdrive." Right
about now you have entered into a new
area, a new ear range. You can now listen
to Mastet' Musicians of JouJout&lt;a.
Using what amounts to JouJouKa's
greatest hits (Brian Jones the medium
between that culture and this with his Uher
tape recorder was not long in JouJout&lt;a
and simply recorded what would have been
played even if he hadn't been there.
Thereby giving us only a smattering of
what the Pipes of Pan are all about. My
God, they weren't even into it when Brian
was there.) We are given a tertiary glance at
a culture totally alien to our own, yet
almost totally the same.

.

Ptnk rtoyd
Doo,-,

New Rtders of the Purple Sage
_tiot Tuna
Steve Mttler Band
..Poco
Konks
_ ..John Seba$tian
_ Gl8dys Knoght &amp; The Ptps
_ J rank Zappa
--Yan Morroson
~ eech Boys
l.ee Mtchaels
_ L ighthouse
__5mokey Robinson &amp; The Miracles
_t_eon Russell
_ _Allman Bros.
en Years After
___.1'he Band
- - - 'efferso n Airplane
___steve Stiffs
_..Dther

Taking up mystical instruments like the
"raita" a w ind instrument w ith a long
curved neck and bell shaped apparatus on
tne end, and magic flutes played beyond
human capabilities, the Master Musicians
play their music for their entire lives. T hey
never wori(, all they do is make their
music. Day in day out. all concepts of time
and space shattered, they smoke their kif
end make their sound.
They say that in Morocco individuals
can roam the h ills and streets teeking out
their own music. They w ander until they
come across a brotherhood which plays the
chords of their sou ls. They hear their music
and they dance w ith the pipers.
Well, the first time I heard the m usic o f
the Master Musicians of JouJouKa m y soul
chord was struck and my being jum ped and
swayed with the sound of th e Pipes of Pan .
The music was m ine the first second I
heard it. It tent a chain reaction through
my body until It found m y soul and I
knew, I really knew I had found my lost
chord. And its hard to explain to an
outsider what your own music can mean to
you.
Brian Jo,. pr,.,tt thtt Piptl$ of PMI a t
Jou.JouKa is very important. It is a
document which every westerner must
ponder over. It is a symbol of the many
unknown and slowly fading out pockets of

musical knowledge and musical culture
which the world needs to know about.
These people should be recorded, they
must be preserved.
Perhaps I responded to the Music of
JouJout&lt;a in a different way because · I
believe in the gods, I believe in the fates.
To me Pan exists.
Listen to JouJout&lt;a music, it might be
your music. They are the first rock n' roll
band and they are making sounds which
are as new and refreshing now as they were
thousands of years ago. The amplifiers and
the microphones still can't transcend the
power of man, and JouJouKa proves it.
For the sake of the purists Brian Jones
really shouldn't have messed with the
production of his tapes, he should have
given the world the pure sound of
JouJouKa music, but I can't complain for
had he not climbed the mountain with his
tape machine I would have never found out
that I had my own music.
- Joe Fernl»cher

5000·7000
5000
5000·6000
6000 7500
5000 6000
7500
4000
7500
7500
7500-10,000
7500
8500·10,000
5000·7000
5000·7000
8500
10,000
10.000
10,000
15,000
16,000·20.000
15,000

Best day of the week to have a concert is - - - - - - Best place to have a concert is - - - - - - Would you go off campus for a good concert? yes _ _ no - Drop at informatio n desk. Norton Hall.

3.00
2 .60
300
3 .00
3.00
3.00
2.00
3.00
3 .00
3 .60
3.00
4 .00
3 .50
3.60

3.50
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�.

Clefelaad Quartet

,

\

Challenging program
The traditional opening program ranks well
among the other challenging evenings that the
Cleveland group sets before themselves. Slee Cycle
billings are quite balanced, with usually one work
from each of Beethoven's three periods of
composition providing an educational cross-section
of the composer as well as the variety necessary to
repress
fatigue. Wednesday's program , the
aforementioned opus 127, the opus )8, no. 1, and
the opus 59, no. 3, are each formidable models of
their respective periods.
The first work. with its long, contemplative
second movement, is a fine example of late
Beethoven. with an obvious departure from classical
convention. In the opus 18. no. 1, one detects the
beginnings of the break with classicism seen in the
late quarteU, with the disjointed nature of the
thematic material as seen In the fliooant ooeninq

theme.
The opus 59 piece synthesizes the classic and
ro~tic - a most exemplary " transitional" work with the melancholic. almost tonal (call it untonal)
introduction to the first movement •IIBgrO . and the
fantastic fugue in the finale, for which, incidently,
the performers set an excruciatingly rapid pace.
The Cleveland Quartet, whose members are
Donald Weilerstein and Peter Salaff, violins, Martha
Strongin Katz, viola and Paul Katz, violincello, will
terminate the Cycle early in December. However, It
presently continues with the Julllard String Quartet
and later on in the month, with the Guarneri
Quartet. '

New music
Baird Hall was a busy place last week, as College
B along with the Music Department, sponsored a
concert-demonstration, with Lejaren Hiller. the
well-known composer of computer and electronic
music; Roger Shields, a member of the creative
associates; and the Concord String Quanet, one of
the finer groups Interpreting the contempOrary
repertoire.
As the intent of the recital was both informative
and aesthetic, Professor Hiller lectured on the two
scheduled pieces, the Cage String Quartet and h is
own Twelve-Tone Variations. The Cage piece is quite
an evocative piece, very structured yet seemingly
high-strung with emotion. Hiller's piece for piano is
massive - tOme thirty minutes in length - and It,
too, strangely works within a rlgtd system to evoke a
high degree of romanticism .
Recitals such as these are quite valuable to the
individual interested in comprehendiOA music.
technically and structurally, without having to
intricately pour over textbooks on theory, valuable
to the " lay" music lover.
- Raymond Artzt

----------------------------------------------

Peace on Elmwood

Changes on Elmwood Avenue have involved a
bit more1han just the openings of new batl. In the
Elmwood·forwt ar•, the Buffalo Polic. have taken
on a new attitude about youth. No longer an 1hey
there simply to enforce their presence, but to
pr~. This can tM seen through the ph1cement of
younger offic.., In the area. It seems they
understand the kids and don't hinder, but help.
The precinct responsible for this is Precinct Five
on Delevan. Only a few years ago, 1he offic.., were
in the same situation, at much of the bar client•• is
now. Things' have relaxed to the extent that the
people feel the police are there to protat them, and
1hey respect them. Never Mfore cbuld policemen tM
seen talking to 1he customers, rather than just sitti"i
there.
If the ttitud• and unct.ltanding of Precinct
Five could happen ell OYer 1he gity, things would
certainly be a lot smoother between the kids and the
police. The example should bt picked up on.

t

---------------------1

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Send em

to the

\\bodshed.

Your bosa. Your
m!Xher-in-law. Your t&gt;e.t
fr1end. Yourself. And you 'll
get eve~ythi.ng you deserve:
fantastJc ch1cken wings anti
tancy sauce, 50~· spirits
..,... from 3 P.M . on, free
peanuts to ahuck, giant aize
aandwiches in a basket
It's strictly come-as-yo'u-are
to The Woodt hed where
the kitchen's alwa'ya open
and the music 's always on
'J.'he Woodahed. Located ·
!'lght next to the Packet Inn
1n North T onawanda. Drive
~ out Delaware or take the
"!ounJ111.1lJln.TheWoodshed's
JUI&amp; over the Del~tware
Avenue Bridre. ()pen from
1 J : 30 A.M . every day
except Sund.y.

...

•

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Get to know The Spectrum staff I
Room 355 Norton
I
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/

I

Queentown lowdown

Fine example ofBeethoven
Servi"i as a formj(W)Ie prelude to such a
massive body of art, the virile opening chords of
Beethoven's E·flat major, opus 127 quartet ushered
in the Slee Beethoven String Quartet Cycle, that
.,nual indulgence for local chamber music
enthusiasu last Wednesday evening at Baird Hall.
Each year, the Slee Grant attracts certain leading
Quartet ensembles to perform the 17 works in six
concerts.
As the new quartet in residence at the State
University of Buffalo the Cleveland Quartet has
already shown itself to be in a league with past
groups that have been chosen to perform the cycle.
As in their Buffalo premiere last month, they once
again proved to be an energetic group, capable of
handling all technical difficulties. The tone problems
that were heard In the violins - they seemed
somewhat thin sounding - were only to a minor
degree, and in fortissimo passages, the group evoked
an incredibly strong sound.

.

r

----------------------

by Mr.

Cle~n

Well, here we are at swinging school .. . where the chicks are kicks
and the cats are cool ... indeed. And Mr. Clean is searching the horizon
for signs of life. Here we sit In the midst of November, the first icy
pangs recalling what Buffalo weather will offer us until April, waiting
with trembling fingers for the new Capitol Christmas Crunchers: 1) the
three record set Bengla Desh Benefit; 2) Paulie and linda's new baod,
Wings, and last but most assuredly not least, 3) E Pluribus Funk . Not to
mention Columbia's new surprise package, Bob Dyl11n's G,.,tsn Hits
Vol. II. Not your ordinary garden variety exploitative rehash, but a
double album of young Bob's definitive versions of " I Shall Be
Released, You Ain't Goin' Nowhere, Mighty Quinn, When I Paint My
Masterpiece, Tomorrow's a Long Time," etc. Not only has Bob taken
to dealing with Weberman in the streets, (no contest, Bob won in two),
but it appears he's taken up the challenge on the field of artistic
probity as well. Good on you, son. We' ll .. be listening.
r

•

•

•

*

•

Mr. Clean's Pick Hit of thtt Millenium ... Tell me. has your heart
taken up permanent resident in your workboots7 Has your ass been
dragging lower than the frayed bottoms of your sandpaper jeans? Has
your soul been in hock for so long that the pawn ticket is printed irl
Sanskrit? Well, I've got the snake oil for you ... the genuine article.
The Geritol of the belladonna and yogurt set. Like a breath of fresh
amyl n itrate, this record will waste you in mere moments. Of course, I
could only be referring to The Momlng Aftttr, the new Atlantic release
of the T itanic J . Geils Band. Indubitably and irrefutably the good
Lord's gift to all rock 'n' roll maniacs e~~erywhere. So borrow two
dollars and eighty cents and 51ip and slide on down to the CO&lt;)P for
your medicin•. (It took them a while, but they do have it. Better late
than never, lads.) Guaranteed to please. In fact , laying this record on a
needy friend qualifies as a Mr. CIHn Ctlftifltld K•rmic Mitzvah . And
while you're doing all your shopping at the co-op, be sure to demand
that. for the good of the campus community, they stock the new
album by Commander Cody and his Lost Planet Airmen. " One drink of
wine, two drinks of gin, and I'm lost In the ozone again."

Ed Sanders and the Family
Mr. Cle~m 's Manic Pen P•ls ... In the early winter of 1968 Ed
Dorn, in New York for a reading at St. Mark's, was being ferried east on
the 8th St. crosstown bus by none other than poet, publisher,
pornsnort, poonscomp, Egyptologist and ac::e Fug Ed ~nders . Sanders
was restive in his role as teen-age totem and he stalked the center aisle
of the bus in his Fugstar clothes (great red shoes if I remember
correctly) and blond brillo hair, mock-terrorizing the riders with
grimaces, gestures and gutteral screams of " flower power ... flower
power."
This puncture and parody of the then current party line proved
prophetic (I dig alliteration) ratber than petulant (scusa) when. in
Indian summer 1969, Charles Manson and h is lovers were accused of
upwards of a dozen murders. Though not t he first nor the last instance
o f peace/ love run amok, it certainly must be considered a bizarre and
crucial high water mark of sorts. Sanders was on the case immediately
providing, in the L.A . Free Press, sadly unheralded Pulitzer Prize ~evel
reportage from the various arraignments and trials.
A year and a half of omnivorous (and often dangerous)
informat ion gathering has culminated in Thtt Family - Tht~ Story of
Charles Manson's Dune Buggy Atr.ck /J8tttJ/Ion , published last month
by E.P. Dutton. With a spare. sardonic skill , Sanders lays out the lower
depths of the Further quest. While you might have gotten off the
elevator at the top floor with some vital enlightenment, there yet
remain vague and sordid shapes mumbling and conjuring at the bottom
of the shaft. Be advised.
This book provides as much real information about Manson and
the vile underbelly o f Southern California counter-cult and culture as
we are likely ever to see in one place. At great personal expense Ed
Sanders has done us all an amazing and indispensible service - every bit
as important and brilliant as his work in the past - and you ignore it at
your own perill .

•
And so, gentle reader, it's time to take it on home with a few of
Mr. Clean's Helpful Hou•hold Hint3: 1) Don't let the runes fool you.
Behind that inscrutable cover is the same computer calculated dazzling
confusion that you have nodded out to innumerable times in the past.
And I like it . 2) If you missed Ron Davis' amazing and delightful
fiberglass shaped paintings at the Albri!flt· Knox ... shame on you. It's
your misfortune and none o f my own.
·
And wherever you may wander this week , remember •..

Gus. Sr. will reproduce
almost anything
355 Norton Hall

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                    <text>Day Car~ Center has
rocky past and future
If Bill Vaccaro
Cltmpur Editor
·

Vol. 22, No. 32

~

University of New York at BuffMo

W~, Nowmber 10, 1971

Editor's note: The following is the
first of a two· part 1erles dealing
with a student-sponsored day care
center and its current struggle for
sur11ival. This parr deals with the
history of the center.
The Niagara Day Care Center is
a student-run community center
for needy neighborhood children
living in the lower West Side's
project area. Located at 605
Niagara St., the center offers the
neighborhood chiJdren a "home
away from home" atmosphere
plus the advantages of educational
facilities.
The center, operating in the
former premises of the Protestant
Home for Children, is sponsored
by the Puerto Rican Organiz.alion
for
Dignity,
Elevation
and
Responsibility
(PODER),
a
student organization at the State
University of Buffalo.
According to Jose and Evelyn
Pizarro,
both
members
of
PODER, the original idea was to
acquire their own premises.
However, there were not enough
fa cilities at low cost.
Evelyn , who has been working
very closely with the center, said

that as a result of the lack of
facilities and inevi~ble money
considerations, they decided to
affiliate with the Protestant Home
for Children.
Center etaential
The facility, now known as the
Niapra Day Care Center, opened
in May with 16 Puerto Rican ,
Black and white children from the
area. At the present time, 30
children are in the program.
Evelyn noted some of the
many reasons why a community
day care center
essentail to
the area. She said t hat some
familie1, especiaUy within the
projects, have five to six children
and cannot take care of them all .
Some mothers cannot take care of
their children for reasons of
health while other mothers work.
She pointed out that the center
is not a " baby sitting service" but
an educational facility . Evelyn
said that the factlities offer these
children a chance to get off to a
good start before they enter
arammar school. This is especially
important to the Puerto Rican
children , who make up forty
percent of the children in the
Center, as they come from
Spanish-speaking families .

was

-cont i nued on p•ge 2-

Amchitka
- Fuo

Bloody shame
by BIUT)' Levine
SP«illl to The Spectrum

The smoke was still nowing f'fom the barrels
of the M·ls when a campaip~ was launched to
obscure (if not completely bury) the facts
surrounding the murders at Kent State. Reports o f
two dead guardsmen were rapidly sent over police
radio. That same afternoon, this unconfirmed
rumor found 1ts way into print in the Kent
newspaper. The he.tdlines read : "Two ·guards, one
student killed at K.S.U." This was typical. In the
followmg weeks and even months, Adjutant
General Sylvester Del Corso and General Robert
Cantebury, the two men in charge o f the troops
that day , would repeatedly speak o f sniper fire
coming from the rooftops.
To this day General Cantebury maintains that
JUs troops were about to be overrun by a group of
more than one hundred students that were
charging to within "three to four yards" of them,
shouting and screaming, "kill the pigs." This
account was given under oath before the
President's Commission On Campus Unrest. He
also said that his men were surrounded, and
because they feared for their lives, the shooting
was in self defense and therefore justified . Del
Corso has said that some SO of his men received
injuries on that day. That Is how the Ohio National
Guard justifies the shooting. The FBI spent two
months and I 00 men mvestigating the incident.
They say :
" There was no sniper ... The FBI has conducted
an extensive search and has found nothing to
indicate that any person other than a guardsman
fired a weaponn."
"Some guardsmen , including some who claim their
lives were endangered and some who fired their
weapons, had their backs to the students when the
firing broke out."

•

"There was no request from any guardsman for
permission to use hill weapon ... There was no
initial order to fire.••
"The guardsmen were not surrounded. Regardless
of the position of tbe students foUowina them,
photographs and television ftlm show that only
very few students were located between the guard
and the commons. They could easily have
continued in the direction in wh.ich they bad been
IOinJ."

"The troops were under my command . I've done
nothing I am ashamed of."
- Major Harry Jones

..At the time of the shooting, the National
Guardsmen did not believe that they were being
fired upon. No auards mao claims that he fell to tho
ground or took any other evasive action and all
available photograph~how the guard at the criticaJ
moments in a standing position and not seeking
cover."
"Some guardsmen (unknown as yet) had to be
physically restramed from contanumg to fire their
weapons."
"Although many claim they were hit with rocks at
sometime during the confrontat ion , only one
guardsman, Lawrence Shafer, was mjured on May
4, 1970, seriously enough to require any kind of
medical treatment. He admits his injury was
received some ten to fifteen minutes before the
fatal volley was fired ."
"We have some reason to believe that the clajm by
the National Guard that their hves were
endangered by the students was fabricated
subsequent to the event. "
Concerning Cantebury's claim of I 00
screaming students within four to five yards of the
troops :
" General Cantebury also testified that the closest
students were within four to five yards of the
guard. In the direction the guard fired , however,
photographs show an o pen space 10 front of the
guardsmen of at least 20 yards."
- Pre.Jident :r Commis.Jion
On Campus Unrest
"Of the nine students who were wo unded, Joseph
Lewis was probably the closest to the guard. He
was shot wh.ile making an obscene gesture about 20
yards from the National Guard ."
- Ju.Jtice Dept. Summary
of FBI Report
-continued on

p.a~je

3-

Editor :r note: The following article is in .Jupport of
the movement to convene a Federal Grand Jury to
invelligate the shooting of I J students at Kent
State University on May 4, 1970. It was submitted
by a concerned State University of Buffalo
student. The Spectrum wholly supports thts
movement. All interested in hdping such a azuse
may inquire at The Spectrum office.

Atomic test blast not as
dangerous as anticipated
the island of Amch.itka shook and
heaved as a result of the blast. A
rolling motion oouJd be detected
At exactly 63 miUiseconds in the Bering Sea and the Pacific
after J I a.m. Bering Sea Time (5 Ocean where the AJeutian chain is
Occurring
a
m1Ie
p .m . EST), the largest earth located.
the
explosion
tremor ever produced by man was underground,
caused by the blast of the United carved out a large chamber in the
States' five megaton Cannikin earth beneath it , melting rocks
explosion . Registering somewhere with temperatures equal to those
bet ween 7.0 and 7.4 on the on the sun's surface.
Only five hours before the
Richter
scale,
the
nuclear
ended
fears
of blast was scheduled to take place,
explosion
environmentalists that it would be th~ Supreme Court, by a narrow
the
cause
of
disastrous margin o f four to three, refused
pleas by conservationists to order
earthquakes and tidal waves .
The barren Aleutian island o f the tests postponed until it was
Amchitka was the scene Saturday decided scientifically whether or
the blast could cause
morning of the nuclear test by the not
Ato mic Energy Com mis~ion . Only earthquakes and tidal waves.
24 people were on the island
Protests throughout the V.S .
when the blast was detonated , and and
Japan
were
held
to
they were stationed in control
demonstrate the possible dangers
point bunkers. Notable among the
the blast could cause, but they
24 were AEC Commissioner
proved futile. The White House
James R . Schlesinger , his wife,
channeled all calls protesting the
two of his children and o ther AEC
blast to the AEC and President
officials and scientists.
Nixon, who could have cancelled
Schlesinger had brought his the test, went to Florida for the
wife and children to the island to weekend. Among the . scientists
prove to a disbelieving public that who pleaded with the Presid~nt to
the nuclear test was really safe. In postpone the test were Linus
a control room 23 miles from the Pauling of Stanford University,
testing site, Schlesinger had this to Harold Urey of the University of
say about the blast only nine California and George Wald of
minutes after it occurred : "All Harvard University. A telegram
preliminary indications are that was sent to Nixon last Friday by
the
test
was
conducted 34 Senators, urging cancellation
successfully and safely." He did on the grounds that there was a
report feeling "fairly significant "small though palpable risk of
ground motion" when the blast earthquake, tidal wave and
went off.
radioactive contamination of the

by Lynne Traeter
Off-Cilmpul Editor

Frigid air vs. sun's temperatures
Swept by strong, cold winds,

ocean."
-continued on p.tge 5-

�Medical It

..

Editor's note: Medical questlonsf.problems on your mind? Medical/,
wee/ely column containing heolth related queJtions from the University
community, is now in o~ration through the cooperation of the
Mt!dical School, Univenity HEALTH Service and the Office of Student
Allain and Services. Just di.a/831-.5000 A ction Line Extension, oddress
a written question to Medical/, cfo The Spectrum, 355 Norton Hall or
visit Action Line booth In the Center Lounge of Norton Hall. NameJ
will be kept In strict confidence, and questiom fielded by students and
faculty of the State University of Buffalo Medical School will be
answered through the colu111n. appearing each Wednesday.
Q: How can a person tell if they have Gonorrhea?
A: Go norrhea, G.C ., and clap are all synonyms for a veneral disease
which has become increasingly frequent among all socio-economic
groups as well as in the University community. It is contracted
primarily through sexual contact with an infected individuaL
Occasional non-genital infections are observed .
Amo ng men it usually presents with a penile discharge. Pain o r
buring with urination and Increased frequency of urinatio n are also
very commo n.
In women the disease IS often present without any symptoms. This
is a significant factor in the spread of gonorrhea throughout the
community. Since women are not made aware of thei r illness by any
discomfort they can often be discovered and treated only by tracing
thei r relatio nships to male patients. Many times, however, urinary tract
symptoms of burning, pain and increased frequency of urination are
experienced early in the In fection. At times, an irritating vaginal
discharge is present. The infection may spread to involve the fallopi:m
tubes and to cause a d1ffuse infect ion of the pelvis. In males
involvement of o ther parts of the reproductive system can occur.
Untreated Or infection discovered late in its course may lead to sterility
in both male~ and female!&gt;.
Symptoms when they occur, usually develop between two to eight
days after contact. All sexual purl ners of an infected individual are not
necessarily snfected . It must also be remembered that one gonorrhea
infection does not offer protection against fut ure contact.
In a small percentage of cases. infection c3n lead to involvement of
joints, liver and other systems.
Methods of allempung to grow the organism and/ ur to observe 11
under the microscope are used to make a definite diagnosis. Treatment
is still very effective but an increasing number of cases are being
discovered that are not responding to normal treatment and new or
larger amounts of dru~ must be used,..

Javits lecture
Senator Jacob K. Javits ( R., N.Y.) wiJJ give the
final speech of the State University of Buffalo 197 1
James Fenton Lecture series o n comprehensive
health care. He will speak at 8 :30p.m. this Thursday
in Acheson S.
Known as one of the most intelligent and
well-informed members of the Senate, Javits has lona
been interested and active in matters affectina health
and health care on a state and national scale.
The Fenton series is administered by the Office
of Cultural Affairs.

~igooff:f"
c~mf 17\C oor - - - - 1

cmtbmm

The Spectrum it publithlld three
r l met e week, ewry Mondey,
Wldnftdey end Frithy; durin(/ t/Ht
reguler IICMiemic yur by Sub Bo•d
1, Inc. OHiut are IOC#Itlld et 355
Norton Hell, Stettl Univeflity of NtiW
York •t BuHelo, 3435 AMin St.•
Buffelo, New York , 14214.
Telephone: A rae Code 716; Edltoriel
831-4113; Butintm, 831-3610.

II

R epreten red for edllflftltin(l by
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Cirr:uletion: 16,000

Page two. The Spectrum . Wednesday, November 10, 1971

-Hinkson

Day Care Center .. .
The facilities, according to is with the New York State and
Evelyn, offer these children a Erie County Welfare Departments.
chance to speak English. To insure
During the summer, they said ,
this, the center has hired three
the
Welfare Dept. paid part of the
full ~time
teachers and th ree
part-time aides, all bi-lingual, to · cost for some of the families. In
ease the stram of a new language early September, however, they
being forced upon the children . changed their minds and are now
" In the Center, they (the tryi ng to force the families to
children) are not denied their send their children to the
ident1ty. They have a feeling of part-time federally funded Early
belonging, of being at ho me," Push program .
Evelyn said .
According to Jose and Evelyn ,
the Welfare Dept. wants to do
Welfare hassles
that because it simpl y doesn't COSl
The Center is open from 8 :30 them any money. However, many
a.m . to 5 ·JO p.m . The fee per day of the children at the Center are
is five dollars. J ose and Evelyn slow learners and need full -time
attentio n .
Furthermore,
the
sa•d that m ost of th e families that
send their children to the Center Center provides a breakfast for
can not afford 11. Another problem those who do not get one at

~ntlnued

from page 1-

ho me,
a
mid-morning and
mid•ftemoon snack, and a hot
lunch .
If the Welfare Dept. has its way
many children may h~ve to be
pulled out a~ their parents cannot
afford the five dollar daily fee .
Several have al ready been pulled
out and put into the Early Push
program .
PODER is curreQtlY paying
part o f the five dollar fee for most
of the children but they. too, are
beginning to feel the financial
pinch . And wllh the current
attitude
of
the
Student
Associ at ion towards fUlances. ll
ma y be -a Jon&amp; winter.

Friday : Will tht•

C~ht~r surrive ?

'I·

t!&gt;.ANHOUNCB.S~

�-

·Smoke screen still hideS
true events Of Kent State
\,;,;

-continued from P498 1-

It is quite evident ..lat members Of the
National Guard are lying. Attorney General
John Mitchell knows this. He also knows
that if he con•enes a Federal Grand Jury,
Del Corso and Cantebury will be forced to
substantiate their stories with evidence.
The fact is, there is no evidence to back
their storl~s and they are well aware of it.
John Simons is an Ohio National Guard
Chaplin who was on the scene of the
shooting. He has since been sharply critical
of the command decisions that led to the
shooting. Robert Shakne is a CBS News
reporter who last year was in the office of
General Cantebury and heard him say over
the telephone, referring to the chaplin:
" We've got to shut him up. This could be
fatal.''
Not only do the National Guard alibis
crumple in light of existing evidence, but
there is sufficient proof to support the
theory that a group of the soldiers
conspired to shoot specific students, and
formalized their decision minutes before
the actual firing.
"Aside from any question of specific inten t
on the part of the guardsmen or a
predisposition to use their weapons, we do
not know what started the shooting."

- Justice Dept. Summary
of FBI Report

appalled by the murders, I know others
who welcomed the deadly confronta tion .''

- a guardsman,
Arron Beacon Tournai, July. I97I
A
year
ago
the
Ohio State
Administration convened an obviously
biased Grand Jury. It was summoned by
Republican State Attorney General Brown,
who appointed two other Republicans,
Seabury and Balyeat, to direct the
proceedings. All three were political
buddies of Repuglican Governor James
Rhodes.
"We're going to employ every force of Jaw
that we h ave under our authority ... We
are goin g to employ ev~ry weapon possible.
"The same group that we're dealing
with here today - and there are three or
four of them - th ey only have one thing in
mind and ·that is to destroy higher
educati~n in Ohio .. .
..."These people just move fro m one
campus to the oth er and terrorize a
community. They're worse than the brown
shirts and the Communist element and also
the night riders In the vigilantes. They're
the worst type of people that we harbor in
America.
"I think we are up against the strongest,

" We have some reason to believe that the claim by National Guards that
their lives were endangered by the students was fabricated subsequent to the
event."
,
- Justice Department summary
of FBI report
"Five persons interviewed in Troop G, the well·trained militant group that has ever
group of guardsmen closest to Taylor HalJ , . assembled in America.''
- James Rhodes, speaking
admit firing a total of eight shots into the
at a press conference on
crowd or at a specific student." (emphasis

added)

·
- Justice Dept. Summary
of FBI Report

" As a guardsman who was present at Kent
State, I cannot wholly dismiss the
• possibility of a deadly collusion. just as I
know many fellow guardsmen who were

Sunday May 3, I970 in
Kent, Ohio

Withheld from the Grand Jury was the
Justice
Department summary.
This
included the testimony of five guardsmen
all of whom stated that the lives of
guardsmen were not endangered and that it
was not a situation that in any way

Prelude
required shooting. Yet Seabury Ford, the
special prosecutor said: "The National
Guard
s~ouid
have shot all the
troublemakers." Also withheld from the
Grand Jurors was the report by seven
Knight Newspaper Chain reporters who
spent two weeks interviewing students,
~ardsmen and townspeople.
These attempts to whitewash the
incident have failed. The job of the special
Grand Jury was done so inefficiently that
some three months later a federal judge in
Cleveland ruled that in their investigation
the members of the Grand Jury exceeded
their legal parameters .and th eir findings
were therefore unconstitutional. lie
ordered that their report be "expunged"
and stricken from public record . However,
25 KSU students still face charges
stemming from the now non~xistent
Grand Jury findinp. The Ohio Grand Jury
was a farce. In May 197 1, one year after
the even t, nothing had been done by way
of acceptable judicial proceedings.
On May 20 , 1971, 20 congressmen
headed by William Moorehead of
Pennsylvania sent a letter to Attorney
General Mitchell saying that they believed
"serious questions" about the incident
remained unanswered. It continued: " We
request you to convene a federal Grand
Jury to investigate the possible violation of
federal law and to return any indictments
necessary." By July 13 the congressmen
had received no reply to their first letter,

Left behind

so Mr. Moorehead wrote to the Attorney
General again. Standing beside the
congressmen in their call for a Federal
Grand· Jury are James Ahern, Erwin
Canham, James Rhodes (no relation to the
governor), and Governor William Scranton,
all former members of the President's
Commission On Campus Unrest which,
second only to the FBI , did the most
thorough investigation of the shooting to
date.
" I don't think there's any question that
that ~n isolated shot proceeding the
volley and coming from a national guard
weapon) was the signal to fire. There
ought to be criminal charges. Somebody's
got to be held responsible for that. At least
it's manslaughter."

- James A hem, former
police chief and
former member of the
President's Commission
On Campus Unrest
"There were two guardsmen who
committed second degree murder ... The
FBI knows about these two guardsmen,
but it wasn't brought before the (state]
Grand Jury."

- James Rhodes, former
member of the President's
Commission On Campus Unrest

~

- Ruffner

In the foreground li• ' Joseph
Lewis, the closest student to the
guardsmen at the ,time of the
shooting. · He w• 20 feet away.
There Is a certain element of
callousn. . in this photo of the
...,d departing the scene.

.Guardsman threatening students with rifl•
five minutes prior to shooting. They are
soon to leave this position in a retreat to
their original outpost. It was in that
retreat, that they turned and fired their
weapons. (Lettering is author'st

.

- Darnell

Restraining force

Major Harry Jon•, waring toft QP end cerrying
baton, hea moved in front of troops as he orders
th.-n to c. . . fire. - "Some guerdsmen (unknown •
yet) had to be physically remeinect trom continuing
to fire their weapons." - Justic:e Dept. summary of
FBI report.

Wednesday, November 10, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Smoke screen of Kentpa,.....--continued from

On Aug. 13, 197 J , 1S months after the
lbooting, John Mitchell responded.
..T he facts available to me support the
conclusion reached by the PresJdent's
CommJaJon On Campus Unrest that the
rlfletlre was, in the words of the
commissJon, 'unnecessary, unwarranted
and inexcuseable' ... It is my judgement
that further actfon by the Department of
J ustice would not be warranted! '

-

Department withholds the 8000-page FBI
report from the American people (only the
swnrnary has been released); still the
parents of four dead children are denied
acceptable explanations of their· chlldrens'
deaths.
The truth must be brought to the
American people, and there is still a means
by which it can be done. A federal Grand
Jury must be convened. Mitchell's decision
must be overruled. The president has the

"/ dJd not know that they I the gUIUdamen I were patroUing with w aded

frtfln ."
- Robert I. White, fonner
president of Kent State

-'
It is interesting that it took less than a
week to convene 1 Federal Grand Jury to
investigate the leaking of the Pentagon
Papen, yet it takes IS months to decide
that the cold blooded murder of unarmed
students does not warrant such an
investigation.
Eighteen months have passed since that
Ohio parking lot was splattered with
student blood. StilJ nothing has been done
to make Robert Cantebury substantiate his

Thle photo .................. lot when

-KSNS

molt of tfle shootint- dl~. The sign
In tonground II 300 ft. frOm the
...rdlm.,., 8ftd It II beyond 1Mt sign
when 10 of ttM 13 students .... failed.
Ald\ou~ ~ deim they were
ebout to be ~n. they choee to shoot at
atudents mar. then 300 ft. from them.

Target area
authority to do this as does any federal
judge by issuing a write of mandamus. It is
the responsibility of the American people
to su that this is done. Representative
Moorehead is currently pushing for a
congressional investigation which could
lead to a reversal of MitcheU's decision and
the convening of a Federal Grand Jury.
Senator Edward Kennedy has repeate&lt;!Jy
made issue of the Kent State killings before
the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee On

which he is chairman. He has also
confronted
the J ustice Department
numerous times requestiJlg a Federal Grand
Jury.
The call for a Grand Jury needs support
by the people . Last week at Kent State
University a petition calJing for such action
received 10,000 signatures. The new
president of KSU , Glen Olds, personally

presidential aide Leonard Garment, a
Nixon advisor on education and civil rights.
The petition h.u been expanded nationally
and Is being circulated on this campus. Sign
it. Keep Kent State alive.

"Justice deiJJyed is not only justice denied,
it is justice circumvented, jusdce mocked,
and the system ofjustice undermined."

~~
. - ~~~ .J~
. r~
.~ ~ .
~~~oo
~~*~~~~::~::::W'':f~.&amp;(t---~-:=-~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

(Youcanask(or 1Gus'l)

Page four . The Spectru m. Wednesday, November 10, 1971

355Norton

'

�·'Blood of tbe CoDdor'

Native sterilization exposed

r

The story of Bkxxl of the Condor, filmed partly
..Never has it been as important in our countries
to fight confusion," writes Jorge Sanjines, director in the Bolivian Andes. shows the Quechua Indians'
of Blood of the Condor (Yawar Mallku in the gradu~ realization that the crew of American
Quechua dialect of the Bolivian highlands where it ·doctors are sterilizing women of their village . Angry
was origninally fUmed). "Never has It been so wgent and disgusted, the men take decisive action against
to say things clearly because never has time for the gringo doctors, for which the leaders of the
actina or perishing been so short...
Quechua community are executed by the Bolivian
army. The wife of the one man who manages to
Blood of the Condor will be in continuous
escape brings him to the city, hoping to get medical
showiog in the Conference Theater as part of the
care for his wounds.
Women's Film Festival tomorrow at 3 and 8 p.m.,
147 Diefendorf. 'Hle director, Sanjines, directly
Rhetorical destruction
confronts the birth control programs run by the
The scenes in the city help us see through the
Peace Corps that sterilize Quechua peasant women
rhetoric of government officials that pop)Jlation
without their knowledge or consent. Based on a
control Is the prime factor in development. What
report by a Bolivian journalist, Sanjines' ntm became
becomes clear, particularly for a sparsely populated
a for~e in a series of events that culminated in the
country like Bolivia with an infant mortality rate
Bolivian government's expulsion of all Peace Corps
over 40 per cent, is that population control is an
workers. O~iginally banned by government censors,
instrument in preserving the rule of a tiny urban
the mm was released after mmtant street
minority, devastatingly portrayed in the ftJm, who,
demonstrations and, since its official opening, more
in
coUaboration
with
American
economic
than 320 ,Q:OO Bolivians lpve seen. Blood of the
penetration , have enforced underdevelopment on the
Condor ~ a record attenda11c~ for any film ever
majority of the people.
shown in that country.
Blood of the Condor comes from the
revolutionary cinema movement in latin America Murder by law
revolutionary because it does not merely illustrate
Against the confusion created by leaders of large misery and injustice, but singles out the structures of
foundations and neo-Malthusian biology professors exploitation. and power, identifies the enemy and
who consider the "population bomb" more summons people to take the kind of action necessary
explosive than the atomic ones the U.S. government for liberation.
is stockpilJng, Blood of the Condor reveals the
Blood of the Condor is sponsored by the
hidden agenda of foreign imposed birth control American Studies program.
programs as pre·meditated extennination of native
people.
- Joe Trimhur

-uPI

Nuclear protests

Atomic test ...
-continued from

Registration infor~ation
Underaraduate studenta should pick up Sprlna reaistration material in the reception
area of Diefendorf HaD startina Monday, Nov. 29. Accurate data is essential for
trouble·free reaistratlon. Class achedules wUI not be available until Dec. 6 .
Students ahould pick up their material accordlna to the following schedule: Seniors
whose firat nam• beain with A-f,Nov. 29; C.Q, Nov. 30; P·S, Dec. 1; T -Z , Dec. 2.
Juniors whose last names beain with A-F. Dec. l; C.Q, Dec. 6; P·S. Dec. 7; T-Z.
Dec. 8 .
for the sophomores: A-K, Dec. 9 ; L-S, Dec. 10; T-Z. Dec. 13. Freshmen : A-K, Dec.
14: L-S, Dec. IS : T-Z, Dec. 16.

HOME FURNISHINGS
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Tlmt pion

Mosttr chorft

Canadian students cross the
Amt.ssadcn
Bridge
linking
Detroit and Windsor, Ont. as they
protest the Nov. 6 blast on
Amch ltka
Island.
The
international bridge was closed for
sev. .l houn as traffic pms
backed up into both countrias.

~)Age

1-

Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler,
speaking about five hours before
the blast, said the President was
aware of the protests, but had
decided to go ahead for reasons of
national security. Declining to
comment o'n the Supreme Court's
decision which authorized the
government to go ahead with the
test, Ziegler said : "AU of the
environmental
aspects
were
looked into and given very careful
study before the decision was
made to proceed with the very .
vital test."
The AEC will not know how
successful the test really was until
a sample of rock for 6000 feet
below ground is analyzed for
radiocative measurement at the
Lawrence
Laboratory
at
Livermore, Calif. This process will

'-

take several weeks, but officials
said the blast was "just what the
doctor
ordered," based on
preliminary flndlnp . The test was
to determine the yield of the
Spartan warhead for the US.
Antiballistic
Ballistic
Missile
system.
The explosion was the largest
ever set off by the United States,
but it may have been smaller than
the
Russian
underground
explosion which occurred on Oct.
14, 1970. The Russian blast was
figured at being somewhere
between three and six megatons.
However, it was a midget
compared to the 58 megaton
atmospheric test conducted by
Russia in 1961. This occurred
before the 1963 US.- USS.R.
treaty
banning
atmospheric
testing o f nuclear material.

AUSTRALIA--...
NEEDS TEACHERS
NOW!
Sick of hassling smog,
unemployment? Growing
needs, all subject areas.
For fuU inform.
Send S1 .00 to:

Inti. Teachers Placement Bureau

psychomat

P.O. Box 19007,
Sacramento, Calif. 95819

-

3:00 - 5:00 ,.m.

WEDNESDAYS -MILLARD FILLMORE ROOM

WE NEED

BLOOD
EAII .lEY
FIIIT

Psychomat

wa

initilted

CALL
DillEDlATELY

to

facilitate
person-to·plfiOn communication amont all studen1J. It is
an open•nded, fr•flowint session whtrt you can share
your fMI1np about experiences.

IIIIIIUL IIIC.
2450 ELMWOOD AVI.

356 norton

Phone 174-0591

Wednesday, November 10, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page five

�.

E_.d_iT_o__
Ri_Al_ ____,

. _ I_ _

Scar for mankind
One small test for man, one huge scar for mankind ~
The blast at Amchitka is now history, and the fears of
earthquakes and tidal waves have proved to be barren .
Perhaps the only significant and remaining danger in a
scient ific sense, is that the gargantuan cavern created by
Cannikin may collapse and allow harmful radiation to seep
out, wreaking death in its path.
The other danger of the Amchitka affair is that,
overshadowed by the lack of instantaneous damage to our
earth, many ind!viduals may forget, not only the occurrence
of the test itself, but the manner in which the President and
military establishment showed their power and priorities.
Two of this nation 's close economic and political allies,
Canada and Japan, objected vehemently to this test only to
be ignored for "reasons of national security." Citizens and
environmental groups t hroughout this country protested and
presented evidence which seemed to conclusively prove that
there was, however tiny, a risk of awesome natural
phenomenon be1ng triggered · by the test. Again, " n ational
security" triumphed.

~IISIDIS, WHO' LL. IIMIMIII A YIAa flOM NOW?'

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman

Fear is spreading throughout the land . The
rebeUion of youth is coming, throwing over your
stale traditional values, your greed motivated
...
The most disconcerting part o f this e pisode was economy and your basically corrupt society. Heed
the Alfreda Slominskis before it's too late. But it is
undoubtedly the 4-3 Supreme Court ruling Saturday
already too late. The movement is unstoppable , and
morning which allowed the test to proceed. The four ,
when we have finished your corruption, your greed
Justices Burger, Blackman, Stewart and White, refused to and your insensitivity to each other will be relics of
even delay the blast in order that conservationist claims ttistory. The new world will be a world of lo1e and
might be evaluated. In addition, they failed to provide the concern for fellow human beings. Young people are
American people with any reasons for their course of action. different from their elders. We know where the real
It also must be noted that two of the majority are Nixon priorities should lay.
Bullshit.
appointees and with two more expected to join the Supreme
The youth of America are about as different
Court in the near future, it is becoming clear, al~eit too clear,
that Richard Nixon's appointments will color the political from th.e rest of the population as Richard Daley is
face of this nation for many years. But alas, t h e public may from Lyndon Johnson. Of particular interest to this
column is the activity of that branch of the Pepsi
never see the shame that will cover that face, because it will
Generation known as the university students. Of
be securely blanketed by the mask of "national security."
course, as most of us are already aware, the term
"student" is a misnomer. However, Jet us not
quibble over trivialities. A study of a few examples
recent of "student" action at our beloved University
(capitalized when referring to the infamous UB)
reveals the depth of perversion among the
Kent State. The very words still carry an air of anathema "concerned" youth. As the man said, "let us look at
strong enough to pierce our current veil of apathy. The
the record ."
specter of a system gaining stow retribution by first
Speaking of records (and very bad puns), the
murdering four youths and then convening a grand jury
place to begin is with the record co-op. Don't panic,
which indicts those originally aggreived is still visible.
I' m not about to put down a surprisingly
\.
- well-intentioned and well-run operation . If you
.
. !h~re IS now anothe~ attempt ~o force the concep~ "search back through our memory, however, ou
JUstice mto
meanmgful
role. 1n the Kent State
affa•r.
Y
of a 1·tme
Y a
.
. . a more
.
.
.
m1'ght d'sscover some vague
reco 11ec 110n
The petition betng ClrC~Iated at t~IS sch?ol ~as .gamed much
few weeks a o when several of the very same
support at other leadtng educational tnst1tut1ons and we
. g
.
·
T
· 'dl b
d
t .
th
aforementioned new generatson strolled calmly into
h
S OU ld be no exceptiOn. 0 Sit I Y Y an no Sign
e
th b
I r ·1·t
d ·
d ff r olb
· ·
·
h
d
f
'I
· h
e asemen taCJI y an nppe 0 a 1eW ~ Urn S.
pet1t1on. IS. to. condone t e mur ers. 1gn tt, or s1 ence IS t e
Th'1s resu It e d .m th e co-op•s ha ving to ·ms t'1t u te
seed 0 f InJUstice.
certain security measures . Only a minor incident,
you say, just a small annoyance? Well, that is true. 1
suppose.
Then let us consider example number two.
Student governments aie usually composed of
" lifers." These are people who started training for
Wednesday, November 10, 1971
Vol. 22, No. 32
these positions by running for G.O. president in high
school. That is, the less intelligent of them start that
Editor·in.Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-MI!Mglng EditOf' - A I Benson
way . The bright ones always start at the top - they
Co-Menllging Editor - Mike Lippmann
run for treasurer. In both cases the first moves that
• • · MIMging Editor - Susan Moss
are
made upon entering college are vo\ynteering for
Butln- MM..., - Jim Drucker
Advertising Mlnepr -Sue MeUentine
the proper government committees and meeting the
'right' professors and administrators. There are
Layout ....... Maryhope Runyon
Campus ........ . Jo-Ann Armao
several
readily recognizable characteristics to this
Ald•.......•..... ... .vacant
................Howie Kurtz
Lit. a. Drama .. Micheel Silverblatt
•.•....... . . .... Bill Vaccaro
type of personality. The male of the species is the
MUiic ........ . ... .Billy Altman
City ..• . • •. •. ... Hervy Lipman
guy on your floor who by the middle of his first
Off.CinlfiUS ..•. .. Lynne Traeger
Copy ...••.••. .. Ronniforman
semester
has already begun smoking a pipe (tobacco,
Photo .......... Marc Ackerman
... .•. ....••. ... Marty Gatti
.......... Mickey Osterreicher
Ald . . ....... Claire Kfiegsman
that is. Do not be confused by those others smoking
Feeture ... , . . , ... . ......vacant Sports .. . .. . ....... Bmy Rubin
pipes with a slightly sweeter aroma). The female of
Ald • ... .. •. . •.•• Howie Falwl
Onphic Arts . ... . .... Tom Totes
the species is slightly more difficult to find.
Fortunately, most intelligent liber~ted women
71te Sptlctrum is eerved by United Press lntef'national, College Presa
Service, the Los Angeles Free Presa, the Los .,gales Times Syndic8te end
realize that there are much more important
LlberMion N - Service.
objectives in life than getting elected to the Student
Replblic:etion of metter herein without the express content of the
Association. However, those few women who find
Editor-In-Chief is forbidden.
themselves Uberated enough to compete with men,
but
not liberated enough to accomplish anything
Editorial policy is «Mtermined by the Ed~·in-Chitrf.
worthwhile, occasionally wander into student

A call for jUstice

s· ·

THE SpECTf\UM

Pa~ ~.The

Spectrum . Wednesday, November 10, 1971

government. This type can often be seen tacking
inane posters to bulletin boards.
In any case, these are the people to whom
millions of dollars of student money is entrusted.
WithoUt exception during this writer's stay in " the
Berkeley of the East" (remember when people really
believed that?), the first action taken by these
concerned, involved young people was the raising of
their own stipends. Then there are always other little
instances of fun and games to keep everyone
amused. This year it is the saga of the blue and while
minutes. The way this game works. you see, is to
have two sets of minutes for Sub Board meetings. On
one set you keep detailed notes of everything that
occurs. On the other you do a bit of editing (read
censoring) and release them to the public. One
member of Sub Boaid explained this away by stating
that this is the way corporations often operate. I
guess that we were expectlftg too much when we
hoped that our student 'leaders' would understand
that this particular corporation was established to
serve a constituency of students. As usual, however.
the bureaucracy runply operates to perpetuate itself
and throws all other considerations out the window.
J suppose I should offer some explanation to
those who remember that yours truly twice ran for
student office and was defeated . Aha, you exclaim!
Sour grapes! Wrong, folks. 1 can only explain that
my first candidacy was as a freshman and plead
Insanity, and that the second instance was an
obligation to a running mate and thus plead
stupidity. At any rate, I emphasize that the analysis
given above is accurate, and if I fit the mold, then I
must be an idiot like the rest of them.
Be that as it may, follow the ramblings of an
idiot through one final example. In this case let us
cast aspersions on the character of the student body
as a whole. There is a place somewhere to the south
of Buffalo known as Poverty HiU. Everyone knows
the saga of 'The Hill.' Suffice it to say that the
undergraduate students at this school decided by a
fairly large margin that they could think of little else
to do with $800,000 but buy what amounted to an
expensive amusement park. Now there is nothing
inherently wrong with having a nice place to go to
enjoy nature and do some swimming. There is
something terribly, terribly wrong, however, with
people who would spend that sum of money on such
a venture rather than put it to good use with the
CAC or some other worthwhile group. I realize that
people wiU now proceed to inform me that CAC
received everything it asked for. This is true , but
their requests were based on the funds they knew
were available. If you don't like the idea of giving
the money to CAC , perhaps some other project
could be organized. How many needy school
children do you think could be fed breakfast or
lunch for $800 ,000?
Fortunately,
Poverty Hill will not receive the
,
two-thirds majority it needs to be acquired by Sub
Board . But then , we can all be secure in the
knowledge that students will find another
self-serving outlet for the money. The revolution's
over, and nothing has changed. Be proud of yourself.
you•re a revolutionary.

�SCUM repri mand
To rh&lt;• Editor:
We noticed In to day's paper ttle use of the term
' Ms.' (raU1er than Miss o r Mrs.) when referring to
women by their last name (Ms. Cleaver, Ms.
Kennedy, etc.). 1r you're going to. go u t'ar as to
abolish the distinction between married and
unmarried, why not abolish the whole title. Would
you refer to Eldridge as Mr. Cleaver? Oh, com e now
Spectrum, you don 't want to be sexist , do you?
Heavens no !

Tfte Sociery for Correcting
Unmindful Men

A t h letic decisions
To the Editor:
The Student Assembly's approval of the athletic
budget should- not terminate the discussion of the
role of intercollegiate athletics at this University.
Before the 1972 - 197 3 budget iS considered a
referendum n eeds to be held . The student body
should have the opportunity to decide if we still
need or want to support a program of major
intercollegiat e competitio n. Furtherly, the body
should establish a clear mandate for even greater
emphasis on recreational facilities and programs. We
should establish whether or not we view it necessary
for intercollegiate athletics and recreational activities
to be mutually linked or exclusive of each other.
Hopefully the results of the referendum will impress
upon the Athletic Review Board , the Athletic
Department aria the Student Association the desires
of the University community and serve to inspire
them to create a more relevant and vibrant program
well in advance o f the next budget request.
J~ffrey Levin
Studem A11embly RepresentJJtive

Record rip-olfs
To tile Editor:
I read with great Interest the fro nt page story o n
the record price war in Monday's Sputrum , The
students of this campus sh ould realize that the only
true bargain 1S the co·op. Were the Record Runner
and Cavages not beating each other's brains out in
the true capitalist tradition , their prices would
refleet
another capitalist tradition , th at of
monopoly . As soon as o ne or the other goes under,
watch the prices "stabilize." The co-op makes n o
money. Wait the week for a record and patronize a
student-run, profitless enterprise.
By the way, if anyone collects bootlegs bear in
mind that the Harrison Concert bootleg is a real
rip-off. The profits of U1e concert went to charity ,
and the profits• from the eventual sale of the
legitimate album will go to charity . The only people
making money are the shithead bootleggers if you
buy their rip-off album.

Ira Drucker

Racism denied

'Moral'segregation?
To tile Editor:
After many years of close self scrutiny and
continued efforts to shirk the racist attitudes
instilled in me (leaving aside for the moment the
degree to which I have achieved- or can possibly
a~hieve this Ideal goal), I am confronted with
situations here at the University which seem to
question the worth of such efforts.
Recently I have been denied ad mission to a rally
held by the BSU solely oecause I was white. AJso, I
observe recent demands made by BSU for separate
policies regarding their budget control since whites
cannot know how to spend money for black
activities. Todt•Y I read (Spectrum II /8/7 1, letters to
the editor) that whites and blacks cannot even
communicate In the sam e newspaper (demonstrably
false by the present reply , and indeed by ''Black
Man's" o wn use of the press).
Equal participation and power must certainly be
affo rded to all groups in all campus activities, but
the idea of segregated newspa pers indicates to me
that racism' and the ensuing segregation is 'morally'
permissible and 'good' when it is instituted by one's
res~tive reference group.
The argument that blacks have been persecuted

for centuries anc,l therefore are entitled to a
compensatory advantage is, I believe, in most
respects a valid one. However, just because blacks
have not enjoyed steak for a few hu ndred years does
not mean that th ey should begin eating ten pounds
of filet mignon per day to compensate (admittedly a
poor analogy). A segregated press on this campus is a
cop-out from constructive problem -solving, and can
only further the goals of racists (black and white
alike) and hinder the cooperative growth and
existence on this campus. The point is that if the
members of this University cannot share a newspaper
without regard to race, maybe white middle class
fears o f 'black racism' are not without justification
and I should join t he ranks of George Wallace certainly I do not wish to be persecuted as the blacks
have been should th e black racists eventually "win.'
Prom the opening lines I have implied that tltis
Is my ' hangup,' however, the members of this
University, black and white, will have no small part
in its resolution . Nor do I believe that thls 'hangup' is uniquely mine. The universities are 'test tubes' of
society - how we approach our problems has effects
in oth er segments of the society.

DMD

Real sports competition
To the Editor:
At last Wednesd ay's Student Assembly meeting,
Dr. Harry Fritz, director of Physical Education,
ardently defended intercoUegiate sports as a
necessary function of a latge university . Is there
actually this need? We spend hundreds of thousands
of dollars so that an athletic bourgeois can enjoy
traveling about the country as self-proclaimed
representatives of this University . Further, we spend
only 20% of the athletic budget on intramurals and
recreation, programs used by a IOI.iority o f the
4tudents. It is time we reversed this i nsult to the
studenr body.
Yes, there is a need for athletics. This is why we
have intramur11ls and gym programs. Intercollegiate
sports, however, are not a necessary function of a
university, especially one that is experiencing
financial difficulties . And even if we must have
university t eams, why must we keep giving away
at hletic sch olarships? This process of buying the
services o f an athlete negates the function of sports
as a forum of competition. Its existence has
degenerated to the point where it can be described in
one word : winning. Winning cannot be the primary
end of a university team . It is not necessary for UB
to be in competition for the title of, " Jock

University, the Notre Dame o f the East, th e Syracuse
of the West."
I support the proposal that a referendum be
taken to determine whether tbe students want
intercollegiate competi tion. Hopefully they would
realize that the Athletic Department is using their
check books as a means to their self-satisfaction .
If we must have intercollegiate s ports, let it be
on a limited basis. Club sports provide fo r excellent
competition without spending huge sums of money.
Instead of scheduling pmes with large universities,
let UB play smaller sch ools with smaller athletic
budgets. Why not compete against teams closer than
the U of West Virginia, so that triYeling expenses do
not snowball. AJl these proposaJs are within the
financial and athletic realm,
The closeness of the vote (15 - 14) in favor of
passing the at hletic budget reflected the fact that a
large athletic program does not have to be
mandatory at UB. Unfortunately, that vote will
remain intact regardless of what tbe student body
does or feels. The only action left is to boycott
University games so that the Athletic Department
will know that intercollegiate sports are not a
necessary function of this University.

Jeff Benson

To the Editor:
While I might tolerate being misquoted in your
recent fro nt page article concerning race relations, 1
certainly will not Jet the implications o f that article
go unchallenged . Indeed , I previously had faith that
the editorial staff of The Spectrum screened fact
from fancy , but it seems that your writer , in her first
by-lined front page article, was allowed to let her
o wn fears and prejudices be s pelled out.
The main assum ption which Miss Mink uses in
her article is that there is a "recen t deterioration of
race relations on campus." This might be the case,
but nowhere does she s upport this claim . What she
does, however, is string together generalizations and
fab rications; at most a very weak foundation .
How can anyone even think of using the
presence of " militantly an ti-white graffiti" as
evidence of "violent feelings coursing beneath a calm
exterior"? I don~t think that the handwriting on
bathroom walls is evidence of anything, except
maybe an absence of fact. Even th e alleged quotes
are obvio us attempts to create situations which don' t
exist. What was done, quite obviously , was to select
the remarks of the most racist students in the dorms
and make them the consensus.
Miss Mink concludes her "story" (and that is
what it is) by remarking that "racial separatism is a
fact of tife.'' Perhaps, as I said before, she should get
her facts straight. ·

Steve Lazoritzz

Editor's note: While Mr. Lazoritz maintains that he
was milquoted , he does not say what, "in fact," he
did say. Students were not selectively interviewed.
Rather, dorm relidents were randomly chosen and
in terviewed. The article was a result of these talks.

Comments on comics
for your statement tha t the art staff is constant, 1
ask you, how can yo u say this? Steve Ditko, Johnny
I recently completed three articles which Romita, John Buscema, larry Lieber, Ross Andru,
appeared in recent issues of The Spectrum . No Jim Mooney, Mike Esposito, Frank Giacoia, SaJ
sooner was the print dry, than did Mr. Steven Farber Buscema, and Gil Kane have done the art on Spidey
writ e a published letter to the editor taking issue during the last eigbt or rune years. That's a lot of
with a few of the points I mad e. Initially, he seems people .
to condemn my article because it expressed a point
Finally • let it never be said that Spiderman is
of view and was not, as he said, "an objechve, not a good conuc. lt is not , however, as good as it
journalistic view." All I can say is that it never used Jo be when Stan Lee and Steve Ditko worked
claim~d _to ~e so. lt was a book review that expre~sed o n it. The guys who are currentl y doing the job, Roy
~n opuuon m th e same way t~at other b~o~ _revaews Thomas and Gil Kane, are good men,, but they have
tn . The Spectrum do. Certainly, t~e lrut.tal two ) turned Spiderman into a fantasy magazine lately,
a rt~cl~ had the dual _purpos~ of mformmg . and.. dealing with things like Spiderman growing eight
re~ewmg, but. the ~lTd article almost entlr~ly limbs and fighting vampires and monsters from outer
revtewed certatn comtc books and that was ats space rather than the more realistic problems he used
intention. To condemn me for stating my opinion in to bJve.
this review would be to condemn aJl of the book and
In his letter, Steve mentions that Spiderman was
movie reviews that The Spectrum (and most other
the
first comic hero to _deal with the problem of
newspapers) publish .
Mr. Farber agrees with me in saying that some drup. True. But, as art, I k.U\d of liked the job they
comics vary in quality depending upon who writes did in Green Arrow's book much better.
Anyhow, I'd like to thank Steve for ~ interest
and draws them , but he disagrees with me in putting
Spiderman in this class because the same man (Stan and for reading the admittedly sometimes-esoteric
Lee) always writes it , and the same artist usually comments I had to make a bout comic books.
draws it. Mr. Farber, you are so wrong, it sets my
Jay Boyar
teeth o n edge. The last few issues of Spiderman have
Spectrum Staff Writer
been written by Roy Thomas, not Stan Lee. And as

Tv the Ediwr.

Wednesday, November 10, 1971 . The Spectrum . Pa&lt;Je se'ltm

�Strong season turnout

Intramural program hayride
BiD Monkarsh's latest gem ftom the intramural and Invaders tied at 5.0-1. Tuesday (3 :30): Elllcott
department is a hayride complete with campfire and Creek Whips (7.0). Tuesday (4:30): Tasmanian
the whole works. The free fun will be from 7 to 9 Devils (7.0). Wednesday (3 :30): Humans (7.0).
p.m . on Saturday at the Amherst Stables. Rain or Wednesday (4:30): XAM (7.0). Thursday (3:30):
shine a bus will leave from in front of Clark Gym at Second Floor Goodyear (6-1). Thursday (4 :30):
6 : I 5 p .r;n. Sign up anytime before Thunday in the Sixth Floor Tower (7.0). Five teams flnJshed the
season undefeated and untied, but, at most , only one
Intramural Office, or call 831-2924.
The annual turkey trot will take place Thursday will remain so, as these teams, as well as their
Nov. 18th at 3 :15 p.m. This one and 3/4 mile foot runners-up, vie for the title.
Basketball intramurals are off and running with
race will be open to all students; faculty and staff
with the winners receiving turkeys and everyone 85 teams already entered. Fifty teams had to be
getting in a little better shape. No entry blank is rurned away and are now on the waiting llst. There
needed, but if possible, please call Bill Monkarsh at are 14 leagues in all with the independent leagues
83 1-2924 or 2926 prior to the race. Basically the playing Monday, Wednesday and Thursday nights at
trot will start at the gym , go across to the golf course the gym. On-campus dorms will play Sunday
and fmish in Tower Lot. Maps of the course are afternoons, while Allenhurst will play Tuesday
available in the Intramural Office at Clark Gym, nights at Windemere Gym . Tuesday night is women's
night in the gym which means coed badminton and
Room 113.
volleyball.
Official figures for the month of October show
Pipkin playoffs on
The regular intramural foot~all season Is over that 7603 participated in lntramurals and other gym
and the playoffs have already begun . Fifteen teams activities. In some categories thi§ figure represents
are entered in an elimination tournament with the the same people counted more than once but not•all
fmals scheduled for Sunday. The winners of the people that have used the facilities are included . So
individual leagues are as foJiows; Monday (3 :30): this figure, which represents an average of more than
Penthouse Revival (5-l). Monday (4 :30): Brunners 250 people a day, remains impressive.

BUlls' experiment with soccer
proves to be quite successful
by Dave Gerinaer

yielded the only two goals against
Gannon and finished with an
There is an expression that , outstanding 0.53 goals against
states that one never knows about average.
The
Bulls
double
something unless they try It, and center-halfback
type
defense
the Bulls tried soccer this year and effectively shut off the scoring
were quite successful. ..A 5- I punch of the opposition and this
record
was better than t played a major role in their
expected," agreed Coach Bert success.
Jacobsen. " l think thai we can
Despite their success. the Bulls
Improve our team even more next do not intend to rest on their
season. Truthfully, our o ffense lau rels. The quality of the
was not what we would have liked scheduel will be upgraded . with
to have had. Our forwards were crosstown rival Buffalo State, o ne
never able to put it all together. of the top teams in the state,
altho ugh this ~as due at least in becoming a chief attraction at
part to the fact that we didn 'I home. " With the kind of s~ hedule
have much time to concentrate on I'd like to get, I'll be happy to
offense. Since we were a new break .500" soccer mentor
team , we had to concentrate on Jacob sen remarked . "W~ would
working together as a unit; and I like to play such top squads as
was very pleased with the way we West Virginia, Pittsburgh , and
were able to do so, especially in Brockport.'' The first two are
the latter part of the season,"
among the top teams in the East .
The Bulls certainly did puU while Brockport beat Buffalo
together later in the year as they State this year and ranks as one of
notched victories in each of their the best in the state.
last four matches. The Erie CC
A number of the squad
game, in which the Bulls were members will continue playing
beaten 4 -3, was probably the soccer after the season. Some,
turning point of the season as far such as goalkeeper Tahm Sadeghi,
as Buffalo was concerned. "I plan to play for the Buffalo
think that it was actually a good Soccer Club. "I am definitely in
thing that we lost that game", favor o f any or all of them playing ·
concurred Jacobsen "because it for an amateur club after the
turned our season around. We season ends," added Jacobsen.
began to play as a team after that "You never .can get enough
game, and the results certainly experience.''
showed in our last four games.
The coach is also trying to
attract prospects for next year's
.• Defensive key
squad, which he hoeps will be of
Overall, the Bull defense must varsity status. " I'd certainly. like
be considered the key factor in to go varsity" he stated, "and we
Buffalo's success, as they yielded could have an excelJent varsity
only eight goals in $lx games. squad if we can improve ou~lves
Junior goalkeeper Tahm Sadeghi, with students who graduate from
one of 18 retumlng lettermen, high schools around the state.
Spectn1m Staff Wrlm

Bible Truth
chNP - $ .01/ copy
AT 366 NORTON

REAL FREEDOM IN CHRIST
Jllus up: "And ye ttwlll know the
truth, end the truth llhall mille you
tr.. •• the Son tflerefore ....,,
free, ye lhelt be tr. Indeed."
-John 1:32.31

'"*•

Page eight . The Spectrum. Wednesday, November 10, 1971
•

•

'f '•

I
4N

f.t. • .

I

l

t ..,

,·,

• •. / .l

't

,.,

Every high school in the state of
New York has received a letter
telling them that we have soccer
here. and are interested in their
prospects.
All in all, if the
soccer squad shows
improvement as did
club . the BulJs should
beat next year.

1972 BuU
as much
this year's
be hard to

MASS MEETING
for
ENGLISH MAJORS

f

and
INTERESTED PARTIES
WEDNESDAY, NOVEM8ER1~

3:00p.m.
****ROOM 6 ACHESON*****

We want to talk to you
about a career in law .••
without law school.
When you become a Lawyer's Assistant,
you'll be doing work traditionally done by
lawyers - work we th ink you 'll find
challe ng ing and responsible . And
Lawyer's Assistants are now so .critically
needed that The Institute for Paralegal
Training can offer you a positron In the
city of your choice and a higher salary
than you'd expect as a recent college
graduate. You'll work with lawyers on
interesting legal problems - and the
rewards will grow as you do.
A representative of The Institute for
Paralegal Training will conduct interviews on :
TUESDA~NOVEMBER

18

Inquire at Placement Office
for exact location of interview
NOTE. If reg,stratlon tor this seminar is 1111ecr.
come anyway - we'll try to talk to you Or call us
collect at the number shown below.

The Institute for
Paralegal Training
13th floor 40t watnut St Phlla Pa 19106
(2151 WA 5-0905

meet our photographers eye to eye

professional fu II color portraits
offered to all graduating students ·
passport, application; 1.0. photos
also available
appointments 356 norton, 831 ·2505, 5570

nl\

�GOOd season expectect

}'0-,.

Newman leads hockey BUlls
by Michael ZwdJ

Hockey fever rages
Bu~alo one&amp;again

Spectrum Staff Writer

by Howie faiwl
Aulltaflt Sport1 Editor

Bill Newman, one of the co-captains of the very
promising ice hockey Bulls, has been Jlapping the
puck around since he wu eight yean old in tus
hometown, Ch.ippewa, Ontario. No, he didn't play.
hockey on the frozen pond in his backyard, a Ia
Bobby Hull. Nevertheless, he has pleased the fans of
Buffalo.
Rising through the organized ranks of hockey,
Newman joined the hockey Bulls four years ago as a
sophomore. Guided by rook.Je Coach Ed Wright, he
led the team last year in scoring with 16 goals, while
accumulating 34 points.
- As one might expect of a team leader,
Newman's prime concern is the club's success. When
asked what hJs goals were for the commg schedule,
he replied: "I just hope we make the playoffs." With
the newly acquired talent and potential of the team
this year, that is certainly within reach.
Reacting to the efforts being made to get the
nation's best teams to compete with Buffalo, he
said: "I see no chance of getting the big games here
for two or three years. They {the big teams) have
nothing to gain and everything to lose."
This also brin~ up the question of Buffalo's
home ice. The Amherst Recreational Center Is just
too small. Not only do some fans have to stand for
the entire game In a freezing cold building, but many
are turned away . This is discouraging fan support.
Newman comments, " We could fill this place two or
three times over."
Tickets will be issued this year to avoid
confusion, but the problem will remain unsolved .
Due to various complications, o nly one game has
been sch eduled for the Buffalo Auditorium. As Bill
put it, " We need a better rink, that's all there is to
it."

Bill Newman
Despite this problem, everyone Is eagerly
anticipating a great year for the hockey Bulls, as Bill
Newman leads the Bulls in his final year. Although
he cannot legally throw his weight around (he weighs
200 lbs.) in the offensive zone, Newman prefers a
rough game. Newman has adapted to Coach Wright's
emphasis on skating and forecflecking, aiming
toward a perfected game of finesse.
If given the opportunity, Newman would Uke to
play professional hockey. But before that comes to
pass, he will hopefully enjoy another profitable
season in Buffalo. To say that the team will revolve
around this particular center iceman would be
absurd. This year's squad is too good for that to be
true. Newman is, however, an 'integral part of
potentially the best team ever to play hockey in
Buffalo.

-sALE
ONYX CHESS SETS
Regulation size

..-

·"·

THE TUDOR HOUSE
100 lisbon A venue

SAVEMONR
SHOP ARMY NAVY

..

MEN AND BOARD
Pre£hristmas Sale
price $25.00

..,. ,.......

7J6.7J2 MAIM- IU-1515 NEAR TUPPII

{4 blocks so. of U.B.)
1 block off Main.
STORE HOURS - for sale
Mon. thru Fri. 7 - 9 p.m.
Saturday 1 - S p.m.
Sale bealns Mon. Nov. 8th

WEEK LONG SPECIAL CONTINUES!

RECORD RUNNER

Soon, with the coming of
winter, Buffalo's most feared
parasite, the hockey "bug" will
grip thousands of Buffalo students
sometime during the season.
Its
symptoms,
developing
mainly o n snowy Saturday nights,
Include high blood pressure,
hyperactivity and an insatiable
thirst for blood . The after-effects
vary somewhat, but most of those
strickened, complain of sore
throats, hoaBe vocal cords and
frostbitten feet after leaving the
games.
The ''bug" has also been
known to seriously effect the
brain, cau sing many to partake in
weird irratio nal behavior - almost
to the point of complete insanity.
Those afflicted in this manner
have, in a frenzied state of mind,
stormed innocent IRC buses
trampling upon masses of tangled
bodies and crushing the few
remaining survivo('S to the point
of a phyxciation .
Such is the virulence of hockey
at Buffalo where in popularity,
competitiveness
and
perhaps
ability, it stands out among
poweB as Harvard,
hockey
Cornell and Boston University.
Buffalo Dull's hockey, which is
the fastest growing sport on this
campus, was a secondary club
sport a few years ago, begging for
recognition
on
any
level.
However, despite its early meager
status, ice hockey has deep·rooted
seeds , at Buffalo, beginning way
back in the late I BOO's when
"men were men" 4nd "beer was
beer."
, The Un1vers1ty was first
represented by a team m 1896.
but play was no t officially
recognized until 1933-34 when it
became part of an eight-sport
intercollegiate package. Those
were the years when proposals for
stadiums, rinks and grandstands
were
rampant
but
not
forth coming. While ideas of three
rink sites were betng tossed
around
by
the
athletic
department, the players resumed
skating o n a frozen-over outdoor
surface ~hat later became the site
UIIIILIUAILl!

We apoligize for th e confusion of last Friday's ad .
Specifically here is what's on sale - 2 for $4.95 .

lc SALE
NO COUH»N UOUIUD

PRICE ROLL
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Very Dionne - Scepter 587
B.B. King - Galaxy 8208
Colosseum - DunhiU 50062
M:C. Five - E.K.S. 74042
Fifth Dimension - S.S. 33900
King Crimson - Atlantic 8266
3 Dog Night - Dunhill 50048
50058

50068

• Big Brother - Main Stream 6099
• Fleetwood Mac - Repriese 6408
• Buddy Miles - Mercury 1-608
61313
• Winter - Buddah 7513
• Byrds - Together 1001
• Bread - EKS 74076

50078

BACK

DINNER FOR 2
(ADUUII

CHOICil OF 18 DIIHI.S

'~nt .,..,..,. ;, et , . .vtot prlc•. S.C:oiWI
.,..,,. c..ttt yov •nly h . a.t•f"f'otio~tt

....... ..
~.

4 P.M•.f:31 P.l . lAilY
3 P.M..fM P.l. SillilY

We we HOT ~... ..,.. -~~"

- ·-

......., ..... ..,. -

~- _,.Ice,

PLUS tOO's MOR£!

That's as specific as we can get.

-

....,...... _.,.,, .... ,.,....... .
....... •-'-· w. •"""- _...
..w-e..... .. .,...., ...............

_,ole ..,._,

JLAmlll'l'll SlOP

Tile ...,_ _, ,._, ,_. H.,. ..

UTI Dlfawm

III·HI1

..H ........ Atf..,tlc Stat...,

of Lockwood Library. However, a
series of mild winters prevented
organized
pra c tice
and
intercollegiate scheduling. These
were the depression years for
Buffalo hockey with interest on
and off campus d.iminilbin&amp;
considerably and play confmed to
an intramural basis one nfaht a
week at Nichols Prep School.
All was not lost however, u
several concerned students rallied
to re-establish hockey o n a ''club"
basis in 1962. Scoring ace Don
Gorney together with student
manager Ivan Makuch kept the
program solvent, mostly on an
assessment of $25 per player. ••
Club sports were not being funded
at that time and the most the
athletic department could do wu
donate retired football jerseys and
a sympathetic ear.
It was not untill 966-67, under
non-skater Howie Flaster from
New York City and Canadian
scoring ace Lome Rombough,
that the renaissance of Buffalo
hockey got underway. While
Flaster scoured the Canadian
frontier recruiting young talent,
Rombough set still unbroken
scoring records including 38 goals
in 17 games .
With this new recognition the
club progressed from midnight
skating sessions at Ft. Erie Arena
to the "spacious"
Amhent
Recreation Center and became a
member of the Finger Lakes
Collegiate Hockey League. Under
head coaches Trey Coley and
Steve Newman they gained berths
in FLCHL To urneys and twice
made it to the finals .
Finally, with a rapidly growing
campus backing. ice hockey
became a varsity competition in
1969-70 and through a 17 game
slate went 14-3.{) with a perfect
8.{).{) in the FLCHL. Buffalo
hockey was now embarking upon
a new ara. From the ranks of
Boston
University's
NCAA
championship TerrieB, Buffalo
called upon Ed Wright to become
the first and only Black hockey
coach in the nation . The "little
man with a big stick" vastly
improved
scheduling
and
recruiting in guiding the Bulls to
their
current
title-contending
position in the ECAC Division II.
We now approach upon the
1971 -72 season which is but three
weeks away. Already the " bug" is
in the air and Health Services is
urging aU students to remain calm.
They must be kidding.

IIIIIIAII ·-

•••••••c••
•••••••
1066 Sheridan Drive

Specializing in Volksw~~g~n,
Triumph, Volvo, MG, Austin
Healey, Toyota, Datsun and
more.
an-S3Q3 WINTER ~ 74-6330
BATTERY SPECIALS
FROM$15.00
&amp; up - E)(ch.
6 &amp; 12 Volt ... Installed
1 Pr. 6 volt - $30.00 + Exch.

Wednesday, November 10, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page nine
X

�-IF YOU THINK
WAS CHEAP THIS SUMMER,YOU SHOULD SEE IT THIS WINJER•

.
For your next holiday you can be in London for $190. Rome $199. Paris
$200. Or Greece $268.
These are just some ofTW~s low round trip fares for youths between the
ages of 12 and 25.
Who knows how much longer they'll be in effect, so for more details call
TWA.
.
And to help you save money when you're on vacation, send for TW~s new
Getaway* Kit.
It's free and it will tell you where you can get ...
.I

BED, BREAKFAST AND SIGHTSEEING
FOR ONLY $4.30A DAY.

,

Only TWA offers you the Stutelpass~ It is a book of vouchers you can buy
for 10, 15, 20, 25, etc. days for just $4.30 a day.
Each voucher entitles you to a bed, breakfast and sightseeing in 50 European Cities. No advance reservations necessary.
The kit also tells you where to ...

RENTACAR FOR JUST $3.65 A DAY.
In over 15 European Cities, you can drive a car all around the city for just
$3.65 a day, plus gas and 41f2~ per kilometer.
~
And how to save money with ...

SPECIAL SKI TOURS.
TWA has some ofthe lowest priced ski tours toVail,Aspen,and Steamboat.
Or if you want to ski the alps, take a TWA tour. It saves you over 50% of
the cost of travelling alone.
The kit also tells ybu how to get a ...

GETAWAY CARD.
You'll receive an application blank. There's no minimum income requirement. And no yearly maintenance fee.
Use your Getaway Card to charge airfare, Stutelpasses, tours, almost
everything. And then take up to two years to pay.
Now what's even easier than getting away for the holidays, is getting a
Getaway Kit. .
Just use the coupon.

rTwA,~~~~~~~~X.mas-~-~cml
I
I

I

Send all the information you have on bargain
vacations in Europe and the U.S.A. to:

~

1

~~~

I Addres
I
I City

.
State

Zip Code

·

1

·.

I
I
I
I
I

L--------~--------~~---~~
'"Service mark~ ownl!d c•du"ivt-ly h~· TWA.

I

'

~ ~--------------------------~----------------------------------------------------~

�AD INFORMATION
CLASSI FIED ads may be placed
MondaY thru Friday betwNn II a.m.
and 4 :30 p .m. at 355 Norton Hall.
THE COST of an ad for one day Is
$1 .25 for the flnt 15 words and $ .05
for Nch additional word .
"HELP
WANTED"
ads
cannot
discriminate on the basis of sex, color,
c reed or national orleln to any extent
(I.e., preferablY Is still discriminatory) .

~12 and · on Tues., Thurs., 1 :3o--4.
Allo her broth er, 6 y .. n . Call Ry
Nlellen 137·0201.
I'~ looking for to buy a trumpet,
folks. Call Dave at 838·1167.

Gl RL SINGER, country fiddler, plano
player. Send phone numO« to Tom
Root, C/O AI Gl9lla, 7 Della Rd .,
Eeeertsvllle
14226 .
MuSical
opportunity.

R IDE BOARD

CLAIIIFIII
MOROCCAN Imports
dill these
prices: custom made. L ..ther Pans $30; full leneth wool/cotton Capes US ; nand·mede L ..ther Baes - $81
colorful Wool Suhes - S2.SO; antique
Moretan la (Gullomlne) Buds $1/Cioz.
Call Steve 183_.707.

DODGE
Coronet,
90od
condition, $350, althou9h ne9olleble.
V·8, Inquire Apt , 6, 235 w. TupPer,
Buffalo.
BRAN8 n - lsrull ShHPSkln COil,
$45. Cell 837· 1674.

WANTED

RIDE
NEEDED
to
Chicago.
Tnankl!llvl!'lg vacation. Will share
expenses. Call Joyce 834· 1993.

COUCH, tab le, lamp, Chain, elCCIIIent
condition.
Best
offer.
Evenings,
weekends. Call 835·0721.

RIDE WANTED to St. Louis lor two
(or
Chicago
or
vicinity) . Split
costs/driving for TnenkSglv fn!l. Call
Elly 836· 1779.

1970 VOLKSWAGEN Fastback. Must
sell. Excellent condltlo!'l. 832· 1111.

INTERVIEWERS: Market Research .
Will train. FteKible houfl. GoOd hourly
rates
plus
miiNge.
No se1lln9.
873·15206 or 8P3-6084.

.

BABYSITTERS
want._,,
daytime
hours,
must
like
kids .
Elmwood·Detevan area. 883·3060.
GUY looking for a female com panion.
Write Box No . 84.
URGENTLY : 6-cyl., 195.6 C .I.D .
(1963·65) cast Iron Rembter engine In
extremely 900&lt;1 condition. 833·7270
~for- 2 p .m., 1fter 9 :3G-ll :00 p .m.
Mon.-Fri. Anytime WNkends.

RIDE WANTED to Princeton, N .J .
area 1ny weekend or Thanksglvll'lg. Call
831 ·2950.
RIDE NEE DED: NYC N ov 11th, 12th,
return 14th, 15th. Call 834·056 2.
2 GIRLS need ride to N .Y.C. for'
Thanksglvln9, Will share expenses. Call
Suun 833· 7571 .
RIDE WANTED to Queens, NYC for
Thanksgiving Tuesday afternoon, Nov.
23rd. Call 834·0772.

BABYSITTER to tiki care of T r ine,
oenlsh, 15 months, Mon .. Wed ., Fr.,

RIDE WANTED for two to BOlton
area around Thanksgiving. Call Donna
834·55 10.

everyman's book store, inc

NEED ride to Boston for Thenksglvlng.
Will
snare
e ~epenses.
Call
Barb
877·3123.

3102 Main Street
Open weekdays : 11 til 7
except Thursday, 12 - 8
Saturday, 11 til 5
An interesting selection o
eaningful books, chees seta

FOR SALE
SIX STRING acoustic g uita r, S30. Clll
Kenny 832-6684.

Hear, 0 Israel
for gems from the
JEWiftH BIBLE
Phbne
875-4265

Browsers welcome
837-8554

•

1970 JAVALIN, sllver-9ray, black
vinyl top, mag whNis, V·8 nick shift,
low mlluge, good condition, call
833·1198, Mon.- Fri. 7 - 10 p .m.

PERSONAL

NEW DUAL 1219 Turntable1"Engllsh
amplifier ; P lonMr reverb; MultlpleK
adapter; University SPNkers; special
Dynaco spNk•s; Karman Ghla excellent parts source; FriQidalre re!'lge;
Coldspot frNzer ; curt1in rod a drapes ;
Bundy flute; metal she1Y1n9. 833·7270
before 2 p .m., aft• 9 :3G-1l :00 p.m.,
Mon .- Fri. an ytime WNkends.
HEAD 360's, 200 em, cubco's, buckle
boou, poles 2 yrs. old, good
cond ition, $135. Skis only $110.
832·2376.
JENSEN Llfe·tlme column, two 115"
spkrs., p lus amplifi er , $.1.60. C111
Adrl•n 883·2 486. Very good buy.
L EA VI NG SChOOl. Must sell stereo,
$550 velue. Best offer. Marentz Utah
Shure S harpe AR . Call Mike 8 33-654 2.

MAKE YOUR

PORTRAIT
APPOif&gt;JTMENT

TO THE Nov . 4 mystery caller : If I
mlsHd JOmethlne lmportent, pl ..se
call back. You know the name and
num~r .

DEAR Marlene R. from Elmlrl! Do
you prefer Avon , Maybell lne or
Y09urt? we still love you. Dennis and
O.J.
CHICK wanted
for fun, 911 lety,
excitement. w rite name, phone to Box
85 Spectrum.

BEAUTIFUL handmldl gold and sliver
jewelry - wedding rings - at sensible
pr ices. J.P. The Goldweaver, 655
Elmwood 11 Ferry S treet, 881·3400.

TV set, drener, desk set, bed frame,
bole
spring,
etc. C all
m attress,
837.0099.

LOST &amp; FOUND
FOUN D :
biiC:k·QrOty
ttger
cat
EnglewoOd, female, 11 / 5 . 837·0827

WINTER st orage, cars, bikes. Safe, dry .
Bikes - $5/mo. Cars, Sl0/ 15 mo. Call
Dave evenings at 884 -3683.
Super
Slerll!'lg
S M ITH.CORONA
typewriter . Almost brand new . S 70 or
bMt offer . Ce ll 837·6558.

FOUND
Drown
knit V-neck,
ShOrt·SIHVI Shirl - medium SIU Wayne Rog41rs make - call Security .
LOST - Nlagar• Falls h14~h school ring
In Health Sc:lenc;es building men's
room . Call 2 8 2-665 4 . Reward offered .

ROOMMATES WANTED

REFRIGERATORS.
stoves
and
washers. Reconditioned: Clll •verld and
guarantNd . D &amp;G Appliances. 844
Sycamore, TX4-.3183.

- - ----

YOU'VE r.. d about It 1n The
Spectrum. Come see for yourself.
Student AssemblY Meeting tonight at 7
p.m. HNith Sciences Rm. 134.

DEAR S teve - have a happy b irthday .
Love, Paltl.

RAMBLER '64 mint condition. Must
sell. Make offer, I 016 N 119ara Fails
Blvd 837·4223.

I•

.

I

CASSETTE tape deck, 3 months old,
walnut venNr, $70 or best offer.
839·1827 .

~965

RIDE WANTED Chlca90 area WHkenCI
of Nov. 12. Cell 831·215 7. Share
driving and expenses.

WANTED : Peopte to altend Student
Assembly mNlln!l tonl!lht 1t 7 p . m . In
HNith Sciences Room 134.

\963 CHEVY convert. - $ '175 or best
dffer. Call Joe 838·2764.

FOR SALE - Framous 12·Str lne. Best
offer, 835 -7082.

"FOUND" ads will be run free of
char!ll for a maximum of 2 Clays end
15 words.

FOR SALE 1966 Yamaha 250 cc,
1200. N- tires, battery, points, plues,
not much for looks, Runs OOOCI . Call
838·1556 or 137-6309.

ROOMMATE want__, Must hke cets.
$60 per month 882-48 44.

MCIN10SH
C·26,
Ml·3,
MR65,
Citation 1 2, Dynac:o PAT ·4, ST 1 20 ,
T h Orll'l\ TDJ 25/SME, S l'lerwooCI 8SOO,
1licott
"~91=', '
Allee
A -7/ 500·2,
Tandberg 12, B&amp;W I,M. F ., Radtord,
Braun. Quad, Sinclair, Pho1se L lnur,
Dolyton Wright . 684-4937 •

COUPLE looking for another couple to
share bNutllul cottage neo1r Bullalo
Stolte. Dec. I , 883·0 484 , $87.50.
FEMALE grad or
faculty
snare
2·bldroom apt. Own room . 15 min . to
cam pus,$ 10 . 876·4118.

TWO PEOPLE want__, to lftare
four-b..,room house off Hertet, SIS
with utilities. Call Steven, 611-7126.
ONE ROOM partially furnlsn__, for
female. Avellable New. 15 In ..r,.
al)artment occupl__, bY couple and
child. Main and Amherst, S60 Plus
utilities. 837-6V58.

MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED: People to attend Student
AssemblY Meet ing tonight at 1 p . m. In
Hulin Sciences Rm . 134.
BRITANNICA'S
R-rch
Service
provides for 100 plus research rei)OI"U
on 111 subJects. Write G. Dunn, 22
Mudowlane,
Lackawanna,
N.Y.
14218. Specify definite mNtlng time.
TYPING done In my home. Term
l)apers, theses, d issertations. 892· 1784.
WITH MADNESS, U with vomit, It's
the
passerby
who
recetves
the
Inconvenience. "W.T.B.S.", December

2-.. .

PLAYFUL nln•wMk-old kitten. l..ltter
trained. Very hultny . Call 837.0533
after light .
ANYONE - Nlllllrl Falls to London- one w1y, $115, return $220. M.T.W.
881·0306, Thursdey nl9ht, 873·5660,
5:0G-10:00 p .m ., wNkly departures.
TVPING.
per

e~eoerlenced ,

near

u.e., $ .40

P.'"·834·3370 . Fast service.

I AM willing to buy l)apers from
EntrOCiuctlon to Architecture , and
Environmental Design. Ill. They ere
needed lmmldlatlly . Pl.. se call 3282
- ask for A lvi n.

Typ~

CC.H
JON ES Professional
Service
com puterized
IBM
equ ipment plus our ex per l enc ~&gt; give
best
possible
presentations
of
dlnertetlons,
thesis,
term P-Jpers,
resumes and employment eppllc •lion
tellers.
Loceted
between
two
campuses.
Very
rusonaole
C all
837-6558.
NV'S Hotel Tudor offers SU N Y rates.

Reservatlol'ls
832·0611.

and

lnformallon t

GEORGE Marchf181CI - The Spectrum
sllll wanh and needs you . Stop by and
s.ay hello.
FERO's RIPIII Serv ice will rll)alr
radiO, television, stereo, mtno• car
repairs.
Also
rusonab le
ates.
882.0850.

APARTMENTS WANTED
S5 REWARD for ltfflc: lency of small
OtPI. Wanted now or next semester Call
Phyllis 835-4637.

SKI CLUB PRESENTS·
ASK THE OLD
SCHUSSMEISTER
I

Dear Old Schu.um£'ister.
I heard thtJf if I join Sk1 Club. I
being a bu.\ c·uptam Wlrats tlr€' .\t oop '~

ca11 el'l'll

get paid to go skiing by

Dear Greedy .
Yot1 heard right. Those sneeky dekes at Ski Club no t only give you a
great deal on free skiing, they give you the chance to pick up a little cash as
well. For more information . come to the bus captain meeting
WEDNESDAY . November 10 (thats tonight) at 7 :00p.m . in244 Norton.

Dear Old Schussmeister,
What is ski fever "
-Confused non-skier

GRADUATING
STUDENTS!·
-PROFESSIONAL FUll COLOR PORTRAITS

Dear Confused ,
Ski fever is what inspired over I SOO crazed people to stand in line for
several hours to join Ski Club as membership was closing last year. But if
you were to come up now, there's hardly any line at all. So hurry up. Ski
Oub offers a great deal for people who have never skied but want tD )£_am
as well i!S experienced skiers.
-

I

OFFERED TO Al l GRADUATING STUDENTS.
PASSPORT, APPLICATION , I.O PHOTOS ALSO AVAILABLE
APP INTM

T

56

nRTON

ADDRESS YOUR QUESTIONS TO :

The Old Schussmeister
Room 318 Norton Hall

831 ·2505 5570 .

Wednesday, November 10", lcr71 '.'The Spectrum . Page eleweil

�Announcements
~ • The Linguistics Depirtment will present an open
lecture in Linguistics 501 "Problems and Concepts''
today at 7:30 p.m. in Hayes 404. Dr. Segal will
~peak on " Psycholinguistics."

University Travel and Hillel - Olympic jet to
Tel-Aviv, Israel via Athens, Greece. March 27 to
April 10 (~assover and spring rcx;ess - 14 days) night
$355
Package $559. For mort information come
to Room 316 or 323 Norton or call extension 3602
or 3603.-

Edpr A. Tafel, nationally prominent architect
from New York City, will lecture at the
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1285 Elmwood Ave.,
tonight at 8 :30 p.m. Mr. Tafel's topic will be, "The
Frank Lloyd Wright I Knew."

University Travel ,._ Alitalia jet to Ro me, Italy
March 31 to April 9 (9-day Easter and Spring recess)
- flight $198 - package available. For more
information come to Room 316 or 323 Norton or
call extension 3602 or 3603.
I

Schussmeisters Ski Club will have a bus captain
meeting today at 7 p.m. in Norton 244. Anyone who
is a member or is planning to be and wants to be a
compensated bus captain for Monday, Tuesday or
Wednesday night free skiing should attend.

The Student Art Board is sponsoring an
excursion to Toron to to the Royal Canadian Art
Museum. Bus leaves 8 a.m. on Saturday. Nov. 13
(returns at 8 p.m .) in front of Foster Hall. The price
of $.75 per person is non-refundable and is payable
to Eileen, Dennis, Carol or Richard at the Art
Department Office, 4240 Ridge Lea.

/

Psychomat is in the Millard Fillmore Room
today from 3-5 p.m. Be part of a listening and
speaking experience. Share in the process of
person-to-person communication.
The UUAB literary Arts Committee wants
people to help t.hem select speakers and poets for
next semester. Come to the meeting tomorrow at
4:30p.m. in Norton 261.
The Undergrad,uate Medical Society will meet
tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Foster Hall Room 110 to
discuss research for undergraduates. Those members
who have expressed an interest in doing part-time
research attend this meeting to be informed of
faculty interests and openings for undergraduates in
the Department of Bioph ysical Sciences.
A Bake Sale for Communicative Crutivity
(College A) will be held today from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. o n the Orst floor of Norton.
U.B. Gay liberation Front will meet tonight at

The Student Art Board and the Student
Association are sponsoring a lecture by Richard
Kauffman on " Basic Black and White Photography''
tomorrow at 1 p.m. in the photography lab at Ridge
Lea, building 4242 .

The Arts Committee wtll hold a meeting of
Mem-Bra in I today at 8 p.m. in Norton 26 I . Anyone
interested in working on Mem-Brain I, a multi-media
environment, please come. For further information
contact Judy or Margie at 837-0456.

The Student Polish Culture Club will meet
today at 7 :30p.m. in Norton 330.
UB Riding Club will have a meeting today at 7
p.m. for all persons planning to attend Friday
afternoon's ricte.
The Bridge Club will have a duplicate Bridge
game tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Room 340 Norton.
The Bridge Club will give free bridge lessons for
beginners today at 7 p.m. in Room 240 Norton. For
further information call 831 -3547.
The Blood of the Condor will be shown today in
Room 147 Diefendorf at 8 :00. It is a revolutionary
Bolivian film.

The Council of History Students will have an
important organizational meeting to discuss student
participation in department affairs today at 4 p.m. in
Diefendorf 202.

I ntern~tional
Conference
on
Political
Orpniz.ation will draw up to 1500 people from o ut
of town. Housing is desperately needed; if you can
put some people up for a day or two, It would be
greatly appreciated. Please call 831-5507 and leave
your name and number. Any hospitality will be well
received.

Hillel will bowl tomorrow evening at 7 p.m . in
the Norton Union Lanes. Anyone interested in
joining this activity may do so tomorrow.

Students who have not as yet picked up their
semester one, fall 1971 Financial Aid checks should
inquire at the Office of Student Accounts, Hayes A.

The Office of Cultur;al Affairs and the UUAB
Dance Committee prc~ent James Cunningham and
the Acme Dance Company tomorrow at 4 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room. The company will present a
Sound and Movement Workshop and the audience
will be expected to participate. Admission Is free,

University Travel and Schussmeisters Ski Club SAS jet to Geneva, Switzerland. Ski package in
Chamonix, France or on to Copenhagen, Denmark .
Dec. 27 to Jan. 7 ( 11 days winter recess) - $ 196 Just
flight - Package $298. For more Information eome
to Room 316, 323 or 318 Norton Hall or call
extension 3602, 3603,2145 or 2146.

8 p.m. m Norton 232 .
CAC needs volunteers for the Student
Comp,mion Program at the VA Hospital. Anyone
interested should contact the CAC office, Room 220
Norton .

CAC Consumer Protection G roup will meet
today at 7 ; 30 p.m. in Norton 242. Meeting will deal
with actions to take - comparison shopping and
also consumer
complaint box committees
education will begin.

UB Day Care Center will have a book sale today
through Friday from 10- 4 p.m. in Norton Lobby
"A" of English and Early Childhood Education
Books.
Students for McGovern will have a meeting
today at 3 p.m. in Room 234 Norton. Topic to be
discussed is volunteer workers for New' Hampshire
Primary and Campus Canvass ...,...t
Intercollegiate Bowling for Women will have
practice today at 4 p.m . in Norton . Any full -time
undergraductte women who dfe interested in bowling
come to practice dr contact Miss Poland, 831-2941,
Cldrk Gym.

Activist Youth for Israel and GTU present Or.
j ohn Houpert speaking on "The New Tri-Arabian
State" today at 8 p.m. in Norton 334.
Chabad House presents "Communication
How to Do It Better" tonight at 8 p.m. at Chabad
House, 3292 Main St.
Women's Studies College presents a film, "Salt
of the Earth" today from 3- 5 p.m. in Diefendorf
148 and tomorrow from 3- 4 :30 p.m . in Acheson 5
and 7- 9 p.m. in Acheson 70.
' ·'

Backpage
What's Happening
231. Poetry evening: Marge Pierc.y, Ericd j ohn,

Wednesday, Nov. 10

Barbdra Harr, Etnairf!, Rivera (Spanish English) .

8 p.m. in the Fillmore Room .
Film : The Prisoner with Alec Guinness will be shown Coffeehouse : Jean Ritchie, Ethel Raim. 9 &amp; 11 p.m.
at 6 p.m. in the Conference Theater.
in the Norton Cafeteria.
Concert : Slee Beethoven Cycle II
The 1ulhard Dance : James Cunningham and the Acme Dance Co.
Quartet. 8 :30p.m. in Baird Hall .
presents a Sound and Movement Workshop. 4
WBCE -FM : Musical Innovations at 9:05 p.m . Dr. D.
p.m. in the Fillmore Room .
Fuller talks about 17th and 18th Century
keyboard music.
Friday, Nov. 12
Women's Festival. Art Lecture: Merlin Stone. 6 p.m.
Norton in Room 231 Jill Johnston, Village Film : The Projectionist with Chuck McCann and
Voice Columnist. 8 :30 p.m. in the Fillmore
Rodney Dangerfield. Conference Theater. Check
Room.
for show times.
A one-man shc'lw of Film : Cot Bullou with Jane Fonda, Lee Marvin .
Portraits of Students
photographs by D.l' Blumberg. Through Nov.
Room 140 Capen. Check for showtime. Tick.ets
20, Monday- Fridi from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
$.75.
4240 Ridge Lea.
Concert : Slee Beethoven Cycle Ill : The Julliard
Antique Sho~: 10 a.m. .o p.m. at Kleinhans.
Quartet, 8:30p.m. in Baird Hall .
Women's Festival : Diane DiPrima, San Francisco
Thursday, Nov 11
poetess and authore~s of Revolutionary Letters.
7 :30p.m. in the Fillmore Room .
Lecture:
The
Fenton
Lecture Series
on Music : Appalachian Women's Band presenting
Comprehensive Health Care will have Sen.
mountain music. 9:30 p.m. in the Fillmore
javitts speaking at 8 :30p.m . in Acheson H.tll 5.
Room.
Film: The Green Slime will be shown at 8 p.m. in Coffeehouse : Jean Ritchie and Ethel Raim. 9 - 11
Room 147 Diefendorf.
p.m. in the No rton Cafeteria.
Women's Festival: Poetry: Earth's Daughters,
followed by open reading. 3 p.m. Norton, Room
-5u~ Welser

Sports Informa tion
1971 -72 Buffalo Varsity Fencing Schedule
Nov. 13: at T oronto with McMaster
Dec. 3: at Cornell with Army
Dec. 4 : at Rochester Tech
Dec. 11 : SUNY Binghamton at Clark. Gym
Dec. 18: at Syracuse
jan. 21: at Paterson State
jan. 22: at Montclair State
jan. 29: at Hobart
Feb. 5: Penn State at Clark Gym
Feb. 18: at Cleveland State
Feb. 19: a~ Case-Western with Oberlin and Air
Force
Feb. 25 : Hobart at Clark Gym
Feb. 26 : Rochester Tech at Clark Gym
Mar. 4: Notre Dame and Syracuse at Clark Gym
Mar. 11 : at North Atlantics - Pace College
Mar. 23: at NCAA Finals -Chicago
_)

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                    <text>People kill the Hill
Vol. 22, No. 31

State University of New York lit Butt.lo

Monday, November 8, 1971

'Get 'em wbile they're cheap

Record price war rages on
by BiD Vaccaro
SP«trum Stt1f{ Writ"
A
price war of major
proportions is currently sweeping
throughout the University area.
The object of this war is the local
stereo market.
The major elements in this
capitalistic melodrama are tbe
Uoiveuity Plaza branch of
Cavage's and the newly-formed
Record Runner. Both sides have
given conflicting accountl of how
it bepn. One thins is certain,
however, this rash of competition
(or "competitive situation.. as
Cava&amp;e's owner Charlie Cavaae
describes it) bepn with the
advent of the Record Runner.
Bob Meares is the owner o f the
Record Runner. He's 26 years old
with short blonde hair (to
conform with his current stint in
the National Ouard). He runs the
store with his 19-year-old wife,
Sherry.
He said that he started his first
sto re in Syracuse. This "student
sto re" is still in existence and he
I ravels back and forth from
Buffalo to Syracuse from ttme to
time to keep an eye on things.
Meares said that he felt "the kids
I in Syracuse I ought to get a
better price. So I opened up a
store to give them a better price."
" My first sto re was exactly like
the l Unjverslty ltecord T Co-op
store. My net loss was $3400.
But,'' he added , " I made a lot o f
fnends."
He then went to Cornell
University in Ithaca to start
another store. As he put it : " I
opened a store there becauloe they
didn't have a store." At the time,
Meares bought his record stock
fr om Columbia Re co rd s.
l-lowever, things changed.

Record Runner
Columbia set up a record store
an Ithaca called Discount Records.
According to Meares: "Columbia
sold to us wh.ile competing against
us." Eventually Discount Records
put him out of business.

' .. ' ... .. \ ...

This taught him a lesson, be
said. "You can't be a romanticist.
This is a cut and dry business." He
noted that when be finally left,
"Competition went up S.60 a
record.''
·
This brought bjm to Buffalo.
From time to time, students from
Buf{alo went to Syracuse sayinathere was no real specialited
record store in the Buffalo area.
Meares said: ..Well, someone
needs a store here (in Buffalo)
that has the service, the
selection." What happened was
t}lat when the Record Runner
finally came onto the market, the
cbmpetitjon's pricea went down.
Meares said that, previous to his
comina to Buffalo, the
competition was playina the game
of "minimization of risk and
maximization of profit." This
meant having a low stock of
records while charging high prices
for them. "I came here to correct
it. That's why I opened," he ~d .
"So I opened up and the
competition tried to correct a
mistake ten years too late," he
said . Meares asserted that "if this
[storefront) was still the Yum
Yum Tree Ladies Boutique, the
prices would still be $3 .99 and
$4 .99 for records in Buffalo.
He said that he is dealing with
whut he termed a "flippant
marltet. AU the~e kids care at&gt;out
is what price the record is ot I :SO
p.m .. on Nov. S. They're running
back to the very stores that were
overcharging them before we
opened."
'Want to do best'
"I am honestly trying to
provtde a store which they never
had before," Meares noted .
"Obviously, I'm guided in part by
the profit motive. Like it or not,
it's a reahty this world forces us
into.
" However. I always want to do
my best in this life," he asserted.
"That's bow I was brought up.
I'm working for me but I'm
working for them [his customers I
too. My whole idea is to do the

best I a m doing," Meares said .
Referring to the University
Record Co-op, Meares said that it
is able to sell at such low prices
because "they don't have any
merchandise and they have no
capital tied up. A record," be said,
"is an impulse good and the
consumer would rather have his lp
now even if it costs $.2 1 more."
In other words, Meares feels
" what good is a price if the store
doesn't have what you want. He
said that by balancing out
inventory, service and hours, he
believes he bas the lowest regular
priced store in the state. "This
includes Goodies, Corvettes or
any other store," he said. "Ask
for any two records for S5 .95,
Meares has any two records in a
special selection for $4.95 .
Chides critics
He said he couldn't do
anything about the relatively high
prices people are pay1ng for stereo
records. "Record wholesale prices
have gone up. Don' t blame me.
I'm just the middle man."
Mea res chided critics who
claim he 1s making tremendous
profits. "As far as enjoying our
profits, Sherry and I work 85
hours a week . We usually have our
dinner at midnight and at 8:30 in
the morning, we're up again ."
He nid : " If YQU take my total
number of h o urs that l'v~ worked
in four years of business and
divided it mto my net worth, it
comes out to be about $2.05 an
hour, What can I say?"
He said that he's not "trying to
be king of the hill. I'm trying to
market to the best of my ability
There's room in Buffalo for 20
stores, room for everybody ."
Meares felt that what his
customers want "is a hustling
record store that has the product ,
has a fa1r pnce, knows their stuff.
IS open seven days a week so you
can buy their sturr and is
organized "
H e sa1d that the Record
Runn e r has "42 limes the
mventory of the competition and

.... .... .....

....
-5Antos

With the voting result&amp; from four of the University's six
schools now in, it appean Sub Board I, Inc. will not purchase
Poverty HiU.
A total of 2994 underpaduates voted last week on a four-part
proposal concerning Poverty Hill, splittina SA's four Sub Board
votes : three yes, one no. 1652 undergrads approved the S 166,000
purchase of Poverty Hill; another I 148 voted aga.iJUt it.
On a proposition which asked whether existing or new funds
should be used if Sub Board does decide to buy the land, 1322 said
to use present monies; J 235 new funds.
The third propOSal asked if SA should purchase the former ski
area if Sub Board gives up its option. Students favored this 1467 to
1396 . SA President Jan DeWaaJ , however, made it clear that since
this was "not a clear mandate !tom undergradl18tes," he considered
buying the Hill " not a proper expenditure of student funds ."
A final question showed that only a small percentage of those
voting had ever seen Poverty HiJJ. Only 835 said they had been
there while 2028 have not.
In addition to SA's one no vote, two neptive votes will. come
from GSA and another one from the Law School. The Med
School's one vote will be yes. MFC is still balloting.
Since at least eight yes, but no mor~ than three no's are needed
to pass Sub Board's Poverty Hill proposaJ, it is thus already
defeated .
therefore 42 times the risk. But
we'll stay open all night if we have
to in order to take care of the
market."

'Don't rock boat'
Meares said that he considers
himself "idealistic." He said that
he is trying to apply that idealism
to each particular situation . He
wants the service to be one where
"each individual leaves happy.''
Meares sees his whole ideas
about business and the Record
Runner in particular m this set of
terms. He described them as ·•my
own personal philosophy with
actual, economic terms, with
particular situations and down to
earth semantics, their lingo."
He feels that the pnce war, 1n
the end, "is all going to balance
out. There was definitely an
unbalanced situation in the record
industry in Buffalo " What took.
place was bound to happen The
market
had
to
reach
nn
t.lquillbruim . However. he said,
" I'm not going to rock the boat.
I' m going to mamtJin my fa1r
prices and open more stores so
other parts of the market ca n
enjoy it."
He said. " There's a lot 'of room
ll1 town for a lot of people. My
whole 1dea ~ to do the best I can
at what I am doing in my life."
Charlie Cavagc . owner of the
chain of Cavage's sto res across the
and her JOb. She never really
disc ove rs what her job 1S
(sy rnbolism : boy. cornered a great
deal of the 10&lt;..'1!1 record market.
Now hc finds the competitiOn
more tough .
Cavage's
" It's a ~1tuation where we've
had to ~,tel more com,wt1t1ve than
1n lhl' past ," he sa1d "I don't hke
to call 11 a price war hecau~e
actually 1t 's not a price war. We
both (Cavage's and the Record
Runner) mak e mc,ney aRd arc
mal..tnl! money ."
when asl..ed what tus rl'al
motives were in lowering his
pnce s, Cavage ~aid : ''We're
workipg on having a lower price 1n
order to be of servu:e to more
people."
H e doe s n ' t think thiS
"competitive situation" (as he
calls it) w1JI get out of hand and
lead to the forcmg o ut of either
him or Mearl.'S. "The ma1n thing is
to be o f service to more people, to
be able to get more people by
changing the price so there are
mo re transactions."
Bot h the University Plaza
branches o f AM&amp;.A's and Grant 's
have been feeling the pinch, too .
Although they are department
stores and don't depend on record
sales, they do have record
departments. Also, haven't done
my homework," or words to that
effect. In the mornin&amp; he
students, through their record
depertmenta, tbey could get them
to notice her with its implications.

She then feels more atone tnan
ever. Humiliated.
A manager for AM&amp;.A's
discounted any record price war,
but refused to discuss it further
with a reporter. The manaaer
from Grant's was unavailable for
comment.

T'be Co-op
A bystander, but nonetheless a
part of this University area battle
for control of the local record
market has been the University
Rec;brd Co-op. The Co-op has
bee) around since last spring,
s e IIi n g ii l·b u m s at near
rock-bottom prices, S2.80 for
$4.98 list, and $3.40 for $5 98
list.
The Co-op JUSt took over the
room in the Norton Hall basement
recently vacated by the University
Barber Shop. lnside are Co-op
volunteers who take orden, make
transactions and man the cash
register. Students can be seen
hrowsmg lhrouttJt the aJhum
covers for theu favorite selection.
According to Co-op volunteer
Michael Shapiro, better known as
Max , record prices in the area
were around $4 .70 for a $4.98 hst
album . " All of a sudden , into the
monopolisti c atmosphere or
record sal~ in the University area
was inJected a degree of free
competition. We expanded here
I in th..- Norton basement) and the
Record Runner open..-d "
Talkmg about the current pnce
war, Max said : " 1n one hour. you
could hear [over the radio I ads
fro m Grant's, AM&amp;A 's, Cavages o r
the Record Runner setting way
below hst "
Prices constant
l-Ie s.ud th.H ·'when they sell an
album at S3.50 or $3 .70 or S3.80,
they'r..- e1ther mat...mg a little
profit or selling at a loss,
depending on what sort of deals
1 hey 've got
wllh the record
co mp.Jn1 es llr the local
d1stnbutors."
The C'o-op, on the other hand ,
"sells at a set une. Our prices are
the same right down the !me.
Sometimes we get special deals on
some albums but that is very
rare."
Max noted that the Co-op is a
to tally non-profit organization
and all its work is done through
the help of non-paid volunteers.
The Co-op also has a complete
return and replacement policy.
" We don't have a one·week sale
on labels as in other record
shops," he said.
Max believed · that the Record
Runner was c rucial in the
beginning of the current price
war. However, he predicts that
once the price war ends, prices
will not remain the same."
However, at least for several
weeks to come, area people will
be able to get'em while they're
cheap .

�Goetzinter lecture

What sensitivity is all about
and all types of encounter
sessions, are helpful in creating
means of ope-ning up
relationships. In these groups,
with trained leaders, a new and
better understanding of oneself is
possible, he said. Dr. Goetzinger
stressed the importance of
knowing oneself and then, in turn,
knowing, real~Zing and respecting
others.
Reviewing past history of the
en co unter movement , Dr .
Goetzinger told his listeners of the
beginning of sensitivity training.
He said, "Back in 1947 in Bethel,
Maine, the National Training
Lab o ratory saw that people,
honest to God , are real, Uve,
breathing indL-.'ruuaJs. They act
and interact and under certain
circumstances they'll be turned
on, and under other circumstances
they'll be turned off.,. This was
the start of the group encounter
sessions that can be so rewarding.
There are dangers involved
when people get together in th~se
groups to learn about themselves '
and their relationships with
others. Dr. Goetzinger emphasized
that he would be scared to run
such a session without the close
availability of a licensed therapist.

by Barbara Malrnet
Sp«trum Stll/f Writer

"I hasten to point out what
so mebody told me about
Monday's The Spectrum , I'm not
• But Russell - and I'm not Ralph
Nader be ca use J drive a
Volkswagen bus. So, ah. maybe
I'm Herbert Marcuse!" Not quite,
it was Charles Goetzinger, a man
de eply involved with
commu nicat ion and human
relations.
He spoke in Haas lounge
Thursday evening, presented bt
the SA - GSA, Speakers Bureau.
The 1opic of his talk was
" Alienation and the Human
Animal - Man's Jnability to
Communicate with Man ."
Dr. Goet~inger is chairman of '
the Department of Speech at the
State University College at
Geneseo and is teaching a
graduate course, "Organization
and Communication," at this
University. He is a sensitivity
trainer, active in participating in,
and educating people on,
encounter groups.
Thursday's session was in two
parts, the first a lecture with
background material, and the
second half dealth with an
audience participation game. Dr. Encounter
He explained that the way to
Goetzinger began by defining
what sensitivity and encounter personal awareness is often
groups deal with. He explained, painful, and individuals may crack
"It deals with two particular when faced with their own
aspects .. . one, your ability to inadequacies. Not everyone is
survive in a culture which capable of resolving or even
operates, whether you like it or handling their problems as they
appear in these truth sessions and
not, in groups ...
"Secondly, I suppose this runs Dr. Goetzinger advised that not all
all the way through to encounter people can become involved in
groups, we're dealing with encounter groups for that reason.
In today's world where lines of
individual concepts, how do you
live and operate and work as communi ca tion break down
individuals . Who are you?" between people, sensitivity
Continuing in that vein , he training can offer a personal
presented the problem individuals "encounter'' of individuals. Dr.
have when trying to present Goetzinger is committed to this
images of themselves to other CO.\l.&lt;;~pt and says it is important
people, whether on one-to-one to him to teach courses and
lecture to groups, in order to turn
basis or in groups.
students on and force them to
react to situations.
Sensitivity
Discussing the problems of
Once forced into a situation
communication and perception, one must react to, then the leader
Dr. Goetzinger said that the role of the session can analyze
of sensitivity training, "T" groups individual and group behavior.

Drug analYsis
To whom it may concern: The Sunshine House
offers a drug analysis service, open to anyone. It
takes 1- 3 days and they're cool. If you wou.ld like
any drug analyzed , bring it to the Sunshine House
office Room 220 Norton. Sunshine House also warns
students about bad mescaline in the Buffalo area.
The white powder, being sold as mesc, has been
analyzed as flour or PCP. Be careful.
UUAB - MUSIC
COMMITTEE
MEETING
Monday, 7:00p.m.
26 1 Norton Hall
~

MASS MEETING
for

ENGLISH MAJORS
and
In t crested parries

w• lNES DAY , N o v.
3:00p.m .

..

Diefendorf 147

The Spectrum is publish«J three
times 11 week, every Monde'jl,
Wttdnesde11 and Fride11: during the
r"f}Uier tH:ttdemic 'jiiNir by Sub·Board
1, Inc. Offices are locatttd at 355
Norton Hall, Stne Universit'll of New
York et Buffalo, 3435 Main St.,
Buffalo , N ew York, 14214.
Telephone: Area Code 716; Editorial
B31·41 13; Business, 831-3610.
Reprssenred for ttdvertising b'll
Nations/ Educational Advertising
Service, Inc., 360 Lsxington Ave.,
Nsw York, N. Y. 10017.
Subscription rates tJre $4.50 p11r
stJmester or $8.00 for two semertert

10
Stleond CIIISS PostBge paid at Buffalo,
Nsw York.
Circulation: 16,000

Page two. The Spectrum
. Monday,
November 8, 1971
.. -.,; '""1-·· .
._ ••.• · - .Oo.i .....
··-~

tll

,

..,., , . ,

\

........ , • • ..., . . .

Thus, the learning experience
takes place and can go on
occurring far alter a single
encounter has happened .
· In order to Ulustrate ·this point
and the whole point of sensitivity
training, Dr. Goetziner explained
that he would conduct a game
with the audience: He quipped
earlier, " If you are too lazy to
work , or if it doesn' t turn you on,
or if it frightens you, 1why you can
always creep out when it gets to
the hassle part.''
As soon as he began explaining
the type of game to be played, a
mass exodus of people took place
in the back of the room, leaving
approximately 60 people to play
"cards."
Playing games
Counting off in sixes around
the room people were divided Into
six groups, five were to be
working groups and the sixth was
an observing body. Behind ~
blackboard in the front of Haas
l:..ounge, Dr . Goetzinger
constructed a hQuse of 20 farg~
cards with different colors and
designs on them . Each group,
arranged separately in a circle
with a center working area and
their own pack of 20 cards, was
told they had to replicate the
model on the platform up front.
Dr. Goetzinger proceeded to
state the rules of the game. There
was to be no bringing up of
individual cards to check their
position on the model. Everyone
had 20 minutes to construct the
figur~ .and the group that had the
leut mi,takes won. 'Then he
explained the ty.pe of system each
group would work under.
Each of the five groups were
assigned a form of organization, a
means to govern the system. The
forms ranged from a squelching
autocratic type to a totally free
form, choosing any means of
governance they preferred. The
basically democratic system, with
three leaders and the remainder
workers, seemed to be the most
effective in terms of working
together.
Scuny and steppings
When Dr . Goetzinger started
the clock, people co(Jid be seen
scurrying around Haas Lounge,
pushing and stepping on each
other's toes to view the structure
and report back to their groups.
Different things were happening
in all the groups. Some people
became obsessed with having to
..win, while others were cool and
just played the game, knowing
they stood nothing to lqse.

Chllrles Goetzinger
and why people reacted as they
did . It seemed apparent that
everyone who participated learned
something, to a certain degree,
about themselves and about
others in tbe group. There was ao
right answer ,to the card house, as
Dr. Goetzinger implied, it's aU in
.how you play th~ game that was
important.
One of his graduate students
explained that in class they were
assigned the same task only for a
grade. She said that Thursday
evenings were a high point in the
week, for that's the night that Dr.
Goetzinger travels from Genese.o
to Buffalo to teach his course.
Fin ishing off the evening
session, which seemed to be at
least entertaining, Dr. Goetziner
said, "I don't profess to have
How you play the game
taught you a damn thing tonight!
Dr. Goetzinger went around to Many people wondered about that
all the groups and tried to as they left Haas Lounge
discover how the group worked Thursday evening.
The systems of organizations
began either to gel or crumble
towards the end of the 20
minutes. People screaming colors,
pictures and directions, were
observed by Group VI, as they
~p¥fateq ant\ w~tcl\ed each;group
trying to build a phallic-type
1eaping ,to':"~f·. of Pjsa .canS.
conflgurat(on~
·
At the end of the time
strangers who were thrown
together in groups, assigned a task
to do and performing it to , the
best of their ability, sat around
and looked at each other. They
began discussing the event and the
course it took for them. ~us
personalities shone out as the
project started and outright
hostility was evident in one group.

J'

II I II F

II E~t ?R

II

- :~Nif#

XEROX OAMN NEAR ANYTHING THAT C AN BE XEROXED

Gustav, Sr.
I R ill. :ZW=!'~

ATTENTION ALL S. A .
CLUB OFFICERS AND
TREASURERS
THERE WILL BE AN IMPORTANT M EETING WITH ALL
ORGANIZA T IO NS RECE IV ING BUDGETS. FROM STUDENT
ASSOCIATION.
IF YOU DO NOT ATT END
FUNDS CAN 'T BE DISBURSED!
M EETING
T 0 D A Y - ROOM 231 NORTON 3:00 p.m.

�..

Campus groups combat
public interest problems
"Silent violence'' rather than
''visible violence" currently
p'erv.d~~ America, according to
Dooat~ :Rbsi~a leading member of
Ralph·... Na'c.ter's investigative
"Raider~:· Speaking to a small
crowd io the Fillmore Room last
F riday, Ross designated such
silent violence as pollution and
industrial negligence more
" pervasive and deadly."
To combat this new type of
violence, he continued , new
methods are needed fo r " the old
tactics are not useful." Such
tactics include '' unglamo rous, gut
research" into laws, corporations
and the government. "Nader's
raide rs" have a lready been
involved in th'is type of
investigative fighting for consumer
protection since 1965.
However, as Ross explained , a
new phase has developed with the
establishment of Public Interest
Research Groups on university
campuses throughout the country.
Indescribable power.
Stressing t.he potentjal
effectiveness of these groups, Ross
explained that a university hires a
band of professionals and "sets
them loose on public interest
problems.'' Further, the resources
of the university would be
available to the pro fessionals .
However, he maintained that the
students would stilJ be in charge,
ocntrolling the direction of the
professionals and working with
them.
.. Five or 10 professionals
backed up by such campus
resources u the law sc.}loot;

medical school and computers can
do something," he said. "The
potential power of this kind of
organization can' t be described."
However, it is imperative, Ross
maintained that it be a joint effort
betw,een campuses: "Students
have failed in the past because
they have been kept
apart . . . separated by such stupid
rivalries as foo tball and basketball
competition'.·•
Probing society
Speaking of the need for the
State University of Buffalo to
establish groups "to probe into
society,'' Mr. Ross gave examples
of what needs to be done in the
We s tern New York Are a.
Labelling Union Carbide of
Tonawanda as " the most vicious
corporation," he maintained that
it is " literally kilJing its workers."
A Universtty Mod School study,
he reported, Tevealed that a
d j visi o tl of Carbide workers
ut}i(ortnl.Y contra~ted emphysema.
· Another area that needs study , he
continued is property taxes, " the
most boring area of law , yet the
basis for the financing of local
communities.''
Mr. Ross ended his speech with
an appeal for any students
interested in fanning such a group
of professionals to stay after the
lecture. Further he announced
that an organizational meeting
would be set up through College
A which sponsored his appearance
in conjunction with the Student
A.ssoci aHo n 's to tlcgi•at e
Symposium.

For peoP.Ie who have

a lot of talent but
not a lot of money.

Fidure role discussed

.

Sub Board evaluates itself
by Jeff Greenwald
Spectrum Staff Write'

Its future at stake, Sub Board I, Inc. sat down
last Thursday night for the first in a series of
meetings to discuss and formulate the role of Sub
Board in relationship to students and their
representative governments.
Generally and deeply frustrated with Sub Board
fun ctionings and image, Board members hoped that
some of ttle numerous students who have levied
criticism against them would be present to suggest
Ideas on restructuring the organization. Outside of
the press, however. only about three non-Board
members were present. With this make·up, the
four-hour meeting was a serious self evaluation, with
most members quite pleased at these initial efforts.
While a number of philosophies were espoused,
the Board agreed on at least one vital issue : in one
form or another, Sub Board should be a
policy-making organization, rather than a service
group merely passing judgment o n the bud gets of
University-wide interest items (publications, union
board , etc.).
Particular focus
The forrn in which Sub Board should exist as a
policy-making body, the extent of that policy
making and the membership o f any such Board,
however, was not decided .
Particular focus was on the possibility of a shift
in the membership of Sub Board . Andre Raszynski,
the medical school representative, suggested, " it
would be better if the people on Sub Board weren't
direc tly involved with th e other student
governments."
Others contended any credibility Sub Board
may retain is related to the membership's direct
responsibility to its particular student const'i*uency.
If someone other than a student government
representative came t9 the various student legislative
bodies asking for money for Sub Board , it was
reasoned by some, that a request would have much
less chance of being approved .

Feeling that the present make-up undermined tbe
image of Sub Board, he stated, "the only respect for
student governments comes from the administration,
because they need visible student leaders." •
Others felt the problem in Sub Board was more
a question of basic irresponsibiUty and
unres ponsiveness. Mike Nicolau, Graduate Student
Associat ion president and a Board member
professed: "Even if you put new members heTe, the
same allegations could arise ; elected officials could
be unresponsive to students too. People in Sub
Board shQuld tak~ a much more responsive role to
their membership roles in Sub Board."
Truly representative
John Greenwood , a GSA alternate to S~b
Board . maintained that this was a problem for the
individual governments : " The problem is below the.
level of Sub Board. It's up to the student
governments to make sure their representatives are
truly representative. The Student Association, for
instance, could easily make sure their representatives
acted towards the needs and desires of their student
body if they want to."
Mr. Greenwood added that stud ent government
representatives were "not elected to sit passively by
and let the student body sit in ignorance, Those of
us who do, should get out of the ball game."
The idea of Sub Board as an eventual
student-wide government was also briefly discussed.
While Mr. Raszynski said he " leaned toward" the
idea, John Samuelson, Sub Board representative
from the law school questioned whether such a setup
would be accepted by the pro fessional schools,
which have already rejected a student-wide judiciuy
proposal. Mr. Samuelson said: " In the professional
schools, we really don't share the vast mlijority of
problems that other student bodies have. I doubt if
we will ever get to the point where interests of law
students are universal with the interests of other
students."

'Evaluation and philosophy'
Commenting on the general ideas of the
gathering, Lester Goldstein, a representative from
Non-governmental representation
Modifying Mr. Raszynski's informal proposal, SA, stated : " A lot has been said tonight about
Oennia Arnold, editor-in-chief• of The Spec:tfum felt contin\.Uty, ruponsiveness, responsibility, etc. Now
that at the very least , there would have to be some we have to go back to our student governments and
straighten it o ut there." Most of those present
rc:presentatjon on Sub Board in addition t o t he
present members. Mr. Arnold , basically agreeing with agreed.
At a no ther "evaluation and philosoph y"
the philosophy of Mark Borenstein, Sub Board
business manager, as set forth in his o pen lett er to meeting bei ng planned, Mr. Borenstein is hopeful
Sub Board , proposed an increase in size to about 15 more input will be received from the student body at
with perhaps five of those being directl y elected by large, especia lly on the vital L~ue of what speci fically
Sub Board's fum:tion should be. Mr. Borenstein feels
the entire student body.
He fu rther felt that nearly all the prt!Sent that it is more important to give Sub Board a
members of Sub Board should resign in favor of definite direction before dwelling on specific issues
others not already student government officers as representation .

Women's poetry reading
Now there 's,never been on easier way
· to buy the words and music to current hits,
because now there's 0 magazir'\e called

On Thursday, Nov. 11 there will be an Earth's Daughters Poets and Open Reading
with readings b y nationally prominent women poets including Mind y Aloff, Judy Kemtan
aod Janet Goldenberg. In addition , other women who wish to read their poetry are
welcome. The readings will be held in Room 23 1 Norton Hall.
An art show and a poetry reading will be presen ted this week as part of the
Women's Festival. The art show, entitled " Myth·breakers : A Show of Serious Women
Artists," will be open the entire week and feature works by national as well as local
women artists. The show will take place in the second floor gallery of Norton Hall.

Words and Music.
It only costs $1 . And for your dollar
every 1ssue gives you the words and music
of 8 to 10 top cu rrent songs; plus articles
and photos of the stars behind the songs. '
You've got the talent . Now all you
need is a dollar.

---

Beef &amp; Ale House
3199 MAIN ST.

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Now on sale wherever magazines are sold.

....

Monday, November 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Revolution and communication
stressed by Kathleen Cleaver

As part of the Women's Festival,
Florynce Kennedy will speak
tonight at 8 P ·lll ~ .in the Fillmore
R~ · ·

Festiml speaker

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NO

COU~N

UOU IUO

PRICE ROLL
BACK
DI NNER F OR 2
I A DUlTS)

CHOICE OF 18 DJSHI[S
' '"' e nh •• ' ' ot , • oulor pr1c• S•cond
e n trH ctntt """ onfy h l~tt•rvot.ont
etwnriol.

4 P.M.·6:30 P.M. lAilY
3 P.M.·6:DO P.M.SUNDAY
W• or• NOT drOC'~tt•• our twofi ty
t tfu'tclo,tf ~
th• pr~ce bnMd on
hfo h H vf\IV"'" • W• g tit\f'f ttUr own
""""· ho~• our own oroonlc bttood:
V \4 pot._,.'\ ft . . OIOV~ b..f ..,.d Offf'l

'*"'"

...... tecJ4....

tH Yt( e .

BLACKSMITH SHOP
T~o H.t~rol

'•..1 Stool

Ull DtiiWI,.
I

Ho • ••

la&amp;·t211

Model Abortion
Program
lmnu•dintu ll e lp With No OelnyN

WICKERSHAM
WOMEN'S
MEDICAL

SIEIIIAII
1066 Sheridan Drive

,~

A black woman lawyer, activist
and author of'Abortion Rap, Ms.
Kennedy has been Involved in
struggles for consum• action as
well as the black and women's
liberation movements

Kathleen Cleaver came to Buffalo o n Friday. sure that they don't teach the true history of the
The attraction of the Cleaver name and the Korean War." She claimed that the heavy we of
revolutionary imaaes it conjures up helped to fill an heroin in black communities was the plan of the
"pig" to confuse the people and prevent them from
entire lecture room in Diefendorf Hall.
The crowds began to form an hour before Ms. uniting in t,beir struggles. Her speech was often
Cleaver was to speak . The people were systematically interrupted by cheers !tom the audience which she
herded into cro wded hallways as a thorouah search occasssion~lly acknowledaed with a clenched fist.
of each person was instituted . AJI coats were
One to nothing
chec~s n an adjacent area and no packages or
After her 45-minute speech she entertained
cameras were permited into the lecture room . The
confisC;Jtion of matf'rsals included the pens and questions from the audience. Revolution . said in
paper carried by this reporter. After being carefully many difforllnt forms , was the answer to every
frisked (not even a :.mall child passed uninspected) query. The most jovial moment of the afternoon
the crowd settled d own and awaited Ms. Cleaver's occurred when Michael Levinson asked, " What was
arnval.
the score with Timothy Leary in Algeria?" Someone
She entered the room surrounded by u yelled out , "One to n othing" and the room rocked
contingent of guards. Cries of " Power to the people" with laughter . Ms. Cleaver criticized Leary for using
and rassed fists completed the scene. The obviously drugs and claimed that his frequent tripping
sympathetic audience quieted as Ms. Cleaver began prevented him from assuming a proper revolutionary
to speak.
attitude.
-When s he left the room tight security
arrangements were once again enforced . No one was
Revolution
She spoke of revolution, but constantly stressed aUowed to leave u'ntil Ms. Cleaver had been safely
communication. " We have brothers and sisters removed from the area. The guards then attempted
waging wars in every city," she said. " What we need to empty th e room row by row . This procedure
to have is lines of communication between us aU."
failed as nearly everyone crowded by the doors and
Ms. Cleaver brough forth many points. She told hurriedly returned to where ttleir coats and personal
of her travels to Africa and the "revolutionary" belongiJIJS 'Were being stored.
mood of its people. She criticized the educational
Ms. Clcaver's -appearance was sponsored by the
orocess and said , "This is a University but I'm pretty Black Studenlllnion and Wananchi.

CENTER
133 East !illlh Stn•ut. No,~rk­
'' COM MUNITY
J\OORTION SERVICE
AF,..ILIJ\TED WITII A MAJOR
METRO I'OJ.ITAN IIOSI'ITAI.
Unequalled snfrly ro cord of
in·pntit•nt and out·Jlatlcnt abortions by IJoard·ceriiOcd gynr·
colo.:lsts nnd nnesthrslulogists.
Gr.nc•ral nnc•st h r.sin is usr.d for
patient cum fort.
low costs of abor tion procc·
duri'S'
Pregnan cy
up to 10 wks .• 0 &amp; C. $150
UJI to 14 wks., 0 &amp; C. $250
14·24 wrrks, Saline or
M•·chunocal Induction $400
I n a ll r.osc'!'l ove r 10 weeks
pre!C nancy, Wockc rsham 's med·
ica l anfcty ~ t nndnrds rc•qul r c
ovc rn i~:ht hospital s ta ys
Fr~· •~ professionnl sNviccs
availabl r to abortion pahents
includl' psychiat ri c counsrli ng.
family pl nnnin!; and bi rth cont rol. No ro fc rral nec•.h•d . No
referral fc1• or contrlbullon so·
liclted ever. Privati' ConOden·
tial. No red tape.

DIRECT SERVICE LINE
TO MEDICAL CENTER

(212) PLaza 5-6805
Call 8 AM to 8 PM

Mondnys through Saturclavs

/

r•11 , .,\ ine A.tle,tfc Stnl;.-

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present

PIN K

FI~OYD

TONIGHT, NOVEMBER 8th at 8:00p.m.
PEACE BRIDGE CENTER
Porter Ave. at the Peace Bridge (Thruway Exit N·9)
ALL SEATS $5.00
Tickets - Norton Hall or at Peace Bridge Center Box Office
1\

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, November 8, 1971

Strohs... From one beer lover to another.
Tillh IIIVH IIRni'FJl) (.Cll{PAM . l&gt;t'l MlliT, N10ti&lt;'.A!'&lt; dZM

0

�Five cent raise

NFT seeks fare increase
Buffalo commuters may be heavy third quarter loss. "We'U be
faced with a nickel fare raise at lucky now if we break even for
the beginning of 1972. The 1971 ," the company president
Niagara Frontier Transit System explained.
requested the increase ThiJrsday.
Company president, Alex Public hearinp
Trumble, stated that the NFT will
The request for an increase will
have an operating loss of nearly be reviewed by the Financial
S I million next year without the Review Bureau of the State
40 cent fare . The appeal was ftled Transportation Department. A
with the State Department of spokesman for the Bureau
Transportation, with the company explained the possible avenues the
urging that the increase take Department could take. "Under
effect Jan. 1. It stated that the our administrative policies ... we
expected increase is predicated on can let the increase become
additional labor costs qf effective without taking any
S 1,130,000 due to new contracts action or appoint an examiner
negotiated earlier in the year. Mr. who can look into the case and
Trumble emphasized that dedde whether to call public
company profits have shrunk hearing1." He indicated that
from S 195,493 on June 30 to because of the impact a fare raise
$67,998 on Sept . 30 due to a would have pubLic hearin~ will

probably be held.
.Mr. Trumble said that "in
projecting this loss, no allowance
whauoever has been made for any
increases in costs of materials and
wages." NFT is also faced with a
labor contract which calls for a
cost-of-living wage increase in
February as well as new contract
negotiations next year.
According tq Mr. Trumble the
co mpany's troubles can be
attributed to a recent decline in
riders. The number of bus users is
down 25 per cent from the level
at which it stood before the bus
strllce in 1969. He said the city
has encouraged the use of autos
by increasing parking facilities. He
also bem o aned the
"indiscrimi,nate issuance" of
licenses to taxi drivers.

Bethlehem Steel hit by labor
dispute over cutback of jobs

•

THAnHSGIVInG SCHEDULE
NKSGIVING HOLIOA Y SPECIALS TO NEW YORK

•

\

$2Q50

ROUND TRIP

*BUSES LEAVE DIRECT FROM CAMPUS
Your Greyhound student agent can get you out of town in a
hurry on spec1al serv1ce or regular schedules w1th connect1ona
to all Amenca

THIS

( - -ouR- MANIN - ,

I

mAn:

BUFFALO

CAn GET:

YOU:I , ,
I
OUT
OF
~own I
1,

KEN S IRLIN
S1UDENT AGENT
116 MARION ROAD
'-- " 836-4169

A recent labor dispute at Beth lehem Steel's
Lackawanna plant has idled some 1800 workers. The
problem arose from a rejection by United Steel
Workers' Union Local 2604 of a company plan to
eliminate 260 jobs from its payroU.
A company spokesman blamed the dispute on
''a refusal by the union local to negotiate a
settlement." He also claimed that the cuts were
necessary as part of a company attempt to increase
plant efficiency.
Jack Meta, president of Local 2604 (which
represents workers in the strip mill, galvanizing mill
and speciality products shop) said the men were sent
home after the union refused to go along with U1e
elimination of the 260 jobs .
Mr. Meta , noting that the job cuts cannot be
made under the present contract unless mutually
agreed upon. claimed that the company tried It)
"blackmail" the local. "They threatened us that they
would close our department and eventually the
entire plant unless we went along with the job
eliminations."

Company statement
In a statement issued eadie1 th1s week . the
C\ltnpany reported its position ." Bethlehem Steel has
not locked out any employees at its Lackawanna
plant. The fact is thai metallurgical employees
assigned to the skin mills who are members of local
2604 (United Steelworkers of America) have refused
to accept new job assignments at no loss in pay
"These assignments are necessary to improve the
competitive position of the plant. Because of th1s
lack of co·operation , the skin mills are unable to

operate and there is no need to run picklers, the
cold-reducing mills, nor the hot strip mill which
provides material for the cold·mill operation of
which the skin mills are part . Similarly, the
galvanizing line is affected.
"If the metallurgical employees continue to
refuse to accept new job assignments, it may be
necessary to shut down additional plant facilities.
Approximatley 1800 employees are involved at the
present time as a result of the skin·mill stoppage."
Unnecessary cuts?

Mr. Meta doubted the company's intentions of
increasing plant efficiency. He explained : "They
may have a point concerning plant efficiency, but
the drastic cut in jobs goes beyond the question of
efficiency of operations. They reaJiy don' t care
about efficiency because when they consider a mass
cut in jobs such as this, they must realize that plant
efficiency will actually drop.'" Mr. Meta also claimed
that the cut is unnecessary . "The plant problem is
not one of too r11any jobs of this type . The company
could increase the efficiency of the plant without
eliminating these JObs . . through a number of oth.:r
e\:onomic moves.··
Bethlehem recently reopened its plant after d
long shuldown during the summer. Its work force
once exceeded 17,000. Union estimates put the
number of employees present workmg in the plant
followmg the dispute at apprOlomately 7700.
Nego11at1om have been going on between union and
county officials m an a11empt to adjust taxes and
some positions 1n a bid to restore full production .

M.F .C.S.A. STUDENT ACT IVITY
FEE WA IVERS NOW AVAILABLE
AT :

,-- - - -~

1n A HURRY. ~ ,
',,'

• MFCSA OFF ICE - 205 Norton Hall
• MFC OFFICE Hayes Annex A. 9:00a.m. - 9:00p.m.
• BURSAR'S OFFICE
All MFC undergraduates who can prove extreme hardship are entitled to a
waiver of this semesters Activity Fee. Waivers are to be filed only with MFCSA
Office 205 Norton Hall, NO LATER THAN NOVEMBER 15, '71 .

...and leave the driving tour.

2400

AT 355 NORTO N

cheap - $ .08 I copy

Monday, November 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�With only four of the six student governments having
voted already, Poverty Hill is not going to be purchased by
Sub Board I, Inc. Some time between now and Nov. 20, the
Board may try to unload the purchase optiont but the saga of
the Hill will shortly be closed; th~s clearing the way for an
urgently needed reform.
CF At,~ R&gt;SStBL£
While some may still push for a Student Association
Aa&gt;lT. \
acquisition of Poverty Hill, a 71-vote margin is assuredly not
a clear enough mandate to serve as a basis for a huge
inv~ment . Further, most SA officials, including those in
favor of the Hill , have admitted that this margin is
insufficient to arouse affirmative action. Therefore, the path
to solvin{the ut issue of Sub Board's internal problems lies
open.
The Board met Thursday night and discussed the basic
Issues confronting them and for the first time, a discussion of
the Board's connection with and dependence upon the
student governments ensued. This we must regard as a To the Editor:
Publicity for students generated by the athletic
program is not the type that I happen to get all
healthy sign since it is our belie! that most of their problemf('
It appears that The Spectrum either deliberately excited about. I don•t expect to have orgasms from
stem from th is unclear and perhaps unwanted relationship.
or through ignorance has chosen to misre present the seeing Student Association plastered all over the
As stated by their business manager, Sub Board was amendment to the athleuc budget I proposed at tbe Amherst Recrealion Hall. Yet if that publicity wer~
help break do wn the distrust and sometimes
originally intended to act as a financial service organilation last meetinl of the Student Assembly. The to
Important part of the motion, as I believe I made hatred that tbe· peQple.. of tbi,i community feel for
for the governments and have minimal policy-setting power. clear, was not that Student Associatiol) be s tenciled students, I Unnk ..,e sh'ould use it.
That is why I proposed that aU publicity,
The Board's history during ·the last two years, however, has o n all unifo rms - that was never proposed - but
chat the !!l uden ts of this University, who after all pay prograrnt~ and materials put o ut by the Athletic
shown nearly the opposite, as it became a powerful organ fo r the program , be credited for it.
De partment include the fact that their program is
through a series of aggrandizements and incorporation. This,
The. Athletic De partment puts a tremendous funded by the student body . not the University . If
that means labeling the teams Student Association
in · turn, was aided by an increasing tendency of the amount of material Into the local media . It is, Hockey
Team . etc.• then I think that should bt'
without exception , positively presented by the
governments to allow and even help the Board to usurp much media . It is in fact one of the few sources of positive done.
Part of the motion did concern any uniforms
of their decision-making power in the realm of student material that the media accepts about the University.
Yet it is not the University who gets the credit purchased in the future by the Athletic Department
finances.
for having the at hletic team, nor the alumni who If someone had wanted to delete that part , J
As a result, the Board grew quite rapidaly, and as often o ft en see a great University i n terms of victories on wouldn't have been too disturbed . That was not
t. But I believe the idea behind the motion
happens in cases of instantaneous expansion, created a wave the s ports pages, who have to pay for the program . impd'rtan
It is the students who ha ve to shell out the was important. That idea was that students, no t th~
of bad feeling towards themselves. While much of this has money that makes athletics possible. ft is students University, s hould get credit for the programs that
been less than totally correct. the Board's unwillingness over who are the segment of the University distrusted by are theirs.
David Steinwald
t he o ul.llide community and it is students who are
a long period of time, to explain their goals and ideas, served going
S tudent R;Kirll Coordtnaror
t o have lhe most hassles out in Amhent.
to reinforce the images of them as omnipotent and
unresponsive power-mongers. Of late, they have taken
reading and consideration, selected this particular
significant steps towards dealing with this ill will and this To tlt1• Editor.
script for its merits : The Spectrum critic is able to
must be cont inued if they are to survive.
The Stud•o Arena Theater is ., significant predict the potential success or fai lure o f this play
One distressing point must be noted, namely that only cultural institutio n in the City of Buffalo and we without ever having read the scrip t. Buying Out will
believe the facts concerning it sho uld be accurately be followed by The Me Nobody Knows. a joyous
three non-Board members attended the Thursday night reported
in 111e Spectrum.
and meaningful theater e xperience for audiences.
Introspection session. If the Board is to be reformed and
Item I : The Studio Arena Theater is a regional yo ung and old . The original musical planned fo r
made more responsive to student needs and wishes, they will lheatcr, &lt;We of th e few professional regional theaters January, Mamma, Is a major undertaking for any
Still successfully operating in the country. A regional regional theater. The critic is unawa re (perhaps due
need participation from wide segments of the_student body. l heater is an institution which, in a local to
his age) of the current wave of nostalgia in the
In order to stimulate such input, we feel it would be wise to enviro nment, runs a quality professional theater arts. Romeo qnd Juliet . with an outstanding cast,
try a series of public hearings in which specific topics, among which is managed both financially and creatively at fulfills the theater's responsibility to provide classical
the local level ; which produces its o wn productions theater as part of its programming. In contrast, Tht'
them the question of reform, could be explored. While such using the best available talent, whet her it be local or Tr ial of the Catonsvill/e Nine , a new and
h~arings often fail to develop constructive proposals, the o u t · of- town. Regional and repetory are not controversial play , will afford the theatre the
necessarily synonmous, although there are regional
to deal with contemporary social and
time has now arrived when the Board must resort to such theaters which operate as repetory companies. The opportunity
political issues. Man of lA Man cha is a classic with
extraordinary actions.
NOW theater company is an example of this. In wide appeal. This season offers a wide variety of

11f£ BeST

Give students the credit

Studio Arena appreciated

Vol. 22, No. 31

Monday, November 8, 1971
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-Man.ging Edit~ - AI Benson
Co-Managing Editor - Mike Lippmann
Alit. MIMging Editor - Susan MO$$
lkltin- Mln•r - Jim Drucker
Advertising Mlneger - Sui Metlentlne

C.mpus . • . • ... . Jo-Ann Armao
• . ....Howie Kurtz
......••. . .... . Bill Vaccaro
Clcy . . . . . • . . . . . . Hervy Lipman
Copy ...•. ..... Ronnifor~n
..... .... .. .. ..• Merty Gatti
A• . ..... ... Cla ire Kriegsman
Feature . . . . .
. . . ......vacant
Graphic Arts ... , ..... Tom Toles

Layout

...... MllfVhope R unyon

Asst . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . .vacant

Lit. II Drama .. M1chael Silverblan
Music . . . . . . . . .... Billy Altman
Off.Cempus . • .. Lynne Traeger
Photo .. . ....... Marc Ac:kt!fman
.......... Micl(ey Osterreicher
Spores ... . .. . .. .. .. Barry Rubin
Asst . .. . ........ . Howie Faiwl

The SfJ(ICtrum IS served by United Press International, College Press
Service, the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los angeles T1mes Syndicate and
Liberat ion News Service.

Repub lication of matter herein without the expr-ess consent of the
Editor-in.Chief Is forbidden.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page six . The Spectrum .

tday,

November 8, 1971

addition to presenting their own productions, when
an oppprtunity arrives to present an o utstanding
prove n production, the theater, rather than
duplicating the effort and expense o f mounting its
own version, prefers to offer the highly acclaimed
and critically well-received version. The Lincoln
Center's Play , Strindberg has been made availalnlt'o ~.
the Studio Arena Theater on a reciprocal basis. The
lincoln Center production will o ffer the Buffalo
theater-goers an opportunity to see this o utstanding
production. In return, · at a future date, the New
York theater-goers will have the o pportunit y to see a
Studio Arena production.
It em 2: The curren t Studio Arena production ,
Th e Gingerbread Lady, is playing t o capacity ho uses
at every performance. If, as The Spu trum critic
suggests "people are not interested in the kind of
theate r the Studio Arena always does," who Is filling
the house1 Mr. Silverblatt's critique o f Neil Simon's
play proves that o!d mallim : You can pl eas~ some of
the people all of the time; you can please all of the
people some o f the time; but you can't please all of
the people all of the time!
Item 3: The next production at the Studio
Arena is the world premier of Larry Ruman :r Buying
Out. This play has been chosen for presentation out
of the many new scripts by fledgling as weU as
proven playwrights which have been o ffered to the
theater because of the Studio Arena's national
reputation for honest productions of new works.
The professional theater staff, after months of

theater experiences.
Item 4 : Grants are governed by prescri bed laws.
The Studio Arena Theater has always used its grant
money in accordance with the grant requirements.
Specincally, grants enable the theater to present new
pro du c tio ns of an experimental nature, not
necessarily as part of the regular subscription season.
last year, two experimental works were presented ,
each for a week's run : 3cenes from American Life
and L.A . Under Siege. Scenes was later presented in
New York and favorably received . Those
theater-goers who are educated and sophisticated
may c h oose t o see these productions, but
avant-garde and experimental theater does not
appeal to the majority of our local theat er-going
audience.
Item 5: The undersigned members of the
academic community have lived in a variety of cities
in North America, many larger than Buffalo but with
far Jess in both quantity and quality o f cultural
opportunity. 1- s a result, we can appreciate the
exceptional quality of our regional professional
theater. the Studio Arena.
Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Zionts
Dr. and Mrs. Richard G. Brandenburg
Dr. and Mrs. Ruput R. Brook
Dr. and Mrs. Michael A . Schwart z
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Jen
Dr. and Mrs. Jerom e Fink
D;. and Mfl. Kenneth Laughery
Dr. and Mrs. Philip Ross

�.

.

SA-iustifll your decisions
To th1 Editor:

(1-7

In deallna with tbe mechanism of formal
orpnlzations, one must realize tb.at there are
JUidelines for .U operatio111 of the orpniutions.
Sometime~ these &amp;Wdelines are so rilid that one
must prepa~ a cUaertation in order to obtain the
eaentiaJ materials that will enable him to make h.is
input into the orp.nization.
In order for one to operate within tbe
orpnization or defined system. one muat \tnow the
guidelines under which he must operate. If these
guidelines are not Biven and interpreted to the
individual, one can only conclude that the
organization or system does not want him to make
any inputJ into its function or operation.
When one becornes a certified nenber of the
State University of New York at Buffalo's
undergraduate student body, he has ,the soie right of
participatina in functions serving the undergraduate
student. Sometimes these functions are in the form
of orpnizations and the individual must apply for
membership throu&amp;b the established criteria of that
organization . If he i.s rejected, he is told why, when
and ho w he can reapply; and o n what bases he was
rejected.
·
The Student Association has been rejecting the
budget proposal of the Black Student Union without
any reasona for the rejecuon or by what criteria the

bu4ae~did not comply with. When the budget Wllll
approved. it was approved for less than half of the
requested amount without any justification for the
budcet cut and witb the overtone of Ni~'' hr
grate{lll.
The Student Association not only cut the
budcet of Black Student Union and disapproved
other requests but deniW the Black students the
ri&amp;bt to have a campus newapaper. Their justification
wu the fact that the~ are too many newspapera on
Campus at praent .
Black students couldn't help the fact that t he
University was not open to blaclu at the time these
other newspapers were eatabllshed ox that they have
never had the funds to e:stabU.h a paper or tbit they
have never had asses to a Campus printing press.

If the other newapapers that are established by
whites for whites to communicate with whites can
be justified by the Student Association, then a
newspaper established by Blacks, for Blacks to
communicate with Blaclu can be justified on the
same premise.
The Student Association must stop playing
"God" and give the proper justifications for
decisions made to govern the people or prepare itself
for a position in History beside the Roman Empire ~down faU .
A

8/a~k

Man

No Golden Age

Health for profit

7'o lht' Edllnr.

To the Editor:
In read ina current issuell of Tlr r Spectwm , I
have come ac ross several advertisements for
contraceptive foams that are the epitome of false or
misleading adverti~ing . Complete reliability in
preventing pregnancy by use of these products is ·
alluded to, although statistical ~vidence of their
cffectiv~ness is not given. In the November 3rd
Spectrum , a new product from Ortho called
Conceptrol is advertised as being "an easy method o f
Birth Control." There is another ad in the same issue
that extolls Emko Pre-Fill as beina "highly effective"
while stating an the same paragraph that "nothing
else IS needed t Hl&amp;}lly effective does not mean that
11 is 100% .Cfective and therefore some ot her
precautio nary measure (like a condom) should be
used along with the foam to msure against
preganancy.
The actual ~tat ast1 cal data 1s as follo ws . The
clinical faslure rate IS IS 25 pregnancies per I 00
women ustng this method for one year (Birth
Con tml Handbnn/.., McGill Untversity). "Pmko
Foam Is reputed to have :t 20% preganancy rate anc.J
1S therefore not o.~n l!ffective contraceptive" (Our
Bodir1 Ourst&gt;lt•n, Bosto n Women's Health Course
Collective).
It seems that health care in tlus country has
• become just another consumer item. Big business has
taken over even this aspect of our lives, with health
care industries consl;:ently on the rise (i.e. nursing
homes, drug companies. medical supply companies.
and health insurance l.:ompanies). Profit is the
ulterior motive as opposed to adequate low-&lt;:ost
health care.

Sh('liq Or/l(:k

Price increase
To the Editor:
I would like to bnng attention to a recent
tncrease tn the price of soda in the two I st floor
cafeterias in Norton. Before we were able to buy a 9
oz. soda for S. l 0 tn a wa cup. Now, these c ups are
no longer available and one must buy soda in a glass.
The soda is still S. l 0 but the glass only holds 8 oz.
This is in effect a 12~% increase in the price of soda.
You can see for yourself by buying a soda from
either the express line or the rat (it still comes in a 9
oz. cup) and takmg one of the glasses now being
used from o ne of the racks. If you pour the soda
from a filled cup into the glass you will notice more
than ~ inch in th~ bottom of the cup. Hence the
price increase in soda! ln this way food service has
been able to continue to charge even more for their
poor food and worse service.
I hope that pressure will be put on food service
to return prices to what t hey were i.e. charge less for
the smaller soda or give us back the larger cups. If
not it just might be better for studen ts to rip off the
glasses thereby forcina food service to give up its
latest method of squeezing more out of students.

Lately, all sorts of people have been trying to
take the life of this University. They are apparently
about to succeed. Most of the liveliest £1Udents and
faculty are dispirited and withdrawn . Some of the
hest have al ready resigned . We are not exactly in the
midst of a Golden Age. Indeed, by now an intnu:nse
amount of hard work is needed sim ply to keep UB
half alive as a place of teaching and learning. With
real tasks so demanding, it is odd that Dr . Clauc.lt:
Welch and his coUeagues have busied themselves with
anventing an elaborate plan for make-work - vil.. a
procedure for deahng with "student :tcademic
dishonesty." Who needs it?
(l am aware there ts an ulterior need for such a
procedure which serve~ • as a secret ~pur to Its
development
vi£. IU insure a semhlance of "due
process" in order to protect Albany against suits for
breach of contrJct
but surely such a need IS not
the business of a ~mmunity of teaching ;~nd
learning.)
It is no secret most students are here because
they think they have no better place to go - most uf
them are probably right and because when they do
leave, they want tbe least de meantnl: and mo:.t
lu cr;~livc bad job they can get, and because a good
reco rd at n university , they think (and again they are
probably right), is the best irrelevant c redential for
such a job. So they want high grades, yet perceive at
the same time that a grade as an unworthy gual.
Nevertheless, as they have no other, the grade is their
goal. ( We are livsng in 1.1 post·Orawsng·the·Ltne Age.
Youthful cynicism has followed hard upon excellent,
but co-opted, social crith:ism. By now our students
all know haw to draw a line - they just feel it is no
longer worth the effort.) So they refuse to feel
ashamed of their unworthy goals. On the other hand .
they know st is stupid to waste one's best energies
and time of life in the pursuit of such goals. So they
do not ex~ust themselves - they are not stupid
many of them ..cheat." Why not? Should we not
applaud young men and women who refuse to
exhaust themselves in the pursuit of an unworthy
goal? (We should applaud more loudly, perhaps, if
they abandoned such a goal altogether.)
(Incidentally, an all this students are only
1m1tating many of thejr teac hers. What is the ethical
difference, I should like to know , between cri bbing
on exams, or plagiarizing term papers, and lecturing
by rote from a textbook you have not even written?)
But what does any of this have to do with the
orocess of teachinR and learninR? Verv little. I am

afraid, and that is just my point. Real teachers are
interested sn teaching real students, and real students
are interested in learning with real teachers. Jf others
"cheat,'' who cares? For the moment they are
unreal. Too bad they must seek shelter in a place
that wUJ not satisfy their reaJ needs. It is a pity. We
Ametu:ans ure not exactly living in a Golden Age.
But at least the University provides many with
shelter, and while they are here they probably
cannot help lea1ning a thing or two. The rest of us,
the minority perhaps , should be glad of that.
Mcanwrule we find ourselves excitedly engaged sn
teachina and Jcarn1ng with one another, such as we

arc.
But some of my colleagues wlll object : Why
should an honest tucher permit his time of life to be
wa~ted h)l a (tl·~:ulled student who submits, uy, a
l'iirer ht h11s not written? Reading papers is hard,
careful W(lrk . indispensable to certain kinds of
le~un1ng
but who needs 1t if the writer hims~lf
obviously dOl" ' nul care ah uut learning? Yes, yes.
But ~utely I he answer JS not , pettily, to withhold the
grade or, worse, to throw the young person ou\ of
w)lat. through no fault ot his o wn, is the likeliest
place he has to go. A wiser policy, I think, when a
teac her has ascertained a case of plagiarism beyond
reasonable doubt , would be to :tnnounce to bis class
that he has llJVen the offending paper an automatic

A.
In tht: case of examinations, another factor
enten;: fo r 1t is an insult to an honest teacher, and to
his worthwhile subjt:ct, to c heat before his eyes the so-&lt;:alled student thereby flaunts his refusal to
take either teacher or subject seriously. The teacher
should announce that all students who wish to cheat
should either hand in a blank sh eet at the start of an
e xam or take that exam, with or without their
friends, 1n another room . He should make clear that
tn e1t her case such an e:umination would receive an
atuomatic A, without (further) penalty.
But some of my colleagues will object: Such
policies would publicly reward di.s~onesty . Not at
all. Let me suggest an analogy : Every Wednesday
evening I set out four or five cans of rubbish' in front
of my house, wasting for the sanitation men . If J
spotted one of my students surreptitiously
attempting to steal the contents of one of those
cans, s urely 1 would not caJJ the police. Rather l
would call out to h1m and gladly offer what he
wanted
so long as he did nqt make a mess. Good
nddance to bad rubbish, no"
Burton /. Weus

Correction : The following was inadvertently omitted from the article entitled "Th~ other side of
Poverty Hill " by Mark Borenstein , Business Manaaer of Sub Board I, Inc. in the November 3 issue of
The Spectrum:
It is unfortunate that The Spectrum, (and others) has chosen to present the facts on this issue in a
slanted and most biased manner. The mere fact, that two paaea were aiven to the Campus Editor in
three successive issues, to say th~ same thing over and over aaain (each time usina more vehement and
more sensational terms) tells somethina of the manner in which the information was presented by the
campus press.
The cries of "criminal behavior" and "n~iaent actions" emlnatina from the campus papers, have
done little except to distort the facts, divide students and generally misrepreaent both Sub Board and
Poverty HiU. For this they should be condemned. AlthouJh journalistic license permits newspapers to
express editorial comment in editorial columns (commmtaries or news analyaes), perhaps The Spectrum
dlould reconsider their policy of liberally sprinklina larae seammts of their paper with the editorial
comments of their staff.

Disgustt!d with Food Service

Monday, November 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�c~

All CAPITOL and A~LE Albums-on

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Special Sale
THE MESSAGE
.
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ttft

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IPINK FlOYD

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REUCS

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STEVE t.tU.ER

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\
Page eight . The Spectrum . Monday, November 8 , 1971

AND
THAT
THEY
WILL

··

-

-~
I

~
.

�- -•

Above, the logo~' the Performance Retearch Unit. It is a n equation moving from zero to
infinity with positive and negative polarity. The Research Unit is presentlv wort&lt;ing o n a
performance version of Beckett's The Unnamable.

Performance Research Unit

Production level is expanded

InterGalactic Music

P i n k F lovd , o r igi n ators of
outer·space rock, will perform at
the Peace Bridge Center tonight at
8 p.m . The British band has
received much critical acc:laim for
t h eir exp eri m e n tal use of
efectronlcs. Thev also have been
recognized as one of the few
bands capable of ptaying rul
"psychedelic" m usic.

BUFFALO MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM
FRIDAY, NO". 12 at 8:30 P.M .
All Seats Reserved: Front Floor. Golds and Reds
Rear Floor and Blues $5.50 Greys and Orange

$6.50
$4.50

rick- - Mt. ••• ot luffolo F.otivol Tlcht Office, Stotlor-Hiho" L_..t.r;
U.l . NortOft Ho i!; Stoto Collot~• Ticket Office. folh Tlch11, Ho.-...Jo
" · · ·· " ' - - • folk.

WE'VE F INALLY DONE IT,
NOW ITS UPTO YOU!
Applications for the Student-wide Judiciary are
now being accepted in room 205 Norton, the
Student Association Office.
For further information
contact

Tom DeMartino

or

Our body of knowledge is growing daily,
constantly expanding in aU directions . Rarely,
however, is information from o ne field used
imaginatively in a totally different area. Rathe r, new
information tends to remain within the confines of
the discipline from which it is issued . The amount of
dedacation, hard work, lime and energy that
necessanly go mto the discovery of new knowledge
make this situation a genuine waste of a ·lllost
valuable resource.
Th e Performance Research Unit of the
American Conte mporary Theatre, Inc., located at
1695 Elmwood Ave. (formerly the Dom~ Theatre)
is a professional company of artists seeking to
extend t he boundaries of performance events
through t he use of this untapped know ledge wathout
sacrificing the vartues of the usable traditio ns of the
past. It is an uncompromising organization where
integrity, puri ty and deep involvement are present in
everything it does.
Defmitions
Before proceeding further 1t IS vital 1hat the
terms we use be completely understood so thai there
can be no confusion as to where the uni t stands:
Pufnrmance - " the formal exhihation of a skill
or talent ; fun rtioni ng with regard to effectiveness of
operation (e .g., the ' performance' of an
automobile)."
Rt•sc•arch
"t he careful, patient , syc;tematu;
study and investigation in a field of knowledge,
undertaken to establish facts or princaples."
Dts&lt;·o~en•
"being the first to find out. see or
know ahout; to realize reveal or disclose ; to expose
or uncover."
These are the basic tools which e nable the realization
of the ri ch es harking deep within any pursuit of t he
mind .
AI present , an adaptation of Samuel Beckett's
The Unnamablr is proceeding toward production. To
clarify the character of the task : the unit works
approximately ten hours per day , seven days a week
on the various aspects of preparation . All the labor,
from physical work to intellectual analysis is
undertaken with one overriding dictum in m ind : that
it bring o ne closer to the very core of Beckell 's
thinking and th erefore to the deepest understanding
of his writing so that the ultimate performance w1ll
be pure and true. Fundamental to all preparation IS
t he individual, for to deal with any work one must
deal with o neself. As the individual matures so,
correspondingly, d oes the wo rk .
In seeking to plumb the deepest recesses and
harvest t he greatest effect from the novel the unit is
utilizing input from such diverse areas as physiology,
electronic engineering, phys1cal culture. theology
and sculpture. Each of these disciplines has
invaluable information that can be found nowhere
else which adds a depth and integnty to the process
that would otherwise be im possible to achieve.
The staff
The Amer~an Contemporary Theatre, Inc . IS
under the darection of Mr. Joseph Dunn and Miss lrJa
Koljonen . Mr Dunn is a graduate of the Ameriuan
Academy of Dramatic Arts and has directed
off- Broadway. In 1966 he won the OBIE Award for

his production of Arrabal's Autom obile Graveyard
for " De~ign, Lighting a nd Stagina for Audience
Involvement." Henry Hewes, in Saturday Re~i~w·s
" Best of the Theater Season" called this production
" The Most Indelible Theater Experience o f the
Year."
Miss Koljonen is a professional actress. She
attended the National Theatre and Film School of
Helsinki, The American Academy of Dramatic Arts,
studied with Stella Adler and at the Eastman School
of Music in Rochester. She was a leading ac tress in
television with regular credits o n Studio One, Phi/co
Television Th~atrt, Broadway T.V. Theatre, Big

Story, Guiding Light, the Kraft Television 17re4tre
and Show of Shows . In all she has appeared in
leading roles in close to 300 television productioos.
Mr. Dunn and Miss Koljonen 'lllso teach a course for
College Bat the State University of Buffalo.
,
The Performa nce Re.search Unit is seeking to
establish a growing, dynamic center for research and
dio;covery which will lead to performance events of a
nature and scope made possible only by the most
demanding type of concentrated effort. The goal is
personal, individual, o n-going growth. There is no
mag~ c talent nor any secret ability necessary to the
production of worthwhile prOJeCts. All that is
required is bone-crush ingly hard work, an enormous
commitment of time and energy , and the high est
level of enthusiasm and dedication which is
necessary fnr any maximum achievement. This is not
rhetoric. The work performed is no t " fun ." The unit
is engaged 1n the very deepl&gt;st expense of effort and
energy . The const3nl challenge and the opportunity
to work in ~ouch an atmosphere make the experience
its own reward .
Deep commitment

The unit IS seekang input from and expansion in
every direction : artists. dancers, media and
elec t ron1cs people, engineers, builders,
demographers, writers , ant h ropo logists,
mathematac1ans, sociologists, psychologists, office
staff, management personnel, accoun tants and others
from any disci pline be t hey u ndergradua te, g~aduate ,
staff, administration, professional or outside the
University comm unity entirely.
This IS the process that makes everything
possible: the chance to work as an autonomous
tndiVIdual for one's own enrichment, challenged in
very specifil. darections; free to develop your
personal capacities t o their highest potential,
surrounded by an a1r of reason and unencumbered
by the mysterious inanities of ..creative" people. The
fulfillment ava1lable under these condttions make the
agonizing effort well worth endunng.
The Performam:c Research Un11 is not a group
tn any collectave sense of the word , nor is it seeking
the work o f groups If you are do1ng your work for
fun , this is nul t he place to do it. Individuals with a
deep and abiding commitment to their own personal
endeavors, who know the a m ount of painstaking
effort that is re4 uired to produce anything pure and
valuable, are actavely sought tn share t heir
knowledge w1th o thers who waJI respect and cherish
1t as they do.
The phone number is 877·9053, the door is
open.

WASHINGTON SURMUS CENTER
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730-732 MAIN - IS).1S1S NIAR TUPPIR
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on
ALL- redecorating ateeds,
art supplies, picture framing
D.M. RECH PAINT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.

AUSTRALIA
NEED'S TEACHERS
NOW!
Stck of hassling smog,
unemployment ? Growing
needs, all subject areas.
For full inform.
Send $ 1.00 to:
Inti. Teachers Placement Bureau

P.O. Box 19007.
Sacramento, Calif. 9 58 19

Monday, November 8, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page nine

-

�Hockey Bulls adopt new
plan for ticket dispersal
by Barry Rubin
Sports E.'dilor

With the varsity hockey season
slated to begin on Nov. 27 against
New England CoiJege, the age old
,?roblem of obtaining t~ckets has
hegun . Dr. Harry G. Fritz,
director of athletics and Joe
Ashwal, chairman of the student
athletic review board, have come
up with a plan designed to
facilitate an orderly dispersal of
tickets for home games on the
Amherst Recreation Center ice.
Instead of having every student
who wants to attend a game,
showing up on the night of the
game, tickets will be issued at
Clark Gym during the week
before the game. All Buffalo
undergraduates are entitled to one
ticket upon presentation of an
identification card.
Last season, chaos existed at
several of the games especially the
ftnal game with Oswego when the
turnstile count listed 1439 for the
1964 Amherst seats. Dr. Fritz
commented: ..We're attempting to
gain the widest and safest possible
student use. We don't want people
out there that we cannot
accommodate. Last year hundreds
couldn't get In causing chaos and
the flaring of tempers."
Additionally , Dr . Frit z
indicated that there will be no
gate sale of tickets, as in the past
when 200 tickets were held for
public sale. Instead I00 tickets at
two dollars per ticket have been
sold to the Golden Bull Fund ,
whose members contribute to the
Buffalo athletic scholarship and
sports program.
Rick Wells , chairman of the
Golden Bull Fund, commented :
" We have many alumni interested
in the hockey program. and we
would like to sell our allotment.
However, if no t all I 00 are used.
we will return the rest for use by
the student body ." In any case.
the hockey Bulls are virtually
assured of an income of $200 per
game, which will b.:: returned to
the student athletic review board

in th«! form of generated income.
In addition to ticket problems,
the Bulls have had trouble getting
together with the Amherst rink on
the starting time of games. The
Bulls, who pay Amherst a fee of
$30 per hour and $100 per game,
were hoping for an 8:30 p.m.
s t arting time, however, Mr.
Collins, manager of the Amherst
rink has been unable to guarantee
a set starting time.
Other possibilities for Buffalo
were rinks in Lockport and
Nichols School, but they were
ruled unfeasible due to distance,
seating and prior i ce
commitments. Dr. Fritz added:
.. l ee is tight now, but the
situation should get better once
the town of Amherst finishes
construction of its new ice
facility."
Buffalo students and the
hockey Bulls may have to put up
with the Recreation Center until
the late 1970's when the planned
Amherst SUNY campus rink will
be completed. Dr. Fritz remarked :
"Plans are tentatively for a rink
seating 2500, but that end of it is
stiJJ open."
The probable salvation for the
Bulls could come downtown at
the Memo rial Auditorium where
Buffalo meets Ohio State, Sunday
afternoon, Jan. 23. Dr. Fritz calls
the Ohio State game "a key" and
hoped for attendance of 5000 or
6000 to make Auditorium dates
feasible. Dr. Fritz also projects
that one half to two thirds of the
future hockey schcdulina will take
place downtown.

Basketball great

Bill Russell visits Buffalo
When the name Boston Celtlcs comes up in
basketb.all circles, a name sure to folJow is the name
BiU Russell, one of basketball's greatest playus of aU
time. Not o nly a basketball player, but a man futly
aware of his race and his people, Russell
accomplished as many thinp in his 13-year career as
anyone. Tomorrow evening, Mr. Russell will speak in
Room 147 Diefendorf Hall. The lecture, sponsored
by the Student Association and Graduate Student
Association's Speakers Bureau, will commence at 8
p.m.
Russell was born in Oakland, Calif., where be
began his high school career as an awkward
teen-ager, but soon developed into a fine 6-9 center
at the University of San Francisco. Russell led the
Dons to a 55-game winning streak and two
c9nsecutive NCAA national basketball tiUes in 1955
and 1956. Thereafter, Russell joined the Boston
Celtics, where he revolutionized the game of
basketball in leading the Celtics to 1 1 NBA world
championship titles in 13 years.
NBA stalwart
While playing in the NBA, Russell was named
MVP five Urnes and was recently chosen NBA player
of the decade and Sport Magazine~ top basketball
performer over the past 25 years. Russell's head to
head duels with Wilt Chamberlain became legend.
And although most considered Wilt the better
offensive player, only once, in 1967, djd
Chamberlain's 76'ers oust Russell's C.,ltics for the
NBA title. Eddie Donovan, general manager of the
Buffalo Braves evaluated RusseWs playtos by
remarking: "The best part of Bill RusselJ never
shows in the box score!' Russell's success with the
Celtics can best be attributed to his defense,
rebounding and general intimidation of the
opposition.
Russell will not only be remembered in
basketball as a great player but also as the first black
coach o f a major professioN! sports team , when he
was named to replace Red Auerbach •in Boston.
Russell's emergence in Boston has been followed in
the NBA by Len Willcens (S~tle), Al Attles (Golden
State) and the recently named Earl Uoyd (Detroit).
Without a doubt, Russell showed the management of
professional basketball that a black coach could
succeed.

-uPI

'··- -"
BiiR
~

8 ill Ru uell (white
uniform No. 6 ), ~~en In
action in g~~me 'lfllnst
th e N e w
Yo r k

Knicktrbockers , will

lecture tomorrow w tning
at 8 p.m. In Room 147
Diefendorf Hall.
After proving his point as sport's first black
coach, Russell left a lucrative financial arrangement
to retirement, but has continued in his search for
answers to today's problems which beset today's
youth and the nation. Number six, with the green
uniform , black sneakers and goatee was not just a
ballplayer, but one who spoke his mind and
accomplished as much as any man in the history o r
the sport of basketball.

Dr. fritz remarked : "Next year
we hope to schedule for Sunday
afternoons and Monday nights.
The opposition wants to play us
in the aud . On file we have letters
from Cornell, Colgate, Michigan,
Michigan State and Air Force. In
fa ct . most will come to Buffalo
for expenses rat h e r than
guarantees.'' Thus the future and
the solution to the cramped
re~.:reation center may come with
increased Auditorium scheduling.

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Discover some of our remarkable condoms for yourself . .• by ordering
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Page ten. The Spectrum. Monday, November 8, 1971

ll D D 0 N 'S B0 0 T SH0 P. BU F FA L 0 , N. Y .
SQU I RE SHOP OF SNYD ER, SNY DER, N.Y.
GOL DMAN'S SHO ES, BO ULEV ARD MA L L, AM HERST, N.Y.

II

�AD INIIORMATION

I: LAlliIIIII

CLASSifiED ads may be p l.cad
M oi14MY t l\ru Frldlly betw •n II a.m.,
and 4:30p.m. at 355 Norton .-.au.
T.-.E COST of an ad for one day Is
Sl.25 for t he flut 15 words and $.05
f or Nc:h addltlon•l word .
".-.EL~
WANTED"
ads
unnot
dltc:rlmln~te on til• b~lt of Mx, color ,
c:read or n1tfon.1 origin to any extent
(I.e., preferablY Is «till dltc:rlmlnatory).

"FOUND" IdS will be run frH of
c:narge for a mllCimum of 2 daYt .an d
15 w ordt.

BABVSITTER to t1ke c:1re of Trine,
Dlnlsh 15 rt).Onths, M on., Wad., Fri.,
9-12 and on Tu~ .• Thurs., 1 - - .also
her brother 6 y urs. Call Ry Nielsen
837·0201.

f or

N EEDED
dess&gt;«ltely
bands , .
slnter(s), entertllners to voluntNr to
entertain
ldoletc:ent
Pltlenu
at
Chlldrens .-.ospltal. Contact C1ro1
886·7131 before 2 p .m. 1fter 8 p .m .

HEAD 360's, 220 em, cubco•s, buckle
boOts, poles 2 yrs. old, good
condition, $135. Skis only SUO,
832·2376.

RIDE BOARD
RIDE NEEDED: N .V .C . N ov . 11th,
12th,
Return
14th,
15th. Clll
831·0562.

I'M LOOKING for to buy I trumpet,
folks. ca11.01ve at 838· 1167.
tenons

NEED
RIDE
to
Boston
l or
Thanksgiving. Will snare expenses . Call
Barb 8 77#3723.

$25.00
PER
hundrad lddresslng,
mailing, possible work at nome your
hours. SimPle 1nd Instructions $.25
and st1mpad salf·lddrened envelope.
CHASMAR, Dept. 2 N , BOIC 263,
Elkhart, lndlana46514.

WANTED

CLARINET
876·8140.

player. Send pnone number to Tom
R oot, c/o AI Glglll, 7 Delli Rd.,
Eggertavllle
14226 .
Mutlc:at
o ppo rtunity.

2 GIRLS need ride to N . V .C. for
Thanksgiving. Will snare expenses. Call
Susan 833·7571.

beginner.

WANTEO: Term P1pers. All SubJects.
Call 871·1878 after g p .m .

RIDE WANTED to Queens, NVC for
Thanksgivi ng, Tuesday afternoon, Nov.
23rd. Call 834·0772.

WANTED : Text for .-.ebrew 1g1, 'FSI
.-.ebrew
Basic:
Course.
C all
IriS
834·55 10.

RIDE WANTED for two to Boston
are.a around Thanksgiving. Call Donna
834·5510.

GIRL. SINGER, country fiddler, plano

34:7

Tapes
8-T.-:k and c...tte
Catalog Price

•$8.98

477

TV set, dresser, desk set, bed frame,
mattress,
box
spring,
etc:.
C1 11
837·009g,
SN OW tires and rims 7751Cl4 like offer. Call 876-6888 .

WINTER stor1ge, Clr5, bikes, ufe, dry.
B i kes - $5.00/ mo. Cars, 110·15/mo.
Call Dave evenings 11 884·3683.
1g53 RAMBLER statlonwagon. Needs
minor repair, 6 -cyllnder, good body,
Take best offer. 833·2422.

REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
and
wasnera. Aec:ondltlonad, delivered and
guaranteed, D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Syc:~more, TX4·3183.

177

TO THE sweetest c:~ntaloupe 1 ever
loved - happy •nn1vers1ry. Happlnen
a Ia mode - Love, K .G.
BEAUTIFUL. handmade gold and sliver
Jewelry - Wedding rings - at sensible
prices . J.P. The Goldweaver, 655
Elmwood at Ferry Street , 881·3400.
IMPORTANT! 1 girl w ith red sweater
and Maroon hot pants lfl S tatter
Camera Exhibit on Slturday night.
Plene call
832·g633
for
Nlkon
MondiY through FrldiY, 7 : 30- 10:30
p .m .
HAPPV hiPPY b irth day to my sister
the witch d oct o r . M1y you and
Adipose Rex have 1 long and nappy
life together!l Love. Ginger.

LOST &amp;

-IJND
- ---

FOUND: brown knn V -nec:l&lt; - snort
sleeve sh ir t - med ium siz e - Wayne
Rogers make - ca ll Security.
I..OST : N l1g.ar1 F alls hlgn school rlng ln
Health Selene• building men's room .
C11ll 282-6654. Rewlrd o ffered .

FEMALE roommate wanted, West
5148, own room, $62.50. utilities Inc:.
N ext semester. Robert.~ 886.0265.

MISCELLANEOUS
1 'AM willing to buy pa~rs from
1ntroduc:tlon
to
ArChitecture 1nd
Environmental Design Ill. They are
needed lmmadlltely. Pl. .se c.ll 3282.
Ask for AIYII\ .
C a.H
JON ES
Professional Typing
Service
com puterlzlld
IBM
equipment plus our experience elva
best
possi ble
pretenta tfons
of
dlnert1t1ons,
th~ls,
term
papers,
resumes and employment application
letters.
L.oc:ate:t
between
two
c:~mpuses.
Very
re.asonable,
Call
837-6558.
NV's HOTEL TUDOR Offers SU N V
rate$,. Reserv8tlont 1nd Information,
832.0611.
BABYSITTING, nousec:INnlng done.
Experienced,
rell•ble .
own
tr•n'Portatlon. Janet 838·3429.
GEORGE March fllld - The Spectrum
still wants and needs you . Stop b Y and
uy hello. •
FERD'S Repair Service will repair
radio , television, stereo, m i nor Clr
repairs .
Also
re.asonable
rates.
882.0850.

APARTMENTS WANTED
I I..EFT two rings, one silver pointed
1nd one turquoise In the Acheson
lldiiS room liSt Thursday. They nave
sent im ental v11ue. 1I you fou nd them,
please Clll 833 •g440 or 831·308 3 .

FI VE m11es desperately need 1 four or
five-bedroom apartment or house. Call
837.0882.

ROOMMATES WANTED

APARTMENT nlldad lor January for
two people. Urgent. Clll 836·2304 for
Jane or Claud Ill.

FEMAl-E RMT, pref. grad. ne.ar R idge
$70
Includes utilities. Call
L.ea,
6g1 ·7640.

E XPERIENCED typing, term papers,
d inerallons, th~ls - 833·15g7 .

HARMONV hollow bodY electric
guitar, on•
pickup, tone volume
controls, flat·wound strings. Must sell .
876-8140.
FOR SAL£ 1966 vamahe aaoc;c,
$200. New tires, battery, points, plugs,
not mucl1 for looks. Runs oood . Call
838· 1556 or 837-6909.
1g53 C HEVV convert., $175 or be6t
oHer. Call Joe $38·2764.
CASSETTE tape dec:l&lt;, 3 mos. o ld.
wa lnut veneer, $70 or t&gt;MI o ffer .
83g· l827.
1g1o JAVAL.IN, sliver.gray, b lack
vinyl t op, mag wheels, v.a , stick shift,
mlle.age, good condition. C all

tow

133· 1198 ~ on .-F'' · · 7- 10 p .m .

Catalog Price $2.98

HEV, NATASHA : Orders from furless
le.ader have 1 happy belated
birthday. A.A ., S.K ., D .L ., R.E ., 8 .V .,
M .T ., P.J ., R .H ., Spotty and a dog
n.m ecs Boo (Short for Boris).

ampus.

MCINTOSH C·26, M1· 3, MR 65,
Citation 12, Dvnaco PAT-4, Stlzo,
Thorens TD125/SME, Shii'WOOd 8S00,
Scott
299F,
Altec:
A ·7/500·2,
Tandberg 12, B&amp;W I ,M .F ., Radford,
Braun, Quad , Sinclair, Phase Llne.ar,
Dayton Wright. 684-4g37 .

CAROLE KING
BURT BACHARACH
CAT STEVENS
CARPENTERS
LEE MICHAELS
QUINCY JONES
HUMBLE PIE
FREE
RITA COOLIDGE
HERB ALBERT
BAJA MARIMBA
SPOOKY TOOTH
JOE COCKER
PROCOL HARUM

ENTIRE STOCK!
Westminster Gokt
Classical Records

will

WHOEVER p ut t hat ad In, sucks the
stiff ob)ec:t . Vou're hlr•d Instead ! Don
Amec:he Rlngm~ter.

LARGE HOUSE to "'ate - furnished
- own room, t65, utlljtles lnctuded,
290 M i nnesota, 10 minutes from

DODGE '6 3 Polara V-8, new snows,
tires,
battery ,
Excellent
running
condition . P .S. automatic: . 836·1gg6.

All Artins Including
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Vw 1964 extremely rel iable, neads
little bOdY work, $32!5. Call Tom
634·7185.

RAMBLER '64 mint condition. Must
sell. M1ke offer. 1016 Nlag.ara Falls
Blvd. 837-4223.

RECORDS
and·TAPES
Catalog Price
$6.98
Per Record

LEAVING school . Must sell stereo,
$550 value. Best offer. Marantz utlh
Shure S harpe AR . Call Mike 833·6542.

SMITH.CORONA
super
sterling
typewri ter . Almost brand new. S70 or
best offer. C all 837-6 558 .

~&amp;Mand .ODE

Recorda

JENSEN l..lfe·Tlme Column, two 15"
spkr5., plus 1mpllfler, $ 160. Clll
Adrian 883·2486. Very good buy.

1g64 TRIUMPH Spitfire tonvertlble.
Runn ing condition, SlOO negotiable.
Call 837·292g ,

Sattler's
Entire Stock

...

FOR SALE

· PERSONAL

•..._.....,,.,.,,.,.....,.,..

. , _ . ,••_,.~..,_w.~-.-,_.

'
_l

...

JAZZ
.••CLOSE.OUTS and
COLLECTERS' ITEMS!
*CADET
*VERVE
*BLUENOTE

*PACIFIC JAZZ
• WORLD PACIFIC

* tMfiULSE

All th,_ f•mous 11rtists!
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

COUNT BAStE
RAY BRYANT
3SOUNDS
RAY CHARLES
MI LT JACKSON
JOHNNY LY TLE
JIMMY McGRIF F
RAMSEY LEWIS
DONALD BYRD

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

LESS McCANN
HANK MOBLEY
GABOR ZABO
HORACE SILBER
DUKE ELL INGTON
G RANT GREEN
CHET BARKER
GILBERTO
OSCA R PETERSON

DON'T
WAIT
IN LINE

JOIN NOW!

OPEN REEL TAPES
Catalog Prices $4 .9 7 t o $1 .98
• RCA
• COLUMBIA 2 .97 to 4 .97
• CAPITOL
• DECCA, etc.

For sheet music &amp; tapes..r. too,
it's SATTLER'S RECOkO
CENTERS
• BOULEVARD MALL
Niagara Falls Blvd.,
North of Sheridan, Amherst.
10 to 9 Mon. thru Sat.
Safe also at SATTLER 'S
998 BROADWAY and
SENECA MALL

AT THE END OF NOVEMBER

"

DEADLINE - DECEMBER 1st
MEMBERSHIP IN Room 318 Norto~
Monday - Friday 9 :00 - 4 :30
Tuesday, Wed , Thurs. 7 - 9 p.m.

BRING A PICTURE
Monday , November 8, 1971 . The Spectrurpr . Page eleven

�Announcements
CAC needs volunteers to work at the Amherst
Counseling Center. Thirty-two hours of tninlng ~ill
be given in group counseling, one-t()-&lt;)ne counseling,
answering phones and drug problems. Call 831·3609
or go to the CAC office, Room 220 Norton.
Open Poetry Ruding every Tuesday, sponsored
• by Outriders. Featured readers tomorrow night are
Creative Associates Frank Parman and Terry Moore.
R~ings are held at the One-Eyed Cat, 28 Bryant
St. (near Main), 9:30 p.m. - midnight; all welcome
to read. For information call Prof. Wickert,
extension 4927.
The Colleae of Mathematical Sciences would
like people interested In tutoring mathematics on
grade and high school levels to contact them at
831-1704 on Tuesday - Thursday, 3:30-~:30 p.m.
The Foreisn Student Coordinatina Counsel will
hold a meeting of the General Assembly today at 8
p.m . in Norton, Room 232. There w1ll be
nominations for the executive committee. Each
foreign club, please send your representatives and
candidates - non-affiliated foreign students, get
organized and send a representative.
Outdoor Club will have a general meeting
tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Room 234 Norton.
The linauistics- Department presents an open
lecture in Linguistics 501 on ''Quechua." Or. Wolck
will speak.
UUAB Oanc:e Committee will meet tomorrow at
2 p.m. in Room 261 Norton. All members are urged
to attend.

Und~tes bk'"' Frendt courses please
pick up a copy of the department newsletter in
~oom 214 Crosby.

The Craftsmen's GuUd is a club being organized
for the purpose of presenting to the entire University
community a complete, well-rounded, educational,
recreational and cuttural program in the crafts that
the existing structure cannot present. If you are
concerned with any craft, in any field, this guild is
· for you. It needs your support to survive. Sign up at
either the Craft Center office or at the table on the
first floor of Norton.
CAC's P.S. 17 Project (formerly Lincoln
Project) will hold a meeting of all tutors and people
interested in tutoring, tonight at 7:30p.m. in Room
244 Norton.
The Student Film Club will have its first general
meeting to discuss workshops and productions today
and tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Room 334 Norton. Alan
Ginsberg jeff Trencher and Mark Vacker will be
speaking: All people ~ho pr~viousl~ signed up ~Ius
all those interested m makmg their own mov1es,
please attend.
RCC 203 - Workshop in Outdoor Living will
have a discussion of survival fishing and cave trip
p~anning today at 1 p.m. in the audio-visual aids
office. There will be two showings of a film at 1 p.m.
and at 1:45 p.m.
SOS will sit in on the trial of students involved
in the Dr. Halstead incident. Rides will leave for the
City Court, 42 Delaware Ave, from in f~ont ~~
Norton, Moday through? For more information call
831 -2879.

ckpage
What's Happening
Monday, Nov. 8
Film: Mother and The End of St. Petersburgh, two
Russian films d irected by Vsevolod Pudovkin, 3
&amp; 8 p.m., Diefendorf 147.
Exh1bit: one man show of photographs by Donald
Blumberg, 4;240 Ridge Lea, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
Tuesday, Nov. 9
Film : OfHn City directed by Roberto Rossellini,
neo·realist manifesto which chronicles the Nazi
oc;cupatlon of Rome, 3 &amp; 8 p.m ., Diefendorf
1477.
Film: Un Chien Ando/ou by Luis Brunuel and
Salvador Dall, classic surrealist short film, 3 &amp; 8 p.m.
Diefendorf 147.
- Sue Welser

/

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BU~

Norm Effman (undergraduate counsel) will be
holding office hours tomorrow from 7:30- 10 p.m.
in Room 205 Norton.

The UUAB Fine Arts Film Committee has, so
far, three possibilities lor a Thur~day night free
series; a continuation of this semester's fantasy
series a horror series or a 1930's festival. If you have
any ~pinion or suggestion about any of these or if
you have a series of your own in mind, please come
to Room 261 Norton and ask for Walt.
The College of Mathematical Sciences is offering
tutoring in Calculus 141 on: Monday, 2- 4 p.m.,
Diefendorf Annex 18; Tuesday, 3-5 p.m.,
Diefendorf 308; Wednesday, 3-5 p.m., Diefendorf
Annex 27; Thursday, 2-4 p.m., Diefendorf 5.
Sessions are open to all students wishing help in any
arell covered by the course.

The Hillel Elementary Conversational Hebrew
class will meet today at 7 p.m. in Room 262 Norton.
The Hillel Beginners Hebrew class will meet
tomorrow at noon in Room 262 Norton. It will be
followed by the Jewish Ethics class at 1 p.m.
The French Department will have Michel Deguy,
a visiting professor in th~ department, speak on
"Valeny et Ia Poesie," tomorrow at 8 p.m. in the
Faculty Club.
UB Day Care Center will have a booksale
starting today through Friday In the Norton Lobby
"A" of English and Early Childhood Education
books.

The student athletic review boArd will hold a
meeting Tuesday evening at 6:30 p.m. in Room 330
Norton Hall.
Intramural activities: There will be a hayride
N17V. 13, call 831-2924 for information; the
apparatus room will be open Tuesday 7 :30- 10 p.m.
for women and 7 :30-10 p.m. on Thursday for men;
co-ed badminton resumes tomorrow evening on the
main Clark Gym floor; jntramural basketball takes
place at Clark Gym, Mon. - Thurs., 8-11 p.m .;
intramural football playoffs this afternoon at- 3:30
p.m., Clark 'Field, Penthouse Revival vs. Invaders,
Snorters vs. Brunnets, Humans vs. Shysters and 4th
floor Clement vs. XAM.
' - •

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>Spectrum, The, 1971-11-08</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1350520">
                <text>en-US</text>
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          <element elementId="51">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1350521">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1350522">
                <text>Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>LIB-UA006_v22n31_19711108</text>
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                <text>Spectrum</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>LIB-UA006</text>
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                <text>v22n31</text>
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          <element elementId="113">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1350530">
                <text>12 p.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="116">
            <name>Spatial Coverage</name>
            <description>Spatial characteristics of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1350531">
                <text>United States</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1350532">
                <text>New York</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1350533">
                <text>Erie County</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1350534">
                <text>Buffalo</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1447094">
                <text>University of Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1447095">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1447096">
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                    <text>11111 I•IHJ I I IJfl

Vol. 22, No. 30
s

I,,

I

$tate University of New York n Buffalo

,

,

State budget cuts to
hurtcarnpuslibrary ,
by Howie Kurtz
Campus Editor

The State Universitysystem is
ill for some extremely hard times,
due to the dire economic situation
faced by the State o f New York ,
according Lo Richard Siggelkow,
Vice President
fo r Student
Affairs. The areas at this
University which will be most
affected, and which are already
slated for budget cuts, will be
students affairs, maintenance and
the already-deprive-d library .
This pessimistic outlook comes
as the result of last weekend's
meeting
between
top
administrative officials of the
State University of Buffalo and
SUNY official~n Albany to
discuss the budget. I ~ was
previously
hoped
that
the
University ' would, at best, be able
to receive a budget equal to last
year's
admittedly
austere
allocations. Now, however, it is
evident that there will be cuts all
across the board, particularly in
the so-called "sefvice ;veat."

Point of no rttum
..Whenever things get tight,

they immediately begin to cut the
service areas - the library, student
affairs, financial aid , off-campus
housing," said D1. Siggelkow .
''They've reached a point where
they can't cut us any further , or
we just won' t be able to operate."
Dr. Siggelkow indicated that the
"very serious cuts'' 'which are
besetting the SUNY system are
the result of the financial
problems of New York State. The
public's
rejection
of
the
Transportation Bond proposal
Election Day was a big blow,
because a reported $400 million
of the funds whfch were
scheduled to be borrowed (had
the bond been approved) have
already been spel)t. " The state
deficit may be ev~n greater than
they thought ," ~peculated Or.
Siggelkow.
j

and
criticizing
"the
treatment o f the library ."

poor

More freeze
Or. Ketter ind ica ted that
S UNY
Chancellor
Boyer
''recognizes serious distress ~ea s"
such as the library , bu t the fact
remains that the libra ry budget
has been cut. Director o f Libraries
My les
Slatin
"strongly,
vehemently and violently" objects
to the library being grouped with
other less essential service areas,
but indicated that this is common
practice in universities across the
country. In light of a continued
hiring and rehiring freeze, Or.
Slatin recognized that "certain
"things will have to be given up. We
may have to keep reducing hours,
and it may take longer for things
to get on our shelves."

Athletic budget is approved
by Jeff Ben!On
Spectrtlm St4ff Wrlur

Thus, the outlook for the
Ubrary, which has been severely
ctificiud from many quarters
previously, is not good . However.
Dr. Sigdkow feels ~- "lhc
library is just a cornerstone: the
entire University structure ls In
real jeopudy." He claims that
reducing allocations to service
areas will not accomplish much .
" They cat~'t solve things by
cutting us - that's like Johnson
turning the lights o ff in the White
House to balance the budget."

Losing battle

The. SUNY system must bear

Or. Siggelkow indicated that
Drs. Ketter, Somit , Doty and
other top administrators " handled
themselves very well" at the
budget meeting in Albany, but
were fighting a losing battle. In
addition to budget cuts in service
areas, Dr. Siggelkow, foresees no
salary raises for faculty members.
as a possible economy move . He
also envisions the state freeze o n
hiring and rehiring to fiiJ vacant
positions, a disability wh ich has
plagued the library, to be
extended , to be longer and harder
and to be more widespread .

economic distress because items
like higher education and mental
hospitals are always the first to be
cut. President Robert Ketter, in
his report to the Faculty Senate
last Tuesday, explained that the
affairs and
library, student
janitorial services are the first to
~e cut because there is "the least
noticeable immediate effect" in
those areas. Lowell Schoenfeld,
chairman of the Faculty Senate
Library Committee, objected to
this reasoning, claiming the library
"always receives the short strip"

A period of economic austerit y
is to be expected at this
University . o ne ··which
will
manifest itself in untold ways.
Service areas such as student
affair s,
minority
affairs,
m aintenan ce and particularly the
libraries, will be the hardest hit.
But budget cuts are being made
across the board , including such
areas as academics. 'The full effect
of these developments may not be
known for months. But as Dr.
Siggelkow aptly summarized the
situation : "We're in a mess."

~he conseqvences ' of the state's

Student Assembly decision

. In a
vote,
president
favor of

dramatic, tie-breaking
Student
Association
lan DeWaal voted in
paaing tbe proposed
1971·71 At-.tic Department
budget. The final count of IS for
the budpt to I 4 apinst ended
almost three bouts of heated
debate
at Jut
Wednesday's
Student Assembly meeting.
Scott
Slesinger, SA. vice
president and former chairman of
the athletic review board, opened
the discussion on the $240,000
budget .
" The
Athletic
Department has been scheduling
and pur~hasing materials for this
budget," he said, "If we would
suddenly make a change, it would
jeopardize the entire program and
the careers o f some o f its staff.1 '
Keith Frankel , Nationa l
Student Affairs cooQrdinator, was
strongly opposed to passing the
budget. He said , " What I would
like to see is the SA setting up a
student referendum . Let them
decide whether we should have
inter-collegiate sports. Also. the
a m ou nt fo r intramurals is
ridiculous. I want to see the
budget defeated."

Stage set
Those opening comments set
the· stage for most or the meeting.
Mr. Slesinger often to ok on the
responsibility of speaking for
those in favor of the budget. while
o p1n1 o n s, in nu e nd os an d
a~.:CUSlltions of "ego-trips" flew
across the roo m. The most highly
contested features o f the budget
were monies for awards, travelling
expenses and intramurals.
Da ve Steinwald , S tudent
R ights COoQrdinator, and Jim
Drucker, Schussmeisters Ski Club
representative, carried on the
d e b ate for the rest o f the
representatives. Mr. Steinwald
suggested that SA was not getting
enough publicity for the financial
support it gave to teams. He
proposed that the letters "SA" be
placed on the urtiforrns of all
University athletes. Mr. Drucker
said: " I'm not sure that putting

university, the travelling expenses
allocation as the safest minimum
amount, and noted that tbe
money previously needed for the
football team will be used to
expand other proarams.
When the 'VOte was finally
·~enthua-'
taken, it ended in a 14-14 Ue. As
It soon became clear that the lan DeWaal voted in favor of the
future of the budget depended on blldget, members of the Athletic
'the $'48 ,000 allocation to Department and student s
intramural sports. Many felt that sympathetic to their cause shook
too much emphasis was placed on bands and traded various
inter-collegiate athletes and not congratulations. Mr. Fritz was
enough on the "average student." heard saying, " I hope we can
Bill Monkarsh, a member of the work for you now."
Athletic Department, spoke on
The roll-call vote on the
this topic : " We have a program at hletic budget was as follows :
YES : Dorothy Ackerman, Fred
like we've never had before." He
cont inu ed : " Th e r e w ere Aueron , David Barmak, Bob
approximately 75 football teams Convissar , Jan DeWaaJ , Jim
and a bout 85 intramura l Drucker, Harold Guberman , Rich
basketball teams. There is a Plumb, Peter KQn&amp;, Alice Kupler.
boundless enthusiasm. I'm asking Jeff Levin , Robert Rosenthal.
for input from you. We need your Juli a n Rub e n stei n , Scott
input to pass the budget."
Slesinger, Mark Weiner .
The ab$ence of Joe Ashwal, ~ NO : J o hn Fiscella, Keith
chairman of the athletic review
Frankel , Lester Goldstein . Larry
ips hman, Michael Horowitz,
board (ARB) left the Assembly
without a qualified speaker from
Michael Husak, Dennis Jewell ,
the ARB. Five motio ns were
Rick Landman, Andre Midgette,
taken to table the budget vote
Dave St einwald , Cory Storch ,
until Mr. Ashwal could a'ttend a
Rich Feuer, Shelly Taylor, Kevin
Whalen .
meeting. All failed to get the
necessary two-thirds majoril~.
In o ther business at the
I n o rder to clarify maqy
meeting, a motion was passed to
sections of the budget, Harr.y table the Sub Board budget to the
Fritz, director of the Athlellic next meeting. A vote was also
Depart m e nt, was present lo t aken to pass club budgets,
including an allocation to the
answer questio ns. He defendtd
th e in t er-co ll egia t e athlefi c Food CooQp. It• was passed after
program as necessary to a lalj8e some minor debate .
those letters on uniforms will
make anyone think of students
... and I don't want to see it go
on to utisfy some peoples' egos. 1
think it's silly." The proposal was
defeated 10-9.

Women's Festival
story and schedule,
seepage 5
I

�I

Students go to court for · WIRR premiers
Marathon
on
student
radio
disrupting closed hearing
by Howie Kurtz

Six State Unjvenity of Buffalo
stud en IS face charges of
disruption and assault in a City
Court trial this Monday . The
University charges against the
defendants stem from a
confrontation between Campus
Security and students supporting
David Levy (Levy was
subsequent ly expelled for
disruption from the University).
The confrontation occurred prior
to a closed hearing last summer
which dealt with Mr. Levy's case.
According to one of the
defendants, Robert Steinhorn , the
whole point of the arrests and
upcoming trial is not assuull , but
racism : " We are not on t nat for
resisting arrest or assnl.ll . but
because we ltled to light ract~m:·
Both Mr. Levy und hts SDS
supporters hJvc J\;'u~ed John
Halstead. :w;o ..tatc prule"m ul
lmtury. of teadling racl\t the~lfl~'
m h1 d&lt;h'&gt;. "l S. lrn pen,rh'm "
B{'C:JUS{' uf thi' b"het. Mr
Sternhurn cxplatncd ' that thctr
defense would be pnh 1ical 111
nature : " We don't plan to turn
the tnal IIllO a CIICU~ , , . by
jumping up und yelling at the
jud ge. We will l)e really
disciplined . But we do plan to
make our main point political ...
that Halstead is teaching racism

C1111tpu1 Editor

~d

the University supports him."
To prove this, Mr. Steinhom,
continued that both Dr. Halstead
and President Ketter commented,
because "the more the University
attacks good, Mr. Steinhorn
commented, because "the more
the University attacks us, the
more it exposes itself."
Dr. Halstead , in a letter to The
SpectrUm (Nov. l , 1971) denied
these c harges of racism . In
addition, he maintained that
" David Levy was expelled from
the University , not because he
'verbally disagreed' with me, but
because his endless interruption
disrupted the class. ·•
In addition. Dr. Halstead
termed the SDS s upport er~ "a
s t ude nt commun ist front
orgam1..atton of the Progressive
L3bor P~rty ." Othcm, have ¥1so
Lharged Mr Levy wllh bcmg
"~ent" to the llntvcr~lly Wllh th~
mtcnt to purpo~efully dt!&gt;rupt
ll ti\\~\Cr,
M r. StetnhMn
~:ommcuted thai wlule an SDS
~ummer
program dtd ex rst to
spread in furmallun to univerSities,
"mo11t (of the a&lt;.:cused I came with
the tdea of going to school. "
Other students accused include
Norman Slawsky, David Levy,
Shertlyn Levy, Jim Suber and Bill
Ford .

Art Auction

At S p.m. today, WIRR goes on the air.
The first excursion into student-owned and
student-operated radio, WIRR·AM, 640 on the radio
dial, will make its debut 'at S p.m. wit,h a 60-hour
marathon of music, a veritable supersession of rock,
folk and jazz. The station, which will operate on
carrie# current (roughly equivalent to dorm
electricity), will probably only be able to be picked
up in the dorms, but hopes to expand in the near
future .
(
WIRR was conceived and organized by "people
from WBFO and e010s who saw the need for a·
student·owned and student·run campus radio
station," according to elhos editor·in-chief Carl
Roelter, one of the organizers. These people were
dissatisfi ed with WBFO. Mr. Roetter explained,
which is owned by the state and controlled by the
state. "Astde from being stat e-run, they play 80 per
~::cnt class~&lt;.:a l music, and not many people listen Ill
11." explarned Mr. Roetter.

PHD \ lyle
The programnung lurmnt ul WIRR will be
''dose to WPHD style. but more free form and
unrcstm:ted," satd Mr. Ruetter. "Whoever is on the
utr wrll be completely m chargc.M The format will be
almw.t enttrely mustc, broken up by news and
detailed reports of aJI campus events. It wtll also
feat ure interviews with important people on
campus. IRC. Sub Board, etc. The music will be
predominantly rock. folk and jaLZ, depending on the
disc JOCkey's personal preferen ces. However, "since
kids are running the show, you can be sure that
they'll play the kind of music that kids want to
hear," said Mr. Roetter.
The 60·hour marathon this weekend will
include continuous music, a live Grateful Dead
c.:onccrl (from tapes put together from various
underground albums) and a Beatles speciaL After

this supersession, WIRR will broadcast daily from 5
p.m. - 2 a.m. The station has a staff of 30 people
and is being backed by IRC. Their broadcast studio
is temporarily located in Clement Hall lounge. J'he
station fs already making profit from the selling of
commercials although it has not yet been on the air.

Simulcast
Although WIRR was originally conceived as a
dorm radio station (its call !etten stand for
Inter-Residence Radio), it hopes to eventually
increase power to be heard aU ove~ campus. Within
six months to a year ,.it hopes to go FM , resulting in
an AM·FM simulcast. When it goes FM it will air no
commercials, supporting itself with money from
grants. It also hopes to be broadcasting 24 hours u
day about the time an FM license is received and to
be audible for a range of about five miles. Mr
Roetter points out tha t there have been many legal
hassles thus far, and more to come in pursuit of an
FM frequen cy. but he hopes these can be overcome.
Stoned-out show
Pratstng radio as an "in!&gt;tantaneous med1a .
probably the best.'' the cjfi(i editor is entertatnmg
many plans fo1 the future. He hopes to broad&lt;.:ast
hve piJy·by·play accounts of sport~ events involvmg
Un tversi~y team!&gt;. includtng both home and away
game!&gt;. The away games will be broadcast via
telephone hool..up. A IJIC·Illght show c11lled " Wet
Dreams" is also :.cheduled. whu:h is ·•a show to get
stoned by."
At btrth . WIRR looks tu be an exciting and
entertaining form of student media ... Anything goes
on the St:ltion ," informed M1 . Roctter. "We won't
have any strict. standardited time slots. like on
WBFO . If someone is grooving on the Beatles and
his show is sppposed to be over, so what - he'll play
for an extra half-hour. Anything goes.:.
Simulcasts and five.mile broadcasts are still a
while off, but the energy and creativity and mustc
are hore right now. Why not tune in WIRR this
weekend and check it out?

Study program in SanJuan
The Puerto Rican Studies and Research Center and the Office of Overseas
Academic Protrams have announc~ a spring semester study program at the lnstituto de
Cultura Puertorriquena, San Juan , Puerto Rico. Staffed by leading artists, writers and
scholars in Puerto Rico, the program offers courses, independent study, workshops and
field work in Puerto Rican culture , literature, drama, folk art, political problems and
filmmakioa.
Sophomores and juniors who have a working knowledge of Spanish and a
satisfactory academic record are eligible to apply .
Further information and applications are atailable at the Puerto Rican Studies and
Research Center, 204 Winspear Avenue and at the Office of Overseas Academic Programs,
107 Townsend Hall. The deadline for applications is Nov. ll, 1971.

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w ..k. -ry Mondll¥,

tim•• •

,. _,

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Marc C'hagall
Salvador Dati,
Alexander ('aida
Joan Miro
Georges · R ouault VIctor \.&lt;.~sa rely
and others

WttdnHdiiV lind FrlcUv: during th11
rii(IIJIIIr IICIIdllmte ytlllr bv Sub·Bo•d
1, Inc. Offic• 11re IOCJJtttd 11t 355
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Page two. The Spectrum. Friday, November 5, 197f

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�Athletic budget passed
with a narrow margin
by Mike' Engel

Athletic

Athletics have been spared, at
least for another year.
However, the narrpw 15- 14
vote of the Student Assembly to
approve the $240,000 athletic
budge t illustrated the deep
divisiOns besetting student
opinion on the relative merits of
an at hletic program , and io; far

New~

Dep-artment

are

a

po~ibillty.

Contributwx Editor

Analysis

l

Flaws and alternatives
The naws inherent in the
present s tud ent governance
system exclude any possibility of
that stability being attained. The
student athletic review board, the
only arm of student government
dealing with the Athletic
Department on a day-to·dlly basis,
has been emasculated by its past
failure to take any semb lan~e of
affirmative, ' independent action _
and by the assumption of its
scrutininzing powers by the
Student Assembly.

from a panacea for the problems
plaguing the relationship between
s tud ent government and the
Athletic Department.
The furor surrounding the
Serious doubts exist as to
budget underlined va ri ous whether the Assembly, which
problems, none of which the consists of J7 representatives of
Assembly alleviated Wednesday various campus interest groups as
afte rn oon. The long range well as the I I members of the
flnancial stability of the Athletic Executive Comrruttee of the
Department, the shortcomings of Student Association, is truly
the present system of student representative of majority student
governance and t he possibility of opinion. Moreover, if discussion
a reoccurrence of the chaos of the of the athletic budget continues
last week are matters that have to occur this late in the tem1, the
yet to be resolved.
basic problem of the Athletic
Despite passagt of the Department overcommitting its
controversial budget , the financial financial resources out of
situation of the Athletic necessity would still remain.
Department is far from stable. thereby creating an ann.ual crisis
Forced to schedule intercollegiate situation.
events years in advance, the
These are alternatives. A basic
department could as early as next
ceiling
over total spendmg could
year find its best laid plans
be
made
by the Assembly.
n u lit fied by a more hostile
although
the
decision could be
Student Assembly . Considering
overruled
in
a
future
meeting. The
this year's budget was approved
by only one vote. and that Assembly could vote on the
studen t opinions often vary budget in the spring rather than in
greatly from year to year. the the fall. thereby giving the
prospects for continual passage of Athletic Department more time to
a budget in the neighborhood of assess the total situation and to
formulate concrete plans in the
$:!40,000 are unfavorable.
The Athletic Department is event of budget cuts. Finally , the
aware of that. Or. Harry Frit z, student athletic review board can
director of Physical Education. l0r on~e properly scrutinize the
Recreatton and Athlettcs satd in budget and make any further
the Nov. I edition of The inquiry unnecessary.
Should no action be taken to
Spectrum that he would nt' longer
remedy
the current state of
deal with the Student Assembly as
affairs,
Wednesday's
vote may be
long as that body had the ultimate
viewed
years
from
now as a
deciston on the budget. Because
forestallment
of
the
inevitable
there is currently little movement
doom
o
f
athletics
:ll this
t u have this sysrem :11tered.
institution.
widespread restgtlations v.. thtn the

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Academic dishonesty

-5i1ntos

Faculty Senate meets again
Academic
dishonesty.
admissions and the library were
among the topics discussed during
last Tuesday's Faculty Senate
meeting.
A proposal was passed by the
Senate to adopt the report
submitted by political sctence
professor Claude Welch's special
committee dealing with acadenuc
dishonesty. The report . which
includes appellate procedures for
accused students, has "significant
student input," explained Student
Rights coordmator Steinwald. a
student
member
~f
the
com mittee.
stressed.
Mr.
Stelnwald
however. that student dishonesty
is "only half the problem ."
Dishonest faculty procedures such
as faulty grading and testing
techniques should
also
be
corrected ,
he
noted .
In
conjunction
with
this. thJ:
standing committee on academic
freedom and responsibtlity ts
investigating faculty integrity fur
an upcoming report to the Senate .
An amendment was mad e to
the
Report
on
Academic
Dishonesty which mandates the
formation o f a committee to
precisely
define
"academic
dishonesty." The concern of the
Senate was that students and
faculty
should
know
what
constitutes academic dishonesty,
such as plagiarism or chearing, so
they wiU not b.! accused of or
accuse
someone
of
a
misunderstood
entity.
Also·
accepted by the Senate was a

report
presented
by
the
Admissions Committee, headed
by McAllister Hull, acting dean of
the Graduate School.
Admissions changes
Few notable changes were
contajned in the report to the
Senate, one being the admittance
of students to the 1972·7 3
freshman class with no dormitory
requirements for those applicants
residing 50 miles outside of
Buffalo.
However. Dr. Hull ex pressed
the importance of this vote
inasmuch as the Faculty Senat e
brought

the

admissions

policy

under "scrutiny" and passed the
measure.
Mention of the "mysr~ry'' of
the poor rreatment of the library
budget was also discussed during

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I

John 8:32, J6

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the meeting. President Robert
Ketter noted that State UniversHy
of New York Chancellor Boyer
cited
the need for better
University libraries but continurd
to cut the budget in that area due
to the "economtc difficuJties" of
the present time. Dr. Ketter
remarked that the first financial
cuts are usually in the areas of
j anitorial
and
library
improvements, noting that the
library is not considered a "first
order priority."
A third proposal which was
passed came to the Senate from
the Economic Status Committee
to support the State Professionals
Association (SPA). The resolution
recommended that the SPA
bargain for a " most favored
nation" clause and merit increases
wtthout the establishment of
runkings within ranks.

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OPEN 24 HOURS
1100 SHERIDAN DRIVE
1611 UNION ROAD

Friday, November 5, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�.

•

_a_c_tl_on_~_ln.. ;~_____.)
..

Halberstam lecture \

Pentagon Papers.discussed ,
•

L-1

David
KaJberstam,
former cost or time," and a venture In
Q : Are there any courses offered on campus iD tbe ifudr of Viet nam correspondent for tbe which the covernmcnt thou&amp;ht
Arabic?
New YorA: Times and eigbt year that America wou.ld "flex a few
A: Or. Richard Humphreys of the History Department has offe~ed criUc of that war, said Tuesday Caucasian, technological muscles,
a course in elementary Arahlc. But the center for Critical Lanauages night , "The mo ment the state has and the HtUe yellow fellows
also has the matenals necessary for studyinJ Arabic on one's own and the rigbt to call up a reporter and would c lose their tents." The
they are available to students. lr you are interested, the Center is demand that he expose his failure o f Vietnam, he stated, was
located at 229 Crosby HaU . For more infonnation, please caJJ 2306.
sources, is the day freedom of the that it was treated as o ne which
invo lved "short range gains to
press e nds in this country ."
Q : I am Interested in teachinJI retarded children. Can I aet a dearee
He spoke before a semi-fiUed long term problems,"
in thi' area trom t h~ Univet$ity?
audience in the Conference
A : Unfortunat~ly , the answer is no. However, o ur sister institutio n,
Theater.
War denounced
the S tate University College at Buffalo o n Elmwood Avenue does havt
Mr. Ha lberstam expressed what
Typifying
the
Jo hnson
on t~ xce-lle nt Department of Exceptional Ed ucatio n and we suggest that he t ermed h is quiet sense of rage
psychology, Mr. H albers tam read
you contact them to see what can be d one.
over his recent su bpoena to testi fy
statements by both McGeorge
(
before a Bost o n federal gra nd jury
Q : I hav~ a friend wbo wL~he~ to cransftr to this University. How investigating Daniel Ellsberg's Bundy and former Secretary of
De fense McNamara . Mr. Bundy
do~s he go about this?
involvement with the Pe ntago n
stated in re fe rring to Vietnam ,
A: First he must get a n application from t he Office of Admissions Papers.
"Even if it d oesn't work we will
md Records. When he has filled this out. he sends it to the cent ral
lie said that the s ubpoena
admissions o ffi ce in Albany and fro m th~:rc it is sent t o this institu tion. constituted a " harassment" whic h be able t o say we tried." Mr.
The school will then notify him about his admission o r rejection . We he feels d irectly ig nores the McNamara expressed in a n an swer
m ight suggest that you go to the A &amp; R office ( Hayes B) and get the lessons that the Pentagon Papers t o a statement that the war seems
hke a " b o ttomless pit" that
application fnr 1\im and send it t o him as soon as possible.
should
have
taught
the "every pit has its bottom .''
~vcrnmcnt.
Mr.
Halberstam
Q : I was charaed SS .OO fo r an orien tatio n fee for transfer studen ~. noted
that
already
the
Mr . llalberstam expressed h is
I d id nt)l takt part in the orientation pr&lt;&gt;jrarn . Can l get this SS .OO government has too much power gratilude and what he feels should
refunded?
over the press. a nd he sees the , be the gratitude o f the Amencan
A : We \)hed.ed up on th1s and found out that the S5 00 you are
to General Matr hew
press in an "ad versary role with peo ple
l:llkrng about 1 part of the student fees and ha!\ nothing to d o w1th the
t he government .''
Ridgway, for his responsibility in
summer onent.allon for transfer students . II is an cmentauo n lee
lie went on to say that m a avo1d1ng total U.S . invo lvementrn
charged to JU stuucnts .md covers the cost of the o rientation program\
recent tt'lephone conversatio n Southeast As1a as early o~s 1954
put on hy the Student Asso~1at1on at the beg~ nn ing of the school year
w1th Clark Clifford, lhe former dunng
the
E ltenhowcr
As su~h 11 IS not refundahlc hccausc the vano~ activities were avaalablc
Sc~retary o f Defense implied that
Ad ministration.
to all s tudents. The Stuurnt A'soc•allon notes, 1n addtllon. th.tt t h~·
he rn1ght he facing troubles With
student taking part 111 all o f t h e~e &lt;~Ct lvitie!&gt; recerved over S IOO .OO 1n
He said that at thut lime,
the grand JUry himself.
value for the mov1es. proJects, hand), etc. that were mvo lved .
S«retary o f Stat e Jo hn foster
Dulles and the U.S. Air Force
Q : Wh y don' t the Uni versity trucks remove illegally parked cars in Quiet rage
Speak 1ng em the issue wh1ch he
t he Parker Engineeri ng 11nd Michael Park lna lots, instead or sittin11
~;on s id CIS essent1al to the lesson of
aro und doing nothing?
Viet nam , the now cont ributing
A : Reall y. the y h.Jvc hccn husy. llo wl!vcr, those in charge of this
cd1
10 r llf 1/arpai Maxazinl! d ealt
te.ll us that they 11re sorry if students are incon venienced and that they
in
d epth with the Pe ntagon
will. rna~~ grea ter .cfrort!&gt; m the fu t ure. Huwcvc r, 1t docs seem t hat they
are 111 a Da~\t\ed 1f you do and dam ne d if you don ' t" situation . If they Papers. lie s poke of the failure o f
are very stnct, they a rc charged with ha rassing students ; if they are the Jo hm.on Adrnimstratron to
rellpond lo C IA warnings exposing
le ntent. I hey arc I ymg up the parkmg lots. I t is a real problem
the brutal realities of a large scale
Q: T.he Michael Parking lot is filled with traffic, coming and aoing. '"volvcment m Southeast Asia. He
d escribed t he people in t he
Wh y don t they make another exit t o ease the problem?
Admmrstrallo n
as
A . T tus tS und..:r stud y at the present lll\lmcnt and you may have Jo hnson
"signmg on and playing LBJ's
an answer tn the near future.
game," and went on to say that
Jo hnso n
regarded
Q: Can 1 s tudent receive a diploma fro m the University If he o r she Lyndo n
Congress
as
"a
problem
to be
d oes not have a major?
A : No, each s tude nt must have a maJor. There are no such things as dealt w1th .''
He satd that 90 per cen t of
" general degrees" offered at SUNY A B.
what IS called "classified" is to
Q · Last year there was a program rn Norton Hall ca!led the man1pulate the people, and
pro tec t
the fa1lures of the
''Psyc:homat." Is this KOina to be held aaain this year?
govern
ment.
T he war was o ne in
A : A timely question because the first session o f Psyc ho mat was
held tlus last Wednesday. It tS being held each Wednesday afternoon wh1ch there was " no planning o n
from 3 - S p.m ., in the Millard Fillmore Room in Norton Hall. For strategy, overall troop strength,
those . who don' t. kno w about it, Psychomat is "a listenin&amp;. a nd s peaking
expenence. It 1S an on·going and free-flo wing program d esigned
specifica~ly t o bring peo~le fro m all segments of the University
commuruty together to mteract in a n o pen manner 1tbout the
com monalities of human ex perience. The specific goal is
person·to ·perso n communication .''

IIIIIIAII

Q : Why aren' t the prices marked in th~ books in the Bookstore? 1
tbouaht that by law they had to do this .
A.: Titer~ are two sections t o the Bookstore. Upstairs is the
b.rowSUlg section a nd all t he book prices there are marked in the books
eJth~r by the publish er o r by the Bookst o re. Downstairs is the textbook
section and here the prices are marked in ultra violet ink. The procedure
here, however, is that you must order the book from the clerk . Yo u
canno_t browse. He or she then shows you the price under the
ultraVIolet lam? and you are st ill free t o buy o r not' to buy the book.
You a re also g1ven a receipt which detailS each rt em 's cost a nd the t o tal
co~t. The reasons for using the ultraviolet method o f marking the book
pnces are many and valid according to the Bookstore.

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Page
four . The Spectrum . Friday I November 5 I 1971
.

were intent o n using air power to
help the French at Oienbienpbu ;
but because of the fmdings of a
com.mittee . headed by Ridgwa y,
Pres1d ent Eisenhower realized that
the U.S. would be in for a very
heavy and hostile ground war so
the idea was dropped right th~re.
Jn summing up his talJc on
Vietnam and the lesson of the
Pentagon Papers Mr. Hal berstam
said , "We made Vietnam what we
wanted it to be, not wltat H was.
The Pentagop Papers taught us
abo u t t he myth of o mniscience
concerning t he execut ive branch
o f government ; these people had
no secre t information that made
them experts.··
During a qu(..-stlon-and·answer
perio d , Mr. Halberstam revealed
that he felt Sen. Edward Kennedy
had the best chance as the
Democratic
candida t e
for
President. When asked if he
believed all deserters and political
prisoners should rcce1ve a mnesty,
he answered " I don't believe in
politic.ll prisoners, particularly
bec:~ usc 1 m1ght be one myst'lf"
but he wen I on to answer "Yc:.."
Mr. Halberstarn is currently
writing a book called Thtt Orr(
and Th£' Br~gllfl!st It is about the
how's and why's of Vietnam lt i~
to be released sho rtl y .

I

�Woinen'S Festival Schedule
I

Saturday, Nov. 6

Lec ture: 8:30 p.m., JiU Johnston , Fillmore Room.

Workshop: 10 a.m.- 1 p.m ., Starting a Women's
Band, Room 332 Norton.
Concert: 8 p.m ., Chicago Women's Liberation Rock
Band, Fillmore Roo m .

Thursday, Nov. I J
Worksh op: 10 a.m.-noon , Rap Group: Older
Women , Room 332 Norton.
Workshop: 1 p.m .-3 p.m ., Puerto Rican Women ,
Room 332 Norton.
Worksh o p: 1 p.m.- 3 p.m ., Erica Jo ng, Barbara
Harr-Poetry, Room 334 Norton.
•
Wo rkshop: J p.m.- 3 p.m., Art Discussion, Room •
23 1 Norton.
Film : Caroline, Fabienne, Francoise, L!Jurette, Mrs.
Case.
Poetry : 8 p.m. New York Poets and Pucdu Rican
Poet. Fillmore Room.
·
Coffeehouse: 9 p.m. &amp; II p.m., J ean Ritchie, Ethel
Raym.

•

Monday, Nov. 8
Workshop: 10 a .m.-noon, Rap Group: Women's
Liberation, Room 330 Norton.
Worksho p: 10 a.m.- noon , Women in Medicine,
Room 332 Norton .
Workshop:
1
p.m.- 3 . p.m .,
Women
in
Communications, Room 332 Norton.
Workshop: 3 p.m.- 5 p.m., Community Health,
Room 332 Norton .
Film : Women on the March, the Story of the
Struggle for Equal Rights (60 min .).
Lecture: 8 p.m., Florynce Kenned y. FiUmore Room.

Tuesday, Nov. 9
Workshop: JO a.m.- noon. Women and Taxation,
Room 332 Norton .
Workshop: 1 p.m.- 3 p.m., Women in Prison, Room
334 Norto n .
Workshop: 3 p.m .-5 p.m., Abortion and Birth
Control , Room 334 Norton.
Worksho p: 3 p.m.-5 p.m., Children 's Literature,
Room 332 Norton .
Film: Women Up In Arms (30 min .), Mariana (30
mio .), Blood of the Condor.
Dance: 8 p.m., Christyne Lawson , Fillmore Room.
Wednesday. Nov. ·10
Workshop: 10 a.m.- noon, West Side Women's
Project, Room 332 Norton .
Worksh op: I p.m .-3 p.m ., Rap Group : Lesbianism,·
Room 332 Norton .
Workshop: 3 p.m.- S p.m.~.ap Group: Divorced
Women, Room 332 Nor"'n.
Film: 6 p.m., Merlin Stone, Room 23 1 Norton .

UNIVERSITY TRAVEL
R~·,ums li3/316 NORTON HALL Ext. 3602/3603
Division of Sub.Ooard I, Inc.

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Schussmeisters Ski Club
Room 318, Norru n Hdll

Ski

Cl1t1monix, Frrt11ce
Dec. 27th to Jan. 7th

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10 nights
11 days

including New Years

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or on to

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PA C K A G E

CHAMONIX, FRANCE
Including hotels
Apartment - Chalets, Meals
Transfers and Gratuities
323/316 NORTON HALL

INFORMATION

.

~rogr:11s

ExL 3602/3603/2145

\ The University Travel Center, its
and services .tre mc1de possiblej
by your Student Activity Fees via Sub-Board I, Inc.

Friday, Nov. 13
shop : 10 a.m.- noon , Betty Kro nsky-Radical
Therapy, Room 334 Norton.
shop: 10 a.m .- noon, Child Care, Room 332
Norton.
Workshop: 10 a.m.- noon, Ethel Raym.Slavic
Singing. Room 330 Norton.
Wo rkshop : I p.m.- 3 p.m., Diane OiPrima-Poetry ,
Room 332 Norton.
Film : I om Somebody (30 min .)
Poetry : 7..;30 p.m ., Diane DiPrima, Fillmore Room.
Coffeehouse: 9 p.m . &amp; I J p.m ., Jean Ritchie.
Concert: 9 :30 p.m., Applachjan Women 's Band,
Fillmore Room.
Saturday , Nov. 13
Theater : 8 p.m ., It's All Right to Be a Woman
Theater, Fillmore Room.

Note: A II j71m-s will be shown continuously in the
Conference Theater. Norton Hall, frum 3 p.m. - / I
p.m. with the exception vf Friday's films, which will
he shown between the same hvurs in Acheson 5.

Upcoming festival to
spotlight womanhood
Women
their beauty, thdr
contributions, their 1=rea tivity ,
their culturt• and their oppression
will all he celebrated hy J
U U A 8 -s ponsore d
Wo men 's
Festival (Nov. 6 I J).
Intended f(tr women, cr.:;tled
by women ) and Jealing with
women, the Festival is an
expression and rccognitiun of
female consciousness in sol·iet y.
"Wumcn
are
beautiful ,"
com mentetl one .Fe~I ivai -...:orkcr .
"They arc there doing, creating
and being." To achieve an
understanJing of this creativity,
women prominent in all artistic
fields will be coming to the
University for ' presentations uf
poetry. music, art. dance and
theater. Coming to celebrate
women wit~ be :
- It s Aft Righi To Be Woman
thea /l'r , a group ,.of New York
women who have developed plays
through improvisation on themes
of women's oppression and
liberation, out of the experiences
of their own lives.
- Jean Ritchie. a songtress
from Kentucky who has collected
folksongs throughout the British
Isles as well as in her home area.
- Chicago Women's Liberation
Rock Band , a new experience in
rock music in a field traditionally
dominated by men.
Diane
There are more
DiPrima, Marge Piercy, Erica •
Jong, Barbara Harr and Betty
Kr-onsky.
Also to b~ explored is the
woman 's movement and women 's
positions on relevant issues.
bringing
women
Workshops
togeth~r to discuss various topics
such as community
health,
women in medicine and child care
wiH be offered. Participating in
these seminars will be women

tll.:t!vc .in the comjllunity and
Un1Vefli1ty, and noted women
spedalists SUl'h as Florynce
Kennedy.
Christyne
Lawson .
Marlin Stone and Jill J ohnstone.
Particular attention will be
pa1d to the spec1al problems of
such groups as biJck. Puerto
Rican , guy. divorced and older
women . A week of films pertinent
to t hese problems will be shown.
Among them biographies on
Angda Davis and Areth;. Franklin.
There is more :
I he movie Mariano abo ut a
23-year-old umversity student
deeply involved in the struggle of
women in Chile ~o achieve dignity
and equality with men in all
aspects of life.
by
Ellen
A discussion
Kahaner exploring sexist attitudes
in chiJdren's literat ure.
- A discussion about existing
birth
control
and abortion
facilities in the Buffalo area with
members of the Women's Health
project.
- Women
from
TY
and
newspape? will speak abo ut their
careers and the conflicts that
women working in the media
encounter every da y.
Although directed primarily at
women. the Festival ho pes to
relate to men through open,
on·going rap sessions dealing with
t he problem of being a man in a
society basicaUy sextist. Howeveli,
the focus is on women. The
Festival is intended so that
women can get a sense of
excitement o f what a woman can
do and so that men can gain an
understanding of what women
have done and are continuing to
do.
The Festival is only a week;
however, the excitement and
interest it hopes to create in both
women and men will be ti meless.

Friday, November 5, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

,

,

�...
(

'He may htive lost, but were
better Q/f tluln we've ever been'
by Janis Cromer
Sp«trum Staff Writu

arandson is o nly nine, you know ...
The others seated at the table are
obviously impressed that a boy so
youna is already learning to use
slander effectively. Another
woman scurries to the gatherina
to exclaim that "at the GOP party
they even have a 'band and the
air-conditioning is on ."
There were notable differences
a cross t h e foye r in the
Republicans' room, in atmosphere
as well as patronage. The hall was
plastered with l)Osters and huge
elephants rearing on their hind
letl t o welcome aU guests,
'including the two somber, pouting
guards stationed at the podium
and a cheery Miss Buffalo
bedecked in red , white and
naturally , blue. Here Repn
bumper s ti c kers we re the
counterpart o f smile butto ns.
Supporters sported them o n
purses, on lapels and , quite
os tentati o usly, on foreheads.
Every few mom en t s th e:
barbershop combo wquJd break
out with a few bars of " fl ot Time
m the Old Town Tonight."

. "Sedita said no pretty face
would win - weU, what do you
call that ?" squealed o ne youna
Regan aroupie, as she pointed to a
large poster of the newly elected
county executive.
T u esday night 's election
celebrations at th e Statler Hilton
h ad a ll t h e glamour and
·excitement of a parking lot
carnival. Entering the hotel from
Genesee Street, we fou nd the
Republican festivities justifiably
located on the right side of the
main lobby and the Democrats'
bash in a smaller meeting hall on
the left. Hotel workers denied all
a ccusa tio n s of Republi can
favoriti s m and pre-election
premonitions o f a Rega;, vtctory
that might be deduced from the
allocatio n of the larger room to
the GOP deletwtion.
At 9 p.m. the polls had just
closed and Democratic supporters
had begun to draft mto the hall.
At this point there were more
people carrying cameras and
wearing "pre~" signs than Sedita Fashionable affair
A fashion editor wo uld have
well·w1shers. But the crowd
increased rapidly with hundreds had nightmares attending thts
of Sedita yellow "smue·· pin~ function . Purple was the colo r o f
fla shing m the televi&amp;ion ca meras. the evening, worn by Democrats
The more loyal and dedicated the and Republica ns alike. First noted
campaign worker, the bigger and was a purple vinyl pantsuit , then
mdre prominent I he smile button . purpl e hot pants and most
Six girls of various ages next to six impressive purpl e s upport
pho nes and sjx pitchers of water stockings. The Democrats had
waited anx1ously for the first clearly more cigar smokers and
ret urn s. Be h1nd them . Joe S 12.50 men's fashionably lo ng
Crangle, Democratic cha1rman o f hairstyles while the Republicans
Ene County, paced back and attracted all the white-booted
forth glancing occas1onally at the high schoolers and o ne t1ger-sk1n
green b lackboards contaimng vest and pants. Yet , the wmmng
names but no numbers, as o f yet. prize for originality in costume
went to the Democrats for the hot
pink bowling shirt em printed with
Garbage humor
A group of elderly Democrats "St. Adalbert's Tuesday Ntght
sat aro und one of the larger Bingo Co-Chairman·• on the back.
At 9 :20 . p.m. WBEN TV
tables , swap p 1ng last·mtn ute
political boasts and pred1ctions. announced that they had )forecast
One woman told a joke her Ned Regan as the next county
grandson had creattvely conjured : executive. Republicans acclaimed
" You see," she sa1d , "one man the me dta 's reputation fo r
asks where Regan stands in the accuracy while Demo c rat s
elect ion poll and the other man encouraged each other with , " It 's
says, 'l.n the garbage can , wailing too early to tell'' and "Come on ,
to be picked up'." The table smile a little - don't give up so
snickers and the woman beams soon." Mr. Sedita came to the
proudly, "Isn 't that cute? And my microphones to deny, as one

newsman had asserted, that he
and Joe Cranate were " huddlina
over fiaures in a corner." He said
of the Channel 4 newsman : " Yo u
have it wrong, just like you d id
throupout the campaian. Don 't
give up. We'll wait a little lonaer."

Democrats concede
Drinks co ntinued to be poured
as the returns mounted . One
waiter· qui pp ed : "Th ese
Democrats consume more liq uor
than anyo n e I know ." A
staggeri n g young Republican
commented : " I sure hope Ned's
winning 'cause I can't even see the
scoreboard anymore."
Shortly after 10:30 p.m.,
Joseph F. Crangle appeared on
stage to state: "It appears at this
time that the people have decided
not to have the benefit of the
expen ence of one of our most
d1sllnguished publtc servants ...
The people o f the county have
awarded the elect1on to Mr.
Regan ."
Mayor Sedita then personally
co n ceded the election. " I've
tasted victory, and I've tasted
defeat. 1'd hke to win , but you
can't always wm." He went on to
congratulate Edward Regan
saying ; " This is a different scene
altogether . . it's a difficult job.
People arc demanding more and
more service and they are en titled
to it. Mr. Regan needs the
strength of your help and the help
of Almighty God."
Crangle

too long?

Rati~mah7.ati on s

and o p1n1ons
concermng the election o utcome
were muttered throughout the
crowds. One old·llme Democrat
said : " He may have lost , but we're
I the Democrats I better off than
we've ever been." A Republican
quened, " Why the hell would he
want to run for thts anyway he's 64 years old !" He added : " I
d o n ' t thmk the people like
he's been
Chairman Crangle
there too long."
Edward V. Regan, after hea ring
Mayor Sedita's speech . forged to
the s peaker 's p latform and
announced his victory was a
"tri um ph of the people over
'politics as usual'." Mr. Regan
explained that he entered the race

photographs by Osterreicher
as an underdog and ran against a
political machine so powerful
"that it could bring in Muskie,
Humphrey . Lind say, Bayh,
McGovern and Ken nedy." The
crowd booed and hissed these
names heartily . "But it did n't
help,'· continued Mr. Repn, "we
stuck to the real issue of this
campaign - Erie County - and
we won."

'Honesty and integrity '
·'Make no mistake," Mr. Regan
said in the Nixon style, "make no
mistake, this victo ry signals the
beginning of the end of the
As a group o f five hotel
political machine in Buffalo and
Erie County. I promise you as I waitresses left the evening's
p r om ise d B. J ohn Tutuska , activities, one woman summed up
present county executive, the her feelings about the election,
same honesty and integrity that "So he was elected ; am I going to
has been the hallmar~ of his life ." get a raise in pay or a day off
Retur n s were c ontinually because of it?''

Supporters sad
Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, November 5, 1971

announced until about II p.m.
when the hotel started to clear.
The Republicans had a county
executive, but they had lost
co n trol of the Erie County
Leais lature . The Democrats
captured II of the 20 seats and
they also retained their 13·2
majority on the Buffalo Common
Council. Another plus for the
Democrats was the election of
Buffalo City Judge Ann T. Mikoll.
She IS the first woman ever
elected to the Supreme Court in
the eipt-county Western New
Yo rk Eighth J udicial District.

Two lea than cheerful Sedita .,pporters watch as a
new generation of 1.-denhip runs up an easy victory.

�News IUUIIysis

Democrats blow it
by Harvy Lipman
City Editor

It is now th ree days since Edward Regan won handily the election
for county executive. ·The custf?m at thls point in Lime is for the various
news media to each release its own incisive analysis of how the victors
came to be victorious. Following in that great tradition, The Spectrum
has o nce again set this reporter loose in the political arena.
/
The place to begin , it would seem , is with the facts of the election.
Thls, o f course, creates an immediate problem since the analyst "mu-;t
decide which of the many statistics available are pen iuent tu•
understanding the outcome. The first major item is not merely that Mr .
Regan won the electio n with nearly 60 per cent of the vote. Instead ,
perhap~ the most telling figures on the state of politics in this area are
the ones that show Ned Regan won the city of Buffalo by nearly 3500
votes.
This is a Democ ratic city. Its populatio n is largely composed of
working people, and it has a history of being a solid union town . Partly
because of those reasons, Buffalo has been one o f the municipalities
hardest hit by Nixon's"economic policies. The election for the Common
Council saw the Democrats retain a 13-2 majority. Yet even with all
these facto rs working on the voters, Mayor Sedita could not even carry
the city. Obviously, the people of Buffalo have not suddenly deserted
t o I he Republican party. Just as obviously. the people of Buffa lo are
getting fed up with Frank Sedita.
Undeceived voters
Evidently, the voters were not ovelly fooled by the Democratic
altempts to cast aspersions on the record and integrity of Mr. Regan .
On the cuntwry, it seems that Buffalo nians are much more interested
in having housing built and in gelling jobs than in following party lines .
They migh t not have been quite sure what they would be getting from
Mr. Regan. but they knew what they had gotten frum the mayor.
The election proved a few nther things . The Democrats were very
unsuccessful at attempting to run against the Nixon policies. The
parade of nat10nal ligures didn't p•utit:ularly impress the voters, it
merely indicated that a lnt of people figure they need Mr. Crangle's
support to get anywhere in New York politics . The people of Buffalo
didn't t ie the policies of Mr. Regan to those of the President. They did ,
however, tic their own living conditions to the policies of the mayor. A
lot of citizens are unhappy with the way they are living.
Ticket splitting
The amount of ticket splitting In this election was monumental.
Not o nly did the ci ty support Mr . Regan while overwhelmingly keeping
the Democrats in cont rol of the council, but the count y overall ga~e
him over 58 per cent of the vote while turning the legislature over to a
Democratic majority. In the legislature case, it would seem quite
evident that the past body's reputation for corruption, especially in the
stadium affair, finally caught up to the Republicans. Frederick Pordum
and Frank Ludera probably had more to do with the Democratic
victory than did the Democrats.
To further illustrate the ticket splitting which occurred in the city
itself, we present these figures. In the individual council district races
the Democrats received a total of over 87,000 votes to the Republicans'
52,000. In lhe election for council president, Democrat Chester Gorski
received better than ~3.000 votes to just over 54,000 for his opponent,
Republican Gerald Whalen. The only Republican candidatefto fare well
in a city-wide council race was Councilwoman Slominski. Her victory
can only be ascribed to the city's conservative history in areas such as
civil rights and edu~.:ation.
Sedita vs. Sedita
The ticket splittmg in the coun try was also quite prevalent.
Democratic legisla tive candidates received about 190,000 total votes to
Mr . Sedita's 170,000. On the Republican side, legislative candidates
took under 170,000 votes to Mr. Regan's 240,000. The election , then ,
was not determined along party lines. The voters simply took to Ned
Regan. Undoubtedly, some of this support was the result of hls
youthful appearance and image. Many vote rs were probably also
disturbed by the Sedita campaign tactics. The Democrats tried to sling
mud, and when they couldn't find enougl1 to use. they made some up.
That may work fine so long as people don' t see through such tactics,
but this time they did.
The biggest single factor in Mr. Regan's favor, however, was his
opponent's record. Even if no one had known Ned Regan's history in
the Common Council and the Democrats' distortions had been able to
pass unchallenged, there was no way for the party to hide the
condit ions which have continued to plague the city of Buffalo. In the
end the man who did Frank Sedita in was Frank Sedita.

'

Friday, November 5, 1971. The Spectrum. Page seven

;.

�Set priorities now
.

The Student. Aissembly ~ted in a proper manner
...._
Wednesday afternoon in finally passing the $240,000
allocation to the Athletic Department. While we do not feel
that this is the wisest expenditure, the moment to have cut
this proposal passed by six months ago when it came before
the Executive Committee of the Student Association.
At that point, the Committee miserably abdicated their
responsibility to the students by effectively doing nothing
more than rubber-stamp the Athletic Review Board's
proposals. As a result, the Athletic Department began to. P.lan
for this academic year based on a nearly quarter-mtlhon
dollar budget. To have modified this proposal on any
. HOWEVER, WI NlVIR TAKI THIS SORT OF THING ·TOO SUIOUSLYI'
large-scale basis now, would, as we stated earlier, have caused
drastic repercussions in the Athletic Department.
All of this, however, does not preclude the Assembly or
no
Executive Committee from dealing with the remaining
question of priorities for the future. We believe .that an
University Booksto re or Food Service : and with a
annual athletic fee of almost $25 per student is outrageous. To the Editor:
subsidy budget o f $76 ,520 .00 this academic year
Further, we hold serious doubts that the student body
On
Friday.
October
29,
197 1, after (from Sub Board I, Inc.) a v)ried qualitative
approves of the current relationship between the amounts unanimously decld in&amp; to take a stand on PoYe~y activities and entertainment program cannot be
directed towards intercollegiate programs as opposed to Hill , we voted 9.0-2 " to argue opposition to Poverty proportio nate to 8 University of this size.
HiU in terms of UUAB's concern · for stude nt UniverJity Union Activities Board, Dlv. of Sub Board
•
intramurals.
Larry Stein, Presid ent/Director UUA B
activities
and other priorities for student m onjes at
Thus, we must urge that the Executive Committee, acting
JoAnn Meo, Organlfllti(mal Mgr. UUA B
this time." This decision was not the result of a n
in concert with the Assembly, begin a study aimed at expensive consultan t re po rt or e ven the o utcome of
Harold Weinberg. Treas. UUAB
Ann Kirschner, Sec'y. UUAB
·establishing a ceiling on future athletic fees, possibly in the a "special committee" fro m UUAB to research
Cllris Wilson, Chalrmall, Arts Committee
range of $15 yearly. We would hope that such an endeavor Poverty Hill . It was from general knowledge,
l1'm Beall, Co-chairman , Co!feehous«'
be undertaken immediately and produce more sound and less Sub·Board Fact ~heets, published newspape r
Joann Erd e, Co-cllafrmari, Coffeehoust:
informBlion,
and
informal
discussions
with
students
absurdly egotistical proposals than the assinine suggestion
William Stover, Ctmtem porary Issues Comm . Chr
(both government leaders a nd not), tha t we found
voiced in the Assembly that the words "Student " reasonable doubt" with tho Poverty Hlll idea.
Linda Gt!lnuzn, Dunce Art.r Comm. C/Jr
Susan Schwarz, Dram(ltic Arts Comm . Chr.
Association" be stencilea on all Athletic Department shirts.
We felt t hat a ''$64,000 .00 a yea r for I 0 year"
Walt Behnk~. Film Comm. Chr.
The closeness of the vote should indicate the controversy committment is too high when the re are items of
Handler, Chr. /,it. An t Comm .
Beryl
highe
r
priority:
T
he
Browsing
Library
and
th
~
Music
surrounding athletics. Because of this, the Assembly and
Paul Rosen. Chr. Music Comm .
Room
are
in
financial
trouble;
t
he
present
facilities
Executive Committee may find it easy to attend to other o n this campus are inadequate fo r presenti ng
Jeff Reiman, Chr. Pub. Cumm
business, rather' than deal with the difficult task of programs; there is no working alternat ive to t he
Karen Markwalter, Co·chr. Pub. Comm.
determining athletic fee policies. Unfortunately, the students
cannot afford this, lest a year hence, the same situation of a
It somehow seems al togethe r fitting to write a to which th e foregoing sen te net' refers - somewhere.
budgetary review six months too late repeats itself, leaving column caUed the grump on t he day of election. Any Now you see it , no you do n't. The pen is faster than
recommendation , or te ndenc y to do so, can be the eye - mind? - mjncls eye? Landlord , two more
them to suffer t he financi al burdens for another year.

UUAB-

Library threatened
During the last fiscal year we have grown accustomed to
the constant stream of freezes and cutbacks imposed by the
State. While a few of the cutbacks may have had some
justification in fact, their latest classification of the Library
as a non-essential service defies belief.
A library is a central part of a university and is an
invaluable and necessary tool for all forms o f teaching,
research and learning. To classify the Library as a
non-essential item not o nly ignores the reality of its value,
but speaks poorly of the understanding that the budget
authorities have of this or any university .
The students and faculty, as well as the administration,
must resist t his move because otherwise the already
decimated library may be harmed further. In addition, the
budgetary action sets a sorry precedent for the day may yet
come that they decide that teaching itself is a non-essential
service.

THE SpECTf\UM
Friday, November 5, 1971

Vo l. 22, No. 30

Editor·in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Editor - AI Benson
Editor - Mike Lippmann
Asst. Man~~ging Editor - Susan Moss
Bulin- Maneger - Jim Drucker
Advertisi ng Manager - Sue Mellenune
Co-Man~~ging

Co-Man~~ging

Campus _• . _ . • . . . Jo.-Ann Ammo
.. . . . .• ___ , . _. ,Howle Kurtz
- . .. . ••.•• • 1 • • . . Bill Vaccaro
City .. ___ ... . ... Harvy Lipman
Copy .. _ ____ _... Ronni Forman
__·_. _, __. _ . . .. . • Marty Gatti
Asst . . . _. . . . . • __ . .. . ,vacant
Feature . . . . . . . • • . . . .. _.vacant
Graphic Arts . _ ... _ . _ . Tom Toles

Layout . . . . . Maryhope Runyon
As.st. _ . . __ .. . . .. _.. _ . .vacant
• Lit. &amp; Drama .. Mtchael Silyerblatt
Music .. .. . .. . ... ..Billy Altman
Off.Campus _... . . lynne Traeger
Photo _ . . . __ .. _, Marc Ackerman
_ ... .... . . Mickey Ostetrelcher
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . Barry Rubin
Asst. _. ....... ___ Howie Faiwl

The Spectrum is served by United Press International, College Press
Service, the Los Angell!$ Free Press, the Los a,gelll$ Times Syndicate and
Liberation News Service.
Republication of matter h.;em w tthout the express consent or t he
Editor· in-Chief is forbidden .
Editorial palicy is det ermined by the Editor-in-C hief.

Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, Nc vember 5, 197 1

suppressed because of the knowledge that t hey
would d o no good anyway - appearin g several days
after the great escapade. It has been an absolutely
obnoxious campaign, a t least fro m my seat o n the
end zone. My dtlc isio ns were first . whether to vote at
all, and second , if I did vo te
d id I want to vote against t he
democrats or the republicans.
Given a choice of proven
Incompetence and probable
Ine ptitude what can o ne do?
You have to admire good
old Frank though. Since you
can't get rid of your record
you might as well run on it and
maybe nobody will
notice. Do not want to assault t he gentle ma n
personally, mind you. It 's not easy being a mayor
t hese days - which mtght make you wonder about
those who want the job, bul that's a side issue. All
these people r unn ing around bla ming you for things
whic h aren't your fault - c rime, poverty, racial
tension, the economy - a nd d isagreeing with
wha tever you suggest doing, and then blaming you
because you didn't do an ything. (Translating as not
doing what t hey thought you sho uld.)
One wo nders about politicians. Are t hey all
schizophrenic, or just mo re generally mad? Do they
really t hink t hat they can, do t hi ngs about t he
situations that exist , and justify the corruption and
dealing o n that basis? O r is it just their own personal
way of dt:aling with the power crisis? It must after
aU make you feel a little more significan t when t he
Buffalo Po lice De partment parks a car o utside your
fro nt door whenever yo u are in the ho use. To be
:~ ure , it isn't a little blac k box which can dest roy the
world - but il is certainly better t ha n nothing.
Damn , t his was supposed to be a rip-rortingly
funny thigh sla pper of a column. It seems somehow
to have no t qu ite gone in t ha t d irectio n. A problem
perhaps explicable in part by a serious case of
autumn - why do bo~h column and a utumns have
that totally use less n o n end , where I am al ways
forgetti ng it? - fever. A malad y which will no doubt
depart as soon as foul wea ther arrives. but which has
tended lo tended to, of late. keep me outside as
much as pos.o;ible. It is no t easy to take a half hour to
walk from Norton to the Library. It takes careful
planning a willful suspensi on of order. Down o rder,
up with chaos.
which is a general policy statement having
not hing to do wit h t he weat he r, and relatively little
to do with currenl American - es p·ecially Buffalo politics. Which should have been as changeable as
this column is but hasn't been. The weathe r is t hat

The

grump

'Poverty'

glorious tall da ys. Vote for · weather control,
whatever! Wh.e ther? Howsomever! (Stick with it
folks, it bas to run do wn somctirne.) Babble, Burble.
Wo rd Salad is frequently a c lear e xa mple of
decreasing mental hea lth. Unless it is an example of
su perior intellectual competence capable of
funct ioning o n several levels at once. Chose one: A ,
T RU E B; FALSE C; EITHER A O R B D ~ None of
the above. Don't you wish you could get paid for
writin g c.r ap like this? Should you find a way let me
k now and we'U split t he money down the middle.
But it does seem only fair to warn you that it had
better be a realtively inexhaustable market if you
plan to tum me o n to it . 'Cause when it comes to
writing cra p there is a several length lead.
Could it be that the full moon has anything to
do with thjs somewhat massive collapse ol
intelligibility? But Eric, the moon isn't fun four
ti mes a month . Good point Steese, I . .. beg your
pardon? Sorry you'll have to se~ the governor. I
would but the hood is kept locked . You're mad . No.
a little irritated maybe. That's what comes of having
an abrassive personality . Don't be coarse! (I can't
find my place in the script, do I have a line about
being crude, before or after your line ab o ut being
refined ? Da mned if I k now, ask the man . Author.
Author. Due to circ umstances beyond our control no tably the a uthor'ss circumspection - we are
unable to presentl y locate the individual responsible
for this . . . wo rds fail momentarily . . _ massive
circumloc ution. (And really big had for Webster's
Seventh New Collegiat.• )).
Come now, be sensible . What, and spoil my
track record . After a month of Hslening to political
s peeches - far out, ac tually found 8 bridge back to
the first part! , careful, no body is supposed to notice
that it was virtually accidental - it become.s
necessary to dump lhe collection of t rivia, un -truth ~ .
confusion, a nd double refined b ull shi t somewhere
( What a coarse remark! - crude, dummy; whoeve1
heard of coarse bullshit'! - Dunno ; how many bulls
have you talked to lately? Not many, I admit , but ) FLASH, could there be a market for a product
which would sweeten the . . . . . uh . . . . . nether
otfice? . . . . t he way the vust prolifer-.Hion of
" personal h ygiene" products take care of certain
other delicate problems? Scented Oat us, wow - we'll
make a million .
S peaking of fla tus and bull shit, it seems well
nigh lime to end this weeks exciting excursions in to
the Jand where id and ego meet. Tune in next wee l.
to see if t he superego ha~ managed to counterattack
the above o nslaught against gvod taste - don 'l
know , about taste , it w:~s smell we were cont:crned
with - STOP !

�Fritz responds
To the Editor:
For students, faculty and stuff of the University,
1 would like to clarify the faU programming of

Rotary Field.
In response to a recent "letter to the Editor" m
your publication, it ~oh o uld be pointed o ut that costs
for field preparation at Ro tary for high school
football games are mcluded in a s ubstantial financ ial
agr~:cment with the institutions involved . Thl! rental
fees are paid to the University and not to the
· Athletic De partment.
Rotary ~~ available for classroom instruction,
supe~ised introm uruls, and o pen recreation o n a
daily basis from 7 a .m . through 7 p.m ., or until
practices and con tests are completed . The field is
also open for supervised and free recreation
weekends as a part uf t he resular pro gram of
rec reation .
II is necessary to secure the facility when
supervision is not available because of vandalism
possibilities.
Destruc tion
of
property
hy
non-University
personnel has created cost ly
pro blems in t he put.
A place kicking area, with a regulat1o n goal post
is available ort the practice field adjacent to Ro tary .
It is here that field goal k1ckmg prac tice us ually
takes place.
The m a1n field is reserved for o ffi cutl contests
and events. Arrangements o nginate m the Athletic
Department and are approved by the Bulldmg
Committee.
We inv1te dlrec tm&amp; anY suggesttons, concermng
use of o ur limited recreational a nd athJet1c facilities,
to the department.
Harry Fritz, Diret·((Jr
Plry.vrcal l:'duration, Rec·rc·arinn
and A rhlnfL•s .

True objectivity!
Tn

1/le Editor ·

Wh y .til th ~ fuss7
To begin with, Prof. H1lstead 's state ments
obviously renect more than just an indavidual case of
racism It renects the racist ideological approach . In
this case, it is presented in a most blatant and
superficial way. Hl!l c laim to "objectivity:· as well as
his cla1m to " intelligent blac k students in his class,''
shows in itself 1he classical rac ist view. known to
every one o f us as "some o f my best friends are
hlack ." With respect to Ius "ObJective" and "factual"
mterpretat1on o f impenahsm, Pro f. Halstead tends to
forget ahout some interesting remarks made 1n his
own book, Rt'blfth of a Na t/ Ofl , s uch as, ..The
miracle thu t France wrought over th1s medieval land
opened the Moroccan 's eyes, broadened his h orizons,
raised his ste ndards ... " As far as the reason for
unemployment among the Mo roccuns, Halstead the
"objective" says, "One cannot h.!lp but o bserve that
the diffh:ultles experienct'd by Moro.:cans in finding
congenial employment were partly of t heir o wn
making. The French-educated Moroccans had an
inOated o pinion of t heir quallfic ataons and disd ained
the modest administrative open to them . Such a
frame of mi nd made job-seeking under the
circumstances a doubly frustrating ex pen encl!." (p.
60). Ho wever, the "factual" Halstead misses this:
"over 96% of the luwt'st pa1d wo rkers in the
Moroccan civil serv1ce are Morocca ns, whereas over
90% of the o fficials in t he h1giH•st grades are
French ." (Mo rocco
Under the Protectorate)
Apparently, the lack of JOb!. for Mo roccans was not
due to the people's "frame of mind ," but the rac1san
of the French bosses. And this IS what Halstead 1s
telling us~ " factual"!!!
Halstead also says in has leuer lhat his ~ou rse as
"factual." He says that t he "communist view of
imperialism is slightly overd rawn ;" as well as tw,
state ment about SDS, a "commumst fro nt "
organization . Accord ing to Ha lstead, the only peopk
who are inte rested m fightmg n1cism are e1ther crazy
communists or their dupes. What about the millions
of people around the wo rld fighlln g racist
pro-imperialist doctrines that he IS defending'! 1\.s an
example, the re are six people faci ng sente nces uplo
4 years for trying to fight the racist filth as taught lly
Pro f.
Hals tead ,
represen ta tive
of
this
"obje.:tive-factual'' imperialist system. People mu~t
come to the trial o n Monday, Nov. X at ('i t y Court .
42 OelawJ re Ave., 9:30 a rn .
IVIIftrd l.t ht•vt•rto
J'q}m tl . Ruww
Norman Slaw~/.. v

"

'

Guest Opinion

The univers.i ty as a socializing ins1itution
by Marvin Resnikoff
The collec tives I've been in and seen in recen t
mo nths have been deeply anvolved in inter--personal
problems. For various psycho logical reasons, very
important to those Involved, ~ne perso n cannot get
alo ng with another a nd, as a result, the cohesiveness
and stability o f the collective hu.s h11en threatened.
It's ver y un usual for a collective gro up to live closely
to gether longer t han six m onths.
And that made me think about the university as
a socializing mstitution. I mean, if individuals in o ne
collective cannot get along because of the
personalities, that's o ne thing. After all , no t
everyl)ne can lo ve everyone else in this world, and
perhaps the personal chemistry is not right . B~t. if
every collective is threatened by internal personaJ
disagreements, then something else must be
ha ppening and since most collecti ves are formed o f
universit y-t ype people, that "somethmg" is probably
due to t he educational systc:m, in general, and the
university, in particular.
There a re several obvious way!i the. uni versity
acts ItS a socializing institutjon . First . tbe universi ty
continues that respec t fo r education that was
nurtured an grade school and high school. If you
spend 40 hours per week an c lass, you m ust believe
that what happens in class is important to you . What
ha ppens in that classroom? In general, an mstructor,
01n .authont y figure, usually mal•. teUs you about
something. The instructor 1S usually without feelings
and emotiOI\S, at least t hat he :.dmits to before a
c lass. he has not much laughter and joy, t~nd
certainly no sorrow .And· then , you don't do
anything In class
you d o n't touch and shout,
"Glory to the Lord , lialle luJa h"
you just sit and
take notes. You sometimes ask a question - more
rarely there 1s a heated argument. In the sciences we
assign hundreds of proble ms an each co urse, abstract
exercises; the students are anesthe tit.ed. Those who
cun st ick at o ut art: passed on to industr y.
government
they're well-behaved , Industrio us,
wit h that small spark of imagination, enough to keep
lBM rolling. In s ho rt , there is no life, no love, no
teehngs, m the t.lassroom . Reform the c urriculum,
innovate in the classroom , n o matte r.ll will still be a
substitullo n
pro.:ess .
Replace yo ur feelings,
e mo tions, your JOY, w1th something bland . by
someone in authority , in a setting you cons1der
important. "Oh. mama, could this he the end7 To be
stuck inside of Mobile with those Memphis Blues
ag:un."
All thL~ has been stated by mo re astute observers
than myself. What hasn' t been stated clearly enough
1s ho w the un iversity teaches us to think . We are
taught to think cnt•caJly, to excess. Read this piece
of literat ure and compa re 11 to th1s p1ece - when
Hamlet lifted h1s left eyehrow , what wass
Shakespeare (could 11 he Bacon? ) telhng us? Tilink.
Think . Your mmd is ho ned to a razor's edge. This
socialization process continues on 111 graduate
school and IS most apparent 1n the faculty . You read
a JOU~al article and find the wea k points. You jump
in with sharpened penc il , and you create a journal
article fo r yourself. 1'h1s research training is then
c;orried ovl!r hy the faculty to o ther areas of art1vity .
For example , it ·ib e xtre mel y d iffi c ult to gel a fa cult y

committee to agree o n the wording o f some m inor
resolution, each fa c ulty member is so c ritical of what
the other says. The Teamsters, with many less y~ars
of education. can get th emselves together better t han
o ur faculty.
The universi ty :tnd, of course, society tn general ,
also socializes with respec.:t to rac ial attitudes, s exual
altitudes, dress artd soctal custom. but I want to
emphasi7e only the ahnve points bere.
It makes mo re sense to me now wh y
umvers1ty-type people can't get along in a collective,
Take th is last po mt about the abuse of crincal
thinking a nd ho w it carries QVer to nat ura l
relationships. You a nd some friends d ct'ide lu hw
together because you are com fort ahl~! wi th ea ch
other, like each o ther, and do similar things. You an:
very fond of Max (the names have been changed to
pro tect the innocent) ; you've had lots o f serious
convet'Slttions, lauQhs, c ries. Max chews his
fingernails , bu t it 's not important, a small part of
Max. But when yo u Uve closely with Max, and when
tensions m crease, it becomes very im portant. Your
perception of Max changes; chewing his fingernails
now beco mes 90% of h is personality a nd those good
points that brought yo u together are lost . That is,
you are think.ing critically of Max like yo u think of
Hamlet 's left eyebrow and the weak points of a
journal a rticle. The un iversity has not taught you to
he loving and supportive, the university has not
taught you to _get along w1th o thers in a meaningful
way 11'1 fact , 1t 's ta ught you the opposite .
Thas soc1alization, in tum , has sad social and
political consequences. If peo ple a re broken down in
1wos, 1f fnends canno t get alo ng in larger groups,
then we must buy o ne refrigerator, stove, car, etc.,
lor every two people, and o ne of t hose two had best
get a job to pay for all this. However, if len people
could share a car, rt a/, why that wo uld have
dr:smallc effects o n o ur ca pitalist system. In
effectively prevl· nting individuals fro m living
collec.:tlvc ly. the university directl y serves the
c~t pil alist system ; groups o f two keep produc tion up.
In addition , by being mutually supportive,
mdividuals 1n a collective are capable of being more
politically involved compared to individuals outside
of a collec tive , es pecially in achons which have less
peer gro up support . Croups of two keep individuals
fragmented, a part , and are not a politically effective.
Also, c ollectives are more capable of shutting off the
influences of the mass media in maintaining
agsregatl' d e m:lnd ; groups of tw o are caught in a
consumptive treadmill And finally, Jt is one thesis of
this a rticle that the more o ne is socialized at tbe
unavcrs11y, the le!.s capable he (or she) is of
mtenic tang deeply and fully With several other
humJn be1ngs, und that's the saddest social
con:u:quence of them all
Unfortunately . like the uruverslly, this article nut tca\.:h you to mter-relate and poses no
posallvc sollatao n except to state t he pro ble m , in the
same theord1c..al manner it criticizes. I can't get out
of tha t b1nd except to say that the univers ity also
equips us w1th t he tools and consciousness to save
ourselves . Th~ rest is JUSt a very hard personal
problem, rc:qulflng a lot of self and group a nalysis
and a lol ~J f energy o n seemingly perso nal nonsense.
l' nl JU~I unlearning a nd learning myself.
aJ~o tine~

Sheep Meadow soiree
g~ve

l i1 tht' f.'di/M ·

Nov 6 IS a h1g rally day fnr lhe far out
:.phnte red o ld new Mohy left an New York City . Lo ts
ol people .1re going to g.tthcr at (lth Ave. and 42nd
St (t ribute to the g.ay liberataon frun t ), and then
marc..h rite up to S heep's llead Meadow in Central
PJrk for the !lag power play .
the Rock ov Man
Vo te the o ld rich man
llatten
uncom mo nly n c h he's fulks like us - when
he talks has hands are always undenched . Everybody
knows 'POWER' aint nuthin but a dcnched fist.
The people will beat o ff in the wind against the
np offs who rip your jack off d own in the deepest
slum fru m the 40th noor o f Madison Ave. (esso and
tc x lcf go gulf my frend). Tht: pt:ople will rail against
t he ~hark s that scrape around Ma nhatlen skies
although t he no n rail- fl y united s kies the limit s harks
contnbutc ~:ver y day to t hc1r o wn s elf destruction in
the screw yoo night id pan-o-ramb-ic corpora te
~lructure ol the decid1dl•Y Un1ted S tates as phillt gulf
course jungle that is tht: govt.
1 here will be lo ts of power on the Sheep's Head
Mcado w ~c t Nov. 6. Electric power - a s tage,
nmropho nc:.. amph fires - also UP A P NBC ABC
CBS the CJA and me Lev will be there replete with
Yapan e&lt;.~:.y megaphone and trunkload of books.
The advance ga1m plan is to sc1ze the stage and

a t y packle Cosrn1c Wra ppmg· Adman and Even
the Gar Den ov Edum.WI the generations ov
men-how the C hana man God a yell o skin-the Peace
wat Da Rush ms Seddlc ment ov the middle
lease-true sm Veil Nam . . also the answer to the
drugh prob
the money rob
polution o n the
Great Lakes (by building one major complex in
Labrador where all the o re is - the quess chin
presents 1tself ' llo w true is Trudeau's dough) - and
how to wape out co rupt shin o n all levels beginning
1n the govt . frum lhe top on do wn WITH OUT
IIURTI NG T li f CORRUPTEU RS!
Lev tells his o wn vision 'This 1s the promised
land t hat was then t his is no w each land show its
promise. Vo w Wow to the Pea Pull-up with the
folks-in rhyme o n tung.s The Lev Book in all its ramshakle magnitude: DEUTERONOMY . . . The
Book OV Lev o ut lo ud (the reb el) treb eld on all
channels foa r all knay shins the grey test sto ry Lever
told and yoo saw id all at the moovies.
. Come for the Cosmit. Wrapping. Join the
c.:omputenzed maJOritt already listed with Herbie.
Help dish out Lev books and free literature. Gossip_
in the ears of C BS
Peace maker frum House ov
Day Vil.l Speakers Bureau along with e pic peace
pohm
c reate hvang teleVIsion for your friends at
hohm . Be there in sparit

Lev

Friday , November 5, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Election results around the country
by Lynne Traeger
1

Among the issues ln that clectlon
were urban sprawl and confidence
in city government. Wilson was a
former campaign worker fo r
Richard Naxon.

0/lCompus l!'ditor

Sta rting ou t Wes t , Tht'
Sptctrum 's elecllon roundup
centers on San Francisco. where
Black loses in Sacramento
ancumbent Mayor Joseph L
lncunlbent Richard Marriott
Alaoto defeated two strong
candidates :~1 the polls. Aliota. 55, won u second term as mayor of
was also fighting a federal criminal Sacram~n t o. It was the first dir~ct
indict mcnt , a~ well as an election elec tion of a mayor m the capital
~ampaign
He· defeated fell ow of Californw in bO years. Millon
I&gt;emocrat Dianne Feanstean and McGhee was the loser. McGhcl" ~~
Republican Harold Dobbs. whu the dty's first black coundlm01n
Muvlng to the Madwcst. and
had tried for the thard lime to win
the mayoralty contest Alioto had Gary. lndtana, Mayor Rtchard G.
been end orsed by retmng Mayor Halcher won a second term as
\art Stokes o f Cleveland and maynr . llatchcr, a bla~k. won the
Mayor John Lindsay of New ckdion in the predonunanlly
York . Also 1n San Franc1~co . an hlad. ~o aty w1th only about 40 per
amendment to reduce the c1ty'~ (O:Ot nf the voters gumg tu the
cah le car ~ernce was dd~atc:d. a:. polb lurnout 10 th~ while
was u propositi n n fl) ban di\lncts was particularly htchl
~l. y:.crapcrs 1n the city
Termmg his dcct1on lit. a
I n San Otego. Repuhlil:an r e f c 1 ~ n d u 111 11 n t h c n c w
A ~'e mblyrnan
l'ct\." Wtl~on l nllianup u li s-Mariu u County
defeated Oemocnat l u Butlt-1 ln "L1 n i gov." Rcpuhlicun Muyor
wlut wa ~ term~.·u a nonrarll!•.tn Rtchan.J I ugar wun rc-clcd1un hy
rate tor the lllJYt•r\ ntft~oe an uvcr" helnung maJOrity. Lu~t .

president of th e National League
of Cities, and a polttical favorite
of President Nixon, has been th e
principa l c hampion of the
city-county form of government.
The loser in this election was
Democrat John Neff.
Stokes' pick loses
The retirement of Mayor Carl
Stokes led to an election with no
incumben t running in Cleveland.
ru a result , 1he first Republicun an
30 years, Ralph Pc:rk , won the
cha1r. ti c defeated a millionaire
busine~\mun
Democrat, and a
black 1 ndcpendent who was
hand-picked hy Stokes. Stokes,
whu retired aft er two terms,
ptckeu school buar&lt;f pre)ident
Arnold Ptnkney as h1~ cho1cc for
mayor l lowever, Stol.es had
swi t ~.:hcd
h1 s s upport from
Pinkney to James Carnry (who
had won tn the.: prima,ry), and then
hack In l'u1kncy again , and this is
whut prnhahly cost Pinkney the
large turnout whn:h wa\ a
trJdemarl. of Stnh-s' two wmnmg

campaigns. Perk, 57, lost to
Stokes by 3500 votes two years
ago. He accused him o f splitting
tbe c1ty on racial lines during his
four years in office. Perk
campaigned hard for law and
order.
Moving southward to
Kentucky, Lt. Gov. Wendell Ford
returned the Democrats to the
governor's seat with a resou nding
victory over two candidates.
Rtpublican Tho mas Emberton,
who had the support of Gov.
Lo uae Nunn and Independent
Albert " llappy" Chandler, fo rmer
commissioner or baseball, were
the losers. f~d said t his was the
fi rst step in Kentucky's " dump
Naxnn" cam paa n.
Nixon lose&lt;~ another
Presid ent NlX(lll los~ another
one Tuesua y when Independent
Jl c:n ry ! low el l was e lected
lieu tenant governor of Virgmla .
The elet.:t ion was viewed as a test
of the strength of R cpu blt~an
Gov Lmwood Holton The puor
'how1ng hy Repubhcan George
Shafran appeared to be the hrsl
~ctba\:k rnr th e first Repubhcan
govcrnur of Virginia since
Ren&gt;nstructton. ll olton IS a close
politkal ally of N1xon .
Whll c Mi s~ i ss 1 ppaan!&gt; who
generally 1gnore geru:ral elet:tinn,,
turnt&gt;d out in hl.'avy number'&gt;
Tuesday tn Jathuu It&gt; help tJclcal
I he state'.!&gt; hr~,r black cunlf1d,11 e
for governor Charles hers, thl.'
black ~:an d1d.ttc and the I.:UII\." 111
mayor of Fayelle , IS the brother
uf th~· lJie civil nghts leader,
Ml·dger t'vc,... There wa~ uo
Rcpuhh~Jn m the contest whlt"h
pattcd I ve,... agaanst J a~.l.\on
lawyer Dc:mouat B11l Waller
Waller wa' the lawyer who
prosc\."uted I ht: accused killer of
Medger Evc:rs antl i:. cunsith:n:d a
racial moderate. Evers, who had
predicted he would win, said the
fact that a black man _could even
run ror governor m Mississappi was
sagnaficant.
Dun election in Baltimore
In a disa ppointing election 1n
Baltimore , Democrat William
DonaJd Schaefer scored an
overwhelmmg vactory against D r.

{jQ/den A1inlt
$pcv;_/eUJUj $mw.

\

Ross Pierpoint, a RepubUcan
surgeon. Democrats outn umber
Republicans in Baltimore S - I .
Schaefer bad been the City
Council president.
I n the only Congressiona I
election in the country,
Republican H. John Heinz Ill or
the Heinz S 7 fa me. defeated
Democrat John Co nnelly by a 2-1
margin in a race to fill the vacancy
left by the death of Rep. Robert
Corhett.
Former Pollee Commissioner
Frank Rizzo, running as a
Democrat on his law-and-order
record as a tough cop, beat liberal
Republican Thacher Longstreth.
Razzo promised to bring unity to
the city which was divided by a
hitter campaign spiked by charges
u l racism. The turnout was heavy
in white workmg class dastricts
where Rizzo was expected to , and
dad , rece1ve overwhe lming
s up po rt. Ri1.zo also had the
support of outgoing Democratic
Mayo r James Tate.
Lady lost in Bosto n
rhe lady l•&gt;\1 Ill Boston a\
MJyor K ev1n Wh tle wun
tc·de~llon over Rep Louise Ot~y
lllcks. Mrs. lhd.. ~ had tun agamst
Wh ite four years Jj,W . ,1ntl she lo~t
by a 3-:! m&lt;:~rgw 111 th.: nunpJrtasan
election. Mr~ I hd.\ plc:-dged h~r
~upporl
to
Whrt.: J '
congresswoman lrom lh~: Nlflth
Dastrict.
In r-ftw York S t.11~:, ClOP
h.•atlcrs could cuunt un 111 least
fl•Ur mayoral ~eat:.. tlw post ol
COUll!)' CXet'UliYe In I- Ill' Count) .
J
tJkeover of ut y t"&lt;HIIH.:Ils 111
Syra.:use and Lo ng Sea ~ h. and thl.'
con ttnuat1 o n ol tht&gt; &lt;.hstncl
attorney's tenure 111 usuully
Democratic Albany County. The
Democrats, on the ot her hand ,
pointed to a clean sweep of Troy's
council seats and an •rnprovement
m the Monroe County J eg~slature .
Democrats becam~ mayors 10
Geneva and Troy, with the
Republicans takmg over 10 Elmira,
Salamanca, Oneida , Long Beach
and Plattsburg. Vo ting generally
fo llowed traditional patterns. with
Incumbents be1ng returned to
office in the majonty of cases.

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A representattve of The Institute for
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NOTE . If reg•stral• o n lo r this semina r IS filled
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collect at lhe number shown below

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(215) WA 5 0905

- Page ten . The Spectrum. Friday, November 5, 1971
I •

•

.......

�Transportation bond defeated-

Peace Council urges State mayface fiscal crisis
big business boycott
by Dave Saleh
Spectrum Staff Wrim
As a part of a continuing effort
to sh1ft national priorities away
from military programs, a local
o rganizatio n named the Buffalo
Peace Council has aimed an attack
at area bi&amp; business. Their efforts
have taken the form of a
consumer boycott in an attempt
to force an end to corporate
support
of
the
so-called
" American War Machine."
The
Council ,
orga ni zed
immediate ly after the American
incursion
into Cambodia, is
headed by Mn. Miriam Becker. It
first initiated the boycott in
February
of
this
year
in
coope ra tion with two national
organizations - Another Mother
For Peace and the National
Boycott for Peace.
Directed at fo ur m;ijor local
corpo ratio ns - Dow Chem ical.
Textro n, DuPont and RCA
the
boycotl is designe5JI to force these
companies to cut o rr government
contracts for war supplies and
ot her military projects concermng
na11onal defense . Mrs. Becker
cl.tims
that
th1s
can
be
:tccomphshed 1f people become
involved enough to no t o nl y
boycott these produc ts, but to
also write le tters to the presidents
of these corporations declaring
t hat these pro duc ts will not be
purchased until the companies
cancel their war contrac ts.
According to Mrs. Becker, the
Counc il believes that the boycott
will
give
the middle class
consumers o f Amcnca the chance
to use their purchasing power as a
major tool in ending American
wvolvement 10 V1etnam . Mrs.
Bc~,;kcr
believe:. t h.Jt "t hro ugh
mcreased parllc1pat1on by mllhons
of consumers, we cannot only
hring about an end to the
Vtetnam War but we can also
Ioree J sh1ft 10 national pnonlles
Jway from military spendtng,
wh1ch now consumt.-s ovt:r 60 per
cent of our fiscal budget ."
Mrs Becker also da1ms tha t
the boycott is a prac tical pro test
to the war. She explained : " It gets
right to the root of the problem .
the suppliers. The present plan of
ending
the
war
th ro ugh
Vietnamization is a massive cycle
As the war slo wly winds do wn m

UUAB

VIetnam, we are sending resou rces
and war supplies into Cambodia ,
laos and Thailand so that instead
of reducing our involvement in
Southeast Asia, we are simply
s preading it out." She further
commented that "even if we d o
pull o ut in Indochina we are still
faced with o ur gigantic military
budget. On the other hand , if we
hit the suppliers so that they do
not fulfill their military contracts,
the military budget will have to ·
shrinlc."
Taking effect
As the boycott enters its ninth
month , Mrs. Becker claims that it
is causing concern to these
companies. Her letters- to the
involved
co;parations
have
brought about personal replies
from these companies, denying
major involvement in mil1tary
s pending and stating massive
achievements
in
social
and
peaceful fields of scitnct!. She
stated, fo r example, t hat "in J
letter from Dow C hemical thtre
were claims that less than one per
cent of their spending goes to th~:
military - They then state the1r
great breakthrough in t he fo rm ol
a o ne-shot measles vaccinat ion ."
She refutes th is position , though ,
by sta ting t hat "t he napal m
pro duced by Dow may be used 111
Viet nam to ki!J t he same c hild
that th e m;:11sles s ho t might have
saved , a nd thtjs th l! good is offset
by the bad."
T h rough
a
half-hour
documentary
film
and
an
mformation distribution program,
the boycott IS becoming more
widespread locally. The film ha~
been s hown o n many a rea
campuses, but the boycott ts still
nor fully publicized . Mrs. Becker
cla&amp;ms that the local med1a have
fruslfated her attempts to obtam
decent coverage. She also pomted
out
the
people's
lac k
of
knowledge
concerning
the
boycott by no ting that when she
passed the Record Co-&lt;1p at
Nort o n , recently, she pomted out
to a member of the staff that t he
RCA records bemg sold there
were being boycotted by the BPC.
His response, sh e claims, "was
very receptive, but he did admit
that he knew absolutely nothing
about the boycott."

COFFEEHOUSE

by Ly nne Traeger
Ofi.Campur Editor

It was a spectac ular defeat for both Governor
Rockefeller and Mayor Lindsay as the state's $2 .5
bilUon transportatio n bo01t issue was defeated in
Tuesday's election. The measure was expected to
either pass or be defeated by only a small margin,
but returns indicated that this was no t the case. It
was a s harp contrast to the passage of a $2.5 billio n
bond issue fo ur years ago when 2 2 of the state's
counties voted for it , as against this year's tally of
o nly seven.
Both the governor and the mayor had their
prestige riding o n the issue; Rockefeller had his
liberal spending plans ~ut to shreds, and Lindsay
must no w WOrFY about whether he can save New
York's 30-cent fare. The two men , no w o n opposite
sides of the political fence, pu t aside their many
differences to stump together for the issue. Rocky
was counting on the saMe voting patterns as the first
bond issue in t Q67, but t hese plans were shattered
by the unexpected vote. lte had based his ~ mpa ign
o n t he grounds that all the 1967 money had a lready
been s pe nt o r committed .

2 million votes switch
New Vorl. Ctt y, wh1ch had delivered a 61)0,000
vote mar&amp;in four years e..trher, switched to o nl y a
150,000 vote margin. Upstate's 100.000 margJO
from 1967 turned into a 440,000 deficit this year
Rea~:tion to the returns varied from one of
ex tr~me concern to one of almost elation. In a
statement Wednesday. Governor Rol·kefeller :.aid the
dl!fcat "t:scalates New York State's exisllng f1~cal
problems to a c ns1s of e normous proportions." It
"has the effect of adding $300 million to tht' state
government's already exist ing prospect of a $470
ntilho n defic1ency in the curre nt fiscal year," The
$300 miJhon in hond funds had already heen added
on to this year's hudgct, a nd the governor had ~:arhcr
esti mated a $470 millio n deficit for the stat e.
Thl! vote "struc k a morta l blow at mas~ tran~it
and hi ghway projects in the sta te, as well as thl!
prospects o f saving the 30 -cent transit fare in New
York City and of ho lding commuter railroad fare:. at
present levels." I n order ''to meet our obligations
and res ponsibilities as citi ze ns and as government
leaders in the face of a $770 million total deficit,
that we must meet 1n one way or another in t he next
five monthl&gt;, we will reqUire cuts in all areas of slllle
ex penditures
10cluding state aid to local

governments and .schools, whlch malcc up 65 per
cent of the state budget." RockefeUer plans to meet
with his staff and legislative leaders to determine
priorities "we must now establish in order to bring
state expenditures withln our sharply diminished
funds available."

Lindsay passed buck to Rocky
Mayor Lindsay a nno unced Wednesday that it is
up to Governor Rockefeller and the Republicans to
save New York's 30-cent transit fare. The statement
was made after Lindsay met with tap aides and labor
mediato r Theodore Kheel who opposed the bond
issue. Lindsay at first said he did not kno w if it wal&gt;
possible to save the fare, but later revened himself.
Kheel said the bond issue was defeated because S 1.5
billion was e armarked for highway construction. He
said : " In my o pinion , it is impossible for t h e fare to
get to 45 cents. It sho uldn' t RO to 40 or 35 cents. It
can be held at 30 cents."
Assembly S peaker Perry Durea. a Long Island
Repu blican, said the defeat "is a reflection of a
national need and concern people have over debt."
M ~&gt;ntioning that the "state is in a serious financial
plight," Duryea said , "needed projects under way arc '
1mpenled, a nd others will not be commenced." A
meeting IS scheduled for Saturday between Duryea,
Rockefeller and Senate Majori t y Leader Earl Brydges
to determine meJns to meet the c risis.
Brydges, Levitt voice opinions
" Brydges wa., one of the first to respond to the
defeat, and sa 1d : " There ts no question tllat, at best ,
~uhstanlla ll y uncomfortable belt -tightening will be
th~: order of the day
on ~e state, municipal and
~ch oo l district kvel!. . . As far as the New Yo rk City
transit situatio n is concerned, the outlook for t he
30-cent fare is bleak indeed. There is no question
hert' of ' pumshlng' the l'ir y. ·n,is merely reflects a
reJ list ic v1ew of the budget picture on all fronts.''
The one favorable com ment about the rejection
of t he ho nd came from State Comptro ller Arthur
Levit t. Levit t , who had refused to take a side before
the voting began, sa1d tha t the results served notice
that "there must he an end to the spending and
bnrruwmg pattern-; o f the pa~t decade." There was
stingmg ~crit1c 1sm of the whole campa!&amp;n, and an
urg1ng of fiscal improvement. " The state now faces a
very grave fiscal problem, but it is no worse than
what the future would bnng if we were to continu e
to pyramid our 1ndchtedness. The lesson is severe
hut tt mJ y make o ur future pa th less arduous."
'

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Friday, November 5, 1971 . The Sp~trum . Page eleven

�'The Last Picture Show': a
way to understand our~elves
Robbie Lowman
Sptetrum Film Critic

Last Friday night l saw a
private screening of The Last
Picture Show, a film by Peter
Bogdanovich . I don't know when
the film wUJ have its run in
Buffalo, but when it does get here
I ~trongly suggest that you see it.
The screenplay. which was
written by Bogdanovich and Larry
McMurty (author of Pass By,
which was turned Into Hud) tells
the story of a smaiJ desolute
Texas town from the fall of 1951
to 1952. Throughout the movie
we are "shown·· the relationship
(both interpersonal and sexual)
that take place io a small town
where there IS very litt!e more
than dreams and memories.
lmplicit sexuality
These Incidents are never
blown up, but simply noticed by
us and by the peoJ)Ie of the town ,
The feeling is that each town has a
rertJm amount of extramadtal
aff:ms etc., and Bogdanovich
never lets us feel that he's showtng
us something we didn't know or
expect . No one was upset that one
of the mam characters , Sonny , a
high school senior. was makmg it
with the football coach's wife.
Rathe• u's implied that. they all
thuught he hJd a good thing
gLHng.

"RECORD OF
THE WEEK"

The Last Picture Show In very
many ways is made with the feel
and the style of a 1940's movie.
The camera techniques used
areclearly in the styles of the
directors of that period - the fade
out shots at the end of a scene,
those long lingering John Ford
portraits.
Forties' style
The most important stylistic
choice was the choice to make the
picture In black and white. This
wus important because the texture
of the black and white film gives
one the impression that he's
watching a forties' movie.
Films today are no longer
solely a source of entertainment.
They're vtewed as both art and
entertainment . We no longer give
ourselves over to the mass cultural
fantasies as openly as the
generation of the forties did.
Movies then meant something
entirely different than they do
today . In fact, the only time we
do enter into that world Is when
we are watchmg a film from that
era .
In The Last Picture Show one
of the opening scenes takes place
in u muvie house. Sonny, who has
JUSt gotten out of work, arrives
after the feature has started .
Obviously. he's been going there
regularly aml the lady who runs
the huu\e knows him and lets him

in for half price. Sonny then
enters and after finding his girl, he
retires to the last row of seats.
Even as they sit there necking,
Sonny has to peek out of the
corner of his eye to see the movie.
The end of t he movies
At the end of The Last Picture
Show there is the closing of the
movie house. The lady explains
that she just can't compete with
television and ~asebaU. With the
closing of the movie house came a
change
in
the
American
consciousness toward tbe duU,
unimaginative fifties. The only
cultural fantasy to come close to
the stature that movies had in the
forties is rock &amp; roll .
Much of The Last Picture
Show has to do with people
remembering and understanding
their past. Movies and how they
affected us are part of our
American cultural past and
understanding the changes we
have gone thtough with movies
mtght give us an indication of the
changes the American imagination
has gone through. Perhaps when
we do we can better understand
where we are now.
Up to this point I've said very
little concerning either the plot
line or the acting in The Last
Picture Show. The reason for not
mentioning the plot line is that
It's too complex to be .summed

up. like all small towns there's an
overabundance of intertwined
stories and in The Last Picture
Show the Importance is how
people relate in these situations :
larry
McMurty's
screenplay
suggestf more than I'm able to
discuss. Just a note. however; the
story line and dialogue are

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entertaining and the acting is
excellent. It's the best of the
forties.
The Last Picture Show was not
made by a man who has a natural
flair or instinct for the cinema
such as Truffaut , but rather by a
man who has a true understanding
of the cinema and what it means.

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·· Page twelve. The Spectrum. Friday, November 5, 1971

51 UNIVERSITY PLAZA
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WASHINGTON - 1"here were
some changes made in the
Selective Service System Tuesday,
which included a reduction in the
minimum age for service on draft
boards. Under the new rules,
persons down to the age of 18
maY be appointed to their local
draft board. Also, terms on the
board may run for o nly 20 years,
as opposed to the present 25.
Now men may register for the
draft any time from 30 days
befo re their eighteenth birthday
to 30 days after their birthday.
At the present, 18-year-olds
must register within five working
days of their birthday. With the
new ruling, men will o nl y be
requared to carry their draft card
until their draft-age liability runs
out as o pposed to the ·previous
taw which stated that every man
born after Aug. 22, 1922 must
carry his card. The draft age
liability as 26 for those men who
were never deferred and 35 fo r all
ol hcnt

A change in the classification
was made also. A 4-G
dassificatio n was establis hed fo r
~ole surviving sons and for men in
fJrnalics where a father, brother or
MSt cr was kiJied an the Ia ne o f duty
.sfll'r Dec. 31, 1959, o r is ca ptured
or massang in actaon. The 1-Y
da~sa ficat io n which covered those
who were consid ered medically ,
uw ntally or morall y unqualified
except at tim es of national
emergency is beang abolished.
Those subject to re-examination
wall be classified 1-A. white those
wath dasqualificataons will be
dassafu:d 4 - F.
sy~t e m

The creation o f a classification
l-It was made . where men turning
1S dunng 1972 or after will
re main until they are included in
the dra ft lottery . Those whose
lottery numbers make them
subJect to the dr3ft will be
reclassified 1-A. There will be an
abolition of classification 5-A for
those over 26 who have never
been deferred and those over 35
who have been . There will be no
records kept
for registrants
beyond the age of 26 except for
doctors
and
o ther
medical
perso nnel.

job by Chou himself," says one
informed
aource.
Peking's
deleption to ~he world body was
announced Tuesday, and it holds
impressive diplomatic c redentials,
as well as being well-backgrounded in journalism . Led by
Chjao Kuan-hua, the delega tion
also consists of Chiao's aide and
permanent representative , Huang
Hua. Chiao did post-graduate
study in Germany, and speaks
English excellently. Huang was
educated
in
the
AmericanHarvard-supported
o p erated,
Yenching University in Pekang.
Diplomatic analysts say that the
make-up
of
the
delegation
indicates that they will be in New
York to do business rather than
make noase.
WASIIINGTON
Supreme
Co urt nominee Lewas Powell Jr.
wala,.
un3nimously
endo rsed
Wednesday by a 12-member
committee of the American Bar
Association with tts haghest rati ng.
Walliam Rehnquist , the o ther
no manee, received almost the
sam e recommendation The two
were no minated to fall the
vaca ncaes left by the deal h of
Justace Hugo Bla ~k and the
retarement of John Harlan
The tnal of
SAN RAFA EL
Angela
Davis
was
ordl·r~d
transferred from Mann County
Civic Center, the site of I he 1970
kadnapping and shooting whtdl
Miss Davis is accused o f hclpang to
plot. llowever, Supenor Court
Judge Richard Arnason denn!d the
defense request to move the trial
to San Francisco, and anstead
ordered it moved to San Jose .
Attorneys for Miss Davas said that
she will probably no t get a fair
trial in San Jose. and that they
migjll appeal , d elayang the trial
even longer.

WASHI NGTON
Appeals
were
beang
pre pared
by
conservationists in an attempt.. to
stop the underground nuclear test
which is scheduled for Alaska 's
Amchitka Island sometime soon .
Dastrict Judge Goerge Hart ruled
the
conservationists
against
Mo nday when be said that they
had
failed
to prove their
contention that the blast might
cause a major earthquake or other
HONG KONG
All ten adverse effects. No precise time
delegates of Com munist China's has been given for the test, but
U.N . delegation are very close to \!Stimates are Friday or later.
Chou
En-lai,
and
were Spokesmen for the Commattee fo r
" undoubtedly hand-picked for the Nuclear Responsibility and seven
other groups fighting the test said
they would carry their appeal to
the U .S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

TilSOn ThOmas: most classical
music has be
by Barbara Mink
Sp~ctrum

Stoff Wriur

" In terms of the public,
classical music is not in one of its
healthier stages today." In many
instances it has become "an
announ ced ,
programmed ,
produced, marketed, consumed,
criticized
and
hierarchically
arranged
business,"
which
fortunately "still retains certain of
the
beautifully
sophisticated
naiveties that made it worthwhile
doing in the first place."
The speaker: Michael Tilson
Thomas,
27-year-old
musical
director and conductor of the
Buffalo Philharmo nic. The place:
over-flowing
C'onferen~e
an
Theater, Tuesday afternoon . The
a t m o~phcre :
literal e
and
receptive.
" Many p&lt;ople have become
disenchanted with das&lt;;acal musac
becau'!e of at'&gt; set structure and
repeta taun of reperto uc ." Mr.
Th o m a~ eKplaaned .
Thornaa. mai ntai ned. however.
that the fault lies with the IJstcncr
as well as with the pcrlnrme rs.
Po~ ~ion

drive

A per I orrnancc hJ'&gt; alnau-.t
become
a
fi Ked
ohJcct
" Possessaon IS a very puwe rfu l
drive
we're p roud o l hnok!o,
obJcCb, rc~ords ami beg,n t(l t.ak e
a pro pnl'tory interest 111 ~pc~a la ~
performances o n re~ords we
happen to own " Mr Thomas
referred to those who go to a
concert hall and shake their h ea d ~
solemnly back and forth If the
piece they rc ~ogni ze is played
differentlY: " A record is what
happens to have occurred in a
room between a certai n number
of musicians on a certaan day . . I
want mo re perspective: I want
more options; I want to stretch
the piece .out into a larger. more
universal canvas.
"H as not a matter of
dest roying
the
standard
repertoire, as Boulez suggests, but
of recreatang at." Mr Tho·nas·
sense of whether a performance
was good o r bad used to be based
on how " respectably" the idea o f
the piece was worked out. Now he
is willing to take chances with
that aspect for the sake of one
perso n , who would normally not
have hked the piece.
" In other words, what is
important as what goes over the
footlights , whether peo ple are

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Record Department
is here to serve yov!
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With student I 0 card

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SUPERSTAR
CONCERT
(Nov. 12th, Memorial Au&lt;U
2 pairs will be given away FREE

Come over to Grant's and fill ovt your entry blank today!
Drawing Wed. night, Nov. 10th.
HERE'S OUR CHANCE TO GIVE YOU A FREE NIGHT OF
MUSIC AND FUN,
IN APPRECIATION FOR YOUR PATRONAGE .

-santo~

Michael Tilsqn Thomas, the newty

appointed musical director of the

Thomas speaks

Buffalo Philharmonic, spoke
informally to 1 receptive crowd In
the Conference Theater last week.

anvolved with that eKpcnencc or Moments of Musac," and at that
not . Perhaps the artist should instant you can squeez.e the hand
develop two o pposing natures, un of whoever's next to you . . ."
Apolloni:ln one and a Dionysian
one, and Jet them slug it o ut some Sponuneity
place in the lo wer limbic system."
Tho mas aJso delved anto some
Thomas said that musac IS a
performang art in which the goal as o f the hasto n cal aspects ·of music
too o ften sameness . He praised when a musacaan was .-om pared to
conductors
like
Stokowski, :1 troubado r , " wandering here and
Bernstein and Metropolis fo r there with my lute,'' and when ..
seemed
to
be
having "fea rlessly pursued new mu sic
gen erated
ideas about new and old paeces, "spontaneously
regardless of the consequences " bet ween the listener and the
performer " He warned against
disparaging the work of minor
genuises . " Everyone is so obsessed
Creative invention
wath the thought of the ultimate
Often the abthty to apprecaale masterpiece, the kind of pieoes
classacal music as merely in that young composers write in
learning to "use your ears," not in Ho llywood movies and the whole
academac study . James Brown was world gasps ."
cited as having unconscaously
produced a beautiful exam ple of
At one point, he illustrated the
the sonata form an "There was a adea of shifting phase patterns
Time," showing that musacal (where
every
c lassical
forms and rules were don e befo re combination of the notes in a
they
were
de~reed
" laws." particular musical sequence is
Everyo ne, maintained Tho mas, is sounded , from complete uniso n to
capable o f fanding something to complete non-unison) by playing
be explored within a musical work it on the piano . The piano was
that is unaque and perso nal
also used an illustrating how
certaan sounds evoke different
He censured the superficaal , emotions .
" interior decorating·• idea of
" What would please me the
entertainment,
where
"the
audience can sit and listen to most is if the designation 'artist'
something and be completely could be broken down and
unaw;&amp;re of what is happening, thrown out to each of you, so
and then alo ng come the eight everyone could have his own
bars that are o n your "50 Greatest music, expression, his own thing."

- - - AUSTRALIA - NEEDS TEACHERS
NOW!
Sick o f hassling smog,
unemploy ment? Growing
needs, all subject areas.
For full info rm.
Send S 1.00 to;

TERMPAPERS
UNLIMITED
" WE GIVE RESUlTS"
295 HUNTINGTON

Inti. Teachers Placement Bureau

BOSTON, MASS. 021 t5

P .0. Box 19007 ,
Sacra mento, Calif. 95819

(617) 287 -3000

Friday, November 5, 1971 . The Specttum . Page thirteen

.....

-

�Dramatic flourish , - ~

. Victory ends Soccer season
Pro football
by Dan Caputi Jr.

The NFC has established a clear superiority over the Af'C with 15
of 2 I contests having been won by NFC teams in interconference
battles. The wizard went 74·2 last week for 58-28-5 and 67 per cent.
Wasliington 30, Philadelphia 10: High-flying Eagles grounded by
NFC's number one defense.
Oakland 37, New Orleans 14: Raiders march over Saints.
· Kansas City 34, Jets 17: Chiefs scalp injury-plagued Jets.
Atlanta 28. Cincinnati 9: Giant castoff Dh:k Shiner continues to
excel as Falcon ftll-in quarterback.
Miami 30. Buffalo 1 ) ; Dolphins' relentless ground game wears out
Bills' defense .
Baltimore 20. Los Angeles 14: In renewal of old NFL coastal
rivalry, Colis prevail with stubborn defense .
Dallas 27, St. Louis 20: Cowboys should have had division locked
up by now with their personnel.
Pittsburgh 23. Cleveland 14: Mean Joe Greene and friends make
sure Cleveland attack stays dormant for another week.
Green Bay 27. Chicago 20: It's about time for Bear bubble HI
burst .
Detroit 24. Dmver 7: Erratic Broncos no match f~r Lions.
San Francisco 20, Minnesota /4: 49 'ers have edge on offense 10
rematch of NFC playoff game.
New England 1 7, Houston I 3: Battle of have-nuts find s Pats on
top with Plunkett-Vataha combo.
San Diego )4, Giants 20: Chargers make II clean sweep over New
York's football teams.
College football
by Barry Rubin
Last week the coUege wizard mel his downfall with a I J -7 record ,
making him 90-~5- 1 and 79 per cent on the season .
Boston College 24, Syracuse 21. Eagles come off week's rest to
down falltng Otange on regional television. BC's big chance.
Georgia 27. Flnrida 13: Gators could pull, upset , but more likely .
Bulldogs continue to roll towards key SEC meetings.
Minnesota 34, Nortlnvestem 7: Gophers oust disappointing
wildcats.
Washington 27. California 7: Sixkiller blasts lethargic Bears.
Alabama 27. LSU 14: Tigers were upset last week; comeback
unlikely against highly rated Tide.
Air Force 23. Oregon 16: Falcuns need win to impress bowl
selectors.
Arkai/Sa.\ 34. Rice /) · Razorbacks met downfall last week. thus
giving Texas a ~h:.tnce to come back and grab a share of SWC title .
Auburn 38, Mississippi State 13: Ttgers' Sullivan remains hoi.
Army 17, R11rgers 13: Unpredictllble Cadets edge Scarlet Kmghts.
Duke 23. West Virginia 17: DiSllppointing Blue Devils come back
at the expense 11f building M. .Hmtaineers.
Georgia Teclt J/. Nav.v 13· Eng.aneerl'. good bet; Middies lack
offense.
Ohio State 28. Mit'higan Srate 24: Spartans 1 Eric "tlea .. Allen has
come of age a~ a hack. but BtH.:keyes have more h1&gt;r~es.
Oklahoma 48. Alissourt 17: Sooners will win, but by how much'1
Nnrre Dame :!4, Piwlmrgh 7: Irish have little offen se. but defense
led by Walt .Patulsl..i is one of the best in the nation.
Penn State 35, Marvlaml 7: Lions have been impressave all scaslln.
Stanford :!4, UCI.A /1'1 : Indians must continue to wm to gain Ruse
Bowl bid, whil~ Bruins playing out the string smell upset.
Texas :!8. Baylor 13: Longhorns get healthy on we}lk SWC
opponent.
Colorado 34, Kansas 2 I : Buffalos learned lesson in football last
week at Nebraska. If defense can hold , easy win for Colorado.
Michigan 34. Iowa 6: Iowa seems improved, little chance for win .

t hem co ntrol the ballgame. 2:27 left , and thus finished with a
Gannon
stacked up the middle season total of six goals, tops on
SptNrnm Stoff Writer
against us, and we just could not the squa4 . Dave Center had scored
When they made the motion get the ball through . In the last the tying marker on a rebound
picture el)titled , What a Way to few minutes I was trying to shake with just over one minute to play.
Go, they &amp;1ust have had the senior things up, so I put three backs up
"Overall," Jacobsen decided.
members of the Bull soccer club faont and it worked."
"I was extremely pleased with the
in mind . Eight seniors ended their
way we were able to pull together.
ct u b soccer careers Tuesday Forward switch works
Despite · the fact that we were
afternoon as the Bulls came back
missing four of our top players
As Jacobsen said, it certainly (including second-ranking scorer
to edge Gannon in dramatic style,
did work. Bill Leiker, who had Alex Torimiro) we showed we had
3-2 in overtime.
Senior forward AI Campagna played at halfback and fullback good enough depth to win. I think
echoed the sentiments of the this season, was moved to a that a finish like thjs can help a
squad in \lating that it was "a forward positi'on and it was off his team's confidence immeasurably."
great way to end a career. This pass that Kola Oseni scored the
The Bulls thus finished the
was without a doubt the greatest winning goal in the first overtime
season
with a 5-l record, and any
ctlmeback I have ever seen and a period. Deiker's long pass was
''expansion
team" which can take
dropped by Golden Knight's
great way to close a career."
five
out
of
six contests must be
" It was a great win," agreed goa I keeper Joe Felix , whose
considered
successful. Perhaps
Coach Bert Jacobsen, "but I'd inability to hang on to the ball
next
year
Coach
Jacobsen will get
rather not win them that way. I probably cost Gannon the game.
the
perfect
game
he has been
must have aged 20 years during Oseni , standing right in front of
hoping
for
.
However.
he can
the last few minutes. Actually. the net, knocked in the rebound
always
say
that
his
inaugural
Bull
during the first 85 minutes we for the winning marker with just
squad
did
produce
the
perfect
played almost as poorly as we did ten seconds remaining in the first
against Erie CC. We were just overtime stanza. He had scored comeback victory - and the
standing around and watching the Bulls' first goal earlier with perfect way to end a season .
by Dave (/eringer

What is life without love?

•

WANTED ••
IF YOU CAN WRITE FAST OR TAKE STENO AND
YOU DON'T MIND SITIING THROUGH All
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE AND ASSEMBLY
MEETINGS:
S.A. NEEDS YOU TO TAKE MINUTES.
CONTACT
SPOT GUBERMAN or
SCOTI SLEStNGER
831-5507 - 205 NORTON HALL

.

---------------------

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . FriQ.ay, November 5 , 1971

From one beer lover to another.
TlU! SDOH 8UWEAY COMPANY, DEnOiT. MJCKIGAN 48U6

�CLAIIIFIEI
AD INFORMATION
CL.ASS IF IE D • ads. may be placed
Monday thru Frid ay b etwMn 9 a.m.
and 4 r30 p.m . a t 355 N o rton Hall .
THE COST o f an ad for one Clay Is
$1.25 for the fi rst 15 words an~ s .Q5
tor uch add itiona l w ord .
" HELP
WANTE D "
ads
cannot
disc riminate on ttte b asis of sex, cotor,
c reed or n at ional origin to e ny extent
(I.e ., pretereb iY ll stU t discriminatory).
"FOU N D" ads will be run free o f
c ttarge for a maximum of two dlays and
15 words.

WANTED
ESTABLISHED
movement
press
collect ive needs 1 or 2 9(apt&gt;lc
designers willing to
learn offset
procen,
photo
and
sllkscreen
e xperience
desirable.
One
year
commitm ent . Subsistenc e pay . Woman
preferred.
Rtfume
Including
technical
s kills
and
political
bacl&lt;grounel . APPlY to O.G., Box 1684,
Hertel Station, Buffa lo, N.Y . 14216.
WANTED: Text for Hebrew 191, FSI
Hebrew
Basic
Course.
Call
Iris
834·!1510.

-------

GIRL. singer, country fidd ler, p lano
player. Send phone number to Tom
Root. C/0 AI Giglia, 7 Delta Rd.,
Eqgortsvllll
14226.
Musical
opportun_•_tY
_ _ _ _ __
Uf~GE NTL.Y·
6·cyl., 19!1 6 C.l D.
119&amp;J·651 cast rron Rambler engtne rn
~Jttremely good condollon. 833· 7270
u~turc 2 p.m .. after 9:-.30 11 00 P m.,
Mnn
Frl Anytrme weekends

wANT F D. 20. watt. amp. I&amp; tuner • l
or. &lt;lleJ P. Hyqoentc . mattress. or; bOth .
&lt;.:,111 Dave 838·2890. E vertlngs.
N~E0£0
song~r(sl.

desperately
bands,
entertatners to volunteer to
~ntertaln
.Jdolescent
PJttents
at
CIHidrens Hospii.JI . Contatt Carol
88b·1131 before 2 p.m. after 8 p.m.
WANTED Well 1&lt;nown commercial
ruck qroup wants FEMALE vocalist gu,,CI pay Call Bob- 6 74·8948
$25 00
per
hundred
addressing,
onaollng, POSSible work at nome your
nours. Sample and Instructions S .25
and start"ped setl·addressed enverope.
CHASMAR, Dept . ZN, Bo~ 263,
E.t~t&gt;•rl, lndoana 46514
CLASSICAL guotar tenons wanted by
Karl
Benzoger,
359
Wrllow St.,
Lockport, N.Y. 14094 Can com e to
Bu llato
Saturday.
Telephone
Hf 3·552~.
DON
AMECHE d8stres l ornlcat1n9
arumal act fnr tntern.Jtlonal Showllme
Rfvrval Competition wil l be stiff.
644 9700

APARTMEN T FOR RENT
EXPERI MENT
In
living.
Couple
wtsmall child wishes to share Amherst
duplex apt. w/same. Purpose: deep
tnvutvement as t&gt;uman tletngs. N ot fre'
love, but plenty of free affection. 3
bdrms: 1'1r b, k, lr, dr, collar, W·t·W
carpet. w&amp;D, centr. a or con d., partially
lurn., $130 + utrt.tcoupte. 693·364 0.
APARTMENTS

tlvtlolable,

and unfu rnlsned, n Nr c ampus ; also one
rt&gt;om . V ery reasonab le. 8 g6 ·8 3 44,
~ en logs p referab ly.

GET SERVICE
worthy
o f o ur
guarantu - I nde'"nelen t Foreign Cer
S e rvice . 8 39·185 0 .

RID.E BOARD

RAMBLER '64 - m int cond ition mus t slit . Make o ffer. 1016 N iagara
Falls 8 1vel . 8 37-4223.

RIDE wanted to Ann Arbor, Mich .
anytime, any d l y . Call Mike 837-6309.
TAKE t w o chicks to N .Y .C. on
Ttoa ni&lt;J91vlng . Will sha re driving 1ne1
expenses. Pluse call 831·2875.

RE FR IGERATORS,
stoves
a nd
washers. Recond itioned; Cllllvered and
guaranteed . 0 &amp;0
AppllanC.s, 8 44
Sycamore, TX-4 ·3183.
\

RIDERS
wanted
to
L .l ,
Thanksgiving. Call 8 37· 1202.

for

FOR SALE

11116B-6T
1969,
19,000
miles.
Immacu late - ell records kept. Wires,
radia ls, gara ged. Call a fter 5 p .m.
691·7468 .

FORO, 1965
Qalax le 500, 390
4·barrel, Crulsomatlc. llllechan lutty
A· l. Must sell. Best offer. 838·2576.

STOVE - c tun - only 35 dollarst C~ll
834·8713 or 833·7162. Call after 11 :30.
Thirty Inches (approx.)

GUITARS: Gibson, Guild , Mtlrtln,
Gurian, etc. Buy , sell , trade. The String
Stoop, 524 Ontario, 7 p .m.- 9 p.m.
dally, Sat. 12- 5, 874·0120.

RADIAL 165Rxl4 Knobby sport
trues ttres . Good summer and winter .
Call 675·2660. After 5, 662·7701.

TV set, dresser, desk set, bed frame,
mlltress,
b ox
spring,
etc . C all
837·0099 .
SNOW TIRES and rtms 775xl4
take offer. Call 876~888 .

wilt

WIN TER storage, cars, b ikes. Sale, dry .
Bikes - S5/ mo. Cars, S10·15tmo. Call
Dave evenings" 884·36 83 .
E N JOY tnls winter. Good used skis lor
sale. Call Mark at 631·5326 or
631·5327 .

DODGE '63 Polara V·8, new snows,
tires,
battery ,
Excellent
running
condition. P .S. automatic. 8 36·1996.
1 NEED cash

head ing Wast. Will
sacrifice:
AC·DC
stereo
tape
t ran sverter,
Army
jac ket,
Smrth.Corona typewriter, P ol aro id 101
camera, desk tamp. Best offer. Call
836~993.

CORVAIR 19&amp;7. very good condition.
Must sell, S295 . Call a fter 5 p.m .
833·35&amp; I.

AFGHANISTAN jackets, modrs and
marcls, 20·25' olf at "T ne People,"
144 Allen 882 6283 .

FROST f' REE
Wtt•trnghouse
refroqerator . very reasonable One dOOr
aooul 13 cu, 11. Call 832·1844 alter
6:30pm

PANCHOS from Boltvoa, Peru and
Mextco. Handwoven . Ched' out pnces
at "The People," a fOik·arts boutoQue,
144 A ll en, 882 &amp;283 .

UNDERWOOD typewroter S45 new
Royal tyoewrtte. S45 new . RCA slotoo
deck
w /speal&lt;ers,
e&gt;&lt;c«.&gt;llent,
S!iO
895·4988

Jg63 RAMBLER statoonwagon. Needs
mono• repatr, &amp;·cylinder
good bOdY
T al&lt;e best offer 833·2 422

MCINTOSH
C·26,
Ml ·3,
MR&amp;5.
Cltatton 12, Oynaco PAl 4, 5Tl20,
Thor ens T 0 125/SME, Sneo wond 8500,
Scoll
2g9F,
Allee
A · I / 500·Z,
Tandber9 12. B&amp;W 1 M.F .. Radford,

NEW DUAL 121g turntable, Eng11~n
amplllrer; Ptoneer revero: MullopleJt
adapter: Untversotv speakers: spec tal
Oynaco speakers, Karman Gnta
excellent parts source; Frrqtdatre range,
Coldspot !reeler; curtaon rod &amp; drapes:
Bundy flute ; metal shelvrng. 833 7270
Defore 2 p .m .. after g ;30·1 1 :00 p,rn.
Mon.
F'rl. anytime weekends.

Braun. Ouao, StnC-tdu,

Ptldh~

L•ne•'·

Dayton Wroghl 684 4937

PERSONAL
II/IlK£
remomoer tess 1n~11 unu wee!.
to go. PS II'S smaller th~n a bretldbOK .

Jg64 TRIUMPH Spttfrre convertoble
runnong condition - s 100 neqotoable.
Call 837·2929

BEAUTIFUL handmade gold and solver
1ewetry
wedding rongs
at senSible
prtces. J .P
The Goldweaver, 655
Elmwood al Ferry Street, 881·3400

PAIR FORO snow ttres
mounted, $15. TF4-7974.

AFSers AAs, WPs and host brothers
•nd sosters, all welcome. C.JII Katnryn
Hansen at 831 ·2401 lor onformallon .

l!J"

7. 75

SMITH·CORONA
super
sterling
t ypewriter. Almost brand new, S70 or
best o ffer . C~ll 837 ·6S58 .

IMPORTANT' A girl woth red sweat er
and maroon hot pants at Statler
Camor.,

E~ehlbH

on S at urd.JV

Please call 8 32·96 33 for Nll&lt;on
Mo nday t hrough Frtcsav, 7 :30- 10:30
p .m.

N V'S H O T E L. Tud or offiiS SUNY
rat". RIHfVI tlo ns and Information.
132 .(1611.

LOST a FOUND

BABYS ITTIN G, h OUftCIN n lng done.
EJC pe rl en c ed ,
r e liable.
Own
tr1nsporat1o n . Janet 8 3 8 ·34 2 9 .

PE R SONAL ITY
a nd
~pan lsh
t extboo ks wh ile h itch ing u p Kenmore
t o Main Wed . V .w. b Og. Urgent.
8 76-3258 .
LOST t N oteb Qok "Ecology of Man"
wtllle h itching u p Kenmore to Main
last Tu esday . Ca ll 837·1202.
1 L E F T two rin gs, one silver pointed

a nd one turquoise In ttll Acheson
lacl les room last Th u rsda y. T hey have
sentiment a l valu e . 1 f you fo und t h em,
please call 8 33·9440 or 8 3 1·3083.

ROOMMATES WANTED
FEMALE RIIIIT pref , grad nNr Ridge
L.u, S 70 Inc tudes utilities. Call
691~740 .

ELEGANT
apartment
available
Immed iately fo r 1 gltl to Share wttn 2
other girls. 15 min . wall&lt; to campus,
$73 month In c l. uttt. Call 838-4248
llllaranathal
ANGOLA ? sun, 14nd, snow - live on
the shores of beautiful L .al&lt;a Erie , Cit
not necessary. S62 .50 tor one. $45 for
two. Call 549-4103,
FEMALE grad or faculty to Share
apartment, 20 mlns. wall&lt; . Own room
unfurnoshed, S7 0 InClude~ utilities. Call
Katy 837·7878 01 831 ·3508.
O WN ROOM, lutntsned, one block
from school, avallaDte Immediately,
833·8113 .
wanted.
Allentown
ROOIIIIIIIIAlE
$40/montn, 239 Tuppet St .. APt 11
or t5after6pm

,..

LARGE HOUSE to snare
furntshed
own room, $6:,, lllllottes tncluelcd 290
Minnesota, JO mtnutt&gt;s loom campus.

MISCELLANEOUS
AUTO .
record

tape
your

spec•f•c.at•o•'"•

olay~r

uwners•

'"Jtlr•dQC\

$2.00

Q EORGE··Marc htlalel - Tne Spct rum
still wants and needs you. S tOP b Y and
say neuo.
CANCE R T r;.d - N ov. 4 , 5, 6 : Movie
"L.a~rlla Natu re's Answ er t o Cancer,"
Th urs.,
p .m ., :Ac h eson , Rm . A 7 0 ;
Friday,
8
p . m .,
Kene n
A rena ,
L ockp o rt. O r. W .O. Kelley (c:lalms
9 9 .5% r-ecovery ) s puker, S al ., 2:30
p.m., Mo unt S a in t Joseph -A~demy,
111111n S treet , Bu ffa lo . All free. For
In form ation : or. Doran 8 5 3 · 1345 o r
Dick Prelsch C3 3 ·8 630.

8

FERO'S Repair service ¥fill repair
ra dio, television, stereo, minor ur
reasonable
rates,
repairs.
Atso
882.()850.

APARTMENTS WANTED
HOUSE or aputment n el&lt;le&lt;l near
campus for four or more st udent$ forJanuary, 83 1-2875 evenings.
FIVE MALES desperately need a foiJr
o r five -bedroom apartmef1t or house .
Ca ll 837.0882.
APARTMENT needed for January for
two people. Urgent. Call 836·2304 for
Jane o r Cla u d ra.
FEMALE
needs
own
room
lt1
apartment . VERY close to campus.
Call 834-8713, 833·7162. Barb.

- - ---

f"'MoTORcYCLEINSURANCE- 1
:IMMEDIATE FS·l - ANY SIZE :
1 NO POOL - NO NONSENSE/ I
fU PS T A T E C Y C l E I N S I

I

t_

call 694·3100
"Ask Vour Broker A bout

I

Us"·-'

to

Call

NF4 · 1!&gt;52

STERE05. TV's, •auoos, toJPes repaued
at tow student r.sles Call Otc k at
876-484!&gt;
C&amp;H
JONES ProiOHt011al Typtng
Servtce
compiiiCrlled
181111
equipment plu~ our expcrrence gtve
oest
ponoDie
prosentatoons
of
druertatoons,
thosts,
term
papers,
resumes and employment appllc..Jtoon
letters
Located
between
two
campuses
Very
rel!sonable
Call
837~558 .

ANYONE
N iagar a Fans to London,
one w ay SitS; ret urn S220 M.T .W .,
881·0306, Thursday nlgnt .. 873·5660,
5:00- 10 r00 p,m Weel&lt;ly departures.

nfght ,

1g1o XKE beige/black convertible.
Branct new A M/FM stereo radiO,
Excellent condition. C~ll 684·2000
between 8-4. A sk for O~ve.
IlliG Midget
691 ·709 7 .

1969.

Must

sell.

Ca ll

CH EVROLET and Rambler, both ue
reliable . we must sell soon. Will accept
fair offer. 834 ·5312, 876·9285.
CAPEHART stereo, hudphones, 45
records,
must
wctlflce ,
S 250.
833·9726 Jule s, Glenn.

furnrstoed

meet our photographers eye to eye

Have flashing lights made you paranoid ?
Think about it·
This is your o pportunity t o do
Something abo ut it-

The Bail Fund Coiiliilittee
is no'W' forJiling

Interested?
CONTACT
Tom DeMartino 831 -5507
professional fu ll color portraits
offered to all graduating students
passpQrt, application , 1.0. photos
also avai lable
appoil\tments 356 norton, 831 -2505 , 5570

Christine Grahl 831·5507

.

Student Association

Graduate Student Association

Room 205 Norton Union

Friday, November 5, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�.......................
:

What's Happening?

•

Friday, Nov. S

•••
••
••
•••
•
•

•
••
•••
•••
•
•

•••

CAC's Buffalo State Mental Hospital Project
needs 45 volunteers. Please contact Ralph D'Amico
at 831 -3609 or contact the CAC office in Room 220
Norton.
The Campus CruY&lt;te for Christ will have a
lecture on "College Life" with O.tve Peterson
speaking today at 8 p.m. in the th)rd floor lounge,
Norton.
UB Riding Club will have a meeting today at 4
p.m. in Room 330 Norton to discuss Sa turday
night's ride and next Friday's ride. There will be no
meeting next rriday .
Hillel w1ll hold a Sabbath Service today at 8
p.m. in the Hillel House. R. Baumgarten will lead a
discuss1on on "The Chang.ng University." An Oneg
Shabbat will follow .

,

Hillel. •s extending an invitation to cill Universit y
Hillelites and their guests to attend a coffee house
tomorrow at 8 p.m. in ttle St.tte Hillel House, 1209
Elmwood Avenue. Music will be provided by the
"Silver Doll.tr." Refreshments will be served.

Underar~u ate R~rch

Committee has
iViilible for the spring/summer
Undergraduate Research Program. They are available
in Room 205 Norton and the deadline fo r the
receipt of completed applications is Dec. 6, 1971.
~pl ications

C hab~

House presents Eternal Truth as the
theme at Services and discussions tonight at 7 p.m.
and tomorrow morning at 9 :30 a.m. at Chabad
House, 3292 Main Street.
The Buffalo chapter of the Medi~l Committee
for Human Rights will have an organizational
meeting today .tt 2 p.m. in Health Sciences 231 .
Naomi Appel will speak on the health care system in
the United States and ' all interested students in
health related professions are invited. For more
information call 881-3639.
Conflict Simulation Club will meet on Sunday
from 12 7 p.m. in the Fillmore Room .
1971 Buffalonian Yearbook is avc1ilable in
Room 356 Norton or in Norton lobby

The Talmud class will meet Sunday c1t 3 p.m. m
the Hillel Library.

1972 Buffalonian announce~ that appointments
are now being tal..en for senior pictures in Room 356
Norton and in Norton lobby or call 831 ·5570.

SOS will demonstrate tomorrow . Assemble at
midnight tonight in front of Norton for c.u pool.
Call 83 1-2879 for more information.

Hillel's Operat ion Greenlight will sponsor a
program of bowling this Sunday at 1 p.m .
Counsellors and youngsters should meet rn front of
the Hillel House.

Foreign Student Coordinating Counsel will meet
today at 8 p.m. in Room 264 Norton to discuss the
newsletter

Group R will meet Sunday at 5:30 p.m. in
Norton,
Room
232
to
discuss
"What
Commumcation Means to Me."

The Student Physical Therapy Association
announce\ an i nlor mc~l panel discuss1on on "An Ideal
Elimindtion Sy~t e m " tonight at 7 p.m. in Diefendorf'
327.

CAC needs volunteers for the Student
Companion Program at the V.A. Hospital. Anyone
interested should contact the CAC office, Room 220
Norton .
The Undergraduate Research Committee will
hold sessions on application writing in Room 205
Norton on Mondays and Fridays, 3- 4 p.m. until
Dec. 3. Students wh() desire to take advanuge of this
service should sign up in Room 205 Norton.

Sunday, Nov. 7
Film : {he Wild Child in tonference Theater
Concert : R.tmblin • Lou presents Country-Western
Music at Kleinhans Music Hall, 2 6 p.m. &amp;
7 I I :30 p.m.
Concert: UB Symphony Band directed by 1- r,mk J.
Cipolla, 8:30p.m. in Goodyear Hc1ll
Sue Weiser

•••• :.•
.•• :•
.••••:

The Hillel study group in "Torah with
Commenuries" will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in
Rabbi Hoffman's home, 12 Colton Dnve.

Hillel advanced Conversational Hebrew group
will meet in Room 262 Norton on Sunday dt 12:30
p.m .

~

The

Film : Tht! Wild Child directed by Frc~n CO IS Truffaut,
in Conferem:e Theater, times to be posted,
adm1ssion $.75
Film : Mash in Capen 140

I

·········~·····················

Announcements

Saturday, Nov. 6

•

•

:Backpage

Film: Mash directed by R obert Altman with Elliot
Gould and Donald Sutherland; tickets and times
at Norton Ticket Offi ce, admission $.75, Capen
140.
Film : Mississippi Mermaid directed by Francois
Truffaut, in Conference Theater, times to be
posted, admission$ .75 .

The Christian Science Organizat ion .11 this
Universi ty announces "Christian Science How Do
You •Heal c1 World?" on ABC\ "Direct ion~" with
host Alan Young, today at 2:30 p.m. on channel 7.
Black and White Action presents a free film and
Ulkback tonight at 8 p.m. at 6320 Main Street, the
Unitarian Universalist Church in Williamsville. The
film is No Vietnamese Ever Coiled Me o Nigger.
Vietnam Vets Against the War will have a
meeting. For more information come to Room 260
Norton.

Available at the T icket Office
Studio Arena Theatre
Through Nov. 2 1: Buying Out
Dec. 9 - Jan . 2: Th e Me Nobody Knows

1-.• •

•••

:
•
•

••

••
•••
••
•••
••
•

.

•
:

Rock and Folk Concerts
Nov. 8: Pink Floyd (P)
Nov. 11 : Donovan (K)
Nov. 12 : jesus Christ Superstar (M)
Nov. 18 : The Doors (M)
Nov. 19 : The Byrds (P)
Nov. 20: Richie Havens (N )
Nov. 21: John Denver (K )
Nov. 21: The Delfonics (H)
Nov. 24 : The Carpenters (M)

• • Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
Nov. 19: Mitch Miller Conducts (K)
..
Nov. 21 &amp; 23: Laurence Lesser, cellist (K)
Bufblo Braves Basketball
Nov. 13: Milwaukee (M)
Nov. 23 : Atlanu (M)
Kodaly Ensemble
Nov. 20: (K)
Theatre
Nov. 19: Le Treteou de Paris (A)
Dec. 5: Will Rogers U.S.A . - James Whitmore

(K)
Key
K Kleinhans
M Memorial Auditonum
P Peace Bridge Center
N - Niagara University
H Hearthstone Manor
A Amherst Central junior H1gh

•

:

- .

.,,..
••
I

- ~

:

Sports Information

•••

•
•
•

Tomorrow: Varsity cross country dl the New
York State Invitational, Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, Troy, N.Y., 11 .t.m .

•
•
•

•
•

e

Tuesday : Lecture at 8 p.m. in Room 147
Diefendorf Hall by Bill Russell, former coach and
sur of the NBA 's Boston Ccltics.

•
•
•

•
•
•

Roller Hockey: Saturday morning at 10:15 a.m.
Srollcr hockey will continue in the Capen parking lot.
pectators invited.

•
••

•
•
•••••••••••••••••••••••

~

�Lunatic messiah

Ian Anderson 'is' Jethro Tull
"Which one is Jethro Tull?" people used to ask
three years ago when the group started. Apparently a
lot of people have found out the answer to that
question since then: Memorial Auditorium was
three·quarters full Monday night.
r

Jethro Tull is theater, and their four albums, as
good aS' they are, don't capture the total spirit of a
live performance any more than a sound-track album
captures a Broadway play.
Cast in the leading role is l:m Anderson, flautist,
vocalist, acoustic guitarist, songwriter and Dionysius
Incarnate. Costumed in oversized grey plaid tails,
yellow T -shirt, dark blue pants with a black velvet
jock on the outside, silver boots and forever-flying
tresses, Anderson prances insanely about the stage
physically, musically and verbally.
Anderson's moves make Mick Jagger look like
he has tired blood. He punches at and ducks from
imaginary monsters. He limbos and shakes his
outspread arms in worship to en invisible sun. He

section, a. sad, almost Spanish section, and a .Hendrix
section.
New drummer Barrymore Barlow also took a
solo. The five-minute exh ibition demonstrated
unbelievable coordination, as~h of his eleven arms
and legs gallumphed in a different rhythm, not to
mention stamina and - unusual for a drum solo
today, in the post· "Toad" era- originality.
Keyboard man John Evan was also top-notch,
whamming away at those strange. medieval church
chords Anderson writes for him and throwing in a
short
solo
occassionally.
Bassist
Jeffrey
Hammond-Hammond was good, although he did
absolutely nothing memorable musically.
They did their part for the theater, too,
protraying a Marquis/de SMitJ chorus (one of them
actually claimed to have been recently released from
an insane asylum) . At one point Anderson led Evan
to the microphone to introduce the next song. "This
- song - is," a pop-eyed Evan chanted in his best
cretin voice, "'A New Day Yesterday'." Soon all
five of them were there, slowly screaming "A new
day yesterday" over and over, before leaping back to
their places to play it .
The concert started shortly after 8 :00 with a
London group called "Freedom," who seemed
rnediocre at the time and terrible in retrospect,
Although Jethro was ready to come on at 9:00, it
took ten minutes to clear a few incredibly stubborn
people from the aisles who were blocking views and
violating fire laws.

.

Socc1sf sorll$

Finally, lan Anderson entered alone and greeted
the crowd. He announced that they had played a bet
too much soccer the day before, "so we'll be a little
sore in the wrong places." Certainly Anderson was a
lot sorer after the concert than before it.

-Jackson

strikes angrily at the air like a panther, dashes back
and forth across the stage like a cougar. whips his
hair around like a lion, and somehow always
manages to get back in front of the microphone at
the right moment.
His usual flute solo is not the wispy, flowing
ballad that most flautists use the instrument for. but
a violent, straining eruption that mirrors the external
hemorrhage his body continues to have despite the
fact that his mouth is tied to the microphone. Most
little boys with savage musical inclinations take
tenor sax or drum lessons and blow/beat the crap
out of it. But when tan was a tyke, he chose the
docile flute instead. The result should be something
like Gonzilla dancing Swan Lake, yet it works.
Devilish humor
Anderson's vocals, peppered with his unique
muffled chuckles now and then, are more civi lized
but no less dramatic. His voice has a creamy, distant
quality that contrasts with the instuments we~l.
A lthough he did play acoustic guitar onstage, he d1d
none of the morP. complicated work he's recorded .
Finally, his profuse between-songs chatter r~ea l ed a
profound sardonic wit, as well as. parad?x.1caiiX• a
nice guy - despite, or maybe because of h1s msan1ty,
•
devilish energy and sarcasm . 1
The supporting cast (what greater compliment
could be paid them?) was worthy of playing onstage
with the lunatic messiah . Electric guitarist Martin
Barre, it seemed, wes always tkaing a solo, but he
never failed to pull it off with originality and class.
He took a long solo (in the true sense of the word the other musicaina left the stage during it) in "Wind
Up" that demonstrated his versatility: like a
symphony in three movements, he played a funky

As he started strumming and singeng " My God."
the rest of the gro up entered o ne by one. Although
they kept tRe physical energy and the music flowing
for a staggering total of two hours, there were only
seven songs altogether - some of them actually
medleys, and all of them having extendocl solos. The
group played a few b its from theil newly recored lp
(due to be released In April), amd most o f the songs
from the previous album, Aqualung. Among the
older pieces was the aforementioned "A New Day
Yesterday " and "To Cry You a Song" (" I'm very
proud to say it's been recorded by two o f your great
American stars - Andy Williams and Lassie") .
After " Up to Me" slammed to a halt , Anderson
betrayed h1s expectations of an encore by saytng
" Good night - we'll see you later.'' as they walked
offstage. The crowd was not about to let them go
after the demo(lic theater and magn1ficent musec of
the previous 90 mentes. They exh1b1ted this
overwhelmeng collective feeling vocally and ,
surprisingly, -hundreds of people held up lit matches
throughout the black audetorium as some sort ?'
vigil (as well as two Fourth of July sparklers up tn
the Blue Section) . The odor of sulphur even
momentarily overcame the other smell prevading the
Aud. Jethro let the tumul'tuous ovation roar for a
minute or two, and then returning for a 30- minute
encore medley, including "Wind Up"
and
"Locomotive Breath ." One of the highlights of this
section was ' the trading of parts by Anderson and
Evan, in which Anderson played a highly rhythmic
solo at tile organ while Evan reeled drunkenly about
the stage.
The sound svstem also deserved a..iland - all of
the instruments were crisply audible and perfectly
balanced, except for the bass, whictt tended to boom
in the mammoth hall. Even the lyrics were quite
distinguishable over th~ musical frenzy . which
heightened the overall effect. Anderson's images are,
largely, of the wretched elements of mankind (like
the Cosmic Dirty Old Man, Aqualung) and are very
poetic, indeed.
Although the other four mus1c1ans are
independently brilliant. there is no doubt who wro_te
the script. Which one is Jethro Tu117 lan Anderson IS.
Norm Wahl

Duane Allman died last Friday, leaving us all to deal one more
time with the awful double edge of the fact : both to suffer it and to
have no recourse.
No one knows how old Robert Johnson was when he died most likely in his early 20's. John Keats and Sharon Tate were 26.
lsak Dinesen and Carl Th. Dreyer fared much better, coming from
hearty Northern stock, no doubt. Charlie Parker died in a
bathroom . Janis Joplin died In a motel room . I guess that's what we
call skin privelege. And Duane Allman, who left school in the ninth
grade to play guitar full time, is mourned in universities all over the
country this week.
Always a notorious mad tucker on a motorcycle, he translated
himself to a higher energy level on a highway in Macon, Ga. And
another of the most brilliant and expressive players of our time is
dead.
A final irony. On the day he died the concert committee was
on the phone to New York finalizing plans forth~ Allman Brothers
Band's appearance here. They would have levitated the gym on the
night of Dec. 4 . Spare a thought.
Hank Williams was 29 when he died. Little Walter went down
slow at 38. King Curtis was stabbed on Friday the 13. He was 37 .
As Duane said himself on the last album, "This is an old true
story ... " He was 24 years o ld.
- Jeff Nesin

�Cat Stevens

Good time for all
"We're gonna do some songs
we've written, some we've stolen,
some that were ' gifts, and
anywhere that you feel like
JOining in is fine with us," So said
Mimi Farina and from that point
on, I could have sworn I was In
Carnegie Hall. For on Saturday
n1ght, Kleinhans Music Hall, the
scene
of
so
many
poor
performances in th~p~st by either
the
musicians,
technicians,
audiences or any combination
thereof, was transformed into an
auditorium with as much dignity
and class as any I've ever been to.
And the reason for this
occurrence was Mimi Farina and
Tom Jans, the act that most of
the audience hadn't even come to
see. Before I go on, let me
commend the audience, since It
was the best crowd I've been with
in quite a while. Comprised of
mainly younger than college age
and older than college age
Buffalonians, they were most
respectful to Mimi and Tom and
in the end, thoroughly enjoyed
them .
Their set was comprised mainly
of tunes from their recently
released album, which I highly
recommend to all of you. Their
songs
are
mostly
personal

reflections, they harmonize well
together and both are excellent
guitarists. Of their own tunes, I
especially liked "Reach Out,"
written by Mimi about a friend of
hers who died because of
loneliness. They also did "You're
16," a 1950's tune by Johnny
Burnet, before which Tom told
how "girls used to stuff their bras
and guys would wear their jocks
backwards and nobody ever
thought of putting the make on a
16 -year-old girl." Many of the
older people in the audience got a
kick out of this line.
Surprise guest
The definite h ighl ight of the
evening
was
the
surprise
appearance of Mimi 's sister, Joan
Baez.
Joan
received
a
well-deserved ovation and the
three of them did two
ngs
together. One was an emot~ally audience clapping along. After a
charged "Children of Darkness," a stallding ovation, they returned to
Richard Farina song that had me dO Gil Turner's song of reslstence,
on the verge of tears. The other "Carry It On." It ended their set
was " In The Ouiet Morning," a on a very peaceful note and I
mournful tune dedicated to Janis haven't seen a more sincere
Joplin .
performance in quite a while.
After Joan left, Mimi and Tom Make it your business to see them .
finished
their set with an
It was now time for Cat
up-tempo song, "Good God I'm Stevens. I knew that he had
Feeling Fine," that had the gotten popular, but I didn't

A myalFolkFamily

- Jackson

Joan Baez turned up as a surprise guest at Kleinhans
last Saturday night to sing a few songs with her sister
Mimi Farina. Farina and her partner, Tom Jans
pleased the sell-out crowd that was primarily
interested in Cat Stevens, pictured below.

realize just how b ig he had
become till he walked on stage.
He received thunderous applause
and even some wild shrieks of
delight. A far different reaction
than the one he received at his last
Buffalo concert, last November
with Traffic. Cat seems to have
replaced James Taylor In the
hearts of the 16-year·olds of
America.
' Know·it-all, huh?
Musically, Cat never phased me
much until I started to listen
closely to what he was saying.
Then I started to find some of his
songs offensive. Typical of this is
"Moonshadows," his opening
song. After Cat has lost his arms,
legs, mouth and teeth so he won't
have to deal w ith people any
longer, he hits us with the line,
"Baby, won't you stay w ith me
tonight?" Bet you didn't think
that was what the song was about.
I also find his know-it-all attit1.1de
offensive. This shows up most
prevalently in "Wild World" and
" Miles From Nowhere," two
other songs he performed at
Kleinhans.
Anyway , he ran through,

almost methodically, all of his
well known songs, most of them
coming off his Tea for the
Tillermsn
album.
Of
these
"Father And Son" was the most
well received, since it seems to
have become the national anthem
of the youth of America.
Cat also performed some cuts
from his latest album, Teaser And
The Firecst. One of them,
"Tuesday's Dead ," again uses the
formula of up·tempo music
overshadowing despondent lyrics.
You can fool some of the people
some of the time, Cat, but you
can't fool all the people all of the
time.
Although I didn't care too
much for Cat, most of the
audience was enraptured by his
performance. After finishing his
show, he was called back for two
encores, closing out the show with
"Sad lisa." All in all, a good time
was had by all. It was just too bad
that I couldn't have heard more
from Mimi and Tom and less from
Cat. I mean, Cat is singing ~bo ut
jumping on the peace train while
Mimi and Tom are carrying it on
- Terry Bromberg

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�'Jennifer': Segal's new ·
movie a \Jad.production

A special form of magic
I

by Frank MarMChlello
SP«trum D~WT~• R~lftWr

by John Ackerman
Sp«:trum Staff Writar

An evening with Marcel
Marceau is always a rare delight,
for seldom does a performer (no,
he is not a performer; he is a
human being relating human
relationships) leave you with such
· a· tremendous enthusiasm for life.
This white-faced funny -looking
mime manages to touoh the realm
of experience of each and every
member of the audience and
leaves one staring in awe and
admiration at his deep insights
into man's nature.
Marcel Marceau lived on the
stage of Loew's Buffalo Theater
Wednesday evening, Oct. 27. He
brought with him that special
ki nd of magic that o nly a man
truly in love with life can bring.
The audience felt this even before
Marceau appeared and a sense of
enjoyment,
of
enthusiastic
anticipat ion
that
I
have
encountered only three times
before,
all
at
Marceau
appearanc~
floated over the
room and lingered o n the faces of
the
crowd.
Smiles
were
everywhere. People just knew.
The performance
Enter a very Renaissance
looking man - tfle Presentor of
Cards - carrying a sign saying
"Sideshow." This is the first of
the pantomines. It consisted of
the
Muscleman · and
the
Tight-Rope Walker, and it showed
posturing skill that gave the
audience an introduction to
Marceau's perfect balance and
coordination.
At the end of the sequence, the
Presentor of Cards returned to
announce the next act - ' "the
Sculptor." Marceau appeared as
the sculptor, assuming traditional
statue-like poses of thinking, and
decided upon his creation . The
introduction of tht element of
sound to an otherwise silent
performance, made this piece
extremely
interesting.
The
simulation of a chisel hammering
rock was created by Marceau's
foot stamping.

... ·.?·

MARCEL
MARCEAU
the space decreased, the audience
felt the need to break through and
their sense of relief was apparent
when he did; only to be caged
again. The true genius of mime
was demonstrated in ''The Mask
Maker."
Marceau's
rapid
succession of different faces
steadily increasing until he was at
a fever pitch, never faltering, in
perfect control of his expression,
brought
an
overwhelming
response from the audience.
•
The second part of the
adventure was Life with Bip,
Marceau's 1947 creation. Whether
as a lion tamer or a skater;
whether
committing
suicide,
playing David and Goliath , or
playing a soldier; Bip retains the
classic human quality that has
elevated him to the annals of
brilliant mime alongside of
Pierret, Barrault's Baptiste or
Chaplin's Little Tramp - the
common man caught in the
tragi-comedy of a hostile world .

''The Creation of the World"
was a beautifully fluid piece,
almost a ballet. It depicted the
Pierre Verry as the Presentor of
Creation ascending to man, then Cards, was a distinctive and
the Temptation and the Fall.
integral performer. The audience
loved them both and returned the
feeling
of communion that
Total control
Marceau
had
shared
In ''The Cage," the most enthusiastically.
physically moving piece, Marceau
created a shrinking box cutting History of mime
The history of pantomime is a
off his life force, his freedom . As

long one, from Greek and Roman
theater, through Medieval and
Renaissance Miracle and Morality
plays, the Commedia Deii'Arttl
and up to the clowns, magicians
and circus performers of the
present day. It is the most basic
and elemental of all theatrical
forms. It traniOends all national
boundaries and
reaches all
peoples. It can depict even the
most complicated emotion~ by
the raising of an eyebrow or the
turn of a cheek. Pantomime
surpasses the limitations of
language, for while language tries
to express movement and effort
through words, a mime uses the
actual movements themselves as
the vehicle to convey the
emotions of life.
Shakespeare wrote:
"Oh, what a piece of work is a
man/ . . . In form and moving,
how express and admirable! ... in
action, how like an angel!"

He must have had
Marceau in mind.

Marcel

Erich Segal Is back . Flushed
with the success of his sentimental
blockbuster, Love Story, he has
written the screenplay for a newly
released movie, Jennifer On My
Mind. How Inspiring.
It
would
appear
that
ex-professor Segal has decided to
introduce the !iocratic method to
the film industry; whereas Love
Story posed the question, "What
can you say about a girl who
died?" this movie asks "What can
you do with a girl who died7" or,
to be more exact, how can Marcus
(played by Michael Brandonl rid
himself of the body of his
girlfriend, Jennifer (Tippy Walkeri
whom he has just killed with an
overdose of heroin. Footage o f his
search for an appropriate solution
to this dilemma, interspersed with
flashbacks which are apparently
intended to shed some light upon
the origin •of his relationship with
Jennifer, comprises the entirety of
the film .

audience to imagine that wealth
does not
necessarily breed
emotional
ltagnation,
the
characters would have to show
signs of life, or at least, signs that
they might eventually po958SS a
potential for life. Segal is far too
clever to place himself in such a
predicament; again and again,
Marcus remirids us that neither he
nor his father before him have had
to work (they were provided for
by Marcus' rich grandfather, a
famous Jewish gangster) . Lest the
viewer find the idea of a Jewish
bootlegger somewhat implausible,
the grandfather is resurrected
twice in the course of the movie,
perhaps to display his rough and
ready hoodlum humor. He laughs
loudly and freQuently so we know
that he must be humorous.

Stultifying perlorm•s
Far from inhibiting the actors'
performances, Segal's stagnant
screenplay is just right for both
Brandon and Walker, for they are
simply too dull even to be
convincingly lifeless. Walker, who,
as a teenager, played the role of a
"typical" adolescent in an early
Schlock sto ry
From the opening scene until Peter Sellers movie, hasn't
the bitter end of this mercifully improved with age. Her initial
short production, the main portrayal of a corpse in the
characters hammer away at a opening scene is indeed admirable,
clarification of the relationship but when she is forced to walk
between wealth and love - the and talk in front of a camera, her
impossibility of genuine love performance deteriorates quite
when one is burdened with noticeably.
Brandon, her forlorn lover,
material possessions. In the light
of the movie's shallowness and who meets her in Venice, loses her
lack of insight into human in Venice, regains her on Long
behavior, this simplistic definition Island, loses ~er In Venice, and so
must
be
considered
a on. for a few more cycles, and
masterstroke, for It relieves Segal who is cl,osest to her when he
of the obligation to create drives her body around In the
trunk of h is car, appears to be
believable characters.
In other words, were the
-c::ontlnued on ne11t JN!je-

This space reserved
Last week an article appeared challenging the
value of the work that the Studio Arena Theater
does. In that article the Studio Arena was invited to
justify and clarify their view of art. Although letten
have bMn received from interested parties, the major
questions about the future of theater and artistic
goals remain unanswered. The Studio Arena has been
silent.
This space was reserved for their answer. It will
be reserved again next week.

will

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·356 norton
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�'Jennifer'.

-contlnuec2 from pr.eedlng P419-

• •

satfering for' a terminal ~ of the
bends. Also, he speaks his lines as
though he has l.arned English
only recently, or else, as though
the audie11ce couldn't keep up
with him if h~ talked at a normal
SP,eed.
\ Of course, Segal's writing is
absolutely terrible, both the
individual lines and the whole
fllmscript . The entire film moves
in fits and starts, staggering
inexorably onward toward an
unknown goal .
CUche extravagan za
Although Jennifer On My Mind
is a priceless collection of all the
worst aspects of recent movies the trite situations. the "relevant"
dialogue and the overall lack of
direction or cohesion - and, as
such, is a rather amusing film , It
Is, at the same time, oppressive
and depressing. Obviously, the
cliche is not a new development in
the film industry; the scripts of
many early movies corresponded
to a sentimental and cliche-ridden
formula that never varied because
it never had to.
Many of these movies are
popular once again, and while
they are often humorous sometimes unintentionally so they are 1/ery seldom as revolting
as Lovtt Srory or Jt~nnifer On My
Mind.
Perhaps this is attributable to
the
feet
that
they were
unabashedly sentimental, designed
to reduce the audience to tears.
They had no wider implications,
but they never claimed to have
any. Not so today. Now, every.
piece of kitsch that can be shoved

b y Jey Boyar
Sp«:rrum Staff Wrl rtr
I

Dear Mom &amp; Dad, Have gone , to
Chicago to stHik fame and fortune.
Don't wait up. - LoVfl T.R.

into a projector is touted as being
the message of our times. Their
"relevant" situations and language
are often intended to prove, as in
.HJnnifttr . . . that society is 1t fault
for the acts of every misguided
indlvldu1l, and, concluding with a
dole of inoffensive m usic, leave
many viewers with a warped sense
of
reality
and
a
"new
underst1nding."
It's •II so simple in Erich
Segal's world. The responsive
audience sheds their te~rs and
leaves the th eater spiritually and
morally renewed. For a new slant
on lite, $2.60 Isn't a bad price.
The "•·-- -

there is a tendency to mix the
Segal world with the nasty world
end come up with a sentimental
mish·mash in which a vicarious
existence is as good, if not better.
than a real one.
I
believe
that
the
pseudo-reali5tic
sentimental
should receive X ratings for they
constitute a menace to the
tender-hearted . .ltlnnir.r On My
Mind was rated R, although there
was no sex In it whetsoever.
Maybe th e rating commission has
adopted a better standard by
which to judge movies, and soon,
only "mature adults" will be able
to see this sort of urtKIUCll'~"·

"A BEAUnFUl
AND UHilARATIN&amp;

EXPERIENCE!"
--Chllstlllt ICitltU MOIIIIOo

I'I

I
I

jt( ,11/l

I Ilt' l',I

I

Send em
to the
\\Oodshed

Your boss. Yo ur
mother-in-law. Your best
fric&gt;nd . Yourself. And you 'll
get everythjng you deserve:
fantast it· chickl'n win,::s and
ta ngy saucl', S01• spirits
from 3 P.M. on. free

TONITE.

• •

Alternative Radio
is born

IRR640kc
ONLY IN THE DORMS

The above is the telegram T.R.
Basltin, played by Candice Bergen,
sent to her parents upon leaving
her home in a small town called
Finley, Ohio, to come to Chit..ago.
The
mood
of
this
note
interestingly echoes the mood of
the entire movie. Upon reading it,
you have to assume that there is
much more to it than the simple
statement it makes. It says "Don't
wait up," but we know what it
really means is, "You, my parents,
are no longer responsible for me
hke you were when I was younger
and you had to wait up for me
because I stayed out late." It says
"to seek fame and fortune" but
we can almost guess that It means
"I suspect that I 'II never be
famous or fortunate In Chicago,
but at least I'll keep my sense of
humor about it." And indeed she
does.
Throughout the picture, which
is currently playing at the Holiday
2 , T.R. keeps a 10rt of wry,
understated sense of humor aboot
her which becom• en inte.,.al
part of her character. That
character is an enigma as the
action progresses. Her name, T .R.,
gives one a clutt to what composes
her character. It is an interesting
name in that it stands for
something. Maybe Toni Rose.
Possibly Therrace Ruth. Or
perhaps Thelma Ritter, • she
herself jokingly suggests in one
sequence. The point is that,
although the initials give us a clue,
we can never really know What
they stand for. In the same way,
one can never know what she
really is simply from observing the
action
in
the
movie.
Understatement.
Soupy sagas
After watching the first part of
l the film , I thought this was going
to be just another one of those
movies without music . You know,
that new crop of movies that
never uses music so as to
underline the fact that the topic"
dealt with therein is cold and
stark (to tell the truth, I always
suspect that they simply don't
have the budget the employ
musicians.) But T.R. Baskin
surprised me. Eventually, they did
use music. Eventually. things fell
into place. And eventually we do
discover some very important
things about T.R.
Thrown into the hostile
environment of a big city, Bergt;n
as
Baskin
confronts
ahd
immediately
dislikes
the
impersonality, the street noises
and her job. She never really
discovers what her job is
(symbol1sm : boy, do I love
symbolism) because all they tell
h«U' is that she is to type whatever
is dictated
to
her (More

T H £ SIN G L E S -

pc&gt;anuts to s huc k. giant s iz£&gt;

s a.nrlwichcs in a has ke t .
H 11 s tl'ic tly come-as-you-are
In The Woods hed whe re
th(l kitchen's always o pe n
a nrl the fTiusic's always on.
Thtt WoodshE'd. Located
~1 ght next to the Packet Inn
In North Tcmawancla. Drivt!"
out Dl'lawan• or tal&lt;e the
'! oungmann.TheWoodshed's
JUSt over the Dela ware
Avenue Bridge. Open from
J 1:30 A.M . every day
except Sunday.

For 'T.R.:Baskin~
the search Continues

60HOURS- of
music

'True passion'
After meeting all of these Jolly
non-entities, important things
begin to happen as T .R. finally
meets a total stranger who
promises to be • " kindred spirit."
She discovers a fellow who edits
children's books named Larry (the
fellow, not the books). and they
have a nice night together. We
Jearn a lot about her as she tells
him : "You know, Sundays always
feel like Sundays. Sometimes you
can mistake a Tuesday for a
Sunday, but Sunday elways feels
like Sunday, It depresses me.
Makes me feef like I haven't done
my homewOfk," or words to that
effect. In the morning he gives her
a small am ount of money "for car
fare." This nearly destroys her
with its implications. She then feels more alone than ever.
Humiliated.
The entire movie is done in
flashback from the apartment of
Jack
Mitchell,
a
balding,
middle-aged sales representative
from Utica played expertly by
Peter
Boyle
(Surely,
you
remember him as Joe in Joe)He
plays the part of a simpleton who
got T .R.'s name (If T.R. can be
called a namel and telephone
number from Larry the louse. He
has an endearing, sympathetic
quality .
The actress
As for T.R . or rather, Candice
Bergen - what can one say about
Candice Bergen 7 She played a
difficult part In her own
characteristically subtle wav~ I did
think she spoke some of her most
important lines too quickly, but
maybe I was just listening too
slowly .
The picture had other faults as
well. It WlllCed too sentimental at
times, and many of T .R .'s
" meaningful" and pseudo-esoteric
statements simply did not work .
But, in general, the film told its
story Qelieveably and somewhat
sincerAiy . By the end of the
movie, the message was apparent .
Something T.R. said near the
film's conclusion serves to sum it
up nicely . She said, " I'm afratd
that if you keep on getting
you
end
up
disappointed,
elCpecting less... I was not
disappointed.

The Roya/1/iglr/anders

a young single adult group
will present a Thanksgiving Ball
FRIDAY , NOVEMBER S. 197 I
ar the

SUPER-SESSION
uninterr~pted

symbolism).
She drifts about Chicago lonely
and loveless. not because she
dislikes company1 but because she
dislikes the type ol people who
are usually available to keep
company with; like a talky
roommate
who
prospective
punctuates everything with the
phrase "if you know what I
mean," or a lhop·lifting co-worker
(one of the film's nicer peo'ple). or
a successful, pot-smoking, bigot
with whom T .R. is ''fixed up," to
use an expression which I abhor
and which T .R . must h ave found
equally distasteful.

TRAP AND FIELD
Ages 20-35

Cayuga Rd.
LIVE MUSIC 9:30 - 12:30

afler 6 p.m. dress

�-

-

Aereo-Aaln John H•rtford (w.m. Bros.
1916)

p~ said h• couldn't do it because he
~o chop wood to be used for heat in
the winter. My father then asked him if he
would perform, provided that in return,
10me people from the colony came to help
hjm chop the wood . This sounded fine to
both Pete and his wife Toshe, and the
result w'as that a fine time was had by all.
Pete came and played, he also had more
than enough wood to use for the winter.
and everyone was happy. Now. could you
Imagine approaching Steve Stills like that?
He would probably tell you to speak to his
manager. That's one way of describing
Pete.
Another is that if he were born 500
years ago, he would have been a wandering
minstrel. He has patterned himself after
one of his many teachers, Woody Guthrie,
and there aren't many finer people to
emulate. When Woody was alive, he
inscribed on his guitar, "This machine kills
t.cists." Similarly, on Pete's banjo it
reads, "This m~hine wrrounds h•tll 11nd
forces it to wrrMrd.,-. " Truer words were
never spoken because both Woody and
Pete realized the enormous healing power
of music. If you've ever seen Pete, you
know the kind of power he has over an
audience. And It's not the kind of power
that Jagger has which seems to briflil out
the hystet:ia in people, it's the power to
bring aut the good in people. It's the same
joyfulness that little kids have before
they've lost their Innocence.
Pete Seeger has a new album out,
"Rainbow Race." It's filled with the same
beautiful music Pete's been making all his
life. But that is not what's important,
because he has had albums out f04' 15
years. What's important is Pete Seeger, the
man. Because whenever there is something
happening of social consequence, whether
it be in the south in the early 60's, or In
Washington D.C., or on the Hudson with
the sloop, "The Clearwater," that's where
you'll find him. And even if that event of
social consequence is just making music,
you can bet he's there, because I doubt
whether anyone has performed for free as
much as Pete. Witness his three free shows
In one weekend at Cornell recently.
'Do yourself, and the world, a favor and
experience Pete Seeger. A more decent
human being, and a greater revolutionary .
is very hard to find . And when you talk
about attitudes, you talk about Pete
Seeger.

had

Rainbow Race Petll S..,.,. (Columbill
C30739)

,

Something bad has happened to the
music industry over the past few years. I
guess that's just it, it's become an industry.
a big bllsiness. And don't think that this
fact hasn't had an enormous effect on both
the musicians and the music they make.
They no longer are musicians, but rock
stars. And it doesn't much matter what
Stevie Winwood...R.od Stewart, Jeny Garcia
or Mark Farner do on the stage, because
they've already earned wild ovations from
90 per cent of the audience for simply
being on the stage. As a result, the
musician is no longer pushed to perf04'm at
his best and in turn his music suffers. I
guess they're suffering from a ruction to
the " Moroseness of HemJ)'tead" syndrome,
right Jeff?
But through all the ups and downs of
rock music, there are others who are
following a different course. They realize
that music is the m05t beautiful way of
bringing people together and breaking
down barriers. And not only are they
determined to bring their music to people,
but also to make sure that the music
remains the essential part of the concert
e)(perience.
As a result, you get Joan Baez charging
a two dollar admission price to all her
shows, wherever she plays, includiflil
Madison Square Garden. And whever she
performs for more, it's always to raise
money, whether it he for the farmworkers
in San Jose or for Oanilo Oulchl in Italy .
And you also get Pete Seeger. I'm not
quite sure how to de1eribe Pete, but let me
relate a stOry to you. When I was much
younger, my family would spend the
summer at Red Mill Acres, a bungalow
colony in the Catskills. Pete Seeger lived
right nearby, in a house he had constructed
himself. Some members of the colony
thought it would be nice if they could get
Pete to come and play . So a few of the
men drove up the mountain as far as their
cars would take them, then got out and
walked the rest of the way to Pete's house.

"Old devil time, I'm gonns ftJol you
I
now
·
Old devil ,time, you'd like to bring me
down
But when I'm feeling low, my lovers
gadler round
To help me fight you one more rime."
- Terry Bromberg

Just about everyone has heard blu8g(Bss
music at some time or other. Even a
moderate bluegrass novice like me has
heard Bill Monroe, the Stanley brothers,
Jim and Jesse, etc. It's a form that is
distinctly American, rich in tradition and
culture. Unlike country and western music,
which has always been commercially
oriented, bluegrass has succeeded mostly as
white "race" music, on small labels
distributed locally in the South and
Midwest. But the appeal of bluegrass is in
its exceptional brand of musicianship and
generally happy sound.
Now since this is mainly mountain
music passed down through generations,
urban bluegrass pickers don't usually get
too far into it. It's a demanding form , with
high standards on all instruments and the
vocals. A city kid that digs bluegrass
usually has to give it up after a while and
maybe become a rock star.
John Hartford is a bluegrasser that
comes from the city. Though he's done
quite a few different things in his young
years, he remains true to the mountain
style of playing. Thoultl many thought
that his little bits on the Glen Campbell
Badtime Hour would rocket him· to
stardom, John took it all in stride. And
while Glen tries to figure out why he's not
up there anymore, Mr. Hartford has quietly
assembled a sensational band and come up
with the sleeper album of the year.
Aeno·Pfllin is Hartford's first release for
Warner Brothers (he'd been chained to
RCA for a few yearsl. Taking his time, he
put together a small band of bluegrass
virtuosos: Norman Blake, a guitarist who's
worked with almost every big name folk
artist, induding Dylan and Baez; Vassar
Clements, veteran of years and years on
fiddle with Bill Monroe; and Tut Taylor,
~o originated the flat pick style of dobro
playing. They play as a unit always, much
like some of the great Chicago blues bands,
with solos shared by all . The instrurrents
bob and weave around the metodv lines.
with riffs beginning on one and ending on
another.
'-'
~blning the great talents of th~e
soloists is a hard enough task. But to top 1t
off, Hartford is a truly· gifted songwriter.
Poetic and intelligent, he can write on any
topic effectively (ever hear his tune about
baklnA soda?) . On At~reo ·PI•in , he covers
everything from steamboat whistles to
airplanes to boogies.
" Turn Your Radio On," a 1938 gen.
begins and ends the record. It's a gospel
tune about getting "in touch with God"
through the airwaves. "Steamboat Whistle
Blues" seems influenced by Jimmy
Rodgers. It features some good banjo
playing and interesting lyrics. "Well far out
Johnny I heard him say as he stretched
back out on the water bed/Bluegrass music
is a thing of the past and the same for rock
&amp; roii./And I loaned him two or three

2610 MAIN ST. (Corner Fillmore)

25 ¢

••••••••

5

WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY

••••••••

FOR BEER AND LIQUOR
NIGHTS Of LIVE MUSIC

FOR ONLY

$1.00

I

"THE COURT"

OON'T FORGET!- THURSDAY NIGHT IS "G OLDIE OLDIE NIGHT"
LIVE ROCK AND ROll NIGHT!
TOTAllY NEW!

.

- Billy Altman

ALWAYS A GOOD
TIME

also
All THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK FROM 8:30 - 10 NIGHTLY

FEATURING THE SOUNDS OF

sen".

A different sound. a different light

ANNOUNCING

MONDAY AND TUESDAY

•

dollars and he gave me the Jatest news/And
he left me here with a Rolling Stone and
the steamboat whistle blues."
"Up on the Hill Where They Do the
Boogie" is a little dance tune abdut
everyone meeting on the hUI to do the
boogie. It's followed by a one-minute cut
called boogie. In an obscene, raspy voice,
Hartford coughs and belches out "Hey.
baby, you wanna boogie, boogie woogie
woogie with me." It really has to be heard
to be appreciated . It's one of the funniest
songs I've ever heard.
Side one . ends with "Presbyterian
Guitar," a lovely instrumental with
Hartford on guitar and Randy Scruggs,
who does a great fob throughout the lp, on
bass. "Symphony Hill Rag," a lively
number on side two, features the whole
band on phenomenal solos. Blake starts it
off on guitar, then Hartford, Clements and
Tayl04' all take turns workiflil out.
Side two has rny two favorite tracks.
"Vamp in the Middle" is a sad song about
being a bluegrass mu.sician : "Make my
living with a hillbilly fiddle, playin' little
runs and a-funny little fills ." The band
does some incredible weaving here, with
Tut doing unbelievable runs on dobro and
Clements biting through with his violin
each time the fiddle is mentioned. "Steam
Powered Aereo.Piane," the title song, is
about being in a 747 and not knowing "if
it's sunshine or if it's rain ." Again, Tut
works out, punctuating lines and melodies,
while the fiddle and banio climb and soar .
There's a fifteen second "Station
Break " just before the last cut, and that's
also hilarious (Hartford used to be a OJ in
Nashville) . The production by David
Bromberg is perfect, as he manages to
capture the live effect of bluegrass band
playing. Each instrument can be picked out
and Is just loud enough for solos to be
identified .
What's best about this record, though, is
its sense of being an album, in the broadest
It's a complete, composite collection
of different facets of Hartford's music, and
functions as ~ whole. At the same time,
any one song 't:an be effectively lifted out
of the album 's conte)(t, like a photograph
album. What can I say? It might be the best
record of this year.

fREE DRINK WITH EACH ''TOILET SEAT' BROUGHT INI

D

525Walde
Opening
Soon!
You have to see it
to believe it

�'Johnny Got His Gun'

Horrors ofwa~ exposed
.
c:.ught In a world between sleep
and waking;' illusion and reality;
life and death.

by Jeffrey Linder

SP«trum St•ff WritH

Reality Is trying ahd painful at
times. It there seems to be a
difficult
hurdle
ahead
we
sometimes try to pretend that it's
all a dream. How many times have
we found ourselves in a situation
where we catch ourselves crying :
" I'm having a n ightmare and • r
can't wake up." Hoppfully, it
doesn't happen too often but even
when it does, somehow or other
we confront our crisis and with
our senses alert, a bit of dexterity
and thought, we can overcome the
crisis.
Joe
Bonham
is
Dalton
Trumbo's helpless contortion in a
magic-lantern show called Johnny
Got His Gun. Joe Bonham is
having a nightmare and tte can't
wake up. Joe cannot keep his
senses alert because he hasn't got
any, excepting that of touch. But
Joe still has the power of thought.

Ni_,tmare and reality
When
Joe Bonham first
awakens from his coma. he finds
h imself wrapped in bandages and,
in fact, that is the exten. that we
see of his wounds. The scene is in
black and white and in all the
scenes that · take place in the
present as the story is told, the
image Is in black and white. Joe
says it's dark and he falls off into
a dream which is essentially a
flash-back . The scene is the last
night Joe spends with his
girl·friend and it is in color as are
all of h is thoughts and dreams
that turn to images on the screen .
As Joe's girlfriend says goodbye
she urges him to " put your arms
around me Joe; both of them ."
We know the irony here.

He is having a nightmare and can't
wake up.
One particular type of image
that keeps recurring In Joe's
dreams is that of nat\Jre. There is
one very impressive scene that
remains with me. When Joe gets a
new nurse she opens the shutters
in the hopital room and the
sunlight pours in. Joe rejoices, and
drinks the warm rays. His ecstasy
at this moment of the movie adds
up to one of the happiest
rnoments. He can communicate
with the earth . He shouts with
sheer felicity - the world for him
turns to bright yellow and so does
the screen for us, the viewers.

For Joe, communication is
very important. It is the only way
he can tell the difference between
illusion and reality ; sleep and
waking; life and death. If Joe can
keep time, he can keep thinking
of himself as a living creature. Joe
can communicate with himself. If
Joe can feel tha sun rise, he can be
sure that he is keeping time with
the rest of the world. He can feel
himself part of humanity - feel
part of the organized cosmos and
the syndrome of nature.

Then the dream shifts to Joe's
father's death bed. Joe cries and
while the tears roll down his
cheeks, he hugs his dead father .
An interruption from the black
and white reality and another
dream . This time Joe dreams that
a rat is gnawing on him and he Bizarre absurdity
can't tell if It's a dream or if there
When
the
ultimate
really is a rat gnawing on him. Joe
communication is finally acheived
can't tell when he's dreaming or
- when Joe can finally speak to
when he is conscious of reality .
the people around him by tapping
For Joe, though, it really doesn't
his head In morse code - Trumbo
make a difference because his
fits
in his most audacious scene of
position in reality is more futile
Johnny Got His Gun. Joe Bonham
and frightening than any dream .
tells the army generals stand1ng
around him that he wants to be
put on•display in a circus so that
people can take a look at a
man·made freak : the product of
war; the product of defending
democracy; the product of men
fighting for freedom . The fact is

This is the premise on which
the movie builds a sequence of
incisive and biting realisms and
images as Trumbo denounces the
big game of ' War." Dalton
Trumbo,
who
wrote
the
screenplay from his novel of the
same titl~ and who d irected
Johnny Got His Gun, depicts the
thoughts, dreams and anxieties of
a World War I victim : "The
World 's Most Horrible Man Made
Freak ." Without a single limb left,
without a face, even without a
name to those caring for him in
the hospital, Joe Bonham is

I•

MAKE YOUR

PORTRAIT
APPOINTMENT

that Joe Bonham is trapped in the
most freedom -less world ever
devised and it Is man-made. Then,
total absurdity on the part of the
generals.
Joe's
request
is
practically ignored; the request is
not
in
accordance
with
regulations; Joe is to be put under
light sedation . "Kill me, kill me,
kill me," is Joe's response to the
"no"answer. And the movie fades
out as JOe is left crying over and
over again, "S .O.S. help me, help
me, S .O.S."

bloody scenes. There isn't even
one scene in which the most
queasy viewer would have even
the slightest bit of trouble. But
the film nevertheless, is,..a gutsy
and graphic sketching 'of the
horror that war really is. It is an
intelligent and sarcastic shotgun
of m&lt;1Ving scenes, as Joe
Bonham's life moves across the
screen. They are the simple and
saccharin scenes of conformity
that we can all associate with .
Girlfriends, fathers, and nature
dominate the flow of images.
They
are
the
kinds
of
Passionless cruelty
relationships we value most in life
What Trumbo wants his viewer and they are also the kinds of
to know about the horrors of was things that Joe cen never look at,
is not shown with any gory or smell, taste, touch, run to, or hold
on to again. He must lie pmstrate
and fruitlessly' vegetate.
THE UUAB• Fine Arts Film Committee

--------MOVE

presents

UP!

FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT'S
"M I~SISS IPPI

MERMAID"

Starring

JEAN PAUL BELMONDO &amp; CATHERINE DENEUVE

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

lntrodUt:tory
Flying Lssson
NIAGARA AIRWAYS, I

TODAYd

SATU RDAY AND SUNDAY, Nov. 6th and 7th

Niagara Falls Airport
(716) 297-4330
VA &amp; FAA APPROVED

-Clip This Certificate ...

--------"IF YOU SEE NO
OTHER FILM THIS
YEAR,SEE'SACCO
I VANZEnl'!"

....

-1\evln S.ulldtrt, Ale· TV

~

GRADUATING
STUDENTS!
PROFESSIONAL FULL COLOR PORTRAITS

At last an 1dult film to which you can t•ke your children.
CONFERENCE THEATRE

~

OFFERED TO All GRADUATING STUDENTS.
75¢after
~ befcn 6 p.rn
PASSPORT, APPLICATION, I.D. PHOTOS ALSO AVAILABLE
lt:IIZIII:ICEZIIZIZZZZI~ Division of Sub-Bovd llz:IIZIZZIZIZICI:Irz:lall
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8LYd. Mill CINEMA II
BACKSTAGE · 510 Mein

Ill!

�.
,..,

-

,

~RounO tffings a re . . . boring'
by Terry Bromberg
and Jesse E. levine
I just sat down, turned on the radio, and was
sadly greeted by news of the death of Duane
Allman. A few years ago death in the music world
came very unexpectedly, all being isolated
incidents. TQis is no longer the case. There are
reasons for Brian Jones, Jimi, Janis, Alan Wilson
and the all but physical death of Johnny Winter.
And one reason might be the continu6us pressure
that we the audience place on these people? Well .
it's something to think about!

All this leads me to the apparent musical
stagnation of the Grateful Dead. let me first
explain to you what the Grateful Dead meant to
me before last Tuesday, and what they mean to
me now. For the past few years, there had been
very few things that meant more to me; a few
family members, a friend or two, my girlfriend.
That was about it. My love for the Dead had even
sur~ my love for the San Francisco Giants, a
group of people I had lived and died with for 11
years.
I loved them for two reasons, one being
that they played the fucking best rock music ever.
As lenny Kaye said in his review of Live Dead:
"The Dead is five years ahead of any rock band.
They play music other groups don't even know
exist." Secondly, I found their attitudes beautiful.
They played their music and if you couldn't dig
it, that was no reason for them to compromise
themselves or their music. As Garcia once said,
"On our first tour, people were constantly
walking out. But the people who liked us came
back every night."

Changing their tune
Then a strange thing happened {or should I
use, "inevitable") and the great masses discovered
the Dead. As the crowds got larger and larger,
some changes began to occur in their music.
Those legendary all -night jams began to shorten,
their acoustic sets were stopped and since the new
Dead freaks were those who were purchasing
Workingman's Dead and American Beauty, a Dead
concert was now designed to please that new
audience. The Dead were true blue and indeed
gave them what they wanted to hear - 'spotlight
on "Uncle John's Band" and "Truckin." It's a
helluva lot easier to just repeat the chorus to
"Casey Jones" over and over again than to work
and attempt to achieve a musical high like in
"Viola lee Blues" or "-Dark Star." I guess that's it
in a nutshell.
The high point of a Dead concert used to be
musical, but it is no longer that. A Dead concert
used to be a reinforcement of life, an affirmation
of an alternative lifestyle. Now it''S just a
temporary alleviation from the monotony and
sordidness of our lives. It is not so different from
the way our parents use the once every three

months bar mitzvah or wedaing to forget how
much it takes to go on. The point of all this being
that the Dead are now able to satisfy their
audience with just a trifle of what they are
capable of.
Pigpen in the hospital
So I found myself in Rochester last week,
hoping that I would find the band that has given
me so much pleasure in the past. But even before
the show began I received news that Pigpen was in
the hospital with cirrhosis of the liver. I had
enough doubts about the show to begin with , and
this news just made it that much worse.
Once inside the gym, I found myself right in
front of the stage, maybe two feet away from
Sam Cutler who promptly introduced the Riders.
They seem to be shifting their sound from strictly
country to include funkier material. This is
evidenced by Marmaduke's shift to electric guitar,
and bassist Dave Torbert doing two or three lead
v9cals. His songs were all hand-clapping,
aSs-shaking tunes. Anyway, the Riders put on one
fine show. Their set included many cuts from
their album, with great renditions of " last lonely
Eagle" and " Henry," which Marmaduke dedicated
to "anyone who has ever made a living by
smuggling dope.''
The stage was now set for the Dead, and it
was the first time I was ever apprehensive before
seeing a band. And my apprehension became even
more real before they played a note. The stage
was inundated by at least ten men wearing
Grateful Dead skull shirts. And when I looked up
at the gym backboard. I saw about five more skull
stickers. And on the drums and everywhere else I
looked all I saw was the ominous ••skull." And
then I realized what had happened. this really was
The Grateful Dead Show, just like it had said on
the ticket .

Note to note replicas
"The hottest rock &amp; roll band this side of
New York City," said Sam Cutler and the Dead
broke into "Bertha." And then "Playing in the
Band, Big Ra1lroad Blues. Me and My Uncle," and
" Me and Bobby McGee." I never saw a gr_eater
album push in rny life. I wouldn 't even have
minded so much, but I was heanng the exact
replica of the album, note for note. Absolutely no
spontaneity, and spontaneity was whclt the Dead
used to be all about.
And not only was their music lacking but
their attitude was also. 1've never seen anyone
more bored than Bill Kreutzmann was that night .
My mind wandered back to before the show when
Phil lesh had refused to give me a backstage pass
because, in his words, "These passes are for
beautiful chicks," and he proceeded to give them
to three girls who happened to be wandering by.
Then came "Sugar Magnolia," and I told my
friend to watch as Phil lesh shoots his arms into

the air at the end of the break. The end of the
break came, up . went Phil's arm. and mY friend
stared at me in disbelief. It had all become so
contrived!
When it was over, I spoke to their manager
and expressed my great disappointment in what I
had just seen. His reply was: " We think there is
something for everyone in our show now." I said
to myself "Yeah, for me and many other longtime
Dead people there was about five minutes tonight
where the Dead forgot about pleasing the masses
and got down to playing." When they did that I
- kn~ they were still the best musicians around,
1'1ort'hClt there was any doubt about that.
Something for everyone
It is evident that they've decided to take the
easier path. But can we really blame them ?
They're only human. and so now that they've
finally made it they're cashing in on it. No
different than anyone else, right? Or mostly
anyone else anyway. My only hope is that when
things get a little less hectic, the Dead can once
again settle down to the business of making great
music, instead of the business of making money.
That the Grateful Dead Show will deteriorate into
the just plain old Grateful Dead. For now I'll
content myself with recordings of what used to be
and sit back and hope it can be again.
They played music and loved it. their music
Sang songs that they sung just to sing them
But the energy from within has turned to
without
Not stopping the music nor preventing the
doubt
The man and the riddle have all been put out
Dollars that drum on and drown out so loud
Guitars that wait out so differently now
Purposed and passioned as means to an end
Begging for more, train time to heaven
Stenciled shirts, once a festive coincidence
Are now part of the stage bedeviled with
clowns
The people are smiling through blank ugly
spaces
Why should they see? Why should they care?
Splendor and stardust ring through the air
The wizards of magic strum ou t hysteria
All visible now, can't everyone see
As fire erupts and blinds every message
I'll play on for you, if you 'll play on for me
Mus1c turned to the prose of illusion
All the stoned souls look blindly at proof
They cluster too close to receive any truth
As the comical stars, in their star-studded
array
Play music of music, with nothing to say
So don 't open your eves, delirious and
wanting
There is nothing to see to make it worth
seeing
For the men in the tee shirts
Those authors of music so fair
"Have but forgotten their dreams ahd cut off
their hair. "

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present THREE BIG CONCERTS

MON., t-rOV. 8
PEACE BRIDGE
CENTER
8 :00 P.M.

Thurs. Nov . 1 1
KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL

8 :00p.m.

WED., NOV. 24
MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM

PIN K FLOYD
DON OVAN

Umited number of •4••nce tickets S4.00 . . . when tone all tickets SS.OO

MAIN FLOOR $6.00 - $S.OO BALCONY $5.00 - 4.00

THE

(;AB PENTEBS

Fro11t Floor Gold• I Red• $6.00
Rear Floor &amp; Blue• $5.00
I ;JO P.M.
Gteys I Oranges $4.00
Tickets Oft , . , . now M Buff1lo Festival Ticl.et OHice, St•tler Hilto11 Lobbr lm"ll onfers •ccepte4
wltfl at1mped ult-~ddresMd e11velopel; U.B. Norton H1ll; State College Ticket Office; falb
Tickets,
tbcrle Pl1u, ...,,,,,.,. F•lls.

-·

Humphrey Bogart • Ingrid Bergman
"CAS ABLAN CA "
Humphery Bogart • Peter Lorre
" MALTESE FALCON"
SUNDAY THRU TUESDAY!
Gary Cooper • Grace Kelly
" HIGH NOON "
Veronica lake • Joel McCrea
" RAMROD "

North Park
IUt MIITC&amp;.

114-7•1 I

SAT. MAT
Ll SEATS

75¢

'Til 2 :00

..

�-

MAYALL VAS PUZZLED~ BUT
H( START[D 00\JN TH[
ROAD. ~t: CAM£ TO A
CROSSROADS AND SAV A
BLACK CAT BON[ IN TH[
LEFT FORK THAT MUST BE
TI-lE RIGHT

HE CAMf TO A RAILROAD
CROSSING, AND JUMPED

ON A TRAIN GOltJG PAST. 1

FROM TH( WHlSTL( ~ HE
KN~\J IT 'WAS TH[

PANAMA
MlT£0; l-IE KNEW H[ \JAS
FOLLOWING T~r RIGl-jT PATH .
TH[ TRAIN STOPP[D
AND HE GOT OFt.

A BLACK CAT CROSSED HIS
PATH. AND SUDOrNLY IT
TURN[D INTO THE D£VIL.
H(LLO, JOHN, 1 E BEfN
\JA\TING FOR YOU. I CA
GIV[ YOU FINE
\JOM£N AND

BUT MAYALL REMEMB[R[D
Tl-1[ STORI[S OF ROB[RT 1
SON S[LLING HIS SOUL. :
Tf.IANKS
YOU'R£ A 1
MART MAN,
JOHN. ·

\J~ISKE:Y

AS ll£ \JALKW ALON~~
lNIG HT VAS FALLIN&amp;.

II'Ll GtVE-- YOU Tl-4£"
I PO\J[R TO .Sfk WHAT'S

IN M[N'S SOUL&lt;;
:AND SIN&amp;
I

TH[IR

\JORS

TORMENTS
BACK TO
THEM

H[ STARTED TO RUN.,
BUT TH[ FASTER ~[
RAN, THf LOUD[R
TH[ SCR[AM GOT.

NO! 0~ GOD! I Ll
N[V~R DO ANOTH[R
BAD SONN'i BOY
IT VAS Tl-1[ LOUD(ST
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S~OOK TI-l[ E"ARTI-l. IT VtBRAT[D IN HIS £\!tRY ~JERV£
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VflltAMSON INITATI ON AGAIN ! rtTrTrC~r11tV
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>Vol. 22. No. 21
The University's Collegiate
System, more commonly known
as the CoUCJeS, have developed,
grown and changed. To explain
this evolution, a Collegiate
Symposium Is being conducted, in
conjunction with the Student
Association, today through Friday
so that each College can better
publicize
its
programs
and
activities.
According
to
College
spokesman: "Originally conceived
of as strictly livin&amp;'learning
residential units, the Colleges have
developed into a unique system of
flexible Interdisciplinary programs
bued on voluntary associations
by
faculty
and
students."
Presently, the 1S.CoUege system
involves some 3000 students and
I 50 faculty members, and offers
over 200 courses and sections
covering over a wide range of
subjects.
The symposium will offer
those interested in "learning more
about the individual "Colleges an
opportunity to survey what Is
being done and to develop
contracts for further work and
discussion" beyond the three
days.
Created in 1966 under then
President Martin Meyerson, the

State Univ•sity of New York~ Buffalo

Wednetday, Nov.nber 3. 1971

Collegiate Symposium to
publicize aims and goals
Colleges are governed by the Stem
Prospectus which allows for
change and growth . According to
Keith Clapp, a Collegiate System
spokesman,
the
Prospectus
uallowa for change whereas
regular courses in the Uruvenity
are
buUt
for
long-time
permanence."
Further,
the
Colleges stress interdisciplinary
work tying together areas which
are taught as single, separate
entitles. The Colleges are Ayn
RAndian in nature - stressing the
individual.
·
Second-class entities
However,
the
Collegiate
System has faced many problems
in its history. Unfortunately , as
one College member commented,
the Colleges are considered
second·dass entities. The result
being that their budget is meager,
teachers from departments can't
teach solely in the Colleges (as
they must flU a certain quota of
teaching time in the departments),

and atodents can't receive major
degrees from the Colleges.
Other College problems have
included obtaining a director.
Konrad Von Moltke was selected
after the first candidate, Fred
Snell, was rejected by the
administration. Dr. Von Moltke
reported that he felt pushed into a
comer to accept the posiUon.
Further, he feels his job is that of
mediator with the administration .
In the future, he would like to see
the Colleges assimilate more into
the University, obtaining more
faculty members to staff the
Colleges and to continue efforts
to attract more students.
To aid in the symposium's
attempt to provide information
on
the
CoiJeges,
capsule
treatments of various Colleges
follow ::
CoUegeA
CoiJege A's present goal Is to

involve Itself with projects ln the
Buffalo community. The College's
staff conaists of people in the
community,
undergraduate
assistants, students, personnel of
Buffalo dty schools, PhD's, a
school
psychologist
and
a
rebabUitatlon counselor. A major
course of the College is Bambii
Abelson's
Commun icative
Creativity course, a workshop on
Sunday afternoons providing a
program
for
physically
handicapped, mentally retarded
and
emotionally
disturbed
youngsters.
According to Beth .K.assirer,
College A staff member, the
flexibility of the CoiJege and
course is greater than in an
established department as student
participation is solicited. Other
College A activities include studies
of
institutions,
hospitals,
family-community relations and
drama techniques to aid in
self-discovery.

CoUe,eB
College B has evolved from
emphasis on the performinJ arts
(music, dance, theater, art) to
increased treatment of cultu re, ln
general. For example, a coun e in
cultural mana,ement orp.nlz.es
cultural
activities
involving
knowlege of eoonomics and
sensitivity to the arts.
An important facet of College
B, h eaded by Allen Sapp , is its
residential nature which promotes
a living-learning experience. ln
addition to sharln,g MacDonald
Hall with College D, there are two
community centers, Oa.kstone
Farm and Domus. According to
Janice
Shulu, administrative
usistant of College B, the College
seeks to enhance the cultural
environment by the planning and
presentation of artistic events of
interest to the general as well as
academic community.
Clifford F urnas
According to its master, Lyle
Borst, Clifford Furnas interprets
tbe sciences for the non-scienoe
student .
Mainly
this
interdisciplinary study, involves
the
-ilontlnuec:t on

~

6-

Black and white

Racial tensions emerge
by Rarbara Mink
Spet'rrum Staff Writu

"Race
relations
have definitely
tm proved ."
"The campus is a segregated soc1al
system ."
"Everything's cool - we get along fine
together.''
" I'll sit in cla~ with you , and I'll learn
with you, but I don't want to live with
you."
A wide spectrum of opmions, some
blatantly contradictory . And yet all these
comments, lUld many more Uke them, have
been elicited from students in Tower,
Clement, Goodyear and Cooke Halls
concernin&amp; the recent deterioration of race
relations on campus.
The most recent racial flare-up ensued
from png fiahts in Tower two weeks ago.
Girls were threatened by stranaers roamina
through the halls of Tower, and students
were muged and robbed outside of the
building. To prevent a recurrence, the
Inter-Residence Council has instituted
tighter dorm-use controls. Though it is
aeneraUy aareed that the disturbances were
caused by off~mpus people, a climate of
fear seems to have permeated the dorms,
an almost tanJible tension.
Many white students find it easy to
channel this fear of attack to a fear of
blacks in pneral. Steve Lazoritz, a student
aide, said, ''Last year the molestor was
white, thls year he's black. There's no
justification for pneralization."
TeDJion noticable
William
Conroy,
Area
One
Coordinator, maintained that this fear was
caused by the presence of stranaers; t.h at
any stranprs, black or white, seem
menacing. He also said that the racial
atmosphere here bas areatly cooled since
two years aao, whe.n J!Olarization was at its
peale M01t studentS point out that
militantlf anti-white araffiti is an
lndJcation of violent feelinas coursing
beneath a calm exterior.
Although there are no "Third World"
corridors in State Uruversity of New York
dorms, the aeneral opinion is that both

groups seem to stay tosether for
socializing. Mr. Conroy said that "There is
some tendency for all groups to want to
congregate with their friends, the people
they get along with best You have this
with athletes, with racial groups of all
kinds, and you also find it with blacks."
"There is no animosity, but there's no
mixing," commented one Tower resident
while a wh1te female student from
Goodyear sensed an actual dislike on both
sides. Another male student frdm Tower
was quite firm in his o pimon tha t the
situation is "very separatist.
"( had a black roommate in the
beginning who was very disappointed that I
wasn't black. So he gave me the alternative
of one of us leaving. Now he's do~n the
hall . . . they have their music, we have
ours. They don't come out and talk with us
and vice-versa . It 's an awful relationship."
Visible fear
An Indian student on the same floor
agreed that it was separatist , but said that
he had no problems personally socializing
with blacks, tiecause they accepted him as
a non-white. He maintained that there is a
definite amount of fear in many whites :
" One boy told me that if he saw six black
guys coming down one side of the street,
and six white JUYS on the other side, he'd
feel more comfortable on the side with the
whites. He couldn't explain it - it was just
there."
On the other hand, one black girl from
Cooke felt none of this tension. "The girls
on my floor drop in on each other all the
time," she remarked. "A few kids are
uptight after Tower, but other than that ,
everytbina is cool."
A major cause of dissension seems to
be a bia difference in cultural background
and upbrin&amp;ina. "Everything is cool," a
black student said, "except for the water
f~ts and stuff like that. When we have a
party, they complain about the noise, but
when they have sbavinc cream fiibts, and it
gets all over the elevators, no one listens.
They have no consideration for us."
A white student corroborated this, and
explained, "When there's a thavina cream
flgbt , 90 per cent of the kids are in it, and

they're white, so it only bothers the blacks
who may be trying to study, and who are
in the minority. But when they play their
stereo loud and late it bothers the
majority, so the minority gets. the shaft."
'They don't p-oove'
Another black's opinion was: " I just
can't groove the way they do. When I go to
a party I like to dance a lot, and do my
thing; they like to rap too much, sit around
and talk about what happened last week ,
how the last party was. White kids just
can't seem to act into the thinas we like. I
have ·a white roommate, and we get along
ftne, as long as he doesn't bother me. In
fact, he aoes home every weekend."
Several blacks complained about the
lack of dorm1ponsored activities that
would be of interest to blacks in general .
" The House Council charters buses to go to
Batavia Downs or Kleinhans, where blacks
wouldn't or couldn't ao. There should be
buses for more localized entertainment."
Poverty Hill was also criticized as beins of
benefit to very few people.
There was a striltina difference in
attitudes found in the International Dorm
of. Schoelkopff. " I know the blacka from
Nipria well, and there are no problems at
all," said Walter Arnold , from Switzerland .

''There is a big difference between the
black Africans and black Ame.ricans. I feel
the Africans are more open and direct. The
Americans seem to have an inborn
bitterness and mistrust. In a one-to-one
relationship it's fmc, but if you say hello to
a black friend in a group of his peers, he
may not say bello back."
Prejudice dispised
A student from Persia criticized many
whites for harboring prejudices they are
afraid to admit. "I have black friend s
because I su no difference. Whites want to
socialize with blacks but when they're
together, they often act artificiaJJy, and the
blacks say 'Stay away , we don't need
that'."
"I worked in Oklahoma where racial
prejudice is tan11'ble and flaunted because
blacks are in a minority. But here, where
there are so many, whites try to disguise
that prejudice with a hail-and-hearty
attitude, sayin&amp; that everything is all right;
we're brothers, etc. Many times it is simply
not true; many people hate. •·
Racial separatism is a fact ofllfe that
cannot be played down any loncer.
However, it appears that the future of race
relations on campus will be in the hands of
the students themselves.
I

�Consumer Wonderland

..

Betty Furness: buyer caution
by Sari Menes
Sp«trvm Sttl{f Writer

Fume~~ . Realization came alowly,
but when consumen collectively
toolc note of "now toys that
broke" and "shirts that shrunk,"
Ms. Furness expWned, we saw
"who we are" as consumers and
what industry has been doina.
Yet realization does not
eliminate present consumption
problems.
She
removed
a
Coca-Cola
can
and
four
proaresslvely larser Coke bottles
from a travel case. After some
discussJon, the audience generally
aiP'eed with Ms. Furness' concern
with bow one selects the most
economical container of Coke per
quart . However, Ms. Furness
noted, this demonstration made
no comparison of Coke to other
soft drinks and their various
containers. Thus, Ms. Furness
illustrated her concern for the
establishment of nation-wide unit
pricina which
would
make
economical
selections
much
simpler.
"The package is supposed to
do the selling," but labeUin&amp;
practices today are insufficient,
claimed Ms. Furness. Ms. Furness
to
an
audience
responded
question directed towards the
requirement
of
labellina
ingredients by statlna that only
products o f mixed inaredients o r
special products, such as low
calorie aoods, must be labelled .
"Standardized products" need not
be labelled , she added, so a
product such as ice cream need
not have its " 125 ingredients"
listed anywhere on the container.

UntiJ recently, we consumers
had been "wanderina around
, W~mderla nd without even a rabbit
' fo guide us," exclaimed Betty
Furness. Ourina her presentation
last Friday ni&amp;ht, former President
Johnson's Specill Aalillant for
Consumer Affam explained the
necessity for more consumer
education and protests to pressure
abusive manufacturers.
" Business is in business to stay
in business,'' noted Ms. Furness.
In spite of this, she explained , it
bad been difficult to get rid of the
seeu.ri.ty that "they" would not let
buyers be harmed. The intepity
of the manufacturer bad always
been assumed by the public,
, • claimed Ms. Furness. She also
believes that the unknowins
consumers were "perpetually"
abused by the '&lt;tricks" of
producers, mainly interested in
their
responsibility
to
stockholders.
Ms. Furness cited sucb "tricks"
as adding monosodium glut.a mate
(MSG) to baby foods to appeal to
the mother's taste and adding
marbles to advertisement samples
o f Campbell's Vegetable Soup for
a richer appearance. A seament of
a list published by the Food and
Drug
Administration
was
presented by Ms. Furness, no ting
major companies involved with
fraudulent practices within the
last year. On this partial list were
the names of Proctor and Gamble,
Brothers, Dr. West's,
Lever
Coca..Cola and Reader's Digest .
OoUar diplomacy
The quality control of the
Unit pricina
&amp;oods inside the packa&amp;es IS
But "being token" con no anoth er proble m . " All beef" meal
longer be tolerated, said Ms. products, said Ms. Furness, may

Goetzinger speaks
Charles Goet:tlnaer. the internationally-known
sensitivity trainer, encounter group leader and
advocate of the human relations theory, wiJI be
speakJna on " Alienation and the Human Animal Man's Inability to Communicate with Man"
tomonow evening at 7 :30p.m . in Baas Lounge.

WAIHI1Ki1'0. H•MUI Clllnll
AIIMF-IUUIF

llllS &amp; THINGS-·~ Styles f• Y•• • • •

LIAII86GOODI

.... ,aans
I ILD,ACKift

8001'1-UV.
II HIP
SAVE MONET
SHOP AIMY NAVY
730-732 MAIN - IS3-1S1S NEAR TUPPER
••Tr•f ( 'If···

contain eyes, lips, or skin of the
steer. The use of cyclamates, now
removed
from
the
market
altoaether, had oriainally been
planned for usc by diabetics and
expanded to tremendous usaae by
a weipt-conscious population.
One of the m ost serious
control problems, or lack of
control, deals with the automobile
industry, cited Ms. Furness. She
read
from
a
" two
or
three-week-old" article which
reported that 5.6 million cars
manufactured between 1965 and
1969
bad
defective
motor
mounts. When a General Motors
official was finally reached for
comment, Ms. Furness stated that
he said cars would be repaired if
they were still under the
warranty; and that the enJine
could only separate from the
defective car while accelerating
over 25 miles per hour. As this
indicates, Ms.
Furness said,
Detroit will not " move away from
the dime."

Poor control
Ms. Furness clajmed that
existing control is not even
effective, as shown by the Food
and Drua Administratio n. The
Food and Drug Administration
has
no jurisdiction to test
products before their sale. An
example Ms. Furness gave was the
hypothetic sale of a laundry
detergent. The detergent is first
sold , then submitted to the FDA
for testing, and then the parent
company is requested to resubmit
a better fo rmulated product.
While the laund ry detergent was
still on sale, the company wo uld
resubmit a formula and wait for
the FDA's results. Meanwhile the
consumer has no idea as to
whether he is buyina the new or
rejected formuJa of deteraent. So
tho FDA has been, according to
Ms. Furness, a "reasonably poor"
source o f control.
But Ms. Furness noted that
regardless o f contro ls, consumer
problem solving has always lead to
In
1946,
new
problems.
consumers becam e "giddy with
progress'' when detergents and
washing machines were invented .
In the 1960 's, Ms. Furness added,
n on-biodegradable
detergents
caused foam in water taps, so
phosphates were added and then
''the Great Lakes were choking."
NTA replaced phosphates in
1970, said Ms. Furness, to be
recently denounced by the United
States Surgeon General , stating
that NTA can be " harmful'' to
lungs, eyes and skin .
••
Powerless position
As Executive Director o f New
York State's Consumer Protection
Board , Ms. Furness said she had
been approached to recommend
the packaging of meats in entirely
botto m
trays.
see-through

RICKET--ANNOUNCES
'' THE ONE WEEK SAL£ "

on all POSTERS AND PIPES
PRESENT! YIN STOCK

1/2 PRICE
(between Englewood and Heath)

Page two . The Spectrum . Wednesday, November 3, 1971

Betty Furness
Althoush this would have directly Licensina, renamed the Office of
aided the consumer, Ms. Furness Consumer
Affairs,
but
checked with the plastics industry maintainina the same authority.
and found ecological problems In
addition,
Ms.
Furness
with the meat packagina. Not ' explained , the New York City
only would the new bottom Council had supported much of
tray
be Mrs. Grant's legislation.
p o lyes tyre ne
non-biodegradable,
the
top
The passage of a biJI creating
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) covering an independent consumer affairs
of the meat tray already emitted office was the best recent reaction
serious air pollutants.
shown by Washington to the
" We had to rethink everything consumer, Ms. Furness cited . If
we were d oing" and be&amp;in the finally passed by the Senate, Ms.
"slow and difficult process to Furness explained that the office
re-educate ourselves" to protect which she held by executive o rder
both the consumers and the would become a permanent o ffice
environment,
explained
Ms. which could not be eliminated by
another executive order.
Furness.
"Corporate responsibility" is
Ho wever, Ms. Furness added,
in both her natio nal and state still very important , said Ms.
consumer affairs positions, the Furness. She quoted Henry Ford
process for chanae was very slow, as saying, " mini cars make mini
if no t impossible. fro m her profits" as his remarks o n the
experience, Ms. Furness noticed development o f a smaller, safer ,
that "our legislators are also pollution-free car. Ms, Furness
producers." She noted they will explained that the "redefin1tion
pass consumer and environmental of profit s" is a necessity and
legislation but they will not vote attitudes such as Mr. Ford's
in favor of the necessary should therefore be altered .
appropriations.
Until manufacturers change,
consumers have "the right to
Alterations needed
complain" to the local store,
Ms.
Furness'
reason
for manufact urer or possibly even the
resigning was that her positions as Presid ent , said Ms. Furness. She
U.S .
Special
Assistant
for claimed that just no t purchasing
Consumer Affatrs and Executive an item will o nly indicate to a
Director
of
the Consumer manufaeturer that it is not well
Protection Board for New York ad"ertised. "Everyone who eats o r
State had been powerless.
breathes, consumes," said Ms.
Bess Myerson Grant , she no ted, Furness, and " num bers count"
protesting
against
had fortunately been given a job wh en
with " fluke " power. Ms. Grant's fraudulent industries.
" We must know what we are
department wu originally the
Department o f Marketing and buying "

The Spectrum 16 publish«/ til,..
ti m•• • week, .....,ry MOIJ(Uy,
w.dn-.t.y •nd Fridliy; during the
, . , . , «:lldflmlc Yllflf by SIJb·BOWd
1. Inc. OH;c. Me ltx»t«J •t 355
Norton Hell, S~r. Unw.n/ty of New
Yorlc •t Buft.lo, 3436 .,_in St.,
Buff•lo, New Yorlc, 14214.
TMphone: A,.. CocH 716; EdltoMI
831-4113; Buii~Na, 831-3610.
Reprt1111nt«J for «Jwrtillng by
N•tiOMI EduutloMI Adwrtiling

AT

3266 MAIN STREET

,,
,

S.WC., Inc., 360 Lttxington Aw.,
New Yorlc, N. Y. 100'7.

,.

Sul»cription ,.,_ .,.
·~ or $8.00 for

#60 ,_,

two..,..,._

S«:ond O..l"ooDfftt peld •t •u"--o,

Mtw Ycri.

CltT:Uitnlon: 16,000

SALE
ONYX CHESS SETS
Regulation size

MEN AND BOARD
Pre-Christmas Sale
price $25.00

THE TUDOR HOUSE
100 Lisbon Avenue
(4 blocks 141 of U .B.)
1 block off Main.
STORE HOURS - for ule
Mon. thru Fri. 1 - 9 p.m.

Saturday 1 - 5 p.m.
Sale beafns Mon. Nov. lttl

�MFCSA to hold a mail
ballot for Poverty :Hill
The Millard Fillmore College
Both the GSA Executive
Student Association has ('" 'Tirnittee and the GSA Senate
announced that it will hold a voted against the acquisition of
special mail ballot referendum on the Poverty Hill land, saying, ..It
the Poverty Hill question.
'
is not in the best interest of
graduate students to purchase the
Other student governments, Poverty Hill property."
including both the Undergraduate
In a policy statement, the GSA
and Graduate Student
Associations, will be ~lding a Executive Committee cited slaring
referendum ..oo whether or not to disadvantages such as distance,
purchase the Poverty Hill land price (the minimum cost of
tomorrow and Friday.
Poverty Hill will be approximately
$650,000 to be paid over a
According tQ Bradley Roberts,
ten-year period), and potential
president of the MFCSA, special
problems in control and
packets containing position
supervision of the land.
papers, ballots and pre-stamped
return envelopes have been sent to
The Undergraduate Student
every member of the MFC student Association, under the leadership
body . All ballots must be of President Ian DeWaal, has not
postmarked by Nov. 12 in order taken an official stand on the
to qualify for the referendum.
Poverty Hill issue. Mr. DeWaal has
Both the MFCSA and Graduate said that it should be a decision
Student Assodation Executive by the entire undergraduate
Committees have come out on student body.
record opposing the purchase of
the Poverty Hill land. The MFCSA
The undergraduate Medical,
Executive Committee has said Dental and Law Student
that the S 10,000 lease option on Associations have also abstained
the 11 SO-acre area should be from expressing an opinion on
allowed to run out by the Nov. 20 how their constitutencies should
expiration date.
vote on the controversial issue.

Special meeting
The special meeting of Sub Board I, called to
discuss the future of the Board has ~n P-OStponed
· until tomorrow night at 7 p.m . in Room 2ds Norton
HaD. AU interested persons are invited to attend .

Public information

:

SA 'blue minutes' criticized
"You.Just can't make everything public."
This ls the justification of Lester Goldstein,
Student Association "Cademic Affairs coordinator,
for the existence of a double set of Sub Board I
minutes, known colloquially as the blue and white
minutes. White minutes are the ones released to the
public, while blue minutes remain a matter of private
record. Mr. Goldstein Indicated that the only thinp
contained in the blue minutes that weren't Included
in the white minutes were information that Sub
8o9rd had to keep private to protect it.s interests.
"Anything that we make public to the student
body, we are also making known to the general
public ,"'' explained Mr. Goldstein. The only
information that has not been released publicly,
continued Mr. Goldstein, is data such as speciflcs of
negotiations, which would be detrimental to Sub
Board's planning and strategies to have known to the
public.
Secretarial error
Sub Board officials insist that outside of rare
instances involving such information, the blue and
white sets of minutes are identical. The recent
controversy about the dual minutes has centered
around a glaring omission that was missing from
both sets. That omission was the record of a contract
signed on May 10, 1971, by former Sub Board I
chairman Philip J . Leaf, with Drayton S. Bryant
Associates. The contract, in which Sub Board agreed
to pay $5000 to Bryant Associates to undertake a
study of the utility of Poverty Hill, was not recorded
anywhere.
The mistake, according to Mr. Goldstein, was a

secretarial one, and unintentional. Both sets of
minutes are slated to be amended to include the
omission at an upcoming meeting. Mr. Goldstein
feels that the adverse publicity surround.ina the blue
minutes is unjustified because "corporation&amp;
everywhere have similar practices. Most corporations
just pass a lepl motion to expunge information from
the record that they don't want publicized."
Blue Shield?
Mr. Goldstein maintained that ..if you appoint
someone and later want bim to resign, you go into
an executive session where there are no minutes to
avoid possltile embarrassment." Mark Borenstein,
Sub Board business manager, lndlcated that in the
future there will be no more blue minutes. lrutead,
to faciUtate classified information, an addendum
{legal addition) will be introduced to the minutes of
an executive committee session, wJUch are a private
record.
Critics have claimed that although Sub Board
states that only necessarily classified information
will be omitted from the pubUc minutes, the blue
minutes can conceivably be used to shield delicate
matters from a storm of student controversy. ''They
can't be used for that purpose," insists Mr.
Goldstein, "because we'd be ridiculed by the press."
In response to charges that students are entitled to
be informed about aU negotiations since it Is their
money that's being spent, Mr. Goldstein replied,
"The SA, GSA and Sub Board budgets are all public
record. Not o ne cent has been spent that was not a
matter of public record."

Poverty Hill on Interface
WBFO, 88.7 FM , will examine the Poverty Hll question tomorrow niaht at 8 p.m .
The radio propam , l nterface, diacussina "The Purchase of Poverty HU ," will feature a
debate between Sub Board I business manaaer Mark Borenstein, arauina for the purc:bue
of Poverty HU and The Spectrum editor-In-chief Dennis Arnold, arauina aaainst the
acquisition. Uateners are uraed to phone in questions to 831-5393 about thlll
controversial topic, which will be answered on the air. l nterface, which features many
distinauished speakers on the air, always enables students to question the show 's auests
by phonlnatn relevant questions.

Art Auction
presents the Fourth Annual
WEEKEND SKI

TRIPS

I)

KILLINGTON . VT. JANUARY 28 - 30
$40.00 - Ski Club members

21

GLEN ELLEN . VT. FEBRUARY II - 13

$40.00 Ski Club Members

original works of graphic art-etchings, lithographs, by leading 20th century artists:
Pablo Picasso
Johnny Fricdlaendcr
Marc Chugall
AlcxanJcr Calder
Salvador Dali,
Joan Miro
Georges Rouault Victor Vasarcly
and others.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7th - 3 :00p.m.
EXECUTIVE MOTOR INN - 4243 Genesee St.
EXHIBITION OF ART - I :00 - 3 :00 p.m.
Admission free! - Prices as low as $15.00
AU works custom framed and matted .

3)

KILLINGTON , VT. FEBRUARY 18 - 21
$55.00 Presidents day - extended weekend .

41

SUGARBUSH, VT . MARCH 3 - 5
$40.00 Ski Club Members

Packages include: Transportation, meals, lodging, lifts.
CHRISTMAS VACATION SKI TRIP

•••••••••••••••••

STOWE, VT. JANUARY 2 - 7
$99.00 - Ski Club Members.
Package includes: Transportation, meals, lodging, 5 day lifts and lessons.
LIMITED SPACES ONLY. SIGN UP SOON.
APPLICATIONS AND INFORMATION - ROOM 318 NORTON HALL.

Wednesday, November 3, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page three
I

�GSA meeting

Albany weekend a 'waste'

-&lt;&gt;sterr•tchet'

L~'•

'H2zat?

ricen...

You. Com'_...
... your
Enou{lf1
of your beck-~k. you're under .nat. You hllve the
remain
lilent; if you c:u't afford a lawyer OM will be provided for !ou.
Ur.dw atand7 Now better call your owner to get up some bail you're going the pound.

""''to

to

·Student Assembly to
judge athletic budget
by Mike Enael
Contrlbutint Editor

The Student Assembly is
expected to make final judgment
this
afternoon
on
the
controversial $240,000 athletic
department budget. The Assembly
will convene at 4 p.m. in Room
134 of the Health Sciences
building.
In a late development , the
Executive Committee of the
Student Association voted to raise
the proposed allocation for
intramurals and recreation from
$26,900 to $48 ,000 . The total
proposed budget will remain at
$240 000 therefore a cut of

''

Joe AshwaJ, Chairman of the
Student Athletic Review Board,
said " I don't think the increase
was necessary. It was a really
foolish move, and a slap in the
face of the professional staff.
They have as much as they need
to run a recreation program." Mr.
Ashwal added, that he " would
have to dlscuss with Or. Fritz" the
rearrangement of Ute other budget
Unes, and that it would be a "joint
decisJon. ·• The most important
thing is that the total be kept at
$240,000," Mr. AsbwaU said.
.
Critics .o r ':he proposed budget
' have mam~med the. amount
proposed
IS
excesstve
and
represents mlsplaced University
priorities.

.I'

$2 1 ,000 fro m other areas ts
necessary·
No money can be given to the
Athletic Department until the
budget is approved by the Student
Assembly .

Harsh and serious scrutiny of
the overaU budget is expected to
be
made by the Student
Assembly, which until recently
was expected to voice only
moderate criticism .

The Executive Committee's
action
will
have
serious
repercussions within the athletic
depart m e nt,
which
had
Both Dr. Fritz and Mr. Ashwal
mlstakenly assumed the original have disapproved of the Assembly
budget,, passed last spring by the having the power to reject the
Student Athletic Review Board,
budget. Or. Fritz termed the
was final . The department has situation
" ludicrous"
and
contended
that
irreversible " discouraging." Mr. Ashwal said
commitments have already been the Student Athletic Review
made. Included are the hiring of Board
and
the. Executive
staff, asslstant coaches, trainerS, Committee of the Student
officials and intramural and Assocaition should have final say
recreational workers, as well as on the budget.
the delivery o r unpaid for medical
supplies. Insurance policies have
IIIILIIYAILII
yet to be paid.
"Somethil}g's going to have to
go," said Or. Harry Fritz, the
director of Physical Education,
Recreation and Athletics. " I' m
surprised they I the Executive
Committee ) would deal with the
budget without consulting us."
When asked what effect the
increased · intramural
and •
recreational allocation would have
on t he other parts of the budget,
Dr. Fritz replied, "It's impossible
to react right now."

GSA President Mike Nicolau's
recent Albany trip and GSA
presence at a budget meeting with
SUNYAD administrators and state
and central SUNY representatives
were the major topics at last
Monday night's meeting of the
Graduate Student Association
Senate. Explaining the purpose of
the the Albany trip, Mr. Nicolau
reported that it was to attend a
conference of 35 o r so student
government officials In the SUNY
sy stem
with
educational
administration officials.
The purpose of the conference,
according to Mr. Nicolau, was to
give the student officials direct
communication with the men in
power. Mr. Nicolau stated : " In
my view, it was a wasted
weekend." Explaining this, he
cited the point that students were
allowed a half hour to bring up
any important issues after each
dignitary
discussed
his
responsibilities and duties. Mr.
Nicolau also noted that he was
one of two presidents representing
• graduate student constituencies,
the other being the Albany GSA.

attendance at the budpt meeting. will immediately replace Anthony
"It was an interesting and Lawrence, who resigned for
informative
opportunity
to penonal reasons.
Under old business, the
experience first-band the dealings
of such a committee." A~rding Poverty Hill referendum was
to Mr. Nicolau, there will have to discussed as Paul Cummings,

-&lt;&gt;nerr~

prwsident Mike NicoiMI
~
the GSA Senate of his
llttendMice .t budget hewing
meets with SUNY repr...,Uttives
Mel University adminittntors.
GSA

GSA meets

to

be severe . cutbacks in certain (chairman of Sub Board I, Inc.
University program$, as the funds and member of the GSA
· available are dwindling and the Executive Committee), explained
'Refreshins safeguard '
political
and the role of allocating funds by
He fu rther informed the Senate " underlying
that Albany dealt with the philosophical implications are Sub Board .
problems of regionalism and fiscal important to note."
The Poverty Hill referendum
difficulties. Chancellor Boyer
will be voted on by students on
informed the convention that,
Thursday and friday of this week
should the concept of regionalism Other actions
and depending on the results,
prove to be unfeasible once
In other Senate actiOilS, club GSA will determine which way to
evaluated, he would instruct the budgets were passed and a new inflt\ICJ their repr~sentatives to
Board of Trustees to withdraw the treasurer was elected ...fred Cazer vote on Sub Board .
mandate for regionalism . Mr.
Nicolau referred to this option as
a "refreshing safeguard."
AJso at the AJbany conference,
Mr. Nicolau stressed that , in
fuw_re conferences of this type,
the burden of financjng the trips
for the students should be placed
with the Albany leaders, as it was
in their best interest to have
student input.
Continuing his report to the
Senate, Mr. Nicolau explained his

total wipe-out

THE UUAB* Fine Arts Film Committee
presents
Thursday, Friday - Nov. 4th &amp; Sth

.. .____

-

FRANCOIS TRUfFAUT'S

" MISSJSSIPPI MERMAID"

surring
Jean Paul Belmondo &amp; Catherine Oevenue

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

1c SALE

SATURDAY AND SUNOA Y1 Nov. 6th ilnd 7th

NO COUPON afOUtUO

PRICE ROLL
BACK

DINNER FOR 2
(ADULTS)

CHQICII OF 18 DIIHIIS
"nt '""" to ot ..-qulor price. S.COIICI
'".,_ -•• 10" .,~y l c. leoon&lt;otiOfto

...........

,.,....a:.,4"""""-......
,
4 P.ll-1:31 P.ll lAilY

We .,. NOT

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~

"uoltt,

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-"
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Tickets
SO¢ before 6 p.m.

75¢ after

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ILICDibfl IIIP
,._

1171

~

IIMH1

Page four. The Spectrum . Wednesday, Ne&gt;Vember 3, 1971

At lnt 11n lld.ult film to which you can t11lre your chiMren•

,.•••••••••••••A DivisionofSub·Board t•••••••••••••••llll'

,

�Editor's note: 17rll il th~ ftnt of a win of three articles
orr tlvee t111NiCII of Sub Botm:l I, IPIC. - Porerty HIU, the
AniiNip.t Lim~! tlltd Sllb Bcwd illel/. 'ndl lerle., Wrltterr by
Mlll'lc BDfmltein, foma111' 'l'retuwt11' of Sub Board I,
repmentr Iris idea and dOft not neceuarily r,flect th~
ideaJ ofSub Board lllelf or the individual memben of the

development is " peanuts." While it is true that Sub Bolrd
will probably spend close to $650,000 for Pomty...UW In
the pext ten years, when compared to what will probably
be spent in other areas, that fiBUJC doesn't quite look as
large as some people mi(!bt .make it out to be. In the next
ten years, (if things remain about the same way they have
been for the last three years), publications wW receive
close to SJ million; Union Board about $800,000; the
athletic department $2.5 million; the student governments
about ·$4 million.
In light of what will be spent in other ar.,, the
$650,000 . used to buy and develop something tat~P,te.
that present students and alumni can call their own,
appears Jess substantial than just ta.king the $650,000 out
of the air and not putting it up against any standard.
Six-hundred and fifty thousand dollars in, relation to the
almost $8.5 million that will be collected is a small price to
pay for a tangible asset that lives on with each new student •
body.

Botud.
In recent weeks, there has been a tremendous amount
of controversy conceming Sub Board J , Inc., Poverty Hill
and the Amherst Land, currently owned by FSA, While it
Is about time the newspapers gave these topics adequate
coverage, most of what has been said has amounted to
biased pot-cho&amp;s and unfair criticism.
My purpose in writing this series of three articles (one
each for Sub Board, Poverty Hill and Amherst land) is not
to refute or try and correct everything that has been
written about Suti Board I - the value of such an exercise
would be doubtful. What I hope to do is present the often
missing, positive side of these questions, and despite what
many sources woUld have you believe, there is a positive
side.

Development
And what of development? Critics of Poverty Hill
would have you believe that Sub Board plans to put up
seven gas stations, three Red Barns, and a Holiday Inn.
Even in a cursory review of the Development Plan, one can
readily see that no more than five percent of the land is
suggested for intensive development (and the decision for
any heavy development at all will be left to the student
body in future years) while only another ten percent is
suggested for light development (campsites, nature center,

Sub Board backpound
To begin with, Sub Board was created four years ago
by the student governments to provide some coordinated
way of funding Universite·wide activities - activities that
affect all students, not just students in one student body.
Since the representatives of Sub Board are direct
representatives of the student governments, in theory,
these representatives should consult and report back to
etc .):~
t ''l, \
their respective governments for a wide spectrum of input.
This doesn't always happen; to say that it never happens is
A~ vestment?
wrong.
Pp The Spectrum critic says that Sub Board only
There are, however, constraints placed on Sub Board
wisi)P.\J~'- buy Poverty Hill because it is "a good.
by the governments that created it - Sub Board cannot
invejJplenf." AU ,the professiQnals Sub Board has consulted
-osterrelc:her
directly uk the students anything (through referenda);
in ~eal estate area assure§,ub Do~. that Poverty Hill is
they must request the student governments to uk. Sub
a " gdOd investment" - but Sub Board does not exist to
Board has to get its money from the student governments, their own use (clubs, special projects, the running of their make ..good investments.. - it exists to provide services.
which usually means waiting until November for funds, offt.ees, etc.) and if Poverty HOI is purchased by Sub With all the talk of alternative life styles, and the new
while the organizations it funds start Sept. 1 (especially
Board, then obviously the money will have to come from youth culture, Poverty Hill presents the ideal occasion to
the newspapers and the Union Board).
somewhere - and that somewhere means spreading the put some of the theories, supplying the alternatives
There are other problems also, most of which I hope . money Sub Board gets, over more areas, with less going to students seek, into practice.
will be resolved in the next few weeks by the student each area. It is interestins to note, that in the last three
In the course of the last 16 months, Board members
aovemments, representatives to Sub Board I and people
years, Sub Board I has received less and less money. yet have felt · that Poverty Hill could be a source of further
from the student body. As I have already stated, Sub
has contin~ to maintain existins services and, in fact , has service to the student body. It is for this reason that
money, time and sweat wu invested in Poverty Hill. The
been able. to increase and provide new services.
Board I cannot continue to operate without any direction,
The other alternative is to get the student fact that it turns out to be a " good investment" is a bonus, ·
any charge or any set responsibilities.
governments to give more money to Sub Board I to run an insurance against a possible error in judgement.
Poverty Hill, alloWing it to maintain the other services Po¥erty Hill
student publications, Norton Hall and Union Board - at Commuaity ~emee or recreation?
On Thursday and Friday, the various student bodies
thos argues in thefT editorial of last week, that they
the current level ,
will be asked in one form or another, whether they wish
Sub Board to buy and minimally develop Poverty Hill. Just
about every on-campus organization has come out against
Poverty Hill, either because of the fear that the funds they
currently receive will be cut back because of the cost of
Poverty Hill, or because they feel that the students could
better spend such a latge arri'Ount of money dsewhere. As
one ~mpus paper asked, should the students purchase a
"$650,000 playgJOund."
The question of Poverty Hill now becomes, not one of would like to see the $650,000 spent in community and
taking money away from important and widely used service activities rather than on the "glorified playground''
Tbe cost - $650,000
services such as the publications The Spectrum, ethos, they call Poverty HiU. While I believe that the University
Their fear that if Poverty Hill is purchased, a cut in
Telos, Undercurrent, Opinion, etc.) Union Boar4 and bas a responsibility to develop and plan new programs and
their funds may be necessary, is very real . Because the
Norton Hall but rather diverting money that is currently projects with the local community, I also believe that there
student governments {Sub Board gets most of its money
tied up in each student government. It is possible to buy is nothing wrong in placing a value on recreational and
from the student governments) have chosen in past years Poverty Hill without taking money from the other Sub social activities planned by, planned for and executed by
to cut back their funds for Sub Board , Sub Board bas had Board seM"ces, but then the money must come from the students. Many thousands ...of dollars of student activity
less and less money to work with each year. In pa,rt, this is student governments themselves (either by raising their fees are spent on community service each year. The
why student publications, UUAB and Norton Hall have
student activity fee, or by taking more of the money they .educational value intrinsic in anything like Poverty Hill,
received less money this year than ever"before.
now collect and using it for more University-wide services). combined with its recreational attributes, makes the $3.17 •
If one assumes that the student governments will
I was incorrectly quoted in The, Spectrum as saying each student will pay each year seem little indeed.
continue their . trend of keeping most of the money for
that the $650,000 for Poverty Hill purchase and
-continued on 1N9e 7-

Mark Borenstein

t

The other side of Poverty Hill

HUMAN DIMENSIONS INSTITUTE
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STARTS THIS FRIDAY

83)·17••

Wednesday, November 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�Collegiate Sympesium. • •
relationship between the humanities and
the sciences·.. The College presently consists
of 75 students. However, Dr. Borst 'would
like to see students, not biologically
oriented, join the College to get away from
a sterile atmosphere.
Uke College 8, an important aspect of
Clifford Pumas i$ its residential experiment
in MacDonald Hall. As Dr. Borst
commented, residential living provides
students with a common goal and common
experiences to interact at a small unit level.
In the future, Dr. Borst would like to see
the development of a society of fellows
which 'would be composed of outstanding
scientists and professors to plan activities
and teach in the College. ·
Tolstoy College (CoUege F)
Tolstoy College patterns itself after its
namesake who had a broad outJook on life
- how to Uve and what to live for. The
College stands for political, social and
educational change. Its master, Chip
Planck, commented that in its simplest
form, the College can be described as
&lt; conscious-ratsmg
encounter
gro ups
involved in the study of society. Further,
he said, the emphasis is on action not only
talk.
College of Social Sciences
Created in the Fall of 1970, Social
Sciences College originally centered on
critiques
of
existing
University
departments. However, now its goal is to
build the College, on positive thinking by

conceiving new methods of presenting
.topics.

NeVi College of Modem Education
Modem Education Conege centers
around concepts of new schools which
question the whole process of education.
Different educational alternatives are
stressed through a series of seminars.
According to a College member, EUiot
Smith, the College can be thought of as a
countermovement
to
the
classical
educational system.
Math Sciences College
Deep in the Heart of Ridge Lea, hiding
·in Room 35 is•the Math Sciences College.
According to its head , Richard Orr , the
reason for such a College is to relate math
and a mathematical approach to the social
sciences, medicine and philosophy .
Communications College
Communications College is involved in
crafts as "an expression of innerself." It
has
evolved
from
dealing
with
communications, in general, to crafts as
self-expression. Its activities include
ceramics, metals and leather weaving.
Rachel Carson CoUege
Quite simply, Rachel Carson tries to
promote an awareness ap&lt;J understanding
of man as a component of his ecological
system. According to John Howell, its
head, the College treats environmental

-continued from page 1-

problems· not superficially but by digging
deeper and deeper into the probleq1.
Uke. the other Colleges, Rachel Carson
does not want only to talk but to do, for
its courses are used in the real world .
Vico College
Named after Giambalis Vico, an 18th
century Italian philosopher of law and •
culture, Vico College is Involved in the
history of ideas as revealed through
literature. It deals specifically with the five
overlapping areas . of history, English,
philosophy, political science and· the
classics.
The College is small but a popular
aspect is the faculty colloquia, which are
seminars attended by faculty and students.
In the end, a well rounded analysis' of
literature and history Is achieved.
College E
College E is a kind of resource center
involving a system that is set up outside the
University allowing a person to research
areas of interest. According to its members,
College E is a kind of clearing house where
anyone can learn about any topic.
CPSnow
CP Snow attempts to integrate
technology in social problems. It is
modeled after the work of the novelist CP
Snow who worked for the government as a
science advisor. CP Snow is also
project-oriented dealing with such activities

vonMoltke
as Buffalo
mechanics.

snow

removal

The S'I'U11ENT ASSEMBLY!
J e undergraduate Student Assembly has been meeting now for three
wetb. New representltives can be elected at any time during the semester.
All it takes is signing 1 petition and voting in the SA office, 205 Norton.
The following final paitions that are in the process of being signed still
need more people to complete them:

Student The8tre Guild II
Foreign Students Co-ordinating Council
Mitchell Mayer
Schoellkopf 1- David Mitchell
Randy Myores
Outdoor Club
Organic Living II
Pharmacy - Terry Harbaugh
Pharmacy Third YIJ8r Class

4th Year Pharmacy
The PeopiiiS- Donald Levins
Bruce Skolnick
Ski Club Ill
Barbara Schneider
UUABI
UUAB/1
Doug Webb
WBFO ...:. Jonathan Baer

Page six . The Spectrum. Wednesday, November 3, 1971

auto

A College spok~man remarked that the
College courses are good in that they are
recyclable, while other University courses
aren't. Thus depending on student interest,
courses can be changed, added or dropped.
Other Colleges included In the system
and which will take part in this week's
symposium are International College, Law
and Society College and the newly formed
Women's Studies College.

JOIN

Activist Youth for Israel
CAC Ill - Bob Rosofsky
CAC V - (Sunshine House)
CAC VII - Jeff Reiman
Craftsman ~s Guild I
Craftsman's Guild II
Craftsman's Guild IV
Mark Drexler
UB Food Co-Op

and

�-continued from pqe 5-

The other side...
- far _smaller than

But it isn't as If Poverty Hill is devoid of any
redeemiOg aoclal value,. in and of itself. During the
summer, it became clear' that all
of community and
on campus social action groups were interested in usiJli
Poverty Hill: The IM'ayette Community Center had an
outing there; CoUogi A wanted to run a Communicative
Creativity sellion on the ·land; the Day Care Center uked
about usin&amp; it for an extension oentor of some kind Oust to
name a few).
In addition to various social action groups, several
University professors took their classes out to Poverty Hill
for overniaflt or weekend .outinp and sensitivity sessions.
One of the Colleaes- wanted to run a course on
environmental survival, with the professor on the land
throupout the week. Because of Poverty Hill's geologic
histoty, in pest y~, aeology classes and geography clwes
have had seminar classes out there. The educational use of
the land is still an area that needs further study ; the
possibilities seem endless.

Poverty Hill) gets $8 a year from each
student. Poverty Hill will cost less than $3.20 per student
per year (for ten years).
There Js also another question as to whether Poverty
Hill is too far away to be of any use to students at Buffalo
- located SO miles south, the distance virtually excludes
aU those without their own private transportation. Perhaps
the answer to this is running buses a few times each week
(costing maybe $6,000).
But, the basic problem still remains: there has been no
way ~o puge whether students will use the place, durin&amp;
the FaD and Spring. The solution might be to let the
option expire, and then Lease or rent the land during the
Spring to see if students will make the effort to use
Poverty Hill. If they do, then Sub Board could either
re-negotiate the option, or enter into lease agreements for
the Summer and Fall. Jf students don't use the property,
then, it shouldn't be purchased .

-arts

Poverty Hm Corporation
One of the more difficult questions involved with
Poverty Hill is ttie proposed administration of the land.
The development plan calls for the creation of a Poverty
Hill Corporation. The IJeed for a separate corporate entity
is almost indisputable - the limited liability It provides
would insure that student funds would be safe from liens
or Jaw suits, should someone ever decide to sue Poverty

""' Not enouab infoJ'IBUion
"'( Some people feel that the statistical information
presented by Sub Board is not conclusive enough to
warrant a vote at this time. There is no proof that the land
is useable or accessable enough to warrant spending over
half a milllon doUars. There is no argument ·here, because
clearly, the statistics gathered by Sub Board during the
summer are not representatives of the larger September to
May student body; these figures represent summer use and
not spring or fall use.
Taking other schools as an example (almost every
other State College or Univenity has some sort of camping
facility for use by tho University community, usually
owned by the campus Faculty Student Association), it
seems that students use the camping facilities year round
when it is made available to them. Though use is heaviest
on spring-like weekends, weekday use of facilities is not
uncommon, throughout the year.
Interestingly enough, the cost at other campuses is far
weater than the proposed cost to students at Buffalo. For
example, at the State University CoUege of Buffalo, the
Camp jloard (the cotnmittee that runs theiJ camping area

Hill.

.

The Poverty Hill Corporation would have nine
directors, of which five members must be students. The
other directors are appointed from the faculty, staff and
community . To allow for some continuity, some of the
seats on the Board of Directon would be for two year
terms.
The underlying consideration in giving students the
majority on the Board of Directors is obviously to insure
present and feture student control of the land. Because
there has to be some c-onnection between the Poverty Hill
Corporation and the Univenity, the advisory committee
composed of the University president, the vice president
for student Affain and the director of Recreation, would
serve to formalize th~ very real and necessary association.

If Bud.is your favorite beer••.

The Ski Club President is included because of the
-poaibWty that aiding facilities may be developed in the.
ftature. The important point is that the advisory committee
would only advise a Board of Directors that has a majority •
of students on it. Although other University and
non-Uni'venity. representatives will bring their ideas to this
Board of Directors, students will always maintain control
of what happens at Poverty Hill.
I believe Poverty Hill to be one of the\ few creative
ideas to come from a student government type entity in
many years. Unfortunately, ·though, I have one reservation.
lbat involves, not the question of Poverty HDl s0 much as
tho question of Sub Board itself. In its c~nent state (as J
mentioned in my letter of Oct. 27 to the Board of
Directors) Sub Board caMot continue to function without
some clear set of responsibilities by either the student
government or the student body; Sub Board as it exists
today, is doomed to be damned if it does and damned if it
doesn't.
If Sub Board does not change, then Poverty Hill will
be just one good idea to never make it, not because of the
idea itself, but rather because of the petty politics that is
always to the detriment of the student body. If one votes
..yes" to purchase Poverty Hill, it has to be with the
understanding that if by Nov. 20, Sub Board ls not
restructured, than purchase~ of Poverty Hill would be
disasterous. The alternatives would be to let the option run
out, and attempt to renegotiate for purchase after the
internal governance problems of tho student governments
are settled or to just try to get an extension of the option.
Although journalistic license permits newspaper to
express editorial comment in edito~ colurMs
(commentaries or news analyses), perhaps The Spectrum
should reconsider their policy of liberally sprinkling large
segments of their paper with the editorial comments of
their staff.
This ls a series of three articles concerning Sub Board's
activities. The next will deal with the Amhent land and
housing - the fact that most housing corporations start
out with nothing, and that the development of Poverty
Hill does not necessarily exc\ude the development of
hoUsing in Amhent; the third article will deal with Sub
Board itself - The .. mystery" of white and blue minutes,
and why I think Sub Board does what it does.
One other point - what I write here and in future
art4cles are my opinions, and don' t necessarily represent
the opinions of Sub Board itself, or any of Its members.

Polling locations
Votina for tbe Poverty Hill referendum will be
held Thursday, Nov. 4 and Friday, Nov. S from 9
a.m .-S p.m. at tbe foUowina places :
Center Lounae, Norton Union
Goodyear, Main Lobby
Tower, Main Lobby
Ridge Lea, Recreation Center
Capen Lobby (Outside Capen 140)
Diefendorf, Rotunda
Allenhurst , Bus Lounge
Acheson Lobby (Outside library)

•

~Q

why not
make it your
regular beer?
Don't you deserve it? After all ...
In brewing Bud, our choice is
to go all the way. We hope beer
matters enough to you that you
too will go all the way.
All the time.

WHEN YOU SAY

Budweiser.

....._.;::o-".= "4

0
.Q

Room
356

Norton
or

~

r.a
QJ

~

Norton
Lobby

~

(b

.,
~

~
Q

0

~

'10liVE SAD rr AU!

ANHlUSlR· IUSCII, INC. • ST. lOUIS

Wednesday . November 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�l

1
Kill the hill

,,.

Tomorrow and Friday the undergraduate and graduate
students of this University will voice their sentiments on
Poverty Hill via referendum. In an ideal situation, this
newspaper would have gladly supported and fought for the•
purchase of Poverty Hill because the very concept of
students owning and operating property is both exciting and
an avenue towards true political power. Unfortunately, we
have not progressed in the direction of the ideal.

•

TIMPil, TIMPit ..•

To purchase Poverty Hill under the present operating
conditions of Sub Board I, Inc. and to administer it through
the proposed guidelines of the Poverty Hill Corporation
would be disastrous. The actions of last year's Sub Board in To the Editor:
tJ
squelching information and working in total, and often
The second installment of The Spectrum's
~uhnecessary, secrecy, prove vividly that the potential for Sub campaign against Poverty Hill (Oct. 27, by Jo Ann
Board to disregard or ignore the student body's interests still Armao) reaches a new low in bumbling rhetoric. I
exists. It is true that tHe current Board has made admirable will answer a few of its fallacies and factual errors:
1) Sub Board's proposed development plans for
strides towards opening up and democraticizing their
Poverty Hill are just that ~ proposals. We don't have
operations, but the recent scandalous attempt by the MFC to adopt them. All we have to decide right now is
Executive Committee to disenfranchise their students must whether to buy the land; if we want, we can buy it
and leave it undeveloped, except for minimal
serve as a reminder that all is not well .

It's what's up tfrunt'

Presently, Sub Board is little more than a corporation
staffed and run by the student governments. Since the people
allocating the monies to Sub Board are for the most part the
same individuals later determining how and why it will be
distributed, a closed circle exists. This circle has, in the past,
acted in a cavalier fashion irregardless of student sentiment.
Therefore, the membership and structure of Sub Board I
must be changed.
The Board should be enlarged to include between five
and eight new members. Half of these should be elected
directly by the student body for two·year terms, t he notion
beh\nd the extended term being an insurance of some
continuity from year to year. The remaining new appointees
could be appoil'lted by the various student governments, but
must not be more student government officials as that would
simply reinforce the present interlocking directorate.
Of late, one of the orgaAizations demanding a reform of
Sub Board has been the Board itself. Many of the members
argue ttlat it must be removed from the sphere of influence
of t he governments. Until 'this reform occurs, we do not
believe that the studeM body can or should countenance any
purchases or deve,lopments through the organ of Sub Board I.
Most of the current members have begun of late to either
oppose or have serious doubts about this purchase under the
present structure and this more than any other factor has
caused us therefore to strongly urge a negative vote in the
referendum .

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 29

Wednesday, November 3. 1971
Editor-in-chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-M.,...Ing Editor - AI Beneon

eo.M.NIIfne Editor - Mike LippmaM
A•. Mlnltinl Editor - Sua.n MOSIS
Bulin. . MM.- - Jim Orucker
~n..., - Sue MelIentine

Advertitlng

C.mpus . ...... . . Jo.Ann ArrNO

... • .. . ... .. . . . .HowieKunz
.. . ....... . .. . .. Bill Vaccaro
City . . . . . . . . . . • . Hervy Lipman

Uyo&amp;Jt .•. . .•. Mif'Yhope Runyon
A• • . . . . ..... . ... . .. .vec:.nt

Lh. • Drema . . Michael Silverblm

Copy ...... . .. .. RonniFor~

MUiic .. ••.••• . .. •.Billy AltrMn
OH.c.npus ..• •. • Lynne T~"~M~g~~r

..•........ . ...• Meny Gml
.. . ..•. .. ... . .• . ,v-=-nt
F•ture ... .. . . .... ... •..v~~a~nt
~lc Arts .. . ..... . Tom Tol•

l'tloto .. . ...... . Man: Aduwman
. . . . . . . . . . Mlc:key Oltflfrelc:her
Spotts ....••..... .. Barry Rubin
A.M • • . •• . •.. . . .. Howle Falwl

~.

The Spectrum is ten~ed by United Pr- lntemnionll, College Pre.
Senta, the Los Anoef• Free ,,.., the Los .,...,. Times Syndicate and

Llbetwtion News S.Vk:e.
Republication of ~- herein without the ex~ QOnMM of the
Editcw..fn-Chief it forbidden.
·Edltoriel policy it detwmiMd by the Edltor·in-C'"-f. •

Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday, November 3, 1971

,

1

facilities required by health laws. If Jo Ann Armao
would like other plans than what Sub Board
suuests, let her sugest her own. That's a completely
different issue ; it's no argument against buying
Poverty Hill.
2) According to Sub Board's "Fact Shebt No.
1," even their maximum Jevel of PROPOSED
development , would leave 85% of the land
untouched.
3) Yo\.1 don't need to be rich to enjoy Poverty
HUI. Altho ugh a car is most convenient, people have
been known to hitch, take a bus (there are three
Trailways buses a day to Ellicottville, for $3.60
round trip), and even ride bicycles. There's also the
Norton ride board. Next, J suppose, we'll be hearing
that you need a car t~attend classes.
4) Many people think we should develop land in

Amherst, for student houslnt and other services. As
yet we don't even have this land; it is in trust with
the faculty Student Association. Even if we develop
It (assuming that we can got it), that's no argument
against buyina more land elsewhere. We can afford
to do botb. Total student activity fees for 1971 - 72,
not countina summer sessions, will be around
$910,000 (based on information from the student
associations and the administration); projected
yearly costs for Poverty Hill are $63,305 , or only
8.0% of the total. We're rkhctthan we think.
5) It seems to me that in as.king for a
referendum, Sub Board has shown com plete
responsibility to its constituents. Apparently JoAnn
Armao believes that if a m;Uority of students vote
against her position, they will have been .
" railroJded." This is a weirder conception of
democracy thon anyone has even attributed to Sub
Board.
I have not argued in favor of buying Poverty
Hill, because the land speaks for itself. The best
argument wo uld be an ho ur or two spent there,
seeing the land fol' yourself, and for that time
making its quiet and beauty a part of you. Compared
to that, words are insignificant. lf we buy this land ,
It will be a permanent resource ; u benefit to UB
students for as long as they want to keep and use it .
That, I think, is w~ worth the price.
Bart Jone.t

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman

there are ten million Chinese on the island of
Formosa, while there ' re only roughly a billio n
The proclivity of tbe American government Chinese on the mainland of Asia. Now who can
toward insensitivity and violence seems never to stop better represent the interests of tl\e United States expanding. This past week its citizenry was treated an ex-war lord who owes his eltistence to American
to several displays of expertise in these areas. Of stupidity or a revolutionary leader who has done
co1.1rse, Americans should not need any new and more for the Chinese people in the past twenty years
exciting examples of the state's abilities. ln the time than anyone else had done over centuries of the
it will take the reader to finish this col1.1mn the nation's hatory?
Vietnam War will kill a couple of people and wound
In another display of diplomacy, the man
a few dozen more. The administration, however,
continues to dazzle and amaze people with its behind the seal of the great bald eagle authorized the
brilliant demonstrations. In roughly one week it has underground testing of a five·mepton nuclear
threatened to cut off aid to the United Nations over warhead. The test has been o pposed by
conservationists, the government of Canada and
the China affair, decided to unleash the effects o f a
citizens of the states of Hawaii ond Alaska. 1t seems
five megaton nuclear blast in the Aleutians,
attempted to force passage of a foreign aid bill which the possibility exists that radiation leakage may
included such items as military aid to Greece, result or that the blast could set off tidal waves of
Cambod ia, Laos and Vietnam - all this, ladies and earthquakes. No one has quite proved that these
gentlemen, while sending Spiro Agnew's likely disasters will result, but then agaln no one haS'
successor, John Connally, to congratulate Nguyen proved that they won't. These lninor factors have
failed to deter the great Dickie Bird. There is hope
Van Thieu on his inauguration.
And just to keep in practice, the federal that resulting earthquakes may send San Clemente
goverpment bas stood by and watched as the state of ~ling into the Pacific, though this has not been
Ohio prosecutes . twenty-five students for forcing confrrmed. At any rate the president is suspected of
those nice boys in the National Guard to shoot four planning to move the winter White House to Key
people at Kent. I suppose it is asking too much to Biscayne, Florida. If somebody could just..-figure out
a way to set off a hurricane ...
expect the attorney general to work for justice.
The reaction to the expulsion of Taiwan and the
Having accomplished so much in the interest of
entrance of China into the U.N. would, were it not good will and world harmony, one mi&amp;bt believe that
so dangerous, be comical. While members of the the administration would be all tuckered out. Not
administration have toned down their own so, however. After aU this the administration still
comments, the implication has clearly been made had time to have super-adviser Henry Kissinger
that financial aid to the world body may be lessened. finalize details for the kina's visit to Peking.
Administration supporters ill the Senate such as Somehow one would imagine that K.i.ssinger's job
Goldwater and Buckley have said that if the rest of would have been much easier bad not his
the world doesn't think the U.S. is number o ne government been in the process of insultin&amp; the
anymore then let them foot the bill. After all, this United Nations for expel.lina Chiang or seelc.ing a
nation has been supplying something in the vicinity foreign aid program which tied aid for Pakistani
of forty per cent of the organization's funds . The refugees to military aid for General Tbieu. All this
fact that the United States controls rougbly considered, it is a good thing that China's ftnt real
three·fourtbs of the world's capital and therefore contact with the American people was tbrouah the
oupt to be apyina even more doesn't seem to have ping pong team. If they bad started out with out
bad much impact on these·gentlemon. In &amp;meral, the ..diplomats.. relations between the two countries
response bas been something to the effect of: "It's could have been set back centuries. Mao must
my ball, and if you're not JOinJ to play the way I wonder why the American people don't ever apread
want to, I'm going home. Of course, there ia a rumors about NiXon's death. I'd like to see a picture
somewhat valid point to this reasonina. After aU, of him swinunin&amp; the Potomac.

..
\

�CategOricallll speaking
To the Editor:

Guest Op,inion

, Having enter~ the University this year as a
freshman, I have observed that the word
"ultra·right" is bandied ab011t with the same
intellectual 'irresponsibility as the word communist
• used to be (and to some extent, still is) in society at
large. The result is that, in the general pctceptlon of
the universe at this University, there are no
conservatives - only "ultra-consei'Vatives;" and
further they can aU be fit into definite categories:
Archie Bunkers, rednecks, fundamentalist preachers,
ha rdha ts, bigots, n'azis, and munitions
manufacturers. Thus, all those opposed to the J964
Civil Riahts Act arc racist, aU strict-oonstructionists
are at least latent fascists, aU those in favour of Right
to Work laws are anti-union, and all those who
question the morality and efficiency of
minimum-waac laws arc greedy businessmen wishing
to exploit the proletariat.
A society which cannot distinguish between
Karl Marx and Senator Teddy or Herr Hitler and
Barry Goldwater, is morally and intellectually
diseased. Jt is time for aU men of reason, Left and
Right, to denounce this ltind of mindless rhetoric
that stultifies critical faculties. It should be done not
for the sake of liberalism or conservatism , socialism
or capitalism, but for the salce of tNth.
Stuart Cudovltz

•

by Bob Convissar

..

Political 'Poverty'
To the Editor:
I was one of the caretakers of Poverty Hill, from
1une t st until two days ago. I feel that I must tell
you how I view the situation since the future of the
land depends on bow we vote in the upcoming
referendum.
Poverty Hill is much more than a recreational
area. If the property was to be turned into a teen-age
ski resort, I'd be dead-set against its purchase. But
this is not the case. Many students have failed to
understand that the possibilities of what .could be
done with Poverty Hill are overwhelming. I spoke
with many of the over 7000 people who came to
Poverty Hill over the last five months. Every one of
them could see the difference between Poverty Hill
and state patks. Something new , radicaUy different
from anything done before was being atttmpted at
Poverty Hill.
We were involved in setting up programs
whereby kids from the day care center, ghetto areas,
high schools and neighborhood centers could uae the
land. We set up a project for handicapped and
emotionaUy disturbed children in cof\junction with
College A, whereby the kids would plant an "annual
flo wer garden" to be replanted and tended by them
every spring so that they could feel the joy of being
out in the country doing something constructive.
People came up from the Food co~p and the New
Age Restaurant and we surveyed Poverty Hill's apple
orchards and checked her soil to see what areas
could be used for farrning. By October students and
professors from different d epartments in the
University were conducting seminars at Poverty Hill.
Many of you haven't heard of the different
programs und possibilities being explored at Poverty
Hill because we've been caught in the middle of a
political power struggle involving the school
newspapers, different student governments and the
Sub Board The newspapers have condemned
Poverty Hill from the start . They've stated that the
students would have no control over development of
the property. I personally went to last month's Sub
Board meeting and bad the Sub Board include a full
paragraph in their Poverty Hill fact sheet explaining
the truth o f the situation. That if any develo pment
was to be do ne on the property qr if any decisions
were to be made, they would be decided and
controlled by the students of the student
associations of the .University. We've got to
understand that this land wouldn't be controlled by
our parents, the State, or the University
administration. It is the students' land . If we, as
students, cannot run Poverty Hill democratically,
meeting the needs we decide are important to meet,
then how can we complain about the lack of
democracy in the rest of the world.
If you can get copies of the last few issues of
our school newspapers, you'll see that the closer we
get to the referendum, the wilder the accusations
and the uglier the tactics have grown against Poverty
Hill. The Millard Fillmore executive committee
refused to even let its students vote on the issue until
a petition, stating that MFC students demanded the
right to vote in the referendum, was signed by 870
MFC students.
11Unk carefully about the political implications
of Poverty Hill. Places where we can be free are few
in number and rapidly diminishing. The situation in
our country is critical and we need to start a student
movement in which students will pool their
resources together to secure wilderness areas
throughout the United States.
Vote for -roverty Hill. It is a vital step that we
must take for the creation of a healthy society.

r

,

-

How to win friends and influence.-peopl~ is not a major concern of
Sub Board I, lnc. If it were, it would · have alleviated some of the
problems they are facing today. But ~ it stands-, Sub Board is
impressed by power and disillusioned tothe extent that it believes itself
invincible, two charactedstics which have sown the seeds of dispute.
The current imbroglio regarding Sub Board is the , question of
Poverty Hill ~ to buy or not to buy? It is characterized by missteps,
foolhardy vef!tures, misinterpretations and gross injustices to the
student body of this University. It is also accompanied by what will be
the downfall of Sub Board : allowing a student referendum on the issue.
For this required a public display of the entire ventilre. And what
students of this University have been treated to has almost rivalled the
Pentagon Papers for sheer bureaucratic chicanery.
f,or too long Sub Board has hidden behind its organitational
facade, protected by tts Founding Fathers, the six student _governments
on tbjs campus. Protected may be too minor a term, concealed is more
like it. And with Sub Board, the entire question of student fees has also
been a veiled issue on this campus. It seems we pay and they play, with
the student governments as counselors and Sub Board as camp director.
Now, slowly but irreversibly, Sub Board is leaving its obscurity and
becoming a common word, synonymous with bureaucracy, and "Big
Business."
,
What is at the root of Sub Board's problems? The answer lies in its
structure, direction and leadership.
In its haste to incorporate last year, so as to assume control of the
Amherst lands, Sub Board put aside its original goal, that of providing
services to the student body here at SUNY A,J!. Before incorporating,
most of the money given to the Board was returned to the students in
the form of Publications, the UUAB activities and the facilities in
Norton Hall . Very tittle was tied up in the "operations" and running of
Sub Board itself.
With incorporation, we have an entirely different picture. It seems
that being a legal entity means more than being able to assume control
of a piece of real estate. It means everyone involved with Sub Board 1,
Inc. gets a swelled head , seemingly as an excuse to swell the
bureaucratic portions of the budget, now a full third of the total
operating costs. Now while this money may be necessary for the
ongoing functions of Sub Board, it does not produce more concerts, it
does not produce more movies or more activities or an increase in the
number of publications, or better S6rvices or anything. The money is
lost.
But moro than lost, this also signals a decrease in services. Botll the
UUAB and the enUre publications budgets were cutback by over
one-third from last yeur's levels of fund ltljt. Man)' lfUAB activities had
to be curtailed and many publications were d i'lcon tinuetl, notably Cold
Stcl'l the .\ctivi"t :md U1"" l ' v~·· " · ~· Ca'"•lda r "t'l Boaro .. 1.w .ers this
wtlh the claim that i1 1
.. •
with ' 1
wd~N t ,. ' year, and
cutbacks wt:re n cces~tll~ l.illf h tlll , '.. • .nl! from tll4;l services
provided'! The bureaucru~.y dti.l 1101 lak~ a .. u. Thi!l show-. that Sub
Board J, lnc. sets as it~ priorities· Jawy.:1s over services: bu..lness over
the student 1-Jody.
Th~ Sub Board lcadllrsl.ip ts re~pon~ibl e for , and co ntinues to
prul11ute. thts myopic view. The guiding philosophy is not to pro mote
student services, but rather, it is 'look how much money these services
are taking frotn us.' The cut-throat world of Big Business is being
played on the second floor of Norton Hall , but it is not a Milton
Bradley game. It is as real as the $67 that each of you pay in
mandatory student fees, which support this organization.
Sub Board is a bureaucratic monolith, untouchable and
unresponsive. It derives its powers from the separate student
governments, but like Frankenstein's Monster, has grown and gone off
on its own, cutting a path of destruction, in this case marked by wasted
money and ruined services.
The first opportunity for repudiation of Sub Board's tactics is in
the re(erendum this week on Poverty Hill. It is no t , as some people say,
a choice between the poUution of the cities and the freshness of a cool
mountain stream. That may be fine for cigarette commercials, but it is
simply not the case here. What is at issue is whether Sub Boa:d's
closed-eye viewpoint on student services will be stopped or not. To
contemplate the waste of $63,000 for a piece of Land is criminal. The
businessmen of Sub Board may get a gleam in their eyes when they
think about owning the land, but that gleam blinds them to the real
situation. The 23,000 students at this University will not get to use the
land. At most a small portion of that number will enjoy the benefits of
Poverty Hill. And Sub Board must not cater to so minor a portion of
students. It was created to foster and develop University-wide student
activities, not to support campers or to provide a Shangri-La for
student government leaders who spend their summer her' in Buffalo.
Sub Board I, Lnc. deserves a thorough going-over. The students at
this University should repudiate Sub Board's intentions regarding
Poverty Hill. The student governments should make a Ions, hard
re-evaluation of Sub Board. Perhaps a reordering of fiscal priorities
should be called for . Perhaps a cut in Sub Board's budget will be in
order. But in any case, whatever happens to Sub Board I, lnc. will be
directly related to the mistakes and the actions of the Board itself.

Paul Carron

Wednesday, November 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�POVERTY HILL REFERENDUM
1) · Should the S.A. representatives to Sub-Board I vote
in favor of, purchasing Poverty Hill?
. If 25% vote yes, one S. A. representative on Sub-Board
will vote in favor of the purchase. If 50% vote yes, 2
representatives will do so, if 75% vote yes, 3
representatives .will vote likewise, and if 100% vote in
. favor, all 4 representatives will do the same.
2) Should Sub-Board I· expend already existing funds or
should additional fees be collected for the purchase,
operation and development of Poverty Hill?
The cost will be about $63,000 per year for Poverty
Hill. If new fees need to be colle((ted it will be about $3.00
per person. If existing fees are used, presently existing
operations may suffer some.
I

3)
If Sub-Board I votes not to purchase Poverty Hill,
would you be in favor of Stude(lt Association spending
about $50,000 per year for purchase, development and
operattJn of Po\ ert y Hill?
Af:.e. a discussion with Drayton-Bryant Associates,
S.A. has learned that purchase and very minimal
development co uld take place for about $50,000 per year.
Further discussions will be necessary before definite action
can be taken.

4)

Have you been to Poverty Hill yet?
.,
This question is being asked for information to see how
many people have visited Poverty Hill. It is purely
stat is tical.

VOTE THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4th
AND FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5th

;I

!
I

I
I

;

I

/hge ten . The Spectrum. Wednesday, November 3, 1971

�Hare Krishnas

The 'souls' of religion
by John Ackerman

constituting virtually ·the entirety of the
Krishna service and processional liturgy.

Sptcrrum Stll// Wrlto-

Durin&amp; the put few years the spectacle
of shaven·beaded and robed members of
the International Society for Krishna
Con.JCiousness chanting their way down
Main Street, has become fairly familiar to
many Buffalo residents. However, while
many onlookers might dismiss the chanting
of the "Hare Krishna mantra" as being yet
another
sign
of
youths'
ongoing
degeneration, it is in reality, the Krishnas'
way of aiding their Spiritual Master, His
Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedenta Swami
Prabhipada, in his war aplnst the
" demonic element" of the world's
population.
The basics of the Krishna faith do not
differ too greatly from those of more
widely accepted religions. They beUeve in a
Supreme Lord, JC.rishna, who presides over
all aspects of human existence and who, to
quote from the Krishna Cofllciousne4s
&amp;ndbook, has attempted throughout the
ages to free man from the gloom of
materiality." A continuous chain of
disciples, the first of whom was Brahma,
bas labored to convey the gospel to the
.. unreali:r.ed" and impure masses, so
described because of their failure to
acknowledge Krishna as the source of all
material enjoyment, and ultimately. of life
itself.
'We are the souls'
Thus, the goal of the Krishna
Consciousness movement is to develop
within man a realization of both Krishna's
ability to remove us from the realm of base
materialism and the resultant possibility of
a spiritual union with Him, in which man's
eternal soul will supercede the body . In tbe
words pf Gunagrahi-Das, whose name
mt41l('"servant of the supreme lord," and
wJ(o is the local chapter's acting president,
" We must reali:r.e that we are not these
bodia. We arc the souls within these
~ies."

ereas the prayers of other reHgioll5
are usually addressed to God, more or less
pendin&amp; a reply, the Krishna chants are
self-Culfillina, not only servina to purify the
mind and elevate the devotee to the
transcendental level at
which he will realize Krishna's truth, but
also to attract Krishna himself, who, it is
assumed, relishes good chanUng.
According to a former Spiritual Master,
the constant repetition of Krishna's name
in the "maham&amp;ntra" or Great Chanting,
"Hare Krishna Hare Krishna/Krishna
Krishna Hare Hare," etc., Is the only way
to achieve self·reali:r.ation in the present
age. Therefore, this particular cb.a nt has
become the mainstay of the movement ,

Stringent standard
Given the Krishna's lofty purpose, it is
not surprising that the standards which
have been established for the devotees are
as stringent as any devised by the Baptists
or Boy Scouts. Because Krishna himself has
rejected all meat, ftsh and eggs that have
been offered to him, the devotees cannot
eat these foods. They must also refrain
from gambling, intoxicants (alcohol and
drugs), frivolity and illicit sex, i.e., all sex
outside of marriage and/or whose object is
not procreation. In addition to these rules ,
there ar~ listed in the Vedic Scriptures the religion's written code - 26 further
qualifications of a devotee, the most
striking of which are that he or she be
faultless, fixed in the Absolute Truth,
poetic and silent, that is, unwilling to
engage in any conversation that is
unrelated to Krishna .
Whatever one's opinion may be with
regard to the merits of such standards,
there can be no doubt that the 20 male and
female members of the sect's Buffalo
chapter (which is but one of approximately
forty worldwide - the first of which was
founded in New York City in 1966), do
their utmost to follow the creeds of their
religion. They chant with a fervor that has
long
been
extinct
within
other
congregations.

f onner addict joins
It is uncertain whether their enthusaasm
is attributable to the power of their beliefs,
the pioneering spirit that is prctsent within
any group of spiritual renegades, the fact
that their religion's forms are actually its
substance, or to a combination of all three
factors. It ia quite eviden t. however, that
their sect constitutes a powerful attraction
to those individuals who, although desirous
of divine inspiration, have been unable to
find it through their participation in other
reliJjons or lifestyles. The actina president
menuonC4L-. t~at at least one of the
members is# a former addict who has cured
himself since joining t.h e rank and file .
Of course, adherina to the movement's
strict regimen has its advantages. Draft..aae
males are entitled to ministerial deferments
and, in a materially-oriented society, in
which college students must battle for jobs
upon graduation, aU of the Buffalo
Krishnas, some of whom attended the
State University of Buffalo and none of
whom graduated , live in a state of blissful
unemployment, existing upon monies
derived from donations and the sale of
homt made incense. Their attitude towards
work is rather curious, for while they will
not condemn constructive work that is

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•
pleasing to Krishna, such as farming, they
themselves prefer to seek Him in a more
spiritual manner.
One of many ways
Although the Krishnas claim to have
discovered a means of attaining In addition
to these rules, there are listed in the Vedic
Scriptures - other religious sects, the
Jesus·freaks in particular, in tbeir attitude
towards the uninformed. Whete'as a Jesus
devote~ will insist that ttis is the only way
to salvation, the Krishnas merely maintain
that theirs is but one of many. In other
words , if lln individual is able to achieve
oneness with God - assuming that this is
the desired result of religious participation
- through more standard devotional forms,
the result tends to justify the means by
which it was achjeved . and one method is
as good as another.
However, this does not mean that the
Krishnas are reluctant to influence
p6tential cOnverts; in the ncar future they
will open centers in Troy, Schenectady and
Albany,
where,
according
to
Gunagrahi·Das, "the people are st.arved for
spiritual salvation ." Other areas that are
currently under exploration are Africa and,
closer to nome, the . black 4istr1ct of
Buffalo, where, it is said, door·to-door
J&lt;,rlshnas have met with favorable reaction.
Downtown doinp
Recently. Krishna

into

the

••

Assembly meeting today
The Student Aaembly will hold a meetina
today at 4 p.m. at Health Science 134. The Athletic
budaet will be reviewed at this meetin&amp;, amona other
items. Everyone is uraed to attend .

~--------~----~
GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
Jewel• - Opticiln
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(•t University Plau)
BUFF~LO ,

forays

downtown business district have decreased
in number, since it was found that
shoppers and merchants, enveloped in the
gloom of their material existences, had
little time for Krishna. In 1968, there was
some trouble with the police, whose
presence was allegedly requested by
downtown businessmen who claimed that
the Krishnas' appearance caused a decrease
in that of their customers.
Soon, the Krishnas will attempt to
distribute leaflets in the Boulevard and
Downtown malls, accompanied by an
ACLU lawyer, who , it is assumed, will
lodge a complaint in the event of any
interference with their activities.
In conclusion, it should be said that, the
Krishnas, in comparison to many of the
sects which have sprung up in recent years,
appear to be reasonably inofensive, and, at
times, fairly entertaining, although, at
other times, they are annoyingly earnest
and dogmatic. All in all, they are an '
interesting facet of a singularity dull city.
Por the information of those who hear
the call or are merely interested in religious
phenomena, the Krishna temple is located
at 130 Bidwell Parkway . There are services
Monday throu&amp;h Saturday at 6 :45 p.m.,
and on Sundays there is a festival that
begins at 4 p.m. Also, they will have a
spiritual feast, lecture and meditation every
WednC$day at 6 p.m. in Room 340 Norton
Hall . AU are invited .

N.Y. 14226

..,!~ible Truth-'" Hear, 0 Is rae• - __
REAL FREEDOM IN QIRIST
for filM from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

875-4265

"And you lhaJI know the
tnlth, and the tnlth lll.tU make you

JfliUIIIYI :

free.

ar the Son therefore shall make

you free, ye ahall be fTee indeed."

John 8:31, 36

PANEL DISCUSSIONS:

FREE SCHOOLS!
AND OTHER EDUCATIONAL ALTERNATIVES
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3, 6:00 - 7 :30 p.m. FILLMORE ROOM
WORKSHOPS TO FOLLOW PANEL
THE CONTINUING DEBATE : PUBLIC SCHOOLS OR FREE SCHOOLS
THURSDAY, NOV . 4 , 8 :00 - 10:00 p.m . Diefendorf 146
THE PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM
FRIDAY, Nov. 5 , 8:00 - 10:00 p.m. FILLMORE ROOM
WORKSHOPS TO FOLLOW PANEL

• •• •••• •• •••• •• •••

1

FREE FILMS: Summerhil~ and othen 12:00 -3 p.m.
CONFERENCE THEATER - WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, &amp; FRIDAY
Sponsor.d by N- Coltee- of Modefn Education, T111iler No. 9
831-6381

Wednesday, November 3, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

.......

�COLLEGIATE SYMPOSIUM

NOV. 3-6

Sponsored by Student Association and the Colleges
Since 1966 the State Univesrity at Buffalo has been developing a "Collegiate
System". Originally concieved of as strictly living/learning residential units, the
colleges have developed into a unique system of flexible interdisciplinary programs
based on voluntary association by faculty and students. Of fifteen existing units
approximately eight still embody part of the original concept and plan to occupy
residential space on a new campus presently under construction. Other colleges have,
however, developed their educational programs along lines which are not readily
adapted to the residential space.
The Collegiate System currently involves some 3000 students and around 150
faculty members, and offers over 200 courses and sections varying over a wide variety
of subjects. The attached program involves twelve of the fifteen Collegiate Units. It is
an attempt to present in capsule form and in a way which lends itself to
dramatization the program comcerns and the styles of teaching and learning being
explored in these units. This should offer those interested in learning more about
individual Colleges an opportunity to surOey what is being done and to develop
contracts for further work and discussion beyond these three days.

Wednesday, November 3

Thursday, Nov. 4th continued
234 Norton

All Day

Display of Crafts Work
Communications College

Conference Theater

12 noon-4 p.m

Films: ‘SummerhilT and
‘What th?y want to produce,
not what we want to become’
New College

Conference Theater

Film: ‘The Colleges at SUNYAB’
All Collegiate Units

1 p.m.-3 p.m

meet in 231 Norton
for ‘field trip’

Organic Survival
Edible wild plants on campus
Rachel Canon College

1:30 p.m.-2 p.m

232 Norton

Discussion: Bambii Abelson
Community Creativity
College A

2 p.m.-3 p.m

233 Norton

Student-made film

4 p.m.—5:30 p.m

Conference Theater

Discussion: ‘What are the
Colleges and where are they
going?’ (This is a special
meeting of the Collegiate
Assembly) All Collegiate Units

Center Lounge
Fillmore Room
Cafeteria 118

Demonstrations New College
Panel New College
Workshop; Description of
Current courses in the Women's
Studies College
Workshop: ‘Women in History’
Women’s Studies College
Workshops: New College

4 p.m.-5 p.m
6 p.m.-8 p.m

6:30 p.m.-Closing
*

8 p.m

205 Norton

11 p.m

8 p.m.-Closing

231,232,and

9 p.m

233 Norton
Fillmore Room

210 Foster

8 p.m.—Closing

232 Norton

8:30 p.m.—11 p.m

114 Hochstetter

Panel

8:30 p.m.-Closing

Baird Hall

Concert-lecture, demonstration:
‘Musical Innovators’ Roger Shields
piano, the Concord String Quartet.
Lejaren Hiller (College B)

-

-College E

234 Norton

All Day
11 a.m

6 p.m

Center Lounge

11 a.m

2:30 p.m

Conference Theater

-

U.B. Blues Concert:
‘Discovering self through
the Blues’

234 Norton

Display of Crafts Work
(Communication College)

12 noon—1 p.m

Ridge Lea Cafe

12 noon—2 p.m
12 noon-2 p.m

233 Norton
Conference Theater

1 p.m.-5 p.m
1 p.m -5 p.m

Fillmore Room

H.S.M. Coxeter, lunch with
students and faculty (College
Of Mathematical Sciences )
Student made film (College E)
Films; ‘Summerhill’
and Canadian Film. New College
Free School Meeting (New College)
Simulation Games (C.P. Snow)
Dorothy McKarrick: Workshop on
Women and Religion (Women’s
Studies College)
Organic Survival
Edible
Wild Plants on campus (Rachel
Carson College)

Haas Lounge
232 Norton

1 p.m.-3 p.m

1:30 p.m.—3:30 p.m.

meet in 231
for field trip

-

Norton

Rm. 38, 4246 Ridge
Lea

2 p.m -3 p.m

Conference Theater

4 p.m.—6 p.m

231 Norton

6 p.m

233 Norton

(New College)

Display of Crafts Work
Communication College
Tables will be set up with
information on the individual
Colleges including information
on next semesters program
All Collegiate Units
Films: ‘Summerhill’ and
‘What they want to produce,
not what we want to become’
New College
‘The Colleges at SUNYAB’
All Collegiate Units

Center Lounge

Demonstratiuons of Crafts
Techniques
Communications College

1 p.m.-5 p.m

Fillmore Room

Natural Food Feast
Donation 40 cents
Communications College

1 p.m.-11 p.m

Haas Lounge

Simulation Games with
opportunities for participation
C.P. Snow College

1 p.m.-4 p.m

232 Norton

Mini-courses (continuous)
Bicycles: Bread making:
Prevention of pollution in
car engines (‘tune-ups’)
Rachael Carson College

5 p.m.-8 p.m

232 Norton

Ollie Fein
Social Sciences College

205 Norton

Workshop; Women’s Studies
College

7 p.m.—Closing

(conference room)

8:30 p.m.-Closing

231 and 233 Norton

Workshops: New College

234 Norton

Display

-

Lecture H.S.M. Coxeter: Frieze
Patterns (College of Mathematical
Sciences)
‘The Colleges at SUNYAB’
(All Collegiate Units)
Fran Fabian Discussion on
‘Women nad Welfare’ (Women's
Studies College)

Demonstration: ‘Self Discovery
through dramatic technique’

4 p.m

6 p.m

Center Lounge

Demonstrations’ (New College )

7 p.m

I 1 p.m

231 Norton

Simulation games (C.P. Snow)

7 p.m

11 p.m

233 Norton

Role playing and discussion
‘Man and his institutions’
(College A )

Saturday, Nov. 6
All Day

Page twelve The Spectrum Wednesday, November 3, 1971

—

0Communications

College )

11 a.m.—3 p.m

Conference Theater

San Diego Women’s College:
‘Women’s Studies’ ( Women’s
Studies College)

12 noon-3 p.m

233 Norton

Student made film (College E)

1 p.m -6 p.m

Fillmore Room

Open Session: ‘The Community
and Welfare’ with participants
from the community ( Women's
Studies College)

3 p.m -8 p.m

231 Norton

‘The development of

CLIP AND SAVE!

.

-

1 p.m.-9 p.m

(College A )

.

Lecture’ Linda Gordon (Women's
Studies College)
Howard Weather
(Soc. Sciences College )

Friday, Nov. 5

-

All Day

4 p.m

7:30 p.m.-l I p.m

College A

Thursday, Nov. 4

2 p.m.-3;30 p.m.

-

Paraprofessionals in China’
Hy Rosenburg, Toronto lawyer
involved in the development
of paraprofessionals. Videotape showing and speech.
(College E)

�..
'

JdsT Foil F1Jtt

by The Coote, Lord Boecooe, aod Eam•

,

.

.

card and American Oaa rolling paper sales were a
little low,'' explained Zil Zag.
A pealtina crowd of I S people were on hand as
the action moved into the second half, after five
pounds. ThoUJ)l far in the lead, Jerry the Head
dropped out of competition when his comb broke,
creating an emotional disorder. Roac.h.Cijp Ralph
from Rochester was disqualified because of his
birthplace, and an ill$i.stence to drink a Genesee beer
with each joint.

Sports - Buffalo, N.Y., (TS) - The first annual
dope-smok:ins marathon, ...which bepn on July 14,
ended today at Buffalo's War Memorial Stadium.
Five reJi,onal champions from all over the
country tested their physical and me.ntal stamina in
the meet. The contestants were: Harry Hemp from
Flatbush; Waterpipe Willie from Waco, Texas; Jerry
Head from L.A.; Roach.Ciip Ralph from Roch.ester
and Jessica J of Jersey City, N.J.
The contestants began with a pound apiece, as Bowl vs. joint
the three judges looked on : R. Ketter, M. Amico and
· As the marathon moved into October, it became
the honorable Monsieur Zig Zag, Oown in from the a two-man race: Jessica J vs. Waterpipe Willie. Jessica
Turkish border.
J , whose enveloping chest cavity enabled her to
The action started strong with all five !"hale an ex~ of s~oke, cleaned out ~everal pipes,
contestants smoking their brains out. Harry Hemp, ... mcluding the J~dges . The con!ronta.h?n b~ought
who was weaned on home-arown Pennsylvania Ave. about a contrast m styles: Waterpape Willie, falling up
pot grabbed an early lead. He was disqualified bowl after bowl, versus Jessica's joint-filled mouth.
thr;e-quarters of a pound later when he suffered an Willie, who filled his waterpipe with everyt\ting from
asthma attack and was rushed to a hospital in strawberry wine to Nestle's Quik, choked to death
Canarsie.
when he filled his tube with Lake Erie water.
Thus, Jersey City's Jessica J "copped" the title.
~erry ~h_e Head from L.A. enter~ W~r ~~morial A few minutes after letting out the winning toke,
Stadaum nding .a su~fboard, SJ110king sax JOtnt~ at Jessica pulled out a joint and said: " Anybody got a ·
once and combmg his hair back at the same time. match?" Jessica received s 1o,000, a pound of
The other contestants also started strong.
Acapulco Gold, and was seen leaving in Monsieur Zig
Zag's Cadillac. Thus, War Memorial Stadium was
Keep 'em rolling
cleared for another stoned-out act : the Buffalo Bills.
A six-ton rolling machine was brought in to Mescaline Marv and Sid Psilocybin have already
keep the J's rollins. Monsieur Zig Zag, wearing a p~ their 'enti.rd~foi the Tripping Marathon, to be
Grateful Dead T -shirt, watched over thinp .and ""heJ.,d in ~January. ~y interested. tripper should
advertised his new Kama Sutra rollin&amp; paper. "Draft bring their eptries to The Spectrum office.

...
THE COLLEGE OF MATHEMATICAtSC,ENCES
presents
M.H.S. CO,ETER,j ·"\,t)
speaktifo on I
FRIEZE PATTERNS
November 4, at 2 :00-4246 Ridge Lea - Room 38
Prof. Coxeter's schedule is:
12:00 Lunch with students and faculty Ridge Lea Cafeteria
followed by discussions·
Room 36 - 4244 Ridge Lea
2:00 Talk " frieze Patters"
Profesaor Coxeter Is Internationally known for his mathematical work muc:tt of which is
centered on geometry. His talk will be Intelligible to anyone with a background of hivh IChool
mathematics.

~· --r~bl

CONTEST : Math Sciences College

_,.

RUt:!ES:
I

1)

Ohly dne set of solutions is allowed for each contestant.

2) Entries must be submitted 'in person only on FRIDAY, Nov. 5th
from 9:00a.m. - 5:00 p.m., at the Office of the College of Mathematical
Sciences, Ridge lea, 4244- room 35.
3) Prizes will be awarded to the correct entries in the order they are
submitted.

A $5.00 voucher will be awarded for answering 2 questions correctly
and a $10.00 voucher will be awarded for answering 4 questions correctly.
Vouchers 'are good for purchases made at the RECORD CO-QP. A total
of $100.00 in prizes will be awarded.

Factor the number 112,233,332,211, into prime numbers.

2) A man went for a walk, leaving his house at noon and returning at
6:00 p.m .. He walked along a plain at 4 miles per hour, then down into a
~alley at 6 miles per hour, returning he left the valley at the rate of 3 miles
per hour. On the plain he went 4 miles per hour. If the valley is 1/2 mile in
depth how far did he walk?
3)

A certain. sequence begins: 1, 50, 1832, 442.
Find the sum of the first 100 terms.

4) There are twelve bombs. It is known that either 11 are fused and one
defused or 11 are defused and one is fused. A fused bomb weighs more
than a defused bomb: A balance scllle is the only weighing device available.
What is the least number of balancing operations which will find the fused
bomb or bombs? If the bombs are numbered 1 - 12 describe each of tt}e
tteps taken.

This_ afternoon somewhere on the compact Buffalo campus, a
decision,.. ~~
~ .Q, made which can either make or break the futur~ of
Buffalo!l
;ipation in intercolleJi,ate athletics. At stake is the ngbt
of the n~w enfranchised Student Assembly to overrule its subsidiary
group, the~ stu"d'ent athletic review board . At stake is also the
responsibility for the funding of athletics in general at this University.
True, it is the responsibility of the student body to determine
priorities on the spending of its student fees, but also the serious
question to be answered is whether the student athletic review board
will c;ontinue in its present function . Last May. the board unanimously
passed the proposed $240 ,000 budget and thereafter the Student
Association's executive board voted 11 - 0 to recommend passage. Now
these same l 1 in addition to the 14 Student Assembly representatives
will decide tbe fate of athletics at Buffalo.
1
Without doubt, the student athletic review board did
scrutinize
the budget as cat:efully as it should · have, but one must attempt to
understand that the board was going through leadership cbanaes in
addition to having the burden of re-allocating the S 130,000 surplus
created by the dropping of football.

not

Is the budget padded? Without doubt, in the areas of buketball
and administration, some padding is evident and that is totally wrong.
However, the remainder of sports and recreation and intramurals
increased just as substantially percentage-wise as did basketball. The
athletic review board was faced with many teams which had suffered
financially for so many years while football ruled the budget . Thus, the
natural reaction made it difficult to deny budget requests, which for
the most part , seemed reasonable. This semester the workings of the
athletic review board have become smoother as the more inquisitive
members of the board have developed an expertise to the point wbe.re
they are now more selective in the allocation of funds.

-

When you become a Lawyer's Assistant,
you'll be doing work traditionally done by
lawyers ..l- work we think you'll find
c hallenging and re spo nsible. And
Lawyer's Assistants are now so critically
needed that The Institute for Paralegal
Training can offer you a position in the
city of your c hoi ce and a higher salary
than you 'd expect as a recent college
graduate. You 'll work with lawyers on
interesting legal problems - and the
rewards will grow as you do.
fl. representative of The Insti tute for
Paralegal Tra ining will cond uct interviews on :

QUESTIONS:

'

: Spom Ed/tOI"

We want to talk to you
about a career in law .•.
without law school.

PRIZES:

1)

by Barry Rubin

The expertise of the athletic review board should not be
overlooked, yet steps should be taken to assure that the board does not
become a mere rubber stamp as it was last year. The Student Assembly
does have a right to examine the athletic budget , but that right does
not extend to being able to make cuts at such a late date at this. With
the winter sports seasons slated to begin in a few weeks, it would be
disasterous to the program if money were to be cut now. Student
control of athletics is a fine idea in theory , but the student body should
realize that Buffalo cannot ask Maryland for a basketball date or
Boston University for a hockey date three weeks before the season is to
begin. The hockey Bulls have found out this painful fact of life in
scheduling the hard way . That is why professional administrators u Dr.
Fritz and Bob Deming are hired by the University .
'fhe athletic review board should retain its function of an overseer
of the budget, and if possible, expand its realm in order to advise the
department of student desires in the area of scheduling and
administration. The use of ancient Clark Gym by 5085 people, season's
hockey attendance o f 6244 (6 games), and bask'etball attendance of
12,600 (11 games ; 3 at the Aud) does not suggest a lack o f student
interest to this reporter. Rather, student interest has increased as the
proportion of publicity has increased . Even in the area of intramurals,
the great number of teams in the individual sports can best be ascribed
to increased pubUcity in The Spectrum and the realization by the
Athletic Department that it can best reach the student body through a
varied program of intramural , intercollegiate and club sports. The
answer lies in increased student input and responsible leadership both
in the Athletic Department and in the student athletic review board.

Sponsorert by the Student A$$0ciation

~· -~;

I

OVERTIME

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Inquire at Placement Office
for exact location of interview

·.

NOTE : It registration lor this seminar Is ll lled.
come anyway ..:... we'll try to talk to you. Or call us
collect at the number shown below.

.

-

Wednesday, November 3, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page_thirteen

�~

·Harrier Jim McClurkin
eyed for championships
,.

Fuchs. But Saturdp, Mcpurkin's
time was better than Fucht' was
in the Canisius Invitational last
year. The seventeenth place finish
may not sound all thl\t impressive
but it should be kept in mind that
McClutldn finislied m aher than
any other local runner. 'This
meant beating people McClurkin
had lost to previously - Charlie
Carter (Rochester), Jim · Fox
(Fredonia) and Rich Weber
(Brockport). Virtually all of the
runners that beat McClurkin
Saturday were from the better
teams in the .tournament, namely
Lehigh, Allegheny and Pittsburgh.
Pitt won the team title easily
while Dave Antoanoli of Edinboro
State repeated as the individual
winner.

by Bruce EnieJ
Sp«:trum Stllfl Writer

•..J

Three weeks ago the thought
of Buffalo sending anyone to the
NCAA C ro ss Country
Championships was absurd . But
Jim McClurkin has come on so
fast, and is still improving, that
the coach is now considerina the
trip. Coach Emery Fisher
remarked : "Nothina is definite.
We have to talk to Dr. Fritz first.
But I have the application in my
desk, and I am not aoina to throw
it away."
Evidence of McClurkin's
improvement came recently in the
two races he ran at the Delaware
Park Cross Country Cross, here in
Buffalo. The latter of these two
occassions was last Saturday in
the Canisius Invitational. FoJ the
invitational the course was
lengthened by two-tenths of a
mile from 4 .6 to 4 .8 miles.
Despite this increase in distance,
Buffalo's star harrier actually
bettered his previous time at
Delaware by 19 seconds.
McClurkin clocked 23 minutes
and 13 seconds, which was aood
enough for seventeenth place
among the 172 runners from 24
schools. As a team the Bulls
finished fourteenth, amassing 366
points.
Hamer comparison
T~o days ago this reporter
'•
--:-.....
mad,e a comparison between
McClurkin and alumnus Ed Fuchs,
which at flfSt seemed unfaiJ to

McClu.r kin showed once again
in the Canisius Invitational that be
could come fmm behind . He went
slow at first, perhaps scared of the
quick early pace set by the leaders
and after 1.5 miles he was in 42nd
place. Then after three miles be
had moved up to 30th and in the
last mile McClurkin passed several
more and finished strong.
Now with the New York State
Championships coming up this
Saturday , Coach Emery Fisher
rates McClurkin a good shot for
one of the top five spots. The
favorite would have to be Bob
Judson from Hamilton College.
But after Judson there are a lot of
fine runners very close in ability
and McClurkin is definitely in this
group .

Annual turkey trot p/anired
With Thanksgiving approachinSt h ow would . a
frozen 20-pound turkey look in your understocked
refrigerator? Well. on Nov. 18 the intramural and
recreation department will be giving away six of
these turkeys as part of the second annual Turkey
trot. The trot, which covers one and a half miles is
open to everyone in the University community.
Last Thanksgiving, 150 runners entered for the
chance to win one of the six turkeys awarded in the
six separate categories. Winners will be selected from
faculty. staff, male student, female student and
organizations. Applications can be obtained from
Room 113 Clark Gym with the deadline for all
entries Nov. 14.
Co-ed badminton, a big success in recent weeks,
continues this coming Tuesday evening. Action will
take place from 7:30p.m. untU 10 p.m . on the main
Clark Gym floor. Additionally, another new activity
)Vi1l occur Saturday at 1 p .m . when the strength of
the University community will be tested in a
Tug-O·War contest.

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
WEDNESDAY, ~OVEMBER 3rd, 8 :00p.m.

everyman's book store, inc
3102 Main Street
, Open weekdays : 11 til 7
except Thundey, 12 - 8
Saturday, 11 til 6
A n interesting selection o1
!meaningful books, chees sets
~ c:erds, etc.
.Browsen welcome
837-8554

Another big intramural tournament gets under
way this week with the beginning '?f basketball. This
semester an 84-tearn tournament has been set up, a
big jump over last year's comparatively meager total
of 55 teams. Bill Monkarsh, intramural and
recreation director, advises all teams to pick up a
copy of the entire semester's schedule so as to keep
the number of forfeitures down. Additionally, no
player may particip~te on more than one team.
Identification cards will be checkeli at !}le gym.
Last week at Goodyear Hall, Bill Monkarsh
hosted another intramural coffee hour. With plenty
of donuts and coffee available, Mr. Monkarsh
attempted to involve students in the program by
asking for their preferences on future activities to be
held.
·
Finally, this coming Tuesday the handball
tournament ftnals will be held between Dr. Jim
Hansen of the Counselor Education Department and
Mr. James Ryan ""of the Off-Campus Housing
Department .

MELANIE
JANEY &amp; DENNIS

WITH

Admission: Orch. $6.00, $5,00, - Bale. $5.00, $4.00
Tickets Available at Norton Union Ticket Office

•

CAVAGES HAS GONE DISCOUNT
ALL RECORD PRICES SLASHED

This m6'aDs every.record in the store

RECORD PRICE POLICY
I

1 ':

I

·,.j (\'!

B

299

··:J ·;'

c

349

', :1 'j;:

·''

·):'

SPECIALS
CAVAGES

D
F

399
599
WEEKLY SPECIALS
SLASHED EVEN LOWER

,
WESTERN NEW YORK'S LEADING CHAIN
OF DISCOUNT RECOR ,STORES
"WHERE RECORDS COST YOU LESS"

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

(.

Page fourteen. The Spectrum . WednESday, November 3, 1971

·/

...~ /

I

, .

�125.00 PER hunelrecl eclelrealnt,
,.lllnt, ~lble wo~ at horne your
hOUr&amp;. SamPle anel Instructions 1.25
.nel stamped Mlf-adclr-.ct envelope.
CHASMAR, C)ept. ZN, Box 263,
Elkhart, I nellana 465l4.
CLASSICAL tultar leaons wanted by
Karl Benzlter, • 359 Willow St.,
LCKkport, N.V, 14094. Can come to
sufhto Satureley, telephone
HF3·5525.
BE PART of a listening and spqklng
experience. Share In the prCKess of
person-to-penon communlatlon.
Come to Plychomet Wednesdays, 3-5
p.m. Millard Fillmore Roorn.

HOUSE nNr ampus available for
January. Room for five or six .,.ople.
Call 136·2304 or all 831-4113 for
Jo-Ann.

1970 XKE belte/btlck convertible.
Brand n - AM!FM stereo r~dlo.
Excellent condition. Call 684·2000
betWMn 8-4. Allk for Dave.

WEST S IDE furnished apartment
Includes utilities, $90. 837·3373.

MG Midget
691·7097.

APARTMENTS available, furnished
and unfurnllhed, nNr campus, also one
room. Very rNsoneble, 896-8344,
evenlnts preferably.

C H EVROLET and Rambler, both are
relllble. We must sell soon. Will accept
f1lr offer. 834·5312, 176-t215.

RIDE BOARD

CAPEHART stereo, headphones, 45
records, must ucrlflce, 1250.
133-t726 Jules, Glenn.

R I 0 E RS wan teeS to L.l . • for
Thankstlvlnt. Call 837·1202.

WANTED to buy or borrow - Paul
Goodman's Empire City, Chip Planck
837-4591.

RIDE WANTED to Princeton, N .J.
arN any weekend or Thankstlvln9. Call
831·2950.

PART·TIME work. Dellverlnt clrcular5.
oays only. Hourly pay. Phone •
854-0400.

FEMALE riders wanted to Ann Arbor
and Lansing, Michigan for votMkend of
Nov. 5. LNvlng Lis at 5 p.m . Call
831·2263 or 83.4--0545.

NEEDED• snows and WhMIS for 1971
volvo, 6 ,15x15 . If you have
either/both all 835·3181.
WANTED • Will known commll'clel
r«Kk group w1nts Female voallst
good pay. Cell Bob - 614-8941.

A'ARTMENT FOR RENT
FURNISHED thrM bedrooms, kitchen,
living room, for 3 or 4, 1215/mo.
Includes utilities. 15·mln. Wilking from
school. Call 135·2903.

cMpatturee.

CLAIIIIIIII

WANTED • Term Pa~n. All SubJects.
Call 1 77·1171 after 9 p.m.

WANTED• A ulecl copy of Basic
Read 1 ngs In
Interpersonal
communlatlon. Call Janice 133·7571 .

w.-IY

8U....eo, 5•oo-10•00 p .m .

WANTED

FOR SALE
I NEED CASH - hNdlng West . Will
sacrifices AC·DC stereo tape
transverter, Army Jacket,
Smith-Corona ty.,.wrlter, Polaroid 101
camera, desk lamp. Best offer. Call
836-6993.·

1969.

Must

Mil .

Call

GET s«vlce wortlly of our eu•rantM Independent Foreltn Car Service.
839·1850.
BALDWIN stereo combo organ, 1995.
N-, will sell 1495. Also $200
amplifier for tsO. 896·7655.
STUDIO couch with mattress matching
Chllr, bar stools, Clresser, antique
trunk. 881.0141.
1964 VALIANT ~oor automatic
transmission, $200. 875·5727 after
6 •30 p .m.
RAMBLER '64 mint condition. M ust
sell. Make offer. 1016 Nl1gar1 Falls
Blvd. 837-4223.

DODGE '63 Polara V-8, n - snows,
tires , battery. Excellent running
condition. P.$. automatic. 836· 1996.

REFRIGERATORS, IIOYU and
washers . Reconditioned ! delivered end
guaranteed. O&amp;G Appliances, 844
Syc•more, TX4·3183.

1969 TRIUMPH 6T6+ , gOOd
condition, moving, must sell . $1895 or
best offer. Julie 836·54168 .

PERSONAL

R~IAL 165Rx14 KnobbY sport
tr d tires Good summ111 and winter
C 1).675·2660 after 5, 662· 7701 .
STOVE - clean- only 35 dollars I Call
834·8713 or 133·7162. Call after 9 :30 .
Thirty Inches (epprox.)
M6B · 6T 1969, 19,000 miles .
Immaculate. All records kept. Wires,
r~dlals,
gar~gect. Call after 5 p .m .
691 · 7468.
ONE Remington 700 portable electric
typewriter, 2 yrs. old - one Olivetti
Lettera 22 portable typewriter - must
sell co ntact Barry at 837· 14134
evenings.
SMITH ·C ORONA super sterling
tlfp-rlter . Almost br~nd n -. $70 or
best offer. Call 837-6558.

AFSers : AAs, WPs and host brothers
1nd sisters, all welcome. C1ll KAthryn
Hansen 1t 831·2401 for Information
BEAUTIFUL handmade gold and sliver
J-etry - wedding rlngf - at sensible
prices. J.P. The GoldWNver, 655
Elmwood et Ferry ~trHt, 181 ·3400.

NV'11 HoWl Tudor Offen SUfotV RbL
R eservatlona and Information,
83.2-0811.
unfumlined, $70 Includes utilities. Call
KAty 837·7118 or 131·3508.
ANGOLA? Sun, unCI, snow - live on
the shores of beautiful Lake Erie . Car
not nec•ury. t62.50 for one. 145 for
two. Call 549-4103.

MISCELLANEOUS
COLOR TV repa irs and ICIJustments.
Service cell t9.00. 837·3373 - rotor
antennas Installed frorn 190. 837-.1373.
TWO one-year-old black ,.le fixed
cats. For FrM adoption of one or botll.
CIII88W250.
CAN CER TRIAD - Nov. 4, 5, 6 &lt;
Movie "Laetrile, Nature's Answer to
C1ncer," Thurs., I p .m., Aclleson, Rm .
A701 Friday, 8 p .m., Kenan Aren1,
LCKkport. Or. W .O. Kelley (claims
99.5~ recovery) spNICer, Sat., 2 t 30
p.m., Mount Saint Jowph Academy,
Main StrMt, BUffalo. All frM. For
lnformltlon t Or. Doran 153· 1345 or
Dick Prelsc:h 433'-8630.
C&amp; H
JONES Professional Typing
Service com puterized IBM
equipment plus our experience give
best possible presentations of
dluerutlons, thesis, term papers,
resumes 1nca employment appllatlon
letters. Located between two
cam puses . verv reasonable. C•ll
837-6558.

PAINTING, papering, Plnelllnt,
car pentr y, odd c:ontr.ctlnt 10111.
Reasonable . Len 181.0141.
GEORGE Marehfleld - Tile Spectrum
still wants and needs you . Stop by anel
say hello.
1971 VEAR BOOKS lvallable In Rm.
356 Norton or N orton LOOby,
PSVCHOMAT resumes
Nov. 3, 3~ p.m. In
Fillmore Room.

r------

Weclnesctay,
tile Millard

A'ARTMENTS WANTED
APARTMENT needed for January for
two .,.ople. Urgent. Call 836·2304 for
Jane or Claudia.
FEMALE needs own roorn In
apartment. VERY CLOSE to amput
C1ll 134-1713, 833·7162. 81ft).

-

240.0
AT 355 NORTON

cheep - $ .G8 I copy

A N VONE - Niagara Falls to London
one way, $115. Return t220 .
M .T .w. 181.0306, Thursday night,

GET A BETTER GRADE------,

Compositions - Bookreports- Twm papen CORRECTED
We will correct your . .mmlticll wrors. - Wt will mtke til
corrections on your draft, end rttum it to you. YOU recopy it.
Write on one side of 1 sheet.
Writt on every o1h• line.
Write Rlmt &amp; tddress on 11c:h pege.
End011 1 nlf-.ddressed
Cut out this td ...SAVE ITI
Stlmped envelope.
Service rates: $2.00 minimum ...up to 1000 words $1 .00 for
~~c:h tdditional 300 words.
Send to:
P.O. Box 259, LIS.IIe Station
An:an Writing S.Viees, Inc:.
Nilllrt Fills, N.Y . 14304

FOLK guitar lessons 11so 0 ·35
M1rtln and Eplphone electric for sate.
Jeff 835·3384, 135·9229.

LOST II FOUND
LOST : N otebook "Ecology of M•n"
while hltcnlng up Kenmore to Main
list Tuesday. C1ll 837· 1202 .

ROOMMATES WANTED
FEMALE grad or fac ulty to Share
apartment 20 mlns. walk. Own room

(SUNYA B)

Rooms 323/316 NORTON HALL Exr. 3602/3603

WE NEED

BLOOD
EARl IOIEY
FOR IT

Division of Sub-Board I, Inc.

Schussmeisters Ski Club

CALL
IMMEDIATELY

Room 318, Norton Hdll

MIRSA, DIC.

Ski

Chamonix, France
.

Dec. 27th to Jan. 7th

10 nights

including New Years

Niagara Falls, N.Y . Non-Stop to GENEVA, SWITZERLANQ
or on to

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
vi;a

SCANDINAV IAN AIR SYSTEMS (SAS)

OC- 8 JET

Ski Packages in
JUST FLIGHT

CHAMONIX, FRANCE
Including hotels
Apartment . Chalets, Meals
Transfers and Gratuities

PACKAGE
INFORMATION

2450 ELMWOOD AVE.
Phone 874-0591

11 days

I

(WINTER RECESS)

$298

TVPINCil done 833-8236. Will pick up
work.

EXPERIENCE typing, term papers ,
dlssert1tlons, thesis - 833· 1597.

UNIVERSITY TRAVEL

$196

BABYSITTING, housedNnlnt done.
ElCperlenc:eCI, reliable . own
transportation. Janet 838·3429 .

MCAT-DAT-GRE
LSAT-ATGSB

NAT'L. BOSe
• Preperatlon tor tHIS required for
edmialon to greduete end prof. .
aionalac:hools
• Six and twelve -ion cou,..
groupt
• Voluminous metwiel for home study
prepared by ••Pif"ts in each field
• Leaon ~ehedule can be teilored to
meet Individual needl.
• Opportunity few review of pest
1.-ons vie tape at the cenur

• s,.u

Summer Sessions
Special Com.,.ct Courte1
Weekends- ln.-~s

323/316 NORTON HALL

Ext. 3602/3603/2145

~------------------~-----------------·
I

The University Travel Center, its programs and services are made possible
by your Student Activity Fees via Sub-Board I, Inc.

-·-·--·-·lAtA...-.
. . ._
OAVS.IYIN -. MIUNCI

•

, . ~St..., ...... Nedee. . . . . . . . . .

Wednesday, November 3, 1971. The Spectrum. Page fifteen

�Announcements
Pilot 100 will hold at\ orientation meeting
tomorrow at 4:30 p.m. in Room 330 Norton. All
persons interested in riding with area
law-enforcement agencies are urged to attend.
UB Photo Club will be meeting today at 8 p.m .
in Room 332 Norton. All members are requested to
come.
Brkile Club will meet tomorrow at 7 p.m. in
Room 340 Norton. Those interested in bridge
lessons Qll 831-3547.
The Department of Chemistry will hold a
Chemistry Colloquim today from 2-5 p.m. In
Acheson 70. The topic will be Insect Sex
Attractants.
Women's Liberation will have an open meeting
tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 332 Norton.
Psy~omat resumes today from 3-5 p.m. in the
Millard fillmore Room. Be part of a listening and
speaking experience; share in the process of
person-to-person communication.

Schussmebters Ski Club will be taking
memberships for this coming ski season, Monday and
Friday, 9-4 :30 p.m . and Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday, 7- 9 p.m.
The Collqe of Mathematical Sciences presents
M.H.S. Coxeter speaking on "Frieze Patterns"
tomorrow at 2 p.m. in Room 38, 4246 Ridge Lea.
The Craftsmen's Guild is a club being organized
for the purpose of presenting to the entire University
community a complete, well-rounded, educational,
recreational and cultural program in the crafts that
the existing structure cannot present. If you are
concerned with any craft, in any field, this guild is
for you. It needs your support to survive. Sign up at
either the Craft Center office or at the table on the
first floor of Norton.

University Travel a.nd Hilfet - Olympic Jet to
Tel-Aviv, Israel via AthenS', Greece, March 27- April
10 (Passover and spring reuss - 14 days), fligflt
$355 - packaae $559. For more information come
to Room 316 or 323 Norton or call extension 3602
or 3603.
University Travel - Aliulia Jet to Rome, Italy,
March 31 - April 9 {9-day Easter and spring recess) fligflt $198 package available. For more
information come to Room 316 or 323 Norton or
call extension_3602 or 3603.
Spanish Club will hold a meeting today at 7 :30
p.m . in Room 246 Norton to discuss their club party
and the theater group production.
The Spectrum photography staff will have a
meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. at The Spectrum
office. All staff and anyone interested in joining the
photography staff should bring their cameras.
Cancer Triad : Movie Laetrile, Nature's Answer
to Cancer, tomorrow, 8 p.m., Acheson Hall, Room
A-70; Friday, 8 p.m., Kenan Arena, Lockport. Or.
William Kelley (claims 99,5 per cent recovery),
speaker, Saturday, 2 :30 p.m ., Mount Saint Joseph
Academy, Main St., Buffalo. All free. For
information: Dr. Doran 853-1345 or Dick Preisch
433-8630.
UUAB Film Committee wishes to apologize for
the fact that Fearless Vampire Killers has been
cancelled for this Thursday night, but will be shown
at a later date. In its place will be Pretty Poison with
Anthony Perkins. Also being screened will be W.C.
Fields' Allee In Wonderland which was cancelled last
week.
Sports I nfo.rmation
Saturday : Varsity cross country at the New
York State Invitatio nal, Rennsclaer Polytechnic
Institute, Troy, N.Y., 11 a.m.

The Krishna Yoga Society will have a
transcendental feast to night"at 6 p.m. in Room 340
Nonon. Everyone is welcome.

The Student Association and Graduate Student
Association Speakers Bureau has announced that Bill
Russell , former coach and star of the Boston Celtics,
will appear Tuesday, Nov. 9 at 8 p.m. in Room 147
Diefendorf Hall.

The Women's Studies College and the Student
Association present lectures and an informal
workshop Nov. 3 6. Please check for times at
Women's Studies College at 108 Winspear Ave. or
posters in Norton.
The

Program in Comparative literature
a lecture " Keats
To Autumn and
ldedlogy" by Geoffrey Hartman, profes!&gt;or of
English at Yale University , today at 4 p.m. in
Diefendorf 147.
announce~

Filmmakers' Series presents today at 3 p.m. in
Acheson 5 Love Affair, and at 8 p.m. in Norton
Conference Theater, Innocence Unprotected. These
drC
film!l by prize-winning Yugoslav filmmal...cr
Dusanc Makavejev who will speak at 8 p.m. in the
Conference Theater.

Back age

CAC Independent Tutor Corps needs tutors in
all \ ludie~ through high school. Contact Room 220
Norton, extensio n 3609.
The College of Mathematical Sciences wants
people who are interested in tutoring mathematics
on grade and high school levels. Please contact the
College of Mathematical Sciences at 831-1704 o n
Tuesday- Thursday between 3:30-5:30 p.m.
CAC Buffalo Complaint Board will meet today
at 7:30 p.m. in Room 244 Norton. Volunteers are
wanted for the committee.
The Foreian Swdent Coordinating Counset
wants all foreign students who signed the FSCC
petition as "interested group" to the SA Assembly
to vote. Please go to the SA office.

What's Happening
Wednesday, Nov. 3

Thursday, Nov. 4

Concert: The Cleveland Quartet presents Beethoven Film : The Wild Child and Mississippi Mermaid
Cycle I in Baird Recital Hall at 8 :30p.m.
Ski Club is looking for a member
directed by Francois Truffaut, Conference
or anyone who is planning to be a member and Film : Paths of Glory, 8 p.m., Conference Theater
Theater - times will be posted, admission $ .75
(free)
wants to be a compensated bus captain for Monday,
Film : Pretty Polson with Anthony Perkins (free)
Tuesday or Wednesday night with free skiing. There Exhibit: Student portraits by Donald Blumberg, 9- 5 Concert: Rod McKuen at Kleinhans, 7- 11 :30 p.m.,
in the Art Department Gallery, 4250 Ridge Lea
will be a meeting Nov. 10 at 7 p.m. in Room 244 ·
tickets available at Norton Ticket Offic~.
thro ugh Nov. 20.
Norton·.
.concert: Event to be announced with pianist Roger
Concert: Melanie appearing at Kleinhans from
shields, A:30 p.m. in Baird Recittl Hall .
7- 11 :30 p.m., tickets available in the Norton WBFO : Interface on Poverty Hill purchase, WBFO
University Travel and Schussmeisters Ski Club Ticket Office.
(88.7 FM) from 8 - 9 p.m., phone questions to
SAS Jet to Geneva, Switzerland. Ski package in
831 -5393.
Chamonix, France or on to Copenhagen, Denmark. Seminar: Jewish Mysticism and Kabbalah presented
by Rabbi Gurary, Chabad House, 3292 Main St.,
Dec. 27- Jan. 7 (11 days winter recess)- $196 just .
8:15p.m.
Friday, Nov. 5
flight - package $298. For more information come
Radio: Musical Innovations, a discussion of the
to Room 316, 323 or 318 Norton or call extension
m u It i-medla dramatization "perimeters" Film: The Wild Child and Mississippi Mermaid
3602, 3603,2145,or2146.
WBCE- FM, 9:05 p.m.
Film : Mash directed by Robert Altman with Elliot
Gould and Donald Southerland, 140 C~ check for times.
Schu~meisters

-Sue Weiser

\

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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Vol. 22, No. 28

St.te Untv-.ity of New York et Buffalo

Mondey' Novem. . 1. 1971

Board being~ planned to
administer Poverty Hill
One of the problems that Sub the University President ; Vice
Board I, Inc. will encounter if President for Student Affairs,
st udents decide to purchase director of Athletics and
Poverty Hill Is its administration Recreation and president of
and supervision. To handle this Schussmeisters Ski Club .
responsibility, a comprehensive
This committee will assist the
plan prepared by Drayton Bryant Board of Directors {of the
Associates caUs for the formation newly-formed corporation)
of a Poverty Hill Corporation.
providing several advantages of
According to this plan, its 1e a d e r s h i p c on tin u it y ,
purpose will be I) to develop diversification of involvement ,
recreational facilities and commwlity relations, reduction of
opportunities for the student .u ability
effiCienCy 0 f
body, faculty and staff of the administration and operational
State University of Buffalo and 2) credibility. However, according t o
to allow pubUc use of those the report : "As the corporation is
facilities which are developed, outlined, Sub Board I, Inc. does
consistent with the best interests not lose control of the
of student body, faculty and staff • operation ."
of the State University of Buffalo.
Basically , according to Sub Reuonina questio~
Board officials, the establishment
Some students have raised
of the corporation is nec~sary questions about the establishment
considering the amount of time of this corporation . with its
that would have to be devoted to adjunct advisory committee. One
Poverty Hill. Because of this fear criticism has been simply that
that the operation of Poverty Hill students will have no control over
might severely tax other board the land, if purchased . Further
activities, a plan was presented to some have questioned the
President Robert Ketter on March composition of and reasoning for
S, 1971. This was before students the advisory board . As one
were even aware of the property's student commented, "Why is the
existence or Sub Board'• interest aki club president on the
Board? ..,. unless they plan on
in it.
\
developing a ski resort."
The question of the Poverty
Board member
Ac cor ding t o
the Hill purchase will be settled next
comprehensive plan, "the purpose week when the various student
of the meeting (with Dr . Ketter) governments conduct referenda o f
was to inform the President of the their constituencies. Both GSA
Intentions of the board in the and M FCSA have recommen.ded
administration of Poverty Hill." that their students vote no, while
Regarding composition of the the Undergraduate Stu&lt;tent
body, the plan further ~ports Association refuses to take an
that "The membership of the official stand. The reasoning for
corporation will consist of the this being, as SA president Jan
corporation of Sub Board I , Inc." DeWaal explained, not wanting to
In addition, there will exist an prejudice or influence the student
advisory committee consisting of decision.
I

.

."-=-- I

~

Newhetulquarters

The Frank Lloyd Wright House on
123 Jewett Parkway It the new
location of the UB Alumni
Astociation. Corresponding with
th. . new "-dquarters .,. new
-~nl .,...,...ms. Kdviti•. lind
Involvement in University afflirt.
For stcwy and more pic1u,., ...
pege6.

Student Assembly review

...

Athletic budget faces crisis
b y MikeBottl
ContributiiU Editor

Representativea of the Student Aslembly could
not be reached for comment becauae the Student
Association does not yet have a complete, up.to-date

Amid great turmoil In the athletic department ,
the $240,000 at hletic department budget fol
I 971·72 will undergo final review Wednesday
aftemoon by the Student Assembly. The meeting is
scheduled to begin at 4 p.m . at a site unknown at the
time of this writing.
The budget was approved last spring by both the
Student Athletic Review Board and the Executive
Committee of the Student Association . No money
can be allocated to the department until the
assembly passes the budget.
Both the athletic department and the review
board had until recently expected tittle debate on
the matter within Student Assembly, however it has
been learned that the budget will be severely
criticized and that slgnij!_cant alterations may be
made.
\.y
The possibility has created a crisis situation
within the athletic department, which had assumed
the budget was fmal. Dr. Harry Fritz, director of
Physical Education, Recreation and Athletics said,
"We thought we had a fixed figure . To learn that the
budget is not final is a bombshell at this time.
They ' re fooling aro und with paychecks and
merchandise already delivered . We have staff people ·
being payed, part time assistants and assistant
coaches, trainers and intramural and recreation
student workers . We have had medjcal supplies
delivered, the officials haven't been paid and the
insurance hasn't been paid , among many other
things. We had regarded the budget as firm since last
May."
Dr. Fritz added , "I had never even considered
the budget being cut. If it is, we'll have to cut
programs . However, the budget cannot be cut
without severely damaging the program . It was a
budget based on need."
Joe Ashwal, Chairman of the Student Athletic
Review Board said that if the budget were cut, " it
has to go back to my committee, and we have to
work it out with the athletic department. If it is cut ,
it will jeop4rdize the future , mainly the intramural
and recreational programs. The intercoUegiate
commitments have already been made, so that the
damage done to intramurals and recreation would be
irreparable."

list of the assembly members.
Both Dr. Fritz and Mr. Ashwal had harsh
criticism for the Student Assembly's havlng the
power to scrutinize the budget under any
circumstances.
Dr. Fritz said , " I don't think a budget should be
reviewed by a group o f this kind . This is very
discouraging. If students are to assume a professional
relationship in athletics, maybe they don't need a
professional staff. Under these condi tions,· ( really
don't think you need an athletic department. I don't
want to do this anymore, and I won't do it
anymore."
Mr. Ashwal said, " J think this situation is
ludicrous. The Student Athletic Review Board and
the Executive Committee passed the budget. I can't
see how fourteen in'terest groups can at their will
disregard a year's work by the committee. They
don' t have any confidence in the Athletic Review
Board or the professional staff. The budget should
be decided by the review board. The Student
Assembly is no t representative of the students here.
To say that fo urteen people represent 11 ,000 is
ridiculous. Even the polity was more effective."
Improvements
Speaking of the need to remedy the situation,
Dr. Fntz said, " If you have to go from review board
to review board , I would favor a percentage of the
fee earmarked annually for athletics. If this were
dp ne, we would have a general assessment for long
range planning purposes. This doesn' t mean that it
would not be open to review by the Student Athletic
Review Board . The review board has a great
contribution to make, and has brought change. It has
sharpened our budgeting ability."
Mr. Ashwal suggested the Athletic Review Board
and the Executjve Committee of the Student
Association have final say on the budget.
Of the $240,000 in the projected budget,
$26,900 is allocated for intrarnurals and recreation,
$139,471 for intercollegiate competition, $42,790
for administration, $12,000 for club sports, $9,435
for pubUcity, and $11.804 for " temporary services"
such as postseason toumarnents. The budget also
includes the money spent for the summer of J971.

�'Man iD the Umverse'

Hoyle to lecture
•
on cosmogenests
Dr. Fred Hoyle, director of the
In stit ute of Theoretical
Astron o my In Ca mbridge,
England, will give a four-part
lectu re series at the State
Unive11ity of Buffalo beginning
Nov. 2 on science and cosmology
as a d istinguished visiting lecturer
of the Faculty of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics.
Dr . Hoyle, internationally
known as a cosmologist and
professor of astronomy, is the
author of many original
investigations in astronomy and
one of the leading proponents o f
the steady state theory of
cosmogenesis. He is also a leader
in popul a rizing science. His
art lcles, many of which are
addressed to lay audiences,
include " The Nature of lhe
Universe, Man and Materialism,"
and " Man in the Universe."
The lectures will be free and
will be held at 8 : IS p.m. in Room
J47 Diefendorf HalL Pr. Hoyle
will lectuie on the following
subjects:
Tuesday, Nov. 2: "Science and
Society in Modem TUnes"
Wednesday, Nov. 3: "Science
and Society in Ancient Times :
Stonehenge"
Thursday , Nov . 4 :
''Developments in Cosmology l''
Friday , Nov. 5: "Developments
ln Cosmology ll"
Recital
The lectureship, which was
initiated and is stiJJ being
organized by Dr. Michael Ram ,
assistant professor of physics at
the State University of Buffalo,

The Spectrum II publllh«J tJu•
w . .ll, -IY Month~.
~,_ay •nd Frlct.~: durl"f tM
~ltw •M~M~Ic ,_, by Sub-Boerd
1, Inc. Offic• .,. lac.ted •t 365
Norton H•ll. Sur. Unl....,..lty of Nttw
York
Buffelo, 3436 ,.,.In St.,
/Juff•lo , N•w York, t4214.
T«•phOM: Arw CoM 116,- Edltorl•l ·
B31-4t 13: BullnM, 831-3610.
'

tim•• •

•t

R•pr•••nt«f lor

MJ~IIng

by

N•tionel Educ.tioMI Adttertlrintl
StwVIc•. Inc., 360 Lexl,ron A .....

Nttw York, N. Y, 10011.

ra,., .,.

Sub«rl~tlon
$4.60 ptN
'um.r.r or $8.00 for n.oo umerterr.

S&amp;cond CJ- ~ t»ld •t Buff.lo,
Nttw Yon.
Cfn:ulation: 16,000

Student Assembly's power to
control athletics is questioned

and provide for Ita members something like an
esprit~e-corpt. Something is definitely there."
Joe A&amp;hwal, Chairman of the Student Athletic
The future of athletics at this University will be Revtew Board,. aald, "Show me one P.lace where
debated tnd decided Wednesday afternoon, when more people attend than Cla1Jc Gym. Not including
the Student Assembly makes a final judgment on 64 intramural football teams and 84 intramUJal
whether the athletic department requires $240,000 basketball teams, 5085 people have used the gym .
I've seen more kids at a hockey game than anywhere
In student fees.
else."
It will not be the first time studentS have had
In atheltlc circles, competition Is viewed as an
the power to ultimately decide the fate of athletics
in a single vote. The Student Athletic Review Board, asset, not a liability. They beUeve that because lhe
created amid similar turmoil three yean ago, has world is highly competitive, athletics provide a
always had the power to do whatever they pleased. training ground for coplng with $0Ciety.
Is there a middle ground between the pro and
with the budget. The Executive Committee of the
Student Association has had the power to overrule anti~thletic viewpoints? A newly discovered form of
them, although in reality they have been a rubber athletic populism bas arisen . According to this
phil oso phy tn tramurals are beneficia l ,
stamp for the review board's decisions.
The significance of this meeting lies not only in
fts actual decision on the budget. By ruling on a
budget already approved by the Student Athletic intercoUegiates aren't. fntramW'llls provide sport for
Review Board, the Student Assembly has deemed all who desire it. So if the people desire sport, why
itself more qualified than the review board in not have it? On the other hand , intercollegiates cost
a great deal more and provide services for a
scrutinizing the budget.
If the budget were to be eliminated or severely privileged few . Moreover, the majority has to pay the
cut, the question of governance over athletics would bill for the luxuries.
be irrelevant because there would not be an athletic
department. Should the budget be approved and left The meetjng
It is probab~e that aJJ three of these ideas will
basically intact, the problem of governance would
surface In the course o f the critical Student
remain very much alive.
In analyrlng . the total situation, the relative Assembly meeting. Guessing at its outcome, it is
was euablished fn 1969 to
merits of athletics in Us cunent state must be expected that some cuts will be made in the budget ,
stimulate i.nterest in the sciences.
discussed first, followed by a look at the problefl)s of mainly in the intercollegiate area, as the " athletic
Last fall , Linus Pauling, a
populist" idea will Ukely be the most dominant.
gover.nance.
two-Ume Novel Prile winner and
Significant cuts would at this time be disastrous
Are athletics desirable? Many think not.
l n ternationally known chemist Competition, the very essence of sport, is said to be for the athletic department - not because the
and pacifiSt, held the teet ureship. dehumanizing and a prime source of conflict. budget 90uldn' t be trimmed, but because it couldn't
Dr. Hoyle will also hold a press Discipline, deemed vital to athletics, is rejected by be trimmed at thil time. Irreversible legal and
conference in Room 142 Hayes many who believe the macbine-l.ike precision financial commitments have already been made.
It is too late because of serious flaws in lhe
HaJJ at 10 a.m. on Monday, Nov. demanded on the athletic field has no place in a
student governance system.
l . The well - known revolutionary society.
Structural condition s within athletic
The Student Athletic Review Board h as been
pianist~mposer , Leo Smlt , who
departments
have
also
invited
criticiJm.
Institutional
inefT~ctive.
Due largely to bad accounting practices,
is now a professor of music at the
racism
h
as
been
an
integral
p2tt
o
f
athletic
neither
the
athletic
department nor the review board
State University of Buffalo, will
departments for years. Two years ago, charges of could arrive at accurate figures assessing the financial
present a recital dedicated to Dr.
raclsm tn this University's athletic department were a needs of the dtpartment (see The SJH!ctrum ,' Oct. 4,
Hoyle in Baird HaJJ on Monday ,
prime cause of serious campus distwbances.
197 1) . The review board was UttJe more than a
Nov. 1 at 8 :30 p.m. Part of lhe
Athletic scholarships have been criticized for rubber stamp for the department , while the
recital includes some works by providing pampered treatment to athletes at the Execu tive Committee was a rubber stamp for the
Beethoven, Schubert and Chopin expense of other students, who often resent having review board.
which are described with to pay the bill .
The problem with permitting the Student
profound insight by Dr. Hoyle
The costs -fo r runn1ng an athletic program have Assembly to finaJJy app rove the budget is the same
and woven into the plot .of his risen dramatically - so dramatically, in fact , that problem in having the Stadent Assembly do
science fiction novel, ''October this University had to abolish intercollegiate football anything else - the Usembly isn't what it was
last year.
supposed to be. The assembly was designed to
the First is Too Late."
represent a large number of interest groups,
Priorities
consisting of 40 people or more and covering every
Finally, there is the question of a university's aspect of student life at this University. To date,
priorities. Most institutions do not have the financial only fourteen members exist , representing only 560
means necessary fo r solving a large variety of people. Therefore, strong doubts exist as to whether
problems, and the doling of large quantities of cash this body is representative of general, student
attitudes .
for athletics is viewed by many as unnecessary .
1088 Sheridan Drive
These
viewpoints
surfaced
here
three
years
ago,
The problems inherent in this system become
Speclellzlng In Volklw~~g~~n,
of
referendums
on
a
mandatory
when
a
series
apparent
when the history of the current budget is
Triumph, Volvo, MG, Austin
athletic fee nearly ended athletics. NationalJy , reviewed . Last spring, the budget was submitted to
Hellley, Toyota, D1111un end
protests among athletes were numerous, and the the review board. Lacking the means to scrutinize
more.
work of Jack Scott, who found~ an institute the budget , the board passed it anyway, as did the
877-9303 WINTER 874-5330
designed to relate sport and society. t'ecame known. Executive Committee. Final approval by the Student
BATTERY SPECIALS
Defenders o f athletics have always stressed the Assembly was expected to be a formality . The
FROM$15.00
need for physical as well as mental development. Dr. athletic department began making commitments and
&amp; up · Ell{ch.
Harry Fritz, director of Physical Education, hiring staff based on that budget.
6 &amp; 12 Volt -Installed
Recreatio n and AthleUcs, said, "Athletics provide a
Last Wednesday the dt:partment discovered the
1 Pr. 6 volt- $30.00 + Exch.
link for a well-rounded campus, and are a vehicle for budget wasn't final after aU, and 'that contracts
studen t expression. It is critical for a campus to have already signed and agreements alJeady made were in
recreational outlets. Athletics solves a need and are jeopardy. Former head football coach Bob Deming
important for a person's overall development. Over said, " If people in business had to operate this way,
5000 people have used the gym . Without athletics, they could never make it."
there would be a tremendous void." In defending
intercolle giate athletics, Dr. Fritz sai d , Ptob,ems
"lntercoUegiate athletics provide an honors program
Could athletics ever " make it" under student
for the gifted. They are a service to the institution,
-;:;ontlnued on page 4 -

by Mike BnaeJ

CMtrlbe~tinz Editor

I

News Analysis

Dr. FredHoyle

liiEIIIAII

•••••••c••
•••••••

•••

SAYI . OIEY
SIIOPAUYIAVY
7. .732 MA• -ISS-1515 MAl tvPPa

··1',.•• n,.,..

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday, November 1, 1971

04r is a Xerox 2400
Gus u.tU Xer~ as ~ copies ofalmost anything as yot• u.t1n1
Gus u.tU do this a$ fast as any ot1ter copy mf.rhine, fi'llSter than most
Xer~ did all this

G4s ui1l cost ~ less than any or:s:her service around
04s ~'task~ to J!.U out aU . · ory ~fore he u.ill Xerox for you
~cZJd we~~
wetrd and interesting people to stare al uhile you Wllit for copies
ke dd this - Js'fMxton Hall - 9 a.m to 5 p.m

JJor:t:.

I

�BeD facility vandalized

,

Security measures needed
• A petition is currently being dJstrtbuted aound
the State University of Buffalo campus demanding
increa.sedl security measures at the University' Bell
facility on Elmwood Ave. Recently, the facility has
been plagu~ by inc!easing vandalism, including an
unsuccessful attmept to blow up a car.
The owner of that car, engineering graduate
student Carlo Scaccia, came up with the Idea of the

Bell- Elmwood at night. This situation must not be
allowed to continue. Something must be done. Now!
"We urge aU the people at Bell- Elmwood who
are sick and tired of the pres'"t woeful state of our
security measures to sign the petition. If ull of us
demand better security measures, maybe we will be
able to work in the evening hours with peace of
mind," the petition concluded.

petition drive. The incident involvinl his car, along
As of now, 130 faculty, students and staff have
with numerous cases of lite slashina and window signed tho petition. Copl~ of the document have
breaking, convinced him that there is a serious been submitted to campus ~urity and Or. Albert
Inadequacy In the ~urlty of both facUlties.
Sornit, Executive Vice President.
A further cheek revealed, in fact, that there are
no security people at all. " This situation can''t
Dr: Sornit noted that he is well aware of the
continue," Mr. Scaccia said. "There is much valuable ~ problems at the Bell- Elmwood facility. When asked
equipment at the (BeU Plant) facility that should be what measures are going to be taken, he said,
protected."
"Presently, we are arranging for a guard to work a 4
In order to gain support in his quest for security a.m. - noon shift each evening. Essentially, this
guards, Mr. Scaccia drew up a petition. It states that means just moving a person from here (the Main St.
the continuing Vandalism "must be stopped. Campus) across town. The difficulty is that we have
Students, faculty and staff, in order to do their jobs a severely limited budget and we do no t have all that
properly must be able to come to the Elmwood many security staff•members.''
facility in the evening hours and weekends without
Mr. Scaccia believes that a single guard would be
fear of personal injury or the tlestruction of their sufficient security. He said that it is a matter of
property.
patrolling a parking lot and its entrance during the
•'At present," the petition continued, "a evening hours. As of now, damage has remained at a
number of students are afraid to drive their cars to minimum during the day.

Legend in his own time
David Halbentam, whose reportina from Vietnam won him a Pulit~er Prize, wiJJ
..,akin the Conference Theater tomorrow niaht at 8 p .m.
SomctbinJ of a lqend in the field of journalism, Halbentam wrote his
priu-winnina article. u a correspondent for the N~w York Tim~s. He was one of the rant
American journalists to question the validity of the U.S. war effort in Southeast Asia. He
is cunently a contributina editor for Har~Hr 's mattnin~ and is at work on a book
deseribinJ bow the U.S . aot involved in Vietnam .
His appearance is belnaspon10red by tbe UUAB Literary ArU and Contemporary
laues Committees
HUMAN DIMENSIONS INSTITUTE

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GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
...... - Optici.,
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Unhwslty Plaza)
BUFF~LO, N.Y. 14228

EVOLUTION

NOWI
STUDENTS

l'flluslng hlghr potMtlsls
in slteffld states of con$Ciousness

Lecture Friday, November 6th at 8 :15p.m.
Seminw Saturday, November 6th It 9 :45 to 4:00p.m.

It

WICK CENTER, ROSARY HILL COLLEGE

4380 Main Street
Lectu,.. - S1udents $1 .75

s.niner - Students $5.00

WANTED

To work on developing
environmental polic:i•. A te.m
il now being put togethw to
work on issu• which directly
affect 1he deltiny of Erie
County. If intertlted call :
Prof. David Shegllu

881-3560

THE COUNCIL ON INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
AND THE LA TIN AMiiJCAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION (CLUB LATINO)

PRESENT

Dr. Fernando Alegria,
Cultural Attache , of the Chilean Embassy, who will give a lecture on :

"CHILE:
A New Road to Socialism" ..

Mark BoreQStein puts
Sub Board on the line
Editor 'I note: Tomo"ow a 1pecifll meeting of Sub 80flrd I, In~. will be
to di1cuu the future of that roverntnx body. Thu kNer, dtltt!d
Oct. 27. wa.r orlttnfllly 11ddre11ed to the m~mkn of Sub Bottrd from
Mark Boremtdn, /lal.tine11 MaMfU.
h~ld

It has become evident over the put montba Chat Sub Board cu
no lonaer function within its current outll.ne, primarily because no
plan, no set of raponsibillties, and no set direc:tion baa been liven to
Sub Board by itself, or by the student aovemments whic:h created it.
For more than a year now, Sub Board baa been opera tina in an ether
(for lack of a better term), pushinJ here and there, trying a few new
thinp, and aenerally moving where the wind hu blown it. True, that
with decreasing sums or money Sub Board bu attempted to keep the
services it provides u a constant level, and, in fact, on lea money bas
provided a areater amount of services than ever before ; but, Sub Board
is no longer tbe "f&amp;Scal or financw agent for the student aovemments"
which is the stock definition given by everyone. It has srown to much
more than this - Sub Board makes policy for tbe student body,
Sub-Board bas done things other than "university-wide activities," Sub
Board more and more looks like and functions lilte a &amp;ovemment.
As it stands now, the Board is divided , with at least eiJbt of tbe
eleven members ready to resign because of the amount of work and
the incredible aggravation membership on the Board brings.
The time has come, t believe, to put Sub Board on the line. Each
student government can no longer look the other way and allow the
status quo to exist : The routine condemnation of Sub Board has
served no purpose other than to divide botb the Board members and
tbe various student governments.
I believe that the student governments and Sub-Board must stop
their everyday functions and concentrate (perhaps for as long as two
or three weeks) on the future of their own govemancesystem;and, I
believe that Sub-Board is an integral part of that governance system.
The student governments and Sub-Board must chose tlie future
direction or Sub Board 1 - I think there is a clear choice between two
alternatives. One involves the recognition of Sub Board as the germ of
a University-wide student government, while tbe other will give Sub
Board a specific direction and a specific charge, and Sub Board 1 will
only perform those charges and nothing else.
The latter alternative will limit what Sub Board can do; there will
be no problems with Sub Board trying new and creative things, since it
amply won't try new things. There will be no conflict between Sub
Board and the student governments, and the student aovernments will
finally be vested wlth the sole responsibility for the creati01l of new
ideas and new services.
Should the first proposal be accepted, that o f Sub Board I
becoming the beginning of a "university-wide student government,"
then certain minimum standards for • more representative 8Jld
democraHc institution must be created. At the very least, the Board
should be expanded (possibly to have representatives for escb 1000
FTE's), and, althouah, I feel tbat bavinJ the persons appointed is still
consistent with representative ideals, some may disairee, nec:essiutina
tbat at least part o f the Board be elected. Appointments, coupled with
an easy, direct recaJI procedure by -the student body as a whole mi&amp;ht
be one alternative to direct elections. (In any case, an easy recall
procedure shouJd exist.) Sub Board will fu~her require a minimum
taxing power of perhaps $4 per student per year (in the form of a
guarantee by the governments that this will be given as long as fees are
mandatory), and Sub Board must be vested with the power to bold
binding referenda independently of the student governments. To add
some continuity , there should be a mechanism whereby the Board
only partially changes each year, perhaps by havina one-third of tbe
members serve one-year terms, another one-third serving two-year
terms, and the last one-third serving three-year terms - this would
allow a turnover of not more than two-thirds of the membership each
year.
There is no doubt that other prerequisites wouJd be called for by
other people, but 1 think that the above would provide a starting
point.
1 think I am one of the few left who believe that the idea or Sub
Board provides the only creative alternative to traditional student
government . Although 1 favor one university-wide student
government , with separate entities that will represent and still perform
services that uniquely affect only one part of the student body (much
like Harpur does witb their University-wide Assembly), I'm sure with
concentrated attention, other plans, possibly more acceptAble to
greater numbers of persons can be devised . Time is critical, and the
solution need now be developed.

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Monday, November 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

-

�Athletics budget questioned. . .

-continued from IN!ee 2-

decisions are representative of student opinion.
Presently, this situati'on does not exist - the student
governance system must be o verhauled.
Finally, as Bob Deming said, " The goals of
students and the athletic Clepartment have to be the
same." The athletic department and the student
body cannot be in open conflict. To create a
worthwhile athletic program, a delicate balance must
be reached between absolute conformity among
students and the athletic department and the right of
students to determine where monies are spent.
Whether this balance will be attained is the
major challenge faced by the student leaders of this
institution. Not only athletics will depend on their
abilities. If studt;nts cannot effectively use their
power in the realm o f athletics, can they use it
anywhere?
fill it.
The answers will begin when the Student
For student power to have any significance, a
way must be found to insure that budget-making Assembly convenes Wednesday afternoon.

supervision? Possibly, but not without serious
problems.
long range p lanning, essential in the
formulation of a viable athletic program, is difficult.
The athletic department must annually face a
different group of students. Attitudes among
students vary greatly from year to year, as the
malaise currently afflicting this University contrasts
to the vibrant mood of two years ago. Student
priorities change annually, and subsequently, those
of the athletic department would have to change
correspondingly. This problem is most evident in the
area of intercollegiate scheduling. For example, if
next year's student body decided intercollegiate
basketball wasn't needed, the department would find
itself with a long range schedule without a team to

'

WKBW ond BUFFALO FESTIVAL present

THURS., NOV. 4
KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL
8 :30 P.M.

MON., NOV. 8
PEACE IR IDGE
CENTER
8:00 P.M.

WED., NOV. 10
MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM
1:00 P.M.

WED., NOV. 24
MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM

FOUR BIG CONCERTS

ROD M~KUEN
PINK
FLOYD
•4••,,•
DONOVAN
aALCOHY $5.00.$4.00

MAIH FLOOR $6.00-$5.00

Umlted 1111mber of

ti,kets $4.00 ••. when gone all tickets $5.00

Front Floor Golds &amp; Reds $6.00
Reu floor &amp; Bluet $S.OO
Greys &amp; Or•nt•• $ 4 .00

THE

CARPENTERS

Front Floor Golds &amp; Reds $6.00
Re•r Floor &amp; Bluet $5.00
8:30 P.M.
&lt;ifeys &amp; Orilnfti'S $4.00
Tickets on u le now lit Buff•lo Festi•al Ticl.et Office, Stiltler Hilton Lobby (mail orders
with atamped aelf·addreued envelope); U.B. Horton Hall; State College Ticket Office; Falla
Tickets, Hiltkrlo Pl.wu, Hlltllril hils.

•"•'"4

Cooperative College
preparatory center
be necessary so a full schedule of
c:luaes is given in the evening
session for students •who work
Funded by the Stale durin&amp; the day. Part-time study is
Legislature and administered possible but discouraged, as it
through the State University of would lengthen the time a student
Buffalo, the Cooperate College must spend in preparatory work .
B u Halo's Co-op _College is
Center is a preparatory institution
for students whose previous operating under the concept of
academic experiences have not team teactun-g... Each of the
enabled t hem to meet the approximately 1100 students
joins f team of 150 students, five
demands of college admissions.
CCC is the largest of six similar instructors and two counselors.
centers in New York State. AU Since the teams 'are of a
were created under the auspices of manwable size and classes
the Educat ional Opportunity usually hold about 20 students, a
Program (EOP) and were assigned considerable degree of personal
to· a nearby State University for contact is possible between the
administrative purposes. The students, teachers and counselors.
Within this context, the
ce nters are independently
coordinated, allowing each to be student works to build his skills in
unique and experimental in Its five areas: language arts,
approach to minority education. co mmunication skills ,
Desire for a college education mathematics, natural sciences and
is the most important social sciences. Most of the nine
qualification for acceptance into academic teams are geared to
the program. All high school general, liberal arts preparation
graduates or holders of and are arbitrarily fo rmed and
equivilency certificates are eligible changed each semester.
for enrollment in CCC. In
addition, some carefully selected Skill building
The exceptions are the
students are admitted w1thout the
diploma or equivilency certificate bilingual team, designed for
and are g~ven extra tutorial Puerto Rican students and the
support in order to achieve one health sciences team which has a
more intensive natural science
while enrolled.
c urriculum and an advisory
co mmittee of visiting
Experimental program
Admittants must fulfill th e professionals.
CCC courses are non-credit,
conditions outlined by EOP of
financial necessity . Due to limited skill-building courses designed to
resources, CCC is not equipped to prepare a student within a
give finan cial a1d . However , the two-semester period, though
program is tuition-free and all e nrollment for o ne or three
books and materials are su pplied . semesters is common. After a
-continued on page 7Full-time attendance is fell to
Susan Ro8mblutb

Spectrum S t11/f Wrlt6

"GOLDEN R\NbS" ,., IAE SYMBOL OF THE
S~/\TE UN~ VE.R..SIT'i tF NEW 'fORK. AT BUFFALO
• (/ua f'4nfee.tJ qua !1 flj
• Suf)pri:J/u
rAef~l/t::.d_
r....,. J.
• 1Jisfincfivdfj ~ nd~h1r:..

Let- Bob Schmidt, our

campus

~lbf

A choice of twelve synthetic-gem birthstones. Your
degree i~z boldly distinctive letters. The traditional
VB emblem on both sides of the ring. Any
graduation date from 1972-1976 available.

''rep'' 1 help with
~our sele~tioh ~

. 00 ])epo~if
Page four. The Spectrum . Monday, November 1, !971

TUESDAY. Nov 2nd
WEDNESDAY. Nov Jrd
at .. Your University Bookstore
On Campus"

�Alumni Association
insists on involvement
by JoAnn Armao
Campus Editor

of more traditional activities were
reviewed by the committee.

New leadership, direction and
involvement keynote this year's
UB Alumni Association. With the
arrival of John Carter as executive
director in the summer of 1969
and the subsequent appointment,
of three additional staff members,
the Alumni Association has
fostered a wide range of new,
diverse programs. Simultaneously,
increased alumni involvement in
University affairs has occurred.
Tri!ditionally con~erned with
fund raising and athletic activites
most university alumni groups ar•
discouifted as supportive house
o rgans . However, Mr. Carter
prides the UB Alumni Association
on broadening its concerns ''to

Exciting new programs
Other alumni programs have
included a self-supporting dues
plan, a proposed Alumni-Faculty
Center in Amherst, continuing
education in such fields as
dentistry , management and
medicine, and establishment of
legislative relations. Perhaps most
exciting is Mr . Carter's
establishment appointment of
three new offices and their work.
Full time staff members, these
appointments are Fred Tamalonis
as director or Undergraduate
Programs, J. William Dock as
editor of the UB Alumn; News
and Rick Wells as director of the
Golden Bull Fund.

,.

Fred Tamalonis
lose them over a period of time."
To correct this, there is presently
being planned programs to include
graduated students in University
activities. For example, alumni are
presently excluded from such
campus activities as UUAB movies
and Baird Hall productions. The
office of undergraduate programs
is working to obtain the
cooperation of such groups to
include alumni in their activities.
Improved communication

John Carter
promote the best interests and
prestige of the entire University."
These concerns, he continued,
have involved the association in
IS or 20 areas.
Alumni voice
One of its most basic concerns
and possibly its most important
achievements is, according to Mr.
Carter, giving aJ~mni members a
solid, active voice in University
affairs. " Most alumni associations
across the nation just exist," he
reported, "they don't have any
kind of say in what goes on . They
are simply a house organ."
However, he maintained "It is
different here. We are recognized
by the administration. They know
we're here and interested."
Alumni participation in
University affairs ca n be
illustrated by their increasing roles
and responsibilities. Some of these
activities include: participation in
the University preside ntial
selection , membership on various
· task forces , establishment of a
permanent committee on alumni
relations within the Faculty
Senate and opportunities to
a tt end President ial-Provostial
meetin~ .

Because of such efforts , the UB
Alumni As soc iation was
recognized by the American
Alumni Council "for exceptional
programs and activities." Both
new programs and improvements

Mr . Tarnalonis heads a program
(one of the first of its kind at any
institution) dealing with
undergraduates and young alumni
and their involvement in
association programs. Descri bing
his job as one of " looking at
studen t s," Mr. Tamaloni s
commented: "The big concern is
how can I relate to students ... to
make students awar.e of an alumni
association and that they are
interested ." He continued that
"students can use the Alumni
Association as a way to get their
demands satisfied."
Building involvement
Agreeing with this, Mr. Carter
remarked that, hopefully, new
programs will evolve to get people
involved . Such programs, he said,
will help to build an active,
interested, aware alumni from
present s tudent s: "Jf the
a ssociation can give students
somethiJ\g concrete and tangible ,
then they will feel that they , in
turn , owe the Univ e r sity
something."
One of the problems involved
is that, previously , University
activities for alumni were almost
non -existent . Mr. Tamalonis
explained that presently there are
no mechanisms to let the alumni
know what goes on on the campus
once they have left the University.
According to him, " If you don't
have the mechanisms to bring the
alumni on campus, then you'll

Helping to inform alumni of
what is actually happening on
campus is Mr. Dock and his work
as editor of UB Alumni News. As
Mr." Dock explained , "Our prime
responsibility is a simple one - to
report events of some prominence
to alumni as soon as possible."
The hope is that improved
communication will result in
increased involvement.
Inc re ased involvement in
athletics is the responsibility of
Rick Wells as director of the
Golden Bull Fund . A more

traditional alumni concern, Mr.
Wells is interested in " building a
representative University athletic
program." It is the feeling of
many alumni members that U1e
ca mpus' athletic potential is
boundless and that it "would be a
hor ri bl e mi s take if (t h e
University) and SUNY
administrations gave up on all ·
intercollegiate athletics." Most
recently, the alumni labored to
continue University participation
in intercollegiate footbal L
However, their efforts failed with
th.e de c ision to discontinue
football competition.
New 'life'
Accompanying these many
new programs has been a
relocation of alumni headquarters
at the Frank Lloyd Wright house
at ,..123 Jewett Parkway. The
Jewett residence, one of five
existing Wright houses in Buffalo,
was purc hased by the UB
Foundation in 1967 as a residence
for t h en-President Mar ti n

Meyerson. Presently, the Alumni
Association shares the facilities
with the library archives.
According to Mr. Carter, the
Alumni Association will be able to
accomplish mo.-e in the area of
University-community relations
from its new quarters as it would
help expand alumni involvement
in co mmunity activities. Mr.
Tamalo nis; director of Special
Program s, is responsible for
helping to restore and furnish the
house and setting up tours for the
public.
In addition to the Association's
and archives' activities the house,
Mr. Tamalonis explained, "should
be able to be used by various
campus groups." He continued
that "something should happen
he r e every n ight." Possible
activities include poetry readings
s ponsored by the English
D e partment , management
meetings and seminars. The UB
Alumni Association hopes to give
the seventy-year-old house " life;"
such "life" will hopefully match
the new vitality of the association.

-Rosenthal

J. William Dock
Monday, November 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�Day Care Center dediclltion: bewitching

Witches, goblins and fairy princeaes were all on hand for the official
dedication of the UB Day Care Center last Friday afternoon. Recently
renovated, the Day Care Center l~ted in Cooke Hall Basement
surmounted such difficulties as funding thortages and University
indifference to remain open.
Started in the Spring of 1970, the Center offers care for more than 110
children of students, faculty and staff.
To further aid the center, President Robert Ketter has called upon the
University community to join him " in making a financial contribution
to the continued existence of the Day Care Center." The Ub
Foundation will act as the collection agent for any gifts or donations.

Hot Shit!

WANTED ••
UNDERGRADUATES to sit on
'

The Student- Wide Judiciary·~·~
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eight cents

APPLICATIONS ARE NOW AVAILABLE IN ROOM 205
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT THE JUDICIARY
STOP IN AND ASK
XER OX DAMN N EA R A N YTHING T HAT C AN BE XEROX ED

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~~~55

Norton

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I

Page six . The Spectrum . Monday, November 1, 1971

�c

o]j

EPIS riles missing

~~~!~:.~~~~~;.:· Students unable to graduate

...d..
some ~SUbject areas, wually in the
For the last two montha, a
second semeater, be can take satellite of CCC on the West Side
credit courses in those areas bas been recruitina students into
offered by the Millard Fillmore the coUep. Canisiw CoUeae and
CoUeae of the State Univenity of the Puerto Rican Committee for
Buffalo or Buffalo State Collqe. Community Action also are
T b e a e a r e a t a n d a r d , recruitlna people for the pr()IJ8m.
fUUy..ccredited freshman counes
tauabt by colJeae.. ppointed
At present, CCC students are
orpniz.in&amp; a Governina Student
faculty.
"""'--"
Body (GSB). Such an orpnization
Students attendina CCC are did exist last year, but was not
usually 18 to 25 yean old, but operated with any efficiency. Ken
often older. They almost always Armstrong, newly-elected
have the intention of entering a president of GSB is workin&amp;
four-year liberal arts school. Every towards developing an active
student who receives the assembly with two representatives
recommendation of his team is and two alternates from each of
guaranteed a place at a univetsity the teams.
by the CCC placement office
which works in close relationship
with all units of the State Open house planned
Univetsity system as well as with
The body has the power to
private colleges throu&amp;hout New swpend students and is planning
York State.
to put out policy rules and
reaulation statements. CCC
already publishes Embryo, a book
Student aovemment
of poetry by student contributors.
Every attempt is made to place A newspaper is also being formed .
each student in the coUeae of his
Mr. Armstrong feels that the
choice. However, this is not
always possible since local main ;oat of the GSB is to build
openinas are relatively few. unity and cooperation between
Chances of satisfactory placemc;nt the students, faculty and staff.
are much greater for the student
An open bouse planned for
who is willina to attend an Nov . 19 is presently beina
out-of-town collqe.
coordinated by CCC. The event
will feature workshops on
Once matriculated in an
teachina and counseling, exhibits
accredited college, students need
from many schools, a auerilla
not enroll in any preparatory
theater and a musical
proaram or classes. However, they
presentation. The schedule is as
must often make use of the
follows :
financial aid which some
programs, such as EPIS, offer.
9 a.m. - Convocation, tours of
Because approximately 15 per CCC bulld.ina at 465 Washincton
cent of the students who
noon - Lunch
complete the CCC proararn decide
2 p.m . - Open panels and
for one reason or another not to workshops
enter college, CCC works closely
4 p.m. - Tours
7 p.m. - Dramatic and musical
with manpower programs in order
to aid atudents wbo ~uire such presentations.

The filet of almost SOO EPlS
students have been found
..incomplete" due to missi.n&amp; hi&amp;h
school transcripts. According to a
memo ftom Mrs. Shirley Arnold,
acting Director of EPIS, to the
students affected, "You (the
student) wW not be able to
complete all the necessary
arrangements to graduate if you
do not have complete records on
flle in that office. Moreover, your
stat us as a student in the
University and in the EPlS
program is in jeopardy."

"They (Admissions and Records)
told me I wouldn't graduate, that
there is no file in the office on
me. I've been here for four years
and now they tell me that I
officially do not exist,'' be
continued .
Jose "QuiQue" Rodrequez, a
member of El Centro, said, "We
are attacking one entity. We know
where it is coming from. We are
not picking on EPIS because we
want to. We have got to get them
out in order to reach the one's on
top."

Dr . Emmitt Lyons of
Admissions and Records said that
provisions are being made to
obtain the missing transcripts and
that the senion will be "allowed
to graduate under the proviso that
they will obtain the necessary
transcripts soon."
Dr. Lyons believes that "one
month ago this was a major cause
of concern. It's too late now - it's
already being solved ."

Mr. Lyons admits that thJs
recent problem wu ••a big one,"
but he believes it no longer is one .
He referred to it u a "boo boo
made by a new group" and
remarked, "It wu a great big
problem but we bad to find a
systematic1way out - we did."
Mr. Lyons said they have
initiated a "new admisliona
pr()cedure" which will avoid the
tangles currently encountered.
''By the time a newly admitted
EPIS student comes to campus he
will know all he needs. There will
be no doubt in his mind as to
where he stands concerning
registration, money, etc.," he
continued .

The circumstances which
caused this situation are "already
remodelled" according to Dr.
Lyons. He stated that EPlS
students must apply to the
University just as a regular Secondclaa
adm,issions student. ''Many apply
The students at El Centro said
through EPIS , get admitted and that they felt "pressured" and
the Univenity has no record of "treated as second class students"
them. It is not that they are not on this campus. Mt. Willy
considered students but, we must Echevaria, El Centro member and
have a file on them at Admissions EPIS student, said, "EPlS was the
and Records,'' he continued .
god that was going to help me
Mix-ups
"EPIS has their own realize my ambitions. It was a
The staff of El Centro de admissions board to which we dream I had about them .
"When I got here I realized
Orientacion , a student run send a member. We give them, as
counseling group made up mainJy other special programs, the right exactly what that dream was. It
of disgruntled EPlS students have to accept or reject theit own. Jt was the American dream - and
become further disenchanted by docs not affect the student. At that, for me, was a nightmare."
this latest administrative mix-up. graduation we must have his He continued, "The University
does not fit us, or we don't fit
Rudolph . Santos, coordinator of complete student file here."
them . I prefer to think it is the
El Centro, labeled this incident as
latter."
"further evidence of EPIS' bad
communication with the rest o f 'We learned'
Whichever way that goes, there
this University."
Mr. J ose Sosa , EPIS senio r. is a definite feeling in the office of
Students involved in the reacts differently to this situation . El Centro that is expressed dearly
mix-up are .. confused and " I've learned the hard way . The by "QuiQue" Rodriquez, "In the
annoyed,'' as evidenced by one more you stay away from EPIS streets, y~a niuer, a splc senior. He commented that he did the better off you are on thls on campus, you're an EPIS
not know where he was headed . campus," he says.
student."

Hear, 0 Israel
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TABLE IN NORTON LOBBY
MONDAY AND TUESDAY

Monday, November 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�I

~

Establish priorities
Wednesday afternoon, the Student Assembly is slated to
consider a large, $240,000, and contr~l allocation to
the Athletic Department. For the past SIM!f81 years, funds
for athletic programs have been the center of harsh battles
between those who wanted to cut the fees and those who
fought to retain the status quo.
One issue that never was resolved in all these disputes was
what priorities were to be placed upon intercollegiate
athletics vis-a-vis Intramural programs. Of the proposed
$240,000 only a tenth, $26,000, is directed towards
lntramurals. Further, only $10,000 of these funds are
directly applied to intramural programs. This, we believe, is
not In harmony with the wishes of the undergraduates who
must bear the brunt of providing the Athletic Department
moguls with a quarter of a million dollars annually.
The Student Assembly could provide a great service to
the students of this L!niversity by carefully scrutinizing this
budget, as well as setting priorities on future distribution of
student funds for athletics. In addition the practice of giving
40 per cent of all undergraduate monies collected to the
Athletic Department must be questioned. After all, the level
of attendance and support of intercollegiate events does not
Indicate much approval of these policies.
One very sore point in this affair is the anger of both the
director of Athletics, Harry Fritz, and the Athletic Reveiw
Board at having their budget exatnined by the Assembly. Or.
Fritz has stated that : "I don't think a budget should be
reviewed by a group of this kind." Aside from the insulting
innuendo of this remark, Or. Fritz is overlooking that the
Assembly is the closest thing to a representative body that
the undergraduates have.
Further, if our money is to be siphoned off year after
year for dubious expenditures (even sources within the
Athletic Department admit the $49,000 basketball budget is
padded beyond belief), the least they can do is give us some
participation in dividing the spoils. While the Assembly
members may not have absolute professional expertise in
athletic funding, they do have an inalienable right to
determine how the fees of their constituents will be spent. ·
The Assembly does face one serious problem in dealing
with this budget. The Athletic Department assumed the
original allocation was firmly committed and therefore spent
portions of it. To deny those funds now might endanger
on-going programs and the Assembly must consider the
potential ramifications in modifying the budget. They
however, should not shrink from their task of thoroughly
examining and evaluating the premises on which this budget
is based, lest history repeat itself and the student body
continue to pay huge sums without its consent.

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Benefit of the doubt
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Editor:

Monct.y, NOftmb« 1, 1971

Editor-in-chief - Dennis Arnold
Co ........., . Edttor - AI 8en10n
Co ............ Edkw - MikeliJIPf'*'n
A.c • .....,..."' Editor - Suan MOll
8...,_ MM..- - Jim Ot'udtw
Adwertilint--... - Sue Mellentine
C.mpus ........• Jo..Ann Anf\80
•... .. .... ..... .Howie Kurtz
..........•..... Bill Veccwo
City .••..•...... Hervy Llpmen
Copy .. .•.•..... Ronnl Forman

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marty Getti
Alit ........... ...... ,vecent
f•ture ....... ..........vacant
Grephic Am ......... Tom Toles

Uyout ....... MllfYhope Runyon
A.c... ......... ......vac:ant
Lit. D,..,a . . Micheel Silv«blan
Mu.ie ............•Billy Altman
Oft-Campus .... .. Lynne Traeger
Photo .......... Marc Ackerman
.......... Micby Osterreictter
Sports ... .•........ Barry Rubin
At&amp;t.- •....•.... .. Howia Faiwl

a

Thll Sp«;trum is MrVad by United Press International, College Press
Service, the Los Angeles Free Pr-. the Los angeles Times Syndicate and
Liberation News Service.
Republication of matter herein without the express consent of the
Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.

Editon.l policy is determin«i by tfle Editor-in-Chief.

Page eight. The Spectrum. Monday, November 1, 1971

I

11flS

,...

When I ran for Congress last year apinat
Thaddeus Dulski, The Spectrum (4/13/70 and
6/12/70) extended to me every benefit of the doubt
and could not have been more flatterina. As Dulski
was endo11ed, I was aft.so running directly apinst
Cran&amp;le and his Democratic organization. Based
upon my treatment and the content of Harvy
Lipman articles in Friday's issue, to be independent,
new, fresh and running against a machine is a
decided advantase for Spectrum's favorable
coverage.
I owe not bins to Sedita or Cran&amp;le, but they arc
due the courtesy of a response to balance the
malicious innuendos of Harvy Lipman.
PhysicaUy, Sedita appean much less like a
Kennedy than Repn, but on the issues and on how
they vote, Sedita is the candidate who carries the
Kennedy mantle. No person could make this
evaluation from more knowledge and independence
than A1 Lowenstein, president of ADA, and he did
so during his appearance here three weeks ago for
Sedita .
I don't agree every time with Sedita, but on
balance, he has been fair, superbly capable of
enlightened executive leadership, consumed with a
passion to help the least fortunate, unquestionably
honest and blatantly receptive to new ideas and

prograou t~t will help his City. And specifically tg
refute with facts the Lipman biu, durina this last
year Sedita reversed the enUre low and moderate
bousina trend by bouslna starts in Ellicott and the
Waterfront and thus be bar been more responsible
for docent housina in Buffalo than any mayor since
the 1930s.
Upman spent more effort blastina Cranale than
be did Sedita. Any party chairman and party
orpnization exist• for the election of their
candidates. Cran&amp;le has power, but that power is
based on his ability u an electoral technician rather
than qualities of bossism o r tynanny. If Lipman
wants to be neptive, he shoyld critize a system
which permits ability to rise above mediocrity. If
CranaJe is to be faulted, it is because he is aood at bis
work, sca11ely nothina else. Bellanca would like to '
be a boss, but he lackl CranaJe's moxie.
An Erie County Democratic Party endorsed
candidate is not, iPIO facto, bad. A political
establishment, like an academic establishment, is
not, Ipso facto, bad. Di.acemment is necessary,
especially from academia, with no undue
newness-for-the-ake-of-newness prejudice.
Based on merit alone, I happily endorce (sic) and
urge election of Frank Sedita.
•
(The Rev.) Hugh G. CArmichael
Rector, St. TholtUU' Episcopal Church

Executive Dlrtctor. St. Augulline ~ Center

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 28

rr (

Common superhero
To the Edrror
The third part of the three part series on comic
books wu 1 believe, more of an editorial Qlan an
objective, journalistic view. Although I agree with
most of what Jay Boyar wrote, I feel . that some
aspects need more attention, specificaUy Spiderman.
Spiderman was rated as having a " ... tendency
to be good ... ". ln my opinion, Spiderman is in a
class by itself. No other comic book has a supe.rhero
as ide n tifiable as Spiderman. Peter Parker,
Spider man's real name, is the picture of today's
teenager ; being the confused young man with many
problems : social, idealistic, domestic, etc.
This is what Spiderman has that other comics do
not have; problems, lots of them . He has so many of
them that t he reader is just as absorbed as in Parker's
personal life as in the super-battles. He has: girl
friend problems (including being wrongly accused of
being responsible for the death of his girlfriend 's
father), problems with his &amp;lint ( a sick , dying old
woman) who raised him because he was an orphan,
problems with his public because an influential
editor constantly defaces him. When be gets tied up

with these problems hu academic work suffers. It is
these problems alo11J with the normal problems of
your everyday superhero that make Spiderman the
most realistic and loveable superhero.
Continuing the above quote " ... depending
upon who is writing and drawing them in a given
month." Spidonnan is always written by Stan Lee.
Spiderman is Stan Lee's baby. The art staff remains
as constant as possible.
Spiderman also leads the comic world in change.
Although tb~ Green Arrow comic won acclaim for
Its issue concemina drug abuse, the first comic ever
to concern itself on this issue was Spiderman (No.
96 ). It wa.s not able to get an approval from the
Authority Code of comics because there were no
existing rules governing drug mention in comics at
that time.
Therefore, Spiderman cannot be mentioned
among other comics, it is in a class by itself. It bas
the most identifiable superhera, and leads the comic
world in change. S&amp;)iderman is the comic book to
read.

Steven Farber

~
~

�Housi:rtll issues critical
To the Edito r:
After reading aome of the recent articles in the
o n the County Bxecutive race, l fear that
the important q ut:lltion of student housina bu not
been considered. lbe iaae of where, for bow mucb,
and under what conditions atudentJ will Uve turns an
election some conlidered unimportant.. into one vital
to students. As a put GSA Pruident and Sub-Board
I, Inc. member, I've spent much time atudyinJ tbe
student housi.ns question and I would like to present
some important pointJ for your consideration before
election day!
When public and state building is completed at
tbe new Amherst campua, there will be 3500
studentJ who will not have a place to live. '1'1Us beat
of present estimates usumea that the U.D.C.
building plans for Amherst will be implemented . The
town o f Amhent bas instituted a suit to block
U.D.C. activities and Ned Repn has stated that the
country should back up Amhent in its Opt with
U .D.C. The succca of the Amherst suit would be a
disaster for Univenity students, faculty, and staff.
lbe lack of U.D.C. coordination with tbe loss of a
number o f middle income housing units would mean
that only the mostly biJbly paid faculty and
administrators would be able to live near the new
S~Hctrum

camput. Wore n~w faeu.lty and certainly moo st.a.ff
would be in competition with ltudents Cor other
avalla~le houaiq fart.ber from fbe campus. Studentl
(and everyone) will bo payinc mc:n and lirin&amp; farther
away, and the number of stude,1ts wbo will not rand
living space in Amherst will be far more than 3SOO.
Bven il the U.D.C. plan is implemented we're
ltill down 3500. ~t c:a.n we do to improve tb.ia
lituation? You say, perhaps tbe county can aid the
towns and cities in aupplyina aome low income
bousina? Maybe, but Ned RC~U . alia, oppoeea
tovemment proridlna low income hoUiiJl&amp;. ( JU4!111
his conservative philoeophy is stymied by the reality
too low a profit ftW1in in docent lo- income
housi.na to attract private developers. Frank Sedita
favors county support of the citi~ and towna to
build low income housina. Sedita bas buUt more
housing in Buffalo than any pre'rious mayor. Under
Mayor Sedita Buffalo has completed or bu under
construction 2000 housiq unita, about one balf of
which are low income units. Livina in thae uAits are
250 members o f student families . I I " • tb.ia is part
of the put record Sedita bas been tellin&amp; us we c:a.n
judce him by and uae u an indication of what he will
do in the future as County Executive.

ot

Jo- 3&amp;

Sanction exception

Mr. Goodbar is nutty

To the Editor:

To rht Editor:

In your Oct. 27, 1971 issue of The Spectrum,
the article "Three Tiered Procedure for Academic
Dishonesty," contains a paraaraph which states :
Also, the President may overrule the
recommendations of tbe committee and invoke
higher sanctions. President Ketter has been noted for
Ibis durina the history of the Hearing Commission
on Campua Disruptions.
To set the record straight, President Ketter has
followed to the Jetter the sanctions recommended by
the various Hearina Boards from within the Hearing
Committee on CampUI Disruption in all ca.ses, with
one exception. In the exception, the sa_nction levied
upon the student was lower than the one
recommended by the Board.
R. A . Powell, Acting Chalrman
Hearing Committee on Campau
DUruption

Halstead vs SDS
To the Editor:
I' m writing this open letter ~use I think
something should be said to counteract the
misrepresentation of my classroom statements and
published writing recently indulged in by the SDS.
One example will suffice. I have been charged with
attribuUng the failure of the lndian Mutiny of
1857- 58 in part to the "innate adequacies" of the
Indians. In actuality 1 said quite the opposite, that
Indian leadership was inferior "not because of any
innate inadequacies, but because Indians, having
been denied commissioned status, had been deprived
of the leadership training they so sorely needed in
the Mutiny." I do wish some of my students would
listen more carefully.
As for connecting me with the recently
expr essed theories of Professors Jensen and
Shockley, l should like to say that, if they do indeed
' assert that blacu are genetically inferior to whites, I
would have to disagree on the evidence of the many
intelligent blacks who have taken my courses over
the years.
"Wby aU the fuss," then, as the latest SDS
slinger queries? Well, I suppose it will come as no
surprise to learn that the SDS has ulterior motives.
As tbe student communist front organization of the
Progressive Labor Party, it disturbs them to have a
scholarly, factual course on European overseas
expansion and imperial r.ule being offered on this
campus. They rightly sense that people taking the
course might conclude that the communist view of
imperialism is slightly overdrawn. Their charge that I
am a "racist" is a case of crude, old-fashioned
character assassination . I would have thought that
c ommunists could manage to become more
sophisticated in the course of the past fifty years.
One final clarification. David Levy was expelled
from the Universtty, not because he "verbally
disagreed" with me, but because his endless
interruptions disrupted the class. We have ruJes
against this sort of thing.
John P. 1/ulscead
Associate Professor of Jftstory

bangina out in bars.
Althouah the bar is chock full 'o "heavies,"
Wow! After Jlancing throup The Spectrum fnr rapping the typical jive, and prbbed in the usual
the last five years, and occuionally read lng "The anti-11f0uent attire, there ue no rul hippies ~
Grump" (Brie the Therapist), the Vol. 22, No. 25 anti-establishment or ''unhooked ceneration" people
issue certainly warrants comment .
present. They all drink - hour after hour. Most of
Mr. Goodbor per se, is, as suggested. All them smoke - ciprette after ci,garette (and
majoring in the field of existential phenomenology occasionally 'grass' - but only at the bar). And the
and/or anti-psychiatry pleue meet Mr. Goodbar. The pro-establishment Goodbar Biases are evidenced by
article (well done, Billy) was at beSt, and at least, pntins admission only to those males 21 or over
well done: Mr . Goodbar is an existential (Jirls, only 18), or to those elite few of tbe Elmwood
phenomenon. And since Mr. Gt&gt;Qdbar is an hierarchy who have been awarded with a blood-red
"out•-sl&amp;)lt" place, more insight is preferable - and " Mr. Goodbar Membership Card."
since •'Time Is On My Side," u lbe Ston~ once
A newa~per· cartoon behind the bar suuests
the origin of " Mr. Goodbar." A mor• •pptopriat&amp;
said, may I?
· There are other experiences portrayed in analogy miaht be that candy bar of Hershey's with
the same name - the one with the nuts .
Goodbar that need to be experienced.
The best niabt at Mr. Goodbor is Tuesday
A starting point may be its location : it kisses
Coles, faces "The Copy Cat,'' and is within waiJdng morning. Since Friday and Saturday nights are
distance of the State Mental Hospital (although crowded with the typical atypical Goodbar people,
running is also permitted). A turning point may be out on the weekend "Booze Belt ," Mondays are
its protection : Bunyan-like bouncers and two more or less reserved for the regulars. Tbose
(youthful), four (average), or 6 (hello Lieutenant!) unmentioned by your article, which deserve
of Buffalo's finest law (not to be confused with mention : The SbeJter People who exhort orpsmic
legal) officers. Where would we be if the cops cries at the sound or a Micky Jager Masterpiece, or
copped out? Sitting on the empty-green-sloping a Neil Young Lamentable Lyric; the short, plump
vegetable stand next door at the semi-open air Food "wiz kid," who, with thinnina flaxen hair, and a
busby upper lip, never errors on the $.25 Computer
King.
Pbenomenologjcally speaking. Mr. Goodbar is Quiz; the boppers who after failing to pin entrance,
existentially very rewarding. Most assuredly, defy the Pip all night lona; and of course Neil, Pat
Jean-Paul Sartre would condone Its freedom of the and friends who seem to know more people there
self to present "the self' as the self, in place of "the than Bobby and/or Joey.
Enou&amp;b said. Stop in and visit The Goodbar.
other." R.D. Laina and Langian followers, such as
David Cooper, from the World Of Man might suggest And while you're there, feel free to be your self - or
we see it as a "plexus" where "normal" people play simply feel free to be. Or simply feel free.
the normal role of pretending that they arc not P.S. Pickups are not a last resort. Mr. Goodbar is abo
playing a role, which they are playing - and we all noted for Seltistentialism.
Larry hclc
play that we don't know it . Field observers in
Soc1al Sciences CoU~c
anti-behavioral psychology can have more fun

Electoral insults
To the Editor:
During the last week, Sedata political
advertisements have appeared in campus publications
whi c h contain unsupported insinuations and
demonstrably false allegations. One cannot keep up
with the multiplication of little lies, but two
refutations should suffice to reveal the Sedita tactics.
A check of citations provided in the Ethos ad of 26
October and The Spectrum ad of 29 October will
show that the documents prove the opposite of what
the ads allege.
In both ads, it is claimed that Regan voted
against the request of the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom for permission to sel
up a table on Main Street for the purpose of
co llecting sipatures on petitions against the
Vietnam War. The action taken by the Common
Council was to refer the League's request to a
committee and thereby, in effect, to Jeny the
request. Regan bad the courage to voto a inst that
action on the ground that the request of the League

should be granted (CCP, 1966, paae 716). The Sedita
ad is diametricaUy opposed to the truth .
The ads also claim that Repn proposed an
emergency curfew law . In fact, what Regan did was
to propose the incorporation or safeguards apinlt
abusive and repressive use of an emergency curfew
measure that had been proposed by the Democratic
majority. (CCP, 1968, page 1122). Again the Sedita
ad distorts the facts and perverts the citation.
False citations can be refuted . Malipant
iasinuations can only be ignored. Sedita tactics this
last week have resorted to both. Why do his backen
not advance reasons for voting for him? lbis
newspaper has provided reportage and commentary
on both sides to enable voters to make up their
minds. And Regan supporters on the faculty, of
which I am one, have advertised their carefully
conceived and firmly held reasons for voting Repn
for County Bxecutive. These reasons include no false
remarks about the other candidate.
Th eodore Friend

Monday, November 1, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page nine

�tion bond
· fate still undecided

Environmentalism fUrious

Cannikan missile set to go!
"Go ahead. Fire Cannildn.'' 'Ibis tene meaage
was delivered to the Atomic Bnefl)' Commission
sometime before noon last Wednesday; its author
was Ricbud Nixon. So now, barring a lut minute
court intervention, the stage il finally set for the
most controversial underpound test of a nuclear
weapon. lfCannikin is fired, the largest underpound
weapon ever tested by the United States will be
detonated more than a mOe under Alaska's
Amchitka Island in the Aleutians.
A proof test of the Spartan antiballistic missile
ABM warhead for the Safepard system which the
U.S. plans to put Into operation in 1976, Cannllcin is
equal In power to nearly five million tons of TNT 250 times bi88er than the bomb which destroyed
Hiroshima in World War II.
In a Wednesday news conference, AEC
Chairman James R . Schlessinger saJd that unless
there is a federal court order restraining the blast,
the test would be conducted "within a week."
Chances of environmental daJnaae are " minimal"
accordina to Schlesinger, and ..overriding
requirements of national security have, of necessity,
taken precedence." Schlesinger noted that the
Soviets have been conducting similar underground
tests, and be feels that such tests will not disturb the
Strategic Arms Umltatlons Talks (SALT) scheduled
to resume Nov. S.
Envirolimentalists take to the courts
In the meantime, environmentalists took to the
courts to stop the tests, but there was no decision as
of Friday. On Thursday, a federal appeals court in
the District of Columbia, refused to give
conservation groups a delayina order. However, the
three-man panel ordered. the government to provide

hitherto secret studies which allepdly conclude that
environmental duna&amp;e could occur as a result of the
Cannikin explosion. The court ruled that it was "In
no position at this juncture to enter a stay order that
would interject the court into national security
matters that lie outside its province .. .''
Conservation experts have char1ed that the blast
could trigger a earthquake and tidal wave like that
which struck the Hawaiian lalands in 1946. These, in
tum, could ldll marine and other wildli.ke native to
area.

the

Ex~tive privilep abandoned

Early Friday the 1ovemment decided to
abandon its claim of executive privilege and turn the
secret reports over to the court for review. David L .
Sive, attorney for the Committee for Nudear
Responsibility and six other poups opposing the test
promptly asked U.S. District Judae George L. Hart
to let him see the documents, and to grant his plea
for a preliminary injunction to halt the test.
The documents were to be handed to the court
by late Friday, which would delay Judge Hart's
decision until possibly today. I( the rule is adverse, it
could be appealed. Meanwhile, the Defense
Department rejected a request from Alaska's Gov.
William A. Egan to station rescue ships along the
Aleutian Island chain to pick up fleeing villagers, if a
mishap should occur. Deputy Defense Secretary
David Packard wired Egan that safety precautions
taken by the AEC were sufficient.
The secret documents were screened Friday by
the AEC, the White House Office of Science and
Technology, the Council on Environmental Quality
and the Environmental Protection Agency before the
papers reached Ha1t , to delete any material which
was classified as secret.

The fate of the proposed $2.S
billion state transportation bond
will be decided by voters of New
York tomorrow. According to
Donald Ketchum, realonal
director of the State Department
of Transportation, more than
$190 million of that money Is
slated for mghway and mass
transit construction in Erie and
Niagara Counties.
The bond has not been much
of an issue in the local races with
most candidates, including both
FranJc Sedita and Ed Regan,
endo r sina the proposal.
Opposition to it has been voiced,
however, by State Assemblyman
Arthur Eve of Buffalo. Mr. Eve
has charged that the state has its
..priorities turned upside down.''
He stated that he has opposed the
bond since its inception because
" it is the wron1 place to spend all
that money."
Leplatora' respoDiibility
His statement added : "During
the past year the RepubUcan
leadership of this state, often
aided by the Democratic
minority, has trimmed human
welfare programs and many
essential services and programs for
human needs as being too costly."
Mr. Eve expressed the opinion
that any legislator who "has a
constituency with aged people or
poor people or workina people is
failing to express his constituents'
real need if he supports this bond

issue."
Support for the bond issue has
been bi-partisan as well as
frequent . New York City Mayor
John Undsay hu come out in
favor of the bill due to an
apeement with Gov. Rockefeller
to use the bond to try to save the
city's thl.rty cent transit fare. 8oth
Mr. Regan and Mayor Sedita have
expressed their backing of the
proposal as necessary for the
construction of Buffalo's planned
rapid transit system.
Rapid tnnsit
Mr. Ketchum of the Dept. of
Transportation stated that $86
million would be used to develop
the system to run between
downtown Buffalo and the town
of Amherst . The department
spokesman also ex plained that
money from the issue would also
be used to replace some 200
overaged buses currently in use in
the Buffalo transit system.
Currently , the Dept. of
Transportation ts studying the
feaslbWty of a high speed rail
service to run between New York
and Buffalo through Albany. Mr.
Ketchum said that funds from the
bond could be used to implement
the study's ftndilip . Money from
the issue will also be included in
planned construction or
impro vement of 197.2 miles of
highway in the counties of Brie
and Niagara.

You've seen them on T.V.
and you've read about them in bookS

NOW SEE THEM IN PERSON
I

•

SPEA

B

Nov. 4 Charles Goetzinger

Nov.19 Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz

Nov. 9 Bill Russell

Nov. 20 Herbert Marcuse

Nov.l9 Andre Gorz

Dec.] Ralph Nader

CHECK THE SPECTRUM AND POSTERS FOR EXACT TIME AND PLAGE

'

.

Page ten . The Spectrum. Monday, November 1, 1971

�y
LONDON • Last Thursday,
PwJjament pve its approval to
Prime Minister Edward Heath's
bid for membership in the
Common M,arket, and this, in the
words of opposition Labor Party
Chairman Anthony Wedgwood
Benn will touch off a ..national
crisis." Despite direct orders from
opposition leader Harold Wilson,
one-fourth of the Labor party
members voted with the
ConJervatives. The formal entrace
into the Market will not come
until Jan. I, 1973, provided
Parliament puts an1official stamp ·
of approval on the move by
passing legislation which would
clear the technical barriers. Plans
are being made now for a
10-nation European summit
conference for early next year to
· l ay the groundwork for the
enlarged economic community.
The House of Commons vote was

..
climaxed a week fo sharp debate Van Camp canned green 'beans
stirred by the historic U.N. vote may contain the deadly botuliaum
which ousted Nationalist China poison. The eight-ounce cans of
and admitted Mainland China. French•tyte green beans carry the
There is a slight chance the bill embossed code SB.72 E213D. The
may ari.se. again, in a different FDA said the beans were in the
form, as a motion to continue aid process of being recalled ftom
temporarily at last year's levels. stores and warehouses. It is not
No rescue attempt was made by known how widely the suspect
the Nixon administration, despite cans were distributed to stores,
the darkening prospects for the _ but the first suspect case occured
bill late Friday afternoon. Senate in Pensacola, Fla., when an
D e mo cra ti c Leader Mike eight-year-old boy and his father
Mansfield said, "It is time to put noticed that the can was swollen
into effect a new foreign aid and the beans had an off-taste.
program, based on a new foreign Hospital tests "suggested the
policy concept - one which presence of botuUsum toxin.. in
would take the burden off our the boy, but be did no t develop
shoulders ... and distribute it any symptoms of the fatal disease.
more evenly ... " The program However, when serum from the
began as the post-World War It can was injected into mice at the
Marshall Plan, and was renewed National Center for Disease
and expanded each year to cover Control in Atlanta , the mice died
new, developing nations.
from botulism poisoning.

a surprising 356-244, considering
only 31 per cent of England's
citizenry are in favor of joinin~.
Other new market members
would be Ireland, Denmark and
Norway. Present members include
France, West Germany, Italy,
B e lgium , H olla nd and
Luxembourg.
WASHINGTON - In a
surprising Senate vote Friday, the
U.S. foreign aid program was
killed after a stormy congressional
session which charged it had failed
to promote democracy and
friends for the U.S., as was its
purpose. The lop-sided 41 - 27
vote re·ectin the $2.9 billion bill

GREYriOUnD
SERVICE*

WASHiNGTON - The Food
and Drug Administration warned
Friday that a batch of Stokely

SAVF THIS HANDY SCHEDULE

LV. BUFFALO
AR. NEW YORK

11:30 a.m. $19.40 ONE-WAY
7:45p.m. . 36.90· ROUND-TRIP

LV. BUFFALO
.5:15p.m.
AR. SYRACUSE, N.Y. 8 :30p.m.

4.90 ONE-WAY
8.85 ROUND -TRIP

t 9.5S ONE-WAY
5:15p.m.
LV. BUFFALO
AR. ALBANY
11 :55 p.m. 17.20 ROUND-TRIP
Plus numerous additional schedules to these
and many other destinations
Your Greyhound student agent knows his way
around . He' ll get you in and out of town on
convenient daily servic~ between Buffalo and
New York with connections to a ll America.
Watch for special low-low fares ($20.50 RT)to
New York City direct from campus fo r
Thanksgiving and Christmas

.

,.....-..

-------,

TOAD:

.

l.l. Y.
PICKlEFACE

•

DURHAM , N.C. - Coeds at
Duke University can now obtain
loans of up to $300 to finance the
cost of an abortion in a state
where they are legal. Funds for
the program were allocated last
spring by the student legislature,
with the original $4000 coming
from undergraduate fees. William
Kennedy , a senior economics
major who started the project

RENO, Nev. - Police used tear
gas to force their way into the
Student Union at the University
of Nevada Thursday, and arrested
a band of black students who had
ignored orders to leave. The
confrontation began when campus
officials told the students to leave
the office of Bob Almo.
vice-president of student affairs,
which they bad occupied for a
week. The sit-in began the week
before with a demand for office
space for the Black Student
Union. An agreement was reached
where the black students could
remain in Almo' s offices pending
a search for space elsewhere on
campus. When the students were
asked to leave, they refused, and
took over additional rooms in the
suite. Earlier they had refused the
offer of ou~ide space for their
offices. Campus President Dr. N.
Edd Miller warned them they
were subject to arrest and
suspension, and an hour later
campus police, Reno police and
sheriffs deputies cleared the way,
and the arrests were made.

UNNERSITY TRAVEL
Division of Sub-Board I, Inc.

Schussmeisters Ski Club
Room 318, Norton Hall

Ski

Chamonix, France
Dec. 27th to Jan. 7th

Hnows

HIS
WAY : r----~
AROUnD.
KEN SIRLIN
STUDENT AGENT
\ .116 MARION ROAD

--,836-4169

I

(WINTER RECESS)
Niagara Falls, N.Y.
or on to

including New Years

Non-Stop to GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK

SCANDINAVIAN AIR SYSTEMS (SAS)

I I
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10 nights
11 days

via

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323/316 NORTON HALL Ext. 3602/3603

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OUR MAN IN
BUFFALO

THIS
mAn

said, ""The money will provide
transportation to a city, such 11
New Yodc:, where lepl abortions
are perfonnecl, and for docton;•
fees.'' The Duke plan is modeled
after the plan at the Univen.ity of
Maine, whk:h is now in its second
. semeater. A student must be an
· oodergraduate at least 18 years
old, and the loan must be repaid
within nine months.

$196
$298

OC- 8 JET

Ski Packages in

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Including hotels
Apartment - Chalets, Meals
Transfers and Gratuities

323/316 NORTON HALL

INFORMATION
Ext.

3602/3603/2145

The University Travel Center, its programs and services are made possible
by your Student Activity Fees via Sub-Board I, Inc .

the drMng to w:
,

...............................................

~

Monday, November 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�FRANK SEDITA
for COUNTY EXECUTIVE
,
Frank Sedita does not represent a new generation of leadership, no one
in this campaign does. He does represent the best of the old generation
of liberal, social·minded, aware political leadership. He is a politician
and a damned fine qne. He has a long record, not all of it good, but all
of it consistently close to the best possible.

POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Frank Sedita has been a supporter of John and Robert Kennedy
from the 1960 convention to the 1968 convention. In 1968 he worked
for the McCarthy peace plank, ·o pen primaries, and party reforms. He
has supported the open primary selection of:£reltes, unseating of all
white southern delegation and the 18·year-old te. The first two have
still to become the practice in Mr. Regan's pa .
There is certainly no whiff of apocalyptic vision rn this. There is,
however, a steady, consistant and honest l'pproach to national issues
which carries over to his handling of city . ..mment.
Frank Sedita was the first mayor in the nation to support the
October Vietnam Moratorium, he was a participant in those
observances and he has consistantty supported them. He understands
the connection between national and local wars. He is pledged to seek
the reorientation of both national and local prioritles away from the
veneration and pursuit of war. He pledges and will seek to have the new
county stadium designated Peace Memorial Stadium, honoring the
aspirations of all powerless people, regardless of the outcome of the
election.

THE POLICE
Frank Sedita inherited an underpaid, undertrained Police
Department which was the subject of two statewide probes. He brought
their pay up to national standards, increased training (including a
program which involves over 300 in college daues), Improved
equipment, fought for and finally last year got the beginnings of a
minority hiring program, appointed minority group memben to
positions of leadership in the department. He has tried to curb lhe local
manifestations of the national wave of lawlessneu among pofice. But
otd habits die hard. The police have fought him most of the way. The
papers have reported acts of traffic ticket harassment and equipment
sabotage to protest Sedita's appointment of a black preclnt captain. In
curbing the lawless elements in the department, Sedita has taken the
Erie Club to the Supreme Court. He will again if he has to. The police
are still fighting and so is he. A significant upshot of the battle is that
he has not received the endorsement of the policemen's Erie Club. He
didn't get It in 1969, either.

POLICE IN SCHOOLS
Police have no place in school. Fact admitted. But when the
administration and the students become sufficiently alienated so that
the casuality rate becomes more than a figure of speech, the Mayor has
one role in the dispute-restoring otder. It comes with the territory. The
only possible cop-out, given the limitation of the role, is to pau the
buck to the governor and ask for the national guard. Our man is not a
buck pauer. He has turned that one down three times. We'll stand by
the integrity that it takes to make such a painful decision and to live
with its repercussions.

Student Vote Power
We, the undersigned faculty and staff, urge our collegues and friends to

VOTE FOR

Frank A. Sed ita
for COUNTY EXECUTIVE
Marvin Bloom

c. Catz

'

I

Judith Falconer
Constintine Yeracaris
Franklin Zweig
Douglas Bunker
Barbara Bunker
Frank Hodges
Chartes Notess
Robert S. l;isk

Mike Milstein
Edward Katkin
Daneil Katkin
William Greene
Marvin Zimmerman
Dorothy •Linn
Morris Fried
Gilbert Moore
Herb Phillips
Robert D. Berdahl

David Hays
Robert Hayden
Arthur Cryns
Warren Button
Jim Blackhurst
David Kochery
S. J . Yaffe
John Medige
Gary Hoskin
Roberta Sigel

J~n lawe

Don Rosenthal
Jim Stimson
Tetsuya Kataoka
Jim Zais
Ken Cook
J. P. Jones
Philip Cook
O.Wid Bazelon

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP~A~IDPOLITICALA~DUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi
Page twelve . The Spectrum . Monday, November 1, 1971

�Revival of anti:..draft board conspiracy
byJaniiCromer
Sp«trum Staff Wrlttr

Three draft boards were
ransacked in Western New York
towns, Selective Service officials
discovered last Thursday.

.Karl L . Brouse, special agent in
charge of the Buffalo FBI office,
said draft board offices in Batavia,
Geneseo and &lt;Niapra Falls were
raided late Wednesday o r early
Thursday. They were discovered
wh e n personnel reported for
work. He said records in all three
offic~ were strewn about and
"some were torn up."
At the same time t~e FBI made
its official announcement a man
telephone Rochester radio station
WHAM and said the raids were
conducted by the "New and
Improved East Coast Conspiracy
to Save ILives." The caller said
raiders dCiltOYed 1 - A draft
classification fifes in aU three
locations and left a note at each
board addressed to President

Nixon, Attorney General John N.
Mitchell and FBJ Director J .
Sdpr Hoover.

'Coocemed people'
'1'he East Coast Conspiracy to
Save lives is not dead and you did
not break our back as you claimed
on the morning o f Aug. 22 when
you arrested 25 of us," t he note
said. " As a matter of fact , the
conspiracy is new and improved,"
it continued . " You see, it is not a
co n s pira cy at a ll , but a
movement : a movement of peo ple
concerned about other people and
their rights to live decentl y and in
p eace. We have no political
ambitions to further n9r material
fortu nes to protect. Therefore, we
will not be bought like so many
oth ers."
On August 22 , the FBI
announced the arrest of five
persons In Buffalo on charges they
stole and destroyed Selective
Service records and their rights to
Lsve decently and in peace. We
have no political similar crimes

the same day in Camden, New
Jeney .
Charles lee Darst, 22, o ne of
the five persons arrested in
Buffalo, told UPI Tbunday that
the FBI tbouaht they were
connected with the raids. " We got
visits fro m the FBI this morning,"
Darst at the old post office
building. Another 20 persons were
charged with said " We just don't
know who did it , but I think it's a
great thing."
'forcible entries'
All three break-Ins were termed
"forcible entries" by Mr. Brouse
of t he FBI. In Batavia, police said
windows were broken and flies
were tipped over at Local Board
78 . Geneseo polsce said the Local
Board 72 office was entered by
"breaking a door glass." Police in
Niagara Falls sasd entry was
gained at Local Board 80 by
breaking a rear door which bad
been sealed off. Officers reported
draft records were strewn about
the office but apparently none

were taken.
However, a spokesman for the
" New and Improved east Coast
Conspiracy to Save lives" cbimed
that 3,129 records were stolen
and "most will be returned to
mother earth ." The rest , an
anonymous called told UPI, were
the records of twenty
conscientious objectors "and they
will b e returned to their rightful
owners the indi vidu a ls
involved."
Such actions will continue, UPI
was told Friday, "as long as we
have to find ways of telling the
government to get out of
Vietnam ." The unidentified
spokesman said more than I00
persons were involved in one way
or another in the break-ins. He
said 70 percent of the records the
group allegedly has are 1- A draft
classifications. The caller sasd
1,573 records were taken from the
Niagara Falls office, 921 from
Geneseo and 653 from Batavsa .
•· w e consider this a totally
non - vio lent action," th e
spokesman said. "Property does

\.

not take preference to human
Ufe."
A spokesman for the Niapn
Falls draft board said 34 persons
from parts of the state would join
local federal personnel in tald.Qc a
tho r o U&amp;h inventory over die
weekend, and said elttra security
measures would not be.
implemented . " How much more
can you do?" the spokesman said .
" If they want to break in, they
will . They'll find a way.'' ,
A door to the building whJcb
houses the Niagara Falls bQ41'd
was fou nd unlocked and
unattended when city poUce made
routi ne rounds early Friday.
PoUce said the building was
sea r c h ed but nothing inside
appeared to be disturbed. Outside,
paint reading "Go NLF" and
"NLF Will Win" was s prayed on
windows at the Army and Marine
recruiting offices.
Karl Brouse, said the FBI
probe mto the raids was being
"pu rsued vigorously." As of
Fnday, no arrests had been made.

AT SATTLER'S!

One was thin,
fair and cleancut.
One was tall
dark and freaky.
Both were
sensational.
Dex1k Walker ripped
apart college gridirons
in the late 1940's.
Lew Alcindor
same kind of
menace on the
courts in the·late l960'a
'The DCXJker"and"Big
Lew:' Both appointed
this month, to Sport's
Immortality team of the

The Best of
Mercury

RECORDS and TAPES
ROD STEWART

BUDDY MILES

Every Plot.,• Tella A Stlf'f

LiYe (2-Record Set)

RECORD

347

RlCORO

4 97

TAPE

4 77

TA PE

6 97

URIAH HEEP

CHUCK MANGIONE
Concert (2-Record Set)

Look At Yourself
RECORD

3 47

RECORD

4 97

TAPE

4 77

Tt\PE

6 97

years.

Just part of the great moments
and the great memories that
began before you were born.
All featured in our November
Silver Anniversary issue.
Plus Eugene McCarthy
recalling his days in bush
league baseball.
Sport Magazine for November.
It's starting a small sensation
at your newsstand, right now.

Celebrating 25 momentous years of
bringing you. and your father, Into the action.

CHUCK MANGIONE
Together (2-Record Set)
RECORD

49 7

TAPE

6 97

PHILIPS
CLASSICAL
RECORDS
Ca talng
Price $5.98

371
Ptr

Rtcord

For Sheet Music &amp; Tapes, Too,
It's Sattler's Record Shops
...BOULEVARD MALL- Niagara Falls Blvd.
North of Sheridan, Amherst . 10 to 9 ttlru Sat.

• Aft Datu l•p•rts
• Ettlre CJtalec 11 Sttck
• Cusillered •1 Mut bperts IJ be
1\1 Wert-'s fiMst QIJiity R"t~s

Sale Also at Sat1fer's 998 Broadway and Seneca Mall

Monday, November 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�11uills and daDs

Winter teams start training
by Bury Rubia
SpcmEdltcr

lt'a that time apin. Soon the
snow will start fallina and all
Buffalo students will once apln
be flocking out in dtowa to see
their varsity winter tams in
action. AJthoup we have yet to
reach the dUDs of o.cember,
action Is under Wl'f to pnpue the
Bulls for their individual eeuona.
The varsity hockey Bulls
Uarted workouts last week,
hoping to improve upon their
8- 7- 1 record of lut teaSOn.
Under second-year Coach Ed
Wript, the Bulls will soon embark
upon an ambitioua 19-pme
schedule. The schedule, which
features ten ECAC Division 11
contests, opens Nov. 27 at the
Amherst Recreation Center with
the Bulls playing New England
CoUege.
The hockey Bulls, who started
their camp with 33 hopefuls, will
soon cut to 25 players. Coach
Wright explained that the aims of.
h is training period, ..are for

r

•

-

-

chosen

conditioning, to evaluate talent
and come up with the riJbt line
combinations." Apparently, the
key race in the hockey camp is for
pesbaps the most crucial pocition,
BOaltender. Coach Wfiaht lists five
hopefuls , includinJ three
freshmen and holdovers MUte
Dunn and Bob Da!Jler. In
addition to their ten ECAC
contests, the Bulls wiU appear in
the Merrimack Tournament and
face Ohio State fow times. One of
the Bulls' Ohio State pma will
be . played at the Memorial
Auditorium, markin&amp; the Bulls'
fint pme played under the liabts
of the big time. The Ohio State
auditorium contest became
Buffalo's only Aud pme when
Michigan State and the Bulls
oould not get together on a date.
The varsity basketball Bulls,
working out since Oct. IS, have
cut down to their squad limit of
12 players . Postmen Curt
Blackmore and Don Van Dusen
join forwards Jim Tribble, Neil
Lanaelier, Greg La.ker, Rick
Matanle and Joe Evans up front .
At. guuds Coach Ed Muto has

Bob

Vartanian,

Eric

Rasmussen, Greg Btuce, John
Forys and Orv Cott. The key to
the success of the Bulls will be the
ability of the auards to step in and
do a creditable job. The Blue and
Gold have another month of
pre«&amp;SSn trainina before they
open their season on the road
Dec . 1 aaainst Syracuse
University. Last season, the
Oranae played weU enoup to
earn a bid to the prestigiout
National Invitation Tournament.
In varsity wrestling, the varsity
and junior varsity combined boast
a squad of 26 members.
Second-year coacb Ed Michael's
Bulls posted a 14-6- 1 dual meet
season last year, and this season
the Bulls hope for more of the
same with an 18-date schedule,
beginning Nov. 19 at the East
Stroudsburg Open. The Bulls are
led by senior Ron Brandt, who
posted a 34- 1- 1 record en route
to being named a mid-season
Aft-American last year. All in all,
tho) Buffalo varsity winter teams
are hoping their training periods
will lead to early season success.

Cross Country Bulls
get better every day

Beef &amp; Ale Bouse
3191 MAIN ST.
(0. 8leS s.da OfUB)

Quarter Nights

by Bruce Enpl
Sp«trum Staff Wrlttr

With every passing meet this
year's Cross Country Bulla take on
more of the appearance of last
year's squad. The script is the
same and so are most of the
I
characters. The only change is in
(ll..seO...)
}
RoUbtc
Rod Splits
the star slot where Ed Fuchs has
Peppermlllt Sclblapps
been replaced by junior Jim
McClurkin. To be sure, McClurkin
Wille 011 die Rods
is not nearly as good as Fudls
Bam....,er1
was, but -very few coUegiate
Freaell Fries
runners in New York State are in
Fuchs' class. In any case,
McClurkin is the undisputed team
.----------------------------------~ leader and ~ been so since the
first meet . The slight junior
(McClurkin is o nly 5'6" and 130
pounds) has finished first among
the BuU harriers in every meet this
season and IY stj)J rapidly
improving.

THREE NIGHTS ONLY:

MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY 4 p.m.-&lt;loei,._

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Last Wednesday Buffalo ran
against Buffalo State, Niagara,
Gannon and Caoisius at Delaware
Parle Buffalo State's home course.
McClurkin won the event for his
third straight victory, as he
covered the 4 ~ miles in 24
minutes and 23 seconds. The
Bulls' only other finisher in the
top ten was Larry Krajewski In
sixth place.

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KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
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As a team , the BuUs managed
to salvage part of the season by
defeating two of their four
opj&gt;&lt;&gt;nents. Buffalo squeaked by

for only

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\
Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Monday , November 1, 1971

Gannon 27-29. and clobbered
Ca.nisius 18-45. Niagara beat the
Bulls 22- 39, almost identical to
the score that the Purple Eagles
beat Buffalo by earlier this season.
Buffalo State, whom the BuDs had
beaten the previous week, aveflled
that loa 25- 30. This ran the
Buffalo season record to 4- J 3
with only one meet to be
contested, tomorrow at Grover
Cleveland against St. Bonaventure.
Prior to last Wednesdays
five-team meet, Mc::Clwkin bad
back-to-hack victories at home
against Geneseo and on the road
at Binghamton. The Geneseo meet
was his first victory of the year,
which must have been particularly
sweet in that it foUowed many
close second place finishes. His
time of 29 minutes and 40
seconds was by far a personal best
for Buffalo's. home Grover
Cleveland Courae. In that raoe he
finished more than one minute in
front of the second place runner.
Then at Binghamton
McClurkin won again defeating
the three Binghamton harriers
that had beaten him in the
Lemoyne Invitational . In the
process he broke the course
record by three seconds, cloclcing
a fine 26 minutes and 30 seconds
for the five mile course.
Binghamto n's John Moreau, the
previous record holder, finished
second , 12 seconds behind
McClurkin .

JANEY &amp; DENNIS
Admission: Orch. $6.00, $5 .00, - Bale. $5.00, $4.00
Tickets Available at Norton Union Ticket Office

�I LAlli Pill
WANTED
WANTED: Term PIC*'I. All subjects.
ceH 817·U78 eft~ 9 p .m .
FEMALE ...d sl~ Meklnt to form
gtOYP with Sin- dynamic muSicians.
C.lt 635·1781. Don't worry ebout
expenence. Just be w1111n11 to work
1\ard. Will work ar011nd schedule.
WANTED: A used cooy of Bulc
Readlnts In Interpersonal
communication. Calf Janice 833-7571.
PART·TIME work. Oellv..,lng circulars.
oays only . Hourly pay. Phone
854-0400.
BASS and flute players needed for folk
group recording an album - needed
Just for album. Calf Ed 896-4409 nltes.
USED toots qualitY • wrenches,
socket Mtlt vlle'i!rlp pliers, vise, etc.
Call Carl 837-1549.
NEEDED• Snows and wh...l for 1971
Volvo, 6 . 85K15 . If you han
eltller/both call 835-3887.
WANTED: Well

known

roc:k group wants female voc:atlst IOOd PlY· Calf Bob 67~948.
WANTED TO buy or bortow - Paul
Oooclm..-.•s Empire City Chip Plenck
IS7-45H.

1H8 MGB. Wlte wme.tl, mufft•,
tood condition. 81300. Prlc•
14)ulltabfe, 8111. 282.0333 aft~ 5 p .m.

1970 XK~ Bel9e/BIIc;k con_,lb4e,
Brand , _ AM/FM s t - r.cllo.
EKCIIIent COftdltll)ft, Call 6844000
betWMn t-4. Ask for Dave.

1962 VOLt&lt;SWAOEN, K.lrmann Ghll.
Good condition, 1225 . Pilon•
832·5910.
1164 VALIANT, ~oor automatic
tranamllllon, 1200. 875•5727 aft~

AAM.BLER '64 mint condition. Must
sell. Mike of,_, 1016 Nlltlr• Falla
Blvd. 837-4223.

REFRIGERATORS , atoves •nd
WMh. .. Reeondltlonech delivered and
11uaranteed. o•o Appliances, 144
Sycamore, TX4-3183.

1969 VOLKSWAGEN
hpe/.,Uy•, 38,500 miles,
632-5354.

DUAL 1215 turntable. One y .. r old.
145. 833-9491.

SMITH-CORONA Sup ... Sterling
typewriter. Almost brand n - . 870 or
best offer. Calf 837-6558.

1M4 TRIUMPH Spitfire mechanically
400 clams! 833-6523. Ask for
J .B.

'64 IMPALA convertible, V-8, power
stMrfnt, automatic tranamlttlon, radio ,
toOd engine, 8150, 832-2154 after 5
p.m .

CHEVROLET. and Rambler, both are
rl4fable. we must sell aoon . Will accept
fair offer. 834·5312, 818-9285.

RIDE BOARD

FOR SALE
GEl' SERVICE Worthy of our
. ,...antM - Independent Foreign Car
S«vlce. 8311-1850.
CAPEHART stereo, hNdphones, 45
records, must sacrifice, $250.
833·9726 Jules, Glenn:

~feet,

BALDWIN stereo combo organ, 8995
new, will sail 8495. AlSo $200
amplifier for $50. 896·7655.
STUDIO couch with mattress matching
chair, bar stools, dresser, antique
trunk. 881.0141.

comm~dl!

6t~Op.m.

DATSUN 2000 Ro.dster, i969,
135-hp, 5 .. pMd, tldfll tires, low
r;niiNge, 81350 or belt offer. 877·5501
after Cl p.m.
1966 FORO Muatang Conv. Must sell.
Call 882·3045. Need the money now.
Good buy, $200.
MG Mld9et
691-7097.

1969.

Must

sail. Call

1965 DATSUN Roadster pelnted red
to 110 fMter, 8400 to il good home.
674-5575.
PAIR mounted 7 s35 x 14 snows. Ford
rims, $15. Call 833-o208 .

Martin and _...,._ tHc:trlc for Sale.

Wf. 8U-33e4, 135-9229.
U8 ORAD WNI tutOt FfefK:h, S.,_ntsh
Cbellnnlnt), t'..cl to bttnd. 811·2407.

BEAUTIFUL 1\endmlde golct •nd SII-

J-·ry - wecldlnt rlntS - •t senSible
price~.

J.P.

,..._.

655

QOkfW-.

Elmwood at F.rry St. 881-3400.

19" CONSOLE televiSion for ule
(fOOd condition), 820. 13-4-3693.

AFSert s AAt, WPs and host bfot:h«S

lnd sisters, 111 wetcome. Call K.ath~

radio
81050.

HanMn at 831-2401 for Information.
HI, me CllcO. Me want girt pen-pat.
Please wl'lte CIICO C/O F. Elsner, 164
Wlnt• Ave., Staten tsl•nd, N.Y .
10301. Can't hurtl

MISCELLANEOUS
TVPING done, 833..a236. Will plok up
work .

FEMALE riders wanted to Ann Arbor
and L•Min9, Michigan for wMI&lt;end of
Nov. 5. LNvlnt UB It 5 p .m . Call
831-2263 Of 834.0545.

PAINTINGS, Pl~lnt, panefllng,
carpentry, odd contracting Jobs
r. .sonlble. Len 881.0141.

RIDE wanted to Princeton, N.J . arN
any weekend or Tllanks9Mn9. C all
831·2950.

PIANO student
pupils. 894-6826.

desires

beginning

ACCOUSTIC guitarist ; Delta,
bottleneck, Appalac:lan styles. Will
teach betlnnln11/mlddlln11 students.
13/lesson. 835-1982.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
APARTMENTS available, furnished
and unfurnished, nNr campus, also one
room. Very rNsonlble. 896-8344,
evenings preferably.

A ES UMES expertly composed,
typed, fut, efficient .sarvloe. Call
835-4473.

ROOM AVAILA8LE, mill on ly,
saYen-mlnute w•lk, 812 per wMk.
Phone 832·2889.

ROOMMATES WANTED

NY's HOtel Tudor offers SUNV r.tes.
Reservations and Information.
832-o&amp;ll .

FEMALE grad or f.culty to lhare
apertment, 20 mlns. w•lk. Own r oom.
unfurnished, 870 Includes utilities. Call
Klty 837'7878 or 131·3508 .

ANVONE - Niagara Falls to London
- one way, $115, return $220, M.T .W.
881.0306, Thursday night . 173-5660,
5 :0G-10 sOO p .m. WMI&lt;Iy departures.

MARK WEINER:

FEMALE - own room - b .. utlful
modern furnished apartment.
five-minute walk from campus. 210
Wlndemere 8 37-7208 , Nov. 1.

We're not toing to SlY
what you expect us to SlY -

ANGOLA7 Sun, sand, snow - live on
the shores of bNutlful Lake Erie. Car
not necessary. 862.50 for one. $45 for
two. Call 549-4103.

BE PART of a listening 1nd JC)Nklnt
experience. Share In t ile process of
per~on · to - person
co mmunication.
Come to Psycllomat Weclntid1ys, 3-5
p .m . Millard Fillmore Room .

so shut-up and
accept it!
by
DONALD BLUMBERG
November 2- 20, 1971 • ART DEPARTMENT GALLER
4240 Ridae Lea Campus

PSYCHOMAT resumes Wednesday
Nov. 3, ~ p.m.. In t he Mlll•rd
Fillmore Room .

LOST&amp; FOUND

EXPERIENCED typl119, term Pll)ers,
diiSirtatlons, ttlesls - 833-1597.

NOTEBOOKS! Lett In car hllehlng
down Kenmore to Delaware, around
1:30 p .m. Wednesday 10/27. Sharon
877-312.9.
LOST : Male Gotden Retrl-r
missing lbOYt a week . Lost first In
ar... Call Don 837-1239.

BA8YSITTINQ, housacl.. nln11 done.
Exp erien c ed , reliable . Ow n
transportation. J •net 838-3429.

-

1971 VEARBOOKS available In Rm.
356 N orton o r N orton lyObby.

ua

GEO RGE Marcttflelel - The Spectrum
still wants and needs y011 . stoo by and
Sly hello•

PERSONAL

Opening and reception, Tuaday, November 2 , 8:00p.m.
. ._.rSporuored by Office of Cultural Affair~ : Art BOQrd - - - •

GUS IS A BIG BOY NOW AND
HE:'S GOT WHAT YOU WANT ... notes you slept through...
books you can't afford ...
clippings to send to your relatives... copies of incriminating
documents... your first novel. ..

COPIES!!!!

S. I. M. S. announces that MR. JACK FORUM, from The
New York City Center, wilJ be giving an introductory
lecture on TRANSCENDENTAL MEDrTATlON as taught
by Maharishi MEHESH YOGI ,

SCENTS
3SS NORTON

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1971
4 :00p.m.

244 NORTON UNION

JOIN

NOW

ROOM 318 NORTON HALL

UNDERGRADUATES

Making love Ia great. But why ah01114 you diminish the pllaaure by
having to worry about getting her p~nant? After au. lt'a your future
(and the future of aomeone cloae to you) that'allt atake.
II yo11 really giYI a damn about your life and hera ... then you'll want
to prevent accidental pregnancy. Br uelng one of today'a goaa&amp;met'tllln, eupremely eenaltlve condom1 that k•p the pleuute In aex, b\11
remow the worry.
And now you can obtain theM remllbble new condoms wllhout any
emoarraument, by ordering them privately by mall. .. from Population
Planning Aaeocllltea. The 11 top-quality brenda we offer are electronIcally t•ted and meet rigoroua FDA tandem.

GRADS. MFC
FACULTY, STAFF
I Yr. ALUMS

$25.00

, ... DlllwrJ-MoMJ led! Q. . . . . .
Dlac:over hoW aenaltlve condoma can be. Send
S4 for a deluxe
aamoler peck of 13 uaorted condoma, plua an lluatnrted broc:hure
dea&lt;:riblng our complete aelectlon. The deluxe aampler contains 3 dlf·
flrent brenda, Including the Fetherilw from England, the very thlnneat
lalex condom available In the U.S., and the extr~y popular Naturalamb. made of highly aenaltlve natural animal membrene for mlltlmum
tranamlulon of heet and Mnutlon. Or Mnd Juat $1 and get 011r excluaiYI Imported condoma: 2 Fether11tet and the pte..haoad NuForm, plua
the brochure. For brochure alone, Hnd only 2S.. All ordera are filled
the aeme day receiYid and Hnt In a plain package. If not delighted,
you mey return the unuaed portion of your order for a lull refund. Mail
the coupon today.

I"''

I
3NIGHTS FRE.E SKUNG - REDUCED RATE TICKETS
LESSONS - RENTALS - VERMONT TRIPS - EUROPE

------------------------,
•.c.
=-===-~11
C..... lilt,

21114

1 Please rush me In plain pac1ta1e:
Deluxe samplar of 13 assorttd
1
condoms- 5 dlffertnt brands, In·
eludilll ttlt super-thin Fatherllte

1

I

a

tnd ttle~turaiMnll

made of nat·

1 ural
ani I mtlllbrln..'J plus lllusl a~br~~~
2 Fe rlltes· 1 rfuform, plus
I broehllrt, st ${
1 a llklstratect brochure only, 25¢

namt

(ole..,. ool• lf

1
1

alldiiu

city

I

H

ilp

itite
lSl
I
I

1 enclose payment In full under

your money-blclt auarantee.

11

I
I

--------------------------

Monday, November 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�.·

r

~

Sports Information
Tomorrow: Varsity cross country vs. St.
Bonaventure, Grover Cleveland golf course, 3:30
p.m.; club soccer at Gannon, 3 p .m.
Saturday: Varsity cross country at the New
York State Invitational, Rennselaer Polytechnic
Institute, Troy, N.Y., 11 a.m.
The student athletic review board will meet
tomorrow evening at 6:30p.m. in Room 244 Norton
Hall.
Roller derby will take place tomorrow evening
at 8 p.m. in the Memorial Aufjitorium .
The Student Association and G~une Student
Association Speakers Buruu has announced that Bill
Russell, former coach and star of the·Boston Celtics,
will appear Tuesday, Nov. 9 at 8 p.m. in Room 147
Diefendorf Hall.

What's Happening
Mond.Jy, Nov. 1
Film: October directed by Sergei Einstein in 1928, 3
and 8 p.m. irr Room 147 Diefendorf.
Concert: Piano recital by Leo Smit. Beethoven's
D/obe/11 Variations and others, 8:30 p.m. in
Baird Hall; general admission is $1.50, $1 for
faculty and staff and $ .50 for students.
Tuesday, Nov. 2

••••••••••••-.•111•••-

Exhibit : Portraits of Students photographs by
Donald Blumberg; opening and reception starts
8 p.m. in the Art Department Gallery, 4240
Ridge Lea. Open to the public; through Nov. 20.
Film: Citizen Kone directed by Orson Welles, 3 and
8 p.m. in Room 147 Diefendorf.
Lecture: David Halberstam, journalist, politics '72 at • • • • • • •. ....,.....
8 p.m. in the Conference Theater.
Latin American Lecture: Or. Barry Lentnek will
speak on La till American Geography in
Perspective, 3-4:30 p.m. in Room 313
Townsend.
Symphony Concert: Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra . . . . .~--••11111!•

willplayfmm7,30- 11 ,30 p.m.

UB Photo Club has a film ~le today from 2- 3
p.m. in the Craft Shop. No film will be sold at
Wednesday's meeting.

Announcements
CAC needs volunteers to work at the "Cradle of
Black Pearls" day care center. Call 836-4169 or go to
Room 220 Norton Hall (the CAC office).

Norton Hall House Council will meet tomorrow
at 5 p .m. in Room 264 Norton. All those individuals
who have requested room and office space in Norton
for the 1971 72 school year please attend this
meeting to justify your room requests.

The Council of International Studies and the
Club Latino will have a lecture tomorrow at 9 p,m.
in Room 23 1 Norton. Or. F. Alegria, Cultural
Attache of the Chilean Embassy will speak on
"Chile: A New Road to Socialism."

CAC is sponsoring c1 community counseling
project for young people at 4590 Main St.
Volunteers are needed. Training will be provided.
For information concerning this new project,
contact Bob Gilbert, 837.0074 or apply in the CAC
office, Room 220 Norton, 831-3609.

The Undergraduate OT Club will have a
mandatory meeting tomorrow at 4 p .m. in Room
246 Norton for all students attending the National
Convention in Cleveland.

Outdoor Club will be holding a general
membership meeting tomorrow at 7:30p.m. Check
at Norton Information for the room number.

CAC needs volunteers to work at the Amherst
counseling center. Thirty-two hours of training will
be given in group counseling, one-to-one counseling,
answering phones, drug problems, etc. Cali 831-3609
or come to the CAC office at Room 220 Norton.

"

Horseback riding class forming; advanced
ground work and jumping; Monday and Wednesday
morning. Call Betsy at 884-2045 after 5 p.m.

- SueWelm

1

The Medical Technology Society will meet
today at 7 p .m. in Room 242 Norton. Or. Lees will
be a speaker and graduate school opportunities will
be discussed . All medical technology students are
invited to attend.

Orpnic living Club will meet tomorrow at 4
p.m. in Room 234 Norton.

UUAB Dance Club will have a meeting
tomorrow at 2 p.m. in Room 261 Norton. All
members are urged to attend.

Hillel classes in Beginnen Hebrew and Jewish
Ethics will meet tomdrrow in Room 262 Norton at
noon and 1 p.m. respectively.

Open Poetry ltudina every Tuesday, sponsored
by Outriders. Featured reader tomorrow is William

..,

Jlackpage
Sylvester, professor of English. Readings will be at
'The One-Eyed Cat, 28 Bryant Street (near Main),
9:30 p.m.- midnight; ail welcome to read. For
information call Professor Wickert, extension 4927.
Transfer Students who have been askt:d by the
Office of Admissions and Records to partici~ate in
an opinion poll of transfer students' perceptions of
this campus are urged to come to Room 233 Norton
today or tomorrow at one to the following times: 10
a.m., noon, 2 p.m. or 4 p.m. A maximum of 30
minutes will be needed.
The Hillel Group in Beginning Hebrew
Conversation will meet today at 7 p.m. in Room 262
Norton.
·
Filmmakers (cameramen and soundmen)
interested in making a birth control film for college
audiences and for national distribution, please
contact Bob Gilbert, coordinator of Research and
Development, CAC, Room 220 Norton, 831-3609.
Please submit a resume and explain access to 16 mm
equipment.
·
Student Theater Guild will hold a meeting
tonight at 7:30p.m. in Room 246 Norton. Old and
new members are welcome to attend.

Environmenta~ction

CAC meeting for all
volunteers tonight at 8 p.m . in Room 23j N~rton.
Ail involved are strongly urged to attend.

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~

State Univ*'lity of New YOf'k at Buffalo

~rty Hill

referenda

SA to give only information
Feeling that it is not their position to take a
stard on Poverty Hill, the undergraduate Student
Association will merely provide pertinent
information to students. This information will be
submitted with t he student referenda to be held
Nov. 4 and S to decide if Sub Board I, Inc. should
acquire Poverty Hill.
The referenda will include questions asking I)
Should the Student Association representatives to
Sub Board vote in favor of Sub Board purchasing
Po verty Hill and 2) If Sub Board decides not to
p~rchase Poverty Hill, would you be in favor of
Student Association spending $50,000 a year for
purchase, development and operation of Poverty
ffiU.
Additional questions include whether present or
future st udent fees should be used to finance any
expenditure and finally, if the student votang bas
ever been to Poverty Hill . Poverty Hill owners must
be informed before Nov. 20, 197 1 if Sub Board
wishes to acquire the land.
Controversial question
Th e whole quest1o n 1s an extremely
controversial one with both the Graduat e Student
Associatio n and Mill a rd Fillmore Student
Association recommendiflg to their st udents that the
land not be acquired. They basically feel that an
expenditure of over $600,000 for the development
of a recreational area for a questionable number o f
students is unjustifiable.
On the other hand, according to SA President
Ian OeWaal, ~A will not take an o fficial stand
because it should be totally a student decision.

However, some SA officials have unofficially
supported the Poverty Hill purchase as fulfilling
student needs.
Because of this unofficial but noticeable support
for Poverty Hill by the underaraduate SA, it bas
been suggested that they exclusively purchase the
property . The consequences o f this are uncertain . It
is certain , though, that Sub Board would be seriously
affected by a fund cutback . Sub Board is financed
thro ugh d o nat io n s o f the various student
governments with SA contributing the laraest
amoun t. Some have even suggested that if SA were
to buy the land, they would be forced to withdraw
from Sub Board.
Informal agreement
How the SA representatives will vote as
dependent upon the results of their student
referendum. Mr. DeWaal explained that there exists
an info rmal agreement among Student Association
representatives to Sub Board to cast their ballots
pro portio nate to the vote of the undergraduate
students voting in the referendum . This would mean
that if 75 people voted for Poverty Hill with 25
against , three SA delegates would vote for purchase
with one against.
The other student governments have also
scheduled referenda to decide the issue. However, a
recent exc\:utive com mittee meeting of MFC
resolved that no referendum was necessary and that
the executave committee would decide for the 5000
night students. This resolution may be reversed as
there is presently a petition ·being circulated among
niaht students to demand 1 referendum be hel~ .

· Student Assembly --

passes BSU budget
The Student Auembly granted
th e Bla c k Students Union
unprecedented autonomy as a
"special interest nrgamzation" at
its meeting Wednesday.
The decisio n gives the fo rmer
club the power to spend its
budget as it wishes. Addilionally,
the BSU will be able to bring its
o wn speakers to campus, instead
of operating through the Student
Association Speak~rs Bureau .
During the two and a half hour
meeting, the Assembly approved a
$20,175 budget for the BSU ,
wh ic h the treasurer of the
organillation wiU disburse with no
interference from SA.
Surprisingly, debate was
relatively short and low key.
Those Assembly members who
objected to the motion seemed to
feel that granting the BSU power
over jts treasury would set a
precedent that other clubs might
foQow . They recommended that
black studeol.l work through the
Aasembly rather than withdraw
Into a government within a
government.
Other members, however,
declared that the Assembly, wh.ich
is overwhelmingly white, could
not determine how a black
orpnization should.- spend iU
money. BSU spokesmen araued
earlier last week that they wanted
only to control their own budget
and stressed that the action was
not put of a black-white figllt.

Black and wh.ite students, they
added, should recognize that the
administration ultimately controls
the purse strin ~ and therefore
should not waste their energies
quarreling with each other.
No 'donut' debates
There was even less
controversy over the BSU budget
wh.ich passed easily. Upon a
request o f the Assembly last
week , the SA Finance Committee
and Executive Committee had
gone over the . BSU budget
request, cutting it in half. This
figure included a $5000 allocation
for speakers.
In other action, the Assembly
approved the final wording of
four questions wh.ich will appear
on the Nov. 4 Poverty Hill
referendum .
Perhaps remembering last
week's meeting, where Assembly
members spent an incredible SO
minutes discussing whether or not
doughnut QlOney should be
allotted to the American Institute
of Aeronautics and Astronautics,
all club budgets on the agenda
were passed en masse.
As the mee!ing wound down.
the half dozen remaining
Assembly members martaged to
pass a motion placing the
long-postponed b\ldset of the
Food Co-op first on next week's
.,enda before hurryin&amp; home for
dinner.

-Haas

Guerilla theater

Vietnam Vets protest war
P rotest in g the war a nd
P resi d e nt Nixon 's economic
policies, the Buffalo chapter of
the Vietnam Veterans Against War
staged a rally and march through
downtown Buffalo last Tuesday.
The marc hers, abo u t fifty
members of the vets group,
initiated the use of a new and very
interesting tactic caUed guerilla
theater.
The basic purpose of the
demonstratjon was not only to
protest the Vietnam War artd ill
other wars, but also to bring art
end to the conacription laws
which the vets claim are

unconstitutional, and wh.ich they
feel force people to kill. Through
this demonstration , they also
protested the unemployment rate
among returning vets, as weU as
increased benefits under the Gl
bill. The organization also wants
the release of all war and draft
protesters now in jail.

Wu simulatioa
As the march began leaflets
were passed out, wh.ich the vets
claimed
dropped
soon to
troops.

were simllar to those
on Vietnamese villages
be entered by American
The pamphlets inform

·· ···· ··· · ·· ·· ········~·· ·· ·· ····---··· - ·~···

villagers that all those who run
from approaching troops may be
shot as suspected Viet Cong. The
first of four episodes of guerilla
theater occurred as the march
proceeded down Court Street
toward Franklin. At this comer,
three girls dashed through the
lines and were immediately
pursued by eight screafl\ing vets
who " beat" and "shot'' them with
toy guns. There was also a
demonstration wh.ich appeared to
be a CIA sponsored· heroine trip,
as two large wooden needles
labekd "CIA SK.AG" were passed

�Poverty HiD still discussed
the total use. Clearly. th ere is reason lo believe that
Poverty Bill would not be wed very much even in
t he warm summer m onths.

by Lee Smith
Special to·tfle Spectrum

-s1ntos

"ideotapelectrrres
may be ready soon
by Barbara Mink
Spectnun Staff Writer

Letters bounce wildly like an
exerdse on "Sesame Street"
finally spelling ''An Introduc tion
to Fortran by Dr. Michael E.
Allen." A man Sllated behind a
desk appears on a little screen , his
voice fills the headset. and a
,private television le~ture begins.
Thro ugh the effort s of Robert
Ting, head of the Science and
Engineering Libraries, the chance
to review vidllo-taped classroom
lectures will soon be available to
the Unive rsity's undergraduates,
enabling them to see classes they
have missed , or simply further
their understanding by repetition .
The idea to use television was
formulated by Mr. Ting • year
ago; and with t he help of
Professors Margolis, Roberts and
Se\ig, audio-visual apparatus was
purchased w\th non-state funds .
The two video-tape playback
machines, six nine-i nch mo nito rs
and 12 listening stations were
installed in September.

''When a dot:tor delivers a lecture
o n nuclear reactors, it is to a TV
camera , and it is as If t he st\.ldent
is learning through a middle man.
This does not intrude as much as
it would in an English course
where the ideal learning situatio n
is a direc t dialogu e," he
continued .

A first

Tlte S tate University o f Buffalo
is the first school in the country
to make video tapes available to
the s tudent body . Other schools
have started ta pe programs, but
they do not rct:ei vc as much
fa cu Hy s upport. It takes a
pr o f essor approximately three
months to comple te a half-hour
tape, so the fa culty must be
willing to d evote a lot of time to
the unde rgraJuates. " I think th e
undergraduates are far mo re
impo rtant than anythi ng else;"
stressed Mr . Ting. With a few
exceptions, the tapes will be
produced by University fac ulty
m ~mbers, so they will be "geared
for students progressing in the
same t:ourse o f study ."
Unfortunate limitation
Mr. Ting concluded : " Once we
This equipment enables two have assigned course numbers to
groups of six students each to the tapes I whi ch stio uld be by
view and listen to two different J anuary!. I think they will
t&lt;tpes at the same time. Eleven becom e indispensable fo r any
tapes are already finished, and st ud e nt t o make o ptimum
more are in productio n . Mr. Ting progre ss in his st udies in
ho pes that the I OO·tape ca pacity at:cordance with his ability and
wilt soon be filled .
time."
Unfortunately. this new use of
the television media will be
available only to those in the
PERSONAL SALVATION
"If thou shall confess wilh thy
natural sciences, mathematics and
mouth the Lord Jesus, a.n d ahaJt
technological departments. " I feel
that the audio-visual method of believe in thine heart that God hath
learning is more effective in these raised Him from the dead, thou shalt
'Rom 10:9
areas , as opposed to the be aved."
humanities," explained Mr. Ting.

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10% DISCOU NT

The Spectrum is publishlld thrs.
t l mtls a Wtltlk, tillery Monday,
WlldntiSday lind Friday; during tht1
TtlfiU/llr «:Mitlmic ytNir by Sub-Board
1, Inc. OffiCIIS artl /~ted lit 355
Norton Hall, Sr.ttl Univerrity of New
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Nt1W York,
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TtllephoM: ArN Code 716; Edl torllll
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With student I0 card
on jeans and tops that
make it happen by
Landlubbers, H.I .S.,
Wright, Hagger Lees and
th e rest of the best.

Rt1prest1ntfld for Mivertlllng by
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SBrllice, Inc., 360 Lexington Ava.,
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Sub#ription ram are $4.60 per
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S.Cond CIIJ.U Postaf/6 peid at Buffalo,

tJ•w York.

CirculaTion: 16,000

The action by the Graduate Student Association
Executive Committee and senators pointed out the
totally negative character of the plan to purchase
Poverty HiU. Their devastating analysis of t~e
quesHon pointed out that : I) Sub _Board I. I nc. IS
unjustified in even considering the development of
recreation areas, especially SO miles away; 2) the
plans are financially irresponsible and impossible; 3)
t he control of Poverty Hill would not be in the
hands of the students ; and 4) the purchase of the
land would do it a disservice. These were pointed out
at the GSA meeting of last Monday . and are
wo rthwhile to consjder in connection with the
upcoming referendum .
The reasons Sub Board I was created explic.itly
reject any notion that they are justified irt s pending
any money , let alone almost S3A mmion, ~m the
purchase and development of land for recreatlo~ . As
outlined in the articles of incorporation, Sub Board 1
is supposed to promote educational activities for the
general student body of the State University of
Buffalo . The word rec reation is never mentioned .
How can Sub Board justify the commitment of so
much money for a project that wo uld serve as the
entertain ment of t he s mall group of students who
would use Povert y Hill? Apparently either Sub
Board is ignorant of t heir fu nc tion o r they choose to
ignore this questio n.
Competence questioned
At any rate they d idn't raise the problem o n
Fact Sheet No. I of last Friday's Tile Spectrum . Sub
Board wo uld like people to deal w1th this issue with
the presuppositio n that they are jus tified in ~u ch
ac tivities and consider it from the narrow perspec tive
of financial considerations and recreational value.
Ho wever, if we deal with it at this level, the reasons
against it are so compelling that the cred ibility and
t:o mpete nce of Sub Board 1 are called into question!
This conclusion is reached after considering t he
following questions: Who could use Poverty liiU?
Who would? How much will it cost and are their
figures at:curate?
It is relatively safe to assum e that a good
po rtion of the students would not be able to ttavel
the 50 miles to Poverty Hill and would not possess
the camping equipme nt needed to spend t he might.
But allowing that if someone really wanted to trav~t ·
the two hours down Rt. 2 19, the questioo he,c ornes:
does anyone really want to? The user sunrey in the
report o f Drayton Bryant Associates, hired by Sub
Board as a consultant firm for Poverty Hm, prepared
for the tid y sum of SSOOO, states that between June
7 and Aug. 7 the place was used a t the rate o f 31
students per day. This figure was swelled by the
Fourth or July weekend when 7 per cent (four days
o ut o f 6 1) of the time accounted for '20 per cent of

Basic math needed
The Fact Sheet includes all sorts of figures on
development costs. Some doubts about their
reliability are raised by the figyres of $4200 annual
down payment (based on an interest free loan!) and
the o perating costs of $25 .ooo per year This figure
is supposed to b~ an average estimate a f the total
costs over the te.n-year period and reflects inflation
and extra costs generated by development of
increased serviees. Basic math is obviously not one of
Sub Board's talents, for a quick estimate at the rate
of S per cerH inflation puts the costa at over
$25.000. When the added cost from development is
added there remains tittle resemblance between the
estimated figures given and the likely costs. Aside
from these little errors amounting to tl~ousand s of
dollars, there is just the sheer size of the costs: over
$650,000. The fac t that it is so large means it will be
spent over the next ten years ,and leads us to the
problem of development and administration.
Continuity problems
·Not surprisingly the Fac t Sheet once again
proves inadequate in answering the crucial question
of administration while the comprehensive plan has
over 30 pages on t he proble m . What sort of summary
is this fact sh eet? As outli.ned in the big plans, the
problem of continuity of administration necessitates
the creation of a Poverty Hill Corporatio n consisting
of Sub Board members, past and present, "informed
students" (one o r two) and an advisory committee
consis ting of the University President (Robert
Ketter), th e Vice President of St.udent Affairs
( Richard Sigglekow), the director o f Athletics and
Rec reation, and last but not least , the president of
Schussmeister's Ski Club .
Perhaps this select group will be able to make
s ure the interest of the student s will be known to
Sub Board's Poverty Hill Corporation. The last
question to answer concerns the development plans.
· Rest assured they are not the o n~s listed in the Fact
Sheet for they are directly contradicted by the
comprehe nsive plan. ln partic ular the legally
requir~d development is phase one and not phases
one and two as told in bold fa~e type in U)e fac t
shee t. (See pages 46·7 and 1 I 8 of t'hi C'od\ptehensive
Plan .) Phases one and t)YO are .Lust fhe prerequisites
for phases 'three and four . fntruded among phases
on.e and two is a plan to c reate a 12 - IS ac re lake.
One doesn't have to be a scientist t o know that this
will cause serious proble ms for Mother Nature in her
fight to ressist rape by Sub Board I.
The only amusing thing about this whole affair
is that the more o ne finds out about it, the more
absurd the whole thina b ecom es.

WVSL and WphO, along with

IRONSPUR PRODUCTIONS
Present

John Mayall
Spirit
Fleetwood Mac
Crazy Horse

.

Coluseum
Nov . 8th

in MEMOR IAL AUDITORIUM

$500
Tickets now on sale at: Norton Union, State College on Elmwood, Yellow
Monkey, Brundo's Music Store, and the Falls Ticket Agency.
SEE FIVE GREAT ACTS FO R THE PRICE OF ONE.
Due to separate illnm, both Buddy Miles and Deep Purple were ulllble to play as scheduled.

Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, October 29, 1971
I

�Colle!(iate Assemhlv
...
votes on College A
In a long and bitterly debated
meeting, the Collegiate Assembly
decided to officially deal with the
current conflict within College A
between Bambii Abelson and
Stanley Dayan .
Mr. Dayan has been petitioning
the Assembly to take up the case
of his recognition as a College A
staff member.
The Assembly came to its
decision after overwhelmingly
voting down a motion that would
have directed the Assembly not to
take up the case. The vote was
13-4.

It was the end of a long,
drawn-out, and at times, highly
volatile affair. Many of those who
attended the Assemb\y meeting
felt that the meeting would have
dra88ed on for many more hours
had it not been for the fact that a
Millard Fillmore College class was
scheduled in the room in which
the Assembly was holding its
meeting.
During the debate , discussion
centered on Mr. Dayan's proposal
to have Ms. Abelson replaced with
a coordinator who would be
neutral. Mr. Dayan's choice was
George Adoff of College Z.

Question of legitimacy
There is "no solution but to

haye a coordinator for College A"
other than Ms. Abelson , he said ..
He noted that if this was not
done, there would either be
"considerable problems over who
would vote" in the name of
College A. The only other
alternative would be for the
Assembly to "dismiss my case.
"If it [the Assembly] feeU my
case is legitimate, then It has no
other choice" but to choose a
coordinator for College A or
" force it" upon the College A
staff.
Ms. Abelson countered saying
that the conflict between Mr.
Dayan and herself was purely an
"in t e rnal matter." Then she
pointed out that section five of
the Stern Prospectus stated that
internal matters are to be handled
by the college in question.
She noted that the entire staff
of College A voted unanimously
that Mr. Dayan not be recognized
as a staff member and not. allowed
to teach his course within the
College. She said that the course
description he had handed in
during the summer "was the worst
that I have ever seen .
Not the same
"I looked at the first course
description" that he handed in

--Erlebacner

"and I couldn't understand it,"
she said . Ms. Abelson then told
her secretary to call Mr. Dayan to
inform him of it. He submitted his
second course description but she
noted lhat it was just as bad .
Robin Levine, a collegiate
Assembly member, questioned the
legitimacy of the current College
A staff. She noted that Ms.
Abelson picked her staff after the
old staff quit. Therefore, Ms.
Levine said, the staff would
naturally support Ms. Abelson .
Another collegiate assembly
member charged that the current
College A was not the same
college in terms of philosophy and
goals as it was when Dr . Fred
Snell was · Master. "This is not
College A. This is not the College
A that we once knew." He said

that although something of this
nature is to be expected when
there is a change of leadership, a
change in the entire philosophy of
the coiJege makes it a very serious
matter.
Administrative pressure

Retorting this, Ms. Abelson
claimed that she was appointed
coordinator by the CollegiAte
Assembly last May. However,
there was some question as to
whether this was true or not . This
and a charge lhat former acting
Vice President for Academic
Affairs Daniel Murray pushed
through Ms. Abelson 's
appointment.
At that time, College A's
summer budget was frozen by Dr.
Murray. Thjs was the result of the
dispute over the College's prevtous

commitment to self~eterrnination
and self-evaluation. Dr. Murray
pointed out that the budget
would be unfroun once College A
gave these principles.
According to Ms. Abelson, she
told Dr. Murray that she would
abide by his decision and take all
-responsibility for it in order to
unfreeze the budget despite the
advice of Dr. Snell and Mr. Dayan
not to do so.
In fact , she charged that she
"was threatened by Stanley
Dayan and Fred Snell" to fight
for those principles upon which
College A was founded or else
they would come back and fight
against her in the fall. She quoted
both of them as saying: "You'd
better fight that self-evaluation
and self-determination in the fall
or else."

Bookstore refunds
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SAVIMONIY
SHOP AIMY NAVY

Editor's note: Tl1e following are parr of the continuing list of books which the Unillersity
Bookstore overcharged, IJiolating the wage-price freeze. If you bought dny of these books
this semestw. you ore enritled to a refund of the amount which you were overcharged.

Author

Title

Brown

Manchild in the
Promised Land
French Colonialism

Brunschivig

••Tr•u ('lfW"

.30
2.00

1871 - 1914

Cohen
Greene
Mager

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Marcuse
Mountcastle
Cullen
Cullen
Gide
Herz
Lockhart
Mills
Schatlschider
Turney
Webb

Evans
Freud
Jakobovitz
Remak
Seton- Watson
VanValkenburg

Investment Analysis &amp;
Portfolio Management
Language Skills in the
Elementary School
Preparing Instructional
Objectives
One-Dimensional
Man
Medical Physiology
2 vul set
Management Rights &amp;
Collective Bargaining
Negotiation Labor
Management Contrates
Two Legends
Beginners of the
Cold War
Constitutional
Rights &amp;
Liberties
Rtadin~ on the
Sociology of Small
Groups
The Semi-Sovereign
People
Simplified Statistics
for Education &amp; Psychology
Unobtrusive Measures
Oxford Economic Atlas
of the Middle East &amp;
North America
Macroeconomic Acltvity
Writings of Anna Freud
Readings in the Psychology
of Language
Origins of World War
One
East European Revolution
Network Analysis

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Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�~ews reaction

Crangle finds politicid 'dirt'

Streutna Democ,.uc .~»rtY
pf\tlosophy and accomplishments
d c har &amp;ina poll tical
:nnexperionce, Erie County
Democratic Chalrinan 1pe Crangle
reacted to recent The SpectrUm
news commentaries on the current
race for Erie County Executive.
Labelling Mr. Crangle " the
Democratic Boss in connol of the
city," the news commentaries
favored RepubUcan candidate Ed
Regan for county executive over
Democratic Buffalo Mayor Frank
Sedita.
In an exclusive interview, M'r.
Crangle commented that "it is
easy in the classroom o r on the
campus for spmeone outside of
government to say what ought to
be done and what should be
done ... It's something else to be
ln the trenches and actually try to
implement thin~ and try to get
people working together."
According to Mr. Crangle, Mayor
Sedita's record proves that he has
succeeded in such program
planning at\d implementation.

Regan has no ·such recOrd but Regan: "How can you support a
merely an " empty television penon that you kno~ _h as been
image." It is part of a whole deliberately decemng the
Republican ·party propaganda pubUc?" On the ~ther hand, Mr.
ploy, he said, " to get people away Crangle partly JUStified Mayor
from the Democratic party and Sedita's candidacy by pointing to
the philosophy of that party by the array of Sedita supporters
running somebody with some sort whic h have includ~d Ted
of image, somebody young and K~nnedy, Al LowensteUl, John
attractive to the pubUc."
Lmdsay• George McGovern and
Explaining that some people Hubert Humphrey.
identify liberal forces by such
s uperfi cial sta nda rd s as GOP responsible
appearance, Mr . Cr~ngle
He additionally said that
maintained "that it is unfortunate Sedita's job performance can be
that some people of tho tested by comparing Buffalo with
community have been attracted any other large urban area in this
by the artificialness o f Ed Regan." country: ..You can go back to the
He said further : " I'm sure it riots of 1967, Mayor Sedita
would be much easier for some wasn't Uke Gov. Rockefeller who
people to be attracted to the stayed away from Attica; he went
mayor if he were 41 years old or down to the heart of the
35 years old or wore a certain disturbances and prevented
kind of suit. I just think it is bloodshed and tried to cool things
inteU~ctually dishonest to be able down. And it worked, and that is
to judge this campaign on a pretty important to show about a
perton's artificial image."
man's character and attitude."
In addition, Mr. Crangle said
Obscene ad
that it is important to consider
Because Mr. Regan is "clean the basic distinctions between the
cut and fresh-looking,'' Mr. Democratic and Republican party.
Crangle explained, people feel The Republicans, according to Mr.
that he is naturally upright, Crangle, are responsible for the
honest and moral . However, he
present crises of the nation such
continued ' Regan is more as Inflation and unemployment.
accurately judged by his past He further maintained that the
record (which, he said, included RepubUcans have always stood for
endorsed support for such the benefit of business and
notables as Al(reda Slominski, Industrial interests whlle the
Nelson Rockefeller and RJchard Democrats have worked to
Nixon) and by his conduct of the improve the lot of the common
present camp&amp;ip .
American worker.
Referring specifically to r"
Regan advertisement containint a
Answering charges by The
sign that said, "Sedita fuclcs," Mr. Spectrum City Editor Harry
Crangle maintained : ..,.here is no Upman that he is "the se~ond
doubt that they saw the word most powerful urban political
'fucks' on the sign .. . they were boss In the country," Mr. Crangle
aware of it, and they dragged their remarked : " I am very flattered; he
feet in removing it from TV ." makes me the second most
This awareness, he said, "perhaps powerful man in the country. I
goes to the most basic flaw of the didn't realize I bad that power."
man's character - he probably He continued : ' 'I only perhaps
didn't even reaUze that there was wished that I bad one-tenth of the
anything wrong with it."
power that Is supposed to be
In light of this, Mr. Crangle attributed to myself or people In
challenged any endorsement o f Ed the category as county chairman."

Sub Board offering
Applications for the poeitioa of Publications
Director for Sub Board I wW qaiD be Qken. Anyone
who II wiWnt to ipetld loq houn, act much
qpnatioo and ~ Utde in retum ia uked to
apply. Applicadou are available iD Rooma lOS, 261
and 166 Nortoo HaD. rtea~e baYC all applic:atioos
returned to Mart loreutetn, ~ JD8UICT by
Mond8y, No•. l, 1971, to Room 266.
KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31st~ 8 :00p.m.

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AdmissJon Oreh. $6.00, $5 .00-Bah~. $5.00, $...00
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0

Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, Ootober 29, 1971

\

�Vietnam Vets. . .
-contl nu~

around, and the other kind o(
shooting wu simulated.
The final sh owln.,g of the
guerilla theater held a startUng
surprise. This exhibition started
out in the same manner as tile
others had. When· the girls were
cornered in fron t of the Federal
Building on Main and Goodrich,
however, they suddenly dashed
into the building· and -performed
their skit Inside. This sudden
move surprised a lot of people,
especially the federal employees
inside the building. As one of the
participating vets put it : "We
scared the shit out of a lot of
people in there. Tiley actually
thought someone was really
getting killed.''
Slight confrontation
This move obviously upset the
escort of Buffalo police who
accompanied the march . They
confronted Mr. Alan Donohue,
head of the BVVAW, as a picket
line began to form in front of the
building. Mr. Donohue said that
" I was told that any further
actio n outside the Federal
Building wa~ out of their

from

.,.oe on-

jurisdiction, and we were now
breaki ng the law ." The
demonstration ended here because
as Mr. Donohue explained : " ffwe
suyed, ten of us would have beeIT
arrested ; and that was too big a
risk for what we may have
accomplished."
Mr . D onohue further
commented on the use of guerilla
theater, pointing out that "these
tactics were meant to convey th e
brutality of the acts we were
forced t o commit while in
Vietnam . Peo ple have been
reading and hearing about these
acts through the media for a while
now . yet they still don't reali7e
the actual significance of them .
Through the guerilla theater.
though , they experience the real
effect of these acts, and the
impression this leaves on them as
much more significant."
The BVV AW is a newly formed
and growing organization. They
are tentatively planning another
demonstration sometime next
month . Their hope is that further
participation by other concerned
vets will further increase their
effe~tiveness.

Food OkJp: delayed action
The establishment of the Food Co-op has been
delayed because of "bureaucratic hassles," according
to Harry Wilker, a Co-op volunteer.
Seeking to establish a storefront in the
University area, the Food Co-op applied for SA
funding in the neighborhood of $5000. This money
is needed for a down payment on a storefront lease,
for payment of rent and to stock their shelves with
goods. The Co-op's application was submitted to the
Finance Committee in late September. which
returned a favorable report. Co-op representatives
were then sent to a meeting of the SA Executive
Committee.
"Our application was kicked around with all
kinds of rules and parliamentary procedure that we
were not prepared for," explained Mr. Wilker . The
end result . he explained, was that the executive
committee "refused to deal with the request" and
referred it to the Student Activities Committee,
which was yet unformed at that time. Members of
the Co-op subsequently brought their request up at
the first Student Assembly meeting. where it was
tabled
No substance
" It was at that time that I contacted (Student

Rights Coordinator! Dave Steanwatd," said Mr.
Wilker. " Dave went to (SA President J lan DeWaal
and informed me that they had agreed to discuss our
request at the next executive committee meeting ."
At that meeting on Tuesday. Mr. DeWaaJ told the
Co-op that their request could not be discussed ~in cc
he had made up the agenda, and they weren't on it.
" tan was on his high horse,'' complained Mr .
Wilker. The Co-op was about to leave when Mr.
Steinwald walked in, and the matter was discussed at
his insistence. "They talked for ten minutes abnut
rules without ever getting to the substan~c or the
issue," said Mr. Walker. The committee ruled that
''since
was sent to Student Activities. and they
have"'tceponed o n it yet, we can make no rulinog.'
~~rding to Mr. Wilker. the f ood Co·vp IS p
vacllm of a personality ~onflict withm the e&gt;.ecutivc
comm1ttec. "My impression is that fan and Dave sec
each other as enemies," he noted. Mr. Wilker also
r~ented that the Fnod Co·op was being u'&gt;cd 1-ty SA

Jt

...

•,

"as a laxative to clean their bowels,,. as he termed it.
The Food Co-op next sought out Student
Activities Chairman Mark Weiner, who told them to
come to next Tuesday's Student Activities meeting.
"Unofficially, Mr. Weiner indicated that there would
be no problem getting it approved," said Mr. Wilker.
" But then it has to go back to the executive
committee, and who knows if they'll go along"with
the approval ."
A further problem is that the Food Co-op feels
it must get started by Christmas if it is to be in
operation this year. Unfortunately, it may take
several meetings of the Student Assembly before
Oteir budget is approved. " It's entirely possible· for
DeWaal to stall this thing into the second semester,"
speculated Mr. Wilker.
Special project
The Food Co-op has already lost one storefront
because they tacked the financial capital to sign a
tease. They presently have an opportunity to rent
the location of the Chicken Broaster, right across the
street an the Unaversity Plaza, which is going out of
busaness. But they may lose that opportunity soon,
too. One decasaon the Co-op had to make was
whether to apply for funding as a club or a special
project A club can only receive $750 its first yea1,
but a special project. which can be granted any
amount, as anclig~ble to receive funds after the first
year.
They decided to apply as a special project
because the $750 " wouldn' t do them any good,"
according to Mr. Wilker. However, he pointed out.
SA is less favorable to cl ubs, which they know are
going to be permanent members. If they are able to
get SA fundtn g.• the Food Co-op hopes to offer
vitamins. canneil goods and other items to students
at cuH:lle pru:es.
They're even contemplating .e Snack Bu l"ith
foods. like yo~urq (heese, milk , eW;:. at cheappacC$.

If they &lt;lrC un~le to teceive SA fWldjng. they will go
atune, gathering funds from sources like
contributions at a table an Norton. But sky..ftigh
rents an the University Plaa may make this approach

H

unfea~1hle

Betty Furness at Buffalo
Betty Furness, former spec1al a~·nstanl ror COn!\umer Affairs for President Johnson.
and foriuer executive director of New York State's Consumer Protection Board , wiJI
speak tonight at 8 p.m. in Haas Lounae.
In both jobs, Miss Fumes.-; has demon~trated her expert ise by fiahting for consumer
interests in the fields of credit regulations, fede ral meat inspection and hidden interest
rates. She has also fought fo r consumer protection , voluntary vendor support and
legislation that required f.airneliS if voluntary compliance could not be achieved.
Her appearance is being llponsored by the Graduate Student Association's Speaker's
Bureau.

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RUNNER
Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�Teachers threaten to
strike for pay raise
contract , if approved , will go into
effect in 1972 and will probably
be a two-year plan.

by Pat Malo ney
Sp«trum S toff Writer
A strong possibilily exists that
Buffalo may be confronted with a
teacher's strike in 1972 according
to Thomas Pisa, president of the
Buffalo Teacher's Federatio n. The
teacher 's uni on w ill begin
negotiatio ns for its 1972 contract
with the city o f Buffalo in a few
weeks. Currently, the union is
involved in a Federal District
Court suit to gain pay raises
frozen by Nixon's economic
measures.
Addressing a meeting of the
Student New York Stat e
Teacher's Association. Mr. Pisa
outlined the ltistory and goals of
his organization. Until a few years
ago, most teachers' associations
were basically "phUosophical
societies" set up and ruled by
sc h ool boards. The Buffalo
Teacher's Federation was founded
In J 947 by Joseph Manch - now
superintendent of schools for the
city of Buffalo. and a chief
adversa ry of the now-"mllitant"
BTF.
The BTF began its activism in
the late sixties, when the Taylor
Jaw went into effect. This
legi slati o n required "public"
employees to negotiate contracts.
and the federati o n t ook
adva ntage of tltis. Accord~to
Mr. Pisa, "TJ,achers have bee me
very in volved''in politics" beca se
of t he law. Crisis situations
existed i n 1970 and last
September when the unton fought
to have Its demands met . The new

Activism
Mr. Pisa said that the BTF has
been taking an increasingly active
role in the e!~ctoral process. for
t he first time. the union has
endorsed candidates for the
November election . Contributions
to these candidates were made
voluntarily by the teachers, and
the union is hoping to gain
support fro m politicans in coming
budget matters.
Pointing out that "teachers are
fuU y controlled by politics," the
union leader indicated that
tea c h ers c an best i mprove
conditions by using political
force. He mentio ned that many
teachers once hesitated to even
exercise their right to vote, but
are becoming more involved in the
sys t em as state and local
education funds dwindle.
Boastmg a four million doUar
war chest fo r use tn st rikes, Mr.
Pisa outlined the BTF position
concerning contract negotiations.
Most contracts become effective
at the beginning of the fiscal year
(July I) while school does not
begin until September. Since
teachers are not working in the
summer, there is little chance for
thetr optnions to be heard . A s in
the past , the union will "go
through the strike threat again
and develop a crisis situation,"
Mr. Ptsa said. Usually, demands
are met at the last minute.
In l'n2, however, the sttuallo n

may be more aerious than it hu
been in the past. Due to
absenteeism and fcw1r funds,
education- money for the comJng
year may be scarcer than ever. In
ca ses like this, the s pecial
programs (such as art and music
education in the lower grades) are
usually the fmt to go. Salaries are
also questionable because of the
wage-price freeze. School boards
try to. work on austerity budgets
while teachers' unions attempt to
bring in as many aspects o f
education as possible.
T h e co.ming co ntr ac t
neao ti a ti ons underscore the
union's claim that teachers are
subservient to other political
forces. Mr. Pisa stated that
"teachers are the only group who
do n o t co ntrol their own
profession" in terms o f stan&lt;krds
and quality. He said that most
teachers would like a longer
school year, and feel that teachers
sho uld have a say in development
of standards - both for the
schools and for their colleagues.
The BTF president stated that he
feels that "education will revert to
I ess degree-consciousness" and
sees a swing away from the
increasing requirements needed to
enter the profession.
Maladies
In the city of Buffalo, the BTF
has taken a secondary role even in
dealing with students. During the
recent high school disorders, the
union requested that the Board of
Education put a strong discipHne
policy mto effect. T.b.e . unio n ,

according to Mr. Pisa , was in favo r
of having police in the schools to
control the outbreaks, but feels
that they sho ul~ no lo nger be
patrolling within the schools.
Mr. Pisa has stated that schools
do not " meet the needs of most
students." He indicated that any

actions taken now to remedy the
situation in the high schols are
only part of a " lo ng-range cure."
Any effective action can only be
b r o ught abou t with the
co o p e r a t i o n o f t h6
budget-conscious school board
which he does not fo resee.

~~~~~~gggag~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~~~~~~6

soy a mce ward.

PC PJ demonstration

Van Tien lauds protest
•

Nearly 300 protesters were
arrested one block from the While
House Tuesday as they nllempted
to serve an "eviction notice .. on
Pre si dent Nixon. Th e
demonstration was part of
antt-war activities spOnsored by
the People's Coalition for Peace
and J ustice . The allempted
evicuon caused a rush-hour traffic
jam in downtown Washington.
The arrests came as part of
moratorium activities planned for
the end of October. Those Jailed
included protest leaders Rennie
Davts, John Froines and Catholic
activist James Groppi.
Alth ough the nu mber of
demonstrators fell far sho rt of the
thousands predicted by the PCP J.
their effectiveness was obvious.
One observer noted that the small
c rowd may have been more
effective in tying up traffic than
the I 2,000 protestors who
attempted the same feat during
t he May Day demonstrations
earlier this year.
Arrests were processed swiftly ,
probably in response to cnticism
of police actions taken during the
May Day p rotest, when hundreds
of demonstrators w ere locked up
for no reason. The police force
included an extra 1800 men and
helicopters used for filming the

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protest as it moved through the
natiOn\ capital.
Phone call
Durin g a pre-march rally,
Father Groppi s poke to twn
m ember~ of the Hanoi delegation
to the Paris peace talks. In a
trans·Atlanttc phone hook-up. one
of the men told the group that
" the war w ill come to an end and
t h e A m e ri ca n se rvi ce m e n .
including those wh o are fighting
and those who are in captivity.
Will be able to come home ," if the
U.S. would accept the 7-point
peace proposal.
Th e delegate , id en tifying
himself as Nguyen Van Tien,
added that " I would like to
extend our congratulations to all
parJicipants in today's
demonst ration and to all those
supporting an end to the war. You
are the very persons who carry the
banner of democracy in the
United States. We give our
heartfelt thanks to all these
fighters for peace in Indochina."
Protesters did not serve the
evtction nottce or meet with
President Nixon , but organizers of
the march stated that the action
was the beginning of a year-long
drive to defeat Nixon in the
corning presidential election .
. . - - - Paid Political Ad - - - - .
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Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, October 29, 1971

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�UN accepting Communist China
received with mixed emotions
by Lynne T raeger
Off-Cilmpus Editor

The deciJion Monday night to
a d mit Communist China and
expel t he Nationalist Chinese was
in actuality, an academic one:
Moments before the vote was
taken, the Nationalist Chinese
delegation , led by Foreign
Minister Chow Shu-kai
announced his country wa~
quitting the U .N. In a face-saving
gest ure, he and his delegation
walked out of the General
Assembly single file . Chow's
dignified speech a nd his staid exit
brought a spontaneous ovation
from the other deleptions, whic h
was matched only by the
pandemonium which broke loose
after the fi nal vote was tallied.

Dancing before rostrum
The vote was 76 for, 35
against, 17 ubstentions and 3
absent. The announcement of the
results led to a wild celebration on
the part of many delegates. Some
leaped to their feet, cheering and
applauding. The ambassador from
Tanzania, dressed in a black t11nic
buttoned to the neck, did a
victory dance in front of the
rostrum. Reporters at the scene
said they had not seen so much
excitement since 1960 when
Nikita S. Kruscbev pounded on
his desk with a shoe to emphasize
a point.
Secretary General U Tbant
immediately sent a tele&amp;ram to
the Chinese government in Peking,
informing them of the decision.
There was no immediate reaction
from China, but reports received
Ia ter this week said that a
delegation may be sent within the
next few days. However, there has
been no official confirmation
from either Peking or the United
Nations.
An hour earlier, the Assembly
had defeated a resolution by the
United States which would have
required a two-thirds vote to
expel the Nationalists. The 59 - SS
vote ended a last-ditch effort by
the Americans to save the
Nationalist Chinese seat .

'Moment of infamy'
Ambassador Bush was
downhearted at the outcome and
told a news conference: " 1 hope
the U .N . will not relive this
moment of infamy. It's not a
good thing to kick somebody out .
My heavens, anybody with a heart
in his chest who saw those decent
people thrown out of the U.N.
couldn't help but be affected."
U.N. observers consider this the
worst diplomatic defeat suffered
by Washington in the 26-year
history of the world organization.
Nationalist Chinese Foreign
Minister Chow said : "I have seen
Chamberlain with his umbrella
and a piece of paper and a year
later war broke out. I hope that
by this decision the U.N. will not
become unservi c eable." The
reference by Chow was to then
British Prime Minister
Chamberlain's return from
Munich in 1938 , waving a piece of
paper and proclaiming "Peace in
our time," as a result of an
aareement to Adolf Hitler's
invasion of Czechoslovakia.

Lona evening
The historic night began
shortly before 7 p.m. when the
General Assembly rejected a plea
by Suadi Arabia to delay balloting
on the China issue until Tuesday.
Then the Assembly, in the only
U.S. victory of the evenina, agreed
to vote fust on the American

proposal to require a two-thirds
majority to expel the Nationalists.
When this proposal was defeated,
Bush tried to delete a provision
from the resolution sponsored by
Albania and 22 othe r countries
whJch would expel Nationalist
China. He was unsuccessful in his
attempts. The victory telegram to
Peking was sent at midnight EDT.
T u esd;ly morning Secretary
General Thant issued what was
termed "an extraordinary appeal
for unity" in the United Nations.
In a statement to the press, Thant
said, "I solemnly appeal to all
member states to leave no room
for bitterness but on the contrary
to abide by the decision of the
General Assembly and endorse the
tremendous step forward which
has been taken last night.''
Expressing sadness at the
departure of the Nationalists,
Tbant also said that the decision
"may enabl~ us to solve more
effectively the international
problems with which we: are
confronted."
R eact ions vary
Reactions varied tbrouahout
th e world and throughout the
country. In a strons but del•yed
statement to the press, Press
Secretary Ronald Ziegler spoke
for President Nixon and .said :
·•The feelin g is thcf' shocking
demonstration and Andisguised
glee that was shown by some of
the delegates to the United
Nations could have a detrimental
effect. This could very seriously
impair support in the country and
Congress for the U.N." Although
there was no actual statement to
this effec t , Ziegler broadly hinted
that the behavior of some of the
del eaatea could lead to a
deterioration of forelan support
to their countries. Jt was also
hinted that, while there was no
immediate c hange in
administration policy , there could
be added support to a reduction
in the U.S. payments to the world
organization.

'Major mistake'
Secretary of State W11Ham
Rogers said he believed the U.N.
had made "a mistake of mlijor
proportions" by its decision
Monday night . But , he said,
Washington must accept the fact
that the decision was made by a
majority of the members in the
U.N. Rogers acknowledged the
fact that U.S. funds to the U.N.
might be cut, but he said that it
would not be a retaliatory action.
Approval of a reduction would be
on the grounds that the
o rpnization was spending more
than it should, and t"e U.S.
contribution had been too high
for too long. The U.S. share of the
budaet is $52 ,437,700 or 31 per
cent of the total.
Senator James Buckley of New
York said that the actions of the
world body ..may well be
recorded as the beginning of the
end" of the U .N. Buckley's staff
began drafting legislation Monday
night to cut American financial
assistance to the body. He added
that the U.N . may continue to
serve as a ''debating society" or a
.. forum for cooperation on
technical matters" but, he
charged, it cannot be reprded as a
" vehicle for collective security in
matters of critical importance."

was not the reason for their
action. Senator Mike Mansfield
said, " J have felt for a long time
that we were contributina entirely
too much to the United Nations.
I f I d id vote to reduce
contributions, it would not be on
the basis of the action taken b y
the U.N. last night." Senator
Huah Scott caUed the action "a
clusic lack of appreciation." He
told reporters, "This is a very
unfortunate 'thing. I grieve for the
damage the U.N. has done Itself."
'Circus'
Foreign Minister Liu Chow of
Nat io na list China expressed
disgust with the U.N. and said,
·• It 's becoming like Madison
Square Garden." Chow , who will
leave for Taiwan in a few days
after winding up some affairs at
the mission , said the world
organization has beoome "a circus
- no longer a dignified , rational
body for peace." Chow felt the
Communist Chinese will become
more beUigerent , and remarked ,
·•It will be the beginning of a th1rd
world war. Mark my word . You
will see." Nationalist China has
experienced reverses before, said
Chow, and "It is rather
invigorating to have a new
challenge."
Ac ting Foreign Minister €h1
Peng-fei , in the first official
Peking statement, said at a
reception in the Iranian Embassy
in Peking: " It is the bankruptcy
of the pohcy long pursued by U.S.
imperialism in o bdurately
obstructina the restoration of the
legitimate nghts of our country in
the United Nations and the U.S.
imperialist scheme of attempting
to create two Chinas in the United
Nations." Chi hailed the decision
as a "VTctory for the people o f
the whole world."
The view expressed 1n many
Asian capitals was stated by
Philippine President Ferdinand
Marcos , a staunch
anti.Communist. Marcos said the
Philippines will maintain friend ly
relations with the Nationalists,
but will seek closer contacts with
Piking. The Malaysian Prime
Minister called the seating an
important event 10 international
relations.

Dismay and fears
Australia, New Zealand,
Thailand, South Korea and South
Vietnam expressed dismay over
the vote . Most of the countries
said they would continue the1r
present fnendly policy to ward
Nationalist China . Sir Keith
Holyoake of New Zealand feurs
that the decision would give China
the &amp;reen light to settle the
Taiwan dispute by force .
-

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(CORNER OF FILLMORE )
THIS Mo'NDAY AND TUESDAY (Nov. 1 tn d 2) ONLY

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NO COIH'OM IIOUIIID

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avery Wedntsdt y - Sund1y nigh ts

9 :30p.m.- 2 :30 t.m.

DI"NER FOR Z
(ADUlTS)

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4 P.ft-1:31 PJlllllY

We w e NOT • .,.,..... -

-lit,

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No retaliation intended
Democratic a nd Republican
leaders in the Senate joined
Buckley in calling for a cut in U.S.
contributions to the U.N., but
said that the expulsi~n of Taiwan

4./PI

In t he European train of
In Taipei, Chiang Kai-shek
thought , the chairman of the issued a statement which accused
Italian parliament's foreign affairs the United Nations of
committee said Nixon contributed ..shamelessly bowinJ to the forces
to the defeat by having his of evil and timorously yielding to
adviser, Henry Kissinger, in Peking violen ce. Thus the United
at the time the vote was taken. Nations , which this country
Radio Tratislava in he.l ped to establish after so many
Czechoslovakia noted that "not a trials, has finaUy degraded itself
single West European country and become a den of iniquity."
supported the United States 1n 1ts
fight to save Taiwan's seal in the
Henry Kissenger, speaking after
United Nations."
an aJ1-morn1ng visit with the
Mo s t of the world 's President. dismissed the fact that
governments areeted the decision he was in Pekin&amp; at the tijl\e of
favorably, maintaining it pve the crucial ll .N. vote as "a painful
mainla1ld China its "rl&amp;htful coincidence" and.. said, " \ do not
place" In the world o rganization . think my VISit affected the vote of
China has one-quarter of the any country." Kissinger said he
world's population and many discussed "substantive" matters
countnes felt that this was o ne with Chou En-lai while other
reason why they should be members of his group worked on
admitted . The Vatican hoped the technical arrangements such as
vote would ''be a contribution to security, communications and
the strengthening of peace press coverage for President
founded on justice."
Nixon's upcoming visit.

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)

GOLDEN OLDIES LIVE ROCK a ROLL NIGHT
~'
All THIS TO THE
~._~"
GREAT SOUND OF
...~
~....

XL 's

'\).~

Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�'

Hall~! t1 problem? Net!d help1 Do you find It tmpouible to untansle
tht! Universit~ buruucracy1 In cooptration with the Qfftce of Student
A.ffain and Serllicu, Tbe Spectrum tpoi'Uon Action Line, a weekly
ruder tervtce column. Through Action Line indMduai611Ulentl et~n get
antwen to puuling quutioi'U, find out where and why Univenity
decuioi'U are made and get actiOn when change is needed.
Just dial 8]1·5000 or vltlt the Achon Line booth in the Center
Lounge, Norton Hall for individual tlttentton. T.1e Office of Student
Affairs and Sertlicu will fnvestigrzte all questloi'U 11nd complaintl, und
will answer them individually. The name of the 'individual originating
the inquiry ts kept conftdenthll under all circumstances. The more
common queuiom will be answered in this column each week.

Correc:lion : Last week someone asked how they could get their
money back when the stamp machine In the Post Office Pagoda did not
give them their stamps. We told them to usc the direct line telephone at
the Pagoda and now we find out that it is ttself out of order. We
checked up and found that the Post Office has a maintenance person
for these self-dispensing centers. If you have any problems please call
842-2782 or 842-2779.
Q : I'm still confused about how many pass/fail (S/U) credits I'm
allowed. How do I fiaure this out?
A: We checked with our colleagues at the Division of
Undergraduate StudJes. You are permitted 2S per cent of the credits
you had left to take towards graduation as of September 1969. Thus,
for example , if an September 1969 you h.ad completed 68 hours :
128 -~8=60 credlls needed to graduate; ~x60= J S ·hours pass/fail
allowed. Any S/U taken bdore September I 969, in the spring of
1969 - 70, or at other 1nM1tutaoru. does not count 1n the total S/U
allowed.
If you are unsure where you ~ota nd , check with your academtc
adv1so r m Du~fendorf I I 4 .
Q : Are there any co-op stores on the campus where I can buy
thinas cheaper?
A: Yes there are. The Inter-Residence Council, through its IRC
Business, Inc., operates two co-op stores in the dormitories. One iS the
Grub located m Tower Lobby and the other is the Underground
located m the tunnel between Goodyear and Clement HaiJs. These
stores sell mostly food staples such as milk, bread, yogurt, cereaJs and
also some other needed tterns such as pens, paper, etc. (However, they
do not sell clothmg.) They ure open Monday- Thursday from
noon- midnight, and on Friday and Saturday from noon - ! a.m. There
is also a Record Co-op operat1ng out of Norton Hall. II is located in the
basement, Room 60 {the old Barber Shop). It is open Monday - Friday
from 10 a.m. J p.m. and specializes obvtously m selling records, tapes,
etc. All of these operations are non-profit and allow the student to buy
at a min1mum cost .

This h ouse stands/is
half-standing/stood at the comer
of Parks! de and Florence.
Nobody lived it it and nobody
was really sorry to see it torn
down. It was , vacated some six
years ago.
Some of the ne!ghboi'S say the
owner had not complied with fire
laws and that the ventilation was
poor; and others say that the
tenants were driven out by rats.
(The doors were marked with' rat
poison warnings , but the warnings
were recent.)
When the wrecker was taking
its first bites of the house - not
from the chimney, which the
neighbors were predicting, but
from the corner which faces
Aorence
Councilman WiUiam
Hoyt discussed with the Parkside
Community Association Chairman
Richard Griffin the possibilities of
turning the property into a park.
M ore curious t h an the
demolition itself was the
demolition party congregated on
an opposite corner to watch .
Neighbors were asked to come out
and have their pictures taken with
the house, the wrecker and
Councilman Hoyt ; and most of
them stayed to gossip and watch
the third floor fall .
"Getting this house torn down
has been a pet community project
for years," one of them said.

Councilman Hoyt became
involved in the demolition
Q : I'm thinking of dropping a c ourse , but hav~n' t mad~ up my
processes in early 1970 after
mind yet. Is there a deadline?
communications with owner
A : Yes. The deadlme for droppmg courses is Dec:. I , 19 71, noon ,
AJona Gamble failed to bring
at the Office of AdmiSStons·and Records , Hayes Annex B. {That's two
about
repairs , Hoyt was
days after we get back from Thank:.g~vtng recess.)
instrumental in arranging for
Q : There is a Telephone Lecture series for people in the Healrh demolition. {The house was built
Sciences. Can you tell me how it operates and if it is available to illegally in the first place, and was
students at the University?
in violation of health and
A : The senes you are rclc.!rnng to ts called the Telephone Lecture
structure
standards.)
Network and IS o perated by the Rcgwnal Medical Program for Western
Investigations by Hoyt's office
New York m conjunction w1th the School of Med1cine hc.!re at the
Univers1ty. Th~ system ~~ a closed drcuit telephone system that pipe) also determined that the owner
lectures into vanous hol&gt;pit .. ls in the area . This mt!ans that telephone held some 86 parcels o f land in
lines are used and the lecture i~ presented over a loud speaker in a
l::.ric County.
designated room in the c.liffcrenl hos pttals. Thus, to use it you must go
to one of the hospitals participating. The nearest one we know of is the
GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
Veteran's Hospital aero'&gt;!&gt; the streel. ll owevcr , you would have to ht~ve
Jeweler - Optician
the perm~ston uf the hospttJI to 1lu thb. II you are interested you arc
invited to call the Network al XJS-0728 . The lectures, by the way . an·
41 KENMORE AVENUE
conttnu10g cdUC&lt;Jiton, wluch me.tn~ that they &lt;Jrt' designed fur people
(at University Plaza)
alre&lt;~dY worki'ng 10 th..: healt h 'ctenu•s field .
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226
Q : Is there any place on campus that a married ~t ud ent can go for
marriage counselling?
A: Y e~ there 1'&gt;. The Cnun!&gt;dhng Center w1ll handle m:Jmage
problems. II ts loc.J!ec.l m South llamman (behmJ lla rrimJn Lthrary)
and you can make Jn appOintment hy ~Jihng HJ 1-3717 .
Q : How can I aet information about VISTA?
A : One can ~o.a ll a nat tonal Watb Ltne free of ~.. harge to ren•tvc
tnformatJon about Volun1cers 10 Serv1ce to Amenca It b
800424-8580. In case you are interested. VISTA 1s mterested tn people
with special skills or techntcal types of knowledge, such as carpentry,
construction , etc. If you want information from someone here ()0
campus, please call Dr. Jerome Fink at Ridge Lea, 83 1-1672.
Q: When can I take the G R E exams here on campus?
A: The Graduate Record Examination will be given on the
following dates: Dec. J I, Jan . IS, Feb. 26, April 22 and June 17.
Closing dates for applications are approx1mately three weeks before
each of these dates. If you want to take the GRE, please get an
application from the Office of Instructional Services on the third floor
of Harriman Library.

A Reminder
In this time of job scarcity it is well worthwltile to establish a
Placement file at the Placement Office. We urge aJI students to do this.
The Placement Office is located at Hayes Annex C. The proper use of
this facility can be very helpfuJ in your future career. And a beginning
on your part will be to establish your Placement file.

Page eight. The Spectrum . Friday, October 29, 1971

Still as fool-hardy as iLseems demolition.
to side with the "slum landlord ,"
Hoyt intends to push "for the
it seems hardet to watch the city to put srass 'tnd benches in
deliberate assassination of a there," and notes that a pocket
and park would be "visually attractive
building which could
should - have been renovated on that comer."
four years ago. Better that the
The neighbors by-and-large
city foot the bill for
improvements than that it be agree. Says one, "Hoyt has
stuck with the bill for demolition. accomplished what we have failed
If usual proce dures are to do . He has my vote." [But, like
followed, the city can now most o f the neighbors asked, he
foreclose on the land to pay back had no . idea whom Hoyt is
taxes and reimburse itself for running against.)

The most
Meaningful Semester
you'll ever spend ...
could be the one on
World Campus Afloat
S~rhn&amp;

ftb 1972 to Ainu

r~ru,rr.ll

a lransler format

~nd

lht Ontnl

mor~
~ave

thdn 5 000
\tudents !rom 450 campuses
partocrpated
tor a \emtsltr rn lll• s unrqu• proP,ram rn rnttr
n~tronal educatron
WCA Ntll broaden yuu• hoorron\ trlt•rally anu
lrguralrvely
and gove yOir a b~tltr 'fiance tu
m,rke rt meanrnelutty 1n lilt\ changrng world
You II Sludy •ll \ea wrlll an r~pe11rntl'd CO\
mn~olrtan lacully and lhcn llurrne pori \llrp\
IOU II \Judy the world Itself You II di\COVP&lt; that
no maller how lorra~n and far dway. you have a
tnl '" common wrth p~op(e ol othtl lands
WCA rsn't a$ e•ptnsrve 35 you mrghl lh•nk.
we've done o~r best to brrng rt wrthrrr reich or
most college sludenl s Wrrte today lor frt~
delarls
TlACHEIIS SUmmer Irani wilh crtdrl tor leach
ers an~ admrnlslralors

NOW
SHOWING

tt

.~.1

l- 1

,.,, O"'Ckt~M 'I(•~· •' '-•w111tt

TR.BASKlN
A Herb.,, Rou.Pettr Hyomo PoodiiChon

�Council candidate

Bell demands discipline
..,

This Tuesday the citizenry of
Buffalo will get the opportunity
to elect the candidates o f their
choice to the Common Council.
Two at-large seats on that often
maligned body will be among
those voted upon this year. The
Spectrum interviewed o ne of the
four candidates for those
positions,
R epublican.Conserva tive Theron
Bell, earlier this week.
Mr. Bell is the least known of
the at-large candidates (the others
are Democratic Councilmen Gus
Franczyk and Andrew Morrisey
and Republican Councilwoman
Alfreda Slominski). Though he
addressed himself to a wide range
of topi cs, the ca ndidate
em phasized that " the main issue
(in this election) is jobs." He
charged that many of the city's
problems are in some way related
to tbejob situation.
" Be cause of the h igh
unemployment rate we have a
higher crime rate. One could
probably indirectly attribute some
of the problems in the schools to
the unemployment problem ...
The city is going to have to start
doing what Is neces.'!ary to attract
new industry , and make tax
concessions to keep those it now
has. Beyond that we need to
' ~evelop some five and ten year
programs on what industry we can
attract ... develop plans that can
be carried out In stages so that we
can prevent this problem" from
reoccurring.
Discipline breakdown
Commenting on the recent
outbreaks in the Buffalo schools,
Mr. BeiJ observed that the trouble
"starts in the home." He said that
a "breakdown" in the family and
in the churches has led to
disciplinary prob&amp;ems. He added :
"Politicians have to take the lead
an establisbJng a dialogue between
students, teachers, admtnistrators
and the school board ." This , he
explained, must be set up "and
maintained" so that students feel
that they have some input into
the programs in the schools.
"Stud ents should have some say
in bow the schools are run ," Mr.
Bell stated .
He does not see busma as a
solution to the school issue,
however . " It is not a
comp rehensive approach to
getting a quality integrated
educational systero ." In his
opinion, most people, whether
"black parent or white parent,
black student or white student,"
oppose busing. Mr. Bell feels that
Instead officials should "develop
more proarams, spend more
money
in ' improvi ng
neighborhood schools." Ho also
noted that the physical structures
of many or the $Chools are in dire
need of repair.
Elected sc:hool board
In keepinJ with the concept of
nei&amp;hborhood Jd\ools, Mr. Bell
stated that he supports the idea or
an elected ac:hool board . He
stressed that "we should maintain
local control with the state

picking up more of the financial
burden." He does feel, however,
that there is a great need for
parents to become more involved.
Mr. Bell also cited the housing
defi8iency in the city and
attacked the present
ad m i nistration for not doing
enough to improve the situation.
He charged that over the past two
years the Buffalo urban renewal
program has demolished in excess
of II ,000 housing units, while
building only 1000. "The city and
the county should spend a Little
less time raising the roof of the
auditorium and building a new
stadium and get to the housing
issue."
He also sees a link between
integrated schools and integrated
housing. " I f we really want to
tack I e quality integrat ed
education then we should
instil ute integrated housing
patterns." This could be done, he
explained, by "building in urban
renewal areas several types of
housing - low. moderate and high
income - and having the city
housing authority see that the
units are sold on an integrated
basis."
Stop the pushers
The former director of the
California Office of Economic
Opportunity would like to see far
stronger enforcement of the law
for pushers of hard drugs. A
member of the Erie County Drug
Rehabilitation Task Force, Mr.
Bell would like to see the city and
the co unty develop ' ' a
comprehensive drug program ." He
said that the ''law enforcement
agencies arf! not doing the best
job ... The bi&amp;gest breakdown is
in the courts. There is a backloa
o f cases. Of coul"$e, the peddler is
let out o n bail and there is
nothing to prevent him from
selling drugs while he's awafiing
trial.
"I'm in favor of the methadone
treatment program . We need to
set up several methadone centers.
It isn't enou&amp;h to cure the addict ,
to get him off drugs, however. We
have to rehabilitate hlm so that he
is a useful member of society.
This means work training or giving
some sort of education ." Being
that t h e interviewer was a
University student, Mr. Bell was
confronted with the issue of the
marijuana laws. He stated~ "I
don't feel marijuana is any more
danaerous than alcohol an d 1
don't think the laws governing the
sale and use o f marijuana should
be any more strinaent."
Mr. Bell has been advertising
himself as an "independent"
candidate despite his Republican
and Co~ti•o endorsements.
He was asked to comment on this :
" Because I am new I don't have
any committmentt or obligations
to anybody. It allows me to
opente better in th e interests of
my constituents. That (his
i nd ependence) was the
understanding when I took the
endorsements."

Kennedv endorses Sedita and
is hopeful for the Democrats
by Janis Cromer
Spectrum Staff Writer

Senator Edward M. Kennedy
came to Buffalo on Monday to
publicly endorse Frank Sedita for
the office of county executive .
Mr. Kennedy made his frist
appearance o f the evening at VFW
17th Division Post in Central Park
Plaza, greeted by a crowd of 1200
complete with marching band ,
searchlight , raffle tickets and the
New York State Honey Queen. lrf"
his opening words, Senator
Kennedy jt\)ce~ that his reason fur
coming to New York was " to
show that at reast one member of
the Derpocratic Senate is not
running for President."
" Frank Sedita has performed
his duties with honor and djgnHy
in every position he has held ,"
said Senator Kennedy . The
senator's adamant defense of
Mayor Sedita apparently reflected
c h arges that his Republican
o pponent Edward Regan was
trying to associate Mr. Sedita with
organized crime. Mr. Regan has
denied making these charges.

Honorable Sedita

" It distresses me that these
allegations and innuendos have
been raised about this flne man ,"
continued Senator Kennedy .
Recalling that the late J ohn F .
Kennedy appointed Mr. Sec.tita
U.S. Collector of Custom s in
1962, the senator mentioned that
there h ad been an FBI
background investigation before
the appointment. " It wasn't a
question of integrity or the caliber

of h is character. it was required,"
said Senator Kennedy . He then
asserted that the report showed
Sedita to be 100 per cent
honorable.

national nature, the senator
declared that "one-third of all
troops killed in Vietnam had died
since January 1969" despite
Pr esident Nixon's publi c
commitment to end the war.

Senator Kennedy also noted
that Mayor Sedita had been one
of John Kennedy 's earliest
supporters for President in I 959
and also backed Robert Kennedy
in his Senate campaign of 1964.

He also assailed the Nixon
administration's economic policy .
"Not o nl y are the poor
unemployed , but whHe coUar
workers are also out of jobs." He
accused the government of using
• the "old Republican do-nothing
Combattina water poUution
formula . . . it didn't work for
" We ln the Senate can pass the McKinley, it didn' t wor\t for
bills but if they are really going to Hoover and it hasn' t worked for
benefit anyone, it takes capable Richard Nixon ."
people at the local level"
commented the senator. He then
Party of progress
p o int ed to Buffalo's Sewage
Treatment unit as an example of
According to Senator
effective local management of Kennedy, while Mr. Nixon also
funds. "Through Mayor Sedita's promised to increase law and
efforts in this direction, real steps order "crime has still gone up.
have been taken in combatting Only the way of reporting the
water pollution," added the statistics has changed." The new
c rime rate i nterpretation ,
senato r .
Kennedy said, is equal to saying
The chairman o f the Senate to a hospital patient : "You're
Health Committee pointed to getting better because you're
what
he
t er med
a getting sicker at a slower rate."
"mismanagement" o f monies in
Senator Kennedy concluded
the area of Erie County Health
programs. He claimed that due to with words of encouragement for
the construction of the new Erie the Democratic party. "It's a
County Hospital , taxes had risen party of progress, not reaction ,
dramatically; and that this could and Frank Sedita's success will
have been avoided if the present only be the beginning. Jf wo can
county officials had taken capture the enthusiasm exhibited
advantage of the HUlberg Act, here tonight, then next November
which provides federal funds for we will b e equally victorious."
local health projects.
Senator Kennedy the n
continued on hls brief Buffalo
National issues
tour to address Sedita-supporters
Addressing issues of a more at the Buffalo Irish Club.

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Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

,

�Rascals stillprovide electrifying music
"I bought you a brand new
Mustang, SaUy - a 1971 ," sang
Buzzy Feiten. It seems to me that
once upon a time the "Young"
Rascals sang that song, only the
year was 1965 . Since then th#
Rasca1s have grown up (they're no
longer young), grown beards, lost
Eddie and Gene somewhere along
the way and picked up two girl
singers, a new bass player and
Buzzy. So it was the Rascals after
all singing ''Mustang Sally" on
Kleinhans stage last Friday night.
The years may keep changing and
the music they do may grow more
sophisticated, but the Rascal's
electricity remains,
Unfortunately, there were only
a few people there to appreciate

them and of those that were
there, too few seemed aware of
the earful of music they were
getting. It's bad enough having a
rock concert in Kleinhans (a Uttle
too formal for my taste, except
for the bar which is too expensive
for my taste). Being surrounded
by weU-dres.-ed couples placidly
holding han&lt;ts while a woup of
musicians are rocking away trying
to add a little life to the situation,
only compounds the error.
Anyway, back to the more
lmport.a nt thinp, like the music which was provided not only by
the Rascals, but by Patty LaBelle
and the Blue BeUes and Buzzy
(big day for Buzzys) Linhart. The
three offered constrasting styles

Jack Gilbert

Cre ta C arbo

QUEEN CHRISTINA
Greta Garlx&gt;

Mel v1n Do uRI as

AS VOU DESIRE ME
SUNDAY THRU TUESDA VI
Be!&gt;l P1c1ure of 1951

tt:~~·l1

Gene Kt&gt;ll 1 Le!&gt;llt&gt; Carpn

AN AMERICAN IN PARIS

COLOR

Bt&gt;SI P 1&lt;1ure uf 195fl
Milltrl&lt; e

Clwvall l'r

GIG I

COLOR

2nd

GREAT
WEEKI

North Park
I'll HUTIL

vocally, but one thins they did to competent spots. The only
have ln common wu that they uncomfortable point was when
w~re ln one way or another Patty and the Belles walked off
defmitely somewhere up itfllie air stage at the end of their set and
(as opposed to being earthy). the audience didn't realize they
Patty LaBelle's vocals really were done because the back-up
soared, and Buzzy Linhart's just band was stiU playing. Patty had
sort of aldpped along, while to come back and take a bow for
Felix's vocals were quite ethereal the audience to realize the set was
at times. It goes without saying over.
that they were all right up there in
quality as weU .
Buu.ina alonJ
Next up to bat was Buzzy
Linhart. Buzzy plays an electric
La beUe LaBeUe
The first woup to bat was guitar like it was an acoustic - he
Patty LaBeUe and the Blue Belles. strums a lot. l saw Buzzy down at
Patty was attired ln a red jump the Bitter lind last year so I knew
suit and blue boots that she wore what to expect. He didn't
over her pants. The Blue BeUes disappoint me. Actually the only
were individually attired. I guess thing that disappointed me was
the days of having the back-up the fact that Carly Simon joined
singers uniformly attired is fading. him in his set last time and I knew
But they're all seasoned pros so that she wasn' t going to this year.
you know that it can't be bad. That I could have enjoyed .
Buuy'i only got a bass player
Patty was side stepping aU over
stage. I don't know if she's lost a and a drummer to back him up, .so
step o r two over the years but it with Buzzy's aforementioned
guitar playing, you wouldn't
sure looks as if she hasn't.
expe&lt;:t much in the way of soloing
On~ of the songs they did was
"Wild Horses." J used to think or jamming. But you're wrong. In
that I knew how the song went, the third song o f the set they
but after hearing Patty's version , went into an extended jam, the
I'm not sure we're thinkJng of the high .point being when all were
same song. Whatever she was beating on drums at the same
singing was great , however. As I time. It was quite a sight. Buzzy
said before, her voice really soars then switched to vibes which he
and in " Wild Ho rses" her voice plays qu'tte well , befo re returning
to guitar to end the song.
got higher and higher.
Patty let the two Belles each
BuLzy's singing, as I mentioned
have a solo and they both turned before, is kind of light. He likes to

scat sins a lot and he makes some
incredible faces when he does.
One of the other highlights was
when Buzzy Felten came out to
play. Unhart ended the set singing
Fred Neil's ''That's the Bag I'm
ln ."
With the coming of the
Rascals, all those people who were
too cool to watch the opening
acts and had stayed drinking at
the bu came upstairs. I bet they
were quite disappointed to fmd
that Gene and Eddie had left the
group. Judging by some of the
passing remarks I heard, I think
they still think it's J 965.
The new Rucals
Then came the Rascals. First,
all the members of the group
came out and stood around for a
while. Felix and Dino waited in
the wings. After all, they were the
stars that everyone came to see.
When they finally did come o ut
we saw that Felix was still
bearded and Dino was still looking
like Paul McCartney. At least
that's what my friends said . All 1
could see of him was a little hair
above the c}'mbals.
With the pi c ture n o w
complete , the group looked great.
The two girl singers (sorry, I don't
know their names) stood o ff to
the right , each with a tambo urine.
One o f them really knew how to
play it, while the o ther one reall y
-continued o·n p41ge sixteen

,,,
at the University Plaza

FREE DELIVERY
to all dor:ms
tel. 832-3211
Announcing

For your amusement we offer
PINBALL
and

POOL TABLE
Our ·s election includes
Pizza-Subs-Draft Beer
-WlQe."Super Buby"
Page ten . The Specttum . Friday, October 29, 1971

�Secret ofcoiltactinf( the dead.~
even Houdini attempts failed
by Jay Boyar
Spectrum Staff Writer
It doesn't take much. An orbic
pumpkin solemnly perched on a
front porch . A vague silhouette
against the liminous moon. A ring
of tbe doorbell and the cry of a
number of smaU children. Or,
perhaps, the simple smell of apple
cider. Somehow, one way or
another, all of us feel Halloween
as it rolls around each year.
Halloween brin~ with it
though ts of mystery, the dead and
magic. Almost synonymous with'
the concepts inferred by the word
"magic" is the personage of the
great Houdini.
Harry Houdini was the world 's
greatest escape artist. That is held
without question. He was a master
of magic and, yet, there 1.s still
another facet of tbe gentleman's
Ufe which bears ex.aminiatioa, as
the eve of aU haUows approaches.
One of the chief interests of
Houdini which coocemed him
(p'eatly toward the latter part of
his career was to contact the dead .
Currently, there are many
concerned with mysticism. They
feel they can contact another
world, the spirit world. The realm
of dead souls.

Dual campaian
Houdini 's interest in this
bitarre mode o f communication
wis stimulated by the death of his
mother to whom he was
extremely devoted. After her
death, be made many attempts to
contact her via "mediums." He
was convinced that if there were a
way to do it, he would. Jn the
early I 920's he embarked on a
dua.l·purposed campaian. Fintly,
he folanted to co ntAct his departed
mother, and secondly, he sought
to expose the fake mediums who
had been bilking people of their
money ·in return for supposed
correspondence with the dead.
Jn 1923, he became a member
of the CommJttee of Phystcal
Investigation sponsored by the
Scientific American magazine.
The magazine offered a prize of
S 2 500 (and this was before

innation , remember) to anyone
wbo could display proof of
extra-terrestrial contact. Houdini
and his com mittee traveled
extensively in search of a true
medium. He later raised the offer
~o S I 0,000, donated to charity, to
anyone who could produce similar
proof.
In all the years he offered this
money, not one cent was ever
paid to anyone. Although many
people tried to convince the
committee, Houdini's knowledge
of the techniques of fooling
people enabled him to see through
every trick and false technique
with which the bogus mediums
tried to dupe him.

Mystic means
The public and the newspapers
loved Houdini's cnuade. Anyone
who claims he still believes in
contactin&amp; the dead after
Houdini's enterprisu is either a
fool, a liar or dead himself. The
Pro vidence Newz ran the
following article concerning
Houdini's crusade: "It was a sad
day for the spiritualistic
'mediums' when they permitted
Harry Houdini, the maaician, to
watch some of t h ei r
demonstrations. Houdini knows a
few tricks himself and be knows
then even better than the cleveres t
psychic frauds ... More power to
Houdini to run Ute fakers out of
busine.s."
While he never proved
conclusively that a spirit world
does not exist (it il almost
impossible to prove that
something of this nature is not a
reaJity), Houdini never found
anything even remotely proving
that it did. On staae, be
performed many illusions that
others claimed were done by
" mystic" means, and he informed
his audiences that to every feat of
magic there was some logical
trick.

Montreal 's McGiiJ University
visited him in his dressing room.
One of th em asked if it were true
that he could withstand a series of
hard blows to his stomach region,
if be braced himself for the
onslaught. Houdini said that it
was true and, in fact, he did
possess this ability.
When the young man asked if
he could try him out on that ,
Houdin i mumbled something
which the boy took for "yes."
Acutally, Ho udini wasn't paying
attention to what the boy said .
and so he was unprepared when
the fellow hit hiro hard in the
stomac h . This resulted in
rupturing his appendix.
Houdini could have had an
operation to save him, but
contrary tO doctor's orders, he
insisted upon performing tha t
on Halloween .
ni&amp;ht with a temperature of 101
Before he went , he devised a
degrees. The result was disastrous. ten-word code that only he and
He collapsed in mid-show and had his wife knew, and promised her
to be rushed to the hospital. He that i( it were at all possible, he
held o n to life for seven days and would contact her from the dead.
then died. If Houdini had to die, They had pre-arranged times for
it was only natural that he should these contacts. "And if anybody
expire on Halloween. Harry can get through," said the famed
Houdini died exactly 4 5 years agb escape artist, "I should be able
~--------------------------

to." Well, he never did although
hls wife, Bessie, continued tryina
to contact him tbrouah seances
for over 15 years. Interestinaly,
each year some of the most famed
magicians in the world at the
outstandina Houdini Museum
hold a seance for him oo
HaJloween ni&amp;ht. But they never
contact him either.

Stomach blows
His very death as almost as
interesting as his life. When he was
52 yea rs o ld and still on tour with
his show, twb students from

Unemployment Insurance

Benefit from not working
A student who is laid-off
beca"se of lack of work, or who
leaves a position because of health
prob lems aggra&gt;lated by the
working conditions, often neglects
to look into unemployment
benefits.
However, tf you worked 20 of
the past 52 weeks and left your
job "through no fault of your
own," you may qualify for New
York State U n ero ployment
lnsurano6!'
Benefits under this program
range between S20 and $75 a
week, and are paid for 26 (not
necessarily successive) weeks.
Payments are determined from
the average weekly wage earned
during the last 52 weeks, and are
generally 50 per cent of the
weekly waae up to $15.
To qualify, you must ftle an
"original claim" at any local
Unemployment Insurance office.
At this time you present your
Social Secwity card-(but no proof
of employment), and cerfifY that
you are able to work, capable of
working and actively seeking work
for which you are qualified by
training or experience. You are
not required to seek a position
similar to the one · you held
before.

When you ftle your original
claam you are assigned a regular
day and hour to report to the
unemployment office each week.
At the lime you report each week
you certify your eligihality for
benefits for the previous week .
To be eligible for any given
week you must have earned less
than $75 and worked no more
than three days. (If you work two
days and earn $76 you are not
eligible for benefits, but if you
work three days and earn $50 you
are eligible for partial benefits.}
General eligabilaty is
determined by your employer ,
who bas to have been covered by
the Unemployment Insurance
program. As a, rule of thumb,
municipal employees, teachers,
agricultura l w orkers and
professional people are generally
not covered under this program.
At present an additional 13
weeks of benefits are possible
under the Extended Benefit
Program , because of acute
unemployment in this area at this
time.
Local Unemployment
Insurance Offices are located at :
200 Franklin, Buffalo
68 W. Huron, Buffalo
61 S Ridge, Lackawanna

-Compliments of a friend

Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�Separate but equal
the Student Assembly action Wednesday afternoon in
granting the Black Student Union autonomy is fraught with
many dangers. Probably the worst of these is that by
designating them to be a "special interest organization" and
separating them from the procedures ar.d activiti.es of all
other clubs, we have returned to a form of. segregation.
It required 58 years for this nation to repudiate the
P/essy vs. Ferguson doctrine of "separate, but equal." Now,
with utter ease and clear conscience, the Student Assembly
has re·embraced that disreputable and discredited notion.
We cannot accept the argument voiced in the Assembly
that says that body, since it is overwhelmingly white, caJinot
pass a budget for a black organization. The Assembly is as
open to black students as it is to whites and its present
composition is due, not to any pre-formed institutional
biases, but rather to the choice of non-participation by large
numbers of black students. Furthermore, we refuse to accept
the Insidious and racist notion that a budget for a black
organization can only be properly evaluated by black
students.
Most members of the University community would
maintain that as far as race relations are concerned, we have a ·
greater potential for achieving the ideal than does the outside
community. Now, by virtue of this infamous return to
segregation and separatism, we have admitted our failure to
attain the ideal. The most depressing part, however, is that if
we have failed to cQ·exist in harmon)' here, then what hope is
there for whole of society?

Buck passing
We believe that the Student Association, through its
executive committee, has failed to fulfill its responsibility to
\ts constituency by not taking a stand on the issue of
purchasing Poverty Hill . While their action is far superior to
that of the MFCSA, who in typically elitist f~sh ion chose to
disenfranchise thier constituents, we still believe that on the
single most expensive proposal in years, their opinion is
required.
There may be sharp differences among the committee
members, thus making it difficult to achieve a consensus, but
this does not prevent individuals from going on record to
either support or oppose this controversial acquisition. Since
a proposal that the Student Association itself, and not Sub
Board I, buy Poverty Hill is slated to be voted on by
undergraduates next week, the least we could expect is some
statements on the feasibility of that plan.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 2~. No. 27

Friday, October 29, 1971
Editor·in·Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-Man-oiot Edit« - AI Benson
Co-M.n-.aing Editor - M•ke Lippmann
A•. MINging Editor - Suun Moss
Bulin- ~Ill" - Jim Drucker
Ad11ertisl ng Man., - Sue Mellontine

C.mpus , , ...... Jo-Ann Armao
. . . . ....•......Howie Kurtz
. . . . . . . . • . . . . . Bill Vaccaro
Chy . . . . . . . . . . . HarlfY Lipman
Covf .. . . .... .. Ronni Forman
...... . .. . ... . . . Many Gani
A.a . . . ... .. . . . .... . .

,vacant

Feeture .. . . . ........ . .. .vacant
Graphic Arts .. .. .. ... Tom Toles

layout . .. .... Maryhope Runyon
Alit. . . . ... . ....... . .vacant
lit. a. Drwna . . Michael Silvefb ..n
Mutic ...... . . . •. . .Billy Altman
OH.Cempus ... ... Lynne Treeger
Photo ....... .. . Marc Ackerman
.... . ..... Mickey Osterr~cher
Sports . .. • . . . .. . . . . Barry Rubin
Aut . ........ . ••. Howie Faiwl

The Spt~errum is setved by United Press International. College Press
S«via, the Los Angel• Free Press, the los engeles Times Syndicate and
llberetion News SeNice,

Republiation of m.tter herein without the expritSS consent of the
Edltof-in-Chief is forbidden.
i.

EditoNI policy is d«ermlned by the Edltor.Jn-Chlef.
-~ -

. Page twelve . The Spectrum . Friday, October 29, 1971

'

'NOW , AIOUT YOU

.2USU SMALL

Took a little drive over the long weekend. Just
about 1300 miles of drive. The lady wanted to see
New England in the faU. Which was the source of
some debate since it didn' t lurdly seem worth it to
haul off and traipse all over hell's half acre to find .
color which seemed to me to be in fine abundance
on the runs south through Cattaraugus and
Alleghany counties. So we went, and nobody proved
anything to anybody. Saw some things fine enough
in' both New England and New
York to keep the debate alive
and aU involved winners,
which is a nice way to tie in
an argument.
You forget what a wide
and diverse country thJs is
until you drive some more of
it . Had not been much in New
~ngland , ever , and was
surprised by many things.
New Hampshire was handsome in its colors in some
places and the trees already stood bare in others.
And there were a great many shacks, at least by my
standards. Tarpaper, rundown ~ittle places set back
1
from the road as if tfl eir inhabitants ipsisted on some
privacy. And agajn you wonder about priorities and
where the hell the money goes, and why some
people don' t seem to be getting a very fair share of
it.

The

grump

Sterotypes falling behind with the miles . (A
short interruption with a few words of praise for a
certain unnamed herok vehicle which despite having
recently passed the hundred thousand mark served
nobly and well and even averaged very close to
twenty miles a gallon. Haznuh . hazzzuh, hauzuh!)
There may be a numbet of dour folk left in New
England, but there are a number of newer and
somewhat more amenable type wH'o even could be
termed freaky with very llltle difficulty. I msnd me
one fin e gentleman who was dressed all in dentm
with his gre¥ hair pulled back in a pony tail who I
exchanged greetings with . He carried a folded scylhc
in one hand and in the nther a somewhat battered
but quiie effective looking AM-FM-sW and who
knows what else radio. We agreed that il was a line
morning.

NATIONS. ·••'

Atlantic, but it appears that you can work with lt.
The small vlUages are frequently built around arms
of thy ocean and lobster pots are neatly stacked in
many places with the boats (too small to carry
anything else) and larger craft riding quietly in the
innumerable small harbors. It is pleasant country,
more it is real country. Quiet and closer to the
elements than you find in a great many places, and
the Jack of tourists may have helped to create this
impression. Lord knows what those quiet twisting
little roads could be like with a bunch of large cars
and careless drivers tieing up the area and generally
futzing up the area. (Yes, I know that they are
entitled to go and look at aU the pretty thlngs too,
but so many Americans are absolute shits when 11
comes to prbaae and where they deposit it!)
On the way back across New York on Monday
there was fog, and at points it would pick up the
color from the trees which loomed up through it and
you would find yourself sUpping in and out of russet
colored nothingness, trying to keep your eye on the
double lines in the middle of the road while trying to
watch the colors at the same time. Which led to
some last minute swoops ar1d screeches, but after all .
beauty should be worth a few small risks. It is, of
course, nice to survive to appreciate it .

To return to the diversity tlteme, it really t)
impressive to rediscover just how incredibly many
kinds of physical and mental territories there are
around us. The old saw about traveling being
broadening is not necessarily true. You can get away
with not learning a thing as long as you keep your
head properly shut and avoid the natives. Which as
really easy when you wind up sleeping by the side of
the road in the country where pick-up trucks all have
gun racks across the back window of the cab .
(Paranoid , who is a paranoid? Just because my back
still hurts from sleeping on my hunting .knife all
night?)

f ear. So easy to fall into. And not just on tnp~
Even catchmg bits and pieces from the newspape r~
and radio stations the picture looks the same. People
doing things to keep it together foa them, their very
own selves and perhaps one or two others close to
them. And you can see al in the shit . literally and
figuratively . 10 the campgrounds and by the road),
Visually Maine, or at least a run up one of the
msnor routes seeking a back way anto Auburn , was a and floating in the waters .. . But then why is it thai
fear and greed get connected in my he?.J, along with
really delightful trip. Lakes. and some scarlets on the
stupidity'
? It is easier to just dump the stuff, and
trees I hat were spectacular although of course no
since
you
aren't directly dumping it on somebody
better than New York at its better. The Maine coast
you
don't
really have to think about the fact tha t
is hard to talk about. It is a grim place in many ways,
you
might
just
as well be doing so ... or is that why
rocky and barren where it meets the Atlantic but
do
it in the first pia~. Ran across an
some
people
with mixtures of colored broadleaf and green pines
old
Sturgeon
story
which talked about fear in terms
running down to the coves and arms. The rocky
of
being
powerless,
of trying to strike back and
places reminded me of the ring trilogy, where Gimli
wanting
to
get
power
simply to reduce the anxiety
the dwarf stomps on the rocks of Helms deep and
in
being
alive
and vulnerable to those who
inherent
talks about it being good rock, the bones of the
have it.
earth. The Atlantic, and least the northern Atlantk
seems a colder and harsher ocean than the Northern
Which SO~f!ehow just might have something to
Pacific - California up - whach seems somehow do with the' incomprehensible ineptness of the
warmer and more playful.
current crop of powerwielders. When your fate is in
It is clearly partiaJiy a. matter of temperature. the hands of madmen it behooves you to get off
The big A is one cold bitch up Jhere. And just as real your ass and &amp;rab u mucb power, or defense as
in its own way. You don't play a.s much wjth the possible. Cheery, cheuy, bahAPax. Fitl.

�Editorial comment
T&lt;1 tht

'

•

IIMPII UIIEII

~:.·ditor:

Congratulations to The Spectrum on another
fine example of irresponsible editoriali2ing. The GSA
votes against acquiring Poxerty Hill after hearing a
presentation in favor of the acquisition, and The
Spectrum praises this ~ action as "responsible
decision-making." This is th&amp; same kind of
"responsible decision-making" demonstrated by two
national administrations in regard to such reports as
those ~f the ~emer Commission, the Eisenhower
CommiSsion, the Pornography Commission, etc. The
Spectrum a lso praised the GSA Executive
Committee for its Policy Statement against buying
Poverty Hill, said Policy Statement having been
issued before the Executive Committee heard the
consultant's presentation. This reminds us of the
disavowal of the probable results of the current
commission studying the problems of marijuana by
Mssrs. Nixon and Mitchell before the results are even
in. Is this what The Spectrum considers responsible
decision.-making? lt would appear so.
Responsible decision-making, it seems to us,
should take into account as many facts and
possibilities as possible. Unfortunately, the student
body has not had access to many of the facts
involved in the Poverty Hill question. Why, for
example, does the figure of $650,000 keep coming
up as a "minimum" cost, when the property will
only cost S 167 ,000? Why do we seem to Jlav~ only
two alternatives - either buy the land and ·~develop"
it at great expense, or not buy it at all? Another
alternative, which does not appear to have been
considered by anyone (except those of us who use
and enjoy Poverty Hill) is to buy the land and leave
it alone. 1'lUa possibility should be seriously
considered .
Finally, we would s~uest that students
in t crested in castina their referendum ballot
intelligently should visit Poverty Hill. Come down,
walk through the "woods, up to the top of the hill,
around the lakes ; tallc to tbe people. We are
convinced that anyone who spends even a few hours
there will vote in favor of the purchase. Contrary to
the opinions of the GSA and The Spectrum, Poverty
Hill is a good buy and a good place.

What more can be said about Poverty Hill?
$650,000. Simply, tf Sub Board I, Inc. purcnases the
11 SO acres south of Buffalo, over half a million
dollars of stuaent monies will be committed to its
malntenance and development. Students shouldn't
worry though, for, as Mark Borenstein remarked,
that amount of money spread over ten years is just
"peanuts" compared to other Board activities.
However, the thought of sinking such an
incredible figure into a Sub Board financial
speculation brings other words to mind. Among
them, ludricious and criminal are the mndest.
This simple fact of $650,000 preclud es.any
Poverty Hill purchase. But there are other facts : the
hard reality of more important student needs; the
utter lack of direction within Sub Board and the
foolishness of creating a student Shangri-la are all
important considerations.
Perhaps, what bothers me mOit about Poverty
leaders who say they are looking out •for student
interests and the hypocrisy of wanting to create a
student hideaway. Sub Board wants Poverty Hill for
one reason and one reason alone - they think it is a
good financial investment, a good financial
investment for Sub Board .
An example of this hypocrisy is the statement
by some student leaders that Poverty Hill" will remain

'Together' analyzed
To the Editor:

Sounds of silBnce

..

Hill is the hypocrisy - the hypocrisy of student

Nancy and Denny Baker
Editor'$ note: You r~queu the we of facts and then
{ail to state even the purchase price of Poverty Hill
correctly. It u $176,000 not $167,000. In addition,
at least S20,000 ha.• bun spent since llut April on
the Poverty Hill land and therefore the purchase
priu alone is not indicative of the cosu.
You refer to the favorable report on Poverty
Hill. This report was prepared by Sub Board l's paid
consultants and delivered by an employee of the
consultant firm . It couldn't· have been anything but
p o1 i t I ve.
T h e Ex e c u t i v e Committee 's
recommendations against Poverty Hill were prepared
over a period of months during which three·fourths .
of the Committee have been intimately involvPd
with Sub Board.

an ecolo~ical wonderland protected by the
conscience of Sub Board . However, this i~ soon
refuted "by assurances that at any time the land could
be sold if 11tudents decided they didn't want it. The
conclusion to be drawn here is that we'll preserve
Poverty Hill land until we get tired of it and then, if
necessary, we'll sell it (probably at a profit) to a gas
station or tum it into a parldng lot.
There are so many more questions raised by
Poverty Hill that •should prevent its purchase :
questions of who will use it, questions of who will
administer it and questions of other stOdent services
suffering from budget cutbacks.
Additionally, there is the Amherst land in the
process of being transferred to Sub Board . Located
near the Amherst campus site, the possibilities for
these 550 acres of student land are tremendous. As
an example, studen~ will desperately need housing
when the University moves to Amherst. There are no
such facilities planned; Sub Board appyently didn't
t~e the uutiative to hire a consultant firm for _,
$5000 to prepa're such plans (as they did for Poverty
Hill).
Again, there are other concerns, problems and
questions raised by Poverty Hill. However , they l}a~
all been adequately covered in past news articles-,nd news analyses. Further elaboration would be both
repetitious and unnecessary.
There are about 650,000 reasons why we
shouldn't acquire Poverty Hill. Nothing more can be
said .

by Jo.Ann Annac&gt;

Your article in lhe Oct. 18, 197 I issue does not ,
in reality, give the reasons for the collapse of the
TOGETHER Program . It must, though, give the
knowledgeable reader some insight into the
ineptitude and lack of true insight which destroyed
the organizatioA.
lack of training was not the reason for the
downfall of TOGETHER, as Mr. Frankel cited . The
most successful drug rehabilitation programs such as
Synanon, Phoenix House, Odyssey House, etc.
employ absolutely no trained or professional help.
The problems encountered by TOGETHER, wruch
Mr. Frankel described as ''too fast for any
organization to handle," could have been handled.
People with dedication. insight and compassion is
what is needed for a successful drug rehabilitation
program . All other problems are superficial and

easily handled by people Uke this.
By using Mr. Frankel as your main source of
information, you have sold sh.ort those people for
which TOGETHER was more than just an
extracurricular activity, but a meaningful cause, to
which they were truly dedicated. You have ~ce\ved
t h e bulk of your i n formation from the
personification of those qualities which allowed
TOGElliER to go down the drain . Your other
informant who stated, "There isn 't much you can do
for a junkie once he's hooked on the hard stuff,"
obviously Lacked any substantial knowledge of the
hard drug problem , as that is not at all the case.
I would greatly appreciate it if nu• Spectrum. in
researching articles of such importance to so many
people would be more concerned with getting to the
truth and less with filling the paper with print.
Mart y D. Cohrn
Assl.ftanr OirCt'tor of Togt'fher

To tile b"dlmr:

The stu dents of this University are apparently
faced with a self-made administrative problem which
they have the power to remedy. But. they will be
successful only if they do so now ; we must stop the
irresponsible antics of Sub Board I , Inc.
We have let such men assume similar powers in
controUing this country's governments. Being
assured that we have a reliable and responsive system
of checks and balances (also, don't forget the ''will
of the masses"), we see that the system in many
cases, becomes a shalJI and there is a way around any
obstalces, if you're the one in power.
And so we are faced with Sub Board I, Inc.,
formed to serve student interests. There are no direct
selection, or even advise and consent, proc~dures for.
the representatives. We select a student government
wruch in tum selects the representatives without so
much as asking the student body , "Do you
approve?" There are no recall procedures; also, I
may be incorrect in saying this, but I believe that, in
last year's elections, no candidate mentioned Sub
Board or what he thought it should do.
Many previous actions by Sub Board I , Inc. reek
of typical .federal government policies (e.g., the
Pentagon Papers) ; don't let anyone know what
you're doing and nobody can criticize your actions.
This allows the group to work with a false sense of
confidence, but eventuaUy leads to distrust. Okay,
Sub Board I , Inc., you're presenting us with fact
sheets to make up for the ~ast silence, but how do
we view your past silence? I, for one, balk at seeing
my fees going to you, especially when you seem to
act irresponsibly and irresponsivcly. You'll see me
vote NO at the upcominl referendum ; you have to
be put in yo ur place, or
the scu&lt;tenti will suffer.

we,

Dat~ld

R. KOJlrJr

Bookstore ckfense
To

rile Editor

a l\Crvlce by specifying the magnitude of loss
attributable

As a member of the FSA Bookstore Committee .
suppose it is ungrateful of me to criticiLe Jeff
Greenwald's favorable analysis of our Report.
Nonetheless, since it is likely that the impressions of
our findings wm be generated more by The
Spectrum account than by the Report itself, I offer
the following observations.
Your commentator is certainly correct when he
refers to t11e bookstore''S ' 'serious public relations
problem ." Unfortunately, he contributes little toils
mitigation. For example. the Committee offered
what it thought to be the most reasonable answer to
a persistent question : why can't the bookstore give
discounts when it has a large captive market and
pays no renf? The reason was accorded major
emphasis in the report: the margin of profit on
textbooks, which presently constitutes almost
two-thirds of gross sales, is simply too small to
permit discounting if the bookstore is to avoid
running at a loss. The only - or at least major - way
to expand profitability is to alter the product mix.
not a feasible alternative in light of current space
restrictions. Yet Mr. Greenwald did not see fit even
to mention. Jet alone ~sht , this critical point ,
S-tudent$ are understandably miffed at
Umitatioll1 on bto~ug. You could have performed

to

pilferage

Lust

year. shortages

amounted t" about $3X.OOO , or ahout 2% of gross
s.tles. Even if the bookstore incurred no overhead
expenses, 1l would have to sell an additio nal
$200,000 worth uf textbooks (where most of the
shortage occurs) to make up this l os~. Put another
way, shortages e.ut'eded total net profit realized by
the bookstore in I iJ10 - 71

A final point , admittedly rather minor Mr.
Greenwald dislikes the proposal to increase the
check-cashing fee . He fails to mention that the
reason the service loses money is that the bookstore
was stuck with over $2400 worth of rubber last year.
Perhaps he would explain why the rest of us should
subsidize lhis quaint practice.

In sum, the Committee was well aware that
much of the bookstore's image is due to
gJisinformation and poor communication. (This goes
for the fac ulty 's perceptions as well: many faculty
members responded indignantly to questions about
their late ordering, while it turned out that the
bookstore was not at fault.) I think you missed a
good chance to make an improvement.

Ho.ward G. Foster
Assistant Professor

Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�PAID POLITICAL

\

A~·······················

THE SPECTRUM IS WRONG

Mr. Regan belongs in this picture
We w. . disappoint ed by The Sp«trum 's failu re of reporting last Friday.
Mr. Lipman has, it appeat~, succumbed to • superficial, high priced ad
campaign. Here are some of the missing facts about Mr. Regan.

WHAT ABOUT THAT "LIBERAL" RECORD?
HIS NEW LEADERSHIP?
In 1969 Mr. Regan spent two brief weeks opposing Mrs. Slominski for the
Republican Mayoral nod because of the dangerously concervatlve road along
'Which she wished to lead the City; in 1971 Mrs. Slominski is his running mate.
After the 1969 Republican defelt Mr. Reg~n was a champion of party reform,
calling for the ouster of the Republican Chairman and refusing to go to party
fuoctions until reforms came along; in 1971 it is enough that the Republican
party and that same chairman support him. In 1970 he liked and wanted the
liberal label ; in 1971 he Is a conservative. (See Buffalo Evening News Feb.
19.1969; BufftJio EII(Jning News Nov. 16, 1969)

.I

Regen's " liberal" voting record w.. mentioned, but not discussed in
Friday'• Spectrum . On examination of the fllcta we wonder if reference Is
being made to hit support of MACE for the Buffalo Polk:e, his opposition to
school Integration, hit opposition to the WILPF anti·VIetnam petition drive,
hit renunciation of Metropofitan government, hit opposition to replacing 1he
rep:easive property tax with a city Income tax, his introduction and support of
emergency curfew legislation, his support of the welfare residency law. his
support of the repeal of the Blaine amendment or pethapa some other similar
stands. (See 1966 CCP p. 776, Item 66, 1967 CCP p. 2612, Item 119, p. 2727,
Item 170; 1968 CCP, p . 412, 413, ltem 2, p. 122, Item 160, p. 1731, ltem
259, 1969 CCP p . 322, Item 167, p . 458, ltem 166).

WHAT ABOUT THE REGAN- AGNEW ENTENTE?
HIS CAMPUS SENSITIVITY?
During the disturbances under Martin Meyerson, Ed Regan publicly
attacked student demonstrators. In 1970 he capitalized on being a member of
the state commission on campus unrest while a candidate for state comptroller,
suggested that card files and surveile~e were needed to keep track of campus
radicals. It is frequently implied that Regan would not have acted as the Mayor
did last year. We don't know because he had not the power, but we have no
reason to believe it. Former President Peter Regan's support of his namesake in
Friday's Spectrum is not without foundation . (SeeBuffalo Evening
News, March 28, 1969 and July 8 , 1970)

Mr. Lipman spent a great deal of copy in Friday's Sp«trum bleedinJI over
the unfairness of the Regaf'I·Agnew association in the public. Mr. Regan we are
told was all faint·heart and unwillingneu regarding the Vice-President's
support. Of course Regan didn't really h.ve to stand on the same platform
with Agnew. Of course he didn't really have to allow himself to be
photo~rctphed with him with that foolish grin. Of course he didn't have to split
the take (some $40,000) . Of course Mr. Regan didn't have to repeat his thanks
for Mr. Agnew's support on TV last Friday. We think the profit motive
conquered again and he grinned all the way to the bank.

REGAN IS A CALLOW MAN TRYING TO COVER UP
HE PLAYS WITH THE BIGOTS
While a supporter of civil rilttts legislation with no teeth, Mr. Regan has
been a consistent enemy of school integration in practice. He is the author of a
plan t o overturn the present pro-integration board with an elected school
board. He supported and voted for the building code amendment to ban
portable classrooms needed to integrate the schoob. He cast seven separate
votes against school Integration in his last two years on the Common Council
(1968 Common Councn Proceedings CCP p. 215·218, Item 162, p . 1123·1124,
Item 162, p. 1318, Item 148. 1969 CCP p. 69·71 , Item 5, p. 1.12·113, Item
108, p. 216, Item 123, p. 316, Item 148). Hardly consistent with his much
vaunted " liberal" record. See Buffalo Evening News July 27, 1968)

Regan's opportunism leads him into a special .kind of lie. He seeks to create
misleading impressions about himself in his advertising.
He says he Is a lawyer when in fact he has passed the bar exam but never
practiced law - By us that is no lawyer. He says he is the President of two
corporations when one is a dummy set up to protect an invention (not his
own) and the other is a family liquor busines - By us that is no corporate
executive.
He says that he is an author in the field of governemnt, when he got an old
term paper of his reproduced twice and now calls it two spearat-. pieces. He has
since repudiated many of the pro·metropolitan government sentimenta in it.
By us that is no author. It is, however, the repudiation of the fruits of
.:holarship for political expediency. By us that makes him no academic
althou~tt ... He says he is a teacher at the college leve. Truth is he held a visiting
lectureship at Buff State for one sem•ter.

Mr. Regan is a man who mendasciousty wraps himself in the mantle of
profeasiona to which he does not truely belong and with which he frequently
has only the most casual contact.

INTERNATIONAL CONSPIRACY TO ZAP
MADISON AVE. IMAGES WITH THE TRUTH
Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday October 29 1971
1

I

�RECORDS
by Billy Altman
Music Editor

Got the Blues" may also have gotten its
start here.
The little known in stru m ental,
To any serious rock fa n and record
"Stoned,.. with Mick stonily enunciating a
collector, bootless are very important. The
~ew ch oice words at the end of each verse,
concept behind bootlegging is a relatively
1S a knockout. " Bye Bye Johnny," the
admirable one. We all know we're getting Chuck Berry follow-up to "Johnny B.
taken by record companies each time we
Goode," captures Richard's great guitar
rnake a purchase. Sales, unfortunately,
work in less than two minutes. Similarly,
don't happen enou&amp;}t times and, beU, we the' first Stones' rut, the Beatles' " I Wanna
need the music to survive. The bootleger
Be Your Man," is included . The slide solo,
gives us the record at reasonable prices, and
the frenzied vocal and basswork lay the
without the usual record company to foundation for the grittiness of the Stones'
distrib utor to record store to us bullsltit music and even the Stones doing the
Coaster's "Poison Ivy," fuU of Wyman bass
slides and spiffy backup singing.
Side two's got a respectful version of
" Money" to start it off. Then, the real gem
of the record: a rendition of Muddy's " I
Can't be _Satisfied.1' Brian's bottleneck
work was so important in early Stones'
music, and here it's never been better.
Great vocal by Mic k o n this one. " What to
Do" is a fine r'n'b tune that was on the
British Aftermath record. The song sounds
like it just happened in the studio as a filler
track.
The last four songs are from tho live EP
from '65. Starting off with the end of
"Everybody Needs Somebody," the band
swings into a classic version of "Pain In My
and price shift. The big question is whether Heart." The girls in the audience seem to
or not the artiit is being screwed.
be dropping like flies , especially when Mick
You'll notice, though, that the really big sings ..Wo n't you love me?" Then the two
bo~nds are th e ones that are bootlegged .
live killers - " I 'm Movin' On" and " It's All
Their label releases seU well eno~gh so that Right ." The whole band is inc redible on
label Ips will not affect their status much, these two. With BiU and Charlie thumping
~u Jt:s cool I guess. It's when a starving or away, and Keith singing "Yes, I'm moving"
new group is hit with :l bootleg that things and Brian playing phenomenal slide, the
aren't cool. Uke the sloppy live recording tune reaches its peak and then they shift
ripped off from an early J . Geils Band into " It's All Right ,•• o ne of the best get up
performance in the Boston area . ll only and gd, songs ever written . Heavy r' n 'b
cuused home area sales of their first record influences on the vocals. Mick screams "all
to shp for a while.
right'' at least ~ev~:n ttme:. when this nne's
Hi storically speaking, bootlegs are over.
1nvaluable. The Great White Wonder
upcned the gates in many ways. The last Rolling Sron~s Europ("(Jn Tour, /970
three years have seen some great offil:aally
unrecorded son~ emerging. Dyla n's " I'll
The European tour, two-record set 1s
Keep It With Mine" as one of his finest Stmply magnificent By the time the Stones
~ungs. Th~: sa me wit h the Byrd 's renditio n got to Europe, they had •managed to
of Little Feat's "Willing." As far as the recapture their old sound . Things start off,
argu ment about quality recordings. the Isle' as usual , with " Jumpin ' Jack Flash," but ,
of Wight Dylun bootleg sounds like I'm dig it. Keith sings alone on the cho rus Iii.\'
there. The "selected cuts" o n &amp;lj Pnrtrait he should . "Roll Over Beethoven" is nc't .
:ue too dean and st udio-like. There's no with another brilliant ro~;k \olo h} Keith
hve feehng in the "perfect" recordang.
"Sympathy For the Drvil" fcatur&lt;"' 'l'OH'
Bootlegs are avmlable finally m Buffalo, of Mick Ta ylor·~ lwry guttar \Hill. and
o11 vanous places. The R ecord Co-op is great drummm~ by Wall~
handbng some, and we thought we'd let
Side two IS the reo~l roclo.er \1\.le. I wu
Chuck Berry classu:s. "l ct It Rod. ·· .md
you know about some of them .
"little Queenie." .md " Brown \• .:u• · l1 '
hard to hear Kc.at Ia ,,lin.: of thL tune hut
•
•
•
II'~ on this side that one pad: ~ up nn l.•n
Swned Again
Stewart:. · unJerrated piano work And, ·~
that a saxophone blann~ ;sway? Yep,
Stoned Again i:- a composite lp of .:uls Bobby K ey~. who joined the tour in
lrom early singles Jnd CP's. A slow ballad, Europe Great sax solo on "Let It Rod."
" I Was Wro ng," has many of the touch~:s o( and perfect lines on "Queenie" and
later Stones anatenal. The org.tn bears more " Bro wn Sugar." Surprise guitar break by
than a passing resemblance to the one on Taylor on the latter and at's a beaut.
" Midnagt;ta--Rambler" might be the best
'She Smaled· Sweetly," and the recent " I

•

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unjversity
un1on
activities
board

performance of this tune ever. Incredible
eneray o n all levels. Side three ends al most
as SQ0\ as it starts with. "Live With Me."
Bo_bby Keys runs away with this one with
able assistance fro m Keith.
Side four's got "Stray Cat Blues,"
" Love In Vain" and' "Dead Flowers." The
sax pushes "Cat" aU the way up there,
pavina the way for Taylor's excellent solo.
" Vain" has a non-slide solo by Taylor and
after hearing it , you wonder w}ly h e used a
slide on this one in the Statel. And " Dead
Flowers," the Stones big country hit, is a
lo t of fun .
There's too much on these records that
is important to any Stones' fan to pick up
on. Either one Is a great buy.
Zimm~man - LoolcJirt ~k

The latest of the Dylan bootlegs is
definitely the best o ne yet. A two-record
set, recorded at Royal Albert Hall and the
Berkeley Community Theatre. Quality is
uniformly good, but the songs a nd the
performances are unreal.
Historically, the Albert Ha11 concert
with the Hawks is one of the supreme
moments of rock cl. roU. The audience is
split between the folk purists and the
rockers. The follcies hiss and boo, the
rockers scream and shout. Dylan plays with
his back to the audience most of the time.
He's at IUs peak as far as rock goes. Shifting
words arounii, moaning and yelling; it 's a
new, triumphant , indignant, Dylan we have
here.
Side one includes "Tell Me Mama; I
Don't Believe You; Baby, Let Me Follow
You Down" and " Tom Thumb's Blues...
"Mama" is a real rocker with Dylan doing
what seems to be a great imitation o f
Dylan. "Baby" is certainly changed with
the Hawks in the background singing along.
"Tom Thumb" is basically the same as the
single flip side from the l iverpool concert.
On side two the heavy st ut f happe ns.
The folkies are shouting insults at Bob ,
a nd . in his speed freakiness, Dylan rambles
un in nonsensical fashion untrl he cun be
heard . and he says ''if only ynu W1luldn't
clap so hard ." " Ballad of J Thin Ma n .. hu~
a lot of great organ hy Garth Dylan
shuffles words throughout (""t ou ' hould
be made to WC&lt;tr all kinds of lclcphunc~ .. )
'l he clincher ~ " Lil.e a Rolhng Stone,"
however. J ust before the !Wng, smr&amp;ctmc
yells oul "Jud.~s:• Bob snarls bal.:lt "You're
a liar . I don't believe you ... rh&amp;s IS
undoul1tt'llly the fin~·~t 'il.ngl,• rth: k
pcrfonnunl"C ever ~-urtur,•t.l "" 1n'n1d
Drumnh't M1cJ..ey lohn' • ~ ,&amp;l ,•;c,Juld 1
tkll,&amp;\tatrn,:. ~vrng ll~ht '" 11 11 ••1u11 tiiiH
I ,...
r. 11
dt• ,.
'''
•'
IJ rn.J
'"llllcJ 1\1 1111' l'flo.l lh
anu d11:cry \Cll l. l
•f ... r.
crowd Now thai\ dalo\ 1
The -.econd nword 1s .&amp;II .ll\111,," I In
lirst 'idl' " an early rc~.,r.t.n• p 1t~h,1hly

around '62 or '63. The ltighligbt is the o nly
recorded versio n of Dylan doing
..Tomorrow's A Lo ng Time." No one reaUy
does Dylan better than the man himself.
''Bob Dylan's Dream" is also a jewel.
The final side is a magnificent
performance of Blonde on Blonde tunes
done way before the record was releused .
The audience doesn't know the songs: and
there's an immediacy and a disl.lovering
tliat belies "'ords. "Vlsiorts of Johanna ,
Fourth Time Around, Desolation Row,"
and " Just Like a Woman." They're all
brilliant and do n't suffer from lack of extra
instruments.
As l said before, tlrls might be the best
Dylan album ever. Do your mind a favor
and get it.

• • • • •
A few words should be spared for some
of the other 6ootleas available at the co~p.
Leon RusseU's NET special is available, and
the sound quality is perfect. "Girl From
The North Country" is fantastic ; Actually,
just about anytlting Leon does is fantastic.
The Shelter People, especially Don Presto n
on guitar provide an admirable backing to
L eon's mad singing and playing. A
beautiful hour of sweet sounds.
Young Man~ Fancy, the Neil Youna
double album, is also good . Over half the
songs a re previous ly unrecorded . " A Man
Needs a Maid," suna about actress Carrie
Snodgrass, is a lovely sons, and " Heart of

Gold," featuring ljeil Young on harmo njca,
'" another dustc. There are good vers.t ons
of "Ohio," whlcb sound quite a bit
different ftom the elec.trlc ~n\on, "Supr
Muun tain '' and the Spnngfield tune ·•on
Lhc Way llome." ' '1 he Damage Done," a
~on~; cll•lll f' ra/Y Horse's horse problems IS
;c s:rd d&lt;~ ·" •n·11 t:11 y uf drug problems rn the
r&lt;• ~ "••rl"
• \ 1·rv junkie is like a settmg
1 ,..,, .· .1

l /lt'rlcJrt '&lt;

Lll't' 111 /Jilh'Oit,

a

•• ·" 1.&amp;11 •~' I o~ylor lp o~nd some C.
:.a..:v. n~•. at all )'' 11c L.trel&gt; o~bout \at.
Pnc ('' ,&amp;r.·. ·''alway~ Jt the ~:o-&lt;&gt;p , lJU&amp;It!
rca,unabk Do t l I • •JJy

ccc~coccccccoccoccccccccccccccccccccoccc

more!
~ccccccacaaccccccaccc~cccccccccccccccccc

presents a ·Weekend of

ENTERTAINMENT

COFFEEHOUSE COMM ITTEE

presents

Sun. thr Thurs.

Country Granoala

AFTER 9 .00 p.m.

Sun. tttru

Th~o~rs.

381/Ti~~ AVU(i)

'*

(¥ 7l1lfT
lcawTIW
IRE$11I&amp;6S M yovAa ._

65c
... SIEIUDU ¥tV!

1111 Ullll IIIAI

(JUG BAND)
OCTOBER 291h and 30th

9 :00 and 11 :00 p.m.

Visit the fubn where love iS the ultimllta crtme.

1HXII38

1st FLOOR, NORTON CAFE

··················••t••A

SEE SHOWCASE

•

SO ¢STUDENTS

FOR TIMES
Division of Sub-Board l,lnc.

Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�Rascals still provide.
.J .

•

-continued

f~om ~

••

knew how to hold it . Buzzy and
the bass player, (who were in the
center of the stage) would
oftentimes stand side by side
while they played: I really
expected tt.em to do some dance
steps togethf'r. lt w~uld have been
a nice to uch .
Felix was on the left side of
stage on a raised platform . He was
surrounded by his organ and
electric piano, which he would
play alternately. Sometimes when
he was playing the organ he would
even reach over with his right
hand to hit a few notes on the
piano. Felix was always one for
class. Above them all in the back
was Dino pounding out the

The first song they did that throughout the set.
really got a response from the
-The Rascals did do one surprise
.crowd was ''Groovin .. - oldies number in the form of
but goodies. Felix's voice just .. Superstar." That 's the
floated out over the crowd. The Carpenters' hit right now. In case
800 &amp;RI of tM fl.-1
whole time he was singing I kept you don't know, the song's about
TRAIL RIDING IN N.Y. STATE
getting flashes of driving in my a groupie's love for a star she once
Open 7 days . . . .
car. Car radio songs are kind of made it with. The song was song
special to me ; it's how I tell time. by bne of the two girl singers in
The Rascals did another oldie the group. She did a very
but
goodie in the fo rm of ' 'Carry convincing performance, while
S32..U12
532..U12
Me Back." Interspersed between Buzzy did some very convincing
the familiar songs were a lot o f playing.
new o nes. Most of them I didn't
recognize, but they all were quite
The last song of the set was
good proving that Felix hasn't lost " People Got to be free." Before
his touch even if he isn't putting he sang the song Felix did a
out hits anymore. One note 1 singing introduction , in which he
must intelject before I go on is thanked the crowd and told them
~~~~~~~~~~~~~c~o~sm~i~c~b~ea~t..:...-------~t~h~a~t_!t~h:!_e_b~a~n~d~w~as~e~x~c~ep~t!!io~n~al!__!!th~a~t_!t~h~eJgroup was quite sincere

~flllll.

..~•.

... .

()

cJ

o'

()
(')

...,

That's the difference between
f Lemon Up and products with
or extract. That's why Lemon
just a little lemon fragrance
Up Shampoo makes hair shiny clean. That's why Lemon Up
Facial Cleanser is far better than soap. And that's why Lemon Up
Anti-Blemish Lotion with hexachlorophene is your best defense
against oil-troubled skin.

.

~~--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~

Page si~teen . The Spectrum . Friday, October 29, 1971

ten-

about the song and hoped that the
crowd was just as sincere. During
the song a few people clapped
their hands and one couple even
got up and started dancing. Most
of the crowd seemed mystified by
all this and started putting on
their coats before the end of the
song. At the end o f the song there
was some polite applause before
they scurried out. l wonder what
the hurry was. I guess it was date
night and they wanted to see what
they could do before the girls had
to go home. Needless to say, there
was no encore. Even though It was
an enjoyable concert , when I was
leaving it, I felt a Jittle bit sad.

Robbie Lowman

�·- .

J,

A full slate of concerts hi~li~t the next few days. Toni~t. at Kleinhans Music Hall,
Chuck Mangione gives another " Friends and love" concert at 7 p.m. M.ngione, the
director of the Rochester Jazz Ensemble, is starting to gain national recognition with the
release of his second Mwcury album. Sunday ni~t. country singer Kris Kristofferson
comes to Kleinhans for an 8 p.m . show. The composer of "Sunday Momin' Comin'
Down" and "Me and Bobby McGee" has
heralded as the finest young country
songwriter writing toct.y. And Monday ni~t at 8 p.m. at Memorial Auditorium, tan
Anderton and Jethro Tull wltl rock out. The Br\tllh band has been a tm81h since \ts
itlJ.. ~ three veers -..o. with their latest lp, Aqualund, continu.aty dimbing \n sales.

been

\

Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page seventeen

-

�Why we urge f10U to)vote

REGAN

for COUNTY EXECUTIVE

REGAN UNDERSTANDS THE UNIVERSITY. As a graduate with honors
of the State University of New York at Buffalo Law School, a member of the
Temporary Commission of Campus Unrest, an intructor of local government
at Buffalo State College, and a frequent visitor to our own campus, he knows
higher education and its needs. As a member of the Temporary Commission on
Campus Unrest, Regan conscientiously sought out the causes ~nd nature of
campus unrest and was instrumental in producing a report that was enlightened
and sympathetic to the needs and aspirations of the contemporary university
and its studepts, faculty and staff. He can be counted on to defend the
integrity of the University and to contribute to better relations between the
University and the community.

HE UNDERSTANDS THE UNIVERSITY AND ITS ASPIRATIONS.
HE HAS THE INDEPtNDENCE, INTEGRITY, AND INTELLIGENCE
TO GIVE ERIE COUNTY OUTSTANDING LEADERSHIP.
During the past several years we have known Ned Regan as an able and
progressive student and practitioner CJI local government. We believe that
Regan is well qualified to provide the i(lJ~pendent and imaginative leadership
that Erie County needs.
IN HIS CAMPAIGN FOR COUNTY EXECUTIVE, Regan has presented
carefully thought out, forward-thinking proposals for Vl intergrated consumer
protection program, a community-oriented drug abuse program, a
comprehensive environmental protection program, a highly professional
county pollee services agency, and a county assessment review board .

On his record and on our knowledge of him, we believe that Regan will
bring ability, independence, and determination to the office of County
Executive.
We urge you to vote for him .

'

ON THE COMMON COUNCIL of the City of Buffalo, Regan was able to
achieve much even as a member of the minority. He consistently advocated a
regional approach to rapid transit, solid wast~ disposal and regional planning.
His , nitiative led to the formation of the Erie and Niagara Counties Regional
Planning Board . Regan prodded the city administration into undertaking the
City Management study. He worked hard and effectively for neighborhood and
community development. In addition to giving constant attention to
neighborhood parks, schools and community facilities, Regan initiclted a ve!&gt;t
pocket program, a program to keep schools open in the evenings for
community activities, a summer recreation program making use of school
facilities, and the Johnson Park restoration project.
Throughout hes term he dept the city administration on its toes and often
provided the leadership required to get stalled projects, such as housing and
urban renewal, moving again.

)

Political Science
Blankenship
EnaJish
Gale Carrithers
Political Science
Richard H. Cox
Economics
Gilber Crouse
Ma~ement
John Drotning
Physiology
Beth E r~mus
Medicine
William A. Fleming
History
Theodore Friend
Newton Garver
Philosophy
Law and jurisprudence
William Greiner
Economics
James Holmes
Medicine
james P. Nolan
Robert Pope
History
Martin Pops
English
SuYn Pops
Italian
Psychiatry
Peter F. Regan
Management
J.P. Secle
lawrence Southwick, Jr.
Ma~ement
Glen Thurow
Political Science
Political Science
Claude Welch
Stanley Zionts
Man..-nent
PAID FOR BY FACUlTV FOR REGAN .
V~uah~n

AS A STUDENT OF lOCAl GOVERNMENT, Regan has written three
essays analyzing problems and opportunities for improvement of government
In Wester !':lew York, on published in the Buffalo Law Review, and another by
the Greater Buffalo Development Foundation. He has taught the subject at
Buffalo State College. He is now serving with Robert Weaver, Robert Wagner,
Basil Pa1erson and others as a member of the Temporary Commission on the
Powers of Local Government.

·--------------------PAID POLITICAL AD _____________________..
rR;;;-H;;;·Lip~~n's (city Edit;·~m; Sp~~t;~~c~;;~is ~t;;·-;;;·~;;;; ~=::v:~,l
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Sedita commentary
The rmyor's office is on the second floor of City Hall, end
moot the first thing !hat lmpt- vlsltora Ia lhe bright red carpet
wtllc:h - . the entire rectf)tlon . . .. Just Inside the office,
.,ardlng the entra.- to the mryor 'alnnar unctum, Ia 1 tcale model
of the downtown Buffalo~- It looks like somtlhing lht
INYOf't grendc:hlldren might heWI built, wllh m.t brown blodts
r~tlng edifices alrtedy conatructed end
grey one
atandlng fOf propoud ptojec:ts. Aocord lng to this.., of tlnkar toys,
roughly half of Buffalo is yet to be built.
To ttle right is Exacutive Aide Stanley Makowlkl'a office. and it
ia thtfe. in lhet doorway, !hat we flrn - him. The men - the
-ond most powerful urban political bo• In !he country - Joe
Crenele. He end the mltyor heve decided that !his morning m.y Nill
' - • the Common Council ennounce Mr. Makowski alta choice tor
the next mayor . Of courM If Frenk Sedita is elected- oounty
tJCacutive !hare woll bllinle choice buno c:h- his tim deputy 11
meyOf. But Sedita Meds heip In the Republican Polillh
~. and Sian Ml6towllu os 1 n«:e Polillh fellow

u-

.......,_IXtlcs
It Isn't surpri$ing thet lhe Otmocrall should use auc:h tactocs
lnstted ol addressing lhemlllvts to IIIMIM and Mr. Sedita's record. In
fact. he doesn't have muc:h of a rtconl to campeogn eround, but he
does have one powerlul machine behind him. Jo. Crlf19le would
like people to believe thet he'a a progr-ive; he h11 aligned hlmaelf
with auc:h exponents of " The Ntw Politlca" 11 Ted Sorenson and
Hubert Humphrey, and if you're not lmpt...,, well you ptobebly
shouldn't be. Crtngle is 1 bou. pure and almple, end If there is one
figure in American politic wnom he edmlra mOte that 1111y other
one would heWI to think thet rNtl would be Richard Olley. Wilh
that lnfOfmatlon in hand. one should even " - expected that lhe
Otmo&lt;nts. finding themtelvts traollng with only a ftw weeks to go,
would stOOp to making personal attacks on their ope~C~ntnt MMI
q.ore the ptoblama of Erie County end the city Itself.
After ell, even Mayor Sedill might be slightly embtriiSMid to
edmlt !hat more houaing ha been torn down in Buffalo over lhe
pen ttw ..,._s !hat has bien constructed. But then It Ia difficult to
find t ime fOf the QOnatruction Industry to build low cost houalng
wnen you're busy gettlnt It to raiM lht roof on Memorial
Auditorium 10 that Seymour KnoK can heWI his own prlvat• hockay
tatm to watc:h - not to mention all thoee nlca people who Willi to
tlvt him four dollars a ticllat to there In his excitement - or to
build • nice mell in the "-! of the downtown • • ., !hat
Stoymour MMI his fritndt can 1111 lhttr goode to the cltiun&amp; of
Buffalo, 'llllltiO can then ruth right home to tM1f aublllndlrd
houang. The mayat is c:orm:1,
wtltn he c:n.,... thet the
Republicana " - ''t done muc:h of a job with the county, failing in
IUGtl .,_ • drugs, pollution end jobt. Ha Ia wey oH bell, though,
wfwl he aat• thet Ed Regen Is e tool of ttlat perty.

L ••

how-.

The ::ly, the regular Repubi!Qn• wouldn't ._. toudled

The only greater di - thet !\wing the o_,alic boiMI excuM me - lhe Oemoc:ntic eo. In conwol of the c:lty would be to
alto heWI him in control of the county. For thlt r~ elone rt
would be worthwtlllt to hew 5«14ta def•tld, i1 he wa
ruronlng 4101inat 1 complete Incompetent - wttk:tl he is not. Jo.
. Crlngle would like to run thla nate; hopefully he will never even
run this county.

Redan commentaru
e

.

~
Voters feet a ingly ullfWOIWiblt dllammeln lhe upcomong
election for Erie County Exacutivtl. They " - • c:holct of voting
for • man wllh !he 'liberal' convic:tlona of a Rlc:hatd Daley, or
voting for• • men runnlne • • Republlcan-&lt;=-vative. On the
surt.c., therefore. one might tend to lgnOfe lhe wholelhing end Itt
the hacka fight It out among thtiTIItl-. In lhia CIM, however,looks
are verv. very deceiving.
When Ed REg~~~~ flrn received the CollMnlatlve nomination
quite a ,_ eyllbrowa wwe railed among people who had eome 10ft
of knowledge about hil record in the Common Council. That body
II noted • • collection of party htcks end inept clown~, but Ed
Rtg~n had been the exception. He voted lnttiiUgantly, made
progrtlllv• propolals, end if he
a R~Pbllctn. well tt1erw w..-.'1
a lot to be aid ~ being a Democrat In ltlls town. Tlwefore thtt
eor-vatlve 0011\inlrtion lll*t quite 1 • - people, lhls rwoportw
lndudtd. Until perwna!Jy going to lntarllltw !hit rNn end hewing
wtwt he had to •Y. thara - e t.ge quenlona a to whllher1le w•
wormaupponlng.

··-··-··-··-·•~••-••-PAtO

Page elgbteen . The Spectrum . Friday, October 29, 1971

keoen

with a Mt of rubber gto-lf they hedn't been tOft:«&lt; to. He got the
Rlpubllctn nomination bec.auM lhey knew he would ' - •
dlltroyed them In a prim.wy bertie. The Republletns didn't diOOM
Ed R1111111. they got him rvnmed down tn.l&lt; ttvoet.. StcondiY. fOf
s.d1ta to cNige enyone .._with .,_.ng the pwm of a madlln. Ia
at,_. too outrag.ous to comment upon. The-e II only one polmc;.
madllne in Erie County. end 1twt one belongl to Cfengle. One dey
10m41body ought to c:htck to vow regiltretlon In Forest L..wn. It
Wllll't Mf. R'lllfl wtto advised by eltudy group to lay off ov.
four hundo'ed munkic* tml)loy- Cm.lnly peny workers - the
PltfOniOI syatem In Buffalo renlu MCOnd only to that In Chlc:ago)
t1 an eoonomy m..ure and then proceeded to remove only 201 of
them. Nor waa 11 Mr. Reg~n who comPOUnded. that action by
rttliring 138 of lhoee people to civil MNict Jobt. NOt wa it Mr.
Regen who overcame the obstacle of lowar 1tlaria ~ lhOtl
worktrS by ptovldlng overtime benefits.

w•

No~:-

no longer lf'IY

qu.~tiolll.

Thlt rNn' la not the onllfWY

modern American Co..-vatlve. Don't bell- ttle ~ions you've
been ,.jng in the Sedita addl - Regan plteded not to"- A¥to Buffalo. end If Spiro found out whit Ed R~g~~~ II
r.tly lbout he'd hew him limited for OOiliPII'ICY. If, In fKt, he
can be t.on.tly celled a - t l w It II t.auM he is 1
~atfvt In the ndltlonal rltMr thet !he c:onltn'lpOf'lfy ·
Ed Repn Ia f111Nt --c.tlllllztd eo-nment ~ the , _ , . that lntalligent radlc:all are: the ,_ of -,n. control h
ov. ~·a 11- MM1 the aucc:eMion of atlfllnt burelucfadta tt111t
'"""· There ia actuelly e gr•t dael more popullam than
QOnllfVetism in R..-n.
He 19e1kl of human rights and people'• Meda end you can't
help but believe him. He Ia 1 hell of a lot closer to Relph Nader 1t11111
William Buckley. He's a politician ell rlltlt, end he undoubtedly 1111
hil own personal ambltl0111, but he Is honenly influtneled by
coruidtretl0111 ~ the people he wents to · NOt Is that
p n - . polltiQI m.torlc. When R1111111 tpllka of llfVIng !he
people he .,.,.lust thet : providing housing for peop1« who,_,
it, providing dNg tr~ment canters CFrank Sedita botltld of liVIng
to 11ft one and a half million dollars from the nate fOf melhadorle
canters - thet'a roughly -'eeout to gtnlng 1 fi~~W doll• low! to
meke • down peyment on a Cadillac).

'*•

HonNt, political 111M
AI we set listening to thla men apee1c 1 got the titling thet It 1
cloltd my eyes and added a Ntw EngtMMI _,1, well laugh If you
went to, but damned If he wouldn't htve sounded like BotlOy
• Kennedy. That Is not meent to Imply eny phony ~tatlon of the
Kennedy style, but simply thet thl 11aut1 thlt Regan add,_
hlmttlf to end the way he 00.. 10 cannot help but lmpreaa eny
liSt-.
C.Uinly mtny hew giVW! up on the political system. The ld•
that one good men can 1 clty Of a oounty or a netlon 00.. not
hold a ~ dael of credibilhy. But the~ that all polltlctl people
.,, hopel_,y CIOffilll(, that one it • bad .. the ne)(f, simply will
not hold up tither. At the very l.n we llhould hope to htvt good
men mekt the best of a bed political aituatlon than bad men m.ke
thl worn of lt. Ed Regan is not a •vlour, no lingle humen being
oould hope to unravel the Incredible knot of political
corruption and ineptitude thet It arangllne not only the oountv but
the entire nation. Neittltr It he MOttw Itt..!, ' - · w i t h the
stock _ , thllt just don't wutc end the tlCpertlta tt polltlctl
~- He is en hotlen, hlrd-wortdne polltlclolnw~ 'llllltiO t.ts fOI' the
.,..._ of the peopM. If you ldll ttrir* ttwt type Gf lndMdual miFt
be wont1 wtlne fOI', here's 'f(NI oppot'tUnlty.

Paid for by hculty fOt Rlglln

:1

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P'OLITIC:AL AD-••-··-··-··-··-··-·•-••J

�LucUie in concert

I

•

B.B. King: master of blues
Sunday night at Buffalo State
was Blues night; even people who
aren't into the blues were drawn
bY the name of 8.8 . King, and the
auditorium was packed . We went
to the late sbow but 1 heard that
both shows were equally good .

Derringer did some of the most
outrageous riffing I've ever heard
bear, including taking off his
guitar and going down on one
knee, while the band and the
a u d i e n c e sc r ea m e d
encouragement.

The show started with Edgar
Winter's White Trash , a band
that's perfectly named. They get
by on pure brashness and Rick
Derringer's guitar: They cam e on
like an express train with a
four·man brass section , bass,
drums and Rick Derrin&amp;er, lately
of the McCoys and Jonny Winter.
Edgar alternated between piano
and sax. They started with "Save
the Country ," which immediately
started the crowd dancing, and
that doesn't happen every day .
The brass was working perfectly,
Memphis-style, and the bass,
drums and gllitar were pure funk .
transforming Laura Nyro songs
isn't 1hat easy.

They ,somebow ended the song
and went into "love lights," one
of t he few versions I've ever heard
that does justice to the original.
The brass was blowina bard and
everyone had a good time. They
came back for a fme version o f
"Can't Tum You Loose" for an
encore.
Not everyone like White Trash
but they weren't another buiJshit
soul band. They're not there to
dazzle or entertain you, but to get
you into the music and feel good.
They know their music so well,
they can tum it inside out, and
still co m e back for more.
Anyway. they had most of the
audience up and ready for more.

A little flash

Polished musk soothing
Next the sax player sang a
While the equipment was beang
brassy blues, " 1 Got News,"
changed, JifTI Santella's remarks
complete with a fine guitar solo,
only seemed to provoke the
and an Otis Redding ending. He crowd more, and by the time
sang with a fine voice, not
B.D.'s band, Sonny Freeman and
affected in any way ; in fa ct the
th6 Unusuals ca me out, they were
whole band pushed so hard that
ready for blood. They were the
they looked like they were born complete o pposite of White Trash.
to do their music. It took a lot of perfectly groomeq tn look-alike
guts to play the way Derringer did suits; and they had'their work cut
before B.B.. but he came through, out for them . They're a J3ZZ
m fine fashion . Rick did a linte ensemble, and they started wtth a
rock &amp; roll wit h Chuck Berry's low key instrumental. Nothing
" Back in the USA."
realty fancy, as the tenor sax
Then they did Edgar's big song subtly worked out the melody,
" Tobacco Road ." The music but it was really nice, and
crashed down ominously behind mellowed everyone out.
Edgar's scat sintring, and you
Each musictan is a complete
kllow this is their song us Edg:~r professio nal and knows his part
screams out the lines. The music perfectly ; and this is what I was
bu11t up and up until everyone afraid of: that now that B.D. Ktng
lost control, Edgar got carried is a star, he docs a very
away with his singi ng, and they professional show and walks ou t.
went into a style that can only be Anyway after another short
descnbed as crazy, insane must c. instrumental the man himself
Edgar und Rick traded nffs unt1l came out. After 14 years the band
Edgar's voice sounded like an knows his every move and can
inst rument , pushing them higher follow him perfectly But B.B. IS
and htgher, until Edgar swittthed the master of tt aJI, pushing the
to sax and started over agai n . band with a perfectly timed riff,

and then throwing in a few chords
and laying back to let the band
work out. He did a few short
instrumentals to feel out the band
and the audience and then went
into " Whole Lotta Love," (no,
not the Zeppelin one) an old rock
song.
Not a wasted note
B.D. knows the value of every
note and nothing is wasted, and
the band started to move. Without
losing a note, he did another blues
instrumental playing with the
a udlence . B.B . knows his
dynamics perfectly, as he built up
each run slowly, letting each note
burn . And when you thou&amp;ht the
big crescendo was coming, he'd
start again but in another
direction , getting stronger and
stronger, so that when it finally
came you knew it was there.
He did "Sweet Little Angel,"
starting slow and under.&gt;tating it
and then butlding it up until it
wa s u joyous sta tement. He
screamed and pleaded, and then
let lucille take over. By now,
everyone knows the s tory of
lucille, his guitar. but she can
sound sweeter than any voice, and
then whine and scream.
Then came another slow blues,
and even though the line~ about
the postman and mailman commg
around were predictable, when he
got to the big line about "Tellin
your insuran~.:e salt:l.man friend to
take out some tnsurancc o n
himself," he sang it with a
vengeance, and the crowd went
wild . At this point the aud1ence
wa s hi s . He wasn't just a
performer, but an artist knowing
when to wtdetst\te himself, and
theft come onl~tfh real rage, and
everyone felt it

Ghetto woman
Afler th1s tl wa~ "Ghetto
Wo man,'' a song from hts new
album . It's a slow, proud song
about a woman who wai ts for her
man who wtll never he there, and
the guitar hcks pleaded . Then he
went into a fast shuffle which

The thrill's still there
feat ured some of lh\! best guitar
I've ever heard . 1-fe would follow
the band , playing m and through
their melodies, and then with a
few screaming licks, push it up,
and then lead the banJ to a new
dtrection . At th1s point he had
everyone up and dancing. Ke was
clearly enjoyin&amp; h1mself and t'm
sure he could have done it all
night.
lie'&amp; not juo;t a gultJrtsl but a
complete rnU!&gt;ICI.tn, and ca n rod.
With the best of them . It wasn't
JUSt performer.&gt; and audienu: now.
but one: whole un1t. Somc:onc
offered hJm some w1ne , and he
warm ed up e nough to tell
everyone huw much he enjoyed
them commg out to hear h1s
music, and what 11 beauttful sight
it was to sec everyone together
enjoying themselves.

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present FOUR BIG CONCERTS
Getting down to il
MON.,NOV.l
MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM

8 :00p.m.
FRI., NOV. 4
KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL

8:30p.m.
WED., NOV . 10
MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM

8 :00p.m.

JETHRO

TUL~L

Front Floor"'Golds &amp; REds $6.00 Rear Floor &amp; Blues $5.00
Grey5 &amp; Oranges $4.00

Then he d1d a bc:auttful slow
ballad, "Somebody Loves You,"
with an amazing lead, in which
every note just 'lang. But B.B. is a
J lues singer and he f10ished with,
of t:o ur..e, " The Thrill is Go ne."

RODMcKUEN
DONOVAN

The man who wrote the book on
blues guitar playir19, 8 .8 . King,
lets one loose. In almost 20 v•rs,
through countless one nisllten ell
over the place, B.8 . has never
once let an audience down.
He moaned ou t the lines and then
mellowed it out until everyofle
was clapping, and you knew thl:y
felt il.
Of course, nobody would let
him leave until he did an encore,
so he came back with a slow
instrumental, and made everyone
in the band take a lead until every
note was lo his satisfaction.
Specia l men tton has to go to the
piani~t . whose playing he liked so
much that he dec1dt:d to do
another number. And tt was "Why
I Sing the Blues ." It wasn't a slow
blues but a hard last ~hufle, and
he went into 11 w1th a vengeance.
lfe made the mcanest faces I've
ever seen, as he made Lucille
scream, and you knew 11 wasn't a
song of torment but of joy. It 's
his story .
B.B. once said there's nothing
much you can do about the blues
exce pt play them , and he
wouldn't have it any other way.
And if you were 1here to share
them . it becomes a joyous
occas1on . B.D.'s music transcends
all categories.

- Tom Bogucki

GUS IS A BIG BOY NOW, AND
HE'S GOT WHAT YOU WANT

MAIN FLOOR $6.00 - $5.00 BALCONY $5.00 - 4.00

... notes you slept through ...
book.s'you can't afford ...
clippings to send to your relatives... copies of incriminating
documents... your first novel ...

Front Floor Golds &amp; REds $5.50
Rev Floor &amp; Blues $4.50
Greys &amp; Oranges $4.00

Tickets on ~le now at Buffalo Fest lvoll Ticket Office, Stolt!., Hilton lobby (molll orders accet)led wlth5lolmped Hlf·
addressed envelope); U .B . N or t on Hall •. State Coli'"""
v " v Ticket Office; Tickets H . .berle Plaza, Niagara Falls.

COPIES! !!!

8 CENTS

355 NORTON

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, PUMPKfN SPECTACULARflll
FREE HAllOWEEN PUMPKIN WITH EACH L.P.- TAPE PURCHASE
AS YOUR PURCHASE INCREASES
INCREASES GEOMETRICALL VI

ARITHMETICALLY -- YOUR

PUMPKIN

SIZE

Friday, October 29, 1971. The Spectrum . Page nineteen

�MIKE Bl..CX)Mf"I[LD AND

JIMMY PAG[ G[T TO
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JOHN~ UNTIL THr-

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tapestries -rugs

Reg. $l6

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Reg.$ 20

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Completely stocked with:

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1.)
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We have 85 new V.W.'s, plus 80 assorted used
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CHILLED WINES

YAGOSANTGRIA . ..• . •• .. . $1.69, 6th
BOONES APPLE WINE ..•..... 1.00. 6th
FRENCH WINES .......... .. ... 99¢.5th
SPANAOA .... ........ ..... 1.99,% Gal.
KEY LARGO ................. 1.16, 5th
CHABLIS PINK .• ...••......... 99¢, 5th

HARD CIOEi'; .•.......•..• 89(, 6th
ZAPPLE .............•........ 1.00, 5th
RED SWEET WINE •........ 1.59,% Gal.
I. LOVE. YOU. . . . . . . . ..... .39¢.10th
SPANISH WINES .............. 88¢. 5th
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Open ti119:30 p.m. Weekdays

Open till 10:30 p.m. Weekends

Page twenty . The Spectrum. Friday, October.29, 1971

�Winaer takes

an

Bicycle intra murals planned
by Mkhael Zweig
Sfl«lrum SttJ{f Wrlur

Ba.ske&amp;ball intramurals have brought great
enthusiasm to the gym. An unprecedented number
of 84 teams have been entered. The idea, of course,
is to dlrett a spherically inflated piece of rubber
through a circular piece of metal resting ten feet
high, parallel to the floor, as many times a~ possible
while stopping yout opposition from doing the same.
points will not be accredited for looking "coot;•
although it is an essential part of the game.
Competition will commence Monday, Nov. I .
All cyclists entered in the Bicycle Grand Prix
have tlad an additional w~ek to be ready for the
contest. Originally scheduled for last week, the
Grand Prix has been reset for tomorrow afternoon at
1 p.m. All traffic on campus will be cleared for the
race.
If you've got the football fan blues because
there is no longer a football team h ere to root for ,
you may enjoy a cheap thrill tomorrow at Rotary
Field. An "extramural" touch football game
between Buffalo and Niagara will be played at 11
a.m. It sho uld be fun, so come down and get that

good old sore throat feeling from shouting too
much.
The prospect of a hayride next weekend is very
promising. AU those interested shouiCJ sign up at the
gym. The long awaited Tug-o-War will be held
tomorrow. It's a good time to show what you're
made of. Co-ed badminton has successfully b een run
every Tuesday evening. Newcomers are always
welcome.
football leaden
for you followers of football intramura1s, here
again are the division leaders. Monday's Penthouse
Revival· at 4.() head their group. Invaders and
Brunners are tied at 2.0-J In a tight race. Tuesday's
groups are led by Ellicott Creek Whips (S.O) and
Tasmanian Devils with the same record . Also at 5.()
leading the Wednesday groups respectively are
Humans and XAM . In Goodyear Hall, the ninth floor
has surrendered first place to the second and sixth
floors at 4· 1. Tower is led by the undefeated sixth
floor with five victories. With the playoffs ensuing,
the oddsmakers are going to have a rough lime
pick.ing a winner. This reporter will go with
Penthouse Revival, a long shot. to take it all.
STUDENTS

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3rd, 8 :00p.m .

WANTED

To

on d eveloplnt
policies. A teem
Ia now RMint put togl1her to

MELANIE
WITH

work

environment.~

JANEY &amp; DENNIS

work on issues which directly
1ffect the deatiny of Erit
County. If lnter•ted e~~ll :

Admission: Orch. $6.00, $5.00, - Bale. $5 .00, $4.00
fid(ets Available at Norton Union Ticket Office

Prof. Dwid Sh..,ib
881-3660

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I

Queentown lowdown
by Mr. Clean

Good mornin.a Blues ... Blues how do you do? It is Veteran's
Monday as I write, and 1 still have not located a sin&amp;lc copy of the J .
Geils Band The Morning After lp for sale within the limits of the Queen
City - or my patience for th.at matter. A special intelli&amp;ence report
from no less an observer than Frl ere Cl~ indicat es that the self-same
lp hu been in record shops, supermarkets and spiritual laundramats in
southern Ohio for at least a week.
• As Chino was heard to remark upon the matter of his imminent
incarceration in 711~ Wild On~. "Oh, the shame of it aJI!" I trust that
when you ue blanching over these ridiculous comments on Friday, this
will all be a matter of dimly remembered mcient history, pushed out of
our collective cortex by the happy hordes boogalooing down Broadway
to "Floyd's Hotel," looking for a love to call their own. Stay on your
toes.
Enouah of this John Mendelsohn rubbish and on to the hot
stuff ... Mr. Clean :r Choiu Cranium Crunchers: Brian Jones presents
the Pipes of Pan at Joujouka - the g~niurte article, rock of cons (and
ions). If you want to go somewhere you've never been before, this is
your steatner ticket passage prepaid. Get it and ao. You'll never be
sorry. 2) Pink Floyd's Meddle - after a momentary Japse these four
princes o f the ether are back to their usual high standards. This is less
weird than in the past, but every bit as exquisite. NB: If money .is ti&amp;ht,
spend it on a ticket to see them live at The Peace Brid&amp;e Center, Nov. 8,
rather than on the record . This promises to be a total restorative. Mark
my words ... some day you will be mumbling throu&amp;h your false teeth
to your grandchildren about the night you saw Pink Floyd .

·i

Rex and Beck
Slowly rocking on, from the Monsters to the meta-Monsters ...
Mr. Clean '1 Hot Nurnbers : I ) The new T. Rex, entitled Electric
Warrior, is a meta-Monster for sure . Marc Bolan's lyric and vocal lifts
rival those of Lou Reed, which is no mean compliment in anyo ne's
cosmolocy. He has personally mastered the proper mixture of the
simple, the erotic, the biz.ane and the humorous which toaether
comprise rock 'n' roll greatness. And u ultimate proof of his mastery
he has knocked off three number one hits in a row in En&amp;J.and . Tony
Visconti has done a fine job from the control booth (he also produces
David Bowie - a corner on the small market of unique British electric
sinaer-songwriters) and even the Phosphorescent Leech and Eddie sit in
for a few backing vocals. So grab it up quickly and mambo throu&amp;h the
space-time continuum with Marc and Mickey. But you'd best hurry ...
they won.'t stay meta-Monsters for long.
2) The strange case of Jeff Beck, who will repin full Monsterhood
in a mere m.a tter of weeks. Hi&amp; new album, Rou1h And RetJdy, and bia
new American tour - the fint \n two yean - should blow him riabt
back up to his accustomed mythic proportions. or all the treble
boosted, set•it-at-ten-and-scatter British b1ooze guitarists of the slovenly
sixties, he was the only one possessed of a bona fide musical genius. His
phrasing was always completely unpredictable and his tute, if it often
seemed psychotic, never failed him when he was playinJ. It failed him
utterly, however, whenever he spoke. This is the sort of dilemma that _
only geniuses bring down upon themselves, and he certainly has
suffered - not o nly from the people he has repelled with his mouth,
but fro m the people he has attracted with it as well .
Makin' the most

Chamonix, France
(WINTER RECESS)

I

CHAMONIX, FRANCE
Including hotels
Apartment · Chalets, Meals
Transfers and Gratuities

323/316 NORTON HALL
Ext. 3602/3603/2145

The University Travel Center, its progr.tms and services are made possible]
by your Student Activity fees via Sub-Board I, Inc.

Well folks, if he can manage to keep tus sb.lrt on - except when
he's playing, of course - his problems should be over for good . The
new band is just great , projecting all the musicality and none of the
Himalayan ego that one had become used to before the tabled sports
car wipeout. Jeff was not merely being self-indulgent and slothful in
taking two years to get this band together and out on the road - this is
the real thang and more than worth the wait. And what 's more, Mickey
Most has fled the scene . perhaps that's the real story of tbe
extraordtnary delay . At any rate, I'm just glad he's back and stand
ready to return him to Mo nsterhood immediately. We don't have many
mad musical guttarists with us in this life, and we must take care not to
let them fall by t he wayside. Now if someone could only give Johnny
Winter the help that would get him playing again, we could aU rest easy
through the months ahead.
Just Trym ' To Do My Jrpaw Puzzle Before It Rams Anymore :
Allen Klein has a lot to say in the November issue of Plizy b oy. 1 hate to
recommend that people give one of their hard earned dollars to Heavy
Heff, but Allen is really quite amazing. Anyone who has been a friend
and advisor to Sam Cooke, the Stones, and the Beatles in one
incarnation has got to be of interest , as is his side of all the current
embroilments. You should certainly make every effort to read someone
else's copy.

Sofme
If It's All Night h 's All Rrght - The Rascals were_simply mcredible
Last Friday. You can keep your Gangla Destt Beneftts ; all my heroes
have been men and women and there sure were some heroes on the
stage at Kleinhans that night. And Oino still twirls his d~msticks!
Brilliant, uplifting music which you _Ignore at your ~wn peril .. And the
same description could cover B.B. King and Edpr Wmter s White Trash
at Buffalo State last Sunday. TransfiaJ'ration piled willy nilly on top of
edification. What can a poor boy say except that I ~ope , for the sake of
your immortal souls, that you were there. Both concerts receive the Mr.
Qean Sweet ReletJse Seal o f Divine Consummation.
Don't forget J . Tull this Monday at the Aud if you are so inclined,
and wherever you go, remember Mr. Clean ·~ Flagg Bros. theory of rock
&amp;. roll. It's a crazy little thing ... goes like ttiis :
" You can't get that feel
With out a stacked heel ... "

"

Friday, October 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page twenty-one

..

�Soccer club
CoUege football
Barry Rubin
Last week the tumbling wizard hit 13- 5 for77- 18- l and 8 1 per
cent on the season. This week's upset team could be Columbia
Unlversit y .

Nebraska 3 1, Colorado 12: Buffalos are tough but Huskers are
perfect.
Columbia 23, Comell 17: Lions• Jackson outshines Ed Marinaro.
Wisconsin 24, Iowa 16: Badgers' tiny Rufus Fergusuon on the run.
Penn State 34, West Vifrinio 13: Mo untajneers are competitive.
but Nittany Lions have to win big to gain notice in national polls.
Washington 28, UCLA 1 7: Sonny Sixkiller comes back after
several poor games against conference foes.
Texas 38. SMU 7: Longhorns on the rebound against lethargic
Mustangs.
Stanford 21, Oregon State 17: John Ralston's Indians know they
canno t afford another conference loss on the coast.
Syracuse 28, Pimburgh 20: Orange exploded against Holy Cross
last week, while Panthers have come down after early season success.
USC 23, California 6: Trojans come off big upset at South Bend .
Ohio State 27. Minnesota 13: Gophers aren't easy pushovers for
rebounding big ten Buckeyes.

Bulls take third straight win
by Dave Gerinaer
SP«Jrum Still! Wrlt~r

To most people, "disappointing" is no t the right
way to sum up a 4 - 1 win, but Bull club soccer
Coach Bert Jacobsen doesn't think so. "sure, I was
happy that we got the 4 - 1 win," he offered, " but
I'd have to say that overall, It was a disappointing
showing. We seemed to build up a quick lead and
then ease off. as though we thought that we had the
game won already. Overconfidence like that can be
harmful, especially if a team thinks that they tiave
the game won in advance of their stepping out onto
the field."
As the coach said, the Bulls did get a quick lead,
as they tallied three times in the opening period .
Inside right fo rward Kola Oseru notched two of the
markers to take over the lead in goals scored with
four. However, the Bulls seemed to do an about-face
offensively after that. They penetrated well. but
were either unwilling or unable to take the shots
when they had the opportunlties to do so. " We still
are not shooting enough," Coach J acobsen sald,
..and it showed in the fact that we were able to score
only once in the last three quarters."
Defensively, the Bulls played well again. Their

Notre Dame 56, Navy 6: Irish take out upset loss on poor Middies.

SaHier's Entire Stock of

Northwestern 23, Illinois 17: Blackman's illini look for second
straight victory. but Wildcats should have h tlle trouble.
Michigan 36, Indiana 7: Wo lverines roll along in Rose Bowl quest.
Army 1 7. Miami ( Fla) IJ: Cadets have proved stubborn foe this
year while Hurricanes have not blasted anyone this season .
Georgia Tech 2 I. Duke 20: Game bet ween two evenly matched
squads ; nod goes to Tech's qb . Eddie McAshan in Atlanta duel.
Auburn 28. Flortda 17: Gators have Reaves to Alvarez
combination, but Sullivan to Beasley should prove more potent duo.

double center halfback-type defense succeeded in
stacJting up the middle against Canillus' o ffense .
Goalkeeper Tahm Sadeghi played weU again as he
did not allow one goal in his two and a half periods
of action. Sadeghi has now played almost three full
games thu season and has yet to allow a goal. The
lone Canisius goal came against subsUtute goalkeeper
Willie Wood, aa Canisius was able to break through
the Bull defense only after they had cleared the
bench.
" I was pleased with the way the defense
played," the coach analyzed after the game...Even
though Canisius was kjcking the baU right through
the middle, we were able to hold them off most of
the way. However, we seemed to have lost our desire
after building up our lead early 81\d that put extra
pressure on the defense."
"Every coach, I imagine, tries for the perfect
game." Jacobsen mused later. " I guess that I am no
different . I'd like to get a perfect game from this
team - a game without mistakes, where they can
move the ball weU, put the ball In the net and hold
the other team off!' A perfect game is a lofty goal to
shoot for, but Coach Jacobsen is stiU waiting to see
if he will get one from the Bulls . Their' next chance
will be their fmal one this season as they take on
Gannon CoUege at Erie. Pa. Tuesday afternoon.

*FOLK* BLUES *JAZZ

Records and Tapes
I

Olclaltoma 53, I owa State 17: Sooners runmng game shows no

Catalox
Priu
/ -1.98

LSU 23. Mississ1pp1 :!0 Tigers can ill afford loss tn SEC contest.
A rkansos 2 7, Texas A &amp;M 14: Razorbacks thtnking big after Texas

win.

\

...

RECORDS

mercy.

Catalog
Priu

Michigan Starr 20, Purdue 13: Spartans gel comebaek win for
aging Coach Duffy Daugherty.

$5.9S

Catalog
Priu

Pro football
by Dan Caputi Jr.

~6.9/J

The pro season nears tis half-way point and there are several
must notably the 'Skins' and the ll1ng-suffering Chicago

s~rpri scs,

Cmcinnuti 24, Huuston I 3: Even though punter Dave Lewts may
have to play quanerback, Bengals should prevatl.
San Diego 2 7 N. Y. Jets 17: Had I fea sts on sieve-like Jets
secondary
S1 Louis 30. Bujfalo 20: Bills help Cardinals get back on wmning
track.
Baltimore 24. Pillsburgh I 7: Bradshaw and Fuqua will make it
interesung.
Denver 23, Philadelphia 16: Bronco defense will make life
miserable for sub· par Eagle quarterbacks.
Minnesota 30, New York Giants 7: Giants can' t score on Eagles,
much less intimidating V1k10g defense.
Dallas 34, Chicago 17: Cowboys continue to move now that
Staubach's the man .
A llama 26, Cleveland 21: Surprisingly potent Falco n attack rolls
over unstable Brown defense.
San Francisco 37, New England 10: Bodie's boys have enjoyable
afternoon against outmanned Patriots.
1.-os Angeles 24, Miami 20: Gabriel IS the key as Rams win close
strugtzle.
Washmgron 28, New Orleans 10: Allen's Aged puts clamps on
Manning.
Detroit 30, Green Bay 24: Packers' woeful defense leads them to
another defeat.
Oakland 20. Kansas City 17: Rruders may need Blanda's help once
, again to beat Cruefs in classic battle.

Page twenty-two . The Spectrum . Friday, October 29, 1971
/

TAPES

297

8· Truk, Quad ruonic
or Cusettes!

347

PrrC't' ~6.')$

(' "'"'~'l

C"'"'"t

PriC'• Si.9,,

397

C.t ..lrr::
Priu $9.1JI

4 77
5 77
6 77

Jazz ... Close-Outs and
Collector's Items !

Bear~.

How dtd I ever pick llouston to win the AFC' Central'?
The wizard nppcd o ff J 10 3 mark to tmprove hts slate to
41 24 3 and 68 per cen t

lo

88

• CADET • PACIFIC JAZZ • VERVE
• WORLD PACIFIC • BLUENOTE • IMPULSE
• COUNT IASIE
• DONAlD I YRD
• UY IRYANT
• LESS McCANN
• l SOUNDS
• UY CHUtES

• JIMMY SMITH
• UNNONBAll ADDERLY
• MilT JACKSON
• IONHNY LYTlE
• JIMMY McCIIFf

• RAMSEY llWIS
• ICAI WINDIHC
• JAZZ CRUSAOUS
• RICHARD "GROOVE" HOl:.IES
• \'/[~ I.IOHTCO:.IERY
• AHMAD IAI.W.
• JAMES MOODY
• JUNIOR ~lANCE
• ART sum
• DUKE flliiiGTON
• CRAHT

CAW~

•
•
•
•

EACH

CHET IARk(R
HAHI! MOilU

C.UOR lAID
HOUCE Sll8£R
• lOU IDHAliStH
• JACKIE Met.£~
• THELOIIIOUS MOH~
• CAl TJADER
• HERBIE MAN N
• l!STEII YOUNC
• EllA FITlCEWD

• DUKE PUISDII
• STAN~EY TUmHntlE
• ~lUE MITCHEll
• JACK McDUff
• STAN C£Tl

• HOWARDS ROBERS
• CILBUTO
• OS~4R I'£TUSOri

Jazz Imports
II ..a rei - lo • ~;d l'••• h·
:ia7Z

di.:&gt;.:ominucd 111

the L'. S. _-\,

R··;;.
$~.9S

498

For Sfrrrt Mu,ic &amp; T "~''"'• To,, It's Sollld'• Rurtrtl C~ 11 1us
e $lli(CA I.IAll. l i4Ct &amp; Ptlltll IU., VI. StlltU, l_,uWJt hot ~H.

It It t Nte. tb111 Sal.
'
• 1011l£YUO MUl, 11~1111 falls lhl. Narl- t l htri4l•, A•urst.
tl It I Mta, Ur1 h t.
hi IIUrl tf lrulwaHill•ert . ..lfalt
lt:U II I Ifto., Thr1 , ftt : '1•1 S hcs. &amp; l'fU .; S,. Sat

e Itt I IUilfAY,

�-

CLAIIIPIII

WANTED
OOUBLE French horn, for
ll(ldlr . 831-4806; 634·93go,

FOR SALE
shcth

FM Converter for AM ur radio. Nor used , Darryl, 1131 · 1166 or
835·20211.
WANTED: Term Papers - Ill ll.lblec:ts.
Call 8 77·11171 after g p .m .
SINCERE DYNAMIC MUSICIANS
sMklng to form group With fem11e INd
si nger, Clll 1153-1781. Don't worry
about ex perience - Just be willing to
WORK HARD. Will work around
sc!ledule.
MAL.E help - foreign car mechanic .
Days. N .V. State I nspectlon ltelpful.
1066 Sheridan Or., Tonawanda, N ,V.
VOL.UNTEERS - seniors, grad student
for Tonawa nda storefront dealing with
teen - agers, problems, rapping
Indivi dual an d group level. N orm or
George S- 10 p .m ., 1175·2 131.

BROTHERHOOD
3342 Bailey Ave.
836-5025

30 %0FF

ON ALL
MERCHANDISE
We are overstocket
and overbought

HELP!
Sale now in progress.
at

BROTHERHOOD

1K2 OLDSMOBILE, 65,000 miles,
good mec:panlul condition, automa tic
transml.slon: power stMrlng; brakes;
mounted snows Included. GrNI
t ransp orhllon. $250 negotllb le.
837·1617 or 831-4113. Ask for
Mickey,
WINTER COAT - fabulous fake fur.
Rich brown. Lat•t style. Like new.
876•9175.
' 67 COUGAR power steering, AC II'IOW
tires, CINn, 75,000 miles. Xlent conG.
Make offer. 883·5272. Leo Smlt.
1966 VW. GoOd condition. Snow tires
w/wheels, metric wrenches . Cell
297·5023 after 5:00.
FOR SALE HI·FI stereo set and radio.
Very re•sonable, Call after 4:00.
831 ·3418,
DUAL. 1215 turntable, One yNr old.
a45 . 833-9491.

IIIIIIAII
Plllll. CAl

•••••••

1066 Sheridan Drive

Specializint in Volkswagen,
Triumph, Volvo, MG, Austin
Healey, Toyota, Dats~n and
more.
871·9303 WINTER 874-5330
BATTERY SPECIALS
FROM $15.00
&amp; up · Exch.
6 &amp; 12 Volt - Installed

1 Pr. 6 volt - $30.00 + Exch .

CHEVROLET and Rambler, both ere
reliable. we must sell soon. Will accept
fair offer. 834 ·5312, 876-9285.

UB GRAO will tutor French , soanlsh
IDeolnnlng), rud to blind. 881·2407.

63 GAL.AXIE. Run5 Well. Clll M lc It
832· 3557. LNve mftagalf not home,

FOLK guitar 1-.ons also 0.35
Martin end Eplphone efec:trlc for ale.
Jeff. 835·3314, 835 -9 229.

1

1964 TRIUMPH Spitfire mec:nanlully
perfec:t. 400 clams! 133-6523. Ask for
J.B.
BALDWIN stereo combo organ, $995,
new, will sell 8495. Also $200
amplifier for $50. 896·7655.
STUDIO couch with mattress,
matching d'lalr, blr stools, dresser,
antique trunk. 881.0141.
OALMATION puppies - come see us
at 192 N orwalk St. or INve message
for E. Topper 831·5388.
1968 MG,B . Wire WhMIS, n - muffler,
good condition, 81300. Price
adJustable. 8111. 2112·0333 after 5 p.m.
1962 VO~KSWAGEN Karmann Gltla.
Good condition . $2 25. Phone
832·51110.
1964

VAL.IANT, 4-door automatic
tr~nsmlnlon,
$200. 875·5727 after
6 :30p.m .
DAVENPORT, Chlppend&lt;~le; very good
condltlon&amp;830. 759·6636.

REFRIGERATORS, stoves
washers . Rec:ondltloned: delivered
guarantMd . O&amp;G Appliances,
Sycamore, TX4·3183.

and
and
844
•

p5o.

I

PANASONIC miniature tape rec:orGer
· with case 1nG microphone, tap•. 85$
firm. 834-6699.
DATSUN 2000 Ro.Oiter, 196g,
135-HP, 5-spMd, radial tires, low
miiNge, $13!'0 or best offer. 817-5501
after 6 p .m.
ROOMMATES WANTED
FEMALE roommate wanted. own
room. 862.50, utll . Inc. we5t Side.
Roberta. 886.0265.

CONTEMPORAR Y couch. Very llood
conctltlon. Reasonable. Call 8 37·0718
after six .
SMITH ·CO RONA Su per Sterli ng
typeWriter . Almost grand new . $70 or
best offy , Call 837-6558.
ROGER S drums blue sparkle.
Everyth ing except snare il nd h•·hat. au
23430 after 6 :30.
9 ·PIECE dinin g room set - mohajlany
desk. empire couch, end and co ffee
tables, bookcase, etc. TF7-6525 .

'

PEOPLE• Off the Gr1191. It'S your mlnct
and future you're messlng w ith - 1
fellow student who found out the nnG
way.
TRANSFER student needs plaCe to
live. Near Main or Rlcatl Lq. Call Oave
876-9668. Ev•.
BEAUTIFUL hln4m~ gold a nd sliver
J-llry - wedding rings - at senslt)le
prices. J .P . The GoldwNver, 655
ElmwOOd at Ferry St., 881-3400.
RATFROG. Go back to Tijuana. Get
laid. Gilly Vaumo Mysterymah
w..pman Bush.

FEMAL.E, own room, $50, furnished,
2 blocks from campus, available Nov.
1, 837·3209.

CVD - 1 got 36 expression ••• can you
spare a d olme 7 L.ove, the nuts at 4b3.
MISCELLANEOU$.

ROOMMATE noeded - own room In
1/2 house - 835 month plus utilities Call 835·7082 - near campus.

QUICK, efficient typing done - 8 .40
Pit page. IBM Selectric. 838-4808 .

MAL.E to shu• huge modern
apartment . Seven-minute wllk to Ma in
campus. $60/month. 837·5960.

PAINTING, paper i ng, panelling,
carpentry, odd contracti ng Jobs,
reasonable.t...en 881.0141.

WE (2) w ould lik e a r ide to Toronto
Friday, Oct. 29. Pleue Clll Barb.
833-9440.
APARTMENT FOR RENT
APARTMENTS avlllable, furnlsned
and unfurnished, near campus : also one
room. Very reasonable. 896·8 344,
evenings p referab ly .
LOST &amp; FOUND
L.OST : Sliver w ire rim glanes 1n oran9e
and yellow case. Reward! Call Susan
837 ·1344.
LOST - Alto recorder In canvu cue
Diefendorf AnneK . REWARD . PINSe
call 632-4665.
MA LE golden retriever mining about a
week . Lost first In ua area. Call Don
837· 1239 .

I

my partn....

NORWOOD·Bryant arN. Female
wanted. About $50 montn Including
utilities and phone. Call Beth 1153·9644
from 9-6 .

RIDE BOARD
VOL.KSWAGON Campar Bus. 1964,
good condition . S now tires, four
spares, gas heater, •x$ras. Call Seth
875·11195.

LOV~

PERSONAL
DEAR Anne Marie
tne second year
has been In describably delicious. Love
this one.

P 1AN 0
student
pUpils. 894·5826.

desires

beginning

AFRICA travel Dec. 16- Jan . 2
roundtrip from N- Vorl&lt; City, 8450.
N igeria, Gitana, Ivory Coast. L iberia .
Wr ite Alrlu Travel Club, P.O. Box
1002, Ellicott Statlo'n, Buffa lo, N .V.
14205.
ACCOUSTIC gu i tarist ; De l ta,
bo ttleneck , Appalaclan styles. Will
teach beginni ng/middling students.
$3/lesson. 835·1 982 .
RESUMES expertly composed,
typea , fast, efficient service. Call
835-4473.
ANYONE - N lagar&lt;t Falls to London,
one way, s 110, retu rn 8220, M.T .w.,
881 ·0306, Wednesday night, 873·5660.
weekly departures.
E NGLI SH SENI ORS GOING TO
GRAD SCHOOL! Meeting: F riday ,
Oct 29, 2:00, Health Sciences Bldg.,
Rm . 134.

Aero O nve-ln - The Velllflt Vampire/
of Demon LOIIflff/2,000 Mani.cs
Amherst - Jennifer On My M md
a.dcstege - Wi thout 11 Stitch/Joys of .Hzebel
Bailey - There Wasil Croolc«&lt; M11n/Kiute
Boulev;trd Cineme I - SH No Evil
Boulevard CinerM II - Johnny Got H1s Gun
Broadway Driv•ln - The Or(JIInizatJOn/Support Your LOCtJI Sheriff
C.pri Art - Making of 11 St11r/MIIIie's Homecommg
Center - Play Mlsry For Me
Colvin - Play Misty For Me
Downtown Cinema - Jennifer On My M ind
Fine Art - Lemon Or Cream JliCk /Hotter lnsick
Ge.,..e - Notorious Women /An/mal Emotions
Granada - To(JIIther
Holiday I - Friends
Holiday II - T. R. Baskin
1·290 D rive-In - R«&lt; On ~tan's CltJw/Bust In the Cellar
Lancaster - Plaza Sui te/Love Story
Loew's Buffalo - The 0ff}ilnirlltion/Cotton Comes To Harlem
Loew's Teck - Cry UI'IC/Iffr»nsp/llnt
Lovejoy - P/Jtton/M•A •s•H
North Pertc - Goldin ErtJ Of Movltn: OutNM Chrl1tina/A1 You Oesint Me
ht8ce - Summer of '42
Park Drive-In - Th1 R«&lt; On Sllr.n 's Clllwl 8 - t In The Cellar
Penthouw - J.C.trhe Man Mlo Hlld Power 011t1r Women
Plaza North - Kotch
Seneca Mall Cinema - S~ No Evil
Sheridan I Drive-In - J.C.ffhe M11n Who Hlld Power Ovtw Women
Scre~HT~

...

Once a song becomes
popular it belongs to the
whole world.
You hum it Whistle it
Try to pick it out on your
guitar.
Well now there's never
been an easier way to buy
the words and music to
current hits, because now
there's a magazine called
Words and Music.
It only costs $1. And for
your dollar every issue gives
you the words and music
of 8 to 10 top current songs.
For instance, our first
issue which is on sale now,
gives you the words and
music to top hits by The
Doors, The Bee Gees, 3 Dog
Night, Isley Brothers, Helen
Reddy, Bill Withers. Paul

Stookey, John Denver, Carole
King and Leon Russell.
And along with the
music are articles and new
photographs of the stars
behind the songs.
Look for Words and
Music wherever magazines
are sold.
You've got the talent
Now all you need is a dollar.

\\\?rds and MusiC published by Hampstme OlstnllUtOfS Ltd, -£h l lllfd Avenue Nev. l'ork. N t 10022

/Take 11 Girl Like You
Sh«idan II Drive-In - The Velllflt VIIITipire/ScrNm of Demon Lollfln

trhe Executioner
Sur Drive-In - J.C.ffhe Man Mlo Hlld Powrtr 011t1r WonHM
Towne - Summer of '42/Di.collflr AmtNica
T111nsit - S11xual Ffflfldom In Oenm•kfflte Lollfl RetHIIion
West Twin Drive-In - Ja.!LOWff &amp; Other Str»nf18ff/Jolm 11nd Mary
Wheffe Drive-In - The Red On S.tan 't Clawffhe 8 - t In Thll Cell11r
Old R ivoli Thatre - King Kong/The Most OllnfJBrous G•me
Studio Arena - The Gingerbnled Llldy

-

SpECTI\UM

we urge you

...................................... _
Friday, OctoQer 29, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page twenty-three

(

�•

•

Backpage

Available at the Ticket Office
Studio Arena Theater
Through Oct. 31 : Th~ Gingerbread Lad, with
Jo Van Fleet.
Nov. 4 - 21: Buying Out with Sam Levene and
Irene Dailey.
Rock and Folk Concerts
Oct. 29: Chuck Mangione (K)
Oct. 30: Cat Stevens - sold out (K)
Oct. 31 : Kris Kristofferson ( K)
Nov. 1: Jethro lull (M)
Nov. 3: Melanie (K)
Nov. 4: Rod McKuen (K)
Nov. 8: John Mayall and Fleetwood Mac (M)
Nov. 10: Donovan (M)
Nov 12: Jesus Christ'Super Star (M)
Nov. 20: Richie Havens (N)
Nov. 21: John Denver (K)
Nov. 24: The Carpenters (M)
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
Oct . 31 &amp; Nov. 2: Michael Tilson Thomas

Ice Capades
Through Oct. 31 (M)
Kodaly Ensemble
Nov. 20 (K)

Saturday, OcL 30

Film: THX-1138.
Recital: Halloween Opera Prod uction, Baird Hall .
Performance : Kris Kristofferson, 7:30- 11 :30 in
Kleinhans.
Exhibit: Student portraits by Donald Blumberg Nov.
2 20 in Art Department Gallery, 4240 Ridge
Lea Campus.

Kleinhans
Memorial 1\ud\tor\um
Peace Bridge Center
Niagara University

Announcements

-·

UB Pep Band will have an important meeting
and rehearsal on Sunday at 7 p.m . in Room 340
Norton. All members are urged to attend. For more
informatiOn call Steve at 83 1-3682 or Ga1y Jt
693-5373

UUAB Coffeehouse Committee will pre..ent
"The M an~on Family " tonight dnd tomorrow mght
in the fir~t floor Norton cafeteria. There will he two
shows, 9 p.m. and 11 p.m. ; the price of admi\sion b
onl y $.50.
The Slavic Club will be holdmg a traditiona!
Russ1an tea today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 340
Norton. Everyo ne is welcome.
Activist Youth for Israel will have a mectmg
today at 8 p.m . in Room 233 Norton and Or. Marvm
Blum of the Department of Social Welfare will be a
speaker.
I RC will sponsor a Halloween Coffeehouse
tomorrow night from 9:30 p.m. 12:30 a.m. in
Tower Cafeteria. Free admission for all dorm
residents.

~

need s vo lunteers fo r the Student
Com
ion Program at the VA Hospital . Anyone
interest d should contact the CAC office, Room 220
Norton.
CAC needs 50 volunteers for its Buffalo State
Hospital project. Anyone interested, please contact
- ; the CAC office.
The Women's Hulth Project announces its first
open house today, tomorrow and Sunday from 3- 9
p.m. at 57 Elmwood Ave. Information on abortion,
birth control and gynecological care is available and
more is wanted.
- \
#'
The Save a Polar Bear Fund of Compassion will
be collecting funds in the Boulevard Mall tomorrow
from 10 a.m.- 9 p.m. Only $400 more is needed to
reach the goal of $1000. Volunteers are needed .
Please call 632-341 5.

..., •

Film: Angelo: Like It Is sponsored by the Buffalo
An$ela Davis Defense Committee with David
Poindexter speaking, 7:30 p.m. at Shaw
Memorial AME Zion Church, -453 Porter Ave.
Film: Putney Swope shown in 140 Capen at 6:25, 8
and 9:45p.m., admission $.75.
Film: fHX-7138 shown in Conference Theater,
timt5 posted at Ticket Office, admission $ .75.
Concert: Oolmetsch-Saxby Duo at 8 :30 p.m. in
Baird Recital Hall.

Sunday, Oct. 31

Theater
Dec. 5: Will Rogers USA with James Whitmore
(K)

Key
KMP
N

F rlday, Oct. 29

Film : Angelo: Like It Is dt 7:30 p.m . in Walls
Memorial AME Zion Church, 455 Glenwood
Ave.
Film : Putn~ySwope
Film: THX-1738
Recital : Halloween Opera Production by UB Opera
C lub at 8:30p.m. in Baird Recital Hall.
Concert : Cat Stevens, 7:30 11 :30 p.m. in
Kleinhans.

Roller Derby
Nov. 2 (M)

Com ing Events
Nov. 19 : TheByrds(on\31cNov I)

What's Happening

UB Riding Club will meet today at 4 p.m. in
Room 332 Norto n. There will be a discussion of
future ridinK trips and memberships .Jre still being
tdkcn .
'
The Conflict Simulations Club will have a
meeting on Sunday from I 5 p.m . in Room 340
No rto n.
The Workshop in Outdoor Living of Rachel
Carson College will be rock climbing o n Sunday.
Meet at II a.m. in front of Norton llall . It is
impon,m t to bring gloves, an old jdcket Jnd Jnkle
~up porti ng b ooK
The Craft smen's Guild i~ being formed . If you
arc con,erncd with any craft. in any field , this guild
is for you. It needs your support to ~urv 1vc . Sign up
at eithc1 the Craft Center office or Jt the uble on
the first floor or No rton.
University Travel and Schussmeisters Ski Club SAS Jet to Geneva, Switzerland. Ski pac kage in
Chamonix , France or on to Copenhagen, Denmark .
Dec. 27 jan. 7 (11 days winter recess)
$ 196 just
flight
package $298 . For more information come
to Roo m 316, 323 or 318 Norton or call extension
3602,3603,2145 or 2146.

Sports Information
Tomorrow: Varsity cross
Canisius Invitational, noon.

country

Roller hockey : The season 's next roller hockey
contest will take place tomorrow at 10: 15 a.m. in
the Capen parking lot.
The next student athletic review board meeting
will take place Tuesday, Nov. 2 at 6 :30 p.m. in
Room 244 Norton :
Roller derbyy, not to be confused with roller
hockey, will return to the Buffalo Memorial
1\uditorium on Tuesday evening ;tt 8 p.m. Ticket
Information is available at the Norton Ticket Offi,-,.

at 9 p.m. at 34- Blantyre Place. Transportation from
Norton steps at 8:30p.m . All are welcome.
Chabad House presents " Journey to the Soul "
tonight at 7 p.m . Services followed by a delicious
meal, singing and dancing. Saturday mornins services
are at 9:30 a.m. followed by a meal and discussion.
Chabad House is across from the Universi ty on Main
Street.
The Hillel Study Group in Intermediate
Conversational Hebrew will meet on Sunday at
12:30 p.m . in Room 262 Norton.
Hillel will hold a Sabbath Service this evening at
8 p.m. in the Hillel House. Rabbi Hoffman will speak
o n " What i~ Reconstructionism? " An Oneg Shabbat
will follow .
The Torah with Commenuries class will meet
Saturday at 4 p.m . in Rabbi Hoffman 's house at 12
Colton Drive.
The Talmud class will meet Sunday at 3 p.m. in
the Hillel Library. Knowledge of Hebrew is dt&gt;sirable,
but not a prerequisite.
Hillel will have a Sund;ay supper at 6 p.m . in the
Hillel House. Please call Debbie at 831 -2786 for
reservations.
Rabbi Goldstein ofTemple Beth Zion will speak
at the Hillel House at 8 p.m. Sunday on "The Nature
of Reform Judaism." This will be followed by a
question and answer period.

University Travel - Alitalia Jet to Rome, Italy
March 31 - April9 (9-day Easter and Spring recess) flight $198 - package available. For more
information rome to Room 316 or 323 Norto n or
call extension 3602 or 3603.

Foreian student coffee hours will start today
and continue every Friday from 4-6 p.m. in
T o)¥nsend Hall on the second floor . For more
information call Peter Kong at 831-5507 or Maly
Lomaz at 831 -3828.

Students for Israel presents Vail Vered, director
of the Middle East Desk in the Israeli Foreign Affairs
Office, as a special guest at a party tomorrow ni~t

the

Tue sday : Varsity cross country vs. St.
Bonaventure, 3:30 p.m., Grover Cleveland golf
course; club soccer at Gannon College, 3 p.m., Erie,
Pa.

University Travel and Hillel - Olympic jet to
Tel-Aviv, Israel via Athens, Greece. March 27 - April
10 (Passover and Spring recess - 14 days) flight
$355 - package $559. For more information come
to Room 3 16 or 323 Norton or call extension 3602
or 3603 .

Students for Israel presents Miriam Halpern, an
Israeli dance specialist, tomorrow afternoon at' folk
dancing in the Fillmore Room from 2- 5 p.m .

at

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.

SpECTi\liM . .

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State Unlv.stty of New York at Bufblo

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�Lack of eYidence

Three tiered procedure
for academic dishonesty

Birdshot investigation closed

New procedures for dealing
with student academic dishonesty
will be in force next month if the
Faculty Senate votes favorably at
their nex t meeting Nov. 2.
The Faculty Senate Executive
Comytittee recently passed a
report submitted to it by a special
Senate Committee on Academic
Integrity. This committee was
headed by Dr. Claude Welch,
Department of Political Science.
If passed, the proposals wiU
clarify the often-vague procedures
for dealing with cases involving
students charged with plagiarism,
c h eating or other forms of
academic misconduct.
There will be three tiers of
procedures for dealing with
academic dishonesty. The first
would involve alleged academic
dishonesty such as cheating or
plagiarism. The instructor of the
course would be required to
inform the student of any
evidence relating to the alleged
infringement .
Should the instructor feel that
he has convincing evidence, he
may impose any of the following
sanctions such as admonition,
replacement o r\evising of work in
which the dishonesty occurred, or
a warning that repetition of such
work may result in more severe
sanctions.
Only the student would have
the right to appeal the decision,
by direct conference with the
chairman of the appropriate
department and then , if necessary,
to the appropriate University-wide
or professional school dean .

The U.S . Department of.
Justice lasf week dropped its
investiption into the alleged use
of birdshot by Buffalo police last
May to quell disturbances on the
State University of Buffalo
campus.
Jn a letter to Richard Rosche, a
law student who formerly headed
a student group which initiated
the investiptions, Robert A.
Murphy, ~asSistant chief of the
Justice Department's Civil Ri&amp;hts
Division, said that the
lnvestiption was being closed due
to a lack of ..concl usive
evidence!'
In his'letter, Mr. Murphy said:
"We have examined the evid ence
in our pQ$$ession and we have
weighed the likelihood of our
obtaining additional evidence that
would lead to a prosecution or
prosecutions under federal civil
rights criminal statutes.
"Based on these
considerations," he concluded,
" we have determined that no
further action on our part would
be productive and we are closing
our files."
According to the Justice
Department, tests conducted by
the Federal Bureau of
Jnvestigation on I 08 shotguns
owned by the Buffalo Police
Department showed that none of
them had been used on the
campus that night.
Case closed
However, it sh ould be not~d
that no effort was made oQfte
part of the FBI to conduct tests
on $hotguns owned privately by
those members of the Buffalo
police who were assigned to the
ca mpu s area during the

blrdshot at State Unjversity of
Buffalo students on the evening of
May 7, 1&lt;&gt;70 , during disturbances
whic h marred demonstrations
disturbances.
protest\ng the U.S. invasion Into
The Jus tice Department's Cambodia. Twelve students were
decision to close the case wounded by birdshot pellets that
apparently seems to mark the end njght.
of what has been a year and a half
Their report , issued in
long investigation into the conjunction with the Buffalo
inciden t. However , the Chapter of the New York Civil
controversy still remains.
Liberties Union revealed that :
A similar investigation by Mr.
- Buffalo police fired birdshot
Rosche's group, the Concerned that night at students without
Law Students for Peace, last year provocation , und
concluded that members of the
- 'both local , state and federal
Buffalo Police Department were officials "ex pended little effort"
indeed responsible for firing to conduct a full and thorough

investigation of the incidents. It
said that there was, in fact , a
"predetermined effort" on the
part of some of these officials to
..whitewash" the entire incident.
The group'~ conclusions were
based on 78 eyewitness accounts,
including a number of t:tersonal
interviews with witnesses, medical
reports on students treated fo r
bird s hot pellet wound s, Safeguards
perforated windows in Norton , as
The second tier involves more
well as a ·numero us assortment o f
serious
questions of academic
metal pellets, spent shotgun shells
misconduct.
In this case, the
and photographs taken during the
incident.
instructor responsible will be
required to consult the
- - IIWIELUEYAIU !
departmental chairman and the
office of the appropriate

I

1~ · SALE I

PRICE ROLL
BACK

DINNER FOR 2

also Gerry Neiwood, Gop Mangione,
Stanley Watson, Esther Satterfield
and ORCHESTRA

CHOICil OF' 18 DISHES

(ADUlTS)

til"''•• it el '"ulor pdu·. S•cottd
• "•r•• coth you only 1c. ••••t"tatione

,.,u

.......,....

We ore NOT tlropplt'O ow qua lity
tteotdaul- o"fr the price boMd on
hlvh., vot.....,.. We vrlnd our own

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
All fOals ruf!rtted : Mllitt Floor $6.00, $$.00 -

11.. poll&lt;&gt;l\·lr.. Vtouotd b ..f cmd offH
tohfedoth ..,..ico.

Balcottl/ S.S.OO. $4 .~

1Jll DtiiWIFI

~U9e 4-

Sscond Clsss Polfllge peid st Buff•lo,
New York.

. l'lto
ILlCDIIITB
SHOP
, .,..,., ,..., .,...., Hovte

Oft

oo

Subscription flltlll 11re $4.50 per
sem•ter or $8.00 for two StJmtllltllf'l.

""'"' bolt• O~~&lt; OWft 0'9CJ"Ic brood1

tole now at I11Hafo fottival 'offi~. Stotlor-Hitton let.by (mail
ord.., a~coptod with tto"'tMCC ••lf·o4cltoo..., OttYolop•J: U.l . Ne&lt;to., l(all; .
Stele C••·•l•. Ticket Office; """"'' I Dol' o ..oo4woy Store.

Tkhh

-con tinued

Represented for lldlffNtiling by
National EdiJCJitionsl Adllertising
Sttrvlce, Inc., 360 L•xington Aw.,
New York, N.Y. 10017.

4 P.M.-6:31P.M. BAILY
3 P.M.-6:10P.M. SUMOAY

FRIDAY, OCT. 29th at 7 P.M.

Elaborate procedures
The third tier involves severe
sanctions such as probation,
s u spension or dismissal. The
procedures would prohibit
individua l instructors or
departments from carrying these
Sanctions out on their own .
Students charged with
misconduct befitting such
sanctions would be tried before an
adj udi cation committee. For
students within the Division of
Undergraduate Studies and
Mit lard FiUmore College,., the
committee will be constitu ted in

The Spectrum is publishtld rhrtlfl
times s wee/c, ..,_ry Mondsy,
Wedntndsy end Frithy; during the
regulsr IICIIdemic ytlflr by Sub·Boerd
1. Inc. Offices sre locstlld st 355
Norton Hs/1, St11te University of New
York st Buffslo, 3435 Mein St.,
Buff11lo, New Yorlc,- 14214.
Telephone: Ares Code 716; Edltorllll
831-4113; Burin*'". 831-3610.

NO COU,ON ll(OUIUD

Featuring Bat McGrath and Don PoHer

University-wide or professional
school dean, in order to evalua~e
the facts of the case.
For the student's behalf, a
series of procedural safeguards
have been set up. According to
t hese, th e instructor will be
required to inform the student in
writing, within ten academic days,
of the conduct of which he is
suspected, evid ence against him,
names of possible witnesses,
poasible sanctions against him and
his rigbts of appeal. The student
shall also be provided with a copy
of these procedures and possible
sanctions.
The student shall also be
entitled to present evidence on his
own behalf to . the instructor,
chairman and dean. No decision
of guilt shall be made except
under clear and convincing
evidence. The student shall be
in formed in writing of the
decision within ten academic
days.
According to these procedures
the following sanctions would be
any of those previously Usted:
reduction in grade, mandatory
resignation from the course or
failure in the course. The student,
in any case, shall have the right of
appeal.

111-1211

Circulstion: 16,000

' 1111 ,.,.;.,, Atl••tl&lt; Jlotl..,

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3.18 and 4.1111SN'T THAT A RIP.- QFF?

Page two . The Spectrum . October 27, 1971

..

l~

•

•

•

•

DOWN TO OUR ~COST
J'HE RECORD RUNNER

�Analysis

News analysis

Despite facts birdshot
Poverty Hill value doubted
investigation abandoned
by Bil V8Caro

studenb at the bands of Ohio
National Guardsmen be dropped,
despit$ the fact that there wu
Whitewuh.
sufficient and incontroverible
That's about the only way evidence at band to prove that
anyon~ could poaibly deteribe
murder bad been committed.
the incredible decilion~y the U.S.
In the meantime, 2S Kent
Justice Department in 'wubina its State lltudeats and faculty will
bands of the cue involvin&amp; the use soon face cbar&amp;es of fomentin&amp; a
of birdsbot by Buffalo police on ''riot" there.
this campus durin&amp; the May 1970
Not 80 surprisinJ either has
diatufbances.
been the reaction and lack of
Despite the · incontrovertible concern by local, county and ltate
facts that:
law enforcement authoritiea. It
- I 2 people aid in siped took ~or publicity in one of
affidavits that they were shot and Buffalo's two dally newspapers
wounded by \be Buffalo police on before they were prodded into
the nipt of lllay 7, 1970; ,
any action.
- another 66 people, includlna
It is not very utonishin&amp; either
this writer, siped .affidavits that it took a student group, the
alleJin&amp; that dot-prbed members Concerned Law Students fo r
o~the Buffalo Police Department
Peace, then led by Richard ·
came on the State Unifti'Sity of lloecbe, to set f.n motion an
Buffalo campus and dehoentely investiption of their own and to
shot birdabot at students and push various law enforcement
other by.Undera;
officials to discover what really
- abundant evidence coDiistina happened that Way niJbt. It was
of metal birdshot pellets, apent a a reault of their work that the
cartridaes, photolflpha and "official" inveatiptions bepn.
#
perforated windows talten from
Norton Hall (aD of which were Little effort apeoclecl
liven a mdence to the FBI)
Their own report, issued in
exist, the Justice Department baa co.Uunction with the Buffalo
theraudacity to tell the public that chapter of the American Civil
the cue ia bein&amp; closed because of Uberties Union, broupt out the
a "laclt of conclusive evidence." fact that the Buffalo Police were
Whom h
the Justi ce indeed reaponsible for the May
Department tryin&amp; to fool?
incident and, furthermore, there
Are they tryina to deceive the wu a " predetermined effort" on
•me people who heard Police the part of local, county, atate
Commisaioner Frank FeWcetta, and federal law enforcement
Deputy Commisiioner Blair, Erie officials to "whitewash" the
County District Attorney Tom entire incident.
Dillon, Buffalo Mayor Frank
In presentina the group's
• Sedita (remember, the toup pro report laat year, Mr. Rosche said
who'll work for you?), the New that this incident, as well as
York State PoUce and, laat but si mil ar ones throupout the
not least, Governor Rockefeller'• country, sbowed police actina u
office say that those char1es were ' judp, jury and executioner"
either falsifications of the truth, with official sanction. "Students
or that there wu simply a " lack must now fear for their very
physical weU-bein&amp; when they
of sufficient evidence."
Haven't we h'eard that 80nl dissent," he said .
But now, what about justice?
before?
Can any student expect justice
when offi cial violence is met with
Same old sons
As incredible as it may seem, equally offi cial sanction? Can any
the Justice Department decision is student expect j ustice when his
not the least bit surprising, at least fellow students are murdered at
to those who have been throuah Kent State, bayoneted in New
all tltla before. OnJy recently Mexico or shot up in Buffalo?
Attorney General John MitcheU Lenny Bruce .was right when he
ordered that the investigation into said : " In the JfaUs of Justice, the
the murder of fo ur Kent State only justice is in the halls."

c.mp.., Edlttw

Editor 'I note: 171e {ollowln1 il the tecond In 11 terlet
deolin1 with Poverty Hillond the deculon to acquire
it {or l tudent need1.
by JoAnn Armao
C•"'IN' EditOI'

Poverty Hill poaea problema for both students
and student aovernment officials. The most obvious
concern is whether to purchase the II SO acres of
wooded land ~ for students' recreational and
educational needs.
Sub Board I, Inc. maintains that such a decision
is the students' to be made throup referenda . To
enli&amp;bten the student body, Sub Board enlisted the
aid of Drayton Bryant Auociates to prepare a study
of Poverty Hill development, finances and
philosophy.
Contained in this 140-pap, SSOOO report are
plans to transform Poverty Hill into a skiln&amp;,
campina, swimmina Shanari·La. Here, accordint to
the plans, students will be able to escape from the
aeneral decay of American society by relatina to
each other and to natwe. There are a lot of problema
and inconsistencies with this conclusion.

Lhnited Ule
First to be considered is who would use the land
if purchased . Use is ratricted to tbote affluent
enouah to posse$~ a car to travel the SO mDes to
Poverty Hill. In addition, averaae users would require
some sort of equipment if they plan to camp.
Sub Board officials arsue, thoup, that while
Poverty Hill was available, it wu in use. They cite
such hard statistics u 3 1 students per day usin&amp; the
land for the period from June 7 - Aua. 7. A bard
look at these fi&amp;ures make them ludicrious for 31
students is certainlr no j ustification tor alnkin&amp; over
$600,000 into the land. In addition, it is doubtful
that Poverty Hill could attract that many students.
From June 7- Aua. 7, •tudents may have the time
and volition to traipae the SO m.ilea but ln December,
there are more appropriate thinp to do than
skinny-dip in a frozen-over pond.

GET A BETTER GRADE-----.

CompolitioM- Book,.,Of1l - TWin,.,.,. CORRECTED
W. wilt comet YIMif ........ W'fM. - We will _., II

Y•·

CCKt'ICtio• o• your *'ft.... rnlt11 it to
YOU r.a,y it.
Write o• one_. of 1 sheet.
.
Write on -v otlter -..
Write .............. Oltlldl .....
End. . I Slff..td.......

Cut out this M...SAVE ITJ
stantplll IRVIIope.
Senice rates: $2.00 mini•um...up to 1000 words $1.00 for
liCit ldditionet • words.
Send to:
P.O. Box 251, laSIIIt Station
Arcan Writin1 Slrvicls, Inc.
' Nietlre fill, N.Y. 143M

JOIN

IMPORTANT

l

Farce
Student• are not bein&amp; considered nor respected.
In a.d ditlon, they are presently beina railroaded into
a disastrous decision for it appean likely that tlae
few IPU'llcipatin&amp; in the referenda will vote to
acquire the lan4. They will then have been
whitewashed into believina there are beautiful
benefita of Poverty Hill.
From a practical standpoint, there is no
j~tification for an expenditure totali.na over half a
million doOars to develop a recreation area SO mlles
from Buffalo. BspeciaUy since atudents already own
land on the now Amherst campus, land for which no
development plans have yet been made. There are
more basic needs for atudent housing, services and
education that should fmt be satisfied.
Poverty Hill is an absurd farce beina perpetrated
on students. Students must •t op its progression by
votina down Poverty HiU and rei.nforcin&amp; their
control over the destiny of their aovernments.

&lt;

r------

To counter this, Sub Board pointS to Phase 4 of
PoYerty Hill development . In 1974, accordin&amp; to
plana, Poverty Hill will boast year-round
entertainment facilities. However, what happened to
all of Sub Board's . .urances that nothin&amp; on the
land would be destroyed for it is a beuy part of
their promotional pitch that Poverty H.i.U, althouab
developed, would remain an ecolOiical wonder.
It Is quite evident to anyone elWiliniDJ tbeir
devdopment plans that Sub .Board is concerned with
the commercial development of Poverty Hill, not its
ecolOiicaJ preservation. 1n abort, Sub Board is
interested in makina Poverty Hill a financially
pro fitable venture.
Some augest that Sub Board would not have
this power, that students would be in control of
Poverty Hill. However, in any battle between Sub
Board and studenta, Sub Board will come out ahead.
To illustrate this, Sub Boald baa already spent at
least $20,000 on Poverty Hill with no student input
or opinion. Amon&amp; other tbinp, Sub Board baa
failed in its responsibility as atudent aovernment
repreaentatives.

IIIIIIAII

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October 27, 1071 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Academic dishonesty.··. .
-continued from INI,. 2-

accordance with those division's
bylaws.
For graduate and professional
students, the committee will be
formed In accordance with the
bylaws of the individual school,
faculty or di~sion. Each student
wU be entitled to the same
pocedural safeguards and risflt of
appeal as in the other two tieri.
fn order to assure a semblance
o f uniformity of justice, a
University-wide panel would be
appointed by the President of the
University, after consulting and
solicitng nominations from the
various student and faculty
governments . It shall be
comprised of at least 12 persons
drawn equally from faculty and
students.

Rathskeller office hours

Also, tbe President may
overrule the recommendations of
the committee and invoke higher
by Bubua Mlllmd
Spectrum St•fl Wriltr
sanctions. President Ketter has
been noted for this during the
In a University plasued with space shortages and
hist ory of the Hearing
overcrowding, a biology professor has solved hJs
Commission on Campus
office problems with a rather unique solution.
Disruptions.
Instead of sharing a small cubicle with five other
Furthermore, there is no faculty members, Charles Smith has appropriated
, auarantoe that thole students or part of the Rathskeller.
1
Last year, soon after Thanksgiving recess, Dr.
•
' Smith was ordered to vacate his office in Health
Sciences Room 28, as It wu to be converted to a
• teaching lab. The re·aSSigJlment of a new office was
lost In the shuffle of administrative functions and
Dr. Smith found ttlmself spending five consecutive
Saturdays packing and carting books and other
office paraphernalia home. It was at that time that
he decided to take up office hours downstairs in the
Rathskeller of Norton.

Oisadvantaaes noted
f or each appeals case, the
Pre side nt sha ll appoint a
four·member committee , also
equally divided among faculty and
students, to be chosen from the
panel on t h e basis of
appropriateness to the student's
major area and status. These four
members shall then select a fifth
member to act as chairman of the
appeal board ..
Despite the apparent
elaborateness of the followlrfg
procedures, many students have
noted severe drawbacks in the
procedures. For one, there is no
guarantee

that

an

•

Dave Steinwaltl
faculty nominated to the
University-wide committee on
academic integrity will be chosen.
The President may choose to
ignore the recommendations and a
student may find himself with Jess
representation and due process
than he cuuld have expected_

adjucation

committee will have student
representation. If the bylaws of a
particular division, school, facully
or department have no provision
for student representation, there
may be none.

UUAB MUSIC COMMITTEE
MEETING
Thursday, Oct. 28 -7:00p.m.
ROOM 261 , NORTON HALL.

area. According to Dr. Smith, students are
sometimes hesitant to seek out a .professor's office
and once there, a more formalized atmosphere
prevails. Education, he feels , doesn't require a new
classroom or a carpeted office. Explaining this, Dr.
SmUh reported that the nvmber of students that
come to tee- him In the Rat is much gr~ter than
those that came to see tum in his old office.
When asked if the unique setup was an
inconvenJence to him, Dr. Smith replied that it
deflnitely wa not. Of coune, approximately 300
messages a week never reach him as he doesn't have a
telephone, except the pay-phone on the ground floor
of the Union. But he does avoid certain hassles an
offlce entails, such as seeing people he doesn't really
want to see or waiting for someone to knock on his
door.
Business houn
Dr. Smlth tries to schedule hours in the Rat
almost everyday. After taking careful notes o n the
flow of people there, he makes a point of having
non-peak hours as his office hours, thereby assuring
himself of at least one table near the clock. There are
times when he doesn' t get much business, primarily
the first two week&amp; of the semester and immediately
following exams. At those times he relaxes over the
newspaper and listens to the hum of campus life.

Tea and french fries
He posted several s.igns on and near his old
office, to Inform students and anyone else that
might want to see him , of the hours he wouJd be
available in the Rathskeller. In the beginning of each
semester, Dr. Smith tells his students and advisors to
~eek him out in the Rat, somewhere in the vicinity
of the clock. There he can be found , over tea and
french fries, helping students with problems ttlat
Dr. Smith said he has often tried to convince
may come up in the course of classes and labs.
some of his colleagues to have lunch with him in the
Things get especially hectic around exam time, Rat but they have refused to set foot in Norton Hall .
when ctudents huddle around two or three•tables, One man, according to Dr. Smith, actually stated he
receiving answers to their questions. There are also was afraid the students might mug him . However,
certain problems as the Rat is not conducive to Dr. Smith feels very much in tune with students and
explaining the role orPGAl in photosynthesis. Dr. University Ufe from his informal post.
Smlth mentioned that It occasionally gets noisy and
Content with his office in the Rat, Dr. Smith
the lighting is a little dim; but all in all, he Is ecstatic
said he would never want to return to the
over his office arrangement.
conventional office he once occupied. Though, he
can't reach over and get a book which may be
I nfonnal atmosphere
. Dr. Smith explained his feelings about offering helpful in explaining a certain point to a bewildered
his aid In the Rat as opposed to a regular office. He student, Dr. Smith says the advantages of meeting
senses that students are more willing to come to him his students in the Rat far outweigh any
with questions when he is I ••guesf' in an informal disadvantages.

Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics

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EWRD has been tau!ttt to the
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idents Kennedy and Nixon;
Senators Proxmire, Ted Ken·
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and thousands of people in
politics, the arts, business and
professional life and ...thou·
sands of students.
These students have found a

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homework drudgery and get
better grades, too. We can
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We have arranged for a free
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read at a f~er rate-that you
can increase your reading
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Attend the mini·lesson that's
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Thurtday, Oct. 28 at 4 p.m .
Frtct.y, Oct. 29 at 4 p.m.

at the Prudential Bfdt. Rm. 824

Master charf•

ALBERT DePARIS LTD.
902 TONAWANDA STREET Bufblo. N.Y. (R~ eection)
877-6660

(We IIIIo BUY uted fumitunt

Page four . The Spectrum . October 27, 1971

836-1818

Church 8&amp; Pearl Sts. Buffalo, N.Y.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL

S.turday, Oct. 30 •t 1 p.m.

•t Evetyn Wood A_.ing
I

OyMm6c:e trlltitwl
3101 Main St.
(NeJn to Buff.ao Textbook I

JOHN TURNER - 837·2823

�Newsnien relate fate of Attica inmates

EdltoT'I note: This ;, the last of a
I hTte ·ptlTI tlTticle o n th.e
minute-by-minute e~~entJ of tJte
1tom1/ng of Attica Prison, as
written by UP/ newsmen.

surgery,
th~ poin, giving rise to the
Somewhere, somehow, ' 'LD.'' castration rumor.
became a casualty of Attica. He
ln the aftennath of Attica, the
d ied instantly of a single bullet most frequently-asked question is
would in the back. Some say it .. was there indisc rimina t e
.w u in those ten minutes, others shootings, not only of prisoners
Thirteen or 14 bodies were
say he was shot hours later but of hostages?" Officially there
found on the catwalk . Two, John
Monday night. Assemblyman is no answer - and probably will
Monteleone and · John
Arthur 0 . Eve, (D., Buffalo) the not be for months, .until the
• D'Archangelo were hostages. The 'Mad bombu' tries apin
black lawmaker who was the results of several investigations are
rest were prisoners. AlthousJl
unofficial c hairman of the released.
One o f the prisoners who
some may have been cut down in wouldn't give up was Samuel J .
observer's committee, said he saw
the crossfire of buUets from Melville , named the "mad
Barkeley alive when he toured the Opinions offered
troopers advancing toward them, bomber" after hit conviction for
prison about two hours after the
There is the testimony of Dr.
it is believed most were killed bo mbin g eight buildings In
rebellion was put down. Civil
John &amp;!land, the Monroe County
instantly by the sharpshooters' Manhattan in 1969 . According to
rights lawyer Hennan Schwartz of
medical examiner, who first
powerful .270 magnums.
Buffalo said that inmates told him
Deputy Correction Commissioner Steel on flesh
revealed that the hostages died of
"Place your hands on your Waiter Dunbar, Melville wu killed
Pappy Wald wu in the c~rclo o f of seeing "L.D." after the prison
gunshot
wounds, not having their
head and do not move, you will by a sharpshooter as he ran with prisoners and hostages when the was stonned . Dr. Michael Baden,
throats slashed . He said the
not be harmed . Release the four homemade bombs to blow assault. came. "The knife was the respected assistant medical
hostages had "five, ten or fifteen"
hostages," a loudspeaker blared up a SOO ·gaUon fuel tank .• pressed against my neck, and he examiner of New York City, said
bullet wounds. Another opinion is
from the helicopter over head .
(the executioner) said 'When the his autopsy showed the single
Authorities said Melville was
offered by Wemple : " If they
"Many of them foUowed the responsible for wiring the doors first sho t is fired , I'm going to cut bullet pierced " L.O.'s" lu11g and
wanted a turkey shoot, there
order," Pan said . "They were told and made explosive devices later your throat," Wald said . ''But J lodged In his chest. It is Baden's
have been a lot more dead
co stay down, and th ey didn't found buried in the yard . In was lucky. Someone picked o ff professional opinion the shot was would
than that."
move, they laid there." But other addition, some mortar-like the man just as he was about to fired at a range of 100 feet.
"The use o f flreann s inside 'a
prisoners, apparently not believing explosives he was said to have do it."
c orre c ti o naJ In stitutional is
that guns would be used since made were f o und t o be
There was so much confusion Rumorsfty
they never had before, decided to inoperative.
When the firing sto pped , the unthinkable," New York City
in the yard when the firing
resist . "The God-damned fools
The heavy firing - ..hundreds s topped , acco rding to one stories that hostages hod their Mayo r J ohn V. Lindsay said.
just wouldn't give up.'' said one o f bullets" according to five trooper, it took at least half an · throats slashed , and m o ne case No ting that he used only unanned
state pollee o ffi cer. "They came troopers - lu ted ten minutes. U hour to locate 12- 14 of the that a guard was Clistrated , spread jail guards to put down uprisings
hostages, incJuding seven who rapidly . L a t e r , Oswald and in city prisons, he added " when
after us with knives, spears, pipes. wu then that the back up force We had to shoot them ."
several hundred mo re troopers, were among those who escaped Dunba r were to relate these rural state troo pers , aU white,
Lt. Joseph Christian led o ne sherifrs deputies and stiJI later serious injury . "There were bodies stories as fact. They were fo unded enter an institution with shotguns
charge into " 0" yard. An inmate National Guardsmen - came in . all over the place - it was .like a o nly on the facts that two who and rifles, yo u're going to have
jumped out o f the crude trench
In addition to those who died battlefield," the trooper said . survived did have cut th rodts, that bloodsh ed ."
Mo re than 100 prisoners were bloody blindfolds had slipped to
"The actio n was taken with
wounded , 83 of them seriously the necks of dead hostages, and extreme reluctance," Oswald said.
eno ugh to require major o r minor that o ne guard hod been shot in ''My main concern was for the
IF YOU CAN WRITE FAST OR TAKE STENO
safety of the hostages." " If you
AND YOU DON ' T MIND SITING THROUGH ALL
re-create the circumstances of the
KLEINHANS ¥USIC HALL
situation
... you nave a scene of
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE AND ASSEMBLY
WEQNESDA Y, NOVEMBER 3rd, 8 :00p.m .
chaos
that
is one in which
MEETIN GS :
accidents can very well happen ,"
S. A . NEEDS YOU
RockcfeUer said .
TO TAKE MINUTES
the prisoners had built and came
after rum with a club. Two
troopers fired with sl\otpns, a
statewo police source said , cutting
down the inmate and hittin&amp;
ChristJan in the leg and arm. He
wu the most seriously wounded
trooper.

on Times Square, the bodies of
two more prisoners and the
remaining eisht hostages, some of
whom died later in hospitals, were
in the circle in the middle of the
yard. The death toU in those ten
minutes would eventually rise to
ten hostases and 29 prisoners. In
addition, guard William Quinn
died of a beatins reuived in the
first days.of the riot and officials
said three white prisoners were
found with their throats slashed ,
a pparently killed by fellow
inmates.

MELANIE

WtTH

CONTACT

--

SPOT GUBERMAN

831 ·5507

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October 27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�EdiToRiAl

I

Another whitewash
The abrupt end of the Justice Department's birdshot
investigation should be surprising to no one. It has become
common and expected practice for one law enforcement
agency to scratch another's back, and this investigation has
been no exception.
Last spring, an inconclusive preliminary report was
rel»ased claiming that the birdshot pellets had not been fired
from Buffalo Police Department guns. The police, as well as
the local press, seized upon this as proof of their innocence.
Unfortunately, what no one cared to pay any attention to
was the fact that most Buffalo policemen buy and use their
own weapons. There was nothing that prevented them from
employing non-departmental shotguns the night ·they fired

Political inexperience

birdshot at the students.
Now, several months later, and nearly 18 months since
the original incident, the Department of Justice has chosen
to quietly drop their "investigation." We feel that this action,
as well as the totally negligent and pre-prejudiced fashion in
which the investigation was carried out, is criminal and
nothing more than a miscarriage of justice.
If this were an isolated example of the Justice
Department failing to find the overly obvious misdeeds of a
police force, then perhaps our judgment would be different.
However, the names of Kent State, Jackson State, and
nllmerous other incidents of st~te and federally sanctioned
violence and murder adequately show that a pattern has
developed. One law enforcement agency commits crimes and
then another performs o slick whitewash.

We should not allow this episode to simply pass into
history. This is one instance where a large amount of credible
evidence has been obtained. Therefore, attention should
continue to be focused on this issue, as well as on the whole
process of official investigations. The need for this is that
much greater because there is currently a Federal
Investigation of the Attica murders. Since the damage and
injustice done there was far worse than any other official
misconduct and since the investigation was requested by the
Governor responsible for the murders, we should force the
investigation procedures to be held up to· public scrutiny.
Otherwise, the crimes and the whitewashings will continue
forever.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 26

Wednesday, October 27. 1971
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-MaMgine Editor - AI Benson
Co-Manll!line Edhor - Mike Lippmann
A•. ~Mill "I Editor - Susan MO$$
Butln- Man., - Jim Drucker
Advenislne MIMgW - Sue Metlentine

C.mpus ......... Jo-Ann Armao
.............•..Howie Kunz
........ : . ...... Bill Vaccaro
City . . . ...... .. . Harvy Lipman
Copy ........... Ronniforman
................ Marty Gatti
Asst, ....... , ........ ,vacant
F•ture .................vacant
Graphic Ans ... . ..... Tom Toles

Layout ....... Maryhope Runyon
Asst •........•........vacant
Lit. &amp; Drama .. Michael Silverblatt
Mutic .............Billy Altman
Off..Campus ...... Lynne Traeger
Photo .......... Marc Ackerman
. . . . . . . . . . Mickey Osterl'elcher
SportS ............. Barry Rubin
Asst... .. ... • .... Howie Faiwl

I

TM Spectrum is served by United Press International, College Press
Sen/ice, the Los Angeles frH Press, tha Los angeles Time&amp; Syndicate and
Libet'Silon News Service.

Reptblicat ion of metter herain without the exptess oonsent of the
EditOf·in.Chief is forbidden.
Editorial policy 1s determined by the Edilor-in..chlef.

Page six . The Spectrum . October 27 1971
1

To the Editur
The endorsement of Regan for county executi ve
in friday's Spectrum reveals a serious weakness of
experience in evaluating the political situation of
upstate New York . It should be noted t.h at in a
predominantly Republican section of the state (Erie
County - I 48 years of undistu_rbed Republicanism),
Buffalo, and iu Democratic pany machine, represent
the only effective liberal political alternative.
A Republican voter will assuredly vote for a
Republican candidate, and will not be put off by the
fa ct that R e gan did not accept A111ew's
endorsemenL It will not be the Republican or
Conservative voter who will be confused by the
significance of Repn's show of antipathy. It was,
after all, a very s uccessful strategy of a similar sort
which divided the liberal-democratic vote of upstate
New York just last year, and put Buckley in office as
state senator. It should be very obvious as well, and
especially Jiven Apew's visit, that Sen. Buckley ,
Rockefeller, and their party, cannot afford to lose
tb e su pp ort or such a reliable
Conservative-Republican stronghold as Erie County

in the upcomin&amp; election.
Individualism, and o pposition to centralized
sovernment, is a form or conservatism as old and
American as apple pie. To equate traditional
conserv~~tivc tenets (concepu which in the hands of
conservative leaders have been effectively used to
maintain Southern and No rthern racism), with
liberal-radical populism shows a misunderstanding of
both 1\merican political tradition and the position of
tbe Conservative party in this country today. Regan
is certainly not another Goodell 1 nor is he simply
running under the Republican-Conservative banner
because he is too "radical" for the Democratic party.
Admittedly Sedita is not an exciting alternative,
but realistically , you don't break the Democratic
machine by reinforcins the Cons.ervative and
Republican party machine, representing an already
reactionary constituency.
Stev~

Stllamone and Jill Stanton

Editor's note : The Spectrum mllde no outright
endunement In l.a.JI Friday '.t (JGper of any candida It'
/br the po.Jt of County Executive.
·

For what it's woi-th
by Harvy Lipman
Of late I h ave wondered whether anybody
actually reads this column, and since ( have nothing
of real value to say this week (if, inde.rx.l, I have
anything of value to say any week), I decided to
make some sort of feable attempt at discovering the
depth and perversion of my readership. If you have
ever read one of these columns (and since you're
reading this one you obviously have, you ·dodo),
please choose one o f the following alternatives to
inform me:
A . Shoot off a purple flare somewhere in Ute
vicinity of Hayes Hall at 4 this afternoon (anywhere
north of Dr. Somit 's office is unacceptable).
B. Shoot off Dr. Somit somewhere in the
vicinity of Hayes Hall.
C. Run 2 1 laps in the nude around the Baird
llall parking lot yelling: "Margaret Mead forever,
Margaret Mead forever ...
D. Send a copy of the following second
bimonth l y
but ·only- wben · l can ' t·think-of-anything·to-write-poll, along with six
Wheaties box tops, two Mickey Mantle baseball cards
and a copy of the Nov. 23, 1934 Saturday Evening
Post to : Anto n1o Rocca, Box 134, The Spectrum
office, 2 11 TiJUana Drive, Juarez. All prizes will be
awarded, and the decision of the judges wiJJ
probably result in their being committed to a
psychiatric insti tution .
So with no further ado (and without saying
anything else first, either), I present the second
bimonthly but "nly - ah, the hell with it. Here's the
goddamn poll.
I . If the hypotenuse of a right triangle is 14 and
the base is 3, then : a. the capital of Tibet has no
relation to the age of the Dalai lama ; b . the next
m emb ~Cr of the University community to resign will
not be Bill Baumer ; c. that's not a triangle, you
ambecile, it's a parallelogram!
2. A parallelogram is: a. sort of like a cand ygram
o nl y different ; b. spelled wrong; c. hard to
pronounce; d . a three-sided eggplant.
3. In 1960, Richard Nixon ran against John
Kennedy and lost, but in 1968 . Hubert Humphrey
ran against Richard Nixon and lost anyway. This

implies which of the following : a . the only candidate
that Hubert Hu'mphrey could beat for the presidency
is Harold Stassen; b . John lindsay will run against
Ro naJd Reagan and win because he's the closest
thing the Democrats have to a movie star ; c. Hubert
Humphrey is the reincarnation of the zeppelin
Hindenburg; d . Hubert Humphrey thinks charisma is
a Jewish warne.
4. If Robert Ketter and Albert Somit had not
taken over the big playpen in Hayes Hall , then : a.
Oaude Welch would still be dean ; b . leroy Pesch
would still be dean; c. frank Zweig would still be a
de partment chairman ; d. Thomas Connall y would
still be a provost ; e. Ira Cohen would still be a
provost ; f. Rollo Handy would still be a provost ; g.
aU o f the; above.
5. The funniest character in the Common
Council is : a . Alfreda ; b . Uncle Ray-Ray; c. Grandpa
Frank ; d . Big Daddy Joe.
6 . If Buffalo were the cultural center of the
United States: a. the rest of the country would have
had to secede; b. every other city with a population
of over 20 wo uld have been wiped out in a nuclear
holocaust ; c. the Palace would still be the cultural
center of Buffalo; d . the country would be
cult ureless.
7. Whenever Ryan O'Neal appears on a movie
screen you : a. get violently ill ; b. have an orgasm ; c.
thi nk of Harvey Weinstein, and st ill get violently ill ;
d. yawn.
8. The next game the Buffalo Bills win : a. wiJJ
be a mistake; b . will lead to a congressional
investigatio n ; c. will not be this year; d . will prove
that Harvey Johnson should be coach of the year ; e .
will be played agai nst the Montreal Alouettes.
9. The fountain of yo uth : a. is polluted ; b. was
discovered by Luigi de Giuse ppe before he got a job
shattering glass on Memorex commercials; c. is
located in the southern part of North Dakota (ah,
c'mon, tben::'s no such place as North Dakota) ; d . is
located in the northern half of South Carolina
(fooled ya! ).
I 0 . Fred Aueron is related to which of the
following celebrities: a . Lawrence Weld ; b . Ralph
Edwards; c. Les Crane; d. Arthur Treacb.er; e. Regis
Philbin ; f. Jan de Waal , but it was only an accident.

�Athletic dilemma
To

th~

by Stanley Dayan

&amp;lltor:

There is one issue which ii very clear. It- really surprises me how
people can ignore it. This is the issue over centralization of power.
On one hand certain segments of America have really come alive
have risen out of a slumber. It was a slumber of the mind. In the past
not only did one's elected representative act for him - he also
wtdtfltood for hlm. One elected his representative and beyond that he
felt no commitment to U!'\derstand his society's politle5. Now however,
people are waking up. are llnderstandina the movements within the
political structure - seeing also the concrete implications of policies.
T~e. ~nough younger people have been withdrawina from political
~CtJVlttes over the last year. But this is only because they have a clearer
tdea of the immense difficulties and problems. I don't think the desire
for a better run polit has departed. When it really comes to govemin&amp;
ourselves our awareness is better than it has ever been.
But look at the response. We understand rouahly what we are
doing; the immediate and the more removed implications. We are
responded to, not by being given more power, but by given less.
Witness the administration of this school. Even the provosts have been
~~queezed out of decision making.
The situation is one of paranoia . Some people have learned to live
in a way which renders them safe from real encounters with other
people. But if the people aet power (individuallY not colledively) there
is no telling what will happen. The "danger" is that one might be
forced to face his own neurosis. Centralization is a reaction by the
pohtically strong against the spiritually strong. The people with real
coura&amp;e look forward to the spontaneous directions free men take even though it could be pajnful. The politically strong (and these days
usually paranoid) want to make sure their spontaneity which is nominal
is allowed and their neurosis unchallenged.
I must add that the people are ultimately responsible for this kind
of centraliutlon. We, because of our cowardice clutch wf'Ctchedly at
our school work, or our women or men , or at our futures, and would
rather aive in slowly rat her than race the fact that we are losing our
rights and principles. I tell you if the academic genie could grant me
one wish, It would be that the faculty and students would refuse to
operate under these conditions: That they would simply refuse to teach
or attend Classes and then. spend some time in relaxed rene~:tion - to
uk what should be done. So I have merely repeated myself; this is JUSt
the old cry tor reOectlon on the aims and purposes and possibilities of
life, for philosophy .
To me now and further centralization of power is into lerable. But
let me be clear. A power vacuum is just us intolensble. A power vacuum
is what we would have It a strong central power suddenly collapsed.
Tbe Jess esthetic qualities of man would predominate. What has to
happen is that the power goes to the people individually. What has to
happen is that the people must develop between themselves
understandinp which will allow them to be spontaneous; which will
allow them to fruitfully handle the detrimental actions which each
individual oC4.:8Sionally deals the eociety. They must have the
understandinp which will enable them to pve up l)OWOt yet retain it ;
to be able to gjve up power to a leader in the case the society is
threatened, without any danger of a power JTib by the leader.
All the more intolerable then is centralization of power. WhjJe we
are ready and able to develop the understandings necessary for a free
society the paranoid people in power 1re keeping even thls
development from taking place. We can do somethina. Remember this,
we could stop the banks dead cold if one quarter of all the people aot
together and demanded the money in their savings Otnd checking
accounts.

While attemPting to k.ick field goals from a
kicking tee on Rotary Field at 6 p.m. this evening 1
was cordially invited to remove myself, my footb~ll
and my tee from the premises because tho playing
field has been rented to Canisius High School for a
Sunday game. Has it come to the point where
students arc denied the use of their own campus
facilities? ln addition, I am interested in knowing th&amp;
source of funds from which the field was marked .
Surely not our athletic fee.

//ugh Hart

Misuse of po~r
To tht Editor:
The executive committee, utilizing their votes
on the student assembly, is guilty of perhaps their
most blatent misuse of governmental power at this
week's student assembly meetin&amp;. After JenJlhy
discussion on the proposed S.A. office budget, the
assembly consisting of 26 voting members allocated
the fuoda. Mr. Barmak, the creator of this budget, is
presently the S.A. treasurer, and is at the same time
serving as chairman of the finance committee, tho
body that "scrutinized" this proposal.
Included in the budget is a $3000 expenditure
for "travel." These funds shaU provide the air fare
for our government officials to travel throuahout the
country. This past summer, at least four executive
committee members attended an NSA meeting i.n
Colorado, located in the heart of the beautiful
vacationland of the Rocky Mountains.
In addition, S I 500 was titled "temp. services," a
common euphamism used, we were informed, to
represent miscellaneous. When questioned further
about the purpose of this sum, Mr. Barmalc asserted
that such treats as dinina in th.e Tiffin Room wltb
S.A. guests and other unexpected costs would
adequately absorb this money. Mr. Frankel
explaining the purpose of this fee, emphatically
stated that he required S I 0 for his department to
retreive a package of persodlcals destined for the
S.A. office.
S 1180 was attached to an S II ,000 stipend
expendHure in the name of flexibility. It appears
that so{Tieone's stretehina the p4int. The
undergraduate student telephone bill this year is
estimated to cost $2600. Included within this sum is
S200 for the sole purpose of lona distance calls to
"Washington and California;' said Barmak .
Other segments of t.he budget included a S6000
appropriation for S.A.S.U . (Student Association for
the State University.). This government is the
conglomerate o f representatives from most of the
state system schools; in other words a center of
compounded compounds. In further discussion
relating to this cost, it was stated that this money
had been frozen and would not be currently used. If
this money is not going to S.A.S.U., the next logical
question to be asked is, "Where is it going?" It
appears that thif extraneous matter was overlooked .
The office budaet totalled a staggerina figure of
$60 ,750 . It should be noted that thls is only the
beginning of the lists of S.A.'s financial needs that
the executive committee has in store for the
assembly. Student government is no bargain!
Last but not least is the matter of the roll call
The motion received I 3 votes in favor, I 0 against.
and three abstentions. Of the 13 individuals in
accord, seven were executive committee members.
or the ten people who realized the inequities of this
proposal , only David Stcinwald, co-ordinator of
student's rights. is a member of the committee. We
were propagandized last year to believe that the
assembly would be formed in order to establish a
more democratic student government; yet, now we
can safely substantiate that thss is fallacious.
It is fact that a member of the executive
committee chairt the meetings of the assembly. It is
also true that members of the executive committee
are the chairman of their respective departments on
the assembly, and presently control at least 35% of
the voting power of that body. Any separation
between the executive and the legislature has been
nullified by this committee's partaking and, in fact..
being a decisive factor in passing their own budget.
Deleting their votes, the S.A. budget would have
been defeated by a vote of 9 to 6, by the rightful
student assembly of this University! The individuals
elected by their interest or affinity groups to serve
on a decision making body of the st udent
government. I therefore urae you, the students, to
become representatives. It is absolutely imperative
that a few power-hungry demegouges not control
this newly-hom body. We must take the power and
utilize the freedom that is riahtfully ours.
A conurned student

Day care has a horne
To the

Editt~r :

Next week the U 8 Cooperative Day Care Center
wUI be movina. Although the ;~ctual distance of the
move is short
the Center is moving from one half
of the basement of Cooke Hall to the other half - it
represents a lo~ way traveled and almost two years
of effort.
Starting with a mere handful of parents working
cooperatively in the spring of I 970, the Center now
serves over I 10 children of UB students, faculty, and
sta ff, caring for as many as 55 children at a time.
The &lt;;enter remains a truly cooperative effort over
90% of the parents are mvolved 10 the Center's
operation.
.
.
Th~ new Center tn Cooke II a_II _1s m~re than a
symbolic b~eakthrough,_ however : It 1~ an lm~rt~nt
asset wh1ch benefits the enhre University
co m~un1ty . For l~e ch!ldren. it means clean, bright,
spac1ous surroundm~ 10 an atmosphere of mutual
love and respect. For the parents, the Center means
freedom to work, to att end classes. to study. To the
University, the Day Care Center represents a
commitm ent to equali ty of educational opportunity
for all.
An important aspect of the new facih t1 es in
Cooke is that the Center will now be entirely legal.
The Center has been operating in a precarious
position due to various state and county regulations
rega rding day care facilities. The new Day Care
Center will meet all regulations of all levels of
government, thus, hopefully, elimmat1ng many of
the hassles of past years and insuring the Center's
permanent status on the campus.
The new quarters will occupy eleven rooms m
the Cooke basement in addition to the large outside
play area which is already in usCY. A large central play
roo m will provide ample space for larae motor
activities
running, jumping, bike-riding,
rope-climbing, wrestling, etc. Another large room
will contain structured activities such as painting,

drawin&amp;, modeling clay, etc., which combme
education with phty . The children , of course, will be
free to participate or not in any activity as they
choose. Other rooms will house a nursery for the
youngest babies and a toddlers' room for children
between one and three; restrooms; and laundry
facihties for washing sheets, diapers, etc. A full
kitchen offers the possibiJity of hot lunches, and a
staff office/lounge will provide a spot for the adult
volunteers and staff to take a break . There is also
room for storage and an isolation room for kids who
I become sick while at the Center. (The Center also
has spcciaJ arrangements w1th Children's Hospital in
ca!&gt;e o f emergenc1es.)
The key to the Center is cooperation . The
Center, th~ugh it has a full-time paid staff, relies
largely upon the parents of the children ; each parent
must work one ho ur for each five hours his child
spends at the Center. (The state requ1res a ratto of
one adult to each five children ) Other volunteers
have also been attracted from the colleges, the
nursing school and the med school
'
·
The Center is, at the moment , not funded by
the University or the state; it is supported by parent
fees and donat1ons. Generous contributio ns from SA
and GSA have prov1ded almost half of this year's
budget. (Although Congrc:ss has authorized
$78,000,000 fo r day care centers, the mon~y has not
yet been appropriated, and probably won't be in the _
near future.) Thus donations of any ki nd - money,
time, toys, bonks, supplies
are - more than
welcome.
On Friday, October 29, the Center will officially
open its new facilities with a combination Grand
Opening/Halloween Party. The entire University
community is invited to participate, for the Center IS
a vital part of the community. In the largest possible
sense, the children of the Day Care Center are all our
c:hildren.
The Day Care Center

October 27, 1911 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�.

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ADDITIONAL

Page eight . The Spectrum . October 27, 1971

"LUCKY SPECIALS " AT UNIVERSITY STORE

�•

Comics cOmment on today's issues
if "relevance.. is your inclination.

colorina, sbadlna and attention to
detalJ make them the best artists
producina comJc books today.
The recent plot-tine of the
Avengu1 (no, it has nothing to do
with John Steed and Emma
Peale), incidently, features a
parody of the McCarthy
Editor'• note: Th/1 is the ltut ofa communist-scare and was written
thn~ptlrt urie1 on comic boolc1. by Roy Thomas.

by Jay Boy•
Sp«lntm Staff 10/tn-

Superman sinks
Superman : Kryptonite can't

For the aake of those who have
been vacationinJ on tbe moon for
the past few
s, Tile -spectrum
has been
· g a in-depth look
at the comJc book situation and
tbe superheroes herein. The
attitude toward th comics has
been hiahlY eomp meptary and
because of this o e may have
assumed that be can now walk
into any nearby newsstand, plunk
down twenty-five coppers, grab a
random comic from the shelf and
be pleasantly entertaJned for all
h.is efforts. Such is assuredly not
the case. Just like movies, books,
plays and Chinese food , there are
good comic books and then there
are those comics for which the
term "junk" is quite appropriate.
While it can take some years to
become a comic book connoiseur,
Perltaps the following sugestions
may be helpful to those in search
of entertaining reading:
A 11engus: If you buy no other
comic book , then you must at
least buy this one. It features the
pe ncillin..s power of artist Neal
Adams and inkin&amp; efforts by Tom
Palmer. These fellows just can't
produce a bad comic book. Their

hurt him anymore, and Clark
Kent works for a television station
instead of the Daily Pfantt
NewiPQPU . As you can see, if it's
been some time since you picked
up a Superman comic, there have
been some changes. It's just as
well, we suppose, because the art
a nd stories in recent Supuman
adventures have varied from poor
to mediocre. Avoid thJs one.
Captain America: Th.is feU ow
was a particular problem for the
artists and writers assigned to him .
In the 40's and SO's, he was the
ultra - patriotic, flag-waving ,
n azi-k illing , co mmie-catching
symbol of all that was America.
The problem, then, was to make
this symbol ac.c cptable to college
students, and make h.is adventures
applicable to what is happening
today. The result was to team him
up with a s m as h.ing Black
superhero called the Falcon, and
s end him riding around the
country o n a motorcycle with no
particular direction, a Ia "Easy
Rider." And if that phrase, "no
partic ular direction," doesn't
characterize Cap as a symbol of
America today, then nothing
does. This one is wo rth the money

NOW OPEN
TOWFR
DELICATESfiEN
MONDAY - FRIDAY 11 :00 a.m. TO 7:00 p.m.

Green

Arrow : A powerful mapzine
drawn by even more powerful
Neal Adams. This attempt won
numerous honors at the recent
meetina of the Academy of Comic
Book Arts. In the past. it has dealt
with overpopulation, materialism,
civil ri&amp;bts and drup, to m~tion
a few themes. One of the most
lnterestin&amp; lines in comic book
literature is what an immortal
called "the Guardian.. told our
two heroes in an early issue, "The
strife whJcb rends your nation your world - must cease! Sooner
or later, humanity must stop
rutting . . . killing . . . which lead
to hate and bloodshed - ! I pray
you find the splendor in
yourselves . . . before it is too
late!"

first issue: "There came a 'time
when the old aods died. The brave
died with the cunning. The noble
perished, locked in battle with
unleashed evil. lt was the last day
for them. AD ancient era wu
pusina in fiery holocaust ...
Silence closed upon what bad
happened - a lone. deep silence wrapped in·nwaive clarkne. ... it

Comics), Th~ Fliuh, Jrmrma11. and
especially cartoonish comic books
like Archt~. M/111~ tht! Modd,
Ou~r. and Do~tt~ld Duck .
And that, believe it or not, is
all we 'have to say conce,rning
comic books for now. Except to
point out that if they ever bestow
an award for the man who did the
IDOit to nile the level of comk:

Escapists

Conan, Th ~ Barbarian: There's
no " relevance'' in this o ne, just
pure escapism in the true
sword-and-sorcery tradition. The
stories are based o n t he series of
Conan paperback books written
by that master of image ry, the
late Robert E. Howard. The a rt in
this comic is beautifully rendered
by British artist, Barry S mith, and
the story is by Roy Tho mas.
Conan is one of the few comics .to
be consistantly good since its
beginning.

A

;,
0

;;
...

1
•..

Th~ New Gods, Th~ [urelltr
People and Mr. Miraclt: A series

of three interrelated comics
written and drawn by long-time
great Jack Klrby. The best way to
tell you the premise of these fine
magu.ines is to quote from their

WE NEED.
[•

BLOOD
EARl MONEY. .
FOR IT

(J

•

~

.;

was this way for an aae ... Then
- Titer~ was new li~eht /" It is of
this new light and the stories that
accomranY it which Kirby tells of
in each issue in his o wn dramatic
manner.
Other comics wh.lc h have a
tendency to be good, de pending
lpon whq is writing und drawing
~hem in an y give n mo nth, are
S pi cJ c• r m a 11 • Ba I 111 an . Tlr I!
Fantallk Four, a nd Tltor.
Comics which tend • to b e
co nsistently terrible are : Thl'
1/ulk. Superf(irl (in Adventu re

CALL
IMMEDIATELY
2450 ELMWOOD AVE.
Phone 874-0591

book writina and art, then it must
be given to Stan Lee of Marvel
ComJcs. P.erhaps a good way to
end this series lS with his words on
the subject , " lln o ur comic
books 1 we're just trying to make
some sense out of the nutty news
ite ms an d ridiculous reports that
assail o ur senses every minute. If
we can make you think - if we
c an anger you, aro use yo u,
stimulate and provoke you, then
we've served our purpose. In fact
ho w's thjs for a new .. . motto :
'Entertainmen t
with a kick 1n
it?' Onward!" Onward indeed .

SPECTRU M CLASSIFIE D$ REALLY WORK. Alter
0111, whal pAge o f The Spectrum do YOU turn lo flru 1
For r01tes •no In formation . come on up lo room JSS
N orton H•ll and ask for Soozlllllllllllllll fl 111111 II I!! I

3342 BAILEY AVE.

CHICKEN
ROAST BEEF
BBQ RIBS

836-5025

COLD MEATS

BREADS
SALADS

and

BROTHEIIHODD

or
Take out
FRUIT

lAntern

MIRSA, IHC.

( 1st F1oor 'Tower Dorm)

'

Green

10.% OFF II

PASTRY
ROLLS
CAKES

DELI SANDWICHES
MADE TO ORDER

WHYCOOK??
When its all at the

Tower Delicatessen

WE ARE OVERSTOCKED

AND OVERBOUGHT .

HELP I
BEGINNING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27th
BROTHERHOOD

October 27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Secoad straipt shutout

SocCer Bulls score again!
by Dave Geriqer
Sp«tn.~m

Stt11! Writer

There is an old sayina that states that you can't
win if you d6n't score, but the Bulls' soccer club's
last two opponents haven' t found that out yet. The
Bulls notched their second consecutive shutout
Saturday by defeatina St . John Fisher, 2- 0.
Onc e aaain, the Bulls' double center
haJfback4ype defense did the job. Wlth Jim Lienert
and Bob Hayes rotatlna at that position, the Bulls
were able to hold off St . John Fisher's attack for
most of the pme. The fact that the field was wet
made it tou&amp;h on the defense, since the ball is harder
to handle, maldna it that much easier to make a
costly error. In addition, a wet ball is much harder
for the aoalkeeper to hana on to.
" The wet, sloppy field dictated that the pme
would be won by the team that made the fewest
errors," coach Bert Jacobsen analyzed. "We scored
twice and made the aoaJs stand up by really playina
tou&amp;h defense. We made short, crisp piues and were
thus able to control the ball throupout the first
half."

Ball control key
BaU control was certainly the name of the pme
durina the fust half for the Bulls ~they outshot St.
John Fisher by a count of 10- 3. St. John Fisher was
able to put more pressure on in the aecond half,
especially in the fourth quarter wbal Jacobsen

-

nabstituted freely. However, aoaJtender Tahm
Sadeabi was equal to the task or stoppina the few
tou&amp;b shots that were put on the net and made 13
saves in recordina his second consecutive shutout.
While the Bull defense shut off St. John Fisher's
attack, the Blue and Gold offenae clicked for two
early scores. 'center forward Don Earl, playlna what
Coach Jacobsen called ''bit finat pme yet;•
notched the first Bull marker on a breakaway. f.
looa pass was misplayed by the fisher defense,
Ieavins Earl brealtina in alone on the goal. He drew
JOallteeper John Carroll out of the net and blasted
the ball into the lower corner for the eventual
winnioa marker. Alex Torimiro notched the other
Buffalo aoal as his ahot was deflected into the net
off the bands of aoalie Carroll. That ,oal Jives
Torimiro the team lead in aoals scored with three.
"We still weren't shootlna enouab," Jacobsen
remarked, "but our offenae wu able to move the
ball well in the first half. We've just aot to shoot
more if we expect to have a couple of hiah«orina
pmes." The statistica certainly bore him out, u the
Bulls only outshot Fisher by a count of 16- 13.
However, the Bulls defense was able to me to the
occasion whenever necessary.
The soccer Bulls will 'take on Canisius at home
this afternoon at 3 p.m. After this encounter, in
which Tahm Sadeahi ,oes after his third shutout, the
Bulls will close out the season as they play at
Gannon next Tuesday afternoon.

SNOBS
THE

SpECT~tUM

!}

OVERTIME
by IMry Rubia
SponrEdiiM

The news item on the national wires read : "Bulfalo students ask
FCC to remedy ABC'a blackout of half-time abow ." Yes, one year after
Buffalo'• ill-fated television contest apinst Holy Croes, a major
controversy ati11 amolden. On an artistic plane, the Bulls triumpbed
16-0, but the Buffalo ma.rchina band wu abutout u ABC refused to
tdecut the "Pride of the Bast'a" anti-war moratorium day half-time
show.
The petition filed with~ tho fCC in Wulliqton comes at a time
when network executive~ are still squirmina to stop alleced
conareuional ceJUOnhip. In fact, just laat week, Blmer Lower,
president of ABC newa t01tified before the Senate aubcommittee on
constitutional riJbta. The -nee of Lower'a testimony was that there
is a potential danaer to .the freedom of the prea due to Concressional
subpoena power to sourcea of information on tdeviaion specials.
Yet ABC, which ia now worried about the freedom of the presa
and censonhip, forbade a half-time abow from bein&amp; seen on its
reaional telecast. Rather, ABC tolved ita half-time dilemma by focusina
its cameras on Shennan Hall and the areaa aurroundin&amp; Rotary Fidd.
Attorney Tracy Westen workin&amp; throuab the Stem Community Law
firm, hu vowed to ..take tbiJ case all the way to the Supreme Court,"
but in all reality in a few weeb tbia cue will bo all but fofiOtten in a
areen file cabinet in Wuhinaton. The next time a network shows a
patriotic half-time abow, ask younelf if that is not as political as a show
with an anti-war theme. Yet, ABC and the hy~ritical networb cry
censonbipp.

• • • • •

Laat week, the basketball Bulls, in their second week of pre-season
train.ina suffered the loll of startina auant Al Delman. Earlier this
semester the Bulb bad lost Tim Lennon with a los operation; Roaer
Kremblu, who araduated and Bruce Huckle who did not ao out this
yeaf. Thus, ~econd year vanity coach Ed Muto is left with but one
proven auard - junior coUep transfer Bob Vartanian.
In reality, the Bulb are thus in the same boat as last year when
they opened the seuon with only Kremblu u a proven auard.
Vartanlan is considered quicker and more potent offenaively, but as of
now, the remainina six JUUCls on the ~quad are bunched closely
toaether. For the BUlla now, the. key to this season's trainin&amp; camp is
the search for a runnina mate for the speedy Vartanial\. lt. is nearly
certain that beainnina with their Dec. I opener at Syra-cuse University,
the BUlls will be pressed from the openinJ tap. It wu often jokinJ)y
!!lid last year that the opposition w&lt;'Uid pick the Boils up at their
locker room door in an attempt to exploit the Bulls' main weakness.
The Bulls seem strona up front with Curt Blackmore back along
with junior coUeae stan Jim Tribble and Grea Laker alona with the
veteran Neil Langelier and Rick Mitanle. The Blue and Gold have the
potential to control the backboard, but chances fo r a bia season hinae
upon the ability of the remainina awards to assert themselves and aid
Vartallian. Where have ou ne Ronnie Gilliam?
.-

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31st, 8 :00p.m .

KRIS
KRISTOFFERSON

0

Admission Orch. $6.00, $.S .OO- Bak. $5.00, $4.00
Tickets Available at Norton Union Ticket Office.

WESTERN
NEW YORK
PREMIERE
TODAY

*1De

malt
malt liquor•••
good enough
to be called
BUDWEISER.
lO()qb

Page ten. The Spectrum . October 21, 1971

.........

iv-i
•.

·'

'-~~ h,.

..,.,..,

TR.BASKIN
A H4rlatt l ou . rete&lt; Hyomt ProductM&gt;n

CANDICE BERGEN ·PETER BOYLE· MARCIA ROOD
- JAMES CAAN Wr•!Mn oNI rrotked by , _ Hyo":' . O.rected by ~ l ou

�guarant.-2 . O ..G Appllan~:es,
SyeamMe TX4-3113.

CLAIIIFIII
'W ANTED

RIDGE LEA coordlmttor-ehalrmar1
needed. Plene apply In 261 Norton.

MEN wanted for patt and fuiHime
reull man1191ts. Call Ken 815·9218 ,
5-10 p .m .

FM Converter for AM ear radio. New
or used . Darryl, 831 · 1166 or
135·2028.

DOUBLE French h o rn, fo r
trader. 831-4806, 6S4-9390.

WANTEO: Term Papen. All Subjects.
Call 871· 1171 after 9 !'om.

shc th

STU DENTS wanted t o WMk on
d.valoplng environmental policies. A
team b now belli$ pu t together to
work on INua whlctl directly affeet
the destiny of Erie County. If
lnter•ted. please eall Pror. David
Stieglitz. 181·35.50.

4118£ VOUR own bon - earn top money
- make your o wn working hours. C all
Ken 885·9278, 5- 10 p .m.
VIDEO charrman for UUAB wanted .
Applications available In Rm . 261.
Paid Po11t1C.1 Ad

r--- An o~ ; ( ( ; ; ; - - - ,

TR3·514~ .

FOR SALE

Buffalo, N.Y . 14222
883~300
883~900

TWO FEMALE roomm1tes wlnted to
sh•,.. with two others. Available
November 1. Call aftw 6:30p. m . Ask
for M•rllyn o r Linda 873-4046.
ROOMMATE wanted. Own room .
1G-mln. walk frMn campus, S66t mo.
146 Rou n ds St . C •ll M lchalle
831 ·2996.

LOST Si FOUND

1966 VW. Good condition. S n o w tires
W/ Wheell, metric: w renches. Call
297-5023 after 5 :00.

LOST DOG 10/20 vicinity Allenhurst.
Male black wltn white naln, long ull,
t wo collars. ln noeent Is friendly. Call
Debbie 8 32·3844.

FOR SALE H I·FI stereo Silt and raCIIo.
Very reasonable. Clll after 4 :00
831 ·3411.
""

HELP! Lost gold w1t~:n . Family
heirloom - sent1ment11 va lue - snYII,
round head. Ca ll Susie 633·9144l.

1969 DATSUN 510 sedan, autom•t lc,
good cond ition, S1 250 . 8 37·944l9 a fter
5 weelcCiays . Anytime on weekend .
FOR SALE: Renault Sedan. Low
mileage. Orlgl n•t o wne r, Mike otter.
632-8451.

,..unt«J by
IHI•-re C.nwre M•rt

RIDE BOARD
RIDE needed to N ew York . Leaving
Tnurs. night, Oct. 28 alter 6 :00 and
returning Sun. 831·2261.

RADIO Ctelg 7-banCI AMtFM/SW, hve
S.W. bands plus A M/FM neadsets • nd
ear phones . Cost S100. Will sell SSO
Reply In writing Spect rum Office, Bo•
86.

IS COMING
leminera • Exhibita •
Con...a • Live Models • Door
Pri~n everydey • Win • trip

N EED ride Oct. 28 or 29 t o Ann
Ar bo r, Unlv. of M ich. or ne~rby . C all
838·3099.

1965 V.W . bug. Ex cell ent cond ition,
$400 . Reply In writing Spec trum
Olflce, BolC 86.

f01 2 • De~r~lone •

E~za of all majw

APARTMENT FOR RENT

Photo Equipment dittpt.yed

end aplelned by the makers •
Chooet and buy tfufo eeeint
It all • G~ Oeefal

BE CROOM, living room, kltcnen.
running water. Ref. Private ent,.nce.
TT5 ·7962, $80tmonlh.

VOLKSWAGON C•mpus Bus, 1964 .
good con dit ion . Snow tires. rour
spar~. gas neater, extras. Call Setn
875 -8195.

STATLER HILTON HOTEL

FRI., SAT., SUN.

PERSONAL
CAROL and Jonn - Happy Wedding!
- B~r r y

REFRIGERATORS. slovu lind
washers . RaeondltlonecS ; delivered and

OCTOBER 2..30.31
ADVANCE TICKETS 1t

BEAUTIFUL handmede gold and Sllv••

Jew•rv - wed.dl"'l rlf19S - at tensible
prlees. J .P. The GOidwNVer,
ElmWOod at Ferry St., 181-3400.

655

HORSEBACK rldlnt. hayrides. Off
- o n rates. wa-ly Stables, Servlc:e
Roed 18, Nlag~ra River Parkway, 8
miles north of Peace Brldgl, Nlltpra
Falls, Ont•rlo, Canad1. Phone
416·295, 3925.
TRANSFER student nMCis piKe to
IIIII. Neer Main M Ride~ Lu. Call Dave
876-9668 ·
BORIS, my darling, meet me at the
Russian tea this FrldiV wenlng In
Room 3.40 N orton. I'll be standing by
the samovar. All my love, Natasha ,
NATASHA, I'll be there. What's I
Boris.

t.~movarr

TOOAY'S the last cSay to XeroiC at our
~peelal s .05 rate. Room 355, Norton
Hall, Gustav. Tomorrow he'll cost s.oa
(still the cheapat prl4:8 on campus).

MISCELLANEOUS
RESUMES elCpertiV c:ompoted,
typed , fllst , efficient service. Clll
835-73.
TVPING done In "'Y nome. 833· 1597.
TV PING, elCperlenced, ne.r u.a . $ .40
per page. 834·3370. Fast Hrvl4:8.
ACCOUSTI~

LOST : Alto recorder In canvas ease
Olef. Annel&lt; . REWARD . PIUS/I Clll
632· 4665.

GuitariSt; Delta,
bottteneetc, Appalac lan styles, Will
te• ch beglnnlnll/mlddllng st udents .
&amp;3/lesson. 8 35·1982.
C .. H
JON ES Professional Typing
S ervlce
co mputerized IBM
eoulpment plus ou r e x parlenoe give
best p ossible presentations of
d lnert•tlons. thesis, t erm papers,
resumes 1nd employment eppllc:itlon
letters . Located between tw o
c •mpuus . Very reasonable. Call
837-6558.

AFRICA Trllvel Dee. 16- Jin. 2
Roundtrip from N- York City, $450.
Nlgert• Ghana, Ivory Coast Liberia.
Write Africa Travel Club, P .O. Box
J002. Ellicott S tation, BuHalo, N .V .
14205.
FREE kittens 8 weeks old. Litter
t r elned. Very heal t hy. EICtremellf
lovable and bOuncy. Call (aft er 8)
8 37·0533.

~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~~~

1/2 HALF PRICE 1/2

A different sound. a different light

50¢

ALWAYS A GOOD
TIME

DELAWARE CAMERA MART
2635 Dela-re Avenue
31 25 Bailey Avenue

·-~una.E

••••s

"

525 W"alde
Opening
Soon!

H

B

I

MEETING
CAMPUS STAFF
THE SPECTRUM
THURSDAY NIGHT
355 NORTON HALL
ATTENDANCE

You have'to see it
to believe it

~Q~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Welcome our blind new Xerox macnino, G USTAV Sr.
He's bigger, more ellltlont and q uicker tnan our otd
machine, GUS Jr .

.,
MOBIUS
lOth DISTRICT
LEGISLATOR

ROOMMATES WANTED

MU ST SELL
1963 S kyl1r1&lt; ,
co nver ti ble V8, 1utomat1c power
t r•nsmlsslon, power top, snow ti res.
Cllll 693.. 154.

1964 DLOS 91 cont~~rtlbte . 4l8,800
aetuat miles - one owner - four new
radial tires - full power -Call Helen
831~113, 9-5 p .m ; 834·5338 after six
- $ 5 00.

on~ runttitt/( em lhl" Rl"publlcon " "'

I

1964 VALIANT 4-door automatic
tflnsmlsslon, $200. 875·5727 after
6 : 30p.m .

- / 1 963 BUICK Electra all power,
automatic, good running condition .
S IN CERE DYNAMIC MUSICIAN S
Clll 137.0937 1fter 6 p.m. Ask RIO.
Slleklng to fol"m group With female leac:t
singer. Call 633-1781. Don't worry
about ex perience, just be willing to
'67 COUGAR power steering A C snow
WORK HARD. Will work around
tires, clean , 75,000 miles , xlent eond .
schedule.
Malee offer. 883-.5272. Leo Smlt.

AND STAPP -

and tht' cJfhtr un tltl' Dt'rrtOCf'flti&lt;'
t lclut. T h fl strGnRr situation Is thr
brain child of our local pollticfll
lt!aden
I am an «'nrollrd R rpubUc•an
with a t&gt;uslnt'u background,
attl'mpt/flll to win t#tr I Ot h District
&lt;Ill tht Constr~~atlllt Unt', Rtu
tty
th~
Co urier Expl't.'ss ~dlfurlally
"recomm~nd«'d that thos~ In Distllct
I Q, who for partiStJn r«'asons. find
tllrmstlvfll unablt to l(n for fl
DtmocrGt·L&lt;bt'rGI. Clllt thrlr vo(('S
(nr Hans J M obius, a Rrpubl1ctm
who is tht' CoiiSt'rllatllle candidate
The Courltr Exprrss rdltorlal
conlfnurd, " M obius Is a man of
c unsi d,rablr ability . It Is
unfortunatl' that hr was uftJJblc to
ob tain tit~ n omlnu.tlon (){ his own
party. ·· Thc {aN tltat on~ of
Buffalo ' s ~rreat nt'wspapus
rtcOJ(nizrs tilt situation 11
ht'artflniiiJt
Tht' most forcl"ful thinK that
Wf' can do this / all to stop tht'
political ltadert frum folstlnlf
polltlc111 h acks upon us 11 t o go t n
our voting boo ths In IJJ'11r numb~r11
and r«'/«t th t'lr plc·ks. A positivi'
vote fo r the I Oth Dutrlct on
El tc tion Day can be c'ast on the
Conservatlll«' lint' The antlquattd
tho111h t. that your votr won't c-ount
or w{/1 be .,.,wtfld unlt'U you "o" the
major p1uty Un u, Is nt'6aliv«'
thlnklnfl Your votr in br·half of my
candidacy o n Nnv~mbtr 1 will 11lso
~"'' notlct' o n political l ead t'f!l that
you will not bt' delud~d any tongrr.
Yo u d o hav~ a p osft llit' ch oler in th«'
lOth Dist rict. and your 11ott'1 cast o n
I he Con~rvatlllt' liff«'
tit~ third line
on tht' votlfll mach lnt' - can mak~
mt' your repre~ntativt' In th e lOth
DutrlC'I.

OA VENPORT, Chlppendalet VMY good
eondltlon,$301 759-6636.

FIVE 8 .25-14 tlra on V.W. bus
Wheels 150/ lot ; two 7.35- 14 n 125/palr. 634·7115.

nc~rll ynn, A m~rlco hu
lltto th~ lfi'OO'H of n~tatlv'

lllpp«l
votl f16 for public offlclab. Or l~t m~
put It another way, vot lnlf for tht
leu u of 1111111. :('h~r• are 10 many
irlltance• of thll that It would bt
tim«' con.rum l nl to tlclf; th«'m off.
But artal)IJ~ fTC~rtt IIOIIftJf ptJttU ftl
tUid It u r~Gdlly apporertt that
polllive 110tlrtf II an o ther A m~rlcllrt
tf'fldlfio rt thDt ilfut dl»pp~•rlffl.
Tht r~Jponlib1Jity for thu rr11s
wltlt tht mafor panlu 11nd the p ower
NlqU«'I w#t() Ct)rtdut:t the a{{ilin of
the~e pan/~1. It u their {allurr to
~feet candidate# {or f«'d«'f'fll, 1t11te
county and ~lty offlct!!l that metUUr~
up t o qualit y 1tandard1 and
command tYip«t of the 110t~n. ln
Buffalo and Erl~ Count y w~ nldom
hat!t calldldate1 w h o an prrnn tfld
by the Rt!publicart alld D~mocf'fltk
tHJIIrtlzatfom that ''"~ th«' "ot u a
cl«'ar cut, po!litivr C'h olce, 611r rGther
produc~l IIOII"'f for tilt' lt!l:tt'r of th~
~111. Thu flaKrGnt tltuatlon 11 bt'iftlf
visited upott th• l ocal elt'clof'fllt' thll
{all with the ty pt' of candldatn
bt'lnlf olf~rrd for thr h/lfhut and
/ow~ll offiC('J. A Jflarlftlf uample of
this UUIS In the f'fiU for the 10t h
Distric t sea t of th~ County
letiJlatuf'fl wh«'rr I am plrtt'd agalnlt
two candldatt'l wh() w~r~ ttlt'Ctt'd to
run b«'c:aust' of their p o litical
affiliation l'tllht'r thatt tltt'ir bu.rt11~11
acum~n. They are btJ th Drm ocf'fl tl,

CHEVROLET 1965 Impala, 2-dOM
hardtop, automatic, power steering,
1295 after 4 p .m . 831-47U..

PAl R men's Austr1111n ski boots, size
9M (not clip tve&gt;ell pair lkl pola,
aluminum (4 ft .) . Must sell. Skip
OeiSordo 184-8224 after 5 .

STUDENTS, FACULTY
ln

REFRIGERATOR and 911 stow. C1U
between 6 p .m . to 9 p.m. 816-6966.

WINTER COAT - f11bulous fake fur.
Rich brown . Lat•t style. Like n - .
816·9175.

TUTOR needed ror Hcond yeer nigh
school German student. Call

I«

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1
I,

- - - · Paid Political A d - - - - ·

Heed help in literature' Ask the
experts who prepare Cltll's Notes
Our 1uthors are scholars who
have taught the works they wrrte
about. They know how to explatn
them to you '" clear, concise
form. Increase your
~nderstand•ng. Cet Cliff's Notes
and 11et wtth the experts.

ltllfiJ

*

tltltl - •l•ars •••u••l.

.....,.,., '"b .,. .....

hfJ

$1tK.

And this

week

only,

-&lt;opt~

5¢

-

Gustav, Sr.

355Nortoh

MANDITORY

·"'-----c(You can ask for 'Gus'/

_____j
October 27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

ill

�What's tbfpenina

Jh

• t

Wednetday, Ort 27

Sports Information

Thunday, Oct. 28

Concert: The Grateful Dead, Syracuse.
Hillel: Hillel Bowling will start at 7 p.m . at the Hillel
Film : Stalcrg 17 will be shown in the Conference
House.
Films: lntemt~tlonol House and Allee In Wonder/end
Theater at 6 p.m. Admission Is free.
jewish Mysticism and Kab~lan: course offered by
will be shown in 147 Diefendorf at 8 p.m .;
admission is free.
Rabbi Gurary at the Chabad House, 3292 Main
St. at 8 p.m.
Film: Putn~y S~ will be shown today through
Concert: 100 Years of French Music (1675- 1775)
Saturday in Room 140 Capen at 6:30, 8 and
9 :45p.m.
at 8:30 p.m . In Baird Hall ; tickets available at
Concert: Gospel Music Concert at Kleinhans at 7
the Norton Ticket Office.
p.m. feawring the Keystone Quartet.
james Fenton Lecture : Dr. Rashi Fein will speak on
the ec;onomic issues of comprehensive health
~re at 8:30p.m. in the Fillmore Room.
- Sue Welser

Today: Club soccer vs. CanisiusCollege, Rotary
practice fteld, 3 p.m .; nrslty c:ross country at
Buffalo State with Gannon, Niagara and Canisius.
Saturday: Varsity cross country at the Canisius
Invitational, noon. •

Tuesday ~ Varsity cross country vs. St.
Bonaventure, 3:30 p.m., Grover Cleveland golf
course; club soccer at Gannon College, 3 p.m., Erie,
Pa.

-5h•vetson

Announcements

Undergrac. ...ates taklns French courses, please
pick up a copy of the d epartment newsletter in
Room 214 Crosby. Also, the Department of French
Undergraduate Directory is now available in Room
214 Crosby.

Music Committee will meet tomorrow at 7 p.m.
in Room 261 Norton.
The Office of Cultural Affairs presents as part of
the Fenton Lecture Series, Dr. Rashi Fein, professor
o f the economics of medicine at Harvard University.
Or . Fein will explore the eronornic issues of
comprehensive health care. The lecture will be held
in the Fillmore Room , tonight at 8 :30p.m .

The British group " Jethro lull" will give a
concert in Memorial Auditorium in Buffalo on Nov.
1 at 8 p.m. Good tickets for the performance are still
available at $4.50 and $4.00 at the Ticket Office.
The Cat S tevens show in Buffalo on Oct. 30 is
completely sold out.

Intercollegiate Bowling for Women will have its
first meeting tomorrow at 3:30 p.m . in Room 330
Norton. All full-time undergraduate women are
eligible. If unable to attend, contact Miss Poland,
831-2941, Clark Gym.

The Sersio Mendes Concert originally schedu led
for Nov. 6 at Kleinhans has been postponed until
spring.
·

The Undergraduate Psych ology Association will
meet tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Room 234 Norton.
Speakers from the University Placement Office will
discuss job opportunities with a BA in psychology
and information about graduate school.

" The Faces" concert originall y scheduled for
Nov. 15 at Buffalo Memorial Auditorium has been
indefinitely postponed.

Anyone interested in participating in Guerilla
Theater please meet today at 7 p.m. in Haas Lounge.
Performances are planned in the near future.
UUAB Dramatic Arts Committee will have an
important meeting to morrow at 5 p.m. in Room 261
Norton.
UB Krishna Yoga Society will have a spiritual
feast, lecture and meditation every Wednesday at 6
p.m. in Room 340 Norton. All are invited.
The Buffalo Logic Colloqu im presents Nicola~
Goodman of the UB Mathematics Department
speaking on " Infinite Proofs in Arithmetic" today at
3:30 p.m. in Room 28, 4242 Ridge Lea.
Filmmakers' Series presents Michael Roemer
today at 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. in Norton Conference
Theater. At 3 p.m. there will be a SCfeening of
Roemer's Nothing But A Man, and at 8 p.m. Roemer
speaks and shows "Cortile Cascino."

Filmmakers interested in making a birth control
fi I m for college audiences and for national
UB Photo Club will meet today at 8 p.m. in
AIESEC will ho ld a membership meeting ,. distributio n, please contact Bob Gilbert, coordinator Room 332 No rton. Club members should bring their
tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Room 244 Norton. Anyone of Research and Development, CAC, Room 220 cameras.
in an economics or business-related field who is Norton, 831·3609. Please submit a resume and
interested in a foreign work experience this summer explain access to 16mm equipment. ~~•••••
CAC Environmental Action jetport Project will
is urged to attend.
be holding a meeting tonight in Room 262 Norton.
All volunteers involved please attend . Meeting starts
CAC Meyer Memorial Hospital Volunteers will
at 7 :30p.m .
meet at 7 p.m. tom~rrow in No rton to discuss work
and transportation arrangements. Contact the CAC
office for the room number.
·

.olllllll

Pilot 100 will hold an orientation meeting
tomorrow at 4 :30 p.m. in Room 231 Norton. All
per so ns interested in riding with area law
enforcement agencies are urged to attend.
The Department of Sociology presents Robert
N. Bellah, Ford Professor of Sociology and
Comparative Studies at the University of California
at Berkeley, speaking on "The Individual in
American Culture : Dialectics of Repression and
Liberation." The lecture will be held in the
Conference Theater, Norton, tomorrow at 3 p.m.
The Student Physical Therapy Association will
have an informal panel discussion on " An Ideal
Health Care System - Implications for Manpower
Training" to morrow at 7:30 p.m. in Hayes Hall,
Room 331.

Backpage

UUAB Dance Committee will h old a · meeting
to morrow at 2 p.m . in Room 261 Norton. All
members are urged to attend.
Linsuistics 501 " Problems and Concepts" will
have an open lecture on dialectology today at 7:30
p.m . in Hayes, Room 404.

1 The Women's Studies College presents a skills
program tonigtlt at 7 :30p.m . in Room 231 Norton.
All interested women from the campus and city-wide
communities are invited to attend.

•

\

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Vol. 22, No. 25

News analysis

Poverty Hill
purchase
practicality
questioned
Editor's note: The decision to buy
Poverty Hi11 is the students·.
Because the issue is of such
importance and to better inform
the student body, The Spectrum
will be publishing a serl~ of news
analyses considering different
aspects of the issue. The fU'St of
this series follows:
by Jo-Ann Armao
C11mpu1 Editor

Located 45 miles south of
Buffalo in the foothills of the
Applachian Mountains, is Poverty
Hill, the 1150 acres of wooded
land, hills and meadows that Sub
Board I, In~. has an option to ·

purchase.
This option obtained late last
sprins for $10,000 expires Dec.
20, 1971. However, by Nov. 20
Sub Board must Inform the
property's owner if it \wishes to
purchase the Ia ~ for an
additional $166,000. Coupled
with purchase costs, there would
also be involved operating
expenses and proposed
development costs. The total
yearly cost of buying and
developing Poverty Hill is $63,305
(for ten yean). Already Sub
Board has invested $20,000 into
the land.
Student decision
The decision of whether to buy
the land rests with the various
student government
representatives which constitute
Sub Board I. However, they have
demurred , preferring to let their
c onstituencies, the students,
decide through referenda . It must
be noted here, though, that the
Millard Fillmore Executive
Committee had second thoughts
about such ..democracy" and

disenfr a n c hi sed 5000 night
students.
The other stu dent
sovernments , graduate,
undergraduate, med, dent and
law, still plan their referenda for
Nov. 4 and 5. Sub Board officials
avow that it is their intent to
simply present an objective
picture of the situation which
would allow students to make up
their minds. This objective picture
includes a 150-page report by
Drayton Bryant Associates, a fact
sheet, an insert in The Spectrum,
and presentations by Drayton
Bryant.Board cou ld be
overextending itself, threatening
its other concerns.
All of these activities are
nothing more than a whitewash.
The beauty and serenity of
Poverty Hill are repeatedly
described ; what is omitted is the
serious and practical effects that
such an investm.ent would have on
existing student activities.
Beauty n . need
Poverty Hill is beautiful - no
one can deny that. Yet as SA
coordinat or Dave Steinwald
pointed out: ..Can we afford the
luxury of a half million dollar
camp site?" Already, existing
prosrams on the campus are
threatened with funding cutbacks
by Sub Board. In addition, there
are other areas, more important
priorities, that must be developed
with student monies.
An example of such a priority,
as pointed out by GSA officers, is
the Amherst land beins
transferred to students by the
Faculty Student Association. No
plans or programs have been
developed for this land ; yet over
$8000 was sunk into development
programs for Poverty Hill.
Other concerns exist that

preclude acquiring Poverty Hill.
One very serious problem is the
nature of Sub Board itself. Sub
Board has no guarantee of
Income; It receives only what the
member student governments care
to contribute. In fact, this year
the Graduate Student Association
cut its allotment.

containing God -knows -what
unexpurgated goodies.

A last minute check of both
the public and private sets of
minutes on Thursday revealed one
glaring omission. A contract
signed on May 10, 1971 by Philip
J. Leaf, then chairman of Sub
Board I, Inc. agreeing to pay
Drayton S. Bryant Associates
Overextension
SSOOO for consultant services on
Considering this, there is the- Poverty Hill, was never recorded.
very possible danger that Sub Two Sub Board spokesmen
Board could be overextending expressed dis may over the
itself threatening Its other omission , s tating that they
concerns. Another difficulty is regarded this as quite serious.
that Sub Board is a relatively new
The whole question of Poverty
organization. Until it decides its
Hill
has also allowed students to
role on the University, where it is
watch the functionings o f their
headed and what it wants to
governments. Graduate students
accomplish, a project such as
should be more than pleased with
Poverty HiU is fool-hardy .
the w o rk of their officers.
Otller questions have'\lso been
Co lle c ting and evaluating
raised. The manner in which Sub
information, the GSA Executive
Board has conducted the entire
Committee published a policy
Poverty Hill affair is, at best ,
statement listing the advantages
negligent and at worst , criminal .
and disadvantages of purchase.
At no point were students
Above that, they dared to take a
questioned if they wanted over
stand, a considered stand on a
SI0,000 of their fees invested in
very controversial issue.
Poverty Hill . In addition, Sub
The only unfortunate aspect ,
Board officers still will not
account for certain expenditures however. is that only waduate
and plans . In fac~ unknown to students have reasoned and
most, Is the exlstence""of "white" concerned leadership .
and " blue" Sub Board minutes. Undergraduates must subsist with
" White" minutes are are released a government afraid to govern and
to the public with the "blue" ones MFC students are saddled with a

clique that doesn't trust student
opinion or input.
Impoverished students
With their unofficial but public
support for Poverty Hill, SA
officials are forgetting their
pos itions as student officers.
Instead of viewins the situation
practically and realistically, many
SA members have made their
personal judsments, official
pronouncements. Very simply,
many SA officers summering in
Buffalo for a few months acquired
a deep attachment to the land .
Because of this attachment, they ·
d o n ' t want the land lost.
Attachment to Poverty Hill Is
understandable. But what is not
excusable is their allowing
personal attachments and feelings
t o i n t e r fer e w it h t heir
deci sion -making as student
officers. To say the least, maturity
doesn't seem to rule SA actions or
activities.
The question of Poverty Hill is
a very complicated one with
serious implications for students.
Student needs and wants must be
c arefully considered. Most
importantly, however, students
must view the question with some
modicum of realism for as one
student pointed out : "Poverty
Hill could very well be the
poverty of us all."

�Undergraduate Research
program has high caliber
The Under.,.aduate Research
Proaram is "one of a few
(research) proarams in the
country which is student-run.''
explained Dne Kosiw, the
progam's chairman. Mr. Kosiur
and Academic Affairs coordinator
Lester Goldstein, coordinatin&amp; the
program toaether, proceeded to
detail the structure, functions and
merits of the research proaram .
Mr . Kosiur defined tl\e
stTucture for the proaram as a
"student-run committee which
seeks funds t o support
undergraduates doing research
projects.'' The committee,
com p osed of students, each
s pecializi n a in an academic
faculty , evaluates applications for
grants.
• 'Two or three dot.en"
individuals are receiving grants
each year although, Mr. Kosiur
added . this figure only indicates
those who have actually contacted
the Und,ergraduate Research
Program members : "a fraction " of
the number of the actual involved
researc hers. An andavadual
receiving a grant from the
program might have many
assastants work1ng with him. The
average grant is about $330 .
Groups or individuals can
contribute research projects.
Many of these projects, Mr. ,
Kosiur noted, had been cited by
various academic facult ies to be of
graduate studies caliber.
Publicity wanted
Funds for these grants are
provided by such sources as the
Student Association, some school
faculties and the offices of Dr.
Ketter and BCTnard Gelbaum,
Vice President of Academic
Affairs.
Dr. Gelbaum indicated that he
had been contacted about
contributing funds from his office
to the research program earlier
this semester. He explained that at
that time, as weU as at present, he
wants more anformahon gathered
to consider funding the program .
However, he added that he was
"much impressed" by what he
bad b~n told about the work of
the U nd ergrad uate Research
Program.
For expansion of the program,
more funds and publicity would
be needed, Mr. Kosiur explained .
A It hough the program is
functioning well, he senses that
very resourceful foundations that
could aid the program "just aren't
aware of what we (the
Undergraduate Research Progrllm)
can do."
Research journal
Publaciz.ing the research
program to undergraduates is
another concern. Mr. Kosiur
stated t h at applications are

accepted for projects dealina with
the 11eas of the sciences,
humanilies and many other fields.
When selectina projects for arants,
special attention is pven to the
value •of the project in relation to
the possible "educational
development.. of the researcher.
Mr. Kosiur also mentioned that
Undergraduate Research Proaram

\btes for approm

SA acts on disputed budget
whlch could deal with the question fairly was the
Student Assembly.
l an DeWaal, p r esident of the Student
Association, explained that three weeks ago, SA was
presented a request by the BSU demanding meetings
to discuss the lack of responsiveness of SA and Sub
Boatd I, Inc. towards the 1700 black students on the
State University of Buffalo campus.

In Its major action Wednesday ntght, the
Student Assembly voted 13-10·1 to approve a highly
oonuoversial $60,750 office budget for the Student
Association.
Later, the Assembly passed a motion that
authorized the SA Finance Committee and the
Executive Committee to go over the Black Student
Union budget request. Currently, they are asking for
$41,337.50.
Among other budgets approved was a $19 ,160
allocation to the Community Action Corps and
allocations to nine other student organizations.
Bitter criticism was leveted upon the Assembly
after the vote on the office budget. Those who
attended the long, tedious and often boring affair,
remarked that the office budget would not have
been approved if not for the massive voting bloc in
the form of several members of the SA Executive
Committee.

BSU controversy
He said that a series of meetings had been held
between him , BSU representatives and Richard
Sigglekow, vice president for Student Affairs, to
discuss these problems, especially the proposed BSU
budget request.
Under the new terms, Mr. DeWaal explained the
BSU would not have the status of a club, but be
something yet to be defined. The closest thing he
could come to describing it would be the special
committee status; much like the Community Action
Corps.
Several BSU representatives suid autonomy was
the only alternative. They said that they wanted
voucher control over their own budget. " We're not
asking for anymore than we're putting in. We're
saying that we can do that job (the vouchers J just as
well as any Sub Board or any Student Association ,"
one BSU member asserted.
They said that they were not asking the
Assembly to recognize them as a separate studem
government. Their only demand was that they retain
autonomy under the Student Association and have
control over their own budget.

The absurd
Many of those present described the meeting as
"bordering on the absurd." During the first two
hours of the meeting, only three items on the budget
agenda (a total of 53) were passed. Nearly an hour
was spent on whether or not doughnut money
should be allotted to the A~rican Institute of
A'cronautics and Astronautics.
Representatives of the BSU asserted that they
feared that the Finance Committee and the
Executive Committee of SA would unduly scrutinize
their budget and, therefore, they wouldn't get the
amount requested. They felt that the only body

Lester Goldstein

applications dealing with student
projects concerned with ecological
problems are under special
consideration for a National
Science Foundation summer
program. These research projects,
to be conducted over tbe summer,
shou ld. be concerned with
sociological, biologicaJ or physical
aspects of ecology for the
program in coope~ with the
National Science Foundation.
As evidence of the success of
the program and as a "fund raising
gimmick," Mr. Kosiur is hopeful
of issuing a research journal. Even
though there is no collective
journal at the present time, some
of the research findings have been
published in other professional
journals.
During his three years with the
Undergraduate Research Program,
Mr. Kosiur said he has been
" happy with the results" of the
program. He and Mr. Goldstein
believe that an important aspect
of the program is that it is
"totally contro ll ed by
undergraduates." The majority of
decisions concerning the types
and amounts of projects, the
funding of the projects and much
of the accounting is maintained
by undergraduates in the
Undergraduate Research Program .

The Spectrum is publish«J thrN
times e week, ewry Mondey,
Wednt~Sday end Fridey; during the
r~lllr IICMiemic v•r bv Sub-Board
1, Inc. Offices ere loC8ted lit 355
Norton Hell, Stete Unl11eniry of New

Collegiate Assembly forum
On Wednesday, Oct. 27, the Collegiate Assembly will make a decision concerning
Stanley Dayan's petition to become a starr member of College A. Bambii Abelson, now
head of CoUeae A, and her staff feel that the Colleae sbould be non-political. They have
argued that Mr. Dayan's political stance is incompatible with the College as it now stands.
The CoUegiate Assembly Invites all people concerned with College A, tbe present
staff and students of the College and other interested persons to attend and express their
Opinions. This meeting will be at 4 p .m., Wednesday, Oct . 27 - for the room number
contact the CoUeaes office (Room 133, Crosby) Tueaday or Wednesday or check
Wednesday's The Spectrum.
Mr Dayan will hold an open meeting Tuesday, Oct. 26 at 4 p.m. in Room 242
Norton to discuss his own views.

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'
Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, October 22, 1971

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Open 10 AM to 10 PM
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�Pottinger expresses optimism
for the case of desegregation
by Barbara Mink
Sptetrum Stoff l+'rito

"Tum over the control of the $YStem to the
people it serves.·· This was one of the ideas discussed
by Stanley Pollinger, director of the Office of Civil
Riahts, Department of Health, Education and
Welfare, in h.1s informal lecture last Monday.
Mr. Pottinger, a bolder of the Grover Cleveland
FeUowship, was visiting Buffalo as part of a plan to
bring prominent figures to the University to speak in
a more informal atmosphere than a regular
classroom-type lecture. Mr. Pottinger, a resident of
San Francisco and Washington, is directly involved
with civil rights policy-making in HEW, though his
office is mainly an enforcement agency. His speech
was attended by approximately 13 members of
lecturer Jack Latona's American Studies class, "Who
Runs Buffalo?"

'

Newsmen's View

administration as having accomplished much in the
field of civil riJhts. Before Nixon took over, he
noted, the South's schools were only 10-14 per cent
integrated. After three years, the dual system is
virtually &amp;one. The firin&amp; of black teachers because
of race has been prevented, and three times as many
black institutions as before have been developed.
"Sooner or later they'U get credit for that," he
added.

Orders are given for
police to storm Attica
Editor's note: The following Is the
second of a three-part article
written by UP/ newsmen on the
minute-by-minute e11ents during
the storming of Attica Prison. It is
entitled Orders Given.

uw e had a job to do and we did
it."

Ultimatum delivered
At 8 :46a.m., Oswald delivered
his final ultimatum to the
prisoners. It did not hint that JUns
The o rders were given to the would be used if they rejected it.
Need for criticism
captains and lieutenants in the big The observers pleaded for more
He also defended civil servants by saying that room by their state police time, but Oswald said there would
most of them are as "talented, efficient and. of as commanders. These officers, in be no more talk.ins. From the
high a caliber as their counter-parts in other tum, briefed sergeants, who gave catwalk that divided the four
bureaucracies." But he stlarply criticized other the orders to the troopers in the yards, Richard 3X Clark, one of
aspects of the so vernment. "The government has a yard. They were divided into the rebel leaders, shouted the
built-in recalcitrance to expose itself to the people, ranks and each group given a reply, .. Negative."
because of those who criticize unfairly instead of s pecific assignment. "As I
Outside the prison, radio
constructively," stated Mr. Pottinger. It takes understand it, there were three newsmen with monitors tuned to
strength to withstand an onslaught of such criticism, basic decisions," Assemblyman the state police radiO frequency,
he said, but he feels that it makes the government Clark Wemple, (R-Schenectady) a taped the command s and
Busina controversy
Mr. Pottinger concentrated mainly on the theme strong and must be done.
member of the observers' responses as the raid neared. First
The civil rigj'lts prosram, o n the other hand , is committee and the head of the the query went out to the
of racial desegrepUon, though be is also involved
with sex discrimination. " Most o f the resistance to •-umquely wide open ," because it has been Subcommittee on Penal Reform, s harpshooters: ..A-1 are you
integration comes from antaaonism towards busing," scrutinized by everyone: newspapers, the public, said, "One was to use state police ready?"
stated Mr. Pottinger. HEW desegregates schools by Concress. "It would be bard to hide something, even because they're better trained and
"Ready, sir."
"pairing" an aU-white school with an all-black, or a if yo'U wanted to," Mr. Pottinger stated .
less emotionally involved m it.
One by one they responded .
Mr. Pottinser also responded to the often touted Second , was that any commander "A" one throuah four, then "B,"
mixed one, hopefuUy close enouah for children to
walk to. But, according to Mr. Pottinger, when idea that m1ny go"Yer;nmental decisions are who had a man who might "C" and finaUy .. D" one through
schools are too far away from each other busing conspiritorial. " I wish there were more conspiracy, become too emotional should four.
must be implemented, and rhe controversy begins. If and by that I mean conspiracy in the sense of remove him. Third, was that they
"How many of the subjects'
busing is one way only - i.e., from the ghetto into planning together, because that implies some should use utmost Cllution in hostages do you think we could
the suburbs - the minority schools are broken up, thouaht process involved," he said . He outlined four going in there ."
clear out free if we used the
and the burden is all on the black children, and their steps that he feels should be followed in policy
The sharpshooters stationed personnel sharpshooters we
parents. If it is a two way program the white making: one, gather. the facts; two, analyze these atop the towers and tallest discussed?" the command post
facts; three, make contact with different groups; buildings overlooking the yard asked.
community objects .
"Of course," Mr. Pottinger added, "we wouldn't four, coordinate with the government .
had orders to shoot the
There was a long wait . Then a
have the busing problems if we had true integrated
'' executioners." As for the hesitant response: "Oh, about
housing."
invading trooper forces : "They 15 ."
Reform needed
The radio crackled again : "Are
were
under specific orders only to
Mr. Pottinger was asked about President Nixon's
Mr. Pottinger also touched upon Charles Reich's
Aug. 3 statement that he was against busing, and idea of a "power elite," which maintains that we use force to meet force o r to you aware that eight of the
thot the money saved from bUSJng should go into have a system that runs along with no control, that protect lives, if possible, of the subjects have knives at their
schools , for more books, better curricula, etc . He the elite are people who are in a better position to hostages," Oswald said . "Our throats?" There was no response .
A short time later, three
replied tltat this plan did not undercut the court exploit the establishmenl , but not even they can orders were to shoot anyone who
order, but was merely an expression of Mr. Nixon's change or control it. " It will take some time to resisted . If they resisted they were helicopters on the lawn outside
-eontlnue&lt;S on page elgtotovercome this," Mr. Pottinger maintained , "because ~hot ," a state police sergeant said .
personal feeling.
simply becoming aware of the problem does not
always lead to reform . For Middle America ,
Based o n myth
desegregation does not stack up against ecology . the
The Foreign Area Fellowship Program has
" Fears of dismtegrattOn, an the South especially. war, economy , Civil Rights in geneml, or law and
•nnouncesl_its annual competition for feUowship
were mostly based on myth ," explained Mr. order.''
and grants for dissertation research in Africa, Asia.
Pottinger. " If it were all myth , of course, it would
Latin-f\merica , the Middle East and Western Ewope.
The class ended with a discussio n o f the idea o f
topple under its own we1ght. ' ' But it is in places like
Grants for special training of persons who hold a
the South, be cont1nued , where re-al advances in experimental schools, such as the all·black h1gh
final professional degree are also available in the
desegregation have been made. Resentment has school set up in Berkeley , Califo rnia, where Blat:k
above locations.
decreased ; "the transition that led to the present culture, history and other black heritage courses are
The deadline dates for applicat ions are: Africa
state is largely b ecause the South has been struggling taught. Mr. Pottmger said that th is could prove
and th(' Middle East
Nov. I S; Asia - Nov. 8 ;
with the issue fo r a lo ng time, " soid Mr. Pottinger. ' dangerous if e ~t ended ; what would sto p a Thurmond
Western Europe - Nov. 22 ; Latin America and the
or an Eastland from saying. with a bro ad wink, ''Wal ,
" That is why the busing laws in San Francisco and
Caribbean Nov. 30.
I'd like to start a little experimental all·while school
Detroit have caused so much loud controversy ; it
Further infonnation and applications are
of my own . .." " But," Mr. Pottinger mainta1ned ,
was a shock to f1nd that sort of thing happening to
available in the office of the director. Overseas
"one of the beautiful thmgs obout America is its
them ."
Academic Program~. 107 Townsend Hall. or by
Mr . Pottinger defended the Nixon cultural identification ."
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�,

Sedita commentary
by H.vy Llpm_,
City Editor

The mayor's office is on the seCond floor of City Hall,

a~d

abo!Jt the first thing that impresses visitors is the bright red carPet

which covers the entire reception area. Just inside the office,
guarding the entrance to the mayor's inner sanctum, is a scale model
of the downtown Buffalo neighborhood. It looks like somethirfg the
mayor's grandchildren might have built, with these brown blocks
representing edifices already constructed and those gray ones
standing for proposed projects. According to this set of tinker toys,
roughly half of Buffalo is yet to be built.
To the right is Executive Aide Stanley Makowski's office, and it
is there, In that doorway, that we first see him . The man - the
second most powerful urban political boss in the country - Joe
Crangle. He and the mayor have decided that this morAing they will
have tHe Common Council announce Mr. Mal6owski as Its ~hoice for
'the next mayor. Of course if Frank Sedita is elected county
executive there will be little choice but to choose his first deputy as
mayor. But Sedita needs help in the Republican Polish
neighborhoods, and Stan Makowski is a nice Polish fellow .
Machine tactics
It isn't surprising that the Democrats should use such tactics
instead of addressing themselves to issues and Mr. Sedita's record . In
fact, he doesn't have much of a record to campaign around, but he
does have one powerful machine behind him . Joe Crangle would
like people to believe that he's a progressive; he has aligned himself
with such exponents of ''The New Politics" as Ted Sorenson and
Hubert Humphrey, and if you're not impressed, well you.probably
shouldn't be. Crangle is a boss, pure and simple, and if there is one
figure in American politic whom he admires more that any other
one would have to think that man would be Richard Daley. With
that info rmation in hand . one should even have expected that the
Democrats, finding themselves trailing with only a few weeks to go,
would stoop to making personal attacks on their opponent and
ignore the problems of Erie County and the city itself.
After all, even Mayor Sedita might be slightly embarassed to
admit .that more housing has been torn down in Buffalo over the
past few years that has been constructed . But then it is difficult to
find time for the construction industry to build low cost housing
when you're busy getting it to raise the roof on Memorial
Auditorium so that Seymour Knox can have his own private hockey
team to watch - not to mention all those nice people who want to
give him four dollars a ticket to share in his excitement - or to
build a nice mall in the heart of the downtown area so that
Seymour and his friends can sell their goods to the citizens of
Buffalo, who can then rush right home to their substandard
housing. The mayor is correct, however, when he charges that the
Republicans haven't done much of a job with the county, failing in
such areas as drugs, pollution and jobs. He is way off base, though,
when he states that Ed Regan is a tool of that party .

The Boss
Firstly, the regular Republicans wouldn't have touched Regan
with a set of rubber gloves if they hadn 't been forced to. He got the
Republican nomination because they knew he would have
destroyed them in a primary battle. The Republicans didn't choose
Ed Regan, they got him rammed down their throats. Secondly, for
Sedita to charge anyone else with being the pa\"t'n of a machine is
almost too outrageous to comment upon. There is only one political
machine in Erie County. and that one belongs to Crangle. One day
somebody ought to check to voter registration in Forest Lawn. It
wasn't Mr. Regan who was advised by a study group to lay off over
four hundred municipal employees (mainly party workers - the
patronage system in Buffalo ranks second only to that in Chicago)
as an economy measure and then proceeded to remove only 201 of
them. Nor was it Mr. Regan who compounded that action by
rehiring 138 of those people to civil service jobs. Nor was it Mr.
Regan who overcame the obstacle of lower salaries for those
workers by providing overtime benefits.
The only greater disaster that having the Democratic bosses excuse me - the Democratic Boss in control of the city would be to
also have him in control of the county. For that reason atone it
would be worthwhile to have Sedita defeated, even if he was
running against a complete incompetent - which he is not. Joe
Crangle would like to run this state; hopefully· he will never even
run this county.

Page four. The Spectrum . Friday, October 22, 1971

by Don Van Every
Spectrum Staff Writer

B u1ffalo Mayor Franj&lt; A. Sedita is the
Democratic candidate for County Executive, and
recenti'V The Spectrum had the opportunity to
question him on h is various platforms and positions.
Sedita had an air of confidence about him that
was ex,pre~ed in his firm, controlled responses. He
answer11!d with a positive "of course!" when as\_edj f
he tho11.1ght he was going to win the Jce. Yna. ho\&gt;e
that this was to be his victory coulf;i be • n in his
expression. He related to us many items, beginning
with drug abuse and his position on it.
" I would point out that there are 4000 addicted
to hero1in in this city And I'm convinced that a great
deal of' crime is committed by those addicts who
have a tremendous compulsion to drugs, and if we
can do something about fighting drug abuse we can
keep this crime down.
County lax
" I know that in the County of Erie, and Mr.
Regan's; party is in control ... the count y did not
take advantage of "state aid of $6 million offered to
the county, while the city11_0t $1.5 million for drug
abuse."
In a reference to Sheriff Amico concerning the
possiblo efforts to fight drug abuse, Mr. Sedita
answenld: " Nobody, but nobody condones the
action l()f heroin pushers ... but I d on't know about
his 'Modus operendi.'
"W'ill you grant me that ... under the law the
use of marijuana is illegal? Now there are different
viewpoiints on this subject ... on the part of doctors
and on the part of sociologists and psychologists, but
while that law is on the books no one can say we're
going to Ignore it."

Moving on to th~ housing problem in Buffalo,
Mr . Sedita said, " Right in the waterfront we got rid
of 600 structures that were unfit for human
habitation ..• "
Inept and inefficient
Continuing, saying the city was working on the
problem : "We've made mistakes, there were no
textbooks on the subject. We went into a district and
tore these homes down .
"-Now, t he theory is . . . to get vacant land to
build homes, housing units. Then move the people
from these structures that are unfit. and tear that
section down."
The mayor charged that county government has
been in the hands of "inept and inefficient
Republican control for 148 years" and now was the
time to change to a man with a. good record in all
fields.
He pointed out his decilings with Republic Steel
on smoke abatements and the new city sewage
facility being built by two·thirds federal monies.
He claimed the county government hasn't done
its homework or its job; by not taking advantage of
state and federal aid the county has put many of its
towns in the position of saying: "Stop construction ,
the sewers won't take it."

Decided on merits
· When questioned on the supposed cross·busing
report before the Board of Education the candidate
stressed that "the report Is not made known ... No
one knows and I know about it as much as you do."
He was referring to the published story in the
Buffalo Evening News which stated that the study
was complete. Referring to the concept of
cross·busing itself, Mr. Sedita said : ''Well, let me see
what's in that report. We've had our problems. We've
had our problems, my friends."
Concerning, the Courier-Cable controversy, Mr.
Sedita said he'd rather do business with a business
such as the Courier because they had been involved
• in that work for five years already when the contract
• was being discussed. He felt he had decided the case
on the merits when he signed the Common Council
resolution into law.
Finally, ·when we came to the qualifications of
h is oppenent, Edward Regan , the
Reptjblican·Conservative candidate, he said to the
Conservatives: :'All the answers were compatible
with Conservative philosophy.' 'All the answers were
compatible with Conset"Vative philosophy.'
-mcnlece '

'A tough pro·who
will work for you'

�or '

:A new generation of leadership'
Regan commentary
by HIIYV Lipmln
City Editor

Voters face a seemingly unresolvable dilemma in the upcoming
election for Erie County Executive. They have a choice of voting
for a man with the ' liberal' cpnvictions of a Richard Daley, or
voting for a man running as a Republican-Conservative. On the
surface, therefore, one might tend to ignore the whole thing and let
the hacks fight it out among themselves. In this case, however, looks
are very, very deceiving.
When Ed REgan first received the Conservative nomination
quite a few eyebrows were raised among people who had some sort
of knowledge about his record in the Common Council. That body
is noted as a collection of party hacks and inept clowns, but Ed
Regan had been the exception. He voted intelligently , made
progressive proposals, and if he was a Republican, well there wasn't
a lot to be said for being a Democrat in this town. Therefore that
Conservative nomination upset quite a few people. this reporter
included . Until personally going to interview this man and hearing
what he had to say. there were large questions as to whether he was
worth supportrtf'g.

by Don Van Every
Spctrum St•ff WritM

Attempting to establish the political beliefs of
the candidates for Erie County Executive. The
Spectrum interviewed Republican-Conservative
candidate Edward Regan earlier this week. The
interviewers. interested in discovering whether Mr.
Regan considered himself a real Conservative,
questioned him on that point.
"I have a very. very definite idea about how
local governments should work. I presented those
ideas to the Conservative party. They agreed with
them. There is nothing I've said so far in this
campaign that wasn't essentially in deep, ( .. . and
somewhat) in detail outlined to them about county
government and local government and how it should
function, what should the relationship be of local
governments. first to thl_ state - and then to the
federal government.
"Now the position could be called conservative,
because I feel very strongly about the involvement of
people in the decisions that affect their lives. I feel
very strongly about an open government. I am not·
one of these people that necessarily believes that all
things that come in big packages are therefore more
efficient. I think that government has gotten too big,
like educational institutions, like corporations, and
major institutions in this country."
Decet}tralization
" Its turned inward; the bureaucracy runs itself.
The technicians run government for their own goals
and purposes, not necessarily for the people. So I
believe in an open government ... decentralization
of some functions and the like.
" Now, you can' describe this position as
conservative. It can be described, I suppose, as 'New
left.' It can be described as just contemporary ...
and this has got to be the shape of things to come in
the•future.
" I think the only people who disagree are those
who know nothing about government and how it
should operate . .. and those old fashioned knee-jerk
liberals, who still respond In the same way to every
new problem that is faced. that when you centralize
power, you add another bureaucracy . .. You can
take your choice as to what that philosophy of
government falls into ideologically. I don't think it
really makes too much difference and I don't think
anybody reallY does either."

'

Recently the issue of day care centers has been
raised in the campaign. Mayor Secirta has proposed
using county funds to expand the centers. Mr. Regan
commented on this: "The mayor proposed we
expand the county day care center operations. A
quick check determined day care centers are half
empty now .. . What we do need is to foster,
encourage, improve and fund day care centers that
are run by non-profit organizations ... After all the
concept could be stretched right into universities and
plants . . . right on the spot." This would need
federal and state funds because, he explained,· the
county doesn't have the money .
The Republican candidate also expressed his
views on the drug problem. He stated that he
supported " law enforcement, there's no question
about that . . . especially in terms of pushers and
suppliers." But he added: "So often these people are
right back out on the street again and law
enforcement certainly hasn't done much for, and
probably never will be able to, the heroin addict. So
obviously, a permanent rehabilitation is needed,
along with law enforcement."
Who will stay?

"County government is not involved, not this
end of county government, in law enforcement. I'm

not running for sheriff. I'm running for count
executive.", He stressed that the Mental Health Dept.
has the prime resJ)Onsibility for drug use and abuse
. .. Obviously, law enforcement certainly isn't the
problem when we start thinking about the
experimentation among younger people in the junior
hilt\ schools and high schools with hard drugs ...
We'll try and get them before law enforcement is
needed."
Confronted with the mayor's charge that Mr.
Regan is a pawn of the Republicans and would be
forced to maintain the current group of bureaucrats
he emphasized that "it's been very clear that not
everybody Jn -oQunty govflr.llfl\fNlt is goi119 to be
there" if he wins.
Mr. Regan stressed that he has been leading an
independent, fair campaign, based on the issues.
Conversely, he charged that "Crangle would rather
run against .. . Nixon and Rockefeller than run
against Ned Regan ; that's all. It's a handier target
and he hopes to get away with it.''

No doubt
There are n? longer any questions. This man is not the ordinary
modern American Conservative. Don't believe the deceptions you've
been seeing in the Sedita adds - Regan pleaded not to have Agnew
come to Buffalo, and if Spiro ever found out w hat Ed Regan is
really about he'd have him arrested for conspiracy. If, in fact, he
can be honestly called a conservative it is because he is a
conservative in the traditional rather that the contemporary sense.
Ed Regan is against over~entralized government for the same
reasons that intelligent radicals are : the fear of the control it takes
over people's lives and the succession of stifling bureaucracies that
result. There is actually a ~eat deal more populism than
conservatism in Regan.
He speaks of human rights and people's needs and you can't
help but believe him . He is a hell of a lot closer to Ralph Nader than
William Buckley. He's a politician all rllt\t, and he undoubtedly has
his own personal ambitions, but he is honestly influenced by
considerations for the people he wants to serve. Nor is that
phrasemere political rhetoric. When Regan speaks of serving the
people he means just that : pro)liding housing for people who need
it, providing drug treatment centers (Frank Sedita boasted of trying
to get O!,!e and a half million dollars from the state for methadone
centers - that's roughly analagous to gening a fil(e dollar loan to
make a down payment on a Cadillac) .

..

Honest, political man
As we sat listening to this man speak I got the feeling that if I
closed my eyes and added a New England accent, well laugh if you
want to, but damned if he wouldn 't have sounded like Bobby
Kennedy . That is not meant to imply a~y phony' adaptation of the
Kennedy style, but simply that the issues that Regan addresses
himself to and the way he does so cannot help but impress any
listener.
Certainly many have given up on the political system. The idea
hat one good man can save a city or a county or a nation does not
hold a great deal of credibility. But the idea that all political people
are hopelessly corrupt, that one is as bad as the next, simply will
not hold up either. At the very least we should hope to have good
men make the best of a bad political situation than bad men make
the worst of it. Ed Regan is not a saviour, no single human being
could ever hope to unravel the incredible knot of political
corruption and ineptitude that is strangling not only the county but
the entire nation. Neither is he another liberal, however, with the
stock answers that just don't work and the expertise at political
deceit. He is an honest, hard-working political man who feels for the
needs of the people. If you still think that type of individual milt\t
be worth voting for, here's your opportunity.

�Regan vs. Sedita

.·

.

On Nov. 2 the citizens of Erie County w1ll choose e1ther
Republican-Conservative Edward Regan or Democrat-Liberal
•
Frank Sedita as County Executive. Unfortunately, a large
' I'Ll liT YOU'Ill
'ECSTATIC?'
GRAllfU&amp;.I'
number of students may not be participating in this election,
despite the fact that a decent number of students are now
registered voters in Erie County.
.
Many students feel that this election offer~the~ little
choice and therefore, they feel no particular compulsion to
vote. Addi~ionally, many registered solely for the privilege ~f
being able to vote in the presidential primary next June. St1tl
e
others believe that the vote is a meaningless tool and demean
' I kNOW-YOU'll JUST TOO
those who intend to employ i~.
OVIIlCOME TO SAY AN"HING.'
We believe that for the students of this nation to
voluntarily disenfranchise themselves, be it in local or
national elections, is fatal. Voting may not be glamorous and
certainty is not as exciting as other forms of student ·political
action have been during the past few years. However, these
other forms have been remarkably counter-productive and
Creak, creak, creak . Just sitting, my bones the system b not perfect aod will one day fa11.
we believe that the vote at the very least deserves to have its
seem
to be making such noises. It was a good leaving you dead and wherever your feelings about
utility tested. No instantaneous results can be promised;
weekend at the end of last week In several ways but afterlife dictate. About all of which I could get
perhaps nothing beneficial will even come from voting, but
a great deal of going and doing was invoJved. So shakey without much trouble. But somehow it scares
we strongly urge participating on election day.
when a funny state appeared on Slloday afternoon it me more to be Incapacitated without being dead.
As far as the candidates are concerned, they each have was hard to · tell just what was happening. While But who wants to get into stuff about depenlfency
signifi cant strong and weak points. Mayor Sedita has had an driving around the countryside Sunday through a and ultimate ends on the weekend? Besides it is safer
impressive array of nationally-known Democrats stumping
variety of colors. and shades to talk about my stomach than abo\Jt things more
locally for him, yet he is also closely associated in the minds
and intensities of sunlight , an depressive and meaningful.
On some levels It is hard to avoid being scared
of many with Sheriff Michael Amico and Police
interesting warm fuzziness
appeared - which has not yet In this world at some points however. Was in a
Commissioner Frank Felicetta, two individuals not known
suburban bowling alley recently at noon, because a
completely left.
for benificence towards youth . Mr. Regan has an aura of
friend of mine who works nearby finds it the
Some
days
tlle
world
keen intelligence supported by a wide range of commendable
cheapest place to eat lunch . Alienation and
has
clearly
defined
edges
and
proposals and strengthened by his fierce independence, yet
can be kept neat.ly separated anonomie are hard words to break back into
he too has been associated, although quite unwillingly, with
without a great deal of meaningful immediate discussion. My feeling about
our beloved Vice President.
by Steae
trouble. On other days this is that you are dealing with incredibly personal
It has been charged throughout the campaign that Mr.
h owever, things get variables. My head responded to this suburban
Regan is a political opportunist because of his acceptance of
considerably more muddled . Seems as if there has bowling alley in terms of alienation and deprivation .
the Conservative endorsement. Further, it has been intimated been a whole string of those. Things gel done. sort What are all these women looking for? What in hell is
that because of this endorsement he is beholden to the local of, but not without a rather large number of false needed, and how far away from it are they if lhey
Conservative party. After a thorough investigation we found starts, mis-steps and general discombubilation. Which feel better getting together in one of the most sterile
environments possible to participate in a minimum
this charge to be without any foundation. .
is hard to live with if you are a control freak.
One interesting sidelight in the election is that a
Having to make five trips back to the car to get exercise psuedo-sociaJ occasion which consists of
Democratic takeover of County Hall would give them an the vitamin pill bottle is a drag. Concentration is not rolling a large ball once in a while? It is possible for
absolute hegemony over Erie County and result in the one of the trumps I happen to hold in the great card me to get into a thing about discipline, about
disappearance of a two-party syst~m for at least a generation. game of life. (Read some really hokey old westerns wanting to do things well just for the part of feeling
While we hold no brief whatsoever for the Republi~ns of over the weekend if my similies seem even worse in control, just to test me against my limits. But Erie County - in fact, their record during the last few years than usual.) So when things are really fouled up I and it is a large but - there is need that such
experience be connected to something real and
is atrocious - we must still place more faith for effective tend to 'Yrite reminders to myself. lately. however,
the notes keep getting mislaid. This necessitates meaningful. I can try and get all the rust sanded off
government in a system where two parties are competing for
racking your brains to recall the location of the the car before painting the bad spots, even if I am
votes.
rem!Jlder , or of what was on it. Frequently it seems tired and want to quit. But perfecting the art of
Finally we must once again stress the importance of to be a draw as to which can be accomplished more rolling a ball down an aJley to knock over some
voting in this election despite its not being an ideal contest. quickly.
upright objects? Confusion, mad and otherwise.
If large numbers of students participate and become active in
Another current hassle is my digestive system.
Why?, they cried in their confusion . Because,
this more traditional form of political action then the future My stomach, and associated systems, are the first roared the great truth giver above. Oh, they said ,
may yet hold a candidate for public office who will truly and places to give me trouble w.hen anxiety strikes - realizing that there would be no answers either, and
which is frequently . And having overpartaken of set off to make their own.
fully represent the goals and ideals of our generation.

•

The

grump

THE

SpECT~UM
Friday, October 22, 1971

Vol. 22, No. 25

Editor-in-Chief - ' Dennis Arnold
Co-MaMging Editor - AI Benson
Co-Men-eint Editor - Mike Lippmann
Alit. MaMeint Editor - Susan Moss
Bulin- ManiiOM - Jim Drucker
Advertitint ManiiOM - Sue Metlentine
Campus ......... Jo-Ann Armao
. . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . Howie Kurtz
................ Bill Vaccaro
City ........ • ... HllfVy Lipman
Copy . ...... .. .. Ronnlforrnan
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marty Gatti
Asst .. ... , ........... ,vacant
Feature ........... . .....vacant
Grephic Arts .•. ....•. Tom Toles

Layout ....... Maryhope A unyon
Aat • ... • ........... ..vacant
Lit. &amp; Drama .. Michael Silverblatt
Music ..... ........Billy Altman
Off-Campus ...... Lynne Traeger
Photo .......... Marc Ackerman
. • . . . . • . . Mickey Osterreicher
Sports ............. Barry Rubin
Asst • . . .......... Howie Faiwl

The $ptJCtrum is served by United Press International, College Press
Service, the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los angeles Tim• Syndicate and
Liberation News Service.
Republication of met1er herein without the exPfess consent of the
Editor-in-Chief Is forbidden.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page six. ~e Spectrum. Friday, October 22, 1971

most things oral over the forenoted weekend, it is
hard to tell whether the current rumblings.
growlings, and expulsions are connected. to
overindulgence, anxiety, or illness ... or some
combinations thereof. Which please me not. If sick,
one should at least have the pleasure of making other
people wish that you were not , and would get well if
for no other reason than at least then you would
stop feeling free enough to be miserable and
demanding. If you are not sure you are sick you
can't really ask for meals in bed and for people to go
out and buy ice crea~nd ginger ale ... or can you?
Being sick is a ole wierd trip anyway - or at
least it can be. If you ar relatively healthy , as I seem
to be most of the time, the feelings around getting
sick can be really strange. First of all there is a whole
thing about feeling apart from your body. Which
may be only a thing a died in the wool head freak
gets into. You start to run this thing about not being
able to trust your own body . and what a sneaky and
treachorous beast it really is.
Which, should you desire to go in heavy
directions, can lead without a great deal of trouble
to a mortality hassle. Everytime that sickness puts
you down, makes you incapable of functioning, you
could 1 if you wished to. consider it_a reminder that

Sunday last Channel 17 ran a thing on the
Philadelphia Folk Festival which was very good, and
the special of the week on Monday was something
called Full Circle which consisted of 90 minutes of
Cat Stevens and Leon Russell, in separate segments.
Stevens was great, and the Russell sequence had to
be one of the funkiest pieces ever televised by
anybody. A whole studio of freaky people making
some fine music and having what appeared to be a
fine time simultaneousJy. Now if they would find
someone to do the fund raising who was less utterly
inept Channel 17 would deserve severaJ rousing
cheers .
So, even when befuddled and belchy, it seems
to be as easy as ever to avoid anything overly
significant and heavy . (There are ways to be
defensive that I haven't even had to consider yet I )
Keep your proftle low and walk soft and they just
might miss you on the first sweep. Paranoia? or just
rational defensiveness? oh just the usual fuzzy
craziness"? Let you know if there are.any answers to
such questions as soon as 1 figure 'out what r want to
be when I grow up. It is somel\ow hard to wish you a
happy Veterans Day, when you thinkof how and
why it got the name.. Hope some nice thinp happen
on it anyway. Pax.

�Youth speaks
To the Editor:

Food Service retort

In handing out Socialist labot; Party leaflets :
''Ybung people have good reason to rebel!" It is
gratifying to note the favorable reception by
students among others. On the other hand, some
adults are so immature and emotional that as soon as
they see the name: "Socialist labor Party," they rip
the leaflet in pieces and indulge in name calling,
What g~ts me is that President Nixon, knowing
capitalism is in deep trouble, is pushing for
increasing trade with mainland Chjna and nobody is
accusing HIM of being a Red.
Yet here l am, a member of the Socialist Labor
Party, founded right here in these United States by
Daniel De Leon in 1890, and some people think the
Socialist labor Party takes orders from Moscow!

Nathan Pressman

A dog's place
To the Editor:
With aJl the current fine talk about ecology, I
am dismayed that debate in The Spectrum on the
''place" o( dogs on campus has been limited to
considerations of legality and minor inconvenience.
let me return to first principles.
'
The covenant between man and dog dates from
the dawn of the Neolithic. Although established, as
Konrad lorenz points out , "voluntarily and without
obligation by each of the contracting parties," it has
become by now absolutely binding upon both. It
may not be unilaterally broken.
The parties to a covenant become each other's
friends, not slaves. The age-old covenant between
man and dog is renewed by each new meeting (in
Buber's sense) of a man and a dog. A man does not
"own" a dog. "Whoever says Thou does not have
something; he has nothing. But he stands in
relation.''
We say the turf dog became "domesticated," he
began to live in the houses of men. let me say more
accurately: man and dog began to share each other's
''places," and to regard each other's needs. This is
the "content" of the covenant : men and doggs care
for one another. (The "sign" of the covenant is
perhaps the look of infinite trust and loyalty on the
face of a dog who stands in relation to a man.)
Now they are saying, "Norton is for people, not
dogs." And, "Pets should be aiJowed on caml&gt;'tS ...
but, of course, only on leashes." I thought ll~ . all
the current fine talk about ecology meant: man must
share one earth with all other species, aware so far as
he can be of their real needs. In theory, these could
reqwre an unbounded interpenetration of "place."
Man does not "own" any place. The earth is the
lord 's: man is a favorite son, but he is not the nnly
favorite son.
1 thought that aU the current fine talk about
ecology meant : man must re-establish the
"immediate bond ... with nature," for "our infinite
longing for paradise lost is nothing else than a
half-conscious yearning Jor our ruptured ties"
(lorenz). Instead, we seem at SUNY to be raising
new boundaries and rupturing one of the last (weak)
ties we still have.
But, you have objected: "Many canines leave
their little gifts in the various nooks and crannies of
the Union, while others anoint the inside pillars
several. times daily" (Editorial, Oct. 15 ). Surely such
precious language arises from th,e usual "civilized"
squeamishness. But as Freud was fond of reminding
us (quoting St . Augustine): Inter uri,as et faeces
nascimur . "We are born between piss and shit.'' We
should not forget it. (Indeed , it is only at peril to our
original human nature that we can forget it.)
Perhaps yqu will grant our human nature but
still object (out of considerateness) to the extra,
"unpleasant" duties which the presence of dogs in
the Uruon has forced upon the maintenance staff.
Then Jet the community of dog "owners" themst!lves
take on these duties. (By rotation, these should
entail no more than a few hours per term for each of
us.)
Men and dogs have cared for one another in a
convenantal communHy since the dawn of the
Neolithic. Suddenly, we do not need dog-watchers,
dog-catchers, caretakers, pounds. (Moreover, as Paul
Goodman might point out, it is treason to our
natural societies, treason indeed to t~ nature of
tbinp, to betray primitive trust and loyalty.) QuiJ
custodiet custodes? "Who will watch the watchers?"
Who will catch the catchers? (One dog-lover at least
is willing and quite able.)

...

Burton I. Weiss
Instructor
Program in American Studies

To the Editor;
This letter is being written in response to yours
News Analysis on the Faculty Student Association
Study groups which appeared in Spectrum last.
ln no way do f feel that I must apologize for
the report issued by the Food Service Committee.
Created in three weeks, the report was admitfedJy
incomplete and the ftrst ~tatements of the report
include a recommendation that an ongoing
"University-wide food committee which would
constantly work to improve the service on campus"
be established.
The Food Service Study Committee never
planned to do an all encompassing report on Food
Service. We acted on several Presidential charges and
added information we felt relevant. The fact that
such an additional intensive report Is necessary is
undebatable.
To categorically deny my statement that " I
have not seen any gross , inefficiencies in Food
Service" without any supporting evidence as the
author of the .article did. speaks ill for credibitity.
The major inefficiency confronting Food Service is
the layout of their facilities. This problem came
about when over-ambitious architects moved to
design the "perfect kitchen" but forgot to consult

with the chefs or the patrons.
The News Analysis overlooked the most
important recommendation of the Committee.
"There must be a more concerted effort to explain
the operations of Food Service o n a campus-wide
scale." Most patrons o f Food Service know nonun&amp;
of the mechanics of running such an operation, '
resulting in many unanswered complaints.
The suggestion that Food Service be required
to absorb {inancial losses to provide services is
ludicrous. The only income derived for Food Service
operations is through sales.
When the Committ~e asked if Food Service
should be a "business" or "service" operation it was
asking if the majority should be required to pay for
special services of a minority. It felt that they
shouldn 't, in the same manner that the Bookstore
Committee was incensed tltat students pay more for
books because of Faculty apathy.
Jan DeWaal, Chairman
Food Service Study Commiltee

.

P.S. I have been a "worker" in Food Service for
three yearS. Rather than brainwashed as the author
suggests, I have a personal understanding of Food
Service problems on "both sides of the line" since 1
am also a patron.

Out ofthe clouds
To the Editor:
last Friday, the Student Assembly, the
legitimate decision-making branch of student
government, made the decision to ease the restrictive
election procedures set by an Executive Committee
appointee. The basic question was whether the
requirement that an election be held with an
Election &amp; Credential official present, or the placing
of the obligation on the party interested in getting
into the assembly to hustle 40 people he probably
doesn't know into coming to the voting table to get
him certified as a delegate, was the way the assembly
wanted parts of the constitution dealing with
election of delegates interpreted . The assembly
thought the procedure should be changed so that
persons interested in becoming involved in student
government should be given the chance for free
access into it.
It was funny to observe that the only six people
who spoke against the proposal for the easing of the
requirements were either executive board members
or their appointees. One would wonder why they
didn'r want more people to have voting power.
Maybe they think that power's for the people who
have it and shouldn't be shared! It does make sense
to only want 19 (people in the assembly) opponents
rather than having 50 or 60; after all, who wants to
take a chance on a six-to-one odds if you can get
eight to five?
These self-styled Elilists lost the battle in the
assembly, but now they hope to achieve through
subterfuge what they couldn't accomplish

legitimately. A couple of them went to Ute Student
Judiciary and coerced an official to issue an
injunction to prevent seating of the people who got
the required 40 signatures. I personally think that
they overstepped their eJected or appointed
responsibilities with this action. Their job, for wltich
they get paid, is to carry out the decisions of the
assembly, not question them. These Elitists say they
will resign if they don't get there way. Too bad, 1
say, but I'm sure there is someone with a smaller ego
who'll accept their jobs.
As for the injunction itself, even there these
people screwed up. The injunction they got and
which they say is covered in the Judicial
responsibilities set down last year, and which we're
living with this year until a new set is made up, was
gotten fraudulently . Boy, were they stunned the
next day when our Student Association president
pointed out that the only kind of injunction they
couJd have gotten was a temporary one while the
one they got was a permanent one. Oh, well, good
help is always hard to find. I didn't think the Peter
Principle would show up this early in a person 's life,
but a couple of SA officials have disproved me.
Everyone who handed in a petition , come to the
meeting today . It looks like another good meeting.
You are legitimate members and shouJdn't have too
much trouble being seated. If there is trouble and
these obstructionists are defeated again, we might
have some really important business to do, such as
replacing persons who aren't doing their jobs.

David Keiser

Jewish Studies funding supported
To the Editor.

have been able to develop into regular language
classes, while Hebrew , with an enrollment of over 90
students r e main s in the Critical Languag~
Department . Despite the fact that Hebrew has been
consistently closed out and there is no cont inuation
available for the students who have completed the
four semesters now being offered, Hebrew Is in
danger of being cut back rather that expanded
because of lack of funds in the Critical Language
Department.

As interested Jewish students, faculty and
community members, we again tum to you with
regard to the establishment of a Jewish Studies
Program at SUNY AB. As you know , we have
actively tried to convince the University authorities
of the need for such a program, and its legitimate
standing as an academic field . In our discussions last
year we were Jed to believe that the University
authorities did rel!ognize these claims as legitimate.
This situation shocks and dismays us. We, urge
We were made to understand that lack of funds was immediate action be taken for funding the Hebrew
the main obstacle in hiring a full-time professor in courses and finding a suitable candidate for Jewish
one of the core areas of Jewish Studies as a first step Studies. We have kept our commitment to find
to a full program. Even though we fell that funding funds, we have kept our commitment to find
was the responsibility of the University we appealed qualified candidates, and we have kept our
to the Buffalo Jewish Community because of the commitment in students supporting and registering
urgent nature ,of the situation for us as Jewish for the courses now offered. We would like to be
students. Despite the fact that this money was informed very soon of what the University is doing
pledged (S I o.ooo for each of the coming three to fulfill its commitments.
years), the University itself failed to fulfill its own
commitment to fmd someone to fill the position and
Judith Fergenbaur
the additional sum needed to pay him.
Beverly Toback
With the beginning of the new school year we
are now facing not only not having the position
filled but also possibly having the basic Hebrew Editor'$ note: The above is a copy ofa letter sent to
language courses cut back. It seems incredible to ~ Jjr.1 Albert Somit, Executive Vice President on Oct.
that Chinese and Arabic with minimal enrollments - 11',"i/ 971.

..

Friday, October 22, 1971 . The SpectrUm . Page sever

�··-.--·------·----------------··--~·--------

.Police storm Attica. .- .
the wall bepn to warm up. Two
were huge Army CH34's and the
third a smaller yeUow and white
:state police chopper. The small
!COpter took to the air and made a
pass over one comer or the yard.
Inside the yard the prisoners
were ready. Ron Kozolowslti, 23,
ran account clerk in the prison,
was one of el'ght hostages
rseparated from the others. First,
lhe said , he was led blindfolded
ri nto a pit that was to be doused
with gasoline. He said the
prisoners felt the hostages
•couldn't be seen there so then
tt hey were Jed atop "Times
:Square," the catwalk that divided
lthe four yards. On the catwalk
!t h ere were at lea st 16
·'executioners" and eight hostages
with knives at their throats when
nhe prison was stormed.

'Wuaf?

Look up In the sky ... er, 1 mean the Norton
fountain area, it's a bird, it's a plane, yes, friends, it's the
VD·Moblle, that motorized education unit touring New York State,
came to the State University of Buffalo campus this week
presenting audio-visual display and poster panels showing symptoms
and consequences of syphillis and gonormea to students. It was part
of a campaign to educate students to the danget's of venera! disease.

Stonning begins
At 9 :42, WiUiams' voice came
e&gt;ver the radio : "All forces in
position."
9 :43 - WiUiams ordered the
po wer cut off inside. The assault
fo rce had gotten word that some
l~t~tes were electrically wired or
that bombs were set to go o ff
with an electric charge.
9 :44 - Williams ordered high
powered wale{ hoses connected .
11"hey were never used .
9 :45 - "Zero in o n targets,"
Williams commanded. The next

-&lt;ontlnued from

~

three-

order is muffled. Then: .. Do not batteriea faUed. Newsmen were
take action until the drop." denied permission to watch the
Almost immediately a voice stormlna.
responds : "The drop has been
The sharpsbooten fired first. A
made. Jackpot One, an ~Army
helicopter, bas made the drop." seraeant who claima he f1red the
Inside the prison, CeU Block D first bullet, pvc this account. " I
and the yard were bcina flooded saw the knife move to slit the
hostage's throat and I pulled the
with tear gas.
9:46 - "Move in, move in. The triger. The executioner dropped
drop has been made. Move in," just before he could complete his
job."
Williams commanded.
Between 100 and 110 troopers,
That hostage may have been
In 25 and 30 man teams, swept Ko:r.olowski, one of the two
down the catwalks and, at the h os taae s freed wh o were
same time, along the hospitalized with cut throats.
nine - foot-wide co rridors " They told us 'as soon as the first
underneath. Th ey moved shot is fired, you whit e
simultaneously down two of the blankety-blanks have had it.' I was
four le~ . They were accompanied scared silly up there," Kozolo~ski
by two prison guards whose job it said. He remembers th e knife at
would be to identify the hostages. his throat, but he doesn't
Tables, radiators torn from the remember when the cutting
walls and planks made crude started or stopped. " I fell to the
barric ades that were easily floor and I knew I was going to
surmounted . A heavy smell . of bleed to death right there ,'' he
gasoline mingled with the clo ud of said. He said he thought be heard
tear ps. They criss-crossed the machine-gun fire, although the
yard five or six times. The tear gas troopers said they had no repeater
cloud clung close to the ground weapons, and he beard the bullets
because of the rain and made it smash into the concrete inches
almost impossible to see.
away.
Permission denied
What happened ne'Xt may never
be kno wn. The television camera
set up to videotape the invasion
had to be switched to batteries
when the power was cut, and the

Part /II

The Finale

STUDENT DISCOUNT
on
ALL-redecorating needs,
art supplies, pictllft framing
D.M. RECH PAINT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.

Until 11 a.m. and
Sun. thr Thurs.
AFTER 9 :00p.m .
Sun. thru Thurs.
3 BUTrJl/tfl~ MJI(AJ(,[$

or iDifTJlltl$2 CIXA'Im'l
FR£SHHI6S M)'t'VMf-

65c
U. $HEIUDU IU'tYE
Mlf Ullll IOU

10% DISCOUNT

With student I0 card

APPOINTMENTS
831 - 2505 or 831 -5570
or stop in Room 356 NORTON
I

f'ortraits of any graduating student Senior, MFC, graduate or professionar
OCTOBER 27 - NOVEMBER 30

Page eight. The Spectrum. Friday, October 22, 1971

o n jeans and tops that
make it happ e n b y
Landlubber s, H.I. S ..
Wright , Hagger Lees and
th e rest of the best.

�-

_-

I

-

-·

act1on l1rle

Q: I want ~o find out the telephone number of a student living
off campus. If he ia not listed in the Buffllo telephone book how can 1
10 about locating him?
_
'
A: Until the Student Directory, which lists the name, address and
telep~one nu~ber 01 111 Sta!e University of ,Buffalo students wishing
su~h .mformation m.a~e pubhc, becomes available, there is no way of
locatmg a student livmg off campus. To locate a dormitory student ,
one need only call their dorm and request the student's number. The
directory is under publication now and will be available shortly.
Q : Help! I just reaUzed that I have no Student Health insurance.
Can l still get it?
A: Sorry! According to Niagara National lnc., the deadline date
for filing for health insurance was Oct. IS. If you are not covered, it is
suggested that you take out Blue Cross-Blue Shield or some other
comparable insurance policy - just to be on the safe side.

Q: I am interested in becoming a special major, outside of the
academicaUy acknowledged majors. How can l go about accomplishing
•
this?
A: The first thing you do is go see your advisor! He's the best
equipped to handle any special questions you may have. A new booklet
will be coming out soon, under the auspices of the Division of
Undergraduate Studies. William Fritton, chairman of the Special Majors
Committee is located in 279 Hayes .

Q: I put money into the Pagoda in order to get Jtampl and
received neither the stamps nor my money back. Is there something I
can do about this?
A: Yes! There's an o pen line to the post office which you may
caU free to complain about the situation. Just pick up the phone
located in the Pagoda near the weighing scale.
- Q : Does this University offer associate degrees? If so, under what
stipulations?
A: No, they do not offer two-year degrees.

Q : Are there anCart-time jobs available?
A: The University has a Placement Office in Hayes C. This office
is the place to check out possible jobs.

Q: How can I make sure about an apartment that I want to rent
- as to price, safety, etc?
A: The University maintains an office"of Off-campus Housing for
this purpose. This office checks out each apartment that is listed with it
as to cost, safety, etc. Students are wged to make use of the housing
list provided by Off-Campus Housing. With the approach of winter, the
dangers of poorly ventilated space heaters, etc., ttlat are used in some
of the cheaper housing in the older sections of Buffalo cannot be
over-estimated. Deaths can and do occur because of this and other
antiquated features of such housing. For your own safety's sake, we
urge you once again to make use of the Off-campus Housing Office. It
is located in Goodyear Hall .

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Nichols speaks on citiJ rights

Economic power for blacks
by Janis CroJQer

A member of tJie audience questiorted Mr.
Nichols on whether ..the riots of Watts, Newark,
etc." were "sel(-defeating." He replied that "every
drop of blood, every head that was cracked in those
violent days helped the movement along." He
pointed out that labor set the example for racial
riots by expounding the theory that if you can't aet
what you need by asking for it, then ultimately you
must take it. He said that Andrew Carnegie once
.promised, ..' We've (big business) got the money and
resources, we'll take ~e of the poor.' but be never
did.'' said Mr. Nichols. ''This bas long been the
tradition and the abuse of wealth."
M.r. Nichols continued tbat the riots might not
be the best way to solve black problems, but added:
"If they .did nothing more than focus the world's
attention on what the United States was really like,
focus on th e dirt too long swept under the carpet,
they were worthwhile.''

Spectrum Stoff Writer

"The civil ' rights movement is not dead, nor has
it gone underground - it's just become more
sophiSticated," commented Nelson H. 'Nichols,
executive director of the Buffalo ·urban LeatNe,
speaking at a local elementary school Tuesday
evening. His topics ranged ftom U.S. economics to
the racial problems in Buffalo high schools. The
informal, open forum gathering was sponsored by
the Conti n uing Edu~ation Division- of the
Tonawanda Public School District.
Addressing a crowd of 20, Mr. Nichols stressed
that "no one can think of a 'black tomorrow'
without thinking of a white tomorrow, or, as a
matter of fact, an American tomorrow." He
proceeded to elaborate on the di rection and role of
the civil rights movement in that "tomorro~." Mr.
Nichols named political and economic involvement
as the two most powerful forces that blacks must
harness.

Powerful dollar
1
' A dollar bill is a great human relations
instrument;" he noted, citing the white Mississippi
wood cutters who are now supporting Charles Evers,
black gubernatorial candidate, due to his financial
backing of their industry. Mr. Nichols contended
that this proves "you can control a man's mind \'Y
the use of a dollar - you can make a man pro-black
or anti-black or whatever."
"We're always bearing about the Gross National
Prod,uct, but until the blacks ·see a 'Ghetto National
Product' tbere will be no real unification in the
United States. And I don't mean black ownership of
just small beauty shops and local hot dog stands...
Mr. Nichols sees the real economic power in
manufacturing. He recalled that President Nixon
promised to stimulate minority business but "it's
one thing, like welfare, to help someone endure
poverty and another to Lift someone out of that
poverty."

Political involvement
Tile Urban League di rector feels that the same
principles that are applied to underdeveloped nations
should be directed to the ghetto. At present, blacks
own only three per cent of America's busines."es.
"Let's face it. blacks don't sell a thing to white
people except services," he said .
The other involvement goal of today's blacks is
in the field o f politics. Mr. Nichols pointed out that
in the 1840's when blacis "were thrown o ut o f
white churches for shouting and praising God," they
form ed their own churches . This, he explained , was
the b egi n~ing of politics for the black man . Today,
with the black voter registration up to 15 per cent in
North Carolina, even Senator Strom Thu rmond is
trying to clean up his racial image because the man
he "picked" to be governor lost an important
primary. Mr. Nichols viewed this as a demonstration
of increased black political influence. He also noted
the plans of the Congress of African Peoples to have
• · ~ black *candidates running in twelve state-wide
elections.

High school strife
Tum ins to the local concern over racial strife in
the Buffalo high schools, be stressed that the~
members of local gangs, such as the Pythons, are not
really of a criminal nature. '1'hey don't have any
approved way to pass from puberty into
adolescence." He explained that unlike other boys
who have high trees to climb orfences to walk, these
boys " don't have any way to prove their manhood.''
Mr. Nichols denied that living in a purely matriarchal
society increased deliquency. Approximately 20 per
cent of Buffalo youths live with only one parent ,
their mother, but this is not necessarily a
disadvantage. "A family is not determined by
curtains, two kids, two parents and a statiqn wagon
in the garage," said Mr. Nichols .
He also listed as a cause of violence by youth
the deteriorating conditions of the school system . He
proposed the establishment of small neighborhood
storefront schools that could deal more directly with
the co ncerns of neighborhood youth. Local
recreation areas, an increased youth employment
program and a counselling service provided by the
parents themselves were also suggested by Mr.
Nicl\ols. "You c&lt;tn put all the police down in Buffalo
you want, but it won't solve anything," be
concluded.
MobiUzing strength
One frowning member of the audience
questioned : " In these smaU schools, will you teach
' Black is beautiful'?" Mr. Nichols response was that
" when people begin to sloganize, it just shows th~t
they need some psycho logical assistance to be
reassured that they do count and that they are
beautiful." Nichols further explained that the goal of
the civil rights movement is not to exclude whites.
What he feels is needed, however, is a period of
getting together, mobilizing strength and preparing
the black morale for tomorrow.
In conclusion , Mr. Nichols said that as black
economic and political power is reaiJzed, blacks will
go through a process he termed " psychic
decontamination ," that is, the feeling of 11J.ack
inferiority would be finally lost. " Integrat ion is-the
fruit and profit of this type of progress."

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�Worth the price
Nickel Theater: afine start
,.

&gt;

i

by Michael SUverblatt

Since' Nickel Theater is
basically a learning experience for
everyone involved even for... the
audience (who may be coming to
grips with new types of theater
pieces for the fust time) I feel
that honest criticism is in order.
The first of the seven plays was
Terence McNally's Noon. This
play comes awfully close to
creating an American counterpart
of the grand tradition of French
farce. Like the masters in the
farce tradition, McNally· works
with stock characters who are
familiar to us all. These characters
work within the framework of
their basic superficiality in order
to reveal some deeper truth.
Unfortunately neither McNally
nor the actors seemed to be up to
the farce trtJdition and the play
often descends into chaotic
silliness. Farce is only farce when
there is some ultimate control

DNmaEdltor

Nickel Theater is not just a
productjon ; it's almost a tradition.
Every year the Student Theater
Guild presents a Nickel Theater
program, .and strangely enough,
Nickel Theater attracts the largest
audiences of anything the guild
produces during the year.
And so r am fairly pleased to
be able to say that this year this
patchwork of one-act and original
plays actually came off well. This
Is comparatively unique - after
all, most of the people working on
Nickel Theater are acting or
directing for the first time (at
least for the first time at the
University) and they are faced
with one of the most brutal
environments for performance
that I can •think of: the
formidable Fillmore Room .

· involved. Unmasking mores and
seeing the seriousness ' of a
hysterical .situation are essential.
When five deviates meet in the
.same room looking for the answer
to their desires, there are funny
repercussions. But, McNally seems
to suggest, there are also sad
overtones that overwhelm the
whole comic premise.
At the opening of the play,
Kerry (Scott Storm) and Asher
(Michael Grodenchik) meet. They
are , respectively , a vit i
homosexual and a pri sy
intellectual . Their pacing is g od,
their general diction and
interraction is near perfect. Both
the play and the direction (by
James Keenan) work. When
various other characters enter (a
pseudo-nymphomaniac and two
leatherists); control and diction
give way and the play falls prey to
imprecision and chaos.

e

Comic originality

The second play was an
original piece by Kevin Hamilton
called Protagony. It is deftly
written and deals with the fact
that a love triangle can form the
basis for a frothy comedy or a
deep tragedy. ft is this paradox
that the author director addresses
himself to. The play was nicely

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Three 7UP bottle cap liners. (00 NOT MAIL
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p;a,.... ...n. The Soectrum. Friday, October 22, 1971

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D'~ouville

CoUege preSentation

.Plays focus on drug abUSe
by Jay Boyar
Spectrum Staff Writer

ll isn't every weekend that

D'You~iu~ College features two

(count 'em, two) plays dealing
with title theme of drug abuse.
Perhap!i this is a good ,thing. At
any ra ne, at 8:30 p.m . on both
Friday and Saturday nights, Oct.
l 5 and J 6, the Mental Health
Associa t io n of Erie County
workintJ with the Erie County
Mental Health Department
presented The Majority Ne11er
Wins and Odyssey House, both of
which a pproached the problem of
drugs.
Sandy L. Perry , general
adminu1trator of the MHAEC, told
reportlers that there was an
apparent dearth of educational
literary works on the subject of
drug abuse, hence there was a
contest with a S I 00 top prize to
spark writers to create plays
concerning drugs. In short, the
idea was to artificaUy generate
some good literature on the
subject .

'

The winner of the competition
was Or. Albert E. Meyers for his
attempt, Th~ Majority N~ver
Wins. One thing we must say
about Dr. Meyers, he is honest.
.... The ''majority" of the audience
who cam e there to see a good play
dld not "win." But let us be fair;
the play started off pretty well.
Ind eed , it was downright
entertaining. Performed by the
Rooftop Players, the play was set
in • the livingroom of a black
family (Mom, Dad and son).
Freeman George did a fine job
playing the father. He was
genuine, funny and engaging as he
ranted around the stage like an
Afro-Archie Bunker, telling his
son to get a job when there were
no jobs to be had . Be also,
typically, considered d1ugs the
cause of a bleak situation when, in
reality, they are but a symptom of
a deeper problem . Mabel Wyatt , as
the mother, was just the opposite
as far as her acting (or lack of it)
was concerned . For every line
George read well, she read another
line terribly. As the son , Keith
Jones did an adequate job as he
played the role with the
disinterested undercurrent of a
non-violent, disenchanted young
man who needs an escape from his
life.
As the play contin ued on, it
became mcreasmgly preachy, and
then degenerated to a pednnt1c
level as a ta lent-free social worker
entered the picture and procct!ded
to explam the dangers and
terminology or drugs. It was hke
watchmg a chem1stry lesson w1rh
moralistic overtones. Finally the
play became ~o trite that even
George's humor and reahsm could
not save it. The play d1d have 1ts
moments, hut it was hardly worth
the long wait between them . ,
Credibility gap
It WJS as 1f tlus first play was
meant to lower the audience's
resistance to poor productiOn in

anticipation of the second play,
Odyssey House. Odyss·~.v House
began badly , and remained that
way. It, too, was honest. Two of
the first words in the script were
" You vomit." At least they let
you know what you were getting
into.
Odytsey House went o n to
explore the problem of heroin and
t h e rehabilitation of addicts.
While it almost avoided being
preachy and pedantic in attitude
(it's hard to get preachy about
heroin, almost everyone's against
it, anyway) it had noth ing to hold
it together. Perhaps the most
heavy-handed sequence in the
play was when the members of
the Odyssey Rehabilitation House
Ia u nched their tirade against
television commercials which tell
one to use " this little white pill"
or "that deodorant" and-all one's
problems will be solved . ~
would have been only hackneyed
and tiresome if not for the ironic
ele ment involved . While
denouncing such commercials, the
play itself turned into a big
commerical for drug rehab centers
to solve all of the addicts'
troubles. This could be considered
qu1te clever except for the fact
that the playwright, Tom Tolar,
was probably unaware o f the
contradiction which existed.
Taken together. the two plays
def1mtely were not art . What they
did accomplish was to point out
(for the 999,999,999th time)
some or the all-too-frightening
problems of drugs and drug
add1ction
They were
soc1o-dramas 10 the sense that
t h c y solved no th ing , bu t
presented a problem for the
audu!nce to ponder. After the
per forman ce, there was a
di sc ussion about drugs with
members of the production.
Maybe somethi n g was
accomplished . Maybe only two
bdd plays were performed . Maybe
a Significant statement was made.
And maybe J wasted an evening.

Gustav, Sr.
355Norton

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Friday, October 22, 1971 . The Spectrum . Paa. el~ven

.. .

,

�HE UNDERSTANDS THE UNIVERSITY AND ITS A~PIRATIONS .
HE HAS THE INDEPENDIE NCE, INTEGRITY, AND INTELLIGENCE
TO GIVE ERIE COUNTY OUTSTANDING LEADERSHIP.
During the past sev1eral years we have known Ned Regan as an'lble
and progressive student and practitioner of local government. We believe
that Regan is well qualified to provide the independent and imaginative
leadership tha t Erie County needs.

•

IN HIS CAMPAIGN FOR COUNTY EXECUTIVE, Regan has
presented carefull y though~t out, forward-thinking proposa ls for an
intergrated consumer protection progra m, a community-oriented drug
abuse program, a com prehensive environmental protection program , a
highl y professional county police services agency, and a county assessment
review board .
ON THE COMMONI COUNCIL of the City of Buffalo, Reg~n was
able to achieve much even as a member of the minority. He consistently
advocated a regional approach to rapid transit, solid waste disposal and
regional planning. His initiative led to the formation of · the Erie and
Niagara Counti es Regiona l Planning Board . Regan prodded the city
administration into undertaking the City Management study. He worked
hard and effectively for nt~ighborhood and community development. In
addition to giving constant attention to neighborhood parks, schools and
com munity faci lities, Regan initia ted a vest pocket program, a program to
keep sc hools open in the evenings for community activities, a summer
recreation program making use of school faci lities, and the Jo~mon Park
restoration project.
.
Throughout his terrn he kept the city administration on its toes
and often provided the leadership required to get stalled projects, such as
. housing and urban renewal, moving agai n .
AS A STUDENT OIF LOCAL GOVERNMENT, Regan has written
three essays analyzing problems and opportunities for improvement of
government in Western Ne~ w York, o ne published in the Buffalo Law
Review, and another by t he Greater Buffalo Development Foundation. He
has taught the subject a t Buffalo State College. He is now se rving with
Robert Weaver, Robert Wag:ner, Basil Paterson and others as a member of
the Temp~rary Commission on the Powe~s of Local Government.
REGAN UNDERSTANDS THE UN IV ERSITY. As a graduate with
honors of the State University of New York a t Buffalo Law School, and an
instructor of local government at Buffalo State College, a nd a freque nt
visitor to o ur own campus, he knows higher education and its needs. As a
member of the Temporary Comm ission on Campus Unrest, Regan
conscientiously sought out the causes and nature of campus unrest and
was instrumental in producing a report that was enlightened and
sym pathetic to the needs and aspi ratio ns of the contem porary university
and its students, facu lty. and staff. He can be counted on to defend the
integrity o f the University and to contri bute to better relations between
the University and the community.
·On his record and on our knowledge of him , we be lieve that Regan
will bring abili ty, independence, and determination to the office of
County Executive.
We urge you to vote fo r him.
Vaughan Blankenship
Gale Carrithers
Richard ·H. Cox
Gilber Crouse
John Drotning
Beth Erasmus
William A, Fleming
Theodore Friend
Newton Garver
William Greiner

Political Sci.ence
. English
Political Science
Economics
Management
Physiology
Medicine
History
Philosophy
law and Jurisprudence

..

James Holmes
James P. Nolan
Robert Pope
Martin Pops
Susan Pops
Peter F . Regan
J.P. Seagle
lawrence Southwfck, Jr.
Glen Thurow
Claude Welch
Stanley Zionts

Economics
Medicine
History
English
Italian
Psychiatry
Man.agemeot
Management
Political Science
Political Science
Management

PAID FOR BY FACULTY FOR REGAN .

IIIIII....~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIPAIDPOLITICALADIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIil

~

Paoe ~ ·1:•r The Sp~m . Friday, October 22, 1971

�~~¢8rcl ~£ octct4 ~~~~~!py!.~~~!,;,.,·poo: (I u:~:-::::::myKoen~uJer~
Pro football
by Dan Caputi Jr.
Last week the wizard reached his season high w1th a glossy 11 - 2
card which moved him to 41 ·2 1·3 and 66% for the season.
Pittsburgh 28, Houston 17: Bradshaw will riddle porous secondary.
Detroit 3J, Chicago I 3: Lion defense lives up to its reputation.
Minnesota 24, Baltimore 20: Purple Gang rises to the occasion.
Dallas 3 I, New England 14: Loss to Saints JT)ay have shaken
Cowboys out of lethargy.
San Diego 27, Buffalo I 7: Bills haven't been able to stop anybody
yet.
Miami 27. N. Y. Jcrs 14: Jets try to repeat upset ; Dolphins are
beginning to peak after demolishing Pats.
Kansas City 20, Wasllingron 16 : Chief defense should prevail in
battle of division leaders.
Atlanta 24, New Orleans 21 ~ Falcons due to come out of nose&lt;ii've;
Manning can't win by himself every week.
Los Angeles 24, Green &amp;y 17: Rams are pleasant surprise.
San Francisco 30, St . Louis I 0: 49'ers have little trouble with
Cards, who don't seem to be playing with a fuU deck.
Cleveland 21, Denver 1J: DiU Nelsen is really sparking Browns.
Oakland 37, Cincinnati 20: Bengals in shock after last minute loss
to Browns.
N.Y. Giants 17. Pllilade/pllia /4 : Giants don' t have much ; Eagles
have even less.
College footbatl

dippy) and I felt that the actors
were ill chosen and rather stiff.

were completely integrated in
their efforts. Even at the points

Sharon P3rweU, Steven Glassman
and Richie Muscard . Sharon

Two other original pieces, The

where the play itself becomes
pretentious and general, the

PyweU , eupeclally, has a broad
co mic zc:st that would have
worked on her projection.
An entirely noble effort went
into the C.·eation of a play version
of Borges' story Three Versions of
Judas. It Is extremely difficult to
translate the intricacy of the
Borges pr&lt;J•se onto the dimensions
of a stage~. The actors and the
directress, Judy Kolbas did an
extreme l y interesting and
powerful , If not entirely
successful, job. The same problem
was inherent in a Reader's Theater
version of Frost's The Death of
the Hired Hand, except that there
was none of the intensity so
notable in the Borges piece. I do

Touch, by Marty Tackel andd
Love Counselling • by . Charlene
Katz, were performed. The Touch
was an interestingly ambiguous
piece dealing with love and
communication, well peformed by
the author-director Marty Tackel,
Elyse Greenhut and Peggy Flaum.

Love Counselling was little more
than a five-minute joke amusingly
presented in its own way.
The height of the evening was
reached with a really marvelous
presentation
Edward Albee's
The Zoo Story. The Zoo Story is
very difficult to perform well
be cause it requires complete,
unrelenting intensity on the ~art
of its two characters. Rand Paul as

or

Last w~ek 's 10 4 slate left the wizard 64 ·13·1 j'ur 82.3% on tlrt·
season. This weeks upset spcdal could be Wisconsin over Ohio Sture .
Wisconsin 23, Ohio State 10 : Buckeyes caught short by h o t
B3dgers.

Comics: teachers use thein
edu~.:utors

by Jay Boyar

North Carolina )I, Wake Forest 14 : Tarheels are a fine squad this
season, although death of one of their players has cast a pallor at
Chapel Hill .
Tulane 23. Georgia Tech 17: Benny Ellender's Green has been
strong; disappointing Yellowjackets pose little threat.
Army I 3. Virginia 9: Cadets pick up third win at expense of
Cavaliers.
UCLA 27. California /6 : Bruins out for second straight on coast.
Texas 32, Rice /4 : Longho rns cannot possibly lose to the Owls.
Toledo 27. Day ton 7· Rockets rema1n unheralded aJU}ough
Dayton win will be their 30th in a row, with Chuck Eal4...,--at the
~~.

I

Syrom.1·e 21. Holy Cross 9: Crusaders are sentimental favonte and
can puU big upset if Orange cannot get offense moving.
Notre Damt• 27, USC 21: Trojans really aren't much of a test, but
Irish offense has continued to sputter in South Bend .
Purdue 24, Illinois 0 : lllini in for another long afternoon against
the improving Boilermakers.
Boston College 23, Pittsburgh 12: Panthers showed promise in win
at UCLA : nothing since, while Eagles continue to fly high.
Penn State 38, TCU 7: Nittany Lions continue to rise in aJI polis.
Northwestern 27. Indiana 24: Close big·ten battle in Hoosierland .
Oklahoma 43, Kansas State 12: Sooners continue to move o n the
ground , while K·State still misses Lynn Dickey.
Alabama 34. Houswn 14 : Bryant's Tide rolls over mediocre
Cougars.
Michigan 28, Minnesota 13: Wolverines remain unbeaten, although
competitive Gophers promise a good fight.
Colorado 3 I. Missouri 7: Buffaloes back on the track after being
derailed by thundering Sooners.
Stanford 1 7, Washington Stare 13: Indians need victory 1n quest
for second straight s hot at Rose Bowl bid .

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power of the two performers
bouy the play onto safe grounds.
Jerry Mood the director has don~
a wonderful job with his actors
and his direction making the
actors actually responsive to the
demands of the piece and the
multi-faceted characteristics of
their roles. Really fine work.
If I have been- overly indulgent
in my criticsm of this year's
Nickel Theater, it is because I was
pleased and surprised - I've
worked with Nickel Theater in the
past and it is usually a harrowing
affair. This year it was not. It was
a nice introduction to the work
that wOI be going on in the
Stud~nt Theater Guild this year.

Superman invades schools

by Barry Rubin

3.)

soup can style with amusingly
broad comic performances by

Sprr tflllll Stoff Wmt•r

l magi ne enrollang in a ~oursc ltkc
"S uper m a n-2 3 7" or " Intermedia te C~ptain
America ." Imagine studying for hours each night,
hunched over comic books trying to memorize
exactly how the· Funtastic Four defeated Dr. Doom .
Prett y unl:ikely, eh? Not •eally . In case you have not
kept up 01~ su~.:h matters, ~.:o mic books bave invaded
the classfOioms of this country with incredible force .
They are being used as reading aids, teachmg aids
and artistic examples in a great number of schools
today.
One of the most noteworthy examples of this
concerns Mr. Orson Bean . Most of us know him as a
regular panelist on that oft-times tiresome program ,
"To leU The Truth ." However, Orson is the owner
of a famous school in Greenwich Village. The kids
who attend this progressive educatio nal institution
have the lbenefit o f learning to read and write by
studying comic books extensively . And that's got to
be a great deal more interesting than reading "See
Dick , see Dick run," for hours each day .

avoided conuc books like the plague, and
perhaps they had a right to do so. After all, comic
books of the 30's, 40's and SO's (with a few notable
exceptions) had decidely inferior art and writing. In
many of them there was even a dis proportionate
accent on smut and gore. But since the re-birth of
comics in the 60's (which we spoke of last issue), the
oomit:s have gained new prestige among teachers.
Gaining respect
Reading and literature are not the only areas in
whtch co mil: books are u.~ed to instruct. The very art
which adorns their pages can be used as a pnmer to
fUm making. Moreover, s~vernl books concerning
movie-making instruction have contained m various

learning lel)ol
One of the most touching stories concerning
comjc books is told by a teacher in North Ca rolina.
He wrote a letter to the Marvel Comic Book
Company to thank them for producing their comic
books. In thut letter he said, in part : " I want to
share with you .. . a beautiful ex perience which a
thirteen-ye~ r -old boy and I had . We used comics as
the primary means to learn reading. His regular
school had ·failed for six years to teach him even the
basic reading skills, and I was failing for months as I
tried all sorts of approaches. Then we picked up a
Spiderman (comic book) and took turns reading the
different •Characters. Success! We ke pt on using
comics and he greatly improved ... Learning to read
was fun."
Perhaps, by this time, many would admit that
comic books are great teaching aids in the primary
education years, but have nothing to offer college
students in the way of instruction. This is not the
case. Just take a glance at the following list of
words: 1nirvana , cyberno, mitlenium , debacle.
venerated, isotopes, eon, indoJent, qualm . They look
very much •like the vocabulaf'Y words from a college
board test. Actually, they're just a few of the words
found between the covers of a random comic book
from your friendly neighborhood newsstand.

chapters, entire comic · books. It is the case that the
panel breakdowns and various angles employed by
many of the extremely imaginative artists in the
drJwing of comic books serve as a fine example to
ca m era men , directors and editors in the
moviemaking business. This is, of course, one reason
why great filmmakers like Federico Fellini and Alan
Resnais have shown increasing and continuing
New reputation
The University of California at Santa Cruz was a interest in the comics.
For tho~e who are in need of some final proof
pioneer in using comics as instructional aids. They
even instituted an entire course which studies the that comic books are becoming an ' important •
characteri zations and motivational patterns of comic educational tool, perhaps the best thing they could
book chara1cters. Before ev~ryone starts to pack their. do is to talk to someone who attended the meeting
bags to mc•ve to California, let us assure you that the of the prestigious American Studies Association on
State Univn~rsity of Buffalo has not been left out of Monday, Oct. 18, 1971 in Washington, D.C. A
this movement. One of our very own English courses featured speaker at that conclave was none other
this semester (No. 289 Cl) taught by L . Yep, uses than Stan Lee, comic book writer, editor and
comic books as a secondary source in dealing with founder of the Academy o( Comic Book Art.
...
Of course, none of this means that comic books
predomina111t themes in science fiction literature. Of
course, thin is not quite as good as the d~ they have will ever become as popular with teachers as
logarithm tables or spelling bees. What it does mean
in Californiia, but it is a start .
Althotlgh comic books have been around for a is that comics are fanaUy pining respect. Dignity.
long time, it was only recently that they have pined And that is an important step for a medium which
this new , scholastic reputation. In the past, specializes in characters who ru.n around in leotards.

Friday, October 22, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�•'

Intramural sports
seen as a success
by Michael Zweig
Sp«trum Staff Writer

'

-i

A golden opportunity to learn
something about the game of
tennis is forthcoming at the Clark
Gym courts. Although most of us
are aware of the fact that the ball
is supposed to go over the net and
land on the other sit1e of the
court, we can no doubt learn
somethin&amp; about increasing our
chances of doing so and doing it
better and more consistently.
A free Tennis Instructional
Clinic and Demonstration will be
held Oct. 23 from 9:30 a.m.-1
p . m . The i n s tru ctors from
Buffalo's very capable coaching
staff i n c lude Mr . William
Monlcarsh, Miss Diane Hall, Mr.
·Norb Baschnagel ~nd Miss Cindy
Anderson. A special personal
appearance will be made by Rev.
Bob Hetherington who is the
National Public Parks Champion
and ranked in the top ten .tennis
players in the East. This is a
one-day event , so don't miss it.
Grand Prix
•
The Bicycle Grand Prix will be
run as scheduled, Oct. 2l.
Different classes of bicycles shall
be determined . The course
consists o f riding aU o f Rotary
Road seve n times. This is
parti cula rly strategic if you
haven't had the ch ance to tour the
campus recently. A team must
consist of at least two persons,
and a pit stop is mandatory .
A few other reminders are in
order. jadminton is being run
every ~day night 7:30 - 19:30
in the gym . Tug-o-war entries are
due Oct. 26. There .will be another

Jog-in, Saturday Oct. 23.
Handball entries are due Oct. 22.
·The Annual Turkey Trot will be'
held Nov. I 8. Wouldn't you just
love to bring home a big turkey
for Mom on Thanksgiving?
The rip -r oa ring football
intramural leagues are proceedjng
nicely. As of Monday, the first
team to clinch their division was
the Tasmanian Devils as their 4~
record led the Tuesday (4 :30}
group. No alcoholic beverages
were permitted in the club house
during the victory celebration .
The boys must prepare for the
playoffs. The BUicott Greek
Whlps are also about ripe. They
lead the Tuesday (3 :30) group at
4-0.
Monday's divisions are headed
by the Penthouse Revival (3~.
3:30 group) and the Invaders are
tied with the Bunners at 2-0 for
the 4 :30 group. The Humans and
XAM both lead the Wednesday
groups at 4-0. It's anybody's race
in rugged Goodyear Hall. The
ninth, fifth and second floors are
tied at 3-1. The sjxth floor il"
Tower has taken the lead with a
4-0 mark . Monday's make-up
games have been rescheduled.
Check the gym for specifi cs.
Soccer playoffs will begin Oct.
30. Specta tors are invited. Choice
seaJs for intramural football and
soccer may be obtained by sitting
wherever you please.

.D111IIs lose a maa

·.A I£~!~an ~u~~SM~~~~~~~lm Qu•···
Spom Editor

The silhouette on the door marked "Edwin
Mute:( basketbaiJ coach " shined brightly in the
$unUght. After a while one could discern two men
shaking hands, and shortly afterward the door
operned.

•••••••••••••••••••••••

l.{)weat

..,.••................,

FREE

AI Delman
AI Delman, his hair somewhat longer tban when
he was playing, came o ut and shook the reporter's
hand . "Yes," Delman confirmed , " I have decided
not to play basketball this year. It's too difficult to
carry m y full schedule, play basketball and still give
my best. It wouldn't be fair to t he coaching -staff,
whorn l greatly admire, nor the other team members
or myself'to keep playing."
· !Delman a iunior this semester came to Buffalo

-----------------------------------------~

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OUR 12th ANNUAL CLIN IC
1241 MAIN ST. - ONLY-

Mon . Oct.
Tues. Oct.

25 - Noon
26- Noon

9
to 7
to

Early starter
Last season, Delman, who himself figured his
chances at "S0-50 at best to make the varsity squad"
became a starter in the season's second game at the
University of Maryland . Delman recalled: "That start
at Maryland was the high point o f my career, playing
before 14,000 people." Varsity Coach Ed Muto,
obviously disappoiJTted in the loss of Delman,
evaluated Al's play'ing by t'emarking: "AI was a
hard-nosed, tough ballplayer. He gave us strength
defensively and bl$ improvement in handling pressing
defenses improved the club."
For Delman, a pre·med Biology major, the
academics turned his decision. Delman commented :
"I realize that basketball is important at present, but
I've got to take the future into consideration. This
thing has been bouncing back and forth in my mind
for a long time, since I enjoyed playing so much. I
don't know what I'll do nowow - it's something I've
been doing since I was five years old . I'll miss it."
Even with a 4.0· index last semester, l&gt;elman
realizes the difficult time in gairung entrance to
medical school. There is also a chance Delman will
apply after his junior year. Delman added: "Most of
the players realize there must be a happy medium
between school and ball. Basketball is important to
me, but so is my education. The breaking point in
my mind came befor~ my exam in biology . I realized
that I couldn't miss practice, and I couldn't ask for
preferential treatment."
As far as the future is con cerned, Delman admits
he might return next season . "Next year I could play
if time and circumstance permit ." Delman also
added: "I'm not at all relieved by my decision. H
was a big part of my life and it 'llleave a big void ."
Just as the interview was ending, Bob Vartanian ,
a fine junior college transfer guard passed by and
slapped Delman's hand . Vartanian said: " I'm sorry
AI, I was looking forward to playing alongside you."
Delman then countered by remarking: " Don't
worry, we'll play some in the gym , and I'll be out to
watch you guys play." Then, Vartanian left to join
the team for practice, and one could tell that the
void in AI Delman's life was iust beainninR..

SPECTRU M c:tasslflecS ~d~ really work.
Sell your old junk. Turn grarbage Into
$$$$. Come up t o 355 Norton ancS
make your f ortune.

AMPLIFIER
••
••
••
••

Delman had never played varsity high school
,basketball and as such was just about the' last man on
Buffalo's J96~-70 freshman squad. However'· after a
black player boycott stripped the squad, Delman
moved in and averaged 6.6 points per game while
showing steady improvement.

p.m.
p.m .

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FISH' and CHIPS
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~························••.w

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday, October 22, 1971

_________________________________________ j

�J

STUDENTS wanted to wew1&lt; on
C~eVeloplng en¥1tonmental PGIIclw. A
tNm II now IMint put totether to
worlt on lllues which directl y affect
the destiny of Erie County , If
lnttftltecl, .,..... ull Prof. David
Stieglitz. 881-3550.
MALE student and dot, OUs, nMd
place to live. Call 881·3647 and INve
, _ . , . for David.
PIANO, uNCI.
832·0611:"

Cheap.

Will

mcwe.

ADDRESSERS nteclecl. Hom-orkers
For Information Mnd
$.25 and stamped addressed envelope
to BO)( 12213, Gainesville, Florida
32601.

e~rn to $150.

BE YOUR own boss earn top
money. Ma~ your own working hours.
call Ken 885-9278, 5- 10 p .m.

,

MEN want ed for part and full-time
retell managers. Call Ken 885·9278 ,
5-10 p .m.
PART·TIME temporary assistan t for
p syc hological research , observing
lnfanu. E)(perlence In observation
tech niques preferred; background,
Interest In c hild development
necessary. Modest pay . Write or phone
836·2051, Research ProJect 5 1
Huntington, B uffalo 14214.
DOUB LE Fren ch horn, f or
gfader. 831-4806, 634 -9390 .

FOR SALE
1964 OLDS 1 9 8 convertible - 48,800
actual miles - one owner - four new
radial tlres - full power - Call Hel en
83 1·4113, 9- 5 p.m., 834·5338, after
six . $500.
Wl i

Ei

ci

l ' ibi Aai ilur.

Rich brown. Lattlt style. Like n -.
876-9175.
1960

MGA

~~ BOdy

roadsttt', mec:hanlcally
In e)(Cellent condition.

Best offer takes lt. 835-6787.
1965 v .w. Bug - e)(Ceflent condition
- •400. Reply In writing Spectrum
Office, BO)( 86.
RADIO Craig 7-band, AM/ FM/SW, five
bands plus AM/FM headsets and
earphontl. Cost $100. Will sell $50.
Reply In writing Spect ru m O ffice, Box
86.

s .w.

VOLKSWAGON Camper Bus, 1964,
good condition. Snow tires, four
spares, gas heater, e)(tras. Call Seth
875-81 95.
1970 PORSCHE 914 roadster, delu)(
appearance group, AM·FM radio, call
after 6 p .m . 741·3921.
10.SPEED bike. Used only twice. Also
would like to buy te)(tbook Algebra
a nd Trigonometry by Fuller and
Goldon. Call Rick 881·1 749.
RAMBLER wagon 1965 - automatic,
p ower steering, excellent running,
needs body work, $300 Cit offer. Cllll
Roy 831-4843, 694·1378.
R£FRIGERATORS, stoves and
washers. R econditioned; dellveFed ano
g uaranteed. O&amp;G Appl iances, 844
Sycamore, TX4· 3183.
1962 OLDSMOBILE, 65,000 miles,
good mechanical condition, automatic
transmission ; power steeri ng, brakes;
mou ot ed snows Included. G reat
transportation . $250 negotiable.
837 · 1 617 or 831-4113. Asl&lt; for
Mickey.
FOR SALE VW b us 1966. Completely
rebuilt engine, guaranteed. A sl&lt;lng
$600 or best o ffer. Call Mik e at
881: 1784 after 7 p.m.
NEW 150-watt stereo component
system. Ul'\der guarantee, s7g5 origi nal

Flllll. CAl

•••••••

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)

1066 Sheridan Drive
Sp.,da li 7ing in Volkswagen .
l 'rhlumph . VuiV~), MCl, Au~tln
Healey, Tnyo l u, nutsun und more.
877·9 303

ILI~IIIIIIII

Sl)(th

WA ITRESSES, bartender s wanted f or
new club. A Job you'll enJoy.
685·3100. Ask for Bob or .John.

thousands. We love Btfnle's BabY from
Tu.-.o to Caracas.

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226 ,

Ask f11r Yucko

Pflee. Must ...1. Call 838-32445 .:lftet 6
p.m. or 634..0118.
STEREO tUrntable Pioneer PLA 25 Shure M-9J,E urtrld,., base, co(ter, 3
months old,. 875-4464. Bob.
1963

FOFtD

ow~.

Go~:ld

automatic V-8. One
condition, radio, Sl75,

836· 1642.
8)(10 BLUIE and white canvas cablr.
tent. US811i OI'IIY twice. 8eau tlfll l
' condition . Complete with stakes, poles
al'ld tent big. Paid S85, now only S55.
Call Billy a1t 831-4113 or leave message
for Steve.

CAROL and John, hiiiPPV. Weddlntl Barry.
...
from campus. 834-3920.

MISCELLANEOUS

TO SHARE elet~nt houM with 4
others own 100m, $60 Includes
everythlnt. Elmwood-9ryant aru.
882-5344.

LOST.FOUND

CHEVRQLIET 1965 Impala, 2-door
hardtop, automatic, power steerll'lg,
$295 after ·• p .m . 837-4786.

HELP! Lost gold watch . FamRY
heirloom - sentimental value - small,
round head. Call Susie. 633·9144.
L O ST: Alto recorder In canvas use
Diefendorf Anne)(. REWARD. PleaM
call 632-4665.

RIDE wanted to Ann Arbor Michigan
University or Detroit, Friday, Oct. 22.
Return ride wanted Monday Oct. 25, If
possible. C all Jules 831 ·2360 .

CHEVROLET panel truck - 1954 - as
Is. Best Offttr. 876· 1733.

N E ED RIDE Oct . 2 8 o r 29 to Ann
Arbor, Unlv. 'of Mich. o r nearby. Call
83 8·3099.

1969 VW sQuarebac k - automatic 23,000, S USO. C all 882-62·11.

R 1 DERS wan t ed t o Colora d o
beginning of next week. Call Derek at
884-0278.

PANASON IC miniature t.a pe recorder
with case a.nd m lc, Pills tapes $55 firm.
834·6699.
DAVEN PORT, Chippend ale; very good
condition; :530; 759·6636.
1964 VAIL.IANT 4-door automatic
transmission, $200. 875·5727 after
6 :30p.m.

APAiinMENT FOR RENT
FURNISHI~ D modern apt. for 4 qulet
graduate males three bedrooms,
$ 60/month each, plus utilities. Walking
distance. 8:H·8 181, 9 a.m.- 7 p .m .

ROOMMATES WANTEO
ONE RQOMMATE ava il able
Immediately. Hertel area, $43 plus
utilities, ow n room . Call 877-4901 .
ROOM M ATE wanted - own room lO·mln. w ,alk from campus, $66/ mo.
146 Ro~ond s St. Call Michelle
831·29g6.
WAN TED female roommate to share
house. S·mlnute walk t o campus. Call
834·3850.

634-3852.
NY'S Hotel Tudor has
fac ulty·st!'CSent staH rates.
reservations and Information,
832..()61 1 .

RIDE BOARD
REFRIGEFlATOR and gas stove. Call
between 6 ,,,m . to 9 p.m. 876-6966.

Pr~P~Wt

TUNE.UPSI
for wlnttt'l All
..c.Jt"'
undtf •20. We're profwtlo.,..s.
Minor repairs. EVet'Ythlng guaranttecl.
UB
For
call

C ..H JONES PROFESSIONAL Typlnt
S ervice computerl~ed
IBM
equipment plus our e)(peflence give
best poulble presentations of
dissertations, thesis, term I)IIPtfS,
resumes and employment at)l)llptton
letters. Located between two
campuses. Very reasonable. Call
837-6558.
QUIC K, et Nclent typing done - $ .40
per page. IBM Selectric 8 38-4808.
WILL C ARE for one Child In my
home, days. 837·7827.
TVPING done 833·8236. Will pick up
work.

PERSONAL
THIS Is your last chance to send $1 to
this address : Dollars, Box L185,
C lement, Buffalo, N .V. 14214.
XEROX anything for only $ .05 , the
cheapest p rice In Buffalo. Celebrate the
arrival of Gustav Senior. our bral'\d new
Xerox machine. He never Jams, breaks
or gets sick. Thi s week's Introduc tory
special - $ .05 a copy.
AUTOMOTIV E service Is our only
business. Independent Fo reign Car
Servi ce, 839· 1850.

THE "All-New" GUSTAV. He never
breaks down! T his week's special $ .05 a cop y .
SPORTS Car Club Autocross - Oct.
24, g ,3o a.Q'I., Two Guys parking lot,
N. Falls Blvd. and Sheri dan Drive. Run
your car around the pylons. Trophyes,
2 novice clanes. Info. Pau l 883·1324.
AFRICA T ravel Dec. 16- Jan. 2
round trip from New Vork City, 450.
Nigeria Ghana, Ivory Coast Llterla.
Write Africa Travel Club, P.O. BO)(
1002, Ellicott Station, Buffalo, N .Y.
14205 .

HOR S EBA C K
r i d i ng, hay ri des,
o If -season rates. Waverly Stables,
Service Road 18, Niagara River
Parkway, 8 miles north o f Peace
Brloge, Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada .
Phone 416·295·3g2S.

FREE kittens 8 weeks old, llttet
tra i ned . Very health. Extrem ely
lo~able and
bouncy . Call (after 8)
837-0533.

BEAUTIFUL handmade gold and sliver
1-elry - wedding rings - at sensible
pri ces. J.P. The Goldweaver, 655
Elmwood at Ferry St., 881 ·3400.

:----Bible
Trutn-----.
HEA YEN IS A REAL P(Al.'E

MALE 33 professor In Atlanta , two
children, seeks fema le companionship
- marriage In mind. Spec:trum Box 88.

COUPLE to share 6-room garage
apartment from N ov. 1st. $125/mo.
Including ~Jtllltles, 5 minutes WALK

Je us Chriat uys: " In my Father's
house are many mansions: if It were
not so, I would have told you. I ao
w prepare a place for you-That
where I am, there you may be also."
John 14:2. 3

NO MOl:tE GAMES
WE WANT YOUR BUSB\TESS-HERE'S YOUR PRICE
" RECORD OF THE WEEK "

~tECORDS

" TOP 50"
•r

257

LIST $4.98

·3 23

LIST$5.98

BREWER
AND

OVER 500 LP's

2

SHIPLEY

495

for

LIST $6.95

TOP 50"

497

3

9

one per customer

"T APE OF THE WEEK "

TAPES
OVEn 800 - 8 TRACKS

II

197

NEW
CARPENTERS

297
one per customer

!ginol Ampex

A .WW''PRICE'' MEANS NOTHING WITHOUT THE
PRODUCT TO BACK IT UP ••• WE'VE

GOT BOTH

Friday r October 22, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�~

I

Announcement s
The John Fitzsenld Kennedy School of
Govern ment of H•uvard Un iversity announces a new
graduate program in Public Policy . PhD Masters or
joint Ma ~ters - professional sct)ool degrees offered.
Applicants should be interested in policy analysis
and be at ease in both the world of words and the
world of numbers. Write Dean Harry Weiner,
Littauer Center, Harvard University, Cambridge,
Ma~. 02138 for catalog and application.

Students fo~ Israel will have folk dancing
tomorrow from 2- 5 p.m. in the Ftllmore Room.
Instructions will be given from 2-4 p.m.
UB Sports tCar Club will have a Mini Monte
Carlo Autocross, Sunday at 9 :30 a.m . in the Two
Guys pMking lot at Sheridan Drive and Niagara Falls
Blvd. Any car maty enter. There are trophies and two
novice classes. For information call Paul at
883-1324.

UB Riding Club will meet today at 3 p.m. in
Room 233 Norton to discuss the excursion to
Scrabble Hill on Monday, Oct. 25. The cost is $2.50
CAC movie 6trand X will be shown at 7 p.m. and
for members and $3 for non-members. Reservations
~
9
p.m.
this week1md. Tickets will be sold in advance
must be made in advance. for more information
...... and at showtime in Norton Ticket Office.
contact S ue in Room 318 Norton .
CAC needs teachers aides for St. Columbia
School and Our Lady o f Lourdes School. Please
contact Marti Thorn at 831-3388 or the CAC office,
Room 220 Norton.
UB Go Club is now organizing. Go game player,
and those interested in learning, who wish to meet
either occasionally or regularly, call Bob Mogy at
831 ·1386 days or 836-6850 evenings.
~
~

Activist Youth for Israel is sponsoring buses for
the Canadian )ewis., Congtess in Toronto for a
demo nstration in support of Soviet Jewry to
coincide with the visit of Premier Kosygin. Buses will
leave Norton Hall Monday evening, Ocr. 25. Price is
$5 round tnp. Reservations must be made in advance
by calling 832-4769 or 8;31-2776. Pa'(ment can be
made ar the Activist Youth for Israel table.
· The office of University Placement and Career
Gu idance announces on campus interviews with
Syracuse University, College of Business
Administration on Nov. 10, the Institute on
Paralegal Traininll on Nov. 16 and the University of
Rochester G:-.. ...iuiue School of Business on Dec. 1.
Students interested in these interviews sh ould
contact University Placement and Career Guidance,
Hayes Annex C, Room 6 or 831-4414.

'

Hillel will hold a Sabbath Service at 8 p.m.
to night in the Hillel House, 40 Capen Boulevard.
Prof. Marvin Bloom of the School of Social Welfare
will speak on: "The Position of Jews in_ the Soviet
Unio n." An Oneg Shabbat will follow . ,.
The Hillel Talmud Class will meet on Sunday at
3 p.m . in the Hillel House.

Delaware Councilman William Hoyt needs
volunteers for a dloor-to-door leafletting campaign to
be held tomorrc•w. All parties inte rested in this
project or any oth er, please call 884-4323 o r meet at
Hoyt Headquarters at 85 Elmwood Ave. at 10 a.m.
Saturday.
Confl ict Simulations Club will have its first
meeting today in Room 262 Norton from 3- 7 p.m.
Avalon Hill, Stra1tegy and Tactics and T est Series
Games on hand . .l\11 are welcome.

Sports I nformiiltion
Tomorrow: Club soccer at St. John fisher, 1
p.m., Rochester ; varsity cross country at SUNY at
Binghamton, 2 p.m.
Sunday : ~ oller hockey at 1 p.m. in the parking
lot between Capen and Michael Hall. If rain action at
11 a.m. on Mo nday.
Monday : Women's tennis vs. Syracuse, Buffalo
tennis courts.
Wednesday : Varsity cross-country at Buffalo
State College with Gannon, Canisius and Niagara;
club soccer vs. Canisius College, 3 p.m., Rotary
practice field .
/.
The m.ain Clark Gym floor will be occupied b y
varsity sports until 7:30p.m . each weekday nigh t.

Africa Club will have new elections of officers
Sunday, Oct. 24 at 4 p.m. in Room 340 Norton.
UB Vets Clul' and VUVAW will meet today at5 · · · · · · · · · · · ·
p.m. m the Beef and Ale. There will be discussions
on Veteran's D.ly Activities and on topics of
Available at the Ticket Office
Importance to the veterans o n the State University
of Buffalo campu•i and the community.
Studio Areri(Theater
Through Oct. 31: The Gingerbread Lady with
Baird Hall announces a recital to night at 8:15
)o Van fleet
p.m. Concert inchudes the works of Mozart, Brahms,
Nov. 4 - 2 1: Buying Out with Irene Dailey and
Szymanowski and Wieniawski by Piotr Janowski,
Harold J. Stone
violinist and Paul BerkowitL, pianist . Tickets for
non-students are $ 2 .and for students, $ 1.
Rock and Folk Music
There will be a Polish folk Ball featuring a
continental music: ensemble, Polish-sty le buffet, a
Grande Polonaise and a song and dance presentation
by the Wawel Dance Ensemble from St. Catherines,
Ontario tomorrow from 8 :~0 p .m . 2 a.m. in th e
Goodyear Dining Hall.

Oct. 22: T he Rascals ( K)
Oct. 24: B.B. King and Edgar Winter's White
T rash (B)
Oct. 27: The Grateful Dead (?) (S)
Oct. 29: Chuck Mangione's "Together" concert

(K)
Oct. 30 : Cat Stevens: sold o ut (K)
Oct. 31 : Kris Kristofferson (K)
Nov. t : Jethro Tull (M)
Nov. 3: Melanie (K)
Nov. 4 : Rod McKuenn (K)
Nov. 10: Donovan (M)
Nov. 12: Jesus C hrist Superstar (M)
Nov. 20: Richie Havens (N)

Chilbad HouSte is having a rap session on prayer
and meditation toda.y at 7 p.m. Get into the words
at the Chabad House, 3292 Main St.

The wuill Resurrection House worship schedule
The Hillel Study Group " Torah With
has been changed for this Sunday only. There will be
Commentaries" will meet at 4 p.m. Saturday in
~ no worship service at 5 p.m . The supper program will
Rabbi Hofmann's home, 12 Colton Drive.
begin at 6 p.m. and at 7 p.m. The group will attend
the Mass Reform.ltion Rally at Kleinhans. Speaker
Ram.adan (fasting month for Muslims) started
will be Dr. Paul M.lier.
yesterday. CalendMs available, people welcome to
•\call : 834-4356, 835-1835, 834-5566 or 833-5991.
The SA Asse11nbly meeting which was scheduled
Salatul Taraweeh every evening at 8 p.m. in Room IIIII.....
264 Norton. Salatul Juma's every Frida y at 1:30 ~ for Monday has b een postponed to Wednesday at 4
p.m. in Diefendorf 147.
p.m. in Room 330 Norton.

..

Buffalo Philh;armonic Orchestra
Oct. 31 &amp; Nov. 2: Michael Tilson Thomas (K)
Buffalo Chamber Music Society
Oct. 26 : The Cleveland Quartet (K)
Ice Capades
Oct. 27- 31
Roller Derby
Nov. 2 (M}

~

BacJkpage
~

Comina Events
Nov. 8 : Pink Floyd (on sale Oct. 25) (P)
Nov. 8: Deep Purple, fleetwood Mac &amp; Buddy
Miles (M)
Nov. 24 : The Carpenters (on sale Oct. 25) {M)

KEY
K - Klelnhilns
M - Memori&lt;AI Auditorium
rrc1 B - Buff;alo S toate
........................ 5 SyrKu~
N Ni&lt;Apr&lt;A Unive1"5lly
P - Peace Brid&amp;t Exhibition Center

Whiilt's Happening?

Saturday, Oct. 23

Friday, Oct. 22

Coffeehouse: Manson !Family appearing in first floor
cafeteria, Norton, .admission $.500.
Concert : Davy jo nes will be at Kleinhans from 6-10
p.m.
Film: Hi Mom will be shown at the Conference
Theater, Norton at 5, 7, 9 and 11 p.m.,
admission is $.75.
Film : Brand X will be shown at 3 and 8 p.m. at
Capen 140 for $.75

Coffeehouse: Manson Family is appearing in first
floor cafeteria Norton at 9 p.m.; admission is
$.50
Co n cert: Sergio Mendes, Kleinhil)s fro m
6 :30-1 0 :30 p.m .
Film : Brand X, a Chamberlain satire on television
with Abbie Hoffman at Capen 140 at 3 and 8
p.m ., admission is $ .75.
Film : Greetings will be shown in the Conference Sunday, Oct. 24
Theater in Norton, 5, 7, 9 and 11 p.m.,
Concert : Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra will play
admission is $.75.
from 1 :30- 5:30 p .m. at Kleinhans.
film : 1970 Buffalo Bills Highligh ts presented by the
Concert: Burlaky Chorus will appear at Kleinhans
Resurrection House, 8:30p.m. (free).
from 4-8 p.m.

Religious Service: Lutheran Layman's League will be
at Kleinhans from 6:30- 10 p.m.
Film : HI Mom will be shown at 8 and 10 p.m . at the
Conference Theater.
Tuesday, Oct. 26
Lecture: The Physical Background of Latin America.
C. Ebert PhD will speak in Townsend 313 from
3- 4 :30 p.m.
Concert : New Cleveland Quartet Chamber Music
Society will be at Kleinhans from 7 :30-11 p.m.
Wednesday, Oct . 27
Concert : 100 Years of French Music: 1675 - 1775;
Baird Recital Hall at 8 :30.
-Su~

Welser

•
I

�---

----

Studio Arena inadequacies

Theater of the 'dying' arts
by M.P. SiJverblatt
Lit &amp; Drama Editor

If you wiJI excuse me, J· wiU
direct myself to more important
matters before I turn to The
Gingerbread LOdy, Studio Arena's
opening production and Neil
Simon's most rec~nt dramatic
foray.

I am disgusted, furious and sick
about the selection and quality of
the material produced yearly at
the Studio Arena, Buffalo's only
legitimate theater. For this reason
I am going to spend a lot of'time
demanding that the Studio justify
itself. I will print any reply they
care to write, any explQnations
they care to give. Someone, at

Jimmy and Evy

least, should ~ffer some
explanation justifying what they
do under the guise of professional
regional theater.
Studio Arena is allowed a
,sizeable grant by the New York
State Council on the Arts. I
believe that theater should be
susidized; serious artists should be
subsidized for they are struggling
in a society that is not geared to
nurture art. Art dies, or else goes
underground. This sort o f thing
winds down to that old die-hard
of a discussion about the artist
and his society.
Unfortunately in the case of
the Studio Arena, I seriously
questio n any classification that
would refer to them as artists.
They are businessmen, and the

Jo Van Fleet and Dean ,Outmann star in the Studio
Arena production of The Gingerbread Lady. The

play Is running through Oct. 24.

•

CouncH, it seems, lends support
not to the artist, but to the
businessman.
Deficit spending
Befo re receiving this grant
(which they received last year),
the theater used to operate on a
deficit. This should not be taken
to show that people are not
interested in theater. It should be
used to show that people are not
interested in the kind of theater
that Studio Arena always does.
And the Studio Arena is still
doing that kind of theater now
that they have their grant.
A g rant should help the
recipient along until he can
recoup some financial stability
and get to the point that he does
not need the grant. In other
words, ideally the Studio Arena
should be working in the hope
that when they lose their grant
they will not have to operate on a
deficit.
I seriously doubt that this will
be the case. In order to attract a
large and faithful audience, a
theater must be vibrant and
exciting. Lurking within me,
though, is the sneaking suspicion
that were l to fall asleep during a
performance at the Studio Arena
aljl by some stroke of improbable
fate were to awaken the following
year, I would probably think I
was still seeing the same play. The
same type of play, the same type
of direction, the same blatant
misuse of the arena stage.
Experimental theater
I am not saying that the Studio
Arena should devote itself to
Uving Theater-ish celebrations of
chaos or present a season of
contorted calisthenics-oriented
one-act plays. Not at all. I just
wish that they would concern
themselves more with art. Art , not
business. You do not supply
experimental theater by buying
up an experimental theater group.
Do you hear me dqwn there at the
Studio Arena? This is not creative ;
this is a business deal. This is not
expanding the scope of art - it's
actually limiting it.
To get back to the normal
spectrum of theater at the Studio :
why do such predictable ,
unsophisticated, unintelligent,
unartistic plays invariably find
. their way into the season's bill?
There are surely good plays that
are also popular.
It is an awfully sorry state of
affairs when thea.ter is not even as
interesting as a third·rate movie.
Why should people spend money
on theater when they can see a
movie? lt is Studio Arena's job to
make them want to spend that
money. But what does the Studio
Arena do?
They do not experiment. They

do not create. They do bad ·
comedies, bad musicals, bad
Arthur Miller-esque drama and
bad , bad , awful original
productions.
This season
Look at what the Studio Arena
is doing this year. The

Gingerbread Lady. Good God,
The Gingerbread Lady. Not only
have they chosen another silly
play, but they've chosen one that
flopped grotesquely on Broadway
in spite of a name cast and a
popular playwright. Then what?
Selling Out. Wow, a Studio Arena
World Premiere. By a renowned
playwright - - Julius Roman,
famed world over for his brittle
comedy Under the · Yum-Yum
Tree. Sound tempting? Well then,
get this. Roman is turning his
expert pen to serious drama - a
play whqse synopsis alone makes
As The World Twns turn pale.
Look, I hope I am wrong. I really
do. But I doubt it.
Then the Studio Arena waxes
original. They are developing their
own production. Their own script.
Their own music and lyrics.
Something relevant. Get this, it's a
musical version of I Remember
Mamma. I'm not kidding. Doesn' t
that warm the cockles of your
heart? Just the cosy little word to
announce to the immediate world
at large that the theater really is
dead.
To go on breaks mJ heart. I
won't go on. I'U go on . The
Studio is making a comparatively
good move. They are bringing up
Durenmatt's . Play, Strindberg.
But , tell me, how much artistic
ingenuity does it take to call
Lincoln Center and have them
stick the Vivian Beaumont
company on the Studio Arena
stage? It takes, let me tell you,
almost no artistic ingenuity at all.
An open letter
And to get down to it, how can
the Studio Arena call themselves a
regional theater when almost all
they do is job actors down from
New York? A regional actor or
two may sneak in, carrying a flag
or (mutter, grumble) singing or
dancing his or her heart out in
The Me Nobody Knows - an
exploitative piece if ever there was
one.
1 am sending this article to the
New York State Council on the
Arts. I bear no hate towards
Studio Arena - I just want to see
them become worthwhile.
Oh. by the way, if you like
that -sort of thing, and if it's still
playing, you can see The
Gingerbread Lady, at the Studio
Arena Theater. Jo Van.Fleet (who
is good) heads a poorly-directed
and inauspicious cast in a very bad
play. Thafs all you need to know.

�f

Michael Cooney plays
and talks a fine show
I've been sitting here for ten has become all too demanding and
minutes thinking of a way to start it's harder for the artist to
this review./ It's not that I don't maintain the day to day
have a lot of nice thinp to say dedication to his music that
about Michael Cooney - because Cooney does.
I do. But it's sort of Hke lavishing
praise on an old friend; somehow A true folksinger
it seems all quite unnecessary. If
The reason that Cooney will
you had seen him when he played
never be a superstar is that he's a
here for a week two years ago, or
folksinger. I don't mean that he's
had seen him this summer at
a
folksinger because he strums a
Mariposa as he ran around making
sure the workshops went off guitar, but because he strums a
· smoothly you'd know what I guitar, picks a banjo (actually two
mean. In fact he had spent the - one was homemade), plucks a
day at York University giving Jew's harp, squeezes a concertina
workshops before running and even sinp (sometimes a
customs to play in our first floor cappella). The sonp he sings are
cafeteria (on Friday and Saturday as h eavy . as they come . :nights better known as the UUAB Leadbelly, JJmmy Rogers, Blind
Coffeehouse). I've never seen any ,· L~~ on Jeff~rson and a couple of
coffee there but I suppose the milli~n tra~Jtiona l sonp, not to
other liquid refreshments that menuon all t~ose sons;; he got off
people buy or bring does suffice. those old 78 s. What s more h e
After all you have to forget you're d~~ them as close ~o their
in a cafeteria and pretend you're ongmal form as he possibly can.
- · · · Michael knows enough songs
in a coffeehouse.
Of course being a person Llke that you could see m ten times
Michael Cooney can be very tiring and not hear him repeat a song.
especially after all those When he was here two years ago
workshops and run ning customs and I saw him play four or five
and all that. Though he was times, and the only sonp I heard
obviously tired , he did two hour him repeat were the ones that
and a half sets. That's what I call people requested. I guess people
real dedication : Something that's still like to hear certain sonp over
all too rare to find and really is and over .again (after aJJ they' re
o nly found in the forgetten folksongs and that what it's all
people like Cooney. Superstardotn about). Michael obli~es them by

Michael CooiU!J'

Michael Cooney appeared at the Coffeehouse last
weekend. Cooney is one of a handful of folk artists
dedicated to the tradition of the folk idiom.

Union a 120 years ago when the
song first was sung. He included
:ill the bad jokes of the times,
Hke: "A virgin in Arkansas is a girl
Stylistic and authentic
One such is "Arkansas who can outrun her brothers."
These little bits of the past give us
Travelt~r" . This song provides a
perfel:t: example of his style. a different perspective on the song
Before he sang the song he gave us and ourselves in relation to the
a little: history of it. He told us song. This is true especiaJJy since
h ow Arkansas was considered the t h,e song is sung in a
most backwards state in the contemporary settina, yet it still
puttinu~ one or two of these
favorites in his act.

proves quite humorous.
Cooney is a rare individual and
spending an evening with him is a
worthwhile experience. Though
the songs are from a different era,
we can still experience the feelings
that were intended, especially
when they're sung with the
sincerity of Michael Cooney,

- Robbie Lowman

B.B. King and White Trash comlnt!(!
B.B. King (below) and Eidgar Winter's Whitlt Trash
(right) will perform this Sunday night at the neW
\ Gym at auffalo State College. There will be tWp
' shows, 7 and 10:30 p.m . B.B. is the undisputed king
of the blues and White l"rash is one of the funkiest
white bands ever.

A different sound, a different light

ALWAYS A GOOD
TIME
'•

FIND OUT YOURSELF
W~Y EVERYONE'S TALI\ING ABOUT

onite a~t: 7 :30-9:30 p.m.
24
10
I I I -6-8·
I I I I I p.m.
I I I I I

llllllllllaiiBIIIIIIIfllllls.ltl&amp;as..'"

525 Wailde
Opening
Soon!

You have to see it
to beli"eve it
·.

�C'est Ia Viva!

Kinky chick a disappointment
by Kevin Hamilton
Spectrum Art1 Critic

The first trace of the evening's guest ;pea}cer was

a wavy-haired young man, late twenties or early

Roberta Flack

Either you liked her or you loved
her. That seemed to be the general
consensus at the Roberta Flack
concert Sunday night at
Kleinhans. Much of the music
Miss Flack sings is not original
but, with her own arrangements,
it takes on very individual
feelings. She adds a tou'ch of soul,
some crescendos and some
rhythms to make the songs her
own.
Miss Flack shares her music with
her audience, as well as her
exhilaration and her soul. Her
blood seems to be pulsating in
beat to her music. She's a natural
woman in eYflltY sense of the
wor~, wtlo cl041 it her own way
and does It well.

CLINT IASTWOOD

thirties, wearing a green felt jacket (the material is a
guess) over an orange t·shirt tucked into sky-blue
denim pants . .Around his neck a red bandana hung,
swinging like an old West supper bell that clangs for
eaters with bad taste. We were later to learn that this
was Michel , father of the main attraction's baby, and
a walking prelude to the evening's festivities.
While we awaited the arrival of his mate, he
introduced us to his work as a video artist . He had
evidently been promised eight screens, but was given
only one, a rare instance of discretion on the part of
the Unjversity. What we witnessed through the
appropriately television-like medium was an
exhibition of visual and auditory chaos. Afterwards ·
someone asked Michel if he edited his stuff. He
answered affirmatively and this writer must grant
him a thorough job. Not an instant of coherence
escaped deletion.
Like bad horne movies, irrelevant scenes flashed
one after the other: a heavy set woman stood before'
a "disarm rapists" sign in New York City ; a cruiser
overloaded with people skimmed across endless
waterways; the big woman popped pills; dogs dug
holes; pot bellies and feet abounded. Senseless
tedium waved the screen for at least half an hour.

Viva enters
Meanwhile, the "Superstar" was late because she
had to put her baby to sleep. It was another 20
minutes before she made her apologetic entrance and
began to do the same to us. Viva is a misnomer that
will be matched only when Wally Cox changes his
name to Tarzan. Her voice drones on as if she'd long
since lost interest in conversation and has been
trudging forward on the weight of inertia alone. Her
appearance is simple, hair ·pulled back in a bun from
a thin sharp-featured face whose beauty needs no
makeup, but could use animation . Boredom seems
her predominant mood. She hates art (no wonder
she and Michel have gott~n along so well), and in
fact she does not like much of anything. Despite the
recent publication of her book, Viva Superstar (she
doesn't like the "superstar" in the title), she finds
writing tedious. She certainly isn't much interested
in public speaking, and says she finds sex ''a drag" .
The spark of enthusiasm flashes in her only at the
mention of her infant daughter. The tape of the
child's birth was the night's highlight for her as well
as the audience.

When a speaker steps out onto the stage and
asks her listeners what they want to rap about, she
had best be quick on her feet if her performance is
to be anything but an exercise in aimless plodding.
Viva is not particularly adept at verbal footwork . At
best she shuffles, at worst she stumbles. Her
comments on the subject of art find her limping.

Viva

Viva, author of Viva,
Superstar made a very
unsuper appearanc:e in
the Fillmore Room
Monday nl~t.

First of all, she says she wants nothing to do with it.
Her criterion for worthwhile endeavor is that it be
" fun." She claims movies and videos are "fun." She
also maintains that she hated making many of her
films . Of course she may mean it should be
enjoyable for the audience, but then there are
Michel's creations to undermine that conception.
All things considered , Viva's appearance on the
cam pus was not an invigorating affair . A line taken
either from her book or a student's poem best
described the atmosphere in the Fillmore Room
"There seems to be a lot of despair floating around
here."

more!

-

Beef &amp; Ale House
3199 MAIN ST.
(OIIe Bled South Of UBI

presents

.

. :./:·:~~: :..:· .~)

..· ;.«t.• .

SUNDAY

A TWO-WAY WEEKEND

" ' :~·· ('., ' .,S;
·• ........ . . ... :.;,..~~ • :.~r.....:.......... ::S.. ,.. •

"PLAY MISTY FOR ME"

...an lnl'ltatlon ttJ terror...
JESSIC'A WALTER ' DONNA MILLS

Friday &amp; Saturday
Rock and Roll
with

C•SL~-t'if'l.t

JOHN LARCH . SCREENPlAY BY JO HEIMS ANO DEAN RIESNEA
STORY BY JO HEIMS· OIR!ClEO BY CliNT EASTWOOD ·PRODUCED BV ROBERT DAlEY
A JENNiNGS LANG PRESENTATION· A 1.4AL""S0 CO~PANV PROOVCTION
A UNIVERSAl·MALPASO COMPANY P.ICTURE • TECHNICOLOR" ~"'")'~!-~., «&amp;

Sl'ARTS TODAY!
OCT. 22

lOT~

THIATERI

THE REVEREND SUNSHINE
SPIRITUAL HARMONY BAND!

Nan Eichler
9 p.m.

COLVIN

-

?

7S¢ after 6 p.m.

Kflt tl COLYilt t7J.S441

I

�Blood, Sweat aild Tears: total wipe-out
An excursion to War Memorial
Auditorium is a lways an occasion,
no m 11tter what the reason.
whether it's for a hockey game, a
basketball pme, the circus, a
horse show , the beloved roiJer
derby, or even, as was the case
Fnday night , a concertt, the Aud
lli u magical place. A lot of great
people have passed through the
doors of Buffalo's biggest indoor
stadium. Mick Jagger and Joan
Westo n , Brian Wilson and Ed
Giacomin, Willis Reed , Jimi
Hendrix, and J umbo all at one
time or another greeted Buffalo
from t he floor of the Aud . T he
remodelling job is jUst about
finished, and the place looks
sensational. And what better way
to greet the new season at the
foot of Main street than with
good ol' Blood, Sweat a nd Tears.
I've henrd of starting off on the
wrong foot .. . well , it'' no
wonder the Cavaliers beat the
Braves. All those ternble sounds
take a long time to leave.
The ~rowd wasn't too bi&amp;, but
it sure was strange. A lot of late
twent1es, early thirties ~ouples, all
looking like shJrk1es and hookers.
A lot of llrtle pac ks of

fifteen-yea.t-old girls ("Look, it's
Friday night and there's not hing
else going on ... • ) and t he entire
population of the Three Coins
restaurant, who sponsored the
sho w. The emcee was the maitre
d' from the Coins, and he knew il
was his big night out. He was
running all over the stage.
introducing every act as " The one
you've all been waiting for,"
nailing his arms, telling everybody
to come down and sit on the floor
scots because t here was a lot of
room (guess they didn't do too
well on the real expensive seats).
Some local band that shall
remain nameless started the sho w.
1"11 say nothing about t hem . ..
Let me just say that between each
song they played the theme from
J.C. Superstar, for no apparent
reason. Of course, if there wa.~ a
reason, I might have disliked them
even more. Luckily , they weren't
on long enough to explaan
themselves, that is if they ~ould
anyway.

Ain't no sunshine
Bill Withers was next. lie was
the one that I re.JIIy wanted to
see. I've heard that his alhum i~

really fine (.produced by Booker
the boys), and "Ain't No
Suns hi ne" is a tune to be
recltaned with . BiJI came out and
an nounced that he'd do his big hit
first to get it out of the way. Ten
class pomls right there. The
melody, he informed us, came
frorn his experiences with two
people from Thailand that he'd
met a few years back. So he did it,
and it was great and all {hat, and
t hen Bill settled down for o ne of
the friendlie st, nicest sets
anyone's ever done. Intermingling
long, fascinating stories with his
fine songs, he was a pleasure to
liste1n to and see.
A,fter a long tale about his
Gn•ndmother , he sang
''Grandma's J-lands," a tender,
revealing song about the strength
of kindred l ove . " I 'm Her
Daddy"' a composition about
mistukes that can't be corrected,
was ,at once painful and soothing.
Most of Withers' songs were sad
and dealt with lost loves, though
he says that on his next aJbum,
he'd do some songs " where I get
the g.1rl." H1s s mall backup band
of k.eyboard, bass and drums
provided just the right setting for

T. lllld

his acoustic auitar and vocals, a nd
on t he last tu ne, "Harlem; t hey
aU stretched out a bit to aood
effect. Withers bas been
perfor m ina for only a few
months, and it's actually to his
adva.ntage tha he hasn't played
before audiences too much,
because he doesn't get caught up
in being a " performer", though
his act is solid and strictly
professional. He just gets out
there as himself, an artist, and
gives you a lot of himself in a very
short time.
Muscles galore
It certainly seemed ridiculous
to wait around to see B, S &amp; T
after Withers, but . business is
business you know . The pied
pipers of the rock jazz age
trounced o nto the stage like a
group of pall bearers, and...iAdeed
they are. Their music is deader
live than on record . Hard to
believe but true . David
Clayton-Thomas, the Charles
Atlas School of Lead Singers lead
singer, came on with his gu1tar so
that he could wow everybody
with his three licks on "Go Down

Gambler", o r whatever it's called
The drummin&amp; wu off, the ho~
p arts were slo p py, a regular
d ynamite performance.
Next was "You've Made Me So
Very Ha ppy," that c lassic song
with the classic line "You know
you showed me that/ Iovin' you
was where it's at." It kept getting
slower and slower, and cute little
Stevie Katz looked like he was
nodding out. Fiedler just lUnd of
ignored everyone els·e and played
into his amp. The next tune was
an uptempo number (Hah!) with a
long, boring t rombone solo. The
o nly excitement was Katz pickingJ
up some maracas (love those
maracas). I think he thought he
was back with the Blues Project
and they were doing "Cheryl 's
Going Home." I know he wishe~
he were back there.
I was hoping Katz would s10g
before f had to split, but my
friends insisted on dragging me
away afler a half hour of insp1ring
fun and amusement. I was really
have a good time, too. Comedy
bands are hard to find .
- Billy Airman

Aero Dnve-1n - Let's Scare Jess1ca to De.th/RoUNnary's Baby
Amherst - Jennifer on my Mind
Bac:tcstage - Love Me L ike I Dotrhe Calico OuHn
Bailey - Summttr of '42
Boulevard Conema I - Two A Perlny
Boulevard Conema II - Johnny Got His Gun
Broadway Drove· In - The O~nization/Support Your L~l Sheriff
Buffalo Driv•tn - Willerd/Houu th•t DriPP«J Bloodffhe BodY BtMtJath
Capro Art - lc«:Jox/Conventton
Center MISty For Me
Colvm - P•int Your Wilgon/rhe Odd Couple
Downtown Cinema - Jennifer On My Mind
Fine Art - The Ht»tfl{lflffhe Fuzzz
Genesee - Fnmcesca's Whirlpoo/Ntmus CurtiS All
Granada - Togethtlr
Holiday I - Fmlflds
Holiday I I - Skm G11me
1·290 Drove-In - Who Is H11rry Ke/lermtM/Cat '0 NIM Tails
lancaster - The Lovtl Mechinll
Loew's Buffalo - The OrgtJnlr•tlon
Loew 's Teck - Tht1Amt1zing Trampltlnt/Cry Uncle
lovejoy - E~eape From The Planet Of The Aptn
North Park - Fifm Festival: Goldtln Er• of Movitill
Palace - The Love MIIChine
Park Drove-In ~ Who Is Harry KellermtM/Cat '0 Nin~ Teils
Penthouse - High Yellow
Plaza North - Kotch
Sene..;. Mall Cinema - Two A Penny
Sherodan I Drove-In - Ch11m Gllng WomMffhtt Virgin SolditN'S
Shendan I I Drive-In - Lir's Scarf/ Jesstca to D•th/Rosttmary's Baby
Star Drove· In - Let's Scarf/ JtiSstca to ONth/ Rosttmtlry't Baby
Towne - Summt~r of '42
Trans.t - Kama Surra
W8$t Twon Drove-In - G,l on a Chem Gang/Cham Gang Women
Wherle Drove-In · Who 1S Harry Kel/ermiHI/Cat '0 NiM Talis

,.Y

KLE INHANS MUSIC HALL
SUNDAY, OCTOBER J ist, 8:00p.m.

Strohs...From one beer lover to antother.
THE '1'ltOH lllf11'£lt)'(;()H1'.ANY l&gt;t:11101T: NJOIICA:\ 11"1\

KRIS
KRISTOFFERSON
Admission Orch. $[00, $5 .00-Balc. $5.00,$4.00
Tickets Availitble at Norton Union Ticket Office.

}

�Mr. Goodbar a fun
place to sip and sup
There are really only two
reasons people inhabit bars. One is
obviously to drink , with the bo pe
of getting drunk. The second is
for meeting people, with the hope
o f picking someone up. Field
o b s erver s I n behavi o ral
psychology could really have fun
if they hung out at bars. There are
so many games o f all sorts that go
on between 10 p.m . 3 a.m. that
it 's hard to keep your eyes on any
one incident for long.
With the unfortunate demise of
most small clubs in Buffalo, the
bar scene rose to new heights this
past summer and the boom is still
on. Elmwood Avenue o n the West
Side of town ha s become
Buffalo's "Boou Belt." Bar upon
bar line the street , and each one
seems to have its own p;lrticulor
clientele. Crowds shuttle fro m one
to another, looking for the one
where they'll feel they belona.
And the o ne where a lo t o f folks
feel they belong IS Mmer Goudbar
at Elmwood and Forest
Hobby and Joey
Mister Goodbar LS pres1ded
over by Bobby and Joey Ahotta,
who've had plenty of experience
in running bars. For years ,
Aliotta 's was o ne of the finest
clubs for hve mu'iic. But Hertel
Ave. fell on hard limes, and so the
live sounds are gone forever from
Hertel and Virg1l. The big sound
systems have taken over the h.trs,
and Goodbar has one o f the better
ones. Of course, what goe~ over
the system is pretty important

'

too. There's a couple of good
tapes that usually get played.
featuring the Stones mainly . The
Stones do great bar music. The
Stones do great music anywhere
and anytime, but especially at the
bar. The J . Geils Band has
recently placed a few hits on the
topes, and, if you're a regular,
you'U get to hear " Waterloo
Sunset" every once in awhile.

Geography lesson
Careful study of the ''Goodbar
Cruise Syndrome" reveals six
different geographical areas to
hang out. Coming through the
front door. one turns to the right
to find the musician's comer,
right near the phone that 's right
®der the speaker. Why the phone
is right under the speaker IS an
interesting question. The answer's
probably even more interestmg.
Anyway, a lot o f the local band
members hang out in that corner .
maybe because there's a big
window there.
Then there's the glonous bar
a r ea . The seats are usuJIIy
occupied by the girlfriends of the
bartenders, so that they ..:an he
near their honeys and catch any
stray dnnks that might come the1r
way . In ex p erienced c rui ~crs
sometimes try to hang out by the
bar, but most ot the g1rls up there
are t:Jkcn . A lot of fights begin at
the bar,
Continuing down the fa r side ,
we turn to the kitchen area . where
Goodbar people can catch a &lt;;leak
sub or some french fries. The food
is really good. but it's hard to get
over to the food bar usually .
Sundays are good days to eat at
Goodbar. The place is ~uiet then,
and you can actually see across
the whole bar if you're so inclined

- A IIotta

Gootlht1r ga11g

week.

(or reclined). Peanuts don't count
in a d1~cUSS1on of Goodbar food,
becau~e they' re the drinker's food
staple (nice h1g batch for a quarter
a lihot)
The bathroom area has a lot ol
clos~ . There arc pictures on the
doorR. but 11 's no t that easy to tell
wh1ch 1s for guys and which is for
girl&lt;~ Of co ur~e. no one minds
when th~e·s a n11x-up. You'd be
surprised how many interesting
people yoll can meet in johns ,
especially ut'tcr you've had a few .
Cruising for love
Now we move to t he two most
im portant and rno't populated
areas of the bar. The big area in
the middle 1S for cruising and
dancing. Most Goodbar transients
hang out 10 the middle, trying to
figure out what • they're doing

FRID A Y, OCTOBER 22

\

The happy-go..fucky png from Mister Goodbar,
they're the on• that serve the dri nks, cl • r the
tables, check the proof and generally keep everyone
loose enough to have a good tim e seven n ights a

TONITE!

there anyway. They stand aroun~
looking lost. move around a few
feet every fifteen m1nutes, try to
put some moves on somebody and
either succeed (wHI the y never
Jearn?) or spht.
The hac~ .trca has been saved
for last. hcca usc th1s IS where the
heart and spirit of Goodbar lies.
The regulars hanl! out in th~ ha c~ ,
away from I he mad flow of lonely
sou I s up front Goodl:lur I'&gt;
probably Buffall''" f1rst existentwl
bar. You don't go to a har tQ meet
anyone, hecause that' II unly ltCt
you in some kind of trouble. You
go to meet your friends , hang ou t ,
drink and hear ~ome tunes ewer a
nice big stereo. P1ckups are only a
last resort. (The last few sentences
could probably be regarded as the
Goodbar Regula rs' "Stat!ment of
Purpose.")
The h'it of regulars IS quJte
lengthy, and tho ugh I'd hke to
mention everyone, " T1me Won 't
Let Me," as the Outs1ders once

THE RASCALS

)

presents

II I11

( 1,
I

,..--------FRIDAY - - - - - - - -

Tidcets on sale at: U.B. Norton H1ll, State Collttte oHice,
CANISIUS COLLEGE Student Centtt', Buffalo Festival
Office at Statler Hilton Hotel, end Kleinhana Mulic hall
Tlcke1 oHice -open at 7 p.m.

.. " AN OVERGROUND SEX-PROTEST FILM!'"
" AN IMPERTINENT,
DELICIOUS UTILE SATIRE.

TICKETS $5.60, 4.60, 4 .00

Gre~~~~g~·

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3rd, 8 :00 p.m.

MELANIE

,d'llllj
\
1

WITH

I

A

JANEY' &amp; DENNIS

.
\\bodshed r

Your boss. Your
mother· in-law. Your best
fri&lt;'nd . Yourself. And you'll
get everything you dcsc&gt;rve:
fantastic dlickrn win~ll and
tangy aaucc, 50&lt;' 11pirits
fTom 3 P.M. on. free
peanuts to shuc:k, giant size&gt;
sandwiches in a h:tskct.
lt'Rstrictly come ·as.you-ar&lt;'
to The Woodshed, where
th&lt;' ki~hen's always open
and the music's alway11 on
Tht&gt; Woodshed. Lot·ated
right next to the Packet Inn
in North Tonawanda. Drive
out Delaware or take the
Youngmann. TheWoodshed's
just over the Delaware
Avenue Bridge. Open from
11:30 A.M. every day
except Sunday.

:

I
I·.
I
:

Admission: Orch. $6.00, $5.00, - Bale. $5 .00, $4.00
Tickets Availablt at Norton Union Ticket Office

..

..

..

..

UBSCC ORGANI ZE RS OF THE
SUN DAY DR IVERS RALLY

presents
- THE MINI MONTE CA RLO A UTOCROSS SUN DAY , OCTOBER 24,9 :30 a.m.
at
TWO GUYS

Niagara Falls Blvd . &amp; Sheridan Dr.

For information call Paul at 883-1324

m

SIGM A Ill ll(l(A5 [

llo COI.OII

SAT. &amp; SUN.

"ONE OF THE
I'UNNIEST,

I

Sendbn
to the

- 811/y Airman

T H E UUAB* FINt: ARTS FILM COMMITTEE

added attraction BUZZY LINHART
KlEI NHANS M USIC HAll B:30 p.m.

/1 I ·,

lk!id . We'll try and cover most of
them somehow or other. There's
the back tables crowd, who are
used to tables because they play a
lot of card games. There's the
Goodbar dance troupe, who on
\paciow. nights take over the
m1ddle. There's one guy that
spends the whole evening doing
M1ck Jagger duck walks . The two
little blonds that shuttle between
the pillars and the juke box. The
auto mechanks class heads can
often he found silting on· each
other's laps trying to stir up
tro uble, and the cute Goodbar
guys hang all over the cute
Goodbar girls all over the place.
I could go o n and on , but if
you're still not convinced that
Goodbar's truly an existential bar,
answer me this : Why did they go
to all the trouble o f getting a juke
box 1f they never use it? Power to
the boo1ers .

.1

I
I
I

HIPPEST,

MOST
AUDACIOUS
AIIEIUCAN
COMEDIES

OFTBE

TEARt"
- Joseph Oelmla,
Newsd•y

••

••

:

i ........................................J

-~.,.,.,

A08ERT DE NR&gt; ct """"" JE~R SALT GERRIT a\AHAM - AUrH AU)• &lt;~U.EH r..uorao
SU....... O!- 0£ PAIW. - . .. .., ., &lt;ON ~O!OWILI S HAOCH...,_O!PN.Mio
,.._,.CHARlES HIRSOi OotOriiO!IRAN DE PALMA AIO{$ll110FlMSI'IIIIru:IION

COLM

ASIGMAIM D RELEASE

CONFERENCE THEATRE

IR I---:-=.G.. -- -~-I

Tickets SO¢ before 6 p.m.
Tickets on sale at Norton Ticket Office

�. .. '
Bergman's 'The Touch'

'R ECORDS

Obscure film of insecurity

Tucky Buz'liJrd (Capitol ST-787)
Tucky Buzzard just might be the band to t1ke over when the
Stones disband (not that that could ever really happen) simply because
t hey are a synt hesis of separate Stones' taJents.
I n the movie Performance, Jagger did a song which hasn't appeared
anywhere except on the film's soundtrack. T he song, "Memo to
Turner," is a raunch-out rumbler from beginning to end . Ry Cooder's
on it, as well as a back-up group which isn't the Stones. Under the
tutelage of DiU Wyman, the siJeot man in t he Stones cosmos, this
back-up band has emerged as a separate entity. They call themselves
Tucky Buzzard and what they play is sjmply rock and roll.
Wyman produced the album and Mick Taylor plays on the album,
ana- the new Stones' sound influence is felt even heavier by the fact
that Bobby Kexs. the mainstay of Sticky Fingers, is also on the album.
This definitely sets up a situa tion for synthesis. What would the Stones
like to do if they weren't the public inta&amp;e of the Stones. What do the
Stones think like when they are
not forced to publically think like
Stones? Do· thty think Tu&lt;:ky
Buzzards?
Anyway, the roc k &amp; roU
power of this group comes in the
fact that they aren't the Stones.
\ They create out of a union of
concepts with Mick and Bill and
Bobby. a force which is entirely
their own. They have a unique
sound which they create by
themselves using other people for
their own purposes. They even
manage to transcend their own
producer. Which brings up another poi nt.

\

The bass player in a rock &amp; roiJ group is usuaJiy the silent,
intellectual type. Wymll4l for the Stones, Entwhistle for the Who, Duck
Dunn for the world, etc. So why riot let the bass player become the
producer. Entwhistle produced his latest album, Smash Your Head
Against the Wall , with as much abandon and audacity as his bass
playing. Wyman produces in the same way. Nothing gaudy, but you
know that it's there and you know its smooth and suburban. So what
will happen when Duck Dunn produces the next Stooges album?
Tucky Buzzard is a hard working set o f souls. They have a
direction, they have a purpose, and t-hat is simply rock &amp; ro ll.
Aside from musical uniqueness, they present very strong lyrical
position . It would do the listener an injustice to print out the lyrics
here, for their beauty lies in the fact lhat you only notice after two or
three listenings that not only do you like the music, but you also like
the songs themselves. Sort of like an unsophisticated Kinks trip.
'The only things I can say are that for me the .best good·time songs
o n the album are "Ace the Face, •· and "Stainless Steel Lady ." They
also do a sublime version of Leon Russell's "Pisces' Apple Lady."
What more can I say than that they are true rock and rollers in the
tl'ue rock &amp; roll tradition, and if you don't know what that is, then you
have no business reading this.

8 BIG PROGRAMII

1

Janel'ow•ll

Wed.· Sat.
OCTOBER
20. 23

Sp enc ~r

Truy, Clark C•bl•, J.. ntlte M•rOonald

SAN FRANCISCO

Sun. · lues
OCTOBER
24. 26

3

HOwAod k11~t

SEVEN BRIDES FOR SEVEN BROTHERS

Wed. · Sat.
OCTOBER
27. 30
Sun. • Tues.
OCT. 31
thru
NOV. 2

THE MARX BltOTHERS

A NIGHT AT THE OPERA
THE BIG STORE
Co~ ! a

C.MOO

H &lt;k ( ,ol bl'ol

QUEEN CHRISTINA
t.u•ra L.ubo

Mt•hln OUUJ.!.I •J&lt;.

AS YOU DESIRE ME
8&lt;'" P•oure ol 195 1

Gen•• KPII~ Ln llf• L••m1

AN AMERICAN IN PARIS

cmo~

by Elllot Krieser
Spectrum Film Critic

No surprise ttiat Scandanuvia
cold,
dmpersonal , private, Europe's Left Hand and Land of
the Midnight Sun - should also be the Land of the
Domes tic Drama . The two superstars of
Scandanavian literature - Ibsen aQd Strindberg examined the woes of domesticity through their
marked ly different dramatists' lenses nearly a
cen~ury ago. Since then, nearly all dramatists, at •
least in Sweden, have felt themselves to be working
pra ctica lly under the aegis o f t heir great
predecessors, for Sweden is a country so conscious
of its future that it is wise enough to look to its past
for guidance.
Most young Swedish writers, considering
themselves "Strindbergian ," will pick up, naturally,
the most accesSible elements of his style . - the
fantasy, the macabre, the quest obsessions, the
elusive but objectified symbols. The more m ature
writers will realize that what they sough t from
Strindberg lay at the center o f h is method. It is his
concerns
dome.~tic interaction and privacy - and
not his methods, often outrageous, of displaying
these concerns, which link the contempo rary
Swedish writer with his "ancestor."
Tradition-conscious
Jngmar Bergman Is, of course, conscious of his
place within this tradition
witness his recent
direction of Hedda Gobbler (In English) and of the
Dream P/uy . When Bergman is considered from the
traditional perspective, many of the problems of The
Touch may begin to dear away, for even Bergman's
admirers will have trouble in otherwise !!CCeptiPg tttis
movie. I imagine that The Touch will be called an
a llego ri cal film
the problems of human
inter-relation in a foreign language (here, EngJJsh)
being analogous to ihe impossibilily o( prayer in a
temporal landscape (an interpretation tempting even
as J write it down, linking, as it does, The Touch
with Bergman's The Silence trilogy, but which I
write o ff as "clever").
I have already heard The Touch called
Bergman's " most obscure film," that it contained
ghosts and many scenes perceived totally
subjectively, through the eye of the protagonist. And
yet. despite o ur all-too-ready acceptance of Bergman
the illusionist and magiclan, the Strindbergian
expressionist, we should notice from his more recent
works - The Pa11ion , Reurvotions (or, The Lie), and
now The Touch - that he is more of a realist than
we'd ever expected, and we should learn that The
Touch will only wo rk when viewed as part of the
Scandinavian traditio n to which it belongs - the
domestic drama, the bourgeoise "tragedy" in which
no one dies and everyone ends up more o r less as
they were when they began, a lot the wo rse for wear
The cnst
It is in watching the people wear down that The
Toru·ll ts chi llingly accura te, a frightening
psychological documentary .· Bergman has always
been a master at two things, one of which is wo rk ing
with actors. Wisely. perhaps influenced by his recent
work in the the:Jter. Bergman has made acting the
crux of The Touch. Elliott Gould ( David) is
~urprisingly
good as an insecure American
archeologist, unsure of his desires, not always able to
find the proper words, not sure that when he does he
will be understood . Max Von Sydow (Andreas) is of
course excellent as the good husband/idealist doctor,
roles and traits which tend to merge and cut him off
from the possihility nf knowing his wife. sav1ng his
marriage. Bihi Anderson ( Karin) is brilhant , a woman
delighh:d that she can be wild and sexy , torn
between what she thinks to be love and what she
thinks to be duty

COlOR

MON ., NOV.l
MEMORIAl
AUDITORIUM
8 :00p.m.
Roben

FRI., NOV. 4
KlEINHANS
MUSIC HAll
8 :30p.m .

r • vlor

CAMILLE
Creta C•rho

Clark Gobi •

SUSAN lEXOX.: HER RISE &amp; FAll

WED., NOV. 10
MEMORIAl
AUDITORIUM
8 :00p.m.

A STORY
STUDENTS
)\ll TIMES ~~~~~~~~~~~ NOW
WITH 1.0.

c...aos

North Park

SHOWING I

know quite a lot about him . Our picture of their
world is made up of such fragments - not what we
are "presented,'' be what we notice.

Fateful flaws
There is a lot to be noticed, enough brilliant
tiny details that we can almost forget some of the
terrible mistakes which come close to irreparably
marring The Touch. I enumerate: I) Having The
Touch entirely in En&amp;lish often gives us lbe feelin&amp;
that Karin and Andreas are in a foreign country.
Much better would have been to have only scenes
including Elliott Gould done in English, the others
sub-titled Swedish . 2) The Madonna and Child statue
which David came to Sweden to study and which is
being destroyed by ancient termites is a symbol so
awkward and opportunistic that I can hear Ibsen
scoff. 3) Jn an essentially straightforward film , the
scene immediately following Karin's return from
London is hopelessly obscure, non-functionally
ambiguous. 4) Jan Johanssen's music varies from
Doris Day's version of cheery to Love Story's version
of classical. Constantly inappropriate. And 5) for
some irrelevant picture-postcard scenes behind the
credits, The Touch proves no exception.
Thus. the faults of The Toucli are primarily
cinematic, not at all dramatic, which accounts for
my confused reaction to the film. That is to say,
when examined as a film (above paragraph), it falls
apart; when examined in minute detail (above that)
it works brilliantly. It is, finally , a ftlm that matures
with reflection
we forget the flaws, and the
dramatic content remains. I can't decide whether
The Touch seems lil&lt;e an excellent play poorly
filml!d, or like a poor play well filmed . Of course , it
is neither : a nd because o f that, it is a little b1t of
both

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present FOUR BIG CONCERTS

Wed. · Sat.
NOVEMBER
3. 6 .

Creta C a rbo

Bergman has also always been a master a t
judicious selection of detaiL He is so still, tiny
fragments tell us more about the themes of The
Touch than explanations ever could. Hundreds come
to mind at once - the dog which no one ever
touches or speaks to, the movie screen for which
"there ought to be a place" are big clues as to the
nature of Karin's married life. When David claims to
be "stoned" on sleeping pills and we see him
surrounded by beer bottles and coffee cups, we

.JETHRO

TULL

Front Floor Golds &amp; REds $6.00 Rear Floor &amp; Blues $5 .00
Greys &amp; Oranges $4.00

ROD McKUEN
DONOVAN
MAIN FlOOR $6.00 - $5.00 BALCONY $5.00 - 4.00

Front Floor Golds &amp; REd s $S.SO Rear Floor &amp; Blues $4.50
Greys &amp; Oranges $4.00

Tickets on sale now at Buffalo Festival Ticket Office, Sutler Hilton lobby (mall orders accepted wtthstamped Hlf·
addressed envelope); u.e. Norton Hall; State College Ticket Office; Tickets Haeberle Piau, Niagara F•lls.

&lt;

�Baroque authenticity

..

f

RECORDS

Recital an intimate alf'air

Rimdy Newmll11jLive (R eprise RS64S9)

Warmth, depth of tone and fluidi ty of style
(musical intent) were the keynotes of the Concentus
Musicus' performance Wednesday evening at B(lird
HaU . Feelings like these were the product of Baroque
instrumental autllenticity and superb musical skill.

The height of the evening.was reached with the
Brandenburg No. 5. This piece is quite a test of the
harpsichordist's ability and either proves or disproves
his ability( It is listed as the earliest known work
including concertante harpsicllord. !t is also an
Using actual 17th and 18th century instruments excellent piece with which one can compaxe the
(with the exceptions of an oboe and harpsichord ,) quality of a modern flute and the non-mechanical
the Viennese Concentus Musicus interpreted four wooden traverse flute . The modem flute produces a
pieces - Suite No. 1 in C Major, Trio Sonata in G much shallower, lighte r tone coloring. The older
Major, Violin Concerto in E Major and the , instrument creates intense depth
,, and watmth. The
Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 in D Major. AJl by same may be said of the present day violin in
Bach and performed as they were originaUy meant to comparison to the gut-stringed 17th and 18 th
century instruments,...:r.fle older instrument definitely
be performed .
produces a tonal quality more expressive of Baroque
music. Technical improvement on the instruments
Performance note
has o ften served them badly by fouling their
A great deal of importance was placed on the aesthetic interpretive ability.
superiority and suitability of these 17th and 18 th
century instruments to perform the pieces with the
Warmth and depth
musical Intent of the composer as their critical
reference point. T he true form and character of this
One retains a rather unique feeling of warmth
type of music is unveiled only w)len brought forth and comfort due to the lack of strain and the
through the original medium. The tones of the 17th exceptional tonal quality produced by the rare
century traverse flute are much softer, more talents of both instrument and musician. This affects
tranquil , darker and fuller than those of the a rendition of Bach in a way that leaves me with an
present-day flut e.
expanded perception or a type of music which is
often referred to as restrictive and even stilted by the
Played as it was, and should be, but generally
narrow-minded.
isn't, (one half tone lower), the music seemed at
times a bit strange to ears accustomed to a standard
One must make additional comment on the
piano scale; at times even sounding dissonant. The clarity and apparent ease with which Mr. Tachezi
general pace was also quicker than usually heard in performed the runs and rolls in the first movement
the Baird Recital Hall. The hall is small and the of this piece. This performance serves to
acoustics can support a lively pace without demonstrate all of Bach's inventiveness and gave
distortion or loss of clarity . In a larger hall the same adequate exposure to the concerto's hidden intimate
pace might affect the merge of individual tones. This qualities.
adjustment was made by the performers _to sustain
Andreas
mood without losing tonal clarity.

HO COU,ON U O UIUO

PRICE ROLL
BACK

DINNEft FOR 2
!ADUlTS)
0~ l8 DISHES
~" '' • "''•• u ot r•oulor pti(;• S.(ttnd

CMOICil

'".,. . coth yov only lc. ltet•r.,ot•on•

•'••ntiat.

4 P.M.·6:30 P.M. DAILY
3 P.M.-6:00P.M. SUNDAY
Wo oro NOT dropplno ovr cwollty
otar\dotd - only tho prico bo..ct on
hi9hM volume. W • orfncl our own
"""'l bGh our own oroonlc btooclr
u•• poill&gt;n·frM oround bHf crnd off or
tobt.clot" '"''''" ·

BLACKSMITH SHOP

Tile NOIIw•l '•'"' Stoo' Ho~ ..

1111 DtiiWI,.

To put it quite simply, Randy Newman is the best pop songwriter
around . Though few people are familiar with Randy Newman , just
about everyone has heard a Newman composition at' some time or
other. ' Mama Told Me Not To Come" was a Three Dog Night mo nster
hit , copied note for note from Newman's version . Judy Collins
butchered " I Think It's Gonna Rain Today ," and everyone from Long
John Baldry to Sam the Sham has tried their hand at "Let's Bum Down
the Cornfield, ' with little success.
Randy Newman's performance of his own songs are another story,
as evidenced on Rand Newman/Live. Possessing an incredibly sensitive
voice and often exhibiting Fats Dofnino influences in both vocal style
and piano playing, Newman is an amazing performer. Having written
almost all the songs he sings, Newman as any singer~ongwriter usually
is, is intimately involved with the material; after aJI, he's expressing his
own feelings in each song.
What separates Newman from
almbst any othe.r writer Is his
ability to create ch~t~ cters in his
songs. In " Mama Told Me," he is
the naive young party-goer,
confronted with "so many thing I
ain't never seen before." Jn "Davy
the Fat Boy," be st eps into the
shoes of the friend that must take
care of the bumbling Davy becase
"I was a comfort to his mother, a
joy to his pa," an4 before they
passed away they asked him to
" lake care of our Davy, you may
be the only friend he'll have." The
way that the character takes care of Davy is by having him dance in
front of a carnival crow.d . ''Can you guess what he weighs foks, won't
you guess what he weigh?"
There's a deeply moving, yet almost hysterically funny tone to a
lot of Newman's songs, "Tickle Me", is about two people at home with
nothing to do. so " why don't you tickle me?" The TV tube is busted
and the radio plays "nothing but news." After the laughter dies down,
you can hear him sing " I won't have to talk to you and you won't have
to talk to me." Not quite so funny anymore. Newman is able to laugh
· at his plight , at our plight , in this messed up world .
His love songs, on the other hand , are so sad and lovely that silence
usually follows before the mood is broken by applause. " Living
Without You' has some incredibly lonely images. "The milk truck
hauls the sun up/the paper hits the door/the subway shakes my floor
and l think about you. Time to face the dawn and gray/of another
lonely day/Baby, it's so hard living without you." The pain in his voice
when he says " Baby" is impossible to avoid.
Randy's funny side, when he is being intentionally funny for
funny's sake . is as brilliant as his serious side. "Maybe I' m Doing it
Wrong" has lines like "sometimes I throw off a good one , . . at least I
think it is." ''Lonely at the To p" is abou t Randy's troubles in being a
superstar. Irony plays a big role in Newman 's writing. and in this one
the line " l-;o ahead and love me. I don't care" really send ~ the song into
hilarity .
Along wtth Loudon Wainwright . .•·•d Ray Davies. Newman is
'' ''' 'ng th e,,,, •· •I ,,fth . horn! "rtl'l "' ' •l..tng with boring subjects to
l" rl'tll l' ,.1 ,,,,t l
~ •. , of 11t,· 11 ···";.' run under two minutes. The
lungest ,, ~ 41 : 111 ,.,
" ng ,, so .:h.tr!;l!d with emotion . each line so
packed wtth ptl.'l iM~. H tct~ ive images, tiiJt they ~;ouldn 't possibly be
longer.
The (;rowd ts tiny, as to be expected . hut there's a unique intimacy
because o f thts . R;Jtldy ~uunds like h e'~ playing for his friends. And
anyone whn hears Randy Newman play comes out of the experience
feeling he' s been made a fnend .
Randy NewmanfUve originally was circulated only to radio
statio ns and reviewers, since he's been a highly unmarketable artist. But
the critical response was so great in favor of the record that Reprise
decided to print up a lot of copies and try and sell them . The sales are
slo wly rising. and maybe one day Randy really will be "Lonely at the
Top.'' Though that'R highly doubtful. But the word is slowly getting
out. True genius is hard to keep down .

118-9211

- Billy Altman

filii Perkl"• Atlo,.tlc Steri.,.

GENESEE
THEATER
1600 GENESEE STREET (4 blocks West of Bailey)
Henry Novak
presents

''The Noto'rious
Concubines"

NOW
SHOWING I

(A love affair from'one of the
best classic eroticisms)
A 1,000 year old Ribald Classic
Banned for many years.
PLUS
· Co-features- All in ColorADMISSION - $1.50 with this ad.
Starts Thursday, October 21 for 1 week
SHOWTIME OAIL Y 1 - 12 p.m.
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY 2 - 12 p.m.

800 acres of the flnest
TRAIL RIDING IN N.Y. STATE
Open 7 days • week

632-4112

532-411Z

~II.! llll.l

o€.~..

�_,

YOU SEE, JOHN I All THE' GRfAT BLU
MEN Hf:RE HAVE: THEIR 0\JN BAR,
FULL Of EVIL \JOMEN AND
\JHISKEY, AND THEIR 0\JN
5T£[L PLANT. . THIS IS SO
THEY CAN \JORK \N THE
ST[fl PLANT ALL DAYI
AND THEN GIV£ THEIR
MONEY TO T~E EVIL
'JOM[N I (\JJ.lO \Jl LL
THEN BrTRAY TII~M

SO lHEV C.AN DRlN
AND PLAY THE
BLUES All NIGHT•

.... .

�..

�,.

Introduction ·
more areas, because of the limited aspect of Sub-Board I, Inc,, please
liability· that is off~re·d to them. feel free to contact any member of
Development Plan as prepared for Sub-Board can do things that the Sub-Board I, or Mark Borenstein,
Sub-Board I, Inc. by Drayton S. stl;ldent governments CJli;l 't, simply Business Manager of Sub-Board I.
.Bryant Associates; a Philadelphia. because the student governments The offices of Sub-Board are
are not incorpor.a ted entities. We located at 216 Norton Hall (though
planning and consulting firm:
Sub-Board~ conulussion~d this need your help, your advice, and they are still building them) and the
phone number is 831-5502.
consultant group ·to provide a your patience.
The members of the corporation
comprehensive view of the
Sub-Board was created by the six
potentials of Poverty Hill. The student governments to assist .them are:
Paul Cumming - Graduate
Board felt that only through the in the discharge of their
advice of experts could a truly responsibilities to · you. Future Student Association (Chairman of
complete picture of Poverty Hill be projects, and in fact, the future Sub-Board I)
Jack Bunting - Millard Fillmore
' - - direction of Sub-Board remain in
assembled.
The whole history of your hands, through your student College Student Association
Sub-Board's involvement in Pov~rty governments. Let them know what (Vice-Chairman/Secretary of
Hill is unique in that it is the first you want.
Sub-Board I)
time in New York State, a student
Scott Slesinger - Student
Copies of the full Poverty Hill
corporation is serious about ·Development Plan are available .for Association (Treasurer of
purchasing land for recreational and your review in the Reserve Room Sub-Board I)
educational development . . The
other unique aspect of the situation
at Sub-Board I, Inc. was the
first student corporation in New
York's history. (There are several
"Sub-Board was created by the six student governments to
now, following Sub-Board's lead.)
assist them in th~ discharge of their responsibilities to you.
Because of this, Sub-Board has no
Future projects, and in fact, the future direction of r
precedents to follow, no previous
Sub-Board I remain in your hands through your student
experience to depend on, and, in
governments. Let them know what you want."
fact, nothing but the present to
base actions on. No doubt
Sub-Board will make mistakes, and
will ·make people angry. We only
hope that you will recognize these
.mistakes and errors as growing of Harriman Library. (All 140
David Barmak
Student
pains and, rather than criticize, pages.) Additionally, the writers of Association
offer ·us suggestions to try and the Plan, and Sub-Board members
Michael ~icolau - · Graduate
.prevent the errors from occuring will be available to discuss your Student Association
'
again.
questions and suggestions at large
· Ian C. DeWaal , Student
The final committment to the and small group discussions to be Association
project is for the student body to held prior to November 4 and 5.
Lest~ Goldstein Student
decide.
Tentatively schedules for those Association
Poverty Hill is just one idea that days are the udent government
Frank Schubauer - Millard
Sub-Board felt was good enough to referenda that will basically ask you Fillmore College Student
'
warrant initial finaacial investment. if you thihk Sub-Board should Association
There are more things that we are precede to buy Poverty Hill. The
'Andre Raszynski - . Medical
working orl; there are many that we fmal text of the referenda and the School Polity
haven't even thought about. The times the polls will be open will be
Salvatore Graziano - Dental
corporation laws of this state, while announced sometime next week.
School Polity
being · restrictive in some senses,
If yoq have any questions at all
John Samuelson - Student Bar
allow corporations to experiment in concerning Poverty Hill or any Association

This insert contains a condensed
version of the Poverty Hill

I

I

.

Watch for the &amp;lJ Ba.rd I AntUJI RepOrt i1 f\bventJer ·

�Part I - History and Environment
Poverty Hill is part of the
foothills of the Appalachian
Mountains, and has a maximum
elevation of 2321 feet above se"level, making it one of the higheSt
points in Cattaraugus County. The
, Poverty Hill property which
the hill I has
includes the summit of
.
a total size of 1150 acres or 1.8
square miles. Approximately 75%
of the property is wooded and the
terrain is generally hilly 'with some
flat meadow area.
The 1150-acre Poverty Hill
property is located 45 miles soutli
of Buffalo just off U .S. 219, 2.5
miles north of Ellicottville. The
property was assembled between
196'1 and 1963 by the Poverty Hill
Develpment Corporation for the
purpose of developing a year·round
recreation operation . The
corporation constructed three
buildings on the property to
support a skiing development which
operated during the winter of
1963-64. Reportedly, due to poor
management, undercapitalization
and the general dissatisfaction of
the stockholders, the corporation
declared bankruptcy in 1964. The
present owners of the property
Messer. Leo Bachner and David
Dattner acquired title during the
bankrupcy proceedings and except
for some logging, the property has
been unused since 1964.
There are two small ponds and
four biuldings on the property. One
of the buildings, a small cottage,
was on the property when it was
purchased by the Poverty Hill
Development Corporation. The
other buildings were built to
support the skiing operation. The
largest of these buildings is a lodge
which was built at ·the base of the
part. of the hill on which seven
narrow ski slopes were cut. The
other two buildings were designed
to function as a ski shop and a
support building for the ski lift
facilities. All of the structures

except the support building are in
good condition considering the
period during which they have been
idle. The support building was

for the option were concluded on
April 22, 1971 and the purchase
price of the property was set at
$176,000 from which the option
price of $10,000 would be ·
extensively damaged by a storm.
In 1969 the members of deducted. The expiration date of
Sub-Board I became interested in the option is December 20, 1971
Poverty Hill as a means of and the owner is to be notified by
expanding the educational and Novemebr 20, 1971 if Sub-Board
recreational opportunities of intends to purchase the property~
SUNYAB, and they condu.c ted
As part of the option agreement
various investigations of the the Student Body of SUNYAB
property during 1969-70. After obtained the right to use the
lengthy consideration, the members proprety until the expiration of the
of Sub-Board voted. in early 1971 option. On June 7 the property was
to enter into negoiations for an officially opened for use by the
option on the property. (An option students and except for a period in
is an agreement which establishes August when there were problems
the sal~ price of a property, sets a with insurance, the property has
date for final decision t&gt;n the been in continuous operation.
possible purchase and keeps the According to the user surveys
owner from selling the property to which were conducted by the
someone else during the terms of caretakers from June 7 to August 7
the option.) The purpose of at least 1500 persons used the
negoiating the option was to property, including approximately
determine the sale price of the 900 SUNYAB students. The survey
property and to give the Student figures also indicate that
Body of SUNYAB the opportunity approximately 75% of the users of
to use the property before a f'mal the property were SUNYAB
decision on the possible purchase students and faculty or persons
would be made. The negoiationg accopanied by them:.

�Part . II ~ Proposed Development Plans
construction. However_, due to the
during the summer of 1971.
The suggested d~~elopment of problems associated with the
the property is designed to leave organizatio~ of volunteer labor and
the environment as undistrubed as the effort to pres~nt th~ most
possible. Inten~ve development is realistic picture, only the ·costs of
considered for only 5% of th'e professional construction . are
p r o p e r t y . I n t e r m·e d i a t.e presented here. The costs which are
developments such as camping and presented below are projections
nature areas would account for based upon the best estimates
another 10% of the total land areas. which can be ~made at this time.
Thus, 85% of the property would The possible discrepancy between
be left as it is, except for hiking ·the proJected costs and the actual
costs is felt to be less than 10%.
trails and trail 9amps.
Phase One would cover the
. The proposed development plans
for the property ate divided into pefiod September 1, 1971 to
four phases of varying length. Phase August 31, 1972. Proposed
development during Phase · One
would provide basic facilit.ies for
"Phases One and Two would provide basic faciiities naceuary
the operation of the property at a
for the operation of the property during the spring, summer
level slightly above that of' 1·971. It
and fall for camping, hiking, swimming, fishing, boating and
would consist of camping facilities
field trips ... In addition, the existing lodge on the property
for 240 persons per day, swimming
would be .used for University classes and workshops. The
facilities for '100 persons, hiking
financin·g of these developments would be primarily through
trails connecting to a nature area.
student fees."
The cost projected for these
facilities and minimal roads .and
parking development is $39,220.
confere~ce . center, skiing, lodging, One would consist of the basic level
Phase Two, September 1, 1972
recreation community and farming: of development which is required·
While it is possible that all of these by the Healt·h Department to August 31, 1974, under the
activities and developments · be regulations in order to operate proposed development plan would
carried out, it is not necessary that Poverty Hill at · the 1971 usage consist of camping faci~ities for 340
all of them be undertaken. The volume of more than 250 persons persons, swimming ar~as for 200
persons, the construction. of a
decisions in regard to specific types per day.
of development will be dependent
Phase Two would provide the 12-15 acre lake and the beginning
upon the priorities established by level of development which would of hiking trails. The cost of Phase
the student associations.
be required by an anticipated Two is projected to be $66,920.
The one general guideline for the increase in user volume. This le~el
The developments which have
development of the property would allow more ·than 500 persons been suggested for Phases Three
would be that the property should to use the property per day.
and Four, September 1, 1974 to
be left as undistrubed as. possible.
Phases Three and Four of August 31, 1976 and September 1,
The ideal case would be leaving the development are speculative in 1976 to August 31, 1981, would be
property exactly as it is. 'However, nature · and may be developed to entirely dependent upon .the
in order to allow students to use provide a wide range of educational operation of the property from
the property, a certain level of and recreatio~ opportunities on a 1971 to 1974. These phases could
facilities must be provided. This year-round basis.
include the devel~pment of five
level is determine(ff~ by the
The costs of development which trail camps, a summer camp facility
.Cattaraugu~ County Department of are projected below are based on
for Buffalo area groups, a nature
Health in its administration qf the current costs of professional center for ecology studies and field
State Sanitary Code. The health construction and are adjusted to trips, a skiing and conference center
officials have outlined what level of account for inflation. The use of development, a full-scale farming
facilities must be provided for the volunteer labor could lower operation and a recreation
future operation of Poverty Hill at construction costs by as much as community. The decision to
the volume of usage which existed $20,000 for Phase One and Two develop any or all of the ~bove
During the summer, Sub-Board
directed Drayton Bryant Associates
to prepare a comprehensive plan for'
the property so that the ·Boar~ .
would be prepared in the event that
the property wa5 purchased.
comprehensive plan was subm~tted ·
on September 29. The following
.comments and proposed plans are
derived from that plan.
· The property has the potential to
support the following activities and
developments: camping, hiking,
swimming, boating, field trips and
summer camps, horseback riding, a
nature · center and area, fiShing,

The·

'

d

••

�.

would be made by future student
government bodies.
Phases One and Two would
provide the basic facilities necessary
for the operation of the property
during the spring, summer and fall
for camping, hiking, swimming,
flShing, boating and field trips. In
addition the existing lodge on the
property could be' used for
University classes and workshops.
The financing of these
developments could be primarily
through student fees.
The development of a nature
center which is proposed for Phase
Three could be. included in the
second phase, bit this would
depend upon the availability of
grants and other forms of financial

assistance. This is due to the feeling
that the investment in such a
facility should not be financed
through student fees and that it will
be possible to obtain foundation or
government funds to construct such
a facility.
The developments suggested for
Phases Three and Four represent a
different type of development than
those of Phases One and Two, both
in terms of cost and nature of
development. The possibility · of
developing a skiing and conference
center or a recreation community
has been considered in order to
provide a way in which the entire
operation of Poverty Hill can be
independent of student fees. Such
develpment should not be financed

"The developments suggested for Phases Three and Four
represent a different type of development than those of
Phases One and Two. These developments have been
considered in order to provide a way in which the entire
operation of Poverty Hill can be independent of student
fees .. . in any case, though, the developments suggested for
Phases Three and Four are not necessary in order to make
Poverty Hill a valuable asset."

'

by student fees, but by other means
such as, develpment groups who
lease small protions of the proerty
for these types of develpment; in
which case the funds derived from
the leases could be used to cover
operating costs and land ~quisition
costs. What ever the Jlethod for
financing these types of
development, it would be essential
that student control be maintained.'
In any case the developments
suggested for Phases Three and
Four are not necessary in order to
make Poverty Hill a valuabel asset.
Since Phases Three and Four are
not slated to begin until September,
1974, at the earliest, and since the
developments in these phases are
not necessary to make Poverty Hill
a valuable and useful asset, only the
purchase of the land, and the
developments necessary to , meet
mm1mum health and safety
standards (Phases One and Two)
will be decided upon this year, in
the upcoming referenda. The
developments suggested for Pbales •
Three and Four will be decided
upon by future student
governments and furture student
bodies.

�·Part ·Ill - Finarcing .

.. ..
~

·:.a-: ..

The Proposed development costs acqu.istion and development costs
The financW method which is
over a ten year period, and reliance
presented below is based on the use are as follows:
upon student fees for all of the
Phase One .... .. .... . $39,220
ef 'Students fees; alternatives are
costs.
Phase
Two
..........
$66,920
possible, but not certain. Such
The costs per year would be as
The total cost of the proposed
possibilities would include leasing
of portions of the property for Phase One and Two development follows:
various types of commercial would be $106,140 which could be Mortage payments on l~d $15,000
development as mentioned for
Phases Three and Four or
government and foUJldation
grants.
" Since Phase Three and Four are not slated to begin until
......
The costs of acquiring,
1974 at the eariest, and since the developments in these
developing and operating Poverty
phases are not necessary to make Povery Hill a valuable and
Hill fall inot four categories:
useful asset, only the purchase of the land and those
mortage payments on the land,
developments necessary to meet minimum haelth and safety
operating expenses, development
standards (Phases One and Two) will be decided upon this
costs and downpayment cost. Of
year, in the upcoming referenda. The developments suggested
these costs only the operating
for Phases Three and Four will be decided upon by future
expenses would not be recoverable
student governments and future student bodies."
in the event that the sale of the
property became necessary at some
time in the future.
The annual cost of the mortage payable at the rate of $19,105 per Operating expenses ....... 25,000
Development costs . ~ ...... 19,105
payments on the property are an year on an 8% ten-year loan.
The downpayment on the Downpayment loan . . . . . . . 4,200
average of $15,000 per year.
The operating expenses of the property is $42,000. There is some Total yearly expenses ..... $63,305
Based 'o n a student enrollment of
l).roperty at the levels SUCJ9ested indication that it will be possible to
would be initailly $20,000 per year. obtain an interest-free loan which 20,000 the cost of acquiring,
This figure would probably increase would cover ten years, which would developing and operating Poverty
due to inflation and expansion of make the annual payments $4,200 Hill would be $3.17 per student per
year. If the enrollment reaches
services, so the figure which is used for the downpayment.
here for operating costs is $25,000
The financing plan presented 25,000 the cost would be %2.53
per year.
below is based upon spreading the , per student per year.

�- as prepared by Drayton S. Br}rant Associates for Sub-Board I, Inc.

Poverty Hill Fact Sheet 1\b. 1

-at a g~ance
l

Location

Land Costs

45 miles south of Buffalo
2.5 miles north of Ellicottville
1 mile west of U.S. 21~1

$176,000 total purchase price
including option
{$60 , 000
in
improvements
116,000 in l and
approx. $100/acre)
$ 10,000 option price

Genral Description
75% of the property is wooded hills
maximum elevation
2321 feet
above sea level
minimum elevation
1510 feet
above sea level
85% of property above 1800 feet
Size:

Option acp-eement
(and lease) .......... ..$10000.00
Consultant fees ... . . " . 5000.00
Utilities . . ........ " .
180.19
Payroll
{two ·full-time caretakers
one part-time caretaker) 2502.88
Insurance .... ~: . . . . . 2913.70
Yearly Costs:
General expenses . . . . . 1334.40 .
600.07
Cottage rental . . . . . . . .
Mortage payments on land $15,000 Equiptment .... . ... . 1000.66
Operating expenses ..... . . 25,000 . Miscellaneous expenses: .
355.83
Development costs . . . . . . . . 19,105
Downpayment loan . . . . . . . 4,200 Total to date ........ .$23,887.66
Total Yearly Cost ....... . . $63,305

1150 acres, which is
1.8 square miles
8.9 miles of property line
Current
Property:

Expenses to date:

lmporvnments

The yearly costs projected are
estimated based on available
on, information. All of the figures are
\. firm except for the estimated
development cost which is accurate
to within 10%.

2 ponds ( 1 and 1'h acrets)
4 buildings:
Lodge ......... 3200 square feet
cottage ........ 800 square feet
ski shop . . . . . . . 800 square feet
. support building damaged by
storm
.

I

'

'

Po.erty Hill
Referef1Qfum -

November 4 &amp;5

Proposed Development Costs:
Phase One ....... . ........ $39,220
Phase .Two ............... $66,920
Cost to Students:
$3.17 per student per year ·
The propased costs to students is
based upon fmancing Poverty Hill
entirely on the basis of studnet
fees. It may be possible ~o recieve
government or foundation grants,
but this is not certain. The
enrollment figure of 20,000 was
used to determine the cost p~r
student. If the enrollment reach.es
25,000 the cost per student per
year would be $2.53.

Sub-Board has atte,m pted to
present the facts about
Poverty Hill as olbjectively
as possible. We ai'e not at
this time making any
recommendations to the
student body. We lb ope you
use the information
contained herein to make
up your mind on the
Poverty Hill issue and we
hope you choose t1o vote on
November 4th and 5th.

...

�Published by Sub-Board .I, Inc.
Sp«ial thanks to Mi. and David for
tflehlnc.I~~SSilt6nce.

�</text>
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                    <text>State Univaty of New :Vork n Butt.lo

Vol. 22. No. 24

w~. October 20.
I

1971

'

Poverty Hill referenda:
it's the students' decision
Sub Board I, Inc.'s option on
Poverty Hill is fast running out.
As part of the option agreement,
~ub
Board must notify the
property's owner by Nov. 20 if It
wishes to purchase the land for
$176,000. To aid in this decision,
the various student g~vernments
are condu&lt;:ting referenda of thtir
constituencies on Nov. 4 and 5.
Initially, Sub . Board became
interested in Poverty Hill "as a
means of expanding the
educational and recreational
opportunities" of State University
of Buffalo students. Negotiations
for the option were concluded on
April 21, with the purchase price
set at $176,000 {from which the
option price of S 10,000 would be
deducted). In addition, Sub Board
obtained the right to use the
property until the option's
expiration on Dec. 20, 1971.

Objective picture
During the summer, Sub Board
directed Drayton Bryant
Associates to prepare a
comprehensive plan for the
property to both aid in any
decision to buy aod to formulate
a development program in the
evenJ that .Jhe property is
purcll&amp;Sed. Copies of this report
are available to students through
the Harriman library Reserve
Room. In addition, excerpts from
this report will be circulated in
this Friday's The Spectrum.
It is the hope of Sub Board
officials, according to Mark
Borenstein (Sub Board business
manager), to provide students
with an objective picture on
which they can base thpir
decisions. It was for this reaf~
that Mr. Borenstein refused to
comment on whether Sub Board

should actually purchase: the land :
"We are trying to give students an
objective picture of the
situation . . . it is the Board's
position that any more investment
is up to students.''
Student decision
Regarding this, all student
government officials contacted
maintained that any 4ecision
affecting the purchase of Poverty
Hill would rest solely on results of
student referenda. However, it
was the personal opinion of many
Student Association officers that
Sub Board should buy the land .
Harold " Spot" Guberman, ftrst
vice president of Student
Association, termed Poverty Hill
"a great place to go just to relax.''
Jan DeWaal, . SA president,
commented that "it is an
excellent opportunity for students
to put into practice a lot of
theories formerely just talked
about.'' While Mr. Borenstein
refused to voice his views on the
matter, he did maintain, as Sub
Board business manager, that
Poverty Hill was a good financial
investment. He further reported
that Sub Board could financially
afford it: "With ita present assets,
Sub Board could afford the
dtposft and arrangement for
mortpge balance . . . this might
not be particularly wise or
advantageous without using other
sources of financing."

Other f"mances
Mr. Borenstein was referring to
various other means of income
besides student fees. This might
include user's fees, federal grants,
bank loans or bonds. Already , Sub
Board has invested approximately
$20,000 into the land . Included in

this is $10,000 for the option,
$5000 for Drayton Bryant
Associates and about $2000 in
maintenance costs . Further
expenditures would include, if
Poverty Hill were purchased,
about $63,300 yearly cost for
mortgage land payments,
o~rating expenses, development
cohs and a d'own payment loan.
Many have questioned Sub
Board's right to commit such a
large am()\lnt of future student
monies to this project. Dave
Steinwald, SA coordinator for
student rights, feels that by
purchasing the property ..student
fees, for at least the next ten
years, will be committed ... Do
we have that 'risftt7" Both Mr.
Borenstein and Scott Slesinger,
SA vice president, feel that a
decision must be made. As· Mr.
Borenstein commented: "Because
of the transitory nature of the
student body, future planning and
long-term decision-making must
be made if anything concrete is
ever to be accomplished."
Overextension
Mr . Slesinger agreed
commenting that if future student

bodies decide they don't warrt the
land, then they could sell it for a
profit. Others, however, are
fearful, that Sub Board iltcurrs the
risk· of overextension . That is, by
channelling so much money into
Poverty Hill, other operations
would be jeopardized. Mr.
Borenstein admitted that this
would be the case, if only student
fees were utilized : "If we had to
use only student fees, without
other means of fmancing, then
other things would be interfered
with." Mr . Borenstein did
maintain though that "money for
the down payment would not
come out of present operating
fees."
Based on a student enrollment
of 20,000, the cost of acquiring,
developing and operating Poverty
Hill would be $3.17 per student
per year. However, Mr. Slesinger
warned that although this appears
minimal, Sub Board is not assured
of a yearly income; it receives
only what the student
government s are wiUing to
contribute. Mr. DeWaal and Mr.
Borenstein seemed to discount
this commenting that Sub Board
has other valuable assets. Included

in these are a reserve fund and
rights to Faculty Student
Association lands in Amherst (a
court case is presently being
conducted to effect a land
transfer from FSA to Sub Board.
Million dollar luxury
Arguing against the purchase of
Poverty HiU, Mr. Steinwald
referred to this Amherst land
commenting that· "the primary
responsibility of Sub Board
should be the development of this
land ." He further continued that
the Poard can't "afford the
luxury of spending over a half a
million dollars on a camping
area."
Exactly what the Board feels it
can afford will not be known until
student opinion is gauged and
recorded . Members of Drayton
Bryant Associates will be available
for infor,mation within the next
two weeks speaking to student
groups. In addition, anyone
having any questions about
Poverty Hill sh ould contact .any
member of Sub Board I, Inc. at
83 1-550 2.

Murray takes leave

Will Dr. Hull become ·dean?
" I 'm a ccep ting the
responsibility to assist the
situatio n during the interim," is
how McAllister Hull . Jr. views his
new position as acting dean of
Graduate Stu di es. Hi !&gt;
appointment is in response to the
vacancy left by Daniel Murray
earlier this semester. Dr. Murray is
on a leave of absence to take a
position in Albany .
'

'

The actual appointment of
dean is "up in the air" according
to Dr. Hull and he does not have
any idea - whether or not the
permanent position will be his. He
explained how the final decision
will be made : "a search
committee will determine the
candidates and their respective
qualifications." Their
recommendations will then be
given to President Ketter who

shall make the final decision.
Dr. Hull envisions his own
chances as "it is all pretty 'ify'
if the committee chooses me; if
Dr. Ketter concurs; if I decide 1
want it - that is a lot of ifs." He
further believes, "The future of
this office is in the hands of
many, of which I am only one."
Much to be accomplished
The administration has asked
Dr. Hull to take o ffice " on or
before Nov. 1.'' As to Dr.
Murray 's return , Dr. Hull
commented: "On a guess, I'd say
Dr. Murray will be in Albany for a
while." He stated that he was
unable to predict anymore.

much to b e accomplished. "I
don't intend to sit aro und the
office. I intend to be active," he
says.
He believes there is much to be
done and sees no reason why his
office should not respond to the
problems facing departments.
"That is why I was appointed," he
says. Although he does not believe
it is in his power to initiate much
action, he does believe it is. his
responsibility to act on the
troubles which are currently
important.

Dr. Hull says Uttle about his
future plans for the University or
himself. He hopes that he will be
able to "act in the best interest of
the University ." He contends:
Dr. Hull has no conception of though , that " plans involve the
where this appointment will lead ability to carry them out. I have a
him, but he does ~elieve there is lot ofideas."

I

,_

-·

'

�News analysis

Recommendations

FSA studies service policy
by Jeff Gf'eenwald
Sp«lrum Staff Writ~

One of the aU too few
statoments of value produced by
Jan DeWul's study aroup on
Food Service concerns the
paradox facina all Faculty
Student Association enterprises.
The report states: ..Food Service
(and the other auxiliary
enterprises , including the
Bookstore) has had a problem
defining its role as a service
oraanization as opposed to a
business operation."
The undesirability of bavina
these enterpri!es run purely as
business operations is quite
evident. Prices which in some
cases are already too high would
invariably become even more
exorbitant. Yet, an enterprise
willina to ao along with all
recommendations, and demands
toward sreater student service,
would soon find itself in a state of
financial disaster. In a case like
this, it wouldn't be very long
before the same type of pure
"business" operation that is so
widely despised , would be called
in to the rescue.
Pathetic 'business'
Despite the fact that such
"business vs. service" confusion
exists, one cannot disflliss the
charges that the Bookstore and
Food Service, in particular, are
certainly not "service
organizations," and appear
pathetically unlike a true
"business enterprise" at times.
Reacting m ostly to student
members' concern, FSA formed,
late this summer. study groups to
investigate the operations of the
Bookstore, Food Service and
vending. Since the Food Service
and the Bookstore are of primary
interest and the vending operation
see ms to be running quate
efficiently, this artacle will
concentrate on the first two
concerns.
It is sad to note that a
committee with three student
representatives, as the Food
Service committee had, produced
a report that can only be labelled
grossly superficial , and in man)!
areas detrimental to s tudent
interests.
Theft is "documented" by the
inclusion of figures o n four items :
brownies, ice cream sa ndwiches,
fresh fruit and wrapped
sandwis:hes. Is one to ~elieve that
a ten per cent theft figure on
these items is representative of the
entire Food Service operation as
the report wouJd have us believe?
This figure seems highly unlikely ,
since these products are, by far ,
the easiest for one to pilfer.
Recommendations in the area
of "Opera-t-ing Policies and

'

~

a

BUFfALO

Procedures," ranac from the
removal of curtain• in the first
floor cafeteria to liJbtin&amp; increases
(so as to ~'improve atmosphere
and sales") to closina the Ridge
w cafeteria between the hours
of J and 6 p.m . daily (due to lack
of sales) to tbe institution of a
"Beef and Ale" type house in the
FUlmore Room durin&amp; lunch
bows (to provide students with
the opportunity of having beer
with their meal).
These recommendations at
best , are rather humorous, and at
worst quite disturbing. To suggest
that the problems facing Food
Service can be alleviated by
"improving the atmosphere"
certainly seems to skirt the issue
or decent service. Perhaps at the
Scotch and Sirloin this shouJd be
a consideration, but to a student,
the worries are more in the line of
"how many days ago was thas
bacon made?" and "why did that
woman take my tray of food
away when I haven't finashed
eating yet?"
Certai nl y the comm attee
shouldn't be expected to delve
into each and every compla1nt
about Food Service, but the
report seems to fotaiJy mput
concerning problems faced every
day by the average student.
Shirking of responsibility
Most of the detrimental
statements made towards Food
Service are chalked up to the
"fact" that " these problems are
common on m06t campuses." This
is a shirking of responsibility and
nothing else.
The closing of the Ridge Lea
cafeteria during certain hou rs
indicates also, the view that Food
Service is viewed a bit too much
by the committee members as a
"business" rather than 1
"service . " A responsibility
c ertainly exists to serve the
University community despite
what may be a slight financaal
loss. It is doubtful t hat
bankruptcy will beckon on the
strength of this mmor "setback."
The re&amp;&gt;mmendation of a
" Beef and Ale" house, possibly a
good idea in itself, must be
considered in tandem with the
recommendation for more
satellite operations, such as that in
Acheson Hall. It seems highly
unlikely, ho wever, judging from
the difficulty Food Service has in
operating its present facilities,
that the addition of still m ore will
do anything to alleviate anything.
Rather, the existing inefficiencies
will be merely spread out,
reaching, perhaps as a grand plan.
every building on campus.

~

'

((

-continued on page

,.

-;o.;."'-"&gt;'\

~

Reprerent«&lt; for «&lt;wwtillnll by
Ne tlonel Ed~Je4tionel Adwlrtising
S¥11ice, ,Inc., 360 Lt~Jtington A.-..,
New Yorl~. N. Y. 10011.
Subscription retn ere $4.50 f»r
st~mester .or $8.00 for two #mattHJ.
Second C'l- Postege Pllid et Buffelo,
New YOfll'.
Cirtukltion : 16,000

~

also Gerry Nelwood, Gop Mangione,
Stanley Watson, Esther Satterfield
and ORCHESTRA

KLEINHANS MUSIC HAll
AU ..a t• r•••1"1.1•d : Main Floar IIJ.OO, 16.00- Bakon., 15.00, 14.00

Tlcbto .,. ..t. ,... at luHot. kulvol Offke, Statl..-+tilto• l.At~y (•oil
or-. ~.... witt. ·~ Mlf ola unol ...velope); U.l. ....,_ Hells
~ Col:... Tkbt Offkes A. . .., &amp; Dol' • ...... woy st....

I
~
uf~
c.,.,.

,.,.nred by
O.htwere

\

l) All non-manaaement employees shall receive at least a five
per cent increase in waaea at the dilcretion of tbc manaaers.
2) Tho startin&amp; waaes of part-time student employees shall be
raised to parity with tho firat class of Food Service employees ...
On-board students shall be raised to $2.05 and students not on
board , .• to $1 .85.
3) The salaries of middle manaaement penonnel should be
ntised from the current $6200 to S 11 ,000 ranae to $8000 to
$15,000 range over a two-year period. At the present time, many
middle f!l&amp;nagement use State University of Buffalo as a "training
ground ." This prevents the development of "institutional loyalty"
and prevents top-notch, qualified personnel from considering State
University of Buffalo as a serious employer. These raises should
approximate S I 000 per annum.
4) A three per cent increase in board contracts or continued
from the stlmmer.
5) A ~ew five per cent Increase in single item sale prices. The
effect on sales will be minimal. The three per cent board increase
has gone "unnoticed" as 1600 board contracts were received apinst
1200 expected .
,
6) The opaque glass windows on the (first floor) cafeteria lines
should be replaced by clear glass. 1bia will make "food snatchers"
more easily visible and cut theft.
7) Additional sateUite operations similar to Acheson must bt
opened. These should be located in Hayes and Diefendorf Halls ...
8) Food Service must be more prudent in their business
operations ... Food Service must steer away from operating any
units at a loss ... We recommend that Ridge Lea cafeteria be closed
from 3 - 6 p.m . daily and that serious consideration be given to
closing the RatbskeUer from 9 - 11 p.m . on Sundays if the amount
of sales decreases any further.
•
9) f'ood Service abould be authoriud to operate a .. Beef and
Ale" house during lunch hours in the Fillmore Room .
I 0) ... mandatory board contracts , .. would not be accepted
by students and are infeasible at this time.
Bookstore
1) All full time Bookstore employees be put on grade and
salary parity with CSBA schedule ... Salary levels for employees
adversely affected by this policy s hould be red~ircled ...
2) ... this enterprise should be fully responsive and responsible
to the needs of this educational institution. But it should be allowed
to venture in areas of services that command a higher mark-up
margin in order to support services of lower margins which are
essential for the improvement of the educational activity in our
community.
3) One faculty member per department should be appointed to
coordinate with the Bookslore the text orderin&amp; of that department
on established deadlines ...
4) If faculty has placed a text on order then they should make
every attempt to use the ordered text.
5) University-wide standing studeot faculty advisory committee
shoUld be established immediately to advise the Bookstore on all
matters of policy-making and to be responsible for keeping the
commUnity informed on these matters ...
6) The cost of check cashing should be raised to S. l 5 , .
7) ... it is not pbysicaUy possible to heve browsing during the
peak periods. However, at the end or such periods a browsing
procedure should be immediately implemented and the public
should be so informed.
8) Each division should be self sufficient and generate its own
reserve funds ...· Consolidation of profits s hould be prohibited ...
The Bookstore should produce some reasonable profits ... strictly
as seed money . . . This committee conceded to giving the
Bookstore a profit·malcing status, but with an upper Limit of
$35,000. This ceiling should be re-evaluated at the end of a
three-year period or when deemed absolutely necessary. If profits
exceed $35,000 then the Boobtore s hould refund to the student
consumers the excess monies by reduci.na the mark up margin of
items sold ...

Delivery

Men

ISC::oMING
S.n,lnan • ExhibiCJ •

Contasts • Live Modela • Door
PrlzM ev.rydey • Win e trip
for 2 • o.tnonltrations •
Extrmr..-nu of ell !Njor
Pttoto Equipment d~l8yed
lind exp~llined by the .-ken •
Ctte»Mt end buy trfte~ -ine
It ell • GrNt Deets!

STATl.ER HILTON HOTEL
FRI., SAT., SUN.
OCTOBER 29-30-31
ADVANCE TICKETS et

1/2 lltALF PRICE 1/2

50¢
DELAWJ,RE CAMERA MART
263£; DeleMre Avenue
31 :l5 Belley Avenue

Page two. The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 20, 1971

FoodSemce

t.,, .FREE

,{

FES~IVAL presents

flv.-

The Spttetrum is publbh«J til,..
tim11 "
weH:, ..,.ry Mondey,
w.ctnadlw end Frk»y; durin11 tM
Ntgt.J,_r • :MI«nic y•r by Sub·Boerd
1, Inc. Offic• ,,.. loc.t«J et 355
Norton 11'-11. Ster. Unlv.rJi tY of NrN
York et Buffelo, 3435 ,_in St.,
Buffelo , New Yor/c, 14214.
'r-'•phone: ArN Coth 116; EditorF./ '
831-4113!;Buslntm, 831·3610.

'

FRIDAY, OCT. 29th at 7 P.M.

.

Inflated hoagie
S h ould the assumption be
made that one does what he can
get awa!f with? Of course, the rise
has gone unnoticed . Those on
board are mostly freshman who
h,ave no knowledge of previous
board prices. One s houldn't
expect the same non-reaction
when re1gular " Rath" dwellers see
the price of a hoagie go up. It
would lhave been much more
meaningJrul to show how many
p eople drop o ff board each
semester and why.

Brainwashed?
Mr. DeWaal's remark that he
has fo11nd no gross inefficiency 10

I ; A CHUCK MANGIONE CONCERT I
~
"TOGETH·E'R"
I
~ : Featuring Bat McGrath and Don Potter ~
~.·

Food ,Service, simply cannot be
belicvod. If, in fact, h e truly feels
tbat way, it seems evident that
Mr. I)'Waal is the victim of a
devastatina brainwash.
Still another sugestion was to
sell the ''UB emblem plates," no
lonae.r tiiSed, to students at cost, in
place of the "plain blue and white
plates now available." The
reasonia~a behind this is that
students would no longer rip off
plates i1f they could buy "cheap,
conveni.e nt and attractive" ones.
One wc•uldn't suspect Mr. DeWaal
to be an idealist by looking at
him.
Perhaps the most disturbing
remark in the en liTe report
co n cerns the recommendation
that a three per cent board
increase be continued , and a " new
five per cent increase in single
item Sll&amp;le prices" be instituted.
The report explains "the effect on
sales wi U be minimal. The three
per cent board increase has gone
'u nn oticed' as 1600 board
contracts were received against
1200 expected ."

Edltor'l ftote : F•ct~lty Srt~deftt AuoclatiOII form•. ltlte thl•
111mmn-, llflriOtU ltlldy I'OUPI to lffllteltilflte the OPfrrltioiU Of tht
Boolutore, Food Sentce 11nd W!ndln1. Ht,.l16ht1 of two of theu
I"OIIPI, Food Sernce 1111d till Boolutor~. foUow ·

838-4557

PIZZA-GO GO

�..

~

~

" J'" I "

Policy Statem£nt
Editor's note: The following is a poiicy statement
on the purcha.se of Poverty Hill issued Monday
by the executive committee of the Gradwzte
Student Association.

Support.\' purcha.w!

Mike H..-ns, Sub Board I
consultant, justified the
expenditure of student monies for
Poverty Hill at last Monday
night's GSA meeting.

GSA has reservations
concerning Poverty Hill
Two student governments have recommendations include the
voted that the purchase of undergraduate medical, dental and
Poverty Hill property not be Jaw student associations.
approved . In separate actions last
Partly explaining the GSA
Monday night, the Graduate vote, Johl'l Greenwood
Student Senate and the MjiJard commented that the main thrust
Fillmore Student Association of Sub Board is to "enhance the
Executive Committee passed recreational, educational and
resolutions not to acquire the service peeds of students." He
1150-acre Poverty Hill land .
continued that purchasing Poverty
Sub Board I obtained an Hill would divert this main thrust :
option to purchase Poverty Hill "What was or i gina II y a
on April 22 , I 971 . The purchase • subordinate issue I Poverty Hill 1
price of the property was set at has now become the primary issbe
Sl 76 ,000 from which the option (of Sub Board 1."
pri c e of $10,000 would be.
deducted . With the Dec. 20 Priority question
Mr. 6reenwood feels , as do
expiration dete of the option
approaching, Sub Board must many GSA representatives, that a
decide whether it will purchase realistic concern and bigger Sub
the land. Notification must be Board priority is the Amherst land
made to the owner by Nov. 20. being transferred from the
Any final decision will be made Faculty Student Association. Mr.
by the voting representatives of Greenwood explained : "Presently,
the various student governments there are no real plans for
constituting Sub Board I.
Amherst; everyone is looking at
Agreeing with the Poverty Hill."
recommendations of its executive
Another GSA worry deaJs with
committee, the Graduate Student the transitory and "not really
Senate voted that "it is not in the viable" nature of Sub Board. As
best interest of graduate students stated in the CSA position paper :
to purchase Poverty Hill "Policy positions of Sub Board I,
property." Their negative vote Inc. as presently constituted ,
followed an executive committee change on a yearly basis,
report evaluating the advantages threatening the continuity of such
and disadvantages of such a a long term program."
purchase and a presentation by
A project such as Poverty HiJI,
Mjke Haggans of Drayton Bryant according to Mr. Greenwood
Associates (a consultant firm would be successful "only when
hired by Sub Board). The Senate's there is a mass degree of
vote will spbsequently be reported reorganization within Sub Board
to aU graduate students who must to provide some sort of
ultimately decide the question for ·continuity." An additional
that body in a Nov. 4 - 5 complaint of the GSA Senate is
referendum.
control of land and future policy
making. As one representative
No student vote
pointed out, "We pay I for
On the other hand. Millard Poverty Hill) and Sub Board owns
Fillmore Executive Committee , ·it."
resolved· ' tll1it :: tliere- -tfe • no ' ·one problem not yet resolved
referendum o( ~~ 's}.udents· wjth · k 'what happens if-8ub: 9oard is
the !exe~upve CotOil\it(ee . mak.in&amp; severely divided on t~ .quesliQn .
polto.y .on ' ' poverty . ,fiilt,. . -~~ ~))~re· are I I . rep~~;ftiyes
resolution ~ in effect,_re~mt,s jn
~ng ·and [JO o ne se~ln$~kn?-w ·
d i s e n f r a n c h i semen t of the result of opposing facttons . 1f
approximate ly 5000 iti'&amp;ht onresolved, the problem could
students. When ~uestioned about passibJy lead: to the Withdrawal of
the legality of such action, some stu4ent governments (and
M FC SA president, Bradley their accomp_an)L'lng .{utt~). : nus
Roberts replied that , since any worry was expressed specifically
student action is questioned, the in regard to the Undergraduate
exe(;utive committee had nothing Student Association wbose
tolose.
officers have come out
The MFCSA ·committee then unofficially in favor of purchase.
vote4 to report to Sub Board that SA funds' constitute the bulk of
Poverty Hill not be purchased, Sub Board's budget. Mr.
that the option be allowed to run Greenwood is worried that ''tb.ls
out. Other student governments qtfestion has not been resolved.
that sit on Sub Board and have and is one that personally bothers
n o t
y· e t
m ad e any me."

tJ¥-

periodic referenda on whether student activities
fees will be mandatory. Voluntary fees would
doom this operation.
10) Since the undergraduates are already
charging almost the maximum possible actjv:ity
fee, additional funds for this project would be
likely to be provided for by the other student
governments, such as the GSA.
I J) Policy positions of Sub Board I , Inc. as
presently constituted, change on a yearly basis,
threatening the contirluity of such a long term
program.
t 2) Even under optimal funding ,
administration of such a large recreational
property would create serious problems of
control and supervision.
I 3) Given graduate student needs, there is a
question whether it is in the best inter,st of
graduate students to devote the .energy and funds
of Sub Board I, Inc. on recreational rather than
student services.
I 4) It is difficult to see how Sub Board I.
Inc. could effectively develop both Poverty Hill
and the Amherst Land .

Early in November all students will decide,
through a referendum, whether ot not to buy
Poverty Hill.
Acting as the information-gathering and
policy-making agent of the GSA, the executive
cominitt~e has been deeply involved, during the
past several months, with the investigation and
evaluation of the advantages and disadvantages of
this purchase.
The following are the important
considerations that we weighed in formulating
our recommendation.
J) Poverty Hill provides prim'arily a pofentia'i
for the development of recreational facilities .
These presently include: camping, swimming,
skiing, etc.
2) Educational opportunities such as
ecological courses, field trips and nature study
could be enhanced by such a purchase.
3) A conference center and a farming
operation are being considered as income Recommendation of the executive committee :
producing developments.
'
As a resu!t of our continued discussion
of
4) Being approximately two hours away , in . these issues with students, other students
the best of weather, it is not clear that a government leaders, other members of the
significant number of graduate students will use
University and external · community and Sub
t·he property.
Board's consultants, the executive pommittee of
5) Comparable facilities such as Letchworth
the GSA feels that it is not in the best interest of
State Park are as easily available as Poverty Hill . graduate students to purchase the Poverty Hill
6) Minimum purchasing and development
pro perty.
·
costs are in the range of $650,000 excluding
The Executive Com millet&gt; of the GSA
costs tlSSociated with develo pment of skiing
Michael Nico/pu - President
facilities, conference center and nature center.
Patrick Gol/aglter - Adm . V.P.
7) Major development could require
Jo hn Greenwood - Ext . A/f. V.P.
extensive outside funding and loss, at least in
Ton y lAwrence - TreiJsurer
part, of student control over these operations.
8 ) Since Sub Board I, Jnc. depends on
allocatio ns vQ)ed on a yearly basis by the vario us P.S. To avoid conflict o f interest . P. Cumming
s tudent governments, future fundiog fo r abstains fro m this position since he is also
operational expenses o r reduction of debts is chairman o f Sub Board I, Inc. However, he
uncertain.
participated in all discussions and evaluations
leading to this recommendation .
9) A further funding difficulty inv~s the

Gustav
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NAME ....................., ............................. .
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WEDNESDAY NIGHT
OCTOBER 20th, 7:30p.m.
ROOM 233, NORTON HALL
~

OR CALL

Information
Advice
Films
Refreshments

Wednesday, October 20, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page three

�SA Speakers Bureau defines
its purposes and future gOals

Debate continues

Election ofSA reps

The three basic points behJnd this
It takes time, hard work and
action were that the petitions
must be verified before the , mone y to bring well-known
representative woWd be seated, speakei'S to ,c ampus. In an effort
that the proposal discriminated to offe.r more and better speakers
agairut clubs who had to foUow to University students, the
Studenrt AJsociation established
the old procedures and that a
the Spe.alcen Bweau last spring. ,.
separate independent category
Using money collected from
c reated an inequality. This student fees, the Bureau adds the
directive will be sbort..Uved. A time and bard work necessary to
heating will be held this week to locate nnd get commitments from
fully
determine the speakers. With a total budget of
constitutionality of the proposal. $30 ,0 00 , the 11 -member
To avoid further problems, a committee has already received
new aystem will be suggested next co mmiitments from several
Wednesday . It states : "A well-.k :nown people, including
petitioner may register a group at Ralph Nader. Bella Abzua. Bill
Russell , Dick Greaory and
the Elections and Credentials
Mupr«:t Mead.
Office by having 40 valid
So that clubs have the
undergraduates signing their name opportunity to bear speakers
and socia.l security numbe{ on the associated with their special
petition. When 40 undergraduates interests, $8000 hu been allotted
have.. registered for the group by solely tor club-requested speakers.
in-person verification or by phone Any speaker who hu a fee over
verification, the group wiU be $300 must be approved 'by a
checked by the computer. When committee vote.
the voup fl,as 40 vali4 people
The biJDMle
after the COfl)puter check, the
This stipulation has drawn
original petitioner will be seated. criticism from some clubs this
"AU elections that are being in year amd npe epithets such as
New suaa&amp;n
The next day, however, the the process of being carried out "autocrat" have been directed
Student Judiciary Issued a by the old procedure wUI now be toward Bureau chairman Mark
temporary freeze on the proposal. carried out by the new procedure, Weine.r . "I laugh when they call
with the only additional me bureaucratic or elitist,'' said
requirement being that in a maJJ Mr. Weiner. " We are always open
GAIN IS LOSS
ballot,
a person must specify who to SUS~Ilestions and anyone is
WFot wttl't .... it prorn • min, tf
he IINII ..In the wttot. world, Mel
he wants for representative . If this welc:om1e to come to our weekly
meetin1s."
eo. his - n toull' Or wttat lhatl a
is not specified no vote will be
How1ever, a critic on the
tM In aJCdtange w his muer•
recorded.''
Mlrtl 8:31, 37
committee has charged that Mr.
Weiner " is not really interested in
clubs, tout in the big-name stars
whose lftSual qualification is their
big oam&gt;e.
" It's a question of what the
orient.a t1ion will be,'' continued
the critic, " whether it will be
toward big names or toward

Each week brin~ mor~
confusion as to how a student can
become a representative to the
' Student Assembly.
The original procedure for
becpmlng a representative was the
aubmittlng of a petition signed by
40 undergraduates. The problems
arose in the search for a practical
way of validating the petitions
and in insuring that each
individual be govemed under the
arne procedures. At last week's
initial meeting of the Assembly.
an amenclment to the system of
seating representatives was
proposed. The original plan of
holding interest group elections
after the petitions were handed in
was dropped. The petition itself
wu to become the ballot, and
whoever handed in the sianatures
would be the representative. The
Office of Elections would make a
subsequent fmal check whJch
wou ld include in-person,
telephone, and mail verifications
of the sl~aiures.
·

~tmt4~t~\~

V~tMt;J$­
't1ct8 nain ~4 At }\6rle.m
'~~

-.eel\.Vi~~
.. YOUR YEAR ROUND-

~

ONE sTOP GIFT SHOP

people who are recoplized
authorities."
Answering this charge, Mr.
Weiner declared, "We are not
gearing ourselves to bia-name
personalities. We are just tryina to
bring Interesting, well-known
speakers to campus."
Unjustifted criticism
~spite criticism from clubs
this year, Speakers Bureau has had
only ten requests from clubs for
special interest speakers and has
approved all ten. Such men u
James Petra• have been sponJored
by Club Latino, Joop Joosten by
Student A.rt Board and Arthur
Slot.kin by t h e American
Association of Aeronautica and
Astronautica.
Therefore, Mr. Weiner sees any
criticism that the Bweau has
"taken away part or the club's
a ut onomy" as com pletely
unjustified. The $300 guideline
set by the Bureau is no problem,
either, contends Mr. Weiner. " We
set the $300 Umit because we
want the money to be used
ef(ectively, he declared, pOinting
out that in 1970 clubs bad failed
to use over SlO,OOO of the money
alloted for 1peakera. Even if a club
requests a speaker whose fee is
over $300, Mr. Weiner said, the
committee wouJd not hesitate to
approve it if it thought the
expense were j ustified. He added
that the Nursing Club had "'!anted
Paul Erlich to appear, and though
ttis fee was over the $300 limit ,
the Bureau agreed to help.
Unfortunately, Mr. Erlich was not
available.

Want ideas
Response from clubs litis year
has been poor. according to Mr.
Weiner. Of 180 lettera sent out

l as t year to c lub s and
departmenta, he has received only
four responsea. "Clubs can't
expect the Speakers Bureau to
have t~ prime responsibility, but
we will help,'' continued Mr.
Weiner.

-5chulm~~n

Mark · Weiner'
Sp.k.,
Weiner,
policy.

a.,,_, ChMrmM, Mark
..,._rn.d
111 OSMmint

Such thinp as publicity for the
upcomina speakers is the
responsibility of the sponsoring
clubs, Mr. Weiner emphasized .
The Bureau will work out other
details in cooperation with the
club.
Finally, Mr. Weiner expressed
his hope that both clubs and
studen ts wouJd come up with
ideas for speakers. " 1£ they would
just let us .know what speakers
they want, we'll d o the work. We.
don't pictwe o urselves as knowing
everythina."

KLEINHANS MUSICHALL
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31st, 8:00p.m.
,,

KRIS
IKRISTOFFERSON

• wortdwide Imports • Mobiles •
• Gourmet Kitchen Wan •Papet Shldea •Soaps •
• Decorator CandJes • Gtas&amp;wve ~Carnes • Stationary

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GUSTAV, Sr. 5cents

Admission Orch. $&amp;.00, $5.00- Balc. $5.00, $4.00

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. . . . . .-....&amp;&amp;. .

Pa9e four. The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 20, 1971

..

�.Medical It

PT. DETRICK, MD. - President Nixon
announced Monday that part of the Army's old germ
warfare laboratories would be converted into a
government-sponsored cancer research facility
devoted to "saving lives rather than destroying
them." Equipment valued at more than $70 million
housed in seven buildings will be turned over to a
private contractor for research aimed at finding a
cure for cancer. The facility will employ 600
persons. The conversion of the defense facility can
be accomplished quickly and inexpensively and, said
Nixon, "It is my hope that this specific conversion
will help illust,.
general potential for using
defense-related f~itfes:hero.." The labdratories ·were
previoualy used to 4evelop' deadly ·bacteriological
warfare materials ~..ube. Oefense Department. Once
one of the BOVemment's mcilrt secret bases.;the ·Army
poSt- will be open to scientlats fJ'!)m thro~out the
world.
•

collected by student orpLO.izers during an 1 I-da.
drive at the school. bids accepted the petition in
ceremonies close to the spc:~1t where the four students
were shot by National Guardsmen during student
protests over the Cambodian invasion by American
troops. He said be would present the signatures
Wednesday to Leonard Garment, special counselor
to the President.

'fASHINGTON - A bulletin issued by the
National Highway Safety Administration Friday
warned owners of Chevrolets turned out between the
years J965 and 1969
b1ring their cars in to the
shop to check to see wht:ther the engine mounts
have deteriorated. The d•efect in question could
cause the accelerator to jam wide open and cause a
loss of power steering and brakes. The models named
in the bulletin include the standard Chevrolets,
lllovas, CheveUes and Ca1maros. Investigators for
HUNTINGTON STATION, L.l. _ The Long Ralph Nader claip1ed General Motors got the initial
lstanff.Al.ailroad may not provide normal commuter report of the problem two years ago, but when the
service all the time, but they have come up with a government examined the: reports, it found no·
new twist to commuting. In oooperation with _ reason to act ~n them. lbe probe was reo~ened
Adelphi University, the LJRR inaugurated a be~use of an mcrease
!the n~mber of accidents
commuter-college-on-wheels for businessmetl and bemg reported,to the tdnunJstration.
women seeking a master's degree but too busy to
HOUSTON - A scientist at Rice University says
attend regular clas~es. thirty-three students, mainly
in their 30's and 40's, boarded the 6:4S a.m. train that the presence of moon geysers may indicate that
Monday itornins, and for the next the~ is enough liquid wator beneath tho surface to
bour•nd-e-quarteJ lis.tened to Prof. Murray Seitman ptovide refreshment for a permanent l'lnar colony.
lecture on· an "Introduction to Financial The water vapor was discovered last Match 7 bt two
Accounting." By taking four courses a week, given instruments left on the moo1n by tho crews of Apollo
on alternate days in both morning and evening 13 and 14. The instrumentn, called suprathermal ion
commuter-classrooms, a student can cam his detectors, detected a clO\ll~ of 99 per cent water
master's degree in two years. Tuition is the same as vapor which lasted 14 hours and spread over an area
on campus - $46 pe.r three-credit course - but it of more than ten square mJiles. This is the first time
water has been discoverc~ on the moon, long
doesn't include the commuting fare.
thought to be barren and dry. Dr. John Freeman, the
KENT, OHIO - President Glenn A. Olds of scientist who announced 'the discovery, said: " If
Kent State University said Friday he would deliver a someone landed on the Sabtara Desert the first time
petition to the White House this week, calling for an they came to earth, they would have a bard time
investigation of the killing of four Kent students last finding water too. But that doesn't mean there isn't
May. The sisnatures, numberln&amp; over 10,000, were any water on earth."

t•

to

in:

FSA studies service...
Mr. DeWaal's report , however,
is not a total waste. The
recommendation that students
should be paid a.s much as regular
employees is indeed welcome. It is
something that should have been
done long ago. That all
non - management p e rsonn el
receive at least a five per cent
raisy can also be seen as only fair.
However, the siuable raises
(about $1000 per a nnum)
suggested for middle management
personnel, only does justice to the
Capitalistic ideal of making the
rich richer and tbe poor poorer.
Hemingway achievement
In contrast , the Bookstore
study report is an Ernest
Hemingway work of art . Milce
Nicolau, GSA president and
chairman of the committee, and
all the members of the committee
must be congratulated for, what is
on the whole, a superb job. This
committee consisted of Ronald
Stein, Howard Deuell, Howard
Foster and Stanley Templeton.
The report is thorough and
detailed; the conclusion and
recommendations, for the most
part, are sound.
A number of.. their findin~
deserve mentidll. The . report
documents various reasons the
faculty have found it necessary. to
order textbooks late . ' The
committee reports that their

statistics show "80- 85 per cent
of the faculty that had ~epUed,
have attributed the late ordering
to their own lack of con cern with
the issue." Negliaence of this sort
should and must be taken up
before the Faculty Senate. To
help alleviate the late-order problem, a number of suggestions
are made that seem entirely
feasible. It is a relief that such
recommendations as a
d e,part mental ordering system
won approval over the previously
mentioned surcharge possibility.
Welcome proposal
The formulation of a
permanent University-wide
student faculty advisory
committee of the Bookstore is
also a · very welcome proposal.
Only with constant input can the
Bookstore 's se rious public
relations problem be dealt with. It
should be noted that while the
Food Service committee asked for
"serious consideration . . . to
establishing a University-wide
food committee," they failed to
make this a formal
recommendation. A bit more
"force" could probably have been
used.
The Bookstore committee also
advises a period for browsing to
be "immediately impJ&amp;mepted" at
the end of "peak. - periods."
Certainly, students deserve no

Editor 's note: Medical questiomjpro'blems ok your mind? Medica/1,
weekly columh containing ht!4/th rekzted questions from the University
community, Is now in opert~llon through the cooperation of the
Medical School, Unfverlity Health Service' and the Office of Student
Affairs and Service#. Jwt dial831 -5000 Action Line Extension, addreu
a written question to Medical/, cjo The Spectrum, 355 Norton Hall or
visit Action Line booth in the Center Lounge of l(orton Hall. Names
will be kept in strict coqfidence, and questtom fielded by 1tudentr and
faculty of the State University of Buffalo Medical School will be
answered through the column, appearing 1!4ch Wedne1dt1y. If student:l
wish personal answers, supply your Mme and phone number and 4
member of the Medical School will call you.
·'

Q; Does my Health lnsorance cover routine examinatiooll (such u

physical for IChool, etc.)?
,
A : No! Most insurances will cover only examination studies for an
illness. Annual checkups, routine pre-school or pre-employment
~xaminations or preventive studies (chest X-ray, Pap smear) while
1mportant, are not covered by most health insurances. Other exceptiont
include refra.c tions (eye examination for glasses) and routine dental
care.
Q : I wu recently examined at the Dental Unit in Michael HaD and
told I ahould aet my cavities CUJed. Ia there a clinic on campu&amp; that ean
help me?
A: If you qu11ljJ:y as a teaching case, you may fmd the help you
need at the School of Dentistry in Capen Hall. The cost is relatively
moderate and the care is first class. Call 831·2821 for additional
informatjon.

.

Q : I u.ndentand tllat the mroUment period ' for the U,UVefaity
Health Insurance expired on' Sept. 3. When it the next' entollment
period?
A: You can still enroll!! Due to an unusually heavy enrollment at
the end of September, the Insurance company has extended the
enrollment period through Oct. IS , 1971 .
Q : How important are vitamins and the' use of vitamin
supplements?
A: Several hundred research articles each year are written about
vitamins which implies that little, if anything really is known about
th~:m.

Most vitamins, whose function is known, serve as co-factors or
catalysts in biological reactions at the sub&lt;eUular level. Only relatively
small amounts of these substances are needed and a health person
eating a balanced "three squaJeS" a day should fulfill all his vitamin
-&lt;onltl nued f rom P'!le tworequirements. Vitamin requirements are determined by tbe FDA and
gratefully listed on your favorite breakfast cereal package, usually
lndicate..the daily amount necessary to prevent a Qleasurable deficiency.
However, the measurement of deficiency is not well defined.
tess.
Certainfy, growi~ children need higher levels of some Vitamins
The mtost interesting suggestion
concerns the possible excess of especiafly vitamin D. Vitamin b is added to milk and found naturally in
profits. 'l'he committee concedes sunlight. (Sunlight is a natural product found outside city limits.)
.that . a reasonable profit is Recently 4 per cent of a group of inner-city children were found
warranted to use for what it cJllls deficient in vitamin D.
Rather than deficiency, vitamin excess may present a problem in
"seed money" for future
the
future.
High levelS .J&gt;...f vitamin C may prevent colds but also may
expansio•n. However , anything
above 1an "upper limit" set cause a higher inciden~of painful Jcjdney stones. Loving mothers have
tentatively at $35,000 would be caused infantile de,th from vitamin overdose by giving their lit1le
refunded to "t he st udent darlin~ as many as 20 multi-vitamins a day. The next time you eat
consumers . . . by reducina the polar bear liver, don't be a glutton because moderate amounts can
mark·up1 marsins o( items cause vitamin A toxicity manifested by brain damage and even dea•h.
sold . .. ." This also, is only right, (Arctic explorers found out the hard way.)
Actually, people have been taking an excess of vitamins for years
but' it is encouraging to see the
with no ill effects. If you think a couple of vitamin tablets a day makes
suggestiom in print.
The o,nJy proposal that fault you less anxious, more power to you, but it's probably not vitamin
can be 'found with is the one power. If vitamin E (which prevents sterility in rats) helps your
asking tc• raise the cost of the performance, give your libido the credit . There's nothing wrong with
check-cashing service from I 0 to spending a couple of bucks and buying a bottle of vitamins, but
I 5 cents. It is not unreasonable to probably the best thing you could do with the bottle i$ take it down to
ask, what appears to be a very Chippewa St. and &amp;ive it to your favorite malnourished alcoholic - he
solvent «~nterprise, to provide a needs it aI lot more than you do .
service that uses up a bare
Q : I read in the Medical/ (Oct. 6) that abortions cost 522.5 and up
minimum of its excess monies.
in
the·
Buffalo area. Are there any places that charge leas?
The sbortcomings of certain
A: In the New York City area an abortion done under good
aspects o•f these reports, mostly
the Foodl Service report, cannot conditions run generally S I 50 and up for clinic care. We have been
and must not be ignored . advised that this procedure can be arranged for S I 00 in some places,
However, one thing should be but we have been unable to confirm the quality of such care.
carefully considered. A precedent
has been broken. It appears that
student input into certain
Ted Glick, a member of the Harrisbura 8 and
Universit)( affairs may finally be
the Rochester Flower Conspiracy, will be speakina
taken se:riously. These reports
Friday at 3 p.m. in Haas Lounge. Mr. GUc:k also faces
were do~te because of students,
charges for allegedly conspirina to kidnap Henry
and pritmarily by st udents .
Kissinger. He is appearing under the au.spicies of the
Hopefull)' a new precedent has
Speaker's Bureau.
been started .

Glick to speak

E GUARANTEE 1'0 .BEAT ANYPRI
E
.
WITHIN 50 FEET ()F OUR STORE...
REMEMBER WHAT YOU WERE PAYING aEFORE3.99 lind 4.91? ISN'T THAT A RIP-oFF?

•

• •DOWN TO OUR COST
THE RECORD RUNNER .

Wednesday, October 20, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�•

,I

ALL 7CAVA(;I•~S STORE~S
BRING YOU A WAR:NER-REPRISE *SPECIAL
ALL WARNER BROS. - REPRISE IN STOCK INCLUDED IN THE SALE

...

*THB HOTTEST LABELS IN RECORDS

J.

..

~

•

JETHROTULL
Aqualung
Benefit
Stand Up

---·-

NEIL YOUNG
After the Gold Rush
Crazy Horse
Neil Young

.

-

· ~,

~~

..

_.

JIIMI HENDRIX
Bainbow Bridge
C:ry of Love
E;lectric Landlady

BLACK SABBATH
Master of Reality
Paranoid
Black Sabbath

JAMES TAYLOR
Mud Slide Slim
Sweet Baby James

GRATEFUL DEAD
American Beauty
Gratefu'r'Dead
Workingman's Dead

WARNER BROS. • REPRISE ROSTER
.Joni Mitchell
.John Sebastian
4
Beach Boys
Mothers
II&lt; inks
Gordon Lightfoot
l~andy Newman

Young Bloods
Deep Purple
John Baldry
Frank Sinatra
Pentangle
John Renbourn
Alice Cooper

Fleetwood Mac
T- Rex
Van Morrison
Arlo Guthrie
Peter, Paul and Mary
Association
Faces

JUST TO MENTION A FEW!

WITH

ONLY
7 LUCI&lt;Y LOCATIONS
CAN GIVE YOU Tt11E LOWEST PRICES IN W.N .Y.
ADDITIONAL " LUCKY SPECIALS" AT UNIVERSITY STORE

"

Page six. The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 20, 1971

•

�r

Comicsproviile contemporary heroes

,

by Jay Boyar

of his comic book creations: ''No, these lines . One of their
literature lover, our fearless little charact ers, Green Arrow, had a
fables are not put-ons! To us, problem with his college-age
The Summer of '33. Yes, it was they 're what's happening, baby! sidekick, Speedy. It seems that
an unbearably hot evening in the It's the real world we have our Speedy wanted to live up to his
summer , of 1933 when a pair of doubts about - but that's another name and got hooked on all sorts
young men, Jerry Siegel and Joe story!" As you can tell, Stan of drugs. This caused Green
Shuster, dreamed up an idea that punctuates almost everything he Arrow no end of anxiety, and the
was destined to become the says with exclamation points. But issue in which the story appeared
cornerstone of a multi-million he has a right to.
received a special commendation
dollar enterprise. It was that year
About ten years ago when from Mayor John Lindsay.
that this dynamic duo, neither of MarveJ was born, comic books
whom had ~t reached his were simply pap to be devoured
Comic books are even more of
eighteenth birthday, conceived much as one wo uld gulp down a an artist's medium than a writer's.
the world's first comic book peanut butter sandwich . They Some o f the greatest psychedelic
superhero: SupeTman.
were. the staple reading matter o f art around today has been
A lot has happened since then. a segment of the bubble-gum
published within the covers of
Superman is still around, but brigade and that was all. Stan and comic books. The undisputed .
today comics are rivaling movies his group made the comics real . masters of comic -art a:re Jim
and books as a true art-form. He gave them meaning. For Steranko and Neal Adam·s. Of
Much of this is due to their example, if you were given course, those names mean as little
wide-sp,read acceptance by college superpowers, what would you try
to you as Ralph Nader means to
students.
the average Red Chinese, but
to do with them? Fight evil? Heclc
In the comic book kingdom , no, you 'd probably try to make a these two fellows ~re the tops in
there are basically only two \luck off it, right? WeU, that's their field . Great filmmaker,
Federico Fellini, has this to say
companies worth mentioning. One exactly what Stan had Spiderman
of these is the group which try to do in an early issue. Spidey about their work and the work of
produces, among others , appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show others in the comic book
Superman , Batman, Gree n for money. He bad to give it up, industry : "Not satisfied with
being heroes, but becoming even
Lantern and the New Gods. Jt is though, because no one would
known officially by the rat her cash his pay check. He had no
more heroic, the characters ...
clumsy cognomen of National positive identification to show know how t o laugh at themselves.
. Periodical Publications. But them at the bank to prove he was Their adventures are offered
publicly like a larger than life
comics fans call it "DC." (The reaJiy Spiderman. AU of this led
name evolved from the merger of him to see a psychiatrist in a later spectacle, each sea r chi ng
masochistically within themselves
detective comics and Natlonal issue.
to find a sort of maturity, yet the
Periodic· Publications.)
results are nothing to be avoided :
~ung-up heroes
Marvelous Marvel
H eroes had . hang-ups and it is a brilliant tale. aggressive and
"DC" has been around since problems in coping with their retaliatory, a tale that continues
the 1930's and was joined in the environment. Not the standard to be reborn for eternity, without
field exactl y ten years ago by its ' 'Lois Lane wants to find out who fear of obstacles or paradoxes ."
closest competitor, Marvel Comics Su p er man rea 11 y is-type"
Comic books have risen in
Group. Marvel publishes such problems, but money problems, price in tile last couple of months.
titles as Spiderman, the Fantastic r omance problems, racial Marvel Comics are now $.20 each.
Four, the Hulk and Conan the problems, problems with the while " DC" sells theirs for a
Barbarian. It is really Marvel ecology and aJmost any thing else quarter. The comics nowadays are
Comics and its now-immortal that really counts! "DC" followed so far removed from their
editor, Stan Lee, who built comics Marvel's lead and recently has ancestors of 30, 20 and even ten
into a genuine art-form . Stan says _.done some bang-up work along years ago, that there is simply no
comparison. For one thing, the
Spectrum Staff Writer

CLINT EASTWOOD

I

;

z
J

kiddie market can no longer
afford the high prices of the new
comics. If anyone is going to buy
them, It's going to be older, more
sophisticated people with plenty
of money. Yes, I gues.-; this means
you.
One word of warning: believe
it or not, comic books have the
frightening effect of becoming
extremely addictive . Once you
start reading them , it is next to,
impossible to stop. And ,at $.25 a

Model school busing district
report release to be de~ayed
Release of a Board o f Education study, said to
reco mmend the creation o f a model integrated
school district, will b~ delayed until the end o f the
year. The report suggests that the new district be
formed by cross-busing of black and white students.
A possible reason for the holdup in making the
report public was acknowledged by one school
officia l who stated that there was a possibility o f the
study becoming " a political football " if it is released
before November . The stud y is said to recommend
that the new district, to be loca•ed in the
Fillmore-Kensington area , be fully in tegrated in all
grades fro m kindergarten through eighth . Two
schools would be established solely for kindergarten
children , with ten o thers for grades one thro ugh four
and six middle schools.
Th e s tud y th e n s uggests th a t t h e
Fillmore-Kensington plan be introduced into other
sectio ns o f the cit y, o ne area at a time. Also included
in the document is an analysis of racial patterns
am ong stude nts and staff plus a study on

"PLAY-MISTY FOR ME ..
... an lnl'ltatltJn ltJ terrtJr...

JESSICA WALTER ' DONNA MILLS

*s~f:r

created 1"6 our

JOHN LARCH . SCREENPlAY BY JO HEIMS AND DEAN AIESNER
STORY BY JO HEIMS DIRECTE D BY CliN T f ASTV.OOO ·PAOOUCf() BY ROBER T DALEY
A JENNi~GS LANG PRESENTA TION · 4 MALPASO COMPANY PROOUCTIOIJ
A UNIVEASAL·MALPASO COMPANY PICTURE · TECHNIC0l0A" ®-..:;.._:;;~~: ..-~ ~

.

STARTS FRIDAY

OCT. 22
~~....::;;;:;:, ':;'"

~~

BOTH
TH.EATERS

COLVIN
KIN.

~~~~
IJ
Engagement
Rinm

~

Co S1• tt•no

-at COLVIN 1!).)441

shot, it can get expensive.
· And so , as Clark Kent dons his
red and blue underwear, and as
t h e Incredible Hulk smashes
anot her H-bomb between his
hands ; as Spiderman loses his
girlfriend for the 327th time, and
as Speedy experiences Cold
Turkey, we leave the world of the
comic books. As long as there are
men, they will need heroes ...
and with so few of them in the
real world, it 's a shame to say
goodbye.

c ross-busing programs in San Francisco and
Charlotte.
Arnold Gardner, president of the ,Buffalo School
Board , d enied that the report is being intentionally
held back. He claimea : " It's not ready for release
now . The staff is still working on it ." Though he had
stat ed at a board meeting Sept. 8 that the study
would be prepared " in about a month ," Mr. Gardner
now expects that it won't be available until "th e end
o f the year." He added : " This is a very sensitive issue
on which many people have strong opinio ns. We
want to approach the matter in an intelligent and
informed way and this requires very careful staff
work which ~.:an ' t be do ne as quickly as we would
like ."
The report was prepared by Donald Laing,
former director o f school integration who resigned in
July to become principal of public school 17. The
school board o ffered the study last Feb . 26 when
Mr. Laing pro posed that the o ne way busing program
bad rea ched the limit of its effectiveness.

~-----------------------

Hot Shit!

WIC6W AND BUFFALO fESTIVAl pre Mnl

CAT STEVENS
with MI·MI FARINA &amp; TOM JANS

Saturday, October 30 at 8:30 P ..M.

Crat\81001

€ri1~Ewet•m.s
11 AI..I..EN ST., 8UFFAI..O, N.V.

1 16-11900

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
All S.ala Reaerved: Main flaot $6.00-$5.00; lolco11y f.S,.OQ-$4.00
Ticketo on •ole now ot luffolo foatival ficllet Office, Stoti..·Hilton' loblty
(mail ordon occoptod with tlamptd aolf-odckened envoi...,.); . U. 1. Norton
Halt; Stole Collo9o fkket Offi..; folio ficht Agner. Ni....,o hila.

Wednesday, October 20, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

..

�Police plot to capture radicals exposed
Editor's note: The following is a
reprint from the College Press
Ser11ice, marked Urgent when The
Spectrum recei11ed it.
L ouis Tackwood, a top
undercover agent for the Los
Angeles 'Police Department
(LAPD) for 'almost ten years, has
charged that there is a police and
federal conspiracy in illegally
surveilling, provoking, inflltrating
and entrapping radical groups.
The plan also includes a macabre
plot to disrupt the 1971
Republican National Convention
in San Diego, California .
The "San Diego Project"
entails the planting and
detonation of bomb~ in the Sports
Arena durin~ the convention in
co njunction
with an
agent-provoked riot outside, to
create a state of national
emergency so mass arrests and
detention of polilical activists can
take place through out the
country. Tackwood outlined the
plan at a press conferc1ce Friday.
Oct. I 5, at radio station KPFK in
Los Angeles. The story originaUy
appeared in The 08 Peoples Rag,
a San Diego underground and was
released nationally by Alternative
Features Service of Berkeley.
Tackwood claims his acHvities
from J 962 included infiltration of
the Black Muslims and Black
Panthers, and the fabrication of
testimony for the FBI which
resulted in the conviction of at
least two individuals.

perfect media situation with the
explosions and riots followed by
" the President coming on the air
and declaring a st ate of national
emergency," Tackwood said.
••Within 48 hours they (police and
federal asents) would have
everybody in jail... Tack wood also
claimed there are concentration
camps already activated for just
such an occurrence. He named
Daniel Mahony of the Criminal
Conspiracy Section (CCS) of the
LAPD, and Edward Birch, of the
FBI, as directors of the squad . •
Several months ago Tackwood
b~came disillusioned with his role
as provocateur and sought out LA
activists Robert Duggan and
Marilyn Katuz of the Citizens
Research and Investigating
Committee (CRJC) with the idea
of publishing his experiences in a
book. Since July of this year,
Tackwood, Duggan and Katuz
have been meeting covertly and
working on the manuscript.
Tackwood's superiors thought lle
was spying on the two radicals.

LAP D C r imin al
section .

Conspiracy

Tacllcwood appeared ·finally
Oct. 6 when the LAPD produced
~ him for a meeting with journalists
investisllting his disappearance. He
stated fthat he had been held for
two ,weeks and had been
instructed by his superiors to
deny aJU allegations contained in
the affiidavits filed by CRIC. He
was tben released but went to
Duggan who arranged for a lie
detecto~r test. On the night of the
test se~·eraJ agents of the Special
lnvestigittiOn Section of the LA
District Attorney's Office burst
into · 1t he CRIC offices and
requ uted that TacJcwood
accompany them.

Protec:tion from police
He said that he was brought
before a district attorney and
questioned. Tackwood claimed
that he was instructed to deny all
his allegations and fire his lawyer,
Daniell Lund. Tackwood
convincc:d the DA that he would
be a witness for the state and
Work a drag
implicat'e CRJC in the receiving of
Admitting that the story broke the stolcm documents. Tackwood
"sooner than we thought it said the DA asked him to "put
would" Tackwood said his work C RIC on the chopping block ." He
was rel~ased oo Thursday, Oct. 14
bact become "a drag, more than l
could handle." His decision to and imtnediately made plans to
reveal th e information was make tili; information public so he
finalized when superiors tried to cou ld protect himself from
pressure him into involving his further police harassment.
wife, Gwen , in his activities. "I Tackwootd claims to h ave copies
have no regrets with severing the of documents dealing with the
relationshi ," wlth the agencies, he San Die~o Project.
added.
At the: Friday press conference,
'Find solution'
On Sept. 15 of this year' Tackwood again spelled out his
Accordi.n g to Tackwood, the Tackwood called Duggan and involvement and reaffirmed his
San Diego Project was begun six Katuz and informed them that he previous c ha rges. Tackwood
months ago when a group of had finally obtained documents stated th:lt he had been influenced
"high ranking police officers came detailing the San Diego Project. A by Danie'l Ellsberg's release of the
up with a plan that would be the meeting was arranged for tha t Pentagon Papers.
final solution to aU militant night but Tackwood never
Tackwood's activities for law
problems in America." Police appeared. When Tackwood failed enforcement agencies are similar
squads would trigger explosives to s h ow . for the scheduled to those: of Thomas Tongyai,
inside the San Diego Sports Arena meeting, CRIC flied affidavits better known as "Tommy the
during the convention while with the LA District Attorney's f Traveler," who toured New York
agents outside provoked a office detailing the charges and State colllege campuses advocating
confrontation between police and claiming foul play on the part of the use of violence. Tommy
demonstrators creating a riot his superiors, FBI Special Agent encouragc~d students to kill police,
situation. Thl~ would set up a Birch and Lt. Robert Keel of the to makt! bombs, to explode

buildings and offered assistance in
obtaining explosives. The students
who exposed him as an agent
provocateur in June of 1970 are
now being prosecuted in the
courts while Tommy has been
given a job with a Pennsylvania
police department on the
recommendation of the FBI.

Crime does pay
Tackwood said his career with
the LAPD started in 1962 while
he was a member of a car theft
ring,. He was approached by
Officer E.C. Williams of the LAPD
who said he had enough evidence
to convict Tackwood but
wouldn't if he ageed to work on
cracking a larger car theft ring.
Tackwood agreed and began a
career that led from being a
criminal to being a top agent on
political cases.

ln 1963 Tackwood worked
with the Narcotics Devi.sion of the
LAPD but was transferred to
other departments to gain
experience. Jn I 965 he began his
political work. He served as the
intermediary between the LAPD
Tactical Squad and "US " a
militant black organization ' that
Te&lt;leived support from the LAPD
in return for "stopping the spread
of Pantherism at any cost."
He said "US" was supplied
with weapons ly the Criminal
Conspiracy Section. ln August of
that year at the request of the
LAPD, Tackwood claims be was
directed to call the police and
state that arms were being stored
in the LA Black Muslim Mosque.
He alleged that the call was used
to justify a raid that included the
firing of several rounds of
-c:ontlnuect on IN!Ie ten-

I

SPECTRUM CLASSIFIEOS REALLY WORK. Aftet
do YOU turn to first ?
For rates and Information, come on up to room 355
Norton Hall and uk f01 Soo.l'll!ll!l!ll!llfllt!lllll!ll!!l

all, what !N98 of The Spectrum

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-

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Gus·tav, Sr.-------

355Norton
this week only

A newer, bigger machine
it'll never break do10n!

c
.
5 &lt;~op:t_es
try to beat that!

--We're not kiddin/l around__,
Page eight. The Spectrum. Wednesday, October 20, 1971

'

�EdiTORiAl

I

;;:

A Different Trend
The decisions Monday night by the Graduate Student
Senat.e and the Millard Fillmore Student E?&lt;ecutive
Committee to not purchase Poverty Hill mark the opening of
what will be a turbulent and important period in the
continuing sagas of Sub Board I and student tees.
find the GSA 's actiC?n particularly refreshing because
it followed the presentation of a consultant's report
favorable to the acquistion of Poverty Hill and a GSA
Executive Committee position statement opposing such an
acquisition. This form of responsible decision making by
student governments is not often seen within this University.
Further, it has been rare for a group of student leaders to
take a position on an issue as controversial as this.
We consider it a healthy sign that the GSA chose to
consult their constituency because one of our prime
objections to Sub Board l's operations has been the web of
Intrigue and cloak of secrecy with which they have shrouded
their activities. Not once during the five·month negotiation
period that led to the signing of the purchase option last
April 'did Sub Board ever make an attempt to determine
whether anyone outside thejr small and secretive circle
wanted to embark on such a questionable enterprise.
It can be countered that negotiations are delicate matters
and prior discussion might have jeopardized the option, but
we frankly must discount that notion entirely. Sub Board I
has spent over $20,000 of student monies on the Poverty Hill
project already without ever having consulted the student
body . This we believe to be a far more important
consideration than the faint possibility of hampering
negotiations. In particular, we feel our position on this
matter to be absolutely ju$tified sin·ce one of the major
Poverty Hill consultants admitted Monday night that Sub
Board fears of damaging negotiations last spring were
unfounded.
While agreeing with the outcome of the MFC decision we
must express one reservation. Only their executive
committee was potled Monday night and this issue is of such
~ramount importance that it should merit a sampling of
opinion throughout the MFC constituency.

We

Excellent appointment
The appointment of Dr. McAllister Hull , Jr. as acting
dean of the Graduate School must be viewed with the
greatest enthusiasm. During his relatively brief tenure on this
campus, Dr. Hull has shown a remarkable ability to work
effectively with many diverse segments. We expect that he
will continue to function in the same cooperative and -open
manner now t hat he has entered Hayes Hall and aid in
broadening the administration's credibility among the
student body. If all the other vacant offices are filled with
men of Dr. Hull's caliber, this University may yet achieve the
greatness it deserves.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 24

Wednesday, October 20. 1971
Editor·in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
~"'Editor - AI Benson
Co-MaNIQine Editor - Mike Lippmann
A..t. ~"'Editor - So•n Moss
Buli- M.n~~g~~r - Jim Drucker
A~ne MaMger - Sue Meflentine

C.mpus . . ... .... Jo-Ann Armao
• ...............Howie Kurtz
. ............... l!ill Vac:caro
City .... ........ Harvy Lipmen
Copy ........... Aonni Forman
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marty Gatt.i
Asst • . ............... ,vacant
F•ture ... . .............vacant
Grepf\lc Arts . : ...... . Tom Toles

Layout . . ... . . Maryhope Runyon
Alit . . ... . .... .. .. . ...vecant
Lit. &amp; Drama . . Michael Sllverblatt
MUtic ....... . .....Billy Altman
Off.CM1pus ...... Lynne Traeger
Photo ......... . Marc Ackerman
.. , .... . .. Mickey Osterreicher
Sports . ... ......... Barry Rubin
Asst . ... . ........ Howie Faiwl

The SP«trum is served bV United Press International, College Press
Service, the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los angeles Times Syndicate and
Liberation News Service.

Republication of matter herein without the express consent of the
Editor·in~Chief is forbidden.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor·in..Chief.

- .-

F~e.e

the dogs/

To the Eduor:
The recent onslaught of dog catchers hired by the
administration has instiUed a sense of paranoia in
dog owners and fanciers on campus. Capture to a
'dog means days in a cra mped cage, the possibility of
contracting disease in a public kennel, no exercise,
being helpless in the hands o f insensitive pigs who
1\ave no empathy or concern for the dog, no walks to
excrete wastes - it often stays with the dog in the
cage for days ... not to mention the trauma that the
dog feels after being kidnapped from its loved ones.
To the insensitive, or to' those unacquainted with
dogs, this may sound ludicro us. The myth of
"human superiority'' had led most humans to look
down upon other animals, to subjugate them
mercilessly, to consider themselves " higher" than
dogs and other animals. But the reality is, that
although we are supposedly the "most intelligent"
animal, all living things have an undeniable natural
right to freedom.
Correction:
Due to a typographical error, part or a
pangnph was ommitted from the letter from
Mary McCarthy which appeared in Monday's The
Spectrum. The complete paragraph should have
read : When I inquired as to his reasons for
accepting the office to which he had been
appointed, he [Myles Slatin 1 said that he felt he
was gifted in tbe field of administration. In the

Ln his self-&lt;:entered plundage of our planet, man
bas subjugated, controlled, even exterminated his
feJJow creatures, and dogs are no exception. The
myth that dogs need humans with them at all times
for safety reasons is a lie. The dog arid his ancestors
were here before man, and like all natural creatures,
they can take care of themselves unless we prevent
them fro m doing so. It would be undemandable if
the dog catchers merely checked vaccination tags in
the interest of public ·health. But what they do is
kidnap unleashed dogs at random, regardless of
whether or not the dog has been vacinnated. This
must stop. To chain another creature, to deny it the
freedom it was born with, is an o utrage . But it is just
another example of man's vain imperialistic desire to
" rule the world.'' Dogs are our most oppressed
minority . Put power where it belongs - in the hands
of nature - free the dogs!

Alan Pasarell

course of the discussion , h e said that I waa
exactly the kind of person he wanted to help
operate the libraries at SUNYAB ; be regretted
my departure. What bas occurred; however, is
that he has s urrounded himself with
administrative assistants who are also
well ·i nte.n tioned amateurs, and has thus
effectively i.~ola ted himself from most or the real
librarians.

For what it's worth
by Harvey Lipman
Spiro Agnew is visiting his father's homeland
this week. Unfortunately, reliable sources in the
Capital insist that the president will return to the
United States. This news has been greeted with equal
dismay by the Republican Party, the Democratic
Party, the PGA and tbe United States Lawn Tennis
Association . The purpose of h.is journey to Greece
was not officially disclosed , though sources who
preferred to remaln anonymous claim that Spiro T .
definitely would not 'be bearing gifts. He did ,
no.wever, spend some three hours Sunday chatting
with a fellow by the name of Papadopoulos (known
to his friends as der Fuehrer). One topic definitely
discussed was the American World Series (someone
please explain to me why such baseball mad nations
as Japan and Cuba are not considered part o f the
world), with the Greek premier expressing his
condolences to Agnew over the defeat of the Orioles.
Undoubtedly , other minor questions were
discussed . The New York Tim es "su.cgested that the
vice president and the Greek leader may have
broached the delicate issue of Greece's return to
democracy." Indeed , the concept of democracy
must be considered very delicately. It would be
helpful, of course, if either man had any conception
of what democracy is before sitting down to decide
whether Greece might be ready for so revolutionary
an idea . Later in the evenin g the Maryland Flash
toasted the Greek dictator and cheered all our hearts
by assuring that our loyal allies will continue to act
as the "southern anchor" of NATO (be j ust can't
seem to get over this thing about the south). The
question of who is protecting what from whom was
left unanswered by our revered rhetorician of the
right.
Somehow it is quite sad to learn that the
birthplace of democracy (no, Senator, J don't mean

Mississippi) could produce two of the greatest
fascists of the I wentieth century. Papadopoulos in
particular will go down in history as the man who
re-introduced torture and assassination into the
mainstream of European politics. An awful lot of
Greeks have fallen o ut of eighth floor windows at
Athens police headquarters. His regime has become
famous for its undying devotion to the destruction
o f the Communists, although the Greek army's
definition of Communist is anyone who ever fought
against the Nazis. Such former freedom fighters, in
fact , are prevented from enjoying even so minor a
privilege as the acquisition of a driver's license.
The junta has been going slightly soft of late,
however. It even withdrew its demand that all
foreign reporters working in that Mediterranean
paradise pledge not to criticize the government.
They have gone so far as to release some desperate
prisoners whose crimes against the state included
such dire deeds as writing "unpatriotic music."
Given these immense concessions by the Greek
regime, one can understand why the vice president
was so anxious to iUustrate our loyalty to them.
After all, if the Papadopoulos government should fall
such other defenders of the American way as
Franco, Thieu, Park, Chiang Kai-shek, Duvalier,
Khan, Jan Smith, Lon Nol and Vorster might soon
find themselves threatened.
Among the places that our clown prince will
visit during his tour will be the village of Garp.lianoi
where his father was born. Two of the people who
live in the town told a Times reporter that they
wished that the vice president could come to a
country not livin$ under a dictatorship but as free
people. Perhaps if they understood just bow
responsible his government is for the survival of that
dictatorship they would not be quite so eager to
welcome their friend Spiro. At least we can be swe
that he would be welcomed in quite a different way.

Wednesday, October 20, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

~

�..

~

Police plot exwsed...
ammunition into the bulldlna. No
weapons were found in the raid,
be said .
Murder on orders
Tack wood alleged that the
campus murder of two Black
Panthers at UCLA was carried out
"on the order of the LAPD." In
another incident, he said the FBI
and the LAPD Tactical Squad
made him swear in court th.lt two
men, Penlin and Jenkins, were
planning to rob and kill a truck
driver in a holdup for some
television sets. He said the two
never planned to kill the driver.
They were convicted of
conspiracy to commit murder
anyway, he said .

•

to have planted electronic
listening devices, stolen flies and
cooperated in the suppression of
evidence which would acquit
Angela. Tackwood said he helped
the LAPD try to substantiate
conspiracy charaes against Anpla
Davis, currently a prisoner on
trial. He alleaed that LAPD
Criminal Investigation &amp;
Intelligence Unit has suppressed
important evidence in her case,
specifically som e ballistic reports.

-continued from .,.._ eltht-

other activities. Tack wood's salary
was paid in cash by the head of
CCS and individually through
other officers, he said.
CC S is involved in
harassment of BlacJt Student
Unions throughout the state and,
accordina to Tackwood, "will do
anythlna to convict the left, but
they don't touch the right, whom
they also know about." The CCS
uses the tight wing, he alleged to
set up the left wing.

Tackwood alleges that the
LAPD or Criminal Conspiracy
One time it located a source
Section (CCS) engineered the for purchasing dynamite and
attempted jail-break of George furnished him with t he money. He
Jackson from San Quentin Prison, said he bought the dynamite and
claiming the organizations said detonator caps and turned them
"He'll never come to trail." ' over to CCS. The explosives were
During the press conference then passed through CCS
Later Tackwood said he Tackwood described the CCS, operatives until the source of the
received a surveillance assiJI'Iment ostensibly part of the LAPD, as oriJinal purchase became obscure,
for the Black Panther Party in LA. actually an intelligence aaency be said, and then distributed to backing them way up there."
budg~t was not listed with the
While there he enpaed in that bas jurisdiction over much of radical aroups.
He added that there were at lAPD's.
encouraJina the use and supply of the left win&amp; and black radical
Tack wood said that be doesn't
least "200 •uys like me working
weapons and explosives . activity throughout the state. Trainina pounds
for the LAPD." According to "fear for his life" because the
Tackwood said while under cover "There is no place they can't ao,"
Tack wood, the Criminal "DA's not stupid enough to kill
Another time he was asked to Conspiracy Section gave him "a me."
be met Melvin · Smith better be said, "no place." "They have
known as ·~ott on." Cotton is the beautiful connections with federal locate a militant training camp_in free hand in any crime I wanted
When first contacted in
chief witness in the LA Panther law enforcement agencies" and Northern California . He to commit." He said that the
trial. Accordina to Tackwood, have almost every radical discovered the camp and found section is involved in attempting Washington, D.C., FBI officials
Cotton had been an LA police orpnization in California "well out It was run by CCS. "There to destroy not only the leftist claimed no knowledge of
informer Iince 1967. His Unlc with infiltrated," including some not so were FBI members in charge of organization like the Black Tackwood and his allegations,
the LAPD is aJJeaedly throuah radical organizations like radio it," be claimed. Tackwood said be Panthers but also the federal asldna the College Press Service
Seraeant R.G. Farwell. Cotton stations a nd colleges, he believes the camp was either government's Office of Economic reporter if be was ..drunk or
heavily infiltrated by the FBI or 0 pportunity Proaram in Los tripping." However, a short time
was supposed to have the specific maintained .
later tbe FBI released the
was being used by CCS as ' a Angeles.
assiJI'Iment of plannina the Dec. 8,
following
s tatement : "The
training
around
for
agents.
J 969 raid on the Black Panther 'Pretty nice' expense account
a 11 eptions of Tack wood are
Party's Los Angeles Headquarters.
When asked about the possible DA not stupid?
When asked at the press
completely false as far as the FBI
He claimed that CCS has files is concerned. The ~barges were
conference how he was paid, political afftliation of people
Davis-Soledad defense
Tackwood said be received an involved in the project plan, on 4000 to SOOO people, based on pubUcly refuted by . Tack wood
In 1fJ?O and I 97 I Tackwood expense account, "a pretty nice Tackwood said be didn't know if information supplied by himself on Oct . 6 in the office of
was a.ssianed to the Angela one." His pay ranged from S 100 the people were political but informers. Tackwood did not the Los Angeles County District
Davis-Soledad Brothers Defense to walk into an office and say added, "for this to come about know how CCS was budgeted ; Attorney with a Los Angelu
Committee. While there he is said "hello," and up to $5-6000 for they had to have somebody however, be did know their nmes reporter present."
~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PAID POLITICAL AD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

A NEW GENER.A TION OF· LEADERSHIP?

,

Photo courtesy Courier Express

WHO ARE YOUK_IDDING NED REGAN?

..

NEED WE SAY MORE

SEDITA for COUNTY EXECUTIVE
PAID FOR BY YOUTH FOR SEDITA - 886-5526
PAID POLITICAL A q · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·...· · · · "

\

Page ten. The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 20, 1971
t

�~School

review board
urged by community
Parent-citi~en

review boards to
oversee school policies is ~eing
urged by three community
groups. Involved are the Schiller
Park Organized Taxpayers, the
North Buffalo Citizens Council
and BUILD.
"They have experienced in the
last three or four weeks that they
are as powerless as we are," said
BUILD co-ordinator Bill Gaiter.
The proposal for citizen review
boards in BtJffalo schools follows
recent disturbances th:tt have in
some cases caused school closings.
" We hope to be able to get a
solution to those problems" in the
schools Mr. Gaiter said ...We want
a voice in the decisien-making
process."
BUILD is a black civil rights
organization, and SPOT and the
North Buffalo Council are white
community groups.
The details of the proposal are
" being worked out now,"
according to Tom Sinclair. He is
coordinatlns the efforts of the
two community groups with
BUILD.
Community powerless
Mr. Gaiter emphasized that the
community is powerless in school
affairs. He said the proposal
involves setti n g up citizen
commit tees in schools to

r------

"scrutinize personnel und
personnel practices, serving as a
liaison body between students and
staff and the downtown office
(the Board of Education) and the
community." The Board of
Educaiion, he noted would have
to recognize the commit tees as
"legitimate bodies."
Unless they have children in a
school, BUILD members are now
forbidden to enter schools
because of injunctions by the
Board .
Mr. Gaiter said the Board has
failed to respond to a list of
demands by black students. The
demands include : hiring of more
black teachers, and counselors,
implementation of ~k stu ies
and setting up black student
unions.
When schools are hil by
disorders, Mr. Gaiter charged , the
Board and teachers label the
causes as black-white conflict.
Racism does exist in Buffalo
schools, he said, "racism not In a
personal sense, but institutional
racism." He contended that the
city's response is to bring in police
and then let the situation "return
to normal."
The city hired guards from a
private security company to
patrol schools foUowing the series
of disorders.

Former SNCC leader shot

H. Rap Brown recuperating
under heavy police guard
by Janis Cromer
S~ctrum

Staff Wrlur

The poliice guard was doubled
Sunday at Roosevelt Hospital in
New York where black militant H.
Rap Brown is recovering from
gunshot wounds received in a
shootout with police. Brown was
seriously h10rt early Saturday In a
New Y &lt;Jtrk running gu n
confrontation that also wounded
two policemen.
Brown, on the fBI's ten most
wanted list, formerly headed the
Student National Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC).
He was on'e of four men arrested
in connecttion with the shooting
outside a bar whlch had been held
up on West 85th St. The
28-year-old militant was shot
twice in t h e abdomen by
patrolman Ralph Mannella, who
found hirn with a .38 caliber
magnum in hand on the roof of an
apartment building where the
holdup SUSIJ&gt;CCtS tried to hide. The
other three men were not
wounded.
Missing sinc:e 1970
The former SNCC leader had
been missitng since March , II.J70,
when he tfailed to show up for
trial ' on charges of inciting to riot

-uPI

ll Rap.Brown

.l

with' half that many on Saturday.
Other patrolmen were stationed at
the hospital entrances and police
with walkie-talkies patroUed the
and arson in connection with a
racial incident in Cambridge,
Maryland in 1967. Brown was
reportedly killed in the explosion
of a car last year, however, this
report was never substantiated .
At least 20 detectives and
patrolmen were outside Brown's
recovery room Sunday compared

GET A BETTER GRAPE-----,

Compositions - Bookreports -llfm PIPet'S CORRECTED
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Send to :
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KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
WEONESOA Y, NOVEMBER 3rd, 8 :00p.m.

MELANIE
.

WITH

JANEY &amp; DENNIS
Admission: Orch. $6.00, $5 .00, - Bale. $5.00, $4.00
Tickets Available at Norton Union Ticker Office

'\

corridors. One policeman said that
the security precautions were
taken to prevent someone from
freeing Brown and to protect the
injured policeman, Gary Hunt.
Brown's condition was listed as
"fair" on Monday and Hunt's as
.. satisfacto ry ." Another
patrolman injured in t h e
shootout, Salvatore Rosato, did
not requlre hospitalization. Hunt
was initiaiJy hospitalized in the
same room as Brown, but was
moved at the poUce department's
request. "He's entitled to his own
room," a poUce. spokesman said.
Mayor John V. Lindsay visited
Hunt on Sunday and reported
that he "looked weU and is
recuperating."
St . louis accomplices
The three aUeged accomplices
who were arrested with Brown
were ordered to be held on
$150,000 bail after arraignment
on charges In connection with the
holdup. They were identified as
Levy BaUantine, Arthur Young
and Sam Petty , all of St. Louis,
Mi ssouri. The four men
apparently had spent some time in
St. Louis before coming to New
York, police said.
In the hospital , Brown has
given his name as "Roy Wi!Jiams"
and several relatives, including his
brother, ststcr and wife, Lynn,
who vtsited him refused to
identify him as Brown. Brown's
lawyer. William Kunstler saw him
from a distance and said: " I am
not prepared to say that the
police are lying, but since Attica, I
have learned not to take their
w o rd . ·• fl o w ever, Police
Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy
said Brown wa s positively
identified through fmgerprints
and other police records.

WE GUARANTEE TO BEAT ANY PRICE
WITHIN 50 FEET OF OUR STORE....
REMEMBER WHAT YOU WERE PAYING BEFORE 3.99 and 4.99? ISN'T THAT A RIP-OFF?

•

. . DOWN TO OUR COST
THE RECORD RUNNER

Wednesday, October 20, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

••

�DeciSioa to storm

Eait.fY:~~'!!;!!~. .~~~ t!~~!~~~~ ~~ w

first of a tltree·part article on the
e11enu that took p/Qce at Attica
prison tire morning of Sept. I 3. A
team of UP/ newsmen interviewed
state troopers, hostage~ and stou
officillls, tmd this is their 11er1ion
of wlwlt lulppened during the ten
minutes of storming Attica Prison.
Hank Williama, "Pappy" WRld
and "L.O." didn't get much sleep
that Sunday ni&amp;ht. Their minds
were pre()C(:upied with bloodshed
and death.
It was a miserable niaht in "D"
yard where rain drenched the 38
hostaaes an d the more than I 200
rebel inmates . Inside the
administration buildina several
hundred yards and a few walls
away, it was dry, but the nme
aloom prevailed. Russell G.
Onrald, the 62·year-old heavy-set
state e&gt;orrectional services
commissioner, had decided to
atorm Attjoca ,Prison.
Capt. Frank Wald - "Pappy"
to his feUow prison auards - was
waitina blindfolded inside the rlna
of hostaaes in "D" yard. He was
scared stiff, but kept silent . He
would be remembered by the
other hostages those who
sumved - as the one who kept
some aemblance of sanity amona
the 38 men who spent four days
in fear, most of the lime behind
blindfolds.
It rained on and off as dawn
broke over the prison yard
Monday. There was no sun to dry
the makeshift tent city the
Inmates bad built in the center of
the yard . Up in the
superintendent's office, Oswald
reviewed the plans to sto rm the
prison with Maj. John Monahan,
commander of Troop A of the
State Police, two other rankin&amp;
officers and Capt. Henry " Hank"
Williams, who bad drawn up the
tactics and shortly would be
watchina his plan unfold like a
aeneraJ standina on a hill above
the battlefield.
'Force to meet fon:e'
"Use force to meet force, even
if it means someone on the other
side gets JciUed," Williams had told
his men when the rebellion broke
out.
He and Oswald wapted to
storm the prison Sunday but were

observers' committee which and we do not intend to be beaten
pleaded for more time to or driven a su~h ."
neaotiate a p~cefu! settlement.
Wives, mothers and fathers of
The battle plans were Jiven to the bostaaes aatbered with
troopers as they mustered in reporters outside the main pte.
parkina Jots of motels in nearby They knew somethina was aoing
Batavia Sunday.
on. Tho new shift of troopers Robert Douaiass, the secretary more than 200 - entered the pte,
to the Governor, was on the but the shift that was supposed to
telephone to his boss. He wu the leave about 6 a.m. stayed inside.
key man on the scene u far as The trooopers pthered in the
Rockefeller was concerned. If grassy area that surrounds the
DouaJas had advised the governor admini.sitr\tion building insidt the
to come to Attica , RockefeUer pte and waited. In a large room
probably would have come. If inside the buJidlna, Monahan
Douglass had advised aplnst briefed the rankin&amp; officers. Lt.
stormina the prison, the move DouaJas Parr remembers that the
probably would not have been briefing was about 7 a.m., and the
made.
move - named "Operation Go" Down in the yard, the inmates was scheduled teotatively for 9
sensed the attack was about to a.m. Th1D troops at Attica - State
come. The hostile rebels - Black PoUce and sheriff's deputies - had
Panthen for the most part always been armed.
shouted that the hostaaes should
be killed immediately. Others Fabe re1,ort
The decision to use gWu was
wanted to surrender the hostaaes.
A vote was taken, and it was probablll made: in part, because
decided to fight , and kill the even thc1 most liberal members of
hostaaes if the prison was t be observers' committee stormed. The Black Muslims, who includinll militant law)'&amp; William
bad assumed leadership positions Kunstler - were convinced the
in the rebellion , put their bodies convicts would kill the hostaces.
between the Panthers and the In fact, at this point on Monday
hostaaes. Volunteers were called mominc, inmate~ inside who were
not symJpathetic to the revolt bad
for to act as "executioners."
smuaaJecl our the false report that
two auatrds lay dead in Cellblock
'L.D: feared
There was one Black leader the "D" with their throats slit.
hostages feared the most - Elliot
''You have to reaJlz:e that al
James Ba rkley . " L.D. " a
2 1-year-old BJack from Rochester this poinll we had given up hope
- the most eloquent of the of gettina everyone out alive," a
leaders - gained powe.r when his top sourc:e in the governor's office
statments were broadcast on a said later. " It was no lonaer a
network news show viewed earler question of saving all the hostaaes
on the two sets in the prison yard . - but whether we could save any ·
"The entire incident that has of them. We thouJht In terms of
erupted here at Attica is a result sa vine I 0 or 20 Uves if we were
of the unmitipted oppression lucky ."
wrought by the racist
administration," Barkley said. ltlrt II - The Orders Were Given

1- 3 copies u ..._ .. n
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attack.
Security was extremely tight
following the discovery Sunday
night of two bombs and a number
of Incendiary devices· near the
Soviet Embassy. Officers on a
routine inspection of the area
found six sticks of dynamite
which were immediately picked
up by the bomb disposal unit of
the Ottawa police department.
Police arrested the occupants of
two cars in the area near the
embassies of The Congo ,
Switzerland, Egypt, Nationalist
China, Belgium and Brazil. Almost
800 people had staged a
demonstration in the same area
earlier Sunday night to protest
Kosygin's visit.
Kosygin arrived at 10 a.m.
Monday morning to begin a
two-day visit in Canada and
discuss a wide range of topics with
Prime Minister Trudeau. A
spokesman for the Ottawa police
department said, " I would say the
security thrown around Mr.
Kosygin is the tightest afford~
any foreign dignitary so far ." This
was before the attack on Kosygin
took place.

:1

••••••••••
•.,•.••
NO COWON ltOVIHD

With
about of "Lona Uve
Hunpry!" i man b roke through
police lines in Ottawa, Canada and
attacked Soviet Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin. The incident occurred
Monday morning as Kosygin and
Canadian Prime Minister Pierre
Trudeau were walking out of the
Parliament building. The assailant,
who identified himself as Giza
Matrai, a Toronto man known for
his acUvities In the Canadian
equivalent of the John Birch
Society, the Edmund Burke
Society, was ttuown to the
pound and taken into custody.
Kosygin, unhurt but quite
shaken, was immediately
surrounded by four Royal
CanadWt Mounted Policemen and
hustled into the east block of the
Parliament building . UPI
photographer Jean Alarie was
dose enough to the action to
receive a cut lip, and said that the
attacker "actualJy got his foreann
around Kosygin's neck" before he
was dragged away. There were
reports that the Soviet premier's
coat was tom, but this was not
immediately determinable .
Trudeau was Wlhanned in the

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Page twelve. The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 20, 1971

1

· ..Reg. S25 to $50 NOW $14.95
Reg. S55 to S60 NOW $19.95
HEAD SKIS K1lly BOOs ....... Reg. S200 NOW $139
320Y's ...........Reg. S135 NOW $110
LAMINATED WOODEN SKIS
w•th P-tl!lrbottom Reg. S40 NOW $14.95
BOOTS Rosemount &amp;t 100 .. Reg S11 0 NOW $39.95
Latrappeur
Reg. $85 NOW $35.00
Nordica
Reg 45 NOW $24.95
PARKAS
. REDUCED 20% to 60%
SWEATERS
. REDUCED 20% to 50%
Thousands of great values All sales !mal

3DAY
SKI
SALE
BE&amp;INS TOMORROW
OCT. 21,22,23

~PWA III.Y
Open ewry __.,. .. HIO pm

�Erie County sued on counts ·
of violating Fair·Labor laws .
by .Janis Cromer

concerned primarily with equal representation rights
in unions.

Spectrum Staff Wtiter

Unsung still'

.

.. .,

••

•

0

A suit charging Erie County with violations of Sex diaciimination
the Fair Labor Standards Act was filed last
"0~ greatest importance in this issue,'' Mr.
WednesdaY' by the U.S. Labor Department. This suit McNamara noted, "is the charge of discrimination."
claims thalt employees at Meyer Memorial Hospital Under the Federal Work Law there is a provision
are not btling paid the federal wage minimum of known is the Equal Pay Act which states that.the
"' $1.60 in SC:~me instances and are not being paid time same pay rate must be administered to those
~~)i~ and a halif for overtime. The Labor Department employees performing equal jobs regardless of sex,
H.~~:...~~~
further c.h.arged that the county is discriminating race or ,relision (an exception to this is cues of
against wt:&gt;men by paying them ,less than men senioritY). Upon investigating Meyer Memorial ,~
perforrninst equivalent work.
Labor Department claims to have found that some
-uPI
Edward G. McNamara, area director of the Wage clellllif!g women are receiving a lower income than
World Ot.mp Nelson Bfil• lhown and Hour Division of the Labor Department, says maintenance men receive for what the Labor
in this photo was one of the issue of the county paying below minimum wage Department has deemed ••equal services." Director
Pittsburgh's several unsung is a "techntical matter - only involving certain hours Russo countered this by stating: "Contrary to the
pitching stars as the Bucs upset not being paid for." Some workers were scheduled Women's Ub movement, we feel that men who are
the favored Oriol•. In addition to to work four days in one week and six days in the required to do more physically taxing jobs, the ones
the .:don on the field, an nex~ but 1were paid for each of those weeks on the that women cannot do, should get more money. The
~mated 100,000 persons spent
basis of a five-day scale. So, an employee would salaries are geared to the work we expect from our
Sunday evening rejoicing In work 32 btOUl'S one week and 48 the next and receive people."
downtow.n . Pittlbur-.. For the
Orioles, getting reedy for a tour of the 'same "amount of pay for each. Thus, in the
48·hour wt~k the hourly rate is less than the federal Two-year period
Japa~~ it'S'.~~~~~ next year.
Mr. McNamara emphasized that the filed suit
rninimwn.
'"·\~.~'
was a civil action resulting from the completion of
County opposition
investigatory procedures over a two.year period. The
'(~~.·
. ~·
County Budget Director Louis J. Russo has suit charges that'violations date back as far u Feb . 1,
urged that the county adamantly oppose the Labor 1969. This legal action serves as an injunction to
Departme~tt suit. He has claimed that the minimum restrain the hospital from further wage violations
wage paid to hospital employees since Jan. 1 is $2 .20 and to force the county to pay the back wages
an hour and that during 1970 the minimum was incurred from past violations. Both Mr. McNamara
and Mr. Russo have expressed sentiments that the
$2.02 per hour.
Concerning the allegation that the hospital does case can be handled out of court through executive
not pay time and a half for overtime, Mr. Russo meetings between the county and Labor Department
argued : "We are operating throughout the country officials.
Neither Mr. Russo nor the Labor Department
under the Taylor Law, and it would be
discrimina1tory to pay some people time and a half could give the exact figures regarding the number of
for overtime ju.st because they work at the hospital people or the amount of money involved, but Mr.
when somt~ne in the same classification that works McNamara estimated that well over 1000 hospital
in county lltall does not get it. That goes for pay, too. workers would be affected by the outcome. Mr.
If we ga'f'e this (wages according to Fair Labor Russo concluded that if the county's defense fails, in
2525 WALDEN AVE .
Standards Act), we might have to do it throughout court or over an executive bargaining table, he hoped
the count)l ." In answer to this, Mr. McNamara of the that only the hospital's professional and
OPENING SOON I
J
Labor Department said : ..1 can' t see where any of para-professional worke~ would ~e covered by the
Russo's arguments involving the Taylor Law and federal law . and that such employees as
supportir~g
present practices are pertinent." stenographers and maintenance personnel would be
According to Mr. McNamara, the Taylor Law is e)Ccluded.
,

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Tickets SO¢ before 6 p.m .
7S¢after6p.m.

Tickets on sale at Norton Tic~et Office

A Division of Sub-Board 1

,
•ll

OPENING SOON.- tnAGARA'S LARGEST TAPE a AUTO souND CENTER

M·OVE''N SOUND

c

3301 ttYDE PARK BLVD.
NIAGI\RA FALLS, N.Y.
ONL. Y .TWENTY MINUTES FROM BUFFALO FOR THE GREA "JrEST -

SOUND AROUND AT LOW- LOW STijDENT PRJCES!I!!

Wednesday, October 20, 1971 . The SpectruJt:l . Page thirteen

.-

�"\

mishap

-

--GharJJ!!!..!?fp8c9

Mohan
by Bruce Engel
Sp~trum

Staff k'rlter

To good golfers the concession
of very short putts is quite
common. It is taken for gr~nted
that one's opponent wi.ll sink it .
Therefore, allowing him to just
pick up the ball is aJmost &amp;Oif
etiquette. But the rules for a bia
tournament do not go aJona with
this. The rules state that the ball
must be putted in. Last Saturday
Bull ace Jim Mohan found this
out the hard way.
Mohan , as well as four other
members of the Buffalo golf team,
competed In the ECAC finals at
Cooperstown. On o ne sreen,
Mohan left a putt two inches
s hort of the- cup. But instead of
puttina it in Mohan merely picked
it up. Jim then scored himself as
havina a six on the hole, but after
he bad finished his round he .,
found out that he had been
charged with an extra s troke for
his action. In addition , Mohan was
disqualified from the to urnament
due to a protest lodged by the Buffalo a four man total of 333,
which h ed for eighth place with
remainder of lti5 fourso me.
Holy Cross. Had the Bulls had
Mohan 's 78 instead of Ahlbin's 89
Costly pu"
Mohan's disqualiflcat ion cost they would have been cons1dered
the Bulls II strokes in team score. h1gher.
That there was an infnngement
Team scores are determined from
the best four out of the squad 's of the rules is beyond question.
fi ve entrants. Wtth Mo han's However thJs incident, in the
disqualificatio n Buffalo had to usc final e of the season, brings back
its fifth man . The Bull scorer.. to mind the very first match ,
were Dale Dolmage (80), Jo hn when Buffalo beat C'anisi us and
Lan:z. (81 ), Chuck Prorok (!!5) and several o ther schools. The Griffins
Steve Ahlbin (89 ). This gave then clai ~e4 that the Bulls

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SAYIMONEY
- SHOP AIJIY NAVY

731-732 MAIN- 15).1515 NEAl TUPPR
••Tr•• ( 'hw••

Jim Mohwt (r-.t) Buff81o's fine
tenior golfer h.t the misfortune
of being dit4u_,ifled at the ECAC
golf championships at
Cooperstown, New York. Coach
Bill Dando (left) led the Bulls to a
16-0 dual meft.teaiOn.
weren 't o n their scheduJe. All in
all it appears easier to beat
Buffalo with •technicalities than
with ability on the links.
Two d ays pr ior to the
to urnament the BuUs trounced
Fredonia 17 ~-~. Thts completed
an undefeated 16-0 dual meet
season, the Bulls' first since l 963
when t hey went 9-0. The victory
at fredonia gave Buffalo a 17
match winning s treak . N~xt year
the Bulls will try to s urpass the
Buffa lo record of 30 s traight , set
over t he four se&lt;~sons from
1961-1964. Of course four o f the
squad's seven members will
graduate (Mohan, Dolmage,
Ahl b1n and Lanz) but Prorok as
well as Marty Fink and Ted
Miskolzci wUI return and provide
a stro ng nucleus.
The Cross Countr y Bulls were
aJso active Saturday. Buffalo ran
on their home Grover Cleveland
couJSe against RIT, LeMoyne and
Buffalo State. The Bulls lost to
RIT and LeMoyne but defeated
Buffalo State. The scores were
RIT 23, Buffalo 32 , Lemoyne 22,
Buffalo 33 and Buffalo 23,
BuffaJo State 33 . Jim McClurkin
apin had a fine race finish ing
second overall. Buffalo's other
scorers were bunched together but
just too far back to contend .

The Phtsbuflh Pirates are champions of the baseball world (three
days later, who cares?). ThiS is the very same Pirate team that,
accordlna tp Joe Reichler, shouJd disprove any notion that there is
racism in baseball. "Why, in one pme lut year, the Pirates fielded nine
blacks ... blacks and Latins, I mean ." That's what Joe Reichler said ,
and the columnist didn't find that very conclusive but Joe continued,
"And sometimes when AI Downin&amp; pitches, the Dodgen field eight
Negroes.'' Joe felt he had put enouab bolea in the columnist's theory
to kill it. So, after mentionina Monte Irvin , the Token Nesro of the
commissioner's staff, Joe felt safe enouah to say, " Baseball has been
very aood to the Nesro blacks.'• He rea!Jy said that. His mind couldn't
choose quickly enouatt between his well polished , polite "Nelfo" or
the "black" he would use to satisfy the colleae sports reporter. Most
likely, it seemed , Joe was more accustomed to using some of Archie
Bunker's favorite expressions.
Now, who is this Joe Reichler,and, even harder to figure, why wu
the inconoclastic college sportswriter speaking with rum? Joe is the
very same man who appears in &amp;/1 Four with his arm around Jim
Bouton advisina him to stay away from labor orpniz.er Marvin Miller,
a danse'rous man according to Reichler. Yes, the same ReichJer who
last year a pproached two lon,.haired pro testers just outside the
commissioner's office and said, "Get out of here." Caucasian white Joe
Reichler is the assistant to com m.issioner Bowie Kuhn.
The lco noclut had come in contact with the assistant before.
Indeed he wu one of the very protesters Joe had wanted to dispose of
just o~e year earlier. He had been prote.stins t he commissioner's
decision to reprimand Jim Bouton for writina what no one denied was
the truth. He was there to protest the commissioner's harassment and
to do his share in seeing that Bouton , his childhood hero, would n ot
become another Jim Brosnan . A decade before, Brosnan had dared to
write a realistic baseba!J book. A year later, after turn ing in an
excellent ERA o f 2.38, he was released and found not one team
interested in him . to ken Negro of the commissioner's staff, Joe felt
safe enough to say,
When the iconoclastic sportswriter spoke to ReichJer the second
time, Bouton had long since pitched him$Clf out of baseball. It w~
earl y this Ma y and the sportswriter had just written a column for his
college paper wh1ch sharply cirticized the baseball estab~hment. He
mailed a copy of the column to the commissioner. A week later, when
he tried to reac h the commissioner on the telephone , evasive
secretaries were all he could speak to .
Then o ne day the call came at home. " Hello, this is Joe Reichler
from the commissioner's o ffice . I have this I ras h you wrote in front of
me. I didn't tHi nk it was worth y of response, but the commissioner
told me to call you.'' The columniSt felt insulted.
" I Wllnted to speak to the commissioner, not his hatchet man!" he
yelled. lie had already lost tus cool, out their t!llk went on for over an
hour. The assista nt would say that in five or six years there might be a
Negro manager, and that the o nly reason there 1s n't one now is that
t hey're too good as baJlplayers ; the Robinsons and Wills are still too
ca pable as playen to retire. Instead of askin&amp; why only these few men
would be considered (hardly any of the white managen; were s tars) and
explaining how blacks are still at the mercy of white· man's control, the
iconoclas t j ust said, " Bull s hit! " That 's what he said , too, when the
assistant explained how chaotic would be an election of the
commissioner by the players. Perhaps the assistant k new the players
wo uJd re place Kuhn and himself with dangerous men like Miller.
The assista nt aeemed particularly upset with the iconoclast 's use
of obscenity , "Now I know what kind of person yo u are!" The
columnist replied in kind when later on the assistant used the work
"crap." to which the assistant replied, "Crap is not a dirty word ."
But this column is not about crap. No, it's about the World
Champion Pirates who wouJd have a black manager in the dugout, Joe,
if basebaU weren' t racist. And what if the iconoclast were a member of
the Pirates; what would h e do? Sunday afternoon, after the game, with
a bat in one hand and a beer in the other, he wo~d have smashed the
lens of every television camera in his locker room . And he would be
shouting just what Joe once told him , "Get out of here!!"

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Page fourteen. The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 20, 1971
J

.I

S PECT RUM CLASS I F IEOS REALLV
WORK! FOR INFORMATION AND
RATES' come on up to 355 N ortonll ll

�•

c·L allllllll
WANTED
ADDRESSERS nMd.ct. Hom-orl&lt;en
ear n to $150. For Information send
$ .25 and stamped addr-.ct enveloSM
to Bo,x 12213, Gainesville, Florida
32601.
PIANO, used,
832·0611.

cheap.

Will

837-8181 from 9 a.m.-7 p.m.

LIVING room and b.ciroom furniture~
Reasonable. Call 837·2593, leave
m-.ge.

please.

1'960 MGA ra.dstet, mechaniCIIIY
good. Body In excellent condition.
Best offer takes lt. 835-678 7.

COUPLE want's apartment neu
c.mpus beginning Jenuuy. as for
Information leadlnt to secure
apartment (January 9fadu1tes vacating
apartment?) Jot'ln 837..0335.

LOST 6 FOUND
Armadillo

purse 834-7343,

FOR SALE
8lC10 BLUE and White canvas cabin
tent. Used only twice. Beautiful
condition. Complete with stakes, poles
and tent bag. Paid $85, now only $55.
Call Billy at 831·4113 or leave message
for Steve.
RUG 11'9" x 8 '6" green-yellow, $10.
cont1ct Jeff 632..0942.
196.r, FORO IUtOmltl(; V·8, one
owner. Good condition, r~dlo, $175,
836·1642.
PAIR Frect'eraun shoes - size 5 1h, like
newt They're too small for me.
833·8366.
STEREO turntable Pioneer PLA 2 5 Shure M·91E cartridge, base, cover, 3
months old. 875·4464, Bob.
NEW 150-watt stereo component
system. Undei guarantee, $795 .
Original price. Must sell . Call 838·3246
after 6:00p.m. or 634..0118.
FOR SALE vw bus 1966, completely
rebuilt engi ne, guaranteed. Asking
S600 or best offer. Call Mike at
881·1784 after 7 p.m.

1965 V.W. bug. ElCcellent condition,
$400. Reply In writing Spectrum
Office, Box 86.
RADIO Craig 7·band AM/FM/SW , five
S.W. bands, plus AM/FM headsets and
earphOnes. Cost $100. Will sell $50.
Reply In writing Spectrum Office, Box
86.
VOLVO 1225 being dismantled lor
parts . 8160 engine with 6-volt
electrlcs. M-4, 4-speed trans., Altts,
glass, etc. Bill Thompson 458A,
Allenhurst, 837-4647 evenings.
VOLKSWAGON Camper bus, 1964,
good condition, Snow tires • .,our
spares, 9iiS heater, elCtras. Call Seth
875·8195.
1970 PORSCHE 914 Roadster, deluxe
appearance group, AM ·FM radio. Cllll
alter 6 p.m. 741·3921.

ROOMMATES WANTED
ROOMMATE - own bedroom, $68 11
month
Inc luding everything.
Meln-west Fetry 1rea. C•ll 836· 3270.
WANTED - female roommate to snare
house - 5-mlnute walk to campus. Ca ll
834·3850.

RIDE BOARD
AUSTIN Amerlcl 1968. Runs well - .
needs some work. Make offer.
896· 1006 anytime.
OLDSMOBILE Cutlass 1966, 4-speed,
elCcellent condition, $650. 896·1006
anytTme.
1962 OLDSMOBILE. 65,000 miles,
good mechanical conditiO n, autom1tlc
transmission; power steering; brakeS!
mounted snows In cluded. Great
transportation.
$250 negotllble.
837· 1617 or 831-4113. Ask lor
Mickey.
REFRIGERATORS , stoves 1nd
washers. Reconditioned; delivered and
guaranteed. O&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore, TX4· 3183.
SON Y 252·0 tape deck four months
old, $120 or make offer. Also Ampex
AX-50, never used. Regular $250,
yours for $200 , Call 831 ·3767·8,

RIDE N EEDED to Albany early Fri.,
Oct . 22. Will share costs. Call Anne,
838·2633.

may the next year bring
"-Ppl,.. and success In all Wldellvors
- · Quoth the VIrgin "N-more"
Roon'lmates M.M. lo M.M ., L.O.

STEVE -

....... froM.

J EWISH BIBLE
Phone

876-4 286

MISCELLANEOUS

APARTMENTS WANTED

move.

MALE student and dog, Otis, ne.ct
place to live. Call 881-3647 and leave
message for David.

'

\

RAMBLER W890n 1965 - automatic,
power steering, excellent run ning,.
nMds body work , 8300 or offer. C1ll
Roy 831-4843, 694·1378.

LOST1

Hear, 0 Israel

TRYING to find an apt. or roommate
In Lancaster. Call Jeanne 886·9625
1fter 3 p .m.

PERSONAL
XEROX •nvthlng for only $.05 - tne ·
cheapest price In Buf111o. Celeb rite the
arrival of Gustav Senior, our brand new
Xerox machine. He never Jam s, breaks
or gets sick. This week's Introductory
specIll - $ .05 1 copy.
AUTOMATIIIE service Is 011r only
business. 1ndependent Foreign Car
Service, 839·1850.
FOLK Guitar lessons, Jeff. 835·3384,
835·9229.
HORSEBACK riding, hayrides.
Off.s..son rates. waverly Stables,
Service Ro•d
18, Niagara River
.f'•rkW'!Y. 8 miles north of Peace
Bridge, Nlag,ra Falls, Ontario, Canada .
Phone 416·2!15·3925.
BEAUTIFUL handmade gold 1nd sliver
Jewelry' - wedding rings - at sensible
prices. J .P. The · Goldweaver. 655
Elmwood at Ferry Street, 881 ·3400.
HAPPY Birthday R.M.C . The hair rTIIY
grow thinner, the body may grow
we11&lt;er, but the desire always grows
stronger. From us.

TUNE.UPSI Prepare 'tor wlntecl All
cars under $20. We're professlon•fs.
Minor rep11rs . Evecythlng 9Uifante.ct.
634·3852.
TVPING, experienced, near U.B., $..40
per page. 834·3370. Fast service.
NV'S
Hotel
Tudor has
Faculty·Student·Staff rates.
reservations and Information,
832..()611 .

I

ll

UB
For
Clll

ANYONE Interested In forming study
group lor growing; learning through
UBntla Book - stop by 43 LeRoy
upstairs evenings.
C&amp;H JONES Professional Typing
Service
computerize d
IBM
equipment plus our experience give
best
po ssib le presentltlons of
d lssertatlons, thesis, term papers,
resumes and employment application
letters. Lo c ated
between two
campuses . Very reasonable. Call
837-6558.
U .U.A.B . Dance Committee wltl hold a
meeting on Wednesday, October 20, at
4 :45 p.m. In Norton 261. All members
are urged to attend.
WILL CARE for one child In my home
days, 837 -7827.
TYPING done, 833-8236. Will pick up
work.
·
THE "ALL-NEW" GUSTAV. He never
breaks down! This week's special $ .05 a copy ,

RIDERS w ;mted to Washington, o.c .
or Marylend. Leaving Friday, 22nd,
returning Sunday 24th. Michael
881·3480.
N EED ride October 28 or 20 t o Ann
Arbor, Unlv. of Mich. or nearby. Call
838·3099.
RIOE· Wanted to Ann Arbqr Michigan
University or Detroit Frldey, October
22, return ride wanted Monday,
Octobe( 25, If possible. Call Jules
831·2360.

a Month in Your

Spare Time

APARTMENT FOR RENT

PLASMA NEEDED

FURNISHED modern apt. for 4 male5.
Three bedrooms. living room, kitchen
and b•throom. Rent $60/month each
utilities. Welklng distance. Clll

Any Group or Type
Men and Women

INC.
2450 ELMWOOD AVE.
874.0591

Slacks galore in 2 new 11tores,
now open at Elmwood and
Bidwell near State Teachers, and
Main Street opposite U.B.
Groovy Dares to tum you on ... in
ptiids, stripes, checks, and solids.
Wester pockets, regular pockets,
wide and regular belt loops.
Plenty of flares in famous Levi's
®Sta-Prest,® slacks. Also straiaht
cuts that are with it. Dig Pants A'
Plenty now!

GRADUATING
STUDENTS:
Call831-5570
or drop in
Rm. 356 Norton

Wednesday, October 20, 1971. The Spectrum . Page fifteen

•

�r

AnnouneemeJits

What's Happening

UUAB Dance Committee will hold an important
meeting today at 4:45 p.m. in Room 261 Norton.
All members are urged to attend.

Wednesday, Oc:t. 20
Filin: The Brig with the Living Theater will be
shown in the Conference Theater, 6 p.m.
Recital : Creative Associate Recital in Room 100
Baird Hall, 8 &amp; 9:30p.m.

Activist Youth foi Israel will hold an open
steering committee meeting tomorrow night at 8
p.m. in Room 332 Norton.

Thu~ay, Oct. 21

Film : Kowaldon, 8 p.m., Room 147 Diefendorf.

CAC needs volunteers to work at the ''Cradle of
Black Pearls" day care center. Call836-4169 or go to
the CAC office in Room 220 Norton.

Friday, Oct. 22
Coffeehouse: First Floor Cafeteria, Norton, 9 p.m.,
$.50 admission, " Manson Family" appearing.
Pilot 100 will have an orientation meeting - - - - - - - - · · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - weekend Film : Greetings and HI Mom in the
tomorrow at 5 p.m . All persons .interested in riding
Conference Theater,$ .15 for students. •
with area law-enforcement agencies are urged to
attend. The meeting will be in Room 231 Norton.

------------------------------------------.~

Chabad House will have a lecture on Jewish
Mysticism and Kabalah tonight at 8 p.m. in the
Chabad House.

in~

The Physics Student Association will be meet
today at 3 p.m. in Room 203 Hochstetler . Anyone
interested in physics is invited to attend.
The UUAB Musical Committee will present a
rock concert, " Pillar," today at 3 p.m. in Haas
Lounge.
The Underaraduate Medical Society has a copy
of the acceptance statistics for last year's senior class
at UB pre-medical and pre-dental students may see
this and other pertinent information during peer
group advisement hours, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m .,
Monday- Friday in Room 346 Norton. Students
should also pick up a copy of V'te UMS handbook,
The Next Four Years as a guide to their
pre-professional program.
tJB wy liberation Front will meet in Room
232 Norton at 8 p.m. tonight. The discussion for th is
week will be Gay Solidarity.
Dr. Edmund D. Pellearino will deliver the
second lecture of the State University of Buffalo's
1971 james Fenton S.eries to night at 8 :30 p.m. in
the Embassy Room at the Statler Hilton Ho tel. Or.
Pellegrino will emphasize the concept of health
maintenance as one of the means of meeting national
health need through more effective manpower
utiliution.

Backpage
The Germanic: and Slavic Departmennt
announces a lecture, " Walter Benjamin: Critic in an
Age of Darkness" by Peter Stern of Cambridge
University in England who is presently a visiting
professor~ ~ the University of Virginia, tomorrow at
8 :15 p.m. in Diefendo1rf Annex Room 29.
Dr . Mordecai Kaplan, the founder of
Reconstructionism, W'ill hold a lecture tonight .1t
8 :15 p.m . in Temple l~eth Zion, 805 De laware Ave.
A group will leave from the Hillel House at 7 :45
p.m. Anyone with a ail' is requested to be at Hillel at
that time so that rides can be provided for those who
need them.

The Hillel Execu1tlve Committee is postponing
its meetjng from toninht to tomorrow at 7:30p.m.
in the Hillel House.

The Environmental Action Jetport Committee
will hold its meeting in Room 262 Norton, tonight
at 7:30p.m. Anyone interested is welcome.

The Office of Overseas AQdemic Prognms, 107
Townsend Hall and the Department qf French, 214
Crosby Hall , have i1nformatio n alld applic&lt;~tions
available for the State University of Buffalo
undergraduate program in Grenoble, France. The
deadline for applications for the spring tum Is Nov.
1. For the fall, 19 72! term of the academic year
1972-73, the deadline lis March 15, 1972.

The State University of Buff.1lo Am.1teur Radio
Society will have a meeting today at 7:30 p.m. in
Room 330 Norton.

Students for lsrad presents -" Program s in Israel
'72." Information on summer, year and permanent
programs today at 7:30 p.m. In Room 233 Norton.

UB-TV will have an organizational meeting to
discuss their formation and format o f a closed circuit
system presenting programs produced by and for the
students, tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Room 330
Norton.

Bridge Club will meet tomorrow night at 7 p.m.
in Room 233 Norton. Those interested in learning
how to play bridge, call1831-3547.

\

American Studies 199 presents "Titticut
Follies" by Frederick Wiseman tomorrow at noon in
Diefendorf 147.

,

WBFO will present Student Counseling Services
at the Erie County j ai l to111orrow night from 8 - 9
p.m. It is presented by the Hard Facts Workshop, an
Erie County social worker's organization. Guests wjll
be : Mr. james Manak; associate professor at the UB
law school, Mr. Richard Pariser and Mr. Clarence
Sundram, law students and Mr. Rict)ard Lucken,
coordinator of HFWS.

UB Photo Club will meet tonight at 8 p.m. in
Roo m 332 Norton.
CAC movie Brand .X will be shown at 7 p.m. and
9 p.m. this weekend. Tickets will be sold in advance
and at showtime in Norton Ticket Office.
University Travel ;;nnd Schussmeisters Ski Club SAS Jet to Geneva, Switzerland. Ski packages in
Chamooix, France or on to Copenhagen, Denmark.
Dec. 27 to Jan. 7 (11 days winter recess) - $196 just
flight - package $298. For more information come
to Rooms 316, 323 or 318 Norton Hall o r call
extension 3602, 3603, 2 145 or ~ 146 .

Sports Information·'

University Travel a"4 Hillel - Olympic Jet to
Tel-Aviv, Israel via Athens, Greece. March 27 to
April 10 (Passover and spring recess - 14 days) flight
$355 - package $559. For more information come
to Rooms 316 or 323 Norton or call extension 360 2
or 3603.
University Travel - Alitalia Jet to Rome, Italy
March 31 to April 9 (9 day Easter and Spring recess)
- flight $198 - package available. For more
information come to Room 316 or 323 Norton Hall
or call extension 3602 or 3603.
The Festlvil of Polish Culture will take place
from Oct. 15-23. Today thue will be a lecture on
"Contemporary Polish Youth Movements" at 7:30
p.m. in the Fillmore Room. Tomorrow there will be
a lecture on "Ethnicity In American Society and the
Polish Americans" at 7:30 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room.
The Underaradu&lt;~te Medical Society will have a
meeting today at 7 :30 p.m. in Room 146
Diefendorf. All pre-med and pre-dent · students are
urged to attend.
NYSTA will have a student meeting today at 7
p.m . in Room .215 Foster to discuss dissatisfaction
with the teacher education program .
The Student Association in conjunction with
the Polish Culture Club will present a.. lecture by
Aleksander Gella on "Contemporary Polish Youth
Movements," tonight at 7:30 in the Fillmore Room,
Norton. On "_Thursday a lecture will be given by Dr.
Richard Ko lm on "Ethoicity in American Society
and the Polish Americans," atw in the fillmore
Room at 7:30. T he films Innocent Socerers and The
Family of Man will be shown Thursday in Capen
Hall , Room 140 at 3 p.m .
Backpage is a service offered by The Spectrum
to student groups and clubs wishing to inform the
University community of upcoming events of
meetings. It is not a free advertising service. The
Spectrrum, therefore, reserves the right to edit or cut
any announcement not conforming to this standard.

..

Today : Women's tennis vs. Rochester, Buffalo
tennis courts.

The student athletic review board will meet
Thursday evening at 7 p.m. in Room 205 Norton
Hall.

Tomonow : Women's tennis at Brockport State
College.

Effective immediately the Clark Gym floor will
be occupied by varsity sports until 7:30 p.m . each
weekday.

Saturdlay : C lub soccer at St.' John Fisher, 1
p.m., Rochester; varsity cross country at SUNY at
Binghamton, 2 p.m.

An intramural sports discussion will be held in
the Goodyear cafeteria on Wednesday evening at 9
p.m.

Sunday: Intramural roller hockey at 1 p .m. in
the parking lot between Capen Hall and Michael
Hail. If rain, shinny action will take place Monday at
11 a.m.

___________________________________......._.
•

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__.:':o:f:N_ew
__v_o_rk__at_Bu
__ffa
__lo~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;=====~~~MQ--~_.. ~18,1971

Inadequate trainjng for staff
causes 'Together' to disband
by Howie Kurtz
Campu$ Editor

The Together program is no
longer together. ·•
Succwnbing to a great amount
of pressu1es and problems, the
program has been disbanded and
its remnants have been
In-corporated with Sunshine
House. However, Sunshine House
will not deal with the hard drug
problem because, according to
participant Merie Lento: "We
would be spreading ourselves too

thin."
Citing "inadequate training"
as a major failing of Together,
National Student Affairs
Coord_inator Keith Frankel
discussed the disbanding of the
program. "The volunteers of
Together were not really trained
to deal with junkies," explained
Mr. Frankel. " In addition , they
had no house to operate from ,
no therapeutic community. You
can't effectively deal with a hard
drug problem from nine to five
ttlrough a table in Norton."
The actual break-up of the
program occurred when Willie
Rivera, the head of the program,
and others walked out on the
program due to certain
"personality conflicts" with
another faction. Part of the
conflict stemmed from the fact
that since Rivera was the top
man , others f&lt;JUnd themselves
taking his orders and not always
knowing the reasons behind the
orders. This, coupled with lack
of training, created a "frustrating
situation," according to one
volunteer.
Hypocrites
The failure of Together
represents a bitter
disappointment for many who
were extremely excited about it
last year. "Together was based
on hopes, but wasn't realistic."

oommentea Mr. Frankel. "The
range of problems it encountered
occurred too fast for any one
program to handle." ·
Many of the volunteers in
Together were ex-junkies. Some
of them were slightly less than
sincere, indicated Mr. Frankel.
''There were hypocrites in
Together," he admits. "Some of
them really weren't interested in
getting clean. Instead, they were
just hanging around , hoping to
rip·off the concerned white
communit y and cop some
money."
The success of Together is
hard to measure due to the
depth of the problems it
attempted to deal with . "There
isn't much you can do for a
junkie once he's hooked on the
hard stuff," said one volunteer.
Together tried to help the addict
with encounter groups and rap
sessions with former junkies; this,
of course, can only go so far.

someone who•s depressed or
lonely and needs another to talk
to. uwe try to rap to them on
't he phone, give them someone to
relate to, help them through a
bad time," explained Mr, Lento.
"If we think they•re in any
medical danger, due to smack or
their personal condition, we try
to get them to give us their
address and then go see them."

New asency
Sunshine House has received
the past files of Together and
some of its former members, but
is still declining to deal with the
hard drug problem since it does
not feel qualified to do so. They
refer any hard drug users to
Suicide Prevention, a Buffalo
hospital, or other agencies. The
24-hour telephone number of
Sunshine House is 8314046.
An encouraging development
for the treatment of heroin and
other hard drug users is the news·
of a private agency to be
established in Buffalo · to deal
Prevention urged
Together also referred those specifically with hard drllg$. "We
seeking rehabilitation to hospita1s- Jltw&amp;. ~ won! that the
and other agencies with better agency plans to open this montl•,
resources than they . But but we haven't gotten complete
Together 's most important details yet," said Mr. Lento.
contribution was its educational According to Sunshine House,
program. They distributed this new agency will be very
educational pamphlets on drug wello5taffed ; it wiU include two
abuse and planned to have or three doctors and a number of
former addicts speak at high social workers. One problem the
schools, church groups, etc. "The new agency has encountered has
best drug program in the world is been a hassle obtaining a state
one that reaches the cats before license for their methadone
they're on smack," said Mr. program. The presence of
doctors. however, would seem to
Frankel.
With the demise of Together, indicate that this )Vill be
drug problems In the University straightened out.
Sunshine House, meanwhile,
communUy are being handled by
Sunshine House. Sunshine House would like to emulate its name
was created last year as a and find a house. They are
24-hour-a-day crisis center for presently operating out of the
people having burn trips. They Community •Action Corps office
receive calls from someone at 220 Norton Hall. They hoped
having a bum acid trip, a person to obtain the house at 108
O.D.•ing on barbituates, or just Winspear Ave., but it had been

promised to the Women•s CoUege
(CoUege E). They urge anyone
who 'knows of an empty
residence to contact ·them
Immediately.

has a private doctor, Dr. Levy,
who has been working very
closely with student volunteers.
The problem of drug abuse is
critical ; it is of crisis proportions
in the Buffalo ghettos, as in
AU volunteers in Sunshine Harlem, Watts and ghettos across
House must Wtdergo a special the country. Many once felt it
training program of three lectures was solely a ghetto problem, but
and two workshops before they in recent years it has spread to
can start answering phones. This the middle and upper classes, to
is something that was Jacking in the suburbs, even to the fortress
.the Together venture. The three that is this University. That was
l ectures, on the proper evidenced by the closing of
techniques of interviewing, the Norton baseme~ last year. The
medical effects of drugs on the comm unit y must not be
body, and handling of overdoses discouraged by the failure of
and bummers, are taught by Together, but throw · its full
professors. The workshops are support and perst!verance behind
taught by students experienced Sunshine House and other new
in the area. Sunshine House also agencies.

Student Assembly

Chaos at meeting

lnfa!'t Assembly

The fust meeting of the new Norton Hall and having to sign a
Student Assembly resulted in the petition for the second time.
initial change of its elections There was much discussion about
procedure. Under the revision , it the amendment to the procedure,
is easier to become a as It wasn't clear if the Assembly
was to be comprised only of
representative in the Assembly.
Any interested student may representatives from interest
pick· up a petition in the Office of groups, (who often are present to
Election Credentials and return it insure their groups' interests) or
signed by 40 people. The director independent students who have
of the office will then validate the t he backing of 40 people. AB a
petition by seeing the signers in result of this new method, more
person to conftrm their identities representatives will be verified
by phoning and mailing for from both interest groups and
along independant lines.
confirmation.
Bob Convissar, an independant
-L•nger
SA Executivel Committee members reported their representative of the Assembly, Late start
activities to the Studen• Assembly at its first meeting , made the motion to change the "' This first Assembly meeting
last. Friday. Present at this initial meeting, Were 19 elections procedure "from the got off to a late start and
delegates representing various interest and previous method of 40 people proceeded with a great deal of
prcsentinJ tbemeelves at a table in
independent bodies.
-Q»ntlnued on page 4-

�Petras views Latin America

Financial matters cause
concert location change

The people are taking control
Army battalions, not baUot
boxes, have been the key to
political power in Latin America
for hundreds of years, l ames
Petras declared at a lecture last
Thursday. Now, he continued,
the people are taking control of
their governments, despite
powerful opposition by riahtist
dictators and United States
corporate interests.
Speakina in Haas Lounae
before an audience of about 90
students, who he praised as "the
most informed and intelligent
aroup · I've spoken with ," Dr.
Petras summarized his views of
"Revolution in Latin America"
and answered questions for
nearly two hours.
A professor in the department
of Politi c a l Science at
Pennsylvania State University and
an inter nationaUy recoanized
scholar, Dr. Petras has authored
several books and articles
concerning Latfn American
politics. He was brou&amp;ht to the
campus by the Speakers Bureau,
in cooperation with the Puerto
Rican Oqanization for Di1nity
Elevation and Responsibility
(PODER).
_A

Close contact
( '
As he has been involvetl with
the New Left since h is
participation in the Berkeley
Free Speech Movement, Dr.
Petras ana ly zes political
developmen ts In Latin America
from a leftist point of view . He
has t herefore been able to
maintain close contact with the
revo luti o nary left in Latin
America and obtain informatio n
unavailable to others in the rleld .
At the same time , Dr. Petras has

received support from the State
Department, a tribute to his
scholarly abilities.
Drawing on info rmation
1Pitbered during a trip through
South America earlier this year,
Dr . Petras summarized the
genera l h istory of Latin
American revolutions. He further
examined specific modern
governments and reported the
activities of several guerilla
movements.
H e divided recent Latin
American history into three eras
- nationalistic, anti-capitalistic
and the present revolutionary
period . These philosophies, he
stressed , were not always
dominant during a time span, but
soon became the expression of
t'he majority of the people.
US. check
In the 'SO's and early '60's,
said Petras , nationalisti c
movements were kept in check
by U . S .- trained c ounter
insurgency teams, economic
manipulation (through loans and
aid) and s ometimes direct
military intervention.
Later, h e continued , after the
abortive RockefeUer tour of
South America and the Tet
offensive in Vietnam , America
tum"ed its eyes from South
America to the Orient . This
allowed the growth of large
an ti -ca p italistic m o vements,
which have now metamorphosed
into revolutionary socialist
movements, Petras claimed .
As America wittidraws from
the Vietnam war, concluded
Pet ras , Latin America has
become a center of interest
again. The actions of the Allende

aovernment in Chile have
particularly an,ered corporations
with interests in that country.
NaturaUy, said Petras, ..what
angers corporate interests angers
the State Department."
The most effective fomenters
of revolution in Latin America,
maintained Petras, are the
guerilla movements, especially
t he Tupamaros in Uruguay.
These· auerillas have made large
corporations their main target ,
Petras explained, and have
developed a areat deal of support
among the population.

"It was purely a financial
matter , " said Paul Rosen
(chairman of the UUAB Music
Committee) regarding the sudden
location change of the Oct. 9
Flying Burrito Brothers concert.
Originally scheduled for Clark
Gym, its location was switched
to the Fillmore Room.
The reason, explained by Mr.
Rosen, was a slow advanced sale
that left UUAB with
substantially less money than was
needed to pay for the original
facilities . . According to Mr.
Rosen, the total cost for the gym
Striklna power
is approximately $ 1000. The
"The U.S. is not a paper tiger, majority of this money goes to
thoujh,'' Petras cautioned, " it
maintenance, to pay janito rs
can still strike back." Thoujh the
overtime
wages for working on
failure of inte rvention in
Sunday.
Other costs include
Vietnam has deterred the U.S.
from takin&amp; similar action in rna terials and hiring security
Latin America, he continued , guards.
numerou s
e c onomic
Financial problems arose last
c ounter-attac ks have been Thursday, three days prior to the
deployed.
concert, when only 300 advanced
During the question and sale tickets had been sold.
answer period and a workshop Another difficulty was the need
held last Friday, Petras further to take out a $2000 bond for
detailed his analysis of revolution the gym. This money would be
in Latin America. He decried the
lack of concern shown by returned after the concert,
American students over Latin provided that no substantial
America, and particularly in damage was incurred. lf any
money would be needed for
Puerto Rico.
After a final discussion h eld in repairs, it would be drawn from
the Rathskeller, Dr. Petras the bond with the balance
hastened to Buffalo International returned.
Airport for his return trip "to
the complete isolation of Penn Big draw ~Uifat
State." For the relatively small
However, because of lack of
amount of time Dr. Petras was interest in the concert, the bond
actuaJly here, he devoted most of issue was academic. When
it to University students, in open questioned as to whether the
discussion.
bond will pose future problems,
Mr. Rosen said : "It will be.
However, with a large enough

MCAT-DAT-GRE
LSAT-ATGSB
NAT'L. BDS.
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Some
research
"experts"

•
•

•
•

say~ucan't

P~ation tor tnt1 required for
edmillion to greduate end prof. .
lionel schools
Six end twelw -ion cour"'
Smellgroupl
Voluminoua matlf'ill for home atudy
prepered by experts In NCtl field
Le_,n schedule can be tailored to
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Opportunity for review of pest

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Special Compact Courset

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blindfolded.

iLl

" In the future," Mr. Rosen
continued, " we will try to
arrange for only those groups
that will assure us of a big draw.
We're going to try to talk our
way out 'of paying the bond, but
as I said before, that iso 't a
primary con cerD." However, in
regard to the $500 price of
maintenance, he said: "lt is
definitely too much."
Harry G. Fritz, director of
Ph~caJ Education, disagreed.

"It
is not an extravagant price," he
said. "The men are being paid
extra for working on Sunday.
They have to move in the stage,
fix the b1eechers, and · move a
vehicle or two. However, we have
had concerts here before, and the
UUAB has a few dates QP reserve
now, 110 J do#)'t think" the
maintenance charge is a.ri' issue."

"Still. 1 am a little fatigued
from the affair," he continued.
" We had guaranteed UUAB use
of the gym at least four hours
prior to the concert . I also had
to cancel a few activities. Being
informed of the change late on
Thursday left us with UttJe time
to reinstate our regular program.
lllis has happened before and it
may probably happen again." Dr.
Fritz concluded that, " I was in
that type of business once and
know that there are many
variables that often interfere with
putting on a eoncert . However,
there is definitely no animosity
between us [UU AB ard Clark
Gym J and I hope we will have
success together in the future."
STUDENT DISCOUNT
on
ALL-redecoratinr ueeds,
art supplies, pictur.; framin3
D.M. REC8 PAINT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.

I

The Spectrum • pcJblilh«f thr"
t im•• 11 weeli, wery Moft{iey,
w.dn-*y end Frid.y; durin; the
rtlgUmr ec«Hmlc ,.., by Sub·8bard
1, Inc. Offlc• ere •loc.ted 11t 365
Norton Hell, Stllr. Un1~ity of tVYork et Bufflllo, 3436 Mttin St.•
Buffelo, New York; 14214.
T.teplrone: AIW Codtl 716; Edltoriel
831-41 13; BUIIMG, 83t-36t0.
Represented for MJ~~ertising by
Net i on11l EdUQtiofllll Adtlertisil7fl
s.rvice, Inc., 360 Ltlxington A.-..•
New York. N. Y. 10011.
Subscription ,..,_ ,.. $4.60 per
,.,..,., or $8.00 for two MtmllnllfL
Second Cl- Pwt~tg~~ Pllid et Bufflllo,
New York.

IINCita.
loltoA • Pht41 •

ticket sale, we will be able to
afford all the costs of running a
con cert. Besides, the bond
money will be returned to us
after each concert."

.,_.,...Oft • 0111-'t ' l te A,..._ • Mil

Circu,.tlon: 16,000

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902 TONAWANDA STREET Bufblo, N.Y. (R~ -=tion)
877-6560 ----(We also BUY ulld fumhure)-'- 836-1818

Pa~

two . The Spectrum . Monday, October 18, 1971
t

• •

._ _.,., "'- • ,._... • -.. -

••v •••

�'

•

Bookstore

Refund list grows

Editor's nots: Last Frict.y The Spectrum ~inttld • ptrl(iminary list of
books for which th6 University Bookstortt would (lrtlnt refund• for tlw
ttmount they r.istld the prictJ, ,w hich w. rultld to be in violation of t/H!J
fedllf'BI wll(JtJ-prictJ frt~t~zs. Ht~n~ i• 1111 lldditionsl lilt of offtJnding books
which ,.s just btltln re/HStiCI by .t he Bookstortt.
AUTHOR
Abrams

TITLE
Glossary of
Literary Terms
Barn lund
• The Dynamics of
Discussion
Barn lund
Interpersonal
Communication
Barry
Atmosphere
Weather &amp; Climate
Baugh
Chaucer
Benda
World of SE Asia
Bijour
Child Development
Volt
Bijour
Child Development
Vol II
Carkuff
Beyond Counseling
and Theraphy
Chomsky
Syntactic Structures
Churchill
The Gathering Storm
Image and Value
Cox
Davis
Hearing &amp; Deafness
Downs
An· Economic Theory
of Democracy
Draper
Mathematical
Analysis Business &amp;
Economic Application
Driekurs
Psychology in the
Classroom
Theory of Probability
Gnedenks
Gollwitzer
Europe in the Age
of lmperalism
Hesse
Siddhartha
Jackson
Life in the
Classroom
Foundations of
Kerlinger·
Behavioral Research
Kramboltz
Behavioral Coun~llng
Lloyd
Penguin in Social
Change
Matthews
· Old &amp; Middle Inglish
Literature
Miller
Errand into the
Wilderness
59, s 202 S607
Reprints
S194
Reprints
PSJ39
Reprints
PS 152
Reprints
PS 19
Reprints
239
Reprints
117
is Intelligence
What
Reprints
Rychlak
A Philosophy of
Science for Personality
Theory
Classroom
Question
Sanders
What Kinds
Shakespear and his
Satin
Sources
Mathematical
Scott
Analysis
Sellitz
Research Methods
Rhetoric of
Smith
Black Revolution
Gullivers Travels
Swift
and other writings
Tolstoy
Great Short Works
The Russian Revolution
Trotsky
Public Speaking as a
Wilson
Liberal Art
Thinking with Concepts
Wilson

REFUND

.05
1.00
.55

.50

..

-t&lt;lng
FS~ Board of Directors pondered the find ings of
study groups which examined its auxiliary
operations. The Board will review these
recommendations before passing operating budgets.

FSA reviews reports

.

4

FSA budget report reveals (
Food Service discrepancies
The fust quarterly budgetary report (197 1-72)
of the Faculty Student Association (FSA) ~uxiliary
service enterprises was submitted at an FSA Board
meeting last Wednesday.
FSA is the "non-profit, educational and
benevolent membership corpor.ttion," granted a
monopoly by New York State, to run such
" auxiliary enterprises" as the Bookstore and Food
Service.
The budget report revealed nothing of
particular _significance other than a $34,000
discrepancy in Food Servic~·s projected income for
the quarter and their actual income. While
predicting an income of $500, . Food Service
realized a loss of $33 ,322.
Raymond Becker, manager of Food Service,
explained that the FSA budgets were drawn up
during last spring: " Part of the figuring was used
last year as a guide. We didn't figure the budget in
consideration with the change in the academic
calendar. This change caused us to employ a larger
workforce, earlier."

Losses
Because this "unplanned for" weekend
included Labor Day, the error was compounded.
"We had to pay double time for the holiday, .. Mr.
Becker said.
These mistakes accounted for $20,000 of the
$34,000 figure. Mr. Becker predicted that most of ·
the losses in this salary area wiU be recovered/
during January and May, At these times, temporary
employees figured into the earlier budget, will not
be n.eeded due to the aforementioned calendar
change.
Losses occurred also in the area of "total
sales". Traditionally the July and Augu.st months

CANDLES POSTERS
MON THRU SAT
JO:OO TO 5:30
THURS TILL 9=00

are the worst for Food Service and this year, Mr.
Becker revealed, was worse than usual. He
attributed this in part to the elimination of athletic
training tables, no longer necessary since football
no longer exists.
..
In addition to these problems, a $10,000
discrepency in the budget line which includes
depreciation costs was shown. John Fa.lkides,
assistant to Director of Auxiliary Enterpreses
Thomas Schillo explained this figure .
"In the past, we used to defer some charges
until a month which they could afford to be paid.
But now, these' charges wiU be gtid when they are
incurred. Over the year, it'll even ouf,'' assured Mr.
Falkides.

'Lot to be desired'
Commenting on the apparent annual problem~
the , FSA admittedly has with their budget
balancing, Vice President for Operations and
Systems and FSA Treasurer Edward Doty said :
"Our experience at budget making leaves a Jot to
be desired."
Mr. Falkides agreed : "We haven 't refined our
budget making practices. Wo're trying to predict
the future and we just don't have the talent.
However, we are getting better," he concluded.
Mr. Becker was hopeful that the red ink would
change to black soon. This, however, depended on
a few things. "The price of food is rising and thus
far we have not been able to reflect that increase
in a corresponding increase in prices," he said.
With the lifting, in part, of the price freeze,
Mr. Becker expects t~ to change, though he
foresees one possible stumbling block : "If we're "
allowed to increase prices only two or three
percent, we'll be in a bind."

NEXT TO THE G~ANADA THEATER
MOBILES INCENSE CARDS ETC ETC I

~\TI""~~

..:

:

1.15

.50
.25
.20
.25

.50
1.00
1.00

.55
2.00
.30
.35
.55
1.00
1.00
.30
t .20

.20
.15

.to
.15
.10
.15
.10
.15
.50

.25
.75
1.00
1.00
.55
.10
.30
.50
.55

........................••

.20

•

BEA::CRAME

1
•

i

..

1.00
.45
.70

CA,.DLE MAKING
BLACK LIGHT SUPPLIES
Bead Studio and Craft Boutique
2780 Sheridan Drive
(,_ Niapra Fells Blvd.)

837-2668

837-2668

L..........................................,
, Monday, October 18, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Chaos at meeting...
con fusiolf. Because computer
sheets with the names of validated
representatives arrived late (due to
machine shut-down) attendance
was delayed. Nineteen of the 24
petitions were validated, with
those 19 representatives being
asked to move to center chairs in
the Fillmore Room to facilitate
voting.
lan DeWaal, SA president and
Assembly chairman called the
meeting to order at 2 :40 p.m. Hi~
opening address to the body
explained that due to last year's
rushed constitutional revisions,
the present Assembly existed. He
further reported Student
Association's activities over the
summer, notina the extenllive
freshman orientation program and
the printing of IIIIIOI'IIement 71.
He concluded with the
introduction of Harold (Spot)
Guberman, SA vice resJdent.

Mr. Guberman discussed bis Committee. Mr. Barmak replied.
role over the summer as that of that be hadn't asked the academic
overSeeing the smooth running of qualifications of the members a.od
the Student Association amidst didn't see where it was pertinent
the remodeling of their offices. In to do so. Tho Finance Committee
addition, he had an electric is responsible for allotting the
stencil-maker installed in Room three~luarters of a million dollars
225. Adding some last comments, in student activity fees to clubs
be said that due to internal and student functions.
conflicts within the SA Executive
Tho remainder of the meeting
Committee they failed to generate was &lt;:~t&gt;ncemed with recessing or
a great deal of interest in the adjourning until a later date.
Assembly. This was apparent by Becauue of a time limit on the use
the sca rce number of of tl~e Fillmore Room and
representatives (out of a potential unfini!thed business, a recess was
100 assemblymen only 19 ca lled . Reconvening next
existed).
Wednesday, Oct. 20, hopefully
Dave Barmak, SA treasurer,
more representatives will be
met with vital questions when he
seated
as they will have been
began his report to the Assembly.
The representative of the proceSlled. The Student Assembly
Accounting Club inquired about will tben continue to take care of
the presence of trained accounting the butineu of student
'
majors on the Financial aovemmeot.

DECEPTI01'1
AND
THE

Library problems

-continued rrom s-ee 1-

REGANCAMP~liGN!

REGAN CLAIMS TO BE

THE FACTS ARE

SUCCESSFUL LAWYER

He Is • member of the bll', Downer, be bu ftot
practiced law. He is not Ualted in the Erie County
Clerk'• ATTORNEYS INnEX of tbe YELLOW
PAGES.
He Inherited a wboleale liquor bulinea. Tlae
other il a ..paper" corpOration 1et up to protect a
patent.

SUCCESSFUL BUSINESSMAN,
PRESIDENT OF 2 LOCAL
CORPORATIONS .

He wu a VISITING INSTRUCTOR AT BUFF.
STATB, tauabt lea than .CIO hn. (I coune) He
doee not teach tbere llOW d4esplte dae f~~et tbat hia
brochure ay1 "He .S.O teachea ao•emmept at rbe
State U. CoUe,e at Buffalo."'

TEACHER

He aerYed o ne term • a pa11Hime councilman iD
Buffalo. It w• termed ''uneftfttfw" by tbe
NEWS. He aouaht and Jolt tbe nomination for
Mayor to Mn. Slomlnald. He ran and loa for
State Comptroller. He'a a member of two
temporary commilliona.

EXPERIENCED GOVERNMENT
OFFICIAL

His only publiabed work wa1 a tcbool term paper
on the adnntaaea of MetmpolUan Gonmment.
So every colleae •tudent is an author.

AUTHOR IN THE FIELD OF
GOVERNMENT

He aot the Conaenative DOimlllation u the rauJt
of a cloted-door meetinta. The NEWS juat
reported another ~eeret, ct.oled-door meetina be
had with the arne Cour11ty Offidala be bad
critici~ in seeldna the nomination and now
they are all ruablna to hill dc:fenae.

..INDEPENDENT MINDED"
uHIS OWN MAN.,,
"UNENCUMBERED"
OTHER DECEmON

GOP CHAIRMAN BBLLAP.CA Sent out copies
of remarb made by Stne Rowan about M1yor
Sedita bot did not indode the remub Rowao
made the foUowin1 niaht about Ned Repn,
which were far wone.

BELLANCA MAILING

REGAN SAYS AUDITORIUM SEATS
WILL AVERAGE $2.000 APIECE

The actual colt of the teat'• ranaa from $28 to
$63 each. To ay $2,000 11 aeat is like pointlna
out that the county h01pital will ccm Erie
County ta:xpapen over $I 60 ,000 for each bed.

REGAN CHARGES MISMANAGEMENT A lhrinkina tu bue hu 11laaued nery city in
this nation, We in Buffalo han finally reversed
AND A 10- YEAR LOSS IN TAX
this trend. There wu an in1creue in '69-70 and
BASE OVER SS3 MILLION
this year ' the Board of ,AISeiiOn predicta a
$3,000,000 inchreaae in tlue real property tax
base.

SEDIT A
for

COU N TY E XECUT:[VE
PAID FOR BY YOUm FOR SEDITA - SU.SS26
Page fo~. The SROQ,tl\UO .. Monday, Octo~J8~

197.1.

remain the same
Dr . Allen added : ..The
problem of space is almost
critical. There is no room for
new books unless o thers are
removed." He continued that
there is not enough reading room
in either Lockwood or in the
reserve room at Harriman. "The
library administration has not
considered adding new temporary
buUdings in spite of the
availability of $25 million for the
maintenance of the Main St.
campus," he explained.
No improvement
Pre se ntly , the library
administraUon hu added extra
part-time help to the Harriman
Reserve room. In addition, John
Theall, director of Circulation,
has been charged with the
responsibility for investigating
and recommending ~lutions to
library problems. However, his
report is not due for six week.s.
History professor Laurence
Sneider, who spoke before the
Faculty..Senate last month about
poor Ubrary conditions, reports
that tber~ has been "no obvious
~mprovement ."

Dr . Allen observed: "The
Jibrary wouldn ' t push for
improvement if there weren't so
many complaints.' ' He Is
encouraged, however, by the fact
that students have volunteered to
investigate the problem. Lowell
Schoenfeld, chairman of the
Faculty-Senate library
committee, urges ..anyone to give
his view to the committee."
AUeo commented: "The

Dr:
SDS demands

administration of this University
n o t gotten sufficiently
excited about the library_
problem. Students are geuing
short-changed ln their education
because of admitted inadequacies
in the library."
Dr . Allen stated : ..The
direc tor of the library has
forbidden the Ubrary staff to give
in
r m a t i 9 n to t h e
Faculty-Senate .~mmittee. The
committee has beeq unable to
get exact information ·concerning
~w much the library spends and
how many people it employs."
Director Slatin was unavaUable
for comment, and other library
officials declined to comment
without his permission.
"The improvements made in
the library might be descn'bed as
a bandaid over a pping wound,"
commented William Allen,
Department of History. The
problems of inadequate staff and
lack of space in the UniveTSity
·
libraries .ttW remairt.
Dr. Allen, dtai0nan of the
history library committee,
explained the circumstances
behind the library's problems.
State University official&amp; in
Albany have mandated that no
new personnel be hired to flU
vacated positions.
"freeze"
on hiring exists, according to Dr.
Allen, despite the fact that there
is money in the library budget
wtddt could be used to refill
vacancies. Indicating the severity
of the problem is tbe fact that
the Director of the Libraries,
Myl~ Slatin, is unable to hire a
trained librarian &amp;o ~SSM him.

has

ro

nus

Open all hearings
To plan a student movement
" demanding that charges apinst
aix suspended student&amp; be
dropped" was the purpose of last
Wednesday's National SDS
meeting . Their suspensions
resulted from a confrontation
with Campus Security at a closed
hearing last summer.
The hearing was convened to
hear charges apinst David Levy,
a University student, of dass
disruption . Mr . levy was
subsequently expeUed from the
University because of charges
against him by his pr'ofelsor.
John Halstead.
Student supporters of David
Levy were suspended because of
their efforts to "open up the
hearing to the pubUc." In
addition to suspensions, they
face criminal charges in oounty
court this week.
S OS members further
demanded that " the IUS{'Cnded
students be allowed on campus
and permitted to· enroU back at
the University in good standing."
It was also suggested that

Rebels surrender

"President Ketter meet with
students in pubUc to answer
questions oonceming the events
around Mr. Levy',s expulsion and
hearings." A tinle and place is
presentl being arranged for such

Maio pomt
SDS members felt that the
main point of the whole incident
and ita resulting suspensions is
that hearings are doted. They
felt that this violated the rights
of all involved. Originally, as
state d in the University
constitution, hearings we~ closed
to insure the confidence of
information disdQsed.
A member present at the
meeting commented that this
policy is not always preferable or
advantageous. It waa further
recommended &amp;bat the Uro¥elSity
oonstitutfQn be ~ended so as to
allow some means (jf determining
when a hearing should be closed .
This point, and others~ will be
explored with President Ketter.

�Natural·philosophy

Meditate for peace of mind
Mr. Clark teeS TM as ..very
beautiful" and believes it does
not require any additional skill.
'rbe mind bas a natural He further believes it is
tendency to seek a field of 1 expanding one's natural talen ts.
greater happiness. There is a " It is this natural aspect which is
source of thought, an area of so precious,'\ be continues. TM
greatest energy, which possesses bas its own philosophy which is
the potential for the greatest reinforced and proven valid or
not by the success or failure of
amount of happiness.
Such are the t h eories the techniques involved. Mr.
governing Transcendental Clark states that it is a ''very
Meditation according to Joe systematic procedure and not left
Clark, northeaat6rn coordinator to chance or · mystical 1
of the International Meditation p.-ocedures!' He refers to TM as
Society . Mr. Clark believes an "innocent technique" because
Transcendental Meditat ion (TM) the attention is drawn from
to be a technique rather than a within and not forced by
artificial means.
philosophy or belief.
The actual process of TM is
"Great philosophers have
talked about ibis, the ability of not clearly drawn out and seems
man to increase his sphere of difficult to explain, but Mr.
knowledge," be explains, "but Clark makes the analogy of a
they seem to believe this type is diver: just as a diver jumps to
a rare person. The Maharashi enable himself to enter the water
believes this is a uniftersal at a better angle, so TM allows
technique. Everyone is born with its followers to reach a "ftner,
the ability, born with the type of subtler level of mental activity."
He refers to the source of aU
m.UIIi to enable them to Jearn
thought as being a novel idea.
11(,:· ..

by Lynda Teri

Spectrum Stflff Writer

c. '

J

•

P.otii'.'$~r
'

. ,'

.

•

speaks

Stanley Pottinger, director of the Office of
Civil Riahts, Department of Health, Education and
Welfare, will speak at 4 p.m. in 146 Diefendorf
HaD on school integration. A holder of a Grover
Cleveland fellowship, Mr. Pottinter will be speakina
at Jack Latona's American Studies course, "Who
Runs Buffalo?"
Also, Mr. Pottinaer will spe.a k and answer
questions at the American Studies office at 124
Winspear Ave. at 10 a.m. Tuesday. All interested
students, faculty and staff arC" invited to both these
enta.

IIEIIIAII.

••••••••
•••
•••••••
1066 Sheridan Drive

Speclutizina In Volk.~wagen,
Trhlumflh, Vutvo , MG , Austin
Healey , Toyula, J)alsun and more.
877-9JOJ
Ask for Yucku

uwe are not accustomed to
thinking about thought as having
a source," he sayd. "But, before
t he microscope, we were
unaccu.stomed to believing matter
had a finer structure either."

Find the ao~

Among transcendentalists, TM

is defined as a technique for

"turning the attention iriward
toward the subtler levels of a
thought until the mind
transcends the subtlest state of
thought and arrives at the source
of though t . " The booklet
distributed by SIMS, Student's
International Meditation Society,
attem p ts to cluify the
"definition" by explaining TM to
be "a process of direct
experience rather than one or •
intellectual analysis." They go on
to elaborate on the technique
itself:
.. 'The technique can be
explained in terms of the
mechanics of the thinking
process. Every thought develops
from a fainter and more abstract
impulse in the mind; ordinarily
this impulse bcoomes perceivable
as a thought only during the
later phases of its development.
The technique of TM allows the
attention to be drawn
automatically to these refined
levels of thinking, which are
found by experience to be
increasin* (qore pleasant."

Joe Clark

from life. "That 's flne if that is "cloud their consciousness"
what they want," he states. " TM which is "not erijoyable."
is quite an experience too. It
doesn't have any bad Long-range Permanent ch..,.e
effects that hard drugs have." He
TM helps people experience
reflects that TM bas been used to life in a "natural and balanced
combat drug abuse, but ~"tplains, way" accontina to Mr. Clark. He
"this drug abuse thing is only a believes, "it develops life on a
side effect." He believes TM broader level of experience." He
holds numerous possibilities for contends that the effects of TM
are permanent and that "any
aU.
"TM makes one feel free from chanae is a normal one." People
stress and strain. It is relaxing are capable of having deeper
and refines one's perception,'' he rel,ationships with others because
No bad effJts
adds. "Those who have managed "restrictions dissolve," says Mr.
Mr. Clark doesn't believe TM to use TM as a vehicle to leave Oark.
to be a moral issue and finds it drugs find drugs " unappealing"
"What used to be big
curious that it -has offered a currently. Mr. Clark believes this significant problems are easily
solution to the drug problem for to be true because "drup bring solved now,'' he explains. The
so many. He sees drup as a them down." Once they are International Meditation Society
device individuals use to enable practicing TM, Mr. Clark states, motto states: "do less and
themselves to experience more the only effect drup have is to accomplish more." The theory
behind this is the belief that 100
per cent of the brain's capacity
will be used therefore less effort
oAll be need~ to be creative; a
The Board of Elections has ln effect "saving of energy" as it seems.
discouraaed many students from reaisterina to vote
Mr. Clark regards TM as an
in Erie ,.County. However, beina a student is no • 'effortless, natural means of
disqualification to reaisterina where you go to development" which is open to
school. If you want to vote where you spend most everyone.
of the year, call the New York Civil Liberties
Learning the technique of TM
Union immediat~ly at 883..0946 or 883-2043.
is not, however, free. There is a
$35 charge for students and $75
for non-students. The fees are,
according to Mr. Clatk, n't:cessary
to cover the "obvious aosts of
. setting up instructions." The
International Meditation Society
is cunently seeking government
and foundational fundings, but
JOIN NOW
until then, the fees are
mandatory .

Registration. info

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1111Dtllwal'l

. . U1

Monday, October 18, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�L

'

I

I

Mistaken identity
To the Editor:

A promising future

On page II of the Friday, Oct.l S 17u
Spectrum tbere appears a letter bitching about the
"UUAB Film Club." It's actually referring to the
UUAB Film Committee. Since the Student-Faculty
Film Club is often identified only as the " film
club" I feel that this mistake could possibly IU
affect the film club . .

The Student Assembly met for the first time Friday
afternoon and for a whfle appeared to be nothing more than
a gross caricature of the Polity system. The meeting which
began nearly an hour late, was an abyss of utter confusion:
The computer list certifying representatives had not yet
~rrived and consequently no one knew who was and who
was not a representative.
Called to order without a membership or a quorum, the
Assembly was further hampered by a malfunctioning sound
system which made debate between nearby individuals
sound as if it were a transatlantic conversation.
Despite all of this, the Assembly survived. The
membership list finally arrived and some semblance of order
began to reign in the Fillmore Room. The parlimentarian's
nightmare over, they turned to business and instantly the
similarities to Polity disappeared.
The Assembly passed a meaningful and quite important
piece of legislation on Friday which should insure their
future as a smooth-functioning and hopefully well-attended
body. Their modificatibn of the membership requirements
so that a student simply needs a petition with 40 signatures
to qualify for representative status is commendable. While
the actual mechanics of telephone or mail verification
remain to be developed by the Elections Committee, 'w e are
certain that this legislation will prevent the Assembly from
degenerating into a forum for the few clubs that were
su fficiantly organized to meet the old requirements. As of
Friday, there were only two or three independent
representatives in the entire Assembly and it is significant
that one of them made the motion for the new procedures.
The meeting had other points which auger well for the
future. For the first time in years, the agenda at a student
meeting was excellent. It was complete and contained much
useful information. We must suggest one modification
however. Having all eleven offici ers and coordinators give
reports at every meeting wi ll be boring, pointless and an
absurd waste of time. Therefore, these reports should only
be scheduled when a member of the Executive Committee
has something of significance to report .
Finally, we noticed one glaring inequality in the list of
proposed budgets contained in Friday's agenda . All the
budgets were strictly itemized except for one, the Student
Association operating budget. It was totally unitemized and
when dealing with a total of money in the $40,000 plus
range, we believe it absolutely necessary, both from a
financial and non-elitist point, that a budget be quite
specific.

THE

SpECT~UM

Vol. 22, No. 23

Monday, October 18, 1971
Editor-in-chief - Dennis Arnold
Co Mlf'lllll,. Edttcw - AI Benson

eo.Miftllll,.Editor - Mike Lippmann
A•. Mlnlli.. Eclitof - SUIIIO Mota
Bull- ........... - Jim Druck•
Adwef'tili,. Mlftllll'l' - Sue MeUentine
Cempua ......... Jo-Ann Aml80
......•.. . ...•.•Howie Kuttz
........ •....•••. Bill Veccero
City . • • . . . • • . • • . H8WVY LIJWMn

COil¥ ... .•...... Ronni FcwmM
................ M.tyGettl
" -· • . • • • • . • . • . • .. • • • ,1111C1ftt
......,. .... . .......... ..v--.t
Qrllpbic Aru ... ...... Tom Tol•

lAyout ....... Meryhope Runyon
" - · .... . ............v.c.nt
Lit. a Dnmll .. Mic::heel Silvefblatt
Mu.ic .............Billy Attm.n
Off~ . . .... LynneT,_.,
PhoCo ..••..... , Mwe Ackerrn.n
. ... .. .... MickeVO~
Sports ..•..•......• Berry Rubin
Alit.. .. ..... 'l ' . . Howie Feiwl

The Spctrum is *'led by United Pr- lntem.tionlt, Coli• PrS.VQ, the Los Angel• F,_ Pr-, the Los . . . . . Tim• Syndlarte end
Llbenlclon N - s.rva.

Repmllartion of nwnw herein without ttte ••.,.._
Editcw~n-Chief is folbidden.

.

co-• of the

Page six. The Spectrum . Monday, October 18, 1971

/

To tile Editor:

Andy

Today we
in rare form . ~
club and the
committee, act
outside contrqts
squashed our
process.
The meetir
longer than for
nastily. There .,.
we were treate.
the debate wa
amount of mo
told us they hl
heard not a ,
short, they pL
weren't in the
extent o f the g:
commenced.
To show )
got, I wiU not 1
ill purely a polil
" politicians" on
Today I fi1
SUN Y AD, to di
student govern n
goes on every d,
note - don't ge
longhaired freak
111 this bastion o

Power corrupts
To th e Editor:
Some " Youth for Sedita•· or hute literature
crossed my palm yesterday. It was hard to avoid .
And then 1 reached for The Reporter in Norton
and accidentally picked up my second piece ; I got
into my car and couldn't see out of the windshield
- that was the third piece. f immediately d ed uced
an election was going to take place soon - that the
good guys, the Sedita fans, were telljng us to hate
Regan (because Regan is a friend of Rockefeller). I
assume the Regan stalwarts wll tell us to hate
Sedita - the public relations men are working on
the right angle. In th e mayoral election, we were
told to hate Slominski, remember the "Stop
Slo minski" campaign . Fear tactics - they use them
every time. It's going to get hot for tttis election, f
guess. And after the election, it will be quiet - the
signs will come down, the coffee macttine
unplugged , the voting lists put away - and really ,
nottting much is changed. The machine, Democratic
or Republican , will dis pense those measly few
pat ronage jobs - secretaries, janitors. God. does
anyone lake this stuff seriously anymore?
If you really got t hat itch to vote, if somehow
or other, you'll feel unfulfill ed unless you exercise
that privilege, if you can make it through that
Buffalo snow on November something to that very
cold voting machine, well , then let m e hit you with
o ne issue that ·s lefl after all th e others are negat ed
with the pros and cons - that if Sedita won , Joe
Crangk and the Democratic machine wouJd have
more power in the county, both City and County
Halls. They're all a bunch of ding-a-lings, but better
the power is spread evenly.

.

Mcm•in Rrmiko[f

Participate I
To

tht!

Editor:

After having watched many forms of~tudent
come and go, some being moderately
effech ve. but most being disastrously in ept; we
would like to make the followin g plea to the
undergraduate students o f this campus.
The Student Association is divided into two
parts ; th e Executive Commmee and the Assembly.
The Executive Committee is elected by the
undergraduate student body. In absolute numbers
most st~dents do not vote in these elections yet
feel guiltless about their lack of interest and
participation . The Assembly is composed of
representatives, each of which are elected by a
minumum of 40 students.
The purpose of the Assembly is to represent as
manr students as is possible it is not its purpose to
proVJ.de a forum for the expression of strictly
personal interest. We implore the undergraduate
students to orpnize to be represented, to know
what your representative is doing and to tell him
or her your interests and desires in order to insure
that you are indeed represented. The purpose of
the Assc:mbly is to represent groups o f 40 students
and theu coUective interest. If you thirtit that the
Student Association doesn't represent you you' ve got to make it !
gover~ments

Alan Schwartz
David &amp;rmllk

Mark Weiner
Bob &amp;U
Fred Auen.rn
Keith Frana/
flzn DeWaaJ

Editorial policy is ct.tannined by the Edltw.Jn-Chief.

Club u

Lee Schwartzberg
Da'llid Steinwald
Peter Kong
Spot Guberman
Scott Slntnger •
Le1ter Goldstein

Librarian neede(
To th£• Editor:

I recently saw &lt;• ~•·nc~ ul four is
Spectrum (September I~·~~. I'J71), :J
contain articles or Ie ll c r~ rert:llfung 1o
at the State UniversitY ut i'&lt;l.'w York at
ll former member of th o: professiOnal s
believe I am in a positit•n to add sor
facts to those already publjshed .
The first signi ficanl fact is thai
lockwood library was hullt has 111
librarian in the position of Oi P·•·tnr of
may weU be that Lock Wl'l.ld as the
library in the United Swes which cat
particular distinction. II is true that
present two o r three great university lib
are administered by non-librarians. In
the libraries are so immense and so w
that only sincere ill will (as oppos•
ignorance) could transform them intc
libraries. All other college and universit !
ttus country, however - if they ;
importance at aU - are directed by L
recent decades, as we all know, the y
printed word bas expanded almc
comprehension. The bibliographic unde
trained librarians is taxed : tbe problems
and availability are among the greates c
our age. To expect anyone without t
experience in this field to .administer
library is simply unrealistic.
In its earlier years, the library at th
of Buffalo was weak, except for cer
(aad indeed unique) coUections. In
ni.Deteen..Qxties, however, the university
Director of Ubraries a Professor of I
Olear A. Silverman, who had both the
and the self-confidence to sed
admiiUstrative positions li brarians who v
of operatinJ a library . These librari&amp;J

�Club worlted over
To the Editor:
Today we experienced our student govemmellt
in rare form . A meeting took place between our
club and the finance committee. The finance
committee, acting u far as I k.now, without any
outside contrqls on its policies and decisions totally
squashed our budget and humiliated us in the
process.
The meeting lasted about 20 minutes. Much
longer than for most clubs, as we were told quite
nastily. There wu little reprd for our feelings and
we were treated like children. They decided when
the debate was c'losed ; they decided what the
amount of money we would get would be; they
told us they had voted on it as we sat there and
heard not a word mentioned about voting. In
sho rt , they pll! ed this meeting out as if we
weren't in t he room and) had decided what the
extent of the grant would be before this encounter
commenced.
To show you bo w successful a workover we
got , I will not mention the name of our club. 11tis
is purely a pohtical move - and when dealing with
" poiJilcians" o ne must play the pme.
Today I finally am aware, after four years in
SUNYA B, t o discover the harsh reality that is o ur
student government. I imagme what I experienced
goes o n every day in our nation 's 'Capital. A further
note - d on't get that down on our leaders in D.C.
longhaired freaks because POWER corrupts - even
in tll1s bastion o f bullshit " LIBERALISM ."

'We lost Finchley end Smith today - they bilked back!'

1

DOlt 'day care'
To the Ediror:
A

p oosi tiv e alternative t o the c urrent
of dogs is to institute a dog "day care
center" (pay the cat cher!~ to maintam the facility
instead of pursue dogs) o n ca mpus, where all d ogs
could be ldt for the day at some mm•mal cost of
the owner's;.
Dog.'&gt; found roaming ' wild' on cam pus could be
d e posite d at this center •nstead of a po und .
Perhap:s this concepr would c limmatc the
growing ho•stility towards d og-catchers on campus .
h:un.ssmen ~

A demoralized yesterday idea/in

A t 'llfH'o'rtH'd Oog·Owfll!r

rian needed

y saw a wn.:' o t tmu 1ssues of Tltt·
eptembcr I'-~~. 1•171), illl nf wh1ch
es or lett cf\ pcriJIIIII)~ t u the hbranes
Universll ~ 11t \ c \\ ) o rk Jt Buffalo As
nber of th .. prnle\.\IOnal staff there, I
in a po~ll•un 1o Jud smne pertinent
: already r uhhshed
. significant fact 1\ that never since
.ibrary wa' bu1lt hd ~ there been a
1e position of Ow• tor of Libraries. It
: that Locl.woou L~ the only large
~ United States wh1ch ca n claim that
tinction . II is true that there are at
•r three grear univers1ty libraries which
red by non-librarians. In these cases.
are so immense and so well endowed
ncere ill will (as opposed to mere
&gt;uJd transform them into really bad
&gt;ther college and university libraries in
• however - if they are of any
t all - are directed by librarians. In
!IS, as we all know. the world of the
rd has expanded almost beyond
n. The bibhosraphic understanding of
ans is taxed . the problems of indexina
!y are among the greates challcm&amp;es of
expect anyone without trainina and
this field to administer a university
&gt;ly unrealistic.
tier years, the hbrary at the Univenity
liS weak, except for certain chosen
unique) collections. In the early
::s, however. the university chose a ita
Ubraries a Professor of Enalhh, Mr.
ennan, who had both the intelliaence
.elf-confidence to seek out for
: politions librarians who were capable
a library . These librarians, in tum,

found other competent, trained libranans t o work
with them
During the stxhes
until Mr.
Silverman 's retirement as Director o f Libranes in
IQ68 - the holdings of the libranes grew from
350,000 to over a m11Jion volumes The public
servtces offered to s tudents and facu lt y grew Jt a
comparable rate. The effort, the tumull , and the
difficulties of such rapid growth cannot readily be
explamed to those unfamiliar with the •nner
workings of libraries. The libraries were not
peaceful in those years. nor were they successful tn
every endeavor. They were, however, moVIng
forward in substantial and often innovative ways .
I came to work at Lockwood Library in 1962,
as head of the Circulation Department. (This
d epartment , in addition to the circulation and
maintainance of the general collec tio n, includes the
Reserve Room .) It was always my s upposition ,
from the beginning, that when Mr. Silverman
retired, the university would relinquish its
antiquarian notions and fill the position of Director
of Libraries with a librarian. My firSt clue that this
was not to be the case came when a faculty
committee was appointed to choose a new Director
of Libraries. No librarian was included o n the
committee. A petition, signed by virtually every
member of the professional staff, requested that at
least one librarian be allowed to help choose our
new Director. This request was granted . One
librarian was appointed to the committee. He, with
· the help of colleagues, drew up a list of
distinguished librarians wbo were thought possibly ,
t o be seriously considered for the position of
Director; very few were even interviewed . The
IUipicion arose (I was myself among the lut to
believe it) that another amateur was to be
appointed as Director of Librarie~ . I announced to
anyone who was interested that I would resign if
this were to come about. Two more petitions were
circulated among the librarians, apin signed by

prac tically everyone (amd by this I mean that thu'le
few libranans who didn't sign were c1ther ill o r n ut
of town). askin&amp; that a real librarian be appoml\!d
as direc tor. You all know what haprened .
•To imply that all of the present proble m' of
lhe ' lllnanes re.o;u lt from lhl' appOin t ment
recommended by the faculty comnuttec would he
unfa1r. Un1versity libraries all over the nation .1rc
feeltng the effects o lf budge t cuts, and part ot
SUNYAB's s uffen ng 1s of cou rse the result of JUSI
such problems . No Director of Li branes, whatever
hi S talent , ex p er1ience, Or knowledge Of
bibliography, could prevent the ill effects of these
monetary dif fi culties.
II may be of interest, however, that my
resignation, in August , 1968, coincided w1th that
of so many o the r m e mbers of the st a ff (about
twe nty, as I recall) that, instead of the usual s mall
luncheon in honor o f one departing me mber , th ty
librarians took over the Faculty Club fo r a reai)
celebration (or memorial?) for the entire gro up. I
cannot speak for all th.ose who left at that time, or
during the next year or two. I was fortunate
enough to receive a fellowship for advanced study
at the Graduate Library School of the University
of Chicago. Many others have gone on to more
important or more newarding positions at o ther
colleges or universitif~. A number of excellent
librarians, however, have chosen to remain at
Buffalo. Some hne the good fortune , as subject
bibliographers, to en11;age in meaningful wo rk an
coo peration with t eaching facuJty in their
disciplines. Some are so immersed in their
endeavors as catalogeltS or acquisitions librarians
that they remain, perhaps, relatively unscathed by
the battles ragin arou·nd them. Many are held at
Buffalo beca~ of vallious obl.iptions (marria&amp;e,
for instance), or fmanc:ial necessity (the retirement
plan problem.) And 'even more - I sUJpect remain at Buffalo because of the recent job

shortage which has afflicted librarians along with
others 10 the field of education .
When 1 wrot e my formal letter of resignation
a\ Circulation Lityanan at Lockwood Library, I
scnl J \:arbon 'opy to Mr. Myles Slatm . The letter
stat ed , or courso:. thai my chief reaso n for leaving
was the fact that the un1vcrsily had chosen a
non-llbranan as 1ts D1rector o r L1branes. Mr. Sta lin
mv1tcd rne to his office for a discuSSion . When I
1r14U1red as lo his reasons for acceptmg the office
to wh1ch he had heen appointed, he said that he
Last June I v1med Lo.:kwoou Library, to see
o ld rric nds and former co-workers. The bu1ld1ngs
are more o r less the same; a few familiar fa ces
rcma1 n . Gt:nerully s peaking, however, the
at mos phcre has changed to an almost unbelievable
exten t. Th e fear and the break-down in
communications mentioned in The Spectrum
articles are very much in evidence.
One o r my last appointments in my position as
Circulation Librarian at Lockwood Library was
Mrs. Ruth Parso ns, who, as readers of T'ht
Spectrum
and all Freshmen and 'Sopomores know, was formerly in charge of the Reserve
Room. I reviewed her impressive credentials as a
libranan . 1 worked with her for only a short time,
but even that short time was enough to malce me
aware of her exceptional abilitieS. Reports from
o ther Buffalo librarians have confirmed and
reinforced my opinion . That she has felt forced to
restgn is a disgrace to the university, to the
libraries, and to their amateur administration. This
kind of library administration is, apparently, still
supported by the faculty at SUNY AB.
The students at Buffalo deserve a better library
than the one they have. The faculty at Buffalo
have exactly the library they deserve.

Mary Constance McCArthy
A11iltant Reference Librrtrlan

Bi(p&amp;t on/
To the Editor:
I think Karen Shatz.kin has a very cood idea in
proposina that Dr. Somit be awudcd a research
~r~nt which "will take him overseas." R.iabt on,
lirl; I'm with you aU the way!

Mfl. Leyltl Somit

Monday, Octob« 18, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven
I

�J•

1

r

,~

Problems are exaggerai'ed
by Roo

KJ•

Sp«trum Stiff Writ~

When be araduates, Hanison
Jordan wants to enter coUeae. "I
hope to ao to Morris Brown in
Atlanta, Ga.," be said. Now an
undercl . .man at K.elllinpon
Hiah School, one of several
Buffalo bi&amp;b schools upset
'recently by student disturbances,
be is interested in studyina
science.
" No other teacher had the
time," Jordan said, explaining

Located at 31 9 Sulfolk, the
school a in a quiet residential
area, away from the noise and
traffic of Bailey Ave., one block
to the west. It is surrounded by
a housina development - clustcn
of small, two-level structures and tree lined streets of privato
homes. Shrubbery bema in the
school, a wac sand colored
buildina. Gua.rds stationed at the
entrance watch students ftle
tbtouah the doors and direct
visitors to the office. The city
rents the auards from the E.J.

-osterrelcher

Troubled .fichool
why a white teacher serves as
faculty advisor for the
Kensinaton Black Advancement
Oub. Jordan is the president o f
the club. The fact that the club
bas a white advisor is listed by at
least one group, the Black United
Front, as an issue in the unrest
in Buffalo's public high schools.
While Kensington has been
the scene of several incidents,
many stu den ts and faculty
members claim reports of such
have been· blown out of
proportion. Although the local
press bas reported black-white
confrontations, ' it is difficult to
find evidence of racial
antagonism while walking
through the haUs of Kensington
High School. The problem of
overcrowding seems more on
people's minds than the question
of race.

Students and faculty at
Kensington HIF School claim
that the reports of 1rouble In their
school have been blown out of
proportion . Contradicting
newspaper reports, they maintain
that the major problem at the
IChool is oven:rowdina.
Burke Detective Agency.
" What do we do with a kid
comin&amp; to class a minute or two
late," asked principal Angelo J.
Gianturco, "take him to court?"
He said he is lenjent with
students who comfl\it manor
offenses, even though the student
may be a chronic offender,
because as he emphasizes,
"primarily we're teachers."
" I know the solution isn't to
keep a dissident student In a big
organization, he subverts the
organization ," Gianturco added.
He denied charges that a double
standard exists at Kensington :
"I' m not the principal · of two
schools and I can't administer u
separate discipline policy with
black students and a separate
discipline policy with white
students - it's contrary to my
own heart."

Principal at K.ensinpon since
1966, Gianturco wants more
Black t:eachers on his faculty.
" We need 2S Black teachers in
this scbiool," be sa.id. There are
only four Blacks on tbe faculty
now, but Gianturco feels be will
be able to recruit more as time
lOCI on. Of 2300 students at the
school, 1about 600 are Blacks.

Outlicle influences?
Two of Kensington's Black
teachers say that it is a good
school a1nd deny that deep racial
antaaonJlsm exists. "I don't think
it's a ra.cial thina," said Prentiss
Henley. He said incidents at
K.ensinaton have been blown out
of proportion. ..UB really
influeno~ the high schools," he
expl ained , saying that some
University aroups try to use high
school 11tudents. "A lot of kids
are rettlizin&amp; that now," . he
added . "'There are a lot of good
kids in this school," Henley
insisted, "it's just that the bad
ones get a lot of publicity."
Bob MitcheU, a Black JYM
teacher, said that K.ensinston is
·•a pretty aood school. Like
other schools it has its
problems." He agreed that news
of dish.arbances at Kensington
have been exauerated. He
stressed that any student, " if he
applies lhlmself, can get a great
deal at t:his school." Students are
so m etimes resentful toward
authoritll, he added, but he
thinks this is a natural situation
for te 1e n-agers. The biggest
problem . at Kensington, he
emphash:ed, is overcrowding.
Toaetherness
Althc:&gt;uah white teachers
appear to be reluctant to
comment on the incidents that
have occurred at their sch~l.
one whc• did is Arthur Pridgeon ,
a biology instructor. " It's nol as
baiJ as it's been painted. ln my
class the kids seem to get along
well."
Dan Ruggiero is a white
;tudent who was involved in a
fight at school. "The fight I got
into," he explained, "wasn't
racial ; it was sort of a difference
of opinion ." He suuested that
there may be "a small amount of
racial tension" at Kensington and
laid that trouble "might have
been caused by outsiders coming
into the: school." If there is
tension at Kensington, one girl
said, " tbe students have to work
it out th•,mselves."

Assembly reconvenes

~-------_.."erox in g._ _
1- 3 copies of one origins/: 8 Cflflts 88Ch
4- 6 copies of one original: 7 c;ents each
7 or more copies of one origins/: 6 ctmts each

Gustav
355 tiorton Hall
' '9-!?0aily

•

?

CLINT EASTWOOD

••

THE SPECTRUM
356 NORTON HALL

_..,acan
~·-···-·
~•••can

1104tn.uv•

All the Beer you
can drink $1.60
8 :00 - 10 :00

)

The Graduate Student AIIOciation Senate will
meet today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 231 Norton Hall.
A report on Poverty Hill will be given by a
repreaentatl.e of the conaultant firm .

1

MONDAY
BEER BLAST

·"·-.

SllVIMONIY
AIJIY NAVY

'

.._____
Wine Nite
Apple, Strawberry
Grape wine
S 1 .60 Bottle
8 :00 - 10:00

•'

WAIHIIIGIO. SIIIIMIIIS Clllllll
. . .r-MArr
E.lS &amp; TH-S- M..l Styles f• r-. • • •

off M.in &amp; Amherst
in Central Park Plaza
ANNOUNCES

TUESDAY

GSA to meet

''

The recessed Student Assembly meeting
will recon•ene Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the Fillmore
Room. There wDl also be a meeting of the Asaembly
Monday, Oct. 25 at 4 p.m., in the Fillmore Room. It
is to everyone's advantaae to attend.

MR . A's

Hamlet in Buffalo

,.mlet h• alvnys been a play
open to stnnte in•ptetations.
Nicol Williamson's film
production of the pe.y Is no
exception. He and Marrianne
Faithful do a job on the "get
ttt.. to a nunnery" .:ene that
81toUnds. 11M film can be ...,.
tomorrow through Thur'ldlry at
the Kensington Theater (Bait.y
and Kentington). On st3lfl the
production excited enthusialtic
comment. The film ~lei be
equally rernarbbfe.
'• 1

SHOI~

1. .m

•a•··T•••n•···

Pa9e eiiJbt . The Spectrum . Monday, October 18, 1971

-153-1515 Nllll 1UPP.a

"PLAY MISTY FOR ME"

...an lnl1tatlon to terror...
JESSICA WALTER . OONNA MILLS

JOHN LARCH . SCREENPlAY BY JO HEIMS ANO DEAN RIESNEII
STORY BY JO HEIMS • DIRECTED BY CliNT EASTwOOD ·PRODUCED 8Y ROBERT DAlEY
A JENNiNGS LANG PAESENTATION • A t.CAlPASO COMPANY PROOUCTION
A UNIV£ASAl·MAlPASO COto4PANY PICTURE • TECHNICOlOA· ~- ...::::::"".':-..., C])

.ST:ARTS FJilDA Y
OCT. 22
.

lOTH
THEATERS

·---

COLVIN
KlM. 11 COlVIN m •S4*

�Stahl Proposes removal
of 'incorrigible' students
An unusual Idea for solving
the turmoil in the Buffalo pubUc
schools will be cons.idered
tomorrow at the meeting of the
Common Council . The proposal,
offered by University District
Councilman Henry Stahl Jr., asks
the Council to petition tbe State
Legislature-, State Youth Board
and the State Education
Department to amend the state
compulsory education laws.
Councilman Stahl wants to
enable school officials to
"remove incorrigible students and
their damaging influence from
the classroom." His resolution
will be offered as a result of the
disturbances· which have gripped
the high schools in recent weeks.The Demacratis proposal is based
on his contention that the
violence is the work of a ''srOau
number of students who
demonHrate a complete
unwUUngness to learn and Whose
habitually disruptive and often
criminal behavior prevents others
from learning."
"We have to reassess ' the
educational system:• Mr. Stah1
contends. ..These kids are not
absorbing any knowledge .•.
they•re not even getting any
discipline." He added that being
in school is not tneaningful to
these stude,.nts. "When I was in
school I had to take Greek,
physics . . . subjects that were

later of no. use to me. Not that I
think those courses didn't do me
good; I think any mental
gymnastics are good. But some
of these kids aren't able to
understand this. Take a kid from
the ghetto - what does ancient
history or English literature mean
to them?"
Special facilities

The councilman does not wish
to merely "turn them out into
the streets" however. He feels
that special vocational training
facilities of some sort should be
estab'Jished so that these
disruptive students could be in
some way herded together.
"There is a very small percentage
that are in over their heads. They
don't want to be in school ...
they would deprive the other
95% of the studenll of their
education." Instead , Mr. Stahl
seeks to establish special
programs "for relevant vocational
training apart from normal
school operations."
though agreeing that the
Situation '(might be chaotic for a
year," Mr. Stahl emphasized that
at least "we would have students
in school who want to be there.''
His proposal would have no legal
power to establish this system
because change in the state law
would be required.

Tiffin Room
(2nd Floor Norton)

COCKTAIL HOUR
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY FROM 4: 30 TO 6 :30
)

•DINNER MENU •
STEAK SANDWICH - $1.25
FRIED SHRIMP IN THE BASKET - $1 .50
STRIP STEAK fLA ITER W/FRENCH FRIES - $1.99
GRILlED RUBIN - $1.25
HAM AND SWISS ON RYE - $.95
HOT BEEF ON WECK - $.95
CORNED BEEF ON PUMPERNICKLE - $. 95
ONION RINGS - $.50 - FRENCH FRIES - $.35
CHEESE, CRACKERS AND FRUIT BOARD - $1.00
POTATO£ CHiPS AND ONION DIP - $.50
ICE CREAM $.25 - SUNDAE - $.40

by

ClJ!f Miller

It's Chiller Thriller night on a
local television station. A rather
intense man in a black cape
appears on the screen. His eyes
are shown in closeup. They are
dark and prominent - almost
mysterious looking. A · young
man with a crew cut makes his
appearance on the scene. He is
unfortunate enough to look into
the eyes of the mysterious
hypnosis master and falls
immediately into a deep
hypnotic sleep. Bventually he
opens his eyes which are now
glassy . He- moves with
zombie-like motions and
proceeds to destroy a town of
7000.
Hypmotism has received the
scorn of many on the basis of its
presentation in movies. There is,
however, little truth in the scene
above.
These dark legends of
hypnotic spells are as old as
history itself. Yet today
hypnotism has found a place in
the reputable world of
psychology and medicine .
P.sychologists use hypnosis to
probe their patients' minds to
unlock the mysteries of their
inner workings. Dentists use it as
an anesthetic and doctors find it
helps reduce pain in labor.
Hypnosis is not a mysterious
{orce. It relies on a known
psychological relationship
between the conscious and
subconscious minds . The
subconscious, having no power to
reason, accepts and acts upon
any suggestion given to it by the
conscious mind.
Suggestion, then, .is the key to
hypnosis. Everyone has fallen
prey to hypnosis at one time~r
another in their lives. According

to A1 lJurringer, a practicins
hypnotist, advertising is an
extremely good example of
suggest,on at. work. It is meant
to appeal to something within
you which will compel you to
purchase something. Consciously
you may know that you should
not make a purchase, but the
appeal to the subconscious is
often stronger and difficult to
overcome.
In order to get the subject to
accept sugiestions uncritically,
the hypnotist must first have the
subject concentrate his conscious
attention on a single object. Mr.
Durringer has his subject
concentrate on his eyes. He then
suggests to the subject that be is
beginning to feel drowsy - that
his body is relaxing and that his
eyes are getting heavy and wish
to close. Each time the subject
accepts one of these suggestions
without a challenge, the
hypnotist is better able to make
direct contact with the
subconscious mind.
Once the subect is ..talked
down" to a deeper state of
hypnosis, or as Mr. Durringer
calls it, .. heightened
su,aestibility," many types of
suggestions wiU be readily
accepted.
Physical suggestions are
usually the easiest. Mr. Durringer
will suggest that your hand is
beginning to tingle and it will . Or
that your ann is lighter than air,
and it will seem to float .
Mr. Durringer generally uses
these suggestions to deepen the
trance. In a deeper state it is
easier to give the subject
suggestions concer ning
self~mprovement . He has had
success in helping patients stop
smoking, improve their
confidence, lose weid\t. improve

their memories and remain alert
even when physically tired .
Again, this is not a mysterious
force at work.. Once the
conscious mind has relaxed and
suggestions are able to reach the
subconscious mind, they will be
carried out.
A penon who is overwe:igbt,
for example, may be so .UOply
from the ha1€i of eating too
much. It is necessary, therefore,
to change his eating patterns.
Today's diets usually do not do
this u they aim at qu.ick weight
reduction by depriving the body
of necessary nutrients.
Mr. Durrinpr would have the
person imagine bow he would
lilce to look and suggest to him
that be can look thAt way merely
by eating the right amounts Of
foods in the proper
combinations. Assuming there is
no. deep-seated psychological
problem involved, the suggestion
is usually effective.
Of more interest on a
&amp;ci~ntific level is an experience
Mr. Durringer has had with a
drunken person. Someone he
knowf once came to him
~xtremely into)ricated, unable to
coordinate his motions or walk a
straight line. Mr. Durringer was
able to hypnotize him and
suggest that in five minutes he
would be "cold sober." It
worked.
Scientists cannot explain, for
example, what happened to the
alcohol. Did the body neutralize
it chemically? Were nerve
impulses changed so -., not to
send messages of intoxication?
No one can say.
- There are limitless possibilities
with hypnosis. It can be used to
reduce stress, blood pressure and
other nervous responses of the
body.

The Spectrum's classifieds bring results!!!!

4:Jo_ 5

COCKTAILS
(MANHA1TAN, MARTINI, SOURS, HIGHBALLS)

50C

(PLUS TAX)

.WHEN PICKED UP AT BAR

-

PIZZA PETE Invites
University of Buffa/() students
to the weekly
SMORGASBORD
5:00p.m. - 7:00p.m.

$1.35
FOR ALL THE PIZZA YOU CAN EAT

1400 Niagara F4/Js Blvd. 835-3636
Open Sun.-Thurs 11:30 a.m. to 12:00 midnlte
Friday and Saturday 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 a.m.

Monday, October 18, 1971. The Spectrum. Page nine

•

�A Place to play

..

Basketball for city children
by Howie Faiwl
A 111. Sporlr Editor

DoJl.er hockey .. aCt.Qfl
1

~

-se~ednlk

On Sa.,l.U1.....day morni·ngs
1

A blond haired player feints

Wright okayed the loan of
foldable hockey nets, purchased
for his floor hockeY. physical
education class.

to his left, moves to his right,
and then shoots and scores.
Suddenly his teammates mob
him and pound him heavily,
National Hockey League style. Student leaders
The player has performed the
But what of the people that
ultimate, by scoring the winning_ really make roUer hockey go _
goal in a Buffalo intramural t h e payer
s. M any are
1
roUer hockey club game.
tremendous hockey fans, and
Organized last spring, the several had never played any
roller hockey r en!husiasts have form of hockey before enrolling
jum~ in number, from ten or at Buffalo. Most players use shoe
twelve last spring to 18 or 20 shin pads. Jt is heartwarming to
this fall. Possibly the biggest see the players rise early every
reason for the success of roller weekend , n o matter what
hockey at Buffalo is the desire happened the night before, ready
for hockey action by many New
York born students. At present for spirited and fast paced
only o ne or two players, action .
includ ing former freshman
This fall the roller hockey
football star John , Stanko club raised the roof and QIOVed
(Cleveland, Ohio) are from areas its co ntests to the Capen
other than the Metropolitan New macadam, between Capen Hall
York.
and Michael Hall. This is in
Although reCeiving no formal contrast ~o last semester when
funding from the Buffalo athletic games were held in the parking
department, the roller hockey lot behind Goodyear Hall.
club as received strong support Instead of the usual vulcanized
from recreation and int(amurals rubber puck, a roll of heavy
direct 0 r 8 i 11 M 0 n ka rs h . electric tape is used. Believe it or
t:
not, the puck can hurt 1·ust ns
Additionall y , sports inaormation
r
·
dl· rector Ot.c"11. Baldwm,
w h o much as a regular ice hockey
donated makeshift nets last year, puck.
and Buffalo varsity hockey coach
However, attendance has been
Ed Wright have been o f meager this semester, but play
c on s i d e r a b I e aid in the will go on regardless for roller
hockey s being played for the
establishment of roller hockey .
Last season, Coach Wright's enjoyment of its participants.
varsity hockey BuUs donated 25 For an entertaining Saturday
top grad e h ockey sticks to roller morning try roller hockey instead
hockey, and this fall , Coach of Roger Ramjet.

•
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I

p••

••

••

••

••1

.

THE

UUAB* LITERARY ARTS COMMITIE
&amp;
THE UUAB FCNE ARTS FILM COMMITTE

•
•

·

present

VI
~~
I
I

.

.

•
•

1I

I

·

·The financiaJ woes of our
nation's citiqs has been a great
discomfort to all classes of
people from all walks of life. It
has created labor problems,
housing shortages, spiraling
transit costs and deterioration of
our public schools. It has caused
the sudden disappearance of
many vital public services, some
of which near-sighted politicians
deem as unnecessary luxuries.
One such "unnecessary service"
whiGh city officials were quick to
destroy was the after-echool
center recreation program where
children of all ages could forget
their daily grinds and ease their
anxieties on a basketball or
volleyball court, ping pong table
or baseball diamond.
Although they were not the
hardest hit by budget cutbacks,
the youth of urban America were
by far the most deeply shocked.
Here they were being hurled
back onto the very same city
streets where our elder statesmen
professed existed a monumental
and harmful drug problem. Here
they would seek their fun on
cracked pavement, '-roken sewers
and crushing traffic. The few
religious organizations or YMCA
leagues co uld not fill the
recreational gap left by our city
~r h ers. Nor cou.ld t h e scattered
.at
· baseu_. proJects
·
han dl e
commumtysuch a huge_ horde of
unsuspecting children.
Local problem
In Buffalo this problem
became quite apparent to several
c ivic-minded personnel who
unfortunately lacked the
resources to do something about
it. The cry for help grew louder
as several schools were beset by
serious student disturbances and
riots. Kids were bored
everyone knew it _ yet empty
pockets and nodding heads were
all that resulted.
On the Buffalo campus, three
concerned stud ents, Cliff Keller,
Steve Fleissig and Chris Sunley,
were deeply disturbed by this
horrid situation. The realization
that something needed to be
done struck the three a year ago
when one Sunday afternoon they
were at Clark Gym and as Cliff
describes it, '" we saw this
disgruntled group of ten-year-olds
wandering about the gym with
nothing to do. It was obvious the
city had neglected them so they
sought help on the University
campus. All they wanted was a
place to play."
The three immed'iately went
to work on the dilemma. Using
the Community Action Corps as
their sponsor, they circled the
local neighborhood in an attempt
to renuit prospective kids into a

•I

functionable basketball league.
After some initial reluctance, the
Buffalo Board of Education
finally allowed t.hem to enter the
public schools and speak to the
children . The response was
overwhelming. After visiting only
six e lementary schools 140
exuberant players were enlisted .

Legal obstacles
However, there were hassles.
Before the kids could even step
onto a basketball court , Cliff,
Steve and Chris were informed of
the necessity of liability and
accide nt insurance, parental
permission and sufficient
funding . Through tedious
maneuvering though , they
hurdled all these obstacles. CAC
agreed to allocate as much
~oney as needed, the parents
gladly cooperated and insurance
was rapidly issued .
There remained one basic
problem which the University
athletic department solved .rather
surprisingly. Athletic director Dr.
Harry Fritz was more than happy
to volunteer Clark Gym facilities
to the league. To bolster his

.I SUPERSTAR ! :~9i:!'~n
·=
I original
graph 1•cs
:I
I
MONDAY - OCTOBER 18- FILLMORE ROOM

Il.

1

purchases may be charged

- AOMISSION FREE-

I

SUNY AT BUFFALO

"Viva's Book VIVASUPERSTARrepresentsa
consummate blight on American puritan morality."
.
-Spiro Agnew

I

ART DEPT. GALLERY--4240 RIDGE LEA RD.
TUESDAV,OCT.19 11AMto5PMand7PMto9PM

•

.. .. .. .. ..

A division of Sub-Bo•rd 1

··--~·

Page ten. The Spectrum. Monday, October 18, 1971

J

CHAGAU., BASKIN, ROUAULT, DAUMIER AND MANY OTHERS

F~

ARRANGED BY FERDINAND ROTEN GALLERIES
BALTIMORE, MARYLAND ·

,

,.

--d9s

aenero':la attempt to better
community relations viith die
University, Dr. Fritz also donated
the use of any necessary
equipment.
Yesterday, the CAC BaslcetbaU
League got underway. For the
140 kids and 30 volunteers it
was indeed a monumental
occasion. Cliff, Steve and Chris
were a happy trio as' they
witnessed the successful birth of
their baby.
The organization is indeed an
ambitious one, but the gym
facilities an·d the manpower is
only sufficient to provide aid foJ'
the immediate community
surrounding the University. The
140-figure could have as easily
been doubled o r perhaps tripled,
for the helpless were many, but
the means few and not
forthcoming.
The three organizers set an
example though. Through the
generous help of CAC they
succeeded in making the lives of
140 children much happier.
However, it is not enough. Their
precedent should and must be
duplicated by volunteer help in
all colleges, high schools and
community oreanizations in the
Buffalo area. Klds are begging for
a place to play under organized
and responsible leadership. When
society fails its youth, it can no
longer function nor be
considered as a humane
structure. The CAC Basketball
League is a step in the right
direction . As Cliff Keller
dolefully indicated : "It hurts to
tum away a ten-year-old starved
for some fun ." It really does.
GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
Jewelw - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
fa~ University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

�WANTED

LOST•FOVNo

WANTEO V.W. tires 5.6G-15. Wllf
pay 110 or mOte for 900&lt;1 ones.
634·71a5.

L05T, Flourentln- gold eockt.ll rln9
with white sapphire stones.
Clll TIN 3597 PINHI
'

EXPERIENCED people to work IBM
CompoJJng Equipment, Pil$te·up Of'
photo-typo5ltlng. Please contact Jim
at 831-4113 or come up to The
Spectrum, Room 355 Norton.
HOYT Helpers wanted. Volunteers to
work In Oelaware Dist rict Councilman
William B. Hoyt's campaign. Call
8a4-4323.

1 NEED 4 ambitious m111es and 1
female to help wltto the harvesting of
Christmas t r - In my plantations In
the be1ut1ful Slox Mountain Range In
Nortt&gt;ern Pennsylvania , Female
expected to cook &amp; keep house.
Transportation supplied along with
room &amp; board plus hourly wage.
Departure approximately Oct. 25th,
returning Nov. 23. Abundance of all
species of Wildlife to provide an
unforgettable experience with n1ture.
Write Box 89 glvln!l all particulars.
BARTENDERS, waitresses wanted at
a new club - a Job you'll enj oy. Call
685·3100. Ask for John or Bob.
UUAB Is 1ookln9 for a chairmen for
the video committee. Anyone
Interested, please apply In Room 261
Norton.
STEEl.. guitar ptayer and drummer for
Poco music C, S, N &amp; Y . Call
835·5405. Ask for Buddy.

•

MAI..E student and dog, Otis, need
place to live. Cell 881·3647 and leave
messege for David.

FOR SALE
197~ PORSCHE 914 Roedster, deluxe
ap.,.atfnCe group, AM·FM radio. Call
aft•• p,fl', 741·31J21.

vc;&amp;WAOON e.mper Bus, 1964,
Cortdltlon. Snow tires, four
spa,._ ' " h"ter, extras , Call Seth
a75 ...1t!l.

OQCNI

1967 SUZUKI motorcycle excellent
condition, $300. A~ for Bob, 3234
Main St. upstairs.
1965 Pl.. Y MOUTH Valiant, good
running condition. Must sell . Call
Murad a37·0290 after 7 p .m., before
9 a.m.
1956 CHRYSI..ER,
condition, 873-4862
$50.

good running
or 881-2431.

A..,.,d.

parts. Bl6D engine wltl't 6-11olt
electf'lcs. M-4, wp4!11d trans., seats,
gla•. etc. Bill Thompson 458A
Allenhurst, 837-4647 evenings.

MALE r~)mmate, own bedroom, S70
a month llncludlng utilities. 20-mlnute
walk from e~mpu$. 632 Engl-oOCI,
Apt. 9. &amp;.:314..0413.

1962 Ot.OSMOBII..E, 6.5,000 miles,
good mechanlul condition, automatic
t ransmission; power steering; brakes;
mounted snows Included. Great
transportation. $250 negotiable.
837· 1617 or 831-4113. A~ for
Mickey.

$46 per rnonth. Own room. Main &amp;
Ferry ·area. Call 835·9217.

REFR I GERATORS, stoves and
WIShers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guar1nteed. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore, TX4·3183.
SONY Model 521 stereo reet-type
tape recorder. Bulove 23-Jewet
setf-wlndlng witch. Set of Army bunk
bed frames. Cell R ogel' 834-4962.

Share

costs.

Call

Kevin

NEED ride Oct. 2a or 29 to ~nn
Arbor, Unlv. of Mich. or nearby. c-•
ua-3099.

WANTED:
roommate(s)
with
apartment to Share or roommate(s) to
took with. Call Robert 896-5709.

RIDE wanted to Arm Arbor, Michigan,
University or Detroit, Frfdey, Oct. 22.
Return ride wanted Monday, Oct. 25,
If po.lble. Call Jules 831·2360.

ONE roc:llmmate very close to
ca mpus own room, S50/mo.
Includes e•verythlng - call a37· 1358
anytime.

RIDE WANTED from South Buffalo
on M ·T ·W·F. First class a tOO. Will
Shire expenses. Call 824·5143.

RIDE BOAilD

RIDE needed to Montreal or Toronto,
Fri., Oct. 22. Clll Karen 831·2156.
Witt share eKpenses.

SONY 252·0 tape deck four month;
old, $120 or make offer. Atso Ampex
AX-50 never used. RegutJir S250 yours for $200. Call 831·3767..&amp;.

834-7j48.

PERSONAL
TO MY one . •nd only T .P.. h89PY
blrthdey with mv love ••w•~ •net
11w•ys. Your one and o nly, P.T.
COUNTRY Day -Nunwy Scftool,
6320 Main St., WIIIIAm1¥llle, IIU
openings for 3 and 4-year-otd c:ftlldren
9:15- 11:15, 12:45- 3 : 00. 5 davt.
The tehool Is non.proflt, lnt..,•tecl,
licensed, a unique prQtnm. call
634-9221 for Information.
OUR Forel9n cer r...-lrs last - we
guerantee it. Independent, 839·1850.

ANOI, may the first time be.the best
and each succeeding time even better.
Love, l..enny,

'59 VW rebuilt engine. Steering needs
work, $75 or best offer. 881· 1075.

l-ECTURE, J-1511 Mysticism 1nd
Kabalah, Wednesday, Oct·. 20th, a
p .m. Chabad House. Rebbl Qurary
will lecture .

RAMBI..ER wagon 1965 - automatic,
power steering, excellent run ning,
needs bOdy work, $300 or offer . Call
Roy 831-4a43, 694-1378.

DEAR LARRY (Sweetie) Simon happy blrthdiY - The C . G ibbOn, H .
Dildo and S.R.P.

1948 DODGE panel truck - needs
engine work - Clll Dean 895-4948.
1969 OPEl.. Kadett, 4-sPeld, 102 h.p.,
red with biiCk Interior, goOd shape,
extras. 674-9129.

AUTOMOTIVE service Is our only
business. Independent Foreign Car
Service. 839·1850.

PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS

I..IVING room and bedroom furniture.
Reuonabte. Call 837-2593 , leave
mes11ge.

AFlM BV

MJSCELLANEOUS

LEWIS GILBERT

TYPING
833· 1597.

"friends"

1960 MGA roadster , mechanically
QOOCI . Body In excellent condition.
Best offer takes lt. 835-6787.

SATTLER'S 32nd
ANNIVERSARY
SALE!

purse.

FOI..K gutur lessons, Jeff 835-3384,
835-9229.
•

MOTORCYCLE! 1970 Triumph Tiger
650, 8300 miles. New handlebars,
spark ptugs, oil. Best o ffer , 835·1725.

ONE ROOMMATE, available Nov. 1
Hertel area. $43 plus utilities. own
room. Call 837-4901.

Armadillo

HORSEBACK riding, hayr'ldes - off
season rates. W•verly Stebles, Service
Road 18, N iagara River Parkway, a
miles north of Peace Bridge, Nl..-ra
Fills, Ontario, C anadl. Phone
416-295·3925.

1963 M6B wh.lte, very
goOd
condition. Best offer. 684-4937.

1963 C HEVROLET , excellent
condition, sound bOdy, eng ine,
trensmlsslon. Must
sell.
Very
reasonable. Call 834·5312, 876·9285.

t..OST:
Please.

BEAUTIFUl.. hlndrnede told And
sliver Jewelry - wedding rings - at
sensible prices. J .P. The Qold-ver,
655 Elmwood It Ferry St., 881-3400.

'65 BUG, new tires, p lus 2 new snow
tires, $500. 835..00690.

ROOMMATES WANT£D

ONE GAS dryer. Perfect condition.
Only $10. Must pick It up . Call
a24 -5143.

Oct. 25.
835·7787.

......., ... _ . , So-.,"

l&amp;\t)OOIRT
~-~·

JfO&lt;~HAfRS

In

my

home .

ANYONE Wh O hU experience
working IBM composing equipment,
paste - up
metorlals or
a
photo-typosltor, please contact Jim at
Tho Spectrum o ffice or call 831-4113.

~_!loy ..

LtY'ttiOOIRT

C &amp;. H JONES Professlonll Typing
Service computerized IBM equipment ,
plus our experience, gtve best possible
presentations of dlliertatlo•u, thesis,
term papers, resumes and employment
application letters. Locat•d between
two campuses. Very reasonable. Call
837-6558.

r---------~

Bl"GJ JaiN. Bffi\JIE 'W..PIN 1~=1

--~­ HELMAN TECHNICOL~· A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
GEOFFREY

U .U .A ,B. D1nce Co mmittee will hold
a meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 20 •t
4:45 p.m. In Norton 261. Att
members ue urged to attend.

NOW SHOWING
Sh~t&gt;WS

done

2-4·6-8-10

WILL CARE f or one Child
home, days. 837·7827 .

' "1

my

.

OMMAND
STEREO RECORD!3
Our Entire Catalog Included/

I

• DOC SEVE RINS~N
• RAY CHARLES
•ENOCH LIGHT
•DICK HYMAN
. • ~RASS IMPACT
•GLENN MILLER

'

•TONY MOTTOLA
•SINGERS
•CHARLES MAGNANTE
•COUNT BASIE
•BENNY GOODMAN
•MOOG SYNTHESIZER

CATALOG

PRICE
$5.98

18~

-18~

per

Record

•N o. 2 BRAHMS: Symphony No 2
•No. 3 MUSSORGSKY·RAVEI..: Pictures At An Exhibition
•No. 4 RIMSKY ·KORSAKOV : C1prlccto
ESPAGNOI.. AND TCHAIKOVSKY Capriccio Italian
•No. 5 RAVEl.. : Oiphnls et Ch loe Suite N o.2
•No. 6 RACHMANINO FF: Symphony No.2
•No. 7 RAVEl..: Bolero &amp; RapsOdle E•oangnoto
•No. 8 DEBUSSY: La Mer-Fetes lber·
•No. 9 BERI..IOZ: Symphon le Fa nt:
• No. 20 WAGNER: Preludes &amp; Overtu.
•No. 21 TCHAIKOVSKY: Sym phony No.
•No. 22 VIRGIL FOX PLAYS BACH
•No. 23 PIANO POPS PARADE, Leonid Hamb.
•No. 24 BEETHOVEN SYMPHONY : No.1 and :l
•No. 25 VIRGil.. FOX PLAYS WAGNER, BACH, et..
•No. 26 BEETHOVEN: Sonato No. 29 Barenholm
•N o. 27 TCHAIKOVSKY: Nutcracker Suite
•No. 30 BRAHMS: Symphony No.4
•No. 31 BEETHOVEN: Symphony No.5
•No. 33 BEETHOVEN : Symphony No.6
•No. 34 STRAVINSKY: Petrouchka
•No. 36 VIRGil.. FOX at SYMPHONY HAI..L
•No. 37 GERSHWIN : Amedun tn Pairs &amp; Porgy and Boss
• No. 38 COPLAND: Billy the Kid &amp; AppatiChlan Spring
•No. 40 VIRGil.. FOX In CONCERT
•N o. 41 MY FAIR LADY &amp; THE SOUND OF MUSIC
•No. 42 SHOSTAKOV ICH : 2 ·reeord Sets
•N o. 12001 13EETHOVEN : Symphony 1 and 8
•N o . 12002 BRUCHNER: Symphony No. 7

.. ..........

.....

and many many more!

fer S6lef Alellr . I T. .4

.....,

r-. If's

BOULEVARD MALL - Niapra Falls BJvd:,
North of Sheridan Drive. Amherst. 10 to 9 Mon. thru Sat.

..

GUTSY,

HIP, COOL!"
- RICHARD COHEN, WOMEN'S WEAR OA/lY

ALL COMMAND CLASSICS
Just for Our Anniversary Sale...

Everything Now In Stock by Command!
Featuring Virgil Fox, William Steinberg,
Daniel Barenbolm, ate.

"A TOTALLY NEW 'HAMLET''~,.. **HIGHEST RATING!

Williamson's Hamlet
is unique, electri·
tying! Unlike any I
have seen or heard!
The star has splendid
sup1port! Surprisingly
good is Marianne
Faijthfull as Ophelia!'
··WN&lt;OA HAl.(, NC'W YO/I~ HCWS

"A SPLENDID FILM~
Nicol Williamson's
remarkably fresh in·
terpretation of Hamlet
has been skillfully
transferred to the
screen!" _,:A;c:;;c/IRIOGC.

"THE FINEST HAMLET I HAVE EN·
COUNTERED! Endlessly reward·
ing, brisk, pointed, brilliantly
paced, beautifully designed!
Shakespeare has been
beautifully served
and so have we!"
"A VIBRANT PER·
FORMANCE'
Nicol William·
son is hugely
talented! He brings to
the role a strong sense
of
and logic ... let us be thankful
that this Hamlet has been made!"
... .,..,........ ,.,...,.,.

~~

STARTS
TOMORROW!

-

~~- .... ........
ensington

........

-JOHH CI!OWTH£1t, THE MOitHIH&lt;i TUEOIIAI'H

OICOL WIWAnlSOO.flllftiiUU. ..
co ....... , . . . . . .

~

3 DAYS ONLY : TUES., WED. &amp; THURS.!
This ad when presented to box-office
will entitle bearer &amp; one to admission
of $1.25 each.

Monday, October 18, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

-

�Announcements
The Hillef class In Bqinnen Hebrew will meet
for the first time, tomorrow at noon in Room 262
Norton Hall . If you never had any Hebrew, join
this class.
Hillel is offering a dass in Jewish Ethics,
tomorrow at 1 p.m. in Norton Hall, Room 262. All
are welcome.
Hillel will show an Israeli movie, " Impossible
on Saturday," tomorrow evening at 7:30 p.m. in
the Conference Theater. Admission is free. This is a
multi-lingual film (mostly French) with English
subtitles.
U.B. Women's Liberation will hold a meeting
today at 7:30p.m . in Norton ~:fall , Room 246.
The Student Physical Therapy Association will
have a meeting tomorrow night at 8 p.m. in
Norton Hall, Room 340. Elections will be held and
the fate of departmental committees shall be
decided. All freshmen, sophomores and juniors
should attend.
UUAB Film Committee will be meeting today
at 5 p.m. in Room 261 Norton Hall.
UUAB Music Committee will meet today at 7
p.m. in Room 261 Norton Hall.
UUAB Contemporary Issues Committee will be
meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Room 261
Norton Hall .

"Workshop in Outdoor Lfvin,." (Wilderness
~
Survival) of Rachel Carson College is· having class building. Everyone is welcome. Rides leave Baird
held tonight at 7 p.m. at 4937 Translt Rd. in Hall at 7:15 p.m. For further information call
Williamsville. Attendance for those interested in Steve at 831 -3682 or Gary at 693-5373.
caving trip is required.
I
Schuumeisters Ski Club is now taking
The UUAB Literary Arts Committee ~d memberships for this coming ski season,
UUAB Fine Arts Film Committee present Viva Monday- Friday from • 9- 4:30 p.m. and Tuesday,
today in the Fillmore Room at 8 p.m. Viva will be Wednesday and Thursday nights from 7 - 9 p.m. in
discussing her book, Vivo Superstar. Appearing Room 318 Norton Hall.
with Viva is her husband, Miohael Auder, who will
be presenting a video tape version of his film,
John Froines, of Chicago Eight fame, will be
Superstar. Admission is free.
speaking tomorrow at 8 p.m . in the Fillmore
Room.
Campus Security announces that student
parking permits are available Monday- Friday from
University Travel and Schussmeisters Ski Club
9- 4:30 p.m. at the Security office, 196 Winspear - SAS Jet to Geneva, Switzerland. Ski package in
Ave. After 4 :30 p.m . permits may be obtained at Chamonix, France or on to Copenhagen, Denmark.
Hayes A, Room 2 from 5-8:30 p.ni. Vehicles Dec. 27 to Jan. 7 (11 days winter recess) - $196
without a valid permit are subject to a fine.
just flight - Package $298. For more information
come to Room 316, 323 or 318 Norton Hall or
The Hillel Dance Group wants anyone call extension 3602, 3603, 2145 or 2146.
interested in Israeli dancing m phone 831-3495 and
ask for Judy.
University Travel and Hillel - Olympic Jet to
Tel-Aviv, Israel via Athens Greece. March 27 to
Organic LivinJ Club will meet tomorrow at 4 April 10 (Passover and spring recess - 14 days)
p.m . in Room 233 Norton Hall. Topic will be flight $355 - package $559. For more information
" Why Organic?" - an introduction to organic come to Room 316 or 323 Norton Hall or call
living by James L. Redding and Alan Wagener.
extension 3602 o r 3603.
All Undergraduate French majors who wilt be.
graduating in January are to fill out a Student Data
form in Crosby 214. Even if you have filled one
out previously, a separate form is required by
trhursday.

•

•

University Travel - Alitalia Jet to Rome, Italy
March 31 to April 9 (9 day Easter and Spring
recess) - flight $198 - package available. For
more information come to Room 316 or 323
Norto n Hall or call extension 3602 or 3603.

SUNYAB semester or academ~ year
Psychology Department researchers are looking
German Ch.b will have an organizational
for shy gir1s who have trouble conversing with meeting tomorrow night at 3:30 p.m . in Norton underJraduate pfOJI'ilm in Grenoble, France men. If you are interested in free treatment to help / Hall, Room 332. Activities and films will be info rmation and applications are available at the
develop your social slo..ills, call 831-1180 between discussed. Everyone is welcome.
· Office of Overseas Academic Programs, 107
Townsend Hall and at the Department of French,
7- 10 p.m. If no answer, call 864-2 151.
CAC's Environmental Action Paper Committee 214 Crosby Hall. The deadline for applications for
A VD unit will be at U.B. tomorrow at 1:30 will meet tomorrow night at 9 p.m. in Norton Hall , the spring term is Nov. 1, 1971. For the fall, 1972
term or the academic year 1972- 3, the deadline is
p.m. at the fountain area by Norton Hall . It is a Room 33~ . All members are urged to attend.
March 15, 1972.
motorized education unit that is touring New York
State combatting venereal disease o n college
CAC needs volunteers for tutoring, arts and
CAC needs volunteers to work at the "Cradle
campuses throughout the state . Showings of the crafts, dance and creative writing programs and the
presentation will be at regular intervals all Ldckawanna Friendship House. Contact the CAC of Black Pearls" day care center. Call 836-4169 o r
go to Room 220 Norton Hall (the CAC office).
afternoon. The mobile van features audio-visual office in Norton Hall, Room 220 at831-3609.
display and poster panels showing symptoms and
1 meeting
The U.B. Pep Band will have an important · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • • •
consequences of syphillis and gonorrhea.
tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. at the band

Sports Information
Tomorrow: Varsity cross-(;ountry vs. Geneseo,
3:30 p.m.; Grover Cleveland golf course.

Backpage

Wednesday : Women's tennis vs. Rochester,
Buffalo tennis courts.
Thursday: Women's tennis at Brockport State
College.
Saturday: Cl ub soccer at St. John Fisher, 1
p.m.; - Rochester; varsity cross&lt;ountry at SUNY at
Binghamton; 2 p.m .
The Student Athletic Review Board meets
Thursday in Room 205 Norton Hall .

What's Happening
Monday, Oct. 18
1- 1:50 p.m. Cooking school , Kleinhans Music Hall
8 p.m. Lecture: Viva Superstar - videotape
accompaniement, in Fillmore Room, Norton
Hall (free)
1927 German,
3 &amp; 8 p.m. Film : Sunrise
Diefendorf 146 (free)
Tuesday, Oct. 19
3 &amp; 8 p.m. Film : Duck Soup, with the Marx
Brothers, Diefendorf 146 (free)

WBFO Programme Notes
Monday, Oct. 18
8 a.m. - Prelude - Classical music for your
morning.
1 p.m. - Ellipse o r Eclipse? - with Roberta
Friedman and Grahame Weinbren
8:50p.m. News
10:30 p.m. - Special of the Week
Midnight - Extension
Tuesday, Oct. 19
11 p.m.
Firing Line - William F. Buckley and
challengers, with the radio version of the
famous Public Broadcasting Service television
series.
History of Rock 'n Roll - with Murray
p.m.
Kirch
8 p.m .
What 's His Name's Greatest Hits - with
Andrew Stiller
11 p.m. - Jazz Moods - with Chuck McClintock
Wednesday, Oct. 20
11 a.m.
Through the Looking Glass - with Jane
Donahue

1 p.m . - View from the Bo ttom - with Dave
Rogot
5:50 p.m. - Chronicle - A summary of the aay's
news, with emphasis on university and local
events.
8 p.m. - Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert
10 p.m . - Searching - "Crashers and Splitters"
Thursday, Oct. 21
11 a.m. - Potpourri
1 p.m. - All My Trials - Folk music with Leza
Mesiah
9 p.m. Vox Humana - with Laurence Bogue
10 p.m.
Book Beat - with Robert Cromie
11 p.m. - Remembrance of Theing Past - with
Ann Marie Plubell
Friday, Oct. 22
11 a.m. - Music From Rochester
1 p.m. The Lonely D(agster - with Billy Altman
8 p.m.
The Estoeric Phonograph - with Steve
Levin thai
9 p.m.
Uncle Sam's False Assumption - the
history of the Indian in America
11 p.m .
Relax Your Mind - with Dave Benders
Midnight - Extension

Wednesday, Oct. 20
6 p.m. Film: The Brig with The Living Theater. • •. .P.•••••••-.•••••~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Conference Theater {free)
8 &amp; 9 :30 p.m. Recital : Creative Associate Recital
1, Room 100 Baird Hall.

~-

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                    <text>•'

Voi.22,No.22

Fridrf, Octot.r 15,1971

State University, of New York 11t Buffalo

Cash on the line!
by Howie Kurtz
Campus Editor

"You are hereby requested to
voluntarily comply with the law and lower
the price on any articles which have been
increased iri violation of the freeze."
This directive was issued to the
University Bookstore in a letter from the
Internal- Revenue Service last week. IRS
ruled that the Bookstore had , in fact ,
violated President Nixon's wage-pr)ce
freeze when it raised the prices of several
books at the beginning of the semester.
The IRS directive ordered the Bookstore to
"furthermore . . . make refunds of any
overcharge to your customers who can
show that they purchased an item at above
the freeze limits."
by

The rulinB resulted from action initiated
David Steinwald , student rights

coordinator, i~early September after the
way to legal compliance with the IRS
Bookstore began selling texts at a higher
ruling. Raised prices are being rolled back
and refunds are being granted to those who
price than last semester. Mr. Steinwald
purchased the illegally 'priced books.
flied a complaint with IRS, claiming that a
,
price hike to a higher level than before
To re~ive a refund, a purchaser mu5t
Aug. 15 was in direct violation of the_ merely bring their book in to the textbook ·
federal wage-price freeze ..
.service counter and a Bookstore employee
wUI check the records to v~rify lf it is one
RoUback
of the offes:tding books. No sales slip will
Thomas Moore, the Bookstore manager,
be necessary. The purchaser will receive
never denied that the disputed prices had
not only a refund on the higher price but
. been raised. He contended, however, that
also on any higher sales tax charged due to
prices were raised to correspond with
the increase.
similar price hikes by publishers which
were instituted before the freeze went into
Refunds offered
effect. When the Bookstore raised the
prices in September, Mr. Moore stated that
the Bookstore was faced with the choice of
either raising prices to compensate for the
hlgh~r publishers' costs, or "losing a
substantial amount of m~ey ." Now ,
however, 'konomic practicality must give

The IRS requested that the Bookstore
" confirm in writing that you will comply
with the law and state tl!e action you are
taking to do so." They further requested a
prompt reply to aid in closing the
complaint " without the need for additional

action on our part." The rollback was
ordered by IRS under the terms of the
President's Executive Order No. 11615,
which froze all retail prices for a 90-day
period. Many have speculated, however,
that small businesses would be immune to
the freeze due to the lack of government
machinery for enforcement. "Basically ,
they are not granting e.Xemptions to
anyone, even in the event it :1ould cause
bankruptcy," said Mr. Mo.&gt;re. He added
that he was not , of &lt;.-.. urse, implying that
the Bookstore would gv bankrupt.
The Bookstore has published a partial
list of the illegally priced boob for which
refunds will
issued. A complete list
should be available sometime next week. If
you have purchased any book on this or
subsequent lists, be sure and bring it to the
textbook service counter for your
appropriate refund, courtesy of the
Internal Revenue Service.

be

'

.

UNIVERSITY
REFUNDS

BOOKSTORE

AUTHOR
Abramonite
Bic;kelhaupt
Brockett
Burton
Caudwell
. Chapanis
Cheyette
Davis

Di Benedetto
Dreikurs
Ferguson
Gibb
Gnedenks
Gottmann
H~e

Holborn
Huxley
Janson
Katz
Lazarus
Massialas

TITLE
Handbook of
Mathematical Functions
General Insurance
Plays for the
Theater
Teaching English in
Today's High Schools
Illusion and Reality
Research Techniques
in Human Engineering
Teaching M~c
Creatively
Hearing and Deafness
Structure Properties
of Materials
Psychology in the
Class.room
Renaissance Studies
Mohammedanism
Theory of Probability
A Geography of Europe
Siddhartha
A History of
Modem Germany
Doors of Perception
History of Art
Cases and Concepts in
Corporate Strategy
Personality
Creative Encounters in
the Classroom

REFUND
1.95
.55
.50

t

.25
.40
.50

McLoughlin

.5S
.50
2.00

.ss
.35
.45
2.00
l.OS
.3S
.20

Miller
Milton
Morgan
Nunnally
Olino
Parzen
Proust
Queen
Sellitz
Selsan
S~w

.50
1.00
1.00

.so
.45

Skolnick

Isaac .Backus and
the American
Piestistic Movement
Urban Education
Behavioral Disorders
Puritan Dilemma
Psychometic Theory
La Camisa
Modern Probability
Swann's Way
Family in yarious
Cultures
Research Methods in
Social Relations
Social Foundations
Manual of Astronomy
Crisis ih American

.25
.05

.so
.2S
.55
.15
1.00

.so
.55

1.00
.4 0
.45
.55

l~ti~utions

Rhetoric of Black
Revolution
Principles of Economics
Suits
Swift
Selected Poetry and
Prose
Fathers and Sons
Turgeney
Innocents Abroad
Twin
Van Valkenberg Network Analysis
Andrew Jackson :
Ward
Symbol for ~n Age
Lives in Progress
White
Wood
Suburbia
Basic Engineering
Zemansky
Thermodynamics
Smith

,/

.55
1.05
.30
.20
.20
.45
.20
.50
.55
1.00

~

•,

�Colieges information
.; '

IL

li , •

e•

Symposium scheduled
for student edification
A Collegiate Symposium has
been scheduled Nov. 3-6 in
Norton Hall . The main purpose of
the event .will be to inform people
on the State University of Buffalo
campus about the various Colleges
and their respective fun ctions and
philosophies.
Plans are under way to secure
speakers to represent such diverse
topics as " alternatives in
education" and "a ltern a te
i nstitutio ns.'' There will be
presentations. demonstrations,
workshops and films which are all
related to the Collegiate system .
For example, College E wiJI
present a demonstration of
a udio-visua I a Id s while the
Communications College will have
a craft show and possible sale.
A film is beina prepared by
students about the CoUeaes as
independent structures and as a
whole unit within the University.
It will feature the Colleges, which
are seen as institutions that pther
individuals together under one
underlying theme, be It Tolstoy
College, Women's Studies College
or Rachel Carson Colleae.

Many electives
Manv

~tuden t~

11re 11n11ware

that the Colleges exist or what
purposes they serve. It is the hope
•of those involved with setting up
the sy mpos ium that much
information will be available to
st udent s so, in the future,
interested people may enroU in
the courses of their choice.
Representat ives fro m the
Colleges will be on hand to discuss
the ideas of their aroups and
a n sw e r a ny questions. The
Co lleges are based o n the
collective will of a group of
stud e nts and educators with
courses designed to suit the needs
of the group.
Pi a ns for the symposium
remain in the tentative stage since
some of the scheduled speakers
have yet to be confirmed. In
addition, the Student Association
budget has not yet been finalized .
Any student in the University
may register for any course
offered by the Colleaes as their
courses are accredited within the
University. There are currently a
wide range o f electives students
may take at the University and,
with the help of th~ Collegiate
Symposium, more may take
ad vantage of th is unique
educational experience,

Auto workshop
Rachel Carson Colle,e is offerin&amp; an all.day auto
tuneup workshop. Anyone is invited to brin&amp; their
car, pointt and plup, or jlllt to attend and team
how. This first of a new protram of eelf-teachin&amp;
workshops will take place at 4130 'IUdae Lea, A-10
thla Friday, Oct. 15 anytime between 9 :30- ll :10
a.m . and 11:30-4:30 p .m ., wea"-er permittiQI.
Rachel Canon CoUeae plana to ._.e a different
atudent-taupt workshop nery Friday. If you have a
akill and can aiYe 10me time to teach other ltudmtt,
call 831 -1721 or come to the Ridae Lea of~ aDd
uk for Bruce or Laurie.

Sub Board suggestion

·Center Lounge peddlers?
A proposa l t o limit the peddlina of
no n-commercial items within Norton Hall to certain
specified areas was submitted to Sub Board I, Inc. at
their meeting Tuesday night.
Presented by Student Association student affairs
coordinator Fred Aueron, in conjunction with the
Norton House Council, the proposal would allow
peddlers of f ood s, handicrafts and other
non-commerci.al items to seU their goods only in the
Center Lo unge of Norton Hall. This, be said, would
alleviate much of the overcrowding aenerall\prevalent in the area.
Under th.is plan, any group or individual wishing
to sell any items would also be required to pay a
minimal fee o f possibly one dollar a month. In
addition4 the lounge sales operations would be under
the auspices of an appointed manager.
" It's absolutely absurd!" excfaimed Lester
Goldstein , academic affairs coordinaotr, referrin&amp; to
the proposal. He said that this would eliminate lobby
table reservations. However, he noted that sales
within Norton "should be reaulated."
Sub Board J then passed
motion, JOin&amp; o n
record that somethina should be done to "help clear
up the hallways in Norton HaU to facilitate traffic ...

a

Excluded feelins
Those present at the meeting generally agreed
that the alleviation of present sales problems in
Norton was a necessity.
The Spectrum is publish«/ th,.
, , ,.,

•

lllllllc,

ft'Wy

-

Mon/hy,

W«&lt;~y •hd Fridlly; during the

ngu/N M:lldlmic yew by Sub-Bo.-d
1, I ne. OHio. ,,. I~Nd 1t 356
Norton H.ll, St6tl UnflllfrlfY of Nlllll
York I t Buf,.lo, 3436 M.ln St
Bu ff•l o , N•w York, 14214:
Tll•phOfHI: Ar• Code 116; Edii!Orllll
831-41 13; BullntiU, 831-3610.
R•pret~nr.d

for ltdlllftlllng by
Educ.tlonll AdWrtiling
Inc., 360 LIK/ngton A ....
N•w York, N.Y. 10011.
N1tionll

s.rvlc•.

lfO COWON . . . . . . '

two,.,..,..,

S.Cond Cl.., Polt11(11 J»id I t Bufftllo

Mtw Yort.

'

BACK

DINNER
FOil 2
(A...UI)

011010&amp; OP 18 DIIHU
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Circu,.tlon.' 16,000

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GRADUATE STUDENTS

PRICE ROLL

Sub«:rlptlon ,.,.. .,. $4.60 ,_,
, . ,• .,. or 18.00 for

Tom DeMartino of the Student Association and
Dave Oeuuch were elected unanimously to the
Norton House Council at th e Sub Board meeting.
Representatives from the medical, dental and law
schools are still bein&amp; sought for the Council.
Another point of Sub Board 's d.iscussion was the
interest of the Norton Hall staff to work with SUb
Board I. At a meeting which took place Friday, staff
members supposedly said that they felt "left out" by
Sub Board I and had some fear of job losses.
Scott Slesinger, treasurer of Sub Board I, said
that these ataff members " wanted to get involved."
It was also stated that lim Gruber, affairs
coordinator, referring to the pro posal. He said that
this would director of Norton Hall, or one of his
representatives would attend upcomlna Sub Board I
meetinp.
•
The feasibility of purchasing the KRC stage was
also discussed. Rental fees for the staae were said to
cost approximately S I 300 for this year with
additional payments of S l 00 for each time it is used
by the Speake(~ Bureau. However, it was explained
that the oost of the stage would be $800 or greater
with possible additional fees for setting it up.
Alternatives are still beina discussed at the present
time.
Durin&amp; the Tuesday night meeting, the Student
Directory was also mentioned. Harold Schiff, editor
of the Student Directory, hopes that the directory
might be printed in approximately one week.

..,.A.._..._.._
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~··~

111111r-u•r

IIUS &amp; TilleGS- ... Styles,_ Y-. • • •

LIAR

8

The- following departments ore urged to hold elections for GSA Senators
and Alternates. Unless a representative is elected these departments hove no
official voice In the determining of graduate student services and activities. The
nome of each elected representative must be sent to the GSA office, 215 Norton
Hall. Recognition procedures require a typed letter Introducing the
senators/alternates. The letter must be signed by five students in the deportment
Indicating official elections were be/d. The signature of the departmental
chairman or director of graduate studies Is also required to verify that the
senator/alternate and signees ore members of the deportment.
If there ore any questions, call GSA office, ext. 5505.
THE NEXT GSA SENATE MEETING WILL BE MONDAY1 OCTOBER
18 at 7:30p.m. In 231 NORTON.
1 senator per 75 FTE's (1 FTE =12 credit hours).
Maximum is 3 senators.

6 .....

••••,aeon
•oon-uv•
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SAVIMOIIY
SHOP AIMY NAVY

7J0:.7ft MAIN -ISJ. 1S1S NIAI TUPPII

...,.,., n,•..

Page two . The Spectrum. Friday, October 15, 1971

American Studies (1)
Anatomy ( 1) .
Architecture ( 1)
Biochemistry (RPM I) ( 1)
._ Biology ( 1)
Biology (RPM I) ( 1)
Biostatistics ( 1)
Chemistry(RPMI) (1)
Civil Ensineering ( 1)
Classics ( 1)
Comparative Literature ( 1)
Computer Science ( 1)
Curriculum Development ( 1)

Economics ( 1)
Educational Administration ( 1)
Educational Psychology ( 1)
Electrical Engineering ( 1)
Engineering Science ( 1)
English (3)
ExperimenLII Pathology ( 1)
Geography ( 1)
German (1)
History (1)
Instruction (2)
Lingllistics ( 1)
Mathematics (2)

Music (1)
Nursins (2)
Oral Biology (1)
Pharmacology(RPMI) (1)
Philosophy (1)
Physiology ( 1)
Physioloay (RPMI) (1)
Policy Science ( 1)
Political Science ( 1)
Social Science ( 1)
Social Welfare (2)
Sociology ( 1)

�-

M~C.., .........

Htilf-time otiprime tim~?
Last fall, on qct. 31, u their part in the
- "Vietnam Moratorium" day, the Univenity
marching band mounted a musical attack on
pollution, racism and the war in Vietnam during a
half-time show.
Aa an added incentive for the effort, that pme
was being televised in five northeastern states as
ABC's "Reponal Game of the Week," 10 the
potential audience ran into the hundreds of
thouunda ...
But something went wrong; instead of the
scheduled half-time show, viewers were shown
empty end zones, Bailey Avenue's elms and eight
minutes of Bud Palmtr mumblilcin~mplete scores.
ABC had refused- h&gt; broadcast the entire half-hour
'show, calling it a "political demonstration."
Ansered band members and officers in the
Student Association prepared a petition to the
federal Communications Comrmssion (FCC) which
charsed ABC with "censorship."
FCC petition
Now, a year later, with no football ttam and no
more half-time shows, the Marching Bulls may
appear on ABC television in a rum of the Oct . 3 J
performance. If the petition is granted by the FCC,
ABC will be forced to either rebroadcast the
cancelled show or provide SA with a half hour to
express the ideas contained in that show.
Delayed until this fall by late affidavits, the
complaint was filed last week by Tracy Westen of
the Stem Community Law Firm in Washington, D.C.
Prepared by Sandi Savill, a Georgetown University
law student and volunteer worker for the firm , the
complaint and request for a declaratory ruling
reviews the circumstances of the show's cancellation
and attempts to prove ABC's action was
unconstitutional.
The cancellation by ABC, argues the petition,

wu unc:onatitutionaJ bcause: "
individuals
controlling access to [the broadcasting) forum
cannot dJacriminate betwt~n the content of various
'views, granting access to some and not to others.
Second, broadcasters controlling access to apeecb
forums cannot place unC4tmstitutional "conditions"
on their use - such as ·obtaining promises from
speakers not to express ce11ain thoughts.

Since ita ~lion two weeks
a10 the Student Allembly'a new
interest aroup votina procedure
hal sparked controversy over its
ability to arouse participation in
student aovemment. The ctwl&amp;e·
made in the votina method no
k&gt;npr requires tbat an interest
ar o up ( 40 people linlin&amp; a
petition) uaemble to elect a
representative. Instead, after the
'Cannot ceDIOf.
petition bas been submitted, each
Third, although broadcasters may make individual must 10 to the Student
programming decisions fc•r numerous reasons, they Association table o n the first floor
cannot censor speech in torder to suppress diversity of Norton Hall, near the
of expression, vigorous controversy or robust debate. Bookstore, and personally hand in
his vote for the representative.
Each proposition alone invalidates ABC's ban on
In its editorial of Oct. 8, The
"poUtical" speech from its half-time program ."
Spectrum uraed a further
Further, the petition requests that the FCC not modification of the auidelines for
only require ABC 10 make time available for the election or representatives. The
rebroadcast, but also that the FCC " rule that ABC's editorial sugested that any
underJTllduate student should be
discriminatory refusal to broadcast ... the able to become a Student
program . . . comprised Ulegal Ucensee t ensorshlp" Assembly representative simply
and .. issue a declaratory ruling that . . . [a by havina 40 other
.broadoasterJ cannot arbiltrarily ind c;Ucrirninatorily undergraduates sign his petition
refuse to broadcast other ideas which the network with later verification of the
siiJ)atures by telephone.
feels are unpopular\ controversial or expressive of
Les ter Goldstein, Stud,:nt
views with which it disagrees...
Association academic affaiR
The commission's ruling is a toss-up at this coor din a tor , r ejects The
point; however, if the pc:tition is rejected , Westen Spectrum~ sugestion. ''Our way,
&amp;rid Savill expect to app:al until they are upheld, the people who will represent the
committees won't be people who
even up to the Supreme Court .
just got 40 signatures but those
Meanwhile, members of the marching band wait. wh o are really interested,''
The Oct. 31 show was, ,ironically their last, since explained Mr. Goldstein. " People
football has been discontJinued. "Morale was never don't get Involved because a
higher," said band direct•or frank Cipolla, "but it process is hard or easy. People
weren't In Polity which was the
turned ot.ft to be our swan song."
easiest thins to aet into. To let 40
Cipolla also called thnt show the best the band people sian a piece of paper would
ever put on . It is possibl•e that finally a year late, be absurd . Just
thousands of television view~rs· may see for
themselves.

to aet . elected is not true
repraentation."
Lee Schwartzberg, diiec:tor of
the Office of Election Credentials,
also rejected ' the criticism. "With
my experience I feel that The
Spectrum) means of aettina this
done by 10in1 around aettina 40.
alanaturea is totally
unrepresentative," stated Mr.
S&lt;:bwartzbera. "The fact is, to aet
40 people is easy and we're not
tryina to pt u many people as we
are tryina to aet people with some
sort of constituency. 1 think the
present procedure is fairly easy
and not impoaible."
Mr. Schwartzberg explained
the reasons behind the present
s ystem, which many have
c riticized u bureaucratic .
"OfilinaUy, it was done so they'd
have the aaurance of havina 40
sianatures," he explained. "i don' t
feel the situation is perfect by any
means but it will be cbanaed next
semester. We don't want to
chanae everythina in t~e middle."
There have been 1s &amp;TOPPI
formed to date and final approval
for the 25 other aroups iJ beina
worked on. The majority of the
groups are already existina clubs
with pre.formed interests but
more indinduals (40 peopfe
sianina a petition) assemble to
elect a representative.
The first Student Assembly
meetina is today and 30 people
representing various interes~
gro ups are expected . There is no
deadUne for when groups can be
formed to participate in future
Student

Beef&amp;

African music makers
II

I

fi

The Aflicaft Students Uo.ion of Buffalo will present the famous HiahlJfe Wafrica
Band at the African Cultural Cmter, 3SO Malten Ave., Saturday, Oct. 16 at 8 p.m . An
added attraction will be the Pittaburah African Combo.
Earlier that day, will be a socc:er exhibition aame between the Buffalo Black Stars
and the Plttabut'Jh Afro-Americana at 2 p.m. at the Erie Comm1mity CoUqe Field.
Ticketl for the dance will be Sl.SO in advance or $3 at the door. For tickets call
Naoni Chideya at 838-3S71 or 831 -S271, Francia Nkabinde at 882-3497 or Victor Moyo
at 838-3331.

~le

·~ ' ·

"4

I

House

3199 MAIN ST.

(0. BleSS... Of VB)
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Friday, October 15, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�KarlHessrstOps speeCh Writing
to expound upOn tbeNewLeft
conservatism, the man who people at Buffalo State Colleae,
actually wrote that line and most after boldina an informal
Spectrum Staff Wrft~r
of Goldwater's speeches bas left workshop earlier that afternoon.
his former boss and his former
A commercial welder who is
built like the proverbial villaae
Those who can't remember political philosophy far behind.
Karl He ss, the former ' blacksmith, Hess spoke for over
anything else will surely recall one
line from the great presidential speecJfwriter, now delivers his an hour, then answered questions
campaign of '64 . It was Barry own words in lectures across the from the audience. At the start,
Goldwater, to the delight of the co untry , promulgating Mr . He ss placed him self
right, who declared : "Extremism syndicalistic libertarianism and philosophically , calling himself a
in the defen.s e of liberty is no explainiqg h is d evelopment from a conservative in the tradition of
vice : moderation in the purs~,&amp;it of solid American conservative to an Bakunin and the young Lenin.
justice is no virtue." While Mr. anarchist who views the New Left These two men bid Marx, he
Goldwater has continued down asAmerica'sonlyhope. Mr. Hess stat ed, a re the genuine
the path of rock-ribbed spoke last week to about 75 forerunners of conservatism.
This conservatism, however,
was differentiated from the
laissez-faire " bankruptcy of
AU interested clubl and oqanitations interested modern American conservatism."
in a room or off~ee apace in Norton Hall should To Mr. • Hess, the ·most exciting
contact Fred Aueron, chairman of Norton Houae and promising aspect of the '60's
was the New Left's contribution
Cour~eil before Oet. 11.
A written request includina sudt information as to the concept of " participatory
how much space ia needed, plana for the tpace, and d e mo crac.y ." " What J he
praent club·operationa, ahould be forwarde4 to Mr. conservatives were talking about,"
he said , "SDS was out doina."
Aueron in Room l OS,.Norton.

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The loca list, d ecen tralist
position of the New Left, Mr.
Hess continued, was attractive to
conservatives. "Goldwater, in fact,
praised the philosophy o f the Port
Huron Statement," said Mr. Hess.
The Port Huron Statement was a
manifesto written by the founders
o f SDS. But while Goldwater and
the o thers could admire that
pf)ilosophy, be continued, they
failed to pay more than lip serv~
to th eir decentralist
underpinnings.
America is now dominated,
argued Mr. Hess, '.'by a pyramidal
power structure, with less than
1.5 per cent of the population
contro lling the economy." Since
conservatives h ave a veste&lt;!.
interest in· maintam/hg this
hierar c h y, they join the
"corporate state liberals, like
Kennedy " in supporting a
cen trali zed" i mperia listic
federalism.

Karl Hess
Yet this government, he
maintained, was "only the
executive committee of America's
large corporations." T hese
cor poration s are in turn
controlled by less than 50 banks,
which themselves are dominated
by the five largest banks in the
country, h.e added. Thus comes
A m e rica's hierarchical power
stru ct ure in a "monopoly
economy."

said . " Without them corporate
capitalism cannot be defeated."
Alliances and coalitions among
dece ntralized groups are the
orp'niiational ticket to a better
country, he said.
.
Most importantly, Mr. Hess
d eclare d , "orpnitation must
occ ur withi n co mmunities,
without intervention by students,
for this represents the first step
toward rejection of state power."
Mr. Hess looks to the South,
where " radical militancy is a way
Wprkint class revolution
of life" to enge nder any
'
The prescri ption for the revolution.
Finally Mr. Hess, whose lecture
country's mammoth sickness, Mr.
Hess suggested, lies in a was often punctuated by lauJhter
; ~olution , led by the white and good humor, destroyed the
~orking class. However, he myth of t h e humorless
discouraged attempts at speeding revolutionary. "Do you see any
a revolution by an intellectual, h ope among the presidential
vanguard action . " The locus of candidates?" asked someone.
general liberating power rises only "Yes," Mr. Hess answered. "They
in tbe work\ng class," Mr. Hess can all have strokes."
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Page four. The Spectrum. Friday, October 15, 1971
1

......

...

�Administration receptive
I

Blackfaculty: 1Jrightfuture?
Editor'$ note: Thu u the ucond and {iruzl article in 11
1erie1 de11linK wiJh Blllclc educ11torr IJt the Slllte
Uni~errity of Bufflllo.

by Jeff Greenw.Jd
SP«Inlm Staff WTitw

The &amp;core is about 150- 0; white America is in a
strons lead. There are well over I 00 department
chairmen at this campus, seven provosts, perhaps a
do zen deans and various obscwe individuals
occupymg vice presidents' offices, and of course
towering over aU, is Robert Ketter. Jt is sad that this
p-oup picture ~flld be w~lc:ome on t"e walls of any
Ku Klux Klan chapter houae In the country.
Moreover, it appears unfikely that score will be
appreciably changed in the near future . While a
concerted effort seems to be in the workinp for the
attainment of Black faculty (President Ketter has
juat agreed to put forth a proposal guaranteeing
minority aroups a substantial portion .of all faculty
openings), very little is foreseen in making Blacks a
part of the administrative power pme that really
runs University affairs.
Sup«&lt;uous presence
James Moss was, two years ago, chairman of the
Select Committee for Equal Opportunity.
TechnicaUy on a leave of absence from this school,
he is soon to be appointed a vice president of Medgar
Evers College in Brooklyn. Dr. Moss explained to
The Spectru m his basic reasons for leaving Buffalo :
" The University's at~itude toward non-whites in
policy-making positions makes mine and ~ny other
minor Black administrator's presence o n this campus
superfluous.
"It's absolutely shameful not to have Black
administrators in any important role given its Black
enrollment "and a pool of trained people: There is si mply just n o eq u al entry to Important
administrative rolls."

Even Dr. Ketter seems to realize the meaning of
the University's .000 battin&amp; average. Among the
ideas accepted from the Committee on Minority
Faculty and Staff Recruitment is one which will
fmally jnsun Blaclc (and f~male) representtlioll Qn
all University-wide administrative search committees.
He added that it was his understanding t~at two
Blacks were under serious consideration for the
position of dean of the School of Social Welfare. Dr.
Ketter was also hopeful that Black candidates would
be found for consideration for the post of vice
president for Facililies and Plannin&amp;.

Hope for future

I

Polish Club presents
a festival of culture

Dr. Ketter's position on this sensitive area is a
surprisingly welcome one. Nicholas Garber, chairman
of the Committee for Minority Faculty and Staff
Recruitment , c&lt;lmmented : "~e ad mi_nistration
seems quite receptive to our adeas. Things look
hopeful for improvement in this area."
.
Mr. Garber did feel that certain immediate steps

were needed 11 evidence of real administrative
The Student Poliab Culture
commitmeot. "For minc1ritJet to have any input in
Oub
and the Student AllocUtion
University affain, you have to aet a Black in a vice
will hold a nine-day Featival Qf
president's position. We should take advantaae of
Polish Culture beJi.nnina today.
. .ociate and allistant vit:e presidencies (which some
Blacb now hold) as (nr u their influencina the 1be pwpose of the festival is to
inform the University community
administration, but for mal effectiveaess a (fuU vice
of recent cultural development&amp; in
prelidency) is a neceaity."
·
Poland and to pin exposure for
Unfortunately, dap~te what appears to be a real Polish culture in aeneral.
concern on Dr. Ketter's part, a Blick vice president
In order to expose students to
the fruits of Pol.iJh culture, the
festival wUJ feature films, lectures,
a concert of Polish and European
music and a grand baU .
Among the ftlms which will be.
shown are Salome , a ballet based
on the biblical story, which will
be shown in Acheson HaU, Room
S at 3:30 ·p.m . today. Gry, a
dance experiment depicting the
relationships between material
forms and man , and Pan
Wolodyjow1ki, based on an
.historical novel by Henryk
Sienk.iewicz, will also be shown
tomorrow in Acheson HaU, Room
S at 3 : 30 and 6 :30 p.m .
respectively.
on· Saturday the films

James

1 eaves

~

Mon,

fonn•

chairman of the Select
I
BUrffiatO

Committee for Equal
Opportunity departs
fTom campus claiming his

presence was
fluous."

"super·

does not seem an the offin&amp;. A university is in all too
complete a sense, a microoosm of the outer world .
"Th e university is not: a community living apart
from the rest of the nation ," said Mr. Garber. He
continued : "It reOects tlhe nation's feelings quite
accurately on most wue-s. What is involved is a
personal selfiShness to mruintain the stat us quo. The
support of the administration is not enough ; we
must have the support of the whole campus
community."

pro~ninent speakers will give
lectures on subjecta relevant to
Poland today. Speakers include
Dr . Ed ward J . C%erwinlk.i,
chairman of the Department of
Germanic and Slavic .lanpqea at
the State University of Stony
Brook. Dr. Czerwinski will speak
on "Somethina Has Happeaed:
Polish Theater and Drama in the
Twentieth Century." The lecture
will be presented Monday in
Norton HaU Conference Theater.
, On Oct. 20 at 7 :~0 rp.m. Dr.
Aleksander GeUa will spealc in the
Fillmore Room on ..The Youth
Movement and Its Moral Values:
A Pattern in Poland." Dr. Gella is
a professor of sociolol)' at the
State University of Buffalo and is
the author of a number of boob
and essays on upects of Polish
life.

Polish art exhibited
..Et hnicity i n Ameri can
Society and Polish Americans"
will be the topic of a lectwe liven
on Oct. 21 by Dr. Richard Kolm.
Gener11tlon, Ashes and Diamonds a Dr. Kolm is on the faculty of the
KJznal will be shown at 7 p.m. in School of Social Service at
Room S, Acheson HaJJ. On Catholic Unjversity of America in
Sunday Pan Wolodyjowski will be Washinpon, D.C. He is also the
featured at I p.m. in the Norton edit or of PeT.Jpeclives, a
Hall Conference Theater.
Polish-American educational and
Other ftlms scheduled for the cultural mapzine.
week include : Knife In the Water.
Throughout the fesUval, Polish
Archaeology and Acropolis (to be folk art will be displayed in the
shown Monday, Oct. 18); &amp;rrlu second Ooor exhibit lounge in
(in Room 140, Capen Hall on Oct. Norton Hall. Among the arts on
19) ; Innocent Soeerers and display will be Polish paper
Family of Man (both to be shown c uttings, woven materials,
on Oct. 23 ).
embroidery and linen and posters
by Jan Mlodozeniec, who has won
Speakers on Poland
many prizes for his posters in
In addition to the films, European competitions.

Diwali Festiawl
The Indian Student Association is presentina a
DiwaJI Festival. This "Festival of Lights" is beina
celebrated Sunday, Oct. 17, in the Fillmore Room at
7 :30 p.m. There wiJJ be an evenina of music and
dance recitals foUowed by a coffee bow with Indian
macb .
The hiahliaht of the proaram will be a
performa~e by India's famous vocalist Miss P~bha
Atre. Donation is S 1.00 for students.

Indeed that is what is needed . A strong effort
on all pa,:;s must be connmenced immediately to
make this University the "~iverse institution it
wrongly sees itself as. The University is not a
serfdom to be manipulated by any administrative
elite and yet it is not a toy for students to play
ofte~ phony ideological games with . Commitment is
measured in action. Thus far, there has been little of
that. To change things, we nil must work . 1

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Capri Art - l u Bor:/ Wet'k enders
Center - The Zodiac Ktller/ The PrtXIIIencd Womon
Colvin The Vtmishinx Praine/ The /.tiling Desert
Downtown Ci mena The Touch
Fine Art - Diory of My Secret Life/Nixht of the Warloek:s
Genesee ~ Photo Finifh/Takt! My Hrad
Granada - Toxether
Holiday I - Friends
Holiday II - Skin Game
1·290 Orive·ln - Blue Water. White De~~th/Tite Ligltt at the Edgt! ofthe WOTid
Kensington - The LMng Desert/The Vanishing Proirit&gt;
lancas ter - Let ·, Scare Je$$/co to Death
Loew's Buffalo - Outback/The Scalphunters
Loew's Teck - New Freedom/Baby Vickie
Lovejoy - Eve/ Knievei/Hell'z Angels 011 Wheels
North Park - The Devils
Palace - Let·, Scare Je$$/ca to Dt!lltlt
Patk Drive·ln - Carnal Knowledge/Baby Love
Penthouse - KamaSutra/Yell
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Man against beast .

Dog catcher dOing his duty
..Oh, where, oh where has my little dog gone?"
has become a familiar cry across campus since Friday
when actions apinst man's best friend bep.n at the
State University of Buffalo.
The University's one fuU-time dog catcher and
three part-time helpen head the campaign to
eliminate the canine creatures from the University
grounds. All stray dqp (unleashed and unmuzzled)
spotted by the dog catchers will be taken Into
custody and sent to the city pound where they will
remain mtU their owners baU them out. fees
charged for the pets' room and board will depend
upon the length of time the animal is left unclaimed.
FeeUn. . on the new dog policy are rather
divene, but the majority of the students ue elated
wkh the prospect of a dog·free college coauwunity.
These feelinp can best be expressed by a sampling af
remarks from various students in Norton tuU.

" It's a good policy. People shouldn't be abused
by pets."
" Pets should be allowed on campus ... but , of
course, only on leashes:•
" The dog.s shouldn't be allowed in school, but
there should be somewhere where students can keep
them." (Dog Care Center, anyone?)

··r rese nt

dog catchen. It's a Communist plot. Freedom for

.
lltiH" probl~m1 N~ed ltelp1 Do you ftt~d It lmpoutbl~ to IUittJn6/e

tit~ Ulli•~mty butuucrr~cylln coopm~tlo,. wit lt tlu Offtc~ of SNdent

A.fltJirr tJnd ~men, The Spectrum IPDfiiMJ Action Line, tJ we~k.ly
re.der 1emc~ column. 11trou1h' Action Une, iruiiJidwll 1Nden1.1 ccn
1et «fltwm to ptliJlifll quntiofll, /it~d out wit~ tJfld why Unitlenlty
tkclllofll fire lfttlde find tet fiCtion where cMnf~ II ,.eeded.
Jwt dilll 831 ·5000 or llillt the Action Line bootlt In rhe Cenur
Lo11np In Norton HtzllfO#' lndtvldiMII flttention. 17te Office of Student
• Af/alrr tJfld ~rli/ce1 will lnwullfPt e fill que1tio111 find compltllntr, 11rul
..It's a good Idea -to have the dogs out of here, will a111wer tltem 1'ndtvid1MIIIy. Tlte ,..,.e of the lndiJidwll orlgiMtint
but some people might tun out of money bailing the inquiry u. kept confid~ntilll under tJII clrculftltflncn. 17te mor~
their dogs out." (Dog 8aiJ Fund , anyone?)
common quutiofll will be •"'wered In thi1 column blch week.

dop! There should be another student referendum and it should be publicized."
..It's ftn.ally fantastic. Lock aU dogs up!"
"Norton il for people, not dop."
..Doss are great - but If lt's your dog, leave him
home - you play with him."

"It seems they ndVer have money for
worthwhile things, but when it comes to dog
catchers ... where is that money coming f(om?"
" I don't like the Idea of a dog catcher, but for
inside, it's great. Dop should be allowed to run free
outside though."

Action Une is pleased to announce that bepnniftl this put week
advisors from the Department of Undergaduate Studies ue available at
tbe Action Ltne table In Norton Hall . If you have problems that tile
academic advisors can llnswer, please feel free to come to the table. The
schedule for tbe advisors il :
·
Mondays from 10 a.m.-noon ancf J p.m.- 2 p.m .
Tuesdays from I I a .m.- noon and 1 p .m .-2 p .m.
"I don't like the idea of dog !hit and piss all
Wednesdays from 10 a.m.-noon
Thursdays from 10 a.m.- noon and I p.m.-2 p.m.
over, so I think It's .ueat ."
Fridays from ll a.m.-noon and I p.m.-2 p .m .
"Get rid of the dog catchers. Put the money to
Q : A friend it YiaitinJ me and bu a car. Wbne can he park without
better use."
aettia
1 • cicttet?
"I like dogs, but J suppose a lot of people aren't
A : Tbe campus security force are not ticketing cars that are parked
used to them. It's inconsiderate of dog owners to let in the parking lot o n Main and Bailey. However, no one must park in
their m is~ehaving animals run loose ... and by a the first row without a sticker . Visitors can also park in the Diefendorf
look of the d ogs here, most of them are Lot . But here they must receive a parkin&amp; tag from the attendant and in
most cases they must pay a token amount of money.
misbehaved."

the outside agitators who are caJied

A ftnal word : Caveat possessor canis.

What is life without love?

.

Q : Why il the card room in the Norton basement closed?
A: There was little call for its use as a card room and so it has been
closed so that it might be painted and refurbished. Shortly it will
reo pen a nd will have ping pong tables and various amusement devices.
The hope is that this will be more appealing to students than the old
card room .
Q : Where can I find out what my rights are as a student?
A: The place to find o ut ebout your rights is the Office of Student
Affairs and Services, 20 1 Harri man Library and the person to see is
Ronald Stein who is an associate director o f that orfice. You may call
him at 3721 .

Q : Are there any programs on campus to help heal the "generation
gap " between students and police officers?
A: Yes, there as a program called PrOJt'C I I 00 . This program enable:.
students to ride an police cars with police officers as t h.ey make theu
rounds. The pohce anvolved are from Buffalo, Amherst and local
campus secunty. If you ar~ anterested in nding with a police officer as
he performs his dulles, please ca ll John Egan at 484 7 or go to his office
al Room ::!45 Crosby Jlall any day between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m .
Q : What are "credit free" courses?
A: These courses are JUSI what they stale - "credit free ." There as
no credi t given for them. Rather they are courses for one's personal
enrichment and growth. They are o pen 10 the entire community and
constitut e one of lhe impo rtant " reach-out" efforts of the University
Complete mformataon about the credit-free program can be oblaaned
from the Office of Continuing Education in Room 3 of Hayes A
Q : I need some help about the draft. Where can I JO?
A: Lo..:ally, there are two places. Aere on campus, Mr. Art Burke
c.1n help you . He as in the Placement Office, Hayes C, telephone
extension 3312 . Another place you can go is to the Buffalo Draft
Counseling Center nt 77 North Parade Avenue, Buffalo. The telephone
number there is 897 ·:!87 I .
Q : I am under 2 1 years of aae and signed a lease for an apartment .
Is this a valid contract ? Can I break it because I am under legal aae?
A: Yes, it is ~val id and binding contract. New York State law
states that minors can enter into valid Cl)ntracts for what are termed
"the necessities of hfe " Shelter is one of the necessities of life. so the
lease as banding.

•

VANESSA REDG~VE......OLIVER REED
IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM OF

THE DEVIlS

r - hioo!·

From one beer lover to anothec
1MI Snotf auwD.Y O:UCJ'ANY, DllrnOIT, MlOU&lt;J.YI ._JH

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, October 15, 1971

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�Supreme
Court sets cases jOY ruling
.
.

The Supreme Court, with two
.of ita seats vacant, moved into ita
first busines. session of tho new
term on Tuesday. facina such
i nvolved · lepl issues as the
constitutionality of the Vietnam
War and the queationins of Attica
prisoners.
The fiut work day
traditionally brinas the
announcement of which cases the
court will bear and decide by
written opinion. A few other cases
usually are disposed of without
araument but most appeals arc
rejected and the lower court
decisions become final. It
normally takes the vote of four
justices before a C~tSe is accepted
for review, but with the vacancies
caused by the resisnations of
Justice John M . Harlan and the
late Justice Huao L. Blac~. il is
possible some' cases will be
delayed until President Nixon fills
the empty seats.
Among the many and varied
decisions was the court's refusal
to rule on the constitutionality of
the Vietnam War. The case was
rejected on a five·two vote by the
seven-member court, Justices

William 0 . Douctu and William J .
Brennan, Jr. votina to hear the

cue.

a..una left staodina

The ·challenae to the Vietnam
con flict wu started by the
American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU) in Federal District Court
in New York City on behalf of
two servicemen. The court's brief
order to postpone left standina a
ruling from last ·April 20, by the
Second U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in New York. That court
held that Conp-es$ional approval
of the war could be inferred from
the p81$8JC of
Tonkirt Gulf
Resolutio11 , appropriation of
billions of dollars to carry on Ute
conflict, extension of the draft
law and specific conscription of
ma.n power.
The ACLU said reliance on
"implied" Congressional authority
"witJtout a formal and explicit act
by Congress is a violation of the
entire constitutional scheme."
The government had urged the
Supreme Court to dismiss 'the
appeal on the grounds that the
iSsu~ was one that only Congress

and the executive branch could
resolve. The JustiCe Department
told the Supreme Court : "A
· president violate s th e
constitutional powers of Congress
in this area at his peril and
'C&lt;Jngess is the best judge of
whether there bas been a
violation."

the

'Fio.ll answu'
Last term, the court refused to
consider a similar challenge
brough t by the State of
Ma ssachusetts where £he
legislature had b!uaned the sending
of its draftees to Vietnam .
Massachusetts tried to bring tbe
case directly in the hip court
without first coin&amp; thro"-lh Lower
courts.
The ACLU commented upon
the earlier refuul, stating: "The
consequences of con~inued silence
by this court on Vietnam can only
be co nfusion , unrest and
continued uncertainty about any
future military action. The nation
requires a final answer to these
questions which have so troubled
and perplexed our society."
A po$ible reason for the

court's delayina action on this Law aroups support
issue may be due to the vacancy
There is no way to undo the
of the two judicial scats.
' harm to prisonera q uestioned
without lepl protection, the
Attica cue rejected
restrainin.g order &amp;fPUcatjon
Another major decision handed cbarFd. It wu filed by Phylis
down by the Supreme Court on Sldoot Bamberaer of dle New
Tuesday wu the refusal of a Yorlt Legal Ajd S~ety and bore
request by inmates at New York's the names of the Amertcao Civil
Attica State Prison to stop the Uberties Union in Buffalo, the
state from questioning convicts NAACP Lepl Deferue Fund, the
about last month's rebellion, National Conference of Black
which claimed 43 lives.
Lawyers, the Natioul Lawyers
On a 6-1 vote, the court Build and the Law Center for
rejected a request for a temporary Constitutional Ri&amp;bts.
restraining order or an injunction
Lawyers for New York State
apinst t he interrogations until t he
told
the Supreme Court that
inmates are given legal help. The
lone dissenter, Justice William 0 . lawyen for the PliM•11 were
Doufllu, said he would like to atte•pting to impede tM .Ute's
hear the claim of intertoption inveatiption of the re•oll. Deputy
without a lawyer present plus State Attorney Genom Jlobert E.
other claims that the prisoners Fi.sc.her asked the high court to let
were beaten and threatened in the the state courts resolve the
wake of the revolt. This is a case question of legal representation,
in which interest runs high "and which it did .
In addition , on Tuesday the
whic h r aises grave questions
concerrung procedures for law Supreme Court also agreed to bear
enforcement that comport wit h North Carolina and VirJinia cases •
the constitution,'' Douglas said . in which school districts were split
" The need for an immediate, up so that in-town white children
authoritative determination of the bad an improved numerical
prioners' claims is paramount.· lt advantage over black , held
would serve no interest . of the constitutional the laws denying
pubtic, or of judicial order, for public employees the right to
that deterl)lination to await 't he strike and also rejected a challenge
exhaustio n of remedjes in the to laws prohibiting public school
teachers from striking.
lower courts."

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·THE RECORD RUNNER

Fri~y , Octob~r

15, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page se'Wl---

�to tell, none of the patients died as a result
SYRACUSE - State Supreme Court
Ju5"tice James P. O'DonneU, Jr. rejected a
of tbe treatment. 1bcle patients had a life
s"uit brou&amp;ht by a aroup of Syracuse
expectancy of lea than two years when
University students seeking to register to
they e.n tered the proaram." Dr. CharleS
vote on their campus rather ·than in their
Kiely Ir., usociate dean of the school, said
hometowns. The case wu broUJht by it would be the only California !City where economist and two nuclear scjentists from
as far as he knew, the research was "done
student body president John Helliker and sbe could have ..even a sliaht chance for a MIT, the study said that the AEC ..has
for the benefit of patients with a malipant
'
others who had been denied enrollment fair trial."
. substantiaUy .abropted its responsibility to. disease and done for the' aoOd of the
late last month under a new section of the
general public. I thinlt the good of the
develop nuclear power in a manner
patient came first . I thinlt the transmission
state election law which prohibits coUeae
OAKLAND - The start of Black consistent with public safety." AEC rules
of information to the Pentaaon was
students from re&amp;istering to vote on their Panther leader Huey Newton's third trial set an, upper temperature limit on the
prqbably a _by-product of the research...
individual campuses. The new section of included the demand for disqualification of reactor core of 2300 deJtees, but the
the bill was added because lawmakers all 25 of Alameda County's jud;ges on the scientists said 1600 deJtees is the bipest
feared possible political upheavals in small grounds that they ..are backwards and limit before the materials in the core
VATICAN CITY - According to
colleae towns such as Alfred, N.Y., where racist." Attorney Charles Garry asked for undergo a chemical change ...This damage
the population of the college is almost as the removal of the judge assipled to the could lead to a meltdown of the reactor Vatican sources, the possibility of women
priests is up for discussion for the first time
great as that of the village itself. O'Donnell case, Lyle E. Cook, on the JI'OW~ds he was core that could cause a mlijor catastroRfle."
in Vatican history during the present
said that individuals could still test the law prejudiced . The caU for the disqu1alification
~
I 0-day synod debates. Cardinal _George
separately, and that he had dismissed only of the Superior Court judges W8JS based on
CINCINNATI - Dr. Eugene Saenger,
the class action. Appeals are expected to the grounds that they had been pressured head of radiology at the University of Flabiff of Winnipea, Canada, 65, said, "To
my-mind the question is too serious at the
begin next week.
by a citizen's group fightin,g lenient Cincinnati Medical Center defended a
moment of our synod to pass over in
sentences. Judge Cook, who ha.d ordered Pentagon-sponsored reseafch program
complete silence. Indeed, it could be
SAN RAFAEL - Oct. 19 wuset as the heavy security arrangements for the trial, which has exposed 81 cancer patients to
date for a bearini on Angela Davis' request indicated that be would fight the "total body radiation" in the last II years. Interpreted as one more expression of male
superiority." He . suggested that the
for • change of venue in her murder-kidnap disqualification.
Commenting in answer to a Washington
2 1O-member synod set up a commission
trial. The request to move the trial to San
Po1t story which said that the patients had
Francisco is the last major matter to be
CAMBRIDGE T he Union of not been informed that the Pentagon was composed of bishops, priests, laymen and
women mem"bers of men's and women's
taken care of before the scheduled start of Con ce rned Scientists issued a stud y paying for the.experim_$!1t. Dr. Saenger said
the trial on Nov. I. Defense Attorneys for Monday which said that the safety that the patients were· info1'm~ that the relilfous ordetS""'r't5"'Study iDe possibility.
Miss Davis, citing a public opinion poll s tandards estabUshed by the&lt; Atomic Defense Department would receive Commenting• that there were centuries of
taken by Univeristy of California Sociology Energy Commission for cooling Hystems in information from the tests, which
tradition against a ministry of women,
professor Jeffrey Paige, said that San certain nuclear reactor system s contain according to the Po1t were run to discover Flahiff added he was convinced one of the
Francisco County had the least general serious defects and couid result in "a major the effects of nuclear warfare on troops.
signs of the times demanded at least a
prejudice against Miss Davis. and therefore ca ta strophe." Written by a Harvard Saenger said, ..Insofar as we have been able study of the matter.

U.B. Riding Club
meeting

...........................
KEF:PIN

FRIDAY, OCTOBER lS, 3:00p.m.

340 Norton Hall
Plans for Saturday evening's
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Elections will be held

442 Niagara Falls Blvd. Just around the cotner
from the Allenhurst Apts.
ANNOUNCING THE "GRAND OPENING~'
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Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, October 15, 1971

.

I.

832-1595

�t

;.,. ~isoner's parole
Women's amendment passed.
rights in question

Filibuster threatened

'\

"Equality of rights under the law shall nat b'e passed . amendment, Rep. Martha Griffiths (D.,
. denied or abridged by the United States or by any Mich.), said that the mQdified language would
The issue of prisoners' rights
state on account of sex." This is the wording of the prevent women from getting full equality.
arose again this week over the new
proposed constitutional amendment which was
Menec bino rule for handling
passed by the House of Representatives Tuesday by Women singled out
parole tevoca tion hearin~ .
Wyoming County Judge John
a vote of 354-23. The same legislation was passed
The CeUer-McCulloch round-robin letter cited Conable Tuesday extended the
last year by a House vote of 350- 15, but it die4 in
an ¥tide in a Yale Law Journal which points out deadline for the State Parole
the Senate when Sen. Sam J. Ervin, (D., N.C.) led an
that, " the widow's allowance or family allowance,
Board to comply with the
informal ftlibuster against it. Ervin has said that he is
homestead and limitation on gifts to ch~rity or other
decision by the State Court of
ready to do the same thing this year.
devices to protect a surviving spouse against
Appeal&amp;, passed last January,
Rep. Emanuel CeUer (D., N.Y.) and Rep.
complete disinheritance will be rendered invalid ." It
William McCulloch (R.,_Ohio) led the opposition,
which grants to inmates the·right
~as a'\so argued ~ tl!_at ll"statutory rape laws which
to counsel and to call witnesses at
circulating a letter Monday evening which
1
rendered invalid.' It was also argued that "statutory
such hearing~&gt;.
Hypnotism has received the scorn of many on
rape laws which render a woman's consent
The actions center on the cases
the basis of its tear down social attitudes toward the
inoperative would be invalid under the equal rights
of three inmates at the Attica
famlly . CeUer, chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
amendment because . • . they single out woman for
Correctional Facility ·who had not
appeal~d for the inclusion of modifying language
special protection from sexual coercion where men
received notification of their
found in an amendment sponsored by Rep. Charles
in similar circumstances are equally in need of
hearings within the time period
Wigi.ns (J.t., Calif.) which said : "This article shall not
protection."
previously set by the judge. The
impair th\ validity of any law in the United States
Opponents of the amendment also said that it three prisoners, Thomas Baco,
which exempts a person from compulsory military
service or any other law in the United States or of could lead to single men and women draftees living Raymond Johnson and Joseph
any state which reasonably promotes the health and in the same Army barracks, since it would not Hill were to·have been notified by
Sept. 27. Their attorney, Douglas
safety of the people." However, the sponsor of the prevent a woman from being drafted.
Cream of the Legal Aid Society of
Buffalo, had gained a show-cause
hearing on a ~ntempt citation

•'

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against the Parole Board when his
clients failed to be notified of the
parole hearing date.
In his plea to the court Mr.
Cream argued that by failing to
give . notice to the inmates the
Parole Board had violated Judge
Conable's earlier order. He aaked
that the court either issue a
contempt citation . against the
Parole Boat:d or order the
immediate rlease of his clients. In
the cowtroom, a question was
raised over a claim by a Parole
Board clerk and Mr. Cream's rigbt
to cross~xaminatiQn witnesses.
The clerk asserted in an affidavit
that notice was maJJed to the
inmates eady enouah for normal
mail service to have reached them.
Mr. Cream argued that be had
the right to question the witness,
but wistant attorney general
Bedros Odian, representina the
Parole Board, explained the
reluctance of the witness to travel
from Albany to th•hearing. Judge
Conable, however, upheld Mr.
Cream's argument and ordered
that the witneu' appear. After
conferring with the clerk by
phone Mr. Odian informed the
judge that the witness would be
abld to appear in court Monday.
Judge Conable then denied Mr .
. Cream's request for the release of
the inmates and ordered the new
hearing. The law~ charged that
the additional delay represented a
"substiUIIlial denial" of bla clients'
rights. ·-· -

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THE ADVERSTISING MANAGER.

Friday, October 15, 1911.. Tbe Spectrum . Page nine
'\

.

...

·~

•

•

6

..

I

...

..

�.Going to the dogs
To some extent the University's newly-hired dog
catchet$ are a necessity. Dogs in certain buildings, notably
Norton Hall, have become an intolerable nuisance. Many
canines leave their little gifts in the various nooks and
crannies of the Union, while others annoint the inside pillars
()
several times dally.
Therefore we believe that removing stray dogs from
M&gt;D
buildings is a quite defensible idea and may contribute
A~D
~lu.?greatly towards making this University a slightly saner place
........
to live. The only problem .. we foresee is that the
canine-grabbers ·may choose to concentrate on capturing dogs
running freely outside the campus buildings, instead of those
on the inside. This could occur because of the catchers' fears
that students may c;ome to the aid of trapped dogs within the
Union.
This would be unfortunate because we believe that this
University has no moral right to snatch dogs outside of
campus edifices. There are few enough parks in Buffalo and
if a student or faculty member (yes, Virginia, not all the dogs
belong to students) desires to let his pet run free for a while
he should be so allowed. We are not recommending such
•
activities, but we believe them to be within the rights and
privileges of any member of the University. After all, a group
of people and dogs frolicking behind Norton, gives this
0 . K . From the top. Once more dear friends , relationships. Altbouah romantic love always verges
campus a little class and a bit of humaneness it might etc . Paise starts rampart on a field of white. Juat on the ridiculous (we would think it comic if a man
junked a fairly well completed effort in which I did a died qf starvation because he could not obtain.
otherwise be lacking.
fine job o f buffoonary, gamboling and caperina my brussels sprouts). Western people genenaUy and

wve.

way abo ut and letting out just enough hints to let
some people know that I was in really bad places. I
may wdJ shy away from it again, but would prefer
to make at least one attempt at more straightforward
communication. That lesson, try and be clear at
For the first time in recent memory, a portion of the least , was brought home again - someday I may
even learn it - this week when l wanted to talk to
federal bureaucracy has acted on a matter that will benefit somebody about where my head was.
" Hey Dan, want to go have a beer?" " Can't,
students. The Internal Revenue Service's decision that the
makesme funky in class and that upsets the
University Bookstore violated the wage-price freeze waS a pro fessor, and he knows me now." "Oh." Go a way
and check out time o f class in
welcome surprise. In addition their directive ordering the
questjon - better sweet ass
Bookstore to refund overcharges will prevent any attempts
beli e ve the c han c es o f
f'ejectio n are going to be kept
by either the FSA or the Bookstore itself to avoid what may
minimal! Come back . " Dan, if
prove to be a considerable financial loss.
I ask you to go have a cup o f
coffee, are you going 10 tell
The entire episode has been a refreshing e~ample of
me that cafeine makes you
how students can occasionally utilize the laws of this country
hyperactive?" Can' t say "Can
I talk to you?" Oh no, much
to their advantage. Further, David Steinwald, SA Student
too easy and o pen . And as
Rights Coordinator, should be commended for his actions on soon os you feel bad what's the first rule? Shut down
behalf of the student body. Finally, with the FSA Bookstore and withdraw o f course. Guaranteed , j ust sto ne
guaranteed to get you all sorts of support and
study slated for release in the near future, we hope that the affectio n . " Where did that new gargoyle come
lesson of students not letting themselves be pushed around fro m?" " Tltat 's no new gargoyle , that's Steese having
himself a funk !''
by the University bureaucracy has been vividly drawn.
II tS not a very pleasant positio n to know that
you :u e being crazy, but having o ne hell o f a hard
time bemg able to do anything else. Especia lly when
your pn mary mode of defense in painful situations is
a flight Into isolation. Feels as though I have put
people where I now am. And would probably be
unllappy abo ut haVI ng do ne that if I were to stop
Friday, October 15, 1971
Vot 22, No. 22
_ feeling sorry for myself lo ng eno ugh to do so.
Ho wever assigning that degree of importam:e to
Editor-in.Chief - Dennis Arnold
myself al this point feels much like a case of wLSt ful
Co-M.nlflng Eclitcw - AI Benson
thinkmg. It is not a pleasant place, especially for one
Co-Managing Editor - Mike Llppmenfl
A•. M.nlline Editor - Susen Mota
you have constructed yourself. You begin to wonder
Buli.,.. ~ - Jim Drucker
how lo ng it takes for yo u to be able to bear a pho ne
Actv.nislne Mlanltw - Sue MeU~rine
rin g without having yow cars perk up a little, and
wo ndering if just maybe they were a little less
Layout . . ..... Maryhope Runyon
Cempus ......... .lo·Afln ArrNO
pig-headed than you are. Would be easier if it were
A• . . .......... ......VliCMII
•••• •••••• •..•.. .Howle Kurtz
just phones tho ugh, those damned noisy m uffl ers,
Lit. a Onlma .. Michael Sll~latt
• .. ...... . .... .. BiiiV~o
closing doors, and people o n Ute stairs too, make it
MIMic . .•••....... .Billy Altman
City . . . . . . . . . . . . Harvy Lipmerl
really hard to concentrate at times.
OH.Campus . , . . .. Lynne Traeget'
Copy .. • . . . ....• Ho nni Forman
Everyttting Is defensjve, aJtd everythi ng is real.
. . . . . .. .... .. ... Marty Gatti Photo ..... .. ... Marc: ~c:kermllfl
. . . •.•. . , . Mickey Osterreic:her
Alit. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . .vacant
So you stand o ff in o ne com er of yo ur head
F.twe ... .. . .. ... ..... .vacant Sports .... · - .. . . . . . Barry Rubin
watching the hostility and the loss play leu p frog,
Alit .. . . . ... . .... J.towie Faiwl
GrepNc: Arta .. . ••.... Tom Toles
and remember Phmp Slater :
" Ro mantic love is one scarci ty mechanism
The Sp!ICtnJm as Rtrved by United p,., International, Co llege Pr•
which deserves special comment." Indeed, 1ts o nl y
Service, the Los Allgeles Fr" Pr-. the Los Bllgtlles Times Syndic:eta 8fld
functio n and meaning is to transmute that wlu ch is
Llbwlltlon News Service.
plentiful (i.e. sex) into that which is in short suppl y.
This is done in two ways: first, by inculcating the
Republic:8tiofl of met ter herein without the exl)fess COflsertt of the
belief that only one obj ect can satisfy a person's
Editor-in-Chief is forbidd81l.
ero tic and aUcctio nal desires, and second by
fos tering a pre fer e n ce f or u nconsumated ,
Edltorial poJicy is determined by the Ediror-in-Chief.
u n re quit e d , i nterrupted , or o therwise tragic

A lesson

The

grump

THE SpECTI\UM

Page ten . The Spectrum . Friday, October 15, 1971

• Americans in particular have shown an impressive
tendency to talte it seriously." (page 86 , The Purruit

of Lonellne11.' Amerlctm Culture at the Brealcing
Point . An excellent book well worth reading in its
entirety.)
I thouabt the above passage somewhat
humorous the first time through. Seem to have a few
changes tho ugh. TJ}ere is now a perception that t.b e
poor bastard is stW dead, whether he died from lack
of brussels sprouts, or or small curd cottage cheese. I
know J won't starve to death, regardless, but a guy
can &amp;ct fo nd of brussels sprouts, even if they
interfere with his diaestion - o r his bead . What's a
body to do when the feelinp start getting mixed and
transmuted and interminl)ed and confabulated?
Especially when there is insufficient experience with
many of them to even identify them? Well, I tell ya
what I am going to do, my friend . I have these three
cats and this bunch o f feclin~ that 1 am willing to
make a deal about, see .. .
Damn, can 't even give them away. Which is
understandable, since both sets of things seem
capabltt o f extensive further generation . The cats and
the kittens the SPCA might handle, but whence do
yo u take yo ur head? Once went through an idio t
sequence of allergy tests, only to find out that if I
spent my life in a hermetically scaled , petless holi'sc I
might feel so mewhat better. For just ano ther few
o unces o f fl esh , however, they would also have given
me some s.bo ts to develop my resistance. Do yo u
sup pose they could develop person-specific shots?
Maybe a lock o f hair . . . ?
Somewhere in the back o f my head is a feeling
thai life is altogether a more complex occasion than
I SiJDcd fo r. If you really respect people, it is lulrd to
see your way clear to push them to change by threat
o f any sort. My sole weapon to date with peo ple has
been to nudge tbem. (Withdrawal is of CO\U1e, not a
weapon but a defense, so it don't count. Cough!)
Which leaves me somehow with a slowly eroding
·positio n and a steady string o f compromises, and
with a dwindling self respect - o f which lhere was
not a great deal in the first place. So, flight. Which
can be seen ambivaJently - at least by me wbo can
see anything so . If you make a stand in the beginning
you might miss the good parts, but you sure as hell
miss the bad parts. Everybody .knows where
every body else is, and can make choices from there.
Whlch is apparently an affirmative vote for being up
front about thin as. Now, if thete were just-someone
who knew how to do that . . .
·
Could it be significant that aU my parasraph.s are
traili ng o ff without derinite ends? Can a
super-ambivalent committment freak fi nd happiness?
T urn to this page at this very same time next week
for the further advel$ures of whoever happens to be
here. Have a nice wdekend. (And, Dan, uh . • . if 1
forgot to say thank you, and I frequently do,
tha nks.)

�.

Guest.O~i

/0 -tl&gt;

A~~r

STIL-t...

WOJj'T

FIT UJ,

South Africa, a country which is notorious for South Africa. This wa construed by the African
her '1nhuman apartheid policies, is reported to have countries as a direct support for apartheid. France
invaded Zambia. Newspapers, radios, and peace which, even prior to tbe Singapore conference, had
loving staltesmen all over the world &amp;ave been been sending arms to South Africa continued to
astounded by the move. Mao Tse Tung declared his boost h er supplies. (France is not part of the BriU.h
support fo1r Zambia in the event of further invasion. CommODwealtb.)
Putting afi t hese facts together, even wltbout
It aU utarted as a retaliatory action against the
African fmedo~ fialtters who scored substantial me nti oning NATO and ot h er powerful
victories ajp.lnst the South African white minority alliances-for-deadly-deeds, one wonders what else
regime. lntemaJ ncial tension is the order of the day humanity is capable of. While the western ethic
in South Africa. The policy of keeping the whites to continues to be the corridor throulh whicb aU that
the cream of society and lambing Africans in the West represents sees the world, there will always
concentratt:d reserves has been met with resentment be conflict. Racial prejudices are clearl y at the center
not only by the Africans themselves but ~Y other of the matter. The abs urdit y of the situation is that
no country which does not give its profits to the
independen1t African states too.
United States or Britain or France will be respected;
Attem1pts by white liberal thinkers to effect
constitutional changes that would ev.!ntually lead to and that the profits must be directly sucked by
better rela1tions with Africans have practically corporations operated by the exploiting countries
amounted to nothing. Just now, a white Anglican for the Interests of the exploiters.
It was within this chaos that the Organization of
priest has c:ounted t he 50th day of his long fast in
Protest against the government. About a year ago, African Unity (OAU) decided to set up a department
the World Council of Churches was condemned by under the auspices of OAU in support for the
the South J\friClln Government for offering financial freedom fighters operatin&amp; on the borders with
assistance and openina up educational opportunities South Africa, Rhodesia, Mozambique and Angola.
The horros of Vietnam and numerous other
to the blacb t here.
examples have not taught South Africa and her allies
The world opinion on this issue has been anything. Every man wants peace for himself. But
motivated largely by economic reasons at the before this personal peace measures up to standards
expense of human dignHy. An attempt to impose that wouJd bring about a society, it seems true that
economic sanctions in 1964 failed because France this se1f&lt;entered man must be forced to recoplizc
U.S.A .• Briliain, West Germany and a few others felt the existence of the other.
that there was too much at stake to pursue such a
Let us hope that South Africa will take heed of
measure. Consequently, trade relations with these the warning received from the United Nations
countries which ironically voted for sanctions at the against her deftance of the territorial bo1111daries of
United Nations have returned to normal.
Zambia, and consequently embark on internal
The B1ritish Commonwealth conference which changes that will restore dianity to every South
met in SinaJpore last spring resolved amidst protests African, black or white.
by African countries to allow Britain to sell arms to
A{rlet~ Qub

Case of racism

Loyalty tested
To the Editor:
Two weeks ago we attended the second meeting
of the U.U.A.B. Film Club . We entered the meeting
with high expectations and open minds, eager to
participate in the activities of the club. As the
meeting progressed . it soon became evident that an
impenetrable hierarchy existed. The "old" members
suspected the new faces present of attending the
club meetina solely to usurp the power of the
standina .members. This so-&lt;alled "power" is
comprised of the riah.t to usher movies in the
Conference Theatre.
As students who have studied faJm, our intent in
joining the club and volunteerina our time was to
improve the quality of the moVies shown on campus
as well as to discuss contemporary cinema . We heard
opening statements of intent promising a better film
club more attuned to the interests and tastes of the
University community.
Behind these optimistic statements we soon
discovered a network of hostility and ego-tripping
which transcended the original purpose of the club.
We find it absurd and a waste of time to devote an
hour long meeting (which the film club did on
September 20) hassling over who bas the right to
usher Conference Theatre movies (old members
versus new). One member with seniority actually
questioned the loyalty . of the new people present
and accused them of joining the club in order to
secure jobs for themselves. His paranoic fear of
losina his own was 10 intense that it led him to
dream up ridiculous loyalty tests for those who bad
not yet "proved" themselves to him .
If the University community is to sustain itself
inteDectually, it must not permit itself to become
elitist at the expense of endangering its own
existence and furt her a.rowth. Admittedly, we could
have persevered in our efforts to infiltrate the film
Club fortress, but nothing exculpates the treatment
we received. Yo u drove us away.
Swan Brellow
Lisa Albrecht
Arlene Adler

Library study
To the Editor:
I should like to make known to the University
community, as I mentioned on the floor of the
Senate on October 5, that the Senate Committee on
Information and library Resources in continuing its
general study of library matters. We therefore would
be happy to receive careful statements of views and
documented experiences from students, staff and
faculty.
Lo wt/1 Schoenfeld
Chairman, Senate Committee
un Information &amp; Library Resources

To lht Edftc,r:

\

This summer, six students and m\mbers of SDS
were expellled from U.B. and have bad crin\inal
charces pressed apinat them for figbtlng against
racism as t:au&amp;ht by Professor Halstead in Modem
Imperialism, History 338. We feel that the reason we
were expell1ed and have had criminal charps pressed
aplnat us, iocludin&amp; a number of misdemeanors and
other charges totalling at least nine years in prison
for aU of USI, was because we were involved in a figbt
to expo~e tile fact that the Uruversity pushes raciJm
everyday. The way U.B. solved this problem of
Uruversity racism wu by getting rid of us and
allowing tbulstead to keep on teaching his racist
course (whic:h he Is teaching this semester). Not once
did U.B. qu1e4tion the content of this course and the

expulsion of a member of this class for disagre~ing
with the professor. We are not allowed on campus
and can be arrested on si&amp;ht for criminal trespass at
U.B . At one point, before these expulsions took
place, Vice Pres. Sicelkow was willing to make a deal
with the student in Halstead's class to drop the
course and receive a arade, if he would oaly keep
quiet about fi&amp;hting racism.
We demand an open hearing which anyone can
attend with President Ketter and Prof. Halltead
present. We demand that all criminal charges be
dropped and that we be admitted back into U.B. as
students in good standing.

Willillm Ford, David Le11y.
Sherily11 Le11y, Norman S/Jlw1ky,
Jim Sober. Robert Steinhorn.

· Friedman endorsed
.

A number of communities, who are arrear in the
submission of their Wastewater Reports wece
Two thflnp occurred d unng the last few months awaiting the results of Judae Gaughan's decision.
which I beli.eve have profoun4 ramifications on the Now that it has been made, they are going to lit
environment of Erie County and the rate at which back and do nothing. The law in their opinion ia a
poUution prooblems will (or will not) be remedied . It "paper tiger.''
With respect to the other matter, the record of
was announced that a county official was being
considered o1ver a career State employee for the post all the counties governments in Western Jllew York in
of Re&amp;io nal Director of District 9 for the State abatini pollution problems is poor, at beat.
Departmen1t of Environmental Conservation. Appointing to a regional post any seruor ofllcial
Secondly, Judge Ch11rles Gaughan ruled on 9 August from Brie, Niapra, Cattaraugus, etc. counties is an
that although the Town of West Seneca was guilty of endorsement of failure.
Of more significance is the fact that a man who
violating New York State Health Department
is eminently qualified for the position of Reciooal
Comm&amp;Ssion•~r·s o rders of April 1967. no fine would
be levied apinst the Town. The Judse pve the town l)irector may be passed over because he has not
until mid-September 1971 to submit an acceptable yielded to local pressure to allow the status quo to
prevail. BiiJ Friedman bas been demonstratina his
Wastew~er facilities Report, in which a timetable
for remedying their pollution problems would be competence in the handling of a wide variety of
stipulated. At this writing, West Seneca will not meet environmental problems since 1942. He is firm, fair
and thorough. To pass him by would ~ a severe
this date.
blow to the morale of aU the employees, particularly
For mo1re than twenty (20) yean, West Seneca those in Western New York, of the neophyte
has been polluting Cazenovia Creek and the Buffalo EnviornmentaJ Conservation Department.
I urge you and your organization to join me in
River. TheSe waterways feed the Niagara River, the
drinking water supply for more than a third o f the writing Commissioner Diamond and endorsing Bill
people in Erie and Niagara Counties. The damage friedman for the post of Regional Director of
being done to the environment is being borne by the District 9 . l also ask you to urge the Environmental
people of Buffalo, Tonawanda, Grand Island, etc. Conservation Department to appeal Judge Gaughan's
not the cltiz:ens of West Seneca. The town engineer decision.
and consulti'n&amp; firms that have repeatedly failed to
Po llution isn't like the weather. We can change
meet the state deadlines were appointed by the the situation. However, we need the officials and the
Town Board, which was elected by the people. regulations to accomplish our objective of a better
Th erefore, who is responsible? I am afraid that the environment for us and fu ture generations. If we
only way the citizens of West Seneca will be made work together, we can achieve the goals that we
aware of the gross handling of the problem by their desire.
town is thro•ugh the payment of a fine . (This money
Respectfully,
would be used by the State towards the construction
R obert A. Sweeney
of the much needed sewage treatment facilities
Director
Great Lakes Laboratory
and/or coUection lines.)

Friday, October 15, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

..

�Not quite 'together'

Yoko's art far/, ; creativity
#

'

r~

onse to Yoko's art. But this was not the case.
Hi.Jden amidst the banalities we{e several delights.
SP«Ir~JM A"l O'lllc
Yoko does not believe in creating ..lumps" of
Yoko Ono's art exhibition appeating in art. This must be explained and understood before
Syracuse's Everson Museum is little more than an one can begin to appreciate her very personal art
obscene ballet of commercialism. I am certain that statements.
She says, "Artists must not create mote objects,
John Lennon and Yoko share the blame with the
exhibition's promoters for turning serious art into the world is fUll of everything it needs. I'm bored
the type of art that is found on the back of cereal with artists who make big lumps of sculpture and
occupy a big space with them and think they have
boxes.
The exhibit is called "This is N Here;· and done something creative and allow people nothing
after waiting in a throng of emotionk,' ctnthropoids but to applaud the lump. That is sheer marcissism.
for three hours in the rain, we began to wonder if Why don't they at least let people touch them?..
the unly art we were to see was the artlessness of the
Yoko's art is the art of particiP9tion. Many of
crowd outside the museum. Admission to the the exhibits say, "Please touch." "Cleaning Piece" is
museum means only ooe-half hour more of waiting one such work of art. It consists of one lucite cube
and a Jucite box which contains a dust rag. Dusting
on line.
the cube involves one in the art.
The Sixth Dimension is more art of
No more lumps
We were certain that an of this would leave JJS involvement , although it falls short of being even
~=~~~~d!Ji~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~d_~in~t!!el~le~ct~u~a!!:lly~i!_!m~p~o~te~n.!_t~-~u~n~a!bl~e~to~g~et~it~up~i!:n_ _ _ _ ____,
- continued on oage 11J

by Curt Miler

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Send em
to the

\\bodshed.
Your boss. Your

m~ther-in- law. Your best

Th~+·~

the difference between
Lemon Up and products with
just a li!tle lemon fragrance
or extract. That's why Lemon
Up Shampoo makes hair shiny clean . That's why Lemon Up
Facial Cleanser is.far better than soap. And that's why Lemon Up
Anti-Blemish Lotion with hexachlorophene is your best defense
against oil-troubled skin.

Page twelve. The Spectrum. Friday, October 15, 1971

.

frtend. Yourself. And you'JI
get eve~ythi.ng you deserve:
fantastic chtcken winKs anti
tangy sauce. 50(' spirits '
from 3 P.M. on, free
peanuts to shuck, giant siu
sandwiches in a basket
lt'llstrictly come-as.yo'u-are
to T~e Woodshed. where
the kttchen's alwaye open
and the music's always on
~he Woodshed. Located ·
~tght ne.llt to the Packet Inn·
tn North Tnnawanda. Drive
out Delaware or take the
YounJlllann.TheWoodshed's
JUSt over the Delaware
Avenue Bridge. Open from
11:30 A.M. every day
except Sunday.

�. _.... ..... ......, . . ....

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MPf\1., NOV.l

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AUP!TORIUM
8:@ p .Jll.

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CQNf~flENCf: TJif::~TIU:

fftl ., NOV 4
Kl-EINHANS
MJ.!SIL HAI-J..

Tis*!.!fS 50¢ J&gt;efQr!! 6 p.m .

p.m .
Ti~~~f~ on S4ll~ ~~~ Norton Tic~'-'~ Office
75¢ after(&gt;

RODMcKUE N

8:3P p.m.
WEp., NPV. 10
M~MQftiAJ..

AI-!PITQ~I~M

frorn f!oor ~ol~s

&amp;

·Jt~qs $~.Sp

~ear Floor

&amp; Qjucs $4.SQ

Greys &amp; Qra!'llles H.QP

8 :flP P·"1·

T lt.kets o n sate n o w at Buffalo Fes~lval Ticket Office, Statler Hil t on lobby (moll or&lt;1ers acceptec:t wll!lslamped st!f·
ad~ress~ enveloeep u a. Norto n Hall; sta tll Colle9e Tlcl&lt;et Office; Tickets Haeberle PJI!za, Nlagar\Falls.
.

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til:l\llfMQi:A VVUAT you Vltfff~ PAYING SEFOR E 3Jf9 $1nq 4.99? ISN'T Tt1AT l'. fHP -Of~7

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JOWN TO OUR

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- . - -~--------

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.
I

FIRST S]UDENT ASSEMBLY .
MEE·TING· TODAY . 2:00.· p.m.~
FILLMORE ROOM
.

l

•

.

Although the student assembly is m•~ting today, the election of assemi;'lymen and ·.
the formation of interest groups has only just begun~ Groups may be formrJ anytime
during the semester and are entitled to full assembly -rights subseq~en~ to one
\
assembly meeting .a fter the election of. th~ assemblyman.
\

\

Twenty-five finished petitions are no~v in the process of being validated. From now ·
on, all students who want to sign ·a final petition or bring ir:' a completed preliminary
form should come to room 205-J, Norton Hall, the office of elections and . \
credentials.
..,r

a •

'

..
The following groups have siUbmitted completed preliminary forms and
need 'people to complete the funal petition.
Activist Youth for Israel ·~
CAC V (Sunshine Hous'e)
CACIII
CAC VII
Mark Drexler
Foreign St&amp;;~d•ents Coordinating Council
Karate Club
(~
I '"
Mitchell May•er
Randy Myon•es
.
Schoellkopf I, David Mitchell
Nursing St~d•ents, Juniors
Outdoor' Club
Orpnic living Club II
4th Year Pharmacy
Allenhurst - Robert Rosenthal
Cory Storch
UB Food Co-•[)P
UUABI
UUAB II
UB Vets 11 ~
Doua. Webb
4th Floor Goodyear-Shelley Taylor
Kevin Whalen

,

·\

�out..,.. widl no llpl ot bouadariet or

Hendrix as vampltic experience. Are
you experienced? Are you vampire? Does
the seed course tbrouah your veins? Do
you crave the bath of blood? We au
embody our most palllionate fears. Pean of
poss~on, fears of canniballam. hendrix
was as alive as Nosferatu. He lived by the
nilb.t . He lived to take from his audiences
their blood, which he needed. to survive yet
another day. He also faded when touched
by the rays of "the new riling sunl' - be
pve of himself as much .&amp;S he demanded of
his others. Cut.
Steaming auditoriums. Sweat running
down cold bee~ and puke stained walls.
Blood· red stage. On stage the echo of
Hendrix's guitar. Henjldx had mastered the
method of cifCUlar breathing, on tuitar,
which enable~ his note to be held for
infinity. Bloclced lung passages, breathing
~hrough the nose, puffed cheeks. Holding
his note. Clean-age Queen Kinp biting into

his flesh. Devouring. Theater of Cruelty • c:
rock and roll. Well, I hear my train t
comin'. Gashed wounds flowing liquid .
Pasty white face pushing its way through a
wave of intense musical radiation . Death
dying out.
Well. anyway my whole Hendrix thing is
very much concerned with images of life,
energy and death. It's kinda hard to make
people understand. As I've just seen by my
argument with Billy who wants me to get
out of rock &amp; roll as theater of cruelty and
gil' back into rock &amp; roll a.s rock &amp; roll.
"Take me from this lonesome town."
This bring$ up the question in my mind
of whether or not rock &amp; rolJ is just rock &amp;
roll or is it something which transcends its
o wn definiti ons? Still trying to find the
answer to that one.
Anyway, t o gel back to my vampire
image. The vampU'e Is a creature that has
been killed through the loss of all bodily
blood . He is buried in unconsecrated
ground~ as are aU suicides, and he raises
himself from underground to walk the land
by night seeking out new victims.
Hendrix lived the life of the vampire. He
died. He has been dead for some time. His
new record is entitled Rainbow Bridge and
its a collection of unreleased tapes ranging
as far back as 1968. It 's a vampire record.
From the grave Hendrix reaches out his
talons and tells us that he is st ill the
greatest guitar player of the electric age.
Incidentally , I'm just looking and
listening to " Dolly Dagger" and guess
what :
Here comes Dolly Daggu
Her love so heavy
Gonna make you stagger
Dolly Dagger
She drinks h er blood
From a jagged edge
Oh, drink up baby.
Anyway , so I'm now b11ck 10 the never
never world of rock &amp; roll and must
comment on the album.
To sum everything up just listen to the

RECORDS
st udio recording of "Star SpanJled
Banner" -. that's where It's aU· at. Oh, by
the way Hendrix does one cut called
"Barth Blues" witb the Ronettes as a
backup group. Get into that if you can.
Yeah, look at old burnt Superma11
Tryin • to shoot his dwt at the .sun.

- Tile Monkey Wrench
Loudon Wainright Ill Album II Atl1ntlc
(SD 8291)

limitationa. If you bappned to read tbc
rmew last year in this
tpOt, you tnow bow I felt about 1&amp;. I mAn
you could just see it comlna. Tbe Dead
manaae to aet up there in ala and teen
appell, 1nd with what? Witb tbe fuckina
m&lt;* lame music they'Ve ever played litlce
they started.
Thill new double lp set should jua zoom
up there in a burry. Aftd where AWftl'ktlln
Amnftt~n B«&lt;uty

i

make my juices now."
Another one of my favorites is actually
three sonp roUet.l. into one. It's sort of 1
three&gt;-piece movement. The first part 1$
called, " I know I'm unhappy." In that
part, Loudon tells or his unhappiness about
getting drunk all the time. Part B is the
"Suicide Song." In this part Loudon tells
how Ws all right to slit your wrists, etc.,
etc. ii you really feel that way. Part Cis
called the "Glenville Reel" and it's an
hon~ to goodness reel. You can probably
square dance to it and everything. In this
part Loudon talks of salvation. "You can
give her the bullets If you can give her the
gun."
I'd really Uke to talk about all the songs,
but I'll restrain myself to just mentioning
three of my other favorites. In case you
haven't noticed, they're .all my favorites .
The first is "Saw Your ·Name jn the
Papers." It has vpeaceful strum to it and
it's about all the rock &amp; roll stars who
couldn't handle the situation. It's also
about the fact that we onJy relate to these
people through their images and they must
be leading a very split existence.
The secOnd song is "Samson and the
Warden," which is a plea from a long-hair
to the warden not to cut off his hair 'cuz it
took so long for him to grow it . He ends
the song by saying he's going to send the
warden a picture in a year or two when it
all grows back. After all when you've been
busted you have very little identity to hold
on to. On this song, as I mentioned earlier,
Loudon plays piano (Neil Young style mostly chords) so it's a real killer.
The third song is "Old Paint," a
traditional number. The only reason I'm
mentioning this song is because it's the
only ~ong on the album where there i!.

This is to get the word out about
Loudon. The role of critic allows tne the
liberty to sing the praises of deserving but
unknown artists. This gives me a double
edge sword; the one side being that no one
will ever hear them anyway, therefore,
anything I say must be correct: The second
edge is that if you do happen to hear them,
you know they must be good because the
critics say so (in Loudon's case, I'll just be
one of many). If you still don't think a
certain artist is good after reading the
praises of the critics and bearing them,
then it's obviously a deficiency in your
taste.
The first thing about this album is not
to get confused by all the Roman
numerals. Believe it or not this is Loudon's
second album. And believe it or not
Loudon is a blue-blooded third. His father
is Loudon Wainwright U who writes for
Life maaazine. Later on we may discuss the
effects of having your father write for tbe
Lif~ -Look syndrome rather than the
1ime -N~w.sweek syndrome.
The second tlling about this album of
noticeable importance is the fact that
Loudon is clean-shaven with short t)air on
the cover and has long hair, a beard and a
beret on the back. Amateur Freudians
draw your own conclusion. But actually, it
isn't that simple because Loudon was
clean-shaven on his first album too. This
suggests more of a philosophical change, so
draw your own existential conclusions.
Personally, I think he just couldn't afford a
haircur and a . shave because no one buys
his albums.
If you like music with a beat, you'll like
this album. It just takes a while to find it.
That's because there aren't any drums on
the album. As a matter of fact except for a
harp and a girl singer o n "Old Paint" and
the piano (played by Loudon himself) on
"Samson and the Warden," it 's just
Loudon and his guitat. Normally' you
might think that this would lead to a
mellow atmosphere but not so with
extra instrumentation. and the effect is
Loudon. The subject matter of Loudon's quite pleasing. If Loudon allo wed that on
his o ther songs, he might become a
sonw; doesn't lend itself to that, neither
commercial success. B~Jt from what I hear
does his style. Loudon's a strummer, not a
picker. There'll be no James Taylor licks or
on the rock &amp; roU grapevine, L0udon
doesn't want that to happen . Maybe
country roads on his album .
The first song on the album is a. typical
because he doesn't want his name to be
Loudon song. It 's only typical, however, if seen in the papers someday .
you have Loudon's first album , which I
So if you're looking for an album that's
had . The song is, "Me and My Friend the a little off-beat and isn 'I about country
Cat," and it features Loudon's high-pitch
roads, Loudon is your man . But do n't too
many of you go running off to buy this
voice and patented strum . It 's about a
conversation with his cat - imaginary or album 'cuz I wouldn 't want to go and spoil
Loudon's plans or anything.
other. The next song is one of my favorites
called, "Motel Blues ." It's about being a
Robbie Lowman
rock &amp; roller on the road and needing a
little companionship. He even o ffers to buy
her breakfast in the morning.
Grate{~/ Deod Warner Bros. (2WS193S)
Another song on the album is called ,
"Nice Jewish Girls." At this point• I was
I remember when the Grateful Dead
going to write three pages on my problems were a great band. From I967 until late
(being a nice Christian boy) with nice 1970&gt;~the Dead were really the heart and
Jewish girls, but I'll forego for now and spirit' of American rock. Each and every
just quote Loudon when be says, "they Dead album stretch ed upwards · and

Beauty was lamentable but not without ita
saving moments (Phil Lesb's first lead vocal
ever), this thing near my stereo (I doubt if
it'U ever get played again) is a disgrace to
any Dead freak . And if you want to unite
with other Dead freaks Jike they ask you to
on the inside cover, you'U only help the
decay spread some more.
Any resemblance between this record
and Live Dead does simply not exist. The
fire , the e n ergy that transcended
everything is lost. A Dead jam used to be
spontaneous, and the Dead were actually
terrible live sometimes. They bad to work
hard to reach those beautiful moments on
Anthem of th~ Sun or "Dark Star." It
seems that they've given up trying to be
the Grateful Dead. The jams are all
automatic and uninspired, like a number
two play on the hardwood (which could be
the result of playing in all those gyms).
"The Other One," better known as
"That's It For The Other One," takes up a
whole side. Bill K.reutr.mann tries to make
believe Mickey Hart is still there, so be~
on for about eight minutes in a pi
l
display of drum soloing. The "figure ei
"
sound of the Dead's music is now t e
lonely "3" looking for help. The whole
band chokes on this one, and I honestly
felt like melting the record and shoving the
free decal over it and mailing it to the Dead
Heads fan club.
Of the four new tunes, "Wharf Rat" is
the only one that 's mildly entertaining, and
onJy because Garcia says "fucking" loud
and clear and the tune has been played
intact on AM radio.
All there is on this album is wasted
:.. ·e, except for " Me and My Uncle,"
which used to start out each Dead
performance when people used to hiss and
yell during the country set. It's a good
song, and Weir manages to sing on key for
a change. " Johnny B. Goode" and "Not
Fade Away," (Oh, wow! The Dead doing
fifties stuff, far out) are horrendous, and
their butchering of "Me and Bobby
McGee" gives me the feeling that the next
lp might be T11e Grateful Dead Tackl~
Montovani.
Pigpen does "Big Boss Man," and sinoe
he has so little to do with the new sound {I
mean he even wrote a song all by himself
for American Beauty, and it was a jug band
song a.t th at), you can't fault him for
anything. He'~ the only one that suceess
hasn't spoiled .
' :
It 's hard to believe that the Dead Cd~d
sink this low. But now that they've fLDa.lly
made it, they probably doJ'l't care. ACte:r
all , they have a. lot of mouths to feed . •

- Lanky Lin11ot

WE GUARANTEE TO BEAT ANY PRICE
~ ~WITHIN 50 FEET OF OUR STORE...
~

•

REMEMBER WHAT YOU WERE PAYING BEFORE3.89 and 4.98?1SN'T THAT A RIP-OFF?

I

•

. •DOWN TO OUR COST
THE RECORD RUNNER

Friday, October 15, 1971. The Spectrum : Page fifteen

�tfllt lBIW Jt asall to ttl

.

/lufflto SIIOW.·IHII~ktli

tdf

/JJ

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~~~~Uii ~u Hilitilqid; '"" lk~Uik ~e ~~r!lilki~ 1W i
J iill ~&lt;tlce, I wll.i .uije.edtif Hli o~f)~~fte
Pi~oHiltuy .

Wily ~UJY ' ~·"?.
tH,Pc ~ ,~ ~· ~~ik Js

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t\llll "Mf ·tHa ff fl!·~·f'f.jl~I'"3Af\•iRI
~~~\.1 IH · •~ l il~ ps J. t " · Uelh.~ -~~Hfii fke
abw f •H t;r.fi~e~l a al a ~lilH et or ·
·•111 .....w~
onroe
iS oved.111

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' ~~~lt~f
lftl.eelHffir
tiuHUl«c. so~lil,
dnHnit·~r.
wetet~e~tl;flld"
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l"a1t1tii·c~~at Bali...
sl~W.,·be t;t :&lt;HU~:ee ~dHes
Ul+HolfuHes
wereaft~
9.H
I

le~T
lfl~
was li~e 0 life H···•f I c:Sl Hi a q l . iii:J~U ·~ li1\¥.11i.
F!ea~
coiHi 'h-. IH~~~ t.H .H,ol bu l~.h ~t -ltked ~~ lti~~~,
r lioqo. Tli rea c ilhHy music, ~ne wit
J~dJca~o·n dP.d re9pFd ~~f orifs own HeHlaie ih '
genre. Ul lHef•e IHa~eH ll do\f~ lti· a ms-HtyetW

tllsci"liHe aHa iUIJiUc· , a;ty.oHe'1
lt seetns a sHaHt~ fRat a b~rid thalls able lo pia~ .fFvel.
1

1

I

osliHih~
'

ot co~cep{ ana roHn. 'fou dQr···t

well a~d wHte go&lt;;&gt;CI songs shoJ d ~a&amp;le so.,rh~cH do "Wake Up I lie S,yzle" lo prove you're coo tt
Uine wttli rtieariirikless. dver-reheahed Janis. Wj'dlh a you've wiiHeH .. HHsUHe's tuhe."
lot of dlsdpUne and guidance. Space Opera cou be
A kind word js spared 'tor AI Perkins, steel
a really good group. the foundatlori is dehriitely guUarlsi
and lead s~tiarlst, ~ho is a real ·work man oil
there.
'e
After a short lime to stand v.P and strdcli, the ills axes. And good ol· clarke, w~o wi1I relnalQ~
ot
mr,
e·
oes
ro
.
Soiiicohe
a
le'
out
tor
"
E
i
Burritos hit the stage. Christ Hdlman and Mike
Miles
:ihdll'iifmah
siaHe1l
e
tass
inHo.
We
,
clarke look good. especially Clarke. Close fiend of
wa~ jUst al&gt;ot.il to
the Fondas, he is now alternaHhg reserrihlirig Peter Mike's eyes bridtiei)ed Ub~nd
hit tHe cY.mbaf~ when fill mah slo~pedblt. tii:.t's
and Jane.
Hillman on the other hand. is aiways face front class which holds up un er alythlng. uryng tHe
chest out. b~ss down by his legs. Chris lilts his liead bluegrass liasco, Mike weiH !o le dowh in back of
aJJ the time and lhere's a dislind mole-like qualily lo lhe stage. He knew wh~t was liappenlng.
his appearance. He knows he's a star. though, and
I teh gerH.Iinely ripped-oft 'T'usically al liils
that's importan t when you're on stage.
concert. You have lo dlg the tad ttiall Used to love
Rick Roberts is trouble from !he mlhuie you Jay lt\e durritos :ind GuJJdcd Palact' migHt h· my
eyes on hilT!. An other Grosby - chubby, arrogant alt-tihic fllvorlle lp. Crain , wHere are yot.i tor God's

'Jikh,''

an d obnoxioUs. He everi plays a Gretsch t cnJiessean .

the

quote at lhe beginning was only one ot many he
carne up with in the ~ourse of the sliow . His guitar

He

Sll.ke'?
- 8illy

Alrman

FALL
FPl
________________________
_______________ __ _
...
.,...

..

....,..

.

60~mplM of lowest price1s-.;~~liiii
Ther:e arc i (jOd's more

3 Qd

(list SS.95 )

4:9 (List tS.95 )

BANj:S - tahoots

L£NNt1N - linagirie
tAt st~VENS - tea for tke tllletman
sANtANA - New
11tlNNt tlsMtlNH lttltl stEWAItt - Every ~ieture

-

t AfU:JU: fdNt - tapelil~y
MtJtitiv ~rnu~ Evert Moda atty
1\itt:AittN v - ltam

stmiEtsAN - wk ie yt&gt;U lea~
j~ Ud) tULL - AijtlaiUHM
JA £S tAWt - t:··aceH
JtiUN tlt:Nviit - ;oellis
idNt tutttls - live
tAt st~v£NtS - teasef aHd tke F~ciU

YES ·-.W~ 'kE dPEN SUNDAYS
~

�,

'···

TILL .....
IT A
ftj §.bjUtl

t'HJU.kb WINES
stftAWD~tHh

i·HLL ......... 1.Htl. sffi
ZAPPbi: . . . .. .. . . ........... 1.t1H. 5th
fteB §fltit ~IN~ ......... 1.s9,% t,;~.

Lltlve. ¥tlU. . ...... . ...... ~t !W

§PAN I§~ WINE§ ............. J~.t 5m
OALI ~~I ................ 1.M. s
-

6~H Hll
--~

-.

-

-

-

--

i H:jHJ).trl. WHitBHdi

�•

A good defense pays

Soccer Bulls down Fredonia
by Da.e Gerialer
Sp«trum St•lf Writ~

Pro footb.U
by Dan Caputi, Jr.

There il an old saying that the
best offense is a aood defense.
Tho BullJ showed it to be true
Wednesday afternoon as they shut
out the Fredonia State JV squad,
3-0, in the season's home opener.
The pme was marked by
Fredonia's inability to

- Four weeks have aone by, and it looks like there is a real race
ahapina up. The race for the number one draft pick, I mean. The Ba&amp;les
and the Bills are netk and neck at this point wit&amp; Houston tryina to
catch up. Last week, the wizard wu 9-4 for a season's record of
30- 19 - 3 for 6 1 per cent.
S.ltim ore 27, Gillnt1 10: Loss of Johnson and Fredrickson too
much of 1 burden for Giants to bear.
.
Jets 21, Buffalo 13: CaU it the blunder bowl, two teams going
nowhere fast .
• •
J)QJ/as 37, New Orlean1 14: Cowboys should have aU mistakes out
of their system after Giant debacle.
Oakland 34, Philadelphia 6: New coactl Khayat should inspire
EaaJes, but inspiration alone doesn't win baU games.
Miami 27, New England 13: Dolphins' ball control offense will be
extremely hard for Pats to stop.
Cleveland 27. Cincinnati 14: Nelsen has Browns moving; Bengals
find winnina tough with rookie qb Anderson.
Washington 24. St. Louis 14 : Believe it or not ; Redskins are
leading the NFC in defense.
Minnuota 23, Grun &amp;y 10: Packers have shown offense, but
defense kingpin of Pack aJory years, is in a sad state of affairs.
De;roit 3 J, Houston 14 · Landry's Lions claw hapless Oilers.
Son Diego 27, Denver 20: Chargers no defense ; Broncos no
offense.
Kansas City 28, Pittsburgh 17: Chiefs' attack jelling under Hank
Stram's whip.
Son Francisco 10, Chicago 17: Bears are outclassed against 49'ers,
although their records show otherwise.
Los Angeltl 20, Atlanta J 7: Rams have developed punishing
ground pme to go with defense which is no longer a pushover.

in tbe middle to atop the
oppolition 's chances of movina
the ball throup th~ middle. Since
the center halfback ia aUowed to
move all Oftl the field , be .can
often be caupt out of position.
This insures aaainst that
happenina. "OveraU," the coach
remarked, "ow defense was just
superb, I think that it was our
finelt effort of the season. We

The

Collqe footbaJJ

by Bany Rubin
Last week's I 5- 2 record left the wizard 54 - 9 - 1 for 8S.7 per cent
on the season. Of course last week's big upset was Oklahoma- Texas
and this week it could be Tennessee over Alabama for SEC honors.
Texas 27, Arkansas /6 : Longhorns come back over rival
R.azorbacks.
Air Force 19, Army JJ: Army ha$ puUed two upsets thus far; are
the Falcons a strong possibility for a third?
Tenn~ssee 21, Alabama 16 : Vols are playing great defense, while
waiting for the offense to ianite at lo ng last. Key SEC contest.
UCLA 23, Aritona 11: The Bruins broke the ice last week, while
Arizona is experiencin1 a downward lrend .
Auburn 3 I , Georgia Tech 13 : Tigers are the class of the SEC, while
the YeUowjackets are one of the top Southern independents.
Oklahoma 28. Colorado 14. The Sooners may be looking ahead to
Nebraska, but the Buffaloes can be tough, just ask Ohio State.
Georgia 37, Vanderbilt 7: Wolverines smell a Rose Bowl bid.
Ohio State 34, Kon1as 13 · No. I Huskers pot about to be caughr
by Kansas.
LSU 19. Kentucky 0: Tigers are back on the beam; Cats no
problem .
Michigan State 27, W1sconsin 17: After two tough losses to Notre
!Rme and Michigan , Spartans are ready to cop rhejr third victory.
Notre Dame J I, North Carolina 7: Irish are attempting to get back
in the top ten's upper echelons - need impressive, high scoring win .
North western 21. Purdutt 17: Boilermakers could surprise the
Wildcats in gritty Big Ten hattie.
Penn State 2 7. Syracuse 1J: Orange o ffensive rejuvenation can best
be described as too little, too late for the Nittanv Lions.

Soccer

i~ve

Bulls played an
home. opening g~me

Offensive power

w.tn.day by defeding Fredonia
3-9. Their MX1 fMtdt II lgainst
St. John Fl..,.. on Oct. 23 . .

pressure on Bulls' goaltender
Tahm Sadeghi throughout most of
the afte r noon. Coach Deft
Ja co bsen attributed the
tremendous success on defense to
the fa ct that the Bulls went to a
double center halfback-oriented
defense.
'' With a double c enter
-halfback," Jacobsen explained,
" there is always someone playing

dominated the game completely,
and if it wasn't for their
goallceeper, we would have had at
least five more goals. Tahm
Sadeghi wasn't pressured much,
but he was able to make tho save
when he had to ."
Offensive powd
On Dffeise, thO Bull SOCee{ .
squad looked very aood as they

kept constant p resswe on
Fredonia aoalkeeper Steve
Croskey. The Bulls outJhot the •
visitors, 37- 13, in lteepin&amp; the
ball in the Fredonia end for most
of the pme. However, unlike the
previous pme at ECC, the Blue
and Gold set the tempo of the
pme riaht from t~htart. A Bob
Hayes pass deflect
ff the leg of
a Fredonia defen er, and Alex
Torimiro drove it home after just
one minute 26 seconds of play.
and the Bulls were off and
running. Torimiro later added
another goal in the fourth period
that tied him with Kola Oseni and
Bob Hayes for the team lead at
two. Don Earl .completed the
Buffalo scoring just one second
before the final hour sounded.
Coach Jacobsen found just one
thing that disturbed him during
Wednesday's victory . After the
Bulls bad taken a 2- 0 lead in the
final period , they started to hold
on to the ball too long. This can
be costly, especially if the other
defensive players are in position.
A steal of the baU in this type .of
situation can very easily lead to a
break-away. In addition, the other
plaY,ers are likely to go after the
baU, resulting in a pileup and a
possible injury.
T h e socce r squad was
scheduled to play the Buffalo
Soccer Club tomorrow, but that
pme has been dropped from the
schedule.· The Bulls will thus have
a week. and a half to prepare for
their next match, Saturday, Oct.
23 at St . John Fisher.

TOUCH
~~~
~~

...

~GR~1,_

SAVE $35.081 SHURE HI- TRACK
EASY MOUNT CARTRIDGE

Hi·track elliptical
3/4 to 1%grams Reg.
tracking.
$49.95

GOES ROCK

14 81

SAVE $4.911 FAMOUS
BRAND HEADPHONES

And its strictly SOLID GOLD

Reg.
$9.98

Tune in for a Solid Gold Sounq.
6 :00p.m. - FRIDAY, Oct. 15
for

Adjustable headband,
comfortable cushioned
ear cups, coiled cord.

WGR/FM's
- .
50~hour~·: ·~
\

J.:. ..

-·

ROCKUMENTARY
#

Rock from 1951 thru the present in this mammoth
stereo marathon. Then straight into the new solid
gold rock format braeaking October 17 at 8 p.m ..
It's all stereo, and all at

GB/FM, 97 on your

•

FM dia

Page eighteen. The Spectrum . Friday, October 15, 1971

~VvoUR NATIO'lfAl MEMBERSHIP DISCCJUNT-OEP.
~~WHERE QtJAllTY COUNTS!

2500 W•lden Ave.
Chetktow.ga, New York

Shop 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Monday ttiru Saturday

�1960 PEUGEOT 403. Good entlne,
- k clutct\, bad h . .ter. Runs well If
you car. staftd t.h e c;ofd, $35. can Mart&lt;,
884-64]4.

WANTED: drivers for • car pool from
tne center and Union area of WMt
seneca - day•.

FREE - 11ny or all of thr.. trai ned
kittens: us,orted colon, all lovable. Can
of cat food Included. Contact Oebbe or
Bob 837..0ii4A.

1962 CHEVY statlonwagon. Good
condltlpn, n - ttres1 $150. Mike

LOST:

O NE GAS dryer Only t10.. Must
824-5143.

SONii Model 521 stereo reel-type tape

LOST: Flourentlne bold ~tall rlnt
with white sal)t)ttlre st~. A-ard.
Call Tina 3597 Pleuel

CLAIIIFIII
u.a.

WANTED
NEED CAR fixed, Willing to PlY. Need
chrome Job. C;all, luve mesnge for
Bob, 882-6432.
WANTED: V .W. tire. 5.6o-15. • Will
pay $10 or more for good ones.
Radlalsf 634-7185.
'
EXPERI ENCED people to work IBM
Com~og Equlpmant, paste-up or
pnoto-typosltlng. Pt. .se cont11ct Jim at
831·4113 or come up to The
Spectrum, Room 355 Norton.
PART-TIME superv"or for Buffalo
T ..n .., . J.Wish Youth PtQ91'am. BA.
Group work experleocetMSW
c•odldate preferable. Call
315-446•9379 or 315-446-4985 for
lotervlew.
HOYT HeiP«S wanted . Votunt. .rs to
work In OeiiWife District Councilman
William B . Hoyt's Clmpalgn. Call
814-4323.
ANYONE who hu bicycle to sell for
about $50, call Bob Klein, 833·7659.
1 WOULD tllce to buy or borrow the
book Hebrew a Balk Coui'M for
Hebrew 191. Call Barb 833-9440.

t NEED 4 ambitious mates and 1
female to help with the harvesting of
Christmas t r - In my plantations 111
the bNutlful Slox Mou'ntaln Raoge
Northern Penns"tvanla . Female
expected to cook •
k_, nouse.
Transportation suppl'-«1 along with
room •
board plus hourly ~~~~~­
Departure approximately Oct. 25th,
returotnt Nov. 23. Abundance of all
species of wildlife to provide an
unforgettable experience with Nture,
write Box 89 tlvlng all particulars.

tn. •

FOOD co-op n. .ds refrlg..-ators
lllld IQiet ' ' " or ch ..p. Call [)ee)Oran
ai 837.0948.
BARTENDERS, waitresses wanted at a
new club - a jOb you'll enjoy. Call
685·3100. Ask tor John or Bob.
·
FOR SALE
1967 SUZUKI motorcycle. Excellent
condition, 8300. Ask for Bob, 3234
Main St. upstairs.
V W 1966 sus. 3 s..ts. Runs eiCcellent.
Solid body. $500. Also · 1970 Slmca,
4-4oor, 4-&lt;:ylloder, 4-sp..CS. Needs
liothlog, S800. And 1967 Ford Luxury
Statlonw~gon, automatic and power,
$700. Deller will trade. Deduct cesh
value for your car. After 6 p.m.,
634·3032.
~ • • • 1963 Chevrolet 8-c:yll~r.
R/H, perfect mechanical coodltton .
Must sell . $225 firm. Call 835·3887.

VW Camper, 1962. Moving. Must sell .
$400 or best offer. 693·4003.
FLATTOP Classic guitars.
Martin, GlbsOI}, Guild,
Gurian, etc. MuSicians prices. String
snoppe, 524 Ontllrlo. 7 p .m.--9 p.m.
dally. Saturday, · noon- 5 p.m.
874•0120.

'Ne~sed.

perfect condition.
pick It up.' Call

1968 TRIIJMPH Spitfire, br~ IU991~8
rack, snoiNS, good condition. Call
83N)885 a1nytlme. A good deal.
VOLVO 1225 beln~ dismantled f or
parts. B 160 en~lne with 6 •volt
etectrlcs. 011-4, 4-spee&lt;S trans., s..ts,
gtau, etc1., Bitt Thompsoo 458A
Allenhurst . 837-4647 evenln91.

recorder.' Butova 23-:1-el self-wlndlnt
watett. Set of Army bunk bed frames.
Calf Roger 834-4962.
1969 JAVALIN 4 -spee&lt;S. Atr Cond.,
factory stereo t1pe, ne~~~~ tires, 26,000
mites. Must sell. Make offer. 297·1084
Niagara Falls.
'65 BUG, new tires plus 2 n - snow
tires, $500. 835-o690.

1962 OLC)SM081LE, 65,001) mites,
good mech.a nlcal condition, automatic
transmission; • power st-Ing; brakes;
mounted snows Included, Great
transport,atton. t250 negotiable.
837-1617 or 831-4113. AIM for
Mickey.

SONY 2S2·D tllpe deck· four monthS
otd, $120 or make offer. At.O Ampex
AX-50 - never used. Regutw $250 yours for $200. Call 831-3767-1.

REFRIGEt RATORS, stoves and
wasners. A•econdlttoned, delivered and
~uarant..CS . o•o Appliances, 844
Sycamore, 'TX4·3183.

ONE a -track ,.., to ,.., . ...:order
Including the tapes, headphones,
micrOphones and separate speakers.
886.0856.

1971 PEU•GEOT - sliver exterior ....
reel bucket s..ts. EJtc:ellent condition .
633-5395.

1963 M69 white. Very ~ood condition.
S..t offer. 684-4937.

1963 BLUE 6-c:yttnder Valiant . 4-4oor
hardtop In good r ul)nlng order, S125.
Call between 1:30 a.m. and 5 :00p.m .
831-4513.

1965 PHYMOUTH V aliant. Good
running condition . Must sell. Call
Murad 837..0290 after 7 p .m ., before 9
a. m .

WINTER c:OAT - rtctt browo, fake
pany fur. ,.,_est style -" still shown In
stores tttls y. .r. tmmacutate 'c ondtt\on .
Size 13/14,. S60. Call 176·9175 after 6
p.m.

SKitS Hart, professionals, metal with
bJndlriliS, 3 s..son•s use - r..sonabte.
Write Spectrum Box 1 7.

RAMBLER: 1964 - must. sell - $250.
Good mechanical condition. Hes snow
tires. AIM f ;or Serafin. 741·3110.

ROOMMATES WANTED

1956 CHRYSLER , good running
condition. 873-4862 or 881·2431, &amp;50.

1971 SUIZUKI TS·125R Ouster,
yellow, 10(10 mt. Jim 883-5435.

MALE. roomm•te, own bedroom , $70
a month lncludlnt utilities, 20·mlnute
Wllk f rom campus. 632 Engl-ood,
Apt. 9. 834-o413.

MOTORCYC LE! 1970 Triumph Tl9er
650, 8300 miles. New tlandlebars,
spark plu~s. ott. Best offer, 835-1725.

t46 per month. Own room. Main
Ferry ar... Catl835-9217.

Evelyn Wood
\

876~256.

a.

DESPERATE! Need one female
roommate. Ten-minute walk from
campus. $55/mollth Includes utilities.
Call 137·9014. AIM for Pat or l..ve

\

'\

message.

WAN T'E 0: roommate(s l
with
•partment to share or roommate(sl to
lOOk with. Cvlt Robert 896-5709.

APARTMENT FOR RENT

m~~utes

ONE BEDROOM, three
to
U .B . Must buy some furnlshlots.
R. .sonable. Call 837-2887.
L.IVE In studios In Art Compte11- $50
per month - calf 9 a.m . 886-.3616. Art
~orsonty.

Y1m·
· 1esson s7
our Iree m

1

so

I

technique.
At a mini-lesson. wt&gt; actually i n ·
crease your ,.ading speed on the
spot. Just a little. to be sure.
but enough so you' ll know how
it feels. By me way • don' t worry i
about how slowly you nrad. Every
one comes to a mini·i~sson ,.ad·
ing slow4y.
One last thing, beck in 1964
adopted the following as a
al policy: " We promise that
read at least 3 times better
wnen you started or we' ll
your tuition." That policy

PLEASE! ' Give beck t~ notea you
ripped off from Clark L.odcw Room on
Oct. 121 1 neect them d...,.t.cyt cau
Lynn 634· 5352.
PERSONAL
COUNTRY Day NUr'SMY SdtOof, 6320
Main St., Williamsville, "_, openlnp
for 3 and 4-y ..r ot4 dllldt.n
9:15- 11l15, 12:45-3•00- 5 days. T~
scttoot Is "on-profit, tntetrated,
licensed, a unique protfWn. C.ll
634·9221 for Information:

-1"',

WILL whoev~r broke Into • loc:kw n
Ctlfk Gym Sunday
pl. . .
return my wallet lntllct to Spectrum
office. Keep -ythlnt ..... No
questions asked.
OUR Foreign car repairs t•t - liUarant• tt . tnd81MndMt, 13St•l850.

•-••rv -

BEAUTIFUL haodmectegOid •nd til¥*'
wedding rings - at sentlbte
!)flees. J.P. The Golctw.vw, 655
Elmwood at Fwry St., 811-.3400.
HAPPV BIRTHDAY Bob 0., you'~
finally made It over ttte hUJ. Oon:'f
forget, It's only with the ~urt ..." R .
WILL whoever took my purte from the
H ..ltll Scleoc:es Llbran!, tt..... retur"
contents. Desperately need gtaues,
keys and I .D. cards• • 632•2409. No
questions asked.

HORSEBACK Riding, h•yrtdel,
Off-•uon rates. Waver1y Stabtea,
Service Road 18, N....,a Rlwt
Parkway, 8 miles nolttl of Peec:e
Bridge, Niagara Felts, Orrt.rlo, C•nada.
Phone 416·295·3925.
IN A TERM paper blncU YOU could
contact four firms wtt" 1,000,000
papers for sate. Ghost written ICI8c:lflc
topics also available. For full details,
competitive price lists, facts ebout
selling your papers and addr- on all
sources, send t l to Oppot'tunlty
Finders, Bo• 3434, Semlnote, Ftortda
33542..

MALE, 33, professor In Atlanta - two
children , seet&lt;s female cprnpanlonstltf),
Marriage In mind. Spectrum Box aa.

RIDE wanted from South Buffalo on
M ·T ·W·F. First c lass 8 :00. Witt shere
expenses. Call 82 4-5 143.

MISCELLANEOUS

.----Bible
Truth1---,
WHEN GAIN IS LOSS

and catalogues can't describe

at
ot's It lee to read a book like Ex us
(all 499 pagesl in 1 hour and 48
mmutes. OranentireTime M
·
zi ne i n 35 minutes.
Instead we invtte you to 594!
minutes th1s week at ami i·
lesson. We'll show you wny t
presidents (Kennedy and Nixor~
personally brought the course int
thll White Houw. so staff member
could learn the Evelyn Wood\

FOUND: told rlnt In tf'!l rd tloor taciJel
room tn Norton. Supply l"fOfmatton
1nd It's yours. Contact Spectrum
office, 831-4113.

RUMMAGE sa le. Trash to Treasures
1- 5 p .m., 1412 Kenmore.

Frt.~un .

it . 'f!le .schedule of free
m1m-lessons 1S listed he,..

Broc'3:~-s
·~

FOUND: cnarm bracelet fn Tiffin
Room, Sunday night. To Identify, call
831·3814. Ask for Helen.

, NEED RIDE Oct. 28 or 29 to Ann
Arbor, Unlv. of M ichigan or nearby.
C•ll 138·3099.

WANTED to Ann Arbor ,
Mlchlg~n University or Detroi t, Friday,
Oct. 22. Return rtde wanted Monday,
Oct. 25 If possible. Call Jutfs
831·2360.

Tha~·s

we invest so mul.h in

134-7343.

RIDE

your ri•ding speed OJI the s:pot!
Know wh

purse

pt. . . ..

FOLK 911ltar lessons. Jeff 835-.3384,
835-9229.
•

AlOE BOARD

Take ,afree Mini-Lesson and in1crease

LOSTS. FOUND
Armadillo

" FOf whet ttrall it profit • men, If
he lhaCI . .In Jhe whole woeid, end
hia own IOUI7 Or whn lhall a
tfve in exchange fOf his ~aul?"

ro.

ATTEND ONE OF THESE FREE MINI- LESSONS

Mertll :36, :n

at OUr

BUFFALO INSTITUTE

C&amp; H
JON ES' Professional Typing
s e r v tee
co mputerized IBM
equipment plus our uperlenc:e give
best pout ble presentations o f
dluertatlons, thesis, term paP41fS,
resumes 1nd employment application
letters. Located between two
c ;ampuses. Very r'easonable. Call
837-6558.
TYPING done up work .

833-8236. Wilt pick

ANYONE who has experience working
18M c;omposlng equ ipment, paste-up
materials or a photo-typosltor, pleese
contect Jim •t The Spectrum office or
call 831-4113.
A SERIES of diKus.slonsentltled "G.I ,
Gurdjteff" will be held every Monday
-nlng from 8--9:30 In Room 22,
Foster Hall. TIM Initial dl..:usston will
take piece Oct. 18.

3606 Main Street
(Next to the Buffalo Text~lk Store)
Tonight, Oct. 1S at 7 PM or 9 PM
Sat., Oct. 16 at II AM or I PM
Mon., Oct. 18 at 1 PM or- .3 PM

UNUSUAL 6-toed calico cat - needs
new home. Call 838-.3255 •ftw 6 p.m.
QUICK, efficient typing done - SAO
per page. IBM Selectric 831-4e08.

For further information ,caJJ

Hear, 0 Israel

Warren Waldow at 837-21!123

JEWISH BIBLE

for 111M from the
Phone

87&amp;-428&amp;

E G :ARANTEE TO BEAT ANYPR
IN 50 FEET OF OUR STORE•..
--.--

RitlttB•E:R WHAT YOU WERE PAYING BEFOREend 4.117 ISN'T THAT A ~IP-OFF1
.

• • •DOWN TO·OUR COST
THE RECORD RUNNER

Friday, October 15, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nineteen
._

'

�Ti~~~ft fflf ~Amini ~v~mt will ~e Qn "'e §~rfinl Qf.J· 1~·

~~~~~,~~1rffl!OfiHm
.. .

.

-

.

/

•

&lt;'

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                    <text>..

Vol. 22. No. 21

Zweig: 'administration
being very vindictive'
· by Bill Vaccaro
Campus Editor

faculty and it is reported that
they entertained delegations of
certain faculty who shared an
ideological position.
"They did not really try to talk
with the rest of the faculty. They
did not try to assist the growth
and development of the school as
an academic entity, as an
enterprise," he said. .
·
" .. . There seems to be a very
typical pattern where certain
people report directly into the
Office of the President and they
are considered the friends of the
administration while others are
the enemies."
He said that, as far as the
present administration was
concerned, there was no · middle
ground. "I think there are friends
and enemies. My experience is
friends and enemies. But what I'm
concerned about is that this
polarizes the faculty which has, I
think, the potentials to gel but
can't when that kind of constant
stimulation to polarization takes
place.

In a recent interview, Franklin
Zweig, former dean of the School
of Social Welfare , criticized the
Ketter .Administration for having
ever accepted the recent
resignation of Social Sciences and
Administration Provost Ira Cohen.
"I do not think that Dr. Ketter
should have ever in the world
accepted Cohen's resignation. I do
~ not think the administration
...should have tolerated it. They
should have sent it back, saying,
.'we do not accept it because he is
capable of the kind of needed
work in the Social Sciences which
we now need in the University as
a whole'," he said.
Dr. Zweig, now holding a joint
appointment in the Departments
of Policy Sciences and Social
Welfare , resigned from his
- A_...,.I
position as dean of Social Welfare
last year.
Franklin Zweig. form• ..._ of the School of Socill
In discussing the recent rash of
Welbre. ch-.cl edminiltntive vind~ .....
vici9.,!1tnela In a recent intwview.
resignations that have hit this
University, particularly those of
Dr. Cohen and Medical School ~teoffear
Dean LeRoy Peach, he said :
"What seems to be descending
However, Dr. Zweig noted that Sciences program is. one of the the prerogatives of the faculty ii
"There is no question in my mind on this place is a climate of fear. that cUmate does not exist at the most significant developments in the item at jeopardy.••
that this is part of an Other universities are facing present tim~ on this campus. '.'Jt is the Behavioral Sciences. I think
Regarding stude nt
administrativ~ campaign."
difficulties in resources (as the clear," he said; "that it will take a now there's a possibility, with its participation in University affairs,
State University of Buffalo is powerliul lot of effort to change linkages to a number of other Dr. Zweig said: ••My position on
facing), but have not had to theclimateonthiscampusforthe programs , to coa lesce an students is that students have a
Vindictive administration
Dr. Zwelg said that he believed manufacture a climate of fear."
better.
extremely important innovation significant part (to play in
Dr. Zweig said: " There is nbt
that "the course of this
"Th1ere is a return in the which is in fledling development administrative roles) and my
administration has been the trust and confidence in this University to a very strong nationallyinanumberofplaces. l position has been one that's not
determined very early in a return administration that agreements position of orthodox academic see no reason for it not to go particularly well respected at the
•
present time.
to academic orthodoxy and some are either clear or that they will functions," he said. He said that ahead and to excel here.
"I feel student participation is
of the People who stood for be held to. It's turning that he feal'ed this return to orthodoxy
Dr. Zweig said that he was
things other than that came- under climate around that should might affect some new innovative worried about the rec ent an essential to the kind of modem
concern the faculty not only for
pressure rather early.
programs such as the Policy consolidation of power within the climate that a university has to
administration. ••1 think it is real . have in order to be a viable
Referring to his own the sake of the present but for the Scien04es program.
••1 think that the Policy I think it is a mistake. And I think academic setting."
experiences with the University's future ."
He said: "I think that
·administration, Dr . Zweig
admitted, "I came under pressure ad minis t ratively -sti mula ted
very early and the pressure came poUticization has got to end if the
about at the change of the faculty and students of this
University are going to· have th~
administration" last year.
"As far as I can see," he told kind of climate where high quality
interviewers, "the tende-ncies of education can develop."
this administration are very
Dr. Zweig felt that ''there has
The Internal Revenue Service ruled last week
While economics won out initially, purchasers of
vindictive. I worked in the Office to be a coalition of faculty on tt)is
that
the
University
Bookstore
must
begjn
granting
illegally
priced books are now due retribution.
of the President [of the United campus which is going to be
refund:s
on
certain
books
sold
recently
at
prices
in
"
Basically
, they [the IRS] are not granting
States in Washington, D.C.] for a concerned with its academic
violatio
n
of
the
federal
wage-price
free~e.
exceptions
to anyone, even in the event it would
year. While I wasn't a political climate." He emphasized,
This
decision
came
as
a
result
of
action
cause
bankruptcy,"
said Mr. Moore. He added that
person, I was there in a however, that he didn't know
institutted
by
David
Steinwald,
Student
Rights
he
was
not,
of
course,
implying that the Bookstore
professional capacity, one has "where the leadership might come
co-orditnator,
shortly
after
school
resumed
in
would
go
bankrupt.
ample opportunity toQ see a host from. It's my hope that some
"I don't know yet how much [the IRS ruling)
of phenomena that are politically might coalesce because it's a September.
.
M1~
.
Steinwald's
contention
at
that
time
was
that
will
hurt
us. It depends a lot on how many kids will
based ...
matter of academic cUmate the
''The viciousness of politics in f~culty has to be concerned with some !books were being sold for more than was bother to come in for their $.50 refund."
charged last semester. Thomas Moore, manager of
To receive a refund, a purchaser mull simply
Washington was not nearly so as well as academic programs."
the
Btookstore,
acceded
that
this
was
true.
He
"demonstrate
they purchased a book at a price
gteat as I think the viciousness
explairued, however, that prices had been raised to above that which is permitted by the price freeze ."
here is. The vindictiveness and the Innovation threatened
viciousness are extremely
He said : "There has to be a correspond with similar price hikes by the publisher No sales slip will be necessary for such
enh~ced," he said.
climate for any university to which were instituted before the freeze went into demoKstration. One must merely bring their book in
function · in which there is a effect. .. ~ince the texts did not go on sale untU to the textbook service counter and a Bookstore
'Friends and enemies'
respect for a broad range of ideas September, after the Aug. IS deadline, Mr. Moore employee will check their records to see if it is
"Jn my own case," Dr. Zweig and jUl ability to communicate then stated that the Bookstore was faced with the indeed one of the offending books. If ·it is, the
continued, "I found an extremely across positions." He said he was choice of either raising prices to compensate for the purchaser is entitled not only to a refund on the
one-sided dealing, that is, 1.he hopeful that "some kind of · higher cost, or "losing a substantial amount of higher price, but also to any higher sales tax paid due
to the increases.
administration' talked to certain informal coalition might emerge." moneyl'
1-.
I~

Dr. Zweig

IRS decision

Bookstore must grant refunds

r·

�Petras will lecture on
Latin .American events

ethO$)

Spiro Agnew spoke at the Statler· Hilton Thunday
night ($100-a·plate) on behalf of Jack Kemp. Dinner
included Lobster Bisque Soup Francaise, Roast
Prime Ribs of au jus and spice of Agnew: "One of
the greatest dangers America faces at this moment is
tfle desire on ttle part of many in our society to
withdraw from the rest of the world, to lay down
our arms, to rest."

Diatribes and ...
Downtown demonstration

Agnew's presence protested
In a plea fo r unity, Charlie
reminded the audience of George
Jac k son's warning that top
" I came to welcome the Vice executive theory is "divide and
President. but I bet he won't rule." Speaking of that samt:
come to see us. That man j ust ruling class, he said, "They try to
doesn't have no upbringing," rob us of even our vocabulary by
declared a middle·aged member of watering down- and excluding
United Labor Action at the words such as racism, sexism and
demonstration held outside the class war."
0 t h e ·r o r g a n i z a t io ns
Buffalo Statler·H i lt on last
Thu rsday eve nin g . The repr~e nted at the rally were the
police-estimated crowd of 1200 Prisoner's Solidarity Committee,
gathered to protest Vice Presiden t The Bu ffalo, Buffalo Youf\3
Spiro Agnew's Buffalo appearance Wo rkers Liberation League, SDS ,
to attend a S I OO·a·plate dinner in Yo utli Against War and Facism ,
support of Republican county plus a local high school YAWP.
executive cand idate, Ned Regan.
Agnew arrived quietly at the Ma~ muider
hot e l an h·our before the
Speakers later di ~ect ed their
demonstratio n was scheduled to comments to the theme o f " Spiro
start. Surrounded by the beige has come to Atticaland ." The
trench-coated secret service men , Peo ple's Coalition fo r Peace and
be was greeted by onlY a handful Justice s peaker cpncluded , "Not
of onlookers, among them an only are we all Attica, but Attica
elderly wo man carrying a sign, has been demonstrated repeatedly
"Welcome Mr. Agnew. Don't in this county. Reverand Ford,
shake hands with the Commie president of BUILD, said , "
reds." One policeman joked to Twenty·four days after Attica and
another, " He (Agnew) invited me counting, those who perpetrated
to dinner, too - but I had already this kind of mass murder, Agnew
eaten."
and his henchmen, have come to
The demonstrators slowly grew Buffalo to see and rejoice with
in population and at 6:30 p .m., each oth er."
the first speaker, Charlie of the
Two minor incidents slightly
Buffalo Coalition for Peace and distracted the attention of the
Justice, rose to the microphone. demonstration. First , a group of
He announced that Agnew is no t about seven Young Americans for
the only enemy of the people but Freedom m e mb ers, carrying
that he is one of the most banners reading, " Power to the
outspoken.
Patriot" and ''Agnew in '72"
staged a counter-protest. One
vocalized graffiti
member, Mike Johnso n, a Canisius
"Spiro Agnew says what others College student, d eemed Agnew as
secretly desire to write on the representative of the " new
walls of executive bathrooms.'' be politics" and added that this
said. A major target of his speech meant a "total renunciation of
was President Nixon's econo mic socialism and liberalism."
policy. Charlie maintained that
the wage and price freeze clearly •freeze Agnew'
showed that the United States was
Later, the YAF members
far from a classless society. The joined with the American Legion
policy is in truth only a wage in a march by the demonstrators.
freeze, he explained, because The rally speaker commented,
"there is no freeze on profit, " f i(ty years ago, the first speaker
interest and dividends. Keep in the American Legion brought to
mind the employment rate the U.S. was Mussolini and we all
officially stands at nine per cent . know who he was. Now, their
in Erie County."
choice of Agnew p{oves they

by Janis Cromer
Spectrum Staff Writer

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.
\
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

rMOTORCYClEiNSURANtel

II IMMEDIATE
FS-1 - ANY SIZ~ I
NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I
IU P S T A T E C Y C L E I N S I

I

t_

call 694·3100
" Ask Your Broker About Us"

I
. _I

haven't changed so much in fifty

years." And appealing to the rally
to disregard the .d istraction , h e
stated , "The American Legion is a
dinosaur and djnosaurs just die o ff
without help." The demonstration
then turned to march past the
Buffalo jail and down Main Street.
Chants ranging from , "Freeze
Agnew, not wages" and " Attica
means: Fight back" to "U .S. out
of Vietnam , cops o ut of the high
schools" wer&lt;: h eard thro ughout
the hour-lo ng walk.
·
A cc~ rding

to a stalJ:Il)ent .

handed o ut by the rally organizers
the t,() t a l demands of the
demonstration were: one, aU U.S.
forces out of Indochina by Dec.•
31 , 1971; two, guaranteed annual
income of $6500 for a family o f
fo ur; three, free all political
prisoners and support the Attica
prisoners demands; four, stop the
wage freeze and five, support all
striking workers.
Perhaps a more immediately
attainable goal of the gathering
was expressed by Chuck Darsey,
arrested on Aug . 2 1 for
attempting to rip-off Buffalo
Draft Board files. " We live in th e
belly of a mo nster and the least
we can do is give that monster a
case of indigest ion," said Mr.
Darsey.
Several demonstrators then
continued o n to the Lincoln
Memorial Methodist Church at
Main and Masten for a free meal
prepared o n a welfare budget in
deference to the Hilton's
S IOO·a·plate counterpart.

The Spectrum is published thrlltl
t i mes • week. ft'ery Mondlly
Wednadly lind Fridey; during ~
regvler «:«Jemie yfllllr by Sub-Board
t . Inc. OfflCfJS ere IOCJJted lit 365
Norton Hell, Stete Unilt~~rriry• of New
York lit Buffelo. 3435 Main St.•
Buffelo. New York, 14214.
Tlllepllone: A,... Code 116; Editoriel
831 -4113; Swine#, 831-3610.

Represented for lldlltlrtiling by
Nationlll Educationel Adlltlrtislng
Serv;c., Inc.• 360 L exington Aw.•
New York, N. Y. 10017.
Sub#cripdon nrte6 11rtt $4.50 PM
111merter or $8.00 for two 111menen.
Second Cl- Postsfltl Pllid et Bufflllo,
New Yorlc.
Circuletion: 16,000

Hau Lounse will be the setting
for a presentation by Ja~es
Petras, the well known critic of
U.S. Latin American policy, at 8
p.m . on Thursday (Oct. 14).
Petras a young political scientist
directlng the Latin American
Development Studies program at
Penn State, will speak on " New
Revolutionary Current s in
Contemporary Latin America."
His expertise in this area comes
from many years of research,
some of which was spent in Latin •
America. Just last month h e
returned after more than a year o f
first-hand experiences witJt all
segments of the Latin American
populace.
Petras has been a frequent
cri ti c of U.S. pol i cy,
p o li cy· m akers and their
apologists. He is a major
spokesman for the counter trend
to U.S. cold war scholarship
whi ch does not accept its
assum ptions, commitments or its
attempts to gloss over obvious
inconsistencies. The battle against
cold war. scholars and other
defenders of th e status-quo has
involved Petras on many levels
und fronts . He was an active
part icipant in the Berkeley Free
Speech Movement upheavals that
h e lp e d awaken Am e ri can
universities from the Lethargy of
"frats," b eer blasts and
intellectual underdevelo pment.
Progressive viewpoint
In a com munique to the.SPf1ng
'65 issue o f Partisan R e11iew,
Petras, a graduate student at the

time, and Michael Shut6, provided
a devastating analysis of the views
and reactions · by the liberal
intellectual establishment as
exemplified by Befkeley faculty
members Lewis Feuel,', Seymour
Martin Lipset, Paul Seabury and
Nathan Glazer. Using a progressive
liberal viewpoint, Petras and
Shute aptly label these piUars of
liberalism '·'New Conservatives"
and fo reshadow the next six years
of liberal reaction to student
protests and other forms of
dissent falling outside " normal
channels."
A former Latin, American
e ditor for Ramparts, he has
contributed countless articles to a
wid e variety of publications
i n c lud ing Social Research,

Monthly R e11iew, Science and
Society and British Socidloglcul
Research . He is the aut hor of two
monographs on Chile, the editor
of several books including Latin

America: Reform or R evolution,
Fidel Castro Speaks and Politics
and the Social Srructure in Latin
A merica. Much of T hursday's
presentation will be based on his
rece ntly r eleased work .

Culti11ation R evolution; Agrarian
R efo rm in Latin A me rica.
Following the lecture will be a
question and answer period .
On Friday Petras hopes to
meet with interested students in a
workshop at 1 2:30 p .m .
somewhere on the second floor of
Norton Hall. All are urged to
attend thjs Speakers Bureau
funded program of the Latin
American Studies club.

Petition deadline
The ·Student. Assembly will conduct its first
meetina . on Friday•. Oc(. U . .Tber11 , are ,OnlY. JS,.
certified poups· tbat have. · f~terecl '!flitla , :tJte
Student A~~embty at present. Another 20 11'9\Ull are .
. pendina 'approval, b'ut members' must' ~orne' to ~0 the.
Student Assembly'·table (firtit floor Ncrrton Hall near
the Bookstore) to ·vote for their representatives
before approval can be lfanted. The Student
Association strongly urges the members of any
prospective aroup to submit tbeir petitions
(requiring 40 sianatures) and vote for their
representative at the Norton table. Speed is
imperative since the first meetina wdl deal with
elections to the Executive Committee, the Stud~nt
Judiciary and budget planning. Any underaradua~e
who wishes to have a matter put on the 'aaenda for
Friday'• meeting should submit them to Room lOS
Norton Hall, to the receptionist or Spot Guberman's
mailbox, by tomorrow afternoon.

~

GRl~

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And its strictly SOLID GOLD

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6:00p.m. - FRIDAY, Oct . 15
for

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�•

News commentary

Black faculty hard to find
Edftor'l not~: The follow~nt lJ a teprlnt of the ftnt
of a lel'iu conceming Bltlck educaton at the
State Univenity of Buffalo which IIPfHtlnd in th~
Oct. 6 luu~ of The Spectrum. Becauu ofproduction
nron, tiN story wa.r fint rendered Ul'll'etldilble. The
1«0nd ptiTt will fJI*r in Fridlly'l The Spectrum.
ptUI

halls ofleaming.

by Jeff Creenw.Jct

)

SP«trum Still/ w.?ttr

•

recruitment indeed require what WiU Brown,
asaistant to the director for Minority Faculty and
Staff Recruitment, terms as "Black Supermen."
Obviously, Mr. Brown said: ••vou can't expect every
Black person to be one of these supermen."
Yet, unless he is, he seldom gets hired. On t~e
other hand, the mediocre white has saturated the

Most problems have remedies; most diseases
have cures. In treating a problem .or a disease, one is
faced often with the possibility that what is being
treated is actually not the diseue, but merely various
symptoms. Moreover, some would-be heaJen have
JWOved so myopic as to be quite unsure of what he is
trying to heal.
There 1s a problem on this campus. One must
merely ask oneself when the last time was that he
had a Black professor for anything (except perhaps
in a subject matter related directly to Black
heritage). The problem is most certainly related,
consciously perhaps, but most likely subconsciously,
to a weU known social disease : racism.
Racism is rooted in the past but it flourishes in
the present. Overt racism is much less common now,
but its vestiges remain in our determination that we
owe nothing for the horrors we have perpetrated.
"We made it ; so can they," is the attitude that still
prevails in our society. Incredible as it may seem, it
is even more so wien one realizes that the
supposedly socially enlightened University
community is also stiU afflicted with this attitude.
Racial rhetoric?
To be fair, it must be admitted that the
problems of attaining minority faculty are many. A
common problem is cited by many involved in the
hiring procedures. Ira Cohen, provost of the F&amp;culty
of Social Sciences, explained : "We're not u
successful as we would like to be (in regard to
recruitment of minority candidates). 'There just
aren't • enou&amp;Jt good ·Blacks coming through tke
gradu~Ue de'partments/' Thomas Connolly, former
provost of Arts and Lett~rs. concurred : " Lt .is
extremely dlfflcult finding the right person." Others
went on at length explaining that there weren't
enough "quality" people in their field , or discussed
their sad experience in almost signing up an
"extremely talented" Black person , but then losing
him (or her) at the last moment to a school offering
more money or prestige.
Supermen wanted
In all these stated difficulties, note the use of
words such as ·~good, right person, quality" and
"extremely talented ." This exemplifies one of the
paramount barriers the minority peoples find
themsefves facJng when hunting for a job . In sports,
you seldom see the Black man riding the bench, the
trademuk of the "average" player. He is the star.
In the poUtical world , the minority politician is
generaUy regarded as .a "rare phenomenon" or
" dynamic and talented."
In education, it seems that all the desirables for

The football team may be dad, but...

Vicious cyde
The emphasis is on quality ; a Black penon must
be the best. The Black candidate has his PhO before
he is lUred and his hiring is often contingent upon
many variables. Always the Black person is expected
to meet the traditional edocational criterion for
hiring and almost always must exceed them . But for
how many yean have the paths for this "traditional"
academic attainment been closed to Blacks and all
other minority people? Can this vicious ''Catch-22"
cycle continue much longer? If these traditional
criterion remain the ones that must be met ,
appuently so.
There are those who worry that to change these
standards means simply to destroy them and with
them the quality o f educatfon on this campus. But
many maintain that 'this isn:t so. " We would not be
subverting academic standards but rather extending
(them),'' stated Gilbert Moore, acting provost of
Arts and Letters.
The problem of establishing acceptable
innovative criterion is not insurmountable. The
question is whether or not those responsible wish it
solved.

'PoOr man's supper'
marks Agnews visit
byRoa KJ•
Sp«mtm St•Jf Wrllu

Claude Welch pointed to the
staae curtalns which carried the
phrase "Acnew Response.'' Some
of the letterJ were hidden in the
folds of the cUJ1.ain. The State
University of Buffalo political
science professor expla.ined that
the letterina would have read , "A
new response" If it was properly
spaced. " I point that out," he said
smiling, "becaute it was my idea."
Dr. Welch wu among some
500 people who marked the
occaSion of Spiro Aanew's first
visit to Buffalo as Vice President
Thursday evening. They met at
t he Lincoln . MemoriaJ Church at
Main and Masten Streets and held
a ..poor man's supper."
Instead of attending the free
dinner ..Dr. Welch mi&amp;ht have aone
to the Statler-Hilton to see the
Vice President at a S I 00-a-plate
Republican fund raisin&amp; dinner.
But Dr. Welch probably would
not have cotten in, even if he
wanted to go. His (ace framed
witb a beard, he chose to wear an
African duhiki Thursday evening.
Downtown, moustached Buffalo
Bill O.J . Simpson was one of the
few in the Golden Ballroom to
wear ~ken and not even
Simps\ wore a dashiki.

aovernment and runnin&amp; the
system."
.
Eve's heavy voice was barely
bea..t with the clatter of plates.
The lines for food still wound
around the room when Eve
futished spea.k.ina.
One elderly Black man c:arryina
his plate to a table explained that
be came to the supper out of
curiosity . "I wu intereated. l wish
Aanew had come to have some
cornbread and some fatback."

Empbaize the poor
The idea of the "poor man's
supper" was Ri~hard I.
Lowenthal's. He wanted the
supper to emphasiu the needs of
the poor. He cbaracteriud Agnew
as "indifferent and insensitive to
the root problems of our society."
As they finished the meal
many people pve donations to
oover the cost of the dinner and
otbers helped to wash dishes in
the kitchen. The dinner was
prepared by members of the
Buffalo Riahts Action Group.
Several people browsed through
anti-war literature placed on
tables by croups like the Buffalo
Peace Council and ClerCY and
Laymen Concerned• about
Vietnam. On o:1e table was a stack
of bumper stickers reading, "Make
Snow, Not War - Scbussmeister's
Ski Club.''

Budget problems
Cuna-ho
As of now, little has been done to redefine
The Statler dinner feted a
As the evening wore on people
qualifications. The 'figures of the past year amplify former Buffalo Bill , Jack Kemp,
this fact . Out of 64 reported hirings from five who Agnew described as "the gathered downstairs to see an
faculties, according to a yearly repo rt submitted by most guns-ho Conaressman ever anti-war movie and then moved
into the church sanctuary where
Mr. Brown's office '(figures were not available for to hit D.C."
they waited for speakers.
While downtown it was Kemp,
Health Sciences &amp;nd Natural Sciences), onJy three
A&amp;new and Repn, at the Lincoln Counter-march
were from minority background .
Memorial
Church it was
This contrasts to a reported 20 or so minority
Assembtyman Arthur 0 . l!n,
By this time young people who
hitings during each of the past couple of years. This
Council man Delmar Mitchell, had marched from downtown
nqmber must be further explained.
William Gater and Richard Ford fol1owing a protest rally began
The funds for most of those previous hirings of BUILD and peace activist Ken ftltering into the church. A legal
came from special minority budget lines allocated to Sherman . Courier ·b'xp rus aide coming in said, "ltgotalittle
various departments to be used for only this stated columnist Paul Jayes, short and h ectic there." He wd that
purpose. In the past year these lines were frozen due dapper under black overcoat, dt, wntown "the American Legion
to the state budgetary crisis. Thus, for the academic climbed up the church stairs. held a counter-march with flaas
year 1971 - 72, only normal replacement lines were Inside he was greeted like the and guns."
A spokeswoman for BRAG
available for hiring. The fact that Blacks are hired lA othen by a blurred photograph of
Richard
Nixon
the
caption
·
told
the audience that welfare is
substantial numbers only when these lines are set
read, " I want to make one thing not a Bla ck problem. Two
aside is not at aJJ comforting.
members of the People's Coalition
· Another problem is that most Blacks are hired perfectly clear."
Mr.
Jayes
positio
ned
himself
in
for
Peace and Justice read from
to teach only courses related to their ethnic
the gymnasium close to the stage, the letters of George Jackson, a
bac~ound . Mr. Brown estimates that over 90% of
taking notes o f Assemblyman Black man who was killed at San
all Black faculty are in the Black Studies and EPIS Eve's remarks. People stlll lined Quentin prison earlier this year.
programs. "Black people must be hired to teach through the hall to serve
"real" courses within thc_University ," commented themselves to a meal o f beans and
Former Senator Charles E.
oorn bread, as Eve talked about Goodell arrived and waited along
Joan Stamper, director of Black Studies.
a wall, chewing on his pipe. When
This is certainly true. The altainment of Attica.
he spoke he talked about prison
minority faculty is a goal that must be achjeved.
reform
and he emphasized an
Expose
.-.cum
Howev_er, as in all institutions, the real goal is power.
obligation
to "fight t he
~ sajd Attica was a product of
In a coUege setting, this means administrative power.
insensitivity of the Agnew's of
racism
.
Eve,
a
member
of
the
For Blacks, at present, there is none.
c it izens n ego tiating team this oountry ."
Explaining the Greek meanings
appointed by rebel inmates, said
Attica exposed the racism of of the wor,ds "Spiro Agnew ,"
society. He said the inmates Goodell said : "The Greek root of
wanted him to "tell. the truth that the word Spior means to 'scatter
the animals are not inside. The seeds.' Agnew means 'not to
animals are o'utsiae running the perceive or know'."

The Athletic BevieiD Board is

WAIHIJIGTON SUDLUI CINIIa
. .MF - IIAfiF

ID.lS &amp; THINGS- . . . Styles f• Y'"l • • •

ALIVE &amp; KICKING

LIA...aAGOODS
8-IACiliH
taDIACIIDS
B001'S·LIY·
"II HIP
SAVIMOIIfY
SHOP ARMY NAVY

If you .,.. interested in U.S.'s sports program- leave a note for
JOE ASHWAL in his mailbox (room 205 Norton HaiU.

7JI-7J2

MAIII-IS~1S1S
••.,...., Cll ,,..

NEAR JUPPII

Wednesday, October 13, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

'

�cu.-aning

for Sedita

Lindsay attacks the
Nixon administration
CQmpus Editor

attacked the Nixon administration
for sidin&amp; itself with those who
have .the power.

Wearina an "I'm for Sedita"
smile button, New York City
Mayor John V. Lindsay toured
the Buffalo area last Firday. His
vis.it, aimed at ptherina support
for Buffalo Mayor Frank Sedita's
quest for county executive,
included a speech behind Norton
Hall .
Mayor Lindsay , the
recently~transformed
Democrat,
anived at the fountain area only
16 minutes late (a record for
political promptness) to address a
sizable crowd or nearly I SOO. The
-charismatic Lindsay , wearin&amp; a
pin-striped shirt, beaan his speech
in informal style.
"I'm here for two reasons," he
bqan. "Because it's useful for me
to aet out of my city occuionally,
and because I'm for Frank Sedita .
Give 'em a wave, Frank." After
deliverina a few jokes ill his best
Johnny Carson form, Mr. Lindsay

"ot a candidate'
"The fust obligation of those
with power is to help the
powerless ,.. emphasized Mr.
Lindsay. He accused the Nixon
administration of "provldina relief
for big business and corporations,
but not for the man in the street."
He claimed that his city
administration has catered to the
working people, the blue-collar
people, the street people.
Mr . Lindsay also severely
criticized President Nixon in the
area of aun control. "Guns are
available to anyone to ao and aun
down the neiahborhood
delicatessen owner," he noted ,
" yet no serious effort has been
made in the direction of gun
control, or to brio&amp; the Kent State
killillp before a lfand jury."
The crowd thouaht the
mayor's funniest line of the day

by Howie Kurtz

was when be informed them, " I
am not a candidate for any
office." After the ensulna
lau&amp;hter, he added, "WouJd you
believe it!"

Guidelines needed
Mayor Lindsay hailed the five
borou&amp;hs u "the most powerful
and creative city ill the world,"
but one that "has contributed the
most , in dollars and blood, to
every U.S. war, including the
present and miserable battle ill

Danforth Fellowships
Danforth Graduate FeUowthlpa are beiJII offered by the Danforth Foundation to
tenlora who have eerious interest in a career of coUeae teach ina and who plan to study for
a PhD. CandJdates for this award must be nominated by the Campue Lluon Officer. Dr.
Howard E. StraUSI, I 14 Parker Enaineerina buiJdlna. Students desirina nomination lhould
eubmlt a letter of lntereat lncludina bioaraphlcal data to Dr. Stnua before Friday, Oct.
IS. Special attention il liven to Oexlble inteUectual power and academic achievement,
peraonal characterillics for effective teacblna and a concern for relatina ethical or
rellaJoue values to teachina. Student• are abo required to take the Graduate Record
Examination (GRE) on Saturday, Oct. 23.

IIIIIIAII. n~TC'r'flVE"D
Plllll• CAl

•••••••

~1.JL-V

H -

Passina the buck?
His major criticism of the
waae -pri ce fre eze Is that
"voluntary controls don't work .
They put massive pressure on the
local community , such as the
labor leader , who has a
constituency be- must respond to

1061 ShMdan Drive
S poe d all7 111 J In V uiiL, w:aaen .
1'rhiumrh. Vutvco. ~u :. Au!llln
Heal01y. Tnynt1.1 , t&gt;ac.un und m ure .
177·9JOJ
Ask fur V.xku

SPRING SEMESTEit

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Diamond

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~

Erii~~WEL~RS

r

I

in contracts talb. Pbue Two
the look of transferrin&amp; the heat
to the private sector and local ,
aovernment," qjd the mayor.
Mr . Lindsay co nt inually
stressed his support for Mr. Sedita
for county executave, explaining
that .. Frank and I have been
tbrouab the urban trenches
toaetber." He also praised the
town aovernment of West Seneca,
as the town councilmen who
flanked the mayor held their
beads high and beamed . The press
conference had the air of a public
relations meeting, as emphasized
by the somewhat bland and
standard questions most of the
newsmen asked.
When asked about Attica , Mr.
Lindsay noted that "we had a
similar problem in New York City
last year (tbe Tombs), and we
resolved it without anyone beina
hurt. We must remember that the
purpose of correctional facilities is
to begin to rehabilitate people and
build lives instead o f ending
them." Commenting on Vice
President Aanew's Buffalo visit to
s upport Republican candidate
Ned Repn, Mr. Lindsay smiled
and sa id , "That s h ows
something."
Mayor Lindsay's schedule also
co nsisted o f campaignina for
Mayor Sedita downtown and a
late afternoon cocktail party at
the Executive Ramada Inn.

Vietnam." After his speech, the
mayor answered studen t s'
questions for about IS minutes.
Mr. Lindsay bepn his visit to
Western New York by fieldina
newsmen's questions at a 9:30
Lm. press conference in West
Seneca . He appeared alonpide
Mayor Sed ita , whom he
commended on his use of city
police • in the handlin&amp; of the
Buffalo hi&amp;h schools crisis. When
questioned abo ut Phase Two of
the waae·price freeze, Mr. Lindsay
complained that the pro&amp;ram
"comes to us without auidelines ...
" We de s perately need
specifics," the mayor continued .
"I deal with city employees all the
time in contract neaotiations, and
I have no clear-cut guidelines." He
feels that the problem with
Wa s hinat o n lie s In
decision-makina. The mayor also
noted the " honendous" nine per
cent unemployment rate in Erie
County, as well as a six per cent
rate in New Yo rk City. " I see no
si gns o f r eco ,very i n
unemployment," observed Mr.
Lindsay.

IN
GIAZ, AUSTIUA

..

Emphasis on Germanic studies. Full SUNY credits.
COST: $1200. lncludel travel, fees, room and board,
excursions, etc.
Further Information:

Professor larry D. Wells
German Department
SUNY·Binghamton
Binshamton, N. Y. 13901

APPLICATION DEADLINE: November 1S, 1971

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privately~"&gt;' mail

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During the non-snow off season the U.S. Women's
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to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That's right-20
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elM- ,..,. lllatmtd llrodlllre
delcrtbllli ~ Mlectl•, $4.
0 FtM ~~. wHtto.t

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Page four . The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 13, 1971
\

,

�GoodeD not switching parties

Nixon economics bOO~ted
by Jeff Greenwald
Sp«tnlm Staff Wl'lter

• I

solve their problems at home, and
see to it there are no more white
elephants like the SST that cost
you and me one billion for
nothing."
Speaking before a younger and
more informal audience at the
Buffalo State Student Union, Mr.
Goodell digressed a bit from his
text. He dwelled quite a bit upon
his intention of h elping to "tum
thing."~ around in this country" as
a Republican.
" I am not a pessimist at all
about how we can tum thing."~
around ... Maybe time is running
out in this country. I don't want
to believe it, but if it is, I want to
work even harder to help change."

While charging the Nixon
administration with fostering two
years of "planned economic
stagnation," former U.S. Sen.
Charles E. Goodell maintained at
a Thursday press conference and
speech, that he would not switch
parties as "long as I can work
within the Republican party."
Mr . Good ell's appearance,
sponsored by various local labor
union leaders, coincided with ·Vice
President Agnew's fund raising
visit to Buffalo.
Speaking from a prepared text
at the press conference, Goodell
lambasted the Nixon economic
policies of the last two years as 'Truth Squad'
Explaining that he felt the
the means by which "we [have
ended ) up with the worst of all American people had been lied to
worlds
unempl oyme nt , about many things as evidenced
by incidents such as the Pentagon
inflation and stagnation."
He continued that President papers, Goodell called himself a
Nixon's new economic policy member of his own "truth
announced in August was a bold squad." R eca lling that
admission of two and one half t raditionaJly a ''truth squad"
years of failure." Mr. Goodell followed candidates of the
explained that had Nixon acted opposing party around the
two years ago, more moderate co untry , enlightening the
measures co uld have been populace with alternate views, Mr.
effec t ive in co mbating the Goodell found himself "appall,ed
economic crisis. " In economics, as that t here was a greater need for a
in love, timing is a key to Republican truth squad with a
success."
Republican administration , than
we needed with a Democratic
administration."
Unnecessary
Mr . Goodell proposed a job tax
Nevertheless, he is not yet
credit, feeling this would be "a attracted by the Democratic
direct incentive for industry t9 party . "If I ·Ichange parties 1 I will
hire people." He added, "we must neglect the opportunity I have to
increase j ob creatin~ expenditures influence the [Republican) party
to build houses , mass from within. I don't think lhe
transportation facilit ies and to party of Lincoln must be the
party of regression."
clean up our water and air."
In an exclusive The Spectrum
To do this, "unnecessary
interview
conducted between Mr.
expenditures in such areas as
space, the military and highway Goodell's two appearances, the
construction" must give way. " In former Senator spoke more
short," he concluded, "we must specifically regarding his plans in
spend more to help our people the upcoming election year.

"I'm not sure ho w long I can
work within the Republican
party," Mr. Goodell said. He felt,
howev•er, that his situation
differed from that of John
Lindsay, mayor of New York
City, who recently switched his
party 11fftliation to Democratic.
''Lindsay moved right in as the
most powerful Democrat in the
state. In my case, I can probably
do more in the interim as a
Republican." Mr. Goodell hinted
that aruy final decision on his
party affiliation would likely
depend on the candidates in the
1972 presidential election.
"If the election were this fall,
and there was a Democratic
candidatte I felt was better for the
country than the Republican
alternative, I would support him ,"
he maintained. Although he stated
that such support could come
while st ill nominally a
Republi•t:an , it seemed likely that
those ci!rcumstances would indeed
prompt a party switch.
Talking of the possibility of a
fourth ~~arty movement , Goodell
felt it w o uld almost certainly be a
reality in the event of a
Nixon- IHenry Jackson race (with
Wallace: o n the · right), but
dismissed the possible nomination
of Jackuon as " highly unlikely."

Charles Goodell
address itself to these root causes.

Asked for his opinion on Sen.
George McGove rn 's recent
an nounced support for total
amnesty for draft resisters, Mr.
Goodell said h e advocates a
"selective amnesty." He pointed
Blames
~
o ut that he had supported the
Addr•essing the Allica tragedy,
idea of granting consciefltious
Mr. Goodell blamed both sides,
objector deferments for specific
but ftllt that .. Rockefeller
wars, if sincerity was shown."
deflnitelly should have gone."
Similar criteria should be used in
More generally. he explatned, he is dealing with the question of
chairman of a "I 5-_!lle~er
(prisoner) amnesty:• He :~dded ,
commi tt ee o n incarceration,
however, that he felt the draft
compoSj!d of people distinguished
sho uld be eliminated .
on the problems of putting people
This reporter also had the
behind prison walls and mental
instltuti«ln bars."
He a.dded. ~ prison refonn is
good; it makes men feel better but it doesn't solve the proble ms.
His cornmiltee , he stated , would

unique opportunity of hearing Mr.
Goodell 's rea c tions during
President Nixon's speech outJ.inin&amp;
Phase II of his New Economic
Policy. As Nixon commented that
increased profits benefit all the
American people {in explaining
his reluctance to provide for strict
profit controls\ Mr . Goodell
muttered : "the poor man doesn't
understand our econ o mic
system ." Goodell also descnoed
Donald Rumsfield, Nixon's
appointee as director of
Operations of the Cost of Uving
Council, as "a poor son of a
birch," adding Rumsfield was
really "a nice guy."

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Wednesday, October 13, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page five

�..

I

EdiTORiAl
Freedom of speech

I

,

Nearly a week has passed since John V. Lindsay,
accompanied by Buffalo Mayor Frank A. Sedita spoke to an
audience of 1500 people on this campus. During this time
much criticism has been voiced within student government
circles over the circumstances surround in~ his visit.
First, many individuals were upset over the Speaker's
Bureau 's expenditure of student monies for the
advertisement which appeared in last Wednesday's The
Spectrum heralding Mr. Lindsay as the nation's savior.
Sec.ondly, sources within the Graduate Student Association
were angered by what they termed " political pressure" upon
the Speakers Bureau. Lastly, the same sources expressed
annoyance at the presence of Frank Sedita on the podium.
contending that since he is a candidate for County Executive
his appearance at a student -sponsored event may have
constituted an endorsement.
o\

We feel the controversy regarding the advertisement has
been adequately settled by the public apology of the persons
responsible for the funding and co ntent of the ad. In
retrospect , it seems clear that the wording of t he ad was most
improper, but we are quite confident that suc h a n episode
will not be repeated.
The allegations of "political pressure" are baseless. It~
true t hat both the Lindsay and Sedita organ izations were
competing against each other in their dealings with the
student governments, but after a thorough examination of
the arrangements made last week we have not discovered any
compromrsi ng crrcumstances or undue pressure.
We also bel•eve the crittcisms votcecl against Mayor
Sedita's visit tn ht, wtthPut foundation While he may be a
candiddtt: for politic.;~! offtce. he is still thu Mayor of Buffdlo,
and as such, WdS l'11trllcd to .1C.C'l1mpany d visttor ot Mt
lindsay's stature to this Untverstty . In particular, we do not
hold even the most remote belief th'-tt hi!&gt; presence here was
an endorsement.

'I'll need your help on this one!'

"

To SQrnit, with love
To tile Ediror:
There has been a great deal of cont roversy
recently concer ning S tud ent Association's
disbursement or student funds. Everyone has very
sensibly been insisting t o S.A. that expenditures
should benefit the greatest number of students to
the greiltcst possible extent; meanwhile. we must
remcmocr that Central Administration 1n Albany has
dictated that use of s l udent funds must b~o· of an
"educatmual, t·ultural. recreational , or social
nature.'
Dr. Sunlit 1\u" fli.\ThltPb ( unwltt~ngly'!) given us
the best ~olull(!tl ttl l lll~&gt; ~no OJc-t ~hich threutl!ns
,tutJcnt ut11ty .ttul S .A.'s VJUhahty.

In the next two weeks, both George McGovern and
Edward Kennedy will visit Buffalo. This University deserves
an opportunity to hear these men and we are concerned lest
the bad experiences of a few individuals in the seats of
student power lead to / reaction against sponsoring political
or controversial speake'rs.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 21

Wednesday, October 13, 1971
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-M.neglng Edhot - AI Benson
Co-M.'neging Editor - Mike Lippmann
Alit. MM~iging Editor - Susan Moss
Bulin- Man., - Jim Orucker
Adwrtlsing MINifW - Sue Mellantine

Campus ...... , .. Jo-Ann Armao
..• , ............Howie Kurtz
.: .............. 8MV_.o
City ...••............•.vecant

Copy ........... RonniFor~n
................ Marty Gettl
"-1................. ,vec:ent
F..wre .................vecant
GraptMc Arts ......... Tom Toles

uyout ....... Meryhope Runyon
"-'· .................~t
Lit. a o,-a .. tliabMt Sitwlblett
Mwie .............Billy Altman
Off-Campus ...... Lynne Traeger'
Photo .......... Marc Ackerman
...•...... Mickey Oltlpl'roicher
Sports .....•........ Barry Rubin
~ • ............ Howie Faiwl

TM $ptJCtrum Is served by United Praa International, College Pr•
Service, the Los Angeles Free Pr-. the Los
Tim• Syndic.te and
Llberetlon News Service.

anoe••

RIP'blialtlon of rNtter herein wfthout the ex.,.-- con181'1t of the
Editor-In-Chief is forbidden.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Page six. The Spectrum. Wednesday, October 13, 1971

as

For what it's worth
hy Harvy L1p111:111
th~.· ll&lt;~uittunJI lllYih'\. Surrl'IIH'
.tlway, lleen chosen laona anuul~
the hnl·.,·l ll•gal minds 111 the natwn. rcmaaned
IIIIIIH&gt;Vl'd t'ly pohii~&lt;JI prcSsliTl'\, ~tcadfastly protected
tlw Comttlution regardless of soc1al or politkal
11nphcations and. maintained absolute personal
JmpurtiOJhty 111 the treatment of all cases. To say that
1hcSt.' .:ondJtions have ncvl·r fully been met would
hardly be an owrstatement. E: very president's
appointments to thc court have been immensely
a fh.•~:tcd hy his personal political persuasion .
OccasiOnally, in fact, chiefs of state have allowed
this mclination to ru n slightly beserk . Franklin
Roosevelt, for exam ple, d ecid ed that he cou ld no t be
sa tisfied with merely filling vacancies o n the court ,
so he carried his privilege o ne step further : he
attempted to enlarge the membership. Unfortuna tely
for Mr. Roosevelt t he Congress d eclined to accept his
kind o ffer.
Usually , however, preside nts have relied on
more s ubtle measures such as appointing old political
c ronies . Lyndon J o hnson fast -talked Arthur
Gold berg int o leaving the court to become
ambassador t o t he United Nations and then
proceeded to replace him with Abe Fortas. Fortas
was an old friend of the president , and had helped
him through many political battles. Evidently he
continued to do so eve n after his appointment ,
t hereby forfeiting a chance at the position of chief
justice. In most cases, however, the political views of
t he various presidents have managed not t o obscure
o ne essential point from consid eration . Nearly every
executive bas sought to fill the court with capable
an d respected jurists - usually of a distinct political
ideology, but none the less men with fine tegal
1\~,,, , ,d,nll

to

( \nul Jll~lll'l'!'&gt; h;ave

We further ·believe that it ts the Speaker's Bureau's right
and even responsibility to bring important and interesting
speakers to this campus. The Lindsay program, as far as
logistics and execution were con~rned, was infi nitely
superior to William Kunstler's appearance where it seemed
that everyone but Mr. Kunst ler was on the stage.

In Wednesday's Spectrum, he is quoted as saying
''I envy" ex-Provost Handy because Dr. Handy
·•received a very nice researc h offer ... t hat may
take him overseas."
1 would like to suggest that Student Association
award Dr. Somit a research grant (I would have no
objection to its being even of a "recrea tional
nature") that will take him overseas
far from UB
as we can afford. That would be a disburst&gt;ment uf
the greatest possible benefit to all students, all
faculty , all provosts
indeed, to everybody in our
University communaty who v:~lues acadenll•'
excellcm:e .1nu an utmosphcn• tact ot admtnJ,trallv~o·
coerciOn .

cr«*atials.
The present a dministration 6as sought to alter
this trend. Not only nas Nixon stressed the
imPQI'tance of bigo try as a llualificatio n for reaching
the bencll~ but he has avofdi 3 as much as possible
consideration of men whose legal backgrounds m•ght
meet the approval of so radical an organization as
the American Bar Association. His two initial choices
for the Supreme Co~rt. Hainsworth and Carswell,
had among the worst records in the history of
American jurisprudence.
Last week another of Sir Richard's selections
was forced to withdraw himself from consideration
when it ·became obvious that his personal history of
anti-civil rights activity would prevent his being
approved.

Nuy. \our~.:c' tn anJ 11111 of lh,• admin"tr;lf l~&gt;n
have quill' clearly indicated that dle IIC\1 l•lnlftdal•
will be Senator Rob~rt Hya d ol \\ rst Vir~tllll.l
Senator Byrd has throughout lm ,.,llel'l naJd1.· a hJhll
uf opposing civil rights lcgrslatuH1 and as c;on~1dcrnl
quite conservative. Thi-. in it.,,·lf j, neithcr w• pri~1ng
nor parth:ularly damlllllj! when conshlcring th~.·
qualifications of a nomine: to the court. Certainly.
one must find the prospec t of an anti-civil nghh
court disheartening, but men ha ve been known to
act quite differently as junsts then they hau
previously behaved as politicians. Of co~ rse , Mr
Byrd was o nce a member ol the Klu Klux Klan, but
he has since d enounced that group. One must also
point out that recently d eceased Hugo Black was u
member of the Klan in his yout h , but later becamt:
respected as a defender o f civiJ liberties.
Byrd, however, has never seen the insid e of a
court roo m as a participating lawyer. He has , in fact,
been a lawyer o nl y since 1963. To Richa rd Nixon.
a p p arenll y, the political implications of t h is
a ppointm ent are far mo re imporJant t ha n the quality
of the Supreme Court . If Senator Byrd is a ppoint ed
to the court his place in the Senate will undoubtedly
be taken b y a Republican , sihce the new man will be
an a ppointee of West Virginia Governor Arch Moore,
himself a member of the GOP. Furtherm ore, if Byrd
resigns his seat the governor himse lf will have an
excellent o pportunit y to win the election for t he
Senate in 1972. Thus Nixon can guarantee his party
an ext ra seat in the Senate while satisfying his
so uth e rn Dem ocratic s upporters with the
appointment o f Byrd .
'
Other politic ians have also seen the advantages
to be gained from supporting Mr. Byrd. Georce
McGovern publicly announced that he tbouabt the
West Virpnia ~mocrat mtiht make a_fine justice~
Tlae JRsidentia1 con ender a.cribed his 'riM to
Senator Byrd's « enormous industry and personal
pride." This may be, but un4_oubtedly the possibility
of seein&amp; the _ West Virginia delegation to the
Democratic convention delivered to M.cGovenf
affected the Senator's judgment. That convention
will be faced with a 'eries of liberals, and the o ne
who can capture the Southern deleptes will very
likely capture the nomination.
The Amencan people should not be surprised at
the political pmes beinc played with this
appointment, but they should be outr:aged. Robert
Byrd will probably win the conse.n t of the Senate.
Perhaps the only hope is that be will surprise King
Richard and become a fair-minded, capable jurist.

�.--:

Dog catchers useless
To the Editor:
I read in the "Courier Express" that our
institution is hiring four part-time persons to act as
dog catchers on campus. May I add my comments to
the "breakthrough." Muzzling dogs doesn't prevent
the dogs from urinating and defecating on anything
on campus, including human beings. Also are the dog
catchers able to prevent the dogs from entering
buildings and classrooms? I n other words if you have
the dog leashed or muzzled the dog can enter any
buildings on campus and I presume in Erie County.
You, have to show me to convince me that the dog
problem will be solved by paying dog catchers
money when the state is more and more in the red.
It is a waste of time and money if the dog catchers
•.
have no power.
""'

Jerry Drost
Librarian

Food study useless
To the Editor:
It seems ' to me that a study of Food Service
should deal not only with methods of obtaining "the
best possible quality of fo od and service" but also
the lowest possible prices ... I would think tha t a
com mittee headed by the presi,hmt of the Student
Association might try to do so. Unfo rtunately this
doesn't seem to be the case.
This latest committee's reports is totally Jacki ng
in meaningful mformation. TJH~ wages pa1d out by
Food Serv1 c~ :lie listed in one lump :&gt;um $910.000.
Tilere IS no hteakdo wn in term:. of management and
non-managcmlml wagt', nu1 1s 1t slated how mu ~ h
the top managcm ~ nt personnel rt'l'CIVt:.
Thr ~ect10 n on tln:ft ~:..ys that then: is a theft
ra te nf ove1 10~ 111 th l.' fir~t flpor .:aletctt,J. Th~
l'vidcn~c ~ uppoltl ng this •~ till' tlldt ratl' of fmu
1ICil" . hrnwnws, i•e ..:ream ~anliwlc he\ fresh fruit
and wrappt•ll '&gt;iliHlw1ch~s !l ow mud1 nf the lood
S\·J'Vlt'c hu::.111~'' ~~ 111 thl"'l' ilt"ln-.·! You .an't flnLI out
hy rl'ad1ng thl n•pnrl What ~b ou t lhl' dnnb and hot
pl:llt'~ that it '' 111lpo1&gt;'1hlu to .;hp into Y•ll!r pn~kt•t''
Appar~n tl y the h 10d Service Jnes not , d ) ~.·noll.ll.h of
1h cs~· 1h,ll it would affect tlw rate of thd t.
Tht&gt;n~ is 111.1 hrcakJliWn 1n the 1epo1t .&gt;Hl'O~&lt;I and
ICI UJ n of C,id1 J.J.:llily . fllll '&gt;C pi.Jtt:S that lo1oc lllOIIC)'
(mayh~ the T iffcn Room or f aculty Cluh) 'hould he
discontinued . lnduu cd 111 thll n :purt is a listin~ of
tl1e comparative pnces of boo~rd contrn1:ts in I J
schools Yet there is no ind11:&lt;l t1on of what 1s
provided for that fee . l n..:ompll!le as 11 j., what good
is that information.
Armed with their useless info rmation t he
co m m H tee goes on to make the followmg
recommendations : a 5'.~ increase in prices in the
cafeterias. a 3% increase in board prices, a 5%
increase fo r non-management personnel wages
(200-300 per y~r to those who have to do all the
dirty work) and a 1000 raise in each of the next two
years to the managers.
There are aJso some other great money making
suggestio ns too ridiculous to mentio n and one too
disturbing no t to mention. That is to turn the
Fillmore Room into a beef and aJe ho use during
lunch hours.
'
Food Service already o perates fo ur facilities in
an overcrowded student union. If that isn't enough
for F .S.A . maybe somebody else should be given a
chance.
Until a non F .S.A. group can thoroughly
investigate the Food Service there should be no
increase in prices. And those responsible for the
lastest report should start representing the interests
of those they are supposed to serve or get out of
office.

Dave Steinwald
P.S. If you read th'e report you don't even know the
Faculty Club exists.

Bill to save bears
To the Editor:
In regards to your article concerning the
endangered polar bears, I would ijke to point out
that a bill is presently being considered in Congress
which would offer protection to sea mammals
(whales, seals, and polar bears). This action is beina
sponsored by Representative David Pryor and
Senator Fred Harris. I suggest that everyone
concerned write to their congressmen and make their
views known. Hearings on tha bill besin today,
October 8.
Mellmie Cuulc

Guest Opinion
by Steve Madoff

surrounding the crowd. And every time one of the
big black round eyes turns to the crowd to record
The 11 :201 classes let o ut on Friday and small the moment, you feel silly because you don't want
clusters of sJo,w-moving people happen their way to be in the picture. It's like as if when the guy snaps
into the b iackyatd behind Norton to bear the camera a big long bomb is going to flow out of
Lindsay ... LIN-zee.
the eye and not actually hit any one person but kill
The 12:00 classes let out and in an instant the everyone. And you don't want to be in front of the
backyard i~ converted from a New York subway firing squad.
population at 3 :00 a.m. into a Friday rush hour
LIN-zee starts talking and in the beginning
crowd. Over a1 couple of shoulders you can see there's aU of the young political rebels cballenJing
someone fingetring through a New York magazine him and it's no use because they can hear him but he
a11d just like that your mind is tugged out of the can't hear them and the crowd is in the middle of
upstate campms air and shoved into the tense listening to both.
big..City pusbin1ess.
You can see that LIN-zee knows he's got t he
LIN-zee's late and it's really crowded and really ears because he stands up straighter and speaks
c hilly so you don't care that they supplied some louder and then ... he announces that he's running
guitar players to make you forget that you've been for President. It was so clear. He talks about the
standing for a half-hour. After rubber-banding on c.ountry and then he says bow it's so disgusting for
their guitars, t.hey play and sing and before you the number one nation to become a third rate
realize it you've: been standing for a half-hour.
country. " We must always be the first country in tbe
AIJ of a sudden, your eye focuses on a man in a world,'' he says but it's so clear that what he ac tually
suit and then a not her and before you know it, me n said was, " I am running for the Democratic
in suits hove replaced the musicrnen and the nomination fo r President." That 's aJI it could be; it
dungarees. UN -zee's here any minute you say to
had to be that . Why else would a guy who is here to
talk about Sedita talk about the nation and the
yo urself.
,
Instead of LlN-zec , though , up co mes t his gu y world? Wh y would a guy who's interested in the
who looks like Lumpy from Leave it to B ~:aver to survival of Ius city o nl y talk abo ut the survival of the
talk Jhout I h e ca pitalisrn-radsm ~xploJtatio n country'! Yea, he's running for President.
-workers·bosses that SOS alway!' talks abou t. The
L;IN -,~;ee doesn't stop there. lie figures as long as
guy has a ca n~: which ht&gt; doesn't need except to he's got some young ears he might as weU keep on
arouse pity an d he's got an :.~ ccc nt like a IJbor lcad~.:r going. l· nr .1 lo ng stretch tn t he speech LIN-tee keeps
fto m a Jl'wish tatlnr's un1on . The crowd , wh1ch o n rt:JWat ing the wmd .. power · Twt•nty or thirty
really has a lot of sarcastk class, hurkl' him l)ft t hl'
tun ~ ru~y llt' '"Y~ power, powerful. powerle~s.
fiOUillm Jnd .ln)t nunull' now li N-zcc's h c 1~ .
puwcr-hung1 y 1111· U \t''&gt; o f power. Nixon and power,
f IN·/Cl' ~umc~ u~"'frutll lhl' 11g.ht ~ f :lir~a\c and
pow~r . Pl)Wl'l Now it', l'Vcn mtHl' de;~r No man can
w;alks k·rt lo I he potlium ,;trin gtn~ a whitc-lntt·n:l.l hl' 'IO pJlal ylcd hy u word unlc'&gt;' tl', alway\ tn hts
SC!Iila hch liH.l him anu at first IH? luuks like a llltncl if !w llr~ .1111 ~ Jhl•UI 11 . if h~ ,h:..:p' wllh the
finished jig-saw pu11h' h&lt;·~all~l' t hrrc'lo a I.Jil guy with word Y&lt;"il. lll''" ru1111111g lor l'r~stdl nl
me''} hair in front nf Y&lt;• U .~nd yuu 've 1.:111 ll• luok
Ne;n thl' end ul Ills 'fll't'L.h . \\ htk l IN·/l'l' &lt;;tarts
lhl\tll~h hir. bw.bcs.
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t:1lkmg about hnv.. mud1 he'._ done lu1 the ..:lly and
'l ite tl11ng that &amp;rah' 111 ynUJ gut\ righ t ·"""'YI\ how h n nt'\1 h••', hn·n '"lite guy' 111 I he h :H k .111&lt;.1 on
I hal IIH·n··~ I he LltJWd l)f ma.o;~c!i mum hlin~· Jnd
llw 'illll' .. t.llf ,fwullng thco;.:- qu.:,tiun, at him likt'
rumhling untl Lold ·und cruwd1.· d :1nl.l thctt', 11 1\ 1.n Why hl' ktlk,) flll~t&gt;lll'l'&gt; 111 lht 111Uih V.h) 1\1.• fal\t'd
I 0 to I S teet ahnv~ you anti al .1 dJ~tatll.:c and yo u 'w th~ l;t&gt;,,., and 1h..- \JH·. and wh} 111.· l&gt;u,lcd up
p.ut to :.land on yuur tu~~ a Ill tk to \Cl' hun. II '' llkt• Cohunhl.t Hul I 11'--Jee ,·.~n t hea1 them whil..- he'~
l'Hl l o l th o~c o ld Mussnli nt llr lll tlt•r filn1-; where ll.te~
!.lik ing But tlw 1.1owLI Ill 1ht· 1111dtlk &lt; Jil hedf both
g:~vl· thcs~ ~pced1es way :~hove th l.' !&gt;t:dlung, ro&lt;~ring.
e&gt;ccept th:ll fill' lJU l'\l lonero;' von c' u1~ from far away
t..nlly masses ~ And th ere'\ more.
and it soun ll~ llkl' l i N-zce'c; &lt;.:llll \cience. What an
fhcrc\ DteWaal s tanJing a few fet:t lrnrn effe ct. fherl'·~ LI N·t.et· up then:- ...!touting througll 11
LIN -~c~ wilh his head up high . And 11 woulu tell you
mJ,-ro phone and all t hl· wJy tn thl' hack, very dimly ,
somet hing 1f he wal&gt; wearing .1 s uit or if he wal' the vokcs 'ooulu likt' LIN-lee's ~on~de ncc .
wearing dun gare:es ."But he'~ wc:trang ne1 ther. He's got
And as liN ·t~c finishes hts talk the c rowd
dress pan ts and a neat sweater as 1f he docsn 't know neither daps nor hoos. l'hl.'y JU't walk JW:Jy waiting
whic h side to take.
to hear what the next guy wh o·, runn111g for
There's al:so all the~c guy~ with cameras PresH..knl'has to say.

t

~:;ub

Board

--- ,,

~srepresented

To the Editor:
Your story· entitled, "B.S .U. Rejects Budget
Action," in your September 29 edition has several
inaccuracies and has omitted some pertinent
information .
factually , Sub-Board 1 is not the ''financial
arm" of the :Student Association. Sub-Board is
composed of representatives of all six student
governments, n•ot just the Undergraduate Student
Association. Sub-Board's charge is to fund those
activities that affect students in all six student
1
governments, notab•y the Union Board and student
publication.s (Spectrum, t.t.•e•cwr-.t. ethos, etc.).
~dditionall!r'. the budget granted for Unity :
Phase I wa.s $3,699 .00 rather than the $3,000.00
stated.
The article !Claims that "B.S.U. feels that. a Black
should be appointed to Sub-Board, currently all
white." This is true, in that currently aU the regular
members of Sub-Board are white. Interestingly
though.. during the summer, a blaclc student was
representina the Dental School on Sub-Board, and it
was durina the nummer when the budget for Unity :
Phase twas approved.
Sub-Board, though, has no control over the
members of the Board itself. Th.e six student
governments ap1;&gt;oint representatives to the Board to
represent their constituents. Apin, Sub-Board has

no say as to who sits on the Board.
In the fifth paragraph, l was quoted as saying,
"S.A. couldn't afford the expenditure." I did not say
S.A., but said that SutrBoard I could not afford the
expenditure in light of the fac t that the Student
Governments have given Sub-Board less money (by
over $30,000.00) this year for its operations.
Additionally, a debt of an additional $45 ,000.00
fiom the Athletic Department was paid back last
year, and was used for operating funds . This means
that Sub-Board has approximately $75,000.00 less
to work with t,bis year than last year.
It is intereaW., to note that Unity: P~
requeste4 $34,500, but refute4 to raise any moRey
itself through subacriptions, advertising, or sellina
the paper in the community; even The Spectrum,
who receives an appropriation of about $30,000
raises more than $65,000 on its own . Sub-Board
merely subsidizes such large ente.r prises - it is in Ro
way entirely or totally supportinglbem.
Lastly. Sub-Board feels that its position with
regard to the Unity : Phase l issue was arrived
openly and fairly. Members are always ready to meet
with BSU or any aroup to discuss its policies and
procedures.

at

Marlr. BoretUtein
Bruine11 MafUI.Ier

S,ub·BOtUd /, Inc.

Wednesday, October 13, 1971 . '~'he Spectrum. Page seven

J

-

�Kennedy to visit BUffalo Proposed amendm~nt outlaws
to campaign for Sedita busing to desegregate schools
Sources in the Democratic
party have informed The
Spectrum that Mass. Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy will be in Erie
County on Monday, Oct. 25 to
boost• the Democratic candidacy
of Buffalo Mayor Frank Sedita for
the post . of Erie County
Executive. Sen. Kennedy is one of
the more prominent "radic-Uos"
of the U.S. Senate and is also
frequently mentioned as a 1972
Presidential hopeful, though he
has not yet declared himself a
formal candidate.
Sen. Kennedy's visit will foUow
that of Sen. George S. McGovern
of South Dakota: He will precede
Sen . Kennedy by a. week, visiting
Erie County Monday, Oct. 18,
also to speak on behalf of
candidate Sedita. Sen. McGovern
is famous above all as a long-term
critic of the Vietnam War and has
lately undertaken to make more
widely known his strong liberal
stance on other foreign and
domestic issues. He was an
eleventh-hour Presidential
candidate in 1968 and the first
Democrat to announce his
candidacy for the 1972 election .
There are strong expectations
that both senators will make a
stop at the State University of
Buffalo campus, though their
exact itineraries will not be
known until Friday at the earliest.
Mayor Sedita's opponent in the
County Executive race, Edward
V. Regan, has contended that the
formidable array of Democratic
superstars have come to Erie

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l!'t"

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Hear, 0 Israel
for gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

875-4265

..--Bible Truth-~

~

PURPOSE OF SCRIPTURE.. _
These are wdtten. that ye might '
elieve 1h111 Jes us is lhe Christ the
on or God : and lhal believing ye
might have life through His name."
John 10:31

Lrt Scholl ExerciSe Sandals
SE.I than to Austria!

-,

'

County to vitalize Mr. Sedita's
Assistant GOP leader Sen. Robert P. Griffin introduced last month by Sen. Willfam E. Brock
sagging ima,ge. He charged that -introdu ced a constitutional amendment last would bar all reassignment of pupils because of race.
this parade e&gt;f national figures is a Thursday which would outlaw the busing of children
sign .of the desperation of the to desegregate schools. Griffin's amendment is Pennsylv•lllia landmark
In a 1landmark decision for the education of the
Sedita forc«~s. New York City's worded as follows : "This constitution shall not be
mentally retarded, a federal court decree in
construed
to
require
that
pUpils
be.,.
JlSSi.gned
or
May or Jf o h n Lind S·a y ,
transported to public schools on the basiS of their Pennsylva.nia marks the beginning of free education
ex-Congressman Allard race, color, religion or national origin."
and trainiing ft&gt;r all retarded children in that state.
Lowensteim of New York,
In a Senate speech introducin1 the amendment, Until now , only those children who were tho9ght to
Indiana's Sen. Birch Bayd and the Griffin said: "When a court orders long-distance be educatable by local school boards were given an
former U.S, Senator from New busing of children because they are black or because education,.
Under the new system, the state education
York , Chnrles Goodell, have they are white, the court disregards and ignores the
already conne to Buffalo and fundamental truth - two wrongs do not make a departme1~t will be required to plan an individualized
surrounding areas for the Sedita right. Whatever the sins of their fathers, program for each child after identifying and
campaign. A Democratic unreasonable punishment ought not to be imposed evaluating: the child within the next 90 days. Parents
spokesman, when confronted with upon the children of a new generation who are guilty will have the right of appeal on a program for the
this allegatio1n, countered: "What of nothing but being born black or white. Racial child. EdtJCation for retarded children of pre-school
discrimination is no less discriminatory just because age was &lt;llmitted under the old plan, but under the
would Mr. Regan say to Brother
new one, school districts with regular pre-school
it is court-ordered."
Agnew's $1100-a-plate dinner up
Griffin continued his speech with: "If we really programs must provide trainthg for the retarded.
here?" refe·rring to the very want more racial harmoney and an integrated Many of the retarded children will now attend
political affa1ir held for the Vice society, common sense suggests that we will not regular cla1sses with "normal" children.
President and Mr. Regan during achieve these goals by increasing racial tensions and
Gov. Milton J. Scbapp said the decision will
the former's stop-over in the area by accelerating the flight from the cities to the "end the warehousing of the mentally retarded in
suburbs and beyond." A constitutional amendment institutions."
last week.

The smart legs are stickin~ with us this winter.
We'll not only shape up your legs, we'll send
thern to lnnsbruck if you win our drawing. You and a
friee~d. Relaxing in your Scholl Sandals-after shussing
down the slopes or ski·bumming around the town.
You'll be wearing Scholl Sandals this winter. Just like
the ,Austrians, Germans, European skiers everywhere.
The~r wear Scholl Sandals the year 'round. {After all,
greatt leg are never out of season.)
Scholl Sandals ·have the exclusive toe-grip that
help1s .tone and shape up your legs-whether you're a
skier or not. And they give you a sense of comfort you
havo to experience to believe.
So put on your kneesocks and
knickers' and buckle Into your
Scholl Sandals.
It could be one beautiful winter. exercise sandals

First Prize:

2·week trip for winner arud friend to lnnsbruck, Austria.

10.Seconcl Fnzes:

pair of Hart Javelin SSL Sikis, plus a pair of Scholl
Exercise Sandals.

SO Third Pri~res:
pair of Scholl Exercise Sandals.

lHTRT RULES: O.t ,our entty lolank at an,. Scholl. S.ndal d lo 1 1 d
drue or thoe atorea.. Or prl"t the Word • ''Sc'-OU l•erclse S..nder.'~ 1w,;-.. r~~~'!t";~:~
Ja5 cent. Set11d to : Scholl Auatttan Contett, P.O. Bo• 7965,
rst· Pr1ae wTh,ner •ncS trfend to be ·~•"' to lnnaltruclr, Audrie or u .s ski r eaott or
l kfl
ne1r C11 otce.. oUt e~pena•a not to ••c:eed SSOOO for two.
'
•
Eftlrleo m1111 be IH,.Imarked br mlcln,lghl, Dec. 15, 1t71. Or awing Will be held Oec.
!~i 'n'r1
toe 1
of a1e n over. Emplo~. .a of Scholl. Inc, and tamlllea
of dia.!ln •wm ~:1f:ai.' be choMn b., Independent and ltnparUal Jio~dt••· Retutts

2:?;:,~71ui::f,·~~

t7" ;rst

f ,..,.

No pwrc\eM neceaury. Vol .. where ptoh lbUad b., l•w AU prfzea wUI be awetded
!:~:abiJI~ on allt•l1•u wiiiM tile lull reaponallollll~ olwlnnera. Enll'J i n con leal con:
•• " perm It on to ••lt:tlfah ftlm l• l, eddrestea, e"d photot of winners wlthou1
lurt
her c o mpenuuon. Your tltnetur ~ r.,dtc•t•• you hawoe read end understood the
ru 1•• o1 111 • eonteat..
•,
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Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday, Octo1ber 13, 1971
/

�Golf Bull place second
in R~gional Tournament
EAU CLAIRE, WIS. - Attorneys for cartoonist
AI Capp met last Thursday with District Attorney
lawrence Durning and agreed that Capp would
appear there this week to f!lce charges stemming
from an incident last May involving a 20-year-old
married coed. The creator of "Li'l Abner" Is due to
make his appearance in court to be uraigned on
charges of sodomy, attempted adultery and indecent
exposure. These charges were filed by an Eau Claire
State University co-ed who aUeged that Capp made
indecent· advances toward her in his hotel room
during an interview she was conducting with him.
Capp failed last week to appear at an extradition
hearing in Boston, his residence, and was therefore
declared in default by the court.

by Bruce EnaeJ
Spectrum Staff M-Iter

The amazing Bull linlcsmen did
it again last Saturday. In a field of
28 teams Buffalo placed second,
in o ne of the four ECAC ReJional
tournaments. This qualifies the
Blue for next Saturday's finals at
Coo perstown . Buffalo will
compete with seven other schools
for the team title. In addition, Jim
M oh~n. whose average round o f
75 is best on the squad, has
qualified for the individual title
competition. Mahan shot a 75
over the tough Northern Oaks
Golf Club in Hamilton, N.Y. This
was just two strokes behind
BUFFALO - A ne9v recycling project called winner Wayne Levy from Oswego
"Cash for Trash" has been started in Buffalo this State.
year. The project, funded by the Coalition for a
The Bulls' four-man total o f
Better Environment (base:d at the State UniversitY
330 w~ second only to Oswego, .
CoiJege of Buffalo), Marine Midland Western and the• which shot 319 as a team .
National Wildlife Association, will concentrate on Syracuse and Siena tied for third
buying glass and aluminum from the community for at 334. After Mohan, the Buffalo
recycling. "Cash for Trash" will be open two days scorers were Chuck ·Prorok (83),
during the week, Tues&lt;by and Saturday, which Dale Dolmage (85) and John Lanz
correspond to the regular trash coUection days in the (87).
area.
Tomorrow Buffalo should
The objectives of the project are three-fold: it complete an undefeated dual meet
hopes to alter household habits in regard to 16 - 0 season by defeating
recycling; have the project ultimately taken over by Fredonia State. The Bulls have
community businessmen or service clubs on a already defeated Fredonia rather
profit-making basis; generate statistical data to be soundly this season.
considered by the Common Council in regard to
Harriers lose
establishing o ther such centers in Buffalo.
While the golf team was
The project will be lc&gt;cated in the Community playing in Hamilton, the cross
Service Center, 1490 Jeff1erson Ave., and will open cou ntry Bulls were running
for operation this Saturday. FoJ: further information around the golf course across the
street in Grover Cleveland Park .
please call 8624458 or 8811·3965.
This wu lhe second home meet

WASHINGTON - A bill introduced into the
Senate last Friday would outlaw private ownership
of pistols and revolvers after giving citizens 180 days
to sell their weapons to the government for a fair
price. After that period of time, "any unauthorized
person with a handgun in his possession would be
subject to a jail term of five years and/or a maximum
fane of $5000." Those persons who would be
authorized to have ··guns would be the military
police, target shooting clubs and antique gun
collectors.
SAN FRANCISCO - Black Panther leader Huey
Newton is back home and ready to' stand trial on
charges of slaying a policeman. Newton, who spent
ten days in Communist China with Elaine Brown,
Panther information minister, and his personal
bodyguard, Robert Leonard Bay, said he made the
trip to "petition" Mao Tse-tung pn behalf of " the
oppressed people of the world." He predicted that
Nixon would receive a " hospitable" welcome when
he visits China, but said he "felt liRe I was retu~ning
to prison" by coming back to the U.S.

for the Bulls. The times were
slightly slower than the fnt meet
due to a strong wind. However the
results were much the same u the
Bulls went down to Brockport
State 23-36.
As before tbe Bull barriers
were just too spread out, as
Brockport had eiaht runnen finish
before Buffalo's fifth 111an pused
the line. This pushed the Bulls'
score up considerably. Jf Buffalo's
fourth and fifth men could have
stayed closer to the Bulls' front
runners, tt would have been a
much tighter contest.

Unsurprisin&amp;IY, Jim McClurkin
was the first Bull to finish the
race. Jim continued a ftne aeaaon
with a close second place flnish,
McClurkin Jtad been right behind
the leader (Brockport's ChriS
Weber) starting from the half-way
point of the race. But with about
one mile left , Weber opened up a
I 0- 15 yard lead and never let go.
Both Larry Krajewski and Bob
Gower had quick starts for
Buffalo, but feU back: slightly in
the second half of the race , and
they held on to fourth and
seventh respectively.
The Bulls' fourth scorer,
Dennis Meka, was 37 seconds and
fo ur places oack of Gower.
Finishing out the Bulls' scoring
was Bruce Tuttle in 13th. Meka,
after a good week of practice, was
handicapped with a bad head
cold, while Tuttle was tired after a
long drive in order to malce the
race.

AT&amp;T take action

Crackdown o~tphone ji'feakfii
Attention all Phone Phreaksl
Ma Bell is reported to be on the
lookout for you in an effort to
cut down o n the amount of
money lost to American
Telephone and Telegraph each
year. (Okay everybody, let's have
one big, long cry for AT&amp;T. Sob.
Sob.) T he " Phreaks" have
developed a n und e rground
toll-free telephone network that
circles the globe and incurs losses
to poor Ma to the tune of
$500,000 a year. This loss, of
course, is comparable to most of
us losing one d ollar.
In recent months a number of
arrests have curtailed the action of
the Phone Phreaks. In addition,
say they, AT&amp;T has managed to
stifle their style by shutting off
some of the more complicated
methods they use to make
to ll-fr ee calls from pay stations
anywhele in America to Moscow,
Paris or just across the United
States. But this had not lessened

the enthusiasm, and business
being business, the pbreaks are
still at it, after ten years. Not only
are the professionals still in
business, but the amateurs are
beglnning to manage to "rip-off"
free long d istanCe calls by devices
that are simpler than the blue
boxes and multiple frequency
tone generators to Phreab use.
Everyone into the .act
C hi se ltng businessmen ,
bookmakers and even college kids
are gettina into the act, duping
l o ng di stance operators into
putting through supposedly paid
calls by using a tape recording
whic h imi tates the correct
combination of change dropping
into a pay phone's coin box.
An ATA:T spokesman,
responding to· the question of
" Why the crackdown now?" said:
"In the first place it was, for a
long time, next to impossible to
catch them. Secondly, the public

~~~"?.s~w:'·~;~{!

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I

ACHoCiALiiiGiOi

CONCERT .

notion that the Phone Phreaks
and otber chiselers are stealing the
telephone companies blind simply
isn't true. They are more a
nuisanc:e, but we now are
prosecuting them as a matter of ,
principlo."
Actunlly, more money is lost
each ycear simply because of
inability to service pay phones
because of a lack of skilled
manpower. Hither the pay phones
are out of order or, as happens
occasionally, the coin boxes
cannot be emptied fast enough
and pe(1ple wishing to use the
phone ar'e unable to.
In a recent Esquire magazine
article, some unidentified Phone
Phreaks boasted that as few as
three o'f them could tie up the
entire llong distance telep~one
system of the United States if
they so chose. A Bell spokesman
respon s~:? "Plain nonsense and
fantasy ."' Anyone want to try?

..... •"'"" J- 4ft ,....,........... S.C..nd
.,.,,.. • ,..H yeo, onlr 1c. ... _ . , _

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Thursday Oct. 2
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and
THE PINCUSHINES

If you bave decided to t•mlnate
your pre&amp;naiiCJ we can help you.
( Abdtns nlelalln New Yort Stafe
. . residency is 11ft fiQtlil'aU.
We wort on aSTRJCTtYCONADENTIAL
basis and tlln Is NO R£RRtW. FtE

·1c SALE
PR~ICE

BARBARA ST. CLAIRE

PREGNANT?

" INIILIIVAILII

Featuring Bat McGrath 11d Don Potter

0t1 Mle
....... ecctCJtecl

.A's

INO COIH'ON IIOUIIID

"TOG'ETH:E'R"

Tldlets

Mr.

off Main 8t Amhent
(In Central Park Plaza)
present1

WOMEN'S
ORIENTATION CENTER

...,.....,

.., c.tral Put . . .

.

Stet'-

Wednesday, October 13, 1971. The Spectrum . Page nine

..

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�il '

SOCcer Bulls drop

Students in action

lntramurals going stron~g
intramurals will beain Oct. 14.
Volleyball intramural teams must
have their entries in by Oct. IS,
The intramural program bas with the opening date Oct. 18.
been gathering momentum right Intramural handball entries should
from the beginning this year. The be in Oct. 21 and action will
few obstacles that have arisen commence Oct. 26. There will be
have been tackled easily. With another jog-in Saturday morning
little else holding it back, the Oct. 23. Remember,. the best way
intramural programs are running to work off Friday night's
well, and promising additions are · munchies is running. If you don't
knocking at the door. If you want to get fat, and you can't do
happen to know the password without the munchies, come on
(which will be secretly revealed down. Grand prix entries are due
presently as "can I play too'?' or
Oct. 19, and the race will be held
even "may 1'!'), you too can open
Oct. 23. A tug of war will take
the door. That's as easy as pla1=e Oct. 30; entries should be in
kreaking into a dormitory room by Oct. 26. The annual turkey
trot will take place Nov. 18; have
and that's not even a challenge.
The chairman of the women's entries in by Nov. 16.
physical education department,
Basketball intramurals will
Miss Viola Diebold has introduced
have a new structure this year. A
badmiton to Buffalo. Padminton
team will enter for two half'
wiJJ be held every Tuesday
seasons. The winner of the fall
evening at 7 :30 in the main Clark
seaSon will play off with the
Gym. Even if you can't tell a
winner of the spring season. If
badminton from a good one,
you start slowly, you can still
come down. Don't be shy. This is
make amends. Get out there and
for 'tveryone. If there are any
start those lay-up drills. Entries
experienced badmintoners, there
are due Oct. 22, and the season
will be competition for you too.
beams Nov. 1.
The women are also offering co-ed
Attentio.n ! (that is done
bowling Wednesday eve)lings at
5:30p.m. Come down by yourself periodically, just to make sure
or with your own team. As one you're still listening). Results of
with a ~it might anticipate, this year's tennis intramurals are
bowling will be held at the Norton in. In a weU run tournament, Dan
bowling alley.
Henkeath defeated Art Schick ,
6 - 3, 6 - 4. It's a good thing Rod
Laver wasn't around because he
Other events
There are many other would have been wooped too. The
forthcoming events. Gotf doubles was taken by Or. Hanstn

by Mike Zweia

Speclnlm Sllzlf Wrl/6

and Lieb~~rman, bestin&amp; Coie and
Viet. Aw;uds wili be pven at a
future date.

FootbaU raults
Here ue some of the football
results )rou jocks have been
waiting tor. The complete and
updated utandinp are posted in
the gym. As of last Friday, each
of the eiJ]ht divisions is headed by
an undefeated team. Leading the
Monday (3:30) group is a tightly
knit and cat-like team, the
Penthouse Revival with a 2- 0
record. The Monday (4:30)
division Jhu two leaders: the
Invaders ;rnd the Bunners have
posted 2 - 0 records. The Ellicott
Greek Wh:ips are 3- 0 leading the
. T uesday (3 :30) group. The
Tasmanian Devils are also
•tbreateninlg to run away with it as
they are 3·- 0 in the 4 :30 group on
Tuesday. The Wednesday (3 :30)
group is l.e d by the Humans G.
Schneider, both 3- 0. Spring Lake
Spa lead the Wednesday (4 :30)
group at 3·- 0.
In the dorm leagues, the sixth,
eleventh 1and fourth floors of
Tower Ha,JJ arc tied with 3 - 0
records, wlhereas in Goodyear, the
rugged nh1tth floor may have an
easy ride as they have sole
possession of first place with a
3 - 0 recoi'd . A constructive
suggestion for the teams that are
having some trouble: being that
games are generally played on
relatively slippery fields, the next
time it rains, call for a practice. ·

match
to
ECC
Kats
o.ve
. by

Gerinaer

SpectrUm Stt11f M-116

They say that tho early bird
gets the worm, and ECC played
the part of the early bird last
Friday aftem.x&gt;n. They struck for
three goals early in the first period
and then held on for a 4- 3
victory over the Bulls Soccer Club·
in the game at ECC.
"The pme was lost in the first
IS minutes, when they• scored
their first three goals," remarked
Coach Bert Jacobsen. "They have
a small field, so it's easy for them
to move the ball into our zone.
That, alohg with the fact that too
many of our defensive players
'were standing around, opene&lt;t .the
door for their goals. Willie Wood
was taking too long to commit
himself on their shots that went
in. We really should have beaten
them. We dominated the game
after the first quarter, but our
offense hail trouble punching the
goal in."
Buffalo ejections
The coach also mentioned that
be thought the outcome might
have been different had the Bulls
not lost their two most effective
forwards, Alex Torimiro and Kola
Oseni, due to ejections. The Bulls
had just pulled to within one goal
of the Kats (3- 2) when Torimiro
exchanged blows with Erie's top
scorer, inside right Tom Schratz.
Torimiro was immediately given

the thumb by the referee. The ref
claimed to have milled the punch
thrown by Schratz. Kola Oaeni
got the heave-bo a mome.n t later
for usinc profanity v1bile
protesting his teammate's
ejection. The double ejection
severely weakened the Bulls
offense.

The coach declined to .
comment on the officiatinc a(ter
the game, an action that was
prompted by a few other strange
decisions by the two refs who
worked the contest. The Bulls, ·
trailing 3 - 1, had apparently
closed the gap by tallying on a
shot by Kola Oseni, as it was ruled
that the ball h&amp;d been caught over
the goal line by ECC goalkeeper
Jack Brown. As the Kats were
preparing to kick off following
the score, the referee decided to
reverse his decision. He instead
granted the Bulls a J)enalty kick
on the grounds that the ball had
been handled by a member of the
Erie squad inside the penalty area.
Later, with the Bulls down by
4- 3, center forward Adedoyan
Kuti was tackled , football-style ,
by Brown as he broke in on the
goal. The officials somehow also
missed that play.
The BuJls will be home this
afternoon for the first time at 3
p.m. as they take on the Fredonia
State JV squad. Following today's
match, the Bulls play the Buffalo
Soccer Club at home on Saturday
before hitting the road again.

t

•

Hot Shit!

.HOT .T rJNA •
acoustic!
electric!
cosmic!

.-e
'\

-~

~~~

0

,

cO tfJ~

~~

-~

H 0 UR S

Mon.- Fri.

10:00-3:00
(Friday a little later)

.NORTON HALL BASEMENT
Page ten. The Spectrum. Wednesday, October 13, 1971

�ILIIIIPIII '
WANTED
VOt..KSWAOEN ei1glne needed. 1500
cc or larger. Any condition.
Clll Stu 111· 1982.

PART-TIME supervisor for Buffalo
Teen·age Jewish Youth Program. BA.
Gro up work expetlence/MSW
ca nd l date preferable. Call
315-446·9379 or 315-4464985 for
Interview.
HOYT Helpers Wanted. Volunteers to
work In Delaware District Councilman
William B . HoYt's cam paign. C all
884-4323.
1 WOULD like to buy the book for
Hebrew 191 called Hebrew Basic
Course. Please call Barb 833·9440.

ANYONE wno has bicycle to sell, for
about $50, call Bob Klein 833·7659.

FOR SALE
1968 TRIUMPH Excellent condition .
Must sell. 29,000 miles. Best offer over
$1000. Callll86·3633.

THREE beiiUtlful f•mete ullco k l t t (two long heir) eight wHkt old. FtN
to good homes . Clll 885-4501
evenlngf.

you an stand the cold. 835. Clfl M•rk,
814-6474.

PERSONAL

SKI BOOTS Hum1nlc 11z1, 1011111 yur
old, chap, ski pan~. 876·2809.

SAAB, 1965 60,000 miles plus. 3
cylinder, R" H. Old but hll ch•racter.
Good tri.J'SQOrtatlon, 8300. 1177·1784
1fter 6:00.

RITA• Sorry we couldn't make It last
WHkend. SH lfl soon. Your loving
brother, Eddie.

1969 VW radiO tape player, 37,000
miles. Best offer. Mult Sell. 632·5354.
1968 TRIUMPH Spitfire, brg luggiige
r1ck, snows, good condition. Call
837·0115 anytime. A good dul,
VOt..VO 1225 being dlsm1ntled for
parts. B 16 0
engine with 6·volt
etectncs. M-4 &lt;4--speed trans., suts,
glass, etc. Bill Thompson 458A
Allenhurst. 837-4647 evenings.

I
1962 OLDSMOBILE, 65,000 miles,
TEST for Psych 223 last semester, . good mechanical condition, autom•tlc
cnlld lind adolesence. Evenings
transmlulon; power steering, brakes,
882-3458. Urgent!
mounted snows Included, Great
transportulon : $250 negotiable.
A SHORT cqurse In C•lcutus (second
837-1617 or 831 ·4113 ask f or Mickey.
edition). D~perate. 759·8859, John.
REFRIGEIItATORS, stoves and
NEEDED despetafi1'y for Independent
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
school of Buffalo - 11 typewriter •nd
guaranteed, O&amp;G Appliances, 844
pnonograph free. Call Jim 1181.0350.
SYcamore, TX4·3183.

EXPERIENCED people to work IBM
composing EQuipment, paste·up or
pnoto·typosltlng. Ptease contact Jim at
1131 ·4 113 or come up to The
Spectrum, Room 355 Norton.

A SERIES of diKulllonsetttllled "0.1.
ourdJieff" will 1M neld every MCHIPV

· - l n t from 1-9•30 tn Room 22
Foster Hill. Tl\e lnltlll 4tKulllon wtll
RIOE w•nt8d from South Buffllo on
ta1&lt;1 piKe Oc;t. 11.
M ·T·W·F, first c1111, 1 •00- will share
expen-. Clll 124-5143.

11ns opening, excelltnt condition. 145.
Clll 131-4317, Joe.

l NEEO 4 ambitious males and 1
t'tmale to help with the harvesting of
Christmas t r - In my Pllntatlons In
the beautiful Slox Mountain R•nge In
Northern Pennsylvlnlil. Fem.le
expected to cook &amp; kHp house.
Tr•nsportatlon supplied •long with
room ,. bolrd plus hourly Wilge.
Departure approxlmltely pet. 25th,
returning Nov. 23. Abund•nce of 111
speetes of wildlife to provide an
unforgettable experience with nature.
Write Box 89 giving all particulars.

--15. llteturn Sunct.v nttnt, Oct. 17.
Mond•Y oct. 11. u•.o562.

Tl RES - 2 snows 6.50·13, rims. 4
regular tues, 6.00·13. Best offer. Call
Ted. 832·9731.
--------------SOLIGOR 1 degree Spot meter, two
months old, $100. Now. Asking $65.
Call Peter 8314214.
1965 MUSTANG good condition,
$450. Call Rosenfeld 837·2259.
1971. PEUGEOT - sliver ll&lt;terlor red bucket seats. Excellent condition.
633·5395.
WINTER COAT; rich brown~fake
pony fur. Newest style - still shown In
stores this year. Immaculate cond ition.
Size 13/1 4 . $60. Call 876·9175 alter 6
p.m .
RAMBLER 1964 - must sell, $250.
Good mechanical condition. Has snow
tires . Ask for Serafin. 741 -3110.
SPORTS CAR, studded snows, one
season old, 5 .6G-14 ( 155SR- 14),
White wall, tubes, $50, Dennis
874·3906.

BROWN muskr•t fur coat; na..turill
cashmere COillt; red wool colt; two
wool suits; Jacket dreu. 1173-8199.
1962 CHEVV Station wagon. Good
con dition, new tires, 8150. Mike
876·0256.
35mm Flt..M Slle. PAN·&gt;&lt;, plus-X,
TR I·X, Ektachrome 64 ASA,
Ektachrome 160 ASA, Incredibly tow
prices. Call 873·7164.
VOLKSWAGEN Bus, 1968, body
excellent, mechanically perfect, radio,
taking offers. Call 873-1164.
1963 vw. Newly rebuilt engine, new
front-end, "ew generator, carburetor,
clutch, etc. Best reasonab le offer.
Sandy. 837·2565 .

ROOMMATE WANTED
$46 per montn. Own room. Main &amp;
Ferry area. Call 835·9217.
FEMALE roommate wanted. Own
room In furnlsheO apartment.
$53.33/mo. Includes utilities. Tacoma
and Colvin. C all Lyn or Marge
871-6057 . Available Oct. 15.
DESPERATE! Need one female
roommate. Te"·mlnute walk from
campus. $55/month Includes utilities.
Ca ll 837-9014. Ask for Pat or tuve
message.
WANTED
Roommo~te(s)
with
apartment to share or roomm•te(s) to
look with. Call Robert 896·5 709.

APARTMENT FOR RENT

1971 SUZUKI T S-125R Ouster,
Yellow, 1000 mi. Jim 883·5435 .
1960 PEUGEOT 403. Good engine,
weak clutch, bad heater. Runs well If

RIDE NEEDED: N .Y.C. Friday, Oct.

MtNOLTA camlfa 35 mm, automatic

ANY organization holding a dance Oct.
30th, expecting 1 group, called Ell, call
627·3639 or 627·3603.
COUNTRY OilY Nursery School, 6320
Main St., Williamsville, has openings
for 3 and 4-year -o ld clllldren,
9 : 15- 11 : 15, 12:45- 3•00. s days. The
school Is non -profit, lntegratea,
llcen'sed, a unique program. Call
634-9221 f o r Information.
HAPPY Blrtnoay little Sally Wallens.
Abuse taker commencement gatnerar
good friend. Love, 1Fran, Kay, Ll"da.
OUR foreign car repairs last - we
guara"tee It, ln&lt;tependent, 839·1850.

TYPIST - part·tlme, afternoons end
weekends. Speed of 60·70 •pm
necessery. C&amp;H Jones PYofesslonel
Typing Service. Phone 837-6558.
ANYONE who has experience worktne
IBM Composing EQuipment, pnt..up
mater1111 or a photo-typosltor, p i contact Jim at The Spectrum offiCe or
Cilllll31-4113.
EARN extra money In your sp•r• time
selling top Quality French pantlhose.
Call 837·2259.
TVPING Clone In my home. 8'33·1597.
TYPING, experienced, near u.s., $.40
per page. 834·3370. Fast service.
TYPING done. 833·8236. Will pick up
work.

everyman's book store, Inc.
3102 Main Street

BEAUTIFUL handmade gold and silver
jewelry - wedding rings - at sensible
prices. J.P. The Goldweaver, 655
Elmwood at Ferry St ., 881·3400.

Open weekdays: 11 til 7,
except Thursday, 12 - B._,.
Saturday, 1 1 til 5.

._ ....._MISCELLANEOUS
C&amp;H JONES Professional Typing
Service, computerized IBM eoulpment
pl us our experience give best possible
presentations of dissertations, thesis,
term papers, resumes and employment
application letters. Located betwe11n
two campuses. Very reasonable. Call
837-6558.
VOLUNTEER wa"ted to Orlve CAC
van. Contact Tedd In CAC office or
call 831-3609.

An interesting selection of
meaningful books, chess Sets,
an cards, etc. Special orders.
Browsers welcome.
837-8554

B37-8554

LOST &amp; FOUND
FOUND: Gold ring In third f loor ladles
room In Norton. Supply Information
and It's yours . Con tact Spectrum
office, 831-4113.

LIVE In studtoes In Art Complex
$50 per month - call 9 a.m. 886·3616.
Art maJors only.

ONE C)oiS dryer, perfect condition. Only
$10. Must pick It up. Call 824-5143.

WILL WHOEVER broke Into • locker
at Ct1rk Gym S unday evening pluse
return my wallet Intact to S pectrum
office. KHP everything else. No
QUestions asked.

RIDE BOARD

Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics

GET A BETTER

GRADE--------~

Compositions- Bookreports - Term papers CORRECTED
We will correct your grammatical errors. - We will make all
corrections on your *aft, and return it to you. YOU recopy it.
Write on one side of a sheet.
Write on avery other line.
Write name &amp; address on each page.
Endose a self-addressed
Cut out this ad...SAVE IT!
stamped envelope.
Semc:e ntes: $2.00 minimum ...up to 1000 words $1.00 for
•ch eddition~l 300 words.
Send to:
P.O. Box 259, laSIIIe Station
An:en Writing Services, Inc.
Nilgan Fills, N.Y.14304

.r•L~1\\\14 ;S1\\~\Q.

~~-~m)\tl\4t ~
Ll fiQQ nain :Street At l\6l'le.lft
-,-,
-.u
'~ tne
W
lecl\.\lilv.ge,_rna~ Y ~
'----::-: UND - ONE STOP GIFT SHOP
U'RE YEAR RO

2 aut of the last 3 Presidents
invited us to teach ~ur Speed Reading Course
ta members af the Whitt Hause Staff.
EWRD has been ta:.t~t to the
White House staffs of Presi·
dents Kennedy and Nixon;
Senators Proxmire,~. Ted Ken·
nedy, Ribicoff, ;,yminatO(I
and thousands of people tn
politics, the arts, business and
profeSSional life and ...thou·
sands of students.
These students have found a
way to free themselves from
homework drudgery and get
better Qrades. too. We can
teach you how to do hours
of homework in minutes by
increasing your reading s~d,
concentration and note takmg
abilities.
We have arr&amp;~lged for a free
mini-lesson to prove, in one
fascinating hour, that you can
read ~t a faster rate-that Y.OU
can 1ncrease your reading
speed right then and there-that ota reading methods
don't appl)' any more.
Attend the mini·le$SOn that's
convenient ~r you . It should
be worth an tlour of youf
time to sav"l thousands.

ATTEND ONE OF THESE FREE MINI- LESSONS
at our
BUFFALO INSTITUTE

3606 Main St.
(Next to Buffalo Textbook Store)

•Worldwide lmporu •MobUa •
•Gourmet Kitchen Wue •Paper Shades ·• Soaps •
•Decorator Candles •Giuswue • Games •Stationary

Open ~on.-Fri. 10- 9, Sat. 10- 5:30
839-2SS8
SUNOA Y I - S
839-2SSS

WKIIW AND BUFFALO fESTIVAl preMnl

£AT STEVENS
with MtMI FA'RINA &amp; TOM JANS
Saturday, October 30 at 8,:30 P.M.

KLEIIHAIS MUSIC HALL
All S.ots lteaerved: Mol" floor $6.00·$5.00; 8olco"y $5.00.$4.00
Tidoolt

Ofl solo now ot l01ffolo f•ativol Ticket OHico, Stot ... ·HIIton Lobbw
(m~il 01cl•n o«oplecl with tlampecl telf-oclcltollecl envelope); U. I . Nort..,
Holl; S•••• C.lle. . Tldoot Office; fall• lidlet AeO'nq, Nloearo follt.

Today, Oct. 13 at 1 p.m. or 3 p.m.
Thurs. Oct. 14 at 7 p.m. or 9 p.m.
Fri. Oct 15 at 7 p.m. or 9 p.m.
Sat. Oct 16 at 11 a.m. or 1 p.m.
Mon. Oct 18 at 1 p.m. or 3 p.m.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL
WARREN WALDRON AT 837-2823

IUffAlO NmVAl fH'eiMita:

ROBERTA
FLACK

Sunday, Oct. 17, at 7:30 P.M.
Kleinhans Music Hall
All Seats Reserved: $6.00 $5.00 $4.00

r!Ckm Otl . . . . ~tow ot kffolo Fettlwol Tlckel Office, Statler-Hilton
(•oil or4ore eccepto4 wl" atantpo4 ,.,••..,• ....., ......_); u.a.
Moll; St- Cell. .e Tlcbf Office; oil Avdrew &amp; Del'• ••cortl Storet.

L~r

..,.,...,

Wednesday, October 13, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

(

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�- ----.::-- =-

~

-

Sporh Informatlon

WBFO Programme Notes
Wednesday, Oct. 13
5 p.m. All Things Considered - people, news,
music and the best in radio from National Public
Radio in Washington, D.C.
6: 15 p.m. Concert Hall - with john farrell.
Boccherini : Concerto in B flat for Cello ' and
Orchestra. Weber: Concerto for Clarinet No. 1.
Bruckner : Symphony 'No. 4 in E flat
"Romantic."
8 p.m. Boston S.ymphony Orchestra Concert
William Steinberg conductor. Bee~hoven :
Leonore Overture No. 3. Strauss: Also Sprach
Zarathustra. (News during intermission.)
Brahms : Symphony No.2 in D, Op. 73
10:30 p.m. Crossroad in Time - a radio profile of
the Athabascan Indians: ''Village life Before
and After the White Man."
Thursday, Oct. 14
I p.m. All My Trials - folk music with Leza Mesiah .
6: 15 p.m . Concert Hall - with Madeleine Kaufman.
Handel : Zadok the Priest. Mozart : Concerto No.
5 in A for Violin and Orchestra. Reed : La Fiesta
Me.xicana. Gilbert : Dance in the Place Congo.
Chavez: Sinfonia India. Villa- Lobos: Bachianas
Brasi leiras No. 5.
8 p.m. Interface - an informal conversation with
University President Robert L. Ketter. Listeners
may phone 831 ·5393 with questions which Dr.
Ketter will answer on the air.
10 p.m. Book Beat - with Robert Cromie, book
editor of the Chicago Tribune (radio version of
the award winning television program) .
10:30 p.m. The Urban Trap - a dialogue o n one of
the world '~ greatest problems.
Friday, Oct. lS
1 p.m . The lonely Dragster - with Billy Altman
8 p.m. The Esoteric Phonograph - with Steve
levinthal ; Czech Symphonies of the Classical
Era.
9 p.m. Got The Blues - " Blues, Black and White " attempts to come to grips with the
contemporary music S&lt;:ene and the place of
blues in the world of modern music.
Saturday, Oct. 16
2 p.m. Art Makes The Waves - Jesse Nazaret
2:30 p.m. The History of Classical jazz - Charlie
Smith
4:30p.m. The Poet's Corner
6:30 Latin Serenade - Marcy Rodriguez and Tino
Mejia
Sunday, Oct. 17
2 p.m . The Music Salon - with Sheryl Kessner
Songs of Purcell
3 p.m. The World of Opera - with David Karpoff.
Verdi : Falstaff
7 p.m. Listener's Choice - Buffalo's only classical
music request program. To make requests, call
831-5393 or write WBFO, 3435 Main St.,
Buffalo, N.Y . 14214. Your host is David
Karpoff.
11 p.m . jazz is Live and Well - very well, thank you,
with a fall jazz festival brought to you live from
the Revilot in downtown Buffalo
Monday, Oct. 18
6:15 p.m. Concert Hall - with Richard Malawista .
Chavez: Piano Concerto. Rachmaninoff: Sonata
in B flat. lves: Largo for Violine, Clarinet and
Piano. Schumann : Piano Concerto in A, Op. 54
8 p.m. Quodlibet - The music for Bach
9 p.m . Music Tomorrow - with Christine Frank and
Walter Gajewski.
10 p.m. The King of Instruments - Wilma Reid.
Cipolla, o rgani st, Bach: Christ log in
Todesbanden, Distler : Sonatina No. 1, Op. 18,
Langlois: Chant de Pai.x, Preston : Alleluyas.

-. Backpage

Monday : Club soccer home opene~s. Fredonia
State, 3 p.m. on the practice field behind Rotary
Field.
Tomorrow: Varsity golf at Fredonia, 1 p.m .;
women's tennis at the University of Rochester.
S;aturcby: Club soccer vs. Buffalo Soccer Club, 1
p.m., Rotary practice field; varsity cross-country
witb R IT and LeMoyne, 11 a.m., Grover Cleveland
golf ,c;ourse; varsity golf at the ECAC finals,
Cooperstown, N.Y.; fall varsity baseball
doubh,header at Brockport.
S1t.10day: Varsity baseball at Brockport, 1 p.m.
Roller hockey : Action will resume Sunday
morni1ng at 10:30 a.m. Due to the law boards on
Saturdlay many of the shinny stars cannot make It on
Saturday. See Snoopy lead his all-stars in action.
R~ecreational
badminton for beginners and
advanced players will take place Tuesday evenings at

7:30p.m.' in the main Clark Gym. All students, staff
and faculty are eligible.
Club paddle racquet team wiJI hold a meeting
for all those interested on Wednesday, Oct. 20 at
5:30 p.m·. in Room 200 F Clark Gym.
Co-ed bowllna begins tonight at 5:30p.m. at the
Norton Hall bowling alleys. Bring a team or come
alone. Sponsored by the Buffalo recreation
department.
Women's interc:ollegiate volleyball team will
hold its first practice Thursday, Oct. 14, 5:3o.-:7:30
p.m.
Any student wishing to become a member of
the st udent athletic review board, should submit his
name to the Student . Association selection
committee before this evening, Room 205 Norton
Hall. Include name, phone and adqress. Get involved.
The deadline for all intramural basketball entries
is Friday, Oct. 22. See Bill Monkarsh at Clark Gym.

.J

Announcements
Tl~e Undergraduate Biology Association will
hold its first meeting tomorrow in Room 340
Norton at 7:30p.m .

Jethro Tull's Concert tickets, contrary t.o
previous announcements, will be on sale beginning
today ;at the ticket offi~e in Norton.
Uf:J Photo Club will leave by bus today at 7 p.m.
fro m in front of Norton for a tour of Arcata
Graphics. All members and interested persons are
welcon1e.
Pilot tOO will hold an orientation meeting
tomorrow at 5 p.m ., Room 231 in Norton . All
stud ents int erested in riding with area
law-enforcement .agencies are u rged to attend.
The Spanish Club will hold their first reunion
today &lt;It 7:30p.m. In Room 241 Norton . They will
discuss the proyam of the club and election of
officers,.
The Brazilian Club will have Gilberta Gil lecture
on· "Struggle, Music and Life - Somebody must
change .. . " tomorrow in the Conference Theater.
Cir·colo Italiano will have a club meeting today
at 1 p.11n . in Room 330 Norton.

Problems in Seoond-order Logic" today at 3 :30p.m.
in Room 27 , 4242 Ridge Lea.
The Film-makers' Series will have Standish D.
La wder, prize-winning experimental filmmaker,
S&lt;:reen and speak about "Runaway, Necrology,
Corrido5, Dangling Participle, Catfilm" and a new
work, "Construction Job," today in Norton
Conference Theater.
An.fone interested in working on the election
campaign of William B. Hoyt to the Buffalo
Common Council from the Delaware District, please
stop in at the Hoyt for Council Headquarters at 85
Elmwood Ave. or call 884-4323 or contact Rich
T obe at 881-0594.
The Council of History Students will have a
general meeting to discuss issues t.o be dealt wfth
during the coming year, today at 4 p.m. in Room
202 Diefendorf.
'
·
UB Women's Liberation will have an open
meeting tomorrow in Room 334 Norton.
James Petras, professor at Penn State and Latin
America editor for Ramports, will speak tomorrow
on "New Revolution.uy Trends in Latin America" at
8 p.m. In Haas Loung~.

UBI Go Club Is now in formation. Go game
Girfs - no dates? Trouble talking with cuys?
players,, and those interested in learning, who wish to Researchers in the Psychology Department are
meet either occasionally or regulariy, call Bob Mogy evaluating methods designed to help girls meet and
at 831 -'1386 days or 836·6850 evenings.
interact more effectively with men. For free
treatment call 831 -1 180 evenings, 7- 10 p.m.
Undergraduates taking French courses please
pick up a copy of the October issue of the
The UB Chapter of S'fudent NYSTA will hold its
department newsletter today in Room 214 Crosby. first meeting today at 7 p.m., Room 334 Norton, to
discuss the problems in Buffalo's high S&lt;:hools. All
CAtC needs volunteers to work in the following interested Education students and those considering
types o•f programs· at the lackawanna Friendship entering the Education field are urged to attend.
House : tutoring, arts and crafts, music, dance,
The Debate Club will have practice today at
recreation. Contact the CAC office, Room 220
7 :30 p.m. in Room 232 Norton. All interested
Norton, 831·3609 .
persons are welcome.
-CAtC Environmental Action Group dealing with
the pro1posed Pendleton jetport will meet today at
The Underaraduate Psychology Association will
7:30p.m . in Room 262 Norton. All interested please have an election of new officers tomorrow at 7:30
attend .
p.m. in Room 234 Norton. All interested Psychology
majors are urged to attend .
Tht~ Philosophy Department presents Prof, H.
Leblanc of Temple University on "Dispensing with
The office of University Placement and Career
Things and Worlds" tomorrow at 3:30p.m. in Room Guidance will host on-campus interviews for various
26, 424:2 Ridge Lea.
graduate S&lt;:hools, during the month of October.
Arrangements for these interviews can be made
The: Buffalo Logic Colloquim will have Prof. H. either in Hayes Annex C, Room 6 or by calling
Leblanc of Temple University speak on ''Two Open 8314414 .

To morrow, in the Fillmore Room, at 8 p.m . a unique theatrical event will take
place. And if you miss it tomorrow, try and catch it Friday or Saturday. That's right, it's
Nickel Theater. At last.
Nickel Theater is the first Student Theater Guild production of the year. Comedy,
drama, inanity, surprise - these are the adjectives that were used to describe Nickel
Theater last year. This year the Guild promises to come up with even more ridiculous
adjectives.
Nickel Theater is a collection of S&lt;:enes and one-act plays done on a low budget for
a low price - only a nickel. This year's Nickel Theater will feature Noon, an obseene
farce ; The Zoo Story, a tense comedy-drama; play versions of a Borges story and a Frost
poem and two unusual original plays.
.
Nickel Theater, in the past, has had a reputation for being audacious and bizarre. Be
warned.

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                    <text>Vol. 22. NO. 20

F.;w.y. Octoblr 8, 1171

Confusion reigns

..

-----Pesch's 'resignation':
whose story to believe?
by Sui MeDel

Anne Ganczewski, seeond year
claa president, discussed the
Tuesday meetin1 in Dr. Ketter's
According to very reliable office. She said that Dr. Ketter
sources, President Robert Ketter was ..surprised" at what sh_e called
told a group of medical students Pesch's ..verbal resignation" last
Tuesday that ten departmental Wednesday.
chairmen in Health Sciences have
requested the removal of LeRoy Controftny continues
Pesch as dean of the MecUcal
According to Ms.. GllllCUWski,
Dr . Ketter told the student
School.
Abo, a med student class representatives that Dean Pesch
president told a group of faculty was interested in leaving his
and students that night that Dr. position because of the lack of a
Pesch gave President Ketter a University-owned hospital facility.
.. verbal resignation" last ln addition, Dr. Ketter had noted
Wednesday. Second year class his strong disagreement with Dean
president Anne Gancuwski told Pesch concerning a separation of
the group that Dean Pesch the medical and dental facilities
requested that the resignation be from the other health sciences.
held in confidence until his
The representatives found
definite confirmation as presldenr definite contradictory statements
of Michael Reese Hospital in upon speaking to Dr. Pesch. Ms. I
Ganczewski noted that Dean
Chicago.
This information , as well as Pe sch explained that a
subsequent facts concerning the University-owned hospital would
Pesch matter, which have been only be a ''sterile facility" and the
brought to Upt recently, have already existins facilities within
increased speculation t~at internal the Buffalo community are m
forces within the Med Schoof acceptable than this.
The major controversy still
brought about Dean Pesch's
remained as to whether Dean
"resignation ...
When asked for his reaction to Pesch had actually resigned or was
the statement, Dr. K~tter did not fired . The med student
confirm or deny its valldily representatives who had spoken to
outrlpt. He said that he had met Pesch maintained that Pesch
with a group of students during denied his own resignation.
Speaking at the meeting, Dr.
his "open house.. hours Tuesday
Pesch
said he was "pleased to have
who he believed to be the four
the
interest
of the students and
med student class presidents. Dr.
faculty"
but,
rtferring to the
Ketter said he had told the foar
between
Dr. Ketter
controversy
students that he had met with
and
himself,
it
is
"aU
too
easy to
several Health • Sciences
focus
on
a
conflict
dealing
with
departmental chairmen over the
me
and
someone
else."
past year.
SP«trum St11f{ Wrltfll"

- Zlnnerstrom

£7ontroversialjigure

'Continue progr&amp;Dl$'
More contndlctioons
He urged that programs he did
He said that each of the
initiate
be maintained if not information they had been given.
chairmen told him that the
expanded
. Pesch cited that all One such student was loudly
Medical School was experiencing
universities
and medical schools applauded for reprimanding the
problems and that they requested
appear
to
resist change. With representatives by saying, "I don't
that "changes be made.. within
regard
for
this
position as dean, think you should say you have
the school. However, he refused
Dr
.
Pesch
explained
, "My secrets between you and Dr.
to elaborate on what these
principal
feeling
of
concern
as Ketter" when the representatives
problems were or changes that the
dean
of
any
med
school
Is
that
I declined to answer a question.
chairmen had asked for .
,
can
do
so
tittle."
In the meantime, med students
An attitude of "nothing can be
A motion by the third year
and faculty met Tuesday night to
gained
by more inside stories"
discuss the current Med School medical class to support such
then
took
hold of most of the ·
crisis. Confulllon, accusations and Pesch·initlated programs as
med
students
and faculty , so they
counter-accusations over who wu r~ruitment of minority students
proceeded
to
form a deflnite
teDiq the truth on the matter and faculty into the Medical
course
of
action.
were made during the meeting tn School and the maintenance of a
relevant community health
Butler Auditorium.
passed "to insure Debate
Med student representatives, program
that
the
programs
and policies of
The most acceptable course
who had spoken to Dr. Ketter and
Dr.
Pesch
aptly
instituted
be
wu
to form a committee to speak
Dr. Pesch, spoke of the
allowed
to
continue
and
prosper."
to
Dr.
Ketter to help decide the
contradictions and subtleties
Still
confused
by
the
appointment
of the next dean of
encircling the illue of the dean's
"resignation"
sitUation,
however,
the
Medical
Sdtool.
"resignation." Dr. Pesch was in
AJlhouah tome students and
attendance at the meetins and many students openly expressed
dissatisfaction
with
the
faculty
thouab "atudent voices
later spoke to the group.

.

was

Controversy surround 1fM resignation of LeRoy
'-:h 11 deM of the MediQI School. Dr. Pesch
contends, contrary to administrative officials , that
he did not wllll~y real"'. Recent information
soun:es report that H...th Science officials requested
P.ch's remOVII.

can be much more effective than

the Med School.
choosing a new dean," few vqted
John· Greenwood of the
for a strike or mentioned another Graduate Student Association
form of action for this time.
endorsed this course of action,
Dr . John Robinso n , an saying that this method worked in
assistant dean of the Medical the selection of the Graduate
School , noted the present School dean.
existence of an elected faculty
However, it was noted that Dr.
councU and an executive eouncil Ketter told the med student
consisting of assistant deans, representatives at the Tuesday
chairmen and other professors. meeting that the " ultimate
The med students proceeded to decilion" for choice of the dean
pass a resolution to send of the Medical School would
representatives, tncluding the four emanate from his office with a
class presidents, to both "promise" of listening to the
committees' meetinp in hope of students beforehand.
strong support with which to face
Dr . .Ketter.
., Thus, the one fear of the med
Another sugestion was to students is that by the time they
select criteria and screen a list of find out what actually has
stude_nt~osen names to be listed occurred and what they can
and presented to Dr. Ketter, one accomplish, they will have already
name of which Dr. Ketter could found themselves with a new Med
choole for the position of dean of School dean.
.,.,

�First GSA meeting
addressed·by Ketter
~&gt;Wing with the future of
graduate edu&lt;;a t ion at the
University., President ~obert
Ketter spoke at the first meeting
of the Graduate Student
Association last Monday night.
Dr. Ketter explained th~ effects
that the recently unveiled regional
plan of the SUNY system will

•

Ketter speaks at FSA

Money 'vital' for education
Future University policy, noted this will not be possible
library conditions and academic until a few years from now.
freedom were among the topics
discussed by last Tuesday's Regional campus
Answering recent queries about
Faculty Senate meeting. President
Robert Ketter, chairman of the regionalizing the University, Dr.
Senate, addressed that body Ketter said that, in fact,
outlining state and local programs regionalism would b~come a
that might affect educations! reality. He stressed, though, that
this regionaHsm is used only for
development.
organizational purposes and will
According to Dr. Ke_tter,
not minimize the University's
money seems to play the vital role
national stature.
in the continuation and
In regard to this, Dr. Ketter
improvement' of higher education
reported that a recent University
in the State University of New
presidents' meeting proposed that
York system . Because of this, Dr.
priority in admissions be given to
Ketter, continued that it is one of
transfer students rather than
his most important jobs to soUcit
incoming freshmen or graduate
funds for the University. As New
students. Dr. Ketter believes,
York State is in deep fmancial
however~ that this would create a
trouble due to present economic
very unfair situation.
conditions, he explained that
Concluding his remarks to the
"private funding Is an absolute
Senate body, he indicated that the
necessity."
Minority Program is presently
Touching o n other topics, Dr. being extended to the hiring of
Ketter reported that the Amherst minority groups and women.
Construction is proceeding as
scheduled. Amherst should not,
he added , be adversely affected by Library problems
economic scarities. Explaining
FoUowing Dr. Ketter, Myles
that the state dispenses monies on Slatin, director of the Libraries,
the basis of enrollment, Dr. Ketter discussed library conditions.
said that increased enrollment
He r ema rk ed fhat he
resulting from Amherst will lead appreciates the role of the Senate
to more funds and better library committee in finding what
e d u\c a t ion a I qua J i t y . they believed to be wrong and is
UnfoJ\unately though, Dr. Ketter grateful for their suggestions.

-IIIIIIAII -

•••••••·cal
•••••••

1066 Sherid1n Drive
Speclali7.ina In Volkswaaen,
TrhlumpJI. Volvo, MG. Austin
Ht~llley, Toyota , l&gt;atsun und mo re.
877 -93 03
Ask for Yock o

EFFETE

SNOBS:
THE

The Spectrum is publithtld thrtltl
t imes • week, ewry Monday,
Wednesday and Friday; during the
r8fJUIBr ecedemlc y11111r by Sub-Board
1, Inc. OHicll$ ere locetlld ·at 355
Norton Hell, StJJte Univenity of New
York at Buffslo, 3435 Main St.•
Buffalo , New York, 14214.
Telephone: Are.t Code 716; Editorial
831-41 13; Business, 831-3610.
Represented for lldvertlsing by
Nstionsl EdUC11tion111 Advertising
Sllfvlce, Inc., 360 Lexington Ave.,
New York, N.Y. 10017.
Subscription ,..,. ,,.. $4.50 pttr
111mener or $8.00 for two SMnesters.
Second CIIISS Pwtllfltt PBid at Buffalo,
New York.
Clrcuflltion: 16,000

H&lt;llwever, Dr. Slatin said that
althc•ugh the University has
increa1sed through the past few
years in both enroUment and
co urses offered, the libraries'
budge:t has not. A resolution
concerning better funding, more
staff, etc. for the libraries was
subsequently adopted .
Tbe Senate also heard a report
from the Academic Freedom and
Resp01nsibillty Committee. This
commtittee presented proposed
revisic•ns to a Senate Professional
Associiation Contract. A proposal
on the definition of academic
freedo m was finally accepted after
much discussion.

have on this campus.
Under this plan, by 1974.
every graduate of a community
college will be guaranteed a place
iO a four-year college within his
region (i.e., Western New York
region, New York City region,
etc.). According to Dr. Ketter,
this implies a very large increase in
the number of future transfer
studj:nts to be accepted by the
University. He continued that
this, coupled with increasing
numbers of school graduates and
job scarcities for graduate
students, has lead to immense
pressure to cut down on graduate
study.
Dr. Ketter stated that his
administration will try to impress
upon Albany that there is a need
for quality education at the upper
level, not quantity. Dr. Ketter's
prognosis for graduate programs
on this campus was, "better than
most state universities since this
campus has experienced relatively
high budget cuts in the past few
years."
Resignation questioned
Dr. Ketter also explained that
Daniel Murray has resigned his
post as dean of the Graduate
School to accept a post in Albany

that will be · instrumental in
deciding the future of graduate
· education in the SUNY system.
Dr. Ketter added that a Search
committee organized to select an
acting dean has aecepted the
recommendations of the GSA
executive committee for a new
dean.
When questioned about the
resignation of LeRoy Pescb, dean
of the Medical School, Dr. Ketter
maintained that he had never fired ~
Dr. Pesch and that he did not
receive a resignation from Dr.
Pesch until after it had been
announced in the press. Dr. Ketter
further indicated that Dr. Pesch
was accepting a position as
president of Michael Reese
Hespital and Medical Center in
Chicago.
Commenting on the condition
of the University libraries, Dr.
Ketter related inadequate library
service to the state fmancial
squeeze. He said that over the past
two years, approximately 70
positions have b~en vacated in the
libraries, yet the Division of the
Budget has allowed only 40 to be
filled. In addition, he explained
that with a $6- 8 million budget
deficit predicted for New York
State this year' the outlook is not
very optimistic.
Before he left, Dr. Ketter
announced that his office will be
open to any student, without
appointment , every other Tu~day
from 9 a.m.- noon. He invited
questions on any subject at this
time.

Evelyn Wood Readi

Take afree Mini-Lesson and increase
your reading speed on the spot!
Know why we invest so much
in our free mini·lessons? Brochures and catalogues can't
possibly describe what it's
like to read a book
like
Exodus (all 499 pages) in 1
hour and 48 minutes. Or an
en.tire Time Magazine In 35
mmutes.
Instead we invite you to spend
60 minutes this week at a
mini·lesson. We'll show you
why two presidents (Kennedy

&amp; Nixon) personally brought

lesson reading slowly.
the course into the Wti1te One last thing, back in 1964
House so staff members could we adopted the following as a
learn the Evelyn Wood tech· national policy: "We promise
nique.
that you 'II read at least 3
At a mini·lesson, we actually times better than when you
or we'll refund yo~ r
increase your reading s~d started
tuition."
That policy st1 1 1
on the spot. Just a little, stands.
to be sure, but enough so
you 'II know how it feels.
By the way
don't worry
about how slowly you read. That's it. The. schedule of free
Everyone comes to a mini· mini·lessons is listed here.

AlrTEND ONE OF THESE FREE MINI- LESSONS
at our
BUFFALO INST I TUTE
3606 M ~i n St.

(next to Buffa lo Textbook Store)

SpECTI\UM

For further information

COlli -

Tues. Oct. 12 at 7 p.m. or 9 p.m.
Wed. Oct. 13 at 1 p.m. or 3 p.m.
Thurs. Oct. 14 at 7 p.m. or 9 p.m.
Fri. Oct 1S at 7 p.m. or 9 p.m. ·
Sat. Oct. 16 at 11 a.m. or 1 p.m.
Mon. Oct. 18 at 1 p.m. or 3 p.m.

Warren Wiiildron at 837-2823 .

•
' Page·two. The Spec_trum . Friday, October 8, 1971
I

•

�'

News commentary

•

•

Promotion ra1ses questzons
by Jim McFenon
Spectrum Staff Wrfter

Academicians in the Philosophy Oepartmen~
have recently forsaken their cerebral broodings in
quiet stuclies for a walk through the less ethereal and
downright earthbound areas of department politics.
And there's plenty of the atmosphere that is usually
associated with ward halls and corporation
cloakrooms, tempered, however, by the participants'
natural restraint and concern for the aff~t a civU
war might have on the department.
Dedicated readers of the Letters to the Editor
section of The Spectrum will have noticed that four
full professors are involved in the incriminations and
recriminations surrounding the promotion of William
Baumer to full professor last August. While each of
the men have declined to elab.o rate publicity on the
case, the three letters have pretty well summed up
the affair.

Questioning
Triggering the whole thing was a letter from
former department Chairman WUliam Parry, dated
Sept. 27, in which he questioned the procedures
involved in Dr. Baumer's promotion to full rank. Dr.
Parry charged that President Robert Ketter's
intervention in the promotion after the Philosophy
Department had voted against it was highly irregular
and undesirable.
Answering Dr. Parry, on Oct. I , Newton Garver
called the procedures in Baumer's promotion
irregular, but j ustified. He further accused Dr. Parry
of "casting aspersions on Dr. Baumer's professional
qualifications and unjustly maligt}ing President
Ketter."
Latest in the series was Lynn Rose's letter
printed Oct . 6, which not only supported Parry's
letter, but claimed Dr. Garver had mixed ..half
truths, and whole untruths." Dr. Rose added that
Garver's promotion to full rank was actually, " Just
as 'irregular' as Baumer's."

under the same umbrella, each stating in so many
words that they ••really had nothing to add!' What
lies behind thJs paradox of public censure and
subsequent silence is partly a oonOkt of
personalities, partly a renewal of old department
quarrels and partly differing definitions or criteria
for profDotion.
Various participants in the dispute reported
iftstances of personal differences and arguments ovet"
department affairs. But one source indicated the
major conOict centers on the interpretaUon of the
promotion process, specifically Arti.cle IX, sec. 2,
Art. XI, sec. 2, and Aft. XII, sees. 1 and 2 of the
Policies of the Board of·Trustees.
Jn essence, these sections state that the chief
administrative officer of any State University of New
York college is responsible for the appointment of
professional staff and must consult members of the
faculty r~ding the promotions. Evaluations of the
faculty members' qualifications for promotion are to
be based on five factors: mastery of subject matter,
effectiveness in teaching. scholarly ability,
effectiveness of Univ~y service and continuing
growth. The fourth factor, according to the
unidentified source, is largely
responsible for the •conflict, since each o f those
involved have different interpretations of that
section.
Spite &amp; pettiness
On the other h.and, philosophy gJaduate
students view the affair as an example of pettiness
and ;pite which typifies the conduct of the entire
department. One student interpreted the Faculty's
refusal to promote Baumer as a reply to Baumer's
actions during the strike last spring. Dr. Baumer
opposed the strike and signed affidavits which
incriminated other professors . "Baumer has been so
antagonistic toward fellow faculty membeu,"
declared the student, "that they were merely
replying back, out of spitetulness."
President J(etter's intervention in Baumer's case
is generally viewed, as one student put i~. "as an
unwise incursion into departmental affairs." Dr.
Rose agJeed claiming that Dr. Baumer was one of the
president's "cronies" and therefore clid not have to
go through the regular grievance procedures.
Another student criticized the President's action,
asking, " Who should know better, Ketter or the
philosophy faculty?"

Irregular procedure
In fact, Baumer's promotion did not follow
regular department procedure. The full wofessors of
the Philosophy Department voted 7-3, with one
abstention, not to promote Baumer. Dr. Baumer did
not appeal to the Grievance Committee of the
However , Dr. Garver viewed Ketter's
Faculty of Social Sciences and Arts (SSA}, because,
he argued, as Faculty Senate chairman he was in intervention as completely justified, in view of the
charge of faculty grievances. Tt.is, he felt, precluded indication "that something might have been wrong
with the promotion system in the department."
his filing an appeal.
The case, however, did not stop there. President
Ketter int e rvened and asked the Personnel Power of the king
Committee of the SSA Faculty to consider Baumer's
Still sticking solely to condemnation of t!te
promotion. When that committee failed to procedures in the case, Dr. Parry asked, "As long as
recommend promotion, President Ketter had his you can go right toto th~1hrone, why not." His view
review board examine the matter. The review board appea~ed to be seconded by most philosophy
subsequently promoted Dr. Baumer to full professor graduate students who praised Baumer's professional
in August.
ability but critized Ketter's interference.
All the while, Dr. Baumer has refused comment
For all the philosophers' reluctance to escalate
and has attempted to remove himself from the affair.
their little war with any more criminatory fusilades,
His public response has been limited to one
it seems, sadly, that the dissension rife in the higher
sentence: "As far as I'm concerned, the matter is
levels of the University is moving down.
closed."
Or perhaps it has already settled at the
departmental level. As one graduate student said
'Nothing to say'
After the publication of their various letters, quietly, "This department is so goddamn corrupt I
Parry, Garver and Rose have likewise sought shelter can't teU you."

Friday, October 8tt•. 3 :00p.m.
'
340 Norton Hall
Plans for Monday's riding excursion will be discussed.

Dayan statUs petition
on College A agerida
Bambi Abelson and Stanley
Dayan, key figures in the cunent
internal crisis that has rack~d
CoUep A, agreed Wednesday to
negotiate the matter of Mr.
Dayan's status as a staff mCQlbet.
This agreement was rea~ed .
during a meeting of the CoUtgiate
Assembly.
••You have the assurance that
everyone who is involved in the
staff of CoUep A will negotiate,"
pledged Ms . Abelson, , who
assumed complete control over
College A following the
resignation of Fred SneU last
spring. Dr. Dayan has been
petitioning the Collegiate
Assembly for recognition as a
staff member of College A.

"'Neither the current staff of

College A nor the students of
Collep A have been brousflt into
discussion . . . I have not reaped
yet,,. Ms. Abelson retorted.
Mr. Dayan replied: ..Youi staff
members in my eyes are of the
Mme validity as my staff who fXe
here. I don't see what you have to
pin by doing it in the back
room . • • Tell me where we are
going to be able to distribute the
information more effi?ently than
here?"

'Dirty linen'
" First, on the one hand, you
say you don't have any facts and
then when I am willing to present
you with facts, you charge me
with 'washing our dirty linen in
Debate ensued earlier during public'," he said.
the meeting over whether the
It was argued · by various
Assembly should hear Mr. Dayan's professors and studen ts that very
case. Konrad von Moltke, little of a constructive nature
Collegiate Assembly chairman, could proceed from discussion of
argued that discussions on the the issues without preliminary
petition were still at an informal internal discussion within College
level and its presentation to the A. A movement for preliminary
Assembly should, therefore, be talks between the staffs of Ms.
postponed. " There's still a great Abelson and Mr. Dayan was made
deal to be talked through," he by Roger Cooke and supported.
told the group.
A caucus was held between the
parties to arrange Urnes and places
An agreement
for meetings. " If it (negotiation)
Defending the presentation of hasn't come about by next time,
his case, Mr . Dayan said: "I realty we will raise it as an Assembly
would like to be able to do matter," Mr. Cooke said.
something In general the next
By unanimous decision ,
semester (about this situation ... College C was enfranchised at the
We can't act until some discussion Assembly , in other business
concluding the meeting. Also
comes through.
"The issue," he continued, "is discussed were methods of
basically not that I should be a presenting grievances and appeals
staff member . . . but because I in case of future disputes.
Monday was set as the cut off
am what I am, 1 should be
excluded." However, further date for courses to be set in the
attempts by Mr. Dayan to state computer. Student committee
his case were discouraged by members f~H the Collegiate
Assembly were urged to sign up.
arguments from the floor.

--Bible Truth1--.
PURPOSE OF SCRIPTURE
" Theae are written , that yc mlght
beUeve that Jesus II the Christ the
Son of God: and that believing ye
11\lght have life through His name."
John 20:31

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L••

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CHABAO HOUSE
You are Invited to participate in tbe
festive Hakofos, Monday n.ight, Oct.
11 ,:11 7:25 p.m. Services also Sunday
and Tuesday nights a t 7:25 and
Monday and Tuesday mominp at
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Friday, October 8, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page three

•

�Presidents to Presidents
conference rol1s along
bylm f&gt;eWul
Sp«itllto Tht Sp«trum
Billed as an
attempt to
provide an
"opportunity to
hear and
question some
of the leading personalities of the
government, the third annual
"Presidents to Presidents"
conference· sponsored by the
Association of Student
Governments seemed rather a
parade of cabinet officials intent
on defending alJ policies of the
Nixon Administration. Also
present were leading contenders
for the Democratic nomination
for President.
George Romney, Secretary of
Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) started the ball roUing
with a general defense of current
economic policy and an
explanation of recent strides in
housing-starts during Nixon's
reign. Each succeeding
representative from Nixon's
cabinet put another candle on the
cake.
Administrator of
Environmental Protection Agency
William Rucklehaur put in a
typical Agnew plug for
mediocrity, "we can succeed only
if we don't equate success with
perfection." John EnrUchrnan,
assistant to the President for
Domestic Affairs, delivered the
familiar cry that Congress "has
too many recesses whlJe problems
are critically urgent." Secretary of
Health, Education and Welfare
Elliot Richardson deUvered a
rather curious explanation of the
determination of administrative
priorities: " We use thoughtful
analysis, poUtics, hope and the
stars."

continued, "We need street-level
government ...
Sen. Fred Harris deUvered an
all encompusing speech that
touched every problem
concerning this oountry today:
repeal of abortion laws, abolition
of military courts, return to free
enterprise and abolition of the
electoral coUege.
Allard Lowenstein summed up
for the opposition by soothing,
appealing, emphasizing and
dernan'ding in a master-minded
soliloquy that left the conference
breathless.
Larry Smith, vice president for
Studeot Affairs at Chicago State
CoOege interpreted what he called
the Nixon staff line. He stated :
"There art. problems ; there have
always been problems. Money and
local government can solve
problems, we need reforms to
bring this about. The government
in Washington, D .C. is here to see
thlt state and local governments
take initiative and meet
responsibillties.''
While the Nixonites were
defending state rights, the
opposition Democrats argued for
a "new federalism." Nixon wants
less national initiative while the
Democrats see strong leadership as
an answer to the nation's
problems.
After each major address, a
q t.Lestlon and answe~· period
followed. As Jt. became apparent
that each $t1ccessive speaker
would echo his predecessor,
questions became sharper and
more directed. Yet no
opportunity for debate developed
and the speaker was given the
platform and a free · hand to
propagandize the "party
position." By the second day
some delegates disillusioned with
the charade, formed a dissentive
Presidential hopefuls
group to analyze the failings of
While Nixon officials the weekend. Their objections
Incessantly defended the centered on the impossibility of
administration's track record, developing any meaningful
Democratic presidential hopefuls dialogue with the keynote
philosophized and theorized speakers. Instead, rather one-sided
about future plans to be disserations controlled by the
implemented and mistakes that s peaker at the podium
had been admitted.
continuously developed. Once
Humphrey felt that he had again it seemed the people were
been a modifying influence-in the dissatisfied with the elusiveness of
Johnson Administration while their government leaders.
calling for reform of local
November 1972 is only a little
government: "It's u outmoded as more than a year away. It's
a horse and buggy ." He beginnin to show.

News
Analysis

•

FSA meeting: airing of,U/eas
recommendations, incl~tding a S per cent .,.,.ge
increase for food service employees, as woll u raises
in wages for part-time student employees and middle
manaaement personnel.
Another recommencllation was to authorize food
service to operate a "Boer and Ale"-type House in
the Fillmore Room during lunch houn, thereby
cuttina the traffic In the' RathskeUar in a peak time
and offerina the students brew with their noon meal.
The second stude1nt committee report on
vending was presented by Alan Miller, president of
Inter-Residency Commit:tee and chairman of tile
vending study group. One recommendation made
was to purchase a Photo Vending Machine to be
placed in an easily accesl3ible place. Students could
use this macrune for talclin&amp; small pictures necessary
Committee reports
The FSA board also discussed the reports of for Ski Club ID cards, p~;sports, etc.
student co mmittees whlch examined lllleged
The FSA accepted !these reports and will move
inefficiencies In FSA operations. Jan De Waal, to take official action on them at next Thursday's
chairman of the Food Service Study Committee, meetina. when' the board will hear the Boolcstore
presented a report which contained several study committee's report

The Faculty Student Association meeting last
Wednesday moved to petition the courts for the
transfer of SOS acres of land in Amherst to Sub
Board I, Inc. Preaently, the tract is held by FSA,
which purchased it in the early J 960's for
educational and recreational uses. Last year it was
decided to give this property to Sub Board, as that
orpnization is deemed to represent most directly,
students and student interests.
For the put year, the lepl aspect of the land
transference has been explored, culminating in this
lut action to proceed to the New York State court.
The court action will seek acceptance of a petition
which would live the land to Sub Board l,lnc. for a
yet to be disclosed purpose.

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Page four. The Spectrum . Friday, October 8, 1971

Phone

875-4286

r------- GET

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Slmclta To,.lt •t tM
CHABAD HOUSE
You .,. l11vlted to ptll'tkl,-te In the
tml~~e H•to{tn, Mottd4y nltltt, Oct.
11, •t 7:2$ p.m. Sen~lcu4llo Sund•Y
tutd Tue&amp;y lfl61tu •t 7:25 •nd
Mottd4y tutd Tuudlly mo17filtp •t
9:30.

A BETTER GRADE-----,

Compositions - Bookrtportl - T.-m 1111*1 CORRECTED
We will comet your lflmmatial .,.on. - Wt will mab all
corrections on your tlr1ft, and return it to you. YOU riCOPY it.
Write on one tide of 1 sftllt.
Writa on IVII'Y otb•line.
Write ntmt a tddr. on _,. Pill·
End011altlf4ddrased
Cut out this ld •..SAVE ITI
statnPid tmllopL
Senict r1111: $2.00 minimum •••up to 1000 wcris $UJO for
.aldditiollll 300 words.
Send to:
P.O. Box 251, LISIIt Station
An:u Writint Strvices, h~e.
Niltlrl F. ., N.Y. 14304

�•

.Learning Center is
working with children
by Lynda Teri

' the responJibillty of cpordinating
writina while Miss Atkinson and
Gary Jaclcaon coordinate reading
"Trying to work alongside of and oral communication,
students' desires and needs" is the respectively.
main objectlve of the Learning
Miss Atkinson believes words
Center, according to its director, are friJ)ltening to· many stlldents.
Thomas Edwards.
"We want to make students aware
Previously the instructional and excited about words,'' she
division of EPIS, the Learning states, "rather than skipping over
Center, is now a separate entity them and pretendin&amp; they don't
handling all students who fee\ exist."
themselves unprepared for college
coursea. Prefertins to call his Speakina confidence
courses ..developmental.. rather
Yr. 1acbon concurs and hopes
)han "remedial," Dr. Bdwards to instill a spealt.ina confidence in
believee that the Learn.ina Center
his students . Callina his
ia for thote studenta who find department .. &amp;he baby of
themselvea "not fully prepared for
diYilions," be believes the main
academic mcc•" ln order to help upects of diacuslion to be ..quick
them "into the academic world reuonina, drawin&amp; loaical
with minimum frustration and eonclusions and recopizina
maximum succ:•." 1M allo hope&amp; illoJical Yiewa...
dlat the eeparadon of tb.e Center
The "important art" of
from EPIS will help remote any
pre~ous ltiama ueodated with noto-tatlna ia atr-.d in all
Ceftter courset. "J spent too much
that PfOifalll.
time mYMlf, taldna uael• notes,"
The Cater often couna in Kr. 1acbon reftects. "I suppoae
math, oral communication, we all did."
readina and wrltinJ wblcb are
ElWIII are also streaed at the
aiven for Division of
Underpaduate Studiee creclit. Dr. Center, but not for the purpose of
Bdwards il concerned with the ripous ltructure. ·~ is a
•.,alae imaae•• amona atudenta that tremendousely neptl.e view
these coUIHI are not credit toward testinJ and students freeze
approved. "All our courses are up," uJd Mr. 1acltson. He sees &amp;he
approved by DUS for credibility exama as diapostic and hopes
and approval and d o fill &amp;hey will help relax some tension.
araduation requirements," he "We all JO throu&amp;b this fear of
exams, but it is more intense for a
el(f)lained.
student who has exhibited more
failure," be explained .
Free to drop
S~ctrum Stt~fl Wrfter

Student, are "free to take or
reject" Leamina Center counes Input wekomed
and stu4ents are not encouraged
Olp WapnheiiJ\ coordinator
to take them if they are not of Bilinaual Education, describes
· needed. There are diapc»tiA: tests · herself u a "floater." Ha'fin&amp; only
-in 4aca subjCGt Jiven "to· slude'iits •• one-specific class, Miss Waaenheim
which determine where help is is very eoncemed with the
needed. "The students in &amp;he difficulties facing Puerto Rican
course are th~re because material students at the Center. There is a
on these (diagnostic) exams and bilingual inJtructor in each class
data on their files support this so that any difficulties which
placement," Dr. Edwards said. " If might arise may be taken care of
they don't believe they belong, right ~way. She do-:s teach ?ne
theyarefreetodrop,justas they ~panuh class, tnstruchng
would any other college course." mterested students in grammar, and composition. Very interested
Whil e most o f the Cen t er s · Pu rt Ri
his
h h
students 'i&lt;lme from EPIS, Dr. 10 e 0 • can
tory, .s e opes
Edwards stressed that all EPIS t~ establish a course m Puerto
students aren't required to take Rican culture soon.
remedial courses.• " All EPIS
Dr. Edwards believes the
st udents don't t ake these Center is well on its way to a
courses," he explained. "Many productive year and is happy
don't even have need of them. We about the "close cooperation
are here for those who do."
b e t w e e n a 11 fa c e t s o f
Laboratory work is a large part ~.dministration" he has dealt .with.
,
.
.
We are delighted for any mput
of the Ce!'ter s cumculum With all that administration and students
studen!B expected to spend two can give us. They can help guide
hours 10 . lab ~or e~ch course t~ey us," he explained . "This is all ver
.
y
take. Linda Atkinson, reading
din t
b li
"L b . t
new and expenmental, so no one
coor a or, e eves,
a. IS 0 has the answers. We've set up a
extend what goes on. m the research and evaluation division
classroom, not to mtroduce head,.d by Dr J d'th
w0 If t 0 1et
1
anything new "
"'
· u
·
us know where we are goofing and
improVing. Where we goof - we'U
Self-help
improve."
In lab, students work on their
own or with private tutors at
specified times throughout tb&amp;
day. Dr. Edwards sees the lab as a
place for " diagnosis en route"
with a variety of equipment
designed to either "enrich or
develop" a student's skills. This
e(luipment consists of varied
"self-help" reading, writing and
math seta with machinery geared
fo1 individual use, arranged ·in
private booths to eneourage
students to work at theif own
speed.
Dr. Ed wards believes oral
communication. reading and
writing s~ould work closely
together. "The)' all deal," be ._.~ ...
believes "with the use of language . ..__ _ _ _ _ _M ....iiiiiii
and .one's reaction\ to it!' Jim
Foster and Elizabeth Dotson share

a

... :lb1

--

'Sub Board releases· report 01J,
Poverty Hill finatJ,cial sources
Financial outloob for Poverty Hill dominated
&amp;he dJicualion of lut Tuelclay•s .Sub Boud I, Inc.
meetina. The result of thia cliseuallon will be a fact
sheet of information about Poverty Hill and
probable sourcea of finance. Sub Baud I ia
compoaed of representatives of seven of the various
student tovemmenta.
A report wu presented to the board by Michael
Hagans, representative of Drayton S. Bryant
Associates, the firm hired to plan the proj~ . 1be
report stated that, if student fees were the only
source of finance the cost of the first two phases of
the project would be $3.17 per student over a ten
year period. These first two project phases include
development of facilities for hildng,. swimming,
c:alnpina and fishina. In addition, Sub Board I
treasurer, Scott Slessinpr, reported that the
insurance for these activities bad not been cancelled
as w15 reported earlier this week.
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Sub Board membca inlisted that student funds
will not be the only source of finance aftilable. Mart
Borenstein, busin• manapr of Sub ·Board,
enumerated a lilt of poeble fundina aowees.

Included amooa these were tovemment panta, sub
leui.nasome of the property or a voluntary student
fee in addition to the mandatory fee already paid. A
sugestion wu also made that those who use the
Poverty Hill facilitiee be cbarpd a min1mal fee. The
report was amended to include the fact that phases
In and IV of the project (which includes a ski slope
and conference center) are at this point very
speculative in reprds to finance.
· This foct sheet on Poverty Hill will be
distributed to the student publications and several
copies will be put on reserve at Harriman library.
S~b Board I also hopes more will be made available
in order to prepare students for the upcoming
referenda on the Po•erty Hill issue.

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KEEP IN TOUCH

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' SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB
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MEMBERSHIPS NOW B~NG TAKEN - ROOM 318 NORTON HALL

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Grads, MFC, Faculty, Staff

Undergraduates

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1. Free skiing and free transportation at Kissing Bridge:
MON - TUES - WED, nights.

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2. Discount passes for Kissing Bridge and Ski Wing.
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LESSONS :
A worthwhile program is offered for $26.00 for 10 one-hour lessons given
on the nights the club has its free skiing. It is recommended that anyone
who wants to learn to ski or improve their skiing, take advantage of this
lesson program.

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Also, Schussmeisters Ski Club sponsors weekend trips to Vermont during January ,
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February and March and a ski flight to Europe during Christmas vacation.
DON'T ROT TijiS WINTER

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JOIN SCHUS. .IISn•s a1 CLUB
............ - :

· MAKE
NOT WAll
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Friday, October 8,

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19~1 . The Spectrum. Page five

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Shooting to kill

Polar bears face extinction
The ailence .of the chill air is
shattered by simultaneous
explosions from the rifle barrels
of several Canadian- · .officfals.
Before them a IJl8SS of agonized
fw and flesh falls to rest on the
snow covered ground. He is one of
35 polar bears which the Canadian
government plans on shooting this
year. He has no chance against
high powered rifles.
Two students at the State
University of Buffalo would like
to prevent this scene. Cu.rt Miller
and Diane Young, both
undergraduates, are involved in an
international effort to raise
$15,000 to save the polar bears.
This money will be used to
capture the animals by humane
methods and to transport them
across Hudson's Bay, out of
harm's way.

Miss Young explains that the
bears descend from the Arctic
each year at about this time in
search of food. "They are
attracted to the town of
Churchill, in Manitoba, by the
odor of garbage coming from the
town's dumps. The smell of food
ultimately leads the scavenging
bears Into the town itself and
sometimes even into the kitchens
of the townspeople."
Mr. Miller adds "this yearly

r i t u a 1 has a n g e red t he
Churchillians and although they
have taken no action of their own
they have appealed to their
government to relieve them of the
annoyance. As with all
governments the only solution
they can find is to shoot the
bears.
"Ecologically this could be a
disaster. Scientists estimate that
there may be as few as 5000 polar

be a lengthy and expensive not taken in the next five years to
operation, costing at least reverse the trend in the decline of
. animal populations we will have
$15,000.
Miss Young says she would like no animals. And without animals
bears re:maining to carry on the to see members of the University this world would indeed be a
species. And with their tate of community contribute at Least lonely place."
reproduction being estimated at $500 - the cost of saving oqe
,. For further information about
once e'rery two or three years, bear. "People are interested in
destroying this number must be ecology until it is time for them this effort or to make a
looked upon as a serious to give something up. Looking contribution write
towards the future it is valid to COMPASSION, 100 Bennington
blunder,," Mr. Miller continued.
assume that if drastic actions are Rd., Snyder, N.Y.l4226.

A lonely· place
Relocating the bears to a more
secure 1area where they should
find a plentiful food supply will

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(

Photographs by Osterreicher

Page six. The Spectrum. Friday, October 8, 1971 ..

�KeasiwghRI

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saiatl~f ~.

Slominski does it again!_)
The troubled situation at
1
Kensington Hish School was
complicated further by an
outbreak of open hostility
between Councilman Alfreda W.
Slominski and Buffalo school
officials. The clash began with a
meeting at the school Tuesday
morning between Kensington
Principal Angelo Gianturco and a
group of white students and
parents championed by Mrs.
Slominski.
The meeting of the whites'
group with Mr. Gianturco, and a

don't play with matches.

simultaneous meeting of black
studentJ with faculty members of
their own choosing, dealt with th~.\
tensions and disruptions that
beset Kensington, as they have
beset several other Buffalo public
schools since the beginning of the
1chool year. At. the whites'
pthering, Mrs. Slominski ignored
requests by Mr. Gianturco to
remain silent and implied that Mr.
Gianturco had turned a deaf ear
to the grievances of white
students. The resulting excitement
caused Mr. Gianturco to close the
school early, in his words, "before
somebody got hurt.'' and led to
an order by School
Superintendent Joseph Manch
banning large group gatherings.
Speaking later of the incident,
Associate Superintendent for
Instruction Eugene Reville
accused Mrs. Slominski of having
••undermined his [Mr.
Gianturco's] authority" and
condemned "the intrusion of
political candidates who offer no
help" to troubled city schools.
At Tuesday's Common Council
meeting, Mrs. Slominski was
further told by Corporation
Council Anthony M~nguso
speaking for Dr. Manch: "You
stirred them up at Kensington
High School." Mrs. Slominski

havlJ

,two

retorted that Dr. Manch "is a
failure and he's using me as a
smoke screen." Other council
members w'ho had visited
Kensington commented on the
situation there, among them,
Councilman Henry Stahl who
claimed that studept,s had taken
over the school from the adults.
''Somewhere we've got to get the
upper hand," he said. Sounding a
much different note, Councilman
George K. Arthur, another drop-in
at Kensington, asserted that the
school need not have closed early
if "misinformed teachers and
overexcited adults had stayed out
of it." He also said that, according
to students at Kensington, the
problem ..is not a racial issue."
At another meeting of Mr.
Gtanturco with white parents and
students Tuesday night, Mrs.
Slominski again showed up,
claiming that she was made the
scapegoat for Kensington's
troubles. She proposed
"adjustment schools, with trained
people to help . these problem
children, and a system to pick up
truants." The parents claimed that
a "double standard" of dealing
with black and white students was
at the root of Kensington's
~isorders, and Mr. Gianturco
accepted a unanimous

endorsement by the parents for
stricter administrative discipline.
Attendance has been markedly
low at Kensington beginning last
Friday, when a city-wide
solidarioty rally drew black
students to the State University of
Buffalo campus and false reports
of "rioting" impelled about 500
parents to remove their children
from school. Since then: the dual
factors of continued parent
fearfulness and a black boycott of
city schools have kept many
students out of school. Large and
small groups of black students
met throughout Monday with

faculty and administration
members and presented a list of
grievances calling for, among
other things , a permanent
student-parent-faculty grievance
committee, the permitting of
students to assist faculty in
monitoring lunchrooms and
hallways and black representation
on the s c hool assembly
committee. On Wednesday,
attendance was estimated at
65- 70%, significantly better than
the previous days' estimate of
50- 60%, though still well below
par. Classes were also conducted
according to schedule.

JOHN LENNON

Unbelievably
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pr1ces

reg. list $5 98.NOW

$3 37
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-·reg. list $4 98 NOW$277

Grants

UNIVERSITY PLAZA

ACROSS THE STREET

Friday, October 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page sevr:r.

�ISub Board!di~oRiAl
I questions

I

SUb Board I, Incorporated is beginning stowly to realize
some of iu responsibility to the student body. Their decision
to publish a fact sheet on their controversial Poverty Hill
project is a step, however belatedly, in the proper dir~~~n.
Unfortunately, we don't believe that their responSibthty
to their constituency will be adequately discharged unless a
full and complete accounting of all student monies spent to
date on Poverty Hill is Included in the fact sheet. This must
Include not only the..$10t00Q option price, but the salaries
and consultant fees that have been expended In the last six
months.
SometJme In the next several weeks the students of this
Unlvenity will be asked through a referendum wheth« they
feel Sub Board I, Inc. should finalize their purchase of
Poverty Hill. Currentty, Sub Board I, Inc. Intends to ask that
question alone, without attempting to obtain a sense of how
the student body wants to develop or not develop Poverty
Hill.
Since plans for a conference center and a semi-private ski
resort ar~ being discussed by Sub Board we believe it to be
absolutely necesarv for them to pOll the students on these
PQSbilltles. Otherwise, Sub Board I may be guilty of base
deception as the students vote to buy 1148 acres of Nirvana
and instead are presented with a flourishing ski emporium.
Therefore the referendum must be broad and far·reaching
in its sc~pe and attempt to draw a complete answer fro'J' the
students of this University. After all, it ts their monies that
may be used to finance these developments and It Is their
monies that fuel Sub Board I, Inc. in the first place.

Endangered Assembly
We do not yet believe that the Student Association has
completely or correctly grasped the intent behind the
establishment of the Student Assembly. The idea was to
create a student voice which was more responsible and had
greater continuity than the still-born Polity system. This
included designing an easy method of affiliating in the
Assembly.
It is true that the Student Association has somewhat
eased the procedures. We believe however that a final step
must be taken ¥&gt; that everyone can participate in the
Assembly through an interest or affinity group. We therefore
must urge a further modification of the guidelines so that
any undergraduate student can become a Student Assembly
representative simply by having 40 other undergrads sign his
petition. The Elections Committee could then call the 40
individuals in order to verify their signatures and thus certify
their designee for membership in the Assembly .
This we feel is the only way the student body can be
of a well attended and smoothly functioning Student
Assembly.

~u red

THE SpECTI\UM
Friday, October 8, 1971

Vol. 22, No. 20

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
~neg~,.

Edltcw - AI Blltl$0n
Editor - Mike Lippmann
A•. Men8gi,. Editor - Susan Mos
Bull,_ MM....- - Jim Drucker
Adwrtili,. M8NgW - Sue Mellentine

~n181,.

Campus ......... Jo.Ann Armao
...........••... Howie Kurtz
..•.••...••.•... Bill VltOCMO
City .....•.••...... ....vac:ant
Cofly ........... Ronnl Forman
........ . ....... Marty Gatti
Asst•.....•.......... ,vacant
F•tu,. .................vacant
Graphic Arts ..... • ... Tom Toles

LeyOU1 ....... Maryhope Runyon

.A.t. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .YliCint
Lit. a Onma .. Michael Silllllt'blatt
MUiic .•...•.••••••Billy Altman
Off.C11mpus ...... Lynna Traeger
Photo .••.••..•. Marc Ackerman
. ... . •.•.. Mickey Osterreichar
SportS ••. .•••.•.... Barry Rubin
Asst • .•.•. . .. . • • • Howie Falwl

ThtJ Spectrum is seNed by United Press lntematlonel, College Press
SINice, the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los 8rlgeles Times Svndlcete and
Llbention News SetVice.

Republication of ·matter herein without the express consent of ttta
Editor-In-Chief is forbidden
Editorial policy Is determined by the Editor·in-Chlef.

Page eight . The Spectrum. Friday , October 8, 1971

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YOU 60 SHoPPI~ ttJ

CNJAOA \

60 SHOPPI)J(; I~
CUSt..AtJD-

l(t)J

6'V£RY1HlUSS

HAt/B ltrJ

AH6RICA.

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6V£R4'ffii~'S

YOU 00

AHeRICA .

AHCRICA -

HADe ltJ

Pl~6

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It Is hard to admit that
one is a neurotic. Or at least is
so so seems to me. Not just
mildly flakey, mind you, but
deep down senseless, stupid,
and irritating 1;1eroticism. All
of which froth is the result of
realizing sometime earlier this
evening that it was time to do
that apin, write the Grump
that is. More precisely, my
anger has to do with the sense of relief which seemed
to accompany that realization.

The
g1rump

W riling this column is a really variable
experi•,nce. Sometimes it is fun thing, sometimes it is
highly satisfying, and sometimes it falls out of the
typew1riter onto the floor with a splat which tempts
me to wrap it in toilet tissue before delivering it.
Rarely , however, is the emotional experience one of
relief. Which feeling, therefore, seemed worthy of
backtmckjng. What was found turned out to be less
than really comforting.
Ju.&amp;t recently completed a major project which is
now b«:ing typed through the generous asuplces of a
fine an1d noble lady who sh.al1 reamin nameless for
reason~• politic. Anyway , I have on schedule that I
should go to the Lexington Avenue Food Coop
Meeting at 7 :30 p.m. - every Tuesday, folks, and
they &lt;:an always use new faces, preferably with
willing hands and keen minds attached - and the
drop things off at the new apartment of a fine young
woma~1 friend I don't see much of, of late. Not sure
just wlllat that second arrand will necessarily.~sult
in, but at least there is enough of an interest to keep
things interesting. The point seems to be that there
is, before recalling this task, nothing which has to be
done. No deadlines.
No deadlines? My god, whatever can be done
with that empty time stretching out to bedtime?
One could , of course, move up bedtime. But this
somehow is a less than totally absorbing concept
when same is a solo experience. Or is that
satisfying???? But regardless, what kind of a nut gets
up tight when he discovers that his time is not
overcommitted? Note that we are talking about a
situation in which time is sorted of filled , not empty,
and th.at this is driving me bats.
Wlttich turns out to be not totaUy unique. One
of the fundamental people in my life was muttering
recently about once discovering herself at the end of
a mental list of things to do which she had been
kee'ping in her head since the year one. She also
discov•~red that having an unscheduled future
unfiUed with all sorts of activity - trivial or
otherwise - could be extremely threatening. Which
somehow seems to be a rather striking commentary
on wh,ere a lot of us are. Running very hard to stay
just ahead of the large empty spaces in our lives but I ':an't stop long eno ugh to t:Uk about that just
now.
If the anx iety doesn't drive me l &lt;' sJrt.asm o r
other assorted clever camaflouges perhaps th.is ~: ·1 be
further ampllfied. Among my other glon~'us
accomplishments is having been married twice. (It is
really 1easy to be a dirt y old man, if you start young

enough!) A great deal of the problem causing the
tense to be put can be seen - at leut from my side
- as being fairly closely connected to problems with
committrnent. (Sorry to use such language in a
family newspaper.)
Or another wary (way damn it, Steese) of
looking at It is to call it a dependency phobia. (I tum
chicken, see ... ) Of late it begins to become clearer
that wherever you go and whatever you do, it is
affected by a tradeoff function. No one can be all
thin&amp;' at once, no way! So that in running very hard
to stay in front of aU those dependency hassles, it
seems as if I keep running up the back of this big
mother devil, independence, who is running after the
guy in front of me, theoretically, and he then turns
around and begins to belabor me. I have a thought,
that were It possible to move in that situation, and
to just lie down, these two might fight each other to
a standstill ... but that Involves this other probJem I
have of making choices, and doctor ...
Anyway, folks, it turns out to be a really
obnoxious bit to try and find some middle ground
between those two areas, at least for me. And you
may, or may not, be surprised at the trivial bullshit
fights that can be started when people get anxious
about who wants what from who and under what
circumstances. If you are other than a complete
dunce it has perhaps occured to you to wonder why
retrospectively small to microscopic transgressions say buying small instead of large curd cottage cheese
- cap be escalated into major outbursts virtually
instantaneously.
Most of us do not seem to be able to stand the
idea of spUtting a relationship when it has more good
than bad in it. So we run around finding every last
scrap of bad we can in order to hide the good parts
o f the relationship, in order to justify splitting from
the person who has such strong appeal that they
make us anxious. And soon after the split occurs the
artificiality may go stealing away,leaving the feeling
that something funny went on, but being too busy
trying to assuage the loneliness by finding someone
else none o f us have time to look at that problem ...
of course.
Someplace at the b ottom of all this i.s a truism
that it i.s not how you feel about the other person in
a relationship which screws it up. It is how you feel
about yourself. People can do weird things around
you, and that can be cool as long as it doesn't give
you grief about who you are, and the value of being
that. When such wierdness begins to tap aU those
things which bump along in the endless night inside
our heads that trouble arises.
Feeling ·threatened we fight back , in any way we
can. A groovily effective way of doing that i.s to
strike back at the self-image of the threatener, and
increase the pain/cost of their doing that to you ,
which makes everybody bitchy enough t~ avoid each
other in the future. Which is neat , but it is hard to
~e t a great many good things ftvm people who are
avoiding you. But surely this i.s all solipsistic crap
and nobody bright enough to read this space could
be dumb rnough to get themselves into such a
predic~'llent . HopefuU) So eat 1 1e cottage cheese
regardless of the curd "1ze, and even if it has chives.
Good week, pa.x.

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·Help make the Assembly regresent
you!
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IT'S EASIER TO JOIN
THE STUDENT ASSEMBLY
THAN IT'S EVER BEEN
t I

BEFORE.
It's no longer necessary to have a pre-arranged election in order to form an
interest group and place a representative in the Assembly.

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Upon completion of the preliminary form (which contains 40
signatures) and upon returning that form to the Office of Elections and
Credentials desk in The Union, the signees individually may return to the
Office of Elections and Credentials desk, and vote for any person who
signed that form. As. soon as 40 votes have been cast, the member of the
group with a plurality of votes shall be the S.A. Representative to the
Assembly for that group.

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Pag,.. ten. The Spectrum. Friday, October 8, 1971

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1:.--~ac~t~Jo_n_t,_n_e____.I [1
Ha~ 11 problem? Need help? Do you flnd It impo1tib~ to untangle
the UntHnlty bu,.....cNcy? In coo~ration with the Office of Student
A./flllrl and S•nlce1, The Spectrum 1/'(JitiOrl Action Line. a weekly
reader •mce column. Throutlt Action Une, lndMdwl ttudent1 ctln
get 11n1Wtn to puzl/1~ quetttom, find out where and why Unh!enity
deciliofll t1re mtlde •nd ~~ ttction when chante ;, needed.
Ju1t dilll 811-$000 or rlllt the Action Line booth in the Center
Lountt In Norton Hflll for lndillidual ttttention. The Of/lee of Student
A/falrt and Servk•l wUI fnveltlftlle all que1tion1 11nd compl4lnt1, and
will tlntwer them indin"dut~Uy. The Mme of the indM4Uill origitUZting
the Inquiry II upt confidenllill under all circum1tancu. The more
com mora qutlliOtll will be an~w•re4 in thi1 column each week.

Q: I had Men cloaed out of a coune. I aot a letter from the
department ldmlttiq me to the coune and took it with a new request
to Aclmilliona IDCI llecoftla. Tbe computer now teUa me tlut I am ltW
closed out of tbe coune. Wby is this and what can I do to aet into the

coune.

A: The reason why you were closed out of the course was because
there was no more physical space for students; i.e. the seats were all
taken. This means that _you cannot get into the coune because it is
physically impossible. A&amp;R suggests that you try another course and
check t.bat you do not choose a closed coune.
Q : Can I teD by look.ina at a studeot'siD number what year he or
she is in (freshman, sophomore, etc.)?
A: No, you cannot . However, the higher the number the more
recently the student was admitted to the University. For example, most
freshmen numbers begin with the numeral 2. However, the class lists
also give the student's class.

Q : If one takes a semester off, does his Regents Scholarship then
go for another semester?
A: A student is entitled to up to two years delay on the life of his
Regents Scholarship with the exception of service in the Aimed Forces.
However, you must request a leave to get this delay. To do this you
merely need to write to the Regents examination and Scholarship
Center of the State Education Department, 99 Washington Avenue,
Albany, New York 12210, and indicate the extent of the leave desired;
i.e. six months, one year, etc. In writing, the student should indicate his
scholarship number and, of course, the college he is presently
attending. The Scholarship Center will send a receipt of the student's
letter, confrrming that a leave has been granted. But each student
should keep a carbon copy of his original letter to the Scholarship
Center, to insure confirmation. of his request for a leave.
Q: I am a fuU time stud ent enrolled in a (our year proaram. Am I
eligible for welfare benefits?
A: No. The current ruling by the Department of Social Services
grants welfare benefits only to students enrolled in two year vocational
programs. (This ruling is currently being cpallenged by a law suit and
the outcome of this case will probably determine future welfare status
of students.)

Q: I want to drop the food services contract because I an1 a
But the Food Services refuses. What can I do?
A: Not much! Food Services points out that the food contract is a
voluntary one. No student is forced to accept it. Students are urged to
read the contract before they sign it. And No. 2 clause in the contract
states that "This contract is valid for the entire semester and cannot be
broken except for resignation fr"m the University." If you seriously
have need of a special diet you are urged to see one of the doctors at
the Health Services. Other than this, it seems like you must suffer for
the remainder of this semester. The contract is for one semester and
you do not have to renew it for the second. Incidentally, the contract is
a valid one, even if you are a minor.
~egetarian.

Q: I am an MFC student and am here only in the evening. How can
I get a student ID card and a parking pennit?
A: Unfortunately, at this late date ID cards are being issued only
during the day on Tuesdays from 9 - noon ...and o n Fridays from
noon- 3 p.m., in the basement of Foster HaJl (Audio Visual Office).
However, the MFC parking permits will be issued at the MFC office in
Room 2 of Hayes A each evening from 5- 8 p.m. Remember that to get
~n 10 card you must have your MFC class registration card .

WASHJlNGTON - The Se,..to voted Tuesday to
CLEVELAND - lbe.re is a chance for La.k.e
reject a b&amp;rlf.che.bombina amendment by a vote of Erte, ac:cordina to Dr. Robert A. Sweeney, director
64-19. ~- amendment wu introduced by Sen. of the Great Lakes Laboratol)' at the State.
Mike Gra
(D.• Alaska) who d:wJod that muaive Uruvenity of Buffalo. If most ef the truh fish were
air strikes 11ndochina by the U.S. constituted a \'t'&amp;r removed, and detersenu were prevented from
crime comparable to Hitler's "finaleolution" for the flowing into the lake, the badly polluted water could
Jews. If Ji*Md, the amendment wOuld have be turned into a beautiful lake. Sweeney said that
prohibited ~\.arthcr bombing in Indochina, except in the tlJh in the lake now could be turned into fWl
caaea where It Is directly necessary to protect U.S. protein concentrate of fish flour, whioh, mixed with
troop. Gra,~el added that, ..if we have a criminal · grain flour, enhances the nutritive value of the latter.
who Is Pres.dcnt of the United States, we should "There is sufficient ft&amp;h in Lake Erie to provide the
have the me•ral resolve to point to it and correct it! ' necessary fish protein concentrate to feed the
Sen. Strom Thurmond (R., S.C.) said in opposition. undernourished people of India and Africa...
to the anl!endment: "We could have laid thls Sweeney said: "l commend the soap and deterw=nt
country, N~;rth Vietnam, bare if we had wanted to.
But instead ;~e have been figbting with one hand tied
behind our bac:k..'' Among those in support of the
amendment to the $21 bUlion weapons procurement
bill were Sonators Mansfield·, Fulbright, Bayh and
Kennedy. Sienators Muskie and Humphrey voted
against it.

ALBANY - Free gononhea testing cultures will
be supplied to the state's 35,000 doctors for state
lab tests for venereal disease, it was announced
WASHilNGTON - It was announced Tuesday Tuesday. The $250.000 program , said Health
that Presid•:nt Nixon's national security advisor Commissioner Hollis ingraham , was designed to
Henry A. Klisslnger will visit Peking later this month permU doctors to conduct gonorrhea tests for all
to pave the way for Nixon's trip to China. Kissinger their ''sexuaUy active'' female patients. In a letter to
told reporte:rs that while he is in Peking, he and the participating physicians, Ingraham said: "With
Chinese rep1resentatives "will zero in on a date" for your cooperation in carrying out the screening
Nixon's visilt. Kissinger will be accompanied by two program, we will be able to reduce the reservoir of
of his staff members, a State Department official, infected asymptomatic females and begin to control
and membe1rs of a White House advance party. No gonorrhea," With the new culture medium,
newsmen will accompany him on this trip, but a "Transgrow," doctors wiD be able to mail the
representative from the White House press staff will cult urcs for lab tests, since the chocolate-covered
be there t•o discuss news arrangements for the liquad preserves the sample for two or three days. A
President's trip ..
few of the larger county health departments and
New York City will do their own testing, but most
physicians will mail their samples to Albany .
FT. MCPHERSON, GA. - Less than two weeks
Ingraham expects 150,000 in the. first year of the
after he was cleared of all charges in the My Lai
program.
massacre, Cnpt. Ernest L. Medina has submitted his
resignation from the Army. In his statement read
Monday by his military attorney, Capt. Mark
BUFFALO - U.S. District Judge John T. Curtin
Kaddish, M'edina asked for an honorable discharge ruled Tuesday there was no cause to issue an
and complete separation from the Army. "It is with injunction barring Attica Prison guards and officials
deep sorrow and regret that after 16 years I leave the from physically abusing inmates in the wake of last
Army whicl~ has meant so much to me and my month's riot. Dismissing the action brought by the
· family." Fir11al action is expected in two weeks, at American Civil Uberties UnioA against prison
which time Medina will go to work for his civilian officials, Curtin noted that Gov. Nelson A.
lawyer, F. l~ Bailey, as a corporation executive for Rockefeller was taking steps to insure that the civil
a helicopter firm Bailey heads in Menominee, Mich. liberties of the prisoners were being protected. The
ACLU had asked Curtin to place federal observers in
the priSon to observe treatment of the inmates, to
SAIGON - Reacting to the 93.4% margin that stop officials from disposing of inmates' property,
President Ni:uyen Van Thleu received in the recent
and to stop Atty. Gen. Robert E. Fischer from
South Vietnamese election, Vice President Nguyen further ipvestigating the takeover and recapture of
Cao Ky said that the result was "indicative of blatant
the prison in which 42 persons died.
rigging," and vowed he would never go Into exile.
The remarks, supposedly made at a ''faceweU
dinner" by the national social and economic council
ALBANY - The union representing guards in
that Ky heads, were the first pubUc reaction by Ky the state prisons reached an agreement with state
to the landslide win. Supporters of Ky petitioned the officials Tuesday night for a pact which would
Supreme Court to have the results of the Oct. 3 provide "security for both conection officers and
elections overturned, but they were given almost no inmates." The agreement calls for hiring additional
chance of sucoess. Ky and Gen. Duong Van Minh 1 corre c tional personnel , training facilities for
were maneuvered out of the race, making it a· correctional officers and an intensive rehabilitation
one-man ele_j:tlon. Meanwhile, it was reported that and correctional institute for incorrigible convicts.
Vice President-elect Tran Van Huong has been in the The latter, a ''max.i·ma.xi" security prison , will be in
hospital sin~e Tues&lt;Iay afternoon, supposedly for a operation within 30 days. The pact also calls for
checkup. Ho•wever, the 68.year-old former premier is improvements in inmate care, including better
being treated by a cardiologist.
menus, new clothing and improved sanitary facilities .

Q: I am a dormitory resident. Recently, I comf}leted a form in
order to receive a parking lot sticker. Although I have given the
requested infortnation to my Resident Advisor, I have not, as yet,
received my sticker. What gives?
A: Action Line checked with Robert Hunt, Environmental Health
officer, who was in charge o f receiving the forms from t~e Resid~nt
Advisors. Unfortunately, there was a mix-up in that the mformataon
called for was not designated to be used for park~ng sticke~ pu~oses .
The forms will enable each dorm resident to receave a spect.al resadent
sticker. Students are still responsible, however, for picking up parking
stickers which can be obtained by going to the Security Office, 196
Winspear.
Q : I need to use a calculator for a research project. Where can I
f'md one to use for a sbort time?
.
A: The Statistics Department permits free usage of therr
calculators by any student no matter what department he is in. They
are located in 4230 Ridg~ Lea, Room A22 ; their hours are from 8
a.m.- 10 p.m., Mondays- Fridays.
The Psychology Department, the Sociology Department and the
School of Management all allow usage of their calculators, but only by
those students associated with each department.

lobby - one of the largest lobbies in Washington on their success in coming up with the grand
delusion. The industry ought to use some of the
$225 million spent annually on advertising for
studles on a safe phosphate substitute."

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Friday, October 8, 1971 . The Spectrum

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Steel is the backbone of American
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If you're thinking career, think
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•
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Page tw"'··o The Spectrum . Friday, October 8, 1971 ·

f.;•

�'

(lnaiJIUnl OODCert)

...

SOccer
Bulls
shOw
StTing ·Quartet: quality music
how to win a game

There could not have been a richer selection of
chamber mullc for the "inaugural concert" of the
new relident String Quartet ensemble of State
Univenity of Buffalo's Music Department at Baird
Hall. The Cleveland String Quartet needed a physical
as well u an artistic capecity to perform a prop-am
that lilted Haydn·s D major, op. 76 quartet, Ravel's
F major quartet and lves' Second String Quartet.
Muaic u difficult u this would be demanding
for any group, but what was incredible about
Monday night'• concert was the relentless vitality
with wbich the Cleveland group attacked each work.
They are extremely energetic performers who seem
to possess an almoct vicious sense of exactitude, and
the result of such intense playing is a sound that is
both strong and clear. The accessibility of such a
group can only .be an advantage to the Buffalo
community.
Haydn quartet
The concert opened with the exquisite Haydn
quartet which, unlike several of that composer's
" lighter" quartets, poueaes a certain introspective
seriousness. Bspecially in the slow movement iJ this
inwardness conveyed, perhaps being more indicative
of Haydn's personality than the ..How do you do?"'
quartet. (n the movement, the Cleveland was able to
evoke much dramatic tension, perhaps as a result of
their own intense approach.
The Second Quartet of Charles Ives, an
extremely taxing work which antecedes much of
Bartok's and Berg's chamber music yet displays an
uncanny resemblance towards them, was treated
with clarity and rigour. In a welcome gesture of
unorthodox concert etiquette, the first violinist,
Donald WeUerstein, preceded the performance of
that work with a brief commentary, explaJning the
compUcated " program" of the work as derived from

the compoeer"s own oote1 b- the orlpn.i JnaDUiaipt.
The piece portrays four mtn - each represented by
an inatrument - In a heated political dilcUIIioo, who
eventually decide to quit bickering and so up on a
mountain to soak up 101me of that Emersonian
transcendentaUJm.

MUiical cleblite
The three movements of the work are marked
"Discussions, Ataument11.. and ·~ of the
Mountain," and although there is much sardonic
lwmor in the work, the real quesUon that Is disputed
is a musical one - somethln;&amp;like "How shall we find
concord out of this discc•rd?" And although the
''Call on the Mountain" does not ruol11e the
argument (the movemen1~ itself remains quite
dissonant), it banilhea all the discordaRt elements
enabling the piece to en9 with a telf-asserting,
brilliance - more like Whit:man, than Emerson. The
resonance of the final movement so vastly
overshadows the opening movemeou, which are
gimmick-ridden and polemitcal, and seem to serve as
nothing more than foils ror the last movement.
However, despite the campiness of these two
movements, the Second Quartet is an incredible
portrayal of musical dialectic.
The Ravel sblmrnered. 11bis is a remukable piece
- certainly one of the repiCrtoire's finest - which
seems to require a most d•:Ucate sense of precision
along with a vividness of textural color. In this
respect, the Cleveland Quutet proved to be superb
craftsmen. The opening movement was partieularly
beautiful, showing this precision, and the pizzicati
sections in the scherzo were perfect, yet the whole
piece still breathed much sp.on t.aneity.
With a variety of such quality music served with
such a vital intensity, the only conclusion to be
made is that Monday night saw one of Baird Hall's
finest concerts. The members of the Cleveland
Quartet are Mr. WeUerstein,, and Pe&amp;er Salaff, violins;
Martha Strongin KAtz, viola and Paul Katz, ceUo.

SA Duplicating Center
Room 2 25 Norton1

the fourth quarter. Oaly a teria
of spectacular ltopl by~
Willie Wood, who w•IUblriDJ for
At Green Bay, Yt'bere Bert the Uijwed Tabm Sadepi, kept
Jacobsen u.ed to coach, tbere was the Blue and Gold iD front.
a pro football tam which uaecl to FiniJly, with seYell minutes left,
win pmea by capilalizinJ on Geneseo fullback Matt Dubai'a
miltaltea by the oppolition. Lut lona shot was misjuclpd by Wood
Tuead.ay, Coach Jacobten's aoc.cer and wu tipped ill by Mike Holt,
Bulls atole a pqe out of the book Geneseo's top scorer.
of the peat Packer teams by
Despite peniltent pressure, it
capitalizin&amp; on their opponents' seemed certain that the pme
mistake Late in the pme to arab a would 10 into onrtime. 1ben,
2- l victory at Genesco. A just a minute• and a half Later,
penalty for bandlina with just 6~ubai committed his third
minutes left ln the pme pve Bob
iolation of tbe afternoon,
Hayes a chance to link
·
dlin&amp; the baU in the penalty
winni.nJ penalty ldck for Buffalo. area which surrounds his own
The Bulls do minated play in pl. Therefore, the· Bulla were
the first half apinat Geneseo's awarded a penalty kick. Bob
junior vanity . KeepinJ the Hayes, who, ac:cordln&amp; to Coach
pressure on throupout the first Jacobsen "hat the most accurate
quarter, Buffalo threatened shot that be's seen on this squad,"
repeatedly, b ut failed to score. was delepted to take the kick.
Alex Torimiro, who put six shots Hayes' low, lw'd shot was beyond
on the Blue Kniahts' net, hit the tbe reac:b of a diving Tom
P&gt;al post once and bad teYeral Crowley and the Bulls bad their
otber attempts thwarted by initial victory.
goalkeeper Tom Crowley. Finally,
Overall, Coach Jacobsen was
with five minutes to 10 in the impreaed with the performance.
half, the Bulls broke throup. " 1 did not expect them to have
Jerry Dion sent a lona pass in such a aood IV squad," be
front of the net to center forward remarked, "but I was pleasantly
Dave Afrasiabi. Afruiabi'a ahot surprised with the fact that Willie
was stopped by Crowley, but tbe Wood wu able to stand up to the
rebouod came out to Kola Oseni, pressure. Off his performance
who notched the fint Blue and today, be bas the job until be
Gold aoaJ of the season, on a low, loses it." The coach also stated
hard drive.
that he thought the offense didn't
use the outside route often
Bulb tied
enoUJh. The reason for moving
However, it was the Blue the ball downfield via t he outside
Knights who reversed the tide of of the field is that it is almost
battle thereafter. After a scoreless impossible to get it through the
third period, Geneseo put middle of the field, since the
enormous pressure on the Bulls in defe~ stack up that area. Jim
Leinert was the mainstay of the
defense, as be held Holt, the
Knights' leading m~ksman , to
only two shots on goal.
This afternoon, the Bulls travel
down Main St. to meet Erie
Community College. On
Wednesday, the Bulls return home
to face Fredonia State in the
Buffalo home opener.

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Friday, October'S, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

�~~~rOo£~0~
l'lo footbell
.
by Dan Caputi Jr.
George Allen is definitely the NFL's man of the hour. His •
reclaimed Redski:ns are nothing short of a miracle. However, the
Redslcins could fall apart by season's end, as was the case with Allen's
Rams. Last week the Wizard went 84-1 which elevated him to 21-15·3

...,\

and 58%.
Baltimore 30, ·Buffalo 17: Bills can't get offense and defense
together.
Washington 27, Houston 10: Allen's Gerltol gang rides again.
N.Y. Jet&amp; 20, New Eng/JJnd 13: leta stay aline in race while waiting
for Joe.
Minnesota 31. Philadelphia 7: Eagles' defense fine remedy for ills
of Viking attack.
Kanstl&amp; City 27, San Diego 17: Chiefs won't get fooled again.
New Orleans 21, Chicago 17: Manning is savior of Saints this year.
Miami 23, Cincinnati 16: Dolphins stung by Jet upset, bounce
back at expense of Bengals, ·vho must start rookie qb. Ken Anderson.
San Francisco 30, Los Angeles 20: 49'ers devastating offense may
be too much for still questionable Ram defense.
QeveiJJnd 27, Pittsburgh 21: Central division battle finds
experienced Browns on top as Nelsen humbles old teammates.
Oakland 31, Denver 10: Lou Saban has no quarterback.
Atlanta 28, St. Louis 21: Surprisingly tough Falcons in close one
over Jekyll and Hyde Cards.
(
Dallas 30, N.Y. Giants: Cowboys get hack on winning trail wit
Lance Atworth back.
Detroit 31, Green Bay 28: Both teams have shown explosive
offense; lions tougher on defense.

Cevert first in Grand Prix
by SteYe Seraf"an
Spectrum Staff Writer

Young Frenchman Francois Cevert drove a
Tyreli-Ford at at an average speed of J J 5.114 mph
to win the U.S. Grand Prix at Watkins Glen Sunday.
The tlophomore Formula I driver outlasted Jacky
lckx'11 Ferrari and outdrove everyone else for his fust
Grand Prix win. But the second team driver for Elf
Team Tyrell has been knock.ing on the door aU
seasol[l, finishing second to team leader Jackie
Stew~1rt on two occasions and trailing Peter Gethin
to the finish line in the.. Italian GP by only .0 1
seconds.
A~gainst aU expectations, the weather was
fantas:tic for the entire weekend. Saturday's practice
sessio:n ended with Stewart's Tyrell on the pole,
havinn toured &amp;the spanking new 3.377-mile circuit
with ,a best time of one minute, 42.642 seconds.
Emen:on Fittipaldi's Lotus-Ford was beside him and
Denis Hulme completed the front row in a
McLa1ren-Ford. Clay Regazzoni placed his Ferrari on
the second row pole and Cevert filled out that row.

CoUege football

by Barry Rubin
After last week's 15-3 slate, the colle_ge wizard stands 39·7 ·1 for
85%. This week's possible upset could be Oklahoma- Texas.
Oklahoma 27, Texas 24: The Sooners are playing hot balJ , and the
Norman home court advantage should be the difference.
Michigan 28, Michigan State 20: Wolverines have clear sailing.
Air Force 21, SMU 0 : Falcons just missed Penn State , won't miss

SMU.
AIJJbama 27, Vanderbilt 16: If the Tide doesn't watch out, Bear
Bryant's feathers could be ruffled.
Penn State 24, Amty 12: Nittany Lions are the East's best, but the

-snlos

Wattkins Glen excitement

Stewart leads
A,t the gun, Stewart grabbed an immediate lead, '
but by the second lap Cevert was right on his tail,
followed by Hulme, Regazzoni and Jo Siffert's BRM.
l ckx c l imbed very rapidly from h is
middl•e-of-the-grid starting spot, and after ten laps
was in fourth. On lap 14, Cevert passed Stewart, who
was sllowing up considerably, and three laps later
Jckx dlid likewise. As the race progressed, lckx set his
sights on the leader, who had pulled out to a sizeable

Cadets are the East's biggest surprise.
Boston College 27, Villonova 24: Eagles' vaunted defense is coming
around and should collar Wildcat dynamic duo of Woodring to Siani.
Buffalo 0, NYU 0: Someone stole the uniforms and the ball.
LSU 28, Florida 20: Gators' John Reaves may make me eat this
pick, but the Tigers are hungry in Baton Rouge.
Tennessee 20, Georgia Tech 17: One of the day's toughest, but the
Vols are most consistent than the Yellowjackets .
USC 30, Oregon 17: Good con t ~-. t, but Trojan offense is more
potent.
Georgia 24, MiS3issippi 13: Improved Bulldogs win, while the
Rebels are still trying to recover from the loss of Archie Manning.
Ohio State 35, Illinois 0: lllini scored for the first time last week.
The question is not whether they can win ; but rather. will they score?
Northwestern 27, Iowa 0: Iowa's Frank Lauterbur wishes he were
back in Toledo with the vaunted Rockets.
Maryland 14, Sy"'cuse 12: The Orange has no offense, while the
Terps have steadily improved.
Notre Dame 31, Miami 7: The ~rish have scored o nly 2-2 points the
past two weeks - look for an explosion.
Nebraska 34, Missouri 3: Tigers reached a new depth when they
lost to Army. The Huskers have no pity for the unfortunate.
Pittsburgh 21, Navy 7: The Panthers are unpredictable, but the
Middies are no match.
Tulsa 23, Virginia Tech 13: After upsetting Arkansas, Tulsa should
take the measure of the Gobblers with ease.

l&lt;fJI All£

lead, and for a while it was touch and go as to
whether be could catch him before the checkered
flaa. A bit back, Stewart and Petersen were having a
tremendous dice for fourth behind Siffert who was
by then running a steady third .
Jckx was going faster than anybody, setting the
lap record on lap 43 with a sizzling 1 :43.474 for
which he received the Ballantine Trophy and $5000.
He was right on Covert's tail at lap 45, but a loose
fue extingu isher forced him to slow up. A few laps
later be coasted
Young Frenchman Francois Cevert drove a
TyreU-Ford at an around to the pits with a broken
magneto, leaving Cevert in complete control with a
lead of 40 seconds on Siffert , who inherited second
following Jckx's retirement.
The Petersen/Stewart battle was resolved in
favor of Petersen who placed third. Getbin, in
another BRM, managed to pass Stewart before the
end, but a broken suspension member almost forced
him to retire on the last lap. Regazzoni finished in
sixth behind Stewart on the same lap as the winner.
Cevert's one· hour, 43 minute and 52 second
drive won him $50,000 and the recognition h e
deserves as one of the 'briahtest of the youns drivers
to hit the Formula 1 circuit in the past two years.
Watkins Glen thus concludes this year's GP
season with Stewart on top with 62 points, followed
by Petersen, Cevert , and lckx and Siffert tied for
fourth. Next year' looms as a tremendously
competitive season as driver's like Cevert and
Petersen begin to come into their own as top drivers,
adding to the excitement that is Formula I - the
best.

QI&lt;OBUJ\~ijl

lNJIJJm£1 w&lt;f !\

COCKTAIL PARTY
JI&lt;ONRJN~

John V. Lindsay
Frank A. Sed ita
AND

On OCTOBER 8 , 1971 - 5:30 - 7 :00p.m. EXECUTIVE RAMADA INN

CONTRIBUTION - $15.00 per couple $10.00 per person

4243 Genesee St.

·wirkrts will br auailablr

t~ru:

Leo Curran ......... . ............ Classics

STUDENT NEW YORK STATE
TEACHERS ASSOCIATION

Frank Zweig ...............•Social Welfare
Marvin Bloom . ·..............Social Welfare
Jarnes DeSantis ... . ........ Public Relations
Bob Fisk . .••.•. .......... . .... Education
J.P•. Jones ........ .... .... Political Science
Bob Berdahl ................... Education
Jol~n Lane ................POlitical Science
Bob Rossberg ...... . ............ Education
Bob Samberg . ,. . ...•....... Political Science
Walter Petty ... ••.•...........• Education
Ar1t Butler .•......... .'..... . .. Economics
John Eberhardt . . ............. Architecture
C. Yeracaris ... .. ... . ........... Sociology
Eugene Martelt . .. ... . ... Student Placement
Tom Guttrldge ............... Management
David Hays ................... Linguistics
Herbert Phillips . . ............. Management
Lester Milbraith ............ Political Science
Ahtn Andreason ............... Management
Nick Kazarinoff .... ........... Mathamatlcs
~tn Katz ......•........ .• ... Psychology
Morton Rothstein ....... .•. ...... .Biology
Ca~rmello Privitera . . . . . • . . . . . . . Engineering
James Blackhurst ...•....... Summ• Session
1
Ed Mlrine ........... f ..........Medicine
Bill Greiner ............•........•.. Law
D. Bezelon .......... . •.••.. Policy Sciences
Dan Gifford ...... . .........•.. ... .. Law
Tickets available at the door.

Ma:c Hull ............ .. ........ .. Physics

presents
../

JUDY RAULS
of the BTF
I

to speak, October 13, at 7 :00p.m.
Room 334, Norton Hall
All interested Education Majors are urged to attend.

..

.

&amp;pnn.surrb .by &lt;!lnllrgr anb llniurrsity Jrrirnbs
351 Woodward Ave.

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday, October 8, 1971

�CLAaiPIII
HELP WANTED

William

B.

Hoyt'$

c:ampalgn .

Call

884-"~23.

1 NEED 4 ambitious males ilnd 1
female to helP wltl\ the harvesting of
Chrlstm• t r - In my Plantations In
the b•utlful S lo x MounQin Range In
N o rthern Penns y l va ni a. Female
ex pected to cook &amp;. keep 1\ouJe.
Transportation $upplled along w ith
room &amp;. board .

BASS guitar player fOI soft rock group.
Must have addltloi\al 8 flat Instrument
and/ or voc:al c:apabllltles. Call Rick,
895..()330.

PART-TIME supervisor for Buffalo
Teen-age Jewish Youth Program . BA.
G roup wor k e x perl ence/ M S W
H O URLY
WA GE.
O e puture
can dldate preferable . Call
approximately Oct. 25tl&gt;, retu rning
3 15""46-93 79 or 31 5""464985 for
Interview .
Nov. 23. Abundance o f all spec:las o f
wildlife to provide an unforgettable , - - - - - - - -- - - - -- E X PERI ENCED people to work IBM
ex peri ence with nat ure, Write B ox N o.
ComPOsing Equipment, paste-4.1 p or
89 givi ng all partlculan.
Photo· tYPOsltlng. Please contact Jim at
WANTED
831 · 4113 or come up to The
Spectrum, Room 355 Norton.
A N YONE wh o has b icycl e to sell f o r
about $50, c:a ll B ob Klei n 8 33-76 59.
W E NE E D a bed! TWin size \
preferrabl e. I f you have o ne for sale or
k now o f one, call ~arty at 837·2694.
1 WOUI..D like t o buy the book for
H ebrew 191 called Hebrew BaSic:
F I VE very llberal ·m l nded femalas
course. Please c:all B arb 8 33-94 40 .
w an ted for par t y with hometown
H OYT H elpers wanted . V o lunt eers t o
friends, O ct , 9th . f'l o expense, j ust fun .
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ONE FEMALE anel ner dog
d•per•tely need piKe to live. Near
c:ampus. Call Sally 837..0661.
VOLKSWAGEN wngtne needed . 1500
cc or larger. Any condition. Call Stu
881 -1982.

FOR SALE
1!H6 FORO Falrlane: needs bOdy
repair. east offer. Phone 832-6436.
COUCH - c:ontemporuy 96·1nc:h blue
tweed - reason..ble. 694-1074,
2 Fl R £STONE snow tlras 7 .35 x 14 on
wheels . 836·7761.
1969 VW radio, tape-player, 3 7,000
m llas. Bast offer. Must sell . 63 2·535 4 ,
L .C. SMI T H office t y pewriter, good
co ndition - $ 35. Call 834-7 448.
'67 VW Bug, new t lras and sn ow s.
E xcellent conditio n . 8 734117.
STEREO turntable, Pio neer PLA25
base and c:over, 3 months old. S hure
M ·9 1E cartridge. 87 5 .....6 4 , Bob.
1968 TRIUMPH S pitfire, brg luggage

•ow
·R·

NO COUI'ON IIQUIIIO

PRICE ROLL
BACK

DINNER FOR 2
{ 4DULTS)

CHOICE OF 18 DIIHitl

Pint • ...,.. Ia at rotular price. Second
o11tr. . &lt;Otlt you o11ly lc. ...orvotlona
11tlol,

4 P.M.-1:31 P.M. DAILY
3 P.M•.f:M P.M. SOIIGAY
We O&lt;e NOT d""'pl"' quality
tlondord - only tt.. price t.o...t on
higher vol""'•· We erlnd our own
flour1 t.olto Ollf own Of'OOnlo btood1
u• poloon-b. . trouftd b..f oond oHor
tablecloth . . ,.....

•saneca

Boulevard Mall
Mall
193 1 Main St. · Mitplne Piau
Niag. Falls

Jloo Hetwol ,..., .,...

1111 DtiiWirt

TO POSJER StlE

A areat alft or 111 ldtl.
Ideal room dteorallon . • .
perfect fo r parties. Send
any b&amp;w or color photo,
Polaroid print, cartoon or
maanlne photo. for slides
and neaallves, add $1 .00
per post er. Better orl&amp;lnllt • - - - - _ .
produce better poste rs.
Gltnt b&amp;w poster m1lled In tl.lbe.
1 X 2 Ft. $2.50 - 3 X 4 Ft. $7.50
Ill PSYCHEDEliC COl.,., Any
1 poster In psychedello Red
Yellow. Only In 1~ x 2 ft.
$3.
• 3 ft. @ S4,SO. Speclf)' deslri'a color.

/z

e

SEIIVICE ................ ..
,.., pot ter Of'Ott.,,

I .., ., hfll

...:

~~~=-~·
c.o.D.IIo•

H•~,.

MALE roomm•t• wanted to -ItCh
rooms with me. 1 am In Allanttunt and
want toom on c:amput. Call Mickey,
833-8153.

Call

FLATTOP Cla ss i c guitars.
New-used. Martin, Gibson, Guild,
Gurian, etc. MuSicians prlcas. String
Shoppe, 524 Ontario. 7 p .m.-9 p.m.
dally. Saturday, noon - S · p.m.
874-0120.

lOST.FOUND
LOST on Thurs. Sept. 30 - 1 bfue
not.e book (unused) wJth two blrm
papers. Keep notebook. PLEASE
return papers, If found, c:all 181·14f2.

V OLV O 1225 being dismantled f or
parts. 8 16 D engine with 6·vo l t
elec:trlc:s. M-4 4 ..$peeel t rans., seats,
glas s, etc. Bllt Thompson 458A
Allenhurst . 8374647 evenings.

APARTMENTS WANTED
FEMALE desi res own room In
apartment with same. Call 838-4679
after 5 :00.

1 foot-and-a·helf blac k light. Never
been used - ,need m o ney. Call Mike W .
881· 1452.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
LARG E furnished roo m available for
two. 876..0L49.

Hl68 TRIUMPH - ex cellen t co ndition
- must sell . 2 9 ,000 mllas. B est offer
over $1000. Call 886·3633.

• PERSONAL

MCINTOSH C·26, Ml·3, 65, Marantz
23 , T h o rens TD-1 25 W/SM E , Bose 901 ,
Altec: A ·7 5 00 w, Sansul 200, C rown
DC · 300, Dynac:o PAS·3X, PAT 4 ,
ST - 1 20, Bo z a k co n c:ert G rand,
Tandberg 12 , 6844937, 8 39·2378.

1F YOU were ever In o ne of Stiller's
sec:tlons o f M usic: 1 15 and tho ught ne
d id a goOd Job, p lease call him •t
837·2297 as soon as possible.

H EY you o ut t here: You know , y o u•re
needed. Come and fi nd out ho w muc h .
Oct. 15th 17th Weekend Godspell Media; t he problem wltn
J• us - $5 per person - Silver L•ke
Manor f o r more Inf o. o r just
Interested, c ontact .B etty·L ou Hilt on;
phone 8 3140 76. You want to talk; we..,
w ant to listen I we all say Peace (but d o
we mean It).

1 9 6 8 , 14 4 Automatic,
V O LVO
AM ·FM , new rad ial s, exh aust, battery .
48 ,000 m llas, $1 500. 839·2378 after 6
o 'c:lock.
1967 V . W. S q u a rebac:k. Great
depend able car . $700. 881 -3400 days.

SElF UP

ILACDIIITI SlOP

rack, snows, good condition .
837..0885 anytime. A goOd dealt

111-1211

Flll ,.,...,,., Atl"\tlc, StotlOift

1962 OLOSM08 1L.E, 65,000 miles,
good mechanical c:ondltlon, au t omatic:
t ransmission; power steering, brakes ;
mo unted sno w s Included. Great
transportation . ,$250 negotiabl e.
8 37-16 17 or 831-4113 . Ask f or
M ickey.

ANY
students Interested In t he
U.U.A.B. Coffeehouse, w e need you .
Meeting Fri day, Oct. 8 , Room 261,
N o rton 1 1 a.m .
BEAUTIFUL h andmade gold 11nd sliver
Jewelr y - wed ding rings - at sensible
prlcas . J .P. The Gol dweaver, 655
Elm w ood at Ferry St. 881·34 00.

REFRIGERATORS, stoves and
w ashers. Reconditioned , delivered and
guara nteed . O&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore, TX4·3 183.

OUR f o reign c:ar repai rs last - we
guarantee lt. Independent, 839·1850.

BUSTING you r ball Joints? See
1 ndepend ent Foreign Car Service,
839· 1850.

PINZ: Yuk , yuk, yuk, yuk. We've got
the blackmail now. B JN , C HR, EJ B .

WOM E N 'S pea c oat , size 10, S30. Call
L.eslle 831·2766.

MISCELLANEOUS

TIRES - 2 snows 6.50· 13, rims. 4
regular tires 6 .00 -13 . Best offer. Call
Ted . 8 32 •9731.

" THE PEO PLE," a folk ar U boutiQue,
feat uring ethnic ap parel, Jew el ry and
handcrafts. 144 Allen , 882·628 3 .

1964 RAMBLER c:ar In condition of a
mu c h newer c a r . 837-4223 o r
634· 115 5.

EARN extra money In your sp are t ime
selling top quality Frenc:h pa ntlh ose.
Call 837-2259.

SOLIGOR 1 degree Spot meter, tw o
months o ld. $100.00 new. Ask ing S65.
Call Peter 8 31-4214.

TUTOR a student In N ew M at h , grade
levels 6'8, for 4 weeks, paid . 836-7404 .
WOUL.O you like a taste treat t hat's
dlfferent1 Try o ur .rasty M exican food ;
tacos, burritos, enc h iladas, t am ales and
more. Snac:Ks or dinners. A ll f ood
prepafed mild wltll llot sauce opti o nal.
Tippy's Taco House, 2351 Sher idan'
Orlve - (ac:ross from f&gt;utt-Putt Golf
Course) . 838 -3900.

1965 M USTANG - good c:ondlllo n,
$450. Call Rosenfeld 837·2 259 .
1971 PEUGEOT - s ilvlf u.terl or red bucket seats . Exce llent c ondit ion.
633-5395 .
TVs and radios repai red, c heap . C•ll Ed
at 896·4409. Also sell TVs by order
only.
MEXICAN wedding shirt s and peasant
blouses, some embroidered, at "The
People," a folk-a r ts boutique, 144
Allen, 882·6 283.
" T HE PEOPLE," a folk arts b o utique,
featuring ethnic: apparel , Jewelr y and
handcrafts. 144 Allen , 882·628 3.

the area's largest selection of audio
components at guaranteed lowest prices!

ROOMMATES WANTED
FEMALE roommate wanted . Own
r o om In fu r nished apa r tmenw
$53.33/ mo. Inc luded u t ili t ies. T acoma
and C olvln . C &lt;!ll LYn or Marge
877-6057. Available Oc:t . 15.
FEMALE r oommate wanted for
three-bed room apartment, $4.0/ m on t h.
Call 884·7631 Kathy, after 10 p.m .

a CHASSIOI C E XPERIENCE
Slmchas Torah at the
CHABAO HOUSE
You are Invited to participate In the
festive Hakofos, Monday ni ght, Oct .
11 , at 7 :25p.m. Services also Sunday
an d Tuesday nights at 7 :25 t~nd
Mo n day and T uesd ay morni ngs at
9 :30.

" Quadraphonic" stereo system composed of the "big" names
in component ~r;tsl ~uy as a unit, save a whopping $109.77 !

SAVE $109.77 - FAMOUS NAME SYSTEM
Kenwood KR -2120
rec:e ivwr ........... ........... . 169 .9 5
Dyn aco Quada pto r .......29 .95

Our Reg . low
Discount Price $439 .6~

Roy al 2 · A sp ea k ers •. .. . 159 .80

~·;:~::!;·~~:::::::::::: :::::~:::: N0 W 3 29 8 8
Shure

930

certrid~e ...... 29.95

ANYONE wh o has ex perience working
IBM Composing Equipment, paste-4.1 p
materials or a photo·typosltor, please
contact Jim at The Spectrum offlc:e or
call 831-411 3.

----------------------------- ~

C&amp;H
J O NES Professional Typing
Se r v ic e
c ompu t eri z ed IBM
equipment plus our experience give
best poss i bl e presentatio ns o f
el l sser tatlons, thesis, term papers,
resumes and employment application
letter s. Located betw e en two
campuses . VltrY reasonable . Call
83?·6558.
T Y PI ST - par t ·tlme, af ternoons and
weekends. S peed o f 60·70 wpm
necessar y . C&amp;H Jones Professl~al
Typ ing Servi ce. Phone 8 37 -6558 .
QUI C K , ef f ici ent typing done - $.40
per page. IBM Selectr ic. 838-4808.

f MOTORCYCLEINSURANCEI
IMMEDIATE FS-1 -ANY SIZE
I NO POOL - NO NONSENSE! I
IU PST ATE CYClE INS I
I
call 694-31 oo
I

I

t_

I

" Ask Y our Broker A bout

Us"·-'

DISCOVER
THE SpECTI\UM
dance!

l

~....,YOUR NATION~L MEMBERSHIP DISCOUNT OEPARTMENT
~~WHERE QUALITY COUNTS!

2500 Walden Ave.
Cheektowaga, New York

Shop 10 a.m. to 10 p.m .
Monday thru Saturday

STORE

•

play!

-

exe~!

in figure 11attering

DANSKIN·
Leotards

n.uas.

nu.t ,.M
.

Friday, October 8, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�R-..rrection House, comet of Main and
University, is sponsoring the film, The )olson Story,
toniJht at 8:30 p.m. Adml~on is free.
Resui'T'e(tion House will have its weekly Sunday
afternoon worship ser~ic:e at 5 p.m. The Sauement
of Holy Communion will be celebrated. The
c:ost-supper pr~rn Is $.SO and eyeryone Is invited. '
The Hilld Study Group in "Torah with
Commentaries" will meet in the home of Rabbi
Hofmann at 4 p.m. tomorrow.
The Hillel Talmud Class will have its first
meeting in the Hillel Library on Sunday, Oct. 10 at 3
p.m.
The Physical Therapy Department is having an
open- house today from 12:30-4:30 p.m. at 208
Winspear Ave. All interested in joining the
department or finding out what PT is all about a're
invjted to attend.
The Africa Club will hold their election of
officers Sunday, Oct. 24 in Room 340 Norton. This
is due to the recent crisis which caused the
dissolution of the present officers.
Students for Israel will have instructions given in
folk dancing on Saturday, Oct. 9 from 2- 5 p.m. in
the Fillmore Room.
The Student Theater Guild will meet Tue~ay,
Oct. 12 at 7:30p.m. in Room 340 Norton to finalize
the Nickel Theater Production. Cast directors and
new members welcome.

Tomorrow: Varsity cross-country vs. Brockport
State, Grover Cleveland golf course, 11 a.m.; varsity
golf in the ECAC district championships at Colgate,
Hamilto n, N.Y.; varsity fall baseball doubleheader at
Monroe ~omm unity College, 1 p.m.

~ )

Students Interested in tutorina mathematics on
IIJ'ade school and high school levels are being placed
by the College of Mathematical Sc:ienc:es. Please caU
831·1704 between Tuesday and Thursday from
3:30-5:30 p.m.
'

UB Rldina Club will hold a general meeting
today in Room 340 Norton at 3 p.m. There will be
elections and a discussion of Monday's riding
excursion.

Hillel is celebrating Simdlat Torah on Monday,
Oct. 11 in the Fillmore Room at 7:30 p.m. Israeli
danc:ing (and leadership), Torah reading, food and
fun.

Students for hnel will have a general meeting
today at 3 p.m. in Room 334 Norton.
The UUAB Coffeehouse will be meeting today
at 9 p.m. and at 11 p.m. in Room 261 Norton.
UB Men's Bowlina Club will meet today for an
organizational meeting and a qualifying event at the
Norton Hall Bowling Lanes.
The Creative Craft Center has a batike class
which will meet Monday afternoons, 2- 5 p.m . in
Room 307 Norton starting Oc:t. 11 . People can now
sign up for the class today through Monday, Oct. 11
in Room 7.

Hillel House will be open every night starting
Tuesday, Oct. 12 from 7:30- 10:45 for study,
socializing, rapping, as an escape from campus.
A Chassidic Experience - Slmchat Torah at the
Chabad House. You are invited to participate in the
festivities Monday, Oct. 11 at 7:25. Services will also
be held Sunday and Tuesday at 7:25 p.m. and
Monday and Tuesday at 9 :30a.m.

Women's Physical Education Department is
offering English horseback riding lessons. Anyone
who missed the organizational meeting but is still
interested may c:ontact Nancy at 836-6374.

People's News Service will show Edgar Snow's
film on China, One Quarter of 1/umanlty. This will
be shown Tuesday, Oct. 12 at 6, 7:30 and 9 p.m. in
Roort:l 140 Capen - also from noon- S p.m. in the
Conference Theater.

"Compassioon" will continue its crisis on the ice
campaign aimed at saving the lives of 35 polar bears.
If you are interested in helping, c:ome to the center
lounge today from 9 a.m.- 5 p.m.

The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will have
a Bible discussion on the nature of jesus Christ and
how this reflects on our personality and actions.
Come to Room 302 Norton on Tuesday at noon .

CAC will have a general meeting Monday, Oct.
11 anytime between 7 and 10 p.m. in Room 240
Norton.

The Labor Committee will have a forum on the
economic crisis with the topic being "Crisis of the
Capitalist Economy." This will be held today at 6
p.m . in Room 340 Norton.

Sports Information
Today: Club soccer at Erie Community College,
3 p.m., Williamsville.

The CAC Basketball L~e will have an
important meeting for all V9lunteers Tuesd~y, Oct.
12 at 8 p.m. in Room 334 Norton.

Meyer Memorial Hospital CAC Volunteers who
have not been placed and scheduled to work in a
specific: area are uraod to call Miss Martin, director of
Volunteers, at, the hospital.

Saturday events: Registration continues, 8:30
a.m.; gymnastics teaching clinic, 9 :30 a.m.; 11 a.m.
cross country meet with Brockport; noon luncheon
at Goodyear Hall; tennis demonstration at 1:30
p.m.; "Aerobics lecture'' 3 p.m.; panel discussion on
"the development of a personal physical fitness
program," 8:30p.m . Diefendorf Hall.

Roller hockey : Saturday morning at 10:15 a.m.
in the parking lot between Capen and Michael Hall.
Shinny action at Its best.

Any student wishing to be a member of the
student athletic review board, should submit his
name to the Student Association selection
committee before next Wednesday, Room 205
Norton Hall. Include name, phone and address.

Schedule of 12S th anniversary Sports
Symposium: Registration at Main gym, 2 p.m. ;
master dance class, fencing demonstration, judo
demonstration and American Red Cross swimming
safety demonstration at 4 p.m.; synchronized
sqimming demonstration and gymnastics at 8 p.m.;
square dance mixer at 9:30p.m. all on Friday, Oct.

Tuesday evening at 8 p.mm.: Dave Megysey,
former Syracuse and St. Louis Cardinal linebacker,
will speak in the Haas Lounge at\ 8 p.m. Meggysey 's
book, Out of Their League was the first of several
books emphasizing the negative aspects of college
aA8 professional football.

The Fenton Lectul'e Series will have Dr. M.W.
Spellman speaking on ''Comprehensive Health Care."
All are invited this Tuesday, Oct. 12 at 8 :30 in the
Conference Theater.

8.

At the Ticket Office
Studio Arena Theater
Thru Oct. 31: The Gingerbread Lady - Jo Van
fleet
Nov. 4-21: Buying OUt - Sam Levine and Irene
Dailey
Rock and Folk Music
Oct. 8: Grand Funk Railroad (M)
Oc:t. 10: The Flying Burrito Brothers and Space
Opera (C)
Oct. 15: Blood, Sweat and Tears (M)
Oct. 17 : Roberta Flack (K)
Oct. 23: Davy Jones (K(
Oct. 24: B.B. King and White Trash (B)
Oct. 30: Cat Stevens (K)
Oct. 31 : Kris Kristofferson (K)
Nov. 3: Melanie (K)
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
Oct. 16 &amp; 19: Garrick Ohlsson, piano (K)
Coming events
Nov. 1: Jethro Tull (on sale 10/15) (M)

-..

Key:
M - Memorial Auditorium
C - Clark Gytn
B - Batavia
K - Kleinhans

Backpage
-osterrelc:her

What's Happening
Friday, Oct. 8
Film: Brewster McCloud, directed by Robert
Altman, Conference Theater, tickets at Norton,
$.75, 5, 7, 9 &amp; 11 p.m.
·
Concert: Grand Funk Railroad, Memorial
Auditorium, tickets at Norton.
Film: Char/y with Cliff Robertson and Clare Bloom,
8 p.m., Capen 140, tickets $.75

Saturday, Oct. 9

Monday, Oct. 11

Concert: jerry lee Lewis at Kleinhans Music Hall, 6
p.m.-1 a.m.
Film: Charly
Film: Brewster Mc.,Cioud

Film: Nosferotu, directed by F.W. Murnau, 3 &amp; 8
p.m., Diefendorf 147 (free)
Christmas Bazaar: presented by Planned Parenthood,
, 5:30-10 p.m., Kleinhans Music: HaJJ

Sunday,Oct. 10

Tuesday, Oct. 12

Film: Hassord Balthozer, Conference Theater 4 6 8
&amp;. 10 p.m., tickets at Norton, $.75
' ' '
Balkan Dancers: advanced folk dancing, 8 :30- 10:30
p.m. Fillmore Room
Concert: The Flying Burrito Brothers &amp; Space
Opera, Clark Gym

C~ristmas Bazaar: Kleinhans, 9 a.m.-9 .p.m.

•
F1lm: The Gold Rush, with Charles Chaplin 3 &amp; 8
p.m., Diefendorf 147 (free)
'

Wednesday, Oct. 13
Christmas Bazaar: Kleinhans, 9 a.m.- 9 p.m.

�•

I

..

...

-~

Down in front

War Memorial rock
'n'ro/1-concert: wow!
by !JJ.Wy Altman
Music Editor
I

Having a co.ncert in War
Memorial Stadium during the
Bill's season is not the easiest
thing to get away with. The
stadium security force is pretty
uptight about longhairs, and NFL
rules prevent anyone or anything
to be on the field at anytime. But
the people of Wingspan
Productions must be commended
on the whole for a real fine job in
putting on a fine day of
entertainment.
Anyway, we aU trucked down
to the stadium with -Gentleman
Jim Santella, who emceed the
show. Now the stage was set up
on the field (past the sidelines, of
course), facing one side of the
stands. Unfortunately, everyone
had to sit in the stands, and
though the weather was beautiful,
it did get incredibly hot in the
stands. And so, while the other
side of the stands was cool and
shady, the audience was getting
collectively roasted.
Luckily, The Specturm crew
(myself, Joe, Jeff, Mickey and
Richie) got to sit on the grass in
front of the stage. Power of the
press and all that. But I must
admit I felt uncomfortable for a
while, caught in the middle
between the crowd and the
performers, not really a part of
eit~er. It was" the music that made
the day work, and for that I am
grateful.

bluesman. Hopefully, the group's
music will lift his seemingly down
spirits.
The music they played was
better than the sound on Lazaru1,
since part of their deal with
Capitol was that Sbel Talmy
produce them . They went to
England for six weeks, sitting
around most of the time, doing
nothing. They finally laid down
the tracks and left the tapes with
Talmy, who really didn't know
just how everything was supposed
to sound, and the record suffered
aecording)y.
Playin' the blues
Taj Mahal was the next
performer. Taj iS doing things solo
this time around, and he too
seems to be becoming a bluesman
finally. His basic trouble is that he
really doesn' t know where his
music lies. He does a lot of
ex perim e nting, going to the
extreme of having four tuba
players in his . band for a short
time. Of course, his first band,
with Jesse Davis and Chuck
Blackwell, was one of the best
ever assembled.
Taj shuttled between his
National Steel guitar and a regular
acoustic. His slide playing was
good, he's always been a fine
singer. "Ain't Nobody's Business
But My Own" and ..Fishin' Blues"
were done with a healthy ragtim~
feel, and "Dust My Broom" and
Bill Broonzy's "Key to the
Highway" showed that Taj can
definitely get down to it when he
ha! a mind to. Someone shouted
out "Corinna," so he did that one
to please his old fans. For an
encore, be did an acappella blues,
co mplete with audience
participation hand clapping.

Black Night is Fallin
The afternoon started with The
Blues Project, still hanging in
there and making some fine
musi c. Danny Kalb, Roy
Blumenfeld and Don Kretmar just
had their Capitol album Lazarus
released, and the tour is basically Family portraits
to re-familiarize themselves with
It took an incredibly lpng time
their audience. Danny Kalb bas to set up the stage, mostly
been to hell and back in the past because there was no stage crew
few years and it shows in his hired. So, in the hour or so till
appearance. He's gained a lot of Sha-Na-Na 1 we took some time to
weight and he's almost bald : He take some rock &amp; roll family
became progressively more s hots . Joe got tackled by
nervous as the set went on. But Sha-Na-Na's sax player on the
Kretmar and Blumenfeld kept a forty, the doomsday defense hung
solid rhythm going and the son~ out on the thirty, and 1 managed
held together well. Kalb's guitar to catch one with both (eet in
still retained that unique, frenzied bounds. A quick sideline interview
sound and his renditions of "Early with J. Geils revealed that Juke
In the Morning" and "Black Joint Jimmy was the band's
Night" were inspired and Nan.ker Phelge. We found out that
authentic in their approach. J. was, an avid football fan, that
-c:ontlnued on centerfoldDanny is starting to become a true

-

,

\
- #.

-osterrelcher

�,

Are you ready l
,.

Appearing tonight at 8 p.m. at Memorial Auditorium, Grand Funk Railroad,
delight of the teeny boppen, guarantee to titillate and enh.,ce its audience.
Despite univ._l criticism of rock music experts, fourteen-year olds swoon
at the sight and sound of Grand Funk. Their albums, such as Survival, have
sold more records than any oth« Am«ican rock group. Also appearing at
tonight's concert will be Black Oak Arkansas.

presents a 1Weekend of

ENTERTAINMENT
.
"""------

UUAB MUSIC COMMITIEE* AND WPHD-FM

present in concert

THE UUAB
FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE PRESENTS
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, Oct. 8th &amp; 9th

Brewster McCloud
SUNDAY, Oct. 10th
ROBERT BRESSON'S

CLARK GVM
OCTOBER 10, 1971

A•J Hassard Balthazar
.:ot

'ERENCE THEATRE

TICKETS 50 ¢ bt.' 're . p.m.

75¢after 6 p.m.

Th1:t Flying Burrito Bros.
8:00 •nd 11 :30 p.m. ·
Available atTickets: U.B. &amp; State Students,
Grants &amp; Cavages
$2.00 in advance
(in the University Plaza)
$3.00 day of ooncert
alsc• The Guilded Palace of Sin &amp; Burrito Deluxe
Others $4.50, $3.60 in advance
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT NORTON &amp; STATE TICKET OFFICES .

~::::::::~~
.. ~:::::::::::::::::::::::!::::~=::::::::::::::.~·:A!~:~:
·~o~rs:u~~:::;•·:m:c·.:-•:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-::
~
-~··

··---··-- ··~---··,---··1--- ···-...-···l--···l---··l---··----··1-----··---··---1
SpE CTJ\U.M cla.ssi(i~ds really work i
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••

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. ••

•• 1

�I Kleinluz11s Concert

l

..

Queentown lowdown· Traffic into neW, fuller sound

"Oh, shit. I left the pipe in the between se-.train an)l the lp. " Wek:ome to the Canteen,"
car," my friend said after we bad Incredible String Band . They are a but doesn't tour with them.
already entered Kleinhans Music ti.ght band and hannonize very Traffic bas developed a new
by Mr. Clean
Hall and stood in the lobby.
well. · Dave Swarbrick plays his sound. With the addition of the
''Well ... don't worry about it. white fiddle superbly in "Sloth" African beat of Reebop, along
Good morning little schoolwomen and schoolmen. Santana's third So we'll be strai&amp;ht for one which was the best piece they did with Wood's sax and flute,
monster album is on the racks in shopping maUs across America this concert," I said.
at the concert. Fairport Traffic's ·sound now 1eans more
The concert was scheduled to Convention used to be a folk toward jazz. Their sound it much
week an4 it sure is fine. Continuing their marvelous quest to be ever
more colorful, Carlos and the boys have added a young white guitarist, start at 7 p.m. with Fairport group, but have recen~y been fuller. and the creat divenity of
getting heavier. I think they will Winwood, Capaldi and Wood lw
which brings the color count to three brown, three white and one Convention comlng on first
followed by· Traffic. If you have become \\'ell known once they get lead to some interesting
black. Ms. Clean, wbo is possessed of a dead-eye intuition for non-sexist ever !lltn a rock concert at into doing more tourina in this instrumental arrangements.
sex in rock &amp; roll, is exceedingly impressed with this aspect of their Kleinhans you will understand country. They did p\lt on a good
After their original set, Traffic
visual presentation. Certainly they are going to cop Little RichardJs·· what I'm about to say. Fairport concert and the crowd dug them. came back to do an encore (who
What about "the feedback doesn't?). They opened up with
coveted "we're all flowers in God•s Bouquet" award for the second Convention did not come on until
problem as Traffic walked on the inimitable "40 , 000
half
hour
later.
I
have
seen
five
a
year in a row. The cover, conceived and executed by the two·woman
Headmen ,'' followed by a new
rock concerts at Kleinhans and stage?
Heavy Water light show that travels with the band, extends the this concert came the closest to
"Could someone'do something cut, ..Lone Star High Heeled
extraordinary tradition of Abmxas {best cover of 1970) and similarly starting on time.
about this mike? It sounds lilte Boots," featuring a strong piano
exteQds their graceful egalitarianism. All of this mU!ical miscegenation
I sat back and Watched Simon frying eggs," said Steve Winwood lead by the versatile Winwood.
has got to lead them to a beautiful place and the pr'Oof is right on th~~ Nicol of Fairport Convention tune of Traffic when he first appeared Next was "Mr. Fantasy," where
on stage.
Winwood ..wowed the crowd by
record. With a second guitar in the band they sound like a Third W~d up his electri.c guitar. They started
Traffic is one of the "super" turning up the volume Jcnob on
their &amp;i£ with "Walk 1\while"
Allman Brothers Band - and that's as good as a band can get. So which was written by David groups of the rock world. They his guitar before going into his
overcome your intellectual elitism and residual Rolling Stone snottiness Swarbick, the fiddle player, and started their performance off with final break, reeling off some really
and visit the friendly folks in the Norton Hall Record Co-op right away. Richard Thompson, who is no "Medicated Goo" which is on fine riffs. I was sure that they had
As an extra added attraction, this album is untitled, so you don't have longer with the voup. A third of their recent lp. called Welcome to ~ved "Mr. Fantasy" for th.e last
the way through the song David the canteen. Chris Wood played song, and was surprised when
to juggle German expressionist concepts while you're getting it on. So
Peg, the bass guitarist, began to sax on this song and throughout Reebop Kwalcu Baah brought the
skip on down to the basement and ask for the new Santana.
get feedback fro m his most of the concert. Jim Capaldi crowd to its feet with continuous
microphone. The high pitched sang the next song called "Leave- conga beats. The crowd stood up,
shrill went on and off throughout Me Alone." It will also be on their clapped, stomped and danced as
Right on Hempstead!
F a i r "p o r t C o n v en t ion 's next lp which has just been the band then went into "Gimine
perfonnance. I congratulate the completed.
Some Lovin'." It seemed that
And while I'm on the subject of overcoming literary and stage crew of Kleinhans on their
Traffic was merely warming up
generational prejudice, need I temind you that Grand Funk Railroad is swift and efficient job.
'Electric performance'
for " Gimme Some Lovin" which
playing tonight at the Memorial Auditorium to warm up the seats for
Traffic has come a long way Winwood wrote in his Spencer
since their first lp, Mr. F~~is days at the age of 14. They
the Sabres. I can't quite go as far as Richard Robinson and call them 'Fryina eggs'
Fairport Convention then went Winwood left Traffic to join Blind wal~([ the stage leaving a
the best band in the land - that honor is reserved for the dead beat
into a very old Scottish folk dance Faith. Blind Faith couldn't get it shouting and excited crowd
between Sly and J . Geils - but their importan'ce as compelling entitled "Dirty Linen." They
together after one album so behind . Traffic put on a
entertainers and symbolic leaden of the forgotten children of enjoy taking old folk baUads (or Winwood reorganized Traffic, tremendous and electric
Hempstead has not been diminished one iota by the cheap shots dances) from the British Isles and minus David Mason, and recorded performance; I only wish my
directed their way by all manner of self aggrandizing critics and rearranging them for modem "John Barleycorn ." Traffic then friend hadn't forgott~n hls pipe.
- Sheldon Kamieniecki
generation gappers. This is not to say that their music. is above criticism rock. However, they somehow added Gordon , Grech and
keep that old English flavor in the " Reebop" Kwaku Baah, who
qUil music, but rather to point out that if, after seeing Grand Funk rearranged ballads. Fairport
plays the congas and bongos. Dave
perform you choose to go after the music, you have invalidated Convention strikes me as a cross Mason also
their recent
youi"Self. The defense rests.
Appearing with Grand Funk tonight will be Black Oak Arkansas, a
really superfine original new rock &amp; roll band w~ose first album should
make you all happy and whose presence in Buffalo should maktr you all
ecstatic. And while I'm on the subject of new bands cruising under the
mighty Kinney K, may I commend Wet WiUie to your ears, loins and
hearts. Due to a gross miscalculation by the Physical Education
Department, who have commandeered their acoustically memorable
Clark concert hall on the njght that Wet Willie and the Allman Brothers
Band were to perfonn, we will not get our urgently needed double dose
of sweet Georgia funk. What could be more physically educational than
two fine strong rock &amp; roll bands. Alas, records will have to suffi ce for
the nonce, and Wet Willie's will do you just right.
VANESSA REDGRAVE........OLIVER REED

IN KEN RUSSELL'S FILM OF

Bad Ka.nna

THE DEVIlS

Another unfortunate misunderstanding occurred last Sunday night
when Roland Kirk refused to allow his last sets to, be broadcast by
WBFO while at the same time denouncing the cbronic lack of exposure
that hi~ music suffers from. It Is a difficult double-bind indeed. More
and more black musicians are becoming aware of the absolute necessity·
for wide exposure while at the same time, becoming increasingly
suspicious of the people who control that exposure. For my part , 1 am
sad that an obviously non- exploitative, community-minded station got
condemned for the multitudinous sins of the music industry . And we,
the low budget audience lost out on some sublime music. 1 hope WBFO
fmds a way to make their non·profit policy crystal clear this week so
we don't miss Pharoah Sanders, who is playing at the Revilot right now
and has been since Monday. lfyou haven't made it down in person, and
canJtot through the weekend, don't dare miss his broadcast Sunday at

ra...vkion" lr&lt;....,ko!M•• r.-w.an- a.-·A kinney~~ Senior

North Park
1421 HlltTIL
-

....7411

··- - - - --

,/') J

®

2nd WEEKI

Sat. 1 :30 to 2 p.m .
All seats 75¢

I

The Flying Burrito Brothers will be appearing at the world famed
Clark Music Hall and Athletic Arena this Sunday night. According to
recent reports, Byron Berline, reknowned fiddler and all around wizard,
will·be .playing with.. them, If you care at all about music, regardless of
type or classification, then you should make every effort to hear them.

the band scrounging around a motel room, staring at the tube.
Obviously, the morning after. If you see it, grab it.lfyou don't see It,
hound your record counters until you do!

• • • • •
Goodbye amigos .. .see you soon!

I

II

\\bodshed.

11.

Hot tip of the week: The new J. Geils Band LP is titled The
Morning After and features another killer cover photo. This one shows

~'/'1/I
I
J
\
II II 1',
Send em
to the
J

Elliott Gould in lngmar Bergman's
ttThe~
r!'"lc-OL-oR-1
.L0UC
~CD

h''

STARTS

TONIGHTI
to 2.p.m.

75¢

Your boss. Your
mother·in ·law. Your best
friend. Yourself. And you'll
get eve~ything you deserve:
fantastic chicken wings ami
tangy sauce, 50(' spirits
from 3 P.M . on. free
peanuts to shuck, giant size
undwiches in a basket.
It's strictly come-as.you·are
to T~e Woo:dshed, where
the k1tchen's alwa.ya open
and the music's always on.
The Woodshed. Located
~ight next to the Packet Inn
m North Tonawanda. Drive
out Delaware or take the
Youngmann.TheWoodahed's
just over the Delaware
Avenue Bridge. Open from
11:30 A.M. every day
except Sunday.

�War Memorial rocks • • •
the new lp will be out 1000, .,.d
that J. GeJII bud T Crt~ are .bard
to come by.
Sba-Na-Na CGne out tbroup
the runway and C:OIIUDUideerecl
the staae with what now is their
brand of ftftiea ra&lt;:k, not just a
funny revue of oldiea. Just about
all of them have featured solos,
and their choreoanpby is just
perfect. They move the mikea for
each other as they nrina into
greater poses, and every part of
the stage is alive when they're on.
Beginnina with "Shake, Rattle
and Roll," suna by the rhythm
guitarist, they never let up for a
minute. "Get A Job, Tears on My
Pillow, Teen Anael, Rarna Lama
Dina Dona," aU were done
masterfully. On "Yakety Yak,"
the sax player (who did a spiffy
vocal on the Crest's "Sixteen
Candles,") played the Kina Curtis
solo with an understanding and
dedication that was a joy to bear.
The bass player sang "Teenager in 1
Love," and his acne only
strengthened the lyrics of the
tune.

Jerry Lee's double
From out of nowhere, the
pianist jumped into Jerry Lee
Lewis' "Whole Lotta Shaki.n'."
Now not only did he play lilce
Jerry Lee, he sang lilce bJm, and
looked a lot lilce bJm, down to the
•Smallest embroidered flower on
his black sbJrt. Tbe whole band
cleared away for the solo, with
the guitarist (who we'll aet to
shortly) on bJs knees and the
1
piano player
bent over hlm,
screaming the notes at him . Then
he shook for one whole verse.
One of the three dancers did a
great Elvis on " Jailhouse Rock"
and "Heartbreak Hotel," and the

-.x iDtro to FI'Ullde Pord'a '"Sea
Cndae," with the wbde bend
ltaDdina around in deference to
the hom blast,
classic.
Now to aet to Chris, the lead
pitariat. Drelsed in a r;een,
double breasted jacket that
buttoned all the way up,
aunalasses, short but touah
pompedour hairstyle, and with a
toothpick in his mouth, and a
spare by his ear, this guy was the
most ra&lt;:k &amp; roll person I've ever
seen. He must have b~en Scotty
Morre's son, and be probably
played every guitar player in aU
the fifties greser movies. And even
if he didn't . . .

w•

Onto the turf
He kept scowlina at me, and
after an incredible solo on "Tears
On My Pillow," he spat on me.
His shuffle across the staae was
every guitar player in aU the fifties
greaser movies. And even if he
surpassed only by his solos, wbJcb
were the best rock solos I've heard
in years. Then, in the middle of
"Walk, Don't Run," as I sat
scribbling away, he looked at me
and jumped off the stage. He
landed about a foot away, and
missing only one note in the
whole process at that. He shoved
the neck in my face, played the
whole sols and then calmly
climbed back up. After the set, he
slid down the ramp leading from
the stage. It took bJm five
minutes. He was that cool.
J . Geils, the band, was comln'
on next, and it was our duty to
get up to the rafters so we could
shout and scream encouragement
at t be boys. This group is
definitely the best thing sheer
rock &amp;: roll has seen sin ce the
Stones, with whom they are very

PARAMOUNT PICTUFES PRESENTS
A flM

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~LEWIS GILBERT

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definitely comparable. Their
material is mOitly Stone, Chicago
bluea and r 'n B, and they rock
· lilce there's no tomorrow. The
whole band is one, with no solos
lastina more than two minutes,
and those minutt;t have the best
music ever put down by an
American band.

The boya in the band
1., on guitar is a rocker in the
mold of Chuck Berry and Keitl1
Richard. The notes blast out as he
crouches down and makes faces.
Magic Dick, the harp player is
without a doubt the best wbJte
harp player ever. He might be the
first intellectual harp player too,
with bJs Afro and glasses and
goatee. Influenced the right way
by Sonny Boy and Little Walter
(cause harp playing begins and
ends with those two, Mr.
Butterfield included); h is
command of the instrument is
surpassed only by his t faithful
taste.
Peter Wolf, the lead vocalist, is
equally fantastic. A lot more loose
than lager and infmitely more
masculine, he will soon tie the
goal of millions of little teenage
pussys. Always tallcing in rhymes
(he used to be a DI), shaking his
ass, doina great hand claps and
holding five (count 'em, five)
maracas, plastic at that, he just
does everything a lead singer
should do.
Seth Justman on piano and
organ, Danny Klein on bass and
Steve Bladd on drums round out
the band. Bladd sings on the
choruses, making bJm the link
between Wolf and the rest of the
gro up, just like Keith in the
Stones.

Unstoppable
.
Fro m "Sno.Cone" the opening
instrumental with the drum solo
(what could be classier than a
drum solo o n the openina
number?) right thro ugh " First 1
Look At The Purse," the eternal
Smoky Robinson sexist song, they
were unstoppable. John Lee
H~ker's "Serves You Right To
Suf~ was the o nly long song
they did , with Geils, Dick and
Justman all taking strong solos.
" Wammer Jammer," Magic Dick's
harp workout was great, and
" Pack Fair and Square," a little
rocker, let Wolf belt out the
longest " WeeelU1111!" ever in rock
history.
When the Geils' new record
bJts the streets, watch out. Rock
and roll is more than alive and
well with these boys around. They
will flatten this country soon.
The only logical step after all
this rocking was the ethereal
music of Boz Scaggs. His band was
tight and professional, and the
born section worked better than
any of those bullshit jazz rock
bands. "Look What I Got To
Come H ome T o , " and
" Somebody Lend Me a Dime "
were simply exquisite baUads. The
, Steve Miller Band medley of
"Baby's Callin' Me Home" and
"Steppina Stone" featured some
areat guitar b y Boz and good
h ornwork by Ed O'Hara on
trombone. It was a friendly,
happy set. Boz is a fine
gentleJTtan.
•
We didn't want to ruin the
night, so we left before
Butterfield got to come on and
bore us. I gave up on Paul when
that live album came out.
A gold star goes to Joe R. and
the pna from KRC, wh~ did a
good job on the stage, sot.-.d and
liabtina. All In all, a areat day for
rock A roll at the Stadium. As we
left, Fembacber exclaimed "Hey
this il where Wray Carlton spit!':
What more need I say?

...

�-------';"'· -·--.....

-

-- .. .
.,..._

..

-

(

�·dur Weekly Reader
. recipes, without food the process
(Fanar, St.raus &amp; Giroux, $6.95). of starvation continues
unimpeded, the body slowly
"The Promised End . . . was eatina its own substance.
about a writer, prematurely old
The Tenant1 is a tragedy of
thirty-five year-old man . . . who
human inadequacy. As Harry
bas always been concerned with
cannot quite end his book, so tbe
love . . • often felt it for one or
others in his world find
another person but not
fulfillment beyond them. The love
generously, fluently . . . It's the
triangle that cuts near the heart of
old Jiving business, be can and he
the plot is comprised of people
can't, not aood enoup, too many pulled by the paradox of
unknown reservations, the self conflicting needs. Harry, his
included. Love up to a point is no fellow tenant and writer Willie
love at all. His life betrays his Speumint (who is black), and
lmaaination."
their mistress (first Willie's and
So Harry Lesser tells his then Harry's), Irene Bell, are all
beloved Irene ~11 about a · suspended in an abyss between
character, tentatively named plateaus of personal achievement.
Lazar Cohen, who is the central
figure in an unfinished book of
They maintain the tension,
,ten year's labor. He might as well rope clutched in each trembling
be describing Jii.s own life as chief fist and wonder if in the release of
inhabitant of The Tenant1, a novel one hand's grip they would
Bernard Malamud bas not only survive the rock impact of a swing
completed but finished to a shine. into a chasm wall. Just as Harry is
Harry's most obvious problem is drawn taut between the ut of ink
that he has no idea he's writing on paper and the craft of man on
about himself, creating out of his woman, so Willie c.l inp to his
own obsession with the highest black manhood and his white Jew
form of human affection.
girl. His terrible self hatred is
He needs love, but instead of nurtured in his belief that the two
setting out to find it "be invents are incompatible. Irene is
this character in his book who will attracted to writers, black and
love for him" (Harry speaking of Jewish, but can't accept the, fact
Lazar Cohen). On the surface it that artists often find their work
seems that his ability to end the more seductive than wive$ and
novel is undermined by his mistresses.
ignorance of its theme. A look
deeper suggest that in his hunger
A fourth character popping in
for love he is a man with half a and out on the tenants is
stomach , small of mouth and Levenspiel, the Jewish landlord.
sparse of teeth, who concocts rich He has been pleading for the past
dishes he cannot consume. No three and a half months that
matter how well composed the Lesser move, but the writer feels
~Tmmuby~mudM~moo

F.IND OUT YOURSELF
WHY EVERYONE'S TALKING ABOUT

he must llnilh his novel where he
started it. The building is to be
demolished, but the tenant has his
legal rights to stay. Threats,
monetary offers, aentlo persuasion
and raw pleas for mercy ue
equally futile aaainst the
intransiaent Harry. Like LCfSer,
Levenspiel is a man whose wclrk is
incomplete. That the former
cannot see this resemblance
reaffirms his nearsightedness in
the matter of human compassion.
One of Malamoo's subtle gifts
is his ability to take the most

banal gestures and objects and
locate them as details from the
landscape of the human soul~
Irene "strikes a match, the,n fin~s 1
she has no cigarette." Sno~\ l~ses
its quiet purity and becomes a
cold portent as "she flips the
matchstick into the snow."
Household things lilce mirrors
reflect more than faces. Harry
examines himself and fmds be's
"b loodshot" and "thinning."
Willie looks "sadly at his face in
Lesser's mirror." (rene searches
her purse for "something she can't
find , maybe a mirror." Malamud
throws his pebble in a puddle, the
tiny ripples running concentric
circles. Watch them long enough
and you'IJ feel the ocean swell.
When ideas don't come soon
enough, a writer is lilce a lover
whose mistress bas missed an
assignation. There are fean that
lie In wait to take demonic
possession of the m ind's•
vacancies, establishing reSidence in
the available cerebr~l spaces. The
Tenants reads like Bernard
Malamud's rite of exorcism, a
kind of psychic evi~tion order to
failme's hob-goblins. It may be
the most strongly worded notice
they've received from him.

- Kevin Hamilton
Pocock &amp; Pitt by Elliott Baker
(G.P. Putnam's and Sons, $6.95).

at: 7:30- ~:30 p.m.
&amp; Sun 2-4-6-8· 10

Re-creation, although far from
being a new concept in literature,
fmds new dimensions and a good
measure of comedy in Pocock &amp;
Pitts. Pocock, a man disgusted
with life, his wife and his coun try,
~

CHASSIDIC EXPERIENCE
Simc:hu Torah at the
CHABAD HOUSE
You are invited to participate In the
festive Hakofos, Monday night, Oct.
11, &lt;tt 7 :2S p.m. Services &lt;tlso Sund&lt;ty
and Tuesday ni,hu at 7:2S and
Monday &lt;tnd Tuesd&lt;ty morninp &lt;tt
9 :30.

~G~ ~1,.

The plot that follows could
easily conform to an already
over-used pattern in modem
literature but it does not. Baker's
inven.tiveness has plotted a
different route full of ironic twists
and very humorous moments. He
develops absurd situations and
uses them as a norm. His madly
unpredictable invention certainly
makes for a fascinating plot.

doina his job. Kikyanos turns
Wendell Pocock into a new,
improved entity named Winston
Pitt. As Wendell Pocock was an
assistant sales training manager for
a lood packaging company but as
Winston Pitt be is employed in an
organ depository (a place where
human organs are stored for use in
event of a nuclear holocaust makes sense doesn't it?).

His uselel$ life has gained
meaning checking dead bodies for
possibilities of life in the
Before I go on I feel I must depository. His philosophical
qualify Baker's inveiltiveness, for nature spurts forth in wonderful
if you read the novel you may short witticism addressed to his
f'md a striking similarity between nameless son, whom he fathered
Pocock &amp; Pill and HeUer's ·as WendeU Pocock . There are spies
Ca tch-2 2. The styles artd and counterspies and of course a
stru~turcs of both novels are very
beautiful womal) (even a
similar. But the difference and the tree-lovers society which
overwhelming reason for Baker's practically determines the fate of
inventiveness are the turns of fate everypne).
,
and a cleverly employed element
I
could go 9 n endlessly talking
of surprise. The inter-relation
abut
the plot but that is not my
between various sti\Jtations within
the novel c ulminate in purpose. r hoped to have aroused'
determining the destiny of one your interest, for Pocock &amp; Pitt is
man, . WendeU Pocock. Every worth the time spent reading it .
character and situation has a People concerned with society
definite place in the fate of and its many fa ults will find that
Pocock and although it appears the novel humorously attacks
that Baker is really going off on them. For the existentialists it
tangents in places it all relates shows the individual
contemplati ng his existence and
when you reach ttre end.
the worthlessness of it. And
·Getting back to the plot ; finally hyper-tensive neurotics will
Pocock's disgust with himself and find many humorous releases for
everything around leads to his their tensions. WelJ enough of
creation of a final fantasy of categories. Although K.ikyanos'
death. However, a short Russian idea of revising the population
called Kikyanos saves him and sets according to character may welJ
him on his path to re-creation have sollle merit in it, the true
with a new name, Winston Pitt. merit of the novel lies in Baker's
Kikyatios' occupation is to inventiveness. For thiS reason I
"reapportion the population on recommend it highly.
characterological grounds" and in
\
re-creating Pocock he is merely
- Jeffrey Allen

~

GOES ROCK

Beef &amp; Ale HoUse

And its strictly SOLID GOLD
Tune in for a Solid Gold Sound
6:00p.m. - FRIDAY, Oct. 15
for

3199 MAIN ST.
,

WGR/FM's
50 hour

.

ROCKUMENTARY
Rock from 1951 thru the present in this mammoth
stereo marathon. Then straight into the new solid
gold rock format braeaking October 17 at 8 p.m ..
It's all stereo, and all at

GB/FM, 97 on your FM dial

(OM JJioet S.... Of UB •

FOEKMUSICSUNDAY NIGHTS!
. THIS SUNDAY SEE

N~nEichler
SING HER LITTLE HEART OUT.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS ROCK WITH

I-RON

�..

'The Devils': graphic
religious debauchery
To be truthful, I was a bit coins, are certainly as decadent as
disappointed ·in Ken Ruaell.'a new Russell's vision of a hunch-backed
film '1?1~ De'lliu. Not for the nun muturbatina in her cubicle,
reaaons youmi&amp;ht expe&lt;!t, thouab. or the same nun lickina the open
Sure, it's probably the most vulpr wounds of a Christ fipre coming
movie ever made, sure it's in very down from the croes to ruck her.
bad taste and sure it's a blatant
The title of the new film is The
attack on the absurdities of the Devill and it's based on histotical
Catholic faith. But so what? So fact and a little book written by
what's good taste anyway? So Aldous Huxley called The Devils
what's wron1 with a little bit of of Loudon .
cinematic reli&amp;ious debauchery.
The stan of the movie are
Jt's been done before, in . Oliver Reed and Vanessa
Buenul's Virdilma and of course, Redgrave. Surprisingly enoush
The Milky Way, but the thing is they both wind up as "the" stan
that Russell does it with a bit of .the movie. Some of the minor
more 1ut honesty and characters such as the Doctor .and
emotionality. While Buenul's the Alchemist were interesting but ,_
attacks are intellectual, Russell's had none of the force of Reed's goes she's just unreal in this
are visual and certainly much portrayal of Father Grandier and movie. A murvelous feat of acting
more cruel and base.
Vanessa Redgrave's portrayal of as the homy hunch-backed nun.
Sister Jeanne, the day-tripping
The plot structure of the fifm
nun.
is very simplistic with Reed as
Comparative decadeoce
Russell's probably .,the fust
Grandier searching through life
for the true meaning of love. And
suburban madman in film . He is Starry eyes
Ree;.&lt;J has never really made a he gog~ about this by very
to the seventies what Von
Stroheim was to the silent era. As bad movie. Even his portrayal of rationally balling a number of
a matter of fact it might be the blighted werewolf in the women. The basic idea is that ·
interesting to compare The Devils Hammer extravapnza, The Curse Reed gets an important official's
)Vith Von Stroheim 's Greed. Both of the Werew If was polished and daughter krnocked up and when
h ave scenes of religious interesting to watch. One of the the girl tells him Reed tells her to
debauchery and both are done in main reasons for Reed 's stardom get lost. This leads into the whole
such a way as to be culturally is the fact that he has star's ·eyes. movie wbicb tells us how the state
im pactive to the time/space The trio of Reed, Bogard&amp; and can murder· anybody it wants,
continuum they inhabit. l mean Arkin comprise the ultimate in anytime it wants for whatever
the scene when Za Zu Pitts is suburban actors with Go uld, reasons it W'ants. The best line o f
under ether in a dentist's office Sutherland, Bates and the highly the film comes when Reed
and kissed while dressed in a nun's underrated T o m Courtney, exclaims that " pain is sensual"
habit, and later the nude scene following very closely in the and for the rest of the movie he
where she roles in a bed of gold second ranks. M far as Vanessa experiences nothing but pain.

Another good line comes toward
the end when Reed says, " If you
live by your senses, you should
die by your senses."
The undoing of the film for me
comes when R~ell decends into
utter moral and cinematic chaos.
For a few brief moments we are
thrown into the maddening
maelstrom of chaos with nuns
ripping off their habits, burning
Bibles, one cinematically shocking
image after another.
Depravity is fun
Yet, just when chaos is about
to transcend into the Other - this
coming when the fag King comes
to the village of Loudon and is
carried into the debauched church
dressed in silver and gold laced
clothes with plums and colors.
There he produces a small jewel
box which he claims possesses a
vile of Christ's blood . Upon seeing
this the crowd goes into a fren zy,
maJting as though the demons
were being driven from their
bodies. When finished , the King
opens the box and we see that
there is nothing inside . It is here
that Russell reaches the limjts of
chaos, and almost slips over into
the Other by having t he King say
(as he's being carried out), "Have
fun!! " From there on it's
downhill.
Grandier is convicted of
trumped up charges of possessing
1 nun with his demonic creatures.
Here Is where Russell fucks up. If
be was true to his school he
wouldn't shy away from showing
Reed getting his balls crushed, his
tongue gouged, his feet mangled,
being burned at the stake. He
would have sho wn this and more.
Instead what we are given is
porno graphic "cinezak.'' Mass

sado-masochism. But thaCs cool
because it 's the first time that it
bas ever really b een done.
Uae of color
Surprisingly the color of this
Russell fllm was no where as rich
as the others. It's almost as if
Russell is attempting to make the
whole color movie black and
white no matter what. For
example, the city of Loudon is
built in immaculate white bricks
while its inhabitants go around
continually dressed in dark black
clothes. That's why the most
impactive scene in the ftlm is the
fmal sho t : Grandier's wife looks
at his charred bones and scrambles
up the crumbled white bricks of
Loud o n and society ( for
metaphor's sake). She walks over
the edge into a black and white
landscape and becomes the true
Gothic h eroine not by being a
static part of that landscape, but
by being a creature forever forced
to move amongst the ruins.
AJso, the scene where Grandier
is slowly crawling to his stake
with the witch-hunter kicking his
bloodied and beaten feet , is no
where near as colorful, in the
sense of blood red and hence in a
sense no where near as real as
Alan Bates' bloodied feet in
Frankenheimer's The Fixer .
So, anyway , no matter what
the f.tlm's drawbacks are it's
certainly a cinematically exciting
happening. As a viewer, voyeur,
you are constantly repulsed by
Russell's demonic images. As a
human being you suffer, through
the images, the su ffering of
Gra ndier and his search for
freedom ilf love. A very important
film everyone must see.
- Joe Fernbacher

355 Norton Hall

GRA~ND

OPENING

October 11 thru October 17
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1543 Main St.
(Corner Ferry)

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-

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                    <text>\bl. 22, No. 11

Ketter denies Pesch's
resignation.was forced
Dr. Robert L. Ketter, President
of the State University of Buffalo,
Monday night denied alleptions
made earlier in the week that Dr.
LeRoy Pesch, dean of the Medical
Scltool, was forced to resign from

his po$1.
He said earlier that day, Dr.

Pesch denied that he had made
any statements Saturday that be
was forced from IUs position. Dr.
Pesch had flown later that day to
meet with representatives of
MJchael Reese Hospital Medical
Center in Chi~o. which he will
head Jan. 1, and therefore, was
unavailable for comment.
Meanwhile, Dr. Pesch officially
resigned as head of tho Med
School, according to a statement
b y Dr . C 1y de Rand a 11 ,
vice-president for Health Sciences.
1be statement read, "I have today
(Monday, Oct. 4) received the ·
written resignation of Dr. LeRoy
Pesch as dean of the School of
Medicine and director of Hospitals
of the State University of Buffalo.
..Along with the resignation,
-dated Oct. 2, 1971, was a press
release from Chicago announcing
Dr. Pesch's appointment t() the
prestlaious position of the 6nt
full-time president of Vichael
Reese Hospital and Medical
Center, a top-level meclJcal

research &amp;cillty associated with
the University of Chicago," the
statement continued.
Confwion

..Dr. Pesch's letter said: 'It is
with profound regret that I
submit to you my resignation as
dean of the School of Medicine
and director of University
Hospitals for the State University
of New York at Buffalo, to be
effective' no later than Dec. 31,
1971 . As we agreed In our
conversation earlier today, I will
retain my position as professor of
medicine in the School of
Medicine."

,

Dr. Randall said that he had
"received Dr. Pesch's resignation
with deep regret and am
transmitting it to President Ketter
with my recommendation that it
be accepted. I congratulate Or.
Pesch on his new position, an
exceUent opportunity to develop
new and innovative programs for
health care. He will be missed at
this Univenity and in the Buffalo
and Erie County medical
communi,ty."
In a short satement that
followed, Dr. Ketter stated : "I
have today accepted Vice
P r e 1 Id e n t
R a n d a 11 's

Prelident Robert K~• ..,_lid at 11M GSA
meeting Monday n~ Md deniM thllt o.n LeRoy
Patch h8d been forced to reli.,.

GS4 guest
recommendation that I accept the
resignation of Dr. LeRoy Pesch u
dean of the School of Medicine
and director of Hospitals effective
Dec. 31, 1971. I wish Dr. Pesch
continued success in hia new
auipunent."
In his informal talk with
reporters Monday night, Dr.

Ketter said that the recent articles
in the local Buffalo evenina paper
on Dr. Pesch's resignation "was a
surprise to me." He said that he
met at I :38 p.m. Wedneaday, the
day of tho Ont artide, with Dr.
Randall ...bndaU had no idea
how it happened," Dr. .Ketter

aid.

He said that on Thunday, he
c:alled Dr. Pesch to discusa the
situation and later had a meetift&amp;
with Peach, Albert Sornit.
Executive Vice-Pre&amp;ident, and Dr.
Randall. Dr. Ketter said that this
wboJe incident was very c:onfuaUta
and that he knew as much about
it as neryone else.

\

News commentary

Black faculty hard to find
c.
Editor's note: T'lu following is the but it flourishes in the present.
first of a two · part series Overt racism is mucl;lless common
concerning Blllck eduaztort at the now, but its vestiges remain in our
State Univer~ity of Bulfdlo. It II determination that we owe
the result of se'lleral wuks of nothing for the' horrors we have
in11estigation and probing Into thil perpetrated. " We made it; so can
1ensltive aru. The second part they," is the attitude that still
will deal with 8/Qck involvtment prevails in our society. Incredible
on the adminiltrative le'llel and as it may seem, it Is even more so
when one realizes that the
t~dministratlve attitudes on the
supposedly socially enlightened
subject.
University community is also stiU
afflicted with this attitude.
by Jeff Greenwald
Sp«trum Staff Writu

Most problems have remedies;
most diseases have cures. In
treating a p~oblem or a disease,
one is often faced with the
possibility that what is being
treated is actually not the disease,
but merely various symptoms.
Moreover, some would-be healers
have proved so myopic as to be
quite unsure of what he is tryins
to heal.
There is a problem on this
::ampus. One must merely ask
:meself when the last time was
:hat he bad a Black professor for
mytbina (except perhaps in a
1ubject matter related directly to
Black heritage). lbe problem is
most certainly related,
::onaciously perhaps, but most
likely subconsciously, to a weU
lcno..tn social disease: racism.
Racism is rooted in the past

'

Racial rhetoric?
To be fair, it must be admitted
that the problems of attaining
minority faculty are many. A
common problem is cited by
many involved in the hiring
procedures. Ira Cohen, provost of
the Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration, explained, "We're
not as successful as we would like
to be (in regard to recruitment of
minority candidates) . There just
aren't enough good Blacks coming
throuah the graduate
departments." Th"mas Connolly,
former provost of Arts and
Letters, con cu rred : "It is
extremely difficult finding the
right person." Others went on at
length explaining that there
weren't enough "quality" people
in their field, or discussed their
sad experience in almost signing
up an "extremely talented" Black

I

person, but then losing him or her
at the last moment to a school
offertna more money or prestl,e.
crisis. Thus, for the academic year
1971-72 only normal replacement
lines were avallable for birina. The
fact that Blacks are hired in
substantial numbers only when
these lines are set aside is not at
all comforting.
Another problem Is that most
Blacks are hired to teach only
courses related to their ethnic
badlcground . Mr. Brown estimates
that over 90% of all Black faculty
are in the Black Studies and EPIS
programs. "Black people must be
hired to teach 'real' courses within
the Univenity," commented Joan
Stamper , director of Black
Studies.
This is certainly true. The
attainment of minority faculty is
a goal that must be achieved.
However, as in all institutions. the
real goal is power. In a colleae
setting, this means administrative
power. For Blacks, at present
there Is none.

Superman wanted
In all these stated difficulties,
note the use of words such u
"good," "right penon," ~'quality"
and "extremely talented." This
exemplifies one of the paramount
barriers the minority peoples find
-.:ontlnued on ~

/

s-

�Wasbqten oollfe~nce

Delegates treatedtop~rrade
Deleptea to the third annual
"Presidents to Presi d en t s"
conference were treated to a
parade of officials ftl\m the Nixon
cabinet i n terspe?sed with
presidential hopefuls under the
,WSe of bein&amp; opposition leaders
to the current adminJstration.
Held in Wasbinatoo D.C. this
past weekend, the conference
featured representatives from the
Department of Health, Education
a nd We l fare (HEW) , the
Depart ment of Housina and
Urban Development (Hl.JD) and
the Department of the Interior.
Sponsored by the Association
of Student Governments (ASG),
th e conference promised to be an
o pportunity for "Student Body
presidents and adminlstrators
from a wide variety of institutions
to meet and aet to know each
other early in the school year ...
to help break down the walls."
In addition, ASG hoped "that
the meetings with various leaders
of America's dominant political
parties may lead to a more
realistic evaluation of their
behavior and motions."
George Romney, Secretary of
HUD, was the first speaJcer after
Senator Edmund Muskie was
unable to attend. Mr. Romney
began by defending President
Nixon's economic policies and
attemp.tin&amp; to s how the
deleterious effects the current
economic slump has created for
housing. Mr. Romney emphasized
that "no free nation has ever
applied the prin'Ciples that

r esult ed in full employment
without inOition!'
Secr etary Romney defined
three areas of public policy which
affect t he economic scene: just
compensation policies, proper use
of monetary controls and the
adequate operation of competitve
processes. He felt that we "must
aet away from financial policies
that developed after World War II.
"We have spent over S160
billion to develop the free market.
Now we, can't even compete with
Germany and Japan ." Romney
contin ued, saying that "we must
be aware of a new economic
threat. We will soon have to
a d ditiona lly compete wit h
China."
Speaking on Phase II of the
Presiden t 's economic plan,
Romney revealed the options and
recommendations that had been
made. The President will make an
announcement in a few weeks.
Romney felt that the elimination
of draft deferments would not
have any effect on the economy.
On Vietnam , Romney
admitted, " We made the mistakes.
We forwarded the idea of a
monolithic communistic
conspiracy when it didn't exist.
We escnlated the war."
Senator Hubert Humphrey
(D-Min n .) provided the first
opposition to Nixon policies .
nat r Humphrey developed a
p · sophlcal argument for hope
in he future of the United States.
e should not be afraid of
change. There is no need to be

~

WASIIIIIGION . . . . .US Clllllll
Mlllr-urr

llllS &amp; TMMGS - . . . Styles f• Y•ll .......

ua.n ••••••

•••••cans
....... ,acan

. apolitical archeolo&amp;iat.'' araued
Humphrey. " Politics il a strugle
.f« powc=r. There are no vacant
chain in the political arena.
People ue always ready to move
in."
H umJ)hrey d efended h is
posit lo n in the J o h nso n
Ad mi n isltration. " I was the
modifyina influence in the
covemmemt. I was opposed to the
expansion of the war. Because of
misjudm1ents we made tragic
mistakes."
Commenting on the prisoper of
war issu,e, Humphrye said, " If
setting
Comm1enting on the prison~r of
war issue, Humphrey said, "If
setting w•e should try it."
Speakllng of the vacanci~ on
the Sup1reme Court, Humphrey
demande.d that Nixon "appoint a
woman I o tbe Supreme Court."
He conc:luded on the recent
Vietnam elections, "They are as
pboney • a three doUar bill.
Thieu has managed to get
everyone off the ballot , he'U
manage to aet SO% of the vote."
H E W Se c ret a r y E I i o t
Richardson presented the next
major arguments for the
administration . Mr. Richardson
spoke on1 the functioning of the
governrnent . "Priorities are
determ]lned by thoughtful
analysis, politics, hope and the
stars. CoiTipromises are rationally
conceived!, humanly considered
and intell.igently carried out.''
'And the :sta..,·
Richardson spoke about the
departme1nt 's ''Women's Action
Proara rn ." " It ha s been
established to define the needs
GUS1.AV A. FRISCH, INC.
.krwelw - Optician
41 K ENMORE AVENUE
(at! University Pfaza)
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~----------· PAID PO L I T I CA L AD -.=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
.

Mayor Frank A. Sedi1ta
A ND

John V. Lindsay
Will be appearing at th,e
NORTON-FOUNTAI:N

12:00 noon Friday, Oct. s·th

Conference speaker
and opportunities or women in
the department as weU as the
impact of HEW's prol{am in the
country." This report is currently
being transformed into an "action
plan ."
Questions arose concerning the
recent alleaed dis agreement
between Richardson and Presid ent
Nixon over school desegregation
and busing. Secretary Richardson
explained the development of the
conflict situation .
"The problem arose over the
desegregation plan of Austin,
Texas. The plan was developed
after the Supreme Court decision
last year. The District Court
decided to adopt the school
board's plah rather than the one
developed by the Office of
Education," he said.
"In the Court of Appeals, HEW
didn't want to araue that their
own plan was the only acceptable
one, therefore, President Nixon
ipstructed the Justice Department
to disavow the HEW plan. We
wanted the Court to just a~tee
that the Austin plan was
inadequate."
Ad ministration speaks
Speaking on local Boards of
Trustees, Secretary Richardson
"genuinely supported th e poUcy
of having students o n the boards
of universities."
Tbe second day's events
~mmen ced with an address by
John Enrlichman, assistant to the
President for Domestic Affairs.
Mr. Enrlichman provided a general
criticism or those who "would
promise more than they could
deliver." AdditionaUy, he severely
criticized Congress for takin1 "too
many recesses while problems are
criticaUy urgent."
Enrlichman complained about

Sen. Hubert H'flftphrey w. one
of 11M ...-k..
.t the
t h ird ennue l " Presidents to
PhsidentJ" cont.•~ held in
WethingtOn, D.C. last weekend.

..,._.t

the "Civil Service Bureaucracy,"
characterizinl it as "a great big
monolith th at lasts forever."
Arguin&amp; for more local control, he
felt that "the federal government
is not very good about delivering
services."
Senator Fred Harris (D.Oicla.),
w h o recently announced his
candidacy for the presidency,
continued the agenda. "It is
incredible that we've been to the
moon when we can't provide
decent heal~h care."
Senator Harris was emphatic
about his support for having
students sitting on the Boetds of
Trustees in universities. "Trustees
are chosen for their political and
financial connections, not because
they know anything about
edu~Uon.

- Refuting Enrlichman, Harris
stated that " the conflict between
the executive and legislative
branch is a very good thing. I
don't araue that it is the inertia of
a bureaucracy ... it is the lack of
national leadership."
Other notable speakers
included Rogers Morton,
Secretary of th e Interior, who
spoke of advancements his office
had made in the areas of saving
the environment and Indian
rights, and Allard Lowenstein who
made a surprise appearance by
Oyina in from an enpgement at
the State University of Buffalo
the previous day.
Wi ll iam Rucklehaus,
administrator of the
Envjro n mental Protection
Agency, and Philip Sanche~.
director of t h e Office of
Economic Opportunity, also
spoke .. Rucldebaus philosophized
that "we can succeed witb
perfection. The idea of utopia is
mischievous."

The Spectrum ;, publish«/ tllrw
~/me• e weefc. ~Mrry Mond.y,

~nftdey end Fridlly; during tM

reguler ~lc .-r b y Sub·8oard
1, Inc. OffH:e. .,.. locer.d et 365

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Circu'-tion: 16,000

Page two . The Spectrum. Wednesday, October 6, 1971
.\

-

..

�Pesch saga: the truth hurts
by Bil V8CCarO
C.mpu1 EdittN

And how, Gnother epuode in the continuint
.aga of Iht~n LeRoy Petch. Todizy'1 1tory: Wt~l He or

Jtbtn 't He?

Confusion is once apin ralnina down on this
University over whether or not Medical School Dean
LeRoy Pesch wu actually forced out of his po~t.
The most recent episode in the controversy
appears to be Dean Pesch's officjal letter of
realpation to Health Sciences Vice President Clyde
Randall dated Saturday, the same day he had told a
J10UP of medical students that he "did not reaip!'
Furthermore, the reli&amp;nation was said to have been
written before that meetina.
,
Now to add to all this, President Ketter told a
aroup of reporters Monday ni&amp;ht that Dean Pesch
bad called him up that ame mornina, denyin&amp; that
he had ever aid that lie was forced out of his offtce.
Which leads all of ua to the question : who's tellin&amp;
the truth?
Dr. Ketter, for all the criticism that has been
leveled on him bver the past year that be has been
president of this Univenity, bas a remarkable habit
of beina extremely honest and candid · when
confronted on a one-t~ne, informal level. That was
the case Monday nipt.
Wbo'slyinf7
He said that Dean Pesc.h was not ftred and was
not forced out, to his knowledse. Also, he wu just
about as confused as the rest of us concerning this
whole mysterious and contradictory episode.
Discusain&amp; the series of articles in the Buffalo
Ellenint News lut week which stated that Pesch had
resianed, Dr. Ketter . said that, frankly , "it was a
surprise to me." Even Dr. Randall "had no idea how
it happened," he said .
Dr. Ketter also mentioned the fact that Dean
Peach had just accepted a position as president of the
prestipous Michael Reese Hospital in Chicaao.

I

Now, if Dr. ~etter is tellln&amp; the truth, which this
writer believe~ he is, why would Pesch come out
with such statements u be made Saturday which lc1d
everyone at that med students' meetin&amp; to believc
that he had been, in effect, ousted from bil polition,
only to deny he said any auch thin&amp; two days later?
that

;;rp~~~!~U:::a:::.~·n:~!:o:n.=:.

:::::~&amp;of

the entire procecdln&amp;?

Why, aJao, would Pesch tell his med students
that, contrary to the local news report he did not
resian when we find his official resianati~n dated the
same day he made the ltatement and, additionally,
learn that he Is takina a new and biaer position
elsewhere?
Despite what PCKb apparently has done, it
seems incredible to believe that he would
deliberately contradict himself and put himself into
such a tenuous position Wlle~a be wu already placid
in that position by someone or some lfOUp, namely
the Med School executive committee.
Did the executive committee put the pressure
on Pesch, tell him to keep his mouth abut and leave
the Mecl School quietly and, additionally, to make
sure that this would be done, leak the rumor of
Pesch's resianation to the New• Wednesday?
WeU, apparently Bob Ketter doesn't know
Clyde Randall doesn't kDow, and most certainly, th~
central administration in Albany doesn't know.
Murray Block, Deputy Chancellor of the State
University of New York, said that they know very
little about what bas been aoina on with the Pesch
episode. He said that their information has been
comina either from the SUNY "1J8pevine" or local
reports in the newspapers. In fact , Dr. Block said
that they knew even less about it earlier until a staff
Writer from The Sp~ctrum related the situation to
Chancellor Ernest Boyer.
Yet, despite all this, somebody around here
knows what's aoina on and that is LeRoy Pesch and ,
moat likely. the executive committee. One thin&amp; is
certain : this University should know, too.

Fee Waiver Applications
for UTf:dergradUates
Available..
205 Norton Hall

group vot1na
procedure amentted.ao
t

The Student Auembly
Executive Committee voted
Monday to amend the volin&amp;
procedure tor Auembly
repreaentatives.
The chanae is in the votin&amp;
procedure of the intetflat p-oups.
No lonaer will they have to
assemble to elect a representative.
After the petition has been
handed in, each individual will be
required to ao to the Student
Assembly table in Norton Union
and personally band in his vote
for the representative.
The oriainal plans called for 40
people to fill out a petition, the
first step in formina an intereat
aroup. After the petition bad been
validated by the Student
Association, elections would be
held to determine which member
of the aro up would be the
representative to the Student
Assembly.
"There are at the moment only
14 interest aroups and the chanae
is in the hope of formiria at least
thirty more," s aid Lee
Schwartzbcra, director of the
Office of Election Credentials. "A
combination of factors resulted in
the failure of the ori&amp;inal
JUidelinea. The .Procedure made it
very hard for people tryina to
form an interett IJOUp to
assemble 40 people at once."
Support needed
"Unfortunately," be said, " The
ever-present student apathy led to
the doom of this procedure.
Granted, it is not easy to assemble
40 people at once, but even with

.,oa,.

;GR£ s scheduled

STUDENT ASSOCtA.f.ON OFFICE

9:00a .m . - 6:00p.m.

•

Deadline for filing application is OCTOBER 16th.

r--------------

.._t

limited support of dae
body, propua c:o\114 lla9e beeD
made.••
Mr. Schwartzbeq COiltiDued,
..Since it ia not always pollible to
vote in maa, mmy people wiD be
able to form interest
without puttin&amp; ao mucll
reapomibillty on one indi'ridul.'~
Thoae lnterat aroupe tbat baye
already formed and - elected
representative~ will be retained.
Also, thole aroupe who ltiD wilh
to assemble and vote will be able
to do ao, under the auspecies of
the SA. The dead.li.ne for new
IJ'OUPI has been extended until
Oct. 14 with the fint meetin&amp;
scheduled for the next day.
" Our oripnal aoals remain the
same," said Mr. Scbwartzbera.
"The idea of interest croups
allows for creater representation
and more effective student
aovernment. The system alao
allows for the formation of
interest aroups tbroupout the
semester. Our hope is that as more
and more people ftnd that tbinp
can be accomplished in student
aovemment, they will try to aet
toaether 40 people and form an
interest IJOUp.
"However," he asserted, "I
cannot stress enouah the
importance of student iupport.
Every reform we make, every
,Cfort we take will be uselea
without enou&amp;b ttudents behind
us." Mr. Schwartzbera asks that
all students with any questions
approach him or any other
member of the O.E.C. at the delk
in the lobby of Norton Union .

PAID POLITICAL AD·---------~----- 1

Charles Goodell
and

Mayor Frank A. Sedita

The Gnduate Record Examination will be ,n-en
1i.x timet durin&amp; the 1971-1972 academic year. The
fint testln&amp; date for the GRE ill Oct. 23, 1971.
Scores for this test will be reported to the anduate
acbooll around Dec. 1. Studenta plannina to re&amp;ider
for the October test date must ban their
applicatlo111 into the Educational Testina Semce by
Oct. 5 or pay a late reptration fee of $3.50. After
Oct. 8 there ia no parantee that application.s for the
October test date can be proceaaed.
The other five test dates are Dec. II , 1971_. Jan.
15, Feb. 26, April22 and June 17, 1972. Equiftlent
late fee and deadlines apply to these dates. Choice of
test datea should be determined by the requilemeuta
of anduate achooill or feUowlhipe to which ooe •
applyina. Scores are usually reported to the aracJuate
tchooill five weeki alter testina.
Full details and rqistration forma for the Gill
are contaioed in the 1971-72 GRE ln/orm~~tion
Bulletin. The booklet ill available on mOlt campuee
or may be ord~d from : Educational Tadal
Service, Box 955, Princeton. NJ. 08540.

will be speaking

Thursday, Oct. 7th at 7:00p.m.

!Buffalo State-Student Union FoveJ.i
J
I

I

I

I

II Sponsoredby Youth/or Sedita- 886-5525 II
l ____ : :_ __________

PAID POLITICAL A D . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '

Wednesday, October 6, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page three

...

�McdiCa.llf
Medlet~l

~ica/1,

Editor 'l note:
quutlonsfproblems on your mind!
a
weekly c~umn contt~ininK halth reulled questiofll from the '&amp;n~'versity
community, II now In operation through tile cooperation of the
Medict~l School, Univenity Hbllth Sernce and tlte Office of Student
.Aifllirs t~nd SerVices. Just d/Jll831-5000 A ction Line Extension, address
a written quution to MediCD/1, cfo The Spectrum, 355 Norton Hall or
Vilit Action Line booth in the Qnter Loun8e of Norton 11411. Names
will be kept In strict confidence, and quutions fielded by students and
faculty of the State University of Buffalo MediCDI School will be
answered through the column, tlppearlng ach Wednesday. /{ students
wi.rh personal answerr, supply your Mme and phone number and a
member of the Medical School will call you.

- Santos

Roswell Park fire

A Roswell Pa-k Memorilll lnldtute laboeatoty and
its 1000 lrNIII .nimals tLtted for tel8llfCh wa-e
dertroyed Monct.y in a fCK~r..alann fire. Firemen on
the scene blamed the fire 0111 anon.
A spok.man for the Canc:4~r R..-rch Institute said
the animals, mostly rats an~ll mice, w.e caged in the
building preparatory to injections end that actual
exp•iments w. . held ai•IIWh•e and thus w•e not
affected.
Fire Commissioner Rob.-t Howard estimated
damage at at leest $186.~). but said that the figure
could exceed $260,000 eftlw the content loss of the
r...,.eh llboratoty
detewmlned.
Firemen diiCOvered k•otene pountd inside the
A•lal Grill wh•e the fir11 erupted at 2 a.m. and
spread to four oth• muc1Uires along the block.

w•

The Spectrum's classifieds bring results!!!!

Q : My sister, aae 18, ill pregnant and hu dropped ~eid. Now she is
fearful of the dfectl on the baby and wiahea an abortion. She cannot
lfford the rate&amp; advertised by the commercill cllnict. Ia there anywhere
in the city she can aet an abortion and at a much reduced r1te?
A : Using acid at present is a little Uke Russian Roulette - we just
do not know whether birth defectl will result or not. There is available
enough experimental evidence sugestin&amp; significant breaks in the
JClletic chain that an abortion should be seriously considered. Two
problems now exist: (I) at 18 years of age, the student will probably
need parental co~nt (although many physicians will perform
abortions without this) and (2) the cost. The least costly abortion in
the Buffalo area runs close to S22S and up for the ftrst 12 weeks of
pregnancy. An abortion done when the pregnancy has continued longer
than this will cost closer to S4SO.
Q : I han a vaginal cUseharae. ll this serious?
A : Not usually. A modetlte amount of vaginal discharge between
periods is normal and this may be increased during ovulation (midway
between periods) and abo by use of the pill o r IUD (loop).
If the discharge is quite profuse, purulent, produces a foul odor or
is accompanied by irritation, it should be checked by a gynecologist
and may well need laboratory studies to pinpoint the cause and lead
~oeffective treatment. If one's sexual partner has a discharge, or if there
IS known exposure to GC, a check-up should be had immediately
without waiting for symptoms.
Q : What is a "strep throat" and is it dangerous?
A: Winter is rapidly approaching and undoubtedly along with it
will come another outbreak of colds, flu and sore throats. The common
sore throat can be caused by a larp variety of bacteria and viruses. It is
a frequent symptom in mono, influenza and many viral infections. A
physician should be consulted to determine the cause of your sore
throat.
The strep throat is caused by a group of bacteria called
st~epto~cci . It is a highly communicable disease and usually begins
W1th chills, fever and headache. Within 24 hours a severe sore throat
develops which makes swaJlowing a painful task . In adults, the
temperature usually returns to normal in 3-4 days. The sore throat and
other symptoms are gone by the end of a week.
In a small percentage of patients, complications such as ear and
sinus infections may develop. Several late complications have been
defin_it~ly Un~ed to strop infections. Rheumatic fever is a dangerous
conditton which can lead to permanent heart damage. Kidney disease is
also a late complication which in most cases is short lived and does not
result in permanent damage.
"But do not fear, penicillin is here" (and other effective
antibiotics). With prompt treatment, the possibility of both early and
late complications can be virtually eliminated . It is important to note
that with this and any other infection , antibiotic treatment should be
continued throuah the full num ber of prescribed days. This is to ensure
complete eradication of the infection. Although the symptoms may be
gone in several days, the streptococci are likely to still be present.

~Gustav

XEROXES
FORB¢

355Norton
WBKW and Belkin Productions present:

GR-A ND
FUNK
RAILROAD·
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I

Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
. Friday, Oc·;·. 8, at 8:30 P.M.
All Seat• Re•ernd: Froat Floor, Gold• ud Reb. II.SD
Rear 'loor ed Blue• .. IS.SO Gre,.. aZHI Orall6•• · .14.SD
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Page four . The Spectrum . Wedn..ctay, October 6, 1971

I

�PraJer-ia staged

Resistance at Bonavei4ture

•

Takina an unusual path of b.ow at St . Bonaventure it
resistance, 2SO students at St. paralleled t-he parent-~bild
Bonaventure University stapd a relationship. "This school hu
prayer~ at the Bonaventure
been plaped and continues to be
Friary last Tuesday ni&amp;bt in an plaaued by an archaic and
effort to improve student affairs senaeless accepted policy • . . and
at the school. The viail started it's been with ·us for J 50 years.
after a Student Senate meetina The time baa come to make a
where four ttudent senators stand. No one ~ we haven't
been treated with d 'ty ."
resiped.
A motion by u::;:: Senator
Student Senate president
Frank Ciarcia began the meetina Janet Zajac to continue
with the foUowina comments: neaotiations with the
"The Student Senate can only admi nistration elicited much
present to you tonisht a net loll discussion. Senator Jack Polidori
of 100% - nothina bas been said: " Negotiations have been a
accomplished." Amona the losses farce and will continue to be a
described by Ciarca were the Jack farce. We're playina a game where
of an interviaitation proaram, the the opposition sets up all the rules
choice of a new dean of women - we can't win." The motion was
without the consultation of the defeated by a vote of 12- 6.
The next motion to reach the
studen~ and the fact that "the
Student Handbook Board floor was that of Ciarca 's who
established by the National Center moved that "the Student Senate
. for Dispute Settlement is now occupy the Friedsam Memorial
Library untO Father Reginald
defunct."
Ciarca commented on the (president of the University)
a~ministration-iJlUdent role and retracts his statement that there

COMPLETE
HO:ME FURNISHINGS
NEW and USED
RENTALS
Tim• plan

-continued from .-.. ~­

themselves facing when huntin&amp;
for a job. In sports, you seldom
will be n1p ~hanps in the academic see the Black 'man ridin&amp; the
year 1971 - 1972." When a bench, the trademark of the
deadloc:k in discllllion wu " averaae" player. He is the 114fT.
reached!, Ciarca remqved lUI
In the political world, the
motion from the noor. .
minority politician is FDerally
reprded u a "rare phenomenon••
Vote of 4:0mMieace ·
or "dynamic and talented."
A mt)tion by Senator Gene
In eCJucation, it seems that all
Walab lit) disband the Student the desirables for rect'Uitment
Senate ai~d "caU for the formation indeed require what Will Brown,
of an academic senate, and quick assistant to the director for
proarus tow.ards University Minority Faculty and Staff
aoveman,c e" wu based on his Recruitment, terms as "Black
claim that the Senate was Supermen... Obviously, Mr.
ineffectual. "It's liJce trying to Brown said, "Yo\l can't expect
awim in a vacuum." This motion . every Black person to be one of
was def'e ated, and a vote of these supermen."
confiden,ce in the Senate was
Yet, unless he is, he seldom
taken.
acts
hired. On the other hand, the
The •motion to move to the mediocre white bas saturated the
Friary cllapel«'o pray "for change halls of learning.
at St. Bonaventure" was passed by
a' 10-4-1 vote, and the meeting Vicious cycle
was adjc,umed. When the group
The emp~
· is on quality; a
rea c h ed the chapel, Senator Black person ust be the beat.
didate has 1iis PhD
Charles Stephan apologized for The Black
voting "yet" on the motion and before he is hired and his hiring is
said : "This isn't the place for civil often contingent upon many
disobed.ience ." As of 3 :30 variables. Always the Black person
Wednesday morning, only two is expected to meet the traditional
students remained in the chapel. educational criterion for hiring
and almost always must exceed
them . But for how many years
hav e the paths for this
''traditional" academic attainment
been closed to Blacks and all

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other minority people? Can thit
vicious "'Catch-22" cycle continue
much lonpr? If these traditional
criterion remain the onea that
must be met, apparently so.
There are thoee who worry
that to cbanp these standards
means limply to deatroy them and
with them the quality of
education on this campus. But
many maintain that this isn't so.
" We would not be aubvertin1
academic standards but rather
extendina (them)," stated GObert
Moore, acting provost of Arts and
Letters.
The problem of eatabliahi.ng
acceptable innovative criterion is
not insurmountable. The question
is whether or not those
responsible wish it solved.
Budaet problema
As of now , little bas been done
to redefine qualifications. The
figures of the past year amplify
this fact. Out of 64 reported
hirings from five faculties,
according to a yc;arly report
submitted by .Mr. Brown's office
(figures were not available for
Health Sciences and Natural
Sciences). only three were from
minority background.
.
This contrasts to a reported 20
or so minority hirlnp during each
of the past couple of years. This
number must be further
explained.
The funds for most of these
previous hirinp came from special
minority budget lines allocated to
various departments to be used
for only this stated purpose. ln
the past yea£ these lines were
frozen due to the state budgetary

~~~~am~-.
g

1Jyou've waitedfor a man to change
the politics of this ntltion

DISCOVER

John V. Lindsay
FRIDAY -Oct. 8 tbt

11:45 a.m.
NORTON TERRA&lt;:E
IN CASE OF RAIN· THIS EVENT'WILL BE HELD IN THE
Fni.MORE ROOM

A SA- GSA Spealker's Bureau sponsored event.
Wednesday, October 6, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five
\

�I
Foot-dragging
Fully two weeks ago we urged the Student Association
Executive Com-rittee to change their procedures for the
election of a representative to the Student Assembly.
Specifically, we had suggested abolishing the requirement for
an on-the-spot election by an interest group of their
representative. We believed this system to be too
cumbersome and overly time-consuming, and felt that either
a telephone call or a mailing to members of an interest group
would more than adequately " guard against fraudulent
petitions.
The Student Association Executive Committee finally
VQted on Monday to change their requirements for election
to the Student Assembly. What is quite unfortunate is that it
'Oh, we thought you were ganef'
took two weeks for them to make this move. Further, it was
only the vivid failure of their overly-structured guidelines
(only 14 representatives have been selected to date) that
made them consider this change. We find this lack of
foresight appalling.
reason he came to Buffalo was his strona belief that
The saddest part of this affair is that the deadline for To the .Editor:
the thrust of medical education in the future would
interest-gr'oup affiliation is this Friday. Since we believe the
I a.m a recent transfer student 'to the medical be with the state-financed medical schools, as the
Student Association has deeply damaged the chances for a school here. I have known Dr. Leroy Pesch for six Vietnam effort and other federal priorities were
full and well-functioning Student Assembly by their slow years as a student at Stanford and now here at rapidly placing the ptivate medical schools in a state
acceptance of reality, we flereby urge that the initial meeting Buffalo. I wou14 like to comment briefly on Dr. of financial disanay.
At Buffalo Dr. Pesch continued to implement
Pesch's work and particularly the events of the last
of the Student Assembly be postponed for two weeks and several
tilays.
progressive medical education reforms, as weU as try
registration for the Student Assembly · be allowed to
In September of 1965 Stanford Medical School his best to brina fine medical care to all the people.
continue. This, we believe, is the only method of insuring was basically an institution isolated from the outside He has worked to avoid duplication of facilities in
that the Student Assembly will be a group representative of commwnity with decisions handed down from connection with the new buildi.n,p for the Amherst
a wide range of interest groups, not just the clubs beyond the medical school and ve.ry little student campus. His personal committment to quality
sufficiently organized to have met the previous involvement in important student matters. Under Dr. medicine was only further emphasized by his recent
Pesch's leadership, substantial innovations in the strong stand after the Attica revolt.
requirements.
curriculnlm and educational policies were made but
If Dr. Pesch is forced to leave this campus, it

Students lose a leader

The visitors
Tomorrow Buffalo is going to be blessed by two
out-of-town visitors. One, Charles Goodell, is quite welcome.
The other, Spiro T. Agnew, vice-president and verbal
assassin, is not.
There is much significance to these visits. First, Mr.
Goodell is coming at the behest of the United Auto Workers
to campaign with Frank A. Sedita in the Mayor's quest for
the County Executiveship. Mr. Goodell is a Republican while
Mr. Sedita is a Democrat. The last New York State
Republican to campaign with a Democratic candidate was
John V. lindsay, who is no. longer a Republican. We
therefore regard the Goodell visit as a possible omen of
future beneficial changes.
Secondly, there is a point to be made about the 1972
election from these developments. A major labor union is
bringing in Mr. Goodell, a well-known opponent of the
vice-president. This very possibly could be an indication that
Mr. Agnew's reactionary and repressive tactics are failing to
attract labor support.
We look forward to Mr. Agnew's visit and hope that a
splendid time will be guaranteed for all. We therefore urge
that the students and faculty of this University take it upon
themselves to make the vice-president's junket a memorable,
exciting and above all, an eventful one.

THE SpECTI\UM
W.sn.t.v.~8,. 1971

Vol. 22, No. 19

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co Mlneeint Editor - AI Ben10n

eo.Minllline Editw - Mike lippmenn
Alit.. ......... Editor - SUSM Mota
lktli,_ Men., - Jim Drudtw
Adwnillne ~ - Sue M.,lentine

Cempua ... .. •• .. Jo..Ann Armeo
................Howie Kuru
. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 8 ill' vec:caro
City .••.••.. • •••••..•••vtcent
Copy •.....••••. Ronnl For"*'

................ Ma-tyG.UI
Alit • .....•..•....... ,, _ , t
,...,.. ................ ,, _ , t .
~Arts .......•. Tom Tof•

lAyout ....... Maryhope Runyon

Alit•...•...... . ....•.vecant
Lh. 6 Dr8ma .. Mich•l Silwrblltt
Mullc ..•..........Billy Altmen
OH.C....,.... ...•.. Lynne Tr.eger
Photo ....•..... Man: Ar*.-m.t
•••...... . Mldcey Osterrelcher
8pwa ............. Barry Rubin
Alit• ... . ..•..••. Howle Feiwl

n.

Specttvm Is served by United p,_ lnternetlonlll, College Pr•
S.VIc:e, the Los Angel• F,_ Pre~~, the Los .ngel• Time~ Syndic:8t.e Wid

U..ion

NIWIS.V~

RlpdJflc:8tlon of INttw herein wltttout the ex,_ C:O'*ftt of the
Edhor-i..Chlef Is forbidden.

Editorllil policy Is detamlned by the Editor-i..ChW.

Page six. The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 6, 197!

significantly . and for the rust time, the students will not be particularly his loss, as I'm sure he will
became involved in the decision-maldna process. move immediately into a more important and
Also dwing ~period many and varied medical care prestigious pb~tion than his ~tost here. The rea} loss
programs were brought to the indiaent chicano and will be to the students, faculty and administraUon.
black ar1eas of East Palo Alto, San Jose and the San One can only interpret Dr. Pe$&lt;:h's present situatio n
Joacquin Valley. The number of black medical along with that of Dr. Handy and Dr. Cohen. If a
students per class rose from uro when I began purge has to go on in this University, why are only
medical school to 8-12 at present. The medical the most dedicated and effective men being forced
school became a community institution.
out?
Wbtm Dr. Pesch left Stanford in 1968 it was
Michael H. Klein
reprded as a great loss to the school. The main
J rd y ear MediCtll Student

For what it's worth
by .Harvy' Lipman

Vietnam - one would suppose that everything
that can1 or should be said about that unhappy
nation has been, and yet events continue to occur
which 81'e impossible to ipore. Americans seem to
be tired of listening to the reports of atrocities. The
reaction is one of «yes, we agree, it's terrible. Just
stop botllering us about it."
It is1n 't that easy. They held an election of sorts
in South Vietnam the other day. It was the kind of
affair th.at must have had even the super-boss of
them aU,, Richard Daley, drooling with admiration.
This was no messy job like the Cooke County affairs.
There yc&gt;u have to Jet somebody else get on the
ballot an1d then have dead people vote for you. No,
Nguyen Van Thieu is nobody's fool - he wasn't
about to handle his eJection in such a sloppy
. manner. The honorable president of the South
Vietnamc~:Se government knew only too weU that if
anybody to the left (or right) of Adolf Hitler ran
ap..inst him, Thieu was a sure bet to lose. The
solution was very simple: hold the election but don't
let anyone else on the ballot. Of course that would
create a few trivial difficulties for his American
allies. p,or example, there was the problem of
explaining how you hold a democratic election
without opposition candidates. This undoubtedly
had many image conscious American diplomats
deeply troubled until they realized that since no one
believ~ 1mything they say they can say anything
they like.
•
~ t:he ~te returns came in, it appeared that
President Tbieu bad ·won the cliff-hanger with a bare
90- 95% of the vote (the element of uncertainty was
attributed to the loss of a few ballot boxes). Mr.
Tbieu wiiU undoubtedly treat those who did oppose
his re-ele~:tion with the same dignity and respect that
he has al1ways reserved for his adversaries - the man
who was runner-up to Thieu in the 1967 election is
still rottUl&amp; away in a Sai&amp;on prisonn.

• • • • ••

The death of Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black
represents a tragedy of greater dimension than
simply the loss of a fine juror and protector of civil
liberties. The death of Justice Black and the
subsequent resignation of Justice Harlan will allow
Richard Nixon to appoint his third and fourth
justices. The idea of a Nixon controlled court is at
best terrifying. He bas demonstrated in the past his
ability to uncover not merely the most reactionary
but also the reast competent legal minds in the
nation . Now he has managed to find another fine
specimen, in the grand tradition of Hainsworth and
Carswell, to consider for the Court . This time,
however, Nixon's man bas bowed to pressure and
withdrawn himself from consideration before the
actual nomination could be made.
Richard Poff is a Viqinian conservative in the
Strom Thurmond-George Wallace mold. His major
qualification for the bench is his unyielding
opposition to any and aU civil tiahts measures. His
name had been submitted at the top of a list of
judicial candidates to be considered by the American
Bar Association. In all probability, however, Nixon
and Mitchell never really intended or expected Poff
to be nominated. As in the cases of his two previous
appointments, Burger and Blackmun, Nixon seems
to be using a southern racist to ease the approval of a
northern conservative.
There is always hope that Nixon's strategy will
backfire. Hugo Black was a ono-time member of the
Ku Klux Klan wbo later made his southern comrades
regret the day he was born, and former Chief Justice
Earl Warren was a Republican conservative whose
appointment was in the end regretted by
tigbt-wingers throughout the nation. Most likely,
however, Nixon will not be disappointed with tbe
men he is finally able to see the Senate approve.
Bven more disheartening is the inevitably nearina
resipation of the aging W'tlliam Douglas, the
strongest su_pporter of human diln.ity to sit in tbe
Supreme Court for several decades. Replaci.na him
with a Nixon appointee would be ... well, rouply
analagous to replacina Ramsey Clark with John
Mitchell. The prospect ia sickenin&amp;'

�..

G·ue§t OpiniOn

Mills leaves .post
To the Editor:
After careful thouaht and consultation with my
faculty, l have decided not to make myself el.ipble
for reappointment as Chairman. However, J am
willing, if it is desired, to serve through the summer
of 1971, so the transition is facilitated and my
replacement can take over at the beginning of our
academic year.
My reasons are simple: with thy termination of
the N. S .F. Department Developmental Grant
program and with university research funds drying
up, the only way we can get the funds necessny to
advance research and training as outlined in our
developmental plan is to design individual research
proposals and peddle them until they are bought. I
am referring to five or six proposals covering six to
' .-eight years. Th~ entreprensurship required by that
program is not compatible with the chairmanship.
Consequently, I think it beSt that I be replaced as
chairman, and that I become free to develop the
research and training program.
In no sense do I feel that I am resigning, or
"leaving administration to do my own work." 1 feeJ
as committed to our developmental plan as before
and see a course of action through which we can
accomplish at least part of it. That's .the action I am
taking.
On a more personal level, I am veri grateful for
your support, your fairmindedness, your wise .,
counsel and your friendship. Is is rare for a
coordinator of academic units to gain the degree of
trust and confidence your units have in you. It is
rarer still for the usual forces or competition
between units to be transferred into mutual trust
and cooperation among those units - this has been
accomplished under your leadership.
While I might not later be in an administrative
relationship with you, I trust our working
relationship will remain close.
Warm regard1,
Theodore M. MiiiJ
Chairman

Editor 'I note: The above is a copy of a letter sent to
Ira Cohen, Provost of the Faculty of Social Sciences
and Administration by Dr. Mills. We have reprinted
it here at Dr. MiliJ request in order to further clarify
the existing titWition.

S p are the trees
To the Editor:

I would Uke to comment on leafleting in Norton
Hall.
With all due respect to freedom of spt-ech, when
leaflets are shoved in front of my face, stuffed into
both of my hands, and dropped on top of a book
which I am reading, and I discover that I have
already seen that leaflet posted on the wall outside,
there is a certain quality of redundance, However,
what is most disturbing is reading a leaflet posted on
the wall which explains that the capitalist system
bears the sole responsibility for the state of our
ecology; then fmding several copies of the leaflet
trampled tin the floor, as two copies of the leaflet
are being placed in each of may bands respectively.
Then I watch one person read each copy once and
discard it.
I write this comment . on behalf of aJl trees
which have been good to mo in the past.
There is a way to eliminate some of this
grotesque waste. Simply print at the top and bottom
of each leaflet the words: "Save trees: do not litter
with this, pass it on to someone else."
Power to the people, death to aU fascists - I
don't know of any fascist trees.
Irwin Liss
Student

From a d istance
To the Editor:
As I write this, I am seated in the Norton HaU
dinina area. To the right of me, a large spotted dog
helps himself to leftovers from a food tray, while
around my feet , two smaller dogs engage in ll mating
chase. Yesterday, J narrowly missed stepping in· a
pile of dog shit in the corridor at Diefendorf. The
number of dogs running loose on campus seems to
increase daily.
I sugest that it is time for those responsible for
sanitation on this campus to take steps to restore the
minimum levels of •.::ontrol required by public health
ordinances. Since appeals to~easonableness on the
part of dog owners have prov
wholely ineffective,
the following measures sho d be takea : I) the
banning of all dogs, leashed or unleashed from the
campus; 2) dogs found running loose on campus
should be captured and taken to the pound (where
they can be retrieved by concerned owners).
I am certain that cooperation between Campus
Security and public health of6~ials would assure the
1implementation of these proposals.
B.C. Andenon

by Paul Chimera

(Note : ftzul Chimera, 1oon to recei11e h£1 fournalllm
degreer from Ohio University , Is a regfltered
consc('entiow objector. He believe.r the military is
one of the major {acton in the gradual degradatlofl
of ouf' country.)
'N'e ophobia deflotes an abnormal fear of the
new, lthe unfamiliar. It iJ often used to explain the
insumlountable social problem of rat infestation,ifor
the ttlenacing rodent is keenJey suspicious of
anythJing mechanical or manmade - anything
forewnming the presence of man. Accordingly, he is
extren~ely difficult to trap, and his destruction and
dange1· take its toll.
Lii.ke the rat, America is strangely suspicious of
the n1ew, the different, the changing. Rather, she
finds welcomed solitude and reassurance in the
security of the familiar and the traditional. She finds
virtue ln the convential, and is leary of the novel.
She ijll:es her pie apple. (sic)
With the Senate's newly·pwed draft~xtension
bill, America again subscribes to tradition. Por when
we SP1Mk of great American traditions, the military
must J~eadline the list. Sadly, and truly inconsistent
· with this country's theoretical love for peace, the
milital'y has pervaded our culture since time
imme~norial. Consequently the means of war, not
peace, have been greatly encouraged.
One needs only to wallt into almost any
Ameri•can city to notice the bright blue neon letters
VPW 11leaming over tbe local post. One needs only to
pick up the daily n~wspaper to read of Local Soldier
Honored For Bravery. Plastic toy soldiers, rifles,
guns and grenades throng the toystore shelves. "GI
Joe" 111ow comes fuUy equipped with combat boots,
M·l6 automatic rifle, and camouflage fatigues.
· Vetera.ns' hospitals dot the countryside. Even the
latest national hiring campalgn asks, poetically,
..Don'1t Forget, Hire The Vet."
Pilllally, our very President, the elected leader of
our co•untry, is, in fact, Commander-in Chief of the
Armed! Forces. It is an economic fact that , in many
ways, our country has.always thrived on war. That is
a sickening notion. The draft , the Army - the
military as an institution - is designed , ultimately,
to train individuals in the dubious tactics of warfare.
Reduced to its simplest terms, it trains men to kill
other men . (Obviously, women and babies are not
exclud.ed .) Thia is rationalized by the contention
that filbtin&amp; wars, using physical for~ api.nst a
country, is the only practical method of resolving
internutionaJ conflict. "We have always had wars,"
many llle heard to say. "You can never put an end to
war," they stubbornly continue. Again, a tragic
example or the insensible reliance on tradition - the
fear of any new change.
'Tiae barbaric Vietnam War, now in its second
decade1, began to put.braJtes on the relentless wheels
of the military. As the fighting raged, and the years
of U .S. involvement mounted to stagering

proportions, more . and more Amerf.cans bepn tc&gt;
seriously question the credibility of our country's
intervention there. Un til, after more than 50 1000
dead young Americans, we bep.o to look objectively
and open-mindedly at this destructive situation u a
major national mistake - a senseless war, a'n
u nequivocal tragedy. The Gallup polls now
inefutably favor a complete, total arut immediate
withdrawal of American troops from that country 10
many miles away. The people, so it seemed, were
beginning to get fed up with the futility of it all. The
untimely and needless deaths bepn to hit home. The
threat of theif sons, husbands, brothers or fathers
going off to kill or be killed, grew even more real.
Americans, it bepn to appear, wanted out!
Today, more so than ever before, there emeqa
a new generation of people hunpyin&amp; for peau, fo.r
our country has so long starved fro m the lack of it.
Some of them have lona hair and wear patches on
their jeans. Some have short hair, and won~t wear
jeans at all. They are vutly different in many wa.p;
and they pride themselves in their individuality. But
there is one common bond among them. It .Ia an
inordinate deploration of war and all its anpisb.
And it is a belief - a sincere and prqmatic belief that there are workable alternatives for reconcilina
disputes of international proportion. They are
convinced, with millions of paves to back them u p,
that more rational, civilized, effective means mUit be
employed, if our very existence is to withstand the
threat of nuclear eradication from the· face of tho
earth. They maintain that, if the means of warfare
are done away with, then perhaps warfare itself will
cease to exist. The cliche, ..there would be no wars if
men refused to fipt," takes on a re(reah.in.g truth.
Many of them feel that, if they are to serve their
country, why not seJVe it in a more constructive
capacity. Service to one's country can take many
forms. It need not necessarily mean military semce,
and , in the view of many, should not be.
It is now October, 1971. As you read t.rus
article, an American, a Vietnupese, a Cambodian is
dead. As many thousands of Americans afflicted
with such diseases as leukemia and cancer live only
in the hopes that a cure can be found, we are still
puttinc all our millions upon millions of dollan into
the same wasteful basket, to support a war that, it
hu been confirmed, cannot be won.
And to top off the disaster, the draft ~ been
extended for two more yeant. Althoup tLe very
Constitution states there shall be no involuntary
servitude, men, apimt tluir will, ue being forced to
enter the Army. After seeminaJy countless yean long bloody years - in Vietnam ; after another recent
Gallup poU concludes that most Americans feel our
country would be better off today if we had not
entered the wars we have, we seem to have aotten
nowhere.
Only one conclusion can thus be drawn.
America places a taboo on the leas travelled road.
Like the rat, she is neophobic. And, like the rat, her
danger and destruction take its toll.

-

Correction
ln Monday's article on the incident concerning
the dean of the Medical School, Dr. Pesch was
rnisquottd. The quote should read :
However, he has "let it be known that I will not,
under any circumstances, reaian my post at this&gt;
time." By this he referred to the fact that be will not
leave until unfinished business has been settled.

And that's tire truth?
To the Editor:
Parry's letter regarding the Baumer promotion
was completely 1accurate, but Garver's answer, with
its mixture of half truths and whole untruths, calls
for several comments.
Garver tries to minimize the value of Parry's
judgments on the~ ground that ,P.JIJY. is "an interested
party;" but Gwrver very conveniently forgets to
mention that h1e, Garver, is even more of an
interested party, in that his own promotion was just
as "irregular" as .Baumer's. We were in fact subjected
to even more ad1rninistrative harassment to promote
Garver apinst our collective better judgment than
we were to promote Baumer against our collective
better judgment. It is hardly any wonder that GaJVer
is 10 "grateful" lfor ''administrative muscles :" sucb
muscles were as much responsible for his own
promotion as the]f were for Baumer's promotion.
Garver also very conveniently forgets to
mention that "the previous grievance case in the
department" thalt he is so certain "indicated that
sometbin&amp; mi&amp;ht have been wrona with the
promotion mecbnniam within the department" was
in fact his own g~ievance case reaultiag from his own
non-promotion. Jl.pin, it la no wonder that he is so
certain that som1ethina mi&amp;bt be· wrong with the

decisions made within the department: to say
otherwise would be to admit that he should indeed
not have be!n promoted! By the way, what that
grievance case actually showed was not that there
was anything wrong with the decision apinst his
promotion, but that the conduct of the grievance
committee was so grossly improper and biased that
one member bad to resign in protest. At this point, it
is difficult to see what integrity the grievance
procedures on this campus have left. PiiSt, the
Garver case showed that the grievance procedures are
rotten to the. core, and then the Baumer case showed
that the grievance procedures need not be bothered
with anyway, so lone as the president is one of your
cronies.
Finally, it should be noted that Garver's slur
apinlt Parry, b t is, his claim that Parry would not
- be so concerned about administrative fiat being used
to help Baumer if he, Parry, did not believe BAumer
undeserving, is in fact falsified by Garver's own case:
no one I know of worked harder for Garver's
promotion than Parry did, yet Pany protested the
high-handed tactics then just as stroDJly as he doea
now in the Baumer caso. GuYer is not only insultina
to Parry, but ungrateful!
Lynfl B. Rlne
Pro/t:uor oflftilozophy

Wednesday. October 6, 1971 . The Spectrum . hQe llftD

-

-

�.

-··

Treasure Island-: Part IV .

"When I'd get my orders for the next day least. Still, ewryooe. believes he can make
and I'd know I bad to ao out, I wu fuctint the tranlition.

A new breed ofNavy: stoned
Editor's note: Tltis is the /tut 0/11/0UT ptiTI
lt!rles on heroin in the.NIIJIY.
Mike Stryjewski, AMS 3, Petty Officer,
went to Vietnam a year and a half ago. At
that time be had never used a hard drug,
and weighed in at a healthy 163 pounds.
When he returned one year later he had a
heroin habit that cost him $40 a week in
Vietnam (equivalent to about $400 a week
in San Francisco), and he welshed 125
pounds.
·
Mike , a handsome, intelligent,
soft.apoken matt of 21; told us about his
first 'contact with skag: '' I was in Nam
about a week ,and a half before I came
across any. We went to ·this whore house
and we were just sitting around smoking
jays of Cambodian Red, and these brothers
came in and sat down and passed some
skag around - snorting it, you know. A
mv could spill a dime ($ J0 worth of

heroin) on the fJoor and it wouldn't even
matter, they:d jqst forin another bit. So
they passed it to ·me and I tried it. And it
was good, you know. I got sick fint , but
then it was really good."

Too pure to bum
Mike didn't start shooting smack until
he was returned to the states. '"'le stuff
you get here," he said, "is so weak that
you have to shoot 1t to get off. And
besides, it's too expensive here to smoke it all goes up in smoke. But over there, it's
so pure, man, you don't even have to bum
it. You j!J&amp;l mix it with a Uttle water, just
Uke that."
Before getting busted for possession in
Vietnam, Mike was a helicopter crewman.
He testified that most of the crewmen
aboard helicopters are either heavily into
dope - mostly smack - or alcohol.
''There's just no other way, man," be says.

acared. So ~e·d· just load up oo Slll¥k.
Mike fiprea that about 80% of the men
stationed in JUs area were freaks of one
kind or another. In hJs barracb of90 men,
exceptfn&amp; the career officers, there were.30
enlisted men who were definitely
strung-out on smack. Most of the others
were on grass or alcohol.

Bird totcore
All the men of 209.8 want to 10 home.
The exdusive topies of conversation in the
barracks are of scoring dope and going
home. Of course, the two ideas may be
mutuallsmally
exclusive. Minostht of~~! men are
firom
towns
e uuuwest and
western states Uke Montana, Colorado,,
New Mexico and Oreaon. They'll find it
harder to score their brand of dope back
there titan it is on Treasure Island where
there's a steady influx from San Francisco
and Travis Air Base and the ships returning
from Asia. They'll settle for one or the
other - hometown or dope - and the
cards are stacked ~st them, to say the

Whatever

becomes of , them, the

so~er-addicts represent a new breed in

America : a new breed Navy, a new breed
veteran, a new breed junkie.
I

Author arrested
On a fmal visit to TreasUre Island, this
re~&gt;rter

and a photosrapher were arrested
and charged with "dealing with dangerous
drugs and narcotics." We were detained
and queationed for five hours by the
security police, who, discovering no
evidence of any wrongdoing, released us
with formal orders never to return to the
base on punishment of fine and
1mpnsonmen.
.
t
However, two sailors of209.8 who were
arrested with us did not receive such
moderate treatment. They each spent two
weeks in the brig, during which time no
charges were . formally brought against
them and no lawyer visited them.
But, of course, they've learned to cope
with such situations. They stay stoned.
IIULIIYAIUI

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Sale Starts Thurs. Oct~ ·7 tli
Page eight . The Spectrum . Wednesday, October 6, 1971

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Call-8 AM to 8 PM
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..
Gymnastic BuDs
-~

Summers says Election Board·
in violation of his pivil rights
by Mike Engel
Colllrlbutint Editor

Charging· the Erie County Board of Elections
with "a violation of my civil rights," Donald 0.
Summers, a Black candidate for the office of County
Exeout}.ve is seeking to redress his grievances through
the courts.
The Board of Elections has rejected Mr.
Summers' petition for placem~onthe-November
ballot.
Justice Catalano of the State Supreme Court
will preside over today's hearing on a "show cause"
order directing the Board of Elections to accept Mr.
Summers' nominating petition and to place his name
on the ballot. The hearing is scheduled to begin at 10
a.m .
''They do not have the power to reject my
petition," Mr. Summers said. "The Board of
Elections, which is supposed to be a neutral
organization saw fit to initiate a thorough
examination of my petition which has not been !lone
to other candidates."
William Kramer, Deputy Commissioner of the
Board of Slections, said the petition was denied
because ••Mr. Summers bad an insufficient number
of valid signatures." He declined further eom.ment
on the case.
Mr. Summers stated "The Board of Elections
said some of the signatures were illegible. They said
they couldn't find the previous addresses of some
and couldn't tell if tbey were registered. They said
some people had voted in an earlier primary thereby
making them ineligible, According to them it
appeared that people had traced over penCil
signatures in ink. I contend t hese charges are
contrived."
'

=a a r:1 a a r:1 r:1 a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a

Caler new coach

Last W.tdnesday, the Bulls
announced the appointment of
Gerry Caler as their new
gymnastics instructor. Caler, a
1967 graduate of Slippery Rock
State College has organized a new
gymnastics club at Buffalo for all
interested students, both male and
female. Caler indicated that meets
will be scheduled with outside
Election piedttS
competition according to the
If elected, Mr. Summ1ers pledged he would degree of skill attained by his
destroy patronage and the nf:ed for people to submit students during t he fall semester.
In order to aid those students
to party pressure, as well as hire solelyton the basisof.qualification.
interested in pursuing gymnastics,
"Young people should not be giVen lift; long a revised apparatus room schedule
records for using marijuana," be said. They .should
was formulated last week. The fall
be given the opportunity to present their case. I am semester hours will be : Sunday
greatly disturbed over the manner that people are (noon- 6 p.m.), Monday (7 - 11
using drug arrests to further their own careers."
p . m.), Tuesday (7 - 10 p.m.),
· Mr. Summers also said h.e would fue the present Wednesday through Friday (7- 11
Commissioner of Welfare, •George Sipprell and if p.m.) and Saturday (9 a.m.- 5
necessary administer the d\epartment himself. ' 'I p . m.). Coach Caler has also
think h e's done a lousy job," Summers said. "The indicated that he will be available
people on and supporting wc,llare are not satisfied. 1 on Tuesday and Thursday evening
am also aware that ma.n y of the services available to sessions for personal instruction.
A native of the famed Beaver
welfare recipients are not givcm to them."
Addressing himself to housing, Mr. Summers Falls, Pa., stamping grounds of the
indicated he intended to eliminate many injustices N,ew York Jets' Joe Willie
by influencing the State legilslature to reinstitute the Na rna t h, Caler first receiv~d
rent control law,recently repc~aled.
gymnastic training at the Beaver
"I'm disturbed about a situation in which Falls Turners under Brownie
absentee landlords exploit citizens by violating the Wrona, former eastern director of
housing codes, leaving housing in a dilapidated the U.S. Gymnastic Federation.
condition and hiding behind real estate and other Cater also competed at Penn State
corporation to charge exhorbitant rent because of before transferring to Slippery
Rock.
the need for housing around the University and
collea.e lllCilS "heJdded
a a wzc:ull a c:::tooQ r:1 c::a a a a a a a a a r:1 a College captain
In 1965-66 Caler was captain
of the Slippery Rock team which
finished sixth in the NAJA
It was also claimed th at the lettc::r notifying Mr.
Summers of the }letition's tejectior;~ was dated two
days later than t he legal limit for such a. letter.
The candidate added, ''I would like to have
many students who have been denied registration
help me build a case against the Board of Elections
wtUch I feel has been trying to exclude free thinking
voters,"
·

championships. He placed third all
a r o u nd in the 1964 North
Amer ica Turner gymnastic
ch ampionships, which is the
qualifying meet for the 1964 final
Olympic trials. After graduation
Caler was assistant coach at
Georgia Southern College, and io
1971 saw his squad place first in
the 1971 Junior National AAU
gymnastics championships and
third in th e senior division.
This coming weekend, Coach
Caler will have a chance to display
his fine art when the division of
physical education, recreation and
athletics presents a 125th
anniversary sports symposium. On
Friday, following a judo
demonstration, a fenci n g
demonstration, a Red Cross
swimming d emonstration and a
master dance class, an 8 p.m.
demonst r ation will feature
gymnastics. Additionally, the
symposium continues on Saturday
with a 9:30 a.m. gymnastics
teaching clinic featuring Caler and
former professional world
champion George Henry on the
trampoline.
After an 11 a.m. cross-country
meet with Brockport, Dr.
Kenneth H. Cooper will present
his nationally prominent exercise
system, "Aerobics" at 3 p.m. in
the main gym. Then Saturday
evening at 8 :30 p.m., Dr. Cooper
will chair a panel on the
"development or a persQnal
physical fitness program," in
Diefendorf HaU.

don't play with matches.

PAIDPOLITICAL AD

I

1

ATTENTION, EFFETE SNOBS:
Agi1ew is coming to BtJJffalo to campaign for Regan,

•

--•w&lt;:sra

L aF

Need -we say more? SEDrFA ~ CO~Y EXECUTIVE.
..-------~~---1!!1!111·--- fAID POLITICAL AD-----------~~~~~~------..Wednesday, October 6 , 1971 . The Spectrum. Page nine

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Bulls braft weather

OVERTIME

Runners picking up speed
Two of the wont conditions lookina stroftl. He finished
for c:roa country runnina are hills sixteenth, only one spot from a
and bot weather. For the rvnnin&amp; trophy. Dennis Meka came
of tho twenty4ee:Ond Lemoyne throuah after 2~ miles in
laYitational last Saturday, both sixty-ftfth and finished 47. Other
c:ooctitions were prevalent. The scorers were Larry Krajewlld (42),
LeMoyne course is one of the Bnlce Tuttle (49), and Bob Gower
billieat five miles one would ever •(60). ~wslci, Meta and Tuttle
want to see. And 80 dOifees on were all within 1S seconds with
Oct. 2 is aomethin&amp; that not ctne Gower only 30 seconds behind
of tho nearly 130 runnen was them. Gower was able to move up
about ten places in tho second
expoctin&amp;.
But despite tho bad day for half of the race.
runnin&amp;, the Buffalo harrlen did
won for them..,lves, flniahin&amp; Filber pleated
After the tournament Coach
ninth out of 20 teams. This shows
vast improvements over their Fisher was happy with the Bulls'
improvement, particularly in that
preYious performances.
This wu shown most clearly a comparison could be drawn with
by Jim McClurkin, junior teams that have beaten the Bulls
c:o&lt;aptaln, who wu the top :Bull this season. Fot example, Niapra
for the fourth straiaht time. The bad defeated the Blue rather
runners passed before the soundly earlier this season but
spoctaton twice durina the race. finished lower in the tournament.
The fU'St wu after about 1-1/4 The squad ia definitely comin&amp;
miles with McClurlcia forty-fifth around. "AD we need is time,"
at the time. Then the next point said Fisher. It appears there is
was after 2~ miles and this time ample time and enou&amp;h remalnina
a twenty-.eventh and meets to compile a more than

byBmyRubla
Spom Edllor

re~pectable

rec:ord.
The neJCt match is Saturday at
home apinst Broc:kport. If the
Bulls have suffered from the. loss
of Ed Fuchs, thea Brockport hu
suffered equally from the loa of
Rod WWiams, last year's state
champion. The Golden Eqles
flnilbed tenth at l.eMoyne, so it
should be a close contest .
The aolflna Bulls are still
rollina alona and aport a 13..0
record aft~ Monday's 11 ~-6~
revenae win over Canlsius. This
victory wu particularly sweet
because it ,followed .lut Friday's
Brook Lea Tournament, where
Buffalo placed second to the
Griffins. Jim Mohan , John Lanz
and Chuck Prorok all scored the
maximwn three points that each
individual match is worth.
Saturday the squad will play in
the ECAC reaional tournament at
Colaate. The Bulla have an
excellent chance of fi.n.ishina in
one of the top two spots which
would qualify the Bulls for the
Eastern finals.

'

SA Duplicating Center
Room 225 Norton

Open 9a.m.- 5 p.m.
OUR SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE TO FACULTY,STUOENTS &amp; STAFF.

Thank you ECAC. Just two abort weeks all), the ECAC (Eastern
CoUeae Athletic Conference) voted to sanction the eliaibility of
frahmen for vanity hockey play. Despite opposition from the Ivy
Leaaue and several top independents, an 86- 26 vote pused the
RPI~ponaorod amendment in New York City.
·
Apparently most of the opposition to the use of frosb baa
centered around the ean.dian va. American debate. It hu beeq said by
many, ao&lt;alled experts that Americ:an~m playen are not ready to
compete on a level commCMUrate with Canad~~om plueo.
Additionally, the elitist Jvy Leque schools have araued that a freshman
is not academically mature for the pressures of varsity play coupled
with the novelty of coUep studiea.
1
However, it should be noted that the vote of 26 apinst the
amendment was more or 1• a •ote to attempt to keep larae numbers
of Canadians out of U.S. c:oUeae hockey. This has not been the fmt
such attempt to limit Canadians, nor· will it be the last, judJinJ from
the track record of ECAC votina.
Just lut year at this time, the ECAC was presented with a
probJem concemina the .UJibility of Canadian junior coUeae transfen.
The school mainly in question was Buffalo, which had formerly
brouaht iD several Canadian "jucos" namely Jim Reaume Jnd Jim
McCoubrey, two of the Bulls' finest playen ip their {)rief history.
However, lut year the Bulls bad the audacity to brin&amp; in three
Canadian jucos: Lei · Tepllcky, Dale Dolmqe 1and _Rande Russell.
Undoubtedly, tq trio were top notch caliber hockey players, comina
from St. Clair Junior CoUeae, after .tarrina 'lor two years. To the
dismay of Buffalo oftlciall, the ECAC voted to create a one-year
reaidency requirement for Canadian jucos, th~y - makin&amp; the Bulla'
trio ineliaible for tile 1970- 71 NMOD. Tbia teason the trio will be
eliJible with one hitch - {tUIICU, after leamina that be would not be
permitted to play, quit school and apparently no lonaer attends coUeac.
That the ECAC would choose to force Canadian jucos to sit out
one year came u a surprise, since the Canadian juco is similar to his
American counterpart in nearly every manner. To show bow unjust this
ia, one noed only look at Buffalo's vanity bulcetball Bulls who'D have
three American junior cofteae transfen playina for them this season.
The three hoop stan, beina Americana, are immediately eUJible for
vanity buketbaU action.
This form of prejudice apinst Canadian-born hockey players can
only serve to hurt Buffalo at a time when the Bulls cannot seem to
attract the quality American~orn player without a costly arant-in-aid
proaram. It's just not realistic to thinlc that an American hockey player
will enroll at Buffalo when Notre Dame or Boston Colleae is danalin&amp;
money under his nose.
The use of freshmen on the vanity hockey team bas to help
Buffalo. Instead of haria&amp; two squads, ' he Bulls will have one deep
varsity squad, compi.led after a hi&amp;bly competitive pre-season practice.
Despite the Iota of the use of the Canadian juco, the Blue and Gold
with their new frosh should be one of the teams to beat iD the ECAC
Division II. Thank you ECAC.

ASK FOR THE SPECIAL STUDENT RATE

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MCAT-DAT-GRE
LSAT-ATGSB
NAT'L. BDS.
• PreperetJon tor t111:1 required fOf'
edmilllon to gredue'- end profalionaltchooll
• Six and twelve -ion cour111
• Small groupa
• Voluminous material for home S1Udv
prepared by tllpertl in eecft fillet
• l..etlon tchedule can be tailored to
meet Individual needl.
• Opportunity for review of past
1et1on1 via tape at the center

Su"'"*' s-ions
~I Compact Counes
WNkends-ln~s

aTANLRY H. KAPLAN
.DUCATIONAL C.NTIIR"'
- . . - - - - . , . . . .. v

51 Univ Plaza
.,

83'1-2322

Next to l\iain St. • 7days -llhrs.day

pa9e ten . 'nle Spectrum . Wednesday, October 6, 1971
•

••

m•.

\

(212) 336-5300
(S16) S38-4SSS

i.'

�JIOOMIIATEI WANTID

CLAIIIIIIII
FORIALE

1917 V . w. Squerebac:k. GrMt
dell)lnCMble c:ar, $700. 111-3400 days.

'65 CORVAIA c:onv., 41peed, $150.
Also '12 cnev. 814-Air, well klttt,
c:hMp. 131-23e9.
BEDROOM, ctln-.e, kllc:hen, llvlnt
room furniture. A-nable. 873-a230,
885·5923.
BUSTING your ball JolnlSP SM
1ndapendlnt Foreign Car Servlc:a,
839-U50.
SUEDE vest fringe to knM, $7 .50.
G.E . w•ner, a to. Air l"orc:a c:oat midi,
$5. Oreftlnll Mt, n-. $10. 3 plec:as
luggage, $15. 876·2852.
.

11113 KARMAN GHIA fM PAnal new
dual 1119 wfsupenractc c:artrldfa.
Sherwood rec:wtvef1 matdlect pair
O)'Mc:o A·25 spuken; Welllntton
IIPMken; Un'-Wtv spuken; OIMn
rac:al-1 English rterao amplifier;
MUltiplex edapten; T n - s turntlbla;
stove. 833-7270 before 3:30a.m. efter
9 :30p.m.
VOL.. VO 1968, 144 automatic:,
AM·FM, new red lals, lxt\lust, battery;
48,000 mile, $1500. 839-2378 after 6
O'c:IOC:k.

wasners. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. O&amp;oG Appliances, 144
sycamore, TX4-3U3.
.:...:.._ ___;__ _ _.......:-,___ _ _ _ _ _

MCINTOSH C-26, Ml -3, 65, Marantz
Tnorans T0-125, w/SM"E"; BOse
901, Altec: A-7 500 w, Sensul 200,
Crown OC-300, Oynec:o PAS-3X,
PAT-4, ST-120, Bonk Concert Grand,
Tandberg12, 684-4937,839-2378.

1965 v.w. Camper, 1970 angina
w/ 15,000 miles. 6 tires, stereo, carpets,
paneling. $850 or trade for 1967 or
newer bug W/WO angina. 634-7185.

1964 CHEVROLET 2 dr. Exc:ellent
runner. Reliable transPOrtation, $200.
834-5312. Ask for Bill.
"'

REFR~ATOM,

PART-TIM£ supervisor for Buffelo
t - e e J-'111 Youth Program . BA.
Group work axparlanc:a/MSW
c endldete orafereble . Cell
315-441-9379 M 315-446.,..915 for
IntervieW.

ANY STUDENTS lnt-ted In tne
coffaenoute, we neect you.
Frtdly, Od. I, Room 261
NMton, 11 a.m •

u.u.A•.

Meet'"-

ROOMMATE needed apartment
.._ c:.m!IKII, 850 plua utllltl•. Call
Aamellt, 136-1278.

HEY, you - t tt\ent1 YOU IC-, you're
naectec~ . come anct find out now mud!.
WMMn4 - Od. 15th - 17th, Gocllt*l Medtl1 tne• problem wltn
J~MK, •1.00 per penon - S"t..Mce MM'Of - fOf' mM~ l,fo M Just
lnt__.ect, c:om.ct Betty-Lou Hfttoni
phone 131-4071, You wWtt t.o talk; we
want to listenI we Ill say PUce (but do

FEMALE wanted to lhare room aperttnent et 205 voom.s off Hartel,
$46.73/month. 134-5168.

APARtMENTS WANTED

EXPERIENCEO people to· work IBM
Compotlng' EqulpmWtt, paste-up or
photo-typotltl"g. P I - c:ontect Jim at
a 31 - 4 113 c!lr c:ome up to Tna
Spec:trum, Ao&lt;1m 355 Norton.

FEMALE deslrw own room In
apertmWtt with same. Call 138-4679
efter 5:00.

WE NEED 1 bad l
Twin size
praferrabla. If you neve one for sale or
know of one, c:all Merty at 837-2694.

L..ARGE FURNISHED room IVIIIIble
for two. 176.0149.

-meen It).

IF YOU _ . - I n one of Stll. .'s
Mc:tlons of Musk: 115 and tnoutht he
dkl • fOOd loti, p i - c:all nlm et
137-2297 es soon • poHibla.

APARtMENT FOR RENT

BRIDGE CLUB mMtlng tomMFOW
nita et 7 p .m . In Room 340 Norton.
N - members Invited - for further
Info, c:&amp;ll Norton Aecrutlon 831-3547.

RIDE BOARD

rtavfl" Tmr""'2'3",

1~3 FORO Country squire, excellent,
$300, or bast offer. '63 Ford Felc:on
wagon, tlOO, good c:ondltlon.
886-8178 anytime. AIM for Zora .

1962 OLDSMOBILE, 65,000 miles,
good mec:l'lenlc:al c:o ndltlon, eutomatlc:
tnlnstnlsslo n ; PO- st-Ing; brai&lt;W I
mounted sno wa lnc:ludad. Grut
trensportatlon . $250 negotlebla.
837 - 1617 or 831.... 113. Ask for
M lc:key.
'63 VW Engine Jurt rebuilt, new
ga n eretor, c:lutc:n, c:arburator ,
not·bOKII, etc . Exc:eiiWtt body
c:ondttlon. t395 . Call Sandy 137-2565.

1968 TRIUMPH - ax~llent c:ondltlon.
Murt sell . 29,000 miles. Best offer over
$1000. Cell 886·3633.
1 FOOT.. nd..nelf b ..ck llllttt. Never
been ufad - need money. Cell Mike W .
881 -1452.

WANTED
BASS gulllr p ..yer for soft roc:k group.
Must neve additional B flat lnstrumWtt
and/ or 1/Qcal capabllltlea. Cell R ick ,
895.0330.
LEAD SINGER for tl'lrM'iMKI rock
group. Heva 11191 need singer.
136.5381 .

OPPORTUNITY
for
sharp
bullneu-mlndtld student to Nrn top
c:ash and gat unparalleled ex perience
working for Mlf on campus. Start
lmmedletely. Sand brief resume end
phone numbllr to • Mr. C.R. Oenfortn ,
sox 75,Swemp~eott, Mass. 01907 .

HELP WANTED
HOUR L.. Y
wege .
Departure
epproxlmetely Oc:t. 25th, returning
Nov. 23. Abundanc:e of ell apecles of
wildlife t.o provide an unforganellla
axperlanc:a wlltn neture. Write Box 89
giving all partlo:ul.,s.
1 NEED 4 ernblt loua malw and one
female to 11111, with the hervestl ng of
C11rlstmll tr•.. In my plant.tiOM In
thl beautiful Slox Mountain range In
Nor1hern P•ennsylvenle. Female
axpec:ted to c:ook &amp;o kMP nouse.
Transportation supplied elong wlt11
room &amp;o board

MISCELLANEOUS

AIDE WANTED to Boston Oc:t. 7 / 8 .
Will share expanses. Call Patti
831-2767.

TUTOR 1 student In N - Math, grade
Ieveli 6-a, for 4 weeks, Peld. 836-7404.

RIDE WANTED to Columbus (or
Delaware) Ohio this Friday. Retu!.'l
same w•kend . Cell Arthur 831 ·2685.

LOSTS. FOUND

WOULD you like a taste trut tnet•s
dlffarentr Try our zesty Mexlc:an food;
tec:os, burritos, anc:nllacles, tlmll• and
more. Snec:ICs or dlnnen. All food
prepared mild wltn not seuc:e optional.
Tippy's Tec:o House, 2351 snerldln
Drive Jacrosa from Putt-Putt Golf
Course) . 831·3900.

ANYONE finding brown oval glaSHS
on c:ampus, piNsa c:ontec:t c .,ol
137.0907.

FREE - soma beautiful end nulthY
troplc:al flan - Pletys and Sword Talis
- call KAiran 833·3491 .
•

l-OST on Tnurs., Sept. 30 - 1 blue
noteboOk (unused) with two tarm
papers. Keep notebook. PLEAS E
return papars. If found, call 881 ·1 452.

TYPING done up work.

RIDE wanted to oswego (otnerwlse
Syracuse) Frldey, Oct. 8, 1971. PINM
call Diana 837-3757 .

IF YOU founcf m y brown wallet lata
Set. nlgllt, PLEASE c:all Jim It
837-4273.

PERSONAL

UUAB MUSIC COMMITTEE * AND WPHD-FM
present in concert

ROCK groups wanted . StNdy w ork,
cnolce of nlgl'lts. The Cl ub Restaurent,
N iagara Fells. Co ntec:t Ed Luc:as,
282-11602.
VIVIAN Cl•y ton
Selent 837 ·2718 .

plUM call

Carol

WOMA N wan ted f or: one man, one
n lgnt. E~tc:ellent pay. G reet benefits.
Contac:t S pectrum Bo lt 90.

CLARK

833-1236. Will plc:k

ANYONE who nas experience working
IBM ComPOsing Equ ipment, paste.c~p
materlllt or a photo-typasltor, p t c:ontac:t Jim at The S pectrum office, or
call 131-4113.
CHEMISTRY tutor. SM me before It's
too ..ta. Mlrty, 6 93·3640 . l..NVI
message. No Pnyslc:el Chemistry.
C a.H JONES Professional Typing
S arv lc: a c:o mputarlzad IBM
equi pment plu s our experience give
be st possible preuntetlons of
dissertations, tneaJs, t erm papers,
resumes and employm ent appllc:atlon
letters. Loceted between two
cam puses . V ery reasonable. C•ll
837 -6558 .

BEAUTIFUL handmade gold and sliver
J-elry - wadding rings - 1t sensible
prlc:es. J .P. Tl'l e GoldwNver, 655
Elmwood at Ferry S t., 88 1·3400.

TY PING , experienced, nNr U .B . $ .40
per page. 834-3370. Fast sarvlc:e.

OEMOL..AYS, Senior OaMolays, Young
M•ster Masons get together Oc:t. 10tl1.
For more Information c:•lh Dave
693-1749 or Paul - 632 ..0113 .

TYPIST - part·tlme, aftern oons and
weekends. S peed of 60-70 wpm
nec:es~ery . C &amp;oH JONES ~rofeas lo nel
Typing Service. Phone 137-6558.

(

GYM·

OCTOBER 10, 1971
The Flying Burrito Bros.
8:00 and 11 :30 p.m.
Available atTickets: U.B. lk State Students,
Grants &amp; Cavages
$2.00 in advar.ce
(in the University Plaza)
$3.00 day of concert
also The Guilded Palace of Sin &amp; Burrito Deluxe
Others $4.50, ~~.50 in advance
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT NORTON &amp; STA'fE TICKET OFFICES

•

URGENT·
STAF'F' MEETir-JG.

P~

A~ BY l.E\hJIS GILBERT

"friends''

Thurs. Oct. 7th
I

PICTURES PRESENTS

6:15p.m.
STARTS

ATTENDANCE MANDATORY

TODAYI

Shows 2-4-6-8·10
Wednesday, October 6, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

•

�Announcements

-·

The Hflel exec:udwe committee will meet
tonW.t ~t 8 p.m. in the Hillel House. All offtcerS~
committee c:h41rmen are urJ8d to ~ttend.

Activist Youth l..t

~ m!~~~······~············

tod~y ~t 8 p.m. in the
cafeteri~
forfirst floorwill
hokl In Norton.
All interested are urpd to ~ttend.

AI ~-. director of GlmrM Shelter will
Introduce screenincs of his docurnenuries, Meet
Mtlrlon Brrlndo met Showmt~n today at 8 p.m. in the
Norton Conference Thuter. Admission is free .
The ~uliblt -c1olr- will hold its first meeting
tomorrow ~t 4 p.m. in Room 237 Crosby Hall.
Anyone interested in any aspect of Russian l~nguage
ex ~ulture Is invited to come.

The Frencte Club will be meeting tomorrow
from 4-5 p.m. in Room 334 Norton to discuss
etec:tJon of officers md plans for Ktlvlties.
Chess Club meetings will be held on Thursdays
at .. p.m. in Rooms 240 ~d 242 Norton for the
remainder of the semester. Tournament games may
be p~yed at this time.
The UnderJradu~te Physics Student Association
will hold a meeting today at 3 p.m. in Room 203
Hochstetler Hall to acquaint physics students with
the Association's function .
The 1972 Buffalonian will hold an important
meeting today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 356 Norton.
Anyone interested in workina on the yearbook is
invited. Those who cannot attend should call Liz at
831 -2505 .
UUAB music committee presents the "Shaking
Smith Blues Band," tomorrow at 9 p.m. in Haas
is free. ·
Lounge. Admissi~
,
Students interested in worlcina for Sedita call

Fr~k Schubauer at 831 -5507 or leave your name in

205 Norton.
•

Resurrection House is sponsoring a "Sack Lunch
Prosram" on Wednesdays, 11 a.m.-1 p.m . in Room
234 Norton starting today. All Christian students
interes~ in ma_king new friends while engaging in
dlt:CUSSton of current issues are invited to participate.
8nna your brown baa lunch or purchase it at the
second floor cafeteria in Norton.
The WOfic:shop in Outdoor livlftl of Rachel

~rson College will meet today in Room 402 Hayes

at 11 a.m. for · a speleological lecture. Class
attendance is requested, plus all others interested.
Women's Collep is offerina "Living on Earth,"
course number 221 . For further information call
831-5545 .
The Department of Computer Science and C.P.
Snow Collqe are offering a new course "Computers
and .Society," listed as CS 312 and c'PS 312. The
class will meet on Tuesdays and . Thursdays,
9:30-10:50 a.m. on the Ridae Lea Campus.
PIQse note the deadline for Backpage is noon,
Monday for Wednesday; Wednesday for Friday;
Friday for Monday: The deadlines must be met.
I

Hillel will sponsor a chicken dinner Friday Oct.
8 at 6 :30p.m. in the Hillel House. Reservations' must
be made. For further information call 836-4540 or
stop by at the Hillel table.

Sports Information
- Fricby: Club soccer at Erie Community College
3 p.m., Wllltamsville.
'
Saturcby: Varsity cross-country vs. Brockport
State, 1 p.m., Grover Cleveland golf course; varsity
golf in the ECAC district championships at Colgate,
Hamilton, N.Y.; fall varsity baseball doubleheader at
Monroe Community College, 1 p.m., Rochester;
roller hockey action at 10:15 a.m. in the parking let
between Capen and Michael Hall. See The Spectrum
whiz kid Jim Drucker continue his assault on the
~11-time aoaJ scoring record.

Schussmeisten Ski Club is looking for anyone
lna.n.ted in being a Head Bus Capuin for Monday,
T.,...y and Wednesday night skiing. You must
make IU' appointment for an interview In the Ski
Cub Office by 4 :30 .,.m. Friday in Room 318

NGr,t9.n.

What's Happening
Wednescby, Oct. 6

Sunday,Oc:t. 10

Concert: "Traffic," Kleinhans Music Hall 6-10
p.m.; tickets at Norton Ticket Office.
'

Concert: "The Flying Burrito Brothers &amp; Space
Opera;" Clark Gym

Thurscby, Oct. 7

Monday, Oct. 11

Perform~ce : The Gingerbread Lody - Jo Van Fleet

Studio Arena Theater, Oct. 7- 24, tickeb
available at Norton.
Friday, Oct. 8

Film: Nosfemtu, directed by F.W. Mumau 3 &amp; 8
~ p.m., Diefendorf 147 (free)
'
Christmas Bazaar presented by Planned Parenthood
'
, 5:30- 10 p.m., Kleinhans Music HaJI.
Tuesday, Oct. 12

Film: Chorly with Cliff Robertson and Clare Bloom,
Conference Theater, Norton, tickets $.75
Concert : Grand Funk Railroad, Memorial
Auditorium, tickets at Norton Ticket Office.

Christmas Bazaar (Kieil'lhans), 9 a.m .-9 p.m.
Film: The Gold Rush with Charles Chaplin 3 &amp; 8
'
p.m., Diefendorf 147 {free)

Saturday, Oct. 9

Wednesday, Oct. 13

Concert: Jerry Lee Lewis at Kleinhans Music HaJI, 6
p.m.- 1 a.m.
Film : Chor/y

Christmas Bazaar (Kleinhans) 9 a.m .~ p.m.

.'

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!THE
Vol. 22. No. 18

I

SpECTI\UM
State University of New York at Buffalo

Pesch discloses that
he was actually fired ·
by Bill Vaccaro
Campus EditCN

that's that state. of affairs, isn't
it?"
Dr. Richard Sigelkow, Vice
President for Student Affain •
suuesfed that .Dean Peach rna~
have chansed the stozy of what
had really happened. "My
understanding was that Ketter was
not about to accept his (Pesch's)
resignation
..It w a different picture than
what
presented to you (The
Spec m) today," be said. "It
10 ds strange, very strange ...
you can't get a man to resign."
·
Dr. Sigaelkow continued,
saying that ..it's powerfully tough
to force a man out of the
administration. The last thing in
the world Ketter wants is any
more resignations."

t
Controversy over · last week's
sudden rash of high-level
.. resignations" continued
Saturday when LeRoy Pesch,
dean of the Medical School, told a
group of med students that he had
been, in effect, fired from h.is
post.
When asked by a med student
whether or not he had actually
resigned, Or. Pesch replied, "In
fairness to you and to be frank
about it, I did not resign. It's no
by choice that I leave instituti
like th.is one."
In the meantime, ~Y
administrative officials have
refused to discuss the issue or
have been unavailable for
comment. Both President Robert 'Strange . . ...
L. Ketter and Executive Vice
He sounded as if everything
President Albert Somit could not that had happened seemed
be reached for questioning. Or. incredible. "As of last week," Dr.
Ketter spent .the weekend ~t his Siggelkow said, ''I and others 1
farm in Allegany County and over knew in the top administration
the past week has not returned were pleased with Pesch."
the calls of The Spectrum staff
During the meeting with the
writers regarding tho resignations. med students, Dr. Pesch said that
J?r. Bernard Gelbaum, Vice • he didn't really know why he had
President for Academic Affain, been fired. He said that he had
refused to discuss the matter of talked to Dr. Ketter during the
Pesch's firing. ••t am not in a week after the word was out that
position to discuss those details," he was being replaced. "Dr. Ketter
he said.
says that he has bad 11othing to do
He had said earlier last week with this very tragic situation,"
that "events will unfold next Dr. Pesch said in an ironical note.
week which will clarify Dean
Vaguely referring to the
Pesch's resignation." However, he resignations that have come about
refused to explain what he meant over the past week, including his
by it.
own firing, Dr. Pesch said, "Dr.
Ketter was brought in to do a
specific job. And he's doing it."
Syllogisms
When asked if the decision to
When told by a reporter that
events apparently indicated that replace him was onilateral , he
Dean Pesch was, indeed, fired by replied , "J don't have any
President Ketter, Dr. Gelbaum difficulty with that. You've made
declined to elaborate. He did say, it quite clear yourself."
He said that there were very
·however, that "if your logjc leads
personal
reasons why the events
you to that conclusion, J would
of
the
past
week came about_
suggest that you reconsider your
"Someone
always
runs the risk of
syllogisms and see whether they,
running out of time before his
in fact , are valid.
"The facts of the matter," he work is finished," hinting that the
continued, " are perhaps rumors Ketter administration was
have been flying around to the opposed to the various changes
effect that Dean Pesch has that were made during his tenure
resigned. If he says that he hasn't as Med School dean. This
then I would say that he hasn't. conclusion was accentuated when
And I would say that if he hasn't, Dr. Pesch remarked that during

Waiting for Goodell
Clwlea Goodell, forma New York Seaator, ia
comlq to Baffalo tbil11aunday aDder the aUipic:ea
of the United Auto Worken to ipUk for Buffalo

Mayor Fraak Sectita.
Goodell, a Repabtican. will M eampaiplnJ few
tbe Dellloeratic Mayow dte ame clay that Viee
Pnlidet Spiro Apew wll be ill BufWo aumpiaa
for the Republicu hopeful ldw...t R.-n. 11ae lut
time a RepuhlieaD cam,...... for a Democntic
eaDdklate . . ill 1970 wbea tile tlaea-Repubticaa
Job Liadlay ...,_. Delaocntic ..lleraatodal
C&amp;DCBdate, Altllar GoldbeiJ.
lb. ~ will . . . - •• 1 p.-.•••
c •••• """'----

.ur.

the past year that Dr. Ketter has
been president of the University,
he had not been a part of any
Univeraity·wide oommitt~.

TnJic situation?
Dr. Peach said that as far as he
was concerned, "conflict and
controversy started very early"
for him "in this process: • This
was especially evident by the way
be began to run things in the Med
School upon taking over as dean.
He noted such significant changes
as the curriculum, the decision of
whether the Med School should
move to Amherst and the

minority enrollment program
during his term.
He indirectly chided the
administration when he said that
"univeBities are not institutions they are people . . . and they
should be faculty and student run.
Democratic insitutions have to be
run . in a democracy, not a
bureaucracy."
H~ said that when there is a
strong oent~al administra~on, as
Dr. Ketter lB now consolidating,
there can be a telling effect
"sooner or later" on the
educational process.
Dr. Pesch wondered "whether

anyon~ can be effecti\'e in

dlia

present situation." He defended
himself as dean, saying that "if 1
weren't fighting with the
president, 1 wouldn't be doinJ my
job as dean of this school."
Dr. Pesch did say howner
/· that "the whole
brought this about ia not
reversible at the moment." He
told the BfOup that it was "the
fundamental responsibility of
people here that" the programs
that have currently been caniecl
out ..don't change!'
Concerning his replacement he
-continued on llllllt' 6-

dung fba;

~

Dr..Leroy Pesch
News commeatary

Dr. ..... . . _ _ • ..,_... of med -.... .... ~
in Capen Han Ntlnt he t.d bean fired from his pott
• deiln of tfM Mad School.

Resignations indicate turmoil
by Jo-Ann Armao
CII"'P"' Editor

Ketter is attempting {and mayb~ succeeding) to stifle
the University and its faculty and students. Instead
of experimentation and innovation, be has suggested
consoUdatlon and retrenchment; instead of working
with his constituents, he is working against them.

Within the past week, five university officials two provosts, two deans and one departmental
chairman - daparted from their posts. Explanations
of these departures differ and queStions obscure the Wony and concern
specifics of each case. However, some certainties do
Those affected by th.is policy and its resulting
exist.
resignations - University faculty and students - are
Ira Cohen resigned his provostial post because worried. According to Joseph Masling, Psydlology
he found it impossible to work with Hayes HaU, Department chairman : "People are upset ... they
most notably President Ketter and Executive Vice don't know what the hell is happening." Joseph
President Albert Somit. Rollo Handy, although Fradin, chairman of the English Department, also
officially citing another research offer as reason for said: " I'm deeply concerned .. ,.I worry about what
resigning, has hinted of insoluble differences and this means.'' He continued that "I'm surrounded by
difficulties with the administration. Finally, LeRoy colleagues who are also concerned."
Pe~ch ~ dean of the . Medi9l Sch~l, has denied ever
. Thi~ concern fust surfaced after Ira Cohen's
restgnmg. Addressmg fhe Medtcal School last '-restgnation as Provost of Social Sciences and
Saturday, Or. Pesch stated : " ... td·be frank about Administration after over 19 years of service to the.
it, I did, not resign." He continued that he learned of University. As Or. Fradin commented: ..( begin to
his resignation through the Buffalo city newspapers. wonder when we have a man [Dr. Cohen) who is
deeply conunitted to the University and despite all
of his work and dedication to the University comes
Complacent administration
The irregularity and number of resignations to the point where he can no Ianser work as
indicate that the University is not functioning provost."
Initial campus dismay increased as Dr. Handy
property, if at all. It appears, though, that
administration officials are unconcerned about the (Provost of Educational Sciences), 'Ibeodore Mills
pattern and frequency of the recent departures. In (Sociology Department chairman) and Daniel
fact, Dr. Somit remarked that five ls not such a large Mumy (Graduate School dean) also forfeited their
number considering that there are over ISO such posts. Many, in fact, have pointed out that they "are
. positions. Last year, .after Claude Welch's abrupt not just a mere coincidence!' Rather, there are
..Jaignation" the administrative assessment was one underlying reuons for at least a majoritx of the
resignations.
\
of "the law of avenpa."
Dr. Pesch, when ukecl if an official pufF was
underway, remarked: ..Dr. Ketter was brought in to AdmJnidratift ovedoad
do a specific job and he is cJoina it." Presumably, Dr.
Both Drs. Cohen and Handy, alona with oct.
Ketter was •appointed as President to p1de tiDs - provosta, have indicated
the prot'Oitial politioo
Uniwnlty in 1010e clirectioo of academic sreatness. has chanaod because of administration
Rather than doinJ this, it •ppean tbat Praident

¥

�Internation'al Organization Conferen~e.

Enthusiam ebbs

Welch discusses the
University's condition
" I was saddened, but not
surprised," commented Claude
Wel ch, former dean of
Undergraduate Studies, in
reference to the resignation of Ira
Cohen as Provost of the Faculty
of Social Sciences and
Administration. He attributed the
resignation to "frtl$tration in ~e
job. It was a tiring job to be. in
with and you had these changes in
Hayes Hall . Add them all
together," explained Dr. Welch.
..It's a tough time to be an
academic administrator," he
continued. "They are hard to
find, at least those with the
qualities of vision and stamina
that are necessary," Dr. Welch
said.
Dr. Welch, who resigned as
dean of Undergraduate Studies
last year and who now is involved
with the Faculty Senate
Committee of Academic
Dishonesty adjudJcating alleged
dishonesty cases, spoke about the
University as he sees it now. He
outlined accomplishments of the
University, citing it as being part
of the nation-wide calm that has
overtaken college campuses in the
past year or two.

......

Repooal concept
"1 think that the day of
violence on the campus certainly
bas passed in the sense of its being
widespread," he said.
Discussing the University's
economic situation, Dr. Welch
cited the lack of growth of the
budget as an attempt to curtail
inflation, even though certain
programs in pilot stages may
suffer.
He termed such changes in the
Un~versity
such as the
undergraduate four-&lt;:ourse load,
the independent study programs
and independent majors,
incorporated between 1967 and
1970, as being definite signs of
progress. He also spoke in favor of

the "regional conception of the
University:· encompassing a
geographically diverse student
body, as ~~ing a boon to the city
of Buffalo.
On the negative side, "the
sense of enthusiasm and drive that

Claude Welch
characterized the late. 60's has
very la rgely ebbed away,"
according to Or. Welch. The' new
academic staff tends not to look
nationwide, he said. He urged
more leverage be put on the
SUNY central administration in
order to aid the graduate
committee.
"We a~e an urban University
and ... we are a major graduate
center. If we can - effectively
combine some graduate and
professional work with our urban
setting . . . then I think we are
making an ext raordin ary
contribution," Dr. Welch said. He
acknowledged the fact tbat the
total University is not involved in
experimentation, though many
departments are working to try
out innovative theories.
Concerning administ rationoitu·
dent relations, Dr . Welch declined
to comment on whether or not it
has slipped back ...1 don't see any
noticeable progress;• he said.

Poverty Hill, the property student-teased
through Sub Board J, is currently open to members
of the University community, for camping, nshing
and hiking. Poverty Hill is located SO miles south of
the University off route 119. Map~ and other
information can be obtained at the Sub Board office
116 Norton Hall or by calling 831-S SOl.
' •
The Spectrum i1 publishlld thiN
tim• 11
ewtry Mondlly,

-k.

off Main &amp; Amherst
in Central Park Plaza
ANNOUNCES

MONDAY
BEER BLAST
All the Beer you
can drink $1.50
8 :00 - 10:00

TUESDAY
Wine Nite
Apple, Strawberry
Grape wine
$1 .60 Bottle
8 :00- 10:00

,

A budaet request by tho Philosophy Student
Association for the second, annual International
Conference on Orpnir.ation"will be reviewed tonight
by· the Student Association executive commi~tee.
The Pbilosophy Student Association is asking
for S86SO from the Student Association to finance
the natiooally-reoognized conference. It has already
recieved $3000 in funds from the Gtadua" Student
Association for the conference.
The conf~rence, • to be held Nov. 18-2 1, 197 I , .
is being coo~nat~ b¥ the PSA in cooperation with.
students in vanous departments and campus
organizations. It will draw upon many people who
are experts in orpni*'g.
Among those wl\o have accepted in~tations to
attend the conference are Dr. Herbert Marcuse,
leading radical philsopher in America, Bobby Seale,
chairman of the Black Panther Party, Paul Sweezy
and Harry Mapoff of the New Left monthly
Monthly Re11iew, and Andre Gon, co-editor of Le
Tem{JJ Moderne1 and Nouvelle Oblerllateur, one of
Prance's leading weekly mapzines.
Mucuse to come
The format of the conference bas been designed
to facilitate communication and undentanding
between people of different baekgrounds and
inter ests . Undergradu ates, araduates and
non-Univenity people will be able to take part in the
numero\lS workshops and small panel discussions

Poverty Hill open

MR. A's

· Radical speakers to Ie'cture.

~n•ct.y Md Friwy; during thll

rrtlf/U/6r «&lt;ldemic Y•r by Sub-Ba.rd
1, Inc. Offic• 11re loc11tfld •t 366
Norton H111/, Stllte Uniwtrrity of
NIIW York 11t Buft.lo, 3436 Mtlln
St., Bufflllo, NIIW York, 14214.

TMep/tontl: Art~~~ Code 116·
Editor/Ill,
831-41 13;
BurintiU'
831-3610.
,
'
RtlpiWilnttld for lldwHt/1/ng by
Nlltlonlll Edue8tionlll AdvfNtiling
SMvk», Inc., 18 E. 60th StrNt,
New Yorlc, NIIW York, 10022.

,.,.,,.r.
,.,.,.,.,,

Subcriptlon ,.,,., llrtl 14.60 PIN
or $8.00 for two

a..

Scond
~
BuHMo, NIIW York.

"

Paqe two . The Spectrum . Monday, October 4, 1971

pllid lit

conducted by sroupt and individuals from Buffalo
and aU over North America.
The major speakora will also participate on this
personal level. The workshops will be compliment ed
by the presemation of three major papers each day
by some of the invite'd pests. The~e prc:aentations
will be able to concentnte on questions from the
audience as the papen will be diltributed in advance
of their presentation.
Many of the workshops will be orpnized and
conducted by various predominantly underata!Juate
ppus groups. The Black Student Union, PODER,
UB Vets, Politics Club, Council o f ~ory Students,
Y A WF and People's Coalition are currently actively
involved'in conference preparations.
Accordins to the PSA, theresponse from outside
the Buffalo area baa been moat encourqing, even
though the conference is almost two monts away.
Some of the groups who have announced plans to
attend have been Socialist Revolution, a San
Francisco group ,Radical A merlca from Boston, the
Surrealist Group from Chicago, People's Coalition Ma1 Day Tribe, and the Black Panther Party.
Clearly, the PSA apokesmen said, this
conference may extend beyond Buffalo and have
great national sipificance.
'
More than I 000 people are expected to come
from out of town to attend atid, the PSA siad,
accommodations are scarce. Those wh,o wish to put
people up durin&amp; fhe conference or help out in some
way are urged to ciall the P.M at 831-0436 .

Court rules Ohio can be sued
for four deaths at Kent State
In a 2- 1 decision Thursday , a
state appeals court in Ohio ruled
that the state can be sued for the
deaths of . four Kent State
University students. The Eighth
District Appellate Court ordered
that the suit filed by Arthur
Krause, father of one of the
students shot by National
Guardsmen on May 4, 1970, be
sent back to a lower court for
reargument.
Krause, whose daughter,
AIUson, 19, was one of the four
killed, had filed a $2 million
wrongful death suit in Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas Court .
Judge George J . McMonagle
dismissed the suit on the ground
that the state could not be sued
because it had sovereign
immunity. However, presiding

Appeals Judge Jack G. Day and forum for this change rests either
Judge Alvin I. Krenzler said the on legislative action or with a new
lower court had erred and stated, c onstitutional convention )'
"The state o f Ohio is responsible Earlier this yeu, the suits had
.. . for the torturous, wrongful or been dismissed by Federal Judge
injurious acts of its authorized James C. ConneD on the ground
agents. A specialized shield for the that the state had sovereign
state against responsibility for its immunity and therefore could not
torturous acts is unjust, arbitrary be sued.
Four other wrongful death.
and unreasonable and result1 io
discrimination prohibited by the suits have been meet, involving
equal protection and due process $11 million in claims, and they
c lauses of tbe fou r teenth are also under appeal in the US
Amendment to the United States Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati. In his suit, Mr. Krause
Constitution."
named former Gov. James A.
Dillenting opinion
Rhodes, fonner State AdjUtant
In his dissenting opinion, Judge General S.T. Del Corso and other
John Manos said, "If it is believed state and National Guard officers.
that the doctrine of sovereign .
Thursday's · ruling is expected
immunity is indeed an antique or to be appealed to the Ohio
of no modem relevancy, the Supreme Court.

Graduate school interviews
The Office of Univetsity Placement and Career Guidance will boat campus
lntemews for varioua graduate achoola Oct. 13- 14.
. Oo Oct. 13, the University of Akron School of Law and the ReniUielaer Polytechnic
lnatat~te Departments of Eqineerina, Mathematica, Science and Manaaement wD1
particapate. The foUowlna day, the CathoUc University of America School of Law will
participate.
Arranaements for tp'aduate school in temewa can be made either in Hayes Annex C.
Room 6 or by callina 831-4414.

"TRANSFER STUDENT

ADVISORY BOARD"
MEETING

Tuesday, Oct.5- 8:30p.m.
rm.147 Diefendorf
*** TRANSFER STUDENT PROBLEMS ***

�Legal loophole found in
city housing ordinance ·

Lowenstei n speaks out

Participation by youth urged
Don VanEvery
SP"trum Still! Wrlt~r

AI pert of h1a barnstorming
tour of Buffalo Friday, former
Long Island Congmsman Allard
K. Lowenstein visited State
University of Buffalo. Mr.
Lowenstein's speech was
presented under the auspices of
the Student Association 's
Speakers Bureau.
Lowenstein, leader of the
"Dump Johnson" movement in
1968, spoke lengthily on what he
thought should be the direction of
this country.
He began by referring back to
his experiences in the Agricultural
Committee of the House of
Representatives.
He explained how a biJI
providing free hot lunches to all
disadvantaged was defeated, and
yet, how another bill, awarding
what he felt were unnecessary
farm subsidies,
ffis basic argument was that
"A meri ca n people don't
understand "
what their
Congressmen are voting for . "A
congressman will vote for
something because he can get
away with it," not because it is in
the interests of his constituency.
Using the "overriding insanity" of
Indochina as an example, along
with the fact that military
fundin~ have continuall) passed
in the interests of national
defense," he tried to drive his
point home.

passt4

'Overriding insanity.
He said passing th is year's
military budget at one biUio n
dollars more than the Pentagon
requested was quite a feat.
" Anyone that can outbid the
Pentagon is doing quite a job."
Referring to the newly
enfranchised youth, he exclaimed:
..25 million kids are not confused
about the Viet~rns or Richard
Nixons." He thougbt that now is
the time to begin to elect a sood
president, rather than protesting
bad ones, and the youns now have
the power to do this.
.. All of the protests and
demonmations in the world

won't stop thinp that are wrong and answer period , a shouting
with this country." As an match developed. Accused of
example, referring to recent being 11 pment day Joe McCartJty
election participation, he stated by an unidentified student, he
that the " IOO,OOO's at the Ellipse answered : "When your record is
in Washington disappeared when befo($ the public as mine," you
it came time to throw don't need to argue with . 'those
congressmen out who voted the • people who Ue through their
money for Laos."
teeth.' and expect it to be
Further, agreeing with a Black acceptc~ as truth.
Panther philosophy, he said: " If
you don't take part [in the Alrpo11t news conference
Befmt coming to campus, Mr.
election process] , you are part of
Lowenstein
held
a
press
the problem."
Quoting Bobby Seale, Mr. confemnce at the Buffalo airport.
Lowenstein commented : " All we Appea1ring with Mayor Sedita, Mr.
stressed
the
want is a cool, clear drink of toweJnatein
water, but we can't get it because importance of the upc:oming
there's a hog in the stream and we election in Erie County, terming it
have to get it out or die trying," "a tes~ on the direction of this
Mr .
Lowenstein
he exemplified the challenge, but cou ntry.
disagreed w ith the extreme continued that a Sedita victory
measure. " There have been too "would say alot about what we
many deaths already," referring to want to see America become."
Mr ..
Lowenstein
also
Vietnam, Martin luther King and
comme:nted on the impending
the Kennedys.
visit otf Vice President Agnew to
Buffalo to support the Republican
Attica
Ned
Regan. Mr.
During the question and candidate,
LoweMteln claimed that this was
answer period, when asked what
anothe1r
example
of
how
choices youth had , he said:
import:ant the election was to the
"Don't quit before you find
White House and that President
wmeone you believe in! We have
Nixon also percieved the election
the facts and the votes, but we
don't have the will!" Very as bei111g a test of what k.ind of
emotionally, he asked if there country the peQple are trying to
shape.
"isn 't enough to stir you? Why
Mr. Lowenstein continued on
can't you get out and understand
this track, stating that "if the
how much can be done by us?"
Alluding to Rockefeller's role Mayor wins in a county which has
had
a
Republican
County
in the Attica tragedy , he stated
Executive since anyone can
that Rockefeller .. doesn't
rememlt&gt;er, it will have the effect
understand how to treat human
of saying this administration has
being~ as human beings."
lost the: confidence of people even
Concerning the Erie County
in ar,eas which have been
Executive face, he called to the
gathered to "repudiate traditio•nally Republican. I think
Rockefeller's pet."
this would be very very salutary
Further, any man that will call right n'ow considering the way in
on Spiro Agnew for support must which this administration is
be defeated. Simply because running the affairs of this
Aa9ew is coming indicated the countr)f."
interest of high nationally elected
Mr. Lowenstein averred that
officials in this local election. It this view of the election is shared
will serve as a "repudiation to by "people who are on the other
Nixon's ways" if Sedita is eJec:ted, side and who very much want to
and a pide to congressmen on see their position sustained." Mr.
votlnJ because it is one of the few Lowen11tein further claimed that
off-year elections important the ele•ction ..is JOinJ to have an .
effect adltically beyond the usual
enouah to watch.
Near the end of his question be&lt;:ausc1of the off year."

Buffalo Mayor Frank Sedita state what they are. Therefore,
bas come to the aid of State students llvjna in off-campus
University of Buffalo students in aputmentl can only be- auillY of
their off-ampus housina dispute violating a definition," explained
with the Erie County Department one city spokesman. Such a
of Health. Speakina at a Youth violation would be thrown out of
for Sedita rally lut Wednesday court, he indicated.
night, the Mayor referred to tho
Mayor Sedita ordered these
complex lepl difficulties involved lepl inveatiptions after senral
in the housina situation and meetinp with the Urban Renewal
promised students "we'll aet it Department and -the Corporation
unraveled next week."
Council on th"'O~~~tatter. FoUowin&amp;
The dispute bep'n when the absolvin&amp; of various le.,Rl,
Department of Health inspecton technicalities, the mayor is
attempted to evict students livina expec:ted to clear up the difficulty
in off-campus apartments by some time next week. It is not yet
invokins an obscure City of known whether that action will
Buffalo ordinance. The ordinance take the form of a direc:tive to the
states that a aroup of students Erie County Department of
livina tosether does not lepUy Health, an informal undentanding
constitute i family, so the or an actual amendment of
inspectOJS inferred that auch a existina hoUsing laws.
residence must be classified as a
boardin&amp; house. Boardin&amp; codes Expected relief
contain a set limit of two boarders
" The mayor realizes the
per bouse, so the inspectors problem of off~mpus housinJ,"
declared that no more than two informed one city source. ..He
students may live in an apartment, feels that tluee or four students
even multiple--bedroom dwellinp. sharina an .... apartment near the
University is like tlL-u or four
No lepl basis
secretaries sharing an apartment
Subsequent lepl investiption downtown. It does not meet the
has uncovered an overlooked popular concept of a boardin&amp;
point. Several Buffalo housing house."
laws, includin&amp; the obscure
A multitude of students who
ordinance invoked by the Health would have been affected by strict
Department, stat9 that "a aroup enforcement by the Health
of unrelated students does not Department on tbe matter will
constitute a family," but include undoubtedly be relieved to Jearn
no stipulation that such a or the mayor's intentions. The
residence should be classified a key point in the issue is that there
boardin&amp; house. Students livina is no Buffalo law stalin&amp; that
together do not constitute a unrelated persons must be
family but rather a boardin&amp; considered a b oardin&amp; house. One
house is the interpretation of downtown sour((e indicated that a
Health Department inspectors, group of unrelated penons could
refer to anybody, even a group or
but it has no lepl basis.
uTh e law states that students nuns living tocether. Or a group of
are not a family, but it doesn't sophomores.

Fear of School

Violence continues
in B~tflllo ~fichoo/s
Violence in and around Buffalo
schools last week left one man
dead and at least i7 students
injured. Grover Cleveland High
School was forced to close early
last Wednesday as a result of racial
tension, which resulted in the
injury of at least two students.
The troub le at Grover
Cleveland began Tuesday when
two students were wounded by
birdshot as they were leaving
school. Wednesday morning, a
fight in one of the school's
Javorato ries resulted in the injury
of two students, one- of whom
jumped out of a second-story
window.

meanwhile at East High Schoo1
and Clinton Junior High School
where gang attacks on students
going to and from sch ool are
blamed for the poor attendance.
In respo nse to this sit~ion ,
schools Superin tendent Joseph
Manch called for a meeting early
this week of parents, police and
community ,groups to aid in
solving the problem. Eugene T .
Reville, associate superintendent
for Instructional Services, claims
that the attacks are a carryover
from the intensified gang activity
during the summer.
Bennett High School was shut
dow n early last Monday as a result
of a protest over the suspension of
a black freshman girl for refusing
to stand during the Pledge of
Allegience. On .Monday morning,
the Black Student Union led a
walkout of 100-150 Black and
white students during which an
American flag was partially
burned . A classroom fire later in
the day finally prompted Principal
Leonard S. Sikora to close the
school early.

The s poradi c violence
continued throughout Wednesday
morning, forcing Principal Ronald
L. Meer to close down the school.
The school will reopen today after
teachers and staff met for most of
Friday to determine methods for
easing the racial discord. Mr. Meer
said teachers were visiting the
homes of about 30 potential
.. t roublemakers" and meetings
were planned Monday with
s t u d e n t go v e r n men t
The one death occurred
representatives and with the Friday, Sept. 24 when Ronald
Grover Cleveland Advisory • Crowell was shot outside
Council.
McKinley Hiah School u a result
of a dusroom arpmcnt. Mr.
Crowell, who wa enft&gt;Ued in a
r......uble
federal jot&gt;.training propam died
~ tro
T r o u b l e was b r e w an 1 the foDowina satwday.

Monday, October 4,1971. The Speotrwn. Pa9a thne

,

�Congress passes legislation
onVietnam, child care plan
In a flurry of aceivity lut week, the Senate and
the House passed JlWlY l,mportant measures. The
only thin&amp; that remains now is to see whether or not
each will accept the other's bills. If so, then last
week can be thought of as a big one for the 92nd
Congress.
On Thursday, the Senate, by a vote of 57-38,
adopted what has been known as the Mansfield
Amendment as a rider to a $21 billion weapons bill .
The amendment, which originaUy passed the Senate
on June 22 as a rider to the draft bill, calls for a
six-month timetable for withdrawal and release of
U.S. prisoners. Th~ amendment reads: J'lt is hereby
declared to be the policy of the United States to
terminate at the earliest practicable date all military
operations of the United States in Indochina and to
provide for the prompt and orderly withdrawal of aU
United States military forces not later than six
months afte( the date of enactment of this section
subject to release of all American prisoners of war
held by the government of North Vietnam and
forces aJiied with such government."

"RZzaf?

-Oit~Mf

MaytM it's bec:au• of 11M t.rible perking

situation on c:MJpus, 01 the lure of In Inexpensive fonn of
tnniPOf'latlon or the irr-.irtablt urge some people haoe to emu'-te
0.,. Hlmilton. Wh.-ttwt' the r.-on, more Md more motorcycle
twve
on c:~mpus thlt ....,tlt.t. ~ congreeadom of 1ttete
mechlnes outside of Norton Hall hwe CCMt1rfbv. . to the ct.lly
tie-ups that
this campus.

..,_,..,ed
pi••

Selection of the NSF
Fellowships will begin
The National Research Council
has been called upon again to
advise the National Science
Foundation in the selection of
candidates for the foundation's
program of graduate fellowships .
Panels of outstanding scientists
appointed by the Research
Council will evaluate applications
of candidates. Final selection will
be made by the Foundation w1th
awards to be announced on Mar.
15 , 1972.
The NSF Graduate Fellowship
Program IS being restructured for
the 1972-1973 academic year.
Applicants must be beginning
graduate students by the fall of
1972 or must not have completed
more than one calendar year of
full-time or part-time graduate
study by the fall of 1972 . Subject
to the availability of funds, new
fellowships awarded in the spring
of 1972 will be for periods or
three years, the second and thlrd
years contingent on certification
t o I he foundation by the
fellowship iunstitution of the
st.udent's satisfactory progrss
toward an advanced degree an the
sciences.
Eligible fieJds
These fellowships will be
awarded for study or work leading
to master's or doctoral degrees in

the mathematical, physical,
medical, biological, engineering
and social sciences and in the
history and philosophy of science.
Awards will nol be made in
clinical, education or business
fields, in history or social work or
for work leading to medical ,
d e 'n t a I , 1 a w o r j o 1 n 1
PhD-professional degrees. All
applicants must be citizens or the
United States and will be JUdged
soleJy on the basis of ability. The
annual stipend for Graduate
Fellows will be $3600 for a
1 2-mont h tenure with no
dependency aJiowances.
Applicants will be required to
take the Graduate Record
Examinations designed to test
sc ientifi c aptitud e and
achievement. The examinations,
administered by the Educational
Testing Service, will be given on
Dec. 11, 1970 at designated
centers throughout the United
States and in certain foreign
countries.
C
The deadline date for the
submission of applications for
NSF Graduate Fellowships is Nov.
29, 1971. Further information
and application materials may be
obtained from the Fellowship
Office, National R esearc h
Council, 2101 CoTIStitution Ave.,
N.W., Washington, D. C. 20418.

'AU to blame'

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7JI.m •a•-m-1s1s

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Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, October 4, 1971

The child care plan would authorize 80 per cent
federal matching grants to private, public and
non-profit groups to oonstruct, equip and staff day
care centers offering comprehensive educational,
nutritional and health services to pre-school age
children . Families with incomes under the ceiling
could send their children to the centers for free, and
children from famDies with annual incomes above
the! ceiUng would pay graduated fees.

International College

Diverse programs offered
The lnternationaJ College,
formed by people afftliated with
the Co uncil of International
Studies, geurs its courses toward
an international, inter-disciplinary
and futuristic orientation . In the
summer of 1970, Bob Mattern, a
graduate student, with the help of
a steerin&amp; committee, designed
pilot courses f\&gt;r the initial fall
1970 semester.
At the present time, the
International College offers five
courses : "Revolutionary and
Evolutionary Nationalism in
Afri ca .1nd Black America ,"
taught by Chinwese lbekwe;
"Political and Social Ecology"
with Paul TenSor; "Student
Designed C"urse" with Carol

Rinnert; "The Arab World and
Israel" with AJli EI..Salafy; and
''Urban Development in
Transitional Society" with Mr.
Mattern . According to Mr.
Ma ttemt in the International
College, "political and social
situations are analyzed in terms
relevant to the world as a whole."

Hall, administrative and clerical
resources and access to the
personnel and resources of the
various programs of the Council.
Dr. Michaels is attempting to
make the actual function of the
Council more relev-ant to the
University community by
su pporting the International
College.

Support urged

Questioned on the fate of the
Intern ational College in the
future, Mr. Mattern replied : "I r
the administration is at all
intemgent, they will support the
Colleges. The Colleges carry
approximately 4000 students in
their courses at the cheapest
possible price. 'Qle departments
would be foolish to resist the
Stern Perspe ctus (which
established the Collegiate System)
because the departments would
not have the facilities to handle
these 4000 students if the
Colleges did not exist.

In addition to academic
courses, the International College
can offer to its participants all the
resources of the Unjversity-wide
Council on International Studies.
Albert Michaels, the executive
o fficer for the Council, has
offered office space at Townsend

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UNIFORM
FASHI·
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re.,le S.rw

HIRS
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SPECIAl PURCHASE

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FOR DOCTORS, DENTISTS,
, STUDENTS, etc

TUNICS

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MAilUPPa

Child care propam
On ThW1day the House of Representatives
approved an expansive program of_chiJd care, but
due to administrative pressures, the eligibility level
was lowered for families who wW receive the free
services. The ceiling on the annual income for an
eligible family was to have been $6960, but this was
lowered to $4300.

It took three hours of heated arguments and
Though the bill docs nothing to create more day
shoutan&amp; across the center aisle of the Senate before
care
centers, it would alJow families with incomes
passage was accomplished. "We are alJ to blame,"
said Sen. John Pastore (D., R.I .), "but this is the last under $4300 to send their children to a center with
clear chance we have to stop this tragic war.'' Senate the governmtnt picking up the tab. The bill was
Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, sponsor of the nailed onto the $5 billion-plus authorization bill for
Amendment_, said: "We've got to face up to this issue anti-poverty projects of the Office of Economic
and face up to it again and again and again." He also Opportunity, and the entire bW was passed by a vote
sa.id that he was not trying to usurp the President's of251 - 115 .
powers of Commander-in-Chief, but to remove "this
al batross from around his neck ."
Over 140 Is safe
As part of the Military Procurement Bill, the
. As part of the busy week in Washington.. the
Senate rejected legislation that would have scuttled Defense Department announced that the draft call
the Safeguard Antiballistic Missile system for the last three months of this year would be only
Wednesday. Critics of the weapon joined proponents 10,000, the lowest monthly quota in six years.
in beating down an amendment by Sen. Harold Selective Service officials said that this meant that
Hughes (D., Iowa) to bar further deployment of the men with a lottery number somewhere between 125
computerized missile interceptor. Long-time ABM and 140 would be fairly safe from induction , and
opponents urged their colleagues to back the those with a number higher than 140 would
Safeguard system, since they felt that the possibility definitely not be called . A spokesman for the
of an agreement ln the Strategic Arms Umitations Pentagon said that the quarterly draft call would
talks in Vienna and Helsinki were near enough so help "to reduce uncertainty and give young men
that rejection might upset a major step toward increased time to arrange personal affairs before
disarmament. Sen. John Cooper (R., Ky.) said that entering active duty .. ." Army officials are hopeful
although he still beUeves the system won't work, "I that there will be a zero draft caU by July I , 1973 .

WASHIIIGIOII ......_US Clllla
llllS &amp; THINGS,. ... Stylei hr Y. . . • • •

believe it belt that 'we d~ not alt~ the basis upon
which negotiations are taking ]llace.
The amendment to scrap the F-14 fighter plane
which wW carry the new ABM was rejected by a vote
of 61- 8. The F-14, at a cost of $16 million each ,
will replace the old F-4.

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The administration may try to
alter the philosophy ·and policy of
each college to conform with a
more conservative view. College A
of 1969 and 1970 is the same
College in name only. The policies
have been altered from a radical
experimental college to an overall
workshop format dealing with
children. Colleges 8 and D, now
using residence facilities, were
favored over the other Colleges
because their philosophies were
more acceptable to the
adminhtration.

�Sedita supporter

Murray takes leave
Daniel Murray, dean of the
Graduate School, is taking a
leave of absence to take a
SUNY assignment. According
to him, this Albany assignment
will coordinate graduate
research and study throughout
the SUNY system.
·
Dr. Murray maintained that
there is no connection
b et 1ween his and other
administrative d e partures
resulting from-difficulties with
the president's office. "In
factt" be said, "for a while, I
was a part of the
administration as Vice
President for Academic
Affairs.
Whether or. not Dr. Murray
will formally resign his
University position is yet
undecided. Possibilities will be
explored this week, he ~
explained.
r

Appeals Court: Leslie
Bacon illegally arrested
that the witness' testimony is
material and that it would be
"impractical" to use' a subpoena.
The first proYi.sion can be met by
the assertion of a U.S. attorney,
but the second provision must be
based on sufficient facts . The
court ruled that such facts in the
Bacon case were lacking, and
therefore, the warrant for her
arrest was invalid.
Mike Rosen, one of Miss
Bacon's attorneys, hailed the
decision as "a great victory for
civil liberties in this country. What
it means is that the attorney
general no longer can willy-nilly
arrest persons, and in the case of
Leslie, whisk her 3000 miles
across the country and hold her as
,a prisoner for an inordinate length
of time." As a result of the
decision, said Rosen , anyone
subpoenaed as a " material
witness" can challenge that
subpoena at the nearest federal
court.
Miss Bacon has also been
charged with conspiring to
manufacture firearms and
incendiary bombs in connection
with an alleged attempted
bombing of the first National
Proper arrest
A proper arrest warrant, City Bank of New York City in
according to the Appellate Court, December. She was released on
must be based on probable cause $10.000 bond in that case.
A Federal Court of Appeals in
San francisco ruled Thursday that
Leslie Bacon was illegally arrested
as a "material witness" in the
March 1 bombing of the U.S.
Capitol.
Seattle Judge George Boldt,
according to the Nin~ Circuit
Court of Appeals, erred in issuing
the arrest warrant which was
improperly based on the
assumption that Miss Bacon had
not answered a subpoena. The
warrant was therefore declared
illegal, and this in tum, validated
Miss Bacon's writ of habeas
corpus.
•
Arrested at her Washington,
D.C . commune April 22, Miss
Bacon , 19, was flown to Seattle to
answer questions about the
bombing before a grand jury.
After testifying for several days,
she refused to answer fUrther
questions despite a "limited"
immunity granted her by a federal
judge. She was then cited for
contempt of court. A $100,000
bond was declined by a circuit
court in June in favor of release in
Miss Bacon's own recognizance.

Javits' speech cancelled
Senator Jacob K. Javita, who was ~~eheduled to
speak in the fillmore Room on Oct. 4, has been
forced to can'c:el that enaqement. Hia appearance
will be re~~eheduled for sometime in November, at a
date yet to be announced. His enaaaement is part of
the Junes Felton Lecture Series which bas invited
diltinpished speaken 'to lecture on campus since
1922. The lectures are available to the public free ofl
ch

Lindsay to Speak on campus
New Ydrk City Mayor John V.
Lindsay, who recently made a
dramatic turnabout from
Republican to Democratic ranks,
will speak at the fountain area of
the State University of Buffalo at
12 noon, Friday, Oct. 8.
He will be in town to campaign
for Buffalo Mayor Frank Sedita.
Sedita is currently runamg for
Erie County Executive. He will
accompany Lindsay at the rally.
Lindsay's visit was also scheduled
to counter a visit by Vice
President Spiro Agnew. Agnew
will be in Buffalo Oct. 7 to
campaign for the Republican
candidate for County Executive,
Edward Regan.
Lindsay will also partake in a
grand tour of Buffalo that day.
Besides his visit at the State
University of Buffalo, he will also
visit the Broadway Market area,
center of the heavily-Democratic
Polish population here.
New York has been consiaered
a key state in national elections.
This has represented a distinct
problem to Lindsay, who, before
his switch, was at odds with New
York Governor Nelson
Rockefeller. This well-publicized
rivalry between the two has, in
the past, hindered efforts by
Lindsay to gain support within
the state.
On Mayor Lindsay's agenda
later that day is a cocktail partv

for himself and Sedita at the
Executive Ramada lnn. The party
is being largely sponsored by
several faculty memben and
instructors from the State
University of Buffalo. Arnone
·them are David Hays, Department
of Linguistics, John Eberhart,
Department of ArcheolOI)', Bob
Fish, Department of Education,
Constan tine Yeracaris,
Depart anent of Sociology, Marvin
Bloom, Department oT Social
Welfare, Jim Blackhurst, Summer
Sessions and Bob Sandburg and
Phil .Cooke, Department of
Political Science.
The purpose of the party,
according to Mr. Cooke, who also
is working for Mayor Sedita, is
"for faculty members to meet
with both mayors in a setting
conducive to having a dialogue."
There has been much speculation
as to why Mayor Lindsay has been
coming to Buffalo, some observers
have noted. Apparently, he is
trying to rally some support in the
event that he runs for either the
governorship or the presidency .
This explanation h as been
mentioned by members of his
staff ever since his switch from
the R epublicans to the
Democratic Party.
According to Mr. Cooke,
" Lindsay is not coming here
solely to further his political
ambition!. This is partly true, but

Resignations ...

John Lindsay -vP•
he has old debts to pay the Big
Six Committee of Mayors (which
Sedita heads). For example, he is
indebted for assistance in tax
backage."
Immediately after the cocktail
party, Mayor Lindsay will return
to New York City to fulfill some
scheduled obligations. Following
Mayor Linilsay to Buffalo in the
next month will be possible
presidential hopefuls George
McGovern, Hubert Humphrey and
Ted Kennedy.

-c:ontlnued from page 1-

encroachment. Former Arts and Letters Provost chairman of the History Department. This was one
Thomas ConnoUy explained that the provost has instance, according to some qualified observers of
seen a lessening in his powers and responsibilities.
the History Department, of "delay, indecision and
Various faculty members term this development begrudging judgment." Dr. Lively'~rpointment
as «a centralization of authority and power in Hayes was one in whlcb President Ketter
· ted a full
HaU." Such a development could lead to the danger eight months before approving it. · delay was in
of administrative overload. As Dr. Cohen explained, · spite of a two-thirds majority vote for Dr. Lively, the
by taking in more duties, the administration takes strong recommendations of Dr. Cohen, and the
the risk of not giving adequate attention to · unanimous endorsement of a formal committee
important matters. Further, it stands to reason that headed by Joseph Shister. All thin~ accounted, the
with increased responsibilities comes less time for delay in official reappointment was, according to
decision-making and the risk of serious mistakes or one history professor, " highly unusual and
oversights.
insulting."
"Unusual and insulting" - words that can be
Accompanying this overload, there has
to the entire functioning of President
applied
developed almost a monomania by administrative
Ketter
's
administration. Unusual because no
officials in certain areas. Very simply, Hayes Han is
administration
hi~-handedly forces resignations,
inordinately concerning itself with decision-making
controls
its
faculty
and lies about its actions.
on the faculty and even on the departmental level.
further, it is· insulting to University faculty and
As Dr . Cohen commented: This " increasing
centralization of authority and responsibility in the students to be treated as infants. It is apparent that
much needs to be done. Whether this would simply
Office of the President . . . either directly or
mean some " meaningful dialogue" between
indirectly threatens faculty prerogatives." Some are
administration and the campus or if it would
more blunt charging the administration with undue
ne cessitate the resignations of the entire
interference.
administration is still unclear. What is certain,
though, is that Hayes HaU should stop viewing the
Strange circumstances
University in terms of "we and they" (allies and
A case in point is the stran~e circumstances enemies) and start to work with aU factions of the
beyond the reappointment of Robert Uvely as campus for the University.

---------------------------------------------------

.JUST THRILLING

IUffAlO RSTIVAl pte1e11h:

ROB·E RTA
FLACK

Sv(ldoy, Od. 17, at 7 :3"0 P.M.
Kleinhans . Music Hall
All Seats Reserved: $6.00 $5.00 $4.00
tlchh H sale ••• et hff•l• mllv•l fldlet Offlco, ltet...· Hilt.., lo.... r
(Melt ..... toeaptM willa .,..,....... Mlf-e44t-.1 ..., .....)1 U.a. Nonoft
Mell1 lteto Ce~ Tlcbf Offtce; trll ..,.,. ., / 1 Del'e 1 - t l

s-.

Campanions needed!

Volunteen are needed for the Student
Companion program at the Buffalo Veteran's
Administration Hospital. The program involves two or
three boun or work a week , during which time the
student will meet and interact with hospital patients,
No special training or background is necessary.
Students interested in taking part in the program
should contact Mike Nichols , telephone 834-9200,
ext. 223 , 269 , or 271.

''

••

Monday, October 4, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�Pesch fired ...

- Ostwrelc:her •

Oppression spotlighted
, "'

Black rally supports strike
Nearly SOO Blacks, many of
them high school students, rallied
Friday in the Fillmore Room at
N o rton Hall in an apparent
display of solidarity over a
proposed nation-wide strike by
Black students scheduled for get.

ninting and composing
equipment to be used for Unity:
Plrase One, the BSU newsletter.
Additionally, they complained
that Sub Board had no Black
members.

way budgets are developed and

the waly they are used." BSU
SJ&gt;kesrnen refuse,d comment on
tJie mec1ting. ReJS'resentatlves from
Sub 84:&gt;ard I and the Student
Aaocia1Uon were unavailable for

said that the students and faculty meetina of concerned med
of the Med School mould have a students continued with plans for
major voice in who it should be. confrontina the firlna. It was
But, he warned, in order for a decided that a mass meeting of all
dean to be effective he must have med students and faculty be held
tomorrow Jlisbt in room G-22
the support of the President.
Capen
at 7 pm. to diJcuas Dr.
When asked by a student how
Pesch's
firing and the problems
it would be posst"ble to get a new
facina
the
Med School as a result
dean who would continue the
of
it.
programs that Dr. Pesch left but
There was a little talk of a
still retain the support of Dr.
boycott
of classes but most of the
Ketter, Dr. Pesch replied, "That's
meeting
was racked with
the problem." At that moment,
criticisms
of
Dr. Ketter and his
another student yelled out an
handling
of
the
Med S&lt;:bool. One
apparent solution : "Resign
med
student
said
that apparently
Retter," whlch was met with a
"Ketter has decided that this is
round of applause.
When · asked if he would going to be his university and,he is
consider coming back if pressure going to play around with
could Ire put on the whomever he wants to .
administration, Dr. Pesch said that Everyone's job is in jeopardy"
was doubtful. "My personal now, he said.
Another med student
viability is lost. It would be an
empty victory because I would be eJCdaimed, " Are we 1Q1na to let a
ineffective." It would be, he said, lousy engineer •teD 1.11 what to
do?"
"a struggle without victory."
In the meantime, a lfOUP of
However, he has " let it be
known tliat I will not, under any minority students held a separate
meetina to discuss the situation in
circumstances, resign my post."
After Dr. Pesch spoke, a the Med School.

MAKE

6.
After the meeting , the
remaining Blacks massed in front
of Norton but were divided by
loud wrangling and failed to take
any mass action. Around 150
Blacks, however, marched from
the campus to the Black Students
Union on Main Street and
discussed the proposed strike.

I

)

I I

~~EAD!

SELL ADVERTISING FOR
I

THE .SpECTI\UM

Participants in the march and

BSU spokesmen refused to divulge

'

any details about either Friday's
action or the nation-wide strike,
which will reportedly last a week
a nd focus attention on the
oppression of Black people in
America.

COME UP TO 355 NORTON AND ASK FOR
THE ADVERSTISING MANAGER.

_,
U

...

Although several Buffalo poUce
cars were patrolling the campus
area during the meeting and
followed the progress of the
march, no arrests were reported.
Some observers had claimed that a
paddy wagon was in the area, but
it was not in use, at any rate.

e

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'SA unresponsive'
Overshadowed by the rally
riday was an informal meeting
mong representatives of the BSU,
3tudent Association and Sub
Board I in the office of Vice
President for Student Affairs
Richard Siggelkow. This meeting
was prompted by a memorandum
sent Sept. 23 by the BSU to
several administration officials
whi c h charged Student
Spokesmen for Sub Board
Association and Sub Board I were
defended
the bu~get cuts and
" unresponsive to the
emphasized
that the p•Jrchase of
peychologlcal and cultural needs
such
equipment
was unnecessary,
of Black students."
too expensive and undesirable.
Sub Board I, BSU spokesmen
The participants, said Dr.
dwFd, had unjustifiably cut Sigelkow, were "amicable,." and
their budaet and made it dhcuued the "roles and
JmJX*fble for them to purc:lwe respona;,llities of my office, the

.

Blat;k rally

XEROXES
FORSC

Pagit ilx . T!w SpectrUm . Monday, October 4, 1971

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A Bl.ck student lent her support
to llllt Friday's rally of IOiidarity.

comment.
Hampering any progress at the
gatherinJg was the absence of
Student Associatiort president Ian
DeWaal, who Sigelkow termed
the "kelf figure" in the talks. De
Wul is scheduled to return to
campus c,.rly next week, when the
next Jnel)tina wm take place.

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�Athletic Review Board
'erosion' to be checked'

of invultJtltlnc tbele araa before
the athletic mlew board...It Is up
to
board, md It will be
ttis&lt;:UIIed." he aaid.

u..,

numerical &amp;pres submitted by
the athletJc department, AshwoJ

1be aawnption of athletic
department accountina by Sub
Board I was not merely a
compjance with State Unmnity
directives . It was more
importantly a reaction to various
conditions that lw eroded the
effectiveness o f the Student
Athletic Review BoaJd to the
point where it wu no longer an
effective vehicle of student power.
Citcumstanca aurroundinJ the
present athletic department
budset provide a good illustration
of how far that erosion had 'been

said, "I neveT chedced into it.
Scotty Slesinser did.••
Alhwol also stated that to IUs
knowledae, Sleslnger had
re~earched the budpt and had
justified the submitted fipues.
Wbeo asked to what decree the
department•s rec:orcls bad been
checked, SJesi.nser replied, " It was
done ln a cursory fashion. I just
had to guess." Slesinser attributed
this to the difficulty in reading
the records.

Budtet a-s aayway

Despite what appean to be a
lack of adequate investigation, the
budpt wa passed basically as it
had been submitted by the
• permitted to ,o. 1be bud,et, athletic department. Among the
alloc:atins S240,000 of student relatively minor changes was a
fees to the athletic department S3000 c ut in administrative
was puaed la&amp;t sprin8 by both the expenses from last year and a
Student Athletic Review Board $4000 cut in medical expenses.
A final detailed budset
and the executive committee of
co
ns ia tins of more than
the Student Alsodatlon. It is the
ambiguous
lump sums has yet to
review board's funct.i on to insure
be
made.
Accordins
to Aahwol, a
that student fees allocated to
finaUzed
budset
is
scheduled
to be
athletlc:a are pro perly disbursed.
completed
this
week
after.
the
11\e numerical fipres from
$240,000
had
already
been
which that budBet was derived
were based on records that existed allocated.
under the old accounting system,
The new duties of Sub Board
handled by state auditors.
should prevent a reoccurrence of
I t h as b eeo co mmon this type. With the issuance of a
knowledge in both the athletic computerized monthly statement,
department and the athletic both the athletic review board and
review board that the old system the athletic department will have
had been grossly inadequate. The a deta.Ued and up-to-date appraisal
monthly balances were totalled of 'deputmental expenses, taking
months behind sc.hedule; Scott out much of the guesswork.
Slesinger, past chairman of the
One area still untouched
review board and now Second vice involves income from outside
pre sid e n t of the Student so ur ces suc h as alumni
Association admitted " We didn•t contributions and scholarship
know where we stood."
expenses. It is very possible that
This was not of major these factors could significantly
significance to either Slesinger. his alter the department's annual
successor as review board budget request, although they do
chairman, Joe Ashwol, or anyone not directly in volve student' fees.
else when the time came to review Flrst claiming that these areas
the current budget. When asked were not under his jurisdiction,
whether he had investigated the Ashwol agreed to take the merits

News Analysis

~==========~aaaaaaaaa=~=aaaaaa~

you cf us

THE SPECTRUM
366 NORTON HALL

I
I

~c··==::=a==~~·==~r~e·==r~····.~::
SHERIDAN FOREIGN CAR REPAIR
1066 SHERIDAN DRIVE
• 874-5330
TONAWANDA, N.Y.

I•Is ways

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e CLIPOUTCOUPON - · · - -

VW
to charge • OWNERS

E"'fMre Cent
a.nlt A ;c.ct

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CLIP OUT coUfrON

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DISC BRAKE • •
$31.15

._..._.,.,._"

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...... OPEN 7 DAYS- EVENINGS TILL 10:00

,I

In tile mkJdle
As of this momcot, 1oe Alhwol
in in a very tryina polition. He II
c:ausht in the middle of the
strugle for control of a quarter of
a milllon dollan of student fees.
The athletic department had the
upper hand until now; at the
moment he is in danFf of lOiint
whatever semblance of
independence he bas to the
offi cers of t)\e Student
Association.
As chairman, he will have to
justify the existence of his board
by assertina his independence and
turnins the Student Athletic
Review Board into •.&gt;hat it wu
intended to be, a functionins
committee that will serve the
students of this Univenity u weD
u the athletic depe.rtment.

the amount of money spent and the funds remainin&amp;
for every budget line. "'The first statement wDl be
done any day now;• said Joe .Ashwol. c:hai.nn.ID of
the Student Athletic Review Board. lt wDl be pubUc
record.

Re:lponsibillty for the accounting procedures of
the athletic department have been assumed by Sub
Board I. Inc.
The move ia designed to conform with the
guldeU11es of the State Unlvcnity of New York
conccming the c:OUoetion and clisbwaancnt of
mandatory student actJvitles fees . The rullnp
empow•ered a " desipated custodial and dispersing
agent" to "establish and maintain budgetary
accounts to ensure that budgetary accounts are not
overencumbered or overexpanded ." Sub Board I
handles student fees o n this campus. In previous
years, the department•s accounts had been handled
by stah: auditors. "There had been a problem in the
past to provide balances. A severe time lag had
existed," said Dr. Hany Fritz, the director of
Physical! Education, Recreation and Athletics. "The
new aJTangement could eUminate much of the
paperwte&gt;rk . This system wUI expedite purchases and
provide a quicker way of getting the balances and
ellminane the time lag," Or. Fritz added.
Scott Slesinger, second vice president of the
Student Association and previous chainnan of the
Student Athletic Review Board , said that in previous
years "'there had been terrible delays. We didn't
know w•here we stood ."
Under the new arrangement , Sub Board I will
issue a computerized monthly statement detailing

Matk Borenstein, business manqer of Sub
Board I, said the corporation will have nothf.ns to do
with the determination of budget allocations. "The
actual dedsions as t~ the funding of the deputment
will be handled by student government ," Borenstein
said . A11ocations of funds within the department are
made by the Student Athletic Review Board.

Despite the shift in accounting procedures, the
athletic department will retain its state-empoyed
purchasing agents, who coUect bids in order to
purchase large quantities of goods at reduced prices.
"We got good cooperation from them. We want to
utilize the bid system ," Dr . Fritz said .
The accounting change did not affect this year's
athletic department budget , which was passed last
spring by the Student Athletic Review Board and the
executive committee of the Student Association.
The budget was based on athletic department figures
provided by the state auditors. A t~tal of $240,000
in student fees was allocated to the various
intercoUegi.ate, intramural and recreational programs
on campus.
IIIILIIYIIUI - -

1c SALE
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BRITISH
AMERICAN
I CAR BRAKE • CAR
AND OWNERS
OTHERS
SPECIALS ALSO

.

•
•

Student Association could
eliminate athletic anOcatiool
altopther; the ooly ~
block would be the Studeot
Athletic Review Board, whole
approval would for lepl reuons
be nec:eswy.

Sub Board overSees budget

II•

- ' • awN. cyll.

year. the Student Allodation now
hll a lump aan to clal wi~ and
contrary to prmous years, it
oeedn"t allocate $2S per student
.to ath.letiet. If it 10 delired the

out

DRUM BRAKE : •
$ 26. ~~

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4

so~ted

•

WELCOME BACK TO SCHOOL BRAKE SPECIALS

•

Athlletic finances

•

N- Voftl S~M• l,..etion

•

Still ill trouble
Unlfortunately, Sub Board's
action wW not be enoup to make
the miew board u effective as it
could be
Preantly, the Student Athletic
Re~r Board is still in serious
troublct, caused mainly but not
solely by student apathy.
The fint meeting of tbe ~ew
board, which wu open to all full
time undergraduate student, was
attend•~d by only eight people. Of
these eight, four were
represc1ntatlves of the various
clubs whote budgets were to be
disCUSS~ed ; two were writers for
The SPf!Ctrum, and counting
chalrmtan Ashwot, there remained
in attendance only one student
not affiliated with an interest
group.
Subsequently, the rules
BOVemina the makeup of the
atblet lc review board were
c hange!&lt;~ . Rather than havin8
membenhlp open to all fee-payina
undergraduates, It was decided to
have tlhe members appointed by
the Student Associallon. " We

were afraid of too IDIDY kids of
the same Joterest pKkioa the
board," Ashwol Slid. "1he
Student Auodation deddod that
the baud wiU be made up of
thote selected by 10 appointment
committee headed by Scott
Slesinpr." be added. When asked
who else would be on the
committee Alhwol repUed that he
didn't know. The idea of uklna
for applJcations for oommlUee
coDJideratlon bad not occurred to
him until it was sugated by this
writer during an interview ...Ws a
BOod idea." be replied.
The appointment system for
the selection of review board
members will pve the Student
Association new discretionary
powers, and could conceivably
tum the board into a .rubber
stamp for its wishes. depending on
whom the selection committee
appoints.
Should the board be packed.
the Student Assoc::iation would
have the authority to do
unilaterally what bad previously
been done only by referendum lower the total amount annually
awarded to the athletic
department. By lncludins the
athletic fee within the student
activities fee for the fint time this

lid uu tUt em cas1t
J01 Mid. Y•'re till Mls. Y• set JW
- profit plctln.
F01 colaiOfl• ond inlotmotion,

write

01

phone

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cit • DISTI.uTCIISIIIC.
_ . ~lOAD, IAft11l, I.Y. IJ7I
CIJ2) 7lla17

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Monday, October 4, 1971 . The Spectrum . hgt ...,_

�I

I

EdiToRiAl

Hayes H~ll treachery

It has become vividly clear of late that LeRoy Pesch did ·
not resign as dean of the University of Buffalo Medical
School. In plainest terms, Dr. Pesch was forced out, with the
ex-dean even maintaining that he was informed of his
resignation by reading the Buffalo Evening News.
This type of administrative conduct by Drs. Ketter and
Somlt is no longer surprising. It seems that the ethics of this
administration are either unimportant .or non-existent. We
might wonder if this was the first such instance of the
President's office forcing out a dean, provost or department
ch._irman, but there have been many others. Claude Welch,
Thomas Connolly, Albert Cook, Frank Zweig, Ira Cohen,
Rollo Handy, Theodore Mills and now leRoy Pesch have all
been ousted through various subterfuges or outright sabotage To the Editor·
'
~Y the administration.

Ideas for better
parking
2) Or. Hunt did say earlier at

Mort of these resignations have been treated by the
administration as normal occurrences. Again and again we
hear the phrase that "it's just the law of a\lerages." We have
had enough of this double-talk. We have had enough of the
sickeningly sweet and absolutely false explanations by the
administration of the resignations that have oCcurred.
Resignations are not the only signs we have of a
machiavellian style of administration. For several months last
year the administration played games with several
department chairmanship appointments. Investigations of
these delays have revealed both unethical and immoral
administrative conduct.
Throughout all of this, however, little has been heard
from the people responsible, Robert Ketter and Albert
Somit. Not one word has come from them on Pesch's
ousting. Perhaps a new low in administrative responsibility
occurred this weekend when all Dr. Gelbaum, the vice
preSident tor Academic Affairs, would say about Pesch's
firing was that "if your logic leads you to that conclusion, I
would suggest that you r~onsider your syllogisms and see
whether they, in fact, are valid." Surely this University
deserves a fuller and more honest response.
The entire campus has been shocked by these
resignations. Department chairmen, provosts, students and
faculty members have all expressed chagrin and amazement
at the loss of quality administrators. Those aware of the
villainy involved in Pesch 's firing have condemned it. Yet all
we hear is administrative silence.
Given a continuation of this current trend of
heavy-handed and tight-lipped administrafion we wonder
whether much time will pass before demands are heard for
the r~gnations of Dr. Ketter and Dr. Somit. Perhaps then
the University community will get a response.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 18

Monday, October 4, 1971
Editor-In-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co.fttlneging Editor - AI 88fl50n
eo.Mtneging Editor - Mike Lippmann
A• . MM\eging Editor - Susan Moss
Busine. Mlmlger - Jim Orucker
Adwrtiling Manager - Sue Mellentine

c.mpua ......... Jo-Ann Armao

lAyout ....... Marvhope Runyon

....•...........Howie Kurtz
• . • . • . . • . . . . . . . • Bill v IICC8t'O

Alit •.................vacant
Lit. 6 Dnma .. Michael S ilverbhm
Millie .............Billy Altman
Off-Campus ...... Lynne Trllegef
Photo .......... Marc Ackermen
.. .. ..... . Mickey Osterreicher
Sports . ...•••...•.. Barry Rubin
Asst •• ·...••.••••. Howie Faiwl

City .•••.•..• . ... ......vacant

Cop¥ •.......... RonniFor~n
•.••..•... , ..... Many Gatti
A.a • .....•.......... ,vacant
Fe.ture .....•...•....•..vacant
Onlphic Arts ........• Tom Toles

n.

Spectmm is served by United Press

~fltemational,

Coll191 Presa

BeMce. the Los Angeles Free Pr... the Los angeles Tima Syodicate and
L.I!Mnllon News Serva.

~ of nwtter h~nin without the express consent
Edltor.a..c:Nef .. forbidden.

~f

lifdiiiiiW poticy isdetarmlned by the Editor-In-Chief.

Pag. t!i9ht , The Spectn.un .·Mond.ay, abtobei'A, 19.7.1 ·.

the

The Traffic Control Advisory Committee is just
that one to collect information and ideas from
parking lot maintenance staff, control and regulation
and protectio n staff, student, staff and faculty
interests. The committee collects Information and
makes recommendations to the administration. As a
technical member of the committee I have not voted
to represent any one special interest and, as implied
in Friday's Spectrum, if some members of the
committee voted as their supposed constituencies
desired, they were wrong. Or. Hunt should have told
tbem, as he bas told me, that we are not a
representative committee only an adVisory one.
Unfortunately I could not be present during the
so-called heated debato and vote on open parking,
However I would like to put forth a few
considerations that I deem important which would
have Influenced, in part , my decision.
1) Wllat has happended to the concern for o ur
natural c nvironmen~ on the part of students, faculty.
and staff? It appears that all want others to walk or
bicycle to school and to form car pools to reduce
exploitatio n of oil and oth er resources. When it
comes to a pivate personal decision, the highly
self-oriented American drives his car with one person
in each vehicle for the most part.
Does the student body want to convert our last
bit o f lawn to parking lots? If so the next problem
that would botber us all, and also non-campus
co mmute~ on Main and Bailey, would be the
unbeanble congestion caused by cars entering and
leaving the campus. This traffic flow problem is
nearly critical now at the points of access to the
campus.
Personally, I don't mind walldng from the
Main-Bailey lot to Parker. If staff or students can't
spare the extra 5- 10 minutes to get some good
exercise walking across campus I suggest they try
budgeting their time better and not mako their life
such a rat-race; as our society does enough of that
already.

the meeting,
before I bad to leave for a class, that by mid
October, students and staff would learn about the
boun of worst ·congestio~ and arrive at other times,
if possible, and also form car pools. This is the best
solution. There will be gripes, but peoples life styles
are adapable to this ext~ot.
3) I tend to suppott open parking except for
those students and staff who, b ecause of other
regular work committments, (excluding Ridge Lea
which is served by a free bus), must park o n tl!e
campus when lots are full. A large portion of these
are health science staff many of whom must travel
from JocaJ hospitals and offices.
1 propose that the student association and
campus media combine their efforts to provide a ride
sharing and car pooling exchange.

4 ) The only valid argument for restricted
parking for faculty and some staff that I have heard
is that some increase in rights to minor amenities
such as parking should go together with increasing
status since a de.veloping self image needs more than
monetary rewards. Status and self image are not
synonomous, but in our society they are correlated ,
-and status is easily measurable.
S) The possibility of a parking fee apparently is
decided by the SUNY trustees in Albany and if we
must have one, it should not penalize the poor. It
should serve to decrease the travel b-y ~r by t hose
who can afford public transit and by those who can
share driving with a fellow campus worker or
student.
6) Other alt~matives used on campuses
elsewhere are to issue no parking permits to certain
groups according to some criteria such as age or
status. This might mean no parking for campus
resident freshmen full-time students, etc.

C. B. Notcss
Transportation Group
Cltll1 Engineering Department

Stipend issue questioned
To the Editor:

Certain members o f the Student Association
have used these pages lo defend themselves and their
policies, which is everyone's right and indeed,
responsibility . But to launch into a tirade, spewing
invective and falsehoods serves no purpose but to
expose the immature and irresponsible nature of our
stud ent government leaders.
Messers. Goldstein and Frankel have und ertaken
such a position . Equating· concern over granting a
$200 raise to members of the Student Association
with personal desires for power and pre-election
campaigning, they have attempted to confuse the
issue.
The idea to achieve parity in stipends is a· most
aamirable one. The way that the Student
Association went about it borders on the criminal.
This is the issue: not what was wanted, but what
the executive committee, in its infinite wisdom,
passed . (Mr. Goldstein and Mr. Frankel included.)
What it passed is the issue, becaus'tl it is what exists
and what effects students and what costs money.
Now if everyone is of equal importance, and
that is accepted, and consequently the pay scale is at
fault, then it follows that Ute lowest pay scale, whic(l
bad been sufficient to pay coordinators, should be
the figure set for parity . That pay was SSOO. To set
· parity at a Level of $700 is a raise. RAISE. A raise of
S200. This is the issue. And it should be reminded
that both Mr. Goldstein and Mr: Frankel accepted
the extra $200.
In · defendin~ their rather dubious arouncb,
Messers. Goldstem and Frankel have resorted to
slander. They have set forth complaints, personal
opinions and suppositions. All without fact.
•,

.

Facts like: The entire budget of the CA&lt;.: was
not passed . The Sunshine house was rejected in its
request for money to buy furniture and kitchen
equipment. Mr. Goldstein said the entire budget was
passed .
Facts like : Keith Frankel received $375 for his
work with the SA last year. This is reported by the
treasurer of the Student Association . Mr. Frankel
lied and said be received no money.
Facts like : Over tbe summer, Mr. Frankel
San Francisco that
received S3SO and a paid trip
cost $200. This too was reported by the tJeasurer of
the SA.
Facts like: Over the summer , $6200 was spent
on summer stipends. Most clubs did not receive any
money over the summer, and in one case, a request
from one club for $70 was turned down.
But tbey have gone further. They have insulted
and much maligned us. This would be acceptable if il.
was presented as their own personal opinions and
not masked, as it was, as fact . They have allowed
their own biases to attribute motives and "plots" to
us. In aD fairness, Mr. Frankel seemed more inclined
to act this way than Mr. Goldstein. He may have
some personal grudge or else his conscious may be
bothering him for acting the way be did on the
stipend issue. He may be attempting to mask it by
acting the aggrieved and insulted party. lashing out
at the "evil" that is attacking him. Whatever the
case, I will not stoop to defend myself against such
•obvious slander. I will only tum to the student body
as a whole and ask them to d ecide for themselves the
matter of the stipend raise and ..question the ethics
~d personality of Mr. Frankel.

to

Bob Con11U1ar

.. .

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...

Priceless Poverty'
To

tit~

Edlt()r:

On December 20, the lease on the Poverty Hill
Property will expire. lbe decision now to be made is
whether the land should be bo\l&amp;bt or not by the
Student Governments of tlie University. To some
tttis purchase will aecm very expensive. But to those
who have wandered tbrou&amp;h the 1 1SO acres of
absolutely splcoderoua wilderness, tasted from the
apple orchard, dua the wildflowers in their myriad
colors, no price can ever measure up against this
pricele• natural treuwe.
It Js our idea that Poverty Hill can become, with
your consent, the home of a truly revolutionary
community - a community composed of a wide
variety of students living in close harmony with tbe
euth and each other, settling over their differences
to produce a smooth nanning activley creative
s\irvival group. In li&amp;ht of the increasing uncertainty
ove~ .man's ability to keep himself from being
annthilated off the face of the planet, wilderness
must now, in these cataclysmic days, be looked upon
as a sanctuary; the possible field of a new world? the
·importance of such an endeavor as a Poverty llill
Community lies in the transmission or knowledge
and experience from them to brothers and sisters
across the nation interested in such Independent ,
New World pursuJta. A&amp; a traiJt&amp; ground for a race of
hi&amp;bJY skilled, hi&amp;hJy functioning wilderness people,
Poverty IJill is indispensable.
In the comins weeks, a referendum will be held.
The student body will be asked to decide whether or
not Poverty Hill should be purchased by the Student
Governments with your money. We urge you; indeed
plead ":itb you; to recommend we purchase Poverty
Hill; tbts would be the first project of its lcind in
America, the first student owned and controlled
wilderness area in the country; if our actions here
could inspire a rash of smaiJer purchases by other
University student bodies, we would be doing a
service l o both ourselves and the New World that 1.s
being made manifest.
Let us explain in a bit more depth and
concreteness what we envision. A -small pilot sroup
of 25 or so students, of every race and ethnic group
possible, should meet and decide what, they as a
wUderness community, need to survive 6 months out
at Poverty lUll. They should decide, what their goals
arc as a croup, and what they would like to create.
Their decision• should be Connally recorded and
presented to the UnJversity for both financial
support and ac:adcmzc accrediting, Tho next stop,
after receiving financial support , would be to
purcha.o;e the required materials and estabUsh their
community,
A complete study of the area's ecology should
be made before any carpentry o r engineering is
consented to so that only the most ecologically
harmonious structures are introduced into the
wilderness. We must be very sure that we will not
interfere with the ecosystem since we are trying for
as ideal a relationship between earth and man as
possible. Only if we treat the earth with the utmost
respect, will she flower for us and sustain us.
Even if the land is pwcha1ed solely for
recreational purposes, it will seem worthwhile. The
price is approximately S 176,000 ...but surely a
huge plot of rugged hills, lakes and apple orcbards
only 40 miles from miserably poUutcd Buffalo is
both a haven and a building ground for physical
health, for rugged bodies.
The fa ct is Sub Board I, composed of the 6
Student As,ociations, can amply afford this treasure.
Although tl\is seems a large sum, this land will help
the students of State University of Buffalo now and
all those to come.
We repeat fuU-heartedly vote for Poverty Hill,
the bow is late, Brothers and Sisters, we must learn
aJI we can of the wilderness and how to survive in it,
look around you - BuffaJo deteriorating quickly wiiJ you be able to live here in ten years at the
present rate of deterioration? - Beautiful wilderness
loves us, calls to her chtlderen - let us answer.
We sing areat praises of Paul and Vince, the two
caretakers there now, true mountainmen in love with
their world .

Da11id Roth
Sandy Boyton
&amp;: frit:ndl

Ezterminator
To the Editor:
. I have at in do&amp; shit for the last time. I have
breathed doc pia air in the Rat for tbe last time.
Unlees aU dop are tied to tbe front of the Union by
Oct. I , I will start a syatematic plan of liquidating
them. 1bis includes doa yummies soaked in poison this is DO joke.

Editor'# n ate: Woof. woof. woof/

'

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• J

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\

Guesf Opinion
1boec momenta immediately foDowina the radio
broadcut that 42 lives were ended inside th e Attica
State Correctional f'acllity by an order of the state
brou&amp;ht shodt and dJabelief to my mind. Because of
ow socW concUtionin&amp;, we could have better
accepted the alaupter bad nJne civilian guaTds not
been included. Notwithstanding lbcse latter deaths,
the State of New York could have assuaaect ita
peoples' mind• by circulating rectifying statements
lUte:

"Since the prisonen declared their goal was to
escape from the Attica waUs and kill members of the
Town of Attica community, we felt o ur actions
imperative in lieu or the threatened safety of you,
the innocent and productive citizen~~; of our state."
But that was not the case. The prisoners were not
even trying to escape Attica. Because of tbe
muddled, contradlctory nature or press reporta, I
myself am far from sure just what improvement, in
the prison tbey were demanding. But, my point is
that they were uldnc for negotiation and, throu&amp;fl
thelr representative BobbY, Se:tle, specifically
expressed no intention of harmine state personnel. It
can only be presumed that to instead storm that
discontented arena with deadly mechanical force was
just the most efficient lnd effective way of restoring
silence for ears that will bear only what they want to
hear.
In our society, a' prisoner, particularly a prisoner
in a pl3ce like Attica, is such a booayman that be has
no human rank (except with his few blood or
street-brethren who knew him before be became
caged - who, because of the g.ood inherent in him,
look forward to his release). So it could have been
fairly simple for the State to convince the majority
of citizens that notlting other than a few dop we~
lost in the process or regaining control of the priso n
- hAd I bey been the only "kind" kiJJcd. WbetheT the
reason be my very Limited property hol~p. my
simplistic logic, or my relatively youna aae, I am, Mr.
Gov. Rockefeller, very sensitive to the fact that
those 42 prisoners were human beii\P with a useiCIS
prayer in face of the troOpers' anxious auns, and J
cannot accept the State's tolution to the uprisin&amp;.
Furthermore, tbe fact t!Uit nine others lcilled were
supposedly respected members of the Town of
Attica, employees of the State or New York, dutiful
citizens o f these United States of America, ffi&amp;htens
my patnotism to bits. Such credentials used to be
worth something. But I'll teU you something,
Rocky : to be patriotic in these times and in this
place l.s the same to me as loving God, because He'U
send you to hell if you don't!
To my knowledge you never so much as
apologized for any of those deaths. If I were a state
employee, I'd think a litUe bit about who I was
working for. But I'm tltinking more than that since
I'm an American citizen and President Nillon
publicly embraced your bloody solution .
Clinging to my red-bluc-and-wltite sentiments, I
recently thou&amp;ht Kent State was a bad accident, that
because of all the protests it wouldn't happen again,
t!Uit troopers and national guardsmen would strive to
master control of their triggers for the sake of their
own respect , if nothing else. How blindly idealistic I
used to be! I say to myself when I consider the
depth of meaning in the above abominalities. The
fact seems to be more every clay that human life is
no longer sacred to those who have power. I think
I'm beginning to understand my radical colleaaues
and I no longer think of them as neurotic New York
Jews. l give them credit, generally, for bei_ng more
.scnsihve and more driven than I toward the pursuit
of happiness which was promised to them when they

wCf'e Pwin&amp; up. Glancins at what J've wdrtea
seema enou&amp;b to Implicate myseJf with radicaUam.
But I'm as yet unattached to aroup action, and
wbat'l above is soJely personal evaluation or part and
present circumltances. However, my sympathy for
the prisoners and my disdain for authority' bas been
geatly accentuated since being told the foUowlfta
thinp by a veey conservative, trustworthy friend of
mine who was one of the doctors treating some of
the prisoners less than a week ago :
I) 80% of the prisoners are black and brown
2) Nearly everyone he treated bad scabs on
their kneea and elbows due to being forced to crawl
back to their cells with intermittent club proddinat
the day the prison was regained by state personnel
3) Three men occupy 'One-bed toileted ceUs
4) Many prisoners bad evidence of having been
beaten the day the prison was repossessed, but no
fe()ent afflictions.
The first fact bas heavy sociaJ implicatioru
primarily that t here must be a reason for the rac:lai
predominance. Is "black men cet jail while white
men give baiJ" really a far-fetched slopn?
Tbe second fact is a real twist: men in thU
correctional institution are treated by-paid men witb
acts synonymous with those deemed bad enough to
send them there in the fii'St place. Think about it.
For the third fact, I can only asJc, if you were to
live in a one-bed , toileted cell with two other
excreting characters, wouldn't you holler? And what
would you do if language ceased to be an affective
form ot communication?
The fourth fact is probably not divorced from
the state and federal "inves ~igations" now in process.
What really got to me was my friend's
reiteration o f initially acquainting himself with the
prisoners. Upon personal address (heUo, Mr. - - -,
t•m Or. - - ) an extension of hand to shake, the
prisoner invariably looked bewildered and took some
time before responding in the usual manner. He said
it wu very apparent that it had been some while
since the lndivldual prisoner per se was treated as a
Man.
When be first went into the ceU bJock.s, the
prisoners were very sJcepticaJ of him, answering
neptiveJy to "any injuries?" adding, " why tell you
you wouldn't do anything about it anyway.'' CeU
to ceiJ, his bedside manner increased in its
effectiveness, tbe prisoners spontaneously opening
up to him. As he left he was caJled from every
direction as prisoners remembered matters needing
medical attention. Throughout the doctor-prisoner
conversations, the guard frequently scoffed at the
prisoner's needs with " never mind him!"
I don't adhere to making the prisoner's home a
country club as 80 mony people think things are
coming to. But, there could be many minor changes
of major import, which would improve Attica, but
leave it far from country club distinction ... which
is probably to their advantage if you are at all
representative of what country clubs do to people.
AJI in all, your Attica solution bas sensitized me
deeper toward the caliber of our state and federal
"government" and l question whether simple sanity
isn 't what the radicals arc after. l ask that because of
my ~wn paranoia which Attica triggered.
Is it an exaggeration to say the state makes few
distinctio ns these days, that being a good white
American is no more security than being a bad
black? In an indeed odd sort of way maybe we
Americans are reaching equality . And wouldn't it be
nice to lock the dehumanizing elements of ow
society in their country clubs and determine once
again a government for the governed?

You must pay to play
To the Editor:
It is a sad fact that our elected Student
Association officials would rather commit slander
than squarely face justified criticism about their
policies and beliefa.
In my last Letter to the Editor, I attempted to
objectively point up the fact that our student mooiea
are beina wronpy aUocated. I have reported that
while clubs have p-eat difficulties being funded /
while our newspapers are bein&amp; budJCted out of
emtance, while all of this &amp;PCS on - our SA ofticiala
have apin raised their stipends.
I have illl&amp;ltrated how a typical coordinator iD
the SA bas jumped in pey from ($500) five hunclred
clollan to a •tartlinl ($1400) fourteen hundred. I
have exPQIOd tbe fact that tbe SA bu allocated
($6200) six thousand-two hundred dollars for

"summer stipends" which is over and above their
oriJinal annual pay rates. And finally, l have
questioned the need for this additional pay raise of
($200) two hundred dollars. Parity is an ideal, but
the original intent of the move bas been distorted,
and the arced of the m.;ority or the exec. council
remains.
I am not interested in returuin&amp; the kind of
poisonoua invective to which I have been subjected.
Neither -will I deem to answer sucb abawditiea. My
motivation is clear : I want tbe student body to be
informed and aware of tbcae incquitica.
What, may I ask, is the motintioo of the
rilbtioua SA offic::Ws who bave not rejected or
forfeited thia newe~t pay hike?

Shelley

Tt~ylor

�~reas,re Island Part Ill

SUNY reorganization

approach:
Four central areas planned · .A novel
-

In order to improve
coordination between campu~ea,
and encouraae students to live at
home, the State University of
New York system it bein&amp;
~rp.llized into four areas. The
announcement came Tuesday by
State University Chancellor Ernest
L . Boyer, who conceded that
budaet cutbacks were another
reason for the chanp. "It's fair to
say that the present llnancial
. climate has forCed this," Boyer
said at a news conference. "When
resources are limited,.it calls for a
reappraisal."
Boyer also stated that another
important matter for the SUNY
system to consider ia whether or
not it can meet ita planned
enrollment arowth of S6,000 by
197S.

Morrisville; Aru Three :
Watertown, Canton, PotJdam,
Sumac Lab, Plattabllflb, Glena
Falls, Utica. 11ioo, Johnstown,
Troy, Scbenectedy, Albany,
Cobleskill, Athena; Area Four:
Stone Ridp, New Paltz, South
Fallsbura, Pouahkeepsie,
Midd letown, Suffern, Purchue,
V,alb.alla, New York City, Old
Westbury , Garden City,
Farminldale, Selden and Stony

pneral po.licy"'lllkina functions.
It will not, boweyer, ahift any of
the major powers to the university
preaidents.

quickie discharges

One or tbe npected results of
this plan will be the promise made

Editor's note: Th/8 18 the third In
a
serle1 of{ow artieIn on hetOin
by Boyer tbat, startina with next
year's freahmen claal, students in the NIIV)I. Thi1 ptUt ~ entltlm
enterina community colleaes will Personal Interviews.
be auaranteed a place in a senior
The daily routine around 209.8
coUeae in their area when they
apply for tranafer after two years . is the quintessence of monotony.
Brook.
"Until now, there bas been no Almost no one works, except for
These areas will be further such auarantee for transfers," said a few hours a day guard-duty
broken down into ei&amp;ht re&amp;iona, Boyer. "We're not tryina to keep inside the barracks, or stationed
eacb of which will have a council atudents at home, but one of the
outside in the guard house. The
composed of coUeae presidents. outcomes will be to encourage
This council will develop common students to stay within their typical day in 209.8 bOJins with
proJI'ams ranJina from shared re&amp;ion because of the ~U&amp;rantee." dinner, followed by more dope,
labs, b"braries and computen to Alona with this statement &amp;aes some acid maybe, then a brief
coordinatina admiuions. It is the fact that due to budaet period of unconsciousness after
hoped that the councils will be restrictiona, SUNY cancelled plans which it's time to do it up apin
able to orpnize within four to six to build another 30,000 bed before breakfast. The true junkies
COOI'dbuitiQa . a t
months, with the exception of spaces. This would, in fact, stay stoned pret1y much aU clay
Tbe four coordinatina areas, Area One, which Boy• hopes will
encouraae students to commute, and aU nisflt, and do nothina else
with their respec:tive schools are: develop a plan of action within
rather than live on campus.
but sleep, wash clothes and drive
Area One: Buffalo, Niapra Falls, the ne.xt month.
"This ian't another layered into San Francisc:o to score more
Fredonia, Jamestown, Brockport,
bureaucracy," Boyer said . smack. The others, who aren't
Rochester, Batavia, CanandaiJU8,
"Proximity does provide lots of heavy into heroin - or at least
Geneaeo, Comina, Alfred ; Area No power sbjft
Boyer said tbat the cbanp will opportunity for educational aren't really hooked on it yet Two: O.weJO, Syracuse, Auburn,
Groton, Ithaca , Cortland, help accomplish his philosophy of shariJia, and that's what we are spend most of the day passl.na
Oneonta , B!Qhamton, Delhi. restrictina the central staff to tolna to try to capitalize on."
hash pipes and talkinaabout going
borne. ()(:Qslonally, the more
active ones will ao over to the
gym and play basketball, or just
tum on all the hot showers and
take a "poor man 'a steam bath."
It's deadly boring.
Undesirable dilclwae desirable
Since the returning dopers
from Vietnam became alm011 too
numerous to deal with at Treasure
Island , the Twelfth Naval District
(of which Treasure Island Is the
center) bas instituted a program
that is unique in the Navy. AU
men awaiting BCD (Bad Conduct
Discharge) or Summary Court
Martials are eligible to opt for an
Undesirable Discharge and thus
circumvent the long, drawn-out
court martial. The program has
been so successful that it is now
difficult to get on the roster of
men willing to accept the UD.
Though figures are not available
to us as to the actual number of
men who have accepted or are
trying to get a UD, we were told
that the Ust "is long and getting
longer ." Many of the men we
interviewed said they would be
happy to take a UD and get out,
rather than wait around for the
legal machinery to offer them a
General Discharge , which is not an
Honorable, but ce rta inl y
pre[erable to the UD. They reaUy
don't care how the hell they get
out, just so they get out.
As the turnover of men in
209.8 is high , activities and moods

.

GUSTAV A. FRISCH. INC.
Jewlllw - Optict.n
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Univenlty Plaza)
BUFFALO. N.Y. 14226

-Compliments of a friend
\..,
GUSTAVGUSTAVOUSTAV
8 CENTS 8 CENTS I CENTS
366 NORTON 3&amp;6 NORTON

vary considerably from week to
week. We were told, for example,
that bad wo come a month earlier,
we'd have found . a barracks
literally full of heroin addicts. As
it was, only about 1S per cent of
the men were strung-out behind
bone. Possibly SO pet cent of
them used heroin, but only to
suf,pl~ent their regular diet of
weed, hash and acid. Even the
"pip'' chanse from month to
month, according to the men.
Currently, one of the assistant
masters-at-arms is himself a head,
and resulady buys and sells dope
id the banacks.

Cbaop from co.-native
Rumplestiltskin (anonymous)
is waitina for a General Discllarge,

dolnahis time in 209.8. He was an
"Air Force brat" before entering
the Navy and held very
conservative political attitudes. He
had nc:ver done any dope at all .
While attending school for
electronics at Treasure Island in
1968, he aot turned on to grus.
" There weren't many dopers
around then," he told us, "and if
anybody aot busted, they got Red
Une Brig and hard labor. Then e
Dishonorable . •• He shipped
overseas on the Carrier
Constellation late in 1968 and
didn't notice much dope, aside
from grass and bash, at that time.
But a year later, on a second to ur,
"Man, the shit was all over the
place. I was on coke (cocain)
then, and used to have to have it
sent to me by mail aboard the
ship. Because I used a needle to
do my coke, I got into all the
other needle freaks on the ship,
and they were doing smack . So, I
staned mixing my coke with
smack , and before I knew it, I had
a Jones (a habit). I iust tried to
stay as muddle-headed as possible.
I hated the fucking Navy, and so
did the other dopers. We used to
sabotage the fucking ship. We'd
short out all the sound·powered
phones on board. Once, when the
· President came aboard with aU his
~mergency
communication
equipment, we cut the hot-Une."
~cbedeticsvs.do~

Back in the states, he went
AWOL and wasn't discovered
until' two months later when he
was busted in San Francisco for
possession of grass and a rig. He
spent 17 days in city jail before
the Navy bothered to come and
get him, then was fined $200 and
received a four-month suspended
sentence by the Navy on Treasure
Island.
He recalls when he first aot to
Treasure Island : "We used to have
basketball game s. The
Psychedelics against the Downers.
And whenever we were given a job
to do, Wee clean up around the
barracb, we'd just find a s~d
freak and tum him on and Jet hlm
do it. The speed freaks would be
nmniog around working their
usa off, and the rest of us would
do smack, or whatever we were
into, and lie bade and watch."
Tom Sawyer, revisited.

P•rt IV: More
lntenWws

Pagt ten . The Spec1rwn • Monday, Octobw 4, 1971

Penon~~/

�~)

Doggie-Do
to escape the bemiJpberes of IJriY matter. That proof
Yes, VirFU&amp;, there Is more to the world than
meets your two eyes. There is also the world of the
third eye - the piYCNC center in the middle of your
forehead which, if con~y stimulated perceives far
more than you are currently aware of.
"'
Thought transference, clairvoyance and
psycho-kinesis (mind over matter) are, to an
ever-increasing nwnber of scientific researchers,
becoming scientific realities. Science fiction writers
who are surely the true prophets of the future, have
written extensively on telepathic communication
and ..leaving one's body... From what we know
today we must admit that science fantasy appears to
have become science fact.
This column, which will appear as a regular
weekly feature of The Spectrum, will attempt to
introduce you to the world of the third eye by
relating scientific experiments, the opinions of the
world's foremott researchers (u weU as my own) and
eyewitness accounts of p1ydtic phenomena. Abo to
be discussed ate topics related to the powen of the
mind such as hypnotism and the science of
cybernetics.
There are many· theories ooncemlng the
metapsychology of the mind. CerUin scientists and
psychologists believe pl)'chic phenomena can be
explained solely u a neurophysical reaction (i.e., the
transrnluioo of electrical-type waves produced by
the brain during periods of act{vity).
An analogy comes immediately to mind
between thoup transmission and radio·wave
transmission. In radio we have a carrier wave which
is modualted in one form or another. Riding along
with it, so to speak, is the voice material which we
desire to send to some distant point.
We k n ow , through the use of an
electroencepbaJograph, that the brain produces
electromagnetic waves of varying frequencies and
amplitudes - different types during different periods
of mental activity . Although we have so little
knowledge about the workings of the brain there is
no reason not to be bold theoreticians and postulate
that under certain condJUons, thoughts attach
themselves to the brainwaves, needing then only the
correct mechanism to decode them.
If you have followed the analogy you are aware
that I have no t yet proved that brain waves are able

foUows.
Numerous experiment$ have been done with
pW\ts concemina their response to external mental
stimuli. Equipment similar to lie detecton has been
attached to plants to make the measurements after
setting the device at a neutral levd which takes into
account the usual electro-chemical activity of the
plant. Researchen found that when a human subject
threatened a plant by way of his thouahts (i.e., ...
am going to cut otT your leav01s") the plant showed a
profound electro-chemical response.
I point this out not to make you think that
plants may be more human t han we imagine (who
would be so pretentious as to question the canons of
science), but to draw from the1experiment the proof
necessary for my theory.
Regardless of our classification of plant as ••not
animal' '. we must agree that the plant did respond to
the thoughts of the human su~1ject. In order for it to
respond, it was first necessury for the plant to
receive the thoughts. ls it pc:mlble that the plant
received the thought so readily because it dJd not
have the barrier of repressior11 which most humans
have? And is it also ~ble ithat those humans we
term "psyc:bic" are that wa.Y because they have
learned to relax the barrier? The questions are
rhetorical.
The volume of Uterature o,f para-psychology and
related subjects is oppressive. It grows daily. There
are scientific worb oo the l'ubject. Semi-scientific
and religious works.
In a group of 50 sclentlsta: there would certaJnly
be at least a dozen dJfferent theories on
para-psychology. And each of the scientists is certain
to have written at least one book treating his
theories as facts and to havet published numerous
monographs presenting his gue1~s as theories.
ReUgious writers are ind~~d the most proUfic.
They are fanatics for the aft,er-life and while they
could possibly build a case for their theories, they
cloud their works with inconc:eivable concepts such
as God and Christ.
Unfortunately there is no absolute . No one can
say what is correct and what is not. But this
seemJngty irrational oontradictting conglo meration o f
literature shall form the material from wh.ich we
shall sculpt our own mode~ of rationality. Stay
tuned.
Next weelc: Hypnosis.

Editor'l note: 17le Nortn 1/tlU 1t11{f hu req&amp;u6te4 the reprint of thU
poem beCIIJUe of ill rele w'"« to the doK lit114tlon in Norton 1/tiU.
- Copyrt;lt 1971 by Mad

It's true, u we•ve beard wile men say,
That every dot must have his day,
ln cities, thoqb, each day we rue
How many dop have bad their do.
The streell are spattered all throuab town
With beape beip and boxer brown;
lbouah litter we're tauabt not to strew,
Still every doa's allowed his do.
The tree-tined parlcl live off a scent
Of, mainly, canine excrement,
Which clinp to him wh9 wean the sboe
That steps where dop have had their do.
ln playgrounds where the toddlers crawl,
And ball fields where boys bat the ball,
Too often what will spoil tbe view
Are spots where Spot has stopped to do.
Our cities will soon 10 to seed
With droppinp from the pedigreed,
From cocker, collie, Kerry blue,
And other curs who can and do.

It's not man's bm friend who'a at faul"No, it's his master we tnust halt;
Our nei&amp;hbor who expects us to
Love him and love his dogio-do.
The city'a for the birds unless
We clear its grounds o f hounds that mess,
And curb, instead , pet-owners who
Care little where their dogs make do.
Let's have them , Wee JOod parents, toil
At cleaning up their puppy's soU,
Removing every tell-tale clue,
Or we'll go to the dop with do.

'Butler' auditions

..
I

I•

IF
YOU WANT
A HOME AWAY FROM HOME
ANACONE'S IS IT!

We

;

Pool table
JukeBox
Color T .V.

sell
Draught
Beer or A le
By Gloss
or Pitcher
Mixed
Drinks

Anacones Inn

Famous
for our

Roost Beef
on Week
Plus

3178 Bailey Ave.

i
:

Audltlona are belna held for Joe Orton's WilDt
the Butler SDw tomorrow and Wedneaday ftom
7- 10 p.m. in Room 346 Norton Hall.
Orton's play is a lick. and arialY eomedy whieb
dentes the improbable to the norm and tuma the
bizarre into the everyday. The play needs Yer&amp;atDe
and uny people. ff you are interelted, eome to the
audition. No adnnce preparation is necessary.

8

.......... .. .........
E AMDAsc R A Me
CANDLE MAKING
BLACK LIGHT SUPPLIES
Bead Studio and Craft Boutique
2780 Sheridan Drive
( - Nl...,. Falls Blvd.l

837-2668

1.-~·~!!!!~·~·~!!!!~·~•!!!!!!~•!•!!!!!!~·~·~~~~·r

GIVE A DAMN.

USE A OONDOM.

(next to G~rden of Sweets}

UUAB MUSIC COMMITI~E* AND WPHD - FM
pr~nt in concert

CLARK GYM
OCTOBER 10,.1171
The Flying Burrito Bros.

1:00 lftd 11 :30 , •• .

Available at·
Tickets: t:t:B. ~!It State Students,
Grants &amp; cavages
$2.00 in advance
(in the University Plaza)
$3.00 day of ~:o~
also The Guilded Palace of Sin &amp; Burrito Deluxe
Others $4.50, .$3.50 '" advance
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT NORTON &amp; STATE TICKET OFFICES
•A DiYWae ol S..._.l,lac..

•

..
Monday, Octoblr 4, 1971 . The Spectrum . Pa9t tleNn

�Our Weekly Reader
/

~ Blood

Ortln,u by John Hawkes (New Directions,

The narrator of Tlte Blbod Orrmge$ begins his tale by
perceiving himself as part of a ••tapestry of love" and
proceeds to narrate in the form of tapestry - the noveJ is
presented in short sections, o ut of chronological sequence,
which, presumably, each add to the significance of aU
preceeding and none of which acquire full meaning until
all are presented. And yet, despite my great enthusiasm for
the writer and my abstract enthusiasm for the method, (at
last I must say it) I have little praise for The Blood

$6.95)
I will teU you in a few words who Hawkes is: the
most artistic of American novelists, expert at transforming

circumstance to pomp, process to pageantry. In a Hawkes
novel, the simplest events tend to sweU, bulge, grow Uke
slow tumors, at first unnoticed, but finally Unforgettable
and unavoidable loci on the relatively smooth surface o f
literature, defining a new, a "second skin."
When I think of Hawkes, I usually Uke to oontrast
him with Burroughs, the way we used to contrast the
Yankees with the Dodgers, or (keeping It in tl!e family)
Joyce with Beckett. If Burroughs amazes us by cutting,
slashing, rearranging - brutally. Hawkes amazes us by
developing, elaborating, exploring - sensuously. Both
methods lead to a dazzling but peculiar sort of novel, a
novel of mood and description, but of very little
movement. With both of these novelists, we tend to forget
the plot almost immediately, and to remember scenes,
moments, pluases; both noveUsls write novels that are akin
to poetry, an a temporal literature.
Tapestry is the perfect motif for a novel written by a
changeling poet - events coinciding and attaining
significance as a result, only, of the events geographically
near to them. Williams used tapestry as the motif for his
lengthy Patef'S()n; perhaps tapest ry could be said to be a
guiding principle in some of the more pictorial works of
Barthelme, as could verbal tapestry in some of the more
"cu~ up" works of Burroughs. Who would think that
Hawkes would not be particularly comfortable when
applying his special technJque within such a sympathetic

Oranges.

.. ,

Tapestry, an cxeelfent metaphor within the novel,
does not serve weU as a fictional structure. On the one
h and, it serves to obfuscate the fact that t here-is very little
development within the novel, and thus our pique is
increased when , finishing the book, we have seen through
the ruse. On the other hand, as we read, each event,
particularly those near the end of the book, have had too
much told about them through that which we 'have aiready
read - their cutting edge is duUed. Scenes become blunt,
and they were meant to be sharp.
Would that The Blood Oranges could be saved by
simple reorganization. It cannot. Set in ntyria, where
music is the food of love, there is much eating and little
digestion. When Hawkes is at his best, all sensation and all
thought becomes rooted in objects, and objects prove to
be endurable repositories for ideas. Here, he strives for the
opposite effect - for a tapestry to be love, for religious about a "sex-cinger... When reading such writers we can
relics to be memory, for a chastity belt to be jealousy, for expect a book about "the flesh of our Uves," not about
singing to be sex. Objects are conveniently left sitting music; about lo ve, not about a tapestry. The narrator
besjde ideas, and we carry away the object, a cheap simple describes himself as "an artist at blowing smoke rings.''
way of having the meaning, but missing the ~rience.
'From John Hawkes, we expect fire .
I am being strict. But when we have a writer who can
- Elliot Krieger
write of sex, we should not be content to Jet him write

John Hawkes

~~-------------

-

~

Bread and Puppet theater

Masks, music and movements
The UUAB Dramatic Arts and Cultural Affairs
Committee will present Peter Schumann's Bread and
Puppet Theater Oct. 1 at 3 p.m. in the fountain area.

PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS
A FlM BY

lEWIS GILBERT

"friends"

--

... .. ~--~ . . - .
~_!otlr
llWSCJ.EfRT
JfO&lt;~tWRS l.tw5WIRT

-

ElJON.. JaiN ... BEft.JIE TAUPIN ls.:::::-=1

--

GEOFFREY HELMAN TECHNICOLOR• A"PARAMOUNT PICTURE

IRI-..::..;;::'ed
41»

STARTS

• I

WEDNESDAY

children, and at the same time profound and
fascinating to adults.
The Bread and Puppet Theater's language is not
one
of
words, but one of emotions. 'Words are sparse.
The Bread and Puppet Theater, in existence for
over ten years, is widely regarded as one of the most Everything done in their work conveys an
innovative and creative theater groups in the world . emotionality, an intense humannesS. Their point is
Their use of life-size puppets and cloaked, masked driven 1n, not by witty and abstract rhetoric, but by
actors ; their disregard for theatrical rhetoric and strangely evocative masks, movements and music.
language ; their appeal to the audience on a Their goal is humanity and their technique is
subconscio us, subliminal level ; all this t.akes this distwbing. One ean expect to be affected by such a
troupe out of the bounds of conventional theater performance to no small degree.
Peter Schumann, the prime moving force of the
and sets them down in the street.
Bread and Puppet Theater, commenting upon the
uses and goals of his troupe, has written, "What is
Intensity
the purpose of a puppet show? To make the world
Their approach has been called ritualistic and plain, I guess, to speak simple language that
religious. Intensely involved in social and political everybody can understand. To seize the listener, to
affairs, one would call them humanistic rather than persuade him to the new world . To spark the
political. Dealing with age-old ideas and concepts movement of the listener ... We demand a
and conflicts o f human existence, t ...ey are at once
civilization that is human, where the suffering of the
timeless and current. Their works are simple and individual is embraced by the common care. The
beautiful so that they are greatly appealing to world has to be demonstrated anew."

..

..

SpECTI\UM:

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••

Page twelve The Spectrum . Moncby, October 4, 1971

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·~

..

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1

classifieds realfy ·Work
••

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••

••

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••

1
!

�~
&gt;..,

Sports fiends

Golf Bulls take second

-lnti-amurals going smoothly
byMi~Zweig

Spectrum Staff Writer

Have you ever seen a hungry football team go
unfed? It is quite a spectacle. At the mere sight of
• g~tdiron they begin to salivate . These
semi-intellectual, pseudo jocks tum into savages.
They come to play ball. It's all right though; the
team they' re ab out to play is just as psyched.
However, what happens, perish the thought, if
tho opposition fails to show up? Victory, by (excuse
the term) forfeit, is no victory at all . How can these
animals relieve their tensions and frustrations? They
dejectedly return home, onJy to bang their heads
against the walls. This cannot possibly deri'(e the
same gratification as banging one's head against
somebody else's head.
Please, if you are signed up for any int ramural
program, especially football, make sure you are
there. If for some reason you can't make it, or
you're afraid to sh ow up, call the gym . No one
particularly cares for holey walls, or for that matter,
lumpy heads.
'
The volleyball fiends were at it again last
Tuesday evening. The co-ed mixer brough 100
students together in some very friendly competition.
The winners were awarded goblets by the gym.
1n general, intramurals are running very
smoothly. Football divisional leaders will be listed
next week. Tennis singles are already into the
semi-finals, and doubles are. Wlde way. Soccer seems
to be scoring big as 16 teams have been entered.
There will also be tryouts soon for th club bowling
team. All interested should call Coach Bashnagel
(extension 2935) or see Bud Manning at Norton
Hall. It is not too late to sign up for women's
bowling intramurals. Call Coach Poland at 2941.
Intramural hoops
Attention aJI leapers, gunners, and wizards.
Entries for basketball intramurals can now be picked
up at the gym. There is no truth to the rumor that
Earl "the Pearl" Monroe has jumped from the NBA
to play in iniramurals in ~uffaJo. However, if
anything else of interest that is not t rue pops up,
please give me a call.
Intramural golf will begin next week. Also lined
up for the near future is a Bicycle Grand Prix. Any

form of bi:ke may be entered. A specific number of
laps will be designated for the course. Pit stops (and
I don't mean as in deodorant application) will have
to be made.
Gymnastics Coach Caler will be sUpervising the

-Santos

Vo lleyball is one of the
many activities open to
11 ;}'UN
students through the
University's intramural
program.
apparatus room Tuesday evening, 7:30- 10 for
women, and Thursday evening, 7:30- 10 for men.
This is an excellent opportunity for some fine
individual instruction. Do~t't miss It.
Ice skating may be available this year, courtesy
of Clark Cym. A Turkey Trot is also planned for
November. The Roller Hockey Club has some fine
prospects emerging. The calibre of play has
heightened considerably. Now If we onJy has some
fan support on Saturday mornings, at Capen parking
lot. It feels good to yell SCORE!! It really does .

Vol''e··.Anll fiun

SA Duplicating Center
Room 2 25 Norton
Open 9a.m.- 5 p.m.

STUDENT RATES

in.Brook Lea tourney
Last Friday, the Bulls' varsity
golf team took its undefeated
(12--{)) record to Rochester Tech
to compete in the Brook Lea
tourney, along with 21 other
schools. Strong teams, such as
Syracuse and Colgate, neither of
which Buffalo had met previously
this season, figured to be the
teams to beat. However, Syracuse
finished fourth, ·and Colgate did
not even finish among the top five
teams.

the Bulls' seoond of the season.
Last week at Gannon College in
Erie, Pa., the Blue and Gold
finished first in the IS-team
tri-state tournament. In edging
out runner-up Indiana University
of Pennsylvania, the Bulls shot a
six-man total of 47S; seven
strokes in · front of Indiana.
B u ffal Q. also bo&lt;tsted the ~
individual winner in the tri-state
tournament in· the person of
senior Steve Ahlbin who shot a
fine 75. The-other Blue and Gold
Rather, the lQcal Canisius
scorers were Dolmage (79), Lanz
College Golden Griffins shot an
(79), Mohan. (80), Chuck Prorok
excellent four-man total of 3 18 to
(80) and Marty Fink (82).
edge the second place Bulls by a
mere five st rokes. Ironically, the
Within the tri-state tournament
Bulls had edged the Griffins twice the Bulls were also pitted in a dual
earlier this season in dual meets. meet against J o hn CarrolL.
In fact the Bulls and Griffins meet Geneseo and Gannon . The defeat
again ·this afternoon on th$l of these three opponents put the
Buffalo h ome course at Audobon. Buffalo record at 11--{). Then, the
Buffalo's leading Brook Lea next day the Bulls defeated
scorers were John Lanz (78), Jim Geneseo to run the string to
Mohan (79), Steve Ahlbin (8 1) 12- 0 . Now the Bulls need only
and Dale Dolmage (85). Dolmage, beat Canisius this afternoon and
who was the most accurate of Fredonia Oct. 16 to finish an
· Buffalo's shooters prior to the undefeated dual meet season.
tourney , had a slightly
STUD~ DISCOUNf
disappointing round. However,
on
this afternoon Dolmage figures to
ALL-redecorating needs,
come back strong on his home
art supplies, picture framing
Audobon course.
D.M. RECH PAINT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.
The Brook Lea tourney was

RECORD SALE

OHN LENNON'S
New
Ibum
Reg. list

•,t

PHOTOSTATING
MIMEO
' DITTOS
MIMEOS
STENCILS MADE

BRING IN AN ORIGINAL AND WE CAN MAKE AS
MANY COPIES AS YOU WANT.

-

NOW
ONLY$3 24

FOR 1 WEEK

9/29 - 10/5
Wed. t o Tues.

Grants
UNIVERSITY
PLAZA
THE
Monday, October 4, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteeD

�Promising season

Soccer team ready to play
If variety II the aplce of life, the Bulla'
innauauraJ club socc:er team is a p.a:ranteed succe~~
in itJ fint aeuon. Seftnteen Americans and nine
foreipera combine to form the roster in the club's
initial season.
An important put of any soccer team's success
il its ability to prevent the opposition from scorina
soals. A JOOd JOI)keeper is thereby neceuary, and
Coach Bert Jacobaen tbinla that be bas found the
rlpt man in Tabm Sade&amp;hi. Sad~i bas been away
from the pme for a few years since comina to the
U.S. from Tehran, but has shown excellent potential
in practice thus far. Sadeahi's main weakness ii on
low :shota, but Coach Jacobsen expects him to be in
top form for the season's opener tomorrow at
Geneseo State.
Alona with the aoallteeper, the fullbacks are the
key to any soccer team'• defeDJe. Additionally, the
fullbacks have the responlibllity of initiJtina the
offense from their position In front of the aoalie.
One of the lcey players mannin1 the crucial fullback
poeition will be Chip Gella&amp;har, an ex-varsity
basketball player for the BuJIJ. Coach Jacobsen sees
peat promise in Gellaabar and commented: "He
aeeJDJ to improve every day. With a little more
experience he ean be the type of steady player th1t
we need." At the other fullback slot Gordon
McKinnon baa impressed with his bard-noted,
a~raaive style of play.

..

...

recent play, Coacb JacobMD remarked : "One
sbowed potential all aloDJ, but just badn't realized
it. I thiDk that be bal finally sbown wbat we
expected." 1be bMiJ for Jacobten's optimism came

r

Bert Jacobsen
when Afraslabi booted home four &amp;oals in the last
intra-squad scrimmaae.
All in all, the Bulls have a youna squad which
fiaures to improve with experience. It is hoped that
the Bulls wUJ be ready when they return home to
Buffalo for their Oct. 13 opener apinst Fredonia on
campus. A successful eipt-pme season would be a
major step towards varsity status in 1972.

CHALLENGE.

THE

by Howie Fliwl
AllbtMI Spot11 Edltcw

Currently, on die Clark Field
· diamond there resides a team
whic:b bas earned the diJtinction
u one of the top squads in the
North . This powerhouse, a
relatively new term 'to Buffalo
baseball, burst into national
prominence through last year's
cin&amp;reUa performance. It was
only laat spring that Coach Bill
Monkar_sh took a highly
iuoexperienced team 1J14 led them
to a 20-10 season alht1Buffalo's
fint University Divis.ion District II
Tournament at Princeton. This
latter feat, an accomplishment
that for many years had escaped
Western New York clubs, thrusted
Buffalo into the eUte of NCAA
teams.

Hopeful offeDit
The halfback in soccer must run the offense .
The BuJIJ baye several top candidates at halfback
includina Mark WilliJ, who baa bustled his way onto
the startina lineup. The other Buffalo halfbacks will
be Bob Hayee (no relation to the Cowboy receiver),
the Bulla best defense player, and Jim Leinert at
center halfback. Accordina to Coach Jacobsen,
''Leinert seems to always be in the riaht place at the
riaht time."
A soccer team can have a aood defense .Jlnd a
hustlina offense, but it still needs players to put the
ball in the opposition's net. For the Bulls, an all
foreip (ront line led by Alu Torimlro will attempt
to put Buffalo on the scoTeboard. Torimlro bas
shown excellent touch so far, as has Niaeria's
· Adedoyin Kuti, wbo'U start at center forward.
Flanltina Kuti will be ~oda Oaensi (Niaeria) and
Dave Afrui.abl (Inn). Commentin&amp; on Afruiabi's

· Baseball Bulls start
a new fall.schedule
ataff one of the stronsest
departments of the team.
Rounding out the star veteram
are catcher Jim Scime, a solid
.300 hitter , seasoned Jim
Lalayanis, clutch-hittins Tom
Matikosh, the steady Orv Cott and
S- S outfielder Dennis Murphy.
Among the missing will .,. third
baseman Don Jok, whose prooess
to Injuries and pubUclty possibly
caused him to be overlooked in
the professional draft : "DoUar
Bill" Balfoort, the talkative
pinochle champ whose mound
skills set many Buffalo records
(including a regular season 0.99
ERA); Tim Meterko, who now as
a grad student here beginJ a new
role as spectator, and
Bob Prorok, the tall lanky reliever
who failed to aUow a hit or run in
16 inninp of relief. These playen
were the nucleus of that
spectacular 1970 squad which
could have reached the CoUeae
World Series in Omaha had their
bats not been silenced down in
Princeton.

The Bulls have come a long
way since Jim PeeUe fielded
Buffalo's fi.Bt team in 1948.
Through Bill Monk.anh who took
over the helm in 1968, the baseball
Bulls have extended their
schedules, added an annual
southern tour, and initiated a new
fall schedule - aU resulting in a Solid hudina
better brand of bueball apinst
However this year promises to
hiJher calibre teams.
be even better. The pitching staff
is solid, the infield even better.
The outfield as usual, remains
FaD tuoeap
This season Coach Monka.rsh undecided, however Coach
has 1S lettermen returning, a Monkarsh has a host of capable
factor which many agree should fielden in the likes of Gary
boost the BulJs to even greater Castune, Joe Piscotty_ and AJ
hdghta. In addition the fall season Delman. Delman wiD try to shake
in Its role as a tuneup for the off a one year layoff and return to
more prestigious spring season has the form that enabled him to lead
spotlighted several new bright the fre~ team in hitting two
years ago. Also among the
prospects.
newcomers are a trio of
Leading the list of returning sophomores, Mike Deluca, Leon
~
veterans is Rick Albert, by far
Dinardo and Gary Montour, who
Buffalo's strongest All-American
have proven their infield abilities
candidate. The slick fielding
and should provide strong depth
senior shortstop, led the team
in that department.
with a .418 B.A. and was named
to the Distric 11 All-Star Team . He
This year's roster is indeed
will undoubtedly be closely quite promising and has kept
observed by several pro scouts as Coach Monk arsh smili_n g
will star hurler Gary Odachowskl. throughout. The team's continued
The hard throwing righty, success is a tribute to the Buffalo
hampered most of last season with athletic department and would
a sore arm, along with left ace have made a proud man out of
Mike Cahill makes the plti tting former Coach Jim PeeUe.

WBKW •nd Belkin Produdiotta present:

In brewing Bud •, our choice
is to go all the way.
We hope beer matte111
enough to you that you too
will go all the way .••
with Budweiser.

-,

WHEN'QJW
I

Budweiser.
~SAD

rr ALLI

AMIIUSU·IUSOI. IK • ST. LOUIS

Pagt f~ . The Spectnun • Monday, Octoblr 4~ 1971

G.R AND
FUNK
BAILROAD
Buff·alo Memorial Auditorium
Friday,· Oc·;·. 8, at 8:30 P.M.
All S••t• R•••rv•d: Froat Tloor, Golda aad Re4a . II.SO
R•ar Tloor aad Blu•• . . IS .SO Gr•ya u4 Oraa••• . . I4.SO
Tldleta -

.............................................

......................... .,..... OMee, .............

~
.....
........ c.-... T...... OHtee; ...., a ..,.. .......,..,~

�I LAlli Pill

fORIALE
1964 BUICK Rlvara,)'taw tares, brak•,
starter. Entin• o-haulad July. 8550.
674·9565.
1963 KARMAN GHIA fOI' pwts; n dual 12l!t W/S~rac:k artrldga.
snarw•d , _ . _, INitChed l)llr
Dynaco A-26 speakers, W..llngton
si)Nkarll Unlvwstty spaakant Ol•n
racalv«l En9111t stereo amplifier;
MultlpleiC adaptwlt ThONns turntable,
stove. 1133·7270 before 3:30 a.m., after
9:30p.m.
1969 OPEL 4...,.ed, snow tlr•, Oood
condition . Must••· 137,.603.
1967 VW Squareback eraat
dependable car, 8700. 111·3400 days.
1962 OL.OSMOBILE, 65,000 miles,
good mac:nanlcal condition, automatiC
transmlulont p o - lt..,lno, brak•;
mounted snows Included. GrNt
tr•ns portatlon . S250 fMIIOtlable.
837· 1617 or 831-4113 ask for Mickey.
1963 FORO Country Squire, •-"catlant,
t300 or best offer. '63 Ford FalCon
W•gon , $100, good conditiOn.
886·8178 anytime. Ask for Zora.
1965 v .w. Camper, .-10 angina
w/15,000 mil•. 6 tlr•, stereo, arpets,
paneling. t850 or trade for 1K7 Of'
newar bUg W/WO enttiM. 634-7185.
1964 CHEVROLET, 6-cyl., automatic.
Excellent running condition, S200.
Ask for Bill.
REFRIGERATORS,

I NE£D .... . , _ Blllk Course. P l -

stovu

and

WMhers. R~Ondltloned, delllleted and
Da.G AppllanceJ, 844
SycamOI'e, TX4-3183.
t~Mranteed.

SUEDE vest frln. . to kn• S7.50, G.E.
- h e r •60, Air FOI'c:a coat, midi, t5 .
Oraftlnt Mt, n - S10. 3 p i - IUII!III...
Sl5. 876·2852.

"1' 833-9440.
haadphonu,
1138·10U.

gar.

mMk.

CHEAP.

MUSTANG 1968 Fmbaek, V ..
automatic, Af~·FM radio. Snowtlr•.
Exc:allant condition. A ftar 5,
1132·2899.
1966 MUSTA,N G , 11-cyllnder, sporty_
red, new a 1utomatle transmission,
anoint In •~c:allant condition, new battery, 8550. 838-4319.

SKJIS HEAD - standlll'dl. E~ecallent
condition. Must sell. Contact VIc, 569
Ntaoara St.

'65 CORVAin Conv. 4-spead, .150.
Also '62 C~tv. Baf·Air, well kept,

U5mm VIVITAR t~ephoto Nlkon
mount like n -, S45 Of any
rNSOnable offer. 834-0875 after 5 :30.

!WANTED

BUSTING your ball Joints? S .
I ndependant Fortlll" Car Service,
839· 1850.
GIBSON Clallfcal Guitar. Originally
8200, best offer. Call Sharon
877·3129. Leave nama and phone.
1964 RAMBLER, n - transmtuton ,
exnaust system, drive It to believe lt.
837-4222. c n ..p .
VOLKSWAGEN, 1966 Bus ,
9-PI•an.-r, dafUKI, Ill Wln4ows. RNI
niCe.- 8690. Evenln91 or S1t. and
Sunday. 634-3032,.
UPRIGHT Pllno In fair condition only needs good tunlno. PriCe
nagotllbla. VIvian 876·3258 after 10
p.m .
DESK, boOkcase. Hagstrom solid-bOdy
tultar, two-pi- lugoaee, sn~rpe stereo

ct'I•P· 838·2~19.

WE NEED a bed! Twin sl&amp;e
prefarrabla. If you nave on• for sale or
know of one, call Marty at 837·2694.
EXPER IENCED people to work IBM
composing ac1u1pmant, pasta-up or
pt1oto-typolft11119. PINM contact Jim at
131·4113 01r coma up to The
Spectrum, Roc1m 355 Norton.
PART·TIME supervisor for Buffalo
tasnage Jawlsl~ Youtn Pr09"am. BA.
Group work experlence/ MSW
c andidate preferable . Call
315-446·9379 or 315...,.6-4985 for
lntervl-.
BASS euttar player for soft rock group.
Must nave add.ttlonal a flat tn1trumant
and/or vocal capabilities. Call Rick,
895.0330.
LEAD linger for thr•..Piaca rock
group. H1ve g iU, need singer.
836·5381.

PLEASE nota the deadline for
Backpae• Is noon, Monday for
WadMidaY t Wed. f« Frt,, Frt, for
Mon. The deedllnas wMI be mat.

MARRIED students to tnlra lar. .
gar•t• apartment with couple
co-operatJYely, 7 mlns. walk fl'om
Dlafandorl. Unfurnllfted, t125/mo.
InclUding utllltl•. can 831-20911 or
coma to 174¥1 LeBrun avanlnt~.
I

FEMALE wanted to Share room .
Apartment at 205 Woorh- off Hartel.
146.73 month. Coma between 4 and 5
p.m.
-------------MALE roommate wanted till Jan. 850
montn. FurniShed. Elmwood-Bryant
arN. 881·1131, t5 r-ard anyone
ftndln9 roommate.
FEMALE roommatatown room, 160
Including utllltleJ. East o.twan. Call
Kathy 894·7197 attar 8 p .m . OT Of' PT
maJors "preferred.''

NEED a brother. Ruth PI Lambda Tau • .
Tabla In Parker Hllll, 11 a.m.-1 p..m.
GTU .,...ents Ill first lflde lecture af
the yew, ..,_ by Or. Chart• EDart,
on the Landlc:apea and ~pia of tna
Upper Amazon Balin on Wad., Oct. 6,
7 : 30 p.m., Ac:n..on 5. A ...,_al
,.,_.,ng will follow, A.'l wetcome.
WOMAN wanted for; one man, oM
night, EICc:ellent pay. GrNt be~MftU.
Contact s~rum sox 90.
DEAREST Bumper Cropp, my little
boy, I'm going to .-t you. I'm a
ttubborn s.o.a. Je l'alma etas-wous ..
mleriP Je sull Ia tlenna. Vour c::harrv.

DEMOLAYS, Santor DeMolays, Young
Master Masons gat together oct. lOth
• for more Information, all o.va - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 693·1749 or Paul - 632,.083.
SINGL.E INIIt student, 28, n~ room
within walklll9 distance of ampus. IRA COHEN and Connolly have been
snare expan-. Call Henry 837~029. · memberS of s.u.N.Y.B. for ~n~~ny
years. Naltner can be discredited (or
RIDE BOARD
framed) fOI' Inability to work with
pr...,t administration. Have •Ofhanf
RIDE wanted to Boston, Oct. 7/8. Will StlgfNI '
Share expenMS. Call Patti 831·2767.
.

APARTMENTS WANTED

MISCELLANEOUS

APARTMENT FOR RENT
ROOMS AVAILABLE for males,
2-mlnute wllk from campus. 875 per
montn. 834·5312.

PERSONAL
BEAUTIFUL nandmadegold and sliver
1-elry - Wadding rlnos - at sensible
prlc•. J .P . Tne Goldweavar, 655
ElmWOOd at Farry St,.t, 881·3400,

TENNIS and squallh racquets rastrung.
cna1p prices. WOI'k guerantaed.
EQuipment sold. Call Alan at
837·1617.
BUG burnt outf Volkswaoan Repair
Coll~tlva now In operation. Tuna-ups
tnru ~auls. Call Shelly 132-$290.
THREE of t he ugliest kittens In tha
world will go to SPCA unl- you
lntentene NOW. 1194-4409 eveni'T.
TYPING done. 833..236, Will plc:k up
work.

SCHUSSMEISlrERS SKI ·cLUB

BEGINNING violin l•sonsl Also
Instruction In music theory. Mullc
maJor needs pupils. Call 873·3400.
ANVONE who nu a~epefAtnce working
IBM Composing Equipment, Pastt-4.1P
materials or I Pnoto·Typosltor, plaiN
contact J im at The Spectru m office or
all 831-4113.

MEMBERSHIPS NOW BEING TAKEN - ROOM 318 NORTON HALL
Grads, MFC, Faculty, Staff

Undergraduates

8

20.00

RESUME uslstanc:a: Make your Ullts
work In getting an lntervi - /Jo b .
Gu~ranteed : Call T om 881-3428.

* szs.oo

CHEMISTR Y tutor. S• me before It's
too leta. Marty. 693·3640. LNVI
massage. No Pnyslc:al c nemlstrv.
C&amp; H JONES Profaulonal Typing
S ervice computerized IBM
eQuipment plus our eKparlanca give
belt poulble presentatio ns of
dlssartatloM, tn•ts, term papers,
rasumiiS 1nd employment aoPIIc:atlon
le tters. Located between two
c1mpuses. Very rNsonable. Call
837-65511.

1. Free skiing and free: transportation at Kissing Bridge:
MON- TUES - WED, nights.
2. Discount passes for Kissing Bridge and Ski Wing.

TYPING d o ne In my nome. 833·1597.

*
*

TYPING, experienced, near U.B., S..40
par page. 834·3370. Fast Mn!lce.

LESSONS :
A worthwhile program is offered for $26.00 for 10 one-hour lessons given
on the nights the club has its free skiing. It is recommended that anyone
who wants to learn to ski or innprove their skiing, take advantage of this
lesson program.

QUICK, efficient typing done - $ .40
per page. IBM Selactrlc 8 38--4408.

VIVIAN Cl ayton
Selent 837·2718.

Also, Schussmeisters Ski Club sponsors weekend trips to Vermont during January,
February and March and a ski flight to Europe during Christmas vacation.
DON'T RO'T THIS WINTER

.10• SCHUSSIIIIfn•s -·CLUB

please call Clfol

ROCK groups Wlntad. StNdY work,
cnotca o f nights. Tne Club Restaurant,
Nlagafl Falls. contact Ed Lucas,
282..602.
I NEED 1 rlda to HIFPUf' Oct. 8 or 9.
PlUM call 833·9440.
BEDROOM, dinette, kitchen , living
room furniture. Reasonable. 873 ..230,
885·5923.
FLATTOP - Classic guitars. N- used . Martin, G ibson, Guild , Gurian, ,
etc:. Musicians prices. String Sh oppe,
524 Ont~rl o. 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. dally.
Seturdav, n oon-5 p .m. 874~120.

MAKE SNOW, NOT WAR!
~IL.."'~Mt;.LI

SALE CONTINUED!

ec~ord

Runner

25"--.---_:

.---cLASSICAL PRICE RED IU CED---. .----111!11-•"TOP

Ullist

167

831·2322

5.98 List

,•347

4.11 List

287

5.11 list

OON ''T BE CONFUSED
... BY LAST MINUTE PANIC
THE CHANCE WAS THERE

3 47

137·2322

Next to Main S't.
Monday, October 4, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�Announcements
The Bruilian Club will meet tomorrow at 8
p.m. in Room 344 Norton. All members are
requested to attend.

J

The UB Outi111 Club will hold its first meeting
tomorrow in Room 231 Norton. All interested in
camplnc, rock climbing and skiing are urpd to
attend. Call Haria Plumley at 835-2642 for more
information.

The student film-c:lub will meet today at 1 p.m.
in Room 234 Norton to elect a representative for the
Student Assembly and to discuss the state of the
club.
All underp-aduate ~ts interested in
tutori,. beginning college students for academic
credit (DUS 4991ndependent Study) should contact
the Tutorial Lab. 168 Townsend Basement for
application forms; 831-5366. Tutors are especially
needed in Accounting 203, 301, Anatomy 113,
Anthropology 105, Applit&lt;f Mechanics 205,
Biochemistry 401, Chemistry 101, 102, 201, 123,
Construction Design 212, Electronics 403, HistoiOIY
305,. Law 201, Phonetics 315, Physics 107, 108,
113, 114 and PhysioiOI)' 201, 420. For more
information caJI831·5366.

Undertraduate Medical Society is
that pre.fMdlcal and pr«&lt;ental peer
..oup .tmement is beinl off«ed Mo~y-Fricby,
9-3:30 p.m. in Room '346 Norton. A library of
cataJop.les, )Mmphlets and inform.Jtion about the
pre-professional and professional years is available in

The U8 Oblervatory announces observing ni.,_t
which is~ dear Friday ewnina from 8-12 p.m.
in Hoc:hstetter Hall. Objects to be viewed will
include: jupiter, Mars, the full moon and the
Andromeda Galaxy.

the off~ee.

The U~ate Re.an:h t.:ouncil will hold a
meeting today in Room 232 Norton at 3 p.m.
Representatives from Engineering ,and Education
faculties are still needed.

The

announdnc

Orpnic livint, a new club for those interested
in body ecology, nutrition, organic survival and
livina off the land, will hold an organizational
meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Room 334, Norton.

Josh McDowell, a traveling representative for
Campus Crusade for Christ, will speak tomorrow at
noon in the courtyard behind Norton (Haas lounge,
if rain) on ''Sick of Hypocrisy." At 8 p.m. he'll
present a heavy rap on "The Midnight of History" in
Haas lounge.

Student Assoc:iatlon needs an assistant treasurer.
If you are Interested and decticated, please call Dave
Barmak at 831-5507.
Sen. jacob K. Javits will not be speaking today
in the Fillmore Room as originally scheduled. This
lecture has been changed to November.

The Student T~ter Guild will hold an acting
workshop ror all members and their friends
tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in Room 330 Norton. Come
ready to roll.
A special lec:ture on Christian Science, "How to
Relate to Our World," will be given tomorrow at 3
p.m. in Room 233 Norton. Everyone is welcome.

Women's liberation will hold an open meetina
today at 8:30 p.m. in Room 340 Norton.

The Women's Physica.l Education Department
will hold an or~izational meeting to discuss
EnsUsh horseback riding lessons today at 4 p.m. in
Room 330 Norton.

The UB Sports Car Club will hold its &lt;Ktober
social meeting tomorrow at the Rose Garden, on
Wehrle Drive. The meeting will start at 8 :45 p.m.
following a pre-meeting rally which will meet at 6:45
p.m. in the Main- Bailey parking lott. Anyone
interested is welcome to attend.

Meyer Memorial Hospital's director of
volunteers. will be interviewing new CAC members
toda~ from l-4 p.m. in Room 262 Norton.

People's News Service will show the award
winning film Chino tomorrow at 7, 8:30 and 10 p.m.
in the Conference Theater.
,
·

Student Assoc:ladon budlei hearinp are in
If you would like a hwing with the
finance committee, please make an appointment in
Room 205 Norton ot call 831-5507.

pro.-ess.

Any students Interested in working for Sedita,
call Frank Schubauer at 5507 or leave your name In
Room 205 Norton.

Prospective FES p-aduate students: as of Sept.
1, 1971 the application deadline for the Faculty of
EducationaJ Studies is Feb. 1.
CAC needs volunteers for the following
projects: Tutorials P5 . 17, Perry Project, Friendship
House, St. Columba School; Hospitals: Meyer
Memorial, Selr.Help program; day-Qfe centers:
Cradle of Black Pearls, Walls Memorial. Please
contact CAC orfice, Room 220 Norton, or call
831 ·3609.
CAC will hold a meeting for the Lincoln Project
tomorrow at 7:30p.m. in Room 240 Norton.
Graduate Student Association will have its first
Senate meeting today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 240
Norton.

Sports Inform;atlon
Today: Varsity golf vs. Canisius College at
Audobon, 2 p.m.; women's tennis vs. Fredonia at the
State University of Buffalo tennis courts.
Tomorrow: Club soccer opener at Geneseo
State, 3 p.m.; varsity golf at Nia.pra University with
RIT, Niapra Falls, 2 p.m.
Club bowlina will hold its first meeting Oct. 5 at

5 p.m. in Room 234 Norton Hall for aJI interested

mal'

undergraduates. First qualifier: Saturday, &lt;Kt.
16 aJ 11 a.m. sharp. Second qualifi« for the top 16
bowlers will t.lke place Saturday, Oct. 30 at 11 a.m.
Practice for the top eight begins Thursday, Nov. 4
rrom 5- 7 p.m.
Physicals for all wrestling candidates will take
place Tuesday, Oct. 5 in the trainer's room of Clark
Gym at 4 p.m .

- Osterrelcher

WBFO Programme Notes
Monday, &lt;Kt. 4
8 a.m. - Prelude - Classical muSic for your morning.
Noon - S~irits - jazz with Dave Silverman.
2 p.m. - This is Radio ...
6 :15p.m. - Concert Hall - with Richard Malawista.
10:30 p.m . - The King of Instruments - Eleanor
Mullen, organist.
Tuescby, Oc:t. 5
11 a.m. - Firing line - William F. Buckley and
challengers, with the radio version of the famous
Public Broadcasting television series.
p.m. - History of Rock 'n Roll - with Murray
Kirch.
7 p.m: - What's His Name's Greatest Hits - with
Andrew Stiller. Good music by good composers
that no one ever hears.
Midnl.,_t - Extension.

•

Wednesday, Oct. 6
11 a.m. - Through the looking Glass - with Jane
Donahue.
5:50 p.m. - Chronicle - A summary of the day's
news, with emphasis on University and loc:aJ I

..

'

Anyone Interested In joining the 1971 .fall crew
team can now sign up on the third floor of Clark
Gym. This season's club crew squad will be coached
by Dennis Schaab.
•

events.
8 p.m.. - Boston Symphony Orchestra Concertt
- William Steinberg, conductor. ExC«Pts from
Mozart and Mahler.
10 p.m. - Searching - " The Ultimate Dropouts."
Thursday, Oct. 7
11 a.m. - Potpourri
8 P:m. - Interface - Discussions on topics of
Importance to both the University and the
Buffalo community. Listeners may call
831 ·5393 with their questions during the
program.
10 p.m. - Book Beat - with Robert Cromie book
editor of TM Chicago Tribune (radio ver~ion or
the award winning television program) .
10;30 p.m. - The Urban Trap - a dialogue on one
of the world's greatest problems.
Friday, &lt;&gt;a. 8
1 p.m. - The lonely Dragster - with Billy Altman.
8 p.m. - The Esoteric Phonograph - with Steve
Levinthal, nqlected compositions of Richard
Strauss.
9 p.m. - ~~ the Blues - "The Blues of 8.8. King,"
a portrait of the modem bluesman is painted.
Midni;lt - Extension.

Backpage

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,.

THE
Vol. 22, No. 17

pECTI\UM
State Unw'tnity of New· ~Of'k 8t Buffalo

Friday, OetoMr 1. 1971

· Resignations continue

Pesch and Mdls forfeit posts
LeRoy Pesch, dean of the Medical
School, is resigning from that post,
increasing the number of administrative
loaes to four. Within this past week, Ira
Cohen, provost . of the Faculty of Social
Sciences and Administration; Rollo Handy,
provost of Educational Sciences and
Theodore Mills, Sociology Department
chairman, have all effectively resigned their
posts.
Dr. Pesch has refused to explain hi$
reasons Indicating that public statement
will be forthcoming. Regarding this, Vice
President for Academic Affairs Bernard
Gelbaum cryptically remarked: "Events of
next week will unfold to clarify that
situation (Dr. Pesch's resignation) ."
Reacting to Dr. Mill's resignation, Dr.
Gelbaum could not comment as he was
unaware of it. In a Sept. 27 letter to Dr.
Cohen, Dr. Mills wlthdrew his name for
reconsideration as department chairman.
Among his reasons, Dr. Mills cited cutbacks
in research funds for his department.
Because of these cutbacks, Dr. Mills
explained that important research w.as

jeop~1dized .

He further maintained that hJs
resignation was independent of Dr. Cohen's
and was a means "to free time and energy"
to fiild these funds.

Difficult problems
Dr. Cohen has attributed his res:ignation
to "difficulties with the administration"
involving a nonviable workable situation,
change in the provostial positic&gt;n, and
increased centralization of authority and
responsibilities In the President's oflllce.
Officially, Dr. Handy resigned 1 0 serve
as dire~tor of a Switzerland 1research
project. However, he did comment that he
had .. too many personal reasons"
preventing him from publicly di15cussing
conditions. According to Dr. Ha1~dy , he
"came pretty close to deciding las11 year." ·
He continued: .., think thatt Ira's
decillion and mine were lndepend·e.llt ...
though everything Is linked together in a
certain way." Dr. Handy further termed
the series of recent resignations as "a very
interesting pattern ."

Others have agreed with this assessment
and predict rn·ore resjgnations, Part of this
can be attributed to budget cutbacks
which, future was raised. One member also
meotioned that some of the plans may be
as Dr. Handy commented , "make it very
ripe for many people resigning." In
addition to . this, changes in official
responsibilities resulting from increased
centra lization ha s prompted some
departures.

Lessened powers
Both Drs. Cohen and Handy. i~ addition
to former Arts and Letters Provpst Thomas
Connolly , maintained that the
decision-making power of provost has
lessened. Dr. Handy believes that " instead
of moVing roles away from provost more
should be moved back."
He continued that one of the solutions

to the problems of the multiuniversity is
more decentralization ; ..more autonomy
for local units." Dr. Gelbaum, on the other
hand, feels that this presently exists : "I

Speculative dreflming

Report submitted to SUb Board
concerning fate of Poverty Hill
by Jeff Greenwald

Spectrum Staff Writer

The first report concerning the
proposed development of the
Poverty Hill land, was submitted
Wednesday to Sub Board 1, Inc.
Sub Board is the student run,
non-profit corporation, which
manages funds aranted to it by
the various student governments,
in order to finance student-wide
operations. Among these
operations is the Poverty Hill
land, a )148-acre tract of wooded
mountain area located three miles
north of Ellicottville, New York.
Sub Boa1d paid $10,000 last year
for the option to purchase the
land after an initial use of one
year. That year ends Dec. 20, and
a report concerning alternative
development pt.na, many montlls
in the making, bas finally reached
Sub Board for analysis.
To discuss the report, Sub
Board's consultant on the project,
Draytt&gt;n Bryant, attended the
Wednesday nigbt meeting.
Mr. Bryant, who terms his
profession as a city planner, called
his or any other plannin&amp; a "path
to • action." He explained that
somo of tbe elements in his
.. patti .. were physical
recommendations, financing
poasjbilities, administrative
reaponsibility and the time
olement involved with these
ftrious elements.

Pout state development

Preliminary plans call for
development to proceed in four
staaes. The first..ctage, planned for
a year's dutation, provides for a
basic dev~l opment. Present
facilities would be slightly
expanded to handle a areater
capacity, and studies in the areas
of forestry, soil and geology

have always made the greatest effort to
solicit the provosts' opinion and exchange
of views . . . I rely very heavily on the
provosts to maintain important sectors of
the University without interference."
Additionally , Dr. Gelbaum reported
that he has suggested that the provosts
retain the powers they have with respect to
appointments and promotions.
Commenting on the appa~ent pattern of
resignations, Dr. Gelbaum stated: "To me,
they ( the resignations] appear
coincidental." Chancellor Boyer's office,
when contacted, explained that Albany
does not usually get involved with the day
to day operations of individual campuses.
However, they continued : "If something is
brewing - we should be made aware of it."
Concern fot the University's future is
shared by many. According to Dr. Handy:
"Just at the time when campus should be
coming together, I don't think it is
happening ." . The fault of this, he
continued, is not due to two or three
"villains" although "individuals may very
well be important."

speculated that the "several plans
for development can generate
money to pay for themselves and
possibly the land itself."
One. of the more vital issues the
Poverty Hill debate raises in the
eyes of Lester Goldstein, an
alternate undergraduate member,
is the responsiveness that be feels
Sub Board lacks to its student
constituencies. Mr. Goldstein
points out that the Board intends
to withhold release or certain
information regarding how the
project will be fmanced. The
Board's generaJ contention is that
if this information were made
public, possible dealinfr'l would be
jeopardited. " We can't teU bow it
will be financed until we're ready
to close the deal," insisted Paul
Cummins, Sub Board chairman .
This disclosure, according to Mr.
Cumming, could not come until
after all student governments
conduct a referendum on the
purchase of Poverty Hill .

responsiveness, a state111ent such
as "it is one issue whether to buy
Po.erty Hm, and another issue aa
to how it will be developed," was
deemed typical by Mr. Goldstein,
as to Sub Board's concem for its
constituencies. It seemed that Sub
Board's feeling might bd'that the
students should be involved only
in determining whether or not to
buy the land, but not to give
information as to what the
investment could eventuaUy
involve.

would be conducted. It was after Mr. Bryant's presentation
pointed out by Mr: Bryant that hinged on certain members'
these studies · would be joint speculatiion that not much would
efforts with the state and thus be need•ed to provide that crack.
Much of that speculation involved
would be of no cost.
The second stage includes the the fitscal . feasibility of the
Insurance problems
enlaraement of swimming and venture.
camping facilities .' A lafger lake
John Greenwood, Graduate
Dave Steinwald , SA Student
and numerous campsites would be Student Associatiol) vice president
Riahts Coordinator, commented
built to accommodate this and an alternate to the Board ,
that "the more I see Sub Board's
expansion. Plans also call for feels t:bat "all these things
attitude to Poverty Hill, the more
I feel that you're asking the
skiina to bepn q.n a minor scale [planned! development projects 1
during the two years required for are very speculative, and if so,
student body for a blank check."
•
then pe1rbaps the land might be
Mark Borenstein , Sub Board
completion of this staae.
business manager, denied this, and
Some of the most dramatic only for swimming, camping and
changes would occur in stage fishing . We couldn't justify
said that after the report had been
three, planned November spendins. the amount of money
analyzed "we may very possibly
decide we can't afford it."
1974- 0ctober 1976. Proposals necessnry (for just these
inClude a full scale nature center, program11) ."s,
The problem of insurance for
to be run as a foundation-type
the land seems. also to be rising
Student reluctance
Inasmuch fmancing plans are apin . Seott Slesinger, Sub Board
' enterprise. Architecture students No public d.iscloswe
are already drawing up plans for
being worked out in a number of treasurer, announced that be
this center. Full scale skiing is also
A siJinilar view was held by places including a local Buffalo expects the insurance to be
scheduled for this period. At Mike Nic:olau, GSA president, also bank, Mr. Goldstein seemed to canceUed any day.- This would be
present, plans to develop the area a member of Sub Board. He feel the source of financing may the second cancellation in a few
for slci.ing include advertising for likened the planned fmancial malte a difference in student months. Some members were
potential ski operators to study support for the latter phases of wishes for involvement in Poverty visibly concerned over whether
the land for possibilities. Full ski · development as "tryin&amp; to get on Hill. He cited reluctance of many permanent insurance could be
development would cost in the the moo111 in order to develop the students to get involved with any acquired when and if the land
vea of S2SO,OOO accordina to Mr. earth. Itt seems you need to phase of the corporate structure, were bought. Mr. Bryant
Bryant.
develop nkiing (which would be a especially when involvement explained that he was quite sure •
money-making enterprise) in would result in profits for an "some kind of insurance can be
'Pontoon' lnlloty
gotten. We just have to be touah
order to support development of institution such as a bank.
Step four, a type of five-year, the basic thinp." Mr. Bryant
In line with this alleged lack of and persistent ."
sky-is-the-limit plan, includes the
possibilities of a $2SO,OOO
conference center, recreation
community and further expansion
of campins, skiing and swimming
Students who wish to vote in the upcoming elections and the November 1972
facilities .
presidential primaries must be reptered by no later than tomorrow , Oct. l . Residents of
Suinmarizing the report, MI.
Erie County may register today and tomorrow at their local districts. Reaistration centers
Bryant commented that the
wtll be open from noon- 7 p.m. today, and from 10 a.m.-8 p.m. tomorrow. For further
project " looks completely
:information on the location of the retistntion district in your area, contact the Board of
feasible . . . aU things hang
Electiona, 846-7760.
tosether like a pontoon bridge,"
Students Who are not residents of Erie County must have their absentee repstration
Presumably, Mr. Bryant, in
:rorma receiYed by the local election district of their home district, no later than
malcint such an analo&amp;Y, means
1tomorrow. Forma may be picked up at Admissiona and Records in Hayes C. Forms
that the slightest bole or crack in
tdlould be mailed in special deliYery in order to insur\ their reception by tomorrow's
his "pontoon" would . brins the
1deadline.
whole business crashin&amp; down.
Much of the ensuing discussion

Last days to register

•

/

�Nigerian symJX)sium Nortoncnck~down. ' . '
outlook on drug
s ess world-role · Ho.ne/u·l
r· . ~·
- ~ CFlSls
.
&gt;

to tr

by Jetee E. Le¥iDe

A Symposium on Nipria and
her relationahip with Africa and
the reat of the wodd will be held
today by the N"llerian Union of
Buffalo. It il part of activities
conimemoratina the eleventh
anniversary of, Niaeria ' s
independence.
The symposium will begin at 3
p.m. in Room 235 Norton"HaJL.
Accordina to Funso Ayoade, a
epokesman for the aroup, the
sympoaum will center on three
main .U,Pectl of Niaerla, her
internal development , her
relationship with her African
neiabbors and hq relationship
with the rest of the world.
Amon&amp; .the activities planned
for the symposium will be several
diJcussions. Dr. B. Ademowore,
M.D., a JYDCCOio&amp;ist for the Erie
County Department of Health and
asst. professor of Obstetrics and
Gynecology at the State
University of Buffalo, will speak
on the development of health
services in Nigeria over th~ past
decade.

..

DiJcussion planned
Dr. M.A. lyoha, Department of
Economics, will speak about the
development of a general
economic base in Nigeria. 0.
Udofia, a graduate student in
political scien ce. will lead

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UPSTATE 'CYCLE INS

ctilcUIIion on social lntearation in
NiaeJia and the role of Nipria in
Afrlcan politics.
In Niaeria, the trend has been
toward accelerated growth since
the advent of independence,
especially in the areas of
educational, health and other
socia l services, increased
productivity 'and other indices of
aeneral economic arowth.

'

The greatest effort has been
directed, however, at the task of
social integration and the
development of a national ethos
amona diverse ethnic groups. The
recent civil war was the climax of
a series of trying crises which have
thre atened Niaeria's very
existence. Hence, renewed efforts
at acbievin&amp; the goals of soc.ial
integration and national unity
have come about.
There is also a growing
awareness that. Nigeria, as an,
African nation, has a vital role to
play in the Uberatjon of Alrican
peoples· still ·suffering under
oppressive colonial rule. She has
to prove that a nation with her
human and n;,tural resources will
h ave to be rec koned with
p olitica ll y, economicaJJy and
militarily wheh the survival and
~JI-being of black people ate at
stake. Her experiences during the
recent civil war clearly indicate
that even her own survival does
not depend on wether "East" or
" West ," but is inextricably tied to
that of black African peoples
~teneral ly .

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call 694-3100

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Acting throup a combination of last year's
experience and this year's caution, a concerted effort
is under way to prevent another drua crisis from
reoccurrina at Norton Hall. Last year, the University
experienced numerous instances of theft, assault and
aeneral harassment, all believed to be associated with
a scattered group of hard drua us'ers and pushers.
The problem rose to crisis form late last sprina
when the Norton HaU staff reported that physical
assaults were occurrina and articles associated with
the use of heroin and other hard drup were bein&amp;
found in the basement and farst floor bathrooms.

Pnwentatlve measwa
Reprdin&amp; ·this, Mr. Ermanovi!ll e~tplained,
~'Preventative measures are needed to prevent the
socio-patholopcal conditions of the sprina. TQe t'y pe
of secyrity program I have in mipd would require
$16,000 to implement." He 'recognized the problem
was as yet in ''its embryo staae" but Stre5$ed the
uriency of~
1 it from maturing.
,.

Campus reaction was ·one of tightened security
efforts which saw the closina of the Norton
recreation ar~. During the time the recreation area
was closed, last March and April, the Norton Hall
security proaram met with emergency funding by
the University's Sub Board I . This helped to alleviate
Both Dr. Gru er and Mr. ~rmanovics attributed
what Norton Hall Director Jim Gruber considered a
dangerous situation. At prtsent , most of these the main part o the Norton Hall problem to
emergency funds have been expitated and no outsiders, non-stu&lt;1ents. Dr. Gruber remarked, " We
renewal of last year's student participation has must stop non-students from perpetrating this tragic
·magic l)mdrome.'' He further- emphasized : "It is
transpired.
necessary to share infotm'lltion, communicate,
coordinate our effortS and move immediately. We
University welfare
will use the powers, of' observation to keep ·close·
Last Monday morning, a meeting was held scrutiny on developments concerning the drug
concerning general campus security measures and in problem.''
particular tlorton Hall. As a result of the meeting,
Along with last year's problem in Norton Hall
a ttended by ooth University employees and
the
dormitories
experienced similar difficulties. Ed
students, a letter addresseb to the University
community from the Norton HaU staff was Mertzlufft , a security aide, outlirred the dorm policy '
as of this year : "No non-dorm residents will be
distributed .
allowed in the dorm unless accompanied by a
Thls letter states : ''It sho uld be specifically resident. Resident advisors will b e responsible for
clear, . . . because the illegal use o f drugs places our drug violations ~n th~r floors ." Mr. Mertzlufft
studen ts -and other members o f the University summed up t h e a~e hen sion in all the
community in very serious physical and legal University-associated bodies concerning drug use on
jeopardy, we will not condone what1oever the campus: "So far this year we have had no problem,
violation of any drug laws in Norton Hall ." It we are hoping. "

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Mayor Frank A. Sedita
URGES YOU TO REGISTER TO VOTE, ON SEPI'EMBER 30: and
OCTOBER 1 and 2. REMEMBER, UNLESS YOU REGISTER TO VOTE
ON ONE OF THESE THREE DAYS, YOU CANNOT VOTE IN THE 1972
PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY.

Sponsored by Youth for Sedita -886 ... 5525
Page two . The Spectrum . Frida}!', October 1, 1971
· · • ' .... t', ..•• J

• • ~J,

'.ri'J.&gt;J
J''J
rt•,·
. J.
"""

.;,:' .l

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• • ·•

At present, accordina to Norton Hall offjcials,
an incipient drua problem now exists, but .hardly
near the maarutude of last sprina.. A.1eneral policy of
"observa~ion , awarenea. and education'' now exists
and that iJ tryina to cope with a sit\lltion t~t Asst.
Director Albert Ermanovics cl.aiJllS is ~ - d.esparat.e
need of funds.

BARRY'S

J h• Spectrum Is publlsh«J thf'fltl
• - k , 6Wiry Monday,
~nesdlty lind Fritby; durinr- thtt
"'f}UIIIr IICMHmic Y•r by Sub-8011rd
1, Inc. Offices • rtl loc•t«J •t 355
Norton Ht1/l, St.te Unlwmlty o f
N4Jw York •t Buff61o, 3435 Main
St., Buff•lo, N•w York, 14214.

tim•

Editorit~l,

•

concludes that "our primary concern in the·
University ·is. the ~lfare ~4 weU-beina of all
students - it iJ because of thiJ concern that we take
thiJ position and uJc that it be respected."

Sf'«'""'" Slllff Writ~

A. GREAT PLACE TO MEET

" A* Your Broker About Us"

.

�ToolSof d~mocracy used to
disCdUrage perspeCtive voters
• •

by Jo-ADQ .Armllo

comer those registered. Ridiculous leaflets praJ.Sina
the virtues of political parties urae party enrollment
Final deadlines for voter reaiJtration ~ futo" and affiliations.
Accordina to tbe$e leaflets, the American Political
approacbina. With them passes the fmal opportunity
for any prospective voter to take advantJtae of the Party is the bastion of democracy. Tbroup them,
equality, motherhood and S\ICcess in Vietnam are
26th amendment.
For the student not an official Erie County assured.
Anyone familiar, at all, with the operations of the
resident, reptration forms must be received by local
eleot1oh d1strict:s toroonow, Oct. 2. If the forms Democratic and Republican parties discount these
were ftbt 'miiled this week, non-Erie county residents for what they are worth. first of all and perhaps,
most importantly, our ''democracy" isn't exactly
will not be able to cast ballots in November.
However, county residents still have an that. Contrary to arammar school history, this isn't
opportunity to resister at the poUin&amp; place of their the country where any boy can grow up to be
local election district. To qualify· as a resident, there President. Perhaps, anyone can event\laUy see the
must be prof&gt;f of a three month residency in Erie White House if they dillaeotly work their way up
County. This can be proven by rent receipts, driver's throuab party ranks and ha.s about $3 or $4 million
license or reptration, or some sort of lepl hanJina around to be invested in the campaian.
Secondly, American political parties are not by
document attesting to county residency .
any stretch of the imalination, democratic
institutions. They are run dictatorially. Their
llftlponsibillty clwps
Until all records are in, no statistics are available candidates are hand-piclced ; seldom is the "people's
reprdin&amp; the numbers of under 21-year-old voters. choice" ever &amp;iven the opportunity to run (i.e., Gene ·
Since the amendment arantina this vote, the media McCarthy).
Most disturbing is the fact that the processes by
has bombarded the public with.,fipres revealina the
bare minimums or 18- 21-year-olds who have which some democracy uists - the primary - is
reaistered thus far. Each set of fiaures is denied to huge numbers of youth. For if one fails to
accompanied by muted mutterinp of "irresponsible resister by this Oct. 2, vote in the 1972 pmldential
primaries is denied as well as the Nov. 1971 vote.
bums who yell for the vote and then do nothina."
Considerin&amp; these tools of democracy which
However, Uttle if any publicity ha.s been Jiven to
deadlines or prQcedures for repterinJ and enrolling. ensure our equality, considering the choices open to
This "ne&amp;Ject" has resulted in underminina the tbe electorate (Repn or Sedita) and considering the
outcome of all elections, one wonders why anyone stren&amp;tb of newly enfranchised voters.
Accompanyina this lessenina in numbers, there the black, the woman, the youth, - eve\- clamored
has alto occurred efforts by the major parties to for the vote.

Ketter to attend GSA installption
The Graduate Student AIIOClatlon wUl bold the formal installationa of ita 1971 -72
Senate on Monday, Oct. 4 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 240 Norton HaU.
Preaideat Robert Ketter bas tentatively promised to attend and welcome the new
Senate. In eddition, t he Executin Committee wW Jive a short IUmmary of cunent
projecta and potlible direction for future action. This meetina. u are all reauJar Senate
mectinp, are opea to all pacluate ltUdenta.

THIS WEEKS SPECI AL

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We have a large variety of
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Also on display are:
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ORIED FLOWERS
TEA SETS &amp; CUPS
INCENSE &amp; BURNERS
VASES • ASHTRAYS

Eviction threats

Studenttenantsunhe
"Seeina people have controls
over their own living conditions,"
was the concern of last Tuesday's
Tenants Union meetina.
It small core of off-campus
housina dwellers attended the
orpniz.ational meeting to bear
bave Steinwald's (Student
Association Student Riahts
Coordinator) suueations to form
a Tenants Union.
Those attending the meetin&amp;
aenerally elt_presaed identical fears
about their ripts as student
tettants . Recent Health
Department eviction threats were
d.iscwsed as students reported
cases where Health Department
officials had questioned various
tenants Uving in the Bn&amp;Jewood,
Heath and Montrose areas.
Also attending the meeting
were two landlords, who also
expressed a fear of these
threatened evictions. One landlord
hoped tbat the planned
organ i :ta lion could be "one
particular union where students
and landlords would work
together."
BlackballinJ
For the landlord, any eviction
would mean a "hardship" to both
students and landlords . If served
with eviction notices, students
would be forced to leave unless
lanatords added better facilities to
apartments in compliance with
the county's roominghouse
qualifi~tions . lf this expense was
not dealt with and the students
were fort"ed to leave, the landlord
explained that new families would
move in, paying less than students
are expected t o pay for
comparable apartments.
Therefore, in order lo pressure
the cou nty , the landlord
com ment ed that a
student-la ndl ord orpnizatlon
would have a greater effect.
Another 13ndlord attending the
meeting contended that this, too,
was his concern . He feared,
however, 1hal other landlords
might "blackball" the landlords
who favored aiding students.
In response, Mr. Steinwald sa1d
he appreciated their concern . but
that when the unio n is better
organized he wo uld be in a •·much
better position" to discuss actions
inv o lvin g both students and
landlords. As for no w, Mr.
Steinwald :tdded, the first priority
is to d1rect and structure the
student body o f the Tenants

Mon .- Fri . to 9 p.m .
OPEN Saturday to 6 p.m .
Sunday 12 - 5 p.m.

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(Next to University Plezal
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Mon .-S at. l :30 to

Formation of locals
Altbouah the group consisted
o( only 15 people, Mr. Steinwald
is planning to mail information to
ot her student s housed i n
off-campus apartments. ~'itb this
information It is hoped hat the
students could form " 1&lt;- als," as
Mr. Steinwald suggested .
Each local would c \sist of
students rentln&amp; from ...e same
landlord . Accordin&amp; to present
plans, an estimated three or four
locals and a number of smaller
ones would exist an the City of
Buffalo. " Locals will have to find
a way to work together to be
effective," Mr. Steinwald
explaine d . This cou ld be
implemented by selecting two
st udents from each local to
orga ni ze a larae steeri ng
co mmittee to form city-w1de
policy.
Tenant s Unions of other
universities are also under study
to help organize the workings o f
this campus' Tenants Union. Fo r
example , the Ann Arbo r Tenants
Union at the University of
M1 c higan a nd the Madison
Tenants Umon at the University
of Wiscons1n were researched to
suggest possible met hods or aiding
student tenants and the collectio n
o f o perating·runds.
In an attempt to Hnd a
workab le s tru c ture for the
Tenants Union. Mr. Steinwald
suggested visiting other tenant
unio ns or to arranae for students
from oth~ r schools to come h er~
and discuss the workings of their
unions.

PIZZA PETE Invites
University of Buffalo students
to the weekly
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Fridlly tmd Saturdily 11:30 a.m. to I :30 a.m .

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All seats $1 .0 0

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Union.
In a private interview last
Tuesday prior to the Tenant•
Union meeUna, Mr. Steinwald
defmed the four main function•
of the new orpnization :
1 .) To provide leaal
information to off-campus
student tenants;
2.) To provide a structure for
provision of a lepl aid form in
possible conjunction with lawyers
or law studenta who wish to
become involved ;
3 .) To serve u a tool for
orpnizin&amp; the community so it
can set up other structures such as
food and medicine co-ops; and
4 .) To operate as a lobbyina
group for specific changes in city
and county laws if the Union
extends beyond students in the
future.
Eventually , Mr. Steinwald said.
the union would t~o aet away
from beina a n "aU-student
enterprise'' in hopes of wider
support. Students at Tuesday's
meeting aareed with these
objectives and for the need of a
union as student tenants were the
" most infrinaed-upon ." Thoso
present listed beina ''ripped-off"
with hiah rents as one of these
infringements.

Friday, October 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�...

"

...

MacDonald Hall residents

COlleges.· illiving experiment
Dr. Meyerson sugeated a plan in
which the large universities would
be broken down into smaller units
of about sod students, each with
similar interests.' These students
wo'Uld be a ble to identify
themselves with these cultural
"living.Jearning units" much more
easily than to the extensive
university itself.

by 1JDda Trotta
SpeciNm St4/f JitWter

The ColleJiate System has
ta.lcen a new tum with the advent
of a resident college in' MacDonald
Hall. Tb.is system was conceived
from previously existing ones in
suc h major universities u
Camkidge and O~ford .
The planning stage of the
ColleJiate System at the State Experimental concept
Six College buildinp are
University of Buffalo bepn a few
years ago when Maftin Meyerson, scheduled to be built at the
then President of the State Amherst site fbr Colleges A, S, C,
University of Buffalo, sugested D, B, F. The complete formation
that university life wu much too of the Collegiate System will not
vast for the individual student. He take place until then. However,
felt the student lost his sense of Colleges B and D (Clifford Furnas
identity in a larae university and College) have· combined to form
became a mere number.
an experiment in the new concept
· To counteract this coldness, of college dormitory living at
Mac Donald HaU.
Heading this project are Dr.
Allen Sapp, Master of College 8,
Dr. Jonathan Ketchum, Associate
Master of College B and Dr. Lyle
Borst, Master of Furnas College.
The ex perimental College at
MacDonald Hall has seven resident
advisors, four women and three
men, and is completely co-ed.
Originally, this experiment was
scheduled to take place a year
earlier. However, it was postponed
until this fall because of the

Sprin11· 1970 d.iJturbances here.
Thosc1 llving ,in MacDonald Hall
are there voluntarily . An
anno~mcement of these plans was
made1 in March to current
students, and letters were sent to
aU fre:shmen and transfer students.
It WllS up to each individual
student to decide for himself
whether or not he wanted to be
associ1ated with the Colleges.
Arts and sciences

Co!Uege B is mainly composed
of students of the arts and Furnas
College is composed of the
scien,ces and pre-professional
students. Ho wever, both Colleges
have ,accepted students who are
not of their particular o rientation.
Stude111ts of the two CoUeges are
combined in such a way:;:at their
own :roommate is of
e same
College but the neighbo
ooms
have st udents of the other
College.
Dr. Bol'llt has set up a system
which provides the opportunity
for sltudents of MacDonald to
l unc h with and partake in
discu$sions wi1h him and the
visitin,g professor of the day.
These' guest speakel'll represent
various fields in the realm of
higher education.
This program is designed to

I I IIIDAII

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RIPAIIS

1066 Sheridan Drive

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round out the students bf
exposina them to · different
interests. As Dr . Ketchum
explained, this conforms to " the
main approach of the Collete ...
to get a aood intenelationship
between traditionally important
artistic topics and a person who
can give a aood representation of
those topics."

. Proper balance

·
Dr. Borst felt that the Soard of
Senior Fellows of bis CoUeae and
Colleae 8 represented educators
of a superior level. Dr. Ketchum
believed it would attraot those
who believed education sho uld be
" not based upon rigid department
standards, but not a pervonality
culture a ther" and those who
would want t o "intera c t
informally as wdl as formally ."
When asked whether this
segreption in the Colleges o n the
basis of interest would tend to
narrow the student, Dr. Borst
said, ..Yes, if it is a professional
College." 8 y a professional
College, be explajned, he meant a
College just housing pre-engineers,
pre-meds, pre-dents, etc. Dr. Borst
stressed that the Amherst c;ollege
system would present a proper
balance in that the social sciences
and arts College would be joined
to the sciences and n'lathematicl
College and there would be
interaction between them.
Dr. Ketchum, however, felt
t
that this segregation woul
present a problem " ecause
becoming associated
th their
(CoUege) major is a considerable
growth in their educational vista."
He stressed that today is a world
of specialization and there are
really few people who can really
involve themselves in more than
one field .

Aa1epted 'benignly'
Laurie Weissman, tl~e kside~t
advisor on the second floor of
MacDonald, -.id that she liked the
persqAef touch of t.laoDonalJI andthe hall's. affiliatipn with · the
Colleges. For the j)tesent, she said,
ttie i~stdeot aiSvlsors are affiliated
with botb C?llek~~. .H~)Vev~r thiy
wtll later be ~C!d ta eh006e
which College' they · wisb • to te
associated with. · ·
The students themselves have
accep ted the College system
rather benignly for the most part.
A few are very enthusiastic, most
like it but see little difference
between College living and the
dorms, and a few are rather
critical of the whole idea. One
resident said, "Sure, there's a lot
of difference (between Colleges
and _dorms) in. theory ~ but in
practice t~'ere is no difference.

Colleges•important
Since the " American system of
highe~ edu~t1on . aS" ·a. w.l}ot,e. ii. : l.Q.t~ · C?f tPiQ~ .h~ve ~,o.~~(Jtned

vett-w~k-a!t fiH"85'sC)fl}Ui;Jlt'Qislhe•: P~l· ~o;::l!f~~~-jo ~~~· has

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of &lt;the fi~t
TRAIL RIDING IN N.Y. STATE
Open 7 d.ys a week

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growtb · of personanty iir lhe·- ~ra.:•:-· ..... ·!·:-:!
aspeets of.~ctlfcatfl&gt;tt:-1~. • •.JtWt&gt;ttJer ~~
c
ed,
concept is important in tbat in " They (tho . drofes!lbn~ are
"the Colleges the person is ·of concentratjng on-.'tfoieir iroage, not
utmost importance."
the structure (of Colleges). It
Colleges B and D are both could be a great community but
members of the Inter-Residence the good will come from what the
Council. In addition to this, the kids themselves do, not what they
Colleges aJso have meetings among do. The whole idea of segregation
themselves. AI Miller, president of is stagnant."
the Inter-Residence Council, said
Perhaps the one who answered
the IRC is very interested in the best in behalf of the Colleges was
MacDonald experiment, not as an Ed Wiener, a College resident,
academic experiment but in its " There's not much difference
residential aspects. He urged that (between Colleges and dorms)
the Colleges participate as much because of the newness of the
as possible in IRC activities program - give them a chance."

...
I" •

I

., .

I

•

- .'

S11JDENT
ASSOCIATION
Slaclta aalore in l new stores,
now open at Elmwood and
BidweU near State Teachers, and
Main Street opposite U.B.
Groovy flares to tum you on ... in
plaida, stripes, checks, and aolida.
Water pockets, reaular pockets,
wide and reaular belt loope.
Plenty of flares in famous Levi's
®Sta-Prat® 'llacb. Also straiJbt
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....

becaUIO "in tbe future, the tnajor
portion ot the I~ will be made
up of Cotlete residents."
Toni Barbour , the head·
reaident of MacDonald HaD, and
her husband, Warren Barbour a
araduate ltudent in •rcheotoiY
are both enliJhtened . by th~
"livin,.learnifta concept." They·
feel thaf the more serious studentll
are attracted to the Colleges and
that "learning is placed on a
different level, a multi-teaming
level.''
•
Toni Barbour said she believed
that "the environment bel~ the
outlook" and that the personal
approach to learning' works
because " people must really know
people before they can re.Jlly
communicate." W.anen · .tJtou.aJ.tt
that the system .was invaluable iii
that the Colleges are . ''more
directed and' they give tlie
students a chance to find out
what field is for them through the
professionals themselves." '

WOULD LIKE TO THANK CAMPUS SECURITY, FOOD SERVICE, MAINTAINANCE,
AND THE STUDENTS WHO WORKED AS INTERNAL SECURITY AND ALL OF YOU WHO
CAME TO OUR DAY OF MUSIC AT ROTARY FIELD (Sept. 12), AND HELPED TO MAKE
THE CONCERT A SUCCESS.

Page four . The Spectrum. Friday, October 1, 1971

..

••

�StuJellt rights: who's .responsible?
by Ger.ld Daalher
Sp«trum Stoff Jtlrlttr

..

The .abolition of the offices of
t b e A d v o c a t e a n d the
Ombudsm~ this summer has left
th,e future , of student tisbts on
this camplJ$ very uncertain.
A budget cut in Albany this
summ~ was r~ponsible for the
elimination of these two offices.
~e office of the _,.dvocate,
staffed . with ,ttolJleYs and law
,tud~nts, dealt with protectina the
rigli~' of apy ' iJidjvidual on the
S'tate University of Buffalo
campus. The Ombudsman was an
ad'~inistrator who . facilitated
4e-anng with the University
bureaucracy and served as Bt1.
ar~itr~ttor • of disputes. Both
offices were initiated two years
aao in' University"'Wide action by
the Office of Student Affairs.
Judaing from the volume of

a

$ 1. 75 3 p.m. 8 :30p.m.

EARLY IIIlER
With Thla Cotipoa For J

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cases bandied by these offices,
there If little room for doubt of
their usefulness. In its two years
of operation, the Ombudsman
" hand led 141 and 344 cases
respectively. The annual report of
the Univer-sity Ombudsman
indicated that this raise result'ed
from its increased. popularity due
to . its' effectiveness in sitUing
lfievances. The report further
speculates t~t the number would
increase each year. Formu
Advocate Norm Effman estimated
that the number of files for
individUal cues hanclled by the
office of the Advocate in its two
years to be over 2000.
Voluntary basis
· The effect of the abolition of
these services has prompted
various reactions. Arthur Butler
and Robert Stem, who each
served a year as Ombudsman, feel
that the office was of such
importance that they are
maintainina the operation of the
office ton a voluntary basis
without pay and with full
teaching loads and committee
assignments. ..The need for it is
sufficiently onaoina that it is a
desirable thing to keep," stated
Dr. Butler.
However, Vice President for
Student Affairs Richard
Si&amp;&amp;lekow , feels that since a good
portion of those cases handled by
the Ombudsman dealt with
faculty grievances, ..If there is not
a groundswell of support from the
faculty, maybe there is no need
for the office." He continued: ..I
think that they feel the present
grievance system is enough."

Presont pievance procedures are
through academic departments
and the Faculty Senate. Dr.
Sialekow further maintained th,at
the Ombudsman never had any
real power;" ,..the Ombudsm~n
could only influence decisions and
recommend people to the proper
authorities."

Conflict of interest
Because University funds no
longer support an Advocate does
not mean that student rights are
left completely unprotected. Ron
Stein, associate director of
Student Affairs, still handles the
protection of these rights on the
campus. Although . not an
attorney, he is recognized by
many as an expert in the field of
student rights.
In addition, Norm Effman, is
retained by the Student
Association and the Graduate
Student Association as the
students' attorney. He is available
one night a week for three hours.
Mr. Effman's role as students'
attorney is more desirable than his
former position as · University
Ad\tocate. He explained that as
University kdvoc-ate , the
Advocate's office was originally
mandated to protect the rights 'Of
any University member along with
the rights of the University itself.
This meant according to Mr.
Effman, that not only could the
office prosecute on behalf of an
individual against the University,
it would also be responsible for
prosecuting on behalf of the
University against students.
In the second year of its
operation, the function of the

Advocate as Unive11ity prosecutor
ended. However, the fact the
University funded this offi~
might have been construed as a
conflict of interest by many. Mr.
Effman continued that this and
the memories of the Advocate as a
prosecutor, might have created
fear of the office and distrust of
its services. Presently, with Mr.
Effman paid by students ·to work
for students, there can be no
conflict M interest.
Judiciary planned
It seems that the present
situation does not provide
students with services they
received in the past . Mr. Effman is
available for only a fe~ours a
week, and although the o flee of
Student Affairs can · e some
lejal advice, it cannot provide
adequate counsel. More
importantly, the Advocate could
actually initiate a proceeding
against the University when there
was a denial of rights. The present
office can only recommend
solutions.
The future of student rights on
this campus is, at this point
difficult to det ermine. A
University-wide j udiciary, which
could act to settle disputes, is
being planned . But action cannot
be taken until the SA organizes its
student assembly.
Currently, a committee is
investigating the perfqrmance of
the two offices and plans to
complete its report by Oct . IS.
Mr . Butler hopes that this
co mmittee will recommend
maintaining the Ombudsman since
its cost is low . and the staff

r--------------------------,l

I
I

I
I

GOOD

YOMTOV!

The GSA extends wishes for a happy Succoth
and a joyous Simchat Torah.

I
I

~

L----------~---------------·

J!.on Stein
a vail able. It will be up to
President Robert Ketter to find
monies from sources other than
SUNY funds. On the other hand,
the outlook for the Advocate is
rather bleak. The estimated cost
of the office was $50,000.
Considering this, it is not likely
the University ·will dig for these
funds while the students are
paying for their own lawyer.
In any case, the question of
where responsibility for student
rights rests has been raised. Dave.
Steinwald Student Rights
Coordinator commented: ..The
University is responsible for
providing this essential service.
Legal aid is difficult to obtain for
students, especially out-of-town
students." He continued that,
"Si n ce the University .is
responsible for brinsinl people up
here it sh ould provide this service
to students in the same way it
provides housing information for
students." Perhaps, the situation
was s ummed up by Lester
Goldstein, (Academic Affairs
Coordinator): "There was n.ot a
protest t~ a-.(!ut in the budget in
spite of the ultimate sood of the
offices."

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Friday, October 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Pagt! five

�I

IFour down .. .

During the past week, four top level administrators, two
provosts, one d~n and a department chairman have resigned.
White these resignations may be quite unrelated, there is
much to suggest that similar factors are involved. One year
ago this very day, Or. Albert Somlt, executive vice-President,
stated of the Undergraduate Dean's resignation that "it's
only the law of averages." At this point we begin to wonder.
We str~ngly believe that the provostial resignations are
due to , adverse administrative interference in faculty
policy-making. Also, we have been I~ to believe that
personality clashes and seemingly unethical administrative
practices may have helped to foster a climate conducive to
resignations. Certainly one cannot explain four sudden
departures as the "law of averages."
In any event, we demand some explanation of the causes
of these resignations from the administration. Eartier this
week there were only two provosts who had resigned ; now
they have been joined by a dean, LeRoy Pesch, and a
department chairman, Theodore Mills. Before any more
oocur, we believe this University is entitled to a response by
the President and executive vice-President as to what is
occurring. Otherwise, we may be forced to draw the
conclusions that the administration is practicing a rare- and
unwelcome style of administering a university. After all , can
four in one week really be a coincidence?

The proposed State University of New York
reorganization strikes us as necessary, but dangerous. A
decentralization is long overdue as too many decisions
affecting the campus are made in Albany with little
opportunity for local input.
The University could greatly benefit from an increase in
autonomy, but the corollaries to the reorganization could
possibly do great harm to this University. The plan t o
provide a space for every community college graduate within
his area is admirable both for its educational value and for its
egalitarian ideals. Unfortunately, there seem to be no
provisions for determining which Institution an individual
will select within his area. Thus the State University of
Buffalo could become weighed down with an inordinately
large percentage of local transfer students.
Providing a college education for everyone in this state
may be a fine'goal , but. it should be approached in a fashi on
that will not destroy the academic quality of the State
University of Buffalo.

THE SpECTI\UM
Friday, October 1, 1971
Editor-in·Cttlef - Dennis Arnold
Co-MeNtlnt Editor - AI Benson
Co-Man8tlint Editor - Mike Lippmann
Alit. Maf1oltllnt Editor - Susan Moss
Bull,_ M~n~~g~r - Jim Drucker
Adwrtlslnt Man..,. -Sue Mellentine
C.mpu1 ... . ..•.. Jo-Ann A rmao

......... . . .. ... Bill Vecerro
Alit ..... •• ......Howie Kurtz
City .............•... • Vecant
Copy ........... Ro nniFonmen
. . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . Merty Gatti
Alit ...............•. Vecaot.

Feeture . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jen Doane
Qfephlc Arts .. • . ~ , ~ Tom Tolet

Ut. &amp; DrenJa •. Micheel Silverblatt

Libraries defended
To rhe Editor:
My experience wlth the library bas been
completely different than those indicated by the
complaints you have published. I have found the
library useful , available, and the staff cooperative
and helpful. They have helped m e find sourees, they
have answered telephone inquiries, and have been
courteoiJS. I like the idea of .open stacks, and enjoy
browsing in them.
Most first-class libraries have an open stack
policy r have gotten material on ioter·Hbrary loan in
by Steese

It t wns o ut to b,e very
hard to start this foolishness .
There is a strong sense o f
• embarassment fr o m
somewhere which seems to
m ake m e eve .o mor e
fumble-penned than usual.
Somehow the writing, or
not-writing, of this column
had already been settled in my
head, and now it is no longer
decided. Inst ead yet another so11rce of confusion and
irritationmust be written into the equation. The
embarassment, and the attendent anxiety, probably
are largely connected to a fear of. m aking an ass out
of myself. When ypu are self-telectlve to a rather
non-productive extrem e in the first place, it is quite
easy to hassle yourself into funny places.
One su ch funny place significant for the writing
of such a concoction as this, is a feeling of being out
of touch, of being off down some side street of my
own making. Which is just fine for me, in many
ways. Thinp happen, and are dealt with, and there is
a sense of movement, o f growth, of some
understanding of what lies behind and what bas been
passed through, and the meanings which can be
puUed o ut for future reference. Which is a place
where 1 can be and enjoy.
In the past it felt useful to talk in terms of
self-discovery, of the confusion that seems to me to
be a hLlman constant. Now it is harder, and it comes
slowly clear to me that this is ~ecause to talk in
terms which feel right and real to me is to take what
amounts to a political stand which is in direct
opposition to many of those who calim to speak for
students and for change. Out of the silence which
seems common to most of this campus it is hard to
kn ow whether anyone is interested in hearing what I
have to say. And there is litUe justification to an
effort such as this unless it reaches others.
It is easier, and in mat1y ways more productive,
for me to simply have another dark beer, (Stegmaier Porter, available at J&amp;M Distributing
1014 Northhampton) - take an empty piece of
paper and scrawl away into the early morning until
my hand gets tired , an_Q_t hen fiJe the result away
where no o ne but me knows where . I can be freer,
mor• profane and somewhat crazier under su ch
conditions. But I have given up something of value
to me, the pretext of at least trying to comm11nicate
with another person .
Does it do any good to articulate the obvious?
That such a desire to reach out and have som ebody
~derstood what is written comes from having felt
1Solated .and alone much of the time? There are costs
for winding up the kind of person you are no matter
what .that kind may be. One of the avow~d purposes
of this mess, when my head was/is together enough
to recall same, was to try and get acro,s the point
that we are aU tn the same boat, th at we are all
people, and that av01dmg the fact that we need eacl1
other gets noboJy anyplace, except bad places.
_On~ 0f the things that seems basic to me is that
the !nd1~1~ual has value , the self-&lt;:onsciousness and
the mability to be completely subjugate to a group
need not be bad. They can be, when there is no
' effort to reach out and to touch other people, and to

.

The

SUNY shuffle

Vol. 22, No. 17

' By 111 the Indications I think we can now get rid of these ridiculous

Layout . .. . . . . Meryhope Runyon
Alit. . . . . . . . . . . . . ...vacant
Mutic .. .. . .. , . . . .Billy Altmen
Off~empus . .. .. . Lynne Treeoer
Alit . ...... ... . ...... Vecent
l'tloto .... .. . . ...Oevid G. S mith
Alit.. . .... . . ... . Gary Friend
Alit .. .. . , . Mickey Onerreicher
Sports ... . . . ... .. .. Berry Rubin
Alit . •.. . ..... .. . Howle Feiwl

Tht1 Spectrum is servied by United Press International, College Pre5$
Service, the Los Afi(Jeles Free Press, the Los Afl8111• T ime Syndicate, end
Liberation News Service.
Republication of mettM hJ!I'ein without the exprea consent of the
Editor-in-Chief Is forbidden .
Editorial policy is detllf'mlned by the Editor· in.Chief.

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, October 1, 1971

grump

reasonable time. The reserve room's service of
xeroxing additional copies of unpublished materials
so there will be enough copies for students has been
most useful. I sincerely hope the University
administration will see .fit to restore any lost budget
to the library. I think tlle University community
ought to express itself very lo udly to develop an ·
exceUent library, and in support of the efforts of its
staff and Director.
Sincerely yours,
Murray Levine
Professor of P1ychology
realize that they too are people. It is argued that
self-oonsciousness is a political evil, that it mus~ be
converted to group activity before change can oceur.
Which tends to b e, in reality, the statement that
people should acquiesce to these group leaders
intelligent enough to, grasp which individuals are
worth following - Mao, Lenin, Trotsky, Cleaver or
whomever.
...
Individualism can be, and has been, perverted. It
has b een used, through training, to keep people
locked into themselves, and to be greedy. We live in
a greedy country led by men whose vision of
humanity stops at salt water and artificial borders,
and whose sense o f future extends to the next
election. Change is necessary, and if such change is
not voluntarily made, it must b~ forced. 'tet it be
noted that tjlere . is " , dtffe.'q'lC'-\ ~..,cen
an
1
insurrection ancf a ;l!'voTiHtofl: h~eYe'f''!! 1t least in
my head. The difference is largely who wins and who
loses. The powers that be get to define the winners
in an insurrection, and of that I wish no part.
There is at present no chance for a successful
uprising in Chis country. This is largely because there
is no agreement on the goals toward which such -.n
occurren ce should move. It is hard to foUow an
idiot ; no matter what color his armband or banner,
the more so if they are stupid - or is that a
contradiction in terms? The student silence which Is
so noticeable of late may be explain ed by the fact
that a great many of t he indivtduals around are
somewhat smarter and aware than they have been
credited for . If nobpdy is going to malce sense, fuck
it , get by, get high and avoid situations where people
want your body and· h ave no use for the outside of
you r head .
,
The name of the ~e is get selfish , oo.t greedy.
F'gure out that you can only eat so much, and that
the majority of the crazy louts runnin&amp;this country
are going to get you killed , by poUution, repressiOn
or a war, because' tbeir country bas to be n umber
one. It docsn 't seem to me that my standard of living
is tha t much in danger, being reasonably low to
begin with, so there is little feel of being pressured
by talking about such reform . Besides, and probably
more significanUy , there are at least .:~ome real people
in my life. Theose people, such as those who get
their kicks by having high school sorority girls wash
their bright shiny uh ... car, nght, car, having no
reality behind them have a great deal to lose. Whcu
all you have is )'our standard of living and it is
threatened , you have to respond - not infrequently
with violence if it is at your disposal .
If you have committed yourself to a life style
which excludes contact with realny, by removing
close contacts with peopl:!, it is h'.:rd to admit th tt
this is yow choice, and thd it can ·,~ changed . Yo.&gt;u
have to face the waste and pain of the lost tJme 10d
this is incrediblY hard for those wtth futwe enough
to j ustify such" a painful investment. How much
worse can it be for those wtth uothing sood or re.tl
beh ind th.:m, how can they assume that there is
so.&gt;m~thmg worthwile in changing? Jt is th is artificial
form of individualism, unable to ass.:ss either its own
.worth or that of others, which gives the whole
conet~pt a bad name.
Enough, already. Clearly I am not bndly
an xious, and can still run on at length. So it would
seem Friday is again araced.(?) Wowsers! Live well,
take care.

�_.

-

.......... ,... ,

Chaoeic librarieS
To the B4ttor-:

•

Two weeks aao, the professor for whom I work
as a ll'llduate assistant asked me to ao to Lockwood
Library and to pull off the shelves a number of
boob which were then to be' placed in tbe Harriman
Reserve Book Room. I was 'supriaed at such a
request, because in previo.us yean the task of
transferring books from Lockwood to Harriman
Reserve had been moat efficiently manaaed by the
library's own ataff. But I was soon to find 9ut that
the library this fall_is characterized by total chaos,
rather than brisk efficiency.
First, l bad trouble findina the books. Several of
the books, althoup they were classics, have never
been acquired by our library at aU. Other books were
catalogued incorrectly. One librarian explained to
me that .the Lockwood card catalogues are so out of
date that they are often more misleadina than
helpful; this means that it is difficult to locate the
whereabouts of even those few boolc.s which our
library Jias boupt .
After making an exhaustive search for aU the
books which my professor had requested, I blithely
assumed that my problems with the library were
over. I was wrong. Although I personally bad puUed
an the books !rom the Lockwood shelves and bad
typed out aU the lists necessary for library files, it
took the library staff three days to phys\_caUy carry
the books over to Harriman Reserve. When I
telephoned to check' lf an the books were on
Harriman shelves, the librarian wearily explained to
me tliat she couldn't even begin to estimate when
the books would be put on tbe shelves. The books,
alona with books needed for many other coutSes, are
piled in huge duffle bags, waiting to be labelled and
shelved . This, however, requires an adequate staff,
which neither Lockwood nor Harriman presently
has.
~
In addition to these difficulties, I have
encountered in my own personal searches for books
further evidences of a complete breakdown in our
library system. Interlibrary Loan, for example, no
longer offers as many services as it did last spring.
And I hive been told by several library staff
members that their morale has understandably
reached a new low point,
.
A university can exist without new buildings or •
new com puters; it can never survive without a
working library. I suggest that the attention of our
admistration now be focused on this fact.

Michael Nylan
Graduate A~sistant

'Jell 'it like iJ; t';
To the Editor:
I was very surprised after reading Shelly Taylor's
letter to the editor on Monday, to find myself in
agreement on two points she mentioned. First , that
it was indeed immoral for the Executive Committee
to raise its stipends. Second, that students should
join the Student Assembly.
Jt was unfortunate though that Sheny, to suit
her own ends, chose to interpret my move for parity
as some sort of grand scheme to· screw the student
body. (There are easier ways to steal and cheat, as
I'm sure Miss Taylor and aU of you are aware).
Sheny•s letter was even more disappointing when she
supports her statements with facts like "the
Community Action Corps are turned away from the
Executive Council (sic) still desperately needing
allocations" while the fact of the matter is CAC was
aUocated their entire budget.
I hope Shelly's remarks to the Student
Assembly will at least be based on fact. At the same
time I hope aD students will seriously question
Sheny Taylor's motives for writing such an
"unselfish, unmistaken" and "factual" (ha!) letter to
the editor.
See aT/ of you in the assembly.

Lester Goldstein
A cademic Affairs Coordinator
Student Association

Byt· bye Bambii
To the Editor:
When the tension built up, after reading Miss
Abelson's letter in The Spectrum concerning Stanley
Dayan's 'no-role' in CoUege A, I found myself doing
something I promised in May I 970, that ( would
not. Get angry at some half-assed pseudo-now
generation person. Abelson's "Stan Day~ is not in
the academic community" bullshit log Dashes me
into the American Legioner•s or Dark-Age ~apal
fanatics' tonceit. Two thousand years of this
God-damned glory, and Self and Community, and
Experiment is a way to alter 'IT.' Self and
Community and Experiment is College A. Miss
Abelson it seems to me should be the one who
should leave College A and ' start a new college
(SUNY AB via circle-seated classrooms?) '

Arthur Fortgang

Beautiful child
)
of soft flesh colour
and the smells of paradiae
and the wonder of da)'l
ridina a basket of white whicker the sea
now hell's noise to offices traffic an4 the discordant
sirens roll out from walls
on the next block.

I

Far past old auilt
and even tbru these srey baits - She
bas broupt me in where
the crown of the child shows forth
the promise

at least we, He who
will replace father politic
with interest
as old as promises
made not to be (orgotten
whose arms flesh sun
rise

Setti~

things straight

To the Editor:

we were trying to do was create pay priority among
aU Student Association officers, C4&gt;-&lt;&gt;tdinators, and
There are some basic questions that should be director heads. What in effect, we are saying, is that
asked about Student Association, stipends and the all of us have specific jobs to do and that no one
whole issue of Student Government. The student member is more important to the Association than
body should also begin deftning their own any other member. This move was made in an
responsibility to that government. I, as most of the attempt to end top down elitism and decision
other officers and co-ordinators, am mort~ than making. I am sure you'd like us to believe that if
willing to answer questions or sit down with people elected, you and Bobby would have been more than
and work to come up with some solutions to the willing to donate your stipends to some charity. But
problems that are facing us.
if my memory serves me correctly, it was this same
I also think that some real questions have to be Bob Convissar that on May 14, 1970, moved to raise
as~d of these so called responsible students who are
all officers stipends by $250.00 or maybe you didn't
appalled by what is happening and I point directly at know that Shelly. How come you didn't get
two of them . One is Sheny Taylor, academic affairs righteously indignant at that'? How come, you
hopeful of last year, who never sat on an academic Shelly, have failed to ask to sit on any academic
committee in h er life and wouldn't have known what committee or failed to sit on any before you ran for
tcf do with academic affairs if she was elected. I have office'?
serious doubts as to whether she could find it up to
Just to save you the trouble of writing wrong
the second floor of Hayes without a student information back, I will remind you that I was
directory. The other one is called by me "ol Rip-off elected in November of 1970 and bad nothing to do
Bob" or Bob Convissar, last year's public affairs with stipends for that year. Furthermore, J did
co-ordinator, whose great accomplishment was to Marsha's work for which she was .paid $125.00 and I
leave us with a ton of totally useless involvement got nothing. So, from now on, before you make false
70's. Then this same person had the audacity last accusations, check your facts and in my opinion, if
year to run for Vice President and Shelly made up there is anything you are not - it's responsible. In
the second mt;mber of the red Pepsi generation case you forgot , campaigning doesn't begin until
banner team known to one and all as Student March .
Alliance. Now when people like that question things
without any real understanding of what is
Keith Frankel
happening, I get a little u pset.
National Student Affairs Co-ordfnator
Shelly, if you bad bothered to see what Lester's
Student Association
motion was all about you would have seen that what

Irregular, not unjustified
To the Editor:
Professor William T . Parry has commented on
the irregularity involved in the promotion of William
Baumer to fuU rank . He is right about there having
been irregularities, and I would not add further
comment except that in the course of giving this true
report, Parry cast aspersions on Baumer~s
professional qualifications and bas unjustly maligned
President Ketter.
Let me start by underlining the obvious : that a
procedure is irregular does not mean that it is
unjustified. Irregularities are indeed justified when
the reg\llar channels are not functioning properly.
The issue comes down, therefore, to whether the
normal promotion machinery in the Philosophy
Department was functioning properly.
At this point it is necessary' to note that Parry is
an interested party to this dispute, since he was then
chairman of the Department and responsible for its
machinery. It is necessary, too, to comment on the
merits of Baumer's promotion, since th e soundness
of regular promotion machinery depends in large
part on its recommendations beina in tine with
merits. Without his saying so, it is clear that Parry
believes Baumer unqualified for the promotion that
his Department attempted to deny him; be would
hardly take such vigorous exception to irregularities
necessary to achieve a just result.
Merit is difficult to judge, especially when one
looks at one person in isolation. I don't know
whether Baumer and all the persons promoted to full
rank in the Philosophy Department this year (seven
in aU!) deserved to be promoted this year. I am ,
however, clear in my own mind that to promote aU

the others and leave Baumer behind would have been
a substantial injustice to Baumer, who, for aU his
advocacy of law and order, is an effective teacher
and has published contributions to three distinct
fields of philosophy. I would chaUenge those who
think otherwise to submit my judgment to, say , a
committee of the American Philosophical
Association, and am confident I would be
confirmed. (My judgment on Baumer's political
postures, I might say, is often quite different from
my judgment of 'his professional merit - and on
many such matters I am much closer to Parry.)
Baumer seems right that it would have stained
the grievance machinery for him, who is its chief
executive, so to speak , to ask for and obtain a
favorable judgment in his own case. In fact the
previous grievance case from the Department bad
already indicated that something might have been
wrong with the promotion mechanism within the
Department . In these specific circumstances I am
grateful to Ketter for stepping in to prevent another
injustice from dragging down the Department for
another year. It is just in circumstances such as these
that irregularities are justified .
There is, in this controversy, too much airing of
what should be confidential, and I wish the matter
had been left alone and 1 had not had to write this
reply. But the issue being raised I cannot resist
pointing to the moral : if sounder judgments were
made at the fa culty level, there would be no such
occasions for flexing administrative muscles.
Ne wton Gar•1er
Prof essor of Philo.w 11!y

Friday, October 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�Bangia Destl: People tc
Last August, while in Calcutta,
I saw 239 raggedly-dressed people,
mostly women and children ,
waiting on line for rice. Upon
inquiring, l was informed by a
local resident that the people were
a group of Bangia Desh refugees,
Bengali people forced to flee into
India or face extermination in
their homeland, East Pakistan .
The Republic of Bangia Desh
(which translates into Bengali
Country) is the name given to the
area which has been called East
Pakistan since 194 7. On Dec. 7,
1970, the first general election
was held in Pakistan.
The winner of the election was
Sheik Mujibur Rehman, a Bengali.
Enraged at the outcome, the
current General and President
Yahya Khan, a West Pakistani
ordered the e·xtermination of t.he
Bengali nation.
The first phases began that
night with the shelling and
bombing of Dacca University in
East Pal&lt;istan and the raping of
1000 women students. A general
curfew enforced by martial law
was put into effect as troops
stormed through villages, burning,
plundering and killing th e
residents.
The most singularly brutal act
occurred on March 25, J97 J when
radio stations announced that the
curfew had been lifted and that it
was no lo nger a violation to go
into the streets after dusk. The
people, freed from the rigidly
enforced curfew swarmed into the
streets. only to be met by a hale of
machine gun fire.
The fear of death and the rape
of their women forced the Bengali
peoples to flee from their mother
land . Nearly J0 million refugees
swarmed across the Indian border,
seeking refuge and the one meal a
day that the Indian Government
had promised to give all needy
people.
I came to Baduria Relief Camp
(which had 45,000 refugees and
only four doctors) thinking that I

could h elp these people in some
small way ; but I was wrong. I
could not aid them in th eir
refugee ca mp because t hey
alread y h ad 90,000 helping hands,
but b ad no material to use or to
make work.

feared tha t I would
,pneumonia if I slept in their b
mud · bo tto'med overcro w
tents, I was allowed to sleep in
special building which hous.ed
d ocotrs and ttie c a
administrators. I shared
double mattresses with the h
of the relief camp, his sons
oth~rs; six people in all.
During my frequ ent visits
other refugee camps (there Y
18 in my area .alon_s), 1 was abl

Refugee life
Even though I couldn't help
them, they helped me by feeding
and clothing me for five weeks.
They did this because I am h'!man

too and also, I thlnic, because they
wished that I would try to help
th em when I returned to America.
They loaned me a camera and
bought me four rolls of black and
white film so I could illustrate

question many refugees. My bf
friend and translator was Mr. Ro
th e chief justice of the minori
parties in Dacca. Threatened by
5000 rupee (S 1000) reward f.
his death or the death of his wit
' he fled Bangia Desh. Formerly
ricb ..Dan, Mr.. Roy entered lnd
u a peasant .· .He had with hi
only his wife, one sari,.one pair •
pants and a watch. His son, wt
had started the journey with hi
h ad been killed by a We

their actual conditioJls.
They also JIVe m·e a n
education in life and death as well
as what it means to be a refugee. I
ate the same foods as they did and
got diarrhea every day the same as
all refugees did . Because they

•

I

Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, October 1, 1971

�le torn from their·land
bat

I

would

get

if I slept in their bare,

t'med overc rowded
allowed to sleep in the
ling which housed the
and the c amp
tors. I shared two
tresses with the head
:f camp, his sons and
•eople in all.
ny frequ ent visits to
ee camps (there were
: a -alone), I was able to

PHOTOS AND STORY BY DAVID A L B IN

J&gt;akistani soldier.
M~st all of the refugees told
me that their homes Md been
burned by West Pakistani soldiers.
Pakistani soldiers would enter
their village by jeep and truck
burning home s and
machine-gunning the people who
fled from the flames . Sometimes
there would be as many as 500
Bengalis left dead out of a village
of 5000.
In order to escape the camage
rna ny villagers fled into th~
jungles where they regrouped and
started making their way to the
Indian border. Even while the
refugees were crossing the jungles
and fields on their way to India
they were pursued by soldiers
who .killed some and robbed them
of their valuables.

America's role
The refugees are now living in
relief camps on land allotted to
them by the Indian government.
Most live in tents, although some
of them have been lucky enough
to acquire grass to build huts.
They are eating rations adequate
for only one meal a day consisting
of rice, dahl (dried vegetables),
onion, potatoes and a little wheat
flour. Each day they eat the same
food.
There is a s hortage of
everything which we would feel is
necessary for life, even clothing,
for some have none and others
have only rags.
I could not bring myself to tell
these people that I was American .
my refugees. My best
The people are aware that the
·anslator was Mr. Roy,
American government bas been
1stice of the minority
giving India food and West
acca. Threatened by a
Pakistan arms. They would come
(S 1000) reward for
to me and ask: " Why are you
the death of his wife,
.gl1 Desh. Formerly 1 _ · .Jiving us rice and Pakistan
lr. Roy ent~d India •r ,, .•You ,Jlave aeen -what they are
doing to us; they are using
1t. He had with him
American arms to commit
e, one sari ..one pair of
genocide."
watch. His son, who
I then felt ashamed and made
the journey with him
no reply.
killed by a West

"""?

Friday, October 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Survey reveals attitudes on violence
and deatruc:tive tactics (92.6% of
tbe students, I 00% of the faculty
and 95.8 of st.affstroQIIy oppoeed
Tbe attitudes of the University breakina windows and aettlna fire
community have become to University property).
liplftc:antly more oonsenative in DJsruptive tactics such u taking
the lut year, and chances for a mer c:luses or adminiltraUon
resumption of violent campus buildmp and inteferin&amp; with
protest ue smallacc:ordin&amp; to the c:l.uael were stTOnaly opposed by
findinp of tbe Survey Rc.earc:b oter 7&amp;.t&gt; of students and over
Center.
~ of faculty and staff. The
These conclusions were opposition to b lo&lt;:ldna the
reached after oomparina the entrances to classroom• and
findinp of a University survey on offices was less overwhelming but
campus protest, conducted in still substantial.
April- May 1971, with the resulta
of a similar survey conducted the CoDJenative shift
year before, right after the 1970
Although opposing extreme
campus disorders.
tactics such as these, memb~rs of
On the topic of protest tactics, the University community often
it wu found that all memben of favored tactics designed to inform
the University community the administration, even
overwhelminalY reject extreme dramatically, of their dissent. The

by Bowie K.a
c.rtptu Edllor

'* of petitfona proved

1971, respondents were asked
bow Jieat tbey felt the chances
were for another ~ampus
diaturbance in the near future.
45.1% of students, 49.5% of
faculty and 48.5% of staff felt
that there wu little or no chance
for student protea, whereas less
that l 0% overall felt there was a
strona chance. The foremost
reasons as to why the campus is so
quiet were apathy, the fact that
students are tired of protest and a
f celina that protest doesn't
accomplish its ends. Some
respondents made a vaaue
reference to a campus atmosphere
which " was not favorable to
protest." However, only a small
percentaae felt that the campus
quiet was due to administrative
action (after the 1970 disorders)
Little or no chance
FoDowing the quiet sprin&amp; of or fear of reprisals .
. "The quiet on campus is a
result of changes in internal
attitudes, but shouldn't be
THE FOREIGN STUDENT'S
interpreted as satisfaction with
ANNUAL BAZAAR
exi!ting conditions," commented
Steve Lewis, a araduate student
Sponsored by
who helped put together the 1971
survey . In other words, the issues
THE INTERNATIONAL
which sparked the 1970 protests
COMMITTEE
are still there, and student protest
of
is always a possibility which must
WOMEN'S CLUBS
be considered.

the most
popular tactic, favored by 77 .2,
of students, 78.4, of faculty and
62.1% of ataff. A ~rity of
students and faculty a1ao favored
the bo1diDa of proteat rallies.
Mixed views were expressed about
boyoottin&amp; c:luses u a protest
tactic.
Students who claimed
involvement in the 1970 disorders
were asked to rate nine different
protest tactics on a scale of 1 to 7
as to their favorability.
Comparison with an identical
section in the 1970 survey
indicates a ..sizeable conservative
shift" "an average change of .865
on the 1 to 7 achale in student
attitudes toward protest tactics.

HARRIMAN LIBRARY
LOBBY

•••

SAYIMOIIY
SHOP AIMY NAYY

Fri«My, Oct. 1·1 :00 ·9:00

Sat. Oct. 2,
9:00 ·12:00 Noon
Houaehold goods
Warm clo1hfng
Available It 1
wry low cost

..,.••,c••···

UniVersity Travel

A bia factor inherent in that
pouibillty is the issue of
administrative responaiveneu.
Only 14.7% of students, 7 .7% of
faculty and 20.8% of staff viewed
University President Robert
Ketter as mott responsive to the
students. tn contrast, 36.S% of
students and 3S .2% of faculty saw
bim as mOlt responsive to tbe
SUNY central administration. An
additional percentage of
respondents viewed bim as most
responsive to the Buffalo
community. Therefore, over SO%
of students and faculty view the
President as being most responsive
to outside constituencies. This ~
important in view of the fact that
respondents in the Gabapn,
Lewis and Rubin 1970 study
viewed lack of administrative
respon siveness as the major
impetus to campus violence.
In retrospect, it seems that the
University community, was c:auJbt
up in a ::hain of reciproql} events
which escalated out of control in
1970, aQd not in a planned and
orpnized rebellion. Respondents
viewed the caUJng in of the police
by the administration as the
immediate sparkplug which led to
violence.
The University community
survey suaaests that attitudes
about protest have become more
conservative in the past year,
which may account for the quiet
spring of 1971 . However, highly
controversial issues remain and
highly intense dissent is still
possible , although it would
probably be less destructive and
disruptive than in the past.

...,UNYAB

.

..

-DIVISION OF SUB- BOARD I, INC.TO BE ANNOUNCED -

Montreal, Canada

Rome, Italy

OCTOBER 23 to Oct. 25 (3 days)
(School Holidly)
R/T Blue Bini Sctnarama Cruiser
2 nights- OuiiM Hotll (center City)
(4 to 1 room)

$3800

MARCH 31 to April I (9 dlys)
(Spring rec•)
vii Alitllil DC-8 J.t
Nil11ra Falls, N.Y. non-stop to Rome, Italy.
JUST AIRFARE OR PACKAGES WILL BE OFFERED.

Chamonix, France
DECEMBER 27 to .lin. 1 (11 days)
1 9 6 00
Schussmeisten Ski Club
$ · JUST FLIGHT SAS DC-8 Jet- Nilprarec•)
Fills, N.Y. Non-stop
to Gent¥1, SWitzeiland or on to Copenhlllfl,
Dtntn«k. Ski packatt in Chlmonix, France,
2 98 00
$
PACKAGE

Vermont

(Wintlr

Wllktnd Ski Trip, Su11r Bush, Killington a
Glen Ellen, in JAN. , FEB., end MARCHThrou"' the Schussrneimn Ski Club

lncluding~ottll/apartment-

chllm, m•ls and transftras.

POSSIBILITIES - NOT YET SET-

Jerusal~m, Israel

,

SanJuan, Puerto Rico

STUDENTS

$355~g. FLIGHT
$519~~KAGE
NON-sTUDENTS

00.

$

(Christma a Wintw rec•)

MARCH 27 to April10 (14 days)
Hillel
(haom Holidays)
Olympic Airways M·N.Y.C. to
TIIAviY, lsntl vii Athens, Gr~~e~.
Packlge in J~n~~~lem, Inti-including
.transfers, hotels (Kosher kitchen) and Inti; bnNikfllt.

POOER and Puerto Rican Community Center

The Caribbean

450 IJUST FLIGHT

(Spring RICIII)

$629~RKAGE

-

;. I

Passport information, Insurance
cards also anilable.
INFORMATION/APPLICATIONS
Room 316/323 NORTON HALL
Ext. 3602/3603

-rhge ten . The Spectrum . Friday, October 1, 1971

a C.I.E.E. lnternatio111l 1.0.

The Univ'!'ity Travel Centlr, its programs au llt'Yicts, are
made possable by Your Student Activity fees via Sub-Board 1
Inc.

'

�I

WASHINGTON - President
WASHINGTON- Senator Sam
Nixon tiped into law the draft Brvin Jr. (D.,N.C.), opened
extension bill Tuesday, but will hearinp on the freedom of the
hold up the $2.4 billion...·year -press in America Tuesday with the
pay raiJe untU after the wage-price following quote: .. No government
freeze ends on Nov. 13. In his ouabt to be without censors and
statement. Nixon said he was where the press is free, no o ne
hopeful ..that this is the last time ever will." The hearinp by his
the Presldent must sian an Senate constitutional riabts
extension of the draft induction subcommittee , will examine four
authority." It is hoped that the areas where the press' freedom of
hiabet J&gt;aY will attract more operation has been challenged by
enllste6i so that it would be the gov~mment in recent years :
possible to institute an the issuance of subpoena$ by
all-volunteer army by the time Jfand juries and congressional
this draft bill expires, July I, committees of reporters and their
1973. Starting now no student notes; the--widespread U$e of false
deferments will be issued to any press credentials by gqvemment
registrant who did not have one investlptors ~ the "new fears"
1as t year . However , the about government control. and
administration doubts that many reJUiation of the broadcast media;
college freshmen or sophomores and the government's attempt to
will be caUed. The law also obtain co urt injunctions to
abolishes state and lcx:al quotas. prevent newspapers from
This means that aU men with the publishing stories, a reference to
same draft number have the exact the Pentagon Papers incident.
same chance of being caJied, no WitnC£Ses will include Harding
matter where they live with this Bancroft, executive vice president
of The New York Times, and
national call.
lfil~:¥:=e:IEIIR~:U:¥0110il..__.::u=-=tt Norman Isaa cs, the retired
executive editor of the Louisville,
Ky. Courier Journal and Louuvi/1~
1Jme1.

___________....,

ALBANY
Governor
Rockefeller and leaders of the
legislature agreed Monday to draw
S4 m'illion for the state's
emergency funds to pay for
damages incurred during the
five-day riot at Attica
:orrectional facility . Restoration
.)(the prison was given S3 mUUon ,

additional sfleurity equipment for to two newly-created posts in the
14 ~nal institutions was pven central administration of the State
$800,000 aJtd $200,00 went to University of New York. Charles
interim expenses of the Attica lnaler, a public relations officer
inveatiaations. Meanwhile, with the National Cash Repter
neaottaU.ona are still aoin&amp; on with Co . , was appointed associate
the union r~1presenting the prison chancellor for poUcy and plannina
IUilrds, in llD effort to avoid a at a salary of S36,SSO a year. Dr.
..lock-ln .. at the state's prisons on Clifton Thome, Vice President for
Oct . 7 , if IRoclcefeller does .not Student Affiars at Albany since
meet .their demands. Other Attica J 96S was named Vice Chancellor
de velopme nt s include an for University Affairs at a salary
appearance at a federal court of $33,325 a year. SUNY
hearina in !Buffalo by attorneys Chancellor Ernest Boyer said that
for the inma1tes to show why three althouab two executive positions
top state officials should not be were created, the future chances
barred from questioning inmates . in the administration would result
involved in tlhe rebellion.
in the reduction of 40 positions.
The changes were made. in order
t o strengthen university-wide
OAKLAND - The Oakland policy and planning, improve
Tribun e repoorted Monday that management and rascal evaluation,
Biack Panther co-founder Huey strengthen community relations
Newton has Oown to Hong Kong and i ptprov e publi c
en n r o ute to Red China. accountability, transfer to the
Newton, 1llong with Panther campuses educational programs
information officer Elaine Brown now oper ated by central
and bodyJU~rd Leonard Bay, a dmi nistration a nd ddepte
arrived in C11nada Sunday and left greater responsittility for
a short time later for Hong Kon&amp; d ay-to-day operations to the
aboard a Cal\adian Pacific airliner. campuses.
The Chinese Embassy in Ottawa
refused to say "Vhether or not
Newton had been pnted a visa to
PHILADELPHIA
Be ll
visit China . Newton is due in Telephone is out to get the
Oakland Octt. I to begin his third " phone phreaks," an organization
trial on charges resulting from the which uses an electronic gadget to
killing of Oakland PoUceman John make free long distance calls.
Frey in 1968.
Numbering about 2SO nationwide
members , the ring bas cost Mother
Bell $500,000 in the past two
Al8 1\NY
Tw o years. A device known as a "blue
appointments were made Monday box" is the main culprit , and can

be made for about $25. It is a
multiple frequency tone pnerator
which bypasses loq distance
operaton. Pour petSODJ have been
arTested in connection with the
crackdown.
I

WASHlNGTON - Supreme
Court Justice Hugo Black died
Saturday and was buried Tuesday
in Arlin&amp;tqn National Cemetery in
an unfinished pine coffm. Black,
who served for 34 years on the
court, wq honored by' a double
receivina Une of past and present
members of the court. The
services were held at Wasbinaton
Cathedral, and• were attended by
President Nixon and Attorney
General and Mrs. John Mitchell,
amona otben. Black was 8S .
SAN FRANCISCO - New
York Mayor John Lindsay was
o ut west this week t o test the
California political climate. for the
Democrati c presidential
nomination, and sad Tuesday be
was not interested in becoming
Vice President . Lindsay, who said
he hadn't made up his mind
whether or not to run for the
nomination , feeis that 1972 is " an
absolutely critical year." In his
many appearances in tbe San
Franciscon area , Lin~ say spoke
against the war and said that
Washington bad lost touch with
t h. e cit ies and towns. "The
resources have been drained from
our \!!ties to su pport this
unconscionable Vietnam War."
GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.

Jewel• - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at Univenlty P\az.a)
BUFFALO, N .V . 14226

The only thing we can think of
what we make. The Swingllne
"Tot 50" Stapler. 98¢ In 1950.
SS. in 1971.
And it still eomn with 1000 free
staples and a handy carrying
pouch. It staples, tacks and
mends. lt'a unconditionally
guaranteed. lt'a one of the
world'a smallnt staplers.
And It's the world's biggest
seller. Could be that's why It
hun't gone up In price In
.21 years.
If you're lnternted In something
a IIHie bigger, our Cub Desk
Stapler and Cub Hand Stapler
are only $1.98. Both Tot and
· cub Staplers are available at
Stationery, Variety and College
Bookatorn.

~Bini~
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r&amp;IC&amp;IIud

!HJJJmqJ~v
•.m.
Until 1 1
and
Sun. thr Thurs.
AFTER 9 :00p.m .
Sun. thru Thurs •
3 81/T1111N1~IWKAJ(l)
Df
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1Dif!

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The Swingline '"Tot 50"

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1931 M81n St. • Mllpine Ptua

98¢ In 1950. 98C in 1971 .

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If you can name something else
that hun't gone up in price
since 1950,1et us know. We'll
tend you a free Tot Stapler with
1000 staples and a vinyl pouch.
Enclose 2S. to cover postage
and handling.

WBKW •nd Belkin Procfuctions present:

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ltEED

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Sat.
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75¢

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Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
Friday. Oc·;·. 8, at 8:30 ~.M.
All Seat• Renrved: Fro11t Floor, Golds •11d RHs . 16.50
Rear Floor and Bluu . IS.SO Grey• aud Oran••• · .$4.50
u1e . . . 8 t ltrff... P•h••• T1cbt Offln, St8ftw·MlltM
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St-.

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Friday, October 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

'

�- -·

. ..

•

-·

~o~

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Friday, October 1, 1971

�•

,.

Treasure I slaod

Editor 'I note : Thtl tlthuecond in
a fou r•ptlrt 1erle1 on herofn In the
/{Q'Iy. Thtl ptlrt is entitled Life and

eyes bled, streaming red tears down
his cheeks.

Death in 209.8.

Frozen like puite

On one of the Iocken ln
Wolfman's Comer, a measace is
scra"ledln pencil: "God, don't let
me die here." Underneath, it's
siped " Biji.ka." The lettering is
hiJhlystyli•ed, bold .
Shortly after he wrote this , on
Aua. 28 Jut year, Seaman "Chlco''
Bijika sat in Wolfman 'a Comer with
four other aeamen and stuck a
needle in h1l arm . All five were
hitting-up t~eir twice daily dosaae
of smack, maintainina the habits
they ' d ac:quiRd in Vietnam.
Seconds after "Chico" released the
tourniquet. from his arm, he closed
his eyes and droo ped his head.
Richard Hadnett, one of the other
four addicts, concerned about his
buddy, reached for Bijj}ca's s poon
and was about to tute the cooked
white powder, when he noticed
that Bijika's face wu flushed . He
put down the spoon and pulled
open Bijika 's eyes and listened to
h is heartbeat. His heart was
pounding and he was breathing.
Hadnett aod the others assu med
that Bijika was just noddin&amp; out.
But minutes later, the face across
fro m them became very red ; the
eyes, pulled o pen once again, were
white, except for bright red
striations. Then they noticed his
mouth was bleeding. His fingernails
turned red and began to bleed. His
ears began to bleed. And then his

thdnett and the others picked Naval deal
him up and started to walk him
Durin&amp; Uijika'a eiahtb month in
down the lona hallway of the 209 .8, acco!fdin&amp; to Dick Richards,
barracks toward the exit, since he a friend, he: wu summoned to the
still had so~e muscle tone. They office of Naval investiptions and
fiaured to take him to fmt-11id and was offe red an immediate
report that they'd found him discharae and the droppin&amp; of aU
OD'ed in the head. But, halfway • charaes ap.i nst hJm if he'd finaer
down the hall "Chico" convulsed . two suspects in his own barracks.
He feU into a fetal position on the Bijilca, sick of the Navy, sick of
floor and froze there Uke aranite. 209 .8, sick •Of the continual hassles,
"We couldn't even open his aareed to nat on two seamen who
hands," reported one of the were selllna: s mack in the barracks.
onlookers.
The Navy promised hJm be'd be
• 'Chico" never reaained· discharaed and on his way home
consciousness. Five days later, he before they would reveal their
died in the bue hospital. Yes, source of information. Ho wever,
"Chico" Bijika had OD'ed aU riabt; days before Bijika's dischar&amp;e,
but not on heroin . He'd been sold a information leaked through
spoon of white powdered battery attorneys em the case that Bijika
acid,scraped from a car battery. He was tbe informant. The news
burned to death, from inside out. spread throl&gt;upout the barracks.
Bijika's story may be more That day , 1Bijika scored a hit from
sordid than most, but in other an unidenhfied barracks-mate and
respects it's fairly ty pical of life in shot his arm full of sulfuric acid.
The mu rderers were never
Barracks 209.8. He had been
detained in "d op~r·s barracks': for apprehendc:d, though the men of
barracks 2t09 .8 have little doubt
eight month s, awaiting discharge
on arounds of a dope bust. The about their identi ty. But of course,
they don't talk ; and most of those
actual paperwork and official
procedure leading to the discharge
who were there at the time are gone
could have been accom plished in
now . anyway.
Wolfmam's Corner was still
about twp weeks, or a month at
most. But Bijika was getting being used when we first visited the
drummed out because he was a barracks, b ut only by more recent
heroin addict, and the Navy
" inmates ."
doesn't like addicts, so it kept him
aro und and hassled him and hnqtf'l1
Part Ill : Pev.ronal irllt•rvit-wt.

him . and made life miserable for
him . 'That'1S how the Navy deals
with its addicta.

u

Q : Row do I aet an "ineomplete" ande rem"ed from my record?
A : By simply completing the required work for the instructor. He
will then forward to the Office of Admissions and Records a liped
form indicatin&amp; the change in BJ8de. If, however, you do not complete
the work, the incomplete arade will remain on your record, althoucblt
will not count in any averaces, etc.
Q : How are recipientl of the Reaentl Scbolanhi.,. aoiq to be
billedT
A : They will be billed the same as the other students. However, if
you have handed in a Scholar Incentive form, indicating tbe amount of _
the award, then that amount will be deducted. lncidenUlly, the billl
should be in tbe mail by the Ume this Action Line column is in print.
Q : Why are buement fire doors locked in FOitn Hall, except for a
period between 10 a .m . and 4 p .m . Ttdl is 1 fue huard, and liace
there uen't any crash ban on. the door, and there are MFC studenta in
the building It niaht, IOmetbin&amp; OU&amp;)U to be done.
A : We asked the Maintenance Department and something bas been
done. Th e doors are now kept o pen until I 0 p.m . Thank you for
bringing this to our attention.
Q : Where can I aet a parkin&amp; permit?
A : Parking permits are available from the Campus Security Office
which is located at 196 Wlnspear Avenue.
Q : I have made arranuments to receive an absentee ballot. When
must it be returned?
A: Absentee ballots, according to Admissions and Records, must
he postmarked no lat er than Oct. 26.
Q : I am an undergraduate and I need lea•l advice. Can anyone aive
me any aid?
A : Yes, the Student Assocralton has retained the services of an
attorney to help students. lle lS Norman Effman and you can get in
touch with him at 856~223. lie IS ai!IO ava rhtble on campus each
Tuesday evening in the Student Assot.:iation offices.

presents

-

-

~ve, MUSIC

"'

t&gt;ANCING

GUSTAV DOES IT!!!!
...and for only 8 cents

BOOSE
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2nd

Q : Does the University have a Veterinary Clinic?
A : Unfortunately, it doesn't! Cornell Uruversity in Ithaca. N.Y. is
the: closest school which does offer ~.:ourses and research in this area .
However, there are a number of veterinarians m the Buffalo telephone
book and Buffalo does have a local branch of the ASPCA .

40 Capen Blvd.

8:30p.m.
HILLEL HOUSE

Beef &amp;

Q : Where can I aet an lD card?
A : To repeal what we surd m last week's column. ID cards are
available starting today '" the basement of Foster Hall on Tuesdays
from 9 - noon and on Fridays from noon 3.

~le

Q : When is the new Student Calendar going to be distributed?
A : Unfortunately , the Student Calendar, published by the Student
Association and the Office of Student Affairs, could not be printed
this year because of a shortage of funds . But we are hopeful that we
will be able to publish o ne nex t year. But thank you for the man y
inquiries about it.

House
3199 MAIN ST.
(0. Bloet S.D Of UB \

•.

Q : 1 received a parking ticket last week. I thought that there wu
open parking until Oct . I . What alves?
.
A : Upon investigation, we discovered that you had parked 1.0 a
section reserved for handicapped persons . These areas are always
reserved because they art designed to aid persons with special physical
problems. Your cooperation is asked so that these persons ~oo may
have an o pporutnity to attend calsses and earn a degree. We might also
add here that open parking ends as of today. Remember that the
parking tickets issued are City of Buffalo parking tickets and must be
paid like any other ticket issued in the city .

INTRODUCES
The folk music of
NAN EICHLER
SUNDAY NIGHTS 9 p.m.-?
FRIDA~ &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

The live music of
- A. M.cr::
BAND

835-6300
CHEAP BOOZE

Q: When will the new student directory be issued?
A : It is in the process of being printed now and should be ready
sometime in the middle of October. It is difficult to pinpoint the date
because printers cannot always give a definite day when the work will
be finished .

CHECK'DISCOUNTS LIQUORS

I

450 NfAt:AR A FAT.T.S BLVD. ( Next to

, GRlA
.... Sl.S9, Stb
YAGOSANT
. . •. . . . •. . . . . . . .
BOONES APPLE WINE .•.....•........ · · 1.00, Stb
FRENCH WINES .........................99¢,5tb
SPANADA .......................... 1.99, ~Gal.
KEY LAR.GO .. · · · .... • ..... ' ••.....•.. 1.15, Stb
~
..... 2.25, Stb
RIUNITB LAM».. RUSCO •.•• ' . . . . ~·
. .
KOSHER WINES ......................... 99¢.Set

-

Ha'le a problem 7 Need help? Do yow find It jmpo611ble to wntJmtle
the Uni'lenlty bwruwcrr~cy 7 /rl cooperr~tion with the Office of Student
Allain and Servlcu, The Spectrum spoftlon Action Line, a weekly
reader service column. '}?!roup Action Une, lndltlidu.l 1tudents arn
ret llfllwen IO pwzzUnt qwuttoftl, find 0&amp;11 where lind why Uni"Hmty
decilio~ are made and ret tJCtlon where clump needed.
·
Just dill/ 831 ·5000 or 'Iiiii the Action Une booth In the Center
LoU:nfe in Norton Hall for indh&gt;id~M~IIIttention . nae Office of Student
Affairs and Serllicu will in"~elti#Jic all quutiom arul compMittt•. and
will aftlwcr them individually. The name of the lrulltlidual orltiNitint
the inquiry il kept confidential under all drcumstancel. nae more
common queltion.r will be aftlwered In IIIII column t!tlch wuk.

HILLEL

FRANKINSTEIN

.

actton L1ne

Death ofa heroin addict

.. ...

...

r ..
•

...

..

"HALJP-GALLON OF

AI F. Wholesale)

··-·

I
•

WINE" (Sweet Red)
- STUDENTS PAY ONE GREAT
ONLY:

•

i

FOR

PARTIES

••

$149
o•

•

1 PER
STUDENT ••

••

••

835 ~ 300

CHILLED WiNES

STRAWBERRY HILL .................. · 1.00, Stb
1 09 5 h.
BALI HAl .•. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • t
RICHARDS APPLE ....................... 99¢, 5th
.
1. LOVE. YOU ...........................39¢,10tb
SPANISH WINES ..........•...............99¢,5th
oo s b
ZAPPLE ............................... 1. , t

.I
Friday, October 1, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

.

.

�For11nula I racing

.

Pro football
by Dan Caputi Jr.

GraJUlPrix·at Watkins Glen

Well, tbe W'ua.rd bepn to pin some measure of respectability by
postina a mark of 9-3-1 last week to make his slat e I 3- I I -2 for S4%.
One indication of the kind of seuon It's aoina to be is the fact
that there are only six unbeaten teams left. This is due in larae part to
tbe "finish last, draft fuit .. policy of the NFL, which allowed New
Orleans to receive Archie Mannina and New EnaJand, Jim Plunkett.
Minnuotll 24, Buffalo 13: Bills are defenseless to Vilclna around
pme.
Detroit 27, Atlllnta 17: Landry comiftg into his own ~
quarterback.
Baltimore 30, New Englllnd 10: Pats had their fun, now
opponents will have some.
Dtzlllls 34, Wa1hlngton 13: Cowboys scalp Redskins with
DoomJday defense plus run nina of Calvin Hill.
Miam/28, Jets 10: Csonka-Kilck duo, too much for Jets.
Green Bay 24, CfncinMti 21 : Benaals' defense can be beaten.
Packers lookinasurprisinJ)y strona on offense.
Slln Francuco 37, Plrilodelphllz 7: No contest . Brodie should eat
up porous EaaJe secondary.
Slln Diego 20, Pittlburgh 14: Close game may be decided by
Cbarprs' strona aerial pme.
Oakllmd 27, Clewlond 10: Raiders dominate all the way as
Lamonica finds chlnlts in previously impenetrable Brown defense.
Kanltls City 24, Denver 20: Strualina Chiefs still lookina for
answers to offensive problems.
Lo1 Angelu 17, Chicago 14: Bears' dream of unbeaten season
ends.
St. Louis 21, Giants 10: Cardinals end Giant jinx which cost them
division title last year.
New Orle1ms 21, Howton 20: Mannina sparks Saints to mild upset
over eniarnatlc Oilers.
CoiJqe football
by Barry Rubin
After picking Colorado over Ohio State in last week 'I major upset ,
my unbeatable record Is 24-4·1 for a percentage of 8.5%.
Notre /JQm e 11, Michigan State 13: The Irish were embarrassed
last week - should get their revenae this week.
Pittsburgh '23, West Virginia 2 1: The Panthers were soundly
trounced last week at Oklahoma, but a comeback is likely.
Oregon Sta te 27. UCLA 2 J : Dee Andros' Beaven should send the
Bruins to their fourth strat¥hl setback.
Texas 2 J, Oregon 0 The Lon&amp;horns are potent this season, but
Oreaon should be a stubborn foe .
·
Mlchitan 44, Na vy 7· The Middies have the misfortune of meeting
the rising Wolverines.
Auburn 3-1 . Kentucky 6 : The Tigers ecked o ne out against the
Vols, and should troun c~· rhe Wildcats
Syracuse 21. /nd1unu I J The Orange offense has got to get gomg
in order to gtve Syracust! &lt;1 shot at Penn Stale later this seas&lt;&gt;n.
•I
Stanford 27, Duke 7: The Blue Devils are playing somewhat out
of class. while Don Bunce, Plunkett 's replacement, is moving the
Indians.
Purdue 23. Io wa 7. The Botlermakers have lost close decisions to
Washington and Notre Dame, but Iowa is a building club .
Penn State 24, Air Force 2 I : Nittany Lions' running duo of Harris
and Mitchell should outgain the tough Falcons.
Oklahoma 35, USC 24: The Sooners edge the Trojans tn a htgh ·
powered offensive battle in the Southwest.
Ohio Stat e 27. Colifornia I 0 : Hayes has fhe Buckeyes hopping
after last week's upset loss to Colorado.
Nebraska 38. Utah Stare 14 · Devaney's Huskers may not be
caught this year.
Colorado 34, Kansas Stare I.J · The Buffa loes are moving in the
major polls, but State could gtve them a tough fight.
Tennessee 27, Fltm Ju / 3 Vols hate Flonda and former coach
Doug Dickey with a passion.
"
LSU 24 , •Rice / 3 · Ttgers have been disappomting and the
tmproved Owls may make it close .
M1ssourl /9, Army 17 : Missouri and Army battle fiaures to be a
dose on on the Michie Stadium sod.
Augu.rburg 24, Sr. Tlromasr 0 . Ttus game may have far reaching
effects on the top ten polls
it may even be on ABC regional
television.

•

by Stew Senfin

~

•
speed and the razor's edge between a disastrous
spin
and a lap record .

Spectrum Stt~f/WP'Iter

Thn Grand ,Prix circus arrives in tiny Watkins
Glen thtis weekend, k.icltina off the blgest annual
party in the country and the only opportunity for
racing. fans to see and participate in the excitement
and glamour that Is Formula 1 racing. Some 50,000
will camp at the newly rebuilt Grand Prix road
course and, by startina time Sunday, the number of
bodies present will swell to more than twice that.
Tht: occasion is the 13th annual Gral\lf Prix of
the United States. It is the only event In the U.S.
where &lt;drivers may compete for points counting
towards the World Championship of Drivers. Striving
for th~;e points and a share of the $267,000 purse
will be names such as : Hulmes, lckx, Stewart, Siffert
and Hill - all est1abUshed members of racing's elite,
the Grand Prix drivers. A fine crop of new drivers
will also be on hand to snatch their portion of the
richest .. purse" in the history of road racing. These
include: FittipaJdl, Wisell and Petersen . All have the
ability t.o achieve rapid suecess In this world of hi~

,---"Bible TrutJr---,

I CHRLST DIED FOR OUR SINS 1•
I "For C~&amp;ritt alto beth once 1uffere4 1
for 1ins, the jult for the unjuat, that I
I He miaJ!1t brlna us to Go4, belna put
.to 4eetJI In the flesh , but quichned I
pbY the Splitt."
f

J - -------~:!.~~~-'

He~ar,

0 Israel

for gems from the

JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

The U.S., long underrepresented in its own
Grand Prix, wUI have three top drivers chaUengina
the world's best. Mario Andretti will appear at the
wheel of a blood-red Ferrari 3128/2. Powered by a
183 cu. in. flat 12 engine puttlna out 480HP, the
Ferrari is overdue for a win. Mark Donohue, who in
his first Fl outing at the Canadian GP finished third,
will pUot a Sunoco blue McLaren-Ford. And in his
first showina In a single seater, Peter Rewon, cunent
leader in the Can-Am series, bas agreed to drive a
Tyrell-Ford. He is teamed with world champion
Jackie Stewart In a car that has won 6 out of I I GPs
this year.
~

For many, the race is an end in Itself, but for
most, it's only part of a complete expenence. It's a
time when every::)l1e's friendly, and the only
invitation one needs to come to a gathering is one's
self. Young people and old bridge their gaps;
friendships are made anJ renewed.
It's a time of sounds and smells and good feeling.
Very few go just once - it's that good .

MAXL'S GONE COLLEGE

G1f~.~~ .!!~~lNG
MAXL 'S NUT HOUSE
1S43 Main St.
(Corner ferry)
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT- 7 NIGHTS A WEEKI

876-4265

Goody Two Shoes
IOUTIQUf

SAL E

SOIJJC

JEANS
CORDS
FOR THE CHICS'
SHIRTS
JACKETS LITTLE BEAVERS638 MAIN STREET
AIIH(US£R.IUSCH, tiiC. • ST. lOUtS

Pag, .fq~ . Tlie. SJ*~ . Friday, Qctok' 1, 1971

The fint malt liquor good mcJI•gh
to ~ called BlJDWEJSER..

�BABY SITTER wanted, hours fteJCNttl,

·CLAIIIIIIII
fOR &amp;AU

own transportation PNf..-.d. Mutt
like ctlltdren, 632-1151. oaytlme

REFRIGK~:ATOR Peft.c\
~J~attent c;&gt;nelltlo n, t100.

1t7l DATSUN 240-Z yellow W/1»18c1&lt;
tnt•lor. OfttiMI owner •nne. StHI
uncter warrtnty . t4100 firm .
117~25 aft ... 5 p . m .

111- 1130.

1114 8 U I c K LeSabre·Sedan .
A utomatic, t:xceiiMt tlr•, lnclucll,.- 2
snow t lr• . P o - &amp;t..,lnt 8nd bra!&lt;• .

'13 ECONOLINE Van fOOd tires,
, _ . little work . V-v fOOd engine.
1230. 131-4022.

FLATTOP - Clat61c tultars. N- u..O. Martin , Gibson , Guild, Gurian,
etc. MUIIchns pt1cee. S trl"9 ShQ9Pa,
524 Ontario. 7 p . m . - t p .m . dlfly.
Slturctay, r1oon - 5 p .m . 17~120.

1t62 O LDSM081LE, 65 ,000 mH•,
good mec~lul condition, automMic
transm..eon, C»&gt;- st-1"9, bra~&lt;•,
mounUd s nows Included. GrNt
tra nsporttt lbn. a 2 50 n-.otlab...
837- 1117 , ~ 1 3 1-4113 111&lt; for
Mldcay.
CHEV Y If , 1M2 auto t50, Olympic
co nsole stereo, AM a. I"M1 air
condition.... 1000 8 .T . U . 112- 3717.
1865 v w eus. Good running co nd.
l n tj)e c ted August . Mal&lt;e O ffer.
114- 1421.
GALAXIJ[ 500, V-1 , euto matlc, body
excellent conditi o n, runs well, t3&amp;D,
tle JCible, Call attar 5s00 - 132~&amp;11 .
1964 BUI C K RI V ERA. N- tlras,
brak • , sttrt ..., antln• o-~led July.
155 0 .00 67.a-flll.
1963 f"O RD c o untry SQuire, a iCcel lent,
1 3 00, or Dell o ffef. '63 F«d Falcon
w a eo n , t l OO , go o d cond itio n .
aa.-.171 an~~ttme. AMI for Z«a.
Must Mil IK&amp; Pont lec. tiOO ~ ~
o tter, 1110 1951 MOA Coupe 1400. C all
838- 1638 .

c;&gt;nelltlon 1350 firm. Aile for BOb,
3234 Main St.
•
TRANSPORTATION ChNp, 65 Cha¥.
WatOn runs toocl. tl75 or bllt offer.
Anytime 17.6 -6110.

~~~.

- - - - -- - - - - - -- -- - - - PONCHOS from ~oll¥ia, Plfu 8nd
MI ICI CO . Hanel W0¥1n. At ''The
People," a foil&lt; arts bOutique - 144
Allen. 112- -6213.

lKO INTERNATIONAL Step Van .
GOOd running condition. Many I ICtras.
Can be ~ at 444 Harrison, o ff
Nlltar• Falls Blvd.

LIVING R1DOM furniture t o r ule mal&lt;e offer, 177- 5 432 1tter 5 s00 p .m .
,
B E DROOM, Dinette, lclt c hen , living
r o om fulrn nu re. Reasonable
173-1230, 115-5!123.

1965 V .W. CAMPER , 1 !170 Engine
W/ 15,000 m1111. 6 t lras, stereo, urpets,
paneling. tl50 Of trade for 1967 o r
~• bug W/ 'Wo engine. 6 3 4-7 115.

D E SK L"MPS, rOIIIWIY tablll,
broll...- frv•w-rottss... le , p ots, . pans,
m ise:. RNnoniDie o ffer ecce.,tlble.
Phone 135--1 517 5- 7 p .m .

1964 CHEV ROLET 6 cy l, autom1tlc,
IICallent runn ing condit ion, 1 200. Ask
fOf 8111.

SUEDE V I.ST frlnte t o knM t7 .50,
G.E. w•h••r 160.00, A ir F o rce coat
Midi t$ .00, Oreft lng Ill~ t10 .00, 3
plec• luttate U 5 .00. 1 76-2152.

TWIN BED for 1111 - t 25. Clll A I
lfter 10 p .m . 837-5413.
REFRIGERATOR S, st o ves end
w•hers. Aeconcl ltloned , delivered and
euaranteed. 0 a. G Appllences, 144
5)'Qmore, TX+--&amp;113.

·~-~The
.
J~~--~nmesa-copy
printifig,
place.

"

fo r dorms
Call Laurt

1965 FORO SUC*'Van. E xcellent
runnlnt conclltlon. Come and - · 105
DOUBLE mattr- and bOJC tprlnt.
Welt f"erry.
, Good colldltlon, c ...n. Call 137~15

---------------------------1 967 SUZUKI 250 . E x cellent

It's your Goodway Copy Center. Where
we print anything. Instantly. And there's
no premium for speed; We're offering
a special this month. Bring in this ad
and those 8 111 " x 11 ~ bl ack and white
jobs wlll cost you $2.00 for 100 copies.
How do we do it? Easily. You give us a
camera-ready original. You get as many
copies as you want. Sometimes within a
few minutes. Sometimes same ti me. next day.
What else do we do?
We copy, bind. collate.
pad. fold. staple.

weca.

for Fri., ,.,., f«

pr~ed.

S PEEDY Transetortatlon . 1t61
Pl y mouth Fury, :UI Autom8tlc.
l nt ...81ted all 134-9143.

u 2- uu .ru• s.e1.

w.ctneeGIY.

Mon. TIM dMCIItnee witt 1M !Mit.

AMP\.IFI E I!t, 3 months old VOX.
Pwfect cond ition . Built In fu u reverb
MB A Vlbratto t 20 5 - 133-394 2 .
H A AMO N V "Scwerelgn " oult er perfec:t for beg lnn«s, Excellen t
condition U50 um taU you guita r ,
cau, Jtrap. b ook, eccn sorles. Gene,
131-5 215 , 9-4.
"THE PltOPLE", 1 Foil&lt;
Boutiq ue, 144 Allan, 182-6283.

Arts

81C VC LES 26", 3 speed EngliSh
Recen, bmnd n - mans, 110111 1 36· 1303.

WANTED
EXPERIENCED people t o work IBM
Composing E q uipment ,
or
l)hoto·typot~ltlng . Please contact Jim at
831- 4113 or come up to The
SDICtrum room 355 N o rton .
NEED lniiCtPinslve tape recorder e ither
reel · tO •reel l) r CISSII t l for $10.00 or 10.
Call Matti 838 - 2098 .
PAATIME S UPERVI SO R for Buffalo
teenage Je\ vlsh V o uth pro gr1m . BA.
Group vv o rk e ~t perlen c e/ M S W
c andlde tl e
preferable . C al l
3 15 -4 4 6-1~379
or 3 15 - 446- 491 5
for lnt~rvle.N .
STA.R1'

,per hou r ulary plus
4-1 p . m . wllkdays,
IG-2 p . m. S1turd1 ys. Clll 135- 31 03

t&gt;onul!'

lJ~OO

wc~rk

ROCK GROUII'S wanted. St.ec!Y Work,
dtokol of nllfttl. TIM C IUit ....uurant,
Nla..,a f'alllo. Contact Ed L KENSINGTON Bailey owrl room •10
Pet' month , Including utiHtte • Share
apartment With th,_ fUYJ, C all ShellY
131- 3194 avai!Mife tmmede.tely.

11~602.

YOU MUST have .._.. a beaUtiful
baby but baby look • you now , ...
lladciNII)·

FEMALE ROOM~TE Mldlcl. own
room, 147 mo/ + UUI ; •to min . wall&lt; to
campus. 2 1 C h_.n ( 1 blodt pest
Etlllft). No phone 10 Just c:orna ·

ATTENTION: Ealy.,.Oint .... y needt
ptac:e to live. . . , _ hale». PfefW own
room. MIIC 134--MIO. ThankS.

OWN ROOM , two minute Will&lt; to
campus, 155. Call after 5 p .m . Gall,
136-"00611 Gena 133-6229 .

HAPPY 2oth BIRTHDAY, Mary. It's
ofttc:lll - you•,. an old maid now. I
lo¥l you.

TWO FEMALES snare larte room .
8Nullful house around corner from
Allenhur st, •55/ month. Call Sue
837--4924.
FEMALE ROOMMATE/ own roo m
$60 Including utlllttas. East Delevan.
Call KathY 194-7197 aft• I p .m . OT
or PT maJors "preferred".
FEMALE WANT E D TO shlrl room.
Apartment at 205 Voorh ees off Hertel.
146.7 3/month , come between 4 and 5
p .m .

T Y PIN G, professionally done,
exPefllnOid secretary , •AO/ INII. fast
service, will p ldc up and deliver,
174- 3476 an... 6 p . m . Ditto mast.,.,
stencils, manusc:rtpu.
RESUM E

APARTMENTS WANTED

IHI&amp;tance -

Mal&lt;e your

- t s w ork In tettlnt an lntervi-/JOb.

S INGLE MA L E stu dent, 21 , needs
room w ithin wall&lt;lng distance o f
camp us. Sh~re I JCpenses. Call Henry
837-6029.
HE LP! I need I p iece to IIIII.
P!'eferably o wn room . O pen you r
hurt. Mire 834~3850.

RIDE BOARD
AIDE WANTED t o Boston Oct . 7/ 8 .
Will share expenses. Clll P1tt l
831- 2767.
RIDE N EEDED to U .B . mornings from
Elmwood and Sher lcsan .,.. , In
Kenmore. Call evenings 876-2155 .
COUfLE S EEKI N G trtnsportltlon to
West COISt I.e. Sin FranciiCO, Will
shere e~epenses. Call J1lme and All
8 3 4-2158 .
S TUDENT N EEDS lf1nsportat1 o n
between Elm a and U .B . M1ln St.
Camp us. 6 52- 3834.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
LARGE furnished ro om avall1bte for
t wo - 8 76 - 0149.

PERSONAL
TIM JOH NSON . If y ou're st il l In town,
cont1c t your buddy from t he steel
p11nt - Jeff - 632- 094 2 .
N EED A brother. Rulh P I Lambda
Tau . Table In P~rker Hall , II 1 .m . - 1
p .m .

orTF9~t)2 .

MISCELLANEOUS
AN YO NE WHO h at e x pertenc:e
w o rl&lt; l nt with IBM C omposlnt
EQuipment, Paste-up materials or a
Ptloto·TVposltor pl.... contact Jim at
The Spect r um o ffi c e or call
1 31-4113.

Guaranteed • Call T om 111- 3421.

MEXICAN F OOD TACOS, burt•1tos,
enchllldes, ta malas and more. Try ou r
popular Tl pj)y's stN I&lt; aandWidt also
III'Ying chicken 1n d seafood. While
you're there, lfllov • br-. TIPPV' I
T aco H ouse 2 351 S l\er1dan Ortve.
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Friday, OctobeF

1~

1971 . The Speetrum . Page lifteen·

-

�....
Today : Varsity golf at the Brook Lea tourney RIT host.

An~ts

lntematio.W folk Danc:ina will meet every
friday with instruction, Room 30 Diefendorf
Annex, 8- 11 p.m :

Saturday : Varsity cross-country at the Lemoyne
Invitational , Syracuse; varsity fall baseball
doubleheader at RIT, Rochester, noon.

..uffalo State Hospital needs 200 volunteers for
unit uslgnments. Please contact the CAC office,
Room 220 Norton Hall or caU Ralph at 831·3609.

Monday : Varsity golf vs. Canisius, Audobon
course, 2 J!•.m.; women's tennis vs. Fredonia, State
University of Buffalo tennis courts.

The student film club will meet on Monday Oct.
4 at 7 p.m. in Room 234 Norton to elect a
representative for the Student Assembly and to
discuss the state of the club.

Roller hockey Ktion will take place tomorrow
morning at 10:15 a.m. in the parking lot between
Capen Hall and Michael Hall. Who knows, maybe the
sides will b•e well balanced this week. In case of rain,
game willet' played o n Sunday at 10:30 a.m.

Brazilian Club will meet on Tuesday evening, Oct.
5 at 8 p.m. in Room 344 Norton. All members are
requested to attend.

There ~viii be a meeting for all freshmen
basketball c:andidates at 3 p.m. in Room 31~ C lark
Gym on Tu,esday, Oct. 5.
•

The University Bookstore's free drawing, open to
all State University of Buffalo students for a
complete 24·volume set of the 1971 edition of The
Encyclopedia Britannica was won by a senior
majoring in art history, floyd Wong of 50S Niagara
Falls Blvd., Eggertsville, New York. Another drawing
will be held january, 1972.

The Buffalo Club Crew Team meets every
weekday in front of Norton Hall at 4 p.m. For
information• contact Seth Bloom, 838·4643.
The in;mgural Buffalo club soccer program begins
this coming, week at Geneseo. The schedule: Oct. 5
at Geneseo, Oct. 8 at Erie Community, Oct. 13 vs.
Fredonia at Rotary Field, Oct. 23 at St. john Fisher,
Oct. 27 vs. Canisius at Rotary Field, Nov. 2 at
Gannon College, Erie, Pa.

The UB Outing Club will hold its first meeting in
Room 231 Norton Oct. 5. All interested in camping,
rock climbing and skiing are urged to attend. Call
Haria Plumley at 835·2642 for information.
The State University of Buffalo Band Party will

be held Saturday, Oct. 2 at 8 :30p.m. in the Band
Building. last year's and this year's members are
invited. Cars leave Baird at 8:30. Call Gary,~ What's Happening?
693·5373, or Steve, 831 ·3682, for information.
Friday, Oct. 1
ACLU Prison Rights Project will sponsor Ed
Koren, attorney associated with Prof. Schwartz'
9 p.m. - Concert: Damnation, Fillmore Room,
Prison Project. He will speak Monday, Oct. 4, at 8
admission is free .
p.m. jn the Holzwarth Room, Presbyterian Church.
9 p.m. - Film : T'he Wild Bunch, 140 Capen,
admission $ .75.
Dr. A.N. Malviya will speak on "The Relevance of
6- 10 p.m.
Religious service: for jehovah's
Mahatma Gandhi to the Modern World" on Oct. 2 at
Witnesses, Kleinhans Music Hall, Symphony
4 p.m., Diefendorf 147. Refreshments will be served.
Circle.
4- midnight - Film : Glmme Shelter, two-hour
UB Riding Club will meet in Room 340 Norton
showings, tickets at Norton Box Office one·half
today at 3 p.m. All those interested in horseback
h our b e fore perfo rmance, continuous
riding are invited to atte~.
performances.

R Group meeting, on Sunday, Oct. 3, at 6 p.m .,
Norton. Anyone interested or able to work in C.O.
advisement, Generation Gap Project, etc. come and
participate, you 're needed.

.

Saturday, Oct. 2

8 p.m. -

The Student Association Speakers Buruu is
bringing Allard Lowenstein to speak today at 3 p.m.
on the terrace at Norton Union. Allard Lowenstein
originated the Dump johnson Movement and he is
anxious to see Nixon and Agnew meet similar fates.
The Student Association Speakers Bureau is also
bringing Carl Stokes, Mayor of Cleveland, tonight at
8 p.m. in the Fillmore Room.
The Women's Physical Education Department will
ho ld an organizational meeting to discuss English
horseback riding lessons Monday, Oct. 4 at 4 p.m. in
Room 330 Norton Hall.
Resurrection House is sponsoring "A Protestant
Visit to Temple Beth Zion" tonight. Leave
Resurrection House (corner of Main and University
Ave.) at 7:30 p.m. Free films, The Pitcairn People
and Switzerland - Europe Downtown, will be shown
at Resurrection House at approximately 9:30 p.m.
The Reverend Wayne Jagow will speak on "The
Emotions of a Christian at Attica" at the worship
service at Resurrection House this Sunday, Oct. 3, at
5 p.m.
Hillel will hold a service followed by a discussion
on the Media Influence over Israeli Culture tonight
at 8 p.m. Raifi Meeron will be the guest speaker.
Oneg Shabat will follow. "Frankenstein," a new
local ~oup, will provide live music at Hillel 's
opening dance of the season tomorrow at 8 :30p.m.
at Hillel house, 40 Capen Blvd. (across from
campus) . Admission is $.25 for members and $.50
for non·members. Everyone is invited to build a
Sukkot Sunday, Oct. 3, at 11 :30 a .m. at Hillel
House. A Sukkot Party will be held at the Hillel
House Sunday, Oct. 3, at 7:30p.m.

I
Backpage

Concert : Sha·Na-Na, Taj Mahal, Paul

Butterfield, j . Giels Blues Band and The Blues
Project, Kleinhans Music Hall, tickets available
at Norton Ticket Office.
8:30 p.m. - Concert : Sponsored by Hillel, featuring
"Frankenstein", 40 Capen Blvd ., admission for
members $ .25, non·members $ .50.
4-midnight - Silm: Glmme Shelter , see Oct. 1.
9 p.m. - Film : The Wild Bunch, 140 Capen,
admission $.75.
8- noon, 1- 6p.m. - Religious service: for jehovah's
Witnesses, Kleinhans Symphony Circle.
Sunday, Oct. 3
8-noon, 1-6 p.m. - Religious service: for jehovah 's
Witnesses, Kleinhans Music Hall, Symphony
Circle.
4- midnight - Film : Glmme Shelter, see Oct. 1.

Available at the licket Office
Studio Arena Theater
Oct. 7- 24 : The Gingerbread Lady with j o Van
Fleet
Nov. 4- 5: Buying Out with Sam Levene and
Irene Dailey
Rock and folk Music
Oct. 2: Sha·Na·Na, Tajmahal, Paul Butterfield, J.
Geils Blues Band, The Blues Project (W)
Oct . 6 : Traffic (K)
Oct. 8: Grand Funk Railroad (M)
Oct. 10: The Flying Burrito Brothers and Space
Opera (C)
Oct. 15: Blood, Sweat and Tears (M)
Oct. 17: Roberta Flack (K)
Oct . 23: Davy J~nes (K)
Oct. 24: B.B. Kmg (B)
Oct. 31: Kris Kristofferson (K)
Nov. 3: Melanie (K)
Puffalo Philh;umonic Orchestras
Oct. 16 &amp; 19: Garrick Ohlssen, piano (K)
Buffalo Chamber Music Society
Oct. 26: Cleveland Quartet (K)
Coming Events
Oct. 22: Sergio Mendes and Brasil '72 (on sale
10/4) (K)
Key

K - Klei nh~ns M - Memorl~l Auditorium W - W~r
C - Cl~rk Gym

Memori~l St~dium

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                    <text>Vol. 22, No. 16

Stlte Univlnity of New York at Buffalo

Wednelday, September 29,1971

Editor's note: the following Is a letter of resignation sent to
helident Ketter Mondlzy from Ira S. Cohm, prowJJt of the Faculty
of Social Sciences and Administration. Oltbon copies were mailed
to Chimcellor E. Boyer, .Execut(~e Vice President Albert Somit and
Vice President for A cademlc A!fain Bernard Gelbaum.
Dear President Ketter :
I hereby submit my resignation as Provost of the Faculty of

·Social Sciences and Administration in order to return to full-time
duties as Professor in the Department of Psychology. There is no
longer any point in detailing the numerous difficulties I have had in
working with your administration since you and Vice.President
Somit took office fifteen months ago - you are no doubt as
l
famlllar with them as I. I request to be relieved of fllY administrative
position at the earliest possible date, and in no case later than thF
end of the first semester of this academic year.
Very truly yours,
Ira S. Cohen

Editor's note: the following is President Ketter's reply to Dr.
Cohen's leuer of resignation. dated Sept. 28.
Dear Dr. Cohen
I received you r letter of resignation yesterday. It comes at a
time when we arc all attempting to maintain the progress of the
University in the face of u severe shortage of resources. I understand
that you have your own personal reasons for this action, and I , of
course, must respect them. I can only say that you will be missed in
this very important administrative post.
Since your appointment to the Department of Psychology in
1952, you have played an important role at this University. For two
yea fl. you have served with distinction u Provost of the Faculty of
Social Sciences and Admimstralion.
Respecting your wishes m lhe matter, I am today accepting
your resignation as Provost or the faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration to become effective at a time that will be mutually
satisfactory.
You have my best wishes ror the ruturc.

Very truly yours,
Robert l. Ketter
President

Provosts' resignations unmask administration troubles
by Jo-Ann Armao
Campus h'd ilor

Ira Cohen , provost of the Faculty of Social
Sciences and Administration, resigned his
administrative post this week after 19 years of
University service. Dr. Cohen's is the third provostial
resignation within a six month perios; RoUo Handy,
provost of Education Services, resigned last week to
"pursue research" and Thomas Conno lly, former
Arts and Letters provost, left his position after six
months of undertakmg the post.
In a Sept. 27 letter to President Ketter, Dr.
Cohen stated that "there is no longer any point m
detailing the numerous difficulties I have had in
working w11h your admmistration since you and
Vice President Somit took office fifteen months ago
. .. " Explaining this, Dr. Cohen commented : "I
wanted to make it very clear lo my Faculty. I'm not
giving it fthe provostial position I up because I am
tired, or ill , or because I feel that I have some
pressing work to do in psychology . I don't want to
be provost because I can't work with them I the
administration I ."

Adversaries
He continued that "there was a general inability
to work with the President's office." According to
Dr. Cohen, this resulted in unworkable conditions.
Included in this, Dr. Cohen said that "we always
seemed to be on opposite sides of an issue ... e~n
matters that I would think to be matters of joint
concern."
In addition, Dr. Cohen charged that there "is
increasing centralization of authority and
responsibility in the Office of the President which
either directly or indirectly threatens faculty
preroatives."

Both Drs. Cohen and Connolly feel that this
centralization has s:evercly altered the provostial
position. "The role of provost now is no longer a
significant policy-making position . The position has
been redefined by President Ketter ... you still have
the position and title but decisions arc not being
made in the provost'!~ office," Dr. Cohen ma1nta1ned .
Agreeing with this, Dr. Connolly stated that the
post has changed "vt!ry markedly w1th a lessening in
the area of responsihihty for the provost." li e
continued that provost1al po wers of makmg policy
and pract1ce have "o;hrunk or eroded." Rcg;~rdmg
this, Dr. Cohen sa1d that he could not he sat1sf1ed
with simply "carrying mcs.,age&lt;; back and forth
between Department Cha1rmen and Haye'&gt; Hall "
Among those powers now dented to provosts,
Dr. Cohen mcluded dec1~10ns affecting allocation of
resources, appoml mc:nt of department chairmen and
search committees, and other kinds of faculty
appointments.
In addition , Dr. Cohen charged that some
administrative dec1siuns are made w1th mformation
sources not represenllatt&gt;Jc of the Faculty : "Often, I
have found that mattllmpffcpting our Faculty have
been made within, trie l»'resident's office on
information not at a II representative of the Faculty
as a whole."
Dr. Cohen refuse'd to deal with specific instances
of this occurring, !feeling that nothing could be
accompUshed. But he did maintain that such
instances have occurred.

No connection
Reacting to these charges, Executive Vice
President Albert Somit commented : "I would like to
expl"C$S my profound regret that he (Dr. Cohen) saw
thinp that Ylay." D1": Somit declined any comment
on Dr. Cohen·~ dtllrtet of difficuJt workin&amp;

conditions. li e also dented that there was a
connect ion between Dr. Handy's and Dr. Cohen's
resign at ions : "Dr. llandy's letter (of resignation)
explained I hat he had received a very nice research
offer ... one that may take him overseas. In fact, I
envy h1m ."
Dr Som1t did attribute any centrali7..ation of
power to the cstahhshmenl o f the Vice President for
Academic Affair!&gt; as a maJOr academic office.
llowever, Dr Cohen &lt;;lalcd that difficulties had
occurred hcforc Bernard Gdbaum, Academic Affairs
vace prc\ldenl , tm,k o ffll·e He said that "it IS
dtfftcull ln worlo. wllh thas admimstration as a
provo!&gt;I . ~n difficult I hat tt has become 1m possible
for me."
Lookang anto the future of the Un1versity, Dr.
Cohen antltcated ha~ senous concerns : " I worry ... I
have hcen here a very long time. My loyalty and
affihataon to th1s Un1vers1ty IS greater than 99% of
the people here I always 1hough I we were moving
alone mcely ... I worry now.''
Faculty reaction to Dr. Cohen's resignation has
been, according to Joseph Masling (Psychology
Department Chairman), "stunned" and waiting: " We
are still sorting out our feelings." AU are agreed
however, that his resignation Is a great loss. As Dr.
Conno lly commented, " Ira Cohen is a splendid
administrator possessing many fine qualities. His
resignation represents a great loss to his Faculty and
to the University as a whole."
Even President Ketter appears to agree with this
as expressed in his letter acceptin&amp; Dr. Cohen's
resignation: "Since your appointment to the
Department of Psycbolo&amp;Y in 1952, you have played
an important role at this University."
•
Howe~r , Ira Cohen still will be relieved of his
administrative position "at the earliest possible
date."

�StUdents in off-campus
housing may be evicted

Sob Board 'unresponsive'

BSU rejects bUdget action
benetit tt1e students, but the off-campus community.
_ Warren Hunter, BSU Minister of information,
denied these justifications, but delayed any detailed
comment until later this week.

by Jim Mcfenon
Sp«trum Staff Writer_

A memo sent to eight administrators, Student
Association and Sub Board I, has triggered some very
delicate manuvering by the student government,
Black Student Union (BSU) and Vice President for
Student Affairs Richard Sigselkow.
J'

The memo, sent by BSU Sept. 23, charged that
the Student Association and its financial arm, Sub
Board I , ''are unresponsive to the cultural and
psychological needs of black students." It further
requested a meeting this week to discuss grievances
and the establishment of an independent black
student government.
While each member of the triangle expresses
willingness to meet and discuss the problems, no one
appears especially eager to initiate negotiations. So
far, no meeting has been scheduled.
BSU's charges center around cuts made by Sub
Board I in the budget of Unity : Phase One. the BS U
b1·wcekly newsleller BSU had requested sufficient
funds to purchase pnnting and composing machines
fur its pu bh~lung Sub Board I reJected the request
and sliced the BSU budget to SJOOO. AdditiOnally,
BSU feels that a Blad. should be appointed to Sub
Board I : currently all-white

Or. Siggelkow, meanwhile, prefers to remove his
office as much as possible from active participatiop
in the dispute: "I am always available and am the
president's dir~ t representative," he said, "but I am
not in the position to sit down unilaterally."
'Low-key administrator'
Or. Siggelkow emphasized that his office had no
control whatsoever over expenditure of student fees
and his role there fore was a low-key administrator :
" I am not trying to evade anything, but I 3m not the
key figu re and cannot resolve it and neither can
Ketter." He also suggested that BSU and SA sit
down to resolve their problems. He added that he
was willing to atd in any way possible.
However, Mr. Hunter charged that Or.
Siggelkow does have a good deal of responsibility in
the dtspute. Mr. Hunter argued that as President
Ketter's rep resent at iVe, he IS thereby the
representatiVe of the Board of Trustees who do set
guidelines for expenditures. Thus, he declared that
Dr. Siggelkow's reticence to open discussions is
evasive.

Mr. Borenstein, on the other hand , was ready to
Justified cuts
discuss the issue supporting the budget cuts: "We
Howrver. the BSU grievances against Sub Board were neither racist nor unjusti fied ... as a minor~y .
r are unjustified In the eyes of Sub Board I Business BSU is entitled to support , but not $45 ,000. They
Manager Mark Borenstein . ''We treat BSU identical can still print the newsletter, and were [originally]
to any other student minority organization," he said. given twice as much money as any other minority
BSU 's budget request to purchase printing ortani7ation ."
equipment was denied for three reasons, according
Mr. Hunter, while unable to comment on
to Mr. Borenstein: \) both The Spectrum and immediate BSU plans, did promise there would be
University Press have printing equipment which BSU some action soon. Also, Or . Siggelkow reiterated his
could use ; 2) SA couldn't afford the expenditure and availability, but cautioned, "We can' t play games
3) the proposed newsletter would not primarily with this one."

~~~
~ CONCERT
DAMNATT.QI'kT~~
:.1,
~

Council of the City of Buffalo. It

bas yet to be seen whether this
Council will continue its previou$
policy.
'Too vape'
Last year, there was a city
ordinance which set a limit of
four unrelated students who may
live together in an apartment. It
was tested in city court and
declared "too vague" to be
e nfo rced . Last sprin g, the
Comm on Co uncil met and
redrafted t he ordinance. That
ordinance has not yet been legally
tested .
The Health Department's legal
argument would have to be based
on a Monroe County ruling this
summer involving students living
near the University of Rochester.
This ruling yielded the "no more
than two students" stipulation
that the Health Department is
trying to apply in accordance wtth
Buffalo boarding house codes.
Sounds unconstitutional
Robert Dombrowski , director
of Off-Cam pu s Housing, is
referring all students to Norm
Effman, the lawyer retained by
the Student Association, and is
' 'encouraging Mr. Effman to do
something about the situation ."
Mr. Effman remarked that in his
opinion, and in the opinion of
several lawyers downtown, the
ruli~soun4s Urtoanstltutjo,W .
Whether any cuo will actually
come t o court depends on
whether the City of Buffalo tries
tQ enforce any eviction notices
which are served. In preparation
for that eventuality, many
landlords in the Buffalo area are
considering retaining Mr. Effman
as their legal counsel. The
Undergraduate and Graduate
Student Associations are also
considering employing a law firm
should the matter come to court .
Officials of .the Department of
Health were unavailable fo1
comment for the third straight
day .

The Spectrum is publilh«J th,..
timer • ..-k, ft'W'Y MondeV.
K4ldMrdily MJd Fridily; during ttl•
IWIJU,.r liCIIdiJmlc r•r by Sub-SOMd
1, Inc. Offic• .,.. loc•t«&lt; « 355
Norton H•ll. Sut• Unlw,.lty. of
~ Yorlc
BuH.to, 3435 Mllln
St., Bufflllo, N- York, 14214.

•r

UUAB MUSIC COMMITTEE PRESENTS A

,.

The controversy between the
Erie County Department ~f
Health and students living in
off-campus apartments has
reached no settlement .
· The controversy stems from
recent attempts by Health
Department inspectors to evicl
students living in apartments off
calhlJilS. They have tried to invoke
a previously ignored City of
Buffalo ordinance which states
that a group of unrelated students
Uving together does not legally
constitute a family, and such a
residence must be classified as a
boarding or rooming ho~ . It
further stipulates that such living
quarters may be occupied by no
more than two students.
Un t i I the Erie Co unt y
Department of Health began its
recent action, the official policy
of the City of Buffalo was to
completely ignore the ordinance .
If they contanue this policy,
students may have nothing to
w o rry a b o ut , s ince any
enforcement has t~ come through
the City of Buffalo. When a
Department of Health inspector
serves an eviction notice and it is
subsequently ignored, he has two
choices.
He can forget about it or he
can sign a complaint in city court.
The people who enforce such
complaints are the Corporation

TMp/IOM:
Edi tori•l,
831-3610.

8

'00P.M

FILLMORE ROOM
U.A .

FRIDAYOCTOBER1,

Recording
Artist

A D ivision or Sub-Boarrt lnr..

-.

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Code

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116;

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Rt~pr•enttJd for •dtlttrtising by
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Nflw York, N11w York, 10022.

Sutncriptlon fllttll •r• $4.60 ,.r
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or $8.00 for two
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Sllcond CIIISI Po1t.
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BEFORE YOU BUT

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CAUTION - NO AUTOMATIC

If you did not make payment to the local
representative of the imurance company-

,..,

YOU ARE

NOT INSURED

DEADLINE - EnroUment wiU not be accepted after Sept. 30,
1971.

~

S~e US first if JIOII ~
,-"":7.. Jftlnnt to save mon~JI

DETAilS AND ENROLLMENT FORMS - available at : Health
· Senices Office, Michael HaD, or call 853~31 .

We have a huge stock of slightly

USED
TEXTBOOKS
being uNCI at all the locet colleges. We also supply new texts - paperbacks - supplies posters - gifts - sweatshirt sale.

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK

INSURANCE COVERAGE

STORES

....,

Mr.
A's
I

Page two . The Spectrum. Wednesday, September 29, 1971
,.

off Main &amp; Amherst
(In Central Park Plaza)
presents

BARBARA ST. CLAIRE
and

THE PINCUSHINES
Tues. Sept. 21 thru Sept. 25
coming

Thursday Oct. 2
The Feeling Within
Dynamic 7 pc. group

�Attica security

Relatives-spurned
byJeffleuon
Spectrum St•ff Writ"

Friends and relatives of Attica
inmates were turned away at the
ptes of the prisoo Jut Monday.
An angry Richard Butts, of the
People's Party of the Urban
• League, stated: "This shows that
the prison officials think as little
of the people as they do of the
prisoners." These charges were
aired at an Attica Defense
Committee Press Conference late
Monday afternoon.
The busJoad of people, many
old and taking days off from
work, had come from "as far
away as the West Indies, New
.
York City and Connecticut,"
according to James Ferguson, also
---- of the People's Party. He
ex;uained that upon approaching
the prison, a guard told them they
would not be allowed entrance.
When they questioned this
directive, a representative of
Commissi.oner of Corrections
Russell Oswald informed them
that they would be required to
malce a "full and detailed list of

liven accea to the prison until
Wednesday morning. ''He wu
accompanied by six state
troopers," said Mr. Ferzuson.
"State troopers to stop elderly
people who bad no intent to cause
a commotion."

Limited fwwls
uwe have only limited funds,"
stated Mr. ButA. ''These come
mostly from the Urban League
and various community groups.
The expense would be too great
to take these people back and
forth again. The action was
obviously done to keep our
people out of the priSQn."
Adding to this, Don Pochoga
of the National uwyers Guild
commented: "There have been
reports of brutal beatinp and
harassment by the prison guards.
People are not being siven food ,
writing materials have been taken
away along with glasses, watches
and dentures." He continued that
"Prisoners want to get out at' any
cost. This is why they won:t let us
in. They don't want us to see
what's going on." Those 60
people denied entrance are
names'."
Twenty minutes after the list presently staying on Canlsius
was submitted, Mr. Ferguson said College's campus until further
the representative returned to developments. However, many
announce that they would not be may have to return home before

..
Attica cllll/ereiiCe
Wednesday.
According to Mr. Podloga,
these actions being taken by
prison officials are unique: " In
the past , before the rioting, if we
had made a request they would
have let us right in ." Mr. Butts
added, "If they were really
concerned about bettering the
situation, they wouldn't have
stopped us."
Mr. Ferguson said, ''The prison

a Month in Your
Spare Time

PLASMA NEEDED

officials will say it was publicized.
But most of the people in the bus
were poor blacks and I don't
know of too many people in the
ghettos who read The New York
Time! ." As of now. the people
have still been given no definite
assurance that they will be ·
allowed into the prison today
(Wednesday).
In a correlated effort the
Attica Defen se Committee
released a statement asserting
that: "We are asking that
interrogations be sto pped
not
only those in Att ica but of
transferred prisoners: that the
rooms and times for interviews of
our clients be inc reased : that

destruction of personal property,
particularly legal materials, cease
and that federal monitors be
placed in the prison on a 24-hour
basis."
Elaborating on this statement ,
Mr. Pochuga said: "We are going
to court tomorrow (Tuesday) to
ask for a writ, in order to hear
testimony from the prisoners
themselves. I'm not anticipating
any trouble in obtaining the writ.
The prisoners can give pertinent
and direct testimony to the
conditions in the prison. It 's
simply that Y'e want to hear from
the prisoners themselves, whether
through the friends and relatives
or in the courtroom."

Last days to register
Thursday, Friday and Saturday are tbe last days
that one can reJister to vote in order to be eliaible to
east a baUot in this year's election and the 1972
presidential primary. Registration will be held in the
local districts from noon· ?p.m. on Thursday. and
Friday and from 10 a.m .· 8 p.m . on Saturday, Oct.
2. For further Information on the location of teh
registration center in your district, call the Board of
Elections, 846·7760 .

Any Group or Type
Men and Women

INC.

RE·CORD S.ALE

,..,...,.,.. of the Attica o.r.n. eommm. cNrfiMI
ttt.t friends Met r.a.tlves of Attica lnm.t• ..-.
turned away by prison offica.h. The c:Nr... w. .
made during a.,._ conhrence Monday.

2450 ELMWOOD AVE .
874-0591

.,

........................................

OHN LENNON'S .r~EF~ IN TOUCH
New
WITH
••
lburh
MOM AND DAD.

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Reg. list
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I••
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--~~~::::~~-----------~
•
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THE

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FOR 1 WEEK

9/29 -10/5
Wed. to Tues.

Grants ..
UNIVI!RSITY
PLAZA

------ACROSS THE STREET._ _ _..,.

NAME

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=S~--------------~----------,.

Clip coupon ;and millil (or brlna to :
lSS Norton H;all
SU NY AI
Bufhlo, N.Y., l4214

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enclosed Is $1.00 for
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enclosed is $4.50 for
First Semester Only.

I..:.....................~.............·........................;
0

0

Wednesday, September 29, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page three

�Treasure Island

Naval stopover for dopers
Kdltur'l not-.· Tile {ollowinrartlcle, the fint o{{our.
Is 11 ;~print of Treasure Wand Revisited : Heroin in
the Navy, by Jon Stewart, copyrlrht Prlcl/ic New1
Serlllce. loft Stewart II a San Frand1co jou,.alllt,
and

tit~

,,tlcle II aft adaption {rom 11lon1er piece he

/11.11 co'flpleted for Harper &amp; Row, publilhen.

Treasure Island, &lt;:Ontrary to popular opinion, is
not located in 10me uncharted expanse of the
eutem Atlantic Ocean - a place known only to
pirates lilce Lona John Silver. The real Treasure
Island il a low, man-made appendeae to Verba Buena
llland, a"d it lies in the middle of San Francisco
Bay. It il inhabited by about 10,000 Navy and
civilian pereonnel. It's the Navy's laraest "separation
center," and serves u the cite for several units of the
Naval Schools Command. Most Naval pereonneJ
returuina from Asian duty pus throup Treuure
Island in the process of receivina clischaraes.
Amona the thousands of retumina veterans
from Asia that come to Treasure Island every month,
a sizeable proportion ate usiped to one barraclcJ 209.8. Here dopen on either Lepl Hold or Lepl
Transit await court martials, summary hearinp or
anything from a General to a Dishonorable
discbarae .
Barracks 209 .8, which we have had several
.occasions to visit over the past month, is known
around the base as "Dopers Barracks." All the men
in 209.8, exceptina the "pip" and "spies" are
dopers. At present there are about SO men in the
barracks. The turnover is high, and It is estimated
that about 7000 men a year pass throuah Barracks
209.8 . 7000 dopers.

foUowina, we sat and talked with the men of 209.8.
They were more than eaaer to talk with us, and
insisted that they didn't aive a damn about beina
identified or havina thelr pictures taken. They were
all due for clilcbar,e soon, and anyway, they
despised the Navy and were atad someone wu
willina to listen.
'lbe second floor of the barrackl, which hu
since been closed, wu the ac:ene of the hottest
action, Iince it wu fUrthest removed from the front
office where a Martial•t·Anns is always atationed.
" Actually," said Georac Hayes, who had a bunk on
the aecond floor, "the pip leave us alone pretty
much. They know what's happenina, and they'd just
rather not have to aet Involved. Some. of tltem are
just plaln acar~d to come up here. They think we're ·
1
all hardened criminals."
Hayes went on to tell about bow they'd dealt
with a former Muter..t-Arms: "He'd been hasaalina
us pretty heavy for a while, makiq busts, ICIJ'Chinl
· Iocken, breakina up parties, ao one afternoon we
just dropped six hits of •white liaht' a&lt;;id in his
corcee. tfe really freaked. He went over to the first
aid station and told them he thouaht somebody'd
slipped him some acid, but since nobody lcnew for
sure what' wu wrona with him, they &lt;:Ouldn't live
him no antidote. He's et OaknoU Naval Hospital
now. Never came down."

Sbootina pllery shown
Hayes and a group of friends were eager to show
us their former "shootina pllery ," the place where
they used to retire to shoot slcag (heroin). It was a
room on the ground floor , between the two halves of
BamclcJ 209. That week it bad been closed and
Wanna score?
padlocked by MP's. Undaunted, someone found a
On our first visit to Treasure Island we crowbar and within a few minutes the lock wu off.
wandered amona the monotonous two-story The larae room wu completely empty, but the walls
buildin&amp;S looking for Barracks 209 .8. Unable to were covered with incredible wall-paintinp, drawinp
locate it, even with the aid of a map, we finally and graffiti - psychedelic, sexual and political. It
approached a group of seamen and asked for miaht have been an empty meetina hall In the
directions. "You looking to score some dope?" they Haiaht-Ashbury. "We used to have lots of mattresses
asked . "HeU, you don't have to 10 there to score. down here, and a aood ndlo," Geor1e said . ' 'We'd
What do you want?"
aet 20 auys down here aU doin&amp; acid or smack, and
Barrecks 109 (divided into 209 .8 and .9) is just lie back all nisht." Since the room had been
actuaUy rather easy to find if you know what you're padlocked, the larae bathroord in the rear of the
\ooldna for. It's enclosed (unlike a\1 the other buildin&amp; had become the new ahootina pllery.
batracks) behind a hiah wire fence, and a smallauard
Another popular location in 209.8 is W9lfman 's
house stands at the gate. Since it was empty, we Corner, a small area In a comer of the second floor,
passed throuah epparently unnoticed, quietly surrounded by high Iocken. A table and several
entered the front door, (apin unnollced) passed by chairs sugest that the ares might be a kind of small
the office and walJced up to the second floor . We reading lounge, but the six-foot plastic marijuana
approached the first man we saw. " Hi, we hear this is plant that stands in the corner sugests otherwise.
the dopers' barracks." "Sure," came the answer, Indeed, Wolfman'"l Corner is a "shootina gallery." Or
"have a toke (a puff of marijuana)."
was, until recent traaedy made the place
uncomfortable....._
Someone to listen
For the rest of th;-day, and for several days Part 1/: Ll{~ and D~ath in 109.8.

The lhnt11l Section ha been Invited to 1ubmlt typical 11udent
que1ti0111 that will appe11r In a weekly column o{1be Spectrum. The
{ollowlnr will be the fint in the 1erle1. Hereafter, the quutloru will
dt~~l with 1peci/ic dental problem1:
·
Q : f 've heard rumon that the Dental Clinic at the lhlth S ervic:e
has .cioled.l f that'a tnae, wbere CUI students &amp;0 for help?
A : The Dental Clinic is allve and weU and liv,ina on the second
floo.r of Michael Hall. More fully staffed than ever, it offers emergency
eervtce u weU u a proaram of prevention. At no cost to him (or her)
the student can be Xflyed, examined, diaanosed and team how to
achieve and maintain a beaJthy mouth.
Depend ina on the availability of persQMel and other resources the
patient wW be treated or .ftferr~ ~laewlaere for trNtGMnt. The u~it is
not pre.eotly able to pro~e restorative care (filUnp etc.).

P""IIIIIIAII "' ·

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Q : Ia there a Plaaned hreatbood (c:ontnception) Ceater at the
Uninnity llaltiiSenice?
A: Not Yet! At present the University Health Senice refen
students requestina contraception to private physicians or to the
Planned hrenthood Center of Buffalo. A aroup of atudents are now in
the Procell of orpnizina sucb a center at Michael Hall and are aimina
at an October openina. (Further information when available.)

..

WIKW •nd lelkin Procfuctions present:

&amp;..M~w

Q: Does tbe tTnlnndty ltaltb Service aapply medicine to
etudeuu?
A: Yes - but only to a Umited depee. Medicine for colds cou&amp;fts
10ro throats, acbes and pains, etc. are dispensed. The Univenity Health
Service does not have avail,ble antibiotica, or any medicine other than
thote noted. Prelcriptjons are pven to atudentJ when neceuary and
must be filled at local pharmacies at the students' expense. J( the
student bu tbe University Endorsed Student Insurance, any prescribed
medicine, areutnp, physiotherapy over ss.oo are paid for up to
$60.00 per illnea if ordered by the University Health Service.

SPEEDED READING

Student Aaociatlon stipends wUl stay u oriJinally reported ln last Friday'• Tlte
Spectrum. This means that all ofncer'a except praident and treuurer will receive $700
for the school year. The two e:xceptlont will take home SIOOO. Action appareatl;
flnallzi?l these fiaures wu taken at a reeonveaed lalion of the Student AIIOdatloa'e
E aeeutave Committee, lut Monday niabl. I t lhould be noted that 1an DeWul S.A
praident, ~id u promiled in a letter to Tlte Spectrum, eupport the mon to eatablilll
•Upend p~ty . for all orrlcen. Despite Mr. DeWaaJ',aupport, how~er, Jhe move to annul
lut week • actaon was defeated 6-4·1. A l/• majority il needed for P...&amp;e.

TIIUts "

Edltor'l note: Medictll quutlolll/problem, on your mllld? Medlcafl, 11
weekly columrt conllllrtlrt6 liN/tit n14t~d que1ttoru {rom the Uftlllenlty
&amp;&gt;mmemtty, II flOW Itt ope,.tlon tltroup the «XJpertttfon of the
- M~dlctll School, Uftlll~nlty Htflltlt ~ce a red tlte 0{/lce of Student
Aff•ln •nd s.r.;ce1. Jwt dw/831-SOOO Actlort Lirte ExtetUion, addrt11
a written quutlort to Medktlll, c/o The Spectrum, J.SS NtNton Hall or
Vlflt Action Une booth in tlte Center Lounp of Norton Hall. 'Names ·
wUI be kept In 1trict conftdeftce, tlftd qu~1tfo111 fielded by 1tudent1 4 nd
faculty o{ the State Uni11enity of Bulf•lo Medt,_l Scltool will be
aruwend throurlt tlte columrt, appetlriltf et~ch Wedne1day. l{1tudenu
wilh penoMI a111wen, ~&amp;~pply your Mme and phone ftumber and 11
member of tlte Aledle~~l Scltool will e~~U you.

I

Stipend raises remain

:-!;,~ N... ~·..

Medical If

TM.. OfftH, lt....,..NIItetl
-'-..4 ......................

c:.ee... ,..._. 0Hiee1 A••rer &amp; Derl ....._ ,1

'
P• four. The Spectrum. Wednesday, September 29, 1971

.

�Bond vote afl'it:mative

Ball stadium: idlsystems g~!
Erie County irill have its new football stadium
after aU. So the Erie County Legislature promised
last Tuesday night. by a 14·2 vote. The vote was held
at the.Yeteran's Administration Hospital to afford
.Legislator Albert N. Abgott (R-Kenmore), scheduled
for knee surgery there, an op{X&gt;rttytity to~~~ a
CTllcial affirmative vote. The m~ure in quesUon was
' a '$23.5 million bond
. resolution for construction of
the stadium in Orchard Park. The legislature then
quickly approved three contingent measures: a
25-year lease with the Buffalo BiUs, the go-ahead to
the County Executive to hire the necessary
architects and a $ 125.000 grant to the S~te Urban
Development Corp. to provide the preliminary plans
for the project. Aug. I, 1973 is the projected date
for the stadium's completion.
Tuesday's meeting of the Legislature had
produced a vote o f I 1-8 in favor of the bond issue,
three votes short of the number required for passage.
· After two days of intensive private meetings, two
key concessions in ttie form of amendments to the
Bills' lease finally swung the necessary ballots. One
amendment lifts a guarantee to the Qills of 50% of
the revenue •from parking !it a possible future .
baseball · stadium in Otchard Park, and gives the
county a greater cut of the revenue from
non·football events at the projected football
stadium. This concession satisfied Legislator Abgott
and Legislature Chairman Arthur J . Carlsen
(R-Sardinia). The other amendment, secured by
Erie County's fworlte lew officer, Sheriff Mlc:heel
"Chief" Amico, wea spottld on cempus ..,.Y Se1u'*Y mornlf1i.
Though his preeence w. verified by C8mpus MCUrity offlc. ., The
Spectrum w. told by Undw Sh•iff Stm Gilmbtone that Mr. Amico
wa~, In fiiCt, not h••· Moreonr, Mr. GiMtbtone ~eel he knew where
Sheriff Amico w• "every minute of the night.'' Ffllther thlln undermine
any citizen's respect for lew, Ofder Mel monlllty - we uked no more
questions.
·

I

'

Sunday, Oct. 17, at 7:30 P.M.

Kleinhans Music Hall
All Seats Reserved: $6.00 $5.00 $4.00

fic~eto ., aalt .,.w at iwffala Pestlval Tlc ...t Office, Staii••·Hi:,.., ' oblloy
1Hell;
-11 St...
.,.,.Can.,.
ace•,..,. with statiiPH ".,....,• ....., .,,,,.,.h u.a. ,..,,.,
Tldlet Offkt; all .....,., &amp; O.l't ....,.. $tarat.

Previous plans foiled
Thursday's vote was the culmination of four
years of shifting plans, bitter con'troversy and, in the
case o f the aborted domed stadium project, political
scandal. This is still being weighed by a grand jury,
but has already cost two Erie County legis.lators their
jobs and reputations.
Stadium proponents had insi~ted on the
·potential economic windfall to the area fro m a new
football stadium in the form of new jobs in the
construction and operation of the stadium, taxes
from businesses springing up around it and a
guaranteed $17.5 million revenue to the County
from the Bills. Ho\Yever their main stress was on the
weakened civic pride of the Buffalo·area citizens. In
the words of Buffalo Mayor Sedita, Democratic
candidate for Erie County Executive: "It 1s a matter
of returning morale to a people who have been called
'the armpit of the East."
On the other hand, Legislator Frank P. Pleto
(D-Amherst), one of the two nay-sayers at the final
vote, while conceding · the need for a new county
stadium, had contended that the $23.5 million bond
cost was excessive, and was in fact geared to the
enrichment of the Buffalo Bills Corp. at the expense
of Erie County taxpayers.

Nigeria symposium
The Nlaerian Union of ·Buffalo will conduct a symposium on Friday, Oct. 1 at 3
p.m . in Room 233 Norton Hall. The theme of the sympoeium wW be "Niaeria - A
Decade of Independence," whJch coincides with the eleventh anninnary of Niaeria's
independence on Oct. I . DiscUMina the arowth of Nlaeria in the last decade will be: B.
Ademowore, M.D., Erie County Dept. of Health ; M. A. lyoba, Ph .D., prof~or of
economics; and 0 . Udofia, political science araduate student. Admission is free and all are
welcome. .
·-

IUfFALO PISTIVAl pt-ta:

ROBERTA .
FLACK

black legislator Bobby G. Bowles (D·Buffalo),
prohibits discrimi!lation in hiring for constructio n
and operation of the stadium.

SpEcTI\uM
••
''
classifieds really work

On Friday

•

I

Grand Openirfll

October
1st
go to

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•

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Wednesday, September 29, 1971 . The Spectt:um. Page five

�' "

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di_To_R_iA_l -:-'" _,/

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Resignations
The sudden spate of administrative resignations raises
some grave questions. At least one of the resignations, that of
Ira Cohen as provost of the Faculty of Social Sciences and
Administration, is directly linked to difficulties in working
with President Robert Ketter and Executive V.t'. Albert
Somit. Further, many individuals have speculated that Rollo
Handy's departure from the faculty Qf Educational Studies
provostship was due, not, as publicly reported, to an
attractive research opportunity, but rather to similar
, ~r 6AV6
problems with the president's office.
W VlOl£0C6.
We would expect that occasional disagreements between
provosts and the President are bound to occur. However, we
do not expect, and indeed are shocked when confronted with
ample and convincing evidence of administrative interference
with academic appointments, department chairman
appointments and search committee appointments. Much of
this has been kept silent, but perhaps it would be wise to
demand an explanation for the long delays that occurred in '
the reappointment of at least two department chairmen last
year. Also the record is not yet clear on Or. Ketter's ill-fated
attempt to ram Or. Marvin Bernstein through as the Acting
Provost of Arts and Letters this past summer, despite massive
Faculty objections.
Or. Cohen even bluntly stated that he has found that
decisions affecting his "Faculty have been made within the
President's office on information not at all representative of
the faculty as a whole." This reinforces similar complaints
last year and over the summer that the administration was
To the Editor:
placing more value upon the opinions of their political
confidants than upon the feelin,gs of a department 01"
The shrill Is disarmed in the echoes of the long
Faculty. In particular these complaints arose, not only during metallic hallways
The l'ootsteps are once again casual
the Arts and Letters fiasco, but in the School of Social
But Innocence never existed here and God never
Welfare, the Department of American Studies and the
performe•~ here
Department of History, just to name a few.
lnsid1e these bars that ho use man's most hideous
These charges are serious because they indicate the demise
existence of a clique. Further, if they are true, it is evidence
• The 11uards pass and will pass the laybys
of an administrative style that has no place in this University .
The o nce o utraged voices have been silenced
We hope that there are some reasonable explanations to these
Men pushed to the last dis parity
aUegatlons, but we frankly are skeptical of receiving a candicf.
Perfc•rm bloody dCl_tb rituals that only a
honest and public response from Drs. Ketter and Somit.
machine llUD wJ.II answer ,
Another matter raised by this affair is the status of the
I am sure, we are sure
Provosts. If they are being decreased in importance and
That
prisoners were prisoners before the prisons
decision-making responsibility, we believe that the President
That streets of yearninJ death hold far more
has a duty to make the University community aware of this. casualties
Additionally, we have emphasized in the past and must a9ain
That the already wounded are but wounded a
do so now, that a strict centralization of all academic bit more inside those walls
decision-making within Hayes Hall will benefit no one and is
a particularly unhealthy trend when viewed by those who
have some respect for the notions of collegiality.
Finally, we must sadly note that this is the 'third
provostial resignation within a period of several months.
Thomas Connolly, Rollo Handy and Ira Cohen are deeply
respected by the University community and together
by Harvy Lipman
represent a total of more than 50 years of administrative
experience. Losing them is a distinct discredit to this
here on our stage, live and in color, a
administration and we wonder whether the President's office blast Rtghlt
. . . from the past (for all you Cousin Brucie
desires quality administrators or is merely seeking to build a fan s), u real golden oldie. So AI Lowenstein is
team of innocuous yes-men.
coming to Buffalo.

AtJ~ ica

Vol. 22, No. 16

Wednesct.y, September 29, 1971
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold

Co-Maneging Edit~ - AI Benson
Co·Mtnetine Editor - Mike Lippmann
Alit. Menltine Editor - Suan Moss
Buai,.. Man..., - Jim Orucker
Adwnlslng Men., - Sue Mellentine
C.mpu• .........

Jo·Ann Armeo

. . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . Bill Vecarro

Alit . ............Howie Kurtz
City .................. Vecent

Copy . . . ..... ... Ronnl For~n

. ....... ... ..... Marty Gatti
Ata . ................ Vecent

F•ture ............. Jan Doane
Orephic Arta .. . . .. ... Tom Tot•
Lit. 81 Drerr11 •. Michael Sllverblatt

Layout ....... Maryhope Runyon
Aut ... .• .............vacant

Music ...... • ......Billy Altmen
OH..C.mpus ...... Lynne Traeger
Aut . ................ Vacant
Photo .. . ........David G. Smith

A... . . . . . . . . . . .

Gary Friend
Aat . ...... Mickey Osterreicher
Spons . . ..... : . . .. . Barry Rubin
A . .. ...... . ..... Howie Feiwl

TM SP«trum Ia servild by United Pr- lntwnational, College Pr•
Servk:e, the Los Anoel• Free Pr•. the Los Angel• Time Syndiate, end
LJberatlon NIIWI Service.
RepUbliation of metter herein without the expr• consent of the
Editor-in-Chief Ia fOfbldden .
Editorial policy Ia dftermlnad by the Edltor·ln.Chlef.

Pafje six . The Spectrum . Wednesday, September 29 , 1971

Institutions of death d o not discriminate
AU who must be killed, must be killed
The animals with blinding white lldn
Can reflect by now no moral apoloJY

poem I

For

THE SpECTI\UM

-.

wh~t

AllanJ Lo wenstein - the very name conjures
images of a •different time. A time when people
actually believed that dumpi ng Johnson might end
the war, when the ridiculous belief that the
American government could be influenced by its
own people sttll exiSted in many of our minds. 'ft\.at
of course was bdore the city of Chicago held any
spectal place 10 the consciousness o f the nation
before many people had heard of Abbie Hoffma~
and before anyone had heard of Julius Hoffman.
lo wenstoin , the young political hustler who
c onvt n c•:d a former English professor from
Minnesotu to run for the presiden cy of the United
States, and motivated hundreds of thousands into
makina one final attempt at stopping the man with
his own rule book.
That was before a few other things as well. It
was before Bobby lay dyinj on the kitchen floor
with a bullet in his head , before another assassin's
bullet murdered Or. King. And that was before a
dozen o f Daley's fi nest burst in on Fred Hampton
and shot him in the back as he lay sleeping in his
own bed . Somehow assassination has become an
accepted political tool, l)ut in March of 1968 we
didn't bellieve that. We have grown very accustomed
to murder, but this was a time when Kent was just a
quiet college town and Santa Barbara another of
those lovely Califo rnia coastal communities. People
bad been killed, o f course - SODJe black studenu in
South Catrolina, Kennedy in DaUas, and aU those civil
rights workers - but that was j ust the South. If we
could only bring them to the advanced level of

All those men that died, they must have known
well
Oh, revenae is blind, blood is cold
When or where did those eyes focus upon the
warmth of life
Do o nlY: the denied die so weU

10

I can say no more
That there Is something fit in honor
That the laat man vomits honor in his last pool
of blood
Of what politio does deat.b belQn&amp; , ,, 1

J..,. ....,

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In the final or the herefortb
My voice will not sanctioo slopos to watch men
die by
There are but lost words in last words
Breathless does rhetoric live in the soul's of
God's dead prisoners
The voice of conscience.

it's

wor~h
I

civilization that we northerners. had reached then
everythina would be fine.
·
In the sprina of 1968 no one could imagine that
we would be able to sit in our living rooms one
August night and watch t he police riot in the streets
of the natio n's third largest city. America had not
seen Bobby Seale pgged and bound by order of a
federal judae because he committed the awful crime
of demanding that he be repreSented by his own
lawyer. Nor had any of us heard of a tiny village by
the name of My Lai, where the nam e America was
being linked for eternity with the word atrocity .
T here is another side to AI Lowenstein , the man
who deserted the civil rights movement in Mississippi
in the early sixties for fear that he might be getting
involved with Communists . But the Lowenstein who
will be in the Fillmore Room Friday will nel remind
us of that. We will remember instead a period of
hope and idealism being molded into political action .
It will be the AJ of the Dump Johnson movement ,
th e m an who w as gerrymandered into an
outrageously conservative Republican district in
1970 and still damn nearly beat a right wing bigot
named Norman Lent for the Congre&amp;ilional Stat.
He will be here trying to convince us that by
registerina and votina wo can still do something
about the rotten state we live in, but we won't really
believe him. Students will resister and vote, but not
with any feelln&amp; of satisfaction or accomplishment.
After aU, it's rather difficult to convince someone
that thin&amp;• will be mu c h different if
MuskieMcGovemHumphreyLindlay Ft• d ected.
Somehow the distinctions have been lost.
AI Lowenstein can rekindle tbe memories, be
can make u. recaU ~tfuUy tome earlier time. He
just can't make us believe. That time il past .

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CC&gt;MMtrr£o'

vot.efJC6 OOT

MFCSA budget: who cares?

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This past Monday I experienced sometliina
unique to me but somethin&amp; apparently not so
unique to this campus. I attended tbe first meetina
of the Millard fillmore College Student Association.
MFCSA, as you may or may not know, is the
student association concerned with the evenina
student. There ue approximately S 100 students
registered this semester in MFC. Each of the 5100
pay $5.SO in student fees which accumulatively
equal the operating budget of MFCSA . Simple
arithmetic. then , indicates a budget of over $28,000
for MFCSA. While it no where compares to SA's
hundreds of thousands of dollars, it does in itself
constitute a sizable amount of cash.
The uniqueness that I experienced was in the
attendance of the meeting.
After seeing last Friday's Sp~ctrum article
telling of plans to discuss tbe orpnization's fall
budaet of $28,000 , as well as the Poverty Hill option
and Bookstore policy, I figured on being areeted at
the door by a "standing room only" sign.
But, alas. I wasn't.
Since I arrived about ten minutes early and
there couldn't have been mort than 30 people in the
room, I decided to take a seat and wait. And I

To

Editor:

K~nnnh Quad~

Our needs or theirs?
th~

l.

r..

Editor:

waited .
The meeting started at 10:05 p.m. and lasted
until 12:05 a.m. During these two b9\lrs, the
numbers fluctuated from a prim~ of38 people down
to 23 ,faithful souls who finally voted on the bJ.Idget
before adjournment.
It was my presumptuous position to ask befpre
the budget vote if the officers of MFCSA actually
expected to pass the budget lepJly with only 23
people present to vote on it out of 5100 eUgible to
do so. Further, of these 23 , ten were officers of
MFCSA .
Quite legitimately, President Brad Roberts
answered : ..Yes," and went on to explain that this
turn-out was 13 people more than at any previous
budget meeting.
So what the hell, who was I to question the will
(or lack of it) of over 5000 fellow students. I fiaured
that if they weren't inclined to come and help dole
out $28,000 that they control, then all the more for
me to give away.
So the budget passed, and we pve it all
away . . . S I 0 ,000 here and $2000 there ... but,
who the heU cares?

Don VanEvery

Students are hypocrites

The youth of this counrty hu an important
decision to make. Will they or will they not allow oil
into the Arctic of Al!Skl and the construction of the
trana-Alaska pipeline? What they decide will
determine whether we continue this downward spiral
of our society and its environment or whether we
ftnaUy tum the country .around towaljd a better
tomorrow.
We should not be debatina this issue of oil in
Alaska. Insiead we should be demandina a full scale
inve~tiption into why the oil industry has become
so powerful. The petroleum industry il underminina
national IC!c\lrity and threatenina our very survival
by squanderinJ away resources in its lu.tt for profits.
In less than ten years we put a man on the
moon. But in nearly 80 years since the automobile
has been on the streets of this country, we still aet
less than IS miles to a pllon of auoline. This is
proareas? Where are ow priorities?
Our mass transit system is on the brink of
collapse, yet the oil industry vigorously promotes
the hiahway trust fund . Eiahty per cent of all our
miles of highways are paved with asphalt. What kind
of social responsibility does the petroleum industry
practice when it lets our cities stranaJe themselves
ju.tt so oil can satisfy its own selfish aims?
But will the youna aeneration follow the same
path of apathy that the older generation did? If it
does it will be sowing the seed for alienation and a
aeneration gap far areater than exists today. It too
can expect to feel the stina of " hypocrisy" and
" hypocrite" flung at it by the next generation and
with more profound venaence.
More efficient forms . of energy are being
suppressed. Why? Will those concerned about the
future of this country win out over geed\ or will
greed write the final chapters to this planet's
history?

To

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Oil decision
To

=•

:

th~

Editor:

Once again it bas become apparent that those
who preach so loudly about sh•dents' riahts are the
first in line to take advantaae of their ..fellow"
students (i.e., the raisin1 of stipends). Unfortunately,
those burt tho worst pay little attention, other than
a pasaina inditnation, which does nothinJ to correct
the situation. In a Univenity enaulfed in so many
other issues important to the student body (parkin&amp;,
BookJtore prices), it would be nice to think that SA
was really interated in us, rather tban tbeiDICIVOI.
Afterall, we elected tbem u our student
representative~, and their 01tenaible motifttion was
to serve our needa, not merely ttieir own!
Mt~rc

Stenzd

th~

Editor:

job with the next aeneration of Americans, but can't
aet enouah volunteers to man the four CAC Day
Care Centera. You who talk about the lousy
education system in this country, but turn away
hundreds of kids weekly from tutorial projects. You
who rap about the socially alienated but can't find
enouah volunteers for the CAC Hospital proarams.

The hypocricies of the students at this
Univeraity overwhelm me. UB students complain
about the relevance of their education. You protest,
yell, scream, picket , big deal. Find some relevance
and really get something done through action and
service rather than verbalization and rhetorical
Maybe those .who wan't to do somethinashould
utterances.
'At a University of 2S,OOO, I can not understand point their idealistic noses to the JfOUnd and really
UB's Jteat youth generation, which at the present understand and be where the problems are at. The
time has only 200 students volunteerina their bullsbittina must stop. Get off your uses.
services throuab CAC. You who talk about the lousy
Tedd Le11y
world we've inherited, how you'll do such a better
Director, CAC

Rocky a political consideration?
To

th ~

Editor:

alienated a large part or the "law and order"
electorate, perhaps enou&amp;fl to forestall any political
plans of h.ls. By tatlna his fum stand, be cemented
his standing with this bloc of voters, and also with
President Nixon, who personally cons:ratulated
Rocky. Ten years aao, who would have foreseen
those two aareeing on any!b)!l&amp;?

Governor Rockefeller's actions, or lack thereof,
in the case of Attica Prison can be more readily
understood when viewed in the liaht of purely
political considerations.
If he believes, as many do, that a tide of
conservatism is sweeping the country, after the wave
Now that Aanew is considered out of the
o f, leftism in the '60s, and if he aspires, as many
contend he does, for further political office, either running for vice-president, Rocky has to look aood .
vice-president, or another term as Governor, than his He's deserted his former liberal imaae, and be can
moves in the last week were the o nly ones plausible. deliver the large state of New York , many of whose
Any show of pacifism , or compromise on residents backed Rocky at Attica.
Rocky's part towards the prisoners would have
St~ve Lipman

United we stand
To

th~

Editor:

The aeneral function of most demonstratio ns is
to build consciousness in the people, to educate
o urselves and the people who become aware that
there is a demonstration or rally protesting or
supporting somethina and to b uald the strenath of
the movement th ro ugh mo re di sciplined,
organizational activity. It is only one part -of the
movement.
When police break up a lepl, peaceful assembly,
even if there is the iUepl use of a bullhorn, they're
violatioa our ri&amp;bts to assemble to speak out on some
issue. And they break us up so easily. I have some
thoughts concernin&amp; demonstrations that are held
downtown when there are many other people
around.
It seems to me to be wrona to fiaht with the
police in tryina to hold some area. They've always,
at this staae, got more re~nforcements and
orpnization than we do. If we " held" an area for a
short time, the biger institution~zed forces would
take us apart with even Jteater force and at a Jteater
loss to us. Jt is not the old days when a few buildinp
could be beld productively on a colleae campus.
Only in nry ~peciiJI circumstances does immediate
counur - terror have results that aaist in educatina
the larae numbers of people, and this is not to make
any comment on self-defense. It seems to me those .
special conditions do not usually prevail at Lafayette
Square.

Too often in the past , people just split in many
different directions when the police start clubbing
and shoving us o ut o f the way . The fewer people
hurt ... the better, of course. The war is not wide
open o n this type o f front and of course the basic
enemy is not the police. But we come to the rally or
demonstrat1on to make a point and there are
hundreds o f people on all the street comers in the
demonstration area who us\llilly are not too affected
by the movement 's activities. These people can be:
I) handed a flyer that contains the reasons we're
there,
2) spoken to on a more personal basis,
3) spoken to in a public way, ptberina in
clusters to hear some kind of explanation as to what
is aoing or has aone on, and,
4) they can be Jiven an example of people in the
movement who are sensitive human beinas dealin&amp; in
a calm, tiahtly reasoned, well-grounded way with the
issues that oppress all of us. Sometimes this can do
more than a thousand-worded statement.
We come to demonstrations and rallies only
•pertly to express our morality. Tho main thin&amp;, it
seems to me, is to aet results. And tbou&amp;h we may
feel like caJlina a policeman or policewoman a pia,
and thou&amp;h be or she may be actina in a '¥icioua,
brutal or piaiah manner, we've aot to keep our eyes
on the prize of a successful movement of human
liberation.
- A Concerned Citlten

Wednesday, September 29, 1971. The Spectrum . Page seven

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Norton coordinators: Friends in need
by Swan Ro.enbluth

,

Sp«tftlm Sttl/! Wrlttr

Editor's note: The following Is the first In a two-part series
dealing with the people responsible for the operations of
Norton Hall. This first article attempts to deal with the
roles of the Student Activities coordinators.

decisions. The staff wanu to be involved in the chanJjng
process." In addit1ion, Ms. Hicks commented about her
concern with li mitt~d facilities : "We could use another and
larger Conference Theater, more convertible meeting
rooms and a gallery "

Students and members of the Norton HaU activities
staff are becoming increasingly aware that the function of
the Student Activities coordinators must be redefined.

Ed Dale see·s h•s role as coordinator as having
whatever relationshtip w1th studenu that they want with
tum . "The Union is service-oriented and being helpful is
our' aim." Much of Mr. Dale's time is devoted to the
foreign travel programs which he initiates and operates in
conjunction with interested groups such as Ski Club, the
crafts center. and the language departments. He also is
financial adv1sor to several student organizations and is
currently involving. himsel f m the formation lif such
cnterpnses as a horseback riding club and an outing club.

•

Coordinators Ann Hicks, Coni Burnham , Ed Dale
and Earl Sinclair are those people most directly involved.
Until very recently, they were viewed as advisors to the
various student governments and organizati6rls. However,
these organizations no longer need or desire advisors. As
Ann Hicks, assistant' director of Student Activities, said :

Minority needs
Devotmg hunself prmc1pall} to dealing wnh
minority student p~ob le ms and organJ7..attons. Farl Smclair
explained· · I work mo)1 ly w1th mmoruv students because
they need me more than other groups." In his capaci ty J S
consultant to minority :~ roupl&gt;, he provides information,
tnes to l!et commnditie-; al reduced rates and works to
mitia tc cult ural and ll'CrC.JIJUilal events. lfe is the
coord111atut who nliUst try a111.l deal " th problems such as
the lack of mmority students :10d women on Sub Board I.
Amung his concern:&gt;. he rccogi1J7es the need for add itional "desperately trying to get away from the image of
orientation for minority students and an 1ncreased need traditional advisors. There has to be a mutual trust and
for a budget for minorily activiltes.
workinl! relationship between students and staff."

Coni Burnham

Mr. Smclair s1peaks for all the coordinators when he
mainta111s that students arc not taking full ~dvantage of
coordinators. With the formation of Sub Board I (a
stud~.nl run non-pwfit educat ional corporation which
fund s University-wide activities and organizations), there
has come a greall deal of student autonomy. This
contributes to the current insecurity many coordinators
fee l with regard to tfhe ir role.
As Ms. Burnham said, the coordinators are

In generaJ. it appe~lrS that this trust is nonexistent
Student Association, for example, hasn't had much
opportunity to use coordinators as some SA officials have
the same connectjons and expertise that are offered by the
coordinators. Mike Nicolau, president of Graduate Student
Association, feels that coordinators are necessary in certain
areas to provide continuHy for student organizations ana
groups. This continuity is important as there is no stable
student leadership from year to year.

,

Both Mr. Nicolau and coordinators realize that a
working relationship between students and activ111es
coordinators would be instrumental in bridging the
info rmat ional gap between past and present events. Mr.
Nicolau does feel, however, that coordinators must be
more visible. He also criticized the amount of space in
Norton given to the coordinators since operational sp:11.:c 1s
extremely l1mtted.

Earl Sinclair

Reaching out
"Students know better what their needs are than we do.
We must help them serve t~se needs more effectively.
We're recourse people."

Hector River.a, chairman of the Social Committee of
PODER, "never looked at Mr. Sinclair fthe only
coordinalor he's been in cont a.:t with J a~ an advi~or , hut
as a profe:.sional who can help us organi1e events. He\
more or less a friend of this organ il.lllon · However, Mt.
Rivera ch·uged that minority stuJcnt' ar\! 1solated on tim
dlllptt-..
" ~ i~ recognizahl\! .JC.CurJm!!. to lum. by the
llulrJtatuml,l a separate c )on 1 n.. t •r 10 deal wit It m•t1llfll}
:1 ! 11 ' ' ' w•th n • •lfort by lllh~r cuur I nat or~ to reach hem
as Sl l' •,.,

The coordmators now act(h consultants Ill stodents;
as people with co nn ec ti ons~ idea:., ml ormation and
concern . The mnovative aspect of the job is extremely
importaftt as c.:oordinators are expected to contribute
suggestions fo r new activities and programs with eJch
coordinator concentrating on her or h1s area of expert1se.

R~ •ci• flb lilc student ~~ n.. p11• 1e 1mpor1 ••• ••
cnorJtnal•lJS, according to Jini v1 uhcr. Studen! 1\ ~ .. • •
d1rt'cln1 "Wr have. to ex~en1 l our\dveo; a~ much as pt' 1,,;
to the '&gt;llltl ·qr way out thcr ·." l ie ,·otHinued llwt n•~ h
· ~ou l · •rch• wit!, rcspc:~1 to t'lc r •' · of coorJina~o rs ~~
.~ein:~ •1 •I ~ '· 1s imperatiw f • cn•1rdinators to involve
''•e m:.~ ve~ in a relevant way ~'' thl v ~.- n be uf maxunum
l.dp 1 ~ t ' uJents."

Communication problems
For Coni Burnham, this is human relations. She is
currently trying to establish a human relations institute
which might include encounter groups and T-grouping.
She, as 15 Ann I licks, is particularly sensitive to problems
of communica tion between staff, faculty and studen ts.
Specifically. this includes the difficulties of such groups
relating to each other on a large campus.
Working with Union Board, Ms. Hicks emphasizes
the importance that coordinators be responsive, creative
and innovative people: "We have to look to the
community around us and it 's going to affect us. Students
want to end isolationism and take part in academic

Page eight. The Spectrum. Wednesday, September 29, 1971

Ed Dale

-mc:n•~•

fo deal with these problems, mt'~ti ngs are presently
being planned between st~dent groups and f\orton staff.
This working together is essential to any success of the
coordjnators. As Dr. Gruber cuncJuded: ''I firmly believe
that it is of carnal importance that all elements of the
University t ommunity cooperate and work together."

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366 Norton Hill/
SUNY •t BuW.Io

3436

,.In

St.

Buw.lo, Nftl York 14214

s.pt. 29, 1971

.
'

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To th• uniflfJrliti•IICroa the Mtion:
The country's health care crisis has reached such severe proportions that the
cries for social change are heard from the darkest ghettos to the most
Comfortable homes in middle America. Sen. Kennedy's sub&lt;ommittee hearings
and the investigations of Ralph Nader are simple beginnings to the complex end
of complete and adequate medical care for all people. Past studies and prpjects
are often one·shot deals lacking feedback and follow-ups while excluding
cross-sections of the country.
The questionable medical attention received by prison inmates at the Attica
Correctional Facility directly after the attack by state troopers, is an
exemplification of the health care allott8d to the disadvantaged and the "social
outcasts" of our society. Concern is measured in dollars and cents by the
American Medical Association and the various departments on the state and
·
1
local levels.
With the generous help of Dick Gallagher, director of Terrace House (a
shelter for homeless men), The Spectrum has compiled a semi-detailed report of
health care facilities, bills and projects in the nation, New Yori( State and,
especially r Buffalo. We are sending the following centerfold presentation of this
report to over 300 universities, lawmakers and councils.
We are asking members of universities throughout the 50 states to do the
following:
A. List the health related facilities in your county and for each obtain pertinent
factors such as :
1. the number of hospitals and beds
2. the conditions' of all the facilities
3. the staff·to·patient ratio
4. the type of staff (social workers, psychiatrists, nurses, physicians, etc.)
6. various programs available to the alcoholic, drug addict, aged, mentally
ill and mentally retarded
6. the amount of money allocated to operate these programs and facilities
7. the length of waiting lists
B. admissions standards
9. medical care costs (are these costs prohibitive to the disadvantaged?)
10. local laws - are they enforced? how do they affect the disadvantaged?
B. Gather ihformation from state and federal government health care
departments concerning opportunities and laws for the :
1. alcoholic
2. drug addict
'
3. aged
4 . mentally ill
5 . mentally retarded .
We hope that schools will work with other colleges and universities in their
respect ive states. These reports can be invest igated by t he staffs o f university or
college newspapers, students in social science or health related courses and for
independent study credit.
We also ask members of the State University o f Buffalo and the Buffalo
co mmunity to assist us.
All studies shpuld be completed by Jan. 15, 1972 and forwarded to :
AI Benson
The Spectrum
SUNYAB
355 Norton Hall
3435 Main St .
Buffalo, New York 14214

-photos by Devid G. Smith

--

It is o ur plan to compile th is cross-sect ional information into one repo rt
which we will publish and send to politicians befo r~ the March 1972 New
Hampshire Presidential Primary.
Although the presentation in this issue of The Spectrum may fr inge the
realms of d ullness with statistics, we earnestly plead with o ur fellow students to
disso lve the committees, commissions and symposiums and st rive for concrete
social changes in health care.

...

AI Benson

Co·managing Editor

.soci~l

The Spectrum

change in America:

Ttle health care
According to Webster, the definition of sick is " ill in
health." Although this term hilS taken on many different
connotations it is aptly applicable to today's health care
system in the United States. This system with all its
bureaucratic involvement has deteriorated to the point
where the American people are unable to rec,eive proper ·
medical care or any medical care at all .
On March 24, 1971 The Spectrum published an article
on the Terrace House, a facility for the homeless men of
Erie County. · The story depicted the abominable
conditions to which these men were subjacted because of
inadequate.housing and the lack of health care facilities to
meet their · needs. The response of the University
community to this article was excellent. In a further study
of the health care system locally and nationally, we. have
found this health crisis to be a reality and~ not fi&lt;:tional.
J1ow did this ch"aotic state evolve? Who is to blame? What
is available nationally and locally? These are just a few of

•

•

CriSIS

the many questions which we set o ut to answer in this
study.
Hippocrates stated that " healing is a matter of t ime
but for the most part it is a matter of opportunity." This
statement quoted hundreds of years ago is still,apptic.,ble
today and can largely be attributed to the K&gt;le Or' the
federal government and the American Medical Association.
However, these two are not the only culprits in depriving
us of receiving proper medical attention.
Shift priorities
We are and have been a defense minded country but
the time has come to shift our priorities to take care of the
afflicted in the United States. the federal government must
be first in space, defense and power while it allows Health,
seat. As a result, it
Education and Welfare to take a
had run a $10 billion deficit these past two years and in

t+:.J

-continued on following .,..,.-

�-&lt;Ontlou.d from PfeYloul ~

Health care crisis ...
1971 It is estimated that the budget deficit will be .$27
billion. Even with this whopping deficit, only a small
percentage of the total •budget4is geared toward health
care.
By the fact that in 1969 t~e government spent $400
per perso!' for defense and only $13 per person for health,
one can see where the nation has been and continues to be
negligent in this mauer. For example, Mr. Nixon stated:
"We are faced today with a massive crisis in health care."
However, he has reduced ' health and health re;search
funding to control inflation. To exemplify he vetoed a bill
authorizing $1.26 billion in hospital construction and
remodeling grants under the Hiii-Bunon program . This was
the first veto in the 24 year history of the program. Nixon
stated that the bill was a long step down the road of fiscal
- irresponsibility and it would significantly restrict
presidential option in managing federal expenditures. On
the other hand, at the same time he was vetoing the above
bill he requested an additional $1 .3 billion fonhe ABM
program .

Misleading statistics
n1e Nixon administration also claims that for the first
time in many years the amount of money spent on human
resources Is greater than on national defense. This
statement leads many to believe that we are concentrating
on domestic issues. For the 1971 fiscal year the
government claimed that 47% of its budget would be spent
on human resources and 36% on national defense.
HoWever, what it failed to ppint out was that it lumps
trust funds such as Social Security (for which the
government Is simply the caretaker), veterans benefits and
even the cost of the Selective Service System under
" human resources." When these misleading costs are but in
perspective only 17% of the proposed budget will go for
"human resources," and 64.8% for " national defense" and
the cost of past wars.
Another glaring example is the fact that the Defense
Department spent $54 million on publicity and
information programs · in 1970 whil&amp; the federal
government allocated only $39 milli,on to combat
alcoholism, which has been labeled by many. the number
O[le health problem in the USA, If one takes the estimated
nine million alcoholics and multiplies that number by five,
s\nce there are uwauv· others affected by this disease
within a family, one produces a staggering total of 45
million people who are afflicted with this desease, directly
or indirectly. Add to this the billions lost in industry and
the thousands of lives lost yearly due to drunken driving
and one can see the magnitude of the problem. The federal
government has reaped the monetary benefits from
collecting the taxes on the sale of alcoholic beverages, but
has done nothing in the past to fight the problem . For
example, In 1!:!69 the .f8f!eral government collected an
estimated $4.5 billion in ··tax revenues from the sale of
alcoholic beverages but only allocated $39 million to aid
alcoholics. Thus it realized a profit of approlCimately $4 .5
billion. Since 19~3 . approximately $133 billion has been
collected and less than $500 million has been allocated to
combat the disease.
AMA strongholds
. These are just a few examples of how the federal
government has reacted in perpetuating the health care
crisis and why it is in its present turmoil. Senator Kennedy
recently criticized the American Medical Association and
justifiably so . This association for the past 123 years has
and still is serving as the guardian of the physicians' private
interests and has devoted its energies to the perpetuation
of the physicians' own elite socio-economic status and not
toward improving America's health care. The latter is best
exemplified by its regression from its 1970 stand, "that it
is the right of every citizen to have available to him
adequate health care," to a modified position at their 1971
convention stating "that it is the right of every citizen to
have access to adequate medical care, but it is the
responsibility of the citizen or society to seek it." This
statement is inane since how can the citizens or society
seek the care, when the AMA holds the key?
In 1964 the AMA opposed the recommendations of a
1964 presidential commission for the creation of some 60
regional heart, cancer and stroke centers surrounded by
450 subcenters for emergency and outpatient care. Its
opposition led to the defeat of the recommendations. Just
recently Governor Rockefeller vetoed a bill (Nurse Practice
Act) which would have given the nurses more authority .
One of the major reasons behind the veto was the
opposition from the State Medical Society which claimed
that nurses. were not educated enough and were unable to
diagnose. (These diagnoses included such difficult cases as
a patient having a heart attack, seizures, etc.) The
relegating of nu'rses to do more than answer phones, pass
me(ification , say yes to physicians and change bed pans
would be an important step in providing the American
peopJe .adequate haealth care. The State Medical Society
negated this possible advance. These two examples are
typical of the dogmatism of the A¥A and other medical
societies whose leadership is towerd the preoccu.,.tion of

senile physicians with egoistic profiteering. At the 1971
AMA convention ~ In Atlantic City the average AMA
delegate was 59.4 -years-old with only one under 46.
Thus the federal government and the American
Mec;lical Association have been largety responsible for the
demise of our health care system, the AMA for largely
wanting control over everything and the federal
government largely for not doln~ ~:ything. A poll ~ken
. by Louis Harris in 1970 thowed~.at the public vtewed
money spent on health as not causing inflation and should
surpass money budgeted for defense.

Alcoholism
Alcoholism has always been neglected as a disease
even though ;t has and continues t~ rank among our major
health problems. Dr. Roger Egeberg Asst. Secretary for
Health, Education and Welfare described alcoholism as the

nation's number one health problem . John W. Gardner,
former Secretary of HEW said : "No other national health
problem has been so seriously neglected as alcoholism."
Today however. money, governmental concern and
most of the publicity involve narcotics. Yet, by every
conceivable standard, alcoholism still terrorizes society to
a far greater extent than drugs. The polititians, claming to
be concerned, are aware of thefmagnitude of the problem
yet persist in allocating onrv small sums of money to
combat the disease. Nationally, Congress P;8SSed the
Alcohol Abuse Act in 1970 and authorized $180 million
for the program. However, even though Nixon and the
White House had preached about alcoholism nothing was
done until Senator Frank Moss from Utah appealed to the
Senate Appropriations Committee to release some of the
funds . Subsequently two weeks later the Nixon
administration announced a "major national effon to treat
alcoholism'' and asked Congress to provide $34.6 million
for t he program. This divided to $3.90 a year for each of
the country's nine million alcoholics. In 1969 the federa l
government allocated $39 million for alcoholism, a sum
which Senator Harold Hughes from Iowa claimed "was like
throwing a pebble in the Mississippi River to prevent it
from flooding." Thus, t he Nixon administration, through
political rhetoric, has actually reduced the monies. Nixon
has tied up $146 million to treat the country's number one
health problem in order to control inflation. Thus, he has
shown his concern with the almighty dollar, and in this
concern is willing to sacrifice human lives to meet his
economic objectives.
'largest addiction'

This neglect by the federal government is also typical
of how the problem is treated at the state level . On June
22, 1970 Governor Rockefeller claimed "that alcoholism
looms as the iargest addiction of all." Yet, in his
administration he has done very little to help the estimated
800,000 alcoholics in New York State. Although he stated
that alcoholism waS' the " largest addiction" he has
appropriated ~nly $4.1 million in 1971 for the Alcoholism
Division of the Mental Hygiene Department. This gives $5
a year for each of the state's 800,000 alcoholics. In sharp
contrast is the $91.7 million budgeted to the Narcotic
Addiction Control Commission . Funhermore the
Alcoholism Division has only seven ~pie on the ~yroll
compared to the Narcotics CommissiQn which employs
thousands.
Another example of this lack of support at the state
level pertains to the State Alcoholism Research Institute at

Buffalo. This institute was announced by Rockefeller on
Oct. 27, 1967 as being the m05t important step taken to
combat alcoholism. However, in 1969 he eliminated the
funds for its establishm.-.t and only after the Council of
Chun:hes and oth• agenci• wim vested interest protested
vigoroully did thtJ governor include the funds in his
supplemen~l budget. In 1971 no funds were appropriatf!d
for the institute. Thus1 8tter four Viars there is a dlrecf9r
and a few other st.ff but no reel ln$titute. There are many
theories as to why ont becomes an alcoholic b«,Jt none have
~ substantieted. This institute then would play an
imponant role in atttrr~pting to finei the answer and also
identify methods of prevention. Yet, while the state
collected $112.6 million from the alcoholic beverage tax in
1970 they didn't allocate one penny for research Into the
problem in 1971 .
At an lnstit'!te on Atcohofism at the State University,
College of Buffalo in 1970, RPCkefetler said : "I share your

concern about the problem of alcoholism." Judging from
the way his administration has dealt with the "problem"
he. \ike Nixon, is concerned not with the problem but with
the dollar. A Study by the Citizens Committee on the
Problem of Alcohol in New York State has just recently
been conclooed and the governOr recommended a
conference to be held in New York City on Nov. 10, 1971 ,
After a committee's repon there will be a conference
report. What we need is to implement the
recommendations of the citizens' committee and have no
more committees, commissions or conferences.

LOC841y
In Erie County, the facilities to house and treat the
alcoholic are grossly inadequate to deal effectively with
the problem. There are an estimated 31,000 alcoholics in
Erie County, 6000 of them female. If you are an alcoholic
in the middle or upper class you will probably be treated
by your private physician at Buffalo General, Columbus or
the other hospitals who cater to these people. After
quietly being treated they will return to their family and
job and in most cases not seek funher treatment for their
dri~king problem until the next time they enter the
hospital .
However, if you are in the lower economic class you
will enter E.J. Meyer since no other hospital will treat you.
At one time this was the worst thing that could happen to
an alcoholic since he was not admitted unless he had
another illness besides alcoholism. T.his is another example
of the inefficiency of the AMA. In 1956 the AMA declared
"Alcoholism" as a "Chronic Disease" yet it wasn't taught
in the medical school until just recently. Thousands of
alcoholics · were turned away ,al_ Meyer ttnd the othe~
hospitals due to .the phyStbian"t'atltitude toward them and
their lack of knowledge of alcoholism. Meyer has now
rectified this to some extent by establishing a
Detoxification Center but the other hospitals continue to
neglect the alcoholic. The 30 bed ward at Meyer is a step
in the right direction but the number of beds is •totally
inadequate to meet the problem. The program is excellent
as it is geared toward an acute medical service but
presently there is no director to oversee the program and
no out-patient service. Thus the work that is being done by
the inpatient staff can be negated due to the lack of
adequate outpatient treatment. Another problem is that it
is still up to the admitting physician to admit an alcoholic
even though beds are available on the ward. Whether one
goes to Meyer or another hospital there are only two

�•
facilities where one can go tb continue treatm'e nt.
are:

Th~y

The Alcoholic Rehabilitation Unit at Ekaffalo State
Is the only residential treatment center in Erie
County. The unit consists of 66 beds and Is restricted to
males. This is a long·term in-patient facility with ttle length .
of stay being 25 Jiays or longer, Individual and group
counseUin'g are offered by trained professional personnel.
It has on its staff a psychiatri$t, social worker,
psychologist, nurse and attendants. Alcoholics Anonymous
meetin95 1r~efd twice weekly and a recovered alcoholic is
a membefl' of the staff.
AlthOUgh this is a good program many possible
applicant$ are deterred from entering because of the stigma
attached 'to a state h9$pital. An alcohotic will claim thet
state ho~itals are for the mentally Ill and refuse to admit
himself~trhe administration of the hospital didn't want the
1
u~,it to be established in the first place and as a result
h n't
pported the · program but has tolerated it. Just
r e"'tl ' the hospital stopped admissions due to an
to receive permission from the director to hire a
ste~ographer . .
Ho~ital

ina~pitt

The Halfway House for the alcoholic is- a communal
residence which .is operated by the City of Buffalo an,d is
located at 693 Ellicott St. It has a capacity of 16 and is
renficted to males. It is geared to help the alcoholic ~ho is
m\:&gt;tivated and its therapy program is directed toward
Alcoholics Anonymous. The staff consists of a director
at)d two supervisors but no trained professional personnel .
The problem here is that there is only one halfway
hduse while several are needed. No one, however, has
taken the initiative in the County Mental Health
Depart ment to establish other halfway houses.

• • •

•

•

~One of the problems with alcohol is that it can take a
nu"'ber of years before victims seek help and in amny
ca~~ they have lost their families and jobs. Thus they
become homeless and althou9h they utilize the above
facilities they are. usually forced
stay at places In
deplorable condition and/or where they are exploited.
These
facitities are;
\

no rehabilitative services and they want the "ideal
alcoholic" inasmuch as the men must be able to work and
must be in good physical condition. In other words, their
work is restricted to the Salvation Army and the program
is designed to meet the needs of the agency and not to
meet the needs of the men. For example, they work 40
hours a week and are paid at the rate of $1 the fh:st week
al"ld $2 the second week plus room and board. They are
not allowed- to-stay~ the facility and work for someone
else. and if they do decide to leave there is no discharge
planning.
The City Mission lodges and feeds apprQximately 44
men. This, is an overnight facility offering no rehabilitative
services. In order to stay there· one has to listen to a
sermon and then :s allowed to have something• to eat.
Again ttle alcoholic is fortea to do something before he
gets something to eat and frequently has to sing for his
meal. This facility may be closed since the present building
is due to/be demolished (Urban Renewal) . Attempts to
relocate have been defeated by the courts as a result of
opposition by a few businessmen who feared they would
lose money lf"the Mission was located near their- property.

,

Women alcoholics
It was mentioned previously that there are an
estimated 6000 female alcoholics in Erie County.
However, it a woman alcoholic seeks treatment after
hospitalization in Erie County sh'e faces added problems.
The closest ,ueatment facility is at Rochester State
Hospital some 40 miles away . The distance as well as
transportation
difficulties deters most interested
applicants. It is a disgrace for a corytmunity this large to
force their residents to another county to seek help in
their effort to stop drinking. · Plans are underway to
operate a 25 bed Halfway House for women at the YWCA
on North St. However, this project has been delayed by

to

The Terrace House is a facility for homeless men and
slnce 1969 has been operated by the Buffalo Area Council
1
on Alcoholism and funded by the Erie County Department
of Social Services. Prior to AU9Ust 1969 it had been
financed and oparatlld by the City of Buffalo. Presently
there is a staff of 15 which includes two case workers from
the Erie County Department of Social Services. There is no
food served on the premises and the men have to walk five
blocks to get a 90-c!!nt meal . Alcoholics Anonymous
meetings are held twioe weekly. The main function of the
present Terrace House is to meet the men's basic needs of
food, clothing and lodging and to utilize existing agencies
in the community by referring the men to them for
treatment. It is almost impossible to do much more than
meet the basic needs since the present facility looks like
the "Kiss of Death."
The city and county for the past ten years have let
men afflicted with various illnesses live in a building which
was condemned four years ago, has rats and rodents, and
in the basement where many of the men have to stay.
Attempts to relocate the building for the past three years
failed until recently When the city and county approved
the Taber Pump Co. site which hopefully will be
completed by September 1972.'
The attempt to relocate was met with oppostion from
many people but the m,fu opposition stemmed from a few
influential people frof' the community. They all agr~
that the alcoholic needed help and a facility of this type
was a necessity but they didn't want the alcoholic to get
too close to their property for fear of devaluation. The
two main sites that were defeated were the Franklin St.
location and the Michigan YMCA. The former was
defeated by the Allentown Association because "they had
a beautiful community" and they felt that the new facility
would hinder their development. The latter was defeated
by a few of the constituents of Councilman Arthur who
had property in the area. However, the reason they used
for not wanting the facility was that "they and prostitutes
and drug addicts" in the neighborhood and they didn't
want to add another problem . Ironically, the new facility
will be located one·quarter of a mile from the YMCA site
which they opposed.
The new facility will be geared toward rehabilitation
and hopefully will offer the para·medical services which
are necessary to deal with the problem effectively.
However, there will be only 140 beds. In 1956 the Erie
County Lodging House provided food , f lothing and beds
for approximately 500 Erie County residents and
transients. Yet in 1972 we will have more alcoholics and
homeless men than in 1956 but we will have 360 fewer

theprotetts of citizens (similar to the ones which the
Terrace House and City Mission encountered) and the
procrastination and delay tactics of the County's Mental
Health Department. At the present time money has been
approporiated for the hiring of a "core staff."

tince Meyer· is the only hospital with an acute mediCal
service for 1he alcoholic.
2. One Residential Treatment Center that has a stigma
attached to admission and which doesn't have the backing
of the administration.
3. One. Halfway-Wausa when several are needed.
4. One organization (The Salvation Army) that
exploits the alcoholic and should be investigated.
5. One organization (The City Mission') that makes the
alcOholic pray and sing for something to eat.
·
6. One flophouse that is not fit to live in alth~
plans are under way to have a decent facility geared
toward rehabilitation.
7. No residential treatment facilities for female
alooflolics.

Drug Addiction
Drug addiction has always been a problem with the
minority groups but it wasn't until the children of the
middle and upper class Whites were directly involved did
the latter become alarmed . As a result the constituents of
our "political bureaucrats" started to panic and "drug
addiction became public enemy , number one." Everyone
on the federal, state and local level overnight became
experts o n the problem and they all wanted a piece of the
action.
•
For example, the Senate passed a comprehensive drug
bill in January 1970. Ho wever, it took the House almost
o ne year to pass the bill . This was due to the House
Commerce, Ways and Means, Judiciary and Education
Committees plus t he Justice, State and Customs and State
a nd Welfare Departments all becom ing involved with this
drug bill .
The b ill calls for $428 million to be spent over a three
year period. This includes $189 million to expand federal
drug rehabilitatio n programs, $220 million for operating
the Narcotics Bureau and $18 million authorizing 300
narcotic agents. One glaring inadequacy of this bill is that
more money is allocated for the Narcotics Bureau than for
the treatment of the addict and one wonders how much of
this money has been frozen by the President in order to
curb inflation.
It is interesting to note that last year the White House
quietly approved a $40 million development loan to
Turkey without securing the curtailment of Turkey's
her&lt;?in production. Now in 1971 . Nixon has established a
"Cabinet Committee" to deal with the international
problem of narcotic traffic. · This will mean more aid to
foreign countries and a promise from their leaders that
they are doing something about the problem.
More failures
On the state level the legislature, on the
recommendation of Governor Rockefeller, created the
Narcotics Addiction Control Commission in 1967. After
being in operation for five years and spending over $500
million the Commission has been a failure. In fact in an
address tQ. the Knights of Columbus, Rockefeller admitted
failure and asked that the American Medical Association
come up with solutions to curb the drug problem . At first
the Governor and the Commission attacked the problem .
However, now that there is public doubt about the state
tre"J!l"ent methods, they have regressed. Much of this
regression is due to the Legislature's trimming of the
budget.
It cut Rocky's request for $117 .2 million to $91 .7
million to fight the drug problem. For three months all
admissions to state programs were halted . The bed
capacity has dropped from 6800 . to 2300. The state
program involved voluntary and involuntary commitments
through the courts on a three to five year basis which
involved inpatient and aftercare treatment .
One of the problems in prevention is the lack of
"accurate" information being given to the youths and
parents today. With all the millions being expended by the
state to combat drug abuse, Albany officials at one time
said they had no funds to hold a seminar on "Narcotic
Addiction and Drugs" similar to the one which is held on
"Alcoholism" at Buffalo State annually .
locally

beds.

Presently, there are 17 agencies within the County
which deal with the problem of alcoholism . In January
1969, County Executive B. John Tutuska stated that a
Coordinator of Alcoholism Services in Erie County would
benefit the alcoholic and taxpaying Citizen. Recently the
County Personnel Department turned down provisions by
the state to establish a County Alcoholism Coordinator .
The reason was that the position of Alcoholism Services
Director at Meyer Memorial Hospital was not filled . The
two positions entail separate duties. This is an example of
the lack of communication and understanding between the
various agencies Involved. As a result Erie County is still
without a coordinator, each agency is doing their own
thing and the alcoholic is the victim .

The Salvation Army can lodge up to 105 men. An AA
meeting is held once weekly and meals are provided on the
premises. There is no prof~ional staff although the
personnel in chll'ge counsels some of the men. T~ey offer

Summary
Thus for the alcoholic in Erie County we have :
.1 . An Alcoholic Detoxification Center with an
excellent progr•m, the bed capacity is totally lnadquate

There is today a great deal of controversy regarding
the use of methadone in treating heroin addicts. It does
have Its limitations especially since the drug is also
addictive.
Presently there is a methadone clinic operating in E.
County at Sisters Hospital. The program is budgeted h •
$226,000 for the current year and has the para·medic ·
personnel available to help the addict return to t '
community if he is motivated and willing to put forth t ·
effort needed to lick the addiction. However, there h;.
been questions raised as to the effectiveness of t •.
program since there is neither job training nor job
placement for addic:ts. The hospital is able to treat 250
addicts on an outpatient basis. At the present time there is
a waiting list of 200.
Another methadone treatment unit has been proposed __.
for the lackawanna Heatth Center. At first a six month
-1:ontlnu" on followlnv

~..-

�Health care crisis
...
.........,

proaastiMtlon by the County Mental He.fth O..,.rtment
a delay in .,bmittJng the propotll to the county
legislature. Now Mayor
Belen of Lacbwanna Is
attempting to ,..,.nt the unft from being eJtabfilhed. He
claims that h.ving a unit in L~ would ruin the
image of the city, and if est8blilhed, he would arrest wery
addict who seeks treatm.lt.
A third m.thlldone unit Is slated to be operated by the
CAO which is currently in the process of hiring staff.
Meyer Hospital treats approximately 30 persons in
their methadone maintenance program and as usual there
is a waiting list.
c:eu.cj

,.,k

More than heroin
Thus as of Sept. 1, 1971 there are an estimated 3000
·addicts in the Buffalo area. Yet there is only methadone
treatment for 230, and other than Masten Park .
Rehabilitation Center, there is no In-patient facility tor the
addict. There is nothing at all for those who are not hard
core addicts.
When we speak of the drug problem too many people
think of marijuana and heroin and for~ that it also
includes the anti-depressants, sedatives, stimulants and
_ tranquilizers. Billions of these pills are prescribed each year
by physicians. These drugs rarely cure anybody of
anything and in fact may obscure symptoms from the
physician .
The only way "pill addicts" ere admitted to a hospital
in Erie County Is by means of an overdose. Individuals
who are hooked on the amphetamines or barbiturates and
seek hospitalization to withdr.w are refused on the basis
that it Is not an Illness. It Is Ironic that physicians prescribe
this medication frequently in large dosages yet refuse to
help people who become addicted. The Justice
Depanment has recommended a tightening of the
production of these pills but it will be up to the physicians
to limit the distribution of them . The prescription,
however, is the key to the doctor-patient relationship.
'Lost' proposal
Since many youth are taking drugs, the Buffalo
Narcotics Guidance Council proposed a $1 .5 million city
wide program which included help for persons under 17
years of age. However , the County Mental Health
Department ''lost" the proposal. Since the time had lapsed
for fundi~. the plan could not be resubmitted .
In August 1970 Mr. Tutuska designated the Mental
Health Depanment as the channeling agency of all
proposals and applications for the state funding of drug

..

admitted. The' problem is th8t f.w people ta.ve this kind of
money and c.n't afford to pey •
$370 per month
et the Caroline Nursing Home to a h igh of $1138 at Mercy
1. One rn«lthadone maintenance progrem with a
Hotplul's ext.nded care facilfty. 8tcause of the demand
welting list of 200.
for beds, nursing homel . . ..tectille in whom they edmlt.
2. One PfOipoeed unit ttMt is beirig thwarted by a
They prefer the patient who has the most money and who
politician.
requi,.. a minimum .-nount of care. As a result the Erie
3. One in·Jlllltient state-operated facility which hes
County Home and Buffalo State Hospital in past years
been a failure.
hew receiVed more than their share of patients.
4 . A number of programs in the communities which ·
HOwever, In 1968 the State Departm ..t of Mental
offer counseling but no rehabilitative training.
Hygiene ruled that its hospitals had to tcreen all
5 . One center which can handle only 30 patients.
prospective patients over 66 and admit no one who was
not in need of immediate care and treatment for mental
~~ging Nursing Hom•
illness. As a result of this ruling Buffalo State is no longer
On Nov. 21~. 1971 the White House will hold a
the dumping ground for the elderly, and has reduced its
conference on the aging. The administration claims it is
population from 2200 in 1968 to 166B in 1971 . This
concerned about the problem. However, a letter by. Eliot • ruling has forced the burden of caring for the elderly upon
Erie County but sadly the eounty hasn't assumed this
Richardson, sec1retary of HEW, to President Nixon
responsibility. For example,
County Home and
disclosed their r'easons for their concern. The contents
Infirmary had a total population of 1200 beds. In order to
stated that care for the aged will become a major political
meet health code requirem.lts such as bed space and
issue and that. a massive all-out effort is needed. He added
Medicaid and Medicare regUlations, the total bed capacity
"that the time iSIIl't right to begin this effort but will be in
has to be at 646 beds by 1973.
1972 and thus we can use it as a campaiW'I issue."
Secretary Richardson ad-Jised the administration to start
Millions for ...
doing something on a small tcale so that they would be on
the offensive and not the defensive.
In 1970 the County Home and lnfirmwy averaged 68
appfications eech month. On Jan. 1, 1971 they restricted
Loalty
the edmisslons policy by allowing only six admisaions and
12 reedmlltions per month. As a result they had a waiting
list of 327 on July 1, 1971: the Nursing Home Division
It would be safe to assume that at least 15% of the
patients in local hospitals should be in nursing homes or
had a waiting lilt of IPPf'OXimately 400. Thus-, while the
the Erie County Home. Due to the waiting lists of these
need for beds for the lged is increasing their total bed
facilities, how&amp;ve~r, the aged must oocupy a hospital bed
capacitY will decrease 655 by 1973. lron.lcally, the county
until an opening occurs. For example, on Sept. 1, 1971
will expend millions of dollars for a new County Home but
Meyer had 587 beds filled with at least 25% of the patients
will have less beds.
The blame for this acute bed shonage for the aged
waiting to be pla.:ed. In som' cases they wait over a year
before being tranuferred. What is more startling Is the cost
rests with the Comprehensive Health Planning Council of
of maintaining these patients in the hospital. An example
Western New York. This council originally staned in 1947
of this occulted recently when a patient at E.J. Meyer
with a small committee. In 1971 it has a budget of over
Memorial stayed jfor 300 days at a cost of $30,000 to the
$600,000, the majority of which is for high salaried
county taxpayers, If there had been an immediate opening
employees. Lately it has undergone almost a complete
in the County H•ome the cost would have been $6200 in
turnover in staff due to a local newspaper's exposure of
the Infirmary and $4092 in the Home, a savings of
their do·nothing policy. One wonders how the County of
$24,000 and $26,000 respectively.
Erie granted this council m oney w ithout investigating what
On June 24, 1971 there were l6S8 nursing home beds
it was doing.
in Erie County ••nd a projected need of 3380 beds by
The care for the aged is in a chaotic state and will
1972. There has lbeen approval for 1395 beds, leaving 327
continue in its present state until someth109 is done. The
beds to be autho.rized by the Planning Council of Western
recent establishment of the "Office tor the Aging"
New York. On June 24. 1971 there were 706
hopefully will take away some of the authority of the
council.

19- •

Thut for the drug .ctdlct in Erie County we hew:

the

Hospitals

progr8ms. Now the Mental Health Comntislioner wants to
contolidate all drug abuse services for Erfe County and
have them under his control. The delay tactics experienced
In the past along with their Ineffective leadership should
' prevent Mr. Tutuska · from giving additional authority to
the Mental Health Department. This should be evident to
the County Executive by the fact that Rochester with a
population of 400,000 less than Erie County received $3.3
million from the state for drug programs compared to the
$968.000 received by Erie County.
,_.
The Mental H811th Depertm..t answers only to the
1
Erie County Mental Health Advisory Board. This
de.- tment controls the key for Erie County residents to
rec:.Mt proper medical care Y-' is lax in submitting
propollls to the Legislature since the 8oerd ,_ just a few
m.tingl v-iY. The 8oerd consists of _,., members, one
~whom ia living in Cincinatti, • well • two ex-offiCio
~. Howaw. et recent melting~ only four members

attMded.

'

health-related beds in the county and a projected need by
1976 of 2488 bedls. There have been 1117 beds authorized
thus necessitating approval of 665 more beds by 1975.
Increases fall lh0t1t
.
Thus, as of s,ept. 1, 1971 there is a total of 3180 beds
for care of the agod and in 1975 there will be an estimated
6505 beds or an increase of 3325. In 1970 there were 816
applicants for admission to the County Home. Realizing
that the populatlotn of the aged Is increasing if we just take
their average for 1970 and take the same figure for the
next five years wet would need a total of 4080 more beds.
This doesn't taktt into consideration those who apply
directty to nursin-11 homes and superviJted boarding homei
for this five y.., period. Thus, tt. increase of 3325 beds
by 1975 will be totally inadequate.
,._..tty there is not one nursing home in Erie
County without a huga waiting list. Of course if you have
$15.000 in the benk there will be no 1fouble in being

The hospital bed shortage can also be attributed to the
Planning Council who has the sole RQWer and authority to
determine the need for additional health facilities in Erie
County. This is a result of a law in New York State and in
nine other states which forbids unneeded hospitals. To give
one agency this much authority is asking for chaos.
An example of the authority this council has is
indicated by a message that appeared in Buffalo Magazine
February 1965. In this message or advertisement Blue
Cross strongly supported th.e Planning Council of Western
New York "which reviews the need for new hospital
construction and · then approves or disapproves the
proposals based on its research ." It funher stated "that
during the past 30 months, the council approved 799
hospital beds, some new, but mostly replacements. It
disapproved 162 beds as unneeded which saved the
community $4 millio n in construction costs and $1 .6
million additional each and every year thereafter ·in
operating costs. Two suburban communities were
dissuaded from building unnecessary independent 100-bed
hospitals and the council had been instrumental in
preventing unnecessary duplication of cobalt bombs and
other high cost equipment. Western New York 's Blue
Cross, assuming its own community responsibility, will not
contract with a new hospital without checking first with
the Planning Council's recommendations."
Fatal lack ,of beds
Today almost every hospital has a waiting list of at
least four weeks before one is admitted for surgery while
hundreds are refused admission due to a lack of beds.
Perhaps the recent reorganization of the council will
find the latter performing their job more effectively.
However, their ineffectiveness in the past has resulted in
many human lives being lost due to the lack of beds which
they felt were "unneeded."
·
To add to the hospital bed shortage, plans to enlarge
Emergency Hospital have been prevented because of a lack
of funds by the diocese of Buffalo. The addition to Sisters
Hospital also may have to be curuiled due to the proposed
rapid transit system . The Community Mental Health
Center at B~alo GenetaJ is still 'in the proposal writing
stage but isn't expecJed to open until January 1972.
~ntlnuect

on followlnt

~

�............
In 1968 the New YOt'k State Oepwtment of Mental
Hyg!ene sui'YIVed the mental h~l systems of the other
49 states lind {ound that New Yort&lt; rMked very low
compared with the other systems. However, instead of
utilizing this a.ti'YIV .nd lttempting to Improve the
conditions, the state hM let the conditions become worse.
For exwnple, the state legistature recentty trimmed
$34 million from the $629 million budget for mental
health. As a result more than 2200 employees have been
laid off and there is a freeze on hiring. At Brooktyn State
Hospital there we only 33 physicians and 160 nurses to
care for the 2000 lni)lltlents and 3500 out-patients. At
Gowanda State Hospital th•e are lea than 20 physicians
for the 1800 p.tients. The staff to S*ient ratio Is IUch

•

menpower shortage. It has been estimned th•t we ••
In need of 60;000 additional doctors. Although the
AMA claims that they we not to blame for this
shortage they heve . to assume a great share of the
burden for ellowing this shortage to occur. In 1950
they stated thet there were plenty of physicians and
that reorganization of the medical schools was not
necessary at that t ime. As • result, in 1971 less than
12,000 students will be edmitted to medical schools.
This is only 5400 more than was edmitted in 1927.
Pretently. medical schools will heve to reject 14,000
epplicants, many of whom are fully qualified.
The recently passed $2.8 billion comprehensive
health manpower bill is a step In the right direction
but even if the manpower is increased and a health
insuranoe plan is enacted where will the millions who
are unable to be treated presently go for medical ~7
The facil ities today are iJLOssly inadequate to deal with
the problem and as st)own in Erie County are actually
decreasing instead of _increasing.

tltdl« to his family.
If this individual continoes to act bizarre but
refutes to go to the hospital agein the family or
Interested party will obtain a w.-rMt end have the
potice pick him up Wid bring him before a judge.
However, the time that elapses between the iuuence of
the warrant afld the courtroom decision is often weeks
.,d sometimes mOfuths. Moreover. efter the judge
orders the client tc• E.J. Meyer for a psydliatric
evaluetlon, the victirn is frequentll( retumed to the
courts with a stetemelf'lt from the psydliatrlst that this
person can function In the community . Even if he Is
certified to State HC1tspltal, the paydliatrist there will
frequendy refuse him. Thus the ludile has his hands
tied until that person returns to the community and
Injures him•lf or od\trs. On1y recendy a City Court

ConcluSion
The contents of this paper have illustrated the
lack of health related facilities in Erie County and also
the lack of concern of our elected officials toward
improving health care. An example of me latter is that
in the race for County Execut111e there has been only
one statement pertaining to health care and that ~ was
directed toward the cost of the new Meyer Hospital.
Neither candidate has mentioned the Methadone Center
In lackawannjt .
The people who aren't affected by this are the
upper class who also are our polittcians whom we
contmue to elect. We let them decide where our
money 1s go1ng, and when new health fac•ltties are
ment1oned they cla1m there is no money ava11able. We
seem to forget tha nearly every family t:" periences
health problems whether it be alcoholism. mental illness
or placemtmt 1n a nursing home . The taxpayers would
gladly pay for theSI' ,facilities but are not given a voice
as to where thetr money is appropnated.
tnat personal contact with the patient is virtually
•mpossible.
Thefe dre an estimated 20 million people in the U.S.
suffering from some form of mental illness. Yet there are
,1pproximately 25,000 psychiatrists in the United States
who dictate how these people should be treated and who is
to be admitted to a hospital and who is to remain in the
community . Many of the psychiatrists are foreign and have
a difficult time communicating with patients. Psychiatrists
m the past have acknowledged that there has been research
done on the brain but no one knows about the mind of a
person. As a result they do a great deal of guessing. An
example of this occurs frequently in the courts. The
defense will have two psychiatrists stating that their client
was Insane at the time of me crime whefeas the prosecutor
w•ll have two omer psychiatrists stating he was sane.

Locally
At one time the mental patient was committed
and locked in back wards without receiving any
t reatment . Today through the advance of
chemo·therapy and with changing laws it is harder to
commit someone. As a result thousands of individuals
•re 10 the commumty mstead of the hospital. With the
• 'ental health laws undergoing another change in 1972.
• 1 wIll
be virtually impossible to have r,omflone
committed .
Keeping people 1n the communtty imtead of
mstltut•onahzing them can be of enormous benefit with
the exceptton of moving from one extreme to the
other wtthout cOnsidering the various tmpl1cat•ons of
such a trend reversal. There are no halfway h ouses for
e mentally ill. The 1200 or more victims who are on
~rwai P. scent care rarely get treated on an out ttent
lSI ) due to the short.lge of staff. The reduct;on
Ill ' ••nts
l t Buffalo State the past fivP. years has
•bercd appro,.tmately 1000 patients Th1s means
many of th1s 1000 (plus thousands o f o thers! a r"
be tng treated due to a lack of beds, manpower and
" •r health •elated facilities for the mentally ill. For
.. , orn pte the State Hospital (Buffalo) and E.J Meyer
" 1, h have SIX Catcnman Areas serv•ng 200,000 Ill each
" ~a
tn Catchman Area 6. Meyer h.ts 14 a r.• • ~
psych•atnc beds and Buffalo State has 25•l
Tt&gt; "'
there a• o'.ly '&gt;•6 " "r1 to treat the ment.- { •II .., this
area
Warrants and judges
Many times a patient will be brought to Empath
lPsychiatric Intake Center) certified to Buffalo State by
two psychiatrists. The admitting psychiAtrist at Buffalo
State will claim he can not help the patient. Since
Meyer has only 14 beds in this area, which are always
filled, the patient is tumed back to the community

The only way to open the eyes of thes~ officials
1s to put pressure on them similar to the pressure put
on the Johnson administration's handhng ot the
Vietnam waf.

judge h8$ asked Governor Rockefeller to have his
administration investig.ate the adm1ssion procedures at
Buffalo State .
Unrealistic hours
It is virtually impossible to have someone
commttted at Buffalo State after 4 p.m .• before 9 a.m.
and on weekends. If someone is picked up by the
police during these hours they usually end up in Jarl
for the n ight sinoe the police don't appreciate waiting
three hours before a patient is seen. A policy that
could prevent this fr•om occuring in many instances
would include having one of 35 health officers go to a
home and examine the individual. Unfortunately. this is
rarely done because the psychiatrists do not cooperate.
Th1s 1s a problem for the Commiss1oner of Mental
Health and in this case the County Health
Commissioner.
Recently on thn local level an agency called
Transitional living, Inc. has been organiz~d which
would provide group houses, supervised living and
independent apartment:; for the mentally dtsabled . The
theory behind this is excellent, but how long will we
have to wait before these places become a reality. and
mdre important, where will the money oome from?
Also, Meyer and Buffalo State Untts serving Catchman
Area 6 have establtshed a day care center in the
community ThiS is a nood idea but one wonders how
many of the outpat te~nts will · tak~ the initiative to
attend the group therapy sesstons and othe r counselling
that will be ava1alble to them.

Heahh insurance
Today. attempt~ iUe be1ng made to pass a health
care plan, but agam. the bureaucracy of the federal
government and the power of the Amencan Medical
Ass"c'a' •on are plavmg maJo r roles. The lllt ,., •eahzes
gove•ne mnt
t " r 1 ~ I an IS mev.t .. le b ut wa r.t
•nter!E'renl':"' to bP. minm1dl They want J U~t enough
federa l lCtivity to provide health care for the rest of
the population .
hcJI;~ever, other 1plans have been submitted to
Co n gr •·~s. the most co n troversial being the
~&lt;enned y ; . fi•hs proposal. Their plan would create a
health m ~urance program for everyone, totally f inanced
by the ted~&gt; ral govemrr1ent. The est1mated cost of this
plan would be S57 bitltion. The Nixon administration
advocates a $2 b illion1 plan which calls for limited
governmental interference; this is similar to what the
AMA is requesting.

Doctor shortage
Evfryone
I

'

.

is

aware

of

the

current

health

What we do not need are any more conferences,
committees and commissions but direct action to meet
the years of decisions regardrng " Health Care in
Amen ca."

~

�White smog threatens
population Of Tolcyo

St. BoaaYeatllre ·

No intervisitation permitted
when u)ted whether or not the intervisitation
question misflt ~ rlised lpin: "Aa far a I'm
cofM;erned, thf' lntervisic.ttion question has been
reSOlved and the final appeal hal been nude and J
shall never pretent it to the Board of Trustees apin.
That doesn' t mean that I'm not..awire o()he feet
that it will be raised apin as a question, but my
answer will be that tho question has already been
resolved and the answer given."
The problem or intorvisitation began last
November, when a proposal concernjng it was sent
to the president. Father Reginald rejected the
proposal, and the students staged a two-night sit-in
at one of the dorms. The president threatened to
close the University if the students didn't Start to act
rationally, and a mediation board was set up to end
the sit-in. The sit·in began as a general complaint
about students' rights, but the issue of intervisitation
took the front, and has been there ever since. The
mediation board set up the Handbook Board, which
sent the proposal to the Board of Trustees this
summer. A Student Senators meeting is scheduled
\ 'Neftr •pin.
The Very Rev. Reginald A. RedJon, president of for Tuesday night, and the issue will probably be
St. Bonaventure, made the following comments discussed then.
Trustees 1t St. Bonwenture Uniwnity have
pr~ mlde by the
Student Handbook Committe«( wfbch would have
lllowed intervisitltion ' 1on 1 limited IDd tempOrary
basis." And, to make m1tten wone they denied the
request by the committee that Ill sophomores,
juniors, seniors and freshmen (yes, freshmen) with
parental permission to Uve o'ff~pus be allowed to
do so. As it stands now, no freshmen may Uve off
campus.
The Board of Trustees at the Univ~rsity made
the' foUowing changes in the handbook: 1. The
regulation prohibiting the burning of incense in the
dormitories was removed in its entirety; 2. AU
- student lounges are o~n to all University students
24 hours a day ; 3. New freshmen hours were
adopted, and freshmen · now have the following
curfew hours: fmt semester - Sun.-Thurs. 12 p.m.,
Fri.-Sat. 2 a.m., second semester - Sun.-Thurs. 12
p.m., Fri.-Sat. self UmJted.

&lt;tone it 1p.in: they rejected 1

'The Investigation' auditions
Open aduitlona are briot held for The ln~lli,.tion by Peter Weill, 1uthor of
MiiiTlt/S.de. The 1uclltioaa wUJ.be bdd tomorrow from 7 - 10 p.m. and on Frid1y from
4- ' and 7- 10 p.m. AudJtiona wUJ be beJel In Room 346. N orion MlJ.

The pl1y della with the 1troc:itiea committed in Germu conc:entr1tion cam.. and
their ominous relenmc:e to today's events. It il 1 atrons, uaJy and moviaa pl1y. Aayone
interested .. waed to audition.
The lnvelliption is the m1jor production by the StUdent The1ter Guild thil term.

Hear, 0 Israel

ll

~--- ·Bible Truth----,
I TH E INCARN AT E CHRIS T
I
f Cc)d w• IMnlftst In the n•h"
1
L
I Tim. 3 : 16 I

for 111M from ihe

'

JEWISH BIBLE
PMne

r ' And t he Word mede Oeah, 1nd
fdwell amo n1 ua, and beheld hill
~-ory, l h e llory IS of t he only

875-4266

1
c·~t~~~·~~::·~!!".!~~·

$ 1. 75 3 p.m. 6:30p.m.

~ (DNSJ) Tokyo - This city is eyes to relieve the most common
worried; not because itJ smoa 11 effect of white smog.
I!)Ctting darker, but because it's
Ironically , thoug.&amp; an
I!)Ctting whiter.
"environment agency" was made
Photochemical smog, which part of the prime minister's
the Japenese pepen call white cabinet on July I , and a "strict"
smog, is becoming an almost daily pollution law went into effect in
part of the weather pettern hero. Tokyo lix months ago, the m•jor
It is the same phenomenon which source of deadly white smog atiU
gave To kyo international is uncontrolled.
publicity last July and August,
Vehicles are not required to
when the first attacks or white have smog control devices, and it's
smog aent scores of people to the so bad In the cities that many
hospital.
drivers - even In the smothering
From July to September lut heat of summer - roll up their
summer, there were eight white windows at intersections.
smog aleru in Tokyo. Thia
Japanese truck exhaust pipes
summer, there have been alerts often stick out the side, not the
virt~y every day, 1nd the worst back, tnd when the traffic signal
of them, in early July, resulted in changes, a great belch of fumes
8466 reported cua of ill effecu. • tnd black unoke can envelop cars
'
The Tokyo Metropolittn nearby.
·
The entire Japanese pollution
government, however, estimlted
that more than twice that mtny picture is much the same: skies
were affected.
over all major areas getting
Sc:hool children throughout the blacker (or whiter); rivers near
Tokyo area as weU as 1djlcent factories setting murJder; tnd
prefectures complain of eye hptn's beaches becoming so
irrit1tion , sore throats, tnd Jittered and fahhy that one report
, headaches caused by the white a.id the nation may have to swim.
smog, which results from high only In pools within a decade.
temperatures and humidity, little
The most shocking report of
wind, and the potentially de1dly
pollution effects came recently
reaction of the sun's ultraviolet
from Tokyo's K.oto war, a
rays on vehicle exhausts.
typically crowded hodge-podge of
factories and houses.
Burnina eyes
A health check of 240 Koto
School infirmaries are "' now
accustomed to I steady now Of residents by three locaJ
student s s eek in&amp; treltment anti-pollution groups revealed thar
because they have coll1peed from 51.2 ~r cent had anous •·lutl&amp;
Jack of oxygen. Newspapen have disorders . The reason : an
printed ph o t os of children estimated SO tons of soot per
clus ter ed around pllyground square kilometer falls on this area
fountains, splashing water in their each month.

EARLY DillER

MAKE

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MONEY!

liHE spECT~tUM

COME UP TO 355 NORTON AND ASK FOR
THE ADVERST~SING MANAGER.
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..

~~~~~~y.ba;

FREE TICKETS FOR FRIDAY OCTOBER 1st

SHOWING AT 11 :30 p.m. at HOLIDAY II 3801 Union Rd.

Answer the following questions and brin1 your finished entry to Ths Spsctrum office and
dtposit with so oz.

1. The C.pen lot hu room to park Sllc:b plore in l new 1torea,
aow open 1t Elmwood 1nd
BidweD ne11 St1te Tuchert, and
lllin S.treet opposite U.B.
GrooY)' flue• turn you on ... In
,..ida, ltrip-. c:hec:b, and eolida.
Wat« ~btl, reaullr pockeu,
wide and rep1u belt aoop..
-, Pleat)' of flue~ ia famoue Le'fi'a
Mta·Prelt® llacb. Allo etniJbt
1R with it. Dia hate A'

can? a) 3 b)blue c) who carts? d)as many as will frt.

2. Millard Fillmot'e Coli"' w• 111mtd aft• a)Collttt b)Abraham Lincoln c)t"- Battle of
New Orl•ns d)1927 (it- I rlllly good v•r)

•o

au.._.
,....,..,r

3. Tu111 fish is 10od for a) othi.. b)two in me bush c)Chow Main tl)your tumtny

·
4. If tlttre 1re five birds in 1 . _ , ••II you W8ll two itf thtnt. how
me ward " I haw only 1M lift te 1M for •Y • 111111•7

••Y e.n.. an tMrl

ill

PRIZES

200 WINNERSI - PICK UP TICKETS - Room 356·Norton -FRIDAY I

hp fourteen. The Spectrum . Wednesday, September 29, 1971

£sr

I
I*

�...

CAC andchildren

. Creativity center.·
- .
helping the disabled
.

.

I

by Lynda Teri

"We're here to communicate, so
we don't get lost." :
In addition, Ms. Abelson sees
Cere&amp;al palsy, · blindness, the course as a means for
mental retardation and deafness interested students to get practical
are only some of the handicaps experience working with children :
young children participating in "Anyone can read the crap they
the Communicative Creativity must from books. The theory
workshop possess. These children comes easy in the lecture hall but,
will receive · four hours of what good is theory when they
~ttention each Sunday as the main have to go out and face a
part of a CoUege A course in situation?" She believes"'that "a
which I 24 studen\S are presently theory is important. But, they
enroUed.
also need practical experience.
"A difficult undertaking," They have to be able to form their
Bambii Abelson, coordinator of own theory; improve what they've
CoUege A, warns the students read, expand it, make it more
taking her course Communicative understandable and meaningful
Creativity 302: "I told you it was for themselves and those they
going to be hard: I wasn't work with."
kidding."
Ms. Abelson sees the teacher's
Ms . Abe 1s 0 n sees the role in society today as one
Communication workshop is the shrouded with mystery. "Kids
one "real place" where ·children of should realize social workers,
all types may COme t oge ther. teachers and doctors are real. I'm .
"The segregation of children," she real and I want them to know it,"
com mented, "from 'normal' she continued. "I think it is the
c h i ldren and even other job of teachers to produce the
handicapped children is the norm map. Kids have to discover the
for all institutions in our terrainontheirown."Sheintends
country." She continued: ..There to have a definite plan each week,
are 110 i~)ted,fChools where aU but nothing so tight as to strangle
diff~en~•.kiAds IQf;;k.ids can cpme • or ,male~ anyone uncomfortable.
and CG.mmunicat~ , with each
Individuality shown
other. They are non-exi~tent . That
The children are far from
is just what I want this workshop
uncomfortable. )Vhile tllking part
to be."
in the group they exhibit much
individuality . "We don't want to
Practical experience
establish a right or wrong way of
Carol, an epileptic child, has doing things," MI. Abelson
her own idea of what their goal is: explains, ''becaute everyone's
Spectrum Staff Writer

ideas are important·. But, we must
learn to work within a group.
Many lose 1sight of the fact that
you can retain your individuality
while coop•erating in a group."
This is see:n in the workshop
theme. "Oommunicate, Create,
Cooperate."

new experiences with new
"friends." "We are all gding to
have to learn together," Ms.
Abelson believes, "No one knows
how to communicate with anyone
in the beginning."
Facing thes e diffe re nt
situations will be interesting and
fun , according to another staff
member, who said : " I'm here
because I want to be. Anyone
who doesn't like this sort of
interaction better get out now."
Agreeing with this, Ms. Abelson
commented: " Meas le s are
catching and so are feelings . tf
you have bad feelings about being
here, the kids are going to pick
them up. Don't come if you are
going to be like that."

Friendshiip is the very core of
the workshop 's. ideology as
children are called "little friends"
and adults, ' 'big friends." The
center sign reading "Friends come
from diffenent environments" is
descriptive of Ms. Abelson's
working ph~losophy .
Ne~ experie:nces

Every we:e k the "little friends"
choose a djfferent "big friend " to
work with . The children seem to
adjust very weU to this, according
to one st~t~en't who believes,
"They [the !children] teach us
more than we teach them." Ms.
Abelson sees: this as a method for
getting everyone together in
different telationships. Every
week, both utaff and children face

sitting back, ~king, 1111oking,
having a good time but ignoring
the kid, that's bad. I'm not going
to let that happen . These kids
need better than that."
The project for the workshop
js going to be a multimedia
production, says Ms. Abelson.
Starring the children, the
production welcomes anyone
wishing to help out. Ms. Abelson
explained that course registration
is not necessary for participation
in the multimedia project or any
of the Sunday sessions.
Perhaps, most symbolic of the
course's goals is in~truction in

Braille and marrual language. The

staff receives this instruction,
along with individual help
regarding the children in their
Braille instruction
two-hour per week recitations.
This course is a great place for The children will also learn to
students to meet and get together communicate in this fashion on
with other students, accordil)g to Sunday from John, a deaf child,
Ms . Abelson . However, she his mother and Ms. Abelson. As
warned\ "I don't want this to turn John's mother stated: "John, we
into a social thing. We're not here ~e doing this so that aU people
for that. If two students are will learn."

'

,_

.,

Wednesday, September 29, 1971. The Spectrum. Page fifteen

�-

Cippolina is outstanding
in Quicksilver concert
The scene at Kleinhans Friday
night was one of the sorriest sights
I've encountered an a long time.
The house was close to fulJ, but
not completely . And all of them
were young kids, IS-18, stoned
out of their minds. They kept
falling all over each other, vaguely
aware that there was music going
on in front of them. One guy sat
down next to me for awhile. As
soon as he sat down , he passed
out. Then he woke up and asked
me if I was Tony . I said no, and
he got very upset and left, only to
return a little later with some girl
he met three rows back. Finally,
they both spi.Jt to greener
pastures.
But with Quicksilver Messenger
Service playing, what dJd I
expect? Though the band started
back in the good old days of San
Francisco, it is only in the last
two years that they've really
emerged as a voice of the younger
set. I can get close to Grand Funk
and way behind Black Sabbath.
depending on whether I want to
so all the way up or aU the way
down, but Quicksilver puzzles me.
If I were 17 and a downs freak,
maybe I'd understand~
Gettina untoaether
Dlno Valenti 's rise from
famous obnoxious obscurity to
everlastin g obno xious
non-obscuuty has plenty to do

~th U, I bet. Uke a stranger in
the land of music, Dino runs from
gujtar to congas like a drooling
gorilla, and with much less grace.
He 's always trying to impr~
upon you that he's up there, and
he ain't gonna leave now that he's
there.

So much for the seedy side of
being a rock star. At the other end
of the stage is John Cippolina, a
true prince of rock and roll.
Alwa·y·s regally dressed, he stands
tall, slightly hunched shoulders
over Gibson Firebird. He is
unassuming, but he projects an
aura that can hft you right up.
In order to listen to Quicksilver
ttfen. I had to -keep my eye
focused on Cippolina. While
Valentt jumped about and
generally ruined all the songs he
sang (except for " Have Another
Hit"), Cippolina did "Mona" and
"Who Do You love" beautifully.
Of ~ourse, Valenti's attempts at
feedback had to be ignored to be
tolerated, and the organist, when
heard, was aJways In the wrong
way. But when they all clicked, it
was great, transcending music.
The expected "What About
Me," with Oino pointing at the
poor Kleinhans' security cops and
counting on each chorus so the
crowd could sing along, was the
showstopper.
James Cotten and his band

~'!f"

Wlult about me!

.,.......--

ar?1~6p;-n
,_..Pro~

Pap sixteen. The Spectrum . WedMsday, September 29,1971

....-w:.

opened the show. Couen's-bi88est on Wood," the sax player messed
mistake, like Uttle Walter, was u~ all the horn Jines. "love
leaving Muddy Waters' band to go tights" also didn't work 'too well.
out on his own. Except for his Why all these fine bluesmen feel
longtime bass player (from whom they have to do soul to stay on
Wyman probably stole the bass top 1,1 never know.
hugging blt) and a sometim~
James did manage to throw in
Interesting guitarist, Cotten's band • his monster instrumental, "The
never left the ground. On "Knock Creeper." For that one song

\ryho '
•

Dino Vlllentt (fir riFt) ttrik• hlt belt dlbluchtd
folkle 1Urned rock 1111r poee • the Nit of ~icklilvw
attempts to play 10me IDOd music. Thou_. Oino'a
could hefdy be dismissed by not looking lit
him, the bend did man~~ge to provide 10me
interedtingliltenlng.
·

GUSTAV DOES IT!Ifl
.. .and for only 8 cents

alone, his harp playing will never
be lost . It's a fast, shuffly number
that lets Cotten work out just
about any lick you might want to
hear on a harmonica.
·But that crowd sure made me
feel bad and depressed. And old.
- Bi/(y Allmon

�'

'Dri,e, He Said •

Craziness~not~ness
byGeorpSax
Sp~trum Film

Critic

Drive, Ht' &amp;tid, the film version of Jeremy
tamer'a fint novel, finally founcr it&amp; way into
Buffalo at the Cinema lllut week . On ita way, the
film pthered a fait amount of critical comment as to
Its tocial and political intent. Most of tbis bas
centered on ita campua aettina and the fact that ita
cbancten are members of a univenity community.
Actually it is no more appropriate to elw Drlvt',
He Sllid with 'the recent run or exploititc potboilers
dealina with atudent unrest than it would be to
describe GHt'nittK o{ Amt'rlca as profoundly
mealiin&amp;ful ' social criticism. The fact that both
rniatakes are common is, of course, to be expected.
Clarence Brown'aJntrudt'r In 17te Dlut wu the last
and the best or a aeries of tnovies about ra~
relations and so, quite naturally, wu the least
succ;essful. A limilar fate may await Drive ...

ftlmm,DDrfatvt', Ht' &amp;ltd, is witf out specific political
appeal. But the implicltions w!li.ch are made a.r e not
mysterious even if they sometttnes seem to lack real
definition and focus. There · ia a certain low-key
approach to the themes in the lfilm which is, I think,
u mu.cb a atrenath u an annoya.n ce:

By all indications (i.e., one
listenina on the radio) the new
Grateful Dead live double LP
dives to a new nadir in "middle of
tbe road.. sloppy country and
aimlesa enatz coanic noodlin&amp;.
And they bad the nerve to want
to title this album Slcullfuck.
Whoae akull, pray tell? I mi&amp;bt
4:hanp my mind tomorrow, but
the real. problem aeems to be that
the Dead have ceaaed to be funky
and ethereal at the same time.
They are ode of the. few bands
that I bave gone to aee in order to
cure a headache. Of coune, u
every true fan will teU you, none
of tb.JI Dead-baitin&amp; really matten
(e.g., the bootleg is as ,ood u
ever), but it sure doesn't bode
well. A$ I always say . . . folkie
hearts will out eventually. Look at
J. TuU. Look at Rod the Mod
(who I adore, but the boot does
fit) .
Sly is back on the road
apin . . . arossed $400,000 in
three nights at the Garden (SRO).
Thinp are straight once apin
between him and KapraUk ·and
Stoneflower, th~ new album is on
the way, and be should sock away
at least S2 million by Christmas.
Well, that should certainly keep
him in whatever it is be uses these
days. (Ben Fong-Torres hasn't
seen fit to tell us yet. Wait tiU
they have a falling out . . . then
we'U get all the filth .) At any rate,
if Sly keeps his bealtb and his
cosmosis under control, it can
only benefit us. He's clearly the
only man alive who can begin to
ftll Ji.mi's moccasins.

Rallty btakdown
The principle characters in the film are all
sufferina from a sense of oonfuaion brousbt pn by
the slow disinteption of f;hdt lives and the
disappearance or their referen1::e points. As Hector
notes about basketball : "It dc&gt;esn't seem to mean
anyttuna anymore." And u a sort of o'ne-man
cborua, Gabriel emphasizes the: irrelevance of their
purauita u be pushca himaelf into a drua-indueed
atate of paranoia.
Without one seen~ of llhajor confrotttation,
Nlcholton and Lamer manqi'C to provicle more
me~~ningful social comment than apy of the
avowedly relevant ftlms from recent years. Bven
ThedUection
.
Gebriel impressively played by l~cbael Maraotta, the
JacJc Nicholson's fint cfu:ectorial effort Ia so one sup(X*dly political indiViclluat in the piece, il a
infused with intellipnce and intelfity that it Victim less of revolutionary stnaples than personal
transcends any narrow pore lines. It is, it should be reeponte~ to the social decay ab,out him. 1
•
noted, not about campus poUtica, revolutionary or
Hector's ~bellion at thO inane, bumlliatina
otberwdel, nor is it a political statement. It is conventiona of coUege sports takes the form of small
concerned with • small group of Americana who are aurly protests. He cannot brina himself to stop doina
more or lesa craz.y. thouah, with one possible t.be thina he does t'est. This ill hell, but on a very
exception: they are not mad.
'
small scale·.
The chief metapbor in the film for this insanitY
The whole ftJm is marked by a kind of contempt
is college basketball and the athletic career of the for excess and grand &amp;estures. No scene is shot in
hero, Hector Bloom, All-American. Whether by bright sunUsbt. It is ftlmed witlil'a nice regard for the
design or happy accident (probably both), this interplay of shadows, planes and angles. The
choice of symbolism works. For one thing, performances are all fine, oft•en underplayed , but
basketball looks better filmed in alow motion than never monotonous and occasionl8lly even ex.citing.
any other sport I can think of. Most of the credit for
One could mention aspec ts of the ntm which ·
these sequences must go to Nicholson who detract from its overall effecti,feness: the vagueness
understands the limitations of the metaphor as well of the theme, the lack of clea1r plot and character
as its advantages. The point is never belabored and development. But on balane4:, these seem more
the players are not degraded by their treatment in apparent than real. Nicholson has tried to deploy
either the script (co-.uthored by tamer and these defects as virtues and be is more often
Nicholson) or the execution. Even that timo-honored successful than not. Drive, He &amp;lid comes closer to
butt of film humor, the coach, is rendered success on both an aesthetjc and human level than
reasonable and realistic by Bruce Dem's portrayal. most American films. The movie-soer can meet this
film on its own terms without fear of being cheated
Clearly, Nicholson is not out to acore easy points.
S.track Hendrix
Jon Stewart has written in RJimP4rt1 that the in the transaction.
And speaking of that soft
step ping, soft spoken master
musician, magician and merman,
it is worth everyone's last pfennig
to race to NYC and catch Ht&gt;ndrix
GRADUATE STUDENTS
at Jkrkley in pulsing 8-track color
at the Garrick. If all else fails,
make it aero$$ the street and take
It is impmtivt that gflduate stud~ntl of IIBCh de{»rtmllflt elsct 111fNitOr and
advantage of the record price WIT
alternst§ to th1 GSA SIMtB by Oct. 4. The list below contains thB f/.B{»rtmllflt name
to scarf up Rainbow BridKe . As
and the number of IIMtors that d1partm1111t is allowld. • For ..ch lllrNitor, on1
Mick is probably saying right now
alternatl lhould b1 1/tct«&lt;. If your dlfMrtmllflt is not listlld, pi•H call' the GSA
in Cannes ... ..lncroyable !"
J
And while you're over there~
office (215 Norton, Ext. 5505).
it's worth your life to scomp on
Recognition proCfldum fiiiUifl • typtld letter introducing thB $tln!Btors •nd
the seminal recordina of Dylan
Blternates. TIN lltttr must be signtld by fiVfl students in th• dtpsrtmtnt indicating
and the Hawks live at AJbert Hall
that l/Jrnul ll«tions WBff hlfd. Th1 signature of the dirBCtor ofIJfldU8tl •rtudies for
in J 966 . . . possibly the single
most important relic of the
the dBPirtmt/11t or thl dlf»rtmllntBI chBirman is al10 rtJquirld to lltfif)'( that the
decade
just passed. " Judas!" a
~t~nstor and lignllll " ' mtmbm of th1 department.
voice shouts from the audience
and a huge roar wells up. " I don't
*1 11111tor p1r 15 FTE's. (1 FTE 12 crfJdit hours).
believe y.ou ... you're a liar . .."
Maximum is 3 sBMton.
Dylan hisses back and the band,
their back s audibly turned,
Medici
nil
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American Studi•l1)
explode the tension with the most
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Sma llleitten l~st. Ownu is
· duperate. Call} o-A nn at
4113 if you spotted white
cat in the Winspear area.

intenae and exquisite version of
"Uke a Rollin&amp; Stone" ever
performed in tbia plaxy.

On tile tube
And where were you on
Wednetday night when Fanny
performed so exc:itinpy on the
Cavett show .. . •NB, theiir
Clulrlty Btz/1 album is almoet as
great u they w~.
And where were you Saturday
niaht, ume program, when John
Lennon aff"trmed his total support
of the Panther I O.Point Pr01J8m.
And where are you now u
W'&amp;Shbone Ash, a solid Bn,U.h
foursome , are makinl their
unabuhed ten-years-efter move
for your hearts and devalued
dollara. Their second, Pilgrllft#lt! ,
will suck up all you muaician.abip
admirers and jazz buffa as
efficiently u Undud once did.
They're actually OK . . . l just
hope .one of them is as preti)t as
Alvin.
'
And where were you Sunday
niaht when the Chi-lites and the
Isley Brothen sang their hearts
out to a miniscule and minimally
appreciative crowd at Kleinhans,
the hitb points beiDa a truly
edifyina version of "Just My
lmapation.. by the Chi-lites and
an amaz.inpy tender and soulful
tribute by the Isleys to their late
guitar player, Jimi Hendrix. Where
were you?

--·

WBFO live
And where were you after the
concert when WBFO, in a move
virtually unprecedented and
utterly unpraise4, broadcast the
\ut two sets by Leon Thomu and
Black Lisbtning live from the
Revilol Lounge. We were aU
sitting up astonished as a capsule
panorama of Afro-American
music was offered to us in the
space of six bows on a Buffalo
Sunday night. And where were
you?
And where are you now when
Rahsaan Roland Kirk is appearing
all week at the Revilot. If you are
brazen enough to think that your
spirit can afford not to see him,
and if you foraet to listen to
WBFO's live broadcast of his last
sets on Sunday night ... weU, U.ke
they say, it's your karma.
And don't forget : The J . Geils
Band, the best rock &amp; roll band
since the Rollins Stones left Eel
Pie Island, will be standing in for
the Bills this week~nd at War
Memorial Stadium, and in some
yery heavy company, I miaht add.
As vocalist Peter Wolf says : " OK,
baby, Time to get crazy !" Be
advised.
Last of all, tune in with me and
listen while "Yo-yo" knocks
"Maggie Mae" out of the Number
One spot this week.
Goodbye . . . and happy
motoring.

w.tlfbedl • ri.,.«f In your town?
StreithUft"ow W.t..tMds ere
.,..nteed in writlnt for five veen end
ere mede of 20 mil Union

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Cerbide vinyl

with .-monic
All

' (11) Portu.,. . (1)
sSocio'
..nish,"ltalien,
Speech Com1munication (1)

ont.s- lhipped

the 1MM c'-y tiMy
... ,_.,.,, Twins just
$14.86. quwns end klnp just
$'1.86. A foem ped II • definite
.. lneu'-te,
llnet wtil protee the flooft. If you •Y INJth wfth • ki,..tze bed '"'
X 7"t the total kit Is only &amp;28.16. Twin lcit ~· lust $22.86,
sind ont.s to Streithtllrrow W.'*'»•dl, 4eGO N.W. Cornell Rd.
PartiMd, Or..,.. 87210. You .-v ......,... fcw,..... (modllt ,_,
or . . for your order c.o.d. Fects: ower 400.000
in . -.
They'..- • ' - on any floor. wen up~~airs ~end otder ~.
They tlke
1111 ' - to filt Ullnt eft ordinery gll'den hole. To
chin JUil .,.....,. the wt1ter out .pn. StrWtihlllfi'OW W.-tMds . . in
WI in """*-*of hoMet end there"-.....,.._. a reported '-k or
defective bed v-t. Give it a tryl

_tel.._

The fint St•te meeting will be Oct. 4th: 1171 in 240 Norton et 7:30 , ..m.

....,.,t

._FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL THE GSA.
~

Wednesday, September 29, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seventeen

-

�·o range victory

S~racuse outruns Buffalo

by Riclt4rd l'euw

Rigbt at the beginnin&amp;, even before the applause sign is fluhed to
the children in the audience, we get a aJ.impse of the end of the show.
There on the television screen il a man's silhouette, a man in Jood
physical shape, no doubt. (If he sap, watch out! He retired before you
learned to read.) Since this is the ap of the Cashion-conscious athlete,
one can notice the stray lock of hair up front , a lock which must
extend beyond the side of the forehead to be seen on the silhouette.
One miJht even get the impression that the ear of today's athlete is not
as large as that of the old·timers' but no, no, old--timers, your Jobes
were not superior (nor could Cy Young pitch as well as .a Seaver).
Rather, part of the ear of today's athlete is hidden by still more hair.
After one examines the figure for no more Wlan a second, the
voice of the announcer tells what is already known, that one is looking
at Today's Bonus Biography guest, or Bonus Biography Guest, if the
announcer is so bold as to call that shadow a sports immortal. AU the
while, the viewer is looking for clues, as if the silhouette were a space
in a jig-saw puzzle; what piece would fit? The hair doesn't help. Except
for Fred Talbot, no athlete, active or retired, sports a crewcut
anymore. And it's difficult to tell from examining the body, since the
viewer gets no perception of size from a shadow and a white scr~en .
(That's why this viewer couldn't even tell that Willie Shoemaker's
.._.:,
silhouette was that of a small man.) Alas, one must wait for the end of
the show to hear the clues, for this is one television show which ends
. at the beginning, thus getting nowhere. But (and let this be said in the
same breath) Sports Cllallenge iS,•fun .
'
Ttw summer, before each NBC Saturday baseball game, sports
fans were treat.ed to this quiz show. Certainly, this is a case of eating
the dessert before the meal, but that's how television works - some
cheap candy to keep you around for the expensive steak and p6tatoes.
You see, fans, to consume is not only to eat, but to buy as wei~ .
Sports Challenge is taped in Los Angeles, so we must endure Angel
announcer Dick Enberg as host to two teams of athletes. Each team of
three plays for a boys· athletic club and, judging from their grins, some
spending m oney as well. The answers are all too easy for the sports
buff, so ~be fun is in trying to guess the questio.n s. Each round begins
with a film clip of sports action, after which Enbera asks a question
which has as little to do with the rum·as possible. For instance, the
category is record br~ers , and a ftlm is shown of Mickey Mantle
hitting a mighty h6me run. rounding the bags and being congratulated
by his teammates . And then Enberg, ''The question is : "Who holds the
Yankee record for least strikeouts in a season by a batter'?" Kind of
liki;- "What color were the bus driver's eyes?" The team which answers
the toss-up correctly is entitled to two free throw questions ; that's
ri&amp;l\t, sports fans , two free throws ! (This is the kind of unimaginative
sports punning whkh leads one to name a sports column after a pitch .)
The viewer \earns \it\le about the players. 1 can report, though,
that Jerry West is the best player in the game's history, that Mickey
Mantle's perpetual grin Is that of an immature third-grader and that
Allie Reynolds has the old-time hig ears. Occasionally, Enberg holds a
quickie Interview bet ween the film clip and the question , after which
the children in the audience applaud and cheer wildly at the
nothingness they've j ust heard (I he cheers so infantile one would think
their autho rs too young to read the applause sign).
Which brings us to the final ro und , the Bonus Biography , which is
worth a possible 90 points. The silhouette is shown as clues are read :
one point 1s ded ucted fro m t he value o f a correct answer for each
second that til'ks by. Since the two teams are never mo re than 40
point&amp; apart going into the fin al ro und, and the Biography hus yet to
yield less than 73 points, the team which guesst:s tbe identity of the
mystery guest always wins, thus making the entire show meaningless
(but fun).

r--------------------------,

!

LG&gt;QK!

$5000
•

Last Saturday, 37 croe~ countTY TUnners from
Buffalo, Niapra, Syracuse and Rochester braved the
10lf balls at Grover Cleveland Park in ordeT to
compete on a quadranaular meet over the SY.t-mlle
course. All four schools started at the aame tim~ but
the finish was an Orange swarm. Syracuse, led by 11
phenomenal junior namod Bruce fisher, took the
top three places and five of the top six. Fisher
shattered the course record of 29 .minutes and 10

dual

even •one. 1'he
meet scoTCS, when broken
down for tbe quadranauJar meet, showed the Blue to
be well behind not only winning Syracuse, but
Rochester and Nia'pra as well. Syracuse took
Buffalo l S- 48 while Rochester and Niagara won by
the same score of 22- 37 (low score wins in cross
country).
Blue strateay

Due to the balance the Blue squad is supposed
to have the basic strategy is to stay in a group near
the fro~t of the pack . Saturday neither half of this
plan was accomplished. The majority . of Buffalo's
harriers were well behind from the $tart and failed to
move up during the course of tne race. Bven the
Bulls' on ly good performer, co-captain Jim
McClurkin, was not able to catch anyone towards
the end of the race. He came through the half-way
mark in about eighth place and fmiahed the race 2~
miles later, still ~i~ eiJhth p1ace. His time of 29
minutes and 58 seconds was good. T~e trouble was
that he was aU alone. The others, who should by all
riahts have been riJht with him were no where to be
seen and weTe to be a long time in coming. Just for
Saturday 1he
the record the other Blue scorers were Larry
varsity cross country Krltjewskl ( 14 ), Bruce Tuttle (20); Bob Gower (24)
Bulls ftll to 1heir fourth and Dennis Meka, the pre-season favorite who was
strllght loss of 1he disappointing twenty-Sixth.
.-.on. Only co-captain
According to Coach Fisher the team seemed to
Jim McClurkin was in 1he
ha~e
an epidemic of stomach trouble. Most, if not
running for 1he Bulls, as
Syqcuse'a Bruce Fisher all, of the running Bulls reported that they bad
set a Grcwer Cleveland experienced cramps during both Buffalo races to
courte recoid. The Bulls' date. Supposedly, this started with poor food in
next appearance is 1his Clevela.qd last week. There is some truth to this but
af'-"oon at Fredonia it is equally certain that there are other reasons for
State University College. the squad's poor showing thus far . One thjna is
certain. The Bulls have to get together and pace each
seconds with a great time of 27 minutes and 57 other in order to nay near the front . Hopefully, the
physical problems will resolve themselves. If not
seconds.
Unfortunately, the Bulls' lack of success in there will be trouble for the meets are coming fa:
Cleveland last week (a ..double loss to Cleveland State and hard , starting with fredonia at fredonia th1
and Toledo) continued Saturday , and was possibly afternoon.

Fun

McQurldn

WASHIIIG1'0N SU.MUS Cl111'1a

.

AIIMI'-MAtiF

IIUS &amp; THINGS- M..a Styles F• Y•• M..a.ra

LIAftll• 6 GOODI

••SHIACIIIU

,...,ac•n•
•ooys.Ln•
II H.

SAVE MONEY
SHOP ARMY NAVY
730-732 MAIN -153-lSlS NEAR TUPPER
..T••• ('lew.. '

Tr.y ~ us

once&amp;
you'll
be

Hooked
THE SPECTRUM

355 f10RTON ftAll

I

in

I
I

CASH &amp; PRIZES!

To the winner of tht 1st Annual Miss College World Beauty
Be sure your school is represented. Penon ,club,
fraternity, or sorority nomi•ting the wiriner riCtives $1000.00.
C~ntestl

RADUATE STUDENT
R~fiister Now!
(or you can't vote in local elections or National Primaries in '72)
LAST CHANCES :

NO TALENT NECESSARY!

(2)
(3)

Just physial attractiveness, charisma, and 11ndtr1l appeal.
Winner announced on November 38, 1971, and will appear in a
Major Football Bowl.

Mail 3 cl•r photos (no lea than 3" X 3") 1 full length, 1'
head &amp; shoulders, and 1 in a swinsuit.
For inquiries or applicrtions write:
COLLEGE WORLD, 4144 E. Grant Road, Tuaon

Arizona85718.(lnclude your name, 111 (18·24), addraa,
tchool, and phone. Pbotos not mumeltle.
Nominltions clo• midnitht October 22n1.

( 1) Thursday September 30

QU All FICAT IONS:

1.
2.
3.
4.

Friday October 1
Saturday October 2

12 - 7 p.m.
12 - 7 p.m.
10 ..... 8p.m.

U.S. citizen (free born or natural~zed)
18 years or order
permanent resident - Erie County
3 months in residence prior to Nov. 2, 1971

Register in your own local district.
Call 846-7760 - Board of Elections - to find out wher-e.
PROBLEMS: C•ll GSA- 831-5506 or ACLU- 813.0946

Pa§Je eighteen. The Spectrum. Wedr}esday, September 29, 1971

�.

CLAIIIIIII.I
FOR SALE
'67 VW, radio, n - tires, snOW$,
perfect condition, $975 after 5.
873-4117.

vw

BUG 1968, well loved and cared
f or. Call 833-4541.

'65 MUSTANG convertible, low
mileage. Good condition. Four new
tires pl us snows. N - top. Just
Inspected. 1450. 836·8624.
1964 BUICK LeSabre·Sedan,
automatic, excellent tires Including 2
snow tires, power steering " brakes.
632·1151. Must sell.
BICYCLE '26", 3•SpHd EngliSh racers.
Brand new - men's, ladles, 836·1303.
1969 ,-RIUMPH Trophy
E)(cellent condition, 4000
885-0606.

250.
miles.

REFR IGERATOR S , stoves and
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. O&amp;G APPIIllnCeS, 844
Sycamore, TX4·3183.
Gl BSON B- 15 folk guitar, $90.
Epiphone 12-st rl ng electric guitar.
Make offer. Steve 834·5637, evenings.

O.J. Selling' out all his lp's 2/$3.00 and
45 •s, 25 for 12 . 00. Groups,
undergfound, .tc:. Saturday Only! 53
Lynbrook Ave., Tonaw,anda, off
'Brighton.
·
19711/t HONDA CB 350 lew than 600
mu"es. Also helmets, Jacket size 38.
Make offer. 882·3787 after 6.
REFRIGERATOR perfect for dorms.
Excellent condition. 1100. Can Laurl
838·1930.
1962 OLOSMOVILE, 65,000 miles,
good mechanical condition, automatic:
transmission: power st-Ing, brakes;
mounted snows Included. Great
transportation. $250 negotiable.
837-1617. or 831·4113 ;ask for Mickey.
CHEVY II 1962 ;auto. $50; Olympic:
console stereo, AM &amp; FM: air
conditioner, 8000 STU. 882·3787.
1965 VW Bus. Good running
coru:tltlon. I nspec:ted August. Make
offer. 884- 1821.
VAN 1966 Oodge standard, 90,000
miles, but runs good. 1400. Rob Miller
741-3110. One whltewalll .
AMPLIFIER 3 months old VOX.
Perfect con dition. Built In fuzz Reverb
MBR Vibrato, S295. 833·3942.
HARMONY "Sovereign" guitar
pe r fe ct for beginners. Excellent
condition. $50 casn gets you guitar,
case, strap, book, accessories, Gene,
831·5215, 9-4 .
GALAXIE 500, V - 8, au tomatic, body
excellent con dition, runs well, $350.
Flexible. Call after 5:00. 832-0588.

lst..floor windOw. Washer, dryer and
kitchen prhltlefes (dtlhw•f'lerl, t7
weekly ANO adequate cf'leery
perform~ of ll!lht housekeeping
(not lighthouse keeping), ~mall,
modern nome. Call eld•I Y gentleman
of KenrnOfe - .between Elmwood,
oetaw•e buses for appointment
bef«e 9 a.m. or 6- 12 p .m. Anytime
Sunday. 876-8086.

wor1c sooMI' than you think. Some
kind of a phOne numbef It tiMntlal.

SET OF metric

wn~ncf'l•

«

SOCkets.

691-9112.
START $2 Plf nour. Salary pfus
bonus. Work 4-8 p.m. weekdays.
lo-2 p .m. Saturdays. eau 835·3803 or
TF9-o402.

1964 BUICK ~lvera. New tires, brakes,
starter. Engtr'l o-hauled July. $550.
674·9565.
MINOL TA SRT·101, chrome body,
50/1.7 MC RDkkor lens. Six months
old. $150 or best offer. Call Bill.
831-4113 after 2 ·p.m.

BABYSITTER wantedt HOUff flexible.
own transportatiOn preferre~ Must
like children. 632·1151. Oavtlme
preJerred.

DORIC transistorized organ, full
keyboard plus fender. Leslie - c heap,
$200 cau 882.1 294 •ft•r 1 1 p m
HIGH ~rform;ance '55 Ford,
w;agon. A classic. 834-0136.

2 dr.

I

ROOMMATES WANTED

PERSONAL
WHHO-o Glmmle Shetter . on babe no~
fade away -Keith, Mid&lt;, Mlck, Charl y
;and Bil l. Aquarius weeps for her
ctllldren.

MALE, 1 femat., four-bedroom house,
two batlls, $60/montf'l. Lotte land. Call
Bruce 632.0983.

PLE-ASE note the deadline for
Ba c:kpage Is noon, Monday for
WednesdaY, Wed. for Fri., Fri. for
Mon. The deadlines will be met.

KENSINGTON-8AILEY own room,
$60/month, Including utilities. Share
apartment with three guys. Call Shelly
831 -3894. Available Immediately.

NEEO a brother. Rush PI Lambda Tau.
Tabla In Parker Hall, 11 a.m.- 1 p .m.

FLATTOP Classic gultan.
New-used. Martin, Glblon, Guild,
Gurian, etc. Musicians prices. String
Shoppe, 524 Ontario. 7 p.m.-9 p.m.
dAlly . Saturday, noon -5 p.m.
874·0120.
GUlLO CE-100 electric guitar, good
condition. Fine acoustic sound. About
$125. C;~ll Ken Sloane, 832· 1971.
1964 CHEVROLET, 6·CYI., automatic.
Excellent running condition, $200.
Ask for B ill.

WANTED

FEMALE roommate needed. Own
room. $47/+ utll. 10 min. walk to
c.ampus. 21 Chassln (1 block past
Eggert). No phone so just come over.

PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT- abOve
average pay tor school term work.
853-8109. 9-3 p.m.

APARTMENTS WANTEO

AMY STEIN, It's beautiful being
engaged. I'll love you always and all
ways. Forever, Ron .

SINGLE male student, 28, needs room
within walking distance of camt:fUs,
share expenses. Call Henry 837-6029.

WILL JOAN Lazarus 1568 Delaware
S.S. No. 113·38-.32 39 please co ntact.
The Blacksmith Shop Restaurant.

RIDE BOARD

PART·TIME supervisor for Buffalo
Teen-age Jewl1h Youth Program. BA group wo r k, experience/MSW
can d i date oreferable. Call
315-446·9379· or 315-446-4985 for
Interview.
WE EMPLOY 17 part-time students &amp;
the turnover Is constan t due to Illness,
dropouts, studies, etc. 1 f Interested,
apply personally to Mr. Ba~er or write
Slac~smlth Shop, 1375 Delaware Ave.
14209 and you may be called up for

ROCK GROUPS wanted. Steady work,
• choice of nights. The Club Restaurant,
Niagara
Falls. Contact Ed Lucas,
RIOE NEEOEO to U.B. mornings from
Elmwood and Sheridan area In
282·8602.
Kenmore . Call evenings 876·2855.
WILL ELL Y Ma rt&lt; son please contact
the Silverberg family at 634·0723 soon
RIOE WANTED to Boston, Oct. 7/ 8 .
as possible.
Will snare expenses. Call Patti
831 -2767.

-

MISCELLANEOUS

APARTMENT FOR RENT
Own

COURSE No. 221 "Living on the
Eart h'' will meet at 211 Summit off
Amherst at 3:30.
CAC UB Oay Care meeting TOOAY,
Wednesday, Room 246 Norton at 7:30
p.m. Vary Important.

SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB
MEMBERSHIPS NOW BEING TAKEN - ROOM 318 NORTON HALL

Undergraduates

Grads, MFC, Faculty, Staff

INDEPENDENT foreign car service
offers guaranteed work and studen t
rates. 839·1850.
FREN CH tutoring, help with papers,
thesis. Exam brush -ups. Conversation,
grammar courses. By Pcnlsliln-Gerard
837·2195. Espoclally reasonable.
TENNIS rtQuets rest ru ng free. Pick-up
and delivery. Call Alan 837·1617.
SPEEOEO Reading and Study.
Registration still possible for some of
Mrs. N ichols' classes. Information and
payment of course fee $15 at 105
Diefendorf.
C&amp;H JONES Profeulonal typing
service - ' com puterl~ed 18M
equipment plus our experience give
best possible presentations of
d tuertatl om , lhtliiJ, !trm l)tpers,
resumes and employment appllc;atlon
letters. Located between two
cam puses . Very reuonable. Call
837-65!)8,

1. Free skting and free transportation at Kissing Bridge:
MON- TUES - WED, nights-.
2. Discount passes for Kissing Bridge and Ski Wing.
Chit\ Notes are i!UI any lime you
need help tn lllff'iturel We
recommend buy1ng early so that
you can use them as you study
the nstgned PI&lt;~¥ or novel and as
a helpful revltw proor to trams
Gel the Clttl's Notes you need
loday You'll see why the;'re the
preferred study atd of m•ll•ons ol
Jludenls nattonwtde. (P S.l If your
dealer \ out of a IItie. he can get
another lui wrlh Chits "Hot line"

TYPING, experienced, near U.B., $.40
per page. 834·3370. F ast service.

*
*

LESSONS:
A worthwhile program is offered for $26.00 for 10 one-hour lessons given
on the nights the club has its free skiing. It is recommended that anyone
who wants to learn to ski or improve their skiing, take advantage of this
lesson program .

Also, Schussmeisters Ski Club sponsors weekend trips to Vermont during January,
February and March and a ski flight to Europe during Chirstmas vacation.
DON'T ROT THIS WINTER
Nurly 200 titiU - IIWIJS ltllll.. t

whrenr htkl .,, so.-.
O•lr '1m~

JOIN SCHUSIMIISIIRI SKI CLUB

MAKE SNOW, NOT WAR!

Perm,anent prices on "TOP 25" .
498 LIST$

2 87

s98 LIST$

347

A good price is nice... BUT you need the PRODUCT 1nd SERVICE to BACK-UP that price... WE HAVE ALL 31

C(A§ICALSST1:ile Record

Runn:eyr

51 Universit Plaza

Next to Main St.

Wednesday, September 29, 1971. The Spectrum . Page nineteen

-·

�.

Announcements
UB Gay Lib will hold a meeting tonight at 8
p.m. in Room 332 Norton.
Activist Youth for lsr.lel is holdi~g a meeting
tomorrow ilt 8 p.m. in Room 340 Norton. All are
welcome.
·
•

Japanese Go Game players, and those interested
in learning, who wish to meet regularly, call Bob
Mogy at 831-1386.
UB Vets Club will be meeting today 'at 4:30
.....llll•••••lllll[ll•••••p.m. in Diefendorf 147 for election of officers and
~
discussion of the newsletter.
Chess Club will meet tomorrow from 4- 6 p.m.
in Rooms 246-248 Norton. All people interested in
playing in the school tournament must attend.
CAC Volunteers for Buffalo Complaint Board
will meet tonight at 7:30p.m. in Room 242 Norton.
All interested are urged to attend.
Maria Kornilowicz will give a lecture on
"Various Functions of Literature : Case of Henry
Sienkiewicz" tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. in Room 234
Norton.

, \

...

The Debate Club is meeting tonight from
7:30- 9 p.m. in Room 332 Norton. New members
are welcome; no experience necessary.
Photo Club will hold a meeting tonight from
8 - 10 p.m. in. Room 234 Norton.
The Undergraduate Physics Student Association
will hold an open meeting today· at 3 p.m . in Room
203 Hochstetler.
The Council of History Students will hold an
organizational meeting today at 4 p.m. in the
basement of Diefendorf Hall.

a

CAC will hold meeting tonight at 8 p.m. in
Room 248 Norton for all people interested in or
involved in environmental action and consumer
protection projects.

Women's Intramural Bowling · (_,ue begins
today at S:3P p.m. in Norton. Openings are still
available fer teams of four or for individuals. For
more information, eontilct Miss Poland· at the Clark
Gym.
The Foreign Student Coordinating Counsel is
seeking signatl,fres for SA Assembly. Signing up is
not enough, you have to show up Thursday, Oct. 7
at 7 p.m. in Room 231 Norton for elections.
Registering will take place Sept. 29, 30, Oct. 1 and 4
from 11 -2 p.m. in Norton at a lobby tilble.
Millthus is planning a conference on population
control tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the Medical Students
Lounge in Capen. All nursing, medical, social welfare
and health-related professions students are welcome.
Tutors needed: All undergraduate students
interested in tutoring beginning college students for
academic credit (DUS· · 499 Iridependent Study)
should contact the Tutorial Lab, 16B Townsend
Basement for appli,cation forms (831-5366). Tutors
are specially needed in Accounting 203, 301,
Anatomy 113, Anthropology 105,., Applied,
Mechanics 205, Biochemistry 401, Chemistry 101 /
102, 201, 123, Construction Design 212, Electrpnics
403, Histology 305, Law 201, Phonetics 315,
Physics 107, 108, 113, 114 and Physiology 201,
420. For further information, contact Mrs. E.
Boepple at 831-5366 Int. 24 or at home 834.0436.
UUAB will hold a music committee meeting
tonight in Room 261 Norton. People needed for
security and help on the Flying Burrito's Brothers
Concert.
UUAB Dramatic Arts will hoid a meeting
tomorrow at 5 p.m. in Room 261 Norton.
The Pilot Project is having a meeting tomorrow
for all s~udents interested in riding with the Buffalo
Police. The meeting will be held in Room 233
Norton. Check at the information desk for the time.

Backpage

..

Sports Information

The Student Auoc~tion has petitions available
for Student Assembl~man at the Student Assembly
Elections Table, fitst floor Norton, from 10....:3 p.m.
Monday through Friday.
·

TodaY: Varsity golf at the Brook ,Lea tourney,
RIT host; women's tennis vs: McMaster State
University of Buffalo tennis courts.
'
Saturday: Varsity cross-country at the LeMoyne • • • • • • • • • • •
Invitational.
Rq.fler hockey action will take place with its
usual furious pace on Saturday at I 0:15 a.m. in the
parking lot between Capen Hall and Michael Hdll .
Last week's contest played with blatantly
imbalanced squads was an 11 - 2 fiasco. Several
newcomers displayed a fine exhibition of the
fundamentals of hockey, which many of the losers
never knew . In case of rain, Sunday is the mdke-up
date at 10:30 a.m.
A Saturday children's program has started which
features swimming and judo. The class will be held in
Clark Gym. For registration contact Codch Bill
Sanford.

What's Happening
Wednesday, Sept. 29
3 p.m. &amp; 7 p.m. - Films: Only The Beginning and
Basic, Diefendorf 147; presented by UB Veh
Club and WNY Veterans Union.
Thursday, Sept. 30
Noon - Luncheon : A discussion of the four-day
work week sponsored by the Buffalo Area
Chamber of Commerce at the Cordon Blue
Restaurant, 3909 Genesee St., Cheektowaga.
8 p.m.'- Concert: Music from India at the Fillmore
Room, Norton Hall (students $1.50, others
$2.50)
9 - 5 p.m. - Blood drive, Fillmore Room, Norton
Hall.
8 p.m. - Film : The Innocents, Diefendorf 147
(free) .
8 p.m. - Gimmee Shelter, Conference Theater,
Norton Hall .
Friday, Oct. 1
9 p.m . - Concert: "Damnation," Fillmore Room,
admission is free.
9 p.m. - Film: The Wild Bunch, 140 Capen,
admission $.7 5.
·
6- 10 p.m. - Religious service for Jehovah's
Witnesses, Kleinhans Music Hall, Symphony
Circle.

-Sue Welser

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>•
Vot. 22, No. 15

State Univeriity of New York at Buffalo

Health Dept. exhumes
old housjn.g ordinance

Inspectors of the Brie County Department of
· Health are severely scrutinizing students living in
off-ca mpus apartments by invoking a
previously-ignored City of Buffalo ordinance. ·
The ordinance, from Chapfer XXV, Article 12
of the City of Buffalo ordinances, stipulates that a
group of unrelated students living together does not
legal!_y constitute a family, and that such living
quarters must be classified a boarding or rooming
house. It further states that such a residence may be
occupied by no more than two students.
Because of the need for housing in the
University community area, it has been the official
policy of the City of Buffalo to completely ignore
this ordinance in the· past. However, for an
unspecified reason, Health Department inspectors
have recently attempted to serve eviction notices
where more than two students are living in an
apartment. The Health Department has sent notices
to area landlords informing them of this, even in
instances of three- and four-bedroom apartments.
Unavailable for comment
'1'he main problem is that people around the
University are down on student culture,"
commented Bruce Manning, a Buffalo landlord.
''The official city policy has been to leave the
students alone, but because of complaints by
residents, the county is attempting to go after
them." Several attempts were made to question
officials of the Health Department, but they were
unavailable for comment for two days.

by Howie Kurti
Cam(1Us Editor

News Analysis

Off-campus apartments:
An endangered system

..

.The Brie County Department
of Health is contemplating a
~eclaration of war on University
students.
For reasons known only to
themselves , the Health
Department, armed with an
o b s c u r e C it y o f B u ffa 10
ordinance, has begun har;issing
students living in off-campus
apartments by means of eviction
notices mailed to landlords. The
City of Buffalo has always ignored
this ordinance, wruch states that a
group of students living together
does not constitute a family, and
only two - yes, two students may
live in any such residence.
What would a .strict
enforcement of this ordinance
accomplish, except · to aggravate
an already overcrowded housing
situation in the University
community area? What would it
accomplish except the. eviction of
an untold number of students
from their houses, disrupting their
Jives and leaving them homeless?
What would it accomplish except
an unnecessary and unbelievable
purge of off-campus students?
Runaround
In the office of the
Department of Health downtown,
the phones were ringing all day
wi1th questions from Buffalo
landlords, students, Off-Campus
Housing, The Spectrum office and
other con~rned parties who

' Monday, kptember 27,'1971

There are approximately 1} ,000 undergraduate
students and 5000 graduate students enrolled arthe
State University of Buffalo, while residence baUs
'contain only 2550 spaces. Many students rent
off-campus apartments as an alternative to
dormitory living and would be affected by a strict
enforcement of trus ordinance. There are over 150
apartments of this type estimated in the University
community area.
Arbitrary figure
The key question in this issue is one of
enforcement; that is, how .strictly does the Erie
County Department of Health intend to enforce this
ordinance? Rowena Adams, an Off-Campus .Housing
'
that "the whole thing is prFtty
advisor, commented
much up in the air." She explained that Off-Campus
Housing could not take a 's tand ·on the issue until
more facts were brought into view and the intentions
of the Health Department were made clear.
One point wruch must be justified by health
officials is the installment of an arbitrary figure, such ·
as two being imposed as a limit for students renting
houses, regardless of the size of the house. ''On the
surface, it sounds unconstitutional to me,"
commented Norman Effman, the lawyer retained by
the Student AssOciation. "There will be a pretty
strong lob8y of landlords and students in uproar
should they try to enforce this thing," he speculated.
All those involved must now await the official
position of the Department of Health to see which
way the controversy goes.

wanted to know jlJSt what was
coming off. Coincidentally, not
one .Heal,tJt Depar1ment official
W!lS available for comment for
two straight days. People were
calling up to find out the facts
and instead got a secretarial
runaround.
It represented a big nuisance
when Health Department officials
spcot their time barging into
students' apartments (they are
supposed to make an appointment
in advance) to try and spot some
type of violation - overcrowding,
fire hazards or responding to
neighbor complaints - but at least
the Health Department could
claim it was trying to do its j ob. It
would be interesting to know :
what is Erie County 's rationale for
telling four students they can't
. live in a four-bedroom apartment?
StUdents' plight
The daily newspapers of this
city are constantly calling
att e nti on to ''poo r
University-community relations."
The campus unrest of recent years
and a small percentage of
irresponsible students living in
apartments have given the
community a misshapen image of
the University student as a
"troublemaking, loud, longhair
radical ."
Perhaps it is understandjlble
the way they feel. But consider
the plight of the student: always
setting screwed. He takes his car
in for repairs and he gets
overcharged. The phone company

s

takes rus 140 deposit and doesn't
give rum a phone for two months.
As a freshman , he gets shoved into
a dormitory cu&amp;icle and is forced
to endure an unknown roommate,
a -bland diet and a zoo-like
atmosphere.
As an · upper-classman, he
moves off campus with a few
friends and tries to exist in peace.
Now he is told that no more than
two students can live in any
apartment, although over ISO
apartments in the area have been
functioning otherwise for many
years.
Need for common sense
Should thtl issue actually come
to court, the constitutionality of a
law which sets an arbitrary limit
concerning where and whom you
can live with has to be suspect.
Certainly some type of
explanation must be offered as to
why a' group of responsible
students, wh() conduct themselves
in a reasonable manner, cannot
reside i~ a multiple-bedroom
hou se. What about the
University's own Allenhurst
Apartments, wruch cram five
students into eacJ:l two-bedroom
unit for a city block?
It is practically unthinkable
that the Department of Health
will ignore all these factor$ and
actually go through with this
purge. Their official attitude has
not yet come down from City
HaU. It seems that some common
sense on the part of the Health
Department could avoid a crisis of
staggering implications.

,.

...

"

�Lfaitia1 students

Judiciary planned
by ()d)bie Miron
Sp«trum S taff WYittfl'

Seeki ng to unite the
undergraduate, graduate, MJUard
fillmore , medical , dental and law
students, a student-wide judiciary
bas been proposed.
Tom De Martino, director of
the Office of Student Rights,
Christine Grahl of the Graduate
Student Association and RonaJd
Stein, associate director of the
Office of Student Affairs and
Services havo worked o ut a plan
that may help grant to aU State
University of Buffalo students
~uaJ rights under a common
judiciary.

.

This student-wide court would
bear all non-ecademic matters
pre se ntl y ·n o t under t h e
j uri sdictio n of the Hearing
Com m issio n on Campus
Disorders. A goal, however, of the
planners is to have the proposed
court eventually take over the
responsibilities of the commission.
Miss Grahl commented that the
administration seems amenable to
this idea.
•

With tho installation of the
judiciary, any student wi11 have
the option, within limits, o f either
taking complaints to a stuqent
court, or seeking outside help. At
present, the Millard fillmore and
graduate students, for example,
have no lormaJ judicial recourse
without going t o o ut si de
authorities.
Disputes dissolved
Mr . Stein hopes that the
judiciary will be used as a vehicle
to question the constitutional
pr ovisio ns of every student
government. As a representative
j unc tion of aJJ s tudents, he
e nvisions this court to help
dissolve the disputes that arise
between the different student
associations.
There is still much work to be
done before the court can come
into existence. ApprovaJ of every
studeot association is now being
sought. PresenUy, the executive
committees of th e undergraduate
Student Association and Graduate
Student Association have given
ttreir pre)jminary approval.

Funds for the services of two
law stud~nts have been
appropriated by the
administration, but two more
legal advisors and an aUotment for
their payment must be granted so
that all s tud ents may be
accommodated.
A treaty Is being drawn up to
be integrated into the by-taws of
eaph stude nt association
constitution, d elegating its judicial
power to the court . Before
enactment, the proposal must be
se nt t o University President
Roberl Ketter and the University
Council for their approval.
The idea of a student-wid e
judiciary is a big step in an even
bigger plan. It is the hOpe of Mr.
Stein a nd ot hers that this
University will have a court which
not only includes all students, but
facuJty and staffas well.
The importance of this initiaJ
step should not be underrated.
Miss Grahl explained : "If this
"(judiciary ) becomes a respected
thing, it could be a s trong, unified
type or studept power. The power
to judge yourself is an important
and needed rwer. ..

Adrian Abel files court suit

il}...~PP~~£~re.~.~~Y.!~!~?.~·~···

before federal District Court
Judge John T. Curtin seeking an
injunction against the Temporary
Hearing Commission on Campus
Disruptions.
The action is being taken on
the behaJf of Adrian Abel, a
graduate student , who was found
oniJty of disrupting University
ec-ti'Vl' tJ'es during the cpn'ng 1970
•
a
Student Strl.ke. He was later
expelled by th"n ActJ·ng Prest' dent
-n." 1
Peter f . Re .,..
The suit charges that the
COmrrusslon Vl'olatod the State
Education Law. It stipulates that
there must be student input in the
formati o n of all Universit y
committees. Mr. Abel claims that
' there was no participation by
students in the commission's
formation.
AJso, the s uit states tbat Mr.
Abel's right to due process was
violated. It said that he was not
notifi e d of the commission
hearing and, th«:reby. tried in
absentia.
In conclusion, the suit caJis
upon Judge Curtin to dismiss the

Abel as a student. It also asks the
court to expung~ the expulsion
cl\arge fr~m his schooJ record .
Injunction asked
T he

Tempora ry

.1'.
C 0 m miss i 0 n

Hearing

°

n Camp U '~
Disruptions was formed in March
1970 in response to the student
stri ke which swept the State
University of Buffalo campus at
·
1t was t h en hea d e d b y
t h e t1me.
Dr . Robert l. Ketter, now
President of the State Univemty
Buffalo.
Approved by the Universit y
Council of the State University of
Buffalo, it was given the po wer to
adjud icate a ll c h arges of
di s ruption l evel ed agains t
University students.
Shortly after its formation , the

ot

GUSTAV A . FRISCH, INC.
Jewel• - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Piau)

by
Yigal Joseph, issued an injunction
against the commission, charging
it wit h negating the constitutions
of the Undergraduate and
Graduate Student Associations.
However, the Student Judiciary
lost its battle in court.
The commission , now in the

form &lt;'f a permanent hearing
bo dy . has received increasing
. .
. recent mont hs over
cnhc1sm
1n
.
•
cases mvo1~llll!. a nun•ota u'
students. lncludcrl in ~ h is were th
controversial expuls ions o
st'udents Terry Keegan and Ala
Rosenbaum 1n J anuary fo
violating their suspensions.

Dispute over control
of UB's publications
Growing controversy has arisen Informed, but not prejudiced, can
o ver the question of who actually gr,e atly inc;rease efficiency." Don
cont rols th e University Bergevin , director of University
publications. This has become Press, also said: "As long as he's
especiaUy evident since Sub-Board aro und and bas an independent
I recently decided to create a attitude, things will improve.
director of publications.
· They have to."
Originally, this area was under
"No good can come o f it
the jurisdi c tion o f the because levels of bureaucracy tend
Publications Board, a commit tee to stifle c reativit~ ." So
which included the editors or 77Je co mmented Th e Spectrum
Spectrum, ethos, and several other editor-in-&lt;:hief Dennis Arnold in
University newspapers. According regard to Sub Board l 's decision
to Scott Slesinger, second vice to cr eate 4 direc to r of
president o f th e Student publi ca tions . Mr . Ar n old's
Association and treas urer o f Sub criticism represents one sid e in a
Board I, the Publications Board gro wing controversy over who
failed because "personal interests controls University publications.
conflicted with the committee's
The area of areatest dichotomy
functions ."
Is whether any one person can do
When Pub Board .was dissolved the job efficiently. " He wouJd
last year, Sub Board I took over have to be aware every day of the
con trol of th e University dangen of censorship," said Mr.
publications . With o th er Arnold. " However, whether this is
responsibilities to consider, the possible remains entirely upon
area of publications was largely what person gets the job." Mr.
left to function on its own. Once S l esinger differed slightl y
again , Mr. Slesi.nger believes, maintaining that "it has to work
personaJ interests have interfered better than the P.resent system.
with Sub Board's processes. In an Sub Board took over a SIOO,OOO
effort to amend this allegedly operation, which it couJd not
unworkable situation, the office properly handJe. One man whom
of the director of publications is everyo ne can refer to can only
being formed.
help the publications."
Dangen of censonhip
The fun ction o f the new
director will be to " increase the
c h anne ls of co mmunications
between fhe puolications and Sub
Board ," explained Mr. Slesinger.
He added that the director must
be able to keep Sub Board
informed. Agreeing with this, Carl
Roetter, the editor-inoo(;hief of
ethos said: "Sub Board does not
have a tremendous awareness of
wlult's going on. A dir~dor who
makes an honest effort to temaJn

warning
Keep Personal objects (hair,
bracefets, fingers, etc.) out
of this area when machine
is operating.

for those of you who
missed the red living
room, remember
that elephants hide
jelly bean jars.

in

BUFFALO, N.Y. 1..226 1

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SHOWING AT 11 :30
Answer the following questions 1nd bring your finished entry to The Spectrum office and
deposit with SOOZ.
1. The Capen lot has room to park 1) 3 b)blue c) who cares? d)as many as will fit.

• Small groupa
• Voluminous materiel for home study
prepered by e xperts in each field
• Le110n schedule can be tailored to
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Page two. The Spectrum _Monday, September 27, 1971

nu hlication~ . "

.....

if''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''r'''''''i!iiltiiiii'iliii''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''11

I "

Further problems have arisen
as to exactly what wiJI be required
of the new director. "He will most
lik e ly be in charge of the
distribution of office equipment ,
such as desks, typewriters and
other necessary products," said
Mr. Slesinger. "However, no one
can be sure as to bow t he
individual will apply himself to
the situation. He will have a
stipend o f $ 500 and the
responsibilit y of oveTSeeing aJI the

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�Two year ·case

Varied -sOUrces 3ttempt

ROTC charges/ renewed

-

Tht ROTC 19 face renewed
chargt} , as the two-year-old case
continues to drag through the
Buffalo court system . Charged
with the ransaclting of the ROTC
offices at the State University of
Buffalo in October I %9, these
allegations have now been altered
in a reindictment issued by Erie
County.
The original indictment
occurred on Jan. 1, 1970, when
J6 political activists, most of
whom were students at the State
University at Buffalo, wete
released to the custody of their
attorney, Willard Myers .
According to the ROTC 19
Defense Committee, four of the
initial 19 indictments were John
Doe warrant$ to be served at the
discretion of the police; one was
served.
Charges ranged from third
degree burglary and criminal

tampering. to inciting to riot and
conspiracy. Six were faced with
fuJI charges, with two of those
including conspiracy. uter on ,
bails were set at $500 for
misdemeanors and $1000 for
those charged with felonies.
'fabric:ated indktmen ts'
For the past two years the
ROTC 19 Defense Committee has
raised funds to meet bails and
other expenses involved in
long -term litigation . Roy
Kirschenbaum , an active member
of the committee, expressed what
the committee feels are the
political realities surrounding the
charges: "These indictments were
fabricated for political ends which
at the Ume were deemed
necessary to split and undermine
the Buffalo anti-war movement ,
by immobilizing its leaders."
He continued : "It is very easy

•
Tenants Union meettnK

to tie people up for two years
until the trial proves insufficient
evidence. The real political
harassment is the time period and
expense of litigatibn now being
conveniently amended by Erie
County in order to keep this case
in the courts for two more years."
Black listing
The committee claims that
many of the ROTC 19 have
enco unt ered p o li ti c a l
discrimination in finding" jobs
because of highly organiz.ed black
lists in the Buffalo area. Don
Sullivan , member of the indicted
16, claims of abusive treatment at
the Attica Correctional Facility
be c ause of his political
involvements. In conclusion. Mr.
Kircshenbaum said : ''Evidence in
this case is scanty at the least, and
all trial pOstponements and other
forms of harassment are no
accident."

to sdve library problems
Library officials and the
Pact~lt y Senate executive
co mmittee have both acted
separately to solve any Library
problems or deficiencies. ust
Wednesday . the Executive
Committee passed a series of
resolutions regarding the library
which I he y recommend the
Faculty Senate adopt. In addition,
at a closed meeting last Friday,
members of the library staff
"discussed the kinds o f
situations'' presently existing and
means to deal with them ."
Resolving that ..a library is th~
most essential University facility
for students and faculty alike, and
whereas the relative support of
the library has decreased during
the last three years," the
executive committee concluded
that this decrease has resulted in
"unavoidable but unacceptable
deterioration of library service."
They continued that action
should be taken by the Faculty
Senate calling upon President
Ketter and Chancellor Boyer to
urge the director of the budget to
life the rehiring freeze and to
permit the early hiring of an
experienced professional librarian
as director of libruries. This
position was formerly filled by
Irwin t-t Pizer.

All members of the ROTC 19
were notified to appear in County
Foewins oa aU •pec:u of tenant-landlord
relationlhi.., a TeiWlta Union il bein1 or11nized on Court tomorrow morning to face
thil campua. The fint meetins -will be tomorrow rearraignmen t. Members involved
nlsbt, at 7 p.m . ill N orton ltD, Room 232. · in the reindictment include
DilcUMed wll be the problema to be encountered In • Arnold Stanton (former SDS
the union'• formatioa. Membenbip to the union will leader), Bruce Beyer (presently
be opea to •rooe. AD thoee ill the Buffalo
commuaity concemed about teaaat problema are taking political asylum in Sweden)
and Peter Rubin (former anti-war
..,..cl to putjcipete.
speaker in the Buffalo area). Some
of the ROTC people will have
their bail raised because of Top pri()rity
changes in their charges to
. l n addition, the executive
felonies , while two have had committee recommenc.ls to the
No. 1 like Dilca-t Cewters
charges dropped completely. No Senate that they "urge our
new trial date has been set as yet. administration to give a very high

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priority to increased support both
for personnel and for books in
future budgets and . . . [for the
SUNY Central Administration]to
give correspondingly high priority
to increased budgetary support
for the library ." The
recommendations followed a
report to the committee by the
sta nding committee on
Information and Library
Resources and' must be formally
adopted by the Senate body at
their next meeting, Oct. 5.
In an independent action,
Myles Slatin, library coordinator,
caUed a meeting of all professional
librarians to consider different
methods of dealing with library
problems . Included in these
solutions, according to Dr. Slatin,
is the formulation of a staff tasJc
force "to identify problems and
complaints staff has seen." This
force-, completely constituted by
library staff, will analyze and
categorize types of administrative
and academic problems.
Dr. Slatin explained that this
body "wlll look at libraries as a
whole . . . hope to make the
I ibrary a happier and better
in s ti tu tion . . . " Any
recommendations, in the form of
an action program, should be
ready, Dr. Slatin reported, within
three to six months. In addition,
library staff plans to meet again in
the next three weeks to review
library by-laws. These by-laws
were originally drafted by a law
pommittee composed of faculty.

Come on down and tutor

J'int C... -l'tnt Served!

I

AU underanduate 1tudents interested In tutorinJ bqinnlna colleae students (or
academic credit (DUS 499 Independent Study) should contact the Tutorial Lab, 168
Townsend buement for application forms (831 -5366). Tuton are especiaUy needed in.
Accountina 20 3, 301; Anatomy Ill ; Anthropoloay lOS ; Applied Mechanics 205 ;
Biochemistrr 401 ; Chemistry 101 , 102.201 , 123; Constnlction Detlp 21): Et.ctroaica
403 ; Hilitoloay JOS ; Law 201 ; Phonetics 315~ Physics 107, 108, 113, 114; and Physiolon
201, 420. Feel free to see (Mn.) Elizabeth Boepple, director, Tutorial Lab.
Monday- Frict.y.

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Monday, September 27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

..

�Harrison S;uisbu~y comments
on US thaw of the ( "old War
weapons, they have a sreat deal of country limb from limb."
Mr . Salisbury believed that
rnll'power at their disposal. Mr.
Salisbury claimed that "so far al especriaJiy within the last ten
the Soviet Union is concerned yean;, the •"more and more
with &lt;lUna, its concern for it is djver@:ent" nationalistic attiludes
not as a Communist power, but as of Rt.1ssia and Otina emerged and
a powerful neighbor."
had finally been £$cognized by the
In September 1969, the famed United States.
joum~tlist observed first-hand the
Indications demonstrated that
actual military clashes which took in adldition to the Sino-Soviet
place on the western-most diffilc ultie s , Cllinese and
province of Ch.ina. Even today, Ruma.nian diplomats meeting in
Mr. Salisbury noted, Russia has Warsaw held secret talks which
one million troops armed with helped to establish better relations
nuclear rockets ready to strike between the United States and
Otina by the border, and China Mainland Otina.
maintains de~ p underground air
last winter, however, the most
raid shelters in her large cities and important steps had been taken.
President Nixon's "State of the
"permanent fortifications."
World Address" referred, for the
Hostile attitudes between the
first tiem, to Mainland China as
Russian and Chinese people are the •' Peo ple's Republic."
extreme ly noticeable, Mr . Foll o wing this, the State
Salisbury added. Russian attitudes Department officially removed
are "tinted with chauvinism and the p~•ssport prohibition of travel
racism." The journalist stated that to Mainland China in March.
thoughts of William Randolph
Hearst and the "yellow peril"
'Not in the cards'
came to mind wh en one
Sin1ce these diplomatic moves,
mentioned the Chinese people to
both 1he American table tennis
the Russians.
team 110d Nixon were invited to
visit China. This has exemplified
Border conflicts
the good intentions on China's
'Powerful Neighbor'
The Chinese felt hostility
part as well.
Although the Otinese have a
because they had endured 150
less advanced nuclear weapons
Renardin~ alliances, Mr.
years of European hostility which
system of aDproxim:ttely I 50·200
had destroyed their civili7.a!ion. Salisbury felt that a "triangular
he;aid. A group of Russian troops relationship" would hopefully be
remain in Manchuria and on their a fi1na l stage in United
border. a reminder of the forces Statcs·-5ino- Soviet relations. He
which "almost destroyed their said that a genuine alliance
belwec:n the U.S. and Mainland
Otina was ..,..,, in the cartl' "
Tlu: alignment since !9j2
between Moscow and Washington
is now considered dead, he said.
This is true because ''China , the
great •unknown factor . . . with
cften unpredictable leadership .. .
moved 0{1 its own rails with the
total sum of its assets."
Sincte the "Chinese joined the
nuclear club," Mr. Salisbury
believes. that the most stable
alliance would be no alliance at
all , witth the three independent
nations: interracting with one
another without their formation.
A two student - two professor
panel asked Mr. Salisbury about
The present thaw in relations
with the People's Republic of
Otina have been due to an effort
by the Unite&lt;&amp; States to begin to
"think the unthinkable," noted
journalist Harrison Salisbury said
Thunday.
The Pulitzer Prize winner and
assiStant managing editor of the
New York Times spoke before an
audience of 250 at Haas Lounge.
He said that the United States
learned the "lesso· "" of the Cold
War by the recent establishment
of dj plomatic channels with
Mainland China. He asserted that
the government's advances in
ruplomacy should not have been
limited'"'bec5ause of the Sino-soviet
conflict, "the ltind of which are
almost irreconcilable."
Mr. Salisbury discussed the
history of the current border
ruspute. He said that there is
currenUy a military threat due to
it. The conflict involved the
question of 1,500,000 acres of
rusputed territory. The Soviet
Union, he said, considers the
ruspute a "very serious threat •• to
its national security.

,
ll
.

Harrison Salisbury
Mr. Nixon's planned visit to People's Republic of China.
Mr . Nixon's trip might present
China, China's relation with North
Vietnam and the very recent "so me scenario leading to
developments within the diplomatic and trade relations" in
Mainland .
addition to jdeas for settlement of
the war, Mr. Salisbury said. A
Exchange possjble
nuclear test ban is also a feasible
Specifically, a question was possibili.ty.
raised as to whether or not
Another question was raised by
Presjdent Nixon might exchange the panel as to what had been
trade remov.d of United States happening for the past few weeks
military bases in Taiwan for the in Otina. Portraits of Mao had
end of the Vietnam War. Mr. been removed, the national parade
Salisbury replied that China did in deificatjon of Mao on Oct. I
not want to misguide Hanoi as had been eliminated, and
they had before when they Thursda y mornin g's rad io
participated in the 1954 Geneva broadcast had begun without the
Accords on Vietnam . Besides, he sayings of Chairman Mao.
said, the Vietnamese, as a whole,
Mr. Salisbury said that Mao is
have always considered the well according to reliable sources
Chinese their ·traditional and in the Chinese ministry. He also
"eternal enP.my." Regardless of said that Mao himself had once
the ujX:oming visit, China will acknowledged the fact that his
always have a natural interest in own personality at some time
Southeast Asia, even though U.S. would no longer be needed to
interest wiU diminish.
arous&amp; the country's na.tionalism.
Hopefully , ho wever, Mr. The recent suspeosJon of
Salisbury felt that the "Chinese commercial airline flights and the
may very well present some of Chjnese military alert could not
their own ideas on the settlemWlt be explained by Mr. Salisbury, but
of the conflict in Southeast Asia" he said that it was probably
when Nixon travels to the nothing to worry about.

THE
Chit's Holes are creal any lime you
1\ttd help '" h1enture 1 We

Slacb aalore in 2 new stores,
now open at Elmwood and
BidweU near State Teachers, and
Main Street opposite U.B.
Groovy nares to tum you on ... in
plaids, stripe~, eheclal, and aolids.
Wester pockets, reaular pockets,
wide and reaular belt loops.
Plenty of Oarea in famoua Le¥t'a
®Sta·Prat® alacb. Alao straiaht
c:uts that are with it. Dia Panta A•
Plenty now!

recommend buyrn&amp; urly so thai
you e~n use IMm as you study
lhe auoantd play or novtl and as
a helpful rev•tw p1101 lo eums
Gel lhe Chffs Noles you netd
today. You'll see why they're the
preferred study aid of millions of
students nationwide. (P.S.) II your
dealer's out of a tllle. he can eel
another last with Clrtrs " Hot line"

lltartr 2tl titles - ahrars nailnlt
Wkrntr kth art set~.
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Sale Monday Sept. 27 thru Saturday Oct. 2 ONLy
ReGI·

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).

Page four . The Spectrum . Monday .~ptember 27, 1971

SPECIAL
THIS
WEEK
ONLY

BUFFALO, N.Y.
JN ALLENTOWN

�•

Attliur BUb

Draft cousel extraordinaire
...

by Don Van Every
Sp«trum St•ff Writer

Upon first sight of Arthur
Burke, one would guess he had
come across a 12-year old with a
long growth of early beard. The
thinly cropped but lengthy beard
and mustache on the
characteristically boyish face
along with wJ:tat would appear to
be his father's watch band and
wedding band tend to make one
think Mr. Burke is quite young
and possibly new at his job.
Don't be fooled .
Go back in your memory, if
you can, to the original "March
on Washington" in the early 60's
when 10,000 was the size of the
protest and all partjcipating were
labeled ''Communist ." Jf you can
remember Olat, you can guess
both Burke's age and experience
because he was part of it. Arthur
Burke, for all intents and
purposes, was and is a part of the
"movement's" foundation .
Counseling trade
He began about this same time
in the trade of draft counseling

and he's been at it ever since.
Burke, presently part of
University Placement and Career
Guidance in Hayes C, was
instrumental in establishing the
Buffalo Draft Counseling Center
on North Parade and counseled
there until its pretent heai, Larry
Scott, took over.
From there he came to the
Univprsity and within the
Placement and Guidance pmce
helped establish more counseUng
services.
Viewing the history of campus
counseling services, he recalled the
decision of the Faculty Senate
that stated draft counseling was
not a proper service on campus
and remembered how the edict
"was promptly ignored" and
things continued as usual.
He further reminisced on
people calling· for information or
help but not wanting to give their
names in the early days. It wasn't
until "middle class J ids" were
hurt in Vietnam and it was no
longer just "the blacks and poor
whites" being killed that draft
counseling became. acceptable, he
lamented.

IRS to rule

'

In fact, he fe lt himself
"prostituted" once the demand
for his services became "in." Jt
apparently became a time of long
days and little thanks.
Lo~e~

A rulina Ia expected next week on whether the
'Jnlvenity Bookstore violated the waae-priee freeze,
the I ntemal Revenut S enicl! ajd Friday. Dave
Steinwald, S ttldmt Riahts Coordinator, is uraina all
atudmts wbo have purchased boob there to save
their receipts. A rulina apinst the Bookstore will
force them to refund money on books whose prices
were raised.

$1. 75

3 p.m.6 :30p.m.

EARLY DillER

bonesty

There is a certain resentment
apparent in Burke's attitude of
the middle class. It was as though
once the mass' of society became
involved in something formally
sincere and truthful, such as
conscientious objection, that it
lost its essential honesty .
However, Burke still handles
approximately 1000 students a
year in draft counseling, basically
answering simple questions. He
has though , by his own
estimation, grown ..a little tired of
it." His hopes are that because oP'
the lessening in draft calls he may
move more and more out of
counseling. But if needed he is
ready and willing to help in any
way if someone brings him a
problem.
Although he handles the
counseling on campus , he
recommends the Draft Counseling
Center for any CO claims. He
further recommends for future
draftees the use of books that give
step by step advice on filing

MR. A's

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claims and getting me&lt;J1caJ counselor-? Only one. He wished
deferments. He refers many to that he had thought to write a
IVF, a book by David Suttler.
book when draft classifications
Since the passage of the new became a middle class concern.
draft bill by the Senate on Sept. Subsequently, he would have
21, Burke has received no made much bread.
information, but one can rest Gustav_ _ _ _""'"'
assured that once he does the
Xerox copying, 8 cettts t!ach
facts will be available to all.
J1eapes1
rate we know itl Buffalo
Does Arthur Burke ·have any
regrets that he became a draft
355 Norton Hall

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We guarantee BIG MONEY FAST - to be paid immediately. COME AND SEE WHAT
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Umitad openings on advartising staff and patronage staff.

.

Monday, September 27, 1971. The Spectrum . Page five

�I3 in theEdiToRiAl
Attic

I

Once again students are being persecuted by public
officials. Once again students are the pawns In a political
chess game. And once again, public officials are malevolently
manipulating the laws to harm one sector of the population.
The excute this time is a vague and oft-forgotten City of
· Buffalo ordinance, Article 12 of Chapter XXV, which states _
that unrelated students living together do not qualify as a
family. Therefore, such dwellings are eonsidered to be
boarding houses, ·which may be occupied by no more than
two individ)l'\ls. Armed with this obviously anti-student law,
the Erie Cdurity Department of Health has sent its inspecto~
on an eviction crusade.
.
'For the Suprwne Court we'll need a libet811y c;on-..tive wNte,
The correct use of this law probably stems from the
anti-.sing, toUthem womlft who looks good 10 minority •oupsl'
community 's stereotype of large numbers of students
cramming into one house and proceeding to destroy it.
I nterestingfy enough, one almost never hears these
complaints from landlords who rtnt to students. Money must
C
be a strong enough deterent to overcome their prejudices.
The most telling point in this whole affair is the politics
to a University or else we will continue to blow the
that seem. to be involved. Buffalo is a Democratic city; Erie is To the Editor:
dreams of &amp;realness which existed a while back . The
a Republican-run county. The Democratic mayor of Buffalo
Friday's Spectrum cites me as charging the lack of a clear vision of what a university can be is
is running for County Executive and stands to carry a large administration with hypocrisy in talking a better probably the basis of a lot of our pro))lems, not just
majority of the under-25 vote. No tactic would better library game than they produce. While I don't think that of a library.
damage his electoral appeal among this group, than making there is any way the University can justify the lousy
library facilities we have, tbat doesn't say anyt hina
Frank Sedita appear to be anti-student. This apparently, is about hypocrisy. Instead, the point I was trying to
J. P. Jones
Assistant Professor
what the county is attempting to do by resurrecting an make was that we need to realize what is important
obscure and dormant City housing law and using it to evict
and harass students.
Whatever the cause of this sudden spurt of harmful law
enforcement, it must be stopped. We will not stand idly by
and watch students become the victims of this immoral, and
problem is being analyz.ed, to explore all possible
To tht• t:: ulwr
avenues leading to the solution o f a specific area
probably unconstitutional, conduct.
Subsequently, these methods should be individually
We therefore urge that students resist these moves iu
It has become apparent that in the past week evaluated to determine their impact on the overall
several ways. First, fight i'\ny eviction notices that are base&lt;i several persons have chosen to deal with the solution. So it would certainly seem that some
on this law. Both the Studeut Association and the Graduate " bookstore" problem by not only focusing on one individuals acted quite presumptuously.
Furthermore, I wo uld like to emphasize that
Student Association have retained legal counsel for their :nea of concern. (late text-orders), but also by
examining one and only one pro posal related to th1s tho ugh personally I may th10k of the "surcharge'' as
constituencies and we are confident that they will gladly give area. II is also unfortunate that the information an interesting idea, I have never indicated that it
f u II I ega I support to a court test of the la~ 's made publicly avai lable hn been im:omplete, thus wo uld be the most appropriate proposal to he
constitutionality.
contributing further to an alreading confusina adopted, nor have I ever sought support for 1ts
~
acceptance.
Secondly, the Erie County Department of Health must situation .
In .&gt;art1..:ular, the "surcharge" proposal
In conclusion, It sho uld b l! no ted that this
be forced to publicly explain why they have seized upon this (containing an unfounded I u% figure), as it was committee was formed o nly due to the persistent
law. Two days of " no comment" by them have more tht~n presented , left the Impression that it had alrClldy efforts of the student representatives on FSA .
convinced us that their reasons are insufficient to survive a reached the "fait accompli " stage. I would like, Hopefully . it will be able to provide alternate
therefore, to take this opportunit y to erase certa in a..,.,roac h es t o Jt.ice increases in order to
public inquiry.
ex1sting mis~.:onceptions and clearly state that my accommodate wage increases fo r the working staff
Also, we urge the Off-Campus Housing Office to resist committee is still deeply involved with ito; charges an without further taxing the student element of our
the county's moves by taking a stand on this issue. To sit ret:~lion to th e bookstore investigauon. community . For it is towards this goal that I had
back and calmly wait because "the whole thing is pretty Consequentl y, it has not yet finalized its finc1ing.c; uor pll!dged to exercise my innuence and cons ume my
has it form ulat ed its recommendations.
energies.
much up in the air," will benefit no one.
As far as the "surcharge" issue per se is
Lastly, the SA and GSA must actively work to redress co n ce rn ed, it is normally consid ered most
Michael Nicolau
President, Graduate Student Association
these grievances, because no issue is truly more basic to the approl&gt;rialc. when a complex and multi-phase
·'·~udents of this University than housing. Perhaps this current
bout of official chicanery will vividly etch- in our minds the
despe~ate nw&lt;f for a tenants' union to protect us.

lari,fication

Bookstore committee

Baumer

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 14

Friday, September 24, 1971
Editor.ffi.chlef - Dennis Arnold
Co-Man.gjng Editor - AI Benson
Co·Manetlnt Editor - Mike Lippmann
Atlt. Mlnetlng Editor - Susan Mou
Buti.- ~ - Jim Druckw
Adwrtlling Mlnetef - Sue Mellentine

C.mpus .. ..... . . Jo.-Ann Armeo
..... . ... ... ...• Bill Vea~~ro
Atlt ........ . ....Howle Kurtz
City . .. . . ............. Vecant
Copy ....... . ... Ronni Formen
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . Marty Gatti
Alit... . ...... . .... . . Vacant
f•ture . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jen Doane
Grept,ic An. ....... . .. Tom Tol•
Lit. a. Drama .. Mictlael Silvefblan

Layout . .... .. Maryhope Runyon
A• •. ... ... . .. .. . ....vacant
MUiic ... .. ........Billy Altman
Off.Cempus ..... . Lynna Traeger
Asst •............... . Vacant
Photo .. • .. . .....David G. Smith
Alit ........... . . Gary Friend
Aat... . .. : Mickey Ostwreichet'
Sports .. ........ ... Barry Rubin
Alit•............ Howie Faiwl

The Spectrvm is serviecl by United Press International, College Press
Service, the los Angeles Fr• Press, the los A119Bits Time Syndicate, and
Liberation News Service.
Republication of matter herein without the expl'ess consent of the
Edltor-i!M:hief Is forbidden.
Editorial policy is detet'mined by the Editor-in.Chief.

questio~d

To tht Editor ·
Promotions for the Department of Philosophy
were announced in August. As the former
deparlment chairman ( 1968 - 7 1), I feel called upon
to make a statement about one o f the promot ions to
full rank , that of Dr. William H. Baumer. I do not
wish to comment on the ments of the case, but on
the procedures . The full professors of the
department followed tbe regular procedure.
examining the record of each candidate, discussing
the ap propriateness of promotion, and vohng by
secret ballot. The final ballot on Dr. Baumer had 3 in
favor , 7 opposed and one abst:~ining . Dr. Baum er did
not appeal the decision to the Grievance Committee
of the Faculty of SSA, as a colleague hud done wi th
some success. Instead. President Ketter intervened
aski~g the Personnel Committee of our Faculty t~
constder Dr. Baumer's promotion . At the request of
the Provost , they made careful inquiry. but dedi ned
to recommend promotion . The Presiden t th~n had
his Review Board take up the matter. I don't know
their decision ; by the end of th~ academic year, their
recommendations had become secret. In any case
the procedure was quite arregular, and the pressur~
from above, extraordinar y.
An honorary degree in recognition of services is
cl~arly distinguished from an o rdinary degree. 1
think a University community is also entitled to

Page six. The Spectrum. Monday, September 27, 1971
I

know if a promotion is not an ordinary one.
This is not the first time Dr. Baumer has
received an un usual reward. In the spring o f 1970, a
request came from Albany to UB to give Dr. Baumer
a merit raise for his services in the SUNY Senate.
Acting President Regan consulted the Provost, who
co ns ult ed m e as Chairman. Consulting the
Department Executive Committee, I declined to
approve, on the grounds that someone elected to
represent the fa culty s hould not be spec1ally
reward ed on administrative initiative lest the
integrity of the Senate be undermined. The Actang
President granted the merit raise.
Pr esi d ent William McGill of Columbia
University. recently reporting to the alumni, said :
" . .. it was equally clea r that the time was past
when Columbia's president could decide questions in
a style suited to an imperial monarch ." Let us hope
the time is past when this style can be established at
the University of Buffalo.

William T. Pa".V
Professor of Philosophy
Editor's note: Dr. Baumer refused comment on tile
above letter, except to point out that as Faculty
Se.nate chairman, he is in charge of faculty
g" evunces. This lie felt precluded him {rom filing an
appeal.

�Guest Opinion

To the Editor:

A MODEST PROPOSAL (wttb apofopa to Jonathon Swift)

At the last Executin Committee meeting a
highly controversial issue once apin confronted us.
The question of stilfends and why they are budgeted
is a problem which has never successfully been
answered ..An stipends to be a reward for work done
or arc they compeOAtlon to allow financially shakey
students to participateln Student Association?
A novel concept, equity of all stipends were
~ presented at the latt meetina. Amidst the irony of
"I S.A. members voUna on their own stipends the
~ motion was defeated with myself votina against it
after requests to delay discuaions to the following
day were denied.
At this time, after reconsideration, I have
decided to alter my vote on tbe question of stipends.
1 am now in favor of equalization of aU stipends at
• S700. Hopefully my new vote will result in the
necessary ~ majority for passing leiislation. It would
have done so on Wednesday and hopefully it will do
so tonipt.
On a side note, Student Association passed the
Community Action Corp's budaet intact after they
withdrew a request for used furniture which we felt
the Buffalo Community would and should be happy
to donate considerina the worthiness of CAC's
project&amp;.

fan C. DeWaa/
Pre1idem
Studt-nt As1ociation

'Greed and l'es'
To

th~

Editor:

Once again, Student Government Leaders, I am
forced to expose and publicize your greed and lies.
" It is ludicrous fo r anyone to assume that
people are in student government for the money,''
was the fantastic remark made by lester Goldstein.
Student Government leader par excellence. It was
or,iginall)' his unmistakenly unselfish idea (ha!) to
equalize the stipends for all members of the
Exer utiv" rouncil of the Student Association .
Jn •Hh.·; words, Student Government leaders,
you had the g:JII to a,t ain &amp;rant yours~I\'CS raises by
use of the falladous ex~use th•t your hish positions
precluded the possibility of your obtaining other
means of support . (Yes, I said again : people, because
whether you've read it or not , our
loyal-dedicated-Student Gov~:rnment leaders have
already pven themselves huge, unmerited "summ~r
stipends'' (mostly at 5700) in addition to thetr
ample annual salades, which they approved in the
beginning of their reisn.)
let me repeat myself in more conc rete terms.
When first elected, a typ1cal student government
leader was to receive five hundred doll:irs ($500) for
his year in office. The "summer st1p~nd" in at least
o ne case added an extra seven hundred (S709) to the
o riginal sum. With this latest unselfish move, that
typical coordinator will receive an extra two
hundred (S200) - thereby making his stipend leap
fro m S500 to a stunnins and (yes) " ludicrous"
$1400!
In a time when clubs have to beg to be fund ed;
when worthwhile groups li ke the Community Ac tion
Corps are turned away from the Executive Council
still desperately needinJ allocatio ns; when our
newspapers are being so tishtly controlled (as to
bo rder on censorship) by the same "leaders" in Sub
Board ! , Inc. - how can we allow this injustice?
In past years , we would have no c hoice . We
would be doomed to hear this misallocation of our
s tud e nt fees by th e a ll -powerful Student
Government lc11ders,
This year, however, we do have a choice . We
have the Student Asse mbly, whic h can stop and
recall all those undeserved dollars and correct the
selfish set of priorities with whic h o ur SA has tried
to d upe us. If t his letter has any effect at all, we may
soon read that o"'Or Studen t Government leaders are
equalizing thciT stipends, including president and
vice preside nt , t hen we can see clearly the power o f
the press a nd the strength of the Assembly.
Jom the Student Assembly
get 40 people
from dorm floors, clubs, de partments - anywhere!
And . remember - It's your mo ney. not theirs.
lt gets mote impo rtant every da y
l'&gt;in the Student Assembly.

Shelley Taylor
"a dul y rPSfiC'Ct/ul student''
J n the Friday, Sept. 24 edition of The
Spectrum, David N ewman. J.ohn . Daley and Fred
KJin,enberg were erroneously 1dent1fied as College ·A
stiff members.

by Robert Neil
I

(ed. note: Robert Nei£ i4 a p1eudonym for an undergraduate student at
this unlverlity, who uses it solely to avoid auociation with thi4 piece
slrould anyone take itserlowly)
The question of student sovernment and especially that of the
undergraduate Student Association has continually been an issue on
this campus, ranpng from the form that the sovemment should take,
to the effectiveness of the individual members that constitute it. Apin
we are faced with an issue that has drawn fire from many sides; the
point currently being arsue&lt;J is the concept of allowing stipends for
~vernmental positions.
The sides are lined-up. There are those who say no, stipends should
not exist or at least should be minimal and strictly regulated . The basic
Josie on this sido is that the waste of money that is generated is not met
by equal or more than equal work performed by those getting the
money.
Lets look· carefully. Only 2% of all Student Association money
10es to ~U pends . Two percent. This two percent, whic h pays for the
stipends of the members of the s tudent government, and therefore
accounts fo r their functionins in the government, is in fact directty
related to the spendins and. subsequent functioning of all the other
operations of the government, the remaining 98%. It is reasonable to
assume that the remaining 98% of SA money could not be spent
without the investment of 2% in the leadership of the government.
How anybody can argue that stipends do ~ot more than equal
themselves s hould go back to first grade and loam to subt~ .
Prom what is implied above, it is clear that the SA could not
o perate In the fluid and well orsanized manner that it does without the
investment in its leaders. No organization can function without clearly
defined leaders and leadership positions. The premium of leaders is
such that they are in constant demand and consequently deserve and
demand significant compensation. constant demand and consequently
deserve and demand significant compensation. dedicated group of
youns men and women who serve the student body at minimal expense
to the students and through their efforts, 98% of stude nt fee money is
spent in the stu~nts interests. Everything that Jequires any student
mo ney must go through the hands of these people. We should be
greatly proud of them.
In fact, I will argue, stipends should be greatly increased.
It has long been a tenet of c:~pitalism, Ameri~ 's predominant
economic foundation , tha t peoples work should be rewarded and that
this reward be used to spur people on to work better and get more
rewards. I hold that for such responsible people in leadership positions,
who work for a mere J.llll:IIH..: !n stipends and who give us so much In
tangible goods and &lt;~ervices, this same tenet should hold true.
Look a t the record. These student government leaders work many
hours a week to ove~~e the utilization of fee money to its greatest
possible potential. They sacrifice class~ to meet and fight with l~e
administration for student rights . They stay up late to usher m
important IIJleakers and pluy with the microphones. They continually
meet with s tudents to poll their o pinions. They are at the heart of
every issue. Thuy have their fingers on the majnstrcam of life on this
cam pus.
What do they have to show for this? They are hounded by the press,
castigated by fellow students, emburrassed by the administratio n . They
serve loyally Jnd cheaply. Why , they are so dedicated that they do not
have the time to ge t o utside JObs to pay their way thro ugh school, to
pay the phone bill . Yes, It 1s so Plad that they cannot even go out and
earn an honest dollar like t he re~ t or us.
The time has come to face up to realit y. We are bles'led w1th
leaders who work unselfishly in the student interest. Ho w long will thiS
go o n? Without ;; cha;;g.: ; .. the l&gt;lipend structure we cannot guarantee
the quality of the leaders that we have. We have luc ked o.ut so far . C'an
we consciously allow the possibility of the IJ8% that remams of stude nt
fees goins to waste at the hands of unscrupulous and unenlightened
people. For how can we be sure of people who will settle for a lower
rate instead of those who demand a higher o ne. Obviously, those who
want and demand more are of a higher quality t han those who would
settle for less . We are blessed with leaders of this type. conscienciOUS ,
hard workihg and responsive. They should not have to demand more.
There s hould be a huge crying o ut of the student body to give more to
thtse leaders.
The time has come. Lets face up to our responsibilities and do our
part for good government. Apathy no w sill sow the seed for ru1n
tomo rrow .

Slogan of death
To the Editor:

To save the system so they say,
My brothers had to pass away.

Today 9-13-7 1

Of ten that perished is what 1 hear.
For twenty-eight, not a tear,
My brothers, they were sla1n today ,
J usuce served is what they say .

The y s hot our brothers dead today.
To end a riot so they say ;
Thirty-eight have passed away.
They cut our brothers down today.
To stop a riot I am told,
My brothers lying dead and cold ;
Now they lay in reddened clay,
They shot our brothers down today ·
To end a problem so they say.
Our s is ters stand there crying yet.
They s tormed today, a safer bet ;
They did 1t now so few would die,
Yet 1 s till hear so many c ry,
I sit here now and Qllestion why.
My brothers they have passed away.
Thirty-eight are go ne today :

They s hot o ur brothers dead tonight .
I hear they gave'em o ne good fight.
They killed our brothers dead today
To save the country so they say .
Our brother's lives is what we pay ;
I fear we aU may pass away .
Peace w1ll come is what I'm told,
how many mo re,
Dead and cold?
from the
David Gregorio Book
of Blank
Verse and thought

Monday, September 27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

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Page eight . The Spectrum . Monday 1 September 27 I 1971

�La Hora De Los Horn as

The
Latin
American
struggle
1
A monumental four and a half
hour Argentine film, pr~uced by
Grupo Cine Uberacion, ~ritten,
directed . and photographed by
Fernando Solanas, will be shown
in its entirety today , and
tomorrow.
Part· I (two and a half hours)
will be shown today at I p.m. in
the Conference Theater, and at 8
p.m. in Acheson 5. Parts II and III

'-.

·•t

(two hours) will be shown
Tuesday at 3 p.m. in Diefendorf •
·147, and at 8 p.m. in Acheson 5.
For those who didn't see the
screening of Part J at th~
University last semester, be
advised that the unique character
of the film, the brilliant
innovation and dramatic power of
it, make it one of the most
important events of the year.

YUMMY
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Others o:f .us who saw Part I and
have waJited to ~e the fuU three
parts at lust have our chance.
The contiiouity of struafe

La Ho•ra De Los Homos owes
its title t'o a quote from the 19th
Century Cuban poet Jose Marti,
later used by Che Guevara, to
whom the first part is dedicated.
The title itself sums up three basic
ideas emphasized by the film : the
contil}uit:y of the struggle through
histdry (the liberation of Latin
America only nominally achieved
in the 19th century wars of
independence), the supra-national
nature c•f the struggle and the
immedia&lt;:y of the caD to armed
action. Frantz Fanon's quote :
"Every s1pectator is 3 coward or a
traitor" further illustrates this
point.
In At:gentina, where it was
ftlmed, ill is underground cinema
in the tnte sense of the word. It is
shown at clandestine screenings in
the ho1rnes of militants and

sympat!l.izers or 'the quarters of
labor orpnizationa. for the
American audience, poerllly
ignorant of Arpntinian and latin
American history, the film
dramatizes, in painful detail, the
role of thl US in the oppression
of the peoples of latin America.:
the exploitative establishment, the
international division of labor that
corresponds to a certain division
of power, the institutionalized use
of violence by the state to
preserve the status quo, the mass
media as a factory of values
functional to the ruling class and
the monstrous gap between the
privileged and th.e deprived are
defined in breathtaking camera
sweeps and image juxtapositions
that convey an unrelieved power
of truth.

The structure
Structurally, the film divides
into three parts : Part I,
'Neocolonialism and Violence,'
defines the nature of colonialism
in the particular case of Argentina
and on a continental and
international scale. Part II, 'Act
for Liberation,' is an expose of
nationalism and its function in
the struggle for liberation in
dependent countries, followed by

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a chronicle of Peroru.m and an
account of the atruJste sustained
by the Artmtine people after the
topplins of Peron in. 19SS. Part
In, 'Violence and Uberation,' is a
call tQ arms a.nd a vision of the
revolutionary future of latin
America and the Third World: .
Emotionally, the entire falm
builds up from a slightly ironic
tone to a perfectly matter-of-fact
casuistic analysis and, finally. an
emotional crescendo climaxing in
a call to arms - a shrill
revolutionary chant is heard over
the staccato cutting of nighttime
scenes of violent demonstrations
and revolutionary quotes written
out on the screen and a last image
of flaming torches burning in the
nigh~.
Guerilla cinema
The iilm is terrible and
beautiful, a masterwork of art and
history, a political statement that
is also a political act. As Solanas
puts it, "In an alienated world,
culture is a deformed and
deforming product. To overcome
this it is necesSary to have a
culture of and for the revolution,
a subversive culture capable of
contributing to the downfall of
capitalist society. In the specific
case o,f the cinemli, its
transformation from mere
e n t e r tainmen t in to an active
means of delineation becom~s
imperative. Its role in the battle
for the complete liberation of
man is of primary importance.
The camera then becomes a gun,
and the cinema must be a guerilla
cinema."
This filin must be seen if we
are to understand the Art of our
time, and the violence of our time
- urged upon us by a guerilla
from that vast space that may
soon become our next Vietnam.

-

..

shoot the dog!

..

GUSTAlV .

"'

a C()PY.
Xerox those notes you've mr.~. NOW! It's areal zoo near exam time.

v
I

Monday, September .27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

-

�organized
center
PODER counseling
.
by Lyacta Teri

SP«trum St•lf Writer

"This project is our thina; a
student thin&amp;-•• So said Rodolfo
Santos, bead of the newly
oraanlzed student run ,
non-funded counsellna pro~ ,
Centro de Orientacion. Mr. Sant06
sees t he project as an answer to
the "bureaucratic red tape which
alienates many student&amp;."

"I was with a lirl for over an
hour today," comments atudent
counaelor, W'illy Echevarria, "you
can't 10 to a counselor and rap
like that. We have had courses and
know what to avoid. It's more
individual. Students understand
becaute they are not re.moved
from the problem and a.r e facin&amp;
many of the same hassles.
To&amp;etber we can solve each
other's problem." He sees this
project as bein&amp; " more human"
than the current' counseling
systems.

Anaered by thil run around he
and his fellow students have been
forced to face, Mr. Santos hopu
• his student staff will be mort 'Alienation crisis'
Centro, open to all st udents, is
aware of problems fa cing othe•
students. "Counselors don't have beina seared for minorities. The
the time to aet involved with staff sees an "alienation crisis"
students," be said. "They have a due to "inadequate counselios
lot of bureaucratic stuff to hassle staffs on special programs namely,
with. They're overworked and EPIS (Experimental Program in
don't have the freedom to really Independent Study)." EPIS was
take an interest. A lot o f singled out because the counselors
bureaucratic red tape can be are EPIS students and are most
avoided and students who already familar with that prosram's
problems.
went through it can tell others.
Mr. Santos maintains that it is
not his intention to threaten or
destroy tbe EPIS propm and
believes it has helped many
SPEEDED READING
studen ts to enter the university
and
to remain here. His letter to
AND STUDY
"Fellow Puerto Ricans" states :
''While EPIS helped in getting us
Registration still possible for
into the university, EPIS has also
some of Mrs. Nichols classes.
contributed to alienating us from
Information and payment fer
the rest of the university and ftue
$15.00 at lOS Diefendorf.
to an inadequate counselling stuff
pro longs and misleads many
individual's dreams in attaining
their goals."
Mr. Echervarria strongly agrees

(

with him1, "EPIS has old ideas of
colleae material. All their courses
are rem•~lal this and remedial
that. They are r emedia l
counselous. EPIS courses can't be
used to ft.ll DUS requirements~
they don't count. The students
don't nec~essarily know this. You
have to !know enough not to fill
up in these courses. They aren't
fo rced on you but they're
recommended."
·

Bullclina ,conftdenc:e
Reme~~lal courses are designed
to help students, not to hinder
them bt~t . as Mr. Echevarria
~Jelieves even t hose who do not
need th em are taking them:
"They sive them (EPIS courses)
to you whether you need them o r
not . They're there to help, yeah,
but not everyone needs them." He
continued, "They figure if You're
in EPIS you need them. It's not
true."
Mr. Santos sees Centro as
neceun ry t o build some
confidenc:e into many students :
"You got to know where you are
goin." He further speaks of the
tro uble he faced with counselors :
" I'd wallk out in a haze, they
(EPIS co1unselors) have reaJJy bad
communications with the offices
on camp'us. They have a whole
isolated ~1orld of red tape all their
own. Students go to them without
realizing they don't really know
about regula r courses. T he
students II&amp;Sually don't even know
they Caf\ have a regular counselor
if they w•ant one. If they relate
better with EPIS, fine . But, they

should know the alternatives." He
hopes Centro will make such
alternatives known.
Not expecting an easy job, the
staff understands the troubles
plaguing both EPJS and regular
counselors. "T hey are
under~taffed, over-worked and
hassled," Mr. Santos explained,
"maybe we can take some weiaJtt
off them too."

Just students
Mr. Santos is further concerned
about t he image of Centro.
According to him, it must stay
informal and honest, "We're not
going to mislead people. we·r~ not
going to say we know all the
answers. We don't. And we're not
going to pretend . It's got to be
walk in, sit down and rap. I don't
want any counselor images. It's
students, no phony imases."
The only regret he seems to
have are the erratic office hours:
" I pess people will just have to
understand that we are students
who lia-ve classes also. Next month
we will hopefully be steady." We
are available anytime both in and
out of the office," he added.
In addition to stability he
hopes to foster a sense of
teamwork . " I don ' t want
recognttlon for me ," h e
commented, "but for the whole
prQ&amp;ram. If you want to pick out
staff members, pick them all out.
We're together."
The counselors, all interested
in counseling as a future career,
are a cross~ection fo volunteers
work~tudy and indepdant study

students. "We aU put in at least
five to six hours a week. We don't
care about credits," Mr. Santos
said, "we want to set somethinJ
done. I auess we all want a feelina
of accomplishment."

Future powtb
Lookina Into the future , Mr.
Santos hopes CenJro will succeed
and grow, but never tum into a
bureaucracy: "It's importa nt to
stay loose; no strinp. That's the
worst thin&amp; to do to a counselor.
If I want to curse, I'll curse damn It!"
Their office is located at 204
Winspear Avenue in the Puerto
Rican Studies office and in
PODEit, room 333 Norton Hall.
Counselors includ.c Willy
Echevarria, Tony Perez, At\a
Rivera, Hector Rivera, Qui Que
Rodrique z, Nylsa Russi and
Rodolfo Santos anp they may be
reached at 8~1- 4 946 or
831 - 535 I . They will be at
Winspear during 10 - 4 Monday ;
10- 5 Tuesday and Thwsday ;
10 - 12, 2- 4:30 Wednesday and
Frjday; and at POOER durin&amp;
9- 11 , 1- 3 Monday, Wednesday
and Friday ; 9 - 11 Tuesday and
Thursday.
Reference sheets for name,
address and problem will always
be available in\ these offices and
Mr . Santos ~urages all students
to stop by if something is
troubling them . "We do want to
be geared for minority students,
but we are going to help
everyone,'' he says, "No one wlll
be turned away."

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near the Alllherst

�Attica pri89fl .demonstrators·
demand Rocky's resignation
· Security measures were tight in Albany
Thursday as a crowd of about J300 people, far short
of the organizers• prediction of 10,000, protested the
state's handling of the Attica prison rebellion. The
demonstrators met at a park about a mile from the
Capitol and then marched to the building to demand
the resignation of Governor RockefeJJer.
On the steps of the Capitol about a dozen
speakers addressed the crowd. Among the speakers
were David DeJJinger, one of the Chicago Seven; and
representatives from civil rights groups ; relatives of
the Attica convicts and members of the Free Angela
Davis movement. Dellinger, acting as moderator of
the rally, said, " I agree with those who say
Rockefeller should be indicted for murder, but when
he's convicted I wouldn't want him to go to Attica no human being on tarth should go there."
Super- security
Extra police were on hand both inside and
outside the Capitol building. Inside, the main
hallways were blocked by iron gates, making it
necessary for workers and visitors to file past a
policeman checking identifications. The second floor
offices of Governor Rockefeller were under tight
security, even though the governor was not in, or
expected.
Meanwhile, representatives of Security Unit
Employees Council 8 of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal Employees, were

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scheduled to meet with state ofllciala Friday
afternoon to discuss prison reform. The union had
announced Wednesday that guards at all the 22 state
institutions would lock inmates in their ce~
beginning Oct. 7 unJess reforms were implemented
by the state.
The union demands include reimbursement to
families of guards killed or injured at Attica, rehirins
of all la id~ff personnel and improving procedures
for providing inmates with personal needs, such u
training, clothing and rehabilitation . .
Attica Uberation faction
A group identifying itself as the "Attica
Uberation Faction"
issued a three-page statement through the efforts of
Jeffrey Haas, an attorney who is a member of the
lawyers guild. The faction members were not
identified, but Haas saisl they-a~ inmates selected by
other prisoners to serve u spokesmen. The statement
was highly critical of Rockefeller, state prison
officials and state prison policies and practices. Their
demands also include the removal of Attica
Superintendent Vincent Macusi, two prison doctors
and the manager of the food service.
,
Calling on " revolutionaries across the nation " 1~
,abolish the present governmentrand form a new one,
the sta&lt;ement said, "We are not criminals nor are we
enemies of the people."

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Monday, September 27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

-

�fantastic strength and optimism to his
songs, and th~ Starsrup Apocalypse trip
seems to have mellowed a bit. "When the
Earth Moves Again'l transcends the starship
- Billy AJtman death wish. He realizes that the desire to
/JIJrlc - Jefferson Airplane (Grunt ~ FTR ascend, "now I go home to th.e sun," is the
- 1001)
most powerful force to change the earth.
''Your head can pull your body around,
f've always loved the Airplane, and you can leave whenever you find the
probably because their music never took ground." Papa John Creach's fiddle adds
the easy way' out. While other groups sang beautifully to the song.
"Rock and Roll Island" celebrates their
about the Alienafion of Modern Man, the
Airplane sang:
own music, and here the Airplane starts to
You are the crown of creation
fly again . Kantner takes up the slack of
anti you've got no place to go.
"" Balin 's absence, and Slick uses her voice
Their songs were meant to disturb as like another instrument, trading off the
much as anything else, like the songs says : lyrics with him. It 's the happiest song on
We arc the forces of chaos and anarchy,
the album : as they sing "we go down, .
everything they soy we are, we are.
down, down, down, back home." "War
Despite the seeming bleakness of some Movie" is a story of a bloodless revolution ;
of their songs, there was always a great our own consciousness and lives are the
concern for human dignity and only force needed . ! had a hard time taking
inJividuallty..
Kantner's album, but his songs here seem
.Compared to your-scream, the human
more believeable. Kaukonen 's time with
dream doesn 't mean shit to a tree.
Hot Tuna has matured his music, and
Eventually they could not escape an instead of plodding, · "Feel So Good"
Increasing political awareness to their dances. He saves his best licks for himself,
songs; but the Airplan~ were never a group and his guitar is like another voice,
to spout rhetoric. Their music seemed to intertwining with Cass idy 's bass.
show the way; increase your awareness; but Covington , the new drummer, sings ''As
the final decision was always an individual Pretty As You Feel ;" another Lather song,
one.
•
but this time with a happy ending. It
Don 't change before the empire falls.
doesn't sound like the Airplane, but more
you'/1/augh Sli loud you 'II crack the walls.
like Santana.
_
Perhaps their most overtly political
"Third Week in the Chelsea" is a bitter
song was a simple statement of hope, "We folk song, sung in a mild, res!gned style.
can be together.'' Marty Balin went from Once again, they sing about themselves but
his sensitive ballads to "Share a Uttle Joke in different ·terms. "But all I know is
with the World," to an obvious little ditty whatever I feel when I'm not· playing, and
e ntitled ''Volunteers." Balin's songs emptiness ain't where it's at and neither is
seemed to deteriorate in this process. (This feeling pain .•·
is . not a value judgment, only an ,....--:;;..;..------------.,
observation. After ''Crown of Creation ·•
there was nothing left to say, hut "We can
be together." If you haven't gotten it by
now. maybe you never will . There was
nothing left to ·do, but restate the obvious.
We: must begin here and now.
After seeing everyone scream for
"Volunteers" and "White Rabbit" in their
concerts after Slick's raps about making
your own revolution in your head, it was
obvious that the Airplane couldn't carry
the load forever. They retreated, Balin left,
Paul Kantner and Grace Slick detailed the
science fiction version of the American
Apocalypse, and Kaukonen and Cassidy
went'back to revive the folk revival. And I
"Thunk" sounds like a drunk man
thought, it's too bad about the :O~irpl ane . sill ing at a piano, but it's perhaps the most
They've come back with Bark, minus revealing song on the album. After much
Marty Balin, and it seems like the old meditation the singer (Covington) realizes
Airplane, but something's missing, or that thinking didn't do him much good and
maybe just changed.
the only thing left to do is to play the
There's a kind of mellow resignation to music.
these songs. It seems as if they've learned
The Airplane doesn't fly like it used to.
something and are not going to repeat the Instrumentally this album is restrained, but
old mistakes. You ~nly need to get burned the band carries it when they have to. The
once. "Crazy Miranda" is a typically bitchy ~irplane's st rength seems consolidated
Slick song; it could be the other side of now, and the band doesn't fly out on a
"L.ath~r."
limb anymore. They seem to be more of a
"Law Man" is a droll little story , again straight rock band . This isn't their best
Slick's, of guarded retreat. "My old man's album, but is good enough to be included
gun has never been fired , but there's always with tlie rest. Bits of the old Airplane a;e
a first tifl_1e." A strange thing to come from in every song, but the energy seems to have
the Airplane. As usual, the songs are _ dissipated, waiting for a new direction.
beautifull y textured, and as usual Cassidy's
Like Slick said , the only real revoluMn
. bass canies it. Kantner's songs seem to is in your head .
balance out Slick's bitchiness. There's a
Tum Bogucki
pickle and crushed baloney sandwich. The
defense rests What is Truth anyway?
Imagine.

I
/mtl#n~ lob~

~

he copped the melody from John. Imagine,
John's new album, cont1nues the problem
posed. The John Lennon of the Beatles is
not the so lo John Lennon, but
McCartney's stuff all sownds like Beatie
songs without the rest of tl!-e group. No

Lennon (Apple sw3379)

Stumbling out of bed at noon in .a
basement can be a lot of laughs, especially
jf you're over six feet three inches, cause
your head will rut the ceiling. I'm not
though, so it .isn't. Over to the stove to
throw on some water for coffee, a
three-day old Dunkin ' Donut and Jeff
Beck•s first album. lt 's the best way to
combat anything that could possibly upset
my day. Of course, nothing much could
bother me if I'm willing to wake up to Jeff
Beck each morning.
Not that I don't like Beck
the
basement (remember "Rats in my
Room?"), J love ol' Jeff. Besides
contributing broken guitar to the Blow Up
movie, and the vocals to "Hi Ho Silver
Uning" and "The· Nazz are Blue," Beck
was the first one to use a wah wah, on
"Hang on Sloopy," to be found at the end
of the For Your Love lp. But those aren't
the real reasbns I dig him .
.
It •s because of J eff Beck' s
schizophrenia. I think that's what I relate
to the most. His problems started early. On
the Sonny Boy Williamson and the
Yardbirda album, Jeff is shown playing on
the cover. But Clap1on is on the record (it
was recorded years before Jeff joined
them). The same for Having a Rave-Up.
When Jeff joined, he had to play all of
Clapton's solos anyway, to preserve the
"Yardbirds' sound". When he finally got
his own style, Page joined the band and,
for a while , Jimmy was stealing Beck's
licks. lt was only natural that fleck should
have a lot of trouble dec1ding if he was
Clapton, himself, Page or Keith Relf's
missing lung.
With ltis own band , ironically named the
Jeff Bed.. group, it was a different story
aJtog\!ther. He took Ron Wood, a fine
guitarist , and made him play bass to
prevent another crisis. But what happens at
the studio? Jeff decides to track a rhythm
guitar on all lhe tracks. And so, the
existential dilemma once again rears its
Telecaster tuning heads. Beck fi nds a
temporary solution. All the rhythm guitars
will be normal; they will play the righ 1
chord changes. But the leads will all be
insane. In fact , Beck, Stewart and Wood
waltz through the album . The only one
that seriously attempts to really play well
is Micky Waller, and that's only because
he's so bad he always has to try to prove
himself.
Consider then the fact that "Beck's
Bolero," one of Jeff's tour de forces on
guitar, was written by none other than
Jimmy Page, and the Who's Keith Moon
plays drums on it to boot. It also happens
to be the exact same song that was the B
side of "Sliver Lining." But "Shapes of
Things," the Yardbird classic, was
re-recorded for the Truth record . Explain
that , Lester!
The only logical place for Beck to turn
is to suicide. In an attempt to kill himself.
he has a motorcycle accident that isn:t
fatal, thereby linking himself inextricably
to Bob Dylan , and John Lennon has always
looked up to Bob Dylan .
Listen to ''Norweigan Wood ," then turn
on "4th Time Around " from Blonde on
Blonde. Dig, Zimmerman 's admitted that

in

wonder John can't stand P.dul.ln " How Do
You Sleep?" he attacks Paul because his
songs arc " Muzak to my ears." And John's
said many times since the breakup that his
Beatles material wasn't very real. Docs that
make the Beatlcs "muzak?"
John's new approach to songwriting and
overall sound ill to be admired and
respected. He's thrown aside his "dream
weaver" at t itudc for what he considers to
be his true nature. Politically conscious in a
strictly social way, " Imagine" asks us to
imagine the entire world as one, with no
nations. no possessions. "You might say
I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one."
Is Paul gonnu be in on it too? The sadness
John feels because of Paul \ betrayal is
exemplified by the inserted photo of John
holding a pig the way Paul held a ram on
his cover. But John is also iaughing at the
whole thing, which is more than Paul can
do.
Ringo wus on the lust lennon al!&gt;um . so
George is on this &lt;•ne. It's nice to J.uvc
George around , since he brings a lot of
cosmic vibes to uny song. King Curtis, rest
his soul. is on two cuts. "It's So Hard,"
done in righteous fifties style, brings Curtis
back to those Coaster da)'S of "Yakety
Yak." " I Don't Wanna Be A Soldier,
Mama" has the llavor of John's lirst album .
You get very nervous, the music sounds
strange. It should. Our minds can usc some
turning around .
The love songs arc very pretty , as to be
expected from John.
"Jealous Guy" and "Oh. My Love" are·
slow and nice, and "Oh Yoko." the
album's 'ti.nal track is a great rock tune,
complete with Lennon's first harmonica sin
e " Rocky Raccoon." It 's so much fun that
the harp keeps going after the song is over.
If all this wasn't enough to make it an
interesting album, you even get Phil
Spector's picture on one side of the label.
And until Ronnie brings out her solo
album, that'll have 10 do for kicks.
f'ut to shot of interior of a restaurant .
With the duality of Beck's and Lennon 's
beings, what can we say about the
audiences' effect on their stars? John si ts at
the table, and the violinist starts playing
"Yesterday," pleading with John to sign
his violin because it's his favorite song.
Beck asks me what I want , and I order a

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Page twelve. The Spectrum . Monday, September 27, 1971

.. -

MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL
WATCH THE GAME

-&gt;

IN COLOR

At SBAII'l'S

1089 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD.

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see page 6 for the masthead

I

I

�Film Festival: a truly
psychic experience
by Keith Shandalow
Spectrum Film Revl~wer

.

.

Editor's·note: The following "review" was
found early Friday morning on bent,
crumpled, smelly and· bloodstained paper
stuffed in our mailbox. It was signed
''Keith Sho.nodalow. " After reading this
rather strange documem, we decided to
seek the whereabouts of its author for ftflr
that his physical and psychic states were
such that he constituted a danger to
society. We discovered the address of his
apartment, and upon entering the premises,
f ound Keith Shandalow lying on his living
room floor, covttred with cantaloupe slices,
apples. plum tomatoes. holding a piece of
bread with honey in one hand, a Bic pen in
the other, with a copy of Advertisements
For Myself resting 011 his abdomen. He was
dead, apparelllly due to natural causes. We
decided that if would be a filling memorial
to him that we print what are conceivably
the lost words he ever wrote.. We realizt
that his style of writing is extremely
abstruse a!td dull. So please forgitJe the
following.

The student had been such for not quite
two weeks and already he was experiencing
an identity crisis of the highest order. He
had gotten into the routine of waking up
for classes, going to them in a state of
physical insensitivity, sitting through them
in a state of p5ychic numbness and leaving
them only to go to another. But unlike all
previous years. a portion of his
consciousness that had lain dormant for far
too long announced its awakenjng by
instilling in him the idea that this routine
of his was not to be his salvation, would
not relieve the c... l~tential torments of his
20th century foun uf existence.
And so, he rc:~soned , he coulJ solve this
unsolvable situation by changing his
identity, by steppiog out of himself, if you
will. Thus, on the night of Sept. 23, 1971,
he laid down his socially-imposed standard
as student and picked up a new one - the
standard of Film Reviewer. Feeling reborn
in more ways than on~!, he traveled to the
first night of the Experimental Film
Festival at the Studio Arena in downtown
Buffalo, acting like a cross between
Vincent Canby and Benjamin Braddock
(known no doubt as the Graduate by you).
That was his first mistake in hi$ new
identity as Film Reviewer.
Editor's note: The reader will

•• BEA OS••

L••

Armies of The Night.
It was not that the Film Festival was
bad, quite tl\e reverse. It was an evening
that should have been experienced by
everyone truly interested in the film as true
art. and in the range and Jfmits the medium
is subject to in trying to express ideas and
such. Some films were important in that
they foreshadowed their makers' later and
stylistically superiOf' work. Others were
examples of a ' filmmaker's succes.~ in
creating a work that used the uniqueness of
ilm to express success in creating a work
that used the uniqueness of film to express
other mediums. Some were visually and
aurally beautiful and thus touched the
Film Reviewer's poetic spirit. Ot hers were
just wonderfully absurd and hilarious. And
yet still (so that you don't think the Film
Reviewer is fascinated by any rot that
comes his way), there were films that
caused him great discomfort and were
actively dislike1l.
Lunatic fringe
But the reason that it was a mistake for
the Film Reviewer to go to the Film
Festival was t"tat he was psychologically
unstable due to the fact that he was in
existence for just a few hours. Hell, any
quick, sudden change in identity is a
mental fuck-up (look at Clark Kent Superman). But add to this the nature of
the films seen, and one has a major crisis
ou hand. For the Film Reviewer was in a
position of extn:me sensitivity to
psychological symbols and the films had
such symbols sticking out all over the
place. When he ·saw all those phallic
symbols in Un Chien Andalou
(Buneui·Dali) such a~ that razor and when
he comprehended all the other
psycho-sexual implications, his mind went
crazy.
Everything he saw was interpreted by
his evil little unstable mind in
psycho-sexual terms. Why even now as he
sit at his desk writing, he views his Bic pen
a phallus, and he conceives of writing tts
a sort of mental release or orgasm if you

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realize ·rhizt the author of this ''r4:view" is
wriri11g in tht thirli person fonn. This· Is a
well-known technique of many
psychopaths 10 cater to their huge egotism
wit/row being conspicuous in their use of
the word "I. " See, for example, Maller's
use· of rhi:; technique in his noted
scrapbook of the overblowi1 ego, The

will. Nothing escapes h.is eye. The lirtes of a young Maiden. He waJk.s into her
the paper look Uke . • .. And that banana courty~rd, slowly. He looks up to her
over there retninds him ·of . . . And that balcony. She Jppears not to see him, but
cantaloupe resembles a . . . And so Un can sense his presence. She walks solemnly
Cltiett A ndalou, being' a fme experiment down to meet him, whereup&lt;,&gt;n he gives her
and important as a preview of ott)er Bunuel a rose, and the petals drop slowly down.
films, made him a sex maniac in the true We last see the pair as Death starts to wrap
sense of the word. ~hd now he cannot t ..e Maiden in his black cloak•.
look anyone in ~e eye witlfout thinking a!-Poetic unreality (in which every object,
it mutiliated and gooey and sexy.
every movement, every action has some
But that wasn't the only way the Film vast metaphysical importance) was not the
Reviewer was affected psydt&lt;&gt;logically. For · only form of unreality experienced by our
you see, many of the films were surrealistic P&lt;x&gt;r beseiged Film Reviewer. Maniac
and expressionistic and so went out of the reality, ltilarious reality, giddy reality were
bounds of visual reality to comment upon also present. As the hero in Looney Tom.
reality. When the Film Reviewer sa~e The Happy L over (Broughton), skipped
fabulous techniques utilized in Life and from one person to another, giving love,
Death of A Hollywood Extra (Florey) to taking Love, spreading love, the Reviewer
express the. dehum6niza.tion and plasticity felt good, felt like he was aU Sweetness and
of ,Hollywood and· those that would make Ught. He felt like an old Beatles' love song.
it big there, his sense or reality &lt;vas And The Loves of Franistan (Schwerin)
undermined (not that he had .such a good sort of a ftlmic forerunner of the manic
relation to rcalify in the firsl pJace). For in insanity of the Firesign Theater, titilated
the fJJm, the e~tras are given numbers his funny bone for the entire eight minutes
written on their foreheads• (our hero's of its length .
'
number is 94 13-, a very psyclro·sexual
So one can see that the Reviewer was
number. don't you think?). and they wear atuned to objects as being both sexual
masks to convey emotions and they dream symbols and as being important details in
of plastic Success and Money and they
the philosophical implications of an
look and talk like Zombies dire~ted by the absurdly meaningful world . And while
evil witch doctors, who are the studio being poetic in his reaction to such a
heads. A truly artistic comment on position, he was also half out of hls mind
Hollywood in the 20's (if not now), but a with insecurity and devastating hilarity.
little disconcerting for an easily inOucnccd
Yes, he was in a situation that was quite
sex maniac.
dangerous. And he wondered to himself
whether another form of art , say literature
Poetic im~e
or paintings, could cause such a profound
Other films intensined this feeling of
impression to be made on the human
unreality. The beautiful portrayal of
psyche.
blatant sensuatify in Lot ill Sodom,
{Watson and Webber) with its ballet·likc
Bu1 as he muddled over the whole affair
continuity of movement. the soft focus in his head, strange things began to happen
techniques in Etoile de Mer (Ray) to him and his physical environment. The
combined with the symphonic dance of the chair he was sitting on rose up to the
starfish and later. the wind-bk)wn ceiling. His pen began to droop and to
newspapers, the strangely silent and shrivel up. The cantaloupe that he had
haunting search for sexual!\)' in Frugment been fondling began to bounce up and
down . Music from Beethoven's Ninth
of Seeking \ (Han·ington) that further
reinforced the Film Reviewer's sexual Symphony began playing out of thin air.
ob:;cssion, the beauty of an elevated train The Film Reviewer feverishly tried to
finish what he was writing, but he was
portrayed in Th~ W&lt;mder Ring (Bakhage)
which made the Film Reviewer nostalgic
having great trouble in keeping hls balance
way up near the ceiling. Also his pen
for his home, Brooklyn (he Is reported
wouldn't write. He thought to himself:
ready to defend his liking of Brooklyn with
anyone, be they familiar with that paradise
"God, I 'vc got to get this over to The
on Earth or not), all made him conscious Spectrum office before the Apocalypse
starts. And I'm hungry. God, what 's
of another world and in tune with it.
happening here? Why can't everything be
This attitude of poetic unreality was
normal? Why couldn't I go see Eve/
perhaps most touched by the most visually
beautiful film of the evening, The Knievel? Why? ... Why? ... " He was just
starting to hear the objects in his .room
A ssignotion (Harrington). In this film , one
•sees Death riding in a gondola through the talking to him when he rushed out of hjs
waterways ot ' '-:- 1 ;~., {:: : ::y brhnming with house and up the block, screaming like a
warmth and color) to claim his next victim , lunatic .

J

·· ~~~i#f••'!o:lW.V~

WBKW and Belkin Productions present:

BAILBOAD

I

Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
Friday, Oc:·. 8, af 8:30 P.M.
COME UP TO 355 NORTON AND ASK FOR

All Seats Reserved: Front Floor, Golds and Reds · 16.50
Rear Floo~ ud Blue$ . . $5.50 Gre7s and Oranres .. $4.50

THE AOVERSTISING MANAGER.

I
,

'I ~ ,,uf~

,.

' GRAND I
FUNK I

THE SpECTI\UM

3209 Bailey Ave.

Tlctleta eft aale otow et lvffele Festlvel Ticket Office, St....,_ttlltoft
..._.. (111eh ot4era ecce,.ecl wltll ste,.,.cl Mff-eclcl,...e4 .....1...1
u.a. ~.. Hell, Stete C:otle. . Toc.ket Offk•; AOiclrey &amp; Dora lrNclwe,

at.....

c.,.,. M•rr

P,.lllllttld by

0.1•-,.

IS COMING
Seminan e Exhibits •
Conc.su • Live Models • Door
Prius ~rvd-v e Win • trip

for 2 • Oemonttr•tiona •
Extr8Y8pnza of all mlljor
Ptloto Equlp~Mnt dhpl8yed

and exptalned by the mak•n •
Ch0010 •ncl buy .tter -.ing
1t a11 • a ....t Oeetal

STATLER HllTON HOTEL
FRI., SAT•• SUN.
OCTOBER 29-30.31
ADVANCE TICKETS •t

1/2 HALF PRICE 1/2

50¢
DELAWARE CAMERA MART

~~~;,~·~.....

2636 Oele~Mtre Avenue
3125 Bailey Avenue

Monday, September 27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

-

�'And they're off

lntramura/s underway
by Midsael Zwda
SP«tf'llm St•ff Writer

Frosh ·now
by Bany Rubin
Sport1 EdiJOT

The next time you attend a
Buffalo varsity hockey pme,
many new facea may be apparent.
Thanb to an ECAC decision last
week, Buffalo and aU of the
hockey playina members of the
ECAC are now able to employ
freshmen in vanity hockey .
The vote on the amendment
s ubmitted by Reo nsellaer
Polytech (RPI) wu 86- 26 in
favor. The chief opposition came
from the Ivy Leaaue powers 1Jiona
with Boston Colleae, Clarkson and

•

1n

•

varstty

Wriaht indicated that their
opposition stems from the fact
that, "they hate to be pressured
into anything." The opposition
aJso clai med that the
American-born hockey player will
be discriminated apinst since be
alleaedl y needed the added
experience of frosh hockey to be
able to compete.
The immediate effect of
freslunen-eligible at Buffalo will
not be known until the season
begins, but it is known that II
recruited freshmen are re£ist~red
and attending Buffalo. Coach
Wriaht, when reac hed for
comment, remarked : " There will
be freshmen oa our varsity.
However, the frosh don't desene
recoanition until they prove
themselves. I'm optimistic that
the frosh will push the players
that are retUminJ. In the past
some of the players knew that I
bad no replscements."

BuUs double
With freshmen now eligible,
the Bulls' varsity pre~n roster
bas swelled to 35 players, double
last year's total. Wright isn'l IU"
exactly bow many players he11
carry, but admitted: " I'd like to
dress four lines and three pairs of
CAUTION - NO AUTOMATIC

INSURANCE COVERAGE

If you did not make PIYment 110 the local
,...,_..~of the IMUr.nc:e CGmi*'Y-:

YOU ARE
NOT INSURED

DEADUNE - Enrolmeat wll oot be acceptN after Sept. 30,
1971.
DBTAO.S AND ENROLLMENT FORMS - avaUble at: Haith
• Senicea Oftlce, Midulel Hill, or Cllll 853-0931 .

ddensemen. Last year, if we had
sustained one injury, we would
have been down to only two
lines."
In addition to unctioning
fre shman play 1 the ECAC
admitted Buffalo to the ECAC
hockey association, which assigns
officials to aiJ pmes. The ECAC
has also established an ei&amp;ht-team
d lvilion II tourney at the end of
the seuon. The format will be
Identical to the Div~n I setup
which provides for the first four
seeded team• u home teams. The
semi..finaJ and final rounds will be
played on neutral ice.
As far u sc:hedulina goes, the
Bulla came up empty in -their
effort to fill their four remainin&amp;
open Monday evenina Memorial
Auditorium dates. Coach Wright
explained : ·~veryone is aiJ
booted uv for this y~owever,
we will scnmm• RPJ on No• . .lO
in Troy, N.Y. Next year we hope
to schedule a home and · home
teries with them.'' There still is a
chance that the Bulls may be able
to enUce Michipn State to the
Aud this year. The Spartans are
e1epected to announce their
dectsion soon for a pme on either
Jan. 17, 1972 or Feb. 7, 1972.
Coach Wri&amp;ht hu also indicated
that next year the Bulls will, "ao
out on the limb" and schedule
bia-name teams before receiving
dates for the availability of the
Aud. The problem is that t'be
Bulls received their available dates
too late to schedule the top
teams, which are already starting
to schedule for next year right
now.

ON
CHRISTMAS CARDS
ordered during

SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER
at

your

Univer•ttv Bookstore

"on campus"

Bill Monkarsh is jumping up
and d own banJina his bands
to get b er . Intra murals are
-underway and thinp couldn't lj)e
better. They say it's happenina at
the-t.oo, and Gino'• may be the
place to go, but one thould check
out Clark Gym too.
'
The festivities commenced last
Tuesday evenina as coed
volleyball was the scene. An
incredible number of students,
250 to be exact, turned out. But
did they have a good time you
ask. Well my friend, they had such
a good time that they absolutely
demanded another evening of the
same order. Coach Monkarsh wu
more than)laPPY to oblige, and
tomomSw evenina hu been set
aside for another coed volleyball
fiesta. If you were there last week,
you1J definitely come apin. If
you weren't don't miss it this
time. All 'lre,welcome. lntnmural
vol'eyball wUl be under way
shortly. Check the JYm for
schedules and times.

Record turnout
To say that intramural football
has gotten Off to I areat start

would be an understatement. This
year, there will be more passes
dropped, more missed blocks and
more bad hikes than ever before.
Don't get me wrong. The calibre
of play hasn't dimilhed in any
way. There will also be t.d. passes,
more interceptioN and more
black and blue marks. You see,
this year's enthusiasm for
intramu1al football ls
unpreCedented. Many
sicned up. This year hold onto
your hat•; 70 teanu have been
entered . OY• JOOO students wiD

be tumina into jocks for this
tournmnent. The battle wounds
have healed from last year and
everyone- is ready to go. You'd
never know that these teams are
not playing for $15,000 a man. lf
you would lilte to see a weU
played •nd very spirited football
pme. drop by Clark Gym field
one ~tftemoon and get yourself a
seat on the SO yard line.
Tennis intramuraJs are looking
very aood . All entries, singles and
doubles, should check with the
gym for schedules.
A newly. found enthusiasm for
soecet bas added. another sport to
this year 's program. Coach
Jacobsen will be available if you
have any problems that ¥OU'd like
to kick around.

Joa..u.
Attention all pot bellies! Waite
up Saturday mornings with a little
jogin&amp;, Get that blood moving
and live your heart a little
excitement . On Saturday, Oct. 2,
at 10 a .m . Clark Gym is planning
it• first loa-ln. Watch for listinp
to sian up. A good turnout will
evoke a Joa-ln every week. Clark
Gym ia also planning a tug-&lt;&gt;f-war
In the near future . When ·you've
finished joggina, don't forget to
do some calisthenics. Can you just
picture yourself in good shape?
Yea! It can even happen to you!
Just what are the reasons for
such a spirited program? Why have
intramuraJs run so smoothly and
why are more people becomina
involved? It might have to do with
the aeneral meeting Coaob
Monkarsh orpnized for students
in Goodyear cafeteria. It wasn't
just the coffee and doughnuts that
broU&amp;ht people together. The staff
deserves the credit they're due.
Whate•er lhe reasons. it'a
happeoina. And, they're off!

Former football coach
Leads golfers _to vict0ry
by Bruce Enael
Stpctrnm St11/! WTitn-

The loss of football was a.bard
blow to all those concerned and
rnvolved with the athletic
program. But some people are
finding some consolation in
whatever activity they have
picked to replace football this fall .
Take the example of Bill Dando.
Up until last year Dando was in
charge. of the Bulls' linebackers.
But last Spring he took over the
golf team and led them to a 3-8
record. This f:ill Coach Dando had
to trade helmets and shoulder
pads for woods and irons. With
three returning veterans and one
outstandins transfer the Bulls'
golf team has no doubt made the
change quite bearable.
Today the Bulls will compete
in the 20 team Tri-State Tourney
held at Gannon CoUeae. There are
many fine golf schools in this
tournament, yet the Bulls will
definitely be in the running. ·In
fact the Blue put an undefeated
record on the line. Presently the
team is 8 - 0 with eight impressive
victories and many fine individual
performances.
Bulls' veterans
The three returning veterans
are Jim Mohan (senior captain ,

presently playing number o ne),
Steve Ahlbin (third) and John
Lanz (a two-year letterman
playin&amp; fourth). In the second
apot the Bulls have Dale Dolmage,
a transfer from St. Clair Junior
College. Rounding out the squad
,at fifth and sixth are juniors
Marty Fink and Chuck Prorok .
The season started two weeks
ago with a tournament victory
over Canisius, St. John Fisher
Fredonia State and Geneseo. Th~
4
Bulls' five scorers totaled 370
strokes. That is an average of 74
strokes per man, which is
tremendous golf.
From there the Blue won a
couple of dual meets by the
identical scores of 10-1/2-7-l/2.
The victims were Canisius and St .
Bonaventure. In these dual meets
each man plays his opponent for
three points. In these two meets
Mohan accumulated a total of
5-1/2 points. Dolmage had S and
Lanz 4.
Then last Friday Buffalo
c lo bbered Niagara 20-4, and
Gannon 16-1/2 - 7-1/2 in a
triangular meet. Mohan, Dolmage,
Lanz and Prorok all ,scored the
maximum eight points. Mohan
shot a 71, while Dolmage, with a
72, has low average on the team.
Prorok and Lanz had 73s.

benji is the real idiot·in-chitf around here!

Page fourteen . The Spectrum. Monday, September 27, 1971

I

�CLAIIIIIIII

-----e.~~----~~-------------=~~
FOR SALE
SIMCA 1969: Needs c:luth, $600 o r
full set ;M
1964 BUICK Le Sabre sedan automatic:
- excellent tlr,s, II'!C:Iudlng 2 snow
t i res , power steering &amp; brakes.
6 32·1151. Must sell .
BI C: VCLES 26" 3 -speed English
R• c: ers. Brand new mens, ladles.
836-1303.
MAMIVA - C ·33 twin lens Reflex,
80mm lens, Interchangeable lenses,
PorrofiOJt finder, c:~se, pistol grip, 220
back . Excellent, 8200, flexible.
GALAXIE 500, 1964 automa_t lc 289
power steering, 2-door hardtop , $ 350
C•ll 832·0588 .
1969 TRIUMPH Trophy
Ex c ellent condition, 4000

250 .
m,11os.

bflt offer .
a.m .-5 p.m .

876· 1221

between

10

REFRIGERATOR S , st o ves and
w•shers. Rec:ondltlonec:t , 4e11 verec:t lind
guaranteed. O&amp;G Appli ances, 844
Sycamore, T X 4 -318 3.
1971 MUSTANG Mach I 3 51 CIO
engi ne, 5 600 m iles. Call •fter 5 :00.
894 ·7792 .
1966 CORVAIR - br4nd new battery ,
sno w tires. Needs some body work.
SlSO or best offer. 837-467 2 llftet 4
p.m .

c:lubl,
Reasonable. 882-6122.

c:~rt,

bag, etc:.

1968 MEI~CURV red convertible,
power st l18rlng 'V -8 . E x cellent
condition: jH400 or best offer. 1',1ust
sell. 675·61 ;19, 822-8758 .
G 18SO N
B ·15 . folk guitar, $90.
Eptphone 1 2-strlng electric: guitar.
Make offer. Steve 834·5637 evenings.
F OR SALE~: Household furnishings:
lamps, rugs, desk, miscellaneous Items
- 837·652 5.

1964 MAL IBU power V -8. v.g. c ones .,'
low mi. Call aft er 6 p.m . 8 32•9771.

DESK, lamps, rollawa y
t• bles.
brollet'- fry•w- rotlsserle, pots, pans ,
misc. Reasonable offer acceptable.
Phone 835· 11567, 5- 7 p.m .

R E FRIG E RATOR, Cll nlng r o om table
ancs chAirs , dresser, double mattress,

APPALAC HIIAN autoharp f o r sale, 2
month s ~·ld, perfe c t
condition .

r•;HERIDA-; FOREI;;:-::;AIR

I --· -·

• 874-5330
•

8;l7·1826, $50.

••

1066SHERIDAN DRIVE
TONAWANDA, N.V ,.

••-

I
•

BRJ~KE SPECIALS

• CLIP OUT CCJIUPON - · · -

[)RUM BRAKE
Master Charve
EJC.,.._

A"*'i«*'

Empire C.rd

I
Try. Try hard.
The only thing we can think of
18 what we mak'e. The Swingllne
" Tot so·~ stapler. 98¢ in 1950.
98¢ In 1971.
And It still comes with 1000 free
staples and a handy carrying
pouch. It staples, tacks and
mends. It's unconditionally
guaranteed. It's one of the
world's smallest staplers.
And It's the world's bTggest
seller. Could be that's why it
hasn't gone up ifl..,rlce In
.21 years.
If you're Interested in something
a liHie bigger, our'CUb Desk ' '
Stapler and Cub Hand Stapler
are only S1.98. Both Tot and
Cub Staplers are available at
Stationery, Variety and Colleg'e
Bookatol'ea.

The Swingline "Tot 50"
98¢ in 1950.

98¢

in 1971 .

If you can name something else
that hasn't gone up In price
since 1950, let us know. We'll
send you a free Tot Stapler with
1000 staples and a vinyl pouch.
Enclose 25¢ to cover postage
and handling.

Bank Americard

I

Texaco

• OWNERSReplace thoen $ 26. 95
•

1
•

•

• AMERICAN

I

•leA-R
BRAKE
•
SPECIALS ALSO •

•
•

'

4whl•. • reM.Jrf•ce
4 drums · lnstJ.
master It wttl. C,fll.

1•1
•

brak~

~

I
I

Disc 8 ••

COUP

CAR OWNERS

=•

•

free up
lldljust.,.
peck wh. bNrinp

BRI~~;~uT

~41(£ •

•

I• I•

s
$31 .95
AND OTH:.~ace tbrakepad
8o .no., inspt. Ditc Roten

-·· . .......-.. ...
8o

Drums - lnspt. C.lipers

Flush

GUlLO C E·1QO electric guitar, good
condition . Fine acoustic sound . AbOut
$125. Call Ken Sloane. 832-~971.
195~ SAAB $ 50 . Running condition .
German Shephlfd, male, 1 year, 835 .
W ide ovals o n Phymouth rims, 815 .
791-4932 .

1964 RAMBL E R CI4S$IC automatic,
4-doo r , heater, r adio. Call 836·7120 ISM for Kumar.

1

877-9303 •

N- Yortl State lnspeetl0f1t

WELCOME BACK TO SCHOOL

uoer, short..,alred, White paws ancs
u!lCSer . Under 1 yo.,. Contact
TIRES, new 7·35 ·14, $13. Nearly n - . Spectrum eox 91.
E-78·14, $10. VW 9IS h8'1ter. Call
:,.:._;__ _ _;__ _~------833·2347.
WILL' THEJMrsonwhostolemywallet .
from the loc:keroom please return to
1966 PONTIAC La Mans. a-cylinder
Information, along with c:ontenu ot
autnmatlc: , bucket JUts, plus extras.
moulder-bag. PI..EASE. 1 NEED IT .
Call 875·8!&gt;70 after S p.m .
Bob Klein, 833•7659 If founcs b Y
another.
9 k 12 REO ANO GOLD sheg rug with
pad, $50. 88 5-9226 evenings .
ROOMMATES WANTED

•

a. mill brakeiY.c••...,-·-•

• • - OPEN 7 DAYS- EVENINGS TILL 10:00

••

WANTED

BABYSITTE R want eCS . Hours flexible,
ow" trilnspor tatlo n preferred. Must
like c hildren. 632·11 5 1. oaytlme
preferred.
•

START $ 2 per hour sall ry plus bonus.
Work 4- 8 p .m . weekdays. 1o-2 p .m.
S a t u rd•ys. Call 8 35 ·380 3 or T F
9 -0402.
SE T OF Metric w renc hes o r sockets.
691 ·9182.
WANT TWO ·bedroom liPart ment In
walki ng distance to umpus. Call Mark
834·8876 or St an 8 3 1·2796.
W A N TED : An y kind o f b icy cle.
Desperately needed . C• ll T erry or Krls.
886 ·6509.
A LL STU DENTS w ish ing t o push f or
m ore iiCt lv ltl es t hrough S.A., sign u p as
"
member of an Interest grou p
representing U U AB In the Student
Assembly. Petit io ns are available In
Roo m 261 N o rton.

BEAUTIFUL . -.partment , S·mlnute
walk. Need one &gt;f'ernale roommate. Call
836·8521 , MaddY or stop by 66
Nicholson off Englewood.
MALE, 1 female, four•bec:troom house,
two baths, $60/ month - Iotta land.
c.a11 B ruce 632-0983.
RIDE BOARD
CO UPLE seeki ng transportatio n to
West Coast , I.e., San Franc isco . Will
5111re expenses. Call Jai me and All ,
1134·2158 .
PERSONAL
1970 HONDA 450 Scrambler orange,
3800 miles. Make o ffer. Must sell
today . Call881 · 171 7.
ALLEG RA : a pho ne call Is worth I
t housend aarogr amm es - as long as
·
y o u get tnru . B ill.
NEE D A BR OTH ER. Rush PI La m bda
Tau . T4bl e In Parker H all , 11 a.m . -1
p.m.
SI N GERS A N D
lnstrum en t4115tS
In t erested In forming a gr ou p t o sing
and play no r t hern Ba rov ue m usi c (e.g.,
Bll ch , Sc huetz , B u~tt ehude) , please
contact But Jones at 83 1-523 1 or
83 5-67 39.
. PA RT-TI M E employment average pa y for sc:llool term
853·81 09. 9-3 p .m.

4hnve
w ork .

APARTMENTS WANTED

PI LA MBDA TAU provloes an acti ve
social and acll demlc life In all stu dents.
Call 6 9 3·4472 .

SING L E male stu dent need s room
w ith i n walk ing d ista nce of ca mpus,
share expenses, call D oug 8 73·9261.

WI LL ELLV M A R KSO N please
con tact t he Silverb erg Fam ily &lt;1 t
634·0723 as soon as possible.

LOST

8o

FOUND

,I

ROC K G R OUPS w anted . St..,d y work,
cho ice o f nigh ts . The C lub Rest au rant ,
N l;agarll F alls. Contact E d Lucas.
282·8602 .
I N EED N ature and Functions of Law
b y Burtnan and Cr. lnet. Call83 1 -4ll3,
Backp age Spectrum.
MISCELLANEOUS

STLJDENT

CAC or9"n lzatlona1 meeting for UB
Oay Ca re qnter, Tuesday , 9/28 . For
r oom and tim e, v o to CAC office or
call L ar ry 837·0302 - very Important!

BOOK E:XCHANGE
IS NO'W OPEN.
_ Bring old books to sell at your own " Discount Prices!" Only books
being used this semester are accoptable.
Come buy these bargains fo,r your own classes too!

NORTION HALL
ROOM 231

ST UDEN T willing to give English or
music lessons In exch• nge for Czech
lessons. Call 873·3400.
SPEEDED Reading and Study.
Registration Ulll possible lor some of
Mrs. N ichols' classes. Information and
paym ent of course fee $15 at 105
D iefendor f .
TVPI N G ,..ekperlenc:ed, neat U.B., $.40
per page. 834 ·3370 . Fut service.
JO N ES Professional Typing
C&amp; H
Ser v ice computer i zed I BM
equipment, plus our experience, give
bes t
poSSible presentat io ns of
d I sse r t.a tlons, thesis. term papers ,
resumes and employment application
letters . Loc•ted between two
c a mpuses. Very reasonable. C•ll
837·6558.
M EX ICAN FOOD TACOS, burritos.
enchilad as, t•m•tes lind mor1t. Try our
popu lllr Tippy's steak sandwich. Also
serving chicken ;and seafood. While
you 'r e t here, enJoy • brew . TIPPY'S
TACO HOUSE, 235 1 Sherl d4n Orl¥e
(across from Putt -Putt Golf Course).
838 ·3900.
TEN NIS raquets restrung free . Plck ·UP
and delivery. Call Alan 837 · 1617 .

OPENlD-4

F R ENCH Tutoring, help with papers,
t hesis. Ekam btUSIPUPS. Convetsatlon,
gr;ammar courses. By Parlsian-Gerar.d
837 ·2195. Ekpecl;ally re•sonable.
INDEPEN DEN T foreign car ser vice
offer s guaranteed work and student
r ates. 839 · 1850.

SUB SELECTION :
Steak &amp; cheese
Roast Beef, Corned Be,ef,

MOnday, September 27, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen
I

�I

WBFO

'

Progr~mme

Notes

..

Mond ay, Sept. 27

..

8 a.m. - Prelude - Classical music for your morning.
Noon - Spirits - jazz with Dave Silverman.
2 p.m.- T his is Radio ...
10 p.m. - The·King of Instruments.
Tuesday, Sept. 28
11 a.m., -

Firing Line - William F. Buckley and
challengers, with the radio version of the famous
Public Broadcasting Service television series.
5 p.m. - All Things Considered - people, news,
music and the best in radio from National Public
Radio in Washington, D.C.
10 p.m. - Town/Gown - Lectures and panel
discussions by faculty a.nd visitors to Western
New York's colleges and universities.
Midnight - Extension

Sports

Today: Varsity golf at the Gannon Tri-state
tournament., Erie, Pa.; women's tennis vs. Brockport
at the tennis courts.
Tom orrow :
Audobon, 1 p.m.

Wednesday, Sept. 29

golf vs. Geneseo

at

1 p.m. - View from the Bottom - with Dave Rogot.
10 p.m. - Searching - " Three R's Spell Rip-Off"
11 p.m. - Richland Woman - with Roberta
Friedman.

Saturday : Varsity cross-country at the Lemoyne
Invitational.

Thursday, Sept. 30

The student athletic review board will meet
Tuesday, Sept. 28 at 7 p.m . in · Room 205 Norton
Hall.

Announcements
Hillel House will be open today from 7- 11 p.m.
for quiet study. Library resources will be available.
Yom Kippur Services will be held Tuesday,
Sept. 28 at 6:30 p.m. in the Millard Fillmore Room .
Wednesday services will run from 10 a.m. until
sun-d own in the Conference Theater. Yiskor
(Memorial) Services will be held at approximatelY.
11 :30 a.m.
'
·
Hebrew classes are now being organized . All
those interested, please sign up at the I lillel table.
Hillel House is offering classes in the stl(dy of
Talmud on Sundays at 3 p.m. in the Hillel House
beginning Oct. 10. Anyone interested, sign up at the
Hillel table or at the Hillel House.
· The Day Care Center is having a Housekeeping
and Supply Committee meeting Wednesday, Sept. 29
at 7:30p.m. in Room 264 Norton .
Occupational Therapy Cl1,1b will meet tomorrow
from 4- 6 p.m. in Room 4 Diefendorf. The senior
class will speak.
CAC will have a meeting tomorrow at 9 p.m.
Roo m 264 Norton. All those interested in joining a
consamer protection gr6up, please attend.
The Ad-Hoc Committee of State Employees will
have a meeting tomorrow at 7:30p.m. in Room 334
Norton. They will discuss the national Attica
demonstration to coincide with Agnew's visit to
Buffalo.
Women's Liberation is offering free karate
classes Tuesday and Thursday from 4- 5 p.m. in
Room 340 Norto n.
Creative Craft Center will have a meeting
tomorrow for the bag workshop from 2- 5 p.m . and
the sandal workshop from 7 - 10 p.m. in Room 307
Norton. Open only to students who have signed the
class list.
Undergraduates taking French courses, please
pick up a copy of the department newsletter in
Room 214 Crosby and fill out an address form
anytime today .
Women's Liberation is having a meeting for all
Interested women today at 8 p.m. in Roqm 246
Norto n.

...,.

Varsity

Wednesday : Varsity golf at Brook Lea Tourney,
RIT host.

11 a.m. - Potpourri
2 p.m.- This is Radio ...
8 p.m. - Interface - an informal conversation with
University President Robert L. Ketter. Listeners
may phone 831 -5393 with questions which Dr.
Ketter will answer on the air.
9 p.m . - Schubert and the 600 - with Lawrence
Bogue, songs from 1817 .
• Midnight - Extension

I

l nform ~tion

The second coed volleyball mixer will take place
Tuesday evening at 7 p.m. in Clark Gym. Everyone is
cordially invited.

Undergraduate PSlfChology Majors who are
considering graduate school will meet to morrow at 8
p.m. in Room 335 Hayes Hall .

Sunshine House is holding a meeting today at 8
p.m. in Room 334 Norton for all interested in
joining.

SA and GSA mernbers Cdn obta in free legal
advice frnrn Mr. Effmatn today from 7 10 p.m. in
Room 205 Norton.

College B 113 will have class meetings every
Mo nday and Wednesday from 12:30 p.m. All
registered students are urged to attend at Domus on
1695 Elmwood Ave.

The Christian Science Organization meets every
Tuesday at 2:30p.m . in Room 264 Norton.
The Day Care Center needs donations of old
record players, child1ren's records, instruments,
typewriters, paper, fa t. crayons, paint, -children's
books, tools, juice cans, clay, scissors, porl·a·cribs
and feeding tables. Plea~e bring them to the
basement of Cooke Hall ..
The College of Mathematical Sciences will offer
tutoring sessions for Calculus 141 today. The
schedule is as follows: Monday, 2- 4 p.m . in Room
18 Diefendorf Annex; Tuesday, 3- 5 p.m. in Room 8
Diefendorf Annex; W&lt;'dnesday, 3 5 p.m. in Room
27 Diefendorf Annex c1nd Thursday, 2 4 p.m. in
Room 5 Diefendorf.
The UUAB Fine Arts Film Committee will hold
a meeting today at 5 p.m. in Room 340 Norton. All
those interested in films on campus are invited to
attend.
The Undergraduate Medical Society will begin
peer group advisement t:oday in Room 346 Norton.
Office hours will be 9 - 3:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday. All pre-medical and pre-dental students are
urged to consult the adlvisors for guidance through
their pre-professional ye.ars.
CAC needs volunteers to work in various
programs being offered at rhe Friendship House in
lackawanna. Cqntact the CAC offi ce, Room· 220
Norton, 83 1-3609 if yoUI are interested.
UB People's Coalition will hold an open meeting
to discuss Agnew's Oct. 7 visit to Buffalo, to morrow
at 7 p.m. in Haas lounge, Norton.
A II under graduate students interested in
tutoring beginning college students for academic
credit (DUS 499 lndepe1ndent Study) shou ld contact
the ·Tutorial Lab, 16B Townsend Basement or call
831-5366. Tut ors .are especially needed in
Accounting 203, 301, Anatomy 113, Anthropology
105, Applied Mechanics 205, Biochemistry 401,
Chemistry 101 ,102,201, 123, Constru(;tion·Design
212, Electronics 403, Histology 305, Law 201,
Pho netics 315, Physics 107, 108, 113, 11 4 and
Physiology 201, 420.

Anyone interested in tutoring Math on a grade
school and high school level, call the College of
M:~thematical Sciences at 831-1704 tomorrow
Women's Festival Meeting tomorrow at 7:30
through Thursday, 3:30-5:30 p.m.
p.m . in Room 332 Norto•n.

Backpage

Students for McGovern will hold an
drganizational meeting Tuesday, Sept. 28 at 3 p.m.
in Room 334 Norton.
UB Vets Club will meet Wednesday, Sept. 29 at
4 :30 p.m. in Diefendorf 147. Election of o fficersand discussion of the newsletter will head the
agenda.

The UUAB Arts Committee will hold a meeting
for all people in tl)r~sted in art, ransing from the
traditional mediums to the newest uses of media and
St'O~·participa tion art, to develop an .tctive art
communl\.ation program within the University, 6
p.m. to morrow in Room 261, Norton.
The Student Theater Guild will hold a meeting
to discuss the Nickel Theater Program and new
productions today at 7 p.m. in Room 340 Norton .
All are welcome.
Sub Board I, Inc. has openings on its staff for a
Publications Division Director.. - responsible for all
Sub Board funded publications, and a Union Board
Division Director - responsible for the University
Union Activities Board.
The jobs offer much harassment, negligible pay
and long hours. For further informatibn, c.ontact
Mark Borenstein, Business Manager,1 Sub Board I at
831-5502 by Friday.
CAC will hold a meeting tomorrow at 7:30p.m.
in Room 244 Norton for all interested in the Vistec
Project.
Chassidic Yom Kippur Services will be held
tomorrow, Kol Nidre at 6:40 p.m. and Wednesday
morning, Shacrit at 9:30 a.m. Mincha Jo be
announced. The services will be held at Chabad
House, 3292 Main St. and Rabbi Noson Gurary will
speak.
Auditions for. three Theater Department
productions on Sept. 28, 29, 30 dnd Oct. 1 4- 6
p.m. in Room 26N Harriman. Those interested, sign
up at the Theater Department. The productions will
be chosen from a list including: Webster's White
Devil, Marlowe's Foust, Ghelderode's Pontog/eize and
Calvina's Cosmic Comics.

'
,.

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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Vol. 22, No. 14

State Unlvenhy of New York It Buffelo

•

Friday, September 24,1971

Parity motion fails

SA votes to raise

their own·stipends
In their first executive committee mee ting last
Wednesday to consider budgets. the Student Association
voted, in effect , to increase their stipends $600 over last
year. The raise basically increases all coordin ators~ stipends
while decreasi ng those of the president and vice-presidents.
Originally , it was moved " I'm doing what I want to do •
by Lester Goldstein . Aca- and I am not doi ng it for the
demic Affairs Coortlinator, money.'' He further added
to equalize all stipends at that th'cre arc fringe bcndi ts
$700. This woultl have, raised involved in SA work which
coordinators' pay and lower- compensate for mul.!h of the
ed the president's. vice pres- work .
idents• a nd treasure r's stipends. However, this move What are stipends?
·•tt is ludkrous for anyone
for parity was defeated and
stlbsequently fo llowed by a to assume that people a re in
series of motions resulting in studen t government for the
money," said Mr. Gold stein.
the budget line increase.
lan DeWaal, SA president,
A cco rding to one SA
agreed with this. However, he
member .. under the guise of
by BiU Vaccaro
vice-chairman of the Faculty Senate, and Rober.
did feel that the stipend
equalization, they effectively
Hunt , chairman of the committee and head of
Camtlllf l:'dltOI'
raises were justi tied . ..The
managed to get nice pay
Environmental Health and Safety, claimed that
whole question rests on what
boo s t s.'' Dave Steinwald,
Open parking met an untimely death Tuesday as Chancellor Boyer would arbitrarily authorize aJI
are stipends and what people
Stude nt Rights Coordinator,
the Tmffic Control Advisory Committee voted 6-4 campuses to institute parking fees .
get paid for. We tried to
to end the three-month old experiment. The lots will
agreed with this assessment:
reach some kind of agree- return llo their previously segregated status Oct. I .
Edict disputed
.. Everyone took advantage of
ment on that tonight but
Abw highlighting the meeting was controversy
However, Mr. Miller and lan DeWaaJ. presjdent
the situation to get a raise."
fail ed ,.. he continued .
over the possible institution of parking fees next of the Undergraduate Student Association countered
Part of the difficulty in semestc!r. The State University of New York Board this. They said that there had been no indication
Elite execs
reaching this agreement is of Trwllees recently gave SUNY Chancellor Ernest from Albany that this would come about. Besides,
Commenting o n his origBoyer authorization to implement parking fees on all they added, such a move would be contrary to the
due to the necessity of a
O.ancellor's own views on self-determination among
SUNY
c:ampuses if so desired.
inal motion to equalize sti- vote of the executive comthe SUNY campuses.
A
ce~o
rding
to
Alan
Miller.
a
committee
member
pe nds, Mr. Goldstein ex- mittee to -pass any action .
However, according to Mr. Hunt, paying the
p1resident
of
the
Inter-Residence
Council,
and
plained that it failed : ''Clear- Mr. Goldstein also said that
parking
fee ''doesn't mean you're going to get a
parking
fees,
if
instituted
next
semester,
would
cost
ly and simply , it failed - it after the original motion to
$20 for all lots except the .Main·Bailey facility, parking space." All it means is that one purchases
failed." Mr. Steinwald added achieve parity fai led. the
which would cost only $ 10. However, dorm the " right " to park if a space can be found, he
that this failure revealed that committee had the choice of
residents would have first crack at obt aining permit~ explained .
there are certain people on dropping the who le issue q r
Some heated arguments arose during the
Du1ring the meeting, a dispute arose over the
the executive committee who trying to deal with it .
-conti nued on p.~ge aBoard of Trustees edict. Willaim Buamer. cxccutiv,.
still believe in elitism .
However, Mr. Steinwald
While maintaining .. , don 't feels that the executive comknow if people deliberately mittee failed to do this as a
used this to get raises," Mr. mo ti on to keep &lt;J il coordinGoldstein explamed his dis- ato r stipends as they existed
appointment : "The fact is and lowering others didn 't reAs a co ncession to the session and said: "We must bring draft for two years, also gives Gls
that the stipend line went up ceive even a second: " Peo ple opponents of the war, the bill this war to an end. It is within our the biggest military pay raise in
history
24 billion dollars.
a nd the whole purpose was didn't even want to consi der carries a strong stand on troop power, if we will act."
Approval
by
the
Senate came only
Draft calls wiJI resume as soon
not to get more money from keeping their stipends at Withdrawal , ca ll ing on the
a
few
minutes
after it had
as
Nixon
signs
the
bill,
as
the
Presiden1 t to withdraw all U.S.
SA."
$500."
troops a1s soon as prisoners of war mechanism for the draft has been decided. by a 6 1 30 vote, to shut
arc released by North Vietnam. kept in working order since the orr further debate and thus end
Regarding this. Mr. SteinAn y fin ancial action in- There iH also no provision for a ex piration of the old draft law on the fili buster threatened by draft ·
wald lamented that "with the cluding any stipend c hanges
opponents and war critics. The
permanent residual force in June 30, 1971.
amount of money we have to of the executive com mittee Indochina, something which the
Pending President Nixon's final Senate vote was 55 - 30.
do the things we need to do, must be approved by the yet administration feels would be approval, the draft will be in
it's ridiculous to increase sti- to be constituted Student necessary to prevent Communist effect again early next week as a Nixon's victory
The bill is a victory for the
result of the Senate's vote on
pends." He continued that Assembly. The Assembly has takeover in South Vietnam.
Nixon
administration and the
l:ucsday
to
extend
it.
Under
the
there is no justification for the option to citner approve
new draft extension bill , which Pentagon. which had warned that
Original amendment weakened
the coordinator increase of o r reject the whole budge t
Th e o rigin al end -t he-war seems certain of Nixon 's the nation's security would be
$200 when no more work which is tied to the SA office amendment, as introduced by signature, the practice of deferring jeopard:zed if the President's
will be gotten from the offic- operations. This means that Senate Democratic uader Mike college students has been ended. authority to conscript was oot
ials.
to deny the stipend in crease, Mansfie ld , ca ll ed for th e This means that starting with this restored . White House Press

Open parking experiment dies·;···
fees for campus lots possible

*

Dem1ise of college deferments

Senate passes draft hill

'

Mr. Steinwald explained
this with the argument that
people are not in student
government for the money as
it is not enough com~­
sation for the time involved :

-

the Assembly would have to
a Iso veto the day-to-day
office ex penditures which
wo uld, according to ~r.
Goldstein, .. hold up a lot of
important SA work."

withdrawal of all US. troops from
Indochina in nine · months. This
amendment was weakened to its
present form in a Senate-House
confere01ce. Mansfield promised
the Senate that ll.is amendment
would be voted on later in the

.

year's. freshmen class,Jhere is no
such thing as a 2-S deferment.
However, the bill does contain a
provision which allows those
students who are already holding
deferments ~o keep them.
Tbe bill, which extends the

Secretary Ronald Ziegler said:
"The President is, of course, very
pleased by the decision. He had
indicated t he importance of the
passage of this legislation ... the
President is pleased that the
Senate moved in a positive way."

�·;/
•I

UUAB in disagreement Fro1rn bad to worse
'
witll St~OBoard decision ~es.idence halls overfloWing
I

A curaory view of the Univenity housing scene
A recent conflict has deveJoped 'The proposed ~~~~ctors will
for resident students seems tto incUcate that the
between Sub Board I and the . receive $500.
Situatic)n is not a good one. Overcrowded rooms and
1
Unive.rsity Union Activities Board
not eutough accommodations are a few of the
Political reasons
(UUAB).
proble~ms facing students d~siring housing,
"This represents a definite
According to Larry Stein,
Alllenhurst Apartments have been especially
chairman of UUAB. "They (Sub misuse of student funds," said Mr.
hard·hit
with over 60 transfer students Jiving·in its
Stein
.
Speculating
about
the
Board) feel compelled to make us
lounges.
Normally accommodating six students,
reason
for
Sub
Board's
motive
in
~ justify our existence, while we
has been forced to put as many af seven
Allenhurst
creating
a
director
to
perform
the
---. think they should justify theirs."
same
tasks
as
he
does,
Mr.
Stein
people
in
some
apartments.
The controversy has arisen out of
.
said:
"I
guess
they
feel
that
I
Sub Board's desire to create
nus 60..person rniJtake is not an uncommon
positions for two new directors - would -try'~ hide things from
one. C!iff Wits~, director of On-Campus Housing,
one to watch over Univenity them for politit.JlJ~asons. If they
reporte~d that three years ago, 200 students were left
publications and one to oversee have someone watc~ing ove{ me,
withou.t rooms tfecause the Housing Office had been
UUAB. "Basically, they want to they might be more confident
unable to accommodate them, even though many
hire a director who will have the that I would be more responsible
had already paid room deposits to the bursar, These
san,te duties and responsibilities to Sub Board." Mr. Stein plans to
niiscalc:ulations arise .each year,
Wils&lt;&gt;ll said,
that I do," Mr. Stein commented. meet with Sub Board business
becauSt~
of the cUfficulty in judging hbw many
"Frankly, it represents nothing manager Mark Borenstein in the
studentts will return to the residence halls after
near future to discuss the
but a pain."
summer vacation.
Mr. Stein indicated that in situation.
"There are three alternatives
addition to these two new
directors, Sub' Board hopes to available to Sub Board and r see · Miscalc:ulation
establish six more for a total of it. Either 'fire me and replace me
HEl further explained that between 18% and 20%
ejght directors who will supervise- ' with their own director, which of residents who in the spring say they will return to
various segment s o f the they haven't told me they're going the halls in the faiJ do not do so. Based on this
University. Al so, Mr. Stein to do; make me responsible to projection, the Housing Office accepts enough
eKplained, Sub Boa rd is Sub Board instead of UUAB, ' people to fill the spaces tha-t will probably be empty.
contemplating establishing the whict1 I am indirectly anyway; or Unfort1unately, Mr. Wilson continued, the number of
position of executive director who have this directot watch over me, studenlls who did not return to the residence halls
will receive a stipend of $13.000 .. approve all expenditures, etc." this year was less than the office guessed it would be.
Mr. Stein indicated that he had The re:sult was, too many people and not enough
lost patience with Sub Board's spaces. To complicate the prQblem, the University
policies. "I had been going along special programs (particularly EPIS) accepted a
with whateve ... they said, but right numbe1r of students and promised them housing
XEROXES
now, I'm at the point where I feel without coordin~ting their plans with the Housing
FORB¢
there shouldn't even be a Sub Office.
•
Board,
he stated. "They're totally
.JUST THRI,LLING
The Housing Office has a list of priorities as to
money oriented. trying to derive
the largest profits they can, while who gets spaces. reserved. Transfer students are at the ·
UUAB feels there should be more bottom of Jhe ljst. so when any mistakes are ma&lt;fe, :
activities 'for free on this campus." transfe1rs subsequently suffer.

'

When asked about the costs and vatu' of the
residence halls, Mr. Schillo replied that the price the
student .Pays does not cover the full cost of housing.
The price charg~ the student (SSSO for the dQrms)
only pa_rtiaUy coven the debt incurre.d by the
building of the dorm, maintenance, utilities, etc.

Discrepancy
The cUscrepancy in price between students and
private residences of AUenhunt (lower for

Mr.

Gustav

Studen1t input
Regarding student input into housing policy
decisioms, Mr. Wilson explained that since residence
hall house c1uncils formulate all the rules and
regulati.ons for their own living area that, "students
here have more input into housing decisions than
they do at most universities." However, any
decisioms affecting prices and basic living conditions
(e.g., tl~e number of people living in an Allenhurst
apartment) are made primarily in Albany by the
State DIOrmitory Authority.

'1~:1
PliCIIBud

!!QJ.Bm~JA~v·
Until 1 1 a.m. end
Sun. thr Thurs.
AFTER 9:00p.m.
Sun. thru Thurs.

To•m Schillo, director of University Housing,
remarked that, " no student was compelled to live in
Univemity housing." He continued that arqple
housing was provided by private renters in the city.

3111/T!I!W~~
tJt itMfT/IM2CIXWTRY

-- 6 c·, ·
~666$,:-M

-osterrelcher

Overcrowded

non-students) as explained by Mr. Schillo is
attributable to these costs for maintenance, staff and
utilities. The rent excess is used by the University to
cover these costs. However, Mr. Schillo was unable
to provide exact figures for these services.
Mr. Schillo further maintained that housing was
a University commitment only because of its
educational qualities: "As an administrator I cannot
be ,concerned with how. people decide where they
wan t to live." He added that the University can only
maintain the number of spaces that are ftnancially
feas ible (determined by state and university
authorities) and it commits itself only to the need
for an educational experience which holJ&amp;ing
provides.

NO,W

NOW

, _ SIIEIUDAif QlltYE

Misc.a~ulatjonJ
in
planning has resulted in
overcrowded dorm
rooms.

SHOWING

IAJ Ullll IIOAD
The Spectrum Is publishHI thrtHJ
• wt~ek. •wry Mondtly,
~n•d.ty •nd Frld.ty; during thtl
l'flf/UI•r «lldlfmlc v•r by Sub-BOIIrd
1, Inc. OfflctiS .,., loc•t«J •t 355
Norton_ H111/, Stlftlf Unlwmlty of

tim•

NlfW York 11t Bufflllo, 3435 Main
St.. Buff•lo. NlfW York. 14214.
AI'N
Cod•
716 ·
Ttllltphone:
Edltorf•l.
831-41 13; BIHineu:
- 831-3610.
R.,_tltltlld for lldwrtlsing by
Nlltlonal Educ.tlonlll Adrllfrt/Mng.
s-Yn, Inc., tB E. 60th Sttwt.
,.,_, Yon\-, NlfW YtNir, 10022.

SubllcriptJon ,.,. .,. $4.60 /1fiT
..,.,,., tN
~-

•

4

$8.00

for

two

- ....._

P•,e two. The Spectru~. F.ri&lt;Jay, Septemb8r
24, ·1971
t I:
~
f

•

•

'

t

-

•

t

, •I I f

f

't+

. . ..

t • '•t

•
j

.

..-

�.

,

.

:Headof.CollegeA .
Stalks from meeting Students loSe parking battle·
News Analysis

,

This ar.gument was made by thole
who are now novins to restructure
the Colle,e.
·
Mr. Dayan, a starr member
durin a the 1970- I 971 school
year, araued that the complete
elimination of the Snell
experiment also ignored facts
proven by it. Though be said that
it was insufficient to remove such
symbols of authority as exams,
t h e y m, u s t in stead be
" burlesqued" in a war that e•ams
are not used as a restraint, but as
an aid to learning. Mr. Dayan is
opposed to teachers merely
spouting out information and not
inspiring their students to pursue
subjects out of their interest.
''I feel that the policy that
she's (Ms. Abelson) taken is
apinst the current feeling among
the students," Mr. Dayan said.
The ve,.Y idea of anyone being
excluded from College A ignores
the philosophy the College was
founded on, he felt.
Ms. Abelson, coordinator of
• • C o 11 e g e A , S e 1f a n d
Community," has abolished the
p r j n c i p re 0 f s t u d e n t
self-evaluation that was in practice
Ia l yt• r, wrule insuring student
participation in the community .
Such programs as teaching
handicapped children and the
development of methods of
teaching reading are being carried
over from last year's program.
Enrollment at the College has
Storms out
been limited from 700 sl udents
The original aim o f College A last year to about 250 this year.
was to explore the possibilities of The controversy has stirred bitter
education minus authority . Such feelin~ between Ms. Abelson and
innovations, as the removal of a Mr. Dayan. He has had the
final exam, however, provided an support of College A staff
atmosphere that was judged to members David Newman , John
have more anarchy than freedom . Daley and Fred Klingenberg.

A Colleliate Assembly meetina
ended abruptly Wednesday when
the new bead of Colleae A, Bambi
Abelson, walked out of the
meet1n1. '
Her sudden exit came after
questionswereraisedconceminsa
petition calling for the recognition
of Stanley Dayan as a College A
staff member. It also demanded a
public justification from Ms.
Abelson for her new policy at the
CoUege.
Ms. Abelson, who assumed full
· ¢0ftttpl over Colleae A afte( tlte
·resignation o f Fred Snell, ia
aimina to make the CoUeae
..non-political" while st ill
pro vi d i n 1 a. s ti m u I a t in 1
educational experience.
T he que s I ion of t be
appointmept of Mr. Dayan was
brou&amp;ht up when he stated it was
clear he hid never resigned from
the Collep. He spoke of various
antaaonizina conversations with
Ms. Abelson over t he summer and
arsued over the new policies of
the College which he terms as
beinaa " tight ship" and iporhaa
the historical fact of the freedom
on which the College was
founded.
"There is a systematic attempt
to keep out radical 'runking in
that College," Roger Cook said in
defense of Mr. Dayan . "There is a
real purge of left-wing thought in
that College."

EVERYMAN'S
BOOK

STORE

by Jeff Greenwlld

SP«tn~m

only a two-week test period is incredible. ·Cited u
" proof'' of thia failure were bottlenecks in the lots
and ••staclta of Jette,. protestina open parkin&amp;."

St•fl writtr

Students aenerally don't win many battles on
this campus. Often, in fact, we .aren't even called
into action. So when exceptions to this

Unfai{rmew
Whit the letters actually complained of,
time-honored rule arise, even seemin&amp;ly minor however, accordina to Ian DeWaal, Student
exceptions, it's time for jubilation. We may even Association president, was the · lack of enforcement
foraet past differences and salute the reasonableness of parkin&amp; regulations rather than the open parkin&amp; '
of those responsible.
system itself.
.
Open parking was considered by most to be one.
If ordinary enforcement procedures were being
of those vjctories. It had
conducted, such as ticketins !lf\d towin~ cars when
been debated for 'montha, necessary, perhaps then a fair review of the parkin&amp;
agreed upon, delayed,
situation could have been done.
debated again, and finally,
Mr. Hunt also commented that, "rt's a good
this past summer, put into
effect. Sure, it was just an thing we voted this way l the committee voted 6- 4
.. experiment," but an to abolish open parkin&amp;) because we would have
agreement after so m~ch discussion certainly meant do ne it anyway." It's understood that the Traffic
that it would be ended only if a crisis situation arose. Committee is just an advisory body, but to admit
Open parking was an experiment ; an experiment that action wU.l be ianored or ratified to suit the
durin&amp; tt1e summer.:-A pretty safe experiment for not intentions of this Univelllity's overlords, does
much of a crisis could arise when no one is here to nothina but completely destroy any credibility
use the parking lots. So, the experiment continued University-wide committees could ever jlave.
into the fall, when a "real" crisis could occur.
Ronald Stein, committee member, explainina
his vote to end o pen parking, •commented that be
Saving situation
was voting "as his constituency" would wish.
Yeah, it is kind of hard finding a parking space, Presumably , most members voted as they did for
but there's "always room in t he Main-Baily Jot." similar reasons. While no objection can be 'found
And since students were always told that when with this principle, further examination is deservina.
complaints were made in the past, surely that's aood
enouah for faculty, staff and administration. Besides, ~bsurd equity
they've still got a couple of lots to themselyes.
The committee consists of three students
To save the day, however (for faculty staff and representing a constitu~ncy of approximately 25,000
administration, anyway), a crisis did arise. Attica students. The eight other memberi represent a
could be called a "crisis situation." Of course, it is population of no more than 5000 members of the
stretchinl the idea ·a bit, but whe.n you need a crisis, faculty, staff·, administration and any others not yet
mentioned.
you aren't choosy.
Whatever the rationale, aU you die-hard cynics
Such voting "equities" would turn the Supreme
were righ.t and open parking will soon be no more. Court. green . Perhaps "one:man, one vote" is not
The students have lost again, and once again, it entirely appropriate for all procedures, but. this
seems that though seemingly playing thi.s time (there situation is nothing short of absurd .
was student representation on the Traffic Control
This latest tum of events, merely reaffums a
Advisory Committee), they were in fact , merely growing suspicion among most students.
being played with .
Negotiations with this administration are a sham Tb~ c omments of Robert Hunt, Traffic
students are involved , if at aU, only to the extent
Committee chairman and director of Environmental they are desired . The likelihood is that only years
Health and Safety deserve a public explanation, and a complete cbanae of personnel will dent the
though their real meanings are not at aU difficult to granit-Uke stubbomess of President Ketter &amp; Co. to
explain. To say, "open parking is a failure ," after admit the student body into the human race.
~

News

Analysis

inc.
SAVE MONEV! VOU.LL

Literature,Sociology
Poetry .Ecology
Crafts.Art ,Fiction:
Tarot .Posters.et c.
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STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE WAIVERS
NOW AVAILABLE AT:

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OFFICE OF STUDENT AFFAIRS - 201 Harriman

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ALL RECOGNIZED S. A. CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS :

• STUDENT ASSOCIATION OFFICE - 205 Norton
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BUDGET HEARINGS WILL
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�... -

StUdent Association stipends inpreased
.
•

by BarlNtra Malmet
Sp«:frllm Staff Writer

people .., For the major remaining part of
the meeting, the size of these stipe11uls was
hotly debated.

The exec utive committee of the
Undergraduate Student Association met Theater of the absurd
last Wednesday night, ostel')sibly to discuss
a . p rep a red
It was a scene out of the Theater of the
agenda with 11 Absurd, with opinions, occasional facts,
items. All began and a lot of curses flung back anli forth
according to the between executive committee members of
o r d e r J y the SA - the 's tudent representative
parliamentary government. A motion was brough1t up to
procedure used at equalize the stipends of aJl the offic,ers and
such meetings., However, with the onset of coordinators that constitut 4 ~ the
the second order of business, that of committee, as stipends had alread)V been
paying Student Association of the State established of unequal distribution
University (SASU) dues, the business-like according to responsibilities·of the 'various
calf!\ was destroyed.
positions.
The issue of stipends allotted to the
All the justifications for the stipends
executive committee members was the were s p~culated upon as we1re the
focus .of the next 2~ hours, which motivations for assuming executive
somehow all began with SASU dues.
positions. As we e~ist in a capitalistic
Stipends, according to Keith Frankel, society, one member astutely not1ed, are
l':lational Affairs Coordinator, are "based people not inspired to seek the office of
on the philosophy that students involved)n the presidency because it has a sti~~nd of
SA have no time to hold . down part-time $1250?!
jobs and therefore the stipends subsidize
On the other hand (the one tipping the

News
Analysis

one

till), each office has certain inescapable
duties wh.ich must be ·attended to anll some
positions happen to have more apparent
duties - therefore these positiods desel'Ve
more money.

could be obtained through community
donations. Several members of CAC
persevered through two very long hours,
waiting for their tum on fhe agenda, only
to hear th.is basic request for funds denied,
and th.is denied immediately after the
'Compromise~ raise?
executive coiTU11fttee' increased their own
The idealistic solution of equalizing the stipends. Could th.is possibly be the
stipends fell by the wayside as motion committee whose purpose was to tab care '
upon motion, with accompanying of student priorities, Iini.Dg their own
discussion and debate, failed to pass. pockets at the blatant expense of student
However, the last motion increasing needs?
stipends managed to gain Jhe necessary ~
Under the guise of . parody, of circus
majority. It now seems that the stipends antics and fools' games, the executive
for tlie coordinators, originally set at $500, commHtee managed to increase their
have been raised to a ••compromise" of salaries. This measure which is part of a
$700. As part of the deal, the original total budget must be approved by the
$1250 stipend for the president's office Student Assembly - which at the moinei\t
was reduced to a meager $1000 (remernber is nonexistent. If and when the Assembly
all that responsibility!) and to round things gets together and passes ·the budget as
out the treasurer's stipend, for all his work stated, the committee members must wait
signing vouchers, remains at $1000.
uotil the national price-wage freeze is over.
In reality, what occurred during the Thus; ' the cold hard cash of the new
budget meeting was that money which was · increase is in the future. As it presently
earnestly requested by Compmnity Action
stands, the stqdents are being tcrewed by
Corps (CAC) was denied ; on the premise their "concerned" Student Assbciation
that aiJ the furnishing~...f&lt;~o;.;.r.;S;.;u;;.;n;;sh~i.;.;.ne;..;.H;.;;o;,;;;u;;se;..._e_x_e,.;,
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thing that

gone

98¢ in 1950.

?8¢ in 1971.

CHRIS

WINWOOD

CAPALDI

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Wednesday, October 6th, 1 P.M.-Kieinhans Music Hall
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Tickett 011 tole now at luffolo Feotivo! Ticket Office, Stotler•Hilto,. Lobby ·
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slncel950.
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1f'you're interested in something
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Stationery, Variety and College
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ST·EVE

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835--3636

Open7days•-*

132..U1Z

~

llcitPAti
~UA HUT PETE

OPEN SUN. - THURS. 11 ~a.m. -- 12~00 Midnite
FRI. &amp; SAT. 11:30a.m. -1:30 a.m.
I

Page four, T.he Spectrum . .Fri~y, Sep~rtlb~r 24, ~971

1400 NIAGARA FALLS BlVO.
OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 7. 71
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i3Z....1Z

�' .
of Binghamton, has been named to review
Jackson is convinced that he wu "set up"
grounding of all military and civilian
current eflduate propams and- make aircraft over China fot three days last w.eek
to be JdUed because or' his status u a
recommendations·for the future:
and the abrupt "inaccessability" of Premier symbol of prison·revohltion.
UNITED NATlONS, N.Y. -The United Chou Bn-lai Tuesday to foreign visitors.
Nations opened its 26th Annual General · White House Press Secretary Ronald
ATTICA, N.Y. - The estimated damage
Ziegler said: " We have no information u to
Asseqtbly this week, and the big problem
to Attica Correctional Facility, according
SAN RAFAEL, CAUF. - Superior facing the metnbe~ once again is whether
what is happening there. It ia not unusual
to a well-informed source in the
Court Judge Richard E. Amason granted to seat one or two Chinas. The U.S. is
that we don't."
Rockefeller administration is more than S3
,t he request of RucheU Magee, charged with advocating th~ admission of Communist
the murder of Marin County Superior China, but is in'listing that NationaJist
· SAN RAFAEL, CAUF. - The final
million . Meanwhile , the union
Judge Harold J. Haley, to have the judge's China be allowed to retain its aeat . Final autopsy report on ..Soledad Brother"
representative from the state's 8000 prison
body exhumed. Haley, killed in a shootout decision on this issue wUl not b~ made George Jackson shows that he was shot in
workers said Wednesday that the worken
at the Marin County Civic Center during an before mid.Qctober. The second big ' the back, and not the head, as had been
previously reported. The report, coming • would lock all convicts in their cells Oct. 7
escape att"mpt by Magee and two other problem facing the member nations is a
from the office of Marine County Coroner
San Quentin prisonen, wu a hostage in the successor to Secretary GeneraJ U Thant.
unless Gov . Rockefeller implementa
attempt, which led to the deaths of four Thant wants to resign at the end of his
Donovan Cooke one month after the Black
immediate penal reforms. Jerry Wurf,
revolutionary was killed while att~mpting
people. Magee hopes to show that~ second five-year term which expires Dec.
president of the parent union, claimed that
was killed by police b~cident~ 31.
to escape from San Quentin Prison, said :
the prisons are equipped with "World War
"BaJlistlcs consultation confirms that ,the
which occurred Aug. 7, 1970.
n vintage .equipment" for putting down
HONG KONG - Diplomatic contacts in entry would was made in the middle back
riots. Wup also wants training in riot
and the exit at the top of the-skull." Some conditions for the guards, as wen as
ALBANY, N.Y. - Ernest ~Boyer, Peking say that there are indications there
chancellor of the State Uplversity, is a crisis brewing in Communist China, but
prison officiaJs have conceded that if the
"training in legitimate rehabilitation
report is true, it would be "almost
, announced Tuesday the imposition of a Chinese embassies say that the reports in
programs." At Attica, numerous changes
impossible" for the shots to have been
moratorium on expansion of graduate foreign newspapers that Chairman Mao
have taken place in order to restore an air
programs. Noting that these prognlms are Tse-tung is ill are all lies. Unusual events fired from a 20-foot guard tower, as
of normality to the prison. These changes
specialized and costly, Boyer said that no cited by the sources include: cancellation originally reported. Warden Louis Nelson
include proces$ing mail with priority to
-new master's or doctoral programs would of the traditionaJ National Day parade and
says, however, that the path of the bullet
lega l mail , issuing. toilet _articles,
be approved, except in unusual or raJly in Peking Oct . 1; the absence of any was possible since Jackson was hit in the around-the-clock medicaJ service and the
compelling circumstances. A speciaJ major military leaders from public view ankle and could have been falling when the institution of three meals a -day starting
committee, headed by Dr. Norman Canton since early this month; the aJleged second bullet hit him. The family of Sept. 20.
Editor's note: Roundup is a compendium
of news stories drawn {rom intert111.fional,
national and city ·news. Us purpose is to
keep students aware of events ouuide the
school.
•

Hear, 0 Israel

Elections scheduled

for gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

Inter-Residence Council's elections will be held
today for House Council officen and IRC
representatives.
Votina will be from 11 a.m. - 7 p .m . in ~e
Clement, Goodyear and Tower lobbies and the
Allenhurst Bus Loun e.

875-4265

Face it. "Be s-paNd" i.tlri't j1.111t foe Boy Scoute. If you re.ally c.re
about your life and hem, you'U take precautions to prevent AD
ac:ddeotal preaoaoc:y. By r.llli"- a eondom. One ol today'a new
eoodoma .•. 80 hiJhly reliable yet 80 exquisitely ~tive that you
DO l~er have to -.crifiee pleuure foe ufety.
WtrrJ-fne auf Yttl
So why nm the rilk ol acd.deotal prepaney? Eapeclally now that

GUSTAV DOES IT!!!!
..~and for only 8 cents

you cao ret famoul·brand eondoma privately-by mail-from Popu-

t.tioa Plan.afDr ~- The 11 top branct. we olfer have been
carefully Mlectecl from the_.. than 100 available today. All ant
elec:t.rGaically teated and m•t riprous FDA ataDdards.
from -a.. FetheriUe from ~land, tblDDaat and most U ·
citia( to u., with "Seoaitol" lubricatioa for atn anjoymant. Or the
NuFOIDl, aiAio from Ebalabd. pre-ebaped foe a unique new M~~Mtioo.
Or the lamoua Trojan. Or the well·bown and popular Sult.n. And
many more.
Flit leiiWrJ IIIIIJ W ••••
Di8covw our fut, Jow~t \MrYice by lllldiDa' juet t6 (or a delu1e
aamplw .,.ck ot 18 ._11ed c:oncJom.-3 each of 6 cWrereot branda,
iocl~ the FedwrUte and the NuForm-plua AD illuatnted broduue deec~ our complete Mlectioo. Or aed jult $1 and •et
3 ~ braoda: 2 Fetherlit• and 1 NuForm, plua the brochure.
All orden are Ailed the aame day received and MOt ia a plain s-ck·

L..~_M~~.~~~eUPted_:_~-~~=: ______ J

I ,_...... ,._... Alatcfata
I 111111r111c.._...
I c........ II.C. 2711'
1 JlttiM rvslt mt 111 plain packqt:
Dtlult
PICk o1 11 •
I o
sOrted cOIIdcns plus broc:hllrt, $5.
I D 2 fttlltftttes, I ft.lfonn, plus
1 li"ocllurt, $1.

'*"'"'

'

I

I tiiCIOM PIYII*It ill full. If not
dtli&amp;llttcl1 I fflllf rftlltn tltlilstd
pcriiCII GJ anMr ftt futl refund.

lddreu
clf1

-.--

C

lip

./

cc-sl
I
(pl ..... l&gt;tlftl) I
I
1
stati 1
j &lt;}1 I
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0 f'IIISt' IMd frtt ntu~trated brochure I
Cllty, wftllaut MJ atllitatfDIIMiatlftr.

~--r-~~-----------~------~

835-6300

c.M-porory

Uv~N!.

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1 enclose $S I 1 mo~~er Otder r I cht&lt;'
( 1 ctill - i&lt;\d htvt fill•~ out ""' cou~

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0111 "'1 1..1 PttiOCI bt(., IMonlhl - -v\')

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NOtmol no. of d•r• btl""" •\;, I ol ••••'"
... tiOCII• - )
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All to ftt l rHt year
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If ~OV """'"· ttll "' ,,;~ Of diYI
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oo. dlltiftl 1111 ll "''ftlhl
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b•lwtotl

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SHOP ARMY IIAVY
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...

$2.05,10tb
99¢,5th
$1.00, 5th
$1.99, ~ gal.

-----.,!t'lft~~-~----..
RIUNITE
LAMBRUSCO $2.25, 5th

MOGAN DAVlD WINES

$1.41 Set

$2.69, 5th
, $1.00, 5th

••

SPECIAL STUDENT OFFER
---MR. BOSTON--PREPARED COCKTAILS

LIMIT

•

Expires
9/ 28171

(Bring this ad and you pay

TWO PER
STUDENT

I•

UNDER

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1.29

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f .

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REG
$1.50

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835-6300

CHILLED WINES

450 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD. (Next to S &amp; E Wholesale)

I
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LANCER'S ROSE
FRENCH WINES
BOONES APPLE
SPANADA

MATEUS ROSE
ZAPPLE

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IRlS &amp; THINGS- M-' Styles f• Y•• .......

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o.~~t- SU9 ttl H•tlon•' ......
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SALE

WASHINGIO• SU.ItLUS Cllnlll

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K&lt;...-Kf, opplot&lt;l lp YOUR niiUft l boely thfl~ m.
1110*0 1'00 to plaol olll ICII•IIIU In lldVJnCt.
101 leu Ulan ~ t ....,,~. ""' loroctol olull
lo oo vfol1llon of ttlia....., btlloll.
' ACT HOWl fo &amp;tl YOOf ne•l 12 -ffoly
Ultnda&lt;t i&lt;\d c _ .tlt dlllill, sttld $5 (lOIII
&lt;ott f01 1 rur) and e..,plttld

ln•tltuto

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You nl 12 l'tUOHAlll(O Mltlll•&amp;llt -·~"
ultndan. n o~~llchttn c YOUR dno of mcnotr••

a.ooa.

I
_

STRAWBERRY HILL
BALI HAl
RICHARD'S APPLE WINE
SPANISH WINES

$1.00, 5th
$2.25, ~Gal.
99¢,5th
88¢,5th

YAGO SANT' GRIA $1.59, 5~
79¢. 5th

RIPPLE
~

KOSHER WINES
R£At, SANGRIA

I
-

..

99¢ SET
$1.69, Qt.

I. LOVE. YOU. 39 ¢,10th
WINES 75¢ , 5th

BESSI CHIANTI
- STRAW BOTTLE- I $1 .79, Qt.

J •

PROOF OF AGE REQUlRED FRO~ ALJ:-

ALL STUDENTS BRING YOUR I.D.

Friday, September 24, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page five
J

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r

CAUTION - NO AUTOMATIC

•

P,urt verdict

INSURANCE COVERAGE

If you did not make p~~yment to the local
representative of the insurance comp~~ny-

Medina innocent of murder

YOU ARE
NOT INSURED

DEADUNE - EnroUment will not be accepted after Sept. 30,
1971.

by Lynne Traege!.,
Off-Compur, f:dltor

DETAILS AND ENROLLME~T FORMS -available at: Health
· Senic:es Office, Michael Hall, or caU 853~31.

•

•

Feel Rite
Health Food Shoppe
1451 Hertel Ave.

(Corner Norwalk)

837-7661

low! low! Prices •
Natural Vitamins
,DANNON YOGURT

.

WBKW and Belkin Productions present:

GRAND
FUNK

••

Lai. The sovernment had
c),ntended that Medina was
rejponsible for the. deaths of the
Vietnamese because he failed to
prevent his troops from killing
them. J f M edina had been
convicted of this manslaughter
charge he would have received a
maximum penalty of three years.

The court · martial of Capt.
Ernest Medina ended Wednesday
afternoon with a verdict of
innocent for the 35-year old
pr ofessio nal soldjer The
five-officer jury took 57 minutes
to reach the verdict, which clears
Medina of all crimes including the Legitimate means?
Howard 's reduction of the
murder of a Vietnamese woman
he admitted s h ooting in charges left Medina facing only
one murder charge - that of
self-defense.
Medina was originally on trial killin~ a Vietnamese woman
for the killing of I 02 people, but outside the village of My Lai.
tl\at sentence was reduced to Medina also faced two counts of
involuntary' manslaughter last assault, which were based on his
Friday by trial judge Col. Kennety firing two shots over the heads of
Howard. Howa rd ruled the a VietCong prisoner. It was up, to 1
reduction since, he said, there was the jury to decide if shooting over
no evidence that Medina llad tile head o( a prisoner is a
joined in the killings, or that he legitimate means of questioning,
had enoouraged his troops to and they so decided.
Another count of murder
slaughter the Vietnamese at My
against Medina was dismissed
when Gene Oliver of Fort
$ 1. 75 3 p.m. Lauderdale, Fla. testified that he
shot and killed a small boy on his
6:30p.m.
own initiative, without the orders
of Capt. Medina.
Defense attorneys, headed by
famed lawyer F. Lee Bailey, were
certain that Medina would be
cleared of aU charges, and they
proved to be right. Bailey

EARLY DillER

RAILROAD
Buffalo Memorial Auditorium
Friday, Oc:·. 8, at 8:30 P,M.

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE
IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE
NO.POOL - NO NONSENSE!
UPSTATE CYCLE INS

All S~ats R~urv~d : Front Floor, Golds and Rt'ds 16.50
Rear Floor and Blues . $5.50 Greys and Oranges . $4.50
Tlckets on sale now ot lwffalo festival Tldlot Offko, Stotlw·HIItotl
LMbJ ("'all orders accoplecl wltll staMpo~ aeff.actclro~ OIIYet...,;
U. l . t4orton Hall, Slate Colle. . Ttckot Office, luoclroJ &amp; Del a lroolllwoJ
Store.

We've moved to:
4275 Delaware Avenue

J.j

call 694-3100
''A• Your Broker About Us"

admitted he 1' had some concern
about t~e assa.ult charge" because
of the way tl\e judge worded the
charge, but he was convinced that
his client would be acquitted.
Quick decision
The decision, coming quickly
as opposed to the 13-day
deliberation in the court-martial
of Lt. WiUiam Calley, was read by
the president of the court , Col.
William Proctor : "Capt. Emest L.
Medina, it is my duty as president
of this court to adVise you that
the court In closed session, and
upon secret written ballot, has
found you not guilty of all
specifications and charges."
Medina , upon leaving the
courtroom ' with his wife, Barbara,
said, " I'm extremely happy, I just
don't know what e1se to say. I
always llad absolute faith in the
military and in the military justice , ••
system and 1 always thought my
actions would be exonerated."
Mrs. Medina broke into tears upon
hearing the verdict, although she
was convinced that her husband
would be found tnnocent.
The Montrose, Colo. soldier,
although elated over tile verdict,
still intends to go through with his
plans to qutt the Army.
Convinced that tile trial has
ruined his military career, Medina
said, "J don't know exactly when
I'IJ be able to leave ... but that is
my intention."

r:----·&amp;ible Trutlr---~I

I
GOD'S LOV.E REVEALED
1 "Fot God so loved the \lf'ottd,
th1t He pve His only beaotten Son,
I thll whosoever beUeveth In him
I should not perish, but hive

1everlastlnallre. ••

Analyzing the reading habits of these people,
Mrs. Wood devised a method of reading based on
these principles. She developed and applied her
system for 12 years with the help of psychologists in
her local school district. Finally, she demonstrated
her course successfully for th~e years at the
University of Utah.
Silent reading
Students in the reading dynamic~ course learn to
read down a page rather than acro~s it allowing the
words to register directly in the mind rather than
being vocalized on the lips. Most people, Mrs. Wood
says, arc taught to read aloud when they first
encounter the reading experience in ~hool. Because
of this, most people are sub-vocc~Jizers, inwardly
~ounding each word they read.
With the hand acting as c1 pacer for the printed
material, the student is taught to dvoid the
vocali1ation process as he reads the lines on a page
baclward!&gt; and forwards. Following these
technique!&gt;, exceptional students have achieved
speeds in excess of 25,000 words per minute without
sacrificing comprehension.

I he Evely Wood method often teaches students
to increase their comprehension also. Students Jearn
to see the whole rather than parts of it. They learn
to steep themselves in the book's total mood and
meaning. Reading at such rapid rates they need not
stumble over single words, details, or even chapters,
but absorb all the material as if it were a work of art
ra ther than an agglomeration of chapters.
Better understanding
The eyes of an average reader will regress eight
to 11 times per 100 words. Evelyn Wood students
Jearn to avoid this by making a series of circular
sweeps down a page. These readers tend to be less
susceptible to eye fatigue and drowsiness because
they avoid repetition of material.
Students also learn to improve their memory
and to organize a book before reading it. Textbooks
are outlined by the dynamic readers and long novels
are first skimmed to get the characters straight. The
result is better understanding of the material at a
speed many times faster than possible by old
fashioned reading methods.
Reprinted from The Spectrum

OCT.2, 1970

ATTEND A FREE MINI- LESSON

\ _

OF THE MOST ADVANCED READING PROGRAM AVAILABLE
TODAY AT 4:30, 7:00 or 9:00p.m.
TOMORRO.~. SEPTEMBER 25 at

11:00 a.m_ or 1 :00 p.m.

AT
3606 MAtN STREET
(Next to Buffalo Textbook)

READ FASTER
'

RETAIN MORE.

EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
I

.
Page six . The Spectrum . Fri~y, September 24, 1971

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L------------ John 3:16

EXPAND YOUR "'CONSCIOUSNESS
Graduates of a school which is once again
offering its only course to State University of
Buffalo students can read many books to speeds of
over 2000 words per minute with nearly total
comprehensioQ. The school, The Evelyn Wood
Reading Dynamics Institute, guarantees its students
that they will at least triple their reading index or
their tuition will be refunded.
The "reading dynamics" concept originated
nearly 25-years-ago at the University of Utah. Evelyn
Wood, a graduate student at the University,
submitted a term paper to one of her professors.
Watching in astonishment, Mrs. Wood saw her
teacher read her 80 page theme in minutes, without
missing a detail. His reading speed was about 6000
words per minute.
Mrs. Wood undertook a two year search and
found 50 other prodigies who cou ld duplicate the
professor's results. They came from all walk!i of life
including housewives and one shepherd, but shared
certain characteristics: they read down the page
rather than from left to right and they read groups
of words or complete thoughts rather than a word or
two at a time.

1
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�I

The parking f~asco

Once-again, the incredibly overcrowded parking lots are
the subject of controversy. As if ~ontrolled by some mystical
force, the scenario has become progressively more absurd. In
years past we have simply had tQ contend with not having
places to park. Now, thanks to Robert Hunt's questionable
interpretation of a State University of New York Board of
Trustees ruling, we may have to pay $20 annually to obtain
the privilege of finding a full parking lot. This unfortunately
is but one of the current crop of ludicrou's and one-sided
proposals.
The simple fact is that the Traffic Control Advisory
Board was loaded against the students from the beginning.
There are ~ight faculty, staff and administration
representatives on the committee. while there are only three
students. Since the eight represent a constituency of possibly
5000 cars and the students vehicle population of 25,000,
the end result should have been clear long ago: If we are
supposedly a university community, then why such blatant
inequality?
~.
In their benevol~nce, tfle committee agreed to
experiment with open parking lots. For the entire summerand the firSt two weeks of the fall semester, this noble
experiment continued. Suddenly, the experiment is over,
with the faculty and staff having finally gotten a taste of the
short end of the institutional stick. We do not believe that
the summer is a viable experimental period and tltlerefore ten
school days is simply not enough time to determine whether
or not open parking is feasible.
Further, the enforcement of prohibitions on out-of-lane
parking within the open lots has been virtually non-existent.
This we betieve has seriously hampered the experiment and
we must wonder whether this lax enforcement was purely
coincidental.
The committee was terribly concerned with the faculty
members who must commute to Ridge Lea or to their
clinical responsibilities. What about the students who share
this same problem? Don't they matter?
Another piece of logic always heard in justifying the
aptly titled segregated lots is that if faculty members cannot
find parking spaces they will not be able to meet their
classes. What about the students? After all, their education is
the reason that the classes are being given.
We find ourselves unable to· accept either piece of elitist
dogma. A student should have as much right to a parking
spot as any other member of this University .
The worst part of this cruel charade is that the
committee has once again avoided considering the basic
question of more parking areas. They are a necessity and
ignoring this problem will not solve it.
Finally a word on Mr. Hunt's parking fees. To be
thinking of taxing students further while doing nothing to
help and much to harm their parking possibilities is
unconscionable. We therefore must urge that the
Administration view the committee's action with the same
skepticism that we do and take immediate steps 'lo insure a
fair and' unbiased investigation into the abysmal parking
conditions.

a

THE SpECTf\UM
Friday, September 24, 1971

Vol. 22, No. 14

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Co-Managing Editor - AI Benson
Co-M.naging Editor - Mike Lippmann
Asst. Mllnaging Editor - Susan Moss
Bull.,_ Manager - Jim Drucker
Advertising Manager - Sue Mellentine
Campus ....... . . ,k&gt;-Ann Armao
......... . . . ... . Bill Vacarro
Asst .. ...........Howie Kurtz
City .. . .. ... .. .. ... ... Vacant
Copy .. • .... . ... Ronnl Forman
. . . • . . . . . . . . . . • . Marty Gatti
Asst . .. . .. . .... . .... . Vacant
Fa.ture . .. ...... . . . • Jan Doane
Gfaphic Arts . ... . .... Tom Toles
Lit. &amp; Drama .. Michael Silverblatt

Layout .. .. . . . Maryhope Runyon
Asst . .. ... . . ... . .. .. . .vacant
Music . . ....... . ... Billy Altman
Off..Cempus .... . . Lynne Traeger
Asst . .... .. ...... . ... Vacant
Photo . .. . . . ... . .David G. Smith
Asst . .......... . . Gary Friend
Asst.. .. . . . Mickey Osterreicher
Sports . . . .. ........ Berry Rubin
Asst . .. . ........ . Howie Faiwl

Th11 Spectrum is servied by United Press International, College Press
Service, the Los Angeles Free Pr~m. the Los Angeles Time Syndicate, end
Liberation News Service.

Republication of matter herein without the expr~m consent of the
Editor·in..Chlef is forbidden.
Editorial policy is determllled by the Editor-in-Chief.

'

' It's the best we c::an do just now, General - believe me, we're pushing hard for the draft law,
but .. .'

S~dent participation
To the Editor:

the committee could be made available to me as
soon as it was available. At the time, both of my
requests were agreeable to your office.
What then, was the meaning of your letter and
the statements made by your staff if Dr. Welch has
asked students to comment on draft proposals? This
is not , by any means, meaningful student

-

It has recently come to my attention, the
Faculty Senate Executive Committe~ has formed
one or more committees to deal with Academic
Integrity. I cannot understand why these committees
have been formed without meaningful student
repruentation. Dr. Claude . Welch's Commjttee, ~presentation.
which I understand is composing n.ales and
It is doubtful the work of Dr. Welch's
regulations for cases involving academic dishonesty committee concerning student behavior will be
by students, has disregarded the request for student acceptable to the student body if there has been no
representation on his committee.
meaningful student input. A meeting with you and
I can only conclude from Dr. Welch's actions, Dr. Welch in the near future would help to clear up
that the Faculty Senate Executive Committee has this matter and avoid future misundentandings.
withdrawn its invitation for student participation on
Lester Goldstein
committees that are relevant to the interest of the Academic Affairs Coordinator
student body. When the Student Association
Student Association
received your letter this summer announcing plans to
formulate th e Committee on Academic Integrity , I Editor's note: The above letter was originally sent to
caUed your office asking if student appointments to Dr. William Baumei, Faculty Senate vice chairman,
the committee could be made and if the charge to by Mr . Goldstein.

Guest Opiriion
by John Greenwood

s~gle

Vice President for Ex/Crnol Affairs. GSA

Young people have' recently been given their
legitimate right in a democr.atic society, the right to
select the people who will decide the fate of their
governmental systems, both local and national.
However, in practice, this is turning into a cruel
mockery. The very persons whom the society is
expending such great resources to educate, the ones
considered to be developing the skills and knowledge
which will allow them to provide the greatest input
into th~ political system, are being svstemically
deprived of that input.
The practice o f refusing to allow students to
register in the area in which they spend virtually all
of their time, in which they will remain from four to
seven years, indicates that the granting of the right
to vote was given only on the condition that it not
be used . The issue has and will continue to be
debated at great length, however, there can be no
do~bt
that students as a group are being
systematically discriminate against.
The registration of students involve the use of
criteria that are never used for other citizens and are
strongly reminiscent o f the attempts to deprive other
minority groups of their voting rights. The absurd
situation in which a student is refused th e right to
register while his working wife is registered without
question, points out the cruel arbitrariness of these
practices.
While the h oax is serious enough for
undergraduates, the refusal of suffrage to graduate
students is intolerable.. To begin with , almost
without exception, they are over 2 I, and fully
emancipated. Sixty percent of them are married.
often with children. The fact that completion of
their degree will require a minimum of four years for
a doctorate and usually much longer, refutes the
notion that they are a transient population. When
statistics show that the upward mobile, middle-class
executive spends not more than five years in a
particular locality on the average, it is clear that a.
double st andard is in operation.
_, Furthermore, the idea that graduate students,
especially with children , are uninvolved and
uninterested in local issues such as education and
taxation is ludicrous. While it is true that a majority
ol (but not aU) graduate and professional students
do not own their own homes, there is no reason to

them out for deprivation o f voting rights.
Buffalo has a relatively high proportion of
self-owned homes, but there is still over 35% of
Buffalo's families who do not own their residences.
We are fa ced with a situation which, if unresolved ,
will merely confirm the opinions of the young that
any attempt to work within the present
governmental system is a waste of time.
The Graduate Student Association is convinced
that this disiJJusionment is not necessary and is
determined to use all of its resources to try to insure
that the legitimate rights of graduate students are
protected. To this end, we are gathering evidence
relating to actual cases of discrimination in voter
registration of graduate students. There is a certainty
of making sure that graduate students do not lose
their rights due to confusion or lack of information.
We are instituting procedures of advisement to deal
with individual cases, many of which can be resolved
without the necessity of court action. Moreover, the
GSA will serve as a clearing house for information
about how students should register, when they
should register and where they should register .
Since they must register in their districts now
that general registration is over, it is important that
each person becomes aware of which district he or
she is in. Time is also crucial since the last chance to
register for the fall elections and for the national
primaries next year is the three-day period of Sept.
30, Oct. I and 2.
For these reasons, t he GSA requests all persons
who have tried ;1nd were denied the right to register,
to contact the GSA in 205 Norton Union
(831·5 505 ). AJI persons who need clarification of
registration procedures should also contact the
officers of the GSA. Further information will appear
as the registration days approach but some individual
cases may require special assistance. ln any event the
primary goal of the GSA is NOT to develop a
power-bloc in order to take over local government.
Even if it was possible to convince a majority of
students to vote as a bloc (which is impossible), we,
as a student government, are not in the business of
partisan politics. The GSA is merely trying, as all
governments should, to serve the needs of its
constituents and to protect their rights. The right to
participate in the government of our community 'is
the bulwark of the dem~ratic system and we intend
to make sure that this system remain intacJ and that
graduate students remain individually involved in it.

Friday, September 24, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

.-

�•

act ton Ltn€

Ig~~~f~~~.; !~=-.~~:.;::;:;;~:00.~~

'------------------------~-

parldiJtg had failed since it had ooly been in
opel'lftion during the summer and two weeks into the
the Uniwnity buruucNql In coofJfrrztion with th~ Office of StUdent curreJlt aemester. According to Mr. DeWaal, "(Mr.)
Alf•in •nd Services, The Spectrum sponson Action UM, 11 wedly ... Hunt pulled up thtee file folders full of letters

'
·,

IMH, problem? Need help? Do yotA /lnd It lmpouible to uniW""t

ruder 1ervice column. 'I'hTough Action LJne lndlvidwl students Ctllf"pt.
answm to puzrling qut8tlons, /lnd otAt where and why Unitlenity
decisions are made and gtt IICtion where che1np u needed.
Just die~l 831·5000 or llisit the Action Line booth In the Center
Lounge in Norton He~llfor lndlvldlUII attention. The Office of Student
AlftliTI and &amp;rncu will lntJUiifllllt 11/1 q.usllons and compllpnts and
will answer them ind/llidually. The name of thl Jndlvld~M~l originating
the inquiry u kept confidenti41 under t1/l clrcumstanctl. The more
common que.tions will be answered fn thll column et~ch week.
Q : Will the repatration in llllllai'Y. be the aame u It wu this
semester? By thill mean, will we be able'to rePter ahead ef time!

A: The Office of Admissions and Records tells us that final plans
for the spring registration are not yet complete. However, tentative
plans are for students to pick up packets before they leave for
Christmas vacation and to mail the forms in before they return.
A~missions and Records will ·then process the cards while the students
ate gone. Of course, there will be several days for students to reJister in
person, if they so desire. Hpwever, these plans are tentative and Action
Une will publish the definite plan when it becomes available.
Q : What happens if l1et sick without bavlnl the Health Insurance?
It seems pretty expensive to me.
A: To answer the past pact of the question first, the price of the
policy is set by the insuranc;e carrier rather than the school. The
University no longer even acts as a collection agency. The; expense
seems to be minimal, however, if you consider that the ;mnual cost is
just about half of what you would spend for one day's stay in the
average hospital. What happens if you don't have insurance is that you
or your parents will have to pay your own medical bills. As Dr.
Hoffman of the University Health Services notes: " The program is
designed to supplement our Stud ent Health Services on campus and is a
fuU 12 month prograiJI ... we have observed many students incur large
medical bills which can be financially disastrous if not covered by
insurance. In these days of high and rising medical costs, no one can
afford to be without· health insurance coverage." For th.is reason , we
urge you to take out the insurance.
Q : J am a student from outside of Erie County - how can I
reli5ter to vote?
A: A student who comes from outside of Erie County and whose
primary purpose for living in Buffalo is to attend school, must register
to vote in the county o f his or her permanent residence. However, if
the student now permanently resides in Buffalo or Erie Coun ty and can
prove tttis by providing the Board of Elections with some form of
identification (a driver's license would be best), he or she can register in
Erie County . The Board of Elections has· a list of local registration
points and will provide that information on request. The next
registration days are Sept. 30, Oct. I and Oct. 2.

'

~,

.

..

No enforcement
Howev~r. Mr. DeWaal said that he explained at
the meeting that most of those letters criticized not
o~n parking in general but the lack of enforcement
~"'

by security personnel. He said that there have been
many instanc_Fs of cars blocking the lots. As a result,
other cars have been 'caught in a massjve bottleneck
at many lots.
~~ccording to Mr. DeWaal and Mr. Miller, the
past ltwo weeks have been a case of "open parking
with lnO enforcement." What those opposed to open
parki1~g did claim was that the failure of this system
"prOV'e d" that open parking failed. Thus the
comnlittee approved the m otion to return to
segrel!:&amp;ied lots with enforcement.
Plroponents of open parking felt that this was
"absurd" as n~ffort was made to see whether
enfor4:ed open parking wouJd work.
Mr. Hunt countered these arguments saying that
there was a "fear 'expressed by the faculty and staff"
over jgetting parking spaces. He said that they had
felt ~~ntitled to the old segregated lot system
" because of the nature of their work." He also
explained that those "transient faculty and staff,"
those who commute back and forth to different
Unive1rsity facilities, such as Ridge Lea or the Meyer
Memo,rial Hospital facilities were especially hard
pressed .
Claimu discounted
However, he appeared to discount equally
ptessing claims by students hampered by similar

Q : What can we do about the dogs running loose all over the
campus?
A,: I'm glad that you used the term ..we," because this is where the
pro Jem''lies·.'·TJUs is a problem of the entire community and o ne that
o nly everyone ::students and faculty alilce. can solve. No one is against
having a pet. But it seems logical that pets sh ould stay at home, or be
properly leashed and trained , if they must be brought to school. Local
and state Jaws forbid dogs and other pets in restaurants and common
sense would dictate that this is a good rule for sanitation . So, if you
must bring yo ur dog on the campus, keep it o ut of Norton Hall and
dining facilities. It seems strange that people who are so
pollution-cOnscious and so ecologically involved see little wrong with
dop figJ\ting , urinating and defecating in Norton Hall . So, the problem
returns from whence it came. It is up to all students and faculty to
insist that pets be kept within certain boundaries. It is a problem of the
••we" and only when we are brave enough to tell people who abuse
their pets to stop, will the problem be solved.

Pa91 eight . The Spectrum . Friday., September 24, J 971

"seemed to be decided already because Bob Hunt
seems to make all the decisions before he goes to the
meetings."
Mr. DeWaal added that after the motion to
abolish open parking was passed, Mr. Hunt said, "It's
a good thing we voted this way because it would
have been done anyway." To this, Mr. DeWaal
rep1ied to him: "With an attitude Jike that, it's a
good thing we have this committee," after which he
walked out of the meeting.
Mr. Miller expressed his ag{eement with MI-.
DeWaal. Those members opposed to oP,tn Plllking
''were more concerned with their own self parking
than the rest of the University," he remarked.
Among the other motions passed at the meeting
was a statement by the · committee stating their
opposition to parking fees if the money used wasn't
returned to the State University of Buffalo for use
for campus traffic problems. Another motion stating
that, should fees be instituted, the State University
Qf Buffalo would have control over the money
collected ~so passed .
Defeated was a motion to install parking meters
at the Main Circle pa.rking lot and the Hayes Road
Parking area. Instead a motion was passed
re-instituting the half·hour parking signs in those
areas. Crltics of the parking meter motion said that
there would be no enforcement and that the meters
would get snowed under due to the normally heavy
Buffalo winters.
•
Another motion to cut the Diefendorf Jot in
half and institute timed parking was defeated.
•
Instead, m otions to make the Lockwood and Capen
lots timed were passed.

.
II§J~m~mtm-.rmrmgrmrm
.------•------•

Q : How ,toes one use the teJepbones on campus?
A: If you are not on the campus and wish to call an office at the
University, d ial 83 1 and the four digits of the office you are dialing. If
you are on the Main St. campus and are dialing an office o n that
campus, j ust dial the four digits. If you are calling an office on 1he
Ridge Lea campus from the Main St. campus, dial .. 7"' and the fo ur
digits . .If you are calling from Ridge Lea to the Main St. ca mpus, again
dial "7" and the four digits. The above instructions are for use when
you are using the house telephones or phones in the offices. From any
of the telephone booths, you must dial831 and the four digits.
Q : J will be graduating in May. Does the University do anything to
help me find a job?
A: The University has a Placement Office in Hayes C. This office
exists to help you in your future career. It has much to offer and you
should investigate it. But there are several things which you can do fo r
youmelf. First of all, you should, in your four ye;trs h ere, get to know
at least several professors well enough to have them be able to write
letters of recommendation for yo u. It is amazing tfow many students go
through four years of college without ever really getting to know a
teacher or to have the teacher know them. A second and very
important thing that you can do is to establish a file for you rself at the
Placement Office. The Placement Office has a procedure for this and all
you have to do is to go to that o ffice and ftll out the forms. A folder
will be established for you and it may prove to be invaluable to you in
the · futurp. The people at Placement wUJ be happy to give yo u the
details of what this folder should contain: We might note also that this
office is the place to check out possible jobs. It has lists of employers
who will be on campus to ·interview, along with lists of possible jobs.
Essentially, however, the task will be up to you to get your own job.
The University, through its Placement Office, will give you some
valuable tips and considerable aid. It is, to be sure, a tough job market
right now. But again, anyone who uses the full facilities of the
University and his native ingenuity will be able to get a job.

I

.

apinlat open parking.

'1'he whole scene reminded me of the theater of
the absurd," 'said Mr. DeWaal of the ge~eral
atmosphere of the meeting Tuesday. He sharply
criticized Mr. Hunt, claiming that all the proposals

3588 MAIN STREET
ACROSS FROM U.B.

HEY GRAD. STUDENTS
YoUI say they won't let
you vote? The GSA is
woriking to insure your
right to vote, but can't
help' unless you tell us.
Cor1tact the Graduate
St1udent Assoc.
immediately if you were
stopped from registering.
215 Norton Union

or call
5505,.9:00 - 5:00

~-··

Whole Eart h Catalog; Local Catalog; Pipes, Papers, Clothes,
Arts &amp; ~rafts, Bells, used clothes, Books, candles, shirts,
dresses, Jewelry, posters, tarot cards, mobiles, records, snuff,
purses, leathers, blacklights, insense and lo ts more.

1458 Hertel Ave.

8384483

Goody Two Shoes
IOU TIGUE

SALE

S(JCJ,O
jEANS
CORDS
SHIRTS FOR THE CHICS'
jACKETS LITTLE BEAVERS 638 MAIN STREET

••

GRADUATE STUDENT
All d'epartments are supposed to elect senaton and alternates to the Graduate
S1tudent Association Senate by the 30th of September.
If your departmental club or some other group of students in your department •
hliS not instituted election procedures, please contact the GSA at 215 Norton, or call
E:Kt. 5505.

•'·---··---··---··---··--111111!11•·---··---··-

�.. #

Grid star at Syracuse

...

Bartette recallS.UBfOotball
JJy Barry Rubin

Now at Syracuse after
transferring last January, Barlett~
considers his transfer a big break,
~d remarked: "It has to be a
good break for me since· I've
always wanted to play at
Syracuse . There's better
competition with more
recognitio~ for the player."

Sport:r Editor

Football, long an
intercollegiate sport at Buffalo,
was• ended last January. Many
observers were interested in the
financial aspects of the program,
but what of the players. One
player, a freshman at the time,
was Bob Barlette, rated tJhe best Bulls' frosb
of a trio of promising freshman
Barlctt e wa s an honored
member of last season's 4-0
offensive backs.
Barlette, now at Syracuse Buffalo freshman squad and
Unive'rsity, recalled the decision undoubtedly impressed Syracuse
to end. football . Bob said : "We when he scored three touchdowns
were on vacation and we didn't to beat them 43- 13 on Rotary
have any inkling of the decision. Field. Barlette said of tJhe Bulls'
It was a total surprise." Barlette, frosh : "They were great, I hated
faced with the loss of football , to leave them because they were
decided to transfer to Syracuse, a one hell of a team and Coach Vin
scho9l which had sought him Keough was just great to play
during his glamour high school for ."
days in Dunkirk, N.Y.
Socially, Barlette feels more at

•

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COMING - SUNDAY - Oct. 10th &amp; MONDAY - Oct. 11th
WOODY HERMAN
3297 BAILEY AVE.

\

home a'- Siyracuse. Bob explained:
"It's hard lo say, but it seems that
the peophl are nicer at Syracuse.
Everyone gets along here - at
Bu.ffalo, many disliked the
football players. j' Academ.ically,
Barlette, an accounting major,
finds the ifOing somewhat rougher
at Syra&lt;:use. Bob remarked:
"When l came to Syracuse last
semester, ~PY index dropped from
3.0 at UB t!o 2.0 at SU."
Football-wise, Barlette
admitted to problems in adjusting
~o the Orange system. "It took me
all spring nod summer practice to
get used t~) the
system. It's more
I
complicated here and the players
are bigger,, tougher and quicker.
It's like ni,ght and day." Barlette
even noticl~s a differen~ in team
morale at Syracu~e and indicated: '
'The spirit is great here. Everyone
gets up fo1r the games - at U8 it
seemed like the varsity stopped
caring after losing their first few
,games. The1spirit here was like the
spirit the UB frosh had."

IIIEIIIAII
Plllll. CAl
III.AIII
1O&amp;Si Sheridan Drive

Spcciullrlng in Volkswagen ,
1'rhiumph. Volv&lt;l. M&lt;; , Austin
Htlull!y, Tu·yuta, Datsun a nd mur&lt;l.
H77 9303
1\sk fur Yuck' u

834·3773

Bob a.rt.n. (23) in IICtion for the
Bilby Bulls last -.on in a geme
against the Syracu• froth.

Bar/ette
Barlette was disappointed with
the opening Syracuse (20- 20) tie
with Wisconsin aryd explained;
"We made a lot of mistakes. Our
offensive line dido 't really give its
best. The season is long and 1 look
at Penn State and Pittsburgh as
our biggest contenders for the
l.amb~t trophy." •
As for the future, the 5- 9,
180-pound Barlcttc admitted :
"I'd like to gain I 5 pounds and
some more experience and take a
shot at the pros. Or else I'll go

into business - who knows, I
might even get hurt. •• Despite his
9.6 speed in the 100-yard dash,
Barlette has seen limited action as
Syracuse has utilized its power
running attack rather than its
speed attack. Bob also said: "I
read something that said I can't
block, but I can and I know that
I 'U see more action in future
games. ·• Football may have just
ended at Buffalo, but a promising
career appears to have only just
b egun for Bob Barlette at
Syracu~.

SALE on top • of a SALE at
•

THE
BILLBOARD'S TOP 25

4.98 LIST

28 7

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5.98 LIST

Record RUnner

I

34 7

ENTIRE CLASSICAL CATALOGUE

p
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2.98 LIST]9

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5.98 LIST

38 7

6.98 LIST

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SALE thru Saturday BREAK A BUYING HABIT!
ft0 1
•
It's too late for someone else's pan1c
•••
the chance ~as there ...
finally you have a record store

•

--UNDERGROUND, PIRATE LP'S
'

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S,OOO JAZZ RECORDS

-CATALOGUE CLASSICAL DISCS

837-2322

51 Vniversity Pl11Za
(old Yum-Yum tree store)

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F:riday, ~P.~Jilber; 24,.l971 ,. Tpe Spectrw'Jl . Page niAe .

-

�0

l~-9rci o£

Nickei Theater ·auditions

ua~

The Student 'Jbuter Guild
open auditions for UJ tkd neater
Produc:Uon. The audltJona will be held today, from 7-10 p.m. in Room
of Norton
HaD.
Nickel Theater il a c:oUectioa of on~t playa and ac:enee from lo
worb which
will be performed oar the cad o f October, Thil year '• prodocUon fea rea playa ~
Albee, Arnbal, Pioter, Terrence McNally and loUnald amona othen.
P~ple intereetecl ia actina, ltlte·work and d eeian are welcome. Yo u will be asked
to read aqmenta from the playa; no advance preparation il nec:eaaary. nil year Nickel
Theater wW feature a _Jar,e c:ut , so If you are interested, pleaae come and audition.

IUFPAlO FUTIVAl IH.-.t•

ISlEY BROS.
with

~

CHI-LITES

Sunday, September 26, 8:30P.M.
KLEINHANS MUSIC .HAlL
All 1crnu

J&amp;

rcut'11ed: Main rtoor $5.40, J4.50-&gt;Balcoll)l 14.50, •4.00

H...........

Tldel'l .., aole ,... ot ...,_,. fealtvol Tidlet Office, Stet...· HII- l.W.y
(Moil O&lt;cle,. OUOiiHetl witlt ~ ..
...vlope); U.a, ._.,_
Htolh S:lo Cel.... Tldet Offfce; A'""•r &amp; Dol' t lroo4we, S....,

~

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liii«W• •M---I:ZYO:W.I

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CONCERT

( ...help a struggling
underground newspaper).

PAPER SUN
RESSURECTION

UNDERCURRENT BENEFIT
$1 .00 donation
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 7 :30 p.m .
FILLMORE ROOM - NORTON HALL

r

- ----

---- - --- ~

)!"

by Dan Caputi
TaJ k about inauspicious debuts, an o penina week slate o f 4 - 8 - 1
left the Wizard dazed and senseless. What used to be a crystaJ ball is
lying over in the comer. I'm afraid one more week like t hat one wiU
find the wizard wit h a one-way Greyhound bus ticket to Bayonne.
Mfnne~ota 27, Chicago /0: Brutal Vikings have new clutch receiver
in Grim. Together with defense they apcU defeat for Bears.
Oakhlnd 34, San Diego I 3: Raiders are too aood a football team to
contin ue losing. They should be fired up after tongue las}ling from AI
Davis.
Dallas 37, Philadelphia 17: Eagles' defense no match for aweso me
Cowboy firepower.
·
Washington 24, New York GianlS 14 : George Allen has stirred up
some life in the previously dormant Redskin defense.
Los Angeles 20, Atlanta 17: Falcons flying hlgb after 49'er upset
last w~k but Rams s hould find t heir winnina ways again.
St. Louis 23, New York Jets 10: Woodall must improve 200% over
last week's performance for Jets to have a chance.
Miami 30, Buffalo 27: Neither team very strong on defense, but
youthful Bill! make mistakes.
Detroit 28, New England 14 : lions should devour Pats, who
played way over t heir heads last week .
Cincinnati 2 I . Pittsburgh 1 7: Virgil Carter continues to perform
miracles. Bradshaw fantastic in pre-6eason, yet suffered four
interceptions in first regular season prn·e.
Baltimore 28, Cle11eland 24: Nelsen's knees could go at any time.
Colts showed surprisingly strong runnlna pme against Jets.
&amp;In Fran cisco 34, New Orleans 3: Manning gets his baptism as
proud 49 'ers strike back after unexpected defeat.
Kansas City 3 / , Houston 10: Oilers can't decide who is
quarterback . Chiefs' sjzz.ling after upset loss.
Grun Bay 20, Den11er 16 : Game could go ·either way as Pack and
Broncos are hlghly unpredictable.
College Football
by Barry Rubin

WITH
JERRY RAVEN
AND
MICKEY LEONARD
ASIA

...

Pro t:OC:tbeU

----------.

Schu:Hme~lerl SLi Cfut

· Membership
meeting
Monday 7:30

Fillmore Room
Information
r
-Refreshments
-Movie: Downhill Racer

f
I

Auburn 27, Tennessee 23: The Tiaers, behind Pat Sullivan arc
hunsry for So utheastern honors.
Penn State 38, Iowa I 3: Paterno's Lions are on the prowl with
sprinter Lydell Mitchell burning the opposition .
Miclligan 20, UCLA 17: The Bruins remain winless, while
Schembechler's Wolverines move upward in the polls.
Arkansas 31 , Tulsa 14: The Razorbacks haven 't been too sharp
thus far but Tulsa presents few problems.
Texas 41, Texas Tech 12 : The potent Longhorns are merely
playing o ut the season as a warmup for revenge in the Cotton Bowl.
Nebraska 24 , Texas A&amp;M 13: The Huskers are up there with the
best , but the Aggies won't go do wn without a fight .
Nurthwatem 21. Syracuu 17: The Orange had troubk with
Wisconsin , whlle Northwestern has learned football lessons at the hands
of Michlgan and Notre Dame.
·
Missuun 24, SMU 6: The Mustangs just don't have the o ffense this
year, while Missouri seeks to replace several key players.
USC 36. 11/inois 0 : Illinois' Bob Blackman fresh from Dartmout h is
getting an education in the arena o f bigtime football .
Nntre Dame 41. Purdue 7: Ara 's new quarterback duo s hould have
little tro uble with the rebuilding Boilermakers.
Co/nrtrdo 20. OhiO State 17: J may be crazy . but the Buffaloes are
too hot to pass up after tmpressive wins over LSU and Wyoming.
Bn.stnn College 21, Na11y 13: The Middiesare stiUsearchingforan
able field general but could upset the overrated Eagles.
Grorf{ia .11, Glemso11 6 : The Bulldogs appear to be o ne of the
South 's most imp r~ssive squads in the earl y going.
Grargta Trcll 33, Amry 9: Cahill's Cadets an in for a long fall ,
while the Yellowjackets come off of an impressive win at Michigan
State.

Butler
Volkswagen ~

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DON'T ROT THIS WINTER IN BUFFALO!

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: JOIN SCHUSSMEISTERS SKi CLUB AND BE PART OF THE ALPINE CULTURE.

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WH Y BUY FROM US?
1.)
Instant Service-no appointment needed at our
facto ry t rained service center.
2.)
We have 85 new V.W.'s, plus 80 assorted used
cars. All100% Guranteed &amp; immediate delivery.
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LEARN TO SKI!

Page ten . The Spectrum. Friday, September 24, 1971

ooaa

•

1200 Main Street, off Baker - Downtown
Telephone 885-9300 Buffalo

�WAH TID

FOR SALE
DUAL 1219, DVM PAS·3X, Flther
BSR turntllbll, Rob«ts rec:etWJ,
Elec:trovolc:e speakers, thr.. months
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' power emps, AR 4X's, Mcintosh 65
1964 MALIBU p o - V-8, v.g. cond., tun«, University speek...s, IRNIIstlc;
old. Was 1340. Now 8240. Flfm.
\OW mi . Cell efter e p .m . 132...771.
amp, Merantz 23 tuner, Th&lt;Jrens · M5·1031.
turntAble, English components, DVM
1966 CORVAIR- brlnd new bltt«y, A·25's, 1963 Karm111n Ghlll, stove,
1969 TRIUMPH Trophy 250.
snow tires. Nwdl some bOdlf work, 1963 SUb, Altec: A7 ·500 II, llf. .
Exc:pllent c:ondltlon, 4000 miles.
1150 or best offer. 837-4672 aft« 4 , a-t, 833·.7210.
" 815-0606.
p.m.
REFRIGERATORS , stoves and
'16 PHVMOUTH Fury II . Herd top.
'65 VALIANT standard, economy. WISherS, Rec:ondltlonecl, delivered end
II'IOW tires, 4 doors, c:rNmpuff, a600.
transportation, fOOd condition, 1295. guerantMd. DI.G Appliances. 844 . Call 831·2NO.
call 137·2394 or 131·3131, VIc:.
Sycamore, TX4-3183.
-------------'--SUNBEAM Alpine 1966, INvlnt
MUST SELL - Plymouth 1962 ~ PO ASCHE 1959 coupe. Excellent
country. Must sell. Excellent
lnstMCted September 1971 + a sat of condition. 741-3921.
mecnanlc:al condition. 1590 or best
1971 snow tyres. 1110. Cell 111-4491
offer. 816·3812.
SMITH.CO~ONA
Clipper
typewriter,
after5 p .m • .
135 1 EXA (G«man) somm camera,
GALAXIE 500, 1964 autometlc:, 219,
1971 MUSTANG MACH I 351 CID 1201 Elgin Shoc:kmater wristwatch,
power st-Ing, 2-cloor hardtop, 1350.
115.
Cell
5262
or
INve
note,
Box
3
Call 832..0588.
engine, 5600 miles. Call after 5:00
Diefendorf.
894-7792.
FREE - 4 longhalred l&lt;lttl(ls, 2 white
m.~las, 2 females 1 black and 1
1969 MGB. Good condition. Must sail. DATSUN, 1969, 2000 Sports, 135-hp,
S·apeed,
low
miiNge.
Must
sail.
white. Available Immediately. Call
832·1613 after 5 p .m.
877·5501 between 6-8 p .m.
855..0123.
1967 vw Squareback. Excellent
1962 RAMBLER - runs good. Chup.
c;ondl~lon, radials, AM·FM stereo radio.
LNvlng for Europe, must sell. David,
134·5312.
832..0241.
MAMIVA - C-33 twin lens reflex,
80mm lens, lnterchangNble lenses;
GUSTAV A, FRISCH, INC.
Porroflex finder, c:ase, pistol grip, 220
Blck. Excellent, 1200, flexible.
Jewel• - Optician
627·9067.

41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University Plaza)

STUDENT to elllst prof-.01''1 family
with housework and blby~ttlng
pert-time, Delawer-'"«rv ere1.
113·1192.
\
START 82 per hour salary, plus bonus.
Work 4-e p .m . weekdays. 11)-2 p.m.
Saturdays. Call 135"·3803 or TF-.o402.
USED PIANO -nted for praetlc:e
pur~. Call 114-8201 -nlngs. Will
off« reasonable price.
HOME for lovlble kitten who's elrNdy
had necessary Shots. Cllll37-3757.
SET OF metric: wrench• or sockets.
691-9112.

APARTMENTS WANTED
APARTMENT needed II soon IS
possi ble nNr campus. call Cathy,
831·3483. we need help!

LOST a FOUND
FOUND• Gold, 101peed Sc:hwlnn
blc:yc:le . Sup ply nec:esurv
IQentlflc:atlon, Information and It •s
yours. Contact Campus Secuflty, 196
Wlnspe.r . .
&lt;4F YOU picked a puppy It Norton
TuiiSday around noon, 14th, brown,
white feet, freckles, please call
881..0334, 8111, Deb.

REFRIGERATOR, dining room table
1nd c:helrs, dresser, double mattr•s,
full set golf c:lubs, c1rt, bag, etc:.
RNsonable. 882·6122.

BUFFALO, N.V. 14226

APARTMENT FOR RENT

1968 MERCURY red convertible,
power steering, V·8, Excellent
c:Qndltlon. $1400 or best offer. Must
sell. 675-6119, 822·8758.

.,.,
lflj,.,.,;

GEORGE HAMILTON • SUE LYO

ROOMS 2 minutes from
Breakfast facilities, $75.
conservative men . 834·53,12.

campus.
Straight

3-4 bedroom furnlshe&lt;J IPirt~ent,
good location, rent or sh1re, 896·8344.

K.ARMANN GHIA set up for road
rallies. L.ow mileage - radial tires, F·M
8 ·tr1ck stereo. Many many more
extras. Cheap. 831-4046. Ask for
Gregg.

ROOMMATES WANTED
GAV GRAD . has 1partment to share
with gay or straight student. Near
Oelevan-Grlder. Rent and utilities 1vg .
$50/.month . Bob, 897· 1667 after five
or weekend .

FLATTOP c:lasslc; guitars.
Ne-used. Martin, G ibson, Guild,
Gurian, etc. Musicians prices. String
Shoppe, 524 Ontario. 7 p .m.-9 p.m.
dally . S•turday, no o n - S p.m .
874..0120.

PRIVATE room In apartment.
F ive-minute walk from Ridge Lea.
Price negotiable. Eves. 837· 1237.

GIBSON B -15 folk guitar, $90.
Eplphone 12-strlng e lectric guitar .
Make offer. Stelle 834-5637, evenings.

ACROSS from campus Wlnspear Ave.,
own bedroom, c:ompietely furnished,
$60/month. All utilities Included,
837..0509.

TRIUMPH 1970 TR6, AM·FM tldlo
wire wh. .ls, 15,000 miles, $2600. Call
837-1202.

APARTMENT to Shiite, with .Yw
s tudent. Rent •nd utlll$1es avg .
$50/mo. Oelevan-Grlder area. Bob,
8'7·1667, after five or weekend.

GARAGE sale: furniture, tools, books,
a ppll4nces - at 100 Ev•ns St.,
Williamsville, Sunday .

RIDE BOARD

1962 PEUGEOT - good condition veoy low mileage, $200. Call Jackie,
· 837· 1136 5-8 p.m.

RIDE needed to UB M- W- F from
Cottonwood vicinity of Wllll1msv111e.

PIRIONAL
NEED Pv brOthlf". RIHtl PI Lambdl
Tau. Tabfe ln Plfker Hafl, 11 1.m .-1
p.m.
Sl NQERS 1nd Instrumentalists
lnt«ested In forming • tfoup to ling
and play north«n aaroeue mutle , .....
aactt, Schuetz, Buxtehude), . . . _
eontac:t Bart Jones at 131-5231 or
135-6739.
PART·TIME employment
•-ate
pay for school term
153-8109• .-3 p .m .

abOVe
work.

COME ON join The Spectrum
Ca mpus Steff. Cell 131-4113 or c:ome
to 355 a nd - Jo-Ann.
PI LAMBDA TAU provideS an active
' social and academic: life to ell students.
Clll 693-4472.

MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING, experienced, nNr u.a. 1.40
per paga. 834·3370. Fait sarvlc:e.
c • H JONES Professlon•l typing
servlc:e computerized IBM
equipment plus our experience give
best po ssi b le presentltlons of
dlssert1t1ons, •thesis, term pilpers ,
resumes a nd employment appllc:etlon
lett.ers. Located between two
c:empuses. Very reasonable. Call
837.(;558.
BEAUTIFUL kitten needs a home.
Pleese call Tom, 833·5854.
MEXICAN FOOD TACOS burritos
enchiladas, tamllles and more. Tt!f our
popullir Tippy's steak sandwich. Also
serving chicken 1nd s..food. While
you're there, enJoy • brew. Tippy's
Taco House, 2351 Sherldiln Drive.
(Across from Putt·Putt Golf course)
838·3900.
GUSTAV Is back! Xerox anything
(books, notes) for only $.08 4 copy
(the cheapest r~te we know In
Buffalo). Come up and see GustilY at
355 Norton Hall. No lines, no forms,
no waiting.
IF YOU'RE reading this, you know
that Spectrum clanlfleds work . For
t~tes and lnform1tlon, come up to
Room 3'5 Norton Hall, 9-5 Monday
thru Friday.
QUICK, efficient typing done - $.40
per page. IBM Selectric. 838-4808.

"HOME DECORATING AND REPAIRS"
-REAsONABLE COSTSDECORATING A NEW HOME OR FOR THE HOLIDAYS? CALL
FORMER PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEER FOR - PAPERHANGING,
PANELLING. PAINTING. D~YWALL REPAIRING, FLOORS TILED.
GUTTERS CLEANED. ETC .

•

LEN OR BILL

u

THE UUAB FINE ARTS FILM COMMITTEE PRESENTS

After 6 call 881.0141

CHECKPOINT

u

FOREIGN CAR SALES &amp; SERVICE
BACK TO SCHOOL

u

u

A

A

SAVINGS ON All1971
SAAB'S &amp; BMW'S

,

FRIDAY,SAT\JRDAY; &amp; SUNDAY
CONFERENCE THEATRE- NORTON HALL

SAVE10%5URCHARGE
SAVE EXCfSE TAX
(refunded when,
......
... ,. "

B

by COfttNIII.)

SAVE on low pre-Aus;-1,6 ~
AMr.tio-nO--.

$25 off your pu~ Wfm this ed

~~;:·

TICKETS AT NORTON TICKET
OFFICE
,

&amp;s••

AOOSBO

836-203.3
.

Friday, September. 24, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven
#

..

c

I

t t

-

�Backpage
Rugby Club will now hold football practice on
Hillel will hold a S~ath Service on Friday at 8
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 5:45 p.m. at p.m. at the Hillel Ho4se. An Oneg Shabbat will
- follow.
1760 Millersport Highway (new campus).
A Study Group in "Torah With Commentarits"
will be held at Rabbi Hoffman's home at 12 Colton
Drive every Saturday at 4 p.m. A reading knowledge
of Hebrew will be helpful. The class is being arranged
especially for those living in the Hertel area. For
further information call 8364540.

• All students enrolled in College B keyboard
courses 201 and 3431 please contact the College B
office, ext. 5294 at MacDo.nald Hall, Room 101 .
~nnouncements

The College of Mathematical Sciences is
All graduate students are reminded to elect accepting course proposals for spring 1972. Please
senators and alternates to the GSA Senate by Sept. send proposals to the College of Mathematical
Sciences, Room 35, 4:244 Ridge Lea.
30.

A "Break-the-Fast'' supper has been arranged by
Hillel with the Univcr~lty Food Service. It will be
served in the Tow~r Dining Room on Wednesday,
Sept. 29 at 7:30 p.m. All students interested in
attending must make reservations with Food Service
at their office.

.
the Social Science

Yoga Club will meet every Friday at Clark Gym
The office of
Program
basement from 7 8 :30 p.m. First meeting is Sept. announces that t~eir office has been moved to 4230
24. For further information call Shanti after 8:30 Ridge lea, Room 6. All MS in Social Science should
p.m. at 835-2999.
either stop in or call within the next few weel..s. Dr.
Milton Plesur's- offic•e hours are on Monday and
India Student's Association will show an Indian· Wednesday from ~:30 a.m. 1 p.m., call 831-1814.
Environmental Action needs able volunteers for
film Padosan on Sept. 25 at 7 :30 p.m. in 147
its project. Contact the CAC office at Room 220
Diefendorf. Movie has English subtitles.
The lnternation~~ Club will hold its picnic on Norton Hall or call 831 -3609.
An inner-city Church wants volunteers to tutor
Saturday, Sept. 25. For more information contact
The College of Mathematical Sciences will be the Fore1gn Student Office, Room 202 Townsend and discover arts and crafts. Please contact the CAC
offering tutoring to anyone having difficulty wi\h Hall.
office at Room 220 Norton Hall, 831 -3609 or call
Calculus 141 beginning Sept. 27. The schedule is:
Bruce at 837-2968.
Monday, 2 4 p.m., Diefendorf Annex 18; Tuesday,
The Undergraduate Political Science Association
3- 5 p.m., Diefendorf Annex 8; Wednesday, 3 5 will hold an organizational meetipg this Friday, Sept.
Buffalo State Hospital needs 200 voluntc('rs.
p.m., Die fendorf Annex 27 and Thursday, 2- 4 p.m., 24 at 3:30 p.m. in tlhe Conference Room at 4238 Contact the CAC office at Room 220 Norton Hall,
Diefendorf 5.
Ridge Lea. All majors and non-majors arc urged to 831 -3609 as soon as possible.
attend.
Rugby Club announces a rugby football game
Students for Israel is sponsoring folkdancing on
between Buffalo and Syracuse to be held on Sept. 25
The UB Karate Club will meet Friday, Sept. 24 Saturday, Sept. 25, from 2- 5 p.m. in the Fillmore
at 2 :30 p.m. at 1760 Millersport Highway (new at 7 p.m. in the Women's Gym. New members are Room. Instruction for beginning dancers.
campus) .
invited.

-·

What's Happening

Saturday" Sept. 25

Friday, Sept. 24

3:00 7:30 p.m. • film, Experimental Film Festival
at th1e Studio Arena Theater.
8 :30 p.m. - concert, Quicksilver Messinger Service 11 a.m. -- audition, UB Jazz Band. At Baird Recital
and james Cotton Blues Band at Klelnhanns.
Hall, we're- looking for horns, brass, guitar, ivory
3:00 &amp; 7:30 p.m. - film, From Hand Cranked to
and bass.
Hand Held, Bruce Powers Film Festivdl at the 3:00 &amp; 7:30p.m. - film : The Milky Way, see Sept.
24
Studio Arena Theater. An Experimental Film
Retrospective. Also being shown on Sept. 25
and 26.
Sunday, Sept. 26
3:00 &amp; 7:30 p.m. - film, The Milky Way, tickets at
Norton Box Office one-half hour before 8:30 p.rn. - concert, Isley Brothers and the
performance.
Chi-Lites at Kleinhans.
7:00- 10:00 p.m. - audition, actors and actresses 8:30 p.m.
exhibition, Balkan Dance in the
needed for nine short plays at Nickel Theater by
Fillmore Room in Norton.
Student Theater Guild, Room 340 Norton.
1:00 p.m.
football, Miami vs. the Bills at War
8:30 &amp; II :30
film, The Guns of Navorone, with
Memorial Stadium.
Gregory Peck, David Niven and Anthony Quinn. All day exhibition, Festival of Grapes Art Show in
Dorm Residents only - in Goodyear cafe.
Silver Creek Park.
1:30, 2 :30 &amp; 3:30p.m. - film, Gallery - A View of
Our Time, and public gallery talk at 3 p.IJl. at
the Albright-Knox Art Gallery.

-Sue Weiser

..

Available at the Ticket Office
Studio Arena Theater

•

Through Sept. 25 : Experimental Film Festival
Oct. 7 24: The Gingerbread Lady with Jo Van

Sports Information
Today: Varsity golf vs. Canisius and Gannon at
Audobon, 2 p.m.
Tomorrow : Varsity cross-country vs. Syracuse,
Rochester and Niagara, home opener, Grover
Cleveland golf course, 11 a.m.; the State University
of Buffalo all-boys rugby club will have two home
games against the Pitt rugby club, 1 and 3 p.m. at
the Millersport Highway field behind the band house
at the Amherst campus; Varsity fall baseball at
Monroe C.C. with Brockport.
Sunday: Varsity fall baseball intrasquad game,
Clark Field, 11 a.m.
Roller hockey : The season's second game takes
place Saturday at 10: 15 a.m. in the Jot between
Michael and Capen. In last week's opener three goals
were scored by Jim Drucker while Barry Burt (not
related) Rubin each scored one goal.
There will be a meeting of the student athletic
review board on Tuesday, Sept. 28 in Room 205
Norton Hall. Attendance is compulsory for all
potential voting members.

F~et

Rock and

~olk

Music

Sept. 24: Quicksilver Messenger Service and
James Cotton Blues Band (K)
Oct. 2 : Sha-Na-Na, Paul Butterfield, J. Giels (W)
Oct. 6: Traffic (K)
Oct. 8: Grand Funk Railroad (M)
Oct. 10: The Flying Burrito Brothers and Space
Opera (C)
Oct. 15: Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears (M)
Oct. 23: Davy jones (K)
Oct. 31: Kris Kristofferson (K)
Nov. 3: Melanie (K)
Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
Oct. 16 &amp; 19: Garrick Ohlsson, piano (K)
Key
K - Kleinhans
M - Memorial Auditorium
W- War Memorial Stadium
C - Ciark Gym

\

-

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.~

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                    <text>THE SpECT~UM
Vol. 22, No. 13

Stltte Uniwraity of New York

...

WedMJday. Sll*m'* 22, 18'71

�.

.

·GSA·to hold student senate
elections by new constitution
Operating for the fint time under its new
constitution, the Graduate Student Aaociation is
currently enpged in elections for its student senatt.
Under tenns outlined last sprin&amp;, each paduate
department within the State Univenity of Buffalo
will be represented. Accordin&amp; to the:, new
accreditation procedures, each senator-elect must
have the signatures of fiVe graduate students in his
department proclaiming his or her legitimacy, and in
addition, the si&amp;nature of the departmental
chainnan. This will be done to verify the fiVe student
signatures.
These signatures will then be submitted to the
executive committee of the GSA which will, in tum,
give consideration and ultimate ratification of all
senators-elect. All specifications for senators will also
apply (or senate alternates.
The senate will be woriUng on the full Time
Equivalent System (FTE), as of Oct. 1. Each
department will teceive represenJation on t.he basis
oJ the amount of FTE members it can fulfill. Each
FTE member will have the equivaltnt of 12 credit
hours.
Constitutional chanaes
In this way, both full-time and part·tiqle
graduate students will be represented . This differs

Library sltortoge

History Dept. complai_lls

from lut ye.r's system in that put-time students
were not represented as they did not fulfill the
I 2-credit hour requiremertt. •
All departments having less than 75 FfE units
will be apportioned one aenator, departments with
76- 150 FTB units will receive two senaton, and
those departments with over lSO FTE units will be
allotted the maximwn of three senators.
· The number of students registered in each
department will be based on last year's enrollment
figures, but these are subject to modification with
the new figures.
Accordlng to Mike Nicolau, GSA president : "We
are. not interested in the way each department
chooses its senators just in the legitimacy of the new
senators." John Greenwood, vice president of
External Affairs went on to say that "we hope to
have as wide a range of political affiliations as
possible ; we don't want to be biased one way or the
other." The GSA hopes all graduate departments wiU
keep us infonned o n the progress of senatorial
nominations. uwe are open to all of your questions,..
he concluded.
A tneeting of the student senate is planned for
Oct. 4 in Room 2 1S Norton Hall. All senators
involved will , be legitimate only if they have
complied with the spting rulings.

by Howie Kuru
Am. C.mpeu Editor

The History Deputm~t can
be added to the growing lilt of
critics of the University libraries.
'7hey're poor, and they're setting
worse," one professor commented
indicating the department's
general consensus.
According to William AUen,
professor. of history, the library's
acqu.ismon of books has "fallen
off remarkably - the most bulc
books are not in the library. It hu
gotten to the point where we
suggest our students try the
downtown library first for books
that the University library should
definitely have," he continued.
Dr. Allen also mentioned that the
History Department has fUed
consistent complaints since 1967
about the library's ~sufficient
resources," but that the library
"has continued to go steadily
downhill."

Record co-op may f~e~shutdown

Muslve rip-off
Due to the theft of eiaftt albums Monday afternoon, the record Co-op may be
From another quarter, eight
forced to adopt protective meuures to insure ita su"inl. Sevenl penon• were apotted In librarians recently sent a letter to
the atore placlna recorda into a baa by Co-op penonnel. When lenina. they were asked to University Preaident Robert
return them. This request was ianored and one member of the aroup claimed that the
recorda were already purchased. A request to lee the proof of purchase 1tamp wu alao Ketter, explaining that any
diminution in . library service$ is
d.IJreprded before the aroup ran orr.
Monday'• rip-off highliahted the problem of record thefts and the Co-op was cloled due to an acute shortage of funds .
untU a meetlna of the aU-volunteer staff could be held. Deculioru u to what action should William Baumer, vice-chairman of
be taken will be made at the meetina.
the Faculty Senate, indicated that
Co-op workers explained that they are prohibited by law from " phylk.ally
the
shortage of funds stems from
restralnlna anyone." They are also reluctant to call In Camp111 Security becaute they
the
state
budget freeze, and that
" don't want to aet people busted," Other alternatives Include a no-browlina policy,
restrictinaadmillion to the Co-op to a few people at a time or closina permanently.
administration attempts to
So far this year the Co-op bu been ripped off 14 records and to make up for liberate funds from Albany for
Monday'a loa, 560 albums must be 10ld.
the library have been turned
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
1 . . . . . . . . ..
down. A Senate Committee on
library Resources is expected to
release their recommendations on

"fGRADUATE STUDENTS
••
I

•
•

I

All departments •• supposed to elect senators and altemetM to the Graduate •
Student AISIOciation Senate by the 30th of September.
If your departmental club or some other group of students in your department
has not instituted election procedures, please contact the GSA at 215 Norton, or call
Ext. 5505.
•
•

1•

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~

RAND

...

SAVE MONEY! YOU'LL
NEVER HAVE TO CALL
HOME AGAIN WHEN YOU
SENO YOUR PARENTS A
GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE SPECTRU MII !IIl

,,,,.,,,,, , ,,,,~

the library .lituation sometime
today.
Dr. Allen stresses that because
the History Department 1$ 10
diffuse, accounting for close to
half of the 'boldinp in Lockwood,
the service they receive is an
indication of the library's overall
effectiveness. "Another indication
of the library's defitiencies is the
tremendous demand put on the
inter·library loan," explained Dr.
Allen. "It has resulted in a·massive
rjp-off of aU other libraries in the
country, and we've been getting
static from many of them about
it."
Input dilcourqed
The History Department bas
been sending memoranda to
variout University personnel over
the last five .Y~rs •. J!laking
suggestions abO\lt the ~te Of the
library, but not much positive
action has resulted . One
complaint of Dr. Allen's has been
f
a pi ea .for · more fac~lty
cooperatiorl 'concerning book
acquisiJ,ion. '7he library pretty
much discourages •any faculty
input about book acquisitions,"
he explained. "They prefer· (o
operate as ·an in'dependent
entity.
. ., , .
In addition, history faculty
have to go to the shelves and .dig
their books out themselves. This is
"unheard or· at any other
wliv~rsity library, acco~"i11g to'
Dr. Allen. He attributes the
overall 1jtuation "partly to a lack
of funds and partly to library
inefficiency.,.
i " ~re have even been cases
wl'lere history professors have
gone out and bought their own
books, paying out of their own
pockets, and stocked the library's
shelves with them. 'They had
books which their students had to
read, and they knew the ·library
didn't kave," explained Dr: Allen.
'ithout books you can't teach."
. ,

I

t

.

Ol'E~NING .Gustav

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Ci~tion: 16.000

Page 2. The Spectrum. Wednesday, September 22, 1971

"

�j

Factfuy Senati'PfOPoseS new
r~les for academic dishonesty
BiH VKCarO

C11mpeu EdltOT

A proposed procedural Nle book for cases
involvina student academic dilboneaty has recently
received much c rit icism from student
repraentatives.
,
The controv4;1Sy revolves around the fact tbat
there wu no official student representation in an
ad-hoc comm(ttee which wu empowered by the
Faculty Senat+ to draw up these rules. The Ad·Hoc
CommJttee oe Academic lntepity ia beaded by
former dean of Underaraduate Studies, ~·
Welch.
·
Students who were uked to come fo tile
meetinp in an unofficial capacity have disa-.owed
any input into the reaulatiolll, charlina that their
opinion bad been iporect time and ._.m by
memben of the committee on bulc issues.
Another sore spot hat been the fact that no
rules and resuJationa bave been •t up invol'9ina ca1e1
of faculty dishonesty. "Studentt have no recoune if
they feel they're belna treated unfairly by a faculty
member," Student Allociatton Studcat JliPu
coordiaator Dave Steinwald said.

St-.tsipored
He cited several examples of action~ by hculty
which ltudents can currently do notldnt about.
Amona these are:
- when a teacher orders books for a class and
does not we them, incurrina a financial burden and
annoyance to atudents;
- when a teacher uaes an outdated exam;
- preasurina the schedulina of exams on
reUaioua holidaya;
- when a atudent feela be has been unfairly
marked ;
- when a teacher schedule~&amp; a thr,ee-hour exam,
arrives an bour late, and forces the students to fmish
the exam in the remalnina two hours;
- receivina a bad mark from a teacher after
diaaareeina with rum on some issue involvina the
particular course.
Mr. Steinwald pointed out that he bad only
recently been notified of the existence of a
co mmjtte~ Involved in settina up rules and
procedures iftvolvina r,.culty academic dishonesty.
.. We don't even know the name of the chairman,"
Mr. Steinwald said. In me~tinp h~ noted that Dr.
Welch seemed to show very little concern about it.

hrrt ~

t

hf

Negative attitudes

Surcharge criticiz·e d

and the unJnrsity-wide dean. If the faculty member
receive~&amp; the support \:J1r the other two, be may
impo~e penalties, inclu1:linf an "F" srade for tbe
course in que8tion.
The second titt involvea more serious cases of
academic -hoaeaty in wbich tbe student who is
accuaecl ~ face more aevere ctiaciplinary action,
IUCh u IUI,..oo or eJipullion from tbe University.
In tldl ~. tlae lt~eat muat be tried by an
IMQudklatioa .....
formed within a particular

.uu..

Despite contlary claims by a
Graduate Student Association
official, reaction to the
"unof.ficially" proposed
Boobtore surchar~ appears to be
almost totally neptive.
If such a tax were to go into
effect, students would be assessed
a given ~ount (about 10%) over
the price f the book. This would
cover t e Bookstore's extra
expenses due to late order books.
Only students wishing to purchase
a book ordered late' would have to
pay such a charse.
Mike Nicolau, GSA president,
insists that "of 30 persons
speaking to me about this (the
surcharge), only one has been
·critital." Such a different
consensus has been found by 171e
Spectrum raising the question of
to whom Mr. Nicolau h.u been
talking. Student comments in an
informal survey have ranged from
a relatively mUd, "It's the most
ludicrous plan I've ever heard," to
more critical responses such as
"Mr. Nicolau and other supporters
can take lheir surcharge and shove
it up their c:ollec,ive asses."

Outnae

~Former ..... of Under·

Dr.·Welch

........ Sludiel, Ce.ude
Welch, heeded the
Ad-Hoc Committ• on

·~·

Aaldemic
department. Each faculty would act it up accordina
to its own by-Jaws.
The th.ird tier is knc•wn u the "supreme court."
CaJJed the Universlty-Wit!e Committee on Academic
lntepity, this body o niJf hears appeals by students
to cases involvina them. It would be made up of a
panel c:onsistina of two students and two faculty .
This sroup would have Ito a&amp;Jee on a fifth member
who would serve as chail'man . The panel would have
the power to confirm , l'everse o r modify sanctions
imposed by any other sroups on the other two
levels.
Mr. Newman said that these rules were made so
as to "provide procedures which will give a fair
hearing to both parties. R1aht now there's an
urgency because there am no procedures av11ilable. A
faculty member can assillft a student an "F" grade
without any sense of due process."
However, he noted that these new procedures
may infringe on traditioJual faculty domain as it has
been in the past. Mr. Newman said that some faculty
feel that they should h11ve the ultimate power to
assien penalties to students guilty of academic
dishonesty.

•o.n,m.us precedent'
"They're settlna a danaerous pretedent and I
don't want to be pan of the precedent,'' Mr.
SteinwaJd pointed out in explairuna why he and
other students disavowed any input into the
committee.
Accordina to the pro~ed procedures, there are
three tiers or levels In which faculty members o r
administrators may level penalties on students
accused of academic dishonesty. Tl)ere is also
recourse to appeal on behalf of the accused .student.

Three tiers
The firat tier states that an instructor cannot
arbitrarily impose any penalty on a student on his
own. Under present circumsta nces, a faculty member
can do this. He can impose a penalty only after
consult ina the chairman of the particular department

nt

Any reasoning that the
surcharge would affect a
confrontation between students
and offending faculty came under
similar attack, with many fearing
the consequence of such a
confron t ation .. One person

explained that "lf the book coma
in the middle of Oetober and yoa
have a test the next day, well ..."
Others doubted that a IUffteient
nwnber of students would protest
to be at all effective.
As for the "hope" that feculty
members would reimburse
students qtey thenuetves bad
caused to 4uffer, the word mOlt
frequently mentioned was
"outrageou$."
Stanley T~pleton , Bookstore
study group member, stressed tbat
the proposal "hasn't been fully
considered" and that the group
h.u "not yet come up wjth any
r e c-o m men 4 a ti on s . "
Mr •
Templeton ' did "not care to
comment on what [the study
group) may do." He d.icl,
however, offer that the committee
will "perhaps try not to pass Ethe
surcharge) on to students."
Thomas Moore, Bookstore
manager, feels that "many
mitigating circwnstances in fbc
late ordering of books mw be
coruidered" Jest punishment in
the form of a surcharge, be placed
upon the wrong people, in this
case, students. fie continued: .,t's
such a complex issue, it would be
very diffic:ult to enforce a
surcharge with any equity to all
involved. It's certainly not the
students' fault that boOks are
ordered late, and may not be the
teachers' fault either. It woutdn 't
be fair to charge students for
someone else's error."

Salisbury speaks
Harrilon Salisbury, winner of many journalism
awuds indudJoa th~ PuiJtzer Priu, llDd lllisfant
manaJinJ editor of The New York Times, wi.lspeak
tomorrow nlaht In Norton HaU at 8 p.m .
Sponsored by the Studeat
Auoci8tlon - Graduate Student Aalociadoa'a
Speaker'• Bureau, Mr. Saliabury will address the illue
of U.S.-Red "New Putnera in Action."

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Voters - Ftegister Now!
NOW THAT YOU HAVE AITAINED THE FRANCHISE - UTILIZE IT!
BUFFALO ANI:• NYC STUDENTS - AITENTION!
Residents of NYC &lt;:an now register to vote by absentee ballot.

Applications availabl:e in Center Lounge-Norton,
.

.

I

I

Thursday Sept:.23, Friday Sept.24,

and Mon. thur Wed. Sept• .27~ 29
,

•
BUFFALO RESIDENTS MAY ALSO OBTAIN INFORMATION AT THIS TABLE.

Wednesday, September 22, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page 3

�Support for Attica

Denwnstration in Albany
The Ad Hoc &lt;.;ommHtee to support the demands
of Attiea prisoners called an infonnaJ meeting
Monday, Sept. 20 in Haas Lounge to discuss plans
for tomorrow's demonstration in Albany.
Sponsored by the People's Coalition for Peace
and Justice, the demonstration is a means of showing
that this organization, along with others, stands in
solidarity with the Attica prisoners and supports
their demands, particularly that of amnesty. Another
aim of tomorrow's rally, according to its organizers,
is to indict both Gov. Rockefeller and Vincent
Mancusi , warden of Attica correctional institution,
for murder. Viewing the si tuation objectively, one
spokesman for the Ad Hoc Committee (a· ftnner
inmate o f Attica) stated he was "not sure if there is
enough support o n this campus, or others, to affect
legislation ." He felt , however, that students are the
"only people who care enough about the situation to
accomplish anything.·•
Shows coalition
Other groups participating in the demonstration
include the Buffalo Coalition, BUilD, the Young

Lords and the Black Panthera. Student Association
NationaJ Student Affairs coordinator, Keith Ff3Jlkel,
explained that ..,he demonstration shows, for the·
first time, the coalition between Third World people
and students." All this activity has grown out of a
concern for Attica and the hope that a similar
situation does not arise again.
The People's NeW$ Service, located at a table on
the first Ooor of Norton Union, ~ selling roundtrip
bus tickets to Albany at $10.
It was pointed out that the demonstration
should have been held Saturday. Sept. 25 so as to
allow a greater involvement of working class and
Third World people. Un fortunately, as explained by
committee spokesmen, a previously scheduled rally
in New York City on behalf of An~la Davis made
this impossible and Thursday was decided _upon as
the date.
Mr. Frankel urged all to participate :
"Rockefeller has been condemned for not giving his
time and money to the cause of Attica inmates ... It
is obvious that people should now commit
themselves by taking part in the demonstration."

Education course offered again
The Department of Hiaher Educ.a tion is aaain orferina HED 254 : Critical IIIUesln
Hlaher Education. It is an underaraduate course for those wh o want to leam 110mtthin1
about the nature of universities : bow they developed, what purpoHs they .erve, the
problems they face , and where they are beaded. The course will present an analyM of
hiaher education in these terms and attempt to point toward future dlr~tions.
This semester, II is beina offered Tuesday and Thursday from 10:3 0 a .m. - II :SO
p.m. II will alao be offered at the same time durina the sprina. For more information
contact Robert Berdahl, chairman , Department of Hiaher Education, 16 Foster Annex,
R~ I -4A06.

Former Attica prisoner
tells gf conditions inside
''A .l ot haa been
exasserated . . • oth er thinp
haven't been mentioned at all. But
they're bad, very bad." So
commented Danny WhJt, State
University of Buffalo student, on
existi ng prison co nditions.
Pruently paroled from Attica and
in and out of prison• since 19S9,
Mr. Whit is especially able to
assess such conditions.
In cluded amona th ose
conditions unexauerated and stiU
"very, very bad ," Mr. Whit listed
the poor quality of food, the
su!Htandard medical treatment
and prison guard attitudes and
action . According to him, while
the food is good quality, it is
.. prepared very badly . . .
everythiog is steamed and turns
out flat and unvaried ." He further
charged t hat there is too much
starch, not enou&amp;}l fruit and
vegetables and the pltal is
rationed.
LabeUing medical treatment
for inmates as "terrible,...,.,. Whit
commented that "I've seen many
people in prison - really sick
people
who can't get
treatment." Further he
maintained : "All the inmates hate
the prison doctor . . . His (the
doctor's) attitude is one that
everybody is out to fool him you're not in pain."

Prison complaints

they're sCIRd and the Juards take
full advanta&amp;e of tJds."
Involved in tH'ts is continuaJ
and co nstant harassment. In
addition, Mr. Whit remarked on
tbe injustice of mixina lcids in for
the fint time with "lifers:" "They
are sendJnalittle.heardless boya to
prison with men in for life - the
result is they I the boys) are
literally attacked."
Tryi na to ex plain t his
h o m osexua lity, Mr. Whi t
commented: "When you deprive a
man of normal relations, even of
seeing a woman for I 0·1 S years,
wh~ d o you expect?"
Attica wiU ha ppen again,
according to Mr. Whit, because
"prison authorities d on't want to
chan&amp;e, but the inmates are more
aware." This awarents$ stems
from listening to radios and
readina t h e newspapers :
" Prisonen are more political: they
reaU:u that they are a part of the
whole . . . they reali:u the
condations t h ey live under
shouldn't be ... they reali:u they
don 't have to stand for these
thinas thin" should be
different."
However, Mr. Whit indicated
that it would be quite a while
before things got better. Tiiis is,
he said, because it's hard to get
any strona organization among
most of the inmates: " Inmates
don't want to do anytfiing to
endanger their parole and officials
make prisoners suffer for their
political beliefs."

To illustrate how much the
prisoners dislike the docto r, Mr.
Whit said that the doctor must
remain guarded behind a wire cage
A SURPRISE IS COMING SOON! WATCH THIS
during sick calls. Also. he added
that standard treatment is a,iven..J
,
for a whole series of aliments. For Athc:a aftennath
SPACE FOR FURTHER DEVELOPEMENTSI
example, all skin disease~ are
Also, in the Attica aftermath,
treated with one kind of sulfur prison controls are tighter. Mr.
ointment.
Whit reported : "The prisoners are
guards in everyday life, all locked in their cells, not
Advertisement • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • for..Prison
the most part, try to make setting out at all. The guards state
sure there are no incidents. They that they are not .going to let
don't go around yelling 'niger' at them out unril more and better
people," Mr. Whit explained . facilities are provided to · restrain
However, it is the "overall potlcy them." Such requested facilities
of the prison that these guards are demands for more guns and
Graduates of u school wlud1 is applied her system for I! years total mood und meaning. Reading impiement that make conditions for mounted submachine guns,
once again offering 1ts onl y course with the help of psychologists in at such rap1d rates they need not in the prisons what they are," he Mr. Whit reported .
to State Umversity ot BuffaJo her local school district. Finally. stumble over single words, details said.
Mr
Whit was further
Part of this policy can be seen,
students can read many books to she demonstrated her course or even chapters. but absorb all
pessimistic
about more prisoners
speeds of over 2000 words per successfully for three yeara at the the material as if it were a work of Mr. Whit charged , in the parole in the future : "Living in the areas
minute with nearly total University of Utah .
:trt r:~ther than an agglomeration system - a parole system in which I here crime is heavy), it seems
the percentage of whites paroled
comprehension. The school, The
of chapters.
is substantially higher than Blacks. so impossible to get out ... it's so
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Silent readina
Born and raised in Spanish hard and so depre;ssing - people
lnsitutute. guarantees ib students
Students in the reading Better understanding
Harlem, Mr. wtut is a veteran of give up." However , Mr. Whit feels
that they will at least 1riple their dynamics course learn to read
The eyes of an average readeJ such peni tentiaries as Sing Sing, that he is through with prisons.
reading index or their tuition will down a page rather than ucross it will regress eight to II times per Elmira Refo rmatory, Auburn and The first step for him is his
be refunded .
ullowing the words to register 100 words. Evelyn Wood students Attica . Mr. Whit labelled Elmira involvement wi th a prison
The "reading dynamics'' directly in the mind ra ther than learn to avoid this by making a Reformatory "l he wo~t" as it r e habilitation program for
concept originiated nearly being vocalized on the lips. Most series of circular sweeps down a "differs no way from a regular handicapped inmates. Through
this program, which only benefits
25-years-ago at the University of people. Mrs. Wood says, are page. These readers tend to be less prison except all its inmates are
about
70 inmates, Mr. Whit 's
Utah. Evelyn Wood , a graduate taught to read aloud when they susceptible to eye fntigue and kids. They don't know anyt hing; tuition and expenses are paid for
student a 1 the Unive rsity. first e nc o unter the rcatl1ng drowsiness because they :~void
at the University : "Without this, I
GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
submitted a term paper to one of experience in sehoul. Because nf repetition of material.
wouldn' t have gotten through - I
Jeweler
Optician
her professors. Watclung in thi s. most p eo ple are
Students also learn to improve
would have gone back." Too bad,
41 KENMORE AVENUE
astonishment, Mrs. Wood saw her sub-vocalizers, inwardly sounding their memory and to organize a
he concluded, mort' prisone~
(at University Ptua)
teacher read her 80 puge theme m each word they read.
book before reading it. Textbooks
co u I d n 't become likewise
involved.
BUFFALO,
N.Y. 14226
With the hand acting as a pacer are o utlined by the dynamic
minutes, witho ut mis!&gt;mg a detail.
His reading speed war- about 6000 for the printed material. the readers and long novels arc first
words per minute.
.---SALE
SALE
SALE--....
student is taught to avoid the skimmed to get the characters
Mrs. Wood undertook a two vocalization process as he reads straight. The result is better
year search and found SO other the lines on a page backwards and understanding of the material at a
AIIMF-IIAIIF
.
prodigies "" o could duplicate the forwards, Following these speed many times faster than
UllS
&amp;
THIIGS·~Styles
f•
Y
..........
professor's results. They came techniques. exceptional students possible 'by old fashioned reading
,.
J
from all walks of life including have achieved speeds in excess of methods.
LIAftl MAGOODS
housewives and one shepherd, but 25,000 words per minute without ~
. . . . ,Aellln
shared certain characteristics: sacrificing comprehension.
E BIACUd
(I)
they read down the page rather
The Evelyn Wopd method
~
than from left to right and they often teaches students to increase
m
read groups of words or complete the : r compreh ension also.
thoughts rather than a word or Students Jearn to see the whole Rtprinted from The Spectrum of
two at a time.
rather than parts of it. T~y learn Oct. 2, 1970.
SAVIMOIIY
Analyzing the reading habits of to steep themselves in thl book's
SHOP
AIMY NAVY
these people, Mrs. Wood devised a
method of reading based on these
principles. She developed and

tReading Dynamics'

Learning to read with speed

WASHIIIGIO. Hltlti.UI CI.ID

,

•

,

,..

..

,J,)j ·'

~·~ ~ r,

...n.uvlil

:· J

---------- Advertisem.-rt•••••••••••
Page 4 . The Spectrum . Wednesday, September 22, 1971
•. • c' '

1

1 •

1

1'1;~:, ;~'

1

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1 ,\'\' .. ' ,1 ,.. "1~;4~~. \'( t~~ -.:1;: i 1/

7._732 MA*-~1515

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~---SALE-----SALE------SALE _____.

�.Pilot Program plans
t0 improve relations
Pilot Program of the State
Univenity of Buffalo will attempt
to improve by ,'"personal
interaction, relations between
students and the various law
enforcement bodies of Buffalo.
The program, now coordinated by
Tom Dixon, graduate student in
the School of Management,
involves students directly With
police by offering teheduled rides
in patrol cars.
Plans Cl11 for students to ride
in the back of patrol ' cars and
accompany polic:e on any oUtside
activity encolntered that evening.
The format has already receivfld
ratification by th~ Buffalo Police
Department and an attempt is
now being made to involve the
Cheektowaga Police, the Sheriff's
Department and the State
Troopers.
It is hoped that by Oct. J,
other coUeges in the Buffalo area
will become involved in the
program. However, at this point,
the possibility of involving high
schools seems doubtful because of
the legal complication of students'
ages under 18. First organizational
meetinp will be held on Sept. 30
from. S-7 p.m. in Norton Hall,
Room 233 .
Actual involvement
Pilot was originated last Nov.
by Jim Wenzel , university
graduate student operating from
March 15 un1il the end of May.
During this period over 250
students were involved. Mr. Dixon
claims a high degree of success
both in student and police
reaction to the program. Students
were kept interested by the

authenticity of actually being
involved in daily police calls and
the personal manner in which the
program was conducted.

tA~2al observers

Your civilrights protected .
Amdiat the many people that often appeal at
demlonstrations are a group of State Univenity of
Buflfalo law stUdents known al the Legal Observen.
The;y attend large public gatherinp for the sole
purJ?&lt;* of determining whether anyone's cWil rights
hav«: been violated..Legal Observers spokesman Gene
Gof,fin di!Cussed the group's actions, stressing that,
"Wt: are definitely not a legal aid organization. Our
only function is to observe and record what we see."

Pilot requires three standards
for · particiPation: students must
be cleanly dressed (no jeans); they
must be a registered member of
The Legal Observers was fol'l1\ed by a group of
the State University of Buffalo;
Buflfalo law students during the demonstrations of
and they must never have been 196'9. They felt that the excitement generated by
arrested .;n any campus conffrontations between demonstrators and police
demonstrations in Buffalo. often Jed to the termination of basic civil rights. Mr.
Accommodation is based on a · GofJfin explained that they attempt to remain on the
fint-come, fint-serve basis, and it peri~meter of demonstrations, record what they see
will be possible to pick both the and remain completely impartial. "We are neither
time of participation and the pro-left nor pro-right," he said. "We try to see the
who•le picture, not just one side."
desired precinct.
Standard stereotype
Last year, in an attempt to
impl'ove police-community
relations, !College A attempted
various meetings with the Buffalo
police. The main participants were
officers from the sixth precinct.
After two meetings with College
A students, police from the sixth
precinct informed Ca ptain
Edwards that they no longer
desired to attend these meetings.
The program was canceUed and
continued only on the basis of
classroom discussions with various
black policemen. As one student
-explained, "Meetings such as this
can only be beneficial when the
conversation is conducted on a
one-to-one basis, otherwise it only
seems to perpetrate the stereotype
of campus longhair vs. cop." Mr.
Dixon expressed the hope that
continuation of the Pilot Program
between students and police will
help break down th ese
stereotypes.

Dra1w attention
YeUow arm bands 'and ta~ displaying the words
••t.egal Observers" help people recognize the group's
members. According to Mr. Goffin, they are well
kno,wn to the police and l}ope that others will
ackntowledge their presence. "In all cases we take no
action to aid any participants," he remarked . "If
som1eone feels that his civil rights are being violated
he slhould yeU out his name and otherwise draw the
attention of a Legal Observer. In this manner one of
our memben can have as complete a record as
possible of the circumstances." Each Jaw student is

required lo make out a full report for a permanent
file of every demonstration he has attended. In the
future this may make it possible for the observer to
serve as a useful witness in court.
Though they take no action at 'demonstrations,
the Legal Observers know tha~ their presence is felt .
According to Mr. Goffin, .,We want to be obvious.
We, like the press, by our very presence can change
thinp." In regard to whether demonstraton will
take greater freedoms knowing ·that the Legal
Observers are there, he said, "I'd hope that they
wouldn't. We cannot make them immune to arrest."

Generally isolated
Their main problem has been the lack of
communication between the Main St. campus and
the downtown Law School. "We don't aJways know
when something is going on. We have to rely mainly
on our own information. Titat presents a problem
because we are generally isolated from the rest of the
University." Mr. Goffin asks that anybody interested
in speaking to the Legal Observers should contact
him at 881-2061, or contact them through the Law
School.
The Legal Observers have had success in the
past . With a staff of close to 60 students last year
they were able to cover the May Day
demonstrations, a gathering of the Metachine
society, and even stand through a blizzard in order
to carry out their functions. Their main hope is that
the community show enough interest in their service
to make their existence worthwhile.

IF
YOU WANT
A HOME AWAY FROM HOME
w~

ANACONE 'S IS IT!

sell

Pool table
JukeBox
C,olor T.V.

Drought
Beer orAle
By Gloss
or Pitcher
Mixed
Drinks

Anacones Inn

Famous
for our
Roost Beef
on W«k
Plus

3178 Bailey Ave.
(next to Garden of Sweets)

Ford Foundation
The Ford Foundation has announced plans to
continue the foUowina proarama for the 1972-19.73
year: Doctoral Fellowships for American Indian
Studenta, Doctoral Fellowships for Black Students
and Doctoral Fellowlh~ for Mexican American and
Puerto Rican Students. The proarama are for
atudenta who have not undertaken any araduate or
professional study, and wtah to pursue the PhD and
to enter careen in hither education. Each proaram
wW support full-time araduate study for up to ftve
years cootinaent upon the FeUow's satisfactory
propaa towud the PhD.
hutructions and application forma may be
obtained from the Ford Foundation, 320 East 43rd
St., New York, N.Y. 10017. Applk:ations must be
completed by Jan. 10, 1972.

sl:is

3 P.M.-

' P.M.

EARLY DIIIIER

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Wftla 1'bh C..... For I

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HEV: GRAD. STUDENTS
You say they won't let
you vote? The GSA is
working ·to insure your
right t.o vote, but can't
help unless you tell us.
Contact the Graduate
Student Assoc .
Immediately if you were
stopped from registering.

STUDENT

BO·O K EXCHANGE
IS NOW OPEN
Bring oi~_JJooks to sell at your own "Discount Prices!" Only books
being used this semester are acceptable.
Come buy these bargains for your own classes tool

NORTON HALL
•

"- ....., "r 7 P.M. 16 P.M. Ill

c:..,...

........................
m.ICIPbii . . .

... &amp; ....... _ ,
..... till Oct. 15/71

...

11'11.......

._..~

.....

.at

215 Norton Union
or call
5506, 9 :00 - 5:00

•

ROOM 231

DPENlD-4
l\\' J ."'.r_

r~fJqs? ,\.t. tA;~"'ro•lJ •~,., 1: ·.".f;[: c ~: (

ILjJ

Wedn~siay,

t ...'~"...':

September 22, 1971 . The Spec.~m . ?age 5

�..

·

...:.....

MedicalIt

•

Q: My roommate has mono. Will I get it and can I get any down to the average working man." Bayh noted that
the present unemployment rate in Erie County has
protection?
A: Strange as it seems, Mononucleosis is not exrremely contagious "officiall!r'' reached nine to ten per cent, but
(as is strep throat) and it is ra r~ for one roommate to contract it from realistically, by taking into ac:c:ount the thousands of
another. It is sometimes referred to as "kissing" disease because close recently llaid-off steelworkers: the rate lies closer to
14 per •cent. The high rate, Bayh charged, was
contact is considered necessary for transmission.
·
brought abo ut by previous ••inhuman and
Q: Should I take the health insurance offered here at the irresponsible Nixon game plans," which were put
into efTec;t in January 1969, to cure inflation by
University or BC/BS?
increasing,
unemployment.
A : Blue Cross and Blue Shield furnishes excellent protection
against the expense of serious illness especially when hospitalit.a tion is
needed (full hospital cost in semi-private room, etc.,
the school Urges Nixon's support
insurance pays our $45/day for up to 40 days, or $90/day for intensive
He urged that the President support his
care up to the maximum payment). But , for the more co~on
pro
posalls
fo r an additional 13 weeks of
outpatient expenses, the Niagara National Policy is designed to
federally-fi
nanced
unemployment compensation for
supplement services provided by the Universicy Health Service. Such
workers
who
have
exhausted their unemployment
common expenses as blood counts, m ono tests, x-rays, specialists'
benefits,
as
well
as
an expanded public service
consultant fees, etc., are paid up to the maximum of the policy . (S40
employm•ent
program
and
a speed-up in the personal
lab and X·ray for each illness, S25 for each consultation, etc., with no
deductable if referred by the University Health Service .)
income ta1x cuts scheduled for 1972 and 1973. ' 7he
best way to get people off welfare is to find a way to
get them 'work,·· Bayh commented.

&lt;&lt;

•
IN YOUR HONOR, WE NOW
HAVE OUR "BACK TO SCHOOL"

SPECIAL

The Senator called for Nixon ..to stop sending
Spiro Ag1new across the country spreading fear ,
hatred and prejudice and trying to build a southern
strategy ... Tying this in with his stated purpose in
coming to BuiTalo, Bayh said the way to have a more
responsive federal government is to start with a more
capable local government. In other words, by voting
for Mayor Sedita, Erie County residents can help
construct a base of support for a "new leadership"
throughou,t the country . And the construction Bayh
continued" must be done "one worker at a time.
That's the way you build an Empire State Building."

ROBO

Bayh also applauded Sedita's success in bringing Big
League hocJcey to Buffalo.
Sedita tpeak•
Sedita rose to the podium only briefly to
welcome and thank the pthered district workers and

'
·

-mcntece

Sen.Bayh

" If we A)' thet we heve no ain , deceive o urselves, end the truth ii
not In us. If we A)' thet - heve no t
tJnned ,. we make Him (God) 1 flu
and His word Ia not in us."
'
I John t : .

9

AUTOMATIC CAR WASH

w•

Sen. Birch Bayh
In
Buffalo Saturday, cam·
paignint for Mayor
Sedita.

to note that the Republican Party now holding
county office positions ''has grown so fat and lazy
that ineptitude comes out of their ears.~·
A few minutes later, at a storefront in
Allentown, Sen. Bayh and Mayor Sedita appeared
again, this time before a smaller,younger audience.
Perhaps due to a tight schedule demanding that he
be in Syracuse to speak to the New York State
Democratic Committee and partially because of the
less receptive nature of the new audience, Sen. Bayh
spoke only a few moments, again to lend support to
the Sedita campaign. Hete, however, Sen . Bayh
emphasized lflOt economic policy, but the fact that
..Mayor Sedita was voting for the Peace Plank in
Oticago while his opponent was in Miami voting for
Nixon."

:--Bible
Truth•-AC KNOWLEDGEMENT Of SIN

AMERICAN GASOLINE

29

Hear, 0 Israel
for gems fr.om the

JEWISH BIBLE
Phone

875.-4266

LOST: Tu•. S.t. 14th

~

Male puppy - brown a. Whit.
contact Bill or Deb at 881-0334

535 KENMORE AVE. (Near Parker)
ALSO
2415 SHERIDAN DRIVE (ac:ross from Putt·Pu~
lPrlcea subject to .changi) w ithout notid

SUB. S.flECTION :
Ste~cheese

Roast Beef, eor:ned Beef

Page 6 . The Spectrum . Wednesday, September 22, 1971

r

Jjrirch Bayh supports Sedita

Editor's note: Medic41 qunrionsfproblmu on yoru mind! Medical/, a
~ekJy column containing health reliJted quntions from the University
Introduced as ..one of the bright~st stats in the
community, is now in operation throurh the coopmztion of the
Democ,.tic:
consteUation," Indiana Sen. Birch Bayh
Medictll School, University Health Service and the Office o] Student
spoke
Oflj
Saturday
to two groups of Buffalo citizens.
Affairs and Services. Just dia/831 -5000 Action Line Extemi'on, address
He
tint
addressed
an Erie County Democratic
a written question to Mellicall, c/o The Spectrum, 355 Norton Hall or
Registration
Drive
rally
held at the Statler-Hilton
visit Action Line booth in the Center Lounge of Norton Hall. Names
Hotel,
W'h~re
he
explained
that his primary reason
will be kept in strict confidence, and questions fielded by &amp;tridents and
for
coming
to
Buffalo
was
to
help "consoUdate the
faculty of the State Univmity of Buffalo Medical School will be
Democratic:
party
in
legislature"
under the leadership
answered through the column, appearing each Wednesday. If students
of
FranJt
Sedita,
present
mayor
of Buffalo, now
wish personal answers, supply your name and phone number and a
running
for
the
County
Executivtt
office. "I don't
member of the Medical Schpol will call you.
know about me being one of the brightest stars in
Q : I signed up for insurance on the, SARA (registration fonn) . the Democratic constellation," Bayh comment.ed,
''but Fr;lnk 'Sedita sure is the Big Dipper from
When am 1 covered?
A : You are not covered. This information was not extracted from Buffalo."
the SARA form this year. The only way you can be sure of insurance
Bayh then comment~ on a more national issue,
protection is to send payment to the Niagara National Insurance Nix on 's economic: policy. He described the
Company before Sept. 30 . (Application forms are available at
President 's actions as a "kind of economic grind
Admissions and Records, !he Universi ty Health Service and the Office
coffee-maker - designed to help those who don't
of Student Affairs.)
need any help in hope that some benefits will drip

&gt;&gt;STUDENTS

r

Indi:ana seaator speaks

.

�.

Justice Black resigns
from Supreme Court

•

\lUmen's festival

Feminine culture featured

The White ~ute announced
Friday the resignation of
Associate Supreme Court Justice
Hugo L. Black; but there is
speculation that there will soon be
a second empty seat on the bench,
with the possible resignation of
Associat~ Justice John M. Harlan.
White House Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler. in announcing the
decision, said that reasons of ill
· health were the basis for Black•s
retirement. Black, 85, was
admitted to Bethesda Naval
Hospital Aug. 28, but no
disclosure about his illness was
made ti.ll last week. His 'Office
issued a statement Friday
describing his condition ·as an
..inflammation of the blood
vessels."
Black, a ·one-time member of
the Klu Klux Klan, served on the
court for 34 years, taking part in
over 41 ,000 decisions. One of his
latest decisions was the opinion
earlier this year which declared
that the newspapers could publish
the top secret Pentagon papers.

Culture, in the minds of many, is something · Women's Festival. We are sure that there are
his list of seven possible
1
appointees, and the list could men do and women watch. ln Nov., A Woman's thqusands of women with talent and ability who
grow to ten or 12. However, Festi\raf-of art, music:, dance, theater, poetry ' and ne¥er get a chance to share their art with others. We
Nixon wants to ..move as quickly fJlms will attempt to change those minds.
hope that the Women's Festival will be an
· Siponsored in conjunction with the UUAB opportunity for that to happen.
as · possible," since the court
The other way we will try to encourage
Contc~mporary Issues committee the festival will run
reconvenes in two weeq. •
participation is by planning workshops throughout
Probable contenders for the Nov. ,S- 13.
There is no one poljtical philosophy that unites the week. These workshops will be on both cultural
seat include : Charles S. Rhyne,
former president of the American the nomen, except the desire to bring together as and political issues. Possible topics might include
Bar Association ; Rep. Richard many possible expressions of what it is to be a ..how to form a women's band," "Oilldren 's
literature," ..women and the welfare system,"
Poff, R ., Va.• the second ranking womnn in contemporary America .
«women and health" and many more: They will give
Republican on 'the House
us
aU a cf:lance to get together witb other women and
Judiciary· Committee; Lewis It's all riJht
plan
ways to carry the spirit of the Women's Festival
PoweU, former ABA .president ;
Among the events Planned for this week is the
beyond
the week of Nov. 8th.
Walter Hoffman, US. District ' It's All Right to be Woman Theater, a fel'llinist group
Court judge from Virginia and who :are attempting to create a new kind of theater
Georg!' Young, U.S. District Court of dnunatiz.ations and improvisations of events taken Plans and meeting
We will-be trying t o do ext~nsive publicity and
judge from Florida . Early from their own lives.
Monday, the Nationaf Women's
A~lso planned for the festival , are speakers,
provide cJVldcare so that. women throughout the
Political Caucus urged Nixon to including a representative of the National Women 's Buffalo community will be able to be part of the
appoint a woman. Some members Politi1Cal Caucus, a women's band, poetry readin,_,, Festival .
Our next meeting is Wednesday, Sept. 22 in
are pushing for the appointme~t an ar1ls and crafts exhibit, a full week of films by and
of Rita Hauser, Nixon's delegate about women and Buffalo dancer and choreographer N o~n 330 at 1 p.m. Any woman who would like to
work on the plannjng of the Festival, who would like
t~ the United Nations Human
Chrisltine I.Jlwson.
Rights Commission.
A~ fuU evening open-poetry reading by both to be part o f it or has ideas about how it could be is
wen-•~nown women poets and women from our own
welcome tp come. If you can't come but want to get
community is planned. The arts and crafts exhibit is in touch with us, leave a note for the Women's
'Extra careful'
o pen to aU women who are interested.
Festiva~ Contemporary Issues committee in Norton
HaJJ , Room 26 1.
Senate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield said he believed the Festi\ral focal local
Editor's note: The following tuticle was
The participation of women fro m the campus submitted by a member of the Women 's Festival
President would be " extra careful
Lona nominee list
Black's decision gives President thi.s time" in reviewing his new and community is an important aspect of the Committee the co-sponsors of the ary festival.
Nixon his third appointment to nominee's qualifications because
the Supr eme Court. The White of the Haynsworth and Canwell
House reported Monday that experiences. Nixon met over the
AU Buffalo area students interested i-' actina. directina, desipina, playwritina and
Nixon is looking for a strict weekend with Atty. Gen. John
theater in aeneral are invited to a meeting today at the Studio Arena Theater, 681 Main
St ., at 7 :30 p .m . The meetina will feature a performance by the NOW Repertory Theater
constructionist to replace Black, Mitchell and domestic advisor
and an opportunity_to sign up for the Studio Arena Theater Student Action Team.
but that the replacement does not John E hrlichman to djscuss
Students involved in the team wiU help usher, construct seta, and work on
necessarily have to be a person possible successors to Black .
publicity. They will be given two free tickets at each play's preview in return. They will
with judicial experience. Ziegler
The speculation on Harlan's
also be able to meet with New York actors, directors and designers workin&amp;llt the Studio
said that Nixon has not narro wed retir,·"'lent centers aro4nd the fact
Arena.
If you are interested but cannot attend the meeting, call the-program coordinator,
that Harlan, 72, was admitted to
SAVE MO N EY! YOU'L L
Tom Mardirosian at the theater, 856-8025.
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I

W~dpes~~· ~P.\e.J\l~r ~?, ,,1.9,~\ ,,Th~ ~l\4f.~l1\ . Pa~ ,3 . ,

�Bookstore surcharge
The current proposal to charge students a~ extra 10% oa .
late-ordered. books strikes us as extremetv. poor. ThCJ logic
bet.ind t he pl~n is that such a surcharge would force the
students to chastise any faculty member who placed t)is
book-order forms after the deadline. ....
This is absurd. The students have little, if any, chance to
affect a professor within the confines of a classroom.
Further, if they do not purchase the books, it is they and
not the faculty who are being hurt.
Even the Bookstore's manager, Thomas Moore, feels the
surcharge logic is a bit too simplistic. Therefore, we must
~~....~
wonder why the president of the GSA, Mike Nicolau, and
the
stall memberr of College A have
voted unanimously to uphold her dec/lion that the
other students involved in the-Bookstore study group are
appointment
of Mr. Stanley Dayan would not be in
supporting this proposal. There is no way that this can To tlu Jid'ltor:
keeping with the million of'lhe College and the
benefit
the students, and it is quite depressing to observe
a
1 was amused
read Stanley Dayan's article in interests of t he Unilleflily and community.
'
')
Jlery truly yours,
student leader initiati~g and advocating a system that will The SPf!Cl!rum on Wednesday, Sept. IS, 1971 . Wttile
Jerome S. Fink
he is pcirfectly free to associate his name with
hurt other students.
Don Kertzman
anything he likes, the fact remains that he has no
Thus we must strongly urge Mr. Nicolau and the rest of associatio1n whatsotver to College A Self and
Beth S. Ka11irer
. Meryl Roth
the Bookstore study group to abandon the surcharge Commt1nity at this time. If Mr. Dayan wishes to start ,
Rtse
Pozwny
his
own
college
and
the
University
Community
proposal. Students ,already have enough problems at this
Seth L. Holzman
wishes,
a1
pinst
my
warnin&amp;,
to
sanction
him,
University, and they surely did not eled their leaders to
Irwin Hoffman
SUNYAB must bear. and will be held to account for ,
create more.
T.M. Mtzrdfrotilzn "
the consequences.

'No assocq.tion'
to

Co-op rip-otfs
To many people, rip-off is a romantic word, complete
with its own set of political connotations. Unfortunately,
when students steal from a student-run and financed
venture, we feel this to be immoral.
The Record Co-op is a promising attempt at offering an
alternative to the overpriced record stores that abound off
campus. They can't afford thefts, nor should they tolerate
them. If this is the way the student body is going to react to
a non-profit group 'rying to give them benefits, then it may
yet be wise to abandon the whole co-op.

The libraries
The list of library critics is growing longer each day.
Numerous librarians as well as several departments have aired
their frustrations and suggestions. Untold numbers of
students have griped about library conditions, hours and
staff discourtesy. Not much of this criticism is new. Much,
however, seems to be quite valid.
•
Last week we urged the creation·of a group of students
and faculty to examine t he library's problems and offer
recommendations aimed at alleviating the current crisis.
Since that time some action by faculty members has
occurred. We now call upon both the Student Association
and the GSA to join tiM t~ese efforts. Poor libraries affect all
students adversely and there is much that can be done to
force this issue to a satisfactory conclusion.
'

THE SpECTf\UM
Vol. 22, No. 13

Wednesday, September 22, 1971
Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold

Co-Meneging Editor - A I Benson
Co-MaMging Editor - Mike LIPJ)mann
Aat. M.nltJing Editor - Susan Moss
. Buti,_ MIIMI't' - Jim Drucker
Advertising M.nlltW - Sue Mellentine
Cempus .. .. ...• . Jo·Ann Armao

..... . .... : . .... Bill Vacerro
Aat . ........ . . . .Howie Kurtz
CUv .. . . . . . ... . .......·Wacent
.copy . . . . ....... Ronni forman
• . . . ! . . . . . . . . . . . Marty Gatti
Aat• . . .... . .... . •... Veclf\t
FMture ...... . . . .. . . Jan Doene
Graphic Arts ... •• .• • ·• Tom Toles
Ut. 8&amp; Drama .. Micheel Sihlerblatt

l ayout ....... MMyhope Runyon
Asst . .................vacant
Music . • . ... . ..•.. .Bill y Altman
Off.Campus ...... lynne Traeger
Asst. .. . ............. Vacant
Photo . . ..•......David G . Smith
Aat • .... . .... . .. Gary Friend
Aat. .. . ... Mickey Osterreicher
Sports ••• . •.. • •••.. Barry Rubin

Aat. ....... .. ... Howie Faiwl

T1N $ptlctf1Jm is serviad by United Press International, College Press
Service, the Los Angeles free Pr. ., the Los Angeles Time Syndicate, and
liberation N - Service.
Republication of metter herein withOut the expl'ess consent of the
Editor-in-Chief is forbidden.
Edlton.l policy is ct.terminad by the Editor-in.Chief.

1~----~~-~~--------------------------~
J»age 8 . The Spectrum . Wednesday, September 22, 1971

The following lerter was sent to Dr. Konrad von
Moltke wUh copies to the Administration on Sept . 8,
197 I, sig111ed by the current staff of College A Self
and Community.

"Dear Dr. von Moltke:
In su,ppon af the recommendation made by
MJu Bamlli Abelson, coordinator of College A . we

I hope that this communication dispels any
IUusion that Stanley Dayan is associated 'with CoUege
A Self and Community at this time, or has any
support from m e in his current attempts to
" ASSOC IATE'' himself with the University
Community!
Bambii Rae Abelson, Coordinator
College A Self and Community

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipmlll'l

If those men grew disgusted with a war that they
couldn't understand and sick of seeing their friends
Ameriicans have this incredible ability to remain die for no possible reason except that there was a
totally unaffected by t e most revolting news. This war and they were there and soldiers die in a war,
fact explaiins ttte ability of the average citizen to sit well, William Westmoreland couldn't help it if they
down to breakfast and the morning newspapeJ: don't make soldiers the way they used to. How
without regurgitating Kellogg's famous corn ftakes could Gen. Westmoreland know that young men
all over thie kitchen boor. This talent
confronted don' t think ·wat is very glorious or honorable
with yet a nother test last week when a panel of army anymor e? No, William Westmoreland is not
judges dtt&gt;pped all but one o f the murder charges responsible for the slaughter at My Lai.
against Capt. Ernest Medina.
But then, who is responsible for the massacre at
But tlhen, who is responsible for the massacre at My Lai? Not Lyndon Johnson, who condemned
My Lai? . Not Capt . Medina, who unleashed the hundreds of thousands of Americans and millions of
attack o n the tiny peasant hamlet. He cannot be Vietl)amese to the hell of war.. President Johnson
blamed fo,r informing his men that there was a lot of could not have known that a war which was
"getting even" to be done. He is not responsible for
escalated by a lie about some PT boats in some
relaying a1n order which he knew would result in the unheard of Asian waterway would ever be found out
murder otf dozens o f civilians. After all, it had been to be immoral. He cannot be blamed for the world 's
done so many times before, how was he to know of refusal to fall in love with that paternat smile and
the uproar that would result? No, Ernest Medina is t hose twinkllng eyes. He knew that they simply
not responsible for the slaughter at My Lai
didn't understand how history would find .him o ne
But tlhen, who js responsible for the massacre at
of the greatest of executives. How else could the
My Lai? Not Lt. Calley. William Calley, who has
President possibly have protected the freedom of
been reprieved by, the President of the United States,
those poor Vietnamese leaders like Ky and Thieu?
how can h.e be to blame? He only fcdlowed his orders
as any go1~ officer must. Lt. Calley cannot be held No, Lyndon Johnson is not responsible for tho
slaughter at My Lai.
responsibl e for the murders of numerous Vietnamese
But then, who is responsible for the massacre at
whom he personally shot. That was war and in war
people gell shot and if they happen to be unarmed My Lai? Not the Congress of the United States,
and standiinB with their hands in the air, well, that's w.hich quite willingly delegated its power to make
war. How. could he be blamed if these people war with but a single protest . Congress cannot be
happened to Jive in a free fire zone? No, William blamed for financing the tools o f death, which were
Calley is not responsible for the massacre at My Lai. unleashed on tbe people of Indochina. It cannot be
But tl~en, who is responsible for the massacre at held accountable for the thousands of dead bodies
My Lai? Not the soldiers who carried out the which once held human lives. If those men had not
mission. 1·hey cannot 'be blamed for having lost all wanted to go, well they had alternatives. They didn't
their hum.anity and butchering children. The soldiers have to obey our draft laws - they could have gone
cannot be held responsible for the torture and rape to prison or left all their friends and family and fled
that occuJTed at My Lai 4 . They cannot be indicted the country, couldn't they? No, Congresa is not
for ignoring the example of a few of th.eir comrades responsible for the slaughter at My lai.
But then , who is responsible for the massacre at
and not rttfusing to obey the order. Orders are meant
to be camjed out, and if they don't happen to make My Lai? Not the American people, who allowed
sense, if they happen to call for the murder of their sons to be sent away to fight for something
civilians, 1vell, Christ, all I want to do is live through they never believed in. They cannot be blamed for
this damn thing and go home. After all, I won't have electing politicians who have not yet emerged from
to l.tve he!re when it's over. How could the soldiers the Dark Ages, knowing that those politicians would
have been expected to know that the world would allow the death to continue. They did nothing wrong
be so sho&lt;:ked by these murders? No, the soldiers are in glorifying war heroes and forgetting that war
not respo111Sible for the slaughter at My Lai.
heroes are only good murderets. Hoti could
But tben, who is responsible for the.massacre at Americans know that by hogging over half of the
My Lai'? Not Gen. Westmol'eland, who insisted that world's vital resources that the rest of ftle world
this war could be won and so what if we have no would grow to bale them? If th.ey merely weat oil to
right to bo here in the first place, we can't lose a war their .b ridge clubs and jobs and ne\'er once protested
now, can we? William Westmoreland cannot be the cam~tge they were fananclna with their taxes,
blamed fc•r having allowed other My Lais to go well how were they to ~now what some lunatic with
unnoticed and having encouraged his officers to win · a gun might do? No, the American people are not
whatever (th e cost. He only requested that we send responsible for the slau$)iter at My l.ai.
1
more and more men to this conflict to reach the
But then, who is responsible for the massacre at
turning point that was always just around the corner. My Lai?

was

I

�.

I
•

Speaking their peace
To the· Editor:
It baffles me why peaceful soluf.ions to
problems are overlooked
favor of a more
potentially-explosive one! I am referring to the
story, "Surcharp for Late Books Is Considered," in
whfch it states t)\at a 10% surcharae miabt be
recommended by the BookstOTe study group as a
means of developina a ''confrontation between
student. and offendin&amp; faculty memben... WoUld it
not be better to require the offending faculty
member to prepay the additional charaes before his
order is accepted by the Bookstore? Ir (s}he refuses
to pay the charaes. his/her order would not be
accepted.

in

by Stanley Dayan
Last week I outlined the laraer structures and goals of the new
College A prop:am. It is apparent though that the larger pr~m is in
no way specific enough for the purposes of an actual coUeae. The
aeneral aspects of CoUeae A include a hostility to authorit.iarian control
of social situations, lbe insistence on continuity and the role of the
teacher as fmt, one to inspire, and second to provide information.
Within this structure a concrete plan is needed.
Stating it as simply as possible the concrete program will aim at
bringing higher learning to bear on 1he problems which are disturbing
our guts. For us it is not enough to solve a practical problem with an
immediate and unintegrated solution. We would like the answer to be
relevant to our deeper and more complex feelings - immediate
solutions usually do nothing but avoid the immediate problem. A
shallow practical solution yields neither an esthetic delight nor a deeper
insight into .the human condition. David Newman, a friend also
concerned with College A, asked bow for example an art history course
would fit into College A. I answ~ed that if the teacher could bring the
~story of art to bear on lhe aesthetic norms holding us in; that if be
could use the art to really convince us of whole.new esthetic problems
instead of being trapped in them then this course is exactly what
College A wants.
I hear the faculty and older people mumbling that this has been
the general .educational program for 400 years. I understand. One
difference. We warit the educational endeavor to concentrate on our
problems not yours. You think authority is necessary. We want to do
without it. You know and we know that our desire to do without it
., 'causes great problems. But you say live with authority. We say let's
solve the problems. The more specific College A program wiJI sould like
this. We want to bring higher learning to bear on the problem .of living
without authority.
But don't be misled . The k.ind of teacher we want is not one who
treats the problem verbally and is not bothered by it in his personal
life. Our teachers should be so concern~d with this problem that they
don't even have to mention it ; th~ particular way they do and teach
philosophy or poetry will show what problem they are really trying to
solve.

A peaceloving bystander

Rippi,_ off the people
To the Editor-:
The Record &lt;;o-op has tried to provide a
wortb)Vhile service to the members of this
community.
,
We provide records at the cheapest price
possible under present conditions. We are also trying
to change those conditions so that we can lower the
prices even further.
However, if the co-op is to survive it needs the
cooperation of everyone. We have a very serious
problem. Some people are ripping us off! For every
album we lose in this way we have to sell 70 to make
up for it. This is because we make only a nickel on
each album sold. we' cannot afford to be ripped off.
There a1e various things we could do to stop
this. We could call security and get people busted ;
we could allow only a few people into the co-op at a
time; we coUld set up a system like the bookstore
has in their basement or we could close up.
We don't want to do any of these thinp.
But if some people of this. community just look
on tf\e co-op as a place to rip off records, we don't
have many alternatives.

The Record Co-op

I •I

F~d

of boldness

To the Hditor:
I was saddened to read the column in the
Wednesday Spectrum entitled " Andante," saddened
less by the words (lll fine and respectable) than the
sense I felt that the last two silent semesters have
made a mediocrity of what was once something very
bold .
Fred Snell's college (called College A at the
time, now changed a bit, as if to say we need more
subtitles) was a comprehensible element in a
frequently faceless university. I chose not to
associate with his college, for my reasons, but many
good people saw justification in joining it. Now these
good people have been served notice, by Mr. Dayan
and others, that they participated in a failure . I can't
see it that way.
One man connected with the colleges once told
me that Fred Snell's vision was "shallow". I suppose
Mr. Dayan might agree, and perhaps his sense of
Snell's failure comes from that. Snell's vision may
have been shallow, but it was dazzling nonetheless.
He gave this university the strongest dynamic
element it had ever possessed, the most exciting,
mean-spirited institutionalized madness around.
What's more, he made, or Jet, the thing work, at
times, for some people. And now it's dead, the
corpse's name given to so many dilettantes out for
their mild-mannered pleasures. It was a deeply
moving shallowness, this faith in self-determination,
pulled from its shallow roots by a mindless and
hearless administration without the least reaction
from our supposedly thoughtful academic
community. If was perhaps not philosophically
profound, but at least it had life.
A year ago it was said the academic colleges,
Vico and C . P. Snow and their like, which many
people tbou&amp;ht gave the system it~ integnty . Now
that there is nothing on the other side, Fred Snell
having lost too many battlp to make the fight
valuable any more, I wonder wbetber the Collegiate
System · still has its i)\tegrity. I wonder whether it
1
hasn't become just another clever little anachronism ,
meaninaless in itself, but sort of pleasant to have
around. And I wonder whether that might be a result
of this University, and 'perhaps this country, getting
very old and very tired over nilbt. more willing to
make fads out of Jesus and bicyles than bother
about anythiq worth their while.
David BlUJCy

Slogan of death
To the Editor:
In order to co~ect allegations that the
leaduship of the Student Association was lax in .
their involvement during the Attica crises, I would
like to describe our activities during that period .
After the SA Executive Committee voted to
actively supJ&gt;ort the demands of the Ad Hoc
Committee, the officers and coordinators became
involved in the confrontation on three levels : active
support, legal rights and negotiations with the
ad min ist rat ion.
Keith Frankel, National Affairs coordinator,
organized and coordinated most of Student
Association's direct involvement with the Ad Hoc
Committee.
Dave Stein wal d, Lester Goldstein, Tom
DeMartino and myself acted at various times in the
capacity of legal observers to insure the functioning
of our bail fund an~ legal rights program .
Wednesday evening, Lester, l}dve and Karen
Shatzkin, along with Dennis Arnold , initiated
discussions with the administration for answering the
demands. At this time I remained in Capen as a legal
observer.
The folldwing day at the memorial, I called for
the immediate resignation of Gov. Rockefeller and
President Nixon, while demanding thal., if prison

officials refused to coo perate, the Medictal School
fully reveal what had happened.
That afternoon, from 4 :30 to 7 : 30~ Karen,
Lester and myself m et with Dean Pescil and Dr.
Sommit and argued for a disclosure of the Medical
School's involvement at Attica . Again that night,
from 10:00 to midnight, joined by Dr. Ketter and
Dr. Sigglekow, we continued meeting and came to an
agreement to have an , open dialogue on WBFO
Friday evening with live phone questions if Dr. Pesch
did not have to drive to Attica for further
j
negotiations.
Friday afternoon, Lester, Karen and I were at
the press conference where Dr. Pesch was releasing a
re port on the successful neg&lt;1tiations with Attica
officials. When the Ad Hoc Committee demanded 'admittance to the conference, 1 insisted to Dr.
Ketter that the questions of the Ad Hoc Committee
should b e answered immediately and be consented
to let them in.
After the conclusion of the hour·long question
period, the Ad Hoc Committee voted to suspend the
strike. At the prestnt time, Student Association is
considering further action on prison reform.

Peoce
/an C. De Waa/
President
Student Association

Library staff complains
To

th~

Editor:

Editor's note: This letter was originally sent to
President Ketter.
In the Reporter for September 16th , you were
quoted as saying that " no one from the library's
staff had come ... to complain about the library or
the shortage of funds." We feel as library staff
members that this statement deserves an answer.
We do not feel that it was our place as staff
members to complain directly to you. The financial
limitations on the library have been stringent since
April I st and we took it for granted that you It new
about them. We were certain that you knew that
positions have been frozen since April so that we
could not fill vacancies suddenly occuring as well as
the unfilled lines we bad done without . We presumed
that you were aware that the libraries had a drastic
cut in funds for temporary services, for books, for
subS&lt;:riptions. We knew that memoranda had been
sent to you by Or. Slatin on July 14th and July 28th
(copjes enclosed) reporting curtailment of Ubrary

hours because of shortage of staff brought on by
budget restrictions. We e xpected that as an
experienced administrator you would understand
that the staff of the library would have to work
twice as hard to maintain the services since more
than 20% of the library's lines cannot be filled .
As library professionals we did not expect that
faculty and students would notice a diminution of
library services until a service that they needed
personally was not there, but we did expect the
administration to foresee that this 'moment would
come.
Sincerely you.rs,
Adrienne &amp;renbaum
MUdred HaUowitz
Shirley He11lein
C. K. Hwmg
NDrtho M1111nlng
Jun MiUer
Remedios SilN
lletltrice Y110n

Wednesday, ~tember 22, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page 9

�-advertisement=:

P~opie -·v

If the
..

TheY've G
JOIN THE 'STUDEN
Petitions and infor111ation

availabi~

a

NOW thru
~

GUIDELINES FOR ELECTIONS OF STUDENT J.

1. Any student may come to the Office of Election and Credential's desk and register
a name for an interest group (Ex. Psychology I, Togehter II) 2. He will contact
)

2. He will contact 40-50 othw undergraduates and arrange a time and date to meet
either in a place chosen by himself or at the Office's desk in Norton.

, ..

3. The student will bring a list of at least 40 names with social security numbers that
are willing to meet at the arranged time. This list must be brought at least one
day in advance so that a room in Norton may be procured (if necessary) and a
member of the Office's committee may be notified to attend.
4. This committee member will attend the meeting with the petition form for the
interest .-oup to sign.
6. The petition indudes the name of the elected representative, his address and phone
number and ttie name and social security numbers of the 40 members of the
in18rest .-oup.

(
In the event that the ,...oup does not havt\eligi~ stut
.. If the group has 35-:.~
another election must be held.
- 39,-J t
required number in the same ...,ner as in point six above.

grmm-advertisement-!
I •

Rijj'IO : The Spectrum. Wednesday, Sep~mber 22, 1971

'I

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"'':

"'

·~'

I

·~ •' ~

t • •.. ' .. ••,• .. • • "

\ •• •

�'

..

R -advertisement

r.
·.

·o t to Take It!
UDENT ASSEMBLY I
labl~

at the table, 1st floor NORTON

thru 0ct. 8
IONS OF STUDENT ASSEMBLY REPRESENTATIVES

.,
6. A group holds . , election only if 35 or more students are present. In this event.
with 36 to 39 und•graduates present, the group takes on the status of
conditionally approved This means that the representative will have his group
certified if he can bring to the Office's desk the number of students needed to
bring flis constituency up to 40, and that they support him for repre entative.
With 40. or more students pr8$811t. a regular election is held. With less than 35. no
election may be held.
1. The representative will be elected by simJ!_Ie plurality

8 . The representative will be responsible to the interest group in any way that the
group sees fit to charge him at the meeting.
9 . A recall procedure must be set up at the meeting.
10. The signed petition will be checked by the Office and the representative will be
notified if any discrepancies arise.

•
s not ha~el~ students after credentials are checked,
18 group has 35':.39/ the rept"8Mntative ,may bring in the
!IS in point six above.

•

II§Jfi.-advertisement\

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Wedn~y ,

September 22, 1971. The Spectrum . Page n

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�.. ltf

Space Opera

Outdoor concert well received
Saturday night's outdoor concert by Space
Opera &lt;Was part of the Freshman Orientation
Committee's free rock series on the Baird Hall lawn.
It was also a handy preview of their forthcoming
appearance with the Burrito Brothers, scheduled for
Oct. I 0 in Clark Gym.

itream of rum and t,ms that really could use a little

more coDJCiousness of the other instruments. He
exhibits a delightful hint of Texas twang in his nice,
high-pitched vocals. The poup'a two and three-part
harmonies (White also sinp) were reminiscent of the
Buffalo Springfield.
'

Phil White's bass playing seemed like an accurate
The group was fo nned five fears ago in Ft.
reproduction
of pre-arranged riffs, although his duet
Worth, Texas, and migrated to their current Buffalo
with
drummer
Britt Wilson showed a good sense of
home base to escape, among other things, having to
improvisation
for
both of them as well. Drummer
play non-originll material. "We always got harassed
Wilson
is
the
only
non-sinlllng,
non-writing element.
because we worked on our own songs instead of
He
played
quietly
and
subtly
throughout, and,
other people 's songs," bassist Philip White
without
sacrificing
the
expression
of his talent,
commented. "We're no! a juke box."
generally displayed the restraint that is the group's
The half-decade of work has resulted in a virtue.
professio nal tightness and unity. Tbe four members
demonstrated that it is possible to blend their Mood shifts and unity
instruments in order to support one another rather
the song-writing, admirably, often mixed
than destructively attempt to "carry the show"
several quite distinct moods in different parts of a
individually.
given song without losing its unity - a phenomenon
recorded best by such groups as Blood, Sweat and
Tears and Led Zeppelin.

Countty ~- Chicago

I f any member of the quintet stands out just a
The quite large audience braved a haJf-hour
bit, it is vocalist and guitarist Dave Bullock. His voice delay in the Opera's appearance, a PA system that
is particularly appealing in its lower range, with jus! distorted the louder vocals, and - most armoyingJy
enough vibrato to make it pleasing but not - an increasingly chiJiy weather. The wann·up
sentimental (or, if you will, not operatic). His largely group, Sweet Cider, was a fine acoustic roJk duo
country-oriented guitar solos, paradoxically, were strongly influenced by James Taylor. With help from
outstanding in that they, too, complemented the slide guitarist Mitch Ames - using a lipstick cover
rhythm instruments instead of trying to dominate for a slide - the pair displayed talent both as
them.
vocalists and guitarists, doing a hair-hour set of
Fellow guitarist/vocalist Scott Fraser is also fine. mostly original songs.

His jazz-oriented guitar work, however, strives for a

.. BEA::CRA~~
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bit more speed and flash . like Terry Kath : a non-stop

:

I=

CANDLE MAKING

1
:

BLACK LIGHT SUPPLIES

I
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- Norm Wahl

BNd Studio and Ctaft Boutique
2780 SheridM Drive
In - Ni...ra Falls Bl¥cU
837 ·2668

837-2668

:
1
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X

Happy Belated Birthday,
Frodo and Bilbo!!

-------------.,

Sc~w6me~leri SLi C/ul

XI

Membership
meeting
Monday 7:30

Fillmore Room
Information
-Refreshinents
-Movie: Downhill Racer

Our Weekly Reader ·
H•ppy JlirtluMy, W.ndo lt1M by Kurt Vonoeaut Jr., (Delacorte
Press, Delli Books S1.95)
Anyone around The Spectrum office when the books come up in
the momina mail witnesses a stranae thifta. Michael Silverblatt waits
pantina, pounces on the mailman, srabs tbe packap, rips them open
and dances a jia about the room yelpina and throwina the new boob
up in the air. This is all very well when you aet b~ like African
Funf!U: Today and Ye1terday, but it won't do at all on the days when
you aet somethina like a new Kurt Vonnegut book. Only the most
extravagant whimsey will do.
And so Silverblatt,lilce some demented firefly, yabbera around the
office hooting like an owl keepina in mind some of the more
complicat~d patter lyrics from obscure Gilbert and Sullivan operettas.
· Silverblatt smiles toothily, like a· spoiled child. He sits. He stretchs his
tep. He burps. He opens the book. He thinks back on early Vonnegut.
The marvels of..pn unpretentious w.ork of the imagination like Siren1 of
1itan . What a neat book! In Silverblatt's mind it is the best Vonnegut
has done. And Ort i Cradle . And Mo ther Night and God Bltll You, Mr.
Ro1ewarer . And Slaughter Howe Five.
SIJJughterhouu·Five? Hey wait.
Silverblatt waits. He thinks about Slaughtuhowe-five . Since I am
Silverblatt, I ca n tell you. SUverblatf' and· I didn't like
Sklughterhowe·Five very much. We thought it was a guilt-ridden book
tryina to be very literary and heavy. And we knew back then that
Vonnegut was aettin&amp; old . Or aettlna serious. Or losing h.is sense of
humor.
Then suddenly we realized that Vonnegut was getting bad because
someone told him that he was a
- aood writer. listen, Vonnegut
never was and never will be a good
writer. He shouldn't want t o be. He
is a funny writer, a writer in the
realms of moral science fiction .
.That's not such a bad thing to be.
But the people at Harvard and
Cornell tell Vonnegut be's a writer
and they hire him to teach their
creative writing classes. And what
comes out is a play like Happy
Birthda y, Wanda June . It is
self-conscious, heavy in dull ways
(it conce rns itsetr with the
derinition of a h e ro in
contemporary American life); it is
not sharp and not particularly
runny.
It always happens. You just listen to old Silverblatt . Writers who
are funny , like Joseph Heller and Jules Feiffer get told that they're
intense or smart or complex or somethin&amp; and they ao on to write a
bad , bad play. HeUer wrote W~ Bombed in New Hav~n; Feiffer wrote
Little Murdtrl . They are all three (Heller, FeiffeT, Vo nnegut) working
outs.ide their medium and they don't know how to write a play.
In Happy Birthday, Wanda June, Vonnegut has a woman, Penelope
(how's that for sianificance?) waiting for the return of her Jon&amp; aone
husband, Harold, an animal-killina Ernest Hemingway type. Meanwhile
she's been entertainina several suitors : a peace-loving doctor and a
faggot yacuum-&lt;:leaner salesman . Her son, Paul, doesn't like this. The
husband comes hQme. It's too borina to ao into. Characters rrom
heaven (Wanda June, for instance) bop in every. once in a while to rap
about how nice it is to be dead. Heavy.
Vonneaut, in his introduction, admits that he thinks the play is
awful. But he bad it published . This is typical of Vonnegut liberalism.
He makes poignant statements about how college kids are Nazis just
like their parents. He said that what has to be do ne is to fool the kids
inJo thinJrtn&amp; the right way.
Some friends of mine went up to Barnstable, Massachusetts to get
to meet Vonnegut. He turned them away. This is bad - aftet aU,
Vonneaut is the only writer left who is a sort of pop-&lt;:ulture hero. He
can't reject his audience. Especially because his books depend upon
having coUege kids for an audience.
' He inverts the whole consumer idea . This was fine when Vonnegut
wu fun to read, but now he's sort of left the modem scene. You aU
will probably plunJc down the two bucks to pay for ttus .book. That's
okay. 1 hope, though , that you have the aood sense to see how bad it is.
- Bo Bo Dolinski

'

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DON'T ROT THIS WINTER IN BUFFALO!

JOIN SCHUSSMEJSTERS SKJ CLUB AND BE PART OF THE ALPINE CULTURE.

-------~--------------- ------------------J
.,.12 .11le Spectrum. Wednelday, September 22, 1971

crea~

11\ oar - - - - 1

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ilSJ€w€L€

LEARN TO SKJ!

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~f:r

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3588 MAIN STREET
ACROss-FROM U.S.

. . .. ·. ·..... .

�'Death in Venice'

Haullting story of
forbidden beauty
by Michael Sitvet'blatt
Lftuotur~ and

Dl'tlmo Edlror

The film is about the sicknesses
that comes with the aesthetization
of the self. Gustave von
\schenbach is a musician. He is
played by Oirke Boprde. The
character has effectively limited
himself to the sphere of art . He
comes to Venice, the city on
water. In fact, we are immediately
aware of a cinematic environment
based on gondola and canal,
beachside and deckchair. We are
l ocated on · the a lm ost
mythologica l Mediterranean
shore. Southern Europe, home of
imported culture, of friU and
fashion where the aesthet~ and
the aristrocrats and the children
come to vacation, to take the
water and to die.

Much of the film criticism
written about Death In Venia
focuses on the film's general
fidelity or infidelity to the book. 1
think that for the sake of film
criticism, for the kke of film and
for the sake of art, that it is time
we accept o nce and for aJI that
the novel, the theater-piece and
the film are different art forms.
They depend on different styles
for their effects. Their tricks are
different. There is, of course, such
a thing as a literary movje. Many
plays are adapted for the screen.
But a film that utilizes and is fully
conscious of Hs medium is bound
to be a more interestina fllm than Dqradcd society
a Broadway-to-screen tra111plant
Luchino Visconti creates a
or a novel merely transposed into de co rative ce lloph a ne
film .
Easter-basket beautiful waxen
high-society that appears in
The novel turned to film is a Venice from out of nowhere with
unique genre. Ther~ are bei&amp;hts of the suddenness of a magic trick.
inspiration (such u the marvelous Aschenbach fits nicely into this
Brit is h version of G,.eat jaded society. His artistry in the
Expectations with Alec Guinness face of this pleasant decadence is
and John Mills in 194 7 ). But there immediately a chaUenge. Can an
arc also films that ruin themselves individual survive the artistic
by trying to be too faithful to the process? If he can, can he escape
novel they're based on..- final ly, becomlng jaded and perverse?
what must be considered is the
Immediately the atmosphere ot
teno r , the atmosphere, the
intention of th e film . Does the decadence becomes stated in
film express itself visually? Are Aschenbach's mental fascination
the scenes static? Is there a reason for a beautiful young man,
why the piece was done as a film .Tadzio . Played by Bjorn
tnd not as a stage play or a novel? J.ndrcsson, he is quite the
These are considerations which Olympian ideal. Polymorphous,
must be taken into account in any sensua l , mysterious , cr uel.
Aschenbach both fears and
review of Dellth in Venic~
ardently desires a physical
culmination to his attraction. The
mm deals with the submerced
Careful and creative
emotion, the repression, the
Let me begin by saying that unsta1ed psychologi c al
the film commands a great deaJ of significance of a glance, a gesture,
respect. It is visually exquisite and a sigh.
its rendering of Venice is careful
and creative. The silent tensions
Slow-paced sections
which are so much a part o f
The ftlm is slow. This is mainly
Mann's novel are subtle and
affecting. AnsJ yet lt is a film that because its central processes are
cerebral. What you see are two
I find hard to like.

.,.,
ICii/.,.1:

GEORGE HAMILTON • SUE

inverted matrica about t o
co n verae. You realize that
Aschenbach is just a part o f a vast
scene, his passion is just a
metaphor for the society in which
he rots. Indeed the metaphor
becomes fully extended . 1'he
whole city becomes contaminated
by Asiatic cholera. The officiaJs
t&gt;egin to disinfect the city, to
purge themselves of the sin.
Ashenbach decides to make his
move, to approach his Jove-image.
He has himself coiffured, painted,
m~de less and less human. He is,
in fact , being prepared for death ,
being made r eady for the
embalming process. His msuci
becomes more and more aethetic,
internal embalming process. His
music becomes more and more

ae.tbetic, internal t.h e bottom
together. If the ftlm is slow, it tw
to be. But the neussity of its
boredom does not change the fact
that it i.s boring.
Inversion cl death
Aschenbach dies on the beach
while watching the boy enact a
very sensual struggle with another
unknown boy. Venice and its
death have trapped him. He
cannot leave. He becomes caught
in the c laws of inverse
romanticism and he must die.
The film is majestically scored
with segments of Mahler's Third
and Fifth Symphonies. I am not
too s ure that Visco nti'.s decision

to turn the character of
Aschenbach to a musician (in the
novella he is a writer) is a good
one. Mann's creation is an isolated
system. Visconti has his hero
enpain&amp; in trivial discourse on the
meaning of "art," whatever that
is. It i5 possible that the film
\tould have been even more
internal and boring than it already
is.
The ftlm is meticulously and
precisely shot - Visconti shows,
once apin , his ability to handle
decadence. Italian natives babble
in street ftaJjan foreshadowing the
s ickness to come. There are
progressive stages of infection and
sickness. And yet the fiJm is slow.
It is a film you can luxuriate in,
that you can be impressed by. It is
not, essentially, a film that you
can like.

MCAT-DAT-GRE EARN $40-$5
a Month in Your
LSAT-ATGSB
Spare Time
NAT'L. BDS.
..
• P,...,.,.tio!\ tor tnta required for
•
•
•

•
•

edmillion to tr.cluate end prof. .
lionllldiOOII
Sl111 end twelw . . .ion courses
SINII groupa
Voluminous m•teriel for home S1Udy
~ed by experts in IICh field
t..e.on ~ehldule cen be t.eil«ld to
, _ t individuel Midi.
Opportunity for riYiew of pest
lellons vii t.lpe It the center

PLASMA NEEDED
Any Group or Type
Men and Women

INC.
2450 ELMWOOD AVE .
874-0591

Summer Sessions
Spedel Compect Courses
Weekends - tnterseuions

u........

STA.NL.aV H . KAftLAN
.DUCATIONAL caN,..Ru·o
MJII_.,... _

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(212) 336-SlOO
(516) 538-4555

- ·-·-·-·L•. . . . •
OAVS (VINI-. IIIIKI -

n. , ...... SdoMI ....... ,....... . . , . . _

-

WKIW ANO IUFfAlO FESTIVAl preMnta

STEVE

JlM

CHRIS

WINWOOD

CAPALDI

WOOD

Added Attra ction: FAIR.POR.T CONVENTION

Wed.Wy, October &amp;til, 7 P.M.--IJeiallals Music Hall
... Secrtt ...., ...~ Melot ,,_,

$5.~.50;

lelc.ey

-

$4.~.00

r..t.... - ..a. - · .. kffale mil..! riel.. om.., ~twt~eo-Ha..., LeW&gt;y
(-.il ....... occwte4 witlo o-..4 .. If~ -·•~); U.a. Ne.t.., Ne:J;
sTkllet Office.

Col.._.

Wednesday, September 22,1971 . The Spec~. Page 13

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American.Legion ·

~

25, 000 oldfolks invade Houston ·

.

-

~ •hl~ 1' 4J

· "' rtL l)l l~t-.
. , ·l 'I )J ~)

~ ·4tt 0

.'t'·he
· ·'1of

•

th is cord is restricted to owner
r.

-

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- Yr~ !'

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8

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II

I2

13

14

1" ·

-ostenelcher

Since the canine population on campus now
constitutes a ' major portion of the daily traffie in and around
NOrton Hall, it seems only logical to give them all the ri~ts
enjoyed by regular full time students. The plan is still in the
experimental stage, with only a fe'lfll of the furry freshmen
participating.
One of the first to take part in this program is Livingston, a
transfer student from Erie County Obedience School (a two-year
junior college) . Livingston is a horticulture major with a special
interest in trees.
Anyone wishing to find out more abou~ this prog(am should
contact Livingston in Norton Hall, somewhere on the ground floor.

GUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAV .
GUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTA
GUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAVG
GUSTAV ONLY 8 CENTS GUSTAVGUSTAV

(l.NS) - OnJy the Shriners get more into
conventioneering than the American Lesion. If you
were anywl\ere n-r the C(mtral part of Houston at
the end of Ausust you couldn't miss the 25,000 men
and women in red, white and/or blue military field
caps who swamped Houstot:t for the 53rd Annual
National Convention of the American Legion - the
world's largest (over 2.5 million) organization of ,
veterans. Only 2500 of these thousands were actual
deleptea - but, of course, sitting through the
speeches, motions and falderal of the meetings
tltemseJves has to rank low on the list of convention
pleasures.
The Legion prides itself on its attempts to relate
to youth, especially to the returning Vietnam
veterans. They claim 427,000 of these vets have
joined the Legion. But, you'd never know it from
the group assembled in the Sam Houston Coliseum.
These men (the women's auxiliary met at the
S~rock Hilton) had a4vanced well into middle
age.

Boredom, babies, credit
Perhaps, retreated would better describe the·
process -- for clearly the high point of their lives had
come as young soldiers on America's battlefields.
Then their lives possessed th~ zest of danger and ~
commitment and idealistic goals. Ever since, it's been
boredom, babies and keeping up the credit rating. So
they flock to the Legion and try to keep alive those
days of old with ritual and uniforms and officers.
And with snappy color guards: a little strange with
the sagging double chins and paunches bulging in
tight white uniforms, but very precise and full of
pride.
The official business of the convention was to
elect new officers and pass resolutions expressing
their position on the important issues of the day.
The election was a mere formality . The Legion
convention was as tightly rigged as the Democrats in
Chicago. The cl\airman begins the roll call for
nominations for national commander. An "A" state
yields to an " I" state, which nominates John H.
\ floor demonstration unleashes itself

Co~munity

complete with unfurled banners, tootin!J horns and a
band blaring from the balcony. Then on cue anoth,er
delegation moves nominations• be closed, and the
national adjutant votes iQ Geiger by acclamation.
Before the new national commander can even
get to the speaker's stand to make on Keeptance
speech, Legion Public Relations people are scurrying
through the press pit passing out copies of the
speech and pre-printed press releases reading "John
R Gejger of Illinois was elected national commander
... on Sept. 2." But, of course, the top post of such
an influential group is too important to be left td the
whimsies of Ooor action .
Nothing new
The convention passed volumes of resolutions all exactly as presented by various committees
except for a small change in the one on
That
resolution endorsed the president's forthcoming trip
to the People's Republic of China but steadfastly
opposed diplomatic recognition or admission to the

auna:

,UN.

.

An interesting note on the China position was
the Legion's new name for the Taiwan regime, the
Republic of China. They called the the Republic of
(capital F) Free China.
The Legion also endorsed the Vietnamization.
policy, and passed no less than three resolutions
supporting better treatment and release for
American prisoners of war in lndochlna - a favorite
Legion cause. A delicately worded Lt. Calley motion
put the Legion on record as opposing the murder of
civilians but nevertheless requesting that, in the
process of review of his case, every break be given
him because of mitigating factors and because of the
effect of his treatmept on morale in the services.
The Legion also supported the draft and the
ROTC, opposed rioters and draft-dodgers, supported
diplomatic recognition for the aU-white regime of
Rhodesia, supported arms for Israel as well as the US
m e diation role in th~ Middle East, and'
wholeheartedly 'supported every weapons system
anyone ever thought of from the 8-1 bomber to the
missile. So what else is new?

Action ·Corps

WANTS -YOU!
OPEN HOUSE TODAY IN FlLLMORE ROOM NORTON HALL
FROM 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.

· TOUR OF DUTY IN BUFFALO COMMUNITY
A ONE OR TWO SEMESTER HITCH .
BE OF SERVICE !0 YOUR COUNTRY {WOODSTOCK NATION).
COMMUNITY (LAND OF ALFREDA) AND MOTHER
Recruitment :

220-Norton
831 -3609

\

There are now openings for volunteers in all fields (hospital program,
tutorial mtd recreation projects, environmental action projects, day care
center, etc. ) for the fall of 1971.
New ideas are always welcomed. CAC needs' stude'!t support &lt;Jnd
involvement for it's continual growth.
The experience is botll beneficial to the community and rewarding to
the individual.

(

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�REC~ORDS

T/uJ A.._ llrodNn /Jtmd « 1M FINttrtlft
Etut (Capricorn SD~2)
Does anyone remember the first
Butterfield Band; the one with Bloomfield
and Bishop? How about the Yardbirds with
Beck and Page? QuiclcsUver before Dino
VaJenti? Of course there aJways was
Cream. AU of these bands had a frightening
power over their music, they could mold it
at will. Such bands were termed "eclectic."
If a band somehow transcends their
influences to come up with something of
their own, then eclectic is the big word.
(Th~ Byrds used to be eclectic until
somebody decided that they were just
- third-rate copy artists.) Well, friends, the
Allman Brothers are not even eclectic;
they're beyond it. Although they're in_ the
same class as the above mentioned groups,
and although bits and pieces of everyttiing

::an be found in their music; what they do
is their own, and their music is a plane
above everybody else.
I
Grand Funk notwithstanding, the idea
of rock is to get it on, and nobody quite
gets it on like the Allman Brothers. TI1e
two drummers, Butch Trucks, and Jai
Johanson, and bassist Berry OakJey, push
each song to the brirtk and beyond, while
Duane's slide guitar work cuts with a
vengance. Second guitarist Dicky Betts is
into more of a jazz style, and the two
guitarists seem to be locked into some sort
of combat. Greg Allman fills in the spaces
on organ.
The first side is devoted to blues. Duanehas done a lot of session work at Memphis
and Mussel Shoals (including the Derek and
the Dominoes album), and it's obvious that
he's learn~is craft well. They're not
another Chicago blues band, and their
versions of "Statesboro Blues" and Elmore
James' "Done Somebody Wrong" have a
cutting, raucous edge to them ; a little like
John Hammond with a band . The band is
unbelievably tight, but everybody gets
good leads in, with Duane's slide guitar
sweeping across the music riffing over
every line.
T-bond Walker's "Stormy Monday" Is
beautifully mellow and jazzy, not an
affected ·cocktail lounge version as you
might expect. "You Don't Love Me" is
nice and funky ; a good hand-clapping song
and never lets up until the end, when
Duane goes into some of the most
outrageous free-form guitar J 've ever heard.
He riffs by himself making the guitar
scream, cry and laugh, until he sounds like
a one man band. Then Dicky Betts comes
in to do the same thing.
Here is where you realize that in
jamming the AUman Brothers have no
equal. You believe the sto~ies of playing till
dawn and getting stronger as they go.
Instead of taking off on a wave, and the
dissipating, like Crean+ always seemed to
do, they have complete control of their
music. "Hot ' Lanta" is a short
instrumental, and features the Allman's
trademark of simultaneous riffs on both
guitars, bass and organ, and everybody gets

in strong leads, especially Greg AUman on
Night trippers are few and far between,
orgaii.
they exist on planes seldom known to JJUUt:
..In Memory. of-Elizabeth Reed''' is Dr. John, Black John; the Conquerer is the
probably tho best thing on the record, leader of the pack.
burs'ting through several musical textures;
The only way · to describe the
bits of Santana, Bloomfield and a lot of - importance and beauty of Dr. John and his
other people can be heard. Starting on Jazz music is simply by saying that he has been
Progressiort, they work their way tbr~~ugh able to take the basic cosmic beat of
until the guitars seem to explode. When Maureen Tucker and transcend it into
you finally think they've reached some sort something a shade more infinite.
of plateau, they go bursting right thro1.1gh . Percussiveness · has been the sensuat release
Betts does his best playing here, as his riffs for man since the beginning of the ending.
float through tbe music, push through it, The haunting of the soul with the rhythms
and then dive back fnto it. Both Betts' and of jungle has been the zap gun to stripping
Allman's style combine jazz, rock and away man's pl1ony sexualities. The animal
blues. The two drummer$, bass and o1rgan man can't stop the slow undulation of Jtjs
'&gt;
provide a constantly changing structure: for hips when the sound of percussiveness
them to work in. There arc just too few penetrates his bone marrow. The· music of
bands that can come Close to this sort of the swamp becomes the music of the
thing.
womb. Swamp music is the union of "'t he
Side four is devoted to ''WhipJ~ing body with the earth. Swamp music is.
Post," and the band comes on like an
Night Tripping our way ttlrough
express train . From the opening note:&amp; of concrete existence Is frustration centered
the bass till everyone joins in one by une, at the back of the spine. We must release
the band comes on with a vengenc•e. I our insides, give up our souls to the swan1p
won't attempt to describe what goes on gods. We must save what little there is left
during the full twenty-two minutes, but to save. Calm and serene we shall face the
they break through energy levels that most danger cxistenc~of the swamp.
bands never get to.
Dr. John dies for our sins. His soul is his
There may be better blues bands, he:avy music. Each time he dies his nightly death
bands and psychedelic bands, but the he wails his voice across the everglades.
Allman Brothers are probably the l~est crying out.
band around. They're not just ano1Lher
D~ . John 's record can be d,cscribed by
electric boogie blues band, but are able~ to one of his own lyrics: "The chickeo and
mold different styles to their own. As. far the fighting rooster got out one night/ The
as I'm concerned this record cuts Satana, figh ling rooster told that chicken I'm
Zeppelin, and their host of imitators. The gonna knock you clean out of sight/ The
Allman Brothers could give a cenain chicken told the fighting rooster - /Well
Engligh band a run for their money for the that's all right/ I'm gonna meet you in the
title of best rock •n• roll band in the wmld. Gumbo any huh tomorrow nig)1t."
So for all you concrete night trippers
- Tom Bogucki get loose. For all you others grab your zu
zu mamous and walk on gilded splinters.
Dr. John, The Sun Moon and Herbs (A T'CO

Sister Ray

so 33-362)

Swamp moanin' breezes floatin ' across
alligator holes, man loses his soul to the
noises of the blackwater. Flatboats be:ing
poled by brightly dressed Cajun QueE:ns,
the last rays of the sunset sinkin' deep i1nto
the ever t rees castin' silhouettes on the
shade of an old jungle rotted cabin. Inside
over a boiJin' pot stands a man dressed! in
paint and the ages of trees. Glad rags

New Riilers of the Purple Sagt! (Columbia

c 30888)

and if he blows it this time, it's gonnu he
his last - when to Acapulco to tum the
golden keys - Henry keep your brakes on
for this comer if you please. •• And ..Dirty
Business" is' about a miners' sttike. Here,
Garcia gets into some extended distortions
on pedal steel, Which might have been
extended a bit too far.
·
As far as Jerry goes, his shining moment
is on "GiendaJe Train," a tune about an old
West train robbery. On this cut, he does
some really neat picking on both banjo and
pedaJ steel. · f'or the most part, he
overshadows the electric guitar played by
David ·Nelson, but Nelson should d~fmitely
not be overlooked. His work on both
..Henry" and ..1 Don't Know You" is
mighty pleasant.
Vocally, Dawson 's phrasing reminds me
of Rick Danko, but let's not forget the
beautiful harmony sung b Nelson and

bassist lJave I orbert. It s espectaliy
effective on "All I Ever Wanted," a sad,
slow ballad about losing at the game of
love.
At this point, l can't quite decide upoJl
my favorite cut. One is "Garden of Eden,"
' which has a message worth thinking about,
especially in light of recent events. "Hey,
look up in the air - There is smoke ft.lling
everywhere - And, hey, look down on the
ground - There is blood spilling all around
- And we live in the Garden of Eden Don 't know why we want to tear the
whole thing to the ground_" The other is
'" Last Lonely Eagle," a tune about giving
up.

You must forgive me. You see, after
finally settling down in my new apartment,
"If you go down round the bend in the
I set up the stereo and realized one speaker river,
wasn:t working. As a result, I really
Youre gonna find il few changes are
couldn't enjoy the album the way it was goin 'down there,
intended to be enjoyed. So if I misse.d any
Cause the people who live round the
small, but important details of the record, bend in the river,
please, no nasty letters. O.K.?
Have forgotten their dreams and they've
Well, regardless of this handicap, it's cur off their hair,
So take a la!t flying look ut the flzst
quite evident that this is one hell of an
' album . lr was a long time in coming, but lonely eagle
He's soaring the length of the land,
the wait was more than worth it, since the
Shed a tear for the fate of the last
Riders have developed into one of the
tightest bands around. They don't go in for lonely eagle
For you know that he never will/and
anything flashy , just perfectly arranged
If you go down where the lights push
harmonies and instrumentals, with
everyone playing an important role. I the nightime,
wasn 't sure whether this would be the case
Back far enough so you can't feel tile
or not because, in concert, they seemed to fear,
Remember the boy who you left on the
rely greatly on the pedal steel work of
mountain,
Jerry Garcia. Not so on their first
Who is sitting alone with the stars in his
Columbia recording.
floatin • in the breeze, mince pie steam1ing
tears.
"
AU words and music have been written
in the night, the man walks slowly over to
a group of people waiting, watching in the by lead vocalist, John Dawson. His writing
"Last Lonely Eagle" contains some fine
corner, behind these people, vines of bla1ck reminds me a bit of some songs penned by
piano
accompaniment by guest star
cord connected to many magi~ machines. The Band, inasmuch as they both like to
Commander
Cody.
The scene: recording session for the n'ew tell stories about specific characters. The
New
Riders
Of The Purple Sage is a
Dr. John album, strange backdrops for a only difference being that Dawson's songs
truly
exceU
ent
album
. Ten songs, without a
sound more contemporary when compared
London studio; the time: impertinent.
bad
one
in
the
bunch.
I couldn't have1
to the rustic tunes of The Band. In
Magic in the air. All waiting for the
asked
for
anything
more,
except, as a
proper positions of The Sun Moon and "Portland Woman " and '' Louisiana Lady,"
friend
said,
"Why
couldn't
it have been
Herbs. Dr. John motions. The steam of the ~e is the traveling rock star looking for his
sooner?"
swamp powers the modern machines, the woman " Henry" is a dealer in a very
darkness of unknown ways haunts out imto
precarious situation. "And now he's going
- Terry Bromberg
down the mountain going fast, fast, fast the night. Cut.

.

,_

'

Wednesday, September 22, 1971 . The Spectr'um . Page 15

�•

i •

Bufl'aJOState concert

'

'

Raindoesil't dafnpenshow

..\

-

-·

-.J

Buffalo State College's second
annual fr~ · folk festival didn't '
cxactJy come off as planned. Not
that the performers didn't show
up, or that the music wasn't great,
cause they did and it was. But the
rain really messed the whole
atmosphere. Last year, it was nice
out and thousands of people
showed up. Everyone had a super
time, and there was a vague sense
of togetherness in the crowd. T.bis
time, the audience was about as
gray as the sky. People looked at
the stage in blank, diffused stares.
Between acts, everyone went to
the bathroom. The roo"l had a lot
to do with it, thougJl. Jt was
upstairs in the studeat union, and
it Jacked any kind of spirit. It was
• jtut there, and it didn't help the
music in any way.
As 't said, you couldn't fault
the acts except maybe Tapestry,
the local group that began the
lbow. They had two girls who
looked like they just stepped out
of a 1961 copy of Sixteen
magazine, and they had about as
much life as the transfiXed girls on

GUSTAVGUSTAVGUSTAV
8 CENTS 8 CENTS 8 CENTS
355 NORTON 355 NORTON

the gl()ISY ..,a. Their 9Utflts
were just tight ; their voices were
peachy. Th~y moved about three
inches the wl)ole time the group
was on. The guys weren't much
better.
I
One, who I guess was the
leader of the band, had apparently
memorized evert line from the
"Hootenanny creative
in-between·SOJ]g witty remarks
manual." The other guitarist was
the only one who had any degree
of class. He was a fine guitarist,
and he looked b'ke he didn't care
if his hair got a little messed
during the show. He sang a song
that he' wrote, and it was
ddflllitely the best one they did. I
guess 'I didn't like them much.
One unaccompanied song that the
girls ·did, '7he Blacksmith Song,"
was all right, but if you've ever
heard Kathy and Carol's version
on that incredible Elektra album,
oh well.
From a wet pussy to a dead fox
Next was an Irish pipist, a
friend of Pat Sky's. I forgot his
name (that's aJI right, I probably
couldn't. spell it anyway), but he
was really good. The pi~s are a
little different from bagpipes, and
dere t from
they sounded very~
anything I've ever eard
did
one tune called ' 7he et Pussy"
and it was pretty raunchy. He also
captured an entire fox hunt on his
mstrument, complete with the

party afterwards.
Dee Higgins, a Canadian
songwriter, {Klt together a soft,
lovely set. Her songs dealt with
love and sunshine and needs and
depressions, and they all had a
stamp of genuine emotion .to
them. Dee has been at Mariposa
for the past few yean, but
generally goes unnoticed. Maybe
it's because people expect another
Joni Mitchell, which she isn't. She
has a fine sense of melody, a
beautiful voice and she's pretty
too.
'Got you last'
Don McClean has been touring
with Blood, Sweat and Tears for a
while, so I fa.gured he'd be awful:
But he surprised me. Though his
songs showed more influence than
originality, he's a great performer
and the crowd loved him. The
highlight of his set was probably
the story he told about his ..got
you last" feud with lou Soloff of
B, S &amp; T. One song about the
people on different floors of a
building was well constructed,
with different melodies for each
floor. His rock and roll tune,
which was. conneeted to Buddy ·
Holly's death, gave everyone a
chance to sing along, a real must
at a folk concert.
A country feel
After a brief intermission, Paul
Siebel came on. It was &amp;lis

Patrick Sl{y
birthday, but Paul looked like he
still wasn't awake, and he wasn' t
too sharp. A bright spot was
guitarist Jack McGahan, who has
improved quite a bit since he was
here with Siebel last May. The
two seem to have a fine working
relationship, and McGahan's solos
now reflect more of the feeling of
Siebel's songs. "Pinto Pony" and
"Jackknife Gypsy" got the best
response. Paul should reaJly play
at some honky tonk bars caust&gt;
he's a country singer at heart.
Patrick Sky finished up the
afternoon. Pat's high on the
comeback trail these days, and it's
a good thing. He's o ne of the best
songwriters ever, in any field of
music. His song~ have great depth
to them, and he writes on almost

r.trick Sky picks out • tune et
the Bufflllo S... free folk
concert. For his encore. he cld his
"'-' hft. "Sepention Blu•... tiM
song that helped him llin
NCOFition beck in the mid
sixti•.
any subject imaginable. He did
mainly old songs, like "Hangin'
Around, •• a ragtime hip-type song.
On that one, Pat showed off his
Eric Clapton lick-one note. Pat's
like that. He's got a strange, but
inteUigent sense of humor.
Of his new songs; his ''Ray.
Charles steal" was . the best. It's
the first soul tune he's ever
written, and he sang it beautifully.
And, for the topper, he did a
selection from his
never-to-be-released lp, "Songs to
Offend Everyone" or "Songs that
Made America Famous."
It's really . t&lt;,&gt;o b11d_ so few
people showed up. They missed a
good show.

.

- Waldo Jeffers

UNIVERSITY TRAVEL

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6thAn~ual

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Dec. 27th to Jan. 7th
SCANDINAVJAN AIR SYSTEMS (SAS)

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Discounts on

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SKI PACKAGE
Includes: Transfers, Hotels, Apartments, Meals, Gratuities.

lessons and Ski passes
Student reservations will be confirmed for the first 30
days after which reservations will be on a first come basis.
The University Travel Center, its programs and services are
made possible by your STUDENT ACTIVITY FEES via
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FOR INFORMATION:
University Travel Rm. 323-316 Norton Hall
Ext. 3602 or 3603
or
SCHUSSMEISTERS SKI CLUB Rm . 318 Nortori Hall
Ext. 2145 or 2146

..

\

�OVERTIME

Buffalo Qulls rely on youth

by Bany Rubin
I

Cross «::ountry preview

Sports Editor

by.BruceE~

\

Spectrum Staff WtiteT
With the prof~ionaJ football season opening this past weekend,
Overtime takes a look at the state of New York's football teams. tn
If in re(:ent days you happenec¥t9 have seen a ·
Buffalo, it appears as if Bills' owner Ralph Wilson will get his new
stadium, while downs~te the stench of the New York Giants' move group of ab4;&gt;lit l S, very dim, very last YOWl&amp; men
lingers on.
.
.
Wilson, not exactly the most subtle of owners, recently seized
upon the idea of moving his Bills to New York City to fiUthe void left
by the Giants proposed move. Despite Wilson's expressed interests
there had to be little chance of the Bills moving to New York since the
Giants hold exclusive rights to the New York area. Just ask the New
York Jets who were forced to pay a ten-million dollar sum for the
right to' share the plush New York market:
However, only two days after his threat to move, a stadium lease
agreement was okayed ~y petrified county officials. So now, Wilson
via a shotgun maneuver will have his 80,000 seat open stadium at
tremendous expense to the county. Originally; a domed stadium coulc;l
have been built for the same $40 million that the open facitity will
cost - all for ten football games a year. It makes one wonder how a
'county like Erie with tremendous social and economic problems can
afford to undertake such tremendous expense for a footbal l-only
facility.
·
Meanwhile, downstate, the original shock of Wellington Mara's
decision to shift the Giants has worn off somewhat. Mara, whose
family fortune was derived from pro football's big economic boom,
has sold New York down the river to move into a stadium in the
heretofore underdeveloped Hackensack meadowlands. But don't Jet
the same ' Meadowlands fool you - the area is nothing more than a •
swamp into which the state of New Jersey will pour millions of dollars.
Yes, this is the same state which recently saw a disgusted minority
community in Hoboken explode into distasteful riots, much the same
as had occurred previously in Newark, Asbury Park and other Jersey
communities hungry for urban renewal.
In essence, the Giants are fleeing New York and more specifically
the South Bronx ghetto. As one defensive Giant official put it : "Do
you know what this area will be like in ten years." Behind the Giants
will leave a community trying desperately to hold on economically,
until purported federal aid can be delivered .
To Mr. Mara, the 20,000 or so additional se~s in Jei'Sey are worth
more than the life or death of a community . When one thinks of the
Bronx, Yankee ,Stadium and the Yankees and Giants come to mind it doesn't matter tllar rus· fans supported him through many losing
years. So now Mara has crossed the bridge to a brighter future in the
swamps of New Jersey, destroying a community's identity and leaving
behind an aging structure, which despite its wear, remains unique in
sports history. Obviously, its days are now numbered as may the
Dennis Meka, a 5 ft. 9 ln.
nearby community which depended upon and received much of its
sophomore, leads the
varsity cross·country
vitality from the stadium .
Bulls_ a.s tbey em.barlum ~
Only Mayor John V. Undsay has the power, but many New
12-meet schedule this
Yorkers would sanction the banishment of the Giants from the
afternoon at Cleveland
stadium immediately. Even hard-core Giants fans have to admit that
State University. Meka
the lame duck Giants and their owner deserve the state of New Jersey
will attempt to fill the
and its swamp stadium . playing on a muddy turf ,may be the only way
big shoes left by all-time
for the Giants' defense to limit their opposition.
star Ed Fu c h 's
So now Gov. Cahill of New Jersey has his toy, and Mara has his
.,.aduation.
additional revenue. The on.ly losers in the move will be New York City,
New York State and the Bronx. And I thought pro franchises had a
loyalty to their cities. Who is Wellington Mara and why did he do this
terrible thing to New York?

Sr.'lr
rumrter

CAUTION - NO AUTOMATIC

running about the campus, you h.ave no doubt
witnessed the varsity cross-country Bulls in one of
their daily workouts. This afternoon the Blue and
White open their 12.-meet schedule in Cleveland
against Cleveland State and Toledo. Cleveland State,
along with Syracuse, Niagara, Brockport and Buffalo
State are expected to be Buffalo's toughest
competition on a rugged and balanced varsity
schedule. '
This season, Coach Emery Fisher's biggest
problem will b~ the loss of his best runner from last
year's 7- S sqllad, Ed Fuchs. Fuchs, a former New
York State ct;ampion, has grad~ted from Buffalo.
1hls leaves the BuiJs witff a -tery ~oung squad,~whicb .
r,ppears short on expinence, but tong on ability.
Bull prospects

Sophomores Dennis Meka,. Larry Krajewski and
Bruce Tuttle, along with junior co-cap_tain Jim
McClurkin, are ex~cted to lead the Bulls. However.
several others are still in contention for spots in the
lineup. Senior co-captain John Fuchs (Ed's brother),
who was out last season with an ankle injury, is now
back at full strength. Soph Jeff Hoag and junior Bob
Gower have been impressive in practice as have two
trackmen running cross-country for the first time.
These newcomers are Bill Heim , the Bulls'
recordholder in the intermediate hurdles, and larry
Slaski, a half-miler. In addition, one freshman Ed
McNiff is rated a good shot to make the Bulls.
As far as strategy is concerned (and beUeve it or
not, there really is a strategy to the insanity of
running 5~ miles), Coach Fisher feels that the Bulls
must run together in a group near the front of the
pack in order to win. Coach Fisher is also pleased by
the fact that nearly every day there has been a
differen t leader at practice.
Basically the team is physically sound this
semester. As of this writing, soph Doug lake has a
sore knee which will undergo X-rays for Buffalo's
only major injury. Tuttle has been bothered by a bad
knee~ but he has been running and should be okay
for competition . In a late development, senior Keith
Noren has rejoined the team, but needs to get into
running condition. After running several eight-mile
workouts, Coach Fisher had his Bulls running shorter
distances with more emphasis on speed, in
anticipation of today's opener at Cleveland State.

INSURANCE COVERAGE

If you did not make payment to the loc;al
·representative of the insurance company-

YOU ARE
NOT INSURED

DEADLINE - EnroUment will not be accepted after Sept. 30,
1971.
DETAilS AND ENROLLMENT FORMS - available at : Health
Serrices Office, Mlc:hael HaU, or call8S3-0931.
,r

Mr.

A's

"'l

off Main &amp; Amherst
(In Central Park Plaza)
presents
B~RBARA ST. CLAIRE

and
THE PINCUSHINES
Tues. Sept. 21 thru Sept. 25
~ming

Thursday Oct. 2
.,T.he Feeling Within
Dynamic 1 pc. group

Clip coupon ~nd m~il , (or brlna to :
lSS Norton Hjlll
SUNYAB
Buffalo, N.Y., 14214

ADDRESS

CITY

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enclosed is $4.50 for
First Semester Only.

Wednesday September
22, '1971
. The Spectrum
. Page 17
~
_,. . ... , Y.'w\.
J '"J' ·, "'
:,. ""t"rc
J •. . =- ,..
~·, ,J , ,f J"',.. ,... f'(.- "' •
..
.. .

' • '·
I_\• ,... l .('
~ ... t''h1"l .. f

~

�-

\

/aims victory
by Stew Serafin

..

Spectrum Still! M-#(•

waa the man to beat when he
lumed in a beat time &lt;»&amp;- one
minute, 1 S.7 seconds around the
2.459 mile road course 'OOrthoast
of Toronto. During qualifying
Saturday, he )Qiocked another .4.
seconds off that mark to set a new
lap record and take the. pole
position for Elf Team Tyrell.
Switzerland's Jo Siffert in a BRM ,
was second fastest with a l : lS.5
while Stewart ' s teammale, .
Francois Cevert, faJied out the
front row by duplicating Super
Driver's Friday time. Emerson
Fittipaldi in a Lotus 72 started
fourth with Chris' Amon in a
Matra- Simca beside him.

World champion Jackie
Stewart splast\ed his way to his
sixth Grand Prix win of the season
in the Canadian G.rand Prix at
Mosport Park Sunday. Driving
through rain and fog, the Scot
found victory 16 laps oady when
.the race was called due to' poor
visibility, the fint s~h occurrence
in the history of Grand Prix
racing. Stewart gave mott of the
credit to his new _compound
.Goodyear rain tires, but his
Tyrell:ford performed .flawlessly
and he himself was superb in the
slickest GP yet.
Stewart leads
After a considerable. delay, the
Stewart served notice that he

IJe1en flag fell in the midst of a
rai a storm. Stewart pabbed an
im~peciiate lead over Petersen,
whi had sotten off very well from
his sixth grid spot, and Jean Pierre
~toise t.oho came up very fast
frOJ!D eleventh in the second
Mlrj~.

approached turri nine nearly
nose-to-taU, Stewart came up
behind George Eaton driving
another BRM. Eaton moved over
to let the Champion by, - but
didn't see Petersen and a1ammed
the door in his face, causing him
to spin and hit a..par&lt;~r&amp;il, costing
him IS se&lt;:Onds. After that, it was
all Stewart.

l~t of the Interest focuted oil
the leaden where the youna
Swtlde, Petersen was batUint it • Race halted
out with Stewart, who is the best
'"-~ -:....
I IIC UlliO'
was really getting
dri~er in the world. Then, on lap
I 71, · Petersen sneaked his heayy, and when the comer
Ma11ch-Ford past to take the lead . mar~ls could no longer tee
The two exchanged it repeatedly from one flag station to the next,
over the next laps; neither could the stewarda halted the rau after
quite shake the other. On lap 3S 64 laps. Stewart really showed
Ste"vart pulled out a three-second everyone how to 80, finishing 3S
lead on the March. As the two seconds ahead of the second-place

car, and nearly a lap ahead of
Donohue, who did exceptionally
weU in his first GP outing. Hulme
· and Wisell rounded out the top
five fi~ishers and despite the early
end, the race does count for
championship points.
With only one · race remaining
(Watki ns Gl en , ""
"'-t. 3), Stewart
has won the title for the second
time with 60 points to Petersen"s
29 and lckx's 19. At The Glen,
Stewart has to be the favorite.
Should he win there, he would tie
the late' Jim Oark's record for the
most wins in a season with seven
- another milestone on his way to
immortality.

832-1595

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1971 MUSTANG Mach I 351 CIO
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1969 MOB good condition. Must Mil.
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1967 VW Squaret&gt;Kk. Excellent
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877-5501 between 6-8 p.m.
FURNITURE, club chlln, bOx springs,
.ofl·bld, el-chMpo, 684·9395.

s.pt. 23.

SI'MCA JMi s Needs clutch 8$00 or
Mit otter. 176·1221 between 10
a.m.-a p .m .
1M5 ECONOI..INE Camper - sleep~
five, poptop, Icebox, link. Excellent
body and anelne. L..Mva name,
tetephone, T'rallw No. 9, E. Topper's
Maiii&gt;OI' 131·5318.
FOR SALE 1M5 VW bus. Good
con dition, ruson.Oie priCe. Call
836·7128 ~ftar 6 p.m.
HAGSTROM triple-pickup, solid body,
guitar and amplifier, Arvin tape
recorder, bookc:aM, dftk. ChMP.
838-1011.
V.W. CA MPER 1967. Excetlent
con ditio n . Factory equipped.
675-7631.
BSR turntable, Roberts receiver,
Elac:trovotca JPUkan, thrM months
old. Was 1340 • now 8210. Firm,
885·1031.

WANTED
WANTED• Bowlers for Newman Club

.•

FEMALE roommate w~ntlc:l - shire
houM five min. Wllk to campus - 8
Flower. S55 +.Call 834-3401.
OWN BEDROOM - bUutlfut apt.
84U50 + utllltt.., 694 Humbott. Stop
by 1nyt1me or IMva number with Andy
Dash WBFO .
NEEO 2 female roommat... 5~'"·
wAlk, 66 N ICholson off Engl-oocl.
8Mutlful aPArtment . Stop bY d inner
lime- no phone.

PRIVATE room In APartment,
five-minute walk frpm Rlc:lge LN. Prlca
negotiable. Eves. 817-1237.
2 FEMALES - roommates "Mdlc:l to
shire room In Apt. 29, Hawthorne.
Cell Jerry It 831 ·2489. $65 • .
ACROSS FROM campus - Wlnspear
Ave., own bedroom completely
furnlshlc:l. 160/month . All uttlltl..
tncluc:lac:l. 837-osog,

A'ARTMENTS WANTED
COUPLE naec:ls apartmlr'lt or room
nur campus. Call Margo or Kirk,
836·8929 bllwMn 6 - 11 .
ONE GUV naects 1 place to live.
Preferably own room . Marc, 834-3850.
Leave m•seve . Grateful .
ONE BEDROOM furnished 1p'artmant
for
mate (near campus). Rent
not more tt\1" 890 (lr&gt;cluc:ll"ll utilities.
Call 838·3480.

''"II'•

APARTMENT nalc:lac:l as soon u
possible nMr c ampus. Call Cathy,
831·3483. We m1ed hllpl

LOST II FOUND
IF • VOU plekac:l • puppy at Norton
Tuesday around noon, 14th, brow",
while teet , frac:ICias, please cau
881..0334. Bill, Deb.

- Ute knuckles

If we ·read with our hands.

..-

Todlly, 1·eading with )•ou r hand i:~
quite acc:eptable.
In fact, it's somewhat of u statttK
symbol, because people who t•ead with
their hands nre g~·aduates of the F: \'elyn
Wood Course.
The band. howe\·er. hasn't ulwuyt'
been the symbol of t•apid rending. Th"
old method of teaching 11ttutents t11 increase thei•· \'etlding speed wa11 to equip
them with u t·eac.ling machine.
.
The theory was that a motonzed
arm on the mttchine \\'(lllld extend out
ovet· the puge. The arm would mu\'c
down the page at a !lteudr Apeed. Hopefully, your eye!' would IZ'It alnng fell' the
ride.
The muchine. while seemingly a
good idea, didn't li\'e up to itA expecta·
tions. It couldn't tdow down when the
reader ••an into a confu11ing pussuge.
And it wa11 t.oo uwkward ln u11c in easy
c hairs o&amp;· beds.
In 1945. Evelyn W.,OO dil'ICO\·ered
the hand m• a device for t·eading fttster.
He•· a•ettson foa· UMing the hand aR a
toul wa~S to "give m\' student11 the ability
to read g1·oups of 'woa·ds at a time and
t o increase theit· concentration 80 they
won't ha,·e to gu back and r e-rend so
nfterr."

Wed. Sept. 22 thru Fri., Sept. 24

at
4:30p.m .. 7:00p.m .• 9:00p.m.
also

Sat., Sept. 25 at 11 a.m. 1 p.m.

I

I I lt t• Jlr 11\Ci pi&lt;· \\'(IJ'kCd.
Sim·e 1!'15!).. 450,000 people }u,ye
laken the Evel\'ll Wood Course and ha,·e
intreu11ecl their reading s peed by au
u\'erage uf 1.7 timet'.
t.:t~ing the hand t o reud fn~Ster i11 a
~'''" '' intere11ting experience.
· If you would like to trr ~·mtr hand
at it why don't you come tD a Orienta·
lion?' In one hour's time. we'll have you
reading down the page faster than you can
imagine.
In fud. y,,u'll aduull~ take hc ~me
w ith ,·0 u a definitely fas ter reading
:-~peerl ·that ('lin be used on newllpa per ll.
mal(azinc:-. cun'e!lpondem·c. t cx thuokt~.
ami tet:hntt·ul juurnalll.
\\'e'll tell ,·uu about :~o me of the
other things that have mude thi:s the
mu:&lt;t popuhu· extt·n-cut't'icuhu· course in
the wurld. We'll afso shnw you huw we
impru\'e memories. and huw we make
l.'h apter outlining an obsolete study
tec·hnique.
lt'14n wild hour. And it's free.

EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
Attend one of these FreeMini-Leuons
at our
BUFFALO INSTITUTE
3606 Main St.
(next to the BJJffalo
Textbook Store)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CALL 837·2823

w •· tlrot~

by

tn. F'"more Room ~ from 1G-4
STUDENT to 1111st _,o'-of'l femlly and ftnd • ptaw for yourself In
With "OIUIWork lnel blbyUttlrt9 Commutttty Action Corps - swo)ecll
pert - time, Oelaw•r.-Fany - · \ Inch..- SOCIAl ~. enwjronmentat
883·1192.
actton, tutorl..s end rac:rutlon,
diY&lt;~r• canters and hotQitll protrams.
START 82 Pel' hour salary, ptus bOnua.
Work 4-t p.m. -kdlys. lo-2 p.m. DEAR JOHN and Jane Volunteer: If
Slturdlya. Cell 835-3803 or TF9-0402. I'm not In the CAC office, look for me
tn tM. Fillmore Room tOCIIy NEED RIDE to NYC, Ieiva Sept. WedfMICIAy, ~2 from lo-4.
23/24 1 return Sept. 27/28. Sl\lra
ATTENTION piiiMI Easy1Qint guy
crtlvtno. expen•. Clll 836· 1779.
ctaslr.. • pliCa to llva. Prefer own
MALE OR femlll l&gt;lbYtltter for
room. Mire 834·3150. ThinkS.
occasional evenings, 1ftarnoons, .ac.
COLLEGE atuctent looking to make
Relllbla •net axpertenc.ct preferred.
good money for working one hour per
C1ll 837·3912.
Clay . Clll 215-877-7700.
AUTOHARP In good condition. Call
.lOll" 831·3373.
WOMEN naact.cl for unctargrou"d
photoa. 820. Olscratton assur.cl. Boll
659, BUffiiO 14205.
ROOMMATE$ WANTED

GRAb STUDENT looking for same to
share
2 · ba dr oom
apt .
Kanmore-Oitlwlfa aru. $40 month,
plus utilities. Vlvt1n 876·3258.

In the old clays,
they smacked us across

IF YOU HAVE nothlnt tO Clo or - n

If you ,.._ _.,.,,...

APARTMENT FOR RENT
3 - J;!EOROO M fumlshec:l apartment,
gooc:l toatlon, rent or sh1re, 896·8344.

• ERSONAL
ROCK GROUPS wanlac:l . Steady work,
cnotce of ntghu. The Club Remur.nt,
Nl191ra Falls. Contact Eel L.ucas.
282·8602.

S IN GERS and lnstrumentalllll
lntar..tlc:l In forming a group to 11"9
and play Northern Blrotua muSic (a.t .•
BAch, Schuetz, Buxtet\UCII), PIMM
contllct Bart Jonas 1t 831·523 1 or
835-6739.

\ MISCELLANEOUS
QUICK, efficient typing done - 1 .40
per PI!II· Donna McGowin 838-4801 .
OPENINGS on Backpaga staff, piMse
contact Sue WeiHr Immediately at
831-4113 or at Spectrum office.
AU 01 OPHIL.ES SHURE M93E
Cartridge - list 139.g5 n - - never
usac:l . Make offar. 883.0722.
IF YOU'RE rudlng this, you know
that Spactrum ctuslfta&lt;K work. For
rat.. and Information, c:ome up to
Room 355, Norton Hall, 9-5, Mo"diY
tllru Friday.
THESIS, CIISHrtatlons, l)lpers typ.cl,
1 . 50 doubte-spaead p1ge. IBM
Magnetic card Typewriter. Plck·UP and
delivery, 937-6050 for detalla.
GUSTAV Is blckl Xerox lnYthl"!l
(bOoks, notes) for only $.08 1 copy
(the chupeJt rate we know In
Buffalo). Come up 1nd Gu5tav at
355 Norton HAll . No lines, "o forms.
no waiting.
HEV YRSTRMQRPJI Whltf CAC Is
holding •n ope" house I" the Fillmore
Room toc:lay, 9/22. Vuh7 Yuh, would
1 lie?
CATATONIC tim-asters: Come out
of IIIII SUSPI"CIICI state '"d be I
votunt- In Community Actio" Corps,
220 Norton. 831·3609.
CALL THE ' 'Second Time Around"
for your household anc:l penon11 needs.
885·364 1 or 882·20g4 ,

RIOEBOARO
COUPLE Hllcl"g tr~"sportatlon to
west Coast, I.e., San Francisco. Will
snare e~eQanSII. Call ~lme and All
834-2158.
MOUNTAIN MUSIC Festival In W. Va .
NMd people to share rentac:l car. $25
rou n Cltrlp. Leave 1fter"oon 9/23.
Return 9/26. Call 83 J ·2197.
NEED A RIOE7 If you CIO, tnls Is the
plAce to get 11. Spac:trum Ride Board
Cllsslflllds ~a~IIY work.

kittens

RIDE NEEDED 10 U .B. M-w~ from
c ouonwood vicinity or Williamsville.
Will sh~re costs. Call 688·8801.

PART-TIME employment - lbOVI
aver•ge pay for scnool term work .
853·8109. 9- 3 p .m .

ROUTED TO Toro"to7 Rlc:le requ..tlc:l
•nytlme Friday, sept. 21. E~epanses
sha red -suunne 831·2g67 .

F REEl euut lf ul ftuffy
available rl9ht now. 886-8079.

..-.GENERAL FOREIGN STUDENT ASSEMBLY ....
~r

Foreign Student;
The Foreign Student Coordinating Council (F .S.C.C.)
URGES you to attend a special meeting on Thursday the 23rd
of September at 8 :30p.m ., room 233, Norton Hall .
The purpose of the meeting is to obt.lin the necessary
support of every single foreign student on the SUNY /AB
Campus in matters that concern us u a minority group fonning
part of the tot.ll university community.
F .S.C.C. is the organization where all foreign students are
represented, no matter if you are officially part of one
particular club or not.
-

I··

Our Agenda for the meeting includes:
1. Present Status of F.S.C.C. activities.
2. Foreign Student representation on the Student
Association (SA) Assembly.
3. Other issues.
It Is essentfol to hove every single one of you at ,this
The Steering Committee,
meeting! SHOW &amp; SPEAK UP/!!

jae Kim
Nasser Ziaian
jayant.l Hura
Cristina Nicklas

Xeroxs cheap!
355 Notion Hall

�,

..
,.

,_

/

Announcements
Student Film Club is SJgnrng up members
Wednesday and Thursday from 10- 3 p.m. at a table
on first floQr Norton.
UB Vets Club will hold its first meeting of the
year on Sept. 22 at 4 p.m. in Room 260 Norton.
There will be elections for officers and the first
edition of the paper.
'
UB Photo Club will hold its first meeting on
Sept 22 from 7:30- 10 p.m. in Room 332 Norton.
All are welcome.

Student Polish Culture Club is' holding its first
meeting on Sept. 23 from 7- 11 p.m. in Room 232
Norton.
A general meeting of undergraduates in the
Department of French will be held on Wednesday,
Sept. 22 from I :30- 2:30 p.m. in Room 334
Norton. All French majors and prospective majors
are urged to attend. A-gendas will be avai lable at the
door on Wednesday in Room 214 Crosby. For more
information contact T . Jefferson Kline in Crosby
214.
UB Gay Lib will hold their weekly meetings
every Wednesday at 8 p.m. Room TBA Norton.
Activist Youth for Israel will hold a meeting on
Sept. 22 at 8 p.m. in Room 233 No rton. All arc
welcome.
Chess Club will hold a meeting on Sept. 23 at 4
p.m. in Room 233 Norton.
The Buffalonian is having a meeting on
Wednesday, Sept. 22 at 2 p.m. in Room 356 Norton
for a ll students interested in working on the
Pho tography staff.

..

I

Women's Li~•eration is holding free Karate
classes on Tuesda1f and Thursday from 4-6 p.m. in
Room 340 Norton. All women are invited.
The Blues (C&lt;J•IIege A 302 or 320) will hold their
first meeting Wedn1esday, Sept. 22 at 7 p.m . at 4 East
Depew in Apartm•ent 7. All registered students must
attend. If you ~t llost, call 836-5169.
The Theater Department will hold a meeting
Thursday, Sept. 23 at 4 p.m . in Diefendorf Annex 2.
All 'theater stude10ts and those interested in this
ye._r•s program, pl~:ase attend.
The Foreign Student Coordinating Council is
having a general foreign student assembly Thursday,
Sept. 23, at 8:30 p.m. in Room 233 Norton. All
foreign students pl1ease show up and speak.
Women's Fe!ltival Committee will hold a
meeting Wcdnesdalf, Sept. 22 at 1 p.m. in Room 330
Norton. All women1 are invited.
Women's Studies' College will hold their first
general meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 22 at 7:30
p.m. in Acheson 5·. It will be followed by an open
house at 108 Winsp,ear.
Human Dimensions Institute will have a lecture
on Improved Nutrition Wednesday, Sept. 22 at 8:15
p.m. at Wick Ccntc1r, Rosary Hill Co ~!ege .
American Studies course Man and Nature in
Industrial Society '199C will meet Thursdays 3- 4:30
p.m. at I24 Wins1pcar (upstairs). There will be no
problems with late registration.

a

WBFO will present
special program ttri
Wednesday 8 9 p.m. featuring LeRoy Pesch, dean
of the State University of Buffalo's Medical School.
Listeners can phone questions into Dr. Pesch at
83 1-5393.

Ba~kpage
Sports Information
Today : Varsi ty cross-country at Cleveland State
with the University of ToJedo, Cleveland, Ohio, I
p.m.; Varsit~ golf ~·s. Camsiu s, at Beaver Island, 2
p.m.
Friday: Varsi ty golf v~. Gannon College and
Ni,tgara University, 2 p.m., Amherst Audobon Golf
Course.
·
Saturday: Var~ity cross-country, horne opener
vs. Rochester, Syrac•usc and Niagara, 11 a.m., Grover
Cleveland Golf Coun.e.
Attention roller hockey buffs: The fall season's
second contest will t.ake place o n Spturday morning
at 10: 15 a.m. in the parking lot between Michael
Hall and Capen Hall.

·,

What's Happening
Wednesday, Sept. 22
7:30p.m. "Flying Saucers 1951 - 1955," Lecture by
Norman C. Brennan, Niagara University
conference librarian. At the University.
8 p.m. Meeting, Weiland Colour Slide Club. First
Aven~:~e North, Wetland, Ontario.
8:30 p.m. Mangione Quartet : Manguso Theater,
Genesee Community Theater, Batavia. Also Bat
McGrath and Don Potter
3 p.m. Bruce Powers Film Festival: "From Hand
Cranked to Hand Held : Experimental Film
Retrospective. Studio Area Theater. (Through
Sept. 25).
7 p.m. Fall of Babylon, Film First and Red and
Black. Northwest Library, 27 1 Grant St. (free).
12 p.m. Activity by the Studio Arena Theater
Outdoor City Center, One M&amp; T Plaza.
9 a.m. " Wage- Price Freeze:" Discussion sponsored
by Buffalo Area Chamber o f Commerce and the
Retai l Merchants Association, Cordon Bleu, near
the Buffalo Airport.

- Sue Weiser

•

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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          <description>If the image is of an object, state the type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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                <text>Spectrum, The, 1971-09-22</text>
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                <text>Arnold, Dennis</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349877">
                <text> Benson, Al</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349878">
                <text> Lippmann, Mike</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349879">
                <text> Moss, Susan</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349880">
                <text> Drucker, Jim</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349881">
                <text> Mellentine, Sue</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349882">
                <text> Armao, Jo-Ann</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349883">
                <text> Vacarro, Bill</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349884">
                <text> Kurtz, Howie</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349885">
                <text> Forman, Ronni</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349886">
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349887">
                <text> Doane, Jan</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349888">
                <text> Toles, Tom</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349889">
                <text> Silverblatt, Michael</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349898">
                <text> Lipman, Harvy</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349899">
                <text> Dayan, Stanley</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349900">
                <text> Engel, Bruce</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349901">
                <text> Serafin Steve</text>
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                <text>United States</text>
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                <text>Erie County</text>
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                <text>Buffalo</text>
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          <element elementId="89">
            <name>Table Of Contents</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349919">
                <text>Lack of volunteers stalls CAC activities</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349920">
                <text> GSA to hold student senate elections by new constitution</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349921">
                <text> History Dept. complains</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349922">
                <text> Faculty Senate proposes new rules for academic dishonesty</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349923">
                <text> Surcharge criticized</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349924">
                <text> Demonstration in Albany</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349925">
                <text> Former Attica prisoner tells of conditions inside</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349926">
                <text> Pilot Program plans to improve relations</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349927">
                <text> Your civil rights protected</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349928">
                <text> Medicall</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349929">
                <text> Birch Bayh supports Sedita</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349930">
                <text> Justice Black resigns from Supreme Court</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349931">
                <text> Feminine culture featured</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349933">
                <text> For what it's worth</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349934">
                <text> Andante</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349935">
                <text> Outdoor concert well received</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349936">
                <text> Our Weekly Reader</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349937">
                <text> Haunting story of forbidden beauty</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349938">
                <text> 25,000 old folks invade Huston</text>
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                <text> Records</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349940">
                <text> Rain doesn't dampen show</text>
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                <text> Overtime</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349942">
                <text> Buffalo Bulls rely on youth</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349943">
                <text> Jackie Stewart claims victory</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text> Classified</text>
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                <text> Announcements</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1447023">
                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1447024">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals -- New York (State) -- Buffalo.</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Student publications -- New York (State) -- Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1876947">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/CNE/1.0/"&gt;COPYRIGHT NOT EVALUATED&lt;/a&gt;. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.  This digital collection is made available for research and educational purposes. Researchers are responsible for determining copyright status, and securing permissions for use and publication of any material. Copyright for items in this collection may be held by the creators, their heirs, or assigns. Researchers are required to obtain written permission from copyright holders and the University Archives prior to reproducing or publishing materials, including images and quotations. For inquiries about reproduction requests and permissions, please contact the &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/archives/"&gt;University Archives&lt;/a&gt;.  If you believe material in our digital collections infringes copyright or other rights, please review our &lt;a href="https://library.buffalo.edu/about/policies/information-use/notice-and-takedown-policy.html"&gt;Notice and Takedown Policy&lt;/a&gt; for information on how to report your concern.</text>
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                    <text>Attica gets help

Medical program expanded
I

by Howie Kurtz
Aut. CDmpul Edit«

An agreement for the "expansion of ...
(the) surgical program at Attica
correctional facility" between the State
University of Buffalo Medical School and
the New York State Department of
Con:ections was announced by LeRoy
Pesch dean df the Medical School, at a
press ~onference Friday afternoon.
The expanded prosram includes three
basic provisions: the inclusion of "general
medical care" and "additional professional
staffins" on a volunteer basis; providing
"full medical consultative services" for
Attica i nmates ; alld instituting
comprehensive care at Attica "on a
lona-term basil.''
This agreement quieted the controversy
between the Medical School and the Ad
Hoc Committ~ to aupport the Attica
prisoners who stapd a lit-in at Capen Hall
Wednesday ni8ht •and bad been otherwise
urginc the Medical School to expand ita
proaram for treatment of the Attica
inmates. The Ad Hoc Committee
temporarily cancelled its scheduled
y.oeekend sit-in at Caj,en in light of Dr.
Pesch's announcement.

411ith quality'
Dr . Pesch indicated that he had
conferred with Jamea Bradley, director of
Medical Services for the Department of
Corrections, and Russell Oswa14,
Commission of Corrections, in arriving at
the qreement. He elao explained that
physicians (rom the Medical School have
been present at Attica all week and '"the
medical care that they (the inmates) have
received has been very high quality."
Responding to cbarces of insufficient
medical care at the Attica prison, Dr. Pesch
offered that "every inmate bJ!S been

examined it least three times; twice by our
own physicians and once by DeWtrtll'lent of
Corrections physicians. There were 83
inmates that required some sort of S'urgical
treatment, 18 of which were critical and
transfened to Meyer Memorial Hospital.
Two of those died," h~ concjuded.

No injuria untrated
Physicians from the Buffalo Medical
School arrived at the Attica prison sqon
after the tragedy occurred on Monday
morning. One controversial point W.!IS the
question of why th~ doctors left Attica
on Monday evening. Dr. W.G. Schenl~. who
headed that . surgical IJOUp, stated that
'"when University personnel left Attica on
Monday niaht, there were no recou~nized
major injuries that had not been cared
for." Dr. Pesch explained thalt the
physicians left Attica to care for putients
who had been transferred to Meyer
Memorial Hospital.
When asked for an explanation tl&gt;f the
fivHay delay between the Attica traaedy
and this expanded medical proara1111, Dr.
Pesch stated: "This is just the
announcement of the official agre~1ment .
There baa never been a time since M1onday
mominc that the state didn•t allow us to
bring in our doctors and equipment:." He
also said that the Medical School is
attempting to "minimi~ the difficuilty of
professionals aettina into Attica - ""e are
developina a panel who will ~~ the
profeaionals in~lved.'•

StaterapoalibiUty
The oripnaJ announcement w~ m1a de at
a closed press conference of administ1rators,
Abe press, radio and TV in Haye•l HaU.
Subsequently, about SO members C)f the
Ad Hoc Committee were admitt~l. and
tb.;y proceeded to fire questions lit Dr.
Pesch. They demanded that the M.edical

~antos

Prison prescription

le Roy '-=h. o.n of the Media~~ Sd..e
·•nounced ...... tor .... expenslon of .......,
fiiCilities 8t Attb Prilon.

School assume fuU responsibility for the
treatment of the Attica prisoners, but
conceded to, Dr~ Pesch's stipulation that
the legal responsibility for the inmates'
health must remain with the state. Dr.
Pesch also indicated that deficiencies in
living conditions. su!=h as the water supply.
ph.tmbins, etc., remained under the
jurisdiction of the Department of
Corrections.
StudentS' obtained Dr. Pesch•s word that
he wo~insist on the admission of black
"doctors (to Attica prison) should the state
authorities resist !' When asked about
alleged prisoner beatings by guards, Dr.

Pesch reported "there was nothin&amp; in the
medical reports to indicate such beat:inp.
However, I cannot support or deny such a
statement since I didn't actually visit the
cell blocks."
Dr. Pesch added that the State
University of Buffalo Medical School wa
caJJed in immediately alter the Attica
traJCl(ly because "the Medical School has
had a relationship with the Attica piUon
for five years through the Department of
'Surgery!: He felt that this relation.s bip, as
weU as experience in the treatment of
trauma, aided the surgical tearn immensely
in its life-saving work on Monday.

Attica prisoners
face death charge
Charging that some Attica
Uberties Union, the Center for
prisoners have been t.h reatened
Justice through Law, the Center
with death in the wake of the for Constitutional Rights, the
upri~ng which left ten hostaaes
New York Lawyers Committee
and 30 prisoners dead, Haywood for Civil Rigbt.s Under Laws and
Burns, National Director of the the NAACP for Legal Defense and
National Conference of Black Educational funds.
Lawyers, led a press conference in
'Norton Hall Friday. The Nomistance
conference held in front of three
"There was no move made to
network TV cameras and student harm th'e hostages, there was no
reporters, centered on the lack of general response of resistance and
prisoner resistence at Attica State the tight orgainization that
Prison during last week's assault
prevailed durin&amp; the period or the
by the National guard .
siege was such that the persons
Prisoners at Attica during the and the security force assigned to
siege were "definitely lying down guard the hostages were assigned
on the ground when shot," Mr. to them for the purpose of
Bums said, as a result of his protecting them," Mr. Bums
interviews wjth prisoners on explained .
Friday. "The general response at
interviews were allowed after
the time of the assault was for the lawyers persuaded officials to
inmates to drop to the ground and open up the prison compound.
proteGt themselves and save .their "The delay to council gettina to
lives in the face of the onsl?t ..:~clients is unconscienable and
offirepower,"hecontinued. '' '
unpardonable.r" Mr. Burns
Interviews with 20 inma ~m~~~c(_ '/
were conducted by lawyers at a ....
Mr. Burns, actina as spokesman
rate of four persons interviewed at for the lawyers, ·reported that
a time, generally with two they had no confidence in a
attorneys present. Involved in the government fact finding agency.
interviews and press conference He explained that beatings of
were representatives from the prisoners "took place after the
National Conference of Black siege bad been concluded" when
Lawyers, the New York Legal Aid prisoners were being removed.
Society, the Buffalo Legal Aid During the siege, be told of
Society , the American Civil ' indiscriminate neavy fire power

Attica panel
by the Nlational Guard and the
shooting ,of prisoners who were .
apparentl)• surrenderina. Inmates
reported ito the lawyers that no
warning l'rom &amp;be troopers and
helicopten~ occu17ed prior to the
assault.
"Virtually all indicated that
when the a~s was released ancj the
troops mo1ved in with heav~ fire
1
power , t:he response of the
inmates was to drop. to the ground
and try to save their Lives,". Mr.
Bums said.
The la~•ye'rs further reported

Haywood Bums. NatiONII Director of the NatioNI Con'-'cl of 8IKk
Lawyers, reported on 1he flndinga of interviews with Attica inmllt&amp;
that during their Friday
interviews, .they had seen physical
evidence of beatings on the
prisoners. At the wake of the
siege, "they were forced to strip
naked. They were forced to crawl
through the prison yard. They
were subjected to racial epithets,
to verbal threats." Mr. Bums
maintained that these findings ·
were cOrroborated by medical
personnel.
Reports of physical harm to
hostages had not been discussed
with the inmates &amp;lthough further
interviews will continue. Those

inmates --i-n-ter viewed are
principally clients of the lawyen.
Mr. Bums reported that the
version of what happened at
Attica through the prisoners' eyes
has, thus far, been consistent.
All of the prisoners interview~
were at one time in Cellblock D
and some of them were there
during,the actual seige.
Many inmates expressed · the
desire to be
,ferred from
Attica. "The cw ....'-~ situation for
the inmates is one of which many
inmates are in fear for their lives,"
Mr. Bums said.
\

sie..

�,

Draft deadlock broken~
WashJngton (UPI) - '11\e Senate rejected a determined bid by war
critia Friday to block the draft bill, slvinl Pusideot Nixon a victory
that could restore inductions by October. Members voted 47 to 36
· against tabling the draft extension so it could be rewritten to set an
April J deadline for withdrawal from Vietnam.
The vote appeared to have broken a congressional deadlock that
has left the President without authority to induct draftees into the
armed services since June 30. Within two hours of the vote, 22 senators
had filed a petition to stop a filibuster apinst further action on the bill
and a vote was set for Tuesday on halting further debate.
Although the biU still faces the threat of that filibuster and other
parUamentary delaying maneuvers by draft opponents, there was
widespread feeling in the Senate that the measure would be on Nixon's
desk by the end of the month - perhaps by this week.
Doft:l' defe.tl
The vote lengthened the string of defeats for those seeking to
legislate a deadline for ending US involvement in the war. The string
broke onlonce - when Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield
steered an amendment to the draft bill thi'ough the Senate last June
that set a rune-month timetable for withdrawal from Indochina and
release of U.S. prisoners of war. The for withdrawal from Indochina
and release of U.S. prisoners of war. The in a Senate-House negotiating
conference in July.

Student Assembly will have'
new f~rmofrepresentation
byJelflealola
s~'«'"''"

sr.n ..w~tr

()pe to the self-edmitted failure
of last year's student JOvemment
to accomplish its pls. this year's
Student Auembly will be
radically chan&amp;ed from thoee of
the past. There will be a new fonn
of representation and a decided
shift in power from the executive
committee to the 'students.
The Student Astociation is the :
main force behind many of · the
University's activities. It sponsors
clubs, concerts, the Bail Fund. the ·
Record Co-op and other programs
of benefit to the student
community. Accordina to an SA
official, its strenath has always
been its ~tential, while its
weakness has been the lack of
student support. This fact came
Into focus last year.

Executive bwdeo

Polity was the name of the
previous student assembly. In
order fo r a student to actively
Deeply disappointed, Mansfield rose at 11 :15 a.m. to make h.is participate in Polity, it was only
necessary to show up at the
tabling
monthly meetings. Unfortunately,
The back of teh anti-draft forces, however, was actually b roken 17 with few students ma1c:in&amp; a
conscientious effort t o attend
wounded, "the amputees, those who have been fragged to death, those
meetings, P o lity became a
who have been drugged to death, those who have been demoralized, monthly meeting of the executive
~se . who are the -Uving dead." But his majority for the measure
committee. As a result, individual
collapsed under the weight of Intensive administration lobbying and interests superceded the main
increasingly sharp warnlnp from the White House of an impending issues. and little was accomplished.
Th e entire rcsponsiblUty of
manpower crisis In the Army, Navy and Air Force.
runnina the government was
force d upon the executive
committee and an unfeasible work
Pay raise provision
load was created.
The back pf the anit-draft forces, however, was actually broken 17
In a lut ditch effort , former
hours earlier when Sen. Gordon Allott, R.~olo., and others seeking a SA president Mark Huddleston
fundamental change in the bill's $2.4 billion military pay raise asked that the p&gt;vernment be
provision decided to drop the issue. Allott said he had Nixon's pledge dissolved and a new constitution
to support a later $300 million ln,crease that would be directed to first- written. When voted upon by the
students it was passed by a
and second-year servicemen. But key members o f the House Armed substantial margin.
Service$ Committee said they would block Allott's attempt to attach
An important measure in ' the
the extra pay to a military procurement bill.
new constitution is th.e calling for
the fo rmation o&gt;f interest groups.
The pay raise now in the draft bill would be the largest ever An inter&amp;t croup is formed by
granted the military in history. It would take effect Oct. J, in the midst any 40 persons, whether a
of the wage-price freeze, unless Nixon postpones it - an action that particular department in the
University, a club, a court in
some lawyers think he cannot take.
Allenhurst, or a Ooor in a
Tuesday's first attempt to impose cloture wut requite a two-thirds dormitory. To create an interest
croup It is necessary to obtain a
majority.

- S TEE 0 -

._(irants available
Under11aduate research aranca are anilable for
one aemeater or full year studies. Application• for
fall 1971 and full year (1971-72) projecta muat be
recelnd by the Underaraduate Research Council no
later than Sept. 27, 1971. Their offiua are located In
lOS Norton HaU.

CANDLES POSTERS
MON THRU SAT
JQ:QQ TO 5:30
THURS TILL 9:00

Distributors wanted
New oil product
Amount of investment
up to you.
For interview
call

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633-1153

NEXT TO THE GRANADA. THEATfR
MOBILES INCENSE CARDS ETC ETC !

petition. (The SA will have a table
of the fint floor of Norton Hall
from Sept. 1S - Oct. 8, where
petitions and other information
will be available.

the wembly's main functions.
This year , the executive
committee will have to answer to
the demands of the student
representatives.

Optimiltic . . .
After tbe petition il validated .
dections must be held in order to
determine which one of the 40
persons will be the representative
to the assembly. This penon will
be the only member of the aro up
to regularly attend mcetiny, and
he will have fuU votina and
legislative powers.
The first assembly mcetln&amp; Is
tentatively scheduled for Oct. 1s.
Presently the outlook 11 for an
initial SO interest aroups, with an
optimistic coal of about 1SO by
the semester's end , accordin&amp; to
lan De Waal, Student Association
president. A primary change jn
the assembly meetings wUl be the
strength of the representatives
over the executive committee. In ·
the past, the executive committee
contr9 Ued the actions of the
st udents in the area of
appropriations of money, one of

'The 6nt aep•
When questioned about the
prospects of success for the new
••embly• SA tpolteaman Lee •
Schwartzbera replied, " They
s hould be very &amp;ood. The
represent.a ti•es from e&amp;ch interest
IJ'OUp thould be acutely aware of
his responsibilities and attendance
a t the meetinp should be
excellent. This is the fmt step in
the directJon of &amp;ood government.
"Unfortunately, the change is
not an end in itself. The same
difficulties that appeared last year
ca n be perpetuated by a
continued lack of student
support. (( a student h.as a specific
interest. tuc~ u skilina, he should
ao to the Ski Club and get other
students together to form an
interest group. Only the students
can prevent the faUure of this
year's student government."

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The Spectrum II publi6Md thiW
,,, . ....... .wry A#on&lt;*y,
.._.,_.,., Md Frk*y; dUring tM
fWI/UIIIr ~ic

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831-4113,BulintJU,
831-3610.

You say they won't let
you vote? The GSA is
working to insure your
right to vote, but can't
help unless you tell us.
Contact the Graduate
Student A s soc .
immediately if you were
stopped from registering.

R•,_.,rwl for Hwntllng by
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ATTENTION
111 MUSIC DEPT.

834-2660:

HEY GRAD. STUDENTS

Page two . The Spectrum . Monday, September 20, 1971

'

pllid •t

~tion: 16,000

�., .. ,

Permanent home

Day Care sets up house
;.o"

by Lyoda Teri

-

.

know where the children are at aU times and who is
SP«trum Staff Wtfttr
caring for them. The sip-up sheet tells the "in and
out" of parents, children and workers. Ms. Richter
"It may look chaotic," Mickey, a work-study summarizes the discipline as "mostly any method
student said as she supervised the antics of the that works." Currently, there are II 0 children
children in UB's Day Care Center, "but the kids are registered - evidence that the methods work.
genuinely happy."
•
The children aren't the only ones taken care of
Hampered for the past year by lack of funds and at the center. Parents, in addition to spendin&amp; time
administrative cooperation, the Day Care Center working at the center, are also involved in at least
finally obtained over _the summer, funds for staffing:, one committee with plans for orientation meetings
renovation, supplies and equipment.
and workshops. Parents arc sharing the center time,
But the center is still in the process of setting up · Ms. Richter says. If both are students, they split
housekeeping. It will be two or three weeks beforte their working hours or the student-parent assumes
the center will be operating with Ute proper the center responsibility while the other works. One
fa cilit ies, according to Leta Richter, cente r father spends a few hours at the center and while
coordinator.
joking about soundproofing, he is thankful for the
center. " I wouldn't be able to go to school without
Renovations
this place."
Community Action Corps has purchased toy1!1
and indoor gym equJpmr.nt including tumbling mats , AdjustinJ
Henrietta jokes about the children adjusting. " I
climbing chains and swinp; quite a switch from theiJr
one mattress gym of Jut semester. The walls have: think {he moms have the hardest time. I try to
been repainted and a kitchen set of two refrigerators, reassure them we are careful with the children , but
they are moms. Their mind is always on the children.
a triple sink and dishwasher have been installed.
The money , available after last semester'!! The children themselves act used to being here
demonstrations, was acquired with the help olf pretty fast . It's harder for those who stay only one
ChanceUor Boyer in Albany. ..Ketter and Somitt or two days a week; it takes them longer to get used
didn't pve us any help. Boyer did, but only because: to mom leaving."
be wanted us off his back," Leta explained. "If 21
The center's official definition on campus states
school is behind the center, it wouJd be a really easy• they must serve as an educational function ,
thing to establish. Without support, it is really• according to Ms. Richter. "Being a school for t hese
rough."
kids isn't enough, according to them. We must serve
"Roup" is an understatement of all the ha&amp;slesl as a laboratory for research . · ~ Psychology and
which have faced the Day Care Center. "It was an1 Nursing majors come in to observe childhood
unsafe place for kids," Ms. Richter states, "Never behavior and this research has not gotten out of
any serious injuriea but lt wasn't aood enough." The1 hand. Ms. Richter is hoping she will not have to set
heating and ~ventilation are still to be completed. limits. "I will if I have to, but if it's fun and
Once all the renovations are through and they educational for the kids, I may not have to." AU
become settled, hassles wiU decrease.
research must be Gleared throup Ms. Richter with a
complete outline. On that she is very definite. "I
Center's policy
want to know what's goina on at the center at all
The center's policy statement, "Some Thoughts. times."
On Educational Policy" reads :
Good child care II based upon fulfilli116 the
needs and honorint' the rlfhts of children and not Subcommittees
One steerina committee and eiaht
Upon accommodatin1 the convcnitnce ofadults.
subcommittees
have been established to facilitate the
The children 6hould comt to undtr1tt1nd that
the •dults staffi116 the center are there tU friendly center's powth. The subcommittees deal wllh every
ruowce ptersons, admon, f•cllftaton and 'final aspect of attendance and scbeduUna, rmance, fund
raising, houselteepJnJ and supply, internal
t~rblter~ • to be IO"'ht out when needed. As attntrtll
proc:eainJ, medical, public relations and
information
principle, with ftw exceptioN, adult• mould not
education. Two members from each of these
Intrude.
•
committees make up the steerina committee.
This discipline is followed and all worlcers believe it a

healthier atmocpbere for the chUdren.

HaPPY chlclrea
"I've worked in centen with children for six
years and this is the first place I think the children
are really happy,'' ~ys Uenrietta Keena, staff
member of tire center. "The children are free,
unstructured and happy."
Henrietta says this model "just means you have
to have 20 pair of hands and eyes."
Unstructured, but not unorpnized, the workers

Tbe workers themselves are shorthanded and
overworlced . Children must be turned down for lack
of room, but Ms. Richter is hopeful aU will be
accommodated soon. The waitina list is small and
she says some parents, able to afford a private day
care center eometirnes pull their children out . The
center plac;, demands on its parents and it is easier
to pay a little more and not hassle about work hours
for some. She sees this as better for the center. "We
want to be able to help those who can't afford the
private centers and are Interested in the cooperative
idea.''

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Mondays cl Thursdayt
thru Sept. 23rd .
Room I 06
Baird Hall

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K.nw ....,..... • .-oup of
facu tty and students Itt the
...--w _..ice for the Atta
~
on 11M Baird lawn.
Thu~

tJ.w

Memorial service held ,
for victims• of Attica
byMuyAaaeMorpt
SP«trum St•lf tttttw

President Robert Kenter
confronted medical stud•,nts
Thursday afternoon • huncllredl
of students and faculty pth•:red
on the Baird lawn for • memcria.l
service for Attica victims. 'The
aervke was held after a futile at-in
held the ni&amp;bt before, conduc:ted
to urae the impleme:ntat.ion or
student demands to LeRoy Pe!ICh,
dean of the School of Medicitne.
Dr. Ketter, who bepn his
speech amidst Ufht rain and anpy
murmurs from the crowd, 11111•
halted by cries of " Murderer!"
when students from the Ad Hoc
Committee to support Attica
interrupted ·him. " Wanted for
Murder: RockefeUer and Nixon"
and "Am nesty for Attica
prisoners" read two promin·e nt
signs held up by students in the
crowd.
Shouts of "national trap(ly"
and "coldblooded murder" came
from the crowd as Dr. Ket.ter
maintained silence. People were
"urged to orpnize to make aw·e
Attica won't happen apin."

claD•""

Students
Ot ber students , urging
President Ketter to issue this
public statement, helped queU the
interruption temporarily. Tbe
President stated that at noon the
executive commit~ee or the
medical teftool bad voted tror
expansion of present surJi•cal
programs at Attica and aeneral
medical care from a professional
staff starting immediately.
Dr. Ketter called for Univerality
and Medical School provision of
comprehensive care at Attica 01~ a
long term basis. "Toaother we can
build a more lasting memorial,"
be said.
"Medical care in this country• is
poUtical, "the President was tc•Jd
by one medical student. " We mc:et
the organized violence or the stute
with oraanized resistance of
people.''
Medical School demands wc:re
read, callina on the Buffn.lo
Medical School to accept full
responsibility for health care of

inmates at Attica. A public
statement of medjcal treatment
and exam• perl'orme4 since the

beslnnina o(

tbe Attica rebellioa

was demanded, indlJdina names,
treatment, condition and location
of inmates.

...- ...
-re
.. ftoeaced
Formation of an objective
Medical Review Board and
visitation rilbts for families of
dyin&amp; and injured prisonus were
demanded iminedjateJy. Also
included in the demands was that
a public statement describinJ the
relationship between UB Medical
School and Attica State prilon be
released.
President Ketter said 18
doctors bad been in Attica from
the School of Medicine, and that
there had been others on
Wednesday besides 16 surgeons
the day before.
"Every day we are faced with
Kent States, Jackson States and
My Lai's," Jan De Wul, president
of tbe Uoderpadu~e Student
Auociation said. "Caged animals
perish. How can men be able to
function behind iron bars?"
De Waal denounced Preaidenf
Nixon's support of Rockefeller,
callina for the resipation of the
two men. He called for a two-day,
student-oraanized, natioJlwide
moratorium to discuss prison
problema.
The medical students apin
uraed the coUective uprisinJ of all
atudents and announced a
nationwide drive to Albany
financed by money collected in
Norton UaU. The microphone was
cut in the middle of the speech,
but the st udents continued
speaking.
Memorial prayers were read by
Rev. Rodney G. Snedeker, Father
Edward Fisher and Rabbi Justin
Hoffman, in which tbe
preciousness of life was stressed.
"They (the dead inmates) will ~e
remembered with shock and crief
and bitterness and love ,"
Snedeker· said. Fisher warned
apinst those antagonized not to
become ''victims of the very
blindness of which we accuse
others."

Monday, September 20, 1971. The Spectrum . Page three
• I

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Page four . The Spectrum . Monday, September 20, 1971
I

�f

•

"'

Fradin speaks

Dismal
future
for
English chairman appointed open parking lots ...

"I don't have any dramatic changes in mind.
The department has functioned very well and quite
democratically., There is a aood deal of openness,
creative teaching and freedom.'' Joseph I. Fradin,
newly appointed chairman of the Department of
English, said in an interview.
He said that the department has and will
continue to encourage student involvement in its
policies. However, Dr. Fradin pointed out that there
has been difficulty in finding undergraduates 1o serve
on the english Department's various committees.
This J includes th e a ll -important curriculum
committee, which oversees what types of courses
will be uught within the department.
Dr. Fradin asserted that department efforts to
contact students through classroom announcements
and alike have failed because there is no organization
of undergraduate English majors existing. The task is
challenging, he remarked .

The issue of open parking has will be on a first come.:first
sparked a great deal of served basis - with the return to
controversy recently. lncreasin&amp;ly separations as to facuJty ~~d
evident has been the confusion student lots . · However, 1\n
surroundlng the quesHon of OeWaal , Student AISOCia_tion
whether or not unrestricted president, reported that he bas•
parking wiU become a permanent heard some talk on the possibllit,Y
-:ntity on this campus. _
of chafiins students parking fees
In actuality, the open system is In the spring.
Faculty reaction to the open
functioning on a trial run . Wwas
conceived by the Traffic Control parking system has been neptive.
Advisory Committee, a At the first meeting of the
University -wide body, as a Faculty Senate, one faculty
compromise between the majority member expressed the faculty's
of students and security guards in concern of open parkin&amp; as a
favor of open parking and those permanent policy . William
faculty and staff opposed . The Baumer; vice cbairm111 of the
trial run was initiated last May to FacuJty Senate •nd member of .
be run through Sept. 30. At the the Traffic Control Committee,
end of thai time, ructions to explained that it was only
I
unrestricted parkjng would be experimental. He further assured
JoteJrity a aoal
assessed . Tile deadline is fast the Senate that, u a committee
Besides his duties 3S chairman, Dr. Fradin is
approaching and consequently a membc:r, tre wouJd give a stron&amp;
currently conducting a senior class on Charles
meeting of the Traffic Control recommendation to return to
Dickens. Some 20-odd students of some literary
Committee is scheduJed to be held sqrepted lots.
experience are currently enrolled . "J'm teachin!," he
Sept. 21 .
explained, "because I want to make sure I do some
According to Robert Hunt, Baumer oppoeed
serious thinking and work with books and I'm very
Environmental Health and Safety
One of lite problems with
officer, the general reaction to the parkin&amp;, Or. Baumer said, was
interested in Dickens. Also, it insures contact with
open parking system has been enforcement. Accordin&amp; to him,
students."
At this point, Dr . Fradln's main goal is to Studies and Advisement for the department ... I've negative and the results of the as faculty lots are enforced against
"maintain the department's integrity and excellence. been in administration fof' ten years so tile volume of upcoming meeting will probably students, students feel that the
faculty should be prevented from
work comes as no surprite to me," he said ...Other lead to a return of restricted
Res~ct for work and intellect is very clear in this
parking. The Student Association parking in their lots. Georae
department, be it from administrators, faculty or than the steady flow of b1usy work and phone calls, on the other hand still retains Hochfeld , Department of English,
I've encountered no speci.nl problems."
students.''
hopes or· keeping the opep policy had 1 novel suggestion for the
A graduate of Columbia University, Dr. Fradin
Dr. Fradin's appointment was the result of a in permanent operation .
whole p r oble\n : entirely
has been with the State University of Buffalo since series of elections in whid' both students and faculty
eliminating cars from the campus,
and with them, parkin&amp; lots. .
1960 when he joined the faculty as an associate participated. In all meetings concerning Experimental basis
Other 11chools have solved their However , the faculty body
professor . Previously, he taught at Cornell departmental policy, each! faculty member regardless
of rank, is given a vote. In addition, one student vole parking problems by limiting the present seemed to discount this
University.
number of parking permits issued solution .
is granted foT each faculty vote.
All of this will be discussed at
accord
in&amp; to arade point average;
The student represe!ntatives consist in equal
Columbia paduate
distance in miles from school; by the committee hearing next week.
Directly preceding his promotion, Dr. Fradin numbers of graduate and undergraduate students. In
di sq ualifying freshmen. An additional proposal will also
held the position of associate chairman. Before that, tenure decisions, too, student advice and opinion is sophomores and dorm residents; be raised. The University bas
he vorvf:(f nv~ yea~ as dlrer tnr nf Undergraduate solicited and pven con~ldc:ration .
anu through the charging of fees. property at 2929 Main St. where
Mr. Hunt has &amp;iven reassurance parkin&amp; spaces could be made
that probably none of these available if enough students would
measures wUI go into effect. He be willing to leave their cars there
The Ofliee of Admillions and Recorcb wAibes to aclvil1e atudeoa. that Cbanae of believes that permits wiJI be issued and pay S.25 for bus service from
Reptralion week endl Wednesday, Sept. 21. Thoee 1tudena. who willh to rtJistn aftn freely as in the past and parking thai Jot to campus.
thil date mUtt receive permialion from the IDitruc:tor on det!)artmental atatlonery with
chairman '1 approYal. No rqiltratiou or eolli'M droppblp wllJ be procaled after Dec:. I.
It il allo ~ that ltudenb clledt with their inatruc:tor to see if they are properly
rqistered on the offaeiaJ daa lilt. IDdmduala whoee namea do not appear on these
offlc:lal ea.. lila. are not reJiatered and lbould rqMter at onc:•e if they are to continue to
attend da~~a.
Student Parkina permits will be available to
thoae .audentl whose automobUes ~re properly
re&amp;iltered with the Campus Security Offtee dwina
ROSH
M A T T R E S S'E S
the week of Sept. 20. PermiU can be obtained at the
HASHANAH?
Diefendorf Rotunda.

Dr. J'i"radin

Registration ends

Permits available

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Monday, September 20, 1971. The Spectrum . Page five

�..
"' '

I.

EdiToRiAlS

I

No whitewash

The Medical School's agreement to provide the Attica
inmates with "full medical consultative services" is a
significant achievement. Its importance stems from the fact
thlt this should guarantee competent and impartial medical
n.tment&gt;for the prisoners. Secondly, it is important because
this settlement might never haVe come about if large numbers
of concerned students did not take it upon themselves to
fon:le such an agreement.
The ..,eement, however, should not be the end of this
univenity's involvement in the aftermath of Attica. Several
stori• of atrocities have veen forthcoming recently from the
"correctional facility.u Most concern exC8158S committed by
smta Troppers and prison guards upon helpl• inmates. In
addition the basic questions of how and why the prisoners
wwe m~rd.-ed remains. Until these matters are investigated
and 1he persons *PQnlible are made to answer for their
crimes. the students of this university should continue to
JM~ntain a vigilant posture.
The potential for any Attica Investigation becoming a
farce is high. Certainly, no official ICf'Utiny will f/lf1l inclooe
either Governor Rockefeller or Commissioner Oswald.
What m• be prevent~ is a whilewash at both the state
and fednl Ievett. We can think of only one .solution to
minimize the chllnCel for another Kent Sute, Jacli(Jon
SC..type investigation. namely to keep so much attention
toc....t on the atrocities of Attica that no one will dare to
wNtewash the staughter.

Student Assembly·
The SA's drive to actualize the Student Assembly has
begun. For the next three weeks, students can join in Interest
.,oups of 40 and delegate a single individual as their
repe811ntative. While we originally had some 1"118f'Vations
lbout the te.ibility of this system, we now urge the student
body to support the ~bly by affiliating in groups.
We believe, however, that the procedural requirements
for membership are a bit too rigid. Requiring that an interest
W'OUP meet and then etect their representative is admirable,
but it overlooks the reality of the situation. F.ew interest or
affinity IJ'OUpS, except pemaps the 1arger c:lubs, are made up
of 40 -udents. Since it is therefOfe likely 1hat most
~fy units wm form around the individual and not arise
from a pnHtxisting woup, we feel it would be advisable to
consi• a woup as constituted when a student hands in a list
of 40 signatures. To insure that this process not be misused, a
form containing the representatives name would be sent' to
each petition signer and they' would be required to affirm the
delagete as their choice. This, we believe, would streamline
1he affiliation procedure and increase the chance for a
well-filled Assembly.
Historically. students at this University are usually
unhappy with the distribution of student fee monies.
Mlimbership in the Student Assembly carries with it the
power of a veto on all Student Association financial
all~ns. This, we regard, as an attraCtive feature and hope
that it can offer a significant inducement to participate.

THE SpECTI\UM
v.e. 22, No. 12

MoiMiey, Sepr.nber 20,1971
Editor-in-QMef - Dennis Arnold

Co ......... Editor - AI Benson
Co ......... Editor - Mike Lippmann
A•. Mu. .nt Editor - Suttn MOll
. . . . . ......_. -Jim Orudcer
Adwrtili"' M...., - Sue MeUet\tine

c-.- ......... Jo-Ann Armeo
• • . • • . . . . . • . . . . . Bill Vec.rro
~ . ..• . ..... ..Howie Kurtz
Clly ..•.............•. V-nt
~ ••... . ... .. Ronni Form~~~~
•••............. Marty Gatti

L8yout ...... . MIIIVhope R'anvon
~ .•.......... .... .vacant
MUiic .............Billy AltmWI
Off..C.mpus ...... Lynne Traeger
~ • ................ Vacant
Photo ........... Oevid G. Smith

~ · ............... V&amp;Qn\ t . , Aat. ............ Ga~v Fr!,OO
F - . ............. Jan Ooene
Asst•...... Mickey Osterreicher

car...- ArtS .. ...•..• Tom Toles
LiLa Ontme .. Michael Si1118f'blatt

Sports ......... ... . Barr1 Rubin

Alit...... . ...... Howie Faiwl

1JW $Mct'Vm is servied by United Press lnwrnational, College Press
S.WC., the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los Angeles Time Syndicate, and
~tion News Sl!f'llice.
...,_.,lication of matter herein without the express consent of the
Edilor·in-Chief is forbidden.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor·in..Chief.

Don't add, subtract
..

sure that som~ of the faculty would not care if their
students didn't have the books aftd they would
refute to do anytbinJ about it, in other words, a
I would like to comment on the propoAI be.ina student who is &amp;niJY at h~vina to pay a 10%
conliderecl by the Bookstore study aroup in which aurcharp .i1 the one who would be duped, and not
they would add a l~ IUI'Charp to late ordered the faculty member u intended.
books. T1UJ . proposal miaht indeed lead to a
The biliest mistake however, is that wh.ile the
confrontation between the students and the propoMl milbt be abte to reform tardy teachers in
reaponlible faculty member, which apparently, is the the future, il\ the tcn~e that they wouldn't be tardy
reuon for it.
the next time they order the books, for now, the
Pint of all, late ordered boob are not always · atudenta would be the ones to have to pay for this,
the fault of the teacher, u one of my teachen bec:autc the faculty hun't been Jiven a chance to
reports that be ordered 70 copies of a textbook and reform.
As conclusion, 1 would Uke to ild a
the t;oobtore cleemed it neoeuary to only order 40
copies with the result that about half the claa still rec:ommcndatioJt to the Boobtore study-sroup: Why
have 110 books and they have to be late-ordered. not wort at reinltatina a I~ d.ilcount rather than
Second, the potlibility that a clasa mflht be biaer addina a I~ extra clwp, in the Jon&amp; run you'U
than the teacher would have expected, which is not have a lot lell •narY people at your back.
A Student
JUs fault. hu to be accounted for. And thirdly,lam

To lltf Editor:

IIM.IIIIIEIT Demands of student protestoR for the State University of Buffalo Medical School
to provide medical treatment for Attica inmates bave been met. Or so we are told today.
Last Wednesday niJht, student leaden and puticlpants in a Capen Hall sit-In were

told that Medical School wouJd aaume all responsibility for the medical care of inmttes
at Attica Prison. nus news wu reported by David Breet,l, president of the Medical School
Polity and described by one top administrator u a representative of the medical
committee neaotiations. Accordi.na to Mr. Breen. the official buUetin by the Ned School
would be released at noon of the followina day.
However, noon uw an empty memorial on the lawn of Baird Hall. President Ketter
disavowed that any committment to student demands were made. Instead, be read a
watered-down resolution and voiced empty platitudes.
"Men do not foraet . but bow do they remember?" asked one of the speakers. No
one can foraet Attica and no one can foraet the
joke perpetuated on students by the
administration. A joke which transformed .the mood of the campu. from jubilance to
anzer and disbelief. Accompanying this ans.er and disbelief was awareness - an awareness
forgotten by students that they are not listened to, nor as Keith Frankel (National
Student Affain coordinator) pointed out. respected.
It appears that Attica will finally receive adequate medical care. And that is good.
However. not to be forgotten is the fact that student&amp; were deliberately misled and lied
to. Repeatedly, throuJhout the events of last week, this lesson wu learned by all
· members of the University community. Once apin, we were educated to the truth of The
Strttwberry Statement : " Whether or not students like strawberries is of no concern to
me." The truth was revealed by James Simon Kunen and is shared by President Ketter,
·
executive vice praident Albert Somit and top medical officials.
David Breen explained that be dropped out of negotiations with the Medical School
because he becahte convinced that the administration did no't care about students or what
they thouJht. Lester Goldstein. Student Association coordinator for Academic Affain,
commented that the administration wu not concerned about. itudent sentiment. A
student at last Friday's press conference announcin&amp; the Medical School's acceptance of
their responsibility to Attica, maintained that the administration bas created a "massive
credibility gap.••
This gap which President Ketter hu supposedly sought to eliminate has gown ever
wider. Instead of conducting open office hours where be can exchange pleasantries with
visiting students and instea~ of appearing on the radio compromisina
to questions
(all not in themselves evil), President Ketter should have listened to students.
Last Wednesday night's events were an opportunity for Dr. Ketter to demo nstrate
his ability to deal with students. He failed miserably.
Maybe this is too negative, too cynical, too damned tired. Perhaps there were
genuine misunderstandings and .the administration did not willfully stage a farce. If this is
the case, then tbe administration should make all efforts to re-establish some kind of
relationship with the students of this University . It won•t be easy for fro m now on
students will auto matically disbelieve any administrative action or motive.
Students learned much. Too weU did we learn that we are ignored, powerless and
leaderless. For our student gQvemment failed us as m iserably as did the administration.
Ian DeWaal ignored student pleas at the memorial service to question President Ketter.
Instead he mechanicaUy read a pre-prepared sPt:ech ; highly entertaining, but certainly not
at all relevant to the day's and night's events. It must be noted here that some SA officials
(and no n-SA officials , also) behaved admirably. Particularly, Lester Goldstein, Dave
Steinwald and. Karen Shatzkin, who truly argued for the students.
_
It was them, not lan DeWaalnor Harold (Spot) Guberman nor Scott Slesinger, who
negotiated late Thursday night with administration to answer student demands. The only
regrettable thing is that there are not more student ,government officials of their caliber.
This first week of classes was indeed an educational o ne. We were educated to the
reality of Attica ; to the dereliction of the administration : and to the absurdit y of student
government.
~
·

eruel

bimfill'

Page six . The Spect:!UID . Monday, September 20, 1971
I

~

--

�.I

\

...

I )

'

9:45 eviction

'I

To the Editor:

by Sme Madoff

Maybe it's time we gave some consideration to
what we are reaUy doing here. Last night I joined a
niJ.D1ber of other students in being evicted from the
Lockwood Ubrary at 9 :45 . I'm sure there are serious
fascal problems, but I still consider library facilities a
bare minimum for a University Education!
Robert Wien
Fred Wien
John Vorrasi
I am sure this list is Longer!

Priorities?
To the Editor;

1

How are priorities aet in this. place?
l"m I : Outside the Themis building there are
muses of lovely petunias and geraniums. (Are there
any flowers around your dorm? Around • your
office!)
lum 2 : The Reserve library, because of buds~t
cuts, cannot put a book on reserve unless it is
delivered to them. Other minimal services have been
eliminated.
Complete the list yourself. lbeQ try to explain
it.
C. A. Gallaper
Assistant Professor
Philosophy

To- tltc Editor:

It is obvious that a crisis ex.ista within the
University Libraries. A criaia which in our opinion
miaht ba.e been avoided bad leJitima&amp;e daannels of
I()Yemance and cohlmunication been available. We
can upon yeu u Director to immediately transmit
the by..f.awa formulated by tu elected Libraries'
By-Laws Committee for colllidention and
ratification ·by the profelaional ataff implementation to follow at once.
We further urp that you, u chief administrative
officer of the University Libraries, work with the
existiq faculty library committees to facilitate the
raolution 9f the most urpnt problema affectln1 the
Libraries and that effective means of establiahina
mutually acceptable priori~iea be souatat.
Finally we, u the Libraries' representatives in
the F•culty Senate, wish to 10 on record u rejecting
tbe imap of librarians u intimidated and oppressed
members of the faculty who are forced to resort to
anonymous aUeptions in the Student Press.
Mary Brady
Shonnie Finnepn
afadeleine Stern
Thil l~tt~r il t1 copy of t1
1ent to Myl~• Shltln, director of the
Libi'Vie1, by tlte abolle-Mmed iluJIIIid&amp;Ulb.
Editor's note:

communiet~tion

Coneetioa: The front p-.e ltcwy of Friday'• Tlte Spe-ctrum ,
lllilqaoted Laurence Scluaeicler, Dep~~~t•eet of Hiltory, in hill
cte.criptioe of dae Ubrary. The quote, wllicb c:alled for ecrutinizint
of th ruuiaa of ·the library, •oald 118ft rad : ••. .. iDc:redibly
coa~tecl ba.reauc:ncy - Byzmtine - which I'UU tile Ubnry •• •"

·GUest Opinion

'

William Kuenstler is going tQ speak in
N"orton. Kuenstler . . . Kunstler .. •
Koonsler . .. Koon·tsa-la.
The lines are carefully and willfully
born early and they grow dimensionally outward, backward, around - like
pidgeons gathering quickly on two parallel
telephone Wires. And why not? Tfl!s is it.
This is the marking characteristic, the scar,
the beauty mark, this is what the sixties
and the seventies will be remembered for.
The line,s, the crowds, the sit-ins, the
demonstrations all indicate that "for the
firat time in history the common man
~t;a,ws that something big is about to
happen before it actually does happen.
And look what the lines are for - to hear
speeches about Attica. Wow. The newsmen
had labeled Sept. 13 IS Attica Day, and
already enumerated the effecu it '11 have in
the future, and it was only B p.m.
The lines, by 8: JS, were not lines but a
rope-enclosed mob. The personality of the
mob was the same u that of the crowd
that used to gather for the Saturday
matinee western movie. But the difference
between the mob outside the Fillmore
Room and inside WIS the difference
between an infant walking barefoot on a
rug and a hippy walltin&amp; barefoot in
mid-Manhattan in 1963.
You get inside ancl the fintlhi08 you
notice is that you don't 1ee any chain. For
10111e reason you e~ to sit on chain
to hear a lawyer speak. lllltead you sit on
the floor. And you ask younelf while
adjusting your awkward lep whether the
reason there's no chairs is that it saves
s.,.ce when everyone sits on the floor or if
the people who set the whole thin&amp; up
wanted the effect. The sit-in effect. When
everyone sits on the floor a tribal
atm01phere scents the room (instead or a
lecture atmOiphere i'f there were chain).
Everyone sits and waits and bullshits
and watches the SA people running around
and being ¥ery busy and excited and
concerned. And you try and pick out the
ones who are nourishing their egos and the
ones who are seriously committed to
becoming politicaJiy active.
After a while, the waiting and the
bullshitting is interrupted by the
stereotyped activity which always goes on
around the microphone. After too many
.. testing 1,2,3's" and feedback taps,
OeWaal blesses the mike and officially
proclaims its readiness.
Everyone is there waiting to see
Koon-tsa-la ... everyone is sw~ting in tbe
large but stiiJ overcrowded box in order to
see Koon-tsa-la but they always have to
bring on other speakers before him. There's
no way you1J ever remember what they
said but they have to bring on the speakers.

Before he walb tn there's a lona line of .
people who are not him who precede biQa.
These people aren't important but they
walk like they are or think they are and it
just maputies the expectations, apeeds lip
the flow of sweat. pains the soles of the

KOON-TSA-LA .. . KOON-TSA-lA ...
KOON-TSA·lA. He Wllb through cloeed
cloon so this is the firat time he is teeing
his audience. He just came from a place
where his life wu in danger and now ·he
comes here. It's got to be on his mind that
he could get hurt. The cr~ is larp but
not completely out of.... band. But it's
crowded and the noise is street noise but
' we're indoors and you could never telJ
what's going to happen - what one py's
going to do. K.oon·tsa-la is a little IC&amp;red
and you could tell by his involuntarily
• creased face 'and cautious step. He's tryins
to bide his fear and you co\dd teU that too.
Aa soon IS be walked in you could teU
he WIS someone important. His IUit lw
been heavily worn during the put day or
two but it is uncreased. But it wun't his
suit that stood out, it wu his head. The
Koon-tu.Ja head. His face looked ~ u
if from make-up not from the sun. His
medium-length .hair slopes down the back
of his head. His sideburns and temples are
whitish but not from 11e. The color is like
a bleached silver - bleached by the sun.
It's a good face for television, you decide,
and it look$ good here u well.
He starts apeakin&amp; and you could see
that he is indeed a little teared; maybe
from the larp crowd. or from the&gt; loud
noises, or from the anall podium, but be is
scared. He's speakJAallowly, bathin&amp; each
word in his jaw before carefully mouthin&amp;
it. It's not the Koon-tsa-la you heard on
the Cavett show Qr the Koon-tsa-b you
uied to imasme heari• when you read the
Playboy interview.
In penon, his accent is dearer. Who
does he sound like? There's a toueh of
Mailer's Brooklyn-to-Hamud inteUectual
twang but there's more. He also breaks up
his sentences and acunu the last word in
each segment . . . like John Wayne does.
Yea, that's what he is Mailer and Wayne.
Koon·tsa-la is Mailer and Wayne. He says
he wu scared~ when he entered CeU Block
0 but after a while his convictions were
false. And you couJd see it's the same here.
His initial fears of the crowd have been lost
in the rhythym. Yea, the rhythym. He
speaks to a climax and then there's that
mechanical clapping. The clapping sounds
like when you bang the bottoms of two
moccassins together Ulce after you come
from the beach, but there's a thousand
mocassins here.
Finally you're out in the street and the
cool street breeu seems even cooler up
against your sweat. Or is it the hard nigbt
chill that there always is after men have
died?

THE GR£ AT. WHIT6 . SUF,:-ALO
C«OIIEL SN.ri/AI$ TOOK
Otlel Till
.4AJP
HAllE

A

DOZ4N
/lOSTA,_.

Monday , September 20, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

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Am. Sporti Editor

St~rJdent

SALE

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'

by HoriFaiwl

In conjunction with the
year-.long 12Sth annivenary
festivities at the State University
at Buffalo, the Physical Education
Department ba~ annnounced
arrangements for a massive
• tw&lt;HI:ay sport• symposium to be
· staged, in Clark Gym on Oct. 8- 9.
Th:is huge spectacle, in what
w
..J
direct,or of pbysiCJl educaUon Dr.
c(
en Harry G. Fritz has described as
"t he most rewarding such
progn1m ever offered in Western
New Vork," wiU involve the entire
physi&lt;:aJ education, professional
and non -professional teaching
staff, as weU as the University's

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SptJrts symposium to. b~ held ·
coaching personnel.
The symposium will consist of
several .demonstrations in judo,
swimming, l'ymnastics, tennis and
fencing, by world renowned
artists along with a series of
movies and djsplays.
National authority
The highliaht of the program
will be the famed clini~ian Dr.
Kenneth Hardy Cooper, director
of the Cooper Clinic and Research
Foundation in OaUas, Texas. Dr.
Cooper, recipient of numerous
national honors, is the leading
authority on a nationally
prominent exercise system,
"aerobics."
This unique aerobics system

Guild meeting

I

The Student Theater Guild is boldina its second
meetiua today to discuss this term 's major
production and the fint Nickel Theater. Nickel
theater is a compilation of one-acta and ~eenes from
major plays whlc:h is presented each year u a aort of
introduction to the Tbeater GUild.
The ~DCCtlaa il at 7 :30 p.m. in Room 340 of
Norton HaU. People intereated in actina, direetina
ad tecbnk:al work are welcome. Orfainal ideu and
experimental ori,m.l works are al8o desired.

1971 - 1972
Newman Hall
SUNDAY MASSES, Sat 7 p.m.
Sun. 8 :30 - 10 - 11 - 12 noon
at Cantalician Chapel - 3233 Main Street
SUNDAY 7:00p.m. SPANISH
at Newman Hall - Niagara Falls Blvd. &amp; Main St.

LOST: Tu•. Sept. 14th
Male puppy - brown White

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Daily liturgy
Newman Hall
8- 12- 5
Sat. 10 a. m .

HALL HOURS
Mon. - Fri. 8 a. m . - 9 p.m.
Saturday 9 a .m. - 5 p.m.

was developed by Dr. Cooper
while be spent a medical career in
the OS Army and Air Force.
Aerobics was specifically designed
for pilots in the supply and use of
oxygen and has developed into a
practice that is now widely used
by over eight million Americans.
Cooper's fmt book. Aerobics
published three yean ago, sold
two million copies, which induced
him to author another best seller,
The New Aerobics. At his Texas
clinic, Or. Cooper's methods are
used' to measure heart action and
metabolism, which enable hlm to
forecast with 80% accuracy
whether a man is likely tp have a
heart attack within five years.
Buffalo was quite 'fortunate to
secure the practically inaccessible
physician and Dr. Fritz remarked:
" With the acceptance of Dr.
Cooper and the support of a
number of noted pyhsical
educators in the area, we are now
assured of an outstanding
presentation."
Indeed, this co.mprehensive
program .at ' Clark Gym should
outdraw last year's open house, in
which two thousand people
attended. The student body is
opce apin invited to aU events,
which also will include soccer
matches, crou-:eountry rl_leets and
several luncheons and dinners.

contact Bill or Deb.- 881-0334

Femo/e roommate needed:
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Main &amp; Fillf}1ore area

Coli: 834-7980

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Page eight. The Spectrum . Monday, September 20, 1971

-

-

�Committees formed

Attica:tragedY investigated
Attica became tbe property of
both priests and politicians Friday
as new investigations were begun
into the five-day rebellion which
cost the lives of 40 people. Jt is
still not known exacUy how many
inmates were injured last Monday
when police and National
Guardsmen stormed the prison in
an attempt to rescue 38 hostages,
but a volunteer worker at the
scene, Dr. SheLdon Schwartz of
Buffalo, said there have been
more than 300 gunshot wound
cases. Dr. Schwartz, who worked
at the prison for two days, said
that many of the gun wounds
were in the back.
Schwartz and three other
doctors interviewed Friday said
that many· of the ISOO inmates
they spoke to complain ed of
being b~aten with nightsticks and
guns as they were being led back
to their cells after the attack. The
prisoners also claim that guards
shot people lying on the ground
"in a posture of surrender."
Another doctor in the group,
Howard B. Marcus, said, "the

received over two days was· that
marly prisoner$ w'ere shot while
they were in a 11onaggressive
posture."
•
Dr. lionel Sifontes was quoted
as saying, "We're physicians and
we went in to treat the prionsers.
We are not forming any moral
judgments. We're simply telling
you what the priso!Jers told us."

headed by Robert e. Fischer,
deputy state attonteY. general for
orpni1.ed crime and a panel
headed by Appellate Judge Harry
Goldman of Rochester. Fischer's
group wilt be considering criminal
violations, and Goldman's panel
will look into the question of
constitutional rights for the
inmates.

Pepper's visit
Mean while, a congressional
co m m i t t ee h e a ded by
Representative Claude Pepper,
(D-Fia) met with Governor
Rockefeller in New York Friday,
and then flew to Attica to inspect
the prison. Pepper was quoted as
saying that the visit was to "learn
what y.~e can about this tragic
occurrence." It is the claim of
Rockefeller and prison officials
that the nine hostages were shot
to death in a crossfire when state
troopers, sheriffs' deputies and
National Guardsmen converged in
1l four-sided attack.
Other investigations include a
citizens' .. truth seeking"

No specific:~

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SDL-3622
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Frenl ; Lombard. (3 discs) SCL-37~

0

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SCL-3772
ll.wtt: Camea. 8umbry, Vlcllera.
frtnl; Frllllbec:llllt 8urcos. (3 dlses)
SCL-3767

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flac:ller-DitsUu; a.1111ro111.
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SCL·3742
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c.dcla; MOII~~art-f&gt;radtlll (3 diSCI)
SCL-3718
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4.
SEL-3776

New York Mayor John
Lindsay, testifying in Syracuse
before a panel headed by former
Nassau County executive Eugene
Nickerson said, "I make no
comment on the specifics of what
happened at Attica ...The Atticas
of this country are the results of
indifference and refusal to look at
the real sicknesses of ou.r society."
Lindsay noted that when New
York was having problems with.its
corrections system, he personally
visited tbe jails · involved, and
added, "When correction officers
retook these instihltions1 they
weren ' t permitted a single
firearm ...Even the presence of
New York City police was

till, De lot Anltles; S.ntlnl.
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Sf:L-3716
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block

o.

The

of • five-day rebellion which
ended in the death of ten guards
and 30 inmates:
hostility and the Vietnam 'war as
some of the primo causes of the
Attica rebellion. He added, " I
speak' of what we had damn well
better start doing if"we want to
avoid the hatred and heartache so
tragically seen this week . I have
-contlnuec:ton~gelO-

•'

'

. .,
.,

...

. . ...

will be able to postpone their induction until after
graduatio n."
Dr. Tarr advised incoming freshmen and
students who started their program of study in the
summer of 197 I or later not to file applications for
student deferments even though the current law
authorizes granting deferments to students in
full-time programs of study .
"If the pending Selective Service legislation does
not pass," Tan said, "it would not be in a
registrant's best interest to obtain a student
deferment which would extend his liability until age
35. Should Congress change the legislation to
provide for deferments for new incoming freshmen,
which is most unlikely, applications for deferments
wiJJ not be jeopardized by delaying their submission
until after passage of tbe new law."
President's authority expired
The President's authority for the induction of
all men under 35, except for those who have had
deferments, expired on June 30, J 971 . If Congress
does not reinstate the gener.U induction authority,
the President could authorize the induction of those
registrants who hold or have held deferments. In this
unlikely event, Selective Service officials believe that
manpower req\tirements of the Department of
Defense probably could be met by inducting those
young men who have recently dropped deferments
because they graduated, dropped out of school, or
changed their occupations. Recent college graduates
or dropouts would make up the bulk of inductions,.
the officials said. They added that cancellations of
deferments probably would not be necessary nor
would it be necessary to call those who have passed
into the second priority selection group.
Currently there are approxtmately six million
young men under age 35 with deferments . Almost
500,000 of these normally lose their deferments
during a I 2-month period. The largest groups of
deferred men are those who have received
fatherhood, occupational or student deferme~t s.

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to cell

debris 11rewn yard wa the cem.r

discouraged . They had never been
inside, they had never worked
with the inmates. They had
firearms and there was no place in
there with firearms. ·r felt it was
important to be there myself."
Lindsay listed poverty, drugs,
economic discrimination, racial

Postponed inductions
Dr. Tarr said that college students will not be
drafted in the middle of a semester or term . " If
called while enrolled, they will be allowed to
postpone their induction until the end of the
semester or term . If in their last academic year, they

G
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Puc:clnh Ttsca. C. lias, 8erconll,
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Schwmkopf, Lud(l'~~~c!i~8i.-SS6l

dlrnaoe

Aftermath

MaJe colleae students who either entered school
for the first time this summer or this fall will not
qualify for student deferments if the pending
changes to the Selective Servi~e Act are passed by
Congress. Those students who were enrolled
fuU-time if\ the 1970- 197 I academic year will still
be eligible for student deferments in the 1971 - 1972
academic year if they continue to make satisfactory
progress in their programs or study. according to the
expected Selective Service policy. Senate action on
the bill is slated for completion some time this
month , and the House bas already passed the
measure.
Dr. Curtis W. Tarr, Selective Service director,
said : "Few incoming freshmen students are likely to
be inducted in the near future because of the student
deferment phaseout. or the 1,034,000 incoming
freshmen males estimated by the Office of
Education, approximately 80% are 18 years old and
only 20% are 19 years of age. or older. The 18-year
olds will receive their lottery numbers in 1972 , and
they will not be subject to jnduction until 197 3,
when draft calls should be low. The 19-year old
freshmen received their lottery numbers Aug. S of
this year and will be subject to induction next year;
at least haU should ruive high enough lottery
numbers to preclude their induction. Of those
remaining, approximately 50% will be disqualified
on mental, moral or physical grounds. This means
that a maximum of 50,000 men will be directly
affected in 1972 by the student deferment phaseout
arra one-half of these, or 25,000, will probably not
be inducted because of enlistments in regular, reserve
or national guard units, participating in
commissioning programs or because of procedural
delays."

Ceddl, De lOS MilliS; Clurtens.
(3 dis~ SClX-3667
hecllh l l ......... Frenl, Gtdda,
Serenl; Schippers. (2 dlsc:s)SBL-3643

0

New Volt S... Correctiona
CommisliCH* RuaeU Otwlld
tookJ perurive 111 he ~&amp;.uveys the

Incoming freshmen might be
ineligible for draft deferments

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0 MaUrt: Otl 8laftlltl. Schwarzllopl,

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JHERE WILL BE A MEETING T0~~9HT \
at 7:00p.m. NORTON HALL Rm.

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"By the way, there WILL be a stipend!
.
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ADVANCED LECTURE
for all
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATORS
Spearker
MR. JOE CLARK
Tues. Sept. 21
6:30p.m.
330 Norton Hall

I

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••~
•t
t

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-------- -- ••
Monday, September 20. 1971 . The Spectrum. Page nine
._'_.

•
~

�~.

J\ttica ...

a-111111-.--

·•IIIIIIIIIM
Am
EJq)e(ll118ntal

FlalwepectiYe

_...,1M_.._.. b............ Jectttr
..,._..,...,....,.s.,..A_.....,

September 23, 24 and 25,1971
Studio Arena Theater

walkc1d the breedins arounds of
Attic.• every day I have been
mayor. I have seen the streets of
rubble and filth - the open
markt:ts for heroin , the whole
intolerable process of necJect and
rage •that sends men to prey on
innocent citizens."

'

, _ lhnuelto lfliiiMae
"""' 1928 lo 19611 lhltl)&gt;..,...
&gt;lwfl nl""' and IWO IHIYI ...
ecta.Ntled by Cllh&lt;l llw world_.
...... ,...,...............'1'.m0tl
~&gt; CI IHI&amp; mofo()llpl(ly(b l)fOCh.c.d

by Indo~~~'~"' lifrntY"f.e" In the
list 40 "'" I( I""' hlw~n' l'""

lhe New A_, an Cln""'• 0&lt; lhe
toteotelfotb of lheJop,tMM, l'olbl\

ond C1Kh o•ont-..rd&lt;o, htre k '0&lt;1'
oppottynorv to·~ • urefyll,
Ofcheitf'lted protrem In thr.e
per'formancet Cw•th lhrH rf:pttll

mltlnet"tl.
lhrN niJhl._ ~Jinn lna et 7 JO p m
Three mau,...,, be11nnlna ot J.OO
p m Sl• ,.rfotmoncn hch PetfOf·
monee 1 complete entt•t•lnment
Ynlt Sl 00 ~''"" Sl 75 h•nlna

. ..

S7 SO (o; lhtH doiiHenl
periO&lt;mancn

The Clne&lt;noiOf~ In

. . . . . . . 24

0&lt;6« o( •-•once 1rr
n-Moy. s.,t. D
LYit lu&lt;luol

lruc:eConnOf

S.IV.tdo&lt;Ottl
Mlnllov

llobet1 riot.,
OmltriKI.....orr
IS W11.on
lite Webber
Chlllft Vidor
l051Ph Strick
Curtk Hlrrit~~ton

,...I•

/Yin Sdtwerln
JoMpiiYotel
Norman McLtren
Andre Tadl

Sren lraU..a•
.., . . lrouahton

toekett••., ..bteollhe-

lr..ceiiHIIe
w.~era.n~

Rid&lt; Cludle¥
CYrtil ttomnaton

Abswrd

loCI Godfrey

Lindsay's remarks about being
h
at t 1e scene himself were an
obvio1us referral to the fact that
Governor Rockefeller refused to
visit Attica at the request of the
prisoners. Rockefeller on the
other hand, still believes he was
ri&amp;ht in staying away. and said , "If
criminals could demand the
personal appearance of a governor

ll c. Dale

~,. s.,t. lS

eu....,~._

H&lt;orber!Kooow••
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llmmvMunrk•ml
ICentl l&lt;llnnokl
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John c..wvelft

=-tHTlaNATIONAL

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I.

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Jiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii.~-every time a hostage was held, and
i
•

I
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=

YOU CAN'T VOTE IN NOVEMBER!

-

U you're a resident of New York Cit)' , you can't •ote unleas you file an
absentee ballot . And we need VOLUNTEERS - to help oraanizc a
atudcnt-abaeatce •oter reaiatration dri•e.
IF YOU WANT TO HELP- CALL
Linda Quandt at 839-0207 or
AI ScbwarCE at 831 -5507
or come to
lOS NORTON HALL .

1....

••

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••

••

..........

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-continued from ,.ge 9-

replaced by the Wallkill
Co rre ctio nal Facility
superintendent, Harold Butler.
Butler, who has only been at
WallkUI for a few months, was
sent last weekend to the Elmira
Correctional Facility to aid in a
dispute among the guards.
One guard has asked that one
institution be established for
hard-core militants. The same
request came from the president
of the State Correctional
Chaplains Association, the Rev.
James P. Collihs. Collins wants a
separate maximum security prison
built to handle "hard-core Marxist
New face?
revolutionaries and militants." He
Elsewhere in the state, guards added, " We must segregate out of
from correctional facilities are our prison population those who
asking that Corrections refuse to abide by the rules of the
Commissjoner Russell Oswald be prison community."
the governor refused to go then,
the next thing they would
demand would be tbe appearance
of the President. This would be
absurd."
President Nixon's support of
the governor's actions has led to
the speculation that Rockefeller is
getting closer to the
ad ministration in Washinaton.
Nixon described the Attica
incident as " the most painfully
excru ciat"i ng experience that
Governor Rockefeller has had in
his term of public service."

CAUTION - NO AUTOMATIC

INSURANCE COVERAGE

If you did not m~~ke p.ym•t to the IOCIII
rep,..,tative of the lnsun.nce comp.ny-

YOU ARE

NOT INSURED

DEADUNE - Enrollment will not be 8C:Cepted after Sept. 30.
1971.
DETAILS AND ENROLLMENT FORMS - a..n.ble at: Haith
Services Office, Miduld Hal, or call 853-0931 .

=

•....

S I M S A N N 0 U.N C E S
ITS FIRST LECTURE
ON
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
FOR THE SEMESTER
SPEAKER
MR. JOE CLARK
(from Boston)
TUESDAY, SEPT. 21

8 :00p.m.
FILLMORE ROOM NORTON HALL

Schools:

f!ra
coursem
•

ATTEND ONE OF THE FREE MINI-LESSONS

at our

printi..

BUFFALO INSTITUTE

3606 Main St.
(next to Buffalo Textbook Store)

•

Start
.the
new
term

mstantly.
During the 30 days of September, Schools
get a ten percent discount on any
job brought to a Goodway Copy Center.

Monday, Sept. 20 thru Friday, Sept. 24
at
4:30p.m., 7:00p.m. 9 :00p.m.
a~
.
Saturday, Sept. 25 at 11 :00 a.m., 1 :00 p.m.

September SpecI•I:
Xerox copln onlr five cent8 each

when accompt~nled bJ thlelld.

LIFB'I'IW&amp; loRMBDSHIP
A. a Raadilll J)yDam.locl ~
JOU .... •titled . to tab • ..,......
Coone at d-. aad .. ofteD ..
JOU wtilll, at uy ol tiM 150 ~

GOODWR4 COP4 CEnTERS
43e Mall'\ Street • Butfalo, New Yorj{ 1•202. 716/854-8510

Wood Reedlq I&gt;yumicl .......
ie llle UD.It.d Statt~ aad fa 8arGpe.

• JJ\.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL
~.7-2823

Page ten. The Spectrum . Monday, September- 20, 1971

...

\

�AUDIOPHILES SHURE M93E
c:Wtrldfa lilt 83•• 95. N- - ower
ueed. Make off•. 113.0722.
DESPERATELV need morning rldM
fram ~11111 will pev. Steve, 236.03411 • .

I

fOR SALE
DUAL

APAR~ENT

121., Oyn. . Pu-3x; Fltner

PGW• amps, AR 4X's, Mc:lntosh 65
tun•, Unt~tY IINIIk••• Realistic:
amp. Marantz 23 tuner, Thorans
turntabta, Entllsh .components, Oyna
A-25's, 1H3 KarJNinn Ghla, stove,
1963, SMit, Altec: A 7·500 II, large
c;hast, 833·7270.
FOR SALE - 2 desks $5, 6 c:halrs, $5
bed, 810. 837-56~8.
HAGSTROM trlple-plc:kup,solld body,
guitar and amplifier, Arvin tape
rec:order, I:IOOkc:ase, dest&lt;. ChNp.
838-1089.

WANTED : Bowlers for N-man Club
League. E-y Thurs. at 7s30 starting
Sept. 23.
STUDENT to assiSt professor's famllv
with . housework and babyslttln9
part -time, Delaware-Fe rry arM.
883-1892.
START $2 per hour salary plus bonus.
Work 4-8 p.m. weet&lt;davs. 10..!.2 p.m.
Saturdavs. Call 835-3803 or :rF9-o402.
NEED RIDE to NYC, INve Sept.
23/24; return Sept. 27/28. Share
driving, ex
Call 836·1779.

pen-.

PIANO Kurtzman c:onvertect upright.
G reat condition. Will sacrlflc:e. Call
eambll, 831·5366, 8125.

ANYO~E wantlog to sell a TV (ChNp,
but In working cofldltlon), call Harvy
at 8 3 1·4113.

ELECTRA-VOICE 150-watt amp with
McDonald BSR 600 turmable and
matched, 12-lnch Wolverloe speak•• like new. Must sell. David 832.0248.

ANYONE tnterasted In taking Physics
101 nights, with a night or Saturday
lab - come to 111 HoChstetler, 6•30
p.m ., Sept. 21st. URG ENT.

REF RIGERATORS, stoves and
wash••· Rec:ondttlol'ed, dellv•ect aod
guaranteed. O&amp;G Appllaoc:as, 844
Sycamore, TX 4·3183.

YOU - to be a part of Community
Action Corps. VoluntMn are wanted
In tutorials and recrNtton, day-care
centers, hospital programs, social
servlc:as and envlronmentll action
proJects. 220 Norton, 831·3609.

1968 GTO g r - with blec:k vinyl top.
very good condition, 81200. Call
683·0287 after 7 p.m.
FOR SALE• Attractive sofa bed.
R-ntly rec:o-ect, 820. 691·7541
after 5 p.m.
PORSCHE 1959 coupe.
condition. 741·3921.
1964 Malibu
condition, tow
832-9771.

Exeelleot

V-8, power, v .g.
mi. After 6 p .m .

FOR RENT

QIVE YOURSELF and us a chance to
know each oth• - RUSh THETA CHI
1oca1 -orlty. R . .lster 'todev and
MondaV 11-2 Norton lobby.

SEEKING . t o m - to lhara our life,
dreams and love. our home Is a place
to grow ci9MI' and learn. 1458 Hertel.
Call Fted, 838·1089.

INTERESTED In concertt7 The music
committee Is meeting Mondev at 1
p.m. In Room 26i Nortoh. Get the
groups of vour ctlolc:e.

FREAK ARTIST. HeaVV trip with
three Together People who nMcs help.
No pav. 633·1781, 835·2550.

JOHN &amp; JANE - Volunt-, p l -.
Get In touCh with mel Oh, I need vou
and want you so bad! I'll be waiting to
hear from Doth of you at the CAC
office: 220 Norton 131·3609.

ROOMMATES WANTED
2 fEMALE roommates needed to
share room In apt. 29 Hawthorne. Call
Jerry at 131·2489, 865 +,

MISCELLANEOUS

TEN~INUTE walk from campus, 2

Sllrls. 66 Nlc:holson off engl-ood.
Stop by or call 837·2593. DMna.

WANTED• Inspired Insane people to
write film revl-s, thNter revl-• and
book reviews for The Spec:trum. See
Michael In Room 355 - oo goldfish or
underwater marine life acc:eptect.

PRIVATE room In apartment.
Five-minute wall&lt; from Ridge Lea.
Price negotiable. Eves. 837·1237.

SAVE 1.30 with this ad. MEXICAN
STEAK SANDWICH with ChMf8 and
onions regularly $1.09, $.79 ~lth this
ad. Tlppv•s Tac:o Housa, 2351 Sh.-ldan
Drive (across from Putt-Putt Golf
Course) 8J8·3900.

GRAD student looklog for same to
share
2 · bedroom
apt.
Kenmore-Delaware ..-... 140 month
plus utlllt!•· VIvian 876·3258.
WANTED : Roommate $50 plus
utllltlas monthly. Grant and Amherst
arN. Call 873-3773.

OPENINGS on 'eackpage staff. Please
contact sue Welser lmmedlatetv a~
831-4113 at Spec:trum office.

PERSONAL

APARTMENTS WANTED
COUPLE n~s apartment or- room
nNr campus. Call Margo· or Kirk,
836·8929 betwMn 6 - ll.

IF YOU'RE reeding this, you know
ttlat Spectrum dllllfleds work:. For
rat• end '"formation, come u_. to
Room 355, Norton Hall, 9-5 Mondav
' thru FridaY.
LEAD GUITARIST -king established
group. "'lso ptavs flute, sax,
hal'montc:a, bus, recorder, etc. Michael
881·34&amp;0.
•
BULL.SHIT you don't have the time! If
vou can ffnd time to pick your feet
and smoke dope, vou have the lime to
votuoteer vour services In the
CommunitY Action Corps.
BE A COMMUNIT-Y voluntMr - CAC
- Be a communttv volunteer - CAC CAC.

ee • c:ornmunttv volunteer -

THESIS, dissertations, papers tvPid.
8.50 double·Silaced page. IBM
Magnetic: card Tvpewrtter. Pickup and
dellverv, 937-6050 for details.
GUSTAV IS BACK! Xerox anvthlng
(boOkJ, notes) for only t .oa 1 copy
(the c:hNpest) • rate we know In
Buffalo). Come up aod Gustav at
355 Norton Hall. No lines, no forms,
no waiting .

THE WINNER of the Alpha Gamma
Delta raffle Is Anthony OorOSkl.
Congutulatlonsl
SOOZ AND EO: 0111'1 237 days until
Mav 1311

LOST a FOUND
IF YOU picked a PUPP'I at Norton
Tue sday around noon, 14th ,
brown-white fMt, freckles, piNM call
881.0334, 8111, Deb.

RIDE BOARD

WANTED

SMITH.CORONA Clipper typewriter,
$35; EXA (German) 50mm camera,
$20; Elgin Shockmater wristwatch,
Call 5262 or INve oote Box 3
Diefendorf, •

us.

RI DE NEEDED to UB M-w-f" from
Cottonwood vlclnlt'l of Williamsville.
Will share costs. Call 688-8801.

DATSUN, 1969, 2000 Sports, 135·hP,
5-speed, low miiNge. Must sell.
877·5501 betwMn 6- 8 p.m.

SEATTLE family with fishing boat,
land and bus needs people and brNd.
632.0188.
-

SIMCA 1969: Needs clutch, $600 or
beSt offer. 876·1221 between 10 a.m .
- 5 p.m .
·

NEED A RIDE? If '/OU do, thiS Is the
place to get lt. Spec:trum Ride Board
Claulfleds rNIIY work .

633-1153

coucH In okay cond ition. Yours for
the asking. JUJt find a wav to move lt.
Call 875·1944 before 11 p .m .

MOUNTAIN
Need people
roundtrip.
Return 9/26.

834-4018

WICBW AND IUFFAlO FESTIVAl pto..nb

Full or part-time sales.
Direct commission to sell
new automotiv., product

ST·EVE
WINWOOD

-STEED.

Music Festival In W. Va.
to share rented car. $25
LNve afternoon 9/23.
Call 831·2497.

For interview call

JtM

CHRIS

CAPALDI

WOOD

Added Attraction: FAIRPORT CONVENTION

Wednesday, October &amp;tb, 1 P.M.-Kieinhans Music Hall

or

AI Soote aoMrved: Moilf floor $S.S0.$4..SO; lofcony $4.50· $•.00
Tlchtt tole now ot luHolo FMtivo! Tidtot Offlu. Stotl.....llt.., ~oltloy
(Moll Otclon occoptocl with
aolf.oclclrMtocl -volopo); U.B. Nortolt Holt;
Stoto Cell-.. Tldt.. Office.

••-peel

m~gggg~g~gqammagg
" OUR PRICES SIMPLY CAN'T BE BEAT"

The ~ord Store

A
A

,

ttr

that Caters to

the popular taste\)
(
.
~~
arid I ower prlce+1'-:··0
.

COME INBROWSE AROUND
and

r

BLOW YOUR MIND

E

in .t he University Plaza
near the ADlherst
\

Monday, September 20, 1971. The Spectrum. Page eleven

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�WBFO Programme Notes
Monday, Sept. 20
8 a.m. Prelude - Classical music for your morning
2 p.m. This is Radio • . .
...
S:SO p.m. Chronicle - A summary of the day's
news, with emphasis on University an4 local
events.
12 p.m. Extension
Tuesday, Sept. 21
11 a.m. Firing Line - William F. Buckley and
challengers, with the radio version of the famous
Public Broadcasting Service television series.
5 p.m. All Things Considered - People, new~, music
and the best in radio from Nationall Public
Radio in Washington, D.C.
8 p.m. The Russian Five - Music of Balakirev,
Bor·odin, Cui , Mussorgsky and
Rimsky-:-Korsakov; with host David Karpoff.

;

·Wednesday, Sept. 22
11 a.m. Through the Looking Glass - with jane
Ooaahue
8 p.m . Boston Symphony Orchestra
Concert-Gunther Schuller, conductor; Paul
Zukofsky, violin. Wagner: Overture to 'Rienzi.'
Szymanowski: Violin Concerto No. 1, Op. 35
(news during intermission). Schuller: Spectra
and Scriabin: Le poeme de L'extase, Op. 54
Thursday, Sept. 23
11 a.m. Potpourri
12 noon Spirits - jazz with joe Brancato
1 p.m. All My Trials - Folk music with Leza Mesiah
8 p.m. Interface - A close look at topics of interest
9 p.m . Schubert and the 600 - · with f Lawrence
Bogue. Songs from 1817.
;
10:30 Whiteoaks of jalna - "The Waiting Game"
, Friday, Sept. 24
,.
8 a.m . Prelude - Classical music for youlh norning.
8 p.m. The Esoteric Phonograph - w~ Jerry Fink,
Mi~e Horwpod and Steve Levinth~P Haydn and
the 107
12 p.m. Extension

c.

Sports Information
Today : Varsity golf, Bulls at St. BoAaventure, 1
p.m., Olean, N.Y.
WedneSday: Varsity cr~-country, B411s at
Cleveland State with the University of Tol~o, 1
p.m., Cleveland, Ohio;-Varsity golf vs. Canisius at
Beaver ls.land, 2 p.m.

Oct. 4, 6, 7, 11 , 13 and 14. Class time is 3-4 p.m. at
Clark Gym with instruction by Ed Muto and Norb
Baschnagel.
The Ippon Judo Club meets every Monday and
Thursday at Clark Gym in the wrestling room .
Beginners start at 6:30 p.m. with advanced students
at 7:30p.m.

Announcements
UB Opera Club will hold open auditions
Wednesday, Sept. 22 at 6:30 in Room 234 Norton.
All singers, performers and stageworkers welcome.
Undergraduates interested in applying
management, organizational, financial or other skills
to a concrete situation should consider serving as a
-member of the Undergraduate Research Council of
the Student Association . For more information call
896-6085 or stop in at Room 205 Norton.
"Revenge Drama" in the English Department is
being offered by Mr. David Willbern. Interested
students sh·ould enroll in English 289W4.
Linguistics Department is offering a course in
Philosophy and Logic. Lecture in Linguistics 501
will be held Monday, Sept. 20 from '7- 8 p.m. in
Room 404 Hayes.
ACC is showing a movie Battle of Algiers
Monday, Sept, 20 from 7:30-:-9:30 in the Fillmore
Room, Norton.
I

Transcendental Meditation Lecture was
_rescheduled and is now being held Tuesday, Sept. 21
at 8 p.m. in the Fillmore Room, Norton .
International College is offering a course on the
"Modern Middle East," registration number 163766.
This class is held on Monday, Wednesday and· Friday
in Diefendorf Annex, Room 6 .
Women ' s Intramural Bowling League
applications are available starting Sept. 20 in the
Physical Education office or the Norton Recreation
desk. For more information call Miss Poland at the
Clark Gym; 831·2941.
Clifford Furnas College is accepting late
registration in Synthetic Mathematics CO 125. Class
meets Tuesday and Thursday from 10:30-noon at
MacDonald Hall Library.

American Studies is offering "Modem American
Jazz" 199 (O) under the instruction of Sam Fried.
• Attention all clu~ sports! All budgets are due by
Register at 124 Winspear or come to first class on
Sept. 21, 1971 ,,..and are to be re~ised by the stud~?t ___ Tuesd~y. Sept. 21, 7- 10 p.m. at 124 Winspear.
athletic review board. First rev1ew board meetmg
takes place Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Room 205 Norton, .
Student's International Meditttion Society will
witti club budgets the chief concern.
hold an advanced fecture on Sept. 21 at 6 :30 in
Room 330 Norton for all Transcendental Meditators.
A non-credit course in physical fitness and
conditioning for all male unaergraduates will take
College F is offering a ·course in the works of
place in Clark Gym, Sept. 22, 23, 27, 29, 30 and
Paul Goodman. Classes meet Tuesday and Thursday

;•

from 3:30-S p.m. in Trailer 6. Attend a session if
interested .

Diefendorf 148 at 4 p.m. Information for late
registration procedure will be given. For more
information call tutorial lab at 831-5366, ext. 24.

Wilderness Survival Course (RCC 203) students
should meet Monday, Sept. 20 at 1 p.m. in Room
232 Norton.

- Sue Weiser

The Ad·Hoc Committee of Public Employees on
Attica will hold a meeting Monday, Sepl 20 at 4
p.m. in Room 233 Norton. All public employees are
invited.
Human Dimensions -lnstit!Jte at Rasary Hill
College announces registration for all courses in
Gestalt, Yoga, Encounter, Seneca Indian Traditions
and ESP. For more information call839-2336.
Contact the · Graduate Student Association
immediately if you were stopped from voting. Cal!
831·5505 or stop in at Room 215 Norton.
The Buffalo State College Alumni Association is
sponsoring a· c~ival Monday, Sept. 20 through
Sunday, Sept. 26 at the Boulevard Mall.
UUAB Film Committee will have a meeting for
new and old members from 5-6 p.m. Monday, Sept.
20, in Room 340 Norton.
Openings on the Backpa&amp;e staff must be filled.
Anyone interested in helping out, please contact Sue
~eiser at 8314113 in The-Spectrum office.
The Chabad House will bfow the Shofar for
those who missed it during services. Come to 3292
Main St. on Monday and Tuesday at 4 p.m.
Sub Board I, Inc. has openings on its staff for a
Publications Division Director - responsible for all
Sub Board funded publications, and a Union Board
Division Director - responsible for the University
Union Activities Board.
The jobs offer much harassment, negligible pay
and long hours. For further information, contact
Mark Borenstein, Business Manager, Sub Board I at
831-5502 by Friday.

.

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M
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The first meetinc of Pop Music SSJ&lt;B (Eris
lsralow) will meet Tuesday, Sept. 21 at 7 p.m. in
Norton, Room 233. All registered students and those
interested in taking the course must attend.
Student p~in&amp; pennlts will be issued starting
the week of Sept. 20 from 9 a.m,-9 p.m. in
Diefendorf Rotunda. Be sure to bring your social
security number.
The Uncteranduate Medical SocietY witt hOld its
first meetin~ of the semester tonight at 7:30p.m. in
Room 233 Norton. All persons ' interested in
pursuing a medical or dental career are urged to
atte-nd this- important organizational meeting.
Refreshments will be served.
All undergraduate students interested in
tutoring beginning college students for academic
credit should attend' a meeting on Wednesday in

-mcntece

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;</text>
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                <text>Buffalo</text>
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                <text>Medical program expanded</text>
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                <text> Attica prisoners face death charge</text>
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                    <text>'vot. 22, No. 11

Library controversy
sparks major issue
in Faculty Senate

Meeting for the first time this year, the Faculty Senate
last Tuesday considered such topics -. as loyalty oaths,
gr ieva n ce mechanisms, Library criticisms and Senate
Professional Association (SPA) contracts.
Although sparsely attended,
the Senate voted on reports of its
standing committees and listened
to President Robert Ketter's
assessments of recent University
developments and policy . In
addition, laurence Schneider,
Department 'Of Histo ry , reported
to the body complain ts abou t
library efficiency and service.
Dr. Schneider spoke o n the
"im~ndi ng c risis of the reserve
room ... which is ty pical of the
deteriorating condition of the
en tire lib,ury . . ." T his crisis,
accordi ng to Dr . Schneider, stems
from the resignation of Ru th
Parsons as its • director w hich
might result in curtailed hours and
service.

rectify these deficiencies, Ms.
Parsons' staff and budget were
furt her cut. Subsequently, Ms.
Parsons reported-l y resigned
because she felt she was unable to
effectively ' do a job with such
handicaps.
In addition, Dr. Schneider said
that Ms. Parsons (ears no attempt
will be made to replace her wit h a
professional librarian· in order to
save money. Implications of her
resignation, according to Dr.
Schneider will result in severely
limited library hours. Such a
schedule might possibly indude
the library being opened 9 5 on
weekdays, a half-day on Saturday
and closecMIII day Sunday .

University tool
Terming the reserve room as
one of "the key tools" the
University has to achieve quality
teaching, Dr. Schneiper explained
its purpose "tG provide contro lled
and limited supply o f materials in
demand for class work." To
function effectively, according to
Ms. Parsons, the reserve room
needs a competent director, a
budget to buy heavily used
information, a no n-professional
c lerical staff to handle the
materials and a good reading
room.
"Virtually all of these things
a r e lacking,'' commented Dr.
Schneider. He continued tha t
when requests were made to

' learning experience'
"Any c r etin knows that
students can't use the library
whel1 in class. Times when they
are not in classes - nights and
Sundays - are precisely the times
when the library will be closed,"
Dr. Schneider said.
He further rela ted the situation
in the library to the no-browsing
system adopted by the Universil y
b ookstore: " Browsing in the
stacks o f the books tore, like 1he
library , is also a learning
ex perience." In additio n, he
stated that the bookstore is the
o nly one of m a n y major
universities which has closed
stacks.
Concludin.g his address to the

President Robert Ketter responded to faculty
criticism of the library at last Tuesday's
Faculty-Senate meeting. Criticism included such
charges as inefficient managema1t, stock deficiencies
and unclennanned staff.

Library assaulted
Senate, Dr. Schnelder urged it· to
undertake study of the library
system. Specificall y, he suggested
the Senate investigate the failure
of the library administration " to
plan and plant a new library on
the Amherst campus ... to find
out why there is such a ho rrific
1 urn over of professional and
technical staff" and to scrut inize
" th e incredible convoluted
byzantine which runs the library."
Presen t library administration
in cl udes Myles Slatin as its
director.
In a response t o Dr .

Schneiders' remarks, President
Ketter maintained that neither he
nor vice preside nt for Academic
Affairs Bernard Gelbaum have
received any complaints about the
library : " . . . no one from the
lib rary ha s co m e 10 me."
Rega rding criticisms leveled
against the new booksto re system ,
President Ketter reported that "all
of the people I have spoken to
fro m the student governments
have praised the new efficiency of
the system . . . !')ever before, they
say. have we received o ur books
so quickly or efficientl y ."

He continued that the only
o r gan iza tion to criticize the
bo o k s t ore ha s b ee n The
Spectrum. Presid e nt Ketter
attributed this criticism to reports
from SA officials that some
groups' budgets are coming up for
review.
Willi~m Baumer, vice chairman
of the Faculty Senate, invited Dr.
Schneider to attend a m eeting of
I h e Faculty Senate Ubrary
Co mmitt ee w hi c h met last
Wednesday.
Other business covered at last
-continued on page l l-

Med School reverses itself

-osterrelcllw

Surveying

Sit-in at Capen

the

crowd

of

demoiutrators who ut·in protest
for the Attica prlton.-s, Director
of Security Kenneth G..,_non
consid..S poelible cou,. of

\

-

action.

Administrative announcements yesterday tha.t night . . . Mr. Breen was not presented as an official
no "officipl commitment" was made to demands of spokesman of th e Medical School .. . he
the Ad Hoc Committee in s up port of the Attica mispresented himself.''
prisoners, raises serious questions abo ut the motives
However, as Keith Frankel, Student Association
and creclibility o f negotiations between University National Affairs Coordinator, pointed out : " At no
officials and that committee. Members of the time did President Ketter, Dr. Somit or Dr.
committee who sat in protest last Wednesday night Siggelkow inform us that this man was speaking for
at Capen Hall , maintain that they were duped by the himself." He continued that Mr. Breen , "in front of
administrat ion into believing that their five demands aU of I the administrators I went t hrough the list of
calling for medical treatment of inmates were demands and the Med School's response to them."
accepted by th e University of Buffalo Medical At no time, Mr. Frankel reiterated, did the
School .
administrators say that Mr. Breen's report of
"It was because we believed that o ar demands demands acc~ptcd was inaccurate.
were acceded to that we left Capen Hall," reported
I
o ne Attica supporter. At a memorial service Lies and misrepresentation
sponsored by the adm inistration, President Ketter
Mr . Frankel further charged, as did all of the
was questioned by irate students abo ut events of the student speakers, that the administrat ion lied and
prior night. Their comments centered on the fact misled protestors Wednesday night: "You [Dr.
that David Breen, president of the Student Medical Ketter I didn't have enough respect for us [the
Polity , after consulting with President Robert students I to deal fairly with us."
Ketter, Executive Vice President ~bfrt Somit and
In answer to some of these charges, Dr. Ketter
Vice Presi dent for Student ~airs Richard read a resolution passed by the medical counsel
Siggelkow, reported thal the medical school would "o~ ring to assu m e t h e full professional
assume full responsibility for t he treatment o f Attica responsibility for initiating, carrying o ut and
inmates.
evaluating medical care delivered to the inmates of
the Attica correction facility." His report was
Administrative contention
criticized as "balf-y.'&amp;Y, half-ass measures" at the
It was the contention of all the s tudents that
most.
spoke at the service that Mr. Breen was acting as an
Further, student~ commented that they did not
official representative of the Med School. Dr. Ketter
maintained that this was not the case and that the intend to accept such measures as the final word. As
only person who could speak for the school was its o ne committee member put it : t"A$ far as we're
dean, Le Roy. Pesch . Dr. Ketter commented: "I concerned we have a commitment from the
University - if they renege, they are in for hell."
don·~" know what you were informed of last

"'
I

/

�Surcharge for late
books is considered
Under conside,.tio n by the
apeciaJ BookJtoiC study-sroup Is a
proposal which would add a
surcharae of abo ut I 0% to aU
bte-ordered books. This surchar&amp;e
would be paid by students,
despite the fact that they had
nothina to do with causins the
added expense.
Accordina to a hiahJy info rmed
source, this would "leave it up to
the individual s tudent to decide if
be will buy the book." By doing
ao, our source contin u ed,
"hopefuUy we could develo p a
type of confrontation bet ween
students and offending faculty
members." Included in the plan
f or c r eating s u c h a
.. c o•frontatio n " would be
advisement of the na mes of all
taray teachers to the University
community. Our source explained
that " presently all costs incurred
fro m such extraordinary expenses
such u late order and special
order books are s pread over the
Bookstore's entire spectrum of
it~ms ,
therefore affect1ng
everyone. ·• The desired result of
s uch a printed list would be
general indignation at those
forcing up prices.
Mike Nicolau, GSA president , a
member of the Bookstore
confirmed t
UN IVERSITY
CHAMBER CHORUS
Holding Auditions
Mondays &amp; Thursdays
thru Sept. 23rd .
Room I 06
Baird Hall

propol&amp;l was under conside,.tion

and termed it "an inaeniout idea."

Power lines obscured

Library Stilfundersta/fed
..Hopeless, understaffed" and
"badly dilo rpnized" were among
the adjectives used by faculty
members to describe the existing
conditio n of the library. Reacting
to renewed criticism of the library
and the resignation of Ruth
Parsons as director of the
Har ri m an Reserve Room ,
university faculty were generally
con cerned abo ut effects on
r es~a r c h
a nd "qua lit y
undergaduate tcachins."
Joseph Masling, chairman of
th e Psy c h o logy Department,
simply said that " it is not a good
library system ." He attributed t his
to th e ir condi tion of being
" tremendousJy understaffed."
Myles Slatin , director of the
libraries, explained the numbers
of vacancies as due to the state
freeze on hiring. This freeze is
reportedly IJCcountable for the
approxim~fy 40 vacancies in the
system . However, others have
chJrged that these positions were
never fi ll e d due to the
"Insufferable working conditions
and policy of the library:·

He explained that possible effects
of any indipation directed at a
faculty member could be that
"maybe he' ll (the faculty
member) learn a Jesson ; maybe
he' ll give a better performance,
feelina he owes his students
something extra; and/or hopefully
maybe he'll reimburse his students
out of his own pocket ." Mr.
Nicolau saw no problem in getting
students mobilized over slightly
hi&amp;)ter prices, whenever greater
issues pass by without raising
more than an eyebrow o r two. " I
would certainly protest,'' he
commented, but added , "it would
of course be much stronger if the
whole class protests. ·•
lie explained his philosophy as
"why sho uld thousands suffer
when that suffering can perhaps
be eliminated (by having faculty
reimbursements) or at least be
minimized to a few hundred?"
Thomas Moore, manager of the
Bookstore, also confirmed that
this proposal was Indeed being
co n side re d , but added that
No consullatio n
nothing had been "officially"
One of the problems with
proposed .
dealing wath library problems,
Asked if a proposal to assess
according to Lauerence Schneider,
the teachers directly for late
Departmen t or rtlstory, is the
charges was also being considered,
difficult y in obtaining ho nest,
111e Spectrum learned from our straightforward in form ation . He
source that " no sanctions" can be said that this is mainly due to u
placed over them. He further
p olicy of non-consulllltlon
complai n ed "even the evidentl y employed by library
administr~tion
cannot con trol
officials. In addition, he said that
tenured faculty."
"never have I had more difficulty

BEFORE ~OU BU1

say."
decision-making."
Dr. Schneider further reported
The library commjttee met last
that Lowell Schoenfeld, chairman Wednesday ~itb the Facility
of the Faculty Senate Ubrary Senate executive committee to
Committee, has had difficulty in present a preliminary report and
COR$Ulting with Or. Slatin . Or. Dr. Schoenfeld commented that
Scbheider stated tllat " Professor " we wilJ be trying to get our
Schoenfeld, an expert In Ubrary Senate committee together to
operations, told me that never continue with the general study of
before has he encountered such a library problems."
situation where the lines of power
However, he stressed that
a nd who has power are so
many. of the complaints about the
obscured."
library recently publicized in 17te
Terming t he whole problem "a Spectrum co uld n ot be
co mplicated sit uation ," Or. investigated as that would in(iolve
Schoenfeld explained that it is scrutinizing its administration on
very hard for on o utsider, not a day to day basis : "A committee
familiar with library policy, to such as this does not normally
make,judgments o n library policy. report o n this aspect. •·
He also saw the problem as u
Many faculty members are
question of where to responsibly nemanding that a thorough(
alloca te funds to different investigation of the library be
components.
undertaken. At last Tuesday's
Faculty Senate ·meeting Dr.
Demand study
Schneidel was applauded by the
When asked if he thought that body when he urged it to effect a
resources were most effectively study into library policy and
and responsibly being used in the operation.
library, Dr. Schoenfeld responded
that "as an outsider ... without Hypocrisy
being in direct position . . . it
In addi tion to charges of
library deficiences, some faculty
The Spectrum 11 pub/fshfld thrH
accuse the t) n.i versi t y
tim• • WNk, e..ery Mont* y,
Mdntl6t*y end Frldlly: during the
administration of hypocrisy .
,._,Jar «:lldemic y•r by Sub·8011rd
" Many years ago," explained J. P.
1, Inc. Offlc• ere loeetlld er 355
Jon es, P olitical Scienc e
Norton Hell, Stete Unl..enity o f
Department , ' "we were told that
New York • t Buffelo, 3436 Meln
t h e library was top priority
St., Buff•lo, New York, 142 14.
number one - obviousl y it isn't
Telephone:
ArN
Code
116:
so ." H e al so accused the
Editoriel,
831-4113:
Butlnas,
ad ministration of t!lipping its
831·3610.
bushes while Its libraries are
Reprt~Stmtlld for edvertiting by 1 closed : "Any umversity that clip~
Nationel Educetionel Ad~illng
its bushes while ils libraries are
SMvi«, Inc., 18 E. 50th St,..t,
closed tsn 't a univ.:rsity ."
N-

Your College Texts
S~e liS

in tryina to find the oriJins of would be very hard for me to

York, N- York, 10022.

1

Sul»crtptlon retes ere $4.50 per
. , . , , , or $8.00
for two
ten.

urn•

firsl if JIOif

I

Cl~m

S«:ond
Pon•
Buffelo, N- York.

..

f»id er

Clrculet ion: 16,000

nl to save mon~JI

1971

We have a huge stock of slightly

1972

Newman Hall
SUNDAY MASSES, Sat. 7 p.m.
Sun. 8:30 10 11 - 12 noon
at Cantalician Chapel - 3233 Main Street

USED

IEXIBOOKS
being uMd at all the local colleges. We also supply new texts - paperb~~eks - supplies patten- gifts - awe.tshlrt sale.
·

BUFFALO .TEXTBOOK

Mr. Jones was also )Of tlw
opi n ion that the library 1s
"hopelessly s mall ... lacking even
in most basac volumes . . . also,
the facilities are very bad with no
place to wori.. ." To improve th1s
3nd other failings, he suggested
that "a lot more resources should
be invested in the library."

STORES
IU,

SUNDAY 7:00p.m. SPANIS H
at Newman Hall Niagara Falls Blvd. &amp; Main St.
HALL HOURS
Men. Fri. 8 a .m . 9 p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m . 5 p.m.

New Avenue Pizza &amp; Subs
679 NIAGARA F.ALLS BLVD .- CORNER LONGMEADOW
(around the corner from Allenhurst Apts.)-

Try us once~ you'l.l be Hooked

FR
........ EE
D e l. l very
e

SUB SELECTION :
Roast Beef, Corned Beef,

838 -4545

Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, September 17, 1971

Steak&amp;Cheese

~

Daily Liturgy
Newman Hall
8~ 12-5

Sat. 10 a.m.

�..
Attica center of protest

Demonstrations ag!linst
penal system organized
by Bill Vaccaro
Camp11s Editor
• ,
Attica State Prison, scene of a
bloody insurrection several days
ago, has been added to the list of
US prisons which will be the
center of massive protests Oct. 2,
Chicago Conspiracy defendant
David Demnger said Tuesday.
.
His remarks were made at a
p~ess confere11ce held . in the
~~_llmore Ro0m. Mr. Delhnger w~s
JOtn~d by co-defendants Renme
Dav1s a_nd John Froines._ All three
are act~ng as r~~resentahves of the
Peopl~ s Coabuon for Peace ~nd
J ust1 ce, the group wh1ch
sponsore_d the _recent May Day
protests tn Washington, D.C.

According to Mr. Dellinger, the
demonstrations have been planned
to protest the deteriorating and
dehumanizing condition of the
American penal system. He said
that the planned action should
receive "additional impetus" from
the Attica uprising which left over
40 dead Mo nday when state
troopers and national guardsmen
attempted to regain control o f the
prison.
Protests planned
The mass demonstrations have
also been planned in Anderson, W.
Va. , site of the Federal Prison for
Women, the Danbury (Conn.)
Federal Penitentiary , San Quentin
_ Prison , Terminal Island in Los
Angeles, and prisons in Ashland,
Ky . and Springfield , Mo.
"Rennie Davis, John Froines
and I have come up here not only

to express our outrage and our
indignation at what happened in
Attica and at the conditions in
Attica and all the prisons in the
country which brought about this
crisis, "ut we've come up here, in
a ser_t.~~~· 'Js;reptesentatives of the
anti-war movement whi ch
increasingly in the last couple of
years has been supporting the
liberation struggle in the United
States as well as in Indochina and
,-Meyra"
- has been struggling against ~h.~ war ., .
of the American governf!lent •
against the American people as tendency of the establishment to
well as its war against the · close rani&lt;&amp;- and evade the issues in
1 n d 0 c hinese peopl,e," Mr. the hope of preserving 'Ia~ and
Dellinger asserted.
order' or, at least, 'tranqu1ht y'."
" We didn't come up here
Dellinger blasted Commjssioner
primarily to h old press Oswald for justifying the -use of
conferences or make speeches, but
force bY c Ia i min g l hat
to get close to the situatio n," he negotiations between the inmates
said. Mr. Dellinger said that he, and au.thorities had broken down.
· Mr. Davis and Mr. Foines have · Commissioner Oswald based his
received a request from William claim on the charge that the
'K unstler, the former Chicago inmates were still digging trendies
Seven lawyer who has been acting and making homemade weapons
as the legal counsel for the Attica from the materials which they had
inmates, to come to the prison. available. Mr. Dellinger called this
However, h~ said, "by the time we reasoning hypocritical and "bad
got here, tragically, the governor morality" by saying that white the
had decided that the lives of the inmates were "doing that, state
g~ards and the lives of t he inmates
o fficiuls were supplying state
were ~xpe ndable in his campaign troopers and national guard
for political advancement."
troops with helicopters. CS gas,
shotguns and ammunition for use
in the attack against them . He
Blasts Oswald
Mr. Dellinger charged that Gov. charged Commissio ner Oswald
Rockefeller, State Corrections with using this as a pretext ror
Commissioner Russell G. Oswald,
and other state officials had
conspired, in a sense, to evade the
issue o f prison reform for the sake
of image. " , . . Once a tragedy of
this kind . takes place, there's a
c~

-fllleyra"

Dave De//inlier

Goody Two Shoes

,~~~

0

\)\)

John Froine_s

Rennie Davis

carrying out the assault on the
Attica prisoners.

what the Governor said, many
options were available. "The
Governor could have flown in and
Pretext for slaughter
..said that 'we will yield on this
Concerning o ne of the major demand. We will remove the
demands of the inmates, that of ~uperintend ent'. And on the other
the firing of the Attica State one, if he felt he couldn't, there
Prison warden, Mr. Demger asked: were a series of steps he could
" Was it so important to keep that have taken. But he could have
one man as superintendent of that said: ' I will recommend clemency'
inst-itution . . . and that 40 or or ' I will recommend minimal
more people sho uld be sentences' or ' We wiJJ negotiate
sla ughtered in order that he stay the matter further'. There were
in that post?" I would rather have various things which could have
given him half a million dollars been offered. Instead, they
and told him to spend the rest of decided to invade and to
his life in the Riviera or any other slaughter."
place ht!'d likt! to spend his life
Mr. Dellinger also criticized the
than kill off those 28 people .. ." press for its coverage of tht&lt;
The anti-war leader loudly insurrection . " . . . It 's been bad
~:on d emned Gov. Rockefeller for that the press has spoken that the
refusing to come to Attica and lives of the hostages were more
h elp w ith th e r;~egotiations . valuable than the lives of the
Regarding the inmates' two major convicts." He said that both were
demands, he said that despite equally valuable.

YOURSELF

Beef·&amp; Ale
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· IOUTIQIIE

SALE
50110

3199 MAIN ST.
(ODe

Block Soutb Of UBl

Live Music Friday and Saturday Nights
(

JEANS
CORDS
FOR THE CHICS'
SHIRTS
JACKETS LITTLE BEAVERS -

by BUFFALO'S BEST BANOS

E1'ery nights nice to meet friends and make friends.

638 MAIN STREET

Calli"' All

FRIAKS, HIADS
anciSQUA.IS
tet ltip ~or • fast tr;,
tet yOflr

t

t
t
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ANNOUNCEMENT
DON DAVIS - one of Buffalo's oldest and largest
-G ENERAL · MOTORS DEALERSis now selling Fiat.

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2JS H_,sltlre St., a.ff.to

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(ALSO AUTOMAT1C AT A HIGHER_PRICE)
RADIAL TIRES - AND MUCH MUCH MUCH MORE!

AUTOS

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AMPHIBIANS
OLD FIRE-TRUCKS
HEARSES
FLOWER CARS
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------~------------- 'I"J'he Home of Fair D e a l i n g " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "

Friday, September 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

I

-·

�-

rrraffic tickets
•

of(ieial hulletin
.

Traffic na1e1 at aw,. Lee are to be •forced aad• p10~Wo111 of the New Yod: State
VeiUde and Tnfflc law. c..,_ Secwtty offlcerl aad lioWII of A_..ent PoUc:e are
empow.-ed to illue tqa for..,.., ftolatlolll ... dtadolll ~or moYiaJ riolallou.
,
All oae-way ltreela, ,wd ....... aop ....,, .,...S Umlta and ltreet and lot Ofr~eill Notice
ideetificado• m - laaft- been .approyecl by tbe New ~rork State Department ot
Tran~ponallon. 1ibe epeed Omit il IS mpll.
'
·
Lllmuy Hours for Filii, I 97I
Parkina Oaee are SS.OO with the exception of the fi:ae for not ha'rina a vehicle
property rqlltered. Tbe latter Oneil S 10.00. AU 1481 ..d cihltlona are retunable to Town Lockwood :
of Amhent courta, Vlllatelbll, WIUammlle.
Mon . - Thur s.
8
Vehicle rqUtratioa may be completed at Campu Sc!ieurity, for atudenta, or at
a .m.-midniaht
Peraoanel, for faculty Mel ltaff.
Friday - 8 a.m.-9 p.m. •

.,.ta.E_
...... _.......

KLEINHANS
MUSIC HALL

...IIIATI fi.I-AIY IIZI

IFIIDAY, SIPT. 17
7:00 P.M.

UPSTATI CYCLI INS.
694-3100 ..

.,...,

...,.,. Yew INMt M.t Ut"

ANOTHER ...

TSUJDJOTO
SUMMER SPECIAL
IMPORTID

IIDIAI IROCERIES

BIJFFILO BOB
SIIITH.....SHOW
IHOWDY·
DOODY

. STARTS TODAY AT BOTH THEATRES!
Student Discounts ayailable
wit~ presentation of student I.D.
Sat.

~If

Sutt ~M
Or'CII. U.OO; lek. $2.SO

20% OFF
15%, OFF
ffAJUIING

TIHEATRE SERIES
11•
MAll IT.
IWIOirlftnriWtl

' ' " '"' ,

•• , 1&gt;1 • .....

• FRESH RED CHILl
• Dllll&lt;ON
,

..

(

•I'll

e hiiH CMIIIFSf
Al i!IOIID

f,, I

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,.

..

"t., •

,_Slit! ~ ~
1

COCWif~

0

'''"'If,,

J,,,, :... .

' ••

;1.\

' .... d

M o n . - Thur s .
a.m.- midnipt
Friday - 9 a .m.-9 p.m.
Saturday - 9 a.m.-S p.m.
Sunday - 2 p.m.- midnight

Science and Enaineerina:
Mon.-Thurs. - 8 a.m.- I 0
p.m.
Friday - 8 a.m,-6 p.m .
Saturday - 9 a .m.-5 p.m.
Sunday - 2 p.m.-6 p.m.
Health Sciences:
Mo n.-Thurs. - 8 a .m.- 1 1
p.m.
Frid11y - 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday - 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sunday - 2 p.m .-9 p.m.

j180

.. ...

1

... •

,,... ,

••

Law:

Mon.-Thurs. - 8 :30 a.m.- 11
p.m.
Friday - R :30 a.m.- 11 p.m.
Satu rday - 9 a .m.- 5 p.m.
Sunday I p.m .-9 p.m .

"~

..

r" . ••

'f
, 4 • •• • •
• \ •• ,, 0 \tl \ , ... . . , " "

.-..:· _,..,... ~:.· ~ ..~

----" ··· --~~

Mo n.-Thurs. - 9 a .m.- 10
p.m.
Fn day - 9 a.m.-10 p.m.
Saturday - 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Sunday - I p.m.-5 p.m.

g
. · .·:-:.i · ~,-: -:.·

"OUR PRICES SIMPLY CAN'T BE BEAT" ·- · · ·· .. • .. : .·. ·. · .·- •· . · :-:.:;-:;:.-::· · !·.

_

that c~;~,ters t~.

..

t.t;
~~

andlOW8r price~

·c;-oO
'-

COME l~N­
BROWSE AI1t0UND

and
BLOW YOUR MIND

in theU~iver,sityPlaza
near the A111herst

Pa91 four. The Sepctrum . Friday, September 17, 1971

9

Art :
Mon .-Thurs. - 9 a.m.-9 p.m .
Friday - 9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
Saturday - I p.m .-5 p.m.
Sunday - I p.m. - 5 p.m.

Ridae Lea :

TSUJIMOTO
.......
... ,, ,..

8'~
.,....

Tic:keu at
.. Noertoh Hal( T1cket Office

ReterYe Room:

• JUIRELil

.... ·••It•

CINEMA

Saturday - 9 a.m.-midnight
Sunday - 2 p.m .-midni&amp;bt

-.r

�..
Book for eacl faculty;

,,

BUffalonian changes its style
A new plot is evolving in the
Bul/alonilln office this year.
Instead of one mauive book
which attempted to incorporate
the seven University fa culties and
all graduating students, the
Buffalonian for 197 1- 72 will
consist of six, possibly seven,
individual books. This new idea
was intr oduced by Liz
Schachtner, editor-in-chief of the
Buffalonian who explained that it
is an attempt to better represent
the great heterogeneity found on
campus. According to her, each
faculty shall have its own book
which will ..conform to the tempo
of that faculty" and in tum "be
more relevant to them ."
There will be certain common
pages in all the books which wijl
contain an in-depth study about
some aspect of campus life. All six
component books (the Faculty of
Law and Jurisprudence may be
omitted) shall be combined in one
major volume made available to

those Interested
facultita.

in all

the

EVERYMAN'S

BOOK

pbotoarapbers. There are four
associate editorships filled and'
two mon (Educational Studies
and Enpeerin&amp;) vacant. Ms.
Schachtner sees the Buffalonian u
a good opportunity for students
to have their work published and
pin a knowledge of bow this
University operates. More staff
members are needed with little or
no experience necessary. All
pertinent $lOlls will be taught.
There lire also good opportunitjes
for those with any selling or
promo tiona ! abilities. All
interested are urged to join soon,
as most work must be completed
prior to the Christmas vacation.
The Buffalonian i$ expecfe,d to
be published in early April.
Faculty books wiU ranae between
I 60 and 200 pages priced
approximately SS .50 while the
combination set wUI run about
500 pages priced.at approximately
$9.95 .

Polls and aurvey
Accordin&amp; to Ms. ~chachtner,
the Buffalonian is not merely a
senior yearbook but, will contain
pictures of all graduates and work
contributed ~Y all students. Polls
and surveys will be conducted to
get an idea of what type of
material each faculty would like.
The pollina will cover material,
picture size and general attitudes
toward the book's content.
Contests for photography and
literature are beina diJcussed by
the staff u a means of coUectin&amp;
such materiaL Ms. Schachtner is
hopeful that student sugestions
will be ori&amp;inal and interesting.
" We are open for any new ideas,"
she states and extends an open
invitation to all interested.
The staff currently consists of
2S to 30 members and 25

'

STORE

,,

inc.

Uterature,Sociology
Poetry.Ecology
Crafts,Art,Fiction;
Tarot.Posters.etc.
Browsing Encouraged

CHECKPOINT
FOIIIGN CAl SAlES &amp; SERVICE
BACK TO SCHOOL
S•vlnas on •II 1971
SAAB 'S &amp; BMW 'S

******'********
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IUFFALO CNfUSTIU CEITlll AIID,

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Distributors wanted
New oil product
Amount of investment
up to you.
For interview
call
834-4018
633-1153

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SAVE 10" Surchuae
SAVE Excise Tllx
SAVE on low pre-Aua. U Prices
AM rlldlo • no chuae
$2S off your purchue with this lid
(refunded when pused
by Conareu.)

H:INBS

GIEAT lASS Of THE MEHOI'OLITAN OPERA
L. . . . _. llCA VICTII ll$11JS

KLEINHANS MUSIC HALL
MONDAY EVENING, SEPT. 20, AT 8 :00 PM
ALL SlATS U .OO - TICKm OH SAU AT

** III'IDfas,

:.!~;::·
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riSTIVAL TICIUT O"ICf HOTIL STATLia
TIAHSIT IIOAD, OPf'OSITI TaANSITOWHI PUU

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A"4 ~,_,...'"'1 H-.4ev•rten, IUFFALO CHRISTIAN
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-

836-2033

UNIVERSITY TRAVEL
..

7 Annual Ski Trip
SCANDINAVIAN AIR SYSTEMS (SAS)

(SUNYAB

Dec. 27t~ to Jan. 7th
OC - 8 JET

NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. - NON - STOP- GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

10 nights
11 days

SKIING PACKAGES IN CHAMONIX, FRANCE
AIR FARE ONLY

Transfers
Hotels
Apartment-Chalets
Meals
Gratuities

PACKAGE

$298°0

OPTION : Continue on-to COPENHAGEN, DENMARK .
Discounts on
lessons ;and Ski passes
Student reserv;ations will be cooflrmed for the first 30
days ;after which reservations will be on a first come basis.
The University Travel Center, its programs and services are
made possible by your STUDENT ACTIVITY FEES via
Sub-Board I, Inc.

.

INFORMATION :
Room 323/316 NORTON HALL
Ext. 4602/3603

Friday, September 17, 1971. The Spectrum . Page five

•••

�Executive meeting

· MFCSA hopes for success
Millard Fillmore· Co llege
Student Association, the only
organi7ation on campus solely
interested in evening students and
their problems. held its first
executive meeting of the academic
year this past Saturday. A mixed
bag of topics affecting all 5200
MFC students was discussed.
The meeting, presided over by
Bradley Roberts, president of
MF CSA, opened with the
announceme nt of a general
meeting of the Association Which
includes all students registered in
MFC who pay the student activity
fcc.
The general meetins will be
Sept. 20. in the Diefendorf
rotunda at td p.m . Slingers will be
distributed announcing the room
number.
Activities chainnan Frank
Schubaucr spoke of the djsinterest
shown by last year's students: "Of
5200 elect1on ballots mailed out
last year. only 300 were
returned." All members of the
committee expressed the hope
that attendance for the scheduled
meeting would be h.igh.
The meeting will Heal with the
organization's $28,000 fall
budget , the option to buy Poverty
Hill, Bookstore- FSA policy and
orientation in general.
Tie breaker
The key to participation in

Although MFCSA has usually
voted with ot h er stud en t
o!gan1zations on prime issues, the
rhQOd of the MFC representaHves
who will do the voting on these
issues is one of mixed caution
over jumping into Poverty Hill ,
and co mpromise on the
Bookstore.
Along with key voting power,
MFCSA offers many services and
activitie s to its members.
Academic and financial aid are
available through the College
St ud ent As socia tion .
(Applications can be obtained at
2 158 Norton.)

BradleyRoberts
Millard Fillmore's St udent
Association is the fact that
MFCSA, along with the other
student governmen ts, . plays a
major role in decisions affecting
the whole Universi ty community.
Both FSA 's executive
committee and Sub Board I have
voting members from MFCSA.
Considering the problems involved
in the changes in the Bookstore
policies, and proposed actions
facing Sub Board on Poverty Hill
and the Amherst lands, to name a
few , MFC"s vote looks to be a
tie-breaker and decision-maker.

FeeJ-Rite HealthFoodSh
1451 HERTEL AVE .
(Cumer of Norwalk)

837-7661
SAVE BREAD ON EVERYTHING !
FEATURING
• DANNON YOGURT
TASTIE VITAMIN C Reg. $1.49

ealth Foods

N

° w 98 C

Computer mixup
A secretary, supported by
MFCSA. is available to handle
questions concerning student
problems at 2 15 Norton from 5
p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Monday
th rough Thursday, or at
831-5503.
10 cards, paJd for by MFCSA

with student fees, are available at
240 Norton from 8:30 a.m. to
8:30 p.m. through Friday, Sept.

17.
Future plans call for a beer and
pizza party, a children's Christmas
party and some yet unscheduled
films and activities with dates.
times and places to be announced.
Finally, it was noted that if a
s tud en t requested h eal th
insurance on his class request
form at registration, he must now
pick up a form for this at the
MFC Student Association 's office
since the computer was not
programmed to pick this up.
Overall, it is the hope of MFC'
officials that this could be a
pot cntwlly exctting year for
MFCSA with a little student

Vitamins

CAUTION-No Automatic
Insurance Coverage
If you did not make payment to the local
representative of the insurance company-

Food Servjce (&gt;pens
·Tower dtnmg room
Those students who were
under board cont racts last
semester may recall the problems
that arose when the number of
contracts dropped from 1500 to
I I 00. As a result, previous
problems were coupled with the
fact that Food Service had less
monty to work with.
In anticipation of fewer
contracts this semester, Food
Service decided to employ the
Goo dyear/Clement dining hall
exclusively for board students.
Tower West was changed to a pay
delicatessen and Tower East, a
pay cafeteria. Recently, the
Tower East line has been
reopened, not due to a financial
loss, but to facilitate service to
students. There are over 1400
students on board contract this
semester, well over the original
estimate of 1200.
Outrag~us

lines
The alternatives were few ;
either conHnue the outrageously
long lines in Goodyear and
Cement or reopen another dining
room. Consequently, 470 students
were moved to the Tower
cafeteria as of Sept. t3 . This has
definitely expedited service, but
other problems have continued.
Until earlier this week, there were
no ·•seconds" lines to speak of.
Raymond Becker, director of
Food Service, stated that this was
du~ to a non-working outlet in the
Goodyear dining room . He
explained that all seconds are
required by law to be warm
(unless otherwise called fOf' by the
type of food) and smce the
heating cart could not be
operated . . . well, no food .
Excluding brcakrasts, student
.complaints about meal portions
have ranged from ''kind t)r
skimpy" to "ins1gnificant. ..
IRC. concerned about food
service problems, is presently

invesllpting the matter. Mike
Matthews, this year's food
com mitt ee chairman, meets
regularly with Food Service to go
over menus and try to improve
service in general.
Loss of appetite
One particular point of
interest, as indicated by Mr .
Becker, is that all food on this
campus comes from Food Service;
whether it is the Tiffin Room
Faculty Club, Tower Hall, Ridg~
4
Lea or Norton Union . Mr.. Becker
offered ''the difference in
atmosphere as a possible reason
for the seemingly better quality of
food at, for example, Ridge Lea.
"After' all,' you certainly do lose
your appetite after waiting on a
line for 45 minutes next to the
ltitchen with steam pouring out all
over you," he explained, referring
to Goodyear cafeteria. Another
feasible explanation, according to
Mr. l)ecker, is the fewer amount
of people eating in those other
areas; more time •nd preparation
can go into the food thereby
resulting in a more pleasurable
meal .
•
Anyone having any suggestions
or grievances they would like to
convey to Food Service can reach
Mr . Becker in his office located in
Goodyear basement (next to the
computer cent er) or call
83 1·3332.

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BOONES APPLE WINE ..•. . • $1 .00 5th
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LAMBRUSCO •.........•.• $2.25 SUI
BALl HAl $1.09 6th ....$2.2525 % Gal.
MOGAN DAVID WINES .• •.••..$1A1
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I LOVE YOU WINES .••..... .39¢ 10tfl
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(ALL STUDENTS BRING YOUR 1.0.)
PROOF OF AGE REQUIRED FROM All

Page six. The Spectrum . Friday, September 17,1971

•

"

�Survey Center. studv

Campus attitudes exposed
The Survey Research Center students as a method of protest,'' traditional evaluation by the
found the attitudes of the commented Dr. Francis. Petitions teachel' alone. Dr. Francis
University community aeneraUy and rallies were also the only expressed surpri~e at this rejection
"moderate" on most major tactics supported by faculty , of more innovative grading
campus issues, according to a while the staff favored only methods in favor of tbe
three-month survey it conducted petitions.
traditior.al evaluation. "This is a
last Spring.
Regarding the campus calm of very happy sign from an
The majority of students, the 1970-71 academic year, most
educatt:&gt;r's standpoint - the
faculty and staff disaareed with felt that "change in support of joint evaluation with
"the use of extreme tactics in administration" or "fear of stronger student input,'' he said.
campus protests," while reprisals" did not explain the
supporting a "tough stance" peaceful period . Instead, the Support for collqes
A c lear majority fe lt the
concerning the use and consensus was that "people are
Collegi1
ate System should be
distribution of hard drugs, the tired of protest and feel it does
survey found. A clear majority not accomplish its ends." In funded more substantially, and
that "0)1Jege" courses should be
also favored joint- evaluation of addition, one-third of the student
course work by teacher and body feel the problems behind the acceptt1d for credit toward
student, establishment of a day 1970 protests remain unresolved, existing degree programs. On the
care center and felt that the and antici pate the possibility of topic of discrimination, a majority
of the administrative staff felt
collegiate system had improved future protest.
that the University is doing
over the past academic year.
"enough" to guarantee c..ivi.l and
Under the direction of Bruce Rard drup
On the issue- of hard drugs, all minority· group rights in aJI areas
Francis, project director, the
survey was intended "to provide three groups favored strict law except co nstru ction of the
University decision-makers with enforecement by pertinent Amherst campus and athletics.
accurate information for agencies, including the courts and Fift y-seven percent of the staff
consideration in formulatiOJl of the University. A majority also (56.8% who are female) perceived
policies." The preliminary results favored a drug crisis center, more IHtle or no discrimination on the
of the survey, which included a research , expansion of existing basis of ~;ex .
A large majority expressed
random sample of 300 students, drug programs and the arrest of
I 00 faculty and 100 staff pushers. As far as soft drugs, displeasutte over the decision to
students favor a crisis center, and drop intc:rcolleaiate football at the
personnel, have been released.
educational programs, but Unive rsity, although 75% o f
Destruction ftjected
opposed stricter enforcement of students,. 84.7% o f faculty and
While approximately 70% of those laws dealing with soft drugs. 72.3% of staff admitted they had
the University commu nity "A majority of those surveyed felt never attended a game. Reasons
claimed some type of involvement there was a distinct difference given for di sp leas ure were
in the campus protests of spring between soft and hard drugs," footbal1'1s "traditional place in the
I 970, only 33% o f students, 8.9% noted Dr. Francis, "and I was University" and its "generation of
of faculty and 8.3% of staff pleased at the willingness of school SJpirit ," as well as personal
calimed that they actively students to cooperate with a hard enjoyment o f the sport.
supported the strike. The only line on hard drugs."
In regard to University
two protest tactics favored by
On the question of evaluation, publications, the overall edge goes
students were the use of petitions all groups considered joint to The S'pec:trum , which Is always
and protest rallies. Picketing and evaluation of course work by
read by 40.3% of the students.
boycotting were mildly conconed teacher and student to be the
Nineteen percent of' students
by students, but highly negative most desirable met hod .
always readethos and 16 .9% the
responses were given to buUdlng Self-evaluation by the student was Re porter. The above findings are
takeoven, disruption of classes judged as a "poor" method by only a liirst level analysis of the
and destruction of property. "The 85% of faculty, 76.8% of staff and survey data. The Survey Center
survey i ndieated a complete 64.4% of students. A high will co ndu ct more in-depth
rejection of
tactics by orooortion also supported the analysis in the coming weeks.
LAST CHANCE
To Rush Nationel
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Sunday, Sept. 19
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f · 51 Un-versity P~aza
Page eight . Tbe Sepctrum . Friday, September 17, 1971

:*******:******

I*

c·MoN ovER I

.

837 - 232?

�The big··lie
Early Thursday morning, Medical Student Polity
President David Breen, announced to a group of students
sitting-in in Capen, a sweeping and totally satisfactory Med
School response to the five student demands. At noon on
Thursday a drastically different and much more limited
program was made public by the Med School.
How and why these changes came about is important.
'the administrative disavowal of Mr. Breen as a spokesman
raises many questions since it was members of the
Administration who placed him in that role. initially. These
issues, however, pale into insignificance in comparison to the
fact that the Medical Schoot:s role in the Attica aftermath
has yet to be fully, clearly and adequately defined.
There is much time to investigate the peculiar
circumstances that caused 150 students to leave Capen in a
jubilant mood at 2 a.m. on Thursday, believing thtt they had
won a stirring victory. There is not an abundance of time as
far as the injured at Attica are concerned. The issue must be
resolved and resolved satisfactorily on the cost in human
terms may rise to an even more deadly magnitude. We feel
that the nocturn~l agreement supposedly reached between
stUdents and the Med School we:; an ideal one and would
hope that both sides work to re-achieve it.
The facts as far as we have determined are that first, the
Administration not only made no attempts to throw doubt
on Mr. Breen's credentials Wednesday night, and in fact
helped to further the impression that he was an official
spok~an for t~e Faculty Council of the Mid School.
Secondly, they refused to take any responsibility Thursday
afternoon for helping the University community to
comprehend what occ;uried two nights~ - Third and most
dlmaging, the studtna'itnlng -in 1ft Capen fully believed Mr.
Breen's announcement of the supposed solutions.
We are particularly disturbed by the blatant discrepancies
in the pre~awn and afternoon versions of the agreement.
Among ttie possible causes is the charge by some student
leaders that Mr. Breen was deliberately "set up" in order to·
relieve what the Administration believed to be a tense
situation. We certainty hope that no tactics as reprehensible
• as this occurred, but frankly the Administration is severely
lacking in credibility at this moment. Further, the
reverberations from the lack of trust that is developing on
· this campus will remain until an honest account by The
Administration
of Wednesday night-Thursday morning is
&lt;
forthcoming.

THE SpECTI\UM
Friday, September 17. 1971

Vol. 22. No. 11

Editor-in-Chi41f - Dennis Arnold
Co-Menlltlne Editor - AI Benson
Co-Manetine Editor - Mike Lippmann
A•• MINtint Editor - SuAn Mo.
BIHi.,.. ~ - Jim Drucker
A~illnt M.n..., - Sue Mellentine
Campus ......... Jo-Ann Armao
.... . ...... . .... Bill Vecarro
Aat . ............Howie Kurtz
City . .............. . .. Vaa~nt
Copy .• . .... . .. . Ronni Forman

.. ... ........... Marty Gatti
Alit. .. .. . ..... . ..... Vacant
F.ture . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jan· Doane
Graphic Aru ...... . .. Tom Toles
lit. a Drama . . Michael Silverblatt

layout ..... . . Maryhope Runyon
Asst. . .. . ..... . . . .....V8Cant
Ml.llic . . ...........Billy Altman
Off-Campus ...... Lynne Traege!'
Alit . ................ V.c:ant
Photo . . ......... David G. Smith
Alit . ....... . .. . . Garv Friend
Asst • . .. .. . Mickey Osterreicher
Sports ........... • . Barry Rubin
A• . ............ Howie Faiwl

The SP«trum is servied by United Press International, , College Press
Service, the Los Angeles Free Press, the Los Angeles Time Syndicate, and
Libwation News Service.
Republication of metter herein without the express consent of the
Editor-in-Chief Is forbidden .
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor·in.Chiaf.

Com• UM tNiw .• ,

Ad Hoc petition

To the Editor;
The Ad Hoc Committee of State Employees has
compiled a petition in support of the prisoners of
Attica Prison. Any faculty or staff member or
graduate student receiving checks from the state are
asked to please sign the petition, a copy of which is
printed below . The petition is in Room 260 Norton
Jiall.
The State of New York has dealt with the basic
issues of human rights at Attica Prison by a
murderous assault on those dem.anding such rights.
Even as the legitimacy of the demands was officially
acknowledged, the state pursued a course which
could only lead to the deaths of many of those
involved, prisoners and prison employees alike.
Subsequently, in a desperate and calculated attempt
to mask the inhumanity of their actions and insure
future contro l, free from public scrutiny and
concern, Governor Rockefeller and his aides chose to
conjure up lurid images of slashed throats and
castration. Such a criminal combination of violence,
racism and deceit demands more than merely the

revulsion of all decent people. Therefore, we the
undersianed public employees :
1) Urge that our fellow public employees in the
UB Medical School and other health facilities, su1,1ply
their services to the prisoners. We will support,
politically and financially, their attempts to gain
access to the prisoners;
2) Urge our colleagues in the UB Law School to
provide legal services to the prisoners and to those
guards and their families who seek legal redress from
the state. We will support their efforts with financial
aid.
3) We wiD support an impartial investigating
committee, free from state control or political
influence, composed of a oross~ection of the
community and including representatives chosen by
prisoners and their families.
4) In support of the prisoners' demand for
amnesty, we insist that the state guarantee that t here
will be no more physical, legal or administrative
reprisals within the prison.
The Ad Hoc Committee of State Employee'

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman

Until last week few memben of this untversity
had even heard of the penitentiary in Attica. Given
the general apatliy and total self-interest of the
students a nd faculty in our myop\c Uttle
community, the possibiUty exists that many still
haven't . WeU it's time to take the blinders off,
they're shooting at people ag.ain. This time forty or
more are dead and Rockefeller is sunJtin&amp; himself
down in the Caribbean and if we're very lucky · he
won't come back. The fact that ten of the murdered
were neither Black nor poor, that they were in fact
employees of the state, had no effect on the final
decision. So let's blame it on the prisoners, boys, and
no one will be the wiser.
Except that this time you blew it, aentlemen.
The hostages didn't have their throats slashed, nor
were they castrated (there is somethina very
revealing about the white power structure publishing
a report claiming white hostages were deballed by
Black men). They were shot, murdered just as the
inmates were. Even Russell Oswald couldn't deny
the coroner's report or the testimony of every
surviving hostage that the inmates had no guns.
Yet can there be any doubt as to who wiU be
tried for murder? Surely not Rockefeller or .Oswald,
for the state can say with complete confidence that
they were no more responsible for these murders
than was the National Guard for the murders at
Kent. We can aU be sure that a select group of the
most politically skilled inmates will find themselves
indicted. The only question is whether the nation's
chief persecutor, John Mitchell, can manage to find a
way to indict Bobby Seale for conspiracy . After all,
Bobby did obtain a pledge from the prisoners
guaranteeing the safety of the hostages at least until
the chairman could return t&lt;1 Attica. Obviously his
presence was a threat to the priso n officials.
Compounding the tragedy, the sad fact is 'that
the original issue, America's rotting prisons, has been
obscured by the subsequent chaos. The statement
bas often been made that a nation's lltJmanity can be
judged by the way it treats those who inhabit its
prisons. American prisons are one more example of
the inhumanity and insanity which pervade every
comer of this nation. As Ramsey Clark states in his
excellent study, ''Crime In America": "When riots
and fires do not occur in these prisons, it is only
because no one feels like starting thept. They are
breeding places of crime, violence and despair."
Priso ns provide little more opportunity for
rehabilitation today than they did in the Middle
Ages. Ninety-five per cent of all funds spent for the
_corrections systems in the United States goes toward
keeping inmates securely Cf.ntained, Only five. per
cent ~es to the comb\Jled areas of health .care,
education and job tr~ining. Is it any wonder' that

eiabty per cent return to prison for a second
offense?
Inhuman treatment tnd the breeding of despair
are in no way limited to work farms in Arkansas and
Mississippi as the northern liberals •would Wee to
believe. To quote Ramsey Clark once more, " As
recently as 1965 the only aJJ-.female federal prison
bad no toilets in many units - the inmates used jars.
Fewer than twenty psychiatrists are available for the
entire fedel'tll corrections system" (italics added).
Yet when Congress decided to cut funds from the
Manpower. Development Training Act in 1968 the
only hundred per cent cut was for prisoner training.
This wu done by the very same politicians who
spent that entire year screaming about taw and
order. Further, when prisoners are finally released
from prison little, if anything, is done to ease their
transition back into society. Two-thirds of those
whose sentences have not expiied are out on parole
at any gi.ven time. Yet only one-fifth of the entire
manpower of the corrections system is even
theoretically involved in servicing these people. Even
these probation officials spend most of their time
writing reports for j uclaes and are often left with just
minutes a day to meet with their parolees.
The most damaging aspect of this sick system is
its effect on youthful "offenders." They are thrown
in with men who have spent the larger portion of
their life jumping in and out of penitentiaries. To
quote Milton Luger, director of the New York State
correction system's Division for Youth : "It would
probably be better for all concerned if young
delinquents were not detected, apprehended or
institutionalized . Too many of them get worse in our
care."
The nation's entire criminal system is by its very
nature prejudiced in favol"of the wealthy. Innocent
people go to prison because they are unable to hire
first rate lawyers. "Guilty" people are usually those
who happened to be born to the wrong part of
society. Crime isn't committed primarily by poor
people because poor people are immoral, but
because tbey have (amities that are starving or
because they must strike back at the.society which
has ensl:1ved them. When so many victims are forced
together apin in a "corrections" institution and
subjected to more inhuman treatment society should
expect the kind of violent reaction that occurred at
Attica . There should be no amazement over the
events of the past week. Given the existing
conditions in America's prison, the question is not
why the outbreak at Attica occurred, but why such
outbreaks don't occur more often.
Now investig.ating commissions have been
established to determine who is responsible for the
deaths 1\t Attica. I wonder. w)to tb~ state of New
York would hire as a defense counsel.
I

\

Friday, September 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

4#

�Attica investigation reve~als
hostages shot, not slashed
In t he wake of the rniiUcre at Attica Prilon
Monday mornina which killed 43 penons, a report
was issued from tbe office of Dr. John F. Edland,
Monroe County medical examiner, which stated that
the nine hostaaes died of aunshot wounds, not slit
throats as had been previously reported.
This new report was confirmed by New York
State Correction Comrn1aioner Russell Oswald.
Oswald explained that unauthorized reports and
rumors were responsible for the early reports that
the hostaaes had died of cut tl\roats. It is likely that
these reports came out of the fact that
throat-slashina of the hoetaaes was threatened by the
inmates durina the riot.
A news conference by Oswald scheduled for
· Wednesday was cancelled. An aide said that the
conference would be delayed "until everytbina cools
down" which could mean as late as Monday.
The eight inmates originaJJy missina in a count
by prison officials Monday evening have been found .
Three were found dead and five alive in the tunnel
system under the prison.

A fund w11 establiubed Monday by the Security
New York State Corpo~ration and the Citizen's Bank
of Attica to aid the families of the slain bostaaes.
The money, totaUna over $2000 already, will be
allocated for tivina and educational expenses for the
survivors. Another fund has been started by the
Alcoholic Beveraae Control Board of the State Civil
Service Employees Association. Rudy Basha, head of
the Board, said in announcina the fund : "I thought
we ou&amp;ht.to &amp;et somethina started for them.''
In Washinaton , meanwhile, Congressman
Bertram Podell sent the Governor a telegram urging
him to "order a specinl session of the New York
State Legislature to tak•~ immediate action on penal
reform.''

4

Varied reactions

Reactio n to the Attica riot drew varied
responses from through,out the nation . Gov. Ronald
Reagan o f California said that the troubles at Attica
and San Quentin was a reflection of "the new
revolutionary tactics of taking revolution into t he
prisons and attacking th•: system there."
Extensive damqe
The Rev. Ralph Abernathy, leader of the
Meanwhile , c leanup goes on at Attica Southern Ch r isti an Leadership Conference,
Correctional Facility. The search is still going on for expressed concern over the fact that he was unable
weapons hidden by the inmates. So far , homemade to be at Attica on Sunday to talk with the prisoners
arms such as bombs, spears, clubs, pipes and swords
due to a previous enpt:ement. Abernathy said that
have been found.
Rockefeller erred terribly in usina force Jo quell the
Only two celJblocks, as well as the kitchen and disturbance. " I just regrc:t," he said, " not being able
storaae house are back in service. Damage to other to talk to the people there as well as Rockefeller. I
buildings is so extensive that 1241 inmates arc being may have been able to save som e lives."
held in cells which hold a maximum of 481 inrru~tes .
Prison officials say that I 000 prisoners will have to Guards react
be transferred du~ to the damage. Some were already
About 230 auards from the Great Meadow
tra nsferred by bus,
Correctional
Facility in Comstock, N.Y. asked for
Gov. Rockefeller's office issued a statement
Tuesday that Justice Harry Goldman of the fourth the resignation of Commissioner Oswald . John
Judicial District, Appellate Division of Rochester, Casey, president of Loca1l 1279, said that the union
had agreed to name a panel which will Implement is requesting a "comp lete investigation" of the
reforms at Attica. J ustice Goldman said that the uprising. He read a statement which urged that
panel would consist of about five people, including Oswald and Walter Dun,bar, his execuijve deputy,
so me top penologists and et hnic gtoup "be forbidden to interfe1re in any disturbances until ·
representatives. The governor's office said the panel order Is restored ." The statement continued with,
is being formed "so that the public may be assured " ...these two men have left a sickening number of
that the constitutio nal rights of the inmates are dead correctiOn personn,el from coast to coast with
their policies. I know the risks I take in my work and
being protected.''
my life can be forfeited at any time. This I can live
with, but I cannot live with the knowledge - and
'Tngedies do deYtlop ·
Attica
has made thjs certain
that when J'm a
In a statement on Wednesday, Gov. Rockefeller
ordered an expanded investigation into the Attica hostage that I'll be abandoned by the administration
situation to determine how the hostages were shot. and be left in the hands c•f Bobby Seales and William
When asked if he had any information that state Kunstlers."
police had fired the shots which killed the guards,
Tougher security measures have been instituted
Rockefeller said : " In the heat of a situation, at New York-$ Sing Sin1: Prison and the California
tragedies do develo p." Rocky flew to Albany State Prison, to prevent any possible riots. Trouble
Thursday to discuss the situation with legislative hllS been reported in jails 1in Cleveland, Baltimore and
Atlanta.
leaders.

-uPI

State 1r001*1 file Into Attia

Trooper action

prison moments before mounting

• m.s .U.Ck on rioting prisoners.
As • ,...It of this Ktion, 43

......

people died

inside the prison

STUDENT

BOOK EXCHANGE
IS NOW OPEN
Bring ol~ books to sell at your own "Discount Prices!" Only books
being used this semester·are acceptable.
Come buy these bargains for your own classes tool

NORTON HALL
NOW
SHOWING!

Plaza North
1111 ..... NW aft. U4- 1SS1

•
MATINEE

DAILY!

2nd WEEK

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231

OPEN 10 ·- 4

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.

'·

\

Pa~ ten . The Spectrum . Friday, September 17, 1971

-

�.

.Cali/Oritia: yoUng Voters nlay
vote where they attend school

LibrarY controversy. • •
~ntlnuecl

In a landmark decision handed down on Aug.
27, the CaJjfomia Supreme Court ruled that new
voters between the ages of I 8 and 20 must be
treated like aU other voters for purposes of acquiring
a voting residence. The unanimous decjsion
overturned a Feb. I 7 opinion by California Attorney
General Evelle J. Younger which stated that
unmarried, newly-enfranchised 18- 20 year-olds
were required to register in their parents' districts for
voting purposes.

presumptions - conclusive or otherwise - that they
are not bona fide residents ctf the community in
which they live. ''
"

The ruling was implemented immediately upon
orders of California Secretary of State Edmund G.
Brown.

"Electoral impotence" .

The ruling makes California the saxteenth state
which allows students to vote where they attend
school. The other states arc:: Alaska, Colorado,
Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana,
Massachusetts, Michigan, Neb1raska, North Dakota,
Oklahoma, Vermont, Washingttl&gt;n and ~isconsin .

In a forceful statement on the issue, the Court
said, ..America's youth enttreated, pleaded for,
demanded a voice in the govetmance of this nation.
On campuses by the hundreds, at Lincoln's
Monument by the hundreds of thousands, they
voiced their frustration at their electoral impotence
and their love of a country whjch they believe to be
abandoning its ideals. Many rnore worked quietly
and effectively within a system1 that gave them scant
recognition. And in the land of Vietnam they lie as
proof that death accords youth no protected status.
Their struggle for recognitio•n divided a nation
against Itself.

Mrs. Anne Wexler, director of the Common
Cause Voting Rights Project, one of the plaintiffs in
the. case, said: "We hope that this landmark decision
will have significant impact on the other court suUs
and the thinking of state and local officials
concerning the all-important matter of where young
people may register to vote.'' Common Cause is a
national citizens' lobby headed by John W. Gardner,
former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare,
with a membership of over 200,000.
Burdened vote

Congress and more than three-fourths of the
states have now determined itn their wisdom that
youth "shall have a new birth1 of freedom" - the
franchise . Rights won at tho cost of so much
individual and societal suffering may not and shall
not be curtailed on the basis c1f hoary fictions that
these men and women are child1ren tied to residential
apron s trings, Respondents' refusal to treat
petitioners as adults for voting purposes violates the
letter and spirit of the 26th Amendment."

\

In its decision the Court. said, "Compelling
\ young people who live apart from their parents to
) travel to their parents' district to register and vote,
or else to register and vote u absentees, burdens
their right to vote . .. "The Court also stated that
the 26th Amendment requires young voters to be
tre~ted the same as all other voters. "Fears of the
way minors may vote or of their impermanency in
the community may not be used to justify special

JFZIGtRLS " * ' ' ' ' * GIRlsr:zlA - · ·
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~---.

''Th:~~·~~~~!JerC~~~~!r~~~~one

Gustav _ _ _ _..,.

. •• .:

Objections to oath
The teport of this commitlee
on loyalty oaths was accepted by
the Senate. Any state employee is
required to swear an oath of
loyalty to the N.Y. constitution.
Failure to do so results in denial
of employment. The question of
the required Qath was raised in the
fall of 1970 when two faculty
members refused to comply.
Resolving that "through the
SUNY Faculty Senate, effort
should be made to eliminate this
oath as a requirement for public
officials in this state," the Senate
stales that "the pledge serves no
useful purpose and, in fact, has
significant objectional aspects."It
continues: .. ... we urge its repeal
by amendment of the New York
State Constitution."
Among the other topics
di scussed before the Senate
adjourned were procedures for
formal grievances, admissions
policy and faculty complaints
about the open parking lot
situation.
'•

Gustav A . f ri$clt; 'Inc.
Jpweler • Optldon

41 ICINMOH AVlNUI

At u"'""'"' ....
aUffAlO, N. Y. 14226

355 Norton Hall

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Rom . 3 :9· 12,23

DISCOVER

A motion was passed for the
committee on Academic Freedom
and Responsibility to draw up an
alternative definition for
consideration and possib le
adoption.

Xerox copying, 8 cents each
heapest rate we lmow in Buffalo

rlvhteous, no, not one: none that
5Miteth after God, thev ar• all von•
~~:~h~",~.:':'I'V· All have •Inned and

834 2860 •

from.,. 1-

Tuesday,..s meeting included the
report of Robert Fisk, Faculty of
Educational Studies, on a
three-year contract with SPA. As
a negotiator of the contract, Dr.
Fisk commented that "the final
document represents an infinite
number of compromises . "
Important highlights of the SPA
contract include an economic
package of salary increments and
cost of living in creases, a
contractual grievance process
I hrough arbitration and job
security for non -teaching
professionals.
In addition, Dr . Fisk
commented that it " ... provides
critical opportunities for free and
open discussion of matters of
concern." The entire contr.act,
according to him, " provides a
power base for those who believe
they have some knowledge of
what a university is and a more
syste matic management of
faculty ... "
One of its weaknesses, Dr. Fisk
feels is that ''it does not clarify
the role of the student in the
governing and decision-making of
the University." An ot her
weakness, that Faculty senators
took issue with was the contract's
definition for academic freedom .

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Friday, September 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�. ..... Siebel, noted IOnl ltylilt,
will be performing in conc.t this

Sunday u the Rockwell
quadrangle 8t BufWo Stde.
Siebel 11 t.t known tor his
recent I y released album
Woodsmoke and Orafl881. Also
..,..,lnt at the free cone.~ will ·

Paul Siebel

be Patrick Sky, Don ~. Dee
Hilllne and Tapeatry.

------PUBLIC

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Tw.ls mortt to •
WATERBEO
th1111 just .JtJBping - Come in and try
$25.00 •nd Up

Near Sweet Home

. .. .

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THE BODY SHOP
3346 Sheridan Drive
in Royalite Plaza

' •;

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JOIN

(~

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THE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION'S

i._.1
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PUBLICIT·Y
COMMITTEE

~:1

L!J
.

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'

CONTACT - ALAN SCHWARTZ - 205 Norton tbll
831 ·5507
"By the way, there WILL be~ stipend!
I'

e1

' •]

•'

., ,.

GIVEADUIN.
USE AOONDOM.

Bruce Powers

.._. Pow.s,

p~illlidMt of the Experimental Film
SocMty, produc:ed a NtJwpectiwe of foNitpt films to
be presented 8t the Studio Anna n...ter.

Movie retrospective

Experimental film festival
by Michael Silverblatt
LfttraNrt! tmd Drama Editor

Buffalo is not a &amp;ood city for film freaks . As
you know, even if you've only been here for two
weeks, Buffalo movie houses are not the last word in
cinematic excjte(nent . If truth be known, the city is
practically fuJJ to the brim with movies like The
He/lltorm Chroniclt! and Scandalous John . But help
is on hend.
From Sept. 23 - 25, the International
Experimental Film S ociety will present a
retrospective survey or European, Eastern and
American underground and experimental film .
Ranp of film
Thirty-&lt;&gt;ne unique films have been selected for
the three-day festival ran&amp;ina from Bunuel's Un
Chien Andlllou , (one o f the first sunealist films) to
Cassevetes' Shadows. Filmed In 1928 Un Chien
Anda/ o u clearly foreshadows Bunuel's
mytho-symbollc preoccupations. Moreover, Salvador
DaJI's scenario provides good examples of the
subject-&lt;&gt;bject transformations that so exemplify
Dadaist and modernist thinking in film . It is a film
made to shock. Shadows Is a strange non-scripted
fllm mede in 1960. Lifeke Face1 , it is a very personal
ftlm - crude and hatd .
The retrospective, under the direction of Bruce
R. Powen (who is also the president of the
Experimental Film Society), will take place in the
Studio Arena Theater (681 Main St .). There will be
two showinp on each day, at 3 and 7 :30 p .m.
Tickets, which cost $2 at the matinee and $2.75 at
everuns performances are available at the Norton
HaU Box Office. You can elect to see all three
proarams for $7 .50.

Uniwnity support
It is extremely important that the University
encouraae such comparatively bold cultural
experiments in our community. This "short course
in experimental ftlm " is perhaps the most
comprehensive and excitin&amp; film program that
Buffalo has had in the past five years. The festival
hopes to show the movement from the abstraction
of the self (in the surrealist films) to the ~enial and
warpina of the self (in the later, post-Dada American
films). The retrospective will also show the oriajns of
many commercial and Hollywood film techniques.

heap and focused on persons and objects as thJnp
without reference to const•nt soclal historical values
ofany kind .
"Today's avante-prde filmmakers may be
divided Into two aroups ;" Powers adds, ••Those who
celebrate with a violent &amp;lee the bw:ial of old
romantic and intellectual values and those who have
returned to pre-eduJt ideas, hopina perhaps for a
renewal in a species of child-like lyricism."
Both of these camps will be found included in
the retrospective. The schedule or showing appears
below. It is recommended that you attend .

..
------------

The schedule

Thunday, Sept. 23 , 1971

Un Chien AndaJou ( 1928) - Luis Bunuei/Salvador
Dali
Etoile de Mer (1928) - Man Ray
Ufe and Death of a Hollywood Extra (I 928) Robert Florey
La Mort du Cerf ( 1954) - Dmitri K.irsanoff
Lot in Sodom (1933) - J$. Watson and Melville
Weber
The Bridge {The Spy) ( 1932) - Charles Vidor
Muscle Beach (1950) - Joseph Strick
Fragment of Seeking (1946) - Curtis Harrington
The Loves of Franistan (1952) - Jules Schwerin
House of Cards (1952) - Joseph Vogel
Nei'ghbors (1952) - Norman Mclaren
Pacific 231 ( 1952) - Andre Tadi
The Assignation (1953j - Curtis Harrington
Desist ftlm ( 1954) - Stan Brakhage
The Wonder Ring (1955) - Stan Brakhage
Looney l'om, The Happy lover (1951) - James
Broughton
Friday, Sept. 24, J 971

Cosmic Ray and Viviaan ( 1961) - Bruce Connor
To Parsifal ( 1963) - Bruce BaiJlie ·
c..
Valentin (1968) - Bruce Baillie
Joachim's Dictionary (1965) - Walerian Borowczyk
The Cage ( 1967) - Rick Cluchey
Rope Trick ( 1967) - Bob Godfrey
Pandora's Bottle ( 1967) - R .C. Dale
Night Tide (1961) - Curtis Harrington
Saturday, Sept. lS, 1971

Schmeerguntz ( 1966) - Guvnor Nelson
The prop-am deals with the artist revoltin&amp; The Face ( 1967) - Herbert Kosower
apinst the HoUywood machine in the attempt to The Problem (1966) - Jan Dudesek
fmd a new be&amp;inruna. Powers notes that "from a Genesis (1966) - Jana Merglova
visual point of view, the revolt bepn with the Breath (1967) - Jimmy Murakami
Dada-Surrealists who sew the emeraence of a Voyeur Virtuoso (1967) - Kenji Kanesaka
post.Christian era at the tum of the century. Dali, Two (J 967) - Robert Bean/Renee Taylor
Bunuel, Cocteau threw the ideas or 19th century The Sword (1968) - V. Stepenek/J . Adam
aesthetic and mytholOJical sensibility onto the junk Shadows (I 960) - John Cassavetes

~twelVe.

The Sepctrum. Friday, September 17, 1971

••

I ~

�.

Aih~ti6department tries to
WeU, footbaU season has roUed around apin and the Wizard is
back to amaze you with his uncanny ability to pick winnen. My .\FC
title picks are Miami (But), Houston (Central) and Oakla;d (West).
NFC title picks are O.Uas (East), Minnesota (Central) and San
Francisco (West). NFC champ O.Uas figures to beat AFC champ
Oakland in the Super Bowl.
ChJcaao 20, Pittsburp 19 : Aerial brawl between two very physical
teams. A to•·up.
New York Jets 28, Baltimore 24 : Don't let the champion tag fool
you - the Colts are hurting. If Woodall is healthy, the Jets shouJd whip
them.
Green Bay 21, New York Giants 7: Pack undecided at Qb., but
their problems pale whep compared to the Giants.
St. Louis 20, Washington 13: Redsklns, minus Jurgensen don't
figure to win many this year.
DaUu 34, Buffalo 20 : Explosive offense not quite enough for Buts.
Los Angeles 27, New Orleans 10: "New look" Rams should have
little trouble with Saints, who In recenf years have been regressing
instead of progressing.
Miami 23 , Denver 20 : Broncos' tough defense will hassle Dolphins,
but Griese- Warfield serial duo should decide outcome.
Oakland 35, New Enaland 13: Raiders. look like AFC team to beat.
Cincinnati 17, Philadelphia 14: Even with Cook stin out, Bengals
have looked good . They should handle improved tl.agJes.
San Francilco 30, Atlanta 20: 49'ers could have hands full with
Falcons, who have improved offense immeasurably.
Houston 24, Cleveland 17: New coach Ed Hughes has Oilers
playing ball. Browns continue to wait Qn Mike Phipps.
.
Kansas City 34, San Dieao 17: Same old story again. Chiefs'
defense forces tumoven; Chiefs score. Chargers unstable at Qb.
Minnesota 24, Detroit 20 : Another " black and blue" battle .
Vikings win on better balance.
ColleJe Football
by Bany Rubin
Air Force '27, Mitlouri 17: Ben Martin's Falcons should be f1ying
high this season .
Texu 28, UCLA 13: The Longhorns, behind their Wishbone-T
offense seek their 29th straight regular season victory .
Washinaton 3S, Purdue 14: The Huskies' golden1rmed Sonny
Sixkiller should eallly cl.amp the Boilermakers.
Stanford 34, Army 9 : Stanford is not particularly strong this
season, but the Cadets are dismally weaJc .
California 21, West Vlrahua 20: Berkeley, on its home turf, gets
the nod in a ti&amp;ht battle.
South Carolina 23, Duke 17: Dietzel's Gamecocks are sky-high
after upsetting the Georaia Tech Y~llowjackets.
Michlpn State 28, Georlia Teeb 14 : The rejuvenated Spartans
loom as a Bi&amp; Ten title contender under Daugherty.
Georaia 38, Tulane 13: The Bulldop led by soph whiz Buzy
Rosenberg are a big surprise.
Louisiana State 28, Texu AclM 7: The Bengals are out for revenge
after their opening loss to Colorado.
Michigan 44, Vlrainla 10: Wolverines figore to. make the Cavaliers'
afternoon a long o ne.
Nebrasb 32, Minnesota 16: Devaney's Comhuskers must be
considered a solid favorite, but the Gophers are hungry for recognition.

'

t

replace gap left by football

This put winter the Buffalo intercollesiate
athletic department wu faced with a major problem .•
To put it concisely, the Buffalo brass had to fill tlte
gap left by the Ia. of vanity football on the fall
intercollegiate sports card. No matter how putilan
the observer, it must be admitted that football wHI
be extremely hard to replace. However, a beefed-up
cross-country schedule, an improved golf prosram
and a brand new club soccer team will attempt to fill
the bill this autumn.
The varalty cross-country Bulls open their
12-meet schedule next Wednesday at Cleveland State
with Toledo. Coached by old reliable Emery fisher
in his twenty-first eeason, the Bulls boast six
· lettermen returning from last year's 7- 5 won- lost
season. However, the Bulls will count graduated Ed
fuchs among the missing. Fuchs, a three-time
competitor in the NCAA championships was
Buffalo's top harrier.
Soph returners
Buffalo's youthful squad will be led this season
by sophs Dennis Meka, Larry Krajewski and Bruce
Tuttle, all leiter winners as frosh . Juniors Jim
McClurkin and Bob Gower also return, along with
senior John Fuchs, who was lost with an injured
ankle last season .
The schedule: Sept. 22 at Cleveland State with
Toledo; Sept. 25 , Syracuse, Rochester, Niagara;
Sept. 29 at Fredonia: Oct. 2 at the umoyne
Invitational; Oct. 9 at Brockport; Oct. 16 at RJT,
umoyne; Oct. 19, Geneseo; Oct. 23 at SUNY
Binghamton; Oct. 27 at Buffalo State; Oct. 30 at

-

Canisius Invitational; N&lt;W. 2 at St. Bonnenlure;
Nov. 6, New York State ctwnpionlh.ips at RP1; Nov.
22, NCAA Univeraity division cbampiomh.ips at the
University of Tennessee. Home meets will take ptace
at the Grover Oeveland Golf Course.

Tuesday, in one of the oddest solf matches in
history, the Buffalo vanity linklmen topped four
other colleae squads - or did they? Afte~ postins a
low score of 370 for ftve competitora, the Bulls
edged Canisius (377), SL, John fisher (386), Geneseo
(395) and fredonia (411). However, Canisius CoUese
contended that they were not contracted to meet
Buffalo. To add further to the confusion, the Bulls
reported that a signed contract is on file in the
Buffalo athletic department offices.
Dolmage stan
For the Blue and Gold, junior Dale Dolmage was
medalist with a one under par-71 on the Beaver _
Island golf course. The name Dolmage should
become famiJiar to Buffalo sports fans since
Dolmage figures to star for the Buffalo varsity ice
hockey team.
The remainder of the Buffalo schedule : Sept. 20
at St. Bonaventure; Sept. 22 at Canisius; Sept. 24,
Gannon and Niagara; Sept. 27, Tri-state tourney at
Gannon; Sept. 28 at Geneseo; Oct. 1 at Brook Lea
toumey; Oct. 4 at Canisius; Oct. Sat Niagara with
RJT; Oct. 9, ECAC districts at Colgate; Oct. 14 at
Fredonia ; Oct. 16, ECAC fmals at Cooperstown.
Home meets take place on the Amherst-Audobon
If course.

..................

~

MATTRESSES

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ALL

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s 18.00
CITY MATTRESSES

Whole Earth Catalog ; Local Calalog; Pipes, Papers, Clothes,
Arts &amp; Crafts, BeUs, used clothes, Books, candles, shirts,
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purses, leathers , blacklights, insense and lots more.

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~t.lS/71

~

...................................._._.,
Friday, September 17, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page ~

�..

'Get into the action'

Ha11e a problem? Need help? Do you find it impussible to untangle
the Univer~ity bureaucracy l In cooperation with the Office of Student
Affairs and Ser11lces, The Spectrum sponsor~ Action l-ine a weekly
reader service column. Through Action Line. ind1vtdual students can
get dntwert to puzzltng questiont, find out where and why University
decisions are made and get action where change 11 needed.
Just dial 83 J ·5000 or visit the Action Une booth In the Center
Lounge in Norton Hall for individual attention. The Office of Student
Affairt and ServiCtJ will investigate all questions and complaints, and
will an~wer them indlt~idua/ly, The name of the individual originating
the inquiry u kept confidential under all circumstances. The more
common questions will be answered in this column each week.
Q : The com puter has put me in the wrong department . How can I

by Howie FaiwJ
AssiftQnt Sports Editor

"Get Into the Action'' has
been the spirited slopn used
frequently this week at Clark
Gym, as intramural festivities
begin to aet underway. Master of
ceremom~
Bill Monkarsh, has
promised an exciting array of
activities which should provide
excellent re creat ional
opportunities for hundreds of
University students.
Deadlines near
Touch football entry form s
have been massing all week in the
ticket booth at Clark Gym, with
today being the final day to
sub mit all team rosters.
Remember, any student team is
- \ eligible, whether it be a dorm
floor, independent, fraternjty or
any interest group. The deadline
for intramural tennis entries are
also today, so all those interested
in compet ing in smgles, doubles or
mixed double matches should
promptly return all forms.
Competition in football will begm
this coming Tuesday, Sept. 20 ,
with tennis commencing the
following day.
For soccer buffs, entry forms
are now available for eight -man
intramural teams. They must be
returned no later than Sept. 22.
For our female jocks, bowling
entry fbrms will be available at
the gym Sept. 20 and must be
submit ted by Sept. 27.
To !&gt;tart off th1s ambitious

Get Involved Ill This coming week
Clark Gym figures to be the hub
'of all intramural activity.
Com petition in touch foo1ball
beilins Tuesday, while tennis will

Gy m activities

begin

on

Wedn esday .

Tryouts will get underway
immediately and all freshmen ,
sop h omo r es and second-year
transfer students are urged to
come down and tfY out. The fall
program, and incidentally fall
tryouts , will det ermine the
makeup of the team for the entire
season, so it is essential that you
try o ut now if you wish to
compete in the spring season as
well. If you are interested, report
to Room 11 3 Clurk Gym as soon
as possible.

intramural seaso n . an
unprecedented co-ed volleyball
mixer will take phtce at ·the Main
Gym on Wednesday, Sept. 2 t .
The gala festivities will begin
promptly at 7 p.m. and all
faculty , sta ff and students are
cordially invited to attend.
Baseball tryouts
Finally, baseball coach Bill
Monkursh has confirmed the
introduction of fall baseball to
Buffalo's varsity schedu le.

ANNOUNCEMENT

tl

DON DA VIS IS NOW SE L LING

I~

SUBARU
SUBARU
is like the other leading Japanese cars EXCEPT
THAT :

SUBARU has front wheel drive-the others don 't
SUB ARU hasa fan/essengine ·the others don't
SUBARU has two radiators - the others don 't
SU BARU has rock &amp; pinion steering· the others don't
SU BAR U has inboard brakes· the others don't
SUBARU has these eJtCiusive features and many many
more, plus a trunk you won't believe.

ALL THIS DELIVERED FOR

$2109 20

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(Including radio &amp; white wall tires)
Slacks aalore in 2 ne• stores,
nqw open at .:lmwood and
Bid•eU near State Teachers, and
Main St r eet opposite U.B.
Groovy flares to tum you on ... in
plaids, stripes, checks, and solids.
Wester poc:k.eu, regular pockets,
•ide and reaular belt loops.
Plenty of n ares in famous Levi's
®St•·Prest® slacks. Also straiJbt
cuts th at are with it. Dis Pants A'
Plenty now!

DON DAVIS
"The Home of Fair Dealing"

291'7 Bailey Ave.
834-3900

have th is corrected?
A: Admissio ns and Records tells us that you need a letter from the
correct dep,rt ment stating th~t you are a student in it. Take this ~etter,"'
which you can get from the department secretary, to th~ Offtce of
Admissions and RecOTds (Hayes B) and they will makt}-sure the change
is made on your records.
Q : The telephone company required SIOS deposit from two
roommates and myself before they would Jive us a phone. Is this legal?
A: Yes, it is. According to a spokesman for the Public Service
Commission and AJ itya'n, manager of the Kensington BranCh, New
York Telephone, the telephone company can require a deposit
estimated to equal the total of the first two mu ntb'rcharges. The
phone company fiaures that with installation charges and charges for
regular service, S3S per user is reasonable and the Public Service
Commission concurs. However, hope is not lost. If after two months of
service your bills come to less than your total deposit, you can request
that the phone company refund the difference. One additional note, AJ
Ryan encourages any student with a problem or complaint to contact
him at the Kensington Branch .
Q : Does the University offer a course in speed readina?
A: Once again, the Olvtsion of Undergraduate Studies is offering a
non-&lt;:redit course in Speed Reading and Study, taught by Mrs. Katurah
Nichols. Classes will meet once a week for one hour in 305 Diefendorf
on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, beginning Sept. 27. Two
sections will be held each day : at I I :00 a.m. and noon. Interested
students are asked lo sign up in Diefendorf I 06.
This is the only University-sponsored course and it is a non-credit
coprse with a fee o f S 15 pay_able when you sign up for the course.
There are other speed reading courses listed on various bulletin boards
on campus, but they are all independently franchised , off-&lt;:ampus
commercial enterprises.
Q : What is the purpose of the "Student Clas.'l Schedule Card?" Do
1 have to pic k it up at Admissions and Records. even if I know I've
been admitted into all my classes?
A: Dr. Arthur L. Kaiser, d1rccto r of the Office of Admissions and
)Records. stated : "The n:gt~tralion process at the University under the
SARA Reg~strution · System is o lw&lt;HIICp process. The first step is the
submission of a Course Request Form to the Office of Admissions and
Records and/or the division indicated in the registration instructions.
The second step occurs a few days later when students are instructed to
return to the Admtssions and Records Office to piCk up the student
registration card generated by the C R F subm1tted .
I would like Jo emphas1ze the tmportance of the second step
described above . This applies to the card generated by the initial
registration as well as to all subsequent cards generated by the
submission of additional CRF's during the Change of Registration
period . Any schedule cards which have not been picked up will result in
the registration covered by that schedule card being cancelled.
Registration canno t be validated until the card has been picked up.
I urge each student. therefore, to cooperate with this office in
picking up this sched ule card as soon after it is available as possible. so
as to not endanger his registration and to avoid the possible
cancellation of his registration ."
Q : How can I get Dr. Ketter's signa ture on the back of my
application for an absentee ballot?
A: You don~! These applications will be signed by Dr. Anthony
Lorenzetti at the Office of Student AI fairs and Services, 20 I Harriman
Library. If you have one, tmng it in and it will be signed and notarized
right there .
Q : I have lost my ID card and it is vital to my existence on
campus. What can I do?
A: The back o f the ID card states !hat if you should lose it , you
must report this immediately to the Office of Student Affairs and
Services (201 Harriman library). You are asked to bring with you some
proof of identity. A temporary ID card will then be issued to you. You
_must take this temporary card to ftoster Hall Ba&amp;ement, Room 16, for a
new permanent card. Starting. Oct. I, this office will be o't&gt;en on
Tuesdays from 8 :30 a .m. to I I :30 a.m. and on Fridays from noon to
3:30 p.m. A charge of S2 is made for a new permanent 10 card . If you
have any questions about 10 cards-, please call 4803 for more
information.
...

SUBARU won the car of the year award in Japan.

)

I

actton ltne

lntramurals to co,mence

834-3900

ISLEY BROS.
w tth

-

I

CHI-LITES

Sunday, Septe.mber 26, 8:30P.M.
Kl EINHANS MUSIC HAll
AU fl!tJU rererved : llfaln Ploor SS.SO,
$f.SO, $4.00
.., ..,,. ...w •' hff•l• Fettlvol TldlM Offlce, Statler44ilteoo 1.e1t1ty
witt!
Mlf-e44re.....
a ...,_
$4.~Bokon11

rock~
, (o. .d .....,. ~ted
ol-...4
.,..,~)· U
!ft~U; Stohl C./.... Tld&lt;et Office: . . . .., &amp; Del'o .,....w.y '~,'

..

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Friday, September 17, 1971

~

~

I"'

"=:R!~ T

l :.lll"ll'i!:iiW-So'JU-IS:mAI

�CLAIIIIIIII

FOR SALE _
1964 MALiBU V·8 Pow«, v .g.
• condition, l ow mi. After 6 p.m .
832·9171 .
ETHN~.c

apparel, Jewelry ano
handcrafts of Asia, Africa and · the
Amerlc.u at "The People," 11-fOik·arts
boutiQue, 144 Allen, 8~2-6283.
VW Bug 1964 green, rebuilt engine,
sunroof, radio, sn ow tires, 75,000
miles. Best offer. 877·6164 after 6.
DATSUN 1969, 20 00 sports, 135-hp,
5-s peed1 low mileage. Must sell.
877-5501 between 6-8 p.m. -·
PO RSCHE 1959 coup e,
condition. 741·3921 .

Excellent

1970 PO RSCHE road ster con vertible.
Deluxe appeara nce group, AM·FM
r~d lo, 5-s peed t ransmission . BeautifUl
burnt orange f inish. Original Invoice
$4367 - now only $2989. Twln·T'on
Auto Sales I nc., 426 Oliver St.
692-2571,_
GRETSCH Tennessean wah -wah, ped al
power and treble boost~:~rs, living room,
kitchen furn lkJre. Make offer. cave
837·7743.
FOR SALE: attractive sofa bed.
Recently recovered •• $20. 691·7541
after 5 p.m.
1964 VW Microbus, $250 - or best
offer. Call Seth llnd ' le•ve message at
836-516 9.
•
•
FOR HOUSEHOLD Items, used
furniture, antiques and collectibles,
come to THE GARRETT, 937
Kensington near Norfolk anq browse
around.
1966 SIMCA. Very good condition.
836·7120.
ZENITH AM·FM radio. Brand new must sell. $45. Phone 886·2292.
VENTURA 12·strlng guitar, plus cue.
Excellent condition. Phone 886·2292.
REFRIGERATORS, stoves and
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaran teed. O&amp;G Appliances, 844
sycamore, T&gt;&lt; 4 ·3183.

.

.

LEAVING for the West. House f ull o f
furniture for sale. Call 833·4541.
1968 GTO -

green with black vlnvl

top. Very goOd condition. $1200. Call
683.0287 after 7 p .m .
·
KARMAN GHIA convertible, 1962,
BlauDOnct radio, studded snows, gas
heater, reliable around-town car. $150
or best offer. AI~. 195 vs engine.
Good condition. $35:- an 874.0882.
TAPE RECORDER,
agstrom guitar,
amplifier; golf c lubs - bag, c art, balls ;
barbells; microphone, stand; cheap.
838·1089.
FLATTOP - c lassic guitars. New used . Martin, Gibson, G uild, Gurian,
etc. Musician 's prices. String Shoppe,
524 Ontario. 7 p .m. - 9 p .m. dally.
Saturday, noon - 5 P.m. 874·0120.
UNUSUAL fabrlc:s for sewing and
dec orat in g. Ka l amkerl, RajliStanl
prints, batiks, double-weaves, Dashiki
panels, Dutch wax prints and more at
"The People," a folk·arts boutique,
144 Allen. 882-6283 .

WANTED
START $2 per hour salary plus bonus.
Work 4-8 p.m. weekdays, 10-2 p.m.
Sat urdays. Cl!ll 835·3803 or TF9·0402.
OPPORTUNITY, sparetime, addressing
envelopes and ci rculars! Make 427 per
thousand . Handwritten or typed , in
your home. Send just S2 for
Instruct ions and a list or nrms using
ad ~ressers. Satisfaction guaranteed!
B&amp;V Enterprises, Dept. 9-29, P.O .
Box 398 Pearblossom, Calif. 93553.
RESTAURANT personnel t o staff
e)(Citlng new JAPANESE STEAK
HOUSE
Ot lent a I waltr esses
hostesses, hat cneck girls, busboys:
dishwashers, valet , parkers. 632-2323.

MI8CELLANEoOs •
SEATTLE family with fiShing boat,
land and bus nNds JMOple and brNd.
632.0188 •

ROOMMATES WANTED
' NEEO .bOdy to fill spacious, furnished
apt, Own room, $60/mo. with utilities.
15·mlnute drive. Tom . 831·2556 .
•
OW'N
ROOM , 3-bedroom apt .
Williamsville area, $60 per month, plus
1/3 electric, 15 minutes from Mai n
campus by car. Eves. 633-404 2.

PERSONAL

MEXICAN FOOD TACOS burrltosf
enchiladas, tamales and more. Tory our
popular Tippy's steak sandwich, alto
18fvlng chicken and MlfoOd. While
v~·re there, enJoy a brew. Tippy·' •
Taco House, 2351 Sh«ldan Drive
(aero~ from Putt-Putt G(llf Course)

83a·3tOO.

..

WOMAN psychology 91'ad student
nNds Infants I to 14 months old and
mothers for one or two home visits.
1nterestlng r-rcll proJect . 836·2051.
THESIS, dluertatlons, papers typed ,
double -spaced page. IBM
Magnetic Card typewriter. Plck·u P and
dellvwy. 937-6050 for details.

1 . 50

ETHNIC appat el, Jewelry and
handcraftt of Asia, Africa and the
Americas at "The People," a fol k ·arts
boutique, 144 Allen. 88 2-6283.
PART - TIME employme n t
above-average pay for school term
work. 853-8109 1 9-3 p.m.
GIVE YOURSELF and us a chance to
know each other - Rush THETA CH I
local sorority. Register today and
Monday 11-2 Norton lobby,
THE SPECTRUM Campus s~art needs
reporters. Anyone Interested should
come to 355 Norton or ca ll Jo·Ann at
411;3.

LEAD guitarist seeking _established
group. Also Pl• ys f lu te, ux,
n•rmonlca, bass recorder, etc. Mlc heel
881-3480.

FREAK ARTIST. Heavy trip with
three Together People who need help.
No pay. 633·1781, 835·2550 .

633-1153

or

RIDE BOARD

834-4018

NEED A RIDE? If you do, thiS Is th e
place to get lt. Spectrum Ride Board
classlfleds really work.

QUICK, efficient typing d o ne - 1 .40
per paga. Donna McGowan 838-4108.

r-Ift! ..,. the lntemollr•""' faperi&gt;Mnlol film Socloty
Ill cooperatkwt wllh lhe Stvcllo Al'l'nl The.ater

September 23, 24 and 25,1971
Studio Arena Theater
From lunuel to lrakhaae
rrom 1928 to 1968. Thlr,....ne

ihorl fojtm ond two r...u .....
acclaimed by crHin the world over
as the tnUit '"'aalnJfiYe. m&lt;'Kt

APARTMENT FOR RENT

VES VOUJ Be a community volunt_..
Bop ovw to Community Action CCHPS.
220 Norton, Fillmore Room, all day
Wed . 9/22, tables In Norton Hall •
tu t orials, day-care, soc ial services,
hospital programs, environmental
action. Whew!

Experimental Film Retrospective

ROCK groups wanted. Steady work,
choice ol nights. The C lub Restaurant,
Niagara Falls. contact Ed Lucas,
282·8602.

SEEKING someone to share our life,
dreams and love. Our home Is a place
to grow closer and learn. ~458 Hertel.
Call Fred, 838·1089.

s.oa •

~ ttllllllllllll

----------------------

WANTED
Full or part-time sales.
Direct commission to sell
new automotiv.; product
- STEED.
·For interview call

GUSTAV Is backl· Xerox anythlrte
(books, notes) for only
CGPY
(the ehNpest raote we know In
Buffalo). Come vP and Gustav at
355 Norton Hall. No lines, no forms,
no waiting.

.a .llllllllrllllll

DEAR SNOOK: Happy, happy
b I rthdiJYl T I vogllo bene!! Lot sa
seagulls. Lov'e L .B., C.B. and J.B.

OI.D FAN wanted to keep cool with.
Call Stu at 831·2797.

IF YOU'RE rNd(ot this, lfOU know
that SJMCtrum clalllfl~l wOfk. FO¥
rates and Information, come up to
Room 355 Norton Hall, 9-5 MondW
thru Friday.

the Clnematoa,.phe" In
brd~r

t&gt;cllln&amp; motion pklurM produced
b\llndependent lllmmaker&gt; in lhe
, lalt ~0 yeon. If you haven' t \CCn
the New American Clr"'''" or the
lotest eiTorb of the lopan...,, Poli;h
•nd Czech av•nt.,.rde. here'' vour
opporlunily lo voew • e01efull\
orche.llrJied proar•m In tluee
1 performanceo (Wllh lhree ~~~
matinees),
Thre&lt;' nlshl&gt;. bc!ainnlns ol 7:30p.m.
' Three m.,lnee•. besinnlns al 3:00
p.m. Six ~rformonce.. EKh P~rfor·
' m.~nu a complete entertalnmtmt
unit 52.00 Mall...,.,, $2.75 [W!nlna.
57.50 for lhree different
1
perfonMn&lt;es. •

of appearance .,~,

thur&gt;dly, Sept. l3

lui&gt; 8unuet
Salvador Dall

Rick Cluchey
Curtb Harrlntto"
8ob Godfrey
R C. Oole
Saturday, Sept. lS

~oben

Florer
Dmitri l&lt;trunoll
I S. Watoon
Melvolle Webber
Charlet v'idor
josepll Slrick
Cut1it Hatnnaton

lul&lt;!i Schwenn
lo&gt;eph VQael ...
NOt man Mc:Uren
Andre hdl
Slon Brakhoae

'"mel Rrou1hton

Tlc.kelt available,.. Nonon Union, SUNYA&amp;
51udent Acllvllit'l Bo• Offoce

--

1

j

8ruceBolll~
8orowuv~

Woiorlon

Mon Ray

Tickets 'vallab&amp;e a• thto doot

~

Fnct.r, ~· :1.4
8ruu Cohnor

832-1595

Gunvor NeiJOn

Herbrrf Kosower

lanDudetl!k
lana Meralova

llmmy Murakomo
KenjiKoneoo~

Renee hylor
V 5teponak
(. Adam
lohn Cusavole&gt;

•=
••

: INHRNATIONAL

:~':!~~~I~l

832-1595

-

442 Niagara Falls Blvd.
Just around the corner from the Allenhurst Apts.

so/c,,
.
IJiscount
for college students upon presentation of I.D.
/

SO~COMES

.

TO U.B.
'

-':1/

,,
r

SONY
HP - 1"40

SONY'S MOST COMPACT STEREO COMPACT:
A COMPLETE PHONE/ FM STEREO/FM-AM SYSTEM

Only $1499' Includin~ · Speakers

SONY
A HANQSOME SYSTEM WITH A HANDSOME SOUND
HP-210/SS-210 FOR RECORDS, FM STEREO, FM AND AM

...

$2J9•11 Includ~.a · speakers

Including 1 Yea~ Service Gqarantee
Friday, September 17, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page fifteen

•'

�Announcements
Ukranian Student Club will hold a general
meeting Sept. 19, 7 p.m., Norton Room 334. A
party will follow.
Chabad House, 3292 Main St., is sponsoring
traditional Chassidic SefVices Sept. 19, 20 and 2 1.
Services on Sunday start at 6:45 p.m. Monday and
Tuesday morning services begin 9:30 a.m. All arc
welcome.
Undergraduate students of the Department of
Spanish, Italian and Portuguese will meet Sept. 17,
7:30 p.m. in Crosby Room 7 to elect student
representatives.
Inter-varsit y Christian Fellowship will hold a
picnic Sept. 18, 1 p.m. at Akron Falls Park. Lori
Jonathan and Maranatha will be fea tured.
UB Kara t e C lub will h ave a k.arate
dcmonwation this Friday at 1 p.m. in ttie Women's
Gym.
Detailed information and applications for the
1972- 73 academk year grants arc available in , the
oHicc of the director, Overseas Academic Programs,
I07 Townsend Hall. Applications must be submitted
to the above office no l.uer than Oct. I, 1971.
UUAB is sponsoring a free coffeehouse for
students Friday featuring Nan Eichler and Paul Rose;
Saturday, Barry Abbott will appear with Nan
Eichler. Entertammcnt starts at 9 p.m., first floor
Norton cafeteria. ID required.
Students for

folkdancing
Jdv,mced
dancing, Saturddy from 2 5 p.m . 10 the Fillmore
Room.
in~uuctions

Israel

will

have

l or beginner\ a' well

d\

Available at the Ticket Office \_
Rock and Folk Music

What's Happening

Sept. 23: Chuck Mangione (B)
Sept. 24: Quicksilver Messenger Service and
James Cotton Blues Band (K)
Se!Pl. 26 : Isley Brothers and Chilites (K)
Oct. 23 : Davy jones (K)
Oct. 31 : Kris Kristofferson (K)

fall Orientation
Friday, Sept. 17
Information Fair: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Center Lounge, Norton Union

Theatetr

Art Display

Oct. 7- 24 : Gingerbread Lady with jo Van Fleet
~a~
•

Hall

Second f-loor Art Gallc!y• Room 219 Norton
Creative Crofts Fair

Film
Sept. 23 25: Experimental Film Retrospective (Sat)
Regres5lon Time

Clay and Sculpture Workshop 1-4 p.m.,
Creative Crafts Center, basement Norton Hall
Free Game Hours (freshmen and transfers only}

9- 11 p.m. Recreation Area, Norton Hall
I

Sept. 17: Howdy Doody Show (K)
Comint: Events

Oct. 6: Tr.lrfic (on sale 9/18) (K)
Oc t 8: Grand runk Rail road (on sale 9/ 23) (M)
Key
K
K lctnh .. n\

M

Mennorlo~l

8

8 .. 14VIcl

~A

I

Group Dynamics and Encounter Workshop : 8 p.m.

Haas Lounge, Norton Hall
Cinema

Rock

~I udio

Auditorium
Arend The.tiCI

Hitchcock Series, Conference Theater
"Lady Vanishes" and ' 'The 39 Steps," $.50 for
fres hmen and transfer students; $.75 for all other
students. Tickets may be purchased at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office.
" Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, " 7 and 9
p.m. showin~ at Capen 140; $.25 discount for
freshmen c1nd transfer students, only when
purchasing tickets at Norton Hall Ticket Office prior
to performance. No di~counts at the door.
" Beda/t.lcd"
ou tdoor on Tower Lawn, open
to dorm residen ts only

The first Hillel Service and Oneg Shabbat of the
year will be held on r ridc~y, Sept. 17, c~t 8 p.m. 10
the Hillel House, 40 C.lpl'n Blvd. John Joyce will
lecture on " l"acl As I S&lt;~w lt."

Coffeehouse

8 and I 0 p.m. showings

Fol~

entertainment and a menu of delight!&gt;, $.25
off for freshmen and transfer students only
Saturday , Sept. 18

Hillel Jnnounc.e) their opening of the Hillel
House on Monday and Wednesday evenings and
Saturday mghts from 8 12 p.m. to socialize starting
Oct. 2. Thi ~ i\ In ctddillon to thCir Tuesday and
Thursday hours.

-,

..

Excursion : lo Buffalo Zoo and Albright Knox

Bus leaves promptly at 12 noon, picks up at the
Lake side of Albright Knox at 5 p.m., leaves Buffalo
Zoo at 6 p.m. Students must regtster for the bus at
the Norton Hall Ticket Office by 10 a.m. on
Saturday.

The Department of Physical Education for
Women have openings 10 the follow10g course : PHW
143 on Tuesday and Thursdays from 2 2:50 for
intermediate tennl\/paddlcball. Sec M i\~ Anderson in
Room 209 Clark Gym or call 294 1.

Free Gome Hours (freshmen and transfer students
only)

2- 4 p.m. Norton Hall Recrc.,tion Area
American Studies is ofrering "Modern American
jazz" 199(B) under the instruction of Sam Fried.
Register at Room 124 Winspcar or come to the first
class Tuc)day, Sep t. 2 1 from 7 10 p.m. at 124
Winspear.
Human Dimensions Institute at Rosary 'Hill
College is annou ncing fall registration in Yoga,
Gestalt , ESP, Seneca Indian traditions .tnd nutrition.
For information call 839-2336 .
International folk dancing with mstruction in
basic steps meets every rrid.ty from 8 II p.m. in
Room 30, Diefendorf Annex .
A II under graduate students interested in
tutoring beg10ning college students for academic
credit shou ld contact Elizabeth Boepple in 16B
t ownsend Hall for applicatiom. Registration can
only take place during change of registration week.
For more information, call Mrs. Boepple at
831 ·5366, ext. 24.
The New College of Modern Education is
offering the following courses which were not listed
in The Reporter and are still open. They arc all
sections &lt;tf NC40 I, "S pecialized Areas in Modern
Educa tion" (4 credits). Inquire at Trailer 9 about
regis tration Jnd . i nform a tion . Section . 10:·
"Improving Inner City Instructions in Mathematics,''
Instructor : Earl Hill ; Section 11 : "Obstacles for
Change in 1 our Schools," Instructor: Armond
Vertucci; Section 13: '~Democracy in Schools,"
Instructor: Dennis Allison; Seeti(&gt;n 14: Workshop in
J rban Education, Instructor: Ran~ Fox .
The Spectrum would like to thank WBFO for
the use of their UPI copy while our machine was
fucked-up.

UB Sports Cor Club Autocross from 12-5 p.m.
Underground Theater: The Swamp Fox Players

"Th.: Sloan Trilogy " at 8 p.m., Fi llmore Room

Sports !Information
Tomorrow : The season's firs t roller hockey
contest will tc1kc place in the parking lot between
Michael Hall and Capen Hall. The game starts
prompth( dt 10:30 a.m. with all spectators welcome.
Momday : Varsity golf, Bulls at St. Bonaventu re,
I p.m., Olean, N.Y.
Wednesday: V.tr,ity cross·country, Bulb Jt
Cleveland State ~i th the Un1versity of Toledo, I
p.m., Cleveland, Ohio; Varsity golf at Cani)ius at
Bc.tvcr J,,land, 2 p.m .
The lppon Judo Club mceb every Monday ctnd
Thursdav at Clc1rk Gym in the wrestling room.
Beginners start ,n 6:30 p.m. with advanced students
at 7:30 p•.m.
The v~rslty t ross-country team :;tarts its season
next wcc·k, however, t~crc is still time for candidate~
to report. Practices arc held at 4 p.m. daily.
Freshmen .uc particularly urged to come out. Sec
Coach Ernery Fisher in the Clark Gym basement.
Attention all club sports! All budgets are due by
Sept 21 , 1971, and are to be reviewed by the
student .athletic review board. First review board
meeting llakes place Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Room 205,
Norton with club budgets the chief concern.

Rock Concert at 8 p.m .

"Space Opera , Clctrk Gym
Coffeehouse at 8 p.m.

Fold enterta inment and a menu of delights, $.25
discount for freshmen and transfer studen ts only
Cinema

Httchcod. Series at the Conference Theater; (see
9/17 for details)
UB Sports Cor Club Auto Rally at noon

Sunday, Sept. 19
Free Recreation (freshmen and transfer sltldents
only}

2 4 p.m. Norton Hall Recreation Area
Cinema

Hitchcock Series at the Conference Theater, (see
9/17 for dct.til~)
·
UB Sports Cor Club Auto Rally at noon
Open House from 2- 5 p.m.

Newman Hall , 15 University
- Sue Weiser

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>Library controversy sparks major issue in Faculty Senate</text>
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                    <text>-

Vol. 22, No. 10E •

.... Uniwality of New York lit euffMo

l'hul"'d.y,leplai. . 11. 1171

Med.Schoolsit~in is successful

by Jo-Ann·Annao
C.mpu1 Editor

All five demands of the Ad Hoc Committee
to support the deman&lt;~s of the Attica prisoners
have been met by the University of Buffalo
Medical School. Formed in the aftermath of the'
prisoner rebellion which left 43 dead, the
committee is composed of people who, according
to Lester Goldstein, Student Association
Academic Affairs Coordinator, "developed some
kind of committment for the cause of the
prisioners."
Last night, about 150 people of this
committee staged ..a non-violent sit-in at Capen
Hall to pressure the University of Buffalo Medical
School .to provide desperately needed health care
at Attica Prison in line with the school's.....legal
responsibility." ·
The announcement that essentially all five
demands were met came at 12 :35 a.m. with David
Breen, President of the Medical School Polity,
greeting the crowd: "I have good news ... " he
continued that the medical · school and Meyer
Memorial Hospital would assume full
responsibility for the treatment of Attica inmates.

De.fmitive action
Further, the families of dying or injured
prisioners will be immediately gtven ful{ visitation
rights ; and the area hospitals would hold all
medical records, not prison officials. Mr. Breen
also reported that negotiations would continue
between Le Roy· Pesch, Dean of the Medical
School, and Vincent R. Mancusi, ~warden of Attica
prison.
However, Mr. Breen maintained that while
the medical council had agreed to officially
announce their action today at noon, they would
go ahead no matter what the outcome of these
negotiations. It is the belief of medical officials
that neither the warden or Russell G. Oswald,
State Corrections Commissioner, would be able to
refuse such a reasonable demand, this demand
being the offer by doctors 9f their services.
In addition to these conditions, a full five
page statement detailing the history of the
relationship between the medical school and
Attica priso.n would be forthcoming.
Long nnge needs
In response to a question concerned about
long range treatment of prisoners, asking what
will happen to the inmates once the medical
teams left, Mr. Breen said t~e " were prepared to
stay for one month, two months, or even six
months, if necessary...
Upon hearing the announcement, the crowd
was jubilant. Many felt that they had won a
complete victory - possib\y an unexpected one.
Jim Gahagan, post doctoral research associate in
psychology, explained: "It is significant that the
university accede to a set of student demands
. relating to a very real situation... That sit~tion
being "the need of the community." He
continued that ·"Unfortunately, this involved the
loss of lives before such action could be taken on

the part of the University."
The Medical School's acceptance of the
demands is significant for two reasons, aceording
to Marty Feinrider, sociology graduate student.
First, he explained, "the inmates will receive
proper medical care." In addition to this very
important fact, Mr. Feinrider said "we
demCU'lStrated that through the concerned effort
and work of people, the institutions of society
can be forced to serve the real needs of people."
He further termed the action as ''a major
breakthrough."
Student action
Other students present were more simple:
" We've won - the Med School has given in."
Student action began yesterday when a group of
students met in Haas Lounge at noon and
proceeded to march to Capen Hall. Meeting with
Dr. Pesch twice during the day, the protestors
v9wed to stay there until all their demands were
met.
Aside from a snarl in communications from
campus security to administration officials, in
which a false account of "snake dancing and
excessive wintH!rinking" were reported; the night
passed quietly. The crowd waited patiently under
the careful surveilance of green-:jacketed security
officers until Mr. Breen made his announcement.
Commenting upon the "on-violent nature of
the students, Mr. Gahagen explained that the
student$ behaved "carefuJly and non-violently
without losing sight of their main aims, that aim
being [to ensure that) the medical needs of
inmates were met." He added that these inmates ....
"were unnecessarily injured and killed on the
basis of a poli~ decision."
•
Ian DeWaal" Student Association president,
agreed with this assessment of a "political
decision." He commented that "in the three days

~ntos

that have elapsed since the Attica m.1SSacre, we
'have been manipulated and tied to by 'officials' to
whom we trust human lives... He continued that
"President Nixon, Governor Rockefeller an&lt;.i his ·
political hacks ha'le failed miserably."
Student Association's response to Attica
included a letter to President Ketter to support a
' moraro~um turning "classes into open forums,
where students, faculty and staff along with
members of the Western New York community
can discuss rationally the issues which have arisen
out of the Attica massacre . ..
President Ketter, early this morning, revealed
that he would , in fact, urge the faculty to discuss
Attica in their classes. He explained this by
commenting that what occurred at Attica and its
aftermath is an urgent issue. In addition to this
reccommendation to the faculty, Dr. Ketter will
participate in memorial services held today.
Other participants in the service.include Mr.
DeWaal and other students active in the support
of the Attica prisoners. .
.'
Public response to the campus' activities has
been overwhelmingly supportive with many
commending the students for their careful and
controlled efforts. In addition, various collegP
newspapers across the country have contacted and
congratulated the students for their "complete
and total victory."
The Spectrum Is published thr" times 1 w•k, every Monct.y,
Wecln~y end Frldly; during the reguler ecedemlc y•r by
Sub-BOird 1 , Inc. Offices ereloc:etect et 355 Norton Hlill, Stete
1 university of N- Votk 1t Buffelo, 3435. Main St., Buffalo,
N- Votk.a. 14214. Telephone• Ar• Code 716 ; Editorial,
831-4113 ; auslness, 831·3610.

Represented for edvertlslng by N1tlon11 Educ.ttlon.l
Advertising Service, tnc., 18 E. 50th Street, N- York, N YOI'k, 10022.
Subscription retes ere, $4.50 I*' semestw ot $8.00 fOI'
semelters.
Second ClUJ Postl!le Plld It BuffiiO, New VcJk .
Clrculetlon• 16,000

two

-

�..

IStudent Victory

',Security crisis just averted

The complete and total victory won by students last
night was a vivid and timely reminder of"student strength .. In
lii a bizarre, near trqic ntisunderstandiria
a time when student action has suffered from poor late last night President Ketter and Execu~e
organization and limited support the Medical School's Vict&gt;-President Albert Somit were Jiven
erro,neous information that students at a
accession to the student demands is heartening indeed .
The students who sat-in at Capen Hall for 12 hours on peaceful sit-in at Capen HaD were
Wednesday are to be commended for the efforts and energies "snokCHiancina." The incorrect report, from
they expended in forcing t he issue. Attica was a tragedy ; a an "on the scene" informant was handed to
horrifying massacre by State Troopers of inmates and Dr. Somit while he spoke in his office ,.w ith
hostages alike. In order to prevent the deattl toll from rising three students concerned about potential
any higher it was neccessary that a competent and impartial secutrity actions.
medical force be prepared to assist the large number of
'Up&lt;5n receipt of the report, President
seriously wounded Attica inmates. The students believed thft Ketlter stated that if it (snakedancing)
the University of Buffalo M4tdical School had a moral con1tinued he would have no alternative but
obligation to assume responsibility for Attica medical care. to c:all in force. The three students. Dennis
The Issue-was admirable; its execution was impeccable.
Arnold, The Spectrum Editor-in-Chief; Dave
The Medical School faculty deserve credit as well . Their Steiinwald, Student Association · student
swift and resolute action came as something of a surprise to Rights coordiJ'lator; and Lester Goldstein, SA
most observers. Their conduct was drastically different from Academic Affairs Coordinator, stressed that
the agonizingly slow pace with which The Medical School as Car as they knew the situation was still
had confronted past issues. They appear to have learned peac:eful.
many lessons from the Minority Admissions Crisis of 1969.
We commend their acceptance of the five demands and Totlitlly false
congratulates them on joining with the students to help
To investigate the validity of the report,
alleviate a bitter human catastrophe.
they went directly to Capen Hall where they
verified that the report was absolutely false.
Mr. 'G oldstein maintained that ..the mood of
the people had not changed . . . it was
One group unfortunately failed to glean any lessons from peacefu l as it was all day." Another account
the Spring of 1970 and its ragged history of mistakes and reported that ..people hadn 't budged off
misinformation. This group is the Administration who have theil' rear ends a ll night." Mr. Arnold also
totally failed, after 18 months and two high-level security confirmed that there was no activities, other
9ppointments, to correct their faulty communications during than those non-violent and peaceful.
crises.
lLee Griffin, Assistant Campus Security
Their instantaneous acceptance of a totally false report Director and head of forces at Capen, denied
that st_udents were "snak~ancing in Capen" could have led any knowledge of the report . He did not
to a tragedy of major proportions. Since numerous security authroize nor was he aware of the account.
personnel were on the scene in Capen, their failure to
Mr. Goldstein termed the apparent
immediately double-check this information is administrative brealkdown of communications ..terrifying".
malfeasance. If several students did not take it upon He c;ontinued : ..When you hear something
themselves to verify this report, riot-equipped Campus like that from people who are supposedly 6n
Security forces might have been ordered to Capen and thus top of the situation, it is tremendously
precipitated a violent confrontation.
upseltting.
In March 1970 the Greiner Report grimly stated about
adminstration actions th~l "scant effort was made to obtain Memtories of 1970
continuous accurate information." It also spoke of "serious
Others recalled a similar situation - that
failures in liason." Eighteen months later these words still of February 25, 1970; a day which saw a
ring ominously true. This time however the University was polic:e rampage through Norton Hall that
fortunate. We cannot however depend solely upon the fates sparked a thrre week strike. The subsequent
and we strongly urge that a joint student-faculty group be inve~;tigation into. February 25, the Greiner
initiated 'at once to examine and evaluate current procedures Report, faulted bad communication and false
and recommend changes if neccessary. If we fail to do this information as major causes of the campus
the ghosts of February 25th may yet return to doom this disrutption which resulted from the police
University.
sweep through Norton Hall.

Ghostly lessons

THE

-osterrelchef

"""n ..., between February 25 and

last nig ht"s even t s continue: the
adminstration was faced with a potentially
explosive situation ; nerves were tensed and
(Jecisions were important. Mr. Steinwald also
assessed conditions as ..a replay of the 1970
incident in which the administration was
acting on totally erroneous information."
He also cited the Greiner Report
commenting; "we saw the consequences of
what happened . . . it could have very easily
happened again tonight., Agreeing with this,
Mr. Arnold said that ..the security problems
of two ydrs ago which we were told were
corrected are still apparent." He further
termed the night's events as a D~ja vu in a
sick way.' "
Summing up feelings, Mr. SteiJ'lwaJd
commented: " I was realJy scared and I stilf
am."

SpECT~t.UM
Thursday. September 16, 1971

Vol. 22, No. 10E

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold

I

-

ea.,.,. ... , , , , , . Jo..Ann Armeo
..... , .......... Bill

V~ro

Am.... ...... ...Howie Kurtz
City .....•..••...••.•• Vec:ant

Copy ...........

RonniFor~

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • Many Gllttl
Alii . ................ VIICant
Feeture .. ! . ....... , . .len Ooene
Orephk Arta ......... Tom Tol•
Ut. a DftMe .. Mlchetf Sllvefblett

LIIYout ....... Mwyhope Runyon
Alit. . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . .~~Kent
MUiic .............Billy Altm..-.
Off..c.mpua ...... lynne TrMglf
Am•................ Vec:.nt
Photo ....... , ...Oevld G. Smith

Am• ....... . .... G.,y Friend
Alit. . ..... MkkiiY Olterrelch•
~ ..•...••..... Barry Rubin
Am . ... ......... Howie Felwl

1M Spectrum Is MfVied by United Pr• lnt•NIIonel, College P~
Service, the loe Angel• Fr• Pr•, the loe Angel• Time Synd!Qte, .,_.
liberation News Service.
A..,.et!Qtion of m11tt« herein without the

ex~

consent of the

Edltof:·ln:chlef II forblddett.
Editorlel potky II cMtwnWned by the ~itor·in-ChW.

•

....

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

,,

�•

--

No student dlscoaats

Help the Bail Fund

Bookstore system criticized
by Jeff GreeDWIId
S(H!ICtrum St11ff M'ittf'

In addition, various students

are curious u to why the former

I 0~ student discount of texts bu
Those familiar witb University not been reinstituted. They point
operations bave gown used to out that the discount was
beina ~eted each September, supposedly ended because of
with many noteworthy cbanaes. A heavy lotses incurred by theft.
visit to the text di'rilion of the Since this theft hu admittedly
University bookstoJ'e brinp been cut to nearly zero, they
evidence of one of tbiJ year's wonder why the ctiscount isn't
more important revisions.
reintroduced.
..
Eady this summer, citina huae
theft Oaurea in past years (about .No llilcount reconuoeAdation ·
$30,000+/year), tl}e bookstore
When questionecl about this,
eliminated its old system of Mr. Moore replied that such a
browsina throuab the stacks in decision was wholly up to ·· the
search of texts. In doina 10, the ' Board of Directors of the Faculty
opportunity to pick up interestina Student Association, which
texts ordered by other professors operates the bookstore .
was eliminated u weU. As Konrad Aclcnowledgina that be does have
von Moltke, Collegiate Assembly a degree of advisory power as
director, explained in a letter to general manager, MJ'. Mo~&gt;re said
The Spectrum (July 2S): " Many that, if asked, he would
instru_£tors Ilk~ m)'5elf make recommend apinst any discount :
extensive use of ordering books "Considering the losses incurred
for suuested reading rather than in the past (when the discount
compulsory assignments."
was in effect), and the cost of
The new system is best expansion to the new campus, it is
described as an over-the~ounter my feeling it wouJd be foolbardy
sales .approach. A list of desired to grant a discount. There will be
books is given to a bookstore a great need for capital in the
staffer, who then goes through the coming years.'' No one, however,
stacks ftJling out the order. The seems to have any idea of the cost
books are returned and the of ex pansion cited when
purcha$er then enters the cash defending pricing policies.
register lioe. This, ideally, wouJd
General aura vat ion with
eliminate the time-consuming and bookstore policies, led in mid-July
often futile search by the to the passage of resolutions by
purc hase r. Thomas Mo ore, both the Student Association and
bookstore general manager, the Graduate Student Association,
maintains this is so: "People are demanding reinstitution of the
getting their books much quicker discount. The Student Association
under the new system."
went so far as to say that if such
action was not forthcoming, they
Discontent
would have no alternative but to
While bookstore management call for a boycott of the
seems quite pJeased at having bookstore in the fall.
relocated congestion away from
the stacks and appare ntly Changed stances
stoppi ng theft, contentment
With September here, the
pretty much ends there.
discount atiJI absent and no
Resentment is surfacing for boycott being demanded, the
various reasons. Many students positions of the student
strongly feel, as Or. von Moltke governments have seemingly
expressed, that their right to changed.
browse has bee.n unfairly taken
Mike Nicolau, GSA president,
away from them. Regarding Mr. told The Spectrum that his
Moore's claim of il1creased government's resolution called for
efficiency, a number of people the formation of study groups
have complained of waits of up to investigating the efficiency of
25 minutes to merely receive their FSA enterprises, These study
books from the stacks. Moreover, groups were subsequently
the cash register lines are as long established. It is his feeling that a
as always. Mr. Moore explained: boycott would "short circuit all
"These lines will always be there ; the effects the committees may
there's nothing we can really do have. We are now digging into the
about them."
"rohlem.'' The first reports of

KLEINHANS
MUSIC HA\.L

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HOWDY
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............,

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Tickets at
Norton Hell Ticket Office

The l1l1echanics of such
o rgani zation includ e the
cooperation of faculty in placing
their tex.t orders with an
alternative bookstore. All orders
must be placed usually at least
two months in advance of their
needed tin~e. As time is also
needed to !lecure the cooperatio n
of the fac\ltlty, oraanization of a
spring semester boycott wouJd
have' to bei~n by mid-October at
the latest.
Mr. DeWaal remarked that the
final study reports would be out
by the en1d of September, at
which time they will be analyzed .
As to the orglrniution of tbe
"postpor11ed" boycott, h e
maintained : "Six weeks is all we
need, mayb1~ eight ."
Mr. Steitltwald, while admitting
study grou:ps may be of some
value, charged that they were
being \&amp;sed as a "smokescreen" of
the immediate problem of the
bookstore's revised system ·and
t he i r m 1t i n t e n a n ce of a
no-discount policy. He feels that
at the very least, a boycott of
"non-essent-ial" items, includjng
the entire upstairs store and any
texts which cou)d be found other
places, should be supported .

Sub Board Inc. has openilngs on its staff for a
Publications Division Director - responsible for all
Sub Board funded publicatio11ts, and a Union Board
Division Director - respo nsible for the University
Union Activities Board.
The jobs offer much harassment, nealiaible .pay
and lona hours. For further information, contact
Mark Borenstein, Business Manager, Sub Board I at
831-5502 by Friday, Sept. 17, 1971.

The Spectrum Is published thrtlfl
tim• 11
e..ery Monday,

BUF~-LO BOB

Faculty eo&lt;tperation

Sub-Board opening

FRIDAY, SE,T. 17
7:00 ,.M.

I

these committees are due today.
Ronald Stein, usiltant director
or the Office of Student Affairs
and a mCJmber of the bookstore
committee, defined their objective
u ••creatina the most efficient
methods which would give
students the best bookstore
poaibte . . . with the benefit of
the University community as the
aoal." Mr. Stein, also mentioned
that to ex.pedite this aoai, he was
.. looki~g into bookstore
procedures at other mlljor
universitien."
Jan DeWaal, SA president, in
ex pWnins, why the proposed
boycott had been cancelled,
revealed t:hat it was only really
postponed. He termed the study
groups a positive step and feels
they are :'making progress." He
expressed fear that "if that
progress is altered, then a boycott
would be · defeating its purpose."
How e ver, Dave Steinwald,
Student Rights coordinator,
believes tll11t the only reason no
boycott has materializ~ is
because no one. got around to
organizing one.

reguler «MJemic ye.r by Sub·8011rd
1, Inc. Offices .,. loc•ted at 366
Norton H111/, St:.te Uni..enity of
New York •t BuHelo, 3436 ,.In
St., BuH•Io, New York, 14214.

Telephone:
Edltorie/,
831-3610.

ArH

Code

831-4113;

116;

BusinttU,

R_,,.,.,ted

for edvwtlslng by
N.tionel Educ.tiOMI Advert/ling
&amp;Jrvlc., Inc., 18 E. 60th Stmlt,
,_w Yorlc, N.w York, 10022.

...............

Smolkey's friends
don't
with matches.

"iiY

Due to the court action oflast spring, activities fees collected
by the Student Association may not be used for the Bail Fund.
Althoygh this action is being appeal~. at this point all monies
available to the Bail Fund are recieve4 on a voluntary basis.
Presently the Bail Fund is desperately depleted and in need of
massive support. The majority of the Ball Fund's money is tied
up now in cases still pending.
This past week, the arrests downtown as a result of the
Attica demonstration, hav~ used up the remaJning available
money. The Student Association implores the University
Community to help restore the viability of the ~Jail Fund . This
week may be the scene of further demonstrations and arrests. If
no money is available, these people will simply rot ln jail. During
this week a table will be set up on the tint Ooor of Norton Hall
and contributions may be brought there or to the Student
Association, 205 Norton Hall .

News Analysis

NSA Congress failed
due to disorganization
Editor's note: The following i4 a minority groups for priority on
news analysu dealing with the the Congress agenda resulted in
24th Congre11 of the National limited success for those groups
Student Association held from 1nd contributed to the refutation
Aug. 20- 29. Student A11ociation :&gt;f the $22,000 debt owed to the
President/an DeWaa/ repretenting National Association of Black
the State Uni11ersity of Buffalo Students.
also acted as an observer of the
As the Congress opened, the
scene. This account follow1.
Women 's Causus immediately

The 24th annual 'National
Student Association Congress held
in Ft. CoUins, Colo. could only be
characterized as a futile attempt
of 600 participants to define and
conquer all the world's problems
in the space o f a week and a half.
Colorado State University was
a perfect setting for this
surrealistic ventl11'tinto tile power
structures of the orld's e mpires.
The quite se e nity of the
neighboring Rocky Mountains is
h arshly in&amp;errupted by this
man-made intrusion into the
spaeiousness of the great plains.
The mental attitude t hat built this
campus is represented by Moby
Gym, a multi-million doUar pun
that seats 12,000 and looks
remarkably like a whale.
The delegates that came to
CSU expected to seriously
investigate many of the problem
areas that are rampant on
campuses today. It didn't take
long to discover that while many
of these areas are similar to those
at the State University of Buffalo,
this university just isn't worried
anymore about parietal hours and
getting alcohol on campus.
Minority infighting
" I am more oppressed than
those' ' seemed to be the key
phrase dominating the Congress.
The gay caucus fought the
Chicanos; blacks argued with the
women . Finally the native
Americans decried this infighting
demanding to know why no one
was dealing with these problems.
This sharp division among

~

BuHIIo, N.w York.

{ Clteuletion: t6,(J(J()

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~

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CHI-LITES

with

Sunday, _Sept~mber 26, 8:30 ~.M. .
KlEINHANS MUSIC HAll
~
All

pelrJ . ,

After each Conaress meeting
the wine and beer flowed freely
(as the dope scene in Colorado
was dry) since the only way to
relieve the pressing tension was to
leave reality .
Reality was missing in ft .
Colli ns from Au.&amp;. 2 0 - 29.
Unfortunately, the delegates
didn't realize the impossibility of
legislating an end to all the
world's evils until th e close the
conference. By then, time was
running ou1 and the hectic
atmosphere of the Congress floor
approached that of th'e closing
days of the session on Capitol
Hill .
Throughout the conference,
Bernie Groffman, a ten-year
veteran of NSA 'congresses, a
distjnguished parliamentarian and
all around wit, kept " th e
conference calm with such
remarks as "I have an important
announcement to make . This
conference will be followed by a
sunrise.'' His truest and perhaps
most unfortunate remark was:
"The student leaders of today are
the student leaders of tomorrow ."

.

SuMcf'iptlon ,.,., .,. #f.50 PH
IN
$8.00 for two

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criticized the "shuttina out" of
women in the planning stages for
the Congress. Soon after., small
groups were formed to discuss
sexism and male chauVinism.
Other groups broke. down to
discuss Gay Liberation and
oppression of minority groups.
After the first day, normal
interpersonal relations were
totally disrupted and the d elegates
stared at each other afraid to say
the wrong thing. Anyorfe who
classified himself as a white male
heterosexual was in trouble.

by fan DeWaal
SpeciQ/to The Sp«trum

. fldlolt

lf!CIU "01111-ved:
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Main Floor $5.50, J4.50-Bolcoll.- $4.50, $4.00

ol luHolo Festival rtd&lt;et OHico, StotlwoHI'- Loltlor

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ill

ll:N'I' ·

1

Page two ·. The Spectrum . Wednesday, September 15, 1971

•

.Jt.\1!1' mna

a :1: ' ••·· .

s-..

'

�I

!

...

LibrarY system faces internal. uproar
by Jo-Ann Armao

Faculty Senate. However, when questfoned
about this, Wtlliam Baumer, vice-chairman
of the Faculty Senate, refused to make any
comment. He explained that it would not
.erve his position as defined by Faculty
Senate by-laws to make public
pronouncements about any case presently
being considered. He further refused to
comment If, in fact, any such case existed.

professional librarian but I am more or less
accepted by the world of professional
librarians." Also, he said that "the
Employees' criticisms of library
appropriate thing Is not to ask me but to
_operation and faculty criticism of library • ask other people in the University for I
quality and service have recently centered· believe I am qualified otherwise l wouldn't
remain as Director."
on administration and library official~.
"The Ubrary Is a mess -. it is operating
Buclpt wontes
at sub-strength and sub-quality . . . Its
employees are living in terror, we are afraid
Viewing his present position as one of
..trying to run the Libraries in a difficult
to talk, to participate, to communicate,"
said a library employee who wishes to
and limited situation," Or. Slatln referred
to present budget limitations affecting the
remain anonymous. Explaiping his
libraries. These Include state freeze on
anonymity, this professional librarian, a
University employee for more than ten
years, commented: "There is a spirit of
dictatorship in library circles . • . people
have lost their courage to talk. They fear
for their jobs." Such fear arises from the
untenured status of many library positions.
Another staff member added that any
attempts to communicate criticisms or
recommendations to Myles Slatin, director
of libraries, were "treated as almost
treasonous acts." Reacting to this charge,
Or. Siatin said that "it is almost impossible
to respond to such generalized statements
as 'no communication.''.
CAmpus Editor

Employee reticence
Also. he suid that if asked, other staff
members would be of the opinion that " I
welcome criticism. In (act r have often
solicited communication ituough memos,
and by in-person appointments.'' However,
some library employees contacted The
Spectrum to air their charges of
mismanagement and unjust administration
commenting that it was one of the only
means open to them .
Other library staff when questioned
about these charges by The Spectrum
editors reftbed comment, citing worries
about job security. In addition, they
referred any inquiries about library policy
to the Director's office.
This office, according to one staff
member, "is a clique who does what they
want for their own 'ends." Besides which,
he labeled most library administrators
unqualified . Indicative of this, he added, is
that the director, Myles Statio, "is not a
professional librarian . . . he did not even
attend library school.''
Dr. Slatin answered this charge: ''The
University thought I was qualified ...
members are aware that I am not a

hiring which has resulted in understaffed
libraries and may possibly mean a cutback
i,n library services. Presently, University
administration Is appealing to Albany to
fill at least some of the 40 existing
vacancies. In the meantime, library staff is
being relocated to maximize the efficiency
of all facilities.
One staff member charged that these
vacancies existed before the hiring freeze
and remain ed unfilled due to the
incompetence of the Director. Dr. Slatin
while admitcing that to some extent
vacancies existed maintained that most of
the vacancies occurred after the state
freeze.
Reportedly, some library employees
have directed their complaints to the

University. He cited a letter from Ernst
Badia, former University professor whidt
gave the state of the Ubrary as a reason for
his departure: "The library here is the
wont I have seen in any University."
Faculty members argue that they are
unable to effectively do their research, and
as Or. ADen explained, "the library has
reached the point where many men
despair, they no longer try to do any work
here."

'Diastet' .-ea.
Or. Slatin stressed that the library
possesses ''a very complex set of Reserve room crisis

problems." Many faculty members seem to

agree with Or. Slatin in this respect.
William Allen , Chairman of the History
Department Library Committee, reported :
"The words I have heard from my
colleagues describing the library include
'disaster area, crisis, emergency situation'
and 'Ca last rophe."
Citing the library us the top priority of
the University , Or. · Allen commented that
''the core of any university is always a first
class library . . . you can't do without
books and call yourself a University." It is
Dr. Allen's contention that a drastic
reshufning of priorities has occurred with
the libr:Jry going down "quite a ways."
As a result uf this allegcc.J library
deficiency , according to Dr. Allen, is the
departure of some notec.J scholars from the

Aside from any harm done to faculty
research, Dr. Allen warned of the injustices
to be suffered by students: " It is the
student who gets shortchnged in the most
basic way - their education." a recent
crisis affecting the Ubrary is the resignation
of Ruth Parsons as director of the
Harriman Reserve Room.
Her resignation stemming from the
curtailment of her resources has serious
consequences for the operation of the
reserve room. Mrs. Parsons explained that
"my resources were curtailed to such a
point that I felt J couldn't work any
{llOre." She further claims that trer staff
was cut from six to three and she couldn't
continue to do the additional work.
Ot. Slatin commented that Mrs. Parsons
is "a very able person and it will be tough
to replace her. I have tried to dissaude her
,but couldn't ; she even refused to make an
appointment to meet with me."
Robert Uvely, History department
chairman reported : " I have had many
complaints from people in the history
department .. . we' re all concerned about
the reserve room situation." Dr. Lively had
written of this concern to Or. Slatin to
"reconsider" his decisions because it Is "a
serious injury to education."
Agreeing with this , Or. Allen
commented that while President Ketter
argues for. and is in support of, quality
education, his policy concerning the library
doesn't support his pronouncements.
Laurence Schneider, associate professor of
hi sto ry , also believes that "the
administration isn't exactly honest with us
when they argue for teaching excellence
the''y aren't prepared to or want to improve
the libraries.''
Or . Lively concluded that "students
should make an issue of it [the situation I
for it is of grave importance."

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Wednesday, September 15, 1971. The Spec+rum . Page three
I

�Page four . The Spectrum . Wednesday, September ~5, 1971

\

I

�P.art n

tJB Foundation tc, pay

-Law School and 'the facts oflife

back debts on sche:dule

The University o f Buffalo its .earnings ·will be used directly
Foundation, Inc. expects to pay by the u,_iversity instead of
off all debts it owes to the State indire c tly
through
the
University of Buffalo on schedule, Foundation .
Dr. Robert D. Loken, foundation
president said Monday.
'Will repay'
The major debt, a S 1.5 million
Dr. Lokem charged that an
loan from the University of article which appeared in a local
Buffalo Bndowment Fund , has newspaper
concerning
the
been the subject of recent auditor's report was filled with
controversy. A New York State "inaccuracies
and inadequate
auditor's report recently criticized information."' He said that some
the financial operations of the of the char1ges leveled by the
Foundation and claimed that it auditor's ~port , particularly that
would "go out of existence" if it of a $78,000 bill for supplies and
were forced to pay all its debts. other materials owed to the
According to the audit, the UB University. TI1e report said that as
Endowment Fund loan is due of March 31 ,, 1970, the bill was
Aug. 31 , 1972.
unpajd. Dr. Loken replied, saying
that
the bill was repaid a year ago
A report made by. the UB
Foundation clarified the situation. upon its recei1~t.
It stated that when the University
The UB Foundation head
of Buffalo merged with the State explained thalt it expects to repay
University of New York in 1962, all its debts to the University on
the State took title to the time while working for its planned
Endowment Fund, totaling $35 goal to raise $5 million during this
million. The State granted $1.5 · 125th AMivc~rsary year for the
million to the Foundation wt)en it University. Currently working on
was set up in 1962. This included its goal to !become completely
the additional SI .5 million loan self-sufficient, the Foundation is
which the Foundation currently planning soon to bear some of the
owes.
According
to
the costs of the: overhead of its
Foundation, when the loan is operation wtnich the State has
repaid it will simply be t.ransferred paid for in the: past. These Include
to the UB Bndowment Fund and heat, light, rer11t and some services.

Editor's note: The following Is the conclusion of a
two·part series by Jerome Fink, associllte director of
the Office of Student Allain, aimtxl at aiding tho~
students planning to apply to law School.
3. The sooner one takes the Law School
Aptitude Test, the sooner one is able to obtain an
idea of where he would stand the best chance of
being accepted. Differences of opinion exist as to
w~ther or not one should study for the LSAT. On
balance, it probably is not a bad idea, since it enables
you to b e somewhat " test wise." There are a series of
bookJ out, Barron's, Cowels', which give examples of
previous law school tests as well as a listing of law
schools. The test dates and closing dates for
registration for the 1971 -72 year are as follows :
Test date

Oct . 16, 1971
Dec. 18, }97 1
Feb. 12, 1972
AprilS, 1972
July 29, 1972
Closins date
Sept. 24, 1971
Nov. 26, 197 1
Jan.2 1, 1972
March 17, 1972
July 7, 1972

It is strongly suggested that you take these tests

as soon as possible, since this will enable you to
fmlsh the arduous process of filing out the necessary
forms and getting }!bur files completed fot the
admission commit tees
the schools to which you
are applying. Applications for the Law School
Aptitude Test can be Q.b tained at Hayes Annex C in
the University Placement and Career Guida{lce
Office, the Office of Instructional Services in 3 16
H.arrifll41l, or in Room C·l, 4 230 Ridge Lea Campus.
4 . The Law School Data Assembly Service Is a
special program estabUshed by Educational Testing
Service which cuts down on the amounts of
paperwork for both the students and the law
schools. It is your responsibility to indicate to the
Law School Data Assembly Service where you want
your scores sent , as well as having a transcript
forwarded to them by our Office of Admissions and
Records in Hayes Annex B. Agaio, the sooner this Is
done the better off you are. If you feel that you
would like to have the first semester grades sent to
Law School Data Assembly Service or to the law
schools to wruch you applied, that is your
prerogative. Remember - all o f this is going to cost
money and is your responsibility. The telephone
number for the Law School Data Assembly is
609·921-9000.
5. Miscellaneous Notes: New York State

or

I

.UNIONBO
Films
Dance
Concerts
Coffeehouse
Literary Art
Dramatic Art
':,
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'rn='
~

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Ul

0

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Ridge Lea·Comn1ittee
Con~mporary ls•sues

If you have fNflll attended a film , concert, lect\nre, art exhibit,
coffeehouse, etc., you hfNe some ide~ of what \Ve do. We're in
room 261 Norton. Come sign up for the com1mittee of your
choice this week. Union Bollf'd: 831-6112.
./

' - - - - - - - - A IJIIIlllon of Sub·B&lt;HII'd / , l l t ! C - - - - - - - - '

\

residents 1l"ho have a " B" average and who make
close to 600 or better on the law boards, should
definitely consider applying to State University of
Buffalo's Law School, since you want to be left with
the option1 of being able to attend· a state school
which has excellent standards. and is an economic
bargain. When one starts looking at the tuition costs
of private llaw Schools throughout the United States,
the cost Wlill range from $3500 to $5000 a year for
tuition, books, room and board. Law schools
normally do not give large amounts of aid to
first-year students. However, if you feel your
circumstances warrant it by all means apply for aid.
Applyilng for aid does not preclude you from
being accepted. Law schools are c'lncemed primarily
with whether or not you are academically prepared
to meet th•e pressures and rigors of their institution.
If you are admitted, then the financial aid package
offered to you is an entirely separate process. The
big trick is to get admitted. Try to bring out in your
autobiographical statement the things which you
have done that you feel might be of interest to a law
school admissions committee, such as work you may
have done with the American Civil Uberties Union,
public ser\lice intersrups, educational experiences
which you feel have helped develop you as a student
and as a person. Listing memberships in 25
organizatiouu is going to mean little, if anything, to a
law school admissions committee, since they are
concerned with the quality of your participation
rather than the quantity .
Do nof~thhold any information such as arrests
or similar p.ersonal matters on your application form
since, eventually, if you do complete law school, you
will be subject to a personal investigation as to
character, and any withheld information which later
could provt: detrimental to you could result in your
not being allowed to practice law. In essence, if you
have been 1mested, say so and give the reason why.
Remen~ber, the process of applying to law
sch ool rests with you. You must be sure that your
fees are se1nt to the Educational Testing Service for
both the LJaw School Aptitude Test and for sending
the necessa ry matertaJs 9 ut from the Law SchooJ
Data Assembly, all . of which are run hy the
Bducationall Testing Service, Box 944, Princeton,
N.J . 0854()1 . Because many of our students are
academically qualified f&lt;l,!' many of the more
prestigious institutions, it becomes difficult, if not
impossible, to tell a student whether or not he
sho uld apply. Much will depend upon a student 's
b oard scores · coupled witll the quality of
extra-curricular activities and other facets, including
summer wo1rk experience. In essence. be realistic and
apply to a wide spect rum of schools, even If they are
not your fi1•st choice. Make sure you give yourself
enough tim(: in following through on the procedures
suggested above . The responsibility rests with you
and you alome!

Ketter approves Student CenteJr
.

.

.

President Robert Ketter has given the go•-ahead for the Student Servaces Center.
Student Association is now permitted to use the Barber Shop as headquarters for the
Student Association Record Co-op , the State~ University Electronics Co-o~: ~nd an
· f rmat'on desk which will answer questionn on student government actmties and
;o~JR~. This penn~ion extends until June., the end of this. f~ Y~ ar, when Dr·
Ketter's decision will be reviewed by the Faculty Student Assoctation whach controls :-H
campus businesses. Until then , the Center is required to submit monthly financial
statements to FSA .
.
•
The Record 1Co-op will tentatively begin operation at its new locatiOn on
Wednesday at which time cassettes and reel-tto-reel tapes will be available as weU as
albums. Th~ Co-op is seriously in need of voluntteers who are willing to w~ regularty . If
enougb committed students do volunteer, the tCo-op will be ope? for busin~ from 10
a.m. to p.m . every Monday through Friday and twice a week dunng the evmm&amp;.
the Student Services Information desk wi.U probably open next week and the State
University Electronics Co-op expects to be in service by Oct. 1.
,

s

REMEMBER
The Spectrum general meeting is Thursda1y, Sept. 16 at 1 p.m.
Come on up and meet the whole gang!!!!

Wednesday, September 1.5, 1971. The Spectrum . Page five

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P,ge six '. The Spectrum. Wednesday, September 15, 1971

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atrocities

Murder is an ugly word. It is a word that will forever
serve to characterize Sept. 13, 1971 at Attica Prison. The
bloodbath that occu rred 1 on Monday was absolutely
unnecessary. Neither hostage nor prisoners need have lost
their lives. Yet at least 38 lives were lost and countless others
injured and maimed. Why?
Why was ~e order to r,etake the prison given? Surely tt'le
situation would' not have Changed drastically had another 24
or 48 or even 72 hours been allowed to elapse. Certainly
those 38 wo~d still be alive. And yet the order was given and
they are dead .

' S.utifulll - I love ·the subtle touches of und..,ylng humore, the wistfUl .,.,.., the feeling of pe~ee Mel
order reg~llned •. .'

Governor Rockefeller, being his usual concerned self,
. callously refused to take' any action which might have
alleviated the bloOdshed. He refused to intercede, he refused Libr~ary
to come to Attica for fear that his reputation and image To the Edi1tor:
might be soited: Now there are 38 dead I

As a student assistant working in the library, l
have become increasingly aware of discontent - a
discontent both of its employees and of its usets.
Unfortunat!ely, this employee discontent has not
been pubHcized . This is due largely to the fact that
employees are scared - scared of the repercussions
resulting from any criticism or recommendations
they might offer.
Such 111n atmosphere of fear C@n be attributed to
the adminJistration of Myles Slatin. Dr. Slatin , for
those not familiar with the man , vie\\os criticism a
crime as serious as murder. Therefore, library
employees are scared to death of jeopardizing their
positions by having the audacity to suggest changes
in library policy. lt must be noted that these

The Governor's actions make him a murderer. Choosing
between the lives of men and a trip to Puerto Rico, Rocky
chose for sun and fun and thus condemned 38 men to death.
This is criminal and the Governor should pay for his acts.

Library charges
The library situation is becoming serious. For years now,
the condition of the various libraries has been a standard
joke, albeit a cruel one to students. For a University with
national pretensions, Lockwood Js an absolute disgrace. Its
shelves are devoid of many necessary texts, and its staff is
both discourteous and often incompetent.
Superimposed on these pathetic conditions is the latest
set of charges leveled at Libraries Director Myles Sfatin by
frightened and concerned members of his staff. Among these
accusations are Slatin's massive incompetence and his
inability to work with professional librarians. Further, he is
supposed to have created a personal clique of his cohorts at
t~ top-levels of the · nbrarv's tdf!\lniJtratlon, by a series of
unethical and unprofessional mcwes.
These charges are serious and we demand that a full
iQyestigation be launched immediately. In addition, the
matter of the 40 vacancies must be scrutinized to determine
whether this is a normal turnover or the result of someone's
malevolent self-serving purge.
The students and faculty of the State University of
Buffalo ,sJeserve not only adequate, but excellent, libraries.
What we currently possess is deplorable. For an
administration which has so staunchly aligned itself with
teaching excellence, such a state should more than serve to
galvanize them into some course of action that will improve
the libraries. Unless, of course, they are only paying lip
service to teaching and learning.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 10
Edttor.fn-Chlef .::. Dennis Arnold
~ng

Editor - AI BentOn
Mike Lippm~~nn
A•. "---lnt Edttor - Su•n Mosa
Bull..- M~neetr - Jim Drucket'
Actw.tiling MIIMter - Sue Mellentlne

~Editor -

Campus ......... Jo-Ann Armao
...•............ Bill VeeMro
A.a.............Howie Kunz
City .................. Vacant
Copy ........... Ronni For~n
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • Marty Gatti
A.a . ................ Vacant
F.ture .............•len Doene
Otaphlc Arts ......... ·rom Tol•
Ltt. • Dnnne .. Michael Silllet'blatt

Layout ... • ... Met'yhope Runyon
A.a • .................VIICant
Millie ............. Billy Altmwe
Off..C.mpus ...... Lynne Tf8119et'
Alit........ ........ . Vacant
Pttoto . . ... . ... . . David G. Smith
A.a•............ Gery Friend
Aut •...... Mickey OJten'elc:ber
Spom ............. Barry Rubin
Alit.. ....... . ... Howie falwl

TIN Spctrum is servied by United Press lntet'n«ional, College Pr. .
Service, the Los Angel• Fr• Press, the Los Anoal• Time Syndic:llta, and
Liberation News Set'vice.
Republication of ~- het'ain without the
Editor·in-Chlef Is forbidden.

npr.. consent of the

Edttorlal policy is determined by the Edltor-ln..Chief.

fears

ediwr '1 IWte : Andante will bt' an irregularly regular
feature of The Spectrull) contributed, by Stanley
Dayan and' John Daley. Today·., piece il on College
A, which they are currently auempting to
rejeuvena w.
by Stanley Dayan

..

employees are aU very skilled and very learned
librarians. Incidentally, Myles Slatin is not· a
professional librarian and yet he is Director of
libraries.
Dr. Slatin must also be faulted for the
tremendous disanay of the libraries. As the Jaraest
state University center, Buffalo ..boasts" the poorest
of.jts libraries. Its reputation in the state is notorious
for its utter and complete lack of important and
basic texts. It is quite obvious from the library's
present condition (a condition which mi&amp;ht result in
severely limited hours and services) that Myles Slatin
knows nothing about effectively running a Ubrary
system.
Regretfully, I top must remain anonymous for
while Dr. Slatin continues to rule as an omnipotent
dictator, no one is safe.

Scarul

simply removing restrictions on the, students'
programs so the students can "do what t hey want"
- a watered down version of the SneU experiment.
Fine, let them d.iscover in their hal£-assed fashion
what SneU so clearly brought to light.)
The Snell experiment has shown as clearly u
possible that the mere removal of restraint and
•tructure i&amp;. not sufficient for inspired and
responsible learning; that something else is needed.
The new College A hypothesis is that we will
qualify the removal of restraint and structure. We
.have decided that the restraint for which fll tbe
others were removed is that of control by authority.
The new program control by authority must be
eliminated , as' in the Snell experiment, without
eliminating the other forms of restraint - such u
that which a discipline imposes on its students.
Heirarchical structure must also be eliminated since
this is the form of control by authority. Last May
Dean Murray made the statement to me that in the
classroom somebody ultimately must be in control,
in authority. Here Ues the core of the issue. ·We
believe that the people will b~tter be able to solve
their problems without somebody ultimately in
control.
In disagreement with the SneU hypothesis, we
will insist on continuity - we will start, for example,
with the traditional classroom, ntinus the ftnal
authority in any one place, and move to other
structures as soon as we see the exact need for a
specific experiment.
Our second disagreement with the SneU
hypothesis concerns the role of the teacher in
another way. That program did not specify the role
ef the teacher. Snell argued that the information is
available ; all a student had to do was to go get it. We
agree, but with this condition : The role of the
teacher is primarily to inspire the student. And this
obvious conclusion of the Snell experiment the
faculty refuses to acknowledge. Instead of simply
removing restrictions, they should make some effort
to Inspire us. Secondarily, the teacher should provick,
information. If a teacher in a classroom is not
inspiring, we feel the student is better off without
him. I think of the chemistry lectures where 200
bored students listen to a man because, they say, be
knows ,Jhe material. Little do they .$Ce that one
could , with small amount of chemical knowledae,
teach a better course than they - by inspiring tbe
students with his love of chemistry. Of course if a
teacher is not inspired about his discipline this is not
possible. You draw the conclusion about our
teachers. If they, the students, were to grow to love
the discipline Sienko &amp; Plane would do the rest. The
teacher's role is to energize. If a teacher is not
available to do this, it is better for the students to be
completely on their own as in the days of the Snell

l have~ been -associated with..&amp;:;ollege A for just
about one year. Before that time I couldn't really
understand! what it was aJI about. J had a mistrust of
College A '11 "antics." But I followed the progress of
the College~. For some reason it held my interest. I
kept tryinu to put my finger on it . What did Snell
hope to ac&lt;:omplish by self-evaulation? By a baskaJiy
structurless. program? By intentionaJJy making the
city community feeJ threatened?
The rational was so hard to understand because
I, like the other people who distrusted College A,
was lookin:g in the wrong place. I expected it to be
some social! good; but I finally got out of that bag.
College A is an experimental college. Its rational was
not to imp:rove the community per se, not mainly to
make a bc~Uer community by communicating its
institutions to the community . The Snell
experiment, which is what I call College A's previous
history, wus to learn about the community and
social struc:ture in the most dangerous but fruitful
way : by living according to a hypothesis and
suffering it!; consequences.
The Sn1ell hypothesis was more an intuition than
a formal stntement. A large part of it was the feeling
one got when Snell explained what tbe College was
about. The hypothesis was based on a faith in youth
and in tht~ important pa.r t 'or our education namely, le111rning to think for ourselves and think
clearly. Snell felt that the youth were idealistic
enough to be responsible and clear enough to have
some effect . What they needed was room to operate
in - freedom . According to the Snell hypothesis
inspired and wdl directed learr)jng and social action
would take place if one only removed the rest raints
holding them down. The principle mission of CoUege
A would bte as an oasis in the desert of restricting
structures.
The crucial point to remember was that the
success or !failure of this particular method was the
most impolftant issue at stake. ' If it bad been
successful no t only would the limited good have
been done ·- but far more important, we would then
be in possession of a concrete method for the
reconstruction of our society. College A's relative
failure only shows that at least one thing was wrong
with the hypothesis. This coming year College A will
move o n f;rom the Snell hypothesis, profiting by
particular ntegative result of the experiment.
·
(Let me~ say here that the conduct on the part of
the faculty toward Snell has been shameful. Not
only has he fallen into a kind of disrepute, but , and experim~nt.
t.his is the i'nsult, hi$ experiment brought some very
Next week J will treat the concrete details of the
significant fa cts to light - and these are being new program .
(My phone number ~ 893:8453.)
ignored. T!te departments of this University are

Wednesday, September 15, 1971. The Spectrum. Page seven

�I

Kuilstler .questions
society and justiCe
by Jeff Greenwald
Spi."C'trum St11}} Writtr

" Why must it take a blood
bath to bring elemental justice to
the United States." This was Bill
Kunstler's question to the society
he seeks to change. This was the
question asked eight years ago in
[)atlas, asked again by mUiions in
1968 and aga{{l in the aftermath
of My Lai. Once more, people
find that same question on their
tongues as the memory of four
days and nearly 40 once-beating
hearts in Allica, N.Y. sift through
their consciences.
William Kunstler. Chicago
Seven advocate, and most recently
attorney fo r the rebelling
pr1soners In Attt ca State
Correctional Facility. spoke these
words to about 3500 people
packed tnto the Ftllmore Room
and in the corridors of Norton
Hall.
The crowd seemed as though it
had come to witness a spectacle,
the Fillmore Room was the center
ring. For a while, they were more
conce rned about smoking a
foot -long jomt than blcreasing
their understanding of the tragedy·
that precipitated the gathering.•
Kunstler's words changed the

happen next?'

Seale co.mments On Atticti

hls home on Sunday even1ng he
had charged New York Governor
Rockefeller with malcfu:ence and
"We won't do nothjn' at least that due to Monday's violence
until you get back:" prisoners at "that maleficence was more
Attica Correctional Facility told ex plained and more f4lly
Bobby Seale during his brief understood ." Rockefeller was
Sunday meeting at the state further accused of buck-passing
institution. Jn a 12:30 p.m. and showing little concern for the
'True massacre'
Monday news conference held at human condition at Attica due to
.. I ~ an exclusive Tilt Spectrum the home of Dr . Herman
interview before his speech. Mr. Schwartz, professor of law at the ..
Kun st ler described Monday's State University of BufTalo. Seale '
events at Attica as a "true ) spoke in some detail about hi~
massacre." He placed the primary experiences at the prison and his
blame for the bloodshed on o ut rage concerning recent
Governor Rockefeller. saying " the violence. Seale claimed that he
man committed murder. I can't had personally spoken with State
Correction Commissioner Russell
find enough words to condemn
G. Oswald on Sunday evening and
him. His refusal to order the related to him the priso{lers'
commissioner to let a lillie time prormse that none of the guartls
go by was an act of wanton would be harmed until Seale
brutality."
returned . Oswald did not
Obviously dtsturbed by what specifically say that no action
had occurred at Attica,' Mr . would be taken until that time.
Kunstler at one point stated in an According to Seale the prisoners
exasperated fashion : " If I wasn't also asked for additional time in
so middle class I would urge relation to his anticip3ted return,
people to avenge Attica ." He yet violence broke out shortly
after Seale.'s plane arrived in
assessed the downtown rally
Buffalo, Monday morning. He had
where 12 were arrested last left the Buffalo area Sunday
Monday afternoon as "Nai'i afternoon to re turn to the West
bruta lity," and sa id that "I expect Coast to "get his lawyer and
trouble everywhere now ."
confer with other Black Panther
Mr. Kunstler began his address members.''
"The best thing for the people
by brielly describing the disorders
to do now is char~te the State,
Oswald and others with outright ,
first-degree. massacring murder,"
Seale told newsmen. Scale feels '
that the state deliberately ignored
the prisoners when they sent word
asking for mOI'e time. When asked
whether ot not the prisoners
should hold any responsibility for
the inmate and guard deaths,
Seale replied. "the state shares the
blame."
modd literally within seconds. He
spoke of four days 'in his life and
the ''knowledge of what I saw
insjde and outside .those walls;"
knowledge he "would live with
the rest of my life."

by Janis Cromer

Spectn1m Sttlf/Wt'lttr

Se~ttica

Janus Films Presents

ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
MYSTERY CLASSICS

THE LADY VANISHES
AND
.
THE39STEPS

Authorized massacre
Al ung wrth deman din g
amnesty anll the removal of
pnsun superintendent Vincent R.
Mancusi , the mmat e~ :Jisu asked
fur the release of all political his refusal to go to the prison to
prisoners Including Angela Davis speak with either the inmates
anll D avi t! 1-l illiard. On e them se lves or th e acting
newscaster asked, " llow coulc.J the committee of cititens. Scale's
release uf all political prisoners be lawyer summed up the Governor's
authurit.cd '~" Scale replied . " If the ac ti ons : .. l-I e's a lot more
s tat e cuulc.J author it.e this concerned with beco min g
massacre. 11 wuld also authori1e President of the United States and
the release."
pr otect 1n g his Standard Oil
Charles R. Geary. allorney for interests than rhe inhuman
the Black Panther Part y. and in conditions of the prisons of this
p:trllcular llcucy Newton, also state." In addition, Geary said
spolo.e at the press cunfere ncc. lie that he meant to "pass no halos"
c 'plumed that an emergency on to o ther state pnson systems.
co nferen ce of the- National ....,. Geary also related an early
Lawyer::. Guild and other New Mon day morning conversation
York lawyers was being called for with allorney William Kunstler.
Mond:ty aft~rnoon in Buffalo. the Kunstler, a$ well as Seale, had
pur~se bc1ng to "discuss legal been reassured by the prisoner
tact1cs and remedies" involved in negotiating committee that no
actlull would be taken until
such a holocaust.
Geary went on to say that i!l a further exchange with Bobby
prevrous press conference held in SeaJe had .taken place .

Speaking about the inmates'
disposition and attitude toward
him on Sunday. SeaJe viewed the
prisoners as happy to see him , all
wanting to shake hands
adamantly voicing the desire fo;
lhe release of poUtical prisoners,
and again, willing to wait his ,
return before taking any action .
" I think Oswald double-c

- UI'f

Blec:k Panther party leader Bobby
Seale Is shown as he entered
Attica State CotTectional Facility
Saturday. On Monday, Seale gave
a news conference in Buffalo at
the home of Dr. Herman Schwartz
of the l-aw School.
tri c ked and co nnived th e
prisoners." Scale now plans nwrc
conferences with his lawyors anti
party members, a mobilizat ion nl
pathol og ists and investiga tin~:t
doctors at the prison, and a mean~
of securing legal aid for 1hc
inmates.

Dr . Schwartz, wh o lw ~
defended some of the Attil:a
pnsoners, called the incident J
personal tragedy for him and find~
a correlation of injustire between
Attica and the '20's Rosenberg
executions. Geary foresees many
holocausts of this nature until the
u.s. "stops warehousing humans
in place of supplying jobs and
eradicating ghettoes."

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Bobby Seale concluded the
interview with: "What's going to
happen next'? You teU me."

(NOR TON HALL)

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FRESHMEN - TRANSFER
ALL OTHERS

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GIVIN.G IT AWAY

Join the .Finance Committee
CONTACT DAVID BARMAK

STUDENT ASSOCIATION

83t-sso7

205 NORTON HALL

. ..

�\

.·

Riot at Attica prison ends in bloodshed
by Lynne Traeger

was 29, , but eight Inmates were
still missing. Prison officials do
not believe they have escaped , but'
that they are probably hiding or
dead • in the maze of tunnels
beneath the prison.

Off-Cam put Editor

ln a swift and brutal attack by
Na tional Guardsmen, state
troopers and police, 38 men were
killed Monday in a successful
attempt to queU the five·day-old
riot at Atttca State Prison. Nine
guards and 29 prisoners were
included in the death count.
The day began when State
Corrections Commissioner Russell
G. Oswald issued a one-hour
ultimatum to the inmates at 8:30
a.m. He demanded that the
hostages be re~eased, and in this
"final request" he· rejected the
· inmates' demand for amnesty. At
that time he did not specify what
action, if any, would be taken if
his request was denied. There was,
however, a strong indication that
state police would storm the
prison if the inmates did not
comply.

,.

Guard alerted
Other incidents which lent
support to this theory included
the fact that Governor
Rockefeller had placed the
National Guard troops in Western
New York on alert that morning.
Rockefeller also cancelled his trip
to the National Governors'
Conference in Puerto Rico to stay
in his, office during the crisis.
'
At 9 :45 a.m. helicopters began
dropping tear gas into the prison.
This was augmented by guards
firing cannisters into the yard.
Seventeen hundred police and
guards stormed the facility, and
managed to free 29 of the 38
hostages. Helicopters ceased
dropping the tear gas long enough
for prison officials to ask tlie
inmates to surrender. When there
was no reply for inside, the firing
resumed.
Along with the attack came a
plea from officials at the prison
for "all available ambulances'' to
be sent there. Reports from the
scene said that more than 5() shots
were fired as police entered the
facility.
Eight hostages were found with
slit throats on the floor of
Cell-block D. A ninth hostage was
killed by gunfire. Five of the
hostages were guards, and the
other four were civilian workers.
The body count for the prisoners

~··

'UnbeUevable'

One of the freed hostages,
Captain Elmer Huhn said, "We
were so near death so many times
in the last five days, it's
unbelievable , unbelievable."
Another hostage reported that a
knife had been held at his throat
for one hour.

Five boxes of weapons used by
the prisoners were found . The
weapons included knives made in
an inmate controlled prison shop,
and Molotov coc ktails. No
firea rms were found.
No one really knows what
started the riot, but it is believed
that an incident last Wednesday,
when a guard was injured by a
piece of thrown glass as he was
returning some prisoners from the
evening meal, may have been the
fuse. Thursday morning the
prisoner supposedly responsible
for the glass throwing was placed
in ·solitary confinement. Upon
hearing of this, the inmates
refused to attend breakfast, and
rioting started at around 9 a.m.
The prisoners took 38 hostages,
Including some civilian shop
foremen.
They then set fire to the
chapel, school, library. metaJ ,
machinery and carpent.._ry shops,
causing heavy damage. Two hours
after the riot started , guards had
the major cell block areas back in
control.
Prisoner demands
Armed state troopers from the
surrounding areas, numbering
about 200 moved in with rifles,
5\lotguns, tear gas and sidearms,
and were instructed to " meet
force with force.'' Helicopter
flights over the area were halted
upon demand of the ripters.
Some of the complaints by the
prisoners included the fact that
attempts to rehabilitate inmates
were a complete farce since the
prison used outdated books fo r
some courses, and no books for
others. A manifesto of demands

.,

-

-uP I

Before the assault

Tension was building at Attica Stattt Prison Sept. 9
as state police armed ' with shot.. ns escorted a
firetruck entering the northeast g~~te. The situation
simmered until Monday when police stormed the
prison with over 40 deaths resulting.

guards released, 28-year-old in, unless I tried to encourage the
prisoners to accept the demands
William Quinn died
Saturday of head injuries received made by th e (negotiating)
in the melee. Details are ,still committee. We are not going in
unclear, but It appears that Quinn and try to compromise our
was beaten and thrown out of the brothers' position ." Two of the
second fl oor window by the demands that were definitely
rioters .
" non-negotiable" according to
Over the weekend , a Seale, were full amnesty for the
negotiating group met with the inmates and the removal of Prison
inmates, with disappointing Superintendent Vincent Mancusi.
results . The group included
Other incidents over the
attorney William Kuntsler. Rep. weekend which gave rise to
Herman Badillo of New York, further speculation that there
Assemblyman Arthur Eve (D. would be an at tack were the
Buffalo), Clarence Jones, bringing in of high preSsure hoses,
publisher of The Amsterdam the checking of tear gas guns and
News , and William Gaiter, director other ammunition, the arrival of a
of BUILD, a Buffalo anti-poverty fourth · helicopter and the testing
organ izat io n . Badillo, upon of electrified bars. Newsmen at
walking out of the prison the scene reported feeling the
remarked that the inmates had effects of pepper gas.
rejected the negotiating package
'Time not lives'
agreed upon with Oswald .
Governor Rock efeller
Bobby Seale, Black Panther
Party leader, arrived in Buff~lo responded negatively to a note

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UNIVERSITY

IUFFALO CHRISTIAII CUTER AID
I

restoration of order; 3) accept the
co mmi ssioner's good faith
.commitment to the 28 major
proposals offered to the inmates.
''I am in full support of the
commissioner's actions and I wiU
con tinue to keep in direct
communication with him in his
untiring efforts to achieve a
peaceful solution ."
The 28 proposals Rockefeller
mentioned Included a drug
rehabilitation program ,
administrative amnesty to all
persons involved and legal
amnesty In regard .to civil actions
rising from the matter, the
application of the New York State
Minimum Wage Law to aU work
done by inmates and providing a
healthy diet.
The propsals were rejected by
the prisoners. The total number of
lives lost in this riot , 38, makes it
the worst prison riot in modem
American history.
CHAMBER CHORUS

t

800 ecra of the flMit
TRAIL RIDING IN N.Y. STATE
Open 7 ct.ys • week

from the inmates urging his
appearance at the prison ''so that
we can spend time and not lives."
He issued a statement on Sunday
in which he stated that his
presence at the prison would not
1
con t r ibute to a peaceful
settlement. Rockefeller ~id, "I
JOin personally with the
commissioner in an urgent appeal
to the inmates that they now: J)
release the prisonen without
harm~ 2) cooperate in the peaceful

Before the attack, a report that
the underground tunnels had been
wired with explosives Jed officials
to order everyone out of the
buildin~. AU electric power to
the area was cut , but no
explosives ~ere found.

I.

I

had. been sent to.. Commfpioner.-. Saturday afternoon ·and drove to
Oswald' in July, which ir\Cluded •Attica, where he was met by
the following · points: inferior Kunlsler. SealQ addressed a crowd
health service , no drug of about 50 onlookers and said
rehabilitation program, the death that, "It is our position that tbe
of three inmates per month , poor Commissioner will be guilty and
food and too few recreational must be charged with murder if
activities. Attjca's budget is $6.5 anything happc;ns to the guards."
million per year, which averages
out to S7 .52 per man .
Seale leaves
Eight hostages were released
Seale left shortly after his
Thursday afternoon after being arrival , and said: "The
beaten and stripped . One of the Commissioner said I wasn't going

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Wednesday, September 15, 1971 . The Spectrum. Pageiline

.....

_

)

�...

�8088YIIALE

�-·

_,

Indiscriminate beatings and other acts of alleged
savagery have been attributed t~ the Buffalo Police
Department by stud e nt eyewitnesses at a
demonstration held Monday afternoon in downtown
Buffalo.
The purpose of the demonstration was to show
support for the prisoners at Attica State Prison and
to condemn the decision to forcibly remove them
fro m the occupied areas. ·Attorney WiUiam Kunstler
was the principle speaker, addressing an audience of
approximately 200 people.
.
Tom DeMartino, director of the office of
stodent rights and an eyewitness, described the scene
downtown :
"Kunstler spoke about seven minutes, then
three policemen moved in and took . the amplifiers
from him. He spoke on, and another system was set
up. Kunstler finished and Tom Soto, NationaJ Staff
of the Prisoner's Solidarity Committee, spoke.
Suddenly, the police charged and headed straight for
the microptlone, clubbing people.

-DeCarlo

I

.

Page twelve. The Spectrum. Wednesday, September 15, 1971

.

.

"Let me go..
"I saw one cop grab one woman by the hair and
hit ht:r. She screamed : 'Let me go, I .haven' t done
anything,' but he continued hitting her. He then
proceeded to have her in a headlock, drag her across
the strt:et and throw her against a fence. When
people saw this. they started saying 'let her go.' T\YO
plainclothesmen went out, grabbed - them from
behind and threw them against the fence. The police
continued to chase the people, hitting those they
had picked out from the crowd . They pushed
everyone with long hair down two blocks. They
'aispersed the crowd thataway."
Tom MacGregor, also a student, offered a
different version. MacGregor said: "Near the end of

Kunstler's speech, the sound was cut off and I heard
a bunch of people yeiHI'l'g 'off the pig.' I l!SSUmed
that the police had disconnected the public address
system, although I wasn't sure. I watched about ten
to 12 police gather on the sidewalk across the
monuments. The whole crowd was watching the
speakers, I was watching the police laughing and
smiling back and forth ."

"No warning"
"With no warning I saw them nod their heads
and c.harge In double fiJe. They headed toward the
steps. Kunstler had just walked down and the police
were watching him to see when he was out of the
way. When I got up to the steps they started
swinging clubs. I saw a number of peo ple get hit
includihg one girl who was thrown to the steps by
three policemen. t backed off lfi1'CJ crossed Main St. I
saw a group of kids trying to leave the scene
suddenly pursued by the police. They caught up
with a kid near the end, clubbed him and dragged
him away. I continued down Main St. and saw a
number of kids get kicked who weren't fast ehough .
I also saw three or four kids get kicked while the
police were on th~ir way , up the steps of the
monument. Other than 'off the pig' I heard and saw
nothing directed against the police."
Police spokesmen could not be reached for
comment.
In the course of the melee, II people were
arrested, including four University students. WiJliam
Brennan and Anthony Lewandowski were charged
with obstructing the administra,tion of justice,
disorderly conduct and resisting arrest . Mike
Dushenko allegdly violated city ordinances and Mary ·
Marino was charged wtth two counts of disorderly
conduct.

�'

Kunstler questions ...

~ntlnued

.

from page 8 -

.

in Lafayeue Square: " Police of

demands were accepted " in the what had happened . 1The reality
tills city brutalized people who name of humanity."
made its appearance in the flow of
were merely sitting . . . and
Ho lding up a quick and bloOd. Kunstler's understanding
listening."
pea ceful settlement was the ended in that flow :
But he was here to talk of refusal by prison authorities to
" Wo uld o ur society have
Attica and it was apparent that grant a_mnesty to prisoners degenerated today had the
the thousands gathered had come involved. Adamant in this refusal, National Guard and State
for that purpose. Explaining in State Correction Commissioner Troopers not massacred those
detail , Mr. Kunstler ran through Russell C. Oswald was apparently prisoners : What difference did
the chronology of events that led plottlng his strategy.
four days or four months matter
to Monday's deaths. During his
By Sunday night, Mr. Kunstler if lives were to be saved. The
original meeting with the inmates, revealed : "We knew it was all inconsistencies the answers of
Kunstler was read a manisfesto over. Death stunk in that prison , hundreds of bullets brings leads
stating the philosophy of the impending doom hung over those .simply to confusion ."
uprising and demands which were walls ." The COJ!I mi ssioner,
The dead were eulogized.
according to Mr. Kunstler, "had a ''They may have been convicts,
to be granted.
heavy heart and would think it may have been convicted of many
lthe situation) over."
Humane demands
crimes. but those prisoners are
The document called for "all
Kunst ler arrived Monday intinttely more decent than the
conscie nti o us c it ize ns of morning at the prison in time to man cle~:ted governor of this
America" to stand up against the hear a "sound I will remember all state.·· Th ose mt!n .. were
system which "threatens us and my life - the sound of helicopters commttting suictdc be~:ause they•
all others an this country." The preparing to go over the wall.'' could no longer Jive as animals."
demands numbered 30 , 28 of This was soon followed by the Mr . Kunstler had hopes that the
which simply called for reforms "faint popping of guns." He then days' tragic events "could make a
termed " I 00 years overdue." knew "mu rd er was being difference bet ween a depressed
There included such things as committed in the names of all of slave and an erect dignified man
effective drug treatment care, us."
or woman."
adequate food and an end to
Mr. Kunstlcr had words also
"slave labor" by granting Reality
f&lt;Jr the slain guards: "Nobody
Mr. Kunstler, as all who were likes the fact that guards died prisoners pay under the state
minimum wage. All the se witness, understood the reality of my heart is just as heavy for the
hearts who arc also u part of our
corrupted society as it_is for the
brothers who were murdered."
Students who have changed their domicile .to Stating that the Commissioner
New York State prior to the beginning of a semester had been told the guards would be
can ettablish their eliaibility for in-state tuition killed if force was used. Mr.
charaes by completina 1 retidency status affidavit
Kunstler termed the guards as
avaiJable in the Office of Student Accounts, Room
I , Hayet A. Most studen ts, unless completely "pawns. expendable in political
emancipated, must be charaed accordina to the g~~ m e of chess." He further stated

Tuition affidavit

" the guards knew they were going
to die because their government
refused to recognize the sanctit y
of life."

responsible.
Mr. Kunstler closed with words
of warning and advice. "We give
notice now we will stand as our
bro thers have the last four days in
Perpetrators unpunished
prison. We should spend as much
The attorney lamented that time remembering Attica..,. as we""'
1
those he feels guilty for the once did the Alamo. Attica
desolation would go unpunished . becomes our monument from this
" Who will be charged for our My night forth and lhat brother Clark
Lai in Attica the massacred , the and (the rest of] the men I would
survivors. The perpetrators will rather be with now live and their
walk free." He exhort ed people to beat goes on as it must if we are
" lind a way to condemn" those to be a free and clean people."

addreu of their parentl.

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"We Have Records Cheap" ________ ~~~!.~~-- Wednesday, September 15, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page thirteen

�.Rotary Field eoaeert

Rockfestival: rain f!,nd music
A well, urn, you know, the
tickets were free (at leut for me
they were). Anyway what is there
to say about UB's first really big
t.ock festival. It had most of the
dements of a really big rock
festival such as; lovely ~lte skin
15·year old girls, bummers,
groupies, rain , artificial
stimulants, scaffold climbers,
pages such as "Martha meet Greg
behind the refreshment stand in
ten minutes ; he's got your pUis,''
and supposedly there was even a
baby born ("It's a boy Mrs.
Walker."). What it lacked was
nudity and natural stimulation
such as was found under certain
'flankets at Woodstock. Of course
~e rain can be considered a
factor, but the rain didn't deter
anyone at Woodstock.

I was a bit appr9tenlive. I mean
after aU they had Mark Stein the
orpn.ist and yocal.ist from the
Vanilla Fudge (their dem;e was
covered in a special edition of T1te
Spectrum last year). Besides that I
had two more fudgies to see later
on in Cactus. But Boomerang
turned out to be a lot of fun .
They played in the great tradition
of Long Island rock banda - foud
and raucous. They were all young
an~ pretty with a lot of the appeal
that makes rock stars except for
Mark Stein who's growing bald
and fat. Mark more than made up
for his looks with his great moves
on piano and orpn.

week before at the WK.BW
festival. His act was fairly familiar
even after one hearing including
his joke about Jan Armin's (the
piano player) song. But that's o.k.
because rock and roll has a lot to
do with repetJtion anyway. Long
John does have a very good band
behind him. Sam Mitchell (he
looks like a punk kid) is a shoot
'em down guitarist and lan Armitt
(who looks older than my father)
is a fine piano player. Long John
did include his big hit for his
encore (the one ' with the long
title).

Then came the rains and a long
&lt;Jelay. The crowd $Cemed a little
Benatb that colcl exterior ..•
apprehensive, but perhaps the
Boomerang was followed by At
soothing raps of Jim Santella
Kooper. I've always had a soft
calmed the nervous energy of the
sopt for At throughout aU his
crowd which under other·
chanps and tock critics rfdlcuJe.
circumstances mi8flt have turned
So I was really looking forward to out different. Then there was the
seeing him . The thing I reaUy like
danser of electrocution from all
about Kooper is that he really
the wires on the field . So the
knows what it means to be a rock
festival was getting exciting in
and roll star. He was appropriately
more ways than one. Not to
attired in an appliq~~ jacket with
mention the danger of the
suede • tie-dye pants. A cross
scaffolds coming down from the
dangled from · a chain around his
people climBing them.
neck. Yet underneath these mere
trappings there beats the heart of
What it's aU about?
a true rock and roller . Kooper
I wandered around behind
proved his dedication by the
stage during the wait. During my
inclusion 9f old rock and roll
wandering I observed a girl asking
songs in his sets. I've seen him
AJ Kooper for his autograph, and
three times and he's done this
Long John giving a ten·year-old
everytime. Two of the oldies but
boy an AI Kooper guitar pick. The
goodies were " Drown in my
boy tratefully accepted it aJ)d said
Tears,. an oltl Raytettes song and
"Oh wow! Does it have his name
the Stone's "Last Time." His
on it?" Personal moments in rock
encore, of course, was a medley of
and roll.
Chuck Berry songs (the hit of the
festival) . Kooper somehow
Savoy Brown finally came on.
managed to sing verses from about
Their lead guitar player Keith
ten different songs during the
Simmonds, the only original
encore.
member, played some fme guitar

When in doubt, back to tbe rooa
What is conspicuously missins
from either o f my lists is music
(more specificaUy rock and roll).
The reason I'm so undecided is
that it seemed that all the
highlights of the evening were old
rock and roll numbers, especially
the ones o f Chuck Berry wtllch AI
Kooper and Savoy Brown did .
This leads. me to wonder where
the rest of the music lands in the
spectrum of rock and roll.
l admittedly didn't look
forward to attending, but for the
most part the music was a
pleasant surprise. The first group
that I saw was Sundance from
Toronto, whom I liked. They had
a Crazy Horse sound with bits and
pieces from other groups such as
Free. I didn't care for their vocals
but they were well co-ordinated
\right Jeff). They were foUowed
by Magic Ring, a local Buffalo
group, who did a competent set.
The next group wa s
The next act was Long John
Boomerang. Before they came on Baldry whom I had seen just ·a

(he even used a Qpo once), but
mostly the songs were too long.

Insurance enrollment
Students must enroll in the student medical lnaunnce by Sept. 30, 19,1 if they
dalre to be htaured for the 1971 - 1972 ~~ehool year. Any atudent .who hu not yet paid
for the inauranee il not covered e.en if he hu checked the box on the IBM rqi.stratlon
form .
DetaUs and mroUment forms are available at :
Health Se"ka Offlc:e - Michael HaD
Adm...ions and Reconb - Haya A
MlUard FiDmcwe CoDete - Haya A, Room 2
Student Government Complex - Norton HaD
Any additioul quat ions sllouJd be addrnsed to :
Niapra National Inc:.
238 Main St.
Buffalo, N. Y.
or the Univenity Health SerYice.

MAKE

BIG

MONEY!

•

Reelin' and Rock1n'

COME UP TO 355 NORTON AND ASK FOR 1'
THE ADVERSTISING MANAGER.

Page fourteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday, September 15, 1971

- "Robbie Lowman

The Department of Classics announces a new course of
general interst : Clasaica 371, THE GREEK THEATER FOR
MODERN READERS ( A coune in En&amp;lish Translation), taught
by Eric A. Havelock, Visitina Raymond Professor of Classics
and Professor Emeritus, Yale Univenity .

The drama ol the Greeks can be fully understood only in
the con tex t of those conditions surrounding its
production. What was the physical setting in which these
plllys were performed? For what type of audience were
they designed? How was the production finan ced ? What
were the PQtriotic and relif(ous ceremonies which
accomPQnied performanu? The course will begin with a
physical description' of the Greek Theater (illustrated by
slides). of the role of mwic and choreography, the style of
acting and the function of the chorus. Sixteen
representative plays In English translation will be studied
intensively. Some comporlsons and contrasts will be drawn
with Shakespearian drama, the better to elucidate rhose
characteriJtics of Greek drama wflich are specifically
classical rather than modern.

Other Classics counes of ,eneral interest :

103
210
287

THE SpECT'(UM

its feet.
slow mellow blues piece seemed
so appropriate.
The guitar player was none
other than Jim McCarty the lead
guitar player from Cactus. I don't
like Cactus. I've seen them before
so I know what there act is like.
This leads me to the question I
more or less asked before about
where their music Ues in the
spectrum of. rock. To me, their
music is aU effect and what is
annoying to me is that I know
they have talent. But perhaps this
Is rock and roll of the seventies.
Rock hu alway• been a great deal
of effects, but somehow the talent
of the performers always showed
through. I don't see it in a poup
like Cactus. It seems like aJJ
effect. But as the old adage goes,
"Don't knock the rock-."
to

The set was highlighted by two
Chuck Berry songs and the lead
singer taking off his multi-colored
boots.
Then there was another break
while the stage crew set up for
Cactus. Again I wandered around
back stageo in the rain . This time
with Jeff and Billy. As we were
standing there admldst the
activity . we heard a guitar
amplified by just a small amp
playing a slow blues number (I
think Jeff said it was an Elmore
James number). The music was
cofl\lna frpm the SunshJne House
tent. On the wall of the lit tent
were the shadows of a guitar
player and a bass player who had
joined . For that moment, with the
rain and the weariness that was
setting in on some of ua after
being there for the whole day, a

213

SELL ADVERTISING FOR

AI Kooper provided some of the
most exciting mom111t1 all
•ft.-noon with his surprisi'!l
..; . playing. His Chuck 8errt
medley brou_,t the entire crowd

313
389
453

Greek Uterature in Translation - Barry (Eng 301)
Women and Slaves in Classical Antiquity -swlivan
Rome: Ori&amp;ins to 44 B.C. ;-Sherk (History 207)
lntroduc:tion to Cluaical A•eology:
Gteeee - Smithson (Art History 287)
Classical MytholOJY - Pmdotto (Eng. 337, Art H 313) ·
Anc:ient Paintina ,; Greece -smithson (Art Hist. 389)
Poetry, Rhetoric:, and Intellectual
TrHition: Erotic: Poetry -Curran and
Hammond (Eoa. 495)

For information consult the Deportment of CilliSics, 390 Hayes
Hall, 811·2816, or the in-'ructor of the course.

�.

·our Weekly Reader
Goln8

Nowhm!

by

Alvin

GreeoberJ. (Simon and SchUJter,

$4.95)

The

Proml~kNtwJ'

by

Clwlea Newmua (S1mon and
Schuster, S7 .95)
This week I will deal with two
new , very mod~m books. One is
about the horror of the urban
business environment; the other
takes place in the country. One is
interesting, new and fine; the
other is trite, derivative and
generaUy not worth 'much. The
Promisekeeper is the interesting
book. It merits discussion because
It is well written and because it is

The novel tries at first to prove · and
characters as thin u
that the universe naturally moves onion-ekin corrasable typin&amp; paper
toward a state of increasing chaos do not a novel make. His point il
(it's really called entropy, and older than the proverbial hills and
Thomas Pynchon bas done that even the tricky faiiy tale
field to death). All of the coherence
of
the
work
characters, under the direction or (intentionaUy opposed to the
one Professor Melville (curiouser theory of unteleoloaY) do not give
and cutiouser!) dutifully live their this
hopelessly
tanaled
lives in .demonstration of. this paradoxical fable the body it ao
chaotic theory which Greenberg desperately needs.
archly calls "unteleology." They
One is, however, attracted to
therefore try to rush the world to
its inevitable state of universal the picture of salvation in the
hysteria by attempting to root · country especially after readin&amp;
hysticaUy
clever-dismal
people into thinking of that the
picture
of
the
city
that Cbartes
Venutians are really just like you
Newman paints in his new novel
The Promise/c,eper.
Newman's terrifying city is
Chicago in a temporal state of
flux . The city has reached the
point of polarity where the major
crises is between the artist (and
the artistic impulse) and the
business baron (and his ferocious
profit motive). The city is
futuristk and old fashioned at
once. The major charaeter Sam
Hooper works for Management
Concerns and he. slowly is being
drawn away to more noble artistic
impulses which directly contradict
his vision of himself as a virile
agressor. This novel has real
characters that sl0wly become
more and more dehumanized .

experimental in the very best
sense of the word. Going Nowhere
is worth blasting because· it is very
typical of the new novels that are
being published o nly because they
are experimental.
Going Nowhere concerns a
young
amputee
(isn' t
that
bizarre?)
who singlehandedly
makes his one-legged way through
an inane series of exploits
involving a flying saucer and outer
space (isn't that bizarre?) to
another series of ditto inane
exploits involving the hero's
copulation with his sister (incest
in the modem novel, isn't that
original?) and his finally reaching
a state of idyllic ignorance in an
abandoned church in the beautiful
green country.

Gustav
XEROXES
F"CRB¢
JUST THRILLING

355 Norton

and I and the little old lady next
door. They do other idiotic
thin~ . too.
Greenberg however has another
trick up his sleeve, and it is as
obvious as it is predictable and as
predictable as it is cutesy .
No he, like many a wise man
before him, leaves us with a telling
phi losop hy .
Unfortunately
Voltaire beat him to it; poor little
first novelist, centuries behind his
time. He proposes that we stop
living our lives by theories
(theories of chaos, of order, of
decadence ... of ships and shoes
and sealing wax and lady's
lingerie); instead we should just
live. Startling perception .

AU this would be very nice, as
far as it goes, if it were told in a
Vonnegutsy pop·art way. We
don't · expect Vonnegut to be
profound, but his books are fun
to read and so we're attracted to
them. Greenberg, on the other
hand, clutters his novel with all
the intellectual claptra p of avante
garde fiction and he just can't
pandle it . Sentences that continue
• pointlessly for four or five pages

~~~~==~~~~
WHY
IS THE DEPARTMENT OF FRENCH
MORE THAN
A FRENCH DEPARTMENT?
FILM
WAR

PRISON
INTENSIVE
WOMEN
TOTAL IMMERSION •

ABROAD

AFRICAN STUDIES

Indeed the novel seems to be
constructed on two...matrixes. At
the beginning, the characters are
complex and very humanly
arbitrary. As the plot increases
intensity and comic confusion sets
in, the characters become more
and more unidentifiable. The
Negro maid turns out to be .a man .
A strange boat appears in a partk .
A demented Admiral who believes
in religious na\lonalism is found
missins after iailins around the
world in a bathtub.
AU this may sound inane, but
it dazzles and dislocates in a way
that
Going Nowhere barely
achieves. The graphical ingenuity
so much a 'part of modern fiction
is employed here to its fullest
height - poems, one-act plays,
menus, ballet scenarios, computer
cards, advertisements and various
visual effects, marvelously bring
about the eclectic sensitivity that
is one of the bboks virtues.

The Promisekeeper makes great
strides in modern novel technique
even while it parodies all the
gimmicks and devices of the
modern novel that we are all
familiar with. If the book has an
obvious flaw it is that ' it is too
ingenious and too new . The
author's intentions are o ften too
puzzling and obscure. This is a
wonderful thing. If you can get
your hands on a copy, read it. I
thlnlc you will enjoy it.

Freshman Serninar: IMAGES OF WAR
French 469
Literature and Film of the Pris~&gt;n.
French 105-106, 2 years in 2 semesters
Freshman Seminar of Women
in French Lit.

drsigrled (:$"

Proj~ct : French 107·1 Ots, 1 year

c~

in two weeks, 2 years in four weeks.
Study in Grenoble, t-rance, tor th~
semester or the year, same cost as 1n
Buffalo.
Courses on Francophone Afric~.

ITS NOT TOO LATE TO ADD-LIFE TO YOUR SEMESTER!
COME TO 214 CROSBY HALL OR CALL 831-5457

creald ~ oor - - - i

I'
ii~€W€l€

Christian movement
tries to reach youth
by James Paul

woman ditto and a hippie the
same, a radical also, a businessman
Christianity is undoubtedly the too. ..As far as race, creed and
very heart of the American color go, the ground is level under
experience. From the beginning a the cross," it tells us. The
Protestant image of God and movement also has a newsprint
Christ has been invoked before p aper . Titled only ..Student ~
meals, on coins, after sneezes, on Action - Campus Happenin&amp; of a
Sunday , at birtlls and deaths, at World-Wide Student Movement,"
ground breakings, television it sports no large print references
sign-offs and before battles. The to Christ on the front page. The
average American, regardless of paper is youth-oriented .' Articles
his beliefs, must make large on racism , war, rock 'n roll, drugs,
accommodations to the Christian revolution and sex all turn out to
be on Christ,
tradition.·
In the early part of the 20th
cent ur y, the largest White Crusade convention
Nan McCuUough , a worker for
Lake-type mass camp-outs that
the world had ever witnessed took Campus Crusade in Buffalo says
place in America. Sometimes a that " the Jesus Christ movement
million strong and lasting for is not a political movement in any
weeks, gathered in the name of way ." The stress is on "change
Christ by the ocean, these from within," she states.
The Crusade is sponsoring a
meetin~ left in their place most
of the beach towns now so co nve nt ion in Dallas next
popular in summer months. summer. One hundred thousand
Atlantic City, R~hobeth, Ocean delegates are expected to hear Bill
City are just a few . Christianit y Bright and the Rev. Dr. Billy
has, in more ways than this, Graham.
The House of Life holds
forged the geography of the
coffeehouses and prayer meetings.
United States.
Located on Delaware near
Reaching America's youth
Kenmore, the " House" is just
Only in the last 50 years has that, with several live-in members.
the skepticism and indifference Their newsprint paper Tog~ther,
that is now so prevalent come to published by the "New
be widely accepted and Community in Christ" is eight
acceptable. Recently, however, a pages of yet farther-out youth
movement has gained strength in issues. The "May Day
attempting a reversal of this trend , Experience," rock festivals and
in trying to reach America's youth the like. "All power thru the
and have them embrace what Spirit ; It's real love, man, from _§..
· America has always believed In, real person Jesus Christ; Jesus
the virtues and power of Christ.
paid it all," to name just a few .
Two of the newer recruiters for
An adherent passing out the
the ranks of Christian soldiers on paper, identified himself only as
campus are the Campus Crusade Brother Don. He said that he felt
for Christ, Inc. ar:~d the House of the youth orientation was more
Life. These two groups, as well as c:::&gt;f~to attract youqg people" than i •
others, are not mutually exclusive. was "the philosOphy of the House
The Campus Crusade, with of Ufe." He doesn't call himself a
SUNY AB headquarters at 34 " Jesus freak," juSt a "Christian,"
Devereaux, is an international and and 'be was repelled by the idea
"interdenominational" student that C hristianity could be
movement founded 20 years ago coercive.
at UCLA by a man named William
One final note : The Campus
R. Bright . Mr. Bright is now on Crusade for Christ, Inc. , the board of directors and writes attempting to fulfill wbat they
for the Collegiate Challenge, the call their "Great Commission." It
movement magazine, which is full is to confront and possibly
of slick color graphics and convert everyo ne in America with
confessions. An athlete finds the teachin~ of Christ. By 1976.
happiness In Christ , and a Black Everyone in the world by 198&lt;Y. •

Wednesday, September 15, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page futeen

�Spof.ts Car Club to
sponsor annu~l rally
Interested in road nUying?
This coming Sunday the UB
Sports Car Club will hold its
Second Annual Sunday Driver's
Road Rally. AJthou&amp;h the club
holds about ten raJUes per year,
this is by far its sreatest effort .
Last season 98 cars competed
with 70 cars out for their first
rally.
The main draw of the Sunday
rally is th e sreat number of
trophies awarded. The club
sponsors ttophies for the top ten
per cent of t he novice and
experienced classes. Combined
with these trophies are awards
sponsored by area car and service
dealerships. Every major foreign
and domestic car is represealted in
these 19 special awards, which go
only to cars wttich do not win a
reJU).ar trophy.

Scenic route

'Friends &amp; 'Love'

An
evening
with
Man!gione
-

Once 1 leveled witH myself that didn't expect an audience to
wasn't about to see and hear a appreciate the subtlet y of their
jazz concert and that I knew my music as well as the complexities.
elitist disposition was shelved for
another time, maybe a rainy night A question of understanding
on the East Side sitting at a side
It's a rut that wo:- all get in . We
table with a gin and .tonic or
pretending I'm a real Bo he mian m ight sa y with annoyance,
with eight or ten other cats, los t "Nobody understands me," yet
in the poor lighting o f a makes haft we c ry o ut to be understood at all
stage intermingled with sound and turns. We perpetuate our own
smoke. Then l could feign that I conte mpt for o thers by cons tantly
am as bored as the piano player selling the m short , thus enabling
us to uppear longer. We despise
really is.
frida y night was a Chuck their loves as being sill y hut we
Mangione concert. l reme mber want them to love us just I he
just a few years back Mangione sa me. We feel o urselves ho nora ble
was playing mghts that make ja7Z in o ur hatred fo r others und
players look a t audiences with misera blc us well.
disdain , the look that says, " You
Chu.:k Mangione admlls that
can't be h1p!'' Beca use of the he feels good abo ut the sudden
extreme tension withm those populanty o f hi.~ music. Perhaps
straight ahead post-bo p tunes , the he has lost all the sd f-1mportance
many changes and complicated that goes
w~th
hetng
rhvthmtc J'l:JIIern~ . 13Z7 playe r.; mil&gt;understoncl . rhe audtence

seemed more pretentious than the
perfoorme rs; the performeu;
dressed in denim and the crowd
garbed in "Opening Night in
Ho llywood" attire.

A genllle balance
Th1~ music of Chuck Mang~one
has n't los t a ny of the honesty that
prevailed in his 1961 recordin~
wit h The Jazz Brot hers, ttis
brothm Gap o n piano then and
no w. Accommodatio ns have been
made in hts mind it seems. Instead
of sollely feeling the tensio n o f
warm I h and love that prevades
musicnans for their peers. the Jove
that CJ!istinguishes atself from the
o mnipresent need fo r lo ve within
the indi vidual, he now can say he
plays lfor fraends and not just with
fnends . There's a gentle balance
of Frit·nds and Love.

.lot'

The Dramatic Arts Committee is a division of the University Union .Activities
Board. The Committee coordinates performances by professi•Dnal companies and tries to
s ponsor experimental student-oriented theater produc tions.
The Committee is looking for new members. Its fimt meeting will take place
tomorrow at S p .m . in Norton Hall , Room 261 . As a membe·r or the commitlee you can
initiate all sorts of theatrical ideas. Under consideration by the committee's chairman,
Susan Schwarz are possible performances by the Open T heater and experimental
performances by Latin and South American theater companiefl.
The committet will be run by its members and ho1•es to deal with individual
interests. To have a voice in theater on campus this year, come· to the meeting.

............ by ..................

(lo_._... .

fh Society

"' c_,."-" wllll lk Stuollo A,.... n..ter

~bM2~24~2~~~

••

Studio Arena Theater

What determines who wins?
The contestants run the route at
J\ven average speeds, stopping at
checkpoints to have their time
recorded. Penalty points are
assessed at each ch eckpoint for
being early or late; low score at
the end of the rally wins. The two
important factors are to stay on
course, a nd to run at the right
spt~eds, not too fast or too s low.
Hveryone who enters gets a
duhboard
plaque. The only
equipment one needs to enjoy
himself is 8 car, a driver and a
naviptor. Pens, maps and a
compass often come in handy. If
you find yourself interested, you
can repter at Leisure Land
(approximately 20 minutes from
campus) at 8 :30 a.m. with the
fmt car off at 10 :0 I . For more
information, feel free to phone
Bob Dean at 836.0635 .

Theater Guild meeting
The Student Thealer Guild will be holding its
first meeling today at 7:30 p.m . in Norton Hall,
Room 340.
The Theater Guild exisls to give students
opportunities to act, direct and perfonn lheater
pieces totally upon t heir own initiative. In the past,
t he Guild has run the gamut from classical
produc tions to musical comedy.
The first meeting will serve to meet · and
int r oduce members, elect officers and begin
discussion of the tenn 's productions. If you are at aU
interested in theater, this meeting is important.
Everyone is welcome.

Bro~~t·a u.

Arts Committee seeks members

Experimental Film Retrospective

This Sunday's rally is open to
all types of cars. Lack of
experience should not be 8
deterrent , since there is a special
novice clu~ . Also, there will be a
rally orientation lecture for
bepnners one hour before the
first car leaves. The start is at the
Leisure Land Inn on Route 75 at
Thruway exit S7 . ftrom there, the

17-S-mile route winds south to
beautiful Allegheny State Park for
a two-hour rest and lunch stop.
Then the route returns north to
finish at the Poor House West,
where everyone is assured a good
time as they await t he reading of
the resultS and the awarding of
the troptties.

CAUTION-No Automatic
Insurance Coverage
If you did not make payment to the local
representative of the insurance company-

DEADLINE 1971.

YOU ARE
NOT INSURED

EnroUment will not be accepted after Sept. 30,

DETAILS AND ENROLLMENT FORMS -"available at: Health
Services Offace, Michael HaU , o r call 853-0931.

GUSTAV

ffOm lun_,.l to lrfthqe
From 19211o 1961 Thlr~
lhQrt
and two leotur...

fi.._

accl»f"*' by crlllc:l the world .,.,
., the moot lrNalnall ... mool
ellCitln1 motion pkturflt produced
...,.

by ln&lt;Mpenden t ntmmoker&gt;ln the

lou •o YUO'S If you lwlven't ....,
the New A,...lcan Clne~N 0&lt; the
Illest eff&lt;HII o( the japan-. Poll&gt;h
ond Czech ovonl·pr&lt;k. here It yo~~r
-tunlty Ia view 1 corefully
&lt;Htheltrated propem In ..,,..
perfom.anceo (wllh th,.. repeat
mall,...~

~

lh ... nlahll. l&gt;.,lflnlol II 7:30P.M.
nw. matW.... bealnnlna 11 J!OO

P.M. so . . . . , _ (.... PerfOf'
_ , _ • complete ..,..,taw-t

1111it. $2.00 MI..._. $l.7S (_....,
$7.SO""- dllf-1

"""'-

The ClnemotopopM,. In

ordef of eppUrance •r•:
, .......,. Se1tf. 23
Lui&gt;lunuel

Salvldor 0.11
Mlon lily
Robert Florey
Dmitri Kl,..noll
I. S. Witton

Melville Webber
Chora.vldor
loMPh Strldo
Cwtlo Herrlnaton

Jw'- Sdlwerln

FtW.y, s.,.. 24
Bruce Connor

II. C. Dale

,......,. Settt. l5
Cun¥OtN&lt;Iboo

Herbotrt 1&lt;-r
,.,. OudtMll

'""'Melt""'•

Jimmy Murabmi
llenjiKI-u

JoMph.,.,...
........... Mc:l.lr.,.
MclreT...

..,_,..,tcw

1-a"-"""'

lohftc--

s........,....

Tldleo ..,...... et the door.

TlcMtt ..,....,._ et: Norton Uftlon, SUHYAI

$,....., Adl.ltto. ... omc.

a copy

Bruc•~ltlle

Walerian 8orowuyk
Rick Cluchey
Curtis Herrlnaton
lob Codfrey

V.SiepiMk

J. Adwn

355 Norton

!!:'.::=L
- - - I1Uo4 50CI[TY

Page sixteen. The Specttum . Wednesday, September 15, 1971

...\

,

�Coacta shows optimism

Soccer team to get rolling

by Ric:lwd F~

As the Giants and Dod&amp;~~ ~nee apin battle for the pennant, Old
Timers Day ceremonies (festmttes?) remind us-Of- the climax of their
soccer. After playing junior soccer in his native
pennant strugle 20 years aao. In 195 I , Bobby Thompson won the
Sp«:trum St111f Writer
Denmark, Jacobsen went on to star as a center
pennant playoff for the Giants with a dramatic three-run homer off
Ralph Branca of Brooklyn.
halfback for the 1967 NCAA champion Michigan
Now we must endure replays of the confrontation with SO-year old
Starting an expansion team in any sport, as State Spartans. Following his graduation from MSU,
men playing the parts of the moundsman and the swinger. Since 1 was anyone knows, is no easy task. Yet Bett Jacobsen, he coached at Wisconsin-Green Bay. It was from the
but five days old when Thompson's homer was struck, this reunion
the new S&lt;&gt;ecer coach at Buffalo, is optimistic about latter campus that coach Jacobsen arrived here.
excites me not at all. Perhaps those of you who were unborn at the
time can feel somethina now if the event so impressed your parents fielding a team. As the coach put it: "Fielding a
that a 24th chromosome was added . But that moment of baseball team shou1ld be the least of my worries. ln the past Personnel problems
history does not belong to even those fans old enough to remember it.
Of course, the new· coach will not be without
No, it belongs to those pot-bellied men in the Old Timers Game. The
problems. He will probably have to depend on
rest of us are intruders. The real "great moments in sport" are the ones
foreign students at the start of the season, as they
we were part of ourselves. To truly appreciate sports, one must have
been a Thompson or n Branca himself.
are more familiar with the game than are most
The perfect game J pitched at age II is a moment which to me, 'American students. Jacobsen said: "So far, we have
and to no one else, is more cherished than anything I've seen at the baU
had more applications from American students than
park or on television. I don't need any reunion to face my now fully
from foreign students. However, I would like to have
grown opponents. I can still see myself pitcb.ing to them as
12-year-olds. They were an older group of boys from a neighboring day
both American and foreign students on the team. lt
camp and they outweighed my aquad by about ten pounds per man.
is harder to get the foreign students to come out,
My teammates and I were concerned that they'd find the Clinchers 1
because they are usually just getting accllmiated to
served up all too inviting. Instead, I retired 12 men in a row, a perfect
living
in a foreign country. They have more trouble
outing for the four inning game. Aiding me was my cousin, a long and
settling down thad do the American students who
lean shortstop whose J)ove swept up several sure base hits . It has pained
have lived here all of their lives."
me to see his shortstopping abllity disappear in recent years, since I can
stiJI see him saving my perfect pme. How could any game I watch
compare to my very own perfect game? (It couldn't.)
The coach has some unique theories which he
Not only the good plays come to mind, though. A few weeks later
hopes to put into practice. Ordinarily, one would
1 was playing third base an another inter-camp game. I had dearly
think that the closer to the goal and the closer
wanted to make the move to third , and I earned the position with some
towards the center of the field that a player is when
outstanding play in practice. In thls pme, the opposition loaded. the
- UPI
he takes a shot on goal, the better chance he has of
bases in the very first inning. The clean-up batter hit a bard ground ball
putting it past the goalkeeper. However, Coach
between me and the shortstop, but I darted over and made a successful
Football may never be
stab for the ball (how wonderful to know what it feels like to dart over
Jacobsen,
who conducted an analysis of shots on
replaced in the hearts of
and stab for the ball), but then came my downfall.
goal as part of his master's degree requirement at
some
Bull
stalwarts,
I made an embarrassingly inept attempt to tag the runner moving
however, soccer under the Michigan State, disagrees. "The defenses stack up in
to third and then set my sights on home plate for the force out (and 1\.T
direction
of new mentor the middle of the field ," he reasons, "and it is
maybe a double play!). 1 fired a two·bouncer 15-feet wide of home and 1 ~ew
Bert
Jacobsen
will attempt difficult to near impossible to get a ball past them .
right through the crowd of campers sitting on the grass - the very
to fill the gap this fall . The
campers (the very girls!) I was trying to impress. I felt like crawling
Therefore, shots cbming at 45-degree angle on each
first home contest for
under third base. We went on to win the game, but to this day, I go
side
of the goal stand the best chance of go
in."
Buffalo will take place at
over that throw in my mind, correcting my motion , planting my foot
Otherwise,
Coach
Jacobsen
plans
to
try
to
Rotary Field on Oct. 13
securely.
against Fredonia State.
implement
a
ball
control-type
offense
,
to
move
the
There's one game I remember because I didn't get into it. This was
ball an towards the goal .
the year after my in fielding escapades and I had no place in the starting
lineup because I had arrived in camp many weeks late. The team had
few days, IS students have already contacted me
Although the caliber of the first edttion of the
already won a game and they were sticking with a winning lineup, even
about playing soccer. I feel that we can definitely Bulls club soccer squ;Jd tS uncertain, il seems likely
though I had proved myself superior to the pitcher in pra~ctice ~ It wns
field a competitive team and. if the students show that they will play an exciting brand of soccer. Fan
painful to watch the game from the sidelines, keeping score, watching
the girls watch the players and watching our pitcher give up nine runs. I
that they lire interested, the team can move up to interest 1s a must, beginning with the home opener
kept puttang on my glove and slamming a fist into the pocket , waiting
varsity sta Ius next season."
on Oct. 13 with Fredonia State . If the Bulls are to
for the relief call which never came. We managed to stay ahead
If arnyone is ·quaJified to make the above nse from the1r five-game club status this fall to a
throughout and won by a single run . Afterwards, while the other
statement, coach Jacobsen certainly is . He has had varsity unit next season, duplicating the feat of ice
players were pouring chocola(e milk on each other or jumping into the
lake fully clothed, I walked back to the bunk and cried .
experience both as a player and a coach in college hockey, student s upport is essential~·
Each person must have his own moments to feel what sports can
do. Without these expenences, becoming a sports fan is about as :
BENIING Fooo co.
•
Truth~--.
rewarding as watching stag ntms. The reward is finding out what it's all
CATERING
HAS r THOU NOT KNOWN '!
for gems from the
about for yourself.
Specializing in Buffets
"Hu,t tlhiiJ nut h.-uru . that the
JEWISH BIBLE
evcrla.,ting (oud , The I ord lh&lt;'
This is why few women should become involved in the game of
Special service for
c:n:atur uf the end' uf the earth,
Phone
watching and discussing sports. The experience of most women is such
parties of all kinds
fainteth nut'/ I am th" l onl thul
that their ability to relate to sports is similar to that of a paraplegac . It's
875 -4265
834·2660_: . maketh ullthin~~~~luh 40 :2R: 44 :24
also why only those who've taken their 'lumps playing tackle football =834·2660 ......_
deserve to take pleasure from the week-end head banging. (We touch
players can relate to the forward puss.)
Vince Lombardi was so wrong when he said that winning is the
only thing. Look at the experiences I've related in this article , and
Xeroxscheap!
you'll see winning wasn't important at all. No. what they show , I tlunk ,
355 Norton Hall
1s that if you put your heart into something, no matter if yo u come
away on top, or come away bleedang, leave as a Thompson or a Branca
- you 'U never be sorry .

------

d•

•

lrreCtlOn

a

-··--·· ....I
I......_..... .. I

ins

Hear, 0 Israel

Bible

'G
~
ruU stav••••••••••••••7
'······

IN ALLENTOWN l ABOVE THE
BENT WICK t"ANOLE GALLERY
TELEPHONE 881 -1717

ALL WATERBEDS
Are not created equal
WE OFFER YOU A KING SIZE WATERBED, WHICH IS NORMALLY PRICED AT
ONLY $24.99, ,TO YOU UPON PRESENTATION OF STUDENT I. D. CARD FOR
THF.AMAZING PRICE OF
182 ALLEN STREET MONDAy - WEDNESDAY - FRIDAY
BUFFALO, N.Y.
11:00 a.m. - 9 :00p.m.

$19 99

"THE LOWEST PRICE IN BUFFALO"

SATURDAY
11:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.

Wednesday, September 1S, 1971. The Spectrum. Page seventeen

�....

~[~

Feiitrider challenges
Board of Elections

Innovtltive Sptudslt course
The Spanilb Department is offerina students
latereated in taldn1 Spaniab 101 an opportunity to
take achantaae of a new concept in lanauaae
trainJD.. The 10 a.m . Spanilb claa will combioe the
talenta of trained linpjttic instructors pll&amp;l the
native abilities of Iuton who normally speak the
lanauaae. In this way. atudenta will be introdue!ed to
a YUiety of pronunciations, thus aivina them. 1
puler facUlty and understandina when spukina to
others.
Students will meet three days a wuk with the
Iuton to improve t.h eir ability in speakina and
undentandint the lanauaae. One day will be apent
with the Instructors for trainina in pammu and the
remalnlna day will be apent with both the tutor and
the lnatructor to aid students on the culture of Spain
and other backaround Information.
Spanish 499, an independent study course will
also use native spetkers to help improve studenta
efficiency In spetkina the lan~Uaae. The course will
have the same format as in the critical lan~U~ae
courses and was formed by the head of the critical
l•nauaae department, Dr. Peter Boyd· Bow~n .
Students interested in repsterina for Spanish
101 should contact Mrs. Grace at 831·5719. No
special permission is needed and the course wnl not
be any more intensive than the reaular Spanish
courses.

(

by Howie Kurtz

Au't. Cilmpur l;'ditor

"There is no difference
between the elections in Erie
County and in South Vietnam,"
claims Mutin Feinrider, 24-year
old State University of Buffalo
graduate student who is People's
Peace Party candidate for the post
of Erie County Executive.
''In both cases," he continued
at a Th e Spectrum interview,
"they want two candidates to give
the illusion of a real choice, even
though many candidates are
denied access to the ballot."
Mr. Feinrider's quest to get on
the ballot, he claims. has been
stalled by the Board of Elections'
"gross negligence or conspiracy to
commit fraud ." As a result, the
American Civil Liberties Union,
representina Mr. Feinrider, is
taking the Board of Elections to
cou rt for violation of Mr.
Feinrider's civil liberties.
EJ«tive stall
In Ene County, an
independent candidate must
gather 1500 Signa tures of
registered voters in order to gain
access to the! ballol. When Mr.
Feinrider applied for the petition
in late July, the Board of
Elections informed him that his
signatures must be those of voters
that were reg,stered last ycur. This
would exclude all new voters as
well as those 1n the I H to 2 1 age
bracket. Mr. Feinridcr wen t to the
ACLU, claiming that th1s law was

c
A
V
A

f,

•-?$

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unfair. "I was staUed around for
quite a while by the Board of
Elections," explained Mr.
Fein rider.
"Later they told me that they
had mistakenly given me the old
law. So they gave me the new Jaw,
which was passed back on March
2. 1971, and which excluded that
stipulation.
" But they neglected to inform
me about the March law when I
originally applied in late July," he
continued. Other candidates for
County Executive were "simiJarly
misinformed," Mr. Feinrider
observed. In · addition, he noted Erie County the first real choice"
that other candidates were thrown thpy've ever had," Mr. Feinrider
out for "arbitrary reasons, such as stated in describing his candidacy.
having a few signatures on their · Among the thinp:; he supports are:
a guaranteed minimum income.of
petition crossed out."
$6500 for a family of four ; an end
' Runaround?'
to the South East Asian War by
As the basis of his ACLU su1t , implem'!ntation of the People's
Mr. Feinrider contends that his Peace Treaty , negotiated by
cha nce of getting the necessary American and Vietnamese
number of signatures has been students; an end to the Erie
" irreparably h:umed" by the County sales tax ; full employment
treatment he received from the at Bethlehem Steel and other steel
Board of Elections. He still hopes companies ; re-establishment of
to gather the signat ures by the rent co ntrol ; legalization of
Sept. 22 deadline, and he is marij uana and an all-out war
utilizing a table in Norton llall for against heroin .
this purpose. Mr. Feinrider also
Mr. Peinrider is a native of
con tends that the Board of New York City; and he graduated
Elections is giving a hard time to fro m the State University of
out-of-town students who want to Buffalo with a BA in Sociology in ·
r eg is t er in Buffalo. " Many 1968. lie has been a graduate
students are refused registration student In thul department since
until they have a lawyer call
then , and is presently teaching
this is clear·cut Intimidation," suid courses at Canislus College and
Mr. Feinrider.
Mill:lrd Fillmore College of
" I int,cnd to give the people o f SUNYAB.

___________){",e rox i ng.-_..,
1- 3 copit!S of ons original: 8 cen~ sach
4-6 copitiS of ons orlgin11l: 7 ctn~ sach
7 or mors copies of onB original.: 6 c:Mts each

Gustav
355 Norton Hall·
9- 5 Daily

" OUR PRICES SIMPLY CAN'T BE BEAT "

The Record Stor
that caters to

~.n~

the popular taste
and lower price
COME INBROWSE AROUND
and

BLOW YOUR MIND

Sint~ University Plaza near the A~nherst
Page eighteen . The Spectrum . Wednesday, September 15, 1971
.I

�FOR SALE

VAGO SANT'GRIA - have lt.
'Check' Discount Liquor, •so Nl191ra
Falls Blvd. Bring student I D .
1964 VW Microbus. t250 - or best
offer. Call Seth and INv!t mes11ge at
836·5169.

FOR SALE Attractive sofa bed.
Recent ly reco11ered, t20. 691·7541
after 5 p.m.

PORCH SALE starts 18th. Double
mattress, black light girls clothes, 268
Parker off Hertel.

ATTENTION
Business
Students:
Graduate has acc:ummulatlon of exams,
cases, term papers, etc. Excellent
revl- material. 895·0172.

FOR
HOUSEHOL.D
Items,
used
furniture, antiques and collectives,
come to The Garrett, 937 Kensington
nNr Norfolk and browse around.

HAGSTROM SwediSh folk ll\lltar,
deluxe f ..tures with fitted Plush case,
originallY t300, 11crlt1ce. at $100.

1966 SIMCA , Very good condition .
836·7120.

- STEED-

'66 VW Microbus. Radi o, ..s heater. 2
new tires. Good running condition .
Best offer over $500. Call 549·2033.

~

Distributors wanted
New oil product
Amount of investment
up to you.
For lnterYiew
call

8344018

RIDE BOARD

195·0'172.

GRETSCH TennessNn Wti\·Wih pedal
power and treble boosters, living room\
kitchen · furniture. Make Off..-. C»ave
837· 77'*3

ZENITH AM ·FM radio. Brand new.
Must sell . t45. Phone 886·2292.
VENTURA 12-strlng guitar, plus case,
Excellent condition. Phone 886·229 2
REFRIGERATORS,
stoves
and
WIShers. Reconditio ned, delivered and
IIUirll)teed. D&amp; G Appliances, 844

633-1153

- - - - - • L E A R N TO ' F L v - - - - -..
Learn, then fly, the economical way ...
through a club .
S125 initiation fee, Sl5/mo. dues, $8.25/hr . for a Cessna
150, or as low as $9.50 /hr. for our full IFR Skyhaw,.
Schoolyear memberships and FAA certified fl ight
instructors available.
qpen general membership meet ing with presentation
o~ m crica n Aviation TRAINER , 9/16/71 at 8:00 p.m
ROOM 14 7 CAPEN HALL M. Allen
831-3125
N o o bliga t i o n , an yone I nterested In
759-6533

MICROSCOPE, Binocu lar Reichert.
lOXW.F., 5X, ~1:1, lOtl, 45:1 , 100:1,
mechanical stalllt, foc:ullble condensor,
case. V..-y IIO(Idl. UOO. 839·3754.
LEAVI NG for ltfte West. House full of
furniture for 11111. Call 833-4541.

SEATTLE family With fishing boat,
land and bus needs people and br. .d .
632.0118.
NEED A RIDEr If you do, this Is tfte
Place to get lt. Spectrum Ride Board
Classlfl,eds really work. ,

ROOMMATES' WANTED
OPPORTUNITY, sparetlme, addressing
envelopes and clrculanl Make S27 per
thou11nd . H1n1~wrltten or typed In
your
home.
Send Just 12 for
Instructions anCI a list of firms using
addressers. Satisfaction Guaranteed!
B&amp;V Enterpri114K, Dept, 9-29, P.O .
Box 398 PNrbiCIISOm, Clllf. 93553.
RESTAURANT personnel to staff
exciting new JAPANESE STEAK
HOUSE
Oriental
waitresses,
hostesses, hat check girlS, busboy s,
dishwashers, vahtt parkers 632· 2323.
EO&lt;PERIENCE OI babysi tter
needed
Mondays, Wedn•esdays and sometimes
Fr ldiYS. 1 :00 ll).m . - 4 :45 p .m . for
el llht·month girl . Call 1132-7045.
O L.D FAN wan ted to k eep cool w ith .
Call Stu at 831 ·&lt;2797.

OWIII
ROOM
3-bedroom
apt.
Wllllamilvllle ar... 160 per month plus
' 1/ 3 electric:, 15 minutes from Main
campus by car. Eves. 633-4042.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
SEEKING so meone to sh•re our life,
dr..ms 1nd l ove. Our home Is 1 place
to grow c loser and learn. 1458 Hertel.
Call Fred, 838·1089.
FREAK ARTIST . Heavy trip with
t hree Together People who need hel p .
N o pay, 633· 1781, 835·2550.

PERSONAL
BI O ll28 PEOPL.E: Please trade vour
T ,W o r Th l ab for my Mondav one.
L.eave name at Spectrum, Box 92.
E S TUDA

PORTUGUES ?

Over

110,000,000 people spak Portueu-.
hal f or soutn America . It's given at
t :OO a.m., 24 Dl.t. Annex.
ORANGE Duck now ap,_rlnt at
Check Olscount L.lquors. 450 N l...,.
Falls 81¥CI. 84'1119 ltu~t c.trct.
D£AR CHAIR: Boy, do you need a
reuphollt..-lntf Happy Blrth~IYI S.C .,
A&amp;P Ketchup, Terrible Trio.

MISCELLANEOUS
XEROX anythlot for only s.oa a
copy, Cheapest rate on c.tmpus. See
Gustav In Room 355, Norton Hall.
IF YOU'RE reading thiS, you know
that Spectrum classlfleds work. For
rates and Information, come up to
Room 355, Norton Hall, 9~. Monday
thru FriCSiy.
GUSTA V Is baCk ! XerOK anytftlnt
(bookS, notes) for only t.OI a COPY
(The chNpest rate we know In
Buffalo). Come up a!ld see Gustav at
355 Nortoll Hall. No lines, no forms,
no waiting.
ALLENHURST lnd Princeton chilled .
Wi nes • cheap boon. Check Discount
L iquors 450 Nllgara Falls Blvd.
RUSH National Sororities - Come to
our Open House Thurs. 15th, 7 :30
Room 232, Norton.
THE 1972 Buffal o nian will hold an
or..n lzatlonal m . .u ng Thursday, Sept.
16, at 7 :00p.m . In Room 356 Norton.
Any one Interested In working on the
y earbook Is Invi ted t o l ttend. Those
Wh o
cannot
attend
shoul d
call
831·2505.

Butler
Volkswagen

I

DELl PLACE RESTAURANT

n
c.

N.Y. Style Hot Dogs
Potato Knishes
Beer on Tap
Bottle or Pitcher
across from U .8 .
3588 Main St.
Just a few doors
from Amhent Theatre

flyin is w elcome.

WHY BUY FROM US?
1971 -1972
NEWMAN HALL
SUNOA V LITURGY
Cantalician Chapel - 3233 Main St.
Sat. 7 p.m.
SUN. 8:30 - 10 - 11 - 12 noon
Newman Hall - Niagara Falls Blvd. &amp; Main St.

1.)
IInstant Service-no appointment needed at our
factory trained service center.
\Ne have 85 new V .W.'s, plus 80 assorted used
2.)
cars. Al11100% Guranteed &amp; immediate delivery.
!Guaranteed - Low Cost Student Insurance.

3.)
HALL HOURS
Mon. - Fri. 8 a .m. - 9 p.m .
Saturday 9 a.m . - 5 p.m .

..Eat &amp; Meet"
Open 7 a .m. - 1 a .m .

lA

Daily liturgy
Newman Hall

8·12·5
Sat. 10 a.m.

'

14!00 Main Street, off Baker - Downtown
Telephone 885-9300 Buffalo

t**'i*•••a***PPR*'''I'i*l'*'l'¥!''*''*1 PAID POLITICAL AD :t**''''''''''''**¥*****¥¥**2'''''''''&gt;
I

ATTENTION, EFFEl"E SNOBS:
Agnew is coming to BuHalo to c~ampaign for Regan,

.e!p~~ ~·

(!Q!C.A

~~--a.------~~~~--~

,.,

· Need \Ne say more? SEDITA FOR C~OUNTY EXECUTIVE.
PO
' LITICAL ,AD
rzae•••p••azaaaa•eaaa•pppppappapppppaaa
1 ?1**#?1#1**??1'*kk 8 # ·····•**PAID'
28??
-------~

Slacks galore in 2 new stores,
now open at Elmwood and
BidweU near State Teachers, and
Main Street opposite U.B.
Groovy flares to tum you on ... in
plaids, stripes, checks, and solida.
Wester pocketa, resu.Jar pocketa,
wide and regular belt loops.
Plenty of flares in famous Levi's
®Sta-Pres~® alack.s. Also straiaht
C::uta that are with it. Dia Pants A'
Plenty now!

Wednesdjy, September 15, 1971. The Spectrum . Page nineteen
..

....,

·~.,

" J7.~l

'~~..-·t~ J C., '....-'J,lt&gt;4J.!"J .. J~Jt •

• ~

' ..' J'J..,..... • ,

l ..

I

t.,.·;." ......

-..
-

�I •

Sub Boam 1, Inc. has ...ni..,. on its sr.rr ro, a
Publications Division Di"'"o' - responsible fo, all
Sub 8oa,d funded publications, and a Union Boa,d
Division
Di•ecto,Board.
- "SP&lt;&gt;nsible
Union Aclivilies
. fo, the Univ.,sity
The iobs off., much ha.assment, negligible pay
and long hou,. Fo, funhe, info•mation, conr.ct
M.,k
Bo,.nstein,
Business Manage,, Sub Board 1 at
83
1·5502
by Friday.
·Note, D.,dlines fo, all announcements is noon
of The Socct•um dead/in, days. Items fo, the ·
8ad&lt;page must be "'bmitted in '"•iling to The
SoectNm office. No announcements fo• any one
event will be nm more than once per week.
Also, no announceornents will be held over from
last semester. They must be resubmitted.

- Sue Weiser

·.

..,

Bac~page

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&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
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                    <text>•

State Univwsity of New Ycwk at Bufblo

Monday, Sept.rpber13, 1171

IRS to rule on bookstore case

Price violation is charged
by Huvy Lipman
Contrlbutin~ Editor

The continuing saga of the
Norton HaU bookstore moved
once again into the spotlight last
week. The latest episode in this
story involves the allegation , made
by Student Rights Coordinator
Dave Steinwald, that the
bookstore has violated the federal
price and wage freeze .

Mayor John Lindsay .
to campaign in Buffalo
copyri/(ht 1971. by The Spectrum

Recent Democrat convert John V. Lindsay will visit Buffalo
Friday, Oct. 8 , The Spectrum learned today . The visit has been
primarily designed to counter Vice President Spiro Agnew's
fund -raising jaunt here Oct. 7.
A spokesman for the Erie County Democratic Committee, Bob
Whelan, refuaed to confirm that Mayor Lindsay would be comins, but
added that "I am not in a position to say that be will not come."
Highly informed sources in the Erie County Democratic party, who
prefer to remain anonymous, have assured The Spectrum that the
mayor's visit is definite.
The oncoming visit of the New York City mayor is of particl!lar
signific.ance. Only four weeks ago, Linds.ay broke ranks with the
Republican Party and started a new political career as a Democrat.
Now seen as a new source of strength to the liberal Democratic ranks,
he is being considered as possible Presidential timber and there is
already a move underway to have him run for the governorship.
Lindsay's visit here will be his first venture into New York State
politics since his switch. Political analysts have seen this as an attempt
for him to gain state-wide exposure, especially in areas where his
popularity bas been on the wane.
On the stump

Upon his arrival in Buffalo, Lindsay is expected to stump for
various Democratic hopefuls in the November elections, especially that
of Buffalo Mayor Frank Sedita, the party's candidate for Erie County
executive.
Lindsa.y comes to the Democratic fold from an illustrious but
harried career as a liberal Republican. A four-term insurgent
Republican congressman from Manhattan's East Side "silk stocking"
district, he defeated Democratic candidate Abe Beam.
His first days as mayor were marred by several strikes, including
that of the transit workers, which nearly crippled New York City.
Although be managed to co-exist with tbe GOP for a few years, his
tepid romance with them waned with the advent of the 1969 mayoral
elections. Losing the GOP primary to con~rvattve State Senator
Marchi and conservative Democrat Marlo Procaccbino.
Lindsay's relationship witlt Gov. Rockefeller, never good·, turned
for the worse when Lindsay announced his support of Arthur
Goldberg, the Democratic candidate. Later, the split became even
deeper when Rocky and Lindsay became involved in a bitter fight over
the New York City budget. They exchanged bitter insults with
Rockefeller contemptuously questioning Lindsay's cpmpetence as
mayor and later .appointing a commission to investigate the city's
affairs. Their battle ended 'with Lindsay's political switch.

didn't thi k it was "the intent of Student Association toyed with
the regulation to ~ce small the idea of organizing a boycott,
businesses to take substantial Ioise but that action has been at least
." Mr. Steinwald, however, held a delayed until next semester.
quite different view of , the
bookstore's action.-He stated that
This delay is due partly to the
in tus· first contact with the IRS position taken by some student
on this issue he was given an officials that action should wait
unofficial opinion which would 411til the reports of study groups

Mr. Steinwald is charging, in a
complaint filed Thursday with the
Internal Revenue Service, that the
bookstore has raised prices on
certain textbooks to a more
expensive level than existed when
the freeze was imposed . If the IRS
should rule against the FSA
operation , a maximum penalt-y of
$5000 could be imposed each
time one of the books is sold. An
official of the government agency
indicated that at the least ~e.rill..
days will pass before a decision is
made.
DiffiCult choice
The book s t o re does not
dJspute that the texts are being
sold for more than· was charged
last semester. The problem arises
from the fact that the publishers
of the books have raised the
wholesale prices . According to hold that the freeze had been
Thomas Moore, general manager violated.
of the bookstore, this was done in
June and· July. He explained that Not farst problem
these texts were not placed on
~ · spokesman f~r the IRS
sale in the bookstore until after
ed that the complaint would
th~ price free-ze had been
have to follow- the normal
announced . This, he said, left the sequence and be processed before
bookstore with the choice of a decision woul(l be made. "Some
either raising prices to compensate of these things take time," he
for the higher cost or "losing a explained. "It may have to go
substantial amount of money."
ba c k to the publisher to
determine the reason for raising
The bookstore and its parent
the price."
group FSA have been attempting
This is not the first
to get a definite legal opinion on
confrontation between the
the issue but thus far have been
bookstore and student
mainly unsuccessful in obtaining
representatives to occur in recent
any positive advice. Norm
)Veeks. Claims of mismanagement
Effman, the lawyer retained by
hax!' , been leveled against the
the Student Assoc iation,
organization by members of the
explained that while the freeze, if
various student governments. One
interpreted strictly, would prevent
sore point has been the desire by
the bookstore's action, no one is
students to have ' the student
really quite sure how the IRS will discount reintroduced into
bookstore transactions. The
rule on individual cases.
Mr. Moore emphasized that bookstore has insisted that it
one reason why he . proceeded cannot afford to give such relief.
with the price raise was that he Earlier during the summer, the

L,to the operations have been
completed. These study groups,
set up last month, were designed
to investigate the innet operations
of each FSA operation and to
make recommendations to
improve tbeir efficiency. The
reports of these groups are
expected at the end of September.
Mike Nicolau, GSA president,
is a member of one such study
group investigating the bookstore.
He stressed the importance of all
these groups in helping to improve
efficiency and thereby increasing
profits. Hopefully, he continued,
this profit increase, will result in
lower prices and better service for
students.
When asked how the bookstore
would respond to a negative ruling
by the IRS, Mr. Moore offered
that the norma_l course of appeals
woUld probably be followed. "It's
not that easy to cut down costs,"
he complained ...You don't just
fire everybody and run the
operation at no cost."

�National Student Associt1tion
Congress: .a tense gather_ing
Amidst seizures of t~e podium personalities as Daniel EUsberg,
and the abrupt disruption of a Dr. Benjamin Spock, Andreas
scheduled concert by Wayne Popandreou (leader of the Greek
Cochran , the National Student Resistance movement) and Beulah
Association (NSA) held its 24th Sanders of the National Welfare
annual congress from Aug. 20-29. Organjzation. Other well known
The 600 participants who fiJtUres who were present at the
arrived in Fort Collins at Colorado Congress included prospective
State University were confronted presidential candidates such as
by the Black Caucus when the George McGovern and Pete
delegates voted not to honor an McClosky.
The evolving tone of the
outstanding debt to the National
Association of Black Students Congress became apparent after
(NABS). The debt was incurred the first day of caucus meetings.
two years before when a seizure The Women's Caucus decried the
of participation
and
of the podium by the Black lack
Caucus had convinced the 22nd involvement of women in the
Congress that NSA had been planning of the Congress, claiming
severely lacking in Minority that they had been shut out from
Programs and should fund an the very start. It was pointed out
autonomous
black
student Utat there was only one woman in
the position of a keynote speaker
associ a lion.
A concert by Wayne Cochran and no women rock groups
and the C.C. Riders scheduled scheduled for performance. They
after the first plenary session was demanded that a· more equitable
abruptly
halted
when
the balance be immediately
Women's Caucus took the stage established.
and declared that Cochran was a
"sexist" as revealed by his music Propoled merger
One major issue which was
and mannerisms on stage. The
disruption was followed by tense handled by the Congress dealt
meetings concerned with the with a proposed merger between
alleged sexist makeup of the NSA and the Association of
Student Governments (ASG).
entire Congress schedule.
These disruptions seemed to Ar guments for the merger
characterize the tone of the 24th centered on the desirability of
Congress. A major emphasis on having o ne u ni ted student
pressing social problems both on a association nationwide .
national and worldwide scale Anti-merger forces concentrated
highlighted the entire congress on the alleged conservatism of
schedule. Workshops on racism, ASG. This was documented by
sexism, the war in Vietnam and the fact that during previous ASG •
upcoming anti·war events, ecology conferences, speakers were drawn
and legal rights consumed most of from the current Washington
the time between Congress administration and the addtional
fact that ASG had not yet Signed
sessaons.
the Peoples Peace Treaty. The
merger proposal failed to obtain
Prominent speakers
Preceding
each
Congress the necessary 2/3 vote.
Lee Mood, a delegate from
meeting, a keynote speaker
addressed the delegates and Newark Stale College and a
observers. Included were such former sergeant in the Green
GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
(at University ptaza)

The Spectrum
tim• •

831·3610.

A .. .

COLLEQI DORM
and a MAD PAD?

R~,..,tJntr!d for •dlleniting by
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TSUJIMOTO
OriMt.l

NSA speoker

S1udlnt A.ociation

Will one of
prominent IPIIken wt\o
-'tended the eontr- which met
last mOttth in O.W., Colofado.

....e

Ellsbua neport
The imdividual who released
the Pentagon Papers was the
featured npeaker of the Congress.
DanJel Elllsberg, former employee
of the Rand Corporation,
described his difficulties in getting
the papen1released. He stated that
he had approa ch ed several
senators on Capitol Hill but had
b een cCJ• ntinously rebuffed.
George McGovern , later in theweek revealed that he had been
o ne of those senators. He
commented that he refused to
pa rticipate in • the disclosures
because he felt that the public
would giv•e them more credibility
if the sc:cret documents were
released in the press rather than
by a Dem ocratic hopeful for the
presidenc)'.
While h1r. Ellsberg decried the
fact that the press had printed
such a limited amount of the
Pentagon Papers, he revealed that
he had not released one of the
volumes because it contained

Netionat

eon.•. Mr. Ellblrt

information on the personalities
of the current negotiation in
Paris. He felt that by releasing
that material he would provide
President Nixon with an easy
excuse to rninimil.e the chances of
success in Paris. Mr. Ellsberg
noted that ... great deal of
sunlight was duown on the U.S .
security system and Its purpose"
when the papers were printed. "I
had hoped to end the war with
the papers' release. On the other
hand, the avajlability of all the
Pentagon Papers will make us take
a closer look at our role and how
we got into Vietnam ," he
continued.
The final evening of the
Congress featured the most
action. The fa ll calander for the
anti-war offensive was. approved
along with the establishment of
..desks" for Women, Veterans,
Native Americans . National
Human Relations. C'. ~om . fr$&gt;m

Hunger and expansion of the
Legal Rights Desk .
Resolutions supporting the
labo r -U niversity Allian ce,
supporting abortion upon demand
and condemning the wage price
freeze were also passed.
The atmosphere of division and
hostility that pervaded the
Congress during the opening
sessions dissipated at the final
meeting. A representative from
the New York Young Black
Voters flew in from New York
City to present the outgoing
president, David lfshin , an award
for all he had done during the
year. In addition, members of the
Black caucus reaffirmed their
support of his efforts and pledged
to continue their support of NSA.
Finally, the new president will be
Marjorie Tabankin, from the
University of Wisconsin, the fi rst
woman president in the history of
NSA.

publi1hfld thrH

,..lllr IICtJdemic yeer by Sub ·BOIJrd
t , Inc. Officer •re loctJtfld tJt 355
Nonon H11ll, SttJr. Unlv•r~ltv of
New York tJt 8uff11/o, 3436 MIJ/n
St., lluff•lo, New York, t42t4.
Telephon11:
ArN
Code 1t6:
EditorltJI,
8314113;
BufintJU,

""" ' "'"" TUII oarrcaD~c•

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"*'

Deniel Elllbert. 11M
who
rii...S the P.•t.IIOn Papers to
the . . - . llddt
d memben of

-k. -rv Mond/lv,
Wednesct.tv and Frid.tv: during th•

BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

8ETW£&amp;~

If

Berets, participated in the Winter
Soldier's Investigation which was
held at C .S.U. He revealed that he
had been involved in a CIA
sponsored program of incursions
into the Peoples Republic of
China during 1969. Mr. Mond
reported that the incursions were
ca rri ed out by Montangard
tribesmen in Northern Laos who
conducted their operations under
the direction of the CIA .
Mr. Mond said : " Although no
American personnel were allowed
to cross the .border, they (the
Americans) did direct, equip and
finance · the oper~ions." He
further revealed that he had
gained information that the CIA
was encouraging the Montangards
to sell ra1N opium to help finance
and equip military operations
being conducted in the area.

Ano(l ......... . .

S«ond Cless Po1ttJgtJ
Buff'IJio, N- York.

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STUDENT

IBOOK EXCHANGE
IS NOW OPEN

Pllid •r

Circul•tion: 16,000

COMING •••
IUFF'ALO CNIUSTIAII CUTER AIID

Bring old books to sell at your own " Discount PrieM!" Only books
being used this semester are acceptable.
Come buy these bargains for your own classes ~ool

S. HUIOK
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ALL SlATS U .OO- TICKETS ON SALIAT
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Page two . The Spectrum . Monday, September 13, 1911
t "'t •

•

1

t

t

t

t•

• • , 1 •

11" I

I \ •

ROOM 231

DPEN10~4

�State hiring freeze
&amp;its library workers
A state freeze on University
hiring may result in curtailed
library services and hours. Such is
the opinion of administrative and
library officials who report that
the Director o f the Budget o f New
York State will not allow vacant
positions to be filled .

For the library, this means that
approximately 40 positions must
remain empty. According to
Albert Somit , executive vice
president , "the kinds of service
and the range of services provided
by the library may be adversely
affected."
Possible
cut-backs
could meao that the library would
be forced to severely curtain thetr
hours open.

reallocating
their
staff
to
rna xtmne
efficiency.
Mary
Cassata, assistant director for
Public Services, explained that the
libmry director is shifting staff
members around in order to
operate the libraries at their full
strength.

Social problems discussed
~·-------------------------

Humanistic view ofscience
by J~Ann Armao
C.mpu1 EditOI'

C&lt;:•nsidering science not only in its technological
but idc;ological aspects is one facet of both Ludwig
von B•ertalanffy, faculty professor of Natural and
Social Sciences, and his undergraduate course

Student's rights
This reshifting of manpower
has aUowed the library to
temporarily remain open on the
weekends. However, no one is
able to say whether this will be
able to continue throughout the
year. - Dr. C11ssata is hopeful,
tho ugh, that the situatio n wiiJ
improve:
"There
is
every
indication that we will be able to
work it out ."

There
has
been
some
speculation tha t the libraries
would be closed o n weekends and
On the other hand, Dr. Sornit
would remain open until o nly I 0
termed
it a very serious matter,
p.m. on weekdays . However,
library o fficials maintain that commenting that the libraries
nothing Is really definite and should be open as much as
permanent schedules have not possible. "Studenrs have that
right," he asserted.
been set and won't be know n
until sometime this week.
Student reaction to threatened
closures has been one of criticism.
Mark
Farrell,
Student
Bar
Official reluctance
president,
maintained
that
Dr. Somit said that the curtailed hours restricts student
University has been in touch with o ppo rtunity
to
study .
He
Albany almost daily in an attempt continued that the University is
to get permission to fill at least not
properly
allocating
its
some o f the vacant lines . priorities:
" It
is a . prime
to
Myles Stalin, responsibility of this University to
According
library
coord inator,
the provide
such
facilities
for
reluctance of slate authorities to students."
grant this permission is because
Whether or not the library will
" the state is uncertain about its
tax revenues." Edward Doty, vice be able to fully function is
president for Operations and dependent on Albany's decision
this
week.
Other
Systems, also commented that pending
«the state revenues will not be development$ that could occur if
sufficient this year to pay for Albany still refuses to authorize
budget
expenses.
There
is, more employees are limited use of
therefore, a strong thumb on such services as the poetry room,
documents and circulation desk.
hiring and rehiring."
Also, several library employe~
In addition to appealing to have threatened to resign if "the
Albany for 1luthorization, library library isn't allowed to function as
officials are readjusting and a library should ."

You'll find
a
large selection
of
jeans
cordoroys
body shirts
knit shirts

•

to

von Bertalanffy ,
offering
"Science,
Society
and
Culture. ••
World-re1nowned biologist and expert in systems
theory, Dr. von Bertalanffy has also been praised as
"one of those rare comprehensive minds ... who was
Ql!lly
proficient
in biology , medicine,
not
phy sic9c h em istry,
piophysics,
comparative
physiolo1gy and cytophysiology, cancer research and
psychology as weU as philosophy, but also brought
fresh ldtlas In all these fields."
Bro ught to the University about two years ago
by the' Meyersonian administration , Dr. von
Bert alan ffy has conducted graduate courses and
semlnam. "Science, Society and Culture" (listed as
FNSM :101 and SSA 30 1) is his first undergraduate
course h ere and according to his graduate. assistant ,
Fred Ta malonis, it may be the only opportunity for
studehts to take "such a course from a man with a
fantastic: personality and style."
Humaniutic science
It is. Dr. vo n Bertalanffy's hope that science may
still be atble to present a grand view of the world and
become deeply humanistic in its endeavor. He
explained that he attempts to look at the world
scene wlith the view of a scientist, "but a scientist
with
co n si derable
humanistic
impulses."
Contrib uting to such a world view and humanistic
science is Dr. von Bertalanffy's ''General System
Theory," an interdisciplinary set of principles with a
broad vi•ew of interaction and harmonization.
Utilizing this theory and Dr. von Bertalanffy's
long expterience as an "observor of the global scene,"
science and its effects on the world will be
examined . Modern science, according to Dr. von
Bertalan ffy, possesses a very ambivalent and
sometimes contradictory nature. He continued that
this contradiction lies in .I he positive and negative
aspects o f science: " There is on the one hand, the
promise of continuous and ever more fantastic,
technolc•gical progress; on the other, the forecast of
doom ,;aused by factors such as atomic war,
population explosio n, pollution.",

at

We

sell

f

UNIV.

UNIV.

PLAZA

PLAZA
•

'Noble savage:
He also said the pbJiosophy of starting anew
implies the idea of the noble savage, virgin man
uncorrupted by society. " The noble savage is a
myt h . . . there is no such thi ng. The young
generation will make a mess of things as did all
previous generations," he concluded.
Dr. von Bertalanffy was skeptical as to the
chances of cleaning up this mess and distinguishing
dtfferent kinds of problems and attitudes. He
that science-created problems are
explained
amenable to workable technical solutions that are
possible or have already been realized . However ,
certain sociological and psychological factors make
the solution unfeasible.
There is anot her category o f problems,
according to him, more dungerous and deeper which
cannot be solved by straight , forward technical
means. This is basically a strong feeling or discontent
manifested in such things as the development of a
"counter&lt;ult ure'', delinquency and psychopathy.
Or. von Bertalanffy commented that whether these
problems can be resolved is dependent on c:ban&amp;es in
the world o utlook.
To be honored
In addition to conducting "Science, Society,
and Culture" which meets on Fridays from 9-11 :30
a.m. and still has roo m for more students, Dr. von
Bertalanffy plans to continue with his extensive
researching and writing. Two volumes soon to be
released will acknowledge the many contributions
tha t Or. von Bertalanffy bas made to a number of
different disciplines from cytology to modern
psychiatry.
Such contributions include his publication of
some 270 scientific publications, including IS books
in the English, German , French, Spanish and
Japanese languages . He is also one o f the founders of
the Society for General Systems Research and is a
member of many scientifi c organizutions.
In recognition of this work, the State University
of New York College of Arts and Science at Geneseo
is presenting a "Symposium In Honor of Ludwig von
Bertalanffy On The Occasion Of His 70th
Anniversary," Sept. 18. Attending tb e symposium
and
marking Dr. von
Bertalanffy's many
accomplishments will be such distinguished scholars
and professionals as economist Kenneth Boulding
and psychologist Nicholas D. Rizzo. Students are
welcome to attend t he symposium and can obtain
information at the Norton Information Desk.
Anyone needing transportation to Geneseo mould ,
contact Fred Tamalonis at 831 412 I by th:ls
Wednesday.

IF
YOU WANT
A HOME AWAY FROM HOME

KEYHOLE
(For Guys ( &amp; Gals, too)

Because of his work of over 40 years und
accompanying personal experiences, Dr. von
Bertala nffy feels the necessity to attempt •such u
course. " I feel, to a certain extent, compelled by my
age to teach this course," he said. He further
commented that he "went , through quite a bit"
including two world wars and several depressions.
However, Dr. von Bertalanffy warned against
any facUe solutions or slogans to solve the world's
problems: " J did not invent a wond er drug for
solving world problems .. .l may perhaps be able to
give some more insight." In addition , he criticized \
those who would attempt easy answers for
improvement.
For example, he discounted the notion of
breaking with the past to change the future. Such a
a cultured
notion attributes aU man's failures
~ivili zution and proposes destroying everything and
starting again with a clean slate. However, Dr. von
Bertalanffy maintained "a break with the past is
impossible and self-defeating ~ot because the past
was so great b ut because every period was
lousy ...we have to live with what we have."

Drought
Beer or Ale

By Gloss
or Pitcher
Mixed
Drinks

ANACONE'S IS IT!
Pool table
JukeBox
Color T.V.

Anacones Inn

Famous
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Roost Beef
on W«k
Plus

3178 Bai ley A v e.
(next to Gvden of Sweets)

Monday, September 13, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Page f our . The Spectrum . Monday, September 13, 1971

�,.

PD Bradley to tbe resme

Hell's Angels see,k justice
To counteract adverse publicity and to raise arrested, 85 Breed were i ndicted on conspiracy to
money for leal fees is the dual purpose of efforts by riot, but not murder.
Hell's Angel Paul Bradley to obtain the eventual
!,»ointing to this omission , Mr. Bradiey
release of II jailed Hell's Angels. Charged with ' questioned the rationale for the charges against 11 of
conspiracy to cause a riot, four counts of murder his dub members : "Wfty weren't the Breed charged
and six counts of cutting with intent to kill ; th~ir with the murder of the one Angel ki.lled ... his
arrests stemmed from a brawl last March at u death was glossed over ... Who killed l;lim? Certainly
Cleveland auto show which resulted jn five deaths.
not our people." He conti1nued : ''It seems unreal to
Mr. Bradley, president of the Buffalo Chapter of me that. 20 - 25 Hell's Angels would go into a
Hell's Angels,. condemned their arrests as a situation with 200 Breed with the idea o f starting a
" miscarriage of justice" due to prejudice against riot. The odds would be 5 to I . There's no sense to
it .''
It is becaul\e of this cl)mmon sense aoproach to
the incident that Mr. Bradley believes a miscarriaJ,te
of justice is be1ng perp,etuatcd . In addition , he
accuses the Cleveland courts of disregarding
documented proof and evidence on behalf of the
Hell's Angels. According to Mr. Bradley, when
motions for bail were brought up and this evidence,
in the form of eye-witness reports, submitted "the
court was completely disi1nterested in anything we
had to say contrary to the s tate's account of the
incident ."

.

~

This year's fall student identification cards include the added
feature of a University seal. This seal. normally used in the spring to
validate second semester students is being employed, according to
Lewis Millholland (Communications Center) to "distinguish between
cards we- made and cards someone else made."
The University's fear that this could occur was prompted by the
theft of 200 ID cards and a $600 camera used to take ID p.hotographs.
Mr. Mill holland expHaned that core. material, consisting o f blank forms,
was taken from a locked cabinet in the basement of Foster Hall.
Campus Security reports that the incident , is presently under
Support appeals
investigation . Evidence collected by them include fingerprints on the
Mr. Bradley is here 3Jppealin~t to the University · cabinet and the serial number of the Avant Quad Polaroid camera
for support , both moral and finan cial , to correct the (Serial No. 3060262).
alleged crime committed ~•gainst the I I defendants.
Wrule Mr. Mill holland personally doubts that counterfeit cards
" I am not seeking aid hec:ause we are Hell's Angl'ls, could be produced due to the complexity and amount of equipment
hut because of the injustic:es that have occurred and employed, he did see the necessity for the seal safety precaution. ''ID
are occurring," he commen1tcd .
cards are difficult to manufacture, but then again , so are dollar bills "People should re-.alize that if something like this it i&amp; possible. And why would anyone stearthe cards if they didn't plan
can happen to t:JS because we are considered to make phony ..:c~rds'!" he commented .
abnormal by the ruting so•ciety. then it can happen
Mr. Millholland al~o explained that a new procedure would have to
to anyone." Mr. Bradley f1urther main tained that "if be used to validate cards second semester. This would involve again
you don't conform to socie:ty's accepted norms, then stamping a certain location of the ID with a contrasting color.
you are an outcast. This is a very sorry thing and
must be stopped. That's why we are asking for
help."
Explaining the purpc1se of Hell's Angels, Mr.
Bradley said that they are primarily a motorcycle
organization : "We are a club that likes to ride our
Free leaal advice and consultation will be made
cycles, and live our lives without any interference.
available to all State Univenity of Buffalo students
We are not out to harm or bother anyone.'' Also. he
this semester. Both Underaraduate and Graduate
termed the Hell's Angel1~ as "the onl y truthful
Student Associations have retained the services of
brotherhood - there are n1o false airs or pretending.
Norman Effman, a local lawyer. He will be available
We are what we are."
every Tuesday niaht in the Student Aaoclation
Because of this sense of brotherhood, Mr.
oftic:e, 205 Norton Hall, from 7 p .m . to 10 p.m . AU
Br.tdley said that Hell's An1gels across the country are
interested students are uraCct to make use of this
actively working for the release of the 11 arrested .
service.
locally, the Buffalo chapter is conducting a raffle to
.---SALE
SALE
SALE----.
pay for lawyer's fees. Anyo ne wishing to contribute
or take part in the rarne i1~ urged by Mr. Bradley to
contact him at 826-7873 or to come to 1481 South
IUIMF-IIAI'F
Park and Buffalo St.
IIUS
&amp;
THINGS... Styles fer Y•• .........
He summed up his activities as "all I'm here for
is that I want the truth to come out. I feel and hope
..J;
'
in my heart that because the truth is on our side.
• . . . IACIIITS
we'll win out in the end ."

Free legal advice

-&lt;&gt;sterrelcM!'

Hell's Angels. "Through the years, we obtained a
kind of faJse notoriety. Fictional books and movies
have stereotyped us as 'violent crumbs' who run
around causing havoc," he commented.
According to Mr. Bradley, about 25 Hell's
Angels went to the national auto show for the
purpose of lookin• over motorcycles. He continued
that about 200 members of a rival club, the Breed ,
issued a statement threatening the safety of any
attendjng Hell's Angels. The riot resulting from this
confrontation found four Breed members ·a nd o ne
Hell's Angel dead. In addition to the II Hell's Angels

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beint UIMI 1t ell the toc:.l coltages. We also supply new texts - ....,tNcks -supplies -

Whole Earth Catalog; Local Catalog; Pipes, Papers, Clothes,
Arts &amp;. Crafts, BeUs, used clothes, Books, candles, shirts,
dresses, jewelry~ posten, tarot cards, mobiles, records, snuff,
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BUFFALO TEXTBOOK

1458 Hertel Ave.

838-4483

·-··· fr• U.l.
Monday, September 13, 1971. The Spectrum . Page five

�SA Open House

.

Three phases of orientation
The ongoing fa ll orientaiion program tor
freshmen Knd transfer students is com bining three
phallcs~ a daily Information Fair on the first fl oor of
Norton llall ; a University-wide Open House on Sept .
14 ; and a general package of concerts, movies and
vurious aclivities. The program, sponsored by Fall
Orientation Committee, bepn Sept. I and will run
through Sept. 19.
"The program is basically oriented to show the
students wha t this University has to offer ,"
explai ned Fred Aureon , Student Affairs coord inator
who conceived and directed the progra m . " If the
res ponse is favorable, we hope to have one a year."
The major difference between the Sept. 14
Open House day and the 125th Anniversary Open
Ho use, according to Mr. Aueron, is that " the May 2
event was di rected to ward the Buffalo community,
but ours is concerned with students. We want to give
the students a chance to probe, to see what they
like. Tl\is will particularl y help students who haven't
selected a major yet . Also, this wiU give many S A
clubs some m uch-needed exposure." ·
Added exposure
On Sept. 14, a variety of clubs and academic
departments will set up tables and exhibits across
cam pus to provide easy exposure to interes ted
students. "SA clubs aren't exposed nea rly enough,"
said Mr. Aueron. "The average student has never
heard of most of them , such as the Film Club , Dance
Club , Phystcal Therapy Club or Amateur Radio
Club. The exposure wtll also help the clubs form
interest blocks for the new Student Assembly," he
continued .
The Student Assembly will serve as the
legislative arm of the Student Association, Mr.
Aueron explained . All laws and budgets will be
passed by th is body. Its constit uency, in addition to
SA officers and coordi nators, will be different
interest blocks formed by cl ubs and academic
departments. A club must be an interest group and
decla re themselves as such to be e li~ble. then hold

an elecuon. t.acl\. interest group will be allotted one
representative for every 40 members.
The activities phase o f the program encompasses
outdoor rock concerts, dozens of films s uch as
Oltch-22. Butch Cosstdy and an Alfred Hitchcock
film festival ; excursio ns: picnics and a battery of
other events. Participants in the daily Information
Fair in the Center l ounge o f Norto n Union include
UU AB, the CoUeges, Off-campus Housing, Career
Guidance and Place ment, SA, Student Counseling
Center, Academic Ad visement Office and others.
"The Fair will add to the general theme of
'communication' because it bridges m uch o f the
time, effort and bureaucratic hogwash that could
was te an entire day," concluded Mr. Aueron .
The locations of some of the exhibits follow·
· Outside-Norton Co urtyard: Engineering Science,
Computer Science, Ptriloso phy, German and Slavic,
Geogra ph y, Anthro pology, Microbiology, History,
L.aw School, Geology, Mathematics, Biology. Annex
8 : Englis h.
Hoc/metter Hall: Physics and Astronomy.
Health Science : School of Nursing.
Harriman Library : Office of Student Affairs.
Acheson 1/a/1 : ChemiStry.
Copen Hall: Dentistry School, Psychiatry . Baird
Hall : Music.
Hayes C: Faculty of Natural Sctences .
Crosby 1/a/1 : French .
Parku Enl(fnemnx : Engineering.
!(ayes 1/aii·Open Of/ices : Robert Ketter,
President : Room 108, l - 2 :20 p.m. ; Albert Somi t,
executive vice president : Room 11 4, 1- 2 p.m.;
Daniel Murray , dea n of Grad uate School : Room
232, 9 - 12 a.m .; Charles H.V. Ebert, dean of
Undergraduate St udies : Room 278, 1- 3 p.m . ; Ed
Ooty, vice president for Operations and Systems:
Room 139, 1- 3 p.m.: Richa'rd Sigglekow , vi,c e •
president for Student Affairs : Room 132 , 1- 3 p.m .;
A. Westley Rowland , vice presiden t for University
Relations: Room 186. I 3 p.m .

Norton HaD will be opened for the foUowina boun durina the
faD semester:
7 a.m . - midniaht
Monday- Thuraday
7 a .m. - I a.m .
Friday
8 a.m . - I a.m .
Saturday
noon - midnJgbt
Sunday
Norton HaU Recreation Aret will operate durina the following
hours:
·.
8 a.m . - II p .m .
Monday- Thursday
8 a.m . - midnjJbt
Friday
II a.m . - mJdnicht
Saturday
I p .m. - 11 p.m .
Sunday

· The Rathakellar's hours will be :
Monday- Saturday
8 :30a.m. - I I p .m .
Sunday
t p.m. - 11 p .m .
I

Student• may ute the Browlina Library and the Music Room
on the second floor of Norton HaU diuina the foUowina hours:
Monday- Friday
10 a.m . - 11 p.m.
Saturday
1 p .m . - S p .m .
Sunday
1 p.m . - 11 p.m .

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Insurance enrollment

Students m ust enroll in the student medical Insurance by Sept. 30 , 197 1 fr they
desire to be ins ured for the 1971 - 1972 schoo l year. An y student who h as not yet paid
for t he insurance is not covered even if he has ch ecked the box on the IBM rqiltratio n
fo rm .
Details and enrollment forms are available at :
Health Services Office - Michael HaU
Admissions and Records - Hayes A
Millard Fillmore CoUeae - Hayes A, Room l
Student Government Complex - Norto n Hall
An y additional qu tStio ns should be addressed co:
Niap ra Natio nal Inc.
238 Main St .
Buffalo, N. Y.
or the Univen it y Health Service.

L

Tiffin Room
(2nd Floor Norton)

COCKTAIL HOUR
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY FROM 4 :30TO 6 :30

STEAK SANDWIC H
FRIED SHRIMP IN THE BASKET
STRIP STEAK PLATTER W/ FRENCH FRIES
G RILLED RUBIN
HAM AND SWISS ON RYE
HOT BEEF ON WECK
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THE

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. . The Spectrum . Monday, September 13, 1971
Page SlX

50~

(PLUS TAX)
MATINEE
DAILY!

WHEN PICKED UP AT BAR

�Just a nickd more ,

··

.SA record co-op to expand
by Susan Rosenbluth
Spectrum Staff Writer

After four months of successful operation, the
Student Association Record Co-op is ready to
expand.
Established last year to supply recorded music
at minimum cost to University students, the co-op
has already handled SIO,OOO worh of merchandise,
charging exactly the distributor's price plus five
cents per album to cover operational expenses.
Student volunteers, sittin~t at tables which are
set up in the lobby of Norton Union at t he beginning -

students volunteer t heir s~~rvices on a regular basis.
Since its inception there have been ten students
workJng with Dave SteinYVald , Student Association
Shfdent Rights Coord inator.
A major problem currentl y facins the co-op
con cerns the acquisition ()f a aermanent location .
They have requested the use of the recently vacated
Burber shop in Norton bauement. SA is plannins to
transform this area into a Student Services Center to
be shared by the Record Co-op; a student services
information desk which would provide information
on aJI student governments and their programs and
activilies ; and the State University Electronics Co-op
no w being formed to ma1ke electronic eQUipment
available at a discount of I 0 %.
·

•

Before this situatio:n can -mate.ri11lize, the
Facult y-Student Association, which has b~n granted
a monopoly by the Uate ..on all Universlty
ent erprises, must approlfe the Service Center.
Pending decision on this matter by FSA and fin al
appr&lt;SvaJ in Albany, Presid1ent Robert Ketter is being
Joining in a candlelight march
asked to give pro visional! space approval, under complete with torah and chupah ,
which the Service Center would begin operation .
abo ut 500 people dedicated the
This approval would mean that the Reco rd
Chabad House at 3292 Main St. A
Co-op could stock approximately 500 albums which celebratio n o f traditional Jewish
- Fr'-nct would be immediately available on request.
dances and accordian music
In order to finan ce the additional expense of
Members of the Student
forlowed speeches and the official
display
materials
and
·a
cash
register,
SA
has
allotted
AsiOCiation NCord co-op
dedica
tion .
lUrvey the former barber $400 as a supplement to the S 150 that the l'O-o p has
earned
thro
ugh
the
five-cent
additi6n
to
cost
prke
shop in the baem•t of
The (' h:~ bad Ho use is designed
Norton whidt they hope on the 3000 albums alre3dy sold . The $400 would to enlighten the Jewish colle~e
be granted the co-op undc:r the stipulation that all
to .,~.,ly occupy.
student on the true meaning of
money no t spent on machinery must be returned .
of each week , solicit orders chosen. from a list of 25
To rah Judaism in the modern
Initial support for the project has been given hy world. Rabbi Gurary, Chabad
popular albums. Delivery is guaranteed by Friday of
that week. Records other than those on the list have James Gruber, director ,of Norton Unio n, who House director, explained that the
been delivered 75% of the time. The co-op's prices expressed his approval in a letter to the Student philosophy o f Chabad Chassidism
for records stand at $2.80 for those retaiJing at Association.
is that through intellectual study
S4 .98 and $3 .40 for tl\ose retailing at $5.98.
" The concept of providing several distinct and understanding o f reliJ!jous
service functions in a centralized area via the Barber truth the individual is able to
Joint purchase
In its effort to expand, the co-op is attempting Shop, would in my o pinion be of definite benefi t to come closer to God in mind· and
to persuade other coUeges in the area to establish our stUdents and also lbe consistent with the heart .
similar ventures so that they may jointly purchase operational philosophy of No rton Union," the letter
Chabad is formed from the
records directly from t.hc companies and reduce said .
first Initials of three Hebrew
prices still further. In addition, the co-op ho pes to be
"In terms of feasibility , I see no problem at this
words whk h mean knowledge,
open for business from 9 a.m.- 5 p.m .• five days a time in having a Student Service Center, us you
wisdom
and
unders tanding.
week and during the evenings twice a week. This will propose, operate from !this area," Mr. Gruber
Chabad
Chassldlsm
is
an
be possible only if a minimum of 30 committed concluded .
international movement devoted
to reawakening and igniting the
spark o f Jewish consciousness in
the hearts and minds o f Jewish
youth. Through Chabad Houses at
The Graduate Record Eurninatlon will be pven six timces durina the 1971 - 1972 UCLA and Minnesotu, the young
academic year. The lint tatina date for tile GREis Oct . 23, 1971 . Scores from this test Chassidlc r.tbbis ~re avaiJable for
discussions,
campus
wil be reported to the 1111dua te tchools eround Dec. I . Studetuts plannln a to rqlster for info rmal
weekend
~e October test da te m ust have their applications in to th e Educational Testina Service lectures, Sabbath
by Oct. S or pay a late realatration fee of Sl .SO. After Oct. 8, there Is no auann tee that
programs and son~ and dance
appUcatlona for th e October ta t date can be proceaed.
festivals.

'Hair' here

GRE exams scheduled

Th e other five test d atei are Dec. 11, 1971 , Jan. lS , Feb. '26, April 22 and June 17,
1972. Equivalent late fee aod deadlin es apply to·these data. Choice of tat data should
be determined by the requirement. of araduate sch ools or fellowships to wh ich one Is
ap plyina. Scores are uaually reported to the araduate schools five~ weeki after testlna.
Full d etails and reailtntion for1111 for the GR E are cont.aiined in the 197 I - 72 GR E
Information Bulletin. The booklet is available on m ost campuses or may be ordered from :
Educational Testina Service, Box 9SS, Princeton, N.J . 08540.

•

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thru Soot. IS, 11'71 .

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upcoming ye~r. One of the first
events planned will be a concert
of Chas'sidic music featuring Eli
Upsker, Sept. 15, in the Millard
FiUmo re Room at 8 p.m . Other
activities
include
a
kosher
sandwich machine to be available
to students at all times in the
Chabad House; a minyan will be
held every morning at 8 a.m. and
the Chabad House will also be
open for prayer and to put o n
tef'illin at all times. Rabbi Gurary
welcomed all interested to attend
Rosh Hashana services bemnning
the eve of Sept. 19 and Erev Yom
Kippur services Sept. 28.
In addition to his functions at
Chabad House, Rabbi Gurary will
be teachin~t courses at the
University. One such course
entitled the Sociological Study of
Chassidism is offered through the
Bulletin Board Program. There
will also be study sessions held
week nights at the Chabad House .
covering such areas as Jewish
Mysticism and the teachings of
the Torah .
The programs for the coming
year are designed, according to
Ra bbi Gurary, to be enlightening
and rewarding and he hopes to
leave the student richer for the

experience. Students are invited
by Rabbi Gurary to stop in at the
Upcoming program
Chabad
House
anytime
to
Rabbi Gurary o utlined the question, to discuss, to argue, to
Chabad Ho use progr~m for the sing, to dance and Jo learn .

............................................

COLLEGE A

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-t&lt;lm Santos

Chabad House dedtcated
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in candlelight ceremony

Stock of SOO albums?

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MONDAY, SEPT. 13

Diefendorf 148
4-5 p.m .
ALL STUDENTS MUST ATTEND

The Na"'\ldJ.oool
Stea : o UM
1375 Delaware

••

886-9281

••

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'

Monday, September 13, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page seven

�.

.Law SchoOl exhibits·
the facts of living

;

Editors note: The following iJ the
fint of a two-part serie1 by
Jerome Fink, associate director,
Office of Student Affairs, aimtd
at aiding those students p/Jlnning
to apply to luw school.

'lJZzaf?

_.iltic
'*•

Behind this intM)CMt abricw lurb the mind of •
demon, bent on
...,_.,"',.... hyst.te end confulion tfwouthout 1M Uniwnity.
Known to .., thOH ttt.t come into cont.ct whh her • SARA, this mon~W
unpdly .......,,.
in dOiint tNjof'J out of courMI which they n..t in orct.. to .,..._, doeint u.....-ctint fr...,._
out of ell their courMI end crulhint the ~ of ;.nkwl ...t ~Miort who Wt thet th#t wwe
immune from h• devious delip.
Oritfnelly introduced es • cu,..ell for the iMqUitiel of the l*t ....,.,.. IYSt*ft, this ..ectronic
cretin '-'"ed up with 1ft ..,.Jiy cretinous cohort, The Report8f to CMJM probtems unique to the
electronic • · Chief emont theM problems w. typogqphicel .,on in The Reporter (the only avai....,.
d . . listing) which catsed d . . . to canv diff•ent registration nurnben fron thole .....,.,.-nmed into
SARA. Meny • trustlnt Individual found himMif left without 1ft Important COUt'M becaase of tt.e.
boo-boos.
.
SARA r•ld• on the Ridge L• e~mpus in building 4250. Any complaints Clft be directed th. .
but don't expect eny ection to be t.ken-.verybody knows you ~·t t.lk to • computer.

s.-....

T o th ose contemplating a
career in law, it should be no ted
that the entire admissions process
has become more selective and
highly competitive. To put it
bluntly. - applying to law school
and getting admitted is almost,
but not quite, as difficult as the
situation which now exists in
American medical and dental
schools . As more s tudents
complete their bachelor's degree,
many view the law as a meana of
bringing about social change by
providing them with a great many
options in the public and private
sector.
The number of qualified
applicants, durin&amp; the 1970-71
academic year, has increased
pmetrically and unless students
pve both extraordinarily hlsh
averases coupled with law school
aptit~de test scores above 600,
the chanc es of their beins
accepted to one of· the more
prestigious national schools such
as Harvard, Yale, Boston, N.Y.U.,
Columbia, Pennsylva nla ,
Georgetown, George Wuhinston,
Chicago, Northwestern, Stanford

and Berkdey, are slim at best.
1ltis is nc;&gt;t to 'say that a person
should not apply if he feels that
he posse sses the n ecessary
qualifications; h owever, those
who approach law school with the
idea that because they have a very
high grade point, average, law
schools o f national status will be
delighted to accept them, are
living under a false illusion .
Rejected and dejected
We had many cases this past
academic year where students
who graduated with Phi Beta
Kappa honors tbought only o f the
schools located in Boston, New
York, Washington, Chicago and
the San Francisco Bay area, and
found themselves either o n
waiting lists or rejec:ted, because
so many students file applications
to these schools. ln essence, there
is a need to apply to a broad
spectrwn of schools, limilar to
what many of you did in h.igh
school when you were applying to
coUese. In brief, you are playing
the hiah school/ coUese guidance
pme four yean later - with a

vengeance.
The national law schools can
Uterally get all the Pbi Beta
Kappa's and high board sco re
students they want.
C onsequently, they not only
-&lt;ontlnued on Plltte 12-

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442 Niagara Falls Blvd. Just around the corner from the Allenhurst Apts.

5%Discount
for college
upon.presentation of I. D.
\

stud~~ts

OME IN- BROWSE AROUND and BLOW YOUR MIN

Only $149• 5 Including Speakers

$219• 5 IneludmM Spealcers

Including 1 Year Service Guarantee

�-suspension
Wilson Fellowship cancelled

J

~Temporary'

PRINCETON - This fall, for the first time in
more tban twenty years, there will be not Woodrow
Wllson Fellowship competition. Among college
professor~ , tills annual competition has become as
much a part of the fall term as football .
In announcina that the fellowship prosram
would be temporarily susponded, H. Ronald Rouse,
national director of the Woodrow Wilson National
Fellowship Foundation, said, "Funds cunently
- -available to the Foundation for first year graduate
fellowships are being used to support over 200
fellows during the 197 1-72 academic year. Prospects
for securing new funds are uncertain . During tbe
comin&amp; year. trustees and officen of the
Foundations in cooperation with representatives of
the academic world, will deaian a new fellowship
program taking into account recent developments in
graduate education and in the teaching profession,
and seck funds for this new program."
A total of 213 Woodrow Wilson Fellows will be
supported this year at 69 graduate s'thooJs.
Fellowships are bang held in reserve for 2S others
who have had to poatpone graduate study because of
military or alternative service.
Other foundation programs will be continued
durin&amp; 1 ~71-72 and 1972-73. These include the
Dissert1tion Fellowships, the Martin Luther Kina, Jr.
Fellowships and the Graduat, information and
Counsolin&amp; Service for Black Veterans, the Teaching
and Adminstrative Internships and the National
Humanities Series. To support its programs, the
Woodrow W"tlson National Fellowship Foundation
receives grants from other foundations and
contributions from individuals, includin&amp; over 2000
former Woodrow Wilson Fellows.
The Wilson Fellowships are only one of a
number of programs throu&amp;hout the country which
have suffered from the recent decline in fello,wship
support, Mr. Rouse said. The U.S. sovernment,
which in 1967 supported nearly 11 ,000 fellowships
for bqjnning araduate students, has reduced or
eliminated several proarams. It will provide only
about ISOO new fellowships for 1972-73. At the
same time many state go~ernmenta have similarly
reduced the amount of support they pJ'ovide, and 1
number of programs financed by corporations and

private foundations have b'een discontinued.
As a- result of rapid 11rowth of craduate schools,
more PhD's have been produced this year than can
be placed, Mr. (f.ouse added. The economic recession
and the recent wave of anti-academic sentiment
across the country hav'e combined to reduce
drastically the amount of rnoney availible for coUege
faculty salaries. As 1 result of these two factors the
demand for college teachers hu dropped just at the
time when the supply is in.::reas~ng.

Overreaction
While the country may have overreacted to the
college teacher shortaae 1:&gt;f a decade ago, there is
now the danger that it wUI similarly overreact to the
c urrent problems of' bi&amp;Jler education by
discouragin&amp; outstanding :~tudents from considering
academic careers.
Mr. Rouse continued: ''Today's under&amp;~aduates
who are conslderiog acad•~mic careers must look to
the job market of 1980. By that time the present
economic and political clin11te will be history."
However, youna people plannin&amp; for academic
careers should make flc~ x.ible plans, Dr. Rouse
advised. It is unlikely that they can expect to step
onto the fellowship CSic alator and be carried
smoothly up throuah the 'PhD and into an academic
post. Many may wish to secure certification {or
secondary school teacbin&amp; to provide an alternative,
either- temporary or pem1anent , to doctoral work .
The MA Is still the accepted preparation for teaching
in most junior and community colleges, and students
headed for graduate sehoul should consider careers
in this rapidly expandina nector. The new Doctor of
Arts degrees, now bcina offered at a number of
universities, provide anc•ther alternative to the
traditional PhD.
..The officers and trustees of the Woodrow
Wilson National Pelloowship Foundation are
convinced that there is n.ot, and never will be. an
oversupply of truly outstandin&amp; teachers, combining
dedication to scholarship with a sensitivity to people
and their needs. They are- determined to ftnd some
means of continuina to Identify, encourage and assist
young people with these qualities in preparing for
careers appropriate to t~aeir talents and society's
needs," Dr. Rouse concluded .

Research grants abroad
Sis araduate atudentl from the State Unl.enity of 8uff1alo have rcce.ived pants for
atudy abroad frcun the lutltute for International Education.
Amon1 the ab are Judith Red,er, LinJUiltiea; Jane Holcombe, Music: ; and Mrs.
Leona Sherman. Two other Jflduate atudcna have received french and Cerman
aovemment pants, rcapectlvely.
UE-adminiltercd pants include the U.S . Government FullbriJht-Haya awards as well
u monica offered by _foreian ,onrnmenta, univenities and prhatc clonon. The aranta arc
available for rcaearcb, study and for profesaional trainint in the creative and performln1
art•.
U.S. cjtl:&amp;cns who have received a BA or equivalent fron1 an American or Canadian
univenity ~fore September 1972 , and who are proficient In an appropriate forelan
laapa,e arc dl&amp;ible to apply.
Detailed information and applications for the 1972- 7:1 academic year arants are
nallable in the Office of the Director, Onraeu Academic Pronrama, 107 Townsend Hall.
Applications muat be aubmitted to the above office no later tb11n Oct. '• 1971 .

registration hang- ups
The 26th Amendment to the
Constitution enfranchised about
fow million students between the
ages of 18 and 21. As a result,
there has been much recent •
controversy about where these
students should vote - in the
college town or from their
parent's home. A re~nt GaUup
poll showed that sixty-seven per
cent of those surveyed thought a
student should vote from his
parent's home.
Many residents of college
towns fear a student take-over in
the Berkeley manner. Local
o fficials uften cite the 3- 2
Democratic enrollment rate of 18
to 2 I year olds. Others cl11im that
new voting machines cost too
much .
Nevertheless, J 2 states have so
far ruled that students may
register in the college town . Court
tests are in the works in at least
14 other states, including New
York.

.

By forcing a student to register
at his parent's home, the local
board of elections may well be
effectively denying the student 's
right to vote. Some states,
including New York , do not allow
absentee voting in a primary
election. Mississippi makes no
provision for :.bsentee voting at
all . Absentee voting involves a
cumbenomc procedure and some
people feel an absentee ballot is
next to worthless in areas where
there are strong polit ica l
machin'es.
Although many students are
a pa I he lie o r take a no.vote
position, there may be an election
where the person wishes to vote
for a specific candidate. Then,
registration becomes
all·important. At the very least,

students should be concerned that
t~ is another area where ..the
system" is not dealing a fair hand
to them. '
ff.you want to register to yote
in the Btitfalo area, you ll}ust
meet these crtteria: I . a U.S.
citizen, 2. J8 years of age 9 r ove1-.
3. a resident of ErkCounty for It
least three months prior to.
November ,2, 1971. The
controversy centers on what
constitutes residence for vo~g
purposes, and this is an
. area of the\
law that is not settlea in New
York~

. • \ ·~~

Your last chance to register in
Erie County is Sept. 30, Oct. 1
and 2. Registration is at your
election district , not downtown.
You can call the Board of
Elections - &amp;46- 7760 - to find
o ut where ro go.

rr you attempted to register in
the past and were denied , or if
you attempt to register during the
up-coming three day period and
feel you were unfairly denied,
please caJI the ACLU immediated
at 883 -09~6. No matter what the
reason for your denial, please call.
AJJ students who wish to register
here, from their own address,
should attempt to do so .

679 NIAGARA FALLS BLVD .- CORNER LONGMEADOW
(lrot~nd thl t~orner from Allenhurst Apts.)

FRE~E

Delivery

' ..

1 '•'-.

In order to be ab1e to vote m •. 1 •
the 1972 presidential primary,
you must be enrolled to vote in
the November election. You must
also be enrolled in the party in
whose primary you . plan to vote.
A change in party enroUment
after Dec. 31 will not allow you
to vote in your new party's 1972
primary . There is no absentee
balloting in a primary. 1f you will
tum J8 before the presidential
primary, you may vote in the
primary a s well as In the
presidential election .

NeW Aven1.1e Pizza &amp; Subs
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SUB SELECTION :

Roast Beef, Corned Beef,
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The ''SlUPER-SUB''

'*''''''***•a••a•••••••***'******'*'**•****''''*•aa••:

Monday, September 13, 1971 . The&lt;Speotrem . Page~nine

�I

EdiTORiAl

Bookstore ·problems
Throughout the summer, the University Bookstore, as
well as the entire Faculty-Student Association and its
various entit'rprises has been a focal point of controversy.
Many of the problems, particularly our demand for ~e
re-institution of a 10% student discount, were not new. 'nus,
however, should underscore, not undermil:l~ their
importance.
The second major difficulty that arose was the
Bookstore's new non-browsing purchas(ng system. We
strof9y urged that this supposedly mO(e efficient system be
either scrapped altogether or discontinued after the first two
weeks of the semester. It now appeers that the Bookstore has
partially accepted this advice by announcing that after the
heavy textbook purchasing period is over, a browsing section
containing one copy of every book will be opeh to students.
•
Unfortunately, this would-be solution seems wrought
with more than a little chicanery. All summer the
Bookstore's managers went to great lengths to explain that
the new system was for efficiency purposes and had nothil')g
to do with security. The efficiency daim was ludicrous then;
it is absurd now. 8uying a book is neither quicker nor easier.
If anything, it is more cumbersome and less reliable. Students
submitting long lists have experienced long delays. The only
change we can see is that the tim•wasting delays have been
switched from the cashier lines to an earlier stage in the
process. This, we feet, does not merit continuation ' of the
system.

If security is the true motive behind this, we would
appreciate the Bookstore's honesty. Their lack of candor to
date might possibly be due to tt)e embarassing fact that their
expensive surveillance system has proved to be a costly
failure. In any event, we do not find their proposed
semi-browsing adequate and unless further modifications are
made, we will be forced to take measures far more drastic
than verbal criticism.
On September 30th several FSA study groups are due to
issue reports on its enterprises. We have demanded answers to
several questions. Among these are wtw the Bookstore,
which possesses such unnatural business advantages as not
having to pay rent or utilities, as well as having a guaranteed
number of sales in a short period of time, cannot undersell its
off-campus competition. Further, why can't they translate
their economic edges into a 10% student discount?
If these issues are ignored or unsatisfactorily resolved, we
will have no alternative but to urge an immediate boycott of
all non-textbook items. In addition we would work to
establish a full boycott for the Spring semester. Such an
endeavor requires the full cooperation of all students and
faculty. but we are confident that it would be forthcoming.
After all, it is time to realize that the Bookstore will not
change its way$ unless forced to do so. Therefore we must
force it.

THE SpECTI\UM
Monday, September 13, 1971

Vol. 22. No. 9

Editor-in-chief - Dennis Arnold
~..

Edit« - AI Benson
Editor - Mike Lippmann
Ast . ......... Edhof - Susan Moss
Jim Druck..Actv.nili,. MM..- - Sue MeUentlne

~. .

au.l..-....., -

c.m,.. ......... Jo-Ann Armao
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bill Vae~~~ro
Alit. ............Howie Kurtz
City •..•....... . ...... Vacant
Copy ........... Ronni Forman
....••........... Marty Gatti
~ ••....... . ...... Vecent
Fe.tww ...... , . . . . . . Jan Doane
~Ana ..... .... Tom Toles
Lit. a ar- .. Michael Sihlet'blatt

LIYout ....... Maryhope Runyon
Aslt • . ................vacant

MUiic: .............Billy Altman
Off.C.mpus ...... Lynne Traeger
Alst•................ Vacant
Photo .•..••• .. ..•David G. Smith
Alst . ............ Gary Friend
Asst .. ..... Mickey Ost..-reich..Sports ............. BarTy Rubin
Ast . ............ Howie Faiwl

The ~ is servied by United Prt!SS lnt..-n&amp;Jional, ~ollege Press
S.Vice. the Loc Angeles Free Press, the Los Angeles Time Syndicate, and
Libefaion News Sefvice.
R~ion

of matter hef'ein without the express consent of the
·

.Editor..tft.Chief is fol'bidden .

'I •n voting for the incumbent - I anlre his resoun:efull*l. cou,..., stn~tfofwwdne~~. lnt..,"ity,
~:ity and Mlministrative •ility In fitc~tlnwttenl'

To the editor:
In The Greening of Ametica, ruMing dog Reich extolls the virtues
of democracy, equity, humanitarianism ad nauseam of Con·3 in an
effort to cast doubt upon Marx's assertion that the proletariat would be
the revolutionary vanguard. SUnr put this dribble in penpective by

uldng;
''Is 'do your own thing' the slopn of hip middle class white men
who continue to do their own thing, as their strajght counterparts have
always done, by dominating and exploiting women, the Third World
and working people? Will today's en~rgy of discontent merely be
channeled into the making of a groovy drug/rock sanctuary for the
disenchanted inheritors of capitalism's overabi.andance?"
Many castigated him as another ••dogmatic, dull, irrelevant Old
Leftist."
As has traditionally been the case, history revealed the ~uracy of
the MarxJst analysis. Recent history at U.B. is a case in point. In
response to recent " law &amp;. order" scare tactics, Con-3 responded with
the old "millions for repression but not a penny for rehabilitation
and/or revolqtion" adage of Coo-l&amp;. 2.1n the August 13, 1971 issue of
The Spectrum, the reactionary bue of Con-3 was reaffirmed in the
article on the FSA budget. The student government position
concerning the wages of the fSA worken on tlUs campus juxtaposed
with the rhetoric on worker-student ~liances, racism, sexism,
repression, exploitation etc. brinp to mind Mao's observatoon on
theory&amp;. practice;
.
" If we have a correct theory but merely prate about it, pigeonhole
it and do not put it into practice, then that theory, however good, is of
no significance."
Perhaps the recollection of Con-3•s condemnation of Fuehrer Nixon's
spending billions to collect moon rocks while our student government
spends thousands &amp; thousands on ski playgrounds, will bring the point
home.
Not being a student of the 4th Reich, I can only consider one
consciousness-class consciousness. It is about Ume that the students on
this campus took stock of their proletarianized position and
determined theil allies and enemies (n.b. Mao Tse Tung - Selected
Works Vol. I, Chapter 1). In concrete terms let me propose the
foUowing;
I. Fully support all working class demands presently being made
on this campus.
/
2. If you have a sincere desire to control your own destiny, then
take control of the institutions which affect you, i.e. have the courage
to enter into the kind of struggle required to
a. Take fuU control of Norton Union
b. Take full control of all worthwhile FSA enterprises ·and bury the
rest.
If you lack this courage, then let FSA coffers swell at your own
expense not that of the workers. The over-publicized theft is largely the
familiar, pitiful response of the oppressed to the "lawful" but needless
to say illegitimate large scale thievery of the power structu~. Certainly
the S37000 cited by Mr. Bozek as being beyond the "safe margin of
profet" could be well spent by struggling student projects on this
campus, eg. the daycare center, and drug programs, to name but a few .
Poverty HiU is another case in point. Many sincere well-meaning
students and faculty on this campus were bewildered by the kind of
sociopathology which contributed to the incidents which marred their
little silvan haven. They forget Buddha's admonition that no person can
enter Nirvana unless all make it, as weU as Marxist teaching concerning
socialism in one country .
Hence students and faculty must stop wasting their energies on the
creation and maintenance of ivory towers, silYan havens, and
pseudo-communal wombs and begin making a revolution . Lest my
readers be scared off by this big word, let me close with Saul Alinsky's
observation;
"History is a series of revolutions, referred to as evolution by
non-participants."

Editon.l policy is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

·Marvin J. Berlowitz
I

Page ten . The Spectrum . Monday, September liS, 1971
I

�...
Buffalo /We lauded
'

To the Editor:
The American war machine is today· the chief
threat to the life and liberty of the American people.
Anyone who lmpedea the operation of that
machine is a benefactor of this count~)' and all
hUlJWlitY,
The brave men and women who attempted to
destroy the Selective, Service records of the local
dnft board and to reveal the eon tents of the files of
the local office of Army Intelligence should receive a
Congressional Medal of Honor.

'Elwin H. Pow,ell
Aswciote Professor

Clean the air
To the Editor:
The County of Erie wUI spend ln 197 t,
$322,000 on air pollution services. This represents a
mere .15% of the $218,000,000 County Budget
approved for 1971. This figure seems small in lieu of
the fact we are aU suffering weatly in one way or
another from respiratory ailments.
It is c.tearly evident that we are not making
much headway in clearing our alr. Last month the
countY suffered a severe air poUution situation. Dark
douds of soot huns over the area most of the day
even though the major steel plants were shut down
all week. I wonder If aU the sneezing, coughing
citizens of the county will blow out the candles on
the county's birthday cake when they discover that
we are spending $150,000 to finance the Erie
County Susqulcentenial celebration. Let's put first
thinp first.

Din Free

Student

V&amp; Bookstore

To the Editor:
I dJdn't think it poss.ible, but the bookstore has
done it again- namely,increased their inefficiepcy. I
am referring to their new book-buying policy of no
browsing. We, the students, are told that this will
have two beneficial effects. One, the lines will be
shorter and two, theft wUl be cut down thereby
lowering book prices.
However, It took me approximately one hour to
purchase three books. Three books, incidentaUy,
whose prices were Increased from last year. In
addition, I was unable to obtain the rest of my
books due to the fact that the bookstore took it
upon themselves to decrease instructors' orders. It
appears that the bookstore, in its infinite wisdom,
knew how many people are enrolled in each class.
An accompanying headache resulting from the
new system is no browsing. Th.us students no more
have the pleasure (the right) to survey their books
prior to purchase.
One wonders about the supposed inteUigence of
those charged with the running of such an operation .
So far, they have managed to raise prices, curtail
their service, alienate students and lose money. It
would appear that they don't know anything about
running a business, much less serving students (which
is th.eir suppossed top priority).
Too long students have allowed themselves to be
taken advantage of. And too many times students
have t)een mistreated and maligned . The time has
come when students must assert their right and their
power.
How this should be done is troublesome. We are
told by our student governments that a boycott is
unrealistic and unworkable. Yet they too fail us in
offering alternatives.
Student vs. Bookstore is important, for if we fail
here to make our wants realized, yet more injustices
will be dropped o~ur heads. As an example even
now we are threatened with closed libraries and
overcrowded facilities. The reason always given is
money and the element always forgotten is the
student.

Shirley Tomato

Guest · Opinion
Editor's Note: Tlte foUowing II 11 pelt column mbmltted by Dr.
MtlTIIin Runlkoff of The Dept~rtment of Phy1ic1 tlnd .•tltronomy. The
Spectrum will be more thtln fltld tp recei11e guut columfll 01111ny tnpic
or i11ue by any member of the Uni11enity community.
BACKPACKING WITH BEANS AND RJC£

by Marrin R.eaUk.off
O.K., you backpack buffs, the article you've been waiting for, the
article that will give new meanin&amp; and direction to your life, new vistas
and horizons to your shadowless sou , transcandental experiences and
IOod karma to your Western oriented positivist mind, yes, all this, and
some beans and rice in your pt,
·
You say you don't believe it, you say it can't be done. You may
be ript. All I really want to do here is relate some helpful hints which
I've lea.med in the mountains of Colorado, mostly above 10,000 feet,
which do not appear in any backpacking books I've· read. (For
belionen, let me recommend two paperbacks by Ruth Mendenhall,
"Baclr.paclc Techniquest• and "Backpack Cookery", La Siesta Press,
Glendale, California, S I ea.ch.
.
In backpacldng, you have to compromise between pacJtins Habt
(because it's no fun to carry a heavy Load) and eating tasty food
(becaUJe who wantt to eat C rations). Most boob will sugest
dehydrated foods, easily obtainable at your local hilting store.
Dehydrated scrambled cap - just add water and heat. Can you di&amp; it?
Dehydrated beef suopnoff and noodles. lust load up your pack with
the latest in American technology and set close to nature. Well, that's
one way to do it - the second way follows.
One cautionary note - if you're coolcing at higher altitudes,
you've cot to be a little resourceful; it is a weU-tnown fact"among
diliaent students of the sciences, one of the few useful facts you'll
lea.rn, that water boils at a lower temperature at hi&amp;her altitudes (Why?
Exam I). At 8,000 feet, brown rice, uncovered, takes a good hour and
a half to cook, and soybeans ... well, you could boil them all night.
Now this situation is clearly a downer because you really went out
there to 10 hiking, not cooking. The answer is a pot with a ti&amp;ht fitting
lid. One very practical purchase is a set of stacking aluminum pots,
that also nest compactly. I have the Sig Tourist set (and a Svea stove,
in case of rain); if you put some food or weiaht in the upper pot, the
seal is so tight in the lower pot that the cooking time is actually
halved.
Dinner: You've hiked all day. The sun is setting, it's getting cold,
you're tired and hungry. What to do? Stop, you schlamiel, and build a
fire. Then before doina anything else, I drop, into salted water, a
handful of Azulci beans (I part beans to 4 parts rice) for protein, and
when the water boils, drop in the rice. While Azuki beans don't have as
much protein as soybeans, their cookin&amp; time is only sli&amp;)lUy longer
than rice, and that makes them at least edible. Make enouab rice for
dessert , also, if you're into the dessort that foUows. Then, in the next
pan up, f make a dehydrated soup. The cheapest is Wyler's, but since
it's the main course, spend big and get Knorr. Magi menstrone is far
out with sliced zucchini, pepper and carrot. In fact, it's so good, you
could forget this backpacking jazz and just do it up at home. I would
cook this up the fint night - aside from the weight, the zucchini gets a
little wretched after a few days in your pack. Since the soup mix
makes four portions, when I'm alone I usually save half for the next
ni&amp;ht by packing it away in a wide mouth plastic container (second
purchase).
lnstea.d of the dehydrated soup mixes, you mjght try mezo, a
soybean paste (but don't boil it, or you'U kill the good enzymes). What
I like is lentil soup - lentils, sliced omon, beef bouillion - then boil
the shit out of it. Buy your lentils from Bob and his friendly cohorts at
the Food Coop, ready and willing to serve you, the J)eople. Then,
finally, I usually p\Jt a thii"d pan, the frying pan, on top, and heat
water for instant coffee or tea. Put this tOWf?r of pots on your fire and
take a walk, fix up y(lur blisters, or get the camp ready for night. I've
often been asked whether it is permissible to make love while
backpaclting. The answer is, yes, it is permissible, and this is a good
time to do it. One word of caution - take off your pack first.
Back to cookins. You can throw the rice into the soup, or eat it
separately with Tamari soy sauce and sesame seeds. Don't carry that
Tamari in a aJass botUe, however - third purchase sugestion : a small
plastic bottle with tight fittfng lid , available in a hiking store (much
better than the Gerry squeeze tubes which leak out the wrong end).
For dessert , I eat dried fruit (apricots, nectarines, raisins, apple rings),
or mix the fruit with the remainder of the rice and some powdered
milk and honey (the honey goes in a second plastic jar). Tastes great.
Save some for breakfast. Or drink liquid jello - it tastes like Kool-Aid,
and the geJatin is good for you. Or, m and m's («melt in your mouth",
and not in your pack). Oh yes, remember that coffee (and powdered
milk), stiiJ heating on the fire .
Bre~~lcfast : There's always last night's dessert . But personally, I like
good stick-to-your-ribs, and everything else, oatmeal. If your
childhood experiences have turned you from oatmeal, return I say.
Before you even leave on your backpacking trip, mix tosether in a
plastic bag (1 carry everything in re-usable plastic bags} instant oatmeal
(one minute - in the mountains, it's ten), cinnamon, nutmeg, and
raisins (cashews, too, if you like). Drop it all in boilin , slightly salted
water (don't drop the plastic bag in as it's non-biodegradable), and
when it's done, add powdered milk to taste, or to solidify the porridge.
Remember to take enough powdered milk for oatmeal, fruit-rice, and
coffee.
Lunch : Is fun - no cooking. Before the trip, into a plastic bag,
mix together peanuts, or cashews, raisins and m and m's. Munch all
day. Or take a bag of Crunchy Granola.
These simple suggestions are just a start. Now put down this
newspaper, order your rice and beans from the Food Coop, and get
out to where there's peace and calm, and time to put your life in
perspective. There's a whole lot more learning :~ od truth in the
wilderness than you'll find in the classroom .

Monday, September

1~,

1971. The Spectrum . Page eleven

�Law SchoOl ..
consider these things bo&amp;. they
look for other indices which make
a cand id ate stand out.
Furthermore, one s hould
recognize that applying to law
school can prove to be a very
costly procedure, since all schools
charge between $ 10 to $25 for
application fees.

•-continued from page

Admittedly, for people ()Oming
from an urban area, life in Chapel
Hill might prove to be a little
different in some respects than
the life styles of Rochester or
New York City .
,
Recommendations
2. All law schools require
recommendations. To ask your
professors to write a half-dozen or
more references would indeed be
a great imposition Of! them .
Therefo re, set up a file at the
University Placement and Career
Guidance office in Hayes Annex C
as soon as possible. When you
apply to the various law schools,
tell them in your letter of
application that because of the
largeness of the State University
of New York at Buffalo and the
difficulty that one encounte~s in
obtaining references yo u have ~t
up a central file ;.,ith University
Placement and Career Guidance
Service. This file should be
c omposed of references from
people who can judge you
a ca demi c ally as to your
intellectual abilities. In some cases
where you have worked for an
employer for a long period of
time, or have done things of an
unusual civic or public nature,
letters of this type sho uld go into
this file. limit the letters in your
file to four at the most, and don't
"gild the lily." Letters from
relatives, ex-scout masters ;~nd
clergymen are not going to be
received ti&gt;o favo rably.

ftay it safe
The following procedures are
suggested as a means of trying to
get a handle on the whole
question of applying and ·being
admitted to law school :
I . Sit down and write to the
various law schools which you are
interested in attending. Include
some of those which you know
are highly competitive, but be
realistic enough to apply to some
other schools - and there are
quite a few - where the chances
of you being accepted are more
likely. Too often many of o ur
students feel that unless they can
be in Boston,' New York , o r
Washington, there is no sense in
going to law school. It should be
noted that legal knowledge and
brilliant teaching is not prescribed
to those three areas.
Students who have thought
through the problem carefully will
often find that schools located in
other parts of the country are
very receptive to them, since they
wish to boild a nati o nal
reputation for their law schools.
This is particularly true of schools
in the south and middle west,
such as North Carolina, Emory,
Vanderbilt , Washington in St. Reference letters
Louis. Case Western and Tulane.
Many of the schools to which

ayou will be applying will ask that
a letter of reference be written by
either the Pre· Legal Advisor of the
univenrl ty or the dean of the
college1. In that case, bring the
form tto, Room C-1 , 4230 Ridge
Lea Campus, or Hayes Annex C ,
Room 3 and fill out in detail, the
questionnaire which will be given
to you and make an appointment
to see 1the writer.
Thin questionnaire and the
interviow will try to communicate
in a letter to the law schools those
variabl~es which are not reflected
in grade point averages or law
school aptitude test scores. It is to
your atdvantage that the filing of
law school applications and the
sendip@t o f the references .from
Univers:ity Placemen t to the law
schools to which you are applying
be donj: as early in the school year
as possible . It is your
responsibility to go to Hayes C to
the University Placement and
Career Guidance office and ask
them l•[) send your references to
those ~chools at which you are a
canditda te for a dmissio n .
Remen~ber, do not put the
Universiity Placement and Career
G uidanc;e service in a bind by
waiting until the last minute to
ha ve :y our re fe rences sent .
Furthermore, be sure that the
people you ask to write your
r e fereu1 ces are res ponsible
individuals who wiJI be sure to
write n:commendations that are
stro ng, 11nd will be certain to send
them to University Placement
promptl y.
3. Tlhe sooner one takes the
Law Sch ool Aptitude Test, the

•

•~
c

Class of '76?

The State Univ. .ity Law sehooi
c:m the new Amherst campus

heads toward completion.
Test Date
sooner one is able to obtain an
Oct . 16, 1971
idea of where he would stand the
Dec. 18. 1971
best chance of being accepted .
Feb. 12, 1972
Differences of opinion exist as to
whether or not one should study
April 8 , 1972
July 29, 1972
for the LSAT. On balance, it
Closing [)qte
probably is not a bad idea, since it
Sept. 24, 1971
enables you to be somewhat
Npv. 26, 1971
..testwise." There are a series of
books out, Barron's, Cowles',
Jan.21, 1972
March 17 , 1972
which f)ve examples of previous
July 7, 1972
law school tests as well as a listing
of law schools. The test dates and
closing dates for registration for Next : Mo re infonnation on
the 1971 -72 year are n follows: registering for law school.

your University Bookstore

1\ WO·R THY SYMBOL OF
THE S'T4Tt: LTNIVERSITY OF NEft. \ 1 0RK .- \T Bl'FFALO

•

GU-ARANTEED QUALITY
• SUPERBLY DETAILED
DISriNCTIVEL Y HANDSOME

Let Bob Schmidt,
our campus "Fep ",
help with your selection:
Mon. Sept. 13 - outside Bookstore

A choice of twelve synthetic-gem birthstones. Your
degree in boldly distinctive letters. The traditional
UB emblem on both sides of the ring. Any
graduation date from 1971-1975 available.

(Main Floor) 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Tues. Sept. 14 - outside Textbook
(Ground Floor) 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

'I 0.00 •IIIOSir RIOII•III
4-Week Delivery.

I

o••,....... ;•••••,.
S.rvi., ,.. tiNr4 t••r•fiN el Amerkfl's li•st s.rNefffs
USE

MASTER

CHARGE,

EMPIRE

CtfARGE,

your University
Bookstore
''on campus''
O.S.A . COUPONS OR EVEN CASH!

f

�Leon Russell: ·an.
energetic concert
by Billy Altman

reason, King a.td Chuck Berry and
a lot of other really great
performers don't have road bands,
They just show up with makeshift
backup musicians and, luckily,
they manage to make things work .
The band di:&gt;es a little warm up
instrumental , just to loosen things
up. Finally, one of them asks us
to welcome Freddie King.
King is a huge man, a kind of
friendly giant. He ste ps out on the
stage with his Gibson and calmly
plugs it in. He waits as the band
comes arou nd to a new Hne and
then, bang! Freddie's first run
lights up everything. It's loud and
clear and knocks everyone over.
Freddie gives such power and
energy to his music that it's hard
to keep still.
He's a real progessional and he
makes it all look so easy. He
sweats and grins and opens his
eyes wide and laughs and loves.
He does a few of his old hits, like
" Have You Ever Loved a Woman"
and "Hideaway." He does some
stuff from his lat.e st record for
Russell's Shelter Label.
When King plays, you see just
how influential his style bas been .
His rhythm riffs form the
background
of many
rock
progressions. His leads account for
much of early Clapton and Green.
Freddie plays with finger picks,
and It gives his guitar a whiny,
moaning sound . His singing is
perfect and sweet . When he finaUy
puts down the guitar "'lnd leaves,
the audience is almost drained of
energy.

MuJic Editor

•
Exciting musical events. come
few and far between, especially In
a Buffalo summer. The keepers of
the keys who manage to stumble
through three months of the
glorified ecstasy of boredom very
seldom are called o n to rouse
themselves. Time is passed with
happy, serene walks' through tlle
deserte&lt;l. corridors of Norton
Union. lhe fountain area is ruled
by two doss and one grounded
frisbee . The clock in Hayes rings
with an unspoken voice of
understanding. Everything moves
along, but nothing really moves,
So, one day, Leon Russell and
Freddie King decide to make a
stop at the Peace Bridge Center.
The word ,gets out about it, and
faces begin to show signs of life.
One big question is " Where's the
Peace Bridae Center a,nyway?" '
Most people expect to see it next
to the toll gates with lots of
arrows pointing towards it, saying
" Here I am!" But it's actually a
Uttle ways over, at the foot of
Porter Avenue.
On the inside, it looks like the
circus just played (it did). Rows
of little plastic pennants dangle
from the rafters. The refreshment
stands feature purple cotton
candy and even a beer and wine
bar for the more adva~ced . The
folding chairs cover about half of
the place; the other half is
precariously empty, waiting for
roller skaters and the ever popular
lady's choice. The air conditioning
isn't working, and it's migh ty hot. it's really him!
After a short intermission and
some gasps for air (now it's really
A real KinJ
Freddie King's band takes the hot in the Center) the lights dim .
stage after awhile. They're young, The spotlight falls on a grand
but basically adequate. For some piano. From beh ind the curtain

-··

.
moves a lean figure dressed in
black . Gi rls start screaming,
jumping up and down . It's really
him ! He's up there. I'm seeing him
now,live.
Yes, Leon Russell is a roc.:k and
roll star, and don't you forget it!
While everyone is screaming and
applauding, Leon starts playing
" Wild
Horses" all by
his
lonesome. The crowd quiets
down, and Leon scratches out the
vocal with that crazy voice of his.
Mick and Keith would be proud .
Then he does Dylan's "Hard
Rain" and that's beautiful too.
Then the Shelter People come
out. God, what a band . Chuck
Blackwell o n drums, Carl Radle
on bass, Joey Cooper and Don
Preston on guitars, a young

WHY
IS THE DEPARTMENT OF FRENCH
MORE THAN
A FRENCH DEPARTMENT ?

..

l\QUTi~ui!/'

II•CI IIIV
''IILt.D ,.,
IPIII .IIT II II.~
Uf

B'lliRILIY 1M

XEROXES
FORB¢
.JUST THRILLING

French 105- 106, 2 years in 2 semesters

INTENSIVE

Freshman Seminar of Women
in French Lit.

WOMEN
TOTAL IMM ERSIO~

Project : French 107 -10~. 1 year
in two weeks, 2 years in four weeks.

ABROAD

Study in Grenoble, 1-'rance, tor the
semester or the year, same cost as in
Buffalo.
Courses on Francophone Africa.

AFRICAN STUDIES

355Norton

su•sc••••

OPENING

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S1UDIII1'

•an-ts

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S.nd coupon with your poyment to: DIPT. C:

THE YIUAOI VOICI
10 UNIVEHIJY PLACI
NEW YOlK CITY 1~

special fOr students
REPRINT FREE

What are some American
companies and associations doing about our
environment? A special
advertising section in this
month's Reader's Di&amp;est
gives many of the an·
swers. Get a free reprint,
by writing
P.O. Box 5905
Grand Central Station

OVER

SEE YOU WEDNESDAY, at 12 NOON!
51 U'niversity Plaza (next to Amherst Theater)

stage, dancing and shaking a~d
wailing: Cooper and Preston are to
the left of the stage, just like the
Shindog days. In the back, Radle
and Blackwell sound like a sonic
launching, keeping that rhythm
rolling.
And , of oourse, Leon directing
it aU from behind the piano.
Whole medleys of tunes, long,
gospel-like raps to the audience
about the street and the women.
That distinctive piano, going up
and down and generally all over at
once. ''Prince of Peace , Strana.er
in a Strange Land , Delta Lady,
Give Peace a Chance," every one
of them is there somewhere. What
can I say'? Leon is definitely there,
and he knows it, and when you
see and hear him, ypu know it.
When he gets up to play a tittle
guitar, the girls go wild. He
doesn 't have to play one note.
They'll yell just because he got
up.
It ends after an hour and a
half, and things are just beautiful.
You
wander home, singing
"Gonna walk, gonna talk, gonna
scream and shout/ Gonna tell the
whole world what I'm thinkin'
about. " And maybe you can set
yourself up for something else in a
month or two.

TOTHI
VILLAGI
VOICI

ITS NOT TOO LATE TO ADD LIFE TO YOUR SEMESTER!
COME TO 214 CROSBY HALL OR CALL 831-5457

Grand Openi~ Sale
This Wednesday
THE
RECORD RUNNER
I
INV.ENTO~Y
so,ooo
I
837-2322

It's impossible to focus on any
one member of the band for more
tha n a few seconds. There's jus t
too much going on. Cla udia
commands the middle of the

Literature and Film of the Prison.

PRISON

P.S, wl'fl M'IUO
YG\IJID iTifl

EnetJY all around

French 469

WAR

.H._

looking organist whom ·I've never
seen before and Claudia l,innear
on backup vocals.
Every song just builds and
builds, and the energy level rises
and rises. There are few stops. The
songs just flow' from and into each
other. Claudia does "As the Years
Go Passing By," Preston does
"Sweet Little Angel." Preston's
guitar work is really the surprise
of the evening. There are traces of
every style in his playing, and he
gets a really twangy sound out of
his Thunderbird, a pretty rare
guitu.

Gustav

Freshman Seminar: IMAGES OF WAR

FILM

leon Ruaell brintint rock ....t roll to the V.C.
Bridfe Center last August. It was like • bit rewtv.a
meeting for the spirit of r 8t r.

Prince of Peace

837-2322

N•Yotk, N.Y.10017
Monday,·September

1~ ; lf)7J. . Th.e ·Spectrum .. Page thirteen

�THERE IS ONLY ONE NON-~ROFIT RECORD STORE IN BUFFAW

The
Student
Association
I

\

-Record · CO-op
·B EST
SELLING
ALBUMS
NOW
IN

STOCK

KRIS KRISTOFFERSON
Sl.80

.
DESK LOCATED IN NORTON LOBBY
IN FRONT OF BOOKSTORE ~
BLANK CASSElTES NOW AVAILABLE
KEEP WATCHING- IMPORTANT CHANGES ON THE WAY ! !!!!

NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE
Sl.80
TEN YEARS AFTER
$3 .40
BEST OF FF.STIVALS
- 3 RECORD SET$5.60

ALMOST ANY ALBUM CAN
BE ORDERED
0
HOURS
MON.-WED .. . .... . . 10- 3
FRIDAY ...... 10:30- 3 :30

.
$4.98 LIST ....... . .. $2.80
$5.98 LIST .......... $3.40

I

I

''We Have R~cords Cheap'' .
Page fourteen . The Spectrum. Monday, September 13, 1971

�\

I

A sutn1mer

Swatnp•fox
production:

'The Homecoming'
Contemporary Is·sues
.

Q..~ Dramatic Art

~~ Literary Art
CoffeehO\JlSe

~
If you have ever attended a film, ·c oncert,
lecture, art exhibit, coffeehouse, etc., you have
some idea of what we do.
We're in room 261 Norton.
Come sign up for the committee
of your c;hoice this week. Union
Board: 831-5112.

~

A OIIIUtott of Sub·BOIII'd I, ltte.

The Department of Classics announces a new course of
general interst: Cl¥5ics 371 , THE GR~EK THE~TER FOR
MODERN READERS (A course in Enghsh TranslatiOn), tau~t
by Eric A. Havelock, Visiting Raymond Professor of ClaSSICS
and Professor Emeritus, Yale University .

Tile drama oj the Greeks c:a11 be fully understood only in
the context of those conditions surrounding its
production. What was the physical setting in which these
plays were performed? For what type of audience were
they designed ? How was the production financep.? What
were the · patriotic and religious ceremonies which
accompanied perfo rmance? The course will begin with a
physical description of lhe Greek Th eater (illustrated by
slides), of the role of music and choreography, the style of
acting and the function of the chorus. Sixteen
representative play~ in English translation will be studied
intensively. Some comparisons and contrasts will be drawn
with Shakespearian drama, the better to elucidate those
characteristics of Greek drama which are specifically
classical rather than modern.

Dance

~

:Films
Art

~~

~

Other Classics courses of general interest :
103
210
213
287
313
389
453

Greek Uterature in Translation -~ (Eng301)
Women and Slaves in Classical Antiquity -Sullivan
Rome: Origins to 44 B.C. - Sherk (History 207)
ln~oduction to Classical Archaeology :
Greece - Smithson (Art History l87)
Classical Mythology - Peradotto (Eng. 337, Art H 313)
Ancient Painting : Greece -Smithson (Art Hist. 389)
Poetry, Rhetoric, and Intellectual
Tradition: Erotic Poetry -Cumn and
Hammond (Eq. 495)

For information consult the DePartment of Classics, 390 Hayes
Hall, 831-2816, or the instruct~r of the course.

Monday, September 13, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteela
·'

~

' • v•7 .,,

•

~

•

•. ,

�/

Letting· it· all ou-

.

Keith Emerson (r~t) and c.t Palm• (left). two-thirds of Emerson,
Lake and Palm•. Emerson is herd at work t.,ing his Hammond apwt,
while Palm• shuts his ev• and lets it all out in his own way. E, land
P also appeered at the Peace Br~ Center in Au.,st.

NEXT TO THE GRANACN\ THEATER
CANDLES POSTERS MOBILES INCENSE CARDS ETC ETC ! !
MON THRU SAT
lQ:QQ TO 5:30
· .. THJIS TILL 9=00

drsigoolf:f"
c~*d ~ oor - - - t

ctattsmm

I'
ilSJewEL~

' MCAT-DAT-GRE
.LSAT- ATGSB
NAT'L. BDS.
•
•
•
•
•

•

Slacb aalore in 2 new stores,
now open at Elmwood and
BidweD near State Teachers, and
Main $treet opposite U.B.
Groory flare~ to tum you on... in
plaicla, stripes, checb, and solids.
Wester pockets, reaular pockets,
wide and replar belt loops.
Pleaty of flares in famous Levi's
®Saa-Prest® alacb. Also stralaht
c:uta that are with it. Dia Pants A •
Plenty now!

Pr~etion tor ~ required for
edmitllon to graduate end prof. .
lionel IChools
Six end twelw -ion cour111
Small groupa
Voluminous matwiel for home Ridy
prepwed by experts in HCh field
lnlon schedule ean be tailored t10
meet individual needl.
Opportunity for r.view of pest
teaons via tape at the center

...,

MONEY!

MAKE BIG

Summer Sessions
Special Compect Cour111

Weekends- lnw.aions

SELL ADVERTISING FOR

COME UP TO 355 NORTON AND ASK FOR

-·-.·-·-·a. A. . ..
DAYS. IYININOI, MIICI-

THE ADVERSTISING MANAGER.

n.1'.......S...., ....... , . . .. . . . .....

_,- I

• Page sixteen . The Spectrum .. Monday, September 13, 1971
IJ'Jfl1.:'feV:,)~ sl:)sG' . mu'l.1:&gt;:1qa stf'f • I\l'! .~ l •~dms!GC:G ,,·r.bn:&gt;M
I

~

I

/

�Fall sports, believe it or not
by Howie Faiwl
Am. Sportr Editor

WELCOMES

U.B. STUDENTS
(SEE VALUABLE COUPON BELOW)

If you love chicken, wait' until
you taste Red Barn's

New Fried

Chicken

Believe it or not, the most
hectic place on campus now is
Clark Gym. Those of you who
have experienced long dinner
lines.
mass
confusion
at
Admissions and Records or total
pandemonium at the bookstore,
might strongly disagree. However,
within the confines of that
Bastilll'·like structure, coaches and
athletes alike are busily preparing
for what m~y consider will be
the most extensive sports program
ever undertaken at the University.
For the first time in the
University's history a fall baseball
and possibly a fall tennis schedule
will be initiated o n a limited basis .
This new fall scheduling, which
next year wiJI expand to the
• entire state university system, will
hopefull y pick up some of the

-S TEE 0 -

Distributors wanted
New oil product
Amount of investment
up to you.
For interview
call
834-4018
633-1153

Intramural grid
For grid freaks, touch football
will soon be getting underway.
Touch football entry forms can be
picked up today and all week at
the ticket booth in Clark Gym.
Any group, (independent, floor,
_/

·------------,

WANTED
Full or part-time sales.
Direct commission to sell
new automotiv.- product
- STEED.
For interview call
633-1153
or
834-4018

Looking for a great meal?
Try Red Barn's combination of a

BIG ·BARNEY.
French Fries &amp;Coke

fraternity, e~c.) may participate.
Also o n the faJJ intrunnarol
schedule Is a turkey trot. waiL:intl
race, archery tournament. a
bicycle grand prix and intramun1l
soccer under new head coach Burt
Jacobson .
More
detailed
information including fixed dates
concerning these activities will be
furnished in t he near future.
Regular recreation hours have
begun at Clark Gym and any
student is permitted to utilize the
gym's
many
facilitJes.
Reservations for squash and
handball courts can be made at
83 1- 2926 or 83 1- 5238.
Another activity has been
added to Buffalo's fall agenda
when it was announced that a
club soccer team has been formed
under the guidance of new coach
Burt Jacobson, a native of
Copenhagen. Coach Jacobson's
Bulls hope to duplicate the feat of
ice hockey, which rose from cl'ub
to varsity status in an exciting
fashion. Buffalo's five game slate
includes Wednesday (3 p.m.)
contests at Rotary Field versus
Fredonia State (Oct. 13) and
Canisius (Oct. 27).

slack left by the suspension of
football. last winter.
Ba'seball coach Bill Monkarsh
has
scheduled
a
meeting
'tomorrow afternoon at 4:30 in
Room 5 (basement) of Clark Gym
concerning
t ryouts
for
fall
baseball. Anyone interested is
invited to attend. Also all
prospective swimmers may see
swim coach William Sanford any
day this week after 3 p.m. Coach
Sanford is also seeking a manager
for the team.
As is customary at the
University, each year the Athletic
Department , in an attempt to
involve all students in some form
o f recreation, has scheduled a vast
array of intramural activities.
Once again Bill Monkarsh will
take charge of intramural sports
and his ambitious plans will be far
reaching and quite enjoyable.!!

•

I
I
I

SUNSHINE HOUSE
Problems - in-living,

I

referral services,
all confidential

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

call anytime

831-4046

'
I

-------------~

Barnbuster - A teasr! ............... 59
fiSh &amp; ChipS - For fish lovers . ........ 79¢
Hamburger-Pure U.S .D.A . inspected beef

. . 25¢

Cheeseburger- they're delicioious .......

Big Bamey~ouble-deck hamburger with

cheese,lenuce, pickle and our own sauce . . . . . . . . .

:90¢

55¢

Chicken -Red Barn's New Fried Chicken is so good

we guarantee it' - you must be sat1stied or your money back!

SNACK - 2 pieces chicken, french tries .. . .... 8 9¢
DINNER - 3 pieces chicken, potatoes,

Buy a Bambust8r

roll, cble slaw . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......
.BARNFUL - 9 pieces, snrves 3 or 4 people . . . .

$ 135

BUCKET -t5 pieces, serves 5 to 7 people ....
BARREL - 21 pieces, serves 8 to 10 people ..

419

F"'ISh Sandwich-areal taste delight!

and a~...
keepJhe Glass!

290

5 75

55¢

Also trench fries. cole slaw, potatoes.
shakes and soft drinks

r··

•~

I

thing that

gone ..~

slncel950.
-----·-------~

Try. Try hard.
The only thing we can think of
Is what we make. The Swingline
"Tot 50" Stapler. 98¢ In 1950.
91U in 1971.
And it still comes with 1000 free
staples and a handy carrying
pouch. II staples, tacks and
mends. It's u'nconditionally
guaranteed. It's one of the
world's smallest staplers.
And it's the world's biggest
seller. Could be that's why it
hasn't gone up in price in
21 years.
If you're interested in something
a little bigge,r, our Cub Desk
Stapler and Cub Hand Stapler
are only $1 .98. Both Tot and
Cub Staplers are available at
Stationery, Variety and College
Bookstores.

The Swingline "Tot 50"
98t in 1950. 98¢ in 1971.
If you can name something else
that hasn't gone up In price
since 1950, let us know. We'll
send you a free Tot Stapler with
1000 staples and a vinyl pouch.
Enclose 25¢ to cover postage
and handling.

£at it here, t.ke it home

e- STUDENT SPECIAL
E TE
ish
coupo;r:::~able tor

R

I•RED
F
A'

one

Golden Brown

_..-.1

FRENCH FRIES .

•

Redeemable during Sept. 1971, at
· following location ONL Yl

BARN

~

3Jao MAIN ST.
BUFFALO, N.Y.

Monday, September 13, 1971. The Spectrum . Page seventeen

�...

,

OVERTIMlE
by Barry Rubin
Spom Editor

a

As one passes barren Rotary Field, the exposed scoreboard reads
Buffalo-Holy Cross. Come back in a few years and it will most likely
read the same. For the benefit of the uninformed, Buffalo ended its
63-year participation in intercollegiate football last January. This past
weekend the Bulls were to have played their opener at North Carolina
State. Traditionally, football at Buffalo had sufferred from apathetic
fans, excessive debts and a mediocre caliber of play, not necessarily in
that order.
However, make no mistake, the main reason football was ended
was due to debts in excess of $400,000, mainly in the area of
scholarships. Even at many gung-ho football playing schools, money or
lack of it has become an over-riding burden on the shoulders of many
universities.
In an effort to remedy their financial problems, many of the
intermediate range NCAA schools are opting for a change in the
formula for the awarding of athletic scholarships. The new plan would
award scholarship monies on the basis of need, much like the present
system fo r awarding academic scholarships.
However, the larch NCAA football factories such as Texas and
Alabama scoff at suggestions for cutting scholarships at a time when
they're enjoying unobstructed prosperity. Thus the numerous
intermediate NCAA schools, now faced with difficult economic
decisions, are running in a collision course with the forty or so titans
of big-money college football .
Even some of the titans are experiencing financial woes despite
the fact that many have their cdffers annually swelled by thou$3fldS of
dollars in television revenues. Despite television revenue and
jam-packed stadia. it was interesting to note how many big-time
schools opened their gates to the professional football exhibition
season. Before this summer, no professional team had ever set foot on
the heretofore virgin turf in Notre Dame, Michigan and Berkeley . In
fact the Big Tnen conference, which only last yeat barred the ChicaRo
Bears from using Northwestetn's stadium, permitted several of its
members to host professional exhibitions for the first time.
.
The pre-eminence of football at many of the nation's institutions
has definitely been challenged in the past few years with Black player
boycotts and other demonstrations., Also there seems to be a view
which questions whether football should have a priority over other
campus activities in the area of funding. Just recently, Dr. Willis Tate,
president of Southern Methodist University, remarl&lt;ed : " People no
longer judge a school by ils football program." This is a truly
surprising statement considering the fact that SMU has long been a
Southwestern conference stalwart in addition to being the training
ground for the legendary Doak Walker, JGJe Rote and Dandy Don
Meredith (sorry Howard Cosell).
Still, football remains a popular spectator sport, with only the
East sufferring attendance declines. It sho uld be pointed o ut that costs
run the same for teams no matter who they are. For instance, Buffalo
paid the same amount for a pair of football shoes as did Ohio State.
Add the problem of inflation to the above dilemma and it is not hard
1
to see why so many schools are in the red.
The oft-used phrase reshaping priorities may have been .the reason
for ending football at Buffalo, but in reality and in fact the answer is
dollars and cents. To put it simply - ftScal solvency has becom~ a
major problem to the University and few universities can find the
resources to-subsidize unprofitable extracurricular activities. Someone
asked: "Will college football ever return to Rotary Field?"
Realistically, the answer lies in the ability of football to at least break
even .financially in a city long alienated from the campus.

O

enclosed Is $8.00 for
Both Semesters.

0

enclosed is $4.SO for
First Semester Only.

• I

~'

NEW SCHOOL FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS :

A cohesive program in The Performing and
Creative Arts. Ages 4 thru 18.
Late registration now being held.
66 Englewood Ave.
Mrs. Steiner
832-3047

839-0185

837-3912

..,...,.,.,,,,,,,

. i_\_1_,_

-

"1 -

CAUTION-~~Automatic

Insurance Covera·ge
If you did not make payment
to the local representative
of the insurance company -

YOU ARE NOT INSURED
DEADUNE - Enrollment will not be accepted after Sept. 30,
1971.
\DETAILS AND ENROLLMENT FORMS - available at: Haith

Serrica Office, Michael HaD, or C8ll 853~3 I.

By the time Phil got through paying for
wltion, late registration, student fees, books,
and an outrageous deposit on his apartment,
he didn't have a whole lot left for a stereo.
BSR McDonald makes the RT.B-40A for
people like Phil. It's a complete AM/ FM/ MPX
Phono component stereo system. The receiver
delivers an honest 50 watts and boasts
excellent sensitivity and separation specs.
The turntable Is our best-seller, and comes
complete with a matched base, tinted dust
cover, and Shure magnetic cartridge. The
speakers are true two-way sealed acoustic
suspension, with amazing bass response.
W&amp; Invite you to see the RTS-40A at your
neareat BSR McDonald dealer. If you think It
eounds ~on paper, walt'll you hear lt.

•

McDONAlD

-----------,

BSR (USA) Lid.

Route 303, Blauvelt, N.Y. 10113
,...... ...... fuQ.color . . . . . of
JOflr NI'M ~~ . , . . _
Met eulo!Mllc ...........
t enctoee no 1MMJ .........,.

I
I
I Name
I
I ~~=m~l~==rm~a=M=n~t~~~~--~------------1
I City I
I Stale
Zip

L-----------------J

Page eightHn': The Spectrum : Monday, September 13, 1971
·~.'

�PERSONAL

CLAIIIIJIII
FOR SALE
1965 TEMPEST
autom1t1c . Must
834-5312

9UaflntMCI. O&amp;G Appliances,
Sycamore, TX4·3i8J.

Lemens, 6 c;y1.,
Mil now. S300.

HAGSTROM Swedish folk gultlr,
doiUKe fNIUres With fitted PlUSh CI M,
originally S300, sacrifice at $100.
895.0172
MICROS~OPE - Amerlaln Optical s, 10, 43X. Tnr" eye p ieces, cover,
c.~se and filtered ste98 llgnt. 674·9193
alter 6 p.m.

CO NTEMPORARY
sofa,
condit ion, Olue. $75, 96
881·2166 evenln9S

good
lnt:hes.

2 COUC HES an d one center teOi e,
$40. PINSe Clll 8115·3096 a rter !1130
p.m .
RAMBLER 19611 stl nderd sh ift , elr
con ditioner, snow tires, $450. Call
882·2194.
HOUSEHOl.O goods, miscellaneous
glass &amp; silverware, stereo, desks. 321
GrlmsDY, Kenmore,
TWO vw studded snow tires. 2000
mites. $ 27. Call 182· 3194.
ONE OOUBLE DOll spring end
mattreu $15, one draaser $ 5 . Cell J im
837·2769.
ETHNIC
apparel ,
jewelry
and
nandcre fts ot Asia, Africa end the
Amerocas at "The People," a folk...arts
ooutlque, 144 Allen, 812-6283 .

8 44

VENTUR A 12-strlng 9Uilar plus cue.
EKcellent cond ltlqn . Phone 886·2292.
ZENI TH AM ·FM radio. Brand new .
Must sell, $45. Phone 886·2292.
'66 VW micro Dus. Ri dlo, 9IS hNter. 2
n - tires. Good running condition.
Best offer oyer $500. Can 549·2033.
1964 FORO Gatexle 500 AutOmiiiC,
Power
steering.
OepenoaDIO
transportation - $173.50 or best offer .
835·1 567, 5- 7 P.m .

WANTED
PEOPLE to work on t"e women's
FestiYal, NOY. 8- 14. See 8111 Stoyer In
261 Norton
WORKERS to help coordinate the
Graduet e S tudent Rl9hts Commltt. ..
C•ll Christie G rahl: G.S.A . K5505
WANTED :
B•bvsltter
for
two
afternoons 1 week. FleKible on dillS
and hour~. Cell 688·9429.

~MAN·GH I A; dual turntable : AR
speakers: Bundy flute ; roomv chest:
misc . nouseholct goods. 833·7270.
ProleraDiy evenings. Also : Lear auto
tape player.

OPPORTU NI TY, speretlme, addrenlng
envelopes and c lrculllfsl Melee S2 7 per
thousan d . Handwritten or tvped, In
your
home. Send Just S2 for
Instructions end 1 list of firms using
eddressers. Sltlstactlon guuanteectl
B&amp;V E n terpriSef, Dept. 9-29, P.O .
Bo11 391, Peerblonom, Celli. 93553.

1966 S t MCA . Very good con dition.
836·7120.

WANTED : Mot orcycle sidecar for
Triumph 650. 674· 1558 l iter 5 p.m .

1962 FORO Falcon van . Runs Quite
wetl . Make an offer. 883·2774.

R ESTA4RANT personnel to staff
e11clll ng new JAPANESE S TEAK
HOUSE
oriental
waitresses,
hostesses, hit check gir ls, busboys,
dishwashers, ~elet perkers. •632·2323.

BUICK Speclll '62, power steering,
automatic. $100. Call 832-4950 a l ter 6
o'clOCk.
MATTRESSES - all sizes. $18. City
Mettrer.s, 315 Broactwav. 854-6030.
SOFA beds $49 . City Mettress , 315
Broedwey 1!54-6030.
FOR
HOUSEHOLD
Items,
used
furn iture, entlques, end collectibles,
come to THE GARRETT, 937
KenSington, neer Norfolk ind Dro wse

uNUSUAL fabrics for MWing and
e1ecoretln9Kelemkllrl,
Ra)astenl
prints. DallieS, dOUDI•WNYes, Dashiki
panels, Dutch wax prints end more at
"The People," e folk...arts boutiQUe,
144 Allen . 882-6283.

~round .

MICROSCOPE , binocular ReiChert .
10XW.F., SX, 4 : 1, 10: 1,45: 1, 100 : 1,
mechanlcll stlge, focusable condensor ,
case. Very good. $300. 1139·3754 .

VAGO Sent'Grla - we heve lt. 'Check'
Discount Liquor, 4f&gt;O Nlagere Fells
Blvd. Bring student 10.

R E FRIGERATORS,
stoves
and
washerl. Reconditioned, deiiYered end

CAMP at Poverty Hllll Mele cemplng
enthusiast wents femele same for this
-ktnd.
Shere
food
e&gt;~oenses .
Contect
Mike
before
Thurldey.
836·5132.

FURNITURE - coucn. limp, kitchen
teble, AM cloclt. r..cllo, dishes. bedd ing ,
more. Gooct condition. RNsoneDie.
837·7149.

1964 VS Microbus. $250 o r Des I offer.
Can Seth •nd , leeve mossego at
836· 5 169.

EXPER IE NCED biDysltter needed
Mondays, Wednesdays end sometimes
Frldeys, 1 :00 p.m. - 4 :45 p .m . for
eight-mont" girl . c an 1132·7045.

~

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ScaiiiOil Taddunl.
On th is momentous occeslon, melt il
couple of doot knOlls and chlf98 •em
to me. Much love iOd kisses. D .C.
PHOTOG RAPHERSI
Join
The
Spectrum Photogriphy steH. E veryone
Interested come to 2 p .m . meeting,
Tuesdav, Sept. 14 or leive • note for
Olvld Smith In Rm. 355 Norton If you
can't ettend .

poj ~iP n Ivs

c

;

.

'

THE NOW LOOK
in

Corduroy
Jeans

S7.95 · S9.95

. . - - - - - - - - -....v",,e rox in&amp;
C T -......
1- 3 copies of one origin11/: 8 e«~ts etiCh
4- 6 copies of one origin•!: 1 ~ts 6eCh
1 or more copies of on~ orlgin•l: 6 Cflnts each

NEED A RIOE7 If you dO, thos os the
piece to get lt. Spectrum Rode Boerd
Clesslfleds rNIIV work.

Gustav
356 Norton Hall
9- 5 Daily

APARTMENT FOR RENT
ROOMS AVAILABLE , 2 m in. walk
from campus. Mull oe resp onsible.
834 ·5312.
MALE GRADUAT E stuaent seeklnv
seme es roommlte. Mostly furniShed
l ·Oedroom ap1rtment In Oel•were Park
ere•: $6S monthly, plus utilities. Call
Frenk at 884-6 250.

Join the Finance •Committee

CONTACT DAVID BARMAK _ STUDENT ASSOCIATION

831 -5507

205 NORTON HALL

ALL '"'ATERBEDS
Are not created equal

Only the w~ter's the same. We manubcture 4 sizes of waterbeds with exclusive safety
features worth checking into. Waterbeds are fun, but 200 gallons of water is a serious
matter... we're serious. Come and see the difference.

KING,QUEEN,DOUBLE &amp;T"WIN
SIZE W'ATER MAT'l'RESS
only

·-

.-

RIDE BOARD

DAVE NEEDS HELP
GIVING IT AWAY

GUARANTEED FOR S YEARS

ETHNIC
apperel,
jewelry
end
handcrefts of Asle, Afr ica end the
Amerlcu at "The People," 1 folk...arts
DOutl&lt;(ve, 144 Allen, 112-6283..

OLD FAN wanted to keep cool wllh .
Call Stu at 83 1·2797.

$803.000

DOUBLE - SEAMED
with air re~ valve and filling adapter

ESTU OA
Portugues7
over
110,000,000 people speak Portuguese;
half of South Amerlce . It's given et
9 :00 e.m., 24 Clef. AnneK.

OAANQE Duck now 49Pe.&gt;rl ng ;U
Check Discount LIQu ors, 450 N l:upo.J
Fells Blvd . Bring student card.
·

To suit you the

CALCULUS :thc:rea~==~
ayERS &amp;
H~~ERS
Reg. No.

Mllth

Hrs.

164256
164267
164278
012673
012571
012651
164007

141AA
141AB
141BC
141F
141SA
141TA
141 Y

8
8
9

9
9
12
2

.m•ll sections tau~t by
interested professors. If
SARA THE
MACHINE won't enroll you, ask
the prohmor to help. Open
sections •re:

DaY$
MTWF
MTWTh
MTWF
TWTh
TWTh
TWTh
TTh

Room

Hayes 334
Foster 23
Foster 19A
Harriman l. 54S
Hayes 334
Parker 152
Foster 22
Foster 208 (rec.l

If you need assistBnce, C811 the MATH HOTLINES: 831 -1104 or
837-1101.

Butler
Volkswagen

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c:

WHY BUY FROM l,JS?
1.)
Instant Service-no appointment needed at our
factory trained service center.
We have 85 new V.W.'s, plus 80 assorted used
cars. All100% Guranteed &amp;. immediate delivery.
2.)

TESTED &amp; APPROVED 8Y UNDERWRITER'S LABORATORIES
WITH BUILT- IN TEMPERATURE CONTROL THERMOSTAT.

Guaranteed - low Cost Student Insurance.

3.)

1200 Main Street, off Baker - Downtown
Telephone 885·9300 Buffalo

Monday, Spetember 13, 1971. The Spectrum . Page nineteen
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Sports Car Club will hold a reorganizational
Transcendental Mt!ditation lectures will be given
Sept. 22 at 8 p.m. in R1oom 233 and 340 Norton at 1 meeting Sept. 14, 8 p.m., Room 233 in Norton
Union. Can Am '71 slides will be shown and club
All undergraduate students interested in p.m. New York speaker jack Forum will preside.
activities will be explained for those interested in
tutoring beginning college students for academic
Women's Studies C:ollqe will post a list of their joining.
credit should contact Elizabeth Boepple in 16B
Townsend Hall for applications. Registration can courses at 108 Winspear. Please stop by.
only take place during change of registration week.
Auto Mechanics 415 will meet Tuesday, Sept.
For more information, call Mrs. Boepple at
Hillel offers ho1111e hospitality for the High 14 at 3 p.m. in Hochstetter Room 114.
Holidays. Call 8364540 or stop at the Hillel table.
831 ·5366, ext. 24.
For University Squash Club Tryouts contact Bill
Hillel will spom;or Rosh Hashana services Monkarsh, ext. 5238, Clark Gym. Rosters to fill A, B
American Studies is now offering Politics and
Art 199K under the instruction of Norman Plotkin. Sunday evening Sept. 19 at 7 p.m. In the Fillmore and C level teams are needed.
Permission of the instructor is required. Office Room. Services will alsto be held Monday, Sept. 20 at
Communication
College
announces
an
hours: Tuesday 2-4 p.m., 124 Winspear.
10 a.m. and 7:30p.m. and on Tuesday, Sept. 21 at
10 a.m. in the Confterence Theater. Services are important meeting of all people enrolled in its crafts
American Studies is now offering Unnatural. scheduled for Yom Kippur.
courses on Sept. 13, 7 p.m. in Norton, Room 334.
Vices, Unspeakable Acts 199B under the instruction
German and Slavic is offering new courses. For
Women's liberaticnn will hold free karate classes
of Burton "Weiss. The course meets Tuesday 2- 4
for women on Tuesday and Thursday from 4- 6 p.m. more information cpntact the department's office at
p.m. and Friday 4.-6 p.m. at 124 Winspear. in Room 340 Norton.
240 Crosby Hall.
Rachael Carson Collese Wilderness Survival 203
Test dates for National Teacher Examinations
Chemistry 371 (A1nalytical Chemistry) is now
will hold a meeting Sept. 13, 7 p.m. in Norton 232.
being offered for non,-chemistry majors. Interested will be held Nov. 13, 1971, and jan . 29,.April8 and
Those interested in registering are invit~d.
students should register for the Thursday Laboratory july 15, 1972. Test centers are listed in me Bulletin
of Information for Candidates. These may be
College A win hold an organizational meeting Section.
obtained from college placement officers, school
Sept. 13 from 4-5 p.m. in Diefendorf, Room 148.
All member students ttlust attend.
A Political Outre;ach Throush Printed Media personnel departments or directly from National
Workshop will be srxmsored by Women's Studies Teachers Examinations, Box 911, Educational
Portuguese 101 is offered this year at 9 a.m., College. Contact Gail Cook at 831-4143 or Mary Testing Service, Princeton, N. j . 08540.
Room 24 Diefendorf Annex. Everyone is welcome. Ann Daly at 876·7670 lfor information.
International Folk Dancing with instruction in
The Department of Classics is now offering
law Enforcement: New Approaches and Old basic steps meets every Friday, 8 - 11 p.m·. in Room
Classics 37 1, Greek Theater for Modern Readers. (COE 389) is being offered Tues&lt;tay and Thursday 30 Diefendorf Annex.
Contact the Department of Classics, 390 Hayes, from 3-4:30 in Townsend 204. Instructor is George
A~~
.
83 1·2816.

Announcements

Fall Orientation
,

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Monday,Sept. 13
Information Fair: lOo.m. - 4 p.m.
Center Lounge, Norton Union
Creative Crofts Folr
Belt Makin~ Workshop 1-4 p.m ., Crafts Center,
Room 307, Norton Hall
1
Art Display
,
I
Second floor Art Gallery, Room 21~ Norton
Hall
Cinema: ·~ Funny Thinq.Hoppened on the Woy to
the Forum"
8 and 10 p.m. showings, Freshmen and, transfer
students : free, all other students: $.50
Group Dynamics ond Encounter Workshop: 8 p.m.
Haas Lounge, Norton Union
Modern Dance Workshop ond Presentation
Time and place to be announced

Note: Deadline for o/1 announcements Is noon
of The Spectrum det.ldline days. lfems for the
Backpoge must be submitted In writing to The
Spectrum office. No "nnouncements for ony one
event will be run more than once per week.
Also, no announcements will be held over from
lost semester. They mus1t be resubmitted.

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Tuesday, Sept. 13

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WBFO Programm-e Notes

Sports Information
Any student wishing to JOin the Student
Athletic Review Board, please leave name with the
Student Association office, 205 Norton, 831·5507.
The first meeting is Tuesday, Sept. 21 in Room 205,
Norton, 7 p.m,
All varsity basketball candidates should ·report
to a general meeting Wednesday, Sept. 15 at 3:~0
p.m. in Room 315 Clar~ Gym.

Monday, Sept. 13
2 p.m. Tt"tis is Radio ...
5:50p.m. Chronicle - A summary of the day's news
with ennphasis on University and local events.
10:30 p.m. Special of the week
Tuesday, St~pt. 14
11 a.m. Firing Line - William F. Buckley and
Challen1gers with the radio version of the famous
Public !Broadcasting Service television series
1 p.m. Hist•ory of Rock'n Roll - with Murray Kirch

All club soccer candidates should report to a
meeting tomorrow at 3 p.m. in Room 8, Clark Gym.

Wednesday,, Sept. 15
8 p.rn. Bo•ston Symphony Orchestra Concert William Steinberg conducting.
10 p.m. "G1rass stains on your mind"
- Thursday, S•ept. 16
8 p.m. Interface - Informal conversation with
Univer!&gt;ity President R. l. Ketter. Listeners may
phone 831·5393 with questions which Dr.
Ketter will answer on the air.

The women's intercollesiate tennis team will
begin its fall / season wim practices being .held
Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays from 3- 5 p.m.
Women undergraduates should contact Diane Hall at
831 ·2941. I

Fritlay, Sept. 16
9 p.m. Gott the Blues - part 2, the later form of
Texas blues as exemplified in the art of the
legenda1ry lightnin' Hopkins.
11 p.m . Relax Your Mind - with Dave Benders

The UB. Sports Car Club's first meeting of the
semester will take place tomorrow in Room 233
Norton ·at 8 p.m. Highlights of the meeting include
slides from Can·Am racing, movies of club activities
and an explanation of club activities.

I

University Open House: 9 o.m.-5 p.m.
Representatives from all academic departments,
physical education and also all student organizations
will be represented on campus. Interesting exhibits
and demonstrations will be all over campus.
Information Fair: 10 o.m.-4 p.m.
Center Lounge, Norton Hall
University Grill PICnic: 11 o.m.!-3 p.m.
Hamburgers, franks and other delights, Norton
Courtyard
Rock Concert: Noon-3:30p.m.
"Natural," Baird Lawn (Haas Lounge, if ra.in)
Art Display
Second Floor Art Gallery, Room 219 Norton
Hall
Creative Crofts Fo/r
Ceramics Workshop: 7- 10 p.m., Creative Crafts
Center, basement Norton Hall
Cinema: "A Funny Thing Happened on the Woy to
the Forum"
8 and 10 p.m. showings, Conference lheater,
freshmen and transfer students: free, all other
students: $.50. Tickets will be sold at the Norton
Hall Ticket Office
Karate Demonstra'tlon: 8 p.m.
Sponsored by the Tae· Kwon- Do Karate Club,
Haas lounge, Norton Hall
Free game hours (freshmen ond transfer students
·
only}
7- 9 p.m., Recreation Area, Norton Hall
Terrace Concert: 8:30p.m.
Entertainment provided, free lemonade and
potato chips, Norton Hall Terrace ( Rathskellar, if
rain)
Buffalo Philharmonic Symphonette
Melvin Strauss conductinR, 8:30p.m., Fillmore
Room

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�</text>
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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
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Vol. 22, No. 8

St8te U""""'ty of New York at Buffalo

\

Friday, August 13, 1971

No pay raises

..

FSA employees
displeased with
temporary budget
Meeting amidst controversy for the past two weeks, the
Faculty-Student Association has tentatively adopted their
1971 - 72 budget providing for no wage increases for FSA
employees. In additio'h, various study groups were
formulated to investigate alleged inefficiencies. in FSA
operations. Operating as a non-profit enterprise, FSA is
granted monopolies to run such services as the bookstore,
food service and the vending machines.
Immediate reaction to the FSA
Board of Director's no wage
increase decision appears to be
disgust and indignation among
many FSA workers. Some, in fact,
have vowed t o leave their
positions if the board's decision
remains firm maintaining that this
is the first time in recent years
that annual raist appropriations
have been denied.
Other employees, however,
upon learning that the decision
will be reviewed along with the
rest of the budget at the end of
September are hoping for its
reversal.

·~

..

Study groups
Although the budget was
passed and the board appears to
be cooperating in the
establishment of the study groups,
questions have been raised as to
the reasoning beyond the decision
and the general philosophies of
the FSA board members. Student
government representatives and
James Schindler, assistant Dean of
the School of Management , all
voted against any wage increase,
even a 5% cost of Jiving ra1se.
Administrative delegates to the
board voted in favor of an
increase arguing that FSA has an
obligation to its employees.
J an DeWaal , Student
Association president , asserted at
one meeting that it was not the
board's soc ial obligation to
,.,.. provide workers with a hi&amp;fler
••
standard of living. President
Robe rt Keller , FSA board
chairman . felt that the entire
University had a right to know of
this philosophy and demanded
that The Spectrum print Mr.
DeWaal's statement.
Mi ch ael Nicolau , Graduate
Student Association president,
discounted Mr . DeWaal 's
statement as the reason for the
student government's negative
vote on increased wages. He
explained that both he and Mr.
De Waal were concerned with
prot ec ting their studen t
constituencies from price hikes
resulting from any wage increase.
lmprov~

efficiency
He further stressed that the
work of the study sroupa would
be extremely important in
bnprovina the efficiency of FSA
operations. As an example, Mr.

Nicolau pointed out the incredible
losses incurred by food service
(Donald Bozek, assistant manager
of food service, estimated that
25% of their projected income is
lost due to theft) and hoped that
1h e
s t u d y co mmit 1 e e s'
recommendations would aUeviate
this.
Although apparently dubious
of any instant relief or "miracle
cures" of the study groups,
Thoma s Moore, bookstore
manager, welcomed their
investigations: " I would have like
t o see r e commend a t 1on
committees come in !ong ago."
Mr. Nicolau also said that he
lloped study group action would
result in increased profits. These
profits. according to Mr. Nicolau,
could then be used to subsidize
pay raises while keeping prices
stable.•
While Mr. Nicolau dwelled on
ineffi ciency. Thomas SchiJJo,
assistant director cf housing,
worried more ab out th e
employees, particularly the food
service employees: " In a
University that prides itself on its
treatmen t of disadva ntaged
peoples. denial of a raise to the
largest portion of disadvantaged
people - food service workers is nothing short of criminal."
Earlier, Mr. N1colau had termed
the stude nt the most
disadvantaged person on campus
and said that measures to aid him
are top priority.
Profit margin
Mr. Schillo also emphasized the
need to plan for a budget with a
reasonable profit margin in case of
unforeseen expenses. Such an
enterprise as FSA , Mr. Schillo
reported , cannot operate on a
deficit for long.
Other administrat ive
representative&amp; to the board,
Charles Balkin, Edward Doty and
Bernard Gelbaum, presented a
different view on the employees'
salaries. They argued that only
wage parity with comparable
CSEA worKers would provide
what Dr. Gelbaum termed ..social
equity." Though price hikes to
cover the approximately 12% raise
needed to reach CSEA parity
would have to be substantial, Dr.
Gelbaum chided students who
would bllndly attack such rises.
(continued on . .,.""..,

�Butralo examined

.

Middle States Association
to review oUr accreditation
The upcoming Middle States
Ac c reditation of the State
University of Buffalo is nor "a big
brother situation," according to
Dean of Undergraduate Studies
Charles H.V. Ebert. Rather he
explained " it is a massive effort to
Ioo k at a 11 as pects of the
Unveristy."
Accreditatio n is conducted by
the Middles States Associatio n of
Colleges and Secondary Schools
Y(hich r evie w s the entire
University and attesJ_s that "the
insitution i s g uided by
well-defined and appropriate
educational objectives, (and) that
it can be expected to continue to
maintain its standards." Review
normally occurs every ten years
with the act ual process taking
three to four years.
To aid in the presentation o f
data for this review, President
R obert Ketter appointed a
Steering Committee, of which
Dean Ebert is a member. Dean
Ebert expla ined that there are
basically three pahses in the
accreditation process. The first is
the organizational work of the
Steering Committee which will
invo lve "t h e accumulation,
digestion, assembly and repo rt of
data" according to Dean Ebert.
This data will include the hard
facts about the University student enrollment, academic
programs, budget figures, future
plans.
Individual merits
Th e second phase in the
process is the act ual visit to the
University by the Association in
which the report o f the Steering
Committee is reviewed . Dt:an

-

t

·~

------

Ebert explained tliat there is no
fixed program that the
Association delegates must
follow : "there is no standard

week, th~ commission writes an
evaluative report of tt,e insitution.
I nc li.aded in this will be
reco mm epdati ons, c riticisms,

are made between different _ and appreciate ow strengths."
univerlsities. "Wo are not a
Once the evaluation has been
Berkeley eX a Wisconsin and we ·
are reviewed for what we are and · completed, the Commission can
grant accreditation; defer action,
what we arc doing,". he said.
make recommendations or deny
accreditation.
Dean Ebert said any
Introspection •
· Welcoming the accreditation as action has important implicati6ris;
't"a true self-study," Dean Ebeyt it affects the University's ability
commented .that · it is a real to attract exciting faculty and
opportunity to look at the talented gradua te students.
University, find out wha't it has However, Dean Ebert maintained
done and where it is going. The that the Commission possesses no
evaluation prpcess supports this as co~rcive power, only the opinions

.

,

- McNI-

proce!Wre ... they'll look at our
report and at our school 'and then
take it from there." Possible
actions of this committee might
include interviews with University
st&lt;~ff, faculty and students and
attendance at classes.
After this visit is concluded,
which normally takes about a

general appraisal and accreditation
(or denial of accreditiation).
Dean Ebert stresses tha t there
are no standardized requirements
that the University must meet :
"there exists no absolute standard
of good and bad ... we are judged
individually on our own merits."
He also said that no comparisions

---

it· requires each member insitution
to periodically review its own
concepts, goals and operations.
Coupled with this introspection is
the crisitsm and praise of the
visiting committee which allows
for improvement. Dean Ebert said
that this objective review "will
both point out our weaknesses

-

1

.I

The Spectrum is published week ly
during the summer sessions by
Sub-Board I, Inc. of the State
Univerlsty of New York at Buffalo.
Offices are located at 355 Norton
Hall, State University of New York
at Buffalo. Telephone: Area code
716; Editorial, 831-4113; Business,
831-3610.

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Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, August 13, 1971

of "highly recognized scholars
from all fields."
Dean Ebert views the visit
optimistically and with little fea rs
as to the University's success: " We
have too much going for ourselves
to be afraid ... we've made our
mistakes but all, in all , it's a
tremondous place." He admitted
that there were certain areas in
which the University might fail
but commented that "we have to
have the courage to look at our
weakest spots. . . once we've
done that we can move on ."

w

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THE SpECTI\UM

come on up and see
us sometime

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room 355 - NORTON

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Poverty Hill

A circus tent af14 an abundant supply of beer w•e
integral parts of last Sunday's large, but
unauthortled, picnic at Poverty Hill. Sub-Board I,
Inc. spokesmen r_eport that necessary legal actions
will be taken against those responsible.

P9verty Hill tempOrarily closed
cfue to cancellation of insurance
Cancelled insurance coupled with unauthorized there was substantial damage to our good name
entry and use of property has temporarily closed which couJd affect our negotiations for the land and
down Poverty Hill, the 1148 acres of wooded land our relationship with the local population.
that Sub-Board I, Inc. has leased for student use with
'
an option to purchase. Scott Slesinger, Sub-Board I Problems
Mr. SJesinger continued that there might be a
treasurer, reported that '·'we were informed on
link with the insurance being cancelled and the
Monday that our insurance was cancelled."
He further explained that Consolidated Mutual Sunday picnic. If this is the case, Sub-Board is also
Insurance after examining what they were insuring prepared to sue for increased insurance rates which
decided that "$300 for a million dollar policy was will amou11t to an approximate jump from $300 to
not enough."
$2000.
Ottier Sub-Board members noted with suspicion
Aldt&lt;?ugh presently there is no insurance
that the policy was cancelled on Monday, a day after coverage for the land , Sub-Board is negotiating with
a party of about 400 people illegally used the land a Local insurance agent and hopes to have Poverty
for what had been advertised as "The Second Annual Hill operating by Monday.
Mulligan's Picnic and General Free-For-AJI.''· In spite
In Ught o( t hese recent problems, some
of such advertising, Sub · B~rd officials are hesitant Sub-Board members are questioning the advisability
to name those responsible for conducting the affair. of buying the land when their lease runs out at the
end of this year. Fred Aueron , Sub-Board member,
.._
Damages and problems
commented that "personaJJy, I think 'Ye should buy
However, Sub-Board plans to prosecute to " the it but officially I think we should wait for the
fullest extent of the law" those responsible and has student referendum on the issue." Mr. Aueron was
already notified Cattaraugus County - District referring to a directive o f Sub-Board mandating that
Attorney that a picnic was held without their all student governments conduct referendums to
permission. In addition, Mr. Slesinger has contacted gauge opinion.
Mr. Slesinger agreed with this stance o f waiting:
an Ellicottville caterer, Michael Pitillo of the Holiday
VaJiey Restaurant .Service, who was allegedly "At this point , I personally like the idea of the
connected with sponsoring the picnic, to inform him property. However, I wo uld like to see what other ·
that suit will be filed for damages.
students think befofe we expend all that money. I
, Mr. Slesinger stressed that Sub-Board-was not think these referendums are a good idea and our
certain that Mr. Pitillo was responsible for the affair decision will lay entirely on them."
and that notifying him of intended ac~ion was part
ln. an attempt to provide some of these controls,
of a preliminary legal process. Specifically, Sub-Board has tentatively passed a list of rules and
Sub-Board is charging unauthorized entry onto regulations including such things as no alcohol , no
private property with accompanying damages .
dope and no skinny-dipping. Mr. Slesinger said that
Included in these damages ·was the cutting of a " we're going under the assumptio n that students will
phone line and "wear and tear on property, facilities help us. I think they will because there is a real sense
·
'
and personnel." Also, Mr. Slesinger maintained that of community out there."

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determine particular rates of pay,
Pointing out the huge for each employee. lJoth Mr.
economic potential most "college Bozek and Mr. Moore maintained
students possess, Dr. Gclbaum • that this was all ready the case in
expfained that an added $20 food service and the bookstore.
In addition, Mr. Bozek said
expended by students to meet
wage in c reases is neglible that he and Raymond Becker,
compared to the loss of hundreds food service manager, have been
of dollars by FSA staff working subsisting on economy measures.
· with sub-par pay. He also especially in the labor situation .
maintained that while FSA should . He reported that approximately
be " paying as much as we can $60,000 in wages are being
afford" to reduce prices, a safe eliminated from food service ·
profit margin" should be principally in the ..over-staffed"
maintained . Dr. Gelbaum Union food areas. He was
criticized studentsfears of a moreover, critical of what wa~
proffl - m o ngering FSA as · presently a $52,000 profit for his
" unjustified " and sa id
division, feeling that no more than
"compensations will come in s $15,000 profit forecast was
order" if profits were made.
needed. However, he admitted
..,~
that a $15 ,000 "safe" f!W&amp;in was
Economy measures
feasible only with a drastic
Mr. Schindler was critical o f- reduction in thefts.
the entire wage system. He
While the entire future of FSA
d lffe r·entiated between wage budget is still uncertain , one thing
poli cy and wage rate , is quite certain for its employees
acknowledging that the board - they, at present will not receive
shQuJd make wage policy and what they term ..expected and
individual managers should necessary pay increases."

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lockers mey be rented beginning

SEPTEMBER 9th
Friday, August 13, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

'

.. -

...

�India r~lieffund
The India Students Asscx:iation hu orpnized a
drin to nile money for refu,ees of Benala Desh
(East Pakista11).
Sollle lOO volunteers will canftll faculty,
ltuddtl and staff for donations for the victims. In
adcliUon a table has been set up in the Norton Hall
lobby. It wUI be open every aftUJlOOD from noon
until tluee p.m.
A recent nccination drive has and tbouaands
of refuaees victimized by the recent cholera
epidemic. However, many of these same people are
now faclna death from starvation. It bas been
estimated that India bat spent $1 million daily to
keep the survivors alive.
In the face of this, Indian Prime Minister lndin
Gandhi has oraanlzed the Prime Minister's Relief
Fund. Every dollar collected will provide food fpr
six people daUy.
Contributions can be made at the table or they
can be sent to the followina address:
Refuaee Relief Fund
202 Townsend Hall
State University of New York at Buffalo
Buffalo , N.Y. 14214

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It has been said ~hat sport, drama and reUgious
ritual aU sprin&amp; from the same mythical source: the
faculty we have that creates order from random
nature. ,With this kind of kinship - in ntind, Bruce
Brown's simple but panoramic motorcycle
documentary, On Any Sunday, takes on all the
dlmen$1cms of a philosophical statement: The
impulse toward art and the impulse toward sport can
be essenttially the same.
PlrSit of all, however, the film must be reviewed
from the standpoint of the average viewer, who
probabl)• has neither the inclination nore the
strength to wield such an admittedly weighty burden
in a movie theater. The film, at its intended level, is
truly annazlng and entertaining, especially for the
would-b•: bike freak who knows virtually n~thing
about the world of motorcycles.
Furtlhermore, the film is refreshingly immune
from thE~ sort of criticism that can be leveled at films
like Le Mans or Little Fauss and Big HaiJy : th;at they
tease the public with big stars and miniscule plots
simply to sell a sports documentary. Since Brown's
films are· totally and frankly documentary, one can't
find fault - you can't tell a nudist that his socks
don't m.atch. On Any Sunday is an entirely honest
film . Br,own's first big film, The Endless Summer,
~ined Its wide audience because of this same type of
straight fiorwardness.
Any bike freak is going to love this film the way
h e would love an incredibly complete and
comprehensive parts catalogue. Brown, who narrates
the filrn in his exclamatory California voice,
("Malc,olm Smit h, sliding sideways on the
Sacramento dirt track at one hundred and twenty
miles an hour!'') covers every aspect of cycling from
motorcross to drag to hill climb to dirt track. (Ah,
the joys of technical vernacular.)
Everything that T11e Endless Summer or
Waterlogged, one of Brown's early surf fLims , was to
the Hawaiian Surfer stranded by the shores of the
Atlantic Lake, On Any Sunday is to the biker whose
machine is in the shop or non-existent altogether.
The fruitless desire to see one's own bike with pipes
and trailing shocks gleaming in the neon of the

theater lot, waitins to be examined and fondled this passion is almost existeAtlaJ in itt absurd
intensity.
The overwhelmlns tableau that encapsulates the
total experience of the ftlm is the foo~ of a race
in Encinito, Califomil wi~ entries of over fifteen
hundred miChines. All on one narrow dirt road
between two fences! Stacked together like so many
fervid motorized cattle, helmeted and bellowing in
the crush. Thae arJ' the true signs, on every street
and path, of the madness of our age. The intensity of
the whole motorcycle subculture is astounding. The
racers soak the casts off their broken legs, even
broken backs to get back on the cycle and race.
These are driven men!
When confronted with such enthusiasm, the
natural reaction ~ to tum inward and search
frantically for the ~me kind of drive and desire in
oneself. And then the revelation. All those crazy
artists and poets - didn't they get back on the track
despite cracked and ill-mended minds, missing ears
and other vital parts, hungry stomachs and wealthy
brothers-in-law with positions available? Of course!
The two activities become equatable - the need for
expression and the impulse towards death and the
machine, the attempt to order and control the real
world in a re~l sense - it's all here! The motorcycles
carve graceful curves into the side of perfect sand
dune - three wavy lines - Picasso! ·

a

But the absurdity of it. The energies expended,
lives and time spent, ruined and lost, the deaths
faced: for a dirty face and a tin trophy or four lines
in a nqtebook or a fleeting melody captured or a
monument or a canvas ... The longer one keeps thts
up, the more one begins to sound like the announcer
on Wide World of Sports, ("The thrill of victory and
the a&amp;ony of defeat") but the true profundity of all
human activity lies behind those and these paJtry
words.
On the metaphysicaL horizon rises politics and
the bustle of the laundromat where I now sit and all
from those fifteen hundred cyclists. One can only
marvel at It and move on. There are no other
explanations given beyond "lt's fun," ..It's me," or
"It is what I do," ''It is my life."

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�opera Workshop's Ida:
enjoyable performance
by Michael Silverblatt
Lit. a11d Drama Editor

In the canon o f Gilbert and
Sullivan operettas, Princess Ida is
rather unique. It came at a crucial
point in the team's career;
Sullivan had just been knighted ,
Gilbert was unnoticed by the
crown; Sullivan was a "serious"
musician, Gilbert .was an idle
punster. The piece clearly refl~ ts
the rift form ing between the two
men - Gilbert writes a near
patter-lyric fo r his comic
c h aracter lady Blanche and
Sullivan sets it to ballad music;
Gilbert writes lyrics to be
carefully articulated and Sullivan
methodically accents 'the incorrect
musical syllable.
Princess Ida is the only G ilbert
and Sullivan operetta with three
acts. It is difficult to perform ,
being vocally strenuous for its
leads (particulary its female lead,
Id a), requiri n g large and
well-trained choruses, and many
elaborate costumes and bulky
sets.
.
Nevertheless, the performance
by t h e University Opera

are comic (men dressing as wornen
to enter the school, 'attacks on the
battlements, ridiculously parodied
female professors, etc.)' until
everything is happily re'solved in
typically outlandish Gilbert and
Sullivan fashion and the chorus
unites In festive array to sing the
effusively nonsensical "Sway of
Love" finale number.
Before I comment' on the
individual perfonnances, I feel
obliged to point o ut that the
timing and the pacing of the piece
were very poor. In fa ct it is rather
strange that I was able to enjoy
the production so much while
faced wilh s u c h distressing
problems. I suppose I enjoyed
individual . performances more
than the piece as a whole. And
there are, unfortunately, ·grave
reservations that I have of the
direction ,. but more of that later.

The plot
The plot concerns Princess Ida,
daughter of th e evil King Gama.
She has been betrothed to the
noble Prince Hilarion since the
tender age of one. This fda ,
however, has contemporaneously
liberal ideas - she has set up a
women's college and she and her
many feminine supporters have
sworn to abjure ty rannic man .
This situa ti o n pre cipita t es
occurrences as ~redictable as they

Princess Ida

na,ne. He is admirably balanced
by Steven Brown who plays the
J ane Bane h as done a malicious King .Gama. Gama is a
remarkable job in her portrayal o f very odd WS. Gilbert creation.
Ida. She is aloof and plays ttfe Usually the comic villain has an
grande dame, and yet she reveals . almost effortless job before him all the glints of sharp humor that Gilbert is, after all, very proficient
Gilbert's libretto so ind ulgently at sketching a broad and comic
villain - but Gama is cursed with
two of the most inane patter
songs in all of Gilbert and Sullivan
and dialogue that just does not
amuse. Gama has a hunched back
and a limp - somehow not
evident in this production - but
. these handicaps do not weigh as
heavily as a badly written part.
Brown makes the most of his
excellent presence to bring life to
the role.
Jacob Ledwo n has a fine tenor
voice and, again, a deft comic
style. In the th ree times I saw this
production his role as Prince
Hilarion grew more and. more
inspired . As his two court buddies
Ray Ksiazkiewicz and Randall
Evans are fine. Their antics while
dressing as the young ladies and
the "Kiss Me" song in the second
act contributed to much of the
production's humor.
Ellen Lang and Patricia
Simpson alternated as Lady
Psyche, Professor of Humanities.
They both did nicely with their
" Darwinian Man"' song, but I
enjoyed the light touches in
Patricia Simpson's performance
more than the leering qualities in
Miss Lang's.

The performers

Jane Bane as Ida
Workshop in Baird Hall proved
the piece to be very alive and
eminentl.y performable. In fact
the cast was so engaging th~t one
is tempted to bemoan the fact
that opera in general receives
scant salute in th e Music
Department's yearly scheduling.

.....

allows her. Miss Bane's voice is
pure and clear, her style is close to
impeccable. This is unique in a
part that is as strenuous and
spending as the one that has been
provided for Ida.
·
Rose Marie Guarasci and Joan
Collopy alternated in the lead
commed ie nn e role of Lady
Blanche, professor ef Abstract
Science. Both have perfected a
rather special comic style and a
wonderful sense of timing. A
delightful an d inviting
performance was put forth by
Sheryl Kessner as Melissa. a young
~ady who has never seen a man.
See a man she does and he r
reactions are delicious. Rober~
Willoughb y is an aristocratically
scowlly King Hildeb,ande with
many a graceful pat~er-song to his

RMdaiJ ·Evans, Sheryl Kessner, Jack Ledwon, Ellen
Lang and Ray Ksiazkiewlcz (1. tor.) rapturousJy sing
"The Truth · is Found" in 1he Opera Workshop
presentation of Gilbert and Sullivan's "Princess Ida."

The direcCion
Now. alas, we &lt;."'mc to the
direction and choreography. This
is generally uninspired and o ften
se n seless. F r om practical
impossibilities (a stage area that is
used as a deep and dangerous
moat is, shortly afterwards, amply
solid to s'upport the entire female
chorus who stand for no apparent
reason with their backs to the
audience), to absolute blunders
(the female chorus mill aimlessly
about for almost the entire first
act). The pacing, as I have said, is
off. There is no dramatic
ti g htne ss. The production
alternates between "traditio nal"
presentation and random
excursions in every other which

way. Muriel Wolf, the directress,
redeems · herself, somewh.at, for
having coach ed a large cast of
extremely talented people. Rhae
Ann Hawkes choreography is
more pathetic than words can tell.
There is one enchanting quintet
called "The Truth i's Found" but
it was so neatly done that I
suspect that it was staged by
someone else.
Loud cheers should be heard
for Denis Azaro who designed the
set and cost umes. The set was

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adequate, the costumes were
inspired "and imaginative. The
same cheers, perhaps somewhat
muted, should be heard for
F r ederic Ford who gathered
together and conducted the small
orchestra and who worked to
produce the unique blending in
the chorus.
This is a production that
overcame its faults nicely. In fact,
my net reaction was decidedly
positive and I look forward to
seeing more work by this group.

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Friday, August 13', 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five•

....

\

�......

~~
~ ----~E_di_TO_R_iA---::1:---\ ____,,.

Editor~[ note: The following is the second
imtilllmcmt ofa two pan quest column submitted by

FSA

Stanley JOoyan. Part one appeared July 30.

For the first time in several years the Faculty-Student
Association is going to undertake a study of its major
enterprises. Three study groups, slat~ to report to the FSA
Board of Directors by September 30, will examine the
operations of the University Bookstore, the Food Service
and vending. Such an endeavor is long overdue in view of tht:
never-ending stream of students' complaints directed most~y
at the Bookstore and the Food Service.
While the usual questi9ns, such as efficiency and profit
making will be investigatjd, we would hope that several
points would be given attention. First, why should a
bookstore that pays' no rent and no utilities and has a
virtually captive market not be able t~rutersell other
bookstores that do not enjoy such !fnnatural business
advantages? Some have suggested that incompetence is the
cause. Others have charged that the Bookstore has a huge
staff of upper-level management personnel whose- salaries
go~ble up the profits. Undoubtedly the actual reasons are far
more complex than these and we would like the answer.
The FoOd Service also has much to explain. They claim
that one-quarter of all the food consumed in the Rat is
stolen. This charge appears exaggerated if not absolutely
preposterous. We do not dispute the fact that there is
substantial theft of food in Norton Hall, but we can not
believe a 25% figure that is based, not on evidence or
statistical studies but on pure conjecture. Since the theft rate
is always given as the primary reason for the outlandish
prices charged for food, we.demand that these allegations be
substantiated.
Several suggestions aimed at reducing theft and
improving Rathskellar service have been proffered recently.
One idea, involving a minor redesigning of the Rat's
counters, appears to have considerable merit. The plan,
proposed by Mike Nicolau, GSA president, strikes us as
entirely realistic, which is more than can be said for most of
the Rathskellar panaceas of recent years. We recommend
serious consideration of this proposal.
One final problem confronts the study group. Because of
the FSA Board of Director's narrow and archaic make up one faculty member, three students and five administrators
- we stronglv urge that the study groups be broadened to
include more students and faculty members. Their
perspectives are broader and their insights into the problems
of the FSA enterprises are usually keen. The notion that
only administrative officers possess the financial acumen and
responsibility to run such an organization is no longer viable.
After all this is the Faculty-Student Association, not the
Administration Association.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 8

Friday, August 13, 1971
Editor-in.Chief - Dennis Arnold
Managing Editor - AI Benson
A-.t. Man~~~ine Editor - Susan Moss
Busln., Man., - James Drucker
Advertising Man..-r - Sue Mellentine

C.mpua ..... ..... Jo·Ann Armeo
City .. .. . . . ..... Hervy Lipman
Cot»v .. . •...... . Ronni Forman
Graphic Arts ... . .... . Tom Toles
L..yout ....... Maryhope Runyon

Guest Opinion

Lit. &amp; Drama .. Michael Silverblan
Music ......... . .. .Billy Altman
Photo ... . ....... David G . Smith
Asst . . . .... Mickey Osterreicher
Sportl ........... Sharyn Rogers

TIHI SP«:trum is a member of the Unites State Student Press AS10cietion
and is served by Unites Press International, College Press Sl!f'ivce, the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate and Liberation News Service.

Rupublication of all metter hl!f'ein without the express consent of the
Editor-in-Chief is forbidden .
Editorial policy is determined by the Editor-in·Chief.

Page six . The Speotrum . Friday, August 13, 1971

1

by StanleY'fJiyan
One's real religion answers the questions "what
am I?" "why am I here?" and •(where am J going?"
For mo,s t people the~e questions are answered
implicitl:y; the answers are built right into one's
outlook . .Many people it seems have dismissed the
question "where am I going?" witll some vague
notions of their future plans plus a faith that it
won't be too bad. However, the less adequate a
person feels his answer is to aJI these questions the
more ln1tensely must he ask them. (I am not
convinced aU must ask these questions. I do know
nevertheless that a certain kind of mentality must,
and that this 'mentality is common these days.
Raskolnikov and Siddartha, as we see them last, I
believe have transcended the need for these
question1s or their answers.) The "doubt" of
adolescemce is the search fo r answers, beliefs one can
build a life on .
The presu-pposition with which this paper is
written is that these questions can never be answered
adequate:ly. The questions can be dealt with with a
combina1tion of understanding and faith . But i.f one
withholds his faith and decides he is going to ·
understa1nd life for what it is - he frnds himself
nauseous at tbe .edge of the abyss. Now some people
have deeper answers than others. But still it seems all
must at one point or another refuse to go deeper,
must ha1fe faith ill an understanding and stand on
that. Let one's understanding be as deep as it can,
still, if be flas not faith, that is, if be insists on
keeping his eyes open and refuses to accept any
given depth of understanding as the truth - he
dweUs in darkness.
The first kind of crime, the healthy bankrobber,
is held to be caused by religio n. By this Is meant that
this crime is caused by a faith in something. Tbe
bank robber has a faith in money and the
understanding that the rest of the people won't and
can't follow his example. The one kind of rapist has
such a fa1ith in the goodness of his sensations that
nothing e:lse seems to make much difference.

In its usual sipification religion is not so broad
a concept as its usaae here. It refers mainly to
Christianity, Hinduism, etc. Religion in this sense is
here understood as just another competitor for
people's faith. Without religion, says Christianity,
people put their faith in o~ber things: people find
hew gods. This may or may not strike a person as
criminal depending upon where he stands. A man
can put IUs faith is Jesus or women or both or
neither. The faith one has in the opposite sex as the
opposite sex, the less of a Christian he is likely to be.
The second class of crimes, those wanton and
destructive, are caused by the lack of any religion.
Take a person say 16 years old. He bas been trying
hard to understand the world . The universe won~t
unlock its secrets to him. Then again because of the
chaos of our times he is not able to put faith in
anything. His life looks absu rd to him . He is required
to act but has neither knowledge of what he is really
doing, nor faith in it. The way which first occurs to
him as a solution to this problem is to experiment .
He · starts by trying to live in the way that happy
people live. Without faith this necessarily fails. Then
it seems he will discover good if he can only discover
evil. If he finds something evil then good is 11imply its
negation. At this point he becomes the criminal of
this second class. Looking for remorse, looking for
regret hi! crosses the boundaries
what other
people hold S(ICred. But he is dwelling in the abyss.
In an ag~ casting off established religion and the
more important religion of ow culture, money and
private property, aad putting its faith, weakly
however in other trungs one must expect this type of
crime. The more faithless a culture the more criminal
in this sense.
Note here how this analysis also sheds light on
the new religious movement within the youth
culture. Some would t~tber live a secure lie than the
absolutely horrifying truth; there is no god who
.commands our faith . The choice is one's own;
happiness or philosophy. Philosoph(_promis~_):rime
and the greatest anguish and only the po$si6ility of
the greatest fulfillment. Faith brings happiness. If
one would guarantee happiness his faith must be
indestructible. But if he wants truth his courage
must be infinite. Alas, the misery of man to live in
between.

of

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
This being the l~t column for the summer 1
have decided to dedicate it to a topic near to my
heart (and therefore my stomach and lungs). It is an
issue of 1such importance, of such magnitude in the
uni\'ersal scope of things, that I cannot mince words
to describe the seriousness of this situation . the time
has com•~ to once and for all put an end to the
secrecy a.nd deceit involved in this actiQn. We must
put the question squarely to those who participate in
this possible f.raud.
How the hell do those two women in the
Pristeen 'commercial manage to stop a conversation
mid-sentc:nce in a little coffee shop and resume it at
the exact point several hours later while visiting the
Museum •of Art'r
Is this some sort of conspiracy? Does it involve
other co:;metics companies that manufacture these
so-called " feminine hygiene" sprays? The time has
come to expose these and other myths perpetrated
on an innocent public. First of all, I must call to
your attention that Dorothy Provine discovered FDS
after a severe case of heat rash . It is not true that the
Man From G lad was in any way responsible for her
condition , though they are reputed to be "just
friends."
Next , let me dispell the fear that has been rising
in the Buffalo communit y concerning a certain well
known a~lvertiser. There is absolutely no truth to the
rumor that J ~bn Starr is an agent for the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police. It is true that he was
formerly 'employed by the Icelandic Air Patrol.
Com1mericals I would like to see (concept stolen
from MAD Magazine) :

Scene : a tropic jungle. Drums play in the
background. A small native woman cautiously
approaches a native man, who stands with his arms
folded, in her hands she holds a small box, wruch she
offel'$ to the man.
Announcer' In Tahiti there 'is a fragrance which
brings out woman's most primitive instinct.
Command bas captured this fragrance in new
Tahitian Lime anti-perspirant. (Woman hands box to
man. As he examines it she hits him over the head
with a club. Blackout.)
NEWS FLASH: The small farming community
of Repose, Kansas was destroyed this morning when
a sudden white tornado swept through the area.
Represtatives from a nearby Ajax ·plant denied any
responsibility for the tragedy.
A spokesman for the Ford Motor Company
announced today that they're coming up with a
better idea. Responding to complaints about faulty
bumpers which will collapse under the pressure of a
fiv~ mile per hour collision, Ford bas embarked on 11
new advertising campaign to educate the public,
about the advantages of the design. The new
campaign features a series of commercials
demonstrating that when a man traveling at · five
miles per hour collides with a new Ford, the man is
uninjured (though the car did suffer over $300 in
damages).
Meanwhile, at a firing range in East Purple, New
Jersey, spectators watched in amazement as Horace
Hotchbliss, marksman first class in the Andorran
army, fired seven straight bullseyes with a .22 loaded
with BIC pen cartridges. None of the pens would
write after the demonstration, however. It seems
t.hat Mr. Hotcbbliss bad mistaken John Cameron
Swayze, on location for a Timex oommericaJ, for the
target. The watch, however, was still tick.ing.

Scene : a 'Well furnished office in Hayes Hall. A lean,
mustachioed man paces back and forth , mumbling to
h imself. The camera closes in, revealing him to be
Albert Somit.
Somil : Dr. Ketter, you can fire me for this. but
Finally , laboratory technicians at the Shell Oil
you've got bud breath. You should try Scope in the Co mpany's r esearch facility announced that
morning.
Platformate, an additive in the gasoline, allowed
(The door opens and Dr. Ketter enters.)
them to travel farther on SuperShell tan any other
So mitt: ~· Ketter, you can fire me for this. but fuel. Dr. Timothy McTimmy, chief technician, said
you've gott . . . Scope!
that their trip covered "all the cpsmic expanses." By
Ketter:
s. AI. I tried it this morning and my the end of the journey, according-to the doctor, "the
breath sti ll feels fres h. And by the way, AI, you're entire crew was at one with the universe." Funeral
fired.
services will be held tomorrow.

�~

Revise elect n procedut:'eS
•

To the Editor:

)

In a response to a letter in last week's Th e Spectrum by the fo•mer
Provost of Arts and Letters, Eric Larrabee, we wi~h to correct a ~~asic
understanding of our position.
We in no way wish to belittle the achievements of our professi1onal
coUeagues in the fields of English and Comparative Literature, bull we
do ask that in their enthusiasm for their own discipline they not fo1rget
that other colleagues in Arts and Letters are working no less zealous.ly
In fiel&lt;ls that ate equally challenging and no less relevant to our ti ,~les,
such as demography, cultural history and historical or ap~llied
linguistics. To take only one example: the much maligned Departnlent
of Spanish, Italian, ·and Portugese has without fanfare among lu 17
faculty members produced this past year alone eight books andl 23
articles, besides editing Forum ltalicum (perhaps this country's leading
journal for Italian studies), and maintaining· as a service to t):le entire
University the highly innovative Center for Critical Languages whose
pioneering in supervised self-instruction is now widely copied elsewlhere
(last- semester alone: over 8.50 students enrolled in 30 different
languages in 43 institutions coast to coast) and has so far attra•cted
outside grants, from numerous sources, totalling $334,006.
The Department also houses one of the most active centers f~r
historical dialectology In the U.S.'today. Its unique computerized tdata.
bank of Spanish colonial language features , now in its third yea r, is
already providing basic source materials for four doctoral dissertations
and will inspire many more in the years ah~ad. The Department has
also developed the world's most extensive index of 16th cenltury
emigrants to the New World, with over 60,000 biographical data cards
arranged according to place of birth in Spain and other parts of Eumpe.
The Department's five senior professors include winners of a
Guggenheim Fellowships plus numerous Fulbright lectureships and
visiting professorships. Four of the five have had many years of highly
successful programs and institutes, and all five are productive scholars
of both national and international repute. In short, by any natiunal
criteria, this Department is one of which the Univ~rsity may justly be
proud, but like our colleagues at other instittffions we do not consider
it professionally dignified to be constantly telling everyone how good
we are. As for the quality of our teaching, as in most departments
(including English), it ranges all the way from innovative and inspiring
to very dull, with examples of both good and bad in most raJnks.
Though the spectacular growth of Portugese studies at this University
can be accredited entirely to the efforts of just one of our Assistant
Professors,--Dr. Kenneth Rasmussen , whom students consistently rate

..

CANADA? Why fiabt the
crowds, high prices, traffic and
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WILLOW BEACH
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Shoes Repaired While-U·Wait

Far from our aspiring to a "f&gt;ower grab," as Larrabee dramatically
suggested in last week's letter, our persistent complaint for the past
four years has been the at-large election procedure, unique to Arts and
Letters, that allows the numerically largest department to manipulate
the election of representatives from the smaller ones. ~evise this unjust
election procedure to conform to those of other faculties, and peace
will return at last to Arts and Letters. Our Department has never posed
a threat to anyone. All 1 Jong we have respected the right of each
department , large or small, to chart its own priorities and wish only
that this same courlesy be accorded to us.
Revision of the election procedures to guarantee a small
department the right to representation is surely not going to spell the
ruin of the largest one. (In any fresh election most of the imcumbents
will probably be re-elected anyway). It is ju~t the principle of
self-determination at stake here. When representative government is
restored, we shall be satisfied.
Since prolonged internal dissension hurts b&lt;&gt;th this Faculty and the
University as a whole, we earnestly hope that both our new Acting
Provost and his eventual successor will seek to heal the breach by
revising the governance of Arts and Letters so that each department can
elect its . own representatives to the faculty without outside
interference.

'!

. .llll:';l.ll _ _ _ _ _
,_,.,

""!W

I

Peter Boyd-Bowman
Professor of Hispanic Linguistics

~JUI'ia

8UFFALO FESTIVAL 11reaaats

Repair

ONE STOP SERVICE CENTER

the most inspiring language teacher that they have ever met, there are
of course a few others whose teaching leaves much to be desired.
However, on t he whole, the picture is a bright number of '
undergraduate majors (80) and M.S. and Ph .D. candidates (40 and 30
respectively) shows a healthy balance. So too does the ratio of one
graduate specialist in Hispanic Linguistics for every three in literature.
One of the reforms long demanded by our students in the past was
a broadening of our departmental program to permit more options than
just the study of literature alone. In this Department we are genuinely
responsive to our students' needs, and elected student representatives
serve with full voting powers on all departmental committees. We feel it
necessary to mention these things, not only to point out that the
Department of Spanish, Italian, and Portugese is very much alive and
wen, but also that its chief desire is to be free to conduct its own affairs
without patronizing interference from other groups in Arts and Letters
with whose notions of what constitutes excellence we do not happen to
agree.

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8:30 p.m. Also on the bill is bfu•
Freddie
King, who has been influenti•l on the guiur styles of
most British guiurists, espec~lly Eric Ct.pton.

•eat

.

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAl present

LEON RUSSELL
and FREDDIE KING

SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, at 8:30 P.M.
~EACE BRIDGE CENTER
Pooler Avenve of ihe Peoce lridte (fhrvwoy bit N-t)
lickel t "' &gt;4.00 (,,,., ,ed 'l"onuty) now or •vtfooo f ..hvol fitht Office,
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enveoopoJ; U.o. Noroon Holt ond lvffolo Stole Colloto Yicket Office.

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Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, August 13, 1971

Milll .... .r • ... lee.. c. . . .s. We talso R~~PIY MW texts , ...,Nds-supplies
___.....,. ......... s-tlts.

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
3610 Main St. Across fr0111 U.B.

133-7131

STORES

INC.

�I

•
TbeWIIo -

Attack!

Keith Emerson, who has betlf'l known to throw
knives and wrenches into his Hammond organ will
appear with Greg Lake and Cart Palmer at the Peace
Bridge Center next Thursday ;at 8 :30 p.m . The trio
have recently released their second ablum, Tarkus.

Are not created eqult,l
Only the. water's the same. We manufacture 4 sizes of waterbeds w!th exclusive safety
features worth checking into. Waterbeds are fun, but 200 gallons of water is a serious
muter... we're serious. Come and see the difference.

I FOB A .LIMITED TIME ONL~~
KING., QUEEN, DOUBLE &amp; T'W'IN
SIZE W'ATER MAT'I'RE!;S
DOUBLE - SEAMED
with air release valve and filling adapter
GUARANTEED FOR S YEARS

only

TESTED &amp; APPROVED BY UNDERWRITER'S LABORATORIES
WITH BUILT- IN TEMPERATlJRE COttTROL THERMOSTAT.

"W... ~Nat "(DL

79182)

So what's aood taste, anyway. The Who are shown quite
profess.tonally tJpping up their flys after palina on a monolithic
structure placed ln the middle of nowhere. So that 'a cool. And it shows
times are certainly a changed . Remember when the Stones got b usted
for piaina on some guy's garage; remember Don Peterson giving us the
old standard high school fmger on the front cover of the first Moby
Grape album, etc.
WeD to procrastinate a bit. What could this Who move ag;sinst the
blatantly stoic Decca records lead to.
Jggy Pop stripping away layers of his flesh with a potat{) 'Pealer an&lt;J
a mike stand being forced up his asshole by a h igh school principal
dressed in drag and Nico on a pedestal laughlna silently while Robert
Plant personally squeezes a case of lemons with Jimmy Page sticking his
dick into a light socket as David Clayton Thomas pukes and Katz says,
'Huh' and the Velvets giggle as Lou raps with David Cassidy and Grand
Funk has its flesh torn from it body by 18 marshall amplifie,rs the siu
of their Times Square Billboard _,__.........-....,
tumea fuU up by Terry Knight .._ _~."".
who's readin&amp; Sixteen magazine.
while jerking off to a foldout or
Davy Jones and the &lt;4Udience is
devouring the worm ridden remains
of jimi and janis shouting 'More,
more, more' as an underground
frizz Queen runs up on stage with
Jimi's decaying manhood shouting
' Halleleujah it's mine, more, more!'
Imagine this could even tum into a
cover for the new Carpenters
· album. 'Oh, Bosch," he said,
proudly .
As for " Who's Next." The attempt at confusing abstractions such
as the figure of the white monolith on earth, and Keith Moon is really a·
madman , see back picture. I mean as in 200 1 when man in confronted
with the force of the unlcnown he hesitantly reaches out his hand to
caress the cosr\}.i~allus disguised as a black monoli\h.
Would The Who have us believe they would piss on the symbol of
the unknown powers of the cosmos·~ Ah, no, The Who are a rock and
roll band, they want us to believe that this white monolith obviously
on earth is represen tative of something else. Why sure. The white
monolith on earth is the symbolic representation of the finite world,
the known, obviously. The Who is symbolically pissing on man. Or
perhaps to put it yet another way perhaps it 's The Who using the white
monolith on earth to symbolically re present its audience. Those who
have reactions on cue, those who wouldn 't know an F sharp minor
fro m a 9th chord . Those who dug Tommy as the ultimate in
cr.tftsmanship. " How do you think they do 11 I I don't know I What
makes them so good!" The Who is pissing on me and you brother for
the morons we really are . Think about it.
Be that as it may . It would be stunning, infonnative and objective
to say something about the album. But I won't . All I can say is that it
has re-conjured up those fa ding images of " I Can't Explain . I'm a Bov,
The Kids Are Alright" and, o f course, "Substitute." And that's gor 1.
Billy says he likes "Going .Mobile" the best. I haven't decided yet but I
think it's going to be '' Behind Blue Eyes."
This is for you collectors : The single world of The Who is almost ,
but nowhere near that of, tt1e Kinks. On the fli p of the latest single
release " Won't Get Fooled Again " is " I Don't Even Know Mysetr'
which isn't o n the lp and just might be the follow up to " My
Generation ." Other Who releases to look up in the past are : an
Entwhistle tune called "Heaven and Hell" as the flip to "Summertime
Blues," Keith Moon's phenomenal " Dogs Part Two" the flip to " Pinball
Wizard" and ''The Seeket" which has as its flip side ''Here For More" a
country western song with Daltry lyrics and Townshend pedal steel.
(Afterthought) : if Mick Jagger dies next I'll know R. Meltzer is god
returned . For thoSe of you who don't know, Meltzer has his 'I' theory
which says that those with the letter J at the front o f a name will die.
He predicted the death of Jim Morrison and Jagger is next on the list.
Anyway, in final conclusio n if R. Meltzer is god I know of some
disciples who will fo llow him to that big Mets game in the sk y. Wow.
God is a rock promoter and Meltzer his son come down to tell the
people where it's really at. It fits. Miracles and all . Watch out if you see
a man with a Mets cap and bottle of bourbon walking across the East
River smoking a stogey. Then we'll know it's true.

- L oki
a••••••••••••••••••••tl t ltllllllttltptattlllttl

join our happy staff
I I I R R I R I I I I Up I p RR A I p pIp I I I I o 'u

I I I RI I I I UtI I I

Af

Friday, August 13, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�'Eve I Knievel'

Movie biography
very disappointing
ready supply of pat answers to
often-asked questions and comes
off as a k.ind of Super-prole (he
Everybody knows that movie travels around in a gaudy trailer
biographies are generally to be truck with zebra wall paper and
avoided like the plague, especially built-in beer keg), but somehow a
if you want to gain some sort of kind of basic integrity comes
insight into the life of the subject. across, coupled with a well-hidden
Even such lauded efforts as Wi/$0 11 Insecurity . The qu~stio n is just
and Rembrandt usually what is K.nlevel trying to prove?
degenera t e' into tired cliche
s it ua I ions, presumably as an Cop-out
None of thi~ is even touched
overreaction to sensationalism.
Anyw ay, s ince m ov ie on in the movie. Content to spew
biographies are bound to be out flctionaliud versions of
baloney, I'd much rather see episodes in Evel's life, the movie
obvious, sensational baloney than loses any claim to be an actual
pretentiou s, quasi-intellectual biography. Since Knievel really is
baloney. With that thought in an interesting character, someone
mind I went to see Eve/ Knlevel. who people want to know, the
After ...,...., y.n of preuure by the Art Oepertment and Norton Craft Shop,
Uttle did I suspect I would be film is a cheapo cop-out of the
Gllllery 211 will open this fall for Univnty members to lhow 1heir work. The . . . fonn.ty the -=ond
disappointed. With so much first o rd er; an opportunity
floor Norton Halt lounge, lhoutd eliminate mMy ..curity and dilpMy problems prwioutly encounter.t
material at their disposal I hardly disappointingly missed .
with 11M first floor C..tw Lounge. Due to restrictive SUNY poticiel on building NnOVftions, 11M
Hamilton, although obviously
thought the ftlmmakers would
turn out such a lifeless piece of no Knievel , comes across as
Mdition of Gallery 218, pwt of a much larger ,..,reng~ment of second floor offices, '' being terweiY
drek, but turn it out they did, something approaching a human
funded by Sub-ao.d I, Inc.
complete with George Hamilton being for the first time in his
career. Remember how he used lo
as a totally miscast Evel.
look like he was stamped out of
plaslic, with plucked eyebrows
American hero
•
co.
EHI Kn ieve/ becomes and sanforized hair? Well, In F:vtl
interesting not as a film but a1 a Knieve/ he does a good job as the
Spoclollzlnoma.ffOb
problem In the old "life imitation young Bobby Knievel, back in
art imitating art etc." routine, and Butte, a SO's roller with a DA
in th inking about this one haircut, leather jacket , etc,. but
immediately senses something can't seem to handle the more ~;..
SUNDAY ..we; 7t
about the personalities of both mature, self-promoting go-gelter
E. . . .._.iMSillllft
""
K.nievel and Hamilton. After all, Knievel.
SAIIJIOAY, ..WO 21
CcN ale a de of Mwsed
fot gems from the
I
Hamilton produced as well as
Sue Lyon. on 1he other hand .
Floyd Ctca;ow
lanck1alltoo
JEWISH
BIBLE
.
starred in the picture, and it can is quite good as ahe mlssus,
a..tAtldrw
Phone
WJ!NOAY. AUO JO
be considered "his" in every way, although here again lhe weird
loots Randolph
876 - 4265
lheOsmonck
and I can't help feeling tha 1 situation of such a marriage is
Roy Clark
Hamilton's obvious attraction to ignored, as are their children
SUNDAY, AUG 22
Knlevel both as a subject for a who've been written out of the
movie and as a human being says movie completely. Knievel really
CHRIST 111E ONLV SA VJOUR
WUlNlSOAV WJ!NOAY,
quite a bit about Our America.
did kidnap his wife when they got
"Neither is there aalvetlon In
5(" 1. 2. l.a, $"""6
any olher for lhere is POne other
Just what the hell has made married by riding his motorcycle
CiraM .. otematioiMII
neme under haven Jiven emona
Knievel, a schnook from Butte, through lhe halls of her sorority
Orcw
S•OO .... ,....• ._ , ..,.,.._ 11,_.,,.,_,.
men . whereby we m1111 be aved. "
Montana, into a nationally known house until he found her, bul in
- Acll4 : 11
celebrity? Why do people go out reality it was wilder than in the
to see him do his motorcycle bit? movie. That's lypical of the lame
Wf~SO...Y, AUO 2$
SUNSHINE HOUSE
ALL PRICES $4- $5-$8- ... unl•
I went to a press lunch for him attitude of the picture.
Guess Who
otherwise
i ndie~tld. Anlnce
during his stay in Buffalo last
Old falthfuls Rod Cameron and
Call or come in
lt1UISOAY &amp; flltOAV• ..W0 76 27
month and then schlepped out to Dub Taylor appear in short
tickets (5041trYice charfl) entitle
Jot.w
...
y
Cash
ANYTfME
lancaster Speedway for his act, c h arac t er part s and th e
you to frtt 1dmit11nce to the CNE
Drug emergencies &amp;
which· of course includes his big co mparative solidity of their
f'Oun• on tht dly of performMct.
~
jump over ten cars preceded by paris, particulary Cameron, only
drug related problems
not include vehicle)
Drum&amp; Bugle
miscellaneous wheelies and such. serve to point out how really bad
Corps
Pl
....
otatlon
All Confidential
u )0_,. 00
Knievel in person forced me to Ha milton is. Mosl of the movee
108
Winspear
Ave.
change my image of Knievel the looks like it was shot with one
TICKETS FOR ALL ATTRACTIONS now on •le It
831-4046
public hero. True, he is an take, so at least not too much film
NORTON
HALL TICKET OFFICE 1nd Flltivll Tecbt Office
.
extremely slick operator with a was wasted.
by David Karpoff

Sp~trom

Film Critic

'"Rizaf?

CAT:,:~

ICANADI~N NATIONAL EXHIB~TION

I

I

I•.....::=.~-=GRANDSTAND
ATTRACTIONS
.. ··Hear, 01 sraeI

TORON'FO ONT ·

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$ $$ $

l~AVING ·- TRUCKLOAD SALt;:
Danish, Grained Walnut 44" wide
STEREO CONSOLE
AMIFM Solid State 3 gang
tuned RF Tuner, 28" &amp; 23~spks.
Reg. $179.95

(one per customer)

(one per customer)

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NOw ONLY $12.88
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•

~
---~--

..
-~

-

-

Page ten. The Spectrum . Friday, August 13, 1971

FRIDAY - AUGUST 13, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.

STEREO TAPE RECORDER
Reg. $169.95
NOW ONLY $68.88

NOW ONLY $128.88

BIG SAVINGS IN BOTH
BLACK &amp; WHITE

co-

QUIET KOOL AIR CONDITIONERS

45RPM
Record

EMERSON RADIOS, ·

carry case

STEREOS, 8-TRACK,

Reg. $1 .49

SOUND SYSTEMS

NOWONLY28 ¢
(One per customer)

AM/FM/FM Stereo, Gawrard changer
4 air susp. spkn. PILOT. Reg. $249.95

SPECIAL 8,000 BTU air wave a~per-deluxe
model 116 volts Reg. $229.95 NOW $148.88

s

NOW$197.n

&amp; E WHOLESALE
" WHERE THE CUSTOMER IS ALWAYS KING!"

442 NIA~IA FALLS BLYD.

orae ~~!~! uav

�DENT DISCOUN

CLAIIIIIIII

ON ALL

.ut supplies, picture framina,

• redecoradna needs.
D. M. AECH PAINT CD.
3209 Bailey Ave.

Xeroxing
355Norton

FOR SALE

C•ll LMlt 117..0114 for Sept.

TRIUMPH ] ,965 650 ec, $700 . N orton
750 cc 1968,~$900. 674· 1558.
MEN'S BICYCLE - Englls11 3•sPMd,
six 'm onth•S old , $30. Cull Jim,
834·2762 .
GARRARO SYNCHR O · LAB 7 5
turntable, plus bltse, dust c:ovu,
Emplra 888E u rtrldge, $100 or best
offer. One y1aAr old . 88 2·35-71.
AUSTIN HE.Al-EY 3000, 1961,
excellent C4)ndltlon, must ~II, best
offer, 873-4;H4.
'

BUFFALO FESTIVAl presents

Emerson, Lake &amp; Palmer
'

And Added Attraction
THURSDAY, AUGUST 19th at 8:30P.M.

PIONEER PLA-25 stereo turntable +
Shure M91Ec cart. 1 month old, cost
$189.90. Must sell, $1 30 .00. B ob
875·4464.
9 1CYCLES 1 Call
Interesti ng prices.

881·1674.

Po•.t•• Aven"" at the Peoce llrldQjt 1Thrvwoy Ealt N-9)
l icaeta a t ~.00 (limited quanllly) now at luffalo F.. tlval n&lt;ket Olflce,
Statler-Hilton Lobby imail otdera oocepted with aelf.addreued, stomped
envelope)l \J .I . Norton Holl ond &amp;u ffolo State Colle9e Ticket Office.

.

A FURNISHED APARTME NT needed
to S\lb-let Just for A\lgust , Call £4 Date,
831 •3602, 874-3056.
SEPTEMBER RENTAL WAnted or
roommate for Stony Brook Graduate
entertng U.B. LAw School . Reasonable
&amp; convenient. PI- e c.JII/wrlte Jack
Gutkln, 1591 Pell\am Parkway N.,
Bronx, N .Y. 10469. (212) OL5·7527.
t, WE .-cs a room or apartment for
Septamber. Call William 885.()093.

WANTED

Very

FO R SAL.E co mpl ete househota
dining, living, bedroom, ki t chen
furniture; r ~1gs, sewing machine, desk,
trunks, etc. ·re7-6525.

PEACE BRIDGE CENTER

HOUSI! OR APT . nellded for ~ dr 3
Ofrts for Sept, Wltl\ln walking dlstanC.
of campus. Call 837· 1617 or 831-4113
or 831 ·5393. Ask for Mickey,

1964 VOL .&lt;SWAGEN for sate. New
clutch, mot•or , and tires. Needs 5100
work . Bast offer. Gibson guitar and
case $200. 837· 1630.
FORD FAI RLINE '63. Call Andres
837·0362 after 7 p .m .

APARTMENT FOR RENT

CHARLIE'S

HOUSE for 4 people,
three bedrooms. Two blocks from
cam pus. Rent $225/mo. Call 837· 2726
after 6 p.m.

BARBERSHOP

CHEAP TWIN BEDS, dresser, chest,
desk, TV, rulg, drapes, file ublnet, pots
&amp; pans. 691 .. 9381.

NICELY FURNISHED house, close to
c ampus.
Evenings: 894 · 1212,
845 ·5600, or 652·1268. Ask for Jim,
Steckmeyer.

UNIVER~ITY

PLAZA)

))

upon presentation
of 1.0 . Card on
men's hairpieces.

((

Specializiflll in Every
Phase of Men's Hair

styUng, Razor Cutting
and Beard Trimmi"'l
._~~~-837 - 3111 --v-~--~

1969 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, light
blue with white top. 351 V -8 engine,
power staerlng and brakes, deluxe
Interior, ra,dlo, white walls . Owner
running aw;~y to Rio. Must sacrifice.
$1795. 876· 2790.
BUICK SPE.C IAL 62, runs good, $ 75.
Call 832-49!i0.

SEpt. 6 th (one way only) $109.00
N iagara Falls to LOndon (GAtWICk) .
323/lUI N orton. 831·3602, untvwslty
Tr.AYII.
BEAUTIFUL HANDMADE gold &amp;
s1111er Jewelry - wedding rings - •t
sanslble pr ices. J.P Gotdweavar
Jewel ers, 655 Elmwood at Ferry St.
&amp;81 ·3400 .

LOST&amp; FOUND

FU~ I SHED

1959 4-doo.r Pontiac. Call 834·9145
after 6 p.m.
USED SCM ELECTRA 220 typewriter.
Call 834·91&lt;15 after 6 p.m.

10% DISCOUNT

MAKE M O NEY Mil Ads for the
Spectrum, room 355 N o r to n.

UB
DAY CARE CE N TER
Is
Interv ie w ing applicants for staff
positions beginning Saptember .
Applicants m ust be over twenty-one
THE SPECTRUM 'S ctasslfleds will do
and h AVe a)(pertence In working with
It for you, or Just help you set up fo r
c hllc:tr an tn groups. Appllutlons · doing lt. $1 .25 for 15 words or less,
available In 342 N orton Monday 8/lo
$.05 for each Additiona l word. Ads
must be paid for before they run. 355
1·3 p.m.
N orton Hall.
STUDEN T FO R evening babysitting In
excnange for own room and meals.
STARVING ARTISTS we ha\le
Small salary, u ,a . area. 8 38·1199.
breltd . Name, ph one, medium. P .O. sos
203, Buffalo 14224.

REFRtGE IRATORS, stoves and
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
' Sycamore - TX4 ·3183.

(across from GOODYEAR, at the

NOTII:;EI Expandin g our VW service to
AmtMrst, CM~r snoo comes to you at
schOOl or nome. $19.95 complete
tun-up. For Mt\llc:. 675 ·5~2 . BMC
&amp; VW Servlca Center, 1415 OrChard
Piork Road, west saneca.

SUB·LET APARTMENT
NEED SOMETHING TEMPORARY ?
Good rooms (up to 6), w ith bathroom
ana kitchen. Low cost. Call 837-5131
any &lt;lay between 9·10 a.m. and 5 ·7
p.m.

ROOMMATES WANTEO
MALE OR FEMALE available Sept. 1,
5 min. from campus . $67.50/mo. plus
utilities. Call Ken 832·1971 .

WOULD THE PERSON who found tile
tight tan jacket In Diefendorf 5, July
29 call 675·2638 . Reward , or at least
return the cheque book to tost and
found .

MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING' EX PERl ENCED. IBM
Selectric. s.so per page. Donna
McGowan, 838-4808 .
UNDERSTANDING GIRL to ch;H
with elderly lady on
temporary basts . Phone 634·3082 .

a Iter noons

CAMPS ITE 9x12 tent on 300 acres
pr ivate wood land. Swimming, fishing.
$50 per week . 823 ·0201 for detAils.,
MEXICAN FOOD - tacos, burritos,
enchiladas, tamales , guKamale, and
more. Try our popular Tippy's steak
sandwich Also serving chicken and
seafood. While you're there, enJoy a
brew . Tippy's Taco House, 2351
Sheridan Drive, (Across from Putt·Pvtt
Golf Course). 838·3900 .

APAftTMENTS WANTED

ONE OR Two roommates wanted for
Sept. own room, $52 .50 +,on Heath.
837-496 4 .

YOUN G LPIDY with small c hild needs
room; cooking facilities, mates of.
females, $·40/A month. Call Gina,
837-1549 04' 838-4317.

TWO Gl RLS to rouna out co-ea house.
Share room. $45 each . Off Hertel. Ken ,
837-6159.

HELP! Ne\N In Buffalo. Must have
Apartment t'or Sept. 1st. G rad student
with 3 yr . o td . tdeally 2·b edroom,
kitchen, ba·t h with access to washer
and dryer. IN.D. from Main St. cam pus
or c lose to t1 us - call 837-8792, ask for
M oya,

BUNNIE AND GERRY - Here's to
many more like tills one. Happy first
year toge ther! Love: Lestye, Dennis
and Benjl.

PROFESSIONAL TVPING SERVICE.
Specializing In term papers, theses, and
d luertAtlons. Call now 684·5135.

DAVID : Six of nineteen completed!
Hang In thera and snow them how It's
done! Ml» you. Love, Sh~ryn.

GUSTAV (no frills or trumpeting,
please) will xerox "Anything for $ .08 a
copy. (Cheapest rate we know In this
town.)

N EEOED TWO BEDROOM apartment
preferrably near c.mpus, around $100 .

PERSONAL

SUMMER
SWEATSHIRT SALE

50%

RESPONSIBLE Interior painting. Free
estimates. Fohl and Sip es. Call before 5
p .m.: 881·3691.

EXPER IENCED FAST TY PING by
elec tr ic typewriter. Theses, term
papers, etc. $ .40 per page, CAll
873· 1305.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE,
work done on 1BM Magnetic Card
Equipment. Fast, error· freo copy.
unlimited originals. Speclellzlng In all
types o f dissertations and tneses. Call
837-6558.
NEED VIetnamese papers tranSlated .
Anyone able to do so, call 897 -3825
after 5 p.m .
ALLENHURST AND PRINCETON,
we are near you. 'Check' Discount
Liqu or . See our ad . Lowest prices.

off

* s:e you Sept.13

...swell!

on all
S¥1t88tshirts in stock.

I

Buffalo Textbook
3610 Main St.
Buffalo, N.Y. 833-7131
Across from Clement Hall.

This ad will be good for most of
. .- - · · - - t h e iummer - w tell your friends·----•

Friday, August 13, 19.7 1 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

I

�Announcements
Women•s Liberation will hold free karate classes
for women Tues. and Thurs. from 4-6 p.m. in
Room 340 Norton Hall.
The UB Vets Club will conduct Draft
Counseling every Wednesday from noon to 4 p.m. in
Room 260 Norton Hall.
Summer seslion students who are eligible for
benefits from the Veterans Administration are
reminded ~ a listin&amp; of their summer courses and
credits for which they ve enrolled must be filed
with the Anmcial Aid Off"e. If this was not done at
the lhne of registration, veteran students should call
ii't , -lloorq 213 Harriman library, to provide this
information .

.

Finance 301, Mlanapment Science 301 and
Chemistry 123. A~•plications are available at 88
WinspeM.

,.
.•

lntenwional FCl•lk Dmcint will be held tonight
from 8 - 11 p.m. in Room 30 Diefendorf Annex.

.

\

Psychomat w1ll lbe held Monday from 2-4 p.m.
and Wednesday from 7 - 10 p.m. in Room 232
Norton Hall.
~

Gay Liberation Front will sponsor a Gay Rap
Wednesday at 8 p.m.. in" Room 234 Norton Hall. All
gay men and women' are invited to stop in and rap.

If you are takinu Orpnic Survival 201 and 202
this fall, please re-gister and come to the meeting on
Sept. 7 at 7:30p.m. on the Norton Terrace.

Student Association's Speakers Bureau needs
interested students to help obtain speakers and set
up programs for the upcoming year. If interested,
please contact Mark Weiner in Room 205.

The Swamp Fox Theatre Group will present the
play The Homecoming by Harold Pinter Aug. 23 and
24 in the Conference Theater.

Any underaraduate student interested in
tutoring college students for academic credit should
call the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory at 831-3946.
Pres.ently tutors are needed in 4natomy 307,

Hillel is sponsoring a hayride tomorrow evening.
Transportation will leave the Hillel house at 8 p.m.
sharp. For more information, contact Bruce at
838-2155 (after 5 p.m.) or Linda at 835-1027.

,

.t

Available at the Ticket Office
Shaw Ftestival

Canadian National Exhibition

thru Sept. 4 : Tqnlght at 8:30
thru Sept. 5: War, Women and Other Trivia

Aug. 20 - Jerry Lewis
Aug. 21
C het Atkins, Floyd Cramer and Boots
Randolph
•
Aug. 22
The Carpenters
Aug. 23 - The Fif"th Dimension
Aug. 24 - C harley Pride
Aug. 25
The Guess Wht&gt;
Aug. 26 27: Johnny Cash
Aug. 30
The O~rnond Brothers
Aug. 31
The Jackson 5
Sept. 1 6: Circus In ternational '71

Melody Fair
thru Au:g. 14 jerry Vale and Charlie Manna
Aug. 15 Bobby Sherman·
Aug. 16 21: Sound of Music Carol Lawrence
Aug. 22 The Byrds
Aug. 23 28: Vikki Carr and Louis Nyc
Aug. 30 Sept. 4: Sergio Franchi and Pat Cooper
Sept. 6 John Gary

War Memorial Stadium
l&lt;leinhan's Music Hall
Aug. 31
Sept. I0

Chicago

Chucl.. Mangione
Excursions

Peace Bridge Exhibition Center
Aug. 13 1 5: Stratford Festival - soldout
Aug. 17
Shaw Festival - Tonightat8:30
Aug. 22
Shaw Festival - War, Women and Other
Trivia

Aug. 14 Leon Russell
Aug. 19 Emerson, Lake and Palmer
Sept. 3 5: WI&lt;BW Festival

What's Happening?
S;aturday, Aug. 14
Concert : Leon Russell, 8:30 p.m., Peace Bridge
Exhibition Center
Sunday, Aug. 15
Concert: Bobby Sherman, Melody Fair
Monday, Aug. 16
Play : The Sound of Music, wifh Carol Lawrence,
Melody Fair, thru Aug. 21
- Sueraich

This edition of The Spectrum is the lut
of the summer. Publication will resume on
Monday, September 13. All deadlines for
advertisements and copy will be Friday,
September-10 at noon.

Bac~page,
•

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                    <text>•

Vol. 22, No. 7

Friday, July 30, 1971

I

'

for .story, see page 3 . ..

�Student leaders object
to proposed FSA budget
A board of directors meeting of the Faculty Student
Association last Tuesday to consider its operating budget for
1971·72 ended without the budget's passage. Instead a recess
was called and a subcommittee appointed to investigate
apparent discrepancies. the FSA is the non·profit
educational corporation which is granted a monopoly by the
state to operate such enterprises as the bookstore, vending
machines and foddservice.
Stmtent"members-of1be-board-,
.particularly Mike Nicolau and
John Greenwood of the Graduate
Student Association and fan
DeWaaJ of the Undergraduate
Student Association, raised
objections to the budget after
obtaining an undisclosed but
submitted budget Of the
bookstore. This budget, drawn up
by Thomas Moore (Bookstore
~nager), differed considerably
from the one being examined by
Ute board as it contained no
provisions for price increases.

t h e- cross . . .
cooperate."

.·Gradilig system investigated
by Ed Jaffe

..

Sp«num St•lf ffrlt~r
A subcommittee on pading
evaluation has been recently
formed by the Faculty Senate
Committee o n EducationaJ Policy
and Planning. First recommended
as a result of the extensive
investiption initiated during the

we're here-t&amp;-

Mr. Nicolau and Mr. DeWaal
criticized the submitted budget as
unrealistic. Specifically, Mr.
DeWaal charged that the budget
was drawn up in a backwards
process with an arbitrary figure
set as the desirable income and all
operating figures and statistics
calculated from that. He susgested
that data concerning present
operating conditions first be
obtained and the income derived
from that.

Secret document?
Ed Ooty, fSA Treasurer,
maintained that the budget not
shown to the board was merely a
"working paper." He further
explained that it was not shown
to the FSA Board as it was proven
to be unacceptable. Mr. Ooty was
apparentl y upset tha t the
document had been obtained and
revealed by s tudent
representatives. He co mmented
th&amp;t "this is something out of
someone's files . . . I didn't think I
would have to answer to
something I didn't kno~ about."
Mr. Ooty continued : " I don't
think it is proper of you to speak
of so mething that wasn't
presented to this board."

Studentconcuns

James Schindler (Financial
Ac counting) agreed with this
reasoning and urged that
respective action be taken. It was
then t hat President ·Ketter
appointed Dr. Schindler, Mr.
Nicolau and Mr: Schillo as a ·
committee to · carefully consider
the budget and to report back to dispute over CoJJege A's grading
procedures last spring, the new
the board today.
subcommittee will evaluate all
According to student members grading procedures currently
employed on this campus.
of the board, they are not at all
When problems regarding self
satisfied with the submitted
evaluation and College A arose
budget. Many feel that inept
management has resulted in last semester, a Faculty Senate
Subcommittee on the Colleges
substantially higher prices for
was formed to clear up the
students and are concerned about
dispute. As a result o f this
correcting this situation.
Thomas Schillo, assistant vice
scrutiny of College A grading
Their specific concerns include
president for Housing, assure4 the
procedures, the group raised
student delegates that "we're ndt questions about charges for
several issues to be investigated on
trying to conceal anything ... adm i nistrative pro -ra te ,
a University-wide basis. Their
tl\ere is no secrecy here . . . we accounting procedures and the
report was issued within the past
want your cooperation to come realization of the _final budget.
three weeks.
up with something." Mr. Nicolau This especially concerns FSA
Included in the report were
responded that they {students) members as that corporation has
three main issues. The first dealt
''are not here to put anyone on steadily operated in a deficit.
with the concept of self grading
and its associated advantages and
:
BENING FOOD CO. ··~--~--------------.,
!
faults. Secondly, questions were
CATERING
raised concerning the general
~oow
Specializing in Buffets
grading patterns In the University .
The final point was concerned
Special service for
no~
with th e Sa t isfactory/parties of all kinds
Unsatisfactory grading option and
834-~6~
2.
self evaluation and whether or not
they s hould be c ontinued,
·
modified or eliminated.

William Baumer

-·· ..

I

eve ,-Y,f?a..,•

cto"e

lS:_;2660

~' o

••

.

.ftC.

opsn

"'"'n fl..

GIVE A DAMN.
USE A CONDOM.
••nr

G1'3dingdiscreP&amp;ncies
The question of self grading
and self evaJuation are two
different issues as separated by

r••·u

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L.!.~'!,!"~- - - - - - - - - ' - - - ._...___ - - - - ..J

Page two . The Spectrum .-Friday, July 30, 1971
I

Dr . William Baumer, vice Presently when problems arise a
chairman of the Faculty Senate. department bead will talk
Or. Baumer tupests t~t self individually to the offender. Or.
evaluation creates a ..pattern Baumer felt that the issues raised
where a student can get a grasp of ..were sufficiently sticky so that
what h e is doing without determination, may have to be left
determining the grade." Self
evaluation would have the student Questioned credits
convey aR evaluation of his
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory
performance to the professor who and written evaluation procedures
would use it in final grade will also be investigated by the
clet&amp;rmin-a-t-i.o.n,._ Dr . Baum.et-SI.lbcommittee. This is bein
insisted that "one thing that is prompted by a problem pointed
essentia l to becoming .an out by Charles H. V. Ebert, dean
autonomous individual is the of Undergraduate Studies. Some
ability for self-criticism in the graduate schools have questioned
the meaning of S/U grades and
positive sense."
An investigation of the general have either asked for further
grading procedures of the clarification or rejected the credits
University has been susgested as a outright. Dr. Baumer noted that
result of all~ged discrepancies in as he has previously predicted,
the assignment of grades from "the S/U pattern is a less sensitive
department to department, from indicator of' the quality of a
C:out$e to course and even in student's academic performance
different sections of the same and schools are reverting to the
course.
administration of standardized
Some problems revealed by admission tests."
Admissions and Records show
There are two factors which
that over the last few years the may influence and direct the
average grades at the University i n v e s t i g a t i o n o f t h e
have' been increasing; the fact that subcommittee. The first relates to
there are generally higher grades the up_Poming visit to Buffalo of
in some faculties than others; and the Middle States Accreditation
the aforementioned discrepancies Committee and the ensuing
of grading in different sections of investigation o~ the University's
the same course.
academic performance in the past .
Or. Baumer stated that this is not
an independent factor "simply
Insured individuality
Or. Baumer feels that the only pressing us to revert to a letter
answer to this problem might be grade system. If we found decent
to develop standard testing justification for the S/U system,
pro cedures. He admitted, we will keep it ."
however, that a series of problems
could develop if an attetnpt to Influencing factor
The second issue which might
dictate syllabi to each professor
was made. When asked if test have some effect on the
standardizaJion would necessarily subcommittee is the fact that the
dictate a similar standardization Stem Prospectus comes up for
of material, Or. Baumer review this spring. The Prospectus
emphasized the difference which will have been in effect for
between standardized tests and two years was the authorizing
materials.
document for the Collegiate
At the present time, certain Assembly. Some colleges, nQtably
departments already employ the College A, were the prime movers
technique of s tandardized for changes in grading procedures.
midterms and finals while College A formerly employed self
allowing the Instructor latitude in evaluation as ·a tool for
additional projects and quizzes. determining grades until an
This is effected by having a administrative decision halted that
general cqurse outline consisting practice.
of broad topic definitions and
The final recommendations of
allowing the individual professor the subcommittee on grading
to supplement the material as evaluation will be submitted to
desired. Dr. Baumer noted that a the parent Committee o n
standardized exam need not be
Educational Planning and Policy .
short answer, but could also
Or. Baumer proposed a final
i n c lude essay questions. This
would theoretically still allow justification for the investigation
individuality while insuring that stating that the University has
each student would compete on been initia t ing ex perimental
programs without any evaluative
the same level.
The final solution may be to procedures to determine if they
just leave things as they are. are successful.

I•

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41 KENMOR E AVENUE
(at Univenity Plaza)
BUFFALO. N.Y. 14226

The Spectrum Is published weekly
during the summer sessions by
Sub-Board I, Inc. of the State
Univeristy of New York at Buffalo.
Offices are located at 355 N'onon
Hall, State University of New York
at Buffalo. Telephone: Area code
716; Editorial, 831-4113; Busmess,
831·3610.

Represented for advertising by
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�Ket1ter anniversary

University opinions
Editor's note: The Spectrum recMtly conducted an lnformall~"'ey
of Faculty and Jtudents to determine whQt the Unlvenity thought
of the /irtt yeQr of Robert L. Ketter'l PJ'tJldency. Many of thou
contacted refused to comment deeming It "imzpproprlate" to
publicly rau Dr. Keuer, Others expllllned thflt they would have to
/111e with the administration and any tuJUiment would feopardtze
their positions. Howe11er, som e faculty members ventured their
thoughts on Dr. Ketter's ftrlt year. They follow:
Marjorie FIJ'DSWorth Department of Biology :
"The Ketter administration has made very few steps
forward ... you do n't have the sense of an on-going thrust ... If
more fac uJt y memben would talk off the record, you'd find that
most of the m are disappointed, dissatisfied or looking a ro und for
JObs elsewhere."
Ernest Selig Civil Engineerlna:
" It's been a quiet year, but some progress h as been made . ..
I 'm still taking, though, a position of watching and waiting as
there's still a long way to go .• , l The Ketter administration I was
successful in "cutting down some of t he tnternaJ pressures that
might o therwise have continued."
lan DeWdl Student Association President :
" Dr. Ketter has proved extremely adept in accomplishing what
he proposed to do when he was fi rst a ppointed; that is, guiding the
University through an extended period of consolidation. His main
lest will be in t he up&lt;o ming year. Now that the new academic vice
president has been appointed, Dr. Ketter has his fuU team. This will
theoretae&lt;tlly allow this University to begin moving forward again
rather than academically stagnating for another year. "
William Baumer v1ce chairman of the Faculty-Senate :
" It was a year of pulting things back together from 3 bad and
disorganized situation ... the general direction of the Univenity is
quite positive ...
Harvey Breverman Department of Art ·
" I think it was a year when 3 number of misunden~tandings
were brought to ltght ... o year of groping to unravel some of the
mysteries the last t hree years held for us."
Ko nrad Von Moltke , Director of Collegiate System:
" In general, I would say that there remains as much of a
discrepancy between reality and appearances on t his campus a~
there was last yea r, o nly that what was submerged has surfaced and
wllat was vtsible has been obscured . I do not think this has been a
successful year for this Univenity In any real sense of the word.
Obviously, this is a personal impression, b ut one I know to be
shured by many other people. It will be interesting to see whether
any o f the new people on campus next faJJ will provide us with the
sense of purpose which I think has been lacking.
McAUiste r Hull, Jr ., Cllairman of Physics and Astronomy:
" It's been a pretty quiet year, not a spectacular year in any
way. In gen eral, it has been a consolidatao n year with no s pec tac ular
failures or accomplishments."
Robert Roabera, Counselor Education :
"Prior to Ketter's appointment, I had some misgivings thlll
gjven existing cleavages and divisions, any tocal campus figure would
have difficult y in pulling t he campus bac k together ... I must
confess t hat t hese misgivinp have been met : the past year was not
o ne of healing of cleavages but rat her of further disintegation."

--------------------------

'

One year in r~rospect
by Jo-Ann Annao
Campur Editor

On'e year and one month q o, Robert L . Ketter
assumed the presidency of this University amidst a
disturbed and divided campus. Administrative
cban&amp;es and shifting campus moods bave resulted in
a sianitlicantly altered l!Jliversit.~mosphere, an
atmosphere described b'y one facultY.,.~ember as
" uneventful, cautious and damned dull."
Ho·wever, there are others who laud the past
year liS one o(,_ quiet advancement and
accomplishment. William Baumer, vice chairman of
t he Fac ulty-Senate, commented : "I am quite pleased
by the developments over the year ... aU things
consideJred , we came out pretty well - we being the
Universiity."
&lt;
Amtong his accomplishments, President Ketter
lists his efforts to improve comm ity relations by
speakin11 to civic groups, entert · ing in his ho me
and belpin o conduct bo th the 25tb anniversary
celebration an tbe University op n house. Speaking
of tl\is repair of ommunity re ·ons, Dr. Baumer
noted ilhat "the t n-around
attitude of the
commur11ity towards
Univ
ty" will be h! lpful
to present and futwe pr
Community worit
MaJrcus Klein, c
f the Department of
English, admitted t t "Pres· ent Ketter has &amp;one a
retnarka1bly long way in securing an accommodation
with the: communit y." But Dr. Klein continued : " On
the oth•er hand, I thinlc that he (President Ketter)
has not yet convinced Buffalo of the fact that this
new Univenity is primarily a center of leammg, wit h
interest!! and assoclataons transcending those of
commumity ,"
AJ tlhougb appare ntl y pleased about his work
with the community , Dr. Ketter did agree that it
hamper•~d
his relationship with his Unavers1ty
constituency: " I regret that I didn't have more time
to spend with faculty and students ." However, he
does fe·el that be made himself available to aJl
segment s of the University.
Ont: student leader commented though that
" many people on this campus feel tha t Ketter's first
loyalty is to the City o f Buffalo and not to the
U n i ven1ity staff, faculty and student body ."
Explaining that his was a year of trying to gellhmgs
back t•l a state of normalcy, President Ketter
maintaimed that he hopes to be able to devote more
time t•&gt; other things. Future plans to better
University communicatio n include holding an open
house for students every o ther week .

• Year of consolidation
In :11 Th~ SpectfUm survey of fa culty and student
impressions this first year, many University members
voiced the opinion that it was one of consolidatio n .
According to Harvey Breverman, the Department of
Art, the Meyerson years were o nes of "qw ck
innovation ." He continued that this past year
"attemp•ted to enhance that innovation." He also
termed it "a year of stabllity" a nd Joseph Bergant z,

Lacking policy
..The campus atmosphere has not been free and
spontaneous ... Ketter is clam ping down like mad
o n students," Dr . Farnsworth said. Robert Rossb~rg,
Counselor Education, found the year "extremely
disappointing,'' which he partly attributed to "a lack
of clear-cut educational policy."
To some extent, President Ketter agreed with
.this, commenting that It is important for the
Univenity to find out where it has been and where it
plans to go. Dr. Baumer also said that "we have to
get a better grasp o n the goals and purposes of this
place and what we need to do to achieve them."
The five task forces appointed by President
Ketter, according to Dr. Baumer, were the initial
steps in achieving this perspective. The task forc ts,
he said , "were major reconsiderations of the
different aspects of t he University."
Several fa c ulty members expr essed a
dissatisfaction w1th the last year without blaming Dr.
Ketter. Dr. Baumer and Dr. Hull both regretted th~t
so Little expenmentation took place and that there
couldn't have been more exciting faculty
appoint menls. They however attributtd these
failures to the very tight state fiScal situation.
Academic stagnation
Other Universit y members fault President Ketter
for not providing the kind of leadership that would
result in academ1c innovation and advancement.
Student Association President Jan DeWaaJ, in fact,
described this past year as o ne of " academic
stagnation."
Dr Klein said that while many student and
faculty fears about adminis trative control have
proven to be exaggerated. " President Ketttr's
administration has been mark td by a powerful
implication of retrenchment and old guard ism."
Every fa c ulty member interviewed, expressed the
opinion that the up-comins year would be most
important. As Dean Ebert qui pped : "The second
year is most critical. This year we spent learning and
listening. We know what the ball game is all about
and now we have to play it."

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Acting Provost of Engineering and Applied Sciences,
described it u ..quiet and productive."
Included in this productivity, President Kette(
cited his successful filling of administrative positions.
The appointment of Charles H .V . Ebert as Dean of
Undergraduate Studies and Bernard Gelbaum as vice
president for Academic Affairs were among those he
mentioned . McAllister Hull, J r., cha.irman of Physics
and Astronomy. also praised these appointments,
but he criticiZed the admlnistratlve failwe t~bt.a.in
a Provost of Arta and Letten.
Marjorie Farnsworth, Biology Department,
labeUed administrative attempts to find an Arts and
Letten provost "a fiasco ." She further said that it
"could have been handled fa r better than it
appeared ." Dr. Farnsworth also feels that it has been
a year of consolidation. However, she criticizes it as
"conservative" a nd ''restrictive."

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Friday, July 30, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page th ree

�ttlexible nature,

Women's College: a cjatalyst
#

Tbe main purpose of the CoUeae of WoOten's
Studies ia not to mass pToduce. graduates with
dearees in women's studies, but to "create an

previously denie4 to them : "One purpose of the
CoUeae is havin&amp; women do analytical research ,
ham&amp; women involved in deciJion-malcing . .. " Ms.
Zucker added that the Colleae, contrary to servina as
a sanctuary, would act!Jally help women to achieve
proper positions both in this. particular University
and in society at large.

atmosphere where women could aet the confidence
to co back to their various disciplines and affect
them." Ultimately, explained Fran Zucker, a coUege
spokeswoman, this confidence will result in chancing
the status of women in society.
A coalition college of women of varying Outreach into community
Another aspect o f the College, according to the
backgrounds, the College of Women's Studies, was
established to create an education that will be&amp;in to Steering Committee, would be " its continuing
meet the needs of women . Accordin&amp; to its outreach into the C4)mmunity ." Basically, Ms.
prospectus, "thiJ education will not be an academic Zucker said , this would involve tryin g to eradicate
exercise; it will be an onaoing process to change the sex discrimination and malting more women aware
of th~ir roles. "The qut1stion of what we specifically
ways in which women think ~d behave."
·
It continues that such an education is necessary will do to ease the rift between the University and
as women have been "subjected to an educational the Buffalo community' has not been determined,"
system which has reinforced the stereotypic images Ms. Zucker·commented.
of women as passive, dependent, unintellectual and
This "very flexibl4~ nature" of t he CoUeae is
unable to analyze and understand olu own position attributable to its very democratic and representative
governing process. The 1CoUeae y.oill be governed by a
in society."
council o f elected representatives who will meet
Catalyst
reautarly and make alii decisiom concerning tht
The Summer Steerina Committee of the Colleae internal and external artaira of the College.
explained that the College would be both a catalyst Maintaining that student input and participation are
of new ideas and a launchin&amp; bue into other wanted, Ms. Dolinsky ~tid "we want it to be equally
disciplines. Functionin&amp; as a catalyst, the College will democratic between students and those teacbina."
provide a focused place within the University where
Occ:upyina offices lit 108 Winspear, the CoUeae
women can come together to exchange perspectives or Women's Studies is •attempting to provide a real
and develop new ideas concerning the role of center for the community and Ute campus. Included
women. Out of this, "new courses, new directions in in th.is center are plans rfor a data resource center, a
research atld new insights" will be effected, the cateJOrizin&amp; of wo men's, orpni r.ations and a full list
committee said.
of books and films. Additional plans of the College
Frances Dolinsky, a committee member, added include fheir participaltion in a UUAB-sponsored
that the College would also establish "a kind of women's festival and a Student Association
coherence to women's programs in this University." Collegiate sy mposium in November.
The crosslisting of courses with other departments
Commenting that t he University possesses one
would help contribute to this coherence, she of the most estabfuhedl women's programs in the
continued .
country, Ms. Dolinsky concluded that the College of
The College will also allow, Ms. Dolinsky Women's Studies is "a r·eOectio n of the tremendous
reported, women to actually do those things growth of the women's nnovement."

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Feeling unappreeieted by all sectors of the
University community, campus security officers are somewhat
consoled by ·the badge pictured above. T..:ked to a bulletin board
l~ted in the sec;urity offices on Wlnspear Avenue, the emblem
proudly proclaims those quelities police say they possess that their
critics deny them .

-Yr~tr

Browsinx Library

A place to relax
Silence, relaxation . . . music or
reading If you wish . . . an escape
from the rat-race. This may sound
like a travel folder describing
some secluded South Sea island,
but it 's all available on the second ·
floor of Norton Union, in K"oom
259, otherwise known as the
Browsing library.
The Browsing library is one of
the few places on campus where
one can sit back and gather his
wits about him . If you would like
to read a book , tbe library offers a
wide selection ran&amp;in&amp; from
humor, mystery, science fiction
and the creat classics to modern
literature and non-fiction. Not
only can you read there, but if
you're one of the lucky few who
is able to fmd a spot with an
equally secluded and relaxed
atmosphere off campus, you can
take a book out for a couple of
weeks.
The Browsing Library also
carries a large number of
m agazines, spanning a wide
spectrum of interests. However,
they can't seem to hold on to
Playboy and Evergreen (once
again , the American male's
kindergarten sexual mentality is
exposed).

But, perhaps the most exciting
feature of the Browsing library is
its voluminous collection of over
2000 records, including both
classical and rock music. Seven
" listening booths" provide a place
in which o ne can listen to the
record of his choice. Or, if so
inclined, you can enjoy the music
being played in the music lounge.
For all of the many benefits it
extends to the community, the
Drawing library still experiences
rip-offs. Although these thefts
have been minimal, much less
than the average library, most
have occurred in the past year,
indicating a rising trend . As of
yet , this problem is not serious,
but as libray spokesmen report,
"with the cooperation of all, the
lrend can be reversed and the
problem solved."
So, remember, when you're
down and o ut, and you're feeling
blue ... or you just don't have
anything to do . . . go to the
Browsing Library; it's open from
10 a.m . to 10 p.m. on weekdays
and from 2 p.m . to 10 p .m. on
Sundays. Relax .. . enjoy
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Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, July 30, 1971

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�\

.

.Students ttnearth Indian village
The site is on ground where a cornfield and woods have given way
to shovels, canvas and about 20 people with healthy suntans. There,
under the direction of Or. Marion White, the State University of
Buffalo Archeological Field School is excavating a pre-1600 Iroquois
Indian village.
"Excavating" mostly entails carefully trawling out and sifting all
of the dirt in five-foot square holes in the woods. The reward for
several days of this is a cigar box containing what appear to be very
unspectacular rocks.
A closer look reveals that the "rocks" are actually pieces of
pottery . From such fragments, Dr. White and her co-workers can tell
much about Iroquois life and the migration of villages. The Iroquois
moved every 15 years or so, when soil and firewood gave out.
The "village" is now only little white sticks in dark dirt patches evidence of posts which may once have been palisades and longhouses.
The work is measured in tenths of an inch and long hours. At the
call of "Rain!," however, shouts of fear and joy are heard as the woods
workers stampede out to ~ure the camp. Finally the day ends, but for
most, the work of "floatating" debris, mapping the day's work and
cataloguing everything from bone fragments to prehistoric crabgrass
seeds goes on late into the night.

Photographs by David G. Smith

I

Friday, July 30, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�I
One down.

,

Robert Ketter has recently completed his fi~t year as the
president of the State University of Buffalo. It was a stra~ge
year, eerily quiet and seemlnly devoid of sharp controversies,
but this was the overwhelming pattern thrpughout the
•
nation.
Since the initial 12 months of a uni~e~ity. p~esident's
tenure is largel y a period of adjustment, 1t 1s d1ff1cult and
perhaps unfair to draw many absolute judgements on Dr.
Ketter's efforts. It is, however, worthwhile to attempt some
commentary.
A year ago, we had reached our nadir in communi~y
relations. The community was frightened of and hostile
towards the University. Both ~ city media and local
politi cia ns eagerly castigated this school . at f!fllery
opportunity. Anti-intellectualism, always present m Western
New York as a latent force, ran rampant. Since then we have
witnessed a rather dramatic form reversal in town/gown
relations.
While this can be at least partly attributed to the serenity
that overtook this campus, much can be said for Dr. _Ketter's
contributions in this area. Altbough he may have m~est~
what many consider to be an excessive amount of _t•me m
these endeavors, the results have be~n worthwh1l~. An
atmosphere of· tolerance has once agan~ b~n ,esta~hs~ed,
hopefully without compromising the Umvers1ty s pnnc1ples
and ideals.
In the realm of academic leadership we belif!flle t hat Dr.
Ketter has yet to assume the full and active role necessary to
provide scholarly direction to this institution. Perhaps now
that all top administrative posts have been filled, the
academic policies of this University will become more clear.
A trend of consolidation may have been established, but we
do not yet know whether this stems from budgetary crises or
personal preferences. A distinct ray of h~pe for growth and
intellectual stimulation may be the appomtment of Bernard
Gelbaum who seems ardently commited to upgrading the
quality ~f teaching and learning, as vice president for
Academic Affairs.
In recent weeks we have been quite upset by the threats
posed in the Ar1S and Letters affair to student and faculty
involvement in decision-making. We are confident, howf!fller,
that the depth of ill-feeling provoked by that dispute has
effectively and vividly proven the value of collegiality
between all of the University constituencies.
Aside from suggesting more involvement in internal
affairs, we would hope that President Ketter exert his
influence to accomplish a complete overhaul of the
governance mechanisms of this sc~ool. T~e participatory
uncertainties that have plagued pohcy-makmg for the last
several years must come to an end. We believe· that ~nless
firm and resolute action is taken in this area, the question of
who govefns may yet return to haunt our future.

.

THE SpECTI\UM
Fridey, July 30, 1971

Vol. 22, No. 7

Editor-in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
M8ft891nt Edicur - AI Benson

Alit. MMeeint Editor - Susan Moss
BUlin.~ M.-ger - James Drucker
Actv.niling Man~~g~~r
C.mpu•
.... . ... Jo·Ann Armao
City . . ........ Harvy Ltpm80
Copy . . ....... Ronni Forman
Grapnic Arts ......... Tom To let
uyout ' . . . . ~ . Maryhope Runyon

-

Sue Mellenllne

Lit. &amp; Dr1ma .. Michael Silverolatt
Music: ...•....... . •Billy Altmen
f'tloto
. . . . ... .David G. Smith
Asat • •.•..• Mickey Osterreicher
Sp«U . . . . . . . . Sh«yl'l Rogers

Thtt Spect rum is e member of the Unites State Student Press A.-,ciation
and is se"'ed by Unitet Press International, College Press Serivce, the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate end Liberation News Servica.

Rupubllcatlon of all rnattM herein without the express consent of the
Editor-i n-Chief is forbidden.
EditOf'ill policy is determined by the Ed itOf'·in-C hief.

Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, July 30, 1971

'Jult • few more billion for reseerch and development end we'll have it licked!'

M:isstatement corrected
wmmittee. It was the consensus of the joint
committees that botll the number of students o n the
committee and the manner of their selectipn should
I must correct a misstatement in the Editorial• be decided by the search committee itself."
"Art.s and Letters." You state that I am part of a The members of the standina committees of this
IJOUP that would bar students from the pro~ostal Faculty unanimously endorsed this position as did I
sean:h committee. I shall quote a pertment in my letter to Dr. Somit.
para1p-aph from a letter on the subject of the search
I hope that you will correct your incorrect but
w m1mittee that I sent to Dr. Albert Somit on July serious charae against me.
13, 11971 :

To

l•~e

Editor:

Thomas E. Connolly
Actint Provost

"Next to the joint committees addressed
themselves to student membership on the search

For what it's worth
by Hany Lipman
There was an item in the news laat week which
three years ago would undoubtedly have thrilled
millions of Americans. The bis event was an
announcement by a sroup of liberals that they were
bandina together to back Eugene McCarthy for
president in 1972. Their statement indicated very
definitely that if McCarthy was unable to gain the
Dem•ocratic nomination, he will lead a fourth party
ticket. As a former McCarthy supporter, my
reactions to the news are mixed .

they alienated the white workingman by calling .rum

a rigbt-wlnaer a.n d a racist when he complamed
about streot crime. The blue: ooUar workclrs didn 't

choose George Wallace and Richard N":xon because
they represented the labo rer ; they supported them
because Hubert Humphrey was a cartoon character,
because Bobby Kennedy was dead and because Gene
McCarthy acted toward them as if he was afraid to
get his bands dirtied .

That is the fundamental tro uble with McCarthy,
and for that matter, with George McGovern. They
are hard line liberals, well-intentioned, but liberals
nonetheless, and the liberals haven't taken a step
Gene McCarthy was one of the flnt men to put forward since the 1930's. Anyone with any kind of
his pc&gt;Uticallife on the line over the Vietn.a~ '!'~r . At political awareness should be able to see bow
the present it is almost common for a polittaan to miserably they have failed . While white workers
reach. office by opposing the war. Those of you who blame welfare for their hiah taxes, two-thirds of
can 1remember as far back as 1968 will probably their money is goina to the Pentagon; men like John
recall that at the time these conditions did not exist. Wayne and James Eastland are get tina overS 100,000
McQtrthy took on most of the Senate and apiece for not growina crops and Ronald Reagan is
practically his entire political party to o ppose manaaina to not pay any taxes at aU. Why haven't
Jobnlson. He went into New Hampshire while Bobby the liberals come forth to chaUenae a system which
Kennedy pondered the political climate of the day functions this way? Why haven't they drawn
and decided to wait and see. He was risking his legislation to close the tax loopholes and redistribute
car~r before most of the nation bad even discovered the wealth? The reason is simple : the liberals have an
who McGovern and Hatfield were. Geae· McCarthy inherent interest in perpetuatina tho.s e conditions
put on a display of political courage that is because they rely completely on bi.a business capital
unpatralle1ed in recent American history. That to remain in office.
coun1ge should not be forgotten.
What is needed is what bas been described by
lbe problem is that we are no longer living itt Jack Newfield as a return to populism. The
1968, and the past t~ee years have b.rougbt some government must r~tablisb contact with the
impo11ant cbanaes. Fustly, the war wilJ not be an people of the United States. It may sound like far
issue much lonaer. Don't let your cynicism toward out leftist propaganda, but the fact is that the richest
Nixota blind you - he is not about to go into the one per cent of the population owns 37% of the
1972 campai&amp;n with the war hanpg over his bead. nation's wealth and it's gettina worse. ln 1949 the
Look for him to have removed the bulk of the richest o ne per cent owned only one-fifth of the
trOOPII by sometime next spring. The issues in the nation's wealth (I refer disbelievers to 17te White
next pre&amp;dential camapaip will be the economy, Worker by Gw Tyler). According to the United
the e·nvironment and the druc and crime problem. States Census Bureau, two-thirds of the population
These are the areas where the liberals have failed classified as poor are white. Another seven million
miserubly in the past. The liberal intellect views all white families earn between $5000 and $7000 - just
these problems the same way : feed in enoup above the welfare level. Obviously , there are vast
mone·y , create enouab jobs and everybody will be numbers of white Americans who the liberals have
happ)•. The trouble is everybody will not be happy. pushod into the waitina arms of so natural an enemy
Jjbenlls were in power for nearly the entire decade as Richard Nixon. Only an immense amount of
Of th•e '60's, and what is their lepcy? The war in political ineptitude could have accomplished that.
VietMm, IJOwinl fear and hatred between the races, Now it will take
even puter amount of political
uncheckod pollution of the enYironment, unjust skill to pull them away.
conspilracy lawa - in sbort, the liberala faileu to face
any of the mlijor aocial problems of the time. They
The liberals have lost touch with America, if
alienalted nonwhites with areat promise and no t hey ever indeed actually were in touch.- The
fulfillment ; they alienated the youth with an unjust tradition of populism rtill is, if anyone is willing to
war w·hich infected the government with deceit and pick up the banner.

an

�'Power grab'
To the Ediror:
l have noted with mounting dismay the
controversy which has attended the process of
appointing my successor. ln the course of It, a
number of statements have been published
concerning the Faculty of Arts &amp; Letters which I
believe to be misleading or Inaccurate, and I hope
you will forgive my taking this opportunity to call
the01 to your attention.
Prof. Boyd-Bowman and Prof. Arcudl, In their
several ways, express the opinion that the Arts &amp;
Letters Faculty is controlled by an "oligarchy." In
this they are mistaken. The view they adhere to
became current at approximately the time when
they, and the minority which thinks as they do, lost
the confidence of a majority of their colleagues and
ceased to play a predominant role in faculty
governance. They did not complain about the
by-laws until they lost the votes. They have struggled
ever since, with little success until now, to represent
themselves as spokesmen for some inchoate faculty
sentiment which somehow fails to manifest itself in
the legitimate, parliamentary actions of the Faculty.
The Imputation that l, as Provost, had
something to do with eir fall from power is one
that J welcome. Before 967 the Modern Language
Department (as it then as, • before the split into
three new departments)
not only an oligarchy
but an autocracy, and a s
r one at that. The
primary thrust was toward the aining of high
school teachers - that is, teacher:s-coUege·type
instruction. Yet the faculty were drawing salaries at
a university-center level o'\the basis of a graduate
program which was undemanding either on them or
on the students. ln eight years of its existence they
had managed to produce only o ne PhD, and that the
wife of a professor. What appeared to be graduate
students were often little more than underpaid help,
local people persuaded to accept gn.duate~tudent
stipends for doing the routine work of language
instructiol}.
The atmosphere, to put it very mildly, was not
pedagogically challenging. When a number of tlte '
graduate students in modern languages came to see
me during the strike, I found them eager, frustrated
and starved for intellectual sustenance. One of their
professor's method for teaching a work of literature
was to read it aloud. Another was capable of giving
three lectures on a major work in his field without
once discussing the text . Copies were shown me of a
quiz in which the questions were at an appallingly
elementary level. 1 notice that Prof. Bernstein, in.his
statement declining the position of Acting Provost,
expresses a concern for students. If any single
incident of my tenure in the office inclines me to
share that concern, it was the discovery of these
desperate young men and women, deliberately and
systematically being stifled and stunted in their
as scholars.
am glad to be accused of having done my best
to od this deplorable state of affairs. In three years
f the faculty and all of the department chairmen
were replaced. The character and spirit of the entiie
Faculty changed, and with it the membership of the
standing co mmittees, which grew to be
representative of what the Faculty had become,
rather than what it had been. Those who were
discommonded by this transformation have never
been resigned to it, and [ fear they have persuaded
themselves that your administration presents an
opportunity to reverse or undo it. I urge you not to
be deceived by their effort to paint the contest as a
matter of liberal vs. conservative politics, since it is
nothing of the kind . To be blunt, it is a power grab ,
and should be treated as such.

~

Guest-------,
Editor's note: The following guest column was submitted by Stanley
Dayan. It will be published in two installments. Part one follows.
by Stanley Dayan
During the 19th century it was widely held that without religion
people would be criminal : that there would be no such thing as
morality . During this century, the opinion gradually died away, science
and humanism both declared that p~&lt;ople would not be criminal if left
without religion. I am going to try to revive the old opinion; to explain
Its truth and its limitations.
1 am doing a brand of thinking which I hope will influence people's
attitudes and actions. My definitions, accordingly, are more emotive
and psychological than they would be if they were to be 'Used mainly
•
for theoretical purposes.
Let me begin by' describing the kinds of action which we, in
general, take to be criminal . It seems there are two basic classes of
criminal actfons. First;-those which seem to be for some understandable
purpose. For example robbing a bank or some species of rape. lt is
fairly clear what the criminal wants. But further, in this first class, if
the criminal escapes punishment , he is thoroughly satisfied witb his
deed . A person who takes a bribe is usuaUy in this class.
The second class of crimes are those which seem to be wanto n and
merely destructive. Examples of this class have been frequent of late .
For example the slaying of the eight nurses a few years back. In
contrast to the first class, this class leaves the criminal indifferent, or
./ ........ ,
~
guilty or like Oostoye~ky 's Raskolnikov, in a fever.
Jt is important to note , however, that most crimc1 are a mixture of
these two antithetical elements. When a gang falls on a man and beats
the tar out of him , some of the.group feel satisfaction, and depending
on the group, feelings of guilt and apathy will be mixed in . Men have
been driven to distraction because of the guilt from a bank robbery .
Raskolnikov on the other hand runs a fever and delirium Rrecisely
because there is no guilt or remorse.
Crimes it would seem have two basic kinds of motive. One motive
is that of attaining a defmite object, a goal. The other is wanton and so
to speak derivative from the lack of a goal. This distinction is very
important for the argument. I will try to show that the first motive of
crime is derivative from religion - that the se~ond is derivative from
the lack of religion. To say that religion keeps people from being
criminals 1 believe to be false when we speak of the healthy bank
robber. On the contrary, his religion is the genesis of this crime. But
when we speak of the second class of crimes, J just as strongly believe
that religion prevents these and the lack of religion causes them.
O.K., let's define what is meant here by religion . Religion is taken
to be those propositions or Intuitions beyond which a person will not
go: those propositions and intuitions which a person takes to be
unprovable and "just there." I like to work with my hands. I can' t
explain it, but I hold it to be good. The place where I live, the kind of
building and right down to "'Y owning tools and not a car all go back
to this faith in the goodness of working with my hands. I was beaten up
a few weeks ago on my front step by a gang of youths. This is likely to
happen where 1 live. And what's more, J don't really care - just as long
as they don't steal my saw, which they haven't. Even J tend to be
abusive of my body; but bodily beauty is not part of my religjon . I
belie1ie in the goodness of working with my hands.
\
When, in more clear·sighted moods, l am not blinded by my faith
in this activity and my love for it, I can't see how it can be so
important. I experience a deep sense o£ being lost, of being bewildered
and confused - I have gone bl'yond my religion .

~------Opinion

Eric LaJTabee

Friday, July 30, 1971 . The Spectrum . Paqe seven

�~·

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Music at t.J'Rel'ilot

RECORDS

Tyner QUJlrtet: excitingjazz

Muds/Ide Slim flltd /he Blue H orizon - James Taylor {W8 2561)

byGusRUJO

punctuating is superb.
Sonny Fortune is the 'sleeper' in the group , and
I don't mean be plays u if be is lued. His playing is
very strong and hard but lyricaJ, on alto and
.soprano. His flute playing is soft and melodic.
McCoy's playing is, well, if you have heard him you
lcnow. But If you haven't, he can sure 'tickle' those
88's. But seriou.sly, ' Tyner has ideas, speed and
technique " down cold." And his years with 'Trane'
show in his writing, So, lC you combine the Ideas and
talents of Tyner with the influence •Of a John
Coltrane and add the vigor of Gravat, Lewis and
Fortune, the result is one of the malt powerful and
worthwhile weeks of music tf\e ReviJot and Buffalo
has seen and heard .
In those years with ''Trane" and the
"post-Trane" years, Tyner's id
.md concepts have
expanded and are still e xpanding, unlike some other
pianists that had (and in some cases still have) the
opportunity to expand but chose instead to re main
dormant.
Do younelf a favor and take an evening or two
off and listen to t he fine sounds of the McCoy Tyner
Quartet at the Revilot. And in future weeks : Grady
Tate, George Benson Grant Green; and Revilot's Fall
Festival with : Freddie Hubba1d, Stanley Turrentine,
Leon Thomas, Roland Kirk. Pbaroab Sanders and
Bill Evans.

Sp«trum Mudc RnJiewt!T

James Taylo%'s third album Mudllide Slim and the Blue Horizon, is
upon us, and I wonder if the response would be the same if it was his
From 1960 until 1966 a quartet consisting of,
first record. The mood of the for the most part, Elvin Jones, James Garrison,
record is best summed up in the McCoy Tyner and John Coltnne played a nd
lines from "You Can Close Your displayed some of the most exciting music ja.zz has
Eyes." " I don't know no love known.
son~ and I can't sing the blues
At the Revilot (East Ferry and Jefferson) thls
anymore." And so on it goes. wee.k, a similar excitement is being generated by t~e
When Sweet &amp;by Jam es first McCoy Tyner Quartet. And aJthough the earlier
appeared , I wondered why so quartet Tyner was in can hardly be duplicated, this
many people were ecstatic over a present quartet has relatively the same unity and
collection of songs that were tightness as the group in the 60's had .
neither bitter nor sweet , with a
Compllmenting Tyner's piano playing are Herbie
melodic but monotonic voic!l, and Lewis on bass, Eric Cravat on drums and the flu te
a bland musical structure. T he and alto and soprono saxes of Sonny Fortune. Lewis
whole thing expressed at most has been with McCoy on and off for a few years, and
ambivalence.
.
has recorded and played with him on 'Blue Note'
A year later, J finally began to app!Jciate the beauty and simplicity records and in live performances. Herbie can be
of these songs, and realized that the ambivalence of what is happening heard with the 'Jazz Crusaders' on some of their
wasn't as important as the sense of what had been left behind, giving ear tier 'Pacific Jazz' recordings. The drummer, Eric
you a sense of resigned pathos, with an occasional touch of hope. It Cravat, is one oth er reason you should catch this
was real music. The pathos is still there in Muds/ide Slim, and the group. Aside from his modem concept of drumming
torment IS more intense, but expressed in the same gentle terms. (initiated largely by Bivin and Tony Williams), he i.s
Taylor's voke is the calm in the storm all around bini. Mudsilde Slim IS o ne of the better time keepers in the young set of
the end of the journey that began with Sweet &amp;by James.
new and modern drummers (DeJohnette, Lenny
The musical structure is the same lyricaJ but ambiguous backing White, Nduau, Billy Hart). And his accentina and
that bas become Taylor's trademark. Carole King's piano and Danny
MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE -; - - - - . . , -....
Kortchmar's guitar never become prominent. The record starts with
"Love Wa.s Brou&amp;)lt Me Around," and it is a joyous statement.
IMMEDIATE FS-1 - ANY SIZE
But in the end the song becomes almost meaningless.
NO POOL - NO NONSENSE!
Taylor's "Y~u've Got A Friend ," lacks the vitality of Carole K.Jng's
UPSTATE CYCLE INS.
version , and comes off as passive but still believable. It's just reassuring
CALL 691 -8878
- if you need a friend J'U be there. The rest of the songs have the same
I.....J'141k
Y011r BrokH About U1"- ,
broken character. "Places In my Past" is about just that; o nly the
emotions are left even though the reasons are gone, but somehow it's Plaz~a-----"'""
e nough to get through. "Soldiers" is a simple song about dreams that
come home in the morning like soldiers, "wounded and barely alive."
The story is frightening in the matter-of-fact way it's told.
The torment becomes expressed as a realization of the futility of
ONE STOP SERVICE CENTER
his music. Taylor turns it against himself. Somehow the singing that
Shoes Repaired While·U· Wai t
"works just fine fo r me" in Sweet &amp;by James just isn't the answer.
laundry &amp; Dry Cleaning
After all, if love has really brought you around, there's no reason to
ONE DAY SERVICE
justify it with a song. The singing seems to take him out of the natural
Self·Service
order of things. "Long Ago and Far Away," like much o f his musk, is
Dry Cleaning Machines
about him and his songs, and he wonders how long he can go o n singing
~ University Plaza
about dreams that never come true : "Stories my poor head has told me
47 Kenmore Ave.
cannot stand the cold."

1111!!!!!'----.

Shoe

Repair;

" Hey , Mi~ter, That's Me Up on the Jukebox" is a hard song to like.
It turns an obvious situation into an almost self-righteous one. It made
me think of KriS Knstofferson's "To Beat the Devil," where the singer
keeps on singang even though he knows nobody listens and nobody
cares. But thiS isn't what Taylor is lam enting. The sad songs take hun
out of the natural order of things.

836-4041

AUTHORIZED DEAL ER

WASHINGTON SUIIMUS Clllllll
. . .r-•Arr

llllS &amp; THINGS- ... Styles f• Y•• ......

'

And so with "We Are Riding" the record becomes a journey; one that
surrenders to the America n Dream , captures it, and finally transcends
it.

LIA'I'Hia6GOODS

..,...,acun
....DIACKID
aoon.uv•

It's a simple song, but one of the best of the album, as Richard
Greene's fiddle and John II art ford's banjo weave through it. It resigns
us to the fa ct that no matter what we do, we are fulfilling a destiny we
are not even consc10us of.
So we come to the title song, "Mudslide Slim," which gives us a
kind of resolutiOn. It signifies that American Dream of independence
within the natural order o f things. It 's o ne of the few happy songs on
the album , with a bounch backing and almost nonsense lyrics.
But the theme of breaktng away comes around on the second side.
It's slightly evident in "You ('an Close Your Eyes."
And it bursts out an "Let Me Ride," a celebration or freedom , as the
horns push the music to a boogie. And finally the record comes full
cycle with " Highway Song.'' The natural order of things is as much a
prison as ptople's expectations. As in " We are Riding" it is only the
fulfilling of another destiny which you have no , ·art in. Taylor breaks
from them both. The song begins very dramatically with almost 1:
convocation.

Father let us build a boat and sail away
111ere 's nothing for you here
And brother let us throw our lot upon the sea
Its been done before
He paints a picture of himself in terms of the wandering blues hero.
The highway becomes hi.s true destiny, as he tells of the people he left
behind, because he heard the highway song.

1
'

-

This is a #disturbing record and Taylor leaves us with a bleak
picture. I'm not sure how popular this record will be; it 's no fun to
identify with songs like this. There is almost a built-in failure to this
record. The "scope is limited ; the journey is Taylor's, and yet we are all
included. There is no way out of the .dilemma except to leave and
create your own circumstances. Despite the limitations and the
disturbing aspects, this is a record worth listening to; if only to destroy
the myth of James Taylor, Superstar. The Highway song; the call to
adventure is always there if you listen for it.

II H.,
I

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- Tom Bogucki

Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, July 30, 1971

,
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·~

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~·:....

--a

J

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-.;iii~

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RECORDS

-

8/ut - Joni Mitchell (Reptile MS 2038)

Alfa-Rome(J,TeamMclaren
are winners·at Watkins Gl'en
by Steve Serafan
Spectrum Staff Writer

Pole-winner Mark Donohue led
the six-hour race for 54 laps until
the front•upright on his S 12M
The Alfa-Romeo T33/3 of Sunoco-Ferrari broke under the
Andrea de Aaamich and Ronnie tremendous strain imposed by the
Peterson scored an upset win over bumpy, 2,428 mile course. Jacky
the John . Wye r Porsche 917s lckx in the three-liter Ferrari
Saturday at Watkins Glen. The 312P also was forced to retire due
race closed out the I t -race Wo rld to a fauJty ignition system . The
Manufac turers ' Championsrup Donohue-Oavid Hobbs car and
Series wruch has already been won that of lckx and Mario Andretti ,
by Porsc he with eight wins to the the third place qualifie r, were
Alfas' three. The small, three-liter rapidly pulling away from the rest
Alfa s ou td istanced t h e of the field until they dro pped
bigger-engined 9 I 7s o f Jo out.
Siffert-Gijs von lenne p (No. I )
and Derek Bell-Richard Attwood Dynamic duo
(No. 2), completing 279 laps to
But in en durance racing,
the runner-up's 277 .
drivers must pace their cars and
themselves so both ma y survive
the grueling test , a nd once the
hotshoes left the race, the Alfas
and Porsches inherited the fro nt
spots.
The five-liter Porsches held the
advantage in speed but the Alfas
with their smaller engines could
go lo nger without pitting. This,
coupled with tire damage being
continually suffe red by the No. I
Porsche, enabled the three Alfas
t~;HTII I'I! JSCLVDII : C..uon ... _ .
and t heir four-liter sister to keep
c.IIIYr • 0\lf OWIC ll""'t •fttOdt.. -~
tro&lt;~ ·•d rye • -· d&gt;oiC'o ot • " ot&amp;lllt ;
up with and ahead of the blue and
tllot o 1101&amp;10: ..,, OW11 wbolo wtwal
bdl31 110•&lt;16 lltlnll&amp; all4 o.ll tM liUI•
o range Gulf cars.
' - 1011 waot.
As the race progressed, t he
IUCUMnR SlOP
Siffert-von Lennep Porsche wo uld
1"- Helw.l ,..., lt..t HNI,.
take the lead only to dro p back
11111 DtiiWirt
111·1211
Fill '•rlcint All.,..lt ltotloto
for a pit st\:&gt;p. Then it wo uld take

rstEAK
WAR

:;~~.!~~'"'$ )45

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Wrangler Jeans
Orig. $7.95 - 8.96

-5nlos

a bit to re-pass the Alfas only to
have to pull back into the pits.
The No. 2 Porsche stalled at the
Start-Finish Une and after a bit of
climbing around the engine
compartme:nt, Bell was able to get
it back intto the pits, but it had
lost considerable time before il
was again running properly
New entry plans
At abo1ut 4 p .m . it began to
sprinkle liapttly and a half hour
later the s,k ies opened up . When
everybody was shod in rain tires,
the Alfas held a clear advantage
and the Porsches never agai n went
into the lelld . But by this tim!! the
two slo wer Alfas had already had
a few shun1ts a nd were out of the
race. Abo ut IS minutes before the
end of th(l race (S :4 5 p.m .), the
Vic Elford·Rolf Stommelen Alta
crashed and was classifit:d as a
non-finisher. Fo urth place was
take n
by
th e Al a1 n
Ca d e n e t s ..Lo t har Motsenbacher
Ferrari S 12M nearly 100 miles
behind the fi rs t three finishers.
The race signalled the e nd of
the five•Jit l!r Ferraris and Pon.ches
in the Manufacturers' Series. Next
year will see the t hree liter
pr o totype s · of F errart.
Alfa-Ro meo and Mat ra, a firm
which did!Mt sho w at the race
Saturday. 1rhe Porsche fa ctory has
not announced plans to ente r a
three-liter pro totype but others
may ente1r updated 908s and ,
given the normal secrecy a mo ng
manufacturers regarding new
efforts, Por·sche may very well try
to extend its streak of wo rld
titles.

• • •

now only $4.95 &amp; 5.95

Team MlcLaren made tl two tn
a row and three out of four as
New Yorker Pete r Revson s ped h1s
494 cu . in . Mc Laren to an easy
-.:ontlnued from

pa~

9-

CHARLIE'S
BARBERSHOP

4~.

(Kross from GOODYEAR, at the UNIVERSITY PLAZA)

.
I remember the fust time 1 uw loni Mitchell perform. lt was at t he
Troubador in Los Angeles a little over three years ago. She seemed shy
and nervous before the small, appreciative audience that night, even
though everyone there was aware that they were seeing a &amp;itt who
would soon be recognized as a truly remarkable singer and sonpriter.
Joni's sonp have a way of grabbing on and envelopina the Ustener. The
intense involvement that she hu with her soop makes you involved in
them too. And that's what sonp should do.
I've welcomed each Jooi Mitchell album into my collection with
special care, and given them aU time to aiDk in far enoulh eo '(hat they
won't ever leave my head. After a few week&amp; with Blru, l must"say that
I trunk it's her best alb urn yet, and
eertainly one of the best records of
the year.
Blue is so vastly different from
Joni's previous work that some
people rnight be turned off by it.
Gone is most of the close.Jtllit
~ru~wmgofsonp. Rw ~~~
have replaced visual symbols.
Musically, Joni"s genius has grown
so that s he is pursuing new sounds
and tones. She plays dulcimer on
three of the ten tunes, piano on
four and guitar on only three. And
each instrument is perfect for each
individual song.
" All I Want," the openin&amp; tnck , gi~ indications of Joni's new
~yle. Her dulcimer a nd James Taylor's guitar weave a hiahly rhythmic
rug on which the vocal seems to glide. Her singing is much freer than
it's ever been and her poetry is looser and has an unbelievably natural,
conversation-like quality to it (" I want to knit you a sweater/want to
write you a love letter/ 1 want to make you feel better/want to make
you feel free") .
"Carey," with Steve Stills on guitar and bass, is a nice, fast
number. When the chorus comes and Joni sings, "Carey get out your
cane," you feel a back-up chorus answering her, and, sure enough, they
do. When she sings of buying rounds of wine for everyo ne at the cafe,
you feel the spirit of the evening in her voice.
"Califomiu •• is another bright song with some very tasteful ·playing
by Jo ni on dulcimer, Taylor on guitar, Russ Kunk el on drums and
Sneeky Pete o f t he Burritos on pedal steel. Each time she sings, ''Oh, tt
gets so lonely , the steel guitar slides in beautifully." And there's a great
line, " WiU you take me as I a m , strung o ut on another man?"
" This Flight To night" agatn has that rhythmic feel to it. Joni sings,
"Got the headpho nes o n high , can't numb you out of my mind ," and
th~ raunchy sound o f a rock band (Joni, Kunk el and Sneeky) fades in
and quickly o ut and the song continues. " A Case of You" is a beautiful
love song probably written for Taylor. " You're in my blood like holy
wine/ You taste so bitter and so sweet. Oh I could drink a case o f you
darling/and I would still be o n my feet."
"Little Green" is a pretty tune, but somehow seems o ut of place
on the album. It sounds a lot Uko some of her earlier songs and t he
guitar is vaguely reminiscent of "Circle Game," yet it has that delicate
touch t hat so many of her songs have. "Call her green and the winters
cannot fade her/Call h er green for the children who have made her."
" River," o riginally chosen as the title track, ts a terribly haunting
song. She dtd it at KJeinbans in December of '69, right in the middle of
" Willy ." I aucss she figured that having both songs together in o ne
album just wouldn't fit . This song is about her breakup with Graham
Nash, and she plainly states that it was her fault . " I'm so hard to
handle/ l'm selfish and I'm sad / Now I've gone and lost the best baby
that I ever had / 1 wish I had a river I could skate away o n ." At the
beginning a nd end of the song, sh e plays the first few bars of " Jingle
Bells" (the song was written around Christmas time) in ascending minor
keys, and it takes a few listenings to realize what song it is, so well does
it fit in with tbe mood of " River."
" Blue" is another terribly sad song, about tr}'lng to get thro ugh
heavy changes in a world dominated by " Acid , booze and ass/needles,
guns and grass. Blue, here is a shell for you. Inside you'U hear a sigh, a
foggy lullaby." Again, there is that tension set up by the piano and
voice. It's the type of song that keeps you awake just as. you think
you're falling asleep.
This album has a great many sides and forms to it , and you really
have to concentrate on it to understand its beauty . Jo ni Mitchell is one
of the few artists who continue to grow even after ef\ioying success.
Just a fantastic record .
- Billy Altman

10% DISCOUNT

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upon presentation
of 1.0. Card on
men's hairpieces.

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ANDLoRD,
Fri. Aug. 6 - 3, 7, 9 p.m.
Sat. Aug. 7 - 7, 9 p.m .
Sun. Aug. 8 - 7, 9 p.m .

Friday, July 30, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�Watkins Olert~. • •
tovictory in the Glen Can-Am at
Watkins Glen last Sunday. The
win cap1e on the beets of his
triumph at Road Atlanta two
weeks before. Teammate Denis
Hulme. provided the support for
the orange M8Fs' 1-2 fmish in
front of 75,000 fans, sett,ing a lap
record of l minute 6.08j seconds
along the way, for an average
speed of 132.676 mph.
-contlnu.ct on page

But it wasn't easy all the way
for McLaren Cars Ltd. Scotsman
Jackie Stewart pushed his Lola
T-260 to a I :OS . 113 to gain tho
pole position with Revson ftWng
out the front row. Behind them
were Hulme, David Hobbs in the
Tony Dean M8D, and Andretti in
the new factory Ferrari 712 .
Donohue in his blue 5 12M,
Motsenbacber in the ex·Denis
Hulme M8D ·and Derek Bell in a
Porscbe 9 l 7 started next. Jo
Siffert, in the special five-liter
Porsche Can-Am Spyder (a
lightened and modified 9 J7), and
Sam Posey in another 5 12M,
round ed o ut the t o p ten
qualifiers.

Turning point
At the flag, Stewart took off.
fo llo wed by Revson, Hobbs,
Hulme and Donohue. But Hulme
quickly got by Hobbs and the
three leaders began opening a gap.
Stewart was fastest but Revson
held the advantage in braking, and
the Scot was never able to get
more than five seconds ahead o f
him.
Mea n w hil e, H u lme h a d
dro pped back a bit, but everyone
e lse wa s r eally far behind.
Andretti spun his Ferrari a couple
of times and Siffert was gaining
o n him . On the eight lap
Motsenbacher shot o ff the course
at the 90, going thro ugh two of

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77-9303
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becJconint you to a Wider f{Otld . 0r better yet, tlon't
think of it-aa anything. Just emptying your mind will
be bard enoup. Rid yoW'Self of your distractions if you can ~ (It is true that .some people go cold
turkey without a radio on!)
,
2. Pick up a short poem, preferably not "Tbe
Raven •• by E.A. Poe. a one-pager is easy to find a
ba,ndle o n.
3. Pick someone good. Go4 forbid Rod McKuen
or T.S. Bllot (the first is hardly a poet, the secoJld is
a fine poet, but bard). I'll put somethina easy and
nice from Allen Kearn'$ Silver Linlngr; the poem,
·coincidentally is about the time he spent in Buffalo.
This book, by the by, is more than worth what it
costs but it may be bard to ('md.
.
Read aloud twice. The sound of the words is
essential to what is said. A good poet bas nothing
superfluous . in his work (in this -t'CSpect he is not
unlilce a good columnist) - everything counts in
more than one way. The words do a hundred tbinp,
all beautifully.
The most important function of the .poem is to
evoke wiUi a few key words, whole worlds that the
reader personally knows or feels . The good reader
1\,ou
now) is in this sense an artist. Congratulations!
.. ,
All that remains is to acknowledge your creation by
a simple and heart-felt ..yes.''

4.

February Thaw
by Allen Kearn
The crows come back to Buffalo in the spring
When the last snows freshly fallen seem
In the minds of poets and crows
To cleanse the city.
When the west wind spins a web on water
A dull grey glint winks - then regains composure.
Wary and wet scarecrows trod gingerly
Muddy-footed
Glancing at the white sky which doesn't answer.
The crows wheel spasmodically in the gusts,
And puzzled, blink over sooty snow
· Pondering, perhaps, another place to go.

I

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the three rows of safety fencing. ,,.
Donohue was having engine
by James Paul
problems along with suspension
troubles due to the previous day's
When most people, this includes .almost all or
misfortune, and Hobb's engine ~be world beyond the walls of our off-white
quit ...
escarpment, tb.irilc of reading poetry, tbe feeling of
The turning point of the race revulsion that arises within them must be something
came on the 28th lap when akin to the shudder I feel just before opening one of
Stewart had to call at the pits to those frilly birthday cards that unfailingly contain
have his. punctured right rear tire five or six lines of the most galling ve.rse ever
changed. He came out nearly two published.
laps in arrears, right behind
"This general revulsion seems to be the product
Andretti's 712 which he promptly
passed. Jackie set off after the of too much .Edgar Allen Poe read aloud vehemently
leaders, Revson and Hulme, but by too many over-dramatic high school teachers on
they were doing extremely well too many proverbial "beautiful spring afternoons."
and only gave up a couple of No one can gain any real appreciation from bearing
seconds a lap to the white L&amp;.M "The Raven" a dozen times a semester.
Lola.
Perhaps, as J think of it, this i.s just my own
bent: J spent two yeats in a flat Virginia institution
called th e Edgar Allen Poe Intermediate School. Poe
'Team McLaren to win?
was fot some reason considered a famous Virginian
On the 57th lap, Stewart despite his moral drawbacks (necrophilia and aU) and
parhd it with a bad vibration in the fact that he was born and died in Maryland .'All
the transaxle and the race was the Intermediate schools were named like that : Walt
nearly won . Jackie Oliver's un.•t
s , washingt on
· Irvin
a 1.S ., and so .on • It
...... rnan 1.•
• ·-..
Shadow was never very much in being the South, where they still call the Civil War
contention, starting J 8th and "The Wah Agenst the Nobth," we even had a
spinning off the course as a result General J.E.B. Stuart High School (will the
of a very badly worn left front revolutionaries of today be as well remembered? tire. Siffert neatly passed the the Abbott J. Hoffman Intermediate School?).
bigger-engined Ferrari 112 on the An'yhow E.A.P ., as we would lovingly call it, was far
60th lap to finish third , nearly a from joyous, but then again, •Walt Whitman was no
iuU lap ahead of the popuJar holiday either. For all his body and life, l)e probably
American.·
wasn't read aloud in the high school bearing his
Revson , who averaged ' J 28.58 name. Free association and understated implication
mph over the 200. 1 mile djstance, don't sit well in public schools.
now leads Hulme in the point
Whether this be the cause of the general
standings fo r the Can -Am revulsion from verse or not, I can suggest an antidote
championship. Both Revson with (if I can only get past these anecdotes). So, at the
67 and Hulme with 65 are far risk of seeming the pedant that J must seem to be,
ahead o f the closest contender, here it is : How You Too Can Ready Poetry Motsenbacher, who has only 32.
I . Don•t panic when you see verse on the page.
It appears very likely that Team Calm yourself. Think of the poem as a friend ,
McLaren is headed fo r its Sth
straight Can-Am crown even if
TUDENT DISCOUNT
Stewart 's Lola should find some
ON ALL
sudden reliability and win most o f
art supplies, picture framing,
the remaining six races. Revson is
redecorating needs.
fast proving himself to b e a
D. M. RECH PAINT CO.'
first-rate drive r and , alo ng with
3209 Bailey Ave.
Hulme, the duo will not b e easjJy
beaten .

Volvo, MG, AIISIIin

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847 Niagara Falls Blvd.
(near Eggert)
833-7744
Ages 2 months thru 5 years

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See tts first if

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We have a huge stock of slightly
800 acr• of the flnelt
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Open 7 days a week

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USED
TEXTBOOKS
Mi.. used at all the leall c. . . .s. We alse .P,Iy MW texts__,.,.rltadls-supplies
-sweatshirflr-1MsJwl-11fts.

BUFFAlO TEXTBOOK
3610 Main St. Across fr• U.B• .

133.1131

STORES
INC. ·

Slacks galore in l new stores,
now open at Elmwood and
Bidwell near State Teaehera, and
Main Street opposite U.B.
Groovy flares to tum you on ... in
plaids, stripes, cheeks, and solids,
Wester pockets, replar pocketa,
wide and reaular belt loops.
Plenty of flares in famous Levi's
®Sta-Prest® slacks. Also straiaht
-cuts that are with it. Dig Pants A'
Plenty now!

.,
Page ten. The Spectrum . Friday, July 30, 1971

\

�•,

•

;--~RMNeo~ea----------------1
I
I
I

~-

SHACKLE LOCKS &amp; CHAINS
You can't saw throl91 it Bicyde Chain
(2% ft. l111gth)
YOUR UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE

•

CLAIIINII·

I
I
I

---~

1969 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, light
blue Wl\h white top. 351 v-a engine,
power fteerl.ng and brak•, deluxe
Interior, redlo, white walls, Owner
running •way to Alo. Must sacrifice.
$1795. 176·2790.

STEREO HIFI Arvin, wood cabinet
console phongraph, 30 Wlltts BSR·TT.
L.lke new, half price: $59. 683·2460.

'
SPECIAL STUDENT

STARTS
TONIGHT
7:30 e9:45 p.m.

RATE OF $1.00

every Wed.- 2:00p.m.

TENOR SAXAPHONE- B·Fiat Buffet
like brllnd n!IW. Best model. Phone
773·2963.
HEARSE 1957 Cadillac;,
condition. $495.00. 634·7174.
FORD FAtRL.INE '63, - call Andres
137·0362 lifter 7 p.m.

GRANADA
3176 MoliN ST.

1967 OPEL. STATION WAGON,
excellent condition. M1ny extras.
Asl&lt;lng $800. 634-9285 before 1 or
after 6 p.m. ·

833 - 7746

POLA ROI 0, liUtomatlc, perfect
c q ndltlon, electric eye, flash
attachment, flashbulbs, literature.
Color or BC.W. $40.00. 839-4036.
ALLSTATE MOTOR SCOOTER $140, with helmet, grut condition and
trllnsportatlon. 1964 - 125 mOdel, 52
mllas to the pllon. can Eel Dale,
831·3602, 874·3056.
/
APARTMENT FOR RENT
FURNISHED HOUSE for 4 people,
three bedrooms. Two blocks from
campus, rent $225/mo. Call 837·2726
•tter~ p.m.
NICEL V FURNISHED HOUSE, close
campus. Even ings: 894-1212,
845·5600, or 652·1268. Asl&lt; for Jim
Steckmeyer.

1 to

APARTMENTS WANTED

REFRIGERATOR S, stoves arid ' NEEDED: TWO BEDROOM
Washers. R~ondltiO!led, delivered 1ne1 • apartment prefarrably near campus,
guaranteed. OC.G Appliances, 844
around $100. C•ll Lanl 837-0114 for
Sycamore, TX4-3183.
Sept .

--------------------------HOUSE OR APT. needed for 2 or 3
girls for Sep t., within Wilking dlst•nce
of campus. C1ll 837·1617 or 831-4113
or 831·5393. Ask for Mickey.
A FURNISHED APARTMENT nHCSeel

to sub-let Just for August. Cllll Ed Dale,
831-3602, 874-3056.
RIDE BOARD
WANTED, ride for two to Siln
Francisco Aug. 3·5, will share
expenses. Call Ed, 873·2536.

Evelyn Wood·Reading Dynamics was the method
taught to the staffs of Presidents Kennedy and
Nixon; to Senators Ted Kennedy, Proxmire, Ribicoff and Symington. It has helped hundreds of
thousands of people in politics, the theatre, business and professional life, as well as students
throughout the U.S. We guarantee to refund ~our
·tuition if we do not at least triple your effective
reading speed.

NOW AFREE MINI-LESSON
WILL SHOW YOU HOW IT WORKS

OESPERATELV NIEED one firM..
roommlte tor next yur.- CION to
t58/rnofttft. call 131.,.113.

campus.

. Jo.Ann.

Call

HOUSEHOLD SALE. Furniture and
liPpllances, etc. Very d)up. Owner
IUvlng countf'y. Must satl evervth)(lg.
882·3571.
CARTRIDGE TAPES - CliiMtta and
eltflt track. Custom made from your
records or OUI'J. Satisfaction lOO'IIo
guaranteed, Also many pre-recorded:
R11m 13.00, Sticky Flngen 13.00.
Whole Earth Store, 1458 Hertel near
Norwlllk,

PANAVI$IC)N8 TECHNICOLOR4t• from Wtmtr Bros. A l&lt;iooey Sefvic4s Company

1959 4 DOOR PO'!fTIAC.
834-9145 after a p.m.

USED SCM Electra 220 ty~rlter.
Call SM-9145 attw 6 p.m.

v.w.

r

cQJ

CHEAP TWIN BEDS, ~.
delk, TV, rug, drape~, ftle cabinet, pots
a. pens, 8~1-9381.
·

BUS. In axcallerit working
order, $600, 881·2447.

86

****

en.«,

Ft)RSALE
MAN'S ' CLOTHING, _..radloa,
phot091'apht. unu..,.l decoration ltema.
$at. a. Sun., 141 'WINPMr, 8~8·1776.
L•vlng, must Mil.

..

-

PEIIIONAL •

--------------------ANNE THE MYSTERIOUS call
837-6958. 1 can't unclerltand my own
not•.

DAVID: I know had a .....t
weel&lt;enel tomorroW! L~. Sltaflm.
ROCHELLE B. Catt"Cflrls 138-2304. I
don't ...,_ yew ..._. .,ut ~e phone
compenytlo8l.
MARRIED COUPLEI Fr• room and
bollrd In complete, n-ly fumltfted
home. E•rn money by belnt
hOUMparents tO four teenage girls. C.ll
Mrs. MarlnSky, 154-8586.
NOTICEI Exl)llndlnt our VW service to
Amherst, our sttop com• to you at
school or home. $19.95 complete
tun..up. For service 675-5382. BMC a.
VW Service Cen~r. 1415 Orchard Park
Road, West Seneell.
AT THE BEEF a. ALE : A brief
encounter betwixt a beautiful and
John from University of Mlehlg~~n.
R.S.V.P•.313·76 1·7744.
MAKE MONEY - Sell ads for the
Spectrum, r~m 355.Norton.
SEPT. 6th (one WliY only) $109.00
Niagara Falls to London (Gatwlck).
323/316 N orton. 831-.3602, University
Travel.
BEAUTIFUL HANOMA.O E gold &amp;
sliver j-elry - wedding rings - at
se nsible prlcea, J.P. GoiCIWeaver
J-elers, 655 Elmwood lit Ferry St.
881-3400.

THE SPECTRUM'S classlfleds will do
It for you, or just help you set up for
doing lt. $1.25 for 15 worela or lass,
$.05 for each additional word. Ads
must be paid for before they run. 355
Norton Hall.
MISCELLANEOUS

ROOMMATES WANTED

TYPING, experienced. IBM Sel ectric.
$.50 per page. Donna McGowan,
838-4808.

FEMALE HERMIT Wished "me for
roommate. Own room, Delaware and
Hertel. Bonnie after 5:00, 873·2431.

RESPONSIBLE INTERIOR
PAINTING. Fr• astlmlltas. Fohl and
Sipes. Cllll before 5 p.m.: 881·3691.

TWO GIRLS to round out co-ed house.
Share room. $45 each. Off Hertel. Ken ,
837-6159.

AFRICA TRAVE.L . Thinking about
vltltlng o r job opportunities In biKk
Africa, write to Africa Travel Club
A·lO P.O. Box 1002, Ellicott St ation,
Buffalo, New Vorl&lt; 14205.

BELL BOTTOMS
INCENSE
PAPERS
THE CLOTHES
OUT SHOP

corner Mein &amp; Beiley
Hn. 11·5 T,W,S. - 11·9 M, Th, Fri.

PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE.
'Specializing In term papers, theses and
dlssertlltlons. Call now 684..5135.
GUSTAV (no frills or trumpeting,
please) will xerox anything for $.08 1
copy. (Cheapest rate we know In this
town ,)
EXPERIENCED FAST TYPING bY
el ectric typ-rlter. Theses, term
l)llpen, etc:. $.40/P~. call 873· 1305.
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE,
work done on IBM Magnetic Card
EQuipment. Fast, error·free copy.
Unlimited originals. Specializing In i~ll
types of dlsserto1tlons and theses. C•ll
837-6558.
TYPING Clone In my home. 833-1597.
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST will do
typi ng In my home. Price varies with
m.Jterial. Call 876·2095 nights or
weekends. Fast service.
NEED VIETNAMESE PAPERS
tr•nslated . Anyone able to do so, call
897·3825 lifter 5 p .m.

'
After one Free Mini-Lesson your reading speed
could increase substantially - r:ight then and
there. There's no cost or obligation for this free
hour of fascinating instruction. After that, the
decision to continue is up to you.

JASS . Sunday, Masthead, Gr•nt Street
with Poor Richard and friends. Bring
ver alta. Bookings 297-3514.

SCHEDULE OF FREE MINI-LESSONS
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institute
3606 Main Street
(Next to Buffalo Textbook)
Mon. Aug. 2 at 10 a.m. o r noon or 3 p.m. or 5 p.m.
Tues. Aug. 3 at3 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m .
Wed. Aug. 4 at 3 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m .
Thurs. Aug. 5 3 p.m. 5 p.m.
last classes of Summer Session will stwt
THURSO
, A y , AUG~ST 5 at 7:00p.m .

~

WKBW and BUFFALO FESTIVAL present

LEON RUSSELL

For further information call
CURT _MILLER
838 3296

Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics
. ·-

and FREDDIE KING

SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, at 8:30 P.M.
PEACE BRIDGE CENTER
Porter Avenue at the Peace Bridge (Thruway bit N·9)
Ticket• ut ~4. 00 (.omo.od quaouity) now ot llutfooo httlvql Titltet Offit•.
Stat oer•Hiolon Lobo~ lmolo orden acuopled wtth 1elf-addoeued, tlompod
envooope); U.ll. Horton Hall ond lulfalo State Collet• Ticket Office,

Friday, July 30, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

I

�..

.. i
Women's Liberation will hold free karate classes
for women Tues. and Thurs. from 4-6 p.m. in
Room 340 Norton Hall.
The UB Vets Club will conduct Draft
Counseling every Wednesday from noon to 4 p.m. in
Room 260 Norton Hall.
Summer session students who are eligible for
benefit.s from the Veterans Administration are
reminded that a listing of their summer courses and
credits for which they are enrolled must be filed
with the Financial Aid Office. If this was not do ne at
the time of registration, veteran students should call
at Room 213, Harriman Library, to provide this
info rmation.
·
Student Associ&lt;~tlon's SPQI&lt;er's Bure..u needs
interested students to help obtain speakers and set
up programs for the upcoming year. If interested,

.

please contact Mark Weiner in Room 205.
Any underp-ac:kate student interested in
tutoring c:ollege students for academic c:redit should
call the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory at 831 -3946.
PresentJy tutors are needed in Anatomy 307,
Finance 301, Management Scienct; 301 and
Chemistry 123. Applications are available at 88
Winspear.
lntermtional Folk Dancing will be held tonight
from 8- 11 p.m. in Room 30 Diefendorf Annex.
Psychomat will be held Monday from 2- 4 p.m .
and Wednesday from 7- 10 p.m . in Room 232
Norton Hall.
Gay Liberation Front will sponsor a Gay Rap
Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Room 234 Norton Hall. All
gay men and women are invited to stop in and rap.

Kleinh&lt;lns Music HaJJ

Available at the Ticket Office
Sept. 10 - Chuck Mangione
Shaw FestivaJ
Cmadian NatiON! Exhibition
thru Sept. 4: Tonight ot 8:30
thru Sept. 5: War, Wom~n ond Oth~r Trivia
Melody Fair

'

thru july 31 Klsm~t - john Raitt and Anna Maria
Albergetti
Aug. 1 - Roberta Flack
Aug. 2-7: Robert Goulet and Norm Crosby
Aug. 8 - The Four Seasons
Aug. 9- 14: jerry Vale
•h
Aug. 15 - Bobby Sherman
Aug. 16- 21 The Sound of Music - Carol Lawrence
Aug. 22 - The Byrds
Aug. 30- Sept. 4: Sergio Franchi and Pat Cooper
Sept. 5 - John Gary

Aug. 20 - jerry Lewis
Aug. 2 - Floyd Cramer, Chet Atkins, Boots
Randolph and Roy Clark
Aug. 22 - The Carpenters and George Kirby
Aug. 23 - The 5th Dimension
Aug. 24 - Charley Pride
Aug. 25 - The Guess Who
Aug. 26-27 : johnny Cash
Aug. 30 - The Osmond Bros.
Aug. 3 - The jackson Five
Sept. 1- 6: Circus International
War MemoriaJ Stadium
Aug. 31 - Chicago

Rochester War Memori&lt;~l

Peace Bricfae Exhibition Center

Aug. 2 - jesus Christ, Superstar

Aug. 19 - Emerson, Lake &amp; Palmer (on sale Aug. 2)

What's Happening

•

Fair : Cattaraugus County Fair, Little Valley, ends
tomorrow
Play : Klsmett, Melody Fair, ends tomorrow
Play : Holr, Royal Alexandra Theater, Toronto, thru
Sun.
Play : Stratford Festival, Stratford, Ont., thru Oct. 9
Play: Shaw Festival, Niagara-o n-the-Lake, thru Sept.
5
Sunday, Aus. 1
Concert : Roberta Flack, 8 p.m., Melody Fair

Thursday, Aug. 5
Film: Relativity and Word/Fiesh/lmoge, 8 p.m.
Diefendorf 147
Opera : Princess /do , 8 :30p.m., Baird Recital Hall
Friday, Aus. 6

Monday, Aus. 2
Revue : Robert Goulet and Norm Crosby, Melody
Fair, thru Sun.
Play: Sweet Charity, O'Keefe Centre, Toronto, thru
Aug. 14
Tuesday, Aus. 3
Film: Two or Three Things , 8 p.m., Diefendorf 147

ackpage

Film : The Landlord, continuous showings,
Conference Theater, Norton Hall, thru Sun.
Opera : Princess Ida , 8:30p.m., Baird Recital Hall
~

.

Tuesday, Aug. 10
Recital : Wolfram and Karin Reuthe, 8:30 p.m.,
Baird Recital Hall
Wednesday, Aug. 11
Film : Exterminating Angel, 8 p.m., Diefendorf 147
Thursday, Aug. 12
Recital: Wolfram and Karin Reuthe, 8:30 p.m.,
Baird Recital Hall

- Sueroich

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/

..
(

Vot. 22, No; I

Fricbly, July 23, 1871

Posi1tions upgraded

Acting provost of Arts
(Jlmpus
security
role
altered
and Letters is CilPPOinted
personnel.
The need for more trainina is
one voiced by many security
officials. Mr. Griffm explained
that at least 25 men of the
43-man , .•security force have
received tho best available law
enforcement traini.na. However,
he atated, "because of the special
nature of the · Un iversity
community, additional trainiDa

by Jo-ADR A.rmllo

Recent furor in the Faculty of
Arts and Letters over its pro.vostial
appointment appears resolved with
the selection of Gilbert D. Moore as
acting provost ' of that Faculty
effective September 1. The
administrative decision to first
offer the post to Marvin Bernstein
(Department of History) resulted
in considerable faculty criticism
expressed in an Arts and Letters
Steering Committee vote of no
confidence in Dr. Bernstein.
Because of this vote and his
conviction that •'the group which
actually runs the Faculty of Arts ·
and Letters ... had decided upon
a course df absolute
obsttuctionism and immediate
confrontation,'' Dr. Bernstein
declined the appointment. Dr.
Moore, presently chairman of the
Department of Counselor
Education, reported that he was
first approached about the
position by individual faculty
meiJlti«!rs· befbre it was offered to
Dr. Bernstein.

resipted director of Comparative
Uterature, said that '~he unamity
of. the Faculty of Arts and..Letters
Steering Committee speaks for
itself."

"We wish Dr. Moore every

success and offer any help with
finding an accommodation with
the President while we are looking
for a permanent provost," he
added. This search will continue
with the constitution of a
provostial search committee by
t he President. Dr. Ketter is
expected to name this committee
and its chairman sometime this
week. In addition. Dr. Ketter
allUred that there would be

, Compus EditOT

Chanaes in hiaber education
and Uninrsity events of past
sprinp combined with new
societal attitudes, towards law
enforcement have sisnificantly
altered 'the role of Campus
Security to one both more
complex and sensitive. Explaining
that in past years the security
officer ~vas ·required simply to
function as a qu~·protector and
watchmaJI\ of students, assistant
director ,of Campus Security Lee
Griffin trommented that "what
the Univcersity is now demandina
is a pretty sophisticated law
enJorcement personnel ."
In addition, recent legislation
bas recJansified and upgraded the
campus officer position in the
state witlu new officers required to
bave the highest educational level
of any la'W enforcement officer in
New Yos~k (a minimum of two
years of coUege). These new
position.s constitute a grade
increase Mllld a change in title from
lnstituUo~nal Safety Office to
Campus Slecurity Officer.

(.

Overemphuized
Commenting that he was
somewhat ''leery" of the situation
after "such an outburst.'' Dr.
Moore said thatJoy dbubU...BG.- .:.:t.,..,."".....l
had had were resolved : "I
wouldn't have aa:epted the
position if I still entertained
serious doubts." lt is Dr. Moore's
belief that the divisions within
Arts and Letters are not as deep as
-ottwrek:hw
some would believe.
students on it. Dr. Moore also said
"Maybe the splits are not that there should be no problem
nearly so severe . . . it could be with student representation as it is
that any splits are overemphasized "a fairly routine matter . . . one
because of past tensions," he that is an accepted practice.''
explained. Dr. Moore· sees his role
as one of reestablishing collegium 'Tokenism'
processes and procedures so that
However, James I . Pontillo,
differences will be minimized. president of the graduate students
According to him, these of the Department of Spanish ,
"procedures and processes should Italian, and Portugese, discounted
be able to aooomodate the st u dent representation o n
differences."
committees as "tokenism." A
Dr. Moore does no.t foresee member of the search committee
insurmountable problems as chaired by Dr. Bernstein, Mr.
acting provost. He said that he has Pontillo described it as a very
worked with many people from frustrating experience.
that faculty "across the board" Unfortunately, he said the
and the situation now is one in. attitude with whidl students ,are
which "they elected someone treated is one in which ''the
they could support." It does student is nigger."
appear that there are no major
Specifically, Mr . Pontillo
objections to Dr. Moore.
charged Thomas ConnoUy,
Faculty suppOrt
The Arts and Letters Steering
Committee which had .voted 14-1
against Dr. Bernstein ,
unanimously supported Dr. Moore
for the post. Bruno Arcudi,
Chairman of the Dopartment of
Spanish, Italian, and Portugese,
praised OJ. Moore as a careful and
honest man. one with the "nice
element of patience.''· He further
commented that "Di. Moore baa a
lot of q~es that will help us
with our problems."

Labeling Dr. Moore a viable
candidate. Albert Cook, recently

current acting provost of Arts and
Lette15, and Dr. Cook with a
disregard and even disrespect for
student opinion. Ptesident Ketter
reported that ~·in the past. some
members of Arts and Letters have
been violently opposed to
students on search committees."
Presently, Dr . Moore is
studying the Faculty's bylaws. its
c urrent committes and their
mechanics. Describing Arts and
Letters "as a very distinguished
faculty .'' Dr. Moore concluded
that it i s important that
"everything possible be done to
exercise its talents."
.~

Morale problems
•
Howe11er, while the job, the
qualifications and the demands o.f
the Uninnity community have all
&lt;lbanaed, those men employed as
~Ceurity officers have buic:a.Uy
remained the sam•. ft was,
therefore,, required tbat these
employees tak.e a two-part written
and oral c!xamination to qualify
for the u:p-graded positions. This
mand atc•ry examination has
caused m111ch dissension within the
unit and created apparent morale
problems.
Donald Jaeger, a member of
campus s1ecurity labelled the exam
as an ins1wt : " We were forced to
take a te11t to do a job that we've
been doing for five years."
Another officer, Frank Lawlor,
said ijaat it was inappropriate that
men wert: forced to take an exam
implying that after seven or ten
years c•f serv ice, theY. are
incapable of doina their jobs.
Most &lt;Jif the officers wanted the
jobs to be grandfathered. Thi.s
would have allowed present
employee:s to serve as the nucleus
for the incoming force .

...IPI

*'*

for aecurity to become armed as
the University was so opposed to
it. He further said that one of the
r~ns why much of the force
wants arms is that "guns are the
trappinJ$ of office...
Mr. Griffin ·explained that
another demoralizina effect on
the force is their "rather nebulous
status.'' Campua aecurity,
accOrdiDa to Mr. Griffin,
'•
,

~reletter

programt in firat-tid, human
relations and cunent social
problems are being planned." Mr.
Robertson said that the chanp in
She functions of security
nec;essltates ~taftt trainina:
" We ~ ptting qu.lte a bit of
trainin&amp;
but we have to
constantly keep in touch."
Coupled with this training
there must be, according to Mr.
Griffm, "a need to go furth er and
to get into human relations. Our
people should be made aware of
questions and change." He further
said that "while you can train a
man to use his weapon properly,
and dress him in dapper uniforms,
but if tte isn't a good man to begin
with, you won't tiave a good
officer."
Mr. Griffm notes that there are
presently about 16 men in the
force that be doesn't consider as
"good officers. " However,
because of their civil service
status, it is extremely difficult to
replace them with better officers.
The two qualities that Mr.
Griffin lists as necessary for such
an officer are "good common
seru~e'' ancl "an ability to get along
with people." There are other
officers, however. who feel that
more is necessary. Mr. Jaeger, one
of the officers knifed last
September, strongly urges that all
campus security personnel be
armed: "We are asked to do a job
we are not equipped for .••
Other officers while not
strongly urging the acquisition of
guns, expressed the need for
them. "One time I was definitely
ap.uist arms, but the knifing made
me think," commented Mr.
Lawlor. Mr. Griffin maintained
that the time wasn't opportune

now.

Refonneel force
According to William
Robertso1n, a security officer for
three years, current personnel are
valuable Jror "their knowledge and
experience of the campus." Mr.
Robertso1n was one officer who
.couldn't qualify for the new
positions failing the oral part of
the exam. "The exam was one of
a guessin1g game . . . you guessed
what answers you thought they
wanted. I don't. know why I
failed . I was just sent a letter
saying I lrailed. But I'm appealing
the decisi•on," he explained.
Mr. R obertson severely
c riti cized A lbany and the
administmtion for not responding
to the rieeds of campus security:
"We ournelves tried to upgrade
our jobs, but we cot the door
slammed in our face." Amona
their reco,mmended reforms were
a demand! for a hi&amp;ber degree of
trainin&amp; aJnd a request to lower the
age limit to attract youqer •

performs full time law
enforcement on this campus, "yet
they aren't considered police
oJficen." As an example ol this,
he said tbat newspapers refer to
them as many thinp from
..security parda" to "niabt
watchmen." "I am a police officer
and should be treated like one."
maintained Charles Scripp.
Adding to security's discontent
is the attitude of the University
community towards it. A spring
referendum on the Norton drug
problem placed campus aecurity
as a last resort solution. "The
University, in effect, was telling
campus security where they stand,
in the community they serve,"
said Mr. Griffm. Mr. Jaeger
criticized both students and
administration for "wanting us
only when they need us, other
times we are nothing to them."
Mr. Robertson said that when
• attention is paid to campus
security It is usually in the form
of critic.ism : "We are human
beings with human feelinp, but
most people feel we aren't
humans ," Several officers
reported, however, that the
situation was improving slightly
with more of a rapport being
established with students, staff
and faculty . Evidence of this is
the retwn of campus security to
the Union after over a year's
absence.
On the other hand, there are
members who feel that their
position in the University has not
improved and is, in fact, getting
worse. These men feel they are
performing a thankless job but, as
Mr. Jaeger commented: "Anyone
that represents authority isn't
popular. But we are not here to be
popular."

Public !zearing

'

Sub Board I. Incorporated invites all
members of the University community to
come to a public hearing Monday at 12
o'clock noon in Room 234 Norton to voice
your opinions, complaints and suggestions
concerning all campus publications.

�Anderson is hostile
tOwards University

FCC petitioned

SA .files suit against /-1BC ·
The Student Association is
planning to file a petition with the
Federal Corrimunica tions
Commission against the American
Broadcastins Company.
The 'pttition asb that ABC-TV
be forced to broadcast the
controversial anti-war halftime
show held durins the Oct. 31 ,
I 970 tJB..Holy Cross football
pme. It was prepared by Sandi
Savill, a Georgetown University
student and volunteer worker for
the Stem Community Law Firm.
Presented by the UB Marchins
Band, the show mounted a
musical attack on war, racism and
pollution, complimentins the
national moratorium c:alled for

~pported by the Stem Famny

At !least · the half-time show,
F u n d , special i z e _s in which wa.S a "program of ideas
co mmunications law and has and mu~c voted upon by students
argued many cases concernins the in the l~and as part of a national
First Amendment. He is also a· non-violmt moratorium day," was
former secretary to FCC captured on film and may be aired
Commissioner Nicholas Johnson. soon.
However, despite the massive
research, Westen's experience and Show's contents
a lawye.r's eternal optimism, Ms.
SavUI expects the FCC to rule
The show began with a
apinst the suit. If that occurs, she narrato1r recalling that Preside,nt
says, the Commission will be Nixon watched a football game
asked to reconSider the rulins at a during the Nov. 15, 1g69
full hearins which will include the Moratolrium march by half a
testimony of witnesses.
million people in Wti.hington ...If,
Jf the commissioners again as last year, the President must
reject the suit, it will be appealed watch TV on Moratorium Day, we
to the Diltrict' o.f Colwnbia Court . can OnlY hope that he is watching
this game," the narrator said.
Whi.le playing "Eve of
Destruction," the band marched
onto the field in the shape of a
bomb , then exploded. Next they
formed a peace symbol and
played '"Give Peace a Chance" and
"We Shall Overcome" in a
dedication to the "peaceful
picketi111g days" of the peace
movemt,nt.

that date by several anti-war
groups.
However, ABC-TV labelled it
"a political demonstration" and
refused to broadcast it. Instead,
fans in five states were treated to
shots of Bailey Ave. traffic,
Buffalo's elm trees and long views
of the end zone.
ABC's action, argues Ms. Savill,
was nothing les s than
..abridgement of the First
Amendment rights of both the
audience and students in the
band." By refusing to broadcast
the half-time show, she adds, ABC
is in clear violation of the
Constitution .
Planned appeals
One of several unpaid ,
"overworked" volunteers in the
law firm's Washington D.C. office,
Ms. Savill has been researching the
suit since 1969. Only two more
affidl$vits are needed before the
petition can be formali zed and
presented to the FCC by Tracy
Westen, the attorney who is
officially in charge of the case.
Mr. Westen, director of the
finn, a non-profit organization

of Appeals, the only court which
has jurisdiction oyer the FCC. Ms.
Savill is then prepared to take the
case to the Supreme Court.

'Swan song'
lro~cally,

the marching band
- nicknamed the "Pride of the
East" - has not appeared since
the Oct. 31 game. "That show,"
says band director Frank Cipolla,
" turned out to be our'Swan song."
With the discontinuation of
football here, it may well be that
the only way anyone will ever see
the marching Bulls again is on the
fllm taken that day.
The show itself was perhaps
the best ever done by the band,
said Mr. Cipolla. "It was well put
together and innovative," he
continued. "We had two rock
bands performing with the
marching band and il was all put
together by the students."
Despite the show's finality, the
band's morality was never higher,
according to Mr. Cipolla. ''There
was a unifying effect from dealing
with controversial issues which
had to be treated very carefully,"
said.

he

A rock band then played
"Message From a Black Man"
followed by the marching band's
playing "Smile on Your Brother"
while ftorming the letters M.L.K.
in honm of the late civil rights
leader Martin Luther King.
Anotht:r rock band did the
Buffalo Sprinsfield song "Por
What It's Worth" as the band
marched into a formation of a
factory belching dey ice "smoke"
from its. chimneys, a comment on
the ecologically destructive role of
many corporations.
Then , while the band formed
an outline map of the United

States and pinpointed such
trouble spots as Kent, Ohio and
Jackson, Mississippi, a rock band
jived through the Crosby, Stills,
Nash . ar1d Young classic ''Ohio."
Finally, to the beat of the rock
band's · "Street Fighting Man" the
UB bat11d marched off the field
playing "America the Beautiful."
Although the script of the
performance had been edited to
what bamd members thought was
acceptable, ABC executives
announ(;ed that the half-time
show w'ould not be broadcast. In
response, to this censorship, the
Student Association began its
preparation to ftle suit and almost
a year later those who may have
forgotten the brouhaha may be
able to see what it was all about.
Th11 SplJctrum is published weelcly

Smokey's friends
don't play with matches.

during

the

sumll'}IW sessions by
I, Inc. of the State
Univerislty of New York at Buffalo.
Offices are located at 356 Norton
Hall. State University of New. Vorl&lt;
at .Buffalo. Telephone: Area code
716; Editorial, 831 ·4113; Business,
831·3610.
S~b-Bourd

Rel)(esented for advertising bV
National Educational Advertising
Service, Inc., 18 E. 50th Street, New
Vorl&lt;, New York 10022.
Subscription rates we $4.50 par
semeste•r or $8.00 for two semesters.
I

Second Class Postage
BuffaJo, New Yo!'~(.

paid

Circullltlon: 10,000

at

Ausustus E. Anderson Ul,
owner of the spacious mansion at
186 LeBrun J)rive that . the
University plans to use as the new
presidential reside·nce, has decided
not to donate a planned (ift
which was to go alons with the
transaction.
Although Mr. Anderson was
not available for comment,
reliable sources said that he bad
made no firm commitment to
donate a gift and declined as a
result of many inquiries from the
University . includlns the publicity
surrounding the transaction.
Included in this was just a desire
to "be left alone."
The LeBrun residence was
purchased by the University of
Buffalo Foundation, Inc. last
month for $125,000. State
University of Buffalo President
Robert Ketter is expected to
move into the new residence
August 1.
In an interview, Dr. Ketter
. explained the entire story behind
the transaction . He said that after
the LeBrun house had been
assessed by several real estate
firms for something on the
average of$138,000, the Board of
Trustees of the UB Foundation
authorized $125,000 for the sale.
Extensive repairs
The whole reason that the UB
Foundation was involved, Dr.
Ketter explained, was that they
expected the State University of
New York to take over the house
eventually, as they did the Jewett
Pkwy . residence of former
President Martin Meyerson.
At the moment, the State
University cannot take over the
house because of the state-wide
budget squeeze. According to Dr.
Ketter, the Jewett residence, built
by Frank Uoyd Wright, is in
.. tremendous disrepair." It is

estlmated that repairs would run
anywhere between $60,000 and

$100,000.
"
Dr. Itctter said that the Buffalo
Historical Society was petitioned
by the University to take over the
WrisJ!t house while the search for
a more suitable residence
continued. Accor4Jng to state law,
the University can not sell the
house. They could, however,
excanse it f'?r another or donate it
to some organization or person
outright.
In the meantime, the
University became interested in
the Anderson residence. The UB
Foundation agreed to buy the
house with the thought that the
State University would eventually
take it over. Rowever, amid all
this, the Historical Society found
that they could not take over the
house because of the prohibitive
·COSt for renovation and budget
cuts.
Dr. Ketter commented on the
a ·pparent hostility of Mr.
Anderson explainjng that Mr.
Anderson, in the past, had been
very uncooperative. Thls was
especially so in ligJ\t of the fact
that his house was considered for
sale by Meyerson when he became
president in 1966.
The hostility that Mr.
Anderson has shown towards the
University has been so great, Dr.
Ketter added, that he has
consistently refused to Jet any
UniversitY' official visit the house
or to besin making minor repairs
and renovations until the August
l moving date.

Dr. Ketter appeared to be very
upset over the secrecy that several
UB Foundation officials showed
over details of the house. He said
that he didn't understand why
they ·did it and said that he did
not authorize nor sanction it.

Mike IVKOOis,.Jack N"Kholson, ~-;:.~:::.~··
fandice Betgen,ArthwGarfunkd,
Ann·Matgret and Jules Feiffer.
camal~.

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L-------------------~-----~J
Page two . The Spectrum . Friday, July 23, 1971

�Gelbaum concerned with
academic._development

Security: aides vs. cqordinafors

Com111llnication a problem
by Ed Jaffe
Sp«trum Staff Write

A serious communication
problem has apparently developed
between the security coordinators
and the student aides in the
residence haJJs. The problem
TH(

Sp£CTI\UM

News analysis
allegedly stems from .an inherent
sense of c ompetition for
impOrtance and a lack of proper
job description for both positions.
At the present time, the
student aides are students who
have been hired by the Housing
Office to Pl\trol the dormitories
while the security coordinators
are campua policemen on special
assignment in tht dorms d.uring
the evenings hours.
The lack of a cl93r job
description adds to the confusion
created by the fact that the
student aides arc hired by and
responsible to the Housing Office
while they draw their paychecks
from and work in conjun ction
with the Security Office. This lack
of delineation of roles bas resulted
in various incidents between the
aides and the coordinators.
One such incident was an
attempt o n the part of a
coordinator to suspend an aide for
an evening. The accusation was
that the aide had failed to " float "
(check the outside grounds or the
dormitories) at specified hours (a
rather strange way to insure
security ... having aides circulate
on a s et schedule) . The
coor dinator attempted to
physically confiscate muter keys
from an aide who refused to turn
them over since be had received

them from Housing and he was
responsible for them to that
office,

~~ntconceptions
Another problem has resulted
from the different perceptions of
law enforcement evidenced in the
aides and coordinators. The aides
sec their function as informing
people of violations of dorm rules
and asking them to stop while the
coordinators seem to take a more
forceful stance. In once instance,
an aide who had discovered u
non~esident sleeping in a lounge
and asked him to leave ,
mentioned the incident to u
coordinator who was aghast that
he had not been immediately
summo11ed in order to make an
arrest for trespassing.
Many student aides feel that
they are beina harassed by the
coordinators. A system has been
instituted which requires the aides
to walk uoescorted to Clement
Hall every morning to sign out.
But the coordinators themselves
never travel in gro ups o f less than
two and always ca rry
walkie-talkies. This seems to place
Lhe aides in a risk sftuation ev~n
the coordinators won't enter.
Another form of alleaed
harassment occurred for the
period when the coordinators
insisted on setting the work
schcdilles for the aides.

pointina out that the bulk of the
weekday residence poplllation is
centered in the Tower Hall area,
quite a distance from the
coordinators' "post."
The student aides offered some
understandina of the problems of
the coordinators. If regular
ca mpus sec u rity patrols are
short-banded the Security Office
won't hesitate to /ull men from
the dorms. Also, the campus
policemen in the dorms don't earn
much more than the student aides
and are somewhat irritated by
that.
Another problem involves the
aide's lack of proper"training. One
aide explained that the only
instructions he ever received were
not to walk on the front lawn of
Tower (for fear of a descending
bottle) and not to turn a comer
t oo close for suspicion of
someone on the other side.

Regular meetinp

Late movie lounge
Student aides report that they
don't see the coordinators more
than twice a night while they are
making their rounds of the
dormitories and sometimes they
are not seen at all. A brief search
or the residence halls will usually
Finally, it becomes evident
rand the security coordinators ·
ca t c hing the late movie in that the aides and coordinators
Clement Lounge. The aides should meet regularly to prevent
q u·es tioned this . pro cedure problems like this from occuring.

WHILf THEY LAST

,Met, ,.. ,....,ft.
•..dlly , ...e4 _ ..

SNOW PEAS

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~ect au,_ (.. HY tl-)
;.
f!Mel ,..,. tlotlll, .,....,. ,.. 111ew
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'lite

Got something to advertise?

Bean Sprouts
c.....
,... .._.. ........
..

,,...,., o..w..

ef

TSUJIMOTO

CLAIII.III
355 Norton Hall

OUR COMPLETE ~NE
OF BEDROOM AND
I
lOUNGE ACCESSORIES
INCLUDES:
PillOWS, RUGS
TAPESTRIES &amp; SPREADS
from

MOROCCO
POLAND
and the

O,l.,lel Am-GIIft-f . . .

,

V•• .,...,, "'"'•' a l,.,,,. e~~....
OPI!f IVK. l •l P.M. DAILY It M P.M.
t

NU . . , _ II. (&amp;1. II) ll•a. M.Y,
I MU. IIMl el Truooit (V.L at)

.__,. NL 2 ·SSII - ...-•

Wa,.ellBelJs

One such issue involvin&amp; the
denial of tenure to J .P. Jones of the
Political Science Department, Is
currently before Dr. Gelbaum for
consideration and action. Coupled
with this specific case, Dr.
Gelbaum reported that his office is
presently . "explorina procedures
for dealing with facu lty-personnel
action" and that they are "in the
process now o f putting somethina
together."
Although
not
specifically
describing
this
procedure, Dr. Gelbaum did hint at
student participation: " I think
student voices sho uld be heard voice should slightly outweigh
they are grown-up human beings." others. He gave as an example of
He fu"r ther explained that while this faculty decision-malting in
be was at the University o f purely Jcademic matters. He
California at Irvine he was one of explained that a University does
the strongest fighters for student not have a long terrn residence
participation and input. According population and that in this
to Dr. Gelbaum, Irvine students situation faculty are in the position
served on review committees for to best judge what they should be
appointment,
promotion and teaching. "Faculty are a group of
termination of faculty. "AU the people come together specifically
experiences I had working with to educate people ... they have
students,
they
behaved devoted a significant fraction of
responsibly. worked very hard and · their professional and adult lives to
made serious and sober opinions," understanding, absorbing and
learning those facts, philosophy
he said.
and attitudes most helpful in
Force of cooperation
achieving this," he added.

Bernard Gelbaum

But "1 don't think there should
be an ocean o f power - either of
students or of the faculty or of the
administration ," he add~ . Rather
Dr. Gelbaum feels that " there
should be an ocean of agreement
and r.1tionality and sweet reason ."
Additionally. he is much more
interested
in
seeing people
recognil.e that ttlere is a common
goal and a common good that can
be achieved.
It is Dr. Gelbalfm's belief that
this "fnrrf' o f CO('Ir"r1lion"
.&amp;JU..:IUlJI.Jl.JUIU'.J~ILX.JUOuuuc..ouo...._..,.

July 23, 1971 !!!! !

KING SIZE WATER MATTRESS
g11Qra11teed for S year~

ONLY

resulted in the absence of student
unrest at Irvine: "We really went
out to meet the student halfway.
... and we found him always to be
respected and heard." Discounting .
charges of irresponsibility as the
cause of student activism, Dr.
Gelbaum commented that "unrest
arises not becaUse people are
irresponsible, but because people
are
irritated
by
genuine
grievances."
There are some cases Dr.
Gelbaum feels where one sepnent's

Student roles

Some steps might be taken to
correct some of these problems.
Either the security coordinators
should assume all responsibilities
for ch ecking the outside grounds
or the aides sh ould pair up and be
issued some form · of wireless
communication devices. This will
probably mean the addition of
more staff. Also, the coordinators
should station themselves in the
Tower Hall area. If these steps are
not taken,
coordinators sbould
be assigned to regular patrol
duties and be removed from the
dorm s since with motorized
vehicles and sh ort wave radio they
could be summoned to the scene
of any disturbance just as quickly.

...

The University's new Vice
President for Academic Affairs,
Bernard R. Gelbaum, envisions his
position as one with a number of
responsibilites including academic
planning and the development of a
faculty . Dr. Gelbaum, appointed
by President Robert Ketter and
recen tly approved by the Board or
Trustees, is the first to fill the post
since it was changed from Vice
President
for
Academic
Development.
However, Dr. Gelbaum is still
with
continued
concerned
Such
academic
development.
development
will • • include
consultation
and
planning
affecting
curriculum ,
new
programs, the academic units and
academic quality . Maintaining that
he is "not very familiar with
anything here," Dr. Gelbaum
explained that he is presently
acquainting himself with the
particular issues of the University.

Endangered experimentation
Looking ahead to his first year
as Vice President, Dr. Gelbaum
foresees one serious problem with
the budget . He explained that the
state is fiscally bound which means
that "a lot of the brave new ideas
that a lot of us would like to see
explored are going to have to go in
first gear rather than in high .. . .''
Dr. Gelbaum also said that this
could result in "far less of tbe
des~rable
luxury
of
experimentation - there just isn't
the money for it."
There are, though several
personal
programs
of
Dr.
Gelbaum's that he would be
interested in exploring. However,
he refrained from disclosing them
preferring to wait , watch and see if
they would be suitable for this
particular University.

MIDSUMMER

20% to 50%

SALE
Reductions
ON AU SPORTSWEAR
DAILY
9o:JO to 5:30

THURS.
Till 9 , .M.

Friday, July 23, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Bicycle parking lotproposed
Ccmtinued bicycle thefts have resulted in an
approx.imately $3000 loss for Univenity studenta
over t111e put few months, according to Lee Grif'Qn,
assistar1t director of Campus Security. Attributing
the thefts to "ofT-campus crime elements," Mr.
Grlfiin explained th.at in most cases the bikes,
secured to some pennanent object, h.ad their locka
cut off with a bolt cutter. He further said that tho
thefts occurred mainly during the daylight houn
between 2 p.m. and 8 p .m.

'JIZzaf?

Takln1 ad•mtate of eoon to c = = o

cold w•ther, unemployed Uninnity atudeot Cui frieclman offen
ftriecl winter appuel to the campua community. llilaore located
ID the Norton·Tower Parldna lot obtains fur coata an4 army attire
oa coaliJDmeDt wbJch aUowa reduced prices of $1 - $10. AU
profita ue then cllftded amona thoee auppUen of the mea"Chandile.
llr. Friedman reporta IUCCta with 10.15 coati aoJd in one day.

Various activities offered
for freshman orientation
-::r

If you bump into a large sroup
of young people, aU carrying blue
folders with a picture of a &amp;lrl and
a Jarae caption in black reading
Hi/, you've come upon next year's
freshmen visiting the campus. The
tour is only part of the II
freshman orientations, called
Summer Academic Workshops,
that will take place throughout
the summer sessions.
lhe workshops involve two
and a balf days of activities,
advisement and registration.
They' re optional, costing each
student S2S . For this fee , each
individual will spend two nights in
Tower Hall. John Buerk, chairman
of the University Coordinating
Committee for Orientation , said
that about 90% of the incoming
freshman class will participate in
the program .
The proposed intention of the
orientation is to acquaint the •
student with life at the University,
u weU as promote interaction
between students and faculty .
'Siulllow view'
''But, " according to lan
DeWaal , Student Association
president, "in many ways it misses
its mark." Mr. DeWaal believes
t bat the prosram projects a
"shallow view" of univenity life.
He attributes this to the fact that
the orientations are held in the
summer, when the University
community is least active, and
that the orientations ue too
WATCH a JEWELRY
REPAIR

structured, leaving the students
I ittle free time. Mr. DeWaal
further commented tbat many of
the II student aids involved in the
program "are on an ego·trip." •
Dorothy Wynne, senior advisor
of the Undergraduate Studies, is
co nducting a survey of the
advisement portions of the
workshop. She reports that the
replies from the first two sessions
have been "fairly favorable,"
although response has been low .
One future freshman , a Buffalo
resident who attended the second
session , said : "On a whole, the
orientation really wasn't worth it.
I learned some new thinJS about
UB but, I could have found those
out in September." He also
complained about the difficulty
of registration.
Variety biFu,hts
When asked whether be would
r e co mmend the Summer
Academic Workshops to other
incoming freshmen , the student
flatly replied , " Not
recommended."
The highlight of the entire
program is the variety of activities
offered to the students at night.
They include many of the regular
University summer activities such
as films, lectures and concerts, as
well as other special events: a
campfire in the Fountain
Co urtyard , guitar and
candlemaking workshops and an
excursion to Niagara Palls.

S1mi1a.r to the Nortqn check room, the l)'ltem would
include attendants illuloa tap to bike ownen.
Admillio.n to the .area would be restricted to these

attendanta and thote poaeatna tap.
Mr. Grifftn commented that aome people may
feel that thil would be an in&lt;:oovenience and prefer
to puk their bikea nearer to their cW.a. To combat

Because of this, Mr. Griffin feels that a large
percenltage of the thefts could be eliminated if the
campun community were to. actively cooperate in
reporting the robberies while they were taking place.
"But tllle problem here is the same q In any large
grouping of people - no one' wants to get involved,
so notlt~ng gets done," he said.

Bike ~ptradon
In addition, Mr. Griffin recommends various
measures that both individuals and the Uni•ersity
can institute. Included in these and presently beina
constlt1uted is a voluntary system of bicycle
rqistration which will have on record the serial
numbetrs and owners' names of bikes. Mr. Griffin
said thnt such a system will allow stolen bikes to be
returned once they are recovered. " Without the
serial numben, we have no way of knowina who to
return recovered bikes to,'' he commented. He
advises anyone wishln&amp; to register their bike with
Campwl Security should contact their offices on 196
W'tnspeur.
Notina that different bike Jocks are more
effective than othen, Mr. Griffin recommended that
aU biko ownen purchase and use case hardened
chains. This type of lock, accordinJ to Mr. Griffin, is
virtualllr' impossible to cut through with the make of
bolt cu1tters normally used in the thefts. Mr. Griffin
has ad,rised the University Bookstore to stuck this
item and it will reportedly be available ~ several
weeks.
Guarded Iota

In addition to these proposals, Mr. Griffin bas
been rneeting privately with persons concerned
about the rash of robberies. One such student , Walt
Tyler, hu drafted a proposition for a student
mannedl parking lot in a central area of the campus.

this, Mr. Tyler sug~ted a campaipt to promote the
use of the faclllty and to infonn the University
community that unguarded bikes aren't safe.
Another problem involved in instituting the
program is one of funding. Mr. Tyler reported that
be plans to show his draft both to the administration
and to the Student Association in hopes of obtaining
tho necessary monies.

COJdPLETE------~~

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The good old days of browsing
through the stacks in the
basement area of the bookstore
are o~er.
A new arrangement has been
recently instituted which, as
officials of the bookstore claim,
will bring about faster and more
efficient service.
Specifically , the new
arrangeme' nt is . a
behind-the-counter sales program.
A person will hand over a list of
books that he needs for his
required courses. A bookstore
staffer will then go throught the
stacks, pick them up and return
• them to the purchaser.
According to Asst. General
Manager Betty J . Brock, this
procedure will allow purchases to
be conducted in a "faster, more
orderly manner." ,
However, this new arrangement
has generated a great deal of
student OP,position, particularly
among the Undergraduate and
Graduate Student AssOciations.
Both organizations have
denounced the new measure as
designed to increase the
bookstore's profit margin at the
No.rn a.om•v, noted linguist expense of student convenience.
n critic of the VietNim War,
..,oke 10 .,. overflowing crowd Student resolutions
July 14 • a guest lecturer at the
1971 Linguistic lnstitut8 at the
In a memorandum released last
State Univnty of Buffalo. An
unrivaled authority on all aspec:1S Tuesday, the GSA charged that
of grammatical theory, Or. "the University Bookstore enjoys
a.omsky spoka on "An ExtM'Ided cost and market advantages that
Standllrd Theory of Syntax."
Or. Chomsky il also widely no priv ate, profit -making
known for his ou11poka1nea bookstore enjoys.
against American Polley in
"It pays no rent or certain
Vimam. Recen11y, he published a utilities. It has a large number of
book of -vs on "American guaranteed sales in a short period
Power and the New Mandarins,"
which Is dedic8ted "to the bnve of time at the beginning of each
young m• who retu• to .-va in
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inventory and a Ulary advantaee.''
It continued, ''They enjby a
central position in a large
community for sale throughout
the year. With all of these
advantages, it is not reasonable
that the University Bookstore, run
in an efficient manner, cannot sell
its textbooks at a lower price than
the private , profit· making
bookstore."
A a result, both students
associations have passed

\

resolutions demanding that the
bookstore re-institute a ten
percent discount ~n all items~The
undergraduates have gone even
further, stating that if those
.. ste ps are not immediately
instituted , the Student
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and faculty to officially boycott
all purchases and orders at the
University Bookstore."
Ms. Brock said that she was
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When asked if there was any
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Ms . Brock replied that the
students on the bookstore stUf
were involved in it. She noted that
there was also a letter sent to aU
faculty members explaining the
new arrangements. However, it
appears that student leaden were
never notified.

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Friday, July 23, 1971 . The Speetrum . Page five

I

�I

The real secret: yeu can't
·mix empire and democracy

...

provide rad y exc~ for the atTOJUICe that
expertise and power generate. Elitism is inevitable.
The real enemy is the bureaucrat's own people. They
When men as different as Truman , Eisenhower,
must be deceived, watched and if necessary
Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon are found locked into
repreased. In the documents so far published one can
the same essential course, when we see them caught
in so extensive a web of deceit and inhumanity as set: over and over apin facts kept from tbe U.S.
public which were not only lc.nown to t he enemy,
that revealed by the secret Pentagon papers ~he New
York "'nmu and the Washington Post had begun to b ut deliberately transmitted by intermediaries of
publish, we are dealing with factors deeper than
"signals." Hanoi was forewarned of destruction in
personality or political outlook. We must try to
1964 ; only the voters at home th ought Jotufson a
determine the forces and the institutional patterns dove. Documents were "classified" to make sure that
which led men so diverse into the same crimes
we would be the last to know.
against humanity and crimes against freedom ,
So it can be said of a wh ole series of Presidnets
culminating in the current effort by the Nixon since the U .S. began to run a world empire that they
Adminis tration to turn back the clock of sought " purposely and systematically . . . to keep
Anglo-American law by three centuries and subject the American people in ignorance of the true state of
the press to prior restraint . Even those few reporters thinp at the seat of war, and by all sorts of deceitful
Ulce myself, who were critical of the war from the tricks to deprive them of the knowledge required for
beJinning, turn out to have been naive. We never the formation or a correct judgment .'' The words are
imagined that the makers of policy were quite so those of the 11eat liberal editor Carl Schurz, writing
mendacious and unscrupulous. Judge J. Skelly in I 899 of bow McKinley carried on fhe war in the
Wright s poke for us aU when he said in his dissent of Philippines. The ume mentality still rules our
the Court of Appeals in the Washington Post case, national councils. On CBS June 16, Marvin Kalb
..As if the lo ng and sordid war in Southeast Asia bad asked Gen. Maxwell Taylor, a principal character in
not already done enou&amp;)\ harm to our people, it is the documents being disclosed , ..What do you make,
now used to cut o ut the heart of our free institutions General, of the principle of the people's right to
k.now when steps of this dimensio n are taken?" The
and system of government."
General replied, in phrues which recall the Charge of
th~ Light Brigade, " I don' t believe in that as a
No New Theory
What are the circumstances that made these men general principle ... A citizen should know those
so untrustworthy? The answer was given by those thinp he needs to know to be a good citizen and
Americam who fought the annexation of the discharge his function." Ours not to question why,
Philippines after the Spanish-American war. They ours but to do and die....
saw this as the beginning of imperialism and
predicted. that empire and democracy would Secret debates, trials
The secrecy bred by empire s preads like a cancer
ultimatelyrprove Irreconcilable. "What is desperately
needed in this country today," Senator McGovern· through the government, undeimining our most
said o n CBS Face the Nation June 20, is truthfulness basic institutions. The Senate held a secret session on
from our government ... " It is impossible to run an a secret war iri Laos. Jud~es Gurfein and Gesell held
empire "truthfull y". In an empire, there is always part of their hearinss in the New York Times and
war o f o ne sort or anot her being waged, or brewing, Wa1hington Post cases in secret and secret briefs
somewhere on its borders and war requires some wer'e flied o n appeal. For the first time in American
measure of secrecy. How much is left when one history Ute Supreme Court may be asked to hear
pleads, as Senator McGovern did , for "full argument in camera or at least consider evidence
information on matters that in no way jeopardize taken in secret and forever sealed from the public
national security." That's a pretty safe standard in eye. With every step confidence in government
soverning Iceland, where security doesn't extend
much beyond the 3-miJe limit. But in an empire like at home of those t.,talitarian practices against which
oun " national security" can reasonably be st retched we are supposedly spending billjons to protect
to cover events in far corners of Laos, Turkey and ourselves. When Johnson "off the record, not for
the Congo. For empires always fear erosion at their attribution but please use" tells Time that release of
edges, and the donuno theory can be seen in action the Pentagon papers wu ..close to treason," he
as far back as Pericles and as recently as the Soviet begins to sound like those other free world leaders,
Papadapolous and Franco. This hysterical reaction
invasion of Czechoslovakia.
The bi&amp;&amp;er the empire, the more numerous its by the consummate old faker can best be measured
potential enemies; allies, too, must be watched lest against Judge Gurfein's decision dismissing the
they waver or defect. A world-wide intelligence government's application for a temporary restraining
network becomes a necessity, and an additional order. •
The circumstances made that ruling all the more
reason for secrecy. To maintain the empire, larger
armed forces are required and armies are by their impressive. In choosing to ftle so momentous a case
nature closed societies, a uthoritarian and before Judge Gurfein, the Attorney General picked a
hierarchical. The bi&amp;&amp;er the armies, the more the brand~new Republican judge, freshly beholden to the
inner councils of government are molded by military Administration ; this was characteristically crass of
c onsiderations. These reinforce the instinctive Mitchell and Nixon. J udge Gurfein's preliminary
secretiveness o r the bureaucrat. The bureaucrats, observation that he didn'f see why a patriotic editor
civil and military alike, feel that their freedom of wouldn't take the documents to the government
action would be Hrnited if they had to explain what before deciding whether to publish them revealed a
they were doing. Ho w explain to a Congressman naivete that was appalling! He granted the request
from the Kansas the complex · intrigues in our for a secret hearing at which representatives of State,
Brazilian policy which may some day give us a bigger Defense and the Joint Chiefs bf Staff could testify.
Vietnam? How draw a firm line between contingency This was to allow the aovernment, the Judge said,
(c:ontlnu.d on Nile 7)
planning and poHcy? Genuinely difficult uestions ·

Reprint from lF. Stolle .

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Page six . The Spectrum . Friday, July 23, 1971
\

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One day Georgie Soloway jumped off a penthouse,
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circled Manhattan in hts private jet, and tried to find
some creep who put him down to every girl he liked.

i (contlnu~ from P11fe 6)
by the North Vietnamese Comtpunists.. whilo the
..an opportunity to pinpoint "'bat it believed to be Wa•hlnJ'tOn Po1t assailed Morse as ·a "reckJess and
ntal brea1cbea to our national security of sufficient querulous" dissenter.
impact to controvert the risht 'Pf a free press..:• But
When the Associated Pr~ tJf.ee y~ later, in
after heaJin&amp; the secret testim~ny, he declared, "I an extraordinary feat of re~rting, mtemewed three
am constrained to find as a fact" that the evidence dozen crew members and bepn to expose
presented "did not convince this court that the McNamara•s ties about the Tonkin Gulf incidents.
publication of these historiC3l documents would neither the 1Jmes nor the Post 'ran the 5,000-word
seriously breach the national security." He ruled that expose by Harry Rosenthal and Tom Stewart. The
"no coa1mt reasons were advanced" why the Arlcontas Gazette seems to have been the only paper
documents "would vitally affect the security of the to publish the fuU report. A year later the nmes and
nation." All he saw was embarrassment to those who the Post were equally remiss in failina at .U
participnted . He ended with an eloquent adequately to cover the fumbling but revealing new
reaffirmation of fundamental free press principles Fulbriaht bearinp on the Tonkin Gulf incidents and
for whiclu every American newspaperman must be the sensational revelations made by Morse about
deeply grateful. We honor him, too, for them in three areat Senate speeches, Feb. 2 1, 28.
demonstrnting so dramatically the independence of and 29, 1968. Nor did any of these big papers bother
the judiciar;y, and pause to ' point out that the to look when in the New York Review of Books,
institutional framework of the-law molds men into a Feb. 13, 1969 I presented evidence that the second
different pattern of behavior than the institutional Tonkin Gulf incident never occurred nor when in the
frameworl' of militarism and imperialism.
Bi· Weekly April 21 of that year I called attention to
But title press, too, has been corrupted in its own
"The Best Kept s~cret of the Vietnam War." This
way by title web of secrecy woven by imperialism.
was the revelation in Westmoreland•s fmal report on
One aspec:t of the whole system of classification has
the Vietnamese war that the South Vietnamese
not bad s~lfficient. attention. The volume of classified
aovernment in 1964 and 1965 resisted the
materiAl jpves elected officials and bureaucrats a
introduction of U.S. combat troops and that
ready me~uns of seducina and brainwashing the press.
McNamara backed WestmoTeland in iporina
Selective declassification becomes a means of
Sai&amp;&lt;&gt;n•a wishes. The Pentaaon Papers, prepared by
manipulation. A half·truth may be more deceptive,
McNamara•s men, draw a veil over both these storie~
because lc:ss easy to rebut, than a whole tie. The
· damagina to McNamara'• reputation.
system olf "leaJcs" makes it easy to mislead the
1 believe the reason, the Nixon Administration is
public and to make reporters beholden to officials
for these phoney "scoops." To be excluded from so desperately anxious to stop the New York 1Jmu
t bose cozy backgrounders whence so much is because the 1Jmu has in its possession a summary
falsificatictn is ,enerated represents one of the basic of the Command and Control report on the Tonkin
advantaaeu of heretical reporters like myself. It also Gu .nc:idents which Fulbrisht has been trying to aet
explains why the establishment press, despite so for seven years. I believe this will show that the
much first rate reporting from Vietnam, has taken so second Tonkin Gulf incident, used by Johnson to
long to dJlaenpae from the "party-line" on the war. unleash his first bombing, never occurred. I also
So wllille we find ourselves truly proud of the believe that the Pentaaon Papers covering the
American press for closina ranks against the Eisenhower years may throw fresh lisht on the part
&amp;&lt;&gt;vemment in defense of freedom, and to the Nixon played with Dulles and Radford in tryina to
editors of the New York 1Jmu , the Washington Po1t bring about U.S. intervention at the time of Dien
and (at p11ess time) the Boston Globe for printing the Bien Phu, if necessary with tactical nuclear weapons
Pentaaon papers, we wish they bad started earlier. as weU as U.S. ground troops. But the overriding
Neil Sheehan or the New York Times deserves a reason for tryina to suppress the documents is that
special salute, and whoever leaked the documents they show the continuity of policy and conduct.
will JO dctwn in history as a hero. It is nevertheless Nixon is still lookina for the same unattainable
true that no small part of what is now coming to victory Kennedy and Johnson sousht, and is as
1isJrt was visible y~ ago, for those who cared to unwillina u they were to let the public know what
look, as my own readers of the .8i· Weekly and the he is really doina in Southeast Asia. New1weelc
New YorA: Review of Boob are aware. If the bi&amp; reports that Lyndon Johnson feels "the danger now
press had examined the original hearings on the is that President Nixon will be pressured to get out
Tonkin Gulf and printed Senator Morse's two of Vietnam before achievina the main objective speeches revealing all that the censor h,ad taken out getting South Vietnam in shape to protect itself."
of \he transcript, they would have known much o f nme reports that Johnson feels it was a mistake not
tbe truth seven years a&amp;o (as would the Senators who to impose censorship. ls it any wonder Agnew in Los
voted like sheep for the resolution, only Morse and Angeles criticized the New Tork Times foT printina
Gruenina di.ssentina). Instead the New York Times the Pentaao n Papers and denied that Jolinson had
swallowed the prefabricated Tonkin Gulf incidents misled the American people in I 964-65? This is the
and saw them, as "the beginning of a mad adventure bi-partisan solidarity imperialism breeds.

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Friday, July 23, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

\

�·~...-1~_E___
d_iT_OR_iA_l_s_ ___,,
The Bookstore
Once again the bookstore is the object of numerous
complaints by students. First, the two f!lajor student
governments, the Student Association and the Graduate
Student Association, have exQressed unhappiness over the
high cost of bookstore purchases, demanding that a 10%
discount for students be reinstituted. In addition, much
ill·feeling has been generated among both the students and
the faculty by the bookstore's new sales system.
The GSA stated that the bookstore enjoys certain
priviledges, am'ong them not having to pay rent and "a large
number of guaranteed sales in a short period of time." They
therefore contend that materials in the bookstore should be
available more ceaply than in private profit·oriented stores.
We wholeheartedly agree with both these propositions. We
can see no reason, except possibly mismanagement, for the
bookstore not to be in a position to accede to these
demands.
Concerning the new sales system, we find it too time
consuming to merit the bookstore's claim of efficiency.
Serious dt!lays have already resulted, this during a period
when sales volume is minimal. To continue this experiment
in the Fall will undoubtedly result in a chaotic situation.
Further, most members of the campus community feel that
they are being unfairly denied the right to browse.
Therefore we must urge, and urge strongly, two·fold
action by the bookstore. First, establish the 10% discount
immediately and secondly scrap their supposedly more
efficient arrangement. If these changes are not forthcoming,
we can see no alternative, but to support and organize a Fall
boycott of the bookstore by all members of the University
community. The bookstore is here to serve us, not vice versa.

Arts and Letters
The latest development in the continuing saga of the Arts
and Letters provostship is the appointment of Gilbert Moore,
chairman of the Department of Counselor Education, as the
Acting Provost. Or. Moore is a knowledgeable, experienced
and sensitive individual, whose long involvement at this
University has earned him the respect of both students and
faculty. We support this choice and look forward to a fair
and equitable resolution of the grievances which are
threatening to tear Arts and Letters apart.

'We'll have to quit - ell the ammunition is gone4'

------~-~---------------------~----·
Lijtrrabee defended
To the! Editor.
A s a part - small, but a part - of the former
a dmi 1n1stration of Arts and Letters Prof.
Boyd-Bowman labels as ..cynically corrupt," perhaps
I mia;ht be forgiven a few comments on that
admin istration.
P1rof. Boyd-B o wman's crack about Eric
Larrabee's teachina of auerilla warfare is a revealina
and pnrfect example of what the former Provost had
to put up with in his efforts towards academio
freedo m and breadth of curriculum. I assume
Boyd-!Bowman would prefer not to have such
subjeclts raised In universities, anymore than his
doctninal predecessors in American ·education
thou&amp;llit communism or atheism fit for the
classroom:
Boyd-Bowman's own sideo()f-the-mouth cynical
ad hominem is but one of an unending series of
potty personal attacks on Eric Larrabee generally

based o n the murky view that his interests in gueriUa
warfare were tantamount to treason and anarchism ,
much as people who instruct in communism are
su pposed to be anti-capitalist inculcators of
revolution and the destruction of the home.
Prof. Boyd-Bowman also seems to have
miraculoualy foraot the many contributions of the
Larrabee administration , even t h ose to
Boyd-Bowman's own comfort and security. I will
not ao into Arts and Letters' constant strivings and
sup p o rt for a pro gram (headed by Prof.
Boyd-Bowman) that few were clear even belonaed in
Arts and Letters, but that the general efforts and
remarkable successes in higher salaries, better
facilities, more and better faculty, fmt-rate
chairmen, student participation, new programs, and
more support funds seem to have been foraotten by
Boyd-Bowman is a mystery to me. That he shouJd
foraet the yet more important efforts on behalf of
academic freedom, decentralization of power, and
responsible dissent doean't surprise me much.

Grq

Mac~rthur

For what it's worth

Soon, a new search committee will be announced.
Unfortunately, one of the factions in this dispute, a group
containing the former Acting Provost and several members of
by Hany Upnw1
the English Department, are demanding that no students be
T~1rn on your idiot box sometime soon. Within a
placed on the search committee. Student involvement on
such committees is a widely accepted practice, both at this few m1inutes some Madison Ave. clown's idea of an
and other institutions. Their philosophy that students are not anti-dr1u1 commercial will appear on your screen. If
you can control your lau&amp;hter, try to force yourself
t rustworthy enough to view faculty personnel records is a to actually listen to what is said in that 60~econd
viewpoint which ceased to be of value ten years ago. This spot, and then tltink about the effect such M cartoon
University is as much the students' as it is the faculty's; this must have. I've been doina that ·lately, and I find
appointment is equally important to both groups. Therefore, myself more inclined toward tears than lauahter.
What I see in those abort episodes frightens me.
despite these fatuous arguments to the contrary, there must
No, th,ey do not make me quiver at the danaen of
be students on the search committee.
drua abuse, il)deed, that is what frightens me about

Vol. 22, No. 6

Friday, July 23, 1971
Editor·in..Chlef - Dennis Arnold
Menetint Ed.ltor - AI een.,n
Alit. Menetintl Editor - Su•n Mo•
BUill,._ M8ft81M' - Jemea Orudcer
Advenlslne MeNter - Sue Mellentine

C.mpu1 ......... Jo·Ann Armeo
City .........•.. HIIIVV Llpmen
Copy .......•.•. Ronni Formen

Grltlftic Aru ........ . Tom Tol11
Layout .....•. Meryhope Runyon

Lit. It DI'Wnl .. Mid'IMI Sllvlfblen
Ml.lllc .........•..•Billy A l tmen
Photo ......... ..David G. Smith
Alit... : ·... Mickey Otterrlticher
Sportl ..... .. .... Sheryn Rogers

Th• Spectrum Is e member of the Unites St.te Student Pr. . A.ocietion
end ia served by Unitea Pr111 International, College Pr• Serivce, the Lo1An{lll11 Ti~TM~ Syndicate end Libenltlon Nwn Service.
RuiX)bllation of ell ~er herein without the expt'IIA con.nt of the

Edltor·in.Chief i1 forbidden.
Editorial pOlicy 11 determined by the EditM· irH:hief.

J
Page eight. The Spectrum. Friday, July 23, 1971

them. I. can only lauah at the lack of understandina
and information that aoes into the makina of most
ant i~ru&amp; shorts. Stressina the hazards of the evil
weed i:s not exactly the best way to reach youna
people, u anyone who bas spoken to someone under
the a14, of 30 can testify. Putting Mike Amico's
imaae of the averaae teena&amp;er on the screen to talk
about bow you don't have to smoke dope to be
'aroovy' probably does much more harm than &amp;ood .
Too m~any youna Americans have already ~n
ox posed to pot to believe the lies about bow
danaewus it is. In fact , about the mt&gt;st deroptory
thin&amp; one can say about marijuana is that no one is
really sure of exactly what it does. But tb~n apin,
that doesn't n epte the experience of millions of
people who have aotten nothin&amp; worse from grass
than a 1 ~eat hiah.
I have atrayed from the topic, however. 1 do not
mean tllis column u an advertisement for the virtues
of marl;luana. The problem is that no one bas proven
it iJ ha.l'mful, and yet campaigns aimed at preventin&amp;
bard dn~o~a use continue to involve marijuana in their
J dvcrtil•tmentl. This can only lead the averaac wban
toenap1r to believe that tl\e rest of the information is
limply :more propa.pnda. The youth of this nation
has con:1o to accept that SO% of what they are told is
false and the rest is only half-true.
To start an anti~rua comm«cial by implyinJ
that marijuana leads to heroin is outn.aeoua.
Certainly, moat amack: addicts have smoked pot. But

then apin, every alcoholic hal had a beer. I don't see
the community marchina'bn the breweriea.
From my own experience as a reporter, I have
learned the danaer of such a campaign. A few
month.s ago I interviewed seterat admitted heroin
addicts. Every one of them wu asked the same
question: " Why didn't you believe what everyone
says about smack? Why didn 't you think you'd aet
hooked?" In every case, the answer was the same:
"They lied to us about everythina else, about
marijuana ... we just didn't believe them when they
talked about heroin." That is the fri&amp;htening tlting
about these commercials. They breed mistrust and
thus in the Ions run have a harmful effect. This
· crime is compc)unded by tho fact that they waste
valuable time and moner - time and money which
could be put to effective use.
.
~t IS the real .traaed~. It would be.so e:"Y to
establish an llffective anti~ru&amp; campup if the
momists and 'law enforcers' would j~t pt out of
the way. The Do It Now comm~ are fine
cum~ of how such a campaagn should ~e
orpn!r.ed. There co~d hardly, be ~ more traumat~c
ex~nence t}Jan beanna Zappa s votce ~ver the. ~dto
tellina all ~ou speed frealt.a that you ~ aot etght
months to ltve. Contra!'&gt;' to po~~ar belief, the dr~g
c~lt.ure is neither stuptd nor swcadal. If someone 1S
willina to put out accurate and documented
information provina the dan•en of any given dtu&amp;,
its use w~ diminish with amazing swiftness. The
problem JS that such programs are few and f~r
between. Ph~nix Houae ~n~ some other gour~ m
New York Ctty have distnbuted excellent sh?rt
spota, but the~e. seem to be more ads with nephve
effect than POiltive.
Neither police strona arm tactics nor Sunday
sch ool sermons will help cwb' the spread of
narcotics. The amount of cyniciam and disbelief
toward the hazards of clrup displayed by 14 and
IS-year-old ldds is tetrifyina. America bad better
wake up, or we may find that our c.ities will become
nothina more than blashootina plleries.

�What does it take to become

Farewell poem
To the Editor:
to the university community comma n~w paraaraph
no i mean people not even ru.mes
events places things
that chunk of my life that takes up ninety percent
of my memory
• of what i am
that explosion that unearthed passions. enthusiasms, skills, will
which the achie¥ing ilness had carefuUy folded away
love, for the first time catholic
not exhausted in a few individuals with special roles
now the unnegotiable good
of which 'theres plenty
unevenly spread thru the university coinmunjty comma etc
i became myself
but also a symbol (painful equivoque for newborn identities)
fatller friend lover one of the movement
teacher (and some a reluctant teacher)
and honesty created ambiguity and confusion
quote a vacuum onJy ln~iffFrence can fill unquote
and some believed i was alf together
avoided my perfection
scorned my incompetence or naivete
rebtted to me in process '
and one girl wept when she found' out i too was fucked-up
and one girl wept when she ran into me in the thick of a cloud
..,
of tear gas
you ask me why did i leave
but in the only sensa that matters
i did not leave
you are not hayeshall
for which one more id1osyncrasy has been wipeiS off
my friends are the ones i can hug
without explanations or apologies
absences do not e~t
the world changed when i was here
not when i departed (nor when i first came)
listen to wallace stevens
The mode of the person becomes the mode of the world ,
For that person , and, sometimes, for the world itself.
The contents of the mind become solid show
Or almost solid seem show - the way a fly bird
Fixes itself in its inevitable bush ...
It follows that to change modes is to change the world .
... Or is it enough to have seen
And felt and known the difference we have seen
And felt and known in the colors in which we live,
In the excellences of the air we breathe,
The bouquet of being - enough to realize: •
That the sense of being chanses as we talk ,
lbat talk shifts the cycle of the scenes of kings?

Iuigi bianchi
Editor': note: On July Luigi Bianchi re1igned hts
appolntme'ht in the Faculty of Natural Science and
Mathematlcl and left to take a po1ition at Toronto':
York Univenlty. This.teuer conttftutet his farewell
to the Univenity Commtmity.

Bernstein supported
To the Editor:
As students we have all got to mature
politically. We must no longer be · utilized by
professors who use students and student rights as a
smokescreen for their own political self-serving. It is
up to every student to learn the facts behind every
issue, and then stand up for what is right. Too often
professors and administrators have publicly implied
that they are pro-students, only to reverse their
positions once behind closed doors, where they
laugh at how easily they have duped us.
I refer to the Bernstein affair. Having been
bohind some of those "closed doors," and having
seen some of the facts, I find it my duty to inform
all studenta, and whoever else cares to know, of the
terrible, unjust and cruel rip-off being perpetrated on
Dr. Bernstein. I have known him as a teacher and as
an administrator and he's been excellent, always. He
does what more people around this University
should do: he cares, about learning, about oequality
and most of all, about people, us. I served on the
faculty of Arts and Letters Provost Search
Committee as one of the two student reps and I say
that if he had not been chairman, Student
Representation would have been mere~ tokenism.
There is no real way to judge attitude, but when you
meet a man who is genuine, you know it.
~ow let us move on to the accusers of Dr.
Bernstein. Does anyqn ut there know the attitudes
and past actions of thes men towards students and
student rights and repr entatives? I, as a Graduate
Representative of tie De
mont of Spaniih, Italian
and Portuguese,- have se ed in various capacities
with these people and I must say that their
performance bas been in arked contrast to that of
Dr. Bernstein. Dr. Connoll , ctin&amp; Provost, Faculty
of Arts and Letters, bas, n various occasions,
attempted to, and sometim succeeded in, denyina

,..

a ·deptirtment chairman?
'

'

Editor'1 note: 17re following il a gue.~t column married as early as 23 and 24. These marital patternS
tubmltted by Dr. Pierre Aubery of the French correlate well with recent findinp of Oinzl&gt;era and
Department. t...
1: Herma that 81% of the Ph.D.'s in their sample who
...
had reached top achievement level had manie4
by Pierre Aubery
under 30. Chairmen in romance Languages in
marrying young fit the general pattern for succeasful,
This is an intriguing question that seldom Leadership-oriented Ph.D.'s.
receives a satisfactory answer. However some
"The Bng.tish chairmen prepared at 18 different
objective ·studies of the actual background and undergraduate colleges, all but 3 of which were large
qualifications of practicising chairmen in literature universities. Small libe.ral arts colleges thus account
and languages at mlijor universities have been made for only 12% of the chairmen, although 69% took
and their results released. Several years ago an their bachelor's degree at private rather tbtn public
assessment of such research has been made by institutions. The largest number from a single
Donald A. Sears ot:. the American Council on institution were S (20%) who trained at
Education, and published in PMLA (May 1965 Harvard-Radcliffe. Although the range was 20 to 28,
LXXX , 2). Excerpts of the Sears paper will be news the typical future chairman was 22 years old at the
to many readers be they ,students or teachers :
time he. took his first degree. The length of time that
"If your goal is a chairmanship in romance it t90k the p-oup to move from their B.A.'s to the
languages; you should take your B.A. at 22.3, your completion otthe Ph.D.'s is well below the national
Ph.D at 30.4, and your wife at 28.4. Only in number
average - a span of 8.3 years, although one
of children would yolt'find the yeastier temperament completed his doctoral work in 3 years and one took
of the 'romantic' literature having its effect - you as long as 13 years. At the time of the completion ol
plan for 2: 1 children. In spite of this fQreign flavor, the docforate the average age was 29.8 with a range .~
your undergraduate work must without exception be from 23 to 37 . This graduate work was taken at lS
at a large American university, and your Pl\.0. different institutions, with 7 from Harvard and 3
should be from one of the top ten institutions. As from Yale, Chicago, Cornell, and The Johns Hopkins
chairman you will be 54.5 years old.
accoont for 2 each. Tow holders of special
"Should the romance language pattern repel you fellowships did not take a l!octoral degree. A
and you still dream of· a chairmanship, you might s urp.risingly large percentage (40%) are now
look to the German department, but you will have chairmen at the institutions from which they
to be younger at the time of receiving your degrees, teceived their Ph.D. degrees. In the full group of 2S,
2 1 for the B.A. and 28.2 for the Ph.D. On the other a third of the chairmen have a primary special field
hand, you must plan to delay marriage until you are of tbe eighteenth century while the Renaissance runs
33 .7 and you must demonstrate Nordic restraint in a close second with 7 chairmen . Three work in the
havin·g a family of I .5 children. Like 'your brethren 19th century and two each are specialists in
in EnsUsh and romance languages, you should American , Irish, and medieval literatures. One is in
c hoose an American university for your the field of drama . ·
undergraduate years, although you will not lower
"The typical chairman spends 49% of his time in
your chances appreciably by doing your graduate academic administration, 17% in graduate
work in Germany. You will be four years younger instructjon and preparation, 12% in undergraduate
than your colleagues in the other languages when instruction, 13% ~n research and writing, and 9% in
you ftnd yourself in the ranks of chairmen at age professional and other activities outside the
S0.3.
universi"ty . Ideally he would like to rearrange the
"These are the profiles of the typical modem division o£ his time to reduce his administrative
language chairmen as drawn from data compiled chores by one-half (24.5%} and double his research
during a major survey conducted by the Commission time (25%). He also yearns to spend more time with
on Plans and Objectives for the American Council on his students, wishing for an increase from 29% to
Education. Professors in 30 separate disciplines in 45.5% of his total time. While most seek only a
the I 06 largest universities wbre asked to rate the modest increase in undergraduate teaching (from an
quality of graduate faculty in their respective fields average of 12% to 18%), only o ne: wished to reduce
in each institution. From the nearly 80% response to his undergraduate assignment to 0 ."
the 5,400 "questionnaires it is possible to extract a
AU this shows that perhaps it is not necessary to
good deal of information.
be a superman t~ become a chairman. However
"Excluding the one who married late, the belonging to the " right" socio-cultural group at an
average age at marriage was 27 .6. AD but 4 were early age remains mandatory.
married by 30, that is, at about the average age for
Pierre Aubery
the receipt of their Ph.D. degree (29.8). Six were

Student Representation in the Spanish Depart1nent.
(Which be could do, since he often holds all the
cards in a game where he makes all the rules.) His
attitude is also one that in no way compares with Dr.
Bernstein's genuine concern for students.
Mr . Albert Cook mentions the Search
Committee for Provost of Arts and Letters, and says
that hfl was one of those who censured that
Committee. But it is indicative that he, himself, was
one of the members of that Committee, where I also
served. In that Committee he regarded the student
representatives as mere idiots or dolts and became
openly antagonistic when we acted as if we were
really human. He also says that Marvin Bernstein
voted against the Black candidate, since be knows
everyone who voted for that Black candidate. Well,/
voted in that election, and I did not tell him how I
voted, nor will I, and further, the vote· was on the
basis of merit, and any racist overtones are being
added now, and by A. Cook. I defy him to answer
how, in a secret ballot, ire knows how I, in my own
self, acting, not only for myself, or my department,
bdt for the Student Body, Black, Yellow , Brown and
White, voted? Racism works both ways, and there
are people, acceptable a~d non-acceptable, regardless
of color, Mr. Albert Cook.
When he mentions those 'one or two
opportUnistic students to Oatter' and 'mask as
student representatives,• be is referring to students
who wert. duly elected to their positions, who are
supported by their constituents, who receive no
salary for their efforts (nothing like the good bread
of Mr. Albert Cook), who put in many hours tryina
·to set somethin&amp; done, and who are often accused,
threatened, and receive just this kind of abuse as
they try to work peacefully for change (and who,
incidently, are not quite sold on the idea of peaceful
cha.n.se, especially when they constantly face
opposition that holds all the aces).
1b.is statement of Mr. Cook is indicative of his
attitude towards anyone who will not be fooled by

him and surrender to "'master knows best" politics.
By the way, this leader that Mr. Cook refers to, Dr.
Bruno Arcudi, happens to be completely trusted and
supported by all the Student Representatives in the
Department, both Graduate and Undergraduate, and
by the majority of Graduates and informed
Undergrads. This is in return for Or. Arcudi's long
history of tru,e concern for students, coupled with
his often having stuck his own neck out for students
(and there are few who have the conviction to do
this). lndeed, much of Dr. Arcudi's opposition has
resulted from battles waged by him on students'
behalf. Mr. Cook is foolish if he thinks he can mask
himself as a 'lover of freedom , equality and justice'
and attack those who are genuin~ly concerned about
students and who have consistently been working for
us for years.
What bas been done is simple. Dr. Marvin
Bernstein , a true teacher, scholar and advocate of
Student Rights, has been publicly attacked by
people who are at best inconsistent in their attitudes
and actions towards students. It is up to us to be
aware, see' the situation and then not be led by half
truths and innuendo. Dr. Bernstein himself never
soupt the job of Provost. I, in fact, sugested the
possibility to him on a number of occasions-durin&amp;
the last semester and he said he really wanted only
to teach. But this attack on him has hurt him. And,
when a true friend of the students has been hurt, it is
a real issue, and wp·should, as lam, be outraged.
I hereby wish to state publicly and emphatically
as President of the Graduate Students of Spanish,
Italian and Portuguese, that I support, without
reservation, the choice of Dr. Marvin Bernstein as
Actina Provost of the Faculty of Arts and Letters.

James J. PontUio
Pre1ident
Gradwlte Student1
Dept. of Spanilh, Italian
and Portugue1e

Friday, July 23, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

�I

Commentary.

.

Youth banmid from Zoar
by Hany Upm.m

to Zoar Valley. What else calf{ the state's action
accompllsh other
hasslina youna peo ple to the
point of getting tfiem to stop frequenting the area?
One would certainly not expect to find much target
practice going on overnight. The incidence of
swimming, nude or otherwise; also would seem likely
to decrease during tbe hours of darkness. As to the
littering problem, anyone I who has ever been to a
public beach or park wei knows that locking the
ptes at sunset will not prevent the accummulation
of trash. Actually ,.most campers are more likely to·
clean up after themselves than are their daytime
counterparts.

'han

City Editor

Thank the Lord, we have been saved from the
hippies and- the nude bathers! In order to save the
" delicate" ecology of Zoar Valley, New York State
has banned motor vehicles and overnight campers
from the gorge.
On the surface, there is nothing terribly diabolical
about the decision. The action was announced by
Henry Diamond , t he state's Environmental
Conservation Commissioner. Thus masked as an
effort to save an admittedly valuable portion of our
environment, :t seems at first a positive measure.
Indeed, the banishment of motor vehicles will not
only prevent some destruction of the valley, but also .
add to an already pleasant atmosphere. Further
examination ·f the state's action, however, reveals
that the beauty of Zoar Valley was not the sole nor
even the primary reason for the decision.

Uttle crime
State and local officials claimed that residents of
the area had been ~omplaining o~ occasional target
shoo tina, nude bathing and littering. Conversely,
police officials declared that crime bas been minimaJ
iJ) tbe area, and that there have been, in fact, no
known arrests involvina drua use in the preserve.
What the real i •1e seems to be is that the local
residents don't like the way the 'hippies' have taJc.en

1

Intolerance
Obviously, then, the decision to loc!c. up Zoar
Valley from sunset ·to sunrise is not designed to
protect its "delicate" ecology. It is more probably
aimed at the delicate sensibilities of some
Cattaraugus County residents. This action is designed
to do nothing more than aet the kids out of the area.
It is certainly not the first time young people have
had to put up with such harassment, nor is it likely
to be the last. In th'at sense, there is nothina
cataclysmic about the decision. It is just rather sad
that young people must continually be discriminated
apinst because of the intolefllllce of their elders. But
then, that's the type of thin1 we've come to expect
from America.

Have you considered joining
The Spectrum staff?
(355 Norton Hall) - Ah, c'mon

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Page ten . The Spectrum . Friday, July 23, 1971

/

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.

.. ..
•

!
:~

.

..

!

,.,.·... ~.\ ·..
l

\

,

~.

! ·!~

~,

·..

~

··~

Scrabble Hill means,
freedom for riders

for an hour
$3 to $3.50, but
what you get in return. can be
quite wide ranged. All are out of
range of any public service
transportation so tJ'le first
necessity Is a car. Waverly and
Sunny Acres are in Canada and
by Andreas
both have a very small confined
Spectrum Staff Writer
ridi~g area. Park Lane and
Rainbow have sections of land
The basic problem. What kind about as big as my backyard and
of meaningful activity can one if they bad good horses, which
engage in whether, it be they don't, they would be a total
meaningful to you personally or bore after five minutes of riding.
to others at the same time, In An exception is Sharpsteins in
Buffalo, is one which 1 have given Lockport : good horses, along with
a grea-t deal of time and effort to a Friday night ride to a local beer
solving. One of the solutions bam.
This leaves us with the three
stems from a childhood love of
horseback riding.
·
biggest pla ces in the area.
Horseback riding is an activity Comparing Sl rabble Hill, Colonial
which can be participated in at Ridge and Circle T (Tremblay
any level, generally according to Ranches), we find some vast
one's monetary state. There 'are differences in the land area and
many ways of viewing horseback the people who work there (which
riding, from the slapstick comedy obViously relates to how you are
of man vs. horse to the seriousness treated there). Without a doubt, I
of owning and raising one. But I find Scrabble Hill the frieQdliest
will be concerned with that area place to go to.
which many of you can relate to,
All three have fairly good
renting a horse for a short sprint horses, however; for those of you
through the woods. This can who can prove your ability,
entail all kinds of extras o r rather Scrabble Hill Stable has a few
a lack of them. They vary widely horses which match any I've seen
with the stable and range from in 13 years. When the proper
being treated U.lce an absolute horse · is fitted to the matching
moronic idiot to a select person, it makes for a really
customer. (Some stables are just enjoyable ride.,ColoniaJ Ridge and
definitely better than others.)
Circle T have some English saddles
There are a number of riding whereas Scrabble Hill has only
stables in the area and a western. However, the so~alled
comparison shows their varying "English trained horses" are really
attitudes and accessibility as far as not very good and do not rate a
those of you who might be try for those of you who would
interested in trying this "Death seriously go into equestrianship. 1
Defying Feat" with which I refer you back to the Amherst
became involved with at the ripe Saddle and Bridle Club for this.
old age of nine and seem to have
As far as land and riding
survived long enough to write this
co nditions go, Circle T and
article.
First let me clear off the Colonial Ridge have 300 acres
Riding Academy in Hamilton, apiece which can be ridden over 3
Ont. and the Amherst Saddle &amp; tQ 4 times in the space of an hour.
Bridle Club. Neither of them rent, In contrast , Scrabble Hill has 800
but rather have riding classes acres and 30 miles of bulldozed
which are held in a ring. These trails which take considerably
longer to cover.
would probably not interest most
1
The essence of ridin$ is
of you - or me.
From here we have a list of freedom, and freedom in riding is
1hose places who rent horses space and variation. This idea is
under conditions varying from the basis for any judgment made
very good to inexcusable. They all in this comparison, and tbe same
charae approximately the same idea upon which the UB Riding
Club is grounded.
After looking them over , my
conclusion which coincides with
the Riding Club's decision is that
XEROXES
Scrabble Hill Stable comes closest
F'OR 8¢
to suitina these qualities. Any
~dditional information about any
,JilST THRILLING
of the stables can be obtained •
from the UB Riding Club
(831-3602 ).

Editor's note: The following
arltcle wa.r written by a member
of the UB Riding Club who hill 13
years experience handling horse1.
The1e are his opinions concerning
the area riding facilttiel.

usta

355Norton

�.canadian Folk Festival

/

Mariposa:1Jeautiftil weekend
The. eleventh annual Mariposa
Folk Festival turned out, as I
expected it would, to be the best
musical experience of the year.
Comparing Mariposa to other
fcsti~ is absurd . The ideas and
goals of Mariposa are so vastly
removed from other music
festivals. No one comes to the
island to make the scene, or to do
outlandish things that they feel
too inhibited to do at other times.
Mariposa is a cultural get together,
a place to learn about the people
in your wodd, a place to hear folk
music.
The "No Stars" publicity
campaign worked almost perfectly
in keeping away the unwanted
~tte cra,shers and scene makers.
Because if anyone knew even a
little about folk music, you'd run
through the li&amp;t of performers and
recognize most of the names. True
stars .are not musicians with four
albums to their credit and gobs of
money. They are people like John
Jackson
from

With six workshops going on
simultaneously for ten hours each
day, it was hectic at times trying
to decide where to go and when .
' But the whole things was
organized so well that you really
wound up seeing everyone you
WBJ:lted to at some time or
another in the course of the three
days.
There were highlights each day,
at least for me. .The ~lues stylists .
workshop featured the
unvelievable ~· Isiah Ross, who
k n e w both Sonny B o y
Williamsona. He played drums,
.Wtar and harmonica. He

R.appab.annock County. When he
plays, you feel the influence of
country, of blues, of almost every
musical style. Jackson's music is
the mUsic of a lifetime of
dedicated understanding. Johhny
Shines is one of a handful of living /

son gs with only harroonica
accompaniment and the crowd sat
amazed at his uncanny control
over the little instrument. Michael
Cooney, certainly the one to be
c hosen MVP of the festival,
hosted the sea sona and son•wap

HAND- CRAFTED

by

musicians who. knew and played
with Robert Johnson. I'm sure
that the couple of hundred of
listeners who sat hypnotized by
the force and sincerity of Shines'
music would say that the whole
weekend was worth it just for his
hour of Johnson songs.

Music aU around

workshops.. Michael's infectious
smile and pixie,. appearance gets
everyone tJlp and happy. ~nd he
really knows more songs than
anyone else on earth. Ramblin'
Jack Elliolt, tbe darling of last
year's festi•val drew a huse orowd
for his mini concert. Jack did it
apin, ramblin' through "Sadie
Brown, Mule Skinner Blues," and
a few Dy~an songs (Dylan owes
Jack plentJy. He stole his vocal
style).
Dave V~m Rontc, a lot heavier
and a Jot happier, did a small
concert, 11nd his dynamic voice
and interesting choice of material,
always o"EI of his strong points,
was a real treat. People like Van
Ronk haven't been getting much
work of la.t e and it was ,good to
see him gc~tting the response he
deserves. Jt()hn Hartford's set was
one of the best all weekend . His
band, whi~h included Tut Taylor,
a fifty-ish 1bald shit-kickin' dobro
and
olin

-5 heedv

Oawless. Each instrument would
weave thro1ugb the music, cutting
'in and out and trading licks with
the others.

7-- ._.,.

CARUSO'S

IW

••

at least once, so that everythina
was incredibly loose. Performers
ran around, playing under the
trees with the crowd, many of
whom had brought instruments
along with them over tbe ferry
ride. Stompin' •Tom Connors,
Canada's most popular artist, gave
a strong, confident performance.
The Ragtime and no\'elty shop
drew a huge crowd (I auess the
biggest single audience was for
David Rea, Toronto'~ sweetheart,
swho turned a lot of folks on and
a lot of folks off with his "act").
With Cooney again hosting, the ol'
ragttrne music of the twenties had
everyone jumping around. The
South Happiness Street Society
Skiftle Band (good thing I'm in
the band or r wouldn't know how
to Say it right) broke things up
again-. Our new surprise was Alan
Kornhauser's National Hockey
League Blues which was so
outrageous that it fit in with
everything. At the end of the
workshop Redbone, who'd
'disappeared in his meanderings
around the island, got on stage
and did (are you ready?) "'Some
of These Days" by Sophie Tucker,
"Don't Go Nowhere With My
Walking Stick" by the late Louis
Armstrong, and "Young at
Heart," the Frank Sinatra bit. He
again stole the whole show.~
The aforementioned Robert
Johnson workshop was brilliant
and drew the most emotionally
inspired ovation I've ever seen.
The people sl owly startin&amp;
clapping and then rose as one to
pay tribute to Johnny Shines.
Once again, Mariposa was
fantastic. And this year with the
accent on tradition and crafts (the
woodcutters were incredible) and
native peoples it was even more
enriching than ever. One beautiful weekend.

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By Sunday, almost all ·the
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Bill Bailey and 'Crossroads'

Each da3f was ended by square
dancing, si!n.-.rounds and do it

~ .ti_

LEATHER

-:5heedy

yourself gatheriogs, nicely
rounding out the festivities.
Saturday featured some r-eaUy
fine yet not too well known
performers. Utah Phillips, a grand
old hulking cowboy; told stories
about being a successful bum and
tborougbly . defigbted the huge
crowd that came to see him. Alice
and Mike Seeger did a
wonderfully varied set of songs
and showed off their incredible
talents on a least ten instruments.
Bessie Smith and the Georgia Sea
Island singers brought the gospel
to the people with their
heaven-inspired voices.
The Jimmy Rodgers workshop
might have been the most
entertaining hour and a half all
weekend . Hosted by Cooney, a
true Jimmy Rodgers freak. it
included Ramblin' Jack, John
Jackson and Leon Redbone. Leon
Redbone probably isn't familiar
to anyone. He is Toronto's living
legend. No one knows who he is
or where he comes from . The only
way to get a hold of him is to call
a pool ball on Bloor St. ·and ask
for ' 'Mr. Grunt." Dressed in a
straw Panama hat, sunglasses,
string tie, black and gold vest ,
grey corduroy trousers and nylon
air vented shoes, Leon looked like
the most unlikely folk artist ever.
With a toothpick dangling from
his mouth at all times, he did
"Mississippi Freighter Blues" and
absolutely demolished the crowd .
When asked to do another one,
Leon sa l frozen for a while and
Elliot neatly turned and said :
"Man, I could just look at you for
hours."

SANGRIA (Imported -S1Jaainl .................................. 1.59 Litw
SCUPPERNDNG ........................................................ 1.36 6th
MOGAN DAVID (All flavora) .....................................1.62 Ot.
MA TEUS ROSE (Portugu-1 .................................... 2.69 6th
COLD DUCK &amp;CHAMPAGNES (Chilled .................. 1.99 6th
SPANISH WINES(Your .•=hoice) .................................... 99 6th

·· ·· ·· ··

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LIEB FRAUMILCH (Chilled) .................................... 1.316dt
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N. Y .S. CHAMPAGNES (Chilled) ............................... 2.58 5th
PORTUGUESE WINES.............................................. 1.696th
FREN~H ROSE(goas witt. -vftllng) ...................... 1..49 5th

P.S. If you think young, act young or are young - bri.ng proof of age.

•

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•

1

··1
I

I

Friday, July 23, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page elm
I

�I

I

RECORDS

R•m Paul ~nd Li* MeCartJae)' (Apple SMAS-3375)

.
Sometime lut November or December Rolli"l Sto"e mapzine
published a report in their Random Noted section which l&amp;id
somethina to the effect of "soon the Georp Harrison album will be
released followed in two weeb by John's record, and finally Paul's
teCOnd album in another two weeb." Other rumors bepn circulatina
tbat the Youna Rucals were doina backina work on Paul's record and
that Paul was bein&amp; coerced into tourin1 the states.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Anyway, two weeks after
John's surprising lp and a week
after an unannounced but welcome
Yoko album, there was no sip of
Paul. But maybe there wu a delay
in the mixinJ or a bold-up with
some red tape from Apple's front
office. Four weeks later, still no
Paul and it seemed that the rumors
were no more than rumors. There
would be no tour and only Paul
seemed to have an idea when his
record would come out. Darkness
pervaded the land.
.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Summer is here and California
is beautiful. The sun always st. · --~ and everything is areen. The good
weather has finally arrived ano so has Paul's album. It is a perfect
marriage.
The thing that really struck me about Paul's first album was the
looseness of it. The peace of mind and relaxing feelina that it
communicated to the listener. Somethina that was definitely missin&amp;
from the final product of Let It Be. Now, with Rllm, thouab, it is more
intricate ; the looseness is still there and much more obvious.
There's a lot more yeUina and screamina, 'SO's style sinJina, and
all around happy good time music. He bas taken the best of his efforts
on Revolver, Sgt. Pepper and Abbey Road, added a little seasonina, a
tittle individuality, some extra love and tenderness and last but
definitely not least, a remarkable female vocal and come up with one of
the most fun loving records I've beard in a lona time.
Unlike his fellow Beatles who went runnina to the famous Phil
Spector, PauJ has proved to be the best student of the man who was
most important in making the aroup's sound what it was, Georae
Martin .
.
Martin is a aenius and f»aul has benefited greatly from this
experience. The son&amp; "Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey''/is a prime
example. The use of orchestration on this tune is tasteful and meUow.
Also, "The Back Seat of My Car," the album's last tune, shows the
Martin influence. The Janer is important because it points out another
new side of Paul. It ends the album on an o ptimistic note with the
statement : "We beUeve that we can't be wron&amp;." It shows that Paul
really feels that hi! has found the happiest way for himself to live.
Paul's guitar work has lreatly improved. His bass playin&amp; hu
always been somethina better than spectacular, but his electric ,Wtar
work was only fair. Now he seems more self-assured and confident and
he is more than adequate. He also plays a dynamite ukelele on t)le title
track " Ram On ." He is backed by Denny SeiweU, Dave Spinoza and
Huab McCracken , none or whom are familiar. to me; but it really
doesn't matter because it's all JOOd and allows Paul a Jot of freedom .
However, Jet us not forget Linda, Paul's wife and co-star, whose
• melodic voice blends weU with her husband's and is a welco me asset to
the lp. Rumor also has it that she plays the spiffy tambourine on
"Monkberry Moon DeJi&amp;ht."
Some critics, including Jon Landau of Stone, a serious critic who
unfortunately bas a sad misunderstandina of music (which is probably
the nicest thing anyone has said about him lately), have not reacted
favorably to this album , but what does any critic reaUy know anyway'?
It's one of the most worthwhile albums I have heard in OUI present
cultural depression.
- Woody Graber

'W~tois

Harry Kellerman •.. ?'

Success results in misery
with razor-thin eyebrows and an awesome cleavace.
Retribution is swift, however. Those marveloua
natural talent• play cribbaae with dry rot, soft Uving
Wh·o II Ha"y Kellerm(m, etc. ? is a graceless little softens the brain, the lut four books are Oops, wife
filin w hJch earnestly wheell out the cob-webbed number two streaks off with a bullfiabter, falle
notion that commercial success spells miseJ'Y and friends mysteriously disappear, and there you have
maladjutstment for the creative artist, and solemnly it. Back to the prret and the dormouse with the
usurea us that if it's food for thoupt we're after, checked apron (&lt;'if she'll still have me"), and pray
God it's not too late for a freah start.
this time--tested inai&amp;ht will live us a hearty meal.
Herb Gardner, who fashioned a briJht, metallic
Ov1~r the last 30 years, there have been countless
filrna e1namored with the imaae of the dishevelled screenplay for Ha"y Kellerman , eschews many of
,enius in threadbare attire, whlstlina the theme from the detaiJa in the portmanteau description I have
Lleb~1traum in his deliJbUully cramped and provided, but the response to Ufe which be reaiJters
ualivabne prret u he produces an imprcaive stack of is aJaeJled from the same pod. Youna audiences can
bulpnJ manuscripts - whether it is novels, operu or usually be counted on for an enthusiastic reception
oils thart repreRnt his particular aptitude, the volume or a ••materialism cont:aminatea" subject, particularly
if lt comes equipped with aymbolic underwear and a
is suitable pJOdiJious.
U the author/compoler/pajnter is uqfortunate slick pessimiJm about depersonalized urban life.
enouah to have his ability ac"nowledaed beyond his
immectiate circle of destitute friends (hone~t soula Baked .ntlliaeut
Thoae who admire Gardner's ~ainl
aU, wbo mi&amp;ht be a trifle dull-witted, but would
Jladly sptit their lut potato with him in a pinch), be ex~iona into the livea of off-beat New Yorkers
will be forced to leave .biJ lealdna-hovel of a room, (Murray, the dapper non-conformilt of A ThotutJnd
where Real Happine~~ lies camoufiaaed somewhere aowfU t sprinp immediately to mind) claim that he
amana the horsefliel and flaking paint, for • bas an ear for idiom and the insider's feel for the
way New Yorkers converse. Sinclair Lewis wu also a
soul-shrlvellina "room at the top."
facile mimic, but his tape--recorder fidelity to life was
merely artificial turf roUed over a cleSert of baked
Rap to rkbel
.
Mat:erlal comfort invariably precipitates an sentiment .
Who /$ Harry Kellerman? is a situational movie,
across-the-board warpinJ of values. With. pinJ pons
ptedicta bility, we have the artist's gritty contempt a film "'bleb moves on a circular track around a
for his embanasainaly raged and folksy former tapered emotiollV surface in which everythina
acquaintances, as weU u h.ia discovery that the vibrates in a fixed key. Unlilte the point-to-point
colorless but sincere drudae he wedded when times linear films which can be approached in terms of
were ha.r d is something of a millstone. The first wife their "story-lines,'' the situational t~pe depends for
(c:ontlnuM on 01,. 13)
tearfulllr resips her position to a predatory siren

by Georp Toles, Jr.
Speclnlm FUm Critic

BEFORE YOU BUT
Your College Texts
TeMyAh
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USED
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3610 Moin St. Acros.fr0111 U.l.

Page twelve . The Spectrum . Friday, July 23, 1971
I

133-7131

STORES
INC.

�Succes~s

resUlts in. • •

ib effocb on the potency f.nd redience of a core
imap.
•
Cbartie moored to bJs inlulatina piano in an
alter~oun bar in Truffaut'a Slloot tile &amp;nq Pltlyer
ia a wonderful bindlna imqe for a lituation rum
with a richly varied texture. The manic seesawina
between tormented ac:cuution and auilt-ridden
apolOI)' that pves Lumct'a l.ofll Day'• Journey into
Nlfltt its down..pirallina movement and hard enerJY
is aJio its int4te, viluaUy and verbally echoed within
a whole aeries of acabroua confrontationa.

SUckWllo
-

IOip)'
II Harry KeUernt4fl 7 falll becauae its
aituatiQD ia hollow and the imaaes which it tries to
CJ)'atallize have the comic strip blandness of a Nancy
and Slugo scooter race. From the ftlm 's openina
sequence, when the camera recorda Dustin
Hoffman'• fantasized suicide leap from the roof of a
skyacraper - his (li&amp;ht becomea a four-minute aerial
ballet as the credits peep o ut on either aide of him we bepo to brace ourselves for one of those
shipwrecked clever moviea in which everytbina that
doean't link immediately is aoina to become part of
a treo-Ooatina mess.
•

Director Ulu Grosbard and photopapber Victor
Kemper do not, unfortunately, have Mike Nichols'
knack for dressina up poay, undemouriabed
material like Peiffer's CartUZI Knowledge and Bivin&amp;
ttl vacuities lyrical "bite." There are juat enouah
lau&amp;hs sk.itterina aJona the surface of the Nichols'
mm to provide its concludin&amp; pumneas with an
authoritative edae. Everyone is so miserable this
must be realiJtic, just lilce La Dolce Yita.
Isn't Qlrnal Knowledge, like so many other
portentious, well-heeled messaae movies, trying to
sell us a bill of aood.s? What it'a saying, in effect, is

t'

f~om

..._. U)

that if your interCIIb happen to be tits, snatches,
objects, chancea are you'U be a flabby, impotent
psbaa by the time you're 3S.

T11rku1 (CotillioD SO 9900)) Emenoa, Late aad Palmer

auc Mat.o~eum

The im.qe of the lqendary Armadillo, while a somewhat
recurrent theme in rock music, bu somehow been forced to take that
one step beyond obacurity to a new status u an intellectual SY,mbol
appearina menaci.npy with silver-plated armor, metallic snout, tank
treads and 'Potemkin'-Uke 4eck auns protrudina obacenely from ita side
(with a pile of bleached bonec acattered in the bact.around to form the
myatifyina name of Tarkw); all on the cover of tho latest recorded
ef£ort from Emerson, Lake and Palmer. (By the way, I finally found
out that Carl Palmer was a former member of the sroup known as
•Atomic Rooster' whose forte these days is hypertenae radiatioD
cock/shock rock - all very primal and sensual if that makes any
difference at aU.)
Tb.e Armadillo has been with us for a while. Jumpin&amp; into Mr.
Peabody's wayback machine, we enter into a dark recordina studio
·where the croup known .. Tbe
Jefferson Airplane are layinJ down
a .&amp;na entitled* "The Ballad of
You and ¥e and Pooneil."
Clustered around
microphones, separated into
aeparate sound-proof booths, we
hear:
(Silence - a guitar breaks
throu&amp;h into a nry deliberate run,
the drums float in and out, the
bus line cornea into view from
nowhere
Marty wails
'Loooove'- 'Grace floats in a
second or two later sin&amp;in&amp; in a
throaty voice: "Looove - Marty (cool and aentle) "like a mountain
spring time/flashin' tbrou&amp;h the rivers of my mind/ It's pourin' out for
you - in the background Grace has slowly been moanins out an 'a'
until finally she undulates out a word - Arma·Arma dillo - Armadillo
- hence rock and roU is introduced to the mystic powers of the
armoured creature of the desert - the Armadillo.)
The musical veracity of Keith Emerson iJ beyond any question.
He is one of, If not the best , keyboard men in the business of music.
Througho ut Tarkus his organ, piano and Moog work is breathtaking
and very, very solid . He obviously knows what the bell be's all about.
This is in no way a slur on the talents of Grea Lake and Carl
Palmer ; they too are very solid musicians, but they can't hold a candle
z to Keith Emenon. He is the reason why this sroup bas survived and
are innocently discussing their sexual innocence with the li&amp;hts out
The first side of the album consists of the Tarkus suite which
includes "Eruption, Stones of Years, Iconoclast, Mass, Manticore,
Battlefield" and "Aquatarkus." l'he story seems to indicate that it is
about a sort of metaphysical revival of the Rodan myth - made famous
by Japanese filmmakers a wtille ago. ThrouJbout, the group remains
ti&amp;ht and puts on a good show despite some awkward moments with
the Moos which can sound awfully silly at times. The group possesses
the innate quality of groups which survive the sound jungle - thf(Y
posess that quality of enerar flow which bas enabled the Stones, the
Dead, the Who to survive. A kinetic enerar which breeds excitement
and musical creativity .
..Jeremy Bender" starts the second side and is simply a little
rocker telling us the story of a man who becomes.. nun and falls in love
with his sisters :
'Jeremy Bender wu a man of leisure
Took his pleasure in the eve nina sun
Laid him down in a bed of roses
Finally be decided to become a nun'
In "Infinite Space," the genius talents of Keith Emerson come to
view as be weaves purely ma&amp;ical spells with the huge St. Marks orpn.
The only trouble comes when the lyrics pop ln, too say the least, they
are silly :
' Would Y.OU believe
God makes you Jrieve
Why did he lose
Six million Jews'
"Are You Ready Eddy" is a aoof tellina the sound booth man to
Ft it on with his levers, all done with sour rock and roll piano (Jerry
Lee Lewis circa) and backaround harmonies .
Tarkw is the second album by Emerson, Lake and Palmer. In the
long run it's not as impressive as their fU'St, but the sroup has potential
and I give t hem an 85, they have aaood beat and the kids can dance to
it - if they want to, that is.

Who u Harry KeUerrr~mt? bu the look of a Mike
Nichola' film, which is to say that it's dimensionlea,
antiseptically colored and infatuated with Fttina tho
camera in tiJbt on the acton' featurea. Sholl that
aren't riveted to some o~~:preaive facial landscape will
be sure to have a point (a ptycholo&amp;ical or satiric
value), and we'll be pven plenty of time to find it
before beina shown anythina else.
Tho space-world of Ha"y Kellerman is
deliberately constricted, as it is in CtJmal Knowledge,
but what there is is overplanned and unilluminating.
We never happen upon anythins by OUillelves, or feel
that the interion are worth lookina over for
interestins details. Dustin Hoffman's apartment is
one of those white pacial monstroaitJea which the
rich, alienated zombiea in an Antonioni film are
always tumlna up in; the walls are covered with
flu.oreacent-lit ' poater-aize maaatine covers
representina the Artist in various Narcissistic poses.
With sterility and "no eldt" decpr ppins at us from
every alcove, it quickly becomea evident that Gcorae
Soloway (Hoffamn) is beins sroomed for some
delicious form of •elf-annihilation.
The major part of the mm, consequently.
beco1flea an elabonte aueasinc-pme between Herb
Gardner and the audience as to the probable means
Georae will finally adopt to put an end to himself.
Dustin Hoffman'• performance thankfully never
descends to the feeble jack-in-the-box improvising
that marred so much of his work in Little Big Man ,
but in this film he seems to be recycling familiar
effects and ca&amp;i.Jy treadins water.

:;,

'
GustaV••••••••••••••

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Beef&amp;
~le House

RECORDS·

&amp;yboy foldouta and e~~:ploltin&amp; wQJDen as sex

I

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3199 MAIN ST.
(0. 8leek S.~ Of UBl

- Joe FembGclto

FEELS THAT ALL MUSICAL

FETISHES, EMOTIONS OR DESIRES COULD BE OVERCOME
BY

G'HEENA
Formerly Steadroot
Formerly Coyote
APPEARING

F R I 0 A Y AND S A T U R 0 A Y

....

Jimmy Pauolari

VbJII Day ,))
Jolua Weitz /.
Red Wllite

SAVE MONEY
SHOP AIIIY NAVY
7JI.7J2

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Friday, July 23, 1971 . The Spectrum . Pacje thirteen

�,

___.........._
. ____...__v"" erox in a-.,..___
r

'

.

c:

1-3 copi• of one original: 8 Qlflts tiiiCh
4-6 capitiS of on• originlll: 7 Qlflts t18Ch
7 or mon copittS of one original: 6 ctNJts tiiiCh

Gustav
355 Norton Hall

9-5 Daily

Jcttns $J.50

1tot ya:nls 'zoo
• LEATHER AND lACE •

33){

~3~-~

f3AILEY AVE.

Racing tbis weekend

Can-Amat Watkins Glen
to a uniform 36 feet, and a sliaht
lengthening to make it 2 .428
miles long.
Racing freaks heading out to
The six-hour endunnce race on
Watkins Glen this week may well '\Saturday will be the end of an era
be witness to one of the greatest - that of the Porsche 917, the bi&amp;
weekends of racing the Glen has factor in German domination of
seen. Two major events on the the Manufacturers' Championship
in t ernatlonal calendar are for the last two years. Next year
scheduled for Saturday and there will be a new limit on engine
Sunday, July 24 aJld 25.
size - three liters u opposed to
The first, on Saturday, is the five liters, which has been In
Glen Six Hours, the iast event of effect for Group S cars since
the Manufacturers' Championship 1968. ThJs wilJ eliminate the 917
Series, which in c ludes the from the series u well as its
Daytons 24 Houn, Tarp Florio closest rival, the Ferrari S I 2.
and LeMans. Sunday will see the
"bia iion" Can-Am cars compete Poncbe dominates
This y~r Porscbe, spearheaded
in the fourth round of the
Canadian-American Cballenp Cup by the John Wyer Automotive
Series. The two races will see over , Team, has already captwed the
S J00,000 ·split up amona the championship by winnina eight of
entrants, assuring the presence of the ten races already run. Alfa
an impressive array of machinery Romeo won the other two races,
but so far the independently
and drivers.
entered Ferrari S 12's (with some
covert factory support), and the
Rebuildina
Thb Grand Prix road course, works' 312P have been shut out,
nestled in the hills of central New malting the red cars all the more
York overlooldna Seneca Lake, hungry.
While the Alfa-Romeo T-333's,
has undergone a massive
rebuildina. Scheduled to be which have won two races, are
completed by the U.S. Grand Prix three-liter machines, ·the dark
in October, a areat deil has horse this Saturday will have to be
already been done, including the 312P - a prototype for next
relocation . of the pit facilities , year's Ferrari effort. This
resurfacing. and widenina the track three-liter, Formula I -based car

has shown quite well, very nearly
embarrassing the bia Porsches on a
number of occasions. It has been
beset by all kinds of problems,
however, and never did win.
But the name of the game is to
be around at the finish and the
9 I 7 's are very good at that. And
this is where it'll be at this week.
Challenaing the Porsche
domination, besides the 3 J 2P
(more t~an adequatply driven by
Jacky lckx and Mario Andretti),
will be the three Alfas, with Vic
Elford, Ronnie Peterson and
Henri Pescarolo among the pilots.
A fourth Alfa-Romeo wilJ be
driyen by Helmut Marko (who
co-drove the winnina Porsche at
LeMans) and Nino Vacarella, but
this one will have a one-of-its-klrtd
four-liter enaine. Mark Donohue
will appear in the Roger Penske
Ferrari S I 2 along with Britisher
David Hobbs. And the list
continues with more S 12's and
the "other" Porsche team, Martini
and Rossi, alona with Corvettes,
Porsche 9 I 1's and Lolas.
All this promises an exciting
race with anyone ready to pounce
if the 917 's should falter , but the
sleek Germans are not noted for
that.
But Saturday is just a prelude
to the Glen Can-Am on Sunday.

by Steve Serafm

Sptclrum Staff Writer

Buy male contraceptives
privately-by mail
Today'• male contl'llceptiv• are extremely reliable and exquisitely
eensilive. So why take chances when you can buy condoms desii'Oed
not only with protection In mind, but with plecuure as well. Get the
famoua-brand condoms of your choice privately by maU . . . and
avoid tho embari'II8Sment or buying them in a drugstore.
Quilty llrantiiiiMII tilly

Population Planning Auociatas Ia the new marketing arm of the
non-profit Population Services, Inc., which for nearly two yesra has
been bringing b:Hh control services by mail to college men acrou
the country . . with over 10,000 customera on .COO campuses.
We offer a wide selection or famous-brand male contl'llceptives: the
Fetherllte from England, thinnest and mOst exciting of all, and
exclusive with us in the U.S.A.; the NuForrn, another exclusive
from England, pre-shaped · for a unique new sensation; the weU Jmown and popular Sultan; the famous Trojan. And many more. All
are electronically tested and meet rigorous FDA apecificatioos.
fatt ltl"ltJ - M011ey.act .....til
Avoid the h . .Je or a druptore purchase. Seod us just S3 for a full
dozen condoms .•. 3 each of the four bl'llnda deacribed above. You
must be completely aatisfted or return the unused portion of you r
order for a full refund. All ordera are filled the aame day received
and are HOt in a plain package to protect your privacy. So don' t
take cbanc•. Make love, not babiee. Mail the coupon today.
"l*lltltll riPIIIIIIAUtc:lalll, 105 Mtr111 Ctll•llla. CllaJtl Mill, H. C. 27514
- - - - - - - -Htadlllere 81111 ...1 c..... - - - - - - - -

,.,.Iatif• PIIMIQ Alstelatts
105 Mtrtll CahiMII
Cllaptl Kill, H. C. 27114
Gentlemen: Please rush me, In 1
plain pac:k111, 1 full dozen con·
doms as desc ri bed above, for
which I enclose $3.00. My money
back il not dell&amp;hted. Also Include
your fr" illustrated brochure de·
scribin&amp; 11 different types ol con·
doms.

OD

name
address

city
zip

s ~te

0 Please send free illustrated brochure
only, without any obliaation whatever.

------------------------

-·· ..

(continued on

I

.
\ .

\

.
.

BENtNG FOOD CO.

··~
.I

Special service for
parties of all kinds

ts:'.-2660

834-2660:

~

t.IDID
:

'

-••

NIKKO STA-7018 AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER

FET's In the front end•••4 I.F. n.ge silicon transistor
amplifier section.. .31C's•.. 1.8 micro-volts sensitivity .. .&amp; noise
cancelletlon cln:ult.••duel tone controls••.and meny other
f•tu,. .,. what went in to the 7018. What com• out is 90
watts of megnlficent sound. Sound thet you controt end
bllance to suit room ecourties and record or tape
cMr8cteristlct. Sound that is as dynamic end briHiant u it is
resonant end deep,

NOW ONLY

$199.95

PaQe fourteen . The Spectrum. Friday, July 23, 1971
\

15)

•I Speci~l~~n~~~N.!:,ffets I
.. ··•

( @NIKKO

~

STEREO HEADPHONES
NIKKO 775

SAVE $40

800 ec,. of the flnllt
TRAIL AIDING IN N.Y. STAT~
Open 7 ..,•• week

132-4112

' &amp;32-4112

'

ON THE RECEIVER. COME IN,
BROWSE AROUND, BLOW YOUR MIND, and
GET STARTED ON YOUR SYSTEM WITH THESEI

~"'ll

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�ILAIIIPIII

Watkihs Glen ...
(contlnu.d fro!" . . . 14)

The mOlt competitive field ever
assembled in the history· of the
series will be on hand to challenge
the
McLaren four-year
domination.

Team

...:~Mutetful

McLarens ·

A word about that laat is in

order. Btuee McLaren founded an
orpnization, McLaren Cars Ltd.,
that has completely eclipsed
everyone else's Can-Am efforts.
Bruce, · and former World
Champion Denis Hulme, drove the
works' cars to win, and they did.
In '69 they won every race,
alternatina first and second place
fmishes. The series came to be
known as " The Bruce and Denny
Sh'ow ." Following McLaren's
death in early 1970, Hulme
teamed with various drivers and
Team McLaren won all but one
race. Not only that, but better
than half the opposition drives
discarded McLaren I ~am cars or
"customer" cars, oruy slightly less
developed t han the l.1test works'
cars.
e-.
The Can-Am ~f'les is worth
over Sf' million, and a lot of
people want to 'l~"C a giant fall .
This is the year. ''' e challengers
have come o ut It force led b:y
none other tha'h '·•per Driver,
Jackie Stey, trt. Or1 •g a brand
new Lola, he has al •.;ady won at
LeCircuit, Mt. Tre •. blant, and has
served notice i ~·u win more.
A brand new Sr low, driven
by Jackie Oliver on.• running on
lead-free fu el, mdd..: its debut a
month ago at LeCircuit and rivals
the M8F's of f t J m McLaren
(Hulme and Peter Revson) and
Stewart's Lola T-260. Last year's
overall second-place finisher,
Lother Motsenbacher, is riding in
Denny's 1970 M80 and, along
with teammate Bob !;ondurant in
an M8E, is also waiting to pounce.
Many of the faster Porsche 9 17's
and FeJTari 512 's will stay over
for .Sunday's race and, if you saw
Jo Siffart chase Ant• ie a year ago
at the Glen , you
•W that they
are a match fot the orange
McLarens. lckx w. I ••pear in the
312P and Ferra n f· ,., come up
with a red surprisl'
brand new
712 to be entereJ for Mario
Andretti in the re~t ,f the series.
But Porsche has a surprise of its
own in a special t';.~ n Am 917 for
Jo Siffert.
That's rather an impressive
field, but this writ s choice is
Stewart, simply b~ tsc h~'s the
· best driver and so 11) cl\ a master
of the Glen drcuit. A 1yway, we'll
all know b y next w• k. If you're
going dow n, look 1 · the U.B.
Sports Car Club 0 11 r• map.

• • •

•

Mosport Park , just outside
Toronto, was the sit of the first
ra ce in th 1
year's
Canadian-American c oaUenge Cup
Series Stew~ rt ·s l c•I, was the star

STUDENT DISCOUNT ON '
ALL -art supplies, picture framing
reder Jting l" ~eds.
O.M. RECH PAI NT CO.
3209 Bailey Ave.

-

,-

attraction alone with the
peraonable Grand Prix star
himself.
At the flaa, Hulme arabbed a
quick lead over Stewart and the
two of them, alona with Revaon,
walked away from everyone elae.
On lap 10 the Scot passed Hulme
and bepn to pull away. The
c:rowd loved it (everybody loves a
aiant killer - remember?), but or
lap 19, Stewart no lon,er came
around. It seems his transax.le
called it a day a little bit earlier
than everyone else and that was it
for that race. Hulme and Revson
duly lapped everybody twice,
except for Motsenbacher and
Bondurant , and finished less than
a second apart to kick off the
" Denny and Pctu Show ...
LeCin:uit
The axe fell for Team .McLaren
two weeks later at LeCircuit. On
race day', a few people were sick,
including Motsenbacher who
started fro m the back Of the grid
in case he should have to drop
out. Hulme and Stewart again
walked away from everyone, but
Hulme could never get more than
a few seconds abead of Jackie ·
Stewart . Shadow was beset by
fuel feed problems (nothing to do
with the lead-free gas) and
Mo tse nba c her was stead ily
climbing upwards. The first lap
sa w Ron Goldleaf spin his
McLaren MI 2 going into Turn I
and nearly eliminate three other
cai'B and our photographer, but
lit tie damage was done and
everybody was able to continue.

Hulme still couldn't shake tbc
No. I white L&amp;M Lola, and on
the 52nd lap the Flying Scot
made his move. Once by Hulme,
Super OriveJ' started to pull away
from the New Zealander and he
became the second man to beat
Team McLaren since the
Monterey Can-Am in '68.
But in all fairness to Hulme
and the McLarens, DennY was far
from fit, suffering from the s&amp;me
thing that hit Motsenbacher, and
his courage in continuing to take
second bas to be recogni~ .
Another eouraaeous drive ·was
that of Motsenbacber who
eventually finished fifth, despite
his back of the grid start.
At Road Atlanta , Team
McLaren was back in form,
relegating Stewart to third place
on tbe arid (notice how it's always
Stewart and the McLarens?). By
the sixth lap Stewart arabbed the
lead, but a deflating tire and
subsequent battery failure
stopped him for three laps and
left him out of contention. So
Revson coasted to an easy win
followed by Hulme. But Stewart,
playing catch-up racing, still
recorded the fastest lap in the
race, once he got his problems
solved, at 117 .3S mph.

GUSTAV A. FRISCH, INC.
Jeweler - Optician
41 KENMORE AVENUE
{at University Plaza)
BUFFALO, N.Y. 14226

U.B. Riding C.l ub
"EXCURSION

TO

SCRABBLE

WE D NESDAY , JULY 28th
$4 .25 students
{including bus)

HILL
4 .75 others

leaving Norton 4 ·30 p.m.
returning 10:30 p.m.
RESERVATIONS ONLY
TICKETS AT NORTON TIC::KET OFFICE
Bring your own food.

ttlrow In PA amp. Also _,ling bk:ycfe,
cneap. u2..aat8.

WANTED
SENIOR MALE NeCK OWl\ room I"
apt. for Autust 1st. Call Howard
881..0141.
HELP WA'NT£0 for l•rnlnt drlvlnt In
my"'· Will pay. Box 93.
WANTED• college studentl lnt...•ted
In maklno mOIWY In t tlelr spare time,
.-une engine ICidltlves. P I - for
appointment. 633-4334.

u.s. GRAD desires house painting. 13
veers experience. Refllf'encea. Aftllf' 6,
M1..0141. Len.
SALESMEN, SALESWOMEN, have
fun - •1 ads for t he Spectrum. Come
on up to room 355 Norton. Ask for
Sue M . If I 'm not here, please l•ve
your n111me, addreu, '"d ptlone

number.

MARTIN

837·93~3.

D·Z8

t400.

Call

Stwe,

MOVING - MUST SE&amp;..L -vtnlnt Records, book$, bicycle. wt of Roter~
drums, quality c:fl- set, electric
sttaver, lamps, candle material, haMOCk,
dou~le mattress • box sprint, sheets
and blankets, light box, electric. motor,
lots of other goOdies, all ctleep~ com.
to 282 Ll5b0n, upper (2 l»toc:ks north
from Wlnspear, 1 block from Salley)
Friday, or call 832.a818.
lts9 BUICK CONVERTIBLE, light
blue wlttl white top. 351 v .. engine,
power st-Ing and brak•, ldelu~te
Interior, r1dlo, White walls. !Owner
runnlno away to Rio. Must Mc:flflce.
$1795. 876-2790.

FUNNY FHONE thalia ent fUflkYI
MAKE MONEY ·-~ 1Mb f« .,_,
Spectrum, room 355 Nortoft,

$EPT. ''" (one w-v ontvt alot.OO
Niagara Falll to LoMon (ca.tw~.
323/316 Norton. aal-H02, U"wonltY
Travel,
BEAUTIFUL HANOMAD£ fOtd •
sliver J_.rv - weddlnt " " " - at
sensfOie pr( cu. J ,P GolelweR..
J-elers, 655 Elmwood at ,..,.,., St.
Ml-3400.
THE SPECTRUM'S CLASSff'lEDS
will do It for you, or Just neep ~ •
up for dolne lt. 81.25 for 11 wewela cw
less, $.05 for eadl lddltlonll • - -·
Ads must be paid tor before th4IY run.
355 Norton H alf.

MISCELLANEOUS

ROOMMATES WANTED

MEN'S ENGLISH RACER-, prefer 10
speed, Will pay. Call 1135·3548.

FOR SALE
1971 OSSA and Yamaha motorcycle.
S675 or best offer. Exc:ellel\t for
racing. 695-1743 anytime, 876.0180.
TENOR SAXAPHONE - B·flat buffet,
Like brand nex. Best Model. Phone
773·2963.
1967 TRIUMPH 4/dr. Exceptional
condltlen. 6/cyl. OHV power disk
brakes, 4/Speed trans. Reclini ng JUts,
radio. 833.0130.
HEARSE 1957 C adillac; ,
condition. $495.00. 634·7174.

good

METAL FILING CABINET, $20.
Boy's bicycle, $15. Portable TV, $35.
Call !hOO - 7:00p.m. 837·7837.
FORD FAIRLINE '63, call Andres
837·0362 after 7 p.m.
RANGER 8 ·tra~ stereo tape player.
New. $100.00, 882·1726.
OKI-300 STEREO bpe recorder,
qMakers, 60 cycle, 65 Witts, serial no.
30284, $45.00. 1970 Emenon colo r
TV, 18-lnch port1ble, stand . $225.
882·1726.
DOUBLE BED with mattress,
boxsprlngs, heavy frame, lind
headboard. $35,000. 836·0652. C all ,
around 6:00 p .m .
REFRIGERATORS, stovu and
washen. Rec:ondltloned, delivered and
guaranteed. O&amp;G Appliances, 844
Syc•more - TX4·3183.
NEW GUITAR, hand crafted In Costa
Rica. $100. Irene Foulkes, 831·21)9,
Goodyear Hell.
CHEAP TWIN BEDS, dresser, chest,
desk, TV, rug, drape$, fife cabinet, pots
and pans, 691 •9381.
HAND EMBROIDERED Afghanistan
weddll\g shirts (for men and women) at
''The People," a folk•arts boutique.
144 Allen, 8112.0283.
HALTEA TOPS from India, Pakistan,
Mexico, at "The People, •• a f o lk ..rts
boutique, 144 Allen, 882.0283.
1959 4 ·DOOR PONTIAC .
834·9145 after 6 p .m.

Call

USED SC M EL ECTRA 220 typewriter.
Call 834-9145 aftllf' 6 p .m .

DESPERATELY NEEiO one female
roommate for next yeer. CIOM to
campus. $58/month . Call 831-4113.
FEMALE, with or without apartment.
Early 20's. Aug...June. Wrlte Gall
Parsons, 1505 Fox Place, Utica, New
York.

RIDE BOARD
WANTED 8V STAFF employee
Dilly to/from Ridge Lea 9.-5 . Live In
5tarln·Kenmore Avenue are• of
Buffalo. 0 ff lc e 831·1801 . Mrs.
Taublleb.

APARlfMENTS WANTED
HOUSE OR APT . needed to; 2 or 3
girls for Sept. within walking Cll5tance
or campus. Call 837· 1617 or 831-4113
or 831·5393. Ask for Mickey,
DESPERATELY NEEDED for
September, t wo single rooms, possibly
double. Walktble from campus. Under
S55. Lana, Gall 837·2347.
NEEDED TWO BEDROOM apartm ent,
preferably near campus, around $100.
Call Laftl 8 37.0 114 for Sept.

APARTMENT FOR RENT
NICELY F U R NISHED HOUSE, close
to campus. Evenings: 894·121 2,
845-5600, or 652·1268. Ask for Jim
Stec:kmever.

SiJB-lET APARTMENT
FOR UNTIL SEPT. 1, share room, nice
- - - apt. alrcondltloned, furnlsheil.
834.(; 179.

OAVIO; N .J. In tho summer Will b.
nothing like Buffalo nut vtJntert Love,
Sl'l•ryn.
NOTICE! Expanding our VW service to
Amherst, our shop comw to you at
sc:hool or home. $19.95 complete
tun·up . For ser vice 675·5362. BMC &amp;
VW Service Center, 1415 Orchard Park
Road, West Seneca.
lives Heath

AT THE Beef and Ale I
brief
entounter betwixt a beautiful girl and
John from University of M ichigan.
R .S.V.P. 3 13·761·7744.

DRUMS, tel of Rogers, $150. Will

WANT ' TO GET the highest everl
(legallyJ Learn to flyl
Free
brothure/demo. Mike 759.0533..

Bible Truth

Hear, 0 Israel

THE LORD HE IS GOD

for gems from the
JEWISH BIBLE
Phone 1
875 - 4265

"0 come, let us worship 1nd bow
down: let us knMI before the Lord
our maker. Today If we will hear His
voice, harden not your hearts."
Ps.tlm 9!&gt; :6,7,8

PROFESSIONAL TYPING 5£RVIC£.
Specializing In term papers, ttl.... end
dllsertatlons. Call now 684-.5135.
ExPERIMENT IN L.IVINQ. Two catt
need home ttlrough next June.
Children wilt cry If eats go, to SPCA.
Call a35-9641 If you will take one.
WANT TO GET HIGH legally? Learn tO
fly! Free brochui'O and demo ride.
M ike, 759.0533.
TYPING, EXPER I ENCED. IBM
Selectric. $ .50 per page. DCHina
McGowin 838-4808.
TYPING
833·1597.

DONE

In

my

home.

PROFESSIONAL. TYPING SERVICE,
work done CHI IBM Magnetic eard
equipment. Fast, error·free CQt»V.
Unlimited originals. Speclalldl\g In 111
types of dissertations and th..... Call
837.0558.
EXPERIENCES FAST TYPING b)'
electric typewriter. These, term papers,
ett. $ .40 p1ge, calf 873· 1305.
GUSTAV (no frills or t rumpeting,
ple1se) will xerox anything for t.08 1
copy. (Cheapest rete we know In tnlt
town .)

MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE

IMMEDIATE FS.1- ANY SIZE
NO POOL - NO NONSENSE I

PERSONAl

EXPERIENCES TYPIST
St. $ .35/sheet. 834-4494.

BARGAINSI Rummatt .... on
Slturday July 24, 1·8 p.rn., 121
Montrose Ave. (off E:ntOIWOOCit.
Bathroom set, books, drapoa. ctottMe.
appliances, furniture, kitchenware ocldt
&amp; ends. 837.0158 for more Info.

UPSTATE CYCLE INS.
CALL 69l-8878

,...,..........•.••••..•
..._.,~lk

Your BrokH About U1"-

50%0ff

SU"M£RSRL£

. R1'

BRUTH

t!IWlfP8DII

!~,,JJ!!~T.a··.

THE ROX DISCOUNT LIQUORS

-

GIN 80
less than
$3.56 Full Qt.

BLENDED WHISKEY
less than
$3.71 Full Qt .

BOONES APPLE ... . $ 1.00 5th
ZAPPLE WINE ..... . $1.00 5th
APPLE DAPPLE ...... 79c t;·h
SAN GRIA .. ...... . .. 99c 5 th
AQUARIUS - .•. SOc Ot. '(2pts.)
FRENCH WINES ...... 99c 5th
B R MELLOW PINK •. ..99c Ot.
..•. . •. •. •.•..... .... $2.99 Gal.

VODKA 80
less than
$3.52 Full Qt.

SPANAOA .......... 1.99 %Gat.
SPANISH WINES ••.•. 99c 5th
I LOVE YOU WINES . 39c 10th
PINK CATAWBA ..... 99c 61h
CONCORD GRAPE WINE 99c 51h
APPLE WINE .. ... . 1.79% Gal.
MATE US ROSE ...•. $2.89 5th
LIEBRAUMLICH . ·~ . 9910 61h

All WINES CHILLED

4382 BAILEY AVENUE
Friday, July 23, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fifteen

�.

Women's Liberation will hold free.!Qrate cl~ses
for women Tues. and Thurs. from 4-6 p.m. In
Room 340 Norton Hall.

Backpage

The UB Vets Club will conduct Draft
Counseling every Wednesday from noon to 4 p.m. in
Room 260 Norton Hall.
Summer session students who are eligible for
benefits from the Veterans Administration are
reminded that a listing of their summer courses and
credits for which they are enrolled must be filed
with the Financijll Aid Office. If this w~ not done at
the t ime of registration, veteran students should call
at Room 213, Harriman Library, to provide this
information.

Sports Information ·
Clark Gym recreation fx~lltles are open to all
fee-paying University students with validated f.D.
cards from second semester, plus all summer school
students. Graduate students must pay $3 and faculty
and staff must pay $5 for a permit to use the
facilities.

•

Clark Gym recreation hours are ~ follows:
Gym and facilities besides pool - 3-10 p.m.,
Mon.- Fri.; 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. Sat.; and noon 10 p.m.
Sun.
Swimming pool - 2:30-3:30 p.m. Mon.- Fri.,
2- 3 p.m., Sat. and Sun. for faculty, staff and
families; 3:30-4:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 7- 9 p.m . Wed.
and Sun., and 3- 5 p.m. Sat. for coed student
recreation; 7- 9 p.m. Mon. and Thurs., 3- 5 p.m .
SuQ. for faculty, staff and students; 7- 9 p.m. Tues.
for women only.
Children using the pool must be accompanied
by a parent. Further information and reservations
for indoor handball and squash courts can be
obtained by calling 831 -5238.

Student Assoc~tion's Speaker's Bureau needs
Interested students to help obtain speakers and set
up programs for the upcoming year. If Interested,
please contact Mark Weiner in Room 205.

,p-

Any underp-aduate student interested in
tutoring college students for academic credit should
call the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory at 831-3946.
Presently tutors are needed in Anatomy 307,
Fin a nee 301, Management Science 301 and
Chem tstry 123. Applications are available at 88
Wins pear.
International Folk Dancing will be held tonight
fro m 8-11 p.m. in Room 30 Diefendorf Annex.

The UB Alumni Association will hold a golf
outing on July 27 at South Shore Country Club in
Hamburg, N.Y. The $15 fee covers a round of golf,
plus a cocktail party and dinner following the event.
Tee-off time is between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.; prizes
will be awarded. Information and reservations are
available through the Alumni Office, 831-4121 .

r•sychomat will be held Monday from 2-4 p.m.
and Wednesday from 7- 10 p.m. in Room 232
Nort(Jn Hall.
Anyone interested in fencing is advised to come
to CIMk Gym Tuesdays at 7:30p.m.
Gay Liberation Front will sponsor a Gay Rap
Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Room 234 Norton Hall. All
gay men and women are invited to stop in and rap.

. Students interested in playin1 roller hockey this
fall, call Jim at 836-6027. You must have your own
equipment. Check The Spectrum in September for
more detail~ .

A non-credit course in Mandarin will be offered
by the S tudent Association every Saturday from
10:30-11 :30 a.m. in Room 340 Norton Hall. The
course will cost $5 for three months. Anyone who is
interested should contact Peter Kong, Room 205.

Horseshoe tournament entries close at noon
July 29, with competition being held Aug. 4. Entries
will be taken In Room 5, Clark Gym, where further
information is also available.

The UB Ridina Club will be sendinJ a bus out to
Scrabble Hill Stable on Wednesday, July 28.
Reservations are necessary and tickets are available
at the Norto n Hall Ticket Office.
Rachel Car.son College still has room available in
Organic Survival. The course includes three weeks of
camping on a farm in the mountains of West
Virginia. For more information, contact Rachel
. Carson College.
Any women interested In working o n the UUAB
Women's Festival should plan to attend a meeting on
Wednesday at 1 p.m. in Room 234 Norton Hall.
The Students International Meditation Society
will present films on Trancendental Meditation each
Monday and Wednesday evening at 9 p.m. in Room
330 Norton Hall. All are invited.
The Farm Workers Union of Cesar Chavez, is
boycotting all Loblaws stores because they are
selling non·union grapes. If you want to help picket
or distribute leaflets, come to Loblaws, 250
Elmwood Avenue (between North and Summer) at 1
p.m. tomorrow, or call 853-1861.

• I

Available at the Ticket Office
'f'

Shaw Festival
July 2~t~pt. 4: Tonight at 8:30
July 29- Stept. 5: War, Women and Other Trivia
Melody Fa1ir
July 19-24: Jerry Lewis and Helen o'Connell
July 25 - ·rhe Irish Rovers
July 26-3 1: Kismet - John Raitt and Anna Marla
Albergetti
Aug. 1 - Roberta Flack
Aug. 2- 7: Robert Goulet and Norm Crosby
Aug. 8 - The Four Seasons
Aug. 9- 14: Jerry Vale
Aug. 15 - Bobby Sherman
Aug. 16-2'1 : The Sound of Music - Carol Lawrence
Aug. 22 - 'The Byrds
Aug. 30-Sept. 4 : Sergio Franchi and Pat Cooper
Serflio Franchi and Pat Cooper
Aug. 30-Sept. 4 :
Sept. 5 - John G~
Rochester lWar Memori;al
July 24 - Ike and Tina Turner and Canned Heat
Aug. 2 - }«~us Christ, Superstar
Syracuse W'ar Memorial
July 28 -

jesus Christ, Superstar

Kleinhans ~ltusic Hall

\\tm's Happeni,.?
Fri~y ,

july 23

Film : Z continuous showings, Conference Theater,
Norton H;all, thru Sun.
Film: Throne of Blood, 8 p.m., Diefendorf 147
S;aturcby, July 24
Concert: Ike &amp; Tina Turner and Canned Hut,
Rochester War Memorial
Sunday, July 25
Concert: The Irish Rovers, Melody Fair
Monday, July 26

Sept. 10 - Chuck Mangione

Concert: The "E" from Chicago, 8 p.m .• Haas
Lounge, Norton Hall

Canad~

Tuesday, July 27

Nlational Exhibition

Aug. 20 - .Jerry Lewis
Aug. 21 - Floyd Cramer, Chet Atkins, Boots
Randolph ~tnd Roy Clark
Aug. 22 - The Carpenters and George Kirby
Aug. 23 - The 5th Dimension Aug. 24 - Charley
Pride Aug. 25 - The Guess Who Aug. 26- 27 Johnny Ca!•h Aug. 30 - The Osmond Bros. Aug. 31
- The Jackson Five Sept. 1- 6: Circus International
War Memorial Stadium
Aug. 31 - Chicago

Film: Don't Look Bock, 8 p.m., Dl~fendorf 147
Concert: Charles Gayle jazz Ensemble, 8:30 p.m.,
Baird Recital Hall
Wednesday, July 28
Film: Repulsion, 8 p.m., Diefendorf 147
Recital: Zygmu~t Krauze, 8 :30 p.m., Baird Recital
Hall
Concert: jesus Christ, Superstar, Syracuse War
Memorial
Thurscby, July 29
Film: Point of Order, 8 p.m., Diefendorf 147
- Suera/ch

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j
'.

Vol. 22. No. 5

s- Um!!lnitv of New York a

Fr~. July 9. 1171

Buffllo

&amp;~rnstein

Dr.I(etter accepts
Cook's 'resignation'

declines appointment;
Cook 'Tesigns' amidst diSpute

Manrin Bernstein (Department
of Hiat,ory) has declined to serve
as Acttns Provost of the Faculty
of Arts and Letters, thus reversing
an earl:y-week decision of his in
Editor's note: The announcement that President Robert Ketter offered which he stated " I have no choice
Mtznin Bernstein the Acting Provostship of the Faculty of Arts and but to' serve as Actina Provost
Letters resulted in a thret1tened reslgniztion by Albert Coole, director of thereb~· d•provin&amp; and disputina
the Proiram In Comparative Literature. Responding to Dr. Cook's the pe~sonal attacks made apinst
protest of June 29, President Ketter sent him the foUowing leuer me." IExplainina his cbanse of
mind, Dr. Bernstein aid that
accepting hi"l resignation.
"Lookiina at the situation, I came
to reaUze that the situation was
July 1, 1971
hopeless . . . I would oot be
allowed to effectively and
honestl:y serve as Provost of Arts
Dr. Albert Cook
and Letters."
Program in Comparative Literature
Presildent Ketter's offer of
Annex B
appointment to Dr. Bernstein was
Campus
a bla:hly contested and
controversial pne as wit.nessed by
a
vote of no confidence in him
Dear AI:
last v~eek ,b y the Steerina
No constructive purpose would be served, it is clear, by Commifltee of Arts and Letters
and by the expressed
commenting on either the content or tone of your letter of June 29. dissatisfaction of many faculty
Your ultimatum that you reserve veto power in the matter makes it membors. In addition, such
equally clear that, quite apart from the resolution of the Arts and faculty threatened retaliation if
Letters Provostship, no constructive purpose would be served either by..., Dr. Bernstein accepted the post.
Prevlious t o Dr. Bernstein's
having you continue in your present administrative position. I,
rejection, Thomas Connolly
therefore, accept your resignation as Director of the Program in
(currenlt Acting Provost of Arts
Comparative Literature.
and Letters) predicted that
possiblE: faculty reactions to a
Robert L. Keller Bernstein appointment might be
President resipations a.n d broad faculty
refusall to serve on certain
necaulry comrrtittee!IIJ.

Ketter chose to accept his
rai.10ation without waitina for
the continaency to occur. Dr.
Cook explained that while
President Ketter'a response wu
un~xpected it wu certainly not a
surprile: "Given the tone and
temper of the time~, it comes as
no areat shock." ·

Continuecllalda
In an official statement to-The
Spectrum, Dr. Bernstein
confumed this assessment: ..1
discovered that the aroup which
ac~ually runs the Faculty of Arb

Forced 1resignation
He continued that "his
The furor surrounding the Arts
and Letters provostship has [President Ketter's) response
alreadly resulted in one · seems to imply that if you· spea.k
resignation, that of Albert Cook , your mind frankly , you can't
Dire c ltor of Comparative work for him . . . however, this is
Literatu1re. Responding · to Dr. usually the case as far as
Cook's protest · of Dr. Bernstein administrations are concerned...
and his threatened resignation as Dr. Cook was one of several
Comparative Literatur~ Director, faculty members who promised
President Ketter formally " to mount a· massive protest
accepted that resignation. against Dr. Bernstein on all
However, as Dr. Cook pointed out fronts ."
It was because of this threat of
in his mply of July 6 , "1 have not
resigned!. [The previous letter! future faculty action that Dr.
spoke only of my intention to Bern$tein reconsidered his
resign OilY administrative post ... " decision to accept the acting
He continued though that "under provostship. According to Bruno
the cir•cumstances, I do resign Ar c udi (chairman of the
Department of Spanish, Italian
Marcus Klein, chairman of the and Portugese), "Dr. Bernstein
was scared off . . . be was
Departn~ent of English, termed
the resignation ..a disaster" as viciously and continually abused,
' 1Albert
Cook il Comparative maltreated and unfairly 'Spoken of
Uterature on this University . .. and written about." He continued
he is one of the few authentic that unprincipled members of
bright !lpota in this UQiversity." Arts and Letters "used every
J&gt;t:. Klei10 further aareed ·with -tbe method of intimidation to disrupt
allegatio•n that "his resignation him and his family . . . that poor
man was put through hell and he
appears forced."
Com1menting that Dr. Cook reacted the only· way he could tbreatented to · resign contingent as a human beina with human
upon certain condition, Dr. feelings." Specifically, Dr. Arcudi
members of the
Connol~y said that President charged

and Letters is, in truth, an
oligarchy and they had · decided
upon a course of obstructionism
and immediate confrontation . .. "
Arts and Letters Faculty who
were opposed to Dr. Bernstein's
appointment voiced their belief
that his decision to decline the
post was the only fair one
considering faculty opposition.
Rene Girard (Department of
French) had px:eviously predicted
that " . . . 'in view of the
widespread opposition to hiS
appointment, Dr. Bernstein will
refuse the post."
Dr. Bernstein's refusal leaves
the task of finding an Actina
Provost to serve for next ·year.
Executive Vice President Albert
Somit reported that the search
will continue with the
administration givina - careful
inspection to all recommendations. However, it is the
contention of many in Arts and
Letters that they "are perfectly
capable of govemina themselves...
They further araue that the
selection of the Actina Provost
should be theirs and that an
exclusively administrative choice
would be unacceptable.

Department of EnaJ.isb with
unethical tactics.

.

Cook.response

Ketter makes a mistake
Editor's note: President Keller's acceptance of Dr. Cook's resignation
prompted the following letter by Dr. Cook, co"ectin.g the details
surrounding his resignation.
July 6, 1971
President Robert L. Ketter

108 Hayes HaU
Campus
Dear President Ketter:

.

Your reply to me shows that you have correctly apprehended the
tone of my last letter, one of the .gravest concern for our Faculty, and
for the university at large.
You have, however, made two mistakes in reading my first
paragraph.
The first mistake is trivial: I baNe no! resigned. • I speak only of my
..intention to resign my administrative post the moment you have
appointed a~ Provost • . . any person who almost totally lacks the
support of the Faculty."
The second mistake is more serious; it stands at the heart of our
difficulties with your administration. I do not ask for a veto at all. As
the rest of the phrase above implies, I wiB happily serve under anyone
who enjoys the support of a majority of the Faculty, even if it happens
to be someone I have voted against. I have in fact done so in the past. It
is the failure of your office to understand this consensual process,
whereby one bows cheerfully to the will of a group, that poses such a
threat to our future.
Again, I am sorry.

..

Albert Cook, Director
•Under the circumstances, I do resign as Director of Comparative
Uterature, effective July·J 5.

Bernstein statement
It is with regret that I withdraw my name f&lt;'r coDJiduation for the post of Actina Provost of Arts
and L~tters. When I fust aareed to consider the appointment, I perceived of it as a holding action until .
the ci1oosing of a permanent provost, and I hoped to deal with the day to 4ay problems as they arose

with Jilonesty· and fairness. I discovered that the aroup which actually runs the Faculty of Arts and
LetteJ'S is, in truth, an ol.jprchy, and they had. decided upon a course of absolute obstructionism and
imm~iiate confrontatiowso that there would be no way for me to prove my intentions. I have come to
the ccmclusion that many who oppose their decision, in the end, will go alona to fet alona. • also faced
the fact of continued vicious personal attacks. I can only sunnise that these ridiculous attacks attest to
their (lesperation to bold on to the power of the Faculty of Arts and Letters.
.
But in the end, I am most troubled by the pliaht of the students these men are willina to abandon,
their tre now faculty whom they ~ole and abuae, and for the damaae they are willina to infllct upon our
Univensity, for these are the last tbinp these men think about in reaching their self-servina decisions.

�r

ClulngU., times

Jlouseprkeconftrmed

Human problems concern EPIS
"BPIS bas become a part of the fibre of this
Univeraity" commented its director Julian Peasant
as he expWned that BPIS, the Experimental Program
in lode ndent Study, bas chanpd botb in concept
and in
since its inception in 1968.
Part of this chanp can be attributed , accordina
to Mr. Peasant, to tbe Univenity adjusting itself to
the disadvantaaed and their probl~ms : ''It used to be
a nrity to see a Black man on this campus, tbat has
changed and BPIS helped to chanae it." . .
He continued that BPIS has senStttzed the
University to the nature of t~e. problem and has
helped it meet the problem. Onp~ally 1 EPIS ~erved
as "a brid&amp;e between the potenttal student tn the

l':rm

anythin&amp; at all, Mr. Peasant maintained that. the;,
"overlooked a Jarae seament of the populatio~.
EPlS attempted to solve _tbil problem by pr~panna
students thr~uab counseltna- Mr. Peasant sa~d that
"we have to mform them !hat they can succ.~ed and
that there are many potentials open to them.
This plan has been successful, Mr. Peasant satd
as he pointed out how BPlS students have excelled .
The drop-&lt;&gt;ut rate of BPJS students, for example, is
far below that of underaraduates admitted under
normal criteria. In 1968, 1S 1 students entered the
EPIS proaram. Today 72% of the oriajnal aroup are
either araduating or In good academic University
standing, and many of the students who left the
University did so for "non-academic" reasons such as
marriagt..
"This is a better 'holding power' averaae than
the majority of the nqtion's colleges," said Mr.
Peasant. " And the fact that our students can
compete successfully in a very competitive school
like UB speaks well for them."
Contributions to society
Counselin&amp; students into the Universit y is just
one facet o f EPIS. As Mr. Peasant commented, there
is also the need for counselina into society : "The
question now is o f directina gn~duated students into
careers that wi.IJ contribute to community and
society at larae." In regard to this, Mr. Peasant said
that , " in my view, disadvantaged students are too
often involved in Social Sciences rather than the
Natural Setences or occupational affain."
This can be remedied, accordina to Mr. Peasant,
by making students aware of aU opportunities open
to them and of convincing them of their capabilities.
Once this is done, Mr. Peasant said , the result will be
nothing Jess than a benefit to the larger society .

After, three years of serving as the director of
_,. BPlS, Mr. Peasant is resignina to institute a similar
------ proaram at the Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn.
~cNiece · However, he maintained thut the momentum and
work of BPIS will continue and will also be
trans formed . " EPIS wlJI address itself to improving
community and between the University," he the skills not only of mino rities, but of all those
explained . These potential students were unable to defi cient ... For I beUeve we are coming to the day
enter the Univenity because of thei r inability to pass when we can view thing.1 in the context of human
standarclized tests.
problems rather than racial o r cuJturaJ,'' he
Criticizina thate tests u not reaUy measurina concluded .

Julian Peasant

daily
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There wilt be an open hearlna on the budaet of
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fall and sprina semesters 1971-72, this Wednesday at .
7 p .m. In Room lOS. All persons wlsbina to speak
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T·BONE $4.95 '
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(with mea t balls 1 2.75)
EGG PLANT PA RM ESAN S 2 .75

The Spectrum is publi shed w.- ly
du ring the sum mer . .slo ns b v
Sub-Bo~d I, I ne. of the Sme
Un iveristy of New York at Buffalo.
Offic• ere located at 355 Nonon
Hall, State University o f New Voric
at Buffalo. Telephone: Ar• code
716; Editorial, 831-4113; Business,
831 ·3610.

ENTREE INCLUDES: cottage ChMM
&amp; homemade stone grou nd rye bread
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Also stone gro und bak ing powder
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MON.
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SPAGHETTI $1.9 5
THURS.
EGG PLA NT PARMESAN S 2.75
SPAGH ETTI I II ADELLE DAV IS

Two Univetaity of Buffalo previously the residence of former
Foundation , Inc. officials State University of Buffalo
admitted last Tuesday that President Martin MeyctSOn, now
S 125,000 was spent ·by that bead of the University of
foundation in order to purchase a Pennsylvania.
Mr. Loken said that the Jewett
new presidential maruion for
State University of Buffalo Pkwy. residence wu in p-eat need
of repair and that the cost of
President Robert Ketter.
The official revelation came as renovation would be prohibitive.
He said that the "anonymous
a result of an investlptive effort
by The Spectrum which revealed donor," Auaustus B. Anderson
the actual cost of the residence at m, would act ..nothina", in the
186 LeBrun Drive and various way of a -university post or
other details concernina the anythina else connected with the
Universit¥ because o{ his sift to
purchase.
The officen, Robert Loken, the foundation. Mr. Anderson is
foundation president and Edward the present owner of the LeBrun
Doty, secretary-treasurer, wenl raidence.
asked to comment on a recent
The Spectrum article and editorial Wriabt bou.e unsuitable
Mr. Doty, in admitting tbat the
concemina the acquisitJon of the
house when they said that the S12S ,000 price ta&amp; was indeed
infonnation in the story was a c curate, said that be only
referred The Spectrum staff writer
indeed accurate.
Despite the fact that the to an Information Services press
infonnation was pubUc record, release in the belief that it
The Spectrum editors and staff c ontained all the needed
writen claimed that attempts to in formation reaardina the
fmd out details concernina the purchase of the hPuse.
bouse, especially reprdina its
He said that the foundalion
price and the identity of the purchased the bouse for two main
"anonymous donor" who made a reasons. First, he noted that the
.. substantial aift " to the LeBrun bouse was better located
foundation with the transaction,
aeoaraphically to tb,e new
were met with increasina Amherst campus currently under
· resistance by UB Foundation construction. He said the Conner
officials.
Meyerson presidential residence
was picked because of the belief
Secrecy clwJed
at the lime that the new campus
"There was never any doubt"
was aoina to be located in
concernina the acauracy of the
Buffalo.
price, said Mr. Loken . When asked
Secondly, be noted that Or.
if the money could have been
used b e tter for educational Ketter is 6 ft . 4 in. tall and the
purpOses, he said : " It's whether Jewett residence was designed ,
you want a president (of the like all of Frank Lloyd Wright's
University) or not ." Mr. Loken houses, " for tbose under five
noted that a univenity president feet ." Mr. Doty noted that
althouah Dr . Ketter never
•needs a place of residence.
Commentina further, he aa.ld mentioned it, he "must have felt
that the current presidential very uncomfortable" in the house.
mansion on Jewett Pkwy., the
He said, however, that " none
pala c iaJ Frank Lloyd Wrisht of these reasons will justify this to
house, was not suited to Dr. someone who doesn't think
Ketter. The Wri&amp;Jtt house was S125 ,000 should be spent.'~

SubiiCription ,.tes are $4.50 per
semester or $8.00 for two semeaters.

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CHRIST THE ONLY SAVIOUif
"Neither is there salvation in
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- Acts 4 :12

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•

Page two. The Spectrum . Friday, July 9, 1971

referral services,
all conftdential

call anytime

..1

831-4046

••

••

••

••

I

�~

L/71

Convocation studies language
by Jim Mc:Fenon
Spectrum Stt11f Wtitu

lnteUectual Intearation," which is
also the theme of the Institute.
This is in contrast to previous
Last weekend, in a quiet institutes, Dr. Hays pointed out,
invasion, nearly 400 Unaulsts took u he explained, Ll71 will attempt
possession of Goodyear Hall and to draw the many aspects of
transformed the formerly peaceful linguistics into a somewhat
dormitory into a modem Tower coherent whole by
of Babel. Scholars from abroad, interdisciplinary seminan, special
American·araduate students fluent intearative seminars and a careful
in dozens of lanauaaes, and the attempt to intearate each week's
University's own Jinpittics activities around a amaUer theme.
Such an approach is calculated
faculty will Uve for the next eiaht
weeks in Goodyear as participants • to allow each student to see
in the 1971 Linauistic Institute, linJUistics in relation to other
an annual event cosponsored by disciplines and partially combat
the Unsu.istic Soc:let y of America some of the fraamentation which
and the coUeae campus, selected bas made linJU.istics an incredibly
to host the affair.
broad field. TraditionaUy the
There have been in the put study of languaae, tbe science of
over 40 Institutes but this one, linauistics is now a huge
nicknamed . Lhl, promises to be, conalo merate of competing
acc:ordin&amp; to its planners, the interests and specialization. There
bigest and best. Devid Hays, arc linauists who do nothing but
director of the proaram, explained compile dictionaries of stranae
that not only will tho top people Scottish dialects; the~ are
in the field present lectures in linguists who study speech-related
their specialties, but the faculty, diseases of the brain; there are
which will do the actual teachin&amp; UnJU.ista who spend their day with
of the some 60 classes, is certainly an IBM, and there are linguists
who sit in cork lined studies
the stronaest yet assembled.
One of the most famous names ruminating on the syntactical
in Ll71 is Noam Chomsky, a conectness of a line of poetry.
renowned Unauist noted because
of his outspoken political views. Common bond
In spite of such diversity,
In addition, each man scheduled
to deliver the forum - lectures llnauists share a way of thinking
keynoting each week's activities is which emphasizes the importance
equally distinpJshed, and the laDIUI&amp;e plays in the study of
permanent faculty - half vlsitina man; biolopcally, psycholo.Seally,
professors and half University socially and aesthetically. Hoping
faculty - represent what is to exploit this bond, Dr. Hays and
essentially "a "Who's Who" of the University's linguistic:a faculty
have spent over two years
modem linau.istlc:a.
preparing the structures or L'l71 ,
initiated by a proposal to the
Cohaatt wbole
David Hays, in charae of the LinJUistic Society in 1969. As a
Institute, il n.ponllble for tribute to tbe o,.DiutionaJ
ensuring the succeu of the capabilities of the Institute's staff,
innovationa which characterize the only problems so far have
Ll71. Dr. Hays will personally been due to computer foul-ups
preside over a course called which eliminated some students
"Linauistlcs : Pocus for from enroUment lists.

When classes began last
TUesday, thoup, only the stifling
heat was out of control 11 Rene
Thorn pve the Institute's initial
forum lecture, diacusaina lin&amp;Wstic
structuralism. The forum lecturer
of each seament meeta informally
with students and faculty to share
his expertise. Thou&amp;h they will
only ttay a short while, the bia
nama will "1et their tails worked
off," said Dr. Hays.
However prestigious names like
Chomsky arc, the success or the
Institute will still depend larply
on the quality of the faculty riabt
in the claJsroom, according to Dr.
Hays. The "stars" are essential to
Ll71, but the education of
JJ11duate students remains the
main thrust. The better an
Institute, noted Dr. Hays, the
more araduate students are
•ttracted to a university .
Executive Vice President Albert
Sorni voiced the administrative
hope that Ll71 will attract
students to the University. Past
institutes have prompted at least
I00 students to apply to host
schools, Dr. Hays reported.

..

Varied opportunities
Students at Ll7l offer a
variety of reasons for their
courageous decision to summer in
Buffalo . Some are admitted
"perpetual students" with nothing
else to dQ; some are industrious
JJlld student. tryina to hasten and
deepen their Unaulstic knowledae,
while others are here to study
under professors who would
otherwise be unavailable .
Reprdlea of their motmtion,
most students expressed
enthusiasm for the summer,
s-rtJcuJeriy for the chance to
meet with the Chomskys and the
opportunity to live for two
months with what amounts to the
cream of the world's young
linguistic crop.
In keeping with Hnguistic
department policy, each student
at the Institute will have a tutor, a
situation which Or. Hays labelled

]_ ___________ _\_
I TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: I
I Our Whom, thanks for stuling I

I my bicycle-outside- of Foster I
JAnnex, Tuesday night. It was my I
I only transportation. If you have I
I a change of hurt, call831-3610.1
I No questions.
I

as untypical of most institutions.

Ll7l benefit the Department of
Linguistics, but the entire
University will profit from the
prestiae and intellectual
atmosphere generated by a
pthering of such d.istinction, said
Dr, Hays.
Many of the activities of Ll71
are public and offer the person
unacquainted with linauistics the
chance to Jearn somethina of the
Ja.aible . . . .tmeat
Tboupa budly one of the subject . Lin,WSrics may be
well - k n own departments , comprehensive and cover wbat
linguistics at the University is seems to be an endless amount of
actually one of the best in the IJOUnd, but perhaps its virtue lies
country. Men like Henry Lee there: the linJUist is free to call on
Smith, Jr., Paul Garvin and the entirety of modem science to
Wolfgang Wolck (the assistant help answer his questions. At any
director of Ll71) are among the • rate, it appears that the linguists
top men in their fields . Or. Sornit of the Institute don't lack
expects that the department will confidence in their science ; as one
become ,.more visible" after the eager participant put it,
institute , whi ch may mean "Linguistics is the key to the
increased funding. Not only wUI universe."
__________._)("... e rox i noc:r _ _,.
It is much easier fot the
Department of Linauistics to
provide a tutor for each of its 12
students than for larger
departments, but in Ll71 it may
be more difficult , if the
department's arowth rate jumps as
expected.

1- 3 copies of one original: 8 cents each
4- 6 copies of one original: 7 cents each
7 or more copies of one origins/: 6 cents each

Gustav

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--------·837-3111------Friday, July 9, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three
~

�..

Amherst construction ~moves on

CLAIIIflll
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Page four . The Spectrum . Friday, July 9, 1971

(We also BUY used fumitt11re)

835-1616

IRI

PANAVISION"Bf'd MElJlOCOLOA

!

CONFERENCE IHEAIRE
2......

July 9 .... . .... . ..... . ... .
3,7, 9 p.m.
July 10 .............. . . . ..... ... ..•7, 9 p.m.
July 11 ........ .. .......• . .........7, 9 p.m. '

�/

'Interaction'goal ofAmherst site design
The North Campus - the billion dollar

~heist site of tbt State University of

will dccut. SuCh activities include a
mini-rathskellar, a small bo'okstore,
lounges, a cinema and a drama workshop.
Also included are faculty and residence
balls.

Buffalo - is presently under construction.
To the visitor, this construction appears as
little more than an amorpb'?us grouping of
steel girders and green earth movers.
However, the layout of the campus has
Located in the central area of the
been carefully mapped out and with the complex are the academic faculties, such as
help of some verbal architecture and much enpneering and the natural and social
imagination, Amherst can be sciences. These surround a central meetina
approXimated.
area nicknamed the "•pine." This "spine..
Is desiped to serve as an intersecting core
Thomas Craine (director of Architecture
among all the different faculties.
and Planning) and Randall Rice (assistant
Facilities Program coordinator) explained
This union will essentially be built in
the general outline of the new campus with three phases accommodating itself to a
emphasis on the student-faculty facilities. varying number of students. Of primary
These facilities, further development of the interest will be the central building known
concept of a student union, will comprise as "StudeQr Activities 1." It will be
many more students and staff than composed of a central library housing rare
presently occupy the Main St. campus. The boo))s, collections, science and engineering,
area itself is estimated to be two to three as well as the undergraduate library.
times larger than· the present one. Due to
this the' areas of student activities are to be
. The hlgbest level will be for the
clustered so as to facilitate their access University administration holding such
from anywhere on campus.
officials as President Robert Ketter. The
middle level will be a mixture of student
Within the fmt six colleges, there is and faculty meeting rooms and some
situated an area where "Norton activities" classrooms. The lowest level will be

eomprised of coatrooms, ticket sales and
countea. Mr. Craine commented that the
architecture and decor will set the
atmosphere for the various activities.
Commwlication &amp; interaction
Located near this complex and
connected to it by tunpe~ lined with
classrooms and meeting halls will be a
smaller building, the student government
center. Here the top floor will house
offices and classrooms, the middle will
contain more offices and a forum for
meetings, while the lowest level will
contain two cafeterias.
The second and third building phases,
known as "Student Activities 11 and Ill"
will contain lounges, seminar and meeting
rooms, recreational facilities and exhibition
plleties.
"Student Activities IV" will include the
central text book store, a campus store,
cafeterias and a "cnfe style" restaurant , as
well as a mini-rathskellar.
Regarding

student

reaction

to

the

presently pl ·a·nn~d structure
accommodating the University .
adminlatration, Mr. Cmi.ne replied that any
resentment occurring would depend upon
whether or not people were to thinlt in
terms of "categories." He saw this plan as
trying to develop a university community
in which all memben could minale as well
as providing their own set areas of interest .
such as the student sovenunent center.
As far as restrictions upon activities and
entrance of buildings, be felt that would
entirely depend upon tbe future
administration. The design' itself was not
planned to be "architecturally imposing" ,
but rather to "aid and abet" the idea of an
open campus.
Both Mr. Craine and Mr. Rice lauded
the tunnel system explaining that since this
central area was connected to aU the
surrounding faculties , it would en~ble
stude.n ts a.nd faculty in aU fields at least to
h ave an opportunity to meet and
communicate. This communication and
interaction, they hoped,\ would be the
central thrust of the entire campus.

• • • • • • • • • • • • Advertisement • • • • • • • • • • • •

'Reading Dyn_amics'

Learning to read with speed
Graduates of a school which is
once again offerink its only course
to State University of Buffalo
students can read many books to
speeds of o~er 2000 words per
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Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics
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that they will at least triple their
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The "reading dynamics"
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Analyzing the reading habits of
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she demonstrated her course
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·
Silent reading
Students in the reading
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Students learn to see the whole
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to steep themselves in the book's

Joseph E. Levine presents a Mike Nichols Film starring Jack Nicholson
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total mood and meaning. Reading
at,such rapid rates they need not
stumble over single words, details
or even chapters, but absorb all
the material as if it were a work o f
art rather than an agglomeration
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~

Better understanding
The eyes of an average reader
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Jearn to avoid this by making a
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Students also learn to improve
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are outlined by the dynamic
readers and long novels are first
skimmed to get the characters
straight. The result is better
understanding of the material at a
speed many times faster than
possible by old fashioned reading
methods.

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carnal Knowledge.

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Reprinted from The Spectrum of
Oct. 2, 1970.

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355 Norton Halt

Friday, July 9, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page fiVE

�IA dictatorship?

1

Or. Marvin Bernstein's eleventh hour decision to not
aocept the acting provostship of Arts and Letters fails to
close this troublesome episode. President Ketter's action in
asking Or. Bernstein to assume the acting role despite an
overwhelming negative response by the Faculty was
dlsturblng. Whi!e we had no particular complaints with Dr.
Bernstein himself, 1he method and bac~ground of his
selection bear an ominous portent for the future of this
University.
Most faculty members and students feel that they have
an inherent righ~ to proffer advice on administrative
appointments. They also believe that such advice, while not
binding, should at least be given serious consideration. We
agree with both these propoSitions. What bothers us in the
Arts and Letters affair is that the Faculty's views seem to
have been totally ignored.
~
The potential loss because of this action was tremendous.
There wes one resignation immediately and numerous others
had been promised if Bernstein became Provost. Others had
vowed to boycott Faculty committees and otherwise prevent
the occurence of Faculty business. Any of these courses
would have immeasurably hurt the academic standing of this
University.
Arts and Letters has long been synonymous with
academic excellence. It appears to us that Dr. Ketter's
continuance in forcing any of his personal choices upon the
Faculty may result in severe damage to its academic standing.
Therefore, we must urge a hasty reconsideration of this
matter lest a bright light of academia be dimmed by
administrative politics.

The Falsehood

Last week we criticized the University of Buffalo
Foundation for their wasteful and ex"avagant purchase of
sti II another presidential mansion. hi addition, we
commented negatively on their refusal to disclose either..the
cost of the purchase or the "anonymous donor's" identity.
Even after the revelation of the price as $125,000 and the
donor as Augustus E. Anderson I I I, the Foundation
adamantly persisted in their refusal to either confirm or deny
·
these details.
This week, evidently upset by the expose of their heavily
guarded secrets. the UB Foundation is claiming that the
information was always public. This is patently false. Again
and again they have maintained that the anonymous donor
wished to remain anonymous, and they therefore refused to
supply any facts other than the address and former owner of
the house.
They have now, however, consented to confirm the
information released by The Spectrum , but this sudden
switch to candor seems designed solely to belie the suspicions
raised oy many concerning the secrecy of the LeBrun
acquisition. Unfortunately, releasing facts already made
public serves no real purpose, and two serious questions still
remain. First, why should the house have been bought and
secondly, why the secrecy? Continued silence on these
matters can only indicate that allegalions regarding other
agreements between the University and Anderson are true.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 5

Friday, July 9, 1971
Editor·in-Chief - Dennis Arnold
Managing Editor - AI Benson
Asst. Managing Editor - Susan Moss
Business Manager - James Drucker
Advertillng Manager -Sue Mellentine

C.mpus . . ..... . Jo-Ann Armao
City .... ........ Harvv Lipman
Copy ........... RonnrForman
Graphic Arts ......... Tom Toles
Layout ....... Maryhope Runyon

Lit. &amp; Drama .. Michael Silverblatt
Music ... .. ........ Bil'y Altman
Photo ....... .. .. David G. 'Smith
Asst . . ..... Mickey Osterreicher
Sports ..... . ..... Sharyn Rogers

Ths Spectrum is a member of the Unites State Student Press Association
and is S\lfVed by Unites Press International, College Press Serivce, the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate and liberation News Service.
Rupublication of ;til matter herein without the express consent of the
Editor·in-Chief is forbidden.
Editorial policy is determined by the Editar·in-Chief.

Page six. The Spectrum. Friday, July 9, 1971

'Go thou, then, unto fNety public IChool in dM land. .• •
-----------------------------~-~··-

A .f air year's pay
To tire Editor:
'We would like to thank the "duly respectful"
studc:nt who authorized last week's Letter to the
Editor on the subject of stipends (Spectrum , July 2,
1971) for his or her proposed " re'lerence" for our
elect•ed positions. However, the "compliment"
would have been more palatable if such a thorough
juxtaposition and reordering of sentence order had
not so obscured the thoughts explained in the "Two
Philosophies on Stipends" (Spectrum, June 25,
1971) penned by myself and Fred AuerO{I,
lin no instance did' Jack of financial support
exclusively attempt to justify Student Association
stipetrtds. It was clearly stated that the paramount
justification fo.r stipend payments was the amount of
work expended. This can average over 40 hours a
week in many instances. ·
lrhe o ther justification for stipends was to allow
low income students to participate in student
government, where they might otherwise be unable
to, fc•r the necessity of seeking employment.

If the ...Duly Respectful" student were to
average out the hourly payment for Student
Government work, he or she would find it to be less
than a dollar an hour. Hardly the greed suggested'.
Many of the officers and coordinators could get
summer jobs for wages that are . well over the
combined sum of one thousand two hundred dollars
($1200) that you suggested Mr. Aueron was
"great fully and greedily grabbing." The seven
hundred dollar ($700) summer stipend, plus the fall,
spring stipend , does not compen~t~ for the
anticipated loss of a summer job.
Finally, student government leaders do not
participate in that organization for lack of other
employment as proposed. If any other students were
putting in the time and effort now expended by the
present participants, they would al.s o be justly
compensated.

fan C. DeWaal, President
Student Association
Fred Auernn, Student Affairs Coordinator
Student Association

For what it's wo·r th
by Harvy LJpman
From the same people who brought you the
uncon1sfitutiona'l New York State Welfare Act, the
excitimg epic, "The Slaughter of the Five Boroughs,"
and that famous singing group, The Lulus, the State
Republican party presents its new release: "The
Makin1g of a Governor, 197 1."
This taut suspense drama centers on the efforts
of a lobster merchant from Montauk as he tries to
win tlhe hearts of the political hacks and climb the
golden stairs of success to the Governor's Mansion in
Albany. His dream is threatened by the quiet
conse1rvative living in the servant's quarters o n the
mansion grounds and by the Ivy League bon vivant
from lthe big city in the south.
Olur story opens in the spring of 1971 . The sea
food dealer (superbly portrayed by that veteran of
the stage, Perry Duryea) begins to build toward his
goal by utilizing his power as Speaker of the State
Assen:tbly to block one progresSive proposal after
another. He wins the unyielding admiration of his
upstate colleagues by slashing the funds out of the
narcoltics addict rehabilitation program. Flushed
with litis easy success, our hero proceeds to destroy
every bill for social reform that unwittingly finds its
way Ito the assembly chambers. His finest hour,
however, is yet to come.
In the late spring the Masher from Montauk goes
on th'e offensive. He decides to exercise the welfare
demo1~s from the state's population. With religious
fervor the Assembly Speaker forces the passage of a
new welfare law , including the surprise residency
clause. Some of his fellow legislators balk. "The
~ffle""Court has already declared such laws
unconstitutional," they remind him . Perry flies into
a blind rage. His face changes to the fiery red
appea1rance his lobsters achieve when they have been
prope1rly boiled.
·• Damn the Supreme Court! Full speed ahead ...
he dedares. Faced with such impeccable logic, th t&gt;
legislature knuckles under. After all, they know the
state budget cannot carry ttte welfare loud any
longer, especially since they all know that ~ome
mone~r must be saved to pay their increased salaries
Charity may begin at home, but austerity begins a~
far away as possible.
With the taste of victory still fresh. the lobster

king turns to bigger game. He will challenge New
York City and its mayor, "Charisma John" Lindsay .
The city government has been getting out of hand levying"its own taxes, instituting new programs and
generally acting as if it represented the citizens of
the municipality. But Perry knows better. He knows
that he, from his home at the eastern tip of Long
Island, and his cohorts from Jamestown, Utica1
Plattsburg and the like are the true representatives of
the pe6ple. Who could better know the needs of
Bedford-Stuyvesant or el Barrio? Certain of his
responsibility ~nd dedicated to his purpose, be sets
out to teach these upstarts a lesson and free the city
dwellers from bondage.
To this end, Perry and his boys_overturn every
effort by the city to raise enough money to keep it
functioning. This is where the plot thickens.
Infuriated by the actions of what is coming to be
known as the Albany State Circus, Charisma John
leaps into action. If the state is so determined not to
give any money to the city, he will arrange to make
this situation permanent. All over Manhattan cries
for independence can be heard. In an office on
Seventh Avenue, an organization is born : the
Committee to Make New York City ·a State. Despite
the threat of civil war, the legislature finishes the
job. Almost as an afterthought, Perry lets his friends
vote themselves what are commonly called 'Lulus' small monetary bonuses (usually in the area of a few
thousand dollars) for a job well done.
Some months later, it is revealed that the
humble lobster merchant has ambitions to succeed
Father Superior Rockefeller when he fmaiJy decides
to retire. This distresses Papa Rocky's disciple and
heir apparent, Brother Malcolm . He has been serving
loyally as lieutenant governor. As the crisis between
the Wizard of Long Island Sound and Deputy Chief
Wilson emerges, our episode draws to a close.
Can Perry and Malcolm work out thei r
differences and keep New York State in the 19th
century? Will John Lindsay, fresh from his
presidential defeat. itefeat both men and challenge
the voters? Can the Democrats blow another
election? Will the people .of New York City ever be
free? Who will win the 1974 election? Will the year
1974 ever come? Stay tuned, folks, and learn the
answers to these and other exciting questions.

�.. .
Save the seals
To the dditor:
We need your help in saving our ocean
mammals and wild mustana.s and burr9s
from extinction.
No doubt you have read or heard about
the battering of our baby seals along with
the WUiecessary killing of our whales,
walruses, seals, sea lions, porpoises and
polar bean, and the suffering and
slaughtering of our wild mustangs and wild
burros that once freely roamed the West.
At last our Congress is coming to their
rescue, but they need our voice to pass
these bills.
Would you be kind enough to take a
few minutes to write a letter or even a
postal card to your congressmen and your
state senator and ask them to do the
following:
" Please co-sponsor the Harris-Pryor Bill
- S. 13JS : H.R. 6558. This bill will save
our ocean qtammals from ettinction. And
please vote for the SJ 16 H.R. 5375 bill
s ponsored by Senators Jackson and
Hatfield and by Representative Baring.
This bill will save our wild mustangs and
wild burros from extlnction."

--These bi.UJ should roaoh tbe flolor of the
Houte af Repre.entativos for comtdetation
sometime this summet. So you q111 see it's
our last chance and theirs . . • Please
mention this app eal to your fri4mda and
organizations; every voice is needeotl.
Speaking for my friends wb4t&gt; cannot
spealc:, we thanJc you very m'~Jcb .

leadenhJp of Dr. Arcudi, has alone refwed
to yield to Syndk.tte control. 1bo
members of 'the oliprcby, that came to
power under t he cynically corrupt
administration of Larrabee, our erstwhile
JUerrilla warfare instructor and provOtt,
did so by pinina control of three
Important committees (Appointments,
1~e Fertig Tenure atld Promotion; Acadentic PoUcies;
Council of Appointed Chairmen) by an
.a. . ta,,.~CB unconstitutional procedure which spuma
'-''••~ .,.~
"'H
repreaentation by departments in favor of
To the Editor:
completely 'at larac' electiont which
permit latpr departments to control who,
You will by now have seen two letters lf anyone, aets elected from the smaller
from Professor Thomu Connolllf, who is units.
temporarily servina as Acting pjrovost of
This sroup, havina muscled out and
tbe Faculty of Arts and Letten, in which silenced all opposition. (which is
he viciously attacks the scholarly considerable and includes most of th e
reputation, intearitY and ad.m.inistrative reputable scholars in the Faculty), now
quatifications of two fine coUeauues who c:Jaims to spealc: for the entire Faculty and
do not happen to $hare his politielkl beliefs. has arropted unto itself the right to screen
Such tactics, utterly unworthy of one all nominees both for Jhe provostship and
occupying, even temporarily, the office of for aU chairmanships and to summarily
a Provost, should be taken for exa•ctly what eliminate all candidates whom they find
potiti~y unacceptable. They now fear an
it is, partisan politics.
What the political syndicate that has end to their p otitical privile&amp;e, an end to
run Aqs and Lettei;'S as a sort ctf private the spoils system whereby Larrabee or
dub since 1967 cannot 1tand is that the some equally cooperative provost awards
Spanish Department, under the, spirited available resources such as faculty tines,

,........,. ".6-- s .....

merit inqeuea, teachtna ~.
office space IJid support lunda leea oo &amp;be
blsis of establilbod crihria such ultudut
Frl!'s or scholarly productivity thaa oa
private 'cSeats• between the provost and .bll
inner circle of friends.
It iB an ironic; spectacle indeed to MC
Professor Connolly, cOok, et al , now tbat
their bammtriock on .uts and Letten
looks as if it may be loosened, are already
busy cryina 'foul' in anticipation of U.e
mere p01Jiblltty that the Vety tactics they
themselvel used to pin power may now ~
used, not to 'clatroy' th~ Faculty of Arts
and Letters (u tbey hysterically proc:1ai.m)
but to restore 10me semblance of equity.
1biB moct recent effort of Profcaor
Connolly to use smear tactics to preserve
the power base of the Syndicate is one
further examp'e of administrative tactics
that prompt ua to urae you to appoillt a
strona and profeuionally quaUfiod pouon
such u Professor Marvin Bomstein to ~~Ye
the Faculty wise ud stable direction 10
that it can once apin take its place with
tbe rest ot the Faculties within tb.iB
University.
·
Peter Boyd·Bowmart
Linguutiu

Profu~or of Hil(Hlnic

Struggle in Arts and Letters
Editor's note: The following is a leuer sent to The
Spectrum by Dr. Bruno A. Arcudi, De(1&lt;1rtment of l(t~llan,
Spaflilh and Porrugese.
Never have I taught a class, either at Yale, Berkeley,
Rutgers, or Buffalo, in which I hav~ not warned my
students to be wary and distrustful of the printed page.
The unjust charges leveled against Professor Bernstein,
many respected members of the Faculty of Arts and
Letters and myself in the last issue of The Spec/rum only
conftrm d\e in my distrust of undocumented printed
matter.
It' is true !that Professors Connolly. Cook, Jackson and
Walker have elery constitutional right to th eir partisan
views of things and we might expe&lt;:J them to use every
device (hopefully, however, only ethical ones) to support
their opinions and their faction . Row ever, their hasty and
violent criticism of the proposed appointment of Professor
Marvin Bernstein as the Acting Provost or the Faculty of
Arts and Letters has led them down the sad path of factual
inaccuracies and totally unfounded allegations.
Let 'me first speak of the so-called Steering Committee
of the Faculty of Arts and Letters ~(the Steering
Committee is composed of the Appointments, Promotions
and Tenure Committee; the Educational Policy
Committee; and The Council of Chairmen} which met
Monday, June 28 in the morning with President Ketter, as
well as later in the afternoon of that same day with
Professor Bernstein of the History Department. When
President Ketter presented Professor Bernstein as a
possible choice for the Apting Provost of the Faculty of
Arts and Letters, thi.s group of some fifteen individuals
immediately reacted negatively to President Ketter's
suggestion, although most of them admitted that they did
not know Professor Bernstein and had never met him. No
one, until President Ketter !IUggcsted it, wished to meet
with Dr. Bernstein. Professor Cook, who had served with
him on the Search Committee for the Provostship and who
had done everything conceivable to subvert the secrecy
and actions of that Search Committee, was of course tl\e
most vociferous. Members or the Steering Committee
insisted' that Dr. Bernstein, as Chairman of the Search
Committee, had not kept the Faculty informed of the
Search Committee's activities, notwithstanding the fact
that when Prof. Bernstein invited the members of these
same committees to meet candidates for the Provost
position, very few of them made .any effort to see the
ca ndidates. Furthermore, they presented very few
candida tes themselves to the Search Committee. ·
Ultimately, upon President Ketter's prompting, the
Steering Committee did meet with Prof. Bernstein on that
afternoon. Prof. Bernstein was subjected to a most violent
onslaught of partisanship. He answered honestly to all of
the questions, however unfair, directed to him . Why are
they so opposed to Prof. Bernstein? It certainly cannot be
because they know him. When , after m uch reluctance,
they did meet Dr. Bernstein, they were less concerned with
his academic credentials than with his politics. Indeed, the
group stooped so low as to ask slanted political questions
concernmg Indian mining rights rather than follow
academic morality and restrict themselves to professional
and adminjstrative questions. That particular political
smear, reminiscent of the McCarthy era, which Professors
Jackson and Walker blatantly repeated in their letter to the
Faculty. is to the academic community the vile eqlyvalent
of the mixing of Church and State. Prof. Bernstein's
political opimons are llis own and should not , for the post
at hand, concern otllers.
After the painful discussion , to which Prof. Jackson
was n party though he belongs to none of these
committees, a vote was taken. W.e aJl know that mine was
the only dissenting vote of the Steering Committee. The

vot~ was 14 to I . Ju you know, over the past four years I
have been attempting to achieve some democratic reforms
in the voting procedures of. the Faculty of Arts and
Letters. Unlike any of the other Faculties, the Faculty of
Arts and Letters, despite the fact that it has one enormous
English Department in It and ten relatively small other
departments, has a1t large elections. We do not vote our
oommittce members in by departments as does the Faculty
of Social Sciences, but are in the distressing position of
having the English Department dictate who wiU be elected
to any of our 4:ommittees and they regularly pick
professors of their own persuasion. 1 have bad these
by-Jaws tested by lawyers who deem them
unconstitutional. )L8 a result, I question the legality of
both of tbe Standing Committees of the Faculty of Arts
and Letters and c~urrently have a grievance in process
against our voting procedures in the Faculty Senate. I
prefer not to think that their attack on me in the Bernstein
context is an attem1pr co innuence the eventual o utcome of
Utat grievan~:e. The Council of Chairmen are not an el~ted
body and, though a last minute change was made in a
Faculty of Arts and Letters meeting which insists that any
Provost selected slrtould b e upon the consultation and
approval of the thiree Standing Committees, that set of
by-laws was not tCI go into effect until July 1st, - two
days after the meeting of Monday, June 28. The 14 to 1
vote, therefore, is of dubious significance. It does not
reflect th e true feeling of the many intimidated members
of the Faculty o f Arts and Letters. Intimidated, I say
because the Standi·ng Committees of the Faculty of Arts
and "Letters constit~ate a powerful oligarchy which has been
running our Faculty for the past four years with their own
self-interest in mind. No individual for the past three years
has been elected to either of the Standing Committees,
without first having been designated in an English
Department caucus.:
Prof. ConnoUy's letter in which he bestows
hypocritical compassion upon me for unfounded reasons,
vehemently oppose:&gt; President Ketter's pro posal to appoint
Dr. Bernstein over the objection of the so-&lt;:aUed
representative committees of the Faculty of Arts and
Letters. This is particularly surprising in the light o f a
recent action by P•rof. Connolly and r believe the readers
should be m ade aw1are of it. Prof. Connolly has, within the
past few days, submitted to Vice President Murray a list of
candidates for the Acting Chairmanship of the Department
of Spanish, Italian and Portuguese for next year. The list
was completed without the advice of the Department, nor
did he ask a· vote of the Department for any of these
candidates. Furthermore, in another action, he belies his
reputation as a liberal and friend of the students by
eliminating the studlent vo te from a crucial election in the
Department of Spu1nish, Italian and Port4guese when he
reported that vote t•o Dr. Murray.
Prof. Cook and his group continually cry "excellence"
as their academic banner and philosoph y and they
somehow entangle excellence with political liberalism.
However, these tterms have fantastically adjustable
m eani n~ . On the one hand they preach high standards; on
the other hand, by military tactics, they change the
by-laws of the Fac•~lty o f Arts and Letters so that they
may keep in the fa,culty, Assistant Professors o f their own
choice for as long 1as six years, without completing tlt~ir
PHD theses. It is obvious they have achieved their
optimum crew o f unquestioning followers, completely
beholden to them and they don't wish to lose them. To
the World t hey joim with many of us in Liberal views, yet
within the Faculty they trample minorities and make deals
to prevent some de.partments from receiving their due in
the matter o f lines und monies. As professors, what indeed
do they profess?
Prof. Cook refc:rs to my experience in the USIA and

gives me an honor which I do not claim, that of being the
spokesman for a group ln the Faculty. He further points
put, most inaccurately, my so-called role in negotiatioDJ
concerning a professor then at Cornell, now at Yale. He
neglects to point out that my alternate choice to that
appointment was one of the two leading ltalianlsts in
North America who had consented to come to Buffalo,
and that it was, in fact, his group's counteraction that
prevented us from having so prestigious a man h ere.
Prof. Coole also states that the group to which I
belong opposed the appointment of both Faculty
professors. A careful review of the minutes of the Faculty
of Arts and Letters will show that ,the first of t he two
Faculty professors was invited to Buffalo by members of
our constituency and we all voted for him and that the
second Faculty professor, when presented to the Faculty
by Prof. Mazzaro, also received most of our votes and ,
indeed, one of us seconded Prof. Mazzaro's motion.
~. in tbe area of Cook inaccuracies, I make
refere"nce to the appointment of a visjting professor and
former Chairman at Yale, whom he alleges was not
acceptable to the Buffalo department because he had
" wrecked" or " rebuilt" the Yale Depart ment. I have
particular knowledge about this professor since I did my
undergraduate and graduate work at Yale and have
maintained close ties with former professors and
colleagues. The story is otherwise. I was approached by
members of the Buffalo department because they had
heard rumors (totally unfounded we discovered) that the
Yale Chairman had been involved in l! possible AAUP
charge. I, therefore, phoned the Dean of Yale CoUege and
spoke to him about the case. He assured me that the same
rumor had disturbed him and that he had investigated it
thoroughly since it involved Brandeis University, as well as
Yale, Nonetheless, he found no truth in it and advised me
to report that the Yale professor be invited to Buffalo. I
did so and, o f course, the members o f the department
concerned immediately acted and invited him.
Close ~crutiny of Professors Jackson's and W~er's
letter demonstrate a rather poor exercise in logic because
their charges are based essentially on intimation and not
fact, a most dangerous and unfair procedure. The charies
against Prof. Bernstein were very personally ad homtnen
and not related to his professional standing or
administrative aMities. The claim that ·because h e is a
professor of H!Stoi)l, he can have little knowledge of the
humanities is paten~ly absurd and disproved by the fac:t
that in most universities of the United States, History is
always included among the humanistic disci plines.
Unfortunately, my refutations have almost become as
long as the catalogue of inaccuracies and intimations, but I
felt that the inside affairs of the Faculty of Arts and
Letters are too little known to the University (Faculty and
Students) at large. In fact, the undemocratic and bullying
actions of the oligarchy which has been running the
Faculty of Arts and Letters has always been hidden under
a hypocritical mask of false political liberalism.
It is important that you all study Ute evidence
carefully before making any decisions. Do not be like the
Steering Committee that, although they did not know
Prof. Bernstein, formed an a priori negative opinion of him
and did not even wish to speak to him .
I staunchly support Pro f. Marvin Bemstein for the
Acting Provoslship of the Faculty of Arts rutd Letters and,
with my colleagues, breathe a sigh of relid that the
rapacious grip which a small clique has held upon this
Faculty of Arts and Letters may finally he released and
democratic process obtain for us, as well as for the rest of
thf University. Prof. Bernstein has th~ academic
credentials, the integrity, and the admini.stra t1vc abilities.
He is a just man and should be appointed.

Friday July 9 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven
1

1

�-

POt;O

lr1starry
r1t.1%=:r:J..l:::&gt;ers

-., PARKSIDE

AT ·PEAlE 1111•1 EIHIIITIOI IEITEII
The mcme, I.e Mtlru, now playina at the
Amherst Theater, bOiinJ with the whine and roar of
a hot Ponche u it streab throuah the wmclin&amp; roads
of provincial France. It enda; not surpriaiqly, with
the same whine and roar and the ditto quaint
provincial roads. The middle (need I even continue?)
arne sound, roads, etc. Bxcept for the scenery, the
eodlea d010-upa of Steve McQueen's pensive,
bepimed face and the incredible speed of the race,

Downhill Rllctr, Bit Ft1uu tlnd Uti It Ht118y, (Little
Fauss and Bi&amp; Halsy? Bia Hauss and Uttle Palsy?
Fauss Bi&amp; and Halsy Little?) and even &amp;11y Rider to
some extent, are saved by the one element that it
clinp to for dear Ufe. No, it isn't the scenery or even
McQueen's close-upped baby blues - you auessed it:
that dizzyina head-swayina, innard-grabbina element
of speed. Lt Maru Is the embodiment of a concept
and experience that is at the very heart of the
medium of film : the experience of motion.

The first time I noticed this was in a 61m called
GNnd PrU starrina James Gamer - with the camera
on the nose of a formula one racer, all the audience
automatically leans to taxe the banked comers. ln
DownhU/ Rilctr this effect was intensified and,
litting in the padded theater seat, one be&amp;ins to duck
and bob, .weavin&amp; down humongous ski slopes. The
same with Lt Maru : an admittedly uninteUectual
reaction, but exhilarating nont&gt;the-less, and a very
valid response.
But if thla' is all true, (as it undoubtedly is)
doesn't it reduce all fi~V' experience to a kind of
slorified amusement pari\ ride? - the wise ones will
astutely ask. Of course, I will answer, but this Is
what I have been saying all along. ·
The medium of film , for all its all-encompassing
realism , is not as good or os forceful at evoking deep
and meaningful experiences of beauty as the most
direct and evocative of aU art forms, that of poetry.
(I told you It would out .) The movies cannot speak
of important thinp, because the most important
thinp cannot be said, they can only be suggested.
Film.r con only t~pprOtlch things frontally, cu they
depend on the realism of everydtly lift. You must
snetzk up 011 the l11ues tht1t truly are the essence of
your existence. Poetry u sneoky. Use it. Letzrn it.
Memorize it. Sin1 It - It lr the very center of your
ltlfl

u

Mom could be a lot like spendina two hours in a
coin Laundromat watchina the 4ryers go around.
(Plot? foraet plot - the bulk of the writteri dialoaue
would Nn about three pages with larae marlins.)

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Page eight . The Spectrum . Friday, July 9, 1971

�Klute/Carnal

Insipid Nichols fiasco .
loses to mystery-thriller·
~

by Michael Sj)verblatt
Llt~rtlture and Dram~~

Editor

This week I'll discuss two new
movie1 - one that's pretty good
that has received short shrift from
nearly everyone and one that's
really lousy that bas received high
accolades o f praise. The films are
Klute and Carnal Knowledxe.
Klute , may be considered a
mystery-thriller, but with a new
and interesting twist. We are all
aware of the elemcnu that typify
the thriller and t he detective
story. The surface form of a
mystery is i m me d lately
recoanizable arid identifiable to
us: the subtle or not-so-cubtle
aocretion o f suspense, tho motive
and/or love interest, the often
lurid sexuality, the Dionysian
blood-violence beina countered by
the pipe-suckina thouptrul
Apollonian detective, the triumph
of good over evil.
KJUR

The Jane Fonda-Donald
Sutherland ftlm, Klute (at the
Granada Theater) is deep and
confusing in its aims. It is also an
excellent movie.
The mystery is actually one or
the most subterranean forms I
know. Much can be lwkina
beneath the complexity of plo t
mechanics . Deep down tbe
, mystery is often dealing with the

tl

I

very metaphysical truths that we
all love so much. Consider: the
genre generally tries to grapple
with the possibility or pure evil,
the ontological experience of
death and the epistomology of
logic. Not quite stuff to sneeze at .

Klute is about a man who
disappears. Altholljh the man is
nowhere to be found , letters from
hif!l are apprehended. They are
letters written to the call-girl Bree
(Jane Pbnda). They are sexually
abusive and raw letters .
Unfortunately we never really get
a look at them. Searching for the
missing man is Klute (Donald
Sutherland), a rube detective,
i nn ocent and sometimes
woodenly ill-at-ease. Prom here
S,Prouts a conventional (if rather
un comp li cated) mystery plot
involvina suspense, doubles and
psycbological telephonic terror.
A new m)'ltay
The person searching for a
aood whodunit is soon
disappointed in Klute, for early in
the film it becomes evident that
what we are searching for is not a
m.issing man or a dead man or a
murderer or any one of a number
of other possible goals. What we
are searcJUng for is the true tender
side of Bree. Her's is a complex
character, fuU of reticence and
love, - fuU of hatred for her
profession, which, simultaneously,
is the only thing she can do to let
her feel in control. This fully
drawn character owes its depth to
Jane Fonda in what is perhaps the
best performance of her career.
Slowly we realize that the
"mystery" is in actuality a
physical reflection of Bree's
mental · state. The mysterious
telephone calls and the tapes or
her voice which terrify her are
intrusions of the past that she is
trying to forget. Neatly dovetailed
into the ftlm are scenes of Bree
with her psychoanalyst. These
scenes, flighty and short as they
are, work to make a general
statement about Bree's character,

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about the madness that she is
trying to ej1cape.

Subtle refl•:ctions
The n.hm is fil)ed with neat
symmetries: and surprising self
reflections . Bree feeb very
stron&amp;)y about her pride u a
woman. ntis pride is undeo:nined
at every au1dition she attends (she
wants to be an actress or a
model). Htlre she is pitted apinst
other women, dehumanized and
left morally destitute. At one
audition a man comments o n her
stranae hands. Those bands
become a focal part of Bree
throughoult the movie.
I
Stand1ing so ftly in the
back&amp;round is Donald Sutherland
as Klute tJhe detective. Bree falls
progressively more and more in
love with Klute, but not in that
cutesy det•~ct ive story way. As she
senses more about herself and as
she cuts herself orr from the
mystery of her past (the past
reenters t.he movie in several
telling scenes: we see what bas
become of ber prostitute friends,
what has become of the pimp she
worked fo r), she becomes more
and more attached to Klute who
is her catalyst and her future.
Sutherland puts forth a mcely
underslated performance as the
detective. Andy and Dave Lewis
have wrill en an intelligent and
detailed screenplay . Alan J .
Pakula has made interesting use of
ang les and s hadows m his
direction und photography. It is a
very consc:ientiously-directed film

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intentionally recallina those
thriller-melodramas of the '40's so
that it c11n switch its tracks and
transcend aU o f them . It is faJ
from a \)rilliant fllm , but it is far
and awb tbe best film around
here so far this summer. And Jane
Fonda is cool and amazinaOunlzl Knowled,r
A ftlm that you need not
bother seeina is Carna l
Knowledge. I say this without
reservation , The only possible
reason 1 could see for seeing this
new hei&amp;ht of insipidity in the
already lengthy Mike Nichols
canon is to avail yourselves or the
air conditioning in the theaters. I
warn you, though, it is a high
price to pay.

sla&amp;heaps, bon-bons or any other
depding euphemisms you can
think of .. And just imagine - it
talces nearly 2~ hours before you
are supposed to reali~ that this
gruesome twosome are
empty-wempty .
The Feiffer 's creenplay begins
c heerily enough , the two
roommates are innocently
discussing. their sexual innocence
with the lights out in the dorms.
The dialogue is out of a Feiffer
cartoon. It is real and affectin&amp;
and we can laugh at it. The
woman in this vignette is Candice
Bergen and she is coy and
delightful. Unfortunately the
ski n-pricks of satire (nothing
sexual intended) are too easy for
Nichols. Thus, in turni.ni the film
into a blood bath, he washes the
whole production down the flush
bowl. Gee whiz and holy moley.
This is not a comedy. This is
serious co mmentary. Horse
manure. It may be serious
commentary to a chimpanzee, but
it s p e ll s obvious third-rate
horseshit to me. My, my, what
language. But notice the sentence
rhymes. This is what we call art
for art's sake.

The Wm is about Jack
Nicholson and Arthur Garfunkel
who begin as college students in
the mid '40's and grow up to be
fuJI fledged bores in the '70's. The
fllm is basically about the sexual
attitudes or the two men and the
women who flit through their
lives. The screenplay takes the
two characters throu&amp;h chirpy
little pastiches of scenes in this
jerky little imitation of a relevant Don't see it
movie.
The film is decently directed,
but poorly and uninventively
Degrading to women
filmed. The colors are clean
The two men give new meanang kodachrome and right out of
to the words sexist pi~. but turdpile spec&amp;mens like John and
unfortunately the women give Mary and Goodbye Columbus.
new meaning to the words
somnolescent cows. I have never,
Garfunkel and Nicholson are
in any movie, seen such stolid and boring. Ann-Margret looks like she
sedentary performing carried on has been washed ashore by one of
for such a long period of time. the tidal wave..~ in her beach fllms
Remember, the fi.Jm has a time and left lying on a bed in bad
span of about 30 years - but I need of mouth-t o- mouth
challenge anyone to summon up resuscitation. If anyone tells you
an attention span of more than 30 Carnal Knowledge is good, please
seconds. The attitudes in the film dofl 't belrcve them . You will be
do not change : the men are sorry. l suppose you get my
constantly measuring the1r women message. Have a good week. Don't
by the size of their hts. boobs , talk to strangers and don't play
jugs, knockers, pineapples, w1th matches.

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Friday, July 9, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page nine

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Doomed or domed

Football's options outlined
"It will be hard to justify our
football prop-am, if conditions
don't improve toon."
Pew believed Bob Deming two
yean aao when be made the above
statement prophetbin&amp; the end of
football. As bead coach of the
sport, he was aware of the
pressina danaen that dwindlin&amp;
crowds pretented to the survival
of the prosram.
Now, one-balf year after the
University dropped football,
many are skeptical of the Athletic
Department's Pive-Year PJan
which proposes to brin&amp; it back.
The same problems that plaaued
the sport before would still exist
if football does return:
disappearina crowds, inadequate
facilities and scheduling and
recruitlna holdups, They will be
harder to overcome now that
football is totally defunct.
• Demina, however, points out
that these are problems common
to most schools in the country.
"Only a handful are maltina
money," he says.
These problems can be licnd,
Demina feels, If football returns
II( I til
the bacldna of the
administration. "We'll never- be
succeuful without the
Univenity's commitment.••
T h e 1 u p p o-r t o f t h e
adminiltration, led by President

Ketter, ls needed before and after
football is brouaht back. Ketter
has to sell State University of New
York Chancellor Boyer on the
idea of football. Boyer will then
take it to the Board of Trustees,
who have final say.
Once the sport is rettored,
Ketter's backina will be necessary
in the achedulins or pmes, and
the recruitin&amp; of talent. "We'll
never be able td sell anybody on
comina here," says Demina,
"unless we can show them the
school is bebind us."
Demins says that Ketter has
left the direction and scope of
football up to him. "You teU us
what you want, and we'U shoot
for it," Demina reports beina told
by Ketter.
Therefore, DemJna and
Athletic Director Dr. Hany Pritz
1lave instructed Ketter they want
to shoot for the top - bil'lime
varsity football - by 1975.
"There's no sense In brinlina it
back unless we have the type of
product we can sell fans."
The fans the athletic
department are moet intereated in
attractlna, e~pe.cially in the
beainnina, are students. "They're
the ones we have the propam
for," says assistant coach Bill
Dando. " If they don't support
footbaU, it won't ao. But I don't
t.now how we are aoina to aet
them."
Demina adds: "I'm not sure
they'll over be involved in It,
unless everybody is involved in
it."

••••••••••
, I could get my hands on
my first g~ teacher now,_._ ___ _ _ ~- - - -....1

ltj

break her chalk~

It all began in the first grade.
But don't blame your first-grade teacher. It wasn't
her fault. II was the system she had to teach.
The old " run . Spot. run" method.
You had to read II out loud. Word by word. And
thai's the. way it was until you became a second
grader. Where your teacher asked you to read silently.
But you couldn' t do lt.
You probably stopped reading out loud. But you
alii! said every word to yourself.
If you ' re an average reader. you ' re probably
reading that way now.
Which means you read only as fast as you talk.
About 250 to 300 word• a minute.
And that's not fat! enough any more.
Not when the average atudent has approximately
8 hours of required reading for every day of classes.
And since the amount of lime In a day Isn' t about
to increase, your reading speed will have to.
In order to handle It all.
The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course can
help.
With training, you'll be able to see groups of
words. To read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per
minute. Depending on how difficult ttle material Is.
At any rate, we guarantee to at least triple your
reading speed, or we'll refund your entire tuition.
(98.4% of everyone who takes the course eccom·
pllahe1 thil.)
So don' t waste time thinking about whom to
blame. Come take a free Introductory speed reeding
Ieason. We'll increase your relldlno speed on the spot
It takaa about an hour to find out how you can reduce
your etudy lime by 50% or mora.
And it ougtll to be worth an hour of your time.
To aave thouaands.

domed atadium, would be more
conducive to an afternoon of
football.
,
The stadium on the new
campus, though not allocated in
the first $650 million, miabt bo
built, says Ketter, If expenses for
other parts keep runnins 1ower
than estimates.
If the domed stadium is built,
Demina says, officials of Domed
Stadium Incorporated have said
they will cover guarantees paid to
visitina teams.
Demlna feels the novelty of the
dome will keep cro:ovds up for
about five y.ears, and aftef'that,
the team alone should ~e able to
attract crowds.
Recruitina and schedulins,
Demina's final two problems, will
be made easier by NCAA
leJislation, both proPosed and
already enacted.
Most schools schedule football
pmes ten years ahead, but the
J I th pme, which the NCAA
allowed for the fust time last
year, is beina kept open for a
lonaer time by many teams to
take advantage of more cunent,
desirous possibilities. Demina
figures most pmes for a while will
be this type.

Profitable cbanees
Once the team is on its
financial feet, Demins adds, there
should be no trouble in
sc:hedullna. "I t.now of teams with
full schedules who were able to
play another team instead when it
became financially advantaaeous."
Want atudeots plus .. .
As for recruiting, a number of
"We'd be foolish to direct it chanp:s which would reduce
exclusively at the students, Demina's recruitins difficulties are
because of student attitudes beina considered by the NCAA.
towards •ports. Ynu bave to aim They are: basina financial aid
at t be broadest possible strictly on need.; limitation of the
audience."
number of l(lnts-in-eid a school
More fans will come to pmes, can allocate; awardins of one-year
Demin&amp; feels, if there is a better scholanihips only; reduction in the
facility in wJtich to watch them . number of schools a prospective
Forty-yeaf:old Rotary Field, player can visit on the school's
offering no protection apinst budget.
chillina winter susts, has not been
These chanaes, says Deming,
filled for a football pme in a
· will cut athletic departments'
decade.
A more attractive facility, such budgets, while "spreading the
as a planned 25,000-seat arena on talent more evenly."
the Amherst campus, or a county
The most beneficial cbanae is
the one which will limit the
837· 1 533
835·6855
number of grants-in-eid any
Come In 1nd Browse
school can award per year to 30.
We Buy and Sell
Many large schools gave as many
as SO a year. "There will be a Jot
ANTIQUES - OLDTIQUES
more aood players around for us
NEWTIQUES
to choose from ," Demina says.
AniU Dlemond
1898 E

" SIMON liZ"

Rd.

SUMMER
SWEATSHIRT SALE

50%
off

on alt
Sweatshirts in stock.

R&amp; MROOlJCX)RV SPHD READING LESSON
Free demonstntlons at our Buffalo Offtce
3606 Main St., (next to Buffalo Textbook)
Thurs., July 8 at 10:30 a.m., 12: 30 p.m. and 2 :30pm.
Next Friday July 9 at 10:30 a.m.,
12:30 p.m., 2:30, 4:30 It 7 p.m.

Next Saturcby July 10 at 10 a.m., 12 noon .tnd 2 p.m.
for addlllonallnforrruoUon ull

CURT MILLER •• Sll·l296

Buflhlo Textbook
3610 Main St.
Buffalo, N.Y. 833-7131
Across from Clement Hall.

This ad will be good for most of

. ._ _ _ _ _ the !IU»&gt;tnttr - so tell your friends•----·

Page ten. The Spectrum. Friday, July 9, 1971

'

�CLAIIIPIII

Gulfav A. frisclt, Inc.

.. .........., ....

h w.Mr · Optic*
41 ICINMOII AYINUI

WANTED

IUffAlO, N. f .

wood. t160 (+). C•U •ny 'time
88MUI3. Have a nice day.

NEEDED desperately leunlno In
social settings, miles and chart_,., Will
PIIY full retlall. Call 831·2511, Ask for
Mrs. Goldst•ln. After 5:00 p.m. c.111
838-2639, a!Jk for &amp;,.ee.
U.S. GRAD' desires house painting. 13
years experience. References. After 6,
• 881..0141. Len.

847 Niagara Falls Blvd.
· (near Eggert)

lst, 3.o.droom
4 . FurniSI!ed, 2
$225 a D'lonth
after IlK.

PERSONAL
MATH TROUBLEf For an eKperlences
tutor with M.S. call Rob, 835-3065.

Af'ARTMENTS WANTED

PAT, the highest peakS In the U.S. ue
Jhe TWII\ Buttes of Montena. W.

QUIET, reliable female desperately
n"ds small Inexpensive apartment (1
NEED light weight use&lt;! hiking pack B.R.) for September-June. Bailey area
cheap with frame. Also down bag? Call preferred. Call 895-7207, Marti.
L.lnda 837-1549.

833-7744

FOR SALE

SUB-LET APARTMENT

CONVERTIBL-E '65 V·8 Pontiac.
Rebuilt engll ne, snows, radio, heater,
754-8600.

SHARE apertment for 3rd summer
session. Five minutes from campus.
Rent negotiable. Cal 834-8876.

GReAT BCIOKS and bookuse. L.lke
new. $225.00. 876•.9220.

ROOMMATES WANTED

Ages 2 months thru 5 years

Open 7;t5 a.m. - 5:30p.m.
Educational Day Care

ENTIRE hCIUSehold for sale. Dinette
set, chairs, love seats, twin bedroom
Mts, rugs, desk, dishes, etc. More. Call
691·9381, TR7·246~.
1969 DATSIUN 510. Cost $2,500 new.
10.000 honest miles. Asking 81,450.
Fantastic mechanically. Phone
691·9,3 81, TR7·2467.
1965 CHEV. 54,000 miles, excellent
condition. Asking $450.
Phone 691-9&gt;381, TR7 ·2467.

"LEMANs·

I

NUDE DRAWING of your5411f, your
lover or the one you fevdr done bY
serious professional · artist who needs
work. Call 882·3045.
HONEYBUNDL.E I L.ove You.

FEMAL.E roommate wanted for the
summer. Close to umpus, $50 per
month. CAll 837-9218 at dinner time.
TWO ROOMS to sublet - ~uly and
August - sso per month. per room.
Call 837·0456.
FEMAL.E, with or without apart. Early
20's. Aug.-June. Write Galt P•rsonl.
1505 FoK Place, Utica, New York.

m~hanlcal

IMMEDIATE~Y

for July and August,
possibly through next semester,
$37.50, apt. Elmwood end Forest. Cell
882-3886.

REFRIGEIRATORS, stoves and
washers. R81condltloned, deli vered and
guaranteed. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore- TX4·3183.

'65 NAVY Mustang conv. $225 or Cleat .
Good condlt I on. 896-6219.

.

OL. YMPI A
L.ettre 22 portable
typewriter with cese and cover,
Scientific symbols. L.lke new. $40. See
Lynn Mills, I:Jiology dept. office.

.........;;;,..,l

HELDOVER!r.Nt•~
2nd BIG WEEK!

APAR'TMENT FOR RENT
NICE~ Y
fwnlshed houM, close to
campus.
Evenings: 894· 1212,
845-5600, or 652-1268. Ask for Jim
Steckmeyer.

3 BEDROO•M

·APPLIANCES

THE SPECTRUM'S ciiSSifleds will do
It for you, or Just helP you set up for
tlolng lt. Sl.25 for 15 words or lieSS,
$.05 for each a~d ltlonal word. Ads
must be paid for Defore they run . 355
N orton Hell.
BEAUTIFUL. hendmede gj)ld &amp; sliver
Jewelry - Wedding rings - et senSible
prices. J.P. Goldweaver Jewelers, 655
Elmwood lit Ferry St. 881-3400.
SEPT. 6th (one way only) $109.00
Nlagare Fells to L.ondon (Getwlck).
323/316 Norton.;sll-3602, University

Trev~

~

DAVID1 Have fun on your N.J.
all-eKpenses-peld vecatlon. Wish you
were here. L.ove, Shar.

MISCELLANEOUS
TWO FEMALE roommates wented for
house 2 111 blocks from camous. $52.50
per month plus utilities. Start Aug. or
Sept. Call Karen or Elyse, 837-4964.

1969 BUICK convertible, light blue
with white top. 351 V-8 engine, power
steering encl brakes, deluxe Interior,
radio, white walls. Owner running away
to Rio . Must ncrlflce. $1795.
831·3610.

I

AVAII...ABL.E August
al)llttment suitable for
bloctcs from umpus.
plus utilities. 837·2726

bitween Harlem - kenSington and
Meln- Chippewa er~. 833·7270.

APT.

GUSTAV (no frills or trumpeting,
please) will xerox anything for $.08 a
copy. (CheapMI rate we know In this
town.)

SEN IOR MALE n ..ds a place to live.
$50/mo. maximum . Call Dan,
652-0569.

EXPERIENCED ,.fast typing by electric
typewriter - theses, term papers, etc.
$.40 per page, c.111 873·1305.

TWO GRAD students desire roommate
for modern air-conditioned apt. Prlvete
room and bath. $69/mo. 688-6436.

RIDE BOARD

PROFESSIONAL typing service, work
done on IBM magnetic cord equipment.
F•st, error-free copy, Unlimited
originals. Specializing In all types of
dlssertetlons and theses. Call 837-6558.

WANTED by staff employee - Dally
to/from Ridge L.ea 9-5. L.lve In ~
Starln-Kenmore Avenue area of
Buffalo. Office 831 · 1801. Mrs.
Taublleb.

AFRICA Travel. Thinking about
visiting or Job opportunities In black
Afrlu, write tA Africa Trevel Club
A · 10 P.O. Boll 1002, Ellicott Station,
Buffalo, New York 14205.

DESPERATELY : round trip, Monday
- Thursday, 8 : 30 a.m. - 4 :00 p.m.

CASSETTES? Try the Whole Earth
Store for reasonable prices. RAM :
$3.00. 1485 Hel'tel near Norwalk.

- STERIEOS - TAPE RECORDERS

CHECK SOME OF
THESE VALUES • •

•

·Craig 8 Track
t~ar Player

WE ALSO CARRY A
COMPLETE LINE OF :
•
e

•

·SERVICE &amp; PARTS

CAMERA OUTFITS
FILM .

e

LUGGAGE
WINDOW FANS 20" $17 .97

•

STEREO COMPONENTS

•

TOYS

•

RADIO • TV • SERVICE DEPT.

•

AIR CONDITIONERS • EMERSON

•

CASSETTE TAPES

•

JEWELRY DEPT .

•

OU"FDOOR •GRILLS • FURNITURE

•

ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES

e

LARGE • SMALL
JEWELRY • COSTUME
SEMI PRECIOUS • PRECIOUS

Com..pare
$319.95

8-Trock Stereo Cortridge Ployer. Ploy.$ all $londord 8-trock cartridges. Avto·
ma:ic cartridge arid track s1~lection Man•.al program change at any time by
front panel bvtton. Has volvme, balance and tone control$. Illuminated proarom ind icators, Has cartridge slot doo~ for protection of tape head,,

AU MERCHANDISE NEW AND fULL MANUFACTURERS'

Compare $89.95

*

U 8 STUDENTS

*

" WE ARE JUST
AROUND THE CORNER"

WARRANTIES AND GUARANTEES APPLY
COMPLETE RADIO &amp; TV
REPAIR SERVICE DEPT.
ON PREMISES.

"IV£ SUYIC. WHAT WB SBU•

442 NIAGiARA fAllS BlVD. e 832-1595
STORE HOURS: 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. - Sat. 9 A.M. te 6 P.M.

lNSTANT CIEDIT TRMS
· 1IJift AN't' 81Uea

C-ITC:Aa•••

•an. ...aECA-

Friday, July 9, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�--.

Shaw Festival

Announcements
Summ~~ Opera Workshop and' UB Opera Club
wom..·s Liberation will hold free karate classes
for women Tues. and Thurs. from 4- 6 p.m. in are pfannir1s a production of Gilbert and Sullivan's
Prlnc«n ld,lo during the second summer session.
Room 340 Norton Hall. ·
Anyone interested in participating il'l ariy capacity,
TMU and Olp H\lbk,a will give a lecture on p_lease contact Mrs. Muriel Wolf - 633-7814..
Transcendental Meditation, Tues. at 8 p.m. in Room
The 1UB Vets Club will condu~t Draft ·
246 Norton Hall.
Counseling every Wednesday from noon to 4 p.m. in
Any undet)nduate student ' ipterested in Room 260 !Norton Hall.
tutoring college students for academic credit should
Summt~ session students who are eligible for
call the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory at 831 -3946.
Presently tutors are needed in Anatomy 307, benefits from the Veterans Administration ere
Finance 301, Management Science 301 and reminded tl1at a listing of their summer courses and
Chemistry 123. Applications are available at 88 credits for which they are enrolled must be flied
with the Financial Aid Office. If this was not done at
Wlnspear.
the time of registration,... veteran students shquld call
International Folk Danc:in1 will be h~tonight at Room 213, Harriman Library, to provide this .
information1.
from 8-11 p.m. in Room 30 Diefendorf Annex.

Studen1t Association's Speaker's Bureau 'needs
Psyc:homat will be held Monday from 2-4 p.m.
and Wednesday from 7-10 p.m. in Room . 232 interested students to help obtain speakers 'and set
up programs for the upcoming year. If inte.rested,
Norton Hall.
please co,nt.a1ct Mark Weiner in Room·205.
Anyone interested in fenc:in1 is advised to come
The UU 'Ridin1 Club will be going out two or
to Clark Gym Tuesdays at 7 :30 p.m.
three more times this summer. Dates and further
Gay Libention Front will sponsor a Gay Rap information will be published in The Spectrum.
Wednesday at 8 p.m. In Room 234 Norton Hall. All
The Eluffalo Mixed Media WorkshOp is
gay men and women are invited to stQp in and rap.
sponsoring two performances next week:
Performance 1 - Mary Fulkerson and the
A non-&lt;:redit course in Mandarin will be offered
by the Student Association every Saturday from Rochester l!&gt;ance Workshop in Haas Lounge on
10:3o-11 :30 a.m. in Room 340 Norton Hall. The Monday at 91 p.m.
Performance 2 - Thursday; watch for signs or
course will cost $5 for three months. Anyone who is
interested should contact Peter Kong, Room 205 phone 881~~60.

thru July 17: The Philanderer - sold out
thru july 18: Summer Days
july 26- Sept. 4 : Tonight ot 8:30
July 29 - Sept. 5: Wor1 Women ond Other
Trivia
July 30 - Aug. 1 : Music Today '71
Melody Fair
thru July 10: Fiddler on the Roof - sold out
· july 1.1 - B.B. King
July 12- 17: Hello Dolly/- Betsy Palmer
july 18 - AI Hirt
July 19-24 - jerry Lewis and Helen O'Connell
1 july 25 - Irish Rovers
July 26- 31: Kismet - john Raitt ond Anno
Morlo A/berghetti
Aug. 1 -Roberto Flock
Aug. 2-7- .Robert Goulet ond Norm Crosby
Aug. 8- The Four Seasons
Aug. 9- 14 - jerry Vale
Aug. 15 - Bobby Sherman
_
Aug. 16- 21: Sound of Music - . Carol Lawrence
Aug. 22 - The' Byrds
Aug. 23- 28 - Vikki Carr
Aug. 30-Sept. 4 - Sergio .franchi and Pat
Cooper ,
Sept. 5- john Gary
Peace Brid,e Exhibition Center
july 10 - Poco
Mariposa Folk Festival
july 9- 11 - Toronto Centre Island
Newport Folk Festival
July 16- 18

Sports Information

Canadian National Exhibition

Clark Gym recreation facilities are open to all
fee-paying University students with validated 1.0.
cards from second semester, plus all summer school
students. Graduate students must pay $3 and faculty
and staff must pay $5 for a permit to use the
facilities.

Aug. 20 - jerry Lewis
1,\ug. 21 - Ffpyd ·Cramer, Chet Atkins and
Boots. Randolph
·~
Aug, 22 - The Carpenters
Aug. 23 - The Fifth Dimension
Aug. 24 - Charley Pride
Aug. 25 - The Guess Who
Aug. 26- 27 - j ohnny Cash
Aug. 28 - Showcase of Champions - Drum &amp;
Bugle C9!PS Presentation
aug. 29 - Cavalcade of Massed Bands
Aug. 31 - The jackson Five
Sept. 1- 6 - Circus International

Clark Gym recreation hours are as follows:
3-10 p.m.,
Mon.- fri.; 9 a.m.- 6 p.m. Sa,.; and noon - 10 p.m.
Sun.
Swimming pool - 2:30- 3:30 P:m. Mon.- Fri.,
2- 3 p,m., Sat. and Sun. for faculty, staff and
families ; 3:30-4:30 p.m. Mon .-Fri., 7- 9 p.m. Wed.
and Sun., and 3- 5 p.m. Sat. for coed student
recreation; 7- 9 p.m. Mon. and Thurs., 3- 5 p.m.
Sun. for faculty, staff and students; 7- 9 p.m..Tues.
for women only.
Children using the pool must be accompanied
by a parent. Further information and reservations
for indoor handball and squash yourts can be
.
obtained by calling 831-5238.
Gym and facilities besides pool. -

Rochester War Memorial
July 24 - Ike &amp; Tina Turner and Canned Heat
Excursions
July 9- 11 - Stratford Weekend
july 13 - Shaw Festival - The Philanderer sold out
·
july 24 - Corning Glass Center
Aug. 13- 15 - Stratford Weekend
Aug. 17 - Shaw Festival - Tonightot8:30
Aug. 22 - Shaw Festival - Wor, Women ond
Other Trlvio

The UB Alumni Association will hold a golf
outing on July· 27 at South Shore Country Club in
Hamburg, N.Y. The $15 fee covers a round of golf,
plus a cocktail party and dinner following the event.
Tee-off time is between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.; prizes
will be awarded. Information and reservations are
available through the Alumni Office, 831-41,2 1.

Comink Events
Peace Bridge Exhibition Center

Students interested in playin1 roller hockey this
fall, call Jim at 836-6027. You must have your own
equipment. Check The Spectrum in September for
more details.
Frisby Tournament entries will be accepted
until noon on July 14, with actual competition
taking place on July 21. Three-member teams may
apply in Clark Gym, Room 5. Trophies will be
presented to the championship team.

'

Aug. 14 - Leon Russell - on sale Aug. 12
Jesus Christ - Superstar

Thefreshme,n get younger every year

Kleinhans Music Hall
Sept. 10 - Chuck Mangione &amp; the Buffalo
Philharmonic Orchestra - on sale Aug, 16

Archers Interested in shooting in the
tournament to be held July 28, may enter from July
12 to July 22 at noon. Fifteen ends of arrows will be
shot at five different distances.

What's Happening
Exhibit: Paintings by judith Rothschild, Center
Lounge, Norton Hall, ends Wed.
Play: Fiddler on the Roof, Melody fair, ends Sat.
Friday, July 9
Film: Brewster McCloud, continuous showings,
Conference Theater, Norton Hall, thru Sun.
Exc:ursion: Stratford Festival
t-e&lt;•ttvaJ · Mariposa Folk Festival, Toronto,1hru Sun.

July 28 - Rochester
Aug. 2 - Syracuse - both on sale Aug. 16

Concert: Tony Kosinec and Myles and Lenny, 8:30 Tuesday, July 13
p.m., Amherst Sr. High School
Fi'lm : Gror.d Illusion, 8 p.m., Diefendorf 147
Saturday, July 10
Concert: Music for T,wo Cities: Berlin qnd Paris,
8:30 p.m., Baird Recital Hall
Concert: Poco,· 8 :30 p.m., Peace Bridge Exhibition Excursion: Shaw Festival '
Center
Thursday1 july 15
Sunday, July 11
Exhibit: Paintings by Nadine P)ke, Center Lounge.
Concert: B.B. King, 8 p.m., Melody Fair
Norton Hall, thru july 30
Concert: Music of Two Cities: Berlin ond Paris, 8:30
Monday, July 12
p.m., Baird Recital Hall
Play: Heno Dolly, Melody Fair, thru july 17

,...

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&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
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Dr. Ketter accepts Cook's 'resignation'&#13;
Bernstein declines appointment</text>
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Ketter makes a mistake&#13;
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Human problems concern EPIS&#13;
House price confirmed</text>
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Convocation studies language</text>
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[Amherst construction moves on photographs]</text>
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'Interaction' goal of Amherst site design</text>
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Editorials&#13;
Feedback&#13;
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Save the seals&#13;
Chides Smear tactics&#13;
Struggle in Arts and Letters</text>
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In starry numbers</text>
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Insipid Nichols fiasco loses to mystery-thriller</text>
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Football's options outlined</text>
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Classified</text>
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Announcements&#13;
Available at the Ticket Office&#13;
Sports information&#13;
What's Happening</text>
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                    <text>Anonymou do11or

..

reveal~d

·Enormous sum spent
·.for Ketter's mansion

State Uniwnity of New York at eufl.lo

Vol. 22, No. 4

The "anonymous donor" who helped the University of
Buffalo Foundation, Inc. purchase a new $125,000 residence
for President Robert Ketter appears to be its present owner
Augustus E. Anderson lll, a prominent Cheektowagan
industrialist. The approximate price of the LeBrun property
was discovered by examining the deed to the house, a copy
of which was found in the public archives of the Erie County
Building.

by Jo-Ann Arm110
Cllmpur Edltot
The administrative decision to offer Marvin
Bomstein (Department of History) the Actina
Provoatshlp of Arts and Letters has spawned
considerable anger in that Faculty. The Arts and
Letters Steerina Committee vo ted last Monday 14-l
in disfavor of Dr. Bernstein's appointment to the
provostal J)Qll. ln addition, various members of the
Faculty have expreaed their dissatisfaction with Dr.
Bernstein , both privately and publiCly, to President
Robert Ketter.
Accordin&amp; to Albert Cook, · of the English
Department and Steering Committee member : " All
heU is breaking loose ... we are up in arms over this
seJection." Explainina the reasons for this furor, Dr.
Cook explained that Dr. Bemste.in~a appointment
would be disast;rous as he totally lacks the
qualifications necessary for the position.
In a Jetter to the Faculty of Am and Letters,
Bruce Jackson and Thomas Walker, Faculty
committee members, reported that most of those
present at .Mon&lt;!_ay's meeting "felt after the meetina
that Prof. Bernstein was the worst candidate for any
position the administration of this University has
ever presen~ us."
Administrative sycophant
Specifically, Faculty members fault Dr.
Bernstein, as an economist-historian, with bavina no
experience to be the provost of faculty involved with
the humanities. In addition, Dr. Cook labelled Dr.
Bernstein as- a sychophant of the administration and
accused him of beina involved with alJepd attempts
to deny Robert Llvely's appointment as History
Department chairman : "This is certainly not the
kind of man l would want representing our Faculty
to the administration."
Supporting this charge, Drs. Jackson and Walker

Connolly opinion on Bernstein

Appointment unacceptable

June 28, 1971

Dr. Robert L. Ketter, President
108 Hayes Hall
Campus
Dear Bob :
I must repeat in writing my own personal
reaction to your suggestion that Dr. Marvin
Bernstein be appointed as Acting Provost of the
Faculty of Arts and Letters.
His appointment would be a disaster of a major
order. He does not begin to have the slightest
rapport with the major portion of this Faculty and,
though be promises reasonableness 1&amp;d eood
intentions (qualities which be no doubt possesses
and intends to offer the Faculty, however
blunderinaly), these qualifies are not, in themselves,
sufficient to carry him throuJ)l the roup waters of
the admiJUstration of that Faculty. He must earn, for
be bas not them, the confidence and loyalty of that
Faculty. By his conduct of the Search Committee
(admittedly a bad committee that was either
cleliped to fail or so constituted out of lack of
• kDowled&amp;e of this Faculty that it w• bound to f.ail),
he has disqualified himself from sttrvin&amp; u provost of
this Faculty. Admittedly, he will carry mto the
office that which I did not; namely, the confidence
of the Executive Vice President. but that is exactly,
.,.m, what will erode the confidence of tb.ia

2, 1ft11

Provostialoffer to Bernstein
irks Arts and Letters faculty

When asked to verify the rel~e iuued by Mr. DeSantiA'
$125 ,000 price taa Robert Loken d~ment.
presiden t of 1he foundation,
~· release in question, dated
replied that he wu unable to do in mid-May of this year, reported
so. He said that to give the cost of only that neaotiatiOD$ were still
the residence would reveal the aoina on reprdina the a~tual
"anonymity of a substantial gift" acquisition of the residence and
by the owner to the foundation. that it was being acqUired without
"He has asked us not to divulge the use of state funds. It said very
the amount of his gift," Dr. little reprdina the actual details
Loken said. To do this would of the. house itself and did not
mention any cost figures for the
pre.~nt the foundation from
_ pttina it, he explained. Dr. Loken obvious reason that it WaS not
dld aaree, thouah, tbat it was bouaht as of that wrltina.
conect to say that the lift was
made by the owner of the 'Scrowwe around'
Reprdina who will furnish the
mansion.
mansion, Dr. Loken replied that
the foundation probably will do
Nocommeat
that or the University will
However, Mr. Anderson baa "scrounae around" for some
repeatedly refused to make any
fumiahinp. There was a areat
comment about the recent sale of likelihood that the furnit\UC
his house an,d foundation officers .would come from the previous
continue their refusal to
P1esidential mansion, tho Frank
specifically identify the "donor.••
Uoyd Wri&amp;ht house on Jewett
Amona those officers contacted
Pkwy., he ll&amp;id. In any case, he
were its secretary-treasurer,
stressed that no state tax monies
Echnrd Doty.
would be used.
Mr. Doty, also Vice President
Dr. Loken added that the
for Operations and Systems at tho . Wriaht residence, previously the
State Univel'Sity of Buffalo, home of former State University
refused to pve any details at all, of Buffa lo President Nartin
referrina The SJH!ctn~m reporter Meyenon, would {&gt;tobably be
to James DeSantis, director for used to house the University
Information Services. He said that Archives and some other
all the information that would be University departments "suited"
needed could be found in a press to it.

Editor's note: The recent announcement tluu
Pruident Robert Ketter offered the Acting
Provostship of the Faculty of Arts and Letters to
Marvin Bernrtein has drawn much criticism from
different parts of the University. Various members
have. in fact, directly communicated their
dissatisfaction to the administration. One such
faculty reaction, that of the current A cling Provost
of Arts and Letters Thorruu Connolly, was obtained
by The Spectrum through informed University
sources. The following is that letter.

F~, Jllty

Faculty, for the Executive Vice President has
consistently listened to the professionally inferior
and numerically insignificant portion of this Faculty.
It would almost appear as though Albert Somit (who
- astonishingly - asked the accreditation team that
was inspecting the Art Department this incredible
question : "What is an Art Department doing in a
university anyway?' ' ) is consciously or
unconsciously attempting to destroy one of the
strongest faculties in this University. This is a strange
endorsement for anyone who aspires to the
provostship - not acting
as Prof. Bernstein
apparently does to carry to the Faculty for which he
is personally to be the spokesman and chief
advocate.
This afternoon (J une 28 , 1971 ). Prof. Bernstein
met with the currently-resident members of the
three standing commjttees of the Faculty . His
answers to questions consistently demonstrated that
he could not muster . any support from those
committees, nor from the Faculty as a whole. They
voted 14- 1 against his appointment as acting
provost. (At some point you must listen to the
message that Prof. Arcudi is a minority of one on
these committees, the members of which,
unfort unately as a result of hls persistent nagging at
their obvious mandate from the Faculty, have now
beJUn to express openly their scorn of his academic
standards and his own claims to represent 25% of the
Faculty. I cannot condone, on the humane level,
their open contempt of this poor man, but I must
recopize it.)
Surely a rational administrator cannot continue
to listen to an absurd minority; nor can be continue
to distrust, fear and anariJy oppose the clear
mandates of the majority of one of its moat
distin&amp;uished faculties.
What shall we do and where shall we ao? I think
that it is time that you bepn placiDa trust in a lfOUP
of academic persons that - by and laqe and with
few exceptions - bas demonstrated that it is
distinauJshed, responsible, reuontble and able
~ntlnued

;

· ······ · ·· · · ··· ··· · ····· ··· · ···· · ········~ · ·~·~,~-~ ' ~'~,-~~ ~· ~, .

'

on

p~~ge

4--

· ·~·~·,-~,····-··· · ·····~······ ·

further stated : "Altbouab he never quite a.rtiallated
it fully , it seemed clear to many of us that Prof.
Bernstein considered his primary allepance to be to
upper administration, and that be considered the
primary responsibility of the provostsbip that of
carrying out the President's orders rather than
articulating the Faculty's mandates."
Other Faculty criticisms of Dr. Bernstein
include his chairing of the Arts and Letters Provost
Search Committee which was censured by the Arts
and Letters Appointments, Promotions and Tenure
Committee, the Educational Policy Committee, and
the Council of Chairmen. In their letter to the
Faculty, Drs. Jackson and Walker said "that
unprecedented censure resulted from the Search
Committee's failure to consu)t adequately with this
faculty in its quest."
Forced appointment
In a recent letter to President Ketter, Thomas
Connolly, current Acting Provost, criticized Dr.
Bernstein's viability as a canclidate and condemned
the administration for forcing his appointment.
Referring to a list of nine Faculty-approved names
submitted to Dr. Ketter for the provostal position,
Dr. Connolly severly criticized the administration for
not selecting a candidate more acceptable to the
Faculty. He continued that there are a wide variety
of candidates for the position who are much closer
to the Faculty and have more of a Faculty
viewpoint:
Dr. Connolly charged in his letter that Dr.
Ketter has "done much to erode the confidence of
this faculty in your administration by this offer of
an appointment." Concurring with this, Drs. Jaclcson
and Walker maintained that "in Bernstein's
nomination we face the most serious challenae to
Faculty autonomy and dignity since the
appointment of President Ketter." (There was no
faculty input in the selection of Dr. Ketter as
President.) To combat this thread and to tipt Dr.
Bernstein's appointment, they urge all Faculty
members to contact both the adm.ini.stration and Dr.
Bernstein in efforts to dissuade him from acceptina.
Coo~tdec.moo

The official appointment of Dr. Bernstein to the
post is dependent upon his acceptance of it. His
deciaion, Dr. Bernstein explained, is contin&amp;ent on
whether he can be aasured that his appointment
would not damap the functionina of the Faculty: "I
am trying to aet a better feel of the situation . . . 1
must truly auesa the feelinp of the faculty." To aid
in this determination. Dr. Bernstein is cw:reotly
~ntlnued

Ofl

·· ·· · ······ -········· ·

.,...

+-

�,

~.College"of Women's

Summer seCu!ity in Norton

Aide prognm continues

byf.dJiffe
S'p«nm Stoff Writer

· Alter discovering a $1190
auplu• in the apring operating
budpt for student aecudty aides,
the Norton Hall adminiatratioo
baa decided to revive the proaram
for the summer motttbs.
Instituted during the drug crisis
in March and Apdl, the Norton
Hall security aide proaram wu
apeciflcally deafaned to employ
the technique of verbal persuasion
'u
opposed to physical
confrontation in attempting to
predict and control problems
before they develop.
By playin&amp; off "peer IJOUp
preaaures.'' the prosram is
desianed to contain potentially
danprous situations by insuring
that problems developing between
students are mediated by fellow
students.
The security aides in Norton
Union focus their activities on the
fint tloor and. recreation areas.
However, their speclfic building
assianments are judged by their
supervUing night manager as room
usage demands. Their primary
assianment is to develop "peer
sroup" relations by seeking as
many personal interactions as
possible.

The inability of anyone to
specify these chanps u resultant
of the aide system has been
affected by many concurrent
alterations in the Norton Hall
atmosphere. These have occurred
u a result of the curtaillna of
weekend and evenina beer sales,
the shifting of much of the illegal
drua traffic because of the
temporary closing of the
recreation area and the closer
~erutiny of sales of alcbohol to
minors.

Operational problems
One of the operational
problems emphasized by the aides
was. their lack of proper training.
Approximately $1500 was
allocated in the spring budget for
training, yet it was never spent
(hence tho S llOO surplus). One
aide commented : "We have not
had training outside of a verbal
excbanae of the problems that we
have enco untered and a
description of bow we handled
the situation. We need more
knowledge on how to handle
specific situations," The aides
noted that they are going to
participate in lectures on drugs
and the addict to be presented by
the Together Foundation.
Original funding of the security
aide program was o/eated through
a compromise between Sub-Board
No true tat
"People realli:e we are not out l, Inc. and Hayes Hall in· which
to bust anybody.'' stated one each party a11eed to fund
aide. " We act as walking approximately half the prosram.
information booths,.. When an However, as of yet, the
infraction of a rule is discovered, administration's share bas not
the aides will explain to the materialized. According to Phillip
offender why the behavior is not Leaf, former chairm an of
wanted and ask him to pursue his Sub-Board I, Jim Gruber, director
of Norton Union, was instructed
pleasure elsew..llere.
Since the inception of the to· inform the administration that
security aide proiJam, many of this was a one-shot deal which
the problems which fostered its Sub-Board could not afford to
creation have been eliminated . continue on an on-going basis.
However, no one seems to be able
to specifically attribute the 'Vigilante groups'
This p olicy bas resulted in a
improvements to the aides alone.
Al Ermanovics, assistant director conflict between Mr. Gruber and
of Norton, feels that there "hasn't Sub-Board. In Norton Hall budget
been a true test of the program." hearings, Mr. Gruber stated that

Rights fights image

" the State will not sublidize the
proaram this year." A.s a reault,"he
included the funds tot t}!e
continuation of the proat!Jn: In
the Sub-Board portion Of the
Norton Hall buqet.
Mr. Gruber bu characterized
the issue u a "political football
between the adminiltration and
students." He afiUCI that this is
the " belt way to pin c:redJbility

I

-osterrelcher

AIErmanovics
for students to have a say over the
Union."
Countering this argument, Mr.
Leaf said: "It is ridiculous that
stude nt s have to organize
themselves into vigilante sroups to
protect themselves in the Union."
He additionally argued that "the
administration"" is hypocritical in
that it can find mone~ to protect
the participants in the Linguistics
Institute from setting riJlped off
I referring to tbe extenstve dorm
security aide pro(!Jam) while it
doesn't have the funds to protect
its own students."
The result of this standoff is
that the future of the security
aide program for next year is very
much in doubt.

To combat an educational
system that reinforces "imaaes of
women as passive, dependent,
unintellectual and unable to
analyze and understand," a newly
instituted College of Women's
Studies at ,the State University of
Buffalo this fall will offer courses,
films and speakers on female
riahts and social roles.
.
As presently concetved l
Women's College courses would
be ~pen to all, but women would
recmve fint preference over men
in class admission and teaching
opportunities. In addition, all
voting representatives of the
co lleae would be female .
Controversy has already arisen
over this proposal, however, and
an Assembly Program Evaluatin&amp;
Committee ho,Pes to secure legal
advice on the question ..as soon as
possible."
No limitations or prerequisites,
however, are placed on women
enrolling in the college so that
registrants vary in age, interests,
social and economic backaround .
The college, in effect, merges the
ideas of mothers, divorcees,
women libites and members of the
Buffalo Women's Rigbts group.
Nonetheless, according to a
college spo~woman, aU share
the belief that ..education has not
taught women the skills necessary
to have a critical understanding of
how a society operates."

Stereotyped roles
Members of the. college note,
for example, that "education in
American universities is often the
study of the culture and historical
development tff the middle and

white male... To
21 are
anticipated for the fall ~mester w i 11 s t r e as "Women's
Consciousness in Literature,
Imperialism and its Relationship
I to
Sexism , Self Defense,
CbiJdcare" and "Women &amp;nd
Their Bodies."
An important part of the
college's program will be its full
lecture schedule. Important guest
spealcers will inclu4e Kate Millet,
auth or of Sexual PolitiCI Naomi
Weissteim assistant professor of
Psycholo~ at Loyola University
Gene Damon of the Daughters of
Libites and Carol Glassman of
Welfare Workers for Chanae.
A series of films is also planned
by the Women's College. A college
spokeswoman explained that by
first showing $Orne "typically
sexist" movies (An Am~rlcan
Woman aand Godard's A Woman
i1 a Woman) and then by
analyz.i.n&amp; them, instructors will
expose and ex plain the
stereotypes and roles traditionally
assigned to women.
Occupying offices at 108
Winspear Ave., the College of
Womeri's Studies is expected to be
fully operating late this summer.
With the Collegiate Assembly's
April approval of the Women's
College and with its consolidation
of four other inactive colleges, the
number of Colleges stand at l S.
For the Women 's Colleae,
specifically, this means at least
part of the $206,000 budgeted to
the Colleges (of which the women
as.lced for $35,000) will actually
be allotted to them .

'Linguistic l~titute
Bundredl of acholan from umversities aero•
the world are expected to visit the State University
of Buffalo as part of the laraest Linpiltic Institutes
in biatory.
Coverina a period of eight weeki, the Institute
will beain July 6 and will feature over 120 public
eventa, from lectures by such linauiatic notables as
Noam Chomsky and Dan Slobin to panels analyr.ina
typet of folk narratives.

Student activity fee reduced
The Student Association voted last Tuesday to reduce the student activity fees
from S69 to $67 next fall. The reduction was made after consideration of the surplus
111onies from last year's budaet when it was found that the SA did not have a need for the
hiaher fee.
While the fees have been reduced, lan DeWaal, SA president said that all prosrams
would be maintained at their present leveL This trend indicates that, proportionately, the
student is payina for an enlaraed prosram.
or the present $754,000 budaet, $240,000 bas been allocated for athletic activities.
The remaining $514,000 is to be divided between Sub-Board I and tbe Student
Association.
Commenting on the reduction, lan DeWaal said that it is " a sianlflcant step in
insurina that student activity fees are prudently and effectively spent."

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The $ptJCtrum is published weekly
during the summer sessions by
Sub-Board I, Inc. of the State
Univeristy of New York at Buffalo.
Offices are loc.ted at 355 Norton
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et Buffalo. Telephone: Aree code
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Gustav never craves originals.
Gus is a Xerox 720 and the original copy never enters the machine, so there
is no chance;of originals being eaten, crumpled, shredded or burnt. Pretty
sneaky for $.08, eh?

Represented for advertising by
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two. The Spectrum. Friday, July 2, 1971

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�Disruption at Acheson Annex

Hearing Commission sends
recommendations to Ketter
Four student arrests. the deliberations of a

the hearing in light of Mr. Levy's absence, Richard
Powell, chairman committee, cited Section VU of
the committee's regulations : " . . . if a person
deliberately conducts himself in a manner disruptive
of the hearing .. . [that hearing is empowered] to
exclude him~nd proceed with hearing as if he had
not appeared."

closed hearing, cries of racism and efforts t o build
student support, were the aftermath of charges
brought against David Levy, a student suspended for
disrupting a summer session history class.
Three of the arrests followed a scuffle with
campus security as approximately 20 persons
reportedly attempted to c r ash a closed
administrative hearing in Acheson Annex last
Monday night. Those arrested included William
Ford, Sherilyn , Levy and Robert Steinhorn, on
charges of criminal trespassing, disorderly conduct,
obstructing government administration and resisting
arrest.
Accused of criminal trespass in violation of his
suspension, Mr. Levy was arrested last Tuesday
afternoon by campus security at the entrance of
Norton Hall. Mr. Levy was suspended after John
Halstead, his course instructor in "Modern
Imperialism," sent a letter to President Ketter
charging him with class disruption and requesting his
suspension. Monday's closed session of the Hearing
Committee on Campus Disruption, a permanent
body of staff, faculty and students which
recommends disciplinary action to President Ketter,
was to ftnally decide Dr. Halstead's charges against
Mr. Levy and determine his status at the University.

• Dr. Halstead testified at the hearing charging
that Mr. Levy was guilty of not simple disagreement
with prepared lectures, but of planned and
continued disruption and harassment. He continued
that he attempted to meet privately: with Mr. Levy
to reconcile any differences. However, according to
Dr. Halstead, "he absolutely refused."
Expulsion requested
Other submitted evidence included statements
from students in -the course supporting Dr.
Halstead's charges of disruption and a sworn
affadavit . by Robert Pope, a profe6Sor from the .
History Department. The content of these
statements, however, were not publicly disclosed. ln
addition, another prosecution witness was not called,
as the committee's prosecuto r, Kevin Malony,
explained, for reasons of his personal safety.
Mr. MaJony, a fter submitting alJ his evidence,
asked for Mr. Levy's expulsion " in view of what has
already occurred in class." The recommendations of
the hearing co mmission were not made public, but
forwarded to President Ketter who will act on them
within the next ten days.

Disruptive hearing
Although Mr. Levy refused to appear before the
committee demanding an "open, fair" hearing,
evidence was given and testimony heard. To justify
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Friday, July 2, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�Bernstein rinacceptaDle. • •
-continued from paee 1-

almost always to lau&amp;h at administrative absurdltics.
1 think that you should send us candidates (if you

choose to pick them, altho~ah I should prefer you to
ask us to nominate them) that are dedicated to
maintainin&amp; (in zero-arowth yean) and improving
(wherever possible) the strengths that we already
have, and struggling, despite whatever local or
stat~wide opposition there be, to building strength
where we have little or none. I think that you should
pay more attention in the future to the former
rather than to the latter. I think that,)llOre than my
immediately preceding recommendation, you should
pay very much attention to what your Faculty
Corn.ntittees recommend to you.
If you enjoy working with an acting provost
who received a vote of 14- 1 against his
appointment, from the major committees with
which he will have to work, I suggest that you
appoint Marvin Bernstein. If you would lilce to work
with someone who can work with and on behalf of
the Faculty of Arts and Letters, I suggest that you
10 back to. the letter of Seymour Fink to you, dated
April 30, 1971 , in which the names of nine oenons

were advanced for the Provostship of the Faculty of
arts and Letters.
It astonishes me that you have gone so far down
the path toward appointing an acting provost
(although, despite what you told our assembled
committees today, be thinks that he is a candidate
for a full-term provostship and we do not consider
him as qualified for either post), after promising our
assembled committees on June 10, 1971 that they
would be consulted even thou&amp;h the candidate,
Marvin Bernstein, informed us that be was offered
the position on June 3, 1971. ·
You have done much to erode the confidence of
this Faculty in your administration by this offer of
an appointment. I cannot see how Dr. Bernstein,
who is an honorable man, can accept such an
appointmentt.
Faithfully yours,
Thomas E. Connolly
Acting Provost

Provostial offer . • •
-continued from page 1-

Faculty's problems or needs. He resents this
Faculty's censure of his search committee's work last
spring. He seems punitive rather than creative." The
continued that "his orientations is to the
Administration rather than the Faculty. He lusts for
the job far more than any serious self~xamination
should reasonably permit."
Dr. Bernstein flatly denies charges that he is an
administration lackey : " 1 am my own man. I am
honest with and at peace with my conscience." He
continued that he has identified himself with and
will continue to fight for the Faculty and that he
. In addition, Dr. Arcudi maintained that the would not " wear anyone's collar."
committee " bad no sound academic criteria for
In light of much Faculty hostility to his
scuttling him [Dr. Bernstein 1. Their primary
appointment, Dr. Bernstein must fin~lly decide if he
objective was that Dr. Bernstein did not
will accept the position. However, several Faculty
philosophically or politically agree with them ."
members have intimated that if he is appointed, "the
According to Dr. Arcudi, who was the only member
matter will not end there." Dr. Cook, in a letter to
of the Steering Committee to vote for Dr. Bernstein;
President Ketter, has threatened to resign his
" Dr. Bernstein is a proven scholar and respected
historian who has the ability to lead us as a faculty." administrative post if and when Dr. Bernstein is
appointed. He also asserted that the Faculty of Arts
However, Drs. Jackson and Wallcer state that and )..etters are "not going to go down without
''Prof. Bernstein bas slight knowledge of this fighting."
meeting with individual members of Arts and
Letters.
Discounting the 14- 1 vote of the Steering
Committee, Dr. Bernstein said: "When I meet with
committee members face to face, what they say is a
lot different from bow they voted." Bruno Arcudi,
chairman of the Spanish, Italian and Portugese
Department, also characterized the committee as
"not .reflecting in any way the feeling of the whole
faculty , but only of the English Department ... they
do not speak for the Faculty."

-osterrelc:her

'W.zzaf?

A scuffle between Campus Security and
student supporters of David Levy last Monday night resulted in
arrests and charges of police brutality. One member of Campus
SecuritY who was confronted with accusations of not bei119
properly identified justified the ab$81lce of his bade. According to
the officer, the clasp of his badge was broken in the melee with the
students.

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Paqe four. The Spectrum. Friday, July 2, 1971

COOL

�.·

..
.

.

•

Sedita advised
on Talbert Mall.
While a special I S•man squad lot early Su~day morning.
of black policemen bepn · Hamilton was employed tiy the
patrolling the trouble-pJaaued Burns Detective Aaency and
Talbert Mall area, Mayor Frank A. worked an after-midnight shift
Sedita met with members ofthe patrolling a construction site at
black commwfity Wednesday.
Swan and Hickory Sts.
"As far as the law enforcement
question is concerned, we will Intimidation
have to depend on the police,"
"Who ls going to be stabbed 40
Sedita said. He advi!eG black times tonight?" asked one
parents to work with their resident of the Talbert Mall. He
children to avoid violence.
said ganp are causing the violence
The meeting - held in the and intimidating residents of the
mayor's City Hall office - was Mall. ·
arranged by Councilmen Georae
Warnilig that the situation has
K. Arthur and Horace C. Johnson. become extremely tense, Johnson
The two councilmen had earlier said adults are beginning to arm
talked with leaders ·or youth themselves for protection.
pnp. Violence at the Talbert and
"We must have more... black
Ellicott Mall's has been blamed on policemen on the police force ,"
the gangs. No gang leaders Sedita emphasized, while he
attended the conference.
d ~ fended
efforts by his
administration in that direction.
"Law enforcement," he reminded,
Consultation
Sedita said that along with the "is not the solution," stressing
IS-member detachment of black that the Social causes of crime
police, SO community peace must be treated .
Responding to a charge that
officers will be mobilized to curb
criminal activity on the east side. the city has failed to put its
The decision was reached in priorities in order, Sedita
co n sultation with Police indicated that the city administer
Commissioner Frank N. Felicetta, "Five million dollars in Model
Cities funds for programs headed
according to Sedita.
The action by city officials by black people and staffed by
follows a weekend that saw one black people."
murder and at least six shootings
A coo rdinator of BUILD,
and beatings in the Talbert Mall William Gaiter insisted that "the
vicinity. A police patrol car was city is not meeting area needs."
fired upon by a sniper on Gaiter said a total program
Monday. One high police official involving housing, recreational
ha s termed the Mall an facilities and schools is necessary
underworld haven for criminals to avoid situations like that at the
"similar to the Casbah of Algiers." Mall.
Among the victims was
In a policy s tat e ment
Gregory Hamilton, 23, who was concerning the special black
found dead in the Mall's parkina pollee squad, BUQ.D stated its

support for the unit as a method
to deal with the youth crime
situatio11. The squad. however,
"should not be viewed as a
panacia to the black community's
c rime problem," the release
emphasized.
Blaming insufficient funding,
Model Cities Director Jesse Nash
ex plained that the
federall)r-sponsored program " has
never been made to do the kind of
thing M1r. Gaiter is talking about."
Social inequities, he said, "can
never b~' solved by the amount of
money we have. But I think we're
doing am excellent job given the
amount of money that we do have
to work with."

Defenanre
One person complained that
the mayor appeared too defensive
regarding his record in the black
commu1nity . "I think they

[ representttives of east side facilities. Another called for a
ganp) should have been here so drive to eliminate drug pushing on
we could talk with these people the east side.
·
A check with the Municipal
on a fmt-hand basis," be added.
Councilman Arthur relayed Housing Authority which
some of the demands of the black pperated the housing project
gal)gs, including one asking for a indicates that less than 20% of the
meeting with the mayor and families living at the Talbert Mall
police commissioner. Sedita . are headed by two parents.
admitfed that he should and
The Mall, which is located
would look into the demands. along Jefferson Ave., was built 12
The pastor of the Michigan St. years ago. Designed to provide
Pilgrim Baptist Church, the Rev. housing for the city's low-income
R.D. HoUowl'y, said that the residents, it contains 763 dwelling
problem of youth-caused crime unit s. Apartments can
must be dealt with in the home. accommodate from one to 12
"I don't want any policeman to persons. The minimum rent for a
do something for my son that I two-room apartment ls S4S a
should be doing myself," he said. month; the rent is determined by
the size of the apartment and the
Frustration
income of each family. About
" We're dealins with people 2247 people are now living at
who have been robbed of their Talbert according to the MHA,
destinies," said one interested and there are 169 vacant
citizen at the meeting, who apartments.
!emphasized that the basic causes
"Sure they are afraid," said
of youth frustration are Jack of Kane discussing crime at the Mall,
employment, inadequate "and we are losing some of our
schooling and poor housing best tenants."

Mall photos by Tom Cavness and Bob Hill

Friday, July 2, 1971 . The SpectrUm. Page five

..

�Ellsberg: Americans
bear the.responsibility
lbe man descril&gt;ed u the
source throuah which the
Pentaaon papen were released to
The New York Timu, Dr. Daniel
Ellsbera, surrendered Monday to
the United States Attorney in
Boston. He is charged with
unauthorized possession of secret
documents.
Dr. Ells berg Is a former
Defense Department aide and o~
of the 30 or 40 authors of the
Pentagon report. Though the
government sought to have him
held in $100,000 bail, the MJT
researchef was released on
$50,000 bail without surety. His
lawyen had successfuUy argued
that ' he had voluntarily turned
himself in at the time they had
promised he would. Despite those
assurances, the FBI spent last
weekend searching unsuccessfully
for Dr. Ellsbera.
He told the crowd of
newspapennen at the Post Office
Building which houses the federal
offices in Boston that he had
given the information contained
in the documents to Sen.
Fullbright in 1969. He added :
"This spring, after two invasions
and 9000 more American deaths,
I can only regret that at the same
time I did not release them to the
newspapers. I have now done so. I
,( ook this action solely at my
initiative.

Ellsbera: I think that a man I
read about named Bernard, who
put his rifle down to the ground
at the risk of his life and refused
the orders of his superior
commander at My Lai; he's a
hero.
Cronkite: You don't trnd them
on a higher level?
Ellsbert: That's a hard question
you've asked me. I hate - I hate
not to fmd it easy to answer. I
hate, as an American, not to find
it easy to answer. Looking at the
record it seems hard for me to
find men who have lived up to the
responsibilities of their office in
terms of not only what they did,
but of what they could have done,
what they should have done, given
their feelings.
Cronkite: What would you
expect to be revealed from the
documents that might come out
in future days or weeks? What's
still back there that we can look
forward to?

Lessons

Over-the-counter sales

Expansion food coops'goal

To expand and spread the idea of food coops
Ellsberg: Well, I thii\k that the
real Je~ns to be drawn are yet to are the dual goals of the Lexington and Allen Street
be seen by the public, and they're cooperatives. Established by its neighborhood
not from any one period or any members a year ago, the ooops are presently
one episode. They really come concerned with transforming their operations from a
from seeing the whole sweep of buying club to over-the-counter sales service.
Paul Spencer, a coop member and monthly
the history. There's never been a
year when there would have been coordinator for the Allentown store, explained that
a war in Indochina without as a buying club, the coops take advance orders from
individuals and then order en masse. Basically, he
American money fueling it.
End the war
The perception that I had,j}.lst said, "there is a poollng of money ahead of time to
"I did this clearly at my own like most people in the country , enable wholesale buying." This, he continued allows
jeopardy and I am prepared to thl}t this was in some sense an food to be purchased for substantially reduced prices
answer to aU the consequences of ongoing war which we had jOined with as much as 20- 40% reduction over retail
these decisions. That includes the for good or bad, screened out prices.
However, Mr. Spencer said that the coops are
personal consequences to me and many of the moral aspects of the
my family, whatever these may conflict, and to discover on the now interested in an expansion beyond this buying
be~ Would not you go to prison to contrary that in Indochina, if we club operation. This expansion would include a
help end this war?"
had not been supplying money reautar store front with over-the-counter sales. The
In an interview with Walter and the napalm and buying current coops have partly realized this type of sales
Cronkite telecast by CBS last soldiers and equipment and finally in the t..ndting of their fmb produce. Mr. Spencer
explained that the produce is bougbt from tbe
week, Dr. Ellsberg commented on supplying our own soldiers his feelings toward the war. The there would have been violence; farmer's market in large quantities and sold on
following is an excerpt from that there would have been violence demand in the coops.
interview.
among non-Communists, among
Cronkite: It's a black history as the sects, pofitical violence ... Policy and plans
According to Mr. Spencer, such over-the-counter
it's been drawn so far. Are there assasinations, raids, some degree
any heroes in it?
of guerilla action, Communists service is more profitable as it cuts down on book
against other Communists (the work and "eliminates a lot of screw-uJ,s." Other
froskyites were wiped out by future plans of the coop include amalt scale farming
other Communists in Saigon in operations, trucking in their own merchandise and a
'45) - there wouldn't have been bakery to be set up in conjunction with the New Age
anything that looked like a war. Restaurant .
All policy and plans, Mr. Spencer stressed, are
And to say that is to say that
Americans now bear major decided upon by the members of the food coop at
FORB~
responsibility, as I read this weekly meellnp. He further emphasized that all
.JUST THRILLING
history, for every death in combat
in Indochina in the l&amp;St 25 years,
and that's one million to two
~ 355Norton
million people.

usta
XEROXES

SUMMER

efforts are utilized to involve as many people in the
workings of the coop as possible. for example, he
explained, the po$ition of coordinator is a rotating
one with a different person in the office each month.
One of the problems of the coop in the past has
been a lack of participation by its members. "We're
supposed to be a coop and sometimes we really •
haven't functioned as o ne," Mr. Spencer
oommented. However, fhis problem has been
improved with more people who were once only
customers now worlcina for the coop.
Member participation
for the coop to function successfully, Mr.
Spencec explained that it's necessary for members to
spend about one hour a· week doing oook work. This
entails such work as baging orders, sitting in the
office and collecting food merchandise, .."We are
interested in having people participate at every level
- u customers and u workers. However, we don't
force people to work, but we do appreciate it,'' he
said.
Other problems of the coop have included
outside lepl complications. Mr. S_pencer said that
they had encountered a lot of "hassles" with such
apnciea as the Erie County Health Department and
the Building Inspector. In fact, last winter the
Allentown coop was closed down by the Health
Department. In spite of these problems, the
Lexington and Allentown food coops are
antlcipatina a very successful future with increased
support for their oollective ooncept. "We're a
definite benefit to the community . . . all we have to
do is get together and convince people that we are
for their own good," Mr. Spen cer concluded.

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SALES • SBVICE
e PARTS •

off

fage six. The Spectrum. Friday. July 2. 1971

Ja change of heart, call831-3610.1

A•t..rirefl ,..,.,

50%
Buffalo Textbook

I Dear Whom, thanks for stealing I
I my bicycle-outside of Foster I
I Annex, Tuesday night. It was my I
I only trusporution. If you have I

)

�I

~

,.

~_Freedo~ of the press up~eld

by Supreme Court decision ·
The Supreme Court Weclnelday dec:idcd by a
1o allow the Nr.t~ Yont 'Jlmer and
~aslrintton Pott to publi&amp;h atories and documents

6-3 vote

from the tec:ret Pentqon history of the Vietnamese
War. In a lbort, Wlliped majority opinion the court
stated that the pemment had failed to provide
justification for the illuance of a restraining order.
The declaion upholds the judgment of the
federal appeals court in Wuhington which pennitted
The Post to continue publication, and reverses the
decision of a federal appeals court in New York
which had prevented Tht Times from printing
material to which the government objected. All nine
justices wrote separate opinions, with Chief Justice
Warren Burger and Justices Harry Blackmun and
John Harlan dissenting. The six concurring o pinions
were written by Justices Hugo BlacJt, William
Douglas, William Brennan, Potter Stewart, Thurgood'
Marshall and Byron White.

ObterVen of the Supreme Court had felt sure of
the votes of teYen of the justices. The crucial
opinions were those of Justices Stewart and White.
Juatlce Stewart explained that the executive branch
has enjoyed enormous power In the areu of national
defense and International relations. He stressed that
"in the absence of tho governmental checks and
balances present in other areas of our national life
the only effective restraint upon executive policy
and power in the areas of national defense and
international affain may Ue in an enlightened
citizenry - In an informed and critical public
opinion which alone can here protect the values of
democratic government ... without an infdrmed and
free press there cannot be an enlightened people."

News analysis

Government vs.
first amendment.
Conpea, which were 10 popular
amoaa members of the Joll.Mon
administration. The 10\'enuDent
of the United Statea insists upon
dilpla)'in&amp; a hilb depee of
mist:rust for the people they are
supposed to be repreaentifta.

by~Lipmt•
City Editor'

CBS News reported lut week
that one official in the Pentaaon
had written a memo to his feUows
deplorina the overuse of 'top
secret' and other such security
desiJnations. He uraed that they Diaent
Governmental attempts to
reexamine their use of these
categories with an. eye toward censor The New York nmu,
Wa1hlngton Po1t and other
limiting ttleir usage.
That note was classified 'top newspapers around the nation which have subsequently printed
secret.'
There, in this short anecdote, portions of the report amount to
can be found the ·essence of the an attack on the First
controversy over the Pentaaon Amendment of the Constitution.
papers. The important issue is not As Jud&amp;e J . SkeUy Wright of the
Taxi dttvus?
so
much the content of the United States Court of Appeals
Justice White based his ooncurrence solely on
history - while the actions which for the District of Columbia
the "concededly extraordinary protection against are described have embanssed Circuit wrote in his opinion
prior restraints enjoyed by the press under our many l(&gt;vernment o fficials, they dissenting with the decision by
Black's opinion
constitutional system ." He added that he did not do not portray anythina that that court restraining the
Justice Black, the 85-year old senior member of believe that the First Amendment would prevent many w ar c ritics have not Wathlngton Po1t from printing
the court, attacked some of his coUeagues for their injunctions in all cases involving the publication of suspected for quite a while - tn.tt excerpts of the report : ''This is a
the secrecy with whjch the acts sad day for America. Today, for
action last week in barring the newspapers from government plans or operations.
described were enacted and the the first time in 200 years of our
printing any o f the report while the court
Chief Justice Burger reproached The Times for censorship · which has occurred history , the Exec ut ive
deliberated the case. Black, Douglas, Brennan and having printed the material without having subsequent to its publication. The Department has succeeded in
Marshall dissented from the majority opinion at that attempt ed to rea ch some agreement with fact that such actions have been stopping the presses. It has
perpetrated by an administration enlisted the judiciary in the
time.
government officials. He stated : ''To me it is hardly
is not even mentioned in suppression of four most precious
whlch
In
my
view,
it
is
unfortunate
that
some
of
my
"
believable that a newspaper long regarded as a great the report can only give rise to the freedoms. As if the long and
brethren are apparently willing to hold that institution in American life would fail to perform suspicion that th ey themselves sordid war in Southeast Asia bad
publication of news may sometimes be enjoined," one of the basic and simple duties of every citizen have become involved ln the very not already done enough harm to
our people, it now is used to cu t
Justice Black wrote. "Such a holding would make a with respect to the discovery or possession of stolen same type o f activity.
o ut the heart of our free
shambles of the First Amendment." He added : "The property or secret government documents.
institutions and system of
Continued deception
guarding of military and diplomatic secrets at the
The simple fact is that the government . I decline to foJJow
"That
duty,
I
had
tho
ught
perh
aps
naively
expense of informed representative government
my coUeagues down this road and
was to report forthwith to responsible public aovernm~nt bas not proven that
provides no real sec"lrity for our republic."
national security could in any way I mu st forcefully state my
A long-time defender of civil liberties, Justice officers. This duty rests on taxi drivers, justices and be endaoaered by revealin&amp; the dissent ."
the New York Times ."
actions of former presidents and
Douglas declared : "Secrecy in government is
Government's burden
fundamentally anti -democ ratic, perpetuating
William Glendon, the attorney for The Post , said their advisors. The report is
What the courts have thus far
dangerous to the prestige not onJy
bureaucratic errors. Open debate and discussion of that he felt the decision would in the f~ture
refused
to acknowledge is that
of those discussed but of Mr.
public issues are vital to our national health." He discourage the government from seeking to restrain Nixon and company , who have The New York Times is not
charged that the restraints on publication of the publication of other information . " In the future continued to utilize those same responsible for proving that
documents du ring the series of court actions there will be a case called U.S . vs ~ the Washington plans. The present administration publication of the history will not
be dangerous to national security,
"constitute a flouting of the principles of the First Post and we hope everybody would have read it," he has attempted to continue the the burden of proof is on the
same type of deceptions, not just
offered .
Amendment."
of the American public but also of government. The government has
not in any way proven this case, it
has
in fact requested the
A liCE HOLIDAY RIDE
restraining orders against The
TO THE ORIEIT
1lmu and The Po1t with the
stated intent of gainin&amp; time to,substantiate its claims. What the
executive branch seems to be
really fearful of is the effect such
documents would have on the
American public, not what the
Communists wiU learn from the
report.
From Mr. Nixon' 11 noint n f
-co ntinued

on

page

14-

CLAIIIPIII

-

15 WOROS or less for Sl.25 ~tddltlonal w ord

$ .05 for uch

ADS SUBMITTEO on or before
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._,..aOfSif IVIf. 1-4 .... DAI£Y M .. 1'..11.

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PAYMENT
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355 N ORTON HALL

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WASHIIIGIO. SURI'LUS CIIITIR
a•r-urr

lfUS &amp; THINGS - M..t Styl.s f• Y•11 ._..,.,
Mar•posn tS thr ee days o f folk mus1c and dance c raft s .1nl1
good feelings on Toronto Island. Jt.ly 9 10 11 . B ut •I pnys
to come ear ly because 11 starts eac h day at 10 1n th e
morn1ng. and f1n1shes a t n•ne at n1ght Mus1c tn s111. places
on the s1 te nil dn y fo~one pnce. S3 iS per dny 1or S 10 tor
;:. weekend pa$51 Allhe Stl e S-1 50 per dny K1dc;undcr 12

50 cents. AdVance tickets at Norton Hall and
Buffalo Festival Ticket Office. Com e early, bring

friends, and feed the ducks.

manl~ll

~~~"-}

'

•

\

LIAn••AGOODS

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r....D..,JACKID

•oon.uv•
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SAYIMOMIY
SHOP liMY MAYY

iaJ&lt; itStlmL At rmcl rtDISLBniS

731-732 MAIM - ISS-1515 Mill TUPPa
J

•
Friday, July 2, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page seven

�.

I
Status symbol
The revelation of the $125,000 price tag on the LeBrun
mansion recently purchased by the ' University of Buffalo
Foundation is quite disturbing. Even more upsetting was the
scurrilous attempt by Foundation officers to hide not only
the cost, but the true details surrounding their clandestine
purchase.
A careful examination of the Foundation's tactics reveal
a deceitful strategy. First, the Foundation has consistently
emphasized that no state monies were used in the
acquisition. Further, they have drawn atten~ion to their
status as a private corporation. This, however, Ignores .the
fact that the Foundatlon is provided with a huge amount of
office space by the University. Also, they are so deeply
involved with the University in financial matters that they
are truly an integral part of this institution, not simply a
private corporation.
The private monies contention appears to be nothing
more than a smokescreen designed to obscure the central
question of whether or not this- purchase should ever have
t;jeen made. We think not. The University already owns one
presidential mansion, the infamous Frank lloyd Wright
house on Jewett Parkway, purchased and restored at great
expense. There can be no justifiable need for another. If the
President desires University-provided housing, let him use the
Jewett house. If this be unsuitable, it should be sold, not
simply preserved as an expensive and costly
'
showcase, while
the University wastes another inordinately large sum on the
4
LeBrun property.
Money is tight within the University. Every statement of
late by the Administration has been prefaced with a
reference to the budgetary crisis. Instead of setting a good
example such as diverting Foundation funds to aid academic
programs with financial shortage~', they have chosen to use
their funds for senseless luxuries.
In simplest terms, $125,000 could support at least five
full professors, yet we see the money going to provide an
attractive and costly suburban dwelling for a man who
already owns one house and has been offered another.
In addition, the Foundation's adamant refusal to reveal
either the cost or the identity of the donor has caused some
speculation as to the cause of this secrecy. Is there more than
meets the eye? Is this s;mpty a case of an individual
generously selling his house to the University at a bargain
price? Or, as some have suggested, is this a deal involving the
appointment of the donor, Augustas E. Anderson Ill , to
some honorific University post?
We hope not. This type of crass politics has no place
within a University. Unfortunately, the burden is now upon
the University of Buffalo Foundation to prove that these
speculations contain no truth.

THE SpECTI\UM
Friday, July 2, 1971

Vol. 22. No. 4

Editor·in.atief - Dennis Arnold
.......... Edhor - At Semon
Aat . ......... Editlcw - Su.n Mo•

B.,.._ M8n..- - J - Orudt•
A..._,........_. - Sue MeUentine
Cempua ..•...... Jo.Ann AriMO

City .........•.. Hervy LIPIM"
Copy . . . . . . . . . . . Ronnl Fornwn
(Jqphlc Alta .. . . . .... Tom Tal•
t...yout ..•.... Maryhope Runyon

Lit. a Orema .. Midi... Sllv«blett
Mu11c •• • ••• •••.•• •Billy AltiNfl
PtiGto ....•......Owld G. Smith
~•

.•...• Mldcey Oswrelc:h«

s.-tl ........... SMr"yn Rogen

T,_ Spctrum is e 1Mr11ber of the Unit • Smte Studentp,_ A.oeletlon
end is _,ed by Unitw p,_ lnt emetionlll, Coll9 p,_ Sarivce, me Lot
Angel• Ti,_ Syndiarte end Liblntlon N.wt Serv~.
Rupublic.tlon of all mattar herein without
Edltor-lrH::hi.t Ia forbidden.

me

eqJNa

c:-on.nt of

fa9e eiCJht • The Spectrum . Friday, July 2, 1971

me

'Why, Mr. Elltberg. how Vf1Y nice of you to comet We've been c:imply dyint to m.-t yout'

Valuable ttme wasted
To

th~

Editor:

Per usual, the campus bookstore has sprung
another surprise on its consumers, abd J hope as a
united body, we students can teach its management
that we are responsible (not adult-like) individuals
who come up here to team, and that our time is
more valuable than to waste practicing penmanship
and fo rm procedure - wblch is a prerequisite to
standing in a long line of other frustrated individuals
who back the lucky person waiting for The Book. to
be b rougbt out from the stacks by the commonly
leisurely paid employee (who naturally enough may
scratch hlmself, clean his ear out or pick his nose
while browsing for " I 0 I , Day, Kobran, Desbera,
Modem French," or whatever your bingo may be).
Disgusted I am now. I was enraged the first day
1 encountered the situation. For as I see it , staying at
one university , instead of switching around, should
bavo as o ne merit the cutting down o f familiarization
time. Customing oneself to processes lessens the
strain big complexes such as a university presents.
But, this University seems to me to be determined to

malce Ufe miserable, or at least exasperating - and
the bookstore here has to be o ne of the best players
of this ridiculous game.
Since J came here two yean ago, I have
strugled to memorize procedQres for each activity,
so as to cut down on wasted time. However , I've
learned that if this memorization serves well for one
whole semester, it should be a publicized rule (for
newcomers) to erase such erotic knowledge from
one's memory' box, for otherwise, a traumatic jolt of
(eelings Involving surprise, exasperation, frustration ,
pure wonder {how in the bell do they tbinJc: this will
work?), and as now, very negative thoughts about
purchasing anything at peak times (such as the
upcoming start o f fan semester) will result.
Accerding to Mr. Andreas, who evidently tried
to impress the management enough to think about a
new ( pltJUe , a better) process for obtainin&amp; books,
nothing is going to change - and this knowledge
leads me to my fmal point : t he Buffalo Textbook
Store is rigbt across the street, and I' m sure they
wouldn't mind a monopoly o n the sale of textbooks.
Please note, professors!
Sharon Hom

Fo·r what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
Muhammed Ali is a free man. Or, more
accurately, be will not be sent to prison for draft
evasion. His vindication Tuesday by the Supreme
Court assures Ali that he will not be forced to suffer
behind the bars of America's rotting prisons. But
bow do you give back four yean of a man's life?
Four yean in which one o f the sreatest athletes of
all time wu forced to let his skills deteriorate and
see himself attacked simply because be bad the
courage to do what be believed wu ricl\t.
Muhammed Ali committed o ne of the most serious
crimes a person can perpetrate in white man's
America. He took pride in his blackness.
Most of the press never liked Ali. When he used
the name Cassius Clay, be wu just a "loud-mouthed
niger,'' and when he threw off the slue title and
adopted his new reliJion, he became one of "those
black power militants." They took away bis crown
before he wu ever convicted of a crime, and they
o.rpni..zed a circus of second-rate boxen to flnd a
ftew "champion." But there was only one champion
because you cannot take a title away from a p-eat
boxer in a hotel suite or a courtroom. That can only
be done in the Jin&amp;.
'Jbe reason for ltealina IUs crown was not his
induction refual. The rulers of the box.ina world had
already decided that tbey must be rid of this
troublemaker, and bit refusal to step forward on that
clay in late April of I967 wu merely a con¥enieftt
oxC\18e. They hated him because ¥u.bammed All was
nOYCr a Nepo;be was always a black man. He wasn't
Sonny Lilton, a man who barely had the intellect to
lip bis own name, nor wu be Floyd Pattenon who
teemed to be filbtin&amp; with. an American tlq in biJ
comer o.ety time )le entered a rina. Ali was black,
and a better fi&amp;bter than either Liston or Patterson
could ever have dreamed of beinl.
They coulclJl't beat him in a fair fiaht 10 they
threw out the rule book and took away his license.
Tbcy named a new "champiOn" who was a cliqraoe

to the title and sent Ali away to wait in oblivion.
They should have known better. Muhammed Ali is
not tbe kind of man who sits idly by and allows
himself to be disgraced. If he couldn't box, he could
certainly speak, and speak he did. He lashed out at
the boxina hierarchy which stripped him of the
crown, and laughed at the buffoons who were put up
as his successors. He said be was still the champ until
someone beat · him with the cloves on; be
proclaimed : "I am still the areatest." And be wu
still the areatest, and even those who bad battled so
diligently to stop him knew it was 10.
But time takes its toll o n a man, and so it was
with Ali. When he finally aot back in the rin&amp;. he was
but a shailow of the. p-eat filbter he once bad been.
Even then, however, he ltnocked out two of the lop
dWlenaen in the world and carried Joe Frazier, a
good fllbter in his own riJbt, IS rounds and left him
lyin&amp; in a hospital bed for .everal weeks after the
fi&amp;ht . Ali lost the decision, not to Joe Frnier, but to
the three years he spent waitin&amp; for a chance to
f!lht . It bad boon too much to hope that even so
sreat an athlete as Ali could come back after so lona.
The sports world hu just seen Curt Flood fail in his
attempt to return to 10 unstrenuous a sport u
baseball after only a sin&amp;le year's absence.
Now thote same men who exiled the champ are
applaudin&amp; his Yictory. The president of the World
Bo~ A..&gt;ci.ation aid that he would recommend
that Ali be named the No. 1 challeqer to Fraz.ier.
Even now, he would not refer to the man by his
pro~ name, chOOiiJia to caU him ..Mr. Clay." But
as I asked eadier, bow do you replace four years of a
man's Ufe? Will the WBA now admit that Ali did
nothin&amp; wrona and cndit him with bein&amp; champion
for those four yean? And bow will they &amp;fve back
the reflexes, the apeOd that made him the quicltelt
heavyweitbt in anyone's memory?
The answer ia, of counc, that they cannot Jive
Ali what is riJbtfully his. But to those of us who
remember the mapificent Ali o f four yean qo, he
will alwaya be the champ,

�'

Sham hearinll
To tlte Editor:

We were upset with The Spectrum'• coverage of the
demonstration apinst the administration and its racist
''Professor" Halstead. It wasn't much different than the
Evening News or the Courier Exprus. The Spectrum
mentioned racism in only one sentence. The other paper
purposely ignored racism - the main-i.ssue - entirely. The
following. is our analysis of why the University ~ racist,
and why lt must be fought .
The bia businessmen and bankers run this country.
They own the factories, ' the media, run the schools and
colleges and control the aovernment which protects them.
To them recism Is not immoral &lt;n a "mistake," but a
necessity - to keep maximum profits rolllng in.
They make 22 biiUon dollars each year ln racist .pay
differential alone by paying black workers about half of
whay they pay white workers. They push racism to divide
white from black workers and to justify wars like in
Vietnam . CoUey said he was never told that Vietnamese
were human.
-Historically, black workers and students have been
the most militant fighters agtunst Utese rich exploiters.
Black worders have organized militant rank-and-file
caucuses in industries like auto and steel, and black
students have led the most militant fights on campuses,
like San Francisco State and against ROTC at Jackson
State. Thus racism. keeps white workers and students from
following the lead of the most militant workers and
students. ls it any wonder lhal the University bosses (the
Board of Trustees is made up of bankers for the most part)
are terrified of a fight against their ractSm and will do
anything to intimidate peo ple like Dave Levy, SDSers, and
others from exposing them and the racists, like Halstead,
they hire to teach their classes?
"Professor" Halstead tFaches "Modern Imperialism
'338" and has taught at State University of Buffalo since
'64. We allege that he is a racist, and the administration has
been backing him to the hilt. lie nus referred to Africans as
"barbaric" and to Indians as "rabble." One student quoted
him as saying: " The British defeated the Indians in battle
, , partly due to their Innate lnudequaciu ." He said "The
Asian and African masses welcomed British and French
knperiahsts." (Everybody loves to be enslaved!)
Many students began questioning his racist remarks.
After two days Halstead claimed that Dave Levy, and SOS
member, was disrupting the class, even though he on ly
spoke when called on . Halstead told Dave that this kind of
disruption has happened to him many times in the past
Four universaty cops were called to protect the class. One
cop defined disruption: "When the professor says there is a
disruption , then there is a disruption."
Six cops were sent by the administration into
Halstead 's nex t class to protect his racist remarks from
students' questions. Students who went to Halstead's class
to see h&amp;m in action were told that if they weren't
registered st udents.in his class they would have to leave or
face arrest .
The University then suspended Dave from class and
from appearing on campus until he could prove his
innocence at a sham, administralion.run hearing. Dave was
told at first be could have an open hearing on the date and
time of his choice, if it was within ten days. Then the
administration siad, when Dave asked for a I p.m. hearing,
that under new rules, they could pick the time and date,
and it bad to be at least ten days away. (They hoped the
issue would die out.) They picked 7 p.m. for a closed
hearing knowing that fewer students would be around
then.
At Dave's pre-trlaJ bearing two weeks ago, 70
students tried to get in unsuccessfully. They claimed Dave
didn't show up. Monday evening, 20 -30 students were
clubbed and three arrested trying to get into Dave's
hearing. One of those &amp;~Tested wu threatened with death
and also maced in the jail. Dave was arrested in Norton hall
the following morning, while raisin&amp; bail for the three in
jail.
The "bearina" was a complete sham. Only cops and
administrators were there. President Ketter, the main
plaintiff, wasn't there. They claim they had witnesses
against Dave, who we~ too afraid to show up. Twenty
cops with clubs isn't enouJh'Obviouslies - that's why the
hearing wasn't open. SDS is gain&amp; to continue this fight
against university racism by demanding that Halstead. ~e
fired, and that aU charaes be dropped. We want you to JOtn
us in helping to expose thia racist administration for what
it is, It's your fi&amp;ht as well as ours.
Scud~ntl

{or a Democratic Society

Cornc:tioa: Ia the Juac 25 I-.e or Tlte Sp«crum we.Jncon~dy
captioned a picture u befq Darid Le.y. The picture was of uothet
ttadent wbo wltbea to reaaaiD uoaymooa.

-·

Struggle ih Arts and Letters
Editor'I no~: The {ollowlrlf ira copy oft1l~tter tent
to l'ruldent Ketter by Albert Cook of the Enf{ish
DePQrtment.
by Albert Cook
This is tu reaffirm my intention to resicn my
administrative post the moment you have appointed
Marvita Be1111tein to the Provosdhip of Arts and
Letten, or any other penon who almost totally lacks
the support of the Faculty. But I would do 10 even i(
he had some support, since he is almost totally
ignorant o f any of the fields in which we work, as
well as so totally s ubservient to arbitrary orders that
we could not find him an effective representative.
At the time of my last resignation in 1966, from
the chairmanship of English , l"was able to say "the
job is done." - a job recent~y cited in the Carter
Report on Higher Education as unique for any
department in -the United States over the five-yea.r
period surveyed. We\ had not onJy become
distinguished; we had created a self-governing
mechanism that could perpetuate itself - and l hope
will perpetuate itself when both of us are gone - for
whatever life institutions may have.
Now, ala.'l, I must say, "the job is impossible." lt
would not be at all impossible if you had the
administrative grace to realize that you have nothing
to lose by letting the Faculty of Arts and Letters
largely govern itself. It will have to have been clear
to you in your negotiations with us that we have a
remarkable collegiaUty, unanimity, and may l say
joy, in our sense that we can do so. While we often
differ, with ·mutual respect and with democratic
openness, among ourselves o n aU sorts of issues, we
have presented ourselves to you as at once united
and flexible in our posture towards your office, We
have consistently turned ln votes of virtual
unanimity to you , and at the same time we sent you
a panel some weeks ago o f some nine names, any one
of whom would be acceptable to most of us for the
Provostship.
We even approved two of the three names
submitted by the Committee we censured , again
with near unanimity, for ignoring our expressed
o pinio ns. Of course one of those names withdrew .
The other name you yourselves did not want, though
he was a black candidate. 1-te ruffled you, we heard ,
bbeause he was gacious enough to have praised your
predecessors to you. And then he had the misfortune
to have had a teaching career at Princeton where be
had been a colleague and friend of lbe distinguished
chairman of h&amp;story who has recently survived the
attempt of some of your cohorts to purge him .
Marvin Bernstein (I infer from the count of the
secret ballot, since I know everyone who voted for
that black candidate) voted against the black
candidate, unfailingly subservient to your whJms, as
everyone knows him to be. So he had the bad
Committee "send" you the third name he already
knew you approved, when that name had failed to
be named to a professorship in the department of his
field by a vote of 14 " against" and 2 " for.''
Moreover, Bernstein had negative statements about
this candidate from eight Department and Program
chairmen in our Faculty, positive statements from
none. Our 30-man steering committee would have
been remiss if we had not responded with censure
after bein&amp; so "kicked in the teeth" as one of us put
&amp;t.
Whlle we are cohesive, creative and harmonious,
It would be strange If In a body of 250 people, there
were not some difference of opinion.
We know well that small minority recalcitrant to
excellence and arowtll. We have dealt with Utem in
the process of our growth; they have consistently
been obstacles to any progress. I suspended
• Comparative Literature from J96S to 1967 , lar&amp;ely

SA greed ezposed
To the Editor:
Dear Student Government Leaden .. althou&amp;b
I am duly respectful or the insurmountable problc.m a
you encounter, and althou&amp;h I truly appreciate bow
hard it is for you to decide how you wW spend your
budgets and stipends, and even thoup l'm bubblin&amp;
over with reverence for your elected positions - I
feel required to correct your lies and expose yow
greed.
ln tho Iuae 2Sth issue of The Spectrum, two of
your Student Go11ernment Leaden published letters
concemina your "philosophies" on stipends.
It wu very informative; our present student
p&gt;vemment leader, lan DeWaal, explained that he
feels "totally justified" in receivin&amp; his stipend
because his parents don't support him and he can't
find work. Ohl how sad! ... except many of us have
the same problems and don 't get supported by
student's feat
Another intripina point wu made by Stu4ent
Go11ernment Letlder Fred Aueron. A. a coorcliaator,
Fred felt "recret" and "a..mu.ement'' that the

because they had 10 • harassed my three brilli.ant
students in the prosram that I could not expose
othen to them. Tba.e studenta have 1one on to
profeasonblpt in m.;or universities and to the
publication of six books. But the harassment .has
contiJ\ued. One Jtudent, driven from his home field
by exasperation at a director of Graduate Study
from tba.t camp, i.a completin1 a PhD in Comparative
Literature. He will return to the home field,
however, tttis ran u an assistant professor at
Stanford. And Cornell Univenity Press has accepted
for publication a\d'onocraph he lw written, apln in
the field made too hot for him at Buffalo by the
ldnd ministration• of our recalcitrant minority.
This group has consistently opposed proaress in
other r espects too. They were against the
appointment of both our distinguished Faculty
Professors. Just recently, a month or so ago, they at
ftrst rejected the appointment (though to be fait,
they ultimately approved) to a visiting professorship
of a professor from Yale who had left IS years
distinguished service at Harvard a decade ago to
assume a Yale chairmanship. The reason be was not
acceptable to Buffalo was that he was alleged to have
wrecked the Yale Department. For «wrecked" read
"rebuilt."
A composite portrait of the dozen or so in thiS
group would not be hard to paint. Among them, in
their long and feeble careers, they have not
published as much as th.e four students mentioned
above have already done.• Most of them had never
taught before coming to Buffalo at an institution
where the PhD was given. Their average age is close
to 55, a!ld they count practically no adherents under
40 on the faculty (though they have found one or
two opportunistic students to flatter them and mask
as "student representatives"). Their self-appointed
21pol(esman, who managed two years ago to veto
negotiations with another professor now at Yale,
came to us from a number of years at the U.S.l.S. in
Genoa, hardly suitable training for the builder of a
distinguished university department.
Of course this s pokesman has been haunting
your anterooms, and of course he has, by his own
boast, spent many hours ~cussing the affairs of the
faculty with Marvin Bernstein. The halt have been
leading the blind,
l don't have to teU you, because you knew
before you acted, that Marvin Bernstein, far from
being " neutral," had already made himself notorious
as a catspaw in the attempted attac.k on the
chairman of history, a chairman who had graciously
hired him just a few months before. Nor should I
have to tell you that no Latin-American economic
historian, even one who gave evidence of far more
inteUectual trenchancy than he, could show the
understanding of what we do in our varied activities,
music, architecture, hferature, drama and art.
We know, of course, that a few of our
recalcitrants campaigned for you as president. But a
wise administrator does not carry on wholesale
destruction in order to pay off campaign debts.
General de GauUe detached himself from the
colonialists who had helped him get elected. And
even Nixon abandoned the Southern strategy after
the CarsweU debacle. Nor has Strom Thurmond been
named to a cabinet post ,
,
We have been flourishing, and as departments,
we will continue to nourish. Comparative Literature
has never been a department, by my deliberate
choice, because it depends too intimately on oUter
departments. But too many of those departments
will go bad and be laid waste umter the policy you
are foUowing. I cannot work my aop , while
intellectual defoliants are being rained down on it.
And I don't want to ex:pose my apprentices.
What. pity!
stipends have been passed amona the couacil's first
businea after promising a " lowerina of all stipends."
Very admirable, except that Fred Aueron did not
admit that he fousbt to act $700 for the mmmer
alone. plus his SSOO annual stipend!
Let me state clearly: our SA present ~Waal
feels "justified" in being paid because of his lack of
other means of support. Coordinator Aueron feels
that officers of his rank should collect only SSOO per
year, whlle be i.a now Jr&amp;tefully and areedilY
JJ&amp;bblna a total of $1200 for bia months iD office!
Comfortably for them, both Student Government
Leaden carefully omitted that 1ummer stipends amountina to S6200 collectively.
Coordinator Aueron fea.n that the assembly,
when formed in faU , will cut "the stipends to a
minimal amount because they are so huee." And ao
be should.

Editor'l note: The "pltllo1ophle1" on 1ttpeNb wen
thole of tit~ two 1tudent coHrnm~ntleaden t1nd not
tlto1e o[The Spectrum.

Friday, July 2, 1971 . The Spectrum . Pacje nine

�,

•

Draft law battle

ManSfield: ]iossib/f!
solution
.

by Hany LipiiWl
Ctly E,dit~

Today, for tl)eo second day in
aver 30 years, no American will
be drafted into the United States
military. There is a very real
possibility that no one will be
drafted for qUite some tiioe to
come.

THl SplCTI\UM

News aiaalysis
The old Selective Service law
expired on June 30, and the draft
wpl remain dormant until the
Congress passes the new bill.
Beeause of the .conflict over the
Vietnam War in that legislative
body, passage will be delayed
indefinitely.
The immediate cause for the
turmoil is an amendment to the
law, drawn up by Senate Majority
Lea-de{ Mike Mansfield. His
addition would make "the policy
of the United States to terminate
at the eaiiiest practicable date aU
military operations of the United
States in Indochina, and to
provide for the prompt and
orderly withdrawal of all United
States military forces not later
than nine months after the date of
enactment of this section subject
to the release of· all American

priaooers of war by the
government of North Vietnam
a&amp;nd forces allied with such
government."

Happy medium?
The Mansfield Amendmeqt
passed the Senate by a vote of 51
to 42 on_! une 22. Following this
the Senate invoked closure and
immediately passed the entire
Selective Service law. Last
Monday, however, the Ho~
defeated the same amendment by
a vote of 219 to 176.ln doing so,
it also rejected the Senate-passed
version of the draft law.
The bill now goes to a
Senate-House conference
committee whose responsibility it
is to fmd a solution acceptable to
both bodies. This will hardly be
easy. Senate doves have
threatened to filibuster the act if
the Mansfield Amendment is not
included.
Ev~n with the anti-war
provision attached, the group, led
by Alaskan Democrat Mike
Gravel, came within four votes of
defeating closure last week. One
war critic who voted for closure at
that time, Sen. Pastore from
Rhode I sland, has already
declared that he will not repeat
that action if the conference

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drops the amen~ent. -Several
others, including Mansfield
binl~elf, are likely to follow suit.

Stalemate
The immediate question · is,
how ·much can the conferees
modify the anti-war provision
without encountering the wrath
of the Senate doves? The answ~r
probably is: not very much. Aside
from any moral considerations, it
is now politically advantageous to
forcefully oppose the war. A man
like Mike Gravel can estaGiish
himself as a national figure by
successfully leading the filibuster.
There is an additional problem for
the conferees to consider. Some
senators, though they may
support administrative war policy,
are in principle, opposed to
closure. •Five southern
conservatives voted against closure
in that initial roU caU.
The House, however, is not
likely to accept anything
resembiing the current strength of
the Mansfield Amendment. What
is left is a stalemate. Unless
ad-ministration forces in the
Senate can prevent the filibuster,
the Joint Chiefs are in for a long
wait. Spokesmen ~or the Selective
Service have already hinted that
they do not expect any draftees

Mike Mansfield
for the month of July. If the
military is forced to go any longer
than that without conscription,
the Pentagon's war aims will be
seriously endangered.
Dick·s choice
There is one other problem to
be considered. The draft wiJJ
eventually pass through Congress,
though the debate might continue
for months. When it does pass, the
law will almost certainly contain
something very closely resembling
the Mansfield Amendment . Then

only one step will be needed to
enact the law - the signature of
Richard Nixon.
The President will be forced to
make a decision he is sure not to
enjoy. If he signs the bill, he will
be committing himself to a
definite pullout date. If he vetoes
the bill, he vetoes the draft.
Indeed, it would ~eem that the
Mansfield Amendment ha s
demonstrated the use of
Congressional power which has
been sadly missing for the past
decade.

University analysis course
For the third summer session the Department of Higher Education is offerina an
underaraduate course. for those who want to learn something about the nature of
universities: bow they developed, what pur-Poses they serve, the problems they face ,
where they may be beaded.
The course, BED 254, will present an analysis of higher education in these terms
and attempt to point toward future directions.
Anyone ·interested in th.is Uninn.ity self-analysis should contact Robert Berdahl,
chairman of the Department of Hijher Education at 831-4806.

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Page ten . The Spectr.um ,,Friday, July 2, 1971

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831-4046

Editor's note: The following
il the .orlgina/ text of
the M4nsfield Amendment to
tlte Selective Service Act as it
was pased by the Senate liut ~
week.
It is hereby declared to be
the policy of the United States
to terminate at the earliest
practicable date all military
operations of the United States
in Indochina, and to provide
for the prompt and orderly
withdrawal of all United States
military forces not later than
nine months after the date of
e n actment of this section
subject to the release of all
American prisoners of war held
by the government of North
Viet Nam' and forces allied
with such government. The
Congress hereby urges and
requests the President to
implement t he above expressed
policy by initiating the
following actions:
I . Establishing a final date
for the withdrawal from
Indochina of all military forces
of the United States contingent
upon the release of all
American prisoners of war held
by the government of North
Viet Nam and forces· allied
with such government, such
date not to be later than nine
months after the date of
enactment of this act.
·
2 . Negotiate with the
govern{llent of North Viet Nam
for an immediate cease-fire by
all parties to the hostilities in
Indochina.
3 . Negotiate with the
government of North Viet Nam
for an agreement which would
provide for a series of phased·
and rapid withdrawals of
United States military forces
from Indochina in exchange
for a corresponding series of
phased releases of American
prisoners of war, and for the
release of any remaining
American prisoners of war
c oncurrently with the
withdrawal of all remaining
miHtary forces of the United
States by not later than the
date established by the
President pursuant to
Paragraph I hereof or by such
earlier date as may be agreed
upon by the negotiating
parties.
propo~al

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Below are listed the roll
. the Senate.
call votes in the Senate on the t
Mansfield Amendment and the ·
The roll calls show that
s ubseq uent move invoking
several strong. supporters of the
~ l osure. As can be easily
amendment voted for closure
simply to force passage of the
demo nstrated, the votes
Mansfield provision. It would
porte n d t h at the
administration forces face a
be very difficult ~ imagine
t h at Senators Ma n sfield,
very difficult period in their
Pastore, Pell and Syminaton
attempt to pass ·the Selective
Service Act without the
would vote for closure on a bill
lacking the amendment. Other
amendm ent inclu ded. As
antiwar Uberals who voted for
explained in the news analysis
on the previous page, the
closure last week include
Senators Muskie, Moss, Percy·,
House-senate conference will
Brooke and (depending on
probably weaken the antiwar
one's deftnition of 'antiwar
portion of the bill before
liberal') Humphrey.
releasing the act to the floor of

.

For the Am«~dm.,t - 57

Oemocrats-46
And1n0n (N.M.)
Bayh (Ind.)
Bentsen (T ex.l
Bibta (Nev.)
Burdick (N.D.)
Byrd (W. Ve.l
Cannon (Nev.)
Chll• (Fie,)
Church (Idaho)
Cranston (Callf.l
Eagleton (Mo.)
Fulbright (Ark.)

Gambrell IGe.l
Gravel (Al aska)
Harris (Okle.l
Hart (Mich.)
Hartke (Ind.)
Hollinoa (S.C.I
H ughes (lowe)
H umphrey (Minn.)
Inouye (Hewaiil
Jordan (N.C. )
Kennedy (Mes.l

Aiken (Vt.)
Brooke (Mess_)
Case (N.J.)

Hatfield (Ore.)
Jevits (N.Y .)
Jorden (Idaho)

llehlt •Mil .t •

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IJ3;.7131

STORES

INC.

Pastore (R.I.I
Pell (R.I.I
Proxmire (Wis.)
Randolph (W. Va.)
Ribicoff (Conn.)
Spong (Ve.)
Stev«nson 1111.1
Symington (Mo.)
Talmadge (Ge.l
Tunney (Calif.)
Williams (N.J.)

Republican- 12
Mathies ! Md .l
Peer10n (Kan.l
Percy ( 111.1

Schweiker (Pa.l
Stevens (Alaska)
Young (N.D.)

Against the Amendm«~t - 42

Democ:riiU- 10
Allen (Ate.)
Byrd (Ve.l
Eastland (Miss.)

Ellender (La.)
Ervin (N.C. I
Jeckson (Wash.)

Long (Le.l
McGee (Wvo.l

Sparkman (Aie.l
Stennis (Mia.)

Republicans - 32
Allott (Colo.)
Bilker (Tenn.)
Beaii(Md.)
Bellmon (Okla.)
Bennett (Utah)
Boggs (Del.)
Brock ITenn.l
Buckley (N.V.I

COQk (Ky.l
Cooper (Ky.)
Cotton (N.H .)
Curtis (Neb.)
Dole (Ken.)
Dominick (Colo.)
Fannin !Ariz.)
Fong (Heweiil

Goldwetllf (Ariz.)
Griffin (Mich.l
Gurney (Fie.)
Hensen (Wyo.)
Hrutt)ke (Ill.)
Miller (lowe)
Pec:kwOod !Ore.)
Prouty !Vt.l

Roth (Del.)
Sexbe (Ohio)
Scott (Pa.l
Smith (Meine)
Taft (Ohio)
Thurmond (S.C.I
Towllf !Tex.)
Wickllf (Conn.)

Absent : Mundt (S.D.)

For Cl0111re - 65
Democnts Anderson (N.M.I
Bentsen (Tex.)
Bible (Nev.)
Burdick (N.D.)
Byrd (W.Va.)
Cannon (Ne~~. )
Chiles !Fla.)
Eastland (Miss.)

Ervin (N.C.)
Ganbrell (Ge.l
Hollings (S.C.)
Humphrey (Minn.)
Jackson !Wash.)
Jorden (N .C.)
Long (La.)
....

19

Magnuson !Wash.)
Mansfield (Mont.)
McGee (Wyo.)
Mcintyre (N.H.I
Montoya (N.M .)
Moss (Utehl
Muskie (Me.)

Pastore (R.I.)
Pell (R.I.)
Randolph IW. Ve.l
Sparkman (Ale.)
Stennis (Miss.)
Symington (Mo.)
Tetmedge IGe.l

Republicans - 36

Buckley (N.Y .)
Cook (Ky.)
Cooper IKy.l
Cotton (N.H J'
Curtis (Nab.)
Dole (Ken.)
Dominick (Colo.)
Fannin (Ariz.)
Fong (Hawaii)

Aiken IVt.l
Allott !Colo.)
Baker (Tenn.)
Beall (Md.l
Bellmo (Okla.)
Bennett (Utehl
Boggs (Del.)
Brock (Tenn.)
Brooke (M1$S.)

We have a huge stock of slightly

USED
IEXIBOOKS·

Magnu10n (West~.)
~nsfield (Mont.)
McClellen (Ark.l
McGovern (S.D.)
Mci ntyre (N .H.)
Metcalf !Mont.)
Mondille (Minn.)
Montoya (N.M.)
Mo• (Utahl
Mullkie (Maine)
Nel son (Wis.)

Goldwater (Ariz.)
Griffin !Mich.)
Gurney (Fla.)
Hensen (Wyo.)
Hruska !Neb.l
Jordon (Idaho)
Miller ltowe)
Packwood !Ore.)
Pearson (Ken.)

Percy (111.1
Prouty (Vt.l
Roth (De.)
Smith (Me.)
Taft (Ohio)
Thurmond (S.C.)
Tower (Tex.)
Weicker (Conn.l
Young (N.D.)

Aplnst Closure - 27'

Democ:rets - 23
Allen (Ate.)
Bayh (Ind.)
Byrd (Ve.)
Church (Idaho)
Cranston (Calif.)
Ellender (Le.)

Fulbright (Ark.)
Gravel (Aieskel
Hart (Mich.)
Hartke (Ind.)
Hughes !lowe)
Inouye (Hewell)

Kennedy (Mess.)
McClellen (Ark.)
McGovern (S.D.)
Metcalf (Mont.)
Mondele (Minn.)
Nelor (Wis.)

Proxmire (Wis.)
Spong (Ve.)
Stevenson (Ill.)
Tunney (Calif .)
Williams (N .J.I

Republicans - 4
Cese(N.J.)

Hatfield

(0"·'

Javits (N.Y.)

Sdwveiker (Pe.l

Not 'toting but announced as paired on the vote (pe1rs life u * to denote
opposi_ng positions of Senators when one or mOfe 111elbsentl :
Sexbe, R., Ohio, end Scott, R., Pe., for, end Methies, R., Md., against.

.

~

Fnday, July 2, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page eleven

�~

I

REOfJROS
I. Gdb IJIIIId (Atlantic: SD8275)

,.,

This aJbum has been out for a while, but I fanally boupt it after a
number of favorable articles in Rolling Stone, includin&amp; some choice
comments by Muddy Waters, comparina M•lic Dick (the harp player)
to Little Walter. The J. Geils band isn't another Chicaao Blues band
with 12 new versions of "Hootchie Cootchie Man;" rather than just
copy the form of blues, like too many EnaJ,ish bands they've captured
the feellna and JllOlded it into their own music. The pr_oblem is that
when it works, it works well, but on occasions it sounds like watered
down soul-blues.
"Wait" is built on a funky piano riff, a little like "K.n~k On
Wood.'' The lyrics are classic blues about a disenpged. &amp;irl at a bar. It's
Malic Dick's harp playing, tho~ah. that turns this sons into something
extra. He's not as flashy as Butterfield or as smooth as Little Walter,
but he's there in every song blowina good strona riffs over every line.
And he aoes into some of the most outraaeous cross-harping I've ever
heard. Be definitely ranks with Butterfield OJ" Musselwhite.
Geil's guitar is unaffected yet powerful. He's not another B.B. or
Albert Kina inUtator; his playing comes from a more primitive styiQ and
cuts like a saw. The two instrumentals "Icebreaker" and "Sno-Cone"
• \ are short but to the point. There's no
extuded
bat the
bass and drums keep the DOittOlm
going while the auitar, organ
harp all take aood solos in tum.
good as they are, no one
ever dominates any sona. They
know when to lay back and let
other man play. When not nJ•,vi~•·~
lead. Geils and Seth Justman on
piano and organ fill in the spaces
the rhythms perfectly.
They ao baclc to real blues
John Lee Hooker's "Serves
RiJbt to Suffer." The sona is
distillation of the blues.
"Serves you right to suffer
Serves you right to be aJone
You've been livina in the aood day
And now your good day's aone."
,
The words and music drone on relentlessly, until the harp, piano
and ,Wtar explode into leads, each man takint off into some private
hell. The cut sounds almost possessed ; they definitely do justice to
Hookei's music. "Crusin' for Love" is pure fun; and although the lyrics
of "Hard Drivin' Man" are pure Steppenwolf, they push so hard that
you believe it .
Some of the second side is unspectaculu, though. "Homework" is
good fun music, but the lyrics about how a auy's gitl takes his mind off
his homework, are bard to take. But the music is aood hard rock,
showina off the versatility of the band. When not playing lead, the harp
fills in the rhythms almost lilce a hom section, and Geils comes off as
one of the best rock auitarists I've heard. His playing is never flashy or
overextended, but always fits perfectly. " Pack Fair and Square" is old,
old Rock and Roll, but comes off too much like Bill Haley and the
Comets to be really good . And " On Borrowed Time" is slow soul and
sounds like a Wilson Pickett reject.
On the whole, though, this is an album of good , raunchy musk
It's been a long time since I beard a band that gets up and plays hard,
driving music without any pretentions or affectations. They've taken
the best techniques of Chicago blues and incorporated them into their
own rock-blues style. Maybe the early Stones would have sounded this
good if they had been from Chicago instead o f London.

- Tom Bogucki

Gustav

Xeroxs cheap!
355 Norton Hall

·.

Joe Henderson: exciting jazz

g~~!Y~l!.!~fu~~~?! t~~~?wPE:~~~ey a~jua

pleUUie of witnessing one of the giants on tenor
saxaphone - Joe Henderson. Here is a man that I've
irown up with (on record), hearing him on his
many Blue Note sides on his own and/or with
people like Herbie Hancock and Horace Silver. Of
late, he is recording with Milestones and these sides
are among his best, prompting me to suggest him to
Bimo Crockett, the main man at the Revilot. .
We walked in on the middle of the quintet's first
set and they were cooking. With Joe there is Leyny
White, a drummer in the fashion of Blvin Jones;
George Cables, a fine pianist in both concert and
technique; Stan Clark, a bass player who has to get
recorded and has to get more in-person exposure;
and a multi-reed man, Pete Gellen, who is quite at
home with bass clarinet, alto sax and flute. Gellen
informed me that CUrtis Fuller (trombone) is also in
the group, but couldn't make it until the weekend .
This is probably the youngest group Henderson has

finishing an album (on Mil~tones~·
,
.
About Joe Henderson s playmg. J m not gomg
to try and impress you with technical music terms ~r
what his influences on tenors are, all 1 can say ts
walk, skip, run or do anything to get to the R~ot
and dig his playing for yourself and come up wtth
your own conclusions. This is, in my opinion, the
most exciting group that has been at the Revilot.
The Revilot has been in existence about two
years now and has brought in people like Freddie
Hubbard, Leon Thomas, Grartt Green, Art Blakey,
Kenny Burrell, Olarlie Cadand and Eddie Harris and
others and will continue to bring in the best in jazz.
Coming up after Joe Henderson will be Herbie
Hancock, Roy Ayers, Grady Tate, McCoy Tyner and
later Pharoah Sanders, Bivin Jones and either Arthur
Prysoch, Ruth Brown or Dakota Sattou.

- Gus Ru$$0

Ad vice to tbe buyer

Let the consumer beware
Edltor'l note (LNS): You need a
new icebox 10 you go down to the
local appliance 1tore and try to
ret one. It co1t1 $300 and you'll
pay in "low monthly
lrutallment4." You lign a piece of
paper called an "Add·on
contract" that you either don '1
bother to read or can 't undentand
If you do. It ~ay1: "All payment1
now and hereafter made by
(purchtUer) 1hall be credited pTO
rata Ofl all out1tanding /eau1, bills
and accounts due the Company
by (purcha1er) at the time each
IIIC,h payment is made. "
What the fu ck doe1 that mean?
It mearu that if you buy a TV set
from the same company and fall
behind in the poyment1, the
company can come and take away
110t only the TV set but a/10 the
refrigerator even if you have
completely paid up on it .
Belo}41 are some other examples
of rlp·off contracts and selling
practices that confuse and cheat
people, particularly the poor.
They are listed in Finding
Co mminity : A Guide to
Community Research and Action
(James E. Freel cl Associates, '577
College Ave., Palo Alto, Calif.
94306), a 1election of crltici1m1
of alternaJfvel to the irutitutions
of our society.
The Standard Acceleration Clause
"In the event of any default ,
the balance of this obligation shall
at once become due and payable

Ir------~-------------------,

I

·.

at the option of the holder
hereof.''
If the buyer misses or is late
with one payment, this clause
Jives the creditor the legal right to
"accelerate payments" and
demand
i mmed iat e
payment-in-full, regardless o f
circumstances.
The range of lepl abuses that
may appear in a sinale credit
contract is illustrated by the
following sample of fine print
found i n a commonly-used
appliance purchased agreement.
It begins with :

A Waiver of Damages:
••. . . and in such case do
hereby waive and relinquish to
and forever discharge said seller of
and from all danages caused by
entry or by such talting or
removal of and from all claims by
rC~tson of such payments, entry,
taking or Temoval .. .''
This same contract also gives the
seller,

The Riaht

An Acceleration Clause:
''In the event of a breach o f
the buyer of any provision herein
contained, or in the event that the
seller shall at any time deem it~elf
or the goods, qr any part thereof,
for any reason, insecure or unsafe,
then in any such event the entire
balance is due and owing under
the terms and provisions of this
agreement, and shall , at the
option of the seller, be forthwith
due and payable .. .''
and continues with :
A Repossession Clause:
". . . and the seUer shall have
the right, with or w itho~t legal
process, to retake the goods, no
matter where they may be, and to
retain them as its own property
without obligation or resale, and
without any duty to refund any
part of the purchase price to the

Gustav A . Frisch, Inc.

""CHICKEN
BROASTER

buyer . "
it also includes, anticipating what
might occur during repossession,

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Merchandise:
the se ll er s hall
"
nevertheless have the right of
resale for the account of the
purchaser. In the event of a resale
by the seller, of the goods or any
part thereof, after a retaking, the
proceeds of the resaJe shall be
applied first to the payment of
the expenses of retaking, keeping
and reselling the goods, and then
to the balance owing under this
agreemen t ... .'' .
but for any a m ounts still
remaining,
The Buyer Still Owes:
" ... and if, a deficiency results
after such application, the buyer
shall pay such deficiency."
What &amp;ould happen to the
u nwary buyer who signs a
contract with this fme print on it?
- At any moment after the
contract is signed, the seller has
the right to use his own personal
"judgment" to d ecide that the
buyer may not be able to fulf"dl
the contract (because of illness in
the family. other domestic
troubl~ or for any retUon) and to
-c:ontlnued on page

13-

•

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----~----~~-~~-------------

Page twelve . The Spectrum. Friday, July 2 , 1971

\

�Consumer beware•.. Pele: world famous soccer
'player wary of discrimination
-continued fl'i)C'I\ o... 12-

demand ful l payment
inimedJately.
- Failing to get full payment,
the seller may take back the
merchandise, wherever it may be.
- The seller has the right to
decide to hold it. while
demanding payment on the
contract.
- Or, he may sell it at any
price (to an accomplice for a
token amount?)
- The seller is not legally
re51'0nsible for any kind of
damage to property or people
(breaking down doors, frightening
children etc.) that may occur
duri.na repossession.
- When the seller does resell
the merchandise, any proceeds go
first to pay the "costs of
repossession" then are applied to
the balance owing on the credit
contract.
·
- Buyers still owe whatever is
not covered by money from the
resale; because of the credit
charges, they may owe more than
the oripnal purchase price of the
merchandise - even though they
no lon,ger have it.
Many abusive con tract s
oontaln,
The Confession of Judgment
Clause:
"We and each of us, jointly and
severaUy, hereby authorize any
attorn ey·a t -law in the state
of
at any time after this
obligation becomes due, with or
without process, to appear for us
or either of us in any court of
record in the state of
and
confess judgment in favor of the
legal holder of this note for the
amount then appearing due
hereon according to the terms
hereof. and court costs, against us
or either of us, to release all errors
an~ the right of second trial, and
the rights o( error on appeal and
execution."
· By signing a contract with the
above clause in fine print, buyers
plead guilty in advance and waive
their right to defend themselves in
court. They have pven "power of
attorney" to any attorney the
seller may select to "confess
judgment" in favor of the seUe.r .
Even when the merchandise was
sold on fraudulent grounds, the
court can, without trial, rule in
favor of the selle.r.

Deceptive Sales Pitches :
Before unwary buye.-s ue
induced to sign contracts

~Is

(~~001' ----i

~
jl

oonta.inina dCQCptive or abusive
conditions, they may be lured
into the unscrupulous merchant's
store by any number of
fraudulent selling practices. Below
are some examples of the
deceptions used :

"Lo-balling":
Step l - a company advertises
or promises a service at 'r"
outrageously low price.
Step 2 - the company actually
performs the wotlc at the
advertised price.
Step 3 - once the company
has possession of the owner's
appliance, automobile, etc., it
olaims that additional repairs are
needed.
Cbain Refeml Sellina:
Step l - a potential buyer is
contacted and led to believe that
by referring the names of
acquaintances as prospective
custome.rs he wiU have to pay
nothing for a piece of
merchandise, and verj often the
buyer will make money.
Step 2 - for each friend who is
sold, or who agrees to. participate
in the "advertising campaign" (as
it is invariably called) the buyer is
promised a commission.
Step 3 - in order to show
"respect" for the product they
will recommend, the buyers llu
encouraged to sign a purchase
contract or promissory note for
the product.
Step 4 - the purchase contract
is turned over to a finance
company for collection.
Step S - t he referrals sent to
the company by the duped buyer
are ignored.

Fear Selling:
The salesman (sometimes
posing as a "safety inspector")
sells unneeded appliances or
services by playing on the victim's
fear of termite damage, ftre,
burglary, furnace explosion, etc.
Deceptive Pricing:
An item adversied at a "former
price" wjich is false, and offered
for sale at a new price supposed to
be reduced from the "former
price."
Fa I se co mparsions with
competitors' prices, such as retail
price S 1S, my price $8.
The use of sugested list prices
as a means of su pposed
comparison.
Offers of comparable value,
such as, "comparable value, S 15."
Two for the price of one sale,
when the price has been increased
to cover the price of two articles.
Free Estimate Not Free:
Estimates for repair work or
goods are advertised as "free."
After purchasers give their
consent, they learn of hidden
chaTJes or conditions,.

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by Steve Lipman
SptJCrrum St4/f Writer

Edson Arantes do Nascimento.
Recognize the name? It belongs to the world's
most famous athlete. Better known as "Pete" to
millions of soccer fans around the world, he
represents the pinnacle of eth1etic. success.
Pete is the highest paid team athlete in the
world. His estimated salary of $500,000 to $800,000
from the Brazilian Santos Soc-cer Club, not to
mention another $2 million yearly in endorsements
and business interests, tops the combined salaries of
America's four top money earners: Willie Mays,
baseball; Lew Alcindor. basketball; Joe Namath,
football; and Bobby Hull, hockey. That's more than
the Prime Minister of England makes in a year.
Pele 's income is exceeded only by his
popularity. An estimated one· billion fans have
wa.tched him play, counting live and TV audiences.
In most countries, where soccer is tbe number one
sport (and called football), Pele is known as the King
of Soccer. Standing-room~nly crowds are the rule
wherever Pete and the Sanfos travel.

Toronto reception
Recently, as part of their world tour, the Santos
played an exhibition game in •Toronto's Varsity
Stadium against Bologna of Italy, and it was SRO
again. Spurred by rumors that Pete will retire after
this year, Torontonians jammed the 2 1,753-seat
sntdium for a final view of the star. Every seat, every
space in the aisle was filled . Four thousand people
climbed the fences, and another 5000 were turned
away. Buildings up to a mile from the stadium
became free seats for hundreds of fan$. One building
across the street from the stadium almost collapsed
under the weight of roof-top watchers. "This the
most enthusiasm I've ever seen here," said a Toronto
policeman who has worked the stadium for five
years.
The throngs got what they paid, or climbed, and
screamed for. Pete.
Twisting and !ticking and passing. And scoring.
Only the third player in the history of the game with
ovtlr 1000 goals, he added one more that night.
Racing for ·a teammate's long pass, he took it,
kicked, had it blocked by the Bologna goalie,
swerved in the air with the rebound and slid it into
the goal.
One stadium and a host of surrounding buildings
rose as on e as Pele observed his patented goal
celebration: jumping into his t eammates' arms.
Many fans missed the goal. It came so quickly.
It was typical of the dark-skinned, S·foot 8 inches,
16Q-pound, 30·year~ld jet who can run I 00 yards in
less than ten seconds, and use either foot with equaJ
s~ Watching him, one is reminded of a rubber
band which is still until snapped, and then you don't
see it again until it stops.
Pete, wbo has legendized number 10, the
traditional number for an inside left (forward), is the
hub of the Santos attack.. He stations himself near
the middle of the Santos formation, pointing and
sh outing instructions to teammates as he runs along,
always with a smile across his face.
A group of Italian soccer teams offered $3
million to obtain Pete's services for three years, but
the Brazilian government declared him a national
treasure and unavailable for sale.
•
Right now, a little background might explain
the reverie that surrounds one man.
Pele was born in the poverty-stricken section of
Tres Coracoes in the Sao· Paulo State of Brazil. His
father, a minor league soccer player, couldn't afford
to buy Pete his own ball, so he practiced by rolling
up rags in a sack, and kicking it around.
He did that hours a day, school not being
scheduled on Pete's calendar then, until he decided
. he would earn the money for his own ball. The
wag~he earned during t~e day shining shoes went
to JUS arents; at night be would sneak down to the
railroa yards to swipe peanuts which he roasted and
sold outside. Two years later, Pele earned enough to
buy his first soccer ball.
It was during his working days that his potential

attracted notice. At ll yean of~. while playina {n
a lunch houi pickup game with workers two and
three times his aae. he cauaht tho eye of Waldcmir 6e
Brito, scout and former player for the Santot.
..It was just one of those th.inp you spot once in
a lifetime," de Brito said years later. "I knew riabt
there I had found someone that, with the proper
development, could wind up the greatest or them
all."
That development started almost immediately,
when, after introducing himself to Pele and meetlna
his father, they agreed that Pete worlc daily with de
Brito, without joining a local junior team. For tho
next four years, de Brito drilled Pete on every upect
of soccer. At the end of those four years, he felt Pele
was ready to debut, and arranged for a tryout.
After a short train ride to the Santos' poWlds,
de Brito walked up to some club officials stantlina
on the sidelines, and announced: "Gentlemen. you
now have the opportunity of seeing what, one day,
will be the greatest player of all time in action.''
The Santos were formed in 1912 after British
sailors in the port of Santos had demonstrated the
game, but this day Pele did the demonstratiq.
Putting on such an exhibit of passing, dribbling and
shooting that veteran Santos players applauded him,
he forced Santos officials to do some demonstntin&amp;
of their own - a contract for 6000 cruzeiros ($74) a
month, more money than Pele had "ever dreamed

of."

So much for Pele the player. Legends are made
of men, not marks, and her Pele has also added to his
stature. "He is a very, very bumble person," says Phil
Woosnam, member of an English clubb which lost to
the Santos 3-l ten years ago, with Pele scoring two
goals. "A very human person."
As the leading Black athlete in the world, Pete JJ
wary of discrimination towards either race. A few
years ago he refused a dinner Jiveo in his honor in
Harlem when he learned his white teammates
weren't invited. "I don't go for discrimination," he
said, " be it against blacks or whites. It's uaJ.y no
matter wbo it's against."

l T PEACE BR,DIE EXHIJITIOI lEITER
Bldl Jf•t)

SATURDAY-JULY 10~1:30 P.M.
All Seat•$5.00
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BrazU was eliminated early in 1966 when Pele,
who as a superstar is always treated roughly on the
field, was manhandled so badly that he couldn't
continue. Knocked to the ground, then stepped on,
he was carried off on a stretcher. And along on t.h at
stretcher went Brazil's chances. ~ They won that
match 2-0, as Pele scored on a penalty kick, but lost
next time, putting them out of contention.

also PARKSIOE

~

.

He started the next day in a key league game.
Programs had been printed a week earlier, so Pete's
presence was announced by loudspealcer. Any
questions of " Who's that" were answered quickly as
scored four goals in a 7-1 Santos victory. In his fmt
five games with the Santos, Pete scored 16 goals,
placing him in Brazilian headlines, and the following
year on the Brazilian national team. At 16, the
youngest player ever to earn that honor, he tourod
South America and Europe, all the time building his
name.
At 17. he was named to Brazil's World Cup
team. The World Cup is the World Series of soccer,
with more than I 000 nations fighting for the Jules
Rimet Trophy.
·
Brazil won the World Cup, beating out host
Sweden S-2 in the fmale, as Pete socred two goals,
one of them his most found. An eyewitness
remembers it this way: "Pele lept like a jack·rabbit
to cushio n a swooping pass form winger Zagalo on
his chest . A big defender swept in foe the tackle but
Pele left him floundering like a babe by bouncing the
ball on his outstretched knee, up and over the
astonished Swede's blond head. Pete, as tho\18h
launched from starting blo&lt;;ks, flashed round him to
catch the ball on his thigh, and repeated the trick to
round another dazed Swede. Then he arched his
body like a bow and crashed a full-blooded volley
into the net."
Two of the following three World Cups went to
Pele·led Brazilian teams. In 1962 they beat
Czechoslovalda 3·1, and two years ago won over
Italy, 4-1.

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Friday, JUly 2, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thirteen

-

�•

RECO~D.S

Son11 For Bqlnnen Gnbam Nub (Atlantic SD 1104)
Willy is the last of the CSN&amp;Y agreption to release. a solo album.
His sonp always have that aentle tone, sonp for bumming alona to or
just relaxin&amp; to. With the Hollies, Nash's main job was doing the
difficult hiah hannonies. He bas an amazing range and the stron&amp;est
falsetto voice to be found in rock. The tunes be. wrote for the Hollies
were usually sad and bauntina. The only Hollies hit that Grabam sang
lead on was "On a Carousel," thought their albums contained really
fine compositions like "Clown" and "Crusader" (to be found on the

Stop/ Stop! Stop/ lp).

·Government vs. • •
-continued from Pllll• 7-

,

view the release of the papers has
already had an adverse effect.
There can be little doubt that the
passaae of the Mansfield
Amendment by the Senate was in
some part a result of the influence
the document bad on some
Senators. That Senator Mansfield
introduced the amendment only a
week after the Hatfield-McGovern
amendment had been defeated
could easily be construed as
evidence that he felt the effect of
the publicatlon of the study milbt
push his bill over the top.
Firat Amendment threatened
Purely and simply , the
aovernment is attempting to
suppress the right of freedom of
the press. This certainly is oot the
first attempt by the
administration to do this, as any
Spiro Agnew fan can testify, but

it is certain1y the most serious.
Criticizing the press is one thina,
censorship is quite another. As
Judge Wright explained : "The
First Amendment is directed
against one evil : suppression of
the speech of private citizens by
&amp;overnment officials. It embodies
a healthy distrust of governmental
censorship."
American governments have
increasingly come to identify the
policie s of individual
administrations with the system
of government established by the
Constitution. To criticize the
Executive Department is in their
view to criticize the United States.
They are unable to. make the
distinction between the president
an~ the nation, instead defining
one by the other. This is, without
rhetoric, fascism . This is the
difference that men such as Judge
Wright are still able to detect :

Graham has found the States to his liking and he bas joined into
the select company of people like th~ Dead and the Airplane. Yet he .
has not let all of this go to his head. Stills and Crosby brought the
whole world into the recording studio for their solo album~. expecting
the caliber of musicianship to cover up for an obvious la" of good new
sonp. Though most of the same personnel appears on Songt Por
Beginner~, it is the sonp that the album puts forth to be heard. And
1
most of them are excellent.
Willy'~ subject matter has obviously been influenced by bis new
relationships. His friendship with Crosby has led him to some political
thoughts, and three of the album's sonp have a political slant to tbe'm.
• Graham simply thinlcJ everyone should be allowed to live their own
lives. "Chicaao," a bit more refined here than on the Four Way Street
live version, expounds this simple theory with sizable muilcal force.
" Military Madneas," with Dave Mason on guitar, is a lament about war.
The less said about "Be Yourself" tbe better. It never acts off the
Jl'OUnd, even with lovely Rita
Coolidge shouting her ass off in the
backaround.
Nash's beat stuff is to be found
in his love sonp. The breakup with
Joni Mitchell was a hard one. You
can tell by Ustenina to "Simple
Man," which is my favorite sona
from the record. Accompanied
only by a hauntina piano, Graham
sings one of the most beautiful lost
love songs ever written. "I just·
want to hold you, I don't want to
hold you down/ I hear what you're
"As the District Court said, a saying and it's spinning my head
detailed account of our initiation around/ and I can't make it alone." There's a very sensitive violin solo
and prosecution of the war in Viet by David Lindley (he's in Kaleidotcope) and some beautiful
Nnm 'unquestionably will be background singing by Nash and Collidge.
"Sleep Song" is another pretty song about glimpses of your lady
embarassina to the United States.'
Butt that is due to the nature of walking out the door and dreams that never come true. ..Wounded
th•e history , not the nature of the Bird" is sung to David Crosby, trying to help him go through fast and
ac: count . Surely, mere unreal changes.
Of the harder stuff (Nash never really gets too hard), "Be:tter
'embarrassment' is not enough to
defeat First Amendment rights. Days" stands out for its good slngin&amp; and fine bass clarinet solo by
Indeed, it may be a necessary part someone named Seemon Posthuma (sure). Throughout the record, the
of democratic self-government. At musicianship is excellent, especially John Barbata's drumming and
a t ime when the American people Nash's acoustit guitar and piano work. And, of course, the vocals.
A lot o f people are getting back to gentler music these days, and
and their Congress llfe in the
midst of a pitched debate over the this album has that nice, soft feeling to it. Graham's melancholy keeps
Wlltr, the history of the war, him from falling into the pit o f commercial sugar, and it's a very
however disillusioning, is crucial. relatable sadness. Put it on a sad, lazy night. It' ll help.
- Billy Altman
Tlne Executive Department, which
br•:&gt;ught us into the war and which
wc1uld be primarily 'embarrassed'
by publication of the material in
question, must not be allowed to
bury that history at such a time.
Detmocracy works only when the
people are informed."

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11•~1

.r...

• FORMERLY COYOTE •

$2.40 per hour. No shit.
Come up and see us at

~o
~.
"'

APPEARING

Main at Summer St.

0

F R I 0 A Y AND S A T U R 0 A y

Ouffalo, N.Y. 14209
883-3242

•

~

NO MINIMUM

PLUS

Parts and service for

Ill)% Student Discount

•

NO COVER •

ALL IMPORTS INCLUDING V .W., Toyota,

Spor1s, etc.

N.Y. St.,_ /Mp«W.

•

Page fourteen. The Spectrum. Friday, July 2, 1971
'\

�CLAIIIIIIII
WANTED

Getting off to a swinging st.a rt, thr~ teams in · through July 14. Each team should consist of any
the Swnmer Softball League remained undefeated three people, regardless of sex, who will compete tn
after the fint week's action. The Innovaton and the a triangular formation.
FJ.O.'s in the slow-pitch league and Psychology in
''
the fast-pitch league are 2-0. Spectators are
welcome at any games, which are played at 4 :30
p.m. Monday through Thursday.
Archers on campus should praetice their
shooting for the archery tournament, July 28.
Entries will be open from July 12- 22. Fifteen ends
The Flying Frisby Tournament, to be held July of arrows w.Ul be fired (from five different distances.
21, will accept anyJfrisby Oyers wishing to pit their Trophies will be awarded to the top three SC.Qrers for
skill against other amateur teams from July S alliS ends.

• • • • •

• • • • •

HOUSEPAINTING, roofing, plutet'lng
JObs, prof-lonal work at reuonabl•
price, Call Carl 875·713 1 or Tom
882·1726.

Rl DE WANTED to W~er
County or N - Palt.l « anywhere In
eut•m part' of .Ute Fr.-v or
Saturday, July 2 « 3. Call Dave
691-9381, TR7-2461.

U .B . GRAD dellr• hOUM painting. 13
~rs expett•nce. Ref•enc:es. Aft• 6,
881..0141. Len.

WANTED BV staff emptoy• - DeNy
to/from Rldfle L . ., t-5, I...Jve In
Starln-Kenmore Avenue area of
Buffalo. Office 831·1801. Mn.
Taublleb.

FOR SALE
'63 VW, n - tires and !Nttery. S200.
C.ll Cerol 662·5867.
ENTIRE hous.hotd for sate. Dlnetw
s.t, chairs, love suts, twin bedroom
sets, rugs, desk, dishes, etc. More. Call
691·9381, TR7·2467.
1969 DATSUN 510. Cost $2,500 n -.
10,000 honest miles. Asking S1.,450.
Fantutlc mechanically. Phone
691·9381, TR7·2467.
1965 CHEV. 54,000 miles, e~tcellent
mechanical condition. Asking 1450.
Pttone 691·9381, TR7·2467.
TE-NT 7x7 umbrella, Inside frame. One
yNr old, waterproof. $12. 839-4036
evenings.
REFRIGERATORS, stoves and
washers. Reconditioned, delivered 'lind
guaranteed. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore - TX4·3183.
Hl69 BUICK convertible, light blue
with wi\Jte top. 351 V-8 engine, power
steering and brakes, deluxe Interior,
radio, white walls. owner running away
to Rio. Must sacrifice. 11795.
831·3610.

ROOMMATES WANTED

t\t
33~1t.AllEY A~ ""·

"'f I could get my hands on
my first g~ teacher n&lt;;&gt;w,
ltj break her chalk~
11 all began in the.Ji.rst grade.
But don't blame ~ur first-grade teacher. 11 wasn 't
her fau lt. It was the system she had to teach.
The old ··run, Spot. run" method.
You had to read It out loud. Word by wo rd. And
that ' s the- w ay i t was unti l you became a second
grader. Where your teacher asked you to read silently.
But you couldn't do it.
You probably sto pped read ing out loud. But you
still said every word lo yourself.
II you ' r e an average reader, yo u' re p robably
read ing that way now.
Which meari'S you read only as fast as you talk.
About 250 to 300 words a minute.
And that's not last enough any more.
Not when the average student has approximately
8 hours of requ ired reading for every day of classes.
And since the amount of time In a day Isn't about
to increase, your read ing speed will have to.
In order to handle II all.
The Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course can
help.
With training, you'll be able to see groups of
words. To read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per
minute. Depending on how difficult the material is.
At any rate, we guarantee to at least triple your
reading speed, or we'll refund your entire tuition.
(98.4% of everyone who takes the course accomplishes this.)
So don't waste time th inking about whom to
blame. Come take a free introductory speed reading
lesson. We'lt'increase your reading speed on the spot.
It takes about an hour to find out how you can reduce
your study time by 50% or more.
And it ought to be worth an hour of~our time.
To save thousands.

837-0e77. Keep tryl.,..

FEMALE, with or without apartment.
Early 20's. Aug.-June. Write Gall
Parsons, 1505 Fox Place, Utica, New
Vork.
SENIOR male needs a place to live,
150/mo. max. can Dan 652· 1569.

LOST&amp; FOUND
L.OST tan dog with black tall and nose.
Call Mary at 838·3483.
130 REWARD for man's gold ring with
opal and two rubles, stolen from first
floor men's room In Norton.
Sentimental value. No questions asked.
Call TR3· 1356 nlghU.

SUB-LET APARTMENT
ONE or two roommates wanted now
until August 31. Rent negotiable. Matt
837·8476.

RIDE BOARD
RIDE WANTED to New Vork this
Friday. Will share driving and expenses.
Call 831-4113.
RIDE NEEDED to N.V.C. July 16 and
maybe return on July 20. Call Dave

BODY SHIRTS
PAPERS
THE CLOTHES
OUT SHOP
corner Mein &amp; Bailey
Hn. 1 1·5 T,W,S, - 1t-9 M, Th, Fri.

MOM'S FREAKVI WantJ male
traveling companlen
30. Share
driving and •x~-. 111mm• In
Mextc:ol 837-4968 Seth.

ov•

APARTMENT FOR RENT
3 BEDROOM apt. Lexlntton/Eim•
wood, S160 (+), Call any time
883·9163. Have a nice day.
NICEL V furnished hOUM, ciON to
campus. Evenings: 894·1212,
845·5600, or 652-1268. Ask for Jim
Steckmeyer.

APARTMENTS WANTED
QUIET, reliable female desperately
needs small Inex pensive apartment (1
B.R.) for September-June. Bailey ar. .
preferred. Call 895·7207 Marti.·
SEPTEMBER rental wanted or
roommate for Stony Brook Graduate
entering u.s. L.aw SchoOl. Reuonlble
&amp; convenient. PINse call/write J1ck
Gutkln, 1591 '"-lham PlrkWay N.,
l\50nx, N,V. 10469. (212) OL5·7527.

-

PERSONAL
BITCH-IN it the front desk t his
afternoon. All crabby people Invited...
FREE sexy smokey !lfaY cuddly
kltlens. RNIIy adorable. Can do many
tricks. Housebroken. Call Roy
837·7127.
THE SPECTRUM'S classlfleds will do
It for you, or just help you Mt up for
c:tolng lt. $1.25 f or 15 words or less,
$.05 for Nch additional word. Ads
must ,be Plld for before they run. 355
Norton Hall.
BEAUTIFUL handmade gold a. sliver
j-elry - wedatng r ings - at MnSible
prices. J .P. GoldwNver J-eters, 655
E lmwood at Ferry St. 881·3400.
ALFIE - Welcome back. we only wlln
You co1.11d stay with us forever. Sue,
Allie, and many others.
SEPT. 6th (one way only) U09.00
Niagara Falls to London (Gitwk:k).
323/316 Norton. 831-3602. University
Travel .
THANKS to 111 my close friends 1nd all
others who helped to make this, my
22nd, a very happy birthday.

MISCELLANEOUS
NEW VORK London, return,
$210.00. One way 1110.00. Open to
public. Departs, returns Nch weekend.
Arrange own schedu le. 689·9632 after
6 p.m.
RIDE WANTED to Westchester
County or New Paltz or anywhere In
NStern part of state Fri. or Sat. July 2
or 3. Clll Dave 691-9381, TR7-2467.
GUSTAV (no frills or trumpeting,
Please) will xerox anything for $.08 a
copy. (Cheapest rate we know In this
town.)
TYPING done In my home. 833-1597.

BELIEVE IT OR NOT, we must
clear our summer line. 20% OFF
our already low prices ·with this
ad.
LEATHER AND LACE

EXPERIENCED fast typing bY electric
typ-rlter. Theses, term paper, etc.
$ .40/PI!III. Call 873·1305.
PROFESSIONAL typing service, work
done on IBM magnetic card equipment.
Fast, error-free copy. Unlimited
originals. Specializing In all types of
dl'*ertatlons and t h -. Call 837~558.

~HARI.IE'S

BAR.ER SHOP
aeress Ire• G. . .year
ac tile Ualverslt'· Plaza
10% DISCOUNT

upon presentation
of 1.0. Card on

.Specializiltfl in Cvery Pltase
men's hairpieces.

FREE INTRODUClORVSPE£0 READING LESSON
Free demonstrations at our Buffalo Office

3606 Main St., (next to Buffalo Textbook)
Thurs., July Slit 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. lind 2:30p.m.
Next Friday July 9 at 10:30 ll.m.,
12:30 p .m ., 2 :30, 4:30 &amp; 7 p.m.
Next Saturday July 10 at 10 a.m., 12 noon lind 2 p.m.
For •dditionaf'1o!(ormalion call
CURT MILLER a1 838·3'296

.

~

~

.

of Men's Hairstylillfl, Razor
("fling allfl Beard Trimmi,.
--------837 :3111------Friday, July 2, 1971'. The Spectrum. Page fifteen

-

�.

.

J

------~. . . . . . . .---Backpage~~----~
, -----:
Announcements
Women•s Llberadon will hold free karate classes
for women Tues. and Thurs. from 4-6 p.m. in
Room 340 Norton Hall.
Taras and Olp Hubb will give a lec:ture on
Transcendental Meditation, Tues. at 8 p.m . in Room
246 Norton Hall.
Any under.,aduate student interested in
tutoring college students for academic credit should
call the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory at 831 -3946.
Presently · tu~rs are needed in Anatomy 307,
Finance 301, Management Science 301 and
Chemistry 123. Applications are available at 88
Winspear.
International Folk Danclfll will be held tonight
from 8- 11 p.m. in Room 30 Diefendorf Annex.

..J

Psychomat will be held Monday from 2-4 p.m.
and Wednesday fro m 7- 10 p.m. in Room 232
'
Norton Hall.
Anyone interested in fencing is advised to come
to Clark Gym Tuesdays at 7 :30p.m.

•

Gay Liberation Front will spo nsor a Gay Rap
Wednesday at 8 p.m. In Room 234 Norton Hall.' All
gay men and women are invited to stop in and rap.

including undergraduates, graduate students and
expe(ienced teachers, seeking more . Information
about the Peace Corps and what volunteers are doing
overseas, are encouraged to talk with Mr. Kurn who
will be located outside of Norton Union from 9 a.m.
to 2 p.m.

A ~redlit course in Mandarin will be offered
by the Stude~t Association- every Saturday from
10:30-11 :30 ~.m. in Room 340 Norton Hall. The
course will c:ost $5 for three months. Anyone who is
interested shou,Jd contact Peter Kong, Room 205
Norton HaJI, or caii831-5S07 or 831 -3828.

Hillel will conduct a folk service this evening at
Summer ~pen Wortuhop and UB Opera Club
are plannins a production of Gilbert and Sullivans 8 p.m. at the Hillel House.
Prln~ess Ida d1uring the second summer session.
Hillel will hold a beach party on Sllnday. For
Anyone interes1ted in p~rticipating in any capacity,
more information or to make reservations, call judy
please contact Mrs. Muriel Wolf - 633-7814.
at 835-2136 or Sue at 877-8451. Buses will be going
The UB Vets Club will conduct Draft to Canada, so proof of citizenship is necessary.
Counseling eve,.,v Wednesday from noon to 4 p.m. in
The languaae laboratory will be open on
Room 260 Norton'Hall.
Saturdays from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. beginning July.
10 through the remainder of the summer session.
Sum~ se:ssion students who are eligible for
benefits from the Veterans Administration are Also, as of Monday of this week. the lab has opened
reminded that a listing of their sum}1ler courses and at 9 a.m. instead ofits previons 10 a .m. opening. The
credits for whic;h they are enrolled must be filed lab will be plosed from July 3- 5 because of the
with the Financial Aid Office. If this was not done at holiday weekend.
the time of regi!itration, veteran students should call
Student Association's Spaker's Bureau needs
at Room 213, Harriman Library, to provide this
interested students to help obtain speakers and set
information.
up programs for the upcoming year. If interested,
Peace Corps Volunteer Seth Kurn from please contact Mark Weiner in Room 205.
Columbia, Sou1th America, will visit the State
University of Buffalo campus Wednesday, july 7.
Any member of !}le University community.

J

SpOt'ts Information

Stuw Festival .
thru j uly 17: The Philanderer
thru July 18: Summer Days
July 26- Sept. 4 : Tonight at 8:30
July 29- Sept. 5: War, Women and Other Trivia

Clark Gym recreotlon facilities are open to all
fee-p;lying University students with validated I.D.
Children using the pool must be accompanied
ca~ds from second semester, plus all summer school by a parent. Further information and reservations
students. Graduate students must pay $3 and faculty for indoor handball and squash courts can be
and !'taff must pay $5 for a permit to use the obtained by caJiing 831-5238.
facilities.
The UB Alumni Association will hold a golf
Clark Gym recreation hours are os follows:
outing Ofl july 27 at South Shore Country Club in
Gym and fclcilities besides pool - 3-10 p.m., Hamburg, N.Y. The $15 fee covers a round of golf,
Mon.--fri.; 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat.; and noon- 10 p.m. plus a cocktail pany and dinner followint the event.
Sun.
Tee-off time is between lO a.m. and 2 p.m.; prizes
Swimming pool - 2:30-3:30 p.m. Mon.- Fri., will be awarded. Information and reservations are
2- 3 p.m., Sat . and , Sun. for faculty , staff and available through the Alumni Office, 831-4121 .
families; 3 :30-4:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 7-~ p.m. Wed.
and !Sun., and 3-5 p.m . Sat. for coed student
Students Interested In playing roller hockey this
rec:re&lt;!ltion; 7- 9 p.m. Mon. and Thurs., 3- 5 p.m. fall, call jim at 836-6027. You must have your own
S~.tn . 1For .faculty, staff and student$; 7- 9 p'.m. Tues. equipment. Chec:k The Spectrum in September for
· for w1omen onlY.
more det~ils.
·

Melody Fair
th ru July 10: Fiddler on the Roof - Robert
Merrill
July 11 - B.B. King
July 12- 17: Hello Dolly - Betsy Palmer
July 18 - AI Hirt
July 19- 24 - jerry Lewis and Helen O'Connell
j uly 25 - The Irish Rovers
July 26- 31: Kismet - John Raitt and Anna
Maria Alberghetti
Aug. 1 - Roberta Flack
Aug. 2- 7 - Robert Goulet and No rm Crosby
Aug. 8 - The Four Seasons
.. Aug. 9 - Jerry Vale
Aug. 15 - Bobby Sherman
Aug. 16- 21 : The Sound of Music - Carol
Lawrence
Aug. 22 - The Byrds
Aug. 23- 28 - Vikki Carr
Aug. 30-Sep t. 4 - Sergio Franchi and Pat
Cooper
Toronto Island
July 9- 11 - Mari posa Folk Festival
Summer Excursions ·
July 9- 11 - Stratfo rd Weekend
July 13 - Shaw Festival: The Philanderer
july 24 - Corning Glass Center
Aug. 13- 15 - S tratford Weekend
Aug. 17 - Shaw Festival: Tonight at 8:30
Aug. 22 - Shaw Festival : War, Women and
Other Trivia

• -ostet'relc:her

The night has a thousand eyes
I

I

Peace Bridge Exhibition Center
july 10 - Poco (on sale 6/21 )
Rochester War MemoriaJ
July 24 - Ike &amp; Tina Turner and Canned Heat

..,

Newport Folk festival
July 16-18
july 16-18.
Pace Memorial Stadium

Aua. 31 - Chicago - on saJe Aug. S

. What"s Happening?

Lec:ture : Derek Traversi, 3 p.m., Conference Theater,
Norton Hall
Exhib•it : Paintings by Judith Rothschild, Center Concert: A Musical Year: 1921 , 8 :30 p.m .• Baird
L.ounge, Norton Hall
Rec:ital Hall
'
Play:. Fiddler on the Roof, Melody Fair, thru July 10
Play: Fiddler on the Roof. O'Keefe Centre. Toronto1 Thunday,july 8
e1nds tomorrow
·
Concert: A Musical Yeor: 1921, 8 :30 p.m., Baird
Tuesday. Juty 6
Recital Hall
Film: Fr«llu and Chien Andolou·. 8 p m 147
D•iefendorf
• .,

1

- Sueralch

I

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                <text>Page 1:&#13;
Enormous sum spent for Ketter's mansion&#13;
Provostial offer to Bernstein irks Arts and Letters faculty&#13;
Appointment unacceptable</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349262">
                <text>Page 2:&#13;
Summer security in Norton&#13;
College of Women's Rights fights image</text>
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                <text>Page 3:&#13;
Hearing Commission sends recommendations to Ketter</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="1349264">
                <text>Page 4:&#13;
Bernstein unacceptable&#13;
Provostial offer</text>
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                <text>Page 5:&#13;
Sedita advised on Talbert Mall</text>
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                <text>Page 6:&#13;
Ellsberg: Americans bear the responsibility&#13;
Expansion food coops' goal</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="1349267">
                <text>Page 7:&#13;
Freedom of the press upheld by Supreme Court decision&#13;
Government vs. first amendment</text>
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                <text>Page 8:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Feedback&#13;
For what it's worth</text>
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                <text>Page 9:&#13;
Sham hearing&#13;
Struggle in Arts and Letters&#13;
SA greed exposed</text>
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                <text>Page 10:&#13;
Mansfield: possible solution</text>
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                <text>Page 11:&#13;
Senate acts on draft bill</text>
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                <text>Page 12:&#13;
Records&#13;
Joe Henderson: exciting jazz Giant on the tenor saxophone&#13;
Let the consumer beware</text>
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                <text>Page 13:&#13;
Consumer beware...&#13;
Pele: world famous soccer player wary of discrimination</text>
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                <text>Page 14:&#13;
Records&#13;
Government vs...</text>
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                <text>Page 15:&#13;
Sports spot&#13;
Classified</text>
              </elementText>
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Announcements&#13;
Sports Information&#13;
Available at the Ticket Office&#13;
What's Happening?</text>
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                <text>University of Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
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                <text>State University of New York at Buffalo -- Periodicals.</text>
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: ·_ ,·: . ·~HE S 'p ECTI\UM ..
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Vol. 22. No.3

.. . . ~.tty of.._ Yen M 8ufWo

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. .

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r

Fridlly, June 25, 1971

~q
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.~
&lt;

·.A dull day·~

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�SAOJi.UC.S

~

Two philosophies on stipends

Editor's lfo te: Stfpmt/1 for
~t ,oHmm*llt olflt*b ~
In rite p1111 bMr i1tt:l'fJallrlly 6ltd
stealily m.d. H&lt;rMHr, diu
ytJtV'I Studmt Auocltltlott lttu put
11 IIOp lb dW lncretue. Some
elected officer~ 1t1111e nen
qutstloned the MCUS~ty or
pt'IICtktlllty of provid/nt studtnt
Jllpmds. T7tJI question/,., lttu
re sulted from different
phUo,ophlt!S about Jtip«ndl. llllf
Dt'WIMII, SA president and Fred
A ueron, Student Affairs
Coordintltor, ncmtly ucltllnged
lttttn ap141ning tlttil' rtspectfvt

year - S7SO, 1970 - SJOOO;
coorcUnatqn: previous year $250, 1970 It Wll stipulated, however, that
these fipres be evaluated at the
termination of the year for tbeir
prevision. This wu never done.
Utilizinl my experience to
evaluate these figures, I would
have J1llde the recommendation
for this year tb&amp;t the president
and treasurer be given a stipend of
equal amount· at S 1100- S 1150
each. The two vice· presidents be
only given $750- $800 each.
Finalty the coordinators be given

phllosopltlts. Tht following an
tlttil' ltlttn:

SSOO each.

O.U Mr. DeWaal :

ssoo.

.

• •

SUNSIT lOOKS

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Student AllodJtion ii no
Ions« a Yk:key Mouse HiP
School G.O. operation in whi&lt;:h
eemce il rarely overly demaodin&amp;.
In a IMie, we are headin&amp; a
eertow bualnell operation.
The lncreuecl demands have
made Student Alloctatlon the
equivalent of a full-time job (or
those wnung to sacrifice the time
·necessary to successfully operate
the orpnizatlon. If a participating
student also attends sc:hool, he
would find it Impossible to obtain
employment. This would
successfully eliminate low income
students If stipends were not
provided, thereby creating the
class of ••chosen ones" you fear
we hue developed.
I do not consider stipends a
••financial award," nor do I
consider the amounts huge. As a
st uden.t who is receiving ·no
financial assistance whatsoever
'from his parents, I feel totally
justified In receiving the stipend I
do, in terms of the time I put into
the organization. Many of the
other officers and coordinators
are In a similar situaUon. I believe
that, not only can I justify these
stlpeJlds to myself, but that 1 can
convince the fegislature of their
validity.

ExplaJniDJ that • ftCUUIIl luii
been left by tM tecell o( the
te&amp;UW ltUdent jlldkiuy, Tom
DeMartino, dlrector ot the Office
of Stucloat RJabta, said that •"tho
need and Importance of a IUI1Uil8r
court hu ~-"It II for th1t real
reuon, he continued, that the
Stu dent Aaaocia tion is
constitutina an undertraduato
student judiciary from June 30 to
Aug. 31 to handle campus cases
and complaints.
Th.is court, Mr. DeMartloo
added, would have quite an
extensive' jurisdiction to include
all registered surnmer school
students and those undergraduates
enrolled in the regular fall and
spring sessions. As of now, he
said: "There i&amp; no oourt to handle
~ involving these students. If
students are busted on campus,
they are sent downtown and
booked."
According to Mr. DeMartino,
one student has been arrested and
charged with civil offenses in an
incident involving the bookstore.
"'This has to stop," he maintained,
for "If a student is accused of a
crime against the campus
comrnunHy, then it should be
under the jurisdl~tion of
students.·• He added that the
crime is against the University
community, not the outside one.

Mr. Slesinger was indeed
correct when he stipulate4 that
these stipends not be allocated at
that time in May. We were f'\Ashed
and had too much to do then
(including finals and papers), to
brush this tope off so lightly. Had
there been an investigation, a
more realistic view would have
been taken toward these figures.
I am really up-tight that we
once again have proved that wt
are to be the .chosen ones and that
we will decide on our own pay. I
do recall that during our
campaign, we suggested lowering
all the stipends. What I do fear, ·
however, is the legislature cutting
our stipends to a minimal amo\lnt
because they are so huge. What I
We mustn't be fooled by the
would suggest would be a cut now
Racial ud sexual balance
~ssiblo lack of appearance in the
to demonstrate our interest In
·
The specific mechanics of the
office of the vice presidents and Austav_ _ _ _.....,
minimizing a financial reward for
the coordinators, for that matter.
services which only four years ago
Speaking specifically of the vice
Xerox copying, 8 cents eac~
were voluntary.
presidents, they .ue both seriously
heapest
rate we know ~" Buffalo
in time-consuming
Peoce, engaged
matten ouuide of the office:
355 Norton Hell
Sco t t , being vi ce
Fred Aueron, Coordinator chairman/secretary of Sub-Board
Student A/faiTs I, Inc., and Spot, being vice
chairman of the University-Wide
•
Committee on Governance. These
are only two of the projects with
Dear Mr. 1\ueron,
wbich they are involved.

It is with deep regret that I
learned that the Executive
Committee tw again made the
mistake of very Ughtly passing
stipends for the upcoming year
within a month after we have
been elected Into office. What
amazed me even more, was the
fact that the motion carried with
little or no discussion with the
exception of that of Mr. Slesinger
and myself.
The major arguments for
setting the stipend at that early
May meeting was provided by
Dave Barmak. He stated : (I) that
certain individuals were indeed
short of funds at that particular
time and wished to draw on their
stipends; (2) that all budgets and
stipends have to be set before the
fall semester. ·
To argue that stipends should
be set for the entire year because
of an immediate need is indeed a
fallacy. What should have been
done is that those individuals who
needed the money be allowed to
draw on their stipends up to a
maximum of a certain set amount
by the Executive Committee.
Thus we would have been able to
Thank you. for expressing your
do it Uke the summer stipends. discontent with the manner in
The reasoning behind setting up which allocations were passed for
special dates for disbursing parts stipend allowances. There are only
of the stipends, rather than letting u few areas of specific interest
officers and coordinators draw at upon whkh I wish to comment.
will was provided by a case where
I am not sure of the exact state
one individual withdrew a great In which stude11t government
majority of his stipend and then found Itself fQur years ago. I can
resigned quite suddenly. This only venture that in the years that
occurred two years ago when I I hhve been a student here, the
first became educated and complexity and importance of
indoctrinated to previous Student Association has
mistakes.
mushroomed. This is not just
As to the second argument tf\at Urnited to Student Association's
all budgets and stipends be set membership in Sub-Board I, Inc.,
before the fall semester, this could but the sophistication of the
very easily, countered by the fact organization itself in terms of
that these stipends should not programs never before considered
have been rushed through as they (Drug Rehabilitation, Legal Aid,
were and passed, let's say, in BalJ Fund, Day Care, Community
August. Last year, stipends were Relations).
raised across the boerd as follows :
With this increase In
President : previous year - complexity, has oome, at least, an
S 1000, 1970 - $1250; vice equal expansion of time allowani:e
president: previous year - $150, required of those who find
1970 - $1000; treasurer: previous themselves organizing and

FAMOUS ••• DEUGtmUL

'1eaclila'' tbla ewolutJod.

is I YitJI plrt of eYtrY WCimln1S
IIWIUII health checkup, becluse
It c:1rt help detect uterine cn:er
in • e.1y, curlble stap.

AIIIICAII CAliCO SOCIETY

Page tWo . The Spectrum. Friday, June 25, 1971

al~

it will be compoeod of
justices, a p101ecut1ng
attorneY and a defense ~omey.
Thele court oflldals wW be
aelected fr9m ~cants by a
roviewlna board of the Student
AaodaUOil.
Two former judFS of the
Student Judiciary, Tom Cavnea
and Don Welnbera, will continue
to serve on the summer court. In
addition, they will also aid in the
selection of the rest of the judges
actina in an advfJory manner. Mr.
DeMartino explained that "as
justices, they have the most
experience and are more· able tQ
direct the neceaary and pertinent
. questions.••
five

Mr. DeMartirto stressed that
the selections will be bued on
merit exhibited at the interview.
However, he did say that they
hoped to obtain a broad spectrum
of individuals racially and sexually
balanced.
Mr. DeMartino - ·has already
contacted PODER•. BSU and the
Native Americans .for Cultural
Awareness in. an attempt to obtain
applicants for the positions.
According to him, the number of
applicants so far has been
"disappointing." Urging interested
people to apply, Mr. DeMartino
saI d that all judges receive
stipends of SSO and would meet
onre a week foi the summer.

• •

·a"PIP" int

a.aas••

coun remain IIC)IIIftbat undecided

One argument presented by
Dave was that by . the time
summer arrived, we had already
worked for a month. You omitted
this from your list.
In any ease, I wUl face the
legtsJatiA(e to defend the budget
when the time comes. If they
decide qalnat stipends, they Will
probably foreca*t the downfall of
student sovemment. nus is the
students' decision. 1 trust them to
make an lntelllaent one.

BASON ST. LOUNGE4Cl31 whitnter rOid~

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were.ng
t
lookl
for talent ......j
,

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(Ohd..lnd, 8ertuwshop
Hermony, oreme (lect
pleys). Comedians. Pro-

r~:·~.o~~~;s

Groups need
apply.) •

not

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Pttlce,

Jan C. Dt'WIZI11, President
Student AISOciation
TIW ~trum Ia publlllhld weekly
tt,e.: aammer ~ons by
Sub-Boerd I, Inc:. of. tM Sutt
UniverlltV of New Yorit at Buffalo.
Officet •e loc.tld 8t 366 Norton
Halt, Slate Unlvenlty of New Yottc

durlnt

1

at Buffalo. 'felephone: Aree code
716; Edltorlet, 831-41 13; Bulln...

831·3610.
R..-ntld for ldvertlaint by
National Educational Adllertlsing
Servlc1, Inc:., 18 E. 50th Street, New '
v~. New York 10022.
~lptlon

ratea . . $4.60

•••

SAVE.OIIfY
SIIOP li.Y IIAVY

per

llft'lelter or $8.00 for two aemeaten.
Second

C'- Po-..

Buffalo, New Yottc..

·

peid

Ckculation: 10.000

8t

..,.,...,

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Reside11t fees

·· .Mysterious-fund

Purc:heeld at a "lllbltantW .naunt" by the UB

Ketter ~s ho.use
•

Foundation. dlls maneion 8t 181 LeBnln wHt be the
new ltome for ~t K.n• In August. It . .

acqulred throuth

prlvne funds. thus not

nec. .i..ting the u• of . . . tax monies.

1

Together cares

House-for addicts propoSed
by Jo-Ann Armao
Ctlmpur Editor

..Once people see what we're
about, we'll have plenty of
support because they'll realize
that we're helping them;• thus
commented Gary Blumberg, a
Together spokesman, about
present and .propoSed Together
~planS: ThCse ln&lt;ilb~ ~l' expansion
of on-camp\,\S drug activities
started in March and the 9reation
of a therapeutic community
center such as Phoenix House
with a 24-hour, around-the-clock
staff.
Mr. Blumberg, explained that
"people are pretty familiar with
what we have done, and the focus
is now ·on what we plan to do and
where we are going." Together is
'currently involved with individual
dn,1g counseling ancl groupencounter sessions. The projected
therapeutic comm.unity would be
an extension of these sessions
resulting in a total interaction of
people. This interaction,
according to Mr. Blumberg, would
be affected by the staff and
addicts living together and
engaging in encounters and
seminars.
'Burea~ratic guidelines~.

Sponsored ' by the Council of
Churches, Together is seeldng the
financial support necessary to
implement their • program. Mr.
Blumberg said that initially
funding is being sougbt from the
State.. However, he commented
that they hoped they wouldn't
have to continue to depend on
state support as .. theiT
bureaucratic guidelines might
hamper our program."
Hopefully, Togetherr would
like to one day be able to run the.
house on private donations. Such
support , from prominent
community members is the way
which Phoenix House operates.
These donations are substantiated

by the services of a " hustling
crew." Mr. Blumberg explained
that this crew goes out into the
community to obtain services
from different businessmen. For
example, instead of contributing
cash, a doctor would donate part
of his time or a supermarket
would oontribute food .
Un~ersity

aware
Mr. Blumberg stressed that the
efforts of this crew are essential to
the successful operation of the
therapeutic center. He added that
peo ple are very .concerned about
the drug problem and•are willing
to help: "Drugs are vezy much on
people's minds . . . drugs are not
just in the ghetto anymore, and
people are finally getting hit." He
added that "even Richard Nixon
is interested in it [the drug
problem] ." · - :

A~cqrding: to : Mt. Blum
... berg,
the University fmally · b~ame
aware of its drug · problem last

organization that confronted the
problem and not erect barriers by
•" ' o.i, for more police or wanting
to throw the junkies off the
campus,'' he said ..
Utilizing encounter sessions
between · peers, Together deals
with the present behavior of an
individual. Mr . Blumberg
described these sessions as "a
situation where people can quite
literally get their shit on the table
and can express themselves." Re
explained that his differs from the
treatment at a place such as the
Masten Community Center in that
"at Masten, there is a psychologist
playing God, giving a lot of
reasons why you are a junkie."
Together however, is not
interested in a junkie~ past, but in
his present behavior. ''This is what
gets dealt with and on a personal
baSis," commented Mr. Blumberg.
He added. that Together ~ met
with much success in its

implementation·and operation.
· However, he did criticize the
March: " The ·U.niversity is }us~a · administration for making a lot of
segment, a nucr~cosm 0 • ~e promises of support and then not
whole community . . . theu fi0 ll in thr gh u t 0 f th
problems are our problems and it ..
doiwt "g T outh . , c oOS
e
't ere
,or oge er s success can
came to a point w hen we co uld n
. .
.
, u .
be attnbuted, accordmg to Mr.
ignore them, any 1onger. J.UJ .
,
th
t
d
Blumberg, to James Gruber,
a a
rug
.
Bl u mb erg .ee1s
· 'b .l
·
., t .
f . Norton Hall Director, to the
. pro em IS a mantaes a11on o
.
other problems that must be dealt Student ~octatlon and finally to
'th
·
Willie Rivera, an ex-addict who
WI •
conceived and initiated Together.
1
..Willie," Mr. Blumberg said, "was
topther philosophy
interested in two things - to set
It is this philosophy which the record straight as to 'Our ' drug
resulted in the Together program . crisis' and to belt&gt; people."
''"We aJe tl\e only caml?'ls
-continued on Plte e-

An apparently UtUe·tnown
account o( resident shadent fees .
bas been pubUciy announced and
is · presently b0in1 ctisputed u to
its use. In a ioutine budiet review,
a state · auditor reported the
existence of approximately
$34,000 deposited and \ql\Qed in
a Housina Director's fund since
1966.
Thomas Schillo, Housip&amp;
Director, explained that prior to
1966 students paid an annual fee
into a Director's account which
wis., in tum, doled out for
dormitory expenses and activities,..
He continued that in 1966, 'this
funding system was changed to
one of students assessing fees
aptnst themselves and spending
them:
This $34,000, ,accordinl to Mr.
Schillo, is simply the balance of
student funds collected over a
period of years that was not spent
when the changeover was affected
in l966.'He further described the
money as ''student fees collected
but unspent."
In addition, he maintained that
" no attempt was made to conceal
it ; I have been fully aware of its
existence." According to Mr.
Schillo, be bas written several
letters about the account and any
information about it "bas been
public information."

va1ue to me.'' Mr. ltOier
.disclaimed any k!'owlcdse
wh~tsoever of the S34;0a0' and
maintained that ....o 'one 'blew
about it."
The future of the fuDd is as
ambiauous as its backaroUDd. Mr.
Schillo said that· the decision for
future use is in a "limbo as to who
can spend the money."
While they both apee that
students should benefit fr010 the
money, there is an appueot
disa~teement between Mr. Sc:billo
and Mr. Miller about its exact use.
Mr. Schillo feels that it would be
totally unequitable for oDe class
of students to benefit from
money accumulated by leftR.I
classes : "The classes of '61. ~62,
'63 , '64 and '65 aU contribu,tcd to
this fund ... to let the class of '72
reap their benefits is totally
unfair."

Uocooditiooal WiC
It is Mr. Schillo's contention
that the money should be spent on capital spendin&amp; improvements
and not for current operations.
Mr. Schillo suggested some
possjble uses for t.h e money such
as a resident swimming pool or
improvements on Poverty Hill
Mr. Miller, on the oth« hand,
feels that ..since the J!lOiley was
intended as student funds, they
should be spent as student funds."
Reserve fund
H o w e ver , Al Miller , This means, he said, that no
Inter-Residence Council President, conditions should be attached to
said that it was "a public record bow the money is spent.
that you had to look for." Mr.
The next meeting of the
Schillo said that lRC presidents Faculty-Student Association will
were aware of the account. finally decide the specifics of bow
Agreeing with this, Joel Feinman, the money is spent and by wbom.
IRC president in 1966 and the While it is pretty certain that the
fU'St one to have full control over money will be given to studCDts,
funds, said that "we knew there Mr. Miller said that his satilf.adion
was a certain amount of money in with the handling of the affair
a reserve kind of fund." He added hinges upon how and when it will
though that it "was all pretty be transferred to student Ulle.

1

I

H

Health Sciences suffer
from inadequate ·space
by Bill Vaccaro
Spectrum Staff Writer

Reaction within the Heal.th
Sciences and the State University
of Buffalo administration was
generally . fav9rable to recent
recommendation to maintain the
presen1 Main St. campus as a
Health Sciences Center.
The recommendations were
made by a special task force
appointed in Albany to deal with
the problems of space plaguing
the Health Sciences departments
and Its relation to the new campus
now ~ under construction in
Amherst. The recommendations
were approved by State University
of Buffalo President Robert L.
Ketter and have now been
forwarded to the State University
. Board of Trustees. A decision is
expected shortly . .

If approvfd, the Schook of
Medicine, Dentistry, Nursin&amp; and
the health·related professions will
remain on the present campus
while the School of Pharmacy t.ill
move to the Amherst campus.
Dentistry to move
The decision to move the
School of Pharmacy was
promoted by the desire • of the
Pharmacy faculty to "get enough
s pa ce as soon as possible,"
according to Michael A. Schwartz,
dean of the School of Pharmacy.
He noted that the school
"certainly does not" like being
separated from the rest of Health
Sciences, but said that the current
space problem was critical.
Al~rt Somit, executive vice
president , s peaking for the
administration, said that "I think
the adJ:'linistration generally
-continued on Pate 8-

i

'

·

Friday, June 25, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page thtee

.

.

l

�•

FestiVal gets 'lhe b/JiJis .

Jf·l/ent
Thousands of Buft'aJo residents
• and out-of-towners witneaed
what turned out to be' a severely.
watered-down vemon of the
annual Allentown Art Festival last
weekend.
The festival was not only
restricted in space, but in actual
purpose and general atmosphere
as well compared to previou!i,
years. The festival was limited to
Delaware Ave. between North and
West Tupper St. This was in
marked contrast to previous years
when the festival stretched out
through Allen St., Delaware,
Elmwood Ave. and Franklin St.,
or what is better known as the
Allentown section of Buffalo.
Also, the festive, carnival-like
atmosphere that was engendered
during previous years was gone:
The permit which the Allentown
Association got from · the
Common Council to hold the
festival restricted it to that of ~
bland commercial art exhibit and
sale with little or no
entertainment or music with the
exception of some street people
who tried to "do their own

~d Filre Conuniaioner Robert
year, but, r•ther, what that the art wu more
Howardl objected strenuously to restrictions does the Council put sophisticated." He was especially
the issuance of the permit and on it to placate the Buffalo Police. . pleased that the police "were on
Poli&lt;:e pressure fails
began to put pressure on "the "Even an emasculated art festival their best behavior" and that "the
The reasons for the restrictic;ms Commo•n Council to deny it to is better than no art festival at spectators were interested either
were simple. Last year, near the the Allentown Association. all," he said, but expressed hopes in looking at the art or, for that
end of the fest iva I, a Howeve1r, through the pressure of that the spontaneity and diversity matter, at themselves."
confrontation between street Delaware District Councilman that was lost this year will be'
people and tear gas-happy·Buffalo William Hoyt, a compromise regained. He considered this year
"Limiting concessions was a
police and Erie County Sheriff's permit plan was ·pushed through "a · period of penance," but felt good idea," he added, saying that
deputies ensured, which inflicted the Council and met with Mayor that the festival "will grow in the last year "the artists complained
coming years."
bitterly that every other block
both physical and psychological . Frank A1 1 Stldlta's approval.
Regndlng the- way the festival tl\ere was- a hot dot atancL or ..a .
damage to the festival itself and
those people who had been a part 'Compromise or nothing'
turned · out this year, Hoyt peanut stand ... He lio~ to
of it all these years .
Coun1cilman Hoyt said that "it commen1ed : "It tumecf'out to be more entertainment in the form
When the festival permit went was eilher compromise or no a great deal more civilized in that of the· Buffalo Philharmonic or
up for renewal, both Police festival.''' In his view, the issue was the crowds were adequate and maybe a rock band in future
Commissioner Frank Fellicetta not "shnU we do what we did last weren't as loud a5 last year and festivals.

thing."

I :

·"HZzat?

WhIt
looks like a r1dar scanning
device perched on the roof of
Lockwood libr~ry Is, in
ac tuality, a temporary
on.way video relay which
hooks up with the state.
Presently the relay system, a
pert of GEMS.ITV and the
flnt of its type in New York,
transmits engineering courses
to Binghamton and Utica
(Griffis Air Force Base).
However, a new relay w be
established on Tower Hall roof
in September will allow both
the receiving and transmitting
of programs.

·see ·

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$~.00 until Julyt

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After July 4 all c•cets $5.00.

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tickets now available at Festival Ticket Office
Statler· HIIton LObby (mall orders accepted with stamped, self..ddres..d
envelope until July 4)1 U.a . Norton Hall; eutfalo State College Tlck.t
Office; also at arundo's, Nr•ora Fails.

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1

Page four. The Spectrum. Friday, June 25, 1971 ·

Specializillf in E•ery Pltase
~Men's Hairstylillf, Iazor
Cuffillf.., Beanl Triln•i•
~------837-Siit----~-

�.

.

.(

,.,

...

.

Hearing cOmfflissien to deCide
future tlf sUspended student.
Altbouah only Mr. Levy and an
attorney or representative were to
be admitted to the informal
session, eeveral people attempted
to force entry into Dr. Ketter's
office, terming the heaJina a
..lta.nproo court." However, they
were quietly repulsed by
adminhtrati'Ve officials and
campus security. Campus police
were also present at Dr. Halstead's
Classes for several days to prevent
disruption, particularly by Mr.
Levy who has reportedly
attempted to force Dr. Ha}stead
into a debatq. over the professor's
alleged "racist remarks.''

The fate of David Levy, a
student 1U1pended for disruptlnaa
swnmer tealoa history dau,
be 4ecicled this Monday ~liFt at
the closed meetJna of a formal
hearin&amp; commission .
AdminiJirauve officialt ICbeduled

wm

tbl

after ..,•

refuled

10 drO,P·OUtl were ••.mou.
atudenta wbo didn't want to
continue ln chaot."
Aecol'dinl to Dr. Halstead, Mr.
Levy hai1 been trying to advance
hla ow·n interpretations of
imperlalhm in clau by
interruptUng prepued Lectures:
..He's just been grand.atancli.Jll,
trying to1 demonstrate tbat I'm a ·
racist ancl a destroyer of facts!'

'

ViolatioJUI
Ho wtlver , an SDS leaflet
contended that Mr. Levy was
merely "a&amp;kihg questions about
Hals~ead''a raclat remarks" And
further aoccused the administration
Coottant hmmaptioo
of defending thla racism.
However, Dr. Halstead charaed Disagreeing with this, History
that Mr. Levy is guilty not of Department chalnnan, Robert
"~eement, but of constant
Uvely, dtaraed that Mr. Levy
Interruption addressed to the class went far beyond asking questions
and not the professor... Refusing. and exceeded the limits of
to comment on the affair, Mr. "exc:hant:e appropriate to the
Levy stated that he is trying "to classroom." The disruption was,
avoid c-re ating a very argued I&gt;r. Halstead, "a flagrant
individualistic conflict with violation of academic freedom,
to attend a session with President
Halstead." He further emphasized both of 'the professors and other
Robert Ketter.
the collective nature of the students.'"
Mr. Levy was auspended after •
disruption.
Most recently last Tuesday,
John Halstead , hi s course
Dr. Halstead himself attributes about 2:5 people demonstrated
instructor in Modem Imperialism,
part of the nearly 60% (from 22 a galns t the administration
sent a letter to Dr. Ketter charging
to 12 students) in his class to this demanding that Dr. Halstead be
him with class disruption and organizing, but adds that the 8
fired , 11nd that Mr. Levy's
reQuestim~ his suspension.
a.m. starting time probably suspension be revoked and his
eliminated some students-. Still Dr. hearing tlltis Monday be opened to
Halsteid feels that several of the the public:.

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The UB COOI"ftdTe Day Care Ceater il preaeady ID operadoa
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To aet thil help and thi11J111pethy, Ita manben are coaocbae:tiDt
a fuad drln llldq for facDUiee and fundi from the UDinnity
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Anyooe iatereatecl ill cootributiDa laelp and fqoda
contact the UB Coopentin Day Care Center at Box19 Norton.

•oald

'

SASU discuss fees

Student input desired
/.

Election of new officers and
debate over the recently released
state guidelines ·for student fees
dominated the Annual Business
Meeting of the Student
Association of the State
University, Inc. (SASU) held last
weekend at the State University
of Buffalo.
The • new slate of officers
includes two students from the
State University o f Buffalo. Mark
Borenstein, former treasurer of
SASU and the Student
Association o f Buffalo was eJected
executive vice chairman and
Karen Shatzkin will be the new
vice chairman f or Campus
Communications. After a reversal
of " personal feelings ," Peter
Zimmerman, last year's SASU
chairman, ran for chairman and
recaptured the positiQn.
Discussion of the policy for
implementation of the Board of
T.rustee Guidelines concerning
Mandatory Student Pee programs
issued by SUNY Chancellor

We apeclallu In m~n·s ~lroceptlves and w~ orter two of Ule moat

achlftC onea aveU•ble •ny•·hert-PetherJite and Nuronn CODdoma.
.JbeY'ri better than an)'thma you ran 1et In oa druptore. Imported

lrorn 'Britain. they're ttahter. tlllnn.r. more ••dtlnl to ~: 8Dd

preclalon manurarturinl and teatlna techniQuea make tbtin u rell8ble a. any condom anywhere. Made by un. world .. aarcest manulaewrer of tnen'a rontr~~CepUv-. Fetherllte (t he best) anct NI&amp;Fonn
not only conform to exact1n1 USPDA aperlfk:lllliONI. but .,.. mac~&amp;
to BriUatl Gov.rnment Stanclard 311N "' well. w., thi nk you'll IIILe
theJa.
OUr tllumat~d brorhure tella you all 11bout l'etherllte and
NI&amp;Form. And about seven othn Amerlcen bor•nd• 1ftlltt'. .,e 1\a'llt'
caNiuUy ~elected from the more than one hundred klnd.l ...,.liable
today. And we explain the clHrerenca.
We abo have nonprescription foam for women end a wl"'veriety of boob and pemphleta on birth control, ee•. populaUoft,

•e

Slacb plore io l new 1toret,
now open at Elmwood and
BidweD near State Tetcherl, and •
Main Street oppo.ite U.B . e
Groo.y flarea to turn you on ... in
plaJU, ltripea, cbecb, andaolida. •
Water pocketa, replar poeketll,
wide ..S replar belt loopL
Plenty of Oaret ln fanoua Le'ti'1
esta·Preete •eb. .AJ.o ltraJJbt
utll tltu are with it. Dil Panu A • •
Plenty now!

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eco~ocY.

Waot more Information? lt'a frft. Juat .end ua your 11.11me and
•ddreu. a.tter aWl, for one dollar we'll eend you all the , lnlonna·
tlon rlu. two Fetherllte Nmplea •nd one NuJ'orm. Por four doUara
you'l 1•t the brochure plua three eaeh of five different eonc1om
br•nda tlndudln&amp; both lmportal. All 1.-orreapo~ncten" and merchaD·
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Vacuum operation
Mr. Zimmerman added that
attempts were made to secure
student input into the drafting of
the final fisea1 procedures but
Albany deemed it proper to
operate in a vacuwn : " We made
overtures to Albany, but we were
totally Ignored."
The new procedural regulations
incorporate ma ny of the
accounting and disbursing
procedures now utilized by state
~rgencles. The tone of the SASU
membership was that the new

:Interestedinjustice?

birth (~ODtJro) ~Rs •••

We believe ~ private life should be }QIIf' own. And when et
comes to buyint contneceptive$. the hassle in a crowded dn.llstore isn't exactly ptivate. So we'¥8 IMde itt possible for ~ to
aet nonprescription contneceptives thfouah !the m~il.

Ernest L. Boyer centered on the
extent of control which was being
newly granted to local school
administrations.
In an annual report, Richard A.
Uppe, representing his firm as
general counsel for SASU pointed
o u t the ••tack of sensitivity
exhibited for the distribution
requirements ~.f student
governments."

••
••
•••
••
••

The Student Association is preaently acceptint
appUcationa for the positlona of judaes on the
IUDimer court. Any lnterated ltudent should
contact the SA office at SS07 .
AD appllcanta wnt be iotemewed by a re'riew
board and ldections will be made on merit. Those
chosen will se"e on the cow1 which will be in
seaion from June 30 to Aua. 3 1 meetina at least
onee a week adjudaina complaintll apinlt
underpaduates. AD judaa wW receive a stipend of
$50 for their lerVIcea.

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Friday, June 25, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page five

�...

EdiToRi~ls

l

Castrated
festival
The verdict on the Allentown

A~ Festival is in. The
expectations of many, that the changes in the form, size and
content of the testival would be detrimental, are now
established fact. The Allentown Festival, held last weekend,
was a bland and innocuous affair. The vitality, the color an~
the rich character of the Festival are gone. The culture was
missing; the commercialism obvious.
The cause of this is readily apparent. The city fathers,
over-reacting to a small disturbance that was escalated into a
riot by incompetent and overzealous police, decided that the
Festival in its original shape, was too dangerous to hold.
Thus, they changed it, reducing it to a hollow caricature of
its former self.
Because of politics and pettiness, Buffalo has lost an
important cultural event. Although the Festival still exists,
its spirit ~ied on the floor q_f the Common Council Chamber.
We, therefore, would like to thank Mayor Sedita, the
Common Council, Fire C~rhmissioner Howard , Police
Commissiqner Fellicetta and Sheriff Amico for their roles in
this tragic oomedy. These are the people who killed
AllentowR; they are the people who emasculated and
strangled it. Perhaps we can return the favor next election
day.

Civil War?
The move to keep t he Schools of Medicine, Dentistry,
Nursing and Health fJelated Prof~ions on the Main St.
campus seems to have a sound justification in terms of its
being an intelligent and feasible allocation of space. There is
certainly no reason that the old campus should not continue
to be utilized in order to provide the maximum amount ~f
space for a rapidly expanding University. The Health
Sciences, in particular, are currently cramped and crowded
and such a plan would alleviate this problem to a large
extent.
It is clear that many, both in the Health Science complex
and Hayes Hall , support this move. Much study went into
the special task force's recommendations and it is a virtual
certainty that the Trustees will enact them. One concept,
though, the relation of the Health Sciences to the rest of the
University, was apparently ignored by both the special task
force and the Health Science faculty.
In the past there have been serious disagreements
between the Health Sciences and other faculties in regards to
budget and academic matters. On occasion, the Health
Sciences have even threatened and attempted to secede from
the University when conflicts arose. The danger of keeping
the medical schools isolated from the rest of the University
is that it might tend to deepen the existing rift. This would
indeed be unfortunate.
We, therefore, feel compelled to urge that any separation
of the Health Sciences from the bulk of the departments on
the Amherst campus· be accompanied by administrative
efforts designed to prevent the physical gap from becomin'g
an inducement to further isolation. Neither the University
~or t he Health Sciences can afford such a split.

THE SpECTI\UM
Vol. 22, No. 3

Friday, June 25, 1971
Editor·in·Chief - Dennis Arnold
Man-eing Editor - AI Benson
Asst. Managing Editor - Su•n Moss
Busln. . M8Mgll' - James Oruc:ker
Adwrtising Man8gllr - Sue Mellentine

C.mpus ......... Jo-Ann Armao
City ............ Harvy Lipman
Copy .... ... .... Ronniforman
Graphic Arts ......... Tom Toles
Layout • . . . ... Maryhope Runyon

Lit. 8t Drema .. Michael Silvefblatt
Millie .............Billy Alttn.n
l'tloto ...........Oavld G. Smith
Asst.... ... Mickey Osterrelcher
SporU . ••. ..•. .•• Sharyn Ragen

·-

TIN Spectrum Is a member of the Unites State Student Press Auociatlon
and is a.ved by Unites Press International, College Press S..-ivce, the Los
Angel• Times Syndicet.e and Liberation News Sl!fllice.

Rupublicetion of all matt• herein without the expren oonsent of the
Editor-In-Chief ia forbicldll"' .
~
Editorial ~I icy Is determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

Paqe six. The Spectrum . Friday, June 25, 1971

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman

Rather than attempting to con those few of you
who may look at this column, let me explain that
the reason for what I am about to do is that I was
unable to write any worthwhile 'commentary on
world events of the past week. Instead of presenting
my own views to tltis vast readership this week, I
decided to try to find out just how much the student
body disagrees with me. And so, with no further
ado, I present the first annual Lipman Poll.
(Should anyone be so moved that they wish to
actually reply to the following questions, cut out the
column and return it ta my mailbox in The
Spectrum office, Room 355, Norton Hall. Then
proceed directly to the psycltiatric ward of Meyer
Memorial.)
1. The next Democratic nominee for the
Presidency of the United States should be : a) Hubert
Humphrey; b) Edmund Muskie ; c) George
McGovern ; d) Frank Sedita; c) Harold H"ughes; f)
other . . .
2. The next Republican nominee should be : a)
Richard Nixon; b) Spiro \gnew; c) Ronald Reagan;
d) John Mitchell ; e) George Wallace; f) It doesn't
matter ; aU of the above are the same.

S.J. Hayakawa; d) Alben Somit;e) Millard FUlmore.

8. The highest point in North America is: a)
Tijuana; b) Berkeley ; c) Greenwich Village; d) Butte,
Montana; e) Mt. Vesuvius.
9. Instead of John Wayne movies and Patton,
the next movie Richard Nixon should go see is : a) Z;
b) The Battle of Algiers ; c) Julius Caesar; d)
Censorship in Denmark; e) Bananas.

10. The most obnoxious person in America is:
a) Howard Cosell; b) William F. Buckley; c) Uncle
Dickie ; d) Aunt Martha.

.

11 . The team that will win the 1971 World
Series is the: a) St. ·Louis Browns; b) Seattle Pilots;
c) Milwaukee Braves; d) Brooklyn Dodgers.
12. The United States does not believe in
dictatotship. True or False?
13. The largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid is:
a) Spain ; b) Greece ; c) South Vietnam ; d) Haiti ; e)
South Korea ; f) Jordan; g) Pakistan (now. go back
and revise your answer to No. 12).

14. The purest water in the·u .s. : a) is found in
the Great Salt Lake; b) contains enough mercury to
· kill a brontosaurus; c) is in a vault at the Chase
j_ The next President of the United States Manhattan Bank.
should be: a) Dick Gregory; b) Julian Bond ; c)
15. The YMCA: a) is a CIA front ; b) holds
anybody the two major parties don't nominate; d)
week.ly
orgies with the YWCA; c) holds week.ly
put away; e) alive and weU and living in Argentina.
orgies without the YWCA; d) a &amp; c; e) b &amp; c; f) a &amp;
4. The entire Republican membership of the b; g) aU of the above; h) none of the above.
state legislature: a) should be dumped in Lak~ Erie;
16. The longest unanned border in the world: a)
b) should be dumped in the Atlantic Ocean; c)
runs
between California and the Pacific Ocean; b)
should just be dumped , it doesn't matter where; d)
runs
between
Nevada and Pennsylvania; c) is north
should be forced ~ spend two weeks locked in a
of
Upper
Volta
; d) is not north of Upper Volta.
room with Nelson Rockefeller.

5. The release of the Pentagon report by the
17. The Cincinnati Kid is really : a) Pete Rose; b}
New York Times : a) should be applauded as a rare Jerry Rubin ; c) from Columbus.
·
act of journalistic courage; b) was a violation of
18. The cultural center of Buffalo is: a) The
Defense· Department security, and should be
applauded; c) endangered government policy on Palace; b) the zoo; c) the Fine Arts Theater; d)
Vietnam, and should be applauded ; d) all of the Mueller's Delieatessen ; e) Utica, N.Y.
above.
19. The next mayor of Buffalo will be: a)
6. Buffalo will bu!!d a new sports stadiwn by related to Stefano Ma.gedino ; b) Alfreda Slominski;
the year: a) 1984; b) 2001; c) of the second coming c) not worth electing; d) Al Dragone'.
of the messiah.
20. The greatest American rock band is : a) the
7. The man least qualified to be president of a 1910 Fruitgum Co.; b) the Partridge Family ; c) the
Jruversity is: a) Robert Ketter; b) Peter Reagan; c) Monkees; d) the Archie$; e) the Osmond Brothers.

�•

...

--~
M~ful,To the Editor:
The June 11, 1971 issue of The Spectrum
featured a "Youth Vote Unite" plea from an alleged
"Little Man in a Trap." After reading his statement,
this one cannot help but suspect that this little man's
"trap" is his own immaturity and vezy limited
perspective.
·
Representatives in Washington don't just "give
away" things indiscriminately - particularly, power
inOuen,cing their own destinies. They're responding
to demands of a very vocal (and generally
conscientious) 18 to 20 age group that wants to
asser t itself in whatever decisions and
decision-making procesAs they feel will have
extensive repercussions in lheir own Uves. The ..
legislators .are neither clowns nor fools, and, it seems
curious that our (writer in a trap) would encourage
youth-at-large to " ... •vote for someone, anyone,
who isn't in office," on that basis alone. That
performance would seem to be far more becoming to
a fool and incompetent - our trapped writer,
perhaps - but hardly something representative of
youth seeking to establish its identity, awareness and
social concern.
The younger adult segment of society has
defmitely been afforded a significant opportunity to
participate, and it is for them to prove themselves a
more responsive element - as a whole - than
previous generations have shown themselves to \)e.
One of the most difficult aspects·o~ campaigning as
an aspirant to office is that of overcoming general
voter apathy.
Society, typically, is notorious for its lack of
perceptiveness and interest in incidents outside the
individual's immediate sphere of influence. Asking
John Doe for whom he voted in the last election can
be an alarmil'lg experience; be frequently "doesn't
remember," and, altogether too often, .just plain
doesn't care.
·
The way to counteract this tendency is .not to
stage a circus replete with clowns and freak
characters, or, indulge in any other comparably
mindless activity. The solution lies in being mindful
of current issues and becoming articulate to a degree
that reflects sincerity and purposefulness.
,Involvement entails work, quite simply, and that in
no small way might make it less exciting than the
usual ~ngling entourage or the last 'kick in the
mouth' one received during the many
demonstrations - which seem to become more
vogue and Jess effective with repetition.
Involvement means more than "banging"
together. Vegetables can hang (from vines or
whatever), but it remains for people - young people
- to "co-exist" with the Clreaded Establishment.
This also means aligning oneself in such a way, with
a certain belief, so that as an advocate of your own
cause, you are not automatically (and too often
entirely) swept up into prosecuting the
world-at-large for prosecution's sake - losing sight
and contact with a goal which may have been very
legitimate and acceptable.
Another point of interest should be raised, and
that pertains to the notion that being." . . . beaten,
shot at, jailed, reviled ... " serves as some sort of
justification, a common ground , a point of pride.
Many have suggested that in several instances of
con frontation , the violent reaction of the
"oppressors" came, not from basic viewpoint
disagreement, but as a resu.lt of inane and delinquent
behavior on the part of a few which caused the
public-at-large (courtesy of constant cameraman) to
ignore or fo~et the group's original purpose however flOble and/or sincere - and concentrate on
the sensational " warfare" narrated nightly by
"detached" commentators who aie selling news. Net
effect of first intent diminishes accordingly.
Should our "little man in a trap" ever recover
from his narrow-mindedness, he could investigate
lawful, meaningful Jipproaches which definitely exist
for those politically oriented - as displayed by
veterans in recent Senate Foreign Relations
Committee hearings. It isn't foolish, clownish and
won't land one in the circus - which is where
J 2-year-olds go when they run away, or more
explicitly, drop out.

'

'

less expenst.

To

th•~

Editor:

It seems that upon attempting to obtain a book
in the: bookstore the other day, I was astounde'd to
find s-omething new had been added ... or actually
taken away! My right to browse around and pick up
-books that seemed interesting. To those of you who
are nc&gt;t familiar with the fact that previously you
could wil.lk around and exercise a free choice in
obta.inting books not d efinitely prescribed b' anyone,
well~ now you can't!
This seems to me to be an infringement on my
rights, however small and possibly trivial to many
people~ 1 have talked to, who laugh and shrug it off as
"progJress." (State control, I'm sorry, progress comes
in sma1ll doses for lo&amp;)caJ reasons.) Control comes not
with a bang, but in a million small ruJes and
curtaillments of my and your freedom noticed only
as thi1ngs you could do yesterday that you can't do
today, till there are no more things you can do at all
and Y•OU come up with "no you can't do anything!"
Sure, rm making a mountain out of a mole bill, but
then that's how mountains are made.
Talking about stealing raising th e price of books
- fiancos li.lte closed circuit television which cost
$5000 for one year's use. $5000 to be added to the
cost of your books. This is how . these people save
you n11oney! Oh yeah, their managerial staff is also
paid !H8,000 a year for doing a job that I' m sure a
number of students are qualified for and could do at

'&amp;')Ok' discrimination
To the Editor:
On a recent visit to the bookstore, I discovered
that new procedures had been intro!luced in the
textb•ook section downstairs making it impossible for
stude111ts to browse through the bookstore stacks. 1
understand that faculty members can get into the
stacks!. L. find this form of discrimination against
'ltudemts unacceptable.
More important , there are substantial reasons
why litudents should be allowed to browse through
the ntacks. Many instructors like myself make
extensive use of ordering books for suggested reading
rather than compulsory assignments. This system can
only work if students are allowed to browse throusb
the available books and choose what they wish to
read . I, for one, could not make a considered
judgement of the books I wanted to buy without

Co1nmercial blood not bad
To the· Editor:
Titus is a reply to a letter written by Dr. Ernest
Schapiiro to you concerning Mirsa, Inc. Mirsa, Inc. is
the OJUY commercial plasmapharesis center in this
area a1nd is the concern which Dr. Schapiro refers to
as adv•ertising in The Spectrum .
F iirst, let me say that I do not think that
housE:wives, unemployed, working people or
studernts from the State University of Buffalo,
Buffalo State or Canisius are lower class or skid
row-t)rpe people. Since our majority of donors come
from these areas, then they are the ones to whom
Dr. Schapiro refers to in his article.
S•econdly, aU of our •plasma which we obtain
from tour donors, is tested for hepatitis. If a positive
test is encountered, the pl~sma is set aside and either

A cunent proposa) in • place I can't rememberis "credit cards which ~ill be used instead of money
in the. future, and if you da not have the riaht
number, you will not get any food at the
supermarket. And for those of you who shru1 il off
and say you will beat the system by rippin&amp; it off
(the food), you wo'n't be able to because you will
find out a card and the groceries will be brought to
you automatically at the Credit Card Register." No
more hard shopping around! As far as I am
concerned, those of you who shrug it off for
whatever reason, there is a poem dedicated to you
called the Ode to An Unknown Citizen (English 10 I
Po.etry). By the . way, there was a direct analogy
drawn by Ian DeWaal as to the state giving him the
power to control the Bookstou.
Therefore the State controls you.
Through your Student (State) Association.
Remember, that's your government.
l was assured by SA that no matter how many
names I could get on a petition to have this policy
changed, they would iGNORE the petition . (Because
they are in power, not the people) that's government
for and by the people, right? The next in line is
going to be Lockwood Library - sign a card and
order the book - but no browsing. ,All this because a
large number of books have been. Tipped off.
Therefore my "privilege" as it was called by my_
student representa.t ive, lan DeWaaJ is nonexistent.

Andreas

being able to look at them rather closely. The system
which has been instituted now will tend to reduce
students reading for courses to the assigned reading
only. I think this is contrary to one of the basic goals
of our teaching.
If the bookstore finds it necessary to institute
such a policy for economic reasons, it. certainly
should not do so on the sly. I, for one, would like to
be convinced of the over-riding necessity for such a
policy until I would willingly accept it~ l assume that
the basic argument will relate to thefts from the
bookstore. I wonder whether the bookstore
considered the economic consequences of its
decision when it instituted the new policy. l would
expect a substantisl. drop in sales as a consequence,
both because students will be buying fewer books
and because faculty members will fmd it necessary
to place their textbook order in some other
bookstore.
r

Konrad von Moltke, Dir~ctor
Collegiate System

discarded or used as control sera in th e laboratorr.
Thirdly, plasma obtained in a commercial
manner is classified as short supply items by the
federal government and is the only way in which
many antitoxins are obtained in our present day of
life. By paying our donors, it adds an incentive to
giving. This also helps many people and in particular
students who need extra money to help them
through school.
Fourth, it is also my understanding that Great
Britain buys plasma obtained in this manner from
other countries.
I would invite Dr. Schapiro or anyone else to
visit our facility at any time to see our operation. I
also feel this would enlighten Dr. Schapiro whose
ideas appear to come from the annals of history and
not Present Day.

Thomas P. Sawyer Sr.
Vice Presiden t

•

Richard G. Couch

Friday, June 25, 1971 . The Spectrum . Pa~ -..a

�Student inpui'"'. ~
-contiiMMI

•

from.,....-

Health Sciences suffer.
.

·&amp;op. ad clilcoaleDC

~ontlnued

auldelines •ould not allow
Executive Director ' Jack
student JOUrnments the SmoUk pointed out the put
IGibility ~ for effectiYe faOtnca and future hopes he
IDd complete prosrl.lllJ'Ili
pictured for the orpnlzation. Mr.
SASU further objected to the Smolik wu .. personally
ambipdty of a new repalation dkappointed.. that many of the
Umltio8 the level of surpluaea orilfnal goalt had not been met,
wbldl c:an be maintained by - but he did describe a IJ80t
student a~vernmentl and proposal designed to bridae the
questioned lily authority who conceptual and ideoloaic:al
would have the power to make differences between four-year
any type of dec:isfon conc:emina schools and community c:oUeges.
reserve accounts.
He also made the sugestion that
An additional problem was the Executive Committee meet
created by a phrase whidt stated with the Central Administration
that " . • . proper evidence that of SUNY on an ongoina basis.
IOOds or services are obtained
The weekend concluded with
prior to payment . . ." must be an emphasis on the importance of
provided before a check can be this ongoin1 input and
Jssued.~ccordinl to SASU, thi$
commitment on the part of the
would limit the ability ..of a member schools, in the programs
student government to provide and activities of SASU.
Thor• was, however, some
auarantees for concerts and other
llm.ilar programs.
discontent as a representative
After much debate, S'ASU from the student government at
adopted a statement condemning the State University CoUege at
the lack of student government Buffalo commented : "I don't
input in the drafting of the fiscal want to level criticism as a
and accounting procedures and a non-member, but there has been a
demand for student government less than total effort on the part
involvement in the redrafting of of member schools and the
the reguJalibns.
Executive Committee.

frOm . . . . 3-

future emoUment.
The recommendations are, in
all actuality, I reaffirmation of
the ori&amp;iaal decliJon -m 1963 to
ve Health Sciences at their
pr nt location and move all
o er departments to the Amhent
sit .
1 were chanaed, however,
in 967 when Martin Meyenon,
then University President ,
announced his decision to move
the entire campus to Amherst.
Dr. Ketter, at a meeting of the
Health Sciences faculty last week,
said that if the Task Force
recommendations are approved by
the TtuStees, preparations can get
underv(ay for a master plan for
the Health Sciences "to determine
what can be converted most
Mixed emotions
She said, however, tha\ if the readily, whether extra space is
trustees reject the Task Force needed and the nature of that
recommendation. it would create space."
problems in " providing adequate
STUDENT DISCOUNT on
space" to handle the growing
ALL redecoratina needs,
'OnJy direction•
art rupplies, picture framina
needs of the School of ·Nursing
WUUam M. Feagans, dean of and would, in effect. force the
D. M. Rech Paint Co.
the School of Dentistry, viewed school to " retrench in our present
3209 -Bailfl¥ Ave.
the Task Force recommendations programs•• and , possible, curtail
supports the Task Force
recommendatioos!' &amp;plainJna
that the health sciences student
aenerally needs six to eipt times
the facllltles that a student in
another division would necessarily
need, Dr. Somit said the present .
campus "could alm01t be all used
with an expanded health sciences
prosram." He fdt, however, that
it wu "impossible tp predict"
how the Trustees would vote on
the issue.
Although unavailable for
comment, Dean LeRoy Pesch of
the School of Medicine
announced his support of
remaining on the present Main St.
campus site as early as March. He
was joined by Dr. Claude L.
Randajl, vice president for Health
Sciences, as w.-Jl as a number of
departmental chairman within the
School of Medicine.

~

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she

...

Got something to advertise?

GENESEE
•

...
wry favorably : "That's the only
direction which we [In Health
Sciences1 can go."
Mixed reactions were YOiced by
Ruth T . McGrorey. dean of
Nursing. She said that althoU&amp;fl
she will abide by whatever
decision the Trustees make,
felt that the School of Nursing
would lose the interaction that it
has previously enjoyed with the
academic disciplines . She
preferred having the School of
Nursing within "the mainstream
of the campus" esJ)eciaUy since
both the undergraduate and
graduate programs have been an
integral part of the rest of the
University for many years.

f

WI DICUH tltAa OM
PftiST IUM ADULT . .

tea

............

Price $1.50 Price
with 1.0.

CLAIIIPIII

IU"M.O'I flUT IUM

355 Norton Hall

ICOLOitl

I'I.Ua alfbltT

__ .......__

-.mrs IIllA"

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(Uitrlo.

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65c -

11111111 Utft
IIU . . . . llal
~

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JONA1MAN lOOM~ •••

HOT PANTS
FOI A COO&amp;. SUMMER
Seenudtera, polyesten Of' cottons HI ltrlpes
tolld color1, Including nOyV. Long or
.hart s!Mws . . • ICOOp Of' turtle necks.
AN Washable.
Of'

$14.95 to $24.9$
THUitS.
flU f P.M.

!

f.

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...

srr..... -Eciditl. June 25, 1971
\

Pauline J ulien
Leam Clancy
Jac k Elliott
Bruce Cockburn
Slompen · Tom Connors
Alice and Mike Seeger
Murray Mcl auchlan
David Bro mberg
Michael Cooney
John Hartfo rd
Luke G•bson
Utah Phtlhps ·
Gordo n Bok
Harry Hibbs
David Rea
and mo re than 200 o thers

Mariposa. July 9, 10, 11. Three days of be~ui.tul music on Toronto
Island by mo re than 225 si&lt;Hs. From 10 e&lt;tc h morntng 1111 nene at
ntghl. A_dvance tiCkets · $3.75 per day ($1 0 for three day paSS).
At the Stle : $4.50 per day. K tds und er 12: 50 cents. Advance 11ckets
at Norton Hall Ticket Office, Buffalo Festival Ticket
Office, Buffalo.
Mall Orde'r:
284 Avenue Rd • ..--.........-~.
Toronto

a

F

· :1 '1.11.1

�Two 'DollS' m&lt;&gt;vies;
MariPOsa: a beautifulhstival skin double feature

· Summer bigtillght

,.____,'

The aae of the larae music
festival has come and gone.
General paranoia in the areu
picked for festival sites ' hu
brou&amp;ht ~ about a lot of tension
between youth and the older
generation. Most festivals don't
get put the planning state
anymore, and if they do, special
laws have been passed to prevent
them from actwally happenina.
Problems of pte crashing, lack of
food and medical supplies have all
contributed to the downfall of
large happenings.
The Mariposa Folk Festival,
now in its 11th year, is a different
story. Held at Toronto Islands in
Ontario, Mariposa is a beautiful,
unassumln&amp;. marvelous festival. A
ten-minute ferry ride takes you
from the Toronto Harbor over to
the islands. Once there, you begin
to feel the magic that is Mariposa.
The atmosJ'here is gentle, r-:Jaxed.
Trees, grass, soft summ~ breezes.
People sitting under trees,
strumming on guitars and banjos.
Workshops going on all over the
place, with performers from all
over Canada and the U.S. playing
their music.

ClosioJ the pp
At Mariposa, the very real gap
between performer and listener
d.isappean. You don't .sit miles
away from a stage, feeling like
you're watching a movie of your
favorite artists. You walk
alonpide them all day, talk to
them, share their music with
them. You realize that music is
made by real people, just Uke you
and me, and that the music is
everybody's to el\ioy.
Mariposa is changing this year
to some degree. The formal
evening concerts, which bave
drawn up to 101000 people in past
years, are being dropped. There
was some attempted gate crashing
last year, and this mi&amp;ht have
something to do with it. Mariposa
is a fragile festival, dependent on
the fact that most folks like
getting together to hear some
music and have some. fun . Since
the davtime prouams are the
BELL BOTTOMS - BODY SHIRTS
INCENSE
PAPERS

THE CLOTHES
- OUT
SHOPPE
Comer Main &amp; Bailey

Hn. 11·5 T, W,S, 114M, Th, Fri.

•

,

w..r~~~~•n·

Toronto island
most enjoyable and meaningful,
they are being extended to last
through the night-time period. On
each of the three days, there will
be workshops and small concerts
runnin&amp; in six different areas from
10 a.m. to 9 at night.
Each momiiig, the festival wilJ
open with a religious ceremony
conducted by two Cree Indian
medi c ine m e n from
Saska t chewan . Indian
participation at Mariposa has
greatly enriched the Festival in
the last few years. Craftsmen,
singers and dancers from the Cree,
Sioux and Blackfoot tribes (to
name a few) will be represented.
Bat of the US. and Canacb
The list of performers at
Mariposa this summer is seemingly
endless and is filled with familiar
names. Ramblin' Jack Elliot, one
of America's greatest folksingers,
returns this summer after making
countless numbers of new friend s
in his Mariposa appearance last
year. Mic hae) Qoo ney , a
folksinger's folksinger, brilliant on
~x and twelve string guitars and
all kinds of banjos ; Dave Van
Ronk, another veat folk and
blues singer; David ltea, one of
Canada's exciting guitarist whose
solo career has just b'gun to take
'off; and, David Brolnbera, who
showed up unexpect~y 1.ut year

.._.

EHiot

end gutt.Milt Dwid R• .,. .mont
the many n-.n• eppeerlng at the
Mariposa 1=o1k Festival this v•r.
· The festiv.al is being held July
9-11 at Toronto !stands in
Ontario.
and wound! up accompanying just
about everyone on guitar and
do bro.
Also Jean Ritchie, whose
dulcimer playing and sin&amp;inc have
thrilled mamy in past years; John
Hartford , noted Nashville
musician, best known for his
bartio worlc with Glen CampbeU;
the Georgia Sea Island sinaers, a
gospel sin&amp;:in&amp; &amp;toup wbo brings
everyone t·o their feet with their
energy an~l joy ; Mike and Alice
Seeger (he's Pete's brother, in case
you didtt't know); bluesmen
Johnny Slllines and Dr. Isaiah
Ross; Stompin' Tom Conners,
Canada's top country singer;
Francois Jo0urdan, French singer;
and from ol' home town Buffalo,
the Soulth Happiness Street
Society Skiffle Band, of which
yours truly is a member and
many, many more.
Tickets for the Festival, which
is a non-p1rofit event, have been
lowered in price this year. A
package for the entire three days
costs S l 0 . Tickets for individual
days are priced at S3.7S .
Mariposa• is one festival in
which everyone there takes plrt .
Once you go to Mariposa, you will
fmd yours~:lf retumina there year
after year. It's one of the real
higbli&amp;hts o•f any summer.
- Billy ..tltm11n

BE~ORE

YOII BU I
Your Colleget Texts
S~e US

first if JIOII
u ..ant to save• mon~y
We have a huge stoc:k of slightly
''

USEII»
IEXTBC-OKS··

..... • • • II rt. lecll , ...... We lise ~ly MW texts •lftrHclks-supplits

l ~s-tfts.

I

BUFFALO TEXTBOOK
3610 Main St. Auoss fr• U.l.

STORES

INC.

There is a certain excitement in
solng to double features - Uke
idiots we figure that we're getting
two movies for the price of one and we faU to · realize that our
percerptions are colored by the
order in which we see the movie.
AP. the juxtaposition of two
images in a film can produce a
third, and entirely different
feeJing, so the juxtaposition of
two entire movies can change the_
meaning of both of them. It is for
this reason that distributors
should really be careful in
b ooking -double features, not
because of compatible audiences
or price levels or anything like
't hat. The movies should simply
complement each other.
If memQIY serves me right, it
seems to me that the first official
double feature was the ·
block ·b ustrng combination of
Frankenstein and Dracula
somewhere around 1932 or
thereabouts (no, dummy, I wasn't
there, J just read about it
someplace), both established
successses on their own. Since
then, of course many a dud has
unrolled befort the bored eyes of
the movie-soing public on the
same bill as a decent movie, and
many good films have been
doubled up by enterprising
theater owners to get in an
audience.
The weirdest double feature I
ever saw was at the Elgin Theater
in New York, I believe, and
consisted of Bergman's Wild
Strawberries followed by King
Kong. Just try to imagine the
combined effect, and, just for fun,
try to figure what differences
would occur in your perceptions
of Wild Strawberries if you saw
King Kong first.

Barbie and Ken
Anyway , s u ch a mental
impasse is created by the double
feature now being flung at screens
in the local area, Valley of the
Dolls and Beyond the Valley of
tire Dolls. As all observers of
sc:block culture know, Valley of
tlte Dolls is the movie of the
Jacqueline Susann novel of the
same name that dealt with the
turgid lives of show biz people in
the j\.lngles of Broadway and
Hollywood .
The film asks the question :
Movie stars make millions and
millions of dollars but are they
happy? Predictably enough the
answer is ..no." This conclusion is
documented by the snowballing
downhill lives of Patty Duke and
Sharon Tate, who are mercilessly
destroyed by the glittering tinsel
worl.d of show biz. Poor Patty, it
seenu, can't belt out a song to a
matinee audience without
popping a few uppers and then
can't get down without upping a
few poppers, that is, downing a

Bible Truth
ADAM, EVE, DISOBEY GOD
' But of1be tree or the knowledse of
toe»d and evil, thou ahalt not eat o
t : for in the day that thou eetelt
dl•eof thou ahalt eurely ell e."
Gen. 2:1'7

dop tloppers ; or, foppina a Pft'
flounders . . .
.
' Anyway, all poor Jennifer
(played by Sharon Tate) hJs is her
body and so when her career ia
nipped in the bud, as it were, by
breast cancer she 1cills herself, but
not before she provides for her
husband Tony who was a
nightclub singer until' he was
struck down by Huntington's
Chorea (I was remind~ of SJ.
Perelman's comment, ..l've got
Parkinson's disease and he's got
mine .") and placed in a
sanitarium.
Meanwhile, Paul Burke and
Barbara Parkins are forever
crossing each other's path and
falling in and out of love as easily
as most people change their socks
until Barbara goes back to the old
famUyhomesteadinNewEngland
to lead a real life, etc., et~ .• etc.
If Valley of the Dolls can be
written off as pulpy gart;age to
convince millions of "bored
housewives that glamour isn't
everything and the best thing (or
nice girls to do is stay home and
have lddl, the viewer is in for a
real surprise with Beyond the
Valley of the Dolls. At the
beginning of the film we are
informed that contrary to our
expectations it is not a sequd to
Valley of the Dolls. As becomes
eminently clear within moments,
truer words were never spake.
Beyond, etc. reveals itself as
the most incredible put-on that
any studio was ever conned into
making. This picture is such a
mockery of the genre of movies
that Valley of the Dolls represents
that the pairing of the two of
them in one biU becomes truly
hilarious. This can be explained
by saying that it is a creation of
that grand dirty old man of sldn
Dicks, Russ Meyer.
This guy has figured things out
that are still twenty.five years
away from Hollywood ; li.lce
instead of putting some dreary old
~pository scene out on a street
someplace or U1 a restaurant he
puts it in bed. Sheer genius! Or
wben one guy is groping around
the private parts of this big stud
type the sound track launches
rnto "Stranger ln Paradise." I
mean , is that genius or is that
genius?
Toward the end the pace and
hectic rush of events is so
m rndblowrng as to send the
audience into disbelieving trances.
Suffice it to say that when Martin
Bormann is hacked to death on
the beach by a hermaphrodite
freaked out on peyote after
behea~ng a guy in a Tarzan outfit
my own threshold of disb_e lief was
totally shattered. Go see It
yourself - I'm not sure I can
stand it twice in a row.

...........
_.._..
......

-D:wld~lf

~---,1J18---.

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171-•t•s

Friday, June 25, 1971 . The Spectrum. Pac)e Dine

.

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Ihstar:ry
r~:t..1ml::&gt;e:rs

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•• u•

I £ ;:;;;nplmifaC
es obsttii!les
.
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by JIIDCS hul

by Stew'e Lipman
"We could 4o it the way other schools do," IIYI
Sp«~m Sl4!f Writer
Fritz. "Have them work the pme on Saturday , then
Two awnmen aao I was eatina my hmch"· on the hood of a
Jive tbem a day durina the week off so they won't
pick-up truck. in a cattle Jnltina ranae called Fiddler's Flats. The scene
Editor :r nou: Ltlst ~ek, The Spectrum covered be worldna overtjme."
is filled with Utah bwe saae and red cattle and bi&amp;J&gt;Iaclt mountains of the btufc propouls ofthe Five· Yet~r Pliln th11t would
Another phase of the plan involves itutitutina a
the Wasatch up in back of me, while the Flats stretCh out in front ,
reinstitute footbll/1 111 11 Wlrlity 1port 111 the St11te
uninterrupted except for occasional pencil lines of barbed wire fence .
"reaao1111ble policy throulh Food Semces of
Uni11enlty of Bu/111/o. Thl:l week, /IMncitll and other
proYictifta a aroup meal plan that must utilize a
Prom the hood of the pey lnter-Aaency Motor Pool Dodae, because I ob1tacle1 to the pllln are dilcwsed.
wu half afrald of those peat paranoid beasts, the cattle, I looked up
trainina table or a pr01ame schedule." Fritz baa no
from bolOJDI and cheese to a plume of dust risina from the flat
exact fiaurea on how much could be saved this .way,
horizon. The next time I looked up its two horses and their riders
A myriad of obstacles face the desianers of but he uys it "would be much.''
p.Uopina throu&amp;b the saae towards me. Marlboro Country! AU thoee football's Five-Year Plan if tbat aport is to return
Last winter when f&gt;Ur w~stlina team ate ita
mystical pairs of riders cloppina over the saae of the TV west str,ay here with the success many bope. Aside from the
across my memory like so many lost buffalo. Finally the two clop up, task of aettina the New Yotlt · State Truatees' pre...me meal of meat, potatoes and dessert, the
hats and aU, weathered, blue-dunpreed .
approval of the proaram itself, other problema the Food Service charae was $4.10 per man. A month
"You auv'ment man?'' one shouted. "Work for the burah?"
Athletic DJ:partment and Alumni Association would later the squad bad the same pre..pme meal at
I repUed that I wu.
face If the proJl'llm is brou&amp;ht back come under "M" another school. They cbaraed $2.10 per man."
Allocation of funds on • "flaashlp" buis is
"You new boy?" Same answer.
for Money.
another sugestion of the plan. With a dozen other
"You from around here?" I said no, from back East.
It was football's almost one-half million dollar SUNY scbooJJ considerina sttrtina football, Prit:t
"CoUeae kid?" I said yep.
debt over the last five years, and the unlikelihood of wants Buffalo to be the financial, as well as playin•
"What'cha studyin' up there at colleae?"
reducina it, which brou&amp;bt on President Ketter's lead. "Many other states work this way," Fritz
"Bnalish ," I said.
decision to drop the sport. That debt, incidentally, explains. "As the larJest member of the SUNY
"EnaJ.ish?"
appears to be of no consideration in the restoration system, other schools will loolt towards us. So fu.ncls
" Yea, like poetry."
of footbaU. "It's not our problem anymore," Jays should be allocated on a basis to let us take the
"
Poultry?"
they
said,
spurrina
their
horses
now,
leavina,
havina
• apparently learned what they had ridden out for.
Ketter. "The state told me this~ministration would lead."
"Yep," said I, watcblna the plume waver over the Flats, and be responsable for all its debts · football continued.
We dropped it. Now the debt' out of our bands."
turnina back to boloana and cheese.
The chances are that had I said Beatles, my stray cowpokes
The Five-Year Plan sua
a number of ways
Other ways of cuttina expenditures as contained
would not have been less puzzled. However, fmding myself 48 moons to cut future expenses so that a other debt doesn't
later in the heart of the Pepsi Generation, " BeaUes" mi~Jtt make a more build up. Foremost amona these. deas is state tuition in the Five-Year Plan include: Resumption of
effective pavlovian bell.
waivers. Grants-In-aid, of which tuition costs instltutJonaJ support (as was the case for a number
Specifically, I refer to the New·Number Two - T1te BEATLES - comprise about 30%, made up a larae part of the of yeal'$) for payment of certain institutional dues,
fees and usessments charaed by the' NCAA, ECAC,
Rlu1trated Lyria - 2 edited by Aan AJdridae. This posh, Neo-Maxian, debt. With state-funded tuition waivers, grant-in-aid
AAU and similar national and regional athletic
woodstoclcish volume Is filled with copied Beatie lyrics and quotes costs would be areatly reduced.
bodies. The total of those fees eomes to about
from the Liverpudlian lads, but is mostly more filled with a lot of
The pl.a n also su11ests "a coordinated health S 1800 per year. Through the proposed
poovy, fab, 1ear, Camaby Street drawinas and graphics by a lot of
aear, etc., artists. The book reeks of anachronism. The onJy · service poUcy for athletics that would adequately administrative restructurina of the Health, Physical
mind·blowina thiDa about it is the price ($5 .95 ) that would have been utilize student health and accident insurance and Education and Recreation Department, utilize
too much at the hey-day (if there was a hey-day) of all those University Health Services, as well as the Schools of araduate assistants from departmental lines who
psychedelic trinkets and novelties: love beads, day-glo, nlckerina love Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy and the Department would have coacbina usianments as part of their
liahts, kaleidoscopes and aU the other cluttering knick-knacks that now of Physical Therapy." By pooling the University's responsibilities with.,-ttl.,__assistantsrup. This would
medicaJ resources, Athletic; Director Dr. Harry Fritz result in the ~vina of II_S least $6000 per year;
pther dust in dim shoe boxes with half-used Bnglish Leather bottles.
continued assipment of coachina penonnel to
Worst of all Is the further prostitution of the Beatles. The book anticipates saving at least S I 0,000.
teacblna in the department, with salary payment
procedes to dl.&amp; up the cast of commercial facades of the four in an
from state lines.
attempt to resell us the poup. Most of the lyrics in the book are the Co-op with A-V
old ones (p~Revolver) , written before it became necessary to say
Anot}ler $6000, Fritz suggests, can be saved by
The athletic department is also investiptina
anythina. and consequently seem worthless except as nostalgia-pieces.
The quotes are interestina if mcanin&amp;less voices from the past, and they workina out a cooperative arrangement with ways ot. briaaina in more: ~ooey."' tla.Jler
consideratlott ts lbe addptlon of a Millard lflltmore
are usually out of sync - like everything efse in the book - with the lnstructionul Communications (Audio-Visual) In the
Colleae Atblettc Fee. MFC students raow pay no fee,
words and pictures. The art as 1967 as weU. The book miJbt have been production of game and practice fllms. In the past
but have to pay for each athletic event they attend,
interesting once just 11s those Pop Idol Charts (favorite Food, Favorite few years, the Athletic Department has had to have
as weU as for the use of recreational facilities.
Color, Srurt Size, What I Uke Best in Girls) on the backs of the early filmina done by members of a local TV station at
professional costs. The plan sugests that "these
Payment of the fee, wruch hinaes on adoption by the
albums were intereslina once.
MFC student body, will entitJe ni&amp;bt students to the
. A book of song lyrics in print brings up another point - one services could be included within the staff member's
load.
Thus,
game
and
practice
filmina
and
same
advantaaes enjoyed by day student.s. The
beaten into the around by lona-winded columnists over Dylan's words
- that of the difference between lyrics and poetry. Now a final word to production costs, plus equipment maintenance, Athletic Department anticipates getting about
$50,000 from MFC fees.
end the araument : I . Poems are o n paper and come in throuah the would become a part of general University services."
eyes; 2. Sonp are in the air and come in through the ears. Therefore ,
anyone who tries to sell you songs on paper is pullina your
clichO.ridden lea, and reaUy seUlng you poetry. It follows that since
Niapa Falls Blvd. North Tonawanda
there is no excuse for buying bad poetry, even if it is decorated with
hlp, if mediocre, art work, then there is no excuse for anyone, even
Sunday, June 27th at 8pm
stray cowboys, to buy this book.

s - amnaideu

-,

MELODY FAIR

speCials

r--------------------------,I
I

I
I
I
I
1

~at

.

noo)Caes

dwly ·

tickets available
at Norton Ticket Office
$4 ASS

I
I
I
I
1

MON.
SAUERBRATEN $3.&lt;45

(0r111nlc b"f)
SESAME CHICKEN $2.95

TUES.
EGG Pl.ANT PARMESAN $2.75
SPAGHETTI $1.95

(with oro-nlc mNt~lls)
WED.

~--------------------------~

SAUTEED VEG. • SPROUTS $1 .95
(With shrimp S2.9S)
SPAGHETTI $1.95

GRAND OPENING

,~'C­
CH ICKEN BROASTER
Free DeliVefv 836-8080
JUST ACROSS THE STREET IN THE UNIVERSITY PLAZA

THURS.
EGG PLANT PARMESAN $2.75
SPAGHETTI 11 II AOEl.LE OAVIS
$1.95
(With Ot!llnlc mNt~IIS $2.75)
lwhole wtiNt lPitlhettl)

FRI.
ORGANIC BEEF BOURGUIGNON
$3.45
l-OBSTER PIE S4..45
(l~

BONELESS SIRLOIN $4.50
T·80NE$4.915

SUN.
SPAGHETTI $1.95
(with mNtbllls $2.75)
EGG Pl.ANT PARMESAN S2.75
ENTREE INCLUDES: cottage chHH
&amp; homemade stone ground rye brNcs
&amp; butter; choice veg.; choice pot11to.
Also stone ground baking powder

biscuit...

PIZZA

SPAGHETTI

FROG LEGS

SHRIMP

SUBS

CHICKEN

HADDOCK

PERCH

Free Soda with this ad
Page ten . The Spectrum . Friday, June 25, 1971

lobst... )

SAT.

�Alllltarillt

let•rdey, J••e 21

CACTUS
I

2&amp;2&amp; Welden An,
Th.Wy. Exit &amp;Z A Rt: Z77

Outdoor volleyball, co-ed variety, will also be
The- Summer Softball Leaaue atarted
teen
on cantpul this IUIIUDer. Each team will be
entertainin&amp; the campus population this week
made
up of three men and three women: to inJure
piaYin&amp; on four fields Monday throuah Thursday.
Twenty teams are included in tho two aub-diviliona, equal riabta for both sexea. Coach Terry R.ansbury
fast-pitch and slow-pitch, with each team havina nine will be in dwJo of the prosram. which wit! run from
pmes in ita divilion. AbQut 400 students are July 6-29, on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons
included ·on tho teams, all appreciatin&amp; their sideline · from noon to 2 p.m. Further information and
registration- so to Room 4, Clark Gymm.
fanll.

• • • • •
Free golf instruction will be Jlven by men's
varsity coach Bill Dando, for women only (sorry,
men!). Activity starts on July 6; cl.wes will be held
every Tuesday and Thursday from noon to 2 p.m.
until July 29. · Registration will be held in Room 4,
Clark Gym on June 21-30. All equipment will be
supplied to the golfers who ~ill be instructed in all
aspects of the game. Any female student and female
faculty and staff members are eligible.
...

• • • • •
Finally, a tournament thia campus has needed
for several years, will be held this summer on July
21. lntense oompetition with ,.expert and hisblY
skilled oompetitors will highlight the Frilbee
Tourney. Teams of three (men and/or women) will
toss frisbees for... a.-three-minute time limit on ' the
appointed day; qualified judp will determine the
winners of the contest. Interested parties may
register on JulyS in Room 4, Clark Gym.

.. . .. . .
ILAIIIFIII

FOR SALE
1963 F,O.t.CON, runs well, new 42Mo.
battery, rldlo, 3.speed, 20+MPG,
$70.00. 873-1443. KMP trying.
REFRIGERATOR S, stovu and
w1snen. Reconditioned, delivered and
gUirlntHd. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamor• - TX4·3183.
1965 GAt.AXY, $400.1 Will be
available on Ju ly 3 , 1971. Y. Tsuo,
(716)839·0704. Call after 7:00p.m.
A BUY - cnalrs, dressers, cabinets,
bed, rug, lamps, bricks, shelves, valet.
After 4:00p.m., 836·0916.

call dinnertime 837·9218.

RAMBLER
1965 C la ssic 770,
6·CYIInder, power steering, air
conditio ned, rldlo, overdrive, tlnt•d
gtus, good t ires. 937-6038 after noon.

OWN ROOM. $50/mo. lndude$
utilities. For rest of summer. 10
minutes from campus. Dav• 837.0877.

WANTED

SUB·LET APARTMENT

HOUSEPAINTING, roofing, plasterlrig
jobs; professional work at r ..sonable
price. Call Carl 875·7131 or T om
882·1726.

AVAILABl-E JulY 1 - A ug. 31. 6Yt
r ooms! Call Jim 831·3610. Just
painted. Qulc.k walk to campus about 5 minutest Rent negotiable.

APARTMENT FOR RENT

SUBt.ET Juiy &amp; August - 1 bedroom
furnished apt. 1 block from campus.
Prlncaton Courts. 837.0377.

3 BEDROOM - Balley(Genesee arN 15 minute ride f rom campus. $120
plus utilities - 894·0904.

PERSONAL .

SEPT. 6th (oJI• way only) $109.00
Niagara Falls to London (Gatwlck).
323/31 6 Norton. 831·3602. University
Travel.

TWO BEDROOM apartment. Close to
c;ampus. July, August. Very cheap. Call
837·1531.

THE SPECTRUM'S classlf leds will dO
It for you, or just help you set 'up for
doing It, $1.25 for 15 words or less,
$.05 for each additional word. Ads
must b• paid f or before they run. 355
Norton Hall.

RIDE BOARD

ROOMMATES WANTED
FEMALE roommate for summer. C lose
to campus. $50. Own bedroom. PINM

•

Gus,
.t o
those

TRAIL RIDING IN N.Y. STATE
Open 7 d8ys • - -

.. ,
132-4112

53Z..U1Z

~~~~~

.~..

Join
·the
friendly
'hi's'
of

(355 Norton Hall)

1

Pt.UNK your magic twanger. TOday Is
National Froggle Day!
"ASIA" jamming Sunday, 5-9 p .m ..
Carousel Lounge. 5987 Main, wmsvl.
Followed' by open ja m . Come downl
FA EE sexy smokey gray cuddly
kittens. RNIIY adorable. Can do many
tr i cks . Housebroken. Call Roy
837·7127 •

MISCELLANEOUS

The Spectrum
Gust~v

A. Frisch, IM.

J•weler · Optlclon

41 l(fNMOII AVINUI

AI

Uool....wty ""'•

IUffA10, ... y, 14116

of

·

NICEt.Y FURNISHED house, c lose to
campus.
Evenings : 894 · 1212,
845·5600, or 652·1268. Ask for Jim
Steckmeyer.

WANTED : Oesperately ride
Berkeley area July 2. Will share all
happiness. Jan 866·9191.

800 8Cnl of the flnllt .

)

GU STAV (no frills 01' trumpeting,
please) w ill xerox anythi ng for $.06 a
copy. (ChNpest r1t• w• know In this
town.)

-------------------------------

FORMER PhD candidate will do paper
research or tutot In ptlllosoptly.
881·2810 Alan.
TYPING don• In my nome. 833·15t7"
EXPERIENCED fast ty ping b y •ectrlc
typewrlt•r. T h -, term papers, «c.
$.04/pa~. Call 873-1305.
PROFESSIONAl. typlng ,servlu, wort&lt;
don• on IBM magn•tlc card
equlpmant. Fast, etror-fr" copy.
Unlimited originals. Spedallzlng In all
types of diSMrtatlons and t h - . Call
837-65511:

us
who
know
him

FACULTY mtmtMn: H - any fOOCI
Jobs? OflC)erate studant needs wort&lt;.
PINSII help. Call J.,f 834-5510.

Xeroz copvtng (BC)
Gustav
- - - - - - - 3 5 5 Norton Hall
\

Friday, June 25, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

�,.
Sports Information
- C~Mk Gym recreation facilities are open ~ all
fee-payina University students with villicbted 1.0.
cards from .oneS semester, plus all summer Khool
students. Graduate students must pay $3 and fac:ulty
and staff must pay $5 for a permit to use the
facilities.

interested should contact Peter Kona, Room 205
Norton Hilll, or c;aii831-SS07 or 831-3828.

Announcements
Women's Liberation will hold free karate classes
for women Tues. and Thurs. from 4-6 p.m. in
Room 340 Norton Hall.
Taras and Otp Hubka will give a lecture on
transcendental Meditation, Tues. at 8 p.m. in Room
246 Norton Hall.
Any underp;adu;ate student interested in
tutoring college students for academic credit should
Cilll the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory at 831-3946.
Presently tutors are needed in Anatomy 307, .
Fin;ance 301, Management Science 301 and
Chemistry 123. Applications are available at 88
Winspear.
lntemiltional Folk Dancing will be held tonight
from 8- 11 p.m. in Room 30 Diefendorf Annex,
Psychom;at will be held Monday from 2-4 p.m.
and. Wednesday from 7- 10 p.m. in Room 232
Norton Hall.
Anyone interested in fencing is advised to come
to Clark Gym Tuesdays at 7:30p.m.
Gay Liberation Front will sponsor a Gay Rap
Wednestlay at 8 p .m. in Room 234 Norton Hall. All
gay men and women are invited to stop in and rap.
A non-&lt;:redit course in Mandarin will be offered
by the Swdent Association every Saturday from
10:3Q-11 :30 a.m. in Room 340 Norton Hall. The
course will cost $S'for three,months. Anyone who is

Summer Open Workshop and UB Opera Club
are pl;annina a prOduction of Gilbert and Sullivan's
Princess Ida durina the second summer session.
Anyone interested in participating in any capaci!Y.
please contact Mrs. Muriel Wolf - 633-7814.

Clar1t Gym recreation hours are u follows:
Gym and facilities besides pool - 3-10 p.m.,
Mon.-Fri.; 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat.; and noon- 10 p.m.
·sunn.
Swimming pool - 2:30-3:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri.,
2-3 p.m., Sat. and Sun. for faculty, staff and
families; 3:30-4:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 7-9 p.m. Wed .
and Sun., and 3- S p.m. Sat. for coed student
recreation; 7- 9 p.m. Mon. and Thurs., 3-5 p.m.
Sun. for faculty, staff and students; 7- 9 p.m. Tues.
for women only.
Children using the pool must be accompanied
by a parent. Further information and reservations
for indoor handball and squash courts can be
obtained by calling 831-5238.

The Chinese Studefft Associ;ation will present
the film Tht East Is Rtd tomorrow at 2 and 7 :30
p .m. in Capen 140.
The UB Vets Club will conduct ,Draft
Counselling every Wednesday from noon to 4 p.m. in
Room 260 Norton Hall.
Summer Session students who are eligible for
benefits from the Veterans Administration are
reminded that a listing of their summer couJses and
credits for which they are enrolled must be filed
with the Financial Aid Office. If this was not done at
the time of registration, veteran students should call
at Room 213, Harriman Library, to provide this
information.

The UB Alumni Association will hold a golf
outing on july 27 at South Shore Country Club in
Hamburg, N.Y. The $15 fee cevers a r?und of golf,
plus a cocktail party and din.-,er followmg the ev~nt.
Tee-off time is b~tween 10 a.m. and 2 p .m.; pnzes
will be awarded. Information and reservations are
available. through the Alumni Office, 831-4121.

Peace Corps Volunteer Seth Kurn from
Columbia, South America, will visit the State
University of Buffalo campus Wednesday, July 7.
Any member of the University community,
including undergraduates, graduate students and
experienced teachers, seeking more information
about the Peace Corps and what volunteers are doing
overseas, are encouraged to talk with Mr. Kurn who
will be located outside of Norton Union from 9 a.m.
to 2 p .m.

Students interested in roller hockey this fall, call
Jim at 836-6027. You must have your own
equipment. Check The Spectrum in September for
more details.

Hell\
Angels

on
wheels

Available at the Ticket Office
Shaw Festival
thru July 17: The Philanderer
th ru july 18: Summer Days
July~6-Sept. 4: Tonight at 8:30
July 29- Sept 5: War, Women and Other Trivia

-ostwrrelcner

Aug. 23- 28 - Vikki Carr
Aug. 3Q-Sept. 4 - Sefgio Franchi and Pat
Cooper
Century Theater
june 26 - Wilson Pickett and Jr. Walker and the
All-Stars

Melody Fair
.
thru June 26 : Plaza Suite - Edie Adams and Toronto Island
July 9 II - Mariposa Folk Festival
Tom Poston
June 27 - A /Ice Cooper
Summer Excursions
June 28- July 10: Fiddler on the Roof
june 27 - Niagara Falls
Robert Merrill
July 9 11 Stratford Weekend
July 11 - B.B. King
july 13 Shaw Festival : The Philanderer
July 12- 17: Hello Dolly - Betsy Palmer
July 24 Corning Glass Center
July 18 - AI Hirt
Aug. 13- 15 Stratford Weekend
July 19- 24 - Jerry Lewis and Helen O'Connell
Aug. 17 Shaw Festival: Tonight at 8:30
July 25 - The Irish Rovers
July 26- 31 : I(Jsmet - John Raitt and Anna
Aug. 22
Shaw Festival : War, Women and
Other Trivia
Maria Alberghetti
Aug. 1 - Roberta Flack
Rooftop Players
Aug. 2- 7 - Robert Goulet and Norm Crosby
Aug. 8 - The Four Seasons
June 24-266: "Slow Dance on the Killing
Ground''
Aug. 9 - Jerry Vale
Aug. 15 - Bobby Sherman
Carol Coming Events
Aug. 16- 21: The Sound of Music
Lawrence
Peace Bridge Exhibition Center
Aug. 22 - The Byrds
July 10 - Poco (on sale 6/21)

What's Happening
Exhibit: Herta L. Kane's Paintings, Upton Hall,
' Buffalo State College, ends Mon.
Exhibit: Images from the Past, Center Lounge,
Norton Hall, ends Mon.
Play : Plaza Suite , Melody Fair, ends Sun.
Friday, june 25
Film: 2001: A Space Odyssey, cont1nuous showings,
Conference Theater, Norton Hall, thru Mon.
Sunday, June 27
Concert : Alice Cooper, 8 p.m., Melody Fair
Monday, June 28
Play: Fiddler on the Roof, O'Keefe Centre, Toronto,
thru July 3
Tuesday, June 29
Concert: Musical Americana, 8:30 p .m., Baird
Recital Hall
Film : The Gladlotors, continuous showings,
Conference Theater, Norton Hall, thru Thurs.

Backpage

-Sueralch

I

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[Allentown Photograph]</text>
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Two philosophies on stipends&#13;
Student Judiciary to continue this summer</text>
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Mysterious fund&#13;
House for addicts proposed&#13;
Health Sciences suffer from inadequate space</text>
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Allentown Festival gets the blahs</text>
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Hearing commission to decide the future of suspended student&#13;
Student input desired</text>
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Editorials&#13;
For what it's worth</text>
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Feedback</text>
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Student input...&#13;
Health Sciences suffer...</text>
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Mariposa: a beautiful festival&#13;
Two Dolls' movies: skin double feature</text>
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In starry numbers&#13;
Football plan faces obstacles</text>
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Sports spot&#13;
Classified</text>
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Announcements&#13;
Sports Information&#13;
Available at the Ticket Office&#13;
What's Happening</text>
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                    <text>,.
Vol. 22, No. 2

.Stat- University of.New York at Buffaln

Friday, June 18. 1971

Mr.' Slesinger added : "i can't see the state expendina
the required amounts on account of the budaet crunch and
. their past disinterest. If they were going to allocate that
A succinct proposal outlining a five-year plan mainly amount they should have done it in December when we
concerned with the Jestoration of "big-time" football to had an ongoing program witli the best freshman team in
the State University of New York at Buffalo has been the East."
·developed by the Athletic Department.
Hin&amp;ing on a return of student funding to its past GeQer&amp;te inferat
The termiAation of football this past spring has
levels, the proposal seeks a renewed commitment on the
part .of the alumni in terms of financial support. The mosf resulted in a majority of the freshmen team transferring to
critical ~quirement is that New York State revoke its ban o ther sch ools. In addition, in terms of the projected caliber
on grant-in-&amp;.ids for athleticS' and aaree to pick up the tab. of comRetition, most teams of the quality needed to
The plan additionally calls for the upgradin&amp; of aU existing · supposedly increase attendance have their schedules filled
through I 980.
.
varsity sports to a more competitive level.
Dr. Somlt's second point concerning alumni monies
revQlves on a supposition which h as never succeeded in the
past. Alumni coptributions to football were between ten
Scott Slesinger, former chairman of the Athletic
and $20,000 last year. In a city where pro-football has
Reviiw Boar( attempted to define the amounts of
been a successful drawing card, it S~:ems presumptuous to
fundin&amp; tha\ wo uld be required for successful increase alumni contributions to a workable levet lb
Implementation of the plan: "At current levels, additio~. only a hard core group of alumni have expressed
grant-in-aids would cost S240,000 every year." Starting any desire for the return of football.
with 3() grant-in-aids the first year , and adding 30 every
The hope that student support be restored to its past
y_e ar after until a total' ofj 20 athletes receive funding, the level is without obvious basis. A few years ago, students
total cost for four years would be $600,000 just from the voted to eliminate the mandatory athletic fee entirely.
state.
After an intensive campaign for the re turn of a mandatory
fee , students stipulated that football not be increased from
Doomed plan
its existent level, but ra ther that aU other sports be
Albert Somit, e)(ecutive vice president, Jn outlining upgraded.
three prerequisite's for the 'rebirth o f football actually
. Upon · consideration of student attendance at
explained the reasons why the plan is doomed to failure : football games, it becomes readily apparent that such an
"There would have' to be a m;Uor shift
state policy ; a extensive subsidy from the students is no t justified (last
major funding effort on the part of the alumni and an year's allocation from .the Athletic Review Board was
outburst of philanthropy on the part of 'he students."
$129,000 ... just for expenses, not grant-in-aids). Over the
At the presenl time the state has shown no last eight years, Rotary Field bas never been filled to
willingness whatsoever to alter . its positio n on funding capacity while local high school football games have
athletics. According to Mr. Slesinger, it seems rather ou\drawn Stale University of Buffalo football on
unrealistic to suppose th.e state would be willing to expend numerous occasions. Also, hockey in its first year of
any additional monies on an activity whose benefit to the varsity competition, dr~w standing-room crowds on three
campus has been proven rather limit~. in Iicht of m;Uor occasions.
.
budget cuts effected. by me ' iqislative ax this past year.
In
reality,
football strikeS'-out. Mr. Slesinger
AJao, a forebodint ~at .u~aJiy prudent beh~vior on concluded: "The alumni
are lobbying, but I'm afraid they
the part of the legislature was no t peculiar to this se.ssion,
have a slim cllance of success." It's time that football be
but wilf continue next year diminishes the changes of a
given its final burial.
maJor policy. change.
by Ed·laffe
Spectrum Staff Writer

..

{

.

.

Football·. revival
.appears doomed

T"~: ~p~:cT~uM aews aaalysis.

in

.

Gelbaum suggestedfor academic post
Bernard R. Gelbaum, associate dea·n of
the School . of Physical Sciences and
prof~ssor of mathematics at the University
of Ca li fornia, Ir vine, ha s been
recommended fo r appointment as Vice
President for Academic Affairs. When
offic ially con'firmed by the State
University of New York B9ard of Trustees
later this month , Dr. Gelbaum will take
over the· pt)St temporarily fille9 by Daniel
Murray.
After reviewing over J00 candidates for
the p osi.t ion, a Search Comm1ttee
composed of faculty, students and alumni
recommended Dr. Gelbaum along with two
other nominees as qualified for Academic
Vice President. According to their teport :
..The Search Committee reached tho
decision that despite the on-campus
presence· of talented iJldividuals who have
demonstrated great dedication to the
development of State University of Buffalo
as a major American university, the
interests of State University of Buffalo at
present and in the foreSeeable future, are
best served by th~ appointment of an
Academic Vice President from outside the·
University."
Active and articulate
Highly rewarded with University Service
Awards and an Extradordinarius
Certificate, Dr. Gelbaum has been lauded
by his coDeagues as ..an articulate
promoter of the University and higher
education." In addition, he has been cited

as "a champion of student needs, a tighter
for the University, a distinguished scholar
and an active member of the Irvine
community."
Dr. Gelbaum was a member of the
University of Minnesota Department of
Mathematics from 1948 to 1964. He joined
the Irvine faculty in 1964 as professor and
first c h airman of t h e School's
n e w I y - f o u n d e (J d e p il r t m e n t' o f
mathematics1 and was named to his present
post in February, 1968. Within the School
of Phy sical Sciences he has been
responsible for staff coordination, faculty
recruitment, academic and curricular
programming and planning, and liaispn
with other academic units of the
Uni\lersity. the Irvine community and
California.
Community-oriented
A key figure in the academic planning
of the Irvine campus, Dr. ,Gelbaum : has
served as chairman of the Graduate Council
and of the Committee of £ducatjonal
policy . He is currently Irvine DiviSion
Chairman of the University of California
Academic Senate, a post which has led him
to deep involvement in decision-making
thro'lShout the enyre range of campus and
.university operation and policy. He has
also been a member of several special
com mittees concerned with the
formulation of academic policy, codes of
faculty responsibility and discipline and
long-range planning.

Much of Dr. Gelbaum's work has been
community-oriented. He organized and
secured financ'ial backing for a series of
programs to upg rade mathematics
education in elementary and secondary
S(Ohools in Orange County, Cali f.
Under a grant from the National Science
Foundation , he designed an integrated
m&amp;themati cs sy ll abus for grades
kindergarten through I 2 and formulated a
program under which 2000 teachers were·
trained in the mathematical background
for the sy llabus and its classroom
application. There are 150,000 Orange
County grammar and high school students
currently learning mathematics under the
new curriculum .
Educational benefits
. Dr. Gelbaum presently directs tht
Computer Oriented Mathematics Program
experimentally designed to determine the ·
effectiveness of having small programmable
co mpute rs in classroom instructional
situations. This plan involves 150 teachers
and 17,000 students.
In 1966, Dr. Gelbaum founded and
organl~ the University of California
Irvine Industrial Associates Program (lAP)
which brought together major industrial
and commercial concerns of the Irvine area
with the University for mutual educational,
research and financial · benefit. lAP
members from business and industry have
subsequently been guests of the University
at special Industrial Asso~te Days and at

various conferences and workshops.dealing
with scientific, management and
recruitment problCJ!IS. These have provided
university students with the opportunity to
learn first hand about troubles in these
areas while allowing industries to draw
upon the intellectual resources of the
university in problem«&gt;lving.
Dr. · Gelbaum is the co-author of two
textbooks and the author of several articles
in mathematics. He was consultina editor
for the W.B. Saunders Co. for whom he
organized and developed the Saunders
Mathematics Books, several of\ which are
already in print . ,

�..
...

..

Poverty Hill

·--

,.

Page two. The Spectrum • F_riday, ~'!'!' 18! 1971

.'

�,,
I

~er.ty Hill

i

'

~

-r

Seal story refuted .bY

Comerce Department
Editor's note: The following is reprinted from a Telex article (June
15, 1971) concerning a story.publi8hed in The Spect rum qn May 5,
1971.
WASHINGTON - A recent article in a student newspaper at the
State University of New York at Buffalo was refuted today by a
U.S. Commerce Department official in Washingt on.
The o ffi ctal, Walter Kirkness, assistant director of the National
. Marine Fisheries Service, said that clubbing seals is the most
human e .way. of killing them for their furs. The cpllege editors
prot ested the slau~ter of the sea,ls on Alaska's Pribilof Islands.
Kirkness sent a letter, released today by the College- Republican
National Committee. The letter criticized the Buffalo story, calling
it inaccurate, because it showed the killing of seals off Canada ·
. rather than in the Pribilofs.
The official said none of the allegations of cruelty made against
'the Canadian seal harvest applied in the Pribilofs, where· the U.S.
governmen t takes· fur seals under an international agreement.
Kirkness said the Pribilof seals provide the main source of
em ployment for Aleuts on the islands, and that an end to the
harvest would lead to unrestricted kill in~ of th e seals on the high

seas. . .

: Caretakers face prOblems

'

·.

.

ne letter stated : " It is our opinion that t he public issue over
clubbing t he seals is not ent irely based on a concern to find. a
method that causes t he least suffering to the animal, but rather to
fin d a method that causes th e least anguish to an observer."
He said t hat .as a result, the government agency is looking for
alternative methods for killing the se~s .

Spa~eforall

Open parking initiated
In what many consider a Tuesday and Thursday, had
surprise decision, the Traffic alleviated the problem that peaks
Control Advisory Committee in ll annually du r ing the winter
·mo n ths. Wh c;n asked if the
m~tjng last Tuesday· moved to
initiate open parking " as soon as problem ~0 a be expected to
possible," o n a trial basis through reappear ne t winter, Mr. Hunt
Sept. 30. This decision, however, acknowledg d the possibility.
He furt er admitted that the
does not include the President's
delay open parking
lot or Diefendorf lot, both of decision
w h ich will remain restricted had been made " higher up," but
during the day. This is the latest refused to name this authority.
development in a series that began
nearly six months ago.
Irrelevant decision
•
Last february, the committee,
At
the time of this decision,
which has advisory power only .
Student Association President lao
recommended to President Ketter
DeWaal
, also a member of the
that an open parking system (first
Committee, denoum;ed
Traffic
come, first served) be instituted
the
reasons
for postponement as
beginning May 1. This was a
compromise recommendation as "irrelevant, inconsequential and
some members wete committed to ridiculous." He contin'ued that the
permanent open parking 'and F e bruary co mpromise was
otherS were adamently opposed to reached ."only . . . because Ithe
any situation which forfeited their students I expected the promises
of a trial period in. May to be ·
privileges.
fulfilled ."
Last Tuesday 's d ec isio n
No changeover
However, nothing was ever reached the on·e important
done to effect the changeover. s t ipulat i on that if serious
Robert Hunt , Environmental problems arise, there may be a
Health and Safety Officer and shift in a system prior to the
c hairma n of the Traffi c September date . . . " An
Committee, explained that the assess ment meeting of open
rescheduling of many Monday. parking arrangements will be held
and
classes to Aug. 15.

After frust rating d elays,
Pp vert:y Hill is now available fpr
st udent u se. Obtained o n a
$1 0,01[)0 option agreement , the
forme r ski resort and surrpunding
land a re open for general camping,
hikina: and recreational uses.
Sub-Board I, Inc., the financial
a'r m o f t h e s tude n t body
respo11sible for closing the option
agree11nent. recently authoriz.ed
the retention of two caretakers to
p erfo,r m t he custo d ial and
maint•~nance tasks necessary for
th e proper upkeep 'of t he
facilities: Facilities include a
lodge, housing toilet and water
suppl)l, two-·takes and over I 000
acres •of wooded land . In addition,
they J!)erform a watchdog role to
preve~lt unnecessary accidents and
t o be available in case of
emergencies.
· Paul Carton, a University
studcmt was first hired by
Sub-Board as carelaker. During h is
first two .weeks of employment he
has been assi$ted by a friend ,
Bruce Gitter (also a student), in
initiating the preliminary steps to
restor'e the lodge to a usable
condil!ion, According to them , the
time they have spent at Poverty
Hill has "opened their eyes" to
some serious problems which
must lbe corrected.

Many misconceptions
"P•eople act strangely when
they get out here in the open
space!;," Mr. Carton revealed . He
continued t h at "the free
move11nen t and lack of rules

.......
.._ ..
.........

ch a n ge s their ~perceptions o f
reality. People react negatively
when you tell them there are
certain t hings that can and cannot
be done."
Mr. Carton commen ted that
there are many misconceptions
t h at b ecome apparent when
students arrive at the lodge. T hese
have ranged from beliefs that t he
lod ge. is open as general sleeping
quarters t o the beHef that
poisonous snakes infest the
property.
In addition, Mr. Carto n is
concerned with the image be has
to proje~t : " I don't want 'to be a
policeman , but what can l d o?
There are certain things which
have to be done. I am also just a
student."
Other problems have arisen
over the uses to which the lodge
can be put. Explaining that the
lodge currently serves as the
s l eeping quarters of t h e
caretakers, Mr. Carton spoke of
people waiting him up during the
evening with the mistaken belief
that the lodge was an all-night
ga t heri n g place : "It's ou r
bedroom. our home. We don't
mind people visiting and rapping
during the day while we work, but
at night, we need our sleep."
Crash-pad dangers
Sub-Board members are also
fearful of the lodge becoming a
crash -pad , thereby limiting the use
of facilities . At the present time,
the lodge itself is available for
over-night stays, only when

·i n c le me n t w eat h er p rev~nts
outdoor cam pin•.
Ano ther basic concern of
Sub-Board bas been to p resent a
favorable image to local residents
of the surrounding areas and
E ll ico tt v ill e. Th e l oc al
to w nspeople have been very
helpful and friendly to students
up to this point as evidenced b y
Mr. Carton's recen t acq uisition of
. an electric stove from th e local
deputy sheriff.
Co mm e n ti n g o n area
personalities, Mr. Carton said that
"a~y time help is needed, the
local people would be the first to
volu nteer. However. th ey do
believe in individuality and the
importan-ce of priva te property .
Whittever happens, th is belief
must be respected ."
ln regard to this, he explained
how careless driving on t he
property . cou ld pose some
proble ms . According to Mr.
Carton , people have attempted to
d ri v e through the fields ,
endangering those people sleeping
hidden in the tall grass : "The cars
should stick to the dirt roads."
He also emphasized that
shooting is prohibited on the
land : "Tell the students that they
can do anything they want,
except use guns." This past
Sunday, Mr. Carton had to stop a
student who believed that th e
land could be used for rifle
practice. Both student caretakers
believe that "the place is j ust not
big enough for that type of
thing. "

..lle•,QI•
[

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a Monti• In Your

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FOnEIGN CAR REPAIRS
11 066 Sheridan Dr ive
S p ttcia lizino in Volkswagen.
Trh~mi»h. Volvo, MG. Austin
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Any Group or Type
Men and Women

MIRSA ; ·1
2450 ELMWOOD AVE.
874-0591
290 FRANKLIN ST.
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June

12, 3 .l 8 p.m.
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
6 .l9 p.m.

CHECKPOINT
FOREIGN CAR SALES &amp; SERVICE
Allt..raefl ,..,_,

SAlES e SERVICE
• PARTS •
Spectrum is published weekly
the summer sessions by
Sub·Board I, Inc. of the State
Univltristy of New York at Buffalo.
Offices &amp;re located at 355 Nonon
Hall, State Unlll\.~it.v of N~ Yotk
at Buffalo. TelePt'n:fne: Area code
716; Editorial, 831-41 13; Business,
831-:5610.

Aep1'111Sented for _ ldvartlsing by
Naticmal Educetiorn~l Adv~ising
Servi,ce, Inc., 18 E. 60t,h Stf'eet. New
Yo rlt, New York 10022.

COMPLOE SERVIa FACILITIES
FOREIGN CAR SPECIALISTS
AUTO REPA.ING &amp; COLLISIOJI WORK

Subt~:rlptlon rates are $4.60 pet'
semaJter or $8.00 for two semesters.

" VIsit O.r New S6ewr...s"

Seco•1d Class Postage
Buff11lo, New York.

peid

Circulation: 10,000

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Friday, June 18, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

P

�·More student input aiin

- - - · ·lllllillll
··· . . . .

•

SUNSHINE. HOUSE

1·-

C•llorcomein
ANYTIME
Drug em....,cies 8J
drug related problems

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All Confidential

108 Winspear Ave. ·
831-4046
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CHICKEN '
SHRIMP
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food . Just across the street in UNIVERSITY PlAZA.

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CHARLIE'S
BARBER SHOP

ofnew GSApresident

To make the students aware of
the existence of the Graduate
Student Association is the
primary concern · of its new
president, Michael Nil;olau. Mr.
Nicolau, a PhD candidate in Civil .
Engineering, explained that the
aim of this association is to
provide a means for students to
have input into policies affecting
them .
In an effort to facilitate this,
he hopes to improve
communications between the
· GSA Senate and the graduate
· student· body. Also, according to
Mr. Ni'Colau, "a more productive
inte_gration of the student
governments at .. UB" would
contrib.u te to the effectiveness or'
the'student power mOYement.
Presently, tie commented,
many students ·are unaware of
what GSA does. He explained that
GSA fund s as many as 60
activities covered by student fees.
Mr. · Nicolau further said that
although many new organizations
arc expected to be established
· during the coming academic year,
GSA would try no t to raise fees·
which are currently $7.50 per
semester.

ae...ss fre• Geotlyear
ac ••• U•lversl•~· Pla7.a

..

~

Gr~duate

problems
" The GSA o perations will
come into full swing as o f next
fall ,'' accord ing to Mr. Nicolau,
but m e anwhjle s umm e r
committees are b'eing set up " to

• 10% DISCOUNT ·

upon presentation
of 1.0. Card on
men's hairpieces.

develop da(a '!!tatisti~s by
investigating the problems of
graduate stud~nts." The i.n tent is
that once these probiems are wC'll
defined, Ute GSA can proceed to
eliminate them systematically."
One ~uch problem ' is tl\e
necessity for legal aid to students.
"Legal Services are a must for a
studen t organizatioa," Mr.
Nicolau said. GSA plans to follow
the example of the undergraduate
Student Association in re!taining
Norman Effman, a ·privat~
attomey, to also act as "the
students' lawyer."
As a voting member of
Sub-Board I , Inc., the financial
arm of the student body, Mr.
Nicolau feel!l that . it should
purchase Poverty Hill, 1148 acres
of wooiied lend sou'th of nuffalo.
However,- he did express his
concern about legal probJems and
safety requirements that stem
from • owning private property .
Such problems could be so lved ,
according to Mr. Nlcolau, if "the
aut horit1es will give careful
thought and act in a manl\er that
will eliminate the possibility o r'
da~age and undesirable lawsuits.''

DA ILY SPECIALS .

.....~!ible T-nJ''.aiUI-L-....

tot thOM Ytl"to w;em to llfftct the struc:tura .nc1

Wt ...a not to inWfU bett.tr -bend·aidS... but to
find and dtsuov root ta~ltl of dltlutnani.llno
oondltiont

HOUSE

WE D.,
SAUTEED VEG. - SPROU~ $-1.45
( with shrim p $3.45)

LONDON

PRESENTS

s.

ANTIOCH COLLEGE

3199MAIN ST.
ATWINSPEAR

11 CO•nrniUecJ to confronting ICX•II lnd lmtiru
cional fUIU•'n' WhiC'h Pl"PIIUite tmpe1'iJhltn, fiC•

'"'"· expiOillllon, end QC)ptfts•on.
F~ ilf)(Jiie~Uon I •ntffV•ew I •nlorm~t •on. cont.act:
J•v f~ror, Admtul4tls, Ant•oth CoUioQII. Oakland

MMO&lt; Columbto. MorviOf'd 21043

Swiochho••&lt;l "'""' Mondlv-Frldov. 11om
(30H 730-11115

u

N
D

SPAGHETI'J SI.9S
( with meot balls $ 2. 75)
EGG PLANT PARMESAN S2.75
ENTR E E INCLUOES r c ottage
cheese &amp; homemade stone w o und
rye bread &amp; butter i choice veg. 1
choice potato. Also stone ground
baking powder biscuits.

- Acls 4 : 12

VJA JET
June 1 to Sept. 30 $239 rd. trip
Oct. 1: '12 to May 30, '72 $198
round trip
Stuart Solomon
'896·0285

,.~RDTHERHDOP
. .){ERN)· 6

sa . }tUCff'
WHEN

YOU~~ . •

L~K!r-ttr, ~0" tL.OTHi.5:
BELLS,f..NITSJHOT PRifllHt,

P.!i: WE 1\"P ~ Yall13;~ ~=~· ~.:.ia1
t!!!l" m ,auf P•
P..kl"f Atleto!lc ltetlell
-.-.1;:;-l;l.";1.;;;b;l\;';l.;E;Y';iw.i;i';O;f2i;Eiilti;;h~l1~)~1.
••
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•••
••
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BLACKSMITII SlOP

:1I.TEIESTE~ 1• 11111~~ ·7 i
• There are several vacan-:

y

6

-

··~---•:,"•

I .

A

I

' ORGANIC BEEF BOURGUIGNON
$3.45
LOBSTER PIE $4.45
( I 00% lobster)
SAT.
BONELESS SIRLOIN $4.59
(center cut)
SUN.

THE WASHINGTON BAL TIMOAE CAMPUS OF

~~A VIOUR

" Neither i~ there salvation in
any other for there is none other
name under heaven given among
men, whereby we must be saved."

FRI.

ltWJ prtouun ot our IOC•tty

CHRIST TH E ONl

SAUERBRATEN SJ.45
(organic beeJl
TUES.
EGG rtANT PARMESAN $2.75
SPAGH&amp;TII $1.95
(wit I.' o rgar1ic m eJJtballs $2. 75)

EGG PLANT PARME'SAN $1.75

'W• oUe·r • i.Jwe~pmental •httn.tlwe in tdue~t4on

Michael' .Nic.olau

Future activities
Mr. Nico!au also commented
on the influence exercised by
Sub-BoJlrd I over the publications
it finances: " This way we can
make sure that the publications
voice student interest . If the

TH URS.
SPAGHETI'l a Ia ADELLE DAVIS
$1.95
(with organic m eJJtba/1$ $2. 75)
whole wfieJJt spogheui)

BEEF
and-ALE

\..

publications were self'Sustaihing,
then there wou'ld be no guar&amp;nteel
that student· interest would be
given maximum attention." He
continued though th'at he would
be in favor of publications
supporting themselves "but such a·
possibility is remote.''
Outlining futur e GSA
activities, Mr. Nicolau maintained
that a new set of officers will try·
to make the next year " more
active and less serio us than .the
' last one." T o fa cilitate this, more
campus speakers and several
carnivals • will be arranged . Other
plans include trying to establish
so m e opti o ns o n s tudent
in'S urance and to " provide student
'in put " o n h o u s i n g and
t.ra'ns p o rtation plans for the
Amherst campus.

MON.

. Specializing in fvery Phase
:.· ol Men's H11itstyling, R11Zor
Cutting and Bear.d Trimming

'

DIRT

THIS FRIDAY. AND SATURDAY NIGHT
MAKt IT TO THE "BEEF AND ALE"
LISTE~

AND DANCE TO
SUNDAY'S DIRT

i

.

·1
I
' : li111•1 AIIICIATIIIi D•FIII .:.
F6.~ further information contact
THE .
·

1

. ._ ......____NN·o-c.a.v.E·R·C·H·A·R-G.E'.~• :

.,.

I

cies stilltq be filled on the
·•• summer student court.
:

•.

1
Ill·
117
:
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. ....•
RM

~~5c:~~TON

Pllt1l four_. 1'/w$p«:ttum. Fr~day, Jun• 18, 1.911
'

�Student Rights Office
.~·

HOT PANTS

B.ailfund basic responsibility

.~CHATMAN

LOGAN SUGOISTS

S.erauo:~ra, po,!y~tera

or cc;&gt;nona In atrlpea

or s.olld' colors, Including novy. lonQ or

"Taking up tl\ings as they come along" is t he
working philosophy of the Student Association's
new director of the Office of Stude11t Riahts, Tom
DeMartino. Com menting that his post ''entails a lot
of t)lings," he explained that his duties aren't
delineated as his job c hanges daily. He continued
that problems arise which his position is forced to
b.andle : "There are no definitive plans that I must
undertake ... my job is whatever arises."

short sleeves . • . scoop or turtle ~ks.

All Woahoble.

WASIIINGYON SUIIftUSCIII'Ia

Presently, the Office of Student Rights has the
two basic responsnbilities of controlling the SA Ball
Fund and functioning as an office for student
advisement. Mr. DeMartino described his role as a
"liaison between students seeking help and between
someone who can help them."

IUIIIF- IIAIJF

IEI.lS &amp; THIIIGS- ... Styles f• Y•• . . . . .

'
#

LIAftii.AGOODS
IACIIID
. . . .

....... ,acun
· ...n.uv•

....

He contin ued that his importance lay not in
what he personally could do but in h is efforts to
direct people to the respective aid. If a student had a
legal problem, according to Mr. DeMartino, hll could
seek information and assistance from the Office of
Stude nt Rights : "Hopefully, we would be able to
help him get his problem solved.''

#

SAVE MONEY
SHOP liMY NAVY

Community work

7J0..732 MAIM - 153-1515 MEAl TUPPa

The o ther real function of the Office of Student
Rights is regulating the bail fund . Expressing hi!
dissatisfaction with the bail fund as presentl)
conceived, Mr. DeMartino outlined future hopes for
a community bail fund. He criticized the narrowness
of the bail fund and maintained that while the
University is separate from the outside community,
it is also an mtegral part of it : "f feel that we are in a
position to go into the com munity and do some
worthwhile communit y work." Such plans would
include a ball fund based on contributions from
many community civic groups.
Referring to the recent court decisions,
Huddleston vs. Ketter and Sigglekow, defeating
justification for t he student bail fund, Mr.
DeMartino maintained that the case should be
appealed. He cited the fact that the case set an
undesirable precedent and that the bail funds at all
the other state universities were jeopardized. For this
reason, in addition to his disagreement with the
court's decision, that Mr. DeMartino feels that the
case should be a ppealed to the highest court : "Sa
undertook this . . . we sho uld exhaust all the
pos.c;ibilhies ... "

Power base
Other act,ivities of the Student Rights Office
include establishing the office of privately retained
"student attorney," Norman Effman and helping
David Steinwald, Student Rights Coordinator,

••.,.,.., «"l• w••
-ostetrelcher

Tom

D e M.,tino, a

P4)titical Science major,

New dire£·tor

was recently selected as
ttne Director of the Office
of Stu dent Rights.

initiate a Tenants Union. Such a union would
provide u power base for student tenants with
landlord !'lroblems.
Viewing h is office, Mr. DeMartino described
possible pitfalls that he might encounter. " My major
fault might be forgetting the: T om DeMartino part o f
me and operatin g o nly as Director of the Office of
Student Rights," he said. Jlie feels that he will be
able to create a better mpport with people by
establishing "more of a personal rather than a
professional relationship."
In addition, he also commented th a t hit position
is "one o f backing up the student community in
what they might decide to do ... the s tudents'
mood is reflected in SA ." H e con tinued that if the
situation ever arose where he di!lagreed with their
mood and thereby in wha1t he must do as their
official. he would have no choice but to resign.
However, he doubted if this wer~ ever to occur and
expressed much optimism for his office and its
future duties.

Budget.requests
Sub-Board I, Inc. will be evaluatlna the
1971· 197.2 .chool year budaets for all publlc.a tlons
in the very near ruture. All publications aroupa aftd
orpniulions wbo wDJ be requestina runda ror the
1971-1972 achool year shall submit their budaeta in
final rorm to tbe creuurer of Sub-Board I, Inc., lOS
Nortou HaD not later than June 21.

••
•••
••
••

WANT QUALITY
CONTRACEPTIVES?

•
•

Once upon a time, the best male contraceptives tN!t money

•

could buy were in your loql drugstore. That time is gone.
Today, the world's best condoms come from England, and
are available in America.Jmb: from
•

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POPULATION PLANNING
the exclualve U.S. dlatr lbutor tor lwo remarkable 1and
hllhly popular) British condom- KtenlllleaUy ahaped NuForm •
and auDOr'flne retherbte-And we make them available t h roulh •
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be preclle. TheM contraceptives are made by 1.11. lnduatrlea o l
London, the w?rld'a laraeat manulacturer of contra('cpttve prod·
\iC'U, 'nle:r not onl}' meet r•1oroua U.S. FDA apectJ·c:auona, but
are meet. to BriU.h Government StandllnS J'I04 u well . Ycu
•
won't find a more reHable o.'Oftdom anywben.
OUr IUuatrated brochure tell• you all about Fflherllte and
• NuJ'orm . And about aeven otMr Amerlc•n brand' whlrh we havt •
carefully Mlect.ed rrom the more than one hundred kinds available
• today. And we explain tl\e dlrterences.
•
We also have nonprescrlptlun foam for w omen and a wide
• varlf'IJI' ol book• and pamphlet.. on blr4h con4rol, ...... popuJaUoo,
and ..,oJoc¥,
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Want more Information? ll'a ,,..., .Juat Mnd ua your name and •
addreaa. Better aUIJ, for one dollar we'll MRd you all the llttonnatlon rlua two Fetherlite 1811\llles and one NuForm. For tour dollatt •
• you'l ••• the broc:hut e plu~ thrt'e each of Clve different condom
brands tlncludlnl both Imports:. All correapon dence and mer('han· •
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1uorantee your money bat'k II you're not aatlllied woth our products . •
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POPULATION PLANNING AISOl .
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•

Boll HM·T, CbaJif'l Hill, N.C. :l514

Gentletnen PleuR ~end me : ~ _
YtJur free brochure and ort~ •
1:.1 at no obllt•Uon, _
- Three sample1 for Sl - Delwta •
JAmpter pacltaae for f-6.
•

Nam. ------------------------------------

AddNel

Ct~·-------

State__ _ _ _ _ JOJZ.IIPP---

••

Have you1considered joining
The Spectrum stiff?

(355 Norton H1ll) - Ah, c'mon

...., 1 :00 'PM
- 8 : 30 ltM

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.

�I
Pigskin pipedream
The Athletic Department's proposed revitalization of
football could not have arisen at a worse moment. This
University is in the midst of a severe financ;ial crisis caused
largely by tight-fisted, closed-minded and open-mouthed
legislators. All academic programs have been sharply
curtailed and few, if any, can look forward to growth
.
potential during the coming fiscal year.
Service oriented offices are suffering as well. Some. hke
the Ombudsman's and Advocate's Offices are being
eliminated, While others have been denied necessary funds.
Despite all of this however, the Athletic Department and the
alumni have the unmitigated gall to demand a huge amount
of financial support for footbatl.
Not content with a realistic proposal, such as the
institution of a modest club football program, these selfish
dreamers have urged that football be returned on a scale
more grandiose than ever. It should be clear that football
failed, and failed miserably, to anract the support and
patronage of both the students and the alumni. . .
There are no mystic causes, no grand consptractes that
can account for the inability to fill Rotary Field. The
interest plainly was not there and no amount of scheming or
fund-raising is going to create it. Yet we are asked, to not
only reinstitute a proven failure, but to force a change in
state policy regarding grants-in-aid . Rather than worrying
about grants-in-aid it would be infinitely more worthwhile to
expend this effort towards restbring some of the monies cut
from academic programs.
One . of the most objectionable tactics of the Athletic
Department was their shallow and disgu~in~ attempt to
characterize football,as a panacea for halting campus unrest.
Robert Deming, ex-football coach wrote, in a confidential
plea to Dr. Ketter, that "The many permissive and dissenting
influences prevalent in campus life today create a need for
discipline and performance oriented programs, providing
intercollegiate sports with an even more important role than
that traditionaltlv assigned." This is totally prepostero~ and
an example of demagoguery at its lowest.
The entire plan seems stricken by a distorted sense of
reality. To expect the students to gladly throw away
$130,000 annually on something they consider worthless is
ludicrous. It cannot be done. nor should it be done. An
enlarged intramural program is undoubtedly more beneficial
to the student body than the opportunity to watch 22
bodies hurl themselves at each other every Saturday
afternoon .
We therefore must strongly urge, for quite obvious
reasons, that this' proposal be allowed to founder helplessly
upon the illusions and myths it seeks to create. This
University is an institution of learning and we believe that
any increased funding or efforts to provide such monies
should be directed towards academic ~ndeavors. not
entertainment for the alumni.

THE

SpECT~UM
friday, June 18, 1971

Vol. 22, No. 2

Editor-in-Chief - Oenni5 Arnold
M.,..;ng Editor - AI BentOn
Alit. Managing Editor - Susen Moss
BUlin.., Meneoer - James Drucker
Advllf11slng Manager - Sue Mellen tine
C.mpua . . . . . . . Jo-Ann Armao
City . . . . . . . . . Harvy Lipman
Copy .. .. ..... , .. Sharon Kelly.
Grephlc Art~ , . . . .. . . Tom Toles
Layout ....... Maryhope Runyon

Lit. 8r Drama .. Michael Silverbletl
Muaic .. .. , .. . .... .Billy Altman
Photo ... . .. . ... .DIVId G. Smith
A• . .. . .. . Mickey Osterreicher
Sports . .. ... . . . , . Shoryn Rogers

Th• Sp«:trvm is a member of the Unites' Stete Student Press Auocietlon
and is served by Unites Press International, College Press Serivce, the Los
Angeles Times Syndicate end Liberation News Service.
Rupublication of all manlf herein without the express consent of the
Eclitor-in-Chief Ia forbidden .
EditOt'lal policy is ctetlfmined by the Editor-In-Chief.

·For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman
One of the basic requisites of any democratic
(or e·ven .emi-democratic) government is that it
enjoy the trust of its people. They must beheve that
'their national leaders are providing them with not
only accurate but also complete information
concerning the conduct of the state's affairs. When
this trust deteriorates the country begins to move on
the road to dictatorship or revolution.
For a large sector (composed mainly , though
certaill\ly not exclusively, of young people) o f the
Ameri1can public this faith in the government has
been tseverely shaken, if not destroyed, by the events
of the: past decade. The largest single contributor to
this l&amp;rowin&amp; feeling o f suspicion has been ' the
condu1ct of the Vietnamese war. Two successive
admiruistrations have seen fit not only to withhold
the f~1cts from the American public, but to deceive
Congr·ess as well. The full scope of the deception,
howe11er, has gone beyond what even the· most
adamant critic of the war could have known. The
study of the Vie tnam in"-olvement cOmmissioned by
then Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara in
1968 and recently released by The New York Times
provides documentation of a series of covert acts
taken by the United Slates which led to the full-scale
war. Had members of the New Left charged a ~ek
earlie1r that the Uoited States had conducted such
activi~ ies, they would hay~ been dismissed as radical
lunatics.
Now the Pentagon's own report has
substantiated what the United States government has
denied from the outset: that this country entered
the vrar not by accident, but by plan. The full
document runs some 3000 pages with 4000 pages of
offici•al papers attached to it. Some of the more
striking details bear inspecting. The history states
that the Eisenhower administration, through its
efforts in Vietnam , played "a direct role in the
ultimate breakdown of the Geneva settlement." It
furthclr offers that it was John Kennedy who formed
the pt:&gt;licy of "broad commitment" which eventually
led to the escalatio n pf the war.
Possibly the most startling revelations in the
excer11&gt;ts so far released by The Times concern the
period surrounding the Tonkin Gul( incident and the
subaequent increase in American involvement. Let
me b1rieOy outline the monumental evidence of the
determination on the part of Lyndon Johnson to
provoke the war.
" An elabora~ pr&lt;&gt;&amp;ram of covert military
operations qainst the state of North Vietnam" was
beguno on Feb. I, 1964 - six fttU months before the
Tonltin resolution was introduced in Congress.
A.s described by 7imes reporter Neil Sheehan in
~

P1f1 $i~. Th1 SptCtFum . Frld1y, June 18, 1971

his summary of the report: "Through 1964, the 34A
operations ranaed from nights over North Vietnam
by U-2 spy planes and kidMppings of Nortlr
Vietnamese citizens for . intelligence information, to
parachutin&amp; sabotage and psychological warfare
teams anto the North , commando raids from the sea
to blow up rail and highway bridges and the
bombardment of North Vietnamese coastal
installations by PT boats." (Italics added).
Among the actiops taken during th.1s period
were a series of air operations over Laos. the T-28
fiJhter-bombers used in this action had Laotian Air
Force markings, but in actuality many of the planes
were flown by pilots from Air America (a C IA front)
and Thai pilots under the control of American
Ambassador Leonard Unger. These Th'ai pilots
bombed and strafed North Vietnamese villages near
the Laotian border on Aug. l and 2. The most
interesting parcel of information., though, indicates
the true intentionll of the administration . One week
after the straflngs of North Vietnam by the Thais,
the Congress passed . the resolution which led to
full-scale American involvement. The passage' of that
legislation might have been considerably delayed ,
however, had the Congressmen known that the biiJ
was drawn up on May 25 by Assistant Secreta.~')' of
State for Far Eastern Affairs William Bundy .
Whether the destroyer Maddqx was sent into the
Gulf of Tonkin specifically to provoke an incident
may never be known, but what cannot be denied is
that the Johnson administration was determined to
find some excuse to pass a resolution drafted ten
weeks prior to tf\e Tonkin action, establishing a
virtual state of war.
How h as the Republican administration
responded to the publication of tb.is information? It
has requested The Times to stop printing the
excerpts, sought legal action to prevent further
release and described the incident as a breach of
national security. The one thing that no one
anywhere- in the administration has done is deny the
accuracy of the report. What, then., do Mr. Laird and
Mr. Nixon find so abhorrent in the study? Could it
be the part that states that American intelligence
agents found " the primary sources of Communist
strength in South Vietnam are indigenous," or the
section declaring how Under Secretary of State
George BaJI proposed in April ~f 965 that the
United States withdraw fro m Viet am? What is
really upsetting to the administrati n is that the
history describes how the previ s government
deceived the American ~ jn o this war ~~en
Nixon has
tboae lies to defend his own pohaes.
Who can really blame the President for being so
upset? It mwt be very embarassi.ng to be cauaht in a
lie which hu cost ~vera! hundred thousand lives.

used

�.Open letter to Ketter

orgqn.Jzation or clulos.?

I

Dr. Ketter:
The firing of Gary Blumberg from the financial
aids office raises some questions regarding the future
of the one thousand minority studenls now enrolled
at this university. The main question is what does a
minority student d.o when financial aid is necessary?
Go to the financial' aid office perhaps? It is common
knowledge the entire financial aids office is staffed
by insensitive robots who are more concerped with
bureaucratic procedure. rather than helping minority
students,
We
know the E.P.I.S. P.r ogram has been given
the Ieiss of death and minority students aceepted the
fact that once the guilt over Martin luther King's
assassination wore off, aU the special programs
would be ellminated. However, you have· one
thousand brothers and sisters on this campus and 'the
rip-off of Gary Blumberg casts some doubt on their
futures. Obviously, the man has helped many
minority ~tudents and it woulsi seem logical that
since Gary Blumberg was handling mahy of the
minority students' financial problems, these
problems will be handled by those smiling
bureaucrats who have a million reasons why they
can't help brothers and sisters - but no money.
Dr. Ketter, an investigation and a definite
position on the future of Blacks, Puerto Ricans and
Native Americans on this campus would ease many
minds at this point. Are you aware of the treachery
involved in Gary Blum beJg's firing? How can a s.taff
member who has been praised by his superiors on
numerous · oe:casions be fired as "incompetent"? ls
this university returning to the "lily-white" campus
concept? Is this an indirect . way of eliminating the
so-called crime and drug problems?
The people will wonder wha1 happened .to Gary
Blumberg this fall . Some people will be angry and all
of these questions will come back to you. I truly
hope you .wilt investigate this bur~aucratic atrocity
and remove the doubt that exists in many minds at
this time.

all

A Black Student

Look II: little deeper
To the Editor:
Tile Spectrum seems to be confused as to what a
reor.d ering of Student Assoc~ation fiscal priorities
mean. I can only commend both the ·sA and Th e
Spl'ctrum for iJ'litiating and backing, respectively. the
move to retain· Mr. Norman Effman as counselor for
students 'at SUNY A B. But a reorderin·g of fls~al
priorities? Really!
.
Surely 111e Spectrum is not so blind as to
misread the minutes o f the recent Executiile
Committee meetings. What purpons to be a
reordering of fiscal priorities is the raising of summer
activities f~ and increasing the pay that members
of the Executive Committee receive for their "work''
over the summe r . This stipend is known
affectionately in some circles as the "summer
rip-off." Allocating up to $700 for each of II
members of the committee is hardly a reordering ol
fiscal priorities. It is, in reality, a gr!&gt;ss misjustice to
all students pitying fees at this University.
. Further, o f the other a~locations that the SA has
made, only those to the Day Care Center and the
Birth Control Clinic can be termed reasonable. Do
we read or hear comment in The Spectrum of the
$ 15,000 that has been allocated to make the SA a
concert pfomoter? Perhaps The Spectrum should
look a little deeper - who knows wfiat it might see?
Bob CnnvisJor

Commercialized blood
To the Editor:
Your June ll issue carries an advertisement
offering payment for human plasma. I would !.ike to
relate the evil impUcit in this advertisement to that
which your editorial properly denounces in a
volunteer army . Just as the volunteer army would
draw from oppressed elements of our society. the
commercialized traffic in human blood products is
equally exploitative. A great deal of these blood
products are bought from lower class individuals,
such as prisoners, skid row inhabitants and the
unemployed ; in other words, from those . whose
blood is most apt to transmit viral hepatitis. Our
commercializ.ation of human blood is in contrast to
the British National Blood Transfusion Service,
under which voluntary ·donation has thus far kept
pace with medical need. ln Britain, viral hepatitis is
at present a much less frequent complication of
transfusion. Also, in ,Britain, blood is a free medi~l
service whereas we Americans have to pay heavily
for an inferior product.
May 1 recommend "The Gift Relationship; from
Human Blood to Social. Policy," by Richard M ·
Tit muss, for a full dlscl.lssion of t~ese matters.

Ernest Schapiro, M.D.

I

Editor·, ;rote: This column was submitted by
McAlll1ter H. 1/ull, clrairmon of tile Depamnent of
Physic~t. Dr. Hull was o member of the '/'ask Force on
Organ.ization w11/Ch presenle(i its. recommendations
to Dr. Ketter this past spring. 711iS report has caused
sharp reactions among the University corvmunlty
and this columfl OIIC'IItfJIJ to answer 40me criticisms
of the report.
by McAllister H. Hull, Jr.

the review , but that can bappen in any
organizational pattern and the danger is not pcculiur
to the one proposed . The Office of the
Vice-President for Academic Affairs is intcnd~d to
provide the flexibility that will reduCt! to a minimum
the probability of missing a good idea·.
Interestingly enough, it is just that office, and
especially .~he divisional vice presidents operating out
o( it, which h as drawn the most fire . In the lcat.l
story of the June II issue, Dean Ebert is quoteJ al&gt;
fearing the interposition of another layer of
administration between him and the president and
the editorial reiterates this fear for all of us several
times (in concert with many others across the
campus). These reac'tions ignore one aspect of reality
and misunderstand the intent of the task force with
respect to the offices of the divisional vice
presidents. The reality has to do with . the
multifnripus activities of the president's office and
the ra' e;at which the number of these increases.

Among the styles of academic admirlistration
with which I am familiar, the one I enjoy is an
anarchic form of rampant cnterpreneurism. The
battles, for resources are heady exercises in maneuver
and riposte, with the spoils going to those whose
rationalizations are the most glittering. So long as
the renources are plentiful, no valid program is likely
to be ~urt much by such tactics, although the
opportunities for uoworkable grand schemes to get.,
heari~t~ - and perhaps some funds - are little more
Every student, staff member and faculty
numerous than may be healthy.
member has the right of a timely , well&lt;onsidered
But when budgets ·are small, the eJlterpreneural
response from the administration on questions he
mode is irresponsible. The University cannot afford
puts to it. But one man, or even one office can __.
to w~tste its resources, and I suggest' that the provide neither timely nor well-considered responses
strangling of academic initiative predicted in The
to 40,000 people. The divisional vice presidents
Spectrwn editorial of lune 11 is much in ore likely to
provide one solution to the problem presented by
occur if scarce funds are unmanaged than if they are.
the completely legWmate demands of all of use for
The e.dltorhll equates man~ement and structures
attention to ou·r needs paired with the limitation of
suggeSited 'for accomplishing it, to conservatism
time .and energy of the administrators designated to
(because they are sometimes closet~ join~d) , whereas
rrovide the attention. I think of the divisional vice
management can equally well imply conservation , as
presidents as combining knowledge of and
· was Intended by the: Task Porce on Organization (or
responsibility for the tot.ality of academic programs
at least by this member
it). If we are to hav~ some in the university with a special brief for the problems
risk capital to fund untried but promising new ideas: and aspirations of a limited gi-oup of disciplines. This
we mu1st insure tllat every penny is wisely spent. The combined fun ction is performed now only by the
specific provision in tht~ report for a fund to allow vice president for academic affairs. and his ability to
experi1me'ntation apparently went unnoticed by the
develop long range academic plans is curtailed by the
editorial writer.
•
time he,must spend on the problems of one or two
The free form administration where anyone can
members of the university at a time.
find fli)meone to encourage hfm to embark -on his
favorite project is fine for fun and games, but it
It is an unproved assumption that bureaucratic
becomes a draa when one needs a decision backed'by complications· and presidential isolation necessarily
real rt~sources to carry the project th rough. The will follow an increase in the number of broadly
hierarc:hical structure proposed in the rc;port· is · knowledgable people in the office of the vice
intendlaJt... to provide clearly marked decision points president for academic affairs. lt is also an unproved
where a timely reply can be had to a proposal. 1t has assumption that a more effective and personal
been rny observation that many fine ideas die as administration will result from the proposed
freque!ntly because no ooe can be found who is organiza,ion, but that at least is its intent. l sugest
responsible for a decisiofl as because the decision is that more of our attention in discu~ing the plan be
negati"e.
directed to the practical aspects of administering the
· It ls, of course, possible thai the substitution of frustraHons aU of us, task force melf!bers included,
sound management information for inspired guesses feel at the extent of thoJe complexities.
will take some o f the fun out of academic planning,
' There are a number of areas left unexplored or
but in hard times enthusiastic ignorance is a poor given less than adequa'te attention by the task force .
investment. The adoption of so.me of th e practices of Among these are articulation of administration with
successful c orporation such as management governance, and the roles o f the Divison of •
inf0rmation services and planning staffs does not Undergraduate Studies and Graduate School in the
imply that the priorities of the corporation need also new scheme (or the old one, or any mix of them). It
be adopted. One of the functions of these staffs; as appears to me that some of these questions need
further exploration and o'thers as well. Perhaps if we
propos~ed in the report, is to assist groups of faculty
and st1udents to prepare proposals for new programs. ca'n raise o ur eyes from our respective navels, we·can
l belie:ve some of the cries of "stifled innovation" yet find ways to operate our university in such. a
come Ifrom those ~ho dislike the prospect of having manner that we conserve our resources, but .are not
to pu'l their pet schemes to some hard scrutiny conservative in the way we deploy them ; that we
before they 're funded . But 'the advantage of the provide the maximum latitude for the exercise of the
proponed organization operatiOn is that if the aspirations of each of us as individuals but do not
program is approved, it is also provided with the lose sight of the broad outlines of the mosiac we are
resouroces of money, space, personnel, libraiy , creating; that we may seriously entertain any i!lea
com putter and A V that it needs to get started . Had
that is seriously offered but re ~o •nit.e our limitations
the coUeges been approved under this plan (which , and accept priorities so that wh at we attempt we can
by the: way puts the existing colleges on a par with
do well.
departments in the budget process), they would have
The task force .may well not have solved all the
problems arising from these antitheses, but that was
been tltlriving by now rather than struggling.
its goal. The discussion of the report could provide
1 should personally prefer to get half a
useful alternatives, or even ralional support for the
megabuck to try out my program Z solely ori the
task force suggestions, if it is based on a recognition
basis c•f the brilliance of my idea and the· argentality
of my tongue. But if the idea isn't worth defending of these 'and other opposing (but hopefully not
polarizing) demands on administrative structure.
under a critical and informed review procedure, then
its validity should be deeply in question. There is, &lt;:&gt;f
McA/Ii.sler H. Hull, Jr.
course, a danger th~t highly innovative scheme.s Wt~l
Chairman, !J,·purtment of Physics
be so misunderstood conceptually that they will fa•l

a

of

- "r)--9t11ft

.....

rrlj{ ~ ·-

yq!AP'

'Hang on I I think he's tlrlntl'

Friday, Junt 18, 1911 . Ths Sp~ctrum . Page.., ·

�.'

..

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...
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IMIIIATI fi-1--AIY IIZI

Gustav A. Frisclt, Inc.
J•

UPSTATI CYCU INS.
c.l ''S-J044

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.,.y._.....,~.,...

HAND -CRAFTED
by

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Optlc.laa

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Atu.t......,,.._.
IUfPA&amp;O, N.Y. 14116

LEATHER

CARUSO'S
2838 o.aa-re AVW~ue
Kenmore, N- York 14217
876-8686

'

Sandell • Vesu · S.lts · Pu,... • Pentl
Expen Orthopedic: end Corrective Work

SUMMER
SWEATSHIRT SALE

- I

on all
Sweat shrits in Stock

Mark Hall Amltin (center) will be
conducting a workshop in
Improvisational Theatre from
June 29 to July 2 and July 6 to
July 13. He has worked with the
Living Theatre and the Open
Theatre. The workshop is open to
anyone who signs up this comint
week in Room 225 Nort.o n Hall.

Buflhlo Textbook

3610 Main St.
Buffalo, N.Y. 833-7131
Across from Clement Hall.
This ad will be good for most of
. ._ ...ll!lll_ll!the summer - so tell your·1n~·e~nd~s----. .

your
UNIVERSIT.Y

BOOKSTORE
"on campus"
TEXTBOOK RETURN POLICY

~~

.

"\\Then?

,.NEXT WEEK

1. Did you purchase a textbook for summer school
that is not going to be used because you dropped
the course or the·instructor changed texts?

June 21st.

2. You can return the book for full refund no later
than

while the items last

~here?.

provided the following conditions are met:
is

in

a:

:c

en

....
c(

w
~

"MONDAY, JUNE 21"

a) The book
CONDITION •

en

....

ABSOLUTELY
.

en

NORTON HALL

NEW

FOUNTAIN AREA

b) You have the cash register receipt __.
I

(weather permitting)

c) After Monday June 21, no refunds will be
given on textbooks.

your
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
"ON CAMPUS"

Pa1J1 ei¢1 : Th'i''S)Jtlttrtim'. FridaY. Jiini r/f, t~rt · ·

-.

L.'

�•

British fa$hlon plate

·Elton John: cocktail·music
Elton John finally macle h is
.Buffalo appearance Monday night
at Kleinhans Music Hall. l.n less
than a year he has risen from
co mplete obscurity J.n this
country to (dare I say it?)
superstar status. It seems that
everybody is record mg Elton John
songs these days (t~ey're so cute
and melodic). And so, here he
was, live, in person, after four
albums and three tours.
·
8 u t , tiefore we turn ou~
attention to Elton's set, let's talk
ab'out Mark Almond , who played
first. Mark is Jon Mark, aeoustic
guitarist, and Almond is Johnny
Almond, sax and flute player.

They both were in. John MayaU's
Turning Point ban&lt;:l , which was
one of the most Inventive and
interesting bands that the blues
ever spawned. Thei'r new group
features two other friends on
organ and bass, and, as an extra
added attraction , Danny
Ri c hmond, . formerly Charlie
Mingus' drummer, who joined .
them after jamming with them at
th~!r first gig in ~ngl~nd.
Solo after 1;010

J expected them ro-be good
because I knew that they were all
fine soloists. l wanted to see what

F~

EXHIBITION
AND SALE
.

,

.

CHAGALL,
BASKIN,
ROUAULT,
DAUMIER
&amp;MANY

SUNY 1t SUFfALO
.MAIN STREET CAMPUS
CENTER LOUNGE GALLERY
NORTON HALL
MONDAY - June 21 11 a.m. - 9 p.m.

OTHERS
'

ARRANGED BY
FERDINAND
ROTEN GALLERIES
r--.&amp;.1...11 BALTIMORE, MD.

..,-~ll't---TT-1

'

)

kind of sonp they did, a -sampling
of their material. Well, they
played .
so.n&amp; entitled . " The
City," ~nd tltat took up an hour.
They went into long solos that
had very little to do with the
song. I'm really tired. of seeina
long solos .. Most musicians in
bands nowadays are technically
good,, but very few bands produce
good songs in wnich I the whole
band plays as one. The highlight
of their se t was drummer
Richmond's solo , which, though ii
really. didn't belong, was well
done. He explored the different
tones and moods o f tile drums as
an ins'trument.

one

· And then lovable old Elton hit
the stage . f or his seco nd
appearance of the evening. Before
Mark-Almond played , Elton came
out and did a · few tunes by
himsel f. The overplayed "Your
Song" started things off. Then a
few new ones, most ' noticeably
" lndtan Sunset," with shades of
Procol Harum in the chords. He
came out for the s~cond time in
strapped red shorts with silver
boots (a regular fashjon show).
His drummer Nigel Ollson sut
behind what l(!oked like enough
dru ms for three drummers. He
needs a pair, of headphones when
he plays, since the piano and the
votce come through the PA
system. The bass player was in
New York in a hospital so the two
of them did the whole show.
Elton John's music does very

--

Elton John
little for me. He has a fine voice,
owing to an apparent ~iligent
study of Jose Feliciano, and he
combines Oashes of Leon Russell
and Jerry Lee Lewis in his piano
playing for a good sound . Bul his
songs don't go anywhere. They
kind of sit there and you go, "Oh,
that's nice" most of the time.
Cocktail music to me. He is not a
great songwriter (he only writes
the musi..: anyway). His songs
don't last long in your head . I like
·•country Comforts." but I think
hjs vers10n is wilted next to Rod

Stewart's sensitive rendition.
But Elton got the crowd o n its
feet , jumping around , standing on
the piano and doing squat thrusts
all over the place. I couldn't
knock him for helping everyone
have a good time, but listening to ·
Jerry Lee do " Whole Lot of
Shakin' Coin' On" .makes me feel
a lot better. John seems to have
something that people want to
hear. But I can't hear anything
excepuunal in his music.

THE -LARGESTAND_
, MOST COMPLETE

PANTS-SHIRTS
POSTERS BLACKLITE
PAPERS CANDLES
DECALS BLACKLITE

INCENSE
- ACCESSORIES
PIPES - ETC.
STICKERS
ROOM

NGJIMES
1717 Eggert Rd.
BETWE~N MI~LERSPORT

HGWY AND N. BAILEY

-osterrelch.,.

- Billy Almum

.
•'~

~.

�,

..

-

~~--·. _R_E_C_;._D_R_D_S~---J~' ~tuNe;;;:hkticplan proposed
by Steve Lipman
Spectrum St•ff Wri!ei

Redwilc' (Tantasy 8409)

_,

Generally a music "critic" is quite conservative (musically
speakina, that is) and quite bard to please. He never participates. in an
event the way an audience is supposed too. Well, we aot this record in
by a group called Redwina. Now, we all fiaured it was aoin&amp; to be one
of those horribly obnoxious first albums.
. ·
But ultimately, when the record is first put on, it transcends even
the most prejudiced of critics and causes them to start viaorous thiah
slappin' and foot stompin'.
It's a group with an incredibly
infectious sense of rhythm. Takina
rhythm breaks from the days of Bo
Diddley and combining them witb.
' the best of country funk, Redwina
soars out of the record barrier and
creates vast amounts of energy.
Imagining the excitement they
create on record, Redwing must be
ons.heUuva Jive act.
Seldom does a new
establish itself as a major talent.
WeU, Red wing is a major talent and
they know what they're doina
when they Oy into songs which tinge or the Band, Poco (as a matter of
fact this is the way Poco is supposed to sound), and a little bit of that
Creedence magic thrown in for good luck.
The thing which sets this group apart from nil of the others is the
fact that they possess class and that is why most of rock and roU sucks,
because the performers just don't possess any amount of class.
With raunchers like "Bonnie Bones'' and ·" Sweettalkin' Lady,"
Redwing shows its efficiency in rhythm and rock.
.
There's just not m·uch you can do to ·describe the beauty· and sheer
overwhelming power of this group. They are a rock and roll country
band that blasts every nerve in your body. This is music that can stir
the body before it stirs the mjnd. ·
.
Redwing is exciting to listen too, and the only thing J can say is
that it has to be heard to be danced to. Redwing bas a"rrived and they
will be around for a long time. This much talent just- can't be ignored.

- JF
L~on Russ~// and th~ Sh~lter P~~pl~ (SW-8903)
Leon RusseU might be the last of rock and roll's kings. I remember
when his much anticipated first album was released . .Everyone played
on it. Clapton, Harrison, Ringo, Winwood , Wyman , Watts, Delaney,
Bonnie, Cocker, etc.
But , in the final analysis, the album h ad to stand or faU on the
.songs, aU 9f which were written by Russell. And the record does keep
coming at you, even after hundreds of spins. " Hummingbird, Delta
Lady, Prince of Peace," and "Song for You." f could name all of them
because they're all dynamite. Leon's funky voice, straining to hit those
high notes and just malcing it, and his incredible piano playing, with ·
rock, boogie woogie, gospel and classical all running together, make
him a real star, and I mean that.
His new release on his own
label, Leon Russell and tile Shelter
People, continues the tradition of
rock •n· roll. The album kicks off
with "Stranger in a Strange Land ,''
a " message" song about people
being rotten to each other. The
backup singing by Claudia Linnear
and Kathi McDonald really moves
that chorus into your head, and it
stays there. "Of Thee I Sing" is a
pretty heavy tune. "She uses
beauty like a Jsnife/ She cuts me
e··en more she changes/ right
before my eyes into something ugly and sore."
\ But if the lyria weren't enclosed, you'd never know it was a sad
song. Leon's insane piano leads the band through a real rocker. At the
end of the chorus, the music stops and Leon goes into some high
pitched gospel singing. Then the piano brings the song back into high
gear.
Two Dylan tunes are included on this album. "A Hard Rain's
Gonna Fall" and "It Takes A Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry ."
Leon does Dylan songs well ; he understands Dylan and it shows in his
versions. "Rain" features some of Leon's old Tulsa friends, especiaJJy
Jesse Davis on slide guitar. "Train" is a good . funky blues with the
music building up continually.
"Crystal Closet Queen" is pt"obably about Little Richard . "If you
ain't heard my rock and roll music/ You ain't never seen nothing like
me/ cause I can wash a dish down in Macon, Georgia/ and help a blind
eye to see." The back-up line on the chorus is "TuW Frutti , the
•' beauty'' on Duty."
~
, ~ :"l·~a,1raz" is .about being around Frisco with the Indians ov.er at
. ..
the' Pfison. It's another mover, with Leon banging away at the keys
incessantly . "Ballad of Mad Dogs and Englishmen" is the theme from
the movie. In the film , it's played on acoustic guitar, with no words.
Here, it's orchestrated and full of little rhymes. I kind of liked the
movie ve~ion better. "Home Sweet Oklahoma" is a pretty tun.e al)out
being successful and generally having a better time Jiving now .
The record closes with a super arrangement of "Beware of
•"·
Darkness." The song shuttles between an eastern flavor and the old
....
funk. It's a nice way to end things off.
For a . guy who ten years ago was doing arrangements for Gary
Lewis and the Playboys and Jan and Dean, Leon hasn't done too badly
for himself. Though it's a shame that so much spirit has been hidden
for so lQng, it's gonna be a long time before Leon's fire goes out. Long
live rock 'n' roll.
- Billy Altman

,

..

..

Page ten. The Spectrum . Friday, June 18, 1971

I

was patterned after Air Force's.
; Athletic ·Director Dr. Harry ·Fritz incficated th11t
"readinp I received from the community showed
Like a beach ball pushed· unde.r water, State people wanted to see foot6a1J played here next year,
University of Buffalo football keeps poppiOg up. any type of football - varsi~y, club or. touch.
Dropped from .the University in 1904 when. it. wu . Footb.all can be a rallying point for "student.f, alumni
t•en yean old due to•lack of players, it came bac.k a and the community, but we want to present the best
d,ecade later. AgaiQ durinJ World. War II, footbaU possible product."
ceased operations, only to come back tt\ree ·years
llater and win 23 of its next 28 games.
· No club football
Now, six months after University President
· For this reason, Fritz and Deming have
Jtobcrt . "Ketter announced,' ·~with very dc~p discounted the possibilit.Y 9f initiating a dub
t~egrets .. . because of insufficient fi.nancial support,· ' football P.rogram, as some people have. suagested.
both in the recent· past and in the · forseeable "We've got to play the be$t schools ot people won~t
f!uture . . . the · St11te University o( New York at come," says Deming. ."Can you imagine people
Eluffalo · wiU not- compete in intercollegiate ~ootball ," filling Rotary . Field, or wherever wo'U play, f{)r Ball
tll\e pipkin program threatens to make it three State? Or for Toledo~" Teams in· Demina's plans
Qiomebacks ifr a row.
.
include Army, SyracuSe and Miami of Florida.
It's all part of a Five· Year Plan · for
To pla)l schools of this calibre, De{lling will have
ltlltercollegiate Athletics to .bring tHg·ti(Jle varsity to have on hand the play~rs . and· that means
(43otball back : to Rotary Field by 197 5, ~bile gral)t·in·aid scholarships and tuition wai¥ers from the
building up th~ University's ten other sports. aoard of Trustees.
lllesigned by th.e Athletic Department and · the
·Deming anticipate!' having ·3Q .grants:in-ajd for
A.lumni Association after three months of work, th~ the tlnt four years · (total, .1 20) and after that, 25
plan was presented last month to President" Ketter -grants per year. Demina figures that those 25 grants
'fl!•ho wil) give it to State University ChanceUor Ernest , will pr{)vide the· necessary "ucleus for the team , and
Boyer for eventual submittal to the New York Stat~ t}lat the 20 fewer .grants over the four-year period
Board of Trustees, upon whom foott&gt;all's final fate will drastlcally.cut footbaU's budget.
.
rc=sts.
.
.
However, the Trustees will have to cro5s o\lt
The plan proposes a four-year buil~up. to vllrsity. their rule about grants-in-aid being illegal - a rule
status and steps to reduce expendatures. Thus, whit:h many SUNY schools have repo"rted1y violated .
football in the form of a fceshm~n team subsidized
The tuition . waiver, which tbe plan proposes, is
by 30 grants-in-aid would begin an the fall of 1972 in line with the: policies of several other states which
atpinst traditional frosh opponents such as. Manlius, waive tuitions for students who perform a service for
Army, Colgate, Syracuse and Ken't State.
their school. "In fllinois, for instan ce," says Fritz,
The fall of 1973 , according .to the proposal, who served -at' Western Illinois Uhiversity before
would bring " program stability to include a Varsity coming here, "athletes, student paper editors.
· F,ootball schedule (allowing freshman participation) student government leaders and musicians in the
oJF six of seven games at the best level possible." The band, got their tuitions waived ." The football tuition
sc:hedule could include the Army and Navy Plebe$, waiver ~ould be in the ratio of two in-state to one
freshman or JV teams, and a possible regional out-of-state student.
fcour·year opponent. Regional Junior transfers would
In ad~ition· to those for football, the fiv~year
b4: able to play at this point.
plan also proposes tuition waivers for the
Opponents of that level would be carried over to University's ten other sports. Five grants-in-aid per
an eight or nine game schedule in the fall o f 1974 year, at the ratio of two for in-state to three for
with fres~meo ~~gible ; a. ten or II game varsity out-of-$tate students for basketball is suggested, as
schedule, t~ a~datlon :to fJVe freshman or JV games weJI as 15 per. year for hockey (three in-state and 12
~ould b.egm an the fall '?f 1975. The d~gree or out), ten for wrestling (seven Jn, three out), nlRe for
IJ1.tersechonal play at th.at tame would depend on the baseball (six in, three out), "six for swjmmina (three
Je•vel of pJarers recruited, guara!ltees from road in, three out), and two apiece for tennis, }tolf and
ga ~es, : and t.~e. calibre of home o~pon~nts that fepcing (both in).
. .
Ulrltv~rsJt.y ~acilittes could attract. . ..
The Board of Trustees in the past has been
ThJS ts the only ~ay to do at.. says ex-head reluctant to allow any University · more than the 2%
football coach an.d. Asststant Athletic Director Bob tuition waiver which· the President allocates
D4:ming. "I did~'t want. t,o see the program dropped ,
Grants--in-aid over the last three yea,;, 80% of
but as long as .•t w~, at s better to start pver fro~t which went to football , made up the large
sc'ratch. The Atr For~e Academy started foot~all Ill proportion of the Athletic Department's deficit.
the early 1950's, and an 1959, J saw them play m the
Cotton Bowl." Deming said that this five-year plan
Next : Points and Problems of Th e Pia

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Problems - · in-living,
ref•ral services,
all confidential
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..........
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83S4041

tl

BELL BOTTOMS - BODY SHIRTS
INCENSE
PAPERS

THE CLOTHES
- OUT
SHOPPE
Corner Mil in &amp; Bililoy
Hrs. ll-s:r,w,s, t1 -9 M,Th, Fri.

,

I

Clark Gym wiiJ be the setting later this summer
for a wrestli~ school under the &lt;lirection of the
University's
rsity coach, Ed Michael. Due to
NCAA and
AC rules on recruiting, the Niagara
Frontier Wrestling School will be open to any junior
and senior high schoof students who are not
academically eligible to enter college this fall.
Coaches and wrestling officials are also invited to
attend the school, which will meet August 9-13.
Coach Michael will ftave a staff of amateur, high
school and collegiate coaches, plus guest cliniciens.
Ar eas of instruction include takedowns and
counters, escapes, reversals, riding and control,
pinning combinations and leg wrestling.

were 9-2 for the season, wVh a first place in the
Fredonia InvitationaL The Most Valuable Player
award went to Mark Kotler.
·
_,
Buffalo's trackmen had slow stat~, but built up
steam and closed the season with a nourish ljnd a 6-~
record. Senior Bernie Tolbert won his team's Most
Valuable Player award:
And last, but not least, the golfing Bulls lost a
close one to the University of Rochester (by 10
strokes), and later placed fifth out of ten teams in
the SUNY lnvitationali.

a

.,

• • • • •
Several weeks ago, the tennis team aimed
opti.mistically for the Eastern Regional Tennis
Tournament, with three players entered. But by t~e
time the tournament rolJed around, only one Buffalo
player was eligible - Dennis Dunning. The others
were knocked out due to a (Ieath in the family of
one, and the fact that freshmen arc not permitted in
varsity events.
When his first game started , Dunning appeared
to be losing. then sprang up tu capture four sets in a
row. and the game. 6-4, and went on to take the
match. However , IllS next upponeut was sixtiHeeded
in the tournament and put Dunntng down. 6-2, 6.0.

• • • • •
Last spring was a sunny one for the University's
sports teams, as they all had winning seasons. The
varsity baseballers had an overall :!0-1:! season tally.
800 ~~en~ of the flneat
• TAAIL AIDING IN N.Y. STATE • with a post season invitation to the NC' AA
c ha mpi onshi ps. Short-stop Rick Albert won
OS*' 7 days • week
' All-qlhrict honors, and led the !oeam with 41 hit s in
98 times at bat. The junior varsity baseball team
posted a 4-:! season record.
532-4112
&amp;32-4812
Varsity tennis men. under the gutdancl! uf
Coach Bill Sanford. lived up Ill therr past hl\turv ~rnd

~l{flllt.t

---------------------------------------

..

.~

CLAIIIFIEI
FOR SALE
'66 vw Bug . Call 834-4842 after 6
p.m .
1966 DATSUN wagon, ucellent
condition, low m11e.1ge, 894 ·3 849 alt er
5:15

~Bini,

flptOWI

P41UIIud
IHSPICW.

Slacks galore in 2 new stores,
now open at Elmwood and
BidweU near State Teachers, and
Mai n Street opposite U.B.
Groovy flares to turn you on ... in
plaids. stripes, checks, and solids.
Wester pockets, regular pockets,
wide and regular belt loops.
Plent y of flares in famous Levi's
®Sta-Prest® slacks. Also straight
cuts that are with it . Dig Pants A'
Plenty now!

St IMO MON04' f HtU HIOAY
UN fiL II A M. AND AfTtl., .,_,

3~I'AIKAKIS

THE NEW Potato Caboose, Buflato's
music paper, needs utesmen to handle
advertrs•ng. Commission Atso needs
street seltets,
50 '
comm1ulon.
832-8818 or 893~470.

FOR SALE fridge and stove. Must soli.

ROOMMATES WANTED

PAIR OF K·2 competition skis. Look
Novodo binding&gt; . Used 10 times. Qost
offer. 773·5780.
COMET 1964, 65,000 miles, good
running condition, body fa ir, best Offer
over $100. 633-7890.

65c

FURNITURE sale - entire ilPartment
- many other Items Sat.·Sun. June 19
&amp; 20, 3 to 7, 721 west Ferry
1963 DODGE - nooos tires, runs gooo
- mak• offer , Call Bob, 897 -03 tl
REFRIGERATORS, stoves and
washers. Reconditioned, delivered and
guaranteed. D&amp;G Appliances, 844
Sycamore - TX4-3183.

BEFORE
YOU BUT
.

Your College Texts
first i I

rt..ant to save

flO II

mon~fl

We have a huge stock of slightly
:

USED
TEXTBOOKS

....... ., t1 ... e.n. cellen. We .... ...., . . lexts ,i,..rWs--ils
.............. s .....

BUFFALO· TEXTBOOK
3610 • • St. Aaess fr- U.l.

STORES
INC.

COUPLE NEEDS apartment to Shar•
or sublet
lor Juty·August or
September. Call 838-4060.

SUB-LET APARTMENT

ADDRESSOGRAPH plates, aoout 750,
but we don't have the addreuograpn .
The plates are In eKcellent condition .
All l or S20 . Room 355 Norton Hall.

Best offer. Cilll alter 5 p.m. 834·3575.

APARTMENTS WANTED

WANTED
ANYONE ablo to give me some plants
or !Ish would make me happy, Mark
837·9541.

1965 GALAXY, $400 . Wrll be ~va1lable
on July 3, 1971. Y. Tsu o (716)
839·0704 . Call alter 7 p.m .

-

NEW DUAL 1219 In factory carton:
OlSon
receiver: AR-4X speakers:
Pioneer stereo reverb amplifier H·K
tuner: Sherwood tuner: misc. w omen's
clothing a no household goods.
833·7270.

TAKE OVER payments '6S Ford,
$37 .50 per month. Needs 011 pump,
Must sell
starting school. Call
885-6748 ask for Bill.

Of' lDif!/M2CIUIHIY
FR£SN/ii!MM)CICIAitw*'

s~e liS

..

O NE STUDENT wanted for apartment
on Englewood for either July and
August or July and Augu~ through
September to Juno. Price negotiable.
Call Debbie, 837·0456.

PERSONAL
LONEL V GRADUATE mate wishes to
meet a
female. You won't be
disappointed about me. Call J.E.D.
837·0089 after 7 p.m .

------

FEMALE - own room - acrou from
umpus. Call 837· 0892 June, July,
August.

2-3 STUDENTS wanted to find and
Share apartment In ue area (sertOUS or
quiet people of liberal or tolerant hOild)
Tom 834-3019 .

RIDE BOARD
RIDERS NEEDLO lo NVC on Wed.,
June 23. Call 836·6027, Jim . Keep
trying and leavu rncssage. One way
only.

LOST &amp; FOUND
LOST MY DOG DOBBS Medium srze,
black wtth brown ;&gt;nd white mart&lt;ongs,
sllaggy ears and tall, red coll ar . II
found, cohtact Gonl at 837 · 53l3 or
bring her to 37 Mtlrrtmac St.

----

NATURAL FOODS freak wants to
fln&lt;f othero to rive Wilh Ron, 832·8818
afternoons or evenings.

------

MISCELLANEOUS

WOMEN'S plcnrc June 20. 1 p .m.: II
you nave a car or need a rtde, call
874·6176 .
EXPERIENCED last typing by electric
typewriter. T hosts, let m papers, etc.
$,40 page, Call 87J l305 .
TYPING - close tu U B . - Call Eileen
at 834·0872 .
PROFESSIONA L 'T VPtNG SERVICE
work don e on IBM Magnetic Card
Equipment. Fa st , e•ror·free copy.
Unlimited originals Spectatlzlng In all
types of d lssertatrons and 1heses.. Call
837-6558.

~ -si_

--.,.._ ~ l A.,.\,.&amp;

IW

"~·

~,,,(l'tt

•"

CHINESE, JAPANESE,
KOREAN , INDIAN, THAI
&amp; PHILIPPINE -

WIIPICIALIZE IN ORIENTAL
ARtS, GIFtS ancl FOODS

801

M11t er spor1 Hwy. near Shendan
rn Grover Cleveland Plaza
Open Mon. , Wed. 1 1 ~ Thurs •• 1 1·9
Sat. 10·5 Closed Tuesdays

835-3553

.....................

i L,?r~~1.~ ,~ ~R~A~!~l~s I
1

12.3:30 &amp; 7:30p.m. AND THE GOLD DIGGERS
7:30p.m.
OF 1935
7:30p.m.

NORTON HALL CONFERENCE THEATER
Tick~ msy b. purchM!IId •t thtJ Norton
Hall Ticket Office. SUNYAB Student$
$.75 ($.50 for •frtJmoon showings).
SUNYAB F~~eulty &amp; S~ff $1.25 ($1.00
for •fttJmoon showings).

133-7131

Friday, Jun~ 18, 1971 . The Spectrum • Page eleven
I

�Available at the Ticket''Office

Anpouncements
l
Women's Liberation wif.l hold free karate classes
for women Tues. and Thurs. from 4-6 p.m. in Room
340 Norton Hall.
h

• •

Taras and Olp Hubka will give a lecture on
Transcendental Meditation, Tues. at 8 p.m. in Room
246 Norton Hall.

..'
Any .... undeipaduate

Shaw· festival
Ju'he 14 - July 17 The ·Phllondere
June 22 - July 18 Summer Days
july 26 _: Sept. 4 Tonight at 8:30
July 29 - Sept. 5 War, Women ond Other Trivia

is the full calculus course sequence. The course is
open· to senior· undergraduate students, graduate
students in Engin~~ring · and Applied Sciences,- all
Natural Sciences, many Social Sciences, some
Humanities ~d Arts;, Pure and Applied Mathematics
.
and Mathematleat·St;atistics. . ·

- -

student interested · in
Summer pera Workshop and U~ Opera Club
tutoring college students for academic credit should are planning a prodciJctiom of Gilbert and Sullivan's
call the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory at 831-3946. Princess Ida during, the second summer session.
Presently tutors are needed in Anatomy 307 Anyone interested ic, ·participating in any capacity,
Finance ·. 301, Management Science 301 and · please contact Mrs. Muriel Wolf - 633-7814. ·
Chemistry 123. Applications are available •at 88
. Gay Liberation Front will sponsor a Gay Rap
Winspear.
. Wednesday, june 23 at 8 p.m . in Room 234 Norton
International Folk Dancing will be held tonight Hall. All gay men and women are invited to stop in
and ra~.
from 8-11 p.m·. in Room 30 Diefendorf Annex.
Psychomat will be held Monday from 2-4 p.m.
and Wednesday from 3-6 p.m. in Room 232 Norton
tiall.

..

AnyOne interested in fencing is advjsed to come
to Clark Gym Tuesdays at 7:30p.m.
An exhibition and sale of original graphic art
will be held on June 21 from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. in
the Center lounge Gallery, Norton Hall .
The Buffalo Women's liberation Union
.announces a .general wol]len's picnic June 20 at 1
p.m. at Prospect Park. It is open to all women. Cars
will leave from the front o.f Norton .Hall at 12:30
p.m.
A co-ed fitness and conditioning course will
meet Monday throlrgh Friday - 7:30 to 8;15 a.m. in
Clark Gym with Coach Norb Baschnagel.
The Department of Mathematics 'will offer
during summer school session trt (July 19 - August
27) Ordinary Differential Equations - Math 443 and
545 - Registration number 147608. It will be
offered from 11 a.m. to 12:20 p.m. at the Ridge l ea
Campus, building 4245, Room 38. The prerequisite

,

The hours for the language·taboratory in Hayes
Annex C for the summer sessions are:
Monday·Friday : 10 a.m. to 4 ·p.m.j Tuesday and
Thursday: 6:30p.m. to 9 p.m .

.

.

The Department of ·f (tnch' will offer an
experimental course on the 105-106 level. . Eight
units, corresponding to one academic year pf normal
training, will be attainable in six weeks, the program
consisting of four c;ontact hours per day in the
classroom. plus a minimum of 1 ~ hours at home or
in the laboratory.
Free Karate cla.sses for women sponsored by
Women's Liberation Tues. and Thurs. at ·4 p.m.,
Room 340 Nofton Hall.

Melody Fair
june 14-20 Sammy Davis Jr. and Irwin C:
Watson
June 21-26 Plaza Suite - Edle Adams and Tom
Poston
June 27 Alice Cooper
June 28 - J uty 10 Fiddler on the Roof Robert
Merrill
july 11 B.B. King
Juty 12-17 He/low Dolly Betsy Palmer
July 18 AI Hirt
..
july 19-24 Jerry lewis and Helen O'Connell
.
July 25 The Iri~h .Rovers
July 26-31 K!Sinet John Raitt and Anna Ma~ia
Alberghetti
Aug. 1 Roberta Flack
.,
· Aug..2-7 Robert Goulet and Norm Cr:osby
Aug. 8lhe Four Seasans ·
··Aug. 9 Jerry Vale ·
Aug. 15 Bobby ·Sherman
Aug. 1(;.21 The Sound of Music - Carol
Lawrence
'
Aug. 22 The Byrds
Aug. 23-28 Vikki Carr
Aug. 30 - Sept. 4 Sergio Franchi and Pat
Cooper
Century Theater
}4ne 26 Wilson Pickett and Jr. Walker and the
All-Stars

Any u ndergra1duate student interested in
tutoring college studcmts for academic credit should
call the EPIS Tutorial laboratory at 831 ·3946.
Tu~ors will be requirced to 'Serve at least one hour per
day for .every two hours of credit they elect.
Presently, tutors are needed in Finance . 301,
Management Sciencte 301 and Statistica 311.
Interested students should go to the 'Tutorial
l aboratQry at 88 .YVinspear Ave. to pick up an
application and ad~fiional Information.

Rochester War Memorial
June 23 Tom Jones

'

Toronto Island ·
July 9-11 Mariposa Folk Festival
Summer Excursions ·
june 19letchworth State Park
June 1.7 Niagara Falls
july 9-11 Stratford Weekend
july 13 Shaw Festival The Philanderer
July 24 Corning Glass Center
Aug. 13-15 Stratford Weelsend
Aug. 17 Shaw Festival Tonight at 8:30
Aug. 2~ Shaw Festival - War, Women and other .
·Trivia
·
Rooftop Players
june 11·19 , 24-26 "Slow .Dance Q·n the Killing
Ground"
·
·

I

Coming Events
Peace Bridge Exhibition Center
July 10 - Poco (on sale 6/21)

Sports Information
Clark Gym recreation facilities are open to all
fee-paying University studen ts with validated J.D.
cards from second semester, plus all summer school
students. Graduate students must pay $3 and facu lty
and staff must pay $5 for a permit to use the
facilities. ~
· Clark Gym rec_reat/on hours are as follows:

-osterrelc:her

WBFO Programme Notes

Wednesday, june 23 ..

Friday , June 18 .

Monday, June 21

5:50p.m. Chroniclet .
,
6:15 p.m. Concert IHall - with John Farrell Britten, ·
Vaughn-Williams
10 p.m. The Goon Show: "The Histories of Pliny the
Elder" - in the year Yliii BC, julius Caesar
conquered Englland. like a mighty octopus, the
legions of Ro11ne spread across the land. How
much of this co•uld Britain take , ..

5 p.m. All Things Considered - People, news, music

Thursday, June 24

and the best in radio from National Public
Radio in Washington, D.C.
9 p.m. MJJsic Tomorrow - with Christine Frank and
· Walter Gajewski Tuesday, June 22
11 a.m. Sexuality: A Search for·Perspective
1 p.m. History of Rock 'r'!' Roll
6:15 p.m. listener's Choice - Buffalo's only
classical music request program. To make
requests call831 -5393 or write WBFO

8 p.m. Interface: An informal conversation with
University Presiident Robert L. Ketter. listeners
may phone 83:1-5393 1with questions which Or.
Ketter will answer on the air.
9 p.m. Schubert ar11d the 600 - The 600 Lieder of
Franz Schubert
11 p.m. Music and lletters: A collige of poetry and
music, with Marcella F aine.

11 a.m. Dru~: The Issues on Trial " Methadone - A
Valid Treatment Technique?"
·
6:15 p.m . Concert Hall Beethove n: Concerto ·for
- - Piano No. 1; Mahler : Songs of a Wayfarer

Gym and facilities besides pool - 3-1"0 p.m.,
Mon .-Fri. ; 9 a.m.· - 6 p.m. Sat.; and noon-10 p.m.
Sun.
Swimming pool - 2:30 - 3 :30p.m. Mon.-Fri.,
2·3 p.m. Sat. and Sun. for faculty, staff and fam ilies;
3:30 - 4:30p.m . Mon.-Fri., 1·9 p.m. Wed. and Sun.,
and 3·5 p.m. Sat. for coed student recreation ; 7-9 .
p.m. Mon. and Thurs., 3-5 p.m. Sun. for faculty,
staff and student~; 7-9 p.m. Tues. for women only.
Children using the pool must be ar,tompanied
by a pa(ent. Further information and reservations
for indoor handball and squash courts can be
obtained by calling 831-5238.

The UB Alumni Association will hold a golf
outing on july 27 at South Shore Country Club in
Hamburg, N.Y. The $15 fee covers a round of golf,
plus a cocktail party and dinner following the event.
Tee-off time is between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.; prizes
wilt be awarded. Informatio n and reservations are
available through th~ Alumni Office, 831-4121.

.

Students Interested In roller hockey this fall call
Jim. at . 836-6027. You must have your 'own
equipment. Check The Spectrum in September for
more details.

B@.~~kpage
r

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                  <text>&lt;div&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Students at the University at Buffalo launched a new newspaper in December 1950. The &lt;em&gt;Spectrum&lt;/em&gt; succeeded the &lt;em&gt;Bee&lt;/em&gt; (1921-1950) and &lt;em&gt;Argus&lt;/em&gt; (1947-1950). This collection provides access to the first twelve years of the Spectrum. This award-winning newspaper has been published continuously since 1950, and three times a week it provides news stories and in-depth coverage of campus events and sports.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Funding for the creation of this collection was received from the &lt;a href="http://www.wnylrc.org/"&gt;Western New York Libraries Resources Council&lt;/a&gt; through the &lt;em&gt;Regional Bibliographic Data Bases &lt;/em&gt;and&lt;em&gt; Interlibrary Resources&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Sharing Program&lt;/em&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Please see our &lt;a href="http://library.buffalo.edu/specialcollections/about/policies"&gt;rights management information&lt;/a&gt; for policies regarding use.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;</text>
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Football revival appears doomed&#13;
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Seal Story refuted by Comerce Department&#13;
Caretakers face problems&#13;
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Elton John: cocktail music</text>
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Records&#13;
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Sports spot&#13;
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Available at the Ticket Office&#13;
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•
'·

...
Stat;, Unw.-sity of New

Vol . 22, No. 1

·.

.·

V~rk at Buffalo

...

Friday, .June 1 1 , 1971

Divide and
conquer ~
by Jo-Ann

~ao

Campus Editor

The recently ~ed report of the Task P.orce
on · Univ-ersrfy Organization has fostered
much
discussion and created apparent
divisions within
the
faculty
and
administration of the State University ~f
Buffalo.
• •sur.prisi ngly. ••
commented
McAllister H. Hull, Jr., of the Physics
Department and member of the Task Force,
the proposed reorganization has ••met with
much flak." Dr. Hull roughly explained the
major changes of the
T-ask
Fore~
reorganization plan. It calls for the structural
separation of academic units into four
departments headed by divisional vice
presidents. Dr. Hull added that. these vice
presidents would act · as ••alter. egos" of the
vice president for Academic Affairs and as
advocates for the academic disciplines their
schools represent. Their function would be to
co-ordinate the schools and to free the
Academic vice president to deal with the
larger and longer-range problems of the
University. These vice prt?siqents would
abolish the need for the faculty provosts.
Bureaucratic level
- This proposed chance has been criticized
by many as the insertion of an additional
layer of .administrative hierarchy with the
faculty at th e bottom and the president at
the top. Charles H.V. Ebert, dean of the
Division of Undergraduate Studies and
chairman of th e Geography Department ,
ex pressed his fear
,. that if the present plan
were to be ffected it might be .. a little more
· difficult to deal with the upper levels of the
administration . . . •• Commenting that his
r eactions toward the plan are .. extremely
negative , •• John Simon , chairman of the
Fre n c h Department , said that ••all power
would
be
pushed downward. into . the
departments and upward into the . vice
presidents with the domain of the area in
between very va~e... He added
••any
dynanism motivated by the Office of the
Provost would be lost." According to Dr.
Hull . while this could conceivably occur, it
was not the intention of the framers to
establish another layer of hierarchy." In
agreement with this, President Ketter
maintained that if the Task Force proposals
were meant to establish such a layer_ then
.. it's not worth doing as there is enough of a
bureaucracy on this campus."
Power concentration
Ira Cohen, provost of Social Sciences,
pinpointed the most significant change to be
one of concentration as ·••all academic affairs
would be concentrated in the hands of the
Academic vice president." However,." Dr.
· Cohen said that it is not really a change since
for the past year provosts have· been
reporting to Daniel Murray. acting Academic
vice president instead of to President Ketter.
·coupled with this division into four units is
the apparent strengthening of the offices of
--continued on page 5 -

�...

SA hires attorney

·Ejfman to prQviik legal aid
To provide better legal services for
undergraduate students, the Student Association has
retained assistant University advocate Norm Bffman
as its private attorney beginning Aug. 31. Ian
DeWaU, SA president, explained that the impending
Aug. 1 closure of the Office of the Advocate and the
Unjversity Ombudsman because of buttsetary
limitations necessitated such a move.
He a'lso said that this action represents a basic
transferring of the responsibility to provide legal aid
to students from the_University administration to its
student government. Mr. DeWaal comme~Jted that
"mont'y-wise J. am not pleased with this shift
(Effman is being retained at a cost of $5000]. but
ideologically it makes s~nse as this legal function ls
well within the boundaries of the Student
Association."
Concurring with this, Mr. Effman commented
that ~ne of the faults of the Advocate's office was
the paradox of the University providing legal services
to students : "In the Advocate's office, 1 was always
a lawyer working for the University - never the ..
individual student's attorney."
Expanded legal proces$
This inadequacy , according to Mr. Effman, will
be solved by his duties under the SA agreement for
he will be enabled to actually represent individuals
rather than merely give advice. Citing the example of
a landlord-tenant dispute, he explained that as
advocate all he was able to do was to tell the student
tenant his rights. As his lawyer retained by Student
Association, he would be able to utilize direct action

-05terrelcher

NormE.Ifman

week in a Norton Union office. In addition, he will
~?e available for calls and appointments in his private
downtown office. Specifically, Mr. Effmun will
• provide legal advice to any undergraduate in custody
such as writing a letter to the landlord.
"We're carrying the whole legal process a lot and legal representation at such a studeht's
further with actual representation for the student," arraignment , advise students on civil matters, assist
Mr. Effman adde~ . Such representation is "the best the Office of Student Rights and provide legal advice
way to handle legal services for the student as we are to aU recognized student groups. Mr. OeWaal also
not a part of the administration and there are no said thilt Mr. Effman would be useful to students as
obstacles to what is best fot the student's interest ," he has been involved with the University for some
he continued.
time and knows its inner workings.
New duties
Included in Mr. Effman's new duties will be
holding hours on campus for at least one night a

. ···-

Jll·~~······~~~
'Reading
Dynamics'

Such involvement includes Mr: Effman receiving
his B.A. in political science in 1965 and his J.D. of
the Student Judiciary and- most recently as a lawyer
in the advocate's office.

Advertisement • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Learning·· to read with speed
Graduates of a school which is
once again offering its only course
to State University of Buffalo
students can read many books to
speeds of over 2000 words per
m~nute with nearly total
comprehension. The school, The
Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics
lnsitutute, guarantees its students
that they will at least triple their
reading index or their tuition will
be refunded.
The "reading dynamics"
collcept originiated nearly
25-years-ago at the University of
Utah. Evelyn Wood, a' graduate
student at the University,
submitted a term pjtper to one of
her professors. Watching in
astonishment, Mrs. Wood saw her
teacher read her 80 page theme in
minutes, without missing a detail.
His reading speed was about 6000
words per minute.
Mrs. Wood . undertooK a two
year search and found SO other
.prodigies who could duplicate the
professor's results. They came
from all walks of life including
housewives and one shepherd, but
shned certain char.tcteristics:
they .read dow n the page rather
than from left to right and they
read groups of words or co~ete
thoUJhts rather than a w d or
tw~ at tJirile.
AnalY'Jng the reading habi~ of
these people, Mn. Wood devised a
method of reading baaed on these
principles, Sh~ developed and

appHed her system for 12 years
with the help of psychologists in
her local school di:;trict. Finally,
she demonstrated her course
successfully for three yeara at the
University of Utah.

fadins

Silent
Students in the reading
dynamics course learn to read
down a page rather than across it
allowing the words to register
directly in the mind rather than
being vocalized on the lips. Most
people, Mrs. Wood says, are
taught to read aloud when they
first encounter the reading
experience in school. Because Of
this, most people are
sub-vocalizers, inwardly sounding
each word they read.
With the hand acting as a pacer
for the printed material, the · ·
student is - taught to avoid the
vocalization process as"'he reads
the lines on a page backwards and
forwards, Following these
techniques, exceptional students
have achieved speeds in excess of
25,000 words per minute withnut
sacrificing comprehension.
The Evelyn Wood method
often teaches students to increase
their comprehension also.
Students learn to see the whole
rather than parts of it. They learn
to steep themselves in the book's

total mood and me3Jling. Reading
at such rapid rates they need not
stumble over single words, details
or even chapters, but absorb all
the material as if it were a work of
art rather than ..n agglomeration
of chapters.
Better understandin&amp;
The eyes of an average reader
will regress eight to II times per
JOO words. Evelyn Wood students
Jearn to avoid this · by making a
series of circular sweeps down a
page. These readers tend to be less
susceptible to eye fatigue an~
drowsiness because they avoid
repetition of material.
Students also learn to improve
their memory and to organize a
book before reading it. Textbooks
are outlined by the dynamic
readers and long novels are first
skimmed to get the characters
straight. The result is better
understanding of the material at a
speed many times faster than
possible by old fashioned reading
methods.

-

Alternative sought for
University Ombudsman
William Baumer, vice chairman
" . . . to improve our •bility
fairly and efficiently to . handle of the Faculty-Senate, expressed
complaints, offenses, grievances doubt as· to the value of the
and disputes arising in the life of Ombudsman: "1 appreciate the
our University," thus former value it has. But, I have my
acting president Peter F. Regan reservations as to duplication."
described the importan~e of the Dr. Baumer refe~red to his belief
Offices of the Advocate and that the Office of Student Affairs
OmbudsmaJ1 at their inception in handles many of the same
1969. Recently, however, the responsibilities as that of the
state austerity budget has Ombudsman.
precluded the continuation of
But, in a report to the
these two offices after Aug. 3 1,
Executive Committee, Robert
The primary role of the Stern , University Ombudsman .,
University Advocate has been to justified' his office. He reported
p r ovide " legal first aid" to that in' the. period from
University members in both September, J970 to last May,
criminlll and civil matters while there were 311 individual contacts
the Ombudsman has attempted to made through the Ombudsman .
advise the campus community on Of this, 2 J 5 were undergraduates,
resolutidh. and adjudication of 40 graduates, 45 faculty, IS staff
c Q mplaints and grievances and six others. ln the previous
unrelated to matters of law. An academic '}'ea.r the Ombudsman
important aspect of both offices had processed 11 2 cases.
'·
has been their freedom from
administrative direction.
Various altemati.-es
Duties previously undertaken
If the preservation of the
by the Advocate have been Ombudsman is deemed justified
satisfactorily filled by an by the committee, according to
Under g ra.d ua te Stud eo t Dr. Baumer, it is qult'e likely that
Association agreement. Next fall , - the attempt will be made to
Norman Effman, the cur~nt convince Albany to reconsider.
assistant University Advocate, will Vice President for Student Affairs
be retained as ..Student RichardSiggelkowsaidthatifthis
Attorney," providing legal service · fails, the Office of Ombudsman
to any undergraduate in nee..d of might possibly. continue on a
aid. Mr. Effman wiJJ have his voluntary basis. Dr .• Baumer
offi~ in the Main. Place Mall and cons iders this action "highly
will also be available· for improbably" in that it would be
consuiiiHion three hours a week in " unfair to ask anyone to do ii."
Norton Union.
The third course of action o pen to
the administration i'S to
Doubtful value '
.discontinue this office and
However, at the present time. incorJ?orate its functions into the
there is no adequate replacement already over-burdened Offic~ of
for the office of Ombudsman. The Student AffaiA.
Executive Committee of the
Dr. Stern said that he would
Faculty-Senate, in a meetihg last ..question whether some of the
May 26, requested that a special thinf$ we do could be handled as
sub-committee be formed "so that efficiently in another office."
justification of this office might When asked if he thought
be presented in order to preserve cont.l nuation was likely, Stern
·
this position."
repUed that "the ball game is not
quite over."
The Spectrum is published weekly
during the su mmer sessions bv
Sub· Board I, Inc. of the State
Univeristy of New York at Buffalo.
Offices are located at 356 Nonon
Hall, State University of New York
at Buffelo. Telephone: Area code
716; Editorial, 831 -4113; Business,
831-3610.
Represented for advenising by
National Educational Advertising
Service, Inc., 18 E. 50th Street, New
Yofk, New York 10022.
·
Subscription retes are $4.50 per
semester or $8.00 for two semel\!lrS.
Second Class Postage-- paid
Buffalo, New 'r~rk .

at

Circulation:• 10,000

Stay COOL in

Reprinted from The Spectrum of
Oct. 2, 1970.

HOT PANTSI
$4.95

~-

"
Por~· p

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Page two . The Spectrum • Friday, June 11, 1971

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�College A

··Day Care's future discus.sed
Th~~~ surJ'ival at meeting . with Chancellor
..,

,

I

'

Utilizing new courses and a
new. staff, Go llege A has
reaffirmed its original principle of
self and community . S~~-Ch a
" revitaliZation,'' according to
· Bambii Abelson, the College's new
coordinator, is n~essary as the
recent fights for self-evaht:&amp;lion
have somewhat forsaken this
origin~ and basic philosophy of
College A.

for A caden~ic Affairs Daniel
Murray only nfter assurances were
made that grades would be
calculated on more than student
self-determination. However, Ms.
Abelson said that self-evaluation
will still play &lt;I major part in grade
formu latio n for College A
students.

WiUiam Ba1umer, vice chairman
of the Faculty-Senate, reported
She explained that the the recent findings of the
resignation of Master Fred Snell Executive Cc•mrnittee, that until
and most of his coordinators University policy Is established by
resulted in a staff turnover and a the FacultJ(..Senate on grade
change in goal emphasis. The new deter mination, no student
staff, composed almost entirely of evaluation will be ail6wed. He
graduate assistants, are devoted to further said that mechanisms for
- "a revamping of mean$" to allow outside eva:luation should be
students- to carry on their special implemented and any student
unwilling to accept this external
projects.
evaluation would receive an
Included in this is student incomplete.
course input, new efforts to
attract different segments of the
community
solutions to ~ Survival
COIT\1Tlunication problem. "What
In spite of these complications
we are trying to do i{tb integrate
and
"an textremely skimpy"
rather than ali'enate,z._explained
summer
budget, Ms. Abelson
Ms. Abelson. She further said that
that College A would
maintained
the major problem of College A is
continue
and
continue for its
to gain student and public trust :
students.
She:
also
said that the
"We have to build and maintain a
of
new
courses in the
introduction
position which will allow students
fall
would
1ensure
an exciting
to know really what we are trying
:future
for
CoUege A.
semester
and
to do."
One of these courses ,

·and

ln a recent meeting at the state
capitol, the final stumbling blocks
restricting the alterations of
Cooke Hall for use by the U.B.
Day Clare Center were apparently
removed .'
Meeting with SUNY Chancellor
Ernest L . Boye{, members of the
Day Care Steering Committee,
President Ketter· and Student
Association President Ian DeWaaJ
outlined the proposed financial
needs of the Day Care Center and •
sought authorization to utilize
state monies in' support of the
project.
Special emphasis was placed on
the ongoing nature of the Center
which has been in operation since
March of last year. The Center has
been the focus of various
educational studies and academic
program s throughout its
existence.
Specifically. observation and
practical training for abnormal
psychology, child psychology,
nursing, social welfare and
American Studies have been
provided through the Day Care
facilities . The~e projects have
involved student participation at
both the undergraduate and
graduate levels. Additionally,
research projects in both the
School o f Management and
Comparative Literature have been
' focused on the Day Care Center.

progress. · The construction is
necessary to bring the facilities'
into com pliance with the
requirements of Erie County
Board .of Health regulations.
· All necessary and involved
officials have been consulted in
the project according. to Bernard
Greenblatt of the School of Social
Policy and Community Planning:
"Planning has involved all proper
officials with authority to decide
such matters."
When final approval is received
from the Chancellor's office, the
newly redirected funds will be
administered by the School of
Necessary construction
Social Policy and Community
At the present time plans for Planning. The sch ool had earlier
the operation of the Day C:are voiced its complete support for
Center during the summer momths the Center ~ut, emphatically
have been completed . Office of stated that it would be impossible
Facilities Planning is presently for the needed monies to come
exploring alternate locations for directly from that department's
the Center while construction is in budget .

justified as an ongoing educaticmal
program. However, he rrientiolned
that his consultation with the
appropriate legislative committee
"would make the going easier."'
Presc:ntly the Day Care Ce~1ter
ha's been guarantetd S75~ from
arr anonymous donor and $7500
from the Student Association and
ttie Graduate Student Association.
The additional monies required
would come from the existing
Universit y budget . However, fltnal
approval from Chancellor Boyer
must be received before the
project can move ahead.

Open courses
Due to a computer error, all Colleae A course
offerinp fo1r ..the summer were closed. Spokesmen
for the Coll•~ge report, however, that all courses are
open and anyone wishing to reaister for the~ should
call 5386 and arrangements will be made.

HAND - CRAFTED
by

Ongoing program
Future plans include an
Introduction to the Community,
i'ncrease in the educational
Hampering conditions
will attract local people of various
Efforts to achieve this have cult ural , s•ocial and ethnic activities being directed through
been hampered by administrative backgrounds into small seminars. the Center including field work
training ln Social Welfare. This
and monetary problems and a
training will be used to fulfill the
recent computer error which
Ms. Abelson added that the ,
graduate requirements for field
resulted in the premature closing theme for Colllege A would be one work experience.
of aU College A summer course of survival. " We will carry on
Dr. Boyer was favo rable to the
offerings. The summer budget was anyway . s1omehow ," she expenditure of state monies for
released by Acting Vice President concluded.
Day Care since it !;ould be ·

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weekly to provide an opportunity for student companions· to share experiences in the
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Friday, Jum' 11, 1971 . The Spectrum . Page three

�..
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~r1stm-ry

- :r11....1.rr1'bers
by James Paul
Thb column will attempt to explore modern poetry and its
themes. 1 will give my views on new workl by known authors and I will
leave space for youn. It is therefore hoped tlult there will be some sort
of free interchange ofldw between us.

The title of this column is taken from "Milton" by William BlaJce.
The full quote is probably the most adequate introduction for this
undertaking:
·

0 how can I with my gross tongue that cleaveth to the dust,
Tell of the Fou;·fold man, in starry numben fltly.ordered
Or ho~ can I with my cold hand of clay/ But thou 0 Lord
Do with me as thou wilt I [or I am nothing and vanity.
If thou chuse to elect a worm, II shall remove the-m9untains.

The SU. UnfvW~fty System rec:enUy acquired the
former Buffalo Mew Co. building on Main Street.
President Robert Kett• announced tl)at the
~ of Theetre and Art would be\housed

New building

th•• as soon as rennovations h~We beefl completed.
Bids ere presenUy being accepted and construction is
to begin, ~~CC?Ordipt to Dr. Ketter, ••as soon as
possible ••• maybe summ• or fell. "

Budget requests
Sub-Board I, Inc. will be evaluatina the 1971-72 school year budaets for aU
publications in the very near future. AU publications aroups and oraanizations who will
be requestina funds for th e 1971-1972 school year sbaU submit their b udaets in final
form to the treasurer of Sub-Board I, Inc., l OS Norton HaD not later than June 21.

.
~·

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WKIW ..... aUffALQ fUliYAl ttr. ..... -~··:•

UNI RECORDIN G ARTIST

~I

THE
CLOTHES- OUT
SHOPPE

ELTON JOHN
':tDith

J~ Mark-Johnny Almond .

2 PERFORMANCES--M9NOAY,

JUNE
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JISUS CHRIST IS GOD

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-John 10:24, 25, 30, •:z

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BUFFAlO TEXTBOOK
133-7131
PaiJfJ four .. The Spectrum~. Friday, June 11. 1971

STORES

INC.

Let this serve as my invocation to the Muses of Imagination, as
well as my handy rationale for failure: it is the condition- of the
universe and not the spirit which is inadequate. With this perfect, if
pretentious introduction, 1 begin the column.
• To say great word s is to run the risk of being called pretentious,
and this may be the reason why so few people say great things. Jf such
a charge is requisite to the attempt, then fire away.
Man's attempt to find th e great in the shrunken realm of the
universe often leads him to poetry , the most directly expressive, yet the
most suggestive of all art forms. Many modem poets· seem to find
scarce that quality of greatness either in persons or thi ngs that make$
for exalted visionary verse. The reason for the lack of heroes
everywhere today Is the lack or artistic impulse and the preponderance
of a static and stagnant medium of popular art and entertainment that
stifles the ima&amp;ination by quick-frozen pre-packaged images and story. I
. mean the "oool mediums" (TV, movies, etc.) that are turning the
modem age into one huge audlent:e.
This is the great quality of great poetry - ,that it makes every
reader the artist and that with a few words, it suggests a world created
and peopled by every reader for himself. Those wh o berate the loss of
individuality in America should really look closely at the Mass Media
(as well as the mass everything else) as the prime amalgamator of the~ ·
beast of collective personality.
My purpose with t his column is to halt this beast and revive the
artist in everyone through the medium of poetry - which is the
function of this art form at its best. The format for this undertaking
will be the revic:w of new artists and new works, and the presentation
of local verse for the general enlightenment of you masses. With this
object in mind, I would like to invite · any poets of the audience tO
begin $ending in their work. I wiJI print the best of it - uncommented
on. In this way, I hope to enhance the discipline, at least in my .small
way in this city, and to -.(prm a focal poitnt for verse and for an
expression- of the urge that lfs bettind the pathos of these works and to
attempt a oommunity~ntered ideal of poetry - with possible
meetings and readings to grow from tttis small start. In this way it is
hoped that the end result will be a general awake~ng to the enthusiasm
of verse that will explode the notion of poetry as elitist, dandyfied or
esoteric. Poetry is anhe heart of man and the pathos of poetry is the
pathos of life, which is neither elitist, dandyfied nor esoteric.
•The essence of verse is inseparable from the whole litenry vision,
arfd accordingly I will use the greats, as in the title of my column, to
help me move my mountains. This ~ to say that the poetic discipline,
in all its jo}l()usness, is essentially conservative. Each word or line grows
in intensity and power as It reverberates through the visions of the past.
In other words, no poem is an entity in separation, which accounts for
poetry's decline, in an age of entities-in separation and fragmentary art.
One cannot feeL the full joy of Corso, Ginsberg or Dennis without
knowing the craft of Milton, Shakespeare or Blake. It is almost as if the
artist's mantle changes the wearer into the speaker of that one great
round word that we all attempt to articulate. This column shall find
that word and shout it , via this tabloid, into your shrunken ears. I call
on the artists of Buffalo to sen~ me y.our words, that I may see if the
One is among them.
A
Let this short piece serve as an introduction and sfatement of
principles fo r the column, which will begin in earnest next week .

(SoTHING B ouTIQUE
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divide and conquer. • •
the Division of Undergraduate Studies and the dean
of the Graduate School. In a June 2 letter to
President Ketter, Acting Provost .Qf the Faculty of
Arts "and Letters Thomas E. ~onnolly maintained
that This concentration of power strips the Faculties
of the advocate rote of the current provostal
(X!SHion.
In a previous letter to Dr. Ketter, Dr. Connolly
charged. that ''the reorganization is clearly in the
direction of creating a monolithic central
government that obviously became outmoded and
unworkable ten years ago." Dr. Simon also said that
the change would "move the University backward to
a much more conventional and authoritative
posture."

-continued from page 1th ese practices be tempered by academic
considerations and priorities.
Another proposal of the plan concerns the
creation of 18 schoo1s out of the seven faculties. Or.
Hull explained that· the point of this division Is "in
order to provide a greater degree of local au_tonomy
without losing a University-wide point of view ."
Thus Dr. Hull explained that both autonomy and
cooperation could be obtained : autonomy through
this ~reation of ,many schools and cooperation
through the establishment of the four divisions wit~
respective vice presidents.

'Talking and thinking'
While Dr. Hull defends and supports the Task
Force reorganizational plan, he does feel that time
should be allowed for discussion and modification.
Academic achievement
Dr. Hull defended the plan on this point by At a May 17 meeting of the Executive Committee of
maintaining that University wide planning and the Faculty-Senate, President Ketter did promise
cooperation would be affected resulting in an easier that he would make no effort to implement the plan
and more sucessful scheme for fa culty to achieve until the faculty has'teconvened in the fall and a full
their academic goals. According to Dr. Hull, another discussion can occur. Dr. Ketter reported that he is
provision of the proposal is also intended to further presently receiving opinions from various parts of
aid this achievement of academic goals. This aspect is the campus community : "A fair amount of study
the introduction of the concept of a program must be unc::lertaken' to see if ·Ole benefits gained
generating the resources needed to support it . This from the plan are worth the problem in achieving
would prevent a program from being launched them."
•
without the funds to maintain it. Dr. Hull
Most faculty members.. are reserving their
commented that previous "programs have been decisions until the plan can be properly reviewed,
lau~ched as academically sound ideas but with no
discussed and , if necessary, modified . Robert Lively,
• support built into their approval." Agreeing with chairman of the History Department, explained that
this, Daniel Murray, Task Force member, said that he, as others, are "watchfully waiting ... prepared
"we shouldn't be offering things that we don' t have to do a lot more talking and thinking." Labeling the
situation too political , Marcus Klein, English
the resources of supporting."
C1'T
-osterrelcher
Since 1967 fewer and fewer heads have ~een
Department chairman , declined to comment on his
Realistic approach
feelings toward the plan .
barbered in the barber shop in Norton's basement. Because of the
scarcity of customers, FSA, which bou"'t the concession from
Dr, Murray added that this is not meant to be
Dr. Hull maintained that the rationale beyond
Charlie's Barber Shop four years ago, will close tHe shop this June
constraining but rather . realistic. Defending this the reorganization plan was "not politically inspired
30th.
provision against accusations th+4t the University but to strengthen programs for the University." He
Robert " Rocko" Rollek, the one remaining barber, greets this
would be turned into a corporation, Dr. Hull said warned, however. that this success was dependent
news with "mixed emotions." "I'm happy and I'm glad, uh, sad," he
that " the Task Force never intended that the not on any plan but on the men who implement it :
joked.
University should be treated as a business with 'tft is quite true as some have suggested that the
~======::;:==================• balance sheets and profit reports." He added that all administration could change the intent o(our plan
e
e that was being suggested was to introduce sound to influence academic considerations. But in the end,
e
e management practices where they were needed and the plan , as is any p(an, is dependent upon the men
could "be utilized. However, he did maintain that who arllin it."

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Friday, June 11, 1971. The Spectrum. Page five
A

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,founded. the fOup) are the best I've heard
since the Everly B~os. for purity and
complexity. The two switch patts in the
middle of verses without the listener
realizing what's JOinB on.

RECDROS·
IL-----------------------------------------------------1
Mud/ark Leo Kottke (Capitol ST 682)

like theJ:e's an o rchestra playing instead of
a _guitar.
Leo's sparse vocals take some getting
used to. He has a low, rich voice, but
somehow he doesn't carry a lot of feeling
..along with it. And so the songs with singing
lack the energy that his guitar playing
certainly has. "June Bug" and "Machinne
tn." are stirring in their tense, emotional
meanderings. "Room 8" is a slow, pretty
tune, as is "Lullaby." "Poor Boy," written.
by Kottke and Fahey, shows Fahey's
influence on his young friend. Kottke
knows the power of strings .and' modal
tunings, and he exhibits an uncanny
deftness in his playing, even when it seems
that he's running out of things to do.
It's hard to write a lot about an
instrumental record. Just let me say .that
this is a g reat record, in the same vein as
Ry Cooder's album, but a bit more folky
and even a bit less ptetentious, if that's
possible.

Leo Kottke's • record is certainly a
surprise. Possessing possibly the worst
cover I've seen yet, he looks like some
continental crooner. You turn it over and
there's a little picture of him with a guitar.
Exciting. But then you notice that most of
the so'ngs are instrumentals, w_ith people
like Kenny Buttrl:y, Wayn~ Moss, Paul

•
Lagos and Roy Estrada backing up. And
John Fahey helped produce it. So you
thro~ it 'on the steeereeo (as John Starr
would say).
•
~
Bang! One of the b4/ter versions of
"Cripple Creek" yet. And on guitar, not
banjo. Then, are you ready? "Eight Miles
High ," with acoustic guitars racing arou·nd
your head at unbelievable speeds.
" Bouree," by Bach (that's right, Bach) is
done with a knowledge and assurance that
few popular musicians have when
approaching classical material.
Most of the uptempo tunes are splendid
slide guitar workouts. Kottke is perhaps
the fastest three-finger picker that ever
picked. His bass notes pave the way for his
high note explorations and it often sounds

The Flying Bu"ito Brothers (A&amp;M SP
4295)

This record comes at a good time. It
seems.. that the few good albums that are
released these days just sort of appear,
without mucH bravado. Though this is the
third Burrito Bros. LP, this is the fint one
that might get them a lot of attention from
people with differing tastes.
The first Burrito record, The Gilded
Palace of Sin, Is a masterpiece of modern
country music, 'and • one of my all·time
personal favorites. All the songs are gems,
and the vocals by Chris Hillman and Gram
·Parso ns (the two former Byrds who

SUNYAB

A few personnel changes ensued,
leading up to Burrito Deluxe. .Hillman
shifted back to bass, Parsons went to piano
(both played rhythm guitars on the first
album), Bernie Leadon joinoo on guitar
and Mike Clarke (Byrds' drummer) also
became a Burrito. Deluxe really turned me
off. The band had been hanging around
with the Stones and Parsons went on a ·
rock trip. Most of the tunes just didn't go
anywhere, the singing was not as carefully
worked on, and Leadon seemed invisible in
l}.is playing. Only two songs, "C ~y ,
Cody," a beautiful Bytds-type composition
with the famous Hillman·Byrds bass line,
and " Wild Horses," the Stones song,. made
the album at all bearable.
As the band began to lose confidence in
itself, Parsons de£ided to leave. His musical
ideas were varying too much from the
Burrito style. The band shopped around
for a replacement and came up with Rick
Roberts, who I'd never heard of before.
Roberts plays guitar, sings and writes
· songs. He does aU Qf these things well. He
sounds like Parsons, but sweeter, if that's
possible. The group has shown a great deal
confidence in
seven of his tunes

included her~. All of them are.good.
The record starts with M~rle Haggard's
highway JOng, "White Une Fever." It's
really too bad most people have onJy heard
of Merle through ''Okie from Muskogee"
and "Fightin' Side of Me." He has written
some of the · best songs to come out of
America. The Burrito's treatment is honest
and sympathetic to the plight of the
non-stop trucker.
"Colorado," about missing home, is
simply beautiful. Roberts' singing is great,
and very sensitive instrumentation helps
the song · along Its gentle path. The sam9
goes for "All Alone," a sad song about a
lonely girl waiting for a man who doesn't
come. "Hand to Mouth" starts slowly, then
builds with the help of some rickety piano
by Earl Ball. "Tried So Hard" is 11 Gene
Clark (another Byrd) tune. Sneeky Pete's
steel rambles through the song in pretty
chord figures.
Hillman's country voice gives •x;an' t
you Hear me Calling" just the right touch.
The music reminds me of Poco, but
without the candy. Chris also sings
"Ramona," the Dylan classic that's been
long overdue in being recorded by other
people. " Just Can't Be," is the longest
track on the record, as the band eases out
for some good instr~mental soloing, most
noticeably Pete's violin inlitation on steel.
The record closes with "Why are you
Crying," a soft little number with only
guitar and banjo. Leadon's banjo playing is
good, and the song carries the album to a
nice, mellow finish.
For a group that's been d own for quite
a while, the Flying Burrito Brothers are
making some spectacular music. This
album will l'lot get you up and jumping,
but it will smooth out the rough edges, as
you nod your head in appreciation of
common feelings and moods.
Take a Burrito to lunch today .

316/323 Norton HaU
831-3602

,

TRAVEL
..
OPPORTUNITIES
STUDYING IN EUROPE NEXT SEMESTER?

SEPTEMBER 6th

$109.00

(one- way onJy)

-,

•

Niagara Falls non-stop to London (Gatwich)
Boeing 707 Jet
final note:

Summer Shuttles

(a few seats left)

JULY 19 to AUGUST 27
JULY 31 to SEPTEMBER 7

CJ.E.E.InternationaliD. Cards
available in Room 323 Norton HaD
Booklests for Inter-European flight programs
and
other travel services and materials.

University Travel is made possible by
your Student Activity Fees - via Sub Board 1.

'Pa{JB six • The Spectrum • Friday, June 11, 1971

TIIIPICIIIM

C.mpuseCityeCopytfntertainment-Gra,a.icAns-L•youtel.it&amp;D,_..,..oto4pons

�I·

EdiToRiAls

J

Reorganization
On -paper the report of the Task Force on Univemty
Organization has obvious merit. It seems designed to institute a more
efficie~t. orderly and coherelft system ..Unfortun@tely, the price for
efficiency will be a high one. T he attempt to ·~tighten things up" and
impose a rigid hierarchy upon academic decision will serve to further
strangle acad emic initia tive and result in the forfeiture of any
aspirations this University has for becoming a leading national
institutipn.
•
Efficiency and systemization are concepts that should not be
given top priority when attempJing to reorganize this University .
Universities ' re not corporations, nor should they be run in that
fashion . The Task Force, however, suggests a strict administrative
hierarchy with i~ the realm of academic decision-making. This is
inimical to an institution that is founded upon notions of collegiality
and delegation of responsibility.
Throughout the past year, the administration has been clearl y
moving towards a re-centralization of authotity with in the University
regarding academic matters. T he oharige from a vice president for
Academic Development to a vice president for Academic Affairs was an
indication of this as was the placing of the provosts within the
Academic Vice President's bailwick. We frown u pon this trend because
it is likely to stifle academic excellence by dampening enthusiasm and
opportunities for innovati!&gt;n and experimentation through the
substitution of efficiency ratings tor.scholarly evaluation.
Possibly the worst result of centralization would be the isolation
of top administrators, overly concerned with day·to.&lt;Jay operations,
from the University community. The administration can be swept away
in a tide of minutae, too busy to plan ahead and too thickly
surrounded to develop the overview necessary to understand the
various campus constituencies. The dangers of such an administrative
overload are that it creates a potential for misunderstanding similar to
the Spring of '70.
The most serious fault of the reorganization plan is that it
appears destined to simply accelerate and formalize the curr:ent
admin istrative trend . The proposal strikes us as· a distinctly backward
step. One provost described t he plan as "creating a mcmolithic central
government that obviously became outmoded and unworkable ten
years ago." We fully agree. This University t1as made great strides in the
academic world during the past few years under a structure that
encouraged and permitted t he kind of e'!cellence to which the
Administration is constantly paying lip-service.
The surest way to conrtnue these achievements is to avoid
enlarging the already .overstuffed bureaucracy of this Vnlversity1 The
Task Force recom mendations call for yet another level of tnsulation
and bureaucratization of scholarship. For ' these reasons we ~rongly
oppose the implementation of t he Task Force report in its current
form . Efficiency may be a tempting goal, but the loss of academic
excellence is too high price to pay for this luxury.

a

SA Counsel

Friday, June11 , 1971
Ed itor·in.Chief - Dennis Amold
M.naging Editor - AI Benson
Aut. Managing Editor - Susan Moss
Busin- M~~UQ~tr - James Dructcer
A_dvert!Jlng Man.ger - Sue Mellentine

lit. &amp; Drama .. Michael Sllvllfbla«
Campus .. •• ..•. Jo·Ann Armao
City ............ Hai'vy Lipman • Mutit: .............Billy Altman
Copy ..... . ...... Sharon Kelly Photo ...•....... David G. Smith
Asst .... . . . Mickey Osterrelcher
Graphic Arts ... ...... Tom Toles
lav.o ut ....... Maryhope Runyon SportS .... ..... .. Sharyn Rogers

Th• Spectrum is a member of the Unites State

Youtj~

vote unite

To the Editor:

;

So they've finally decided that if you're old
enough to fight and die, you're old enough to vote.
The poor fools don't realize how much power
they've given away. They figured the 18 to 20 group
would be as confused a nd easy to sway and split into
factions as ltbeir parents. The ~ommon plaint "what
cat) my one~ vote do?" is all too true. The powers
that b.e, few in number though they are, have been
able to remain the powers that be because the
American v·oting public, great in number though
they are, hasn't gotten around to organizing and
uniting t he way the powers have.
So you say, "suppose we do unit. Who the hell
do we vote for? Anyone big enough to even get
nominated in already power-oriented enough to lead
us down the same ho peless trail. What 's the use when
you can't trust any of them? It's going to be the
same show no matter who we elect."
You're right. They're all basically the same, and
it is a show. It 's a collosal three-ring circus, with a
few super-c lowns at the top putting all us animals
through our paces. Isn't it about time we took a turn
at being the~ clowns and make a monkey act out of
them? Once we're the clowns. w~ can change the act
periodically just like Ringling Bros. does. The
process is so simple it's a wonder Its never been lried .
In eve.ry election, whether local . state or
natio11al, the incumbents always win the largest
percentage o f contests. There has never been an
election anywhe re, let alone on a national level,
where every· illeumbent has been swept out of office

St~ent

Press Association

end is served by Unites Press lnt•rnational, College Press Serlvce, the Los

Angeles Times Syndicate and Liberation News Service.
Rupublication of all mattft he!'eJn without the exprtl$ con110t of the
Editor·in..Chief js forbidden.
Editorial pollcy is determined bv the Editor-in-Chief.

and an entire new set of people voted in . The first
time this happens it's going to (righten and confuse
the whole pack of them ·almost as badly as t he
average American has been frightened and confused
for years. The second time it happens, they're either
going to quit entirely or start jumping to find out
what we' really want instead of what they think is
good for us. If a nywhere along the line after the first
few times, somebody up there actuatly' does
something constructiver keep t hat one in office and
continue to vote the rest of them oot. Eventually
they're going to get the idea, and the only people
who will bother to run for office are the ones who
really mean to accompli~h something. T he power
grabbers, monef grabbers and fools are going to stay
away because it..won't be worth the time and effort
and money that getting elected costs if they know
they can't last more than two to four years.
People in this country have never before' united
the way we have in the last ten years of marches,
demonstrations and riots. We've been beaten, s.hot
at, jailed, re~· ed , spat on and largely had our
demands ignor d, and still we hung together.&gt;What
can t hey use
fight us with if we are united in our
votes? They an't use guns o r mace at the polls or
1gnore our legally voted in demands unless they
themselves are willing to destroy this "republic" as
they insist we've been t rying to do.
Our only strength is hanging together. It doesn't
matter who any of us vote for if we can just agree to
vote for someone, an yone, who isn't in office. We
d~n't even need enough votes to elect someone by
ourselves. We only need enough to swing an election,
som~:~times as few as several hundred in a given area.

The Little Man in The Trap

For what it's worth
by Harvy Lipman

Last month we commented favorably upon the Student
Association's decision to not fund clubs during the summer and urged
that financial priGrities be re·thought in order tq provide increased
fund ing for programs directed at the entire student body. Since that
time, the SA has taken the positive step of retaining Norman Effman as
its attorney. This should more than adequatel y fill the void being
created by the Administration's ill-timed abolition of the University's
Advocate's office.
..
Legal aid for students is a dire necessity and we can only view Mr.
Etfman's appointment with the 'strongest enthusiasm. In addition, we
must commend the SA upon tttis initial venture in what appears to be a
reordering of financial priorities.

Vol. 22, No. 1

/

' Dear Mr. Nhcon . . . I was reading how you sometimes ~ss out loans to revive businesses that are going
broke, and I was wondering if ••• "

Treme11tdous joy filled my heart earlier this week
when I read of an action taken by the Senate in
passing an llmendment to the Selective Service law .
The new addition prohibits the drafting of any man
whose fath e r, brother or sister has died in combat
from o ther service connected causes or is missing m
action. It t h rilled me to learn that the U.S. Senate in
its infinite wisdom has decided to prevent entire
families from becoming extinct. Now all you have to
do to beat lthe draft is get your brother to enlist and
arrange to ~Lave his brains blown out. considerd this
action " h ighly improbable" in that ft would be those
6f us wllo pcefer security blankets to M·15's. The
pres~nt draft law expires on June 30, unless the
Senate pass•es an extension of the act. For the first
ti me in several decades, t hat passage is not a
certainty . The filibu ster, that old anti-civil rights
weapon oft he southern conservatives, may suddenly
become a tool of the liberals.
If the proposed e xtension comes to a vote on
the floor of the chamber, it will pass. Several
senators, however, led by Mike Gravel of Alaska ,
have threate·ned to talk the law out of existence. The
critical stagf: should be reached sometime in the next
week and a half. If the bill has not been passed by
June 30, it will probably trave a very difficult time
ever being atcted u pon. Propone nts of the d raft will
therefore have to make their move before t he end of
this mo nth. They will try to invoke cloture to force
the issue to a vote. In order to do this, however, they
must get twtO·thirds of the Senate vote. Or, in other
words, if 34 senators vote against cloture, the
Selective Service System may become a thing of the
past.
The pre:sent compositio n of the House of course
prevents anJr positive action from being taken by
Congress. 'Therefore, it becomes crucial that
whatever reactionary concepts can be defeated in the
Senate are &lt;le,_feated. Ana if one believes that slavery
is .at least a slightly reactionary idea then so must
one consider conteription.
The ideo of a volu nteer army is one. which must
be met witlh just as much hostility . 1n order to

recruit such a nliJitary organizatio n the government
would try to entice young American pat rio ts with
promises o f higher pay. Where will the volunteers
come from? Certainly not from the whi te suburbs
and universities. T hese new soldiers will be the ones
with nothing to lose : the urban non-whites seeking
refuge from the sqvaJor of the ghetto, the migrant
workers doomed to Lifetimes of misery for
themselves and their children, poor southem blacks
inflabiting shacks not fit for use as outhouses.
These are the people America has never given a
damn about. Drugs and crime were all right as long
as they were limited to the poor. Not until they
spread. to affluent Ame rica did they become a
'problem.' In the same way, no t until middle class
white Americans started dying in Vietnam did the
anti-war movement arise. Indeed , how many of our
young political activists would now be account
executives had Lyndon Johnson not made that
fateful decision? If the government can feel so Little
constraint now, what will happen when the white
fa ces disappear from the battlefield? After all,
Vietnamization is no more than. the substitution of
Asian lives for Americans.
T he argument I make is .a pacifist one. The
UniteU States does no t use its army to pro tect the
American people - it uses it to defend the economic
interests of a relatively small group of men . The
American army in Europe is an absurdity. As was
proven in Hungary and again in Czechoslavakia there
is absolutely nothing that this country can do
militarily to affect the Communist' in Eastern
Europe, and the Russians have no more intention of
invading West Germany than we have of send ing
troops into Siberia. What the military keeps refusing
to learn in Southeast Asia is that we are not capable
of patrolling the world. Wlille America's military
might has delayed a Communist takeover in
Vietnam, the political implications of its
involvement have insured_one.
The draft law should not be extended, nor
should a large \'olunteer army be establi~hed. It is.
time for the government of this country to start
protecting lives rather t~n taking them·.

·Friday, Jun. 11, 1971 ."Th1 Spectrum . Paqe $8f11"

1

�·Allen and Matthau star in comedies··
by David Karpoff
Sp«trum Film Critic

t h ~~ stories are completely
vis1ualized in movie - form
something, alas, is lost.
!For the most part, t he only
scei11es that could exist in visual
for1111 are fairly elderly slapstick
bits1 such as spraying ink from a
pen all over someone's shirt front
or getting trapped in a maniacal
mac:hine. Every· once in a whiJe,
however, there is a reference to
~ some famous director, such as
Bergman, or well-known film,
. suclh as Tom Jones or Pptemkin
tha1t are absolutely hilarious. The
Be1rgma n~ s q 6e cross-bearing
mo1nks made the whole film for
• me, although I 'll never be able to
• see Seve~~th seal again without
smirking.

into a bubble gum comic. That
may be stretc!tingitjust a bit, but
I think it 's safe to say that Allen's
What can one say about Woody comedy Is basicaJJy verbal, and it's
Ailen? That he's nuts, of course; here that his new movie Bananas
but trying to define the full ra nge starts peeling. Allen is at his best
of his nuttiness , with all its in a monologue, when the crazy
subtleties and variations is like stori~ he tells are seen only in the
trying to condense Les Mis~rables minds of the audience, but when
""
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Grea. t Old Musl·cals

Junr 14
June 15
June 16
June 17
June 18
June 19
• June 20

:

1

,

..

7 &amp; 9 p.m.
7 &amp; 9 p.m.
3, 1 &amp; 9 p.m.
12, 3:30 &amp; 7:30p.m.
12, 3:30 &amp; 7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30 p.m.

SING IN' IN THE RAIN
SINGIN' IN TH E RAIN
N
SINGIN' I THE RAIN
FLIRTATION WALK
•
AND THE GOLD DIGGERS
OF 1935

a

NORTON HA ~ L CONFERENCE THEATER
•
Tickets may be purchased at the Nortqn
Hall Ticket Office. SUNYAB Students
$.75 ($.50 for afternoon showings).
SUNYAB Faculty &amp; Staff $1.25 ($1.00
for afternoon showings/.

Bamana-nutlf
The plot, f or how
understandable It is, revolves
aro111nd the somewhat lusterless
chnacter of Fielding Mellish, who
rise:~ from lowly products tester
in a big corporation to the El
Pre11idente of a South American
rat-ilnfested hellhole. This Horatio

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171·4261

Girl's Only

by FB I age n ts, beard'ed
revo l utionaries , · power -made
South American genemls · (the
dictator is portrayed by -the buy
who spends th e rest of hiS time
tasting coffee - the creat El
Exigente) and the ABC Wide
World of Sports team headed by
Howard CoseU and Don Dunphy,
who televise Allen consummating
his marriage with radical groupie
Louise Lasser who looks like a
Jewish Doris Day .
Watching Bananas , one gets the
un comfortable feeling that it
should be fu nnier than it r.eaJJy is.
There just aren't enough threads
to hold it together; it.. looks like
the plot and characters grow out
of individual gags, rather than the
other way around. We want the
movie to be funnier because we
expect so much of Allen. Yet
substandard Allen is stiJI Allen,
and that makes it funny . He owes
a lot to Groucho Marx and Charlie
Chaplin for Ws screen comedy,
but he is still unique.

'ANew L~f'
After The Graduate. Wh o :r
Afraid of Virginia Woolf and
Catch-22, Mike Nichols is so
firmly entrenched as one of our
best new directors that a good
many. of his new generation of
admirers are totally unaware of
his former career as one half of
the brimant comedy team of
Nichols and May whose satire did
m iJ ch to alleviate the tepid
atmosphere of the late SO's and
early 60's. Their admirers have
always known that Mike Nichols
held no monopoly on comedic
talent, that Elaine May • was a

brilliant comedienne in hir own
n ght and that sooner or later
Elaine May would make her own
individual splash in the big time
show biz world .
WeU, that splash has finally
splashed with A New Leaf, a neat
comedy that Elaine May wrote,
directed and, wit h Walter
Matthau; starred in .. ~ movie
succeeds very weJI because it sets
modest goals for itself right from
t h e start and m ai ntains a
consistent high level of
professionalism ~straight to the
finish. Matthau and May are
delightful foils for each other as
Mathau, a suddenly pauperized
playboy, attempts to snare rich
but weird May into a life-style
saving • marri:lge. Miss ~ay 's
clumsy, absentminded heiress is a
character that had its seeds in her
ol\:1 Nichols ahd May days, but
now has a subtle touch of charm
added that peeks through
unexpectedly from time to time.
Walter Matthau has been so
stereotyped since The Odd Couple
that it's enjoyable to Sect what a
&amp;ood actor he really is - he
wouldn't be anybody's first
choice to portray a suave
man·about-town, yet be pulls it
off with great style.
Everybody in the cast is good
from the two sf'ars right on down
to Jack Weston . as a crooked Wall
Street lawyer, James Coco, as
Matthau's rich uncle, and George
Rose, as Matthau's stoic butler,
plus a myriad of solid New York
character actors such as Fred
Stewart and David Doyle.
;
All in all, a neat musing
movie.

PORTUGUESE
The equivalen t of a year'sprork
in Brazilian Portuguese will be
offered during lilt and Jrd
Summer Sesaions (4 credits
each session). Natives of Brazil
will provide cuJ ~ral insigllts
and
o p portuni t y . for
conversation . There will be a
week-end trip to the Portugqese
sect ion of Toronto.
FOR INFORMATION

..__ _ _ 836-1620 - - -...

any slacks

You can1 buy 'em!
1tbt Campuj € orntr of Jluffa((a, Jnt.
I

•

3262 MAIN STREET

.,

BUFFALO, NEW YORK 1.4214

,

-65c
, _ IIIIRIDAI flttVE .
111J Ullll l l l l :;

Slacks galore in 2 new stores,
now open at Elmwood and
Bidwell near State Teachers, and
Ma in Street opposite U.B.
Groovy Oarea to tum you on.•. in
plaids, stripes, ch ecks, and solids.
Wester pockets, rei'd&amp;r pockets,
wide and regular belt loops.
Plenty of flares in famous Levi's
®St a-Prest® alackf. Also straiJht
·c uts that are with it. Dig Pants A •
Plenty now!

eight . ThB.Spectrum .• Frfday, Jun1 11, 1971

~-

'\

...
I

-

�..

t recreation

rkGym:[un
or young and old ·

..

If you're already feeling
However , for those IJQl,
· droopy frt;&gt;m the summer session partic ularly interested In the
heat, or if you're not back in water, the gym and ~ther facilities
shape after that long Buffalo will be open Monday through
winter, take advantage of the Friday from noon to I 0 p:m.,
summer recreation program, based Saturday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m .,
in your on-campus health spa, and Sunday from 9 a.m. to I 0
Clark Gym.
p.m. Equipment and areas for
H o urs for s plashing and vo ll eyball, golf, archery,
swimming in the 25-yard pool we I gh t li fii n g, h ct n db a 11 ,
have been scheduled for students, paddJeball, badmintt;&gt;n, squash
faculty, staff and families, seven and other sports are available
days a w eek. Student from the basement . recreation
co-recreation hours are 3:30 to office, Room 5 Clark Gym
4:30 p .m. Monday through basement.
. Friday, Wednesdays and Sundays
Students regist~fed for summer
fro m 7-9 p.m., and Saturdays school courses need only prese}lt
from 3-5 P.m.
pro~f of payment 'of fees and 1.0.
Faculty and staff may bring card in order to use the facilities.
their families to tile pool on Graduate studen,ts and those not
Monday •through Friday, 2:30 to .. repstered for summer sessions
3:30 p.m.. and Saturday and must pay $3 for a permit and
Sunday from 2-3 p.m. Faculty, faculty and staff, $5.
staff and stud.ents may also swim .
Indoor courts may be reserved
Monday and Thursday, 7-9 p.m., two days in advance, either in
and Sunday, 3-S p.m. AJI ,::hildren person in Room 5 or by phone
using the pool must be {831-5238). Any questions about
accompanied by a parent.
the summer recreation prograrTY
Special hours have been set up may be answered by either Ed
for wo men only; these are Wright or Ed Michael at ext.

(

Elton John, British compote!' and singer, who
becam.J sick and had to cane* his first Buffalo
..,_,.nee a mon1h ago, will perform next Monday
tMtning at Kleinhans Music: Hall for two shows, 7 :30
and 10:30 p.m . Alto on the bill is Mark-Almond,
comprised of several form• members of John
Mlyall's Turning Point band.
~.

""'
52•3..8~
. ~~~~~~~-..

Tuesday nights, 7·9 p.m..

USE OUR "FLOATIIO"

LOBSTER
FEA·S T

-m!BIAIG

..

IMMEDIATE fi·1--Ail IIZE
NO POOL -

NO MONSINIII

UPSTATE CYCLE INS.
Call 695-3044
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CURRENCY COUPON

$5• VALUE

It all began in the first grade.
But don't blame your first-grade teacher. lt wasn
her fault. II was the system aha had to teach.
The old " run, Spot, run" method.
You had to read it out loud. Word by word. An
that's the. way It was until you became a secon
grader. Where your teacher asked you to read sllentl~
But you couldn't do lt.
You probably stopped reading out loud. But yo
atlll said every word to yourself.
If you ' re an average reader, you're probabl
reading that way now.
Which means you read only aa feat as you tall
About250 to 300 words a minute.
And that's not fast enough any more.
Not when the average student has approximate!
8 hours of required reading for every day of classe·
And since the amount of time In a day Isn't abol
to Increase, your reading speed will have to.
In order to handle it all.
The Evelyn Wood Reeding Dynamics course ce
help.
With trainil)g, you'll be able to see g roups '
words. To read between 1,000 and 3,000 words Pf
minute. Depending on how difficult the material is.
At any' rate, we guarantee to at least triple yot
reading speed, or we'll refund your entire tuitio
(98.4% of everyone who takes the course accon
plishes thia.)
So don' t waste time thinking about whom t
blame. Come take a free intr~ctory speed readir
lesson. We'll increase your reading speed on the ape
It takes about an hour to find out how you can reduc
your study time by 50% or more.
And it ought to be worth an hour of your time.
To save thousands.

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for students $ 1.25 for fst 15 words
$.05 for each additional
word ·

&amp;32-4112

~Iii
~

"'lt.

;.

OOLLtiAJl, • •••

FRE£ 1NJR(){)U(X)RVSPEro READING L£SSOI

GUSTAV

at
University of Buffalo Office
3606 Main St. (Next to Buffalo Textbook)
T 0 DAY at 12 noon, 3 p .m. and 5 p.m.
June 12 at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Classes correspo~d with U .B. Summer SchedL
STARTING T UESDAY, JUNE 15 .

Xeroxs cheap!
355 Norton Hall

For addh ioMI infornurlon ull
CURT MILLER •t al&amp;.)296

\

I

Friday, Juns 11, 1971 . Ths Spsctrum. Page nine

,.

�..

.

#

'·

SperidYour
.Su111rner wvith
Cine111a Center Films
Summer greetings from Cinema Center Films, the
young-and-growing motion picture division of the Columbia Broadcasting Sy§tem.
.
_
Our name may escape you, but our films should be
familiar. Internationally-acclaimed hits such as "The Boys

'

in the Band," "Scrooge," "The Reivers," "A Man Called
Horse," "The April Fools," "A Boy Named Charlie Brown." •
And just as we made those screen entertainments so
outstanding, we're now getting ready to make your summer:-tour times over:

DUSTIN HOFFMAN
"LITTLE BIG MAN"
A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PAII;SENTATION
CO.ITARRINQ

MARTIN.BALSAM • JEFF COREY
CHIEF D.AN GEORGE AND FAYE DUNAWAY
AS MRS. PENDRAKE

SCREENPLAY BY CALDER WILLINGHAM • BASED ON THE NOVEL
BY THOMAS BERGER • PRODUCED BY STUART MILLAR
DIRECTED BY ARTHUR PENN • PANAVISION&amp; TECHNICOLOfte
A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE

STEVE McQUEEN
"LEMANS"
A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION
WRITTEN BY HARRY KLEINER '• MUSIC BY MICHAEL LEGRAND
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER ROBERT E. RELYEA • PRODUCED BY
J
JACK N. REDDISH • DIR&amp;CTED BY LEE H. KATZIN
A SOLAR PRODUCTION • PANAVISIO,... COLOR BY DE LUXE'"
A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE

DUSTIN HOFFMAN
WANTS 'TO KNOW

"WHO IS HARRY KELLERMAN
AND WHY IS HE SAVING
THOSE TERRIBLE THINGS ABOUT ME?"
A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION
CO-STARRING

BARBARA HARRIS· JACK WARDEN
DAVID BURNS • DOM DE LUISE
WRITTEN BY HERB GARDNER • PRODUCED BY ULU GROSBARD AND
HERB GARDNER • DIRECTED BY ULU GROSBARD • COLOR BY DE LUXE•
A NATIONAL G'NERAL PICTURES RELEASE

,,
CINEMA CENTER FILMS

III-I

.

A.DIVISION OF

T~ECOL~MBIA B~OADCASTIN~ SY~TEM

'

Page ten . The Spectrum . Friday, June 11, 1971
I

"

�Baseball.Bulls lose
NCAA phtyoffs
Although the baseb!ill Bulls
suffered losses at the hands of
Seton Hall (3-l) and Penn State
(2.0) # 2 • playoffs at Princeton
University , the Blue and Gold
proved to the critiC$ and experts
that they could stay in a game
against the best of the East's
baseball powers. A timely hit or
two would have certain!~ turned
-

fundamental errors, the Bulls were
quickly behind. The Bulls were
stopped by the opposing pitch ers
and as one pJayer remarked : " Our
hitter s seemed to lack the
co nf i den ce." Grad~ting
outfielder Tim Meterko put it
more succinctly when h e
commented : "All season • long
we've bad trouble with the good
pitchers that we fa(:ed ."
On the plus side for Buffalo
was the fine -ptliy of junior
short-stop Rick Albert who seems
ready to move in os next year's
team captain .. Albert was easily
the most impressive shortstop in
the to urney and despite his ankle
inju ry, Alb e rt s h owed the
numerous majo r league scouts in
attendance the fi elding and hitting
that made him a (,lislrict # 2 third
team all-star. Next ~cason Albert
heads a list of returners that
includes catchers J im Scime, John
Wojak, first baseman Orv Cott,
second baseman Jim Lalayanis
and outfielders Mark Stanko, Tom
· Mati.kosh and Doug Whelan.
The Bulls will lose third
baseman Don Jqk, who had a
disappointing season along with
Tim Meterko and pitchers Bill
BaJfoort and Bob Prorok. The
Bulls will have a hard time
replacing Balfoort, their stopper,
h owever, righ tha,Pers Gary
Odachowski, Gary Gaiser, Ernie
Kalobius and Owen Tober return
along with lefty Mike Cahill who
was extremely shar p in the 2.()
loss to Penn State. Odachowski , a
junior appears to be the heir to
Balfoort 's stopper role for the
thtnp arouna tor the u uus tn eacn Bulls.
Despite their two losses, Bill
of their losses.
However, the Bulls lacked one Monltarsh's baseball Bulls easily
thing that both Seton Hall and had their best season ever with a
Penn.St:a,m had -- elU)~~..f.ll.r J.l-j - ~&amp;Y!it. ~ca~or:! slate. ~Next.
the

Hall

this

was their th.ird

year

Bulls ret um

FORSALE •

July end August or July and August
THROUGH September to June. Price
negotiable. Call Oebble, 837·0456 .

COMET 1 964, 6 5,000 miles, good
running condi tion, b ody fl lr, b est offer
over $100, 633·7890.

APARTMENTS WANTED
SYRA CUSE UNIVERSITY STUDENT
seeks sv mmer 1partment near campus
with other fema le students. Cont•ct:
Li nda Loverock, 412 University Place,
Syracuse, New York , 13210.

KNIGHT R·100·A radio receiver with
meter, speaker, and aerial . $120 new In
k it form . $40. Lou Wajda 831·1665
Intercom 8.
65 VW, 38,000 miles. BltSI offer takes
II. 592·7200.

SEPTEMBER RENTAL WANTED or
room mate for Stony Brook graduate
entering U .B . law school. Reasonable &amp;
convenient . Pleas. call/write Jeek
Gutkl n, 1591 Pelham P.rkway N .,
Bronx, N .Y. 1046g. (2121 OL5·7527.

65 vw BUG, new king pins, cl u tch,
brake lini ngs, engi ne neecb work. $100.
837·6147.
TAKE OVER PAYMENTS - 65 Ford,
$37.50 per month. Needs oil pump .
Must sell starting school. Calf
885·6748, ask for Bill.

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted ' to
share ap.a rtment c lose to school. Own
room .
Available
Ju ly
1st.
Call
297·7713.

1963 FA L CON, runs well, new 42Mo.
battery, radio, 3·speed, 20+MPG, $70.
873·1443. Keep trying.

RIDEBDARD
MOVING OUT of town, must self:
single bed, desk, dresser drawer c hest,
and tables. Call 896· 7894, evenings.

WANTED : rider to Los Angeles area.
Must share driving, gas and toll
expenses. Must drive standard shift.
Leaving Buffalo on June 22nd. Call
896·7894 evenings.

PEASANT B LOUSES, Kurus, llldlan
and Pakistani halters at "T he People,"
~ foliC
arts boutique, 144 Allent
8a2·62 83.

WANTED
PART TIME: PERSON needed f or radio
produc:tlon. Write: Radio , l!ox 27,
Hayes Hall, Campus.

-

MEET SOME o'd friends. Find them
through Thf Spectrum c:lasslfled ads:
• $1.25 for 15 words or less, $ .05 for
each additional word. Deadline Is 4
p.m. Tuesday for the follow ing F riday.
The Spectrum, 3S5 Norton Hall.
DO N NA, Warren and Scotty: When
will you be back to visit us? we miss
you.

FREE
BREAKFAST.
Babysitter
needed for 2 boys, 2 &amp; 6, weekdays at
7:45a.m. until end of 1st S.S. At teast
till l l a.m., better till 4 : 30. Pay
negotiable. 5 min. walk from campus.
837·0692 evenings.

WHAT ~d I do to deserve this? The
least you could do Is talk about ft.
Moody people should get violently
talkative every now and then.

SUB·LET APARTMENT

S.w . has tegs l (We th ink. If only she'd
wear a dress!)

AVAILABLE July and August : 1
bedroom apt. 1 block from c:ampus.
Furnished . a37 ·0377 After 5 p.m.
ONE
STUDENT
WANTEO
for
apartment on Englewood ror EITHER

Interested in playlnt ROLLER
HOCKEY next falll Cheek
next week's The Spt~etrum for
complete deteilsl

ROBERl

MI~ELLANEOUS
~LREAOY hate your eluses7 Hell,
don't go. Gustev will xerox notes for
$.08.1 page. 3 55 Norton Hall.

-*

BOWLIN G LEAGUE. , S ign up
l'eereatlon desk before June 14. Open
to all - male/fenfale.
EXPERIENCED typing near U .S .
Fas! servi ce. $.40 per page. 834·3370.
TYPI N G done In my home. 83 3·8236 .
B 1 K ES
repai red ,
lots
cheap,
guaranteed . All makes. Also want to
buy 3, 5 &amp; 10 speeds. Call 835· lg49.

"GO!-FOA THE FURY.

...

FORCE
, AND FUN Of
U - - lOCM

•

• "ANGRY, TOUGH AND

PERSONAL

TWO OESPERAl'E PEOPLE need
place t o pitch tent outside the city.
Ptease call Laurette, 838·1754.

'"

tractor
drlvlnt,
and
cheln
UIW
exp«lence. Submit complet~ r esume
Including referencet to Sub Ba.rd I ,
205 Norton H ell bV Tuesde)' June 15,
1g71,

,

RODMMATE WANTED

FULL OFSTINGI"-&lt;,f

"A PICTURE YOU MUST
SEE THIS YEAR IS If_"
- &lt;AOOES HOMf JOUIW&lt;AL

PARAJmfl ftllllES
AHRAI. ENTEMS FlM

•JL

ID.OO ·APNWWfl ftTURf f!Jo
NORTON

HELP WANTED

Conference Theatre
June 11 - 3,7 &amp; 9 p.m .

CARETAKER
l or Poverty
Hill
property must know carpentry,
plumbing, elect rical repairing plus have
camping, swimming, life saving, truck

June 12 - 7 &amp; 9 p.m.
June 13 - 7 &amp; 9 p.m.

CALL OR COME IN
24 HOURS A DAY EVERYDAY
L

a solid

nucleus in an attempt to cop
another tourney berth. The Bulls
must be considered one of the
East's more formidable baseball
powers and a team with a rugged
schedule. Perhaps this · year's
experience will serve the Bulls as
it has served other teams in the
district two tourney.

straight tourney appearance, while
Penn State was appearing for the
second straight ·year. With their
lack of experience, plus several

A

the

CLAIIIPIII

SERVICES

• B. )

m

PRODUCTION

.NDRC.DA

STRAIN

WAIHIIIGIONIU.ItLUS aNtd
a•r-urr

lll.lS &amp; THINGS- . . . Styles f• Y-. • • •

'

·

LIAR

8

AGOODS

--•&amp;can
5 DIACiliiS
aoon.uv•
II H.
SAVEMONR
SHOP ARMY NAVY

7J0.732 MAiti-1~1S1S NEAR TUPPa

··r....,

OUR COMPLETE LINE
OF BEDROOM AND
LOUNGE ACCESSORIES
INCLUDES:
PILLOWS, RUGS
TAPESTRIES &amp; SPREADS

vWalellBells
KING SIZE WATER MATTRESS
guara nteed for 5 years

from

ONLY

MOROCCO
POLAND
and the

-

-

c•····

Friday, June 11, 1971 . The Spectrum. Page eleven

..

�Available at:the Ticket Office
S~w

F estivill
June 14 June 22 JuJy 26 July 29 -

July 17 The Phi/andere
July 18 Summer Doys
Sept. 4 Tonight at 8 :30
Sept. 5 War, Women and Other Trivia

Melody Filir ·
June 13 Guy Lombard o
June 14-20 Sammy Davis Jr. and Irwin C.
Wa~n
,
June 21-26 Plaza Suite - Edie Adams and Tom
Poston
•
June 27 Alice Cooper
June 28 - fuly 10 Fiddler on the Roof Robert
Merrill
July 11 B.B. King
. July 12-17 Hello Dolly Betsy Palmer
July 18 AI Hirt
July 19-24 Jerry Lewis and Helen O'Connell
Julv 25 The Irish Rovers •
July 26-31 Kismet - john Raitt and
Anna Maria Alberghetti
Aug.l Roberta Flack
Aug. 2-7 Robert Goulet and Norm Crosby
Aug. 8 The Four Seasons
Aug. 9 Jerry Vale
Aug. 15 Bobby Sherman
Aug. 16-21 The Sound of Music =- Carol
Lawrence
Aug. 22 The Byrds
Aug. 23-28 Vikki Carr
Aug. 30-Sept. 4 Sergio Franc;,hi
and Pat Cooper
Centu ry Theater
thru june 13 Hair
june 26 Wilson Pickett and Jr. Walker
and the All-Stars
Rochester War Memorial
June 23 Tom Jones

~

Kleinhans Music Hall
june 14 Elton john
Summer Excursions
July 9-1 1 Stratford Weekend
july 13 Shaw Festival The Philanderer
July 24 Corning Glass Center
Aug. 13-15 Stratford Weekend
Aug, 17 Shaw Festival - Tonight at 8:30
Alfg. 22 Shaw Festival - War, Women and Other
Travia

.

-.

Announc:ements

WBFO Programme Notes

Womul's Liberation will hold free karate classes
for women Tu~s. and Thurs. from 4-6 p.m. in Room ·
340 Norton Hall.

Friday, june 11

Tv.u ilnd Olp Hubka will give a lecture on
Meditation, Tues. at 8 p.m. in Room
246 Nortolrt Hall.

Trilnscend~mul

11 p.m . Drugs: The Issues on Trial
•
5 p.m. All-Things Considered - f&gt;eople, News and
Music
9 p.m. BBC World Theater

--~

Mondily, June 14
The S·tudent Associiltion will offer il non-credit
course in Mandarin every Saturday from 10:30 11 :30 a.m.. in Room 340 Norton Hall. The course
will cost j5 for three months. Anyone who is
interested should'' contact Peter Kong, Jitoom 205
Norton Halll, or call 8~1-5507 or 831-3828.

8 a.m. Prelude -Classical music for y~r morning
11 p.m . Music in Miniature - with,BobJess.elson
Brahms:-5onata for Viola No. 2{20:16)
Hracek: Sonata No. 12 for Viola

.

Coli~~ A will 1 hold a meefing of Drugs in
Society, Course 339, tomorrow at 7 p.m. at the
Sunshine Hou se, 108 Winspear. For more
information call 831-4&lt;&gt;46. All those who are
interested but not registered are welcome.

Tuesdily, June 15
11 a.m . Sexuality: A Search for Perspective
6:15 p.m. · Listener's Choice - Buffalo's only
classical music request programme. To make
requests, call 831-5393 or write WBFO.

lntermational Folk Dancing will be held tonight
from 8:11 p.m. in Room-30 Diefendorf Annex.

Wednesdily, June 16

Psycho,m at will be held Monday from 2-4 p.m.
and Wedne:;day from 3-6 p.m. "in Room 232 Norton
Hall.
·

11 a.m. Through the Looking Glass - with Jane
Donahue
10 p.m. The Goon Show - T he Emperor of the
Universe - "Bulldog Seagoon choked back a
gasp as hereadit ...

\JUAB will flold registration for workshops jn
.Room 261 Norton Hall. Workshops are open to
everyone and incl ude theater, organic gardening and
more.
Commnmication · College Craft Workshop will
meet to night at 8 p.m. in Room 332 Norton Hall.

Thursday, )!.me 17

Any undergraduate student interested in
tutoring colllege students for academic credit should
call the EPIS Tutorial Laboratory at 831-3946.
Presently !tutors are needed in Anatomy 307,
Finance 301, Management Science 301 and
Chemistry 123. Applications are available at 88
Win spear.

If'st

·

Sunshine House, the former Crisis Center, will
be in full operation over the summer months.
Counseling service facilities for drug emergencies and
drug-related problems are located .at 108 Winspear
Ave. Sunshine House operates 24 hours a day, every
day and anyone in need of its services can receive aid
at any time by calling 831-4046.
Also, anyone interested in working at the house
and getting involved in its summer training program
can obtain information at the Winspear House.

- UPI

Tbe bl,essed vlrgin
,·

'

9 p.m. Schubert and the 600
10:30 p.m. The Best of Sherlock Holmes - Starring
Sir lobn Gielgud and Sir Ralph Richardson.

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                <text>&lt;a href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/"&gt;IN COPYRIGHT - EDUCATIONAL USE PERMITTED&lt;/a&gt;. This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. In addition, no permission is required from the rights-holder(s) for educational uses. For other uses, you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/"&gt;IN COPYRIGHT - EDUCATIONAL USE PERMITTED&lt;/a&gt;. This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. In addition, no permission is required from the rights-holder(s) for educational uses. For other uses, you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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